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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":" ****\u2022\nm       \u2014 r\u2014\n***\n\u25a0 Harry Cooper Takes Lead in\nCanadian Open Golf\n\u2014 Pa&e Seven\nthon\nNelson Asks Restoration of\nNelson-Trail Day Mail\n\u2014Pc_e Three\nVOI.IMB 11\nTHE NELSON DAILT NEWS, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 FRIDAY  MOENINO, JILT  \u00ab,   IM!\nnn cents a torT\nFRENCH\nfr\n'\u25a0 v,,.\nA fl c\n3 SINKS WITH 66\nRotrnd'the-World Fliers\nMissing Over 24 Hours\nLAST SEEN\nTHREE HOURS\nFROM BERLIN\nLong Over Due Even if\nHeaded for Omsk Instead of Moscow\nMOSCOW, July 8 (Friday)  <AP\u2014\nJames Mattern and  Bennett  Griffin,   round-the-world   flyers   who\nstarted out w bravely by crossing\nthe Atlantic In record time, were\nunreported   and    mare    than   24\nhours over due here this morning.\nThey   had  disappeared   u  completely \u2022\u00ab though their red, white\nand   blue   monoplane   had   gone\nsailing off Into  space.\nTha   laat   heard   of   them   was   at\n6:05 p.m., K. 8. T. Wednesday, when\nthey were sighted over Lake Wyszlyt,\nnear   Hegelingen,   on   ths   German-\nPolish border. That was three hours\nand lire minutes after they book off\nfrom   Berlin   with   high   hope*   of\ngreatly  extending  their  margin over\nWiley   Post   and   Harold   Gatty,   the\nround-the-world  airmen   whose  record  they set out to better.\nNow they have fallen far bshlnd\nPost and Gatty. Thursday midnight,\nMoscow time, they had been out of\nNew York 60 hours and 60 minutes.\nPost and Gatty reached Moscow H\nhours and 31 minutes after leaving\nNew York.\nDO   UTMOST   TO   LOCATE\nftoviet air officials did their utmost to locats the missing flyers.\nInquiries were made along the line\nof Koenlgsberg, Germany, but Hot a\nword   of   newa   resulted.\nIf they, were forced, to make t\nlanding between Berlin and Moecow\nthey might well have come down at\na point where communications were\nso bad they could not possibly get\nword here. There are many fairly\ngood landing places along that route.\nAs the hours passed and no news\ncame, Moscow airmen pointed out\nthat the globe-glrdlers might have\ndecided to go on to Omsk, 1600\nmiles to the east, where a new supply of gasoline avraitedi them.\nThey had enough fuel tor that\ntrip, but no reports of a landing\ncama from Omsk. When they left\nBerlin they hud gasolln\u00a9 for only 34\nhours' flying. Thus It was apparent\nthis morning they had been forced\nto land somewhere.\nTRY TO MAKE\n350O   MILES?\nIf  the flyers  essayed  a  non-stop\nBerlin  to  Omsk  hop   they   tried  to\nmake  3500   miles   all   at   once.   At\nthe   appwUmate    speed    of   their\nHarbor Grace-Berlin  leg, they would\nhave been In Omsk Thursday forenoon.\nThe Kazan airport, three hours\neast ot Moscow by air and on the\nway   to   Om*,   failed   to   spot   the\nmissing   monoplane.\nAU  Wednesday   night   mechanics\nremained on duty at Moscow's brightly  lighted airport, hoping that they\nmight have a chance to inspect the\nship and send her on her way,\nCHARLIE CHAPLIN\nIS THE RICHEST\nMOVIE CELEBRITY\nPossesses Taxable Stocks and\nBonds Valued at\n$7,686, 570\nVisits Canada\nPALESTINE    BADBI\nRabbi Horwltn ot Palestine, regarded as the world's greatest rabbinical scholar, who Is visiting Canada, say* seizure of Jewish property\nIn Germany  ls  plain robbery.\nfcOS AKGELBS. July 7\u2014The County assessor haa answered one of\nHollywood's great speculations, namely, who ls ftlmdom's richest celebrity?\nTha assessment roll revealed today\nhe Is Charlie Chaplin.\nChaplin possesses taxable stocks\nand bonds valued at $7,6B6.750, cash\nand solvent credit* totalling 9908,60)\nbut his automobile Is worth but\n9T70.\nThere were also a variety of other\nIntriguing secret* about Hollywood's\nfinances which came out of the\nassessor's  office,   such   as:\nThat Greta Garbo owns taxable\nstocks and bonds valued at 9122,080\nand   an   automobile   listed   at   $220.\nThat Gloria Swanson has a harp\nWorth 9850.\nThat Douglas Fairbanks Is runner-\ntip to Chaplin, possessing taxable\nstocks* and bonda worth 9689,004.\nThat Harold Lloyd has taxable\n\u2022tacks snd bonds worth 9174,450,\nautomobile at 9700, furniture, 9102.-\n940, real estate and Improvements\n9341,260.\n ?\nSEVERE EARTHQFAKE\nREGISTERED  AT TORONTO\nTORONTO, July 7 (CP).\u2014An earthquake of severe Intensity was recorded on the eel sinograph of the\" observatory here late today. The epicentre was\nw4g*fe4 \u00ab9 1_\u00bb8 aulas from Toronto,\nLUMBER PLAtiT\nSWEPT BY FIRE,\nWOO LOSS\nSpectacular Fire Destroys\nBrunette Lumber Company, New Westminster\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C. txAft\n7.\u2014A spectacular firs that attract-\ned thousands from all sections of\nthe   city   and   Involved   a  loss  of\napproximately   990,000  resulted  ln\nthe destruction  Thursday night of\na   large   section   of   the  plant  of\nthe   Brune', a    Lumber   Company,\nLtd., In No.ih Westminster.    The\nfire   broke   out    In   the   loading\nsheds   and   swept   this   section  of\nthe sawmill plant for several hours.\nThe   fire   raged   fiercely,   and   destroyed   at   least   2,000.000   feet   of\ncedar   siding   stored   there   by   the\nHammond  Cedar  Company, Ltd., of\nPort   Hammond.   The   loss   to   this\ncompany is placed at 950.000, but it\nIs   covered   by   Insurance.   Arrangements had been made to ship several\ncarloads of this cedar out this weekend.\nThe loading sheds were about 250\nfeet in length and located along\nthe line of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway running between Port C#-\nqultlam and this city, They were\nvalued at 916,000. So intense was\nthe heat from this source that the\nrails were badly twisted at one\npoint, blocking traffic on the tracks.\nFallen debris and burned timbers\nalso covered the line. Some interruption to the Great Northern railway line and the B. C. Electric car\nline along Columbia street was\ncaused by hose lines used in fighting the blaze. Hundreds of spectators lined Columbia and Brunette\nstreets to w^tch the fire.\nBl H-T   ON   PILES .\nSpreading from the loading sheds\nthe fire did considerable damage to\nthe piling and decking that forme*\nthe thoroughfares through the mill\nproperty. Located on low-lying land\nat the Junction of the Brunette\nriver with the Praser river, the hulk\nof the mill property ls built up on\npiles  and timber work.\nWhile the bulk of the damage\nwas confined to the loading thot*\nand their contents, considerable dam-\nago was done to the planking\nthroughout the yards and the numerous small bridges that crossed\nBrunette river. Firemen were kept\nbusy for several hours preventing\nthe flames from spreading beneath\nthis planking. Light and power lines\nas well aa many poles that carried\nthese were destroyed or badly damaged throughout the mill property.\nSome damage was also done to the\nold power plant of the original\nsawmill.\nINJURED JOCKEY\nPASSES DESPITE\nTWO TRANSFUSIONS\nMONTREAL, July 7.\u2014Despite two\nblood transfusions, Jockey Willie\nCleverly, seriously injured in the\nthird race at King's Park race track\nyesterday when riding Airdrome, died\ntn hospital here today. An operation\nperformed last night showed that he\nwas suffering from four broken ribs,\na perforated bowel and other internal Injuries. The young Jockey\nwas conscious until shortly before\nhe  died.\nCleverly was up on Airdrome and\nwas well to the fors when the horie\nstwmbled and broke his leg. He was\ntossed, and the horse trampled cm\nhim.\nCleverly was from Toronto, and\nwas 20 years old. Hs was under\ncontract to Rod Arblque. Montreal,\nand had been riding on tracks under\nthe Jurisdiction of the Canadian\nPacing weociotioa tor several pears,\nCAPTURED MAN\nADMITS PART\nMURDER, RALLS\nTwo Companions Evade\nCapture as Send Fusil*\nlade of Bullets\nKURULAK CAUGHT\nHOLDING HORSES\nFleeing   Men   Separate;\nPosse Follows Each;\nCapture Expected\nKELVrNOTON, Sask., July 7\u2014Admittance that he took part ln the\nmurder of Corporal L. V. Ralls on\nthe outskirts of Poam Lake Tuesday\nmorning, Implication of his brother\nand a third man and confession that\nhis name was not Mike Danchuk\nbut Mike Kurulak\u2014those facta were\ngained by R. C. M. P. In an alleged\nconfession by the one member of\nthe trio of desperadoes whom police\nhave captured In the hunt for Hall's\nslayer.\nThe confession w*a made by Kurulak late tonight after he had been\nbrought   Into   Kslvlngton, by   pollce.\nBesides himself there were his\nbrother, Bill Kurulak, and a third\nby the, name of BUI Miller, alias\nGregory, Kurulak's oonfesslon stated.\nIt la known that Miller has been\nwanted by police sine. 1928 for\ncrime at Rose town, the pa ture of\nwhich could not be learned.\nSeveral hours before Kurulak's\ncapture, two youths who were arrested at Margo and who had 18 keys of\nmotor car Ignitions on their persons,\nwere released. They were able to\nsatisfy police as to their whereabout* at the time of the murder.\nCharlei Hayden, 44, of Port Hope,\nwho waa instantly killed when hla\nmotor car was struck by a CPU.\nflier.\nCAUGHT HOLDING HORSES\nKELVINGTON, Bask., July 7\u2014\nMike Danchuk, 17, Ruthenlan, one\nof the three men believed responsible for the death of Corporal\nL. V, Ralls. R. C. M. P. at Foam\nLake Tuesday morning. U ln the\nhands of the police here. HU two\ncompanions are surrounded near\nKlnloch post office about 20 miles\nnortheast of here and their capture U momentarily e\u00abpeeted.\nThe capture was effected amid a\nfusillade of shots from two of the\nmen. who evaded capture after a\ngruelling, merciless and relentless\npursuit since early Thursday morning, when police and armed citizens of the district drove over\nmuddy roads, at times their cars\nmired, without food, but sticking\ndoggedly to their objective.\nWATCHING   HORSES\nConstable Joe Parsons, R. C. M. P..\nKelvlngton detachment, and Constable Wilson Hay_s, town constable\nof Wadena, were the two men who\ncaptured Danchuk. A Uttle ahead of\nthe party with which they were\nworking, they had turn_4 onto the\nfarm of a man named Johnson half\na mile west of Klnlock post office,\nand walking around the bluffs came\nupon Danchuk, who was watching\nthe three horses, used by the men\nIn their flight from Leo Herbert's\nfarm about 12 miles northeast of\nKllvlngton early Thursday forenoon.\nConstable Parsons ordered Danchuk\nto throw up his hands, panchyt\nobeyed. J\nJust as he did \u00bb. two other>ncn\nrushed out of Johnson's house\/yThey\nwere ordered to j t up the Unhands.\nThey replied by pulling tQelr revolvers and firing in ths direction\nof the polioe offloers, who returned\nthe fire.\nTWO MEN SEPARATE\nThe two men Jumped Into the\nbush, and separated, one going eas*.\nand the other south. Sergeant N. J.\nAnderson, witn a number of msn\nrushed up, and Danchuk was haod-\ncuffed.\nDetective Servcant Mortimer anl a\nparty of men chased the maa who\nwent east, and another posse went\nsouth toward Round late whero the\nother man was reported seen by t\nfarmer   travelling  on  horseback.\nSergeant Anderson picked u_> a\n26.20 Marten rrpea'.er rifle and ihwi\nplaced Danchuk In a car. and he\nwas driven back to Keivlcgton, wher.\npolice officers secured a iU_en.cn.\nfrom him.\nBritain Launches Move for\nFive Power Conference to\nReduce  Sea Forces Farther\nKilled In Crash\nGREETS PUNS\nOF HOOVER TO\nCUT ONE THIRD\nReprestntives  of  U.  S.\nCritical   of   British\nNaval Proposals\nROCKEFELLER TO\nBE 93 ON FRIDAY\nOTHER POWERS\nREFRAIN COMMENT\nBritain   Would   Havc\nAnother   Conference\nBefore One in Fall\nBRITISH AND\nFRENCH AGREE,\nDEBT PREFACE\nHope That German Delegates to Lausanne Will\nAccept Friday\nLAUSANNE,  July   7   .By Melvin\nK.   Whiteleather,   Associated   Press\nstaff   correspondent).\u2014British   and\nFrench    delegates    announced    an\nagreement early today on the preamble of a reparations settlement\nwith hope that the German  delegations   to   the   conference   here,\nhaving   relinquished   all   political\ndemands, would  acrept It today.\nThe document contained allusions\nto the political aspects of the question, including a compromise on the\n\"war guilt\" clause  ln the treaty of\nVersailles,  lt was  understood,  without   engaging   any   powers   on   tlie\nsubject.\nGermany had sought elimination of\nwhat tt called the \"war guilt lie.\"\nIt also was understood that the\nFrench and British had decided to\npropose that Germany put up a\nbond of 3,000.000,000 marks (approximately 1720.000.000), Which would\ntake   the   place   of  reparations.\nThe \"text of the preamble was\ndistributed among the various delegations by Sir John Simon, British\nsecretary for foreign affairs, an^\nNeville Chamberlain, British chancellor of the exchequer, after the\nFranco-British accord was announced at 2:30 a. m.\nONTARIO BOND\nISSUE IS FULLY\nMET THIRD DAY\nTOP-ONTO. July 7 (CP).\u2014Three\ndays after it went on the market,\nOntario's $30,000,000 bond issue was\n' Tully subscribed today. The proceeds\n: wtU bo used to repay short term\ni \u00ab.dvsnc*s incurred for capital ex-\n, (vynditures, Hon. E. A. Duh_op, pro-\n{vtncial treasurer, said ln announcing\n\u25a0tha loan.\nI The Issue was ln the shape of 14-\njy-ar 6M, per cent bonds, selling at\n|J7, and bearing a yield of B.fll per\nj cent.\nIt waa the second loan floated by\nj the Ontario government this t year.\n|Xa February a -125,000,000 issue was\n'cf'tred to the public.\nGENEVA, July 7 (Cp cable).\u2014\nGreat Britain has launched a move\nfor another five-power naval conference aimed at further reduction\nof sea  forces.\nThe proposal for a five-power\nnaval conference between Britain,\nthe United Stales, Japan, France,\nand Italy was advanced br a hiRit\nBritish authority in a press Interview tonight.\nHe proponed that lt be held In\nthe Interval before the world disarmament   conference   resumes   Its\nurtlvltles In the fall.\nThe   proposal   came   at  the   same\ntime as publication  of the detailed\nBritish naval disarmament proposals\n\u25a0 ln London, ln the course of a statement by Stanley Baldwin welcoming\nthe Hoover plan for a one-third reduction  In  world   armaments.\nSpokesmen of the other powers\nat the world disarmament conference here, which, is preparing to\nadjourn until the autumn, withheld\ncomment on the British proposal tonight, although representatives of\nthe United States were critical of\nthe British naval disarmament proposals.\n'The naval questions are most\ncomplex, and require extensive and\nfrank discussions on the part of\nthose concerned,\" said the British\nsponsor of the conference proposal\nin an interview in which his name\nwas   withHeld,   by   agreement.\n\"President Hoover himself will be\nthe first to admit that naval reductions cannot be accomplished by\nthe mere mention of a vulgar fraction.\"\nThe London and Washington governments were In agreement on the\nprinciple of further and substantial\nnaval reductions, the British spokesman said. He backed up the British\ndeclaration in London on the impossibility of numerical reduction of\nnaval units beyond a certain figure\nfor a power like Britain, with worldwide Interests.\nUnited States naval experts here\nTABRYTOWN, N. Y-, July 7.\u2014\nFrom the sheltered seclusion of\nhis rolling estate, John I). Rockefeller, who will be 93 years old\ntomorrow. Issued today the prediction, \"Prosperity has always returned,  and  It  wUl  again.\"\nA birthday cake, a quiet family\ngathering, and probably a Simile\nautomobile tide, all within the\nconfines of his 8000 acres, called\n\"Kykult,\" will mark the occasion\nfor the retired oil magnate.\nGOES DOWN LIKE FLASH\nWHILE MANEUVERING,\nFIX MECHANICAL FAULTS\nSeven of Crew Flung: Into Water; Rescued by Watching Fishing Boat; Sinks in 150 Feet of\nWater; Currents Terrific\nMEN IN VESSEL MAY BE ALL RIGHT\nIF WERE ABLE TO CLOSE HATCHES\n(CONTINUED   ON   PAGE   TWO)\n100 Japanese Fishermen\nReported Imprisoned\nby Soviet Authorities\nTOKYO, July I <*P>,\u2014A report\nthnt Soviet authorities had imprisoned 400 Japanese fishermen employed at a llusslan crab-canning\nplant on Puihtchi island, off the\nwest coast of Kamchatka, was re-\nTiorSed to have been received by the\nbureau  of  fisheries here  today.\nThe newspaper Asahl, which published the report, said the bureau\nhad ordered the Japanese patrol\nboat Shunkotsu Maru, cruisling\nnearby, to proceed to the Island,\nobtain release of the prisoners, and\nInvestigate the incident, the reasons\nfor which were not given.\nSimilar Russo-Japanese incidents\nare reported during nearly every\nfishing  season  ln  northern  waters.\n300 CITIZENS\nAPPEAL AT TOWN\nHALL FOR FC0D\nLINTON, Mass,, July t\u2014Utnw than\n300 men, women and children crowded -ttoe corridors of the town hall today appealing for food. The town\ntreasury has been exhausted, banks\nhave declined to loan Clinton money\nand town officials were forced to\nturn the applicants away empty\nhanded.\nWASHINGTON, July 7\u2014The TJ. 8.\nsenate today passed snd sent to the\nWhite House a bill providing \u00bb100.-\nooo for returning bonus marchers\nhot* to their boa.**.\nMAJOR SUBMARINE DISASTERS\nIN RECENT YEARS\nFollowing Is a list of major submarine disasters ln recent years:\nMarch 24, 1915\u2014United States submarine P-4 sunk ln Honolulu\nbay;   31   dead.\nMarch 33. 1932\u2014British submarine sunk by another British submarine off Gibraltar; 23 dead,\nAugust 21, 1923\u2014Japanese submarine foundered beside a dock\nat Kobe Japan:  85 dead.\nJanuary 10, 1934\u2014British submarine L-24 sunk by a British\nbattleship of Portland, England; 83 dead.\nMarch 19, 1924\u2014Japanese submarine 5-51 sunk off Block Island,\nR. I., by steamer City of Rome; 33 dead.\nNovember 11, 1925\u2014British submarine M-l, sister ship of the\nM-3. lost off Start Point. Devonshire; 06 dead.\nDecember 17, 1927\u2014United States submarine S-4 sunk ofr Prov-\nIncetown, Mass., by coast guard cutter; 40 dead.\nAugust 9. 1928\u2014Italian submarine 5-14 sunk ln Adriatic sea In\ncollision with destroyer;  31  dead.\nOctober 3, 1928\u2014Ths French submarine Ondlne was ln collision\nvtth a Greek steamer off Portugal;  43  dead.\nJuly \u00a3., 1E39\u2014British submarine H-47 sunk in Bt. George's channel, between Ireland and Wales, In collision with submarine L-12.\nHeavy  death   toll.\nJune 9, 1931\u2014British submarine Poseidon sunk in collision with\nmerchant steamer off coast of China;  20 dead.\nOctober 24, 1931\u2014 Russian submarine sank In Gulf of Finland;\n50   dead.\nJanuary 28, 1932\u2014British submarine M*2 aunk off Portland\nBUI, England;  61 dead.\nDOUKHOBORS\nCAUSE RIOT,\nPRAIRIE COURT\nCitizens at Canora Jump\nin to Assist Police When\nBecome Unruly\nCANORA. Sask., July 7.\u2014Porty-\none   Doukhobors  of   the   Sons   ot\nFreedom   sect   languished   In   the\ntown Jail here and In the Lkran-\nlan hall under guard tonight. They\nwere  to  have   been  sentenced   on\ncharges   of   vagrancy,   on   which\nthey were arraigned following nude\nparades, but police Magistrate McDonald of York ton failed to reach\nthis   town.   It   was   not   definite\nwhen they will be tried.\nThe 41   were  remanded   Until   today,   when   they   pleaded   guilty   to\nvagrancy.   At   the   same   ttme   they\nwere   told  that  the  charges  against\nthem  would  not be pressed if  they\nwould   return   peacefully    to   their\nhomes. Only  one of  their number,\nMrs.   Mike   Derhousoff,   whose   husband   waa not  in  the  nude   parade\non  Tuesday  ln  which  the  Doukhobors   disrobed,   accepted   the   police\noffer.   She   was   given   six   months\nsuspended   sentence.\nThe remainder adopted a stubborn\nattitude, and one member of the\nsect, Alex Revan, caused a riot in\nthe court when police removed him\nfrom the room. A fight, ln which\nthe Doukhobors were only subdued\nby the help of prominent citizens\nof  the town,  ensued.\nPolice fear further trouble from\nthe sect, for members have been\ncoming into Canora from all directions to attend the court session. A\nmeeting was held in a village to\nthe east of here, and it lsvthought\nthat a number of the Doul;hobo:|\nhave Joined forces with the Sons\nof Freedom sect, which has not been\ngenerally   supported.\nHUGE MEETING TO\nBE HELD, VICTORIA,\nON PRICEJGASOLINE\nSeveral   Dealers   Refuse   to\nRaise Price; Sell to Public\nat 30 Cents\nVICTORIA, July 7 (CP).\u2014Increase\nIn the price of gasoline is claiming\nthe attention of the registrar o(\nthe Combines Investigation act at\nOttawa following a telegraphed com\nplaint by the Victoria Association of\nGasoline Consumers, Information to\nthis effect was received by the\nKroup tonight ln a wire from F.\nMcGregor, registrar, who stated that\nthe complaint, addressed to the\nminister of labor, had been referr%.\nto him. and was receiving attention\nSeveral Victoria gas dealers today\nrefused to increase the price, anci\nwere selling to the public at 30 cents\na  gallon,  a cent  above  cost   price.\nWhile the authorized price of gasoline was the subject of discussion\nfit every filling station, parage and\nservice shop, ae well as anions; groups\nof citizens, preparations were under\nway to hold a big public meeting\nearly next week to review the whole\nsituation Directors of the Victor*'.\nbranch of the Automobile Club of\nBritish Columbia have been asked\nto arrange for the gathering and\nwill meet tomorrow to discuss the\nmatter.\nIn the meantime, Alderman W. T-\nTodd, chairman of the Industrial\ncommittee of the city council, has\nestablished long-distance contacts\nwith several United States companies\nwith a view to obtaining quotations\nfor gasoline landed here ln bulk.\nThe city controls a 2 50.OOO-gall on\nstorags tank, he said, and this, he\nwas informed, could be filled by\na big U. 8. refinery, duty paid, at a\ngallonage price substantially below\nthat which Canadian companies are\nasking. The quotation, Alderman\nTodd said, was for imperial measure.\nHe ls awaiting further figures from\nCalifornia concerns with whom he\nts  making  contacts.\nSeveral business men. the alderman, said, were prepared to erect\nadditional storage tanks if required.\nRescued Commander Stateg Cause Inexplainable;\nSpot Is Seven Miles Off Capte Levi; Flying\nConditions Hamper Naval Planes\nCHERBOURG, France, July 7 (AP).\u2014The French sub-\nmarine Promethee plunged without warning under the waves\nof Cherbourg harbor while on a trial manoeuvre today, taking\ndown at least 66 men in 150 feet of water seven miles north\nof Capte Levi.\nSeven members of the crew, including Lieutenant du\nMesnil, the ships commander, were saved when they were\nhurled from the deck into the sea by the lurch of the vessel\n - '*'in its unexpected dive.   They\n' swam until they were picked\nup by a fishing boat.\nEfforts  to locate  and salvage   the\nSubmersible with its imprisoned occupants, begun immediately, wer*\nimpeded by strong currents prevail*\ning at that spot. Search for tha\nsunken craft by naval plane waa\nhandicapped by miserable flying conditions, which made their Job dangerous,\nMPOSMBLE TO EXPLAIN\nLieutenant Du Mesnil, the submarine's commander, satd tonight\nthat lt was impossible to explain\nthe catastrophe, but \"it would appear there was acme error in handling\"\n\" Hearing a noise on deck,\" _va\nsaid, \"I thought a man was over*\nboard and sprang up tha ladder.\n\"I waa dumbfounded to see thst\ndeck awash and as I climbed ont,\nI lelt the ship sink under roe.''\nTb* submarine, In service only two\nyears, was endeavoring __> correct!\nmechanical faults when It set cut\nparticularly   for   diving   trials.\nThe ministry of marine at Paris\nsaid the prornelhee bad not been\nIn perfect working order. Various\nadjustments had been found necessary before It rould be deemed\nfit for a long voyage. It was In an\neffort to bring the machinery to\nperfection that this afternoon's\ndlsasterous trials had been arranged.\nIt was estimate<: 40 members\nof the crew and 17 other men. In-\nBURRARD BRIDGE\nCOLLISION KILLS\nONE, INJURES SIX\nTrucks  Smash on  Southern\nApproach of Newly\nOpened Bridg\u00ab\nVANCOUVER,  B. C, July   7   (CP)\n-Plret fatal accident On the Burrard\n1 bridge since it wu opened to traffic\nJuly  1, occurred late this afternoon\nwhen Edward W. Melcombe. building\ncontractor,   west   Sixteenth   avenue,\nmet inatant death, and six other per-\nIsons were injured, when two trucks\nj collided head-on, at tl.\u00ab southern approach  to  the   brtcige.  The  iujured,\n| three  of whom are  In hospltaJ, arc\nexpected to recover.\nThe injured ln hospital are:\nDick, Melcombe, aged 11. cuts and\nconcussion.\njoe Caley. Central City mission, cutB\nand  shock.\nM. Forbes, west Fifteenth, cuts and\nshock.\nOthers whose Injuries were treated\nat home are:\nMrs. Tarshls, west Thirteenth, Injured hand.\nDavid Smith, Pender and Abbot\nstreet*, cuts.\nFrank Melcombe   aged 8. cuts.\nThe   collision   oe'eured  at   the   intersection   of   Cornwall   and   Cedar\nstreets.   Tbe  truck   driven   by   Melcombe was travelling north, going on\nto  the  bridge  from Cornwall street,\nthe other vehicle, driven by S. Tarshls, west Thirteenth, who  was the\nonly occupant of cither truck to escape  Injury,   was   coming  off   the\nbridge and turning south on to Cedar I\nstreet when the Impact took, place.     |\nCKIHHI'.S  OCtHWNT\nHt.HINh WHEEL\nTarshls' truck hit the Melcombe\nmachine Just at the driver's cab on\nthe left side and crushed the occupant behind th_ wheel. Melcombet\ntruck then swerved sharply to the\nright, threw the driver clear on a\ngrass island in the center of the\nstreet and made a complete circle\nbefore coming to a atop. The other\ntr-ck swerved to the left and crashed\ntig.-vlnst the curb of the Island, narrowly missing Melcombe's body.\nln the Tarahls truck was Mrs. Z.\nTarshls sister-in-law of the driver,\noccupying the eet on his right. Smith\nand Caley were ln the rear. The two\nMelcombe youngsters were with their\nfather, as well as Forbes.\n(CONTINUED   ON   PACE   TWO)\nTAX RESOURCE TO\nBE ONLY USED AS\nA FINAL MEASURE\nThomas   Reiterates   British\nPosition as Bill Passes\nCommittee Stage\nLONDON, July 7 kCP cablel.-As\nthe Irish Pree State special duties\nbill passed committee stage without\namendment In the house of commons tonight, J. K, Thomas, secretary for the dominions, reiterated\nthe British government's position\nthat the powers conferred by the\nbill would not be exerclaed If President Eamon de Valera of the Free\nState agreed to arbitrate *he land\nannuities dispute before an Empire tribunal. Otherwise, said Mr,\nThomas, the bill, with all its con-\n| sequences, would go in t Immediate\nj operation against imports from the\nI Free  State.'\n|    Ministerial cheers greeted this dec-\n,   ] laratlon, which  came at the end of\nIN REVOLUTIONARl     a   \u00ab\u2022*\u25a0**\u2022   marked   by   another   onslaught on the  bill from the   \\ >pc*\nOUTBREAK AT PERL .'^y    outnumbered    Labor    cp;.osl-\ni tion.   The   dominions   secretary   re-\n * ; fused  amendments proffered   bv  the\nLIMA, Peru, July 7 (AP)\u2014A i Laborites and the latter then rc-\nrevolutlonary outbreak ln the de- j torted with some unflattering department ot la Llbertad, w;f\\i several I scriptlong of their former colleague,\npersons, killed including three po- \"Out-Herodlrig Herod\" and \"hav-\n11 mm|l snd a Co*i.nunilst agitator Pn\u00ab * dPS're (o Il? remembered aa ttt\nwounded,    was    reported    in    offlclal | English   Bismarck\"   were   among   tha\nSEVERAL KILLED\ndespatches from TrujiUo  today.\n! commentaries on Mr. Thomas' cour .e\nMartial   law   throughout   Peru   wis   ut*red   by   L:.bonte   spokesmen\nproclaimed    by    President    Luis    M. i * \"\nSanchez    Cerro,    whose    government        \/ \/\/\/*,       \\\\ fa\\ \u00a3 jf fj\/(\nattributed   the   revolution   to   Com-! \t\nmunists  and   members   or  the   Aprs'\nparty.\nCoast Flier Forced\nDown on Race Track;\nEscapes Uninjured\nTemperature^; Mln.\nNELSON . 43\nNanaimo  52\nVictoria       41.\nPrince   Hup.rt     48\nEstevan   Point     _...., 48\nDawson.  Y. T.  .   so\nPortland,  Ore.   \u201e  .66\nSpokane  M\nPenticton     !.  44\nKaslo   46\nCalgary\nwtft  Current\n. 46\n49\n48\n. 46\n. 50\n. 44\n44\n. 50\n. S3\n. CO\n44\n. 44\n8.1\n63\n66\n58\n.5\nVANCOUVER,   July   7\u2014While   flying over Lansdowne race track today.\nEdward   Bennett,  city   flyer,   made   a I Qu'Appeil?\nforord    descent    owing    to    engine | Vancouver\ntrouble. Ho landel perfectly and was j Kamloops\nuninjured. i Prince George\nThe plane came to rest on tlie ln-, Atlln   \t\nfield  of   the   track.  No   horses   were j Seattle\nrunning  at  the   time. , San  Francisco\nThe   propeller   of   his   Waco   ma- * Los  Angeles   .\ncl.lne  was damaged   in   the  landinj. I Vanen    ..\nThe thousands of spectators go. a i Edmonton   .\nthrill and made a mad  dash  to  tlie: Prince   Albert\nijiachlne,   Bennett   climbed   leisurely .Winnipeg   54        7\nout    of    the    p'ane,    assuring    the      Forec_s: t<tr t-.t-Wm r.r.d  vtclnlt\ncrowd  that he   was  unharmed. Conttntitd   tin*   w\\   %*\\r\\v.\nTJ\n\u2014_____\n ____________\n Guide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels and Cafes\n\u25a0122 VERNON STREET\nDinner\n75c\nrilONE 787\nLuncheon\n50c\nHume Hotel\nKELSON, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHIM IS- O. M. Hodges, Mr. and\nMrs. J. F, Harvle, Calgary; K. Gray-\nII ii*?. M. Grayling, Ka.slo; John\nICunaden, Lardo; Mr. and Mrs. L.\nG. Korth, E- E, Greene, Spokane;\nG. N. OtooO, Spokane; Mr. and Mrs.\nG. I_. Hodgson, Mr. and Mre. C. L\nC II xi^son, Vernon; C\". L. Moffat,\nWeston; N. W. Murphy. New Westminster; C. P. Hamilton, Mr. and\nMrs.   E.   T.   B.    Klrfguren,    Los    An\ngeles; C. H. WllHfcm, Ottawa; H. H\nMcBain, T. A. Burns, Medicine Hat;\nA. J. ironside, Cranbrook; G. 6\nHill, Lcthbrldge; R. Swan, Victoria;\nT. S. Leslie. C. S. Scott. T. H. Gow,\nT, D. Kclpatrlck. L. 8. McKlnnon,\nL. Dick, J. Anderson, J. H. Hazel-\nwood, Vancouver; Q. J. Duncan, Penticton; J. J. Fltzgibbons, Toronto;\nV. C. Mesker. Midway, Jim Buchanan.   Marcus.\n'$r~\"~'\"\"'\" \"\"\"\"\" i\ni\n!  , Where (lie Gueslls King\nI    cUhe Savo^\nNEISON'S NEWEST AND FINEST HOTEL\nMANY   BOOMS   WITH   PRIVATE\nBATHS  OR SHOWERS\n;.' J. A. KERR, Prop.