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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":" %2\u00b0l\nExpect Heavyweight Gate to Be\nSmall Tonight\n\u2014 \u2014Pa&e Seven\nGerman Girls Go to Tennis Final\nat Wimbledon\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\nsins.   NELSON,   B.   C.   \u2014   IHIDAV    MnRMMi,   Jl'I.Y   S.   1?.11 HVE CENTS k COM\nNUMKIR   <*l\nFIGHT IIn JMTISH COMMONS\nSTORM RAGES\nAFTER HEAT M\nWEST ONTARIO\nFurther Deaths Reported\nas Result of Extreme\nHeat\nWIND SWEEPS THE\nNIAGARA DISTRICT\nTrees Uprooted and Telephone Services Are\nDisrupted\nVATICAN WANTS\nCATHOLIC CLUBS\nOPENED AT ONCE\nTORONTO, Ont., inly 2. (CP)\n\u2014Raging across Ontario with\nnear-hurricane velocity, wind\nand rain storms brought relief\nlate today from the heat waie\nwhich hai gripped the province\nTor   theree   adys.\nTerrific wind ln the Niagara\npeninsula district endangered\nmany lives. Fifty people were\nrescued from the Niagara river\nand Lake Erie points, as ihe\nsudden storm swept down. Many\nboats upset but life-saving crews\n\u25a0 and ooastuuards prevented fatalities. Trees were torn down\nand wire service Interrupted by\nthe storm at some points. Rain\nfell at many polnls ln the province.\nFIBTHKR   DEATHS   REPORTED\nFuther death* were reported 'n\nthe province today directly or indirectly due to the heat wave,\nJohn 7. Zolos, farmhand, was\nstricken ln the field* near Brant'\nford. Joseph Kearny of Quelph. collapsed while working on the highway. At Ouelph too, the body of\nPeter Scollnpaln was recovered from\nthe Speed river. At Lindsay, George\nPorter, fire, was drowned in the\nTrent canal. Oeorge Borkwood.,\nWoodstock, died due to the heat.\nas the car he waa driving left\nthp   road 4\nSoaring temperatures were blanwd\nfor four death,. In pttawa district\nbringing the two-day total to nine.\nWilliam Hives, 18, of Carsonby,\nsnd Rene Vllleneuve, 11, of Hawk-\nesbury. Que., were drowned in the\nOttawa river, Henry Jones, 33 of\nKamsayville, Ont., and Alexander\nSoullere. 80 ot Hull, died from\nprostration.\nThe Grand xlver claimed its\nthird life in the past two days when\nMarguerite Foster, eight, Brantford,\nwas swept to her death. Joseph\nOonnoll, 45. term worker, Mrs. Annie\nOearl. both of Hamilton; Ernest\nGeothollc. 61, Chatham farm hand,\nMrs. Elizabeth Dore, and John\nKobra. both of London, were victims\nof   heat   prostrations.\nDISCUSSION ON\nWALKATHON GETS\n\"HOT\" AT COAST\nVATICAN CITY, July 2. (AP)\n--The Vatican has taken the\nposition that Premier Mussolini\nmust reopen the Catholic clubs\nhe closed May 30, before \"im-\nleable discussions\" to settle the\ncontroversy between the Holy\nSee and the government can\nbegin.\nIt was learned today that ln\nthis note to the government\nyesterday the Vatican demanded\nproof of the government's statement that the clubs meet\ntn the chancery buildings In\nRome and enjoy extra-terrltort-\nallty, and have engaged In seditious discussions. The Vatleal\nalso insisted on most adequate\nexcuses for Insults to the pope.\nROBBINS, JONES\nTO TAKE-OFF AT\nDAWN SATURDAY\nPOPULAR YOUNG BRITISH M.P.\nHope    to   Make    Non-Stop\nFlight From Seattle to\nTftkio. Japan\nVANCOUVER, B. C July 2.\u2014Vancouver city council's consideration\nof \"walkathons\" developed into a\n\"talkathon\" Thursday afternoon as\naldermen, outstanding citizens, representatives or ministerial organisations and spokesmen for the walkathons plunged Into a frenzied discussion of the question.\nFrequently, during the discussion,\nopponents or proponents of these\nendurance- contests broke into applause as a particularly neat verbal\nmissile was launched, and toward\nthe end of the long session Mayor\nL. D. Taylor informed a capacity\naudience that the council would be\nable to conduct Its business more\nexpeditiously if the audience continued its arguments In the corridor.\nDefinite action by the council waa\npostponed until tomorrow afternoon,\nwhen J. B. Williams, city solicitor,\nwill submit a considered opinion regarding the council's powers in\ndealing   with  the   walkathons.\nWEST ST. JOHN\nWHARVES WILL\nBE BUILT AGAIN\nSEATTLE, July 2. (AP>\u2014At the\nbreak of dawn here Saturday morn-\nnlng, Reg. L. Robbins and H. S.\nJones, Texas aviators, hope to shoot\ntheir little white monoplane, \"Port\nWorth,\" into the sky over Seattle\nand start their propected 6100-mile\nnon-stop mld-alr refueling flight to\nToklo,  Japan.\nWith the exception of checking\nover their motor, which tbey plan\nto do tomorrow, the two Port Worth\nairmen were ready tonight to leave\non the dangerous adventure which\nhas never before been accomplished,\nalthough attempted a half-dozen\ntimes in the past.\nRobbins tonight telephoned refueling ship filers, J. J. Mattern and\nNick Greener, who are In Edmonton,\nAlta,, with a trt-motored machine,\nand learned that they were ready\nto leave for Fairbanks, Alaska, tomorrow.\nWILL   BE   REFUELED\nThe \"Fort Worth\" will be refueled\ntn mid-air at Fairbanks and at\nNome by Mattern and Greener, and\nthe two woulq>be Pacific fliers have\nto mark time ln Seattle until the\ntrl -motored ship reaches Its first\ndestination.\nToday Robbins and Jones checked\nover maps and charts of Alaska and\nSiberia with Grant Elliott and E. E.\nDildlne, two former pilots ln Alaska,\nand completed charting of their\ncourse.\nAt the suggestion of Elliott, the\nTexas aviators decided to fly to\nFairbanks over the \"inside\" route,\nvia the Fraser river to Prince George,\nB. C, Hazelton, Whitehorse and\nDawson, rather than follow the\ncoast line. Elliott believed this would\nbe the safer route of tho two.\nTENTATIVE   ROUTE\nA tentative route down the coast\nof Siberia was also charted tn case\nof bad weather on the coast. Robbins and Jones plan to follow the\ncoast to Kamchatka peninsula and\nthen strike out for the Kurlle\nIslands in a direct line to Toklo,\nbut in the event of severe storms\nln the Bering sea district they will\nmove inland.\nThe tentative course would take\nthem from Cape Nunyagma, across\nBering strait from Nome, inland to\nthe Gulf of Anadir, which they\nwould skirt on the westward side.\nFrom the gulf they would travel\ndown the coast, only Inland about\n100 miles, to, Olyutorskl gulf, over\nKaranglnskt island, in Baron Kork\ngulf, then over the Oulf of Kamchatka and then to the Kuriles.\nEXPORT INCREASE\nBENNETT'S WORK\nSTATES STEVENS\nNEW ZEALAND\nPROPOSES TAX\nON SALARIES'\nWELLINGTON, V. Z., July 2.\u2014\n(Apt\u2014A special emergency lav\nof .30 per cent, on al) salaries,\nwages and Income earned and\nunearned. Irrespective of m or\noccupation, Is the chief provision of the unemployment\namendment bill Introduced In\nIhe house of representatives today by the minuter of labor.\nThe hill, which was given first\nreading, In an emergency measure to go Into operation tor\none year from August I. It Is\nexpected to yield an additional\nsi,.r.oiMin to the revenue of the\nunemployment board, bringing\nthe total of the hoard's revenue\nto about il2.5M.ooo within a\nyear for purposes of relieving\nunemployment.\nTha. existing flat levy for unemployment of \u00bbti a year, which\nIs-not paid by women workers,\nIs reduced to $5.\nMONASTERY IN\nSPAIN BURNED\nBY GREAT MOB\nThree Thousand Rioters]\nHeld at Bay  by\nBayonets\nMAKE ATTEMPT ON\nOTHER BUILDINGS\nCOAST TRAFHC\nINJURES FOUR\nIN SHORT TIME\nCoruna   Crowd   Streams\nFrom Bull Fight to Do\nBurning\nTO   MAKE   TOlR   OF   AMERICA\nMiss Jennie Lee. most fashionable of the lady members of the English parliament, who is soon to leave for the United States to make a\nlecture tour of the country. Her charming manner, as well as smart attire,\nalways  attracts  much  attention   In   the   British   parliament.\nBRITISH GOVERNMENT BELIEVES THE\nFRENCH DELAY DANGEROUS BUSINESS\nPHONE THE DAILY\nNEWS FOR''FIGHT\nRESULTS TONIGHT\nResults of the Strib-\nling-Schmeling heavyweight fight to be\nfought in Cleveland tonight may be obtained\nby phoning the Nelson\nDaily News editorial office after 8 o'clock.\nPhones 144 and 143.\nCANADIAN- U. S.\nFRIENDSHIP IS\nA FINEEXAMPLE\nPremier S. F. Tolmie Stresses\nPoint in Speech Across\nBorder\nSAINT JOHN, N. B., July a.\u2014\n\"We have been given authority by\nthe government to commence worlt\nJmmedUtety ln rebuilding West\nSaint John.\" said H. C. Scholleld,\nchairman ot the Saint John board\nof harbor commissioners, who arrived home today. He was accompanied by High Buaver, espert on\nocean terminals on the staff ot\nSir Alexander Gibb, English port\nAuthority, engaged by the Dominion\ngovernment to make a survey of its\nnationalized   ports.\nThe port facilities were almost all\ndestroyed ln a no.000.000 fire on\nJune 33. Mr. Schofleld said the\ngovernment had met the Saint\nJohn situation sympathetically and\nwith   heartiest   practical   support.\nWOUNDED MAN\nIS RUSHED TO\nMEDICAL CARE\nEDMONTON, Alta., July 2\u2014 Rushed from Port McMurray in a Canadian Airways airplane piloted by\nPilot Archie McMulIen, George Sanderson, a trapper, waa in hospital\nhere tonight, resting nicely after a\nleg amputation. Sanderson had been\naccidentally shot when mistaken for\na deer.\nOTTAWA, Ont., July 2. (OP)\u2014The\nincrease of 3,000,000 bushels of\nwheat exported to Prance during the\nfirst four months of the present\ncalendar year was due to the visit\nof the prime minister to that republic last fall, Hon. H. H. Stevens,\nminister of trade and commerce,\ntold the house of commons tonight.\nMr. Benrfett had very satisfactory\ninterviews with French officials, and\nthe increased exports could be attributed to these.\nT. J. Donnell (Liberal, Willow\nBunch) challenged the statement.\nIn previous years Canada had exported from 12 to 20 million bushels of wheat to Prance, but the\npresent rate of export amounted to\nbarely 12.000,000 bushel* annually,\nIf averaged. He did not think the\npremier had been \"on the Job.\" The\nincrease was due to Prance having\nwidened the quota of.foreign wheat\npermitted to French millers from 15\nto  25  per cent.\nDEBT CONVERSION\nBILL ADOPTED BY\nTHE AUSTRALIANS\nCANBERRA, Australia, July 3 \u2014\n(AP)\u2014Thc house of representatives\ntoday adopted the debt conversion\nhill which reduces the Interest on\nInternal loans from approximately\nfive to four psr cent. An amendment to the measure which would\nhave reduced all bond Interest to\nthree per cent was defeated by a\nvote of 47 to nine.\nHolders of Australian International\ndebt bonds were given three weeks\nin which to notify the government\nof their dissent. th\u00ab bill providing\nthat conversion shall be voluntary.\nBET.LINOHAM. Wash., July 3. (AP)\n\u2014The United State* and Canada\nhave set an example of good -will\nand peace among men that, if\ncopied by the rest of the world,\nwould result in universal peace, Dr\nS. P. Tolmie, premier of British\nColumbia, and Dr. N. D. Showallr<-\nol Olympia, state superintendent of\npublic Instruction, told 9000 participants In the International flag day\nexercises at Blaine peace arch tonight.\nPremier Tolmie said that as a\ngesture of appreciation to America,\nthe Canadian government is considering thc proposal of the construction of a highway through\nBritish Columbia to Alaska, lo unite\nthe territory with the United States\nby road. Such a highway, he said,\nwould be stilt another link In cementing the friendship of these two\ncountries, and toward this end an\ninternational committee ]& now complete, and a report, is expected before the end of this year. He paid\ntribute to the late Samuel B- Hill\nfor bis  work  for  both  countries.\nOther speakers were Mayor C. V\nWilder, Blaine; Judson Pal*nor. Seattle attorney; J. T. Brown, reeve of\nSurrey, B. C; Most Rev. A. U. De\nPencler, archbishop of New Westminster; R. L. Reld, R. Rowe Holland.\nVancouver, B. C, general chairmen,\nand Tim Healy, Belllngham, American  chairman.\nHOMESTEADS IN\nALBERTA BRING\nBRISK INTEREST\nAnnounces    Willingness    to\nHold Debt Conference De.\nspile French Decision\nLONDON, July 2\u2014(AP)\u2014 The\nBrllMi government inlervened\ntonight In discussions ol president Hoover** moratorium plan\nhy announcing lis willingness lo\nhold a conference of the powers\nroncerned, if negotiations at\nParis break down.\nThi   Aasodatad   Press   learned\nlhat Great Britain hai advised\nI runce that the Trench proposal\nregarding  the  Hoover  plan constitutes an entire alteration of\n1 lie Young plan in regard to the\n\u2022im-stlrm of guarantees and It   I-.\nunderstood   that   (lie.   p&oposals\nare  unaiiTptabtc  to  Grans'   Britain.    Officials  would not confirm Mil*  Information.\nBritish official anxiety concerning\nthe trend of events, and Ms opinion\nthat  tho  matter  Is one  ot extreme\nurgency,   arc   reflected   Is   \u00bb   brief\ncommunique   which   announced   the\ngovernment's decision.\n\"Should not early solution be\nfound,\" tbe communique f\u00bbald, \"the\ngovernments have expressed their\nwillingness\u2014In order that \u00bbn agree.\nment should he reached with a minimum ol delay- in hold a mating\not' thc powers chiefly concerned at,\nan early date.\"\nCommentators agreed tonight that\nthp, phrases \"early solution-minimum of delay- early date\" gave a\nelrar indication of the government's\nbelief that delays are dangerous.\nThree   Boys   and   One   Man\nKnocked Down Inside Two\nflours, Vancouver\nVAUCOUVBR. B. C. July a.\u2014In\na little over two hours three boys\nand a man. were injured ln traffic\naccidents in various parts of the\ncity late this afternoon, one of\nthem seriously.\nPrank dark, police say, was Injured at 0:30 p.m. in the +100\nblock John street when he was\nthrown to the pavement on his\nhead from his bicycle when riding\nto meet his mother who was visiting In thc .vicinity. His condition\nis  serious.\nTeddy King and Vincent Sexton\nhad a remarkable escape from death\non Cartier avenue, near the intersection of Sixty-seventh street, according to police who were on the\nscene.\nThe boys slighted from a bus at\nthe corner. Unknown to the driver\nthey caught onto the rear1 of the\ncar. officers say. and rode a quarter\nof a block north on Cartier avenue.\nJumping off. the report says, from\nthe slowly moving bus, they dashed\ndirectly in front of a truck proceeding south, and both were knocked down.\nA collision at 5 p.m. at the corner\nof Eleventh avenue and Pine street\nbetween a'brewery truck driven by\nE. Whiteside and an automobile\ndriven by Miss Laura Holland. Ar-\n,butus street, resulted in A. D. B.\nloade, passenger in the truck, receiving a broken arm,\nFRANCO-AMERICAN\nAGREEMENT NEAR\nCORtNA, spaln. July 2 \u2014(AP>\n\u2014'Three thousand rioting men\nand women tonight burned\ndown a (utholh- monastery and\nwei> (ought of! by police and\nsoldiers wll h lived bayonet*\nwhen they attempted to fire tw\u00bb\nother  Catholic  institutions.\nThe capuchin monastery of\nSan Jose burned to the ground\nand the flame* destroyed four\nhomes adjacent to the proper**\nAll the priests escaped and are\nin   hiding.\nThe mob stormed out of a bull\nri n g early j n the evening at the\nend of an anti-Catholic meeting,\ncharged across the city to the Capuchin monastery, set it afire, then\nstreamed to the Jesuit college.\nTHOOPK CALLED\nTroops were cailed out to reinforce the police when the situation\nthreatened to get, out, ol hand. They\nwere deployed to protect the Dominican monastery aa ft part of the\ncrowd gathered there.\nDriven back by soldiers, they\nfought with stones, sticks and knives\nln a desperate effort to break\nthrough the lines, hut they did not\nsucceed.\nThere Is no martial law yet, but\ntroop* were postca -at strategic\npoln\u00a3a tliroughom the city. The\nprovincial governor reported to trM\nminister of interior at Madrid that\nthe situation wa,, under control und\n<'OI.ORFI I.    I'HilBE    DEAD\nAlfred AIovslus Horn, Known to\ne world aa \"Trader Horn.\" who\ndied on June 26. at Whltstable,\nEngland, al. tho age of 82. This\nphotograph i\u00ab from an oil painting\nfrom lif* by W. O. Hutchinson,\nEnglish  portrait, painter,\nGREAT OVATION\nIS GIVEN WORLD\nFLYERS IN EAST\nMELEE BRINGS\nBUCK EYES TO\nMANY MEMBERS\nLaborites Resist Suspension of One of the\nMembers\nUNPRECEDENTED\nFOR 25 YEARS\nGlasgow Is Carried Bodily From the Seat and\nEjected\nthat precautions had been taacn\nprevent further disorders,\nThe    Capuchin    monastery,    built\nfour years ago .was valued at SbO.oOo\nWhole   of    Downtown   New\nYork  Turns  Out  to  Welcome Post and (laity\nNEW YORK. July 2. (API\u2014WUey\nPost and Harold Gatty covered today perhaps the most nerve-wraok-\nIng stretch or their rerord-sma&hing\ntnp around, the world\u2014the am\nmjle\u00bb between the Battery and 46th\nstreet.\nWith  .such   fierce sounding places\nas Blafortahohanek, Khabarovsk and\nto  Novo tttbirsk  behind,  they faced  the\nNEW POSTAGE ON\nNEWSPAPERS TO\nYIELD $200,000\nEDMONTON. Alta.. July 2.-Homestead filing wag again thrown open\ntn Alberta when new provincial\nregulations became effective thla\nmorning.\nl*and seekers lined the corridors\nof the Edmonton offices early and\ncomparatively brisk opening hours\nhave been reported from the Peace\nRiver and Grande Prairies r-ffices.\nNo lands are being made available\nfor the present in Ci.lgs.ry nnd\nLeth.brIdge   districts.\n31. P.'S WANT TO\nTAKE OFF COATS\nIN GREAT HEAT\nOTTAWA, Onut., July a.\u2014(CP)\u2014\nMay members ot pn.iame.it remove\ntheir coats while in the house ol\ncommons? Mr. Speaker black grave\nly informed a sweltering member\nship today that their dies-; must be\neat with the decorum of\nlhat ITSSt iii.-.i itutioii. while at\nM nine parlUnKntanans may\nexercise their own good Judgment\nas to what they should do.\nIn a chamber Lhat was uncom\nfortably warm, E- J. Garland (U.F.A.\n\u2014Bow River), making his appeal\non the ground of humanity, ap>\npeeled to the minister of public\nworks for the installation of an\nair-cooling   system.\nN. Campbell. (prog.\u2014 Mackenzie)\nthought members should be garbed in whatever attire was comfortable.\nH. B. Spencer. (TJ.F.A \u2014 Battle\nRiven .suggested the speaker might\nwear a wig as in the British house\nof   commons.\nSALES TAX ISSUE\nIS ROUNDED OUT\nOTTAWA, Ont., July 3. (CP)\u2014After an afternoon spent wrestling\nln committee ot ways and means\nwith Lho bill which provided, among\nother things, for the imposition of\nthe 4 per cent sales tax, the house\nof commons today reported progress\non this important measure. On the\nsuggestion of Premier R. B. Bennett\na number of clauses'stand over for\nfurther consideration, but the major\nportion have now been approved.\nThe committee stage. In which a\nbill Is given detailed consideration,\nprecedes third and final reading.\nCommunication  Between  Officials Termed as \"Very\nOptimistic*'\nWASHINGTON. D. C, July 2- )By\nC. P. Williamson)\u2014Strong Indication\nthat France and the United States\nwere approaching an agreement satisfactory to each on a debt moratorium plan were evident tonight in\nofficial   circles.\nAfter a tians-Atlantir telephone\nconversation with Secretary Mellon,\nacting Secretary Castle ot the state\ndepartment said he was \"very optimistic\" over thc prospects for an\naccord.\nOff trials declined to comment on\nthe course which the discussions\nare now following, or the exact reasons  for their sudden optimism.\nBENNETT DEFENDS\nPRESENTATION OF\nGRAIN APPENDAGE\nOTTAWA. Ont.. July 3.\u2014iCPf \u2014\nIncreased postage rata* against newspapers with a circulation tn excels\nof 10.000 copies an issue will yield\nabout $200,000 a year, Premier B. B.\n| Bennett told the nour.c of commons\ntonight. Tho hill increasing the\nrate on papers with that circulation,\nother than religious, scientific or\nagricultural, has passed. The rate\nwas Increased  from one to one nnd\nhalf cents.\nDuring the discussion, Hon. Peter\nJ venlot, former po&tmaster-general,\nsaid tho newspapers, because ot the\nincrease, would \"Iind the new rate\nwill cost them no much they will\nadopt a cheaper means of circulating  their newspapers.\"\nPremier Bennett i ltd 'he newspapers \"have been .**\u00bb about the\nthing. When It, was brought to their\nattention, they expressed a desire\nto cooperate, with the government\nin srriving at a reasonable rate,\nrealizing that the <<*t of transporting such papers involved a loss.''\nPOLICE OFFICIAL\nTO BE APPOINTED\nSOON, VANCOUVER\nOTTAWA. Ont.. July 2.\u2014 (CP) \u2014\nAppendix XII to the stamp commission report again furnished\nmembers with debating material for\nabout an hour tonight when the\nhouse, of commons adopted the vote\nof 12,68,000 for the administration\nof the Canada grain act. No new\nground was broken, however.\nIt traverses the same matter covered by Premier Bennett last night.\nThe prime minister emphasized that\nhe would have been guilty of an\nact in violation of the criminal code\nhad he altered the report before Its\npresentation to parliament.\nH. E. Spencer <U. F. A., Battle\nRiver). Intimated that Commissioner\nSanford Evans had been anxious to\nInclude the appendix more from\nthe point of view of the grain Inter,\nesta than from his sense of duty as\na commissioner. It had been inserted for the purpose of prejudicing\nthc wheat pool, he said.\nHon. W. R. Motherwell (Lib., Mel\nvtlle), charged the prime minister\nwith having been derelict In his\nduty.\nCORPORATION TAX\nISSUE IS RUSHED\nTHROUGH COMMONS\nOTTAWA. Ont., July 2. (CP)\u2014The\ngovernment bill which increases the\nrate of Income payable by corporations ln Canada from 8 to 10 per\ncent has but one more stage to go\nbefore It passes from the house of\ncommons. Working at fairly high\npressure, the house today gave second reading to the bill, and put tt\nthrough the committee stage. It\nnow stands for third reading.\nVANCOUVER, B. C . July 3.\u2014Appointment of a new police ccm-\nmlssioner, to replace Norman Mc\nLean, resigned, one ot th\u00ab items of\ncivic business set for today's sen\nslon of the council, was burled in\nthe avalanche of winged words\nwhich tlowed in connection wuh\nthe wMkathons. When the hour for\nadjournment arrived. Mayor L. D.\nTaylor announced that the appointment would be considered at a\nlater date. He added it might be\ndiscussed at tomorrow's meeting,\nprovided sufficient time was left,\nafter the fate of the walkathons\nhad been decided.\nEXTRA STAMP\nTAX GOES ON\nFOREIGN  MAIL\nOTTAWA, Ont.. July 2. (CP)\nThe extra one-cent stamp tax on\nmail \u2022 applies to letters destined\nfor overseas, the prime minister\ntold the house of commons today\nwhen. In committee of the whole,\nthe house was considering .he amendments to the special war rev'\nenuc act.\nREFUSING CENSUS\nDATA MAY BRING\nCOURT ACTION\nshowers oi ticker tape and confetti,\nscream.ng sirens and boat, whistles,\nhurrahs of thousands and the lines\nof humanity iilong Broadway and\nFifth avenue.\nOnly the \"Winnie Mae\" herself\nhad -a chance to take the day quietly. She stood like a patient- charger in her Roosevelt, field hangar,\ninto which she had been rolled\nwhen the world-rounding flight ended last night, -nl-ei' tight days, \\ft\nhours and 51 minutes,\ni. vi i ri \u00bbii i   iruvi t\nThe day began lor Harold Gatty.\nnavigator ot the flight. Whan Ins\nWife, i ft er a plane- tral u trl p ftOBB\nOlendale. Calif., crept into ins room\nat his hotel nnd iwafcntd him with\nshortly after 0 o'clock this\nmorning. Mr. nnd Mrs. Galty and\nMr. and Mrs Post, together with\nF. T. Hall, millionaire oil man who\nbarked the llight, breakfasted lightly, and then thc procession of welcome  began,\n[raffia w\u00bbi et > vutadatlll our\nFifth avenue M tlic string of cars\nptawd between ''iirbr. filled Vttfl\nshouting thousands, and windows\nfrom   which   thoiwnnris   peered.\nBuck ;it. thc Rlti*.. ihey were ri-.li-\nored In through a side door for thc\nluncheon given by Mayor Walker.\nAmong those to pa$ them tribute\nthere were Col. Charles Lindbergh,\nBerndt lalchen, William Brock, Olar-\ntSM ObamharlUI and James Fltz-\nmaunce. all ol whom have aMed m\nthe   writing   of   avtatlon'h   hlh'orv   hy\ntraravAUsntia nights.\nEXPECTS SEVEN\nMILLION RETURN\nFROM EXCISE TAX\nOTTAWA, Ont,, July J. (CP\nprime minister hopej, Lo secure\nabout \u00bb7,500,000 from thc special\n1 per cent excise tax on all\nports into Canada, he told O. G.\nCoote <U. F. A. McLeod), In the\nhouse of  commons  today.\nRt. Hon. W. L, Macktnal* King,\nopposition leader, suggested that\nthis Wis not an excise tax so much\nas a customs tariff. The premier\nsaid It waa purely a revenue  tax.\nSHIPblrlCERS-\nARE SUSPENDED\nSAN FRANCISCO. July 2. <AP)\u2014\nLicences of the three principal officers of the ateamship Harvard,\nwrecked without toss of life May 30\noff Point Arguello, Calf., W\npended today by tbe United States\nsteamboat  inspection   service.\nCaptain Lyle B. Hllllnger's licence\nwaa suspended four months; that of\nsecond officer George P. Mc Vicar\none year, and that of third officer\nOscar S. Anderson li days. The first\ntwo suspensions were effective from\nJune 22, and Anderson's from\nJune 30.\nLONDON, Jury I, (AP> \u2014 A\nrough-and-tumble fight, unprec-\n'deiiird (or more than a quarter\nnf a tcntun, look place today\nIn (he hejsae of commons, when\nleft wing Labor!trs rented the\nMi>penslon of one of their members.\nLater, after order was restored,\n(he government esmprd defeat\nby only live vo(es on an amendment lo the Snonde.ii land tax\nbill, which would have exempted garden cities and garden\nsuburbs (rom the lax. several\nLiberals voted against thc government.\nWhen the melee was at its height,\nwith fists flying and members kicking, wrestling and tearing clothe*\nand hair, thc bpeaker waa forced to\nadjourn the session because of the\ngeneral disorder. This was the first\ntime this action had been taken\nsince the great battles of Irish national days.\nBODILY  EJECTED\nThe trouble was ended after the\noffending members. J. McGoveru. of\nShetUaeton, Glasgow, who had defied\nthe speaker, was removed bodily\nfrom his w\u00abt and ejected from the\nhouse. After a 20-mlnute recess, the\nspeaker reconvened the house rfBd\npronounced suspension for the remainder of the session on McOovern.\nThroughout most of the fight,\nwhich wa*, between halt a dozen let',\nwing Laborltcs and attendants, the\nConservative members sat aghas\u00ab\nand thunderstruck. Finally thel\"\nshouts were added to the confusion.\nFrom one of these benchea a member shouted:\n\"Wring hia neck!\"\nWhen peace was restored after\nMcOovern was thrown out, one of\nhis staunch defenders. George Buchanan, a ieliow-Clydeslder, wa*\nweeping, with tears streaming down1\nOthers  had   their  clothes\n(.Continued on Page Two)\nHEAT WAVE IfT\nU. S. BLISTERS\nEASTERN AREA\nHeat Death Total Mounts Over 1000; Thermometers\nin  West   Fall\n'lh*v heal. wnv\u00ab that scorched the\nmidrti,- watt lor more than a week\nmoved eastward Thursday into the\nAppalachian   region.\nWestern Pennsylvania, western\nNew York nnd parts of Ohio, West\nVTrgl n la a nd Kentucky felt the\nscotM'go or a pitilesu sun.\nThunderstorm conditions moving\ndown the Allan' ic sea board gave\nsorflg relief, Thermometers in lho\nmiddle wcsl id! \u00bbiown to 70 \u00abnd 80\nThunday and tha sun-haked populace considered it cool.\nThere were enough heat deaths,\nhowever, to bring the total to more\nthan 1100. Forty-four died tn Chicago,\nmany of them stricken on previous\ndays; Chmtand added five more;\nSt Louis, where lho official temperature Wednesday waa 104, reported 10. Additional persons suc-\ncumbert   <. l   sea tiered   points.\nForecast issued by the United\nStates weather bureau said motajlv\nfair weather with moderate temperatures was Indicated for Thursday\nnight and  Friday.\nrortcaet, Nelson and vlcinty \u2014\nGenerally fair and warm, with local\nthunder storms.\nMin. Mai.\nNELSON    mmmm 43        74\nNannimo i   i \u25a0   i      54       73\nVictoria    .\u2014._ ..\u2014,.\u25a0\u201e 66\nVancouver   \u2014_-_.\u201e 50\nSTONE BLAMES\nGRAIN TRADERS\nEDMONTON.      Alta.,      Jul 1^3\nlrrfOTm\nWASHINGTON. D. C. July 3.\u2014\nCharges that grain traders were attempting to prevent farmers from\norganizing was mad> today by Chairman Stone of the farm board. He\nsaid that the deBlre to obstruct\ngrowth of cooperatives was behind\nthe traders' activities in pressing lor\nCharges of failing to give irfPbtma-\ntlcn to federal census enumerators\nwill be laid against eight Edmonton\ncitizens unless they at once comply\nwith   the   requirements   of   the  act.\nF.  Owens,  census  commissioner  for \u00bb more definite statement\nEast   Edmonton,  atated   today. laaUop   wheat sales.\nTHE WEATHER\nKamloops     . 50\nPrince  Oforoe  \u2014  .. , 44\nbtmn Point.   so\nPrince Buprrl.  __..\u00bb &4\nT\t\nDswuon. Y.\nBeattle   \t\nPortland    -..\nS.Mt  Fmicisco ...\nSpokane\nLos  AtiRrles\t\nPenticton\n64\n. 60\n. 8U\n. at\n. 48\n. 68\n. 50\nVernon     31\nCr.lid   For'iS    _  43\nCr.nbrous.   .   -  42\nCalgary      _  48\nEdmonton    -  i8\nSwift Current    4a\nPrince  Albert  .\nOil (tppelli .       ih\nBg  I.'i\n70\n76\n74\nee\n6]\n80\n74\n7C\n75\nat\nm\n9I>\n\u20229\n76\n79\n72\n6;\n70\nAa\n \t\nFAOI  TWO\nVANCOUVER BOAT\nTAKES R CLASS\nAT BELLINGHAM\nBELLINGHAM, Waal... July 2 \u2014\n(AP>\u2014The Bir Tom. whose reputa-\ntion a* tlie most cnnhlsteut winner\nof R. class hailing yachts in Puget\neounrt waters in the put 20 years\nhas been built up in light wind\naaillng, failed, today before a whisper\nof a breeze to win from a perky\nbrown-hulled yacht from Vancouver,\nBritish Columbia, the Ladv Pat\nThe R. rlaas race over 2 miles nf\nthe triangular course, adjusted after\nu lut** discussion when tho course\n1r>fs were lengthened, rlimaxad the\nfirst day oi raring In the bay, and\nvae the highlight of the second\nday of the annual regatta of the\nPacific International Yachting asso\nciation being held here- The regatta,\nwill continue tomorrow and Saturday.\nVERNON STORAGE\nWATER LEVEL UP\nVERNON, B. C-. July 2.\u2014Irrigation storage water ln Aberdeen lake\nhas reached the 10 feet, 3 inches\nmark, and Haddo lake. 10 feet, thc\nformer having gained 8 inches during the past week, and the latter\n17 inches.\nThe present total storage In Aberdeen, Haddo and Goose lakes is\napproximately 3880 aero feet. Tills\ngives a net resource of about 2i2o\nacre feet, after the usual deduction\nof 40 per cent for loss in transit.