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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":" q(di\nYoun& Doukhobors Give Brief\nDemonstration Here\n\u2014 Pa_\\e Two   -\nRefuel at Fairbanks, Alaska\nt-Hon SteUg\nNelson Ball Nine Defeats the\nFort Wri_ht Team\n\u2014Pa_\\e Seven\nVi    >\/   'te\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS.   NELSON,  B.   C.   \u2014   MONDAY   MORNING.   AUGUST   3,   19_t FIVE CENTS A  COP*\n;   BLESS LOSE LIVES\n\u2666    *    \u2666   *    \u2666.*   \u2666    *    \u2666    #    \u2666\u2666.*    \u2666    #    \u2666    *   \u2666\n\u2666    *    *\n\u00ab\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u00ab*-\n12 Swept to Death When Vessel Crashes\n\"FOLLOW RUSSIA\" IS URGE OF G. B. SHAW\nReg.   I-.   Robbins  And   Harold   8.   Jones,   flyers  of  the   Port  Worth,\nattempting a non-stop refueling  flight from Seattle to Tokyo.\nFort Worth Makes a\nContact With Large\nFitelShip, Fairbanks\nSHAW SORRY TO\nBE BACK AFTER\nSOVIET   VISIT\n\"Russia Putting- House in\nOrder; Other Nations\nPlaying: Fool\"\nRobbins and Jones Complete One Leg of Long\nFlight Over Pacific\nFAIRBANKS. Alilska, Aug. \"..\n(AP)\u20141)0*11 the Yukon valley\nthe monoplane Fort Worth, wllh\nthe Ilret Itj.vi-mlle lap ol Its\nSeattle Tokyo night completed\nand the flrat refueling finished,\nproceeded tonight toward the\nBering sea.\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska, Aug. 2.\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Reg. l. Roholns and Harold s. Jonea, Fort Worth.- Texas,\naviators, arrived over Falrhanks,\nAlaska, on their nonstop refueling flight from Seattle to Japan\nat  .\"i:50   p.m.   (10:60  e.a.t.)   tonight.\nWithin   a .few   minutes   after\nthey were sighted over the city,\ntheir tri-motored refueling phiiir,\npiloted   by   James   Mattern   and\nNlcke Oreene, took the air and\nthe  \"rM   gasoline  transfer   was\ntegun.    A load  of 20(1  gallons\nwas  to be  moved  at  thc   first\n______\nTho Tokyo-bound (lyera brought,\nthe Fort Worth Irom Seattle, over a\ncourse of approximately 1\u00ab50 miles\nJn 12 hours and 50 minutea. The\ntime waa nearly an hour longer than\nBobbins estimated before leaving the!\nPuget sound city, but head winds\nwere met on the way down the\nTanana valley here Ifom eastern\nAlaska.\nDuring the refueling over Fairbanks, weather reports to the west\nand of conditions north of Japan\nand along the Siberian coast were to\nbe given the flyers by Mattern and\nGreener through the exchange ol\n| messages.\nAIR PAGEANT IS\nAT WINNIPEG\nWIHNIPEO,     Aug.    2     (CF)--The\n| transcanada   air   pageant   was   en-\nc-mped  tonight   ln   Winnipeg   after\na crosa-pralrle  hop from Saskatoon.\nI Baak..  where  yeaterday   tbe   tourists\npresented their aerial program to a\ncrowd of 12.000. Sixteen atrong, the\n[ party   left  Saskatoon   this   morning\nI and   came   here   via   Regina   and\nI Brandon.   Man.,   arriving   here   wvll\nbefore dusk.\nOn their  way  to  the  west  coast\nlaat month,  tho flierB  were  unable\nto give thetr pageant here because of\nrain and tomorrow they will take to\nJ the akles over the city while h >ii-\nI dayers view their antlca from every\nI vantage point. It la expected 50.000\nI people will be present at Stevenson\nI field  when  the  show starts.\nCASUALTIES  OCCUR\nON ANTI-WAR DAY\nHalf a dozen communists and\nseveral police were Willed, and\nseveral thousand arre.ts were\nmade aa \u00a9ommunlsts celebrated\nAntiwar  Day  on   Saturday.\nShooting* and stabbing* occurred In Germany and Mexico.\nFifteen hundred radicals were\narrested In Rumania. Rain discouraged would-be demonstia-\ntlons   In  Paris.\nParades and speech-making in\nthe United States nnd Canada\nwere quiet affairs according to\nreports received tonight, order\nbeing maintained by police with\nllt|le  or  no  difficulty.\nLloyd George Has\nComfortable Night\nLONJDON, Aug. % (AP)\u2014David\n. Lloyd George spent a comfortable\nnight last night and tils physicians today expressed themselves\nas _atlsfled with the progress he\nlias made since he underwent\nan operation last week fur a\nkidney  disorder.\nBANK ENGLAND\nGIVEN CREDIT,\nFOREIGN BANKS\nNew Credit Will Put Decis\nive Stop to Gold Leaving Country\nLONDON. Auk. 2. (A?)\u2014The Bank\nof England made two announcements yesterday which are regarded\nIn British financial circles as of tne\nhighest possible importance ln connection with the world's disturbed\nmonetary position.\nThe first was that the Federal\nReserve Bank of New York and the\nBank of France each had granted\nthe Bank of England a credit ot\n\u00a336,000,000 (about \u2022126.000,000). The\nsecond was that the British treasury\nhad authorized the Bank of England to Increase its fiduciary n;.tc\nissue by \u00a315,000,000 (about $75,000,-\n000)  for a period of three weeks.\nThe new credit is regarded as an\ninstrument which will put a decisive stop to the flow of gold 'rom\nLondon, especially toward France.\nTHREE KILLED\nCOAL CREEK, Ark., Aug. 3\u2014\nI Three members of one family were\nI killed today as their automobile was\nI struck by a special Missouri Pacific\nI passenger train at a grade crossing\nI two miles west of hare. The dead\nI were Mrs. John Wilson, <2, her\n| daughter, Eula Lea, 13, and her son,\nI Thomas  4.\nINJURED    IN    CAR    CRASH\nSASKATOON, Bask.. Aug. 2\u2014Hurr;-\njing home from a picnic at Watrous\nI early this evening, Thomas Armltage\nland otner occupants of the car he\nI was driving sustained serious In\n| Juries when the machine swerved,\nI rolled over twice and toppled into\n[the ditch on the Dundurn highway,\n114 miles from Saskatoon.\nEngineer Monkman\nPasses Through\nOver New Line\nO. H. N. Monkman, assistant engineer of construction, Canadian F&-\nclflc western lines, arrlveu from the\ncoast Saturday night, accompanied\nby Mrs. Monkman, on the home\nstretch of a tcur comolnlng business\nand pleasure.\nMr. and Mrs. Monkman left Sim-\nday morning for Winnipeg, it being\nMr. Monkman's first trip since\nMarch over the Kootenay lake link\nwhich he was ln charge .<* during\nthe first portion of its construction,\nprior to his being summoned to\nWinnipeg to become assistant en\nglneer of   construction.\nMembers of House\nWill Be Questioned\nAbout Public Works\nMembers of parliament, regardless\nof political offlllation, will be questioned by communication oa tbe\nmatter of Dominion public works in\nwhich they were interested in their\nconstituencies as Boon as the unemployment relief measure become*\nlaw. Necessarily the province Itself\nmust be tg.\u00ab body in the first In*\nstance with whom the Dominion\nshould communicate.\nCHINA  TO   ENTERTAIN\nCOL. AND MRS LINDBERGH\nNANKING. Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014A government committee representing several\nministries, conferred today on the\nreception of Colonel Charles A,\nLindbergh and his wife during their\ncontemplated visit to China, it was\ndecided to hold two huge official\nbanquets and the minister decided\nto award them a special decoration\nIn evidence of the admiration held\nfor the famous couple by the Chinese people.\nG. B. S.\" BACK IN\nLONDON  AGAIN\nAdvises  Young  Men  to\nGo to Russia and to\nSettle There\nWOMEN OF THE FAR!ROCKS, BRICKS,\nNORTH GREET ANNEjjfl BOm[S\nMORROW LINDBERGH F|y -. pp-.\u2122\nEleven Only Women in Churchill Look After Colonel's better Half; Anne Misses Her Babe She\nStates; Flight Took Nine Hours\nLINDY LANDS PLANE AT CHURCHILL\nAFTER 750 MILE HOP IN BARREN LAND\nPlan to Start Further Flight Through Canadian Northland\nat Noon Today; Making 375 Mile Jump to\nBaker Lake; Pleased With North\n.through    the    Bay   route   this   fall.\nMRS.    UMDMBOH    Hl'NORY\nTrim    and    tiny    in    her    riding\nbreeches and Jacket, Mrs. Lindbergh\nLONDON, Aug. 2. (AP) \u2014\nGeorge Bernard Shaw came\nhome from Kutmla today, sulci\nhe was sorry to be back, und\nthat he would advise a young\nman Io go to Russia and settle\nthere.\n\"KiiKfala Is putting her house\nIn order.\" Shaw eald. \"AU the\not her nat lon_ are playing the\nfool.\"\n\"I cannot speak In detail\nabout the great experiment I\nhavo seen, for what 1 have io\nsay must be caret iiliy tho ught\nout and written, and I have\nmade arrangements lo da this.\n\"Meanwhile, all I can add ia tide\n-we had better follow Russia's example   as  soon   as  possible.\"\nAt Berlin yesterday Shaw poured\nout his scorn on the bankers who\nare trying to untangle the world's\neconomic   problems.\n\"Any child knows the world can't\nexist on credit. But they don't\nseem to realise it. They think credit\nwill take care of everything. The\nbest remedy for the world's ;11_. is\ngood hard work all around.\"\nHouse Continues Its\nLabors and Fails to\nProrogue on Saturday\nOTTAWA, Ont.. Aug. 2.\u2014iCP)\u2014\nParliament was unable to prorogue\nlast night. Arrangements had been\nmade for winding up the session at\n10 o'clock but the commons found\nlt impossible to get through, it haa\na considerable number of estimates\nstill to bc voted even when 1!\no'clock arrived so members quit for\nthe day and will go back to work at\n11 o'clock tomorrow.\nThe galleries were filled with spectators even at a late hour last night.\nThey expected to witness the ceremonies connected with prorogation.\nThe house ls expected to prorogue\ntomorrow.\nUntil the last few minutes before\nadjournment the hope of prorogation persisted. Consideration of estimates followed after the house had\ngiven approval to two bills relating\nto the Beauharnois project. The\nfirst of these measures declared the\ncanal to be a work for the general\nadvantage of Canada. The other\nrelates to the diversion of water\nfor Beauharnois. Both received third\nreading. Previously approval had\nbeen given to the government bill\nwhich provides for unemployment\nand farm relief.\nCHLRCHILL, Man., Aug. \".\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Almost onelquarter of the\nway to Japan Col, and Mis.\nCharles A. Lindbergh rested tonight on thetr ?ono-mlle aerial\ntour. After a 7 50-mile flit lit\ntoday along the barren shores\nof Hudson bay from Moose Factory, Ont., thetr low-wing Lockheed sirliis was brought to a\nhalt at the harbor of Chun hill,\nmost modern of frontier towns.\nAbout noon tomorrow, if all\ngoes welt, the flying Lindbergh*\nwill proceed on thetr way. Next\n\u2022\u2022toil on their Ulnery Is Baker\nlake, 178 miles due north. In\nthe morning, the colonel said,\nthe plane will he checked over,\nthough tt appeared In fine (-audition after Its nine-hour jump\nfrom .Moose Factory, at the\nsouthern tip of James bay.\n\"We   Just   love   th\u00a9   north.\"   s_id\nthe former Anne Morrow when the\nand   her   husband   were   questioned\nabout their entry into the bad lands,\nMrs. Lindbergh, who said sho misses\ntheir  W-nWntri-old*  baby, mentioned\nthat  the  sand  flies  were  annoying\nni Moose  Factory  and   the  weather\nwas cold. \"But it warmed up nearer\nChurchill,\"  she  added.\n\"Canada  must   be   proud  of  tela\nnew sea port,\" commented  tht flying colonel after he had viewed the\nextensive   construction   work   under\nway   at   the   Hudson   Bay    -aiiway I was anxious to eat after the plane\nLachine Canal Gates\niERI0USLYILL 20 MEN SWEPT\nCommunists   and   Police\nClash in Downtown\nVancouver Streets\nSKIRMISHES LAST\nFOR HALF AN HOUR\n\"Demonstrate\" Yell Communists as the Police\nClose in on Them\nCOL.   AND   MRS.   I.INDBLRGH\nterminus. \"It is certainly Indicative\nof prosperity,\" he mentioned, lefer-\nring to the majestic 3,500,000 bushel\ngrain elevator near completion and\nthe towering dock structure almost\nready   for   test   shipments   overseas\nhad been securely moored in Churc\n111 harbor, She had not had \"a bite\"\nMnce the morning and smiled eagerly   when   Churchill's   11   ladles   hus-\n(Continued on Page Two.)\nFLYERS ARE HALF|Mej|l  \\\\rm  jjjj  fQr\nBritish Columbia Coal!:\nROUND EARTH\nAre Hair Hour Short ol  Being Five\nDays  from  New  York;   Land\nat   Chita   Siberia\nMOSCOW, Aug. ?. (API\u2014The\nsecond pair of round-the-world\nfilers. Clyde Pan shorn and Hugh\nHerndon, Jr., reached approximately the halfwny point on\ntheir round-the-world flight today when the landed at Chita,\nslberta. at I p.m. Moscow time\n(5 a.m. K. S. T.) Just a halt\nhour short or being five full\ndajs out of  New York.\nAMY IS AT IRKUTSK\nMOSCOW. Aug. 3 (API\u2014Amy\nJohnson, British nUatrlx, was\nscheduled to leave Irkutsk, Siberia, today on tlie next stage\nof her flight from London to\nTokyo.\nVANCOUVER, B. C. Aug. 3.\u2014\nBrisk battling look place along\nhuiiMiinlr and Hamilton streets\nIn down!mi n Vancouver Saturday afternoon before the police\nbroke up a Communist parade.\nSeveral polite officers and St*\ncivilian1- had to receive medical\nattention in hospital, and seven\nmen were detained hy police. A\n11->ear-old girl was sent to thr\njuvenile detention home. She ts\nalleged to have struck a mounted officer with a piece of scantling 0* he partly fell from hi*\nhorse, when struck on the head\nwith   a   rock.\nBricks, stones and bottles were\nused by the paraders. and clubs\nhy the police, and tor half an\nhour   skirmishes   mcuned.\nThe most seriously injured wus\nmounted officer \u25a0\u2022\u25a0 Robinson,\nwho suftered tin injured knee,\ncuK and brnfSM, and will he\nconfined to hospital for \u25a0 couple\nol   Say*.\nThe Interiors of four or five\nhouses WOta damaged when battling\nQOtWto*tto%on i'i'o amy and sought\nrefuge.\nMounted policemen, their horses\nrearing above tlic crowd, were the\n| chief Kotfgte for showers of stones.\n:\u00abnd were belabored with pieces of\n[scantling, a rence was torn down to\nprovide   weapons.\nOn the grounds of a service station at Hamilton nnd ounsmu:r\ntreets, demonstrators armed themselves with a down quart bottles of\noil. Two plate glass windows in g\n.store were broken, and another wa*\nsmashed In thc school board building. Several parked automobiles\nwere dam-aged.\nMBKT1NO   on   t \\Mllli:\nTin- parade followed a mooting ftt\nOamble itreet grounds, summoned\nacoordtng to noi it to, to proton\nagainst \"Imperialistic wars.\"  A per\nINTO RIVER BY\nWALL OF WATER\nLachine Canal Tied Up\nfor Three Weeks as\nShip Crashes Gate\nINNOCENT MEN\nRESTING ON BANKS\nTHOM-tM   A.   EDISON\nWEST ORANGE. N. J.. Ag. 2 \u2014\n(AP)\u2014Thomaa Alva Edison, Sage of\nMenlo Park, rallied this morning\nand demanded food, but. Dr. Hudert\nS. Howe, hla personal phy.tctan\nsaid he did not think Mr. Edison\n\"ever will be out of danger.\"\nThe inventor, who is in his 85th\nyear, collapsed yesterday I .om a\ncombined attack of flrlght's disease\nand diabetes. He spent ft fairly\ncomfortable night, Dr. Howe said,\nand seemed  much   better  today.\nIn a statement to reporter Dr.\nHowe said Mr. Edison had been a\ndiabetic for many years and, although rather mild in nature, it\ncompacted, chronic Brtght's disease\nwith which Mr. Edison also hat,\nbeen stricken.\nOTTAWA. Ont., Aug. 3.\u2014(OP)\u2014\nFurther consideration for the coalmining districts ot Cumberland and\nNana lino was pressed on -h\u00bb\nernment last night by A. W. Nelll.\nIndependent,      comox- Alberni h\nform of bituminous eoeJ, he. Mid,\nwas entering British C-_umbla from\nthe statp of Washington as lignite,\nto thc  delrcmcni  of   the  home  in- IJJJ' n|[d  ^\u00a3 tfvenHfor ttie meeting\ndustry.    He suggested  a  revision  ot proviahWI    that   there   b_\ntho customs definition oi  lignite  to|M   p;j|..)(lr,\nArt   the   third   speaker,   said   to  h\ncircumvent   this  practice.\nFRIEND OF POOR\nPASSES AWAY\nsunt      Margaret     of     Winnipeg\"\nMourned by Her flock or Down-\nand-Outers;   Was   Aged    75\nWINNIPEG, Man., Aug. 2.\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Mrs. Margaret Scott\u2014\nSaint Margaret of Winnipeg\u2014Is\ndead and her \"nock,** which\nconstituted all the poor in this\ncitv, mourn* tonight. Mrt.\nScott, who devoted 45 years of\nher life to the down-and-outs,\nfounded the Margaret Scott\nnursing mission and carried\non her work until a few weeks\nago, died Saturday at the age\nof ti,\n\"She might well re canonized\n\u2022Saint Margaret of Winnipeg,'\nsaid Bet. Dr. S. P. Matheson,\nformer primate of the Church\nof England In Canada, \"If not\nliterally, at ui! events In the\nhearts of those who have known\nof her work.\"\nBOSTON\u2014MARITIMES\nLINKED BY  AIR\nSA-TNT JOHN. N. B., Aug. 2\u2014\nLanding here yesterday at 6 pm.\nfive hours after the takeoff l-om\nMoston, a Sikorsky plane jf Pan-\nAmerican Airways company Inaugurated the Boston marltlmes passenger\neervloe. The plane took off for\nHaHifax. maritime terminus erf the\nnew route about an hour after arriving here.\nAUSTRALIAN EXPORTS\nSHOW LARGE DECREASE\nSYDNEY, Australia. Aug. 2 (AP)-\nAustralian exports during the past\nfiscal year show a decrease of approximately $115,000,000 compared\nwith those of the previous year.\nAfter making due allowance lor\nabnormal exchange, the excess of\nimports over exports is estimated\nto reach alD0.000.000 as compa.cd\nwitto approximately -*&0,000 000 last\nyear.\nWhen Canada increased the duty\non bituminous coal, said Mr. Nelll,\nUnited States plseed \u00bb corresponding\ntariff against importations into that\ncountry. This would mean a loss\nof 49,000 tons a year to British Columbia mines. A_ a \"compensating\nindemnity for the injuries done,\"\nMr. Nelll suggested thP British Co-\nlumbta coal industry receive* a bonus\nfrom the unemployment relief fund.\npermitting them to continue their\noperations.\nTwo Chinese Drown\nMax  HtrxuM,  otaa  talking,\nshouted:\n\"The   police   are   coming!\"\n\"The  police  ire  coining!\"  shO-tM\nthl   IpftfeftP.   'Are   we   going   to  deill-\n\u25a0 i   ctiS-X rat'\"\n\"Demonstrate!\"   waa   tlie  answer.\nThe speaker Jumped from his\nplace, seized a red flag and putted\nhis way through the crowd. Banners that had bean on the ground\nwere   raised.\nA body of mounted officer reached the paiftdero, but reinforcement*\nwere     delayed     when     to*     otOWd\nwitched   from   the  expected   line  or\nVANCOUCER     Aug.    2\u2014    Toinmv I march.    The    _nttUa|    ittrfeMt,    Wtd\nPong.  23.   and'  Jack   Roy,   30.   two finally   ended   with   the   arrttt   ot\nChinese,  were drowned  while -swun- Herndel   and   other*,   and   the   {ho\nming it Spanish Banks beach to\nday. Fons was a .short distance freni\nthe shore when he suddenly went\ndown. Hoy immediately went to\nthe other's help, but was dragged\ndown by the drowning man. both\nlosing their livei.\nTWO BEAUHARNOIS POWER BILLS\nPASS HOUSE; QUEBEC SATISFIED\nOTTWA, Ont., Aug. 2. (CP)\u2014The,\nDominion government will seek to\nsecure proper control and management for the Beauharnois Power\ncompany and protect the bona tide\ninvestors ln that project. The powers conferred upon the government\nunder the bill which declared the\nnavigation end of the propect to be\nfor the general advantage of Canada, Is expected to enable the cabinet to exercise pressure ln this\nconnection.\nPremier R. B. Bennett made a\nhouse of commons last night as to\nvery Important statement in the\nthe attitude of the ministry regarding the future of the enterprise.\nThe government by every means ln\nits power will endeavor to Insure\ntbe continuance of the undertaking.\nThe prime minister made it clear\nhowever, that neither the government nor parliament had any power\nto set aside the corporate rates of\nthe Beauharnois company created hy\nthe Quebec  legislature,  nor  deprive\nits  shareholders  of   tlic   ib\u00abfH   they\nown.\nThe two Beauharnois bills\u2014Hie\none dealing with authority to take\nover the navigation phase of t*M\nproject and thR other to provide\nstatutory authority to divert the\nwater from the St. Lawrence into\nthe canal, passed the house unanimously Saturday night. Some minor\namendments were carried to flUka\nthem more explicit. Hon. C- ri-\nCahan explained that tho bills had\nbeen framed in consultation with\ncounsel for the Quebec provincial\ngovernment, and these changes were\nchiefly precautions, Quebec suggested.\nThe bills were satisfactory to the\nprovince of Quebec and do not\naffect Its rlghta in any way. Tlie\nquestion ls to the relative rights\nof the province of Quebec and the\nDominion in respect to the water\npowers created by the canal wtll be\nsubmitted to the courts as soon m\npossible. This will give the com Is\n|a specific  case  to  decide   upon.\npersal   of   thc   crowd.\nThere were mtUOT rcnewuU cf the\ndisturbance down town Saturday\nnight. A crowd sang Lhe Red Flag\nwhile a rtli_jtOUS preacher WU dtt<\nCOUntng on a corner. Police n>\nNrna   moved   them.\nBARCELONA  CELEBRATE\nSECURING   AUTONOMY\nBARCELONA, Aug. 2, (AP)\u2014With\nsongs and other forms ot mciti-\nment, the people ol Barcelona today celebrated the favorable result\nof the plebiscite held to approve the\nCatalonian plan for autonomy. The\nplan is believed to have been approved   by   a-   large   majority.\nThe demand of the province of\nCatalonia tor independent statehood\nln Spain has been persistent, especially since the fall of the Spanl3h\nmonarchy snd tho establishment, of\nthe  republic.\nKING  OF  SIAM  IS\nIN MONTREAL\nGANDHI IS TO\nTRAVEL THIRD\nCLASS ROUTE\nBaggage Will Be Two Goats,\nSpinning Wheel and Sparc\nLoin Cloth\nBOMBAY, India. Aug. 3 (AP)\u2014\nWhen Mahatma Gandhi satis two\nweeks hence M a steerage passenger\nfor the London round table conference lie will not even too* it. ftttt\ncase, a tooth brush or a coat and\nhat. His only baggage will bt (Wd\ngoats, a splnninc; wheel, a spare\nloin-cloth and a copy of ThOtftd's\nessay   ou   \"Civil   Disobedience.\"\nSr\u00bb that he wilt bc In no d.mgei\nof bring swept overboard while a*\nsleeps on the third clMa deck, the\nsteamship romp-niy wtll build i\nspecial guard rail around Gandhi's,\nstr;.w  mattress.\nA score ot fndian pnn-T-, and\nother distiiiRinshed Indian\nto the conferem* will travel tn\nspecut suites bin, Gandhi noes m\nwould the lowest pariah, with a\nbard-wood deck an his bed and the\nsky   u_   his   roof.\n8000 ATTEND\nWALKATHON\nItins       Crowd      Nees       Viinrou\\rvS\nIhufrifl   Wlodup;  13000   Distributed; court Thorn Mini Todaj\nVANCOUVER. B, C. Aus. '_.- Approximately   8000   persons   .saw    -even\ncouples win | ihare ot tlie >*300O\nprig* money In the- international\nwalkathon which concluded at thc\nArena Saturday night at 11:45\no'clock.