 aSomerville and Nash 'Are
Only Canadians Left
—Pa^e Seven
*"-'r_-mflpat
«   C
LUMB n
IB  NBLSON  DAILY  NEWS,  NBLSON,  BC.  —  THURSDAY   MORNDIO.  JUNS  tl,   ISH
5W
Or?* Move Upward on the
New York List
—Pa&e Nine
nvB CUNTS « con
NUMBER  H
M'DONALD SEEKS DODGE STABILIZATION
DETOUR WATER Markets at FIRES RASE IN
WEST, ONTARIO
FROM LAKE ON
BALFOUHOAD
High Road by Thompson's
May Be Used Because
of Lake Rise
a Glance
Toronto   aad   Montreal   StotSi
firm at cloae.
Tomato mine*—Irregularly "ewer.
New York—stocks cloee sflthtlr
Winnipeg   Wheet cloeed higher.
London—aat tUrer, oopper, tin
and  lead  lower: Une en-hanged.
New York—Bar sllrer aad Ua
lower;  other   metals  (Ina,
New York—Cetton aad rakker
higher; sngsr and coffee orrchang-
ed.
LAKESIDE PARK
RAIL TOUCHED
Columbia Is Around 29
Feet; Ferry Lay-Up
Not Yet
Showing unsuspected reserves ot
water, th* lakt tt Nelwn continued to rise BlowU Wednesday,
tn spite of the Kootsns/ river at
Bonner* Ferry. Idaho, having
itarted to drop late Monday, and
oontlnued to htve a hearing on
public worki art Wl tlr* In thla
section.
Wedneeday'* rtjj*. though amall,
detracted (rom tip eervloeablllty of
tha fill made near J. P. Thompaon'*
place on the Nelson-Bel four road,
where quite a etretch hai been under water alnoe Uonday morning,
and DUtrlct Engineer William Ramaay itated Wedneeday night that
lf the rise continued further, th*
old road turning up paat Jack's
8err.ee itatlon would be opened, to
detour the water. Later Foreman
Oeear palmer had two man on that
.work.
In th* caa* of th* aectlon under
water near,' T. Alrey'*, th* temporary road mad* along th* back
Tueaday afternoon la high enough to
he ctaar of the water, though th*
fill hu been covered.
CAMP (HT*  UNDEE  WATER
Among Inundated aectlona along
th* West Arm la tb* site of thi late
provincial^ wlief  camp  at  Kokanee,
(Contlnned  at  Pag* Two>
LORD MONTAGU
FOUND GUILTY
Sentenced to Pay Fine in
Assault Case; Brooks
Guilty Abo
■1
Sweeps 15-Mile Stretch
Near Poland; Leaser
Fires Burning
200 MEN FIGHT
FORESt TERROR
C. N. Bridge Burned Cutting Connections With
Port Arthur
No Blane Attached
io Coast Accident
Finding of Liquor at Scene
DU Not Meu Driver
Wan Drunk
VICTORIA, June _1.—(CP)—Lord
Idward Montagu waa found guilty ot
common aaaault on tbe pereon of
John Porbes on June 15 and waa
lined tM and 17 costs, or In default to days ln JaU. by Magistrate
Oeorge Jar In provincial polioe
oourt bere tbla afternoon. C. W.
Brooks, co-defendant, waa found
guilty of aaaault causing grietout
bodily harm and was fined SM and
t7 ooete, or In default, one month
In JaU.
Magistrate Jay commented tbat
both were reaponalble for tbs helpless, drunken oondltlon of Forbea
and the conduct of both waa n-
prehsnslble. There was no doubt,
tbe magistrate oontlnued, tbat Lord
Montagu loat bla temper on Shell
laiand, Brooke had used unnecessary
tlolenot, considering Forbes' condition, aad tha two blows struek
were unjust. Tbe magistrate agreed
thst aome of Porbu' bruises were
the reeult of falling Into tba cockpit of tlw boat.
11m oaae ansa out of tba cruise
ot hott Montagu's gseboet Merman
from victoria to Venerator. Tb*
craft went eehora.oo Jones Island
tad waa ultimately taken fat «r
pelra ta
FOOT WILLIAM, June tl (CP)
—Only partially checked by a
tadden shift In the triad, a raging rarest tire* tonight defied efforts ef too rangera and firefighters to oeench It aad swept
over a 15-nslk stretch ef eul-over
tlmberlands, near Poland, 85 miles
wett of here.
Lesser fires are burning at wveral
places la tbe eestern section of tbe
Thunder Bay dlttrlet, ceualng oonalderable damage, and all a»silbals
men la tbe area hsve been dratted
to fight tbem.
A Canadian national rallwaya
bridge waa destroyed near Horns-
payn* today, temporarily cutlinj oft
Guilty
iSssssr^Sa
NORTH VANCOUVER. Juna 31.—
(CP>.—Deith due to accident, whleh
might have bean cauaed by ovar-
crowding In tba front seat earning
the driver to loaa control of tha
ear, but attaching blame to no one
i the verdict-of a ooroner'a Jury
which enquired today Into the death
of Hurray Patterson, ona of three
persons killed early Sunday whan
the roadster thet were riding' in
plunged over a cliff near Whyte-
cliffe Park.
No Inquest will be held Into the
deatha of Mae Davla and Dorothy
Turner, wbo wen killed wltb* Patterson wben tbe ear In whlcb they
were returning to Vancouver after
attending a danoe at Cliff Houae,
plunged from the highway 60 feet
to tbe rock* below.
Finding of a partly filled bottle
of liquor on tbe rooke near tbe
ear after the accident % flask ln
one pocket of tbe ear and tba
fact that Patterson waa known to
have taken a drink befon leaving
Vancouver for tha North Shore wme
not proof the driver waa Incapable
of driving wben the party left tbe
dance, tbe Jury  said
to pick up tbo two tt tUt
crew Ml there, tbo fight, took
place.
Both Lord Uootagu and Brooke In
tbeir evldenoe stated tbat Porbea
ww drank and troublesome and
tbat be bnd flrat atruck Brooks.
Medleal evldenoe waa to tbe effect that Porbea waa Buffering from
a fraetun near tbe left "ye that
would probably cauae permanent
dlsflgusnnent and sinus trouble, and
alao numerous brulaee about tbe
body.
Lord Montagu li the aecond eon of
the Duke of Manchester.
communication
and Port Arthur.
Uo
PUN LIGHTER
CUT IN WHEAT
News of Extensive Crop
Damife in Canada and
Short Crop in VS.
THREE AIRMEN
DIEINCRASH,
PRINCE ALBERT
Commercial Pilot and Mechanics Crash to Death
Making Test
Lord  Bdward  Montagu,   who waaitenoed lo pay a fine at Victoria,
found   guilty  of  aaaault  and  aM*
Find Bodies of Lost
Deam Boys of Banff
STUDIES PRISONERS
ON SENSITIZATION
Name George Murray
LILLOOET, June 31 (CP)—Oeorge
M. Murray, Vancoufer newspaperman, wu unanlmoualy nominated
as candidate for the Libera] oarty la
tbe provlnclsl riding of Lillooet st
a convention Tueaday. J. B.. Bryaon
waa elected preeldent of tbe Ubersl
sssoclstlon. L. L. Adam of Squamlsh
vice-president, s*_d Kay Jonea. Ashcroft, seerotary-t-eaaurer.
OSUimniKl. K.T_ June 11   ICP)
tern to dost, drug* or wrtmg food
plays any part In producing pty-
oophathlc ooodiuona leading to
crime ls bslnj made with 50 Inmates
JOSEPH   TBAVBBS   DIE .
NCW  WESTMINSTER, June 11 —
(CP)—Joseph    Travers.    83    widely
known In tbe praser vslley, died la
St. Mary's hospital. Be wss born la
Ireland, and resided bere 18 yeara.
SIGNS OF BETTER TIMES
Decrease in
Unemployment
BORNABT, June 11 (CP).—During tbe past six weeka there bea
been a decrease of 186 ln ranks ot
those receiving unemployment relief, acoordlng to the semi-monthly
report ot Belief Officer J. O. Nelll
to Commissioner John Bennett
Increase in
Wages Looms
J-tDTSMITH. BC, June 11 (OT)
—Tsn per osnt Increase In wagea
affecting too mlllworkers. effective
July 1, ls snnounoed by tbe Victoria
Lumber and Manufacturing Co.,
Ltd., plant at Cbemalnua.
9ot July, at leaat, owing tha un
certain nature ot tbe ruing nvsrkst
for lumbar, tba Increase will Uke
tbe form of a bonua. Should tbe
demand for lumber become stabilised, tbe Increase wlll be Incorporated Into tha wage ratee.
Spanish Fliers Are
Located; One ls Dead
MEXICO CITV. Jone 11 (AP).
—The gOTemaeent announced lale
today tbat the Cuarto vientos.
airplane bearing the two Spanish
transatlantic filers from Cuba to
Mexico had been located la the
atate of pnebla. and that oae of
the  filers was dead.
Tke other Spanish filer waa
aald to bt Injured It wu aot
determined which af the aviators
—Captain Berbenn ar Lieutenant
Collar-had been killed and which
waa still alive.
Export in
Lumber Is Up
OTTAWA, June 11 '.CP) .—Exports
of planks and boards from Canada
made a atrong advance ln May, tba
value being ,,3t3,ltt compared wltb
WIS** la April and 81.1.4.808 la
May, IMS. The total to Onlted
Statea waa 8480.H9 and to tba
United Kingdom ttM.S-8. Tbere waa
a heavy lncreaae in douglaa fir
aquan timber alao, tha total being
,U,t3S against Ml All ■ In April
aad  t.t.eig In May.   1831.
commissioner
Branham.   deputy
correction.
■e seeks to discover whether tuch
influences baar any relationship to
Instability  of  behavior.
■y oMMnCaAnmctoTt
Oaaadlaa Preas staff  Writer
LONDON. June 11 (CP cable.--Rie
four-power   wheal   oonferenoe   ad-
• _,____..__._____*.    ,___,._    ♦__.    .—.,. I —mm. _»  _...___,  .___■.■_,  wtw.  mu mm
Jo-limed discussions today  to await ,_*g___, aui_ nriaon hv  Oe   v
statistical Information on prolucUon  -
trom Australia, Argentina, aad soviet Russls attar formulating a tentative    plan    calling    for    reduoed
acreage and expert quotae.
News of extensive crop damage ln
Canada asd a abort crop ln tba
United Statee cauaed delegates to be-
Here tbe final poaitlon may ba
changed  materially.
Stanley Bruce, Auatralian minister
to the united Kingdom, sskod that
tbe conference produoe eome concrete propoeal wblcb be might trana*
mit to Canberra Ior consideration
Of  hla govemmsnt.
It waa learned tonight limitation
propoeal at aow constituted contemplates reduction of acreage by
16 per eaat for ona year only and
that tba * program for tbe aeoond
year would be decided aftar the
effects ot tha one-year reduction
are asen.
ASKS CANADA TO
REVIEW DUTIES
PLANE BURIES IN
BOTTOM OF LAKE
Two Bodies Recovered;
One Is Scarcely Recognizable
KIDNAP AMD ROB
WINNIPEG MAN
June 11 (CP)
napped by two gangsters aad driven
la a tail-cab which he bad hired,
out Into tbe oountry. Charlea R0.-00.
restauranteur. waa robbed of 81SS
today .at tba point of two revolvers.
Wltb tba taxi-driver, WUUam PM1**
llpe. he waa left stranded on tba
prairie. They walked to ttw elty
and notified police.
LAKE STORM
HITS YOUTHS
John Boms Wires News;
Presses North by
Plane
PBINCB ALBERT, Sask., Jane
IL (CP).—Plrst aeroplane tragedy
of the yaar In northern Saskatchewan tonight had claimed the
lives ef three men near the
Brooke air baae at Emma lake, so
miles north ot here.
Captain B. W. "WIT Broatch.
pllet. 41.
Hiram C. Brooks, [.Hot-mechanic 14.
T. D. ronytb,  mechanic. It
Broatch, well known western oom
merclal flyer  wbo gained tame ln
tba MscAlplne  aearch, waa  testing
(Coatlaaed oa page Two)
LONDON. June 11 (CP oable)
Taking further advantage of the
terma of the Canadian-United Kingdom trade agreement signed at
Ottawa, the United Kingdom today
aaked Oanada to review tha Canadian duties on it long llat of
articles with a view to revision. The
Canadian tariff board la already
preparing to review the duties on
cotton and textile gooda Imported
from Britain.
In acoordanoe with thla provision
(article It) the United aUngdom
government today requested tbe Ctntdlan government to aak the Canadian tariff board to review the
duties charged by Canada on boots.
shorn, slippers, tin snd lead alloys,
yarns and other artictss.
Ten Are Killed in
Polish Collections
WARSAW, Poland, June 11 (API-
Nine peraona and one policeman
were officially reported killed today
Wben polioe foroed' peesants to
cases beating tax-collectors In the
Oallclaa districts ot Ropes**. Rae-
seow and Laaeut. sixteen peraona
were seriously   wounded.
Many arrests were mede and numerous peasants escaped to the forests.
PULPWOOD CUTTERS
AQREE TO TERMS
Missing Since February;
Attempted Traverse
Duchesney Pass
rati|», B.C Jaa* M (cr>_
One hdnd Jutting above reck and
melting anew tonight had led te
discovery of Chris Deam, It, and
his brother, Jo*. II, leet In Dn-
ehesney' paaa sine* laat Pebruary.
Tbe young men, both residents of
Banff, Alu, were trapped In a
snowsllds In tb* paas ae tbey attempted a akl Journey trom Camp
Rector to Pleld. Tomorrow work
parties wtll leave here to dig tb*
bodies out, of the debris.
Dlsoovery ot tbe bodlee waa made
today by two Swim guides, Rudolph Anuner and 0. Baealar, wbo
were conducting a aearch of tba
pass. Searches bave been made Intermittently alnos tbe young men
dlsappssred, a brother. Rank. 10.
making trlpa through tba area at
every opportunity.
Both skilled skiers. Chris and Joe
attempted tb bt tbe first to Journey
on skis through the dangerous
Duchesney and Dennis passe* from
Csmp Hector to Plaid. Evidence
found by the -Marchers Indicated
tbey bad travelled from Camp Bee-
tor to Lake O'Hara and then through
Duchesne, paas without troubit.
tafflcultlw ensued aa they tried
to negotiate tha mot* dangeroua
Dannie paaa and location of tbalr
campa Indicated they bad given up
the trip and were returning to
Lake O'Hara wben burled by th*
snowsllds  ln  Duchesney nam.
Parenta of tbe young men reside
st Banff. Their brother Prank la
en route here. The work of recovering tbe bodies Is expected to take
until late Prlday or Saturday.
MAY MAKE
STEEL, BC.
Negotiations Under Way
for Establishing Steel
Industry
PORT ARTHUR, Ont., Jun* 11
(CP)—Pulpwood cutters who bay*
been on atrlke lor several days for
higher pay have agreed to contractors' terma. and threatened cloelng
up of tbe varloua camps, throwing
n*arly MOO men out
been averted.
T
That Robert Burna, aon ot ftr.
and Mra. Jobn Burn* ot Nelton,
with hla compankma. Albert Corn-
stock of Bronxvllle, N.T, aad Robert
Weld of Waterton, Cona, ara definitely missing In northern Albert*.
waa Information received by Bev. J.
C. McKenale, of th* Church of
Mary Immaculate Wedneaday from
Mr. Burna. Tha win read aa followa;
Tbe boya caught by a storm on
Atbabaaoa  lake."
Mr. aod Mra. Burna. wbo left bar*
Sunday following receipt of newa of
the reported tragedy, left Immediately for tbe northland and left
Bdmonton Tuetday for Waterwsya,
som* 800 miles north by rail- Tb*J
Mft Waterwaya by airplane tot Fort
Chlppewyan on Athabasca lake. Wedneaday.
OOLDEN. Colo., Jun* 11—Thm*
Colorado School 01 Mines studsnts,
on* s Canadian, may hav* lost
thtlr Uvea on a canoe trip ln th*
Canadian wilds.
Tbey an Robert Burns ot Nelaon.
B.C, Albert Comstock of Bronxvllle. NT., snd Robert Weld. Water*
ton, Conn. Royal Canadlsn Mounted
polioe notified offlclala of tbt college
that a email canoe bad been found
wracked on the anon of Lak*
Athabaaka. near the Seskatchewen-
Albert* border. An ennlope addnaa-
ed to Robert Buoie waa in the
wreckage.
Joba Burna et Neleon.  father of
Jtobert   Burns, aald  the   bm J
planned to paddle malt era* an a
rlnr mat empties Into Lake Athe-
FREKCHFAI
TO DEMAND
ADJOURNMENT
Succession of Speakers
Plead for Currency
Stabilization
US. GROUP HEARS
NEW INSTRUCTIONS
Meet Behind Cloeed Doors
to Hear Roosevelt's
Message
•nCTOHIA, Jan* II (CP).—It
la reported In legislative drclm tbat
tentative negotlatlena are under
way locking to the establishment
at a ateel Indattry In Brltbh
Colombia, probably on Vancouver bland.
If tba Britiah Columbia gonmment would Implement it* Iron
Bounties aot and pay a bounty on
all Iran produoed. thorn Interested
an prepared to establish an Industry employing from 1000 to 1000
men. It It etated. On from Texada
Uland. la th* Oulf of Oeorgla, would
be  used.
Under the Iron Bountlee aot tbe
gonmment la' allowed to pay a
bounty of S3 a ton on pig Iron
manufactured from Britiah Columbia or*, and 11.50 on pig Iron
manufactured from ere mined outalda the province. Hw limit on
tbe bounty la «1,000,000.
600 Yon Neurath
as He Departs
LONDON. June 11 (AP)--Baron
von Neurath. German fonlgn mlnlater and eight otber memben of
tbe German delegation to tbe world
economlo conference, departed from
London tonight for Berlin amid the
hisses and boo* of British antl
Ml
REGULATED  PRODUCTION
IS    SOLUTION
CALOART. June 11 (CP)—Regulated production alone le tbt solution to agricultural Ills, declared O.
W. Pateraon, Alberta member o. th*
pork hu western whest problsms oommittee.
ln an address hen today.
MAY MERGE C.P.R. AND CM LINES
FROM KAMLOOPS INTO VANCOUVER
NEW WEBMINSTBR, B.C., June
31 <CP).—Merger of th* Ctnadlan
Rational and Canadiui Pacific Mo**
trott Kamloops Into Vancouver la
being aerloualy considered lt vas
Mated today by Tom Raid, MP.,
New Westminster, to a meeting of
tbe bridge oommittee of the board
Of trade.
"It hss been recommended by the
englneen of both railways and is
now being serlcusly considered by
ih* railway commissioners In Ottawa
that the C.N-B. be merged with
the CP.R. .eectlon from Rope to
Vancouver. This would entirely
ellrolnet-B the CNR. from tbe south
ban* of tbe Fraser river and obviate
necessity of the CJfJt. using the
New Westminster bridge. Owing to
the better grade on the C.N.R.,
the C-PJL. would run Its trains over
the C.N.B. from Kamloops to Hops."
Ur. Beld said this was a serious
matter affecting the port of New
Westminster aa It would absolutely
cut off tbe Boyal olty from CN.lt
connections.
Mr. Beld made the statement following discussion of a proposed
new bridge over the Fraasr river,
during wblcb lt had been suggested
that the Canadian National might
be willing to ooitinu* to lesse or
to purchase the preeent bridge and
uae lt solely for railway traffic.
AUSTRALIA IS
TO STRENGTHEN
HER AHl FORCE
Id*? TORK, Jun* 10.—(CP)— A
apeclal despatch to tba Hew Tork
timet today (rom Canberra saya It
It understood that tb* Austrsltsn
gonmment le prepared to spsnd en
additional £1.000.000 nett year In
strengthening tb* air foroe and
mechanised transport equipment.
BOOVU  TO   HCOMB
A    LIBRARIAN
Stanford   cmvnsrrr.   cai.,
Jum ll (AP).—Former Prealdent
Herbert Boow U to beoom* a
librarian.
The Stanford unlnralty library
building Is being remodelled to
provide an office for Mr. Hoover,
trom whloh he will direct the
unique Hoover war library.
Ghostly Wails and Family
Quarrels in Haunted House
Nightly Demoniacal Revels Upset Little Village in Quebec
BTE. JXANNX D'ARC D'ALMA*
VILLI. Que., June 11 (CP)—A
ghostly family quan-el accomoenled
by fierce oaths, tha aound of vicious
blows aed tha tbln walling ot a
terrified child, the whole taking
plaoa in an unoccupied dwelling
each night at 10 mlnutea of midnight, haa glnn thla llttlt rural
Quebec village a bad attack ot
nervee.
Tbs haunted houa* stands on th*
edge of tbe village. Originally built
aa a hotel, lt waa later oonnrted
Into four flat*.
Maurice Martin and Philippe Sam-
eon an tennants in th* two lower
flats. Jean Baptists Laramee 1
bla family occupy an upper flat—
and tha other one la haunted and
BENNETT TO MAKE
A RADIO ADDRESS
OTTAWA, Juna 11 (OP)—Prim*
Minister R. B. Bennett, now beading
th* Canadian delegation at tb*
world eoonomlc oonferenoe, wlll mske
• speclsj radio addreu 00 Bunday,
Jun* IS. tram London.
JOBLESS MARCH
ONLY A RUMOR
HARD TO OR'NEW! OUT
EDMONTON. • June II (OP) —
R.CJ-.P.   offlclala  hem   today   par-
(ConUnned on Pae* Two)
Savage Will Run as
Cowichan Independent
VICTORIA. June 11—Hugn Bang*,
editor ot tb* Cowichan Leader alnoe
I91t, we* nominated- sa an Independent candidal* to contest tbe
Cowlchan-Nswoastle constituency In
th* next provincial election at
matting of over _oo vote;* b*ld at
Duncan.
Samuel Outhrle. Ladyamltb, hat
been dominated by tb* Common-
weelth Cooperative Confederation.
No Liberal candidate haa been
nominated. A Bowser nominating
convention wlll be held n*M Tueaday.      	
FIX ANYOX FOR
. SUMMER JAUNT
VANCOUVER. June 11 (CP)— Hammers an pounding and :lntt*n
an rapping away on tha hull ol
the steemer Anyox at Paclflo Sslvsg*
company, limited, plut at Nortb
Vanoouver, in preparation for a
summer battle wtth tbe lc* ot tb*
wo*t*rn arctic. Th* rtout wooden
ateamet wlll make tbe annual Vancouver-Coronation gulf voyage for
Hudson's Bay company file aummer,
sailing on July I »1* Point Barrow to a point far In the a-etle
beyond the mouth
mine river.
By CLAUDE  A.  JAOOEB
Associated Preu Staff Writer
LONDON, Ju* 11—Prtm* Minister J. Ramaay MacDonald, el-airman ot th* world economic conference,  tonight  waa  nld  to  b*
seeking elimination ot tb* monetary   subluxation   question   which
constitutes   tb*   bon*   of   bitter
contention at tb* parley.
Tbe Pnnoh deviation falUd to-
day to carry out tbraata of demanding adjournment ot tke oonferenoe
until tbe United Statu dollar ahould
be   stablllwd   but   tb*   fullng   of
anxiety over tta* problem -ontlnued
Intenu In oonferenoe quartan.
Meanwhile Mblnd cloeed doom
the American* delegation dlaoutud
new instructions from Pruldent *
Rooeevelt. For th* p*riod 0: an
hour OonKU Bull, tmslatt ot th*
Unlttd Statu delegation, met with
his ooUeeguu to deal with th* new
Instruction*. On adjourning, th*
delegttu nfueed to discuss Mr.
Rooeenlfs means* but satd tbey
would ree-eembl* later tonight to
consider It further.
Quarters wtn clwrly duturbed
by tb* solid lining up ot many
countries opposed to dollar Inata-
blllty and It wa unofficially pointed
out ln oommtnt tbat oa* of tb*
chief point* of *• W*«-dngt*n pro-
|^.£^tTi;n_JS
in the resolution submitted Monday
by Senator Key Itttnun.
(Oeattaat* -an Pag* Tarn,
Nazis Raid tk
Nationalist Party
BERLIN. June It (API—Tb* Bad
reeolutlon entered open a n*w phase
today ln attempting to eliminate Dr. -
Alfred Hugenb**'* HMlonellat fol-
lowers and other units wblcb formerly marched *ld* by aide u
emnradu with tb* Bitter brown-
shirt*.
Natlon-wtd* mid* on Nationalist
part headquarten wuw canted out
and th* Steelhelmet veterans' organisation, another patriotic group,
waa dissolved throughout tbe Rhine-
land.'
Dissolution of tbe uml-mllltarp
Nationalist organltntlon wu decmM
in order to "cteanu tb* organisation
of Martlet and Communist element*.
as weU u bad political leadera. and
preeerve It u a non-polltlcal defence
organlutlon."
itoutly declare, tba argument hu
»w»ktn«d them and put aU tboutht
of aleep out or mind.
Stain crack, footsteps taoend tha
•Ulia. Tba upper ball echoes to
•oft knocking on tbt door of tba
unoccupied tttt. Tba catch tunn
and tba door iwlmga open and
•lams abut. Lo* voices a's hsard
murmuring in ths bars rooms.
A man and woman ralsa tbeir
voices sdarply In inorsaslng anger.
Ths child whimpers and thsn breaks
into sobs and abrlekt.
A euddan oath and tbs thud of s
vicious blow.
Ths woman scrsams In pain. Trembling tenants In tbs other fists bold
thsir breath as ths tsrrtilc bsstlng
goes on. Suddenly all Is qulst.
Ths men folk of tbs tbrss families living In ths houss have bunt
into tha room suddsnly ss Uft qusr-
rel was at Ita height—aad found
nothing.
Persiudsd. tha good Abbe Ousabltn
blessed tbs premises. But tbs noo-
Uirna  quarrelling has contlnusd.
Lest nlgbt stout htartsd cltLnsns
rsmalnsd on watcb—but peace  snd
VAKOOUVIR. Juna ai (AP>—Tba
reported march of 1000 Jobleu from
road camps to ths lower mainland
to Vancouver is Just another rumor,
according to word reoelved at ths
dty ball today.
THE WEATHER
vacant.
Bach night for a month put, all I harmony ln th* spirit family pro
three    tennants    of   tha    building vtllsd all nlgbt.
Temperaturee:
NELSON _	
Victoria	
Vanoounr	
Ksmioopa   _	
Estevan Point -
Prlnoe Rupert ..
Dawaon   —__.—
Seattle	
Portland .
San Prancleoo
Mtn. Max.
. tt        81
Prince (Mart*
Lo* Angelu ._-
Penticton	
Vernon 	
Onnd   Porkt
Kaalo   _	
Oilgary   -.	
Edmonton   	
Swift Currant
Prlnu Albert
Qu'Appelle    ...
Winnipeg    	
tfanelmo
, n
. u
. 50
. *A
. 40
. M
. U
. 10
M
. to
. M
, 45
. 47
. 41
. 44
. 48
.48
. 80
. M
. 4S
. 50
Question Government
on Grain Shipment*
LONDON. Jun* ll/-(OP Oable)—
Th* govemmant wa* questioned In
tbe bouw of oorn mona today a* to
whether It had bean poaalble to
make arrsngemente whereby Canadian wheat oould be ahlpped to
tbe United Kingdom through United
Statu porta and still get th* Brltlth
pnftrmo* ot alx unt* * busbsl. lt
wu explained tbla could be don*
_.provld_d th* requirement ot proof
of the Copper- of direct consignment from Canada
wa* mat.
Today's Odd News Breaks
Most Spend
Nighti in Cemeteries
HIOH POINT, N.C. Jun* 11 (AP)
—Pour blgb school ttudante who
opened a gran ben to tak* plctun*
further scientific study ln a
eebool club wen eaoh untenced to
spend tin nights, from 1:M pan.
to 4 am., alon* In tb* oemetery.
by Judge Ltwi* B Teague.
Memory
Expert Forgets
TOPEKA, Kaa- Jun* It (AP)—
Charlu M. Woodmansu ct New
Tork. memory expert, forgot all
about his engagement to gin •
talk and demonstntlon today befor*
tbe Junior chamber ot oommerca.
Th* young buslneu men bad t»
worry along without any tlpa on
how to nmemUer tblnge.
URGE INDIAN REPORTER TO MAKE
SACRIFICE TO APPEASE GODDESS
_ 41
.54        8<
and    v'.clnlty-
Moose   Jaw
Porecdat,
partly cloudy and moderately rarm
with local showers.
By OAULT MacOOWN
Canadian Preu Cerreapon*nt
POUT OP SPAIN. Trinidad. June
11 (OP).—"Bloodahedl" Tha awful
word passed from mouth to mouth
today in the village of Chafuanaa.
wben Supertad Nalpaul calmly
awaited' tb* dutb vengeance of
UU Blndu goddsu Kail, becauw he
hsd written an article dlsp-eaalng
to Indiana of tba district.
Alarmed at tbt strange actlona
of the villagers, the nporter'a friends
in Port of Spain wen relieved to
'earn that Nalpaul bad manly cut
his finger while sharpening a table
knife, but the natives considered It
Newrtbelae*. the d*fi*nt nporter
hu bun urged to appeen the wrath 1
of tba goddew by werfflclnf • goat
M he wu Instructed to do In let*
ten warning that If he nfueed b*
would develop polaonlng on satur-
day, dl* on Sunday and be burled
on Monday.
The nporter. although hlmwlf aa
Indian,  declared   tl)*  thrwte   war*:
"lujubuncomb*." The Trinidad Ouar..
dlsn.   when   Nalpaul   la  employed,
today declared:     I
"It might be well It Seeperaad
made tbe sacrifice, thus closing as
amaelng chapter of local fanaticism and tuptntltton."
■---■v
 D.S. TENNIS ACES
SWEEP ONWARD
LONDON, JUM 31 (AP)— Tha
atrong American contingent, led by
th* 1883 Wimbledon champions, Bill-
worth Vina* and Mr*. Rilen Will*
Moody ,c*rrl*d on through th* third
round of th* London t*nnl« championship* today with it* rank* almost unbroken.
The only major* casual ties among
the group pf the Onlted State* were
David N. KM, th* formtr columbli unlvenlty etudent- who bowed
to Vine* In tha dtyt outitindlng
-match, tnd Clayton Lot Burwell of
Charlotte, N.C, an, Okford student.
Cliff Sutter, UMtr stoefen. Keith
Gledhlll, W. L. BratM, th* former
Harvard player, iim. Dorothy An-
drua Burke and Virginia Rio* all
negotiated the third round barrier*
auooeatfi*"iy.   •**'
•ratee. almoat unknown recorded
the Big up**t of the tournament bv
eliminating John S, Cliff, ranking
■ngllsh player. Sutt»r deletted W.
A. B.  Collin*,  Scotch   player  ,
EINSTEIN HITS TITLE OP DOCTOB
BRMBBLS. Belgium, Jun* il (AP)
, —The Unlvenlty of  Brussels * today
conferred upon Prof. Albert Einstein
the   tltl*  doctor  honoris  causa   of
; tht ftculty of tclenfiee..
BOWLING GAMES
BEGUN IN TRAIL
TRAIL, 8.C., June 31—Ttm Trlll-
Ttdantc -Ltwn Bowling olub started
off tonight with thalr weekly competition* and;, played wall Into tha
first round.
Reault* of team gam* wnt m
followi:
Johnwn 33. Rae 18, Watton 31
Ltwlt 30, Thompton 31, R. Weir
17, MoOhle 30. Plsaplo 18.
Oamea wlll be continued Thurtdty
night.
NELSON TO PLAY
AT TRAIL SUNDAY
TRAIL, B.C. Jun* 31—Word wa*
reoelved todsy from Jake Rothery,
president of the Nel*on Senior B**e-
ball club, that tha Queen City
squad will, be *hl* to com* to Trtll
Sunday to engage la an exhibition
ball game. Trail'* lineup wlll likely
be atmtlar to the team which pltyed
In Nelton lttt Sundty.
RAIN THREATENS
Wednetdty wa* warm with the
mercury refltterlng I hlgb of •( dt*
greet'. Later In' the afternoon,- however,'* It clouded over and rain
threatened. Th* low temperature was
44 degreeo.
Stench Triable
After Her Meals
from pain* in my rtomach, and
headache*, after eating my meal*.
A friend advised ma ta taka
Burdock Blood Bitten, aad aftar
having dona ao I found a mat
change in me. Now I never hava
any. trouble with my atomach, ud
headaches are a tkin g of the paat.
ar -2rrmS&£$?_2! -EftST ~*--" * ■* «- » ***■ -<r
[
 -"—B_.rU.BP OHBATOM At V01B MBVIITI
tf   R     DE LUXE BARBER SHOP
NEXT        Special Attention to Ladle* and Children
804 BAKEB ST. OPP. IMPERIAL BANK
]
Guide for Travellers
Nelson, B.C., Hotels
"Finest in
tttttttt,
Ma-. to80*
Luncheon
3*4 io 50a?
the Interior"
Dinner
35* and 66*
Phone 787
HUME HOTEL
B.O.
Pte* Bu* Servlc*             aaorsa Benwell, prop.