\nA   proverb   la   the   interpretation\nor the words or the wise.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C. Hotels\nw^^^w^\/vvvvvwv^\n, NELSON, B. C.\n\\ Nelson is now on Daylight\nSaving Time.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prep.\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. A. MHntvrc,\nSUverton; J, R. Bayne, M. Beattle,\nE. Lumsden, O. Lawrey, E. Ablett,\nO. O. Carter, V (Iralmm, Mlna E.\nBrown, Vancouver; Mr mid Mrs. F,\nPeterson, H. W. Bayley, f Clark,\nTrail; Mr. nnd Mr*. A. J. Watson.\nKootenay Bay. Mrs. D. Fisher, Port\nCrawford:    M,   MeKfnnon,   D.   Mc-\nKowan. A. Dufonr, T. A. Wallace,\nO. Mcintosh, cranbrook; H. M\nCoursey. o. Slblrv. Medicine Hat;\nMr. and Mrs, H. Tarp. Seattle; Mrs\nH. Kmlth. MIbs H. Smith. Mrs, .1\nMeDougalL J. McDouKiiU, New West-\nminster; r Sinnoft, Victoria; Mrs,\n<.. Hobb*., H. Mason, (jrand Porks.\ntaWjjaaWTft^\/flVtriaff^^\nWhere {he Gue&Is King\ncOhe Savo^f\nNELSON'S NBWKT AND FINEST HOTSL\nMANY ROOMS WITH PRIVATE\nBATHS OR SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n\u00bbWUff^lWt)ffFA^^^\nSAVOY\u2014O. Armstrons. P. Oakley,\nC. Oelll. Vancouver; H. Newman.\nPenticton: H. M. Parker, Yahk; Mr.\nand Mrs. Douglas. Edmonton; R. F.\nJacques. W. ft. Lpmmon, Calgary;\nn. Swanston. E. M. Swanston. Amu-\nlot;  C.  D. Jarvls. Procter;  Miss z.\nHlrd. Ballour; Mrs. H. E. Munro.\nTacoma; Mr. and Mrs. Davis and\nson, Sllverton; M. Dowes, J. 8ton-\not;kl, Rosobrry; B. H. Wallace. Trail;\nA. J. Bayley. Winnipeg; W. J. Clar-\nldgc. Burton;  w. MUlan, Nakusp.\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nHot and tnlil water In eicry room\nHleam heated.\nQUEENS\u2014L. Neal, Slocan City; D.\nWhite. New Denver. VI. Vance. City;\nA. Lovell, Spokane; II .1. .lackson.\nYmir W. R Hou.scr. Alnsvrorth; E.\nSwan'. J. Simpson. 11. Simpson. N.\nAnderson, cranbrook; S. McCabc.\nW. Haonans,  Sirdar.\nMadden Hotel\nD, A. MCDONALD\nSteam Heated Rooms by ths\nDay, week or Month.\nEvery consideration tr.own\nto guest*.\nCor  Baker and Ward Streets\nNelson\nNew Qrand\nHotel\nr. L.  KAPAK, Prop.\nWeekly or monthly rates.\nHoi  MS  <\"1<I mttf In all rooms.\nPhone 503       P. O. BOX 1061\nFOUR AMERICAN\nCENTRES PLEDGE\nNELSON'S HEALTH\nCowl  Will  Parly  Guests at\nSpokane Chamber's\nLuncheon\nMOSCOW, IDAHO,\nHOST AS  WELL\nWelcomes at Pullman and at\nColfax; Archdeacon\nSpeaker\nInternational greetings were exhaled with representative* of (our\nAmerican cities\u2014three in Washington and one in Idaho\u2014by the Nel*\nfcon board of trade party that went\na \"good will\" trip south of the\nline over the Dominion Day holiday.\nIt waa a wonderful trip\u2014we've\nhad nothing Just like It,\" declared\nH. M. Whtmster, president of the\nNelson board, in recalling the events\noi the two-day trip.\nSPOKANE   MKM\nAt Spokane the seven Nelsonltca\nwho .eft Nelson at an early hour\nTUMtUf, were guest.-, at the Spokane\nchamber of commerce weekly luncheon at noon, when 600 members of\ntlM clmmbcr were present to preet\nthem, and to hear Ven. Archdeacon\n1'rrd 11. Graham, NelMjn's spokesman, and the official speaker of\ntl-.e day.\nThe archdeacon's general theme.\nPresident Wnlmster .states, was the\nrelation of world trade and peace,\nnd he suggested that knocking\ndown of tariff walls and extending\nof world trade thereby would powerfully assist the ideals of world peace\nlor which the League of Nations\nb   working.\nThat night the \"Rood will' twists\nwere entertained in every possible\nway.\nWednesday   morning   they   started\ntheir    eastward    trip,    with     Hai\u2014\nOoct\/.   proprietor   ot   the   Coeur'\nAlene   hotel,   going   ahead   witn\npilot   car   to   act   M   truide.   Brief\nstops   were   made   at   the   cities   <\nColfax     and     Tullmaa     where     M\nOoctv.   marie   appointm\u00abtJ   for   the\nreturn   Ulp. and   140*09*,  Idaho,  the\nprimary   objective   of   the   trip,   a\nHlf   Moscow   chamhe\nvitation that led  to ft, WU reached\njust  before  noon.\nMOSCOW   TO  VISIT\nBusiness men of MoiCOW apparently turned OUt en mai.se In welcome, ihe visitor* li'om north ol trie\nline, tlie Nelson men being guest*\nol honor, As soon as the business\nwas transacted, following the luncheon, the program was turned over\nto President WhimMer, who called\non In succession Alderman J. B.\nGray, Alex. LcltU and Archdeacon\nGraham, the last named being the\nappoint*^ spofcaaman. The archdeacon covered the same ground in\nhis address as at Spokane. President\nWhlmsier inviied tha Moscow Cham-\nbid to pay a return visit to Nelson, and this return vlatt\nonce   promised.\nAfter the luncheon, member* ol\nthe chamber drove tha vlalton\nabout the University of Idaho campus, where they were shown into\ndifferent bunding.-, and \u25a0**\" the\nchief points of interest.\nGREETINGS   EN   ROUU\nOn crossing the state line Into\nWashington and arriving at Full-\nman, seat of Washington state university, the Nelson partf \u2022found the\nmayor and council of Pullman assembled and waiting to extend I\ncordial International welcome, this\nbeing the consequence ot Mr. Ooats'\nvoluntary mission.\nSimilarly at Colfax the mayor and\ncouncil were la ittttutanaa: whan\nthe party arrived 10 within the\ncitv boundaries, and spoke words of\nwarm   welcome.\nThe party took supper at Spokane\nand then drove home, making Hal-\nhon   around   midnight.\nTwo ears were used by \u00abM delegation, which consisted of FrtaUlent\nH. M Whlmster, Ven. Archdeacon\nFieri H. Graham. J- A. Kerr, Alderman J. B. Gray, Alex. Lelt.i, A. D\nMcLeod  and  R.  E.  Horton.\nTHE   NELSON   DAttT   NEWS,   NELSON,   B.   C.   \u2014  FBIDAY   MORNING.   JCLY   3.   1PSI\nCABS COLLIDE IN\nEARLY MORNING\nBY PETER'S TOMB\n1800 Acres Arc\nStaked, Greenwood\nGREENWOOD, B. C. July 2.\u20141800\nacres   have   been   itaked   on   Rock\nGold in small quantities\nis being taken from the old bed ol\nthe creek.\nTVrc    in    black    eand    ln    ait\nwashings.\nCENSUS TAKING\nABOUT COMPLETE\nIN CITY, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. 0., July 2.\u2014Census en-\nnumerators for Trail have practically completed their labors. C. D.\nBlackwood of Nelson, census commissioner, who was a recent visitor\nto the city, stated that in Trail be\nfound lho ivimcrators had been\ncourteously received and had met\nflue response on thc part of the\npublic.\nIn case of parties living la rooming houses there had been, regret-\nably, a few who had held up the\nwork through delay in filling ln the\nquestionnaire cards which had been\nleft lor them. Fortunately these\nhad been Ov and It was only the\nodd ends such as this that had to\nbe  cleaned  up-\nMr. Blackwood stated that anyone who was m doubt Hbout having been Included in the enumeration should communicate with him\nat Nelson and the matter would be\nchecked up.\nIt was in the interest*, ol everyone from thc community point of\nvipw tr> see that ho or she was\nincluded.\nisvery community was striving to\nsee that its enumeration was as\ncomplete as humanly posible, It was\nof considerable material advantage\nto a community that the census he\ncomplete. There was also the tnghj\nof   civic   pride.\nSAD SLIM SMITH\nTO BRING FAST\nNINE TO NELSON\nSpoklUt and Local Teams to\nProvide Kans Willi Real\nSport\nCsr, drlwi resp\u00abctiv\u00bbly by \u00bb. L.\nMarshall of Kelson and John And\u00abr-\nson ol crescent Valley collldad ,bout\n1 a.m. Thursday at Brilliant, ln the.\nvicinity of 4*.t tomb of Peter\nVerlfln.\nThe car. .Ide-\u00bb\u00bblped each other,\nIt is gathered from the reports made\nto the provincial police, but no one\nwas Injured. The care, though\ndamned, were able to move away\nunder their own power.\nSOUTHWOOD AND\nPEARCE MEET IN\nSCULLING SEMIS\nBradley and Give Are Other\nOarsman in the Diamond\nSculls Event Today\nHENUrr-ON-THAMES. July 3.\u2014\n(C. P. cable)\u2014Tomorrow Is semifinal day at the royal Henley regatta and the program Is aa follows:\nDlsmond Sculls\u2014Pearce. Canada,\nva. Southwood, Thames B. C.I T.\nBradley, Cambridge, vs. L. CUve,\nOxford.\nSilver Ooblets (pairs)\u2014Poole end\nJohnstone vs. Sambell and Luxton;\nOffer brothers vs. Edwards and\nCllve.\nSteward's Challenge cup (fourt) \u2014\nBrasenose College vs. London R. C.\nPlacenza,  Italy, bye.\nOrand Challenge cup (eights) \u2014\nThsmea B. C. vs. Malnr,. Germany.\nLondon n. c. vs. Berlin, Ruder.\nGermany.\nVisitors' Challenge cup (fourt)\u2014\nNew College vs. Third Trinity.\nUniversity College vs. Pembroke\nCollege.\nLadles' Challenge Plato (eights)\u2014\nFirst Trinity College vs. Jesus College.\nMonkton Coombe School vs.\nShrewsbury  School.\nFIGHT MANAGERS\nBOTH LOOK FOR\nTHE KNOCKOUT\n\u2022avturttiy and Sunday the ball\nfans of Nelson, who have bo far\nthis year been treated 10 a fast\nbrand of bawball, will have the\noprortunity ol witnessing an even\nfaster exhibition of the game by\nihe local nine and Sad Slim Smith's\nmen  from Spokane.\n'11 tr flfit Kama li scheduled for\n6:15 p.m.. Saturday evenum and\ntha second for 2 :JU p.m., Sunday\nafternoon,\nEar! Shin Smith's Spokane nine\nhas ihe reputation or being a\nHnli lied taam and follower., of\nsport bare think that smith will\nbring over (he best team thH he\ncan muster. While thc Spokane\nwill no doubt prove fast, the\ngame will not be one tOded. In\n,i. representative team. Nelson has\na nine that has won five straight\nlamai in International senior league\nplay.\nHarDd Olllett will burl the first\ngame for Nelson and Kraft thc\nsecond one.\nWINS APPEAL ON\nCHARGE DRIVING\nCOMMON DANGER\nCl-EVKLANn, Ohio, JulT 2. (Kf.\n\u2014From what the flfht managern\nhad to say tonight, tt appeared\nthere would he two knockouts\ntomorrow night when t-hamplon\n\u25a0Max Mtimrllnj: and W. L.\n<Ynung) Mrlblinp meet for the\nworld's heavyweight ehamplon-\nHhtp!\nThe fighters were In fcfluslon\ntonight, but each of thrlr mHn-\nHKen* freely predicted bin M-rap-\n|M\u00bbr would win hy a kaocltOttt,\n\"Pa\" Mrlbllng, father-manager\nof  the  challenger, wild:\n\"W. 1, ulll win the title on a\nknockout within, five round*. He\nIs In perfect i-hape, ready and\neager. He has never been bovine nor punching hurder. I am\ncertain he will bring the title\nhack to America and lo Macon,\nt.eorgla.\"\n\u2022Toe Jacob*, manager of the\nchampion. Insisted Schmellng\nwould be tlie one to win hy a\nknockout, but he said Ihe Msht\nmight  go  10  rotin(is.\n\"Max will take the fight on\na knockout within 1ft round*.\"\n.lacohs said. \"He I* In much\nhetter condition than when he\nfought Sharkey last .tune. He\nIs much stronger and hi* punching; Is heavier. He wilt clip (he\nsoutherners with a few of lhn*,e\nright hand*, and tt won't last\nlong\"\nMacKAY'S TEAM\nSUFFERS FIRST\nLOSS, BOWLING\nE. Y. Brake's Team and J.\nArmstrong's Win Lawn\nBowling\nSkip J. Ivan MacKay's record of\nnot having lost a lawn bowling contest ibis season was stopped Thursday evening when his team lost to\nE. 7- Brake's team. 15-16. in a closely\ncontested game. In a second match\nJ. Armstrong's men defeated J.\nDraper's 13-13.\nTeams were:\nE. Y. Brake, Cl- A. Meeres, C. Romano and  W. B. Melnecsuk.\nJ. Ivan MacKay, A Smith, R. Ren-\nwlck and W. 2L Morgan,\nJ. Armstrong. E. Marsden, R. A.\nAldersmith and J. Penwell.\nJ. Draper. W. Chapman, A. T.\nJones and J  .Argyle.\nBOUNDARY MINES\nARE ONLY CUSTOM\nSHIPPERS, TRAIL\nBell and Union Ship 51 and\n54 Tons; Company Total\n9101 Tons\nA total of 9506 -tons of ore has\nbeen received at the Trail amelter\nfor the period of June 22 to 30,\naccording to statistics from the company's office at Tadanac. ot this\ntotal, company mines shipped 9101\ntons and custom mines 106 tons.\nThis latter total was made up of\nshipments of 51 tons from the Bell\nand 54 tons from the Union, both\nBoundary properties.\nSocial Events\ngf Trail City\nFERNIE VICTOR\nIN FIRST AID\nAT KIMBERLEY\nWins New Shield; Trail Last;\nRepresented by Newly-\nOrganized Team\nTRAIL, B. C. July 2.\u2014Fernle\nwon the first aid competition held\nat Kimberley July l for the new\nshield donated iu that city for annual  competition.\nTrail did not fare so well, taking\nlast place in a competition In which\nsix teams competed. Michel was\nsecond; Tunnel No. 1 third; Upper\nMine, fourth, and Tunnel No. 2,\nfifth.\nInability of a team from outside\ndepartments to make the trip resulted In Trail being represented by the\ngeneral office team, which had buj,\nrecently been organized. Members of\nthe team were G. O. Capell, captain; R. McKendrick, J. Aldrldgc, R.\nSmytho  and  T,  Ommuncy.\nNEW GRAND-J. Bennie. Trail;\nB. A. Byer, LethbrldRe; J. Joy, Nel-\naoa; R Taylor. Craeton, D. Robertson, McLeod; MtM Helen van Braam.\nCranbrook*\nSOLID IN *lOTOR ACCIDENT\nABBOTBPORD, B. C, July 2. \u2014\nThrown out of an automobile when\nit Kkldded in loose gravel and overturned about five miles west of\nhere ibis morning, Mrs. John Croaa-\nley was almost instantly killed.\nMADDEN\u20146. Motley, Vancouver;\nj. imhoff, M. Mdxllan, j. Denis,\nSpokane.      ^___^__\u201e_\u201e___\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Horte of Plenty\n!H Vernon fit. Phone\nH. Wasbick\niifiv  Roomi of solid Comfort.\nHeadquarters   for   Loggers   and\nMiners.\nIt   Is   very   easy   lo   rl.se   in   your\nown  estimation.\nThe cleanness and purity of onc'i\nmind Is never better proved than in\ndiscovering Its own faults at first\nview.\u2014Pope\nTrail,B.C. Hotels\nH,\nOTEL   -tlRLINGTON\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. P. 1.KVE3QUE, Prop.\nA SAFE RELIKF FOR\nHemorrhoids\nPiles\nDo you buffer from 1 bis\npainful and in many rases\ndangerous ailment? Is your\nlit,, a burden through the\n(suffering caused by PILEo.'\nNo longer Is it necessary to\nsuffer ... a new and vou-\nderful   discovery   callsd\nPAX   Internal   Pile\nRemedy\nwill give you relief. This\nWONDBR TREATMENT is\nin capsule form and contains\nno harmful drugs or alcohol.\nThere Is nothing that can\nharm you In any way. Taken\ninteimally ... no ointment,\ninjection or dilators. Simply\ntaken with a glass of water.\nHo matter what form of piles\nyou suffer from, this medicine will bring the desired\nresults.\nDON'T DELAY ... put an\nend bo needless suffering\nNOWI Bend ftl.OO and we'll\nmall at once postage prepaid\nOn plain wrapper). Not tor\nsain in Drug Stores or by\nAgents. Write and tell us\nth* results obtained.\nThe Crown Chemical Co.\n1378 Pender St, We\u00bbt\nVancouver,   B.   C,\t\ntaattla Necemer. who WjM eon\nVlcted on a charge of obtaining\nfood hy fsise pretences at Cran\nbrook, on MaroU 17, 1931 and .*^en-\ntencci to nlno months imprisoning hy Judge G. H. Thompson, has\nhad his caaa dismissed, after an\nappeiil before three different Judges.\nHe hat been released from the\nNelson   provincial   jail.\nHis Hint appeal wa* made before\nthe Supreme Court of British Columbia. \u00abnd dismissed. lie made a\nsecond appeal before Mr. Justice\nMurphy who dlartlased the application snrl refuse I discharge, as did\nMr. Justice Fisher, Matlja Necemer\nthen made another appeal before\nMr. Justice D. A. McDonald, which\nwas successful, and the prisoner\nwas  ordered  discharged   forthwith.\nAn order arai made that \"no\naction of proceedings flhall be\nbrought t|aln*t the said keeper of\nthe common Jail or the convicting\nJudge or either of them, by Matlja\nNecemer, or anyone on bit behalf, arising out of the said conviction   and   commitment.\"\nNecemer was to have been deported at (be expiration of his\nsentence, but as he has been ordered discharged by Mr. Justice McDonald the immigration department\nwill not akc  action.\nGreenwood Car\nIs Wrecked\nBOARD ANNOUNCES\nCUT IN TEACHERS'\nSALARIES, TRAIL\nTo (iet Less, Two and Half\nPer Cent; Raises Not to\nBe Affected\nMRS. JOHN YOUNG\nBURIED AT TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. t'.. July 2. \u25a0\u25a0 Mrs. nos-\ntana Young, wifo of John \"Ice\"\nYoung, was buried here this after-\ntery. Rev. Brycc. II. Wallace officl-\nnoon irom Knox United church.\nBurlhl look place m the Trail ceme-\nated and favorite hymns of Mrs.\nYoung, Who was an active member\noi i lie shurch, wcro fcung. The choir\nattended.\nTallbearers were Harry White. J.\nA. MacKinnon. J. C. Murdoch. J.\nH. Doughty, r. B. Dovey and W. J.\nWagstaff.\nGREENWOOD. B. C. Jiily 2,\u2014An\naccident occurred on Saturday last\nat Kettle Valley when a car owned\nby Percy Beckett was smashed beyond repair. Mr. Beckett was turning a corner when a wheel camt\noff, and before it could be stopped\nIt turned over and was badly damaged.\nBRITISH HOUSE\nHAS FIST FIGHT\nIN MID-SESSION\n(Continued From Page Onci\nDOUGLA6\nHOTEL  9\nRooms and Bath\nE. L. and A. OROtTAOB\nSteam Heated\nThroughout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nTRAIL, B. C.\nTHE ROYAL CAFE\n< LASSIC HtSIAl'RANT\nRefinement and Delicacy  Prevail\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nspnlal Dinner. 11:30 to 8 p. tn. 35c\nSpecial  Sunday Chicken  Dinner 50c\nSpecialisms; In Chop Suey and Noodles\nPHONE 183\nVANCOUVER\nOUFFtRIV    HOTEL\u2014900    SEYMOl'R\nBT.\u2014Bright Rooms. Central. Moderate rates. A. Patterson, Into ot\nJoleman,  Crgw'a  Nest,  Prop.\n''Next Door to Everything\"\nBEVERLEY HOTEL\nAPARTMENTS\nMake your visit in Victoria pleasant and economical\nby staying at \"The Beverley.\"\nLight housekeeping apartments and cozy  bedrooms.\nModerate rates by day, week or month. Elevator service, free phone, splendid lounge.\nFOR   RESERVATIONS   WRITE\n734    YATES,    OPT    DOUGLAS    ST.\nManaged by Mr. and Mrs. J. A. orifflth, formerly of the Kootenayi\nTRAIL, B. C. July 2 \u2014In keeping\nwith th*\u00bb decreased cost or living,\nlho Trall-Tadanac board of school\ntrustees decided to decrease the\nteacher's salaries next year two and\na half per cent. The decrease wl,!\nbe based on the 1930-31 schedule\nand the usual raises called for by\nthis schedule will be granted and\nwill not be affected by the reduction.\nTRAILTEACHER\nASKED TO MOVE\nFROM ROSSLAND\nTRAIL,   B.   C,   July   2.   \u2014   KttOl\nUnited church was the scene Tuesday aftarooon of the wadding of\nMlna Edith, only daughter ol Mr.\nand Mrs. A. M. Kelderman, and\nArthur Crampton, eldeit son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Oeorge Crampton of Vancouver Rev. Bryca H. Wallaca performed thc ceremony. E. A. Templa\npresided at the organ. Tha bride\nwas charmingly attired iu a gown\nof white georgette trimmed with\nlace with a form-fitting bodies and\ngraceful flared skirt reaching to the\nground. An embroidered veil of silk\nnet was arranged with a coronet of\nseed pearls and orange blossomB.\nWhite shoes and hose completed the\neffect. She carried a bouquet of\nwhite, pink, and tea rosea, with\nfern. Mlsa Argle Lauriente as bridesmaid choae a dress of mauve chiffon\nwith lari\u00ab Picture hat in silk mohair to match. Her bouquet was\ncomposed of pink carnations and\nroses. Charles Sharpe of Vancouver\nsupported thc groom. Immediately\nafter the ceremony a reception \u00bbvas\nheld at the home of the bride's\nparents, Bay avenue. Mrs, Kelder-\nman, in a dress of black crepe-\nback astin, and wearing a seed pearl\nunburst brooch as her only ornament, assisted the bridal couple in\nreceiving the guests. Tha dining\nroom was beautifully decorated with\npink and white streamers and festoons of ayrtnga and summer flowers. The bride's table was centered\nby a two-tier wedding cake, surrounded by a garland of syrlnga.\nwith a wedding bell of silver hanging over It. Vases of carnations and\nroses were used on the well appointed tables. The bride's gift to\nthe groom was a set of gold cuff\nlinks. The groom's gift to thc bride\nwas a crystal necklace; to the bridesmaid a crystal necklace; and to the\nbest man a leather bill-fold. For\ntravelling the bride wore an ensemble suit in blue and white with\nwhite hat and accessories to'correspond. Mr. and Mra. Crampton left\nto spend a honeymoon at Vancouver. They will reside at the coast.\nInvited guests included Mrs. C.\nLauriente, Mrs. B. T. Treen, Mrs. C\nCooper. Mrs. E. J. Garner, Mr. and\nMrs. W. Thornton, Miss Edna Lauriente, Mlsa Beth Kollmar, Miss Dorothy Treen, Miss Nellie MoKenzie.\nMrs. Wilson, O. Wilson, H. Johnson,\nB. Tether,   B.   Young,   E.   Wallach.\nC. Sharpe. J. Hamacher, w. Truger\nand P. Williams; and Miss Marian\nBayllss. Miss Myrtle Bayltss, Mlsa\nMargaret Graham, Miss Winnie .--c-\nphenson and W. Bennett of Nelson.\nMies Hazel Harris Is spending the\nvacation aa the guest ot her sister-\nin-law, Mrs. J. Harris, at Yrnlr,\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nLouis Landucci and Armando Orlando   left   Tuesday   to   spend   two\nweeks' holiday ln Spokane and district.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. D. II. Chapman and daughter,\nMyrtle, left for coast cities Tuesday\nmorning to holiday for about two\nmonths.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRev. Leo A. Hobson. and Mrs. E.\nM. Hobson, accompanied by Miss\nIrene Savard. left Tuesday by car\nfor Vancouver, where Miss Alberta\nHobson la to undergo an operation,\nPathec Hobson and Mrs. Hobson\nexpect to be away about two weeks.\n\u2022 a *\nMrs. K. B. Woodward and children will spend the summer holiday\nvisiting relatives in Vancouver. Mr.\nWoodward will attend summer school\nin the  east.\nMr. and Mrs. Clifford Carr, who\nwere married Saturday evening, wilt\nspend a holiday at Vancouver. Mrs.\nCarr  was   Mlsa   Edith   Woodacre.\n\u2022 *    *\n|fj* Merle Smith left Tuesday for\nher home In Summerland.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss   Kay   GiUls   will   spend   the\nholiday at her home in Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlsa Ethel Moody has lclt for her\nhome   in   Mission.\nMrs. Thomas Hlnton and Mrs. D-\nC. Spain returned Monday evening\nfrom Eossland, where they spent a\nfew   days   visiting   friends.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr.  mid Mrs.  It. McLeod  returned\nMonday evening from a honeymoon\ntour to Spokane, Seattle, Vancouver,\nPenticton. They .spent the week-end\nat New Denver as guests of Mr. and\nMrs. Fi. MrPherrton. They aro taking\nup resldcnco at the Rtvors.de apartments.\nenjoyed. Refreshments were served\nby Mrs. J. A. Callen. alias Iole\nMugnanl and Mlsa Rene Tavarolt.\nThose present were Mrs. Monaldl\nand daughter. Jean, Mrs. V. Stan-\nlehl. Prank Vellutlni and children,\nHelen. Jack and Billy. Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Decembrinl sr., Mr. and Mrs. L.\nTognottl. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Callen\nnanl. Mlsa Rene Tavaroll, Miss\nand daughter Pearl, Miss Iole Mug-\nLouis Harper of Roasland, Olno\nTognottl. Jama* Weir. Q. Deotm-\nbrlnl, and William Mollskl. Mrs.\nVellutlni was the recipient of many\npresents.\nMiss Ellen Hobson, a student at\nSt. Joaeph's academy. Nelson, came\nhome Tuesday for the summer vacation.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. Arthur  Cherry and\ndaughter Dorothy were guests of\nMrs. Cherry's parents, Mr. snd Mrs.\nA. c. Webster, at Frultvale over thc\nholiday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Edith  Mclntyre  of Nelson  Is\nthe gueat of Miss Ruth Doughty,\nBay avenue, for a few days.\nMrs. A. Annandale leaves today to\nJo^i Mrs. W. R. Baxcndale at Nelson and accompany her to Procter,\nwhere they will holiday at the Bax-\nendale summer home.\nMiss Mary Bishop has returned to\nTrail after an extended vacation at\nVictoria and other coast cities.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr, and  Mrs. Frank Sindel spent\nyesterday at Nelson visiting Mr. Sin-\ndel's mother,  Mrs.  J.  T. Sindel.\nMiss Doris Anthony was a visitor\nin Nelson Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs.   D.   Forrest,   Mrs.   T.  Cairns.\nMiss Rene Balfour and Miss Malslo\nCalms have returned after spending\ntwo weeks visiting  in  Vanco\/tver.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss  Dnlslo  Christie left yesterday\nby motor for Spokane. From there\nshe will travel by airplane to C;attle\nMiss Christie will spend the vacation  at  the  coast.\n\u2022 \u2022    t\nMr. and  Mrs.  Frank  Newton, Mrs.\nA. E. Jefferey, Miss Rose Newton\nand John Newton have returned\nfrom Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMtss Therza Rossman leaves today\nfor a trip to Sudbury, Ont., where\nshe will visit her sister. She will\nalso go to New York and Milwaukee, and will return via Spokane\nand Portland.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss  Isabel  Kelr  In  spending thr,\nschool vacattcn at Spokane and district.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJ. G. Gagnon  and A- E. Tweedals\nare attending school at tho University of British Columbia, Vancouver.\nThey travelled to (he coast with\nMr. and Mm. P. R. McLean, and\nwith Leo Jantz, who will spend the\nholiday In Vancom-er.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss   Marion  Mallott  left Tuesday\nevening lor her home in Chtlllwack,\n\u2022 a   a\nMrs.   Laura   Waters   left   Tuesday\nfor Seattle, where she will attend\nsummer school.\nMlsa Pearl Murray will spend thc\nvacation at her home at Salmon\nArm.\nand   collars   in   tatters,   with   eyes\nblackened and hair awry.\nASKN   INVESTIGATION\nThe disturbance arose over the\npreaching of the gospel on Glasgow\ngreen. McGovern asked if the secretary of state for Scotland was prepared to Investigate the arrest of\nfour lay preachers for a breach of\nthe city law forbidding meetings on\nthe green.\nDissatisfied with the secretary's\nreply that he would Investigate, McGovern remained on his seat despite\nshouts of \"Order\" from the Con-\nDonald then moved the suspension\nservat! voa. Premier Ramsay Mac-\nof the member, and was upheld by\na vote of 315 to 10.\nStill McGovern refused to leave\nsnd  the speaker said:\nI must ask 'the sergeant-at.-arms\nto remove the honorable member.\nONE   AT   TKET,\nOTHER   AT  I1KAI)\nA large attendant took McGovern's\nfeet and another his head and started toward the door. \"Be a man I''\nsomeone shouted from the Labor\nbenches, and McGovern's friends\ncharged in to the rescue. In an instant the house was in an uproar,\nand tha free-for-all was on.\nAnother member, David Klrkwood,\nof Dumbarton, was reported by the\nLabor parliamentary party to th\u00a9\nJoint committee on discipline today.\nThe action was based upon a report\nfrom the consulatlve committee\nwhich had Investigated a speech\nmade by Klrkwood in a colleague's\nconstituency.\nThis was not the first suspension\nduring the two years as a member\nof parliament of McGovern. Last\nNovember he waa given a five-day\nsuspension when he shouted, \"What\na lie,\" when a Conservative member\nsaid laboring people did not want\ntheir children ln school after they\nwere   14  years -old.\nToday McGovern flatly refused to\nobey the speaker's order to alt down.\n\"You don't need to tell me when\nto alt down,\" he shouted angrily.\n\"I'll  alt down  when  I like*\"\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e July 2.\u2014Tlie Trall-\nTadanac school board made a request of A. E. Allison, principal of the\nhigh school, that he make every\neffort to take up his residence In\nTrail. Mr. Allison is now residing In\nRoesland.\nBrother Bill From\nIndiana Pass Through\nNelson on Way Coast\nOn their way to tho national convention of the Benevolent Protective\nOrder of Elks In Seattle next .week\na party of 70 \"Brother Bills\" Is\nscheduled to pass through Nelson\ntonight On the way to the coast via\nthe Kettle Valley railway route.\nMiss Ena AngcrllU Is spending a\nholiday at Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. John Bertuzzi have\nreturned from Spokane, where they\nspent their honeymoon, and have\ntaken up residence on Nelson avenue.\nMrs. A. W. Harrod and Miss Jean\nHarrod are spending a holiday of\ntwo weeks at crescent Bay.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Frank Vellutlni was surprised Monday evening by a number of friends, the occasion being\nher birthday. Games and music were\n\u25a0 irp* W*w? *\"f     \u2022\nVf\nTRAIT HOUSE* AND LOTS IN-\nsurance Notary J D Anderson.   Trail. tS9ul)\nTelephone Right\nof Way Cleared\nGREENWOOD, B. C. July 3.\u2014The\nright of way of the B. C. Telephone\ncompany is being cleared between\nthe Hartley ranch and the Wellington camp, e bout 20 men from\nGreenwood being employed.\nBiliousness\ni    Brutalized\nHer for Years\nBut went as soon as sfie took\nCarter's Little Liver Pills\nBiliousness is simply liver turned\nlary. You'll never conquer Biliousness permanently by taking ordinary\nlaxatives. You need a definite, sale,\nliver tonic\u2014Ur. Carter's Little Liver\nPilla, which helped Mrs. C, of Leigh.\nShe says; \"I suffered with Biliousness\naccompanied by Sick Headaches for\ndays at a time and every medicine I\ntried failed to bring relief. A friend\ngave me some Carter's Little Liver\nPills. The first dose gave me great\nrelief. I find they prevent these BUkma\nand Sick Headache attacks.\"\nVegetables, as everyone knows, promote health. Dr. Carter's Little\nLiver Pills are entirely vegetable and\nshould not be confused with ordinary\nlaxatives. These wonderful little pills\nwill tone up your liver, invigorate\nyour digestive -tract and keep you in.\nthe best of health. Sold by druggists\nover 00 years.   25c & 7oc red pkgs.\nThere is Just about as much truth,\nI believe, in the legend of the\ntheatre having spun out its brief existence as there Is that the \"road\"\nis over and dow with.\u2014Ethel Barry-\nmore.\nDr. F.Rose\nPhysician and Surgeon. Specialist in\nrectal and Intestinal\ndiseases  only.\nPILES\ncured without operation. Constipation successfully treated. Writ, for\nfree booklet, 4th floor Zletler nidi..\nHf  Riverside Aye.,  bpokani,  Wash.\nEnlarged Prostate\nAMP ALL UHINARY ILLS\nTAKE OVB RKMEOIKS\nPsmphJets \"Man KnowThy-\naelf\" and Diseases or Men,\"\n\"Ilia ot Women.\" also . Skin\nand Blood Diseases, with Diagnosis Form and advloa ln\nplain envelope. fre\u00ab by mat!.\nMall order and Tablet remedies  a specialty.\nThe English Herbal\nDispensary Ltd.\n1359 Davie St., Vancouver, 8.C.\nEstablished   .15   Years\nCut Out and Mail!\nDaily News Want Ad Mail Blank\nWrite   Adn.   