\nThe contest ran for 1203 hour\nFrt)in 1 P.m. Fridpy tha shufflers\nwalked continuously, As the grind\ndrew to a close hmin of them appeared in distress and several of\nthem were walkinc; around i'-leep\nsupported   by  their  partners,\nTomorrow    the    promoter!     fai <\nthree  summonses  Issued   bj\nInspector H. A. urnuhart, for operating contrary to a bylaw which order-\nad tho walkathon to close July %*..\nMURRAY BAY. Que., Aug. 2\nTheir Majesties, the King and Queen\nof Slam left tonight for Montreal\nafter spending Saturday night and\nSunday here. Arriving laat Tight\naboard the C. O. S. Lady Greay,\nwith the Montreal harbor commls-\n\u25a0vnera' yacht Sir Hugh Allan in\nattendance as escort, th royal party\nwas greeted by a large crowd of\nsummer residents and LmmedlAtclf\nrat-fad lo thali suite m a-*ioc*i hotel\nStimson and British\nPremier to Visit in\nScotland, Two Days\nI.os-MIMOITH, SOOtlaHd,   An;.\ni (aim\u2014prime Mtarittar Itmu]\nMacDonald admitted tonight thai\nSecretary nl Mali- Mhnson oi\nthe I nit rcl State*- had Invited\nhim to spend two days with bin\n\"somewhere In Scotland\" uwl\nthat he had accepted, hui tha\nprime nilnfolrr rafnaad to rtvaol\nwhere the meeting would take\nplace.\nPRINCE OF WALES\nSENDS FLOWERS TO\nILL ACTRESS\nLONDON. Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014Miss Beryl\nRlggs, pretty young actress who was\ninjured when her car collided with\none driven by the Prince of Waies,\ndrove yesterday from the hospital\nat Windsor to London to resume\nrehearsals. With the actress In the\ncar waa a beautiful bouquet last\nby   the   prince.\nShe had a small bandage on  her\nhead   and  drove -the  car   herself   a'l\nthe   way.  \"It  was   the   only   way   i\ncould  bc :-ure i  had  racwared  in\nnrivc,'  she  ,>*.d\nNo   Bodies    Recovered;\nNumber Who Met Death\nNot Definitely Known\nMONTRE.IL, Aug. X ((Tithe g, I, Rapids Prince today\ncr;i-tied Into the western ggta\nor lock number (no on (he\nLat-hlne i.timi, inc.king the gates\nand releasing a flood ot water\nwhich, pouring through, swept\naway more than 20 men who\nwere sitting on the runa I wall\nand on an embankment. Evr-\nwltnefese* claimed some of these\nmen were swirled into the canal\nand possibly down the Rtvei M.\nLawrence   to   their   deaths.\nCareful search of the. laoul\nby dredges (ailed to bring tu\nthe surface any bodies, and the\npolice had no deilntte report of\nmen being mining at a late\nhour  tonight.\nA wall or water, :i\\ feet Ugh,\nswept through the broken gate,\nover the lock and tfown the\nslip to the entrancf! of thc canal\nwhere it Joins the si. Lawrence\nriver.\nThe water poured in a torrent, six\nfeet high, over an embankment m\nthe center ot the canal upon which\na number of unemployed and destitute men were eating a frugal\nbreakfast, washing themselves and\ntheir clothing, or shaving. Thews\nmen. estimated by SaOrgo Sevec, a\neurvivor. to number about 40, wero\ncaught tn the flood. A few grabbed\nposts und bars to cling to until tho\nforce of the water was P-ist but a\nnumber were swept on. Rescuers\npulled many from the water. Hovec.\nhowever, R*r\u00abu<- bla opinion that ,'oou\\i\nli! vera drowned, Bants were covering the aWfaoe tOB-gb. by no bodies\nbad   been   recovered.\nPolice stated It would be Hlniosu\nImpossible to mskc a check. Names\nOi 'hose who may have met ocath\nwere unknown, the rescued had immediately gone away trom the aeena\nand --mid not be located, snd the\nbodies ol any drowned would ho\ncarried trtto thc Bt Lawrence where\nit wuuki he aome  lino before ihcy\nwere  picked up.\nThe material damage wa.- estimated at MOO.uOU partly tn the damaged jama and partly to departmental iheda and offlcea which were\ncarried away with thc exception of\ntwo, and partly to ahlpa higher irp\nn the Cdnal which weip lelt high\nsud dn h.-, the water inurefl Ita wav\nthrough thc broken g\u00bbtc_ on tu tho\nriver.\nThc   Rapid*   Prlnoe\nminor damages.\nThe    Canadian    BtaouUhipa    lines,\nowner,   oi   tho   Rani*:.,   Prince,   pre-\nierred   tu   wmt   until   tomorrow   be-\nag my rtatotnent aa to tho\nthe accident,\nTha Laohlna can*] eaatn feeder\nof grain Irom the lakes to rxROTt, Ionian, was- completely sealed up. it\nttclpAted the pouthtra side\nmight be put into operation within\nthree daya but it w*a considered\nthree weeks would be necessary be-\nlore   tbe   nor ...em   \u00abaulti   open   UA\nREDS DENOUNCE\nWAR, CALGARY\nWithout\nqouBists\nmarched    here    Baturdl\n*\ncelebration   of   '\"Intern,    onal    Dai\nade waa led h\\ \u25a0 motorcye'e\noona table,\nBpeechi i ooi    tunlst   leader*\nIn \"Red Square\"  preceded  and to!-\nloweg tbo parade*, with wl Bpetrtter^\ndenouncing   wat\",\nLINDY  CHANGES HIS\nNORTHERN KUGHT\nEDMONTON.    Alta,     \\   ;\nEdmonton Journal  in\nitotry baturday ,\n\"The Journal learns ,\nImportant change in hU route . c_\naoroea the arctic waa Fa ortd bv Col,\nCharles a. Lindbergh, notfu ui-i'tirt\n\u2022Mai met, previoua :o Lea vim;\nOttawa.\n\"Instead ol [lying I iot B-aKer\nlake .o Batlnii-t inlet n.i the Aictlo\ncoaat, it U probable that the- rnitto\nto be taken will bc from Baker ifke\nto Hunter bay on Groat _ica\" lake,\nthen to Fort Norman and down tho\nMackenzie river to AklavlK.'\nCafe Robbed, Vancouver\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 2\u2014Two bandits entered the Boston cafe on\nPender street lonighl and while one\nheld the proprietor up at the point\n\"yni up HSi\nin bltta trom lot  LIU,  rhey escaped,\n__\u25a0\n PAGI  TWO\n=THL  NELSON  DAILY  NEWS.  NELSON, B.  C. - MONDAY  MORNING.  .UC-IST  3.  1031=\nNelson, D. C, Hotels\nWW^)AAAt^^\n:mmt\nNELSON, B. C.\nNelson is now on Daylight\nSaving Time.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nKtjtta\u2014C. 8. Williams. J. If. tarts: w. L.. PoaXtr, Caloajry; A. W.\nBTOwn\\_g, W. J. Campbell, J. C, Wallace. A. Dulour, J. G. Sutherland,\nMunro. J. Boyd,  Mra.  Rhodes.  J.  E.! Cranbrook,  H. M. Couraey, O. Sibley,\nMilne, A. B. Bear, J. H. Ha_te\u00bbood\nA. Let-on. T. W. Wilkinson, Vancouver; J, Hutton, P. M. Netherton.\nR,    Willis,    Trail;    E.    Hutchlna__\nSo-th Slo<__; E. Whltaker. Cheyenne | Smith,   G.  c.  Weatby,  D.\nWlscon.;   K.  Painter,  Mr.   and   Mrs. I P.   J.   Rothrock,   Seattle;\nCANADIAN BORN\nDOUKHOBORS IN\nTHE M.D NOW\nForbid Demonstration on the\nCity Streets, They Speak\non Own Property\nSAY GOVERNMENT\nALLOWS OUTRAGES\nIf Effective Action Not Tafc\nen They Will Refuse lo\nObey Laws\nH H. McBaln. T. A. Burns, Medicine\nHat; Mr;,. E. Thornton, Mra. S\nDanes, Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Williams\nPenticton; . J.   carter,   Robson:   H\nB.   Gray.\nMr.   and\nA. Bell, Denver, Colo.; E. Davla.JMra. G. H. N. Monkman, Winnipeg\nNelaon; Mr. and Mra. Rogers, Mr, Man: B. O. Emerson, Wardner; R.\nand Mra. B. A. Dodle, Mr. and Mrs.'S. Staples, Kelowna; T. Kunst.\nA, H. Peters, Spokane; I.. A. Camp-j Boswell; W. A. Campbell, Los Ange-\nbell, Roasland; G. Dlnhmore, H. M.lies; Mr. and Mrs. W,. Cook, Canyon;\nKlrkpatrlck,   A.   W.   Kennedy,   On-ID. C. Chlalom, Kimberley.\nWhere (he GueslIs King\nC(5he Savo^\nNELSON'S NEWEST AND FINEST HOTK1.,\nMANY ROOMS WITH PRIVATE\nBATHS OR  bROWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nSwff^'^i^^JMJi^\nSAVOT\u2014H. E Lemon, J. A. At-\nkltw, A. O. Montvtff, C. TeveH, \\v.\nKeller, D. GtllLs. A. Mi-nm, ll. B.\nErsklna, A. Kuff, ll. B. Adolpn\nand part*, .1, L. PaRuett*. Vancon-\n\\er; O. Waterman, J. II. orr, Mr.\nsnd M\u00bb. Riley, R. F. Jacci\ngary; W. Caraen, L. Ttchviitc. Mr.\nand Mrs. L. Miller, P. F.\nL. Ohuelkelef. Mr. nnd Mrs, Bodges,\nE. Bettlsflo, E. C. Dodson. BpOka&e;\nL. D, Wheeler, D. B. Hayes. E.\nleonard, J. E. BuMer. Waitsbur-J\nWash,; W. G. SherhHm, Walla WaU;i;\n3.   Dotoey,   H.   Beckett,   Edmonton\nI,   Woolftar,   Crawford   Bay;   E.  Nel-\n_on, Kitchener; J. W. Whltere, Vernon;    11,    L.    Dearmld.    KamloopB;\nPorter,  Mrs.  F.  M.  Deal*?,\nti.   o. ningham,  0,  Wilson,\nW. ('. M;id 'v. Creston; C. E. Adamv\n, R. W- McDonald, W. H,\n.-. hvrwortu, Cranbrook:; A.\nB, FT-HBer, Corra Llnn; A. M. Cameron, Sandon; D. Shepherd, A, Mo\nQXtgOTi Tl. Bueige, Harrop; C. Mc\nKor Wmmpeii; H. Kx>r. Farrnn;\nH. D. He;, Trull; E. J. Vandergrife,\nNew Denver;  Q, Wateon, Procter,\nCricket Team Kingsley School, North Lonsdale. B. C\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nBot uid cold water In every room,\n-leant heated.\nNEW GBAND\nHOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Prop.\nWeekly  or monthly  rales\".\nHot and cold water in all rooms.\nPhono 503 T. O. Box 1061\n1KEE BIS ItnfS EVERY TRAIN\nQOEENS\u20140. McKlnnon, H. Wlt-\nthera. B. T. McKay, O. Finlay, O.\nFmnlgan, F. Finlay, H. Corswm, S.\nCUpper. Trail; D. Duffy, Mr. ;\u00abnd\nMrs. Wood, G. Meral, C. Chiaholm,\nMlaa Wood, D. A. Marien. C. G\nSmith, Vancouver; v. Lehani, Mr.\nWood. Montreal; ' Ai ' fotracken, B.\nHarmon. Corra llnn; Mr. and Mr.s\nJ. Oallo. Three Fork?; a. SmlthcU\nG. Buechlth, Ymlr; Miss O. Hol-hid\nNew Westminster; C. Walton, P.\nMoMann, Rossland; M;'. and Mrs.\nBunMin, G. Gchery, E. Henner, Saskatoon; P.. C. Procter. Cranbrook\nW. C. Vance, A. Mullins, K. Swan^\n.son.  City.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nd. a. Mcdonald\nSteam Heated Rooma bv the\nDay, Week or Month.\nEvery   consideration   bhown\nto guests.\nCor.   Baker   and   \\Vard   Streets\nNelson.\nNEW GRANI>\u2014N. Fedorak. Golden\nAge, J. Caaslto, A- Grant, Bpokane;\nC, Mclnnes, C. chostuk, Mr. and\nMra. J. G. Best, R. D. Holsteln, Ax\nOwen, Trail; E. Wenjer. J. Bartlett,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Walker, C Whong,\nB, McKiunon, City; V. E. John_on,\nV. .v--widbcrg, Salmo; A. s. Massle.\nGrand Forks; Mrs. 8. Thomley,\nKaslo; J. Sr.epelak, Reno Gold; J.\nbwnyer. Procter; K. McDonald, W.\nV. Smith, Troup; E. Brown, Cranbrook; F. Fedomk, R, A. Sewal,\nBlake; Mr. and Mrs. j. Procter,\nWinnipeg; A, Rasquay. Montreal;\nl\\\/.\\ and Mrs, J. G. Walker, Mln-\nnenpolis-; Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Spiers,\nBo_will; P. Gee. Corra Unn; Mrs.\nBpartz, J. Sulalynch, P. Stein. Wat-\nrous; Mr. and Mrs, J. H. Rogers\nEdmonton.\nMADDEN\u2014C. Henmstic, Valllcan;\n.1. 9. Helms, P. J, Ancins, Spokane;\nD. Carmlchael. Bo.*: well: A Johnson,\nA. Erlckson, Creston; M. 3. McDonald,   D.   McPhail,    Vancouver.\nOccidental Hotel\n\"lhe Home of riettty\"\n\"05  Vernon   M.\nH. Wasskk\nfifty  Rooms of  Solid  Comfort.\nHeadquarters for Loggers and\nMiners.\nFifty young Doukhobors, claiming\nto bo Canadian born, and under\n,aood to be of the Christian Com\nmunlty of Universal Brotherhood,\nM distinguished from the Sons of\nFreedom fanatic element ( made ,\nbid for fame Saturday by attempt'\nIng to read \u2022 manifesto on tne\nstreets of Nelson, after collecting a\ncrowd by singing. The manifesto\nthey wished to read served notice\non th* people of Nelson that if\noutrages were not soon ended by\naction of the government, tho demonstrators proposed to cease to be\nlaw-abiding, and to tfcop paying\ntaxes and sending children to\nBChool.\nChief of Police Thomas H. Long\npromptly suppressed the demonstration, which vu blocking the\nildewalk on the south side ef\nBaker street Just east of the Josephine intersection, end informed the\nleaders that under no circumstances\nwould they be permitted to make a\npublic address on the streets of\nNelson, nor to parade to thc city\nlimits singing, which was Uteii\nnext proposal.\nGO   TO   H AKLHOI BE\nBowing to authority, the leaders.\nwho stated this waa Lhe firnt visit\nof the party to Nelson for bucIi a\npurpose, .started off in nn orderly\nmanner for the Grnnlte road, nsk-\nIng members el the public io follow them and hear 1hclr nprwnn-\ntatlons. Quite a number of spectators aootpttd   tbe  mviiHUon.\nThe young Douknobora did not go\nto the city limits, botttttr, but\nhalted when tt_ty en me to the warehouse of the Christian Community\nof Universal Brotherhood, and taking up a position in the yard, atng\nhymns,  and  read  Iheir  manifest:1.\nThe -manifr_>to. which vu ulsned\nby 12 young Doukhobor;,, said lo\nrapfMtttt vanoui oi Hie Kootenay\nmer and Slocnn \\alley M-Homtnta,\n\u25a0ificr charging the government with\nfailure to make any r.erious invc.H-\ngations into the outrages of nmnv\nMttl PMt, which were alleged to\nhave coat tho Community thousands\ncf dollars, suggested in lis Una]\nparagraph that if the outrages were\nto bo continued, the vlrtlrrw would\nrather havo tho governmen u d< j\nthen ii daylight, rather thin at\nnlglit, It i-r.id M CoUOWtJ\nTHI MAM11STO\n\"Appeal to the OltlMM of Canada.\n\"Wc, the Canadian-bora Doukbo-\nbors, members ot the Christian\nCommunity of Universal Brotherhood, compelled to appeal to you,\nbecause we havo appealed numerous times to the B. C. government,\nbut without any result. We believe\nthHt you aro well -posted in our\naffairs, and thc circumstances In\n\u25a0which we stand.\n\"It might seem to you that onr\npresent actions are ridiculous, but.\nif you realized our difficulties, you\nwould  act the same.\n\"For many years in succession, we\nhave been bothered by an unknown\ncause. Consequently, we ^Ave withstood many losses on account of\nyour Inability to solvo this serious\nmatter.\n\"No longer can we bear this endless and unbearable burden. No\nlonger can we keep silent tinder the\npresent conditions. We are now demanding for a definite and conclusive answer, whether you are going to make any forward movements\nto make oerious Investigations and\ncheck the continuous insult on our\npeaceful lives. Bombing, lires. and\nother outrages have been prolonging now for several years, which\nhave put us Into large debts\namounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars. The government\ndoe* not seem to notice this. And\nnot only that they do not tike\nthis matter into consideration, but\nIt puzzles us to notice that th\u00b0y\neven do not make *t\\y attempts\nwhatsoever.\nREASON    FOR    ACTION\n\"Therefore,  this  is our final  de-\nLAWN BOWLING\nDRAWS\nIn uu men'a doublea lawn bowling\ncomrMtltlon, the following matt-iee\nhave been acheduled tor Monday and\nTuesday to commence at 8 p.m.\nMonday\u2014J. A. Young and P. B\u00bbte\nno. A Meere. and W. C. Chapman\" E Y. Bra-e and W. Melnec-u.\nva T. Oeder and A. F. Jamea\nTueaday-J. A\u2122\"1\"\"1* _SJ: I\nUorian w. P. Bate and H. Allen.. P.\nM0STM0TOWSTS\nTAKE NEW CURVE\nIN GOOD SHAPE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nTENNIS HONORS\nWONJJYNELSON\n\"A\" Team Heads League by\nFive Matches in Lead of\nthe Others\nWIN AT ROSSLAND\nIN TOURNfiY K\n2\nPolice Have Some Summonses\nto   Issue   for   the\nSpeeders\nTadanac Second With Score\nof 23 Points, Rossland Third\nand Trail Fourth\nThese   boys   won   the   Radcliffe   cup,   emblematic    of the Junior cricket championship of British Columbia.\nduration. . Wc hive came to the\nconclusion that the government Is\nworking to destroy us. Many things\npoint to thla resolution. First of\nall:\nThe fiMlure ol the government to\nfind the assassinators of our late\n, petal! VerifW. T\\t\\o toss\nis still pulling us. And all con-\ntoUOUa outrages of thc Ih1 few\nyears confirm morn positively than\never hotot% thai metbittf\nmyvterloui behind al of ihis. Most,\nf all that gives us this idea Is\nthat we, aa Canadlwn-born\ntion. Mincercly fulfilling the demands of your laws, that is: attending schools, paying taxes, -oi-\nLng. approving t nd ;-tin\nyou not only fall to sympatln\nua,   but   we  can  elearly\nyou havo a kind of a grudge against.\ni'. proved  by the (act that\nvr ;ire aeeeeeet] for high t;ixes, but\naro   not   Blven   any   opportunity   to\npay off :mv 01 It through thc meann\nof road work or any other con-\nfecectOf Jobs that are under !hc\ncontrol   of  ,the   government.\n\"After all Hie vork wo have put\nin, end all tho sufferings thnt we\nendured for the development of\nCanada. Ten* of thousands of acres\nof wild and barren land has been\ncleared of stone and root, and\nbrought up Into full fertility. Big\nprogress has been made; schools,\nmills, factories and other industrial\ndevelopments. And yet nil the appreciation and thankiulness we get\n\u2014'Do not enipUy Doukhobors.'\nWILL   CEASE   OBEDIENCE\nIn conclusion, we f>ay that w*\nare compelled to declare before you,\nthat our conclusive decision Is that\nIn the future, a.s protest against\nthe abuses and insults made upon\nus. we claim full rights to act the\nonly way that is loft for us; that\nis-\u2014instantly stop paying taxes, refuse our children to attend schcool-,\nend refuse to fulfill any other sov-\nenunent demands that may carry\nwith them great expenses that are\nbeyond thc laborers' powers to\nwlthstand.\n\"We are mode convinced todr.y\nthan ever before that If we. h*ve\nto bear the night outrages, we nutf\nas well inform you that we would\nrather have you come and do your\nwork In fun daylight.\"\nSigned  on  behalf   of   all.\nOrpen, Noted Artist,\nSuffers Break-Down\nLONDON, Aug. 2. \u2014 (CP) \u2014 Sir\nWilliam Orpen, distinguished British\npalater, who wae taken in ehorttt\nafter the opening of the Royal\n. annual exhibition, ia\nnow itaylag at a prhate nursing\nhome outside of London. His studio\nat South Bolton te Hosed and Lady\nOrpen ti in residence at ths Corner\nHouse,   Tite   street.\nOn medical advice Blr William\nbai bWJJ OtdOtOd to take n Ion? rest.\nIt ls understood he le not seriously\n111. U probably will be some weeks\nbefore he returns to London aud\nresume.   hiH   work.\nAt the time Sir William Orpen\nni ill he had completed most\noi the important work which he\nhad on hand. Since his illness ha\u00ab\nbecome known t here hn vc been\nmuny anxious inquiries ubout Sir\nWiUiam'e  hMlth.\n\"ValOl Sunday. A. D. 33,\" by Sir\nWilliam Orpen, waa the most tdlked\nof picture at the opening of lhe\nRoyal academy's exhibition recently\nand lt aroused considerable controversy. .Snme critics called It a carl-\nc.ture of Christ riding oa\nwhereae others regarded H with\nfavor.\nSUN BEAU ADDS\nMORE TO PURSES\nALREADY FILLED\nHorse Which Von Arlington,\nSaturday,   Has  Karned\n$330,044\nNelaon \"A\" team tennis players\ncame through with flying colors at\nRossi-nd Sunday afternoon when\nthey defeated a team from that city\n8-2 in their final matches In the\nWest Kootenay league schedule play.\nSunday's eight matches gave them a\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^fctal of 28 and top place In the\n! league and a  lead of five matches\nProbably, every   Nelson   car-owner j over  the Tadanac  team  which was\nSTEWART SM1LL1E\nEX-RANCHER DIES\nCame to District Quarter of\nCentury Ago, to Nelson\nNine Years Ago\nAft\u00abr a brief illness, (Stewart Smll-\nHo died at Kootenay Lnko Gencrtil\nhospital   Saturday   night.\nComing from lhe county of\nHuron, Ont., 24 years ago, Mr,\nSmillle eettUd en land at Burton\nCitv. on (lie Arrow lakes, and despite a heavy physical disability\nluc-ceeded ia ttmk_nng u prosperous orclmrd. which he sold nine\nafo. Since that time ho has\nlived In Nelson or on the north\nshore.   Si   \"-,i i'n>n   reader   and\nweU-lnformed student of world\naffairs. He took an active part on\nbehalf   of   the   Liberal   party.\nMr. Smlllie was single, and leaves\ntwo brothers and a sister living in\nHuron county, and a brother, Robert   Smlllie,   of   Nelson.\nLINDBERGHS ARE\nWELCOMED WHEN\nLAND CHURCHILL\n(Continued From Page One)\ntried out Saturday or Sunday the\nnew Baker-Cedar pavement, now a\nlink in the tranaprovlnclal highway\nthrough the city.\nAt times as many aa eight cars\ncould be seen on the two blocks ol\nnew pavement at once. '\nFor the flrat two or three hours\nthat the pavement was open Saturday afternoon, motorists made the\nturn under tho eye of a police\nofficer.\nSunday also members of the force,\nincluding Chief of Police Thomas H.\nLong, prolonged their beats ..t times\nto keep an eye on the traffic around\nthe big curve under the shadow of\nthe high  retaining wall.\nIn every dozen cars, one or two\nwould try to save a couple of seconds on the turn and cross the red\ncenter line, though having five leet\nto spare on their own side, but the\ngreat majority of drlvara strictly\nkept to their own 10-foot lane, the\nbroad and regular curve, with superelevation on the outer side, making\nit e.sy to make the turn with\nhardly a motion of the 6t\u00abrlng\nwheel.\nSOME   SPEEp\nOf course there wero some speed\ners. ana Chief of Police Long has\nsome summonses to Lwue for drivers\nwho took the turn at an unreasonable speed. One offender was an\nout-of-town silver who is alleged to\nhave hit up a gait of 40 miles an\nhour.\nA car track In the earth alongside\nthe pavement Sunday morning w.s\nevidence that some reckless driver\nSaturday night did not imd the\npavement at the curve wide enough\nlor  him.\nThe new improvement cute out\ntwo square corners aiui one nearly\nsquare, between Baker atreet and\nthe  Cedar-Edgewood arc,\nsecond in the league with a total of\n23. Rossland followed as third in the\nleague with 20, Trail Memorial\nfourth with 18 and Nelson \"B\"'\nteam iaat with 11 points-\nResults 0f Sunday's games at Roasland were:\nMen's singles\u2014T. Malahoff beat\nW. R. Cllthftrow 6-0, 8-0. Ned\nRhodes defeated D. K. McAllister.\n6-4, 3-6, 9-7; L. Simpson beat W,\nMcCulloch,   8-6,   6-1.\nMen's doubles\u2014L. Simpson and E.\nNeff beat W. R. CUtherow and J.\nMacDonnell 3-6, 6-3, 6-2; N. Rhodes\nand O. Simpson beat w. McColloch\nand   R.  N.  \/Xderson,  6-4, 8-3.\nMixed doubles\u2014T. Malahoff and\nMiss O. Wragge beat D. K. Mac*\nAlllster and Mlaa B. Wright 6-3,\n4-6. 6-3; O. Simpson and Mrs.\nSimpson heat D. K. MacAUUtcr and\nMiss O. Freeman, 4-6, 7-5, and 6-4;\nE. Neff and Miss J. Waldle lost to\nR. N. Anderson and Miss E. MacDonnell  4-6,  6-2,  3-6.\nLa:lles' doubles\u2014Mrs. Q, Simpson\nand Miss O. Wragge lost to Miss Q.\nFreeman, Miss B. Wright, 0-6, 6-8;\nMiss J. Waldle and Miss E. Hamson\nbeat, Miss E. MacDonnell and Mrs. P.\nTucker, 6-3, \u00ab-3.\nHAYES WIDELY\nKNOWN ARTIST\nTOC H SPREADS\nSLOWLY THROUGH\nTHE DOMINION\nHEADACHES\nTrail, B. C, Hotels\nHotel  Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. P. LEVESQUE, Prop.\nMONTREAL,   Que.,   Aug.   \u25a0.-*\u00ab-_\u00bb)\n\u2014\"Toe,   H   is   building   btrongly   all\nnvcr Uu Btttteh Empire.    It Is nuking   good   progress   In   Canada,   too.\nbut us yet ihls Dominion  lags  behind   tho   other*,    in    membership.\"\nstaled   L.   0.   