Rotary »nd Oyro Headquarters   _.',„,
HUMB-T. Olbeon, H. McKanale, i Mrs. W. 0. Jewltt, and aon, TraU;
O. O. Bmee, T. R. Mackenale, Van- Mrs. J. A. Jackaon, Bdmonton; Mr.
couver; a. B. Magi*. W. R. Lawrence, and Mra. B, Stewart, Ka*lo; H. B.
Penticton; o. Blbldy, B. Steedmsn,, Kennedy, Lethbridge; it. P. Thoma*,
M*dloine Bat; ». A. MacDonald, Toronto.
Winnipeg; C. P. Perry. Iteno Mine; I
tt)t>r)s}!ril»&?&S£Z^^
C(5he Savoy
"Where the Gimt It Kin&"
Nelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.
Many Rooms With Private
Baths or Showers.
J. A. KERB, Prop.
>U BAKKR BT. PHONE   18
settrtottwiat
'««*>*««^M!»M*«M«»^W'?»ltmil')tftM*r
dktVOT—Mr. and Mra. Walter* and
I1 m, Mr. and Mra. R. B. Stevens,
B. A. Berwell, Toronto;
Hyde, Nelton; ft. Kyan, 8.
Vault. Mr. and Mrs. P. O. Boots,
^Vancouver; W. Bethel, Mra. Oeorge
Rimer, Mlaa May Elmer, Corbin;
Ate.  end Mr*.  N-  P., Alpooo,   Mlw
Mabel Alpaon, Ml** Baaal* UcWhlr
ter, Ntkusp;. Mr. and Mra. l. J.
Smith,   victoria;   T.   8.   Buchanan,
Portland; «. R. Cupdtle, R. a.
Holmes, Vsnoouver; h. Toreton, Spokane; BUl White, A. R. Hartland
Vancouver,
HUME ORIS WIN
SOFTBALL SHU)
Wtdnttdty Hum* achool glrla bagt
the central achool *oftb*ll taam 0-*
to wl* th* aoftball ahieid vhlch la
oompetad ior yearly.
Tha Hume glrla acored twloe ln
th* lan two inninga to win the
game.
Team* ware:
Central—Irla Johanaon, Diana Wllllama, Helen Wlgg, Dona* Long,
Ruth Chrtillane**, Kay ABd*r*_it,
Peggy Dunnett. Mattle Smltb Pat
Margant M»thew* and Vivian Cot
grov*.
Bum*—BeU Weatherhead.. Jean
Spain, Bet-bare Oarllala, Wen AW-
aon, Naoma Webber. Hani Speir*.
Thomatl* Brodl*. Muriel Smith,Rita
Smltb, Alte* Baar. ,
MORE ABOUT
DETOUR
(Contlnned From Pag* Owl
SAN JOSE. 0*1.—Evldeno* of an
intruder In th* Umecn household.
who mty hav* entered befon David A. Luneon and, hi* wit*, Allan*,
wham he 1* charged with alaylag,
returned home May 38 trom a vlalt
•with frlenda, la eought by Bdward
O. Helnrlch,  Berkeley erlmlnologtit.
whote bulldlngt ware recently moved
to Longbeech, to form a portion of
the new Dominion road camp than.
Soma old framtt an floating, and
part of a kitchen garden planted
by the men can ba seen 'above the
water.
At Nelaon the water waa in contact Wadaaaday afternoon with the
lower of the two rail* of the
oeplanade at Lakedde park.
The Bonner's Bitty reading tt 7
a.m. Wednesday ahowed a drop of
.8 foot ln 34 houn, bringing the
tottl drop from the peek to 1.1
feet.
COLUMBIA  HIOH
Lwt account* respecting tha Columbia river wan that lt was black
wtth drift wood, aad atlll rising
slowly. In tha forenoon it stood
tt 38.8 fttt. or within a tenth of
a foot ot the height at which In
1838 the terry wa* laid up and tnfflc diverted by way of ttr Mtlton-
Htlwty   highway.
The lay-up that year la aald, how-
aver, to have been mon on account
ot tha drift wood t. in on account
of Inability to operate, and Unless
th* river make* around 80 teet,
the terry aervlee will probably not
be Interrupted, The ferry la now
being tied up at night on the Robton side, which necessitates the
ferryman aleeptn. aboard, this
•voiding the danger ot getting entangled with timber lama, tha drift
wood following the Caatlegar bank.
MEN OF BECKITT
WIN HORSESHOES
TRAIL, "B.C, Jun* 31—In * competition Wedneaday night of horseshoe tossing, th* team ot H. T,
Backltt loat to that of P. O'Neill
163-188. Tbe game* wm piiyed oft
ln foureome group*, th* flnt two
being of Beckltt's team, and resulted   as   follow*:
Backltt, Hott. 38; P. O'Nell. Bremner, 80; Balfour, W. Long, 33, D.
Con Jonea, W. MoQuarrle, 80; Bennett, 3. Ward, 80, Groves, skinner,
48; L. VinLondensle, C. Luyparet,
43, s. Mirtln. X. Jory. SO.
Quoin gamee wlll oontlnue Thuraday night.
Miss Youla MacKay
Wed in Belling ham
Of much Interest lt th* announcement mad* In Vanoouver by Mn.
Jean Ma-Kay, 1418 Wut Fortieth
avenue, who teU* of tho marriage
ct her daughter, Youla, to Lawrenoe
Whelm, eldeat aon ot Mr. tnd Mn.
c. L. Wbtltn, tbt wadding taking
place at Belllngham.
Mia Youla MaoKay tttended
high tcbool In Neleon lttt yetr,
while vUltlng btr ftther, J. Ivtn
MacKay.
team
New Grand Hotel
r.   L.   KAPAE,   Prop.
-    weekly and Monthly Rata*
Hot and coM.Water
•Ingle 80o np     Double Jl-50 up
IMW tie ■ Month and Op
Occidental Hotel
IM Vernon St. Pbone MIL
H.  WASSICK
Fifty   Roomi  of  Solid  Comfort
Headquarten for Loggen
aod Miners
Madden Hotel
A' Welcome Awaits You
JA8.  I. MADDEN
Completely   Remodelled
Hot  and  Cold  Water
In  the U1ABT of  tba City
QUEEN'S HOTEL
A.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.
Room* fram 88c fo 81.80 Monthly
MO and up.
Steam heated and hot and oold
water In  every  room
80S Baker St. Phone lttl
TRAIL, B; *£.
*e.e.eee.e»e»e#eea»ee>e.*
|   MEW CROWN  :
: POINT HOTEL ♦
Buropean Plan •»
t HEADQUARItBS' t
J*  Commercial and Tourist Tnde a
*                Sample Rooma
2          COMMERCIAL   RATBS .
Wll hom   Bath    - IIM I
With Batb __ 82-00 and I'M.
TRAIL, B. C.
"A Palace
in the Kootenays"
........................
NELSON
DAILY NEWS
Classified
Ads Produce
Results.'
♦
I    Phone 143 or 144
TRANSPORTATION — Freight and Passenger
GREYHOUND
LINES
Anrtoniicc
! Spokane Bui
VIA   TRAIL   Commends*
MONDAY,  JUNE   1Mb
■tnt leivet* dtlly ewept  Sunday
at 10:00 a.m.
NEW   REDUCED   RATER
NEL80N-TRAIL
FREIGHT
Cartful Handling'
Efficient Service
Low Ratea
•*-   -tat* aa carry your
TRAIL-NELSON   FBEI0HI
Ntlton   -   PHONES —  Trail
77*78      (Bud-vant)        2
BLUE LINE
FREIGHT
Hemorrhoids]
tl       OH "PILBS* <i
art promptly and thoroughly (I
relieved hy the uie af
D..CUASIS
OllwflwIFIa-l
■THE NBLSpN  BAfLT  NEWS,  NEUON, B.O. —  THURSDAY   MORNING,  TONE* M.  ItM
LATE NEWS FLASHES
Loe AWJBLIS—H-rxiet Jordan,
manager of Ang*lus Temple, reports
Almee Semple McPherson-Hutton la
IU in parla.
ST- PAUL. — Informttlon revttlt
1100,000 wtt paid to kldnippere
tor relent ot WUllam Hamm Jr.
Search,tor thtm continuee.
OHBBTELLO. — Dtfflcultlet at
landing euppllea holda up departure
of Italian pltnet to expeeltlon In
Chlctgo.
WINNIPEG-, araaehoppert threaten
80.000 acres ln aouth-weat Manitoba.
<T '
took hla flntl workout for hli try
tt limy Ctnaontri't lightweight
Utla Friday night, in teem, th*
ebampion want through light ax-
ereleat todty and decltrad hlmatlt
ready.
NBW TOW—Tin houn attar it
reoelved th* can,* tha federal oourt
Jury trying Chart-* B. MltcheU on
chtrget of evading 8880,000 Income
Mx, retired tonight without having
reached an agnemtnt.
MOHTRBAL—A nmtlng of Uw
bondho'.dert protective committee of
Prloe Bro*. wUl b* held hen neit
weak to discuss various propsuis
to tak* over tbe company* proptrty tnd M oontldtr plant ot their
own.
OALOART—A ooroner't Jury ben
nturned tb* vndlct th*t lnipector
Joetbh Oarruthan waa fatally
wounded by a bullet from a gun
In tb* handa ot a peraon unknown.
Loughran Rallies to Stage Brilliant
Punching Spree and Wallop Steve Hamas
CtOT FOR C. N. R.
CLERICAL MEN
M0NTRBAL.»_une »!.—(OP)-Clar*
loal tnd other employ*** In th*
■arne clua on tha Canadian National railway* from Cottt to com.
tie* t reduction of pay Jul? 1 ot
10 per cent trom tbeir batlc ratea,
making a total ot SO per otnt within the put two yeirf, offlctn
of the company tald here today.
Fifteen thousand employeea ire affected.
MORE ABOUT
AIRMEN
(Continued -'rom Pag* One)
a reconditioned plane at tn altitude
of 3000 feet. Wtth blm were Brook*
tnd Forsyth, mechtnics of tha
Brooks   Alrwayt  ben.
BURIES  INTO LAKE
In the middle of thetr tests, for
some unknown naaon, tht pltne
dropped ln a spin and plunged Into
a say of the lake juit north at
the air baae. Tha machine * plunged through about 10 teet ot wattr
and wat burled ln the bottom of
tbe  lake.
Tha bodlet of Broatch and Forsyth were recovered shortly etter
the ortth but tht lakt bottom wtt
still btlng dragged lite tonight for
the body of Brooke, ton of R. D.
Brooks, president of the alrwayt
here. Forsyth's body was ectroely
recognizable, Broatch'* head waa
badly emashad. ,'
R. D. Brooke left hen tonight aa
aoon a* newa of the cruh arrived.
Mn. Brook*, mother dt the ma.
chanlc ln the ill-fated pltne, lt living In Toronto with her thre*
daughters tnd two other tons.
SON   SEES  DISASTER
A fourth ton, Ren Brooks, mtn*
Iger of th* Brook*. Alrwaya, witnessed the disaster from the air
bsse.
Shortly alter tb* accident a Brook*
Airway* plane »mved here trom the
baae to procure grappling Iron* and
Immediately returned to Emma Lake.
Royal Canadian Mounted police at
once aet out for the scene ot tha
tragedy.
With a big transport plant, whlcb
be operated from the tithing ground!
of Reindeer Like to Prince Albert
and, The Ph, Broatch earned for
hlmaelf the the name of "Flying
Fisherman" thru year* ago. Ha
carried tona of flah to tbe railhead polnte win lt waa ruahad
to Canadian and United state* cltlet.
Broatch had more thin t decide
of flying experience In nearly every
part of Canada. He atarted hit career Wltb Laurentlde Airways at
Orand Mere. Qua., and later waa
employed by Dominion Sxplorem ln
the Hudaon Bty dlitrlct tad at
Stoney Rapid*, saak.
Begins Sharpshootlng  when
Hi Appears All in; Gets
Decision
By EDWARD 3. NEIL
Auotlited Prtn Spana Writer
YANKS! STADIUM. NSW YORK,
June 91 (AP) — Blood itretmlng
from cuta over both tytt, every
bit of hit marvtloua ring tchniqu*
•tratnad to tb* utmost to fend off
a punch bluing youth. Tommy
Loughren, tb* Impnulbl* veteran
trom Philadelphia, itaged mothtr
of hla famoua oomt-hack* tonlgbt
to tvtn bis aeon with slugging
st*v*   if*,*ri*tv
Wltb a crowd of 10,000 cheering
hla ooma-badk In the final round*,
Loughran atabbed bla way to a 10-
round decision, the teoond ha hu
tcond ln nil tour engagement** with
th* formtr football itar trom Penn
ttttt.
Loughran gavt a maaterful die-
play of boxing UUU, ring general-
ablp and ihirpebootlhg punching,
Oolng Into tha ninth round, hla
left eye Ud wu out tnd tban ww
t daep eut ovw bis right aye. Ha
eeemed Und. about to go.
But apparently he wu Juat beginning to tight. He called on new
apeed In th* ninth and tenth,
Jabbed Hunts' head back oa hla
ehoulden, tnd ripped it him with
both handa, fighting Inatead ot boxing. Tim*, ind tgtln ba Nt tba
youugiter back wltb dean Delta to
tb* chin that won blm the lut two
roundt by the claamt margin* ot
-tha fight, tnd with tbtm tbt de-
clilon.
MORE ABOUT
ROBERT BURKS
(Contlnacd rrom Pag* Ona)
tltlly confirmed tha nport three
men apparently han bttn drowned
In Lake Atbibaaka. word of tht
tragedy reached B.c MP from Dr.
Lewla of Fort Chlppewyan. wblob
le on Lake Athtbuka and whlcb
hu no communication facilities.
Tbe measag* ww ttken by plana to
McMurray and telegraphed to Bdmonton.
Otber details of tha tragedy are
not known Dut R.CMJ. man in
tha ana ban betn ordered to In-
vettlgtte.
Lake Atbabukt, • deep-water Mm,
1. •ppioxlmately ne mllu long with
80 or 80 mil** ot It* length In Alberta aad th* reat In Saekttchewan.
Airplane* operated by Canadian Alrwaya, limited, m*ke ocaulonal trip*
over th* length of th* lata.
Tha lake la ia tha northern portion ot Alberta and Saakateltewan,
being doea to the Northwut Terr!-
torlea border.
___
ROOTS THAT GO  DEEP
Strength comai to a Irm by steady growth
that drives ltt roots deeper aach yaar. Tho
history of th* Royal Bank, avar line* Its
establishment sixty-four yean ago, has
btan ona of loundly conservative progreu,
itt strength Ii deep-rooted in experience.
THE
ROYAL    BANK
OF-  CANA DA
Community Chest
TRAIL, 8. a. June 31.—Balance
of revenue over expenditure imount-
lng to 8568.31 wu shown by tbt
Community Chut tor 1888-33 by H.
P. Ktngwtll, treuurtr In hi* nport.
"It mutt be vary gratifying to
you." wu tbe commtnt ot O. w.
OuUltume. honorary auditor, refer-
Ing to tbe financial ttttemtnt.
In a summary of receipt* and ax*
pendt-un* over th* flv* y**n 1838-
-» to 1081-88. recelpte wan glvan
u 818.-0888 tnd disbursements u
818,388.88. Although dubunemente
tor tht put yttr wan heavttr tban
In any previous yetr, nettpte w
tlto greater tnd sufficient to matt
th* demand*
Clothing expenditure tor tbe tint
yetr wu 1177.48. and thl* Item lnereued each year until tbe 1833-88
total waa al.3S9.73_ It wu surmised
tblt wu due to cttlatni being kbit
to kup tbt Community Cheat weU
supplied with warn clothu for the
flrtt yun ot operation, and to being untblt to mtkt such donttloni
Utterly. It therefore became necessary to purchut more tnd mart
wttrlng apparel.
Considerable increase wu noted
In fu*l expenditure, also, for 183J-83
btlng 8480 compared with 8158 for
the lower year af 1893*80.
RIVER AT TRAIL
OVER 39 FEET
TRAU. B.C. Juna 31.—A rite at
-7 loot In tbs Columbia rlv»r
not-d Wadaaaday night wu lan
than during tha prevloua day by
about ona Inch. Height of the river
wu 80.06 feet u compared to 88.08
tut tt tbe ttmt Umt lut yetr.
Wtter It now seeping into tbt
nuamantt of some ef tbe buiMlngi
on tht wait ude of Bay avenue.
but no dtmtga hu bun dona.
CENTRAL BOYS WIN
SOFTBALL SHIELD
Oentral boys defuted the Hum
softball teant 13*13 at tba Hume
grounds Wedneaday to win tbe
public icbool softball shield. Thle
shield It competed for yearly, by tht
two public lohOoli.
132 FAMILIES ON
H-EL1EFJN TRAIL
Cost Is $4.57 Ptr Individual;
Social Service Cost* High
TRAIL, B. C, Juna Si,—TraU had
tn ivtrtgt ot 183 ftmlllu co relief far tba tint tit* montba of thla
year, and tbe avert_o monthly cqet
par bead to tha olty of each individual hu been Juit oyer 14.37.
Tottl expenditures on relltf fcr the
fire monthi bu bean 030.iai.84.
ot whleh tht provincial and federal
governmint* contributed 18,713.88.
The city upended glo.448.9d.
Is idditlon to tbe 'burden of n-
lltt tbt Mty hu bad to 'contribute
to wcial nrvlct cottt. thut Including TrtnquUle lehetotlum, mental
hospitals tnd mothen'. -penalon*
Pour patltntt tt T_inqulllt cott the
dty 8000 for January tnd Ftbruiry, tbl Mtreb tnd April aooounta
not htvlng bun received u yet.
The dty hu bean billed tar a por-
Uon of Ute aum* paid to 18 under
tbe mothers* -penalona regulations,
tbls coat from January to April
amounting to 11354.84.
HOME RUN
STANDING
Bome runt yeatarday—Oehrlg, Lu-
aerl. Yankees: shet, Brownt; Alexander, Cookt, Red Box; Oahrlnger.
Tigers; p. waner, Plratu; O'Doul,
Olants; Whitney. Braves: one etch.
Tbe letder*—Oehrlg, Ytnkeei, 17;
Pou, Athlttlci, II; Rutb. Yankees.
16; Klein. Phllllu 13; Berger,
Bravu, 13; LaaaarL Yankee*, 13.
League totala—Amerloan, 317; National 181; total 468.
BOWL IN THREE
GREEN EVENTS
Two men'a gamu, a ladlu' gam*
and a mixed gam* were bowled on
the Neleon Lawn Bowling taiocla-
Uon'a gnep* on th* CPJt. flats
Wedneeday evening. In th* men's
game J. Draper*! rlnk but thtt of
I. T. Braka't 31-7 and P. Coulttr'a
ring dtfeittd J, P. Morgtn'i rlnk
10-8. Tht ladlu' game went to Mn.
Wheeler'a bowlers who defeated a
rink skipped by Mn. A. Bllott 13-8.
C. Romano's bowlera took t clou
18-14 win over tha H. Allen rlnk.
WHO WAS SUCKER
TRAILITE OR FISH?
TRAIL, B.C., June JI.—Pit-as in
the Columbia rlv*r hav* been having
a fine time thla pan week or to.
With • th* rlter ftawing pan the
back doon of a number of houses,
oertaln residents htve bun gtner-
cualy feeding crumb* to th* flah.
At tba "MoCIarmit Manor" 0. A.
Mlttun wu to generous thit he f*d
th* flthu nearly all th* bread In
the houae.
Then to get even be decided to
go a-flahlng. He wu *ucoe*ifui,
ltndlng t beautiful three-pounder
that ht thought would provide a
fine breakfait. But hli htrd-httrted
oompilon put him right—It wu a
•quaw-flah
MORE ABOUT
CONFERENCE
(Continued From Ptgt One)
Oeorget Bennett, letder of the
Prench repreuntaUon In th* outstanding addreu of today jttor* t
aub-oommlttu od th* monetary oom-
mluton, uked: "How can capital
Ilow and ooafldenoe be tutored tt a
oountry wltb aound flnincw ind t
balanced budget can be hard hit be-
cauu near or distant countrlu hire
embarked on perUoua courrn ot in-
tlttlon or currency devaluation!"
Mtny delegttu Interpreted his remark* u an appul to ind doUar
depreciation before Franc* ihould
be foroed off the gold itandard.
A aucouelon of speakers pleaded
for monetary atabUlaaUon u ctttn-
tltl to reiteration ot confldtnce. including repreientativei of Italy,
Swltaerland, Poland, Norway,' Oar*
many, Rumania and JugoalavU.
The dl*cu*alon arou during conalderatlon of a Britiah resolution
cftUlng for euy money and cheap
credit pollclu.
The ooneervative gold atandard
countrlu doubted the feulbUIty ot
tht program tnd warned ol ltt pot*
•lbl* danger*.
East Trail Men
TRAIL, B.C.. Jun* 31—Tb* But
Trail team of the TraU Borusho*
and Quoit* dub detested the ctty
taam at a game ot quoit* tonltht,
th* soon being 43-38. The tint of a
three-gtmt series wu won by the
tut Trail aquad 31-13 and ono
men gtmt la to be played to dedd.
tfce wlnnen. The final dath wlll
take pltot it the grounds on Otdar
avenue on June St.
Tbe But Treu team ottered a
chilling! to toy out-of-town olub,
no mtltdr where they ire locited,
provided home-and-home gtmet an
played.
Tbe boya are lining up a handicap
competition with an entranc tea *nd
ao far th* foUowlng namu htv*
bun entered: Herd, UVlngitone,
Toung, Cummlngt, Crulektbtoki,
Mtlrou, MoOovem, Jonu, Perguion,
Woodi. Long and Cady.
Social Events
of Trail City
TRAIL, B. C, June 31.—Dominic
Wllmei md hit ton and daughter-
ln-law, Mr, and Mre. David Wllmu
of Inverneta. Mont., were guutt
of N. WUmu, Plna avenue, lut
week. Mr. WUmu accompanied hla
brother and nephew and nieoe to
Northport Saturday, when tbey left
tor home.
• •   •
Oordon McCallum haa bun vltltlng in Onnd rorki for the put
tew dtyt.
• •   •
O. McParlon and daughter ot
Orand Porki ware In Trail Sunday.
• •   •
Arthur caldlcott hat nturntd
homt from the Unlvenlty of Brltlth
Columblt to ipend tba summer with
hit ptnntt. Mr. and Mre. H. C.
Caldlcott, Rlveralde avenue,
let
Mr. and Mrs W. Bauohand hav*
u thtlr gutttt tht latter* mothtr,
Mn. a. O Wllaon and alater. Mr*
Reginald Pendlck ot St. Jobn, New
Brunawick. They were joined at
Crenbrook by another Hilar, Mlu
M. J. Wllioo, and from there took
the motor trip to Banff and Lake
Louise, returning by Calgary to
Treu.
ess
Trail News of the Day
TRAIL    B0DSB8    AJTO    LOTB-Ut.
aurenca. Notary  J. a Andenofc.
'   (7183)
CONVENT GIRLS
WIN SOFTBALL
In a recant softball game played
it tba Central tchool. the Convent
glrli but tbe Central tchool nine,
13-8. ^
The Convent girls tcond tire run*
ln th* tint Inning to uk* * big
lead, added two ln the ucond end
three In the fourth and sixth innings-
Vivian Coagrave wu a run getter
for tbe leaden, tooting three time*
and reaching third one*. Muy Mao-.
Dougall, Betty Klrkpatrlck and Lou-
_» OoUetU *oot*d tnn* oaeh tor
tbe Convent. Roar Kunta got on
beeu every Ume, eoorlng one run
and being left on third twice tnd
on teoond onu.
THISTLES TO MEET
TRAIL JUNIOR REPS
TRAIL. B.C, June 31—Tbe Tbu-
tlu, senior city loccar league turn
wlU cluh tomorrow night wllh a
reprauntauve taam ot th* lunlor
league. Judging nam tbe gtme played by tba Junlon Monday night,
the young-ton in going to do t lot
ot running around tbe unlor iquad.
Tbe lut Ume tbe junlon met a
senior squad tha play and scon
wan both pretty cloae,
SHIPMENT OF TIN
PLATES IS COMING
MONTRBAL. Jun* 11 (CPI—Al a
reault of the imperial economic con-
lereno* beld ln Ottawa lut rear,
ona million boxee of Un platu arc
coming to Canada from Great Britain tn a alngle order. Blr William
Firth, repreeentttlve of • London
tin plate manufacturing firm, stated
here today.
WILLIAM n. BrUtNOS DIES
VAKOOtnWR, June Jl—(CP)-
Wlllltm H. BlUlnga, 68, w*ll-known
iniurtnct mtn tnd resident of Vancouver 86 yean, la dead hlra.
Mr. Billing! wu t nttlve of Ontario.
TRAILITES SPEAR
LOGSJPOR WOOD
Driftwood Plentiful But the
Work Is Htrd
TRAIL, B.C., June 31—The old
cue Of lt being more fun tq look on
than to be t participant hu arisen f
tgtln tt the Columblt river sinew
high wtter hu brought do-vn the 3
utmlagly Infinite supply of drift.
wood.
Frequently a group of people ore a
•un standlni on th* <hor* of tbe
river at the etreftt end* watching j.
lost  oarsman  rowing   upttream   by   i
way ot tbe  btck eddies. On ipot-   '
ting a long coming down the river
he  wiu  row out in mid-stream to !«.
mut  lt  tnd there tie  the loi  to S
hu bott. Tben tb* work itaiw.'H* ■
pull* for the shore but it th* um*  .
time la travelling down stream at a I
rapid ipeed.  He eventutUy retciiet
tbe   shoreline   and   then,   with   hit  I
captive,  manipulates  In  the eodlu   *
clou to. th* shore to land the log. *$
Than In a few mlnutu  lis  li off i
•fter «notber (tick ot firewood.
Ot course there tre mo o for- •
tun»t* neldent* ot Trail »ho stand f
on their 'back verandahs, with a -
long pole and Ju*t guide the log* |
th*t get Into the eddies ln their I
back yard, onto shore, which tbout I
now, I* thtlr front yard.
DIAMOND AGAIN
HEADS TRAIL CHEST-.
TRAIL, B.O., June 31.—R. w.
Diamond, prealdent of the TraU
oommunlty chest, and hla enure
elite of officers were reelected to
•erve for 1038-34 at th* annual
meeting of the organlxation. Otber
offlcen elected ware: J. R. Andereon, vlce-pruJdant; H. P. KlngwaU,
treuurer; Mlsa C. P**rl Murray,,
eeeretary; ud Mn. C. W. Oullltuau,
J. R. Andereon, C. A. Newman, Rev.
W. F. price, W. F. Doubt, Mn. M.
L. Barnu and A. Major, executive.
fnittke,
Crenuine
'Vaseline' Petroleum Jelly is a
standard product tbe world over
—pure, safe, sanitary. Por first
aid, nursery and a faundraAnher
nothing can take t^^H
of it. Soothing and healing.
Aa ideal emollient. Tasteless,
may be taken internally. It is refined by a special process of the
Chesebrough Manufacturing
Company. For your own protection insist upon the genuine.
lOOK FOR THI TtADIMASK
VAIUINI WHIN VOU  BUT.
If yob don't see it yon ara not
getting the genuine product of
Chesebrough Mfg. Co., Cons'd.,
J J20 Chabot Avenue, Montreal;
Ivi
I lime's
I roekt and
OOtWMT
FOUR SPECIALS-Thurs., Fri. and Sat
Ready-to-Wear
Shoes—Hosiery
Medical Arts Building       I
ar        I
ry        I
Naturalized Trailites
to Get Certificates
TRAIL, B.C.. June 31—About 13
cluasu-of Tnll wlU be presented
wltb Canadian cltlaan cartllioate*
by tht Arthur Chapman * ot tha
I.O.DR. Friday evening The remit-
oatai are preeented following receipt
ot naturelnetlon paper* tram th*
rovtrnmint
Preeenttllbn will b* m»d* by Mr*.
F. B. DMktMl, regent of the chwter,
•nd by Mr*  Jamw Ooupland,
MISS D. HOPE IS
ESSAY WINNER
TRAIL, B.C.. Jun* 11—Mm Dorothy Hopt, gride VIII pupil of th*
Trtu Centrei aohool, woa tint prlw
for in tatty on "Oanada Baoooee
Britiah." The prlae waa donated by
A. O. Camtron and I* enUtled "The
Letteri of Oentral Wolf*." Tht
essay dealt largely with Wolfi%
part In the Brltlih right igiinit
the French for  Canada.
Wash Crepe Dresses
I
la Whit* and Pattel Shade*. Slaes 14
to  44   	
$1.95 I
New lend Crepe Dresses
$4.95
In   aM   tb*   buret   shades.   Including
Wbllt.   Specially priced at 	
Weld-rest Chiffon Hosiery
Fall Moments, cradle foot.    A  complete i
selection ef shade*, sites 814 to 18	
SHOES
II ... that an different.
Styles that an nsw and
fit.
See Our Windows for White Footwear.
ORDERS SENT C. O. D. APPROVAL
I   MAIL OR]
PPR0VAL 1
 UT KAMLOOPS
TROUT TOTALS
Poods Penask Mean Only
500,000 Eggs This
District,
A* a result of tba high water
Mm high inter at Penask Uke In
Merritt    dlatrlct—thla   district
receive only 600.000  iCamlooofl
it  etsu.   instead   of   the   000,000
ited for  here.  II.  C. Crawford,
.ten dent    ot    Dominion    fish
tries ln this district, has been
ItCu
hlgb water came over the
pena at the Penask lake hatch-
and liberated most of the
■pawners, with the result
it the egg collection will probably
ba over Bo per oent of what
been planned.
lieu of operating the Oerrard
ery thli year, the department
sherles agreed to send in eyed
from other sources, and the
k   hatchery   waa   to   provide
||j.k.htng   wlll   be   done   at   tbe i
into eying station, and will start'
, t couple of weeks.    Mr. Craw-
rd   has   not   yet   been   Instructed
| to   tbe   man   to   be   put   ln
large then.
Advices from Oerrard ere that
HB« has been a good run of spawn's fish, with the presumption that
Aural spawning has been at least
•rage at that point. There aro
iTlous parte of Kootenay lake, par-
larly oreek mouths, whero the
fish are known to spawn.
O   SIX-MILE   PENS
fiigh water—the looal high water
time—has also cut down the
tain trout egg collection,
h began at Six-Mile lakes and
early in June, about the
toe that the Cottonwood collection
H finished.
teat week'a flood water submerged
w pens, and liberated tbe spawn-
It trout that A. G. Bush was
Epplng. Tba water la now down
nln, and the odllectlon will.pro-
Ubly wind up Thursday, but in-
Bad of Six-Mile providing 300,000
ns, as planned, tbe collection
pi   run  around   160,000.
Coombs Second
Deputy on Kaslo's
lire Department
KA.5LO, B. O.. June ai.—Members
of the Kaalo Volunteer piro Brigade
held their meeting wtth Ohlef E.
K. Latham presiding. WUllam Timma
and Floyd * Oarrett were nominated
for membership to 'be voted upon
at Uio next meetihg. A, W. Anderson
resigned as seoond deputy owing
to hla leaving town, and A. Coombs
wee promoted from third to seoond
deputy and C. J. White was made
third deputy. There waa a good attendance, nearly every member
answering  to roll  oaU.
vmjum nutt kews, neuom. %a **. thumdat nobbing. nwB/n, w«
WHAT BO YOU THINK?
Proficient, in Study and Sport
'Rationalist" Answers
"?0 Canal Street"
To th* Alitor.
Sir—I am -eony  to  troubla  jou
again nut aftar reading ":,  Canal
8-V   rambling   etfuikm   In   your _________________________________________________
lasts, of June 13. lu _"._lch lie '. si*a I *■*"*»» *nd  Hold*  to  be  true
-._..      ' _<M___»    _,.~i.   ._-._■    __.._.    ah.    __■_.<
tto. «plrit of agmostvntm u th*
wt k tnm Ua ntt. An them
tb* ward* of a true tgnottlc as
quoted from bit laat letter' "I
welglied lallflon in tba balanw and
found It wanting."
To weigh anything mentally one.
.muat haw etsarfwhere- In.bl* mind
1 * substratum of fact* that ha be.
^^^^^^^^^^_
~r
up ao much apaoe to sty ao Uttlt;
Tea Committee Is
Named for Fair
CRAWFORD BAT, B. C„ Juxp 31
-VThe monthly meeting of tbe Womens' Institute wae held at the
home of Mrs. Wateon on Saturday.
It waa well attended, aeveral members coming from Orsy Creek.
Mre. Wateon, president, gave the
motto for the month "Think thoughtfully of your thoughts." A letter
of thanks for a donation of 15
was read from the Queen Alexandra Solarium, Vanoouver laiand.
Mrs. Bourne, Mrs. McDonald, Mn.
O. McOregor were appointed to attend   to  the   tea  at   the   fall   fair.
Mrs. Wateon gsve an addrees on
•Sweet Pickles", which waa followed
hy a hunt In tbe garden for 13
tlna of products wblch had been
carefully hidden by Mrs. Wateon,
the successful hunters keeping their
find. A, dainty tea was eerved by
Mrs. Wateon and- Mlss Walker.
Tbe Oray Creek members presented til* president with a beautiful
bouquet of flowers for her birthday
anniversary.
[tthe figuree of the dairy division,
Inartment of agriculture, show the
Uted butter graded for March. 1883,
na 13,910 tons, and the unsslted
Bt tons, a total of 13.33a tons,
ipared with 10,037 tons for March
1. an lncreaae of 3306 tons, or
ttJ3 per cent.