Below\nNo. of  Insertions\nt\u00bb this blank to mail jour Want Ads. to The Dally News. Now\nIs tha time to rent that summer cottage, room, garage\u2014sell or\ntrade the used Ice box, campers' equipment, furniture, etc.\u2014Sell\nfarms and farm produce, nursery stock. Beach thousands dally\nwith your ad.\u2014The Dally News Want Ad Columns will do the job.\nRIO   RESULTS   AT   SMALL   COST.\n tfD\n= THB   NELSON   DART   NEW?,   NELSON,   B.   r.   \u2014   HUDAT   MORVINO.   Jl LY   3,   1 ?.Tt -\nWhen the mind has brought it-\nself to attention it will be able to\ncope with difficulties and muter\nthem, and then It may go on\nroundly. \u2014Locke\nKASLO PROMOTION\nAND AWARDS MADE\nSCHOGULOSING\nAttendance Standing Ik High,\nMany Have Perfect\nAttendance\nLone Ea&le Plans Pacific Flight\nAfter\nmedicine\nk Life\nSavers\naie\nKAJ5U), B. C. July 2. \u2014Thel\nKaslo high and public school* closed |\nfor the aummer holidays Tuc^|iy.i\nfollowing i& the honor roll and passi\nHat. Those passing In high school. |\nCrude 9: Doris Re.td. Ruth Aim,\n\u2022lean Carter. Winifred Austin, Rod- j\nerlck Butler. Vera Coulter, Iris\nClarke and Rex Matthews. Orade 10:\nCharles Webster, Ellse Cody, Hilda\nCheater. Annie Coulter, Elsie Rouleau, Gladys Coombs and Mary\nSurina. James Fraser is the teacher\no fthese grades as well as principal of both high and public schools.\nPass list for division one. T. H.\nRobson teacher, grade seven: Isabel\nDavison, Douglas Strachan, Ha vt -\nland Butler, Prank Gardner, Virginia Hendricks, Beatrice Llnd. and\nDeward- McLellan.   Grade   eight:   Re\nJAMES BALDING\nDIES AT RANCH\nATBLEWETUC.\nResident of the  District 33\nYean; Son Jack, a Nelson  Resident\n9 STUDENTS WRITE\nEXAMS, CASTLEGAR\nCABTLEGAR, B. C, July 2.\u2014The\nfollowing have written their entrance\nexaminations at Cantlegar, under\nthe   supervision  of   Miss   M.   Fisher;\nPatrick MrOauley, Vladimsr Zaek-\nerenko. Jeanette Maxwell, Opal Wld-\nThe district lost another old-\ntimer TuesVisy m the pasing of\nJames Balding, who fox 33 years\nresided\" in various points in the\ndistrict. For many years he ran the\nNelson   Dairy   here.\nMr. Baldwin was born In England 67 years -igo. coming to\nSaskatchewan tn 1886 and later\nto Nelson. He was a member of\nKootenay lodge No. 18. Independent\nOrder or Odd Fellows.\nI He Is survived besides his wife\nby a daughter. Mrs. Talbot of\nVancouver, and a son Jack ol Nelson.\nmm   \u25a0 woe nree*\nmark, ot Cartleiar; Helen Quance.\nPhyllis Oborne, Albert Martin. Son-\naid Webster, of Robaon;; Audrey\nMackereth, of Broadwater.\nA vulgar nan is captious and\njealous, eager and impetuous about\ntrifles. He suspect* himself to be\nslighted, and thinks everything that\nis said 1b meant for htm.---Cheater-\nfleld.\nONE   OF   THE   BEST   EQl'lPPED\n\u2022\u2022Mors   FOR\nShoe Repairs\nIn British i i himiii.i That Is\nlh\u00ab rggajt nf ii^tallallon of\nnew equipment. But this isn't\nall. We prottts II\"1 \u25a0\"\u2022esf and\nmo*t c;n\u00abftii norkman<>ii]p and\nfm only the highest grade\nand   mn*t  durable  o(  leather.\nWatson Shoe Co., Ltd.\nI.ISDItERGH PLANE ON TBANRPACIFIC FLIGHT\nAlthough tt will be several weeks before he takes , Pacific to th\u00a9 Orient. AH latent, devices are being\noff with his wife, Colonel Charier, Llndbergh tB taking I attached to his Lockheed Sirtus monoplane, Including\nevery precaution ou his contemplated flight across thc |   pontoons.   Photo shows thc plane at North Beach, L. I.\n8:li5\u2014Walkathon, remote. ,\n8:30\u2014The Royal Loafers.\n7:00- -Silent  Period.\n8:00\u2014Orpheus Trio.\n8:15\u2014Water   Sport*   program.\n8:30 -Storage   Battery   Co,\nf>oo   UcmtavlUt   Flowers,  lecture.\n!>.;io   Ad   Lib   Review.\n10:00\u2014Ken   Htuart's   N   Minutes   of\nBunshine.\n10:30\u2014Walkathon from Lotus Isle.\n11:30\u2014Phllbrtuk   Van  \u2022oomlsen   orchestra.\n12:00   to   3:00   A.M.- Midnight   Revellers.\nSpend July 4 Week-End at\nPROCTER\nThin most delightful resort on Kootenay Lake is the most ntlractive of\nplaces al which to spend a vacation\nor a weekend. Fidiing, Routing,\nBathing and lots oi other amusements and excellent accommodation.\nCOOLE snd BXtOM\nTwgwork   and   fishing   ami   tx-\neursdon parties a specialty. 0u*\neral  toning.\nf,   roCKMAN\n24-foot cabin  cruiser.    A  comfortable   bout   for   fishing   ami\nexcursion parties.\nA.  I,  RITCHIE\nGeneral store at  Procter.    Supplies, fishing tackle, he cream,\nsoft drinks, etc. tTp-to-datp   [ea\ndoom  In  connection.\nOUTLET   HOTEL\nSpecial week-end, weekly and\nmonthlv rate?. Rownoats for\nhire, $2 a day. Oil and gas for\nsale. Cabins for rent.\nF.   R.   BRADLEY\n18-fnot launch for rent at reasonable rates for excursions and\nfishing parties.\nFAIRBANKS and BEBRY\nF. & B. (More at Harrop.    Close\ntn Ferry, das and Oil. General\nStore,\nTAKE   THE   HARROP   FERRY\n'\u2022ommended to high school, Dorothy\nTt&lMM,    Bertha    Sutherland.    Alexander Nord, Mildred Hamilton. Mar-\ngtttt   Hamilton   and   Mabel   Benett.\nDivision   three,   Miss   M    L,   Bmlth.\ntescljer, attendance for June 38 percent. Perfect attendance:  Joan Cad-\nden, Billy Chandler, Winnie cimnd-\nlet,   Joe   Furiak,   Louis   Furlak,   Annette   Hacking.  Jack   Hartln,  T*>ddy\nHorner.   Raymond   1 \u00bbockhard,   Myrtle\nLeet,   Molly   McOlbbon,   Maldlc   Palmar,   Bobby   su-ichan.   David   Abey.\nPhyllis Sllveraon. Ranking grade lb:\nhard   tied,  Jack   Mayaea.   Grade   la:\nDavid   Abey    and    Raymond   Lock-\nMyrtle    Leet,    Joe    Chapdler    tied.\nJimmy  8tr*6h*n,   1,01115   Furlak   and\nRobhv Btadrleka  Orade 2: Annette\nHarking.  Vcrn\u00bb   Beat,   Plivllia Silver-\nson. Teddy Honin  tutf J\u00ab* Martin\nUnranked. Arthur Ben net. Orade 3:\nPonn  Cadrien,  Billy   Chandler,  Bnh-\nhy   Stritchan,   Molly   McOlbbon,   un-\nranked. AJblna Johnson. \"Honor rolls:\nProficiency,   Joan    C'adden,    attrnd-\n.hit, Mvrt.lo liret, deportment, T*>ddy\nHorner. The Women's institute prize\nfor   proficiency   went   to   Joan   Cad-\n(tttl,  Mojlv   UcOlhhorj  won  tlie  general improvement, priz*. Bobbv 8trn-\nchan  the  booklet  prize  and Jlmmv\nMayzes   the   prize   for   the   greates'\nAttendance   and   writing\nAttendance  snd  ranking. Miss M.  .1\nMcPhaiL    teacher.    Attendance    ofr\nJune   99.64   per   cent.   Perfect   attendance  26.  Absentees   were  David\nHartln    and    Ralph    Gardner    who\nmlwed   one-half   day   each.   Promotions Grade 4  to Grade 5:Ratr  pid\ndell.    Ills'   Bert..    Norman   McLellan,\nJoyce   Brooks,   Ilene   Llnd,   Dorene\nLlnd,  Ronald   Matthews,   Billy   Hen-\nrirlrk;.,    Clara-    Horner,    David    Hsr-\ntin.  Bessie   McGlbbon   and   Murdock\nMaePherson.   Grade   &   to   Grade   8,\nEdward    Costello,   .Stanley   Lnckhard.\nEleanor Horner, Douglas Befit, Archie\nRruter,  Ronald  Carter.  Ralph  Oard-\nn\u00abr   and   I\/irtiR   Blarkwell.   Grade   *\nto   Gve.de   7:   RaVJUMtli   BttUtb,   Lorn a\nSpetrs,   pranced   Lockhard,   Dorothy\nHamilton,  Mabe   Beck,   Gusale  Carney.   Tommy   Berk    *nd   Jack   Mac-\nPh*Tson.   Honor   roll,   division   two:\nProflciecy.   Dorothy    Hamilton,   deportment.,    Eleanor    Horner,    Wrtecl\nattendance for school year, Iris Brsi,\nFrances Lackhard. Jack  MarPnerhon,\nafurdock   M^Phereon,   Kate   Rtddeii\nand Lorna Spclrs, Joyce Brooks won\nthe prize for  thc  greatest Improvement in spelling and Dorothy Hamilton   the   Women's   institute   prize\nfor   proficiency,    tn    th*   paws   and\nranking   lists   the   standing   of   the\npupils Is in the order named.\n! COURTNEY YOUTH\nSTRUCK, KILLED\nBY HEART BLOW\n' COURTKNAY, B, C, July 2-\nStruck over the heart by a base'\nhall during a game here yesterday\nFrederick Stephens, nged 20, son\nof M. F. Stephens died almost immediately. Death was believed due\nlo  paralysis  of  the   heart.\nStephens miscalculated a long\nfly, and the ball struck him. Hr-\nfielded the ball, staggered a few\npaces' and collapsed dying a few\nminutes   lster.\nFive hundred people saw the accident.\nSon the airi\nTONIGHT\nFRIDAY, JLLV   ft,   IM1\nstandard  Time\nNATIONAL BROADCAST\n6 30\u2014Theatre of the Air, KOO,\nKHQ. KOMO. KGW, KFT. KPBD\nKTAR\n7:00\u2014Tlie Pep&odent program. KOO\nKOMO. KGW,. KBCA. KFSD, KHQ,\nAmos  'n'  Andy.\n7:15\u2014Footlltes;   KGO. KHQ,  KOMO,\nKGW.   KFI,   KF8D,   KTAR.\n7;W-The     Fearful     Seven;     KFI.\nKOO,   KFSD,   KTAR.\nT:4ft\u2014Cheer   leaders;   KOO,   KHQ\n8:00\u2014The   House   of   Color;    KGO,\nKHQ.   KOMO.   KGW.   KFI,   KSL.\n8:30\u2014To be announced\nB;00\u2014Hlllv Billies; KGO. KOA.\n9:30\u2014Werk-end   hour,    KOO,   KHQ,\nKOMO,   KGW,   KFI,   KFSD.   KTAR,\nKSL,   KOA\n10:00\u2014News   Flashes;   KOMO.   KFSD,\nKHQ,  KGW,  KPO.  KFI\n10 00\u2014Mystery   Serial;    KOO,   KSL,,\nKOA\n10:30\u2014Musical    Echoes;    KOO,    KOA\n1)00\u2014Dance  orchestra.   KGO,   iKFI\n11:30    tfi    12:00.)\nKHQ\u2014 SPOKANT\nMft.1 m; 6I\u00bb0 k; 1\u00abM) w.\n0.00\u2014Sport,  page,-\n9:IS\u2014piiblix Opinion.\n10:15\u2014 Evening Hlghltte:,.\n11:15\u2014Hotel   orchentra\nKFBC\u2014HAN FRANCIfCO\n01  m; fill k;  lon\u00ab  \".\nH or\u00bb- Oyp\u00bb y Trail.\nr};J0-Pat  Frayne's  sport  talk.\n*i:4iv_Mickey   Gillette   and   Eleanor\nAllen-\nfl:46\u2014Fletrher    Henderson':,    orchestra;  CBS.\n7:15\u2014Arthur  Prvor's military  band,\nCBS.\n7:30\u2014Quarter   hour;   CBS.\nt:45\u2014Hollywood  Gardens   orchestra;\nCBS.\nR:00- Adventures of Black and Blue;\nCDLBfi.\n8:15--Oeorge Olsrn's orchestra;  CHS\n8:30\u2014College  Dasw.\n9:0fj\u2014Don Lee Symphony.\n9:30\u2014Tom Gerun'a orrh , ODLB&\n10:00\u2014Anson      Week's      orohwtra)\nrni.BS\n11:00\u2014Root   Garden   Orchestra.\n12:00\u2014Vagabond ot  the Air.\nKOMO\u2014ftKATTLE\nSSfi.l m; 9:;n k; mno w,\ng;00\u2014Concert  orchestra   and   vocal-\ni b\n7 .10    Eire,   Trans\n7:4 V\u20141Tunef'it    I\"1\nfi nrj ..Two  pi*nn  raeilal\nlil'i.V-C'erii  and Sally.   Elee    tTaW\nJ0:30\u2014Glohr TLottrr,\nll:00-Bcacrh    orchestra;    KGW.\n1:1:00\u2014Theatre   organ\nKOIN\u2014PORTLAND\nSift  m; 910 k;  IQOfl  w.\n8.00\u2014Dinner   Dance   Music.\n6:30-- Mnslr-al   Narratives.\n7.00. Andy   and   Virginia.\n7:15\u2014Prjw's   Military   Band.    CBS\n7.30--Quarter  Hour,   CBR.\n7:45\u2014Oodsby  Entertainers\n8 00-- Black   and   Bine;   DLBS.\nft:!6\u2014BaUi of Harmony.\n8:30-   rollPize   Da?,p,   DLBS.\n9:00\u2014Dance  Rythmn.\n0:30\u2014Del  Milne's Dance  Orchestra.\n10:00\u2014Pipe   Dreams.\nin |0_ j*rk  and JUlfa orchestra.\n11.00\u2014Poor  Garden  music,   DLBS.\n1 oo   to   i ;oo   AM \u2014Paradise   Inn\nBroadcast.\nKNX\u2014LOB   ANGELES\n38ft.\u00bb m; 1050 k: 500 w.\n6.00\u2014Wesley  Tourtelotte. organist.\n6:15\u2014Tom and Wash.\n630\u2014Pennant Knights of the Roaring Road\n7:00\u2014Frank Watmsbe and Hon\nArrhie\n7:15\u2014Vincent Lopes and his valvo-\nHners.\n7:30\u2014 H. T. Whiteett.\n7:45_Orand Slam Golf classics.\n9 00\u2014Do-Nute.\nfl.00\u2014Blenders,\n0:15\u2014 X Marks   the  Spot\n9 45--Boxlng Events (torn Hollywood\nlealon fi'adium.\n10:45\u2014\"Mlstah Bill and Jackion,\"\npresenting Bill Sharpie-, and Clarence Muse.\n11:00 to 12:00 Midnight\u2014New Paris\nInn.\nML\u2014SALT LAKf; CITY\n285.3 m; 1130 k; .wio \u00ab\n6.00\u2014Studio   program,\n7,1.'i- Keeley Ensemble\n7:30\u2014Musical   program.\n7;45\u2014Progrpm.\n9:00\u2014In forma I Program.\n10:30\u2014Organ   Program   (rom   Capttol\nTheatre.\nPROMOTION LIST\nOF YMIR SCHOOL,\nAWARDS ARE MADE\nYMIR, B. C, July 2\u2014Yrair public\nschool   promotion   list:\nPromoted to gt adc n - Shirley\nStevens, Tolly Verigin, Alvln Slat-\ntery.   Perry   Anderson.\nCirado III. -FranrTf, Plc.tin, Mike\nPictln,  Thomas  Clarke.\nGrade IV.\u2014Lottie Anderson, Evelyn Emilson. Mike poznlkolf, James\nGrant.\nGrade v.\u2014Ann if Kale-nlkorr, Annie   Poznlkoff,   Sam   Verigin,   Harry\nhtrvrns,   John   Granl.\nGrade   VI\u2014Elmfr   Peterson.\nOrade  VII\u2014James  Titlon,   Wood-\nrow Anderson  (both on  trial).\nGrade   VIII \u2014Norman   Burges*.\nPrl\/\"\":- were awarded to the follow,\ning:   Geography  s^rap  book,   Wood-\nrow Anderson; j.pell|ng. Shirley Stev.\n|ens;  projrtctfl,  Annir  Po?.ntkotl;   general   improvement,   Thomns   CWrkr.\ngenfral  efficiency,  Sam  Verigin.\nRolls of honor were awarded to\nthe following: Regularity and punc\ntotality, phlrlfy Stpvpns, Kmily Em-\niisnn;   OttnrtBM&t,  Sam  Verigin.\nThe awarding of the roll of honor\nlor proficiency win be deferred until It. (s known which ni two r%n-\nit-nnro fandtdate*. Klleen Otlle and\nHelen Vertgln. has made higher tn\nbet   examinations\nSucha clean ,fre$h, lovablefragrancc\u2014-\nNo wdnder dainty women all over the\nworld treasure its refreshing charm \u2014 no\nwonder our Canadian leaders of taste and\nfashion find it indispensable for those\ninformal occasions when heavier scents are\nout of place.\nYARDLEY LAVENDER\nri\nPerfume, Face Powder, Compact, Day and Night\nCreams, Talcum Powder, Bath Salts, etc. \" The Ltmtry\nSoap of tlie World,\" and Gift Cotes.\nAt all Good Drug and Drnartment Store..\nYARDLEY     \u00bb Old Bond Street    LONDON\nCud,! Yirdley Houw\nHirfcw it York tstntt, Toronto\nUSA. i 4fi Fiftk Avmue\nNwYork\nMRS. McCRIMMON\nVISITS DAUGHTER\nFOR A FEW DAYS\nA better combination\nTHESE crispy, sun-brovn Kellogg's PEP\nBran Flakes are a wonderful combination.\nThey're full of whole-wheat nourishment \u2014\nwith milk or cream they are virtually a perfectly balanced food. And they contain just\nenough bran to'be mildly laxative \u2014 to help\nkeep you feeling fit.\nWith a better taste\nAnd you'll never know how delicious bran\nflakes can be until you fill your bowl with\nthese better bran flakes and enjoy that\nglorions flavor of PEP. Only Kellogg in\nLondon, Ontario. Jas the secret of making\nthem taste so go<C Serve Kellogg's PEP\nBran Flakes often. For the children's supper,\nfor your own lunch, for a midnight snack.\nIn the red-and-green package.\nION KERR IS HOST\nON 8th. BIRTHDAY\nNAKUSP, B, C.. July 1.\u2014Mr*. M\nKerr recently entertained a nnmbr\n>f imaU hoys on tho occasion of\nher youngest son'a Ian, eighth\nbirthday annlversgy. Among tliow\npreeent. were, Roderic and Ian Ken,\nJark Bailey, Harold Horfrfleld, Ernest   BRlrd   .and    Raymond   Talbot.\nHEADACHES\nNeedless pains like headaches\narc quickly relieved by Aspirin\ntablets as millions of people know.\nAnd* no matter how suddenly a\nheadache may come upon you,\nyou can Always be prepared. Carry\nthe pocket tin of Aspirin tablets\nwith you. Keep the larger size at\nhome. Read the proven directions\nfor pain, headaches, neuralgia, etc.\nKJR\u2014SKATTM,\nnort.i m; run k; r.on w.\ne:00--Kmghts   ot   tho   Road;    Elec\nTrans.\n6:15\u2014Melody   UuaketttM.\n6:30\u2014The  Royal  loafers.\n7\u25a000\u2014Ward   and   Chet.\n7:15\u2014Betty   Andersen,   soprano\n7:30\u2014Vacalon   Land   review,\n0:8O\u2014\u00a3ong  Exchange.\nfl:00\u2014Tlio PI Mn torn Empire,\ntl 30\u2014Ad Lib Review, U.  B. C.\n10:00\u2014Ken   Stuart's   30   Minute;,   ol\nSunshine.\n10:30\u2014 Moonlight.      Melodic:;       Chet\nCathers,  baritone.\n11:00\u2014The Hawaiian*-.   NWBS\n11:80 - Hfollc;    jNWB.S\n12'00-Midnight  R*v#ll\u00ab\u00ab,\n( NRV\u2014VftM'Onr.R\nMl in;  I oho k; -*.oo n.\n6:80\u2014Jasper Dinner  hour.\n7:30\u2014Audrey   Benoit\n8:00\u2014String    EilM-mblc.\n0:00\u2014\"Canada   on    rarari\"\"\n10:00\u2014We$ Mortimer's tiHiiri.\n11:00\u2014Organist.   Sidney   Kclland-\nMade in Cahada.\nKOA\u2014SPOK\\M:\n2P4 m; H7o k; r>ooo m.\nti no - Melody Musketeers,  NWBS.\n6 30\u2014The   Royal   Loarers;   NWBG.\n7:00\u2014Listeners Hour;  ET.\n7:30\u2014 Vacation Land  review;   NWBS.\n8:00\u2014Orpheur,   Trio.\n8:15\u2014Knights  of   the   Road;   Elec\nTrans.\nR'30-^.Song Exchange.\nt*:00-. The  Phnntom   Empire\nft-30\u2014Ad   Lib   Review;   NWBS.\n10:00\u2014Ken   Btuarta   ^0   Minutes   ol\nMflahtnt,\n10:30\u2014Moonlight   Melodic**,    NIVBfci.\n11.00\u2014Tlie   Hawaiian*;   NWBS\n11:30\u2014Frolic;  NWBft.\nREX\u2014POR1.ANI*\nH8.1  m;  11*0 k; fioo w.\n8:00\u2014The  MHody   Musketeers.\nKASLO, B C. July S.-Kaflottes\ndrlt^d lo many district points to\nspend the first- of July holiday.\nThe Junior baseball iwm went to\nRtlTtHon and l-he MfLtOI WtBI f-o\nNakusp. \u00abadh team accompanied\nby a goortly number or fang, others.\nkfWOt the d^y in Nelson and Trill\ni Mrs. McCrimmou ot Cranbrook. arrived ln the city Txtesday to spend\ni a few days here vlsttng her daughter\nMlsa Effle Charboneau of the Victorian  hospital  nursing staff.\nMiss QueenLe McQueen who teach-\n|\u00abt school at Invermere anlved home\nTuesday and will spend tho holidays\nhere with her parents, Mr. and Mrj>.\nA.   McQueen.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Norm\u00bbn. who\nhave i-pcnt the past, ^ew days at\nMirror l*ake left Wednesday for\nt-netr home in Nelson, Their son\nTeller, wbo was with them left ior\nNelson   Tiicj.rtv,'\nIQh Edith Mm who teaches at.\nNatal arrived in town Tuesday to\n> pend the holidays here wtth liei\npsltuU, Mr. and  Mrs. John Aim.\nMiss Margarri, McNicol \u00abho ha\nbeen in town tfl write her second\nyear hlEh Khool exams left Tuesday\nfor her home in Joiinfion's Landing\nWhile in town Miss McNicol was\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. William\nNelson.\nGLENBANK SCHOOL\nPROMOTION LIST\n0*&\nPEP\nBRAN    FLAKES\nGALT COAL\nSUMMER PRICES\nGALT LUMP  811.00 per ton delivered\nGALT EGG      10.00 per ton delivered\nGALT STOVE        9.00 per ton delivered\nNow is the time to arrange, for your winter sr\/pii'i\/\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE))\nNAKUSP, B. C\u201e July 2.\u2014Honor\nroll of Olenbank school is as *ol\nlows:\nProficiency:   Joe   Gardner\nDeportment:   Alice   Shilling.\nPcgualrlty and punctuality: Marion   Balrd   and   David   Johnson.\nPromotion   list.  Olcnbank  school:\nTo Orade VIII: Joe Gardner.'\nLawrence Bailey, Herbert Balrd, Roy\nRogers.\nTo Grade VII   Edith  Rogers, May\nriiboi.\nTo Grade VI. Sybil Bailey, Marion\nBaled. i\nTo Grade V: Rod Kerr, Gladys!\nTalbot, Sophie  Likus.\nTo Grade IV: Emil Jpras. B|M\nChadwtck.\nTo Grade III: Alice Shilling, Jack\nKerr, Jack Bal)\u00bbv. Ernest Baird.\nOlive Chadwtck, Mable  Read\nTo Orade II: R^mond Ttalbo'..\nHarold Horefleld. Roala Read.\nAUGUST 8 DATE\"\nOF COMPETITION,\nMINE RESCUING\nrtPMDJ!, B. C. July 3\u2014The mln\u00bb\nj rescue competitions for East Root-\n(rnay have been set for August 8, to\nbe held at Fernle, by the society\nh*re It, ir. expected thet competing\nteams will come from several points\nin East and West Kootenay.\nLOW PRICE\nLONG MILEAGE\nHere to \u25a0 Xom piked qoaHt? a\u2014ii\nand pntantnd hj Flrartone. It is the\nequal of pnany first Knee of tires by artoal\ntest\u2014tn fact better than some, and yet it\nsells for 20% less!\nOnly in Firce&me-OldfieM tires csx\nyon receive the benefits of\u2014\nGum-Dipped Cord Construction\u2014Give* 25% to\n40% longer life.\n2 Double Cord Breaker\u2014\n\" insures against blowout*, puncture* and\nloose tread*.\n3     Non-Skid Tread of\n\" toughest rubber for\ntraction and safety.\nFirestone-Oldficld tires bare been\ntried and proven by thousands of motorists. They give you tbe most in dependable, carefree low cost mileage. Your\nnearest Firestone Dealer vnll gladly serve\nyon.   See him today.\nEl EDLEY QASLAC2 CO.\nDEALERS NELSON AND DISTRICT\nNEXT DOOR TO P. 0. PHONE 71\nSOLD AND SERVICED BY\nWc DE3J\/J&E\nAT DILL'S S. S, S.\nNELSON, 3. C.\n MOB  rocn\n\u25a0\u2014KBEM HTU!a. ;-.\u201e.. i.; lXi.\\S:.\\ ..Ui I SJuL,,:\nMarriage a la Mode\nBy VIDA HURST\nCHAPTER  FORTY-THREE\nMorning brought white csmelllas\nand a note from Oonioz.\n\"I'll telephone some time this afternoon. Not sure yet Just whst\ntime I can get away, but must see\nyou If possible.\"\nCorliss pressed her face against the\nwaxen smoothness of the blossoms.\nEven if It ruined them she wanted\nto feel their exquisite texture\nagainst her skin. Was that the way\nGomez felt about her? There was\nreluctance in hla. advances. As if\nonce he had taken her in his arms.\n\"It will be everything or nothing,\"\nhe had whispered.\nYet In spite of this restraint, perhaps because of It. she felt her sell\nbeing drawn rclenUcsMy. Never be\nfore hid *he been to conscious ol\nIfeS mevit.ihiity of fats. It was, she\nknew, Just s question nt time, and\neven that seemed to ro*i with him.\nApparently without effort he had\ncaptured her capricious will and\nheld It Muttering but restless between his hands. . .\nShe could not leave her apartment until 1 ic oiled. 5o fearful\nwas she of missing him. When tlic\ntelephone rang a little after three\no'clock she lifted the receiver with\nshaking lingers.   But it was Beatrice\n'Hello, darling! What did you do\nlast night?\"\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022 \u2022\nElaborately, beautifully, Corliss\nlied.   She   would   nov\u2014could   not\u2014\nShe won prizes\nNever a failure.'\nREAD Miss Doris Oldfield's experience, \"I have never had a\nfailure using Certo. I entered three\nvarieties of jam end toolc two firsts\nand one second.\"\n\u2022 \u2022 *\nVow can achieve the. same splendid\nresultj. Try Cerio\u2014 the modern\n\"short-boil\" method. Jams and\njellies in only '-'j the time. Never\na failure to set\u2014halt as much again\nirom a given amount of fruit!\nNo matter what month tn the year\nuse any fruit, fresh, canned or dried\n\u2014or fruit juice.\nRecipes\nA mine of tnfotmstion on jam end jelly\nmaking ii in the Certo recipe, booklet\nfound under the label of every Certo\nbottle. Follow instructions exactly, always.\nCERTO\n\u2014Ii f mit per tin.\n\u2014Tha natur.tl jellying subitance extracted from fruit.\n\u2014Jells the .juiee that would have boiled\naway by tlie old (long-boil, method.\n\u2014Makes 50 fi more jam or jelly at less\ncost ptr jar.\n\u2014Saves *j the time. Saves the fruit\nflavour.   Saves the fruit colour.\nSftouM any preoUm of jam or jetly milting par-\npltx you. or should you dostra any Information\nwhatiotvar. writ a to tha Demastic Science\nDepartment, General Foods Liinjtad. Cobouff,\n^^-^^ Ontario.\nCerto\nMade in Cauda\nmuauamu.um.imu\/. v.'rm\nE14-31\nCanadian\nShredded Wheal\n\u25a0 i 100% Canadian\ngroin. Eat TWO\nShredded Wheat\nBiscuits a day\natnd help Canada's\nProsperity.\nBrighten\nthe breakfast\nwith   berries.\n\"I pile luscioui red straw-\nberries on our Shredded\nWheat Bistuiu and then\npour cream or whole milk\nover them. The flavory\nshreds blend with the juices\nof the berries in such a way\nas to stimulate themost jaded\nappetite. Shredded Wheat is\ntohealthf ul and wholesome.\"\nTHE CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT\nCOMPANY, LTD.\nSHREDDED\nWHEAT\nWITH AH THE BRAN OF THE WHOtE WHEAT\nrsrlee Dutton and Beatrice\ndtBCU*BlnB the dctSila, poasiblUtiea.\net*., cf her romance. It would\ntake all the romance out \"I it\nBeatrice wa\u00bb not difficult to deceive. Trustfully as a child she\nfiwallowed the rather lame explanation. Charlea end ahe were so happy. They were going to be married\nIn a couple of wecka. Would Corll&a\ngo with them?\nsaid -slic hoped they\nwouldn't he mean enough to think\nof taking the fatal step without her.\nAnd huny up with leai!, m her\nMM. She wa\u00ab so alienated from\nthem. As it they were deliberately\nshutting her out. yet she knew nothing WSl further from their intentions. Sbe was, inexpressibly surprised when Iter apartment bell\nrang a few moments la ter and\nCharles askfd If he might come  up.\n\"I was In the neighborhood,\" he\nsaid,   'and  thought  I'd just run  in,\n\"Making an excuse for it,\" she\nthought, a little lrscrufuUy. He\nwould always have to have an excuse fcr running In now.     #\n\"Sea here,\" he began without pre\namble, \"what's this I've been hearing about you?\"\n\"I dunno. Not guilty of anything.\"\n\"I'm afraid you are,'' he said. \"I\nunderstand you were stepping with\nJunipers aomez last night.\"\n\"So Jerry Newman'b bern enlisting\nyour services again, has  he?\"\n\"He has not. I happened to have\nlunch today witi, Bill Dunlap.\"\nToo late she remerrebered that the\ndirector who had helped her reg'\nlater at central Casting had been\none of the men she had seen.\n\"All right,\" she said sullenly\n\"Supposing  I   waa?\"\n\"Just this.'* Charles Dutton said,\nsuccinctly, \"I gave you the introduction to Bill and he has done a-l he\ncan for you, but if you're going to\nkick over the traces with a man\nlike  Gomez . . .\"\nWhite with anger, she cried, \"You\nhave no right to say a thing like\nthat lo mo Chsnea. I've done\nnothing but go dancing with him,\n4 Dd ci en If 1 had 1 fall to see\nwhere that concerns eltljcr yuu or\nBill Dulep.\"\n\"Too many girls have had their\ncareers cut abort just that way.\nGomez it Spanish, with ideas \u00abnd\nCLi3om3 utterly foreign to ours. He's\na great box office attraction, but\nevery one In Hollywood knows he's\nabsolutely uj.ctujju.ou..'> where women\nart concerned.''\nTm free,  white  sad  over  21.\"\n\"Jusl bccdUM; you happen to have\nbeen married and divorced doesn't\nmean you're ctp )le of playing with\ni man like Gomez. Hell rum \\oa\nbody and soul. Career\u2014everything.\n. . .1 know you, Corliss. Understand\nyour capabilities and weaknesses far\nmoro tnan you do yourself. And\nit'a God's truth I'm telling you.\nBetter check him now bclurc it's\ntoo everlastingly Iste.\"'\nNew m bsf life had Corliss been\nio insulted.\n\"And ii I don't sec lit to folio*\nyour .atvice,1\" she demanded insolently.\n\"Yuu'ii regret it to the end ol\npour lite, iou're an extra. Gomez\nKnow., your so extra. And everyone\nelse knows' tMre'J ui!v one possible\nreason for his devol ml\".\n\"The fact mn; in .lollywood I am\nuolhing  but an  extra doesn't  mean\nlat   somewhere  else   he   might   not\nbe glad eiiougu to know ms '\"\n*ou'rc   not   anywhere   else,1     be\nsaid biutdlly.   \"You're m Hollywood\nid   Bill   Dunlap  says   juu'rc   about\nto be given a ciunce. ..   . \"\nWhat kind oi a chancer\"\nA chance at a  comedy with   fiery   Crestou.   li  seems  Harry   took  a\nlancy iu iou the other day.\"\n*    *    \u2022\nHer  fleshing  eve* softened   as She\npieadca, -On, Charles, do you really\nmean it?\"\n\u2022Vm telling you what Bill bold\nmc. Harrys next picture la Lo be a\ntalkie and U your voice Mete rigbt\n\"There's nothing the matter with\nniy    vuice,\"    itM   cried    cvuilidenw\n...   Hit y  I .ill.'\"\n\"NoL  tor  severs!  weeks,\"  he  ad-\nml tied, ' out tho point hi this; You\nouibt   lie   ui)  on   your   tors.   Ready\nLo   take   ad vantage   ol   every   break.'\nThe tnenv.. \u201e   oi   those fiery,  Span-\n.  made her catch tier breath\nbut the said, \"You're right. I'm |UTS\nyo.i vent to help mc''\n\"Of course, I do,\" ric said, polishing bis glasses. \"Anu my advice to\nyou now Is don't be MM with\nOanui   again.''\n\u2022    \u00bb    *\nHo   wdd'il,   \"One   thing   moftl   l\nyou'll  think mc an ass, but\ndon t  i eh Beatrice I stopped  today,\nwill you?\"\n\"I'd rather Beatrice wouldn't know\nanything shout a*.* of this if you\ndon t mind.\"\n\"lo would i,\" tat' aato smiling.\n\"The tact is I don't *-aui i.. dp anything 11 upsei . '\u2022!'. and she's in-\ndined to be Jealous.\"\nCorliss said, curlou ly, 'You gnrjjv\nthat, yet you at ill want lo man y\nher?\"\n\"I'm going to\nwith  flushed  determine! ion.   \"As   l\ntold   you   before   .'-lie   Is   the   only\nwoman Ui itic world i want lee my\nwrfe.\"\n\"And you egpec, Lo be fa ppj\nunder iucu rondjl\n\"Hspprnesfl ia nol eswhto-U,\" replied Dr. (Jharles Dutton, baking up\nhis hat.\nAs hr !rn iter apartment Mir tent\npbona rang again.   .  And tim. iinv\njunlpera OonMg\ni re rv continued.)\nGreenwood Couple\nMarry at Midway\nGREENWOOD, B. C, July 2.\u2014 The\nwedding look place at Midway on\nTuesday evening of Miss Vera Rat-\nledge and Gaiabakil Umtilla, both of\nGreenwood.\nMr. and Mrs. Umtllla , left on\nWednesday morning for Spokane\nwhere they will spend their honey-\nmoon. They intend to live at Cas-\noadc until ths autumn when they\nturn to Qreeu '\nDiamond Sculls Winner Marries\naaaM\nI Miss I. Kelleher\nto Take Summer\nSchool at U. B. C.\nNorth Vancouver.\nMiss Irene Kelleher has reft for\nMsttsque to spend a day or two st\nher home prior to attending summer\nscnool at the University of British\nColumbia.\nJACK   QUEST   tUl\u00bbS  MISS   MARY  M,\\< i>(>\\ \\t.l>\nOn the left is the charming bride. Miss Mary Macdonald. daughter of Dr. W. J. Macdonald of St. Cathnr-\nlncs, Ont. whose marriage to Jack Guest, winner of\nthe Diamond Sculls at Henley last year, attracted wide\nInterest.    On   the   right   appear   the   bride   and groom\nimmediately   following   the   wedding   ceremony, which,\nwas performed very quietly at the home of the bride's\nfather, bv  the Rev. Dr. Robert Johnston.\nMust Be Cautious\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn  Authority  on  Problem;* of  Love  and   Manlsge\nBefore me Is a letter from a\ncharming and (sincere, young girl,\nevidently deeply in love, yet unable to understand her emotions or\nwhat to do In the situation m\nwbiefa lbs finds herself, i c*n only\nreply to her generally, saying that,\n.is matters at and, she must be pa-\nMem.   Tlic letter explain,') iLscir.\n\"Dear Mill Fairfax:\n\"The most wonderful sgperiencs\nhas come to mc; I'm really happy.\nWhatever tbe future may bring, I\nthai] always look b.<ck on this\nSoring, when the trees were greenei\nthen ever before and it is Just wonderful to be alive. For a long time\nI didn't realize what made me\nstumble Into this world ot enchant-\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nD]   LAURA A. K1BKMAM\nBOUTH SLOCAN, B. C\u201e July 2 -\nMiss Muriel Harrop. principal of the\npublic school, leaves to spend the\nfirst part of her vacation on a\nmotoring trip to invermere. Banff\nand Calgary. Mlsa Harrop will be\naccompanied by her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs E. Harrop of Harrop and\nMiss Jessie Harrop of Nelson.\nR. G. Elliott has Just had a large\nsun porch added to his residence\nwhich takes ln the rul! width of\nthe house 3W10 and in completed\nwith   10   large   windows.\nTOMORROW'S   MI.M\nIlrcuklasl\nreaches\nCereal\nBroiled Bites ol Hum\nCoffee   Cake Maraalsdi\nCoffee\nLuncheon\ninl Tomatoes\nBiscuits Peanut  Butter\nI'iuii Deleting Molds\nCookie;, Iced Tea\nDinner\nBee!   