Beokly,   ol    London,\nEngland,   who   lor   the   past   three\nfOOt* has been intimately  associated\nwith   tlie   work   of   the   non-denominational   social   service   organization\nj which grew up during the war aud\ny    jt        __.,:\u201e_   m___   I,*a(Wli,*51 under   p^dre   \"Tubby\"   Clayton   ha*.\nNeedless   pains    ike \u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab?\u2022 BPM#d :ill 0\u00a5M the empire.\nare  quickly   relieved  Dy  Aspirin;   Whcn in[m.;,.mt ncre Mr< Beckly\ntablet, as millions of people know. :    present  trip to Can-\n1 And  no  matter how  suddenly tlada li to be in tha nature oi \u25a0 long\nlicadache   may   come   upon   TOtt, holiday, although ha \u00abxpe\nI iicaud-uic   mtv    wi c     r       -       ,oU th0  brunches of the association.\n\\ou can alwavs be prepared. Larry p\"       i\t\nthe pocket tin of Aspirin tabletsi _\u00a5TXTTrkn XTAmTi>i?\nwith you. Keep the larger size at; JUNIOR NATURE\nhome,   Read thc proven directions'\nfor pain, headaches, neuralgia, etc.\n>.\nD0UGLAS\nHOTEL\nRooms and Bath\ne. u mt a. gkoi i\".un.. mm.\nttesm 11f.-\u00bbf.<! Hot und Cold\nTtiouihoot Water\nBoi 111* I'lvnr -61\nTRAIL, B. G.\nThe Royal Cafe\n< i.assic _ilTA-aV_NT\nKrllnrninil   and   Ilrllrary   Prevail\nOPEN DAY AM) NtOBl\nM.rrlal Dinner.  11:30 to 8 it.ni. :t.\"if\n^nerlal   Sunday   Chicken  Dinner  r.ttr\nMwilallztns In Chnn f^uey and Noodles\nPHONE 18J\nfr^k   i\nVANCOUVER\nDIIHKIV HOTLL\u2014BOO M ..Mm V.\nST\u2014Bright Rooma, Central, MoJ-\nel-at\u00ab ratea. A Paterson, late ol\nColeman, Crow's Neat, Prop.\nREST HAVEN SANITARIUM\n(Near  Victoria;\nSIDNEY.   BKITISI1   COLtMBU PHONE   SIDNEY   Bit\nEnjoy   the   well-known   Battle   Creek   treatment.%   ot   hydrotherapy\nmanage,  clectrotheiapY,  light  treat ment.  diet,  etc.   FORTY   QUEST\nItooMS-all  ol- which   h*\\e.   hit  utw   rwW  rimnlnff   water),   l.arpa\nl-ungcT fi>ac)nu<i   (lining   room,   from   S3,b\u00bb per  day  tnclublve.\n^rite for lUuvtrutfj buoklet. it's free!\nSTUDY CLUBS ARE\nFORMED MONTREAL\ntied   her   off   to   her   resting   place\nto prepare tfor supper,\nIt waa nearly two hours after\nreaching Churchill before thc tliU\nberths s-t riown to Mipper at the\nstaff rook house, wi.ere thc 2000\nlaborers working at the Embryo\nport are served their meals. The\ncolonel hart surveyed the town from\nthe air tor more than 20 minutes\nbefore landing, and ihen lie and his\nwife spent mor\u00ab than an hour\nchecking: over the mooring of their\nplane. They feared the treacherous\nrip-tide which l^as already .vreclced\ntwo planes In  Churchill  harbor.\nEvery resident of Churchill w..s in\nthe crowd that gathered on the\nrocky shore to greet the motor boat\nin (whlch the Lindbergh* were\nbroug\/.t from their plane to shore.\nHundreds levelled cameras at the\ncelebrated visitors and kept them\nwaiting to long that Mra. Lindbergh\n(.eemed to become lircd irom landing. Tho two guesta were mirr\u00abed\naway to the home of George D.\nKydd, portly resident engineer, v-here\nthev spend the night,\nDINNER   is   IURFRISK\nMr*.   Lillian   Jacobs,   wife   of   ;ne\ndoctor,    and    Mra.    Grace\nSEVEN CUSTOM\nMINES SHIP TO\nTADANAC PLANT\nLONDON. Aug. 2.\u2014(CP)\u2014Heniv\nJames Hayes, who died recently at\nFolkestone, was one of th8 oldest\nshowmen in Great Britain and w;i*\nwidely known in England for his\nPunch and Judy performances. In\nthe course of 40 years, during which\nhe had lived in a caravan, he had j ^Jj\"\nCHICAGO, 111., Aug. 2.\u2014<AP>\u2014Old\nSun Beau, which came pounding\ndown the stretch victorious in tho\nArlington handicap yesterday to increase his earnings to 8330,044. is\nthe world's greatest money-winning\nthoroughbred notwthstandlng the\nclaims Bet up for the French horse,\nKsar, credited with having won\n$355,340.\nSearch of musty racing records today revealed that Ksar's winnings\nIncluded all the pieces cf plate and\ncups he won ins^sad of restricting\nhis earnings to dollars anci cents.\nDisregarding the frcjtk record eet\nup by Kear, the list of high money\nwinners ot the world follows:\nAmerica\u2014Sun  Beau,   s3U0,0*4.\nEngland\u2014Isinglatib. $291 8TB,\nAustralia\u2014Am aoi in is, $241,488.\nFrance\u2014Sardantal,  $211,405.\nRacing authorities said thnt Ksar\nactually  won.  in  dollars and  cents, j -^i-I\u00ab*\nabout   $200,000.    but   the   value   ol . a,,,'^\",:      wif.    ~t    t-h.    .<-\u00bb.b___\u00ab.\ntha cup, and plate awarded to thn f.K'^ \u25a0 ,- ^\u00bb?_.^ , ? e P '\nFrench hon* bought hla total earn. W\u00abJ\u00abJ*JJ*!fS.2_l_KL\u00bb?E\nmgs up to the amount ch.ur.In_; tor XJlILEfj1,?i 2?, J\u00b0,OTW!H-_? JK\nhtm       They   pointed   out   that   ii ' (l0O\u2122\u00abP   \u2122tn   OttXaUl*   0t   the   Do-\nWillis Sharpe Kilmer of Blnghnmp-\nton, N. Y., owner of the gnlhtnt, r,m\nSun Beau, desired to Include tho\nvalue 11 nn- cupe and trophlee,\nthe tasaoom Run oi ftunbrlar-Beautl-\nlul I.ady had -von, hla earnings\nmight be ^retched to (915,000,\nFASHION\nminion department of rallwaya >ind\ncanals. Thence the Lindbcrglu,   vero\ntaken to the dining hall where ihey\nMtt   dow-i   it   a.   dinner   which   the\ncolonel  claimed  mi  \"quite surprising ih a town north of '58'.\"\nAfter   supper,   the   V__U\u00a9ra   walked\nI nc   rolling  recka  ou   which\nIU la hullt to the government\ngiven Punch and Judy shows bejor.\nQueen Victoria, King Edward VII,\nQueen Alexandra, Queen Mary, the\nDuke and Duchess of York, Prince\nHenry, Princess Victoria, the Princess  Royal  and princess Maud.\nHayes performed before Queen\nVictoria at the 1887 Jubilee ln Hydo\npark, befor0 Edward. VII when he\nwas Prince of Wales. Pour vears\nago b* gave hie show at Marlborough HoU9ft before Queen Alexandra,\nand it was on this occasion that\nQueen Mary and the other members\nof royalty saw his show.\nFor the past ll years Hayee had\ngiven Punch and Judy shows \u00bb-very\nsummer on the waterfront at Folkestone. Ha was 68 yeara old. Hla\nlittle d\u00b0g To\u00b0y Plflyed in thB rhow,\nand on the death of hla master\nwas grlet-stricken. Hayes ln hla\nc-aiTlei days appeared as Milo, the\nweight-lifter, with Beaumont's box.\ning  academy,  and  he attended  all\nhe big fairs In the north ot England and the midlands,\nDINOSAm~FIND\nSTIRS CARDSTON\nShip Total of 261 Tons; Total\nfor a Week Is 12,583\nTons\nThe large total of 261 tons of custom ore and 13,322 tons of company\nore went to make u? .he receipts of\nthe smelter of the Consolidated\nMining & Smelting Ccmpny of\nCanada at Trail for July 23, to 31.\nof 12.583 ten. Seven custom mines\nwere on the lot'to make the largest\nnumber for quite a long time.\nCustom mines shown on the Trail\nore statement were: Bell, Beaverdell,\n50 tons; Midnight, Rossland. 33 tons;\nRiuV, Sandon, 20 tons; Sally, Beaver-\n38   tons;   Sllveremlth,   Sandon,\n37   tons;   Union.   Lynch   creek,   33\ntons; Wellington, Beaverdell, 60 tonb.\nMANAHAN ASSUMES\nPOSTMASTER POST\nFIRST OF MONTH\nMajor Roy M. Manahan, whose\nappointment to the postmaaterehlp\nat Nelson made vacant last winter\nby the death of Postmaster John A.\nGibson, was announced from Ottawa\nIn June, took his holidays from his\nduties as railway mall clerk ln tha\nlatter part off July, and returning\nto Nelson, assumed his post off postmaster August l, and commenced reorganization of the work.\nCARDSTON, Alta.. Aug. 2.-<CP>-\nFosall remains of some enormous\nprehistoric *nlmal were discovered\nexposed In a sandstone ledge on\nLee's creek, five miles south of\ncardston   recently.\nRex Forsyth and Hugh Archibald,\nhlffe school boys interested in rock\nformation, accldently stumbled onto\na curious huge bone. This proved to\nbc portion of a knee bone ll Inches\nin   diameter   and   carried   it   into\t\ntown. Later a group of business men hag now accrued to\" about $3000,\nvisited the place and bonea were but did not fulfil the purpose for\nfound scattered over an area ot 80 which the society was formed. The\nicet,   How   perfect   the   skeleton   '\"   \"\u25a0\"\"\u00bb*\u25a0\" '\u25a0 tt.* hank- in Uu BocUtv'a\nUSE OF DORMANT\nFUND ASKED FOR\nMONTREAL, Que., Aug. 2.\u2014(CP)\u2014\nSuggestion ls made by memben of\nthe Botanical Garden society, organized recently with a view to\nopening a modern arboretum on. a\nsection of Malsonneuve park, that\nthe sum of $3000, which has stood\nln the name of the Montreal\nBotanical Gardens association since\n1885, but which never operated, be\nturned over to the new association\norganized for the sam\u00ab purpose and\nbacked with financial assistance\nfrom the city of Montreal.\nThe promoters secured necessary\nlegal enactments, opened a public\nsubscription, collected mora than\n$1000 which was deposited ln the\nbank   and  with   compound  Interest\n' money ln the bank ln the society's\n^__5*i____\u00ab____-l_%'__l ESitaTu, IT^n\/tatThr^lo-j \u00bb\u00bb. wa. IJto\u00abto P^Jf^\nSIGN NOW!\nFill in and mall immediately\nthis form, and learn the truth\naDOUt this remarkable Health\nRestoring   Method.\nTo   New   Health   Clinic\n,n: < ml nil Bide., Victoria. B.C.\nPlease send me fun information about a New Health Method that increases vital energy strengthens weak conatKu-\ntlons, builds up muscular tissues, tones up to the vital\norgans, restores vision and removes glanses, softens hardened arteries, normalize* tha circulation. Restores youthful energy and health to Young and\nOld alike.\nName\nAddress t\nM-ONI'IltM..    Qur.    *u_f,    y._ (CP)\nJunior  Nal urt  Btudi   i lube  wot*\nI   and   district\na short time ago and DOW mon\nUian M affiliated olube are being\noperated in conjunction with the\nsocietc   Canadlenne   d'R_8to.re   Nat-\nurpllc WhlCb initiated thi movement.\nRecent 0 schoolglrle ac-\noompanli lathered\nen Moii'i    i a day'i outing.\nThere they mra Introduced to flowers, plants, butterflies and characteristic minerals of thc  mountain.\nThis the third field day of the\nseason waa preceded by I first\nexcursloon for schoolboys nnd a second  lor cottage  undargradttatv.\nCar and Truck Bump\non Narrow Roadway;\nSlightly Damaged\nR. J, Johnson, thc Slocan City\nlumberman, suffered aome damage\nto hit car Saturday evening when\nit and a truck collided on the\nNelson-Balfour road a short distance\nfrom   the   Nelson   ferry;\nThe two vehicles met on a narrow\nstretch. a.nd a collision could not be\navoided.\nNo OM\nwere  slightly  damaged.\nand  sent  messages  regarding   their\ni rrivjii. George Ooutts, aiilafcant engineer, and \\V   W. MacKenzle guided\nthp   Lindberghs   through   the   rlalr.g\ntown   before  they retired.\nMeanwhile,    tha    Lockheed    plane\n\u25a0 <*<i  toj by Otptatu J. Peiits.\ndeparicaent ol  rallwaya .md\nwho?  gave   it   a   \u25a0\ncheck  preliminary  to  the  eoioatl'i\nexamination on the morrow. A guard\nwee placed oyer the craft, wnic.i _tad\nbeen accural!  anchored in the wort\nsheltered   part  or   tbt  six-raile-lonif\nharbor.\n-   * a        _.  tn vAfa-i tion  and.  therefore,  no one  could\nS-M. _s5ss\u00ab_r \u00a3\u2022&\u00a3! *& - ai\u00bb \u2022_* *!__.*_=\nMUSKEG BASIS\nNEW INDUSTRY\nEDMONTON, Alta., Aug. .a.\u2014(CP)\nThcmandg of acres .of. mU-kp-j. in\nnorthern Canada muy be turned to\nprofitable commercial uise through\nutilisation of. iiiu\u00abkci} vegetation aa\nthe basic raw material for a new\nIndustry. The new product la an insulator developed hy two Edmonton\nmen, J. Victor Carlson, and his son,\nArtflur  V.   .\nHaving   perfected   a   process   by\nwhich    ordinary   muskeg   litter    i_\ntransfovmei  into  fine  qu*nty   insulation, tho men have advanced their\nexperimental    work   sufficiently   to\nprotein   to   the  building trades  II1*\ndustry   their   new   product\u2014mosatex.\nThe    rotted    vegetation    1_    dug\nfrom  thc  -fields,  mixed  with   water\nand boiled; then it ll churned and\npre % d   out   Into   sheets  of   various\nlengths.  It. is describe J  as  a  light\nmaterial  that Is effective and fire-\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ juroot and of desired rigidity for all\nLustrous Kiimmer evening gown ot structural   purposes,   providing   per-\n0paU_M WM* satin  with bandt ol sil-l manent,  insulation apainst,  Mt1   rn:i\nver   tied  unertly  it  the side, worn  sound    tranannleilon.    Plan\nby  Conttancc  Bennett,  screen star.(large plant have been drawn up.\nThe \"find   Will   be   reported  to   the\nUniversity  of Alberta.\nCity Band Plays\nin Lakeside Park;\nLarge Audience\nBefore a large and appreciative\naudience the City band played on\ni-unday ittemoon at the bandstand\nIn the Lak-tJf- park. The program\nwai ns follows: March, \"Spirit of\nMinstrelsy,\" by King; overture,\n'-Spotlight,\" by Brockton; selection\n\"Chimes of Normandy,\" by Laudcn-\nrienu; waltz, \"Silvery Brook,\" by\nBrahittii caprice, \"Dance c< the\nHoueybells,\" by Mantla; overture,\n\"Masterblll.\" by Alford; Opus 101,\n' Humorebque.\" by Dvorak; selection.\n\"Joy of the World,\" by' Barnhouse,\n\"Thc   King.\" #\nBandmaster Spencer J. Newell officiated.\nwithout a master. Assets vacant\nwithout a master for 30 years, lt\nwas pointed out, revert to public\ndomain.\nNothing but the Butt\n\"* CORRECT\nGLASSES\nPRETTY  EVENING  MODE\nWeak Men\nANO AEE DISEASES OF MEN.\nTake   our   Remedies\nPamphlets \"Man Know Thv-\nacll,\" and Dlsea.es 01 Men.'\n\"Ma of Women.\" also ..kin\nand Blood Diseases, wltn Diagnosis Form and Advice In\nplain envelope. Free by ,oall.\nMall order and Tablet Heme-\ndie.   i   apectalty.\nENGLISH HERBAL\nDISPENSAKY I\/H).\n1 jr.-  Davl. St.. Vancouver, B.C.\nfinest:\nOPTICAl OFFICE\n^^^^^^       IN SPOKANE\nSAVE $6~$9\nWe aall to both YOU * the DOCTORS\nAT THESE WHOLESALE PRICES\nRetail Our Wholesale\nPrice Price\nIS Eye-Ulan Frame ItM\nJ8 Heavy All-Shrll Frame 13.10\n11 Fine Nil-SHELL Frame 13.80\nII Fine White Gold Frame 14.35\nIS Menlscu, Lenaea pair 13.10\n17 Torle Lenses pair 13.91\n110 Crookes Lcnsca pair 15.3a\nIIS Kryptok Lenaea pair M.50\nMOD-UN   EXAMINATION   ROOMS\nDOCTOR'S   EXAMINATION   IS\nSpecialitt't Examination\nSafeguards Your Vition\nYon save mora than tnaujh money\nto pay tha Doctor and your total\n.expense Is leu than tho Retail\nPrlea   el   Lenses  and Framt _to__\n\u25a0___\u25a0________\nu\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\s\\%A\n 9_3\n=TH_  MISON DAILY, NEWS,  NELSON. B.  C. \u2014 MONDAY  MOENINO.   Al'Gl'SI  3.  1931 =\nKING AND QUEEN OF SIAM ARE IN\nDOMINION ON COAST-TO-COAST TRIP\nMONTREAL, .1. C. Aug. 3\u2014One\nof the world's moet colorful fif-V\nurea; a link between the old eut\n\u25a0nd the new west; a god nnd a j\nking, yet a man and a modern,\nman at that; has entered Cyiada.j\nfor a tour of some sue weeks' duration, m the person of H, M. Kin\u00ab*\nPrajadhlpok. of Stain, who is ae-*\ncompanied by his queen and a\nnumerous'  retinue.\nHe  \\n king of Blsni, of the north\nsnd  the south, of Laotlens, of Ma-\nmodern political and economic footing.\nThe Siamese are Buddhists, a devout of sincerely religious race.\nThe preservation* of religious and\ntraditional ceremonials ta part of\nthe national life. King Prajadhlpok\nIs the first to apprtelat\u00ab this, yet\nbe has proved and is proving the\npossibility of adapting modern occidental methods to his country's\na'falrf. His personal example Is\nnoteworthy in this respect.\nChateau for King and Queen\nI\n\u00a7\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nsgk\n-        \u00ab*.     *\nt    \\\\^r:'-m\nE^ v\n-T^S\nd\n9_____r_.\u00bb__\\ *!' fl\nr *'i \\\nf     !i^\n*$\u00a3\n\u25a0Khj^IMjI'SJ\n\\*T' __\u25a0.->\"*\u2022 *_______-\u25a0'\n\"\" \u2022  If\nIPSl\n\u00b1____E__.''\nW\\W'\n^*?Sm\n^p\n\u25a0>*>\u25a0<* \u25a0;.. '-:BT1 |\nSftuated In the site of tht residence of the Governors under.\nithe French regime, the Chateau Frontenac, the Canadian Pacific'\nRailway's great hotel at Quebec, is unique among tht hostelriea\nof the world. July 1931 adds to its distinguished guest list tht\nnames of Their Majesties the King and Queen of Siam, and suitt,\non a visit to the Ancient Capital of Canada, during a tour of tht\nDominion by special train over Canadian Pacific lines.\n'lain, of Ksren; descendant nf the\nr\\re*l Ood Piiddhn; Supreme Arbiter of 'he v;hb srM Flo'V of tbe\n-t.de*; Brother of the Moon: HsW\nj-prniher of the Sun, and Poestatoi\n'of tht F'<*__r nnd ^n timhirMi^. But.\nV i*. travtUlsg \u25a0\u00ab Prinre fluk-\n[hAdsTH; a. rovsl tounr-.t, r-*<liie -i\nnew land.\np^OPMOft   SOILS\nHlgh-sounMing as his title., are\nIhey \u00abre real, for the Un: of\nplan i if. ab^'ute monarch over\n\u25a0ome 13,000,000 souls, in f\u00bb., Dirt.iu--\nyr.qur and prosperous \u00ab km.dom a*.\nh\u00ab found on ?h\u00bb ftolw, Hir>\nt&unvellors   are   ail   princes   of   l-hc\ntblood und hip government riepart-\n\u25a0nen'i ol bla own makinj. Hi* Eng-\ni;ii education, including iits studies\ni nv ford and at the EV-ole dc\n'uri-v :n praaca, have Aon* mur.h\n> in, his majesty lor ibe tt*** taai:\ne is still carrying out; tlm nt\nhie    roimtiy    on    a   sound\nSHOES\ni ,  lhat   Jnok    <\u25a0\u25a0   If  they   were.\n_J   their   last   Its   Will   br   put\nI] i\u00bbiii k on >our fet-l tn smarts oat*\n\\teeablc ronrlKion,    soles t.1iUh-\ncil;   no   tacks   or  nails.\n| Watson Shoe Co,, Ltd.\nII M Queen Purnb.i rami is his\nonlv wife, in a religion which endorse* polvgamj- Both the raonaj-cbe\nare 'moderoh'' In the best oeont of\ntne word   In dress and  deportment\nTouring Canada\nPacific railway, will, necessarily, be\nof much interest to hi* majtety He\nwill find himself ln a land which\nbaa many and virying characteristics, many of them In sharp contrast\nto those of his homeland, which Is\none of the world'* great teek-suppb\ncenters, with Bangkok, its capital at\nit* seaport and main trading center\nKing Prajadhlpok's country is\nknown throughout the world a*,\n\"the land of tht white elephant\";\nit* particular atyle of architecture\nand Its great forests are matters Of\ncommon knowledge. Even (n thit-\nsketchy summing up of the average\nroan'* knowledge of Slam one find*\nthe marked contrast between the old\nand the new. for the whltt elephant\nla sacred aa ont of tbe embodiments\nof Buddah. while tht country's forests are linked to Bangkok by road\nand rail systems of th* most modern\nkind.\nThis Is the land of tht old and the\nnew, where the ceremonial nine-\ntiered umbrella Joins tjia RqIIs\nRoyce ln his majesty's splendor aftd\nwhere tbe ceremonial lanetk hothe\nby the royal escort give way to the\nmost up-to-date weapons of the\narmy and navy, both of which are\ncommanded by his nwJeety,\nThus, typifying today, tomorrom-\nand yesterday, King Prajadhlpok\ncomes to Canada. He haa already\npassed through the west, on his\nway   down   Into   the   United   States\nPASSION PLAY\nTO BE STAGED\nSOON, SPOKANE\nBPOKANE. Waah. Aug 3\u2014Seven\ncenturita ol tradition and development, *nd 400 years of Inheritance,\nare represented in the Freiburg pas\nsion play, from Freiburg. Baden.\n\u25a0fJermany, which will be produced m*\nSpokane under American Legion aus-\nnlces. August 12 to 15 Inclusive The\nPaaaion play is on Its first American\ntour. *\nAdolph Kaasnacht, who portrays\nthe fhrlstus during His week ot\npssslon, suffering, death snd triumph, Is tht eighth psssnscht In\ndirect descent to portray this role.\nSince 1760 AD the role ha* been\nJealously guarded as a Fassnscht\nstriving to Improve itself In the part\nand   bring   a  deeper   spiritual   and\nartistic significance to the presentation of the triumph of thc Man of\nSorrows.\nMr. Passnacht t_ rupported by a\ncompany of 3H principal*, members\nof the original German company\nwhich, 18 month* ago, began the\nAmerican tour. Many of these have,\nIn like manner, inherited their part*\nfrom preceding generations. Because no company could possibly\ncarry the huge number of people\nnecessary to the mob and crowd\nscenes which mske so colorful a\nbackground   for  the  principals,  200\nSpokane men, women and children\nare being organized to appear with\nthe noted German eaat. and, ln addition, there will be a chorus of 300\nvoices, t-elected from tbe best choirs\nand musical club* of the city, and\na Spokane orchestra to fumlrh accompaniments\nAuthentic costuming of th* ancient orient, elaborate lighting and\nspectacular wenle effect* will Join\nwith acting of rare character to\nmake the Passion play a colorful\npageant of magnificent proportions.\nTelling  the  age-old  story  of  Jesus\n^^^^M TARE  IBRCE\nsimply and sincerely, Ita theme car*\nrlea an appeal to all kinds and\nclasses   of   people\nA special effort ta being made ta\nPrance t his year to encourage tbe\nexchange of ee_iolars between England Prance and Germany. The\nchildren will change places without\nany further cost thacuUiat of their\ntravel   tickets.\nRoyal Visitor\nTht charming Queen of Siam,\nB. M. Rambai Be mi, who is\naccompanying her royal husband;\non a tour of Canada. Every inch\na Queen, her smart dresses and'\ngracious manner are arousing\nmuch interest among tht women\nof Canada, at various points\nalong tht trans-continental Una\nof tht Canadian Pacific Railway.,\nfor su operation of   hLs bight, from\nwhich he ima now happily recovered\nMontreal,   Ottawa,   Banff   and   the\nPacific   coast   swuit  him.   with   the]\ngreatest intercut.\nDuring two weeks, at the Banff\nhotel, the king will formally open\nthe Highland gathering on August\n21 aud spend some time viewing at,\nlirst hand tho beauties of this glorious section of tlie Rocky mountains.\nLater, he plana to make a cruise\nalong the British Columbia coast\nline, arriving in Victoria ou September 10.\nCANADIAN\nANTI-VIVISECTION\nSOCIETY\n3i;\nSay ward Building\nVictoria, B. C.\nMembership $IOft per annum\nLife Members $25.<H1\n\"1 accuse my profession of\nmisleading thc public as fo\n.he crueltlch and Marfan\nwhich Ot* perpetrated on animal   lite\"\n-George HIImui. M. D,.\ni,LD , former President State\nMedical lection, British Med-\nlog] Association. Membrr ot\nrtojul Commission on Vivisection.   1012.\nH, M. King Prajadhipok of\nSiam, who is visiting Canada,\naccompanied by his Queen and\nft considerable retinue. His itinerary includes points of interest\nfrom cast to west, including\nvisits to Quebec, Montreal and\nBanff, and a cruise along the\nBritish Columbia coast. The\nRoyal party sails from Victoria\non September 12, on the Canadian Pacific liner \"Empress of\nCanada.\"\nSenator Taylor's Brother\nDies at New Westminster\nNWW WESTMINSTER, B C, Aug.\n3.