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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" New Process for Halting\nCancer Found in East\n\u2014Pa_\\e Two\nM 10 3 IUADS5\nLIBRARY\n00tt1\nV6'\nMay Gold Production in\nCanada $9,409,599\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nVOLUME 14\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNELSON. BRITIIH COLUMBIA. CANADA-THURSDAY  MORNINO. JULY 18. 1935\nNUMBER  72\nITALY TO USE JOO PLANES IN AFRICA\nBRITAIN HAKES\n(HANGESINHER\nAFRICAN FORCES\nRedistribution of the!\nTroops Made Says\nMacdonald\nSteamship Niagara, Out of Victoria, Is\nIn Collision and Sends Out an S 0 S\nNOT TO REINFORCE\nTHE SUDAN FORCES\nEden to Lead British\nDelegation to the\nLeague Council\nLONDON, July 17 (API-Anthony Edtn, again In the role of\nBacemaker, will hetd Grtat Brio's delegation to tha ltagut of\nnationt oouncll session opening\nJuly 2B called ta itek tome way\nto avert an Italo-Ethloplan war.\nOthtr developments in the Eatt\nAfrican tltuttlon, which British\nofficial! contlnutd watching close\nware:\n1. Malcolm MacDonald, tecretary for colonial, told tha commons Britain'! military foroes In\nKenya,  bordering   Ethiopia and\n(tentlnutd on Paga Ten)\nMANY MARCHERS\nFAILJNTREK\n35-Mile Hike Into\nKenora Takes a\nHeavy Toll\n-OSNOKA. Ont., July 17 (CD-\nMore than 240 revoltert from Manitoba relief campi, awaiting here\n* the arrival of 120 of their fellowi\nfrom Winnipeg, pondered their next\nmove tonight, faced with the knowledge they could not linger long.\nRefreahed aftar a good meal and\nan afternoon's aleep In a church\nbasement, tha men were rapidly recuperating from hardships of a 35-\nmile trek fram the Mtnltobe-On-\ntap\u00bb bouadarr, e march that took\nheavy toll of their ranki.\nThe itriken, en route to Ottawa\nto protest camp conditiona and to\ndemand work with wagea, arrived\nhere today after being dropped from\nbuaea they had chartered to take\nthem to the border. FUty-flve men\nwere forced to withdraw trom the\nmarch.\nMayor T. McLellan warned the\nmen no aid would be given them.\nThey would not be provided with\nihelter, he laid, and would be treated as transients, usually allowed to\nttay in town only two dayt. They\nmutt buy their own food, the mayor\nlaid.\nIn the meantime, the 120 strikers\nleft behind Monday when the tint\ncontingent left Winnipeg neared tha\n(boundary. These men left Manitoba's capital in five buses today,\nand like the first company, will\n. march to Kenora trom the border.\nVESSELS CRASH\nFEW HOURS OUT\n0FB.C.HARB0R\nDamaged King Egbert\nStands by the\nNiagara\nSEATTLE, July 17 (AP)-The\nharbor radio reported It received\n\u2022n 80S at 8:12 from tha tteam-\n\u2022hlp Niagara stating that It had\ncollided with tha steamer King\nEgbert.\nNelthtr tht extent of damage\nnor tht location of tht vessels wit\ngiven. Tht Niagara sa|d It wet\nproceeding towtrd Vlctorli,\nThc Niagara arrlvtd In Vlotorla\nJuly 12 and was bound for Honolulu.\nThe King Egbert radioed it 9:50\np.m., the htrbor radio reoprted,\nthat lta bowi wtrt damaged, but\nIt wat itandlng by tha Niagara 23\nmiles off Race Rocks.\nThe harbor radio reported the\nNiagara told the King Egbert It\nneed not atand by longer. The Niagara and the Egbert were proceeding toward Victoria.\nThe Niagara left Victoria at 5 p.m.\nfor Auatralla, via Honolulu, wtth\nPremier J. A. Lyona of Auatralla\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nFEWER FOREST\nFIRES IN B.C.\nVICTORIA, July 17 <CP)-Llght\nshowers throughout many parti of\nthe province recently helped to\ncheck the advance of foreit tires,\nprovincial forestry offlcera Indicated today. A total of 402 firei have\nbeen reported to date this aeason.\ncompared with 517 at a like,data\nlast yaar. Prince Rupert, Fort\nGeorge. Kamloops and Nelaon forest districts reported fewer outbreaks, the Vancouver foreat dlitrlct alone showing rrsqre. The public li uked to take all care with\ncamp and picnic flrea ln the wooda.\n20Y1AMFOR\"\nMRS.M.T.WALEY\nFEDERAL BUILDING, Tacoma,\nWash, Julv 17 (API\u2014Mrt. Mar-\nparet Thulln Walay, 19, oonvlcted\nin the George Weyerhaeuser kidnap caae last Saturday, waa sentenced by United Statet Dlttrlet\nJudgt E. E. Clubman today to\ntervt 20 years In tha federal detention farm at Milan, Mich.\nSoviet Flyer Ready fo Take Off\nior San Francisco Via North Pole\nPower Through\nAir\n\"Tht greatest achievement of\nmy life,\" .aid Nikola Tesla on hit\n79th birthday, pictured In Naw\nYork whan apeaklng of hit litttt\ndiscovery, a method of tending\nmtehtnlcal Impulses to til parts\nof globt at guldt for ships and at\nIndicators ef world's mlntral\nwealth. Impulses can alto be uted\nIn time of war te explode bombt\nanywhere.\nSees V. S. Dictator\nKarl Radek, Soviet editor,\nwhoee deolarationt reflect tftIclal\nvlewi, it tilling rtadert er Rus-\ntlen prett that a dietatorttle of\nmiddle-class origin wlll ba tet up\nIn U.B. within a ahort tlm^\nBeware of Quick Tan \u2014 It\nCan Cause a Lot of Grief\nPhysician and Beauty Expert Both Offer\na Word to the Wise\nBy LOGAN CLENDENNING, M.D.f\nThe tun alwayi haa. been\n**\nLIBERAL LEADER\nOPENS BATTLE\nAUGUST?\nOTTAWA, July 17 (CP) \u2014\n.-Definite announcement that RL\nHon. W. L. Mackenzie King,\nliberal leader, will open his\ngeneral election campaign at\nKingston, Ont, August 7 waa\nmade here today. He will speak\nthere ln support ot hit former\nprivate tecretary, Proteisor Norman Rogers, Liberal candidate\nJn Kingston constituency. The\naeat la now represented by Oen.\nA. E. Roil. Coniervative. Mr.\nKing will, it is underatood, tour\nthe Dominion.\n_\u25a0\u00bb*\u25a0\u25a0 <ew*w*f >*>\u00bb>\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0*\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*>\u25a0*\nU. S. A. MAY HAVE\nREPRESENTATION\nAT LEAGUE MEET\nLONDON, July 17 (CP-Havas)-\nPredictions the United Statei may\naend an unofficial observer to the\nLeague of Nations council when it\ndiscusses the Italo-Ethiopian dispute next week were made here\ntonight following a report Britain\nhat been sounding out Waahlngton\nregarding possible American support to prevent war.\nAtlantic Flight\nIs Interrupted\n\/NIW YORK, July 17 (AP)\u2014\nThor Solberg, Norwegian-American pilot, returned to Floyd Bennett fltld an hour afttr hit takeoff lttt todty on a flight to Bergen, Norwty. Ht broke off hit\nflight btcauw of difficulty In navigating dut to hit pltne btlng\ntall-heavy. Ht wlll make anothar\nttttmpt tomorrow.   \/\u2022*\nJust Wants Favorable\nWeather; Tests His\nMystery Plane\nMOSCOW, July 17 (AP)\u2014So*\nViet Russia's flying htro, Pilot\nSlgmund Levaneffsky, tonight uld\nhe and two companions wtre\nready to hop off acrott tht top of\ntht world to Sin Francisco \"at\ntoon at tht wttthtr It right\"\nLevaneffsky uld ht expected\ntha 5000-mile nonstop flight, tf\nsuccessful, would take SO to 72\nhoura.\n\"I htvt thoroughly txamlntd\nthe pltnt and ltt (single) motor,\"\nhe added, \"and they ara In perfect condition.\"\nLevantfftky, who gained International prominence end tht tltlt\n\"htro of tht Soviet Union\" In\n1933 when ht fltw to rescue Jamtt\nJ. Mattern, Amtrican around-tht-\nworld filer forced down on the\nfroztn waittt of Anadir, fltw hit\nmyitery plant ovtr Moecow thli\nafternoon.\nMAY BE RECORD MAKER\nHe waa too high, however, for\naccurate inspection of the ihlp tnd\nhence reporta that the plane waa\n(Ctntlnutd on Ptgt Tin)\nSign of Better\nTimes on Prairie\nBETHUNE, Saik., July 17 (CP)\n\u2014Crop prospects look ao good to\nW. Hamilton that ht hit filled\nhit Kit modtl automobile with\ngasoline and brought It from tha\ngarage for tha flrtt time In tlx\nytan.\nAutoiit Killed\ntidered by mm to ltt tha gkrer ad\nlite and health. From the earliest\ndayt of recorded Mitry In Egypt\nthe iun haa been worshipped ai\nt dlety.\nAnd certainly twilight, aa we\nhave frequently pointed out, la\nhealth-giving and beneficial. It ia\ngood tor many tkin diseases, including acne. It It very neoessary\nfor babies becauae it prevents\nrickets. It produces vitamin D ln\nthe body.\nAt the tame time, excessive exposure to sunlight when one ia not\nuted to it may have serious consequences. Burna are divided by\nthe lurgeon Into those of first,\nsecond and third degree. Sunburn\nit usually considered to be firat\ndegree, involving only the tuper-\nficial layers of tbe ikin, but since\naecond degree burns arc defined\nthoae which have inflammation\nWith blisters, lt la obvious that sunburn may be of the second degree.\nQUICK TAN BRINGS\nMISERY\nThe fellow who goet on a thort\nvacation and wants to get aa much\n'tan into it aa poaalble, it liable *\u2022*\u2022_>\nmake himself very unhappy ana\nprofit very little from hit vacation\nShod. I' concur ln the recommen-\ntiona of Jerome W. Ephraim in a\nmagazine article tor July, when he\nprescribe! tun baths at followt:\n\"Begin your tun baths by exposing tho entire body for a maximum\nof fifteen or twenty minutes the tint\nday. In penont of average aenai-\ntivity, thii will produce a sught reddening or minimum perceptbile erythema, aa the ultraviolet ray exper.t\ncall lt. Wear dark glasses to protect the eyei. Extend the times of\nexposure by five minutes each day\nfor the next ten or twelve dayt (bru-\nneta can lately lncreaae tnis outage).\"\nSome of the wont sunburns occur\non cloudy dayt becauie the heat is,\ndiminished, you feel cool, and do j\nnot become apprehensive of the effect of sunlight\nTreatment of sunburn, whether\nmild or severe, is usually with tome\nform of oil or greaie. It maket very\nllttle difference whether this is\nolive oil or special preparations.\nAnother good preparation la calamine lotion. It Is toothing and antiseptic.\nThe prevention of sunburn with\noUt which afford iome protection\nfrom the ultraviolet raya it quite\nfeasible, There are many preparations of thia kind on the market\nTown Clerk Will\nCast Vote for or\ninst Beer\n(-OVAN. Saik., July 17 (CP)\u2014\nM. Hocking, town clerk, la on the\n\"tpot\" In connection with the recent beer ptrlor vote here. The\nvote wtt a tie and the attorney-\ngeneral's department picked Mr.\nHocking to cut the deciding vote.\nThe 94 against and the 94 for voters\nare watching the town cleric\nCASSELS. PROMINENT\nBARRISTER, IS DEAD\nSBCRETAH, Sask., July 17 (CP)\n\u2014W. A. Robertaon, Brooklyn, N.Y,\nwaa killed today near here when\nhla automobile skidded ln loose\ngravel and turned over teveral\ntimet. Mn. Robertton, wrloutly ill,\nwu taken to Moote Jaw hoipltaL\nAgai\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP)-R. 8.\nRobert Catels, K.C, number of\ntht ltw firm of Catiels Brook\nA Ytly, and ent of tht but known\nbarristers In Canada, died at hla\nToronto home today In hit 79th\nyeer..\nBy  GLADY8  GLAD\n?_t_s^^\u00bb\ndent Egyptian were ardent aun\nworshlpperi. Moit of the Egyptians\nin that distant era. especially thoae\ncantered around the mouth of the\nNile, regarded the tun u their god.\nThey firmly believed that their aov-\nereigna, the Pharoahs, were descend-\nanta ot the tun, and they frequently\nmade tacriflces to blm by slaying\nucred animals.\nToday, ot coune, ln this country,\nthere aren't any sun worshlppen fn\nthe religious sense. But there ttlll\nare gala who make sacrifices to the\naun. They sacrifice their flawless\ncomplexions in an attempt to ac*\nSilre a rich suntan. And that ueu-\nly ia becauae they are ignorant of\ntuntannlng methods.\nIf a girl doein't know how to go\nabout getting her ikin attractively\ntanned, the chances are that she'll\nwind up with nothing more than a\nraw, red, painful sunburn. And after\nahe'a gone through the subsequent\nstages of blistering and peeling, her\nskin may not only lack the becoming tan that the hoped for, but may\nalso have become coarse, leathery\nand wrinkled.\nAlways, before exposing younelf\nto the iun, give your sum proper\nprotection. Tne luntan oils and\ncreams now on the market are generally mott. effective, u they permit\nonly the beneficial rays ot the sun\nto penetrate to the body; and the\nvinegar and oil procedure la alto a\ngood one. First moisten your tkin\nwith ordinary cider vinegar and permit it to dry. Then masaage a generoui amount of pure olive or cocoa-\nnut oil into your ikin. And after\nthii, if you with to remove the\nthine, you may dust a bit of powder\nover your oiled ikln.\nIn addition, you must be careful\nabout your timing. Don't try to acquire a deep coat of tan all at one\ntune. Permit your first tunbath to\nlaat for only 20 minutes. The second may be a bit longer, the third\nmay be still longer.\nRELIEFERS ARE\nARRIVING EACH\nDAY ATOTTAWO\nMost Stragglers Who\nEvade Ban Against\nOrganizations\n150 FED AT MEN'S\nHEADQUARTERS\n350 Reach Limits of\nToronto; Many Are\nFoot-Sore\nOTTAWA, July 17 (CP) .-Advance guards of \"on-to-Ottawa\"\nmarchen continued to drift into\nOttawa during the day. For the\nmoat part they were stragglers,\nthote who had evaded the Quebec\nban on organized marchers on highways or railwayi. One contingent\not 30 trom Petawwa relief camp,\nnear Pembroke, Ont, arrived via\nfreight train.\nOttawa headquarters for the\nmarchers and relief camp strikers\nat Ukrainian labor temple fed ISO\ntonight Some 200 more were being\n-\"red for ln private homes.\n\"TwtTwu collected by visiting\nfarmi and individual merchants ln\nand near Ottawa. Farmen retributed potatoes and peu in large\n(Contlnutd on Page Tan)\nRIOTS, SHOOTING\nSTIR BELFAST\nBELFAST. Northern Ireland. July\n17 (AP)-rRioting attended br ahooT-\nlng broke out again today bringing\nback the soldiers releued from duty\nyetterday. when the Orange day\ntrouble seemed ended.\nThere were no fatalities in today's\ndisorders.\nPint trouble occurred at a cemetery where one of the tlx victims of\nthe catholic-protestant fighting since\nlut Friday waa being buried. The\ntwo tactions stoned each other until\na volley trom troope and soldiers'\nguna. fired over their beads, dispersed them.\nReturning from the funeral (000\nmen, carrying the Union Jack, were\nfired upon by snipers from the Carrick hill. Nationalist section. At\nDonegal street, at the other end of\nCarrick hill, there was heavier fire.\nPollce knelt ln the streets and poured fire into the sniper's nest\nBRINTNELL ON\nFLYING JAUNT\nFOR HONEYMOON\nBELESFORD LAKE, Man., July\n17 (CP).\u2014Leigh Brintnell prepared\ntonight to take off in the Radium\nSilver Express for Prince Albert,\nSuk., en route to Great Bear Lake,\nN.W.T. The noted northern aviator, accompanied by his bride and\nteven passengers, landed here today from Red Lake, Ont The trip is\na combined honeymoon and business flight for Brintnell, who left\nToronto lut Friday.\nGARDINER IN ONTARIO\nIrish Journalist\nDies In England\nGEORGE WILLIAM  RUSSEL\nBOURNEMOUTH. England, July\n17 (AF)-George William Ruaaell,\nIrish journalist, writer and painter\nknown to poetry loven by the cryptic pen name. \"AE.\" died tonight\nHe wu 08 yean old.\nAlthough primarily noted u e\npoet AE wn an energetic lack of\nmany trades\u2014a painter, businessman, organizer, editor and co-founder of the famoua Abbey theater in\nDublin.\nParadoxically he wai a lyrical advocate of the virtues of Idleness tnd\ncaused amuaement when he deicribed Longfellow't line, \"Let ut\nbe up and doing.\" in the American\nbard's \"Paalm ot Life,\" at \"One of\nthe most terrible lines in all poetry.\"\nHe made a lecture tour in Canada\nabout eleht yeen ago.        . *\nIu 1932 ha told American audiences the United States depression wu caused by a too literal\nfollowing of Longfellow's advice.\nBANDIT HUNT\nUNSUCCESSFUL\nTACOMA. July 17 (AP)-Uncon*\nvinced that their quarry, a bank\nrobber-slayer who has shot two men\nto death, hat fled the area, heavily\narmed officers and a civilian posse\nresumed their search today, beating\nthrough woods and brush in the\nStuck river bottom, northeut of\nSumner.\nTwo shots were fired at a fleeing\nman there at 3 ajn.. today. Police\nChief Morris C. Nelton of Sumner\nreported. He was not believed hit\nand as the area was surrounded it\nwas doubted that he wu able to\nleave the vicinity.\nMEN BEATEN BY\nSTRIKE PICKET\nAT THE (OAST\nAttempt Made to Set\nWaterfront Worker's\nHouse on Fire\nAUTO WINDOWS\nBROKEN BY ROCKS\nAnother Car Used to\nCarry Workers Run\nInto a Ravine\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP).-\nFresh attacks arising out ot the\nlongshore ttrike here were reported To police todey.\nJ. H. Grove, employee of the\nNelaon Spencer Co., had his car\ntrapped by a barricade oh Victoria\ndrive. He managed to clear It under a ihower of rocki which' that*\ntered the car's windows. A man,\nhiding in the nearby buth, leaped\non the running board with a club\nin hit hand but wu shaken off.\nA car owned by Frank Cadogan,\nallegedly used tor transportation\nof _*n et work on the waterfront,\nwu f-\"-id wrecked at the foot of\na ravine.\nATTEMPT BURN HOME\nNIW WESTMINSTER, B. C July\n17 (CP).\u2014An attempt to burn the\nhome ot W. J. McKay, Sixth ave..\na waterfront worker, wu reported\nto police today. Burned rags were\ndiscovered undernearth the back\nsteps.\nPete Peten and Pete Kazakoff,\nboth of south Westminster, reported they, had been tet upon and\nbeaten by lix strike pickets on Columbia ttreet. The picket! accused\ntht men of working on the waterfront\nFRENCH LAUNCH\nA NEW CRUISER\nEXETER. Ont. July 17 (CP) \u2014\nPremier J. G. Gardiner of Saskatch\newan. ipending his holidty visiting\nrelations here, said tonight he plans\nto return to the west about the\nfint of next month.\nCAMERON DECLARES HE DID HIS DUTY\nAS CHIEF TO THE BEST OF HIS ABILITY\nDenies Agreement to Carry Out Illegal Enterprise; Declares\nPolice Have to Co to All Sorts of Places\nto Get Needed Evidence\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP)-\nTaking the witness stand in his own\ndefence, John Cameron testified in\ncounty court Wednesday afternoon\nthat he had never entered into any\nagreement to carry out an illegal\nenterprise, and that he did hia duty\nto the beit of hit ability u chief\nconstable for the city of Vancouver.\nThe ex-chief of police took the\nstand after Judge J. C. Mclntoih refuted a motion, made on behalf of\nLou Barrack, for dismissal of the\ncharge at the dote of the crown's\ncaae.\nHit honor uid that he placed the\naccused on his defence on the merits.\nThe defence of Joe Celona and\nBarrack to the charge ot conspiracy to commit a public mischief\nwill be preiented titer Cameron't\nevidence hu finished.\nArgument on the motion for dls-\nmissil evoked a cluh between Spe-\n(Contlnutd on Page Ten)\nFrance, in Economy Measure, Bam Public in\nDemonstrations; Civil Servants Are Alarmed\nPARIS, July 17 (CP-Hevai) -\nTht Frtnch govtrnmtnt tonight\nbanntd all publlo dtmoitrttlont In\na move to permit It to oarry\nthrough tha program of draatlo\neconomy dtorut promulgattd by\ntht cabinet urly today.\nTTtt federation of civil servante.\nrailway workers, mtmbtn of tht\ngeneral ltbor ftdlratlon and post\nmen mtinwhlle pledged themselves to turn out by thouundt\nIn Plaet dt L'Optrt Frldiy night\nto mtkt known thtlr objtotlont\nto thl stringent oovernment measures whloh uked tvtry man,\nwomtn tnd ohlld In France to contribute ta Prince's financial rteon-\nSAINT NAKAIRE, July 17 (CP*\nHavu).\u2014France must\u2014and will-\nincrease ita navy, Francoit Pietri,\nFrench naval miniiter, declared\nhere today at the launching of the\ncruiser Marseillaise.\n\"For the moment,\" the naval\nminister aaid, \"my one aim is to\nincrease our naval strength and I\nwill have the frankness to repeat\nthat statement again.\"\nThe Marseillaise belongs to the\nsix cruisers of the 1832 naval quota,\neach of 7600 tons. The ships have\n84,000 horse-power, a speed of 32\nknots and carry nine 6-inch gum\nin triple turrets.\nYAKIMA MAN IS\nFOUND DEAD BY\nHIS AUTOMOBILE\nCabinet Talks\nTrade Problem\nPremier Meets Japan's\nMinister Over the\nNew Surtax\nOTTAWA. July 17 (CPJ-Negotia\ntions with Japan over alleged Ca*\nnadian trade discriminations against\nJapanese imports, activities of \"on\nto Ottawa\" groups, and the tvery*\nday routine of administrative problems, combined again today to ao\noccupy the government that no pro*\ngreat wu made with numerous appointments and other detail to be\ndisposed of in preparation for the\ngeneral election.\nPrime Minister R. B. Bennett had\nan interview thii afternoon with\nSotomatsu Kato. Japanese minister,\nand afterward held a long conference with officials of external of\nfairt\u2014a conference which will be\nreturned tomorrow\u2014but had no Information to make public tonight\nSEATTLE. July 17 (AP)- With\nhia head resting on the bumoer ot\nI)is automobile near the exhaust\npipe, the body of a man tentatively\nidentified from personal effects as\nH. G. Henderson. 55. Yakima, Wu\nfound today at Cottage lake.\nThe motor of the car waa running\nand the lights were burning when\ntwo Seattle boys camping rearby\ndiscovered Henderson. They notified the coroner's office. Deputy\ncoroner. Ted Harris estimated the\nman had been dead about 12 hours.\nHarris nld papers on the body\nIndicated Hendereon wu a salesman\nfor an oil promoting company.\n(Contlnutd on Page Tin)\n150 Camp Strikers\nFrom Hope Refused\nAid at Vancouver\n\u25a0*fi        \t\nVANCOUV-rl, July 17 (CP)-\nApproxlmately ISO relief camp\nmin who wtnt on ttrlkt at four\ncamp's nttr Hopt, 80 mllu from\nhtrt, trrlved In Vanoouvar today\nby freight tnln.\nTodty a delegation from the\nstrikers waited on provincial relltf officiate tnd uktd for relltf.\nThty wire refund.\nMott of tht ttrlkirt. It It reported, trt members of tht groupt\nwhloh arrlvtd In Vanoouver re*\nctntly from Rtglna.\nBROOK, BRITISH\nAVIATOR, SEEKS\nNEW FLIGHT MARK\nLONDON, Ju*y 17 (AP)-H. If.\nBrook, British aviator with only six\noranges u provisions, took off from\nLympne airdrome Vonight In an attempt to break Amy Mollison's\nflight record ot four days, tix hours,\nto Cape Town, South Africa.\nBrook's flrat itop wlll be Rome.\nHe tet a new record lut tall for a\ntolo flight from Australia to England after competing ln the Melbourne air derby.\nCAN'T SUE GOV'T.\nFOR FLOOD DAMAGE\nVICTORIA, July 17 (CP)-The\nprovincial government holds that lt\ncannot be responsible for damage\ndone to private property by floods\ndue to the heavy rains of early July\ncombined with melting snowt.\nSettlers ln the Okanagan district\nbetween Enderby and Mable Lake\nhave written, threatening to sue\nthe government for their losses. The\ngovernment, however, will not ia*\n\u2022ue the necetury flit for them to go\nto court.\nThe government itself hu taken\na lou u well. On the road cast of\nEnderby four bridges were washed\nout and repain will cost over $10,000.\nNone of Relief\nStrikers- Granted\nBail Is Released\nREGINA, July 17 (CP).-None of\nthe 11 relief camp strikers granted\nball totalling $26,000 in district court\nyesterdiy hai been released, it wu\nlearned today. A second list of applications It let for hetring Thursday. No sureties have been posted\nyet with authorities.\n24 PLANES AND\nN PILOTS ARE\nALREADYONWAY\nEthiopia Drills Her\nTroops Anticipating\nActual Warfare\nATROCITIES ARE\nITALY'S CHARGES\nClaim Children Were\nMutilated in Raids\nby Tribesmen\n. By A. E. STUNTZ\nAuoclated Press Foreign Staff\nROME, July 17 (AP\u2014Italy pour,\ned troopt and planes Into Africa\nand Ethioplt drilled htr tribal\nwarriors today In preparation for\nexpected hoitllitlu as efforts to\navert war\u2014repeatedly called futile hire\u2014continued.\nA spokesman for tha govern*\nment uld Ittly had received ne\nnotice of tht League of Nationt announcement tht council would\nmoet In ipecitl union about July\n25 to consider tho Italo-Ethloplan\ncrisis.\nItaly will not consider her reply\nto an invitation until it arrives, ha\nnid. Well-informed circles believe*\nhowever. Italy will accept an Intrl*\ntation but refuse to yield any other precepts and oppose any further\nefforts to handle the situation\nthrough the League. Press and officials alike have said repeatedly the\nLeague can do nothing.\n300 PLANES TO GO\nDispatches from Addis Ababa reporting increased Ethiopian military\npreparations followed yesterday's\npublication of dispatches from Cairo,\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nFERNIE WORKER\nDIESINCRASH\nGalloway Is Held on a\nManslaughter Count;\nThree Injured\nFERNIE, B.C., July 17 (CP)-\nDlmltrl Swidertkl, a road worker\nof Ftrnlt, Wll Instantly killed today and three othtr passengers of\na truck driven by Jamu Galloway, ware tevtrtly Injured when\ntht vehicle overturned on tha\nroad neir Llztrt eretk, thret\nmllet wist of hero.\nTht Injured. John Bella, Leon\nMltcovltch and Thomas Paynes,\nwert rerjioved to hotpltal.\nGalloway wat arretted and\ncharged with manslaughter In\nconnection with the accident.\nCoroner Outhle formally opened\nan Inquest tnd adjourned It until\nFriday.\nSwlderskl leaves a wife anl\ntwo chlldrtn.\ntltHWIWIISWtllllMI\nNOBLE HEADS THE\nSTEVENS-PARTY\nFOR B. C.\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP).-\nJ. F. Noble, Vancouver businessman, was choten British Columbia chairman of the Recon**\nstruction party, Warren K. Cook,\nchairman and Dominion treat-1\nurer of the party, announced\nhere today.\nDecision of Jacques Cartier,\nMontreal, former vice-chairman\nof the Canadian Radio Broadcasting commission, to join the\nparty was a surprise to ita officers, Mr. Cook stated. Mr. Car-\ntier will be the party's chairman\nin the province of Quebec.\n\u25a0 imiwtimniiniHi\nFORMER PRE8IDENT\nIN  BOLIVIA  IS  DEAD\nLA PAZ, Bolivia, July 17 (AP)-\nDr. Daniel Salamanca, 66, who wu\npresident of Bolivia during mott\nof the Chaco war, died today of a\nheart attack at his plantation at\nCochabamba, it was officially announced here.     ^H\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON \t\nVictoria  \u2014..\nNanaimo  _\t\nVancouver \t\nKamloopi \t\nPrince George\nPrince Rupert..\nAtlln\t\nDawson  _\t\nSeattle  _,\nPortlanjj\nMin. Max.\n_   57    88\nSan Francisco .\nSpokane  \t\nLos Angeles\t\nPenticton \t\nVernon\n64\n78\n74\nBfl\n72\nn\n58\n70\nSO\n82\n78\n88\n80\nGrand Forks \t\nCranbrook  __\nKaslo  \u2014-\nCalgary \t\nEdmonton   \u2014\nSwift Current     56\nPrince Albert _    60\nSaskatoon     58\nQu'Appelle -    62\nWinnipeg    68\nMoose J4w    60\nNelson and vicinity: Continued\nfine not much change In temperature.\n *.^__\u2014\n\u25a0^^^^^^^^^^^\u25a0\u2014\u25a0^\u25a0^\n\t\nPAOITWO\u2014-***\nDISCOVER SECRET TO ARREST\nCANCER AND MAKECONTROLOF\nTHE DISEASE A POSSIBILITY\n\"Ensol\" Solution  Is\nInjected Into the\nBlood Stream\nDISCOVERY MADE\nIN KINGSTON, ONT,\nDiscovery Result\nFour Years of\nResearch\nof\nKINGSTON, Ont, July 17 <CP)-\nDiscovery ol a new series ol biological products which he calls\n\"ensols\" one of which has arrested\ndevelopment of carcinoma cancer\nand may control It, was announced\ntoday by Dr. Henry C. Connell of\nKingston from his laboratory at\nQueen's university. The \"enaor eo-\nlutlon ls Injected into the bloodstream so lt can reach all parts of\nthe body.\nDr. Connell, 40-yesr-old specialist\nln diseases of the aye, ear. nose and\nthroat, said he realized hii announcement may be regarded ai\noremature but hli laboratory findings are positive and conclusive and\nearly clinical effects uniform and\nremarkable.\nDr. Connell's \"ensols\" are produced by growing harmless tiny\norganisms on protein media which\nare liquified in the process. These\nmicro-organisms are non-pathogenic, or non-disease-causing, and of\nthe proteolytic type, which produce\ncleavage of protelda with formation! of ilmple and soluble producer.\nU8E OF PATHNTt\nIn the liquid produced ll an active\nsubstance which can be separated\nSTEAMER TRIP\nSUNDAY JULY 21\nTO\nPROCTER\u2014AINSWORTH\nAND KASLO\nLeave Nelson City Wharf 12 Noon\nArrive Back 9:45 P.M.\nTrTp [ULY 28TH IS CANCELLED\nReturn Farts for tht Day:\nProcter  \u00bbf]\nAlniworth  fl.\"\nKisl fl.50\nChildren Half Faro.\nNo Paisei Honored\nN. J. LOWIS, City Ticket Agant, Ntlion\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B. C, HOTELS\n\"Finttt in the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nIres Bui Service Cee. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 25c to 60c\nLUNCHEON 35c to 50c        DINNER 35c to 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarten\nTelephone 717 Nelson. B.C.\n422 Vernen St\nHUME\u2014L. B. Cook, W. J. Well-\nwood, G. V. Ballentine, D. M. Lamont, Ron Hewst, 3. 3. Horan, R.\nClothier, S. Launer, H. 0. Hall, J. A.\nNachorlan, C. H. Sougenay, Mrs.\nC. D. Risk, Vancouver; J. Rickson,\nVictoria; Len Green. City; H. Miard,\nFernie; Mr. ana Mrs. C. Bruce, Leduc, Alta.; Mr. and Mrs. L. Sells,\nNew Denver; 3. H. Lewis, R. Shad-\nman, Medicine Het; L. A. Agassi.,\nAgassis; R. Pearson, W. Bater, Winnipeg; F. Fuld, Cranbrook; Mrs. M.\nFuluken and party, F. Blttaher, San\nDiego, Cal.; Mr. and Mra. Leary, 3.\nFitzsimmons, Nskusp; Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Glan, Mr. and Mrs. E. Chambers,\nCalgary; C. Thorn, Penticton; Mrs.\nWegen, Spokane.\n^The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kind\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n124 BAKER ST. PHONE 19\nNILSON. B.C\nSAVOY-H. McLean, Vancouver;\nMr. and Mrs. M. B. McGillivray,\nMr. and Mrs. W. L. McGillivray,\nToronto; Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Smith,\nBellville, Ont; A. Workman, Crawford Bay; S. Elink, Revelstoke; E.\nW. Paterson, Fernle; Mrs. T. T.\nScott, Chapman Camp; K. Mark,\nYmir; J. N. Murphy, Kaslo; Mr.\nand Mrs. H. J. Palmer, Trail; H. H.\nShawenltager and son, Spokane;\nDon C. Aldls, Longbeach.\nNew Grand Hotel\nPL KAPAK. Prop.\nHot and Cold Water\nSingle 50c up; double 50c up\nMonthly ratea tlOOO up\nPH. 234       Sit VERNON 8T\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nPETE BORSATO, Prop.\nRooms from SOc to $1.60\nMonthly 110 and up.\nSteam heated and hot arM cold\nwater ln every room\nttS BAKER ST. PHONE 00\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vsrnen tt Phons II7L\nH. WASSICK. Prep.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nMiners' Headquarters\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaitt You\nJAS. A. MADDEN. Prop.\nComplstsly Remodelled\nHot snd Cold Wster\nIn the HEART ot the City\nPHONE 61      505 WAPO 8T\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL'E^SSpp.n,\nE. NIEDERMAN,        Comfortable Rooms        Plaoa on the\nProprietor Good   Meals Road to  Vsrnon\nB.C. 4\nping I\nha\n-non J\nVANCOUVER, B. C. HOTELS\nI     \"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel\nWW Seymour gt.      Vsncouver, B.C.\nNewly Renovated Throughout\nPhones    \u25a0     Elevator\nA. PATERSON. late of\nColeman. Alta.. Proprietor\nfrom the ether constituents end\nmade sterile. This has the power of\nliquifying protein similar to the\nbase but has no effect on protein of\nother types, thus, \"ensol\" produced\nin this way from lens protein will\nbreak down cataractous lens tissue\nbut does not affect other proteins.\nSo also, said Dr. Connell, \"ensol\"\nproduced from a carcinoma bue\nlus a specific action upon carcinoma tissue\u2014demonstrated ln repeated laboratory tests, \"ensol\" produced from carcinoma ls being used\nupon patients with carcinoma pronounced incurable. No Inflammatory reaction occurs and there ls\n\"remarkable and Immediate improvement in the patient's general\ncondition; apparently the growth\nof the carcinoma is arrested and the\nprocesi reversed to one of retrogression.\"\nDr. Connell said detailed reports\nof his work are under review and\nwill be published in a scientific\nJournal as soon as possible. His announcement today was made with\nsome reluctance, but becauie ot\nmany rumori concerning patients\nunder treatment and other features\nof thc work, it was considered advisable to make known just what\nhas been done and the present position of the research.\nRESEARCH FOUR\nYEARS OLD\nFour years ago Dr. Connell began\nresearch upon cataract. His original\nIdeas were changed into a new conception of the nature of cataract. He\nwas led into new paths. Seeking a\nsubstance which would break down\nlens protein into soluble substances,\nhe began to use the harmless microorganisms and was surprised at the\nresults. He demonstrated the specific character of lens \"ensol\" in\nbreaking down lens protein. This\nled him to see a wide application of\nthe same principle to other diseases\nand particularly to the various\nforms of cancer.\nThe principle of the treatment ls\nsaid to hc applicable to all forms of\nneoplasm, or morbid groths, and is\nprobsbly applicable as well to innocent growths such as fibroids, tor a\nlaboratory test upon a hard bibrold\ntumor proved it can be liquified\nand dissolved by action of similar\nmicro -organism.\".\nBertram Holsgrove, technician In\nthe department of bacteriology at\nQueen's university, has been associated with Dr. Connell throughout\nthe Investigation.\nDr, Charlei Mundell hai given\nvaluable service in obtaining cancer\nmaterial, in making biopsies and in\ncaring for patients under treatment.\nDr. Charles Elliott has an important case under his care.\nNO FEES ACCEPTED\nSo far no charge has been made\nfor the remedy supplied and no fees\naccepted for services.\nIf there is criticism that the announcement is premature and that\na greater mass of evidence should\nbe collected, it may be answered,\nsaid Dr. Connell, that there can be\nno doubt of the fundamental nature\nof the discovery and that it can be\nput fully to the test only by applying it to all sorts of cases. This can\nbe done only when the discovery is\nmade generally known. Dr. Connell\nhimself hss borne almost the entire\nexpense of his research.