Loaf\nnice nisi Oruoni\n1-Hi.ur>   ttalad\nRaspberry Tapioca Coffee\nTill: BR1DKH KIH IIKNWARB\nI havc  been asked  for a \"complete   list*'   of   kitchen ware   for   a\nbride.\nReoessary: Basting spoon, colander, doub!B boiler, ladle, two measuring cups, three saucepans or i\\i\\-\ntereui, sites \u2022email, medium ami\nlarge\u2014one skimmer, griddle, lkls\nfor saucepans, measuring spoons,\ngem or muffin pan*, tea-kettle.\nOptional: Double omelet pen and\negg neecher. All oi these, may be\naluminum, ot some of them agate- .\nware-\nNecessary; Reel of ratling bowl1.,\nflow bin, sugar bin, tea oentster.\noptional: Bet of ramekins, bean\npot. The:,c In crockery or earthenware.\nftecessary; Bottle opener, bread\nkeifs, can opener, carving set, two\nesse knives, chopping knlle, cleaver,\ncork-screw, large and small egg\nbeaters, griddleeake turner, loa plot,\nlong-handled fork, meat grinder.\ntwo paring knives, one shears, one\nnet skewers, two small forks. Optional; Apple parer, butter curler,\nfancy vegetable cutters, grapefruit\nknife icurred blade), larding needle.\npotato parer, potato bail scoop     tAH\nkeel).\nNecessary:   Two bread pans, but*\nter crock, casserole, six custard cups,\n\\2 Jars for cereals and dry groceries,\nsix spice Jam, oue lemon squeezer,\ntwo pic plates, one pudding dish.\nOptional: One rolling pan for pastry    All these In glass.\nNecessary: Two baking pans, medium and small; three different\nsized frying pans; frying kettle:\nroasting pan with cover; soap dlah\nto Kuapend from faucets; soup kettle.\nOptional; loa cream dippers and\nmolds.   These i\" iron or aluminum.\nNecessary: Bread Imx, eak\u00ab box,\ncoffee caniater. dustpan, flour bin,\nlea canister, sugar bin. These In\njapanned  ware.\nNecessary Apple coraf, biscuit\narid cookie cutters, doughnut cutter, angel (tube) cake pan, three\nlayer-cake pans, cookie sheet, dish\ndrainer, dtshpan, large and small\nfunnels, grater, Jelly molds, nutmeg\ngrater, quart measure, soap shake,\ntea strainer, wire boiler, two wire\nstalnera. Optional: Assorted fancy\ncookie cutters, asorted fancy jelly\n, molds, wire whisk. These In tin and\n1 wire.\nmerit,  then   the  discovery  came   to\nme that I was In love.\n\"I am gg, and the DU li 48. He\nbaa known me atnefe I was a little\ngirl, hu given me books to read\nand takes me to the opera and gond\nplays, He lias always treated mc\nlike i kid, called me that, and iak\nen the attitude that he was Inter\nestsd in my education. All this\nhecmed just a happy arrangement to\ninc\u2014then, suddenly, life changed\nfrom rather R drab world into something that seemed to me like n\nseventh heaven. At Ctrst I didn't\nresiles \u00bbhat it meant, then I knew\nI WSl happiest when 1 wa.s with nw\nfriend. He is very rich and we ore\nvery poor. 1 wi-.li that he. too, wti\npoor, so that in some way I SOUld\nprove my love for him by working\nfor him and trying to make him\nbsppisr, but tlie different ln our\npositions would make such a step\nlook  now  like  self-tntereflt  on  my\npart.\n\"My friend ha.s never said anything about love\u2014I imagine he\nthinks there is too great difference\nin our ages, but sometimes i catch\nhim looking at me m the kindest.\nwtiy And he talks a great deal\nabout our lifelong friendship, and\nboat lie hopes It will continue ai-\n1've written to you sevecjkl\ni lines before on questions about\nmy clothes and Mhoo) matters, '\u25a0\"\nvnu'u answer Il la (to me)\nmost tmbortant of my letters. Thank\nyOU, \"LOUISE\"\na^ the chance:, and rewards in\nlove arc the greatest in life, Louise\nmust he most prurient and cautious\nat thla time. Her friend evidently\nis considering the question of thc\ndlffcrenoa in their ages seriously.\nBna mustn't show too plainly thai\nthe Uaeg arc greener than ever he-\ntore.\nBo tnany affairs ttka tbta, be-\ntween   a   younger   woman   and   an\nolder man who has everything but\nyouth to give, go ou the rocks be\ncausa the man at the Last moment\nferis the match would be unsuitable\nBo he takes thc next ateamer to\nEurope or he noes olf to the Rock\nMountains and   when   be  mecis the\nClr]    again    they're    OQ    an    rrMir<lv\ndifferent    looting.      lie's    reserved,\nbarricaded; chill prudence has overtaken him. That la too ' bad, be*\ncause some |UCh marriages havg\nbeen  among  the  happiest  I'nown.\nThis man haa supervised the\ngirl's   education,   which   gives   them\ngreat fund of interests in com*\nmon. And it's Just as wise to have\nmutual Interests to draw on after\nthe honeymoon as it Is to have\nsomething  saved   for  the  rainy  dav.\n8HOREACRES. B. C, July 2\u2014Mlsa\nHelen Lensmann, principal of thc\nClsde school, leaves to spend the\nschool    vacation   at   her   home    In\nBONNINOTON FALLS, B. C\u201e July\n2.\u2014Maurice Walker, school teacher,\nhas left to spend the summer vacation in Victoria.\nSOME day you'll be tempted\nto try a substitute for Kotcx.\nIt may look the same.\nDut where was this substitute made? How? By whom?\nWhat do you know of its\ncleanliness\u2014would a hospital\nconsider it safe to use?\nAll these things, you see, arc\nimplied in the careless phrase,\n\"just like Kotcx.\" That is\nwhy you must be careful.\nKotex is adjustable. It is\ntreated to deodorize.\nTlie safe thing to do is to\ninsist on Kotcx. Genuine\nKotex. Then you know you're\nsafe. Kotex is used in thc\nfinest hospitals from coast to\ncoast.\nMatchless Comfort\nKotex is so marvelously comfortable, too. Its softness\nlasts.   Soft, filmy layers make\nKOTEX IS SAFE..;\nIdm be worn on elfhcr side\n\u2022 with    tf\\\\i,i]    comfort.        No\neinharrctismrni.\n2toia U soft . . . Net ntrrrly\n\u2022 an apparpnt. aoftneUi gnal toun\ntii.li trio chafing hardnfw,\nut a delicate lasting softness.\n<\u00bb The Koirs absorbent ii tlM\n**\u2022 identical material u\u00abd tiy Birr\n\u25a0MSI in Canada's leading\nli-ispiialv\n. IHsnoMblr, instantly, torn-\n**\u2022 plctcly.\nadjustments easy. Wear it\non either side with equal protection. Thc gauze, too, in\nKotcx is specially treated to\nmake it amazingly soft.\nKOT6X\nMADE IN CANADA       UM\nCASH ONLY\n3 DAYS\nFrL, Sat, Mon.\nNO APPROS.\nBargains\nMail Orders Filled if Received\nWithin Six Days of This Advertisement\nNO MEED FOR US TO ADVERTISE THE  ITEMS OUR  STORK   ALL OVER\nBOTH FLOORS ABLAZE WITH HUNDREDS OE OUR  USUAL BARGAINS\u2014\nWE QUOTE ONLY A FEW\nLADIES' CALIFORNIA VOILE also PRINT DRESSES easily 500\nlo select from.   Sizes 13s to '18a.   East Colors. QfT\u201e\nEACH   *Wl'\nif^l LADIES' PURE SPUN SILK DRESSES\u2014all colors.   Sizes     QX\/.\nlo 44.   EACH  VOK'\nLADIES' SUMMER HATS\u2014 Ughttttu, Tuskin, Baker, etc.,   QC0\nVALUES TO 110.00 FOR   UOK'\nLADIES' NEW STYLE JABOT BLOUSES, also broken lines   QCP\nlo 16.00.   FOR EACH   aoK'\nMISSES DRESSES   . to 14 Years.\nEACH \t\n95c\nEvtiy drop ol 8o'd\u00abn't St. CiWUi\nMilk il midt Item Iht SisS ind,\nfull-cfism mill) ol British Columbti\nBo.d\u00abn'iSt. ChiiU. MilkdtHniltlv\nImp'ovti thi Rtvour of your pud-\ndlnf, ai yon and youf family will\nSUtovtr immidiattly wiStn you\nby II.\nTrtft Bordan Co. LlmiUd,\n2 Hamar Aicad* Bmldinj,\nVANCOOVER\ni     r\u00bbdory. South Suimi\niSordtyrti\nST.CHARLE5 MILK\n\\             LADIES' CORSETS, CORSELETTES, GIRDLES, GARTER    QEp\nV BANDS, ETC., EACH UOX'\nLADIES' RAYON SILK LINGERIE HOYS' WASH SUITS     Sizes QC\/.\nGOWNS, SLIPS, PANTIES, .   ggc to 8.   EACH   uay'\nl'u-    EACH   PURE SILK H0SB\u2014 Service weight\nRAYON SILK BLOOMERS \u2014 mly 2 pairs cadi customer.     OKn\nOnly 50 Dozen to Go at Qgj. 2 PAIRS for   *,yl'\n3  lwi''8  for   \"    \u25a0' tOOO PAIRS PURE SILK HOSE -\nTlijcse are good weight and lull  fashioned,  chiffon  silk  toe  to\nguaranteed. top, semi-service and extra       Q^r\u00bb\nBeby'a Department ablaze with bar- heavy.   PAIR    \u00b0   ^\nWins separate displays at 1.   95,, BUOADCLOTHS, PRINTS,  etc.. 36   '\nI. 3, and 4 articles   inches widc -_\nNEW  PRINTS  \u2014  36  inches  wide 1 YARDS   t,OK'\nvcrv Smart Patterns. OK\/.\n:, YARDS   00^ SEE   OUR  WINDOWS\nRAMSDEN BROS.\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\n %y\nGolf Shoes\n$4.95 and Up\nR.Andrew&Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nONTARIO HAS\nRELIEF PLAN\nTORONTO, Ont., July 3. (CP) \u2014\nThat the Dominion and provincial\ngovernments be requested to pay\none-third of all direct unemployment relief, without regard to past\npayments as from July 1, was the\nresolution adopted by the conference\nof Ontario municipalities here today. Both governments were urged\nto start all possible public works,\nto he carried out by direct cm-\nplyoment and. the use of hand labor.\njfc01\nR\u00abno\u00ab dn- .kin.    Difa on\nMinard \u2022 3 um\u00ab. daily. Let it\nlift right off\n1\nMINARDS\nSociety\nThis column Is conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vigneux All news\nof a social nature, including receptions, private entertainments,\npersonal Items, marriages, etc.,\nwill appear In this column. Tele-\nPhone Mrs. Vigneux st her home,\n610 Silica street.\nWith Canadian Memorial church\nat Vancouver forming a beautiful setting for the ceremony, tho marriage\nof Mlsa Vera Maria Walley and\nFrank. Pearson Llghtboy was solemnized, Tuesday evening, June 30,\nby Dr. A. M. Oanford, Providing an\neffective background for the service were standard baskets filled\nwith delphinium, snapdragon and\nfoxgloves ln varied colorings, while\nmarking the pews were bouquets of\nsweet peas. The bride lo the elder\ndaughter of Mrs. M. E. Walley. 2609\nWest Tenth avenue, and the bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.\nA. V. Llghtbody, 148 West Eleventh\navenue. During the signing of the\nregister vocal selections were given\nby Mrs. I for Roberts.\nDr. G. A. C. Walley of Nelson gave\nhis sister tn marriage and her lovely\ngown, designed with classic simplicity, was fashioned of egg-shell\nbridal satin. Sheath-like to the\nknees, where It rippled Into graceful\nfullness ending ln a train, it featured a cowl neck and long, slender\nsleeves finishing ln points, the only\nsuggestion of adornment being a\nnarrow puffing of self material ln\na peplum elfect reaching to an Inverted V in the front. Held in cap\nBtyle to her head with strands and\nclusters of orange blossoms, was her\ndelicate oval veil. of embroidered\nsilk net which cascaded over the\ntrain, and carried in a sheaf were\npink rosebuds and llly-of-the-valley.\nA silk net frock of a soft apple\ngreen ton* was chosen by Miss\nGenevieve Walley, who attended her\nsister as bridesmaid. Outlined with\na befrilled bertha collar, was the\nboat neck-line of the slender bodice,\nwhile flaring from a swathed and\nscalloped hip-line was thc fluffy\nskirt, which also featured a frilled\nedging. Of matching shade was her\nmohair picture hat, overlaid with\nmallne, and her pumps, while providing a color contrast was a high\nbelt of braided ribbons blending\nfrom pale yellow roses and mauve\nsweet peas of her shower bouquet.\nLeon Manual of Chllllwack acted\nas groomsman and the UBhers were\nDr. M- J. Walley, Bruce Samls, Harold McLean and Marvin Henderson.\nRoses in blended tints, intermingled with greenery, were artistically arranged throughout in the\nhome of the bride's mother for the\nreception which followed. Mrs.\nWalley, who received with the bridal\nTHE    NELSON   DAILY    NEWS,    HELSON,    B.    C.\nFRIDAY   MORNISr,,    JULY    3.    1Wla\nFor One Week Commencing Friday (today) Some\nWonderful Values in\nComplete Living\nRoom Suites\nNIME PIECE OUTFIT\n3-Piece Mohair Chesterfield Suite\n1 Chesterfield Table\n1 End Table\n1 Lamp and Shade\n1 Axminster Seamless Rug,'\n9 ft. x 10 ft. 6 in.\n1 Pedestal and Vase\nRegular $420 - Special $357\n3-Piece Chesterfield Suite, Mohair, and\nEnd Table. Special $177.50\n3-Piece Chesterfield Suite, Tapestry, and\nLamp. Special ,  $137.50\nWe have many to choose from.\nTime Payments. Terms: y4 Down;\nBalance Nine Equal Payments.\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nComplete House Furnishers Nelson, B. C.\nThe Store of Service and Satisfaction\nparty, was smartly attired In Jac-\nquctte costume of black French\ncrepe, a distinctive touch being\ngiven by clever diagonal goring. Her\nlarge hat also was black and red\nroses were worn en corsage. Also\nreceiving was Mrs. Llghtbody, her\nblack flat crep\u00ab gown being worn\nwith a fur-trimmed coatee and a\nmatching bat showing a trim of\nostrich feathers. Framed In tulle\nand rosebuds, the three-tier wedding\ncake waa cut from a small table.\nBefore leaving on a motor trip\nto the south, the bride donned an\nensemble of skipper blue wool crepe,\nwhich was worn with a white crepe\nde chene blouse, relieved with fagot-\nting. Kntle-pleatlng which formed\na peplum on the skirt was again\nrepeated as an edging on the cutaway coat and three-quarter length\nsleeves, while matching ln color were\nher pumps, a tallleured cloth topcoat and cloche hat or linen straw.\nResidence will be taken tn thc city.\nMrs. H. H. McKenzle and her two\nsons, Harry and Roddle, left via the\nGreat Northern yesterday for a fortnight's  visit to  the coast cities.\nMr. and Mrs. Donald McLeod, Vernon street, left last night for a few\nweeks' vacation to be spent at the\ncoast.\nMrs. Henri Gagnon, Carbonate\nstreet, and daughter Marguerite, are\nspending a few days in Spokane.\nArthur Gibbon, Silica street, is\nholidaying at thc coast cities.\nMr. and Mrs. B. N. Sharp of the\nBayonne were recent shoppers to\nNelson, Mrs. Sharp having recently\narrived from Spokane with her lani-\nlly to spend the summer there.\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. Hacking of\nKaslo were in town recently en\nroute home from Sllverton, where\nthey visited at the homc of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Mclntyre.\nMiss ina Steed, her nephew, Graham Steed, and Miss Maud Simmons\nare spending the week-end ln Spokane.\nMiss Grace Wilkinson and Miss\nGeorgle McKeown are spending the\nweek-end In Spokane\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. E. Hoskin of Balfour paid a\nvisit to town yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. George McKay of\nTrail were recent visitors in Nelson,\nguests at the home on Latimer\nstreet of Mr. and Mrs. Gregolre\nChoquette.\ntea\nW. J. Miller of Nakusp was a city\nvisitor yesterday.\nMiss Georgle Brown, Hoover street,\nspent Dominion Day at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. M. E. Emerson in\nSllverton.\nMrs. Mary Blanchard of Chicago\nhas arrived to spend a vacation at\nthe home In Falrview of Mr. and\nMrs. W. R. Blanchard.\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Crannage.\nKerr apartments, nnd their son.\nHarley. have spent a holiday in\nSpokane.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Alleen Appleyard. Hoover\nstreet, left yesterday for Vancouver\nand Victoria, wtkVe she will holiday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nRev. J. C. McKenzle has as his\nguest over the week-end bin brother,\nRer. R. V. McKenzle of St, DunMan\nuniversity In Charlottetown, P. E. I.,\nwho Is en routp to Vancouver, where\nhe will visit another brother, Rev.\nW. B. McKenzle. rector of the Holy\nRosary  cathedral.\nMiss Rubv Palmer. Falrview, lea-ves\nthis morning for Edmonton, where\nshe will visit friends.\nMrs. D. D, McLean. Carbonate\nstreet, has returned from Denver. |\nColo., where she went, a* a delegate i\nt0 the Ladles' Auxiliary to the I\nB. of R. T. convention, where 8T.I '\ndelegates gathered.\nMrs. J. L\u00ab, who ha:; hern the\nguest of her daughter. MIps M.\nCallahan, for the past few weeks.\nhas returned to  the coast,\nMr. and Mrs. George Rasmussen\nand son Billy, who tr\u00ab Mimmcrlng\nat their Shutty Bench home near\nKsslo. were in town shopping yesterday.\nMrs. T. \u00a7,* Jerome, Victoria street,\nleft yesterday \\ia the Great Northern for Vancouver, where she Will\nvisit her son-in-law and daughter.\nMr. aiicl Mrs. Howard McCosham.\nMr. and Mrs. J. R- Hunter and son\nBertram spent the holiday at their\nsummer   place.\nW- F. Llngle of Lfng* A- Johnson\nOf  Slocan  City,  spent  yesterday  In\ntown.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nG. Avlson of Grand Forks was a\nvisitor to the city yesterday.\nTlie Misses Belle McGauley and\nMargaret McLeod recently entertained at a smart bridge complimenting\nMiss Jessle Croll. wno Is the incentive for a number of social gatherings prior to her marrlase on\nthe 13th of this month. Mrs. J. F.\ncroll won the prls* for top icon\nand the guest or honor received \u00bb\nguest gift. Those invited were Miss\nJessie Croll. Mrs. J. F. Croll. Mrs.\nCharles Bland of Bennington, Miss\nGrace  Wilkinson.  Miss  (Horflfl  Mc-\nThe Housewife's\nFriend\nYour neighborhood ITS****! entire (itock is >o\u00abr famlljl re-\nItfVt Mipply of choice groceries\nthat von can draw upon aa Wto-\ned. In person or by phoning.\nCharge if counts InvHrd. Free\ndelivery service. Personal attention to sour needs. Aa yonr\nneighbors we'll appreciate your\ntrade and strive tn Justify your\nconfidence.\nThe Elite Grocery\n622-4   IIAKLR   STRLET\nrilONE 111        NELSON, H. C.\nKeown, Mrs. II. N. MacLeun. Miss\nWlnnl\u00ab Borthwock. Miss Blanche\nBeatty, Miss Iris Robertson. Mra.\nW. J. Ternan ol Rossland, Mlsa Lois\nSheffield, thc Misses Eileen and\nBessie MacKenzie, Mlsa Eileen Dill,\nMiss Grace McDonald, Miss Edna\nCampion. Mrs. J. Frank Meagher,\nMiss Enid Etter, Miss Connie Martin, Miss Helen Douglass, Miss Roberta Rodgers. Miss Dorothy Gilchrist, Miss Mildred Irvine. Miss\nHazel Eldrldgc and Mrs. Donald\nMcLeod.\nMr, and Mrs. G. F. Ortner, who\nhave been on a month's honeymoon\nmotor trip to the prairies, have returned to Trail, where they will\nmake their homc.\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Lakes have\nreturned to Vancouver. They were\naccompanied on their trip by Mrs.\nW. M. Walker and daughter, Miss\nMary Walker, who will visit at the\nhome of Mrs. Walker's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. O. Miller. Mrs' Lakes\nonly made a brie! visit to Nelson,\nhaving come up by motor from Spokane Tuesday night.\nMrs. R. L. M.cBrlde and son Lee\nleft yesterday by motor for a few\ndays to be' spent In Spokane. They\nwere accompanied by Mrs. McBridcs\nsister, Mrs. Wilfred Allen.\nFrank Meagher, Trail lawyer,\nspent the  holiday  in  Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. A .0. Gclinae, Victoria street, havc returned from\nSpokane, where they spent a few\ndays.\nMiss Albertino Choquette spent\nthe holiday in Trail with her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. nnd\nMrs.  George   McKay.\nMis\u00bb Marguerite sandcrcock. Hoover street, left yesterday via the\nOreat Northern for a 7l3i\u00bb to Vancouver and Victoria.\nMrs. O. Hatre of New Denver waa\na recent visitor to town.\nDr. Norrlngton. who has been on\nthe teaching staff of tlie Cranbrook\nschool, has returned and taken up\nresidence at her Crescent Bay home.\nMrs. J. Barberle nf Vancouver is\ntn the city, a guest at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McDonald.\nMill street.\nHenri Gagnon, Carbonate street,\nand son Louis nre spending some\ntime at tbg home nt Crescent Valley ct Mis.  Moise Bourgeois.\nMrs William Rutherford left via\nthe Great Northern yesterday morn*\nIng for ii for might's visit to the\ncoast.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred L. Irwin, accompanied by their daughter and\ngrandson. Mrs. Harold Hlnitt and\nFied, have returned from a motor\ntrip to Seattle, where they visited\nMr. Irwin's brother, Edward Irwin,\nformerly of Nelson. They also visited their son, Floyd Irwin, at\nRutland   In   the,  Okanagan  district,\nCharles Bourgeois of Creetow\nspent yesterday in town and left\nlater In the evening for Orescent\nValley, whero he will apend some\ntime.\nGeorge Grlmwood ot Ratio ,i I I\nrecent visitor to town.\nMr, and Mrs. P. W- Dow. who\nhave boon visitinc ihe litters\nparents, have returned to their\nhomc in Cm n brook.\nMiss Barbara Gould has arrived\nfrom Vancouver to visit her mother,\nMrs.   Gould,  cedar  and  Mill  street.\nMr. Sofctatl of the Relief-Arlington\nmine at Erlo paid a visit to town\nyeaterday.\nMrs. R. Clark and children of\nBerkeley. Call! . have taken up residence in  the Ken- HpiHtment.s.\nMr. and Mrs. A, B Hall, (inre f\nstrcel. have us their Imnsr guest' 3\nMr. Hall's alitor,  Mtsi Qnot  Halt or j\nVancouver. \u00bb \\\nMr. and Mrs a .J. Watson 0, ,\nKootenay   Bay   paid   I   rWt   lo   thc j\ncity   yesterday.\nMiss Maymc McPhail, or the teaching staff ot tue Kaslo school, baa\narrived home to i P<nd **\u00ab aummer\nat the home ol her parente. Mr\nand Mrs. John McPhall, Silica itreet,\nMr. and Mrs. D II. B'ivlry, formerly  ot  Willow   Point  and   now of\nTrail,    were    in    tOWD    yest..Trl>i'   tfl\nroute to Procter.\nAlex Cneyne 11 i-.;\"' P*M fl **\u00bbtt\nto town over the kolld ''\u25a0\nMrs. c* chapman, Latimer itreet,\nend  her daughtera, Marguerite end\nDorothv. have left lor UtbbrMge,\nwhere they will visit. Mra, J. D, McGregor.\nir\u00bb\u2014,\u2014t-M..MMi.\u00bb.\u00ab\u2014,\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0MM.iMaM.i.M.^wKianl\nMiss Irene Kerr ol lonabeech haa\nU    her    hOUM    (UWt    Ml!'.;    Stanley\nTalt or Oliver, British Columbia.\nMr. nnd Mrs. E. 0: Wr\u00bb\u00abi<-, Oh-\nwrvaton rtrttt, leaw today Ix iheir\nsummer place nt lour mile.\nMr ami Mrs. A. J. Burn. irt,. ol\nnntlcton, \u00bbho \u25ba\u00bb\u00bb\u2022 been on m\nextender! motor trip lo the pram\".\nhave returned and tn imata at ihe\nheme of Mrs. Burnslde's mother.\nMrs W H Whlmster. Falrview.\nThev are a'Tompnnlert M their son.\nDeanr.\nOn Wednesday. June 93, a u'\"ct\nTeddine    waa   wtannHWl    \u00abt   s>.\nPaul's United church at 1:30 P\u00bb\nwhen Elsie May Millar became thc\nbride ot Harold Albert Cam. Miss\nD Cam attended the bride, while\ntlie uroom was supported bv Roy\nC .Inner. Tile happy couple lett\non the coast train and have taken\nup  residence on   Bay avenue. Trail.\nCANADIAN SPIRIT\nSTRESSED BY THE\nWEEKLY NEWSMEN\nREGINA. Mak!, July 2,-Oreatness\not a country Is not (o be nauurtd\nalone In tar-Ilunr, boundaries, natural resources and   cash   values, hut\nalso in the spun and unit} ot its\npeople. This, in bnel tw the key-\nnole nr the addr\u00abMM delivered, it\nthe tessions ot Ihe 12th annml\nconvention of the Canadian Weekly\nNew\u00a7papera association which opened\ntoday.\nThe meetings were the first ever\nheld in Saskatchewan, and were attended by 350 delegates.   ,\nMarriage.   It seems.   Is   important,\nprincipally as \u00bb means to alimony.\nFlattery   sits In   the   narlor   while\nplain dealing is kicked Ml .'\ndoors.\nClJMea^her's^O\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nApparel Clearance '\nAn Occasion of Great Importance\nA CHARMING SELECTION OF CAREFULLY STYLED SUMMER MODES IN BEAUTIFUL MATERIALS\u2014EITHER GAY OR CONSERVATIVE- CONFORMING TO ALL THE\nNEWEST LINES AND MADE DISTINCTIVE BY THE CLEVER APPLICATION OF\nSMART TRIMMING TOUCHES. SUITS - COATS - DRESSES - SPORTSWEAR \u2014\nSUNDAY NIGHT DRESSES - ALL ARE MUCH LOWER PRICED. EVERY WOMAN\nAND MISS SHOULD TAKE ADVANTAGE OF  THIS  SPLENDID  MONEY  SAVING\nOPPORTUNITY.\nWOMEN'S DRESSES\nThp new Folka Dot Krashccn in assorted colored sports on light grounds.   Made sleeveless style, in sizes 16 to 42. ALL ONE PRICE S3.95 EACH.\nSPORT DRESSES\nSports Dresses and Travel Dresses of lifrht woolens and silks.\nWith or without jackets.   Sizes 14 to 42.   ALL REDUCED 20%.\nClearing Summer Dresses\nAll are smart new summer dresses. Made of Chiffon voiles, Flat\n:repe, Rajah silk, Pongee or Silk Pique. Sleeveless or short sleeve\n*tvles. With or without jackets. Sizes 14 to 42. Regular values\nSJ6.75 to 8U9.75 each.       CLEARING AT 20r; DISCOUNT.\nWomen's Afternoon Dresses\nMany of these have just arrived. Dresses of printed\nihiffon, printed silks, Flat crepes or plain chiffon,\n\u25a0sleeveless or long-sleeve styles, and all tlie season's\nbest colors and Black. Sizes 11 to II. Regular \\ allies\n1116.75 to $50.00 each.\nSALE PRICE 20',;. LESS.\nWOMEN'S DRESSES\nOdd lines of Dresses at less than one third of the regular\nprice.   There is 20 in the lot, consisting of Fugi silk, novelty\nravons and printed Ratiste.   Assorted sizes and colors.\nALL ONE PRICE $2.19 EACH.\nKNITTED SUITS\nTwo or three-piece Knitted Suits in pure Botany\nwool.   Assorted styles.   Sizes 11 to 38.   Values to\nM6.50 each.\nSALE PRICE $11.95 EACH.\nen's\nSuits of the better sort.   Smartly tailored and\nrichly, lined.   Made of tweeds or novelty worsteds\nin a range of colors,   sizes 11 to 10,    Values to\n149.50 each,\nSALE PRICK 984.05 EACH.\ns\nSize\nA wonderful opportunity for the woman who'\nis hard to tit These conic in Printed silks, Flat\nirepc or Chiffon In a range of smart styles All\nsizes up to UJ'\/o. Regular values $10.75 to\n$50.00 each.   SALE PRICE aW% LESS.\nA wonderful opportunity to\nsave on your coat. Most of\nthese arc suitable for early\nKail wear. Th<n- come in Novelty Tweeds. Chonga Cloth,\nCamel Down or Broadcloth.\nMany have collars of rich fur\nand others have self collars.\nMade by firms with I nationwide reputation and they are\nthe last word in style and tailoring. There is still a good\nassortment and the savings arc\nworth while.\nSALE PUCE $10.00 TO\n$30.00 LESS.\nWomen's Leather\nJackets\nSmart Jackets of Soft Lealh.\ner. Belted styles and hip\nlength. All wanted colors. Sizes\n16 to 88. Regular $12.95 to\n125.00 each.\nSALE PRICK $10.15 TO\n$20.00 EACH.\nED BOYES IS\nMARRIED, BALFOUR\ni:\\i POUR, B. c, July i<\u2014A QUlet\nwedding book pl\u00bbc\u00ab nt mc home\nof Mr, tod Mra. S. B. hwer, Balfour,\non Monday. June 2>>, When Uwtt\neldest,  dKUgbtOT,   Isiilirllr,   Ml   linlM\nIn  marrtfffQ  111 ti   I dwtrd   Boi h ol\nNelson,   b Oeorge  Kinney   ot\nProcter.      The    bride    looked     verj\npretty,   dreeaed   In   white   crepe   de\nehene,  tat, eboea and\nmatch.     \u00bbhe   wore   n   cortege   o!\norange   Woeeom*   nnd   wntti\nroora'i lift bo the bride whs\npe i necklace. Tbe bride's\nmother wai dreeac i la dainty blue\nsilk. The rooms were fle\nwith power*, roeee predominating.\na dainty bund luncheon wee served\nUtter which the bride MKi crmm\nlcrt by cere decorated with Btreamera\nand flower.s. (or Kelaon to catch\ntlic train lor the coaat to apend\ntheir honeymoon in Alaska. The\nbride's travetliiR ault was [if grey\nwool will a black het, lira.\nkated by Mra. (l. Conrad and\nher daughters, Bdna, Laura and\nKvelyn. ThOM from outside points\nwho were present were the groom's\nlather. E. Boyes, Mr. and Mrs. Kid-\nwell, Mrs. HlpDerson. sister of the\ngroom, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony\nBanks, brjiher-ln-hiw and sister ni\nhride, Mra, McLeod and three children, all of Nelson. Mrs. Coniad\nand two Children, Mrs. Gates, Un\nVerner    Hoskin;-,    and    Km.    Morgan\nwere amone thoee who motored  to\nNelaeon o spp them off.\nVisitor* to Balfour over the wttk-\nend included Mr. and Mrs Paul\nPugsby of Spokane, Ben Cohen.\nMiss Flora Muntler, H. E. R.\nBedford of Trail; Mr. and Mrs Roy\nSharpe and daughter of Nelson;\nMr. and Mrs. G, C. Whitney of\nSpokane.\n. EDMONTON, Alta.. July 2.\u2014Dc-\nplorlni the [act that Dominion day\ntiol In UlB tnu sense is completely neglected. Lieulcnani-Ciovcr-\nnm-   W.   L.   Walsh   nf   AlberU   called\nupon CenadleiM to refute and counter  Bolshevist  propaganda   by  public  eddreeaae on  Oena\napeaklni befmc i aerrioe club hfrr\nin  parte oi weatem Canada talk\nol   aeenalon   Irom   the   Dominion   has\nreared   ita   ugly   head,   it   is  silly\ntalk- not, In Ihe lifetime of anyone\nhere can there be const lUit.onai secession, since it can only he oh-\ntalMd by repeal of the statute of\nImperii 1 psrliament which granted\nthese rights to the Dominion---or by\nsuccessful   civil   war,\"   he   declared.\n. You may keep your beauty alid\nyour health, unless you destroy them\nyourself or dlaoourage them to ita;\nWith you by ttalng them ill.\u2014Temple.\nTHINKS DOMINION\nDAY NOT OBSERVED !\nIN RIGHT MANNER\nIt's Frigidaire\nTime\nHUH Ihe warm Wtotfeff nay.\nlierc. now Is the time to see\nlis about vmir IVUQIDAIV. io\nmany advantaefs are there to\nhe enjoyed hy owning a Ir'rlg-\nIdalre, and so low are they lit\ntost, no home should be with*\nout one. See us today.\nAgents for\nFRKilDAIRE AND\nNEON SIGNS\nColumbia Electric\nPHONE G95\nKimberley \u2014 Nel?on\nK. P. OFFICERS\nARE INSTALLED\nFOR NEXT YEAR\nThe Knights of Pythias held a\nmeeting on Thursday evening nt the\nK. P. hall at fthlch new olflcern\nwere installed for the coming yenr\nThey were: fe. Newell, C. C; L\nRanwlck, V. Cj Y. Oouchtr, M. JM\n.1. Mclvan, M. W . H. Logan, prelate;\nD. Laughton, K. R. and 8 ; R. O. JOf,\nM. P.; J, Robb, M. of E: r. Raydon,\ninside guard; N 8- Heuston, out-\n\u25a0tde  Ruard.\nA  good   name,  1 ike  great   rtchflal,\nia ofien  faked.\nPORTABLES\n! lie l.ininiK Iliunw.\nwick     r..M..t i n(i,-\n1'inlable       IMimyi-\nHphj^\u2014\u00abWT   and\nI'nrld's   Beau\n555.\nKootenay Music House\n;iiu   Baker   si.   Netoon,   \u00bb.   C\nPhone   .-)A.i\nPreserving Utensils\nEverythijg for the Housewife.\nPRESERVING KETTLES\nCANNING RACKS.\nCOPPER BOILERS.\nCHERRY PITTERS.\nSTRAWBERRY HULLERS.\nSTRAINERS.\nMIXING SPOONS.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\n\"Look for the RED HARDWARE Store\"\nPHONE 45)7 BOX 414\nJM.\n P*Ot   BIX\n\u00aeIu> Hrioim latlg Ktwa\nPublished ewj morning eicept Sunday by Ntn Publlihlng Com-\nf*ar. Limited,  Nelion.  B. c.\nMember ot c\u00bbnad!\u00bbn Press leased wire  mwi service.\nAdtertlslng rat* cards ond A. B. C. statements of circulation\nmailed on reouest, or msy be seen .at tlie office of any advertising\n\u2022gency recognised by the Canadian Dally Newspapers' Association.\n_ SUBSCRIPTION RATES\n\u2022y mall   (country),  per month     \u201e...\u2666   .60\nPer  year    _ ___          joo\n\u25a0y mall  (city), per year      13.00\nOutslas Canada, per month   __  .     .78\nPer year  ; _ _    7.50\nDelivered, per week       _  36\nP\u00abr   year    \u201e _ _ _____ _  13.00\nPayable in advance.\n      Member Audit Buresu of Circulation.