\u2014G. H. Taylor, 76, brother ot Senator J. D. Taylor, died In hospital\nlast night two hour., afler he was\nknocked down by a motorcycle at\ntbe corner of Sixth and Columbia\ntercet*. He suffered severe head injur ic*\nFoster Davles and Claude Dlehent.\nboth of Vancouver, -who were riding\non th motorcycle, were also taken\nto hospital for treatment,\nthey compare enviably with thetr\niwei's ln western nation,. Both are\nBGOOioipUshed linguists, Jovera ol I\ntravel, study and eport. They have]\nlhe quiet enthusiasm ol voyageurs\nIn new countries and luvc already\nmade fast friends of all atrata 01\nlot American public Their Canadian\nvisitation operut under singularly\nhlbtorlc, auspices, in that Ihey make\ntheir bow to tho people of the Dominion at, QUebrr, the country'i>\nvery cratitl.\nCANADIAN  TRIP\n_ftam Itaeil Is about t-he Plzc ol\nBpaln and Portugil together, and\nthe vast extent of the Dominion at\nteen from hit, special train from\n''oast   to   const   over   thc   C.nadlsn\nCommunist Parade\nOrderly, Winnipeg\nKIDDIES\nWill Be Happy at\nPROCTER\nThryMl find plenty to amuse\nI hem at this delightful Kootenay\ntake resort. So will their elders\nwith boating and launching, with\nswimming and bathing, in Ihe safe waters at the Outlet.\nOUTLET  HOTLL\nspecial week-end, weekly snd\nmonthly rates. Rowboats for\nhire, ?2 a day. Oil anil ga^ 'or\nMle.    Cabins for rent.\nF.  R.  BBADLLY\n18-foot launch tor rent at teas-\n\u00bb->able rates for excursions and\nii-hlng  parties.\nFAIRBANKS   and   BKRRV\nP, St B. Store at Harrop.   Close\nto Ferry. Oas and  Oil, General\nStore.\nCOGLE and EXTON\nTugffork and fishing and excursion parties a specialty. General towing.\n8.   COCKMAN\n\"l-font  cabin  cruiser.    A   ttm-\nfnrtahle   boat   for   llshlng   and\nexcursion parties.\nA. S. RITCHIE\nGeneral Store at Procter.    Sap-\npiles, fishing tackle, Ice cream.\nsoft drinks, etc. Up-to-date Tea\nRoom ln connection.\nTARE   THE   HARROP   FERRY\nWINNIPEG. Man., Aug. 2.-<Cpi-\nWhlle policy remained In the background, close to 10,000 Communist\nadherents marched through citv\nstreet* tn \u00bb steady downpour of rain\nlast night as part of a celebration\nof International Day. There waa no\ndisorder.\nFed leaders had BMUftd a police\npermit to parade. Before thn March\nstarted, they addressed th* crowd\nln  a city  hall  square,\nNEW LIEUTENANT-\nGOVERNOR INSTALLED,\nVICTORIA\nVICTORIA, B. C. Aug 2\u2014With\nthe utmost simplicity compatible\nwith the occasion, Hon. John William Fordham Johnson wa\u00ab regularly\ninstalled us British Columbia's !4*-h\nlieutenant-governor W the executive\nchamber of the parliament bulldlngj\nat li o'clock Saturday morning\nApart from the IS-gun salute at.\nthe Work Point barracks, no outside\nceremonies were perlormed.\nUSQUIMALTS   CHIEF   OK\nPOLICE VICTIM OF\nSUNSTROKE\nVERNON, B. C Aug. 2\u2014The deat>\nof John Ackerman, chief ot police\nat Esquimau., occurred ta Enderhv\non Friday evening Chief Ackerman,\nwho had been suffering from a nervous breakdown, was taking a sun\ncure \u00bbt Enderby. on Friday while\ntn the sun he suffered a sunstroke\nand tn\\a taken to the hospital,\nwhere he died.\nWood of AU Kinds\nWe have the perfect Miming wood for fireplaces\nand for general heating purposes.\nBIRCH, FIR, TAMARAC and CEDAR.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE 33\nMILL AND FIVE MILLION\nFEET LUMBER BURN\nNANAIMO, B. C. Aug. 3\u2014 Fire\nearly Saturday destroyed the mill of\nthe Extension Lumber company, 10\nmiles from Nanaimo, and consumed\nalmost five million feet of lumber\nThe Iocs is estimated at \u00bbl\u00abt,000\nSeveral small building* snd a locomotive were damaged,\nMAE  MCRRAY  FILE*  SUIT FOR\nDIVORCE\nLOB ANGELES. Cal. Aug, 3 \u2014Ms*\nMurray, film aetress, Wed ault for\ndivorce Baturday from Prince David\nZ M Dvani, charging extreme\ncruelty.\nThe gross assessed valuation today of Montreal's realty stands at\n\u2022 l.a48,T4M69. Slnre the war the\narersge Increase has heen 132.000 \u25a0\n00O a year\nBASEBALL\nSWIMMING\nGO L F I -M G\nFun and Sport\nPervade This\nGlorious Playground\nVacationists throughout thc Northwest have accepted Spokane as their\nown- For nowhere do they find such perfect aid to enjoyable holidays as in the\nmultitude of attractions and things to do as this great recreation centre brings.\nThrills and laughs\u2014fun and sport\u2014 dance and ride\u2014swim and play\u2014there is\nreal happiness every second you are here-\nWhen hnlirfayinR in Spokane vou should not overlook the opportunity to take\nthe trips to the following points of partinilar Interest throughout the Inland\nEmpire. Grand Coulee and Dry Falls\u2014the geological phenomenon located near\nthe center of lhe State of Washington, which is unique in the experience\nof the world and which lias attracted geologists from every corner of the globe\nlo study its unique formation. On Ihis trip which you should not, fail to take\nyou will see Steamboat Rock\u2014a _reat island in Ihe old Columbia River bed\nwhose walls tower SOU feet from the floor of the Coulee. Then you will want\nto visit and see Cataldo Mission, Review Rock. City Museum. President Harding\nDrive, Lewiston Spiral Highway, Spokane State Park, and hundreds of other\ninteresting spots.\nDon't miss the glorious vacation hours that await you In\nSpokane. Plan now to come down for a week or two during this\nmonth.\n^^ Let's Take the Family to\nI POKANE\n^^   SPOKANE 18 NOW ONL.  A FIVE\n^^ HOUR DRIVE OVER GOOD ROADS\nM FROM NELSON, VIA YMIR, SALMO,\n_f AND METALINE FALLS.\nThe insertion of this advertisement was made possible by the Spokane firms listed below, who\ninvite you to visit them when in Spokane:\nWHtN   IN   BPOKIM;   (ALL   \u00bbND   tit,\nDr. Ramsey's        Triple-Suction\nPLATES      * SPf-fin?1\nGAS,  X-RAY _)15\nLIB-MY    IB.A11R    BLDO.\n3\nTHE\nHOTEL COEUR D'ALENE\n\"CANADA'S   SPOKANE    HOML\"\nHoward   nii'l   Trent\n\"IN   1IIK   HFART   OF\nMODERN\nM'OKANE\"\nALL-ELEC1RIC\nA     first     class    popular-\nCOITEE   SHOP\npriced   holel  In  (he  heart\nOPEN\nof Spokane's retail district\n.4   HOIRS   A   DAI\nNATATORIUM PARK\n\"YOLK    srOKANE    PLA_ (\u25a0ROLN0\"\nIhe  only   complete   amusement   turk   In   tb\u00ab   North-\nnest.   Untied   aud   operated   hy   Louis   A ojrl.\nCome   and\nPLAY    ON    T'lE    GRASS,    SWIM    IN    IHB    PLUNQK,\nDANCE IN THI, BALLROOM. BIDB   CHE CONCESSIONS\nThe MOTOR INN GARAGE\nNelson and  Koolenay  Motorist*'  Spokane  Garage\nRepairs   to   all   makes   ot   tan,   Hashing.   pol_*blng,\ntreastng and tow tne.  oil. Ou,  Acmsorle*  and   Ilrei.\nBatteries repaired. De MM to wait us..\n101-   M'KV.U, rnUNE   MAIN   ,:m 1\nA-l DRUG CO.\n\"Till:   CANADIANS'   BPOKANE   DRVO   STORE''\nA few doors up from the Coeur d'AIene Hottl\nA   complete  drur  store  service.   Drugs,  candles, toilet\ngoods.   Kodak  supplies,  s'\u00bbda  fountain  and  expert\nprescription   Millet.\nN.  E.  Cor.   Main  and  Honaid      Spokane.      Plain 6183\nA.   IV.   <B-TCB>\nWOODWOtti'H\nIVIth mild -  Moort\nOPEN \u00ab ATM,  to  t r.  M.\nMl   RIVERSIDE SPOKANE.   WA8B.\nYour  nome.  town   newspaper\nPapers from  all  principal  cities\nSODA   FOUNTAIN\nSY'S CORNER S3Si__\u00abr.\nHOUSE   OF   VARIETIES i_-__\u00ab.\nSy   Jacoy,   Prop. ..miins\nonly one block  Irom the   i oeur d Alene  Hotel\n130 N   STEVENS ST.     frO-ANU     PHONE MAIN 2733\nHOME SHOE STORE\n\"THE   CANADIAN    SHOE   STOBE\"\nJust around tho corner from tha Coeur d'Aleoe Hotel\nSHOES  FOR  THE  WHOLE  FAMILY\nAT POPULAR PRICES\nM3 MAIN PHONE MAIN ITM\nDRS. GREER & MeGILCHRIST\n\"Those  Careful   Dcntistt\"\nSTERLING DENTISTS\nPhona   Main   l'.M\nHours 9 a.m, to 5:30 p.m.\nErenlnga  by Appointment\nZ1EGLER   BLOCK\nCor.  Uoward *  RHersldt\nSPOKANE\n PHONE   MAIN   S33S            \">\u2022\u00ab   Spokane\nDINING   ROOM,   BARBER   SHOP  and   CIGAR\nPedicord Hotel\nJOB   PEDICORD.   Manager\nRates from $1.00                    'With  bath\nTha only hotel ln Spokane  with free bus\nand our own garago  in connection.\n209-219 Riverside  Ave.      ?0\u00bb-218  Ppragua\nSPOKANE.   tVASH.\nHome.\nSTORE\nJ2.no\nservice\nAve\ns\nPOKANE'R\nIGHT\nERVICE\nTATION\n\u00ab>\nSPOKANE OPTICAL CO.\nDr.   O.   T.   Sapp,   Optometrist\n410 Mohawk Bid*.       Phone Main BUty-flU Flfty-Flta\nThe Spokane\nChamber of Commerce\nInvites its Nelson Friends to visit\nSpokane's new Civic Building.\nWe Shall Be Glad to Serve You\nand Supply You With Complete\nTourist Information.\nWe Take the Dent Out\nof AcciDent\nl_Mtt-    \u00ab\u00ab_me_\u2014Modern   equipment    Seat-   rebuilt\nfor   beds.   Complete   aerrlca   under  ona  roof.\nQUALITY COACH & BODY CO.\nIV  till  FIRST  AVE. PHONE MAIN UU\nHOTEL SPOKANE\nFirst at  fltatena\nSolid comfort and readf\naervtce   haa   mad\u00bb   this\nhouse  the home  of tha\ntraveller\nHome nf the Famous\nSilver Grill\nRATES\n\"-'.'I- '\"\u00bb\">.   \u00ab-50   ne,\n\u00bb\u00bbh   Bath,  \u00bb2.J0  op.\nHave The\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nDelivered   to   You\nWHILE SPENDING YOUR VACATION IN\nSPOKANE\nLAUBER'S STYLE SHOP\nTOUR   SPOKANE   LADIES'   SHOP\"\nJuit atound th* corner trom the Coeur d'AIene Hotel\nA large, and complete ttock of everything that'i new\nIn Ready-to-wear and Millinery for Ladles and Mlisei.\nat popular prlcea\n\u00a3\u00a39 MAIN PHCNE RUIN  5631\nSAD SLIM SMITH\nSIPF.R    SERVICE    STATIONS\nlt>35   Broadtvaj   and   3   RlrerUde\nJiut tu yoa enter town.\nOne call dot* tt all.\nSAMSON   TIRES\nFree   Automobile   Travel   Mjp*\nALEMITE GARAGE\nRECORDED   AEEMITE   LCBRICATTNO   -ERVICB\nAlemite Parts,  Serrlee and  Carhosolve.\nEvpert   Repairing   and   Brake   Service.\nDay and  NlgTit  Towing  Serrlee.\nStorage and Washing.\n1S13 FIRST AVENUB PHONB MAIN 385J\nFOR EVERY AILMENT\nChinese  herb* hive heen  found  to  be a   \u25a0\nnatural   remedy.\n|j4   blocks   from   the   Coeur   d'Alena   Hotel.\nWing: Wo Chinese Medicine Co.\nN.   12SH   WALL MAIN   5543\nGo by Air From Spokane!\nLeave   Spokane   end   be   In   Seattle\nin 2tt hours. Res. Phone Main _s_j,\nEtenlnis,   Potter's   Desk,   Davenport\nHotel. \"**\nMAME^ air TRANSPORT\ni\n-J\n pao_ rmm\nTHE NELSON  DAILY  NEWS. NELSON. B.  C. \u2014 MONDAY  MORNING.  ACOCST  i.\nKey to Stations Listed in Program Schedule:\nCan Utters     Station Location\nKH<_\u2014Spokane,   Waah.   \t\nKPRC\u2014Ban Francisco _______\nKOW\u2014Portland, Ora. \t\nKFI\u2014Lot Angeles,  Calll.  ,\t\nKPO\u2014-an Francisco, Calll. __\nKVI\u2014 Taooma.   Waah.   \t\nKliO\u2014Oakland,   Calif.   \t\nKOMO\u2014Beattle,   Wash.   \t\nKJK\u2014 Seattle.   Waah,\t\nKilocycles   Metres    Channel   Power\nCNRV\u2014Vancouver. British Columbla-\nKNX\u2014Hollywood,   Calll.   \t\nKSL\u2014Salt Lake City, Utah\t\nKUA\u2014 Spokane.   Waah.\t\n690\n010\n6-0\n640\n190\n9.0\n970\n1030\n1060\n1130\n1470\n600-\n401\n483.0\n468.5\n440-\n894.8\n-79.5\n3J5.9\n808.1\n391.1\n385.5\n365_\n304\n50\n61\n03\n64\n68\n76\n70\n93\n07\n103\n105\n113\n147\n1,000\n1,000\n1.000\n6,000\n6.000\n1,000\n10,000\n1,000\n6,000\n600\n5,000\n6.OO0\n6,000\n6.00\u2014Clark   Slaters,   KFRC,   KOL\nCon Lee studio, KVI\nAfatha  Turlay,   soprano,   KPO\nStudio program, CKWX, KOA\nKnlghta   ol  the  Road,   KJR\nDinner hour program, CNRV\nOrgan   program,   Chester   Markert,\nKNX\nVariety program of music, KSL\nNorthwest concert trio, KOA\nExpress,   piano   duo;   novelty   orchestra   direction   Victor   Arden,\n(Trana.)     KGO.    KHQ,    KOMO,\nKFSD, KFI. KTAR\n6:16\u2014Tom   and   Wash   Matrimonial\nbureau,  KNX\nEdna Fischer, piano moods, KFRC\nJoe Waterman, Sport talk, KOL\nMAIL ORDERS A SPECIALTY\nUNIFORMS of DISTINCTION\nBOWMAN'S\nAPRON SHOP\n810 GRANVILLE ST.\nVANCOUVER, B.C<\nWrite for Illustrations and Samples\nWEIGHS 100 POUNDS\nTHB    WONDER   CHILD\nHarry St. Clair Heckman is only\nfour, hut weighs 100 pounds and haa\nthe mentality of a much older boy.\nHe's called the \"Wonder Child\" of\nHeckman's   Island,   Lunenburg,   NJ3.\nNorthwest concert trio, KJR\nG:30\u2014Air Cyclopaedia; Allen Wilson,\ntenor, KPO\nVacation  Land   review, KJR,  KOA\nDinner hour, CNRV\nEarl    Burtlett's    orchestra,    Elec.\nTrans,, KNX\nConcert orcheatra, vocalist*, KOMO\nArabwque, KOL, KFRC, KVI\nNBC Network program.\n6:45\u2014Slavic trio, KTI\nChester  Markert,  concert -organist\nKNX\n7:00\u2014News releaee, KFI\nDance orcheatra KPO\nPure and  Simple, KOL\nFrank Watanabe, Japanese Houae\nboy, KNX\nFletcher   Henderson's   orch.,   KVI,\nKFRC\nProgram\u2014Amos    'n'    Andy,    NBC,\nBlackface     comedians.      (Trana.\nfrom    Chicago)       KOO,    KHQ,\nKOMO,     KECA.     KOW,     KFSD,\nKFSD, KOA, KSL\n7:IB\u2014Program   KHQ\nArthur Pryor'a band, KFRC, KOL\nBeach  Broadcast,  KOW\nStudio   program,   KOA\nViennese    Nights,     Elec.    Trans,\nKOMO\nMary  Rosettl. soprano, KNX\nWestern   concert   hour,   KSL\nAround   the   Bridge   Table    with\nJohn   Charles   Ship.   NBC,   KOO\n7:30\u2014 Quarter  hour,  KOL,  KFRC\nProgram,   KJR\nRecital, Gertrude Huntley, Oldeon\nHicks,  CNRV\nThe Realtor Californlane, KNX\nNorthwest   Salon   orcheatra,   KGA\nDeml-Taase revue, NBC. Oua Aru-\nhelpi's  orch.;   Loyce   Whlteman,\nsoprano;    Donald    Novi*s,. tenor,\nKGO,   KHQ.  KOMO, KGW.   KFI,\nKFSD,   KTAR.   KSL.   KOA\n7:45\u2014Musical  varieties. KSL\nBert  Lown's   orchestra,   KOL\nCecil   and   Sally,   KPO\n8:00\u2014Blue Monday jamboree, KFRC\nSalon oi?h.; Alice Gentle, soprano,\nKPO\nPeter Pan Playmate, KNX\nDr. Frank B, Robinson, KHQ\n8.00\u2014Happy    Hawaiian*,   KOL\nSee What You Save!     See What You Save!     See What You Save!\nTHE SALE YOU HAVE AWAITED!\nPRICES \"DOWN\" TO ROCK BOTTOM!\nWHAT A SALE! WHAT VALUES! What a\nchance to save money on the better grades of\nFurniture. Thrifty shoppers will revel in the\neconomies we are providing. Regardless of\nyour requirements, plan to attend this event\nand SEE WHAT YOU SAVE!\nTime Payments Arranged\n<*___-                ^*\"\"*N\nIVtyJl'i\nffm\nL__JIJ->\n^\"-If-f\n[Hi; B'l}r\n1 ill l'<\n_\n<4-_J|\nI'll k.\n______\nCHESTERFIELD SUITES\nand ODD CHAIRS\n.-piece suites, worsted mohair, Regular  $139.50.\nAugust Sale Price  ?119.75\nYon Save $19.75\n.\u2022piece tapestry suites.     Regular $137.50.     Sale\nPrice  _  $109.00\nYon Save $28.50\n3-piece Mohair Taupe.     Regular $225.00.     Sale\nPrice  '.  8177.00\nYou Save $48.00\n3-piece  Mohair,  blue.      Regular  $267.50.      Sale\nPrice   ?237.50\nYou Save $30.00\n3-piece Tapestry Suite.     Regular $162.50.     Sale\nPrice  Z  8132.00\nYou Save $30.50\nOdd Mohair Chesterfield, wood showing.     Very\nHigh Grade. Regular $157.50.   Sale Price ... $117.50\nYou Save $40.00\nOdd Tapestry' Chesterfield.   Regular $87.50.   Sale\nPrice  \u201e  809.75\nYou Save $17.75\nOdd Chesterfield chairs $22.50 to $48.50\nMANY  OTHER  CHESTERFIELD   SUITES   AT\nSAVINGS IN PROPORTION.\nSIMMONS BEDS, SPRINGS\nand MATTRESSES\n2-inch combination post bed, 5 fillers one inch.\nAll sizes in Ivory or Walnut finish. Coil Spring,\nand No-Sway Kelt mattress. Regular $27.75. August\nSale Price   $21.50\nYou Save $6.25\nCane Panel Beds in all sizes. Walnut finish. Cable\nnr Coil spring. All white cotton felt mattress. Regular $38.50. August Sale Price   $28.75\nYou Save $9.75\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nDrop Side couch and Pads. Very suitable for\nverandah, bed or living room couch during day, and\ndouble bed for sleeping during night. Extra Special\nprices, $12.50, $14.25, $16.50, $19.75 and\n$22.50.\nYou Save From $2.50 to $5_25\nCURTAIN MATERIALS\nand CURTAINS\nRuffled French Marquisette, White only. Regular\nper pair $2.00.   Sale Price per pair $1.45\nYou Save 551\nMarquisette. Rose,  Blue,  Gold.  Regular per pair\n$2.25. Sale Price per pair $1.65\nYou Save 600\nRuffled Voile Curtains with vallance. Regular per\npair $3.00. Sale Price per pair $1.95\nYou Save $1.05\nColors Rose, Green, Blue and Gold. Ruffled Curtains, per pair  \u00bb5\u00bb?\nVoiles and Marquisettes, 3 yards for $1.00\n500   yards  of   cretonne   in   all   colors,   3 yards\nfor - :. $1.00\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers\ntee What You Save!     See What You Save!\nNelson, B. C.\nSee What You Save!\nA Star In Stone\nLILY AN TASHMAN POSLS 1 OK TAMOLS MI'LLPTOR\nWhen & likpnfwi at Mlynn Tashmuii. chlss-IM in stone, wa*. re-iu^rd for\na sculptor's studio, Albert, Sllva. waa celled upon to capture tho conture of\nLilyan's face. Sir* MlN Tushman it poMng -while SiKa busies himself\nwith his sculptor's tools.\n\"The  Jewel  Box.\"  KSL\nSupreme {Serenade :*, KOA\nDance-  band,   Kl'l\nParisian   Quintet,   NBC.   Direction\nEva  Garcia,   Howard   I,   Mllhol-\nland,   reader,   KGO,   KPSD\nDream   melodies,   KJR,   KGA\nSupreme Serenuders, KOA\n8:16\u2014The Scientific Four, KOL\nKnights  or   the   Road,  KGA\nSyncopators,   KHQ\nHour of music. KOMO\n30\u2014Fireside   hour,   KGW\n\u25a0Tack Rutledge \"Sport Thots,\" KHQ\nConcert orchestra,  KFI\nEighteen  Feet  ot  Harmony,  KJR,\nKGA\nConcert,   CtTRV\nBeauty in Song:, KOL\nThe    Vagabonds.    NBC    Direction\nMahlon   Merrick.   KGO,   KECA,\nKOA\n8:45\u2014Babylon Drams, KOL\nThe Easy  Chair,   KOA,  KJR\nTom Mitchell,   KGW,  KOMO\nPacific  National   Singers,   KHQ\n00\u2014Tho Looking  Glass,   KPO\nLeitai,   the   Practical   Philosopher,\nKFI\nBlue Monday Jamboree. KVI, KOL\nTho   Noveltecrfi,   KHQ\nLittle Symph'y KGW, KOMO\nVic  Meyers'   orchestrn,  KJR,   KOA\nDance  orch.,   CNRV\nThe  Violin  choir,  KNX\nSalt   Lake   Federation    nf   Labor,\nKSL\nlilr.ncer  than   Fiction,  NBC.   Dm-\nmatlc   Sketch.   KGO.   KOA\n9:15\u2014String  Quartet, KFl\n0:30\u2014wrcstiiiiK match;  Kni Stuart,\nKJF.  KOA\nRev.   Ethel ' Duncan;    Que:-     u_d\nAt*.,  KNX\nThe   Vagabonds,    KHQ\nPacific     Nai mnal     Hliifrcrs.     NBC\n\u25a0OiolfU  and  orrhr_tra  direction\nEmil   PDlnk.   KECA,   KGO,   KOA\n10:00\u2014    Sam    Coslow's    OT\nKNX\nDance music  KSL\nAnaon  Weeks' -orcii..  KVI, KOL\nWeather   reports,   CNRV\nFifteen   Minnie   Men,   KFRC\nNews   flashes,   NBC.   Sam   Haves.\nKHQ, KOMO, KGW, KPO, KFSD.\nKFI\n10:15\u2014Aldeane Smith, soprano, KGW\nKFI   String   orchestra.   KFI\n\"Tom and Dudd,\" KPO\nraciftc  National Sinacrs,  KHQ\nAnson Weeks' orchestra, KFRC\nCecil and sally, KOMO\n10:30~Marion   Boyle   Trio,   KHQ\nProgram, KGW\nThe  Senuoians.  KPO\nThe White Wizard. KVI\nPopular   Trio,  KOMO\nNorthwest Frolic. KJR, KUA\nOut  of  Doors with  J.   P.  Cuenln,\nNBC       \"How  to Fish  lor Steel\nHeads,\"    KGO.    KOA\nStudio   presentation,   CKMO\n10:45\u2014Two  pianos,   KGW\nVolC\u00ab of Pan, NBC. Anthony  Lin\nden,   llutlst;   Emily  Linden, eo-\nAiprano. KGO, KOA\nHff>8\u2014Weather report-.; Globe Trot\nter, KOMO\n11:00\u2014Lazy Ike, KHQ\nDance   orch..   KFRC.   KVI\nVft Meyers,   KGA,   K.JIt\nNew   Paris   Inn,   KHX\nBob KJolr'i SyncopatoTP, KPO\nLofner-Harris dance on.hestra, NBC\nKGO, KGW\n11 .30\u2014Mtdnite    Prowl,    CKMO\nDance   orchestra,   KOL\n12:00\u2014Midnight Revellers, KJR\nOrgan   recital,   KOMO\nVagabond  of   thc  Air,  KFRC\nFOR   Till;   B08TIM\nHere are a few sandwiches that\nhelp out the  picnic  basket.\nCheese   and    Onion    Samlnii hes\n1 cup of cream cheese\n14 cup of chopped Bermuda onion.\nLettuce leaves\n\\_   cup   mayonnaise\nMix the cheese with the onion.\nUse with mayonnaise and a crisp\nlettuce leaf between thc slices 0t\nbuttered brcid.\nChicken   Ham  and Celery\n1  cup of  cooked chicken  meat\nl'\/i  cup celery.\n! tablespoon  green pepper\nU  cup mayonnaise\n14  cup cooked  bam\n.Mince the chicken, ham, celery\nand green peppers. Mix with the\nmayonnaise and spread on buttered\nbread.\nIlecf   handiwiehes\nV.   cup  of  cold  beef\n1 teaspoon salt\n1-3   tablespoon   tomato  catsup\n1  tablespoon Wore tste rshire sauce\nI   tablespoon   melted   butter.\nTo minced cold roast beef add the\nsauce and melted butter. Then\nspread on buttered bread* cover\nEdit. tomato catsup, Worcestershire\nwith a second slice.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy  LAURA  A.  KIUKMAN\nTOMORROW'S   MEM\nBrrukJaM\nPunch   Sauce\nCereal\nCreamed Dried Be*-.\nCoffee Cake Coffee\nLuncheon\nCom Custard\nStuffed Pepper S*lid\nRolls Jam iced Tea\nDinner\nOlives\nBaked Slice of Ham\nBurnt   potatoes Beans\nApple  R'o Coffee\n\\i;,v  oishi;s  this   week\nStuffed peppe- 0*3*d; Cut a tJice\nirom tho stem-end of green sweet\npeppers, scoop out ***0* (throwing\nI hem away), then stuff tho peppers\nsolidly with cream cheese, mashed,\nseasoned \u00bbnd moistened (till pasty)\nwith BWMt crc-mi. put on Ice to\nchill. At, \u25a0frvtni tune, sUc0 tho\npeppers MTOM ''O that rach slice\nconMst.s of a Stoon ring filled with\ncream chtttti f'-jpnnkle a littlo\ncruafted canned pineapple over each\nallot, and serve on lettuce, with\nPrendb dressing. Although this is\na pretty salad tor a guest meal, it\nla ;ilso a hearty, nourtMiing salad\nlor ihe home table. Fine to serve\n\u00abitii tho following-\nCorn custard: Mix ono cup ot\nnwoet corn (Cut from the cob) with\nfour Bltffhtly beaten, unaeparated\neggs. Add one-half teaspoon ol salt.\n\u25a0 pinch of black pepper, on0 and\none-fourth cupa of cold, sweet milk,\nand one-half Mtapoon of onion Juice\n(obtained by putting \u00abn onion\nthrough tha iood chopper and\ncatching the .iulec which falls).\nTurn this uncooked mixture into a\nbuttered baking dian, set this dish\nIn a shallow pan filled with a little\nhot water, and slip both dish and\npan into a moderate oven to ha*a\ntill delicately firm l\" the center.\nServe at once.\nOnion string beans: String uncooked green beans, then shred\nthem finely. Put three cups or\nthese prepared beans into a saucepan, barely cover them with boiling\nwater, add one-half teaspoon of\nsalt one teaspoon of butter, and let\nrook till the beans are tender nnd\nthe water almost evaporated. Now\ndrain and quickly stir into the hot\nvegetable four tablespoons of finely\nchopped peeled onions which you\nhave sauted in three tablespoons of\nbutter till light brown and fairly\ntender. Serve at once. These \"onion\nod\" beans are delicious.\nTomorrow\u2014Answers to inciiunes.\noverallYare\nin fashion\nYou don't have to bo bark to Uu\nlarm to hear tho appealing WTlta\nHon. \"Come en out Into thc garden,\nGiven the right togs and any\nlittle bit. of garden, even If on .^\nroof, and you can get al] the health\nalvlng effects of \"Maud Mullerlns \"\nCertainly   soma   of   this   season\nciopa    of    tricky   .garden    togs    :irc\nenough to make any girl go farm-\nette.