\nMice infected with carcinoma are\nused in the laboratory to demonstrate the action of \"mouse ensol.\"\nCase histories are kept of treated\nand untreated controls, with biopsies and micro-photographs showing cell structure in treated and untreated cases. Profound changes are\nproduced in the tumor mass within\na few days after use of \"ensol\" and\nit is suggested the \"ensol\" may act\nas a catalyst since the cell structure\nchanges are out of proportion to\nthc amount used.\nNEEDS NEW TISSUE\nDr. Connell's present need Is a\nconstant supply of fresh cancer tissues to continue his investigation\nand to keep on hand \"ensol\" solution!. With his announcement, he\nappealed to surgeons to send cancer\ntissues at their disposal.\nThe \"ensol\" discoverer said all\ncases treated for the present must\nbe under his immediate supervision,\nfirst for accurate diagnosis, then\nfor observation during the course of\ntreatment, and to insure the records\nwill be kept, radiograms made and\nresults noted and reported. He will\nwelcome any inspection, investigation and criticism that may assist\nhim. Professional ethics, he said,\nwill be rigidly observed, but he\nhopes any credit due will be given\nhim and his technician.\nDr. Connell ls a native of Kingston and a graduate of Queen's university. He has been associated for\nthe past 15 years with his father, Dr.\nJ. C. Connell, a veteran specialist\nin diseases of the eye, ear, nose\nand throat, who for years was dean\nof Queen's Medical college.\nThe son served for a yesr and a\nhalf with a Canadian military hospital at Vladivostok where many\ncases of typhus were treated.\n THI NELSON DAILY NEWS.\nFERRY TRAFFIC\nIS UNH JUNE\nGeneral Rise Shown\nin Castlegar\nLoads\nOn the whole the ferry traffic\nthrough the district was up in June\ncompared with that of the lame\nmonth in 1934. The Kootenay-Cres-\nton ferry, which wai held up ln\nJune of 1934 for repaln, wai responsible for a big portion of the\nincrease.\nThe Nelson ferry carried fewer\ncars and passengers but more trucks\nand buses. The CasUegar ferry showed an increase all down the line.\nReturns for June were:.\nNelson 1834      1935\nAutos   902J     8023\nTrucks   (light)         800      863\nTrucks  (heavy)      1053     1287\nBuses       144       157\nMotoroyclea        40        13\nRigs           78        74\nPassengers  37,427   84,424\nFreight (tons)       756H   1111*4\nHorses       'IJ        10\nCattle          6        13\nCastlegar:\nAutos      4520     5191\nTrucks (light)       728       841\nTrucks (heavy)      781      914\nBuses         192       199\nMotorcycles        73        68\nRigs         210.     214\nPassengers     16,823   18,385\nFreight  (tons)   ....     738H      852',i\nHorses         88        45\nCattle        15        26\nKootenay-Creston:\nAutos          7        216\nTrucks (light)        t       81\nTrucks (heavy)        \u2014      191\nPassengers       155      833\nHorses          5        19\nCatUe  _      \u2014        11\nSaddle horses        19        85\nMain Lake Nasookin;\nAutos       983     1021\nTrucks      102       123\nMotorcycles        17 7\nPassengers     1796     1863\nHarrop-Longbeach:\nAutos       717      651\nTrucks (light)       101        99\nTruck   (heavy)         190      164\nMotorcycles        62        56\nPassengers       2058     2378\nFreight (tons)        163H      81-K\nCattle        12       10\nGray (reek Miss\nBecomes a Bride\nNELSON. B.O-THURSDAY MORNINO\nLUMBERTON IS\nWINNER BY U*5\nBeats Cranbrook\nSoftball Game\nin\nMary Adams Weds\nW. Merrifield of\nProcter\nGRAY CREEK, B.C, July 17-\nOray Creek hall was the scene of a\npretty wedding July 2 when Miss\nMary Adams, second daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. J. Adams, Gray Creek,\nand William Merrifield, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Merrifield, Procter,\nwere united in marriage by Rev, E.\nJ. McKittrick, parish of Kokanee.\nThe bridal couple were attended\nby Mrs. T. Knowlson, lister of the\nbride, and William Ogden ot Procter.\nThe bride wai given ln marriage\nby her father.\nMn. William Haig-Smellle, Procter, played the wedding march and\nalso while the register was being\nsigned. After the reception, the\nbridal cpuple left on the Greyhound stage on a honeymoon.\nMiss Mary Adams, bride-elect,\nwas the recipient of a splendid\nshower in the Gray Creek hall.\nMn. N. Anderson was hostess,\nassisted by Mrs. T. Oulell.\nMrs. William Halg-Smellle. Mn.\nBlchan, Mrs. Williams, Mrs. T.\nKnowlson, Mary and Eleanor Merrifield, and William Ogden were\nover here from Procter to attend\nthe Adams-Merrifield wedding.\nWARDNER TEACHER\nGOES TO COAST\nLUMBERTON, B.C.. July 17-\nWednesday the Lumberton-Cran-\nbrook nine played tbe Kimberley\nMiners a return baseball game at\nCranbrook. The locals played snap-\npy ball and with the excepUon of\na few bad throws had the visiton\noutclassed in every way. McRae and\nLewis make a good battery and\nDeharnais did not let them down\nwhen he went In to relieve. The\nfinal score waa 21*4 for the locals,\nfeaturing some nice hiti on their\npart.\nMr. and Mn. William Hutchison\nand family left Friday by car for\nSalmon Arm and district where they\nwill spend the next few weeks renewing acquaintance.\nThunday the W. E. Acei played\nthc local softball team on the local\ndiamond. The game was ragged on\nboth sides. The score was 17-5 for\nthe locals.\nMlss Vera Walker of Cranbrook\nis visiting Misa Nora Harrison of\nthis town.\nMax Dobson ls home again to\nspend the summer with his parents, Mr. and Mn. E. J. Dobson.\nC. Johnson was a town visitor\nSunday, a guest of frlenda and relatives.\nJ. Walton and R. Wllliston motored to Cooper lake Sunday to spend\na day fishing. They report a good\nday's catch although the weather\nwas not ln harmony.\nSunday the Lumberton \u2022 Cranbrook baseball team motored to\nCreston to engage in conflict with\nthat city. The weather wu excellent for a good ball game and the\ndiamond wai ln perfect shape. The\nlocals were unable to hit Hale,\nCreston's chucker effectively, which\nsccounted for their two runs to\nCreston's eight Some ragged fielding was featured on both sides.\nlcRae began on the mound and\nMitchell went In ln the seventh.\nBob had the tough luck to groove\none for a Creaton player to bang\nout for a homer with two men on.\nIt is expected that the ssme two\nteams will play on the local diamond July 21.\nMonday Mn. R. B. Mitchell, accompanied Miss N. Sutherland and\nMr. and Mn. Mclntyre of Calgary\nto Spokane, where they will spend\na few days.\nMohday the local ball team motored to Cranbrook to play a scheduled game of softball with MacDonalds Consolidated. The locals took\nthe lead In the fint inning. Lan\ncaster poled out a homer late in the\ngame. Ragged fielding was featured\non both sides. The score was 25*10\nJ. Price of Radium Hot Springs\nwas in town Sunday to visit friends.\nHe visited Wardner en route home.\nMiss Msurine Holton of Wardner\nIs visiUng Miss Alice Hunter of\nthis town.\nJ. Shypitka of Dorr, waa In town\nSunday to visit his parents.\nMr. Gray, local engineer, la in\nSt. Eugene hospital, Cranbrook.\nNews of Trail\nThle column ll In charge of Mra. Olenn Quayle of TraiL AH\nevents of e loclal nature of Interest it, Trail and Tadanac will appear\nIn this column. Mrs. Quayle wlU be glad to bave any such newt\ntelephoned to her at ber home in TraU.\nAnnable were visiUng recently at\nFruitvale.\nPatsy Dunn,, accompanied by I\nwo brothers end sisten, will le\nBACK AT ROSS\nSPUR\nROSS SPUR, B.C.. July 16.-Mn.\nJacob Heimstra has returned from\na business visit to Trail.\nAlex McCormick ls visiting ln Uie\nvalley.\nMrs. Armand Vian was a visitor at\nUie home of Mn. T. J. Tremblay.\nMiss Edith McColm was a vlaltor\nat the home of her parents, Mr. and\nMn. John McColm.\nMrs. Alvin Shaw of Parks Siding\nwas a visitor here.\nMrs. A. Doerksen and children,\nLuella, Wesley and Allan, were\nguests at the home of Mrs. J. Doerksen.\nMiss Helen Tremblay has returned to the home of her parents.\nMr. and Mrs. T. J. Tremblay after\nspending some Ume in Kaslo.\nMlss Mable Shaw of Parks Siding\nwas a visitor here.\nW. W. Bullanow of Parks Siding\nwas a visitor here.\nMany Attend Dance\nat Vallican\nPASSMORE, B.C., July 17-Rev.\nJ. McMoraine of New Denver held\nservice in the hall here Sunday\nevening. There was a good attendance.\nThose attending a dance at Vallican were Mrs. W. R. Perry, Miss B.\nPerry. Mrs. C. Thoruber, C. Thoru-\nber, Eric Taylor. Mr. and Mn.\nShtpokl, the Forbes family, and\nWilliam White.\nEric Taylor ls a visitor here for\nthe summer a guest of Mr. and\nMn. C. Thoruber.,\nFloyd Curzon of Slocan Park\nmotored to Appledale to see the\nforestry pictures, accompanied by\nMn. W. R. Perry, Mlss B. Perry,\nMn. C. Thoruber and Mrs. Kenneth\nChandler.\nW. R. Perry was a business visitor to Slocan City Monday.\nMrs. A. P. Whitcmen wai a business visitor to Ncison Monday.\nWARDNER, B.C., July 17-Frank\nPacquette, Mayook school teacher,\nleft with Mr. and Mn. Glen Potter\nPotter of Yahk on a motor trip to\nthe coast.\nMr. and Mrs. George Renick and\nMr. and Mrs. A. Shaw of Cranbrook\nhave returned from a week-end\nspent with Mr. and Mrs. R. Shaw,\nLetnbridge.\nMrs. w. G. Hottom and children\nare holidaying at Rock lake.\nMn. O. Shipton, who had been\nvisiUng in New Brunswick, spent a\nfew days with Mrs. M. Donahoe\nhere en route to her home in Victoria.\nMrs. Elmer Thompson and Miss\nGlendolyn Armstrong attended the\nNixon-Gill wedding at the home\nof Mn. Gill in Cranbrook.\nOwing to the heavy rains of the\nlast few days the snow on nearby\nmountain ranges has been materially reduced and fear of extremely high water on the Kootenay river at this point is considered\nover for 1935.\nSidney Renstrom has returned\nfrom Cranbrook hospital where he\nhad his tonsils removed.\nE. Thompson of Lumberton visited his family over the week-end.\nCitizens of Wardner tnd friends\nfrom surrounding districts entered\nenthusiastically in the events of the\nC.CF. sports day held here. A\nA dance which concluded the day'i\nactivities wu a splendid success.\nMiss Gwen Armstrong, Junior\nteacher of Wardner schcol. left by\nbus Sunday morning to spend a\nfew days as guest of Mr. and Mn.\nE. Repsumer of Creston. She will\nthen journey to her home In New\nWestminster via Kettle Valley railway.\nAmong thoe shopping in Cranbrook Saturday were Mrs. L. Lovlck, Mrs. P. Keywanday, Mr. and\nMrs. A. Kievlll. Mr. and Mrs. F.\nThompson, and G. Carlson.\nDominion day services were held\nIn the cburch Sunday by Rev. T.\nW. Ruddell of Moyle.\nSunday school has been discontinued for the months of July and\nAugust.\nTHEY LOOK ALIKE\nTORONTO (CD-Grand circuit\npatrons are having the novel opportunity thla season of seeing two grey\ncolts ln the most Important stake\ntrotting races. One ii Greyhound,\n2:04'\/\u00ab and the other Silver King.\n2:06. They look very much alike and\nboth are top-flight favorites for the\n$40,000 Hambletonian at Goshen,\nNew York,\nGovernment scientists compare\nthe earth's vegetation to a human\nbeing's skin\u2014remove much of lt\nand dreadful sores result\nTRAIL, B.C, Jury .T.-Mr. and\nMrs. M L. Brothen have returned\nto Trail from a motor trip to Calgary. They were accompanied by\nG. 0. Cummlng and Thurlow Cummlng.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nJack Hutton ia a paUent ln the\nTrail-Tadanac hospital \/\n\u2022 \u00bb   >\nAllan McLeod, who for the peat\ntwo weeka hu been hoUdaytai at\ncoast cities, has returned to Trail.\n...\nMr. and Mn. A. W. Harrod have\nieft for Ainsworth, where thsy will\nspend a short holiday.\nMr. and Mn. 3. Young ware recent viaiton to Syringa Creek.\n! CecB Richards, a former Trail\nl reildent but now residing at PenUcton, li ipending a few dayi in\nthe city.        _  ,  ,\nMr. end Mn. Keith Kettlewell\nhave returned to Trail from Creiton, where they were vlaltlng relative!.\nVan Huycke hu returned to\nTrail from the coait where he\nspent hia vacation. (\nher\ntwo brothers ehd allien, wm leave\ntomorrow for Robson, where ihe\nwlll spend the tummer holldayi.\nMlaa Queenie German, a vititor\nin Trail for a few dayi, hu returned to her home et Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMrs. Howard S. Allen returned\nduring the week-end from Creeton\nwhere, with her ion Jimmy, ihe\nhu been visiUng at the home of\nher parenta, Mr. and Mn. Jamu\nChcrrington.\nL. Wooda left today for Salmon\nArm, where he will ipend a abort\nvacaUon.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMn..Murray Gibeon hei left for\nChristina   Lake,  whare  aba  will\nspend a holiday.\n\u2022 \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. Coupland were\nrecent viaiton to Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. B. E. Smith returned laat\nnight to Fruitvale after a ihort\nvisit in the city.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nMlss Annie Bottorell of Creiton\nil vacaUoning with TraU frlenda.\nGuy Moray, who wu vliiUng ln\nNelion, hu returned to Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMn- 3o* Rowling and two daugh-\nten are ipending a hoUday at Alnaworth.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMrs. Either Johnion left today on\na holiday trip to cout cities, viiltlng at Victoria, and Seattle. She expects io return in about a month.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. R. Heighton of\nMr. and Mn. Rupert Skelton arrived today from Vancouver and\nwiU ipend a ahort holiday here\nand at Robson, where they wlU be\nthe guests of Mrs. Skelton'i parenta, Mr. and Mn. A. F. Mitchell.\nWill Change tht\nMarketing Board\nVICTORIA, July 17 (CP)-The\nprovincial government proposes to\nincorporate in the provincial mar-\nkeUng board regulation! power to\napprove agenciea let up to handle\nthe marketing of ipeciflc producta, Hon. K. C. MacDonald, minister of agriculture, said today.\nThis move will be made u the\nresult of difficulties that have arisen\nin some schemes where it Is claimed\nagencies thst hava shipping and\nproducing interests as well are placed in a preferred position, the minister said.\t\nTRAIUTE UNDS\n8-LBJAlMON\nj. R. Craig Gets CatcK\nat Procter; Severql >\nOthers Lucky\nPROCTER. B. C July 17.-J. \u00ab.\nCraig of Trail spent Uie week-end\nhere fiihing and caught a fine 10-\npound wlmon.\nH. Gadden of Kimberley il e guest\nat the Outlet hotel.\nA. Pauline of Procter caught \u2022\nsalmon weighing five and a halt\npounds. Monday. .   .  '\nMr. and Mn. H. Severn of TttU\nhave arrived to ipend e holiday\nMr. and Mn. D. Darough and ion\nof Nelson, who had been holidaying\nhere, have returned.\nMr. and Mrs. P. Ruskln of Kulo\nare visiting at the OuUet hotel\nCant Cogle of Procter caught an\neight-pound salmon Sunday.\nMr. and Mn. A. Dingwall c\u00ab Nelion are ipending a hoUday here,\nhaving Uken the Bichan cottage.\nMr. Walker of Trail, who le boll-\ndgying here, caught an eight-pound\nsalmon over th* week-end.\nMMr and Mn. A. Kraft and daughter were week-end gueiti at we\nOuUet hotel.\nUSE THI WANT ADS\nHere We Are\nAgain\/\ny\u00abl... wist \"roll-your.\"\nowntrs\" irt back igain\nwith Ogden's Flnt Cut.\nWhy not do tht sami and\nsmoke tht best thtrt it,\nwhtn it costs so littltl\nDon't dtprivt yourstlf of\nthe smooth satisfaction only\nOgdtn's can givt you..;\nand roll it in \"Chanttcltr\"\nor \"Vogut\" paptrs, tht\nbest combination known.\n52 POKER HANDS. ANY NUMBERS, NOW\nACCEPTED AS A COMPLETE SET\nFINE\nCUT\ntour Pipt Knout Ogden's Cut Plug\nAwv.trisw *-\u00bb*> \u2022*\u2022\u00bb \u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\u00bb*\u00bb'-\nOGDEN'S\nFINK'S,\nJULY SPECIALS\na Days thuMday-Fri*\u00aby-\u00bb\u00abtis\u00bb\u00ablay\nDRESSES\nVoiles, crepei, in white, pastels and prints. Six-it 14-44.\nSpecial HOSIERY\nHosiery, full-fashioned, pur* thraad\n10 M (2 Pairs 95c). PAIR\t\nGLOVES\n(Kayser) wash fabrics, all\nwhite, reg. to 95c.\nDRESSES\nWash prints, neatly trimmed.\nGuaranteed dyes. Sixes 14-53.\nReg. to $1.95.\n$1.00\nsilks. Sim 8, 8 1-2, 9,\nHATS\nOur complete stock of hats.\nFancy straws, crepes, etc.\nReg. to $2.95.\n$1.00\n$2.95\nBATHING SUITS\n(KUNGTITE) Novelty Suits, suntan backs, halter necks,\netc. Sixes 34-40. Reg. to $4.00 \u2014~    \t\n(HARVEY WOODS) all wool, plain or novelty suits, sixesgIfif\nWHITE SHOES\nTies, pump, step in styles, cuban and high^ A\nheels. Reg. $4.00. Sizes 3-8. NOW $ 1.99 and $2.99\n \u2014*\u2022_\u2022\u2014\u2014-\u2014---_\n\u2022THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THUR5DAY MORNING. JULY 18. 1935-\n\t\n,\nmllO\nQ\/o<M\n\/ be glad\n'.you bought\nP.E.I.AdministrationsFrom\n1873 to Present\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nHon.\nJ. C. Pope, premier, (C). April 1873 to Sept. 1873.\nL. C. Owen, premier, (C), Sept. 1873 to Aug. 1676.\nL. H. Davies, Q.C., premier, (L), Aug. 1876 to April 1679.\nW. H. Sullivan, Q.C., premier (C), April 1870 to Nov. 1889.\nN. McLeod. Q.C., premier, (C), Nov., 1889 to April, 1891.\nF. Peters, Q.C., premier, iL), April, 1891 to Oct., 1897.\nA. B. Warburton, Q.C., premier (L), Oct., 1897 to Aug. 1, 1898,\nD. Farquarson, premier (Li, Aug. 1898 to Dec. 1901.\nA. Peters. K.C. premier (L), Dec. 1901 to Jan. 1908.\nF. L. Haszard, K.C, premier (L). Feb. 1908 to May 1911.\nH. James Palmer. K.C. premier (L), May 1911 to Dec. 1911.\nJohn A. Mathieson, K.C. premier (C), Dec. 1911 to June 1917.\nAubin E. Arsenault, K.C, premier (C), June 1917 to Sept. 1919.\nJ. H. Bell, K.C. premier IL). Sept. 1919 to Sept. 1923.\nJames D. Stewart, K.C. premier (C), Sept. 1923 to Aug. 1927.\nAlbert C. Saunders, K.C, premier (Li, Aug. 1927 to May 1930.\nWalter M. Lea, premier (L), May 1930 to Aug. 1931.\nJames D. Stewart, K.C, premier (C), Aug. 1931 to Oct. 1933.\nJ. W. P. MacMillan. M.D.. CM., premier (C). Oct. 1933 to present.\nThii advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Llouor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia\nUSE THE WANT ADS\nFIELD DAY AT\nWILLOW POINT\nWILLOW POINT. B.C., July 17-\nDespite unsettled weather a jolly\nday for the kiddies was held Saturday at the Willow Point field\ndav at Horrigan's.\nTug of War, wheel of fortune.\n\"Aunt Sally\", pin game, and races\nkept everyone busy, and two mysterious clowns added to the fun.\nSome of the races had to be cancelled but there was keen competition in the following:\nSpud and Spoon races:\nGirls under 10\u2014Helen Sutherland.\nBoys\u2014Richard Robert!.\nBalancing race:\nGirls 10 and under\u2014flnt Winnie\nBing. 2nd. K. Sutherland^\nBoyi\u2014Jimmy Bing.\nSack race:\nBoya 10 and undei^-Jimmle Bing.\nBoys over 10\u2014Bert Ramsden.\nWheelbarrow race \u2014Jen-old Fitz-\nsimmoni and Roy Mann.\nThrei legged race\u2014Mary Campbell and Nora Marshall.\nObstacle race:\nBoys 10 and under\u2014Jimmie Bing.\nBoys 12 and under\u2014Roy Mann.\nBoyi 15 and under--Louii deCocq.\nBoyi 15 and under\u2014Louis Jackion.       ,\nThe nail-driving conteit wai keenly contested, many ladles ihowing\nhow expert they were with the\nhammer, especially Mrs. D. Heddle\nwho won. L. deCocq won thc left-\nhanded contest for men.\nL. F. Spearing. H. M. Greenwood. J. Worsfold and J. Fltisim-\nmons had charge of all thc arrangements and also looked after the\ngames. \"Aunt Sally\" was handled\nby Charlie Baxter.\nMrs. Fitzsimmons dispensed cooling drinks of lemonade and Mr. and\nMrs. N. Denny were in charge of the\nice cream.\nThe kitchen was under the supervision of Mrs. Greenwood assisted by Mesdames Worsfold. Sutherland. Horrigan and Greyson.\nAssisting were the Boy Scouts.\nCubs and Girl Guides, all ln uniform.\nL. F. Spearing, teacher of Willow\nPoint, le\" Sunday for Vancouver\nto spend two weeks holiday with his\nmother.\nMiss Mildred Calder of Regina\nis a guest of her aunt Mrs. J.\nBlunt.\nMiss Winnie Jardlne of Nelson is\na visitor here.. a guest of Miss\nMariorie Howe.\nMrs. G. H. H. Applewhalte and\ngrandson Denny Davis arrived home\nSunday from Victoria.\nELKO FOLK IN\nHOSPITAL\nELKO. B.C. July 1*7\u2014Mrs- W.\nKelly and daughter. Jenny, are patients in St. Eugene hospital. Cranbrook, where they will have their\ntonsils removed.\nMr. Langtree left Sunday for\nLumberton where he will be employed by the B. C. Spruce mill!.\nThe Misses Barbara and Emma\nSwope have treturned from a trip\nto the Eureka district.\nBoundary Dairy\nHerds Tested\nFarmers' Institute to\nHold Field Day\n| uly 24\nGRAND FORKS. B.C. July 17-\nDr. D. H. McKay, provincial vet*\nerinary inspector of Kamloops, has\nbeen in the district during tbe past\nfew days testing cattle for tuberculosis and grading the dairies in\nGrand Forks and Greenwood that\nare selling milk retail. A consider*\nable number ot herds of dairy cat*\ntie were tested from Grand Fork!\nto Midway.\nThe annual field day of the Grand\nForks Farmers' lnatltute will be\nheld Wedneaday afternoon July\n24th. Visitor! will be made to onion\nand vegetable seed plots, alfalfa\nplots, and crops of interest In the\ndistrict this year. The proceedings\nwill commence at 1 p.m. from the\ncourt house and cars will be avail\nable for any who wish to take in\nthe field day. Officials will be present from Agassiz, Summerland,\nTrail and other points and refreshments will be served on thc lawn ot\nSunnyslde farm. ,\nAPPLE GRADING\nMACHINE\nGreat Interest is being Uken In\nthe apple grader invented and patented by J. T. Lawrence and Pete\nTamilin. A feature news article\nappeared in \"Country Life In B. C\".\npublished at Vernon, and Mr. Lawrence has already had several offer! from persons wishing to purchase patent rights on this machine.\nCALGARY LAWYER\nAT FERNIE\nFERNIE. B. C, July 17\u2014McLeod\nSinclair. K.C, of Calgary was in\nFernie for a few day! in connection\nwith the triali on chargei of vagrancy. \u2022\nH. I. Bird and ion, J.J. Bird of\nVancouver are ipending a few dayi\nIn Fernle.\nMr. and Mri. L. J. Garrison and\nson Wayne of Calgary are spending\na few days in Femie.\nThe \"Comets\" were victorious over\nthe Annex softball team in an exhibition game Tueiday. The icore\nwai 11-2.\nWinged termite! can be dlstin-\nguislvid from winged ants by their\nwaist-lines: Termites have thick\nwaists, winged ants have slim ones.\nEngland\nBoats as\nBuilds MosauitoH-HMMBON\nDimas mosquito HARR0PB0ARD\nAirplane Defense\n\"S5UDAY 547^1\nGoodri\nTIRES\nAT LOW\nPRICES\nHere are teal tire bargains. These\nprices speak for themselves. And\nlook what yoa get at these low\nprices ... Goodrich Standard\nGuaranteed Commander Tires\nbacked by the name and reputation of die makers of the famous\nGoodrich Safety Silvertown.\nThe Commander has been known\nfor years as an outstanding tire in\nthe low price field. It has a big,\nhusky, non-skid tread and a rugged carcass, that's buih to give\nyou unusual mileage.\nPul your car in shape for the holiday. Come in now and let us quote\nyou on a complete change-over to\nGoodrich Tires. We have your site\nen ttock.\nLook at these Low Prices on\nSTANDARD GOODRICH\nGUARANTEED TIRES\n4H.Y\n30x3Hn $ 5.25\n4.40-21 ; i      7.25\n4.50-20 11      7.75\n8.00\n8.75\n9.25\n9.50\n9.75\n10.75\n4.50-81 ;:\n4.75*19 11\n4.75-20 11\n5.00-19 I:\n5.00-20 :;\n5.25-18:i\ntm\n$ 9.00\n9.50\n9.75\n11.00\n11.50\n11.75\n12.00\n13.25\nAbove pricei on Goodrich Commandefl.\nOthet brands oroportionately low in price.\nGoodrich\n-    Y.-v\n\/\u25a0-J v..\nKOOTENAY  MOTORS  (Nelson)\nLIMITED\nNelson,  B.C,\nThe Following Goodrich Silvertown Dealers Are at Your Service\nHUNTER  BROTHERS  LIMITED\nRouland, B.C.\nGRAND  FORKS  GARAGE\nGrand Forks, B.C.*\nI DOMINION   GARAGE   A   8ALE8\nCOMPANY\nI Trail, B.C.\nHARROP. B.C., July 17-Mlsi Jei-\nsie Harrop hai returned from a motor trip to Vancouver.\nThe annual meeting for Harrop\nachool district was held in the\nschool house Saturday evening. O.\nB. Appleton was appointed chairman. H. Holmei wai elected to fill\na three-year term as trustee and\nMrs. W. J. McConnell was re-appointed auditor. Mr. Appleton was\nthe retirini! trustee.\nThe assessment for the com in**\nachool year was placed at $500.\nPARK'S SIDING\nSCHOOL REPORT\nPARK'S SIDING. B.C.. July 17-\nThe children of Park's Siding school\nenjoyed a luncheon held in the\nschool. Following this the children\nout on a concert. Then games and\nraces were enioyed by both pupils\nand visitors. After thc sports refreshments were served which thc\no.Mentcdn\u00b0r r0\"S' and ''CPOrtS woro\nThe pass list follows:\n 1 \u2014PAOE THRU\nRecommended to Orade IX \u2014\nFlorence   Berukoff,   Mable   Shaw,\nPromoled tn Grade VIII\u2014Ella*\nbcth Faulkner.  Eva  Viau.\nTo Grade VH-Peter Berukoff,\nAlbeit Shaw.\nTo Grade VI\u2014Annie Gritchen.\nTo Grade IV-Vlola Faulkner.\nTo Grade Ill-Nettie Vlau, Bobble Bell.\nHonor Rolls:\nProficiency\u2014Florence Berukoff.\nDeportment\u2014Elizabeth Faulkner.\nPunctuality and regularity\u2014Viola\nFaulkner, Peter Berukoff.\nMiss W. McAlplne is teacher.\nBritain In her efforts to build an Impregnable\nair difence, Is building large numbers of these\nspeedy armed motor-boats which are fast and\ntricky enough to avoid bombing. They wlll be\nused In coastal defence work.\nBy WALLACE S. HULLETT\nCentral Press Canadian Writer\nLONDON, July 17.\u2014Coastal fleets\nof small, high-powered aimed motor-craft are the best methods of defence against enemy aircraft in the\nopinion of Hubert Scott Palnc,\nmotorboat racing ace. who recently\ncompeted In the U. S.\n\"Fourteen of them could be built\nand equipped for the price of one\ndestroyer,\" he sayi. \"These small\nboats would be equipped with machine guns and anti-aircraft guns,\nand. because of their speed, they\nwould be particularly dangerous\nagainst submarines.\"\nAt the British Power Boat Works,\nHythe. Scott Paine is continually\nexperimenting, designing and building high-speed craft of various types\nwhich he believes will pave the\nway   towards   a   \"Mile*a*Minute\"\nnavy. Other designers also are at\nwork in a similar direction. The late\nCol. T. E. Lawrence tested some of\nthese craft.\n\"I am convinced that the present\ntype of war vessel would not be able\nto operate in closed waters (such\nas the channel) without the airplane\ntaking command of thc position,'\nScott Paine says.\n\"Instead, wc should develop 60\nm.ph. motorboats with an 800-milc\nfuel range.\n\"I visualize that all coastwise\ntraffic and closed-water operations\nwill be taken care of by 'mosquito'\ncraft manned by a small penonel,\nthus avoiding the risk of sending\nout costly ships with big personnel.\n\"Fleets of these small, high-powered motor craft could be built at\na moderate cost and would offer\npractically no target to enemy aircraft.\"\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nWidM Ctlmul-hl Tnll J\u00bb* 0\u00bbi rf U is\nIh Msniai lira' It Ct\nTh; llm ahould four cut l\u201e\u201e mndl \u201e,\nIquid blin into Tour bowels dilly If ..hi, |_,l,\n\u25a0 not (lowmifntlT. rour too. iio__.il *td.mi _\nIt juit t'.ae.y. In th* bowe.. (_.\u00bb_, bloat, up\nTttitr itomith. Vou t*l \u00abomtlr*tptJ Yeur\nwhole Ifttfm Is poison..! ind you JWtoui\nsunk tnd tha world Win punk. '\nUiiliTM .ro onlr rn.kt.Ufu. * _,,\u201e\nbowtl rnovtmtnt donn't ctl at tht era.. It\nUkt. thoui rood, old Carter's Lllllt Uttr\nPill, to itt thott two pound, of bill 5owI,\u201e\nrrc-elr tnd rotxtyou tot.', \"up ami tip\" nirtn-\n!\u00ab\u2022)\u25a0, centi. ret .mtiinj In rn.kiiiv l.itt (low\n'rttlr. A.k fo, C.rt,r*n L'ltl, lJ\u00bb,rl*i!|, b,\nname, btubbornlr \u00bb(um __nytli.ni tlu. Be.\nO ml e. M et.\nHughes Again on\nAinsworth Board\nAINSWORTH. B.C.. July I7.-Thc\nAnnual meeting ot the Ainsworth\nachool board was held in the school\nroom Saturday evening. There was\na good attendance of ratepayers.\nJ. B. Fletcher was elected chairman. Mrs. W. E. Lane secretary-\ntor the meeting.\nThe trustees report was read by\nMr. Fletcher, secretary-treasurer of\nthe school board; the auditor's report wai read by R. Sherraden. who\nwas re-elected auditor for the coming year. Both reports were approved by the meeting.\nRay Hughes whose term of office\nas a trustee expired, was re-elected\nfor a further term of threo years,\nthe other members of the board being J. B. Fletcher, secretary-treasurer, and C E. Harmon, trustee.\nIt was decided to appoint a teacher who is qualified to teach Grade\nIX as there will be several pupils\nfor that grade next term. It was also\ndecided to ask for the same appropriation as last year.\nMr. and Mrs. Tom Hawes and\nbaby daughter of Greenwood and\nMr. and Mrs. W. Fanner of Procter\nand their two young daughters came\nin Tuesday. Mr. Farmer went back\nto Procter but the others sepnt several days holiday in town.\nCanadian ice creairrby law must\ncontain not less than 10 per cent of\nmilk ^at and no other kind of fat j\nmust be employed in its manufac\nture.\nDAHLIAS MUST BE WATCHED\nDURING JULY AND AUGUST\n* By  DEAN   HALLIDAY\nCentral Preis Garden Expert\nDuring July and August caretul\nwatch must bc kept over the dahlias,\nfor at this time we often find the\nwhite fly on the under lidei of the\nleavei. A weak solution of nicotine\nwill control thia fly, although another apraying should follow in\nabout 10 dayi.\nThe leaf hoppen uiually put in\ntheir appearance too during the hot,\ndry weather, and tobacco dust is an\neffective control for this pest.\nThen the stalk borer also puts ln\nhis appearance during July. This\nborer Is found In the stalk, Indicated\nby the wilting of the top of the\ndahlia plant There are several ways\nof ending his existence. A small slit\ncan be made in the stalk and he can\nbc pulled out by means of a wire.\nIt Is wise to tie the stalk together\nagain with raffia, but not too tightly,\nfor this might cruih it. The slit will\nquicklv grow together again.\nAnother method of control la to\ncut off the infected stalk and burn\nit. Thii italk will won be replaced\nwith new growth. Another very\nsimple, but extremely effective control, is to squirt a few drops of car*\nbon disulphide, with an eyedropper,\ninto the hole by which the borer\nentered the stalk. Then cover over\nwith either chewing gum or putty,\nttt\nFlagstone walks seem to be increasing ln popularity, says an article called \"The Garden File\" in\nHouse Beautiful. Their appearance\nharmonizes with many types of garden development, and the manner\nof laying diversified enough to\nsuit different surroundings. To put\nthe flags directly on a grass foundation, peg down two length! of garden hose at the required width of\nthe proposed walk, 20 to 24 inches\nfor a single row of stones, or 30 to\n36 Inches for a double. Arrange the\nflags* between the hose in a fashion\nto suit, then cut the sod around each\none and dig the soil out to the pro-;\nper depth, replacing the stone level j\nwith tho surrounding turf.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN  RADIO\nCOMMISSION  NETWORK\nS:0O No Mournful Numbers, comedy team; Isaac Mamot's orch., singers, Winnipeg, (ex. B.C.); 5:30 Goldman concert band, N.B.C.-N.Y. (ex.\nB.C.; 6:00 Up-to-the-Minute News,\nmusic, fashion, literary and sports\nreleases, Toronto; 6:30 Nova Scotia\non the Air, music and drama, orch.;\nHalifax; 7:00 News, Weather Fore.;\n7:15 Jesie Crawford, organist, N.B.C.\nChi.; 7:30 Joe De Courcy'i or. Montreal; 7:45 Acrou the Border,\ndance orch.. N.B.C.-N.Y.; 8:00 Pacific Nocturne, lalon orch. dir. Percy\nHarvey, Van.; 8:30 Three Guitars,\nPrince Albert, ex. B.C.; News. (B.C.\nNet); 8:45 Mart Kenny and the Western Gentlemen, Lake Louise; 8:00\nValley Echoes, Chilliwack; 9:30\nUnder the Stars, A. Caron, organist,\nWinnipeg: 10:00 The Silver Ship of\nDreams, vocal and instrum., Vancouver.\nN.B.C.-KPO NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\nU0 620 640 680 920 870\n5:00 Captain Henry's Show Boat;\n6:00 Paul Whiteman's Music Hall;\n7:00 Amos 'n' Andy, blackface comedians; 7:15 Tony and Gus,\nMario Chamlec: 7:30 Winning the\nWest drama; 8:00 To be announced;\n8:15 Symphony hour, orch., dir.\nGaetano Merola: 9:15 Jones Boys,\nvocal band; 9:30 Arlic Simmons'\norch., Denver; 9:30 Book Parade\niKPO); 9:45 Ricardo and his violin; 10:00 News Flashes. Sam Hayes;\n10:15 Paul Pendarvis' orchestra;\n10:55 Press - Radio News Service; 11:00 Way Back When, organ-\nlit <KPO); Freddie Martin'i orch.;\n11:30 Jimmy Grler'a orch.\nC.B.S.DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n670    610    940     1130     1270\n5:00 Louii Prima and orch.; 9:15\nCharles Hanson Towne; 6:00 U.S.\nNavy Band. Al Roth'! orch.. Threo\nBrown Bears. Harmonettes, St. Lou-\nIs;   6:30   Heidt's   Brigadiers;   7:00\nJohnny Hamp's orch.; 7:30 Bill Ho-\ngan's orch:  Midge Williams with\norchestra. (Don Lee): 8:00 Portland\nSymphony orch. from San Diego\nExposition: 8:30 Frankle Master's or.;\n9:00 Horaclo Zito's orch.; Magazine\n(DL); 9:30 Al Dlen'i orcheatra; Jan\nGarber'i orch.,' (D.L.); 10:00 Lyle\nDaniel'i orch., D.L.; 10:30 Orville\nKnapp's orchestra. (DL); 11:00 Don\nBestor's Dance orch.. (DL) 11:30\nBill Fleck's orcb.; 11:45 Les Hite's\norch., (DL).\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVANCOUVER 600 w\n5:15 Cariboo Cowboys: 5:45 Eb and\nZeb. EX: 6:00 Star Dust. Reed Chapman: 6:15 News Flashes; 6:30 Orchestra; 7:00 The Woman's Point ot\nVief; 7:15 Sugar and her Cookies;\n7:30 Peace Talk; 7:45 Yodelling\nMountaineer; 8:00 Tlie voice ot the\nCommonwealth; 8:15 Program; 8:30\nSports; 10:00 News.\n1030 k CFCN 291.3 m\nCALGARY 10,000 w\n6:00 Happy Endings: 6:45 The\nContinental Quartet; 7:15 N. F.\nPriestley, U.F.A. talk; 7:30 Indian\nGuides and Arvella; 8:00 Old Time\nDance: 9:00 Newi; 9:15 Wilf Carter,\nYodelling Cowboy and Old Timers,\n790 k KQO 379.5 m\nOAKLAND 7500 w\n7:00 California Dons; 7:30 National\nRadio Forum; 8:00 Sports Headlin-\ners; 8:15 Talk of th* Town. ET; 8:30\nDancing in the Twin Cities; 9:00\nGlen Lite's orch.; 9:30 Arlle Simmons' orch.: 1Q:00 Henry King's\norch.; 10:30 Tom Gerun's orch.; 10:55\nPress-Radio News; 11:00 Freddie\nMartin's orch.; 11:30 Jimmy Grier's\norch.