\nj ] -124  BAKER  ST. PHONE   19\nB __?p__Wr___-'i_fiiS__^!5\nSAVOY\u2014Mr. and Mrs. T, H. Bar- Jamleson, Mlss Jean Jamleson, Mlsi\nnett, Regina; Mr. and Mrs. T. Pear-j Jun? Jamleson, Vancouver; J. E.\nson, Mlss Nellie Parkinson, Mlas I Mercer, Trail; J, H_.s. Edmonton;\nWinnie Harding, P. Shaw, Toronto; I L. Harrison, J. R. Taylor, H. G.\nH.   S.    Walker,    H.    Jamleson,    Joe I Taylor, Calgary.\nGRIFFIN BLOCK\nIN EARLY DAYS\nWAS BROKENHILL\nWas Built by Traves on Corner Bought by Selous\nFrom Government\nGRIFFIN ACIJI IRE1.\nAND IMPROVED IT\nWas Nelson's Earliest Large\nCommercial Building\nDates From 1897\nlilt .\\_L.\u00abON DAIU.   StlV\u00ab, N__-_tf, B. C. \u2014 IH-D-V MOBS-NO, JULY 8, -\"31\nA New Accomplishment for Feline*\nNew Grand Hotel\nV.   L.   KAI'AK,  Prop.\nWeekly or Monthly Ratea. Single,  BO cents  ana up.\nHot and Cold Water. Double.  11.90  and ud.\nPHONE  SO. P.  O.   BOX   1061\nNEW ORAND\u2014A. Macklnley,  Van-Uttle, Roasland;  Mra. Wh.._l_n, HO--\n-Ouyrr;    J.   Poster,    Cranbrook;    W. mer;   Mrs,  Kiterlup,   Tabic.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA. LAPOINTE, Prop.\nHot and cold water in every room\nSteam   Heated\n\u202205   Baker   St. Phone   90\nOccidental Hotel\n703 Vernon St. Phone 687L\nII. WASSICK\nFifty Rooms  of  Solid  Comfort.\nHeadquarters   for   Loggers\nand  Miners.\nTrusetroctton by lire of th* Oriffln\nb.act. eirly Thursday morning, after\n\u25a0 fight of many houra, teven stream.,\nbeing used *iy Fire Chief M H. Ma-\nrmU*j> and hla men, removed one of\nNelaon\"\u2022 earliest commercial build-\nlOtti \u00bbnd the city's first large commercial block. The fire dispossessed\n16  business  or  professional   tenants.\nIt wag not until about 1891 that\nlhe provincial government placed\nthis corner lot, and o-th.rs which\nlike lt were situated In creek beds.\non aale at auction, Harold Selcus,\nwho waa the original purchaser, recalled yesterday. Though ln 12889\nMr. \u00a3elou\u00ab had. secured tlie site now\noccupied by the Wool worth store\nfor \u00bb30, and. the site of the L. D.\ncafe for $100, \u00bbt similar auctions,\nprices had advanced by the time\nthla other list was offered, and he\nhad to bid \u00bb2o00 before It wa.s\nknocked down to him.\nIt remained Juat a piece of creek\nbed until 1897, the year of Nelson's\nIncorporation, when Mr. Seloua gave\na ground lease to E. C. Traves, who\nput up the building, which was\nbuilt on contract by \"Big Jim\" McArthur, and his partner, Jim McDonald, both builders, who then\noccupied the main floor for many\nyears with a furniture store, Nelson's flrat facility ln that line. Old-\ntimers say that Mr. McArthur had\nan Interest ln the building with\nMr. Traves. Tiie latter called th;\nbuilding the Brokenhlll block, and\nso lt remained for eight years,\nGRIt'FIN    ACQUIRED    BLOCK\nIn 1908 J. y. Oriffln, the former\nWinnipeg meat packer, who some\nyears ago was killed ln an elevator\naccident In Victoria, bought the\nInterests of Messrs. SSelous and\nTraves ln the block, which originally\nwas rather plain and prlmlatlve, and\naltered and vastly Improved It In\nvarious ways, making lt completely\nmodern for that time.\nProm early tirms, up to th\u00a9 time\nwhen, shertly before the war, the\nMcBride government extinguished\ntfef sloons and permitted their owners to convert them Into hotels,\ntha portion of the block facing on\nStanley atreet was occupied by the\nOffice saloon, which had verious\nregimes In the approximately 15\nyears of Its existence. After the sa-\n; loon* went, the Office premises\nI were converted to use for real\nestate and other offices. At a later\nI dat* the addition next the alley,\noccupied recently by H. R. Kitto's\nrepair shop, was built.\nI While the Medical Arts block was\nunder ccnstructlon a couple of years\nago. the owners of the Griffin block\nremodelled It, Increasing the available store premises ch the Stanley\nfront.\nMOYIE PUBLIC\nSCHOOL STANDING\nMOYIE, B. c., July 7\u2014Clasa stand*\nlagl of pup'.li. of the Moyle public\nschool  for June,  _Mt\\ are as MlOM\nIn    order   of    merit;\nr.'H _a 1\u2014Michael Joy, Margaret\nWhitehead, Gloria Whitehead, Harry\nTaylor.\nOrade fl\u2014Yv'-mn* Sanders.\nOracle 6\u2014Russell Conrad, Josephine   White, ead,   Jessie   Walker.\nOrade 4\u2014Philip Conrad, John Joy.\nOrjtdo 3\u2014Jessie Jane Whitehead,\nAnthony   J< >',,   P_>bert   WalKer.\nOrad* 2\u20141-% Vaune Conrad, Henry\nWatowskl, Nlcho'-ia watowakl, Vincent   Conrad,   Ada   Birr.\nGra-ie IA \u2014Allsa Forsyth, Pred\nBarr, Edward Barr.\nGrade IB\u2014Joan Oeroux, Geraldlne\nConrad, James Whitehead, Emberson\nWalker.   Eugene   Joy.\nAverage     dally     attendance,     29.8.\nPupils   attending,   30.\nHONOR   KOLLH\nProficiency\u2014Yvonne   Binders.\nDeportment\u2014prances  Whitehead,\nPunctuality and Regularity \u2014\nMichael  Joy.\nCANNY KITTY  CAN BEAD  LIP9\nTom, pet cat owned by Dorothy Christy, Hollywood\nfilm actress, is atone deaf, but reads his mistress'\nlips so well, she says, he  can  carry  out  Instructions\nwhen given.   Here are shown the canny feline and the\nneed we say, pretty mistress.\nMORE ABOUT\nE\n((ONTTjrCED   .'ROM   NOI  ONE)\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\n.AS. E. HW\nCotnpl .cly   RPraoclclI.d\nHot and  fold   Water\nln the HEART <if th. City\nL. D. CAFE\nThe Finest in the City\nOrEN ALL HOURS\nFresh Food\u2014 DoUcfMi Chop Suey\nPrompt   Service\n\u25a0\u25a0ia   Fountain\nROOMI   TO   HINT\nStirling Hotel\n; Blocks East of Tost Office\nHot and Cold Wat_r\nSteam Heat\nModerate Rates\nP. H. Bush, Prop.\nThe Royal CaSe\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nRefill mi nit    and    Delicacy    Prevail\nOPEN  DAY   AMI  NIOlIT\nSpecial Dinner,  H:_M.  to 8 p.m. 33*\nSpecial  Sunday   Chicken   Dinner Hoc\nspecializing in Chop Suey and Noodles\nPHONE   183\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e HOTELS\nArlington\nHotel\nCentrally\nLocated\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. T. EEVESQIE, -Top.\nnOUGLAC\n** HOTEL   **\nROOMS and BATH\nT..  L. \u00bbn_  A.   GROt'TAUE.  Prop.\n-team   llP.ir.il\nThroughout\nHot ana Cold\nWater\nDux __:.. . hon.  _S_\nTRAIL, B. C.\nWHAT WILL BE\nFUTURE OF THE\nGRIFFINCORNER?\n\\\\\\ J. Meagher, Half Owner, Is\nlTnable to Say; Crease\nMight Build\nPROCTER, B. C.\nOUTLET\nTourist Hotel\nrum rut, B. < .\ni uiiv ummi\nIMM < tokod   MOOM  nt nil hour-.\ntourist   tiblos.   Boot*   for   rent,\nfood tlMiinc Qtaewtj More in\ncon mri iciii.\ntt.   V   -MID,   Prop.\nHave\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nDelivered to You When\nYou Are on Your\nVacation.\nAs & large city gang of relief men\nwith several trucks was busy under\ncity foremen all day yesterday clearing up the mess from the Griffin\nblock fire, taking the wreckage from\nthe street to the city Incinerator, and\nWhile the firemen still played streams\nem the flaming debris ln the cavernous hollow in which the block stood,\nthe question universally asked waa:\n\"How soon will the Orirfln block\narise from Ita ashes as a new and\nmodern commercial building of permanent construction?\"\ntiJl.QO*   INSURANCE\nIV. J. Meagher, half owner of the\nproperty, stated to Inquirers that he\nwas Informed by H. w. Robertson,\nwho had written the Insurance, that\nthere would be full recovery of the\n139,000 carried on the building. The\nother OOmOtt me Mrs. H. W. Robertson, and Dr. Fred J. Crease \u00abf Hollywood, Calif., a brother ot the late\nE. A, Crease, former Nelson lawyer\nand    magistrate.\nIt was reported that in the past\nDr. Crease has talked of aome day\nutilizing the Griffin building site\nfor t new business block t'iat would\nbe  t  memorial   to  his brother.\nAs yet no word has been received\nfrom Dr. Crease. Apparently thrre\nmight be poesibilliies for a new\nblock  Jn   that  quarter.\nMr. Meagher stilted yesterday that.\nhis personal inclination would be to\nsell his Interest in the site to a\nprospective   builder.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nHOTEL HUDSON\n7.3   SEYMOIR   ST.\nFIREPROOF,   MODF.KV.\nLMJP-IXY   NEW    ITKNl-TRE.\nVERY   COMFORT-VHt.r   m.!)*.\nAMI  VI ;tY   Bl  V-.iYU.I.E  BATES.\nl* 11 ( HON    INVITED.\nDu\u00a3\u00a3erin Hotel\nV\\N((HVIR.   B.   C.\nUrlslit   Rooms  \u2014  Central.\nModerate  Kates.\nA.   Patter-tun.   late   of   Coleman,\nCrow's _se.it, Proprietor\n900   Sejraour   St. Sey.   4.3\nKead  The  LNelson   Daily\nNews Classified Ads.\nPLENTY OF CHERRIES THIS  YEAR\nAccording to enrly estimates by\nthe market service of thn Dominion\nfruit branrh, the clicfry crop ln Ontario. British Columbia and other\ngrowing areas will be heavy this\nyear. In all eections the trees cP-me\nthrough the winter In excellent condition with practically no Injury of\nany kind. In Ontario a plentiful\nsupply of fruit buds are In evidence and increased production 1*\nalmost certain. The Okanagan valley, where there was a good fall of\nanow during the winter, Wtth consequent good moisture conditions,\nthe Lower Fraser valley, Vancouver\nIsland and other cherry districts of\nBritish Columbia all hold promise of\nexcellent crops. It la estimated that\nthis year's cherry crop for the\nprovince will be In the neighborhood\nof 85.500 crates, as compared with\n85,600 last season. Present indications are that the British Columbia\napricot crop will be slightly smaller\nthan that of 1931, but of excellent\nquality.\neluding    engineers    nnd    ftorkmen.\n\u25a0uent   down   tvllh   the   ship.   The\n-iirrcNpoiirient   of   the   Paris   newspaper le Matin estimated lite victims   at   70.\nCLOSE    HATCHES\nMarine experts offered hope tonight the men Inside the submarine\nmight have found time to closo the\nwatertight hatches before there was\na fatal ruah of the seas Into th;\nB'.-.lp, which  sank like a  flash.\nThey added If no serious break\ncc?urred ln the hull, It waa reasonable to expect that the crew ran no\nimmedi,itc danger of death. This\nhop?, however, was coupled with a\npessimistic statement that salvaging\nconditions were difficult, first because of the powerful currents and\nsecond became of the depth of\nthe sea.\nArrangements w?re pressed ln the\nendeavor to ralso t_e suDvnarlne.\nThey were aided by the presence at\nCherbourg of Prance's tpcclal floating dock far the raising of submarine... Efforts tonight were concentrated on determining the exact location of the ship and the conformation of the sea bed,\nrUHIN'O    NEW    .VATCII\nThe crew of a fishing craft plying\nnear the scene of the disaster,\nproudly watching tho submarin? this\nafternoon,- was shocked to eee It\nsuddenly   st.igi.er   and   disappear.\nA number cf men standing on the\ndeck seemed to be flung Into the\nair. The fishing boat lmmediatrly\nset Its course for the scene and\nrescued tlie seven from \"the sea, including th? comma n ier, Lieutcnt\nDu Mesnil.\nIt was believed others of the crew\nwere on deck at the time, but were\ndragged down hy the suction of\nt]-e Urrific current, which might\nhave mum] the submarine's sinking. S?arch continued throughout\nthe night for other possible survivors.\nTlie submarine's commander and\nthe others save.1 ma for an hour\nbefore they were rescued by the\nfishing boat. Alt w:re complrte.y\nexhausted and wero removed to a\nhwpital, apparency suffering from!\nexposure and t he tr exertions,\nALL   VESSELS   SENT   OCT <\nThe marine police of Cherbourjj\nsent out all the v-ssels at their\ndisposal. Tugboats, despatch boats!\nand airp.ant's patrolled the area!\nhunting for survivors and vainly j\nwatching for reappearance of the\nsubmarine.\nIt was the first major disaster of\na French submarine since 1928 when\nthe Ondln> wait down in collision\nwith a Greek steamer off Portugal.\nForty-three men perished in th.t\naccident.\nThe sea off ClierbougT was the\nscene of nn earlier dlsast.r when\nthe sub m.i line VendemalrQ sank wjth\nthe low of 22 lives off the headlands here on June 1, 1013. Tlie\nVendemalr?, participating In manoeuvres, rose tinder the bows of\nthe battleship &t\u201e Louis, wai struck\nsquarely    and    WUl    instnntly.\nThe Promt-thee was built for a\nnormal crew of 05. Like her sister\nsubmarines, tin Redoutuble and the\nVengeur, she was designed for 30-\nday cruisers to distant French colonies.\nThreatening Note\nCauses Judge to\nGet Extra Guard\nCrude Note Promises Bloodshed to Judge in Hutton\nTrial Case\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nReceipts:\nh.gs    220,\nCoed  and !\nOood   and\nA  \"sky  road\"  to  the  summit  of\nMonte    Rosa,    BO   mil^s   long    and\nreaching sn altitude of 6750 feet, is\n1  planned ^by   tlie  province  of   Turin,\nItaly\nWmNIPF-O, July 7-\nCattle 230, calves 60,\nsheep   45.\n.Steers, up to 1050 11 js\nchoice $4.75 to (15.75.\nSteers, over LMO lbs,\nchoice   $4.75   to   $5.50.\nHeifers: Go__l and choice $4.25\nto   $5.25.\nFed calves; Good and choice i>5\nto  99.\nC\/W3: .Good, $2.50 to $..; c__in;rs\nand   etttttn, * 50  to  |L\nBulls:   G.od,   $1.50   to   * 1 73.\nStocker and feeder steers: Good,\n$2.76   to   $3.50.\nStsck cows and heifers; Good, \\\n$2.50 to $3.\nMilkers and springers: 919 to $40.\nVeal calves; Good and choice $41\nto   $5.\nH-g;: Select bicon, || per head\npremium, bacjn, $4.50; bii-c...:rs $1\nper   head discount;   heavy   $3.73.\nLambs; G_od handy weight, $6 to\n$6.75.\nSheep: Good heavies $1.50 to $2; *\ngood   handywelght,   $2.50.\n  |\nProfessor -Robert West, of the University of Wisconsin, say.1;; \"About\nH per cent of the 1.O0J.O00 fc.ut-\ntarers nnd other speech dc.e-ciiycs\nIn the public schools of tlie United\ntales cou:{| have their (-pcech dlffl- \\\ncullies  ti.ectlvcly  cured.\nLOS ANGELES, July 1--Superior\nJudge Lester W. Roth, hearing the\n5200,000 breach of promise action\nbrought by Myrtle fit. Pierre against\nDavid Hutton, late today found ln\nhis chambers a threatening note\nwMch caused him to order an extra\nguard   about   the   courtroom.\nBoth Mlss St. Pierre and Hutton,\nhusband of Aimee Semple McPherson Hutton, the evangelist, previously had reported receipt of threatening   letters.\nTlie note addressed to Judge Roth\nwas printed crudely ln pencil on a\ncard.   It   read:\n\"Dear Judge: Please see- th\u00ab Jury\ngets instructions for a Hutton verdict. If you don't through no fault\nof yours, that blackmailing Schemer\nwill get one of these. You save\nbloodshed If ycu follow instructions.\"\nJl   CALIBRE   CARTRIDGE\nTie Pasadena nurse, recalled In\nrebuttal of defence testimony about\nher'past life and other all-ged lovers,\nbecame so excited Judge Roth dismissed the Jury while he reprimanded her,\nfluttoq, back from an overnight\ntrip to Lake Arrowhead wh.re his\nwile, Almee Semple McPherson Hutton, evangelist, is recovering from\nan Illness, watched with apparent\nInterest.\nThe outbreak was engendered when\ntb* attractive brunette waB asked If\nshe had ever aeen Mrs. Catherine\nElsoff before. The wltnesa' faos\nflushed   and   she   cried:\n\"I've never seen that vlctom woman   before   iu   my   Hie.\"\nShe dent ' she had called Hutton\n\"simple, ft \u201ev fat slob, sissy and\nprevaricator,' or that she drank\nliard liquor, lost her riding breeciies\nat a party nnd had affairs with a\nnumber, of men,\n\"One cf these referred to a .32\ncalibre cartridge, tied to a corner\nof  the card  by  a string.\nIt was found on a window alll,\naccessible froai ft fire escape. The\njUdgj turned the note over to Under-sheriff Gene Btscalluz for fingerprint te*ts. Several additional deputy\nsheriffs, as well as a special matron\nto guard IBM St. Pierre, soon took\nstations in and about the courtroom.\nTher.after Judge Roth served notice that tti* sensational care, in\nwhich Miss St. Pierre charges Hutton\nJilted her to marry the evangelist,\nmust reach the argument stag, tomorrow.\nKugene Ehen, bearded organist,\nrepeated under cross examination\nins denial that MIks St. Pierre, once\nMs fiance, had ever been a maternity hospital an \"Mrs. Eben.\"\nDKH.NU    Ml    HONOR\nMiss Bt. Pierre, summoned to\nthe witness stand .crcat'd a sensation In demanding fro:n Judge Rot.i\nthe right to \"defend my honor.\"\nAIMIL   RAVS   ALL  18   WELL\nARROWHEAD J'OT SPRINGS, Cal.,\nJuly T -fll-ll. a wheel chair, cushioned with pillows, Almee McPherson Hutton, Lea Angeles evangelist,\ntoday denounced purveyors of rumors that, all was not well between\nherself and her huband, David Hutton, who ls being sued tot breach\nof promise by Myrtle St. Pierre.\n\"I believe David Is in tie right.\"\nsaid the evangelist. \"And I intend\nto keep on believing that In spite\nof everything thnt woioan\u2014 Wm St.\nPI rt\u00ab\u2014says to the contrary. Nothing has marred our devotion. I am\nso  tired  of  people's prying.\nMORE ABOUT\nNAVAL FORCES\n(CONTINUED   FROM   PACE   ONE)\nwith the American disarmament delegation crftctzed the British plans\nfor cutting down the size of capital\nships, aircraft carriers and cruisers\nIn future naval replacements. One\nof them characterized it as the\n\"renewal of a 10-year-old controversy\nin which the British have sought\nby reducing the size of our ships\nto keep our navy in home waters.\"\nMaurice Dupre, Canadian delegate\nto the disarmament conference,\nvoiced approval of the Hoover proposals in the general commission\ntoday, hut was regretful that they\ndid not Include the abolition of\nconscription. He explained he spoke\nas a \"good neighbor\" of the United\nStates, and declared the delegations\nshould persevere along the path indicated by President Hoover \"until\nat least some better avenue ls\nopened to us.\"\nRepresentatives of Belgium, Bra\/,\nTurkey, Cuba, Austria, Norway, flu\nDomingo and rinland also lauded\nthe American plan.\nStanley Baldwin put forward this\ndetailed program for naval dlfearm.*\nament:\n1. Reduce the maximum size of\nany future capital ship to 22,000\ntons and maximum gun calibre to 11\nInches (now 35,000 tona and 16\nInches).\n2. Reduce the maximum tlze of\ncruisers hereafter constructed to\n7000 tons and maximum gun calibre to 6.1 Inches (now 10,000 tons\nand   8   Inches).\n3. In International ajjreement on\npoint a cannot be obtained, the\ngovernment of the United Kingdom\nwill urge the maximum size of\ncapital ships should be reduced to\n25,000   tons,  wtth   12-inch   guns.\n4. Reduce maximum for aircraft\ncarriers to 22,000 tons, with 6.1-ln(|i\nguns (these are now ln the capital\nship class,  as  in   1).\n5. Abolish   submarines.\n6. Reduce destroyer tonnage by\napproximately one-third, this depending on abolition of submarines.\n7. If submarines cannot be abolished, fix their maximum surface\ndisplacement at 250 tons, with strict\nlimitation of both total tonnage\nand number of units.\nThe British air disarmament proposals in detail  were:\n1. Abolition of all aerial bombs,\nwithin limits to be laid bown by\nan international convention, which\nmight allow bombing of military\npoints and such action within strict\nlimits.\n2. Prohibition of attacks on |lvll-\nians by land, sea and air.\n3. Strict limitation of the unladen\nweight of all military and nival aircraft, with the exception of troop\ncurriers  and   flying   boats.\n4. Numerical restriction of all military   aircraft.\nSalmo Athletic Club\nOrganizes Further\nMiss K. Edmondson\nVisits at Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C, July 7,\u2014A. B. B.\nStanley, Jr., returned from Trail\nMonday accompanied by T. Reid ol\nTrail.\nMiss Kathleen Edimniiscn of Cranbrook. li the htu.se gvest of Mr. and\nMtt,   Hoy   MtUtteNU.\nA. E. OoUtna of tb* British Columbia Forr-Uy brancn of V.ctorla ls a\nvifitnr ln the city thts werk.\nMr.i, J. Vestrup of Revelstoke ls\ntlie Iioufp-guest of Mr. and Mra.\nBs E. BTuhn. ]\nMr. ond Mn. R. Humphrli anci |\ntWD daughters, Nellie and Allc-:, j\nsprat thr> week-end : .otoring, visit-\nlog Gftslmok, i.'\\..io... fnci Kclson,<\n\u25a0 The Theatre de la Comedla Fran- !\naim, In Paris, la said to be th0 only j\ntheater hi tlie world giving ntOtt \\\nthen 500 performances a year, with I\n200 d-Ifcieiit plays.\nBALMO. B. C. July 7\u2014A meeting\nof the Salmo Athletic club vraa held\nat the residence of Henry' Payant\non Monday evening to clear up\nall matters of Importance since July\n1. Reports were heard from the\nsecretary. Verne Read, and money\nmatters left in his hands.\nUp until the present time the\nclub haa had no president as It\nwas thought unnecessary. When lt\nwas decided to open a bank account\nIn a Nelson bunk, a president was\nfound necessary. A. McLeod was\nelected president with a majority of\nfour   votes   over   H.   Grutchfield.\nNext it was decided that th*\nbaseball section of the club would\nbuy enough suits tOt the team,\nsome only needing new sweet shirti\nNew baseballs nre to be ordered and\nalso shin-pads for thn catcher. Th\"\n1 girls are to get new softball bnln\nand anything thev ahould find U-\n0*t***t f\u00b0r their team.\nTlm Jtmlm boys ball team will\nhe re-oreanized before anything U\nbought for them.\nTbt Salmo baseball team Wll]\ntravel to Frultvale on Sunday whero\nSalmo, Trail and Frultvale wilf draw\nstraws to play a double-header. It\nwas also learned the Rossland seniors ott expected here In the near\nfuture. Before the meeting wa:;\nbi ought to a cloee the members all\nagreed the club should meet once\na week. Thursday night at 8 p.m.\nwas the day and time decided\nupon.\nIt ls estimated that more thtn a\nbillion of the earth's inhabitants\nlive within the regular reception\n:ircas of radio broadcasting stations.\nThe older dwper roc\\ formations\nor the Grand Canyon are less porous than the younger rooks, according to tests by ths Virginia Polytechnic iiibtituto.\nMISS SIMMONS IS\nGRAND FORKS 1932\nTENNIS CHAMPION\nDefeats Miss Florence Gilpin\nin Hard Fought Finals\nBattle\nGRAND FORKS, B. C July T\u2014\nPhyllis Hlmmons, 18-year-old high\nschool girl, won the women's tennis championship here today after\na hard fought battle with Mlss\nFlorence Gilpin, * veteran of the\nlocal  courts.\nTaking two stralgh sets, Mlss Simmons defeated Miss Gilpin 0-4 In\nthe first set, and ln the second set\nMtss Simmons held her opponent to\na  6-0 score.\nLast year, when only 15, and ln\nher first year of tennis, Mlss Simmons got Into the finals but was\ndefeated by Fannls Barlee, who for\nthree years held the women's championship   of   Grand   Forks.\nAlthough yet only a youngster.\nshe shows remarkable skill and plays\na  speedy   game.\nFollowing the tournament, tea *^is\nserved by Mrs. J. Simmons. Mrs. W.\nD.  Smith  and Mrs.  F.  Newman.\nMona Fraser Wilson\nand G. D. G. Barwiss\nAre Wed at Proctor\nPROCTER, B. C, July 7.\u2014A quiet\nwedding was solemnized on Tuesday\nmorning ln All Boule church when\nRev. C. H. Shortt of Vancouver\nunited ln marriage Geoffrey Donald\nGeorge Barwiss and Mona Fraser\nWilson, both of Longbeach. The\nwitnesses were Mr.\u00bb and Mrs. H.\nLeggatt of Longbeach.\nRev. George Kinney showed an exceptionally fine collection of moving\npictures in the United cMurch on\nTuesday evening. These included,\nstunt flying, a Great Lakes romance,\nInshore fishing, a seaside summer-\nland, motoring in cloudland. Babe\nRuth's home run end Felix, the\nCat. A good crowd was In attendance.\nThe United Church Ladies' aid\nheld a successful strawberry social\non Saturday at the home of Mrs. J.\nBlchan, which was kindly loaned for\nthe occasion. The sum of $12 was\nrealized.\nMrs. 8. B- Jacobs and hoys of\nCalgary passed through Procter on\nSunday en route to Kootenay Bay.\nA. C. Crawford of Portland, Ore.,\nand Dr. Q. Coplen of Spokane left\nMonday md-nlng for their homes\nafter spending a few days at the\nOutlet hotel.\nMrs. Ernesteln of Litton Is hers\nvisiting Mrs. E. Coleman for a low\ndays.\nMiss M. Blssett and Miss B. Hutchinson of Moose Jaw left for their\nhomes on Monday after a two week's\nvisit with Mr. and Mrs. E. coleman.\nPaddy Bowman of Lethbridge was\nthe guest of Mrs. G. Robinson on\nMonday.\nMr. and Mrs. Cropaey and baby\nof Calgary arrived Sunday night to\nspend the summer here.\nDonald Livingston of Lethbridge\narrived Monday night to be the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. J. Seweil. \u00ab\nMrs. J. C. Scott. Mlss Mildred\nScott and Mrs. E. Palmer of Crawford Bay left on the east bound\ntrain Tuesday morning en route to\nEngland.\nT. Hpmei-Miam and family, who\nhave been camping here for the past\nweek, left Tuesday for their home in\nNelson.\nVictoria Girl Visits\nAunt at New Denver\nNEW DENVER. B. C, July 7.\u2014The\nMisses Eileen and Muriel Aylard of\nVictoria are the guests of their aur.r,\nMrs. Charles Alywln.\nHenry Blumenaeur and two sons\nof Merrttt were week-end guests of\nMra. Charles Aylwln,\nMrs. A. J. Dornan and daughter of\nKimberley are the guesta of Dr. and\nMrs.  Francis.\nRev. Father Monoghan of the Blocan district, was a week-end visitor\nin town.\nGOW IS GIVEN A\nTESTIMONIAL BY\nLEGIONFRIENDS!\nPresent Branch With Kitrh\nener Relic; to Rest a\nYear, Scotland\nAt a VtdaJ ttfh-tm Bt the Legion   Thursday   evening,   W.   A.   Crow.\nM-i-nnd   vice-president  of   the   Nelson i\nbranch  of   the   Canadian   Ler\nthe  eve  of   his   leaving   fur   s<  .';.\u25a0\u25a0..\nto take a year's rest ordered by his i\ndoctor    and    to    undergo    treatinerr.\nfor   a   war   disability,   was   presented ,\nwith   ft testimonial,   printed   in   book\nform, and   bearing  the   numea   of  35\nof  his  Nelson   comrades   and.  associates.\nTHE   AOORFSS\nOn the cover the booklet wae\ninscribed: \"Comrade W- A. Gow,\nSecond Vice-President of Nelson\nBranch No. 51, Canadian Legion,\nBritish Empire Hervice League, Nelson. B. C,  July  7th.  1932,\"\nTlie address within read:\n\"Comrade\u2014It is with very deep\nregret that your comrades of this\nbranch hear of your departure on\naccount of 111 health. We feel that\nwe cannot allow you to go without\nexpressing to you our deep gratitude and hearty appreciation loe\nyour very Kindly Interest and help\nat all times for the benefit of our\nassociation.\n\"In wishing you God Speed we\nsincerely trust that you may soon be\nrestored to good health again and\nhave continued happiness with your\nloved onea for many years to come.\"\nThe presentation was made by\nO. K. Ashby, first vice-president of\nthe branch, the testimonial betng\naccompanied by a handsome pipe.\nAt the branch's monthly meeting\nTuesday evening, a resolution was\nadopted expressing regret at \"Comrade Gow's\" departure and extending him best wishes.\nPRESENTS PICTURE\nIn replying, Mr. Gow climaxed five\nyears' service with the branch bv\npresenting to lt his moet valued\nmemento of the war. a large framed\nmemento of Lord Kitchener, which\nembraced a reproduction on war\noffice paper of his cal) for 300.000\nrecruits, of May 6, 1915, superimposed on a large drawing ln black\nand white by Frank Brangwyn,\nARA., portraying Britain's war sf-\nfort, a portrait of Kitchener surmounting the reproduced letter. The\nmemento was Issued for the benefit\nof the Lord Kitchener Notional Memorial fund and the British Red\nCross fund, in 1916, at which ttme\nMr. Gow purchased his copy at\nauction, only a limited number being  Issued.\nPresident Joe Holland accepted the\ngift on behalf of the branch, declaring lt would be treasured both\nfor itself and because of its donor.\nMr. Gow, who has been in charge\nof the dry goods department of\nthe Hudson's Bay company stores\nhere for the past five years, leaves\nthis morning for Toronto, where he\nwill spend a day with old comrades,\nbefore proceeding to Scotland. His\nfamily will accompany him.\nOF NAKUSP HOLD A\nMEMORIAL SERVICE\nNAKUSP, B. C, July 7.\u2014The annual memorial service of the Knlglits\nof Pythias and the Pythian Sisters\nwas conducted by Canon G. Thompeon at St, Mark's church Sunday\nevening. An inspiring address, the\ntheme of which was \"Friendship.\nAltruism and Love,\" was singularly\nfitting.\nMlss Helen Gardner of the- Kootenay Lake General hospital, Nelson,\narrived Saturday and will spend several weeki# holidaying at her home\nhere.\nW. Brown and D. Calder of Trail\nwere the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. \u2022\nE. Fowler over the week-end.\nMlss Eunice Carruthera left on\nSunday for Nelson where she will\nresume her duties on the nursing\nstaff of the Kootenay Lake General\nhospital.\nMr. and Mrs. E. W. Somers and\nson, Lionel, left Tuesday for Nelson\nwhere they expect to make their\nhome.\nMlss Mary Kirk of tha teaching\nstaff of Nakusp public school, left\non Saturday for Vancouver where\nshe will spend the summer vacation.\nMIsb Marlon Steele, principal of\nGlenbank public school, left Tuesday for her home In Nanaimo.\nMiss Steele will spend a few days\nln  Princeton en  route.\nMrs. E. Rushton left Saturday for\nKamloops where she will be the\nguest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. J, Russell.\nAfter the FIRE\nIS TOO LATE.'\nWhat takes >ears to build up may be\ndestroyed In a few minutes. And, unless you ore Insured, you have In effect\nItst so many years of life.\nUre may take jour home or office\nnext! And the one wa\/ you can mske\nsure that you CAN'T lose ls to be\nthoroughly covered with lire Insurance.\nSee us today about that low cost Fire\nInsurance Policy which will ensure1 your\nbeing paid back dollar for dollar for\nany loss you may have.\nP. E. POULIN\n.      INSURANCE\n503 1-2 BAKER ST. PHONE 627\n<P\n *___ JIUO. OAB.T rW\u20143, Xtl\/SO \u2022. B. C \u2014 FRIDAY MOItMXJ, JT_Y 8, IM-\n_E Tumos\nMISS RUDDELL TO\nSPEND HOLIDAY\nAT VANCOUVER\n\u25a0torAN p..PK, B C, July 7.\u2014\nMki J. W. O. Ruddell, principal of\ntb* (Sloean P\"rlt school, left for\nVanrouver on Friday where, she will\napand the summer vacation with her\nmother,  Mrs.  T.   W.   Ruddell.\nHr. and Mrs. A. T. Nicnols \u00a7nd\nfamily who have redded here for tbe\n-past 13 years have taken up residents at Rj-'sManrt\nMrs. Walter Dwiini of Castlegar\nspent the werk-end with her mot ner,\nMr*.   D.   Crebbln,\nDr. F.Rose\nPhjtlrlwi     and     burgeon.      PpeclaPfat    In\nrectal   and    tnle-tlna.\ndlsea .*<.    only.\nPlies\nCweO. without operation. Constipation \u00bbijreessful1y treated. Write for\n. fres booklet. 4th floor Ztegler Rtdr.\n\u00a326   Rlrereide   Are..   Spokane.    Hash, good\n93 STUDENTS PROMOTED AT NELSON\nSENIOR HIGH SCHOOL   EXAMINATION\nRESULTS REVEAL; 46 TO GET TRIAL\nPrincipal   L.   V.   RoppfH   of\nIlijrh School  Announces\nWednesday\nRemit* \u00bbn the MM senior\nhigh school June examination*\nwere announced tn Nelvni Tester-\nd*>   by   Prlnripal   I,.   