\nFRIDAY, JULY 3, 193~1~\nSend Them to Relief Headquarters\nNelson citizens will welcome the installation of a\nkitchen in the city where transients can be fed. Already it is proving a popular place for those who are\nout of work and funds.\nBegging on the streets in Nelson has been more or\nless common for some months. Numerous citizens have\nlime after time parted with 25 cents and 50 cents in\norder that some unfortunate may not go hungry. But\ncitizens did not always know if their money was going\nfor food or was being used to buy rum-dum, wine,\nrubbing alcohol, canned heat, liquor or food. The\ncitizen was always taking a chance. With the kitchen\noperating in the city the begging on our streets phould\ncome to an end. Those out of food can get it at the\nkitchen. They have no need for money. Nelson citizens should, as Mayor J. P. Morgan has requested,\nrefrain from giving cash to transients.\nNelson housewives will welcome installation of the\nkitchen. Hundreds and hundreds of meals have been\nbegged at local backdoors in the past few months.\nSome citizens, more generous than others, and who\ncould not afford it, have been donating food freely to\nmen out of work. Other housewives, whose husbands\nhave been at work, have been terrified into giving\nmeals. This practise, too, is now unnecessary. Transients desiring meals at your door should be referred\nto the kitchen at the Armory. Local housewives should\ncooperate in this respect and fall in line with the wishes\nof the mayor. With a kitchen operated for the tran-\n' sient, meals handed out from local kitchen doors should\nbecome a thing of thc past.\nA Remarkable Flight\nWiley Tost, one-eyed Oklahoma aviator, and Harold\nGatty, Los Angeles, Australian-born navigator, on\nWednesday completed a remarkable world flight. In an\nera of brilliant air performances, they have accomplished a wonderful feat which illustrates once again\nthe exceptional progress that has been made in aviation\nin a few short years.\nPost and Gatty flew a total of 15.474 miles over\nbleak, barren lands and over fog-covered waters. They\nvisited areas never before crossed by airplane, and\nfrom the time they left New York until they returned\nthey were away just eight days, 15 hours and 51 minutes. They actually flew around the world however, in\na flying time of four days and 10 hours.\nIn their flight, which was carried on doggedly from\nstart to finish, the aviators beat their own estimated\ntime of 10 days. They easily eclipsed the time made by\nthe Graf Zeppelin in 1929 when it flew around thc\nworld in 21 days.\nThis world flight was all the more interesting, in\nwestern Canada because of the fact that one of the\nstopping places was Edmonton, Alberta.\nPost and Gatty hold a new record. Already others\nare planning to better it. May their flights be as successful and as free from accident as was the flight of\nthese two brilliant men who guided the Winnie Mae.\nJuly First a Great Suceeas\nDominion day has come and gone. It was a tremendous success in Nelson. Thc weather was at its best\nThe program was excellent, and the support given the\nCanadian Legion Bugle band by the citizens was particularly generous.\nWith the above combination it is almost unneceasary\nto say that the children of Nelson more than enjoyed\nthe First of July celebration. It was a real Kiddies'\nday from beginning to end. Thc Canadian Legion Bugle\nband deserves great credit for its efforts \"\ndeserve praise for their support.\nThe citizens\nTaaunar.y, the well-known New York political organization connected wilh the Democratic party in New\nVork City, owes its name to an Indian of the Delaware\nnation named Tammany. He lived in the seventeenth\ncentury. Inter Tammany became chief and he was\nfamous for his wise and peaceful reign. The New Yot k\nDemocrats named their society for this Indian chief.\nAugust* Baron, the inventor of talking pictures, i;\nliving in Paris in a home for the disabled poor. His\ninvention has made large fortunes for actors and nct-\nratacs, but not one of thorn seems to give a thought to\nthe man who made those fortunes possible. It is\nanother illustration of man's inhumanity to man.\nMembers of tlie Montreal branch of the Canadian\nAuthors' association havc expressed themselves as opposed to tuc tax on American magazine.,. It might have\nbeer, thought that those associated with such a body\nwould have been among the first to approve a measure\ndesigned to inCTMM the popularity of Canadian publications.\nA Harvard professor has won a modal for his findings ia comparative psychology of the ant.   Wasn't it\nSolomon who said. \"Go to the ant   thou sluggard\nSo from time to time various persons take that ancient\nparagrapher's advice.\nA talking parrot is to make his microphone debut,\nsays thei news And all the time we thought that bird\nhad been at it for years!   \t\nBoom in the metal business would follow if.England\nstarted putting up brass tablets wherever Phil\nfell.\t\nMoney is cheaper than ever before, and all you need\nto get It is proof that you dont need it.\nCable says China had 2,500,000 men under arms last\nyear.  How many did Chicago have?\nTwo Australian golfers halved a hole in one. Now\nyou tell one.\nSeen and Heard in\nNELSON\n(By  J.   It.   C.)\n\"Did you enjoy the dance the other\nnight?\" That question has been\nasked hundred* of times. I had\naeveral peraona ask me that yesterday afternoon. Of ccurse I said\n'Certainly, I had a wonderful\ntime.\" But did V\nI'll admit that I took a couple\nof twirls around the floor pushing\na partner tn front of me. My partners\nmade gooj ahock absorbers. Very\nseldom waa I bumped hy soma\ngalloping sheik whose performance\nwould warrant him getting a job\non at least a second r-te vaudeville\ncircuit, i never lott a shoe\u2014but my\npartner did once. I did not get someone's elbow in my eye\u2014but a lady\nfriend of mine did. I did not step\non anyone's tcea-but everyone eeem-\ned to step on my feet. When I had\na partner who waa particularly hard\nto get along with on the floor and\nwas particularly pleased when the\ndance was at an end, some darned\nfool clapped for another encore,\nand the orchestra, apparently feeling my embarrassment and knowing\nmy predicament, played the tune\nnnce more. Now I know why aomc\nguy wrote, \"I'm dancing with tern\nin my eyea.\"\nAnd when some large husky chap\ndid give me a dig In thc back With\nan elbow, then turning stepped\nupon my partner's heel, he didn't\neven excuse himaelf. He looked at\nme as If I should not be on thc\nfloor. And when I remarked, \"Some\npeople are rough,\"' he answered with\nan \"Oh Yeah!\"\u2014and just as much\ninvited me outside to knock my\nblock ofr. Yes. dancing is an enjoyable  pastime.\n\u2022 \u00bb   <\nNoticed about town recently-Joe\nLabadee of New Westminster, formerly of Nelson, renewing old acquaintances\u2014Ruebcn McCandlish making\nbrief speeches at a dancc gathering\n\u2014Robert Andrew picking Leo Gansner to win th\u00ab five mile race-\nChief Long saving a Trail motorist\n\u202210, when he halted him as he\nwas about to pass a .standing street\ncar\u2014A prominent I. O. D. E. lady\ncalling her order the independent\norder instead oi the imperial order\u2014Archie Blaney declaring he was\ngoing on t he Kaslo run\u2014Stanley\nHorswill keeping track of the laps\nbeing run ft flip marathon\u2014Oene\nPnulln proudly leading his little\ngirl  and  her  pet.  bulldog.\n\u2022 *    *\n\\Vrll,   from   last   Wednesday   those\n\"i tu who occasionally write a\nletter will have three stamps to lick\ninstead of two. Those of us who are\nlucky enough to write checks will\nhavc one stamp to lirk no matter\nwhat the size of the check may be.\nWith this additional business\nrolling in to tlie post office department, and with the public faced\nwith extcrcme stamp lickln,, would\nIt not be appropriate for the authorities to use a new flavored mucilage. It would be in good taste it\nthe postal officials would dig into\nthis matter and stick to tt until\nsome solution is arrived at.\nHow nice it would be for Mamp\nbuyers to get their favorite flavor\nwhen malting stamp purchsaea. Some\ncould get vanilla, .some chocolate.\nand others pineapple. Then the\ndlsagreable task of licking ttsmpi\nwould become ;i pleasure. 1 am sure\nit would increase the sale nf\nIt would become the \"flavorilc\"\nspoit.of some people.\nAt present many people will lick\nB stamp no matter how disagreable\nthe taste. They will lick 10 stamps\nin preference to using I IP ng\u00ab\nthat may be handy for the very\npurpose. This cr course means that\nthe tttte of Die present mucilage\nIs not absolutely disagreable. But\nI have not &ccn anyone hanging\nabout the post office licking stripe\ntorn   from   stamps,\n+    \u2022    \u00bb\nThose husbands in Nelson who arc\nenjoying their wives' vacation should\nalways remember that it Is always\nmuch safer to piSOS the dirty\ndishes on thc lawn before turning\nthe  hose  on  them.\nIn these days of depression, nvtm-\nerotis Industries are reported to be\nsuffering. One industry that is not\nsuffering is playing card manufacturing.\nCard playing is on the Increase\nduring these days of unemployment\nAt least that is one reason why\nthe U, \u00a3. A. treasury Is getting\nmore  revenue  irom   tha  pasteboards.\nDuring tbe 11 months of the iis-\ncai ytsr, ths stamps that go on each\npack brought the u. 8. government\n\u26664,583,700, or $50,603 more than during the corresponding period of the\nyear   before.\nGeorge Allen England Is going to\ngive up writing and at art a chicken\nfarm because \"there simply Isn't\na living in the writing gime any-\nmors.\"\nH.s advice to ycur.c Ittt on. L|\n\"learn the grocery business or practise to he a radio annoUttOSr. The\nnewcom*r to thc fiction racket has-\nnci a chance today. It's hswl\nenough for the old timers lo keep\nthe  \"*olf  rro:'1   Uw  door-\nEngland, according to his own\nfigures, \"bats out\" an average of\nhalf a million words of copy yearly.\nlie's been hitting lhat pace for about\nao ysai \u25a0       tbe P pva a\nand    now    he    thinks    \"the    golden\nera of  authoring  is done.\"\nIn ins own worta Ik\".- going to\n\u25a0 pi 'he cover on ths typewriter,\ndraw upon the dwindling bank\nbalance, and buy tnystU and wife\na tidy little poultry ranch.\"\n\"Therea money In chickens.\" the\nveteran writer insists, \"the public\nmust Continue eating, hut reading\nli going oul   of fashion.\"\n\\  (.( [DS  in   I OX  III.MM.\n= TI1L   NLLSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON\n9.   C.   \u2014   FRIDAY   MORNING.   JILY   S,   1331*\n_;*\u25a0 *x _ h* k' 4-1   t i.'i\nTHAT BODY OF YOURS\nBr  JAMBS   W.   BARTON\n\"The Blanks must be pretty hard hit.   I see they've hud to move\ndown to the 40th floor.\"\nWhat the Press Says\nMILK   A  BONE  UI 1LDFR\nScientific sesearcn finds another\ngood reason for the liberal uso of\nmilk, especially m the diet of the\ngrowing child, and that is in its\ncapacity as \u00bb bono builder. The\nhuman body contains more calcium\nthan it does any other mineral,\nand thc best and cheapen! source\nof supply i_ man. Dlctltlc experts\nasstrt that a quart of milk dally\nensures the growing child of ttie\nbeet storage or calcium for the manufacture oX bono* and teeth. It is\nequivalent in calcium content to 10\nlarge oranges, 10 large helpings of\ncauliflower, 2i helpings of carrots,\n32  eggs or 20 pounds of beef.\nA   POH'LAR  SERVICE\nThere could be no better Indication of the rapidly growing popularity of thc beef grading service of\nthe Dominion department of agriculture than the increase of over 70\nper cent In t.'ie volume of beef\ngraded for aals throughout Canada\nbetween April and May of this year.\nOnly a little over a year tn operation thr beef grading service graded\nand branded a total ol 1,193,357\npound, of \"red\" and \"blue\" brand\nbeef In April last. In May this\ntotal raised to .983,022 pounds. Of\nthe May total 1.333,247 pounds graded \"good\" for branding \"blue,\" and\n649,775 pounds \"choice\" for the\"red\"\nbrand. Figures by provinces show\na rapidly increasing demand for\ngovernment graded beef, particularly\nin Ontario and Quebec.\nKeeping m step with the aea.on is\nthe way to ensure best results in lox\nfeeding, studies in this respect \u00abt\nilia experimental fox ranch of the\nDominion department nf agriculture\nat gummernde, p. E. I., show. The\nleport for 1928. 1929 and 193o Just\nissued state.: \"It .\u00ab absolutely necessary that foxes should be fed in\nstep with the aeason. When the\nearth Is covered with green vegetation foxes require that vegetation, or\nthe essentials of it from animals\nthat havp recently been eating it;\nduring the fall months, when ripe\nvegetation Is prevalent, foxes re-\nuire that ripe vegetation. In the\nlate fall montha when frost haa destroyed vegetation and the prey of\nfoxes la In good condition, foxes\nrequire a high meat ration. When\nthe prey of the foxes is in poor condition and the vixen and h*r prey\nare are often snowtd In, lohl do\nnot require a large amount of food \"\nEXPORT ENTERPRISE\nThere \u00bbs food for thought for the\nCanadian farmer In the recent arrival in the Canadian market of\n\"tinned h_ns\" irom Denmark. When\nit com\/; to marketing its production, cf over-production if you prefer, the UtUo kingdom of Denmark\nseta a pace which is hard to beat.\nNot only do they market their product in all the usual forms, maintaining thc dominant position in\nthe British market, but they arc\nnow processing their finest guts,\npackaging them attractively, nnd\nmaking a strong bid for the larger\nconsuming renters m our own Canadian market. Canadian farmers\nshould find an Incentive to opportunity In tlie situation. A study of\nthe fundamental principles underlying Danish methods might hold\nmuch  of   useful   interest.\nWEANING TDK UTTER\nNatural vranMg gives best results\nwith a litter or young pigs, and to\nobtain this, feed suitable for young\npigs should bo provided In the\ncreep. a cood mixMtre\u2014 for the\npurpose 's a n\u00bbH find half combination nf middlings and finely\nground oats from which the hulls\nhave been sifted. Young pigs will\nstart to nibble at th* lood at about\ntwo to four weeks of age, and by\nthe sixth or seventh week should\nbe eating uitc freely. Under such\na procedure shook Incidental to\nmore abrupt methods La overcome\nand   (raSDlBg  develops   as   p   natural\nsvent.\nII i D   WATER   BEST\nStudies in keeping cream sweet\nmade by the dairy and cold storage\nbranch of tne Dominion department\nof agriculture, show conclusively\nthat iced water not only keeps\ncream better than when It Is placed\nin a refrigerator but that it takes\nconsidersbly less toe. The reason\nfor this Hen In the fact that the\niced water, being a better conductor\nthan the cold sir of the refrigerator,\ncools the cream more quickly.\nWORK FOR RELIEE\nVarious reports of men making a\ngood living out of the community\nhave come to the Albertan during\nthe past few days. Men are alleged\nto havc ridden the freight train\nInto town and then put up a first-\ncla&s hotel. Others are reported to\nbe making as much flg seven and\nSight dolls'i. s day begging from\nhou:e    t0    bouse    These   men    are\ncapitalizing the present unemployment situation, and they are usually the first to whine at conditions,\nSome way of stopping this sort of\nthing must be found. The fact that\nsuch a condition Is possible bear*\nout the cldim already made ln the\nAlbertan that there is a lamentable\nlack of organization in the present\nmethod of meeting the unemployment  problem.\nThat relief waa absolutely as.en-\ntial was stltlHd mo_t emphatically\nby the Albertan during thc visit to\nthe west oi the Hon. Gideon Robertson, minister of labor. As a result of the outcry in the west, the\nDominion government promised to\np.iy 50 per cent of the cost of supporting unemployed single men\u2014a\nconccsion which brought a rearrangement of other schedules so\nthat the province is now paying 30\nper cent and the municipalities 30.\nper cent of the same expense.\"..\nWo have agreed upon how much\neach government should PSJ toward relief, hut we have not yet\nmade any serious attempt to devise\nan intelligent means of spending\nthat money. That is our most vital\nproblem  today.\nThe Albertan was emphatic that\nsomething should be done lor the\ndrifting poulation of workle.'.s, who\nwere forced into Idleness through\nno fault of their o*n. Now that relief is assured, thc Albertan is\nequally emphatic that work should\nbe provided for every coot's worth\nof relief given. Civic, provincial\nand even \u2022federal governments should\nmake this their prime objective. It\nis a duty they owe to the employed\nand   the   unemployed   citizens   alike\nMany things hay happen to men\nreceiving relief for no work\u2014especially to foreigners who have come\nfrom countries where they have\nbeen oppressed.\nThey may become demoralized and\nio-c all initiative.\nThey may come to have contempt\nfor a country which would give relief without system _nd would insist en nothing being given in exchange for it.\nThey may see so mSR) casss where\nmen are making a good hting out\nof relief that they will become\nuso.1 to the idea of dishonest citizenship.\nIdleness may breed lawlessness and\ndefiance in them.\nTo avoid huc.i condition^ it is\nessential that authorities move\nquickly, British Columbia has\nshown the wa y and proposes to\ngive work to some 25.000'men. Two\nmain things arc needed\u2014a. checkup of every man out of work in\nthe province so that his record may\nbe found at snort notice, and a\ncheck-up of all public work.i that\ncould   bc   undertaken.\nThere arc manv things whic\ncould be done ln Calgary. Tlie\nroatds arc In bad SRSpt. There arc\nparks improvement.-, which will\ndoubt be undertaken soon, find\nmight just as well be undertaken\nwhile labor and materials arc cheap,\nIt la eaaentla] that civic and provincial authorities look ihsad 10\nyears, estimate how much they will\nhave to spend on public works\nthat time, and see hew many work:;\nthey could undertake at the present time.\nThe present system of relief will\nundermine the morale of the community and it only in existence be\ncause at lack of Initiative on the\npart of authorities. We do not\nsuggest payment fo union wages,\nbut we do urge insistence upon\nwork for relief given. If thla Is\ndone, it might then be in order to\nstop calling this particular typo of\nundertaking 'relief work\" Even\nthe name tends to hurt a man's\nself-respect.\u2014Calgary  Albertan.\nPATERNALISM\nThe people of Canada are to be\ntold what they are to eat: Just as\nthsy are to be carefully shepherded\nIn the matter of their reading. If\nthey do not obey they are to be\nfined by means of penalties embodied in ihe tariff act.\u2014Ths Mmimh\nFree Press.\n(This article is intended mr 11m unction and contract  bridge beginner)\nAuction and Contract\nBridge\nBy  the   World's   Leading   Authority.\nMILTON  C. WORK\nsH\nHO-7-4\n\u2666 0-7-2\n+11-8-5-4\n#H-H-3-l\nNORTH\nflflH-J\nV10-9-8-2\n5     \u00a7\nJE   Mi   3\nVJ-6-5\n\u26668-6-4\n\u266618-9\n\u26667-6\nSOUTH\n+0-9-2\nS6-2\n\u00bbK-3\n\u2666 H-K-J-5-3\n+A-J-10-3         m\nWith the above hand at auction,\nsouth would bid one diamond, west\none spade, and north two diamonds.\nAt contract south, with *Vz high-\ncard tricks, would .bid two diamonds,\nnorth four, and 'south five; so It\nboth gamers south would be striving for 11 tricks with diamonds the\ntrump.\nWhen the hand was played west\nled tlic king end ace of spades. As\neast correctly refrained from giving\na come-on signal, west shifted to\nhearts, leading the ten. South won\nwith the king and ulaycd three\nrounds of trumps, leaving the lead\nin his own hand. South then led\nof clubs, followed by the\nJack, dummy finessed and lost to\neast's queen. Tlie contract was thus\nset one trick. Did south play this\nhand correctiv '\nTin; CORRECT PLAY\nBOUth, after drawing all the ;xl-\nvcrsc trumps, should lead three more\nrounds Of hSftrtS, discarding a club\non tii.' second and ruffing the last.\nHis hope would be that this might\nproduce an adverse club discard\nwhich would bc informiitory; but\nthe only discard would bc a small\npade from east. South, being able\nto finesse clubs either way (that is\nto finesse Hgalnot either west or\nMgt), Should lead thc Jack of clubs.\nIf west holds thc queen, he la very\napt to cover, hoping to set up a good\nclub In his partner's hand. When\nwest plays low, the chances favor\neast's holding thc queen! so thc Jack\nshould bc overtaken by dummy's\nking nnd i\\ smsil club returned from\ndummy. It east plays low, south\nshould finesse  the ten.\nThis method of handling the club\niine.rc Dftiy not succeed fa clever\nwest may foil the declarer by refusing to cover although he has the\nqueen i, but the play will win ln\nthe majority of Instances. Postponing the finesse till the second round,\nfurthermore, eliminates the possibility of \u00bb Singleton quern capturing\nthc first    cluh  trie!;.\nREADY  FOR  HOT\nWEATHER\nMagistrate\u2014\"Did you Itta] ihe\nrug?\"\nPrisoner \"No, sir, a lady gave It\nto me and told mc to beat it, and\nI  did.\"\nAUNT HET\nWhen hot days come along it la\nbeat to be prepared for them, not\nsimply because you wish to avoid\nheat stroke or heat exhauatlon, but\nthat you may be able to go about\nyour work, and do It without too\nmuch discomfort.\nNaturally the first thought la food\nbecause the heat of your body la due\nentirely to food, and aa you do not\nneed as much heat in hot weather,\nlesa food Is of cou\/se necessary. The\ndiet therefore ahould be light, the\ntotal amount being at least 10 per\ni*ent less than during cool weather,\nthat la if your occupation Is the\nsame all the year round, individuals\nwho yet outdoors and work or play\nhard are going to need a& much If\nnot more food because of this hard\nwork or play. Meats arc necessary\nfor these outdoor people, but for indoor people, meata and rich food*\u2014\nfata, butter and pastry\u2014ahould be\ncut down. Too much waste in the\nlarge Intestine because too much\nfood has been eaten, is one of the\ncauses of heat  prostration.\nAlcoholic drinks should be avoided\nduring hot weather; use ordinary\ncold water and fruit Juices.\nThe skin should kept clean thus\nhelping evaporation. Cool rally baths\nare   helpful.\nTlie clothing should be light, and\nnot too tight, as the free circulation or air about the skin permits\nthe heat to be carried away from the\nbody by evaporation. Electric fans\nkeep the air moving, and thla breaks\nup the envelope of hot air that surrounds  the body.\nIf possible when heat Is intense\nyou should follow the example of\nthe people of other nations who try\nto rest during thc middle of the day\nln a cool, ehady place. Avoid real\nhard work if poe-lble. particularly\nif you must be in thc sun.\nThe windows in the home should\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(Prom Thc Dally tfews, July a, 1931)\nNews in detail of the cadet camp\nwas received yesterday afternoon\nby Nelson cadet commander. The\ncamp will be held a few miles out\nof Kaalo in combination with the\nKaslo corps and a naval squad.\nTt, Is announced that the plans\nfor an advertising campaign, to help\nsei] this year's nop of fruit, which\nwere discussed nt the annual meeting of the Bri'ish Columbia rrult\nGrowers* association, held at Nelson\nin January, have been perfected and\nthe Urst advertisements will appear\nearly in July.\nA. C. Yoder, general manager of the\nLludslcv Brothers Canadian company, leaves tnday for the prairie\nand eastern points.\nMiss Esther Be tot spent Dominion Day in Nelson.\nb\u00ab open but shaded so sa to exclude the heat rays without interfering with the free circulation of\nair. it la quite all right to keep\nwindows toward the sun closed\ntight and blinds drawn if you are\nable to keep the air circulating ln\nthe house.\nIf you feel very thirsty, small\nhelpings of cold water, or lemonade,\nmay be taken as this'helps the kidneys and intestines to get rid of\nwastes. Don't forget that H you ars\ntired, worries, or constipated, there\nwill be more wastes in your blood\nthan normal, and you will not stand\nthe heat as well.\nIn other words. Just use a little\ncommon sense In your daily habits,\nand you will be best able to wlth-\nttand the heat when it comes,\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News, July 3, 19U>\nJ. M. Doyle, assistant superintendent of the Marcus division of the\nGreat Northern, reached tho city\nlast night.\ns   s   \u2022\nH. T. Goodeve of Roasland, who is\ntaking part ln the tennis tournament, has arrived In the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHon. Mrs. H. Grosvenor of London,\nEngland, la a visitor In the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nWilliam Kennedy of Salmo report*\ned that the gophers are doing greal\ninjuries to his vegetables.\nMiss Cf. Genellen, who is ill ln\nthP Kootenay Lake General hospital, is reported to be progressing\nfavorably.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\n(Prom the Nelson Dally Miner\nof July 2. 1901)\nFully 1000 people witneased the\ndrilling contest which took place\non the vacant lots east of the\nQueens hotel yesterday. The contest was In charge of Blake Wilson,\nof the sports committee, and Jacob\nDover acted as official time-keeper.\nBorn in Nelson to Mr. and Mre.\nA.   J.   Kerr,   a   daughter.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. D, Arnot, wife of the well-\nknown merchant of slocan, is on a\nvisit to Miss Simpson of Silica\natreef.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nD. O. Thomas and G. B. Hennle\nwere In charge of the shooting gallery at the Recreation grounds yesterday  afternoon.\nQueen Marsavttt'g School\nDUNCAN. B. C.\nCountry Boarding School for Girls,*\nKindergarten to Matriculation. Music, names, swimming. Rlritne;, (ivm-\nnastlcs. Large Playing fields. English staff. Modern buildings, prospering on application. Principals:\nMiss N. C. Denny. R.R.C., Miss D.\nR. <lf0f>hcgan, B, A.\nSOCIETY OF BEAUTY CULTURE\nI illlupr lacandes for fall class iu all hranrhes of Beauty Culture.\nExpert   Instructors,   students   placed.\ntnR-v.i - Granville   St.,   Ytinrnuver,  r.   p,   sejmmir   VMt,\nNext  Hoof  lo  Vancouver  Hotel.\n\"Amy thinks she's beln' charitable when uhe's Just Bwappin'\noff some old clothe* with the\nhut tons off (or P10 wniih e>'\ngratitude.\"\nFarm implsoesits\nISow is the time to buy your\nPLOWS, HAKKOWS, CUI.T1VA'lOKS,  DISCS\nHARROWS, SPRAYKRS and\nPLANET JR. TOOLS\nFK1CKS Kll.iii\nPROMPT SHIPMENT\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail  Quality  Hardware\nNELSON, II. C BAKE': SI'.\n1\n__.\n-\u25a0\u2022\u25a0   *\nm\n mm *m*\nft?\nGERMAN WOMEN MEET IN FINALS AT\nWIMBLEDON; FIRST TIME IN HISTORY\nHelen Jacobs Is Knocked Out\nin Startling: Upset by\nHilda Krahwinkel\nLONDON, July 3\u2014(AP)_Kor the\nflrat time in the history of Wimbledon championship tennis play two\nOerman girls will face each other\nacross th<j net tomorrow for the\nwomen's title on which Suzanne\nLenglen an<i Miss Helen Wills Moody\nheld lease so loni.\nThla waa determined today aa\nHilda Krahwinkel defeated Helen\nJacobs, last hope of the United\nStates, 10-13. 0-6, 0-4, In a startling\nupaet, and 01111 Aussem disposed of\nMme. Rene Mathleu. Prance's last\nrepresentative In singles play, 6-0,\n2-8. 6-3.\nIn the men's doubles Frank X.\nShields and Sidney b. Wood Jr. were\neliminated in thv semi-finals by\nHenri cochet and Jacques Brugnon\nOf Prance, fl-4, 7-5, 6-2, In the\nmixed doublea Oeorge Lott Jr. and\nMrs. L. A. Harper advanced to the\nsemi-final round by victories over\nBaron von Kehrlln and Mra. Sfttter-\nthwalte, 6-3, 6-4, In tbe fourth\nround, and E. Maler and Miss Adam-\noff, 6-2, 4-6. 6-4, In the quarterfinals.\nPLAYS OPPONENT'S OAMI\nMlas Jacobs today took her stand\non the baseline and there she and\nPraullen Krahwinkel stood, at opposite ends of the court, for almost\ntwo hours and the ball swinging\nback and forth between them. Helen\nrarely ventured to the net, where\n\u2022he waa much superior to the German girl, and in falling to do so\nplayed Just the sort of same Prau-\nleln Krahwinkel likes. Miss Krahwinkel wisely eaaed up In the second\nact after winning the flrat 10-8,\nand took a rest aa Helen rushed\nthrough to win 6-0, but returned to\nthe third to win 6-4-\nTomorrow's progrsm brings Lott\nland his Davis cup doubles partner.\nJohn van Ryn. agalriet Oeorge\nHugneg. and Fred Perry of Oreat\nBritain in the laet seml-ftnal match\nDO YOU KNOW\nI&0U ARE TALLER IN THE\nMORNING THAN AT\nNIGHT\nt*UCKIN&HAM5\nr\\X AUWAY5 THR 5AME -\nLEttUAEIN EVERY PUFF \u00ab\nM0KETHEM \u2014  AND  SMIU.E\n!i in ten cents m stamps and we will\nI ^ou a complete set of \"Do You\niw'1 cards\u2014sixty cards of knowledge\ncurious facta printed in color (size\n' X \\%A'), Or twenty cents will bring\nthe amy cards accompanied by an\nin* in which tbe cards can be placed as\nrmanentcollection. Address Dept. 10,\nIcett Tobacco Co., Ltd., Hamilton,\nkingham Cigarettes\u2014a smooth\nsahins blend of choice tobaccos, sun-\nted by powerful ultra violet rays.\nre is no more mellowing influence than\ngun. Buckingham*, treated with\nt sun lamps, are remarkably cool and\now\u2014an all-pleasure cigarette, never\ning in quality, packed for freshness\ni\u00ab patented sealed package;\nor the men's doubles, the winner\nto play Cochet and Brugnon for thQ\ntitle Saturday. Miss Auasem will\nplay against Mlsa Krahwinkel ln the\nwomen's singles final snd V. P. X.\nSpence and Miss Nuthall wjll meet\nIan O. Collins and Joan Ridley in\none semi-final match oT mixed\ndoubles.\nMiss L. A. Harper and Mrs. van\nRyn will play Mra. Eileen Bennett\nWhlttlngatall and Miss Nuthall In\na quarter-final match of women's\ndoubles, while Lott and Mrs. Harper\nwill play Perry snd Mlsa Mary\nHeegy In the semi-finals of mixed\ndoubles ou the same court.\nNEW ZEALAND MAY\nPLAY m MATCH\nOfficials to Meet in England\nto See About Staging Two\nMore Matches\nLONDON, July 2.\u2014<C. P. cable) -\nBoard of control and the advisory\ncounty committee will meet on July\n7 to decide on the suggestion that\nthe New Zealand team be granted\ntwo more cricket test matches with\nEngland. It has been suggested\nthat the visitors, who drew with\nEngland In the test match which\nfinished on Tuesday at Lord's, play\none of the matches at the Kcnnlng-\nton Oval beginning July 9 and the\nother at Manchester starting August  15.