\nOveralls are the accepted fashion\nBut auch overalls! Old fashioned\nfarmers would have thrown up then\nhands and fainted away It anyone\nhad told them a few years ago that\nglrla would be wearing plaid pink\nand black overalls with prctically\ntransparent lacy weavo pin- shirts\nunder them. Or black linen over\nalls with no ahlrt at all. \u25a0\nThe garden overalls differ from\nbeach pajamas ln that' they are\nslightly tighter In the legs.\nTIPS  FOR  HOMEWIVES\nWell-lighted . rooma -dp to make\na home cheery aa well as. healthful\nund efficient.\nA closed, curtained sheK over the\nkitchen work table helps the house\nwife  to save steps.\nThree hundred puje strain dairy\nand beef calves have been pur-\nchaaed through thc New Brunswick\ndepartment of agriculture and dls\nIributed among Hie It Calf clubs\nin   various   parts   oi   the   province.\nThe Hmman Sphinx\nby\nELLIS PARKER BUTLER\nI,\" .LL T.X '\u2022- i- s- '\u25a0\u25a0 -\u25a0 *\u25a0 \u2022- '\u25a0\"'- ___*: _* i-r|-< \u25a0\u25a0i...LIX-i.lL__\n1NT-IXMKM   XII\n(Continued)\nWell, bhe* my cats, I'm glad to\nknow there was some good in the\nwoman, anyway!\" Simon Judd -exclaimed. \"Did she make that will\nshe was talking about, leaving the\nmoney to Amy?\"\nYes, and she was going to give\nAmy a fine sum when she married.\nWe liked Bob Carter. It waa like\nending with something clean after\na lot of vileness to know we would\nleave these two when we went,\"\nAbner Dart 6ald. \"It did not pay.\nSime. She made a mistake, Ella\ndid. She wasn't happy and I wasn't\nhappy. John Drane's money did\nher no good and It did me no good.\nI'd have enjoyed life more just being a second-rate undertaker out\nthere in Elverbank, burying eome\nold friend now and then, and going\nalong nice and easy.\"\nAmy was weeping now, crying\ngently, and Bob Carter, sitting on\nthe arm of her chair was trying to\ncomfort her. Norbert, caughlng.\ncame ta the door. He seemed to\nthink Brennan was m charge c< the\nhouae,  for  he  spoke  to  him.\n\"If you please. Mist. Brennan,\"\nhe said, \"George Flrmandlck haa\njus' gone an' died all of a sudden\nan' Maggie Is star tin* to carry on\nmlghtly   bad.\"\nWhere ls she?-' Brennan asked.\nShe's up in his room ovah the\ngarage,\" Norbert Mid, \"an1 ahe\nwon't let nobody come up. She's\ngot hold of a knife Bnd 1 reckon\nshe's  gone  plum  crazy.\"\nI'll be out there in a minute,\"\nBrennan said. \"Have the two offl-\nera go out with you, will you?\nHurry now! I Just want to ask Mr.\nDart  a   couple  of   questions.\"\nNorbert   hurried    *iway,   coughing\ns ho went, and Abner Dart made a\ngesture   of   despair   with   his   hand\nand   his   face   became  sadder   than\never.\nLast night,\" Brennan said, \"w-hen\nCarter herc went through the 11\nbrary, Dart, you said to Ella\u2014to\nJohn Drane, if you please\u2014some^\nthing like 'Don't do it! I warn you\nnot to!' or 'I'm against lt; remember what I say!' Something of that\nsort. What did you mean by that?\nwere you warning your wife not\ni.o   let  Amv   marry  Carter?\"\n\"No,\" Abner Dart said hollowly.\nOh, not that; never that I We\nboth 'wanted  that.\"\n\"Then   it   wasn't   over   that   you\nnd Ella Drane quarreled last night\nalter .Simon Judd went to bed.\"\n\"You know we tjuarreled, then?'\nAbner Dart  asked  dully.\nWe know it,\" Brennan aald.\n\"Why did you not stay the night\ns  had   bee*  arranged?\"\nFor a full minute Abner Dart did\nnot answer and when he did it was\nn the voice of one talking in his\nleep.\n\"I'm old! I'm old! And I'm tired\nA man can stand so much and\nthen he can stand no more. I had\nthought she was UiroiiRh with her\nkllllni and that wc might have a\n\u2022few years of pc^cc and gentleness\nbefore we died. But she told me\nthere\u2014In there, last night\u2014that\nanother had to die; another had\ncome to believe she was a woman\nGeorge Flrmandlck had. She told me\nlast night that George must die\nbefore morning, and that was what\nI was begging her not to do. That\nwa_ why we quarreled. That whs why\nI went away lust night, 1 told her\nI was through with her\u2014through -for\never.\"\n\"Dart,\" Brennan demanded frharp-\nply, \"do you know who killed Ella\nDart  last   night?\"\n\"No! I do not know!\" the little\nman said, shaking his head. \"If\nL kr\\ew  l would  tell  you.  1\u2014\nOne of the police officers interrupted this time, coming around\nthe veranda, walking firmly on his\nbroad   soles\n\"Brennan!\" he said, motioning to\nthe   detective   With   a   finger.\n\"What is it Joe?\" Brennan asked\n\"The   cook   lady,   Maggie   Maney\nher name is, had a spell and -passed\nout up yonder in the chauffeur's\nroom Juat now,\" the officer aaid. ,\n\"I don't know was ahe right In\nher mind or not but ahe was\nshoutln' that the dead woman had\nkilled the chauffeur. Sh_ was shout-\nin' that the dead woman was mur-\nderln' all that guessed ahe waa a\nfemale, sir, and that last night she\nsaw the dead woman\u2014who was\nnot >yet dead, you understand.\nBrennan\u2014glvin' George aome drops,\nat which time thc cook was in the\nchauffeur's closet, I'm sorry to \u00abay.\nair,\"\n\"And\u2014\" said Brennan questlon-\nIngly as he closed his note book\nand dropping lt in his pocket.\n\"And the laat words the oook\nshouted before she passed out,\" the\nofficer said, \"was to the effect that\nshe had murdered this late John\nDrane, now known to be a female,\nusln' a knife as the implement, the\nobject of the said crime betng re-\nvenge, and tha crime beln' actuated\nby love and affection for the aald\nGeorge  Flrmandlck,  now  deceased.\"\n\"Write all that down before you ]\nforget any of it, Joe,\" Brennan aald.\n\"You'll   have   to   give   that   to   the j\ngrand jury, possibly.\"\nHe turned to Simon Judd.\n\"I think that's our case,\" he said.\n\"It's not much  f\u00abr us but it will I\nbe a big story  for the newspapers, T\nBy   the  time   It   reaches  Rlverbank I\nyou ought to be  quite a hero detective, Iludd.\"\n\"If   I   nln't,\"    Simon   Judd   aaldi\nplacidly,   \"R   won't   be   my   lault.\"\"\nTHE END\n[The Beauty Box]\nj \u25a0 BY Helen Foltett\n_j_______i___r__iisi_u \u25a0\nOU your  finger  nails;  they'll feel\nbetter  and   look   better.  It   Is   fre4\nquent  washing   of   thc   hands  and\ngeneral   dryness   that   cause   bang\"!\nnails,   break   down   nail   structure!\nput painful gnashes In the fl\u00ab6h\nthe   nail   base,   dim   that   roacafc\nglimmer   that   should   make   fingcj\nsheaths  attractive   to  thc  eye.  Um\nolive oil,  lanolin, cold  cream  or  'I\ncommercial  preparation  designed  fo|\nthe purpose of keeping finger nail*\nIn   tip-top    order.   Be    wise    in    thd\nchoice   of    toilet,   soap.   Dry   handi\nthoroughly   a fter   washing.\nBusiness girls, jumping througll\nthe activities of the day, should!\nmake it a point to eat luncheon 111\nsome quiet, restful place and tm\nthrottle the impulse to bolt thctw\nchow and bc on their way. A sandl\nwlch, a green salad anci a \u00ablasa ol\nmilk form - balanced meal. an<f\nwon't put on any adipofo cushions!\nHeavy luncheons aren't 60 good]\nwhen the afternoon work await*\nthough some members of thJ\ngrouchy sex ti<\"Chi to be able to rc!\naway with them, and no harm ddricT\nSoaps and astringents are effectlvJ\nin overcoming excessive olliness ol\nthe skin. Lotions containing alcohol\nremove lubricated deposits. But thex\narc temporary helps, like the rlpj\nold powder pad. The greasy skin ll\nproduced by oil glands that arl\noveractive and to make them bchav\u00a3\nH ts S0O*a*SXf to eat less fat an<|\nmore  giccn   vegetables.\nDon't let any fussy old auntie icl|\nn_u that washing injures the haul\nIt doesn't, if soap is good grade ami\nthe rinsing is thorough, accompit-hT\ned by means of a spray and a atronJ\ncurrent of water. Oily hair needs til\nbe washed every 10 days bccausT\nthe greasy exudations from thc &cal||\nattract atmospheric duat and layf\ndandruff   on   the   scalp,\nOur Summer Sale\nroiitiiiiics all this month. Wc l.tuf\nt wn sales each year, and they art\nreal  ones;  pUftM)  of  marvelous.\nbargains.\nBathing Suits\nat a Real Reduction\nLADIES' SUNTAN HACK Pure W'nol\nSuits, all colors including; black and\nmany fancy colors. Values (PO QK\nto ?6.00.   NOW Vta.DO\nMISSES AND BOYS' Sizes 22 to U.\nValues to 14.50. <-1'\/.Q\nNOW    , *!\u2022*\u00bb\nLadies* Beach\nPyjamas\nAn extraordinary reduction. Long wide\nbottoms. 40 1Q\nTHE SUIT  1B1..S-U\nLEATHER CUSHIONS\u2014 fljl OQ\nHand laced.   EACH  OL.-O\nRaansden Bros.\nSmart Shoppc for Smart Women\n \u00b0t(cH\nAndrew's\nlor\nShoe\nBargains\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaders In FootUihiont\nSociety\nThis column Is conduct*- _?\nMis. 11. J. Vltneux All news\nof a social nature, including receptions, privet* entertainments,\npersonal Hems, marriages, etc,\n\u00ab_i appear ln this column. Tsls-\nPJione Mrs. vmneus ot Mr tome.\n\u202219 silica street.\n\u2022TIB  NRISON  DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON. B.  C,\nMONDAY'  MORNING.  AlOLST  3.   1931 '\nr_o_ nv_\nWins Women's Archery Championship\n[SCOUTS OF TRAIL\nAND ROSSLAND IN\nCAMP ON TUESDAY\n|Total- Number Is 63 at Kokanee Camp; All Scouts\nHaving Fine Time\n(By THE SCRIBES)\nMonday, thc third d\u00aby or the\n\u25a0Scout camp, the fourth Nelson\n\u25a0troop tooK to their boat, while tha\nfirst Nelson attempted to get a\n! view of the herons which atiy\nIiround   thc   marshes,   but   without\nivail. However, they found traces of\nhe   herons   and   other   birds   ind\n[nlmals.\nWhile    the   Scout_,    were    sitting\nIround tho camp fire enjoying\natermelon. which A. Browne kindly\nresented to the camp, a marauding\nsunk was scented, and an expedi-\non headed with torchlights to rout\ni out was organized, but the stfunk\n\u25a0iaappeared. leaving Ita unpleasant\nBor   behind   it.\n^ On Tuesday the camp was enlarged\nthree troops from Trfltl and one\nWoo? from Rossland, bringing the\n|>tal in camp to 64 Scouts divided\nltto six troops.\nI The Trail and Rossland boys wem\nbe settling down quite well and\nIivlng as good a time as the Nelson\njouts. The Trail Pioneers aie con-\nructlng a bridge across the creek,\nhlch will soon be completed.\nOn Wednesday seven Nelson Scotts\nent to the United church basket\ncntc at Laska mountain, and were\nrought home by Rev. George Kln-\nIn his launch, the Broadcaster.\n[Stocks of dehydrated apples in\ne Okanagan valley have practical-\nexhausted. Only very email\nlounta are ln the handa of the\nckers.\nFretted\nInstruments  .\nWe. 1iht_ Gibson,\nStewart, Serenad-\ner. etc. makes In\n<iultars. Mandolins, Ikes, Violins,\netc.. at Standard\nl>rlces.\n^Cootenay Music House\n804   Baker   SI..   .Nelson.   B.   t.\nPhone  58,.\nMlss Aloise Wragge, Mlas Louise\nCunllffe, Miss Senate Fowler of\nRlondel and Miss Gale T-iyior of\nWillow Point have returned from a\ntwo weeks' vacation spent camping I\nat Woodberry creek.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. O. Rose entertained at an\ninformal tea recently st her home\non Vernon street honoring Mrs.\nJohn Oliver of Vancouver, who '\u00ab\nthe guest c.' Mr. and Mrs. John Bell,\nOore street. Mrs. Hvse waa assisted\nby Mrs. C, V, Gagnon. who poured\ntei. and by Mrs. Walter C. Kettlewell,   who   served.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Sharp. Hoover\nstreet, and their daughter, Mlsa\nDawn, ha\\> returned from Ainsworth where they have spent the\npast couple of weeks holidaying.\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. McDonald,\nMill street, motored to Metaline\nFalls yesterday where they met their\ndaughters. Mlas Lillian McDonald of\nthe staff of St. Lukes hospital. Spokane, who will spend a vacation\nherc, also by Miss Grace McDonald,\nwho Is Just returning from a trip\nto Alaska.\nOrvllle J. W. Shugg. who has been\nln hospital suffering from eye\ntrouble, left Saturday morning for\nhis home In Ontario.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNelson Ball, Houston street, who\nhas spent the past week in camp\n'\u25a0with  the Boy Scouts, ha3 returned.\nMrs. Gilbert Hartln, Vernon atree',\nhas as her guests, her nieces, Mrs.\nGeorge Bignali, snd Miss Helen\nYoung, of Los Angeles, Calif., who\narrived in Nelson Saturday by motor.\nE. W. King has returned from\nthree weeks visit to Calgary, Banff,\nRcvelstoke and thc west coast.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Ferguson have had\nas their guests at Willow Point Mr.\nFerguson's cousins, Mr. and Mrs.\nPercy McArthur at Los Angeles,\nCalif., who have returned home via\nBanff and Lake Louise where they\nwill  visit en route,\nMr. and Mrs. B. Lowery, 815 Josephine street, have inken up residence in their recently purchased\nhome, 411  Nelson avenue, Fairview.\nMrs. A. Deildal and sons Bobby\nand Bud left yesterday for their\nhome in Sydney, V. I. They were\naccompanied oa the trip by Mrs.\nDeildal'a two brothers, Arthur and\nBobby Carlson, who are on a couple\nof weeks' motor trip.\nMiss Helen DeRousle of Edmonton\nwho has been a guest at the willow\nPoint home of Mr. and Mrs, A.\nClyde Emory, has returned to her\nhomc.\nJohn Daly of ymir paid a visit to\ntown Saturday.\nAmong visitors to thc city Saturday was Mrs, Turner Lee of Bonnlngton.\nW. R. Grutobe, manager of the\nImperial Bank of Canada, hat. re\nturned from his vacation spent at\nMirror lake.\nMra. J- L. Purdy of South Slocau\nwas a recent visitor to the city.\nMrs. Price and children, who have\nbeen on a visit to the prairie, have\nreturned.\nMiss Helen Qulnn of Harrop was a\nSaturday   visitor  In  Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Llplnskl entertained\nrecently at h musical house warming in their new home on Hendryx\nSCORES 69\u00ab  TO BETTER WOMEN'S   RECORD\nMrs. Nat B. Lay of MapleWood, Mo., broke the world's record for\nwomen In the open archery tournament at the Mapiewood Archery club,\nSt. Louis, Mo., when she turned In a score of 696. The. former record of\n645 was held by Mis. Smith of New York since\" 1928. Mrs.'Lay also holds\ntbe   Mississippi   valley   women's  archery   championship.\nRefrigerators\nPreserve and save food.   Perfect refrigeration safe-guards your health.\nLeonard Electric Refrigerators give safe\neconomical and continuous service at small cost.\nS. M. P. Steel Ice Refrigerators, sturdy, perfectly insulated, durable.  Look over our models.\nHlpperson Hardware\nCompany, Limited\n\"Look for the Red Hardware Store\"\nPhone 497 Box 111\n\"It's Safe Because It's Pasteurized''\nIs Your Child\nWell Equipped?\nModern life demands\nmore than average\nalertness and vitality\nfor success. Sec that\nvour boy or girl is well\nt equipped with a sound\nI constitution. A quart of milk a day is recommended\nI by eminent doctors and dietitians for every child.\nTo be sure that your child gets the purest, and\nI most healthful milk, give him Curlew, because Curlew\nI Milk is Pasteurized.\nA phone call to 200 will start daily delivery ira-\n[ mediately.\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nPALM   DAIRIES,   Ltd.\nICE   CREAM BUTTER MILK\nALL   PERFECTLY   PASTEURIZED   PRODUCTS\nand Observatory streets. ' Dancing\nand cards were enjoyed by a number of their friends. Solos were\nplayci by Ernest Llpinkhi and\nBen and Monteleonc. Those present\nwere Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Magllo.\nMrs. Montelcone. Bcnardo Monte-\nleoue, Mr. aud Mrs. Bachman, Mrs.\nMne, Mr. and Mrs. W. Hulne and\nson, Mr. and Mai, A. Tonlan, Mlaa\nLillian Ionian, Mr. and Mrs. O.\nCbaluk, Mr. and Mrs. Maska, Mr.\nDereter, Mr. Godwin.\nMrs. James Johnstone of the\nnorth shore and her daughter, Miss\nAlia Johnstone, have returned from\na short visit to Spokane.\nMrs. L. O. Appleton of Sunshine\nBay, accompanied by l.cr mother\nand sister, who are vlMtlng there\n\u2022_rom Winnipeg spent Saturday shopping In the city.\nPaul Lincoln returned Sunday\nnight from a trip to the coast\ncities.\nWalter Crowther of the C. P. R..\nwho has been in Trail for thc past\nwhile, has returned.\n\u00bb   *   *\nWilliam Lybarger of Vancouver,\naccompanied by his mother spent\nthc  week end in Nrls_*n.\nFred Leno has left by motov for\nthc   Okanagan   district.\nMrs. A. O. Oeltaas, Victoria street,\nhas returned from Spokane where\nshe has beeu visiting *t the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Kirby Orenfell.\nShe was accompanied home by Mr.\nOelinas, Miss Prlcilla and Elmer\nGelinas, who motoroj down for her\nyesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Manson, Houston\nstreet, had ai their week end guests\nMr. Manson's niece, Mrs. E. H\nHowcll of New York city. Mrs. Howell was accompe nlcd on the trip\nby Miss M. A. Campbell, Miss M\nFeardude and Miss A Rowe, all of\nNew York. They havc motored\nthrough Yellow Stone park and are\nnow en route to Portland, New\nOrleans  and  Arkanwih.\nMrs. Margaret Madden motored lo\nKaslo yesterday where she attended\nthc   Women's  institute   picnic.\nGeorge Dozenbenrer or Harrop and\nhis son, N. Dozcnbergcr spent Saturday shopping in  town.\nMrs. Fred W. Conway. Kerr apartments, left Saturday via thc Great\nNorthern for Portland. Ore., where\nshe will hpend a holiday,\nW*t Jessie McDonald left Saturday morning for Missoula after\nspending the past (aw weeks In tiie\ncity the guest of her parents, Mr.\nand Mr.s. J. A, McDonald, Mill\nstreet.\nMiss Frances Chapman. Baker\nstreet, has returned from three\nweekh' visit ia Vancouver, Victoria\nCourtenay and Rcvelstoke. While in\nCourtenay Mlaa Chapman was the\nfueet of Mr. and Mrs. Irv, R. Cuth-\nbeM, nnd In RevC-stOke (.he vlftttd\nMr.   iind   Mr*,   Jimes   Jamison.\nArthur Boyce has returned from a\nvacation  spent   at   tie   coast.\nMr. and Mrs. A. H. Green, Willow\nPoint, have as their guc*L their\ndaughter. Miss Kathleen Green, who\nh in training at thc Vancouver\nGeneral! hospital and la home on\nfurlough,\nMlsa Margaret SmiW.e spent Ih.\nweek end _. the home of her father\nin  Procter.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr-. W. J. Grove, Terrace apart\nments, has had as her guest Miss\nRachael McMillan of Saguinah\nMichigan, who left Saturday morning to visit in Sllverton at the\nhomc  of  Mr.   and   Mrs.  Webb.\nDonald Bunyan. Carbonate street,\nreturned Saturday from Thrums\nwhere he has been spending tha pas'\nweek with David Scott at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Chalmeis.\nRev. Clyde Harvie ot Procter paid\na visit to  town Saturday,\nMr*. J. Polosky of South Slocan\nspent Saturday shopping Io. the city,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs.   Arthur   Scott   Lauder,   her\ntwo daughter*, of Queens Bay, paid\na visit, to Nelson Saturday.\nMlta Christina Davidson spent the\nweek end at South Slocan with Mlas\nMyra Humphry\ntee\nHugh UiddJeton of Cedar point\nwaa among those shopping ia town\nSaturday.\nMra. K. Popoff of Slocan City waa\na Nelson -visitors Saturday.\nwa. recently the guest of honor at a\nbridge party giVen by her sister,\nMrs. Roy L. Hood. Fourth street,\nFairview. Miss Margaret McLc-ul won\nthe honors or the game and the Invited guests included Mrs. H. B\nPeebles, Miss Helen Humphy, Miss\nMargaret McLeod, Mrs. j. D. Notman, Miss Louise Peebles, Mrs.\nOeorge M, Benwel. Miss Eileen Dili\nMrs. Harold II, Hinitt. Mrs. W. t\nCorry of Victoria, Miss Carmen Horton. Mrs. H. N. MacLean. Miss Ruth\nColes, Mrs. Douglas Cummins, Mrs\nJ. A. C. Laughton, Mr3. T. Clark,\nMrs. Louis Choquette und Miss\nEvelyn Wallace.\nMr. and Mr?. A. Willey of Mon-\nnington and their dn tighter and son\nRuth and Allen  motored  to Nnkuep\nyesterday.\nMr. Johns of the customs M Nel\nway and \"his nephew paid a visit\nto town Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. Earl E. Swanson and\ntheir little daughter Beverley Ann\nhave left for Vancouver where they\nwill  visit Mr. Swanson's parents.\nMr. and Mrs, Mike O'Donnell, of\nNcnd cl'Oreille t-pent thc week end\nin the city.\nMis* Gladys Gammon returned\nSaturday night from her vacation\nspent tn Revclstoke with her parents, Mr. \u00bbnd Mrs. E. Ga_nmon a\nformer Nclsonitc.\nMrs. Archie Murray or Grand\nForks is spending a few-days lu tuc\ncity.\nMrs. Harold Lakes and Mrs. W. J.\nGro\\e left by motor Saturday morning for a few days in Spokane.\nMrs. James B. Curran and daughters Betty and Kathleen returned\nSaturday from Grand Forks where\nthey have been visiting Mrs. Cur-\nran's parents, Mr. and ott*. F. D.\nGordon.\nMrs. H. H. Currie and ion Ian.\nwho have been apeuding several\nweek., in Victoria with Mi_. Curries\nparents, Mr, and Mrs. rhomas McDonald, formerly r,\" Helton, returned\nhjnc  Saturday   merit.\nItlta Lillian   Dunn of   Grand   Forks\nvisited   frlenda   in   to^u  oar   the\nweek end.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTHAIL, B. C, August 2 \u2014 A quiet\nwedding, highly interesting in Trail,\nwas solemnized at the Blessed Sacrament church of Hollywood, Cal.,\nwhen Marcella. third daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. M. Mussatto of Hollywood, was united in marriage to\nAntonio Lauriente of Trail, eldest\nion of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lauriente of Trail. Rev. R. T. D. Bpenr-\nman performed the ceremony. The\nwedding was a complete surprise\nhere. The bride was attended by\nher sister, Angeline Mussatto Htr\nbrother Michael supported the\ngroom. Mrs Lauriente had resided\nin Hollywood for 10 years. Previous\nto that she resided with her parents at Phoenix and Kelowna A\nbrother was well known as a hockey\nplayer. Mr. and Mrs. Lauriente\nhave taken up residence at Victoria street and Pine avenue.\n* \u2022 *\nMr, and Mrs. Reginald Hendry\narc  spending  a   vacation  at  Robson\n\u25a0 as   guests   of   Mr.   and   Mrs.   D.   W.\niForteath at their summer home.\nMr. and Mrs C. J. Thorndate and\nfamily are holidaying at Kootenny\nBay.\nMr. and Mis. O. H. Nelson anJ\nchildren leave today for their aummer home at Nelson, Mr. Nelson\nwill spend two weeks on vacation\nand Mrs. Nelson and family will\nremain  a month.\nMrs. G. A Burton and daughter\nMargaret returned to Robson after\na few days at their homc here.\nMr. and Mrs. A. H. Hopkins aud\nfamily arc on holiday at South\nSlocan.\nMrs. Charles A .Newman and her\ndaughters Grace and Geraldlne left\nthis morning for a vacation In\nNelson.