V.   BOfttt   of\nthe   high   seh<v:!   tearTtjo^   staff.\nWHB* there i re 94 student*\n\u25a0sho -sere either recommended for\npttMlng or who were tfUttottal In\nllielr examinations, there were 4ii\npupil* who have been promoted\nconditionally.\nTlie promotion Hat ls divided Into\ntwo  group..  In   tlie   first   group  are\nthe    nil me*   of    pupil*   whose    work\nthroughout tbe yesr was -sufficiently\npermit   promotion   without\nMOVING\nand\nHAULING\nWe understand how jou\nwant your goods handled\nand we nerve you as you\nshould be served when you\ncall on hs for Transfer and Moving work. We respond\nto your call promptly, handle your goods tar-fully, and\ncharge you reasonably. Call us and be sure of satisfaction,\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE _\u2666_*\nFAIRVIEW\nBUYERS1\nGUIDE\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nHOTPOINT HI-SPEED RANGES\n6 Exclusive General Electric Hotpoint\nRange Features\nOver tnd abo\". ths cl-ftnllneaa, convenience end other well-known\nadvantages of electrlo cooking. Hotpoint brings to thousands ot\nhomes these six exclusive features:\nDESIGNED BY WOMEN FOR WOMEN\nILLUMINATED COOKING TOP\nSUPER-AUTOMATIC OVEN CONTROL\nECONOMY COOKER\nHl-SPEED CALR0D ELEMENTS\nALL-STEEL CONSTRUCTION\nFleming's Store\n.A.THOBIZ.D  CANADIAN  GENERAL  ELECTRIC   DEALER\nPHONE 12. FAIRVIEW\nYOUR       ,     ,\nSILK\nDRESS\nDYED\nH. K. FOOT\nDyer and Cleaner\nFairview    Nelson, B.C.\nFAIRVIEW\nMEAT MARKET\nPHONE   295   FOB\nQCALIIT    aM    SERVICE\nrresh salmon, halibut, and\nsalmon   trout,   still\nMtHBM\nFirst   Quality   no-ernment\nInspected Meats.\nSHELOIN,  lb  tie\nT-BONE, lb  -tk-'\nROUND   STEAK,   lb  IOC\nBONELESS  VEAL STEAK,  Ib.   .Sr\nVEAL  LOIN,  Ib  ISc\nSTEW,    lb  I\"\"\nLAMB   STEW,   lb.   _  15c\nLBOS.   lb -  'tie\nPORK   ROASTS,   lb  12c\np_0 line rooked and jellied meats.\nPresh  stork  of  butter.   New  laid\nlocal eitRS  from  MrKlro.   Poultrj\nParm,  etc.\nFAIRVIEW\nSERVICE\nDominion Tires and\n[Tubes, Groceries,\nSoft Drinks, Ice\nCream, Candies,\nCigarettes, Cigars.\nPhone 605    We Deliver\nYOUR FUEL\nNEEDS\nwill receive prompt and\ncareful attention if they are\nentrusted to the\nFAIRVIEW FUEL\nAND TEAMING\nCO.\nPhone 701\nStandard Lethbridge Coal\nCord Wood in all lengths\nAVENUE\nSERVICE\nMALT, tin  JOc\nMALT   AND   HOrS.   tin   _  90c\nHOPS,   pkt  lie\nROOT BEER EXTRACT, bot. 30c\nGINGER  BEER   EXTRACT,\nbottle     aoc\nl-LIKA  DRINK, lemon and\nOran_e.   bottle     toe\nSOFT   DRINKS,   bottle        \u00bbc\nCANADA   DRV,   bottle     20c\nCANADA   DRV,   botlle     35c\nPhone 857\nYour Needs in\nSAND\nand\nGRAVEL\nwill be well taken care\nof by calling\nphone 797\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\nPrompt Haulage Service\nFORESTRY LECTURE\nAND   SHOW  GIVEN\nAT WILLOW POINT\nJuly\na final examination, and also those\nwho obtained the nerewary aUndnrd\nat the final examliiatlr.ns In June\nTlie wcond group, marked pa.\ncondition*) ly, eonuini- tl.r nnoiM\nof tho*>\u00ab who left before the final\nexaminations but VhOM woth 'luring the year had been ft*, it factory,\nand b'so thoee who made 60 but\nunder 00 per cent In the final ex-\namlnn-Mona or had on\u00bb or more\nsubject! under 40 per cent. Tlie pu-\npila in lhe second group miy enroll\nln the higher grade when *rhool reopens September 9, but unlet. <t their\nprogress is satisfactory they may be\ndemoted   at   any   time.\nNames are arranged alpha Deticail;\/.\nnot   In   order   of   merit.    '\nPrincipal L. V. Rogerg will be at\nthe eenlor high Mfaool f.ct'i :. \\> ...\nt. m, Prlday and M..:--._e\\, July h\nand 11, to give cm marks to an.,\nwho wish to call.\nGRADE XI, THIRD YEAR\nCLASS,   MSVL1S\nLola Boonyr, Maude Dolphin,\nOttherttn Ferguson, Dorothy Glh-\nbona. Margaret Kirby. Norman Lind.\nHelen Martin, Gordon MoDowell,\nLena Nedelec, Catherine Noakes. Clara\nNorman, Josephine Plsacreta, Muriel\nWeath.rhead  and  Kathleen  Wheeler.\nPromoted     conditionally\u2014-     Oeorge\nBates,   JJeUy   Qrlmea,   Dorothy    HaJl,\nFreda   McKay,   Joeephlne   McKlnnon, j\nFrank Smythe,  Oeorge Stewart, Jack\nTownsend  and   Boh  Waldle,\nCOMPLETE   PARTIAL   COL ME\nLettle Fleet.\nOrwle X- Second year claes re-\nMlti:\nWILLOW   POINT.   B.   C\nAn    enjoyable    hour    wa*    \\_pt__r\\    tn\nCrystal hall. Saturday night, -when\nE. V. Ablett. reprewrUAt.lv*> of the\nCanadian Forestry aenociatinn. gave\na le'.ture and ahowed moving pictures. Mr. Ablett ln his talk explained the elm of the aaeoclation \u2014\nmainly to eduetta the public ta be\np'i   cantloua with  fire  and  tn mate tu\nthe   minds   of   the   people   a   fe-MMf\nrf-CHrd   for   our   woods,   waters   and\nwild life..\nThere waa an exceptionally fine\nfilm featuring the Ufe of the beaver and showing grey owl ln their\nhaunts, 'Urns portravii.g ner nle\nb-WUiy \u00abnd outdoor recreation and\nFelix, a reel for bovs and -girls.\nJoe Horrlgan, Junior fire warden\nfor this district introduced Mr. Ablett and Mrs. E. H, ApplcvVaUe\nproposed a vote of thanks.\nNELSON BOARD TO\nBACK TRAIL UPON\nTHE MAIL SERVICE\nAsk   Authorities   to  Restore\nDiscontinufd Mail;\nV*. Ru-ssfA\nHelen I.i.'c Burkitt\nand A. D. Tricked Are\nWedded at New Denver\nJailbreakers to Stand\nTrial for Wounding of *\nPenitentiary  Guards\nConvict   of  Stony   Mountain\nWas Hit and Killed by\nStray Bullet\nWINNIPEG, July 7-Tho-mn* Jonea\nand William Gorda. Inmates of\nStony Mountain penitentiary, were\ntoday committed by Magistrate H.\nR. Welsford to >tMU trial at the\nfall aaaine*, on charges of unlawful\n\\ wounding of two of lhe penltenlary\nPromoted 'o grade XI\u2014Gladrs Ah\u2014\nhntt    nirv   Airev    Hlake   Allan    Har- ' tO-ttO* last. April 15. Tne disturbance\nbott,   Die*   Alrey,   \u00bbiane   AUD,   Har-, tm_tmd thm Atttlttl  nf Mllrm  n,,_11M   ,\nold Bat#, Mon lea Beceton, Hairy  Bur.\nfield,   Jean   Burgess,   Pelplilne   D:nl\neon,   Ella   Des.ardlns,   William   Don-1 JTJJr\nald_on, Jean Ferguson, Archie French, j      *\u201e_.-,.,,\u201e,.,   f\u201e    (ha   \u00bb..\u2666,_\u201e\u00ab\u201e\u201e   \u00ab#\n^^fSa^mmTa \"\".\" \" - \u25a0\"\u25a0\ncaused the death of Mike Bihun,\nconvict who took no piurt lu the attack,   but   waa   struck   by   t   utray\nR*stnraHr>u of the mail service\nthat, wad dropped when ihe Canadian Pacific recently discontinued\nthe mortiini? pnv-ei-gT train service\nbetween the cities of Rosslnnd. T^sll\nand Nelfon, will be nought by the\nNelson h^srd of trade. In corporation with the boards of the other\nflties   named.\nRepresentations to the Dominion\nauthorities. Including W. K. Mln |\nMP. for Kootenay Wrst, and to the\n^upertntendent, at Vancouver, were\nmade by the Trull board of trade\nwhen the chsnue went into effn-t\nml week In June, Trail pn>ndin|\n* of its rpKolutlon to UN Nel_\u00ab.'t:\nKosfcland   boards.\nA* Thursdsy's sepnion of the board\nof trade council here. Trail'* resolution wss endorsed unanimously,\nand tmetettty D. A Mr^rland was\nInptrurted to an ad\\liw U__M con-\nf-erned, If he should find on consultation with Secretary Jp-\u00bbs_ Kemp of\nlhe Trail board and with Postmaster\nR. M, Manahan at Nelson that there\nwere no developments yet.\nLA EOK   POPLI.ATION\nAl recm\nThe Trail renolutlon pnlnt\u00bb< out\n\u25a0.hat with the curtailed mall service\nit could In some 0*m* take a letter from Trail 36\" hours to get to\nNelson, and that there waa a population of 12,000 In the area of Trail,\nTadanac and Rossland. whose Interests  were   thus adversely afrected.\nIt Is the idea that the post office\ndepartment should arrange a mall\nservice by hus. to replace that that\nwai discontinued. At present there\nnre   three   round   trips   by   bus   bc-\nGrace Haydou, Chris Horsfield, Es-,\nther Janzow, Volt to Koskl, Maurice.\nLatorneil, Joo Lindsay, Harold Long.1\nTom, Magllo, Katherlne Martin, Maureen Miller, Effle Morrlj., ftttt Mc-\nKwan, Youla lUflKay, Kathleen Mac-\nNaughton, Edward Nichols, William\nRamsay, Katiileen Prltclwrd, Doug-\nla* R^ad, Christine Re.den, Alex\nRitchie, Rhoda Shecfield, David\nSmith,    Harold    Smythe, Melvin\nSparkes, Graeme Bteed, Leonard\nSlewart, Jean Tattrie, Gladys Teague,\nJamea Thompson, Gordon. Williams,\nand   Annie   Willi!*.\nPromoted to grade XI (conditionally)\u2014Ted Baker, Harold Bradahaw,\nVictor Bridge, Prancla Clark, Marjorle Ooffee, EUeen Cookson, Gilbert\nHunt, Lawrcncv Irwin, Albert Jeffery, Bob Kirby, Oeorge Munro,\nMargery Myers, Dewltt McCuaig, Mollle Nixon, Irene Plowman, David\nBoott, ' Effle Spiers, Grant Tlndale\nand Eleanor Wright.\nCOMPLETE   GRADE   X\nLettle  Fleet.\nOrade  IX   (Um  year   claaa)   NHlM;\npromoted to gfade X\u2014 Waller\nErlckson, Ruth Hanson, Eva Johnson\nHugh McKean, Clara Nygard, Alfred\nParker, Marlon Parker, Esme Penny,\nLeonard Purdy, Sibley Ramsay, Bertha Sutherland, Margaret Williams\nand  Edwar_,  Wright.\nPromoted   to  grade   X   (condition-\nally)\u2014Christine   Fornelli,   Ruth   Joy,\nNorman.  MacLeod,   Bob  Smith,   Jack\nTlndale   and   Jack   Tltsworth.\nCOMMERCIAL\nCLASS    RKftLLTS\nGrade XI, partial course, statement ot marks\u2014David Allan Ev.lyn\nBrereton, Albert Bush, June Gamble,\nConnie Qengc, Heen Lawson, Eva\nMassey, Doris Mclntyre and Jean\nRowe.\nPASSED   TO OBADE  XI\nCOMMERCIAL\nLillian Bennett, B_nn_< Boweil,\nB_rnlC4S Boyes, Peggy Gamble, Ellen\nLinden, Peter Rollck and Margaret\nThompeon.\nPromoted to grade XI commercial\n(conditionally)\u2014Martha Allen, George\nBeattle, David Brown, Edith Goldsmith, Ted Goldsmith, Edith Waler-\ner,   Dennis   Webster   and   Jill   Wlgg.\nand Jones were In the lead of four\nprisoners marching single  file back ] R\nto   the   cells   from    the   washroom.\nGorda    se.\u00abd    a    12-pound   t-l'dgt \\\nhammer and  felled  Clayton trtth  \u00ab\nblow   on   the   temple   as   th\u00ab   latter ;\ncloned with him. At the same timo\nJon.cs   knocked    out    Gsurd    Fisher\nwith blows behind the ear and t\u00bbid- |\ner   the  chin.  The   guar^  could   not. \u25a0\nsay whether any weapon waa used. ]\nThomas  Clayton  said one of   the !\naccused had been ln the penal cefll\nfor 30 day*. He could not say which\nof  them  it  was,  noj.  did  he  kiwrw !\nhow long the other man had  been\nIn  cloee  confinement.  During  tia>ir .\nperiod of punishment, the men were !\nchained by their hands to the cell I\nbare for six  hours each   day. They\nreacelved   one   full   meal   and   two '\nmeals of  bread  and  water.\nNBW    DENVER.   B    C,   July   T \u2014\nSt. Stephen's Anglican church was\nthe ecene of * pretty wedding Monday, July 4, when Helen Lisle |\nBurkiH. youngest dn tighter of Mr\nand Mrs. J T. fcurki't of KMlD\nwas united in msrr'aiie to Alexander\nDougins Tricket-t, joungest son ot\nMre, Georae Trifkett of New f>n\\er\nIfcv. c.non Thompwiii of Wokmp\nofficiated. The bride entered thf\nclnm-h on the arm of her brother,\nf)eorge Burkltt, who gave her in\nmarriage.\nTlie brlde'a gown v>a* o' nary flat\nsilk crepe with hut lo iimVIi In n\nshade of beige, and her bouquet wu\nopheila ropes, i'rr on Is attcnd.nu\nwas Mtss Sylvifl Juhnt-on o. KmiO.\nwho was gowned in cream flowered\ngeorgette and ehe carried a bouquet\nj of pink ros's\n!     S.   Samueh-on   of   N^w   Denver   at-\nicnd^d the groom.\n| During the eigning of th\u00bb tt*tBBm,\nMrs 'Bud\" R^>se sang \"I Love You\n|Truly,\" by Carrie Jacobs Bond. Mrt.\njF,ose was accompanied by Mrs A\nL. Levy as organist. Immediately\nfo'lowint the core mon? a re\u00ab*\u00bbptinp\nwas held at \"Hillside Ranch.\" the\nhome of the bride's brother, O^orae\nBurkltt, Thoee assisting at the re-\noeptlon were Mrs R B Kirk and\nMrs. H. 8. Nelson who poured and\nMra. J. Burkltt, Field. Miss D. Tinkess. Kaslo, Mlss K. Tingle ei%l Mlsa\nRosle   Zadra,  serviteurs.\nGuest* at the rec-ption were- Mrs,\nGeorge Trlckett. Dr. and Mrs. A\nFrancl., Mr. and Mrs, D. Trickrt.t,\nMrs. R. B. Kirk, Mrs. \"Bud\" Rose,\nMrs. L. W. Soils. Mrs. C Thrlng,\nMrs. A. L Levy, Mrs M. R. Hill. Mrs,\nH, 9. Nelson, Mra, E Cook, Mrs. C.\nClifford, Mrs H. Aylwln. Mlsa K.\nTingle, Mlss R. Zadrn. S. Samuel-\nson, D. P. Morgan and Btt, Nelson,\nNew Denver; Mrs. A. J. Dormsn.\nKimberley: Mr. and Mrs. Jameb\nSpiers, Mrs. M. A. Tinkess, Ml\u00abs\nDorcas Tinkess, Miss- Slyvta Johncon.\nKaslo; Mrs. B. Parkinson and eon,\n{Edmund. Miss Lily Hascart, Mrs J,\nI Hopkins, Nakusp; Mrs. J, Burl\/itt,\nJ Field;    \"\n\u2014-\u25a0\u2014* PAOB raws\nI fatal   accident   to   Alfred   Jew-11   o,\nMonday evening  toumed out to b\n| only  minor   cuts  and   bruises  whloi\n.,_..        ....._   .    .,.,_ oeotw t   be   taken   inv\nCAR;SLIGHTL. HI RT '     .\u00bb   t-   m__ici   .ttrati.,\n  }WhU\u00ab  indulging   In  a  softbalj   tttt\nMr    ..  \u25a0>\u2022\nMOYIE SOFTBALL\nPLAYER RUNS INTO\nMOVIE,\nJuly      7\u2014What\nington\n-ni,\u00bb \u25a0\u201e   bat*   proved   to  ha^e   been  a  first   t*\nThc govrrnn\u00bbmt of Mexico operates | g~J    \"*'   Canon   Thompson,   Na-\nAfter the reception  the bride and\ngroup   of   national   pawn   shop*\n2!XrSXt\u00abSS______|\" \"\u2022\"\u2022'- \u25a0 -' *\"\u00bb\nm  1 The    bride    travelled    ln    a    btoSrn\nshops   have   a   special   depart-I tailored suit.    \"\nmfnt for automobiles.\nOn thpir return thc%\nwill   reside   ln   New   Denver.\nSee us for \u2014\nFIRE Insurance\nThe Risk Is Too\nGreat for the\nSmall Premium.\nLet Us Explain\nthe Right Plan\nfor You.\nThpre is ro safety without Fire Insurance ... no one\ncan afford to take the chance.\nTruly the premium is insignificantly small . . . and\nihe risk is too great to take.\nWhether it be a small home, an apartment buildinf,\nan office structure or mammoth factory, we will\nprovide the right kind of insurance at the right price.\nSimply phone us, or come in to our offices, and we\nwill explain our plan in detail.\nROBERTSON REALTY\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nINSURANCE-REAL ESTATE\nPHONE 68\nTemporary Offices, Room 18 K.W.C. Block\nMANY VISITORS\nGO TO AINSWORTH\nOVER THE HOLIDAY\nAINSWORTH, B. C. Jul. Tc- __\nOeorie Klnn.y of PT.-t\u00abr landed\nlie\u2014 on Saturday In hla mlwlon boat\n'\u25a0Broad.a.t...\" With him ..ere hla\naon. BUM, ond E~\u00bb. Mr. Joyte or\nRoglna.\nThe doublo holiday a( tho _\u2022_-\nend brought an extra large number\nof .l.ltor. t. Aluarcorth. Aa uaual\nthe avrlmroln* pool at the hot\n.prlnire proved a great attraction.\nThe management at the hotel put\non \u2022 dance on the evening of July 1.\nJ. Burns and f. Delpretto are\nbuay cleaning out the road to Loon\nlake.\nMr. and Mra. B. Irvine, also Mr.\nand Mra. H. C. Dooec of Spokane\napent the yeek-end at the hot.\naprtngs hotel.\nDr. .nd Mm. Muir and party of\nTrail occupied one of the coUame\nat the hot. springs  recently.\nMr. and Mrs, K. Smlllie and\ndaughter of Nelson atayed In one of\ntbe   cottageb  at   the  week-end.\nS W. Donav of Trail, D. A. McDonald of Trail, also MIfs T. Parker\nand Mlss r. M. SetM of Nelson were\nat the hot. springs st the week-end.\nA. W. Moore and D. Dske of Nelson occupied a cottage at the hot\nsprings   recently.\nMr. and Mrs. Ft TJ McDonald and\ndaughter. Bernice. of Trait, are\nspending a holiday here They are\noccupying the Sherwin cottage at\nthe hot springs. '\nMr. and Mrs. Brothers and family\nof Trsll. who are staying ln one of\nthe corteges had aa their gueata at.\nthe week-end Mr. and Mrs. G. Q.\nCummings of Trsll\nMr. and Mrs. H. Murphy. Vancouver. Mr. and Mrs. W. .1. Sullivan\nof Trail were also vlsltori at the hotel at the week-end.\nMrs. S. O. Hill and daughter.\nShirley, also Mrs. Hills' mother of\nCrenbrook. were at the hotel for\nthe week-end\nMr. and Mra. N. 1. Achesm of\nTrail have been occupying one of\nthe cottages at the hot springs.\nMr. and Mra. D. L. Kerr of Nelaon\nhad aa their guests at the hot\nsprings. Mra. Watt and aon and\nMra. Irving.\nMr. and Mrs. Ferguson Wilson and\nparty apent the week-end at one of\nthe hot spring cottages.\nThe flnst alrpla. e passenger and\nmall service ln Greece haa been ln-\naugr&ted betwen Athens, Salonika\nand jenla. Civilian aviators will pilot th* planes.\nMISS BARLEE TO\nSPEND HOLIDAYS\nAT GRAND FORKS\nGRAND   FORKS.   B.   C.   July   7.-\nMlss T. Barlee, who teaches at Kin\nnalrd,    returned    to    her    home    on |\nFriday morning where she will bpend\nthe holidays.\nMra. P. T. McCallum returned on\nTuesday morning (rom Trail where\nshe he-4 spent the we*lt-end with\nher daughter, Mrs. J. Morrison.\nMlss Rita Hutton returned Saturday morning from Nelson.\n\u25a0 Mr. and Mrs. B. McCallum and\nchildren of penticton are vlaltlng\nat the home of Mr. McCallum's' Jar-\nenta, Mr.  and Mrs. P. T. McCallum.\nMiss Bernice Donaldson, who has\nheen attending normal ichool in\nVancouver, returned Monday to her\nhome here where she will spend the\nholiday.\nMr. and Mrs. R. F. Hlne Wt\nSaturday morning for Vancouver\nwhere they will spend the holidays.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Slevers of Spokane motored to Grand Forks Monday where Mrs. Selvers had been\ncalled through the death of her\nuncle, the late J,   Walker.\nMIps Geraldlne Cowans left on\nTuesday morning for Kelowna where\nshe will spend the holiday with\nher tMtm, Mrs. A. R. Pollard.\nMrs. J. G. Archibald left on Tuesday morning for Greenwood where\nshe will Join the Rev. Mr. and Mflfc\nRuddell an daughter and accompany\nthem on a motor trip to thc coast.\nMrs. A. F. Michener has as her\nguests this week her daughter, Mrs,\nM. Peone  of Spokane.\nMrs. J. Simpson of Cranbrook ts\nspending the week-end with Mrs.\nMcCabe   of   West   Grand   Forks.\nRaymond Treenof McGlillvray is\nrelieving F,. Marshall as C. P. R.\noperator at West Grand Forks depot.\nMr. McCabe, CP.R. brldsre foreman, and Ms crew left Saturday\nfor Tadanar where they will remain\nfor a   few  days.\nD.- Carter, manager or the Boundary Iron Wbrkn. will leave irtth hi?\nfamily Thursday for a motor trip\nto   the   coast,\nMrs.  F.  RiK-kle  or   New  Westminster arrived   tn  town on Tuesday   to I\nattend   the   funeral  of  her  brother-\nin-law,   J.   Walker.\nMr. and Mrs. O. Rendell were In\nthe ctty on Tuesday for a short\ntime while en route to their home\nIn Trail. Mr. and Mrs. Rendell\nleave thla week on an extended holiday In Newfoundland, Mr, Repdell's\nold home. They wtll sail from Vancouver for the Panama Canal, from\nthere to New York nnd-on to l\\\nJohn's,  Newfoundland.\nMr. and Mrs. Walmpley, former\nCP.R. agent at Greenwood, were\nrenewing acquaintances In the citv\non Tuesday. They spent a dsy at,\nChristina before returning io th\u00bbii\nhome at Enderby. Thpy wtt* rc-\ncomnaniPd   by   their   son,   Thomas.\nR. Foote returned on lioodty from\nSan MotiNO ar will spend the\nholidays   with   hla   parents,   Mr.   and\nMrp. W. r*mt*.\nMlss Fern Hennlngpr left an Bet'\nurday for Priest River, Idaho, where\nshe  will spend  the  holidays.\nMrs. C. Hebha of the high school\nstaff left on Saturday via Spokane\nfor Vancouver.\nMr. and Mm. Randolph Davis are\nvisiting at tbe home of the former's\nparen'e. Mr.  and Mrs. J. Davis.\nWalter Manson of the Gazette\nstaff left on Saturday mnfriing for\na three week's holiday In California,\nWILLOW   POINT   NOTES\nWILLOW POINT, B- C, Julv 7,\u2014\nW. Blunt and friend Mrs Crawford.\nwho have be*n visiting Charlei Blunt\nhave left for their homes In Moose\nJaw.\nMra. E Caldlcott and family of\nTrail have rented the Institute\nhouse for the month of July. *\nMr. and Mra. R. W. Diamond and\nlamlly are here for th* aummer.\nGET READY FOR YOUR TRIP TO\nSPOKANE\nThe Playground for Canadian Yacationists\nThe Spokane Highway has been greatly improved and was never in such . plen-\ndid condition aa now. You drive out from. Nelaon via Ymir, Salmo and Metaline Falls . . .through beautifully wooded sections, and over hill tops with views\nrommanding forests, lakes and rivers. It's one of thc most beautiful scenic\ndrives in the Pacific Northwest, over which Spokane can be reached in S hours.\nCoifing - Swimming - Boating - Fishing - Hiking\nRiding - Tennis - Canoeing\nFUN and SPORT\nHere you will tennis and golf, take\nrides on woodland trails, spend lazy\ndays on the sands, dip in cool waters,\nenjoy games, music, dancing. .. something to do every minute ... or long\nhours of restful ease in thc bright\nsunshine.\nMODERATE RATES\nAvailable in'Spokane is every convenience for the perfect and complete\nenjoyment of your vacation, at reasonable rates . . . excellent golf\ncourses, well-kept courts, riding\nhorses, boats, bathing beaches, dance\npavillions, shops, hotels, garages,\ncafes and bungalow camps.\nCome Down to Spohane This Month, for a Wcch\nor Two, and Bring the Family.\nSpokane Accepts\nCanadian Money\nMor\u00bb than ?60 leadlntr Spokane firms.\nIncluding hotels, garagps and many\nothers, have agreed ro absorb ihr discount on Canadian money up to 10\nper cent on all purchases of *1 nr over\nby bona fide Canadian residents, and\nwill pay back aU change in Canadian\ncurrency.\nAM Canadians visiting Bpokane should,\nthprefnre, register at thr WoMKOtt\nChamber of Commerce, or any leading\nhotel, where they will be ilvcn the\nnecessary Registration Card, and a list\nof these  Spokane firms.\nIHE   fPOKANE   FIRMS   LUTED   BELOW   INVITE   VOL TO VISIT THFM WHEN  IN  IPO KAN*\nNims\nCafe No. 2\nClt.    P.m.    Oftr.g*-   BUUdlfif\nW. .__ Spi\">>e!i~ Avemie\n_.okan.\nTRY CS FOR ST*.   TOODS,\nOYSTERS. rnAB.,\nLOBsnms\nCluh Breakfasts\n20\u2014.0 Cents\nMerchant Lunches\n30\u201440 Cents\nEvening Pinners\n35\u201465 Cents\nwith Soup, C-fkt.ii, I>\u00bb.\u00a7.n.\nand   Drink\nASK    ABOIT   OCR   FREE\nCAR   PARKING   SERVICE\nA   CUMPLLIU   -LH.KL   IMJLR ONE  R001\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nJOE   HEDtCOBD.   MUMtr\nRate*   from   fUX) With   hath,   *_. BO\nI)U only hotel in BpOteM  wltii frpe  bus servi.-e\nand  our  n\u00abn   fKtfl   lo  connection.\n309-310   Riverside   Ave,   \u2014   'Ki8-'J18   BpTtHM   A*e\nYOUR MONEY  ACCFTTF-D AT PAR  HERE\nSAD SLIM SMITH\n8 SUPER SERVICE STATIONS\nISM   Bropdway,  3rd  a'   MonnT,  and   7  BtWlldf\n,JuBt nt you enter town\u2014One call does It all.\nrw>rA tires\n1>.p   -lutpm^bile   Travel   Mips\nYour Spokane Headquarters\nPe sure to p*y  ue a visit.\nWHOLESALE. RETAIL CIGARS and TOBACCO\nSoda fountain\u2014Candien\u2014Papers\u2014MRfozlneA\nFishing   Information.   Et**,\nPETER M. JACOY\n1   Washington   _.-\u00bb\u00bb\u2014_*-   Rprazn.   Av..\nBPOKANR. WASH.\n\"when vou arrive\nin   Bpokane. drive  rizht. Into our t-WtOtj   Pamp\nOnrage   and   let   H  takr   you   to   your   hotel\nPopular   parking  rates   nnd   complete\ngarace   service.\nCITY RAMP GARAGE\nF1\u00abST-PTEVLN?-SPNW.I 1 MITT.    ItlS\nThe HOTEL COEUR D'ALENE\nRAIK1   t. t'OLI-f.  Miinacrr\n\"\"CANADA'S   SPOKANT!   HOME'\nHoward  and  Trent\nA   flrtt nlf  popular  hotel   in   thr   hear* rf\nSpokane's   retail   district,\nCanadian   money   tCOiptti   at   par   for\nrnnm   arrouirnodsttons\nLAUDER'S STYLE SHOP\n'Voir   VOK-tKl   UMH*   *HOP\"\nJust   around   the   corner   from   the\nCoeur t'iMon*  Hotel\nA  'arte and  eompltt* stork of tftt-ytbtng  motft\nnew   tn   Pea-dv-to-wear  and   Millinery   for   Le.dtei\nand    MIspc*.    At    popular    prlr\u00bb_.\nIM   MM\\ PHOM,   MA Pi   MH\nWelcome\nCanadians\nto Spnkaiio ;im| thc Inland Empire.\nWe invite you to visit Spokane's\nnew Civic Building. It will be a\npleasure to serve you and to supply\nyou with complex information in\nregard to our cily and territory.\nSpokane Chamber of\nCommerce\ni i\t\n w>f  mm\nIHE NTLBON DULY M\u00bb\u00ab, MHOS, 8. r. \u2014 FRIDAY MOBMM-. _t-T\nSTEERING INTO THE MODE\nThere's Zip and Co in These New Motor Cet-ups \u2014\nTraffic Cops Beware!\nYou m e-barm your way out or a ticket from the traffic cop, it\nhee been pro\u00bbf<d. If you know the right kind of a bat to wearl\nIf you me a sportsy outdoor girl, driving * speedy low-sluDg sports\ncsr. you might do well to look at a bandana cap and kerchief eet (lefti\nwhich is so chic that old \"mammy ' would never know her bandanas\nwhen they oome don* uo this way.\nThe gay red, Wwk and white coloring makes this set lovely with a\nwhtta dress. It is downright \"saury\"\u2014so much so, in fact, that vou\ntun be ewe*** as pie to any officer who stops you and he will think\nwhat a nioe little girl you ara\u2014and that you Ju*t couldn't hive looked\na* the ereedometer.\nIf you sre a sophisticate and scorn trying to get sway with the\n\".oung girl stuff,\" there is a very smart black and white taffeta turban\nand bow tie scarf (tipper right) for you to drive in. it is one of those\ncrisp, clean-looking checks and the taffeta makes a billowy scarf, yet a\ntrim one. The little turban ls superbly cut. and fitted, with Just the\nright lift to its left side to show your new culfiure.\nWh*n jou get all dressed up tn an afternoon dress, miffed sleeve*,\n\u25a0floner on ehoulder snd sll. you will want ft big hat thst suits your\ncortume.\none   'lower   right,   is   black   haku   and   ha*  something   new   in\nack brims that keeps It from being the floppy kind that would\nwhen driving.    It has a charmingly fitted  crown,  with\nutest Uttle lawn flowers in black and white polka, dotted print.\nThis\np if\" ted\ngei   in your way\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy LAIRA A. KIBEMAN\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nPeaches\nCereal\nPauMg*s Popovers\nLuncheon\nB.ikeJ    Beami\nPlcallllt\nLeMuce French   Dressing\nPrune Whip Gingerale\nDinner\nM-ttt   Balls\nCreamed   Noodles\nSliced   Tomato   Salad\nPeach   Cottage  Pudding Coffee\nWOMAN'S PAGE\n_.\u00ab\u00ab\nSKYSCRAPER\n*-\"  By FAITH BALDWIN\n\"More  than  all   the  world\nthan you  love  me.\"\n\"But that Isn't  possible.\"\n\"Let's   get   married   soon-\nrow!\" said  Tom.\n\"Well,   no,   Tom;   I've   thought   p\nall out.    Mother nnd Fr.thcr, they]\n____(\nCH..PTFR    Mill.\n(CONTINUED;\nTorn came up behind her and\nswung her about, his big arm ctos- |\nlug around her I Irmly. \"Think,\nAgain. Tliis doesn't express my soul. \\\nI'm ;i tidy man. really.\" he toltl her :\nsolemnly. \"It's Slim\u2014and it's Hank; I\nMid 1-tst week half a dozen others'\n.-lept here off and on, three to a\nbed nad the guy that didn't get a |\nbed rated the floor.\"\n\"It looks like a municipal loclgins j\nhouse. Only not so clean,\" Lynn j\nremarked.\nTom dumped thelleUoftteisen pack- '\nages down, anywhere. \"Darling, ,\nmust you hc so fussy?\"\nLynn vanished into the nearest\nbftroom. screamed in horror, and \u25a0\nflew out again. Sheacldcd her hit j\nand coat to the general chaos nnd j\nwent into the bathroom for a towel.\nMutters arose. \"Why do men use\ntowels to mop up tiie floor''\" was\nher plaintive miMtton,\n\"Search me.\" Tom replied ebatr-\nfully, lighting a dgwet and Pitting\ndown before the radio. Discovering\nji sper-k of dust upon its ciiaetc top,\nhe whistled and took out his hitnd-\nkep-hlef. Dust n n rArllo was not\nto   lie  endured\nLynn appeared, h rnmpn r.it I velv\nrjerm towel 'led about her slim\nwairt. Sm ruitM shout in tt\u00bb\nkitchen and -nhtle Ton' turned dislF,\nsmll\u00bbd or frowned and nu -oundM\nhimself in blue \u00abm\"!.\u00bb, there wbs s\nrunning of water, r clatter of dtsher..\na sound of brooms and of slapping\ndust cloths. \u00bb\n\"What's the use?\" he demanded\nss Fhe dashed in and out on her\nerrands of reconstruction, \"it will\nlook worse tomorrow!\"\n\"I don't care how It locks tomorrow,\" she informed him severely. \"I\ndon't have to see lt tomorrow, hut.\nif you think I'm gome to cpend my\nmarried life picking up after you,\nVotn Shepard\u2014\"\nTom Orlnned     He said,  mildlv. \"I\nwish you could hear this thing on\na cold, snappy winter night. Summer's not so hot, in a reception\nsense.\"\n\"Tom, you might at least put\nthese pa.lamas and things away!\"\nLynn   walled.\nShe did so herself, and It is on\nrecord thtt Slim, some hours later.\n\u2022\u2022arching for his night garb un-\nnvallingly for ten minutes, cursed\nand  went to  bed raw.\npresently, \"Let's cit,\" suggested\nLynn,  her labors completed.\n'\u2022Happy thought!\" Ton leaped up\nfrom his beloved obsession to assist\nher   ln   clea-tng   the   battered   tabic.\ni After  a   time  coffee  bubbler!   on  thr;\nI gas stove and  the clean plates werc\ni burdened   with  cold fare.\n;     \"Gosh,   this   in great!\"    He  viewed\n1 her across the table.    \"Com here.\"\nHeplete. he pushed his pinto away,\npur-lied  his chair hack  and  held OUt\n, his  arms.    Lynn  MUM  and   perched\n! upon his knee happily.\n, \"It's as if wc were married,\" he\nsaid.\n1    \"T. know.\"\nj   Dtrknen outside tad thr glow of\nlamps. The room took on an aspect of mypterv and comfort. The\nnoises of Perry Rt.rr.t--ehlldren ervlne-. i-hiMren QtttmUog; mothers\nshrieking; cars passing through\u2014\nfnrjed to a dim murnnir, nnd their\nworn bMrt-btttj watt louder than\nI anv slien sound. Thev were fed\nj and warmed and roofed, and thev\n\u25a0 hart  itOtl other.\n\"A    httt    of    bread\"    commented\nj Tom.   who   always   0'i\"*ed   Omar   on\n: sentimental   occasions.\ni    \"Thtt were te. biscuits.\" Lvnn re-\n|minded   him,   \"ood   we  didn't  have\nj anv wine.    As for boughs\u2014\"\nj     A dog  harked   in  the Mtttt helow.\nI \"There'\" said Tom. tn slllv triumph\nI    Tliey   laughed   together,   n haired,\nj young, happy; and recited their worn\n[out   but   never   monotonous   litany.\nI    \"Do you love me-\"\nI    'Vou   know   I  do.\"\n\"How much?\"\nwant   mo   married   from   home,\nthought    it    couldn't    be    managed, j\nbut   If   we   ask   for   our   vacations\nat  thc  same  time\u20141\"\n\"Marvelous, dear Sherlock,\" said !\nTom; \"We'll do that little thing, j\nWe'll put In our appllcaf us nest[\nweek. Sarah's a good old scout; j\nshe'll O. K. yours\u2014end perhaps1\nshe'll speak a word to Gunboat for\nmc.\"\n\"We can go home.\" aald Lynn I\ndreamily,    and be married,\"\n\"And  go  honeymooning.    Where?\" .\n\"What difference \u2014 where?\" she '\u25a0\nwanted to know; and then, \"But I\nwe mustn't go to a hotel or anv- ,\nthing and spend money. We can't\niittord it. Look here. Tom, Mother I\nhas a cousin who has a little placc j\nin Virginia. She goes lo Maine |\nsummers. If I asked her, I think\n:hc might let us have her house for\n10 days or so. Wouldn't that be\nperfect?