SOUTH SLOCAN
DEFEATS KASLO
ONE-NIL, SOCCER
SOUTH SLOCAN, B. C, June 31—
The Kaslo football team played a
match with the South Slocan team
on the home ground on Tuesday
when the latter won by one goal.
The teams were Tery evenly matched, Colonel Jobn Murray soored the
goal for the home team, A. Wallach of Nelson was the referee.
Thero was a large crowd of spectators.
The South Slocan baaeball team
motored to Perry's Siding on Sunday whero they played a match,
the score being 10-0 ln favor of
Perry's Siding.
FELL DOWN IN THE STREET
He Dreaded Going Oot
I  feel   I  muat  tak*  olf  my  hat
.to hint ln one  respect.
I think he hu «hown ua—unwittingly no doubt—in tb* fourth
and, fifth paragraph* of hi* lut
letter where the Id** of *n all
powerful creation oame Irom; that
it originated ln th* mind ot th*
•nel*nt tevtft.
It ts amusing to not* ho* your
correspondent arrofata* to himself
all tha power* of thinking worth
po*****lng.
Anyone wbo dq«* not think or
believe u b* do**—tb* umt appllea
lo "Believer"—1* *lmply a tool. And
be ttlk* of conceit. Il hi* arrogant
attitude, and the fact that he presumes to know the unknowable 1*
not conoelt, then I don't know the
meaning of tbe word.
Again and. again he advltes mt to
think. Be would greatly benefit lf
he would apply that process to
himself. H* ask*, "Why is on* born
disused tnd another whole?" A
wlw dl*pe_-k*t)on of providence I
suppow. Aooordlng to your cgrret-
pondent's Idu, Sir Arthur Keith,
the cel«_n»_Kl scientist snd anatomist la only a tool, u alao ara 9,
3. Gould, the educationist, professor
Lukl, Jowph McCabe, th*. pro-.
line writer and lecturer, who wa*
at one time the Very Reverent
rather Anthony. Th* Uta 3. U.
Rob*rt*on and th* lata Vlcount
Morley come under the same heading
to mention only a tew ot the R.
9.  A.  number*,  paat  and  prewnt.
"90 canal Bt." tdvlws m* "To
hold no trafflo with unknown
ton**." Well, well, lent tbat rlohf
Bow eny man oould hold, traffic
with foroe* unknown to him I*
beyond m*. And thl* 1* clear thinking.
Again, ha •dvlw* m* to proeur*
book* on the—-religion. I euppdee—
subject. I think I oould reoommend hlm to som* publication* tbat
would Improve hla mind lt properly
digested.
Coming to the end of hi* letter
I am taken aback at hla cordial
Impttftnoe ln tuggestlng that I
'"hate them wbo dlagraoe with (me)
you". I hat* no m»n.
I sugfwt that ninety-nine .out
of every hundred Ohrtstltnt. and
all other rellg-onltte, accept their
religion without going through the
proceu of thinking. Thay tlmply accept ft beoauw thalr people before them were of that penuaalon.
Bad ">0 Canal St'*." or "B*tl*W*"
people heen Mohammedan* or Bud-
hlsts   they,   th*   above   mentioned,
other word* th* mau wbo mentally
weigh* muat flrat ttSume the possibility at knowing ud further
muit presume thkt he hlmwlf doe*
know *omethlng about th* lln* of
argument by which agnostic* reuon
a true knowledge of Ood out of
existence. Tb* ume line of reaaonlng would render visionary and 11-
luaory our knowledge ot all m*tartai
thing*. It I* an unt-uabje poaitlon
becauw all our thinking la baaed on
the awumptlon that wa do know
something; all mental effort la
bawd on the usumptlon that know
ledge   la  resl.
Still another quotation to ahow
that "Rationalist" 1* not a oon-
alstent agnostic. Be uya: "All ths
philosophy, all the law, all the L.
L. Bs In the world, will not make
right  wrong, nor wrong right."
Tbew are not the words of an as-
nostlc. They are Um worda of a firm
believer tn principle* ot right .and
Wrong, more enduring tban the
evorligtlng hllla, more profound
than th* mighty. d*«p, more listing
than tlm*; prhuipKa that existed
ere the morning stars ung-together
and that shall retain tbeir power
when the huven* sh*U He g*tb*red
is a aoroll. Tba man who firmly
believes In the unchingeabtllty ot
right *. and wrong muat Inevitably
think ot aom* Power behind thew
principle* If he think* long enough
and, eoniUUntly enough be will with
the ear of reuon »t last hear a
still *mall voloe uylng: "I am the
Lord: 1 change'not."
—n— -i sfsi att
Nelaon, B..C. June 10, 1B33.
Economic Methods
Useless in Solving
Economical Problems
uoimn
To- tbe Bditor:
Sir—we are aaked by the preu
and public to pray for the membeia
of thl* con_eren6e, to give them
strength snd wisdom for solving
th* world's greatest economic (__*-
prewlon. For my part, I prater
action Inatead ot prayer- But If
we llnd ourselves unable to make
proper uw ot oor energy, without
praying—tben I uy,'"By all meana
prayl-
To solve tba world'a eoonomlc
problem by eoonomlc methods la
Juat at Insane u to Imagine th»t
we oan put-on fleeh by etarvlng
ourwlvu. By such prooesw* we only
buck the law* of nature.
Our    ruler*    and    statesmen    are
____________ .milling   around   Inalde   the   vlcloua
would have bun supporters * end circle constructed from our pre*-*
defenders of either of thow religion* I,__,   monetary , *y*t*m.   Th*y   han
A MARTYR
TO  IHEUMATISM
K*ard__ lurveTafcn woe time br thl*
pan's rheumatism to hare become so
Bor. He does noi uy anything
_BO__t that. But he does make it
kaa that it needed only four or five
lonth* of Knuchen to make him
met all about the pain he onoe
Onered.
.Ms Is twlm he write* <—* I have often
tea Knuchen announcement* in the
•pen, and I think it ia only fair that
atoo ahould (ire a small teetimony.
hsve used Kruschen Salt* for over
wo yun.   Bribre I started to rue it,
WM troubled with rbeumstttm very
•diy. chiefly in ray leg*.   I had it so
____l used to tall down in the itreet.
this laat 18 or SO months I bave
teit anything at all;   in fact,
fojgntgen it altogether, whereu
I aaad to dread going out
en   la   non   valuable   than
It"—LU
" Uttle daily doee" of Knuchen
ntains a aeienUnc combination of
' icral salts which tone up all your
uu of elimination—Uver, kidneys
I stomach—and keep them working
as  Nature
aa the cue might be. ^^^^^^^^
If   we   practice   the   lallflon   of
Humanity we aaad no other.
lt we muat .postulats a creator
for everything that exist* than,
_n common reaaon, wa muat postulate
. creator tor that creator if nothing could happen by Itulf. *
RATiOMALU-r
smoothly tad cO-deathr    .	
intended. The reward of thia internal
cleanliness  is   a   freshened   and   invigorated bloodstream which courses
through your veins, driving -ail fan-
purities before it. Poisonous uric acid
with   its   needle-pointed   crystals   is
expelled through the natural channels,
and the peine of rheumatism cease.
And as you continue with the " little
daily dow " of Knuchen, your whole
being—body and brain—respond* to
the purifying force. t»
______      _.    n' unnmania.     a   w.   snow   noraing
Kruachen Salt* is obtainable at aU   ,t ,u then w* cannot even know
Drug Storea at *Sc and 75c. per bottla. ^^^^^
"Believer" Delves
Into Real Meaning
of Word "Agnostic"
- To th*  Bditor:
Sir—Referring to the letter of
"RatlonalUt", appearing In thl*
column of th* 15th Instant, I not*
hi* declaration that strictly speaking h* la sn agnostic and that,
he believe*, thtr* I* only one true
religion, the religion of Humtnlty.
A* "Rationalist" dou not- define
the term "agnaatto", I have consulted the oentury dictionary and
the Encyclopedia Britannic* to
learn tbe aocepted meanlnf of
tha term. In lte broader application an agnoatlc 1* on* wbo denies
tb* powlbtllty of knowing anything
at all. Shakupeare glvu ua th*
qulnteueno* of thl* belief when
he makes one of hi* ch*r»cters ur,
"W* are aueh stuff u dream* are
mada of, and our Ufa la rounded
with a aleep.*'
Puihed to lte logical ooncltulon
agnosticism become* ridiculous and*
untenable.     If   we   know   nothing
A girl athlete who la.at the top
ol th* swimming world and *l*o
today, at the tqp of.hir clau at
th* University of Toronto, 1* Mlu
Betty Bdward*. Mlw Edwards wlll
graduate   this   year , In   household
economies,  which  will   entitle  her
to the degree of "BA." She graduatea at the top of -htr claw, which
goes to Prove -that aport snd study
go  htnd-lh-htnd  lf  properly  han-
dled., ^^^^^^~~~~*****~~~~~~~~~~~m
ON THE AIR TONIGHT
CANADIAN    RADIO
COMMISSION  NETWORK
ckv      crcN      cbcv      cm
010 ION 1100 1130
8:00-0:30 Canadian Folk USn, from
■   Montreal
0*30-740 Singing  String*   soloists
* and   Orch.   o6nd.  by. Alex.
Chuhaldln-
How About
Your Library?
Never before have we been able to
offer the public such low prices to
enable them to renovate their library
and have their valued books repaired
»and made to look practically new
again	
BOOKS REPAIRED FOR
the almple tact tbat we know nothing at all and our agnosticism
vanlshw ln tba void ot nothingness.
In legal parlanoe w* have talked
ourwlvu out af court. To um *
mora commonplao* Illustration, vn
have been' given enough rope end
h*ve bulged ourwlvu.
Now   "R*tion*ll*t'*"   mental   *t_
tltud* u u tar removed from tbe
been born, bred - and educatad in*
•Id* of thl* clrcl*, ahd find themselves unable to break through,
Preeldent Roowvelt ls the first
statesman to try and break through
thla financial circle, that enalavw
our clvlltutlon. \^^_^_^_^_^_~
we wiU obwrra, that the num
effort* of th* prewnt world'* oon-
ferena* wul be to mend thl* gap
ln th* monetary •trueture, which
the prealdent ln u. 8. A, ha* dared
to open. And the Statesmen have
ejnady partly •uoceded, u you wUl
observe by reading Arthur Blra-
bene't reference to the us. A.
Congreu ln the "Vanoouvar Bun"
under data of June 8 where he
refer* to th* aecretary of the U. S. A.
treasury, uklng the publlo to
subscribe to tb* hundred million
dollars worth of Oovernment notw.
to mwt th* ooat of publlo works
program.
Tlw contracton *nd wcrker* wUl
be peld with thle money, printed-]
and backed by tbe government.
Mr. Bunbane gou on to aay:
"Why noi print tbe money and
pay it direct to the worker*, Instead of borrowing tt . and tben
pay interest?"
II ith* government borrow* IS,-
000,000,000, and taku 90 yeara to
pay, tha Interest will amount to
*8,000,000,000l In otber words. $9,-
000,000.000, for work and (6,000,000,
000  for  Intereet.
Tin* I* a confirmation of my
monetary theory explained and advocated tn your paper for yeara.
But money luued from tbe government for uw *mongst Its subjects
mu*t be controlled, whloh 1* Impossible with our prewnt monetary
system.
* The falacy that tbe so-called
Inflation now practiced In u. B. A.
oan ba controlled, bs not worth the
consideration, even hy lte advocate*.
Tbe billion* of monty. now luued
end put Into circulation by the u.
NRC-KOO NETWOBK
KHQ      KOW     KFI     KOO    KOMO
_M        MO        640        790        9.0
6:00 Denoe   music,   Th*   Modern
Baron Munchausen
7:00 Amos "n* Andy; blackface com.
7:ig Sam Robbtn'* Orcb.
7:80 Dwth Valley Day*, 'Old Ranger'
8:00 Symphony Hour
9:00 Captain Henry* Show Boat
io-oo New* nuhw
10:15 Anion  Wwk'*  Orch.
11*00 Ah*  Lyman**  Oreh.
11A0 Organ  Concert   (KOO)
1190 Kty  Kywr'* Orch.
CM-DON   I.EB   NETWORKS
KVI      KntC      KOIN      KSL     KOL
670       «10 940       1180        1-70
OAO John Henry. Black River aiant
6:19 Windy  City   Revue
6:45 Symphony  Orch.
7:11 Phil  Regan
7:80 Ouy Lomberdo'i Orch.
' 7:4s Vagabonds of Kills (tton Lm)
8:00 oien dreys oreh.
8:80 Ben Pollack's Orcb
CBCV
113.1 m
(00   w
1100 k
VANCOUVER   ^^^^^^^^^
6:00 Sw CRC Network
7:00 "Radio Newa" Prewnt* . Ra-
•    mona Rambert, memo-soprano
.    and Wm.  Carr. baritone
7:80 News  Plathes
7:45 Mac and Hla Oultar
8:00 Instrumental   Trio
830 News Bulletins
8:60 Hodge-Podge .. ...
9:00 Iris  Lockwood   snd  Jsmes .
Tbdd
147.8
800
IMG MEN PAY
VBITT0 KASLO
kaslo, s. q.jto* air-tiA. a.
S Latham waa a.tea boetaw Thure-
y aM again Wday, oompUment-
Ing her d»u«bt*r.' Mlu rranow
Utham. The invtted guuta ware
Itsi. A. l_ McMeei Mn. J. J. Sku-
lloctn. Mr*. S.' ■% Orwn, Mra.
Charta* -ooodwln. ftn. 3. Kirk. Mn.
J. Oallln. 'M»s.*.A.'B_ Kgter. Mn. 9.
T. Abey, MU* * B. Btll, Mra Robert
Hendt-cks, Mrs WUllam EnglUh.
Mn. B.■■ 3, Thomburg. Mn. M.
Whlta. Ws. W|U1«_ MacDonald. Mra.
W. L. BUllng*. Mra. B. Oo*grlft. Mn.
S. J, Reutet. Mrs. 9, 6. Obsndlcr,
Mn. A. T. Oarland. Mra. j. J. strait,
Mn.. A. T. o*rl*nd. and Mra. 3.
Tonkin.
Mra. Jamu Johnaon hu ratttmad
from Crewtpnd lay .'where sb* tptnt
th* major pbrtlon ef tba winter.
9. C. Williamson. Provincial Inspector ■ ot weight* and measures,
wu* vUltor In' town during the
week. He wu aooompanled by hit
brother Oeorge 'WUliamaon ot Mew
Denver.
Stewart Denleon. * former Kaalo-
lte who hu spent th* put faw
yun in Sandon, has returned -to
make his jlertnanent horn* In Kulo
tnd ha* > purchued the adjoining
propertlw formerly owned by Ven.
Archdeaoon H. Beer and the late
Mlu Margaret  McKenMe.
Mn. A. MdQumn hu reoelved
word that bar aon Archie, and bla.
bride, htv* -jTlvtd safely In Montreal. Mr. McQueen hu epent the
past three yean In parla and London
on tha ataft of the Bank of Montreal and ska no* bun tranafered
to a Ilk* pe*lt_on in on* ot tbe
bank'*   brenohw   la  Toronto.
Walter 0; Power and Prank A.
Moore of Rettend*. 0*1- hav*
«rrlv*d-*ln '__«*■ ■-cRy. *
Mrar'J.'Toimfl'of-Woodbury apent
the week-end. In town.
M. L. Jone*. ot Salem, Oregon, haa
arrived In the city-and wUl epend
aeveral daya here looking after hla
mining  Intent**.
J. a: Tinku* .wu * bualneu
visitor In Nelaon' during the wwkend.
Stanley Laku of Johnsons landing
wu • visitor In th* ctty Sunday.
J. Il_nd*h of Maadow Crwk paid
Kulo * vl*lt Sund*y.
Ri D. VanHorn pt* Lardo mft* the
round trip to Kulo and return,
by  launch Sunday.
R. & Oreen * wa* * vultor to
Lardo Saturday.
. H. Newoomen of lardo arrived In
tbe city Friday evening from Nei*on,
and ltft Saturday for hi* bom*.
Mn. Al»x Sutharltnd hu u her
guwt, htr mother Un. Spiers of WU-
HIGHWAYS FLOODED
*      rt'INDl '.-Ml.iB
Highway* are floctad ls tbe Wln-
darmer* v*Uey. l*Ux Schroedir, -*t»
returned to Neleon Monday *v»nlng
by car—vlt the Nuookln—raport*.
TEMPTING   RECIPES
POTATO
SALAD
CJOR
Chill before Serving.'
Mix cold Waa-aUee-d L- ...
with luyonaelia dranlaf mta
with Coliun'i Mutard, to wMdt f
M* onion lolea b*i baen afW.
Arr.njs IsHuc* luttl Oil pWhf,
lomlnj into j«n«roes sited \a-
dlvldual nuh, pl*ein* In e*di a
thick illce of tomete. A<
ddpoibon
Mlu   Vera   Coulter   hu   returned
her   inter   ln
8:46 Johnny Hemp's Orch.
9:00 Out  Arnhelm's Orch.
(Don
940 The Buccaneers  (Don Lw)
9:48 Olga Stub. pltnUt  (Don Lw)
10-00 The   Islanders   (Don  Lee)
10:30 Berceuse  (Don Lw)
11*00 Orville   Kntpp'i   Orch.    (Don
Lee)
1210  k
VANCOUVER    _^^^^^^^^^
6;00 Btllsdwr
6:15 Musical' Program
7*0kMu*lc*l Program
7:lO_Uhlng Well Oreh.
7:80 Book Review
7*5.T_d   WUUatoa
8*00 Jlmmle   Hill
8:15 Novelty Program
a :3H Wrestling  Match
105* k KNX,        ,     J8S.6 m
HOLLYWOOD -500O  w
6:00 Buchanan,   Newa
6:18 OoWboy   Revue
6:30 Lawrence King, tenor
6:48 Growth'   UP.' ft   T.
7*00 mnk   Watanab*
7:15 Miles of Melody
7:46 Count of Monte Critto
8:00 Rev.  Bob  Shuler
8:15 KNX Parade, variety
8:46 Drury Lane, tenor
9:00 Buchanan,   News
9:15 Happy chappies
9130 Dance Music
from I a	
Spokane.        ^^^^^^^^h^^^^^b
Tbe number* of St. Andrewi
United, churoh , .Women*' auxiliary
met at the home, of Mra. John
McLellan, Allans Addition. Th* prwldent Mn. 8, H. Oreen  prealded,
Mr. *nd Mf*. R. T. Dean* of
Beanaheven were recent vlaltora ln
the ctn.
ol poWo ulad lo -weh "••,••'•
rmhiaj. wl_t tliew el herd-bolW
•Hi. (Mil btlor* wrvlnj.
The eh-twij fef *l« m\i*M t-ry
importsnt B* wre I* uw Cobnut •
MutUrd In pnasstUs* 11. Coliaea •
will m*k* It rwlly dlgwltbh
lUvoothil-* ttbl* b**t yauTI
proud to Ml*****-!
\t
(olmans
AIDS   DIGESTION
*G*t      O mi umitiiisi am k-w i*rO *	
.VUmttf f
616 k KFRC
SAN FBANCISCO
8*00 Headline!
8:30 Sports parade
9:46 Personality Trio
491.5 m
1000 w
r I *2-5 or $ 1
.50
We guarantee our work .. . nothing
but tbe best of materials is used ...
Send your books along, we will do
the rest... we know that you will
bc pleased with our work	
Phon* 144
Wa will call for and deliver books
in the City
Nelson Daily News
Job Department
Like a Shower
Baker Street
Nelson, B. C.
Except mml KtUogj'* Corn Flakea
help yoa feel cooler ill dty through.
Theae delictoag flakei tre so etgjr to digest they don't "hett yoa up."
For comfort thtt lists, enjoy a bowl of
Kellogg'i instead of hot, heavy foods.
Breakfut, lunch, the children's evening
meal. Mtde by Kellogg in London, Ont
DRIFTWOOD ON
LAKE DANGEROUS;
ROSS SEES BEARS
Thftt tb* driftwood ooming down
th* wwt arm of the Uk* li heavier
and more danteroua than u»u*l
1* th* belief of Hugh W. Bow
who haa a ranch acroo* and (town
the ann. Mr. Roes aaya there are a
Jot ■ of oottonwood drUteri thla
year which are hard to dlatlngutah
whUe rowing acrow th* arm. High'
water hw not done any damage to
hla property. He reporta - awing a
large black t*ir at hla plaoe lwt
wwk. Bean ar* reported numerous
throughout the dlatrlct and farmer*
am worried In regard to raids on
their oropa and especially cherry
and   other   fruit   crop*.
Th* establiahnunt of a butter factory at Dalntree in tbe tropical part
of Queensland In tbe Commonwealth
of Auatralla j* of particular lnterwt
because lt probably la the only butter factory operated to far Into the
tropical ana of any oountry ln the
world. An .excellent grade of butter
la nported to be made at thla factory'. —i Dominion dairy and cold
storage   branch.
Motf*^00^
B. A. government, wlll In a faw
years llnd Its fay Into tha collert
ot tbe capitalists, ipecultton and
gamblers, and tne public wlll he
aa mercllettly neeoed In ..-future u
ln tht paat, regerdlttt of tbe political party ln.povor.
Tba   preas   and  public   aee   now
inclined to put most of the blame
for our economic depression on the]
Morgtn   clau  of  cltiaens.  But   this1
ls  entirely   misleading.   Tbe   blame
la  reetlng on our monetary  system
tnd  th* lMctTOeflt of  uneniorclble
lews, whloh breed this upper elate
of  criminal*  at   well   aa  tboee   In \
the lower strata of our eoclal or-1
ganlam—euch  ts. you . tnd (I.
Tbe only- permanent eolutlon la
to adopt a monetary system, that
oannot be stolen, lost or destroyed,
nor used for Illegal purposes, euch
se I btvt been advocating through
your paper' for tome time,
Thle monetary system will do
away with tbe capitalistic system
without oonllt-atlng or destroying
preetnt capital.
Capital U nothing but .accumulate*! energy, snd.it Is sheer folly
and Ignorance to wantomly destroy
what energy haa matted. But,
under my propoeed monetary iy«em
aU tbe energies of the notion be-
oome tvtllable for uae aa exchenge
under the luperviiion and regulation
of   natlon'e  exchange   governor.
Mr. Alitor! I retract my.previous!
expretsion of an "Beoaoole Oovernor", . and subsUtute "(xebange
Oovernor". The use. mlaailee and
abuse of the word "Energy", hae,
of late; become aa unattractive as
tbe word "Charity". Tbty are both
caneerotla growtii on, our preient
monetary lyttem. wltbout either Inflation or deflation,
Butl lt wilt unavoidable become
thie, thst In IU perfection of operation it will lted very closely us
a socialistic tttte wltb the exception,
that the individual will get private
uae.   of    the   exchange    value    of
Sis tpent energy et recorded In Ue
quid uaete tcoount on the ledger
of tbe rlttlons Exchinge Oovernor.
O.'J. wtotn
Wynndel, B. c., June 21, ina.
DODD'S
KiONE
^wcPSJTt
MaH Orders
Dent fergat our new jojjf-
we prepay all orden of $_S« «
oVer   emlndlng   Orooerlea   aad
Hardware.
FRIDAY
at "THE
BAY"
New
Misses'
Summer Dresses
VOILE AND LINENE
Sizes 8 to 14
smart Printed Volte and Unene In
•SEl ihad-, with printed comblnt-
tlen. Dainty organdlt trim, featuring
luge oollart tnd puff tletvee.
Regular $1.50 Value.
Kiddies*
Pique Coats
Emart -Uttle ttylet mede from
fine quality pis*-"- "t*******
styles tot hoy» tnd ttucy little
stylet ftr girls. Tucking tnl
applique tjlm. Meet 1, 2 and
3 yeirs. Oolom, pink, blue,
main  aad green.
Kiddies'
Wash Hats
Mtde from fine eoWon erftn-
dlt. doublt itltchtd helm. Juat
eo oool for tbe bot daya. ftally
liundered. Blwe to fit children 3 to 8 yetn.   White only.
WIllIMIIIIIIHtlMWH
"Build B. c. Payrolli"
Pacific
Goes
Into
Camps
Mthy men who go Unto tbe
hills to work mines or "prot-
pectt" are very careful tbout
thtlr food suppllte. Tiielr
health demanda that. .They are
teal cooki, too..
Ptclflc 'Milk   la  ln  tlmott  universal   use   tmong   these   men
because   of    Ita   food    value.
-natural flavor and  freshness.
Pacific Milk
100%   B-C.   Osned   and   Controlled
plant  at   Abbotifotd
aaooaar*. t - -r - •'raaf'rio^-w-i
35c
Girl's Smtut Ntw
SHEER
DRESSES
Enchanting frocks for smart Junior
girls. Bheer materials Just llkt big
tlittr'i. Charming votlae and orgtn-
dlee ln effective deelgna. Puff alaeme
tnd dtlnty oolltrtl Dainty colon ln
tlaea 2 ta 14.
$1-9S
GROCETERIA
peanut  Batter:
Ho. 1 Un 	
15*
Ubby't  Corned   Beef—
riaset   quality: _*ap
3 tint.for  - - •***tr
Bttt roof Salad Brewing,  Irtish  or Jtt
MSyenntlee -  •*■■»
llornel  Custard -MU.
powder; IS-sa. tin   *"
aylmer WMU Crosby ma*
Cora; per tin — ••
Service Grocery
peas—Royal City, Super*
81i. No. ■> tins; JM
etch   ...-      *1 .
Lobiter—Princes Brtnd; mm__
u-lb.   tin     "▼
Crab   Mott—C.   ta   B.    .
p_nc, quality, H-lb.     M^
Una;  each   —— ■   ****
Quaker C
I  fer _.
Cora flakes;
17*
MORE AND MORE PEOPLE
ARE SHOPPING AT THE BAY
 ..,...,,„ I
FAOE   F01B
STEEL INDUSTRY
RISESJPART1ALLY
Enjoys SubsUntial Rebound
From 19S2 Depths and
Hits 41% Output
JOCW YORK. June 31 (CF)—The
steel, industry, once described by
tbe late Andrew cornet's u either
"prlnoe or pauper," haa made a let
of progress out of Ita extreme Indigency, though It Is still a hit
short of any regal state of Affluence.
It has been well In the front of
the Industrial recovery movement
now apparent In the United States,
tt hw enjoyed a aubatantlal rebound from the depths In which
it wallowed through the flrat quarter of the current year.
Thc extent of the industry's recuperation may be measured by
comparing the current Ingot output of 41 per cent of capacity aa
reported by "Irm Age" wltb the
dreary range of 14 to 30 per cept
under which tb. trade hobbled
along for aeven or eight months
preceding the upturn ltt April.
Steel makers are encouraged becauae the Improvement alnoe tbe
turn hu been distinctly better
than seasonal. As a natter of faot.
tbe gain has bam so aharp and
rapid aa to discourage expectations of lte continuance at equal
_peed However, a higher level of
steel ooesumptlon and a further
progress toward the realm of profits la predictable.
Opinion tn tbe trad, ta that
repawed demands from miscellaneous consumers, fortified by well
maintained sales to tbe automobile
Induetry and aome pickup In rall-
rMd and building requirements,
will help the Industry In the autum
and aid mlfhtly toward giving the
oomrtnies some reel income over
s||d above their fixed charges and
depreciation.
Signs of an awakening of Interest
on the psrt of tbs railroads Is es-
pedslly pleasing to the steel makers.
Sons recent falr-alsed rail and
equipment orders are regarded aa a
preliminary step toward a general
rehabilitation of equipment.
Scouting—Here
There and
Everywhere
 IHB  NELSON   DAIL?  NEWI,  NELSON,   B.C,  —  HTCMDAT   MORNINO,   JUNE   «*,  18H-
Brttlsh Royalty at Royal Tournament \
^mmmmemm—mm.
flmr* are "deeerte" la the ocean
wb*l* there Is llttle plant and animal life because of ths deficiency
at pboOhete or oxygen.
Thsrs ars IMI OathoUc Boy soout
troops In 108 archdioceses snd dlo.
oesss la tbs United Statee.
A battle agalnat tent caterpillars
is being csrrled on this spring by
tbe Scoute of tbs Eastern Townships,   Quebec.
PRINCE ALICE OFENB
SCOUT EXHIBIT
A three-day Exhibition of Scout-
craft held la the Oom Exchange,
Brighton, was opened by H. R H.
Princess Alloc, Countess of Athlone
HEADMASTER  OF  ETON
ADPRESSE8 SCOUTS
A gathering of 800 Boy Scouts
cf Slough snd district wss addressed
at Eton by Dr. Allagton. Headmaster
of tbs famoua school.
RHODES   SCHOLARSHIP   TO
O.   A.   C.   SCOUT
A Rhodee scholarship, tbs first
won at Ontario Agricultural College,
has gone to an Englls-h whitehead
Scout Scholar-hip atudent, W. J.
Oarnet. Several Whitehead scholsr-
eblpe, s full couree at a Canadian
agricultural college, are awarded Engllah Soouts each year. The 1883
medalist at Kemptvllle A. C. alao
ts tan Old Country scholarship
Scout.
CANADIAN  FLAG \
TO N.S.W. SCOUTS
In response to sn invitation reoelved through the Canadian trade
commissioner at Melbourne, s Canadian flag rrom ths Scouts of
Canada was presented to the New
South Walea scout aasoclatlon at
an International flag oenmony at
NSwcsstle. Tbe prpasntatlon wsa
mads by president A. S. Cbsllsn of
Too H, In the presence of ths state
governor. The flu now files with
others st Olenrock, the New South
Walee Soout training Oenter.
Their 34th annual ssrvlos st St.
GENERAL^ ELECTRIC
REFRIGERATORS
Sold in TRAU, ROSSLAND and
CRESTON By
West Kootenay Power & Light
COMPANY, LIMITED
These two automatic control. General Electric Refrigerators will keep your food dean and fresh all
the year round. Before you buy a refrigerator let
us explain their outstanding merits.
MONITOR TOP
tbe Oeneral Electrlo MONITOR TOP model li  offered as the
K-crld's finest. And a low down payment will place It In poor home!
EAST TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED
JUNIOR MODEL
Ths Nsw TIMOR MODEL Oenersl Electric Refrigerator Silence,
low ooet of operation, a great value.
EASY TERMS CAN BS ARRANGED
West Kootenay Power & light   °
COMPANY, LIMITED
TRAIL, ROSSLAND and CRESTON*
Paul's catbsdral was sttendwl by
3000 Scouts and Rovers ot the London dlooesa.
CARDINAL HEADS
U. 8. CATHOLIC SCOUTS
His Eminence Patrick cartmel
Hayes, Arobblabop of New Tock. Is
honorary chairman ot tbs Bishops'
oommittee ot lbs National Catholic
committee on Scouting In tbe United states.
180  SCHOOUIASTIM
TALK SCOW-NO
A hundred headmasters of famous
Engllah schools attended tbs
Boy Scut oonferenoe of public
scnool headmasters and Scoutmasters st St. Paul's high school, Ham-
merantlth, sad were addresssd by
Lord Baden-Powell.
SCOUTS PAT  TO
PLANT 50,000 TRH
When a- restricted budget caussd
the Ontario department of forestry
to caacel the annual May 9_ Soout
reforestation camp at Angus, nssr
Camp Borden, Scout headquarters
suggeeted tbe boys pay thsir food
cost. Mors spplled wan there was
accommodation for. apd during two
daya planted 51.000 young tress.
LONE  SCOUT REVIVES
DROWNED OIRL
Ttie Scout honor of' first suocssi*
fully uslpg artificial -Mutation this
summer went to patrol Leader Jack
Evans of s Lone Soout patrol of
Carman, Man. After ssststlqt Ut rs*
covering ths body of a girl bathe:
who had been «M*_-B
minutes, Scout Evans
gaa tho artificial ta	
with success.
BOT CONTINGENTS
FOK WORLD OATHEKINO
The Hungarian contingent to ttM
great world Scout gathering to be
held this summer netr Budapest
will bs held te 8000 boys sad lsad-
ers. The British ampins, will ee«d
WOO. followed by Pound and Franc,
wltb 1800 each. Denmark la ssndlng
800. Austria 700, Unltad states too,
C-achoslovskls 3*0. Sweden. Switzerland and Yugoslavia 800, Norway
178, Oreeoe 160, Roumania sad Belgium 185, Spain. Aasyrls aad Portugal 7o each, aad other countries
leaser numbers. Tbs latter Include
Jspan, Slsm sad Hslt!.
Mm. Ted Clarke of
Beaverdell Leav*
on Trip to Coast
BBAVHIDELL. B. O, June Jl—
Mlss Hus Fillmore hss returned to
her home st Rhone sfter spending
three months* in town.
' 3. Hanna and D. Murray asd. .
business tap to Midway orar tbs
weekend.
MUs I. Orant. of orwnwood, wss
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. O. a.
Nordraan during tha weekend
Mlss Irene tnglls bM Isft for
Vsncouver when ahe wtll visit wltb
friends for a time.
C. D. Collen ot Oliver, wag » visitor to oamp during tbs week.
Mrs. Ted asrke sad son Dsnls
Crawford, have alsft for a abort
visit to Vancouver.