\nBRITISH EMPIRE PROGRAMS\nShort Wave\u2014Pacific Standard Time\nTRANSMISSION 1\nQSD 11,750 kci. (25.53 m) and QSB\n9510 kcs. (31.55 m)\n8:30 o.m. Big Ben. Chamber Mualc.\nGriller String quartet; 9:00 Adventures in Living Dangerously\n\"The Wonderland of Big Game,\"\nby Major A. Radclyffe Dug-more:\n9:15 Anona Winn, Australian radio\nstar, on her own in fifteen minutes\nof songs: 9:30 Ida Santarelll and her\nLadles of Spain: 10:13 News and\nannouncements. Fruit Market Notes;\n10:33 Close down.\nThursday\nand\nFriday\nBARGAINS\nMisses' Polo Shirts\nand Pullovers\nTailored styles with colors, others'with round ^ ^^\n.necks, plain or figured patterns. Sizes 32-HQC\nto 38. 97\nSPECIAL, EACH         w\nRayon Lingerie\nA lovely range of panties,  bloomers and\nvests,  in lace trimmed or tailored styles\nPastel shades, in small and medium sizes.\nSPECIAL, EACH\t\n49\nPrinted Tea Cloths\n45-inch tea or supper cloths. Beautiful new\ndesigns in colors on English \"Indiana\". All\nfadeless.\nSPECIAL, EACH \t\n7*\nHOMESPUN DRAPERIES\n45-inch drapery in new stripe effects. Several color combinations.\nSPECIALLY PRICED, YARD\t\n59'\nDRESS\nFRILLING\nRegular 89c Yard\nLimited quantity. Dainty\norgandy dress frilling in\nwhite, blue, green and\nmeize.  SPECIAL, YARD\nENGLISH\nPILLOW SUPS\nHeavy, long wearing slips\nin a 42-inch size. Special\nvalue.\n76\n3 for\nt|.00\nBROADCLOTH SHORTS\nMen's good quality broadcloth shorts, plain\nor fancy stripes. Elastic waist bands.\nPAIR   \t\n39\nMEN'S SILK\nVESTS\nWhite silk vests, athletic\nstyle. Sizes 34 to 42.\nEACH\u2014 x\nSILK SPORT\nSOCKS\nMen's ankle sport socks,\nwith elastic tops. PAIR\u2014\n39'\n35\nKIDDIES HALF SOCKS\nRegular 39c Pair\nGood quality lisle end rayon mixture half\nsocks in assorted shades. Sizes 5Vi to 6Vi-\nSPECIALLY PRICED, PAIR\t\n15\nHBC Pore Food Specials\n193\u2014PHONES\u2014194\nLOBSTER PASTE-' ii,     **\u2022*\u2022.\u2022\u00bb-.  ROMAN MEAL, or Luslius _\\_A\n-tins         \"\"ttr  Pkj.     -**>\nPINEAPPLE-Faultlets     4*M  PALMOLIVE SOAP-      -!_,_*\n2 tins  -w s takea       -***>\nWAX PAPER\u2014 IQi* COFFEE-Our spaelal       Mai\nrell   *<** bltnd, Ib \u2022**\"T\nSALAD DRESSING-        tQA  SALMON-Socktya *\/_,    IBA\nKraft, 12 oa.              *\u2022*\"\u2022 tin     *\u00b0T\nCORN FLAKES- -ttA  PUREX TISSUE- _ J\u00bb\u00bb\nKellogg's, 3 pkgs. \u2022\"\u25a0** 3 rolls     m**r\nTUNA-Paney White V.I, IM TEA-HBC, Broken MAA\nTin.        ****> Pekoa, Ib.   W-\"\nFort Carry Tet and Coffee making frlendi everywhere!\nee\u2014\u2014I tn a.. i*i%\nm\n -\n^^^^\u2014\n\u2014\nPAOE POUR\nCONTENTMENT NOT SUPPRESSION\nSOLUTION FOR THE UNEMPLOYED\nPROBLEM STATES MRS. MACINNIS\nEnd Market Fight to\nStop War C. C. F.\nSpeaker. Says\nDeclaring thit tupprtiilon  by\npolict did not provldt \u2022 ulutlon\nto tht unemployed problem, ind\nthit wir could only bt outlawed\nby rn tquil-dlttrlbutlon of thingi\nthat would do away with \u2022 nitionil turplui ind \u2022 nci for foreign  mirktts,  Mrs.  Angut  Mac-\nInnlt of Vancouver, diughttr of\nJ. S. Woodtworth, leader of the\nC.C.F.   In   Canada,   addrtsitd   a\ngathering of lady mtmbtn of tht\nNtlion C.CF. club In the Strathcona hottl Wedneiday afternoon.\nIn opening her address Mrs. Maclnnis stated that rather thtn give\n\u2022n address, she would outline the\nobjects of thc C.CF. and call for\na general discussion.\nYou have all heard a lot about\nthe C.C.F., a lot of good things and\n\u25a0 lot of bad tilings and it is probably with mixed feelings that you\nregard its objectives. \/\n\"Some of us believe that lt is\nnot sufficient to tike i stand for\none party, or to vote for one candidate just because we persomlly admire him, but feel that every Individual should know why hei or she\nli voting one way or another.\nWOMEN'S PLACE\nWomen in politics is something\ncomparatively new. she stated. In\nher grandmother's day, the speaker\nuid, it was the opinion that the\nwoman's place was in her home and\nher day and life was run on a routine schedule of sewing, cooking and\nmending, with no thought to thc\ngoverning of the country. \"Let mc\ncook the meal of the nations, I care\nnot who makes the laws,\" an old\ncook book motto had long been discarded, but the women were none\nthe less fond of cooking and today\ntheir houses were juit as neat, she\nuid.\nWhit had ciuied thli change?\nFint modern housekeeping hid\nJirovided the\" housewife with more\neisure hours. The fictories replaced\nthe home weivers ind home convenience! cut the working time md\nended drugery-\nThen, too, women were becoming\nmore concerned with liw-miklng\nfrom a materialistic viewpoint.\nThere was not io much to cook is\nin 1929, supplies were scirce and\nthe women were cooking for a\ncause.\nIt was In this sense of governing\nthit women differed from min.\nThe men pondered over md delved\ninto monetary reform, tariffs, finance, etc.. while the woman looked\nto thc more realistic side.\n\"They wondered why the comforts and necessities of life are not\nforthcoming. You here in Nelson\nwith strawberries, fruit and firm\nproducts in abundance, yet many\ngoing without thcin, can see what I\nmean. It is the same across Canada.\nIn thc maritimes in the first year of\nthe depression thc bottom fell out\nof the fish market so they put their\nfine catches of that year on the\nfields to fertilize potato crops. Fine\ncrops werc harvested that fall but\nthey had to bc thrown into the\nocean because of the poor demind.\nIn other sections there wis i greit\nneed Ior those products but no buying power.\"\nIn condemningthe distribution of\nnecessities she instanced numerous\nother products that Canada had in\nan abundance yet the people were\nunable to secure.\nWhen a constituency needed a\nnew bridge, it was a different mat*\nter. A candidtte was elected and hc\nput the mitter before the government.\nWORK TO BE DONE\nTodiy people had a different Idea\nof the use of government\u2014it must\nfunction so that thc plenty goes\nthe rounds. There were roads that\nneeded fixing and thousands of\nyoung men glad to get the opportunity to do thc jobs at decent\nwages, There werc parks and bridges\nto bc built and other work to bc\nundertaken.\nBut where is the government to\nget its money? Big industries are\nnot losing anything. The Canada\nPackers made 1314 million dollirs\nIn the midst of the depression. The\nImperial Tobicco compiny, .Ltd.,\nwas able to pay its vice-president a\nulary and bonus of $140,000. They\nare not doing badly. Any law that\nallows money to go into thc pockets\nof a few in such a manner is wrong.\"\nThe party hid no intention of being unrontltutional, disrupt religion\nor blow up old and tried customs,\nbut sought to modify.\n\"Wc want the law to make It impossible for a few to grab everything. Some 120. bills were passed\nit Ottawi this list session, but few\nwere drifted for the benefit of thc\nunderprivileged. Nine million dollirs wu voted to i railway equipment company and this came out of\nthe pockets of the taxpayer and a\nsubstantial percentage will go to\nline thc pockets of the big company\nofficials,\" she said.\nThe speaker also voiced condemnation of the chain stores which\nsent small privtte enterprises to\nthe wall.\n\"What Is thc outlook on the young\npeople today? A quarter of a million\nof them letve ichool every yeir,\nhoping upon hope thit something\nwill turn up. They go into thc\ncimps. It may have been wrong in\nleaving those camps. They admit\nhaving a roof over their held and\ngood meals, but that is not suffi-\nSUMMER COMPLAINT\nCAUSES MANY DEATHS\nAMONG INFANTS\nThousands nf mothen throughout\nCanada hive uwd\n^r\n0?FOWLEuj\ntXT- Ol\n-WILD    .\n^RAWBERK',\ncient. They ire ihut twty from\nother people trom now until in Indefinite time. Many of them are\ntrained to do \u25a0 job ind their ambitions are given a setback. Miny of\nthem wmt to marry ind establish\nhomes. We must not be blind to the\nfact that there should be laws to\nprevent this sltuitlon. It ls not\nright thit a few should enjoy the\ncomforts of life md i few hive ill\nthe opportunitlei.\"\nDISCONTENT\n\"Yet Mr. Bennett isks the men\nto ao btck to the camps tnd Judge\n! Thompson of Fernie tccusei them\nof fighting Canada. If the men were\nsitlsfied with their lot there would\nbe no discontent. It Is when people\ntre suppressed under trying condition! thtt they ire moit likely\nto listen to everything and anything that the agitators hive to ny.\nMike the people contented ind\ndo iwiy with this trouble.\"\nFew crimes, except under specltl\ncircumstances, were found in homes\nwhere families were comfortably\nfixed. It was the poor, with their\ngrudges and resentments and feelings of injustice, that provided \u25a0\nmijor portion of crime. It had been\nsaid, she declared, that 100 persons\nhad the say what people ate or\nwore.\nThere was no reuon why the\npeople should not own their own\nIndustries. Publicly owned industries md utilities put money into\nthe people's pockets or give better\nservice is evidenced in the Nelson\npower plmt and in the Calgary\npower plant, the latter provided the\ncity with a profit of $711,000 yearly.\nTaxation, graded heavily in ac-\ncordince with salaries, was one\nwiy to even the balance of living,\nor a gradual purchue of private\nenterprise by the public wis in-\nother. The speaker termed is cow-\nirdly the tix on sugtr. She said\nthit it itruck it the poor u sugtr\nwis i necetilty.\n\"Prime Miniiter R. B. Bennett\nhis uid thit radio ls fir too important to be privitely controlled.\nIf thli is so then too the timber,\nmining and agr>ilturil industries\narc too important to be privately\ncontrolled. The timber on the hillside and the coal in the mines were\nnot put there by the Creator for\nthe use of a few but for the benefit of all.\"\nFollowing her talk tlie speaker Invited questions. Her mswer to the\nctuse of war wis \"competition for\nlimited mirketi.\" The world wai\nplaying \"pussy ln the corner with\none too many pussies.\" Italy was\nwarring on Ethiopia with a view\nof taking over certain nitural resources. Such hid been the cue of\nJipm's fight in Mmchoukuo. Ai\na means of outlawing war she suggested the C.C.F. system. When\nthe countries of the world organized in such a manner that a balanced distribution met the needi\nof all, thereby doing away with\na huge aurplus, there would be no\nneed for a fight to lecure foreign\nmarkets.\nThe C.C.F. wu a comparatively\nnew movement. Other systems had\nbeen tried and had filled md the\nthought that the new one wu it\nleast worth the trial. If it did not\ngo fir enough then she would\nchimpion what she considered the\nnext best\nAnswering another question she\ntold members to look askance at\n\"Bogeys\" manufactured by opposing parties. Thc list provinciil election sew i number of these in use.\nClaims that the party introducing\n\"Red Russia\" was out to smash and\nseize, were foolish.\nThe public did not get a fiir picture of the tltuttlon beciuse news-\npipers, like other concerns were\nout to mike money end citercd to\nthe scmdil-loving public. The C.C.F.\nhad no intentions to burn, tear up\nor throw things about.\nFascism had gained a slight foothold in Montreal and other plices\nbut wis not to be feired, she uid\nin reply to mother question. This\nfound growth in discontent md\ncould be wiped out entirelv through\nproviding a pieceful populace. Suppression by police md bitons did\nnot mike for contentment, she\nconcluded.\nBATH NIGHT GAME\nPLANNED AT TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. O, July 17-A new I\ncompetition known is the Btth\nNight competition will be staged\nFridiy night it tht Trill-Ttdinic\nLiwn Bowling club greeni iccording to Bob Livingstone, secretiry.\nAlex Liurle belt Gordon McCtllum to breik a tie of the second\nround of the singlet competition\nWednesdiy night. Other tlei will\nbe piiyed off Thuradiy night.\n\u25a0THI NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. B.C-THUMDAY MORNINO. JULY 11. UN\nduring the nut 88 years it hu been\noo the market, and their child's life\nprobably uved by ita timely uw.\nPrice SOc. a bottle at all druggists\nor dealers; put up onlv by The T.\nMilburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Out\nt\nRossland Plays\nNelson on 19th\nTRAIL. B.C.. July 17-Following\nis thc league schedule of the recently formed West Kooteniy Box\nLacrosse association.\nIn releasing thc schedule, Charles\nDodimead, secretary, statei that,\nwhile it is at present satisfactory to\nall clubs, occasional changei may\nbe necessary later on.\nOn Fridav July 19, Rossland goes\nto Ncison. The schedule continues*\nJuiy 24\u2014Nelson at Trail.\nJuly 26-Rossland at Trail.\nJury 31\u2014Nelson at Rossland.\nAugust 2\u2014Trail at Nelson.\nAugust 7\u2014Trail at Rossland.\nAugust 9\u2014Rossland at Nelion.\nAugust 14\u2014Nelson at Trail.\nAugust 16\u2014Rossland at Trail.\nAugust 21\u2014Ncison at Rossland.\nAugust 23\u2014Trail at Nelson.\nPaving Carried\nOul al Trail\nTRAIL. B.C. July 17-Munlclpal\ndistrict of Tadanac commenced Its\nstreet surfacing program Mondav\nwhich when it Is completed, will sec I\nall the roads In lhat municipality\ncoated with bltck top. '\nTadanac area proper wu com-1\npleted list night. Todiy the surfic- i\nmg crew is engiged it the Incinerator hill which will connect lower\nTadanac with the government hlghwiy it Stoney creek.\nAs long,as the hot weither lists\nwork will continue Including War-\nfield hill ind the road past thc fertilizer plant and company farm to the\nmunicipal limiti in the vicinity of\nSchofield highway.\nASPHYXIATION\nCAUSE DEATH\nHARRYBRAUER\nGas Pump Prohibited\nBelow Ground Says\nMine Inspector\nAsphyxiation from carbon mon*\noxide gas was given as the cause of\nthe death of Harry John Brauer at\nthe Gold King mino July 12, by a\ncoroner's Jury which also brought a\nrecommendition thit the government give more publicity to the fict\nthit gasoline engines ire prohibited\nfor underground work by liw.\nMr. Brauer was found below a\nplatform in an 80*foot shift, where\nhe descended to repair \u2022 pump\nused in the dewitering of the shift\nWilliim Nicholson Kennedy, fore*\nmm at the Fern gold mine, \u2022 quirter of \u2022 mile dlilint. told the jury\nmen md Coroner Dr. H. H. Mic\nKenzie thit hc hid been celled to\nthc mine Siturdiy morning when\nHirry Lindblad rushed into the\noffice to uy thit there had been an\naccident at the Gold King. He took\nover first aid supplies and upon\narrival at the mine took charge of\nproceedings. With James Fisher,\nprincipal owner of the property, he\ndescended the shaft to the pump\nplatform md found Brauer. There\nwis no signs of pulse.\nAn lutomy statement from Dr.\nF. M. Auld itated that there had\nbeen no evidence of foul play or\nmechinlcil injuries, md thit the\nlungs were free of witer.\nElmer Joseph Accirt, I pirtner\nof Junes Fisher, stated that he new\nthe deceased 12 or 14 years. On the\nmomlng in question he looked out\not the cabin to iee i board, supporting a pipe from the pump. dry. Mr.\nBrauer who uw to the upkeep of\nthe pump hid gone down the prevloui evening to mike I repair, and\nhad he bten lucceuful the pump\nwould have been working and the\nboard it the held ot the shift dimp\nfrom the flow from the pump.\nMr. Accirt Slid thit he went down\nthe shift but it wu dirk md he\ndid not iee myone. Failing to find\nMr. Brauer he went to the Fisher\nhome it HtU but wis tgain unsuccessful md returned.\nRecalling thit on previous occasions long stays in the bottom of the\nshift left him dizzy, ind that hc\nhid smelled gu, Mr. Accirt becime\nalarmed. Gu condltloni prior to\nthe iccldent resulted In the\" construction ot i Wood draught pipe.\nIn inswer to \u25a0 queition uked by\nH. E. Miird. mines inspector of Fernie. he said that he did not know it\nwis unlawful to operate i gis pump\nbelow ground.\nH. E. Miird, mines Inspector who\nwis it the Gold Belt mine it the\ntime of the iccident, told of his\ninspection ot the working. The cir-\nbureter hid been dismantled indicating thit the mm wu repairing\nthe pump. Operation ot a gasoline\npump below ground wu strictly\nprohibited by law. he uid.\nConstable W. V. Shepherd and\nCorporal David Halcrow of tho\nprovincial police alio give evidence.\nJurymen were Stephen MicDonild. foreman. H. Allen, George Mel-\nlls, Arthur Lambert, John F. Kllby\nand Gordon E. Bitley.\nChange In System Not In Parlies\nIs Needed, Declare CCF. Speakers\nA. Maclnnis, M.P. and\nMrs. Maclnnis\nHeard\nTRAIl BANTAM\nBALLIEAGUE\nTRAIL, B.C., July 17.-After two\nhighly successful exhibition fixtures, the Trail bintam leigue,\ncomprised of three turns sponsored\nby the Senior Baseball club will\nget under way Saturday at 3:30\np.m. The first fixture will be Hirry\nRothery'i Cubs vs. D o c Muir'i\nBeavers. Games will be piiyed every Wednesdiy md Siturdiy following, the time of starting op\nWcdnesdiys being 5:!0 p.m.\nDraper's Rink\nWins Groceries\nWedneidiy night wu grocery\nnight it the Nelson lawn Bowling\nclub greens md J. Diaper's rink\ncarried off the prizes.\nResults were as follows:\nJ. Draper, Mrs. A. Wigg ind E. A.\nWright. 19; George A. Meeres, Dr.\nWarren and J. W. Graham, 7.\nF. E. Wheeler. Mrs. Wheeler, Mrs.\nRcberger and Mrs. E. Y. Brake. 13;\nH. Kingiette, Mrs. A. G. Lane, Mrs.\nJ. T. Sindell \u00bbnd Mrs. Bamber 12.\nA. O. Lane. Mrs. J. Ball and H.\nAllen 14; E. Penwill, C. I. Archibald and Mrs. W. Calbick. 12.\nN. J. Lowes. Mrs. J. Draper and\nMra. E. Penwill, 18; Mrs. J. S.\nGoulding. J. S. Goulding and J.\nSimons, 10.\nCubi Travel to\nRossland Sunday\nPete Kipak. manager of the New\nGrand Hotel Cubs, stated Wednesday night that the, Cubi would\ntravel to Rossland on Sunday to\nmrei the seniors of tho city of\nlight.\nCarrier Pigeons\nRemain In Nelson\nCirrier pigeons which hive been\nfound in Nelson, ire thc property\nof tht Kimberley Homing club md\nwere released In the clly. It his been\nrevelled. Appirently well satisfied\nwith the cllmite of the lake rlty \u2022\nnumber hive remained it the point\nof liberation.\nWedneiday night the two birds\nwhich were fed ln the editorial\noffice of The Dilly Newi. came\nback for another umple of wheat\nand put on \u2022 retl scrip for the morsels on a wlndowslll. A fifth bird,\nbinded KHC-10 wis ciutht at tha\nArmory by one of the office itaff.\nMr. Corbin. Attempts ire being\nmide to ctnture the birds for ihip*\nment to Kimberley.\nA ihort iddress by H. W. Herridge,\nC.C.F. cmdtdttc for Kootenay West,\non what tht C.CF. party promised\nto the people followed by addresses\nfrom Mr. and Mrs. Angus Maclnnis\nof Vancouver, telling of the present\neconomic sltuitlon, md warning\nagslnst the outcome lf either of the\nold parties were returned to power\nln the next Dominion election, werc\ngiven to i Urge meeting in the\nEagle hall Wednesdiy night Following thc addresses the speakers\nanswered questions given to them.\nAngus Maclnnis ls Independent-\nLabor member for Vancouver City\nat Ottawa.\nM. Brennan wu chairman for the\nevening and introduced the speakers.\nMr. Herridge declared he would\nspeak briefly, but stated that in his\ntour of the riding ht had tound a\ngeneral and hearty response to the\nC.C.F. He had addressed 43 meetings and it was gratifying to see\nhow people werc iligning with the\nmovement.\nWHAT C.CF. OFFERS\nThe quelion might be asked, observed Mr. Herridge, as to what\nthc C.C.F. would do for Kootenay\nWest. It had something for four\nmain classes of people, fruit growers and farmers, industrial workera,\nprofessional men md also women.\nThere was the criticism 'offered\nagainst the C.CF. that their ideili\nwere too high, too utoplin. md\nthit they could not be realized.\nSuch criticism was foolish.\nThe C.C.F. guaranteed tteurlty\nfor thi firmtrt ind fruit growtn,\n\u25a0nd Industrlil workln; It offtrtd\ntht profuilonil mtn relent from\nhit Incraulng worrltt, ind in opportunity for lervlct in thi ust of\nhit technical knowledge. For thl\nwomen It offtrtd lttt worry, Itu\nlabor, mora leisure, mora tlmi for\nculture ind equality.\nAnd finally  the C.C.F.  offered\npeace, i thing thit no other party In\nCanadl included on iti platform.\nOther parties believed in the law\nof the jungle, and In conflict, but\nthe C.C.F. believed In cooperation.\nBUILT BY THOSE PEOPLE\nMrs. Maclnnis. in connection on\nMr. Herridge's talk, itated there\nwis nothing curious or obscure ln\nthe promises of the C.C.F. The\nmovement had been formed by people, in reility, belonging to those\nfour categories that Mr. Herridge\nhad named. It wa stormed by them\nhad named. It wu formed by them\nagainit their interests.\nWhat was holding back the entire\nproducing class? uked Mri. Mic-\nInnis. Why wu it not moving theid?\nThe ancestors of thc Camdian\npeople had moved from England\nand many European pointi to this\ncountry because they sought to\nescape similar conditions that were\nnow facing the people*! ot Canada.\nThey had run away from capitalism.\nHistory books might state that it\nW|t for religious or politlcil reuons,\nbut the reil fict wu that it wai\neconomic insecurity.\nFor many years tho early settlers\nhad appeared to be doing well md\nhad accumulated plenty. Today people found that that plenty was slipping from their grip at a rate faster\nthan lt had ever slipped before in\nthe old lands. Where was it going\nto and why? There wai plenty of\nwheat and fruit ln Canada md\nenough machinery to take care of\nthe industrial work of 25,000,000\npeople.\nSOCIALISTS KNEW ANSWER\nPeople of the old party would not\nreveal why such conditions persisted. Hon. H. H. Steveni after an inquiry had found out jut what the\nsocialistic speakers had been telling\nfor the put 40 years. Dreaded capitalism was creeping in and wu\nthreatening to choke the life out ot\nthc people.\nAlthough  It would  tppetr to\nthi contrary, only \u25a0 tmtll numbtr\nof Individual* controlled ill tht\nbig flntncltl eonetrnt In tht Dominion.   Enght   hundred   of  tht\nmott powerful corporation! hid\nbeen  tiktn  tnd  In  uctrtalnlng\nwho win tht powen behind thttt\ncorporation!,  It wtt  found  thtt\n\u2022bout IM mtn determined whlt\nCanadian! ihould htvt In tht wiy\nof ntctttltltt of life.\nThere hid been previous depressions to this one. but they hta not\nbeen so severe. In days past there\nwis not so much michlnery and\nmore people were employed during\nthose periods of stagnation. Now in\norder  to   compete,   manufacturers\nhad to cut costs to the bone, and\none ot the moit effective wayi of\ndoing that was to climlmte mm\nlabor ind get michlnery.\nThe solution for the preient pre-\ndiciment did not lie in finding foreign markets. There were no foreign markets and the suggestion\nthat one might blut one's way into\nforeign markets was beside the\npoints. Nor would lowering, or eliminating of tariff wills bring about\nthe desired conditions. People In\nany one country did not have\nenough to buy the surpluses in their\nown country, let alone buy mother\ncountry's produce.\nIf oni took tomt of tht main\nIndustriu, iteel, pulp and piper,\noil, cement, picket, glut, rubbtr,\nchemical!, lumbtr and ubtitoi,\nent would find thit tht small\nbreup of peoplt prtvlouily mm*\ntlontd, controlltd thtm, Thty alto\ncontrolled transportation and communicttloni, food ind clothing\nnectultltt tnd itrvlcu. Sir Herbert Holt, for Instinct, wu a director In 68 mijor comptnlet, controlling four ind \u2022 hilf billion*\nof dolltn.\nWhen the voters of i comtltu*\nency sent i min to rcpreient them,\nthey should not consider whit kind\nof person he wis, u much u whlt\nperty he belonged. For once arriving at Ottawa he would be told to\nuse hit powers is the pirty dictated. The lut Dominion election\nhad been bought by a certain Individual of Calgary for $750,000, and\nit was to be expected that he would\nuse the party in like manner to\nanything else that he had bought.\nfor his won use. Both the old\nparties had received money trom\nthe Beauharnois company.\nBetween 1921 and 1930 only two\nmembera it Ottawa had voted\nagainst their parties, slid Mrs. Maclnnis. In the cue of one member\nhis constituency hid been cut out\n\u25a0nd the other member had not received the nomination again.\nCOULD CARE FOR THE\nFEW TOO\nThere were those who urged\nagainst change because lt would\ncause so much suffering. It was the\nbulk ot the people, pointed out Mrs.\nMaclnnis. who were suffering, md\nthe 100 or io who were living In luxury. It would be \u2022 fir better move\nto hive the mui of the people\nliving in comfort, md it that could\nbe brought ebout, lurely the lys-\ntem would be ible to look after\nan extra hundred. So my pity extended toward them wu more or\nless wuted.\nThl aim If thl C.C.F. pirty wu\nnot to tmaih thi preunt michine, but to make It function In *\nwiy thit thi proflti would go to\nthl ptopli. Varioui Individual!\nmight bt afraid to move forward\nto back tht movement bectute of\nthl fur cf losing thtlr Jobi.\nOthen wtrt In tht umt predicament and If thty unlttd thtrt\nwu ufety tnd protection in number!. A unltad effort. Capltallim\nwu powtrleit to itop. Quick action wu neceutry for thl tltuttlon wu urloui. Ont gtntratlon\nhad bun lut in thl wir, and\nthin wu anothir gtntratlon In\ndingtr it preunt Boyi wtrt In\nrelltf ctmpi tnd thilr opportunitiu flipping quickly. And It would\nbt renumbered thit thl mut vloltnt revolutions htpptntd In countrlu whtre ptopli did \"hot know\nenough toon tnough.\nThe brains of tht young people\nwere needed, ihe concluded, and\none and all had to itand resolutely\nand firmly tor their righta.\nWOULD FtATTER THEM\nIt he were an old party member,\ndeclared Mr. Maclnnis, he might\nseek to flitter the audience into subjection, but not being one of them,\nhe would endeavor to point out\nwhit thc put few years hid brought,\nmd whit the future muit continue\nto bring if no change were instituted.\nHe hid repreiented Vincouver\ncity In thc federal houu for the\npist five years. The tint uuion in\n1931 had opened with the Conservative! confident and assured. But\nthat ittltude had long lince disap-\nEcared md things were going from\nid to worse. The lut session hid\nbeen the most futile tint one could\nimagine.\nRecently thc premier in five fimoui radio speeches (quite comparable to the famous quintuplets of\nCillinder), Mr. Bennett hid told\nthe people thit capitalism hid failed and that he was going to reform\nIt. He would make lt work for the\npeoplt md not against them u It\nhad been doing in the past. In the\nccsc of the speeches, however, there\nFerry Stops for\nSix Hours Early\nSaturday Morning\nTht Nelson, terry will be off for\nrepalra for six houn Friday night.\nJuly 19, between the houra of midnight md 6 a.m. Minor repairs\nhive to be made to the michlnery\nby the depirtment of public worki\/\nnecessitating the temporary break\nln thi regular ichedule.\nHear 900 Tickets\nlor Picnic Sold\nCM. OS. Picnic Squad\nBusy in Trail and\nRossland\nTRAIL, B. a, July 17-With cloie\nto 900 tickets already out including\npurchued and free tlcketa, children'! identification! and refreshments, the transportation committee for the Consolidated employees'\nannual picnic today girded ita loins\nmd prepired for \u2022 big rush for the\nprize pasteboards during the remainder of the week. At pruent the\nentire distribution is being made\nfrom the board room it tne zinc\nplmt in Tadanac, ind from the War-\nfield gate home.\nPicnic plins are moving npldly\nthud with little more thin a week\nremaining until Trail's day of dayi.\nCommitteemen in general are working at top ipeed. Moit of the arrangements ara well in hand, however.\nHerb Jackson, head of the grounds\ncommittee, ii in the field with a call\nfor volunteers who will put ln an\nhour each in the check room at\nLakeside park, Nelion, on picnic\nday. He needi eight, and aiki those\nvolunteering to luve their namei\nwith him or it tht Tidmtc gate\nhouse.\nFlashei From the Wires\nWALEY IN ALCATRAZ\nSAN FRANCISCO - Harmon\nWaley, kidnapper of Otorgt Wty-\n\u2022rhieutir of Tacoma, wu brought\nitcritly to tht federal govern-\nmtnt't priion for incorrigible! on\nAlcttnz Islind In Stn Franclico\nbiy.\nClosing of the gitti of tht fort-\nren-llke prison behind him virtually cut off hit contact! with\nthi outtldt world becauie of tht\nttrlct rulu tgtinit vlilton tnd\ncommunication! with frlindl er\nacquaintance! beyond thi grim\nwills,\nCAN SELL POWER\nNEW ORLEANS \u2014 The let of\nTreating the Tenneuee villey authority wai held conltitutional by\nthe fifth circuit court of appeals. It\nsustained the United States government's right sell electric power\nIn competition with private utilities.\nMAY BAR RECRUITING\nWASHINQTON-Leglilttlen to\nttkt iwiy tht Amtrictn citizen-\nihlp of ptnont leaving tht Unlttd\nStttet fer ttrvlet In Ittllin or\nEthiopian armed force! wii pro-\npoitd by Chilrmin Simuel Dick-\nttt In (D.-N.Y.l of thl houu lm*\nmigration commlttu.\n30-HOUR WEEK BILL\nWASHINGTON-A new bill to\nput Industry on i 30-hour work\nweek splashed Into the turbulent\nlegislative waters congress muit\ncross to adjournment.\nThe measure, ipproved by the\nhouse libor committee, would crette\n\u2022 federal commission to license Industries sending goods or commodities into interstate commerce.\nTAN FOR SUGAR\nCAMBRIDGE. Mtii.-Dlicovery\nthit tugtr cm tiki on \u2022 myittr-\nloui form of \"tan\" from ultn-vlo-\nlit light ind thtrtby prevent\ngtrmt from growing ortitid \u2022\nlenittlon among blologlltl at thl\nconference on tptctroMOpy It\nMuiiehuietti Inititut* of Ttch-\nnology.\nSHIPS LIMP TO PORT\nVICTORIA \u2014 With both thtlr\nbowi believed badly dimigid, tht\nR. M. S. Niagara of tht Cinidlin\nAustralulin lint, md thi King\nEgbert, lumber ctrrltr, wtrt\nheading ttwird Vlctorli lata tonight, afttr colliding In tht Strait\ncf Juan dl Fuel, thru milei wut\nof  Race  Rocks.\nWANT LEAGUE TO CARE\nFOR REFUGEES\nLONDON\u2014A propoul wu mide\ntint the Leigue of Nitlons r-.sume\nthe responsibility for the care of\nrefugee! from Germmy, utimited\nat more thin 80,000.\nNAZIS PRESS PLANS\nBERLIN\u2014Null continued thilr\n\u2022ntl-ttmltlc cimptlgn, d tip Itt\nwirnlngi from hlghtr-upi, ind\npuihtd thtlr ttirllliitlon progrim,\ndttplti Cithollo pretttti, whllt\ntht controlled prtu crltd out\nbitterly a giln it \"atrocity\" reporti tbroad.\nKEATONS IN DOMESTIC ROW\nLOS ANGELES-Tht mirltal if-\nftln ot Buster Keaton. noted film\ncomedian, were brought into thl\ndivorce court by his wife, Ma*\nElizabeth Keaton, and it the umi\ntime entangled in the ilreidy com*\nflex domestic relations ot Mr. md\nMrs. Barton Seweil.\nMrs. Keaton filed iult for divorce,\ncharging infidelity, ind naming u\nco-respondent Mrs. Leah Clampitt\nSeweil, whose husband il the beneficiary of a $26,000,000 trust fund.\nSimultaneously Mrs. Keaton filed\nsuit for $200,000 damages against\nMrs. Seweil. charging the hid stolen her huibmd'! lov*.\n'    a\nMrs. E. H. Boyer\nDiesat Coast\nResident Willow Point\nfor 22 Years; Great\nPhilanthropist\nMn. E. H. Boyer. a resident ot\nWillow Point tor 23 years uid a\nwell known philanthropist, is dead\nin Vsncouver.\nMra. Boyer, before her mirrlige\nMlu Emily Cathcart, was born in\nEdinburgh. Scotlmd md wu ln\nher 73rd year. She would have been\n74 In October.\nMri. Boyer wu will known\nthroughout the dlitrlct lor h*r\nphilmthropy. She wu in tntl-vlvl-\nsectioniit and wu ictively usoci*\nlted with the Society for the Pre\nvention of Cruelty to Ainimals.\nShe leavei two sons. George of\nHollywood. Cil.. ind Robert who\naccompanied her to Vmcouver.\nW.V.P.CIery\nIS PROMOTED\nNelson Accountant to\nGo to Vancouver\nBranch\nW. V. P. Clery, accountant of the\nNelson branch of the Bank of Commerce for the put ilx and a half\nyears, hu been promoted to the\niccountancy of th* Victory Squire\nbranch it Vincouver, md li to\nleave within the next week.\nMr. Clery came to Nelson from\nthe luperintendent'i department in\nVincouver ind while in the city hu\ntaken an active part in golt club\nactivitiei. He ilio took pirt in\nminy of the city billiard tournaments.\nhid bten no Dr. Dafoe md the\n\"mental children\" had died.\nThere wat a Dominion election to\nbe held shortly md there would\nbt the usual slogans brushed free\nfrom cobwcbi ind brought out\n\"Time for a change,\" and other lim-\nilir onu would b* mouth*d everywhere.\nNEITHER FERE CONFIDENT\nBut pointed out Mr. Maclnnli,\nchtnges in government hid been\ngoing on between the Liberals md\nConservative! ilnce Confederation.\nEich chinge hid memt essentiilly\nthe ume thing\u2014put out one dirty,\ncorrupt and incompetent party, to\ninstil mother u equally competent in common view. It wu not aa if\nthe pirty being Initalled hid luffered \u2022 chinge in social outlook. Its\npassport for going In wu the failure of the other. He would not take\nthe time to tell what the partiu\nwere like. Each one would ihortly\ntell thl elector! ibout the other,\nmd knowing eich other'! vlcu better thin he knew them, they would\nprobibly do i much bitter Job thin\nhe could.\nIt wu tlmi fer \u2022 chingi, ntt \u2022\ntuptrflilil chinge, it In partiu,\nbut for a chinge In tyitem. Tht\npnunt   tyittm   wu   formtd   to\n\"ikln\" tht pupil. Oni hid to be\nformtd   new  to  work   for  tht\nptople. A cooperation In production wll neceittry In order thit\nptoplt could hivt tht mtntlili\nef lift. If thi itandard of lit! of\nthl mui cf thi peoplt wu to\nImprovt, it wu Imptritlvi thit \u2022\nchingi In tyittm bt Introduud,\nThe   usual   promises   would   be\nmade at the coming election, but\nhe would uy that my man who\nmade the promises thtt Bennett did\nIn 1930, knowing the economic iltu-\nttion md sociology of Canidi ai\nhi did. wu  either dishoneit  or\nIgnorant\nEven In Itl hey-dey capltallim\nproduced unemployment. Unemployment wu Inttparable from\ncapltallim ind profits. And capltallim hid not betn concerned about\ndrain on their proflti. They were\ndrain n their profit!. Thiy were\nstill not Interuted ln the Individual\nwho wu without work. Thalr profits wu ill they were worried ibout.