\"\nHe agreed with her, without words\nbut to the s-itlsfartlon of both.\n(To Be  Continued*\nThe shadows lengthened. , The\nradio was silent. The street noise*,\ngrew low. The remains of thc picnic 1\nsupper still sat coldly, dismally, on |\ntiie tahle.\nLynn stirred In Tom's arms\u2014 aiU |\nUM bitterer] sofa upon which they!\nhas been sitting for hours protested, j\n.^iie ssld, pushing iher hair from i\nbtt heavy, bright eyes and laying;\nhtr hand to a flushed bhttk, \"It's\ngetting late darling. I must clear up\n--and   go  home.\"\n\"Stay a little longer.\" His lolce\nwas very low; lt scarcely rippled tlie\nsurface of the spell in which she\nMi slowly and en trancedly drowning,\n\"I      mUSt      go\/'      Jt.      WHO      fttrtmmttt     to\nft.flV.\ntb* pulled herself away from him;\nsat,  upright,   dazed.  Ph.   got  to  her\nmore I feet and   took  the  dishes Into  the\nkitchen.\nTom rose and went to the window\ntomor-jand  stared  out of  it  unseelngly,\nj Presently Lynn returned to him.\nj ready for tho street. \"Going to take\n; me   home?''\n(To Be Continued)\nFRIIT   BVTTERS\nFruit Butters ere most delicious\nin wintertime on hot breads, aren't\nthey? Let us put up several Jars\nof them this summer.\npeach Butler: Peel and cut,\npeaches ln amall pieces. Measure.\nTo one quart of these pieces sdd\ntwo cups of granulated sugar and\nthe Juice snd grated rind of one\norange and one lemon. Cook till\nthick, stirring often to prevent\nburning, then turn the mixture into\nhot Jelly tumblers. When cold, cover\nwtth  melted paraffin.\n\"Apple-Tomato Butter: Femove\npeel from five pounds of ripe red\ntomatoes. Also pere, core and quarter one snd one-half pounds of\napples, Add sugar to the sliced\ntomatoes snd apples, using enough\nto sweeten the mixture to suit\nindividual liking (taste ltt, then stir\nln two cups of vinegar, and ft small\ncheesecloth bag containing a three-\ninch stick of cinnamon broken tn\nbits and 16 cloves. Cook the mixture three hours slowly, or till very\nthick, then seal In clean Jars, using\nnew rubbers. Add two cups nf\nraisin* if liked. Contributed by\nMlss E.   \u25a0.\"\nPlain Apple Butter: Wash, pare\nsnd quarter one peck of apples.\nBoll two quarts of elder before putting the prepared apples Into lt.\nCook slowly, stirring often, till thick\nand dark and smooth. Then add\nfovir cups ot brown sugar, one tablespoon of salt, one tablespoon of\nsalt, one tablespoon of ground cinnamon snd one t***poon of ground\ncloves. Store in earthenware crocks\nin ft cool place.\nTomorrow\u2014Cheerful\" Kitchens\nSlocan City Lady\nIs Treated at the\nNelson Hospital\nBLOCAN OITY, B. C, July 1\u2014\nMT. and Mrs. Nelson Spires and\nson, David, who have been the guent\nof their uncle and aunt, Mr. snd\nMrs. Ribbons, for some time, left\non Saturday for their home ln Manl-\ntobs, ftccompanled by their cusin,\nWalter Ribbons. They will take In\nthe stampede at Maple Creek eh\nroute.\nMr. snd Mrs. David Sherwood, Miss\nHazei Sherwood and their five sons\nleft on Monday to visit with relatives at Quill Lake, Bask.\nMrs. William Clough, who has\nbeen In Ill-health for some ttme\nwas taken to Nelson on Monday\nand Is a patient ln Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital. Mr. Clough and\nMrs. George Law ftccompanled her to\nNelson.\nThe Beauty Box\nBy Helen Follett\nHips and thighs that have expanded beyond the laws of proportion will thin down if they are\nmade miserable for 10 minutes' twice\n_, day by this exercise; place hands\non hips then run standing still,\nlifting the knee almost to the waistline, anyhow as high as you can\nHft It. Splendid for taking up the\nslack In tummies that have gone\nsaggy.\nJust se well to protect the hands\nfrom the ravages of wind, sun and\natmospheric dust; there will be fewer tears when autumn comes and\nV btg saving on the allowance for\nskin bleaches. The new mfsh gloves\n\u2014vou can get them to match your\nopenwork stockings, believe it or\nnot\u2014are cool and nice and very chic\nand they act as agents of protection. Some of them look suspiciously like great-grandmother's lace\nmitts except that they have fingers\nattached. The similarity la due to\nquaint patterns in the lace, reminding one of old-fashioned Nottingham\ncurtains.\nface washing la done in too casual a manner, specially by members\nof the young fry who muat dash out\nfor ft date tn no time. Soap should\nbe frlctioned ln the hands or on\nthe washcloth until there is a live\ncrackling suds. No need of scouring\nlt into the skin\u2014flaying one's\nonly complexion\u2014yet there should\nbe. sufficient energy expended to\nforce thc soap Into the pores. Then\nblackheads won't get settled forever\nnnd for aye.\nThe girls sre polishing their\ntresses. Have to have thnt clean-\nlooking glisten. First you give 10\nor 30 sweeps of the brush, then you\ntake the hair strand by strand and\nwipe with a silk handkerchief that\nhas been dipped in HU de cologne,\nCan't do it when ths water wave\nhas Just been pieced, but later on\nwhen the undulation begins to\nweaken It <an be a besuty indulgence.\nOnoe there wss a little girl whose\neye* were blue like her mother's\nand whose finger nails were black\nlike ber fathers. She died of a\nbroken heart because nobody loved\nher. Too bad she didn't rush to\nthe drug store, get a bottle of\nperoxide, a jar of powdered pumice\n'stone and an orange wood stick,\nwith which to banish those darkened\nthe    scissors\nnail  eaves.\nlines under the nail eaves.   Peroxide\nand   the   pumice   form   a   cleansing\npaste,   the   stick   does   ths   work.\nRsgged cuticle is sn enemy of pink\nfinger   tip   eheaths.     It    must    be\nsoftened with eutiele oil (cold cream\nwill  serve), detached  from   the  nml\nbase   by  means  of  a gentle   massage ,\nwith   the   stick,   snipped   off   with I711*   vogue   of   the\nneedle   point   scissors,   the   ends   of  not diminishing.\npointing    towatd    the\n1-ie smart hairdreas remains passive.    It clings closely to the head,\nlt isn't fussy, every hair must have\nits   special   plt.ee   and   stay   there.\nfinger   wave   ls\nWhen\nTraveling\nWHEN you are away from bome with __\u2022\nchildren, remember Kellogg's Corn\nFlake*. You can always get Kellogg's at\nany hotel or restaurant. And what conld\nbe better than a bowl of healthful\nKellogg's and milk? So easy to digest.\nSo wholesome. Quality Guaranteed.\nbHJO(piX%tv(o^\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nFRIDAY,   JULY   8\n*    NBC PROGRAM\nG :00\u2014Rhythm     Vendors\u2014Orchestra\ndirection Jess Norman, KGA, KEX,\nKJR.\nC :00\u2014Faul    Whiteman's    orchestra:\nMildred Bailey, blues singer;  vocal\ntrio.     From    eastern   studios     to\nKGO,   KHQ,  KOMO, KPI,  KSL.\n6:30\u2014Erno Rapee In Foreign Lsnds.\nVocal   and    instrumental   soloists.\nFrom N. Y. to KGW  (KHQ 6:45.\n6:45~Salt    Water    program;    KTO\nchain.\n7:00\u2014Tom Mitchell, baritone. KPO,\nKGA, KJR, KEX.    \u2022\n7:00\u2014Amos 'n' Andy, KOO chain.\n7.15\u2014Tune Blenders;   KGO chain,\n7:15\u2014John  and  Ned,  comedy duo;\nKPO chain.\n7:30\u2014Cesare Sodero's Symphony orchestra,  KPO chain.\n7:30\u2014Musical    Merry-Go-Round   \u2014\nKGO chain. -\n8:00\u2014Ralph Kirbery\u2014Dream Sinter;\nKPO chain.\n8:00 \u2014Rhythmic   Shadows   \u2014   KGO,\nKHQ,  KOW.\n8:0ft\u2014Orchestra N. Y. to KFO chain\n8.no\u2014\"Chinatown   Squad,\"    drama;\nKPO chain.\n8:30\u2014Jonen end H*re, songs, patter;\nKGO chain.\n8 45\u2014Llnn Tamers;   KGO chain.\n0:00-The Olympians;  KGA. KOA.\nH:W~Music Musters, Dunn's orehes-\nhn, KPO chain.\n9 30\u2014One    Man's    Family,    drama,\nKGO,  KHQ, KOA\n1Q oo\u2014Neva Flashes.   KGO chain.\n10.00\u2014Lakeside  Park orchestra.. KPO\nchain.\n10:15\u2014Eva  Gruninger,  contralto.  \u2014\nKGO, KHQ, KOMO.\n10:30\u2014Across the Music Counter \u2014\nBobbe   Deane,   comedienne;    Jack\nDean, tenor; orchestra, KGO chain\n10:30\u2014Around   the   Network\u2014\"Puget\nSound  on  Parade.\"  from KJR  in\nSeattle to KPO chain.\n11:00\u2014Jimmy  Joy's  orchestra;   KPO\nchain,\nll:0O\u2014Ted Flo Rlto's orchestra, KGO |\nchain.\n11:30\u2014Charles   Kalcy's   orchestra   \u2014\nKGO. KOMO, KFI.\n11:30\u2014Organ concert, Dftllo Sargent,\nKPO.  KGA,  KEX.\n13:00\u2014Organ concert\u2014Dollo Sargent,\nKGO.\nRFRC   \u2014   RAN   FRANCISCO\nfilO   K 1000   W 491.5   M\n8:00\u2014-Gua  Arnhelm's  orchestra\n8:15\u2014Chandu, DLL'..\n8:30\u2014Art Krueger's orchestra\n9:00\u2014To be announced\n9:1ft\u2014Eb and Zeb\n0:30\u2014Program\n10:00\u2014Bsqulck   Band\n10:0ft\u2014Anaon Week's orchestra\n10:00\u2014-Blsqulck Band\n10:^0\u2014Anson Week's orchestra\n11:00\u2014Henry Ha Intend and orchestra\n12:00\u2014Mldnlgfct Hour\nKVI   \u2014   TACOMA\nft70   K 100(1   m 929   M\n6:00\u2014Music That Satisfies\n8 15\u2014Eton tm studio\n6 30\u2014CB8 Symphony orchestra\n7:30\u2014Oarie Nelson\n9:0o\u2014Don Lee studio\n9:15\u2014 Studio  program\n10:00\u2014Scandinavian Hour\n11:00\u2014Henry Halsted and orcheetra\nSecret of Serving, Good Fruit Lies in the\nMarketing; Here Are Hints for Housewives\n-BEAUTV IN THE MORNING\nHOW YOU thrilled __ M*\neyes adored you et brc.k-\nf\u00abt. Hov\/ comforting to\nknow th_t _s you slept\nPompeian Night Cre^i\nh*d restored the youthful\n*n eothness of your lit to,\nHow wonderful to (mow\nthst your frc.h mming\nloveliness Will br preserved throughout the d.\/\nby the cfinqing Vflvct-\ntortikwl Pompeian Beauty\nPowder.\nNow, as always, you\nmay pay more for beauty\nprepar^lions but you can-\nnet buy belter than the\nN NEW ._.\u201e\nKri'jfTP'jwd*. (\u25a0 tbt-Vt)\u00abV. 9rtif (t th\u00bb]ff)\nNicbtCrotmff i\u00abr_ri*n\u00ab. rVk, DiyCra-n\nbutttAg fovOtt $IW.\niJjsr. k\u00ab\nHim* C\nPOM P\u20ac IAN\nsrafssa]^^ BEAUT\/ PRODUCTS\nFuylne fri!** and vegetables rails\nfor a combination of acoir.te\nt;nomled?\u00ab snd pood luck. Kvery\nhuckster and _rrrK0r a_rftng\u00bbs hli.\nHM to look thPlr best snd i*> only the canny shopper vho discovers\nthe Meinish if there Is on\".\nThere are NVfttta conditlrvnB ami\nqtitUttM pertaining: to some se_-\nsonahlA fruits and   v*f*ttb_W whHi\nthf,   ttpttionoti   hounrwtfs   Mir_.iui\nknnv.\nBtttmtmttt tt i.iieir bttt should\nhfl of medium sire find \"f a Mgbl\nthe color .Th\u00ab color should b,. un|.\"\nform--fad Ing slightly 'o^ard th*\n\u25a0tip. perhaps, hut not tbOiHBf kt\"^^\nThe fruit should be ffM from ex- '\n4>flFke dirt. Bruits are had in any\nfruit nlnce they lnvii\u00ab- decay. Immature or one-sided berries arc like-\nly to be needy and poorly tlavored\nnnd   are   not   dofilrahlr,   The   boxes\nwHottter they be Quart or pint MM\nshould  be  well  filled,  and  \u00bb qua-rt\nWOtth* 20 ounce*, including the hox. j\nIf it wtttbt less than   17 ounces it J\nis sheet weight\nHOTT TO CHOOFK .\nTIN t APPLES\nPineapples are another fruit most '\nplentiful    now.   Tnfy   are   ea*y   to J\nr.hooec   btCftUM   they   have   few   Im-\nperfection*.  Tba sire of  this fruit \\\nusually   lus   little   to   do   Wtth   lt\u00ab\n. .unltty, and poiin^ lor pound one;\nploinppk yields about the same per-\ncenlAfe of edible material as another lYult -ft-anted for immediate use\n.'vlimild b* of an even golden yellow\nrotor. Tills denotes full ripening.\nFulling the loaves frnm the \"crown\"\nis another teat of rniturlty. The\nItOTN r.houl-j pull easily ard be\nv__tta for some distance up from ihr\nl?sse The fruit ahould not r>e hard\nnnd green looking unless ft in to be\nkept, fnr mow time before using.\nOverripe pln^s are uott nnd frequently have blH--k Ipeti. The black spots\nln4toat\u00ab \"block rot\" wblch btabmn\ntroublesome with warm we. ther\nThis usually fttfti \u00bbt, the base of\nthe fruit and i* plain to be aeen.\nDecay   and   nver-rlpenesn   are   th*\ncommonest fault* with cherries. 'Hie '\ncver-pre.vnt   wormy   cherry   cannot\n1* detected  on   the  retailer's stand\nbut it can easily  he picked out at\nhome,   for   wormy  cherries  float  in i\nwater and sound onea do not. Brown\nrot.   the   most   destructive   of   all '<\neherry decays,  ls  held  in  check  by\nlow   temperatures.   Cherries   should :\nalway* be kept ln a eol^ place. j\nThe MaaonaM* vegetables are\nstring bean* and peas. While these\nere obtained throughout 'he year\nthey nre most plentiful and cheapest  now.\nWhat ape \"ptrinp hcwis\" to us\nmean severs! vgrl\"tie\u00ab to the market\nman, but no matter Vhether they\nare green or yellow, they should be\n- lean, vwld and smooth. Crlsptness\nIk desirable, but a slightly wilted\nbean can be fresheued in cold -Prater\nproviding thc other quailtleg are.\ngood. The beans should be unnot-\nU-eable in the pods Even a slight\nMil* Indicates poris will be tough\nand stringy.\nPeas should be a clear green color\nwith well filled, firm pods. When\nthe pod.. \u00bbre light colore.! and rough\nits a sure aign the vegetable is too\nold i\u00abl the peas will b\u00ab tough and\nbard Wilteit peas are tasteless snrj\ncannot, be restored to their original\nfreshness  and  delicacy.\nCucumbers *re steadily becoming\nplentiful although they do not tOtttb\nthe height of their season until\nlater In feg summer. However when\nyou choose cucumbers for a salad,\nlook for thoee which not firm.\nstraight 'nnd slender with well\nrounded ends. They should be a:\nleaet half anj preferab.? twothlrd*\ngreen in color. The principal defects\nof cucumbers are seedinesi. poor\nship* and bitter nes*. Whila the firs\ntwo call b* d\u00abtected by examination\nbittern*** 1* impossible to determine,\ntt is said that tbls bltternest. can\nbs avolrie^ by peeling the stem end\nlast, wiitla the theory haa not yet,\nbeen definitely proved, It'a worth\nuylng and keeping tn mind. *i\nUSE THE\nSTOPPER\nNOT the InkJ\nCurtailing classified advertising appropriations or can-\ncelling- newspaper advertising schedules, won't put the\ncork back in the red ink bottle ... nor will discarding the\n, \"stopper\" eliminate the need for the use of red ink in\nthe accounting department.\nAs has been proven time and again in the past, the persistent and consistent use of the Want-Ad columns of\nThe Nelson Daily News WILL most effectively put a\nstop to the red ink flow ... We suggest that you use\nthis medium to eliminate the need for tlie use of red ink.\n'     USE THE STOPPER- AND NOT THE INK.\nUi)t 2fc faott iailij Hauii\nWANT-ADS\n\u2022mmm\n ******>\n*a\nTR_ NIL. ON D.ILT NEWS, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 FRIDAY   MORNINO, J.LY I, 1\u00bb1-\ntmtlvSamnq^\n****\\W__\\mM B*^^\/^^\njo\u00a3Mi%LmiIjfa,\n..'omen's Smart i Women's  Black\nTics, Pumps and      \u2122A Co,orcd\nSlippers.\n$2.65\nPumps and\nSlippers.\n$3.15\nWomen's\nOxfords, Pumps\nand Tics.\n$3.65\nWomen's  Extra\nQuality   Tics\nand Slippers.\n$4.65\nWomen's Sport\" ; _      . - \\tx ' _f**\noxfords.    R* Andrew & Co.\n?2-85  to   *4-35 |\nLeaders in Foot.ashion\nBARGAINS\nin\nTENNIS SHOES\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. C. July 7\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. O. A. Rendell left yesterday\nafternoon   by   stage   for   Vancouver,\nwhen oa they *U] sail via the Panama canal to Newfoundland to visit\nrelatives. They exprct to return\nTrail  lu  October.\n\u2022   a   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. William McCready.\ndaughter, Mrs. Ernest Clay, left yes\nterday morning for a vacation a\nHarrop.\nMr.    and    Mrs.\nand   son   George,\nThomss   Summers\nColumbia   avenue.\nHard, Large Pimples Lasted a\nLong Time.   Healed by Cuticura.\n\"I had pimples all over my face. They were hard, large and red and\nfestered and scaled over. The pimples also itched a great deal. The\ntrouble lasted a long time, and I lost sleep at night on account of the\nirritation.\n\"A friend told me about Cuticura Soap and Ointment so I purchased\nsome and after usjng six cakes of Cuticura Soap and about four boxes\nof Cuticura Ointment thc pimples disappeared. I was completely\nhealed.\"   (Signed) Miss Almeada Smith, R. R. 2, Kelley's Cove, N. S.\nRo_p?5__  Ointment 25 end 50e.  Talcum 25e.   Sold everywhere.   Sample each free.\nAddress Canadian Depot: Lyman Acenciea.Um.tad, 286 St. Fool 5... W., Montreal.\nleft thla morning for a motor trip\nthrough Banff to Calgary. They will\nvisit relatives In Calgary and attend\nthe stampede.\n\u2022 |     a\nL. Robinson and son Tom left\nTuesday evening for Vancouver where\nthey will visit Mr. Robinson's mother\nfor two weeks,\ns       \u2022       \u2022\nMrs. rrvnald MrKeci-nK snd baby\nson are campln\u00ab at Robson during\nthe summer. Mrs. A. R. McCarthy\nIs their  guest  this  week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMurdoch Campbell of Chapman Is\na visitor ln the clt-y prior to leaving\non an extended visit to Scotland.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Hoefer,\ndaughter Margaret and Miss Charlotte Lowes were visitors In Spokane  during last  weekend.\nTrail News ot the Day\nTPML HOUSES Am, LOTS \u2014 TN-\n.uranc..  Notary,  J.   D.  Ander-an\n,_.-n\nSALE\nCASH ANO\nCARRY\nSALE\nCOMMENCING TOMORROW, JULY 9,1932\nGOLF CLUBS\nand BAGS\n25% Discount\nSTEEL FISH ROD\nREEL and LINE\nComplete for $1,25\nWASTE PAPER\n.    BASKETS\nFancy Designs\n59c\nDU-ALL\nDUSTING MOP\nat89c\nHigh Grade\nRUBBER TIRED\nWAGONS\nNos. 1,2, 3, 4\n$4.95 - $5.09\n$5.49-$5.99\nTENNIS RACKETS\n$2, $2.25, $4.50\n$6.50, $7.50\nELECTRIC\nTOASTER\nMM?\nELECTRIC IRON\nfor$1.99\nPICNIC BASKETS\nat $1.09, $1.29\nVACUUM BOTTLE\n1 Pint 35C\nScreen Doors .. $2.19, $3.19, $449\nRefrigerators MiMetai $18.99, $25\nLawn Mowers $8.59, $10.99, $11.69\nBamboo Lawn Rakes 29\nGALVANIZED PAILS\nHeavy Grade\n39c\nM EAT SAFES\n$2.89\n100 Ft. Wire Clothes Line\nand two 5\" Pulleys\nat $1.09\n18\" Nickel Plated\nTOWEL BAR\nat 14C\nLong Handled Dust Pans\n59c\nAll Copper\nWash Boiler\n$2.89\nTea Kettles\nAluminum\n89c-99c\n$1.09\nPRESERVING KETTLE\nand Cover\nGreat Bargain \u2022\n12 quarts $1.49\nWOOD CAMP RANGE\nwith Cast Top and Oven\nJust the Thing for Campers\n$17.99\nROUND  ALUMINUM\nROASTER\n$1.26\n14 Quart Aluminum\nDISH PAN\nat69c\nSEE OUR WINDOWS FOR BARGAINS\nHlpperson Hardware Co., Ltd.\nSociety\nThia eolnmn Is conducted by\nMrs. M J lljnriu. AU nem ftt s\n\u25a0in la I n-tturt, Inrlui-llns recep.\n(ions, pri.HiB entertainments, per-\n\u2022onnl It enn, marriage a, eir.. Mtll\nopitear In this .-vlumn. Telephone\nMrt. Vttmux it ber hume, 611\nSlllra  itreet.\nt>r. md Mrs. C. Franklin M-i;ee j\nof Moscow, Jaaho, have arrived to:\nspent % tern 6*90 at \"Klllarney-on* j\nt_K-L*ke\" the home _f Mrs. Maze. > I\nparents, Mr. anrl Mr... J. Fred  Hume.\nJ.    J.    Skillicorn    of    _____BS    was\namong visitor, to town yestcrdiy.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAmong shopper*  to  Nelson  yesterday   waa   Mrs.  C.   F.   Olson   ol   Ainsworth.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs.   O.- R.  Curwln,  Fairview,   has\nas her guest hfr daugher, Mrs, C.\nA. Cawley, and da us .ter. Margery-\nMay, ol Salmo.\n\u2022 \u00ab   0\nMrs. Frank Dirr.ai wa. In shopping frcm Ain'Aorth  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u25a0    \u2022\n\"Buena V_st_,\" the picturesque,\nsummer ho.i.c ot Mr. snd Mrs. A. D. i\nEmory was tlie scene ot a delljht-,\nfully arransed strawberry social and !\ntea Wednesday afternoon and evening when the Ladles Service club\nand the W. M. S. of Trinity United\nchurch wer tne hostesses. Mrs. A. A.\nPagdln and Mra. D. D. Townsend\nWtt**} as general conveners while\nMrs. Emory made a gracious hostess\nassisted by Mrs. A. Clyde E nory,\npresident ol the Service club. Particularly beautiful was tb* rose\ngarden In thc lawn adjoining the\nterrace. Row buds ln small silver\nvases graced the Individual tea\ntables. Those acting as servlteurs\nwere Mlss Oladys Ewlng, Mrs. A. K.\nMurphy, Mlss Enid Etter. Mlss Ida\nFleury, Mrs. William Brown, Mrs.\nL. S. Bradley, Mrs. Walter C. Ket-\ntl-wcll. Mrs. \/. C. Emory, Mrs. T. |,\nHlgglnbotham and Mrs. Wardalr.\nMra. K. R. Keitleweil and Mrs\nKccTe made Bble tttttOlt\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs.   Scott   Wardle   of   I\/Ongbeach\n! paid   a   visit   to   town   yesterday.\n1 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. Moran and Dr.\nj and Mrs. F. Wilder have returned to\nI Spokane   after   visiting  at  the   honv\n09   Latimer  street  of  Mr.  and   Mrs.\nM.   H.   Baskln.\nf \u2022    \u2022' \"\nI     Dr. and Mrs. H. H   MarKenr.le and\nI family have taken up residence nt\ni their Willow  Point home.\nI ...\ni Alex Orant of Ainsworth paid ft\nI visit to totfn yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nI    Mlss Phyllis Chandlrr, Mlss Elaine\n1 Calvert,    Murray    Elder    and     Basil\nPalmer motored from Kaslo Wednesday  evening  to see   the show.\n\u2022 9   t\nMr\u00bb.    A.   McKlnnon   of   Ainsworth\npaid ft visit to th- city yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nCol. John Murray of South Slocan\nspent yeetrday ln  Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nRobert Joy has left for a visit to\nthe co^frt cities.\n\u2022 \u25a0   \u2022\nMr.   and   Mrs.   R.   *H.   Jlassard   of\nCtOottt* forrer relsonltes, \u00bbre Nelson\nvisitors.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. T. Dolphin. War 1 street, has\nt ad as her guest Mrs. E. J. Campbell\nan ex-resident, of Nelson, and now\nof Sm  Diego, calif.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. Stvraden of\nAinsworth spent yesterday lo the\ncity.\n\u2022 9    \u2022\nThe Misses Helen \u00abnd EUaabe*h\nVance. hV.ua Te.uy AU.n, Mi* Effle\nSpier* and Mis\" Annabel'.* Dunk\nhave Ir ft te spend ft couple of\nweeks   camping   at   Balfour.\nMlss Hazel Knauf of Harrop was a\ncity   visitor   yesterday.\n' \u2022    *    \u2022\nCircle No. 3 of Trinity Worn ids\nassociation met at the park yesVrday\ntttttnoon where they spent, a social\nh;ur after the buhiuess part of the\ngathering tea was served. Those\npresent w:re the president. Mrs. J.\nbundle. Mrs. W. Z. Coles, Mrs. Web-\nuer, Mrs. Percy Amas, Mrs. Bertha\nSimms, Mrs. a. A. Pagdln, Mrs. A.\nWod. Mrs. R. L. McBride, Miss\nDorothy Coles, Mrs. Charles Miller.\nMrs. J. A. Irvln, Mlss Norma Irving, Mlm Norma Irving, Mrs. Arthur\nTcrrl.l    and    Mrs.   TbQUM   Oerman.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. John O. Argyle ftnd\nfamily have taken up residence at\ntheir   summer   place   at   Four   Mile.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nArchibald    Campbell   of   Trail    is\nspending   ft   few   days   ln   town   the\nguest   or   Mr.   and   Mrs.  J,   H.   WU-\nkihaon,   Cedar   street.\n\u00ab   *   \u2022\nSherrlf M. E. Harper, la In Orand\nForks en business.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. II. Chapman and daughter\nMlss Frances Chapman, were \u00bbt\nAppledale Wednesday to attend the\ndance.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. W. Dunn of Kaslo spent yesterday   ln   th\u00a9  ctty.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong those who motored to town\nyesterday was Graham CrulckshftiiJ.\nof Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA. Haggart, Mill street, has returned from a visit In Trail at the home\nof hla son and daughter-in-law, Mr\nand Mrs. Robert Harggart.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. M. C Donaldson of\nSalmo  were  city shoppers  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlss Norma Trvlng, who teaches ot\nVermilion, Sask., has arrived In town\nto spend her holidays at the home\ncr her lather, J. A. Irving, Hoover\nstreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nMrs. Archie Oray of Salmo paid ft\nvisit to town yesterday.\nMrs. L. Exton and daughter Phyllis\nof Procter expect to leave Monday\nfor Mo\u00ab trcal to Join tho Duchess\nof York for an extended Visit to\nEngland.\ntw-0\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Lelth, Mrs\nJames O'Shea and Mrs. A. D. McLeod motored to Mirror lake yesterday and were guests of Judge and\nMrs.   W.   A.   Nlsbet.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nC. Barrett motored to Appledale\nWednesday What* he- attended \u00bb\ndance  that evening.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Slbbald, -who has been the house\nguest  of  Mr.  and   Mrs.  Hugh   Ross,\nM_a__________________________m\nmmm*lMmmm**immmmMmt*smmiaatmB\nJuly Clearance\nSale\nTHE SAVINGS IN THIS SALE ARE WORTH WHILE.\nEVERYTHING IS TAKEN FROM OUR REGULAR\nSTOCK AND UP TO  OUR  USUAL  STANDARD OF\nQUALITY ONLY THE PRICE IS LOWERED. BUY\nYOUR HOUSEHOLD GOODS TODAY AND SAVE.\nPrinted Broadcloths\nAll new patterns and in large assortments. 36 inches wide. Fast colors.\nSALE PRICE, YARD  20<\nPillow Slips\nFull size slips of good quality bleached cotton.\nJULY SPECIAL, 4 FOR 11\nWabasso\nSheeting\nSplendid heavy sheeting\nin full bleach. 81 inches\nwide.\nSALE SPECIAL-\nYARD   .\u00bb<.\nPillow Cotton\n42-inch Circular Pillow Cotton in good quality.\nSALE PRICE\u2014\n3 YARDS ?1\nALL OTHER LINES OF\nPILLOW COTTONS AND\nSHEETINGS CLEARING\nAT 80% LESS THAN\nREGULAR.\nBleached Sheets\nWabasso Sheets direct from\nthe Mill. Full bleached,\ngood weight and free from\nfilling.\nA SALE SPECIAL-\nTUB PAIR  ?1.08\nLuncheon Cloths        Children's Beach\n(CAFEWAY STOKEC1\n%J    l.iMi.n.i   inc.   v_i 1 MOl    i    W*STI        *mss*\nWhen Every Penny Counts I! I    TaWe CJotlis\nW tf rib i   _V       ,Piirp linen Table cloths of Irish\nThe most logical place lo buy your food is at Safeway.\nWhy?   Because Safeway Saves you something on\neverything you buy.\nSPECIALS FOR FRIDAY AND\nSATURDAY, JULY 9 AND 10\nCERTO\nBottle   290\nJAR RINGS\n4 DOZ 2501\nRED ARROW SODAS, large pkts., each  1\u00bbf\nMATCHES. Eddy's. 3 boxes  S.V\nTOMATO SOUP. Campbell's, tin  7<*\nWHIZ FLY FI ME. sure death to insects, 35<* and 6Cr\nSOAP, r. & G. 3 bars .__ TO\u00ab.\nPEANUTS, fresh roasted, per Ih IQf\n$______%?_____%\nPOTATOES      I    GREEN PEAS\nLOCAL run dig i'rf.sii, nu. runs\no LBS. 250 I 3 LBS 2$t\nCANTALOUPES, large size, 2 for  %>.<\u25a0\nRASPBERRIES, large baskets, 2 for  S9C\nCUCUMBERS, 2 for  15.1\nLETTUCE, large size heads, 2 for  1W\nHUCKLEBERRIES, 2 lbs 20c\nBANANAS, golden ripe, 3 lbs 25.\nLet us fill your order for preserving Fruits, Cherries.\nStrawberries, Red Currants, Black Currants, Huckleberries.   The best of Quality at Rock Bottom Prices.\nFor FREE DELIVERY Phone 153\nPure linen cloths with colored borders. 54 inches square.\nJULY SALE PRICE, EACH f 1.10\nAll New Voiles\n25 pieces of flowered Voiles in light\ncolors.    All new patterns.   Regular\nvalues 40c to 75c ei\"_h.\nJULY SALE TRICE\u2014\nTHE YARD 32^ TO GOf\nSilk Spreads\nPlain or figured silk spreads. All good\nquality and full size. Regular ?5.75\nto $10 each.\nSALE PRICE, EACH *4.60 TO 08\nFap\nPure linen Table cloths of Irish manu- '\nfacture. Full bleach. 2 yards square.\nSALE PRICE, EACH  ?2.30\njamas\nRegular $1.95 each. Sizes 4 to 12\nyears.\nJULY SALE PRICE, EACH $1.50\nHemstitched\nPillow Slips\nExtra quality cotton slips with _iem\u00ab\nstitched ends. Full size.\nJULY SALE PRICE, YARD .. Ut\nBed Spreads\nStriped Cotton Spreads in large slz_.\nA11 wanted colors.    Regular $2.50\neach,\nJULY SALE TRICE, EACH *l.f>S\nC_JM.ea^, her 's^O\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\niPi!__\u00ab__^^\nSilica \u25a0treet. leav.a today for his\nhome in Gray Creelc.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBruce Oriy, Purview, la motoring\nLo Roasland today where he will visit\nIr lends.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. R. Fletcher of Aln\/rcrth\nfpent   yesterday   shopping   la   towo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. N. Caisloa antf aon left yesterday morntng for Edmonton WbOt*\nthey will Vlalt Mm. Casslos' parents.\nt   *   *\nMr. and Mrs. D. O'Sulllvan, Robson\nHireet, have as thrlr guesta their son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and ttt*.\n.\"nomas O'Sulllvan. of Trail, and\ntheir little daughter, KaV.ilecn Mary.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMisa Mary ttOtUft and party of\nRofsland paid t visit to town yesterday,\n\u2022 i   *\nMr*. D. MeDermii of Three TOtttt,\nwho Is visiting Mrs. A. McKlnnon\nIn Ainsworth. spent yesterday shop-\nI ping   In   Nelson.\n...\n! Mr. and Mn. I. Lnrfl or Bagwell\ni are In Trail vlMtlng their son-in-law\nland daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice\n! Mawa.ey.\n\u2022 . \u2022\n|     George   Fawcett.   formerly   of the\n1 staff   of   the Star   ln   Vancouver haa\n1 arrived to visit hla pnrentfl, Mr. and\ni Mrs. Samuel   Fawcett,  Fairview.\nKASLO FOLK TO\nVISIT FRIENDS\nIN KIMBERLEY\nMiss Elsie Rouleau Visits Sister in Nelson en Route to\nHoliday in Alberta\nKASI-O, H. C, July 7.- Mrs. I! Eft,\nDawson and daughter, Tsobel, of\nNelson, have arrived In the etty to\nspend the holidays nt, .nnr nlti\nhome here.\nMrs. H. Parker of Slocan City ar-\nrived In the city Monday and is tlie\nhouse-guest of Rev. and Mrs. C. C,\nRaven.\nMr. and Mrs. Nnel Bacchus of\nBlrclidale were city visitors TUMdar-\nGovernment agent, Ranald Hewat..\nand Mrs. Hewat have left to visit\ntheir son and daughter-in-law, Mr.\n| nnd Mrs. Harry Hewat of Kimberley.\nj During Mr. Herat's short MWHI\n; A. W. Anderson ll acting government\nSALMON\nSLICED. LB. 200\nHALIBUT\nLB  1801\nCLUB STEAKS, per lh 20e\nVEAL CHOPS. 2 lhs 35c\nRUMP ROAST VEAL, as cut, per lh 17c ;\nPOT ROAST VEAL, per lb 13C\nBACON, sliced, per Ih.  15_-\n(31 SAFEWAY  STORES  LIMITED fyl\nMrs. W. J. MJhr. Willow Point,\nwill have as her gust r-er daughter,\nMrs. Stanley Wright and daughter\nElizabeth, who are arriving tonight\nfrom   Winnipeg.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nMrs. 8. Smith of Ainaworth paid *\nvisit to town yeaterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong shoppers to Nelion yesterday waa G. W. Ward ot Valllcan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMisa M.iy Hag;art, accompanied\nby her sla^r, Mlsa Eleanor Haggart\nand Mrs. J. Ellson havo ret'irn-d\nfrom a motor trip to KelowTia and\nother   flMMfM   town*.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Pitta\nwere axong those from Nelv>n to attend the dance at Appledale Wednesday   night.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nMr, _nd Mrs. ... Rilling. <jf Ka'.ln\npaid o vLMt to the eUy yesfrr-lsy.\nagent.\nMiss Sylvia Johnson who taught\nAt Dorr during the winter, is spending the holidays in town with her\nmother,   Mrs.   j.  Johnson.