Mlas Charlotte MoOutebeon of
Wsstbridge was a visitor to Carml
on  Saturday.
The total acreage of land prepared
la the three prairie provlnoes during 1832 for either crop or follow
in 1838 is estimated at 18381.100
.eras, tbs lowsst figure sines 1838.
aad compared wltb tbs scree prepared during 1831 for 1833, a do-
crease of 1317.000 seres.   *..
DE LUXE REFRIGERATOR
tkt
GENERAL ELECTRIC
MONITOR
TOP
Refit
Convenient
TERMS
A SMALL DOWN PAYMENT wlll
place one of these do luxe
Monitor Top Oeneral Electric Refrigerators In your home. " One
out of three homes with refrigerators bave Monitor Tops —
backed by Oenersl Electrics famou --yesr Serrtoe Plan, which
tuirds yon against costly repslrs.
CANADIAN    GENERAL
ATURALLY, the
.famous Monitor Top
sfrigerator will continue to be offered as
the world's finest.     It
haa achieved an unequal
led record  of  trouble-
free performance . . .
it is the only refrigerator with all moving parts
hermetically   sealed   in
oil.   Those who demand
the best and can ifford
a few dollara more for
_________________*&* coat will Inevitably
select the refrigerator that gives continuous satisfactory service to over 1,300,000 owners.
Colt! by
West Kootenay Powtr and Ught
Company, Llmitad '
Trail, Roaaland, Creston
"       i H I P i Ml      |i
Fleming's Stove
Fairview, Nelaon, B. C.
ELECTRIC   COMPANY    LIMITED
Tlie Duke and Duchess of York
(tbe duchsss st right.) and their
two daughters. Prlacsss Elizabeth
(at right of the duke), and Princess MsTfsret Rose (smsUest child),
when tbey attended tba royal tour*
nament at Olympla a short tlms
sg>. The third child Is a friend
of llttle  Princess Elisabeth.
Tbs Dominion chemist sad other
scientists hsvs shown that Juns
grass contains a much grester degree of nutriment; i.e., more protein, than gran tbat Is mors mature.
Jun. Is tbs bsrveet month ef
Italy, Bpsin. Portugal, Onto*. Turkey, south of spsln, North Carolina.
Oeorgls, Arkansas, Tsias. Virginia,
Indiana, Illinois, Ksntuckj. Tennessee, Oklahoma, Missouri sad Kansas.
FLEMING'S STORE
FAIRVIEW
ff Pleased to Present tht Ultimate In
Electric Refrigeration
GENERAL H§ ELECTRIC
JUNIOR AND MONITOR TOP REFRIGERATORS
Two Models—Six Sixes
All Made in Canada
Will Suit Every Taste in Price, Economy and Efficiency
A General Electric Refrigerator Pays lor Itself!
If within 30, days from date of installation, yoa are not convinced that the
General Electric will pay for itself, we will remove th* refrigerator and refund all money paid. We urge your investigation.
And aay—Let's whisper in your earl We have a very apeclal offer to
on the next few salea, that will surprise and please you. Please enquire.
FLEMING'S STORE
Phone 130 124 Behnsen St. P. O. Bos «7I
Canadian  General  Eleetric Authorised Dealer.
In Hotpoint Ranges, Cleaners, Washers and Ironers, Sunlamps,
—*       **.«-• .        .. »_.___ !__.     __ ll__	
Fans, Clocks, and many other Hotpoint Appliances.
\\ • " //
JUNIOR Model is
Sensational VALUE
CHECK THESE POINTS—and
Then See the GJE. Junior
1- ALL-8TSEL CABINET. Not ta ounce of any material
to deteriorate from Heat, Cold., Damp.
2 -STAINLESS STIfL StPER-FREEZER. instantly eMaa-
sbls; cannot chip or mar.
3—FUU AUTOMATIC CONTROL, the same Had sf control aa In the Monitor Top.
4   ECONOMICAL OPERATION; eftlclencj ln compression,
radiation. Insulation. Is responsible.
5-P0nCBLAJN INTERIOR: seamless, stainless, ssked-on
enamel oannot absorb odors. s
£t—lCB FRgEZlNU  CHAMBER  complete!*, sanitary: oan
Q   ba s-sshed like a chins dish.
7—HOT WATER DEFROST INO; ean be 4oM In ttfcln-
utss. N. mod ta wait for hours.
—SHELVES sdentlllcellj  plaoed.   vastly  Increasing tbe
ussbls capacity.
-.-SHELF tur-H-RTS sn of aliuninum. alwsys, brUhl
I   and clean and tree from tarnish.
—SILANCE; compare tbe JUNIOR to tbs most expensive
refrtaerat-n pn ths marketl
HARDWARE of forfsd brass, plated with evtr-brifht.
untarnlshable chromium.
-MOTOR is Capacitor type, sad wtU new crests ths
slightest  rsdlo Interference,
1 Q—CaHtttt-ISOIt—Rotary type, without cylinders or pis-
10    tona Sliest and trouble-free.
-DESIGN: oompactly trscsful. with flat top ovsr m-oh-
anlsm and braom-bl|h less.
8
10
11
12
14
NOW is offered General Electric's answer to the demand for a low-
priced refrigerator .■. . the new JUNIOR flat top model. In all
respects it is a magnificent product... full General Electric Quality
... on which the "G.E." emblem is placed with pride. »
For years General Electric research technicians have worked and experimented, behind them the great resources of the world-famous House
of Magic They have built and destroyed in use every possible kind of
refrigerator.
General Electric manufacturing division — already the largest of all
household refrigerator makers — now offers you the result of all thia
care, in the JUNIOR model. The difficulties in the way of presenting
G.E. quality at alow price have been overcome. You may have confidence in this splendid refrigerator. •
Silence, low cost of operation, freedom from the necessity of servicing—
these are offered to you in this companion to the famous Monitor Top.
Now, before you buy ANY refrigerator at ANY price, ask your dealer
to explain the truly outstanding merit of the 'General Electric Flat Top
JUNIOR!
FLEMING'S STORE
Fairview,
NELSON, B. C.
Sold by
WEST KOOTENAT POWER
& LIGHT CO., LTO.
TRAIL, ROSSLAND, CRESTON
CANADIAN    GENERAL    ELECTRIC    COMPANY   LIMITED
 HERE IS A SPLENDID
MODEL
Black and White
and
Brown and White
Price
?6.00
R. Andrew
&Co.
Leaders in  Footfashion
DOST OF LOGS
ARE RECOVERED
Tba majority of tha logs trom a
boom whleh broke whU* going
through tha narrowa at Procter last
$Mk, while btlng brought down to
tte mill of Scheefer-Hltchcoek of
Nelaon, have been collected, according to company officials.
E A large number waa taken bf a
.boom tne swung across the arm
near Willow Point. Dally atnoe tben
numerous logs have been taken
along tbe ehotee, from eddtea and
among buat.ee In ihe high water
Setween Willow Point and Nelaon
ftnd   below   Neleon.
The main object of spraying orchards is to kill the files before
ttey can lay their eggs. Tbe entire
orchard should be sprayed twice—
tte first aa soon* aa lt li known
that the flies have begun te appear
In the district, and the aeoond two
weeks later.—Dominion department
of agriculture.
CRESTON TO AID
IN BOSWELL FAIR
CRBSTON, B.C., June 31— Fourteen
membera were out for tbe June
meeting of Creaton board of trade
with Preeldent W. L. Bell in the
chair. There wiu be no regular meetings for the text three months. The
executive waa empowered to take
care of alt matters of urgency.
C. O. Rodgera and Col. ft* Mallandaine re-ported on tbe teutons
of the Aseoclated Boards of Trade
at Trail laat month, and 11 of the
reeolutlotu dealt with at the iinelter
city gathering were submitted for en-
doraetlon. Thts waa accorded uli but
two of them.
The board decided to again lolly
cooperate with Boewell Parmers' Institute In putting on the Kootensy
lake regatta at Boswell on July 28
wi'/i 50 per cent of the net proceeds to go to the Creston Valley
Public hoepltal. Boswell baa already
named a oommittee of toree, and
the board's representatives will be
Jobn Murrell  anl  H. A. PoweU.
The hardy annual, the appointment of a fenoe viewer for *he
north aide of the vaUey, was Introduced by Ouy Constable, add waa
dlscuaeed but action waa stood over
till the next meeting, which *ul be
in October, ln view of the tiirea
montha' holiday.
Suitable acknowledgement wlll be
made to a letter from the Crawford
Bay and District Cooperative aasoclatlon. whlcb wrote asking Ior tie
board's backing to their request that
the Kootenay lake ferry tie up ottt
night at Oray Creek rather than
at   Praser's   Landing  aa  at  preeent.
Por the committee on the board's
new constitution: and bylaws- President Bell reported progress and
a.ated the oomplete article would
be available for adoption at the
next  meeting. •
At a special meeting of the executive In June, at which a wire was
sent the authorltlee aaklng that
when the alngle unemployed were
taken over by the federal department that a crew be put to work
Improving the north and south highway to Port HUl, and that another
be employed on the Tahk-Kuskanook
road. A reply Is to hand stating
the latter highway will reoelve attention, but as yet nothing definite
has been decided upon as to north
and aouth highway betterments.
Un notice of motion suomltted by
John Murrell aaklng that discussion
on Burnaby board ot trade reeolutlon ofierlng a solution for municipal financing of unemployment the
president ruled the matter was not
one that might properly oome before
the board, and on a vote being taken
hla ruling  was sustained.
From evidence found In ancient
mlna, it seems likely that the first
fanners lived in Palestine.
-THB NEUON  DAILT
Sdciet^
This ooiumn la conducted by
Mrs* M. J. Vigneux. All news of
a social nature, Including receptions, private entertainments,
personal items, marriages, etc..
will appear la this ooiumn. Telephone Mra. Vlgheux at her home,
519  Silica  street.
Keep Kitchens Cooll
'ttoy. Is my tat* red," may be the usual
theme song of the summer oook - - -
but not she who uses t handy, cool
Hot platf. They're low In price too - - -
the single burner at the left rtj-i Qg»
la  only   ...._, __ _ _.._ Jtlee/D
AY MUSIC HOtfSE
304 Baker Street
Phone 585
Tbt homt ct.Ut. tad Kn. J. A.
ail_.tr, Vlotorli itntt, wtt tbt scene
ot t dtlithttul tn Wtdnetdt, tfttrnoon, when tht -Htm Jttn Oilier
tnd Helen Murphy wen Joint hott-
tuet honoring MIm Marlon Blickwood. Tbt room, throughout wen
dtcortted wtth rotet, thtttt dtltlet
tnd peonlee, whllt tbe ttt table,
tt which prealded Mn. C. D. Blickwood tnd Mn. A. Btlrd, htd tot
centre, roat peonlet tnd oorntpond*
Ing ttpen. Thote earring wera Mn.
J. T. Andrew,, Mn 3. 9. Cottet,
Mra. Douglu Cummlna. Mlat Jttn
Wtldlt tnd Mln Virginia Morrlton.
The Invited gueata Includtd Mn
C. D. Blackwood, Mn. A. Btlrd, Mn.
F. P. Pent*, Mn. j. T. Andrewi,
Mn. Q. Burnt, Mra. R. w. Dtwion,
Mn. J. P. coatea, Mn. R. DID,
Mra. WUUam J. Sturgeon, Mn.
Douglu cummlna, Mrt. Oeorge
Pleuiv. Mn. M. 3, Vigneux, Mrs.
W. Lalah*ey, Mn. O. A. C. Waller,
Mn. P. Meagher, Mn. 1. O. Mttthtw,
Mn. Hirold Ltkea, Mn. 3. P. Ouaaln,
Mra. 8, P. Boetock. Mn. Jamea Mot-
man, Mn. Htrry Horton, Mrt.
ChlMet Hamilton, Mn. I. S. Planta,
Mn. P. D. Campbell. Mn. N. Murphy.
Mra. J. A. Ollkar, Mlu AUt Johnstone, Mlu Loulw Cunlllfe, MIU
Alleen Manafleld. Mlu Con Barnt,-
Mlu Dorothet Orthtm, Mlu Myra
Humphry, MIM En Dewdney, Mlu
Jetn Hunter, Mlu Cirmtn Horton,
Mlu Jetn Wtldlt, Mlu Rutb cnu-
furd, Mlaa Mildred brine, Mlaa
Eileen Dill, Mlu Rent Edmondson,
Mlu Loulw Peebles, Mlw Virginia
Morrison of Portland, Mlu Dudley
B'tckwood, Mlu Marlon Blackwood,
Mlw Molly oreeii. Mn. A. L. Put.
min of New Weamlnater, tnd Mn.
J. Wllaon of Ne** Westminster.
....  .—,
Ulu   Rene   Kerr  of   Long   Beach
arrives   In  town  todty  to   be   tbe
suest of Mlu Loulw Cunllffe.
...
Alex. Smith of. Colcm Ptrk wtt
i  vltltor to Nelaon  on  Tuetdiy.
• •   •
Mn. O. Ctm of Slrdtr tptnt
Wednesday In town.
• •   •
Oeorge Mclnnea, who bu bwn
spending t ftw dtyt In Nelaon,
letvw thli morning for hli bomt
ln Wynndel.
...
Mr. ind Mn. Mirshtll of thl
Reno mint wen nwnt vlalton In
town.
.   •   •
B.   B.   Powler   of   Rlondel   ipent
yesterday   ln  Nelton  tbopplng.
...
Mn. H. Rotting' of Willow fcolnt
made t delightful hotteu tt t
bridge lunchton Tuttdty tfttrnoon,
when ehe entertained honoring Mlu
M H. Cameron's slater tnd coutln,
Mn. McKty ind Mn. Scott Rlddell.
Ttw Invited gueit wen Mlu M. H.
Cameron, Mrs. McKty, Mn. Seott
Rlddell, Mn. C. W. Appleytrd, Mn.
J. O'Shet. Mn. L. t. Bordtn. Mn.
P. Q. Moray. Mn. R. L. McBride,
Mn. W. R. Orubbt, Mnt J. cartmel. Mn. L. Cmrfnrd, -Bmt—,. c
Wrtgge. Mn. H. Ukea, Mn. B. E.
L. Dewdney, Mn. Peters, Mra. P. 9.
Ptynt. Mn. L. v. Rogen tnd Mn.
HtUett.     -
a   •   .
Mlu   Muriel  Llndow  of  Retallack
NEWS,  NELSON,  B.C.  —  THTJBIDAY  MOBNINO,   JCNg  It,  IIS.
44.
I WON IstPRIZE
Last Fall for Jam made with Certo
h Certo"
la l guut  In  NeUon tt  tbt  honw
at ttr. tnd Mn. E. Murphy.
...
Mn. O. Q. ftlt ot Stlmo wu t
notnt vlaltor  In tht city.
.   •   •
Mr.   tnd   Mn.   O.   A.   Ctwley  of
Stlmo wtn notnt vltlton In Ntl-
Mr. tnd Mn. H. Burnt ltft reoently by motor tot Blilrmore tnd
Hlllcrwt. whtrt Mn. Bum wUl
mit, while. Mr. Burnt goes on W
Cilgtry.
• •    •
L. D. Kerr motond to Alniworth
Tueedty aecomptnled by bll mothtr,
Mn. Miry Kerr tnd Mlw Dyke.
Mlu Dyke md Mn. Ktrr will n-
ratm tben for • couple of wwks.
... .
R. H. McMillan la a guest In tbe
ctty from Vlotorla.
.   *   « *
Mlu    Loula    Sheffield    nturned
Tuetday  fnm, two watke tpent ln
Ctrdaton.   Altt.
...
Mlu Eletnor Bltlr of Canyon It
vltltlng   ln   Ntlton,   tbt   guut   of'
Mlw  Htltn  pochln,  Second  itntt,
nirvltw.
...
Mr. tnd Mrt. C P. Brett tnd wm
Pnd tnd OUlford, ltft ywttrdiy by
motor to ipend t couple of dtys In
Kulo btfon going to thl ooaat. On
returning they wlll take up residence in Kulo.
...
Mn. J. Cart-sr wu tbt guut. of
honor on Tuttdty tvenlng it i
mtrry firewall party Of the Music
Lovers' club, held it tbt homt of
Mra. Divld Ktrr, Vernon ttrwt.
Music, tinging tnd muilotl con-
testt wfre the feitura of the evening, tfter which l presentation
ww made to Mra, Ctrttr. wbo wlll
be grattly misted by the olub. ..Her
Pleasing volet. and muilotl ability
combined with an ever nady willingness hu helped many worthy
ctuwa In thla city for tbt put 10
yttn.
• ••
Mlu Miry Jtrvlt ot Procter wu
a vUltor to town yetterdty..
•'      _\
Un. 3. 9. -Bourn* of Procter bu
left for vincouver. ctlled then by
the  deith  of  Mlu  Hirriet  Loulw
Ctrmtn,
.   •   •
Ralph   Hogan   Jr.   wtt   t   vltltor
to Ntlton yetterdty with bla father.
Herr MU    Bckert.    proftwor    of
geology, from   tbt   Unlvenlty   of
Aachen. Oermany,   ll   t   vlaltor   at
Btlfour Beech  Inn, Btlfour Beach.
• a > a
Mr. tnd Mn. S. Couch of Nelaon Were recent vliltori to Kulo.
.   • . a
Mn. K. Tork U t guwt In Nelton from Vincouvtr.
• «   «
Dr. nd Mn. R. A. Teld cf Edge-
wood  in vlaltora In Nelson.
aaa
Mn. L. cltrk wu t vltltor ln
town Tuttdty- from arty Crwk.
. e    •    •
Dr. tnd Mn. D. J. Barclay win
recent vlslton In town rrom Kulo.
aaa
R. E. Green of Kulo vUlted Nelwn reoently.
• •   •
Mtw N. Munroe haa bwn 1 guwt
I
mot nn
records another expert jam and jelly maker
"•—In Certo-made jams the colour of every
% kind of berry stays brighter; taste is better
than you can get with long-boiling."
Mils Alice Suplcy,
A Belleville, Ont., jam and jelly champion.
"Alw," add. Miaa Stapley, "I find that
when making tarts, Certo-made jam or jelly
neither melts nor runs to juice with the heat
of the oven as other jams do, making the tart
shells sticky and unsightly."
Important, convincing testimony—this
—as to the merits-of Certo in all jam and
jelly making.  Prove the value of Certo for
, yourself. You'll be delighted with
results if you follow carefully die
recipes found in the booklet under
the label on every Certo bottle.
CERTO
—Is fruit pectin.
—The natural jellying substance
extracted frSaa fruit.
—Jells tke juice that would have boiled
away by the old (long-boil) method.
—Makes 50% more jam or jelly at lan
cost per jar.
—Saves ?i the time.   Saves the fruit
flavour.   Saves the fruit colour.
—Permits die use of oty fruit—fresh.
canned or diced—or fruit jutes.
Ut ut solve your jam or jelly making problems.
Should you desire tny information whatsoever,
write to the Consumer Service Department,
General Foods, Ltd., Cobourg, Ontario.
CERTO
MADE   IN   CANADA
O. Hawkins of Nelway waa a visitor to Nelson Tueeday.
• •   •
Mlsa Molly Oreen arrived ln Mel-
son Tuesday from Vancouver to
spend the summer ■with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Oreen,, across
the  lake.
a ■ e. *
Mr. and Mrs S. J. Wllaon arrived
In town from New Westminster.
Tueeday and have taken up residence st the Kerr apartments.
• •   •
Mrs. W. Deacon and daughter
Mary of Portland, Ore., arrived In
Nelson last evening to apend a holiday with Mrs. Deacon's parenta,
Mr. and Mrs. V. Bperson, Vernon
street.
• •   •
The foUowlng ls a Vancouver ec-
oount of the wedding ef Brans
Wasson, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.
B- Wesson of Neleon, whloh oocurred
on   Baturday  at  the  coast.
The picturesque Uttle church cf
fit. rtande-tn-the-Wood st CauHeiui
was the setting for the pretty wedding at 0 o'clock this morning of
Joan Marlon, only daughter or
Major and Mrs. H T. Curtis of
West Bay. West Vanoouver, and
Bvens Wasson of thts city, only son
on Mr. snd Mrs. W. E. Wsason of
Nelson. White carnations and white
peonies lent their summer lovellneu
to the quaint Interior or the Uttle
church, banking the high windows,
and delicate pink and white lupin
marked the pews. Mlss Jean Duncan
attended the bride and the tfrooro
waa supported by Clare F. Domoney.
Rev. P. A. Ramsey performed tbe
ceremony.
Olven ln marriage by Jamee Rimmer, the bride waa charming In a
suit of dove grey sill crepe, featuring a abort coat wltb tbe new high
neckline and ties st tbe neck, worn
over a bodice of soft blue and grey
figured crepe, belted, with full
pUffed sleeves. The skirt waa cut
on graoefuUy-flared lines, A smart j
hat of matching grey fabrlo sug- [
gested the swagger type, and eboee.
glovee and purse were IA matching
grey. She wore a corsage bouquet of
rosebuds ln two pale tones -of pink.
As bridesmaid, Mlss Duncan chose
a dreaa of pale pink vyalla crepe.
molded on plain llnee. At'the high
neck Its Simplicity faund delightful contrast tn a frilled Jabot of
.white organdie. Sleeves were puffed
and ware ornamented, as wu the
bodloe tn front, with tiny buttons
of self-material. Her hat was of
white pebble crepe, brimmed and
shallow-crowned, and her eboee 'and
gloves oontlnued the tbene of white.
As a corsage bouquet ahe wore pink
rosebuds a shade deeper than those
of the bride.
I Mr. and Mrs. Wasson left for
1 their wedding trip directly from the
church, the bride wearing a tailored
blue swagger coat over her wedding
coetume. After driving to Beattle
they will Uke the boat to San
Francisco and will apend aome time
motoring In Southern Calfornla and
Mexico.
On their return they wlU reside at
Cyprus Park.
• . •   *
Mlss  Florr.no"   Maundrell   Is  confined to her home, having cut her
[ hand seriously-
PROTECTIVE CLUBS
ARE AMALGAMATED
REGORDNELSON
GIRL ENVIABLE
Belle Ramsa/ 10 Years in
School Without Fail-
ing Once
Ten years of ecbolestic endeavor j
at the Kelson schools, during which
time she has never failed ln t
final examination, nor haa missed a
day from school, is the enviable
record of Mim Belle Ramsay, 17-
year-old daughter of WUllam Ramaay, district provincial engineer and
Mrs. Ramaay.
In recognition of this dlUigent
application to studlss, Chairman
John Notman of tha school board
presented Mlss Rsmssy with a book
at ia special gathering ln the high
school auditorium Wedneeday morning. The' gathering' was also the
occasion tor. the presentation of
prices for the best abort stories and
veras produoed by the students.
This week Mim Ramsay completes
writing her fourth \ year high or
first year unlvenlty examinations
and lf she Is successful, may possibly attend the Unlvenlty of British
Columbia next term.
Born at Pernle shs oame to Nelaon
when three yeara old. She entered
school at Nelson snd from grade
three on haa no record of having
missed a day or having failed ln a
final   exam.
She baa one brother, Charlie, work-
jJni at the Reno mine, and a younger
alater, Jesn. Jean la a member of
the achool track team.
In making the presentation on behalf of the achool board, Mr. Notman, emphaalned tbe responsibility
and necessity of early training. Hs
declared that lt waa not alwaya -the
person with natural abilities that
amounted to something but more
often those who mw the responsibility of equipping themselvea for
the future and applied themselves
to their work. A poetry book wsa
preeented to Mlss Rsmssy but abe
will have the opportunity of naming
her own  choice of book later.
Mim Betty Orimm, whose poetry
was adjudged the bwt ln tbe school,
and Mim Helen Affleck, who submitted tbe best short story, received
books, the glfte of B. P. Dawaon
and F. P. Payne, reepectlvcly. The
preeentatlona wen made by L. V.
Roiera, principal. Mr. Rogen also
outlined the new non-matriculation
couth which wUl be instituted next
term.
Wlnnen ln tbe lltenry contests
were:
Poetry—Betty Orlmea, houae A,
first; Mlss Daphney Sandercock,
houae C, second, and Ray BeU,
houae A, third.
Short atory—Helen Affleck, houss
C, tint; MIm Wlnnifred Lutes,
bourn C, second; Jsmes Thompson
of Crescent  Valley,  bourn  C,   third.
CRESTON MASONS
VISIT AT BOSWELL
i«*^M*l*_l«-__>___.M.,ri_,1-l_l»lffWt«in,MUll*«M.ll..l--g
Qj^4ea^hers^)
607BaJcerSt
Phone 200
STORE NEWS
SPECIAL SHOWING OF
CHILDREN'S WEAR FOR FRIDAY
Featuring cool and comfortable garments for children. Mothers will
find just the cutest things for summertime among the new wearables
for children now being shown here especially for the warmer
Summer season
Children's Dresses
Smart dresses for kiddies 2 to 6 years. Made
pantee style of fast color prints or dimities
in a range of pretty designs. See these
tod & v
BACH S1.60, |2.50 to fS.OO
Boys' Wash Suits
Linen suits in plain colors with
contrasting trimming. Sizes 2 to
6 years.
EACH Sl-00 tofl.25
Play Suits
Good quality
denim suits in
solid' colors or
combination colors. Sires 2 to
6 years.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^faSACH    fl.00
Children's Sun Suits
Wool sun suits in sizes 2, 3 and 4 years. All bright colors.
EACH   fl.00
Children's Bathing Suits
Pure wool bathing suits in a range of styles. Jantzen or
Klingtite makes. All colors. Size* 6 to 12 years.
EACH   Sl.W, S2.S5 to f3.00
lpil-j.i_ill_ii-_ji__,ii;jBjyjjjnjliaj^
CRESTON, B.C., June 31.—A party
ot more than half a hundred mem-
beta of Creston Masonic lodgs, together with their wires and lady
friends, were at Boewell Sundsy
afternoon for a reception tendered
them by Mr. and Mn. Allan on
their spacious grounds with1 a short
musical program and the serving
of s delightful lunch Just before
going away ttme. The whole after*
noon wu very much enjoyed by all
present, Mr. and Mn. Allan proving
capable and gracious entertainers.
ably 'assisted by their daughter and
son-in-law,   Mr.   and  Mn.   Kunst.
Mr. and Mn. W. H. Ffcrtln an
back trom Vancouver, to which city
they wen called earlier in the
month, due the death or Mr. Foc-
tln's brother. W. DeFoe, accompanied
by Mra. DeFoe, of Nelson, wbo haa
been ln charge of the Shell OU
com pan y branch while Mr. For 11 n
was away, baa returned to Nelaon.
While hen they wera gueata of
Mn. DeFpe's parents, Mr. and Mn.
W. Ferguaon.
Ux*. Jamea compton got back on
Sundsy from a vtalt with her
daughter, Mlas Ruth Compton, at
Nelson.
Mrs. Manuel and eon, Herbert of
Vanoouver, wen renewing creaton
acquaintances at the end of the
week, leaving on Sunday for Nelson.
M. Lewis, mall clerk on the
Medicine Hat-Nelaon run, apent a
few days hen last week, a guest
of  Mr.  and  Mn.  Frank  Slmlster.
Harry A. Powell and J. B. Holder
wen vlalton at Cranbrook on Sunday for a meeting cf the Baat
Kootenay gone of the Canadian
Legion.
Mr* and Mn. J. A. Broley of
Fernle apent a oouple of days hon
st tha end of the week. Like several
otber Fernleltes, the Broleys are
desirous of securing an orchard
property In Creston valley and Inspected a number of these plsces
during their stay ln town.
HONG FINE FOR NOT
KEEPING DISTANCE
At a special meeting Tueeday
evening, the amalgamation of the
Nelson Protective association and
the Fifteen Hundred club waa oompleted. Preliminary arrangements
were mads at a prerious meeting.
No offloen were named Tuesdsy
night.      r
Some dsys ago The Nelson Dally
News published a nport that R.
H. Hong had been fined for paaalng a street car while It waa discharging paasengen. Tbls wu sn
error. Mr. Hong did not pass a
street car whUe discharging , passengers. The charge against him
wu thst ha failed to stop his
ear at a dlatance of 10 feet from
the  exit  of   the  street  car.
STEVENS HOPES
FOOEVWAL
Conference Progrew Encouraging He Tells Fernie
FERNIE, B.C., June 31—Hon. H
H. Stevens, minister of trade and
commerce and federal representative
from this dlatrlct, who acted u
chairman of the conference to dle-
. cuu the Fernle situation hen Monday addressed a packed houss iu au
open meeting held In the evening.
He wu able to get favorable report* as to the success of the confennoe held bare that day -tat.n^
that he wu confident thst lt would
be powlble to ncopen the mines st
Coal Creek. Mr. Stevens publicly expressed thanka to D. C. Coleman,
vice-president western Unu CP.-..
whoee part in the conference w. .
be responsible for the probab'.e .>
lutlon of the situation.
Hs said that governments we.e
not all powerful but oould use their
influence ln bringing together buslneu Interests and he felt that the
present  one   had   done   all   that   it
u possible to do.
Mr. Stevens emphasised ths. complexity and ramifications of tbs
system of banking, transportstion
snd transaction of buslneu. u
e v ldenoed ln tbe ooilsyu of 1 arge
businesses like Insui brothets. He
thought the reaaon for the disruption of trade snd commerce wu the
collapu of their system ot credit ln
the downfall of tbe atock market,
occuloned by tbe use of tbs latter
for gambling pnrpoau, and to some
extent to a eo-called over-produotlon.
But the system u a whole should
not be scrapped. To thou who
wholly condemn the preunt society
of economic system he pointed out
thst tbe cause* behind the ao-c_%Ued
evils of democracy were due lo
the human element.
Mr. Stevena dealt with tha effect
of depreciated currency whlcb allowed aome otber countries to wU
on better terms than Canada, advocating a nturn to tha atlrer-gold
buls u before 1873 u s remedy for
the dislocation of trade resulting
from the scarcity of gold In some
countrlu due to maldistribution,
He hailed tbe acceptance of silver
Irom Britain by U_S. ln payment of
war debts u the most hopeful thing
from the world economic conference.
Speaking of tariffs he thought
that the United Statu wst in s
position-to bs nther generous with
tariff reductions, and their >ttr_ude
st the oonferenoe repreunied a
hope. Dumping, Mr. Stevens said
wu tbs main cause which led
Canada to raise tariff walls. Instancing Ruulan whut, pulpwood
and anthracite coal and UB. furniture,
ln oonoiuaion he commended tbe
Fernle cltiaens for their nut lots
and gardens, Indicating to him that
Fernle   was   a   town   of   hope.   He
sUted thst the atatlatlcel reports
be received from Ottawa during hi*
trip were distinctly encouraging.
He also commended the admlniatratlon of Fernle's city council.
Sherwodd Herchmer acted *t ehalrman,
■     '    •	
Farmera who spread arunle to
poison grasshoppers ace warned to
scatter it thin, lut farm animals
pick up enough to poison tbem.
Only in "Quaker"
can you get these
EXTRA
FEATURES
AT NO
EXTRA COST
ORANGE PEKOE BLEND
"SALADA
■MM  M_
Tfttk from (he GwW
Attention Mother* I
(*kUdr«iw_ll__»«ilk«1thm>tco_xiii,l-To*J
mre. wtth Osaka*. Con Tlalsm. AU la on.
Mr-dag th trTI l*t lb, rich mmp ol ffani.. ■
lh, noOTi.hmml of milk... ttiahMlthiH-l
Suaahln. Vitamin Qui build, boo, aid pro'
tactataath.
£( Money-bfck guarantee printed on every
package.
2. Freshneij and criipneu assured by tu
wrapping and triple sealing.
3. Enrichment with Sunshine Vitamin "D"—
an exclusive health feature.
A   Coupons—exchangeable for valuable mer*
chandiw—in every package.
MADE IH CANADA
Quaker
Corn Flakes
 % JMamt latlg Netun
"intmor of British Columbia's Family Nttu/tpaptr"
Aim IBB RBWB  WH1LB IT IB mw*
pubii*a*d   every    morning   tiotpt   Sunday    by    nu   mws
FOaU_U__M»  COMPANI.   UMJTtD,   tie   Battr   Stmt.
B.O.   Macabag ol OAHAOUR ppjBb Lreatd WB» Bervue.
AOVBRTISIRO  RATBS OH  APPUCATIOB
a rale oerde may be teen at tba office ot any Advertising Agtney
raoognlatd bj lbe CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPERS AJBOCIATION,
SUBSCRIPTION tuna
.,.. t    an
—   ,n
—..    I-*
HI
tmt y**»   -              	
iijoo
Payable in advance.
MenMe Audit Burna ot Circulation.
THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1988.
BUY NOW AND SAVE MONEY
From all over the country are coming reports of
increases In prices for both primary and manufactured
commodities. These increases in prices an being reflected in communications which are being received by
Nelson merchants, and it is evident that those of the
public who make purchases now will save money as
oompared with the prices which they will have to pay
a little later on. In some commodities then has already been an advance in the retail price, and in most
of these commodities the retailers have bean notified
that then will be a further advance when later shipments an made.
One cotton manufacturer writes that his fall price
list shows an advance of approximately 5 per cent on
practically all lines, and tint he has been notified by
win to advance all prices an additional 2**_ per cent,
to take effect immediately.