\nUnemployment could only be ended by eliminating the system of\nprofits, which thl capitalists would\nnot do.\nBURN EFFIGY OF\nMUSSOLINI  IN\nSO. AFRICA\nJOHANNESBURG, South Afrlci. July 17 (CP-Cible vii\nReuters)\u2014An effigy of Premier\nBenito Mussolini was burned on\nthe itepi of the city hall here\ntoday after a communist meet-\nting, while spectators ung \"The\nRed Flag.\"\nThe effigy comiited of \u25a0 ituffed figure, with a balloon for a\nheid. Two natives carried It up\nthe steps, hoisted on a pole,\nwhile two red banners, inscribed\n\"Hands ott Abyssinia\" and\n\"Communist party,\" were unfurled beside lt On the chest\nof the figure were printed the\nwordi: \"Big Bully Mussolini.\"\ntttttttttttttattttttttw\nTralllles Win\nBoxlaOpener\nOvercome Deficit to\nBeat Rossland\n11-9\nTRAIL, B.C.. July 17.-Bittllng i\nitiff uphill fight. Trail licrosse team\nouited the Rouland squad in the\nlast half of the struggle to cop the\nfirst gime of the Weit Kooteniy\nBox Ltcroue leigue played it the\nGolden city Wednuday night The\nacore was Trail 11, Roulind 9.\n\"Stew\" Pitteraon. eratwhile hock\ney pliyer, effected ilmllir tactics of\nthe ice iport. feigning \u25a0 pass before\nshooting, to tally six of the winning\ngoals. Scoring honora of th* Trail\nteim were ihired with two other\nmen. Duty icoring three md Stevenson two. Scoring by the home boys\nwu more divided, Davles, Carr and\nVlckeri eich getting two, Snowden,\nErart md Marshall making one\neach.\nAt the outset Roulmd engineered \u2022 itrong attack md at tht end\nof the first quirter wii in the leid\nthree goali to one. At hilt time the\nTrail boyi hid whittled down their\nopponent's leid considerably ind\nentered tht second quirter only one\ngoil behind, the score being J-4 for\nRoulmd. The end ot the third quirter found the visiting tetm in the\nleid 1*7, Tnll'i winning mirgln\nbeing lnereued to two at full time.\nROssland citizens gave iplendid\nsupport to the game, md their large\nturnout added much -est to the\nplayers' enthuiiaam.\nThe teami wsre:\nRouland\u2014Milne, goal: Snowden,\nWilmiley, Davlei. Holditch, Eurt,\nCarr, Sympcock, Delicti, Marihill,\nFox md Vickers.\nTrail\u2014LeRoy. goal: Mik* Gavrilik.\nStevenion, Sherwood. Don Lithim,\nPitteraon. Davy md Chirlu.\nGeorge Smirt of Trail refereed\nARMY PUPILS\nGIVENPICNIC\nRaces and Games Are\nEnjoyed at Willow \u2022\nPoint\nSundty ichool pupili of the Selvi*\ntlon Army were treated to th* innual picnic Wedneidiy when three\ntruck loads wire taken to Willow\nPoint\nRacei for young and old. Ice\ncream, swimming, peanut ind cmdy\nscrambles md bueball all combined\nto make it a lucceuful diy. Can-\ntain Rou. who succeeds Adjutant\nH. Chapman, wu ln chirge ind\nFred Williims provided trmiporti*\ntlon.\n\u25a0 >\"mZ\nJohnson Rink\nWins al Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, July 17\u2014Johnson's\nrlnk won the umbrella competition\nat the Trail-Tadanac Lawn Bowling\nclub greena Wednesday night with 30\npoints. Pocket knives domted by\nBill Wagstaff were received by\neach member.\nStanding of three other rlnki\nwere:\nBob Weir, 18; Wilson, 12; Divis,\n10.\nResults of draws wire:\nFlrit draw\u2014Witaon but Divii\n0-4: Johnson beit Weir 5-3.\nSecond draw\u2014Johnion but Divis\n11*1; Weir beat Wataon 8*4.\nThird draw\u2014Weir beat Divii 7-J;\nJohnson bett Watson 4*2.\nThe rlnki were:\nJohnion, ikip, Deami, Cimeron \\,\nind Leylmd.\nR. Weir, ikip, W. Weir, Provost\nmd G. S. Wstson.\nG. M. Witaon, skip, Chtlmtr,\nCrawford ind Hardman.\nDavii, ikip. Brercton, Livingstone\nmd Wigttaff.\nN.G. Cubs Capture\nCharles Morris Cup\nTake Sixth Straight\nFrom Savoys\n7 to 3\nNew Grmd Hotel Cubi made the\nbest-out-of-eleven lerlu tor th*\nChirlu Morrii buebill cup u abbreviated ai poulble when they\ndowned Savoy Hotel for the lixth\ncomecutive time 7-3 it th* Recrei-\ntion ground! Wedneidiy night Tha\nCubi took the lud in the lut halt\nof the flnt inning md retained lt\nthroughout\nGeorge Goble made hli appearance on the mound for tbe Cubs\nand held the Savoyi to ilx hiti, one\nbeing a home run by Walter Gillett\nwith none on. Goble itruckout nine\nbatten and walked one.\nShorty Bailey went the rout* for\nSivoyi and although held th* Cubi\nto uven hits, he wilked flv* men.\nGoble and Brennan collected home\nrum off htm, there btlng on* on\nbue each time.\nRoy Andenon pulled off a nest\ndouble play ln the opening Inning\nto squelch a Savoy threat. Ht grabbed Stewart'i fly nur iecond and\nthen caught Gillett off bue.\nPREE OF ERRORS\nThe gime wu pnctlcilly tttt tl\ntrron, only two being chirged\nigiinst Savoyi ind on* agalnit th*\nCubi. Cubi, ifter getting their fint\nthree mm on baie in the opening\ninning on walks, fiddled awiy a\nnumber of rum on wild movu.\nWalt Gillct stole the batting honon for the evening by getting a\nhomer and two singles in thre*\ntlmu at the bat. Brennan _.i two\nfor the Cubs, and Goble got one,\nhla other two trips to the plat* resulting in walks. Cooper, Kapak,\nPasacreta and Waterer each got\nsingles. Richardson. Crane, Horswill, were the other Savoy hitters.\nFreno. Scanlan and Ioanin were\numpires, the former calling the bells\nind strikes.\nScore by Innlngi: RHE\nSivoy  10 1. 010  0  S  S  2\nCubi    2 3 0   0 3 0x771\nLineupi:\nSivoy Hotel: Shorty Bailey, Wilt\nOlllett, \"Slim\" HonwUl, \"SUm''\nKraft \"Duffy\" Stewirt, Welter Kitto, \"Fat\" Richardson, Bill Vance,\nBill Kirby, Mirk Crane, Howird\nMoore. ,\nNew Grmd Cubs: Roy Anderson,\nEddie Witerer, George Goble. Sim\nPuicreti, Austin Brennm, DelPuppo, Bill Kspik. Art Ltnglll. Bud\nCooper, Jick Blihop. ,\ni\nBand Gives lis\nOpening Concert\nMany Out to Hear.the\nCity Band Under\nS. J. Newell\nPlaying at the Vemon street band\nitand before I large gathering, the\nNelion City bind gave its tint concert of the leuon Wednesday night\nand received \u2022 warm welcome.\nUnder the baton of Spencer J.\nNewell the following progrim wu\ngiven:\nMirch, \"Chi Gin Beace,\" by A.\nVandercock.\nOverture, \"Olla Night,\" by Ed\nChenette.\nSelection, 'Th* Belle of New\nYork,\" by Gustave Kerker.\nWaltz*, \"Sur La Mer,\" \"On the\nSea,\" by B. Vereechen.\nIdyl, \"The Glow Worm,\" by Paul\nChenette.\nWaltz. \"Heart Murmura,\" by Writer Rolfe.\n'The Rage ln Irelind,\" by t. Byer.\n\"Gladiator March.\" _\u25a0\n\"God Save the King.\" r\nUSE THE WANT ADS\nDon't trust\nto LUCK\nProtect Your Income and Family\nBY JOININC THE\nMUTUAL HEALTH AND\nACCIDENT ASSOC.\n1.  Piytd ovtr \u00bb55,000,000.00 In elilmi In 28 yun.\nt.   It li thi lirgnt exclusive Htllth and Aeeldtnt concern In thl\nworld.\nI.   Nurly 800,000 policy holden In Cinidi and tht U.I.A\n4.  M% of our clilmi in piyid tht diy proofi are rtetlvtd\nClilmi for I. C. an payid In our Vincouvtr Office.\n8.   Oun H \u25a0 Mutual Compsny, no itoekholdin to pty dividend! to.\n8.   Complete coverage far Aocldent and llckntu.\n7.  Chann of occupation don not ifftet btmfiti.\n(Vtry ImporUnt)\nFor furthtr information call or writ*\nCho*;. N. Dondaneou       Diitrict Manjpr,\nHoi-i Humi Nelion, I. C.\n -\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\n\u2014*****\u2014\nw\n-w \u25a0 y-\n\u25a0m* * .        \"F11\nSocial Happenings\nin Nelson City\nThli column ll conducted by Mn. M. J. Vlfneux. All news of a\nsocial nature, including recaptioni, private entertainments, peraona!\nitems, marriages, etc., will appear In thii column. Telephone Mri.\nVigneux at her home, Sli Silica itreet\nMr. end Mra. F. William Bird of\nPasadena. Calif., were Nalion vlalton Tueaday en route to Sandon\nwhere they are aV3t~lt ot Mri. Bird's\ncousins. Mr. and Mn. S. J. Towgood. Jerry Towgood accompanied\nthem to Sandon.\n\u2022    a   e\nMr. and Mn. Clarence Dye and\nBetty and Jack, who have been\ngueiti of Mr. and Mrs. 0. F. Hunter.\nrails itreet. have returned to their\nhome in Regina.\naaa\nCaptain T. E. Peters   and   his\ndaughter of Gray   Creek   visited\ntown yeaterday.\naaa\nMr. and Mn. G. H. Fraaer. Robson street, have as their guests their\ndaughter and granddaughter. Mrs.\nE. Batea and daughter Bunty\nKlamith Falls.\n.  .   .\n3. Blaney of Ymir ii the guest of\nMr. and Mn. Archie Bleney. Cedar\nitreet\naaa\nMr. and Mn. H. George of New\nDenver were city visiton yesterday.\nMr. and Mn. Manden end child*\nren. Betty, Bub, and Donnie. who\nhave been the gueits ot Mr. and\nMn. Marcus Martin, alio of Mr.\nand Mn. Sandy Martin. Carbonate\nstreet left yesterdey for their home\nln Vancouver.   -\n\u2022    a    a\nShoppen In Nelaon yeiterday\nIncluded Major Turner Lee of Bonnington.\neee\nMn. Ernest Marsden. Baker itreet,\nREOPENED\nREDECORATED\nRENOVATED\nRE-EQUIPPED\nWITH MODERN FIXTURES\nConsult our ntw beautician,  Mln  Iubel\nCooper, regarding your ntxt permanent.\nCapitol Beauty Shoppe\nMom 18 Opp. Ctplttl Theatre\n\u25a0THI NELSON DAILY NIW*. NILION. l.C\u2014THURSDAY MORNINO. JULY 18. 19S5-\nLOOK. . . .\n.... LOOK\nAf Then Values In\nQuality Footwear\nDon't fill to Ukt tvtry advantage tf theie\ntruly remarkable thot valuei.\nWOMEN'S SHOES\n$1.35 to $4.85\nMEN'S SHOES\n$2.15 to $7.65\nBOYS' AND GIRLS' SHOES\n$1.65 to $3.35\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\n1\nNOW AT A NEW LOW PRICE\nUmtLNcmttyit MAYONNAISE\nUu-Vifydfo DEEP FRYING\n___{-.mAmMob ECONOMICAL\nCURLEW ICE CREAM\nTHE PERFECT REFRESHMENT\nIn Brick or Bulk\nAt AU Curlew\nDeoieri\nfor Your\nSUMMER\nPARTY\nWhtn your ptrty itarti\ntt lti! its ptp, thit'i tht\ntimt to revive it and ll-\nlurt it'i lucceu by eerv-\ning your gueiti CURLEW\nICE CREAM \u2014 Thtlr\nPoeular Favorite!\nCurlew Creamery\nPALM DAIRIES LTD.\nhaa aa her wait Mlaa Irene Kennedy\nof sllverton.\na   t   i\nH. E. Miard, mlnee   lnapector,\nwith headquartan In Femie. waa a\ncity vilitor yeaterday.\na   a   a\nMr. and Mra. W. L. Sella of Naw\nDenver, viiited the city yeiterday.\n*  .  .\nMr. end Mri. E. Froet and ion\nhavs left for Sookana and Seattle.\naaa\nB. N. Sharpe of the Dundee mine,\nat Ymir. ii a city viiltor.\n. . .\nMr. and Mn. J. Olion returned\nyeiterday to Slocan City aftar a\nfew dayi ln town.\n.  .  i\nA. H. Crouley and aon Trevor\nhave returned from a motor trip to\nthe Cariboo diitrict.\naaa\nD. E. Orobe of Spokane li ln the\ncity, the guest ot Mr. and Mn. C. W.\nAppleyard.\n9     .     .\nMr. and Mn. D. St. Denii of Slocan\nCity are in the city for a few weeks.\nThey have taken up raaldence in\nthe Kerr apartment..\n.  .  .\nMn. Clarence Ocilvle of Hirrop\nvisited the city yeiterday.\naaa\nJ. N. Murphy at Kaalo wai ln\nNelion yeiterday.\naaa\nShoppen in town Tueaday in\neluded Mrs. William Wadeeon of\nSouth Slocan.\naaa\nMr. and Ura. C. W. Appleyard.\nHoover itreet, have returned from\nSpokane and coait cities.\naaa\nMlia Audrey Klchardaon ot the\nKootenay Lake General hoipltal\nstaff, hai left to ipend her vacation\nin New Weitmlniter.\nTudor Edwarda of South Slocan\nMn. Roy .Graham wu among\nshoppen in Nelion yeiterday.\naaa\nMn. Darley of Medicine Het and\nher children Doreen and Ceorge\nhave arrived to vlalt for aeveral\nweeks at the home of Mn. Darley'i\nparenti. Mr. and Mn. George Johnstone.\n\u2022 .  .\nLittle Helen Jean Fotherlneham.\ndauihter of Mr. and Mn. D. T.\nFotheringham of Calgary, li here\nspending the holldayi at tbe lummer\nhome of her grandoarenti. Mr. and\nMn. George A. Hunter.\naaa\nMri. E. McDonough of Calgary\nand her daughter Grace Loulie are\nvisiting In the city. They have taken\nup reiidence in the Kerr epartmenti.\nWhile here Mn. McDonough ii viiiting her two sons Carl and Ted. who\nare employed at the Kootenay Bella\nmine, and Butter, who il on the\nstaff of the Relief Arlington mine.\n. .  .\nAlex McMillan, pioneer reildent\nof Sandon, la a Nelion viiltor.\naaa\nMn. E. Jarrett and her Intent aon\nleft the Kootenay Lake Genenl\nhospital yMterday for their home\non High street\ni\nMr. and Mrs. J. S. Halgh and\ndaughters Marguerite and Annable\nare expected to arrive Sunday from\nMillion to ba guests at the home\non Hall Mines road of Mra. Halgh'i\nparenti. Mr. and Mn. J. E. Annable.\naaa\nLloyd Garrett of Kaalo wea a city\nviiltor Tuesday.\n* a\nMiai Bernice Marapodl. High\nstreet haa left to viiit friendi at\nBoiwell.\nMn. W. W. Beer of Toronto, an\nex-resident of Nelson, ta the gueit\nof Mr. and Mra. W. E. Waaaon. Mill\nstreet Mra. Beer hu been ipending\nsome time in Vancouver and coait\ncltlea.\nMiu Cecille Olivier who bu bean\nthe house gueit ot Mr. and Mrs.\nHarry Burns. Carbonate itreet. hu\nreturned to her home ln Cretton.\n.  .  .\nMin Mary Madden   and   Mln\nMhora McLeod left by motor yet*\nterday for   Spokane   and   Coeur\nd'AIene.\n.  .  .\nMn. T. W. Slader, Mlu Phyllla\nSlader, and David Slader. accom\npanied by Mra. Slader'i gueit. Mrl.\nC. I. Garrett of Winnipeg. Charlu\nPenny and Trevor Crosaley. motor*\ned to Trail yeiterday. Miu Phyllis\ndemalned to viiit frlenda tor a few\ndayi.\naaa\nMr. and Mn. Fred Weir have tak*\nen up ruldence In the Kerr apart*\nmenta.\naaa\nJ. P. Sutherland of Slocan City\nviiited town yeiterday\naaa\nMri. Thompion and daughter of\nNew Denver were in the city yu*\nterday.\naaa\nRuawU Tinkess of Kaalo vlalted\nNelaon Tuuday.\naaa\nMr. and Mra Percy Coulter. Kootenay street have u their guut\nMiu Coulter of Kulo.\naaa\nMn. Doiker of Harrop apent yuterday in Nelaon.\naaa\nMn. H. Roiling entertained in'\nformally at the tu hour Monday at\nher Willow Point home in honor of\nMn. J. G. Bunyan'i two houae\nguests, Mill Margaret Fuller and\nMiu Violet Rebelettl of Reno. Nev\nada. Tea. wai urved on the lawn\nand the guests were Mlu Reblelettl.\nMiis Fuller. Mn. Bunyan. Mn. F.\nF. Payne. Mrs. Gordon Hallett Miu\nJoan Hallett. Miu Gann ot Victoria.\nMn. L. E. Borden. Mn. W. T. Fotheringham. Mn. C. W. MacBey of\nTrail and Mn. Terence Roiling.\n.  .  .\n- WUllam Brlnley of Procter viiited\nthe city yuterday.\na   a\nAmong ihoppen in Nelaon yuterday ware Mn. Eric Latenby and\nthrn ions ot Yahk. who are visiting\nat Bonnlngton for a month, guests of\nMn. Latenby'! parenti. Major and\nMn. Turner Lee.\na   \u2022\n' son C\nroy of Longbeich were Tuesday vlalton In Nelson.\naaa\nJack Burna, who hu been ipending the oast ilx weeks ln the city,\nthe guest of hli parenU. Mr. and\nMn. Jobn Bumi, Stanley itreet,\nleevu thli morning for Golden, eol.,\nwhere he will attend lummer ichool\nat the school of mlnu. His brother\nTeddy will accompany him u far u\nSpokane.\naaa\nJ. J. Culllnalne of Ymlr visited\ntown yuterday.\n.  .  .\nShoopen In Nelson yesterday Included Miurlce Major of Procter.\nPopular Nelson Bridal Couple\nMOYIE MAN ON\nMOTORJRIP\nGeorge Whitehead and\nCousin Leave for\nthe Coast\n\u2014Photo Courtesy McGregor Bros., Nelson\nMr. and Mn, Victor C. Oweni, recent newlyweds. Mn. Owem\nwu formerly Min Jsan Waldle, member of a plonur Nalion family.\nMr. Owem hu resided In Nelwn far iome yun, being on the itaff\nef tha 1. C. Taiaphona oompany, Thiy havs taken up ruldence\nIn Nelson.\nWOMEN OVER-VALUE LOVE, EMOTIONAL\nRELATIONS; THEY NEED SOLIDARITY\nSEATTLE, July 17 (API-Dele-\nSites to the convention of the Na*\nonal Federation of Buslneu and\nProfessional Women's cluba tonight\nheard themselves psychoanalyzed,\nheard what is wrong with woman\nand what she can do about lt\nThe psychoanalyst was Dr. Karen\nHomey, New York City psychiatrlat,\nwriter and lecturer, and she waa\nspeaking on \"women's fear ot action.\"\nDr. Homey asserted that women's \"psychic peculiarities are:\n1. \"An over-valuation of love and\nemotional relations.\n2. A complying attitude to men's\nIdeas and ideals of feminity.\n3. An age phobia with a subsequent wute ot human valuu.\n4. An inferiority feeling u a woman.\n5. A lack of solidarity among\nthemselvu.\n\"How can we overcome the difficulties within ourselves?1' Dr. Homey asked. \"We have to free ourselves\nentirely from the choking pressure\nthat these attitudes are unalterable\nfacts of women's nature, but to see\nthst and how they are culturally\nconditioned.\n\"We heve to free ourselvu from\nthe idea that our demanda ln the\nultimate goal are feminine demands,\nbut to realize that we demand lomethlng as human being. Demands for\nIndependence, development ot potentialities do not concern womanhood but human personality.\"\nMrs. McEwlng of Salmo visited\nthe city yesterday.\nCranbrook Nurse\nVisiting Yahk\nYAHK. B.C.. July 17-Lena Nedelec, nurse-in-training at St Eugene hospital. Cranbrook, hu arrived to ipend three weeks at the\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Nedelec.\nJohn Holmgren left Monday to\nvisit with friends and relatives\nat Red Deer. Alta.\nMr. and Mn. S. Wetter and family are moving to take up residence on the Albln Bjork ranch\neast of town.\nDr. A. G. Thompson of Yahk\nhas left for Corbin where he will\nrelieve Dr. Elliott who is leaving\non holidays.\nThe annual picnic of the Anglican\nSunday school wss held Wednesday afternoon on the lawn at the\nC. P. B. offices. Gamu and lunch\nwere enioyed.\nRagner Stein of Canal Flat wu a\nweek-end guest of Mr. and Mn.\nS. J. McCartney.\nMr. and Mn. F. A. Lazenby and\nsons Dick, Geoffrey snd Hugh were\nweek-end visitors ln Cranbrook.\nwhere Dick had his tonsils removed Saturday at St. Eugene hoipital.\nC. Y. Mlchie of Waldo wu a\nweek-end visitor st the home of\nMrs. Burlinghsm.\nNelson Mclnnis is being employed\nu helper at the Lythgoe garage\nfor the summer.\nMr. and Mrs. Buckleu and Margaret Mclnnis ot Cranbrook were\nvisitors Wednesday at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh Mclnnis. They\nleft later by motor for Spokane.\nMrs. Joe Brogan was a tea hostus\nWednesday afternoon entertaining\nthe following ladiu. Mrs. Joe Nedelec. Mra. George Walt. Mn. E.\nA. Lythgoe. Mra. P. W. Jupp, Mrs.\nLeonard Walther. Mrs. Jack Hamilton. Mri. Archie McGrath. Mra.\nJack Walther. Mn. Bert Revans,\nMn. F. A. Lazenby. Mitt Helen\nMcGrat hand Mrs. S. J. McCartney.\nG. B. Bumi, CP.R. land agent, of\nSpokane, wu in town Wednesday\nen route by motor to Calgary.\nTRAIL MAN IS AT\nBEAVERDELL\nBEAVERDELL, B.C., July IS-\nClyde Kennedy of Trail Is a guut\nof hit aunt, Ms.. Ted Clarke.\nE. CoUier ot Penticton wai in\ncamp viiltlng old friends.\nMn. William Runell and family\nhave arrived In town from Slocan\nCity to spend a holiday with Mr.\nRussell, who ls employed et the\nBounty mine.\nMrs. Jack Morrison bu returned\nfrom e ihort visit to Grand Forks\nCrawford Clarke li spending part\nof his holidays ln Trail visiting\nreiatlvu.\nMlssu Pat and Joyce Warrington\nheve returned trom e holiday at\nLakevale and Naramata.\nMr. and Mn. Francii Cousins\nhave returned from a ahort visit to\nthe Okanagan.\nMrs. George Bums has arrived\nfrom Kelowna and will be em\nployed at the Beaverdell hotel.\nSITKUM CREEK\nSCHOOL REPORT\nPromotions at Sitkum Creek\nIchool follow:\nTo Grade II\u2014Ray Simmons, Betty Manhall.\nTo Grade HI\u2014Jean Simmoni.\nKathleen Sutherland.\nTo Gnde IVMSuaan Tawie, Helen Sutherland.\nTO Grade VIII\u2014Alex Sutherland\nTo Gnde IX\u2014Mima Sutherland,\nNora Marshall, Louia Jackaon.\nHonor rolls:\nProficiency\u2014Jean Simmons.\nDeportment\u2014Nora Manhall.\nPunctuality and regularity\u2014Ray\nSimmons. Mona Sutherland.\nMOYIE. B.C.. July 17.-George\nWhitehead and,hli cousin. Mill\nGloria Whitehead, motored to Vancouver Sunday, after viiiting a\nfew daya with Mr. Whitehead's\nbrother-in-law and sister. Mr. and\nMrs. Glen Johnson. On hli return\nJourney he will be accompanied by\nhis mother and two listen, Mlss\nFrances Whitehead. Mn. Glen Johnaon, and her two children, Glen*\nnyne and George of Vancouver. Mn.\nJohnson will visit her parenti Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Whitehead for the summer.\nGeorge Morrisett of New Lake\nspent the week-end at Moyle. While\nhere he did the resulting of his\nmineral claim on   Lama creek.\nMn. Conrad of Moyie accompanied by her granddaughters. Betty\nand Gertrude Curran, of Chapman\nCamp, left Sunday for Challan\nFalli where they will vlalt Mri.\nConrad's sons-in-law and daughters.\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. MacLun and\nMr. and Mn. D. Rourk. Before returning Mrs. Conrad will visit her\nsister Mn. Shaugneuy of Spokane.\nMr. and Mn. Fitch accompanied\nby Mlss Yvonne and Frank Sanden and Miu Jessie Walker motored\nto Cranbrook on Friday.\nVictor Sanden of Curzon spent\nthe week-end at the home of his\nparents. Mr. and Mn. Saunders.\nClive Bateman accompanletd by\nMr. and Mrs. Geroux and two daughters and Mrs. Turner and son. Eugene, spent Sundiy In Kitchener,\nguests of Mr. and Mri. Clifford\nFolsy. Joan Geroux remained for a\nfew days visit to her aunt. Mrs.\nFolsy. i\nMn. Smith, Mn. Qulndon, Mn.\nMontpellier. Jeuie McKenzle of\nChapman Camp and Therese Sanders spent Tuesday In Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mn. Barr and family\nalong with Alex St Denis. Charlie\nDempsey and Albln Danlelson spent\na day In Yahk.\nRon Hyde is now employed at\nthe Spruce mill In Lumberton.\nMr. and Mn. R. A. Smith of\nMoyie were guuts of Mr. and Mrs,\nC. A. Foote of Kimberley Sunday.\nWalter Hyde of Cnnbrook arrived here by bua Saturday. He\nwill ipend the rummer at the home\nof hii uncle. R. Hyde.\nMn. Frlesen her daughter. Betty\nLeu. and young son, Paul, of Kimberley are house gueets ot Mr. snd\nMrs. G. Jewell. Mr. Jewell's sister Min Jewell of Vancouver is\nalio a guut and will remain here\nfor the summer.\nbrook returned to her home Frl-\n\" Mln Gladys Radcllffe of Crap-\nday after spending a few days at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith.\nMr. Walker accompanied by his\ndaughtcn. Jeuie and Pearl, left by\nbus for Cranbrook Saturday, ipending the week-end with friendi.\nPete Danlelson of Chapman Camp\nspent Sunday ln Moyie.\nMr. and Mn. Gordon and children\nSandy and Mary of Bonnington.\ntheir niece. Lillian McNair of Vancouver, and Mrs. Jewell of Moyle\nthe stampede. They will also visit\nwent bv car to Calgary to take in\nfriends.\nMr. and Mn. Ray Curran and\nfamily of Chapman Camp visited\nrelatives in town Saturday.\nJoan Geroux returned home by\nbus Thursday after spending a few\ndays with her aunt, Mrs. Folsy ot\nKitchener.\nMr. and Mra. Kershaw of Fort\nSteele, accompanied by Mr. Olson\nand Mr. Swansen. spent Mondav ln\nMoyle. Mr. Kenhaw having buslneu ln town.\nMra. Pearson was a business visitor Monday to Cranbrook. While\nthere ihe purchased a new coune.\nMrs. Peanon and daughter. Esther,\nleft Wednuday morning for Nelson where thev will visit Mra. Ed\nNordman and Mn. C. 0. Pearson and\nson. Eric Hammer.\nBALFOUR YOUNG\nPEOPLE FROLIC\nBALFOUR, B.C, July le-The\nBalfour Young People entertained\ntheir parents and friends at a delightful birthday party ln honor ot\nthe third annivenary of the organization Thursday evening. Dancing\nwu enjoyed, mualc being supplied\nby Mln Margaret Graham and\nothen. A two tier cake wu cut by\nthe president, WUllam McKay.\nThere wu a good attendance.\nMrs. Ryan hu returned to Edmonton.\nMiu Hazel CampbeU of Kimberley is viiiting her parenti, Mr. and\nMrs. B. Campbell of Balfour.\nMiu Margaret Ling, who ipent a\nfew weeki at Procter, hu returned\nto her home in Balfour.\nMr. and Mn. A. Ling ot Balfour\nwere visitors to Nelson.\nGeorge Green of Willow Point hu\ntaken up ruldence at the Balfour\nBeach Inn.\n\u2022 \u00bbAM FIVi\nGUIDE. HONOR\nMISS BRADSHAW\nHave Farewell Picnic\nat South Slocan\nPaper can be made from cornstalks, but the product would cost\nmore than paper made from wood,\naccording to studies completed at\nthe U.S. bureau of standards.\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.. July 17-\nThe Girl Guldu, nine in number,\nwere in camp at Sunshine Bay with\nthc Trail and Rossland Guides. They\nwere Mollle Murray, Mabel Baker,\nThelma Bird, Winnffred Ridge, Helen Samson, Betty Russel, Sigrid\nAnderson, May Tomkins and Mai-\nlander Davidson. Colonel Murray,\nP. 0. Bird and W. A. McCabe motored them through to the camp.\nPrior to the Guides leaving for\ncamp they entertained at a farewell\npicnic at the pool in honor of Patrol\nLuder Meg Bradshaw who was\nleaving for Victoria. Later they adjourned to the bome of Mrs. W. A.\nMeCable where a merry time was\nspent in playing games. Tea, with\nstrawberries and cream, was served.\nA pruentatlon of an autograph\nalbum made to Min Bradshaw as a\nmemento of the Guldu and Inscribed with aU their namej and a\nsuitable Inscription from each. Patrol Luder Thelma Bird made the\n\u00a3 mentation of behtlf of the Guides\n> which Miu Bradshaw responded\nsweetly. Mrs. John Murray, captain and Mn. McCabe were hostesses.\nColonel and Mn. J. Murray and\nson John motored to Sunshine Bay\nSunday to visit the Guldu in camp\nThey were accompanied by Mn.\nF. H. Russel and Mlaa Fiona Sutherland.\nMr. and Mn. John Zuk and family of Trail, who are on a motoring\ntrip to Regina and Winnipeg, made\na stop-over visit with Mr. and Mrs.\nP. Horlick during the week.\nMn. A. H. Davlu and baby have\nreturned from a visit to Grand\nForks where they were guuts of\nMra. Davis' parenta.\nMr. and Mrs. John Jewltt who\nspent a month on a trip to tiie\nHawaiian islands, returned home\nSunday.\nMr. and Mra. Jewitt had u their\nguest Monday their daughter, Mra.\nNorman P. Richardson of Second\nstreet. Nelson.\nA. H. Vlpond, who wu relieving\nagent for John Jewltt at the C.P.R.\ndepot, hu left for Wardner.\nMr. and Mn. S. Medvind and Mr.\nand Mra. M. Zublck of Nelson were\nguests of Mr. and Mn. P. Horlick.\nMn. B. Baker hu returned from\nNelson where she wu a patent in\nKootenay Lake General hospital.\nMiu Marguerite Irving ot Tarrys\n3 spending a week as guest of Mra.\n. W. Humphry at Summerhlll\nRanch.\nMln Helen Perepolkln of Thrums\nspent a few daya with Mn. J. Polos ky.\nMr. and Mn. F. Thompson and\nfsmily of Rosemont were guuts of\nMr. and Mn. J. L. Purdy Wednesday.\nMANY HERE FOR\nWEDDING\n52 RIDE RUNE\nATSALMO\nUrge No Open Season\nfor Pheasants and\nPrairie Chicken\nSALMO. B.C.. July 17.-Although\nthe new Airport here at Salmo is\nstill unfinished and by no means\nin perfect condition, there being\n\u2022till a few soft spots, lt wu put\nto good use Sunday and opened\nup a new page ln the history of\nthe district\nC. DePencier with hla mechanic\nand Parker WiUiams of Trail flew\nover from Columbia Gardens via\nWaneta. the trip taking them just\n20 mlnutu. They arrived at the\nSalmo airport at approximately 2:30\npjn.\nMr. DePencer flew In here last\nOctober and was also In June 24.\nWhen he drove over trom Trail to\nlook the field over carefully with\na view to flying In July 1. but weather conditions made thli impouible.\nSunday morning the weather was\ngusty and showery so no flights\nwere made but in the afternoon,\nuntil lt wu too dark to see any\nlonger, a iteady itream of people\noffered themselvu as pasaengen.\nmany miking their fint trip ln the\nair.\nAltogether 52 persona were token\nup. many being children who where\ngreatly thrilled, and the total time\nthe plane wu In the air wu just\nfive hours.\nMr. DePencer wu pleased with\nthe landing field and expects to be\ndown here again.\nHe left here at 11 a.m. Monday\nfor Trail. Grand Forki, Kelowna.\nVemon and wu lut seen travelling\nInto a bad storm in the direction of\nTraU.\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMENUS, RECIPES and\nHINTS\nMINU  HINT\nSpanish Stew\nMixed Vegetable Salad\nOrange Cream Pie Coffee\nThe acidulous fruits are always\ndelicious served in any form for dw\nsert. salad or as a tint coune In any\nmeal, no matter how simple. Thli\noringe pie is not only delicious as\ndessert, but is healthful.\nToday's Recipes\nSpanlih Stew\u2014Two pounds chuck\nor neck of beef, one-fourth cup salad\noil, three small onions, sliced: two\ntablespoons chopped parsley, one\nclove garlic, three green oeppers cut\nIn strips, six potatou, cubed: ult,\npepper, flour for thickening. Cut\nmeat in inch cubes. Put salad oil\ninto the stew kettle, and heat. Add\nonion, garlic and cook gently until\nmnt is browned on all sides. Sprinkle with ult and pepper and add\ngreen pepper. Cover with water\nand simmer gently, one hour. Add\npotato cubes and continue cooking\nslowly until meat and vegetables are\ntender. Thicken liquid with flour,\ntiling one tablespoon flour to each\ncup of liquid and blending it with\nmilk or cream, before stirring into\nthe stew.\nOnnge Cream Pie\u2014One and one-\nthird cups (one can) sweetened condensed milk, two tablupooni lemon\nJuice, one-fourth cup orenge Juice,\none cup iliced orange sections, free\nfrom membrane: baked pie shell\n(eight-Inch), two eu whltu. two\ntablespoons granulated sugar. Blend\ntogether sweetened condemed milk,\nlemon Juice, orange juice and darln*\ned orange sections. Chill. Pour Into\npie shell, which wu baked in eight\nInch pla plate. Cover with whipped\ncream or meringue. Chill before\nlerving. If meringue ii used, but\negg whites until stiff and add sugar.\nSpread on pie and bake ln moderate\noven (390 degreu F) 10 mlnutu or\nuntil brown. To prepare orange pulp\npeel oranges and remove all white\nmembrane. Remove sections, cut*\nting free from membrane. Cut each\nsection in half crosswise.\nFACTS  AND  FANCIES\nDrink Through Straw\nMilk drinking becomes a game for\nchildren when they are allowed to\nsip It through a straw. Some new\ndrinking straws are even more exciting than the usual ones or even\nthose of glau. are of a transparent\nplastic, glassy in appearance. Even\nit there are no children In the family, thue Inexpensive articles are\nnice for the next penon on the sick\nlist\nTry Thli Gsme on Your Friends\nPresent each girl at the door with\nfive parts of a picture puzzle and\ntell her that everything she uys\nmust be backwards. Any sentence\nwhich ls uld in the conventlonsl\nmanner wlll cause her to forfeit one\npart of her puzzle. Someone will be\nsure to forget ln the excitement ot\ntelling the latest news and this wlll\ngive everyone a laugh. At the end\not IS minutes the one who hai collected the moit nuzzle parts Is pro*\nclaimed the winner. The prize ls the\ncomplete puzzle.\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nEiWiiMMttotSXt&KSXittoMtri\nFRUITVALE. B.C. July 17.-Mr.\nand Mra. K. Knowler were vlslton\nto Nelson Tuesday to attend the marriage of their son Douglu to Miss\nDorothy Vyse.\nLeslie Knowler wu a guest Tuesday at the homo of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Vyie. Fairview. Nelson.\nMiss Hazel Knowler wu a guut\nTuesday at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. R. Vyse. Fairview, Nelson.\nMAKE ADDITION\nTOTHE SCHOOL\nAT CASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR, B.C., My 11-Aa-\ndrew Carlson and Carl Dahl were\nsuccessful tenderers for the building of an addition to the Public\nscnool here; and are making good\nprogreu with their contract. Local\nlabor and supplies are being used,\nthe lumber coming from Carlson's\nmill, near here.\nChina creek camp defeated Cutlegar men's softball club, 22*17\nTuesday. So efficient are some of\nthe players becoming that extension\nof the grounds in being considered\nand protection of wlndowa tn a\nnurby building provided for.\nCherriu are beginning to show\nthe effect of the continued rains\napd haymaking Is being delayed.\nReturni to Nelson\nSALMO, B.C., July 17. - Mln\nKathleen Relsterer has returned to\nher home ln Nelson after a week's\nvisit here, a guut of the Misses\nPeggy and Shirley Donaldson.\nMr. and Mra. G. G. Fair and\ndaughter, Olive, returned Thursday\nfrom a few days visit in Spokane.\nMr. and Mn. N. Harrop and son,\nCarale, were visitors here from\nNelson.\nMn. F. Johnson has returned\nfrom a visit to Spokane.\nMin Betty Benwell hu returned\nto her home ln Nelson after a few\ndays' visit hers, e guut ot her\naunt, Mrs. R. Lane.\nMr. and Mrs. W. ShleU of Nelson\nwere viaiton here Tueeday.\nMr. and Mn. R. Goodwin and\ndaughter of Regina left Tuesday\nfor their home after a couple of\nweeks' visit here, guests of Mr.\nGoodwin's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mn. F. Stevenson and\nalso ot Mr. Goodwin's father.\nMrs. E.  Sharp wu visiting ln Trail Monday.\nNelson a guut at the home of Mr.\nand Mn. R. Vyse.\nMra. A. Borrow, left Monday to\nattend the Vyse-Knowler wedding\nand was a house guut of Mr. and\nMrs. R. Vyse. Nelson.\nMn. A. Johnson, of South Dakota.\nleft Tuesday to return to her home\nthere.\nArthur Borrow and Oalr Mason\nwere visitors to Nelson Tuuday to\nattend the \u2022 Vyse-Knowler wedding.\nMrs. A. Johnson waa a visitor to \u25a0\nASK   FOR   {{ilHiyifm'\nIr TOU WANT the biggest pouible value ia the cereal\nyou buy \u2014insist on Kellogg's Corn Flakes! With\nKellogg's you get the most for your money. Many\nservings for only a few cents. The sesson's biggest\nvalue!\nKellogg's Corn Flakes ere the most popular reedy*\nto-eet cereel in the world. They're ovtiv-frtth. Because they're heat-settled in the petented waxtiti\ninner beg. And they're flttvor-prrfect. No imitation\nhu ever matched their delicious flavor.\nBe sure, when you aak for Corn Flakea, thet yen\nget Kellogg's. Made by Kellogg in London. Ontario.\n1{d\u00a3(ty\u20acJ<S CORN FLAKES\nOVEN-FRESH    FLAVOR-PERFECT\n PAOE IIX *\nEstablished AprU 92, 1801\n'Britiih Columbia'! Mott Interesting Ntwtpaper**\nALL THI NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished  every  mornlnf  except  Sunday  by\nth* NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n218   Baker  Stmt,  Ntlion,   Britiah   Columbia.