\nOnly match to finish today was\nbetween Essex and Kent at Colchester which Essex won by 10\nwickets. Scores: Kent, 130 and\n162 runs; Besex, 289 and four runs\nfor the loss ot no wickets.\nOl'HLK .SCORES\nClosing Korea in other matches\nwere:\nOxford University, 215 and 250\nruns far nine wlcketn, declared;\nMarleybone Cricket club. 63 runs\nand  102 runs for flvft wickets.\nM. D. Q. Leveson-Oower's XI. 229\nand 69 runs for one wicket; Cambridge University, 503 runs for Jour\nwickets,   declared.\nLancashire, 230 and six runs for\none wicket; Gloucestershire, 330 runs\nSomerset, 300 runs; Yorkshire, 352\nruns for four wickets.\nSussex. 470 runs for seven wickets,\ndeclared; Glamorgan, 296 and 23\nruns for*no wicket*, (followed on>.\nNorthamptonshire, 253 and two\nruns for the loss or no wickets;\nHampshire,   334  runs.\nSurrey, 170 and 327 runs for\nlour  wickets;  Derbyshire,  183  rum;,\nMiddlesex, 330 and 168 runs for\ntwo wickets; Warwickshire, 241 runs,\nNew Zealand, 190 runs; Staffordshire. 78 runs for four wickets.\nWIGHTMAN CUP\nTEAM IS NAMED\nWIMBLEDON STADIUM England,\nJuly 2. (AP)\u2014The British Wightman\ncup team, Which will meet the\nAmerican Bquad at Forest Hills. L. I.,\nAugust 7 and 8. was named today,\nwith Mrs. D. C Bhephard-Barron\nas  captain.\nThe other members of the team\nare Betty Nuthall, Dorothy Round.\nMrs. Eileen Bennett whittlngsatl\nand   Miss   Phyllis  Mudlord.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 8-*. Toledo 2-5.\nloulavllle 8, Colntnbug T.\nKansas Cllj  13. Bt. Paul  11.\nMilwaukee   8,   Mlneapplls   6.\nINTERN^TKINAlTe AG I! E\nButralo   3,   Montreal   3.     .Called\nend of ninth, darltnciB.\nRochester at Toronto, rain.\nNewark   4,   3tltlmore   7.\nJersey   City   7,   Readlnj  3.\n\"Thi\u00ab advertisement is not publi\u00bbhed or displayed by the\n1,iquor Control Board or by the  Government of British\nColumbia.\nBig; League\nBASEBALL\nPlaying Shortstop\nTtone. Play\n'0Y&Mtt:-s7op>\nWIW-. MSN ON,\nmsf AND r_Mm\nDffIVS \u2014\nybucHes\naeooND\n~'vettes\\\n'ffUNNSfe\nCOMIN6\nf\/fOM PUST\n\"D0HT\\\nHeap\nT0G\u00a3T}*Eft\\\nWtiSN\nF\/\u00a3l\u00a3>\/NG\nMIL\"\n\"XABBfT'\ntfti\/?ANWtl\u00a3\nSMYffS\n(By   At   nt;\\l\\im>\nRabbit Maranville, Boston Braves\nshortstop from the boys' standpoint,\nsaid  to me?\n\"In my observation when a bunch\nof boy* arc gathered for a ball\ngame, the spriest and most active\nwish to play shortstop. I can re-\ncall that when I played as \u00bb hoy\nI was one of the kids who essayed\nto play shortstop because I hsd\nthe reputation of moving rapidly\nover the ground.\n\"Boys as they become older lean:\nthat this seemingly natural selection\nof youth follow** when nines of\nmature age are placed on thc field.\nTho agile and olcrt player becomes\na shortstop, as naturally as the tall\nboy becomes a pitcher or firs'.\nbaseman.\n\"For that reason I wish to encourage the short and sturdy chaps\nwho are fast and have a good pair\nof hands for the position of shortstop. Nine out of ten time's if the\nimpulse of baseball takes them ti\nthat position they will succeed. 1\nthink it safe to recommend to the\nbeginner who is a little below the\naverage height to play shortstop i~\nhe feels it in him to be a short\nstop.\"\nAl Demaree has prepared an Illustrated leaflet on \"Art of Pitching,\"\nwhich he will gladly send to any\nreader requesting It. Address Al De\nmarce in care of this paper, and\nbe sure to enclose a self \u2022addressed,\nstamped envelope.\nCLEVELAND BEATS\nATHLETICS, 12-4;\nWASHINGTON WINS\nBeat  St.   Louis,   \\M\\   New\nYork Wallops Detroit,\n13-1J Chicago Wins\nAMEKH AN   LKAfilK\nPhiladelphia      M\nWashington       *?\nNow York .  37\nCleveland     33\nSt.   Loula  30\nBoston      21\nDetroit,     2fl\nChicago       1!4\nHOSTON  tt, I'hiragti '\nCHICAGO,    July    2\u2014Al    Thomas\nIn another of his rare well pitched\n'lame^i for the White Sox today beat\nBoston   with   three   hits   to  nothing\nBoston         0   3    1\nCMcago         2 10    1\nKlein and Berry; Thomas and\nGrubc.\nSDNATOItK   13,   ST.   LOUS   |\nST.   LOUIS.   July   8.\u2014The   Wash\nIngton   Senators   overcame    I    .'ou.\nrun   lead   to   defeat   the   St.   Louis\nBrowns  here  today   13  to 6.\nWashington      13 14'  0\nSt.   Loui*       ft 10   :i\nBurke. Crowder and Spencer;\nHsrgravc; Stewart. Stiles Klmscy\nand  Perrell.\nCLEVELAND   H,   PHILADELPHIA    I\nCLEVELAND, July 2. (AP)-Four\nPhiladelphia pitchers were in effective ag.lnst the Cleveland Indians today and the tribe won the\nthird and 'final game of the rertea\n12   to  4.\nFoxx got his 15th homrr of thf.\nseason in the second nnd *;arl\nAverlll got bin LSth and Mth homers in the third anri seventh, Bi-\nMv.-p alto cinutcri a olreuli drive\nIn the seventh Inning, the Indian\ngot three runs off four walks Mid\na   fielder's   choice.\nPhiladelphia       .   4 HI    1\nCleveland    .          12   0    1\nWalberg, Earnshaw. Kraupe,. McDonald and Cochrane. Hevlng, Pal-\nmisano;   Hudlln  and  Scwcll.\nNEW   YORK   13.   DLTRtHT   I\nDETROIT, July 3\u2014The New fork\nYankees ended their western tour\ntoday by pounding the Detroit\npitchers for IS hits and a 13 to\n1 victory. Babe Ruth's nineteenth\nhomer of tie seaesn and Chapman's ninth were listed among tho\nYankee   clouts.\nNew   York    13 IB    1\nDetroit      18   3\nWells    and    Dickey;    Uiile,   Hoyt\nand Grabowskl.\nNeon   gas   tubes   have   been   inserted  in  the high  skeleton towers\nof power transmission lines in Germany tn eervt m fi*\"\nana tor a.\nHEAVIES NEAR SAME SIZE\nSCHMELING STRIBLING\n25 yre.   AGE       26 yrs.\n180 lbs WEIGHT \"l'86'\/j lbs.\n6 ft. 1 in HEIGHT 6 ft. V* in.\nii in  CHEST  38\u00bb\/4 in.\n45Vi in  EXPANDED  42<\/4 in.\n171\/j in  NECK  16% in.\n15 in  BICEPS  14% in.\n121\/, in FOREARM 13% in.\nV\/. in.   WRIST   Ity in.\n33 in  WAIST   33 in.\n23 in THIGH   22 in.\n15 in      CALF   14l\/a in.\n91\/2 in  ANKLE   9 in.\n75 in  REACH  74 in.\nNEW YORK BEATS\nCARDINALS, 3-2;\nCUBS BEAT PHILS\nPirates Win Final Game of\nTheir Series With\nBoston, 1-0\nNATIONAL LLAGIK\nSt.    Louis    _.... 42 38 818\nNew   York     40 27 .697\nChicago        37 30 JiM\nBrooklyn      38 32 .54;l\nBoston  35 35 .500\nPhiladelphia      30 37 .488\nPittsburgh     07 40 .403\nCincinnati   .             .... 23 47 .347\nP1RATEH   I,  BRAVES  0\nBOSTON. July 2.--Pittsburgh won\nthc final gafne of their series with\nth\u00a9 braves 1 to 0 today behind\nthe \u2022five hit, pitching of Hclnie\nMeinc. They took tnrse of thc\nfour  games.\nPittsburgh         1   7   0\nBoston        0   5   1\nMelne and Phillips; Cunningham\nand    Spohrer,   Cronln.\nNEW  YORK 3,  IT.  LOUIS 2\nNEW YORK. July 2.\u2014Frank Ho-\ngan'a home run with two men en\nba.-ses in the fifth inning gave the\nNew York Oianta a 3 t-< 2 victory\nover the St. Louis Cardinals today\nand an even break in the four game\nseries.\nSt.   Louis   .-    2 12   1\nNew    York    ,      \\\\ 10    1\nHallabai., Derringer and WlleOO;\nntzsimmona and  Hogan.\nBROOKLYN    4.    CINCINNATI    S\nBROOKLYN, July 2.\u2014Putting to\ngether three doubles and a bare\non balls in the anth Inning, th\nBrooklyn Robins deleateri the Cln\nclnnatl Reds 4 to 3 in the final\nRame   of   the   series   today.\nCincinnati    3 10   0\nBrooklyn     4    5    1\nJohnson. Newton and fiukcforih;\nHcimach  and Lorn bard 1.\n(TIH AliO   |(   PIIILAOELPIIIA    I\nPHILADPHIA, July 2.\u2014The Chicago cubs nosed out the Philadelphia Nationals in thc eleventh in\nnlng tort ay two to one. Grimm\nscored the winning run on his\nown aingle, Mallon's error and Cuy-\nlei's  single.\nChicago       2 lo   l\nPhilidelphla        7   7   3\nSmith and Hemslcy, Bcnee nnd\nMcCurdy.\ntrailToy~drops\nspokane champ in\nkimberley bout\nJohn   Lcmmon   Knocks   Out\n\"Honey    Boy\"    Kdwards;\nMorrison Drops Trail Boy\nWINDSOR, Ont., July 2. tCP) \u2014\nRiding the crest or hla fourth\nstraight set victory, Walter Martin,\nof Regliid. thii'd ranking Canadian\nplayer, today advanced into the\nquarter-final round of the men'j\nsingles In the western,Ontario tennis championship matches by defeating Roscoe Burgess of Flint, Michigan.   0-2.  6-2.\nMartin also shared m another victory when he teamed with Leroy\nRennlc, Toronto ace, to advance\ninto the quarter-finals of the men's\ndoubles by defeating Botts and Qtb*\nson  of   Detroit,  8-4.  8-3.\nameriManiT\ncoast netmen\nmeet in final\nKIMBERLEY. B. C. July 2\u2014Don\nLemmon, tlie Tr*\u00bbil featherweight\nflash, knocked out \"Honey Boy\"\nEdwards of Spokane, litleholder of\nthe inland Empire, in the Kimberley arena Wodltaeda] night, In thi\nfifth round, nad will uctcpt a challenge for a fight with Mel Cowe, *\ncoast boy. holder of the Pacific\nNoitliue.st title. If Cowe can weigh\nuntUr the legal 126 pounds, The\ntight was described \u00abs \"the fastest\nbattle seen here.\" and ss \"a rsal\ntest\" for Lemmon. Following the\nfight the fins stampeded into the\nring to congratulate him.\nin the tirml-flnale, a middleweight\nbout. Murdo Morrison of Kimberley\nknocked out Bryn Blaney of Trail\nln the fourth round. The. boya provided plenty of action. Angus Morrison of Kimberley and Mickey\nStewart mixed It well, the Kimberley   boy   getting   the   decision.\nOeorge Howie and Roy ICcClelsh\ndrew In the bantam class and Lloyd\nMcLennan nnd Buck. Jon\u00ab in thc\ncurtain  nil rdMi\nIn a wrestling preliminary, Joe\nMlney of Kimberley won a decision\novrr Bill Cos of Cranbrook, whin\nCos, receiving body slams from Mlney, refused to return to the ring.\nBob White of Kimberley and Jimmy\nDixon of Cranbrook gave n lo-mln-\nute exhibition which resulted tn a\ndraw.\nOne of the lurgest gates in thc\nhistory of boxing In Kimberley wnh\ndrawn, close to 1000 packing the\narena. Matches were run off in a\nspeedy  manner.\nOfficials were:\nClarence Marene, main bout r*[-\neree; Jsfk McKay, preliminary referee; Allan DeWolfe, of Cranbrook\nand Bert Wallace of Kimberley,\nJudges; Clarence Bsrkbtrom end J.\nSutherland, timers, H. Stanton, announcer,\nBeauty is only that which makes\nall things as they are ln their\nproper and perfect nature; which\nthe best, paifttess always choose by\ncontemplating tha Forma of esen.\n--Dryden\nMARTIN ADVANCES\nIN TENNIS FIGHT\nAT WINDSOR, ONT\nTwo Americans and Two Canadians in Semifinals of\nthe Men's Singles\nVANCOUVER, B. 0-. July 2.~The\nfinU for the men's singles title of\nthe B. C. clay court tennis championships Saturday will be an international alfair, with either Bob\nJohnson of Portland or Henry Pru-\nsoff of Seattle meeting Dune Williams or Ossle Ryall of Vancouver.\nAll four won their way to ihe semifinals Thursday at the Jericho Tennis club, but. thr- lurk of ihe draw\nbrings the Vancouver players against\neach other ln thc semi-finals tomorrow.\nThe big surprise of today's plav\nwas the elimination of George Joshv,\nJapanese ace. by Hunter randlisl:\nCandlifh beat the Nippon club \u00bbUr\nIn straight sets. 8-6. 6-0. Yoshy got\noff to a 4-2 lead In the first set.\nthen cracked. He lCBt all his sense\not Judgment, and Candllsh took the\nlead and won out. Yoshy was unable to pull himself together for\nthe second set.\nCANADIAN PIT OUT\nCandllsh was nut out in the quar\nter-finals by Prusoff. in straight\nfiet\u201ep after making a great first set\nbattle. Scores were 8-6,  tJ-2.\nBob Johnson of Portbnd was t;tk-\nen to three sets by Eddie Mcll-\nwalne, Jericho ace. in the quarterfinals. Johnson won the first set,\n6-2, then Mcllwalnc recovered to\ntake the iMOnd 6-2. The Portland\nboy grabbed off tlie final,  6-4.\nDune Williams of the Vancouver\nclub eliminated Oeorge Sparling, veteran star of the Jericho club, In\nstraight acts in their semi-final\nmatch. Sparling did not play his\nusual game, and made consistent\nerrors, especially in t he first set.\nwhich Williams won, 6-1. Sparling\nrallied for a space in the second\nset to take the lead at 4-3. but\nWilliams came back strong to win,\nfl-4.\nOssle Ryall. first ranking B, C\nstar, defeated Jack Brawn of tlie\nVancouver club In straight sets in\nthe other quarter-final. Brawn has\nnot yet fully recovered from the\noperation on his shoulder, and is\nforced to serve underhand. Ryall\nwon by scores of 0-7, 6-1.\nK\\ UL AM) WILLIAMS\nKyall and Williams won their wav\nto ihe seml-fmal.'; of the men's\ndoubles by defeating P. Haas of\nWashington, D. c. and Hunter\nCandllsh, T-8, 8-8. Prusoff or Beattle and cokie Shields of the C.N.R.\nput out Yoshy and Sonny Qrelg, 6-1,\n8-2, and will meet Ryall and Williams  in  the semi-finals.\nThe Portland pair of Don Lewis\nand Bob Johnson also made the\nsemi-finals, defeating Oeorge Sparling and Eddie Mrllwamc of the\nJericho club, 6-0, 6-3. in the quarter- finals, Geoff Peers and George\nDixon of the Vancouver club, city\ndoubles champions, made the other\nsemi-final berth bv beating Brown\nand  Milne. 3-6,  0-4, c-3.\nSemt-ftnals were nlso reached in\nthe women's tingles Muriel Munro.\nMarie McNab snd Mrs. Hsggart all\nhave berths, while Jean Milne and\nPhyllis White have yet to play to\ndecide which will oppose Mrs. Hsggart.\nOn Hot\nGATE FOR THE HEAVYWEIGHT HGHT\nTONIGHT TO BE ONLY ABOUT $400,000\nDepression  Has  Forced  Oul\nNormal Purchasers of\nMiddle-Priced Seats\nKAYE DON WILL\nTRY AGAIN FOR\nSPEEDBOAT MARK\nCLEVELAND, Ohio, Julv 3.\u2014(AP)\n\u2014The fighting clans moved in on\nCleveland today, through the air,\nover the highways and by train, aa\na blazing sun poured down on the\napproaching climax of another\nworld heavyweight championship\npicture.\nTomorrow night, on the eve or\nthc national holiday, Max Schmellng,\nthe black-browed, plunging Oerman,\nwill defend his title against Young\nBUI Strlbllng. the lean, handsome\njoungater from Macon, oa.. In Cleveland's new municipal stadium and\nto the old-timer the scenes shifted\nback easily to another big day in\nOhio's  fistic  history.\nAlmost to the day, on July 4,\n1919. Jack Dempsey, then the young\nManassa Mauler, hammered down the\ngreat hulk of Jess Willard at Toledo,\nabout 120 miles from here. In the\nsame kind of killing heat that has\nbeen blazing down on the midwest j\nfor the past two weeks.\nTomorrow night in th\u00ab new steel\nand cement amphitheater that is\nCleveland's greatest pride, two\nyoungsters of another lighting era\nhope to Dtart out in thc footsteps\nof the warrior they now call the o!d\nManassa Mauler.\nOATK Nor UXGE\nStrangely enough, in the second\nheavyweight, tlte battle Ohio has\nseen, the gate receipts will no more\nthan equal the $432,000 the young\nDempsey aiifl fading Willard drew\non the suns wept plain at Toledo.\nDesplte the feverish ballyhoo that\nalways accompanies a heavyweight\ntilt, unprecedented use of thc radio\nfor publicity uses, the flying squadrons that have combed the nearby\nPennsylvania and Ohio towns In\nsearch ot customers, and Strlbling's\nflying stunts, there itemed no prospect of more than 5400.000 in the\ntilt tomorrow night when the warriors open their Li-round duel on\nthe ihOTM of Like Eric.\nOld Man Depression has stepped\ninto the fight picture to mak*. more\nImprcMlve than ever the $1,000,000\nwnd ft2.000,000 gates of the Dempsey\nera. Old Joe Faithful, who pays\nthe freight by filling the moderate-\npriced scats, doesn't seem to have\nto49 or * 12.50 to spare this season.\nKKI MUX ARRIVES\nGeorgo Blake of Loa Angeles, who\nflew into town today from Chicago\nto referee the bout, hud a rules\nconference scheduled with the *tl\"\nrlors. There will be no fouls recognized from low blows, the wounded\nprincipal having only the right to\nrest five minutes before continuing\nWsgerinc on the bout was at a\nstandstill and no beta of size wprc\nreported. Stribling remaining a five\nto  four   favorite.\nEven though the gate receipts\ntotal no more than #300,000 Dft,\nM;n1i\u00bbon Square Garden of Ohio is\nassured of a nrrnll profit on the\naliow. Tlie 123 ringside seats, the\nroosting place of the wealthy, will\nbe well  filled.\nThe principals In the battle picture moved into town today, Schmellng from his camp at Conneaut Lake\nand Stribling from Cauga Lake, for\nthe welghlng-in ceremonies at 8 30\np.m.   ie.e.t.)\nGAP.DONE, mviera. Italy. July a.\u2014\n(AP) \u2014Kaye Don. famed Brltlch\nsportsman, will attempt to lower his\nown world's speedboat record here\non Sunday, he said today, after a\ntrial run with his boat, the Miss\nEngland.\nLYLE ROACH AND\nEDWARDS BATTLE\nSIX-ROUND DRAW\nSpokane, South  Slocan  Boxers Fill Six Hounds With\nAction and Speed\nTRAIL. B. C July 2\u2014Lyle Roach,\nSpokinc, and Jack Edwards, Bouth\nSlocan, went six f.nappy rounds to\na draw in the i>eml-wlndup or Wednesday night's boxing card at the\nskating rink- Roach was' again\ngiven a big hand by the fans, with\nwhom hs is always & favorite.\nEdwards seemed in better form\nthan in any of his previous boutn\nhere. He still used the fast rush\nand his right waa still the big feature of his attack, but he showed\na straight left that may prove valuable  In ihe  future.\nRoar)) took every thinu; EdwardH\nhsd lo offer, and came back 'nr\nmore, often going bark to the rrpe\u00ab\nand covering io keep off Edwards'\nright.\nHe had jack worried u thl heavy\nblgwi apparently had little effect on\nhim. and in the finaJ round Ma\nspeedy attack kept Edwards cm the\ndefensive.\nA draw aa given by Referee Stan\nAlibonc. wa* a fair decision.\nA method has been developed lor\nUsing raihodc rays to detect genuine precious ;.ton?s from imitations,\nv.hlch glow when subjected  to the\nrays.\nSunburn dangerous\nto some skins\nWhat to do\nA CONSIDERABLE number of\nblonde Nordics can't stand sunburn,\" Hays a noted health officer.\n\"They don't tan. They just burn. And\noften they get actually ill (rom tha\neffects of the sun.\"\nAnd sunburn is not only injurious to\nyour delicate skin, it is unbecoming.\nBetter avoid it. Even on cloudy day*\nthere may be enough violet rays to\ncause irritation. Use a parasol and\nwear a hat. Look out for the reflected\nviolet rays from tho water and take\nyour \"Vaseline\" Jelly along on all outings for complete protection. Tbe tuba\nslips easily into your hand bag.\nBefore you' go out, apply a thin layer\nto the exposed skin, face, arms, neck,\nlegs (if you go without stockings).\nWipe it off with cleansing tissues and\napply powder. This will give a protective film over the skin.\nAnd if you feel yourself burning,\napply a fresh layer and leave it on.\nNever mind thc looks. Better be safe.\nThis is a harmless way to save yourself\ntrouble. Do try it.\" Vaseline\" Jelly can\nbe bought anywhere, in jars or tubei\nand it is very inexpensive. Chese-\nbrough Manufacturing Co., Cons'd,\n6520 Chabot Ave., Montreal, Canada\nHOMK RUNS\nHome rune yesterday;\nAverlll,   lndlann,  2.\nRuth. Yankees,   I.\nChapman.   Ynnkee.\\   l.\nFoxx.   Athletics,   1.\nBiKhop.   Athletics.   1.\nHogsn.   Giants,   1.\nThe  leaders:\nKlein, Phillies. 21.\nGehrig, Yankees,  19.\nRuth,  Yankees,  19.\nFoxx. Athletics, IS.\nHornsby.  Cubs,   14.\nAverlll, Indians   14\nLeague totals    American 267; National 265.   Total 532.\nPACIFIC  COAST  LEAGUE\nMissions  7,   Hollywood  3\nPortland   2,   Seattle   0.\nLos  Angeles   1, San  Francisco fl\nOakland   9,   Sacramento   8.\nMACDONALD'S\nFine Cut\nwith ZIG-ZAG papers attached\nCHATEAU\nRATRICIA\nVINTAGE\nDays\nYou  will  enjoy  one  of\nthc numerous cool drinks\nlhat we serve at our\nfountain.\nWRIGHT'S CIGAR\nSTORE\nfei>\nt1oa\u00bb wm\u00a3V\u00ab'5?!'\" \u25a0     \u2122\nThis advertisement la not puMlahed\nor (ilnpla.ved by the Liquor Control\nBoard   or   by   the   (ieternment   ot\nBritish   rilnmbla.\nSi\n|UST A WORD\nABOUT OUR\nBOYS\nA newspaper tossed in the general direction of a house does not constitute\ndelivery in the code of the carrier boy\u00bb\nwho will deliver the Nelson Daily News.\nOur earlier boys are cautioned to deliver their papers exactly as they are,\ninstructed to do by their customers. Infractions of this rule wll not be tolerated, our hoys realize this and make delivers accordingly.\nThe Nelson Daily News\nYou can materially assist your carrier by having the money ready when\nhe calls.\n . PAGE  EIGHT\n\u25a0Till:   NELSON   DAILY   NEW*.   NFI.KON.   B.   C.   \u2014   FRIDAY   MORNTNO.   Jl'LY   J.   1*31\u00ab\n'S&SteMmnk Ad PageWs^k:\nHARROP SCHOOL\nPROMOTION LIST\nProgress Certificates Awarded; Usual Exhibition of\nWork\nHARROP, B. C, July 3.\u2014Below Is\ntlie promotion list for Harrop school\npupils:\nTo Grade Vin\u2014Joan Ashby. Die*\nSeweil, Elsie Johnston, Louelle Hong\n<on trial).\nTo Orade VII\u2014France* Andre* s.\nAgnes Maloney. Ethel Falrbank and\nCyril   Fitchett,   tied.\nTo Orade VI\u2014Florence Howard,\nWilliam Howard, Clarence Johnston\n(on trial).\nTo Grada V\u2014Ada Andrews. Melvin\nWalter Fitchett, David Falrbauk.\nVivian Rowley (on trial).\nTo Grade IV\u2014Evelyn Rowley, Brr-\nhloe Haines, Gena Haines.\nTo Grade III\u2014Edna Johnston.\nLouis de Cocq. Alfred Maloney, June\nRowley. Loll Serres, Fred Podmovotf\n(on trial).\nGrade IA to Grade II\u2014Susie Bern\nand Barbara Serres (tied), Wilfred\nHoward, Douglas Haines, Clarence\nMaloney (on trial).\nGrade IB to Grade IA \u2014 Sun\nPodmoroff.\nHonor rolls\u2014Proficiency, Joan Ash-\nby; deportment, Melvin Maloney.\nregularity and punct lality, BlaM\nJohnston, Florence Howard, Will In m\nHoward.\nMerit marks\u2014High test in room,\nfirst, Joan Ashby; second, Frances\nAndrews; third, Evelyn Rowk\\.\nOthers heading their classes ID\nmerit marks were Elsie Johnston,\nAgnes Maloney. Florence Howard.\nAda Andrews, Bernice Blase. Edn;i\nJohnaton, Susie Berry. Special prizes\nwere given for merit marks. al-(\u00bb\nlor spelling, in which Elsie Johnston won first. Bernice Balnea,\nsecond; Edna Johnston, third.\nProgres* certificates were awarded\nto Douglas Haines. Susie Berry, Barbara Serres, Edna Johnston and\nAlfred Maloney.\nThe standing ln class for the\nmonth of June was ss follows: Grade\nVII. Joan Aahby; Grade VI. Frances\nAndrews; Grade V, Florence Howard;\nOrade IV, Ada Andrews; Grade III.\nEvelyn Rowley; Grade II, Edna\nJohnston.\nThere waa the usual exhibition of\nwork and at the close of present \u00bb-\ntlons, refreshments consisting ol\ncake, strawberries and Ice cream and\n\u2022oft drlnka were enjoyed. Tlic par-\ntall and interested friends had been\ninvited to attend.\nRELATIVES VISIT\nMRS. COLEMAN AT\nHER HOME, YMIR\nYMIR. B. C, July 3.\u2014Mrs. G. 8.\nColeman has as her guetts this\nweek her son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mra. Price, and Miss Oer-\nmalne nf beattle, and a great-granddaughter  of  Spokane.\nH. Stevens left for the Emerald\nmine   on  Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Peterson, their\nson, Elmer, Mrs. E. M. Gllle and\nMrs. Oordon Peters were Nelson\nshoppers   on   Tuesday.\nJ. B. Bremner and Andrew Burgees \\\\c\\r_ Nelson visitors on Monday.\nMAM'   AND   C..ASMHLI)\nADVERTISING\nOne insertion  10 cent* a line\nSix insertions 40 cent* a line\nOne   month   (1.30   a   lln*\nMinimum t\u00abo line*\nHo  extra  charge   U   charged.\nBirth   not,cm   Irea   of   charge\nDea ths,    marriages    and    cards    of\nthanks.   2Q   centa   per   line\nFuneral   flowers   15   cents   per   line\nNews   of   the   Day   Items   20   cents\n>er   Una.\nO IA'lll.1  COST IF CHARGED\nVc\nWINLAW SCHOOL\nPROMOTION FOR '31\nWINLAW, B. C, July 2.\u2014Wlnlaw\nschool  promotions:\nDivision II, Mlea Tvette Bourgeois,\nteacher :\npromoted to Grade IV\u2014Polly\n<-mieff, Helen Fomlnoff. Milan Mr-\nKean, Pate ArokotX, Annie Susoeff,\nNellie oiitoben.\nPromoted to Orade UI\u2014John\nroohochoff, Mike Baaoff, Sam Flh-\nnoff, Nellie Vlotln, Laura Vapoff,\nI-rnest Sutherland. Kathleen Cutler,\nJohn Cohernoff.\nPromoted to Grade II\u2014Nirh Orlt-\nchen, Tanka Omleff, Supi  Malakoff.\nPromoted to Orade i~ Bv* Hobble.\nFanny Suaotr. Lee Sutherland, Julie\nV5erchlltof[, Mike Fnminnif. on trial.\nRoll of honor\u2014De port men t. Potty\nGmleXf; punctuality and regularity,\nKathleen Cutler; proficiency, Nick\nGntchen.\nPrize for neatness won hy Usllte\nVlutln.\nDivision I, Mia* Mildred T. Clarke,\nPromoted to Grade VH\u2014John He*\nKran, Edwin Swansou, Clara, bwan-\nfcon, 'led Sutherland.\nPromoted to Grade VI\u2014Polly Fnm-\nln\"!f, Julia FlUipoll, Pete Chcmoli,\nRov Hubble.\nrromoted to Grade V- Itlldred\nWillfoid,     Laverne     iiebbic.     Percy\n(..'11* lei\ncandidates writing on depsrtmen-\ntal   examinations   for   tntri\nhigh   .-chool:   Hugh   Mf-Kean.   Robert\nn, Jean Sutherland.\nDiplomas awarded lor proiiciencv\nla penmanship. Evelyn Lister, improvement ln penmnnshln, Laverne\nHebtte.\nWriting cerllflcates\u2014Senior, Hugh\nMf Bee ii, Robert IwaneOB, Jean\nSutherland.\nRolls of honor\u2014Punctuality nnd\nrtfutarttf, Hush McKcan, John Mc-\nKean; proficiency. Polly FominofI;\niteportment,   Reggie   stenson.\nPri?es for the best diaries kept\nduring the year\u2014Jean Sutherland,\nfirst; Clara Swanson, *econd; Polly\nFomlnoff. third.\nPrizes for the neatest set of exercise books\u2014Robert Swanfon. first*\nTed Sutherland, second.\nPYTHIAN LODGE IS\nINSTITUTED, SALMO\niiossland  and  Trail Pythian\nLodges   Assist  With\nInstituting\nROSSLAND, B. C, July 2.\u2014Siv\ncarlcade of Pythian SlsterB and\nKnights ol Pythias from Roasland\nand Trail and two carloads from\nNelson motored to Salmo Tuesday\nnight to assist in the instituting ot\nTwin Temple No. 33, Pythian Sisters, by Mrs. Duncan Downle of\nTrail, Grand Chief of British Columbia. The new tetKjkf; has a\nmembership of 22 Sisters and seven\nKnights. Thc floor work was beautifully exemplified by the dearer\nstaff ot Trail temple. At the conclusion of tlic ceremonies, a nice\nbanquet waa served, at which\nspeeches were made by Mrs. Downle.\nR. Sainsbury and  J- A   MacKinnon.\nThe following officers were ln-\nfUilled by the grand chief, assisted\nby Mrs. E Bpoctter, grand senior.\nand Mr-.. T Alt v. grand manager\nMarea rot, Fraser, past chid; Isabelle\nBush, moat excellent chief; Ella Monitor, Hilda Bremner, Junior;\nIva Llndow. manager; Villa Wild'-,\nmistress, of records and correspondence; Anna P. Miller, mistress nf\nfinance; Enid L Clarke, protector;\nGladyi Ltndstrom. guard; Alice\nHeam, press correspondent; Cecilia\nShiell, Ethel Shrum, Alice Bond,\ntrustees.\nVMIRITES ATTEND\nPYTHIAN  SISTER\nLODGE AT SALMO\nYMIR. B. C, July 2,\u2014Mrs. W.\nClark, Mrs. M Peters, Mrs. A B.\nClark, Mrs. J. ft Clarke, Mrs. W. B.\nUelaaao, Mrs. Leslio Bond and Mrs.\nWendell Shrum attended the Pythian Sisters lodge at Salmo on lues-\nday. Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac and Mrs.\nJ. II, Clarke were installed as officers of Twin Temple No. 33 on\nTuesday   evening.\nMrs. E. Daly had ss her dinner\nguests on Sunday Mr. Bnd Mrs. R.\nR. Brown and family and Mr. and\nMrs.   Hodge,   all   of \"Nelson.\nJ. H. Clarke. Andrew Burgess, J\nB Bremner and Wendell Shruni\nwere Salmo visitors on Tuesday evening, and attended the public Installation of officers of the Pythian\n81sters.\nSuccessful Pupils\nAnnounced. Fornic\nMRS. E SHARP OF\nNELSON VISITS\nPROCTER FRIEND\nVALLICAN. B. C, July 2\u2014Mrs. E\nSharp ot Nelson Is visiting Mrs.\nWard   for   a   few   days.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Harrison, lira.\nKlmting, Mrs. Coleman, Miss Coleman motored to Nelson Thursday\nto visit Mr. Klnzlng. who Is a patient at Kootenay Lake General hospital.\nA very successful whist drive was\nheld In the school house Pvlday evening. Many visitors from New Denver. Slocan City, Terry's. Appledale,\nWlnlaw. Passmore, Crescent Valley,\nSouth   Slocan.   attended   the   dance.\nPrizes for cards went to Mrs. W,\nPres, first; Miss E. Coleman, consolation; C. Hermlston, gentlemen's\nfirst; S. Konkon, consolation.\nHostesses for the evening were\nMrs, Harrison. Mrs. Kllnzlng.\nMr. and Mrs, A, Tulloch, Mr. snd\nMrs. S. Tulloch, of Iron Bridge, Ont..\nMrs. H. Hermlston and Mrs. E. Kane\nof Trail motored here Saturday, returning Sunday. While here they\nwere the guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nColeman.\nMiss Archibald motored lo Nakusp\nSunday to attend the ball game\nMr. and Mrs. Bentley of Perry's\nspent Sunday here, *the guests of\nMrs    Kllnzlng.\nMr. ind Mr;;. C, O. Harrison and\nbaby of Trail are- spending a few\ndays hern tha guests of Mr, nnd\nMrs. c. HarrlMn.\nMany Write Entrance\nExams, South Slocan\nINDEX    10    CLASSIFIED    ADS\nAOEMS WANTED (12)\nii iomobii.es jfor hike <4i>\n*.U'l\u00bbIOBII.Erl   WANTED (42)\ntl KIMOBILES   FOR   SALE (4<ll\nBEES (5!)\nHIKIIIx (1)\nmill*. I UNdlF.S FOR RF.NT (4i>\nHUATh, LAINI'HEN   FOR   SALE (441\nBOATS.  LAUNCHES  WANTED (451\n111 SINESS   OPPORTUNITIES (3d)\nI ANAK1F.N   FOR   SALE (8>\ni ITS AM) DOGS FOR SALE (61)\n(ATS   AND   DOGS   WANTED (Ml\nDEATHS (2)\niiULSKMAKING (71\nFARM  AMI   DAIRY  PRODUCE Cllli\nI ARM   PROPERTY  FOR SALE (36)\nI OR   RALE   OR   EXCHANGE (371\nFOR  SALE  OB RENT <22l\nIIRMMIED ROOMS for rent (lo\nMUMMIED   ROOMS   WANTED (llil\nFI RMTUHE FOR SALE   . (461\nHELP    WANTED (101\nHOUSES   FOR   RENT (21)\nHOUSES   WANTED (20)\nIN    MKMORIAM (41\nINS1R4NCE (331\nINVESTMENTS (4sl\nI.IILHARY (\u00ab)\nLIVESTOCK    FOB   SALE 123)\nLIVESTOCK   WANTED (24)\nI.OSI    AMI   FOUND (31)\nMACHINERY (56)\nMARRIAGES (3)\nMINING,   TIMBER.   LUMBER (SHI\nMISCELLANEOUS (29)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOB   SALE (27)\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED (28)\nMUSICAL    INSTRUMENTS (34)\nNDTKES (8)\nM RSERV    PRODUCTS (47)\nNURSING (14)\nPERSONAL (51\nPLANTS (J8)\nPOl I.TKY   AND  EGGS (261\nPROPERTY    WANTED (35)\nRABBITS   FOR   SAFE (25l\nRANCHES   FOR   RENT (40)\nROOM   ANT)   BOARD (17)\nROOMS   TO   RENT (18)\nROOMs  WANTED (181\ns( 1IOOES (321\nHITI \\ I IONS   WANTED (11)\nSTORES   TO  RENT (51)\nTEACHERS   WANTED (IS)\nPERSONAL\n(II\nTHE MASTER KEY 'will, HELP\nsolve every problem. ..Mailed tn\nany Rom* on receipt of 25c to\nMailer Key Exchange, P.O. Boy\nMi 377, l.elhbrldge. Alia., Canada. (6242)\nLET MME. FOSS. ASTROLOGIST,\nCrystal Clairvoyant, solve vour\nproblems, fi questions 81 Horoscope Readings $1. Send birthplace and date. 1375 E. 12th,\nVancouver. (6245i\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C, July 2.