In the case of manufactured ailk, an increase of
5 centa a yard is now going into effect. In soma cases
silk mills have withdrawn all their prices, and will accept orders for immediate delivery only, and then only
at the price Which prevails on the date of shipment
from the mitt, This nport sayB the price of raw silk
is rising continuously.
Shoe manufacturers an notifying dealers of increases whkh have gone into effect, and further increases which will.take effect within the next few
weeks.
Felt foot-wear has been advanced 10 per oent in
wholesale cost. Felt wools have advanced 25 per cent
Upper leathers for shoe manufactunn have advanced
80 per cent and sole leather from 80 per cent to 45 per
cent These advances are being reflected in wholesale
quotations on shoes.
Then are increases in prices of woollen coats, woollen underwear, and other woollen goods. Some oi the
Upper leathers for shoe manufactunn have advanced
wools imported from Australia have advanced 40 per
cent over the price which pnvailed in February.
It is obviots that the advice to the public "to buy"
now is sound. It is likely to be many yean befon commodities and gooda will be purchased at the prevailing
low prices.
GERMANY'S NEW CHRISTIANS
in their efforts for religious control in Germany,
the Nazi organization has rounded off its interferonce
with Jews and Lutherans by riotous demonstrations
against a Roman Catholic convention at Munich.
Politically also the Catholic centre party has felt,
in common with the Jews and the social-democrats in
the main Lutheran, the weight of the Hitler decrees
under his revolutionary dictatorship.
The "New German Christians" contested the election of the state head of the Lutheran ehureh recently,
and in storm troop fashion, their defeated preacher-
candidate has launched the Nazi edict against Dr. Bodel-
schwingh, the bishop-elect of the Reich. The New
Christians declare that the Lutheran body has not
heard the voice of God "summing us to valorous deeds."
A new election is now being urged.
Munich, aa the centre of Catholic Bavaria, is now
subjected to a curtailment of a religious convention,
one owing allegiance in w religious sense to the Vatican. Extreme interference took the form of prevent*
ing a cardinal from celebrating high mass. It is a
follow-up of interference with the Bavarian Centrists
in the campaign awarding Chancellor Hitler his office.
ThU anti-Catholic outbreak is in sharp contrast to
, Hitler's original outline of the Nazi program given
out over ten years ago in Munich: "We demand freedom for all religious sects in the Btate, so far as they
do not endanger its existence or work against the customs and morals of the German race."
Now Herr Hitler assumes the arbitership of re-
. ligion in the light of its endorsatiOn of valorous deeds,
such as meet his favor. What becomes of peace and
good-will in the perfervoid doctrines of Germany's
"New Christian?" The Nazis have adopted a misnomer
to designate their religious -Met.
London Economic Conference has a bar 70 feet
long, serving drinks of 66 nations to thirsty delegates.
That, at least, should keep the delegates in good spirits.
University professor says it's dangerous for man
to marry Rf ter 80.  How about befon?
King George is nported to have lost weight during his recent illness. Another case of the declining
pound?
"Between You
and Me"
By "I.RC"
PM_ etoria* tn beginning to
drift in, tblt littit ooming Tfoin a
realdent up the arm. who returned
trom a recant tithing trip to tall of
large trout, wblcb ba almoat
landed, whtn It wea itoten ttom bla
very hook by a water make. Nothing
daunt*d, th* angler mtnoeuvred hit
Una about tha tall of th* wriggling
snag* ead hoisted tbe reptile, wtth
tbe' tlth In ltt mouth, Uttr from
the »it*r.
*   a   •   •
Irate Ootftr—You muat taka your
children *w*y Irom bare, madam.
Thl* la no piece tor tbem.
Mother—Dont you worry—tb*y
cen't war nothing naw. Tbalr fither
wat a aergeent-mijor, "e was.
• •   .
strawberry   time   haa  arrived   In
the Kootenay*—We all tzpect to
g*t our fin ot barriei—and probably
tome of ue will gtt tbt bin*—
• •   •
Strawberrte* now are In tbeir blush,
(Delight b*yond ell meaaure),
And weeklng thlcv** to pttchct rutb
In tearch ot berried treuure.
.   .   .
Here and there about tbe olty—
An extraordinarily large number ot
district people ln Nelton Monday,
Tueadfty and Wednesday—And practically everyone of them having
come to see Ctvtlcade—Expressions
of enthusiasm—-tnd disappointment
—But belief tbe picture wit worth
teeing—Othen declaring the advanw
nottcM were too strenuous—But
ereryon* happy—In fact cloee te or
over dOW people atw the «how In
Nelaon—
• •   «
Otorg* B*nw*U telling a youngster
on a bicycle—Thtt b* ahould have
e Ugbt wben travelling at nlgbt—
Davie Kerr working overtime on ble
book*—Bill Sturgeon remerklng that
be bad not tests a picture that bad
come up to "The Birth ot a Nation."
—Dr. L. E. Borden and Eric P.
Dawaon converting on * itreet
corner—
• •   •
Someone explaining that "Cavalcade" meant a pre nalion ot eventa—
Cllfdtn Ctrne of Sunshine Bay—ip
to ate the thow—oeorge Dvorjetz
planning a drive up the arm—
Orover Ctdy with a newtpiptr stuck
In hla hip pocket—WUllam Fraaer
of Kootenay Bty—pacing up tnd
down a corridor at tht Hume—
prob-bly awaiting bla wife—Joe Carter recalling palmy dayt whtn tha
Na*ook|n docked ln Nelson—Dr. H.
B. Morrison talking mining—If that
I* anything new for htm?—Jess
Sender* alttlng kt eaat with maga-
alae In hind—And I bought some
•aired peanut*—
• •   a
And tt won't be long before we
will ell be getting ttung—The silver
trout ara biting—and lt won't be
long before mosquitoes wlll he busing and drilling—
• .   .
Tb* big moaquitou aun tb* ntt
And bum with conaclotu pride,
But amall mosquitoes never tret,
Fcr they cin get Inalde.
• •   •
"I bought one of thoae ahlrts tbey
aaid would laugk at tba laundry.":
aay* a Nelsonlt*. "tnd It mutt hivi
heard a aide-splitting Jok* tb* tint
tlm* lt wtnt thttt."
25 Years Ago
(rrom The Daily Ntwi of jane 22,
1908)
Twelve tbouMad dolUre worth ol
fltemondi, uwd for drilling purpoees, were ittflen tt Roeelend yee-
tenWjr.
• •   •
The water leral la dropping rapidly. Teeterdaj it lell fin inchee to
16 feet three lnchea abore low water.
• •   •
A petition la being circulated
throuth the city for the changing
of the time to one hour earlier. Tbe
promote™ expect that * tbe tporting
cluba and the fraternltlea generaUy,
which means a good slice out ot the
community,   will  sign  the   petition.
see
W. R. Campion, who la handling
the strawberry crop for tha district,
states that Nelaon Is going to hat* a
bumper crop.
AUNT HET
"I don't ctre If they tre pt'i
kin folk. They re vltlton the
flrtt week, but ttttf tbat they're
juat llvin' on pm.-^
—I  '   fl    *,**" -L     I   '-■'.	
THB MUON DART JfBWS, NSU-Wf, B.C. — TBOTSDAY MOBNINO.  JVM  SS, Utt '.,
Auction and
Coftrdgmridie
By tb* 'forld-j^ftadlng  Antborltr.
1-dILTON C. WOU
a cBArni -Ain-t'P
BY *ni«D»BBNSl
m\£jfm^r*^>**<?_m „
"But you abouldn't com***, here two dayt running."
"'Oo't bin runnln'?"—JLondon Opinion.
CAVALCADE
By  GBRALD S. R»
Morle -Ada are familiar with the
celluloid lion that turna hla maselre
head at the introduction of oertaln
feature fllma before letting forth a
oslloptymlo roqr whloh serves either
a warning, or rouees patrona from
a eemi-eomnolenoe induced by the
earlier Inanities ef the proframl
The Britiah Lion may well roar
approval, ahd the American Xagle
may also gtve a screech of delight
ln a cousinly and mutual appreciation of tbe rare artistry and masterly direction woven into the tapestry of Cavalcade, which ia sow by
way of becoming an historic document.
Produced on the GoM Oout of
California, lt la to the greater glory
of America that Sngland oould not
have created anything mora Sngllah
than thia Vox produced movietone,'
for lt embodies tba soul of England in feeling, tradition and instinct, and ia aa Bngllsh aa roaat
beef, Yorkshire pudding and boiled
cabbage, though made under the
blue skies of Hollywood alx thousand miles away from the misty
realms ot Britannia.
OUE ANCIET LOYALTIES
Your reactions to tbla episodic
drama of an Bngllsh family's faith,
oourage and heroism for - their love
of oountry ue conjectural, but may
revive a renewed hope for a revitalising prooess, clnemetlcally, towards
a loftier conception and a less
tawdry un-ldeallsm than heretofore
conceived as tbe acme of desirability
ln tbe llluslonary world of Shadow-
land.
One forgives Hollywood muoh for
Cavalcade;' tt surpasses anything yet
enoompaaasd 6j the Pacific coast
studloe. Originally a London stage
production, it was reoently preeented at Windsor Caatle u a command cinematic performance for
their Majesties, the King and Queen
of Kngland. lhe story of Cavalcade rings true, and the playera are
competent; they are secondary to
tha narrative, which la aa it ahould
be. The photography is no less
graphic and luminous than expansive and Imaginative, and there
la fine restraint of the spoken word,
thero an but few technical flaws.
A   DBAMATIC  CAVALCAJ*!
This atory of a typifcal middle
class English family, vividly etched
against the passing years of more
than a quarter of a century, takes
one back across the way on* has
come ln one's own life.
It Is not readily forgottan, for
Cavalcade carries a world wide and
a heart stirring appeal, though
very English In setting and.mood.
Tba .celluloid strip unrolls in a
aeries of f*_sodes agajh-tt •* kaleidoscopic merry-and-aail paatmmi since
New Year's Eve 1800 (The years,
with their shattering crises, immediately preceding the twentieth
century, determined tiie post-Vlc-
torlan history bf England*), though
the family Is drawn more than onoe
into the vortex of war, one eenses
Its Innate hatred therefor. For
all of Britain's fighting history,
Britons an not naturally a bellicose'people. A greater interest develops ln the terrifically dramatic
background of events which Inexorably color tbe lives of the principal characters than ln their portrayals by aome familiar acreen
favorites; then an faces strange
to Canadian audiences, and they
an   very  acceptable.
In a series of dignified and deeply moving animated Vignettes, the
story sweeps throuth a crescendo
of woes adown the life of one generation, with a background of the
whirling vlclaaltudas of three decades, from the Boer War to the
cataclysmic yesrs of 1914-1Q18—»nd
after! It crystallises the emotions
of an epoch.
SOUTH   AFRICA
Tbe Boer War! Buller. Baden-
Powell and Plumer; Roberta and
Kitchener, colenso and Paardeburg,
Ladysmlth and Kimberley. Britain
drunk with Joy and aloohol on
Mafeking night over the nllef of
a beleagured village on a treeless
waste of the sun-baked Vaal. The
disastrous Black Week of military
ineptitudes Is forgotten, though unfriendly nationa oontlnue to 'visit
the Lion's tall as Britain inwardly
questions tbe Justice of her cause
in this -Squalid little war. Mafe-
kft-g restores national confidence,
Implies the -assurance Of final victor/; the last battle, whloh ls the
only one that matter* In any campaign, would be won.
$50,000 IN FIREARMS DUMPED INTO OCEAN
New York City -utnuaUy makes a practical contribution to disarmament, and the other day consigned
?50,000 worth ol confiscate^ firearms to Davy Jones'
locker. A great variety' of vyeapons were destroyed.
They ranged in size from a massive Lewis machine gun,
which required the, efforts of two husky policemen to
toss overboard, to three fountain pen pistols designed
for pocket wear.
In the year's accumulation were 3,150 pistols and
revolvers, 476 shotguns and rifles and 260 other dangerous weapons, including one machine gun, one-half
of a baseball bat, a section of a wagoh tongue, one
crank handle, a boxful of bombs, and a nice assortment
of leaded gaa pipes, taped billies, brass knuckles, butcher knives, stilettos, carving knives, bayonets, blackjacks and homemade persuaders of one'style or another.
Unemployed St Louis shoemaker ia writing an opera which, probably, will Q&ntain some very sole-fut
Delanaivo piajr* olln. require al-
nwat braun auuranc* coupled with
prompt wtton. Any haatUttOQ baton making a plaj ol the typo
thown below would be aat te be
fatal. In a hand recently played
la av rubber gem* In Montreal,
Canada, Kr. Btantey Bart who held
tha Cut hand wu th* itu wr-
fonnwr althoufh South and Horth
did all the bidding. TtsA auction
wu u follow*: South on* Cluh
North pn* Dl-mond, South two
No Trump*, North three Diamond*.
South thr** No Trump*.   *i
Wut'* Initial lwd wu th* Deuoe
of Spadu wblch, If th* Mad wu
"honeit", marked both for South
aad Cut a 4-1-4-1 Spade dlvtelon.
Agalnat a No Trump when a player
mike* a _on»nttonal original lead
without a holding that Justlfte* a
high card opening he lwd* bi*
fourth but. in racint yean aome
aiport* hare become convinced that
tha accurate counting of the card*
whleh a fourth beat Mad permit*
li ipt to be of grater value to th*
Declarer that to the partner of the
barrel-organ*  ln  th*  •uburbj;   th* Wider and therefore. It la wiu *t
PASSING OT BOK AND OLOBV
A glittering galaxy ot flva Kings
ln gnat pomp and clroumatanoe
ride behind the coffined gun-c*r-
rlige of Queen Victoria. No more
whUtUflg "Soldier ot tbe Quun" I
Cdward the Peace-maker la crowned
Xing and Emperor; whlatllng re-
•umw, but lt la now "Soldier, of
the King"; the tune revwrberatu
overaeaa with all tha enthustesm
of the world war Tipnerary.
LAND Or BOTE AND GLORY
Prosperoua d*yil Halcyon yeanl
A decade of » aolid eplendor, unparalleled" In tb* annate ot England.
Cavaloada Bin the leuer memories
of one-time -familiar Incident* of
the Edwardian era, even of remembered itreet aound*. Muffin ball*
tinkling defiantly at du*k and
bicycle bella, Qoachlng horn* In Pic*
1,
el-
Jingle of hansom cabs with the
clop-clop of horses' hooves (like tbe
gulp of a bottle wben water passes
unevenly from Its neck) and driving
whips slapping merrily against tbe
slatted aides of horse-drawn busses
leisurely perambulating between Putney and Peckham 1
THE   EBfriEft'S   ZENITH
Heydays exceeded only by the
luxury living yean of an unbridled
Imperialism and passionately crimson cartography, which culminated
in the Diamond Jubilee of 1807.
Queen Victoria acclaimed the mother of her people, the embodied
symbol of their Imperial greatness.
Kipling writes tbe famous Recessional, and shocks England wfth Its
note of warning:
"Still   stands   Thine   ancient   sacrifice
A humble and a contrite heart."
LEST  WE  FORGET
The world forgets. The fatal Four
Horsemen of Plunder again ride
their whirlwind of fame, with bloody
hooves. The world oannot yet forget tbe grim desolation and loneliness, hideous fears and horron of
the   "Disastrous   Years."
A   far   off* August   ln   1014,   and
across tha smoky sky:
"Ring the deep strokes marking the
hour
One by one from  tbe  gny stone
Midnight the hour of destiny,
and Britain, without nalitlng It,
already one hour at wart War
again, ranging the world, and this
time with an extraordinarily competent and obviously brave enemy 1
HAZARDS   AND   HEARTBREAKS
Troope leave, and hospital trslns
.... Zeppelins and sinking warships ... tha recruiting doggerel
"Tour King and Country needs you"
—the acme of bathos! Other war
songs, jesting and obscene, sentimental and ribald. Officers, young
and old (many of them mimicked
and ridiculed aa tbe "Temporary
Oentlemen") and their fighting
men civvies pulled from field and
shop and office, from banks and
universities and flung Into the
furnace with perfunctory training—
on home-hurried leavea from the
Une of battle. Dim figures flit
across the screen like shadows ln an
Aeschylean tragedy, fading ghost wise
... It Is tbe pack-laden, amateur
army bound for the flashing horl-
Bons, marching first in Jubilance,
tben ln cold dismay, then In a grim
tooth-ahowlng doggedneas Into the
Valley of the Shadow . . . De Fro-
fundls. The barren bog of No-Man's
Land wltb tangled thickets of rusted
wire, broken, bodies and battle debris . . a wooden cross In silhouette
against a darkening sky.
CEAftE  FIRE
"Eleven hours". Tbe Armistice of
HU. A queer sllenoe tn the war
aones, an hysterical Ireniy elsewhere. The war Is over and what
an ending! Tbe rumbling gunfire
stops, street lights an again brightly lit, and publlo clocks resume
their   forgotten  striking.
Tbe singed and battered curtain
of war Is rung down on the gigantic murder competition, and the
world gases at the ruins, but the
real winter la yet to come with
chaos after a Pyrrhic vlotory. Peace
on paper but not ln men's hearts.
Hang the Kalstrl A world fit for
heroes to live ln! Who really won?
Whoever ean really win any war?
THE   AFTERMATH—FINALE
Disintegrating yean. Mah-Jong
and midget golf, the Eugenie hat
and Jig-saw putxles! Cavalcade depicts a flash-back to thoae hectic
times, ahd through tbe acreen
drama, we look back on -this transitory  and   tribal  civilisation   which
Looking"Over the Field of Economics
tJ-IM
♦MS
♦JHH
~r~—
nw
:!r,
ESP
VMS
♦M
•M-J-H
tlmea to try to defelve both partner
and leader by aterllng wtth wh*t
I* known u a fate* card. In this
hand the declarer knew that If a
fourth but Sped* wu being led,
each adversary had four and, with
that type of holding, no benefit
could be derived, by a failure to
-May the Ace on the flnt trick.
However, lt W«*t'i lead twd bun *
fifth but Spade, thtn It would be
a big advantage for tbe Declarer to
hold up until the third round be-
csuu if But held th* King of
Diamonds, a Spade could not be
led when Eaet took th* trick. Oon-
muently South ducked trick* 1 and
1 but played hi* Aoe of Spades on
trick S. South then led the Jack
of Diamonds, West played the Five,
dummy the Deuoe, and East un-
healtatlngly pl*y*d th* Pour. South
lod a aeoond Diamond and covered
West** Six with dummy'i Ten. Cut
won .with hi* -logleton King and
th* tummy htnd wu dead. Tbe
Deolarer consequently took alx
tricks; lt tba King of Diamonds
had baen held up, he would haw*
made  gama.
When -But mada tha play he
fait quite sure thst hi* partner bad
opened a four-card Spade suit and,
therefore, that gama could not he
uved by winning with tba King
of Diamonds and cashing thne
Spadu—tour trick* tn all. But
North'* Diamond! oould be thut out
tnd gama uved if South beld only
two Diamond*.
Agtlnit <uch *tnt*gy u thl* a
Declarer 1* helpless.        -
_ Jn the two hundred yun prior
i» t»l4 th* prottctlon -fronted alien
wad enemy private property by tew
during w*r-tlm* had grown to a
point whare the world hsd oome to
t*_sr_ oonfiacatldn u obsolete. It
w*i, like the carrying off of «l»«i
arid hosttges, uaoeltted #lth *n-
clent and barbarous times, and not
with tha practices ot clvllt_»tlon.
Th* orelt War changed all that.
It became a *J»r of attrition. A*
the month* wdre on tb* oonvmtlom
ot clvllteed warfare were *b*ndoned
one by one. Non-combatant* atrand-
ed la enemy territory mtt* herded
Into camp* . and Intenwd; tbeir
property wu usuaitrad. «nd placed
ln charg* ot an official r*c*lver. tn
many cuu th* property consisted
of factorlu which htd to be kept
running b*c*use th*lr product* were
-uentlal.
up to thtt point lt It pouible
to uy thit print* proptrty placed
In th* hand* of offictel cu*todl*n*
ln Allied countrlu htd not bua
confiscated—although the effect on
the owner wu tbe ume, and the
only thing tbat distinguished tt
from confiscation wu tha f*lw hope
tbtt restoration would be mwte
whtn the w*r wu our.
The AUM* *t Verulliu, under the
Inspiration of that man ot stone,
Ctemenoeau, agreed to keep the
sequestered property tnd to hand
over to Oermany, u part of Ita
reparation* bill, tha tuk of oom-
penutlng «propri*ted Cterman nation-!*. In abort, tee Alllu, pw-
hips more dttute than they realised
at th* time, substituted * b*d debtor for a good one, and ln tbe upshot Oermany paid only ten or
twelve per oant of tba claim*. Article j«7 (1) of th* Truty of v«r-
ullles can now be interpreted only
u * subterfuge to cover an outright confiscation.
It only remalna, uya rsrrero, tha
eminent Italian, for the "clvllteed"
world to revive the custom ot selling prla <*r* of war Into slavery.
Theu bitter words are quoted
with approvtl by Drs. Bitter tnd
Zelle ln a tract entitled, "No Mora
War on Foreign Invutmenta," published b, Dorranoe Is Co., Philadelphia. The two O-rmtn scholars,
who htv* written volumlnouily on
post-war economlo problems, make
an eloquent and comprehimlv* cu*
for • new nonoagmulon or Kellogg
pact for private property, and ot
coune thalr work te highly appreciated by international banker*.
The whale cau, of ooun*. rest*
on 'th* usumptlon thtt prlvtte
property, (tnd pirtlculirly prlv*t* In.
vestment*) should 'be u "s*ored"
now u In ISth oentury. perh»p*
It should, perhaps the pnurv*-
tlon ot our olv-llutlon depend* on
It. But the Onlted States government spok* Very plainly on the subject about the time the Kellogg put
wu enunctetad. It uid th*t Unlttd
state* n*Uon*l* participating ln
foreign enterprises henceforth did
so at their own rlak. Other government* have not, perhaps. Men eo
outspoken. But they are not u
willing u they were to nuh to tha
Ten Years Ago
rrom The Dally News of 3mse 31,
lttl)
3. H. McDonald, of Rossland  hu
aold  th*  Rio Ttnto  mlnenl   claim
on tbe Salmon river tor $60,000.
a  a  •
The water level ot the Wut Ann
dropped another 15 inehu yuterday
to 18.5 fwt above aero.
1 .   .   .
Ur. and Mn. Frederick Niven ot
Willow  Point  ipent  the  day  shopping in Nelson yuterday.
•   *...
Betwun 40 and 50 membera of
the Odd Fellows of Enterprise lodge,
Trail, will visit tb* Nelaon lodge
tonight.
Twenty Years Ago
Cadet* ind members of boy* brl*
nam at Neleon, Orsnd Forki, Kaalo
tnd Crtnbrook, will hold t oamp on
Kootenay like during tbe flrat week
of July.
...
By t *oore of 33-9 Percy Jcrdtn't
Juvenile baaeball nine but tha St.
Andrew's Juvanllu last nlgbt. Larson's Fats, Juvenile chimps, beat
the Ftlrvlew boys 13-11.
QUIVERING
NERVES
TThtn too, arc juit pa edge , * ■
wban you can't atand die cblldren'l
boIm ... when everything you do
b a burden ... when yoa an irritable Ind Mo*... try Lydia E. Pink-
him'i Vegetable Compound. 9S oal
of 100 women report benefit.
It will five you |ut tbe extra energy you need. Lift will teem worth
living again.
Don't endure anothar day without
th* help thia medidoe can (iva. Gal
a bottle from your druggist today.
^ifduOL b. WumklmtatU*.
VEGETABLE    COMPOUND
aaelittnce   of   tdvsnturoua
who   get   into   trouble  lit   foreign
parte.   Ttw British government did
not rush into Moscow, fer Instance,
to uve  AUn  Monkhouu and  hla
tallow vickers englneen In tha tine,
dramatic manner the powen s—eA
to exhibit when people  were kidnapped   by   -teliull,   tha   Morocoan
bandit.   Thow dan are  gone forever.    Ute   and   loana   ln   forelgri,
ptrt* tre not u mt* ** our ftthef*
hoped tbey would be by thla tlm).!
and a price la being paid for thli,
lack.of security.
Dr. -Bitter and ttllt might now
writ* another book on protecting
foreign lnvutmint* In time of.
petot. Tb* gnat need today I*
not an igreement to cover wtr-tim*:
rlaka, but one to cover peace-time-
moratoriums, gold embargoes, anff
llmlter meuure*.
'■    ■
For
MINING CAMPS
Ununded Cottonwood
Puels ire t »ult»bl*
gnu tor *U mining
snd otber oamp buildings. It te strong,
wsterproof, light and
very  euy  to   handle.
Wood, Vallaneo
Hardware Co., Ltd. '
District   Dlitrlbuton
lf
IT'S LOST
WANT-ADS
IN
THE NELSON
DAILY NEWS
WILL FIND
IT
we, In our complexity of thought,
han built up, tnd which hu mtde
or unmade us, tnd tre moved to
weep for our nry greatneu, and
our every weaknau u * people.
The film flickers to clow, and the
curtain la rung down wltbout an
apple-bloslom ending. Yet we are
undeniably inspired to Join Dim*
Wynytrd, lhe mother, in her elo- |
quent tout to the Pete* of Eng- *
tend, and echo her hopeful worda
thit the Mother Oountry will some
d*y find dignity, grutntu and
peace tgtln ln tb* abiding* mystery
of the swiftly puslng y«*n. A
memorable evening. - Think you
Hollywood.    Mtny happy returna.
THAT BODY OF YOURS
By   JAMES  W.   U.tKTO.V   M.ll.
NO   MYSTERY   ABOUT   REDUCING  WEIGHT
I sometimes think thst tbere ls
so much eald and written about
the varlou* method* of reducing
weight thit on* would think it w*s
really a complicated matter.
The reuon for to many augges-
tlons regarding reducing—reducing
foods, gland preparation!, speclsl
exercises, speclsl bathe—te because
overweight Individuate, 9 out of 10
st leut, wlll not do the only common unu thing they should do, thst
te cut down on tbeir dally tood
intake.
It la all nry simple. Thou who
ire overweight usually hsve good
mtehlnery or good organ* tnd tlt-
suu. and can really get ilong on
a naalter amount of tood than they
eat; in fact un get »len* on kn*
thtn many who are of average
weight.
You can thua tu that lf they cut
down by Juit a amall amount ot
food eve., day they will itop in-
creating ln weight, which te one
big point gtlned.
Then when they tlnd thit they
an not locmslng In weight lf
they wlll cut down a little more on
the dally Intake whst will htppen.
The  fit   thit   It   stored   In   the  a yur to do lt.
body will gradually be taken up
and uw<( for the evirydiy needs of
the body. It te Jutt like using up
the cott or wood from t speclsl
pile when the pile tbtt Is usutlly
kept replenished M exhsusted. Or
another way of putting lt la to uy
thtt Uie exceu ttt In the body te
Juit like l merchtnt with goodt ln
hi* storeroom thst should be on his
shelvu   In   thl   procu*   of   being
m_t,
Naturally It I* weU to know ln *
genertl wty thtt oerttln foods—
augtr, potltou, breed tnd ptstry—
mike ftt, *nd other foods—butter,
crum, and fit meats—prevent body
tissues from wesrlng out too aoon,
and thua It te in these two cltasei
of foods thai the reduction should
be made.
The other main gyoiiP of food*7-
mut, egga, oeruls—should not be
nduoed u tbey are needed to
maintain the structure of .the
body tlnues.
Therefore every overweight indlviduil who te willing to tike theu
two ttepi, that Is a alight reduction In tood intake to pnnnt Increau In weight, and a further
•Ught reduction to uu up bte exceu ftt, I* bound to got result*
ufely  If he  tskes six  months  to
he Coeur d'AIene
Hotel
In the Heart
of
SPOKANE
ANNOUNCES
Rooms newly furnished tHroughout in prep»r-
ation for our usual excellent Spring and Summer patronage from our friends in Canada.
HARRY F. GOETZ, Mgr.
Th* HOTEL COEUH
d'ALENE conllnuil Itl
polky of IcciptllH
ranadten money at
par In payment el
room accommodation
The Coeur d'AIene H
the only hotel la
Spokane that hu
for yetn conslatenlly
maintained tbl* policy In rei*rd t*
Canadian   monrj.
SPOKANE, Wash.
■ laiiiaiMMf-aiuaiB
I Sponges and Chamois i
I  We have a nice assortment of New Sponges
and Chamois Skins in stock. Just
~ the thing for cleaning*
___. that new car
| PRICES RIGHT
I NELSON HARDWARE CO.
_ WHOLESALE  AND   RETAIL   QUALIIY   HARDWARE
■ NELSON.   B.C.
■ ■■■IHIIIBI
 m
. TBI NBLSON DAttT  -WW*.  KM.SON.  trnt*. - TBCBSOAY  MOBNINO,  TOW  M.   WW- ,
HOB  UVW
SOMERVILLE AND NASH STH1
GOING AS FIELD DOWNTO 32
Sandy" Has Yet to Be
Extended; Meets Kyle
Today
     _Bnf..    jun§    SI     (Of
•).—In  unbther  dty ot  upeet*
field   In   Uw   British   amateur
tourney   today   was   brought
to the  eighth round  of  82
...j    and    Included    aro    Roee
Kkdy)  Somerville, Canada's cham-
t of tbe United etatw, and hla
_ idon  clubmtte,  Jack  Nuh.
t Tolley and Roger Wethered.
title-holders,   represent   the
remaining    British    threat,
two surTiTort cf  the  United
contingent of six utt  left—
T.    Dunlap    snd    Douglas
■U-tnt Ckndy," who has yet to be
led, will get some opposition
ow. He ls drawn In the fifth
against tbe player who sprang
biggest of today's surprises,
d P. Kyle cf Scotland. Kyle
-*t*d the Scottish champion,
McLean, one of the favorites,
§ up*
id   tf   Dunlap,' fair-haired   New
; youth and Walker cup player,
I past sharp-shooting Uster Hartln the morning, he will collide
SomerTllfe—-o» Kyle,
ANCE  OUT
mmaJtux wu not tbe only favorite
wttttt  over.  Also Joining  the  de*
fending champion, Johnny de Forest,
| th sidelines ace T. A. Torrance
Lit year's British Walker cup cap*
lte. eliminated by A. fi. Thompson
Aldebrurgb   at   the   twenty-Tlrit
In   the   third   round,   John
British   Walker  cup   player
ed by  Nuh   and   Alarlc 'de
older   brother   ef   tho   d«-
___,_ ohampion, beaten by Dunlap.
While Bandy'was getting an easy
* tnoe to the fifth round with a
and   five   victory   over   D.   J.
old   Cambridge   unlvenlty
Naah had to overcome two
hy golfers In Lionel Munn.
■•« Irish star, and  VurkO.  He
letted Munn four and two and
tt   to   the   nineteenth   hole   to
t Burke.  In  a ding-dong   battle
which  neither player  wu enr
than one up.
..General A. C. Crltchley. na-
of Calcary and holder of the
ch amateur title, wu the latest
Han to go out of the oompett-
J. W. Jones and Orange Park
___iated htm In tbe fourth round
a two and'ione count.
WBBWABU. KAV
Bomerrtlkr  ire* obtl(*ed  to   pUy
Miy   one   match,   ln   the   fourth
round,  and wu again  ln  unbeatable form. He was only one stroke
liver par for the  13  holes  t* he
Mtshfd off Walker. The last hole
Witt something of a freak,  Sandy
letting    an   eagle   two   on    the
thirteenth   when   Walker   knocked
111 ball Into the eup.
_' The only thing that hu wemed
|o  bother sandy  Is the wind  on
the   putting   greens,   making   the
Ml!   do  unesperted  tricks.
Cyril   Toll-**   champion   ln    1B30
Dd   1029,   alternately  brilliant   and
nitlc,   eliminated   T.   C,   Manners
Mb and one and then oqueeaed out
tarn   Robinaon,  I-u_cashfre   veteran,
mt up. Wethered nad a three and
w>> victory over R, 0.  Howell  of
Glamorgan. -
HOW FAST CAN
A CADDY RUN?
Still In Swim
i&r
"anything
canHatpch
IN it *»•»<•*
0A/tB-AND
USUALLY
00*3*
*&
■V
(By   AL   DSMARCT_>
"Panta" Rowland tho old-time
manager of the world champion
Chicago Whlta Sox, tells me a good
story on Judge  Landls.
The Judge wu pitying one of
the oourses in Florida with a
strange caddie. -He wu doing better than usual, and In a moment
of exuberance he turned to the
bearer of the cluba and aaked tbe
time-honored  queetlon.
"You've aeen worse playera than
me on the oourse, my boy?"
The caddy hesitated and the commissioner of baaeball repeated his
question.
"Well," aald tb* caddy, Tm nev
to the oourse, and I don't know
many of tbe players, but from what
they tell me, there's an old guy
that comes here they oall Judge
Landls and I think be mutt be
worse than you."
TWENTY   YEARS   AOO   TODAY
June 33, 1011—Nick Attrock eon
eumed five pitchers or beer with his
dinner at Dlnty Moore's chop Muse
in New York,
Waa tbls a reoord or wu lt a
reoord?
YANKEES WIN
IN THIRTEENTH
New •tort  ._  II ai
Wuhlngton     td 31
Cleveland  M 38
Chicago  .;■  81 at
Phlladelpbl*   38 38
Detroit  30 81   .483
Boiton       38 38    .871
St.  LouU     31 40   .844
1"_1tl mm_m___^i________mty    ...