\nPhone 141 Private Exchange Connecting all Department!\nMember  of  thl  Audit  Bureau   of  Circulations   ind\nThi   Cinadlan   Pren   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nTHURSDAY, JULY 18,1935\nMEDICAL VIEW OF FASTING\n\"Eating not wisely but too well is causing moat of\nour illnesses, and the same thing keeps them up.\" That\nis the viewpoint of an American doctor, who, when ht\nbroke down after 16 years of busy practice, began to think\nover the advice he had given his patients and apply it to\nhimself. He has now given the results of his study in a\nbook entitled \"A New Health Era,\" which is being widely\nread in the United States. One subject with which ht\ndeals is that of fasting, a process which he regards, in\nsome meaaure at least, as conducive to health.\nHis advice about the best way to approach a faat ia\nto miss one meal a day for a time, then, two meals; then\ndrop the third meal until food loses its imminent significance and becomes remote in thought. It appears that\nafter two or three days without food, when the fasting\nprocess ls commenced in the way suggested, there is no\nappetite at all. The person fasting then begins to speculate\non why it was ever thought important to have three meals\na day, or six meals, as some people have. The writer doea\nnot advocate fasting as a general venture, but he intimates that a period of it might well do away with many\nof the ills to which, through continuous eating, fleah is\nheir.\nIn olden days, he says, the fast waa the usual mode\nof correcting bodily ailments. Disease can come from\nstored and circulated toxins. In that case the fast is the\ncorrect way to right the wrong condition. When a person\nis in full health fasting is unnecessary. There are some\npeople who never wait until sickness develops but who\nhave a fixed period every year, or several times a year,\nwhen they engage in fasting, because after each such\nperiod there is regeneration and life is lived on a higher\nplane, materially at least. The writer believes that it is\nfolly to eat when feeling disinclined. No animal does it;\neven the hog stubbornly refuses food when really ill. It\nis man alone who thinks he is compelled to eat \"to keep\nup his strength,\" whether well or ill. Then the writer\nsays:\n\"Eating not wisely but too well, is causing most of\nour illnesses, and the same thing keeps them up. Yet it\nis so simple and easy to eat only when really hungry, and\nit is a wonder that such a mistaken habit ever could havt\ndeveloped as eating when not hungry, and especially taking 'something' when the thought of all food is repugnant\nto one.\"\nTHOSE TINTED NAILS\nQueen Mary may be old-fashioned in her ways, bnt\nshe has plenty of sound common sense, says the Boston\nPost. She has announced that ladies who paint their fin-\nger nails are not welcome at the royal residence. At the\nrecent reception a few of those who ventured to enter the\nBuckingham Palace portals with highly-decorated finger\nnails were coldly commanded to wash off the paint before\nbeing presented to the Queen. Most men will be ready to\ngive three cheers for the Queen's good sense. Of all the\nfads which women have taken up this red finger nail\nbusiness is the silliest. It is on a par with the blackened\nteeth of women of some savage tribes. There is a widely-\nheld idea that women dress to please men. Lately it has\nseemed that some feminine fashions are calculated to\nmake men sore. The red finger nailB are particularly\nobnoxious.\nANEWLISTOFNAMES\nAmong the multitude of changes that have taken\nplace in the social life of Germany, since the advent of\nNazi rule to be noted is the renaming of the months of\nthe year.\nA set of names derived from the Gothic is to be revived and aa reported by Reuter, and explained by The\nManchester Guardian Weekly, is as follows:\n\"From January to December om reads:\n\"Hartung, Hornung, Lenzlng, Ostermond, Wonnemond,\nBrachet, Hcuert, Ernting, Scheiding, Gilbhart, Nebelung,\nHartung is the hard or ice month; January was also known\nas Horn, the horn-hard month. Mornung (February) Is the\n'little horn' month, not so hard-frozen as January.\n\"Lemlng (March) is the month of Lent or ipring.\nOstermond is the Easter month. Wonnemond (May) the\n'month of delight', is said to be a misinterpretation of the\nold German Winnemanot, the month of pasturage.\n\"Brachet (June) Is an abbreviation of Brachmond, the\nmonth in which under the three-field system of husbandry\nthe fallow field was plowed up. Heuert ls similarly in\nabbreviation of Heumond. the month in which the haymaking ends. Ernting (August) ls 'harvest month';\nNcbulung (November) is the month ot mists.\n\"The old German name for December, dating from\nCharlemagne, was Heilmond, the month of the Saviour.\"\nThe discarding of the Latin names of the months\nthat have been in use for some hundreds of years, in\nGermany, in common with the other European countries,\nis just another \"removal\" that seta Germany apart.\nN-i.o;:. B.c-7:;'jr.EDAY morning, julv is. 1935-\n20 YEARS AGO\nFrom Nelson Dally Niwi Pllea\n*> \u2022*\u00bb\nJul\/ 18, 1915\nBorn, July 14, to Mr. and Mrs.\nGordon Holmes nf Procter, a son.\nI   \u2022   s\nA party of six recruits left lut\nnight for Vernon to join the Mth.\nThey were: J. J. Chamncy of Nel\nson; E. F. Pratt, Procter; E. Dean,\nRossland; S. A. McDonald. Creston;\nand Fred Ogg and George Petit,\nboth of Rossland.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nBom. July 14, to Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Bartholomew. 313 Richards\nstreet, Nelson, twin girls.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. DUl hive left\non a vacation to Vernon.\nBetween\nYou and\nBy J. a G\nTO MY PIGEON PRIIND\nI am wriUng thli for my pigeon\nfriend. \u2022 __._,.\u201e\nI forget his leg-bind initial and\nnumber, but the bird certainly\nknows his stiuff.\nHe lmded on the windowsill opposite my desk amid the heat of\nTuesday afternoon.\nThi dove left the window md\nsettled upon my typewriter.\nIt spread its wings out and settled for i quiet rest on the typewriter carriage.\nThere It remained until disturbed.\nThen came the wheat and water\nprocess and a happy, well-fed carrier pigeon, fully identified with an\nadditional message on Its leg band.\nI would like to know the significance of the- bird's visit to this\noffice.\nI have come to the conclusion it\nwas a Kimberley bird and had been\nreleased somewhere east of Nelson.\nFrom its action thit Indicated\ntiredness, I concluded lt hid flown\nprobably all day long.\nBut I really believe the bird had\nthe right idea. Like Lindbergh, it\nwaa on i long, lone flight.\nBut unlike Lindbergh ita flight\nwas not healded by the press ot the\nland.\nSo the pigeon just thought it\nwould get itself some publicity.\nSo it landed on my typewriter\nand accomplished its objective.\nSo we bid the bird farewell and\nhope It reaches Its destination safely.\nBut imagine our surprise when\nSergeant Harshaw of the pollce\nforce walked into the office carrying 1 similar bird.\nIt, too, ,was remarkably tame and\npartook of food and water. But it\ndid not fly away. It stayed for the\nnight like an Invited guest.\nSo I came to the conclusion the\nbirds were working together.\nOne knew that two birds in an\neditorial office would not create\nand more stir than one.\nSo to get its due publicity lt nn\ninto I policeman.\nYei, sir, I believe these cirrier\nbirds had the right idea.\nTheir flights, no matter where\nfrom or what the destination, have\nbeen duly recorded in the Koote-\nnay's greatest record book, the local\nnewspaper. \/\nI thank you.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRECIPE POR A\nQUIET EVENING\n If you will perform a simple\nexperiment some evening at home,\nyou will have a permanent example\nof the relation of thought to action. Take three nails, a hammer\nand a piano. Drive two nails into\nthe piano and pull one out. The\nnail you leave In the piano symbolizes and act; the one pulled out\nsymbolizes changing your mind:\nthe one not used symbolizes controlling your thoughts.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMY WIPE\n\"Have you cleaned the rooms, my\nlover?\nHave you vacuumed the settee?\nHave you swept each filthy atom\nInto dark eternity?\n\"Have you shaken out the carpet,\nDusted well each parlor chair?\nHive you mopped the floor, my\ndearest.\nAnd removed eich speckle\nthere?\"\n\"Hive you opened wide tlie windows?\nOusted dust of every type?\"\n Thit's the second   time  ihe's\nfainted\nAs I calmly lit my pipe.\n\u2014Leonard K. Schlff, In N.Y. Sun.\n...\nGAVE HIM A CHANCE\n A girl recently travelled 5000\nmiles to get married. It was sporting of her to give him such i substantial start\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nA  LONG-PELT WANT\n In Chicago's exposition of the\nNational Association of Master\nPlumbers was displayed a bathtub\nin which the bather can turn the\nfaucets on and off with his toes.\n1   10 YEARS AGO   \\\nI From Nelion Dilly Newi Files I\n* mt\nJuly 18,1926\nSurrounded on all sides by fire.\npeople are caught on Uie Summit\nlake island, ln the midst of a raging\nand uncontrolled forest blaze ln the\npass between Slocan and Arrow\nlakes. A sawmill, bam, two bunkhouses and other buildings it Hunter's Siding, 10 miles from Hall\nSiding, are burned. Hot ashes ire\nfilling over New Denver.\n.   .   *\nPearl Adelaide Robinson became\nthe bride of Arthur T. Bush at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Lambert Thursday (July 18). Rev. F.\nR. G. Dredge officiating. They have\ntaken up residence in the Kerr\napartments.\nill\nMlss Grace Miller of the B. C.\nTelephone company staff has left\non a vacaUon at the coast\n|   35 YEARS AGO   |\nFrom Nelion Dally Tribune Fills I\n\u25a0* \" **\u00bb\nJuly 18,1900\nA $44 nugget is on exhibition at\nVanstone's drug store. It was picked\nup at Atlln. with another somewhat larger, by D. K. Morrison, who\nit now prospecting about Hall Siding.\nlie\n* E. A. Crease, William Brown and\nR. H. Williams have been elected\nschool trustees for the Hume addition.\nall\nJohn Ayton Gibson is it Spokane\non a holiday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFumigation of the mails it the\nInternational boundary line, resulting in mail from United States\narriving here a day Ute, is causing\nmany complaints. It ls held there\nis no reason for It, is smallpox hu\nlong since been stamped out in\nSpokine.\nThe object of cold storage of commercial vegetables Is to prevent\nthem from drying and shrivelling\nind to stop the development of\nmoulds and rots. Most vegetables\ncm be placed in cold storage, but\ntoo much stress cannot be laid on\nthe necessity of first pre-cooling\nthem at a temperature ot 50 de*\ngrees Fahrenheit when most of the\nheat will be taken off.\nWin, Lose or Draw.\u2014Pease in the Newark Evening News.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAU letteri to the editor must be ilgned wtth the name of the\nwriter.  A nom de plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines In typewritten copy should be double spaced.\nAN ANSWER FROM GERMANY TO\nLETTERS IN NELSON DAILY NEWS\nThe Editor, Nelson Daily News:\nSir\u2014I have hid the opportunity\nto read in your valued newspaper\ncertain letters to the editor under\nthe column \"What Do You Think\",\n(C. H. Lochnart, H. Severn). In\nconnection with these permit me to\nstate that I visit, frequently, Eng*\nland on business, and nave done so\nfor the last 12 years. I therefore\nknow the feeling between the English and German people very well,\nhaving mmy good friends on both\nsides of the channel.\nBroad minded people on both\nsides have long forgotten all those\nwartime stories which have been\ncirculated as war propaganda during 1914*1918, which is over 17 years\nago. Conditions could have been\nnormal a long time ago If a sensible\nsettlement could have been made in\n1918 according to the 14 points ot\nMr. Wilson. Today, as far as England and Germany are concerned,\nboth sides feel that we should be\nfriends, as we are of the same race\nwith similar ideals. Both sides re\ngret that we fought each other, the\nfirst time in history, and feel that\nit will never happen again. The\nnaval treity just concluded between\nthe two countries in accordance to\nthe offer made by Germany's chancellor, Adolf Hitler, will certainly\nserve to that end.\nConcluding, I would like to state\nthat I have been a resident in your\nbeautiful district for a few years,\nabout 20 years ago owning a fruit\nranch it Sunshine Biy, next to\nMessrs. Appleton's rmch. I will\nnever forget those yesrs and many\nhappy memories still remain, in\nspite of the naturally difficult times\nin many respects, for a German\nsubject. Perhaps some of your readers will still remember me. To ill,\nof those thit have been kind to me\nduring that time, I would like to\nsubmit my kindest regards; hoping\nthat they ire still hippy md prosperous in your beautiful country.\nI beg to remain, dear sir,\nF. W. von BECKERATH.\nKrcfeld-Traar, Germany,\nJuly 3, 1935.\nTINY FUNGUS CAUSES FOOT ERUPTIONS\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nwhile others are very resistant to\nit, but may be killed with iodine\nor one of the dyes. For this reason\nmany remedies have been advanced, md certainly no one remedy\nis capable of curing all cases of so-\ncalled \"athlete's foot.\"\nONLY SEEN UNDER\nMICROSCOPE\nThe fungus cm only be seen under thi microscope. In about 80 to\n70 per cent of cases, if one of the\nlittle blisters is ruptured with a\nclean needle md the- fluid spread\nout on I glass slide md treated\nwith alkalis, lt can be seen as a delicate network of threads, much like\nthc lace-work of a lot of grass roots.\nThe fungus may go Into a spore\nstage, which is very long lived and\nresitint to destruction. Specimens\nmay be grown in i glass test tube\nand then the culture medium allowed to dry and the test tube wuhed\nout: Months afterward the fungus\ncm be cultivated from the sides of\nsuch \u2022 tube.\nAn experiment of this kind shows\nus how the plant can live on bathroom floors, gym floors, locker room,\nfloors, around swimming pools, on\nautomobile steering wheels, golf\nclub handles, tennii rackets, gloves,\nand shoes.\nThe fungus being very widely\npresent, It only needs a favorable\nsoil on the skin to start growing\nand to Invade the deeper layers,\nsuch a soil is prepared by the penpiratlon, which softens and macerates the upper layers ot the skin\nand also provides a good moist mea-\ndium tor the growtn of the fungus.\nThe itchy UtUe blisters that form\non the soles of the teet and in between the toes in this kind of\nweather are, in about four-fifths\nof the cues, due to the Invasion of\nthe skin with \u2022 microscopic plant\nfungus or mold.\nSimilar eruptions are called\n\"pompholyx\", but there is quite a\ndiscussion going on among dcrmat-\ntologlsts as to whether pompholyx\nis simply mother form of the fungus eruption, or whether lt can occur simply from heat and excessive\nprespintion. Other forms of bllst-\nery eruption on the hands md feet\nare due to chemicals used in various industries\u2014ire forms of ip-\nduatrial disease. Grease handlers,\ndyers, platers, bakers, polishers,\ncurrent handlers, asphalt an pitch\nworkers, are especially Uable to\nthese. Other causes are food or\ndrugs and nervousness.\nA peculiarity of the Itchy, blistery\neruption due to fungus is that it sp-\nfiears on thc smooth hairless sur-\naces. When the same fungus (or,\nat least, a close cousin to it) invades a hairy region, such as under\nthe armpit or ln the groin, there are\npo blisters but a red itchy area\nsharply limited, with very definite\nborders.\nThe little plant which causes this\ncondition has many varieties. They\nare closely related in form, but may\nshdw considerable differences between themselves u to their reaction to chemicals and drugs. Thus\nmost of the varieties may be killed\noff very quickly with an ointment\nor pute containing salicylic acid\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers''\nA MODERN DELUGE\n. THREATENS\nWhlt is the best book on contract\nbridge? Which is the best bidding\nsystem? How do experts rank? Do\ntne results of tournaments md\nstaged contests mem anything?\nUpon which elements of the game\ndo experts in general agree? Do\nteachers really have to pay tribute\nto racketeers? Is a recognized\nauthority?\nFormerly the majority of ques-\nUons were received from individuals, both teachers and players. During the past 18 months more than 40\nbridge clubs have sent In official\ninquiries for help in deciding upon\nsomething like a standard game, to\nrecommend to their members.\nBallyhoo and high pressure salesmanship are as rampant ln bridge\nu in i period of lend booms, oil\nstock promotion or automobile advertising campaign.\nNo wonder the usual stream of\nquestions has risen to flood proportions. A deluge threatens. Lacking\nNoah and his ark, sane bridge playen will find perfect safety upon\nhigher bridge ground.\nContract bridge il i genuine science, not i mere pasUme. Card distributions follow unvarying laws,\nnot chmce. Playen art competent\nto formulate rules of procedure\nonly to the extent of their familiarity with the laws governing card\nhappeinings and their ability to\nmake practical use of this laws.\nThere are essential md non-es-\nsenUal features, with known dangers to be avoided, whether designing a racing yacht a motor car\nof a bridge system of-bid. lead and\nplay. Only a highly trained specialist is competent to design any one of\nthose structures. It requires a master designer to offer an improvement. Less talented designers merely palm oft as real inventions new\ncombination! of old elements, lacking additional value.\nSales talks to prospects must\ndwell upon the supposed merits of\nnon-essential gadgets, to have something different from what every\nexpert uses in common. Our greatest experts adhere to the most efficient methods known. They avidly\nseek newly discovered facts, making practical use ot each opportunity\nto improve their game in my particular. It is a joy to know them, to\nplay with them, to learn from them\nand try to discover things which\nthey wmt to know.\nHabitual partners usually employ\nspecial minor devices to cover special holdings and situations. Without meaning to use secret conventions such ariants confuse weaker\nopponents or causual partners, until\nthe special meanings are explained\nor discovered. Such happenings are\nof minor importance, coming under\nthe heading of non-essentials. What\nthe public should know is the essentials used by experts.\nEich week there will be some\narticles upon basic facts ind experts' methods of advantageously\nemploying them, Eventually these\nspecial articles will mswer all important questions asked.\nACTIVITIES IN SOUTH CENTRAL\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\n\u2022V\nOLD GUNS, 200 YEARS AT BOTTOM\nLOUISBURG HARBOR, ARE SOUGHT\nit Old guns that have rusted at the\nbottom of Loulsburg, Nova Scotia,\nharbor for two centuries\u2014since the\ndays of Uie mighty struggle for this\n\"Dunkirk of America\"\u2014are to be\nsought this summer by Canada's\ndepartment of the interior.\nAn engineer is being sent trom\nOttawa to search for the guns, sunk\nln one or mother of. the two sanguinary seiges that centered ibout\n18th century America's greatest\nstronghold. They lie aboard the rotting hulks of old wooden wmhips\nscutUed or shot to the bottom in\nthe battles between British and\nFrench for supremacy on this continent\nLoulsburg. in the days before the\nguns were silenced forever, was the\ntreat French center of the New\ntarld. Built around 1720 at a cost\nof (10,000,000, it was so strongly\nfortified is to be considered impregnable. And as the yean went by the\ntown grew in splendor through\nFrench gold wrenched from peasants and poured into its coffen.\nBut at tne height of its prosperity\nit wu to fall. Angered at the privateering of the French sailors who\nmade Louisburg their rendezvous.\n4000 New Englanders beseiged it\nin 1845. After heavy toll of life,\nthe French garrison finally capitulated.\nBritain rebuilt the fortress on an\neven grander scale, and then handed\nIt back to Frmce by the treaty of\nAlx-La-Chapelle ln 1848 in exchange\nfor Madras, in India. Ten years\nlater, realizing her mistake, Britain launched mother seine\u2014 a combined naval and military attack.\nFew stories in Canada's seaboard\nhistory held more of the quality of\nheroism than the account of how\nthese British soldien landed from\ntheir ships in the face of a withering fire from cannon and musket.\nBoiling surf overturned and smashed boats; men drowned or fell before the gunfire. Yet, somehow, a\nfew reached shore and got a footing.\nTheir charge, behind gallant General Wolfe, drove Uie French and\ntheir Indian allies Into the fort.\nSoon Louisburg had fallen again.\nAnd this time she was to rise no\nmore. For six months, explosive and\npick and spade battered at her fortifications. They were levelled finally, though the labor of 1000 men\nand the pillage of two centuries\ncould not completely erase their\noutlines.\nToday, the foundations of many\nof Louisburg's prominent buildings\nare being unearthed from the rubble covering them. The bases of\nthe old fortifications are appearing,\ntoo, and they are being restored ln\nthe hope of developing the old town\ninto a national park.\nAUNT HET      |\nBv ROBERT GUILLEN\n\"I h-.j flies in the house the\nsame as Pa does, but when It's\nhis bald spot they're torment-\nIn', he cm do the swattin'.\"\nThe Field museum hu the only\nhuman skeleton of the Old Stone\nAge now exhibited in an American\ninstitution; bones of a girl who lived\nin France 20,000 years ago.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nTOO LITTLE OR TOO BIG?\nHe wu just i dirty litUe street\nurchin, bedraggled, grimy and ill-\nkept. When we saw him the other\nday he waa selling newspapen on\na downtown Colorado Springs business corner.\nThere are lots of dirty UtUe itreet\nurchins\u2014In Colorado Sprlngi md\nelsewhere. One sees them every\nday\u2014sees them md feels sorry for\nthem. But we noticed this young\nchap in particular\u2014noticed him and\nfelt sorry to a degree more than\nnormal\u2014for there wu something\nabout hlm that particularly attracted our attention. It wu the fact that\nhe was wearing a regulation O. D.\narmy blouse.\n\u2014Yes. a soldier's blouse was hanging about the upper part of his\nbody. It struck him half way to the\nknees. Only his fingen protruded\nfrom the lengthy sleeves. The blouse\nflapped in the *cold breezes\u2014flapped\nU though it were on a scarecrow in\nsome farmer's com field.It wu too\nmuch too big for the UtUe newsie.\nHe was lost ln it.\nWe looked at the hoy. We wondered. We became lorry ill over\nagain. Hard times these that force\nAmerican youngsten md American\ngrownups, too. to weir cut-ott\nclothing too large for them-or too\nsmall: or too ragged. Not enough to\nwear in a lmd that produces too\nmuch. No wqnder we were sorry.\nThe youth was a pitiful figure.\nAnd we thought ot the lad. of the\nblouse that was too big md of war\n\u2014for the blouse wu \u2022 garment of\nwar. It wu not difficult to think\nof war. Weren't the very pipen\nthit this lad of 14 or 15 yean was\ncarrying\u2014weren't they telling of\nwar clouds hovering over Europe?\nYes\u2014or war and of threats of war.\nDictators, leaden, politicians, common citizens\u2014most everyone talked\not the posslblllUei ot war. Mmy\nfeared the race ot armaments would\nend in conflict\u2014maybe not now.\nperhaps not within the next two\nor three yean; but in the not far\ndistmt future.\nWar looms. Thit seems certain. By\nthis time we hid passed by the\nnewsboy with the army blouse that\nwas too big. But we thought of him\nagain. Two or three or four or five\nyean from now\u2014would he by that\ntime have grown into the garment?\nA few yean and it would fit him?\nNo, we couldn't figure in that way.\nAnother thought came. The blouse\nisn't too big for American vouth\u2014\nwhether their ages be 15.16.20 or 25.\nThe garment of war is too little for\nthe boys of this naUon and every\nother. The youth of today have\noutgrown war blouses. They\nare the ones who are too big\u2014too\nbig tor the tunics of wir; too big\nfor war itself.\nTwenty yean ago there were war\nclouds in Europe. And war came\u2014\nthe most devastating conflict in all\nhistory. America entered that war\nto make the world safe for Democracy. That war failed, u aU wan\nfail. With the clouda of war again\nhovering over the European horizon\n\u2014it behooves America, Europe and\nall nationa to shun armed conflict\nthat the world miy be made safe\nthis lime for Democracy's most ore-\nclous possession: Youth\u2014youth thit\nIs too big for wir. \u2014 Colorado\nSprings Farm News, Colorado\nSprings, Colo.\n\u00aby L. K. ARMSTRONG\nA summiry preiented to Wash-\n' fnjton Nitionil Resources\nAuoclitlon, apokini\nAnyone doubting statements made\nu to prosperity reflected by mining\noperation should visit the Kootenays of British Columbia where\nWest Kootenay Power Is Light\ncompany ls kept busy running new\npower lines and connecting mines\nand mills with lines ilreidy ln service. Quoting from an Inspired statement \"The four hydro-electric\nplants of the West Kooteniy Power\ntt Light Co. on Kootenay river\nhave been in continuous operaUon.\"\nAt a recent meeting ot thc Eastern\nBritish Columbia Boards of Trade\nheld In Nelson, .he 35th annual, a\ntwo-day session Indicated unusual\nactivity. The following Information\nwas obtained through personal contact, through the press and by hearsay, much of which was checked\nand proved ln most cases to be accurate.\nReveraing the order of the flow-\naheet. Secretary' J. R. Hunter reported as follows regarding value of\n1934 production of the Consolidated\nMining tt Smelting Co. metallurgical plants at Trail ind Tadanac;\nLead    315348,312 pounds\nZinc  221,\u00bbM,701     \"\nCopper     1,5\u00ab7,078     \"\nCadmium        Wll     \"\nBismuth          248,092      \"\nSilver       7,316,231 ounces\nGold            -8,JJ8     \"\nThis representing a substantial Increue over 1933 Doth in quantity\nand value. The fertilizer plant at\nWarfield wu working at capacity\nand metallic sulphur was exhibited\nas I new product.\nIt will be interesting to know that\na large proportion of the metals\nand raw phosphate passing through\nthe several metallurgical plants originates ln the United States, Republic for the most part supplying gold\nand Montana u point of origin of\nthe phosphate rock, much of the\nlatter after being processed returns\nto adjacent American farmsteads;\nthe advantages moat outstanding\nbeing a more vigorous crop with an\nearlier starting, resulting in reduced weed growth and about a week\nto 10 days earlier ripening grain,\ndecreuing dangere from the early\nfrosts.\nIt Is Interesting ind gratifying\nto nota the accelerating pace at\nthl minis ind mllli of the 8heep\nCreek, Silmo ind Ymir districts.\nIt Is innounced  by the Nelson\nNews  thit  thi   Spokine   Idiho\nCopper it Apex, Perrler, Granite-\nPoormin, Koetenay-Nevada, California, Humming Bird, Athabasca, Venui-Juno, Gold Pirn around\nNelson  an  undir  operation  or\npreparing to resume.\nMore   advanced   operations   are\nnoted: Those most prominent being\nthe Ymir-Yankee Oirl with H. W.\nSeaman, EM. in charge has a 100-\nton mill operating at full capacity,\nYmlr Consolidated Gold Mines is\ndeveloping both  the TJoodenough\nand Ymlr groups with a 125-ton mill\nunder construction, O. D. Frith. E.\nM. being in full charge. The Two\nStar adjacent to  Yankee Girl ls\nbeing developed. D. H. Norcross is\noperating a 10-ton stamp mill, Wesko Exploration ts Development Co.\nwith Arthur Lakes, E.M.. ts driving\na tunnel at Center Star: Jubilee\nMountain Durango Gold Mines Ltd.\nis under charge of O. C. Thome-son,\nE.M., Ymir-Dundee with Bert Sharp.\nEM., as the operating head; Alfred\nMcMillan well known in the Kootenays, especially at Roulmd. now\nresiding ln Calgiry. Is at the Blackcock preparing that  property for\nearly production. F. O. Orr Is at\nthe Tamarack  miking ready tor\nproduction.\nThe prominent property In the\nSheep Creek district Is the Reno,\nemploying ibout 100 men, operating a 100-ton mill and making a\ngratifying monthly production under the penonal supervision of W.\nR. Lindsay, recently with the Granby compmy. The Reno Is the best\ndeveloped mine In the Sheeo Creek\ndistrict having reached a depth of\n1500 feet Kootenay Belle Gold\nMines organized by F. M. Black, is\nrmerating under direction of J. P.\nMcFadden, well known ln the Slocan country where he hu operated\nthe Bosun. Th\u00bb new Hadsell mill,\nthe tint in the district Is doing\nsatisfactory work, the concentrates\nbeing shipped to Trail smelter.\nAfter several yeara of reseirch by\nthe Hardinge company the bulc\nprinciples of this mill have been\nbrought Into service resulting in a\nmost satisfactory record for reduction md recovery. It would be,well\nworth-while for anyone Interested\nIn the subject to inspect this mill\nwhen ia the vicinity. Harold Lakes,\nIn chirge of the Gold Belt Mines,\nLtd.. is completing arrangements\nfor an exiensfve development campaign. We now find an old friend\nIn the person of H. E. Doelle, whose\nactivities have extended from coait\nto coast, now ln charge of the Sheep\nCreek Gold Mines, operating the\nQueen and YeUowstone groups\nwhere a 150-ton mill is warming\nup with a large ore reserve. S. M.\nManning, engineer in charge of the\nRelief-Arlington Mines. Ltd. ia reported to have decided to increase\nthe capacity of the Second Relief\nmill to 100 tons daily.\nThe Clublne - Comstock Gold\nMines, Ltd., Salmo Malartic Mines\nand several other properties not\nhere mentioned are reported In condition to start or increue produc\nThe hardest resin known Is made\nfrom amber.\ntion. It waa noted as passing through\nthese districts south of Nelion thit\ndead towns and camps but a ihort\ntime since, are preient hives of gold\nproduction, the payrolls at top notch\nin numbers and per diem pay.\nTo anyone who desires more specific information u to the geology\nof these and adjacent camps will\nfind it ln the publications of th*\nCanadian Geological Survey, Memoirs 172. 173, 161, 148. 118, M. 76.\n77. 87, 69, 38. 53. 19, 20E, 21, 26, 2.\n171. 74, 79. 68. 59. 88. or the annual\nreports of the minister of mlnei of\nBritish Columbia.\nIt should be added that Rossland\ncimp, for some yeara put almost\ninoperative, is now quite like Itl\nold self indicated by the steady production from both old and new\nmines with diminishing stock piles\nand dumps. At the receiving ends.\nTrail, Tadanac and Warfield operations continue on an even wiy with\nnow and again a new product on\nthe list As i postgraduate college\nthis Is an excellent point to continue\nsubjects of research under the\nwatchful eyes of half a hundred\nspecialized scientists.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nTHE PUBLIC FRIEND\nWe have heard much of late about\nthe Public Enemies. The United\nStates government is pursuing certain conspicuous characten whom\nit declares to be Public Enemies,\nand It haa disposed of several conspicuous figures in that dais. There\nIs a whole army of Public Enemies\nwith whom the country hu to contend, and many ot them have never\nseen the inside of any prison.\nMeanwhile we should recognize\nthat we also have a great many\npublic Friends, as well u Public\nEnemies, and warm tributes should\nbe paid them, and people should\nbe encouraged to qualify for this\nclass. What are the characteristics\nof the Public Friend?\nThe Public Friend believes ho\nmust take some share of the labors\nof carrying on community work in\nhis home town. If he is asked to take\nsome office in some good community organization, he does not say,\n\"0, no, I could not pouibly do anything like that.\" You find him taking up tasks thit ire more or less\ndistasteful. You wlll probibly see\nhim at your door some night, offering you an opportunity to give\nmoney to some good home town\ncause.\nThe Public Friend is interested In\neverything that promises progress for\nhis home town. He attends meeting,\nand gatherings considered to discuss local problems. He offers su(-\ni gestions when he cin see things that\nshould be done.\nj    The Public Friend mikei his pur-\n| chues at home whenever he can,\n: which ls practically always.\ni   The Public Friend always speaks\ngood words for his home town. He\ndoes not think it smart or funny to\ntake a superior tttitude md point\nout its defects, but he always speaks\nof Its kindly and friendly spirit,\nand  the   public   Institutions   built\nup over yean ot labor. We hive\nminy of these Public Friends in\nRoyil Oik.\u2014Tribune, Royil Oik,\nMichlgm.\nFOR PANELS\nKooteniy Cottonwood\nii unexcelled in the\nbeauty of iti grain\nas it is unexcelled In\nutility md economy.\nRepeat ordera prove\nlti popularity.\nDlitrlct Distributors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nHRMKftlsa*?*?^^\n\"Build B.C. Payroll.\"\nLovely\nFresh\nCreomy\n\"Pacific Milk is so lovely,\nfresh, rich snd creamy.\nIt's all the time like this.\nIt makes the nicest soups,\ncakes and biscuits.\"\nThese words are from a\nletter received from Mrs.\nW.\nPacific Milk\nHAYMOWERS\nand\nRAKES\nNow ii the time te purchue a new mower or\nrake for your hay making. Wa hava them in itock.\nMower Repain for Mott of the\nPopular Makes of Machines\nQUICK SERVICE!