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. J.'Beech, who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. S. G. Hill,\nBay avenue, for the past week, left\nyesterday for her home In Cranbrook. She was accompanied by her\nlittle grand-daughter Shirley, who\nwill spend a month as her guest.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Mattle Young and her .later Tina left Saturday morning by\ncar on a holiday trip to Vancouver\nand  other  points  at  thc  coast.\n\u2022 *   \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. A. L. McCallum\nand daughter Jean are on vacation\nat Balfour.\nMiss Mabel V, Furnsworth, Miss\nGrace B, Kendall, Miss Ella Van\nBrunt, Miss Marjorle Willhorte and\nMiss Edith Lowry of Spokane left\nSaturday for their home after\nfew days lu Trait,\nMiss Mary Duncan left Saturday\nevening for a vacation at the coast.\nWilliam   Huddart  of  Grand   Forts\nhas  been  spending  a   few  days\nTrail  last week.\nMrs. R. C. Crowe and family \\y.ve,\nleft for their summer home ti\nKootenay lake\nJames _-Yrri_, accompanied  by Mrs\nJ.  T.  Woods,  M is_  Anne  McLeod  of\nWinnipeg,    Harris    and    N.    Wood:\nmotored   to  Nelson  Hnd   Bonmngion\nThursday.\nMrs. Odic and _on. Fred Odle. returned Saturday from a holiday\ntrip to Spokane, Seattle and other\npoints at the coast.\nMr. a nd Mra. W. H. Taylor a nd\nMr. and Mrs. B. 0. King arc camping at Tatty*,\n\u00bb   *   *\nII,   W.   llankln   is   spending   t\nweek-end   at   Willow   Point,   where\nMi;*. Hankie is aummerlng,\nP.   J.   Hughe*   left   Thursday   for\nhis homc  in  Fernle, where he  '\nspend   two   weeks   on   holiday.\nHarry Trehbct of Trail\nweek   end   In   the   city.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   W,   H. Horton   Iff,\nlatt   evening   to   spend two   Malta\nthe j vacation   at   Vancouver and    other\n'coast cities.\nWilliam    McDonald\nwho   Is   en   route   tc\nmotor.   It   spending\ntown.\nof   w'rinbrook,\nthc   coast   by\n.   lew  dayu   In\nMiss Helen Murphy, Kerr .'-part-\nmen ts. had at her week end, nuc_t,\nICJaa  Ethel Rcichii  or Trail.\nMiss Marguerite (Mike) Adat.is ol\nVancouver, formerly of thc Nelson\nhigh school teaching stair, la expected in Nelson tonight to be the\nguest, nf Mr. and lln, Jame:, Mt>\nT ray or.\ntea *\nL D Baton, I L Wheeler. D\nP. Rayet, E. H. Leonard and J. E.\nButler of Waisburg, Wash., and\n_1m W. G. Shiihan oi\" Walla YValU.\nnirive-i in Nelson laat e ven Ing and\nleave this morning for the Cork\nProvince mine near Kw'o. where\nthey expect to dn some fishing,\n\u2022   *   \u00bb\nEvans WttaOfli barrjeter, \\ <\u25a0\u25a0 ]\u25a0\nror, bat returned to the coaat city\n-ftc:' spending two weeks' vacation\nc-, the homc of hu parents, Mr.\naiid Mra. w. F, Wasson.\nR, C. Crowe ano family ot Trail\nnr* holiday ing up tlic W\u00ab6 Arm\nnt   Four  Mile.\nMiss Peggy WMtchou-C. Jack Toul-\nson. Leslie Fielding and Arthur\nLumber t, were tbt guests of the\nMisses Nancy, Kathleen and Jane\nNisbet at their summer homc\nMimi Lake on Sunday.\nMiss Manr Matthews nnd MlM\nAsnta Hay returned Saturday [nHii\n\u25a0a   holiday   In   Spokane.\n\u2022    t    w\n.lames    Ferris    and     Harry    Fern\nleft   by   motor   Saturday   via   8po\nkanc  for  thc coast  for  a  vacation.\nMiss Vlda Swanson end William\nSwanson, who have been holidaying\nfor two weeks at the coast, return\"d\nSaturday, accompanied by Mlaa Rib\nbard of VtOCOUVtr, who Will be tin\ngUt i ol Mr and Mra. E. Swanson\nfor a  vacation\nMr. and Mn Waiter Brady will\nppend tiic next two weeks at Willow\ni Point.\nr Ptrtrldffl returned Friday afternoon   from  Spokane.\nmmmmmKmmMmmmammMMmtuMmnWu^^\nC^Mea^hers^D\n607 Baker St. Phone 200\nStore News\nWARM WEATHF.R WEARABLES AT NEV\/ LOWER PRICES\nEVERY ARTICLE IS THIS SEASON'S BUYING AND THE BEST\nOF THE LATER STYLES.\nSLEEVELESS\nSUMMER DRESSES\nAnother reduction on the balance\nof these dresses... They arc all new\narrivals. Made of Canton Crepe,\nRajah or Printed Pongee. White,\nKggshcll and Pastel shades. Sizes\n13, 15, 16 and 20.\nALL ONE PPvlCE $6.95 EACH.\n'MISS LOS ANGELES'\nDRESSES\nSmart Tub Frocks for street wear\nor beach wear. These come in printed liroadcloth or Batiste in a range\nof styles.   Sizes 11 to  11.\n?2.95 EACH.\nPURE SILK HOSE\nHoleproof Hose of pure thread\nsilk. Full fashioned Chiffon or senii-\nservice weight. All the best colors.\nSizes 8 1-2 to 10.\niHi.oo thl: pah:.\nWOMEN'S JACKETS\nDRESSES\nLower prices on the balance of our\njacket frocks, These arc extremely\nsmart and well tailored. They come\nin sleeveless styles with matching or\ncontrasting long sleeve jackets. Materials arc Canton Crepe, Flat Crepe\nor Silk Pique. White and pastel\nshades. Sizes it to 20.\nALL ONE PRICE TODAY\u2014\n?14.fKi EACH.\nPRINTED CHIFFON\nDRESSES\nA few only Chi Tion dresses left\nand these go at worthwhile reductions. These are of the smartest\nstylos shown fchia season. Made of\nlhe better grade Chiffon and fit perfectly. A range of atyta and patterns. Sizes {\u25a0\u2022 to '\u25a0>}>. Regular price\n$29.50, SALE PRICE 923.50 EACH\nRegular price $80.50, SALE PRICE\nJS-J1.50 EACH.\nRegular price $49.50, SALE PRICE\n#39.50 EACH.\nfagfflgffi^TgM\u00bb*^^      aai\u00ab__?aitW\u00ab\nhave   vlt-ited   at   Harrop,   balmo   and\nYmir.\nMr. and Mrs. C. F. Brown ot.\nFruitvale were visitors In the \u00abily\nFriday aUcrnoon.\n\u2022        *        a)\nMrs. W. Barclny ol Fruitviite was\na City  vlMtor Friday.\nMr. and Mr?. O. J, WUnon ind\nson left Saturday lo holiday ri\nNakusp.\nMrs.  H   Halt,  tnd  bm  Kcnnetn\nof   Fmitvalp   vert   \\ifltlor_.   In   Trill\nyesterday.\nMrs. Thomas Davles of Fwltvalfl\nwo% tn the city Friday  vlalttng Mr\nDavir;,,   who   is   a   patient   :it   Trail*\nTadanac  hospital.\nMrs. Percy Palmer and daughter\nJune of Rowland wOTt visitors .n\nTrail   Wednesday.\nMr:.. Alfred Jobtiaon Itfl Ftiaoi*\ntor Vancouver to Hilt h\u00ab daughter,\nMlti  Erii-a  Dorii  tfohnaon,\nCruickshank Hack\nFrom Motor Trip\nto (he Capital\n[napector ^'n^-h^.\u00bb Crulck hank.com-\nmanding \"H\" division ol the nro-\nvinnai -vMirr, returned to Nelson\nBunchy evening rrom \u25a0 l i d<\nnotoi :rip io western polnl:. of hi*\ndivision nnd to Vencouvw\ntorta.\nMr.    arrl    Mrs.\nKellofg.    Idaho.\nTrull   Prldiy,\nR    r.   Rand)   of\nwera   vial ton   in\nMi', and Mra, W. ,' (tutled|_ nd\nWat Otltrudi Rutledge havi ,-*-\nturned irom a visit to retatlva.\nat,   Moyle   and   Cranbrook.\nu        \u2022        *\nLeonard Batley i.s st thc home of\nhis parents. Mr. and Mr_i. J. BaL-\nley,   of  South   Slocan.\nrBAILITGH    \\RK   TO\nUTtMi   COMBS TION\nTRAIL.    B,    C.    AufiUbl.    t*~~W,    A\nPortecnia.   praeJAe&t   at   Trail   Rotary\n' omptOlad   by   Mrs.   Porte-\nuu*-*.    will     letVfl    tins    evening    for\nBell um ha in.    when    he    will    attend\nHi*- anaual conference or presidents\n.md secretarial of the rotary clubs\nnf CHttrtet No- 1. notary International.\nVisit the famous\nCanadian Pacific\nmountain resorts\nBanff and\nLake Louise\nMr.  and   Mrs.  G.  \\V.   Wadds   haie\n|! been spending a   few (Ufa  ss  fuatti\nnr   Mrs.  Charles   Brett  at  her  summer  home at Kasio.\nMiss\nhome\nJessie    McDonald,\njn    furlough    from\nwho    Is\nMisoula,\nMcdonald inquest\nagain postponed;\nwire for report\nOwing to (he non-arrival cf unv\nicport from Victoria on the anal \u2022\nyels ordered, of the stomach of\nAlex McDonald, the Piapot, Si&fc..\nresident who died In h!s room at\ntbe Queen's bottl 10 days ago, the\nInquest into McDonald's de.'h,\nwhich was to have be*n resumed\nSaturday alternoon. was further adjourned,   to   Tuesda y\nA wlr\u00bb has been eent to Victoria\nasking what has happened la connection  with   the  order.\nTORONTO, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014After a\nweek (-pent lo discussing the policy\nof their organization and the problems of modern youth, delegates to\nthe world conference c-f Young\nMen's Christian associations adjourned tonight to meet again in Cl.ve-\nland  on Tuesday,  August 4.\nMlaa Doris Johnson  left Thuraday\nlor a vacation at the home of  her\ntistcr.  Mrs. E. Oray,  at,  Princeton.\nMr. and Mrs. P. R. McDonald ;->;;\nlast evening for points on Kootenay\nlakr. where they will tpend a few\nweeks  on   vacation.\n\u00a5 \u2022 \u00ab '\nW   and Mr*. A. C. Archibald and\nfamily and Mr snd Ma   W   K, Fox\nand family are hol'daving at Frultvale.\nH, Shepherd has returned from\nthe cossf, where he has be-In on\nvacation.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HODSES AND LOTS ni-\naurance. Notary. J. D. Ander-\naon.  TtfU. (63o7l\nBLACKSMITH SHOP\nCONSUMED BY FIREI\nROSSLAND, B C . Aur 3 ' r^\nbreaking out about Saturday night\ndestroyed the blacksmith shop on\nthe historic Stlc_e mine property ut\nthc foot of Spokane htreet. The\nhead works of the mine were only\nMVed with Brest, difficulty. Two\n.streams of water, some 1200 tec of\nhow being brought into use, HfN\nplayed   effectively   on   the   fire.\nEstimated lots was tentatively\nplaced at *_0<).\nlhe cause of the fire Is not\nknown. Kor a number of years the\nStlcze mine has not been used. It\nwas being occupied by 11. Von\nAlt man   as   a   residence.\nMiss   K    HlU\nNelson yesterday.\nwaa   a   visitor   In\nMr. and Mrs. James Thompson\nhave had le their guests their \"f\u00bbn-\nIn-lAw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. McCormick and family of Van-\nt.uiui    While   in   thla   district   'iity\nPlumbing - Heating\nPhone 169 for prompt and experienced work on jour piunin-\nlng    end    healing    requirement.,\nNELSON    PLIMBINO\n\u00ab   HEATING    CO.\nCEO. BRANT\nSummer Tourist Fares\nEffective May 22 to Oct. 15\nReturn Limit. October 31, 1931\nGO (ut *\u25a0* the world's \u00abreair*t travel\n\u25a0TtiCBl . \u25a0 - special summer tires (a all\npoint* ii? (ainiiin nn*t tlie 1 n.led States.\nA A\u00bby light ride) thinugh tin* m underfill\n-Catifidiaii Rockies, with atnp-nvere at nil\npoints of intereat. I'erfert service throughout.\nHound Trip lore*\nMa-alt-sal -\nTorontu- -\nNa-W ^ tirk -\n'.IHr__n. .\nI Mr.,it - -\nRnolon - -\nSi. John   -\n-ami. in\n,     III. 'HI\nw..ie\n109.12\nHiitif.i - - - 9UT.-M\nMliiit*4p_>lu        75.60\nst. Pad  - -    7S.M\nsi. UnU - -    avse\nPtlfl_rirl|.h,\u00ab\nat-hiujlon\nOmaha - - -\nK.V8S\n81.SS\nFares to othur points un request\nSleeping, eompari ment, and eomparttuent-\nobservation ears of the most modern and\nluxurious typei through service; dining car\nproviding thc cuisine for which the Canadian\nPacific is famous.\nFull itinerary tsrrai ltd anal iffvjtratarf Utaratw*\nsupplied  by  any   Cmnnd,o-.   Pmeifle   Aftint.\nor  writs J.  S.  (ARIL--.   DM.  l'augr.   Ajt.\nNelson. B. C.\nCanadian Pacific\nImnttHinti   VncMe Kit\nnretu TVsra.I*ri' t h\u00abt.iiaa.\n __ THt  Ml.SON  DAILY  N-WB, J.ELSON,\nSite JMwm laUtj News\nPublished every inotning except bunduy by News Publishing GPtt*\npuny, Limited. Nelson, B. C.\nMember ol Canadian Press leased wire news service\nAdvcittb.n^   rule  cards  And   A.   B.   C.   Matemcnts  of  circulstlon\nmulled on  requeu, or  may  be seen  at  tlie  office  or sny  advertising\nagemy recognized by tho Canadian Daily Newi-pipcrs' Association.\nBy   mail\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nPayable in advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ol Circulation.\nMONDAY,  AUGUST  a,  1031\nMr. Lloyd George\nIt is evident from the dispatches from London that\nthe operation which has been performed on Mr. Llovd\nGeorge was much more serious than the public realized when the first announcement of his indisposition was made. It will lie learned with gratification,\nhowever, that at this writing thc distinguished statesman seems to be holding his own and maintaining his\nstrength. But it is obvious he is not yet out of danger.\nA delicate operation at 68 years of age naturally is a\nsevere shock to thc system, says thc Victoria Times.\nThere is no indication, incidentally, that the reduction of the British Liberal party to a condition of\ncomparative omnipotence in parliament has had anv\neffect upon either the health or spirits of Mr. Llovd\nGeorge. On the contrary, he often has seemed in hia\nelement as the leader of the party in possession of thc\nbalance of power, able to keep the MacDonald government in office, or bring about its downfall, and about\nwhich the principal opposition led by Mr. Baldwin can\ndo very little until more can be persuaded to leave\nthe official Liberal camp and cross the floor to the\nConservative benches. So far there does not seem evident any burning desire on the part of the majority\nof Mr. Lloyd George's followers to transfer their\nallegiance to Sir John Simon.\nThe illness of the war-time premier recalls a number\nof outstanding incidents in his colorful career in public\nlife. Many will remember how at the end of the last\ncentury he denounced the Salisbury government's Boer\nwar policy, took the public platform, and was roundly\nabused by hostile audiences, only to become the inspiration of the nation in thc dark hours of the Great\nwar. For it will ever be said of Mr. Lloyd George that\nwhen he became minister of munitions in 1915, he\nrealized that only by heroic efforts could the wheels\nof production be speeded up sufficiently to provide the\nsupport for the men in the trenches of which they\nwere so sorely in need. So he set about his task with\nall the vigor that had characterized his somewhat\nstormy political life to that date. He took all the advice he could get, conscripted all the best brains in the\ncountry, and put the whole of his dynamic personality\nbehind them. Later, to the office of prime minister he\ntook this reputation for getting things done, and thereafter, until the end of the war, it was he who very\nlargely kept up the spirit of the nation, while his\nbreezy optimism, even when the clouds were darkest.\nwas similarly a source of comfort to the people of all\nthe allied countries. No matter, therefore, how his\npolitical fortunes may have wavered in the meantime,\nnothing can detract from the great value of the l-rv.ee\nhe rendered to the Empire.\nIt will be remembered, too, that many prominent\nBritons who rallied to the support of Mr. Lloyd George\nin his coalition government only a few years before\nhad regarded him as their arch-enemy. Had not his\nbudget of 1909, rejected by the house of lords, produced the Parliament act which abolished the veto of\nthe upper chamber in respect of financial measures''\nNor was it supposed that any of these men\u2014many of\nwhom were landed proprietors of great wealth\u2014had\nforgotten the man who had declared war on the \"idle\nrich\" in bis famous Limehouse speech. But whatever\ntheir thoughts may have been, they recognized in the\n\"little Welshman\" the man to meet a crisis\u2014and he\nmet it successfully.\nOne of the painful incidents of the post-war period\nunquestionably was the widening of the breach between\nhimself and Mr. Asquith, first caused when Mr. Lloyd\nGeorge became prime minister and accentuated by\nwhat many Liberals declared was his insistence on\nretaining a coalition government so long after the war,\nand after the special need for a political truce had\ndisappeared. There followed the famous Carlton club\nmeeting, which restored party lines and left Mr. Lloyd\nGeorge and Mr. Asquith leading two Liberal wings.\nalmost as bitterly opposed to one another as wen:\nLiberals and Conservatives before the war. The healing process was not very successful. Although Mr.\nAsquith and Mr. Lloyd George sat side by side when\nthe first Labor government took office,' the former\nnominally the leader of the reunited party, some desertions bad taken place\u2014and political memories, as\nis well known, are notoriously long where feuds are\nconcerned.\nNow. as be lies on his bed of sickness, Mr. Lloyd\nGeorge is forced to contemplate the possible effect\nupon the future of the party he leads the defection\nof Sir John Simon and half a dozen others may have.\nEven though he may regain sufficient strength to lead\nwhat is left of his wing into another election battle,\n(here is little prospect of his assuming the position\nwhich bc filled with such conspicuous ability when\nhis country most needed unafraid leadership, In memory of those years, however, if for no other reason,\nhis sppedy recovery will be hoped for by his political\nfriends and opponents alike\u2014and by thc world generally.\nFlo Ziegfeld has cooled his New York theater to an\nexceptionally low summer temperature so that his sev-\nentv beauties \"will look fresh and gorgeous as when\nthey were plucked.\" Anyway, that is an improvement\nover the \"hot mamma\" idea.\nA California rancher grafted an almond tree with\npeach, apricot, nectarine, prune and plump slips, and\ntoday all of them are bearing. That is one kind of\ngrafting that doing the southern U. S. State no harm.\nEven though the punishment may seem excessive, it\ncan't be denied that the appropriate place for the road\nhog is the pen.\nDivorce of Zbyszko, former wrestling champion,\nsuggests there was too much tabasco in the Zbyszko\nmenage. ^^^^^^^^^\u2014^\u2014^\u2014*,mmMM*,mmmmm**m*tt'**\nFeen and Heard\nin NELSON\n(By   J    B.   C.1\nAutomobiles aiwi automobile drivers are common ta^tHs -for conver-\nntlen :!ic.--c days We hear that such I\nand such a car ir- the bunk. It nay\nbe a gas eaten it may be an oili\nburner; it m*y not pull, un t it ony|\nnot do hundreds of (rings tl-aL automobiles are t-uppoeed to do. Another fcftke ot car Is lulled M the!\nbest :n ihr land. SUe has pep and |\nclimbinu; power and in light on gasoline, etc. Automobile.') are always I\nRood conver&Htion among people |\nwho own or drive autos.\nIn npe<i..iiiK vt -uitomobilc drivers!\ncue must bc careful, There in c\\*|\npert, driver*, driver.-, who use every]\nrare and ur <! om In a mlxu:>.\nThtrc arc clu* \u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0 who drive eg\n'arcfully -'.aya  bumping j\ninio .-uinethiiig or somebody. Theiel\nare drivers who care not for then\nown auto, or for those of others on\nt .e road. There ure road hog.*;\nspeeders; law breake's; nnd hundreds\nor other kinds of drivers. Wc hue\n.teen them all and know thi\nWell, I have a |tt.*3 yarn about an\nhuW driver and about perfect con-1\nuol of an automobile.\nOn Friday afternoon while walking\nup Ward street from thc post office\nI pa.shed the alley between the post\noffice and the Medlnd Art* building.]\nI wbs wearing s itlfl straw hat, A\ngust of wind came statsf, ind before\nI could say Jack Robinson my boater\nwas a sailing acres! thc mad. it\nrolled on right Inta thc path ot\na passing car. A big car at that. 1\nsaid \"goodbye hat\". The h\u00bbv sped\nen. The .iuto sped on. The hat\nwent under the car tn direct path\nof the rear wheel. The car stopped.\nThe hat wis salt, The rear wheel\nwaa within a half Inch of running\nover H. The hat free, it moved under\nthe car and stopped under the other.\nrear \u25a0wheel. The car remained motionless. T walked over, retrieved \\\nsaid lid. thanked Dr. D. w. laaeKey\nfor his excellent driving ability,;\nconned the lid and walked up the!\nstreet amid the hoots and laughs '\u2022\not numerous people who hart seen!\nthe incident. But, at. that had I \\m\\\\\nthe hat I would not have been out)\nmuch, it was a bat that someone\nleft In a restaurant lor me after\ndeparting with mine.\n*   *   *\nTwo spinsters were disc us.*-ins; men\n\"Which would you desire most In\nyour husband, brgtus, wealth M\nappearance?\" asked one.\n\"Appearance,\" .-napped th'1 Ol I I\n\"and the sooner the better\"\nWHa4T\"DeTYOU\nTHINK?\nWould Paint Boat\n\u2014  MONDAY   MOHMNO.  Al'OtST   3.  IM*!\"\nAuction and Contract\n'   Bridge\nBy   Ilia   Horld'a   UadllK   Authorllr,\nMil Ids c uo__\nA HARD GAMP TO WIN\nSRI\nf 10-4-3-2\n\u2666J-10-9\n\u2666Q-J-10-7\n7PT\n\u2666 1-7+3\n\u26666-4-2\nisw\nt \u2014 SUWH\n'i\nAA-K-8\nH-aol\nTHAT BODY OP YOURS\nBy   JAMES   W.   BARTON\nTHE FAMILY DOCTOR\nCONTRACT BRIDGE\nBy MILTON C. WORK\n\"Official\" Expert Explains Stand\nOn Points in Bidding Controversy\nM>\\ Work Discusses Proposition Thai No Trump Nrrcr\nShould Br Hid Originally With a Hand Thnt Contains\nn Suit-Bid \u2014 Citfi> Specific Example\nWith the above hand the auction\nbridge bidding would be: South one\nspade followed by three passes. The\ncan tract bidding would be: South\nthree upadee, north four spades.\nTlie plsy at both games would be\nthe same. In duplicate game only\nthree out of 17 tables played the\nhand correctly.\nThe incorrect play of the declarer\nwas to win west's Initial club lead\nand then lead a trump. West won\nand led a second club which south\nwon and exhausted tho adverse\ntrumps. Played in that way the declarer lost one club, one diamond,\none heart and one trump, nnd con-\nfluently failed to go game.\nTHK  (ORRECT  H.AY\nThe declarers who played thc hand\norrectly saw. after winning the first\ndub trick, that game can be m*de\nonly by finding the king of hearts In\nthe east hand and leading a small\nheart from dummy while still having\na trump entry ln that hand, Conse\nfluently a small trump was led lo\ntrick 2 which was won ln dummy,\nand then a small heart led from\ndummy. East captured tbat trick\nwith the king and led a second club\nwhich south won and led lhe queen\nof hearts. After that south led a\nsecond trump, west took the trick\nand of course cashed his good club;\nbut dummy still had a trump entry\nio get in and cash his ace of hearts\non which south discarded his losing\ndiamond. In that, way only three\ntricks were last and game was won.\nm_____________________________mmi   ARTICLK     ____________________________________\nOn Monday and Tuesday of thlH.,lIlu\u00abtratlons sre imaginary\nind   are\nHouses in Nelson\nTidy Up Waterfront\nTo the Editor of The Nelson Dally\nNewa:\nSir; Permit me to make a suggestion  through  your  valued  columns.\nWhen approaching the waterfront,\nand looking at the ttflto of dilapidated looking shacks which comprise the boat houses of the boat\nloving peoplr of MtlMa, and the\nmuch ndvertiso.i Kootenay Launch\nclub, the memory flashed across\nmy mind, of other launch clubs, of\nother beautiful, and picturesque\nwaterfronts, in other parti of the\nworld. I\nWe could liave the sine here,\nwhat more beautiful scenery than\nour river  and  our  mountains.\nIf a boat owner loves his bout, h-\nmost of them do. why not give her\ndecent looking berth, it every\nboathouse owner would give his boat-\nhouse a coat of paint, we would have\na wonderful looking watcrtr tit.