\nKla Kathleen Burgess, teacher of\nthe Mirror Lake school, has left to\nspend a part of the holidays in\nVancouver.\nAlderman A. F. Adams was a\nbuslneaa   visitor  In  Nelsoon   Tuesday.\nMlss Sylvia Johnson haa returned\nfrom New Denver where ahe w^.\nbridesmaid at the Trickett-Burkitt\nwedding which took place ln that\ncity Monday.\nMiss Elsie Rouleau spent a few-\ndays in Nelson with her lister, Mlss\nWinona Rouleau, early In tho week,\nlater polng on to Carbon, Alta .\nwhere she will visit her brother and\nsister-in-la-.*-, Mr. and Mrs. E\nRouleau.\nj. J, Streit, principal of the N\"w-\nDenver public school, has arrived in\ntown to spend th\u00ab holidays here\nwith hli parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J.\nStreit.\nThe weeklr practice of the Kaslo\nvolunteer fire brlR*ul*\\ scheduled for\nTtW-flM evening, had to he calWl\noft  BWtBf to a WJ  henvy  rnin nnd\nwind storm which prcviulrd here for\nabout   three   hours.\nF. G. Talbot of Nelson was a\nWednesday  visitor in Ksslo.\nRess Kimball of Peatte, South Dakota, and Gladys Knabe of St. Paul,\nMinn., who are motoring through\nthe district, were city visitors Tues-\nrlny and Wednesday,\nL. Steel of Nelson was \u25a0 visitor in\ntown   Wedi.er-dny.\nSlocan Park School\nList of Promotions\nKODAK PARK, July 1 Promotions for thc roming term werr\nmom at the Rlocan Park school.\nMerit, certificates w-ere awarded to\nAlbert. NirhoK punctuality snd\nreculnrlty; and Aasta StorbB, deportment.\nPromotions in senior room:\nTo Grade VII\u2014Albert Nichols.\nWalter Orcavlson, Nancy PoohaehOff,\nNick Poohachoff, Fred Konkln. nnd\nMvrt'P   Stc-rhn.\nTo Orade vi-Belle Nichols. PoUj\npodowinlkoff. Martini Osachoff. Mike\nOaaehOtt, Peter Pozlnkln. Mable\nPlotnlkoff, Annie Poohachoff, Xancy\nKonkln. Pet,er Bonderoff.\nTo Orade V\u2014Ronald Oroavlwin,\nAstri Storbo. Oiorla 6 tor bo, Mary\nJcrevlotf. Bill Volkin. Billy Mtt*\nMarv Strilaif.\nPromotions in the Junior room:\nTo Oracle IV\u2014Mable Glogoloff.\nNick Wishloff. Nick Zoitsoff. Mary\nZottfloff, John Polonikoff, Polly Bonderoff, Nellie porinkin, Anita Samar-\nodln.\nTo Grade III\u2014Joyce Oreatison,\nTheodore storbo, Bill Chernoff, John\nMartin, HI] Plotnlkoff, Mike Poohachoff.   Koosma   poohachoff.\nTo Grade II\u2014Msry Polonikoff.\nPeter PUkoff.\nHinchliffe Denies\nResignation Rumors\nVICTORIA, Julv 7-Hon. Joshua\n| Hlnchllffe, mlaiiwr of education,\ni today denied repor's fmanstlng in\nVincouver that he was obout to resign and assume the position of\n1 superintendent of edui-Riion. Mr.\nj Hinchliffe further stated thst eo\nfar  its  he   knew  1her\u00ab   whk  iio riinns .\nmplateo in um supertnftndeney.\n IHE MLSON DAILY NEWS, ..ELSON\nlUtr Sfrlmm Saily ^Xruifi\nPublished every morning except Sunday by Ne\u00bbi Publishing Company,  Limited   Nelson,  B   C.\nMember of Canadian  ims* leased   wire sew* **rvlet.\nAdvertising rata cards and A. B. C. \u2022la'emant* of circulation\nmailed on rr. :**'.. or may ba aeen it tba office ot any advertising\na*\u00ab-.cy recognized by tha Canadian Daily Newspapers' Association,\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBt tn.a   (country),  per month\nP.r year\nBy mall (city), per year _\nOut-ide Canada, per month .\nPer   year\nDelivered,  per   meet\nTa year        , ,\nPayable Id __._nc-.\nMember Audit Bureau ol circulation.\nJt   m\n_ -.00\n_ 13.00\n_ .15\n_ 7 50\n._ \u25a0_\u00bb\n.. ISM\nFRIDAY, JULV 8, 1932.\nDr. Arthur Passes\n\u25a0 In the death of Dr. E. C. Arthur, Nelson has lost another of its pioneers, who have seen the city grow from a\nmere village on the lakeshore to one of the most substantial and modern cities in British Columbia.\nA man of strong character, of decided opinions, of\nmarked intellectual power and of unshakeable convictions, Dr. Arthur fought many a major and many a\nminor battle of opinion during his residence in Nelson,\nbut no matter what the issue he always gained the respect of his opponents. He fought hard, he enjoyed a\nhard-hitting battle, but he always fought cleanly. He\nfought in the knightly spirit of a crusader, in the spirit\nof the captain of an cmbattlemented castle.\nHe was a Liberal of the old school. He enjoyed discussion of the intellectual and the oratorical powers of\nHon. Edward Blake. He retained his vivid interest in\npolitical questions to the last, but it is doubtful if even\nI_turier aroused in him the same enthusiasm as the\ndoughty Ontario opponent of Sir John A. Macdonald.\nGreat principles appealed to him more than great politicians.\nAt the age of 55 he volunteered for service in the\nCanadian Medical Corps and served until the end of the\nwar, devoting his services to Canadian soldiers and to\nthe allied cause with the whole-heartedness and disregard of all but essential principles which marked his career in Nelson.\nNeed for Careful Driving\nMore than one thousand school pupils in Kootenay\nhave been released from their studies and for the next\neight weeks or so will be free to indulge in play, in sport\nand other forms of recreation. Naturally the number\nof boys and girls using the streets and highways in one\nform or another during the day will be greatly increased\nIn the summer vacation period. This is natural and inevitable and the fact Bhould be kept in mind by motorists.\nThere will be need for constant viligance on the part of\nthose who are driving cars on the streets of the city.\nChildren cannot be confined indoors during the summer months. Nor can they be locked in back yards or\nchained to verandah posts. And despite the warnings\nand the supervision of parents there will be countless\noccasions when they will stray upon the roadways. This\nis particularly true of those of tender years who are unable to appreciate and understand the danger from motor traffic. It therefore behooves motorists to exercise\nconstant care and caution when driving on residential\nstreets or elsewhere where little ones are likely to be at\nplay. The responsibility for avoiding accidents is primarily theirs. The little loss of time involved in driving\nslowly in these areas will surely be more than compensated for by the knowledge and satisfaction that they\nhave done their part in making the streets safe for the\nchildren of their neighbors and fellow citizens. Care\nand caution must be the guiding motto.\nBolshevism Exposed\nDr. Waldcmar Gurian, in a book he has just published,\nhas analyzed Bolshevism in theory and practice, and has\nis. tied a warning. He has sought to ascertain the merits .\nand defects of the system and reach a conclusion, and to\ndo so he leads up to his examination by a detailed historical survey up to thc time when, the old system having\ncollapsed, Russia attempted both a Utopia and an organization; when Marx provided the first and Lenin the second, and the Bolshevist regime became a combination of\nboth. The Utopia gave birth to the new economic policy\nwhich was succeeded by the Five Year Plan, \"which\naims at th? creation of an industrial proletariat and the\ntransformation of agricultural life.\"\n\"Whatever success the Plan has achieved,\" says Dr.\nGurain, \"has b^n secured on terms which make ultimate\nfailure inevitable. The essence of its method is that\nit seeks to compel initiative from above; but this policy\ninvolves the creation of a new bureaucracy and the consequent renewal of the very evil which the regime set\nout to extirpate. The development is a necessary consequence of Bolshevist theory, but its very necessity\nmakes it fatal. It proves that the alleged economic\nchaos of capitalism reappears in the Bolshevist system\nat another point\u2014in the working of the Socialist economic machine in thc control and guidance of production\nand distribution.'\nThe Victoria Colonist quotes Dr. Gurian as saying\nthat since the system is producing, as it is intended to\nproduce, men whose capacity is limited to working it, if\nnecessary by the ruthless exercise of force, there is no\nhope of remedy. In Russia the new tyranny maintains itself by the constant promise of a Utopia which its own\nmachinery makes unrealizable. In commenting on this\nDr. Gurian points out that the whole tendency of modern\nthought \"has been to blind men's minds to sense of thc\ntheor.vs inherent weakness.\" A critique appearing in\nthe London Times on Dr. Gurian's publication says that\nWestern civilization \"has made economic success its criterion of value and has regulated ethical considerations\nto private life. What wonder then that Bolshevism\nshould claim to bc a strictly logical development in that\nit excludes ethics altogether and applies an economic\ntest to all life, private as well as public? Salvation from\nthe dangers involved lies in the restoration of Christian\nmorality to its proper place as a guide in social as well as\nirt individual activities, and with this exposition of Bolshevism as a warning to the current bourgeois civilization Dr. Gurian brings his analysis to a close.\"\n^Between You\nandVs\"\nBy   \"t-B-C't\"   COLUAGCES\nTh*r* Is only one powlhle topic\nto lead off with In -\"J.B.C.V column today\u2014the Griffin block fire,\nof  course.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAnd has Nelaon any -water pressure? The answer la in tiie t'firm-\natne. When seven streams 01 water\ncan be poured into a apot for six\nhours straight, each one delivering\n100 gallons or better per minute,\nwithout undue upsetting of the\nequilibrium, It seems to establish\nsomething. The level of the reservoir\nfell a few inches owing to this severe drain, but a few hours afterward was nesrly normal. Three hydrants  feci  the  streams.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nFir* Chief M. H. Maloney hss\nfound that diving goes wtth firs\nfighting In Nelson under some conditions. The water that poured Into\nlhe Griffin block had to find its\nlevel, and found It in the Hume\nhotel basement, the Hum*'* special\noutlet for eucn occasions as these\nhaving been plugged with a screwed-\nin cap. The chief stripped and\nworked in this water hslf an hour\nto open the outlet,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTo picture Nelson as lt was when\nthe Griffin Block was born, wt\nhave to Jump backwsrd ln time\nacross several eras, to primitive Nelson, gullied irregularly by deep\ncreeks, bnCged where the dirt roads\ncrossed them, and a frame business\nsection, the majority of the stores\nbeing of the one-story false-front\ntype. A roystering pioneer town In\nthe throes of incorporation\u2014that\nwu Nelson. Known first as the\nBrokenhiil block, ths new commercial structure was of a rather plain\nappearance for several years, but\nwas extensively altered and Improved\nin 1805 when J. _*. Griffin purchased\nand renamed it.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWednesday a visitor unacquainted\nwtth Nelson's history could have\nseen no Indication ln the business\nsection, at least from Vernon street\nsouth, that lt was crossed diagonally by Ward creek. The recessed\ncourthouse site and the still lower\nJail garden alont would have hinted\nat a peculiar terrain. But Thursday there was a yawning chasm\nfilled wtth wreckage, to tell of \"it,\nwhlla beneath the cement sldewtlk\non Stanley street It would be disclosed that Stanley street- there was\n\"built up.\"\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAa a matter of fact, the opera\nhouse block south of Vlclorla etreet,\nthe Annable block and the Madden\nblock between Victoria and Baker\nthe Griffin block and the Hume\nhotel between Baker and Vernon,\nand intervening sections of highway, stand, or have stood, in thc\nbed of Ward creek, wiping lt out\nas a topographical feature of Nelson,\nwhile Its waters were long ago diverted into the sewer system.\n\u00bb   *   \u2022\nMembera of the board of trade\ncouncil paused In their deliberations\nThursdsy to repeat the name of a\nJust-departed member, and to place\non record their sense of loss. Afterward many turned to ths framed\ndocument on the wall, that records\nthat on April 23, 189... a number of\nmen   associated   themselves   together\nU,nd.tT tiUi nflmp of flie N(,I\"on Board\nof Trade, Opposite each name being\nthe notation that the Individual had\npaid gft. Ths name they looked at\nwas that of Edward  C. Arthur.\nTenYems~Ago\n(Fmm Thf Vslly |nt Julv 8,1 j)_-1\nMIm Eth.l Morrison, daughter of\nMrs. F. E. Morrison, leaves this\nmorning for Spokane where she will\ntake a thre. ycar't course at the\nDeaconeea hospital.\n\u2022 ,    \u2022\n\",; L\u00b0rn,1 I\"e> of Ih. \u00bbtar_ of the\nBrltleh Columbia Telephone company, left la.t night for the coaM\nwhere she win visit friend.\n\u2022 ,   ,\nWalter M. Hoover of the United\nStates and  J. Beresford of England\n_cilll\u00bb ln England today.\n\u2022 l   .\n^n,l'w _unlor ba\" tose\"\u00bb Mm-\nTwenty Years Ago\nIFr-m The Pall,- Ne\u00bb,..lalv g, ,\u201e-,\nB^r.?''?'\" ra\"rh '!'<\"\"\u00ab- north ot\nMr.    \u00ab   ,I\"    _r<'tn\"y    \u2022**    \"\"I    5\nMrs. Holiday-Smith.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs   c. B. Hamilton and children\n_*\u00bb *\u00a3 t0n8prild the holiday?\"\"\ntheir  Deer  Park  ranch.\nW.    Q.    Thompson    fy    s_________w____m\nord.lne,  e.der and  Ind\",e^at   .he\ni   of   et.    Pa.ir\u00ab   -\nchurch\nR-   H.   Stewart.   superintendent   nr\nim-.*ii    H    *****    comptroller,\narrived in the city yesterday\nThera are two solution* (fie real ( The bett ]ee<-hee come from r.nrm-\nestatei. Utter cut loans In two or any and Sweden, During tht war, 1\ncut interest ou existing martfMM could not get oerman leeches and\nto 4 or even 3 per cent and one- I imported some from Greece. They\npend amortization payments until were very good, too, but somehow 1\nt_iirrt.   15   _,  gelded   improvement,\u2014 j could not feel at home with them.\u2014\n\u25a0tmiul   a.\nsa ss i.i.r^,r.ce,n\n2r__fir-\u00bb-\"\u00ab sss\nFRIDAY MOKMNG, JTXT |, 1.3!\nAuction and\nContract Bridge\nT,j  the  World,  Le-rilp.   Authorllj.\nMILTON  C. KOR\u00bb\nAN UNUSUAL\nELIMINATION\nThat Body of Your*\nBy   JAME.   tV.   BARTON\n\"Hmph! you tryin' to tell mo business is\npickin' up, and Astorbilt, the millionaire, sends his\npants down to havc 'cm PATCHED!\"\nLIGHT OF THE STARS\nOne-fifth of thote normally .,._.\nIng income, by work are pr. ven\u2122\nfrom producing the wea 1,1, that\nwould  pay their Incomes. _%_\nffiiu* Co,18r,M \u00ab\u00b0 \u00ab\u00b0 something-\nWilliam Green, president, American\nFederation  of Labor m\nAUNT HET\n\"It wasn't all modesty that made\ngirls resist bein' hugged In my time.\nThe was already squeezed so tight\nAdams,   Cleveland   real , Brrnhar^   Berkitz,  flew   York  leech    that any more would o' been dan\nI dealer, gerousV,\nOn  a clear moonless night  awny.\nfrom city lights the sky seem* stud-\ndod   with   a   limitless   number   of '\nMars.   It  may  bo  thnt  there  is  no :\nend  to  the  universe  with   its  mil- |\nlions upon millions of nebulae and\nstars but tho best eyes can not see\nmore than two thousand to twenty-\nfive hundred etars at any one ttme.\nAround   the  whole  celestial   sphere\nther* are only six to seven thousand\nstars sufficiently bright to bo Been\nby   the   iuialded   eye   undeP   Ideal\nconditions,   a  fMd  gl*\u00ab  increase\nthe number to some 60,000.  while\nthe world's largest telescope at Mt.\nWilson  can probnbly record  on  its\nphotographic    plates    the    light    of\nwen over _ billion stars.\nBrilliant as the starB m*y eeem in\na clear, dark night, all the starlight\nof the heavens Is feeble when compared with the sun, an electric light\nOr even the moon. Only a sixth of\nthe light of the Bky comes from the\nstars, and the five-sixths cornea from\nzodiacal or permanent auroral light\nln the earth's own atmosphere, it\nhas been computed that all the\nstarlight about equals that of 1100\nfirst magnitude stars. In the western\nevening skits this month the planet\nVenus shines more brilliantly than\nan star. To see a star of about\nfirst magnitude took north of Venus at Pollux, the brightest star in\nt he constellation of Gemini the\ntwins.\nFrom thetr light it haa been determined how much of the *ky is\noccupied In the aggregate by the\ndiscs of the stars, which individually can not he distinguished even ln\nth* most, powerful telescopes. The\nfull moon's diameter Is some 7500\ntimes that of the sky space of the\nstars and the part of the sky unoccupied by stars Is about twenty\ntrillion times as much as the stnr-\noccupled part. A ray of sunlight\ntravelling out into th* nntverse in\na straight llne has only one chance\nin   20,000,000,000.000   of   meeting   a\nGREAT MEN'S BRAINS\nBEST IN BLOOD SUPPLY\nThe difference between a scholars\nbrain and that of the ordinary man\nia not ln size or weight, but blood\nsupply   and   composition.\nThla Is the conclusion drawn from\nstudies reported to the American\nPsychiatric Association by Dr. ifenry\nH Donaldson, of the Wlitw Institute of Anatomy aji^ Bloligy. Dr.\nDonaldson studied the brains of\nscholars, euch tt a. Stanley Hall,\nSir WUli*m Osier and Edward 8-\nMorse, and compared his findings\nwith similar studies of brains of\nordinary hospital patients,\nIn his adrsess he asked tho psychiatrist to Imagine before tliem the\nbrain of a scholar, and one by one\nDr. Donaldson took up the anatomical features of this imaglnery brain.\nJust as he had studied them In\nreal brains fn his labratory. The\nweight of this superior br*ln nnd\nof its different parts was no different from that of persons of low-\ngrade mentality. Dr. Donaldson\npointer out. Careful measurements\nof   the   area   of  the   brain   surface\nI also showed no difference between\nbrains of superior and inferior mentality. But when Dr, Donaldson examined the part of the brain containing the chief vessels that supplied It with blood, he found a\ngrrat reference.\nIn the brains of scholars this part\nwaa always well developed, showing\nthat the brain wae unusually well\nnourished. The brain with a better\nfood supply works better, as does a\nmuscles with better bloo^ aupply\nand better nourishment, he reasoned. Even the best of brains\nmakes a poor showing In a fainting\nIndividual in whom most of the\nblood has been withdrawn from\nthe brain, he pointed out. Since\nnourishment of the brain i\\ppears\nto be t_v factor influencing lt\u00ab better functioning, or causing greater\nmentaa ability, the composition of\nthe blood, as well as the amount\nof It supplier to the brain, must be\nimportant. Further studies along\nthis  line  are  needed,  he aaJd,  but\nj Important progress has already been\nmade.\nThla hand wai played at Duplicate\nContract with North \u00bbnd South vulnerable. At all tables South passed,\nand at some West bid two Hearts\n(the Intermediate two-bid), North\nthree Diamonds, East three Hearts,\nand West four Hearta. At other\ntables West opend the bidding with\none Heart, North bid three Diamonds, Weet three Hearts and East\nfour Hearts; so in this case lt was\nimmaterial whether the initial btd\nwas one or two.\nAt Auction the bidding would be:\nSouth pass. West one Heart, North\ntwo Diamonds, East two Hearts,\nNorth three Diamonds, writ three\nHearts, South four Diamonds, West\nfour Hearts.\nNorth led the King of Diamonds,\nfollowed by the Queen which West\nruffed. At every table but one Declarer drew two rounds of trumps,\nled the Ace of Spades and then a\nsmall Spade. When North failed to\nfollow on the second round of\nSpades, West was forced to lose a\nSpade and two Clubs In addition to\nthe Diamond alrea-'y lost. His four-\nHeart contract was thus set one\n.rick.   Could it have been made?\nTHE CORRECT PLAY\nOnly one Declarer stopped to\nthink\u2014when North's Ten of Spades\nfell on West's Ace at trick 5\u2014that\nfor West to false-card with the Ten\nwhen'the Jack-Nine was over him\nIn dummy, would be bad play.\nNorth therefore was marked with an\noriginal Spade holding of Queen-Ten\ncr Ten singleton; and with North\nholding the Queen-Ten, Declarer's\nprime could not be lost. The thinking - West therefore usumed that\nthe more difficult situation existed.\nAt trick 6 dummy was put in with\na Heart to lend a small club; South\nplayed the Four, West the Ten,\nNorth the Jack. Since a Diamond\nlead obviously would be fatal. North\nled the King of clubs to trick. 8.\nWest won with the Ace and led a\nthird round of clubs, which was\nwon by South'* Queen, south was\nforced to lead a spade up to dummy's King.Jack, or a Diamond or\nClub which Declarer could ruff in\nclosed hand while discarding a\nSpade* In dummy. Regardless of\nSouth's choice. Declarer escaped losing a Spade trick, and made & game\nwhich no defense could prevent.\nIf North led a small Club to trick 8,\nthe third round would be won by\nNorth, and hts next lead would be\nfatal. North would be similarly\nsaddled if South went \\ip with the\nQueen on the first round.\nALWAYS TAIN' OR <\nDISTRESS IN' ULCER\nIt Is now admitted that a great\nmany Individuals suffer wi'h ulcer\nof the stomach and are not really\naware of It. They believe they have\nhronlc lijilllWIIw.. but because they\ndo Hot suffer s^.arp or severe pain\nthey never thin* they might MM\nan   ulcer.\nNow ulcer of the stomach It *\nserious mit'er ,but the comforting\ntruth tha\/. has come to light Is\nthat by fsr the greatest proportion\nof th*w ulcers can be cured by\ndiet and medicine without the need\nof an operation.\nUnfortunately tfcey may occur\nagain due to the saint cause*\u2014\nInfection, wrong eating habit*, extreme n*. wrusncM-, iad again require medical treatment or even\noperation.\nIn a aeries of 100 oases of ulcer\nof the sto:nach and of first part\nof the small Intestine Inxmedlstely\nadjoining the stomach, Doctors flippy and Brown, Presbyterian hospital, N\u00abw York, made * record of\naurvey of these cases covering a\nperiod of 18 years. They received 1224\nrepllee to the qiwatlon sheet MM\nout. A period of two and one-half\nyears was the least time that had\nelapsed since the treatment.\n25 Yeors Ago\n(From The Dally News, July 7,1907)\nW- White, second vice-president\nof the C.P.R., accompanied by Sir\nDaniel McMillan, governor of roani-\ntoba, arrived ln the city last night.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nBetween 80 And 100 men are employed at the Blue Bell mine, laying a three-mile pipe line and repairing the foundation for the big\nmill which U to be built soon.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. A. W. Dyer left last night\nfor Spokane where ehe waa called\non the receipt of the news of the\ndangerous illness of her mother.\n\u2022 i   \u2022\nG. P. Wells, secretary of tbe\nMountain Lumbermen's association,\nwhich met here yesterday, haa resigned.\nThere are fliree roads before you.\nTlie center one is etralght ahead,\nfollowing out Amprtcan principles.\nOn the right ls that of military\ndespotism, ruled by capitalism and\nwealth. To the left is a dlctMor-\nshl p of the proletariat.\u2014Governor\nWm. H. \"Alfalfa BUI\" Murray of\nOklahoma.\nfho   average   m*   of   ext**t   wi\n3fl   years,   hut,   there   were   case*   a\nail   o':i\u00abr   \u00ab<_*\u2022   also.\nThe    average    time   of   the   ___\u25a0\napp-paranres of symptom* bt'.< .-\u2022 c\u00ab\nlrg    un .er   observation   wm   **.?*'\u25a0\nand   one-half  years.\nThink ot that ter a moment. A.\nth*** ps'lente suffered lor your]\nb*tm* they knew or \u00bbt leaat\ntreated   for  ulcer.\nPrsc:lcally every uloef causes \u00abit-.|\ner distrew or pain. Of this eerie\n_9 per cent had a feeling of dli\ntrees, md 81 bad actual pain.\nThe dlatres* or pain appeared fm\none to three hours after ettln\nIn 30 per oent, from two to thr\"\n\u25a0hours after ectlng ln 48 per cen\nand from three to four hours afw\neaMng ln 33 per cent. Thee* fig*_.\u25a0\u25a0\ndefinitely prove that 1 oases of ul\nc#r there ls always either dlitre*\nor pain.\nPain In ulcer 1* with but o W\\\nexception* definitely located In oi\nsmall *pot in tbe stomach reglo1\n\u2022eldom found oelow the umblin.\nor navel.\nThe point then, is that wltb u:\ncer of the stomach, or of the part o\ntb* small intestine, within a ver\nfew inches of th* stomach, there I\npain and distress at * definite tin\nafter eating.\nDon't be *atlsfled to euffer wit r\na \"little Indigestion'' If thl* eymp\ntorn l* present; begin the diet ant\nmedical treatment at ono*.\nEstablished   1849\nLamb's Rum\nAOED,  BfRNnlO   AND\nMATTB.JD AT IHE\nLONDON DOCKS\n\"LAMB'S FINE OLD\nNAVY\"\nraoor ovERPHoor\nOld ind Good!\nA,,  the  BrltUh  N.tjI\nOn ial. tt Liquor Vendors \u2014\ndirect trom Oovernment Llq.\nuor Control Boerd, Mill Order\nDepartment,   Victoria,   a.   O.\nIbli ad.ertl.ement le not pnbUahe\nor    ..plaved by the Llqaor Control\nBoard   or   br     ie   Government   of\nBrltUh  ColumbU.\nWhen in SPOKANE Stop at the Beautiful\nWestminster Apartment Hotel\nA little aside from the  b_...   business district.\nDlnlnc Room  snd  every  Hotel  convenience.\nRooms and  Apartments  by the day,  week or month.\nRates  mn.t  reesonable.\n2301   WEST  TAClriC  AVENUE\nCHECKI.NO RIS. IA OVER\nBallads of Long Ago\nStill Have an Appeal\nAft?r all, It ls possihle etllj to sin?\nths old  songs  that were sung Ion*,'-\nlong ago.  And -what's mon.  a great\nmsny in the U. fl. sre doing so.\nAlthough he himself subscribed to\nthe theory that popular --sonns are\nephemeral In character and wllj not\noutlive their day tie American public apparently has chosen to refuse\ntradition and the belief of the lot*\nCharles K. Harris, author of \"Aft.r\nthe Ball,\" and 200 other favorites of\nthe 00's and early ot)'s, and Is\nclamoring for th, old favorltca With\naugmented  vigor,\nMrs. Cora L. Harris, vlio looks\nafwr the music publishing buslnesn\nestahlis'-.erl by her liusinnd, has\nrevealed some figures on the sale nf\nhis ballads and other lute Victorian\nfavorites that would bring tears to\nthe eyes of the publishers of modern\n\"boop-boop-n-do.p\" tunes. Although\nthe firm has not added a title to\nIts catalogue since Mr. Harris panned\nbin UM ba'nd, it dees t flourishing\nbuMness, for which Mrs. Harris\ntfcankB  the  radio.\n\"We hOrt* over 2000 titles here,\"\nsh* told a New York Herald Tribune\nreporter, \"and we have calls for\nevery one of them, of course, some\nare only m de-nand once in a gr?at,\nwhile, but others have a steady\nsale.\" There are 103 titles in the\ncatalogues attributed ta Mr. Harris.\nand for all but half a dozen of\nthese tM wrote both the words and\nthe  music.\nToday most of these are forgotten\nby    all    but   connoisseur,,    of    folk\nsons or student* of an ere, but thetr\ntitle.1 bring a wistful memory:\n\"Brfak Her Heart n-cl Let Her Go,\"\n\"Don't Give Me Diamonds, All I\nWant Is You,\" \"In the City Where\nNobody Cares,\" \"Must We Say Goodbye Forever, Nellie Dear,\" \u25a0' Tla Not\nOnly Bullets That Kill.\" \"Without a\nWedding Ring.\" \"There's One Face I\nCan Nev.r Forget,\" \"Will the Roses\nBl-xvn ln Heaven-\" -wil] I Find My\nWtUDffia There?\" and \"Why Don't\nThey play With Mc?\" And those\nthst reflect the beginning of sn age\nor double meanings and the wisecracks: \"Since Kali* FU1es a Wheel,\"\n\"Won't You Come to Dolly's Farty7\"\nand \"Hello, Central, Qive Me\nHeaven.\"\nAnd the modern popular song title\nhad nothing on these of half a century neo: \"The Umpire Is the Most\nUnhappy Man.\" \"I Don't Bell_ve I'll\nEver Be a Lady.\" \"I Bhould Worry\nand Get Pimples.\" \"Maggie, Your\nRoast ls Burning,\" \"I Want to Be\nKissed by a Mitlnee ttol.\" \"I Am\nthe Wizard of Will street,\" \"Fudge,\nFudge Fudge,\" \"Heaven WUl protect\nthe Working Girl,\" and \"He Raised\nEverybody's   Rent   but   Katie's.\"\n\"There Isn't a single one that\ndoesn't find a gale at least once a\ny_ar,\"   says   Mrs.   Harris.\nIt ls time for the New York legislative committee nnd their counsel\n(Scabury) to stop talking and do\nsomething.\u2014Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York,\nLittle Victim (of card sharpers): \"I won't go ro far as to say you\ngentleman actually cheat, but I don't think you lesvs quits enough to\nchajK-e.' - London Ottnlon.\nEight prominent buslne* men ftom\nthe United States have arranged, to\ng-) to Russia early next month to\ntry to find out for themselves Just\nwhat la happening there, how the\ncountry Is getting along with, its\nPlve Year plan, and what the prospects are for the future.\nThe personnel of tho commission\nIs not yet known. It will be fostered\nby the American Russian Chamber of\nOotptOtrtm. but It will travel, once\nIt ls set up, entirely on Its own\ntnlatltlve and at lt\u00ab own expense.\nAnd the caliber of the members, we\nare told, will assure It the resp;ct\nand backing or responsible business\nIn the United State*. Each member\nwill report Individually when ho returns.\nAs previewed by executives who\nare eagerly awaiting the report of\nthc commission, there are five main\ntopics on which the manufacturer\nand exporter *eek reliable Information. The first is an Intelligent appraisal of the first five Tear Flan.\nHow wisely waa It conceived? Docs\nIt form a sound basis on which the\nSoviet* can be exjwtted to develop\nthe great Industrial nation which\nthey visualize? Have the v&rlou* key\nproject* been well carried out? U the\nscheme likely to succeed In raising\nthe standard of living to the extent\nthat it claims it can? How serious\nare the accusations of forced labor,\nmismanagement? Is the Soviet Union\na  menace In world  marketa?\nBecau&j American hOMttm* la desperately seeking new trade outlets,\nand because of the promise of hug*\norders If Moecow can develop th*\nsecond _T.va Year Plan in a manner\nsimilar to the first, the commissioners will attempt to appraise th* prelected plan b;' going over It with\nofficials In Moecow, by visiting the\naltos which will be developed as a\npart, of lt, by studying the whole\neyfltem Ito which It must fit What\nthey say concerning these two plans\nno doubt will carry much weight\nwith the manufacturer ln tho United\nStates who see* a large volume of\nbusiness alvad If h\u00ab can eecur*\n(omfl of the huge orders which Moscow Is expected  to plaoe.\nEach memljcr of the commission\nwill Interpret the entire Soviet experiment to In relatlou to American\nbusiness. It will attempt to do something similar to what th* Bureau of\nForeign and Domestic Oommeroa does\nfor American buslnes* in countries\nreoognlHd by Washington, tt will no\nIn no position to aupply immediate\ntrade Information t^, specific Indus-,\ntries or to keep its report up to date.