"Silent" Sandy- Somerville. lett, and Jack Null, right. Doth ot Canada, who are etlll ln th* Britiah amateur golf tournament u the field la whittled down to 88, 	
BRAVES TAKE
DOUBLEHEADER
Giants Win Final; Cards
Win After Lagging;
Phillies Count
NATIONAL   hKAH-t,
New Tart 	
St. Loui* ......
Pltteburgh   ...
Chlcayo 	
Cincinnati   ...
Brooklyn 	
Boaton 	
Philadelphia
. 35   31
_____\
. 88 37 M0
. 33 31 .808
. 28 38 .4511
. 38 81 .448
38 38 .438
. 24 88 All
X Centi
( Choose from thit wide
variety of ro«nJ-trip
bargain- to Chicago:
*6©50 «66w
• -.•*«• rirrtClu,"!
•tl-tw Wan Um*.
I rm_us »tw Mmael m M. Udwt.
$90*°
Cnt u Mra* Mt Oal. II. 1H>.
Cei-responding redactions te
all Eastern point*. Stopover,
es er-fwbere. Kedoeed dining
ear price,—delieloia meals,
SOe up.
Aik *bont surprisingly LOV
COST "ALL * EXPENSE
TOURS" to World's Ft-rl
Everyone ahould vlalt ihli
meet tol*rlal, enchanting aa*
petition, and enjoy 'be de*
light el a ride on the lemon,
Empire Builder over Ihe
clean, rind * r lell, teenie Great
Northern Roll*, with 60
11*1 aloag Claeler
national I*ark.
New', lh* time to to—
•nd we'll help yea
plan all detail*. A*k
•ny Grut Northern
Aient.
To GltcUr fork,
Tsein CltUs,
Chics,, rnd Esat
tt
Empire Builder
OX. CRICKET
LONDON, June 21.—(CP Cable).—
Remarkable bowling feats marked
the opening of the flret-claaa cricket
match between Oxford university
and Buaeex today. Oxford* crack
bowler, Q. H. Owen-Bmith. took tlx
Bxutn wicketa ttt 14 runa and Bua-
aei's veteran Cornford came right
beck to take fire Oxford wlcketi
for is. Onlr om century waa knocked UP »t today's matches got under why, Human gtttlng no for
Cambridge against surrey.
Cloelng scores in flrst-clist matches
started   today:
Kent 189 (Smith five for 38),
Ssaex 187 for eight (Pearce 65
not out) it Chelmsford.
Derby 38' for one wicket against
Gloucestershire at Chesterfield.
Yorkshire 330 iSutcliffe 71), War-
wlckihlre one for no wlcketi, at
Leadf.
Somenet ISO, Hampeblre 87 for
nine wickets, at Portsmouth.
Cambridge University 378 (flu-
man 110, Brown flva for 6S>, tur-
%y 81 for no wickets, at the Oval.
Sussex SB and 66 for four (Owen-
Smith six (or 14). Oxford university OA   (Cornford five for  IS.)
There waa no play in tha lllddle-
sex-Worcestershire fixture at Lord's
on account of rain.
Glamorgan 306 for eight (Dyion
68, Turnbull 81), sgslnst Lancashire
st  Swansea.
B08TON, June 21 (Aft—After
dropping three games In a fow to
Pltteburgh, Boaton Bravei recovered
their batting eye today and took a
double-header from the Piratea, 0-5
and 6*3.
Flnt game: ^^^^■^■■^
Pltteburgh	
5   18   0
Sharkey Confident
of Taking Camera
By EDWARD 3. MIL
Asso*ta.ed rrea* Kport* Writer
oAanoebuho, NY., Jun* 11—
(AP)—Wltb but on* Ide* In bla
mind—* clear, cold knockout—J*-*
Sharkey I* working down to tbe
cloae ot tbe training grind tttt bis
is-rouud title defence *t*ln*t Primo
C*rnera Jun* 31, aa keen, gs fit
and vicious a* he ever bu been In
all hla fighting daya.    '
Under * broiling aun lbe Botton
sailor battered throe aptrrtng partner* today, tuna Blrkle. Cheater
Maun and Yuatln SLrutlt and Unlabel off with ftv_ mar* round* of
lljht b*g punching and body eser.
elae*. Perspiration pound from him,
yet at the cad of the drill he
weighed but Jou pounda, IV, less
than b* *c*led for tiie mtt**h with
Uai Sohmcll&g ln which M woo hi*
tltl* * ye*r ago.
Bhei'kry leaped Into Blrkll Who
fought earner* 10 h*rd, close round,
l**t aummer, and bettered the oerman *ll over t'.ie rlbg.
Maun. * rough toller from New
Tork. ww holding on detperateiy
when hla thre* minute* war* up.
Ton *aw ttttt," ttld tb* cb»m-
PIod liter t* h* ttretcbed 04 hi,
rubbing table- "Tou taw me winging
em, eh? Well, you gutttad whtt It
meana, aU right.
"_ had earner* dowa the lut
time 1 fought blm. He won't gat
up thl* tlm*. Ten, do you hear toil"
Wild theep do not grow wool, out
have straight, cotra* htlr Ilk* thtt
of deer.
Boaton   ...._.     J   11   1
rrench and Grace; C*ntw*ll. Zachary
Smith, Chagnon, Kremer, Harris,
and Hogan, Spohrer.
Becond game:
Pltteburgh    »    SO
Boaton      »   W   1
Swetonlc. Chagnon and Grace;
Pruikhouw. Starr, Uingum and
Bjwhrer.
GIANTS WIN FINAL
NIW TORK, Juu* 31 (AP)—With
r-rel Pltaslmmon* pitching three-hit
bftll and hi* teammate* making th*
moat ot their wven blow* olf Pat
Malone, New Tork aunt* today protected tbeir one-btlt gtmt letd ln
tbe National league, defeating Chicago Cub* 3-1 In tbe final conteet
ot the four-game aeries of whlta tlw
Glanta won thret.
Chlctgo _   1     <   I
Hew  Tork    „ _  3    1   0
Mslone *nl Htrtnett; rttuun-
mona and Mancuao.
CABDS   WIN   AFTEH
LAOGINO
BROOKLYN, Jun* 11 (AF)—St.
Loui* Cardlnala spotted Brooklyn
Dodgera flvt run* in tb* flrat Lining today and then oame from behind to whu 7-6 when a pinch
double by Rodger* Hornaby rammed
over tbe deciding marks ln tha
eighth Inning. The victory left th*
Card* ttm t htlf-gton btck of the
Oltnu.
St. Louli   -    1   11   I
Brooklyn   _..._    •   11   0
Ctrleton. Vtnce tnd J, Wilton;
Beck, shute and Lopea. Outen.
rniLi.it.M mark clean sweep
PHILADELPHIA, June 11 (API —
The Phllllea made a clean sweep
I over Cincinnati todty, ttking th*
1 final   of   the   four-game  acrtta   by
'10-e.
Uliclnaatl    , „ ____   8   13    I
Pblltdelphl*     _ to   11   8
Stout, Johnaon, Qulnn and Hemiley; Amore, Hansen, Ltaka, Elliott
*nd   Dtvl*.
SALMO LEADS IN
INTERCITY BALL
Salnjo-NeUon baaeball leatfue
standing:
WLPct.
Salmo    - - 2   1   .667
Maulers     I   2   .600
Pairvlew   A.C  4   8   .872
Sefiatora   . .-.— 8   8   .500
Young Liberals  - **. 1   4   200
The Salmo Baaeball dub who
plays tbe pairvlew Athletic club,
and the Senaton at the Recreation
grounda on Bunday afternoon in a
doubleheader of tfit intercity league
havo made a number of changva in
their lineup lh an endeavor to fcuep
tbeir lead In the aerlea. Players now
on tb* team are aa follows: J.
Pair, R. Ollle, R. Edward*, w. Dorey,
R. Illlborn, C. Buah, R. Sapples, A.
Mclsaae, a Jones, H Bush, W.
Leahy, B. Johneon, W. Doniidsoo.
H. Payant.
The olub la well equipped with
unilorma and other baaeball ne>»*-
sltlei and expect to put up a snappy
display on Sunday afternoon. It
waa o.iginally arranged to play tne
Maulen and Toung Llbera'a against
Salmo but as thla would interfere
with the local league the above
change wm made. Maulen play the
Young Liberals on Baturday evehiAg
and Young Liberals play the Bens-
ton on Monday,
MARTIN ADVANCES
Athletics Walloped; Bos-
ton Detroit Divide;
Sox Blanked
AMEBICAN   LEAGUE
.131
.810
.841
.538
AM
BT, LOUIS. Juna 91. (AP).-Carried 13 inning* by Bt. Louli Brown's
stubborn defence, New Tork Yankees
today won th* opener of a five-
same M-leS, 8-8, tnd maintained
thetr one-g»me lead ln the American letgue pennant race.*
H*    TO*          8   18   I
St.   Louli         8   18   4
Vanttti, Moore tnd Dickey; Wells
and She*.
hind  W»* Perrell'* effective  pitch*
lag.
PhlUuWlphla     1   «   «
Cleveland  11 11   1
Karnahaw, Walberg tnd Cochrane;
Perrel and Spencer.
WHITE  SOX  BLANKED
CHICAOO, June ». (AP).—Earl
WhlUhlll* ahutout pitching and
hla mat**' 18-hlt attack agalnat
Oregory and Klmsey gav* Waahlngton Senator* an atay 8-0 victory
over Chloago White Soi in the
ipening gam* of thalr aerie* today.
Waahlngton         0 18   1
Chlctgo    «   »   1
Whitehill and Seweil; Oregory,
Klmsey and Orub*.
i-
BASEBALL'S
BIO SIX
WILMDIOTON. Del.. June 11 (OP)
—Canada'* lone seeker after the
Delaware at*t* grate-court tennla
crown, W*lt«r Mtrtln. University of
Toronto etudant from Regina. td-
vanced Into the quarter flnala today
with * 8-3, 8-0 victory over Lenlor
Wright of North Carolina.
Martin'* eiact plaotment* ctught.,_,.,,. _.,..-
th* American flat-footed time  and  ""J**1!! WALLOP
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^mm   _yf1_n_KtK_^m____m
DETROIT AND BOSTON
DIVIDE    '
DETROIT. Juna 31. (AP) .—Detroit
broke even ln a double header
with Boaton Had Sax, Uklng tbe
cloelng engtgement 8-8 tfter loelng
a wide open,' erratic' opener,  10-0.
Flrtt game:
Botton     10 14   1
Detroit    ...*.    9 13   3
Rhode*, welch. Kline. Weiltnd and
Ferrell; Herring, Hogtett, Bridges
and   Dettutels,   Hayworth.
Second gtme:
Boston       3   1   3
Dttrolt     5   7   3
Andrews, Welland and Oooch:
Mtrberry tn<| Htyworth.
tgtln.
Fedoras of whlta Panama and
Angora wool! tre uaually aooompanled by llttle scarfs of tha wool.
CLKVBiAND, June 31. (AP). —
Cleveland Indiana belted Karnahaw
and walberg for a doaen aafe blow*
tod*y and coasted to an 11*1 victory over Philadelphia Athletlca be-
Ben Chtpmtn* two hlta in flv*
thne* tt btt while Al Simmons
wtt connecting only onoe tn four
trip* to the pl*t* yetterday booeted
the Yankee outfielder into undla-
puted poaaeealon of tha batting
leadership of tba American league.
Randy Moore waa the only other
member of tha big alx, la addition
to Chapman, to show a gain.
O AB R H Pat.
Chtpmtn, Yankeee 84 199 48 73 .887
Slmmoni, Whit* 8. 80 347 44 SO .384
Schulte. senttore.. 83 199 40 71 JS7
Klein. PhllUt* .... 83 383 41 90 .357
Martin, Cardinal*.. 58 333 83 83 .358
Moore. Bravei  53 184 39 03 3A3
ENTRIES ARRIVE,
JULY 1 SPORTS
Entries for tha open track meet
on .July 1, part of the Canadian
Legion Bugle bsqd'a Ng program -
have been coraiat in etoadily to
aasure keen competition In practically   erery   event.
The flea mile marathon will again
bo- the main event of the day and
a large number of entries are expected. Several han already been
roetvMt.
Substantial prime are to be given
for all of the open eventi whleh
Include:
Man—100 yard daah, 330 yarda.
tyO yards, 600 yards, mile, five
mile, high Jump, broad Jump, hop
step and Jump, lnter-clty half-mile
relay and five-mile bike raee.
Ladlea—100 yard daeh, high Jump,
broad Jump, and lnter-clty Quarter
mile relay race.
NELSON TO SEND
BOWIES, TRAIL
Nelson will bo represented In <*he
Etet tnd Watt Koottnty Lawn
Bowling tournament at Trail, June
30 and July 1, by five -men'a rinka.
Tht composition of the rlnk*. ln
order of skips, thirds, second* and
le*dt. 1* »s followt:
Rlnk No. 1—O. Twist. J. Armstrong, B. Penwill  and P. Coulter
Rlnk No. 3—3. Draper, A. Bllott,
D. Eccles. tnd J. H. Argyle.
Rlnk No. 3—O. A. Meeres, 8
Brown. W. Wylle and Max Baakin.
Rlnk No. 4—R.M. Aldenmlth, A
O. Lane. W. Calfelck and J. Ball.
Rlnk No. 8—I. Y. Brak*. 9. B.
Wheeler, C. Romtno tnd F. Lee.
MINOR LEAGUE
BALL SCORES
PACIFIC  COAST LEAOUE
HoUywood 8; Lo* Angelea 7.
Mission* 8; Ban Francisco 8.
Portland 8: Beattle 6.
Put your amall dtughter'i Initial*
on the buckle of her Angora ooat
and abe will bt rlgjit lu qtyle.
Cnaritm
CIGARETTE PAPERS
MORE USD THAN AIL
OTHERS COMBINED
V
Bid	
AUTOMATIC
BOOKLET
S
WOODCUTTERS WIN
THEIR FIRST £0
Woodcutters won thetr first game
of tbe local men'a aoftball leaguo
by handing Servloe No. 1 A ib-7 setback on Wedneaday evening.
Woodcutter* led 16-3 at the end
of tbo third inning, but from then
on tho Service No. 1 boya put up s
anappy diep.ay and outaoored the
winners ln the last ilx Innings.
Hawklni itartM on tho mound for
the losers, but gave way to Doug
Jarrett Ju the fourth who held thl
Woodcutter! safely. Jack BlUop wii
alao switched to backstop duty.
' Tom Bata pitched for the dinners
wllh J. Bate behind the plete. tfid
Ball cleared the bases wltb a homer
in the tblrd.
WOMENS SOFTBALL
LEAGUE STANDING
Men's Softball
won loet
-40
pet.
1000
.800
.718
.800
.600
300
.000
.000
won lott
.   1     0
.   4     2
pit.
1.000
.887
.88
.   3     4
.   0     7
.600
.333
.000
Aott.   	
Hutklea.    	
Hed Sox	
Ftlrvlew A. C. .
Toung   Liberal!.       ^^^^^^^^
Two women* toftball gamea ar*
oil tap for thla weak, Ptlrvltw
meeting tb* Huskies to-night. Red
Sot pl*y Ftlrvlew on Friday tvenlng.
Two garnet ntxt w*ek wlll conclude the league.
June It Acta play Toung Liberal*, tnd on Juna 86. Huaklw
play  the Red  Sot.
BMIF  HI8TOBY
OP MOADCAfTtNO
Son* mt that Uw flnt regular
radio broadcaatlng wu begun tt
Montreal In December, nil. Slnoe
thtn I4.800.0M radio tete bm been
pltced In th* homea of the people,
tbout htlf of thtm In the United
8tat«*. In Germany alone there tra
now 66' different wireless journals,
with t tottl of 9,600.000 weekly
aubecrlbers.
Hum* Hotel. ....
Rangers  4    I
Ftlrvlew A. O.     6    1
Dtlly   Newt.       3    8
Roughnecka    „„,„.   2    2
Trafalgar Olanta.     1     4
Service Mo.  1.   -   0    3
Woodcutter*       0     4
Th* balance of the flrat half
of Um letgue It ta followt:
June 21. Woodcutter* va. Service
No.   I.
June 22. Hume Hotel va. Trafalgar oi*nt*
JUn* 23. IXUy Newa vt. Roughneck*.
Qemea postponed were a* follows and will be playtd oft at toon
tt poaalble.
Roughneck* va Woodcutter* (played 18*13 tla on May n>.
Hume Motel ra. Servloe Mo. 1.
(called off lor rain at the end of
.hir_ Inning on May 281.
Trafalgar Olanta ve.  Woodcutter*.
Ranger* vs. Hume Hotel.
Servlc* Mo 1. vs. Roughneck*.
Rang*™ v*. Servloe No. 1. (tbl*
gam* waa omitted from tb* origin*
aj   echedule).
PENWELL RINK
WINS BOWLING
I. fMwIIU rlnk baat 3. H. Argyle* 17-16 ta a men'i itwb bowling tournament match Tuttdty
night, ta a Itdlet' tourrjaattnt af,
Ulr Mr*. T. J. Behan aad ttifn
mate* but Mra. P. s. ooulwr'i
r»k,   n*U.
Rlnki wet*:
Men'*—J. B. Argyle. N. J. Uwtt
and D. locltt; B. PtnwUl, P. Ut.
3. T. Moen tnd J. T. Lawrle.
Udlef-Mra. P. 8. Coulttr. Mn.
A. Wlgg, Mn. I. Wright tnd Mia*
O. Uughton; Mn. T. J. Behan. Mn.
J. Ball, Mra. A. Oliver and Mra. W.
T.   Calbick.
THROUGH THIS
MAZE OF CLAIMS
—one safe, sure
guide stands out!
—the 18 year old
fact—
MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON
GOODYEAR TIRES
THAN ON ANY OTHER KIND
This has been the year-after-year
response of the Canadian public to
Goodyear's manufacturing policy,
which always has been—"Give the
motorist the most for his money."
GOO
YE A
 MQi   EIGHT 1 —~—
*^^i-s*>»*_w.w)w*))*>mw«*)'>,-»»_w»iMa»iii«»i»))»^
"SHARLIE"
By BEATRICE BURTON
^JW-|i»WMMW3*-?*v--M*W«ttW
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
(Continued)
Sharlle wu wearing a nightgown and kimono. But ahe had
drawn cm her stockings snd slipped
Into her sllppera. flbe looked down
at tbe sllppera. High-heeled onu
thst ber mother had glnn to her
wben they needed new solas. And
tht stocking had bun Dodle's too.
before tbey needed mending. Lace
clocks ran up either side of them.
"I don't know how Dodle can
be u tttttttt u she Is," uld Edna.
"It never seems to occur to fer
that she might uk some of Sharlle'a high school friends In to spend
the evening, or to do sny of the
things for her that other mothen
do. I've never known her to take
Sharlle downtown for some naw
clothes, or even bring her home
some little thing when ahe and
Maud had bun shopping. SRe
never thought of buying anything
f6r anyone but herself. . . . And
lut June when Sharlle got Into
all that trouble, and wanted to go
to buslnesa achool, what did aha
do? She abut her up hem in the
flat to do the houu work l . . .That
wu her Idea of taking care of herl
. , . She'a my own oousln, and I
- think a lot of her, but honestly,
Eldon, ahe hasn't any more right
to bring up a young daughter than
a pink rabbit hul It'a up to you
and me to help her . . . and lf you
don't mind my doing lt, I'll glee
her a good talking to. It strlku
me that this la tha time to do it . . .
Now, when, she'a feeling sober snd
repentant."
Late that afternoon she wwt
Into Dodle'e room with a tray of
hot tu and crackers. For over an
hour Sharlle heard her talking to
her mother, and every now and
then her mother's voice raised In
fubls answer, it sounded u if
she wen crying.
But after ail it* wu Edna who
gave Sharlle most of the help thst
sha got ln ths long slow weeks
that followed.
Her mother bough t her a naw
blue hat with a bag to match, and
one Sunday nlgbt abe suggested
that Sharlle invite Jim Barnum
and Gertrude in for supper. But
two mlnutu later the Hanaberrys
ume over and that wu that.
Sharlle tried to' talk over the
school with her. Tried to show
her the funny little shorthand
symbols and explain them to her.
But they wen plainly unintenet-
lng to Dodle, whareu to Edna
they were u Interesting u any
other written word. Shorthand
and typing and all other klnda of
office work wera the foundations
of Ufe to her. Whenever sbe
spoke of the offloe and her work
In lt abe apoke of them with great
urlousnesB, and the way abe
uttered Mr. Collins' name ahowed
vrrly clearly tbat to her he wu the
greatest  msn   alive.
She had talked about him at
intervale for so many yeara that
the Dunns knew ail about him.
They   knew   that   he   played   golf
every Saturday; tbat ha went fiahlng tn Florida for a month enry
Winter; tbat his wife wu very
extravagant  and  that aha  wu  so
careleu that aometimu sha' forgot to turn over her bllla to him
lor two or thru months.
"Mra. Collins hu bun awfully
sick," Edna told them one hlght In
early October. "I unt out checks
to three doctors of hen this afternoon, and Mr. Collins aaya ahee
going to aome clinic -4a a day or
two 'for observation. He's worried
about her."
"She'a about u old ** I am, Isn't
she?" Dodle ssked hsr, and thea
she sdded bitterly. "I auppou I'U
start going to pieces pretty soon.
I've noticed that most women do
when they're around forty." She
made a aound that wu half a
groan and half a sigh.
"Dodlal How siUyl" Bdna
laughed at her "Forty-year-old
women an young u they can be
theu dayal I know hups of them
wbo work In offlou in our building, and they're slim and trim and
pretty I What mains you say a
thing like that? You're still ln
your late thirties."
Dodle ahook her head. "I ful a
huldred," abe said with a shrug.
As tha wwks went by SharUe notloed that abe hsd begun to look
bar sge. Sbe never vent to Maud's
buuty parlor any mon to hava
her blond hair touched up with
bleach or to bavs tha wwkly facial
treatment that had bun a kind of
religion with her tor yurs. Sbe
stopped  using  lipstick.
Sbe paid mon attention to tha
flat than sbe ever bsd befon, and
tbe meals began to show a decided
Improvement.
Ob the afternoon before Thanksgiving ahe telephoned Sharlle at
bhe school, and uked ber to bring
home a quart of oyster* - and a
quart of cooking sherry from, the
Municipal   Market   downtown.
"I haven't any money," SharUe
told- her. "Unleu you cail a quarter money."
"Oet lt from Bdna," ber mother
answered. Tbey both knew tbat
tbey could oount on Bdna for almost anything, and Dodle owed
ber money moji, of tba Ume.
At five o'clock Bbarlle telephoned Bdna'a offloe and aaked
lor ber. After a minute sbe heard
Bdna'a   volw.
"I want to met you and borrow aome—- " ahe wu beginning
when Edna cut per off ahort.
"X can't talk yew. baby," abe
ssld quickly. "I've got to uu tbls
telephone, too, right nowl—CsU
me.bsck In s few mlnutea!" There
wu s dick si she bung up the receiver.
In tan mlnutu Sharlle celled the
Collins Company again and aaked
for her. "Mlea Bellinger's not
here," tbe feminine voloe that answered the telephone uld in the
dry, impersonal way of most office telephone voices. "Bhe left
bare a faw mlnutu ago with Mr.
ColUos. In> sure ahe won't be
back   tonlgbt."
(To be Continued)
MANY COLORS ANO SHADES
ON THE STREETS OF BOMBAY
Ttt NELSON  DAILT NOTTS,  NELSON, B.C.  —  THCMDAY  MOBNINO,  JUNE  St.  UM
I
Crematorium Is Interesting to Trail Visitor;
Leaves for Suez
(LET-TEE NO.  IS)
COLUMBIA RIVER
HELD FOR WHILE
TRAIL, 8. C, Jun* l»-Rlw of
tbe Columbia river checked Monday night and during Tueeday
rou .48 foot to the 38.78 foot level.
Lut year on June 30 tbe level
etood  at  36.14  fut.
Rlu of another 4 8 lnchw would
put water Into tba basement of tbs
West Kootenay Power A. Light company. Tbe Company Store baument
would be next to auf fer, being only
3,8 incbu above tbe level of the
West Kootenay.
House* and buildings along ths
riverfront are beginning to feel tbs
effect of tbe high wster. The bsw*
ment of Harry .White'* houu on
tha Bowery is below .water level, tba
wetar being Juet on the sills of tbs
wlndowa* Another houu owned by
Harry ii almoat eurrounded.
Water la quite dwp on the baument floor of tbe Kwt Kootenay
Power and Ugbt oompany garage,
and Is sbout 38 lnchw dup on the
barn floor of ths Trail Livery
building.
At Dan MoI_ean'a bouu one or
two of tba "MoClsrmlt Manor"
boys wan diving off the back
porch lut nlgbt and extending in-
v 1 tatlona to their friends for a
awlmmlng party.
Water Is from thru to eight Incbu deep, according to the depth
of hue menta, ln houses along Bowery
annus from Helena to Portland
atruta. Tbe famous Scbwarts eddy
la beginning to cut tbe bank at
thla point,
Tba water Is fairly dup along
tbs side of tbe skating rink and
at tba far end bags have been
stacked to prevent tba currant getting In to tbe artificial lw plant
equipment. Brick bouew owned by
tbe C. c, v., B". lb tbe Vertgln
sub dlvlaion an almoat surrounded.
but at noon tbs water bad not
atarted to crou tba road except
at tbe blind end of tha mad into
tbe   subdivision.
On the east aids or tbe river
tbe beaemsnt of B. I. Smith's houu
is, flooded, sod tbe river la knocking at tbe door of a bouu on tha
Thatcher    property.
Houau os tbe dty aids of the
river below tba Columbia river
bridge an mostly protected by walla
but tbe water is rising up thau
walla  fairly  fut.
Flood oondltlon of the Columbia
and Kootenay waa f raphaalned today
by tbe timber and stumps btlng
carried along put Tnll. Big timber and huge stumps wen coming down.
Yutarday's tempemtuns wen
again lower at 78 and 81..
Standard
Butter Wrappers
Printed with the words
"Dairy Butter"
100, 91.00      —      850, 9) .50
500, 9050      —       1000, 94.50
Let Uf Supply Your Neeto
PHONE 144
Nelson Daily News
Job Department
Baker Street—NeUon, B. C.
The Bditor, the Nelaon DaUy Newa:
Sir—I wu given , to undentand
that tha Hanging QaMens' sre built
over one of the reeervoire ' that
suppliw tha city with water. Speak-
lng of water I waa told tbat the
water of India is not nry good.
and ona hu to drink bottled water
wben there.
Tha Temple of Silence is a large
building snd hu big grounds around
lt. Tbe crematory und by one of the
wates is another largs plaw. -with
a atone fence aU around It and
wood plied outside the fenoe, ready
for uw. Another religious body put
their dead bodlw out in tbe open
snd allow the vultures and crows
to pick tbe bonu, which generally
bakes two days, and they claim
that lt ia much mon unitary tban
many other ways of disposing
of the dud, but to me it, seems
horrible. Cremation u practiced 1u
Oakland, California, is* what'appeals
to me. If you ever go to Oakland
be   sun   and   visit   thia   crematory.
Bombay. hu many large open
spaces for play grounds, and all
Of them seemed to be crowded,
but don't forget, Mr. Bditor, that
there sm one million six hundred'
thouwnd people in this city. The
Hindus are tbe gnat majority, tbe
Moslems and Pareeu am In tbe
minority. The Portuguese acquired
8opibey in 1530, and wben Charles
II of Kngland married Catherine de
Braganne in 16-31, It was glnn to
him u part of bis Queen's dowry.
In 1668 the King granted the Island
of Bombay, iSalsette Island) to
the Eaat India Company for the
small annual rental of £10.
Bombay   University   wu   founded
In 1670, and hu under lt 18 art
collegw and ll professional ool-
legw, of Bnglnurlng, Medicine,
Agriculture, Commerce and Law.
The upper and middle cleans of.
Indians, (not red) whether Hindu
or Mohammedan, ate highly intellectual, cultured and meat agreeable and charming people to mwt.
We drove .into the native part
of tbs city, and lt wu almoat
lmpowlble to get slong, tbe crowds
were so denw, snd one of our
psrty ssld that ahe had never
sun so many people of eo many
shadw, both «f skin snd of clothu.
Some of tbe ladiw' clothu an very
rich to coloring, w also are the
turbane of tbe men. 1 undentand
thst when a woman becomw a
widow, abe dresses in red, abd ls
not allowed to marry again. If
she dou, ber church disowns her.
Bullooka are used a great deal
bere, for cartage purposw and many
are kept ln good condition, nearly
as fat u Trail city's team of blacks.
Tbe weather wu beautiful while
In Bombay, a nice cool breew all
the time, which tempered the raya
of tbe sun very much.
The. next .day, I drove wltb some
ship friends to tbe National Sank
of New Tork to get some American
money on my letter of credit, but
they could only let me have 160,
whlcb will soon disappear down
here.
Before laaving Bombay we were
ill inspected by the doctor, the
reason, being Italy, knowing that
tbere is a good deal of sickness
ln India, bu taken this preoautlop
to keep It  out of Italy.
Altogether, Mr. Bditor, I wu very
much impressed with whst I uw
of India, while in Bombay, the
gateway to tbls large oountry,
.nth Its millions of mon .or leas
troublesome   people.
Today ia Sunday, April 9th, and
we are two days out from Bombay,
the Arabian Bea ls calm, and there
la a nlw cool breeze. We an travelling aouth west by west, and making
sbout 390 mllw a day. Tbtn wu
•May We Serve You?'
For lowtr ntti on  Auto Repairs—
Phonp_ t—Kilts,:   Service.
9bo_____
KtiBlvr ■
Ing, -*t»»*«l|°»,| «"■- Drlvs'in .today
nuiw, .tc.
M-flB-BB-1
6ltf A. _-Wj_-_^-V G-2*^ JW
*ff»pUa—__it Anybody— Phon. tc.
j. 9. COAlSa—1-Wtstend Profee-
•lunil Electrical Engineer. Contracting, Supplies, tban, IAI.
IDEAL T«_3-_9-m*-_3mi tad au-1
Itary txy cleaning.	
B   0OI-M«!J»O»-_fcii«t JffaWb
•May We Serve You?'
1 Continued)
ror   good    brake.' DtLL'S    8.S.S.-
Phono a.   ^^^^^^^^^^^^
Clock end Jewelry Repair,. Prompt
Serrlee at nasonabl. rate,. Write
to 9.0. Drawer UM  W,l*_on,
Autoinert, lor all * Can --KRAFT
Ag_0~WMCKAOB.	
T. PLAYER—Painting And Decorating   tot  S_itlBt.^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*
ilaon Dally News job Department
(or aU klnda of commercial print*
log. Phon. IM.
 SraViSS	
■_
for
■	
PEUEtUEFr
Graham, ou, OU, Oreaalng, wash-
Ing. apeclal Ratee. Drive u Now.
RAMP BODY t-~b FINBBR WO-IKS.
Duco Punting, Welding, Body Re-
palra on el\
Trucking  and   Haulage—Phone bit.
central T_en|fer. Prompt 8er~.ee.
MacGregor     Broa.     Photograph-.
Fllma de.Hoped, printed. Bog 641
STANDARD IXW-T-UC. Phone 838
for Electrical, Wiring, Contracting,
inatallatlom. R-M-wnaM, Rates,
ARTHUR HOMERSHAM, Hiiion, For
queene, Bwa. Honey, Comb,, etc.
Taxi Service
PHONB 77
Diy or Night
lU-S T. T, ft >, MP,
Shoe Rebuilding I, not a new venture with ue. DO year, experience
behind every Job. c. Romano.
Ideal ahoe Shop. Stanley St. Opposite B. C. Telephone.
R H MABER,' Ttnemlthing, ~~~t~-
pace Repalra, Roofing. Phona 665.
Tennla Racquets Reetrung,~63.60 end
up New Shipment of Out. H. R.
KITTO,_B^M-jSt.	
Delegates to Economic Conference
.-lumbing eud Heating Installation*
and ,uppllea Work ouaranteed.
Phone jullua Relatenr at  669L3.
Tire Jtepairing   While you wait  -
DEqJAROlHS, at pill's,	
Wrttere-we are placing
PLATS   —   SCENARIOS
STORIES,   ETC.
Reading   and   market   analysis
free. Write The
AUTHORS'   AND   PUBLISHERS'
EXCHANGE   BUREAU
Suite   43,   Leigh   Spencer   Bldg.
663 Oranvlile st, Vancouver, B.C.
(740J)
WHAT I Going to the hot springs.
That means HALCYON Springe.
  (71»7)
Silver Trout Are
Biting Off Nelson
Deaplte the high water ailver
trout are biting well about Nelaon.
Chlneee fishermen off the city
wharf and at tbe launch club boat
houae, an having a lot of tuck
with tbeee tasty flah the put
few   days.
K. As T. Auto Sepal* 8hop. Expert workmanship. Low Ratw.
Por cleaning pressing, alteration,,
THE  WaBPBOBE,  417  H-U  St
HEMSTITCHING—ao per yard, a C.
rCHHWHtl)   BOOMS FOB KENT 111)
7-HOOM  FT-RNSSeD  SUIT*,   LOW
ratea, phone 13, Strathcona Hotel.