\u2014\nPupils from the district who v.erc\nwriting cmratice examinations ii\nthe public schcool were Irene I'ris-\nby. Leonard Purdy, Jack Ttndale.\nand William Muir of South Slocan;\nPhyllis Motley and Norah Brown of\nBonnington; Sibley Ramsay, Shore-\nacres; Annie Konkin. Nick Bayoff,\nThrums: Louis Borgeois, Florence\nSmith. Olga Storbo snd Lloyd Cur-\nzon. Crescent Valley Miss A. R.\nMitchell la supervising.\nGenerally speaking, the man who\nstarted Ufa with a bhoestrlng still\nhas   it\nIS   YOUR   SLEEP  RESTLESS?     ARE\nyou   tired   and   lagging   at   your\nwork?    Visit Reethaven, Sanitarium, Marin* Drive.  Victoria.  B. C.\n16150)\nFEMALE DISORDERS AND OBSTLT-\nrlcal Specialist. Write to Dr.\nFromm, S. P., 5152 Arcade Bldg..\nSeattle.    Treatment by  mall.\n(62441\n\u25a0SINGLE LADIES AND GENTLEMAN.\nDon't be lonesome. I have sweat-\nhearts for you. Descriptions free.\nDorothy McDonald. Box 62, Seattle,\nWash.\" 153)4)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nOffers   will   be   received   up   to\nJuly   8th.   next,   for   the   following\nproperty,   known    aa   the   Charles\nRobertson  Property   on  the  corner\nof   Robson   and   Hendryx   Streets,\nNelson.    B,    C.    more    fully    described as:-\nLot 27A of District Lot 304, Plan\n766; Lot 8, 8,  10, and 11. Block\n27. Nelson City, Plan 349.\nFor further   particulars apply   to\nC.  F.   McHARDY,\nExecutor Estate of Charles\nJohn Robertson.\n(6224)\n_<\u00bb>\nBALDING\u2014Jsmes. age 67 years, of\n\"Humewood Ranch.\" passed away\nTuesday. The body win rest at the\nHowell Funeral Home until 1:45 Saturday afternoon, thence to the\nChurch of the Redeemer, Palrview,\nwhere services will be held at 2\no'clock. Rev. w. J. Crick officiating.\nInterment in I. o. O. F. plot. Nelson\nlodge in charge. (6262)\nHELP   WANTED\nJ321\nWANTED \u2014 GIRL FOR GENERAL\nhousework. Apply to J. Cameron,\ndrawer 2162. Trail, B. C.      (6197)\nWANTED\u2014A COOK WITH RE6-\ntaurant experience. Apply Box\n6259 Nelson Dally News.       ,6259)\nSITUATIONS   WANTED\n_\u00abli\nYOUNO MAN. MARRIED, HOME IN\nNelson, wants steady work, can\nwork for moderate wage as have\nsmall poultry farm aa sideline.\nApply Box 6166 Nelson Dally News.\n(6166)\nYOUNG LADY WISHES POSITION,\nexperienced ln store and office\nwork. Will do anything. Box\n6168 Dally  News. \u25a0   (6166)\nGIRL   WANTS    GENERAL    HOUSE-\nwork.    Phone 596Y. (6176)\nFURNISHED  ROOMS. lor rent    (15)\nAPARTMENT   FOR   RENT.     APPLY\n210   Fall   St. (6265)\nHot Ms   TOR   BENT\nJ3U\nFOR RENT-FIVE-ROOMED FUB-\nnlshed house, close ln. Apply J.\nJ. Boyd.   Phono 576X. (6229)\nFOR RENT-SIX-ROOMED FUR-\nntshed house for summer months.\nApply Murphy Bros. (62271\nFOR RENT JULY AND AUGUST\u2014\nFurnished 6-roomed house. Phone\n454   beforo   6   pjn. (6260)\nCOTTAGE WILLOW POINT BE-\ntween road and lake. Rosllng,\nR.R.   1,   Nelson. (6065,\nLIVESTOCK   WANTED\n_(21)\nWANTF.D-GENTLE COW, RECENT-\nly freshened, about 4 or 5 years,\nprice must be reasonable. Apply\nMrs. A. Heuston. Balfour.     (6233)\nMISCELLANEOUS TOB BALI      (17)   L08T   AND   FOUNB\njai),\n100,000 FEET GOOD USED\nPIPE, all sizes, black and galvanized, large stock of pipe and fittings, valves, etc. Inquiries solicited. Swartz Pip, Yard. 220 Bast\nFirst Ave.. Vancouver. B. C. (6260)\nHAT TAKEN BY MISTAKE FROM\nCanadian Leglon<dance. Please return  to the CarSdlan Legion\n(6240)\nPROPERTY   FOB   SALE\n(84)\nONE 2-HJ\". FAIRBANKS MORSE\ngasoline engine In good running,\norder, price 840.00. One small\nelectric range, two burners and\noven, brand new price $24.00. F.\nH. Smith, Sunshine Bay, R. R.\nNo.  1. (6208)\nWRITE  FOR  CATALOGUE  OF  THE\nWorld famous B.s.A Cycles or\nMotorcycles. Cycles from 155.00.\nMotorcycles from 8375,00. Fred\nDeeley Ltd.. 424 Cordova St.. Vancouver,   B.   C. (6364)\nBicycles\u2014School closing sale. Rebuilt, guaranteed gents' bicycles.\nevery bicycle solid and strong. Ask\nfor list. We pay freight. W. M.\nRitchie. 470 Commercial Dr.. Vane.\n(6193)\nFOR SALE-DAYTON SCALE AND\nWalk-In Ice box. A-l condition.\nApply J. Brennon or phone 91 or\n364L3   Nelson. (6228)\nINDIAN MOTORCYCLES _ 1 \u2014 1929\nScout $195. Terms. Palmer Rut-\nledge. Trail. B. C. (6219)\nROYAL ENGLISH (TWIN CYL.) Motorcycle and aide car. Nelson\nTransfer, Nelson. (61891\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS. KEGS. BUR-\nlap sacks, white sugar sacks. McDonald  Jam Co. (6217)\nFURNITURE FOR SALE (NEARLY\nnew); household utenBlls. Phone\n607L2. ,6253)\nAUSTRIAN SCYTHES FOR SALE.\n$2 each. Morgan, Box 417 Nelson. (6243)\nGOOD LAWN MOWER,  $5.    APPLY\n622 Mill St. (6206)\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED\n_(28|\nLAWN   MOWERS   BOUGHT IN  ANY\ncondition.   Phone 562Y.        (6263)\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(89)\nTRADE   TEN   ACRES   FOR   LIGHT\ntruck. Wllloughby, Crescent Valley\n16I881\nINSURANCe)\n_<w\n'IP YOU WANT TO MARRY A RICH\nWIFE?\"   or   \"Wealthy   Husband?\"\nWrite Box 100-EA Detroit, Mich.\n(6217)\nPOULTRY  AND  EGOS\n.(26)\nFOR SALE\u2014COCKERELS. 9 WEEKS\nold, 20 cents; 6 weeks old 14\ncents each. Apply Box 950 Nelson. (6211)\nUMiii iiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir\nS DO YOU  DRIVE  AN =\n= AUTOMOBILE?\n\u00ab5 Before starting on  that Auto S\n= Holiday Trip,  protect yourself E\n\u00bb against the risks of the road. 2?\nS A   Personal   Accident   Policy. E\nS Paying   weekly   Indemnity   for S\nS injury,    in    connection    with S\nS Auto   Policy.   Isn't   It   worth S\nE while to  Invest a small  sum E\nS to   protect   yourself?   Ask   us Z\ntoday for rates.\nH. E. DILL 1\n= Fire and Automobile Insurance =\nE 508  Ward  Bt. Phone  180 _\n16225) =\niiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiJi\nSEVEN IOTS IN SLOCAN CITY,\ntwo houses with good garden, a\nnumber of fruit trees of different\nvariety, also small fruit. M. Do-\nmlco.  Slocan City. (6186)\nFOR SALE \u2014 SEVEN-ROOMED\nhouse. Apply 609 Victoria St.\nPhone   6I6X. (6204)\nFOB   SAj;E^R_EXCIIANOE (87)\nlllllllllllllinillllllllflllMIIHIIIHIIHIIII\nCHICKEN RANCH, FIVE ACRES\nall cleared; 4-roomed bungalow, good\nchicken nouse, flowing well, electric\nlights, etc, will sell or tak* small\nhouse or car ln trade; balance six\nyears at 6 per cent.\nN. Beyersteln, 164 Eleventh Ave.\nwest. Vancouver, B. C.\n(6166)\n,ll!lllllllllllll!IIIIIIMillll!HIIIII\t\nAUTOMOBILES   FOR   SALE\n(40)\nCHRISTIE TRUCK AND CAR PARTS.\n1630 West Ut Ave.. Vancouver,\nB. C. Largest reliable wrecking\ncompany. Power plants, trailers\nand parts. (6251)\nAUTO WRECKERS & SALVAGE Co.\nUsed parts; Rods Rebabblted\nVernon Machine Shop Q94a-5\nWhyte   Ave..   Edmonton.   AIM\n(602H\nFOR SALE\u2014STAR ROADSTER.   AP-\nply Box  688 Nelson. (6234)\nBOAIS,. LAUNUUL8-ror_Sale   (44)\nFOR SALE\u201413 FT. BOAT, $40.   Apply   E.   Harrop,  Harrop.  B.   C\n'6171)\nJ46)\nFOR     SALE\u2014FURNACETTF,     SIDE-\nboard    bed   and   spring.'   Phone\n(6257)\nMm\"'2FBY S0? SALE-One only\n54 Band Re-Saw with 3 saws\n1 only No. 3 Wardell Band saw\nstretcher. l onlv 6\" automatic\nhand saw grinder, i only ovij\nBrazing clamp with Brazing Irons\nBand saw filing equipment f\nonly 6x15 cowan 4-slde planer\nwith 3 set heads. i only Hall\nright hand automatic cut off \"aw\n}S.?nl*\u00bb*\u2122 dead rolls with, be\"\"-'\nln?5'\u201e\u201e2 on,y 26 H.P. motors i\nonly 20 HP. Motor.  2 mil, 15 HP\nJSS^ui on,i 6 Hp' motor 1\nonly 1 H.P. motor (Starting Blocks\nfor all motors). 1 onlv\u25a0 nJS\nprinting machine. 1 only V4 S$\nEdger. 1 only Saw Hirst !?,!!\nframe with clrculs,.W\u201ea^U^ 0\"nfv\nsaw carriage. 2 only saw d it\nblowers, a quantity 0f shafting\npulleys The abm> together with\noffice safe and furniture of Wen\nem Box and Shingle Mils ltd\"\nBankrupts. !$ offered for sale\neither \"en block\" or In timS\nItems. Apply D. St. Deqf,, TTU,tee\nNelson, B. C '   \\S2jj;\nCATS AND DOGS FOB SALE     152)\nFOR BALE\u2014GERMAN POLICE DOO,\nsix months old (female). What\noffer? Write Box 6220 Nelson\nDally   News. (6230)\nBusiness and Professional\n Directory\t\nAccounting\n_ ...CHAS. F   HUNTER\nPubllo  Accountant,  Nelson\nMunicipal   and   Commercial   Audita\n(6844)\nAssayers\nE. W. Wlddowson, Box A1108. Nelson,\nB.   c.   standard   western   chatMa.\nChiro\npraetors\nDR. GRAY. GILKER BLK., NELSON\n  (8846)\nDR. MITTUN, X-RAY. CRANBROOK.\n(8847)\nDentists\nDR. O. A, C.  WALLEY\u2014206 Medical  Arts  Building.  X-Ray, Nation.\n(5848)\nDressmaking  and  Designing\nDRESSMAKING AND DESIGNING\ntaught^-Academy of Useful Arts\nNo. 4. Write to Mary E. Rodgers\nBox 352, Roasland. (6221;\nEngineers\nCHAS MOORE AND H. D. DAWSON\nEnglneera and Land Sumyors\nK.W.O. Blk., phone 286, Nelaon.\n  (5819)\nFlorists\nGrteelle's Greenhouses. Nelson, cu\nflowers and floral designs.   16850\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. FUI\nline cut flowers at all times\nfloral designs   Phone 383.    (6861\nJOHNSONS GREENHOUSE. Phon\n842 cut flowers. Potted Plant\nand Floral Designs. (5862\ninsurance and Keal Estate\nR   W.   DAWSON.   Real   Estate   I era\nsurance.   Rentals   Next  Hlpperao\nHardware,  Baker  Ejt, (586J\n Second Hand Stores\nThe\u201e^rt' \u201e<!ea|er\u00bb   in  second   nan\ngoods.    Phone   534 (6864\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'  TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE    COAL    AND    WOOD\n Phone 106 (6868\nATKINSON   TRANSFER.     Coal   an\nWood.  Long Dlstanc, hauling\n|685(\nWood Factory\nTHE   GUMPS \u2014LET   ME   AT   'EM\nLAWRON'S WOOD FAClOIU Si\nBn>er St. W\u00ab, Pleaa* our eu\ntomarg (5771\nIdeas mike their way in (.Hence\nlike the waters that, filtering behtnl\nt.he rocka of the A]p\u00ab loosen thfin\nfrom the mountain! on which they\nfwt.\u2014iyAubigne.\nBATHING\nSUITS\nSHOP   MORRIS\nAND SEE!\nJust a little better\nfor a little less!\nCharles Morris\nLtd.\nt'KRNIE, B. C. July 2.\u2014The names\nol   those   pupils   recommended   lor\nidmiHlon to inch school from gradr\nVIII.   of   thc   Fernle   public   schcool\n1 follows:    Oeorge    Ashmore,\nAtlon, Frank Baker, Olive\nB'!:i-t, Mary Bennett, Maigarrt, Brr-\nnott, (\u00bbnrn>n Bidrlulph, William\nBimigg, Constance Bodrn. MaryBou-\n\u25a0 ].r Orv.i'ii, Henry Burrows.\nEunice Bushel), Daniel John Bu-\nJSIOtS Carnwortli, Frrdrlck\nChlvers, Robert COUgtSA, John De-\nman, Catherine Dolstra, Clara E-\nliotl, Charles Kicton, Catherine\nGates, Bernardo Orlando Olaccom-\nazzi, Rena OtSCCOmsjSl, Nellie Good,\nJoseph OUMEl, Norma Gray, Roland\nHeader son, Wilfred Hughes, Brnest\nHutson, Kii<-abcth Jakublec, Wlnnj-\nfred Jones. Henry Kasmer, Kop-\nchiak, John Uincafiter, Louis John\nLento, Grace Manning, Josephine\nMegale, John Melusl, Flora. McCal-\nlum. David MacDonald, John Mil ton,\nLillian Milton, Bernard Moffatt,\nGeorge Owen, Margaret Rcdoules,\nTannis Reld, Kate Rutledpe. Tnni\nShaw, Victor Slavlnskl, Henry Ward,\nPearl  Whitelaw.  William Wilson.\nThose recommended from grade\nIX. to X. -Evelyn Alello, Norah\nBaker, Victoria Chubra, Marlon Em-\nmott, Thelma Kniert. Florence Man-\n|gan, Oordon Mulrhead, ARne,^ Peter-\nson, Katie Sangals, Ethel Sorkie.\niBlisabeth VanbURklrk, Frank Butal\ni Frank CoatUUOS, Robert Chris ^.o,\nWilliam Green, Kenneth Knu-r'.\n[ George Lancaster, Brynley Morris,\nI Vincent Pod.bielanclk. Bte'Ve Berek,\nj James Shaw, Alex Swiderskl, Roy\nI Taylor, John Verklrk, William W01-\njobefe, Stanley Edgar.\nI From grade X. to X.\u2014Margaret\nj Bella, Esther Gates, Evelyn Hutch-\nilneon, Kste Jakublec, Ethel Oaklev,\nJEmma Pollock, William Prentice,\nI Jack Reeve, Alex Rizzutto, Helen\nSchupe. Emma Shulslka, Douglas\n] Alexander.\nj Mr. and Mrs. Chesholm\nRenew Acquaintances\nin Rossland, Holiday\nROSSLAND. B. C July 2\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Llddlcoat of Grand\nForks motored to the city yesterday. They will be accompanied on\ntheir return trip by their daughter,   Mlsa   Elsie   Llddlcoat,   of   the\nMiss Ruby McAllister lelt Tuesday for her home at the coast..\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. B- Johnson, who\nhave been living In the city for\nseveral months, have taken up their\nresidence   ln  Trail.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. snd Mrs. B. Cheeham of\nKimberley are renewing old acquaintances In town over the holiday,\nA real angel  is not always trying\n\u2014-   to make you believe he l6 an angel.\n <&3\n'THE   NELSON   DART   NEWS,   NELSON,   B.   C.   \u2014   FIIDAY   MOINING.   KV!   I.   1M1\"\"\nMarket and Mining News\nNIPPERS' COUNCIL PLANS MUST BE\nALTERED STATES THE ASSOCIATED\n)kanagan Independent Grow.\n| ere and Associated Will\nTry for New Scheme\nVERNON.   B.   C,   July   a.\u2014Altera-\nona must be made In the plan tot\nshippers'   council   before   It   will\nwive    tha    assent,   ol    Associated\nrowers.  This   wa*  the  decision  of\ne   board   of   directors,   Tha   board\ncltned    to   accept    the    plan    as\niginally   set   up   by   the   lndepen-\n>nt shippers. It indicated its wlll-\nigness,   however,   to   work   cloaely\nlth   ail    the   other   Interests.\nFollowing   announcement   of   this\nBcislon  the   Independents  end   the\naociated met  at Kclowna  on  Sat-\n:day.   A   committee' appointed   at\ntat   gathering   met   in   Vernon   on\nueaiiy  and  a  meeting  of  all   infested has been  called tor Friday.\nAn  effort   is   being   mide   to   In-\nuca   tho   government   to   aet   up\ni .organization   in   the   \u25bcalley   in\nmnectlon with the markets branch,\nicii organization to work with the\nltppers   council.  *ir   this   la   done\nwill  look  after  the  collection  of\nivotoas   daily   from   the   shippers,\nie    issuing    of    statements    from\nme   to  time  regarding  the   move-\nent   and   values,   but   It   will   not\nime   the  shippers   or   buyers.   Thc\nlppers council  will discuss values,\nadcs.   \u00abnd   collect   And   distribute\nformation     regarding     marketing\nethods. Although the movement of\n,rly    fruits    and    vegetables    was\nirely   commenced   about   50   car-\nids  have   moved  out   ln   addition\nmany    local    shlpmen ts.    There\na  quite  a   spurt   on   Friday   last\nd the movement on Monday and\nesday  was  about   IS  cars,\n\u25baYAL   ANNES   LEFT\n>4any growers of Royal Anne cher-\nare   not   picking   them.   Some\n-ved  to  the  canner^s.  Blngs   pre\narlng   up   fairly   well   and   Lam-\nts are, starting to move. Windsors\nnearlng   the   picking  stage   and\nuld   come on  with   a  rush   with\nadvent   of   warm   weather   and\nlahlne.   The   cherry   deal   la   said\nbe   down   about   30   per   cent\nm last year and  tho cherries are\n;ch    harder    to    mov\u00ab    Although\ny are going out one of two cars\nHy. There  has  been  a movement\naome volume  to eastern  centers,\ngolpg   to   Toronto,   Mmtreal,\nI North  Bay..\n'be feature of the week's market-\nhas been, an advance m the\noa of early cabbage. Owing to\nwet, cold weather the cabbage\nnot been heading up. The\nnts are lusty, but tho heads are\nclosing in. fast enougli to meet\ndemand thc price I>er ton\nIch was $50, advances to $56 and\nsome cases to WO. A few days\ni should alter that. Carrots are\nin great demand at *6>. A\napricots are ma vine; out of\nver. The main crop, however,\nOliver, Penticton. Naramata and\namerland will not be ready for\n>ut another 10 days under present\nidltlons.\nT  SL'N   SHOULD   HI.LP\nhot sun would, however, make\ngreat difference. The crop Is a\n>d one and Is more than double\n,t harvested one year ago. A few\nd cucumberK are moving,\njool wet weather most bene-\nlal for the apples. The irrigation\nter supply has txvu loeTMMd\natly so that there will be plenty\nthe tomatoes, onions and later\ntable crops.\n| 15 expected that apples will\ne well and that in size may\nko up some of tlie estimated 25\ncent reduction in volume,\nought snot is said to be preen t in some districts. Chinese\njetables are making rapid growth.\niere were several report* of hall\nthe Winfleld and the Gelgo d lasts. Orowers In bo+li these dls-\ncts state there was nothing to\nlse any damage to growing crops.\nMarking space is like money\u2014\nare is plenty of it where It\nesn't do you any good.\nTORONTO MINES\nACTIVITY SMALL\nTORONTO   Ont.   July   3.    (CP)\u2014\nSpeculative interest waa lacking\ntoday on the fitandird Stock and\nMining exchange and movements\nwas   of   small   proportion.\nTurnover waa only  158,151 shares.\nLake Shore and Gold fell to\n137.26; Dome at $1150 waa off 5\npoints. Mclntyre rose 6 cents to\n\u202231.75.\nWhile Noranda dropped 35 cent*\nto $19.50 NlOei rose 25 cents to\n$15.50 and Hudson Bay moved up\nfi points to $4.76. British American\nOil dropped 75 cents to $11 and\nImperial  fell  25  cents  to  $13.\nTORONTO STOCK\nPRICES LOWER\nSome  of   Leaders   Maintain\nGains;   Brazilian  Traction Closes Higher\nTORONTO. Ont., July 3. (OP)\u2014\nPrices slipped lower in conservative\ntrading on the stock exchange today.\nSome of the leaders maintained\ngains accumulated ln early trading. Brazilian Traction closed il\n2314, a gain of IU- Bell was Oft\nIt, C. P. R. lost vk ftnd Montreal\nPower waa off H. International\nNickel gained % at 15%. Smelters\nwaa off 3.\nBritish Afnerlca Oil was off %\nto ll'i. Imperial was unchanged\nand International Petroleum was\noff   V*   to   12.\nPage-Hcrsey lost 1% to 81 and\nSteel of Canada at 30% waa up\n1 \\%. Ford of Canada was up %.\nDominion Stores gained  V.   at 32 V3.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBank of Commerce   310\nImperial   Ban*   \u201e.... 208\nBank of Montreal  386%\nBank of Nova Scotia  310\nRoyal    Bank  243\nBank of Toronto  210\nAbltibl Power as Paper   4*4\nAsbestos  Corporation  '.ii\nAtlantic Sugar  \u201e  24\nBell  Telephone  140\nBrazilian T L & Power   22%\nCanada   Bronze     24\nCanadian Car  & Foundry  .... 11%\nCanadian   Cement      11H\nCanadian   Cement  pfd  00%\nCanadian Converters   38\nCanadian Industrial Alcohol \u25a0 'i\nCan. General Electric pfd .... 210\nCanadian   Power     60\nCanadian  Cottons    20\nCanadian Steamship Lines .... IU\nCons. Mining to Smelting .... 107%\nDominion   Bridge     35\nDominion Glass   106\nDom. Btecl Corp. pfd  3sii\nDominion   Textile     72\nA P Grain  ...  2%\nHlUcreat Colliers \u201e  HO\nMasaey  Harris  4%\nMontreal Power   45\nMontreal   Tramways     155\nNational    Breweries  38\nNational   Steel   car    22\nOgilvle  Milling     190\nOntario   Steel   Products     6%\nOttawa L H & Power   Ptfi\nPenmans Ltd.   41.\nPower   Coroporatlon,     47\nPrice   Bros  30\nQuebec   Tower  3\nShawlnigan         42%\nSherwln,    Williams      24%\nCo  Canada Power   .   \u201e\u201e  31\nSteel  of   Canada     30\nSt.   Lawrence   Flour  Mills   .... 16%\nWabasso    Cotton     18\nWestern  Grocers   17\nWinnipeg   Railway     11\n\\\nJ^obody ever regrets\nsaving money\nOne dollar per week deposited regularly in your\nSavings Account will\namount\nin Five yean to\nin Ten \" \"\nin Twenty\"   \"\n$280.00\n605.00\n1,400.00\nAny Branch of this Ban\\\nwould be glad to have\nyour   Savings   Account.\nIMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA\nhead office\nTORONTO\nCapital and Rejervs,$15,000,000\nNELSON\nCRESTON\nW. R. GRllBBE, Manager\nJ. S. W. CLOWES, Managai\nBranches at Rarelatoka, Cranbrook, Ferni*\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. oS Canada, Ltd.\n1 KAIL\u2014HK1IIMI   COLUMBIA\nNanuracturtn ot Ammonium   Phosphat*\nELEPHANT Sulphate of Ammonia\nchemic il'Tm.tilizeiw Triple Superphosphate\nSOLD BV NATIONAL FEU1T CO.. NELSON\nrrodurera  anil   ReMneri   ol \u2022   \" a \u25a0\u00bb\n.   TADANAC UadZ,nc\nBmnii Cadmium liismuth\nELECTROLYTIC\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014Copper\neaaler. spot and future* IU to 0.\nTin firm; spot and nearby 34.12;\nfuture 26.35.\nIron steady and unchanged.\nLead quiet; New York, spot, 4.40;\nEast   St.   Louts,   spot,   422.\nZinc firmer; Eaat St. Louis, spot\nand future, 3.85 to 4.00.\nAntimony, spot 7.05.\nForeign b*r silver 20 !i cents.\nAt London\u2014\nStandard copper, spot \u00a337 15s;\nfuture \u00a338 7s U: electrolytic, spot\n141;   future  \u00a341   10s\nTin. spot 1110 15s; future \u00a3118\n12s   Od.\nLead, spot \u00a313 5s; futures \u00a313\n12s  ad.\nZinc, spot \u00a313 2a ad; future\n\u00a313   19s.\nCHICAGO WHEAT\nCLIMBS HIGHER\nSensational    Adverse   Canadian Crop Report Brings\nBullishness\nCHICAGO, HU., July a.\u2014tBy John\nP. Boughan, Associated Press market\neditor)\u2014 Sensationally adverse Canadian crop reports lilted wheat today. One Canadian authority said\nthat even allowing for any future\nImprovement, this season's wheat\ncrop would not exoeed 300,000.000\nbushels, compared with 374,000,000\nharvested last year. Premier Bennett of Canada was quoted aa saying the Dominion faced Its greatest\nnational crisis.\nWheat closed unsettled. \\\u00bb to 1\ncent higher; corn ^b to '\/\u00bb UP. oa,U>\nat ',4 to '.j advance, and provision-.\n5  to  15 cents  down.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAllegheny    \t\n\u00bbW\n8\n8%\nAllied    Chemical\n131U\n128\n128%\nAmerican Cau   ..\n113'4\n110!,\n111%\nAmer For Power\n\u00bbT\u00bb\u00bb\n35%\n36\nAm Mach & Pay\n34'i\n33\n33%\nAm Smelt tc Re\n39',\n37%\n37%\nAmer   Telephone 183^\n180%\n181\nAmerlc    Tobaccq\n124'-j\n123%\n122%\nAtchison   \t\n199U\n167'.',\n167%\nBaldwin\t\n15 '\u25a0,\n15%\nBait   tc   Ohio\n63',\n61%\n63\nBendlx   Aviation\n21',\n20%\n20%\nBeth  Steel\n52%\n51%\n51%\nCanadian    Paclf\n28U\n27\n27%\nOrro   de   Pasco\n20\n20\nChea tc Ohio ...\n38',\n37%\n37%\nChrysler\n23',\n22%\n22%\nCom 8c Southern\n\u00bb'*\n8%\n8%\nCon Gas NY..\n00\n96%\n07\nCom    Products..\n751.\n74%\n74%\nC   Wright  pfd\n3%\n3%\n3%\nOupont \t\n91\".\n89!,\n89%\nEastman    Kodak lMVs\n148%\n149\nElec Power A: Lt\n44!,\n42%\n43%\nErie\n25%\n25%\nFord English\n13%\nFord  of  Canada\n18\nFirst Nat stores\n54',\n52%\nH\nFreeport   Texas.\n18!,\n18%\nGeneral  Motors\n39 i.\n38%\ntJH\nGeneral   Electric\n45\n43%\n43%\nGeneral Foods\n49\n48!,\n48%\nGold   Dust   \t\n30',\n30\n30%\nOrahby \t\n16\n14%\n14%\n3reat North pfd\n53 !i\n53\n53!,\nGreat   W   Sugar\n10 ti\n10%\n10%\nHowe   Sound\n22\n21%\n31%\nHudson   Motors\n15\n15\nIns    Copper    . .\n1%\n7!i\n7%\nInter Rap Tran\n32':,\nInternet    Nickel\n15',\n15%\n15%\nInter Tel & Tel\n36\n34%\n34%\nKelly  Spring\n2!.\n2%\n2%\nKenn Copper  .\n91ft\n21\n21%\nKresge   S   S\n27',\n28%\n22%\nKroegg  8c  Toll.\n33\n32%\n32%\nMack   Truck\n33\n32\nNash   Motors\n30'i.\nan\n29\nNat   Dairy   Prod\n36',\nII\n30\nN   Power   &   I.t\n27%\nNew York centr\n04'.\u201e\n02%\n92%\nPaclf   Gas   As   El\n47',.\n47\n47\nPcnn  It  R  \t\n50\n49%\n49 %\nPhillips Pete\n\u00ab'i\n8%\n8%\nRadio    Corpora..\n21\n19%\n20%\nRadio  Keith   Or\niB'k\n15%\n15%\nRem Rand  \t\n101,\n10%\n10 %\nRock   Island   . .\n43\n43\nSafeway   Stores\n56\n55\n55\nS Louis tc  S  F\n19%\n19%\n19%\nShell  Union  OH\n7'.,\n7%\n7%\nSinclair   Con.   .\n11'..\n10%\n10%\nSouth   Calif   Ed\n44%\n44%\n44%\nSouth  Pacific\n88\nlit,\n85%\nStan Oil or Cal\n38\n37%\n37%\nStan OH  of  Ind\n27%\nStan Oil ot N J\n39%\n38%\n39\nStewart Warner..\nMM\n12\n12\nStudebaker   \t\n19%\n19%\n19%\nTexas    Corpora-\n21%\n23%\n23%\nTexas Gulf Bui..\n37%\n36%\n36%\nUnion Carbide   .\n54%\n52%\n52%\nUnion  Oil   Calir\n18%\n18\n18\nUnion    Pacific   .\n108%\n167\n1\u00ab8' ,\nUnited  Aircraft..\n32%\n30%\n30%\nU S Pipe & Fdy\n26%\n25%\n25%\nU  S Rubber  . .\n15%\n15%\n15%\nU   S   Steel   \t\n104%\n101%\n102%\nWest Electric ....\n73%\n69%\n70%\nWillys   Overland\n4'\/>\n4-%\n414\nYellow Truck ..\n9%\n9%\nMt\nCANADA B(\n)NDS\nuly   \u2022!.-\nWINNIPEG.   Man.,   0\n-Ql'O-\ntations on  victory   bonds for\nsiooo\nare as follows;\nWAR   LOANS;\n1931.  5   per  cent   100 10.\n1937.   6  per   cent   107\nVICTORY  LO'ANS:\n1933.   5',    per\ncent\n104:25\n1934.   5!j    per\ncent\n101.25\n1937,   .'>'\u2022\u25a0    per\ncent\nm.\nWAR    LOAN    RENEWALS:\nMil.  .1  per   cent   IM.lt.\nREFUNDING   LOANS:\n1048.   5   per   cent\n06 40.\n1940,  tU   per\ncent\n101.80.\n1944.  4t\u00a3   per\ncent\n:01.50.\n1948.  4!,.   per\ncent\n101.80.\nCONVERSION   LOANS:\n1956,  4   per   cent   101.70.\n1057.  4',i   per\ncent\n102.25.\n1958, 4'j  per\n:ent 104.10.\n1959,   4'i   per\ncent\n104.18.\nEGG   MARKETS\nMONTREAL, Que.. July '.'.\u2014Butter\nend cheese, advanced. Eggs, lower.\nThe only change in tlie egg market waa the %-ccnt decline of Ontario and prairie rresh seconds, In\ncar lots, at 15% cents \u25a0 dozen. Extras were quoted unchanged at J2\ncents and firsts at 17 to 17% cents\na dozen, car lot prices ol British\nColumbia fresh extras snd firsts\nwere 33 and 18 to 18!, cents \u2022\ndozen, respectively.\nCheese \u2014 Ontario, 11% to 11%;\nQuebec, 11.\nButter\u2014No. 1 finest fresh, 21 to\n21%.\nEggs\u2014Fresh specials in enrtons.\n21; fresh extras In cartons. 20;\nfresh   firsts   tn   rartons.  22.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nRETREATS A BIT\nOils Close Firm While Both\nColds and Base Metals\nDrop Moderately\nVANCOUVER, B. C, July 2 \u2014\nStocks generally retreated ln light\ntrading on the Vancouver exchange\ntoday. The market was enlivened\nduring the forenoon session by a\nbuying flurry In Crow's Nest ln response to bullish field news, The\noils closed firm, while the mines,\nboth golds and base metals, dropped\nmoderately. Sales dwindled to 18,-\n590 shares, tu compared with 31.172\nshares for the previous full session.\nReport* that Union OU of California will finance drilling operations of Crow's Nest-Glacier Oil and\nMajestic OU Co., Flathead valley,\ncaused an accumulation movement\nln Crow's Nest at the outset. The\nstock opened strong at l\\k cents and\nlater rose to 8 cents, but the price\neased In the late dealings to 7\ncents, to close unchanged at that\nquotation. Crow's Nest accounted\nlor 26,000 ihares of the curb turnover   of   28,800   shares.\nThe flurry ln Crow's Nest filled\nto stir Amalgamated, the holding\neompairy, which closed unchanged at\n8 cents bid. C. St E. sold at 33\ncents, a net gain of 3 cents, while\nA. P. Consolidated entered new low\nground at 10 cents, off 2 cents net.\nEast Crest tagged 2 cents to 18\ncents.\nTrading was sluggish in tlic mines\nshares, nnd prices were inclined M\nease. Pioneer closed down 7 cents\nat *2.25 bid, and Premier at 88\ncents and Reeves McDonald at 31\ncents each dropped 2 cents. Reno\nadvanced 1 cent to 24 cents, and\nBeaver Sltvcr rallied fractionally to\n5% cents. Lome hardened slightly\nto 9 cents.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbana          07\nAcondu .02\nArno  .   03',i\nAJax    \u00ab....      1.29\nAmulet .       .20\nAmity .oi\nAssociated      .10\nArea   . .   .\u201e _        .o| \\\nBaldwin     01\nBaltic  Oil  03\nBase   Metala      I.OO\nBidgood  04'a\nBarry   Bollinger        .08\nBig  Miswurl   .     31\nCalmont  .07'^\nCentral   Manitoba    to\nChemicsi   Rceearrn         1,00\nClerlcy       . .021*\nDome       l.is\nDalhoHsle  .25\nEastcre*t ,18\nroothiiu ,ta\nFalconbndaK 1.20\nOoodflhrt .05\nHomo    Oil .53\nHarker  Gold DP.\nHowey . .30\nHollinger    8.50\nHudson   Bay   . .        ??\nInternational  Nickel       15.50\nKeelly .24\nKlrkland    lake m\nLake    Snore 27.00\nMacassa ,31\nMandy .07\nManitoba  Basin    jj$%\nMnlarttr  04\nMclntyrc .   . 21.60\nMining   Corporation         1.80\nMurphy   02'-j\nNew  Imperial Oil      19.90\nNtplssing        128\nNoranda 10.35\nPeterson   Cobalt .01 K\nPend   Orrtllc .70\nPremier  (.old        .05\nBhvntt  Oordoft .72\nSan   Antonio   . .       .15\nSudbury  Bsain 47\nSlscor  45\nBt. Anthony  08\nStadacona     \u201e 01%\nTech  Hughe*        6.70\nVlpond     75\nVentures     53\nWright   Hargreavcs         2.80\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG. Man.. July 2.-C.OS-\nIng  gruln quotations:\nOpen . Iligii. low close\nWHEAT;\nJuly         .    00H      A\u00ab K%     tt'J'i\nOct.     .    .    63';.      04% 68 y      84 H\nDer.         ..    (J4 \\i      65?* Mti      6jTa\nOATS 1\nJuly     . ....    31          II% 30*1      31 \"8\nOct,    .   ..   38H     33', 021*     33\nDec               32:!d      33% 33ft      33'a\nBARLEY;\nJuly            .     33>i        MVi ISM       34*.\nOct.          .    MU      36U H%      35-j\nDec         ..    oS^u      37-, 35'4      36%\nFLAX:\nJuly          .  112        115'* 112 115U\nOct.    ... . 118H    UTH UIH    nt*'*\nDec.       .... 114',    ne sM%    117'!-*\nRYE:\nJuly .    353n      36 U MH      38\nOct     38 38% 37'\u00bb,      38%\nDec    39%      40% 39%     40\nCASH    CLOSE:\nWheat:   No.   7   hard 63%:   No.   1\nnor,   62%;   No.   2   nor. 69%;   No.   3\nnor. 54%; No. 4, 48%; No. 5, 44%;\nNo. 6. 42%; leerl 15%; tr^ck 62%;\nNo. 1 durum 75%; screenings, per\nton,   50   cents.\nHAILSTORMS\nDAMAGE APPLES\nIN GRAND FORKS\nRaspberries At Coast Suffer\nin Rain; Transparent*\nOn Market\nVANCOUVER, B. C, July 2 \u2014\nThere are still considerable supplies of strawberries coming on the\nmarket, but owing to wet weather\nthey are off condition and being\njobbed at from 81 to 11.80 * per\ncrate says the market news letter,\ndepartment >f agriculture, Victoria.\nRaspberries are also depreciated by\nwet weather and going to the re-\ntaller at 31.50 per cr^te. There\nIs now a good supply of loganberries on the market, the price\nbeing about tho same as for raspberries. New upples of the Yellow\nTransparent variety are now ou the\nmarket from local sources, but the\nsupply as yet Is limited. Okanagan\nBins cherries are now in good supply, the quality la good and tbe\nprice to retailer Is 17 cents per\npound for (op grade. Most of the\nlocally grown cherriej are split\nand the price shows a great variation. Washington Moorpark apricots\nare now coming in L.CL lots, today's price is |125 per crate. The\ntomato deal is somewhat firmer.\nMoat sales vt hothouse No. 1, stock\nare at 82.75 per crate wholesale,\nwith a few at 83. New potatoes are\ndown somewhat, growers are getting\nfrom 830 to 832 per ton for good\nstock.\nCALGARY: One hundred and two\ncrates of strawberries. 