\nBut It will make that flrat fundamental study on which Individual |\nbusiness men cau base their thinking.\nSo far, the pr*\u00abnt Plan haa no\nbacking from the United States\nOnamivr of Commerce or from the\nAmerican Federation of Labor. It ls\nentirely separated from any political\nconnection. But the faot that Washington haa agree-d that Russia sit In\non the world economic conferenc* in\nUmdon, If and when It 1* held, and\nth* fact that Russian* are participating in many trade conference\u2014\noil was the most recent\u2014ln which\nour neighbors are participating. Is\nevidence that tt.ey are becoming an\nimportant cog ln the world business\nmachine.\u2014Victoria Times.\nRefrigerators\nfor One Week\nWE OFFER YOU A\n20 a Discount\nON ALL REFRIGERATORS\u2014ELECTRIC AND ICE\nCALL AND PURCHASE ONE WHILE THEY LAST\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardwar*\nNELSON, B.C.\nIt is not the state that means io\nmuch. It is the county and district and municipal taxes that nre\nloading the people down beyond en-\ndurnnr-f. senator Hu#y Long cf\nLouisiana.\nIN THESE\nSIGNIFICANT\nTIMES\nKEEP INFORMED\nBY READING\n\u00a9I.. N_lamt lailg Mrim.\nWORLD DEVELOPMENTS-\nCANADIAN HAPPENINGS--    .\nBRITISH COLUMBIA EVENTS\u2014 '\nKOOTENAY NEWS\nSPORTS-COMICS-FEATURES\nBy mail outside Nelson 60c a month, $3 for 6 months,\n?6 a year.\nBy carrier in Nelson, 25c a week'.\n(% Ni.ls0tt Saili; Jfrum\nKootcnay's Complete Newspaper\n ^1\u2122\nHARRY COOPER EQUALS PAR OF\nOnAWA COURSE TO LEAD GOLF\nASPIRANTS IN CANADIAN OPEN\n\"The Hai*\" and George\nVon Elm Single Stroke\n*   Behind With 70\nCOOPER'S ROUND\nIS SENSATIONAL\n25 Are Within Six Strokes\nof Leader; 11 Players\nScratched\nOTTAWA HDNT TUB, July 7\u2014\n(By A. T_. Fulford, C. P. Staff\nwriter)\u2014\"The Ughthorse,\" blond,\nbespectacled Harry Cooper, of Chl-\neago, blared down the fairways\nof the Ottawa Hunt ind Oolf club\ntoday took 69 strokes for the tricky\nlayout and  went Into the lead  ln\nthe Canadian open coif championship.\nOn his heeln. only a stroke behind when the flnt 19 ot the 72-\nhole tilt were completed, came\nWalter Hagen, the defemltng champion, and George von Him, clever\n\"businessman golfer,\" of Detroit.\nFour others, Olln Dutra, leo IHegel,\nA| Watrnus and Tom Kerrigan,\nwere right In the field, with ??'s\none stroke under par.\nRQU4U   RECORD\nIn all, 29 of the continent's best\nshot makers were wltliln alx strokes\nof Camper's rcuna, which equalled\nthe oourse record. Mac Smith snd\nWlffy Cox, had 73\"s; Johnny Farre.l.\nj J_se Jurado, the Argentine, Jack\nI Littler, assistant pro at the Ottawa\ni Hunt. Horton Smith, Bobby Crulck-\nI shank, and Ed Dudley wcr_. locked\nI together with one stroke more and\nnine   were   banded   at   75,   only   two\nONALD\nFine Cut\nwith ZIG'ZAG papers attached\nstroke* over psr.\nIncl-.u-.ed In the 75 group were\nWalley 8mltj- rs. Royal Ottawa assistant, Art Hulbert, Bob Bortr\/wick,\nAndy Kay, and Bob Cunningham,\nof Toronto, Em met t French, Art\nLynch, Mamoroneck, n. y.; Mor tic\nDutra, Long Beach. Cslif.. D. A-\nFerguson, Wee ton, Ont., and Bobby\nBurns ot Montreal.\n\"HAW\" STEALS\nSPOTLIGHT\nCooper's marvellous round centered Interest on the retiring Chl-\ncagoan, who. always up wiih the\nleaders, ha* never won any of the\nthree major open titles, but \"the\nHaig,\" gallery god wherever he goes,\nBto_s ti'.e spotlight aa usual. The\none and only \"Sir Walter,\" drew\nthe galleries of other stars to him\naa he played around with Jose\nJurado.\nThe champion had nev_r aeen the\ncourse before he teed off, yet he\nwas able to turn In a 70 which In\n\u25a0ciyded two eagles ani a brace of\n'birdies. He hit first drive \"a mile\"\ndown the fairway, chipped his third\nInto the h-cle from off the green and\nfrom then on stuck cloee to par.\nCooper's round \"'as nothing ahort\nof sensational. Tense, white-lipped\nt bt p!a,ye:l every shot aa If hla life\n! depended on lt, clipped off five\nbirdies and getting Into trouble only\ncnoe, on the nlrjth where to had a\nfix. one over the normal figure.\nAKMOl'R AMONG\nSCRATCHED I\nOn hundred and five golfers played _k. fourth of the 72-hole tournament today. After another 18-hole\nround tomorrow all those not with\n20 strokes of the leader will be\ndropped from Saturday's 38-hole\nround. The field originally was 1\"\nbut ^cratches accounted for 11 of\nthem, including Tommy Armour,\nformer Britiah open titlist, who, although entered, did not appear at\nthe course.\nBirdies picked up on the 12th,\nItth and 15th holes enabled Von\nElm to shoot hia par-shattering\nround.\nThe home green, a wide, rolling\ncarpet set out before the clubhouse,\nwaa the burial ground of many\nhope*. Leo Diegel and Olin Dutra\nthree-putted   it  for  sixes.\nLeading the amateur after today's\nround wsa Arthur Lynch, of Msna-\nroneck, N. Y., who carried 76. Close\non hla heel* for Simon-Pure honors\nwere Ja.i: Nash, youthful repre-\n\u2022\u00a9native of the London, Ont., Junt\nclub, wtth 78 and Frank Corrlgan,\nthe Ottawa ch aud! ere \"a slim young\nchampion   77.\nCanadian professional leadership\nwent to Davie spttial, of the Toronto St. Andrews, and Jack Littler,\nassistant professional at the Ottawa\nHunt club who were among the 74's.\nA working model or a Kimberley\ndiamond mine la to be constructed\nait the Chicago Century of Progress\nExposition.\nHen, In RECORD TIRES, is\nguaranteed DUNLOP Cable\nCord quality at rock bottom\nprice.! Price* heretofore tint-hough, of for tires built to\n[the standards which have made\n[DUNLOP TIRES the choice\n,of every world speed record\n(holder!\nf\n[Never before have you been\n.offered so much real tire value\nat such low prices.\n| RECORD Tires, DUNLOP\nI guaranteed, are sensational\n[value.\n_7.t ivorld>famou$\nCABLE-CORDL\nCONSTRUCTION\nFULLY GUARANTEED\nDUNLOP\nCABLE\nCORD\nTIRES\nAmerican\nBaseball\nNational\nBaseball\nRW   YORK,   4;\nI'lTTBbLHQH,  S\nPITTSBURGH, Pa., July 7.\u2014Walte\nHoyt, one of the games most prominent cast-offs, came back in a New\nYork Giant uniform today to pitch\nflowery relief bail for three \/.wings\nand make possible a 4-3 victory\nover the  league-leading  Pirates.\nHoyt stood the Piratea on their\ncollective heads for the last three\ninninga while his new mates punched acroaa the deciding runs.\nHoyt yielded only one hit during\nhis tenure, and struck out three\nmen. Including Floyd Vaughan twice.\nHe whiffed Vaughan for the final\nout in. the ninth with the tying\nrun on second base.\nThere were to have been two\ngames today, but a hail and rain\nstorm caused the aecond to be called\noff after 45 minutes' wait..\nFirst   game; It. H. E.\nNew   York  4 10   1\nPittsburgh     3 113\nntzelmmons, Hoyt and Hogan,\nOTarrell;  Meine  and  Grace,\nCIITCAftO. t;\nllllADKl.l'HIA,   0\nCHICAGO, July 1. -Pat Malone\nstopped tho slugging Phillies with\nfive singles today, and the Chicago\nCuba won their second straight game\nof the series, 7-0, to pick up a full\ngame on the Pittsburgh Piratea,\nleaders   of   tho   National   league.\nTwo Philadelphia pt tellers. Jim\nElliott and John Beale. were thumped for 13 hits, including a triple\nand a double by Klkl Cuyler and a\ndouble by Gabby Hartnett. Malone\nfanned  Beven batsmen, R. H, E.\nPhiladelphia  0   5   2\nChicago  7 13    1\nJ. Elliott, Berly and V. Davis; Malone   and   Hartnett.\nROSTOV.    I;\nIt.   I.OUP,  4\nST.   LOUIS,   July   7\u2014Two   home\nruns gav* today'a contest to Boaton, the Braves winning 6-4, although slightly outhlt'by St. Louis.\nHargrave's circuit clout ln thc second drove ln a run ahead of him,\nand in the eighth, with his team\nbehind, ShfreB' homer came with\ntwo on base. Mancusco led the\nCardinal batting attack, driving lu\ntwo runners with his pair of doubles and reaching home after one\nof his singles. It. H. E.\nBoaton     \u201e  5 11    2\nSt.   Louli  4 13    0\nBetts, Cunningham, Cantwell and\nHargrave; carl ton, Llndsey and M_n\ncusco, Wilson,\nAustralian Cricket\nTeam Score Cleancut\nWin Over Montreal\nPOSTPONEMENTS\nIN   BASEBALL\nNATIONAL  LEAOIE\nNew   York   at   PjtUburgh,   second\ngrime, postponed, rain.\nBrooklyn at, Cincinnati, postponed,\nwet  grounds.\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nNo    postponer.ents.        Six    games\nscheduled.\nINTERNATIONAL   I.EU.IT.\nReading    at    Toronto,    postponed,\nrain.\nFour games scheduled,\nAMERICAN\nASSOCIATION\nNo,   postponemen It.     Fi ve   gamea\nschedukd,\nIndianapolis   at   Kansas   City  Is  a\nnight   game.\nAMEKirAN   ASSOCIATION\nToledo 4. Minneapolis 3,\nColumbus 4, Rt. Paul  11.\nLouisville   3,   Milwaukee   b.\nSecond   game I\nLouisville   2.   Milwaukee   fl\n(Indianapolis at Kansas City, night\ngame)\nINTERNATIONAL   LEAGt'H\nNewark  6;   Montreal   3.\nBaltimore   4;    Rochester   3.\nJersey   City 3;   Buffalo 7.\nReading-Toronto,  postponed,  rain.\nMONTREAL. July 7 (CP)\u2014Runs\ncame smoothly off tl.e bats of Don\nBr?dman, world'a premier batsman,\nan9 S. J. McCabe today to give the\nAustralian cricket Ina) a clean-cut\nvictory over an all-Montreal team 10\ntb3 first of a series ol three one-day\ngames   on   the  McGill   stadium.\nMontreal batted first to score 133.\nall out. The Australians quickly tur-\npassed that total and went on to\nsecure 34.5 for the loss of eight\nwicket* before darknew. called a halt,\nto one of the cleverest exhibitions\nof tha ancient game M Ureal has\never *een.\nmr-TAno,  13-3;\nPHII..PF.I.PHIA,  3-fl\nPHILADELPHIA, jQly 7-Tha Philadelphia Athletics and the Chicago\nWhite Bo* started their marathon of\nthree doubleheaders ln three -successive days by dividing honors today. The White Sox won the first\ngame 13-3, and the Maekmen the\naecond  8-3.\nChicago ended Earnshaw's winning streak of five straight by\nscoring five runs snd driving him\nto cover ln two Innings in the\nopener. Thc Sox pounded three A's\nhurlers for 30 hits to win. Pother-\ngill, Appling and Hayes hitting I<%\nthe   circuit.\nThe Athletics did most of the\nslugging in the closing gam*, scor.\ning ln four successive innings, beginning in the fourth, and sending\nFrasier to the showers. Cramer b\\\nin both games to run his streak to\n30 la i row.\nPint game: R. H. E.\nChicago     \u201e_, 13 30    3\nPhiladelphia       3    0    1\nDagila and Berry; Earnshaw. Sl^i,\nKruassc and Cochrane, Heaving.\nSecond game: R. H. K,\nChicago      3    0    1\nPhiladelphia     9 11   0\nFrasier, Evans and Grube; Walberg\nand Cochrane.\nCr.EVIIANI),  3-4;\nWASHINGTON.   8-3\nWASHINGTON, July 7\u2014The Washington Senators slipped down into\nthe second division today by dropping two games on a doubleheader\nto the Cleveland Indians by one-\nrun margins. The ecorea wero 3-2\nand  4-3.\nRussell and Harder went the route\nfor the Indians, Russell letting down\nthe Krlffmen with seven hits, while\nHarder yielded io.\nFirst game; R. H. E.\nCleveland      3 13   l\nWashington    3   7   o\nRussell and Myatt; Thorny, e, Marberry snd Spencer.\nSecond game: p.. H. E.\nCleveland      4   7   0\nWashington  3 10   J\nHarder and Seweil; Crowder and\nBerg, Spencer.\nDETROIT,  8;\nNEW   YORK,  I\nNEW YORK. July 7.\u2014 Starting\ntheir crucial invasion of the faat\ntoday, the Detroit Tlgera rallied to\nscore three runa each tn the ninth\nand 10th innings and defeat the\ni Yankees, 8-5, reducing the Yanks'\n[ lead over the American league to\n' six  and  a   half  games.\nNone other than Don Lefty Gomez, bright particular star of the\nleaders' mound staff, waa the victim of the Tigers' victorious rally\nEntering the game aa a relief pitcher\nin the ninth, Gomez waa slugged\nfnr the three runs that tied the\nscore and then Issued four walks\nin the IOth before he would be relieved   by   Kd    Wells.   Stone's   ttBtM\nott Wells with ths bases loaded gav*\nthfc  vlaltora their  laat   two   runs.\nR. H   E.\nDetroit     ,-   \u25a0 8 13    0\nNew    York   6 10    3\nUhle, Wyatt. Hngattt and Ruel,\nHayworth; Mcpayden, Gome\u00ab, Wells\nand  Jorgens.\nST.   LOUIS,  S;\nBOSTON,   I\nBOSTON, July T.\u2014-Tba Bt. loula\nBrowns whacked out 17 hits in.\ntheir game today wltb the Bostou\nRed  Sox to win 8-3.\nArt Scharetn, rookla third baseman who reported to ths Brov ns\nyesterday, continued hla brilliant\nplay ln the field, snd drove out\nthree singles and a double. Ben-\ngough and Levey were other St.\nLouis sluggers. \"Bump\" Acilty held\nthe Sox to six hits. R. H  E.\nBt.   Loula   _.  8 17   0\nBoston     3   8   1\nHadley and Bengough; Michaels,\nBoeruer,  Kline  and   Connolly.\nWILLIAMS WILL\nPROBABLY ATTEND\nHAMILTON TRIALS\nTORONTO, July 7 (CP>.~P. J. Mul-\nqueen, chairman of the Canadian\nOlympic committee, tonight said he\nhad been Informed by a British Columbia representative of ths committee, Percy William*, Vancouver aprint\nstar, probably would attend the Canadian Olympic trials at Hamilton.\nMr. Mulqueen had previously received\nfrom the coast ctty Intimation that\nWilliams' appearance at the Hamilton trials might seriously endanger\nhis chances at ths Olympic games.\nThe extent of William.'.' participation ln the trials would bs left to\nhis own discretion, said the chairman. Williams would not be expected to run ln every heat, but take\npart aa seemed to him compatible\nwith training requirement*. Ons objection to sending tha flashy runner\nrest wss that it might aegrava* his leg\ninjury.\nMr. Mnlq'ieen eiprewaed ths hope\nWilliams would corn's to Hamilton\nfor ths trials.\nBaseball's Big\n- Six -\nAMERICAN    ASSOCIATION\nMUHT    GAME\nIndianapolis   fl,   at   Kaa.as   City   1.\nBig League\nBASEBALL\nPlay the Ball\niBy ih. Aitexiiiea Fre_\u00bb\nO  \\B B   K    m\np. Wan.r, Plratt, 10 __5 S. 111 ._\u00ab.\nPo_x.   Athletic-   _ 78 JB- 11 10- .37*\nHunt.   Phillies   _ 77 1.5 \u00bb7 100 .811.\nLombardl, R.da _ M 218 M   It .385\nWalker, Tll.rs  __ SB _1\u00bb >4   11 .361\n(5-hrlg, Y-\u00bb_\u00aba .. It _90 ft.    88 .331\nHorn, run leader*\u2014Pom, Athletlca.\n-!!;   Klein, Phllllri,  35;   Ruth.  Yankeea, 'II:  Gehrig, Yankees,  18;   Blm-\nmona. Athletlca. 18; Wilson, IkxlGeT.,\n15;  Terry, Olants,  18;   Averlll,  Indiana,  13.\nA  movement has  been started ln\nCludad, Victoria.  M.ilc_. for a 3.-\nhour divorce law. cruelly _ accommodate Ajnerlane.\nHooks and Slides\nBy William Broucttcr\nJ1\nTmmW\nP\/TCH'\"HIGH''H_--\n\/\/fsip-'ro iWfitr\nHAND 'BAlT\u00a3fio\n\\S\/f\/P\\ j\nTurnip sauerkraut la a MV. appetizing food aUR_eatert by the U. 3.\nDepartment of  Agriculture.\n91)\nflTCH Low\nOutside\" To\n\/ti\/zKAor.iEPr\n(JETS   MAO   AT   OLD   MAN\nThen w> saw another old man'\ncrouched in a window on the fifth\nfloor. He stuck his head out th\u00ab\nwindow aa far Rs ho rould and turned lt away from the smoke wMch\npoured out. He was a smart old\nfella  at  that.\n\"I notioed something bu'glng under  his  coat,  i   thought  may bo  hc\nwan a cripple.\ni     \" lot of ua atanriing around want-\n| \\ng to hrlp went anr. got a net.\ni     \"'Jump'.'  we   hollere-j  up  to   the\nold fella.\n1 \"But the old piv wouldn't jump.\n\u25a0 He, kept, crouching thrrn In the\nj -\"-moke. It bec_ra.n to look aa if the\n! wail might iTanh hhv minute. I got\ni pretty mad at the old man,\nI \" \"You old m and so.' I hol!er*M.\n'*'hv the hell QOttl you lump?\"\n\"Then firemen put, ladders up and\nbrought  him down.\nCUNCM TO FIIUU.K\n\"'Come on,' I said to him. 'we'll\ngo over  to  the  hotel  and  get  you\n| flxedup.'\n' 'To hell with the hotel,* said thc\n^ _J>JF\/*P'\"'<-&\nold guy. 'I'm \u00abolng to afclok around\nand watch the fLre.' Hs waa certainly a gfltne old kid.\n\"Then *e noticed that the thing\nwhicli bulged under his coat was a\nviolin case.\n\" 'Is lhat why you didn't Jump?'\nI aske^j him.\n\"'That's why,' aald tho old man.\n'I should smash a Stradlvarlus fiddle worth ft50,000, and registered Ot\nthe niuaicM library! Not me, hroth-\nOFKERS A (.OOP hTORY\n'T aaked the old m\u00abTi That hla\nname wae. He said lie waa r**um*a\nty-encvyers and that he he was a\nbuilder and thst tn 1B8U he had\nworked on the eonatnicfloni of the\nhotel  who** wc were atopplng.\n\"Finally  tine otd  fella  aald.  %l\u00bbt-\nten. young man. Thla fire isn't such\na   hot   aiory.   Bring   some   of   your\nnewspaper friends around  sometime\n\\ MM  *\u25a0 Btm\\ vou a real atory.*\n\"Then he want back to watching\n. the   fire.   Can   you   beat   anything\ni Ilk,    thnt?\"   And   that    is   Mlckev\nCociiranc'a atory of thc fire.\n\u25a0JOHNNIE\nWAhKER\nDISTILLED AND BOTTLED BY\nOURSELVES IN SCOTLAND\nTin tmivtrti-ement is not fiuhlhhad er dhpt*ntd h the Liquor Control\nt       faird orh)tiw Qtmeomhi ij British Coltmimh\nBy   Al.   IlF.MARU;\nThe mill| ball player anxious to\nbecome a_n inflelder. should always\nremember the first rule In the book\non  handling  ground   balls:\n\"'Always plsy the hall; never let\ntlie   bail   play   you.\"\nThtt means being on \"tnp\" of the\nball from the time it leaves the hitter's bat until he hns woopc-d it\nup.\nBein^ nn \"tnp\" of tlie ball means\nplaying the ball for a good hop and\nbeing in a position to throw to\nrirst base afterwards. Unles-. a ball\nla hit unusually hard, the inflelder\nshould never stand still or hack up.\nHe ahould pn forward to meet\ntho ball, thus bring in a position\nto take advantage of a Rood hon\nor bounce and not stand etui and\nbe rit the mercy of the ball, if lt\nshould decide to take a bad hop or\nikld.\nThtt ia particularly true of the\n5hort-stop and eecond baseman.\nTlie third baaeman is often forced\nto take\" tha hall on unnatural hops,\nbecause It ls driven at him hard\nand from such a comparatively ahort\ndistance from the batter that he Is\nnot in a position to take the offensive.\nAl Demaree has prepared an illustrated leaflet on \"The Art of\nPitching\" which he will gladly send\nto any reader requesting It. Ad-\n(dress A! Deninree in cure nf thli\npaper and be sure to inclOM a\nMlf.eddrauad   sttmoed   enve V>pe.\ntcrijciitliCivlli-cr\nfor your pleasure\n(iood old dc Kuyp\u00ab. with\nthc famous Dutch flavour\u2014for festive occasions that demand joviality or as a preventive\nfor colds, grippe, rheumatism and lumbago.\nAccept no subatitutm\nJOin dr -.UTTER A SO... Duti-lm.   __t_b_i_h__ IMS\n-rOTT_I.I._M - HOLIAM. __\n\"This advertisement is not published or displayed by\nlho T.iqunr Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\"\n CREATE DESIRE TO\nBUY IS MAIN POINT\nFOR ADVERTISERS\nEditor   of   Trades   Journal\nSpeaks at Advertising\nClub Convention\nVAJffOOOVER, July 7 <CP).\u2014Necessity of advertisers creating a desire\nto buy tor the sake ct the merchandise and not on account oi price\nwa* emphasized by Arthur E. Brayton, editor. \"Dry Goods Merchants'\nTrade Journal,\" D?s Moines, at the\nopening business session of Pacific\nadvertising   clubs   convention    today.\nHe. declared that many advertiser* were trying ta compel buying\nthrough medium of price rather\nthan making buying a pleasurable\nadventure by creating the desire to\nbuy through description of merchandise.\n\"Use more originality in your advertising tn presentation of the\nmerchandise,\" the speaker continued, adding, \"but the advertising\nmust not be best known for Ua\ncleverness but lot the fact that lt\ngets the merchandise talked about,\nPresent tlie rea] story of tlie merchandise to the customer in . language he will understand. Too much\nrecent publicity has sought to compel buying rather than give the\ncustomer what he wishes.\"\nPLIS   TIIE   DUOO.\nMr. Brayton said too many firms\nwere \"coasting long\" during this\ndepression and had lost momentum.\nthat can only be rega.ned througi\nadvertising. Price is not the \"be\nall and end all of buyinp.\" he eald.\nBuying power is thc ability to buy,\nplus lbe desire (o buy, anrl Idver-\ntlsers mwt create that desire, he\ndeclared.\nThe speaker presented statistics\nof many firms which had lUNUtd\nprofits, or maintained sales volume,\nduring prwnt time., by intelligent\nand  persistent advertising.\nIn closing her urged his audience\nto take tho bunk out of advertising\nand tell the real story of tt* merchandise.\"\nINDEX  TO CLASSIFIED ADS\nAgent*   Wanted\nAuiomuDiiefc   tor  Hire\nAutomobile* ior bai* _\nAulomoDi.e*   Wanted\nBirth*   _ _ , '_.\nBoats,   Launches  for   Itent  ...,.\nBoats,   Launches   tor   Sal.\nBoats,   Launches   Wanted   _...._.\nBusiness   Opportunities   _Z__.\u201e\nCanaries   fi>r   Bale  ,.,_\nCats  and   Dap   for   Hal*   . \u201e\u201e',,\nCats aiid  Dog*  Wanted      .\u201e,,.,\nDeath*...    \t\nDreA-Hiiakitig    ~ __.\t\nFarm   and   Dairy   Produce\nf*tm Property  for Bale  \t\nFor Bale  or  Exchange -,__,_\u2122.\nFor   bale   or   Rent \u201e__,_,,\nFurnished   Room8  for   Kent  _.\nFurnished   Rooms   Wanted\"\nFurniture   foi    Bale __    ._,\nHelp   Wanted       \t\nHouses   ior   Rent  -\t\nHouses    Want\u00ab(f    _...,._, \u201e__..,.\nIn   Memoriam   _. _..\t\nInsurance     __2 __\ninvestments\nLivestock   lor  #l_t   ,,\nLivestock    Wanted   - -...\nLiterary \u201e   ,   \t\nLost   and   Found    -..._.\nMachinery     __,\t\nMarriage*   , _...\t\nMining.  Timber, Lumber\nMiscellaneous\t\nMiscellaneous for 8a_e \t\nMiscellaneous   Wanted ......\nMusical  Instrument*  _.\t\nNotices .,   \u201e, \u201e\nNursery   product*  \t\nNursing   __,  ,\u201e\nPersonal __, __. __._.^-. -_\nPlants   \u201e _ \t\nPoultry and  Eggs \t\nProperty   for   Bale   ..., ___.\nProperty    Wauled   \u201e\t\nRabbit,,   for   bale   __..__, \u201e.\nRanches for  Rent  \u2014\u2014\nRoom   and   Board   _... \u00bb\nRooms for Rent .\nRooms  Wanted\nSchools    _\nSituation*   Wanted\nStores   to   Kent   ......\nNotice uf   Application  for  Beer  License,\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\non the nth day \u00abf July, next, the\nundersigned intenas ty apply lo tne\nLicjuor control Board for a license\nin respert of the premises being\npart of the building known as tlie\nMadden Hotel, situated *t 60? snd\n50'j Ward gtn-et, in ihe City of Nelson, upon the lands described \u00abs\nLot One (]). Block <5>, City of Nelson, Kootenay Land Registration\nDistrict, Ptovmce of British Columbia, fnt the sale of beer by the\nglass or open bottle iut cousumptlOL\non   the  premise-).\nDated Una llth dav of June; A. D.\n1932. ELI K. JOHNSTON\nApplicant\n12558)\n. Bl\nDI\u00abTRIRl'TE   STREAM\nOF FOOD\nVANCOUVER. July 8 iCP> \u2014 \"The\nbig undone Job in the world today\nls to economically distribute the\nliuge stream oi lood, and goods,\nand Ideas which the modern engineer, and soil chemist, nnd educationalist, are producing for civilization,\" said Robert Cromle, publisher\nof the Vancouver Sun, in addressing\ntlie delga'es ta the Pacific advertising clubs convention here today\n\"T e place ct publicity in that\nJob 13 a key position,\" stated Mr.\nCromle. \"Standing between the producer and the consumer, It Is the\nwork of tla Jn tbe srlv-rtLslng- field\nto Interpret and sell tlM consumer\nan ooooemt that will effectively\ndistribute those sondt. nnd allow\ntlie   HUMM   tr*   enjoy   lhem.\nPROMOTIONS AT\nSLOCAN SCHOOL\nHonor Rolls and Awards Pre-\ndenied    in    Kach\nDivision\nSOUTH BLOCAN, B. C. July 7.\u2014\nTlie South Sloean, dh'hion one,\nschool promotions are as follows:\nPromoted to Grade VI \u2014Eva Hcn-\ndrlekfon. Meg Bradshaw, Molly Murray.\nPromoted to Qftd* VII\u2014Betty\nMcDonald. Thelma Bird, Emma Rogers, ione Kinsley, Ronald Bdwirds,\nJu'ileti   Yeatman.\nPromoted to Grade VIII-Robert\nWalkley, Rita Jones, Tom Hunt.\nHonor rolls--Proficiency, Betty McDonald;   deportment.  Norah   Brown;\nattendance,     Edith     Edwards,     Rita\nJones.      Betty     McDonald,     Emma\nRogers.\nPromotions in  division  two were:\nOrade   I \u2014Donnld     Polo., I. y,     Grace\nMcDonald, Gwen Jones, John Murray,\nOrade II \u2014Mona teett, Tngvar Mag-\nCuson,      Oeor;;ene     Hunt,      Dorothy\nJames.\nGrade IIT-Arne Hrndrlckson, Helen BHMonoff, Marvin Mclntyre,\nGreta   Melntyre. Nick  Poporr.\nGrade IV\u2014Lily Edwards. Colin McDonald,  Alan   filthy, Betty  Russel.\nRegular attendance for year\u2014Grace\nMcDonald, Betty Russel, Colin McDonald.\nProficiency\u2014Arne    Hetidrlcksoll.\nDeportment\u2014Lily   Edwards.\nCLASSIFUI*    ADVERTISING\nlocal    .(('..ding   .Mitlrej\n<,Mltilmum two lines)\n22o a line, JJlsplay type larger\nthan 6 point, charge at rate of -12c\na llne 6 point; i.e., one line 12\npoint, charge 44c; one Una 14 point\ncharge fiSc. Dally for one month or\nmore deduct 25 per eent spf> disc,\nfrom above rates, minimum for\nmonthly advertisement. $11.44 less\ndiscount. Minimum charge. 44c.\nCLASSIFIED\n.Minimum  two lines)\nlie a line per insertion. sij con-j\naecutlve   Insertions,   44c  a   line;   per\nmonth.    $ 1.43    a    line.    Minimum\ncharge,   22c.\nMarriages, death, and In rnernor-\nlam notices, 22c a line. List* of\nflowers st funerals, gift* at weddings, etc.,   I7o a line,\nBOX  NUMBERS\nIf a Dally News Box Number ls\ndesired tbeie ls an \u00abtra charge of\nlie.\nI.EGAf_   NOTICES\n10c 0 line first insertion, I2c a\nline additional  insertions.\nFBOFEB-HONAL   OR   BUSINESS\nCABDS\n(Minimum  two  Une\u00bb)\nYearly contract*\u2014$l-io a line per\nmonth.\nb\\% months' contract\u201411_37 0 line\nper month.\nTransient\u201491M \u00bb nne per month.\nCLASSIFIED   DISPLAY\n8*me rate e* transient or contract\ndisplay, according to classification\nand space used. Minimum 1 inch.\nwith same provision *or cash -discount\nAbove rates are Jes\u201e 10 per cent\nCUD discount when accounts are\npaid on or before the 20th of\nmonth   fcllowfn?   publication\nGO.ERNMENT  Lift COR ACT\nNotice  of  Application   for  Beer  License,\nNotle# Is hereby given that, on\nthe 9th day of July, A. D. 1932, Uw\nundersigned intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for a license\nln resp*ct of premise* being part\nof the building Known as the\nQueen's Hotel, situate at 605 Baker\nStreet in the city of Nelson upon\nthe lands described as Lot No. 11,\nJ t,ck 2, Offi;'al plan tt tne City\nof Nelson, ooter.ay Land Reaistr.'tmn\nDistrict in the Proviuc* or BrltL-h\nColumbla, fcr Ct aale of bee* by t'19\nRlMi 01 by the open bod c fcr con-\nsuniijflon on  the piwmld**.\nDated this llth dav or June, 1332.\nADOLPHE  LAPOINTE\nApplicant\ntUtt)\nNOTICES\nm\n.-it: I ll \u2022\n(I)\nCURWIN\u2014 At   the   Koo**nay Lske\nGenera]   hoppltfll   to   Mr.   and Mrs.\nSmith  curwln  of  yrnir,  July 6, a\ndaughter.\nCONWAY\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Conway, at Trall-Tadanac hospital,   June   28,   a   daughter.\nMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMII\nI Announcement f\nI Owing to fire we have |\nI moved our office to   |\nI     ROYAL BANK     1\n|        BUILDING I\n= Room 6 =\n|       401 Baker St.        1\n|   Business as usual    1\n|       PHONE 167\n1 Whitfield & Sturgeon |\n~ (3i)lfi)   I\niTiiiniMNiMiiiMMiniiiiiMiMMmiiiiiiiT\nTourists   In   Italy   may   now   obtain   speclnl    permits    attache-]   to\npassports entitling them to visit\nItalian alpine prontier _-oiieP, hitherto closed to all except residents of\nthat country.\nA Want Ad\nOn This Page\nWILL BRING QUICK RESULTS. An enthusiastic\nu. er of News Want-Ads writes us to cancel his ad immediately because in Two Days hc Found a Prospect\nwho Purchased the house advertised. The Total Cost\nof this Want-Ad was SO Cents\u2014again proving the\nEconomy and the Resultfulncss of THE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED SECTION.\nYes\u2014The Nelson Daily News Want-Ads are quick,\n. -silent, sure and inexpensive salesmen. TRY ONE TODAY at our Special Kate of Six Insertions for the\nPrice of Four.\nTHE\nNelson Daily News\nBaker St.   <__>   Phone 144   <$>   Nelson, B. C.\n'Who's I!\nFIRE!\nThe drr_d word that, .trlkes\nterror Into th. hearta of those\nwho   h\u00bbv.   fulled   to   INSURE.\nPERSONAL\n(5) | FIJKMS1IEI) ROOMS FOR RENT   (13)\nRANCHER INVITES CORRESPOND-\nence with mlddle-agod lady, widow preferred View matrimony.\nStrictly confidential. Box 289:1.\nDally News. t'_833l\nHELP WANTED\n(10)\nEN.ROETIC AND RELIABLE MAN\nor youth for truck ranch. pt.r.r-\nahly one with garden experience.\nFor particulars apply box 2881,\nDally  News. (2881)\nSITUATIONS WANTED (11)\nDRESSMAKER AND TAILORESS\ndesires sewing dally. Mrs. Lee,\nPhon. 287L. 12845)\nROOMS   FOB   RENT\n(in)\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii\nI   FOR RENT   I\n= OFFICE   SPACE -\n_\\ Office space  for rent \u2014 Well ~\ni _j  Hunted   and   heated,   centrally \u2014\n\u2014   located  next  Hlpperson   Hard- I\n\\_\\  ware.     Rents   from   \u00bb15   per _\\\n_: month and up. \u00a3\ni Apply: =\ni| R. W. Dawson  1\n= GENERAL   INSURANCE =\n:! 2 P. O. Box 733           Phono 197 5\n;  _: Hlpperson  Block _.\n= (2319) I\niTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiT\nI'lMl.TRV   AND   KOfiS (36)\nSIXTY BOLIVAR TWELVE WEEK\nWyandotl. pullets * 1.10. \u00bb60 the\nhunch. Irwin, Balfour. 12882)\nFor rent\u2014two small suites and two\nliou-ekei.lng rooms, Amiable Block.\n(2809)\nFURNISHED   SUITE,   MRS.   COVb.\n_07  Carbonate  St. Phone 8wutv.\n(2.64)\nBEDROOM    FOR    RENT     PRIVATE\nhome, 208 Baker St.    ' (2835)\nFURNISHED SUITE 607 SILICA ST.\nMrs. Leslie, Phone 440X.       (2342)\nSUITES-ASHMAN'S    APARTMENTS\n715 Baker atreet. (2840)\nPARTLY    FURNISHED   SUITE.   411\nSilica   street. (2775)\nIIOLSE3 KOU RENT\n(31)\nFOR RENT \u2014 SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE\nwith large sleeping porch and\ngarage; corner ptiv and Chatham\nstreets. Fairview. Available July\n12. Phone 6UY2. (2811)\nFOR RENT\u2014FIVE-ROOM HOUSE;\nthree-room house; four-room furnished house; pool hall. Phone\n808L. D. Magllo. (2833)\nHOUSE BOAT FOR RENT, PARTLY\nfurnished. Rutherlord, R. R. 1,\nNelson. (2832)\nHOUSE FOR RENT \u2014 CORNER OF\nJosephine and Victoria. Phone\n794L1. (2819)\nFURNISHED    COITAOE    ON    THE\nlake, screened. H. Rosllng, R. R, I.\n(2828)\nFULLY FURNISHED BUNGALOW\nCheap. July and August, phone\n218L. (2820)\nSUMMER   CAMr.   CLOSE  TO   NEL-\nson. Box 314. Nelson, (2815)\nI No one knows\u2014it may =\n; possibly be YOU\u2014which =\nI brings up the question of _\u2022\n| fire insurance. \u00a7\nAfter the fire has de- 1\nstroyed your property\u2014 5\nwhat   about   the   loss? z\nDoes it come out of your =\npocket or is it paid by E\nthe Insurance Company? \u00a7\nSec to it before the fire \u00a7\nthat you have adequate =\ninsurance and that your =\npolicies arc written with =\nreliable Companies. j_\nLet   us   talk   Insurance I\nwith you.   