\nNelson Hardware Go.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardwara\n___\t\n \u2014\nTHI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.C.-THUR8DAY MORNING..JULY 11. 1935-\n\u25a0PAQI SEVEN\nIbiiu Satly .Nphib\ntoiber ot the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Auociation\nTELEPHONE 144\nIvate Exchange connectlnj to\nall Department!\nSubscription Rates\nBile copy _ I   .OS\nr carrier, per week     21\nI carrier, per yaar _ - 18.00\nBy mail ln Canada, to sub-\ntiberi living outside regular\nrrier areu. per month, (Oc;\nree monthi, $1.80; ilx months,\n.00; one year, $6.00.\nUhlted States and Greet Brl-\nln, one month, 75c; six months,\n.00. one year, 17.50. '\nForeign countries, other than\n, S., same u above plus iny\nAra postage.\nou heve room for roomers In\niur home\u2014and room for their\nBt ln your pocket\u2014remember\ntt* la room for your Ad in the\nlooms for Rent\" column.\nPERSONAL\nUP TO ISO EACH PAID FOR U. S.\nIndian head cents. We buy all\ndates, regardless ot condition. Up\nto 11.00 each paid for Lincoln\nHead oents. Up to $151) eaoh tor\nCanadian coins. We buy Stamp\nCollections, Medals, Books, Old\nPaper Money, Gold, etc. Send 25c\n(coin) for large illustrated pries\nUlt and instructions. Satisfaction\nguaranteed or 25c refunded. Hub\nCoin Shop, 159-3 Front Street.\nSarnia, Ont. 12372)\nHIGHEST  QUALITY  RUBBER\n8pods. 25 Latex assortment for $1.\nirder direct and be sura of best.\nPacked plain. Free catalogue. National Mporters, 218-6th, St. West,\n'   ry, Alta. (?478)\nsi\n__ 11 WORN OUT? NO VITALITY?\nRegait) youthful vigor with \"Men-\nnl', harmless gland restorative, $2\nbox. T. Iterr, Box 353, Vancouver.\n(1171)\nEXPERT rilUHttiHttft. Fife RE*\npaired. 511 Carbonate St Ph. 8531..\n(2377)\nEcsema Itch Piles Ulcers Try Geo Lee\nChina Remedy at Hudson s Bay Co.\n(MOD\n!\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0<\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb par.ee \u00bb \u00bb\u00bb*#\u25a0>*\u00bb<.\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbt \u25a0***\u00bb*\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0*\u00bb \u25a0\u00ab>\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\n%_y *\u00abmWm\u2122tyf\u2122\u2122\u2122XiW I\n...r--r****m*<*l*a*.**.**m--~xtlt\u00bbMim-t.\nCHAPTER 60\nll thoughts in a turmoil after\nI had told him he had taken Sue\n, unitarium, Val approached the\nInet above the duk and, opening\ndth preoccupied flnlers, reached\na bottle and poured himself a\nUt of whiskey. When he uw\nI there wu no seltzer in its\nal place on the shelf, he started\nbmaticelly out through the hall-\nr toward the kitchen. He had\n_ reached the entrance to the liv-\nroom when he was stertled\nn his abstraction by the sound\na tinkling Jingle. He Itopped\nuptly, then glanced into the\nm through the partially opened\nn'conscious of hli presence. Lia\nitretched on the utln divan\nring with the Persian kitten. Her\n(t-snaped mouth wai curved in\necretive little amlle; her dark\nI were soft and lsngorous with\na hidden emotion; and as sbe\ni waved Iran'i favorite toy\u2014\nloony whip with a white plume\nII tip\u2014each graceful movement\nir arms sent the Venetian brace*\nInto little gibben ot brittle\nking.\n\u25a011 black brows drew Into a\night line, an amazed anger shook\nrFor bulde the irritating glau\nWta, he saw that she wu wear*\ne Chineie robe of crimson satin\nthat her hair was dressed ln the\nIon he detested. As she lay there\npletey relaxed, wrapped in\nacarlet robe and with that In-\ntable half-smile on her face, she\n;ed like some low Chinese wo-\n_, he thought furiously! He\nng suddenly on his heel and\n[ht unctuary ln hii study once\ne.\nhat wu the answer to all this?\nIf he didn't know! He wu agi-\nt by anger and disgust u, still\nping the glass, he moved rest-\ny about the room. Why not look\nthis itraight in the eye? There\nle lake Lia had only been play-\ngnother part. When lhe had deft that matten were beyond her\ntrol, she had limply given in,\nthe time being, and floated with\ntide. She had even wheedled\nInto a renewed faith in hen\u2014\nbelieving they might make a\nk start\u2014that their Ufe together\nlit be possible\u2014\nIt moment she had returned,\ntver, she bad reverted to the\nthings she knew he hated. The\nroom, the Penian cat, her in*\nnpe, that cuned Chinese outfit!\nwith a sense of outrage he\n___ the glass that he held and\n: a swallow of the fiery liquor,\nlout water the whisky bit into\nhroat. After an Instant he lower-\nda hand to itare at the partially\nd tumbler.\nnew thought itruck him with\nilling force. Why blame Lia for\nlapse, when, without thinking,\nlad gone back so easily to his\nweaknew? For lt wu a weak*\n. He had never been one with\nwhole-hearted bravura to go out\nget rip-roaringly drunk for\niwn uke. You could respect a\nwho did that. But In hla own\nhla appetite for liquor had been\n'. a means to evade whatever\nleaaant thing faced him. He was\nOne of those wretched spineless\nKi who couldn't uy \"No!\" He\ned grimly ss he recalled his\nplacent satisfaction thue put\nat what he had chosen to con*\n1 a victory over himself. Vic-\nbe hanged! He had proved no*\nI by doing without something\nWasn't available in any cue.\nthe pruent moment every\nre Inch of his body demsndrd\nlollc stlmulstlon. The smoky\nof the Scotch sent an excited\nto assail him. Now. it ever.\nthe time for a show-down. His\n~ bonu Whitened. Then with a\nlute movement he emptied the\nI Into the fireplace. In three\nthe, wy\u2014when he had utisfied\npelf that he could really take It\naave it alone\u2014he'd pour him*\na drink.\nte room had become unbearable\nhe knew he must go out In the\nI and walk. He snatched up his\npassed through the hsllwsy,\nentered the kitchen where a\ntied Opal gazed at him with\n1 eyu.\nd\u2014didn't know you were home,\nPreston,\" she stammered. \"How\nyou b\u2014been here?\"\n\u00ab threw a napkin over the tea-\nahe had lust carried from the\nBroom. Her agitated manner\nt Val's attention. There had\n1 two cups on the tray! A sud*\neuipiclon crystallized into be*\nThe maid's furtive action told\n\u25a0plainer than words that it wai\nLie's father who had spent tha\nrnoon here.\nwhile ago. when he had gltmps-\nUa wife's satisfied imile, had\n^zed the sensuous pleasure ln her\nIng eyes and had seen the eos-\n\u25a0 she was wearing, he should\n1 known who Lia's visitor hsd\nL Plutlc as clay, she hsd slip-\nDeck into this Chlnue pose to\nN the one who had created it\nIray had taken charge once\net\nlg mind In a ferment of anger\ndisgust, Vsl strode from the\nbungalow and struck out toward the\nroad that circled the golf course.\nAnd so Cordray had been there in\nhis house this afternoon. But why\nget excited? Take time to think, and\nhe'd have to admit he didn't rnlly\ncare. Certain it wu he had wanted\nto the right thing by Lia. For her\nuke he had tried to make a success\nof their marriage, had concentrated\non the Invention, had desired to\nmake something worth while of his\ncareer. But none of these things hsd\nmeant anything to her. The flnt\nfellow who had come along to flat-\ntar and divert her, counted for more\nthan he did. She didn't love him.\nnor he her. And so if Cordray wu\nwhst Lia wanted, well, then, she\ncould have him!\nCertainly he was through with a\nwoman who had sold htm out. For\nthat, undoubtedly, was what ahe\nhsd done. There at the lake, on that\nday when she had lost control of\nher temper, she had disclosed her\nplan to divorce him. At that time\nhe had not recognized the full Import 6f the threat; but now he knew\nthat she would not hsve uttered hsd\nshe not had a definite plain and\nsome other man ln the offing. He\nsmiled wryly to recall how she had\nemployed every weapon at her command to penuade him to tell hli Invention to Cordray. He even wondered if he had been 10 insane on a\ncertain unforgettable day when he\nsuspected that only Lla'i terror of\nbeing alone in that isolated spot\nhad uved him from a ghastly fate.\nFrom the beginning, he thought\nbitterly, he had been merely a way\nof escape for her. And now that a\npleuanter path seemed to present\nItself, she wu welcome to take it.\nHe wouldn't Interfere. He didn't\ncare any more. He wu through!\n(Ts Be Continued)\nSLOCAN GOLFERS\nPLAY AT KASLO\nKASLA, B.C., July 17-Sundsy\nwu a gala day at the Kulo Oolf\nand Country club when about 20\ngolfen from New Denver. Silverton\nand Roieberry were guuts of the\nKaslo club. Friendly matchu wera\narranged and thoroughly enjoyed\nby all. During the afternoon tea\nwas served, the hostesses being Miss\nGladys Underwood and Miss Ellse\nCody auisted by Mn. 3. Strachan\nand Miu Katharine Gillis. Memben of the party were: Dr. and\nMn. A. Francis. Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nBrouithton. Mrs. Ellen Butchart,\nNeil Tattrie. Misa Helen Williamson.\nMr. and Mrs. Alex D. Trickett.\nRobert Butchart. Miss Adeline B.\nClever. J. E. Kennett E. Tingle.\nA. Coombs, and Mr. Samuelson of\nNew Denver. Mr. and Mrs. J. Tier\nand Mlu Evelyn Tier and G. Wood-\nrow ot Roseberry, Mr. Lelbscher and\nJohn Lelbscher of Sllverton snd\nMr. Francis of Victoris. who is\nvisiting his son Dr. Francis of New\nDenver. A return visit by memben\nof the Kaalo club was arranged for\nAuguit 28.\nE. H. Latham had word Monday\nthat hia brother-ln-law. E. N. Hopklnt of Moose Jaw, died suddenly\non Sunday. Mr. Hopkini wu a former member ot the federal house\nof commons, representing Moose\nJsw. He had been ln declining health\nfor some time.\nMr. and Mn. D. Wetmore and\nsons, Douglas and Michael, of Trail\narrived in the city Sunday to spend\na few week's holidays.\nJ. O. Patenaude. Dr. Prentiss and\nparty of friends from Nelson spent\nSunday in town.\nGeorge Williamson of New Denver\nwaa a visitor ln the city Sunday.\nW. M. Cunllffe and John Fraser\nof Nelion were Sunday visitors In\ntown and played a round of golt.\nDr. F. W. Green 6f Crtnbrook arrived at Mirror Lake Sunday to\nspend t vacation at hli summer\nhome.\nArt Smith. Bob Smith and Mr.\nPrice and ion of Nelson ipent Sunday In town fishing.\nMlss Nell Moodle of Kelowna li\n1 guest of her aunts. Mn. John\nKeen and Mlss Mildred Twlss.\nMn. W. F. Marleau of Kimberley\nsrrlved In the city Sunday snd for\nthe next few weeks will be a guest\nof her parents. Mr, and Mrs. E.\nH. Latham of the King George hotel,\nMr. and Mrs. W. L. Billings, thsir\ndsughter. Mrs. J. R. Tlnkeu snd\nhsr son. Jlmmie. relumed Sundsv\nfrom a two weeks' holiday spent on\na tour of the Psclfic coast and a\nvisit to the San Diego exposition.\nOLDEST  MILKMAID\nThe oldut known milkmaid In ths\nUnited SUtes is Mn. Anna Hokan-\nson, 104. Mn. Hoksnson keeps in\ntrim by doing the milking on a farm\nnear Puyallup. Wash. Asked the secret of her long lite and activity she\nnys healthful outdoor life, moderation In eating, and plenty of rest,\nare her recipes tor longevity.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMINERAL ACT\n, (Form F)\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICE\nEngland Frac, Ireland Frac,\nScotland Frac, mineral claims, situate in thc Nelson mining division\nof Kootenay District.\nLocated on Jubilee Mountain.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. H.\nGreen, acting as agent for Wesko\nExploration and Development Co.,\nLtd!, N.P.L., Free Miner's Certificate No. 4701-E, intend, sixty dayi\nfrom the date hereof, to apply to\nthe Mining Recorder for Certificates\nof Improvements for the purpose of\nobtaining Crown Grants of the above\nclaims.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85, must be commenced before the issusnee of such\nCertificates of Improvements.\nDated this 30th day of May, A.D.\n1935.\nA. H. GREEN.\n(1840)\nHELP WANTED\nYOUNG MAN WITH CAR AND\nsmall cash security u salesman for\nAuto Supply Co. Call on garages,\netc, no canvassing. Commission.\n'   Box 2601 Dally {Jews. (2601)\n-M>l\u00bbi?i\nWANTED\nWILL PAY THREE CENTS FOR\ndripping and one, one half cents\nfor fat, per pound. Trail Chemical\ncompany, Trail, B. C. (2597)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS. ETC.\n5 ROOM  HOUSE. APPLY P. O.\nBox I'M or 707 Victoria Street.\n(2541)\nTHREE ROOM HOUSE WITH GAR*\nden. Phone D. Maglio. 808L. (-2591\nFURN. OR UNFURN. APTS. BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts, bldi\n(2403)\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nFrigidaire equipped suites. (2405)\nF U R . IS H B D .HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms. Apply 918 Kootenay Street\n(2539)\nFURNiSEb    HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms tor rent Annable Block.\n(2404)\nFURNISHED  SUITE. APPLY 507\nSilica or Phone 440X (2310)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nCLEAN COMFORTABLE HOTEL.\nFurnished cottagu on beach.\nReal camping. Fiihing and awlmmlng. etc. Write to Outlet hotel\nW. A. Ward, Procter, B, C. (2392)\nALPINE INN. CHRISTINA LAKE,\nvia Cascade. Ideal holiday retort.\nBeautiful surroundings. Sports.\n(MM)\nBALFOUR BEACH FOR HOU'\ndays. Modern furn. cottages. Boats.\nO. H. Green. Balfour, B. C. (2499)\nYOUR HOLIDAY IS C(.MiiL!._'-l\nonly when you have your Nelson\nDaily News coming to you at\nyour vacation home. Order it today trom your carrier, postmaster or direct\t\nPhone\nJean Robertson\n144\nFor the NELSON DAILY\nNEWS CLASSIFIED\nSERVICE\nFOR SALE\nWE HAVE EVERYTHING AND\neverything in the small rubber\nlinea Order by mail direct trom\nmanufacturer and uve 76%. All\nordera are mailed postpaid by us\nin plain wrapper. Mail order catalogue sent free on request. Novelty Rubber Mfg. Company, Box\n353, Dept K.5, HamUton, Ontario.\n(2400)\nNEW HIND GEAR FOR MASSEY*\nHarrla freight wagon. Steel arms\nand tires, axle reinforced with\nsteel. Burns Coal 4 Cartage Com-\nnj, NelsonrPhone 33.      (2599)\npany, Nelspn,\nSTORE WITH i\nSTORE WITH LIVING QUARTER*\nend garage\u2014two lots adjoining\ncity tourist park\u2014Seven hundred\ndoilan\u2014half cash\u2014Phone 662.\n(2654)\nWe carry largut stock reconditioned\nPipe and fittings suitable for all\npurposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yard\nJM-lst E Vancouver, B.C, (2492)\nFOR SALE-BA_RRELS KEGS, SU\nlar sacks liners. McDonald Jam\nCo.. Ltd., Nelpon, B.C.       (2491)\nSNAPPY DRUM OUTFIT dS-SP\nPh. 388R or Box 2546 Dally News.\n(2546)\n6 TUBE FADA TABLE RADIO AND\nfloor lynp. Phone 12, .(2550)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nYOUNG JERSEY COW FOR SALI.\nGood milker. TB tuted. Fh. 592R1.\n(2581)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nMODERN 7 ROOM HOUSE, FURN*\nace, fireplace, stone foundation.\nacre of land, fruit trees, garage,\noutbuildings, apply Mrs. Sinclair\nStanleySt (252J)\ndey I\nfOR CfOittC SALt 8 ROOM\nhouae, 10 lots ln Iswns and garden\n$1800. Cash $1200 balance on terms.\nCraufurd, Nelson Iron Works.\n(2559)\nPOULTRY AND EGGS\nPULLETS!   PULLETS!!\nLeghorn  Pulleta  for  delivery  in\nJune and July.\n8 weeki old    \u00ab5c\n10 weeka old   75o\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nMilner, B. C.\n(2684)\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelaon Dally Newi endeav\non to print only truthful claui-\nfled advertising and will appreciate having its attention called\nto any advertising not conforming to tha highest standards of\nhonesty.\nFOR YOUR HOLIDAY?\nRent Your Home for the\nSummer Months\nthrough\nan Advertisement on\nthe Nelson Daily News\nClassified Page\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nFor Service Phone lean Robertson at\n144\nOut of Town  Readers\u2014Prompt Attention Civen\nto Mall Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nUSED MORE    Largest In the Interior    READ MORE\nFILMS DEV_Xp?EI_--A*JY' StZfc,\n25c. With 1 print from each negative. Extra jjrlnts 8 tor 25c. Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon. (2J74)\nNSLSON  DAILT  NIWS CUMITIID\nThe   leadlni\ndl.Krlet.\nada    The   leading   laleamen   and\nbuyeri tor Nslson and aurroundlna\nREAD THI CLASSIFIED ADS.\nAdvertlsen who desire may\nhave replies addressed ts a oot\nat the Nelion Daily Newi and\nforwarded daily to their address. A charge of 10 cents li\nmade for this service. In this\ncase add tour words (Box \u2014\nDally News) to the count for\nthe number of words.\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAgeowntiftte\nCHAS. F. HUNTER $.TJsX.\ninternational Accountant\nP.O. Box 1091     Nelson. B.C.\n(2406)\nArteye-n\na w. w.bD6wsoN, provincial\nAnalyst Assayer, Chemist. Chemical ana Metallurgical Engineer:\nampling A ents at Trail and Ta\ncoma Smelters. 301-305 Josephine\n. Nelwn, B. C. (2407)\n___Mlle H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker Street, NeUon. B. C.  P. O.\nBox No. 716. Representing Ship-\nperi' interest st Trail. B.C. (2408)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d.c. palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelson.\n(2514)\nE.  M.  WARREN  D.C.  BOX 872,\nOUker Block. Phone 115 or 755L.\n(2514)\nFUEL\nLOST AND FOUND\nHtctrieal\nA-J-AX\nStandard Lump\nCOAL\n$9.50 per Ton\nWilliams Transfer\nPhone 106\n(2602)\nMOTORCYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nGOOD USED BUYS\n1 Ind. Scout. 1930, complete overhaul, new battery and chains $200\n1 Ind. Scout, complete overhaul $100\n1 Ind. Ch'ef. complete overhaul $200\n1 Ind. Chief, complete overhaul $225\n1 H.D. 2 new tires and battery $125\n1 H.D.. complete overhaul $150\n1 B.S.A.. 1932 Big Twin, complete\noverhaul   $250\n1 A.J.S., 1931. complete overhaul $150\nPALMER RUTLEDGE\nWrite for further details\nTrail B.C.\n(2000)\nClaaS Ada get reaulta.-\nTo Finders\nIf ynu find a cat or dog a pocketbook, Jewelry or fur or anything else of value telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\"\nAd will be inserted without\ncost to you. Wo will collect\nfrom the owner.\nJ. F. COATES-The Electric Store.\nSupplies ahd Installations\nPhone 766 P. O. Box 1065\n(2409)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nLOST - LAt-Y'S WHITE GOLD\nwrist watch without bracelet. Valued as keepsake. Please leave at\nDally Newi. Reward. (2578)\nA. H. GREEN CO., LTD. 516 WARD\nSt. Phone W. Nelson, B.C. (2410)\nH. D. DAWSON.       Nelson. B. t'.\nMine Surveys and Rsports\nB. C. Land Surveyor.\n(2411)\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR\nList of wanted Inventions and full\ninformation sent tree. Tba Ramsay\nCompany, World Patent Attorneys. 273 Bank St Ottawa, Canada\n(2373)\nBoyd C. Affleck, Fruitvale, B. C\nLands, Mineral Clalma, Waterworks, surveys, plans, estimates.\n\u00abjUJ)\nFARM  LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms tn Alberta and Saskatchewan. Write tor full Information to 908-Dept. of Natural Resources, C.P.H., Calgary, Alberta.\n  (2373)\nt. L. WAhBUhWi C6MfANV\nNEUON. B.C.\nMine Surveys. Plena end Estimates.\nAgents: Oils, Greases. Specialties. Bituminous coals from Crow's\nNest Pan. Mine supplies and machinery. Ph. 239. P. O. Box 688.\n(;379)\nFlorists\nAVIATION\nAVIATION\nDo you want to get started ln aviation? We will help you. Write for information. Canadian Aviation Club.\nKitchener. OnUrlo. (2568)\nSprays, wreaths, symbolic designs.\ncarefully made at reasonable prices.\nShipped anywhere. Cut flowers and\nSlanta\u2014Phone 238\nN FLOWER SHOPPE\n [\u25a0 (2418)\nFurs\nGUARANTEED    STORAGE-EX-\nPIANO TUNING\npert remodelling and repairing*.\nlow rates; prompt service. Polar\n548 Granville, Vanc'r\nlow rates;\nFurs Ltd.,\nTune, Clean, Demoth, Repair, special. Vancouver Tuner, Est. 25 yrs.\nWrite E.C. Woodrow, Thrums, B.C.\n(2549)\n(2498)\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD\nTHI BUYER AND SELLER\nOF THI  KOOTENAYS\nInsurance and Reel Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal eitate. Insurance, rentals.\n_217 Baker St.        C.10\nR. W. DAWSCN, Real Esta'e. Insursnce. Rentals Next Hlpperso-i\nHardware. Baker Stree.      (24171\nC. D. BLACKWcjSD. Insurance of\nevery draiptlon. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(2418)\nH. E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Eitate. 508 Ward. St.\n(2419)\nJ. E.* ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE,\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block,\n(24201\nLIfe. fire, Atrt'OMi.Ritll tNSiift-\nance. P. E. Poulln, Ph. 70. (2421)\nCHAS P. McHARDY mSltRAflrt\"\nReal Estate. Phone 135.      (2422)\nMachinists\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work. Lathe\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grinding.\nMotor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding.\nPhone 593           MiVernon Street\n (2428)\nMaternity Homei\nELIZABETH PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician in attendance. Ph. Broad 3078.\nW-13.4 Broadway, Spokane, Wash.\n. (2424)\nMining and Mill Michlnery\nEMPIRE MACHINES. LTD. NEL-\nson Mining and Mill Machinery.\n  (2360)\nPhotographs\n\"PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEASE''\nGEO. A. MEERES. 715 Baker. Ph 46\n,  (2425)\nSaih  Flctory\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY Hardwood merchant 217 Baker Street\n  (24.6)\nSecond Hind Storet\nSEE ARK RECONDITIONED COOK\nstoves before buying new one.\n(24271\nDRESSES AND SUITES AT MRS.\nRsdclUfe's, (2428)\nTypewriter Service\nNELSON TYPEWRITER AGENCY.\nSales and service. Phone 197\n         (2415)\nWitch Repairing\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle. Vernon St.\n(2429)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\n.IV\nBy Geo. McMinui\nWELL-LOOK OUT\nOC YOU'LL FIND\nYOURSELF IN\nTHE HANDSOF\nTHE LAW\nU\nNOT ME> WHEN\nYOU6EEMEAGIN-\nILL HAVE ENOUGH\nMONEY TO BUY\nTHING&IOONTEVBN\nWANT'\n\"\"\"\\   SAY.* WHO IS THAT\nHELLO-JI&OS-\nWHERE'DYOO\nCOME FBOM AN'\nWHY?\n&UY YOU WUl\nJUSTTALKIN&TO'\nHE LOOKS LIKE\nHED STEAL A\nSHOE-LACE -\nycJRe rasHT- hestryin\nTO SELL SOME STOCK   ,\nIN A (SOLD MINE THAT JJ\nDON'T EXIST- HES      ^\nBAD NEWS TO ANV*\nONE DOIM' BUSINESS\nWITH HIM-\nAtfVOU\nSAY THE\nSTOCK IS\nNO OOOD*\nHEY, YOU!\nJUST A .\nminute!\n- _\u25a0__---~.n   \u25a0    'i'iV___a_ii    .\n* W). Kim, ham llriiim, ht. Cm Bcito r^ta mm-. I\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Ruii Weitover\nIT'S NO USB\nI CANT MARRY\nDOM ALVAEAOO\nTHE CUMPS\nBy Sidney Smith\nARE6IST6RE&\nUTTM MO* \"THE\nmSDHANCE COMPANY.\nTHI* MUST BS B-ft'S\nCOPY Of THAT\n*5,0(X__OOO. POLICY-v\ntit\n\u2022\u25a0WHAT IWOULt-NT GIVE. -JUIT\nTO 6tT A PEEP INWDK THAT\nEWILOPE ANO FINf> OUT WHO\nHE'* LltTED At HIS BEMEKICIARWS\"\nYftU'ts THINK Ht'U AtK OUR.\nAMICE ABOUT A THIN* THAT\nIMPORTANT- BUTNO-\nHOO CAMT OET A\n\u2022\u2022MORD OUT OP-\nWIM-\nSffi^\nNEAVSN HELP US IP THAT\nLEECH OP A NEPHEW OP\nNIB HA* HAD ANY HAND\nIH AOMIBINd HIM-\nIP THAY TU\u00bbHT.\\D*A& HA*\nANY BAY IN BIM'S WK.L.\nOUR SHARB WOULb PROBABLY J\nCONSIST OP A ONE-WAY\nTICKET TO THB\n^O0RW0U\u00abe*v\n-      .mini   II\n\t\n\t\n ^p\nLOU STWTCHIS\ni \u25a0aggwe^w\nOehrlg\nfor wldt ont but tht umpire called Travii, Wuh. out\nHoley Brothers, Outstanding Athletes\nej Smelter Ctty\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\n\u2666t-t\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nP4.0I EIQHT-\n\u25a0THE NELSON DAILY NEWS  NELSON. B.C.-THUR8DAY MORNINO. JULY 18. 1935-\n-PAOE UOHT\nCANADIAN WINS BRONZE MEDAL,\nBADGE, FIRST STAGE BIG SHOOT\nGentlemen Are All\nOut for 218 Runs\nLONDON, July 17 (CP Ceble)-\nAt the clote of play in the gentlemen-players cricket match today\nat thc Oval, the gentlemen were all\nout for 218 runt. When stumps were\ndrawn the playera had acored 135\nrunt for four wickets.\n\u2014Photo Courtesy Progreu Studio, Trail. B.C.\nHaley Brothers of Enviable Repute\nExcel in Track and Field Competition\nJoe Bailey, High Jump\nChampion of\nCanada\nSIX RECORDS ARE\nHELD BY THEM\nPat, Over 6 Ft,, 3 In.\nStill Competitor\nJunior Class    \u25a0\nBy ARTHUR R.JOY\nTRAIL. B.C.. July 17,-In the\naccompanying photograph is shown\nthree attenuated Trail athletes of\nagility and speed and a tew of thc\ncupt. trophies and medals which\nthey have attained. They are (from\nleft to right) Pat, Joe and Paul\nHaley, sons of Mr. and Mrt. J. J.\nHaley of Trail.\nIn the few yeart that theae\niplendid specimens of sportsmen,\nobsessed with an infinitely clean\nenthusiasm, have participated in\ntrack and field events, they have\nromped oft with mony first and\nestablished amongst them, six records of the Kootenay Boundary\nSchools track association.\nAlthough Trail claims ownership\nto the Haley boys there are towns\nin eastern Canada which mutt be\nequally proud, for Joe, the elder,\nwas born in Cape Breton, Nova\nScotia, Paul and Pat ln Pictou. of\nthe same province. The family hu\nresided at Trail for about the past\nten yeart, and it wu tince coming\nto the imelter city that the boys\nrealized their possibilities and with\nthe tutorical aid of local men attained their present status. However. Mr. Haley hat been a resident\nof Trail for 30 years, spending short\nperiods in thc eut during that time.\nJoe, the elder of the three, has\nstepped out and taken not only provincial titles but one of the Dominion and now holds the Canadian\nhigh Jump championship. Last year\nhe placed second in the high jump\nat the London Empire gamea.\nTo cop thete reapectlve titles Joe\nhta lumped six feet one inch and\ntlx feet two inchei but unofficially\nhaa attained six feet four inches,\nonly one-eight Inch short of the\nCanadian record.\nIn the fall of 1828. at a Kootenay\nboundary meet in Nelson, Joe first\nstarted to approach he bar and placed first in the Junior high lump. Hc\nitlll holds the Kootenay Boundary\nmeet record of 5 feet US inchei,\nestablished at Cranbrook in 1932.\nAt the present time he stands 8\nfeet 3 inches In height and tips the\nscales at 179 pounds.\nPat and Paul, although now 18\nand 18 years of age, respectively.\nstarted running the tame year,\ntwelve months after their elder\nbrother started off on the road to\nsuccess. The younger of the two\nproved more fleet afoot at the outset but Paul got down to business\nand now surpaaes his younger kin\nin sprint attainments.\nHowever. Pat holda the junior\nhigh jump record of 5 feet iti inches\nmade in 1934 at the Cranbrook Kootenay Boundary meet. He also holds\nthe junior 100 yard mark of 11 1-5\nseconds whicli he established at\nihe same place, the tame year,\nThe Kootenay Boundary junior\nbroad jump record it held by Paul\nwhich he made at Nelion in 1931,\nthe distance being 17 feet 9 inchei.\nHe also established a new Kootenay\nBoundary 220 yard sprint record\nthis year at Trail, going the ditttnce\nin 22 4-5 tecondt. breaking the prevloui record made by Fred Large\nof Cranbrook in 1930.\nBoth Pat and Paul were members\nof the junior 440 yard relay team\nwhich holds the Kootenay Boundary\nrecord of 51 seconds established at\nNelson in 1931, The other two members of the team were John Ponak\nand Victor Paolini.\nPat. the tallest ot the trjo. stands\n8 feet 3'\u00bb inches and weight 154\npounds. Paul is 8 feet 2 inches, his\navoirdupois being 187 pounda.\nReps Want to Meet\nOld Timers Again\nPractice Nightly for\nGame Friday With\nRossland\nDetermined not to let mitten remain as they are the Nelton tenlor\nrep boxla team hat lasued a chal-\nlence tb the Old Timers to do battle\nMonday night, and it is believed\nthe Old Timers will don their war\nduds again. They pulled \u2022 big surprise Monday night when they beat\nthe rent 7-5.\nIn the meantime the reps are\npractising nightly for their first\ngamo In the West Kootenay league\nwhen Rossland comes here Friday\nnight. Rossland has a good team\nand a fast game It expected.\nLONE CANADIAN\nIN TENNIS PLAY\nU. S. Assured Holding\nTwo Western Grass\nCourt Titles\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP)\u2014\nUnlttd Statet tonight wu assured\nof retaining two malor wuttrn\nCtnada grau court tennii titles\nand a third Wai practically certain to remtin In tht touth at\nCalifornia and Oregon ntt ttan\ntook ovtr complete control of tht\nmen's ilnglu tnd doublu events\nand a lona Canadian wu lift to\nbtttle thrtt Amtrlcini In tht womtn't singles.\nLtd ky young Piul Newton of\nBtrktlty who tprang tht only upset of tht day by   eliminating\nWorth  Oiwtld, fttlow townsman\nind top rtnktd player In tht draw,\nn a tecond round match, seven\nCallfornlans  and  a youthful  ntt\nitar from Ortgon marched Into tht\nQuarter flnali of thl mtn'i singles.\nAfttr taking tht mtuurt of the\nftvored    Oiwald,   3-8, 8-S, 8-4,\nNtwton romped through hit mttch\nwith Cecil   Sharpt,   Vincouvtr,\n8-2, 8-2, to inter tht quarters.\nOiwald laid hia defeat to a two-\nday  train  journey  from  Denver,\nwhere he loit latt Sunday to Jack\nTidball of Lot Angeles in the finals\nof the Colorado men's singles.\nDick Bennett ot Berkeley, who\nwith Newton holds the American\nInter-collegiate doublet title, tcored\na three-eet victory over Charles\nWelaner, Berkeley, to enter the\nqutrtert. The -core!, 6-7, 8*1, 6-3.\nSMITH BEATS CASEY\nOene Smith, anothr Berkeley\nracqueteer and associate professor\nat Stanford univenity. defeited Ray\nCasey, veteran San Franciscan. 8-8.\n6-2 to gain a quarter berth with\nHoward Blethen, San Jose, who\ndowned Doug Cameron, Vancouver,\n7-5, 7-5.\nBob Pommer, yetterday\"i conqueror ot Mel Dranga. advanced ln\nthe lower half of the quirter bracket! with a 7-5. 7-5 victory over Walter Haas, San Francisco.\nIn other fourth matchei Wayne\nStbin. Portland, defeated Jack\nBrown, Vancouver, 6*3, 3-8, 6*0;\nJohn Law. Pasadena, downed Lloyd\nBudge. San Francisco, 7-9. 6-4, 6*1,\nand John Murio. San Francisco, won\nfrom Ben Neiden, Berkeley, 6-2, 7-5.\nBennett and Newton teamed up\nto defeat Cecile de Mille and Jack\nMuir of Vancouver. 6-2. 6-3 to enter\nthe quartera of the doublet tt favorites.\nBudge tnd Murio gave Hau and\nDon Lewrie. Berkeley a 6-4, 6-4\nbeating to win tecond tpot In the\nquarter brackets.\nOther quarter flnalistt include\nCuey and Law, Blethen and Neiden,\nSmith and Dranga, Pommer and\nKelly, Oswald and Welaner and\nCooke and Sabin.\nJean Milne scored a three let triumph over Mrt. May Haggart, who\nyesterday eliminated thc defending\nwomen's alngle champion, Mrs.\nGolda Grow of Berkeley. The young\nVancouver girl won by scores of\n2*8. 8-6. 8-2 from her fellow towns-\nwoman.\nIn the only other three set match\nof the event today, Gussie Racgener\nof San Francisco won from Vest\nO'Shea, Vancouver, 8-6, 4-6, 6-2.\nMrs. Citherine Rote ot Loi Angeles disposed of another Cinadlan\nthreat. Sutie Milne of Vmcouver.\n6-4, 8-8 and Margaret Osborne, San\nFrancisco eliminated Marjorie\nGrelg. Vancouver, 6-4, 6-4 to give\nthe United Statei threc repretenta-\ntivet ln the semis.\nGRADS\nQriJyCLrKjeJt&erS\n\" \u25a03srfli9rti\n\u2022 * Sit* the\nPremium Cardi\u2014\nA.t 83 ttttttt . Set\nL. O. Qrotbe Ltd.\n__.i_.i__tf-iir.ri i\nGRADS\nLeaders\n q L-\n(By Tht AttocltUd Prtn)\nThe big tlx went throuth another\nshakeup yeiterday but itill retained\nita two extra memben u Bruce\nCampbell failed to hit and dropped\nout of the American league group\nwhile hla teammate. Joe Vosmik\nmoved uo a notch and Buddy Myser\nof Washington moved into a three*\nway tie with the idle Doc Cramer\nand Jimmie Foxx for the last berth.\nVosmik hit five times in eight\nattempts during a doubleheader to\nshoot his average up seven polnta\nto .345 while Myer hit two out of\nfour.\nThe National leaguers all lost\nground and Joe Medwick and Bill\nTerry failed to hit and Arky\nVaughan got two blows in six timet\nup. The itandlng:\nXJ AB R H Pet.\nVaughan, Pta 68 248 62 96 .387\nMedwlck. Car 78 325 69 121 .372\nJohnion, A'l 76 309 66 108 .350\nVotnick. Ind. 77 326 41 112 .345\nTerry, Glint 79 332 58 114 .343\nCramer, A'l.. 76 S40 56 115 .338\nMver. Senat 79 325 61 UO .338\nFoxx. A'l        76   266   65   50   .338\nMysterious cuet of Ivy poisoning,\nwhen no contact with piantt ran be\nrecalled, may be due to drops of the\npoisonous oil on cattle or other animals touched by the suceptlble per-\n\u2022on.\nPenman of Montreal\nLeads Nine Others\nto Second Stage\nBy THOMAS T. CHAMPION\nCanadian Preu Statf Writtr\nBISLEY CAMP, England, July 17\n(CP Cable)\u2014Balked up to now, Canadian! put on a fine display ot\nmarksmanship today that law Sgt.\nMatthew Penman of Montreal winning the bronze medal and badge in\nthe flnt itage of the clastic King'i\nprize and leading nine other Canadians directly into the second\nitage of the big ahoot on Friday.\nComing to the critical cloiing\nstages ot the great empire meeting\nof the National Rifle association,\nthe Canadian shook off the jinx\nand showed themselves ready to\ndefend the historic trophies they\nwon a year ago and to put up a\ntturdy battle tor the King's prize\nitself.\nEQUALS RECORD.\nSgt. Penman equalled the record\nfor the fint stage of the King's prize\nby potting 104 out of a possible*\n105 to take thc bronze badge. He\nhad perfect 35's at the 200 and 500\nyards distances and lott only a\npoint on the latt range, 600 yards.\nScores of 98 were good enough\nto quality for the tecond stage, limited to the bett 300 out of the 1032\nmarksmen from all over the British\ncommonwealth Who went Into the\ngreat match today. Ten Canadians\nhad thla score or better, and three\nmore will shoot off with 102 other\nmen, all having scorea of 97, for 45\nremaining placei ln Friday's continuance.\nPenman, an old countryman now\nwith the Canadian Grenadier\nGuards, won the governor-general's\nand the Bankers' prizes at the D.R.A.\nat Ottawa a year ago.\nTHEY SCORE 98\nCapt. A. B. Coulter ot Ottawa\nand the veteran C.Q.M.S. Alex Parnell of Verdun, Que., had aggregates\nof 100 each; Capt A. W. Hunt of\nWinnipeg, LL H. D. Proctor of Ottawa and Lt. A. P. Williams of Ottawa posted 99'i; and Lieut. Neal\nDow ot Saint John, Lieut. P. J. Martinson of La Tuque. Sat. C. Iddiols\nof Calgary and Lieut.