149 crates\nof raspberries and 12 loganberries\nare the total L.CL. arrivals from\nthe west Tuesday morning. In addition there were 25 crates of strawberries from Creston. The quality\nof all was only fair, but broker\nsucceeded in maintaining thc i>rice\nof 83.35 on straws and rasps nnd\n31.73 on logans. The demand for\nthe latter Is very indifferent. Cherry\nquotations remain the same with\nexception of some \"clean-ups'' on\nRoyal Annes which still arrive in\nlarge quantities. Tartarlaus are over.\nRain yesterday reported fairly general   over   the   wliole  province.\nWINNIPEG: Weather extremely\nwarm. Business Is brisk. Thc volume\nof B. 0. strawberry shipment* la\ndisappointing and no raspheriies except. Washington on tnls market.\nCherry supplies have been light\nmostly L. C. L. Until Kalurriay Wb*fl\na straight car was received. Th\u00bbre\nis unothrr car in this mom in? with\na giwd demand, Blng-s art- wholesaling at 83.50 and Roy tl Annex\n*n:l TaiUiians at $2.25. A fresh car\nof B. C. hcadlettuce of only fair\nquality and selling at 83.50. Fine\ncar of Ontario cabbage consigned\nand selling at 8150 per 60-pound\ncrate. Tomatoes iW arriving in\nvolume, seven cars of Mississippi\nand one of Texas, Rood quality, in\nfour-basket crates at $1.75 and 1 iks\nat $2.75. A car of Virginia hamper cucumbers, two cars Oklahoma\nnew potatoes; two enra of California\ndeciduous fruits and one car Te:tas\ncarrots on track. Wynndei strawberries expected tomorrow morning.\nGRAND FORKS: Hail siOTUU Ot\nJune 28 and 39 b\u00bbv\u00ab damaged upples in some Mellon* of vus district.\nWHEAT POOLS NOT\nCLOSING BUSINESS\nMONTREAL, Que.. July 3.-Foreign Power securities proved a\nstrong feature on the Montreal curb\nmarket during today's post-holiday\nsession.\nThis Issue on one sale ot 35 shares\ngained 2'fc points to close at 134\na new high level for the current\nyear. Canadian Wineries was the\nonly other issue In the miscellaneous section to close higher. Lossef\nIndued Beauharnols Power, British\nAmerican Oil, 2 imperial Tobacco.\nSouthern Canada Power preferred\nand Hiram Walker. The oils were\ndull and easier while the beverages\nwere lower and the public utility\ngroup mixed In trend.\nIn tlie mining division Lake\nShore lost 75 cents at $27 while\nNoranda was also lower closing\nat   $19.35   off   29   cents.\nFOREIGN POWER\nIS8UES STRONG,\nMONTREAL CURB\nNEW YORK LIST\nUNABLE TO FIND\nTRADEJNTEREST\nGains Are Narrow and Down\nward Drift Sets in Early\nin Late Session\nWINNIPEG WHEAT\nFAILS TO REACT\nBullish Influences Are Lost;\nFirmness Is Noted on Big\nMarkets\nWINNIPEG, Man., July 2. iCP)~\nWheat prices on the Winnipeg exchange today failed to react appreciably to pronounceed bull is !i\nInfluences, advancing only :,( to ',\ncents. Adverse crop reports, noted\nfrost and reported under-cover buying were unable to send values\nahead.\nFirmness, however, was noted locally as well as at Chicago and\nLiverpool, and light pit offerings\nallows values to retain their levels.\nNo cash wheat improvement wag\nmarked in the apathetic demand.\nOKANAGAN GOLD\nSTRIKE APPEARS\nTO BE VALUABLE\nVfcRNON, B. C. July 2\u2014 H. J.\nBltirton Is In possession ut gom\nsamples of gold quarU which In\nanother day and generation would\nhave started a stampede Into the\nbtltfJ on thc west side or Okanst;aii\nlake. Mr. Blurlon MllMted tat HOI*\npies and showed them to O. M.\nWarren, mining tnginorr fur the\nConsolidated Mining & time! ting\ncompany, who went ortr tbe proper-\nty.  known   as   the   Skookum   claims.\nThe gold ghowi iii UM pockr'., ,,1\nthe crumbly rook like honey In\nthe  comb.\nBorne of thc Indians and others\nwho havc aoe.n the ore sample^\nexpress the opinion that Mr. Blur-\nton has discovered the deposit which\nold Muma found, and to which he\nsteadily refu-sed  to take any person.\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK. July fe-\u00abi*rUM exchange irregular at $4.R41.i for \u00abn-\nclay bills nnd at H.H6), tor demand\nCanadian dollars  >, not discount\nFrancs   4.91 's    cents.\nUfa 6.2;i;8   cents.\nUruguay  58.35  cents.\nMarks 23.71  cents.\nKronen   2680   cents.\nNelson approximate sterling cx-\nclungp   ratr   $4.88%.\nNBW YORK, (AP)\u2014With the ln-\nter-governmental debt question htill\nbanging fire, Wall street was unable\nto muster up much interest in\nthe  stock  market,today.\nAlthough prices advanced along\na wide front during the morning,\nthe gains were narrow end a downward drift set In by early afternoon, carrying through to the\nclose, which averaged about a point\nlower.\nIt was tlie dullest session since\nJune 19. Sales totalled only 1,300,\n000 shares. The relative steadiness\nIndicated confidence in an eventual settlement was dominant..\nITIL1T1KN    PROMINENT\nUtility shares took the most\nexceeded a point. UB. Steel's best\nprominent place in tho morning\nrise, although the advance hardly\nprice was 104**. up one, bm U\nclosed at 103'4. Oil one. Tr.c.c\nwere simihr losses Iu such Industrials $# General Electric. Westing-\nhouse, National Biscuit and Allied\nChemical. Coppers softened on word\nthat some metal, had been\n6 U cents, a drop of U fro u last\nweek's high\u2014rails were heavy. Union Pacific, Baltimore and Ohio\nnd Atchison lo&t ft bout a point\nand   half  net.\nForeign exchanges were it regular.\nThe market sagged half a point and\nthe peseta was Heavy, while sterling and French franc gained, the\nformer   rising   |*tt,\nThe action on thc bond market\nwas encouraging. Average closing\nprices for railroad, public utility\nnnd Industrial Issues all ibowed\nRani.v\nThe foreign group scored  .\n!   \u2022   upward   ntovcmenl\nU&oni   corporate   lhsue.,    ni   I):   fed\nVANCOUVER LIST\n\t\nMIMS\nRi'l\nourl                    .'-'-\u25a0\ncork  Province\n.01\nDuthli\n01\nSmTH Coppn                     .-\".Ci\nlieoibia Rlvrr                       \"J1,\nCloU'cnidi.                20\nGranclvltw                          'H1.\n[nt c ti c. .                     ,10\nUickv Jim                            M\nNutioiul  Sliver   \t\nN!\nNoble Flvo                       .   .O.'i\nPremier                   Rl>\nKee.rs  McDonald    31\nBnowriake   .        0-\non a\nA   p  Conftoluliited\n.in\n,V     it''l  ll<\"<l MM\n.10\n.:\u00ab\n.01\nDelliouMe    _\t\n\u25a0jo\n.18\nFreehold    _\t\n.04\nBuiftl\nM\nHome   Oil   \t\n.so\nIllinois AHa\t\n.01\n.04\nMcDougflll   Segur   New  \t\n.02\nMereury \u2014\t\n.12\nMayland    -\t\nM\nOkalta  New -\t\n0J\nRoyalire\n7.00\nPAor.   KIM\nBROKERS' LOANS\nUP IN THE EAST\nWASHINGTON. D. C July 2. (AP)\n\u2014Lwuu to broktra and dultn held\nby New York federal reserve banka\n[or the week ended July 1 were\nannounced today by the Federal\nReserve board aa 11.4711.000.(100 representing art Increase of ain.itoo.ooo\nas compared with the preceding\nweek.\nThe loans for the week ending\nJuly   3.   1930.   were   \u00ab3jlD,0O0.0O0.\nmontreaTstocks\nclose irregular\nBrazilian Traction Is Feature\nof Session .With 1 1-4\nPoint Advance\nMONTREAL, Que,. July 3 \u2014 Prtoeg\nj ii the atock exchange opened\nktrongly today, and then reacted la\nsympathy with New York, and\nclosed Irregular. Price movement*\nwere  narrow,  and mainly  iracUonal.\nBrazilian Traction *m *he feature of the session with a 1^-polat\nA(i..r,(- at, 32*4. Bank of Montreal\ngained P. at 3MW, while St. Lawrence Paper preferred rose a iwiut\nat   11.\nShawlnigan Power at 4.i and tie*)\nof Canada at 30 were both up a,,\nand Canadian Pacific advanced '..\nut 27V->. Quarlcr-polnt 3dlng were\nrecorded by International Mckel at\n164fc, Dominion Brtdgt at W\nAsbestos Corporation at 76 cent!.\nConaolidatru Osteite** led the decline* with a 2-point Iocs at 108.\nand Power Corporation dropped 1 '^\nat 47. National 8teel Car a1. .\nBank of t'omm-rce at 311 both\ndeclined   ft   point.\nWHEAT EXPORTS\nAT VANCOUVER\nUP THIS YEAR\nVANOOOVCrt, B. C July 'J. \u2014 I lie\nrelume oi wheat exported I\" JlUH\n10  iot  I1 . h  ap-\nproilrruUel busMV wreat-\nei ui.tii ;\n\u25a0..  tbe  weekly   report\nMiince.\nK.i lar  l hi. tt\u2014OB  70JM1.T41   blmh-\nbeen moved comimrtd with\n;.. 141 W4  busrMii '\u2022 year ;iko.  During   Hie   past   week   exports   totalled\n\u25a0i ,n ii i   bv   i'i     '\"\u2022' \"hips ln port\nbuahelB. July book-\nnounoed total\n000   bushels.\nElevator itocka tn J.4MJW bushels, with  700.000  hutheli  en   route\n'in terminals  here.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nGRAIN.\nSTOCKS.   BONDS.   COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nNcw   York,   Montreal   inn   Vu-\nrouver Ktntk r.\\cTian\u00abes, tUleaj*\nBoard of Trade. Winnipeg Ural!\nluTiange, and   nlher   IntflaJ\neichanfea.\nTRIVATB   WIRE\nOFFICES:\nVancouver.   Spokane.   Heallle\nWINNIPEG. Man.. July 2. (CP) \u2014\nLesrlers of Canada's prairie Wheat\nPools today refused to confirm a\npublished report lhat the three\npools had decided to wind up operations and to go out of business temporarily.\nWhile A. J. McPJiall. Saskatchewan Pool president, and Henry Wise\nWood. Alberta Tool head, denied the\ntruth of the rrport, no comment on\nIts verai'lty was tortheomtni; from\nColin II. Burnelt. president of Ihe\nManitoba Wheat Tool, On June 1\nthc Manitoba Pool adopted the optional open-market system, under\nwhich members are able to obtain\nspot cash prices for  their grain.\nMINNEAPOLIS  GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn., July, 2.\u2014\nFlour unchanged. Shlpmeuts 33,-\n129.   Pure bran U.5n to 12.00.\nWheat: No. I northern 70',A to\n72',; No 1 Red Durum M*', to MHl\nJuly o5'i; aeplcmber SlHl December   64%.\nCorn;     No,  ;t  yellow  f)4   to 65.\nOats:    No. a white 2V,  to H%.\nFlax:    No.   1   1.58 to  1.6a.\nLONDON    4JLOKK\nLONDON July 2.\u2014C. P. MHi;\nBra Tr tS3H, Ford \u00a32 13s 0d; Hud\nBay tl 3s lVtjd; Hydro Eire $24'3;\nImp Tob 14 9s 6'-ad; Iutl Nkl $16'.;\nShell T it. T Vi 15s; Brit 5 pet,\nwar loan 101 2s 6d, Brit 4',. pel\nwar loan 101 12a 6d.\nA warming oven for lood or dishes\nhas been invented by an English*\nman to be clamped to a residence\nheating radiator of the steam or\nhot water type.\nDisks made of rubber compound\nInstead of bristles make up a new\ntooth brush that lB claimed to be\nmore sanitary and ta polish teeth\nthoroughly.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG. Man. July \"J -(Live.\nitocka\u2014Rto*lpts:  Caitta  OM etivti\n215; hogs 1815; khc.^p BftO, Steers.\nup to 1050 lb,-;, \u00a3ood nnd choice\n13 to 86.25. Steers, over 1050 lbs.\ngood snd, clvclce $5 to $6.25. Heifers\ngood tod choice 14.78 to $5.75. Fed\ncalves good and choice $5.25 to\n$6.50. Cows good $3.25 to $4. Can-\nners and cutters $.50 to $1.60; bulls\ngood $2 tj $2.25. Stocker and feeder steers good $3 to $3.50. Stock\ncows and hel fers good $2.50 to\n12.75. Milker* and springers $35\nto $55. Veal calves good and choicu\n$4.50 to $6. Hogs select bacon $1\nper lesd premium; bauon $8;\nbutchers $1 per head discount;\nlights and feeders $7.40 lo $808.\nLambs good liandyweight $7; sheep\ngood heavies $2; good handywelght\n$2 50\nAIRMAIL    IUTfc   IP\nMOIHA, Bask., July 3.\u2014Continuation that the air mail rate had\nbeen boosted froru five cents for\nletters to six as announced, was\nreceived today. The charge will\nbecome   effective   immediately.\nH'l    a    ner.'ect    fit.   if    ;i    WAR) m'r-\nnitfvnifnrtablP.\nreputation\nfor prompt\npayment..\nPAY BY\nTHE 10th\nTELEVISIONS\nYou would say that she had X-ray eyes . . . was clairvoyant\n... a fortune teller\u2014except that thousands of shoppers see\nas clearly as she into the contents of perfectly opaque jars, and\nfortcll with (he same swift accuracy the future of things they\nbuy.\nAdvertising is her television. Advertising gives her complete\nadvance information. Quietly, in a congenial corner of hor home,\nshe thinks and determines lieforc she buys. Finding out about\nthe newest foundation cream, thc crispest breakfast food, thc\nmost gossamer brand of hose. Comparing these with others.\nMaking selections serenely. Going forth to buy . . ,\nShe has only this left lo do. No worrying or hesitating when\nconfronted by two jars, each equally inviting. No doubts about\ntheir makers. Advertisements have told her thc invisible merits\u2014given her clear true images of thc contents of those jars,\nand thc results of their use.\nRare is thc woman who can boast she has never bought\nanything she wishes she hadn't Imughl. But with thc aid of\nadvertisements, that sort of buying is almost entirely done\naway with. A regular reading of advertisements keeps shopping-tempers sweet.\n\u00bb\u2022\u2022<\n-\n rAOE   IE!\u00bb\nWater Balls\n60c, 75cand $1.00\nWATER WINGS, tJQg\nBATHING CAPS\n15ct0 $2.00\nMann, Rutherford\nDrag Co.\nFOUR-CORNERED\nTIE IN THE U. S.\nGOLF OPEN LEAD\nREADING\nThe mea of today, with few exceptions, does his reeding In tbe\nevening. Inst means artificial\ntight, nnd usually eyestrain.\nHenus the Increase in eyesight\ndefects that should be corrected\nby properly fitted glasses. Cnder\nM circumstances should tbe\nslightest Indication of defective\nlight or tired eyes be neglected.\nJ. O. Patenaude, R. 0.\nOptometrist   and   optician\nExpert   Optical   .Service\nHOME    OF   COMFORT\"\nStrathcona\nnrjr | Outside Rooms\nllOtCl n Per Night\nspecial   Bates  to Permanent  Guests\nji'st arrived\nchocolates, 75,*\nSpecial   1-lb.   Box   Assortment\n\"Always at Your Service\"\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's   Dispensing   chemists\nCall   and   set   vonr   correct\nnelght   FREE.\nDutra, Guest, Barron and Wit\nHams Are Dark Horses\nat Head of List\nTOLEDO, O., July 3. 03y Alan\nGould, Associated Press editor) \u2014\nPour dark horsemen of the links,\nunconcerned by the inferno of Iv-\nverness and unchecked by its hazards, galloped out in front today\nto establish a four-cornered tie for\nthe lead in the United States open\ngolf championship.\nWhile British forces experienced a\nseries    of    staggering   setbacks   and\nPHONE TAXI\n77\nFreight Schedule\nDally to Rosbland\nand Trail, 10 a.m.\nBUD   STEVENS\nProp,\nTrail  Phone  183\nSMYTHE'S   MaK   MAGNESIA\nfor   Acidity   or   sour   Stomach\nwill neutralize these acids when\nNature   falls.\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription   Specialists\nPHONE   1\nShop with us by null.\nPhone\nTAXI and\nTRANSFER\nPHONE\n44\n^W ^W DAILY  FREIGHT SCHEDULE\n*       *   TO  TRAIL  AND   ROSSLAND\nLEAVES   NELSON   10  A. M.\nTRAIL   DEPOT-DOMINION   GARAGE.\nROSSLAND   DEPOT-L.  O.   LAr-i.\nCON  CUMMINS\nGLASSES\nI.A.C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST   and   OPTICIAN\nlutte 205-20ij, Medical Arts Bidg.\n35\nTAXI\nTha   Best   of   Service\nCareful,    Courteous\nDrivers\nNelson Trauiatcr Co., Ltd.\nUnited States favorites struggled to\nsurvive the heat wave and stay\nwithin striking distance, the quartet\nof unheralded and unattended competitors rode the fairways to finish\nln a deadlock with old man par\nwith scores of 71 each, for the first\n18-hole round of the 27-hole championship chase.\nThe four leaders\u2014Mortle Dutra, of\nLong Beach, Calif.; Charles Quest,\nanother Cslifornlan, now located at\nDeal, N. J.; Herman Barron, of Port\nCheater, N T.| and Eddie Williams,\nof Cleveland, charged into the fray\nfrom the east, mid-west end far\nwest to take temporary command of\nthe battle to determine tbe successor to Bobby Jones.\nGuest and WlUlama posted cards\nof 36-35\u201471 for their first round\nefforts. To vary the monotony, Barton and Dutra came In with 35-36\u2014\n71 to duplicate exactly the par layout of Iverness. None of the four\nhas ever been in front before at\nany stage of the United States open\nchampionship.\n?THE   NELSON   DART   NEWS,   NELSON,   B.   C.   *-   FRIDAY   MORNING,   JULY   8.   1531 *\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER\nJEWELER^\nand Graduate Optician\n413   HALL   STREET\nROSE\nHairdressing\nParlors\nMRS   HIDI  NOLTE\nK.W.C   BLOCK WARD ETREET\nPHONE 3)7 FOR APPOINTMENTS\nUZCUDUN AND\nBAER READY\nFOR BATTLE\nRENO, Nev., July 2. (AP>\u2014 Under\na blazing Nevada sun today, Paulino\nUzcudun and Max Baer puffed\nthrough short workouts to end their\ntraining for their 20-round prizefight July 4.\nWeeks of hard work were climaxed\nby easy sessions Intended only to\nkeep the heavyweights limbered Up\nfor Reno's most important pugilistic\nset-to since Jack Johnson defended\nhis title against Jim Jeffries 21\nyears   ago.\nAdvance -ticket sales led Jack\nDempsey to believe his fight will\nplay to a gate of between \u00bb70,000\nnnd $100,000. The former figure will\nenable the promoters to at least\nbreak even on expenses. If the\n\u2022gate\" goes above that sum, Demj\u00a3\npey says he will match the winner\n| with the bet>t heavyweight available\nfor  a  Labor  day   bout.\nChamber of commerce officials estimate that between 10.000 and 15,-\n000 outsiders will make the city\ntheir headquarters by Saturday, Reno's normal population Is  18.500.\nUzcudun nnd Baer will weigh In\ntomorrow.\nAlthough UiKudun will conredr\nBaer practically every physical advantage, the Spaniard is tho betllnp\nfavorite.\nMANY AMERICANS\nEXPECTED HERE\nFOR THE FOURTH\nReservations   Are   Made   at\nLocal Hotels;  Ball Games\nMain Attraction\nJuly 4 will see a large contingent of American holiday makers in\nNelson to take in the base-ball\ngames on Saturday evening and\nSunday afternoon and to spend\ntheir national holiday in the play\ngrounds of the West Kootenay. All\nready a large number of reservations have been made at the local\nhotels by residents from across the\nline. The various summer resorts\non the West Arm. thc driveways of\nthe district and two ball games will\nprovide plenty of amusement -for\ntlic many visitors who nuke the\nvisit to the district an annual affair.\nDOUMUGUE BREAKS\n2000-METRE MARK\nPEARCE DISPOSES\nOF GENTRY EASILY\nHENLEY - ON -.THAMES. England\nJuly 2\u2014(C. P. cable)\u2014Bob Pearce\nof Hamilton, Ontario, got over a second obstacj e ln his q nest of the\nDiamond sculls today wben ho easily\ndisposed of P. Gentry oi Ibis Rowing\nclub. In the semi-final tomorrow\nPearce will meet L, P. Houthwood\nof Thamea Rowing club, a powerful\nsculler with a clean-cut style.\nIn some quarters it wa\u00bb believed\nPearce's test tomorrow would be\nthe stlffest be ha* to face. There\nseemed to be some belief that on\naccount of the weakness of his opposition since he came to England\nsome weeks ago, Pearce might have\ndeveloped Into a \"one-pace\" man,\nPARIS, July 2.\u2014Jules Doumuguc,\ncrack French middle distance runner, bettered the world's record for\nthe 2000 meters ln a moonlight\ntrack  meet  here  tonight.\nLa Doumugue was timed in 5:21.8\nin beating the veteran Frenchman,\nJean  Bouin.\nThe listed world's record for 2000\nmeters was 6:23.4-10 set by the\nFinnish star, Elnb Purje, ln Finland,\nin  1927.\nLORD DUNCANNON\nCHANGES PLANS\nFOR KOOTENAY\nSpace   Is  about   all   many  college.*\n.student* take  up.\nplans of Lord Duncannon, son ot\nthe Earl of Beasborough, the governor-general, to return east from Vancouver by the Kettle Valley route\nand arrive ln Nelson Friday night,\nwere changed Thursday. Division\nSuperintendent J. Ivan MacKay wab\nInformed by wire Thursday evening.\nOmitting the southern trip on this\noccasion, Lord Duncannon will remain tn Vancouver until probably\nSaturday, when he will leave direct\nfor Calgary by the Canadian Pacific\nmain line.\ngoing to REMODEL?\nIT is for a very special reason that we urge you\ntn let us talk to you about remodeling now. It\nis possible to remodel a room or a whole house\nat an astonishingly low cost, and we know that\nyou'll he interested.\nA* li* GREEN ltd.\n(Successors to John Bursa & Son)\nPLANT ^T^. \" OFFICES JjJJ^\"-\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab SALES OFFICE\nTravellers Samples in Suits and\nDRESSES\nSILK CREPES - Heavy\nweight, washable. Pastel\nshades.\nDRESSES - All colors,\nand White. Specially\npriced at \u00bb7.95 and \u00bb8.9a\nSUITS \u2014All colors, and\nWhite. Priced at $IQ %\nand S12.95.\nAll ottr millinery excepting panamas on sale at\nhalf price.\nPanamas front *3 95  '\"\n>9.00.\nCAPTURED MEN\nCHARGED WITH\nBEING VAGRANT\nRemanded Eight Days While\nInquiries for Car Owner\nAre Made\nHerbert Teanby. 23, and Siegfried Nelson, 25, the men who were\narrested by the provincial police\nrespectively Tuesday night and\nWednesday morning,at Procter when\nemerging from the bush, nearly\nthree days after their accident at\nNine-Mile Sunday morning when\nthe car they were in went down\nthe bank, were arraigned in provincial police court here Thursday\nmorning on charges of vagrancy,\nand were remanded by Stipendiary\nMagistrate John Cartmel lor eight\ndays.\nInquiries respecting the ownership of the car in which the n'en\ncame here from the coast are still\nproceeding.\nGOOSE GOSLIN\nGETS STANDING\n\u2022AMONG BIG SIX\nThree Hits in Four Times to\nBat Puts Brown Player in\nThird Place\nGoose Ooslln ot the St. Louia\nBrowns made his tint appearance\nof the year In baseball's big six\nyesterday as his three bits In four\ntimes at bat hoisted his average to\n.375 and gave him third place\namong the American league's bat*\nting leaders. He displaced Al Simmons. Chuck Klein dropped to\nfourthln the sextet, losing two\npoints as he hit only once in\nfour tries. *\nHarvey Hendrlck registered the\nonly gain among the big six veterans, hitting two out of four for\na   three-point    increase.\nThe standing\nCADETS WIN ON\nDEFAULT; LEAGUE\nBASEBALL GAME\nRuth    Yankee*,\nMorgan,   Indians\nOoslln,   Browns   .\nKJeln    Phllltoi\nDavis   Phillies   ...\nHendrlek,    Reds\nO. Ab. R H Peg.\n60 214 63 85 .397\n. 57 187 38 73 .390\n. 65 248 50 93 .375\n87 371 70 101 .373\n. 60 190 16 69 .363\n.. 56.214 32 77 .360\nHIGHER COURT\nTO HEAR THE\nSOLLOWAY CASE\nIn the second game of thp MOond\nhall of the Trafalgar baseball leatjue\nschedule, the High School Cadet*\nwon by default Thursday when the\nMarried Men failed to put in an\nappearance.\nThe first game scheduled for\nMonday was postponed until ;i week\ntoday  on  account  of  rain.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, July 2.\u2014\nCharges of bucketing In stock market transactions, against the defunct lirm of Solloway, Mills & Co..\nLtd.. were referred to a higher\ncourt by M.>gistrat\u00ab J. A. Pinlay,\nof city police court, at the conclusion of a preliminary hearing\nat the Vancouver court house, this\nafternoon.\nProceedings were brief, few witnesses being called by A. H. McNeill, K.C., who represented the\nrrown. There were no defense wlt-\nQeatas, and neither Mr. McNeill\nor W. B. Parrls, K.C . who represen-\ned the company, entered any argument.\nThrough an agreement between\ncrown nnd defense counsel, the\nconspiracy chsrcea against I. W. C.\nSolloway and Harvey Mills, partners in the defunct firm, were\nadjourned for an indefinite period,\nprobably to await the outcome of\nthe   case   against   the   company.\nAthletic Shirts and Shorts\nRank First in Summer Underwear\nSILK SHIRTS\n75* and \u00bb14\u00bb\nBROADCLOTH.\nSHORTS\n81.00 to f 1.35\nMATCHED SETS\nS2.00 and S2.25\nSILK\nCOMBINATIONS\n82.25\nHATCHWAY\nCOMBINATIONS\n81.00 and 81.35\nWhy are these Shirts and Shorts so comfortable? Because they are cut roomy and full, from thinnest fabrics. There isn't a bit more to them than is necessary\nas an 'absorber' between ones body and outer garments.\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nEverything   awaits   the   man   who\npartakes  In s  plate of  haah.\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nTODAY'S SPECIALS\nBlue  Ribbon   (otter,  ::\nlbs.   fur       $ M\nTea\u2014Our  special  Pekoe.\nV   lbs 73\nButter\u2014Our  (Special  Creamery.   3   lbs*,   for    -    .80\nSugar,   :Ju   lbs.   for  1.20\nOranges   (Juicy), 4  dnz. for    J .flu\nLemons,   per  rioz 30\ni Oval Bnamel Dtsti Pan\nwith   id   Cakes   P   &   U\n(Soap   fnr      1.00\n1  qU Sweet   Mixed  Pickles   10\nI    ll>.   Mired   Bids   Bacon   ._   .30\nV   runs   Peas,   Corn\nor   Tomatoes     J.tO\n(i   cans   Soups 55\n1   lbs.   (Strawberry   or   Raspberry   Jam  t\u00bbo\n1   lb.   Malkln's   Best   Tea,\n1 tin Malkln's Best Baking\nrowder.   I   cakes   Toilet\nSoap,   for  1.00\nEggo   Baking   Powder,\nper  tin   ...   .30\n4  lbs. Marmalade  50\nUutch   Maid   Salad\nDressing, quirts ,   >H\n4   cans* Sliced   Pineapple   for    .4*\nID ran* Pork and Beans for    .1)5\nSockeye Salmon,  r-ih. flu  30.\nPHONE   110\nFOR   BEST   SERVICE   AND\nLOW PRICES\nSave $1.70 a Ton\nby\nBuying Coke NOW\nFOR JULY DELIVERY ONLY\nCoke will be sold at the Special Cash Price\nof $11 a ton delivered.  The usual price\nis $12.70 a ton.\n\u2014The City of Nelson\nWe are district agents for\n\"GILBERT\"\nBLACKSMITH COAL\nThis is the best Smithing; Coal on the market\nPrompt shipment in any quantity\nWood-Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale - NELSON,B.C.\nRetail\nAmazing Opportunity\nTo Save on\nTHAYER'S CREAM of CREAMS\nSPECIAL INTRODUCTORY SALE\nThayer 8 Cream of Creams has been introduced to thousands\nof American women at $1.50 a tar. Now it is available to you\nin a sensational sale, at $1-00.\nAnd as an additional offer, to make you acquainted now\nwith the World's greatest aid to quick beauty, we will give\nyou Free, during this sale, a full size box of genuine Jeromee\nPoudre Antique, regularly priced at $1 00. This, we believe,\nit thc finest face powder sold in either America or Paris.\nExclusive.  Exquisite.  You will like it.\n\u25a0ALL FOR\nFREE!\nl:\n99<\n$2. size NARCISSUS Perfume\n$1. box Narcissus Face Powder\nAlso you will receive a full ounce bottle of Jeromee Parfum  Narcissus.\nregularly \"t $2.00.   All three during this introductory sale for 99?\nSale SUrts July 3\nand Ends July 11\nOn  sale\nThin   HdTfrtlwmrnl    and   99?   rnlillrs   >nn\nlo   tills   Offer\nAdd   15c  for  postage  If  ordering\nhy   mall.\nPOOLE DRUG CO., LTD.\nPHONE 25\nTHE REXALL STORE\nMedical Arts Building\nBOX 505\nCANADIAN PRESS\nOFFICIAL TO BE\nBURIED FRIDAY\nTORONTO. Ont.. July 3. (CP)\u2014\nFuneral wrvlces for Harold Raine,\ngeneral superintendent of the Canadian Preos, -who waa killed, with\nfour others In the airplane crafih\nat Hamilton yenterday, will be hejd\nFriday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, in\nA, W. Miles' funeral chapel, 30 St.\nClair Avenue West, Toronto. The\nbody will afterward be taken to\nWinnipeg  for  burial.\nMessages of sympathy ln connection with the death of Mr. Raine\nhave been received from newspaper\nmen In all part* of Canada and\nthe  United   States.\nA girl never thinks a young\nman's heart. Is In the right place\nunless   .-.he   possesses   It.\nLAST MINUTE\nADVERTISEMENTS\nVem SALE\u20141P30 CHEVROLET MX.\ndelivery, good closed body, engine\nJust overhauled, new tires. Terms\nran bp arranged. \u00a3nan for quick\naalc. Apply Bex 41\u00abil Trail Times.\n(6269)\nFOUND\u2014LADY'S HAND BAG CON-\ntalning money. Apply Police fier*\ngeant Alex Stewart. (6266)\ni\u00abS OF THE DAY\nSalvation  Army tag day Saturday,\nfor local work. (6268)\nLawn mowers bought lu any oom-\ncfttion.    Phone  562Y. (6264)\nWanted\u2014A   capably   maid.     Apply\nto Mrs. J. J. Binns, Kaslo.      (6236)\nCLAN   McLeary   meets   tonight   at\n7   o'clock   sharp.     Special   meeting,\n(6206)\nBig dance at Vmlr Sal unlay, July\n1th, $1.50 per couple, supper Included. (6183)\nFor Rent\u2014Single Housekeepi n g\nrooms, also two-roomed suite. An-\nnable  Block. (5316)\nDanre\u2014Tonight. Shirley Hall.\nSnappy music. Refreshments. Admission  60c. (6258)\nFor Rent\u2014Single Housekeeping\nrooms, also two-roomed suite. An-\niiuble Block. 1,6241)\n-kldina to Vancouver July 5th.\nWill take passenger. Pay for drive.\nBox 62b,1) Nelison Dally News.    (6265)\nAll members L. O. L. 1692 and\nL. O. B. A. 841 also visiting sisters\nnod brethren are requested to meet\nat Eagles' Hal! Sunday, July 5, at\n10:15 a,m. (6267)\n\u2014SEE sM\u00bb SUM SMITH'S BASE-\nBAl.l, II AM IN ACTION. TWO\n(JAMER, Mil KIM A' AT 6:16 P.M.,\nADMISSION 50c AND Mc; SUNDAY\nAT :;:30 P.M., BOOSTERS AS USUAL.\n(6262)\nCARD  OK  TIIANRS\nWe wt:-h to take this opportunity\nof thanking all citizens who took\npart in thp Patrtotic Exercises, the\nNelson City Band, and others who\ninsisted In making the Dominion\nDay celebration such a success.\nCanadian Legion Bugle Band-\n16261)\nThe FINEST RANGE\nin   Canada\u2014absolutely.\nSold on very Easy\nTerms.\nHunter Electric\nand Plumbing\nPrestolite\nHi Amp\nBatteries\nThe battery with a 12-month guarantee.\nIs included in factory equipment on Buick,\nChevrolet, Oldsmobile, Packard, Pontiac\ncars, and International trucks.\nREASONABLE PRICES\n\"Service Right, Now\"\nPhone 35\nNelson Transfer Si\nE!\u00aectrical\nWc?k\nCall   as   for   any   eieetrtcai\nwork that  yati   may need In\nyour home.   Reasonable ratei.\nSatisfaction   guaranteed.\nPHONE  8\nL. B. Elestrie\n(I.EAMNO REPAIRING\nI'RESSINfi ALTERATIONS\nIDEAL TAILORS\nand\nDRY CLEANERS\n1V.1RD   STREET\nNext C. P.  R. Telegraph Office*\nWe    want    your    repair    business\u2014\nthat's    why    we   satisfy\nNELSON  DAILY  NEWS  WANT  Al\nGET   RESULTS\nTWO SHOWS  NIGHTLY\n7 AND 9  P.  M.\nNow Showing!\nA STARTLING REVELATION OF\nLOVE AS IT IS LIVED TODAY\nIN THIS STIRRING  OUT-SPOKEN\nDRAMA FEATURING THREE\nTALENTED STARS.\nHOW\nEAR   SHOl'LD\nWEDDED   LOYALTY\nGO WHEN A  BEAl'TI-\nIII.  GIRL   MARRIES   TO\nEWAPE    THE    LOVE   OF\nHER   WEALTHY   EMPLOYER\u2014WHO    IS    NOT    THE\nMARRYING   KIND?\n\"HONOR\nAMONG\nLOVERS\"\nSTARRING\nCLAUDETTE\nCOLBERT\nFREDERIC\nMARCH\nCHARLIE\nRUGGLES\nGINGER ROGERS\nDOES    THIS    MODERN\nDRAMA   PROVE   THERE'S\nA    HIGHER   I.OVE\nCODE  THAN\nMARRIAGE\nLOYALTY\"\nCOMEDY\nTOM HOWARD\n\"THE PEST\"\nPICTORIAL\nNetts  of  Interrating  people\nand   events.\nFarce Comedy\nWilliam Itobyn\n\"TOP NOTES\"\nPARAMOUNT\nNEWS\nBTARTINO   SATURDAY\nMATINEK\nNEW   SERIAL\n\"THE   PHANTOM  Ol'\nTHE   WEST\"\nMONDAY-TUESDAY\n\"The Criminal Code\"\nONE OP THE BIO\nMELODRAMAS OF\nTHE YEAR.\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_1931_07_03","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\/1.0405666","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":"1931-07-03 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":"1931-07-03 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":""}]}