(7439)
pURNISHHJ^stjrnt,   607   CARBON-
ACT Street. Phone 390R.      <7339)
Plumbing end heating Installations
and euppllea. We guarantee all
our work Prloea very reasonable
Phon.   Hi,  B.  c Plumbing Co.
CAPITOL BEAUT- SHOPPE. ll-
pert   Marcelling.   Phone  18.
Prompt   Service    —   Watch,   Clock
repair,   -   NOXON'S   JEWELERS
Phone._03--B. B. Tail, Dey or night
rvtce.
[ORTY'S REPAIR SHOP FOR DEPENDABLE  REPAIRS,
H.  X.   STEVENSON - Electric   and
acftylene welding: steel worka.
Autcmoblle   Motor   Repairs
Body  Repairs
Ow — oreaalng — Oil
wuhlng — Batteries
KOOTENAY  MOTORS
Phon. 11.   —   Baker St.
 FWOSaKi	
SALES  AND  SERVICE
Phone Ba.    J-TrALBOT.    Bm 398.
*» —__—___—-__,t _. ——
Call .«.
phone 86 for Tail—Safe, Reliable
Buick, Can. NELSON TRANSFER
~-~~ Limited,
FAIRVIEW BBS,VICE STATION   Oas,
terlee, Domfiuoa tin! an"! "tubes"
We will serve you. Phone 606,
Radlo
testing , ■-„.
PAINTING AND ___3_SO___N_NG
•_a.__um*t. Phone 790b.
ReMiranutaiiatlona.   Tub.
KOOTENAY
Have tbopi man or a_ratcbe, n*
moved from your furniture, rhe
cost li nseonable. Pbone KOOT-
_BtiA_   MUSIC  HOPSE.
A. TEFtSlILL, Upholstering, Furniture
repairs, -Phone 4MM,      	
DECORATING! 	
Reliable Auto Repairs-with modern
[Ulpment. NELSON TRANSFER.
HELP   WANTED
(10)
ecL_Applf Plata Cafe. (7438)
FOR EENT   (Jl)
LAROE, COMFORTABLE CAB IN
fully furnished. Lake Front. Row-
boat,  Bleeps  four.  A.  Allubrook,
Phone 44 F, Kaslo.  (73»B)
TO-RENT POR 3 OB 3 MONTHS. «■
room furnished house, good locality, lawn and treea. Boa 183, Neleon. (738.)
6-ROOM HOUSE, 3 LOTS AND
irult trees, 3 blocks from station.
cheap. Afrply l_» Blltca,       (7438)
FOR   RENT—HOUSE.  FIVE ROOMS
and   bathroom.   Fruit   tnee,   .16
month. Phone 393 U. (7413)
__^_t
Balding.
(7053)
Finance Mlnlater Georges  Bonnet.
and former Pnmler Joeeph Cnt*.
laux (left), together an beading the
French delegation to the World
Eoonomlc  Oonferenoe,   with   Premier
Edouard  Deiadle.   (right), presiding
over the 'delegation the flrat few
days, lt hu been learned on high
authority.
a short ohurch servloe. this morning,
conducted by a real clergyman, and
some 33 attended, not a very large
crowd.
Our next stop. I believe, ts Sues,
and we wlll not reach then for a
week yet. eo we wlU have to make
our own fun on board, but u
my cholera Infantum hu left me,
I am able to enjoy ahlp gamea now.
Youn truly,
FRED W. WARREN
OOOD  HOOSE,   BEHN„
Uable     tenants.     Mn
_Blewett. _ cnwjj
THE   Flin.    _WHPP_ST"APARf-
mentain the Interior. The Terrace.
 (743.1
I ROOMED COTTAOt. 135 k6-H*_t-
ly. Poet Office,'Queen's Bay, B.C.
 (78M)
SMALL HOUSE," SOUTH SIDE HIOH
St., possession June 30. Phone 863.
****^^^^^^^^^^^^(1ti31
FUBN. OR COTTON. TPTB. _f_
week or month. Medical Arts Bldg.
 . (7S39)
FIVE   ROOM   BUNGALOW.   NEWLY
painted inalde and out. Phone 831L.
  (7161)
FULLY FURNISHED HOME — 618
SUIca St.   Phone 683,,        (7383)
FOUNISHXD .  HOMB,__JULY   _AND
BRINGING UP FATHER:
Auguat.    Phone  637 Y.
(1444)
BOOMS FOK BE.N- (10)
f OR JUENT-APARTMENT OVER
store.   J.    w.
Oallagher,   Nelaon.
(7387)
LIVESTOCK   FOB   IALE (13)
"two "Cop.  jEFtafrs,  a ¥*a_S
old, one freshens early July, one
Slvlng 3'k gsl'ons dally, freshened
ept. Prloea reasonable. Olendell
_ Jeraey Farm, Crawford B.y._("_)3t)
FOR  BALE-ONE PAIR "QELDlNaS.
3"<0 lbs,,  well  broken, 3  Taylor
Mfc   one   large,   one   small.   G.
Pulse. Midway, B.C; (7MT)
TWO COWS CHEAP FOR CASH.
__3 P,Jell, park BA,.,n_C.     (7376)
Small Claaalfled Ada bring big n-
tnrne. Try one.
FOILTRY AND EGGS (36)
_«T la__KT~TYPE   BRONZE   TUR-
keys, past _ixi*ir stage, priced to
sell. Write Hlrd, Balfour, for prloe
list. (7400)
MISCELLANEOUS FOB SALE      (37)
FOR .SALE     ■""
1   Piano,   player,   golden   oak
cabinet, 67 rolls music— 616.00
30   Vol.   Book   of   Knowledge,
half    leather    binding    with
Reference  book    • 80.00
3.  t.  PRICE,  Neleon
334 Robson Street Box 330
i. (7431)
100.000 FEET SECOND HAND RE-
condltloned pipe suitable for all
purposes. All sins, write to
Swarte Pipe Yard, 330,  let  Ave,
Vancouver, B. C. _1_83>
favANBTTB,    ALSO   WINNIPEG
Couch cheap, room 36, K.W.C. Blk.
(7303)
(-6)
MISCELLANEOUS  WANTED
WANTED — WASHINO MACHINE
with Gu Power in good ahape for
cuh. Mn. F. Forch, Erie, B.C
^^^^^ (7401)
WANTED-8MAU, SAFE. GIVE SIZE
and price to Box 7897 Dally News.
^^^^^^^^^^^ (TJ8T)'
WANTKD-iA   ONE-HORSE   WAGON.
Write John Miner, Fauquier. B.C.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*~""~~~~~*~ (7377)
DEALERS   m   HIDES   AND   SCRAP
metala. 8. Peah. 411 Hall St.
   (7399)
(29)
MISCELLANEOUS
ICE—ICE
Regular Deliveries to
Your Home
PHONE 106
Ask the iceman for ice
tickets and save money.
Williams' Transfer
609 Ward St., Nelson
(7436)
FOB SALE Ott EXCHANGE        (37)
WANTED TO KdHMfOB t~~~~
montb old pulletta for young
milking cow. Box 1196, Nelaon, B.C.
 <7_S7)
NUBSERY PRODUCTS^ (47)
CABBAOif »3_1000,   CAULIFLOWER
66, Strong plants. Mawer, Nelson.
(7379)
PBOFEBTT   t-OB  8ALB
fTBT
erty of the late D. A. McFi
situated on Robson Street.
WUu    10    lou    and    dwell
Grounds In good shane, with ,
Ing    and    MerchandL—
&&_&.-**  AW"
sexll fsr   	
with cropa. aeven miles from ■
son.  Partlculara  Box  480,  Mta
 (74.
AUTOMOBILES  FOB  SALE U
FORD SPORT C6tffc,  kfcSEXM
condition. Must sell, owner leavi
town. Box 7434 Daily Newa.
  (74j
CLASSIFIED   DISPLAY
WE DO EVERYTHING IN
PRINTINO
BOOK BWDINO
PAPER  RULDIO
Cornet ttylss IS Wedding Invl-
tat Ions. Announcements, anl
Invitation Cards.
THE DAILY NEWS
JOB   PRINTINO   DEPARTMENT
Phone 144
Phone 141
Business and Professional
Directory
Accountants
CHAS. F. HUNTER, 8. F„ INT. A.
Municipal and Commercial Aur
P.O. Box 1191, Nelson, B.C. (7:
Asaayet's
E W. wtbttoWBON. sets bushed lH
306 josephlns St. Nelson, B. 0.
a
ORENVILLE  H.   6_UM*J750->_~lC
Box 418 Kaslo. B. C. (711
?
fi. C. Land Surveyor  ■
R. O. LESLIE B. C. L. 8. 303 _
_B^^_Nel^n._Phon«_376L._(7ll
Chiropractor*
R. E. Gray, D.C.. Fh.C, Olliur Bid,
T~k. MACJMIU-AN. DR. OF CK_1
practic. Aberdeen Blk.. Fh, 31*
St-TUN AND OkDDI... X-ftAt'Tl
MCM, Cranbrcok and Trail. (7M
 Florists
•lOH-fsbH'- oltiUmdDtltt, i-B
343. cut flowers, potted pin
and floral designs.     ,tij
NELSON _FLOWER 8h6p». ..,
line eut flowers st all tlmw. FK
al dealgna. Phon. 331. (718
Insurance and Real Estat!
R W. DAWSON, Real Estate I
tunnce. Rentals Nsxt Hlppn
Hardwan, Baker street. nU
Sash Factory
LAWSON'8 SASH FACTORY HAI
wood merchant, 317 Baker etreet.
  (71*
By Geo. McMam
 (£>cb
■Ont NELSON DAILY NEWS,* NELSON,  B.C. — THURSDAY  MORNINO,  JOTB  gt,  IMS	
moi mm
Market and Mining News
LS HIGHER ON
NEWY0RKL1ST
[vance of Point or More
is Rule; Main Market
Steady
DOW JONES AVERAGES
30 industrials  95.51. up .28
20 rafls     44.89 up .17
20 utllties     84.95 ap .08
RENO LEADS
GOLD ISSUES
VANCOUVER. JUM 21.—(CP)-
PrloM fluctuated lwlly and irregularly oa th# Vmoou ror itoek
txch»ng- todar. Tbe market wa*
draggy throughout and gold itoekf
vere the only group to dliplty any
activity. Little intereet wae shown
In bate metala and etlvera while
tbe oils were lnoonalatont.
Reno wu tbe leader throughout
the day. gtrlng unusual play in tbe
afternoon session and touched a
high of 3.80 before dosing off five
at a.56 for an advance of H. Bridge
River exploration and Bridge River
Consolidated were sctlve and gained
two points and Vi respectively. Carl-
boo rallied ln late trading to tquil
yesterday's cloee at 8.00.
Bralome sold down to 6.75 but
recovered to doet at 7.10 for a lo*s
of   10.   Premier   dropped   thne   to
im.
The base metals suffered from a
weak  opening  and   Insufficient  <.«■
I    By JOBN L. COOtBY
•elated  Press Financial  Writer
HT   YORK.   June   31   —Stocks
Id along In a relatively narrow
■ today. Ottt and a rspresenta-
* tt   "commodity   shares"   out-
ped other sections, but the rank
.file   showed   amall   variations.
mfc   the   trend   wu   upward.
Ing prices averaged slightly high-
Nth advanou of a point or more
rule  for petroleum  issues.
■nt and corn took a lata sprint
■Htr market, making new highs
Iome  deliverlu, and stocks reload with a fair rally after early
a***.   Extreme   gains,   however,
I not  fully  maintained.   It  waa
lifting to note tbe market waa
to   make   progreu   against   a
Uar dollar.
M market appeared to hava con-
Id  stabilisation  or  oontrol   was
» held ln abeyance for a time, j mand to bring them back to levels
|| Wall atrwt heard reports | of tbe previous day. Pend Oreille
opened five down at 1.30 and held
that level to tbe clou. Nobis Plve
wu down .4 at lOVfc. -to the Alvers,
National and Sllvercrwt lost fractionally whlta Beaver gataed   Vi.
I -agreement might be reached
Bttably soon.
| ahares had ln their lavor a
Ri of prloe advanou, a reduction
mide and current expressions of
HUam u to ths industry's event-
Jyaoceu in rehabilitating ltaelf.
M motor traAs la counting on
'best June in thru or four
1 aqd eo far then bu bwn
l or nothing to suggwt its
lme of buslneu would not cm-
ie well  into next montb.
.TORONTO STOCKS
MONTRBAL.   Jun*   31    (CP)-To-
d*y't iraln Ilfura* ln bushela:
Stock In eleva-or* __._
Total   receipt*
to dtte, 19-3  _..
Total reoelpt*
to d*t*. ina _.__..
Total dellwriu
to data. 1931	
Total  dtllmrlM
io data, 188- 	
Ye*urd*y'e reoelpt* 	
Yeaterday* d*llr*rl«* ..„
Uk* boata arrlvad, 10.
Uk* boat* unlo*d*d 4.
TOMINION LIVESTOCK
nmnpsa. 3*3.1 91. ten.—r«-
rta:  t«0 cattl*:   IM  cslrm;   1480
ISS ihup.
Nm*. up to 10H lb*, food and
Ha.   84.00—MOO.
ta*r*.  onr   1050 lb*,  good  and
la*.  H-_H.7».
Mt—t. load and oholce,  MOO—
».
•4 aalT**. food ind choice, 84—
-J.      -
food. MM-83.76.
Bit*, food. ai.7»—*__».
tocker   and  feeder   *t*ea,   food,
GRAIN FIGURES
8.018.1M
30.73M48
—. S5.51J.M4
 ii.isim
. 34,403.145
373.357
1M.I00
VANCOUVER LIST
MINES
Bralorn*   _  	
Big  Mlwourl  _-	
Bluebird,   lut Ml*  at
Beaver Silver  _ _
Bridie  River Con.  __
Oeorge  Copper  ._......_.
Georgia   -Uver   _____
Oolcond*   _„_____.
Orandvlew   ____—.
Oold   Bait   	
Int O * O	
Kootenay
Kootenay Ball*, Mat nl*
Lucky Jim  _______
Meridian, lut sale at
Mornlnf Star. Mat aala
National  Silver	
Pioneer  Oold   	
Nobl* Flv* 	
Pend   O-tlU*  _______
Porter Idaho
Premier
Bid      A*k
7.10     7.10
.36        M
.05
my, os
.40 Vi  .41
.55       —
.06*    MH
41       .44
at   i.oo
— -i»
.0314 .03%
.88
.05 .0814
.It
J4
-08%    -07'A
— 15.00
18(4    n
Ut
METAL MARKETS
NIW TOBK, June 31. (AP).—
Copper quiet, elwtrelytlc *pot and
tuture S.
Tin aaalar, apot and nearby 44.78;
future .tao.
Iron ateady, unchanged. Steady
■pot, new Tork ,30; aut St. Loui*
44*.
zinc, But at. Loui* apot aad
futur* 4 31.
Antimony, ipot 7.00.
Bar ailver. 1 ent lower at St.
At London—Oopper .atandard, apot
-38 |<: lutur* tM 10*.
Electrolytic. *pot 140;  futur* £41.
Tin. apoi -333. 2 a., ed; futur*
£333 It.,
Uad. root (13 3* Ml futur* CIS
10*.
Sine, apot (17 3* M; futur*
(If, It*.
Bar allnr quiet 14 lower, at It
1-liid.
DISTILLERY AND
OIL STOCKS RISE
TOBONTO. Jun* 31. (CP).—Dl**
tillery and oil atocka provided tbt
market tod*** on tb* Toronto *tock
exchange, turnover In two Walker
lasuea totalUnt 33,000 Ibarea.
Dlatlllery itock* war* affected by
renewal of merger rumor* and by
the ateadlly expending llat of etate*
votlni ror prohibition repeal. Walkers
preferred advanced two point* to
15% and tlw common IVi to I»H-
Dlatuiera Seafram picked up H to
nln* and-Canadian Induatrlal Alcohol f»ln«d V, to IV,. Beer ihare*
wen Met spirited.
Imperial Oil wu he*vUy traded
and the atock made ona of Ita baat
gain* of tba year. Th* atock dot-
id at 1S% for a fain of 114.
UJS. GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES FIRM
NIW TOME. Juna 11 (AP)—Plrm-
nee* of Unltad Statu (onrnmant
•MourltM* five tha hood markat *
nthtr plaulnf appaanae* today deaplte tcttttrad Imtularltiu In corporation froupa. Moat le*d*ra clowd
modantaly hlthar.
All listed f*d*ral loan* advanoad
3-S3nd* to l*83nda of a point. Canadian Paalflo and Southern raUway wan a trifle heavy.
Ponlfn obllfatlon* wan lnolined
to ee*. Bond* of Japan and Oar-
many wan aft a point or mon,
MONTREAL STOCK
USTM__J)ECI_INE
MONTRBAL. Jun* 31.  (OP)—Du.
Site a Iat* rally which carrMd acme
iiden into hither territory. Montreal atock eichani* llatlnf* declined durlnx today* waaion. Turnover
wu approilmataly 34.830 aharu.
Selling pressure wu directed
agalnat Brazilian Traction, leader in
activity, u a ruult of th* aharp
drop ln th* earning* for th* yaar.
It cloud »t 15%. off 14. CanadMn
Pacific railway held unchanged at
la. international Nlekil gained 80
cut* *t 13.80 and Smeltera ad-
vanoad  IVi   point* »t 133.
Wood* Manufacturing pnferred on
lte tint appearance alnoe July, 133*
loat M point* at Mm,
Canadian Celaneae wu a strong
■pot, ruing 314 point* at 1»V4.
RAW SUGAR HOLDS
NBW TORK, Jun* 31 (AP)—Haw
*ug*r wu unchanged at 331 today.
Putun* cloud on* point higher to
one point lowir. saMe 83.tM ton*.
July cloud IM, Sapt. 1.43, Dec-
Jan. 150, March IM, May 1.S0.
Refined wu unchanged wtth re-
ftnen list tags  at 4.80.
Rmvu McDonald __
Reno Oold _________
Ruth Hope ______
Bllvwcrut	
Sunloch   ___________
WeUlngton     ,	
Whitewater  — _
OILS
A P Oonaolldatad	
C and I Und*	
Commonwulth	
Dalhousle    _.._______
Cutcrwt  __.	
y-reeheld	
Hargal
,:J_M
.14
139
as
ats
,o»
.08
as
.ii
1.80
.30
3.57
-05%
08H
NEW YORK STOCKS
Allegheny   —     414
Al Chem 117
Am   Can   .__   88%
Am ppow    18%
Am Im    n
Am Ma a. Nry it
Am 8m * Mt _   34*4
Am TWephon*    138%
Am Tobacco _   81%
Anaaond* ie%
Atchbnn MK
Aublurn   _...__
B*ldwin	
Bait dt  Ohio .
Bendlx   At   	
Beth Stael _.
Canada Dry _
Can Pacific __
Chu li Ohio ...
Chryaler    ;
Com ai South
MVi' Con Ou N T
Horn*  Oil    — —
McDoug*ll   8*gur   New
McDougall Segur B* _
Mercury .  _
McLeod
Mrt ctane, food and choloe. H—
k
Ipt, ale*ct baoon 41 par head
(glum; baoon 88.38; butchen 81
head dlacoont; hwvy, 8475;
14 heavy, 4350; light* and fud-
48-*l_5; *ow* 4350. .
ambs, good baodywelfht 88.00—
heap, good huvtea, 41.78—43.
MIU   City   ...
Okalta  Com  _-
Royailt*	
Sterling Pacific .
JS
.75
.08
_tl
.It
-MVi
.10
_M
.08
.04
-ion
.40
.18
amVa
13.10
X0
•6 V4
11
33
is*
MH
l»H
18H
«1V4
•IVi
SVi
M
.78%
Oorn Prod  ___
O Wrtfht PM _  -
Dupont   „ _   7tV4
Kaatman   Kodak   SI
■ P * Uf ht ....   14
Ma       14H
Ptord   Bot —   ,
7—0   Canada   _. —
Pint  N»  Btan*  87%
Pnaport Tat -._•' M
4
lit
MVi
UH
10%
"Vl
84
134H
It
18
«5Vi
S3H
10 Vi
33 Vi.
18V4
It
1314
1814
3-V4
• 114
8SH
74V4
.76H
SOVi
li
-3H
CURRENCIES MOVE
NARROWLY
Whett Closes Buoyant at
Day's Best Level Up
2 5-8 Cents
CANADIAN DOLLAR
FIRMS, NEW YORK
NIW TORK. JUM 11. (OPI.-Th*
Canadian dollar flrm*d on th* New
Tork fonlgn exchange market today while tha pound *t*rllng anad
•lightly.
Tba oaoadMn dollar advaaoad %
cent to 3014 mat* attar th* tank*
h*d cloud.
Starling cloud Ju*t V4 under Ha
top at 44.18*. towa H out (nm
yut*rd*y'* clou.
Ry JOHN P. BOUOHAN
.<A*aocla-td Press Market EdKor).
CHICAOO, Jum 31.—Almoat tha
•ntln IMt 'of ralna lumped lit*
today to fruh high ptle* ncord*
for th* uuon.
mends of hlghar prlcu for wheat
gan particular emphuia to auggu-
tlon* volotd by Btcretary of Agriculture Wallace that tha United Statu.
whUe holding the domestic prlc* of
whut around tl, might Mort to
dumping America'! wheat on the
world m*rk»t. if Canada. Auatralla
and Arfentlna did not aee tha light
at London.
Whut cloaed buoyant at the day*
hlfbut level, 3—JH oant*. abov*
yeaterday* flnlah, corn IVi—3 cant*
up, oat* IW—IH «dv»nc*d. and pro-
vMlon* v»rylng from 13 cent* to a
rlu ot two cent*.
WHEAT FUTURES
SCORE ADVANCE
WINNIPBO. June 3:. (OP).—C
eratlona took on tht aapect* of
-weather markat" on tha Winnipeg grain market today u wheat
futun prlou, barn* upward! by a
ateady atrtam of speculative buying,
•cored advances of IH—IH oents.
July   option   do«lng   tt   07H.   Oc-
LOSSES DOMINATE
ON MINING LIST
TORONTO, JpM 31 («F)-Th*
Standard mlnint markat found tha
aleddlng a bit heavy today due to
period* of profit-taking and un-
■taadlnui In th* Ntw Tork llat. A
EXCHANGES
MONTRJ-AL. JUM U (OP)c-Brlt-
l*h and fonlgn «_ch»ng» curftnclM
In nMUon to tha CanadMn dolUr
u oomplMd by tM Royal Bink of
Canada cloud   today  u  followi:
Argtntlaa. puo •.■KSl
AurtnlM, poruid _ -_ «.M^
Auatrla. tahlUlnf
Belgium, btlt*
Braatl, mllmM
Bulgaria,   lev
mUd nlly In tM lata afternoon
lenlled down Mm* of tM neeuion*
but louu pr*dOmtn*tad at tM
clou. Ban metal abana bald up
wall whU* atnlot told* eaaed undtr
Ntw York mnutnot. Volume Mid
up around 1,800,000 aharu.
Lake Shon tradtd only 381 share*
end showed a lou of 1.70 to 41.30.
Mclntyn teat 140 to IIAO and Bra-
loma 48 to 0W, whll* Dom* gained
88 oant* and Tack-Hugh** 30, *nd
HolUniw   wd   Plonur    '
China, Horn Boat dc
OucboalorakM. crown
Danmirk,   kron*   	
Finland,  flnmark   	
rranoa, tntte ~~ ——
Oermany. ntdumark —
onat Britain, pound —
Oreeoe, drachma  _
Holland, florin ..______
Hungary, pengo	
India, rupea  *
Italy, lln —-,—■_ -
japan,  yan   ~_
jufosMvi*.   dinar   ..._—
New Zuland. pound	
Norway, krone -
Poland, alotl  	
RouraanM.  Mu
 UMD
._   otau
... .010*0
doilan- _13»7D
MIM
_K**D
Mim
.oisTtr
Sylnnlta tnd Reno featured the
aeoondtry froup. tM Klrkland Lake
producer climbing to 150 and cm*
in* at 13* tot a net gain of IS
oent*. Rino tdranotd 33 wnta to
3.43. Venture* dropped a point.
International Nickel and Nonndi
developed mild weakneu.
EGGS STRONGER
MONTREAL. Jum 31 (CP)—Narrow monmente pnnllad among
fonlgn curnncM* Mn today.
TM pound starling opcn*d with a
•mail advanca but moved down. It
later recovered to 34.68 11-18 where
lt cloeed with a lou of 8-18.
Th* Unltad Statu dollar touched
high of UH Per cent pmmlura
only to clou at ll per otnt, unchanged.
MONTRBAL.   June   31.   (OP).-At
tha weakly auction  of  butter  and
cheeu htld btn today. No. 1 butter
toMr S»H—H and Deoember 70S— aold at 18V4 oanta a pound. Thw*
71 cant*. wm*   no   Ontario   ohwn   ofhred.
BullMh nport* wen nc*ln« from I all   uM*   belnt   m*d*   In   Qu*b*c
many whaat-growlm anu today and ohwu at ltV4  oanta a pound,
with plentiful *upport *t hand to     TM   ttyl   rant*   for   wholuaM
offut   occulonal   ralda   ot   profit- butter  held at  It—10V4   centa.
taken, valuu flnlahed at tha __•__• I   Sggi ww* again atrongar, quota-
•lon'a hlgheat prlcu. [tlona   becoming   It— 13H   o*nta   *
Fonlgn d«mand for Canadian I doain for *»tr»«, 15 cant* for tint*
wheat ahowed aom* Improvement, .end IS cehte for aeconda. for grad-
export   orden   approiimately   too.-1 e«   ehlpmenU   in   carlota   or   lea.
South Africa, pound;
Spain, panta _.
BwltrerMnd, franc ....
Unltad Statu, dollar.
11
premium, unchtnged.
A—advanoa;   D—<I*c11m:
chsngad.
_ tann
_ 4.8370D
._ .OOTID
._   JV483Q
_ attav
_ a»i(D
_ men
._ _»38D
_ .01340
._ 8.7038D
_ .tmn
.. .18S30
... .OMIO
._ 4.B353D
...   .U57D
._ aesiD
Pf  c*p»
EOT NEW VEIN
BRALORNE MINE
VANCOUVIR, JUM 31—(OP) —
Amtur C. Taylor,- pnHrMct of Bra-
tan* Mlnaa. Halted, annoonced today tMt "a promMIng" new nln
of undetermined alu btd bwn
itruck tn tM Bralorn* Oold min*
in tM Brtdf* Rlv*r dUtrict of
British Columbia. BtuMr ot auch a
strike had bun ournnt on tM
•took   «ach*ng*   for   tM   paat   two
Mr. Taylor atatad that on tha
croaaut oo tha eighth Mnl from
tM King nln. a n*w vain bad bun
enoountand. Bi* latat nport wu
th*t it had op*n«d up from four to
fin fut ln width. Md rru-mllllng
gold, and wm giving nry good
aaayt, .
SILVER FUTURES .
CLOSE 8TEADY
N«W TORX, Jum 31. (AP)c-RU-
nr future* cloud atea-tys a_ln 4,-
800,000 ouncu. July 85JO; s*pt.
38.00; Oct. StJTN;  Dm. tttt: Jan.
37.15;   March   37.85N.
N—Nominal. ,
EGG MARKETS
MWpllea
TBrooK
OTTAWA. JUM 31. (CP).—Sgf
markete in Ontario and Quebec
ahowed firmer trend* today with
light and prloe* hlgMr.
ito— Market firm, .uppllu
light. Graded egg* to dietributora,
•itru 1714—IS; flnt* 18—i5Vi; ucond* 13.
Montreal—Recelpta 1488 cuu. Ontario graded egga, eitru it; first*
15;  noond* 18,
Saint John—Brtra* 10—30; flnt*
10—30; ucond* 13.
jcoiaxxdk jgsuK. _l__Jtq_*aova'?
A.mt rushing from vsrious pans of tbe home to
uswet the one telephone, Mrs. Weary feels u though
she's been .pending the day climbing mountains.
The telephone it on the main floor. It teems that it
tlwtyt nngs when she't down in the basement oc
Up on the second floor. t*o wonder she's tired.
One extension teUphone or more in the house
would main llfc io much easier for mother.
B* tt TELEPHONE COMPANY
Oen   Moton
o*n (Metric __
Oen  Food* —__
Oold Du»t	
Goodrich	
Ot Roc pfd	
Oranby    _
Ot Watt Sugir
How* Sound .._
Hudaon   Moton
Iu   Oopper   	
Int NicMl  	
Int TBI a. T»l -
ICenn  Copper  _
Kreege  S  S	
Kroegg Is Toll _
Lebn At Pink _
Mack Truck .._
Milwaukee pfd
Nuh Moton ...
N pow a ught
N T Central _
Pao Ou Bee .
Packard Moton
Penn R B —
Phllllpe Pate _
pun Oil _____
Radio Oorp —-
Radio ( Or _
Item Rand	
Rock Uland	
Safeway	
Shell Union 	
8 cal Cdlaon —
South Pacific -
Stan Oil Ctl _..
Stan Oil Ind ....
Btan Oil J ....
Stew Warner __
8tud*Mk*r  	
Texu Corp 	
Ten*   Oulf   Sal   SOVi
Tlmken   Roller     30
Union  C-rblde     40Vi
Union Oil C*l _   10V4
United   Air       SST4
Union Paoiric _ lit
U S O A Pip*
U S RuMnr
U  8  Stul....
Vanad   Stul
Wut nectrlc
YelMw Truck
33(4
34H
37
•s*
1814
MH
I8H
W%
33
HH
7H
17%
ISH
30
18(4
SOH
31
41H
OVa
IVA
30H
3t%
•H
MH
15H
•
♦V4
10
Jit
MH
•H
34H
M(4
MH
7
34(4
17H
14H
67H
MH
47(4
. _V4
M
38
37(4
UH
36H
33%
10
33%
MVi
7H
17
17H
lt
UU
MH
40(4
8%
_!*
MH
514
MH
14H
•Vi
8(4
•H
•H
4H
M
•
34H
38
MV4
ST
75
8H
M
M14
3«%
It
ISH
33(4
I ISH
10H
18H
MH
MH
MH
8%
4
118
»3H
1«H
10H
17H
MH
137H
"»»
IS
«H
MH
10H
33%
18(4
MH
10(4
10H
-O0H
MH
814
MH
78H
SVi
TTH
•1
ISK
ISH
4H
UH
MH
MH
37H
34
SSH
MH
IS
as
ISH
MH
33
HH
7H
17H
17%
UH
lt
MH
31
41H
«H
30H
It
MH
MH
•%
MH
ISH
•H
4
• %
•H
•H
MH
•
34H
MH
38%
31 .
37H
X
MH
30%
M
S3
18H
33 H
118
•UH
14H
MH
35
48H
t
VANCOUVER SALES
VAKCOUVB-. JUM 11 — Mining
•ban* aold on tb* Vanoounr (took
eiohtng*   todar:
LISTED
Surer Silver 7000.
Bralorn* 3083.
Bralome Praet. 8-8.
Brldg* Rlnr Oon. 10,000.
Oeorgla Rlnr  5800.
Oold Belt 1878.
Orandvlew 3400.
Inter, c. St O. 500.
Met. Metala  1000.
National   SUver   5350,
Pioneer 400..
Premier Border 8850,
Premier   Oold   1800.
Reno   33,730.
Bally SOO.
ONUSRD
B.C. Silver 300.
Big Mlaaourl 1000.
Indian Mlnu 18M.
Kootenay Plorenot 80,
Lucky Jim 3500.
Noblt Plvt 8700.
Pent Onlll* 3100.
Porter Idaho 3000.
RUtb BOP* 3035.
Sllvercrwt  4300.
Whitewater IHI.
CURB
B»yvUw  3000.
Big  SUM   300D.
Bluebird 3000.
Brldg* Rlnr Ea. 13.350.
Cariboo Oold 8400.
Cork Provlno*  1500.
Dalbouate Mln* 3000.
Dunwell   3M0.
Oeo. Inter. 500.
Ooldtn Bill* 1350.
Kooteniy Bell* SOO.
Ukevlew   11/000.
L. * L. tOOO.
Marmot  Mat. 8450.
Meridian 3P.MS.
Morning Star ttoo.
Mprton W. 7800.
Natln Sow 4800.
NlooM MO.
Reward 1700.
Snowflake 4000.
Rufua  Art.   4800.
Standard Oold 3700.
TopMy Rloh 10,408.
Wererly T. 8000.
w_y_ld* T4M.
000  buahela.
Offerings were posted *t 14M cuu.
DOMINION DAY FARES
■ETWEEM ALL POINTS IH CANADA
FARE AND ONE OUARTR POR ROUND TR»
TWO TO THREE DAY TRIF—Good  goto*  11 noon
FiMaT Jane SOU. till 12 soon Sunday Jo-T *»* J-5**"*
limit to leave desttoatioii wot later than midnight Monday
July 3rd (Sundmrd Time).
ft^rttasataly Uw «>>••«»••'**«» •««*
dutlulkia* In tb* Uplt*d Statu.
SH4QLE FARE FOR ROUND TRf
ONE IUY TRIP-Good going on any t-th,^ftorl**!Btw*
ttrd -nm. on July ltt. Return limit to reoeh erigtnal turttog
point any train up to mk-nlght (Standard Ttoo) July Ut.