-Col. F. W. Ut-\nton of Toronto qualified outright\nwith 98's.\nIn addition Lleut.-Col. C. W. Gib*\n*n of Hamilton, Sgt. F. Wallace of\nMount Dennis and Cpl. E. E. Wright\nof Montreal are still ln the running\nwith 97's. Five of the 13 are on thc\nteam for the fint time\u2014Penman.\nCoulter. Hunt, Williams and Wright.\nLEGLESS SHOT VICTOR\nPlacing in the final arc determined solely by the aggregate ot the\ntecohd stage and Saturday'! wind-\nup of Ihe historic match, tint competed for at the opening of the NRA\n75 yean ago.\nThe who. camp cheered the vie-\ntoiy of legless Lieut. C. A. Sutherland ln the only other' shoot of the\nday, the Corporation of thc City of\nLondon match. Sutherland, formerly of the Black Watch, who lost\nboth legt in the war but never misses a Bisley, posted a perfect score\nof 50 at the long range for service\nriflei of 1000 yarda to take the lilver\ntrophy and cash award of $40.\nBest  of the  Canadians  in this\nmatch  was  well  back with 45\u2014\nLieut. Neal Dow of Saint John.\nTO DEFEND CUP\nCheered by the ibowlng in the\ntint itage of the King's, the Canadians will select a team of 12 to\nf;o out tomorrow-afternoon and de-\nend thc MacKinnon challenge cup.\nTheir victory a year ago wat the\nsixth since the trophy was offered\nin 1891.\nThe rich Prince of Wales prize\nat 300 and 600 yards, and thc Dally\nTelegraph at 300 yard! are alto on\ntomorrow'! heavy program.\nCanada'! qualifiers in the final\nstage of the important St. George's\nchallenge vase to be fire on Saturday\nwere lnereued to seven today,\nwhen Coulter ot Ottawa managed\nto qualify ln a tie-shoot for remaining places.\nWOMAN QUALIFIES\nMlu Marjorie Foster, only woman who ever won the King's prize,\nwat the only one of four women\nwho started today;to qualify in the\nKlng'i tint stage. She had an even\n100.\nCanadian scoring in thc first stage\nof thc King'i prize:\n200 yards; 500 yards; 600 yards;\ntotal.\nSgt. M. Penmna. Montreal (bronze\nbadge) 35-35-34-104.\nCapt. A. B. Coulter, Ottawa, 34-\nJ5-31-100.\nC. Q. M. S. Alex Parnell, Verdun,\nQue., 35-33-32-100.\nCapt. A. W. Hunt, Winnipeg, 32-\n34-33-99.\nLieut. H. D. Proctor, Ottawa, 35-\n31-33\u201499\nLieut. A. P. Williams, Ottawa, 35-\n83-31\u201499.\nLieut. Neal Dow, Saint John, 33-\n32-33-98.\nSgt. C. Iddiols, Calgary, 32-34*\n32-88.\nLieut. P. J. Martinson, La Tuque,\nQue., 35-34-29\u201493.\nLieut -Col. F. W. Sutton, Toronto, 34-32-32-98.\n(Above qualify directly).\n\u2022\u2014Lleut.-Col. C. W. Gibson, Hamilton. 35*31-31-97.\n\u2022\u2014Sgt. F. Wallace, Mount Dennis.\nOnt, 33-32-30-97.\n\u2022-Cpl. E. E. Wright, Montreal,\n34-31-32-97.\nLieut. James Boa, Montreal, 34*\n12-30   9fl\nMaj. J. A. Burry, Toronto, 33-31*\n32-88.\nL. R. A. Sweet, Hamilton, 34-31-\n31-96.\nSgt.-Maj. J. Tralnor, Toronto, 34-\n31-31-96.\nSgt W. H. Edaell. Ottawa, 34-32*\n26-92.\n\u2022\u2014Enter tie thool for placet.\nGQLF\nI MORRISON M-\nThe other day I uaed a. baseball\nterm ln trying to convey an Idea\nto one of my pupili.\nI wanted him to assume a starting position which would find the\nball opposite his left foot and both\nhands on the right of the shaft.\nAt times he would have the ball off\nhit left foot but fall to get hla\nhands on the right side of the'club.\nFinally I asked him if he ever hit\na baseball. He told me that he had\nplaced  professional* baseball.\nI told him to get hli handi, body\nand everything behind the club.\nThis put him in the proper position.\nHe had no trouble hitting them a\nmile. If you have stood at bat\nready to knock a home run, you'll\nrecognize the position. Just lower\nyour club to the goll level and\npresto, you have the proper itarting position for your swing.\nRED SOX CLIMB\nUPTHELADDER\nBeat Cleveland.Two in\na Row; Senators\nTake St. Louis\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW    I\nNew York _______  49  28\nDetroit  -.-   49\nChicigo   42   33\nBoston         .*j I','    43   38\nCleveland    .._\u00a3.:.._.....   39   38\nPhiladelphia ____    34   42   .447\nWashington    $4\nSt. Loula    23\nDetroit-Philadelphia,   poitponed,\nrain, four icheduled.\nPet.\n.836\n33   .598\n.580\n.531\n.506\n46   .425\n55   .295\nRED SOX WIN TWO\nBOSTON. July 17 (CP)-The Boiton Red Sox regtlned t flnt division\nberth at Cleveland's expense today\nby turning back the Indiana twice,\n13-5 and 3-1, today before a delighted crowd of 16.000.\nBill Werber set the pace with four\nconsecutive two-baggers, when the\nCronln men came from behind in\nthe opener and blasted four enemy\nhurlen for a total of 18 hits. Werber\ndrove in four runs and Rick Ferrell\ndrove in three more with a tingle,\ndouble and a homer.\nBob \"Lefty'' Grove gained his llth\nwin in the second game, when Moe\nBerg drove in all of the Boston runt.\n\"Bing\" Miller tripled in the second\nand tcored on the relief catcher's\nlong fly and two more rum came\nover in the fourth when Berg iln-\ngled with the bases loaded.\nFirat:\nCleveland     5 10   2\nBoston 13 18   I\nHarder. L. Brown, Lee and Bren\nMl; Cascarella, Walberg and R.\nFerrell.\nSecond:        .   .      .,,\nCleveland .'.    .18   2\nBoston 3   5   0\nPearaon and Phllllpi; Grove and\nBerg. ^M^\nSENATORS BEAT 8T. LOUIS\nWASHINGTON. July 17 (AP)\u2014\nWaihington batted out an even dozen hiti today to defeat St. Louii, 8-4,\nai Ed Linke turned in an effective\npitching auignment. ^^Z\nThe victory gave Waihington a\n3 to 2 edge in the current leriei.\nSt. Louii   .'.    4 10   0\nWashington    8 12   0\nKnott, Vanatta, Cain tnd Hemiley\nLinke and Bolton.\n\"Big League\"\nBASEBALL\nBob ind Det Munson try out thtlr Inboard tpndboit at Long Beach,]\nDodgers Win Two,\nGlanb Jake Reds\nPop-Bottle Shower\nin Cincinnati;\nHallahan Wins\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW   L Pet\nNew York  52   24 .684\nSt. Louis _ _ 49   29 .628\nChicago    48   34 .575\nPlttaburgh  42   40 .512\nCincinnati    38   43 .489\nBrooklyn    38 '42 .462\nPhiladelphia     33   45 .423\nBotton  21   60 .259\nPOP-AOTTLE SHOWER\nCINCINNATI, July 17 (AP)-The\nGiants ended their three-game losing streak asd cut off Cincinnati'!\nstring ot seven straight vlctorlei todty aa they pounded out a 6-3 victory over the Redi to the accompaniment of flying pop bottlei,\nThe ihower of glassware from the\nright field pavilion furnlihed the\nmott exciting interlude in the long\ngame which wai marked by much\nbickering on both sides. The missiles were aimed at Umpire Beans\nReardon because of his ruling in the\nseventh inning thtt Gordon Slade\nhad interfered with Dick Bartell\nwhen the latter wat trying to make\na double play at tecond.\nNew York    S   15   3\nCincinnati      3    9  2\nHubbell, Schott and Dannlng: Hollingiworth, Herrmann and Erickion.\nPHILS BEAT CUBS 3-2\nCHICAGO, July 17 (AP)-Curt\nDavit' five-hit pitching tnd a barrage of four coniecuuve hlta by\nMoore, Camilli, Verger, and Haslin\nthat tcored all their three runa at\nthe atart ot the fourth today gave\nall their three runt at the atart of\nthe fourth todty gave the Philadelphia Phllllea a 3-2 victory over\nthe Cubs, their tecond in a row.\nPhiladelphia     S    7   0\nChicago    2    5   0\nDavit and Todd; Lee and O'Dea.\nHALLAHAN GETS A WIN\nST. LOUIS, July 17 (AP)-Blll\nHallahan, moving rapidly along the\ncomeback trail, won his fifth\nstraight game today, 2-1, but a\nhome run In the ninth Inning by\nTerry Moore was neceuary before\nthe champion Cardinals aucceeded\nin turning back Boiton'i Braves.\nMoore'i circuit clout broke up a\n.tight left-handed pitching duel between Hallahan and Ed Brandt.\nThe St. Louli victory waa tUe 13th\nin lucceulon for the Red Birdi.\nBoaton     1    4   l\nSt. Louii    2    7   3\nBrandt and Spohrer; Hallahan and\nDavii.\nDODGERS WIN TWO\nPITTSBURGH, July 17 (AP)-\nThe Dodgera won their tint double-\nheader lince April 19 todty* when\nthey defeated the Piratea 5-4 and\n5-0. The double triumph left Brooklyn only a half gatr** behind the\nfifth-place Cincinnati Reda.\nAn assault upon Guy Buah won\nthe opener but Watson Clark had a\nbad time of It toward the finish.\nThe Bucs acored four rum in the\nilxth and seventh and had the tying\ncounter on base when Clark was relieved by Dazzy Vance. George\nEarnshaw blanked the home club\nwith aeven hits in the iecond clash.\nWalte Hoyt wai nicked for four\ntallies, one on t homer by Len\nKoenecke, while the latt wai icored\nwithout a hit off Bill Swift\nFirat game:\nBrooklyn    5   10   2\nPittsburgh    4   18   3\nClark. Vance and Lopez; Buih,\nBirkofer and Padden.\nSecond game:\nBrooklyn    B   12   Q\nPittiburgh     0    7   1\nEarnshaw and Phelpi; Hoyt,\nSwift and Grace.\nNelson Swimming\nMeet in August\nDives Will Be Same as\nSeries Carried by\nthe News\nNelton city ii planning lta annual\nswimming meet about the middle of\nAugust thli year, when there will\nbe both open and cloied eventa for\nswimmers, and it ls expected competitors will be present from Trail.\nRossland, Grand Forks, and most\nother polnti to the west and also\neaat of Nelion.\nThere wlll be 10 main dives for the\nbigger events, and thew dives will\nbe the tame at the series that The\nNelaon Dally Newt It now running\nin lta iport pages. Both low and\nhigh board events are planned.\nDIVING\nHIGH BOUNCING TAKEOFF FOR\nBACK JACK-KNIFE NECESSAR1\nHonve.Rims\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u00a9\u2014*\u2014\u2014\nBy Tht Associated Press\nHome runs yetterdty: R. Ferrell.\nRed Sox, 1; Koenecke, Dodgen, I;\nT. Moore, Cardlnall, 1.\nThe leaden: Greenberg, Tlgera,\n26: Ott Glanti, 20; Johnaon, Athletici, 19; J. Collins, Cardinals. 18.\nLeague totals: National 397; American 390: total 787.\nEditor's Note: Thli Is ont of a\nseriei of 10 articles on diving written by tht ftmoui authority, Fred\nSponbtrg, tht man who dtvtloptd\ntht ttntatlonal Pttt Dtl Jirdlnes\nand who hat bttn cotch of American Olympic dlvins teams. Anothir\narticle will appear In our ntxt issue.\nBy FRED 8PONGBERQ\nFamoui Olympic Diving Coach\nNo. 4\u2014Tha Back Jack-Knife\nIn executing the back jack-knife\nfrom thc springboard, the diver\nshould try to get as much ipring\nas possible to as to obtain a maximum height\nAt the height of the diva the pike\nis made, tt shown in the illustration\n\u2014arms straight, handa touching I\nbelow the shins, the kneel loa\nand the toes pointed\nThe opening of tha iack-1\nshould be made well above L\nboard in order to permit a itra|\nclean entry Into the water\narma extended atralght in fron!\nthe head, hands touching each o|\nin line with the body.\nCommon failings  are unloci\nthe knees, opening of the knlfef\nfast, and having too much an\nthe back when entering the t\nThe pike is, of course, the Intel\nfeature of the jack-knife- divef\nthe pike the body it bent atl\nhips, the lega kept atralght at]\nknees and the toea pointed.\nNtxt-Tht Half Galntr, Runnll\nBIRTHDAY GREETINGS\nBy Tht Cinadlan Prtu)\nTo Bernie Thornton, who teamed\nwith Seymour Wilton at outside\nwing on Hamilton's Interprovinclal\nUnion football Union champions in\n1934. Bernle, a smashing tackier,\nwas born at Hamilton July 18, 1912.\nand ioined the Tigen in 1932 after\nstarring for four yeara with the\nDelta Collegiate team.\nGIRL. BEAT\nBUGLERS 10-9\nAre\nin Good Shape\nto Meet the   >\nRotarians\nMaltreating two pitchen, Herb\nPitta and Art Oliver, the Nelaon\ngirls practiied their batting eyes at\nthe Recreation grounds Wednesday\nafternoon when they defeated the\nCanadian Legion Bugle band 10-9.\nFive rum ln the eighth inning saved\nthe Bugle Band from a drubbing.\nThe girls tallied in all but the\nfourth and eighth innings, while\nblanking the Buglera in four inningi. They were hitting well and\nhome runt were made by Anastasia\nGlllett and Alice Dunn. Dot Jar*\nbeau and Alice Dunn got three-\nbaggers, and two-baggers were\nmtde by Jean Spien and Agnes\nStewart.\nThe Buglers outhlt the glrla 16-8\nbut Art Oliver and Herb Pitts\nissued six walki which tallied\nagainst their1 cause. Hazel Spiera,\nRosa Stewart and Jean Spiers\npitched for the girls.\nArt Langlll and Herb Pitti got\nhomers, and Webster, Corbyn and\nGeorge got two-baggen.\nDot Jarbeau made the most sensational catch of (hc game to nab\nHerb Pitta' fly back of iecond. Alice\nDunn made five running catchea\nin the field.\nTHREE DOUBLE PLAYS\nThe girls pulled off three smart\ndouble plays by way of proving i\ntheir field work: the flrat. Dot Jar-'\nbeau to Hazel Spiers* Rosa St\u00bbwart\n! to Alvina Arlt and Barbara King'i zett to Rosa Stewart.\nGirls\u2014Hazel Spiers. Jean Spien,\nAgnes Stewart, Alice Dunn, Rosa\nStewart, Alvina Arlt, Barbara King-\nzett. Dot Jarbeau and Anastasia\nOlllett   .\nBuglers\u2014L. George. F. Jones, Art\nLangill, H. Pitta, Art Oliver, J,\nCorbin. Al Langill, D. Webster,\nDick Rowe.\nRotarians Play\nGirls Tonlfll\n\u2022Na-* ^^^_\nGame of Century i\n5:45 This Eveninj\nTonight ls the big night -g\nthe Rotarlani will attempt to bl\nthe rampant course of the Ne\ngirls' rep tetm. The game will I\nat 5:45 sharp, providing the\ntarlans do not get \"buck\" feed\nstage fright. j\nThe stands at the grounds, wll\nwere really erected for thia ta\nalthough they were uied fori\nHouse of David-Cuba game, are!\npected to be filled to capacity. I\nBy way of a workout Wedneea\nthe girls took on the Bugle t\nand defeated them 10-9 and ,\nthey are ready to ahow the\ntarians the go-around.\nManager Russ Potter, who ,\nscribed for each of hla playera\nthe matter of getting into lbl\nhai got tome of. hit men faat|\nrunning and othera running by 1\ning; two of hii playen he had i\ndow boxing but when thoyl\nthemselvei outpointed in thii wl\nhe took them off that; three M\nbeen meditating, while the otH\nhave been doing road work,\nare in the pink of condition ,\nthey haven't been out in the\neither (well, not much).\nThe girli' teem will be chc\nfrom the following: Hazel Spl\nRosa Stewart Peggy McGov\nAlvina Arlt, Gladyi Jarrett, N\nMcDougall, Jean Pateraon, Si\nMatheson, Peggy Donaldaon, I\nbora Klngzett, Jean Spiera, A\nDunn. Agnes Stewart The Rotarl\nwill have the entire club out\ncollection will be taken'at the ga\nBOX\nLACROSSE\nROSSLAND vs.\nNELSON\nSKATING RINK\nFRIDAY, |ULY 19,\n8:30 P.M.\nRESULTS\nInttrnitlontl teague\nBaltimore 2. 3: Toronto 4, 1.\nNewark 4, Montreal 9.\nAmtrican Association\nSt. Paul 4. Columbui 2.\nMilwaukee 9, 6; Louisville 4, 4.\nSyracuse 11. Buffalo 12.\nPaelfle Coait teague\nPortland 8. San Francltco 6,\nPLAIN OR I\nCORK TIP\nBritish Consols\nCOLLICT THI CARD PICTURE.\n \u2014\n****************\n\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\t\ntANMN GOLD PRODUCTION IN\nMAY IS VALUED AT $9,409,599\n[\u00a369,238 Ounces; Exceeds April and May, '34;\nB. C. Ouput of 29,050 Ounces Is\nLower Than in April\nOTTAWA, July 17 (CP)-Gold\ntraduction In Canada in May\n\u2022eeched a total of 269,238 ouncei\nrelued at $9,409,599, according to a\neport Jutt issued by tbe Dominion\nrureau ot statistic! at Ottawa. In\nkpril 247,697 ounce! were produced\nnd ln May, 1934, the output waa\n81.125 ouncei.\nDuring the tint five monthi of\n835 Canada produced 1,232,405\nwncet ot gold at compared with\n,197,070 ouncet In the correspond*\nKg period of 1934.\nOntario'! gold output totalled\n188,993 ounces.\nAn advance of 17 per eent was re*\ncorded in Quebec's production of\ngold in May when 38,166 ouncet\nwere produced as against 30,908\nouncet in the preceding month.\nBritish Columbia produced 29,050\nouncet of gold ln Mty and 30,781\nouncei during April.\nManitoba and Saskatchewan\nsources accounted for an output ot\n13,853 ouncea of gold ln May. Thli\nrepresented a decline of 13.4 per\ncent from the previous month'!\ntotal.\nThe Yukon production in May\namounted to 727 ouncei ot gold; in\nApril no gold waa produced.\nShipments of gold from Nova\nScotia to the royal Canadian mint\nin May were recorded at 449 ouncet\nas compared with 507 ouncet In\nApril.\nINDUSTRIALS ON\nTHE UPGRADE\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP)-Plvo*\nlal issues Jogged along on the up\ngrade today and, detplte a tagging\ntendency In the majority of domestic atocks, produced a net advance\ncf .18 ln the Toronto exchange in-\n\u2022duitritl listings. Volume wit down\nto around 17,000 sharei.\nWalken common closed tt net\nUp at 29% and Distillen tt up at 21.\nBrewers It Distillen lost 5 centa.\nCantda Malting wat a itrong spot\nin the brewery group, gaining \u00bbi\nto 34tt,\nImperial Oil and International\nPetroleum were up Vt to \"A. Braslllan and Ford A weakened ti to V\u00ab\nend CPR. wai dormant\nWestern Canada Flour preferred\nSdded a point Westoni Vi and Canada Picken common tt.\nPerjury, Bribery\nCharges Laid in\ni      Stock Sales Cases\n.TORONTO, July 17 (CP)-Col. D.\nf. Pldgeon, ipeclal investigator for\nthe Ontario securities commission.\ninnounced today that a charge of\nEcrjury had been laid agalnit Bowen Myen, trader for Armstrong\nTaylor and Co. and a charge of\njribery   preferred   against   Kerr\nEwni and Co., in connection with\naged  dishonest  dealing  ln  the\n' ck brokerage bualneu.\nCanadian Dollar\nUnchanged\nNEW YORK, July 17 (CP)-The\nFrench franc had the only net\nchange recorded In the foreign exchange marketa todav.\nThe Canadian dollar at a dlicount of 3-32 per cent tnd the\npound tterling at $4.98V\u00ab both were\nunchanged. The franc, closing at\n6.63tt centa, ihowed a lost of ,00tt\nof a cent\nWHEAT (LIMBS\nCHICAGO, July 17 (AP)-Spread\nof black ruit damage reported from\nlections of ipring crop territory\niwept wheat values upward fast today, 5 cents a bushel at Minneapolis.\nDrought damage complaints from\nparts of the Canadian prairie province!, together with word of acute\nneed of rain in larg:e areas of the\nUnited States, gave additional impetus to soaring of wheat price!.\nWheat ln Chicago cloied nervous,\n3V\u00ab to 3tt higher, September 85%\nto 85tt, corn unchanged to 1%\nhigher, September 76tt to 76fc;\noati tt to tt advanced.\nDISCOUNT RATE\nREDUCED\nAMSTERDAM, July 17 (AP)\u2014\nThe Bank of the Netherlandi today\nreduced lta dlicount rate from 3tt\nSer cent to 3 per cent. It wai the\nllrd iuch reduction in a month.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\ntilled Chemical 157\nAmerican Can 140*.\nun For Power Stt\nim Mch It Fdy 22V,\ntm Smelt & Re 43%\nlm Telephone, 127%\nUm Tobaoco __ 98%\nInaconda _......_   18%\nktchlson    51%\n,uburn Motort   22%\nlaldwin Loco _    2%\nlalt & Ohio __  ll'*\nlendix Av .....\nlath Steel \u2014\nSenada Dry ....\n__an Pacific\t\n_em> de Paaco\n_het tt Oblo ...\nSiyiler \t\nSm Gat N Y ._.\n_orn Porducta\n; Wright pfd _\nJueenT 106tt\nStatmen Kodak 147%\nD Powr _ Uta   3%\nHe \u2014\t\ntord English\nnord of Canada\n\u2022Vlt NeU Storet\n'reeort   Texas\nrt Electric ..\nieral   Foods\n\u2022eral Motors\nlow Duat \t\nGoodrich  \u2014_.\nOranby\t\nOrt Nrthrn pfd 22'\u00bb\nGrt Weat Sugar 29\nHowe Sound ... 49%\nHudaon Moton 8%\nInterptl Nickel 27%\ntster Tel It Tel   9%\nLow\n139\n3tt\n23%\n43\n127\n95%\n16%\n80%\n22\n2%\n11%\n16%\n31%\n10%\n87%\n44%\n52%\n25%\n76tt\n7tt\n104%\n147\nStt\n     Stt    -\n17%\nSltt\nlltt\n10\nUtt\n44%\n53's\n25%\n77%\n8\n55%\n26\n27%\n37%\n37\n17%\n7tt\n8%\n59\n26%\n36%\n36%\n17\n7tt\nStt\n21tt\n48%\n8tt\n27%\n9%\nClote\n157\n140\n3tt\n23%\n43\n127%\n85%\n16%\n51\n22%\n2%\n11%\n17%\n31%\n10%\n10\n57%\n44%\n53%\n25%\n77%\n7tt\n106\n147\nltt\n. 8%\n26%\n85%\n28\n27\n36%\n36%\n17\n7%\n8%\n21%\n29\n49%\n8%\n27%\n\u00bbtt\nJewel Tea     63\nKenn Copper ..   19%\nKresge S S     25\n-JJ- It T\nMack Truck ....\nMont Ward ...\nNash Motort ....\nNat Dairy Prod\nN Powr It Lite\nN Y Central ....\nPac Gas tt Elec\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R \t\nPhillips   Petrol\nPure Oil _ _\nRCA\t\nRKO     2%\nRem Rand      9%\nSafeway Stores 40%\nShell Union ....\nS Cal Edison ..\nSouth Pacific ..\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStewart Warner\n29%\n23%\n30\n14%\n16%\n8%\n17%\n24%\n5\n24%\n21%\n9\n6%\n9%\n20\n19%\n34%\n25%\n47%\n12\n-. 83\n19% 19%\n24% 25\n29 29%\n22% 22%\n29% 29%\n13% 13%\n16% 16%\n8% 8%\n17% 17%\n23% 24%\n4% 4%\n24 24%\n21% 21%\n8tt\n6%\nStudebaker      2%\nTexas Corp\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTlmken Rollers\nUnder Type\nUnion   Carbide\nUnion OU of C\nUnion   Aircraft\nUnited   Biscuit\nUnion Pacific\nU S Clt Irn Ppe\nU S Rubber ....\nU S Steel    37%\nVanadium Steel   15%\nWearn   Electric   59%\nWoolworth _   62%\nYellow Truck ..    3%\n19%\n34%\n46%\n67%\n85\n18%\n16%\n25%\n108%\n19%\n12%\n8',\nlfl\nlji\n9%\n40% 40%\n\u2014 9%\n19% 19%\n18% 18%\n34 34\n25% 25%\n47% 47%\nlltt 11%\n2% 2%\n19% 19%\n34 34%\n45% 48\n67%\n64%\n18%\n15% 16%\n25% 25%\n107% lOStt\n19% 19%\n12% 12%\n37 87%\n19 IS\n58% 58%\n3tt\n3%\nAT HOME AND ABROAD\nThe Royal Bank serves Canadians both al\nhome and abroad. In eld London, for example, a branch of Tha Bank, acrou the\netreet from Hie Bank of England, givot\nefficient aid to Canadian enterprise and\noffen friendly service* to Canadianviiitort.\nTHE\nROYAL   BANK\nOF     CANADA\nTHE NILION DAILY NEWI. NILION. B.C-THUR8DAY MORNINO. JULY 18. 19JS-\nm\n-MOI NINI\nMarket and Mining News\nSHEEP (REEK AMD\nYANKEE GIRL UP\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP)-\nTrading wat more active on the\nearly lesiion of the Vancouver\nitock exchange today and gaini\nwere regiitered ln all lections but\nthe pace slowed up In late trading\nand most issues closed practically\nunchanged. Salea totalled 167,066\nshares.\nPioneer sold to 9.60 and closed\nwith a net gain of 15 at 9.00. Sheep\nCreek at 85 and Ymlr Yankee Girl\nat 28 each finished up a point and\nDentonia wai % cent higher at 33.\nBralorne sold at 4.70 but closed unchanged at 4.50. Premier Gold lost\na cent at 1.43 and United Empire\nwas unquoted.\nPend Orlelle sold at 60 and\ndropped back only 2 to hold an 8-\ncenl gain at 58. B.C. Nickel at 29\nand B.C. Silver at 1.45 were unchanged. Porter Idaho gained % at 8\nand Beaver Silver firmed % at 5%.\nRoyalite lost 25 at 23.00. Ranchmen's gained 3 at 32, Mar Jon was\nup a point at 8 and Mercury firmed\n>\/< at 12.\nMINOR GOLDS UP\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP) - A\nnumber of secondary gold iharei\nmoved ahead itrongly on Toronto\nmining section today. The turnover\nwas 429,000 shares. An advanct of\n.73 to 103.51 was registered tor the\ngold and miscellaneous mines gained .62 to 91.27.\nNoranda moved up % to 38, Base\nMetals corporation added 6 cents\nat 72, Sudbury Basin and Sherritt*\nGordon gained 2 to 4 cents each and\nFalconbridge weakened a couple of\ncenta. In the lilvers, Eldorado cloied\n2 cents down at 1.83 while Bear, In\nwhich 68,000 shares changed hands,\nfinished 5 centi up at 62.\nCHINA REDUCES\nCONSTRUCTION\nSHANGHAI, China, July 17 (CP)\n\u2014Due to the stringent need of financial retrenchment, the national\neconomic council haa decided that\nvarioui economic conitructlon project! for the next fiscal year should\nnot go beyond a total of 11,000,000\nChinese doilan, currently $4,290,000\nCanadian. Thii represents a reduction ot almost 50 per cent when\ncompared with the records of the\norevious year. Thc reason given\nfor thii action ii the dire financial\nstraita in which the Chinese government findt itself.\nDow Jones Averages\nHigh Low Cloie     Change\n80 Industrials  123.49 122.25 122.91-Up 0.57\n20 Rails  34.00 33.49 33.81\u2014Up 0.22\n20 Utilities  22.46 22.11 22.28-Up 0.19\n40 Bonds                 97.01-Up 0.03\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED\nA P Con \t\nAmal Oil  .-_\nBig Missouri\t\nU C Packers\t\nBradian  -\nBralorne Gold _..\nttridge K Con -\t\nB R X Gold ......\nCariboo Gold \t\nC and -1 Corp\t\nCoast Brew\nDentonia ....\nGold Belt\n\u2022Id\n.08\n.10\nJMtt\n... 13.00\n. 1.80\n4.50\nM\n.08\n1.00\n_60\n     M\nHargal Oil  \t\nHome Oil \u2014 _\nInt Coal  _\t\nKoot Belle _\t\nMak Siccar \u201e\nMcLeod Oil \t\nMeridian \t\nModel Oil\t\nNat Silver \t\nMorning Star \t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Gold\t\nPremier Border ....\nReno Gold    \t\nReeves MacDonald\nSally Mines  _\nSalmon Gold\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSpooner _\nTaylor Bridge \t\nWayside   \t\nCURB\nBeaver Silver \t\nBluebird   \t\nB C Silver\t\nB C Nickel \t\nBunker Hill \t\nCan Rand   \t\nCalmont Oil \t\nCongress \t\nCork Province ...\nCottonbelt\nCrowt Nett   \t\nDalhousie Mines\nDalhouiie Oill ...\nDictator \t\nEastcrest \t\n.91\nJO\n.33%\n.10\n30\n.03%\n.19%\n.03%\n.04%\n9.50\n1.43\n1.23\n.10\n.11%\n.85\n.18\n.12%\n.05%\n.01\n1.48\n.29\n43.00\n.05\n22\n.03\n.10\n23\nAlk\n.06%\n.56\n1.90\n4.70\n.04\n.09\n1.03\n.52\n13.50\n.34\n.38\n.03\n.55\n.12\n.04\n_!0%\nM\n.lit\n9.60\n1.44\n.00%\n1.25\n.12\n.28\n.12\n.86\n.20\n.20\n.13%\n.05%\n\u202201%\n1.50\n.30\n45.00\n.05\n.05%\n.24\n.00%\n.05\n.10%\n.01\n.27\n01\nFairview \t\nFawn  \t\nFederal Gold.\nFreehold\n.06\n30\nGeo Copper\nCrt\n_\u00bb\n.l*-**.\nGlacier Creek     .00%\nGolconda 18\nGold Mountain       \u2014\nGeo Enterprise  05\nGeo  River   00%\nGrandview      .01%\nGrange    03\nGrull Wihksne     .05\nHecla     10.50\nHedley Amal   19\nHighwood Sarcee 03%\nHome Gold  04\nIndian    01\nIndependence       \u2014\nIsland Mountain     .74\nLucky Jim     \u2014\nMar Jon ._ 08\nMercury   12\nMerland    19%\nMill City 08\nMorton wolsey      \u2014\nNicola     08\nNoble Five  06%\nNordon      10\nOkalta Oils  _....    \u2014\nPacalta        .02%\nPend Oreille _    .58\nPilot Gold        .02\nPorter Idaho     .08\nQuesnelle Q  16\nRanchmen's  32\nRelief Arlington .....    .27\nReward    02\nRoyalite    23.00\nRufui Argenta      M\nRuth Hope     \u2014\nSllvercrest  00%\nSilversmith         .03%\nStandard Silver ....    .73\nSunshine  21.75\nVidette     15\nViking Gold      .01\nWaterloo     .03\nWaverley Tang .....    \u2014\nWhitewater   08%\nYmlr Yankee     21\n.07\n.35\n..08\n.08\n.05%\n.00%\n.03\n.03%\n11.00\n.22\n.09%\n.09\n.01\n.75\n.03\n..09%\n.12%\n.20\n.01\n.09\n.07\n.11\n.09\n.69\n.04\n.09\n.28\n24.00\n.02\nM\n.80\n22.50\n.01%\n.03\n.00%\n.07%\nToronto Stock Quotations\nBONDS HIGHER\nNEW YORK, July 17 (API-\nCorporate bond market wat pulled\ninto the upward trend of other\nmarketi by utilities and Junior rails\nwhich rallied in tha final hour today.\nIndividual firm ipota in utilities\nincluded American a-e\/orelgn Power 5s at 73. Laclede Gas 3%a of\n1953 and 1960 at 79 and 78%.\nForeign bondi were itetdy.\nC. P. R. EARNINGS\nLOWER\nMONTREAL. July 17 (CP)-Earn-\nningi of the Canadian Pacific Railway con*?any for the week ending\nJuly 14 were $2,428,000, a decrease\nof $2000 compared with $2,430,000\ntor the corresponding week of 1934.\nEastern Sales\nMONTREAL, July 17 (CP)-Salei\nof 100 or more iharei on Montreal\nttock exchange today\n350 Brazilian, 440 Ind Ale A, 235\nCPR, 320 Dom Coal pfd, 1020 Hollinger. 950 Imp Tob, 850 Int Nick,\n382 McCall Fr, 667 Mtl Pow.\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP)\u2014Salei\nof 100 or more iharea on the ttock\nmarket today\n4271 H Walkers.\nDom Coal pfd, 607 Ford A, 1467 Int\nNkl, 489 Loblaw A, 295 Stl of Can,\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, July 17 (CP)\u2014Prime\ncommercial paper %.\nSterling exchange iteady at\n$4.95% for 60-day bill! and at\n$4.96% for demand.*\nCanadian dollars today 5-32 discount, yesterday 6-82 diicount week\nago % dlicount\nFrane 6.63% centa.\nLire 8.25% centa.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, July 17 (CP)-Brlt*\nish and foreign exchange cloied\niteady.\nArgentina, peao      -2656\nBrazil, milreii    .0546\nChina, Hong Kong dollara ...   JS278\nFrance, franc  -   .0864\nGermany, reichimark  4049\nGreat Britain, pound 4.9802\nItaly, Ure     .0826\nUnited Statet, dollar, 3*32 per cent\npremium.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, July 17 (CP)\u2014Grain\nquotation!:\nOpen  High  Low  Cloae\nWheat:\nJuly    80       80%    80       BOH\nAug    80%    81%    80%    81\nOata:\nJuly ....  42%    44       42%    44\nOct. _    31       31%    30%    31%\nDec    -       -       -       29%\nBarley:\nJuly     34%    88%    84%    33%\nOct   33%    S9%    83%    SSH\nDec.  ..._  -       -       -       39%\nFlax:\nJuly ..._ 121      131      120%   120%\nOct- 116%   117%   116%   117%\nDee   -      -       -     117%\nRye:\nJuly ..._   38       35%    39       39%\nOct    87       38%    36%    38%\nDtc    38%    38%    38%    39%\nCaah wheat: No. 1 hard and No. I\nnorthern 80%; No. 2 northern 77%;\nNo. 3 northern 72%: No. 4 nothern\n64%; No. 5 wheat 58%; No. 6 wheat\n57%; feed 54%; durum 70%; track\n80%.   ,\nAlexandria  _ _._       .01\nAlgoma  03%\nAsnley Gold ....       .71\nBarry Hollinger  04%\nBase Metali  _._ _      .73\nBankfield        .46\nBear Exploration 62\nBig Mii-buri 56\nBobjo \u201e       _U\u00bb\nBradian         1.76\nBrett Trethewey 01%\nBRX Gold 08\nBrownlee _..        .01\nBuf Ankerite      2.75\nBuf Can Gold __       .01\nBunker Hill        .07\nCan Kirkland _..-       .01%\nCan Malartic  __      .64\nCariboo Gold Quartz 95\nCaitle Trethewey  _    1.05\nCentral Manitoba 03%\nCentral Patricia _     1.78\nChibougamou _      .17%\nClerlcy  03\nCoast Copper     2.00\nCobalt Contact        .02%\nConarium _     1.60\nCons M *4 8 \u2014  161.50\nDome    __    38.00\nDom Exploration  04%\nEldorado       3.78\nFalconbrldge     3.78\nGod's Uke .... _      1.73\nGranada        -21\nHardrock   _ 42\nHollinger  _ -    13.00\nHowey\nHudson Bay\t\nInt Nickel  _\nKlrkland Lake\t\nLake Maron   \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLake Shore \t\nMcLeod Cockshutt\nMclntyre\n    15.00\n    27.25\n       .43\n 03%\n     4.69\n_.._   50.29\n 04%\n......   39.79\nMcVittie Grahamroe 13\nMcWatters Gold     121\nMacaisa      1.60\nMalrobic          .00%\nMaple Leaf    \u2014 _      .03\nMining  Corp    _    1-43\nMoffatt HaU _ 01 %\nNipissing  _     2 20\nNoranda    38.80\nParkhill       -20\nPaymaster 26\nPend Oreille      \u2022\u00ab\nPlekle Crow     2.17\nPioneer Gold      9.60\nPremier Gold  -     1*\u00ab\nReno Gold  ,    1-26\nSakoose  \t\nSan Antonio\t\nSheep Creek _\t\nSherritt Gordon\n.03%\n3.68\n.83\n.69\nSiicoe       2.73\nSmelteri Gold        .06%\nSouth Tiblemont 02%\nStadacona   21%\nSt Anthony  _ 16%\nSudbury Baiin     1.42\nSylvanlte      2.15\nTeck Hughei  _     ..it\nToburn      1.10\nTowagamac    _     .18\nTreadweU _ 15%\nVenture!    82%\nWaite Amulet        .60\nWayside  13\nWhite Eagle     _.      .02%\nWright Hargreavet     7.50\nOltS\nAcme  _.     .18%\nAJax     _ _ 50\nB A Oil  _.   15.50\nCalmont  -      .04\nC and E Corp  50\nChemical Research     122\nDalhousie          23\nHome Oil -      .53\nHomestead O and G       .04\nImperial Oil -   18.75\nInt Pete    34.50\nMerland  18%\nNordon  _ 10%\nOil Selection!        .04\nOlga    +       .04%\nRoyalite          23.50\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Broi A        9%\nBell Telephone  129%\nBrazilian     8%\nBrew tt Dist       _\u00bb\nCan Bread   - _    2%\nCan Cement      6%\nCan Car and Foundry      8-U\nCan Ind Ale A       9%\nCan Dredge  _ _   24%\nCan Pac RaUway     9%\nCom Bakeriet    14%\nDist  Seagram      21\nDom Storet      6%\nFord of Canada _    26%\nGoodyear Tire  _     71\nHiram Walker     29%\nImperial Tobacco    13%\nLoblaw A     19\nMassey Harrli ..._      4\nStandard Paving  _._\u2014       _\nSteel of Canada ,-.    50\nWalker Brew     3\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBell Telephone \u2022- 129%\nB C Packing 6$\nBrazilian _      8%\nB C Power A \u2014 _   22%\nBuilding Producti    30\nCanadian Bronze  -   28\nCanadian Car it Foundry     6%\nCanadian Cement      6%\nCanadian Cement preferred _   52\nCanadian Industrial Ale A ....    9%\nCanadian Industrial Ale B -    7%\nCanadian Pacific RaUway ....    9%\nCanadian Steemert -    1%\nCockshutt  \u201e   _    7%\nConiol Min it Smelt  161\nDominion Bridge    28%\nDominion Gltss -  110\nDominion TexUlet _     69\nGn Steel Warei     8%\nHamilton Br      8V\u00ab\nInternational Nickel 27%\nMassey Harris     4\nMontreal Power     30%\nNational Steel Car 14\nNational Brewing      36\nOgilvie 152\nPowtr Corporation   -t    7\nQuebec _   -_   14%\nShawlnigan     15%\nSherwin Wllllama    12\nSouth Camdian Power   11\nSteel of Canada _  49%\nCURBS\nAssd Brewing\nBrew It Dist\nBritish American Oil.\nCanadian Celaneie\t\nCan Dredge\t\nCanadian Malting\t\nCan Wineriet\n12%\n.55\n15%\n23\nh\n4%\nDistillers Seagram     21\nDryden Paper _    3\nImperial Oil  _    19%\nImperial Tobacco Canada _.-.   13%\nInternational Petroleum  _   34%\nMcCoil Frontenac  _ __   12%\nMitchell Robt _ \u2014 _    4\nPage Heney  \u2014    80\nBANKS\nCanada      60\nCanadian    128\nCommerce 165\nDominion  -  163\nMontreal .._\nNova Scotia .\nRoyal\n 189%\n 268\n  148\nToronto    _ 208%\nMISCELLANEOUS\nDominion Storei _    6%\nFord of Canada A    26%\nMontreal Silver Prices\nMONTRBAL, July 17 (CP) \u2014 Silver futures closed\n\u2022Steady on the Canadian Commodity Exchange today, 15-20\npoints lower. A total of four contracts was traded, two Dec,\ntwo Se}pt\nOptn High Ltw S'ote^\nSept.    68.10B      68.15      68.16      68.18B\nDec    69.00B      69.15      69.15      69.00B\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, July 17 (API-\nWheat caih: No. 1 northern 1.12% to\n1.14%, No. 1 red durum 78%.\nFlour 29 higher. Carload lota,\nfamily patenta 7.60 to 7.80 a barrel\nln 98-pound cotton sicks. Shipment!\n19,329. Pure bran 17.90 to 18.00.\nBULLS PILE IN\nATMONTREAL\nMONTREAL, July 17 (CP)-Bulle\ntook a hand ln dealing! on the\nMontreal atock exchange today.\nDominion Textile gained 1%\npolnta to 69 while Bell Telephone\nadvanced a point to 129. Canadian\nHydro Electric preferred wu up %\npoint to 52 and Goodyear Tire preferred rose % point to 62%.