We specialize 5\nin   Insurance   of   every \u00a7\nclass. ~\n= MAY BK THE NEXT.\n2       Fate waits for no man.\n11      Insure\n!\nSECOND HAND TIPES, jnTTIKai\nValves, etc. We carry a full itoc\nof rfrondiMon-sd p'pe\u00ab \u00bbUltib-\u00ab rj\nail imrp'>w.s. wr't\u00ab to Bwatti Pip\ny__rd, M0 1st Ave, East Vancouv\ner. B. C, iftm\ncompitte err op hioh oRAdj\ncarpentfr toils almost n^w, con\nalstlng of i',,n pieces or diffprerj\ntools prlf* \u00bb!25. C'TnipIff'e list A\nthis ollle*. Box 2B25 Dally Jffwe.\nPOTATO OROWFRS. USFTD QRAlj\nm\u00abl iiaclis. 100 for *3, CwtU\nfrultvale. <284_|\nV\/OODTATT LAWN MOWER. If\nInch. Al condition. 823 Jowphln\nstreet, pbone 266L. \u00bb5. (28H\nR. W.\nS\n~       General Insurance       I\nI        Ilipperson Block \u00a3\n| Phone 197      P. Box 733 5\n_\\ (2018)   S\nr?i \u25a0 i 1111111 ri 111 ii f \u2022 11111 ri i m 111111111111111 iT\nniiiiiiiiiiliiilllllliiiniiilMlliilliiiiiiiii\nI FIRE*-FIREJ |\n|    FIRE!     |\n= Your property may b\u00ab ashes. \u2014\n5 tomorrow. Insure with our IS\n_z    etrong  Companies  at  once.    ~\n1        II. E. Dill 1\n3 Pire and Auto Insurance I\n=  608 Ward St. Phone ISO  I\n- (2915)   I\niTllllMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIItllllllllllllllltllli\n- Only   the   most   reputablt _*\n5 companies  represented. 2\n1        c. w. I\n1 Appleyard |\n_\\ Heal F.stnte and Insurance _\\\n_             410   BaKer   Street _:\n=                                             (-0.0) I\niillllMIMIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII\nBtHlNESH    OPrOHTtNITIES      (JO\nBUSINESS     TCB     SALE.     OWN!\nleaving   town.   Paying   well,  Prlc\nreasonable. Boi _872. pally Newt\n(.87.\nI'ROPERiy   FOR   SALE\n(SI\nSEE   C.   W.   APPLEYAKD   POH   CAR\nInsurance In reliable companies.\n1284.)\nLIVESTOCK FOR BALE\nPOUR YOUNO BOUND HORSES.\n1800 to 2000 iba. George Mclnnes,\nWynndel, B. C. (2830)\nFOR S4LE \u2014 2 AND   1-YEAR-OLD\ncolts. A. Hucal. Blewett, B. C\n(2824)\nFOR SALE \u2014 HALT SECTIOr\nwooded l_n_ adjoining South Ne<\naon. Cheap (or cash or terms ar\nranged. Phone 811Y2. (2812\nAUTOMOBILES   FOR   SALE (4o|\nFOR SALE 1929 PLYMOUTH COUP)1\nIn first class shape. Five good\ntires. FTloe ,250 cash. Apply A. \u25a0\nKnauf, Harrop.\nPRINTING\n(8TI\niiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiii\nLoose Leaf Equipment\nBINDEHS  FOR ANY   SHEETS\nLOOSE LEAF SHEETS\nFOR ANY  BINDEB\nNelson Daily News\nJOB DEPARTMENT\nPhone 144 ,\nllllllllimillllllllllllllllilllllMIIHIIIIhl\nBUSINESS and PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER. S.T. INT. AC.\nMunicipal and Commerclsl Audita.\nP. O. Bo. 1191, uelsou, B. C.\ni28.8)\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON establlalied 1900\n.05 Josephine St., Nelson, B. C.\n(2848)\nGRENVILLE   H.   ORIMWOOD,  P.   O.\nBox 418, Kaslo, B. C- (2849)\nChiropractors\nDR. ORAY, OILKEB BLK., NELSON.\n(2830)\nDR.   MACM.LLAN,   ORAD.   PALMER\nSchool, Abcr Blk-, Nelson, ph. 212.\n(2852)\nMITTUN AND OEDDES, X-RAY and\nMCM, Cranbrook and Trail. (2861)\nFlorists\nJOHNSONS GREENHOUSES\u2014Phone\n342. Cut flowers, potted plants\nan^ floral designs. (2855)\nStorage\nSTORAGE,  MOVINO, COAL. WOOI.\nPhone 63. Burns Coal & cartapj\n(285 ll]\nEnfrinccrs\nCHAS. MOORE. Griffin Blk., Nelson\nB. C. Land Surveyor, Box 654.\n(2881\nH. D. DAWSON. B.C.L.S   EOOM 12\/j\nK. W. C. Block, Nelaon.        (2860|\nInsurance and Real Estate]\nB. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate, In\nsurance Rentals. Next Hlppersoi\nHardware, Baker street.        (2862\n8-Cond Hand Store?\nWE BUY CLOTHING. MUSICAL In)\nstrumenta rifles etc 217 Baker.(2837l\nTh.   Ark-Dealers  In   Second   Henri\n_Booda. Phone 53. (2856)1\nTransfer\nNIHjSON FLOWER. SHOPFB. FTJI.L\nline cut flowers at all times. Floral dealgns. Phone 233. (2854)\nGrt__elle's Greenhouses, Nelson. Cut\n(lowers and floral designs, (2853)\nATKINSON TRANSFER, ROSEMONtJ\nCoal  ai%i  Wood. (28631\nWood Factory\nLAWSON'S WOOD FACTORY HARD-l\nwood merchant, 317 B_ker atreetl\n(2864)]\nTHE GUMPS \u2014STOP THIEF!\nITORES   FOR   RENT.\nFOR RE.NT-RESTAURANT AffO\nroon's complexly furnished. Trail.\nJ.   D.   Anderson. (2730)\n     LEOAI, NOTICES\nLAND    T(M;iSTRV    MT\n(Seilton   180)\nJ^ THE MATTER OP i\/H 2104 \"K\\V\nknrn\" Mineral Claim, Lot 310h\n'\u2022Rcil' 1 .ea No. 2\" Mineral Claim,\nLot ll(M \"Mollle: Hughes\" Mineral Claim, Lot 2107 \"Pinto\" Mineral claim. Uh ^108 \"Tnon\"\nMinpnl Claim, all in Oroup 1,\nand aU m.npral precious and base\n(save coa.) therein. Kootenay district.\nPrcot having been filed in my office of the Toss of ctMflrat* of\nTitle Number 1034!)a to the abovh\nmentioned lands in the nam* of\nMichael -fiattoni and bearlntr d\u00bbt\u00ab\nthe iflt-h May. 1^*70. I HFT.EBT\nGIVE NOTICE of my Intention, at\nthe expiration or one rnlrnd-ir\nmonth from the -first publication\nhereof, to I.\u00bbue to the nald Michael\nEattonl, a Provisional Certificate ot\nTitle in .leu of such lost Certificate.\nAny person having nny Information with reference ta svich loot\nCertificate of Tift* Is requested to\ncommunicate,   with   the   undersigned.\nDated at Nelson, B. C'., this 8th\nIt) of June, A. D. 1(1^2.\nA. W, IDIFNS. Reflitrw.\nDntp of first publication. Juofl\ntfl. inns. <2o26)\nBELFORD SCHOOL\nPROMOTION LIST\nfor. Quick-\nResults use\nJolly   Tarty   Marks   (losing\nfor the Midsummer\nTerm\nBELEOPD, B. C, July 7.\u2014A Jolly\nparty at the public school marked\nthe closing of the midsummer term,\nMlss Elvlr4 C.uf^Rfson, the prlnclpnl,\nleaving to spend the achool vacation\nin   Nelson.\nMlas Pcgcy FWk, William Riley,\nArthur Hill and Jack Robinson,\nGrade VTII pjiplla. ttTOte their examinations In Nelson.\nThe   pass   list   Is   as   follo-a-s:\nPromoted to Grade IA\u2014 Tina Laktln.\nOrade If\u2014Nora Masloff, Mary\nChernenkoff.\nOtWt* IITA\u2014 Alice lOfltl\nGrade IV\u2014Jackie Masloff, Tina\nCh\u00bbrnenkoff.\nGride V\u2014Fred Chernenkoff. Mike\nWasiirnkoff, Nellie Chernenkoff.\nGrade   WA    JX*   Laktln.\nGrade tl\u2014Wat%*t Hill\nGrade VII\u2014M\u00bbrv Masloff, Elnrence\nCarlson,   Polly   Salancoff.\nHonor nils were awarded as fol-\nIOWI\u2014Pro'icipnry, Prirgy Flrck; deportment, Maty MsOatett; regularity\nand punctuality, Aruiur ILK. Walte\nI 11, Jack Robinson, Piggy Fleck ani\nMi  i\n\u25a0\u25a0'.\n  \u2014\n1\n1\nMB ti-UOic datlx News, >_i sun, b. c. \u2014 rnriMT mobnino, i_i.y \u201e lan\nMO\u00bb\nMarket and Mining News\nlEIi YORK LIST\nDUES SOME\n'arket Is  Governed by i\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, July 7 \u2014 Copper\nQUWt;  elcrtiolytir apot anl future \"\nTin   Jrir.,   (.pot  und  nearby  2\nf jture   a 1.50.\nir n  6te;u;y  and  unchai'j?d.\nLend quiet, *p<.t, Wew 'iork 385;\nEa_L   St.   L*:ula   J.-.O.\nZUio easier, __.__. 6t, Louis spot\nand   tuture  2 90.   .\nAntimony, spot, 5.00.\nAt   London:\nCopper, standard, spot \u00a327 17s M;\nfuture i26 0s; electro.ytlc, spot\nOl. future \u00a331 10*.\nTin, spr>t, \u00a3123 15*; luture \u00a3128 5s.\n,. \u25a0   ,. .-, ,\u2022      I    I^ead, spot  \u00a310 J* 9d;   luture  \u00a310\nDisappointing Domestic Uo*.\n| Zinc, spot, \u00a311 13* 6d; future \u00a313\nBANK STOCKS MAKE\n- FURTHER ADVANCED\nON TORONTO LIST\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nDevelopments\nN-EW YORK. July T CBj John L.\noley, A P financial writer)\u2014Btock.v\n.\u25a0ked the stamina to withstand a>\n\u00ab selling flurry todsy and closf-zi\n| loes   of   many   leader*   were   1   to\npoints net lower,\ni An early decline found the market\n,rly    well   fortified    with    buying\n! ders, but all It oould  do,  on  the\n\u25a0 iole,   was   to   erase   losses   before\n1 mlnj  downward  again   under   ln-\n| -ased  pressure.  There  wer-s  a  few\n\\ onounced  airpockets.  However,  ac-\n>n    of    tho   general    list    seemed\nverned not so much by individual\nTforma.ioes   a*   by    domestic    de-\n! lopments which  the market labei-\ni i   as   disappointing.\nIn    stock*    conspicuous    weakness\n_pped   out   in   International   Shoe\n. ,ilch dropped \u00ab\u25a0% to 20|\/_ anl tin*\n.ed,  near  the low. The company's\n1 st   hall   earning*   were   k\u00bb   than\nvldend   requirements   at  the   pres-\n'\u25a0 t rate of payments and the shares\nill swiftly. It  was notable  that  at\nI e close they wot* no longer com-\nf andlng   a   premium   In   th*   loan\n; arket.   international   Business   Maine*    -softened    6    points,    while\nt-ug, Consolidated Oaa, Public Serv-\ni s  ot   New  Jersey,  Eastman,   U.   S.\ni sel  preferred,  Coca  Cola  and  Na-\n;>nal   bead  lost 3  or  more.\nI American Telephone  wa* an easy\nter In tlie afternoon dip, breaking\n1 rough It* old low to 74 K. off IH\ni t.  A  market  report  eald   discon-\n1 ctlona had increased  In June. V.\nI steel,   American   Can,   Westing-\ni .use,    Allied    Chemical,     Dupont,\n!,nta Te and Union Pacific yielded\npoint or so. Sales totalled 784,421\n; 2s ed.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN  :\nIS FRACTIONALLY\nLOWER AT CLOSE\nPrices Hold Narrow Range;\nLiverpool Support Gives\nStrength\nWINNIPEG. July 7 (CP).\u2014Wheat\nprices held to a narrow range and\nclosed fractionally lower on the\ngrain  market  here  today.\nAll futures were 8\/_c down at tha\nclose. July finished at tt%, October\nat Mtt. and December at 67.4.\nStrength at the opening was due\nto Liverpool support, but after a\nsteady period Influenced only by\nImprovement in harvest weather in\nthe southwest states winter wheat\nareas, prices slumped with Chicago\nln the last hour. Export business was\nnegligible.\nDemand for cash wheat was confined to No. l hard and No. 8\nnorthern, spreads being fractionally\nhigher. The coarse grains market\nrecorded sales ln harley only, but\nvalues were generally Improving.\nEXCHANGES\n.    MONTREAL STOCKS\n\\ lantlc  Bugar   - 30\n1 11  Telephone   _. _\u2122._ 78\nazlllan  T L.  &  Power  .... 10V*\n\". ltlsh American Oil  _.-. 8tt\nJ nada Bronze  \u2014\u201e._  11\nI ,n. c&r & Foundry \u201e - 3%\n\\.n. Car & Foundry, pfd _. 10V*\n.nadlan Cement  \u2122 -\u2014       'H\n.nacllan Cement pfd    30Vi\nII Ln.  Industrial  Alcohol        1 Vi\n.n. Steamship Lines        2\n' ms. Mining & Bmelting  86Vi\n' tmlnlon   Bridge      HVi\n1 imlnlon Glass \u201e.. \u2014   \u25a0 32>^\n. am.  Textile  \u201e..-  40\np   Grain             3\nI .perlal   Oil      835\n\\ke   of  the   Wood*            4\n; issey  Harris   \u201e         2%\nj mtreal   Power     .. -V'*\nontreal   Telegraph    \u2014.\u2014 39\nontrear Tramway* __ \u2014 89H\n; itlonal Brewerle* \u201e\u2014_\u2014\u2014 13Vi\n, uional Steel car        9\ni uebec Power     HU\n| ) Canada power ,.._ _ 13\ni ,eel   of   Canada  _..-, ,  13\n! lnnlpeg   Railway   \u201e _        3%\n1 Six per oent of the total area of\n' erlln, Germany, i* water. About\n(300 of the Inhabitant* of the city\n. -rn canoe*, 2000 have motorboats,\ni 7.000 own rowbottts, and 6500 have\nUllboat*.\n| j About one person In every three\n'imllle* in Roumania la on the\n1 overnment pay roll.\nGeneral Trend Is Mixed; Imperial Makes Heaviest\nGain\nTORONTO,   July   7\u2014Bank   stocks\ndo:nic&ted trading today on ti_*\nToronto stock exchange, chalking up\nfurther advances in brisk demand.\nOeneral trend of the board wa* mixed. R\u00abport\u00ab from Ottawa that no\nbank affiliations were pending proved no deterrent to bank issues.\nBank of Com mere* Issues cam* In\nfor th-5 bulk of th* group trading\nand cla-sed l'\/i point* higher at 137\nwith 14 shares out. Imperial Bank\nregistered the heaviest gain, up 10\npolntt at 141, while the Dominion\nand Toronto gained five point* lo\n130 and 150, respectively. Royal\nspurted  s*v-:n point*.\nOther groups In the local U*t were\ngoverned by New York where trend\nwaa mixed. Canadian Pacific at\nHVi -Consolidated Smelters at 40,\nFord \"A\" of cana-1- at 7H. International Nickel at 5',i, Bteel ot\nCanada at 18 and E.ltish American\nOil at B'\/i moved down. B. C.\nPower \"A\" wa* a bright \u00bbpot In the\nupside of the list, closing 2V_.\npoints higher at 19. Smaller gain*\nwere worked ln International Pete,\nMontreal Power and Shawlnigan.\nThe day'* n._w lows Included\nBeatty common at 3V_, General Steel\nWare* at ft ahd International Utilities   \"B\"   at   H>\nVolume was the heaviest ot the\nweek \u00abt 10,848 share*.\nCALGARY, July 7 (CP)\u2014 Rec\u00ab!pta\nCattle    293,    calves    25,    hogs    725,\nm$ lea.\nBtawta,' Good and choloe, $4 to\n#425; medium. 13 50 to #375; common,  92.60   to  $3 25.\ntttit***', Oood and choice, 93 50 to\n94; medium, 93..5 to |3-50; common,\n93 50   to   ft.\nFed calves: Good and choice, $4.75\nto $5; medium, $4 to 94.50.\nCows: Good and cholc*, $3 to\n$2.25; medium, $1.50 to $175; common.  $1.25   to  $1-75.\nBulls: Good, 9125 to $1.50; common,   $1   to   $1.35.\nLambs:  Oood  handywelght* $5.\nSheep; Oood handywelght*, $3 to\n$3.50.\nLONDON INFLUENCE\nGIVES MONTREAL\nSTOCKIST, GAIN\nSmall   General   Advance   Is\nMade; Demand for Canadian Securities\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAllegheny   _\t\nAllied Chemical..\nAmerican Can-\nAm Por Power.,\nAm Ma & Pdy\nAm Smelt & Be\n48\nS\nT14\nMONTREAL, July 7 (OP)\u2014British\nand foreign exchange in relation to\nthe Canadian dollar, as compiled by\nthe Royal Bank of can\u00abia, closed\ntoday  as follows:\nArgentina, t>?eo   _.   .3964\nAustralia,   pound     3.2827\nBelgium,    belga     _,    .1585\nBrazil,   mllrela      _.   .0870\nCzechoslovakia,   crown   _ _.   .0339\nDenmark,   krone   _\u2014....,...___..\u201e\u201e   .3206\nFinland, flnmark _.    _01fl8\nFrance,   franc   _ \u201e_\u201e..\u201e   .0448\nGreat Britain, pound  , 4.0683\nGermany,    relchsmark     \u00bb   .2710\nHolland, florin     .4601\nIndia,  rupee       5078\nItaly,    lire      . ,._m    .0BQ3\nJapan,   yen    _   ___.   5149\nJugoslavia,    dinar    \u201e.\u201e _.._.\u201e   .0200\nNew  Zealand, pound  ............._ 8-6984\nNorway,   krone  .._ ,__,\u201e    5013\nPoland,   zlptl    _      .1288\nRoumania,   leu _..    .0070\nSouth   Africa,   pound   __ _ 5.5005\nSpain,    peseta   0926\nSweden,   krone       .2070\nSwitzerland,   franc    2224\nUnited  state*,  dollar,   14  per   cent\npremium.\nLONDON   CUM\nLONDON, July 7\u2014Brazilian Trac-\ntion IItHl Canadian Pacific 113%;\nHydro Electric $8%; Int Hold <$_\nInv |%t Int Nickel $8%; Ford\n18s 6d; Hudson Bay 18a 3d; Imperial\nChemical lfla 4<_d; Imperial \"Job\n\u00a34 1o 6d; Brlt American Tob \u00a34\n3s 6d; Distillers \u00a32 9s; Dunlop Rubber 13s 3d; Shell T & T \u00a31 17* 6d;\nVickers 6s 6d; Brlt five pet war\nloan 1947 \u00a3101; British 4% pet\nwar loan \u00a3102 5s; British four pet\n1960-90    \u00a3106    12s    6d.\nIncrease Your Crops By Using\nELEPHANT BRAND\nFERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphate \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\nrOB SALE AT\nNelson\u2014Wood V\u00bbMa___ Ila.-war. Co. Ltd.\nBonnlngton\u2014BonnlngtoD Co-operative,\nHarrop- -Harrop and Dlatrlct Co-operative.\nCreaton\u2014Creaton Valley Co-operative; Creatland Fruit\nCompany; Long. Allan Is Long.\nCrawtord Bay\u2014Crawford Baj Co-operative.\nWynndel\u2014Wynndel    .erry   Growera*   Association. '\nWillow Point--Willow Point Co-operative.\nThruma   Tarry ttt Thruma Co-operative.\nOrand For__\u2014Grand Fork- Orowera' Aasoclatlon.\nGreenwood\u2014Taylor _f Bona\nAnd Associated Orowera ol B. C. local centeri.\nThe CM.US. Co. of Canada, Ltd.\nTRAIL, B. C.\nProduoeri ind IWflnera of Tadanao Brand Dectrolytlo\nCadmium, Bismuth, Lead, tnd Zlno\nAmer Telephone 11 _\nAmerlc   Tobacco   62V.\nAnaconda   _      4\nAtchison       -1W\nAuhum Motors. 4B_\nBait et Ohio _ SH\nBendlx   Aviation    _\nBeth  Steel       8%\nCanadian Pacific   10!,\nCerro   de   Pasco    fl\nChes   As   Ohio  _   10_\nChrysler     -     fl\nCom Ae South- .Vs\nCon Gaa N Y 36..\nCorn Producta _ 36!.\nC Wright ptd ..\nDupont    34\nEastman Kodak 38V,\n__ Power ts Lt S'\/s\nFord English ....\nFord of Canada\nFirst Nat Storea SB',.\nFreeport Texas.. 11_\nOeneral Motors-\nGeneral Electric\nGeneral Foods _\nGold Dust ....\nGreat North pfd..\nGerat   W   Sugar\nHo-we Sound \t\nHudson Motors..\nInternat Nickel\nInter Tel As Tel\nKenn Copper ....\nKresgo 8 8 \t\nMack Truck \u2014\nMilwaukee pfd _\nNash Motors ....\nNat Dairy Prod\nN Power As Lt\nNew York Centr\nPaclf Gas _ El\nPackard Motors..\nPenn R B \t\nPhillips   Pete   _\nPure   Oil    -\nRadio Corpora-\nRadio  Keith Or\nRem  Rand      IV,\nSafeway   Stores..   34\nShell  Union      3%\nS   Cal   Edison....   19\nSouth  pacific  ..    8's\nStan  OU of Cal   1S_\nStan   OU   of   Ind\nStan Oil of H J   33 V.\nStudebaker      3 _\nTexas Corpora.. 9 _\nTexas Gulf Uul 13\nUnion Carbide... 16..\nUnion Oil of Cal\nUnion Pacific ..\nU S Pipe Is Pdy\nU S  Rubber ....\nU   8   Steel   \t\nWest Electric ....\nWillys Overland\nYellow Truck ....\na\n20 j)\n10_\nti\ni'A\nIM\n4H\nBV\u00bb\n4'4\nIg\nH\n-iii\niv,\n9%\n15 Vs\n13'A\n19 %\nl'\/i\n\u2022n.\n3>\/,\n3 V,\na\n8_\n31%\nni\nV'\n2.'i\nIT\/.\n1\nl',_\n45 Vi\n31 ii\n\u00bbMj\n7\n74 _\n49 Vi\n3%\n_Mi\n44\nM\n4\u00ab4\nIM\nHI\n10\n\u00bb_\n2\n34\n3fl\n33 H\n39\nI\n38\".\nHVa\n7(4\nIH\n20\n10V,\nHi\nfl\nMi\n\u00ab_\nIH\n1454\n11H\n19\nIN\nIjj\n3H\n3H\ni%\ni_\n32 V,\nIM\n18.\n7\nUM\n24\nIM*\nD'.t\nIt 3\nifl_\nTM\n20 H\n_1\u00bb4\n1814\n%\nM\n48%\n31'\/j\n2 .\n7%\nI'.-s\n7.V,\nSO\n3%\nIIM\n44\n5 V,\n4%\nIM\n0H\nt\n10\n814\n3\n34\n25\ntM\n22%\n30\n3\nn\n\u00ab\n38%\n1114\n7%\n0%\n30\n10 Va\n\u00ab%\nIM\n8%\n4%\n4',4\n3'4\n8%\n\u00ab%\n12%\n1%\n9%\n14%\n7%\n11%\n19\nl.H\n7V4\n8%\nIM\n3%\n1%\n1%\n33 K\n3 V,\n19\n7%\n18%\n18%\n24\n3%\n9%\n12%\n18%\n7%\n30\n7%\n2%\n23\n16%\n%\nl|\nCHICAGO MARKET\nDECLINES tJNDER\nHEAVY SELLING\nBelieved Prompted by Fear of\nLiquidation of Federal\nBoard\nCHICAOO.   July   7   (By   Johtt  P.\nBougl.au, A P market editor.\u2014De-\noplti & lively lat\u00ab advance due to\neastern buying of wheat, the grain\nmarket wilted at the last today under  increased   pressure  to  sell.\nFear of liquidation by the federal\nfarm board waa asserted la toim\nquarters to hava prompted the final\noutbreak of aelllng. Other observers\nsaid much ot the selling wa\u00ab of a\nhedging character, that better weather prevailed for domestic harvest\noperation* with recelpta at aome\nsouthwestern points Increasing, and\nthat spring wheat news Vta \u2022till\npredominatingly   bearish.\nWheat cloeed unsettled, *', to %\nunder yesterday's finish, corn y% to 1\ndown, oats unchan\u00ab?_l to Vi lower\nand provisions varying from 2 oents\ndecline  to  ft  rise  of  23  cents.\nMONTREAL, July 7 (CP)\u2014London,\nrather than New Tork, aeemfd to\ninspire lbe Montreal stack exchange\ntoday when Issues generally scored\nanot.-.er   small   but   general   advance.\n1-ondcn's influence was noticeable\nboth ln the optimism that ha_ developed at that center and In the\ndemand for Canadian securities arising from there. Wall street turned\ndefinitely weak.r.\nThe Issues which are Interllsted\nhere and at New Tork, such as Bra-\nrl]ia_n Traction, Canadian Pacilic\nand Internationa] Nickel failed to\nshare ln the rally but Montreal\nPower, Dimlnlon Bridge, British Columbia powrr. Consolidated Smelters,\nNational Erewer.es, National Steel\nOar, Shawlnigan and the bank Issues were all holding gains at the\nclose.\nBank of Montreal was 18 points\nabove Its last board lot sale at\n185; Royal gained *'\/_, at 141; Corn-\nmere.) 4 at 130. Bank of Nova Scot.a\neasted two points at 340.\nNlck.1 lost Vi at 5V_; Dominion\nBridge waa up 2'_t  tt  12.\nCanadian Pacific confined Its loss\nto  Vi  tt 11,\nBritish Columbia power ran up\nltt  to  19.\nBands were firm with a good demand for govemimntal Issues which\nscored moderate advances. Sales were\n(61,800.\nStock    sales    were    10,808    sharss\nSterling closed at 84.0683 and\nUnited States funds at ft premium\nof 14 per cent.\nVANCOUVER STdCK\nMARKET IS SOFT\nMore Oil Companies\nto Be Prosecuted for\nFailing to Check Flow\nCALOAItY, July 7 (CP).\u2014More oil\ncompanies In. the Turner valley ire\nto be  prosecuted  by  the  province.\nFollowing ft closed session of the\nAlberta gas conservation board today, tt was Intimated prosecutions\nwould Increase the list of six oil\ncompanies to appear ln court Monday charged, with falling to comply\nwith orders Irom the board to reduce  their   gas  flow   ln  the   valley.\nNames of other companlea were\nnot learned, nor ls lt known If they\nwill appear ln court with the first\ngroup. There were seven companies\noriginally summonsed to appear ln\ncourt, but after representitions had\nbeen made to the board today by\nRichfield Petroleum, Limited, lt was\nlearned the company had agreed tf\nabide by the board restrictions and\naction against Richfield would be\ndropped.\nMINES\nBtd     Ask\nBig Missouri  _ -    .08.4   .09\nGeorgia   River   _    .03 \\'_\nGolconda. _.   11\nOrandview     - 03       A\nInt  C   __   C     .08\nLorne Oold  \u201e _.   .08\nNational Sliver \u201e _   .01\nNoble   Five    \u201e a\nPend Oreille  40\nPioneer  Gold  $35\nPorter Idaho. _ w.\u201e. 03\nPremier    44\nReeves McDonald . .   .07\nReno   Gold    39\nOILS\nA   P  Consolidated   \t\nCalmont \t\nC  and  E  Lands   \u201e.....,\nCommonwealth   \t\nFabyan \t\nHargal    _.\t\nHome   Oil    _ _....\nMayland   _\t\nMercury    \u201e\t\nMcLeod \t\nRoyalite     _      4 50\nSterling Pactflo        .0814\nTORONTO INDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros .... 4\"*\nBell    Telephone..   78 Vi\nB   A   Oil         814\nCons   Bakeries \u201e\nCons   Mining   ..   43\nDistill   Seagrams\nFord   of   Can  A     7*\nGoodyear      8Vi\nInternat Nickel 5%\nInternat Pete .. 19%\nLa ura   Secord   ..\nLoblaw  A \t\nMassey  Harris  _.     314\nNoranda    _    16\nPage Hersey ....\nPhoot ISngravers..\nHiram  Walker  ..     5\n3H\n4'.i\nn s\n78\n\u00bb'i\n8 .\n4\n40\n40\n4_\nlis\n1',.\n8\n8\ns_\nHt\n10\nJ0\n80\n10'i,\n.\n3\nKB\n14.90\n41   .\n10\n4\n4_\n\/RIGHT-\/R|GHT\nYOUR\nPIPE\nOGDEN'S\nCUT PLUG\nIjym,\"rta >m.w.\" uu\nOiden's fine eut\nd.nrctu lobocci.\nVANCOUVER LIST\n09\n.50\n3.70\n.04\n.43 _\n.40\n.04\n.03\n.16\n.07\n.om,\n.03\n.15\n.06\n.06',\n.29\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nMin.,  Jul.   7.\u2014Oraln\nWINNIPEG!,\nquotations\nOwn   High   low Clos.\nWl.-t\nJuly          \u00bb4        64 .\nOct     67       571_\nDec    58 !i   68 H\nOats:\nJuly       33%   34\nOct    28_    38.\nD-C    2T,    37',\nBarley:\nJuly       37      371.\nOct     I\u00bb%    33'\/,\nDec    33       33\nFlax:\nJuly   _    \u00ab6\"_\nOct    70',_    701.\nDec    72_    73\nRye:\nJuly   _    33      33 H\nOct    34 v_   34 .\nDtc _ ..   35%   36_\nCash grain close:\nNo.   1    Hard.   64'.;   No.\n53\\:   No. _  Nor.,  50It]   No.\n48_;   No.  4  Nor..  46V.;   No.   5.  43%\nNo. 6. 36%; Fred, 34%; Track, 63%\nNo. 1  Dur., 66%.\n63%\n56%\n57%\n33%\n-S'l\n37\n36%\n83%\nMtt\n73',.\n32%\n34',.\n35%\n63%\n66%\n67%\n33%\n38'..\n27\n36%\n32%\n66',\n70\n72':\n33%\n34%\n35%\nNor.,\nNer.,\nLack of Speculative Interest;\nDozen Issues Receive\nAttention\nVANCOUVER, July 7 (CP)\u2014Lack\nof speculative Interest coupled with\ndearth of constructive market\nnews from eastern centers gave active\nIssues ft soft tone on __\u2022 Vancouver\nstock exchange today. Interest was\nscattered through some dozen Issues\nln both section, with Lorne Ind\nPremier Golds the feature traders In\nth* mines and Crow's Nest the leading Issue ln the oils.\nLight offerings tended to keep the\ndecline In the fractional class ln\nmost cases.\nReno Oold the only mine to show\na favorable trend, gained a to close\nat 39 oents while Mercury was the\nonly firmer lasue In th. oils, up a\nhalf at IV..\nLorne lost a half to 8 while Premier at 44 ww off 1. In the oils\nCrow's Nest on a turnover of 21.000\nshares after trading at a firm 2%\nduring the day, eased to 2%, off\nan eiRhth at the cloee. Mayland at fl\nwas off 1%.\nOther active Issues closed unchanged.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 Industrials  41-*- oO \u25a0\n2') rails   18.8! off    .IH\n20 utilities    10.00 off    .66\nTORONTO MINING\nLIST MOVES INTO\nHIGHERJGROUND\nProfit-Taking Appears in the\nLate Trading; Gold Leaders Make Good Showing\nTORONTO, July 7.\u2014Movement Into VtBm ground continued today\non the Standard stock and mining\nexchange, despite profit-taking in\nthe late trading. Sales totalled 2*0,-\n000   shares.\nLeaden In ths baae metal section\nopened the scwlon firm but with\nweakness la New York to contend\nwith. Both Noranda and International Nickel fell off to clo.e with\nminor declines. Noranda closed at\n*14.90, orf 5c, while International\nNickel advanced to $5.80 and closed\nat $5.55, showing a net .osa of 5c\non turnover of  1765 shares.\nWhile the leaders In the gold lint\nmade good showing,* the price range\nwaa of minor proportion. Hollln(jer\nand Teck-Hughes were the most\nprominent, the former closing up\n10c to 15.20. with 135 shares out,\nwhile the latter closed at (4.28, a\nnet gain of 8 points, on turnover\nof 6715 shares. Mclntyre lost 10c\nto 117.40; B. C. Pioneer declined 8\npoints to 13.62, while Dome and\nLake   Shore   were   unchanged.\nDOLLAR UNCHANGED\nNSW YORK. .Illy T (CJ->.\u2014Brlt-*\ncurrencies did sot fru-tuate en _____\nforeign exchanges today. The Canadian dollar bald at (7..c. un____f*4\nfrcm yesterday's cloae. vhllt Uu\npound sterling was quoted at 4141\nfor cable transfers, '.c lover than\nyesterday's close.\nInsist on \"GRANT'S BtST PR0CURABLE\"-The Original\nFor .>. tr at Vendors or dirrrl from \"Mall Order\nDept.\"   Liquor  Control   board,   Victoria,   B. (_.\nPROCURABLE\ns\nTCH   WHISKY\nCHEST   IN   FINEST\nGHLAND  MALT\nBottl.. end fnsfint.. _ by WltMsBi\nGr_nt _. Sons Limited (,!. ibidicb snH\nB-lv_nic-Gle\u201e]i..t Di.tUWiea, Duff-\nt ah A GfcMfD*. Scotland.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Li_uo.\n(Control Board or the Government of British Columbia,\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbana    -\t\nArno     \u2014\t\nAjax   \t\nAmulet   .\u201e._\t\nA P Consolidated .\nBase Metals \t\nBidgood     _\nBarry Hollinger \t\nBig Missouri \t\nCalmont\nChemical  Research\nCierlcy _\t\nDome  \t\nDalhousle    \t\nEastcrest  \u201e..\t\nEldorado    \t\nFalconbrldge\t\nGranada   \t\nHome  Oil  \t\nHowey    \u201e \u2014\u2022\nHnilinjer   \t\nHudson    Bay\n.65\n.00\n.04\n.35\n.0214\nMVI\n.06 jf\n.04\n1.00\n.01' i\n11.00\nMM\n.05\n1.22\nii\n.72\n.14\n.41\n5.15\n1.70\n5.35\n.33 Vi\nInternational Nickel ......\nKlrkland   Lake\t\nLake Shore  -  38.30\nMacassa   \u201e  .2'-!\nManitoba  Basin    .001,\nMalartlc     0*\nMclntyre  _  17.40\nMining  Corporation  1.06\nNewbec    -  -01\nNoranda     14.78\nPend   Oreille      .40\nPremier   Gold      *4\nSherrit   Gordon  t\u2122\nSudbury Basin \u201e   20\nSlscoe           - .73',\nTech Hughes  420\nVlpond     \u201e  .33\nVentures  - -~~\nWright   Hanrreaves  2.72\nWalte  Ackerman     .30\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW TORK, July 7\u2014Alerting exchange steady at a3.55',i for flO-day\nbills and  at $3,66^   for demand.\nForeign bar silver 2fl3_  cents.\nCanadian dollars 12 \\_ per cent\ndiscount.\nrranca   3.92%   cents.\nLire  B.10,4   cents.\nUruguay   47.25   centa.\nForeign and Domestic\nBond Issues Close Up\nNEW TORK, July 7.-Confllctlng\nforces were at play ln the bnntl\nmarket today, causing considerable\nchurning up ln prtccs, but average\nclosed higher for both foreign and\ndomestic Issues.\nAfter an early advance to new\nhigh levels for the year, the German 6'.\u25a0_,\u00bb reacted for a net loss\nof 3|>. points and the 7s drifted\ndown l'_. points. Oerman municipals\nwere off 1 to around 3 or 4 points.\nBut other foreign governments retained their recent firmness, Belgian. Bulgarian, Finnish, French,\nDanish and British bonds registering\ngains ranging frnm fractions to 4\npoints. South American securities\nwere also strong.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMWN^ATOLrs, Minn., July 7\u2014\nHour 10 higher. Carload lots family\npatsnts'4.30 to 4.40 a barr.1 In 08-\nreund cotton sacks. __lpm.n_ 17,-\n869:   bran  8.S0  to  8.00.\nWheat No. 1 nor. _4i. to 56'.;\nNo. 1 red durum 42Vi to 43vi; July\n_4V4;   Sept.   50_;   Dec.   83.\nCorn; No. 3 yellow 36 to 37.\nOats;   No. 3  whits  18 _   to 30.\nFlax.;  N\u00bb 1. 98'.   to  1.02!..\nMONTREAL   PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, July 7\u2014Firmer tendencies were experienced on ths\nproduce dairy market here today.\nButter advanced, being quoted ut\n16'i oent_ a pound for carlots or\nless or No. 1. To retailers solids at\n18 cents and prints at 19 cents a\npound were llrm. Receipts were 222\nboxes.   .\nCheese eased, becoming 9_ to 9%\ncents a pound for Ontarlos and 9'i\nto 9>. cents for Quebecs. Receipts\nwere 8118  boxes.\nEggs were sll.htly higher, quota.,\ntlons being 31 cents for extras, 17\ncent* for firsts and 14\", to 15 cents\na dozen for seconds. Receipts were\n2311  cases.\nTHE TIRE that\nTAUGHT THRIFT\nto- THOUSANDS\/\nLOW prices on tires is one thing\u2014extra quality at low prices\nis quite another and that's what you get in Firestone\ntires. At prices no higher than for ordinary tires, Firestone gives\nyou these extra values s\no\nGiim-nippod   for\nExtra Strength\nGum-Dipping-  prevents  internal friction and heat. By\nactual test it increases thc\nlife of the cords by 58%.\n2 Extra Cord Plies\nUnder the Tread\nGive 69% greater adhesion between the tread and cord body\nand 26% extra protection against\npunctures and blowouts.\nSilent, Non-Skid\nTread\nWider . . . thicker . .. tougher\n... the Firestone quiet running,\nscientifically designed tread\ngives 25% more non-_l_id wear.\nYou owe it to yourself and\nyour family to equip .our car\nwiih Firestones\u2014the strongest\nand safest of tires. Your local\nFirestone Dealer can supply\nyou -with Firestone-built tires\nin every price class. Sec him\ntoday.\n0\nHIGH   SPEED   TIRES\nDEALERS NELSON AND DISTRICT\nSMEDLEY GARAGE CO.\nNEXT DOOR TO P. 0.\nPHONE. 71\nSOLD AND SERVICED BY\n-AT DILL'S S.S.S\nW. DESJARDIHS\nINELSON, B.C.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nSold and Serviced in TRAIL by\nTHE MOTOR INN\nBay and Portland Sts.\nPUONE 223\n__.\t\n\t\n\t\n_________________________\n______\n ,i _s\u2014 NT.L'O.    WHT SEWS. NELSON, B. f. \u2014 IT. .PAT IMMM,  -FIT 8, 113.