\nand when strangers come looking\nfor the Kootenay Launch elub, and\nRowing club, they would be thrilled,\nwith tho sight of a nlce bright;\ncollection of well kept boathouses\nInstead of the t-hock of tha present\nCondition,\nOne would imagine that there Is\nI good proposition fo;- three or four\nof    our    unemployed     enterprising\nyoung  fellows.\nWhy not go to the wh\nsnd get \u00bb, price on ouuidc paint lit\ndoes not have to be an MpftDalVfl\npaint land then find out the boat-\nhouse owner.-.' nanus d very eu]\nthing to rioi and then figure on\nthe job, the cost should not bc\nmore thn n any owner cf a boat-\nhouse, would be glad to pay, if [lie\nproposition wtta figure-.! QUt reason-\nably.\nOwner.-- oi boalhouses who refuted\nto do the pain tins thenuelv*_i oi\nhave it done reasonably, should be\nattended to hy the \"City Be.utKul\n\u2022Mnmittec* of the Nelson city council, or  thc powers that hfl\nThe city council, or Hie Launch\nclub could do a lot u they would\nonly tike the matter up, before\nAmericans come over to our regatta.\nTrusting I have not taken up\ntoo   much   of   your  valuable\nD     A     ACTON\nKelson, b   C , July 31\nweek ' explained the reasons whi'h\nmade thc creation of en official\nsystem of contract brUU_ btddini\nadvisable, md told my readers who\nthe frainera of that gyttem arc Today and during the Itet three days\nor the week i shall describe the\ntypes ol bidding which UM offlcUl\nsystem support* and  rejects.\nTlie three teatune of eorne popular\nsystems bo whim UM creators ol the\nofficial eyettno bavo s*eu fit to take\nexception arc; tl) tho propoeltlwn\nthat no trump never should bc bid\norlllnatiy with a hand thnt contains e hiiit bid: (2) the proposition\nthat three email cards ol the *uit\nihr partner ho* hid never w\u00abr*nl I\nraise ol that Wit; <3) the absence\nof un \"mirrniediatc\" two-hid. These\nthree propositions will bc considered\nIn order.\nrm; INITIAL Bt ll   BIO\nAll the members of the\ncouncil unhesitatingly concede the\ninnumerable advantages uf makln\u00ab\nan initial suit hid. cither major or\nminor, and either four-card oi longer,\nWith many typM of hands amply\nstrong enough to Justify a no trup p\nbid; but they have been unable to\nreconcile -with their ideas the doctrine that no irump should alweya\nbe ignored, tegWdMH Of the\nand distribution Of tho lnnd. If an\noriginal suit-bid  is h possibility.\nDistribution, preponderance of major strength, unstopped suits, etc.,\nOften make n sun-hid much sounder than ti no trump, but. unless Mm\n\"never\" m proposition <ii is modified the council cannot, accept It,\nWith BUch holding as the following\nn spade-nld unquestionably should\nbe made although thehand'cstrength\nwould   lustlfj   bidding   UQ trump.\nSpades\u2014A~K-J-x\nHfl ii*'* - A-Q-J\nDiamond*   A-J-x-x\nClubs*-*-*\num ii does not. follow that beosuse\nthe   suit-bid   should   have   the   pref-\ntrence in many cwen, it should _wn\nthe preference in all\nI   Take    the    following    contrasting\nexample:\nFow tan pronounce\npronounced on it.\n\"Beauharnois,\" but many have\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\n(from   'he  NetaM  Datli   Mlnei   '-i\nAngus, z. WOli\nSome    shareholders    oi\nchequer  Gold   Mining  company  are\nv-.'\u25a0\u00ab< .  . , iua become of the\ncompany,\n*   *   *\nftevers]  members of  the  R\nCricket cluh arrived u\\ the 11\nevening   for   matoh   with   the   Nelson\neleven  this afternoon,\nThe Nelson B?\u00bbt elub Will  \\m]d an\nother  re^attH, about  thfl  iir;  o[   (he\npresent  month.\nJohn 8, Ingram and William Mad-\ndough came in from Roasland yesterday and wm remain in ihe city\nfor a few daya\n|H4_\n?M\n\u2666 10-2-3\n+0-J-W\n\u00bb_Wl\n50um\n|\n\u2666\ne\nWW\n(-0-4.\nWM\nsomewhat, strongly drawn to show\nwhat might happen hy following an\ntron-clad rule pertaining to suit-bids\nand nn trumpers; but It is because\nof the possibility of surh hands that\nthe sdvteofj council has'determint-d\nto make the official system definite\nand vet avoid rules which might,\noperate unfortunately tn many cases.\nThe next proposition to which tne\nadvisory council object* is the provision that a partner's hiilt-bld never\nshould he raised unless the raising\nhand contain* *. high honor nnd '.wc\nother cards or the sua ur s toUl\nol four cards.\nSuppose south bids one spade,\nwest  two  hearts  \u25a0 nd   north  holds\nSpades -10-9-7\nHparts-6-5-3-_\nDiamonds\u2014A-K-1\nClubs-K-J-10\nOr course north is too strong to\npa^f=, be dare not bid two no trumns\nwith Hie adverse suit unstopped md\nhas no other suit he can asihe; so\nhe   must  sdv\u00ab.nce  his  partner's suit.\nLet ua look at a somewhat different esse, Buppoee .south to have\nbid either one or two spades, incl\nnorth   to  hold:\nSpades\u201410-9-8\nHearts- a-k-q\nDiamonds--7-6-4-3-2\nClubs\u2014*-.\nIf north is barred trom raising\nbecause he has not four spades, mid\ntherefore is obliged to bid no trump.\ni'ouUi ml\u00abht make a genui-bld ll\nno trump, and a name hand at\nspades might be played nt no trump\nith one suit unstopped. The combined hands might be:\nsim\n\u00bbA-K-Q\n\u2666 7-6-4-3-2\n\u2666 M\nI    \u00ab6*tH\n\u2666 A-K-7-5-4\n4__j\nAUNT MET\nWith the above hand south would\nhave   staph)   strength   u>   bM   i-'1\ntrump,   but   tbtS   band   ah.o   COntdlKB\na  btddsbla diamond  suit,    it  south\nwere  obliged   to  bid  one  diamond\nnorth   would   pass  and  south   would\nhave   the   pleasure   o*   plftgll\ndeclaration   '-,'   cm*   diamond,   eon)*\nblned hinds capable of producing s\nsure gi-me snd probably extra tricks.\nat no trump.\nTo Cirry   the   examination   Itirthcr,\nsuppose ine north and south binds\nto bc;\n018-6-5-1\nvK-7-2\n\u2666 10-4-2\n*0-8-5\n_      1\nj| Oaam   -1\n1   SOVty\nsa-q-j\nSMI\n\u2666 A-Q-5-3\n.    *A-J-9\n2\nYou are reading from time to\ntime that this is the age of specialists that the old family doctor is\npassing   away.\nNow there is no question but\nthat a specialist studying the one\nailment day after day, month after\nmonth, snd year after year, ls\ngoing to know a great deal more\nabout that ailment than the family physician. This must be admitted.\nBut did you ever stop to think\nthat knowing the ailment is not\nreally as important as knowing\nabout   the   patient.\nA farmer will tell you that the\nsou must be of a certain kind to\ngrow certain seeds properly. Similarly with these bodies of ours;\nthere Is a great difference between\nthe way one body handlo an ailment, than does the other.\nI have spoken before about two\nchums, sleeping n barracks in ad*\nJoining  beds  taken  down   with   in-\nII1M   COWUNI   IN   (ANADA\nIn comment on the finding of\nCommissioner Peter White, K. O..\nthat there exists in the motion\npicture industry in Canada a combine in restraint of trade, th\u00ab\u00bb managing director of Famous Players\nCanadian Corporation Limited, remarks that he does not see where\nhis company is injuring the public\nInterests The answer to that re-\nark li that 93 per cent of the stock\nof his company ts owned by a\nforeign corporation, which thus M-\nOUJte an exclusive an exclusive or\ndominant position ln practically\nevery town and city ot over 10,000\npopulation in Canada, and has in\nits power ihe dictation to \u2022 large\nextent of the films which Canadians\nare  allowed  to see.\nThat alone would be sufficient to\nput in question the situation as\nto film distribution ln thla country.\nBut. the commissioner goes further\nand definitely states that operations\nor the combine hare been detrimental to the public lor three reasons: The cfist has been enhanced;\nlarge sections of the public have\nbeen prevented seeing pictures whUe\nstill fairly new; Famous Players and\nits affiliations have been given an\nundue advantage over Its competitor\nexhibitors and over the public generally in Canada.\nIt is disturbing to discover that\nstock-pooling srrRngcment, of\nwhich the ostensible object was to\nIpad the public to believe that Famous Players was a Canadian controlled company, was in fact for\nsemiring in option on pictures produced by a United States corporation. Also one of thc Canadian trustees under this agreement ls 1. W.\nKlllam. under whose Mo.itienl proprietorship the Mail and Empire\nhas assumed a self complacent role\nas monitor to Toronto and custodian\nof lie civic virtues. Toronto Telegram.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From The NcImjii Dally News ol\nAugust 3, 1HM>\nW. A. Cameron, superintendent of\nthe Rambler-Csrtboo mine, and Mrs,\nCameron, arrived In thc city yesterday from New Denver.\nA proposal has been made to tbe\ncity fathers for the erection of a\ntemporary bandstand on Baker street\non the vacant she at thc corner of\nBaker nnd Stanley streets.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nJohn Forbes, an old time miner\nof the Big Bend country, arrived in\nthe city yesterday from his claim on\nCams creek, with a number of\nsamples of gold, copper, and silver\nores to be assayed. He Is Interested\nln thc old Waverly property.\ns   e   *\nMr, and Mrs. Neil S. Houston and\nfamily left yesterday for Princess\nCreek for a camping holiday with\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Fitch.\nfluenra   during   t he   1918  epidemic.\nlater, one cured of his Influence, an\nthe   other   passed   away.\nWhat   ts   my   point?\nft ls certainly Important to knoi-ti\nall about an ailment, to make ill\nthe laboratory testa and so forth!\nbut lt is at least equally important\nto know the patient, know his\nfamily, know thc stock from whtcij\nbe springs.\nA recent editorial calls attention\nto the old family doctor who says |\nWendell Holmes' story who says,\nknow the families that have a wa\nof living through everything, and\nknow tpe other who have the tries]\nor dying without any kind of reason\nfor it!\nThe family physician learns tl\nknow the Inborn tendencies of hif\npatients.\nA conscientious general practltlonj\ner will send one case to one\niollst, and another case to anothel\nspecialist, until some people get thf\nidea that all he does Is to dlstrl\nbute patients around to other doof\ntors because he does not know hu\"|\nto    treat    them    himself.\nAa a matter ot <fact he knows, ii\nfact has to know, what ls wron\nwith the patient in order to seni\nhim to the proper specialist to ge\nthe best possible treatment fo\nhis particular body, which body thi\ngeneral practitioner knows bette\nthan anyone else. The general pruc\ntltioner Is thus of more real valu<\nto thc community than the speciall\n1st.\nol n\nINSTITUTIONS    WILL\nDISAPPEAR\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From   The   Nelson   Dally   News   ol\nAugust 3. 1011)\nMrs. .1. B. Bremner end Joe Kellel,\nwho have been prospecting for the\npast month, havo struck upon a\npromising vein of galena snd brittle\nsilver ore. They sre developing this\nvein, which is in the Ymlr Mint\ngroup.\nThe financial meeting of the West\nKootenay district conference of the\nMethodist church meets ln Kaslo\ntoday. J. H. Wallace and M. ivetis\nrepresenting Trinity church of Nelson.\nA. Gordon French, while investigating m thc Granitc-poorman mine,\ndiscovered a platinum group of\nmetals   of   considerable   importance.\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Riley of Ymir\nsre   visiting   friends   here.\nA despatch from across the bott\ner announces thst this will be tl\nlaat    year   for    many    Chsuts,uqi |\ncompanies.   The decision ls not di\nto  the  prevailing  business  oepre*\ntion,  which  will pass, but  to coi\nditions   which   ire   permanent,\nreal  reason   for  the  gradual  dlsail\npears pee of this form of entertaUj\nment and instruction is that it j\nbeing   crowded   out   of  a  field\nwhich'it once reigned supreme,\npopularity   wis   based   on   the  fsJ\nthat It provided interesting prograi\nto people in small communities, r\"\nhad little other opportunity to hej\ncapable   speakers   and   artists.\nIn  these days of automobiles,\ntion pictures which can be preseil\ned   in   even   the   cmsllest   villi\nand the radio, there is not the n*\nfor    Imported    diversion.   Reeldel\neven In  isolated  hamlet* are tocf\nwell   provided   with   these   model\nfacilities,   and   the  old   Chautauof\ntent has  lost  much of its  alluj\nment.   It will disappear in the i\nof   modern   progress.\u2014The   Calgi\nHerald.\ni,uec'i Margaret'* finhooi\nDIM AN,  B. U,\nCountry Boarding bthool for Girls,\nkindergarten to Matriculation. Music, (lames. Swimming, Hiding, Gymnastics. Large Playing Fields, English stall. Modern buildings. Prospectus on application. Principal*:\nMlsa N. C. Denny. R.R.C, Miss V.\nR. Gtoghegsn. B.  A.\nPHONE 1C1\nWe specialize in Plumbing anl\nHeating jobs of ill sizes and del\nscrlptlona, hy trained experts, anj\nare equipped to fulfil nil require!\nmen Is for Plumbing and llratln|\nFixtures   and   Supplies.\nB. C. Plumbing I\n& Heating\nNELSON, B. C. .\"ONE Jj]\nCHESTERFIELD\n(Established  \u25a0; 1  Years)\nBOARDING   Kf'HOOL FOR BOYS NORTH VANCOUVER,  B.  C.|\nThorough, British education and training for University and Business,   small   classes.   Individual   attention.   Swimming   biith   and |\ngymnasium.   Prospectus  from  Frederick   II.   ISiic-,   Principal.\nNext Term begins ggpC. 9th.\nNearly 60 stitches were required\nlo clone a wound In tlic throat of\n.'oe Bafcaluikl, 4', years old, of\nMurlJIo, ont., after he hsd been\nga.shcd by a cow. The boy was injured when an animal suddenly\nraised Ita hend Hnd the horn eutercl\nhis   throat.\n\"There ain't not bin* in the\nworld thst interests ever'boriy\nexcept the way a widow spends\nher   Ufa   insurance  money.\"\nSoufh. If unable in bid no trump\nbecause his hand contain: a biddable\nsuit and not justified in bidding\nmore than one of that suit because\nbis hand lacks five and a half\nhonor-tricks, would be nbiiced to bid\none diamond which north would\npass; snd south would lose a practically assured game at no trump\nplus s large honor score.\nWHY OFFICIAL SYSTEM IS\nDEFINITE\nIt   la   oopoedtd   thst   the   above\nIn which ca.se, playing no trump,\nif  the adveraa-lee opened  cluh:\nihey would be apt to do, genie probably would be lost.\nNO IKON CLAD RULE\nThe council wllingly concedes thi\ntheir   mc   many   hands   witti   Which,\nalthough holding ihrec cards ol part'\nner'B   suit,   a   call   of   no   trump   or\nanother suit in more informstory and\nmore idvlasble than in waist;  but\nil   |g   unwilling   to   make   an   Iron\nclod rule which would hnr ihr Wilt\nwhen   it   would' be   the   .sound   -rid\nadvantageous hid.\nWEAKNESS  OF ORIGINAL\nrWO I ORCING  BID\nHowever. It Ir- against the miking\nof all original sull-blds of I wo forcing\nbids and tho consequent elimination\nof the intermediate two-bid that the\nkrivlsory council are disposed to coin-\nbll   most strongly.\nFrom thc very introduction of\ncontract bridge the fict has been\nrecognized that some sort of in\noriginal lorclng or demand bid was\nneeded in order lo complct** n perfr \u25a0;.\nsystem. To illustrate suppose s\ndealer holds:\nSpades   A-K-q-n-x\nBeat-to -A-K-Q-x*x\nDiamonds\u2014A-x-x\nClubs\u2014None\nHe would see at a glance that he\ncould make game against any normal |\ndefense, provided his pari tier selects\nas the trump the major suit for\nwhich the partner's hand can furnish\nthe more effective support. Partner\nmight have but one card of one\nmajor and four small ones In the\nother, ,n which case he would have\na distinct preference but, would Bftt\nbid unless to had minor strength\nor unless the original bidder conventionally forced him to overcall lbs\noriginal bid. It would be dangerous\nfor a player holding the above hand\nto make less than a game-bid unless his bid forced his partner to\nkeep the bidding open; end it would\nbe equally dangerous for him to bid\neither four spades or four hears\nbecause It would be only an even\nguess whether he hsd hit ths major\nthst his partner preferred. Also, an\noriginal four-bid of either suit might\nbar the partner from giving useful\nslam Information. So 11 ls essentia\nthat there be an original forcing bid\nall hough lhe hand in which it\nshould be used Is of comparatively\nrare 01 currence.\nWhen conUact, was introduced it\n5onn became quite a fad to cull uil i\nlUlt-bids of two demand or forcing\nbid:.: but in time players round that\nwhile this worked well when '.he\npartner had strength. It was apt to\nwork badly when partner wbs weaiT\nand the forcing hand not weeptlon-\nally strong, in such cases thc force\ncaused disaster; consequent^- thl\nstrength requirements for forcers had\nto bp \"jacked up.\" Thc result of\nplacing this safety device on nil\noriginal forcing two-bid* has been\nfhflt almost, ail original bids beepme\none-bids, m ;-omp of irbtcll the bid- j\nder hai merely thc minimum\nstrength 'hat Justifies an original\none. while in others he is very\nstrong but has not quite the strength\nfor a forcing-two. Of course his\npartner cannot tell which kind M\none bid htis been made, snd with\nhands of doubtful strength might ,\nraise a comparatively weak bid or |\npas\u00bb a very strong bid, and in ooth\ndecisions might be wrong.\nWhen the original one*bld ts followed by a high adverse bid (e. g\ne:iie spade, four hearts), the partner\nof the original bidder if holding\nmoderate strength la placed in c\nstill more cmbarassing position,\nIn no msny rases has game brer,\nsacrificed by a one-bid not raised\nwhen four-odd could be made, th.it\nthe advisory council has decided tu\napprove a two-bid which will not be\na forcer, thus enabling the original\nbidder to show a hand of intermediate strength\u2014which he will be glnd\nto do in a multitude of cases nro-\nvided he can bid two without forcing his partner.\nConsequently the official system\nwill provide that a suit-bid of one\nwill show merely moderate strength,\na suit-bid of two wll! show much\ngreater strength without involving\nshow fer grtster strength. Bu', ^\nshow far greater tsrength. But. ss\nthat scheme Ipso facto does not, provide for an original forcing bid. the\nsystem would seem to be faulty. In\ntomorrow's srtlcle I will tell how the\nofflclsl system get sround thl6\nseeming awkwardness.\nTwo   Entrance    scholarships of the value of\nSiJQ  each.\ntom-\nMlchuelnuts   term\nmences on YVedneMl;.,\nSeptember   Hi.\nBRENTWOOD COLLEGE\nNear Victoria, B. C.\nAn English Public School adapted to meet Canadian requirements.   Unsurpassed situation on sheltered I\nwater-front of Saanich  Arm.    Modern steam-heated |\nbuildings accommodate 108 boys (ages 12 to 18). Specially built class-rooms, laboratory, gymnasium, dining hall, studies, etc.   60 acres of ground and playing |\nfields, tennis courts, squash racquet court, rifle range.\nPrivate chapel. Out of total enrolment of 1175 boys, 1511\nhave passed into either first or second year of thirteen]\ndifferent universities.\nPreparatory school in connection, entrance scholarship value $.')0.00.\nApply to Bursar for prospectus.\nH. P. HOPE, B. A. (Charterhouse and Cambridge) |\nHeadmaster.\nIf you still want a MOWER or RAKE\nto finish Haying, we have\nstill a few on hand.\nLOWEST PRICES\nNelson Hardware Co.\nNELSON,\nB. C.\n \u2014eM\u2014r\u2014_uf\u2014 \u00abt-*^j\u2014r\u2014\u2014\n\u00b01(l6\n?TKf.  K_t\u00abo\\  PAILT  NEWS.  NELSON, \u00bb.  r..  \u2014  MONBAY  MOBN1NO.  AfOC\u00abT   \u00bb.   WI'\nMOI MTaW\nm jn si \u25a0 !7aTii a\nJACK WRIGHT WINS THE CANADIAN\nTENNIS TITLE WHEN NUNNS LOSES\nIN STRAIGHT SETS AT THE COAST\nArmour Solves\nBackswing Trouble\nWright   and   Katnville   Win\nDoubles; Mixed Doubles\nTitle Goes to U_ S.\nWRK-iHT\nVANCOUVER,    Aug.     2-^Alter    a\nyear* layoff from Canadian competition, Dr. Jack Wright, of Montreal,\nSaturday   came   back   to   win   the\nDominion singles title which he held\nin   1927 and  1629.\nIn  the  1931  final\non    . the      grata\ncourt., of the Vancouver Lawn Tennis   and   Badminton  club,   Wright,\na Davis cup team\nregular,   gave   an\nartistic tennis lesson     to     Ollbert\nNunna,  of  Toronto,   a   non-playing\nmember     of    the\nteam.   Thc   scores\nwere 6-3, 6-4, 6-2,\nNunns took the\nfirst game of the jack\nfirst   set   on   hla ^^M\nown service but from then on he\nfought a losing battle, the Montre-\naler giving a superb exhibition of\nstroking and placing to keep his\nopponent on the run. Friday in\nthe semifinals. Nunns pulled somewhat of an upset in eliminating\nWright's regular Davis cup team\nmate, Marcel Ralnvllle, of Montreal,\nln four acta. On the atrength of\nthat display, Nunns was conceded\naomewhat of a chance to win the\ntitle, but he was a different man\nagainst the brilliant Wright. He waa\nwild netting easy\nlooking volleys\nand placing many\nballs Just outside\nthe sideline*.\nWright's swerv\n| Ing batk-hand anl\nhla well-placed\nforehand drives\nwere little short\nof perfection.\nIN DOUBLES\nWIN\nWright \u00ablso fig-\nI ured in the win-\nI nlng of the men'a\nVILLE doubles partner,\nscored a straight-\nset victory over the good American\ncombination of Henry Prusoff, of\nSeattle, and Lauraaon Driscoll, of\nSan Francisco, bright and Ralnvllle won 7-5, 8-7, 6-5 but only\nafter one of the snappiest exhibitions of doubles play here ln a\nlong  time.\nThe Canadians were generally in\nfront, but the Pacific coast stare\nput up a sturdy battle, and smashes\nof Prusoff and the soft stroking of\nDriscoll nearly proving the undoing\nof the cup stars on numerous occasions The vide experience of the\neasterners, however, told in the end\nPerfect coordination winning them\nthe title In straight sets. Beautiful\nvolly rallies scattered throughout the\nmatch together with Prusoff's terrific service smashes featured the\nmatch.\nWright played as well as he did ln\nthe   singles,   while   Ralnvllle   was\ndifferent   man   from   the   one   who\nsuccumbed   to   Nunns   ln   Friday's\nsingles  semifinal,\nV.   S.   A.   STARS   WIN\nAU other major titles, including\nthe women's singles, women's doubles\nwent to thc United States Pacific\ncoast contingent. Edith Cross of\nSan Francisco, figured in all three,\nShe won the oingles title in straight\nsets, from Marjorle Leemlng, of\nVictoria, 6-3, 6-2. It waa Miss\nLeemlng who Frllay eliminated the\ndefending champion, Olive Wade, of\nToronto. Miss Cross led all the way,\nher low-driving and well-placed\nshots keeping the British Columbia\nfinalist on the run. Miss Cross won\nthe first five games of the first act\nand the first four in the aecond.