\nHollinger touched a new low at\n12.70. At toe cloae lt rallied to 100,\noff 60 cents. Nickel wu ott % point\nto 27%.\nCanada Cement gained % point to\n6% while Canada Steamship! slipped % point to 1%, a new low,\nwhile Montreal Power wai up %\npoint at 30%.\nWinnipeg Higher\nWINNIPEG, July 17 (CP)-Re-\nportt of nut in the United Statei\nsent wheat pricei upward ln world\ngrain marketi today, though Winnipeg grain exchange futurei lagged\nsomewhat due to poor current demand abroad for Canadian grain.\nValuei here cloied % to % cent\nhigher. July's cloie of 80% marked\nthe tint time in five dtyt thtt option had moved mora than % cent\nfrom iti 80-cent minimum level.\nAuguit cloied at 81 centa after a\ndesultory session.\nPRODUCE SHAKY\nMONTREAL. July 17 (CP) -\nPrices were Irregular on Montreal\nproduce mirket today.\nButter 20% centt per pound.\nCheeie off ilightly it 10 centt\nfor No. 1.\nEggs were 22 centa a dozen for A\nlarge.\nPotatoei 60 to 85 centa per 80-\npound bag.\nShip Refusti a\nRaw Silk Cargo\nVICTORIA, July 17 (CP)-A thlpment of raw tllk destined for New\nYork vil Sin Frmciico ind the\nPanama ctnil It lying it Rithet't\nplen following refutil of tht Pacific ateimihip Uner H. F. Alexander\nto load it\nLoading of the cargo wu well un*\nder way last evening when officen\nof the vessel learned that the work\nwat being done by strike-breaking\nlabor. The shlp'a offlcen chose not\nto risk trouble with Ubor In California porta and ordered the illk\nback onto the dock.\nTbe ihipment wu brought here\nfrom the orient on tht R.M.S. Empress of Russia and wai to have been\ntranshipped tgtln at Sin Frmciico.\nMonty\nBy tht Cinidlin Pratt\nCloiing exchange ratei:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.97, franc\n6.64 cents, U.S. dollar 1.00 5-32.\nAt New York-Pound 4.96%, franc\n6.63% cents, Cinidlin dollar .99\n27-32.\nAt Parlt-Pound 73.87 francs, dollar 15.08% franca, Canadian dollar\n15.06 franci.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12t, U.S. dollir\n59.09 centt, Cinidiin dollir 58.98\ncents.\nU.S. A. Notional\nDebt Takei Jump\nWASHINGTON, July 17 (AP)-\nThe federal deficit ind debt got\noff to i flying start In thl tint two\nweekt of the new flninciil yeir.\nThe treMury'i July IS itatement\ntodty showed the national debt had\njumped about 8500,000,000 to I new\npeik it $29,177,788,318. Expendlturei totalled S536.249.207. leaving an\nexcels over receipt! of $376,010,835,\ncompared wltb a deficit of ibout\n$151,000,000 in the corretpondlng\nperiod list yeir.\nThe wir debt peik in 1919 wu\nnearly $26,600,000,000.\nLoses Appeal in\nUnsealed Liquor\nCase at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, July IS (CP)-A\nhome brewer, Chrlttophtr Stephens,\nlost hit appeal from a police court\nconviction tor having unsealed liquor in his possession because Magistrate Mackenzie Matheson thought\nthat 125 bottles of beer and 468 empties were too many tor hit domeitic\nuie.\nMr. Juitice D. A. McDomld, to\nwhom Stephens appealed In supreme\ncourt, held that he could not interfere with the magittrtte'e finding.\nStephens hid notified tbe liquor\ncontrol boird thit he had the beer\nready for leallng; ind.the board replied thit it wu not their practise\nto leal home brewed betr which wu\nfor domestic ute only ind not tor\nnle.\nThe magistrate releued Stephen!\non suspended sentence.\nMttdl Markets\nNEW YORK. July 17 (AP)-Cop-\nptr quiet; electrolytic tpot tnd future 8.00; export 7.85.\nTin firm; ipot ind nearby 98.82;\nfuture 51.62.\nIron dull, unchanged.\nLead iteidy; tpot New York 4.15\nto 4.25; Cast St Louii 4.00.\nZinc quiet; Eut St Louli tpot\nind future 4.30.\nAluminum 19.00 to 23.00.\nAntimony tpot 12.76.\nBir lilver tteidy, unchtnged it\n67%.\nAt London\u2014Copper, ttandud tpot\n\u00a331 13) 6d; future \u00a332 2t 6d: electrolytic, ipot \u00a339 5t; future \u00a339 10a.\nTin, spot \u00a3284 12a Sd; future\n\u00a3224 12s Sd.\nLeid, tpot \u00a314 ltke; future \u00a314\n1.1 M.\nZinc, ipot \u00a313 17t Sd; future \u00a314.\nBar tflvtr quiet unchanged at\n30 3.19d.\nOOTACAMUND. India (CP) -\nPrince Aum Jah Bahadur of Hyderabad created a record recently\nwhen he bagged 39 tigers. 10 bean,\nfive panthers, five crocodiles and\none bison during a 33-day hunUng\nexpedition.\nSHARES PUSH AHEAD STEADILY\nTO BEST LEVEL OF YEAR AT N.Y.\nBUILDING SHOWS\nINCREASE\nOTTAWA. July 17 (CP)-Value\nof building permlti luued by 61\ncltlet during Junt wu $9,117,086,\nin Increue of $2,705,606 over Junt,\n1934.\nThe cumulitive total for tha flnt\nalx monthi of the year wai $24,629,*\n071 u agalnit $10,411,377 lut year.\nFarmers Criticize\nSloneman Actions\nSASKATOON. July 17 (CP)-A\nreiolution crltlclting the actioni of\nJ. A. Stoneman, first president of\nthe United Ftrmen of Canada, Saskatchewan tection, now a member\not the botrd ot railway commissioners, wu adopted at the annual convention of the farm organization\nhere today.\nMr. Stoneman wat criticized for\n\"his unfaithfulness to the prairie\nand British Columbia agriculturist!\" by hli action ln catting the\ndeciding vote against a reducUon ot\n\"mountain differential upon feed\ngrain entering the province of British Columbia?\nDelegate! were told by C. W. King,\nSaskatoon representative ot the\nSaskatchewan wheat*, pool, that the\nquality of bread used in England\nhad fallen off with the decreued\nproportion ot Canadian wheat used.\nHe suggested that arrangements\nbe made with Britiih bakers to offer\nbread baked from Canadian whnt\nto show the BriUih public the luper*\niority ot it. An opportunity to taste\nbread of Canadian wheat he uid,\nwould result in an immediate increase in the demand in the United\nKingdom.\n*\nHudion Boy M. & S.\nRetire* Bonds\nNEW YORK, July 17 (AP)-Hud*\nton Bay Mining tt Smelting company, Ltd. 6 per eent convertible\nbond which matured July 15 have\nbeen paid in fuU, according to an\nannouncement today, or fund remain In tlie handi of J, P, Morgan\ntt Co. to pass those not presented\non thtt dtte, with the exception of\n$1,445,600 per vilue bondi which\nwere represented for conversion\ninto common itock it the rate of\n$15 per share under the termi of\nthe bond indenture. On the conclu-\nlion ot thii transaction the total\nnumbtr of iharei iiiued and out-\nitanding will amount to 2.757,973.\nAt a metUng ot the dlreeton today a dividend of 90 centt per\nthare in Canadian fundi payable\nAuguit 31 to itockholdera of record\nAuguit 9 wat declared.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, July 17 (AP)\u2014doling: Brtj Trac $8%, CPR $10, Brit\nAm Tob \u00a36, Distillen 93i 9d, Hud\nBty 17s 9d, Imp Tob 141s 3d. Rand\nMinei \u00a38, Rhodeiitn Anglo Am\nIOi 9d, Rhokana Corp \u00a34%, Crown\nMlnu \u00a313%, Spring! 42s 6d, Vickers 14! 9d.\nBonda\u2014Britiih 2% per cent con-\nsols \u00a386, BriUsh 3% per cent war\nloan \u00a3106%. BriUsh funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a3119.\nTurnover Increases\nSharply; Reports\nAid Market\nNEW YORK, July 17 (CP) \u2022*\n\"Good newi\" wu the watchword In\nthe itock market today, u the general level of iharei puihed steadily\nthead to the bett leveli of the year\nto date on sharply lnereued turnover.\nThe encouraging tiding! came\ntrom a number ot sources, including favorable tint half earningg\nreporti for teveral leading corporations; a better than icaional\ngain ln power output; a further\nblow at the constitutionality of the\nAAA, which helped tha packing\nstocks; better iteel newi, and a\nsharp reduction in gaaollne ln itorage.\nThe .3 of a point advance in the\nAssociated Press average of 60 itocki\nbrought it to the higheit point for\n1939 at 49.7, supplanting the 45.9\nmark made on July 8, The 30 industrials in the compilation likewise\nscored a new peak with a .6 of a\npoint lltt to 62.8. The lndustriils\nfigure li not only the bett for thit\nyear but it now more than a point\nabove the 1934 top of 61.4.\nActivity wai brisk in the itock ex*\nchange with a turnover of 1,393,340\niharei. Not tlnce June 21 have\ntransactions exceeded today'i.\nTo Investigate\nStock Buying\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP)-Tha\nmanaging committee of the Toronto\nttock exchange hat ordered an Immediate InveitigaUon Into the itate-\nmenta credited to in official ot\nChemlcil Reitlrch corporaUon regirdlng thi market poiltlon ot the\nitock ln the lait few dayi.\nAcUon by the exchange followa\non a itatement made public today,\nIt ii alleged, by a director of Chemical Research that tbe market wu\ndepreued by certain dnteretta \"who\ntold to cuitomeri at higher leveli\nover 250,000 iharei of itock which\nhad never been purchased and\nwhich can only be purchued ln the\nopen market.\"\nBAR GOLD UP\nMONTREAL, July 17 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London up 3 centi to $85.04\nan ounce ln Canadian funds; 141s Id\nIn British funds. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $39.04 ln\nCanadian.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, July 17 <CP)-\nMlning aharei nld on the Vancouver stock exchange.\nListed\u2014Big Mlsi 5000, Bradlan\n190, Bralorne 250, BRX 200, Dentonia 3500, Koot B 3400, Meridian\n3000, Momlng S 7000. Pioneer 200,\nPrem G 3600, Reeves Mac 700,\nSheep Crk 600. Wayiide 1000.\nCurb-Beaver S 2500, B C Nickel\n3700, B C Silver 900, Golconda 3900,\nGrange 4000, Hedlev A 1000, Home\n1100, Isl Mtn 600, Minto 4500, Morton W 1000, Nicola 2700, Noble Five\n11,000, Pend O 1200, Porter I 4000.\nRelief A 500, Silversmith 2000, Standard Sliver 200, Waverly 3200.       i\nWe Art Pleased to Announce\na private -win connection with\nE. A. PIERCE & CO.\n40 Wall Street, New York.\nMembers of the New York Stock Exchange,\nand thi appointment of f\nMR. F. J. PULLEN\nat Managar of our New York Stock Dtpartmtnt,\nA. E. JUKES & CO., LTD.\nMemberi of\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nB. C. Bond Dealert Association,\nCanadian Commodity Exchange Inc., Montreal\n810 West Hastings St.\nVancouver, B. C.\nCorreipondenti:\nP. I. POULIN .... NELSON, l.C.\n(ESSE KEMP TRAIL, B.C.\nC. W. HERTIC.   .   .ROSSLAND, l.C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL - BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nELEPHANT Brand\nChemical Fsrtilissrs\nAmm-nliim Phoiphatea\u2014Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphoiphatei\u2014-Complete Fsrtilissrs\nProducers snd Refiners of\nTadanac Brand Metals\nCOLD\nSILVER\nILICTROLVTIC\nLEAD \u2014 ZINC \u2014 CADMIUM \u2014 BISMUTH\n PAOE TEN -\nBATHING CAPS\nNew Styles\nNew Designs\n15c to 75c\nMann, Rutherford\nDrag Co.\nSEEK QUOTA UPON\nCANADIAN PULP\nWASHINGTON, July 17 (API-\nPlans for obtaining a quota restriction on Imports of Canadian news-\nfirlnt and woodpulp were discussed\noday at a meeting of the Maine\ncongressional delegation.\nSenator Frederick Hale, ln whose\noffice the meeting was held, said\nprocedure and information were\ndiscussed in preparation for another\nmeeting to be held early next week.\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTING\nWe Repair and Overhaul\nAnything Electrical\nGeneral Electric Appliances\nStandard Electric\nJack Hoogerwerf\nPhone \u00abM 615 Biker 8t\nMORE ABOUT\nITALY-ETHIOPIA\n(Contlnuid From Pigi One)\nEgypt, describing ln greit detail the\nAfricin Empire's isiertedly feverish\nefforts to get ready for war.\nThree hundred planes will aid\nthe tens ot thousands of Italian foot\nsoldiers already designated for East\nAfrican service. Hie National Aviation service disclosed, with General\nGuiseppe Valle. under-secretary for\nlir, probably commanding them.\nTwenty-four planci and 80 pilots\nleft for East Africa yesterday.\nA government anokesman. however, said Italy had not considered\nimmediate severance of diplomatic\nrelations with Ethiopia. That will\ncome up it and when hostilities start,\nhe raid.\nCHARGE CHILDREN\nMAIMED\nROME, July 17 (AP)-A communique Issued by the ministry of\npropagandi tonight charged Ethiopian tribesmen with \"mutilating numerous children\" in their \"mass attack\" on \"the defenceless natives of\nEritrean Dancali May 31,\"\nEmphasizing what it termed the\nbestiality of the Ethiopian raiders,\nthe communique said: \"NumertuB\nchildren were mutilated and left\nbleeding along the paths of the tribal\ninvasion.\"\nA brother of Chief Mohammed\nAhau of the Ethiopian Dancali tribe\nof Dammohoita. assisted by an\nEthiopian chieftain called Negaso,\ncommanded the lnvaden, the communique raid.\nThese leaden, it continued, were\nresponsible for the infiltration into\nEritrean Dancali of heavy contingents of the Dammoholt tribe and the\nAlalta trive ot Ethiopian Dancali.\nwith iome tribesmen from the\nEthiopian plateau in the vicinity ot\nTeru Biro.\nAt dawn Miy 31, the communique\nslid, the varioui attacking tribes\n\u25a0truck out in leveral directions on\nthe Midra plain of Eritrei. Italian\nforces dispatched from Assib were\nunible to reach the region, the\nstatement said, before the ralden\nkilled md wounded numben of\nnative herders with their women\nand children md made off with 4000\nhead of cattle.\nDRILL TROOPS\nADDIS ABABA, Ethioplt, July\n17 (CP)\u2014Emperor Hille Selassie's\nfighting men, clad In new uniforms,\nsharpened their ihootlng eyes and\ndrilled interminably today as Ethiopia'! preparations for possible war\nwith Italy continued apace.\nA belief gained credence the emperor would declare general mobilization in his iddress to parliiment,\nprobably tomorrow.\nStreets were converted into drill\ngrounds for practice manoeuvres.\nArtillery roared and machine guns\nsputtered in the mimic wirfare. Detachments of troops streamed steadily toward the front. Recruits moved\ninto the capital to draw new arms\nar*! Khaki uniforms, learned the\nrudiments of organized warfare and\nreceived Instruction in military\ntactics,\n^^sW^s^______________________________________W_M\nA FIFTEEN PIECE\nLIVING ROON\nENSEMBLE\nAT A VERY SPECIAL PRICE\ne CHESTERFIELD AND TWO CHAIRS\ne TABLE AND RUNNER\ne FLOOR AND TABLE LAMP\ne MIRROR AND TWO PICTURES\ne COFFEE AND END TABLE\ne FERN STAND\ne FOOT STOOL\ne SMOKER STAND\n$153.00\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nCOMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS\nISTANBUL, Turkey. July 17 (CP)\n\u2014Reports reaching Istanbul todiy\nslid the tierce Galla tribesmen,\nknown is Ethiopia's most savage\ntighten, were planning to turn lions\nloose against my Italian lnvaden.\nThe lion is the nitionil symbol\nof Ethiopia, even being used on\noccasions to guard the throne of\nthe Emperor, who, since the days\not King David, has been called \"the\nconquering lion of Judah.''\nMORE ABOUT\nRELIEF HIKE\n(Continued From Pigi One)\nquantities. One contribution of BO\npounds ot meat was received from\na local meat merchant. Tea, coffee\nmd other incidentals were purchased from strikers' funds. A strict\npatrol ot the Ottawa-Montreal highway was continued.\n350 AT SCARBORO\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP).\u2014Provincial police escorts in the van,\n350 Toronto \"on-to-Ottawi\" marchers tonight were outside the city\nlimits and planning to spend the\nnight at Scarboro, five miles away.\nBefore the trekken reached the\ncity limits, first lid squads were\nbusy treating sore feet.\nAdvance agenta were lent ahead\not the main body to attempt to collect food for the marchen on the\nexpected arrival at Scarboro.\nIncluded ln the parade were numerous women, several wearing\nhigh-heeled shoes. A gift of tint\nof \u2022 special \"toot hardening\" com-\npund was packed for use it rest\nhllti. With the mirchen were 25\nflnt aid men.\nMORE ABOUT\nBRITAIN-AFRICA\n(Continued From Pigs Om)\nItalian Somaliland, hid blin \"partially redistributed\" In view of\n\"possible contingencies on thit\nfrontlir.\"\n2. Sir Simuel Hoare, foreign secretary, replying to questioner!, expressed his belief lt wii not necessary to reinforce the normal peacetime garrison in the Sudm.\n3. Usually well-informed quarten\nsaid Britain wu ready to authorize\narms shipments to Ethiopia, following receipt of communications from\nEmperor Haile Selassie certifying\nhis empire's need of two shipments\nheld up here \"for the legitimate\nuse of the Ethiopian army.\n4. Authoritative information uld\nAnglo-French consultations in Paris,\ngoing on for several days, had not\nyet produced anything of importance.\nEvening \"Moonlight Cruise1'\nOn Beautiful Kootenay Lake\nNelson\u2014Procter and Return\nWEDNESDAY, JULY 24\nEnjoy\ndancing on\nenlarged\nfloor space.\nNew\nTroubadours\norchestra\nwill provide\nthe music\nOnly  limited  numbtr cirritd to hurryl\nMake up your party\nnow and order reier-\nvitioni from City\nTicket Office.\nPhone 203\nLight lunch\nand\nrefreshments\navailable on\nboard.\nEverything for\nan enjoyable\nouting.\nSteamer leaves\nNelson wharf\n8 P.M.\nreturns back\n1A.M.\nReturn fare including dancing 7 5c per person\nCanadian Pacific\nWorld'* Greateit Travel Syttom\n\"Review of the Fleet by\nthe King\"\nA New Poem by Rudyard Kipling\nLONDON, July 17. (CP Cible)-A\nnew poem entitled \"Review of the\nFleet by the King,\" ls published\nby Rudyard Kipling, distinguished\npoet md author now in hii 70th\nyear.\nThe poem ls u follows:\nAfter his realms and statei were\nmoved\nTo bare their hearti to the Xing\nthey loved.\nTendering themselves ln homige ind\ndevotion.\nThe tide-wive uo the chinnel sooke\nTo ill those eaxer exultant folk:\nHear now what man has given you\nby the ocean.\nThere was no thought of orb or\ncrown\nWhen the single wooden chest went\ndown\nTo the steering flit md the cir*\nless gunroom hiled him\nTo learn by indent md bitter use\nHow neither fivor nor excuse\nNor lught have his sheer self henceforth availed him.\nThere was no talk of birth or rank\nBy the slung hammock or scrubbed\nplank\nIn the steel-grated prisons where I\ncist him\nBut niggard hours md a narrow\nspace\nFor rest\u2014and the naked-light on\nhis face-\nWhile the ship's trafflck flowed unceasing past him.\nThui I schooled him to go md\ncome-\nTo socak at the word\u2014it I ilgn be\ndumb.\nTo stand to his task, not seeking\nothers to aid him,\nTo share In-honor what praise might\nfall\nFor the task accomplished md\u2014over ill\u2014\nTo swallow rebuke in silence. Thus\nI made him.\nI loosened every mood of the deep\nOn him, \u25a0 child and lick for ileep\nThrough the long watches that no\ntime can meuure\nWhen I drove him deafened md\nchoked and blind\nAt the wave tops, cut md spun by\nthe wind\nLulling him fice md eyei with my\ndispleasure,\nI opened him all the guile ot the\nTheir sullen swift-sprung treacheries\nTo be fought or forestalled or dared\nor dismissed with laurrtiter.\nI showed him worth by follycon-\ncealed\nAnd the flaw ln the soul thit I\nchance revealed\n(Lesions remembered\u2014to bear fruit\nthereafter).\nI dealt him power beneath his hand\nFor trial and proof with hii first\ncommmd.\nHimself alone and no man to gainsay\nhim.\nOn him the end. the means md the\nword\nAnd the harsher Judgement 11 he\nerred\nAnd\u2014outboard\u2014ocean   wilting   to\nbetray him.\nWherefore when he cime to be\ncrowned\nStrength In duty held him bound\nSo thit not power misled nor ease\nensnared him\nWho had spared himself no more\nthm hli teas had spired him.\nAfter his liegei ln ill his lindi\nHad laid their hmds between his\nhands\nAnd his ihlpi thundered Mrv.ce\nand devotion\nThe tide wive ranging the planet\nspoken\nOn all our foreshores as It broke:\n\"Know now what mm I gave you\u2014\nI. the ocean.\"\nSCHMELING WILL\nMEET 'EM BOTH\nNEW YORK, July 17 (AP) -\nNoxie, hoxie, who's got der Moxie?\n\"I have,\" piped up Jimmy Johnston md Mike Jacobs, rival New\nYork promoters, in one voice,\n. \"O.K. boys,\" blithely cablet Joe\n(hell Hitler) Jacobs from tar away\nBerlin, \"each of you wins.\"\nThe already tingled heiwwelgnt\nsituation was no nearer untangle-\nment tonight.\nAs if to make certain It would itay\ncomplicated until he returns sometime next week, Joe Jacobs sent\nword to both Johnston md Mike\nJacobs thit Mix Schmeling wlll\nfight under the lusplces Of each ln\nSeptember.\nJacobs, ln Chicago, flushed a *, ble\ntrom Berlin saying Schr, i ng\nwould meet Joe Louis, negre h . vy-\nweight, for the 20th Century Sporting club either on September 17\nor 18.\nJohnston, ln New York, wai ihowlng everybody another cable from\n\"Yussel Joe\" reading:: \"Everything\nO. K.\"\n\"Which means,\" said Johnston\nknowingly, \"that Schmeling wlll\nfight Mix Bier In the Madison\nSqusre Garden's bowl on September\n26. It's In the bag. Jacobs md Bier\nboth have agreed.\nSo there you are, boys, you pay\nyour money md tike your choice.\nMORE ABOUT\nSOVIET PLANE\n(Continued Prom Page Oni)\nthe same low-winged monoplane In\nwhich the Soviet pilot Gromoff set\nwhat is claimed here to beta world\ndistance record over a closed circuit last autumn, flying back and\nforth between Moscow and Krar-\nkov, could not be confirmed.\nLOW-WINGED PLANE\nThe machine has long thin gliderlike wings, the wing spread being 13\ntimes the width. It was designed\nby A. N. Topaloff, designer of the\nill-fated monster ship Maxim Gorky,\nwho recently returned from the\nUnited States to superintend the\nconstruction of 18 new planes of\nthe Gorky type.\nThe ship Gromoff used Is powered\nby the Soviet-built motor called\n\"M-34,\" said to develop 750 to 800\nhorsepower. It has never been submitted to public inspection. Its Identification letters are \"D.R.\"\nWhile the ship is not speedy, it\nIs strong on endurance and tan\ncarry much fuel, enough, observers\nbelieve, for Levmeffsky to fly the\n6000 miles across the north pole ind\nnorthwest Canada, and Incidentally,\nbreak the non-stop distance record\not 5658.5 miles, from New York to\nRayak, Syria, set by Paul Codos\nand Maurice Rossi in 1933.\nMORE ABOUT\nSHIPS (RASH\n(Continued From Pagi One)\naboard. The King Egbert wu en\nroute from Alberni. on the weit\ncoist of Vincouver Islind. to Victoria.\nNIAGARA 13,415 TONS\nNEW YORK, July 17 (AP)-The\nsteamer Niagara, which transmitted\n1 distress call tonight to the harbor\nradio at Seattle after reporting a\ncollision with the steamer King\nEgbert, ls listed ln Lloyd's register\nas hiving i gross tonnige of 13,415\ntona It ls owned by the Canadian-\nAustralian Line, Ltd.\nThe King Egbert is listed at\n4535 gross tons. It ls owned by the\nT. E. King line, of London.\nBoth are listed as having wireless.\nThe Niagara left Sydney, Australia, June IB on her eastward crossing md irrlved it Vmcouver\nJuly 11.\nThe King Egbert plied between\nVlidivoitok. Siberia, md Vancouver, having irrlved it the litter\nport on July 13,\nAtlantic coast maritime stations\nhid no report ot the collision.\nNELSON STUDENT\nFLIES TO BUTTE\nMiss Isabel Oxley, who attends\nschool In Nelson, ls visiting her psrents, Mr. ind Mrs. T. F. Oxley of\n3208 Floral Boulevard, Butte, Mont.\nMiss Oxley flew by plane from\nSpokane to Butte.\nRaUenbury Left\n$1(10 Estate\nVICTORIA, July 17 (CP)-F. M.\nRattenbury, former Vlctorli irchltect who wu murdered on Mirch\n28 at Bournemouth, England, left\na net eitate of about $3,810 it wu\ndisclosed in his will, passed here\nby Mr. Justice D. A. McDonald of\nthe supreme court.\nAlthough the estate wu set out\nii hiving total vilue of 333,577 composed of $31,273 within British Cnl*\numibi and $2,301 elsewhere, it was\nfinally passed u having only an\nactual net value of \u00a3502 8s lOd.\nIn the will, made in Victoria ln\n11)29, Mr. Rattenbury left all his\njewelry, personal trinkets md in\nincome of $350 to hli second wife,\nAlma Vlctorit Rittenbury, wbo\ncommitted suicide following her acquittal of the murder chirge. (Mrs.\nRattenbury s chauffeur, George\nStoner, was found guilty, sentenced\nto be hanged ind liter reprieved).\nAfter her deith, the estate wis to\ngo to his second family by her. Mr.\nRittenbury let out that if the income of the estate during the life\nof his wife did not amount to $350\na month, enough was to be taken\nfrom the capital to bring it up to\n$4200 a year. Probate officials tound,\nhowever, the net value of the estate,\n$2810 was less thin the specified income for one yeir.\nThe assets include $7070 principal\nmd unpaid interest owing by a\nnumber of Victoria residents on\nmortgages and agreements for sale\non various pieces of Vmcouver\nIsland property, some of the agreements running back mmy years.\nAmong the liabilities are bills owing to Bournemouth and other English shopkeepers, doctors md others\nfurnishing general living services to\nthe Rittenbury home. These amounting in all to $4194 were ordered paid\nout of the flrit realizable assets.\nLetteri ot administration with\nwill annexed were issue**1 by the\nhigh court of Justice, London, md\nbecause of the British Columbia\nproperty, the will wis brought here\nfor reselling ind taxing.\nCOUNTY CRICKET\nLONDON, July 17 (CP Cible)-\nClose of play scores in county cricket matches started todiy follow:\nKent 129; Derbyshire 295 rum for\nseven wickets; it Chesterfield.\nYorkshire 398 for six; vi. Northamptonshire it Harrogate.\nHampshire 205; Nottinghamshire\n55 for two: at Bournemouth.\nSussex 4(0 (John Lingrldge 195,\nGreenwood 115); vs. Essex it Hove.\nLancashire 108 and 89 tor two;\nGohicestershire 68; it Minehester.\nWorcheitershlre 315 (A. Bell 131);\nSomerset 24 for four; it Wells.\nDurhim 45; South Africans 208 for\neight; at Sunderland.\nSir Lindsay Parkinson eleven 136:\nLeicestershire 182 for two; at Blackpool.\nCHARGE DELIBERATE\nDESTRUCTION IN U.S.\nUTILITY BILL FICHT\nWASHINGTON, July 17 (AP) -\nThe deliberate destruction of records of Its antl-utllity bill tight wis\nattributed to \u2022 power compiny todiy\nby \u25a0 senile lobby committee witness.\nCoupled wis testimony thit 87.000\ntelegrams assailing the bill poured\nln on Wuhlngton ln i single week.\nThe record-destruction wu attributed to the Anociited Gu It Electric comoany. It also wu named u\nniylng Weitern Union messenger\nboys in Wirren, Pi., three centi for\neach signature obtained on tele*\ngrams to congressmen assailing pre*\nsldent Roosevelt's demanded abolition of utility holding companies.\nNAVAL VESSEL SCORES A DIRECT\nHIT ON BRITISH \"RADIO\" PLAHE\nPut Ceiling on\nScout Building\nWork hu been itarted at the Boy\nScout hall to tix the celling, and a\nnumber of the members of the Nelion Rotary club are helping Scout\nofficials do the work. The hall,\nrather \u2022 lirge building, wu found\nto be hard to heat during the winter, md lt wu deemed advisable to\nclose in tha ceiling and do away\nwith so much wute space.\nMORE ABOUT\nCAMERON CASE\n(Continued From Pigt Ont)\nclal Prosecutor Dugald Donaghy,\nK.C, md Gordon S. Wlsmer, M.L.A.,\ncounsel for the ex-chlef constable.\nCOMPLAINTS OF MAYOR\nMr. Donaghy contended that Detective D. A. McGregor hid been\ntransferred from the morality depirtment because he was too active\nIn raiding bawdy houies.\n\"He was moved because of com*\nSltints of the miyor,\" interjected\nlr. Wlsmer.\n\"Are you cistlng reflections on\nthe mayor?\" uked Mr. Donighy.\n\"I am not,\" said Mr. Wlsmer with\n\u25a0ome heil \"I think he wu one of\nthe finest mayors we ever hid.\"\nHe explained that the miyor hid\ncomplained ibout McGregor drinking.\nEx-Chief Cameron laid that he\nhad been ln Canada 28 years, home-\nsteaded for a time, joined the Edmonton police and remained with\nthem nearly three, years, when he\ncame to Vancouver and wu sworn\nln a third class constable of the city\nforce on November 17, 1911. Six\nyears later he was promoted to the\ndetective department. Mr. Wlsmer\nelicited the information, without\nparticulars, that the accused lost an\neye in the line of duty.\nIn getting information of major\ncrimes, a policeman hu to be i\ngood mixer md his to go to sll\nsorts of plices for hli evidence, the\nwitness explained.\nMORE ABOUT\nFRENCH BAN\n(Continued From Pagi Om)\nstructlon. Demonstration! wtrt\ncalled for alio in tht provlncu.\nThe civil servants and labor un\nions argue reduction in the cost ot\nliving, provided for In the decrees\nby lowered rents, coal and bread\npricei. gu md electricity rites was\nonly \"symbolical' 'and did not correspond to the salary cuts that range\nfrom three to 10 per cent.\n\"The budget of the state his hid\nm increasingly heavy deficit.\" Laval\ndeclared in his speech. \"Our rail*\nway deficits have only added to our\ndifficulties. Finally some of the departments md the communes ire\nin a worse flninciil situation than\nthe itate.\n\"In five yeari the debt hu In*\ncreased from 260 to 340 billions. One\ndoes not need?to be \u2022 financier or a\ntechnician to understand thit ln\nspending more thm one possesses\none reiches bankruptcy quickly.\"\nBoy Scout Camp\nto Be Large One\nMore names of Boy Scouti wishing to ittend the scout cimp this\nyear, ire being received dtlly by\nCommissioner J, M. Dronsfield, md\nhe expects I lirge attendance. It ll\nbelieved there will be several boys\nfrom Silmo, ilthough as yet no\nnames have been sent in.\nCamp opens August 3 and con\ntlnues until August 17.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nCrystal butter is always fresh.\nAsk your Grocer or Butcher. (2557)\nDont forgtt to Phone 148 for\nquality mutt ind quick tervice.\nLAURITZ MEAT MARKET. (2-Mi\nFOR RENT. Furnished suite, electrical refrigeration. Kerr Appts.\n(2358)\nExtra pair of troustrt FREE with\ntvtry iult ordered. Sale positively\ntndt July 31 st. JACK BOYCE'8.\n, (2587)\nRING  up  ROYNON, YE  OLDE\nSomerset   Fruit   Ranch   for   Blick\nCurranta. (2598)\nMrs. Hilgh, formerly of the Cipl*\ntol, ls now established it Hiigh Tru-\nArt Beiuty Salon, ibove J.B. Gray's.\n(2575)\nGREYHOUND Is tht ont travii\nwty thtt exactly (iu vtcitlon needs.\nStt your locil agent todty. (2S89)\nMr. ind Mrs. Angus Maclnnis.\nM. P., will be it Trail ind Rossland\ntoday. (2566)\nThere will be a meeting ot the\nSouth Slocm and District Liberal\nAssociation at Crescent Valley tonight at 7:30. Business election of\nofficen. (2804)\nWANTED IN THE JOINTT0WNS\nOF MICHEL-NATAL, TWO DOCTORS TO ACT AS PARTNER8,\nCLOSING DATE OF APPLICATIONS Aug. 10th. STATE QUALIFICATIONS. ALL APPLICATIONS\nTO BE FORWARDED TO W.H. ADAMS, SEC. MED. COM., MICHEL,\nB. C. (2585)\nThe Nelson Ferry will be closed\ndown for repairs for 6 hours between Friday, July 19th midnight\nmd 6 a.m. Saturday, July 20th.\nDept. Prov. Public Works.      (2393)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nThe body of Mrs. Lucy Palmer,\nwife of William J. Palmer, rests at\nthe Davis Funeral service until 2.30\np.m., todiy. Service wlll be conducted by Rev. H. W. Guicott\n(2605)\nEvery Type Modern\nWarcraft in Huge\nSham Battle\nPORTSMOUTH, Englind, July 17\n(CP-Hivas)\u2014A sea fight of the future was vividly portrayed today u\nthe combined British fleet fought a\nsham battele before the watchful\neyes of King George, Admiral ot\nthe fleeL off Spithead.\nA direct hit by the anti-aircraft\nbittery of the super-bittleshlp Rodney brought down one of the radio-\ncontrolled \"Queen Bee\" robot\nplanes, the secret of whose operation is one of the British navy's most\njealously-guarded mysteries. Another \"crashed\" shortly alter taking\noff.\nThe heavy md Ught crulsera ln\nturn showed their marksmanship\nwhen they made 56 direct hits out of\n320 rounds fired at the obsolete\nbattleship Vindictive, now a radio-\ncontrolled target vessel.\nTARGET AIM GOOD\nPractice firing of the battleships'\n15-inch guns at towed targets was\ndescribed as excellent.\nSupporters of the theory plmes\ncin cope with battleships gained\nconsolation from the fact the \"Queen\nBee\" actually weathered a hail of\nshells to pass over the Rodney before It received the destructive shell.\nEvery type of modern warcraft,\n157 in all, took part in the manoeuvres, attacking and beating off attacks. The submarines launched attacks on thc big capital ships and\ndestroyers rushed to drive them off.\nRadio-controlled plmes swooped\nmd wheeled overhead, while the\nanti-aircraft batteries barked in defence of the surface craft\nKING IS WATCHER\nFour hours the sailor-king stood\non the bridge ot the royil yacht\nVictoria and, Albert, watching his\nfighting ships go through their\npaces. As thc display ended he ordered the traditional signal \"open\nthe barrel\" hoisted it the yirdirm\nof the yicht, signifying thit u a\nreward for their good work tlie\nbluejackets were to hive m extra\nration ot rum tonight\nSwinging about, the Victoria md\nAlbert led the great armada back\nto Solent.\nAs the King stepped uhorj from\nhis yacht a ihort battery fired 21-\ngun salute, md the naval ceremony\nwas ended.\nSPORT\nBELTS\nDistinctively\nNew\nSee these new sport belts\nby Hickok\u2014braids, black\nand white stripes, plain\nwhite, brown and white.\nAll the new styles.\n75c, $1.00, $1.50\n\u00a3MORY'\u00a7\nLimited\nWANT ADS BRING RESULTS\nWASHINGTON, July 17 (CP)-\nDepartment of justice officials tonight denied a Stlt Lake City report that WlUlam Mahan, former\nSaskatchewan firmer wmted In\nconnection with the George Weyer-\nhieuser kidnipping, wis under arrest at the Utah city.\nR. H. MABER\nTINSMITH\nROOF REPAIRS\nPhoni 685        510 Koottniy St.\nIt Your Thirsty Theie Hot Dtyi|\nGet a Bottle ot\nENGLISH   HEALTH  SALINE\nIt\nSmythe's\nThe Prescription Drugglttl\nPHONE 1\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. PoweU Co., Ltd.\n\"Tht Horn, of Good Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley Sf.\n3 DAYS\nNOW!\nmwt.\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1935_07_18","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0404966","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1935-07-18 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. 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