\nSUMMER\nFICTION\nbf Popalsr Authors\n25c, 35cand 50c\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nSTRAWBERRIES\nSUFFER UNDER\nRAW AT COASTS\nWeek-End Supply Effected by\nHeavy Rains; B.C. Berries\nFlood Prairie\n_.\u2014i\u2014_-\n|    VICTORIA.   Jul.   7\u2014The   we._en_\nsupply   cf   .trawb.rrl.s   that  showed\nThe\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\n______    AMI    R.T-KDAY\nM'tllUS\n_0   IBS.   GRAM'LATED\nS. (.AR \u00bbl.tO\n1  111. M U.KIV.   OK NABOB\nTK\\   nil   COFFEE    tH\nI   I II.   01 It  CHOICE\nCREAMERY   III TTER '.'\nA Jt.l.LV IMIWIlERS  :.\">\n4  US.  FRESH,\nJl'icy    DATE_ -   J\">\n4-IB.   CAN   STRAWBERRY\nOR    RASPBERRY   JAM    ...    ._U\n4   CANS   SOCKEYE\nSALMON.    _ .     .'\"I\n3   CANS   I'll.* HARDS        .'_.\n..   I'KTS.   IRISH   ASSORTED\nCHRISTIE'S   BISCI ITS    ...\nCORNED   BEEF,  |mt till      .13\n1    III.   TIN   S.MOhlD\nVfElNERS      .H\n1   IB.   TIN   SAl SAOE    VI\n1   I.AROE   JAR   PICKLES    3.-,\n1    BOTTLE   TOMATO\nCATSIP     U\nI   IB.  sl.KED  BACON      .17\nTOMATOES.  PEAS, CORN  OR\nBEANS,    0    lor      1.00\nPHONE   110\nPatronize   ymir   horn,    store   anil\nkeep  jour   mow*,   In   Nelson.\nAVE    DELIVER   FREE.\npumbu shipped eight nr. of etrsw-\n\u201eer::es   w~:.n   _.'.   se:::t:_   et   .3 00\nper  cra_;   three   cars   ol   lettu.J   a'.\n'..  per  crate  and   two  cara  of  hot.\ni _o'.i_e toma: -ea at 14 per crate. On.\n[ tarlo shipped two cars ol strawberries\nIn  .$_____   crates.  These   are  _.llln_\n3 75   per   crate.   Imported,   live\ntomatoes,   one   cucumbers,   two\napplea, or_) onlona, two cherries, two.\ncanteloupes, one p:acbe., one plums!\nand one mlse. trulls.\nVANIIIHI.K\nExcerpt Irom report of Brltta.\nColumbia Livestock Exchange, litd.,\nJune __, 1932. Cattle: Trading In\ncattle waa active ail wee. with\nprices well maintained In lln. with\n._'\/*_.. markets. Bulk of steers sold\nIrom H.85 to .5.-5 with few tops at\nthe effect of the recent h \u00abvy .am 6 \u00ab,._(, _,,\u201e. _nd veaU) bcl_ lU,__,\nIs now all cleaned up and a firmer i.,, WMk wlth ._-, _ti,t u - cem.\ntone ls sain prevailing on this anl _^__._ _, _,_ _.nUi Ho-e:\nmarket, says the market news letter Ho_, tr__ln- ,h0wed steady move-\ntrom  the department of agriculture.  mellt   -,,th   prl0M   unchanged   from\nTRAIL CLUB DR0B!Rf\u2122J^^TO 'CAUFORNIA AND\nOUT OF KOOTENAY be ready, weekend! SEATTLE PLAYERS\nREMAINJOT\" PLAY\nOne Vancouverite Remains in\nMen's Singles Western\nCanada Play\nBASEBALL LEAGUE\nMove Believed Made in Best\nInterest of Trail Baseball\nFollowing\nat Victoria. The se__son will be\nlengthened t little by the added\nmoisture. Local Hcyal  Anne   c.-.errles\nlast week's quotation*. Sheep: The\nlamb and mutton market held steady\nalj   week   under   comparatively  light\nEGG PRICES ARE\nON UPWARD SWING\nSo  Declares   S.  K.   Boweil,\nDominion Egg Inspector\nat Nelson\nTor  a  ______  Time   Onlv\nJERCENS   I.IMONKI. T    TOILET\nMl.IP\nIt   Finals\nSPECIAL\u20143   TAKES\nfor   \t\nw\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's PiKpon-*injf Cbamtota\nPHONE   34 BUY   lOtt\nare  now  offering at   8  cents  pzx  !*\u00bb\u25a0 j r_relpt_i. Yearlings and heavy mutton\nB!ng   cherries   will   arrive   from   the | cotUlnue   ^  ^  harder  to sell  with\n.Okanagan   'n t  few   days.   California   tM    advent    of    more   choice   well-\n\u25a0y^a.hes,  i-lums  and   apricots  ar*   ln | nnl8hed lamb3 on the inar__;-t.\nj plentiful    supply.    Canteloupes     are j \t\nselling   at   14.78   tot   45's   and   |U0\nfor tr*. Tomatoes are down In pric?,l\n\u25a0 N.i.   1  ls quoted at 99  tnd No. 2, at\n$:_.5_   per   crate,   loci]   new   potatoes\nare   offered   at   ft 24    per    100   lbs,\nand    mainland    potatoes    at    $1.60.\nCarrots   are  quoted   at   25   cents   per\nI dozen   bunches   and   onions   at   30\n| o^nts.\nj EDMONTON\nj The strawberry market was wreck-\n>\u25a0 ed on Saturday by the c rrlval of\n11400 crates In very bad condition\njand M'-nday's arrivals of 1200 la\ni worse condition, which are selling\n! for what ls offered. A few raspberries,\n' logans and red currant- are arriving.\n, British Columbia cherries. Royal\n! Annes,   Tar:arians   and   Deacons   ar;\narriving In fair condition and se._-\n,lng at |2.25 to $2.50. Hothouse to-\nj matoes, ln 4-basket crates, are of-\nI fered at 12.90 to *3. Head lettuce\n'is In slow demand at 92.50 to S3.\n\\Th--.ro is an ample supply of local\n[lettuce of excellent quality now on\nj the market. New potato demand\n(slow at 2',| to 3 cents p?r lb. Caull-\n| flower  ls  scarce  at  |1.25  per  crate.\nBrltl-.:.  Columbia bunch  carrots and\nbeets are in  good  demand   but  local\nsupplies    will    noon    bo    available.\nCar arrivals. British Columbia, strawberries   4914     rates   I..C.L.   and   one\ncar. lettuce 2, fruit and vegetables 4.\nWashington  one   car  of   apples   and\none. ol tomatoes from Mississippi,\nWINNIPEG\nWeather Is ccol and business fair.\nDuring   the   past   week   British   Co-\nrn.Mh, b. c, July ;\u2014The Ml\nBaseball rlulj txesOtttt tonli.Lt\ndecided tu .-tlll.uraw from the\nKootenay   baseball   league   and   to   I Tn\nYou'd Want\ntmau^mvti\ntires even if they\ncost dollars more\nthan other tires\u2014\nBUT THEY DON'T!\nWo know lollti who would gladly pay a premium\n-for Goodyaar Tires. But they don't hava tol\nGoodyears coat no mora than any othar tiras you\nwould put on your car.\nTha axtra quality in Goodyean la titra valua for\nyour money. Thair axtra milaaga, axtra aafaty,\naxtra atamlna ara a bonus\u2014for which you pay\nnothing.\nGat thia axtra lomething! Uta Goodyaars! Ltt\nua ahow you!\nPHONE 35\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nThe egr market In interior British\nColumbia has developed a decidedly\nfirm trend, and, prices are now definitely on the up swing, says S. B.\nB;well, Dominion *gg Inspector of\nNelson. At practically every point\nproduction has slacked below consumptive requirements, with the result that demand everywhere ls keen,\n'with dealers seeking new sources of\naipply.\nPfices in the Kootenays hava not\nreacted as rapidly as they would\nunder normal business conditions,\nbut have advanced about 5 cents all\naround since tbt upturn started,\nand will likely register further advance aj the beginning of next\nweek.\nOkanagan markets have responded more quickly, and are now about\n10 cents abevo low mark for the\nseason.\nThere has been conelderabl-s\nslaughtering of hens In aH parts of\nthe territory, and some producers\nhav* endeavored to cheapen the\nfeed ration, with disastrous results\nas far as production ls concerned.\nHowever, everyone is prepared with a\ngood stock of pullets for fall laying,\nwhen they should represent a tidy\nprofit.\nNelson prices for next week will b\u00ab\nwholesaler to producer: Extras 15,\nfirsts 13, pullet extras 10.\nRetailer to pr.ducer: Extras 20,\nfirsts 18, pullet extras 15. Retail\nextras 25, firsts 20, pullet extras  15.\nWhere specials are on the market\nthey are selling at 30, and will\nlikely  go to 35 ln  the near future.\noperate   as   a   purely   Independent\nunit   henceforth.\nCIAB'H   BOOKS   CLEAU\nThe ac-ion was taken ln the general Interests of the Kootenay Baseball league and the Tra.1 base ha!1.\nfollowing. The club executive was\ninformed that tha club'* books wn.\nclear ond that from now on It\nwould endeavor to keep them that\nway.\nI.N   SEARCH   OF\nCHAMPIONSHIP\nlyi addition to Its proposed trip\nto Vancouver In search of the provincial baseball championship, the\nclub will endeavor to bring to Trail\nfans first class clubs, Including Fort\nWright, tlie House of David, the\nKansas City Bloomers, the Calgary\nhucksters, and other teams in this\nclass.\nMOVE  IN   INTEREST\nOF  BASEBALL.\nThla move was believed by the\nexecutive to ba ln the best interests\nof local baseball, and it ls hoped\nthat tha result will ba the encouragement of Junior players who\nhave developed rapidly In the past\nyear, as shown by the present team,\ncomposed largely of youngsters, with\nseveral older heads to guide them\nalong.\nVICTORIA, July 7\u2014The report of\nhis honor, Judg- Peter S. l_a:ppman,\nwho was appointed a special commissioner by the board cf governors\ncl the University of British Columbia to Investigate differences existing\nwithin the confines of the Vancouver\nIMUtUta of learning, will b* avail-\nftMa to the governors over the weekend.\nJudge    I.?-npman    has    co-npleted\nhis   1 nvestigition   and   .as   prepared\nhis report wnlch ls now being typed.\nlcclngs   ci   the   rommiKloner\nThe....\nFlash Swim Sui\nVANCOUVER, July 7^-Most of thc\nSeattle and Cahforn.a players managed to stay ln the running u. the\nannual western Canadian tennis\nchampionships  were  narrowed   do*n\nj \u00ab.\u2022\"-\u25a0\u25a0*>   V*    \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '    ----- i to the aeml-nnals today at hte Van-\n! ptoi.k5ly W made public early next, ^^   ^^   Tenals   Ciub.   Seattle\nwill  go direct t-_  the board of  governor*,   of   the   university   and   will |\nweek-\nNew Preferences\nEnable Empire to\nKeep Empire Trade\nTask of Imperial Conference\nIs Diversion of Much Buying to Empire\nNELSON JUNIOR\nBALL TEAM TO\n\u2022 INVADE TRAIL\nAllan McLean Will Start the\nHurling for the Nelsonites;\nSmith k_sts\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nThe   New   noating   Pavilion   tor\ndancing. Saturday Nite. (MO)\nDaughters of Scotia meet tonfght\nin K. P. Hall 8 o'clock. (2913)\nPresh Strawberry Soda-\u2014That's our\nnew drink\u2014Try it\u2014 Getlna*'.  (2838)\nDaughters    of    England    special\nmeeting this afternoon at 3 o'clock.\n(2014)\nSuits $24. Rex Tailoring Co., Ud.\nllftcDcmaid agent, IUH Baker st.\n(2841)\nThe Nelson Junior representative\nbaseball team, will Journey to TraU\non Sunday to play the eecond game\nol the series to decide the lnter-city\nchampions. Trail won the first game\nplayed In. Nelson a couple of weeks\nago, but at that time the local team\nhandicapped through having no\npractice period.\nSince then the team has been practicing steadily with the senior club\nand has shown a great improvement\nboth In batting and lu the field, and\nexpect to tie up the series In Sunday's game.\ni_)ue to his been only 15 yara old,\nsome criticism has been hurted fc_\nthe team ofiicials that they are overworking Stevo Bmlth, whoee pitching\nhaa been the feature of the presen.\nseason, as there ls some danger of\nruining his future prospects, but now\nAllan McLean has struck his true\n.orm, there will be no necessity to\noverwork Smith lu the luture,\n.UcLEAN I1LRLS\nMcLean will be started In Sunday's\ngumc, with Smith been held ln reserve. McLean will bo allowed to go\n_he route If his form warrants It.\nThe following players will make the\ntrip: Clarence Wilson, Howard Moore,\nHarry Btirzaker, Hoy Anderson, Jim\nuppset Teddy Romano, Pat Duffy;\nS'-cve Scott, Lome Stewart, A*ilan McLean and Steve Smith.\nSummer   Boarders,   Sandy   Beach.\n1 Mrs. Oakes, B. R.  1. Phone 471R3.\nMMJ\nAttention! Extra pants free (String\nmonth of July at Ideal Tailors.\n(2885)\nParty going to California. Can\ntake one passenger, enquire suite 40.\nAnnable   block. .2889)\nDANCE\u2014OUTLET   HOTEL,   PROC-\nTFR,  SATURDAY,  JULY 8.  AO-VIIK-\n|  HON   50c   and   23c. (2904)\nScandinavian baaket picnic rifle\n' range. Sunday, July 10, under\" man-\n! igcment,   Vassa   Lodge. (2925)\nBoard of Trade to\nSend Condolences\nt o M i s s Arthur\nPANCE\u2014OUTLET HOTEL, PROCTER. BATURDAY, JULY 9. ADMISSION 50c AND Mill (2901)\nTwo ladies would share expenses\nto Vancouver within a few days\nwith carfeul drlvw. Phone 668Y.\n(20OA)\nOn motion of If. M. Whimster, the\nboard of trade council Thursday\nplaced on Its records its sense of loss\nIn the death of Dr. E. C. Arthur,\none of the board's mart active members, and also one or its founders.\nIn offering his motion, which also\ndirected Secretary D. a. McFaxland\nto write a letter of condolence to\nMiss Margaret Arthur, Dr. Arthur's\ndaughter, Mr. Whlmst-T described\nDr. Arthur as one of the board's mos.\nactive supporters, active in every\nsense, anj nt*t a passive participant.\nE. E. L. Dewdney seconded the motion, which was adopted unanimously.\nNelson Folk Take\nUp Residence at\nYankee Girl Mine\nELKS' TAXI, TRANSFER\nti FREIGHT, LTD.\nPhone 77\nMoved to 511 Baker Street\nNEXT TO GOLDEN GATE CAFE\nOperating as usual. AU loads Insured.\nBud Stevens, Mgr.\nNelson News Depot news stand will\noperate temporarily at Con Cummins\n44 Taxi Office on Baker street.\n(2924)\nRoberK-on Realty Co.. Limited,\ntalk taken temporary offices, Room\n18, K. W, C Block, across hall from\nDr.  Rose  and  McKenzle.\nFISHING\nIs Good\nThe water is going down and lhe Fish\nare biltinj,.\nLet us supply your requirements from\nthe largest stock of Fishing Tackle in\nthe interior.\nProcure . our Angling Licences at our store.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale - NELSON, B. C. - Retail\nYER, THERE IS A NEffSTAND W\nTOWN. E. F. Jarvis at the William's\nNews stand. Across from the Daily\nNews. Papers, books, magazines, candies and  tobaccos., (2908)\nDANOE\nJoe Vingo and hSl music will be\nback at Ainsworth every Sat. nite\ncommencing July fi. Prize, swims,\nnovelties. *29I2)\nDance Midway Pavilion. Castlegar,\nFVloay, July 8. Billy Reld and his\ncrlterlans, Trail's popular orchestra,\nfeaturing Ted Landers, Prince or\nRythm as master  of  ceremonies.\n(3897)\nYMIR.B. C, July 7.\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nAlvlr Johnson of Nelson have taken\nup residence at the Yankee Girl\nmine.\nMr. and Mrs. Johnson have as\ntheir guest. Mrs. Johnson's sister.\nMlss Tlllle Erlckson.\nMrs. Murray of Hall has as her\nguest Mrs.  Bear of Bpokane.\nMrs. Leslie Bond and her young\nson have returned home from the\nKootenay Lake Oeneral hospital at\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Slattery and fam\nlly spent Tuesday at the How \/ d\nmine.\nOTTAWA, July 7 (By B. K- Sand-\nwell, p. R, 8. 0U Queen's University)\n(CP)\u2014Every nation which has control ot its own tariff may oe saJd\nto do Its selling where lt can and\nita buying where lt likes.\nWheat, coal, steel, oil. lumber, are\naccepted only where they are wanted. Money ls accepted everywhere.\nThe aeller of goods Is greatly limited in the choice of customers. Tlie\nbuyer of goods in free tp bu\u00bb\nwhere he will. Under free trade the\nchoice is largely In the hands of the\nindividual, with a tariff, and particularly wtth a graded tariff, such\nas that of Canada, it rests to a\nconsiderable extent with the government.\nBefore the ws^ the empire got on\nvery well each of its member countries doing its selling where it could\nand Ita buying where lt liked. The\ncombined buying outside of the empire did hot exceed the combined\nselling to countries outside of the\nempire, by more than the amount of\nincome which the empire was entitled to collect from outside countries In return for the capital which\nit ha^ lent to them.\nAfter the Vt* things were found\nto be changed. Great Brlta-ln no\nlonger had anything like th^, same\namount of Income coming In from\ncapital lent to other countries; and\nthe rest of the Empire, notably\nCanada, had Immense sums going\nout every year in payment for capital which they had borrowed from\noutside the Empire and sold more\nto non-Empire countries. But, to\nWpeat the observation at the beginning of this article, nations do\ntheir (idling where they can and\ntheir buying where they like. And\nthe nations of the Empire wea^ lesa\nand less able to sell outside of the\nempire and they apparently liked\nmore and more to buy outside of\nthe empire,\nThis does not of course mean the\ncitizens of the members countries\nreally preferred to do their buying\nfrom outsiders, but that circumstances made it easy lor them to do\nso, and that they had not yet pe\u00bb-\nfected their organization for divesting that buying power to their own\nfellow members, Oreat Britain, for\nexample made no effort to direct its\nbuying power by means of a tariff\nuntil a few months ago. Canada, in\nspite of having a partially effective\npreferential tariff which was surp-\npoeerf to direct Its buying to empire\ncountries, continued until well Into\nthe present depression to spend from.\n#200,000,000 to \u00ab300.000,000 less With\nBritish countries than they spent\nwith her, an<] about 1200,000,000\nmore with non-British countries\nthan they spent with her.\nAn empire which haa to pay more\nfo,. goods bought and debts and\ninterest due, to foreign countries\nthan it collects from them for goods\nsold and debts and interest due,\nmust settle th* balance in gold\nmoney. And If the process goes on\nlong enouRh it will begin to run\nshort of fcfld. This is the essentlru\nreason for the inability of AustraSa,\nGreat Britain and Canada to remiin\n\"on the golfj ba-s's:\" they were losing too much gold.\nAnd the main concern of the Imperial Economic conference? t hlch\nwill shortly sit at Ottawa Is to devise ways and means for directing\nthe purchasing power of the member\ncountries of the empire towards\ntheir fellow-member countries, ana\ntheir fe^low-memebr countries, and\naway from the outsids countries\nsnd especially from those which\nshow least willingness to buy empire  goods.\nTo direct purchasing power from\nnon-empire countries, by means of\ntariff duties, ia a simple matter. To\ndecide whether that purchasing\npower should, In any given case and\nany given country, be directed towards produoers ln that country or\nproducers Jn another country of the\nempire ls a more delicate matter.\nSome of the considerations which\nshould   be  borne   Jn   mind  will   be\nhas two men remaining in the singles\nand California and Vancouver -one\napiece. The lone Californian 1* 15-\nyear-old Don Budge the Vancouverite lt T. O. Ryall of'jericho, and the\nbeattle men, Frank Prusoff and MeJ\nDranga. Cyril Hobbs, furnished the\nfirework* of the quarter finals by\ntaking Dranga, tournament favorite\nto  three  sets.\nRyall and Jack Brawn of the Vancouver club figured lu a well-played\nmatch, with IM former walking oif\nwith the former winning fl-2, 6-3.\nPrusolf did not have a great deaj\nof trouble with Henry Neer as be beat\nhim 8-6, fl-2.\nDon Budye's game proved much\ntoo steady Ior Young Bou Johnson ci,\nPortland, who went out 6-1, 6-2. j\nThe sensation of the day w._* the\ntriumph of Don Campbell and Bud i\nxiocklng of Victoria over the Pacific\nnurthwest secilcnal champion, Don\ni-cwis and Henry neer In the men'a\nuoubles. They wotj 6-7, 8-6 6-1. Considerable ot the edge was'taken off\nthtt victory, however, when the sur-\nIvors went down before the mighty\n.asey ot San Francisco and the sien-\ndcr young Henry Rosenberg of '\u00a3acuta* ln a later match fl-4, 6-3.\nPrusoff  and  Jolins;n polished  off\nftyall  and  Oeorge  Dixon,  Vancouver\ntars, 6-4,  6-1,  in  a hard-hitting\nmatch In which  the visitors piayeu\nunbeatable   tennis.   They   will   meet\nOeorge  Sparling and Jack Muir, tht\nonly Vancouver team letf, in the scinl-\nlm-ls. Muir and Sparling accounted\nor Perry  Swartz an_i  James  Kluney\nof San Francisco 10-tt, 6-2. Casey and\niosenberg  will be opposed  by Robb\nand Budge.\nKAIVN   WHEELER WINS\ncracyn Wheeler and Theo. Smith\ndc.lghted   a good-sized  gallery   with\n.n'ir ladles' quarter final battle. Miss\n\/heeler, a moet perfect stylist with\na splendid repertoire of strokes, won\nout 8-6, 8-7.\nTwo .Vancouver people reached the\nsemi-flnais, Mrs. Mary Haggart qual-\n-ylng to meet Miss Wheeler by tak-\nng Carolyn Fringess, Tacoma junior,\ninto camp fl-4, fl-l and Marjorle\nOrelg overcoming Susie Milne 6-4, 7-i)\n_o move up into a bracket with Dorothea Swartz of txa Francisco. The\nlatter won from Jean Milne, city\nchampion, fl-2   6-1.\nNo matches \"were played In the ladies' doubles which reached ths seml-\n_inal stage Wednesday. One Vancouver team is left In the mixed, Muriel\n.vlunro and Dune. Williams qualifying\nto meet Miss Wheeler and Don Lpwi..\noy downing Nora Robinson and Bev-\nKhodes. Miss Wheeler and Lewis were\nextended to Vess O'Shea and Jack\nJrawn. Scores were 3-6, 6-4, 6-3,\nMiss Bwartz and Casey meet Mlss\niTringess and Rosenberg in the other\njracket, tlie latter having put out\nihe strong team of Leo. Smltl* and\njames Kinney, 6-4, fl-4.\n\u2666VOOD AND MANGIN\nADVANCE TO IRISH\nTENNIS SEMI-FINALS\nDesigned by\nJohnnie Walker\nJOHNNIE WALKER, Canada's fo\nJ most swimming; coach, created\nnew \"Flash\" Swim Suit.\nThe \"Ilash\" desifm is entirely difl\nent. The cut of back and shoulder,\nlows absolute freedom of arm, shouh\nand body movement without the slig\nest strain or pull. It gives utmost nwi\nming comfort.\nThe Choice of Champions\nTry the \"Flash\" this Summ_r\nlearn why it is the choice of such cha\npions as George Young , Marga:\nKavior, Kuth Downing, Ernst Vierko\nter and a host of Mhers.\nPlain and fancy patterns\u2014a wi\ncolour range.\n(Prices)\n$2.50-$2.9.\n_-.______       With ..err \"Fln\u00bbh\" Swimming S\n* lW\u2014       Johnnie Walker', own book\n\u2022The Art or Swlmmlnl\"\nEmory's LtcL\nWe Close at 5:30\nBOARD OF TRADE\nPLANS TO VISIT\nFAIR AT HARROP\nAccepts  Invitation   for September 7; Turns Down\nEdgewood\nInvitations to attend the West Arm\nfall fair on September 7, and to attend the Edgewood snd Inonoatlln\nValley fair opening, September 14,\nwere dealt with by the Board of Trade\nTTursaay, the council acting in all\nmatters for the board until the summer recess is over, the next board\nmeeting being In September.\nIt was decided to accept the invitation for Hiirrop end to make Its\nfair the objective of this year's excursion, and Secretary D. A. McFar-\nlanil waa instructive to so advise Mrs.\nW. J. McConncll, who wrote on behalf of the Harrop organization.\nKIKJICHOOOD KOI\nMEASIBUl\nThe board attended tiie Edgewood\nand Inonoaklin Valley fair last year,\ntaking up a party of 70 and staying\ntwo days, and Secretary McFarland\nwas instructed to write Secretary w.\nDUBLIN, July 7.-Sldney B. Wood|H. Cowell that for that reason, and\nand Gregory Mangin, representing\n.he International Tennis club of New\nVork, today advanced to the eemi-\nlinal round of the Irish tennis championships.\nWood defeated A. E. Fannin of Ireland in straight sets t*i 1, 6-3,\nwhile Mangin eliminated *E. A. Ma-\nquire, the defending champion, 7-5.\ntf-3, 2-6, 6-3. Tbe otuer semi-final tuts\nare H. F. Cronln of Ireland \u00bbu_t A.\nacobsen  of  Denmark.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nLoe   Angeles        6    6    1\n&: 1  Francisco        3   7   2\nBaccht   and   Campbell;   Zinn   and\nyvaligren.\nPortland       4- 11   0\nSacramento        1    5    0\nShores and Palmlsmo; Flynn, Salvo\nand Wilts.\nSeattle        7   8   2\nOakland        1   6   1\nKalllo and CJ-x; Thomas and Gaston.\nMissions        3   7   2\nHollywood     10 17   :\nBowler, H. Pillette, Lieber and Hof-\ninann;  Page and Bastler.\n711 HT.'.NI.EY AT.      PHONE 19H\nfor the additional one that the\nEdgewood fair will be held on the\nsame date__ as the Nelson one, Including the date of the visit of the\ngovernor-general to Nelson en September 16. the board, while expressing\nth..nks for the Edgewood Invltrticn,\nmust decline lt.\nSome members suggested the possibility of arranging ior a small delegation to go to Edgewood. but H.\nM. Whimster argued that whatever\nthe board did It wanted to do well,\nand that under the circumstances\nit could not make a success of a trip\nto Edgewood.\nVice-president C. H. Hamilton was\nln the chair.\nWEST AJtM MAKES\nSMALL COMEBACK\nI. O. O. F.\nAll members Kootenay Lodge No.\n16, I. O. O. F. meet ln Fraernlty hall\n1:30 p. m. Saturday, July 9, for purpose of conducting funeral of late\nBrother Dr. E. C. Arthur, P. O. M.\n(2622)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nHULLS\u2014Mrs. Thorald, of 604 Firth\nstreet, Nelson, passed away Wednesday. Funeral services from the Somers Funeral Home Saturday at 3:30.\nRev. W, C. Mawhlnney officiating.\n(2923)\nFl'NfcKAL NOTICE\nARTHUR\u2014Dr. E. C, of 515 Silica\nstre'*;, Nelson, age 75 years, passed\naway Wednesday. Funeral from the\nisomer's Funeral Home Saturday at\n2 p. m. Rev. W. C. Mawhlnney and\nVen. Archdeacon F. H. Graham of-,\nflclatlng. U321.\nMrs. Dalgas to Spend\nVacation at Victoria\nBRILIilAJiT, B. C July 7\u2014Mlsa\nG8--elle Splller, principal of tlie\nBrilliant schools is visiting for a\nfew weeks in the district, prior to\nspending the latter part of the\nschool vacation visiting her parents,\nat Fauquier's Landing.\nMrs. Dalgas left to spend the vacation at her home in Victoria.\nMlss Krooshkln has left to spend\nher vacation at the family home ln\nTrail.\nMlsa Cliisholm has taken chirgeof\nthe Canuuian Girls in 1 raining camp\nat Koolaree.\nA framed picture of the Canadian coat of arms, waa received at\nthe school recently from the Canadian club at Vancouver.\nMercury Registers\nRise of 5 Degrees\nDeclining steadily for nearly a week,\nthe mercury made Its wcond rise at\nNelson Thursday, rising five degre\nfor a high temperature of 99 degrees.\nThe low temperature during the 24-\nhour period ended at 5 o'clock Thursday altcrnoon was 42 dCe'reer.\nAfter dropping nearly half a toot\nyeaterday for a low of J3,50 feet\nabove low water mark, the water\nlevel of the West Arm made Its\nfirst rise since the peak was reached\non June 19, gaining .05 foot for a\nlevel of  13.55  feet above low water\ndlscusse^   in  othe*  articles.  Suffice ; mark, according to the reading taken\nit  to say here that In the opinion   at noon Thursday.\nof   the   present   writer   no   country\nof   the   empire   is   called   upon   to\nkeep in view anything but its own\nbest interests, if those interests will\nbe best served by buying at home.\nthen \"buy at home\" ahould be the\npolicy,  if  they will  be  best served\nby buying In other empire countries,\nthen   \"buy   in   the   other   empire\ncountries\" should be the word. Jut\nobviously    the    interests    consulted\nmust be than of the country as a\nOne Seventh of B.C.\nPopulation Owned or\nOperated Cars, 1931\nB. C. STRAWBERRY\nCROP FAR SHORT\nOF THE DEMAND\nVICTORIA, July 7 (CP)\u2014The British Columbia strawberry crop has\nfallen fr*- short of the demand.\npreliminary check of the harvested\narea lndlcatrs. Field representative\nreports to t.^e provincial department\nof agriculture reveal a shortaga of\nprocessed berries running into hun>\ndreds of tons.\nThe Britlsji market will suffer\nthrough the shortage to the extent\nof between 500 and 700 tons, this\nquantity having been spoken for\nearly ln the year and practically\nguaranteed   to   the   importers.\nFears are being expressed that\nthe Inability of British Columbia\ngrowers to supply _lc demand for\nstrawberries, processed, in the overseas market, may further aggravate\nthe  Importers.\nNOTICE\nI wish to state that I have\nno connection whatsoever with\nthe Kootenay Advertising Specialty Co., B. c. Sign Co., or\npersons claiming to represent\nme from Trail, or other places.\nI carry on legitimate businesses\nunder   my   own   name   only.\nFRANK   DeWTJEST\nPhone\n35\nTAXI\nTUe Best of w.v\ncareful, Court..,\nDrivers\nNelson Iran.Ur Co., Ltd.\nGLASSES -\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST ANO OPTICIAN\nSUITE  Z09.20IMEOICA-ARTS IUILDIN1\n44\nTAXI   and\nTRANSFER\nDally Freight Schedule to Trail\nand Rossland: Ler-es Nelson at\n10 a.m. Trait Jtpp.it, Dominion\n(.arage. Uosslanrl Depot, I.. D.\nCafe. \u25a0    CON   CUMMINS.\nU-NEED-A FOOT LOTION\nFor  Tired,  Sweaty, Aching  Feet\nat\nSMYTHE'S\nPHARMACY\nPrescr Ipt Ions   Our   Specialty\nPHONE   1\nRead The EVclson  Dail\nNews Classified Ads.\nVICTORIA, July 7  (CP)\u2014Approximately one out of every seven  per-\nhons  In  British  Calumbla  owned  or\n. ..j operated   a  motor car,  passenger or\nwhole   and   not   ot  one   section   or; commercial,   or   motorcycle   in   1931.\ngroup or cla.ss.\nPolice Recover Large\nSum of Stolen Money\nFrom Winnipeg Bank\nWINNIPEO, July 7.-Poltce today\nsaid nearly #7000 of tho $8000 taken\nfrom a branch of tho Royal bank\nhere has been recovered, and intimated Ronald U Rideout. holdup\nsuspect at present in Buffalo, has\nmade certain ftatemcr.ts since his\narrest which will probably be used\nagainst  him  at  hi.  trial.\nManitoba has fun' claim on him,\npolice explained, and despite efforts'\nof authorities nt London, Ont., and\njSte. Anne de Bellevue, Que., to have\nhim   ctuBftd   there,   an   escort   of\nBerlin, Germany, now has a pop\nula.tlon   of    approximately   4,270.0001 Royal  Canadian  Mounted  pollce will\ninhabitants    This   la   10,000   fewer   be sent to Buffslo to bring Rideout\nthan   th^ last report. here  for hearing.\naccording to figures obtained from\nthe motor vehicle branch of the\nprovincial police, which keeps an\naccurate record of all motor registrations for th-3 province.\nThe figures show that in 1931\nthere were 96.498 motor cara registered in British Columbia. Of tuts\ntotal there were 79,699 passenger\nautos and 16,799 commercial cars in\noperation.\nSAMMY   STEIN-\nDEFEATS   Mct'READY\nMONTREAL, Ju'y 7\u2014 Earl Mc-\nCready, Amulet, Mik., former Canadian Olympic mat star, suffered\none of his few losses sines turning\nprofession when he went down before Sammy Stein of Newark, N. P.,\nhere tonight. Stein won the first fall,\nlost   the   second    and   captured    the,\nthird,  fltfln   weighed   203   and   Mc-\nCrcady   228.\nMatinee\n2 p.m.\nEvenings\n7 and 9 p.m.\n\\\\\\\\\\UU\/\/\/\/A\nWD\nTHEATRE\nSHOWING TODAV and SATURDAY\nGeorge O'Brien\nMystery Ranch\nSHORT FEATURES\nComedy\n.\nParamount News\nSaturdav Matinee\nSERIAL\nA beautiful girl\u2014captive of\n\"The Killer\" and his murderous henchmen\u2014rescued by a\nlone avenger amid the thunder of hoofs and the roar of\nelK-shooters,\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_1932_07_08","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\/1.0405626","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. 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."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1932-07-08 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/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]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1932-07-08 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]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}