Vtum* On. Day (S«_*^) tata aba fct agaat Mr W
tmat-mmtlmmm, ta*/.....M.i, „>, -.8-_l.ru Tl in -...»■      i"0
Canadian Pacific Railway
nMVi
WINNIPEG GRAIN
WINNIPBO. Juna 31_-(OP)—Wis
plpeg   grain   quote*:
WHRAT—
88 87t4 85%
88 8344 8t)4
«*H    7114    83H
July
0«.	
Dm.	
OATS—
July   	
Oct. 	
Du.    —	
BARLET—
July    -
Oct.	
Du.    	
n*k
88*44
7014
-3814    -»*H   MH
31       SIH   SOH
SOH    SIH    SOH
87%
30%
SSH    STH
40H   83 H
38 V,
31H
SIH
S8H
40H
40H
180H 1S4H
131     188
IS1H  135H
SSH
54H
57%
64
58H
88
LONDON GtOSE
LONDON. JUM fl (API—Amerloan stock* quoted *t 4 ahllllni*
par dollar: Am Tobaooo "B'' 8103;
Am Tel * Tel 8153; Brailllan
Traction 817H; ' Canadian 'Pacific
tlOH: tctarnatieetl- Nickel 13114:
U 8 Stael tMH: Aftglo Dutch 14*
4Hd; Anglo Per*l*n _ 11%: Brlt
Am Tob____j H«V Bwtn* M-Kubna
lV,i; 0*l*n*a* Oo of Am t$%; Dt
Beam MH: Dtatilfcre Ms; Hudson
Bay 34s td; Imurlal Chemical 35*
lOHdj ImpwMl TObaeao ICO*; Mining Tru*t Ltd ts; Rand Minn MH;
RltoduMn Anglo Am 15* Hd; Rio
Tintos C1TH; Royal Dutah I30H;
Vlokaea 8a 3d; Sonde: Britleh tH*
per unt conaOM (71%; Brltlth 3H
per cent war loan ttt%; BrltUh
landing* M UM-SO HIOH.
July    ltOH 135
Oct.      111    1ST
DM.   —-_. 1SI44 137
RY_^—
July SIH   84
Oct. MH    MH
Dec.    -     87%    M
CASH    PRIMS
Whut: No. 1 bard M%: No. 1
Ror. 87H: No. 3 Nor. MHi No. I
MH: No. 0. MH; Peed 58%: Track
87%: No. 1 Dur. MH: No. 3 Dur.
MH: No. 3 Dur. tOH: fo. 4 Dur.
MH-
CALGARY LIVESTOCK
CALOART.  June  31—Raulpta:
0*ttle.   ISO:   calTU,   13:   hoga.   TM;
aheep 34.
Steer*, good and cholo*. MHO:
medium. M-80 to M.TS: common,
83.00   to   83.00.
Heifer*, food and choice, M.78
to HM; medium, 33-16 to IS JO;
common. ttM to MOO.
Cow*, food, 8300 to 3380; medium 31.80 to 11-75; common 1138
ta 81-80; canners snd cuttera, 80
wnta to tioo.
Bull*, food, 81.75; common, tl-00
to  1180.
V*al calru. good and choice, MOO.
to M-00; oommon ud mtdlum, M-80
.to M16
* Shup, *wu, |3O0 to MOO;  ytar-
llng* f480 M MM.
Hot*, ulect bacon. M.38; bacon,
M-76; butchen. ttat ott, truck*,
There is a buoyancy in the air!
The day of business paralysis was yesterday
Today revised* conditions demand action.
Every dollar wisely put to work means more pay envelopes
and consequent buying power.
Every mother's son is involved in this new phase *f
commercial revival. Remember when you spend a dollar
it stimulates trade.
■
What do yo«r need?
Why d«5lay the gratification of the need?
Don't hold back because you feel it unseemly to bay
what you want
BUY THE THIN« YOU WANT
IF VOU HAVE TW MONEY TO tPEMD
SPONSORED      II      THE      CANADIAN
DAILY      NEWSPAfSBS      AtEOCtATtOW
 PAOB TEX
DEATH TAKES
MRS. RAMSDEN
To Have Celebrated Golden Wedding in Two
Days Time
Two daya Mfon ahe wu to celebrate her golden wedding annlver-
wry. Mn. J. v. Ramadan waa called
by death at her bome on Kootenay
atnet s o'clock Wednesdsy afternoon.
Mn, Ramsden wu born In London,
England, 75 yean ago, and with her
hutband and family came to Neleon
In   lail.
She ls survived by her husband,
four aone, . Joseph, William. Car).
Harry of Nelson, and two daughters.
(Mary) Mrs. W. Kearns and (Alice)
Mn. 8. K. Nlcholaon ot Vanoouver.
. Tbe funeral will be beld Prlday
afternoon.
HUSKIES DEFEAT
FAIRVIEW TEAM
TBB KELSON  DAILT' NEWS, KELSON,  B.C.  —  THURSDAY   MOB-UNO,   IW»  tl,   18-8-
Where Tigers Are Titers
Huaklw defeated the Pairvlew Athletic olub 0-1 la a women'a eon-
ball game Wednesday.
Th* wlnnsn nearly registered the
flrtt abut-out of tbe waaon, u tbey
led 1-0 wben tbe Pairvlew team
went to bat ln th* ninth, th* flnt
two batten wen retired ln auccee-
slon. Martha Allen neit up elenimed
tbe ball to right field to aun the
Falrrlew team's flnt run. Two other
batten gst on bases but Jean
Ptttenon took tbe tblrd out un-
sulsted. Peggy Oibbon, Oertle Woods
tnd Fnd* Lelpwck and the battery.
Jean Pattereon end Bdna McKenzie
played hangup ball for tta* winners.
Oot Tlteworth. Isabel Oughtred.
Martha Allen end Peggy Donaldeon
played a anappy gam* tor the lours.
Miss P. Tulley
Returns to Fernie
From Normal School
PEBNtE, B.C.. June 31—Cbarlw
Hun-ley of Edmonton, who acted u
accountant for tbe Eaat Kootenay
Power company wveral yean hen,
la aufferlng trom eye trouble and
hu gone to Vancouver for treatment. He bu bwn the guut ot
Iter, and Mn. B. U. Qawald. formerly
of Pernle. at Powell River.
Oeorge Elliot of Corbin la ln
Vanoouver doing Interne work at
one ot the large hospitals.
Mlu Pearl Tully hu returned from
Victoria when ahe tucceufully oompleted her course ln the provincial
normal whool.
Dick King. W. A. King and their
•later, Mlu Margant King, of Cslgary. wen in tbt city Tuwday en
route to Vanoouver and Duncan
wham W. A. King will be married.
Mr. end Mn. Oien Walston arrived
ln Pernle by motor from Seattle
to vlalt the latter'* mother, Mrs.
Leelle Mill*. Tbey wen aooompanled
by Bob  Mill*.
Hon. H. H. Stenn* left by CPJt.
Tuesdsy morning for Ottawa ac-
eom:*»nled by bla secretary, W. H.
Orant.
J. A.C. Laughton, R.O.
OPTIMBTIUST—OPTICIAN
MIM 105. Mrdjnl Arts Building
SOAP SPECIAL
Bath   Soap.  Rand   Soap,  Fancy
Soap and Pau Soap
SPECIALLY   PRICED
Se* Onr Window
Smythe's Pharmacy
Strathcona
Motel
The Ideal Place For
Your Vacation
Rates Sharply Reduced.
Roberts Is Head of
the Greenwood
Stockbreeder's Body
KETTLE VALLEY. B.C. Jun* 11—
Tb* annual mwtlng of the Orwnwood District Stock Breeden' aasoclatlon wu held at Kettle Val ey on
Seturday. O. c. McParlon, dlatrlct
toreet, ranter and a. L. Landon.
dlatrlct agriculturist wen prewnt.
Vlw-prwldent Arthur Robert* wss
In tbe chair. Routine bualneu wu
dealt with and arnngementa oompleted for Incorporation, The following officers wen elected for the
ensuing yesr: Praldent, Prank Robert* of Kettle Valley; rtce-prwldeut,
Arthur Roberts of Kettle Valley:
secretary-treasurer, J. H. Bruce of
Kettle valley; dlncton, Howard
Smith, Westbrldte; a. 9. Htrpur,
Myncuter* J. C. Bolt*, Boundary
Palls; J. C. Msdge, Rock Onek; Edward Rlchter, Rock Crwk.
The sum of 815 wu voted to the
Boys' snd olrls' club* trust fund
tor 1033.
In Pulr Puteh, Kelantan, Infested I ,___,   ,. ____  ,.._,.   ,„ .__  _,u
with   tlgsn.   wslter   Aylwaxd.   the  "*"  'V**  "»"  »° "«*•  mite.,
community's chief hunter, estimates I Aylward te awn in tba abon plc
tun with a 183-pound tiger which
he ahot
Mr., Mrs. McGregor
Are Bridge Hosts
BONN-NQTON PAULS, B. C. June
31—Mr, and Mn. E. J. McOngor
entertained at bridge complimenting
Mr. and Mra. Thomu White of
Roaaland and Mrs. S. c. Bradshaw
of  Trail.
Mra. Blddlecombe and Mr. White
won the prlaw for tbe hlgbut
honon at bridge and Mrs. White the
wcond prlw. The rooms wen frag-
rant with varied anting blossoms,
delicate pink violet peonlw wera tb:
chown table decorations.
The guwts included Mr. and Mn.
A. WUley. Mn. c. Oansner of
Taghum. Mn. M. Watte of Nelwn.
Mr. and Mn. R. Kennedy, Mn. B.
Spier, Mr. and Mn. T. White, s. c
Bradshaw and Mr. and Mn. O.
Blddlecombe.
Mr. and Mn. E. J. McOngor wen
recent visitors ln Spoksn* for *
couple of day*.
Mr. and Vn. A. McCrone and
daughter Owennle wen motorists to
Tnll on Sunday when Mr. McCrone played for Nelaon In tha
football  team.
Mr. and Mn. A. willey, Mn. B.
Spier, Mlu Ruth Willey and Alan
Willey wen motorlat* to Perry's
Siding on Sundsy whan tbty attended tbe bawball match.
Mm. McOngor wu a day vlaltor
In Trail motoring through with
Mr*. M. Wstt*. Mlw Bdna -Watte and
Mn.. IT. H. Pitt* of Nelson.
Mr. and Mrs. A. McKlm and
family wera motorists to Nelson *n
Saturday.
A naw kind of adbesln plaater ts
waterproof, thereby making It eaaler
tor tbe wearer to bathe.
Retail Lumber Prices
Na. 1 Dimension S4S .._   $25.00 per M
No. 2 Dimension S4S $18.00 per M
No. 1 White Pine 2x4 and 2x6 34S .... $22.00 per M
White Pine Shiplap f 15, f 20 tad $25 per M
Wr Shiplap f 18.00 and $22.00 per M
White Ptae DropSiding   $20 and $28 per M
v- Joi"t **& $30, $35 and $90 per M
No. 1 XXX Coast Shingles  $4.00 per M
Ntt. 2 XXX Coast Shingles  _... $3.25 per M
No. 1 XXX Local Shinties  $3.50 per M
No. 2 XXX Local Shingles $2.75 per M
No. 1 Idaho White Pine Lath  $7.00 per M
No. 2 Idaho White Pine Latli ,..„.. $6.00 per M
We Pa,  6$  Seles  Tu      —      —      Pre*  Delivery  In  City
Prtw* are subject to 1% Discount for cuh with order.
W. W. Powell Co., Ltd.
PHONE 176        "The Home of Good Lumber"
OUR STOCK OF EQUIPMENT FOR
BONERS
AND
PROSPECTORS
IS LARGE AND COMPLETE
Call and Inspect These Goods or Write for
Further Information and Prices.
PROSPECTORS' PICKS
SHOVELS
PACK SACKS
FUSE
G V. Hunt Returns
From the Cariboo
BOOTH SLOCAN, B. C, June 31—
Mr. and Mn. B. Bowkett war* motorists to Tnll on Sundsy where
Mr. Bowkett plsyed football tor
the Nelson team.
O. V. Hunt bu returned from a
alx weeks' trip to the Caribou,
having been u (ar u Barkervllle.
Speaking of weather conditions, he
uld tbat they had continuous snow
and rain up to the' tins* ot his
lesvlng snd * 1st* sesson wu holding up working conditions.
itr. and Mra. H. Hlnltt and son
Freddie of Nelson accompanied by
his brother. 8. Hlnltt and Mlaa
Freda Hlnltt, who neentiy arrived
from The Pu, Manitoba, wen motorists on Sundsy, tb* guute ot
Mr, and Mra. O. W. Hunphmy.
Among thow motoring to Pern**
Siding on Sunday to attend tbe
bewball match when South Slocan
wu the Melting team. Wen: Mr.
and Mn. F. Scott and daughter
Monella, Mrs. J. __ Thompion, Mr.
and Mn. W. Walkley, Mr. ahd Mn.
A. Davis, Mr. and Mn. O. vTlTunt
and family, Mr. and Mra. H. McDougall and John Laurie.
Mlu Rou Etter of Ksslo hu bwn
tbe guest of Mlw Maxine Chapman
for a few days. Mln Chapman re-
turned with Mlu Exter to Kaalo
for a Hslt of a tew day*.
Last Minute
ANNOUNCEMENTS
POR SALB — 8-PISCB BSBA__FA4_T
aet, Winnipeg ooueh, two wicker
chain, bed. Apply tit Carbonate,
Thunday morning or evening.
  (7448)
NEWS OF THE DAY
Dunk   Ji   Conway  Panama   Hata,
♦ 1.35; Baby Bonnets SOc. (74.8)
FRENCH  'FIOABO'  PEBMANENTS
AT BOSE BEAUTY PA-LORS ONLY.
(71 tl)
. Por Bent—One turnlshsd suite and
0n« furnished housekeeping room
Annable Block. >7304)
Aak your dealer for Elephant
Brand oranges. Something different.
McDonsld Jam Co. (7348)
Serve tbe finest duality bread
In your home, phone 288. CHOQUETTE BROS., Bakers.
Come and hsve a good tlm* at
the danw at Salmo, June 33rd, aus*
pices of ths Women's Institute.
(7488)
Dance at crystal hsll, willow
Point. Frldsy, June SOth. Joe Vlngo
and his music. 11.25 per couple.
(7447)
Lut three-martin stole near corner ot postoffice. Finder pleau n*
turn to Mn. Leary, Hume Hotel.
Reward. (7449)
DANCE — SENATOR BASEBALL
CLUB, EAtll.K HAM.. 'TONIOHT.
JUNE tt. MELODY MAKERS'MUSIC.
ADMISSION   1ST.. (717*1
THE EVENT YOfl HAVE ALL
BEEN WAITING FOR. BALFOUR
BEACH OPEN. 8ATVMAY, WITH
A BIO LID-I.IFTINO DAW* PARTY.
(744?)
MINERS' LAMPS
CARBIDE
TENTS
BLASTING CAPS
ETC.
Wood, Vallance Hardware
Company, Limited
WHOLESALE
RETAIL
SEND IN VOUR ENTRIES NOW
FOR THE BlU EVENTS IN CONNECTION WITH THE M'OLR BAND-
JULY l»t SPORT* NELSON. TO B;
C. PITTS. <74_»>.
Th* executive of tbe Kootenay
Musical Festival an .now preparing
rlawltlcatlona snd syllabus -for tbe
next Festival to tak* plsce In ml*
son In May 1P34. Thay wtll welcom*
any suggestions u to elsesiflcstlons
or on any ether matters pertaining
to 'the successful carrying out of
tha festival. Addrsw o. Horatesd.
Secretary, Box 383,  Neleon. DC
(7441)
Plan Huge Sweep for
NEW TORK. Jun* 31 (CP)—A
conteit to tld Brltltb hoipltali, designed within tbe Uttary Uwi, li
pltnned to rival the "Dublin iweep."
a»yt * -special cable tt the New
York Times todty.
1 The King'., horae-racln* colore of
blue, scarlet tnd gold are being
uaed, It la claimed, with royal par
mlealon In tbe new --oatest. Tbe
Btri ot Dudley, Air John Lavery, tbe
artut, and ftlr Maloolm Hobertson
have been named truateea.
fiubecrlbera are Invited to Judge
the artlatlc menu of tbe racing
oolora of a number of patrons of
the turf. By tbla means the British
lottery law U evaded *ni subscriber! whose opinions tore* with tboee
of the judgea will have allotted to
them the namea of horses running
ln the ftt. Leger stakes, klore than
£4,000,000 worth of ttckeu have been
printed, according to the Times correspondent.
MRS. A. WALTON IS
SILVERTON HOSTESS
ST.VBRTOH, B. O, Jun* Jl-W.
Claridge and B. Roberteon of Burton wtn vlslton ben on Prlday.
A. S. McAulay wbo bu been visiting frksnds ben tor tbe lut few
days hu nturned to hi* hom* at
Pouland.
B. Pinchbeck and W. Bleb of
Slocan City wen visitors bsn on
Prldiy.
Mn. Johnson of Burton I* ths
guut of Mn. A. Peachey.
A. Plngland wu a vlaltor to New
Denver on Mondsy,
Mlu M. Brown of Nelson I* tbs
guest  cf  Mn.   s.   Wsteon.
Mn. E. -Mstbews wu a reoent
visitor to Nelson.
Mn. A. Mclntyn hu nturned
from a tew daya1 visit with friends
tn Nelson.
Mrs. J. Cadden of Burton wu
the guut of Mn. J. Kelly on Sundsy.
Mr. and Mn. J. Tlnllng and Mn.
A. Cummins an spending * fsw
days  visiting  mend*  In  Nelson.
Mlu Hsul Marahall of the St.
■ugene hospital at Cnnbrook, ls
spending her vacation at ber home
ben.
B. Falrhurst and B. Marahall wen
vlslton to Nelson on Saturday.
The Sllverton glrla' aoftball team
motored to New Denver on Saturdsy
and played a game with tbe girls'
team there, winning by th* scon
ot   17-4.
Mrs.   A.   Walton   wa*  boateu  to
number   of   friends   at   tbe   tea
hour,  on  Thursdsy.   When   she   wu
ssslsted by Mn. W. Hunter snd Mn.
A.   Wallace.
Tb* guuta included: Mn. J.
Webb, Mrs. B. Millar, Mn. A, Wallace. Mn. j. Johnson, Mn. W.
Hunter, Mn. 9. Pareons. Mrs. M.
Emerson. Mn. T. Cleary, Mn. E.
Butchart, Mn. J. Toung and Mlu
J. Walton.
Mn. E. Butchart of New Dennr
wu visiting Mends ben on Sunday.
WOMEN'S SOFTBALL
GAME TONIGHT
Friday evening's scheduled women's
softball game between the Falrtjew
Atb'etlo club and tbe Red Sox will
be played this ennlng Instead.
4 TRANSPORTATION
DREAM NEARING
MRS. ANDERSON
DIES, NELSON
Mrs. Bunn Anderson, widow of
the late Daniel Anderson, died here
Wedneeday at tbe age of 80.
Mrs. Anderson waa born In the
township of Blanchard ln tbe oounty
of Perth, Ont., In 1844, and wu
one of the pioneers of tbat aectlon.
In I860 she moved to flault ftt.
Marie, ln 1808 to Saskatchewan and
tn 1931 to Nelaon. Both ln Ontario
and ln Nelson she wae a memoer of
the Preabyterlan churoh.
She Is survived by two sons.
Thomas and WUllam, and a daughter Mary, all of Nelson. %e Is also
survived by three sisters In Londoa,
Ont., Mrs. Jane Leads tone, Mra.
Barah Barr and Mrs. J. Nethercott.
Her husband and har parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Alexandra McKensle, predeceased   her.
RISE IN LAKE
IS MAINTAINED
A rlee in-the lake level waa maintained all day Wednesday, although
at a alow rate. Noon to noon read-
Inge gave a rise of two and au
eighth lnchea. At 0 ajn. the level
was 18-98 feet above aero, at noon
18*07 feet above and at s p*ra. 10
feet above. Tbe last reading wu
taken under difficult conditions as
tbe lake was rough at that Ume.
Wear your favorite animal done
in Jewels lf you want to follow the
newest Parts fashion. Birds are
most colorful, but there are ama'ler
birds—even sparrows and robins—
done ln a single oolor.
MRS. SPARKES IS
MS. SPEAKER
"Fifty yeara tn Japan** was tbe
text, of an Interesting paper given
by Mrs. O. I. Sparkes at a meeting
of Trinity Womens Missionary society Tuesdsy afternoon, ln connection wltb commemoration of the
Ooklen Jubilee of the founding of
a   mission   ln   Japan.
The meeting wu held at the
home of Mn* W. 3. Steed and Mrs.
T. 1. Hlgglnbotham presided. Mrs.
B. Oook gave the opening prayer,
Mlss Amelia Hanna aang "Divine
Love" and "Strive Bach Day" and
Mrs. O. 0. Arneson and Mlsa Lottie
Annable gave a duet, "O Love Dl
vine." Un. W. O. Mawhlnney ec
com pan ltd.
"Our Anniversary",' a reading, was
given by Mrs. fttmms and Mn.
Arthur Terrill gave a ahort talk
on   Japanese   curios.
"This "Oolden Jubilee" ts not
only an opportunity of studying
ttie progreu made in Japan", Mrs.
Sparkes said, "but Is an opportunity of studying ourselves and finding out whether we are Justified ln carrying on this work ln
spite of the difficulties we are fading financially and otherwise. If
any of us'think ws are not Justified tt may be well for us to read
our history dating from 58 B.O. Are
we not ourselves the result of missionary enterprise? If Auguet' <. had
not sent missionaries from Rome
to ohrtstiantae the savage Briton,
where would we be?
Speaking of the work done ln
Japan abe mentioned some of the
outstanding characters. Including Dr.
Oeorge Cochrane and Rev, David
MacDonald. When the nlssionar.es
ftrst entered the country they were
confined to the foreign concessions.
Two United church missionaries
wsre the first to carry on, tbe work
outside of ths concessions.
Mlu J. cartmell wu the first
woman missionary to Japan and
ahe ls alive end Interested In the
work. Tbe advance made in the
way of establishing schools and hospitals wu described. Social activities
were    alao   mentioned.
"Through 80 years, aeeds of truth
have been sown tn the hearts of
llttle children, individual lives have
been transformed, homes have been
radiated with the light of Christian
truth and communities hive been
changed and uplifted. We cannot
measure the rich achievements of
the years, yet there ls still much
to be done. We must not slacken
our efforte now," she  declared.
HOUSES AT PORT
CRAWFORD BURNED
Two houau at Port Crawford, the
C. Orr-Simpson propertlee. were totally destroyed with contents by
fire at 1:30 o'clock Wednesday moru-
Inr Occupants eeoaped. One of the
buildings wu' a newly built log
structure. Tne lou la partly covered
by Insurance.
Service Stations to
Write Down Shares
TORONTO, June 21. (CP).—Shareholders ot Service Stations, Limited, at a special meeting bere today approved the writing down of
the "A" aod "B" common abarn
to the value of 88 per share with
consequent write-offs on the asset
side  of the  balance  sheet.
Propose Province Provide Credit For
Any Compromise Settlement Between
Commissioner and Defaulting Cities
VANCOUVER. June 21. (CP) _—
Propoul that the provincial government provide credit to finance any
compromise settlement which may
be made between a commissioner
of a defaulting municipality and
tt* bondholders wu ' advanced to
the provincial commission on taxation at the courthouse todsy by
X. H. Brtdgmsn.. representing the
North Vancouver bored of trade.
Mr. Brtdgman's proposal followed
his auggeetlon that the government should consider establishing
a policy of funding ths debf ot
a defaulting municipality and accepting Ita revyted tax aale lands
u security. Theu lsnds would be
held until tbe debt had been repaid.
FINANCE  COMPROMISE
After remarking that he had been
Informed that North Vanoouver Is
still In arrears ln Interest payments. Mr. Brtdgman suggeeted that
tbe government should be prepared
to finance compromise settlements
with Bondholders.
To support hts argument, Mr.
Brtdgman submitted that such a
meuure of provincial-municipal cooperation should be the normal re-
lattonship between the two administrators.
In dealing* between the provlnoe
and a'municipality, he utd. It hu
alwiya been assumed that each
wu  a  separate  entity   wtth   upar-
ste responsibilities. As a matter of
fact, be argued, the municipality
ls only a branch of the provincial
administration wtth such powers
u are delegated by the province.
Another propoul he advanced wu
that a commissioner should have
full authority to uli high-priced
bonds held ln the sinking fund and
purchase lower-priced debentune ot
the' defaulting municipality, commissioner Ansoomb declared that
such power Is vested In municipalities now, but Mr. Brtdgman replied that the practice hu been
frowned upon by R. H. Balrd, Inspector   of   munlcl pal itles.
"A commissioner ehould have special powers of financing to clear
up a municipality's troubles," he
deelsred.   ,
Rearrangement of the system of
school financing to lift the heavy
burden from lend .wu alao suggested by the North Shore board.
Mr. Brldgman declared that tbe 1
per oent Jonu tag had bun ostensibly Imposed for education, and
that the municipalities ahould receive 70. per cent of the revenue
from this source. This estimate he
reached by assuming that 70 per
cent ot the pupils in British Columbia reside within municipalities.
Revision of the buls ot hospital
financing wu aleo urged, to relieve municipalities which own hospitals.
Irishman's
Representative
HERE TODAY
Mr. A. Turner representing Wm. H. Leishman
& Co., Toronto, makers of the best tailored garment* for men, will be here TODAY with a complete range of samples for Immediate delivery or
Fall. Come in and look them ov?r. No one ever
regretted buying qiudlty.
EMORY'S
Limited
EXTINGUISH FIRE
WITH GARDEN HOSE
A null ttm on the roof of B.
E venables' bonM on ObMrntory
street, necessitated tlie fin department meting » run Wednesday
morning. TIM blue tnt finally extinguished by the um cf tbe garden
haee before muoh damage wn done.
A •perk from tbe chimney probably
Ignited tne it-Unties.
MURRELL HEADS
CRESTON C.C.F.
CRESTON, B.C.. June 31-flupport-
ers of the Cooperative Common;
wealth Federation in town and vicinity were out ln some numbers
for a eatherlng at Ifurrell's hall on
Friday evening, at which a second,
and tbls time successful, effort wu
mads to organize a Creston local.
The gathering wu addressed by t
oouple of local speakers and after the
alms and objects of the C.CF. and
Its prospective benefits had been
very fully discussed, a motion to
organize wu carried and the following officers choeen: president,
John Murrell; vice-president, L. C.
Plumb; secretary-treasurer, R. O.
Penson. The selection of a treasurer
and executive wu held over tor a
future meeting. For the preunt the
officers and friends of tbenu7ement
wlll conduct an educational campaign during whloh the shortcomings
of bote the provincial and 'ederal
governments will be stressed, me attendance at the organisation muting would not Justify the thought
even, that a candidate will be plaud
ln the provincial campaign.
FINISH STREET
RAILWAY WOR
Two Extra Men Laid Ofl
After Sis Weeka
Following completion of tbe tt
on tbe street oar tracks where *
round tbe comer of Josephine I
Vernon streets, the city track «
la down to Its regular proportt
tb* two ertra men taken oni
tbe spring work program being ]
off. TbU Job consisted of lay
new ties, and truing up track.
Tbe big job ot tlu campaign i
laying of about goo fnt of 1
track along Oak street, In replg
ment of  tbe  old.
Before tbat, the crew wm bl
on Hendryx stmt, renewing j
and realigning thf -track fram *
Latimer oomer to tbe alley a
nortb, tbe roadbed being oa
Old crib.
Altogether, the spwlal prop
covered about all week! work.   |
MONTREAL STOCKS
BeU Telephone	
Braalian T h Ss Power
British American OU
.7*
CANADA BONDS
WINNIPEO.   June   91.    (6?).—Dominion   of  Canada  bonds:
WAS LOAN   .
9,   1M7,    108.35;    111.00.
V1CTOBY   LOAN
Btt,'   1931,    100.00;    101.00.
814.  IMt.   101.40*.   103.10.
Stt.   1337.    100.10;    110.10.
REFUNDING  LOAN
S, 1043, 103.75; 104.80.
4(4, 1940, 100.78; 10140.
414. 1044, 100.80; 101.80.
414.   1040.   100.80:   101.80.
CONVERSION   LOAN
414,   1958.   99.60;    100.50.
414,   1957,   9*JO;   100.50.
4tt.   ItM,   99.00:   100.40.
414.   1969.   100.40;   101.35.
NAT.   SERVICE  LOAN
5,   1998,   103.76:    108.75.
5.   1941,   109*);    104.50.
1932  LOAN
4,  1935.  09.50;   100.50.
4,   19M,   M-M;   96.26.
TORONTO INDUSTRIALS
Beatty   Bros   ■—
Bell    Telephone
Brailllan
A OU .._ - -
Canada Dredge —
Canada Gypsum —
Cons  Bakeries   _....._
Cons  Mining   	
Distillers Seagram ..
Ford of Canada "A"
Goodyear
Canadian Car ft Foundry
Cockshutt   Plow   _ 	
Cons tuning _> Smelting
Dominion Bridge ________
Dominion Textile .   , .....
Imperial Tobacoo ....
Montreal   Power .,
National  Brewerlee	
National steel Car	
Ogllvle  Milling „
Powar  Oorporatloa _—
Prloe  Broa  _________
Quebec   Power   ________
Sherwin   WUllsms
Steel of Canada
Winnipeg   RaUway
Hiram   Walker	
Imperial   Oil    —
Imperial Tobacoo —
International   Nickel
International   Pete  _
Loblaw   "A"   	
Msssey   Harris   ___—
Noranda    ,—
Page   Hersey	
Service Stations —
Standard Paring —
Steel of  Canada _.-.
8
. lOltt
lift
;  ii
17
- 4*|
a*
129 tt
»
13 tt
. 108
10H
.   13tt
- 1%
19.70
l»tt'
13.85
,  <tt
31tt
65
8(4
.     3tt
.   31%
Renwick'j
Will handle ya*r needs to
coal and wood to a maa*
ner that will give the !
greatest value for
your money--—      _
Just Calf
797
RENWICK'fl
TRANSFER
Cesl   Wood   Hsufls
,e»»s,eei
All Classes of
METAL   WORK,   LATHE
W0RR, DRILLING, BORING AND GRINDING
MOTOR     REWINDING.
ACETYLENE  WELDING.
BENNETTS LTD.
*   DEATH   NOTlC« . "
CARMAN — Mlas Harriett Louise
Carman, aged 77, cousin ot tbe late
Bliss Carman, paaaed awa; at Bt.
Paul'a hoepltal. Vancouver, Tueeday
mofnlng. (7448)
FUNERAL NOTICE
Funeral  services  for   Mrs.   J.   v.
Ramsden   wlll   be   beld   from   St.
noon at 3 o'clock. The remalna wlll
rest at tbe family resldsnoe. 1323
Kootenay atreet until time of church
service. (7450)
FUNERAL NOTICE
ANDERSON-Mra. Susan,
away yesterday morning at the
family reeldence, Stanley St., aged
M years. Funeral will take place
tomorrow afternoon, Friday, at 8
o'clock from the First Preabjlerian
Churcb.
CHICAGO. June 31 (CPI—A trans
portatlon dream 2M years old approached reality todav aa four
barges, bearing freight, pushed toward Chicago from New Orleans
over an Inland waterway—i virtually man-made channel 98 miles
long costing 8106.000.000. An engineering feat comparable almost to
thst of the Panaaa canal was necessary in making It poaelble to
travel from Uke Michigan to tbe
Mississippi river.
RIVERS DROPPING
RFVRLSTon.   June   31.—(CP) —
___  Tbe Columbia and Dleclllewaet rtv.
Saviour's church  on  Friday   alter.' ara bave registered   big drops dur
ing tbe pwt two daya.
Tbe Mvelsttoke-Arrowhead highway and the trans-Canada highway weat of hare are again open
to traffic after being temporarily
tied up by flood oondltlona.
"TURK" LEWIS DIBS AT KELOWNA
-KILOWNA, B. C. June 31.—(CF)
—Valentine Dooorei (Turk) lewis.
91, died today after an Ulneas te-
sultlng   from   Influenza,   contracted
(7446)   early  this year.
WEEK-END SPECIALS
Dresses        HATS      Swim Suits
$2.95
White fabric hats
in cashmere and
$6.95        . 8ilk
$9.50     $*<<*yj
£mem*yfal&.
is    —*j-—t——mmxpj
Summer   frocks   in
washable silk crepe
in the pastel shades
and   white
$4.95
4*IM*JMUM*U.
"Look for the Neort Sign"
Klinjrtite     Bathing
suits   individually
tailored by hand to
ensure perfect fit
$2.95
$3.95
$4.95
Phone 151
TONIGHT ©NLY
7 AND »   ■
Novel Detective
Mystery Story I
AND FOR LAUGHS
THE BARON
MUNCHAUSEN
JACK PEARL
"MEAL TICKET
■ I      I I        ■■! ——■W*^^
SCHKKN   SOUVENIR!
MELODIES
COMING
Friday and Saturday
The picture that giyai
complete satisfaction
in entertainment I
Wr
MMT6AYI
Semmns
«*_.(____
CrtmsXsl
CATNOR MUROa
LIN ATMS   SALLY IILII
STATEf
AIR