\nMiss Crews, together with Mrs.\nDorothea Perow. also of San Francisco, took the women's doubles title\nby defeating Mrs. Walter Patrick, of\nMontreal and Miss Bess O'Shea, of\nVancouver, 6-2, 6-0. The Americans\nhard driving and ne.it placements\nhad the Vancouver-Montana pair\npuzzle;!  throughout,\nThen Miss Crocs, together with\nLaurason Driscoll. stepped out and\nwon the mixed doubles title in\nnil-American final, defeating Lloyd\nNordstrom, Seattle, and Mrs. Perow\n6-3.   1-6.   6-1.\nThe two Junior titles, boys and\ngirls, also went to the United States\nClyde Hockley, Portland, winning\nthe boys' singles, and Jane Sharp,\nPasadena, Calif., taking the girls'\nchampionship.\nBoth veterans titles remained tn\nthe Dominion, however, A. S, Milne,\nof Vancouver, defeating R. N. Watt,\nof Montreal, 9-7. 4-6, 6-3, tn the\nsingles final, while Watt and F. C.\nCasselman, of Edmonton, took the\ndoubles crown \"from G. McRossan\nand O. Lacey, Vancouver, 3-8, 6-3,\n6-1.\nINTERPROVINCIAL\nCRICKET SERIES\nSTARTS AT COAST\nVICTORIA. Aug. 2\u2014 With the,\nbeautiful grass covered pitch In\nexcellent shape, the curtain will rise\non the annual western Canada in-\nterprovlncM cricket tournament tomorrow at the university school\ngrounds at Mount Tolmie. British\nColumbia will face Saskatchewan,\nand Alberta clashes with Manitoba\nIn tha opening fixtures at 10 o'clock.\nFormidable squads arrived herc\nyesterday from Manitoba. Alberta\nand Saskatchewan, bent on returning home with the Dingwall cup.\nsymbolic   of   thc   championship.\nSENATORS BEAT\nATHLETICS; BOTH\nTEAMS HIT WELL\n40,000 Fans See Yanks and\nRed Sox Split; Indians\nWin Two\nSENATORS    Ol'TSLI'li\nTHE   ATHLETICS\nWA3HWOTON. , Aug 2 CAP) \u2014\nWashington overcame a (our run\nlead today to win a alugfest, 10 to\n0. lor their aecond straight victory\nover Philadelphia. The victory left\nthe champlone a 10-game hold on\nfirst place.\nAl Crow.er relieved Jonea in the\nfirst Inning with three runs In and\nnone out and struck out the aide\nafter allowing a hit and a run. He\nacored eight strike outs.\nPhiladelphia 400 010 100\u2014 6 10 3\nWaahlngton .. 440 on OOx\u201410   13   0\nMacDonald, Hoyt. Rommel and\nCochrane; Jones, Crowder and Span\nSt.,\nrVfT\/*t\ntsp\/p with\nUTTLE r~W6\u00a3\/P o\u00a3\nL\u00a3t*T \/\/\/)#\u00a3> ssc\/rsr\noPCOHrnoi. of\/ron SHors\\\n\\*\\\\OtR\\\nv\/m\nBy   AL   DEMAREE\n\"Many golfers complain of losing\nControl of their club at the top oi\ntheir back swing,\" says Tommy Armour, winner of the British open\nthis year and recognlssed u one ot\nthe greatest iron players in the game\ntoday.\n\"I find.'' continued Tommy, \"that\na firm grip with the little linger of\nthe left hand at the top of the\nswing provides control of the club.\nThis mental as well as physical\nsense of gripping with the little\nfinger must bc maintained at\ntlmeb.\"\n40,000   SEE   YANKS,\nRED   SOX   pfYlDE   TWO\nBOSTON. Aug. 2\u2014A crewd of 40,\n000. the largest to witness a balL\ngame in Boston since the 1016\nworld series, saw the Red Sox and\nYankees divide a doubleheader. The\nvisitors took the opener, 4 to 1.\nwhile Wiley Moore shut out hta old\nteam mates, 1 to 0, in the second.\nThe first game started out es n\npitching duel between Charlie Ruffing and Jack Russel, but the latter\nweakened tn the eighth, giving four\nhits and two walks.\nIn the nightcap Moore and George\nPipgras held the opposing batsmen\nto three hlte, the lone score coming\nin the eighth on singles by Sweeney\nand Berry and a muff at the plate\nby Jorgens,\nNew    York    .... 000 000 031\u20144    11    0\nBoston     000 000 010\u20141     S   0\nRuffing and Dickey: Russell, Kline,\nMorris and Berry.\nNew   York    . . 000 000 000\u20140      3    1\nBoston  000 000 Olx\u20141      3    0\nPipgras   and   Jorgens;   Moore   and\nBerry.\nTIGERS   SHL'T   OLT   WHITE\nWOX AT DETROIT\nDETROIT, Aug. 2\u2014Detroit Tigers\nfell on thc Chicago White Sox, their\nrivals for tail end honors In the\nAmerican league .standings, Cor an\n8 to 4 victory arid evened the current series at one game each,\nCHICAGO . ... 800 020 000\u20144      9    3\nDetroit 013 210 lOx\u20148   12   3\nThorns, Caraway and Tate; Hcvlng\nand  Hayworth.\nINDIANS   WIN   BOTH\nENDS DOLBLEKEADER\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 2\u2014Cleveland Indians strengthened their hold on\nfourth place tn the American league\nrace by conquering St. Louis Browns\nIn both ends of a doubleheader, 9\nto  4,  and  11   to 9-\nClevclanci      003 005 011\u20149    12   2\nSt.    Louis     ... 000 200 200\u20144      7    3\nW. Perrell and Seweil; Gray, Coffman, Stiles >and Bengough.\nCleveland    . . 210 042 002\u201411    1!)   0\nSt. Louis   023 032 000\u2014 0    10    1\nHudlln, Harder and Berg, .Seweil;\nStewart, Kinsey, coffman and Ferrell.\nTORONTO-NEW\nWESTMINSTER\nCONTEST TODAY\nRain Postponed Saturday Dominion Championship Soccer Match\nWINNIPEG. Man.. Aug. 2.\u2014 (CPt \u2014\nIdle yeaterday when rain upoiled the\nfamous old Carruth-jrs park pitch.\nNew Westminster Royals and Toronto Scottish will resume their finsl\naeries fcr the Dominion Footbail\nassociation championship tomorrow-\nafternoon before a holiday crowd expected to exceed 6000. A win for\nRoyals will gtve the veteran Westminster club ita third OmmkUih\ntitle  in four years.\nBeaten in the first aeries clash\nlast Thursday, 2-0, Scottish must\ntake two straight to capture the\nchampionship they won in 1921. The\nToronto club has been unable to repeat In nine years of campaigning.\nTRAILlNilS\nDEFEAT SPOKANE\nBeat Sons of Italy 24.5 in an\nKxhiblion Game: Ise\nGreen  Players\nSATURDAY   BAH.\nNew York 3, Boston 9.\nPhiladelphia   1.  Washington\nChicago   0,   Detroit   0.\nCleveland 5, St. Louis 7.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nSt.   Paul   14-4.   Kansas   City   5-9\nColumbus 7*7. Louisville 6-3.\nToledo  15-0.  Indianapolis  7-1.\nMinneapolis 6-10. Milwaukee   1.-5\nMALTED\nMILKS\nThe Best in Town\nWRIGHT'S CIGAR\nSTORE\nTrail Tennis Club\nAdvances in Play\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 2.\u2014Playing In\nintense heat Trail tennis club clipped off the scheduled games on the\nweek-end open tennis tournament.\nMK.VK CLASS \"A\" SINGLES\nD. K. McAlllater beat B. Coon. 1-6.\n8-6. 8-6; c. A. Yolland beat H. D.\nForward. 6-0, 6-3; J. J. ringUod beat\nA. M. Chesaer, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4. W. B.\nHunter beat H. Bayley, 6-0. 6-3;\nOeorge Hamson beat W, Mcculloch.\n61, 6-3; Joe MacDonnell beat J.\nFoeter, 6-3, 6-\u00bb, 6-4; W. R. Cllth-\nerow beat Jamea Curtis, 6-1, fl-1; W.\nRoeenbloom beat A. O. Rellly. 10-g.\n36. 6-J; T. H. Weldon beat r. E.\nWeldon, 6-3, 6-3; A. Gllflllan beat\nEric winter. 6-1, 6-3.\nMEN'S DOIBI.ES\nHawkins and Thompson beat Mc-\nPherson and Corbould, 6-3, 6-3;\nMacAllliter and Bouchler beat.\nFoster and Curtis, 6-3, 6-3; Oray and\nHaylock beat Pennoyer and Smith,\n6-3. 6-0; O'Reilly and Wilson bent\nDynes and Winter, ,6-1, 8-6.\nLADIES- SINGLES, OPEN\nMis* E. MacDonnell beat Mrs. r.\nTucker. 6-1. 6-0; Mlas D. Anthony\nbeat Miss E. Wise, 6-4, 6-1: Mrs.\nBayley beat Miss P. Macdonald,\n6-1, 6-3.\nMIXED   DOUBLES.  OPEN\nHumphreys and Mlaa Wiso beat\nJ. C West and Kitchen, 6-3, 6-4;\nArrowsmith and Mrs. Colls beat MacAllliter and Miss Wright, 6-3, 4-8.\n6-3; Anderson \"rid Mies MacDonnell\nMai. T H. Weldon and Mrs. Wet-\nmore, 7-6. 4-6, 6-1: Chesser and\nMrs Chesaer beat Halllweli and Mlaa\nRitchie. 6-4. 6-1; F. _. Weldon and\nMra. weldon beat dltherow and\nMiss Freeman, 6-4. 6-3.\nLADIES'   DOUBLES.   OPEN\nMlaa D. Anthony and Misa E\nJllte-lo beat Mrs. Bayley and Mrs,\nCOlK, 8>3, 6.3. 4-8.\nTRAIL. B. c. Aug. 3\u2014Playing\nseveral ot thetr aenlor novices. Trill\nseniors today defeated Spokane Sons\nof Italy 24-5 In an exhibition gam*,\nDemore knocked out, two hom'rs\nwhile Morris got one. Demore r'.so\nhit lor a two bagger and Mollskey\ngot a three and two bugger. Two\npitchers were used on e:\u00bbch te*m\nSurlano and Pupo striking out two\nmen each for Spokane. Demore\ndowned two men and Ro.s.. fhicc lor\nTrail.\nSHE\nSons of Italy   g    r,   ji\nTrail      24    jn\nLAWN BOWLING\nRINKS  FOR THE\nMIXED TOURNEY\nThe following are the rinks for a\nmixed doub!fn lawn bowling tournament lo commence here on August 5, in crcler of skip, third, aecond and lend. Thc draw to he |\nmade  ln  a day or two,\nW. C. Chapman. & Brown, R.\nWick and Mrs. A- Poster.\nF. Gedder. Mrs Q, WW*. J. Argyle,\nand Mrs. o. Taylor.\nE. Y Brake. Mrs. w. Thomoson,\nJ. Romano and Mr?;, e. y. Brake\np. coulter, Mrs A Wig*, G F\nCunllffe and Mr*. C. Muunro.\nW. Chapman .!r., Mr.s. P. I. Wheeler. J. P, Morgan and Mrs A. Elliott.\nE, Penwill, Mrs F C- Rowley, A. F.\nJames  and   J   .C.   Hooker.\nP. Bates, Mrs. A, Kraft, W B\nMelneczuk and Mrs. E. P. EdglnET-\nton.\nR. A. Aldersmlth. G A. Metres,\nD. Eccles and  Mr*.   D   D   Mrl*en.\nA. Wigsr. T. Marsden, J, Simonds\nand Mlas G. Laughlon-\nJ. Armstrong. Mrp. S. N. May. H.\nAllfn and Miss O. Wlgg.\nN. B. Bradley. A. Smith. W H\nMorgan   and   Mra.  J.   Anvil.\nJ. Draper. Mrs. P. Coulter, p. Bate\nand  Mm.  L,  M.  W*ffer.\nJ. Draper. Mrs. P. Coulter, P. P.\nMra. C. BeHn^r.\n.1. A. Young. Mrs, J. Drarrr. W\nBrown and Mrs. C- Beltner.\nBERMUDA'S CRICKET\nTEAM DRAWS, McGILL\nMONTREAL, Aug t\u2014 Bermuda's\ncricket 'earn, beginning their tour\nof Quebec ano Ontario, drew ulth\nMcOIll Cricket club Saturaiy at. tne\nconclusion of a two-day matci. On\nSaturday the visitors scored HIS for\ntheir first Innings and followed on,\nplaying out time and scoring 133 for\naaven wickets. The team lift satur-\na\u00bb\u00bb for \u25a0 Toronto where thay have\ngamea most of the week.\nLOCAL BALL NINE\nTAKES EXCITING\nEXHIBITION GAME\nFort   Wright   Wash.,   Team\nStages Fine Bally in Last\nInning\nj I'LAV STEADY BALL\nTHROUGHOUT  GAME\nRichardson's Bunt Brings in\nHorswill for Winning\nCount -\nIn the final Inning of an exciting\nbaseball exhibition at the Recren-\nHon grounds on Sunday afternoon\nthe locals squeezed in a run to defeat a rort Wright, wash., team\n7-0. The Nelson team led 6-3 up\nuntil the ninth Inning, when fori\nWright players ataged a rally that\nnetted them three runs, to tie\nthc score.\nThe winning run for the local\nteam was made on a Horswlll-\nchardson play. Horawlll first man\nto bat ln the last halt of the\nninth, slammed out a three-bagger\nand acored on Richardson, successful  hunt.\nThe game was a fight from atart\nto the finish and wss featured by\nair-tight play on the part of the\nlocal nine during the flrat stage of\nthe game, and by a pitcher's battle\nthroughout While Haralson, the\nvisiting pitcher, allowed 15 rrts,\nKraft allowed the Fort Wright nine\nonly five hits.\nFort Wright players ware blanked\nthe first two innings. Kraft sending down three of their batters In\nflr_ style In the second. Five Innings visiting players tailed to get\non base while the Nelson players\nwere stopped only twice.\nIIOKMU1,-  GETS   HOMER\nIn tho third Inning the scoring\nwas opened by the visitors when\nQriffls tallied stealing one of the\nfour bases In his circle of the\ndiamond Horswill put ihe home\nteam one up when he slammed out\na spectacular drive to tlie center\nfield for a home run and scoring\nWallace. Haralson, the visiting\npitcher, made the second home run\nof the day when he planted a long\ndrive Into the left Held. The hall\nstruck a rock and glanced off Into\nthe brush on the left aide. Schumaker ln the right field was unable\nto find It until the man had scored\nFor the Nelson team. Tommy Harrison nabbed everything that came\ninto his territory, the left field,\nand for the Washington team, Nemeth at ahort stop picked some\nnatty grounders out of the duat.\nHorswill and Schumaker were the\nheavy hitters for the afternoon. Two\ndrives made by schumaker were, robbed by Halbert at first base, who\npulled them out of the air ln an\namazing style.\nAlthough fans were noticeably absent, the game lacked nothing of\nspeed and thrills and the lew -who\nturned out In support or the team\nwere given a real treat.\nE. _. Buchanan umpired the game\ntc the satisfaction of both teams.\nHBST   INNING\nFort Wright\u2014Neldaba struck out.\nHlgglns out. Olson at third to Glllett at first. Curtis grounded out to\nGlllett.\nNelson\u2014Horswill  grounded out  lo\nNeldaba     Richardson out. grounded\nto Halbert.    fachumaker out. NcUlii-\nha ta  Halherl\n\u2022CCOMI INNING\nFort Wright\u2014 Ncrr.tth. Porter olid\nHaralson  struck   out.\nNelson\u2014Glllett out, Grltfls to Halbert. Bay hit through second and\nthird for a single. Olson out on fly\nto Orlftls In left field, and Bsy was\ncaught In a hoi bcx between first\nand second\nOPENED l-CORIM.\nTHIRD   INMNG\nFort Wrlght.-Oriltis sale when\nGlllett ran off first base to 6e.t slow\narounder and could not gel back.\nGrttlls >tole second base, i\nunder Wallace. Harlhert. out\nfirst, grounded to Kraft.\nwent, to third and home for the first\ncount on Goldstein's grounder to\nKrart. Goldstein was thrown out\ngoing to Onrt, Nelduha clammed\nout (Ire two-base hit bctwe\"i> \u25a0croud and third. Kiggins out on fly\nto Harrison m lift field. Harrison\nmaking |r\u00abat run to get the ball.\nNelson\u2014Krjft   out.   srounded    to\nNeldaba-    Harrison  tanned     WallaM\n\"Ingled to left field and came in en\nIll's home run whleh DUi '\"\"-\n2-1.    Horswlll's   rtme\nto   center   field.\neflv   which   was\nLost to Diamond Sculls Winner\nB. C. Lawn Tennis\nSeries Opens at\nVictoria Today\nV'CTORIA, Aug. 2\u2014 With a \u00abl\u00abct\nentry li_t headed by Walter Martin.\nP.eglna. John Murio. San Prtnciaco\nEdith Crow. San Francisco, and Olive\nW&de. Toronto, tha annual Brltlih\nColumbia provincial lawn tennis\ncriampi-^nahlps will get underway\nhere tomorroj'. The majority of tbt\nplayers who competed in the Canadian championships at Vancouver\nthU poat week, will play here. Leading exceptions arc Dr. Jack Wrlg .t\nor Montreal, th_ new Dominion\nsingles champion, Marcel Kainvllle.\nMontreal, who, with Wright, captured the doubles title, and O.Inert\nNunns,  Toronto, t.ngles  flnaJU..\nAMATEUR HOCKEY\nTRAVELLERS ARE\nTO BEJMKED\nAmateur Body Pans lo Halt\nHockey Players Changing\nResidences\nFACED    BOBBY    rCARt't\nWilliam O. Miller of the Bachelor** Barge club. Philadelphia. Pi>..\namateur single eculling champion of the United States, who loat to\nBobby Pearce, Olympian and Diamond Sculls titleholder, In the aecond\nheat of the BlnRles at the Canadian Henley regatta at Port Dalhouile,\nOnt, Miller brut Ken Meyers of Philmlclphti in four lengths. Hla time\nwas   7   mlnut*8,   a   and   3-3   second-;.\nWITH THE HOME RUN KINGS\nHomo runs Saturday; Vosmln. Indians, one.\nHome runa yesterday: Kress and\nOoslln, Brownt; Simmons, Athletics;\nFerrell, Indians; Verger, Mitchell and\nJackson, Giants; Schulmcririi and\nRlclibourg, Braves, Frederick. Robins; Cuyler, cubs; one each.\nLeaders; Gehrig, Yankees, 30;\nRuth. Yankees. 38; Klein, Phillies,\n23; Averlll. Indians, 20; Foxx, Aeth-\nletlcs, 20.\nLeague totals; American _-9'_; National  344.\nHARLOW GIVEN\nKAYO IN THIRD\nBY F. LENHART\nNelsonite Floored Thrice Before He Goes Out for\nthe Count\nSANDPOINT. Idaho. Aug. 2\u2014(AP)\n\u2014Fred Lenhart, 181. Spokane, knock.\ned out Oeorge Harlowe. 183, Nelson.\nBrltiHh Columbia. In the third round\nof a scheduled 10-round bout here\nSaturday night. Lenhart floored th*\nCanadian three times before ntowlng\nhim away.\nJohnny Ca^ebeer. 138. Mullan, unleashed a terrlffic punch to the\nstomach to knock out Red Vandei-\nvert. 138. Spokane, ig the lourtTi\nround ot their scheduled elght-\norund semi-final bout, opened.\n\"DUTCH\" REUTHKR\nGOES, PORTLAND\nYesterday tho big six standing\nchanged considerably. Slmmona\ngained five points In the averages\nand Ruth lost five, holding the\nmajor league lead by only one point\nOrimm gained a point and tied Dav-\ni    !or  the  National  league  **ad.\nStanding:\nO AB R H Pet.\nRuth. Yankees ., 02 341 93 130 .381\nSimmons, A's. 103 418 86 158 --J80\nWebb, Red Sox 08 383 70 140 .366\nOrimm. Cubs .. 93 330 42 116 .348\nDavis. Phillies.. 82 262 10 91 348\nTerry, Giants  ..   98 396 72 130   .343\nPORTLAND. Ore., Aug. 2\u2014\"Dutch1\nReuther, southpaw hurler, released a\nlew days ago by thc _3eattl\u00ab Indians,\nnow on the Tortland piiroll\nThomas L. Turner, presides q| the\nBeavers, made t he announcement\ntoday. Reuther pitched f->r Portland\nmany years ago\nTurner said the signing of Reuther\nresulted in the unconditional re-\nleaae of AI. Oould, signed recently\naa relief pitcher.\nREGINA, Sask., Aug. 2 <CP>\u2014\nHinting that even the exr,*iiae ol 0\nDominion-wide meeting will not bt\nspared by the Canadian Amateur\nHockey aa*oriatinn i> such -* ncfH-\nsary to halt thc practice of puck\npropelloM changing th?ir re*idenre\nevery winter. President Jack Hamilton issued another statement regarding the existing situation o*i I t. e\nweek end.\nMr. Hamilton's general statement\nfollowa out whit he h.*s already decreed\u2014tha: no pU.er will b\u00ab given\na transfer until his case la investigated fully, hut it held extremely\nlikely that a moating will bave to be\nheld ceiore the hituut.jn la cleared\nup once and ior all.\nIn an additional statement, addressed to all cm.leur hockey clubs\nIn Canada, Mr. Hamilton emphatically states that, ln order to get any\nconsideration from the parent body\nin the matter ot transfers, the clubs\nmuse register the players affected\nwith their branch secretary on or\nbefore August 15 and, in turn, these\nmust be in h_s hand, befoic August 31.\nHere is the president's statement\nto the club:\n\"To all umateur hockey clubs In\nCanada:\n\"Amateur hockey cluba all over\nCanada are asked to submit io their\nrespective hranch secretaries a Ilat\ncontaining the names of all players\nfor whom they expect to obtain\neither club or branch transfers In\norder that these players might play\nhockey with their clubs next season.\nThese lists will also show tne name\nand location of the clua with which\neach   player   last  played.\n\"The individual club, are asked to\nhave these lists tn thc hands or\ntheir branch secretaries 0n or before\nAugust 15 next if they any consideration to bc given to their caaef.\nPACIFIC   COAST   LEAGUE\nsliding\nOrifll-a\naon   one   up.\nwsk   a    long   owe.\nRlch&rdaon   hit\ncfiuelv by O'-ili'Is.\nt-ni'lUM  INNINC.\nPert -ffrtftbt\u2014Cvrtlt  funned\nmath Mid porter flved out   H\ntakino: th,  first hit and Olson  the\nsecond.\nmond into the grass, where it waa\nlost. Orlftls hit to the right 1105(1\nfor two bags and Halbert made it\nthree down when hr. lived out to\nOlson.\nNelson\u2014Horswill lilted one out to\nGnftls. Richardson was sate on Ont\non it center field hit bat WU lnrrei\nout on second when Bchumaker\ngrounded safely to Neldab.i. Glllett\nstruck out.\nEIGHTH   INNINU\nFort Wright\u2014Goldstein walked anrl\n,waa proceeding to second on an\noverthrow to first by Richardson,\nwhen he was nabbed at the base by\nWallace, Schumaker having returned\nthe ball. Neldaba hit a Texas\nleaguer for a single. Hlgglns flyed\nout to Olson and Neldaba went to\nsecond on a pass ball at the Plate.\nNeldaba scored on Curtis' two-base\nhit.    Nemeth fanned.\nNelson\u2014Bay safe at first when\nHa!beri. dropped Curtis' low peg\nirom third. Bay went to, second\non Olson's bunt; Olson was thrown\nout by Haralson. KraK bunted out\nand Bay went to third. Harrison\naafe on first when Haralson fumbled\nhis slow grounder on the* third base\nline Bay scored a* Haralson hi-\ntempted to get the grounder. Wallace hit to Halbert and waa out.\nMNTH INMM.\nFort Wright\u2014Porter out Kralt to\nGlllett. Haralson hit a hot ground-\nOt to Olson, who was unabi,. to hold\nIt. and singled. Qriffls hit to Wallace, who loat the ball ln a pufi o(\ndust, and Haralson went to second\nand third. Haralson came in on a\nlow ball to catcher and Qriffls pro\nceeded to seeond. Qlllett, tost Hubert's line drive and Onftis went, io\nthird. Goldstein, catcher, drove out\na three-bag hit and brought m Halbert and GrlfflB, tying the i\nNelson\u2014Horswill   got   a   fine   hit\nIcr three bags and  scored  th\nnuig run on RicbardaWs aafi bunt,\nThc game ended with Bo ona oul.\nBox M-or*1\nST. LOUIS ADDS\nTO LEAD BEFORE\n42,000 PEOPLE\nPittsburgh Scores Its Third\nStraight Shutout Over the\nRed Outfit\nOakland   4-4,   Ban   Francisco   6-J,\nHollywood 1-0. Seattle 0-5.\n-acramento 5-1. Loa Angeles 6-13\nMtAslons   8-'..   Portland   5-8.\nH. FLYNN WINS\nLAWN BOWLING\nTRAIL,   B    C.   Aug.   3.\u2014In   the\nfinals of the Trall-Tadanac Lawn\nBowling association on Sunday evening, H. Flynn beat E. F. Mclntyro,\n13-18,\nDrawlng    for     the    singles     and\ndoubles will be made Monday night.\n_Ne-\nIHT    IS    ROBRH*\n\"M   robbed\nNFLSON\u2014Schumakc* --\nOf : good hit when Halbert puUed\n\"own nla hleh lln. drive \u00bb\u00bb? \u2122u^\nJim out. Olllelt out. Grltlls to\nNeidabH.\nlav   and  ^as.throwrx ^Jj.^   '\u00a3\u00a3\nNemelh\nBav   and\nGriflls oul. Olson to\nbert out, Wol'acc to GUI-tit\nNelson\u2014Olr,on but. ^^^^^^^\nHalbert. Kraft lifted one out to\nHaralson.     HhitIsou   sale   when   H*t-\nalson overthrew first, and he went to\nthird when Wallacr potted oul \u25a0\nTpxhs leaguer to center field. Hor_.\nwill hit -through second [or a simile,\nhrlnalnK Harrison home and Wallace\nio third. HonttlU htole second dud\nRichmdson was out when Nemeth\nmade a neat oirkup, throwing him\nout noina to first.\nMMM INNING\nFort Wright\u2014Golds! rnt walked\nand went to aecond when Neldaba\nuraunded out to Wallace. Harrison\ncausht HiRglns' fly. Curtis went out,\nW\u00bbUn_e to Oillctt.\nNelson\u2014Schumaker lilt lor a two-\nbanger to left field and went to\nthird when Glllett repeated, B**y\nhit h. TexaK leaguer tn the center\nfield, scoring fichu maker Hid bring-\nin? Cilllctt to third. Qlllett came\nIn on an overthrow to third ba\u00abe\n\u00bbnd Bay advance^ to third. Kralt.\nHarrison and Wallace all bunted out\ntu nn effort ti bring ln Bay.\n(VENTH  INNINC\nI-'ort WriRht\u2014ois--n made a tnekv\nt:aU-h. mining out Nometh. Porter\nout. Wallace to Glllett. Harrkon\nmade a home run when tM b*U\n\u2022\u25a0truck an oMtnictton In thi left\nleft  field  deflected from  the  dta.-\nFort  Wright\nN'idfba, 3b  .\nHlgglns.  cf    .\nCurtis 3b \u25a0\nHemclh. ss \t\nporter, rt .  \t\nHumlson.  P  \u2022\nGriffls.  H  \t\nHalbert. lb   . ..\nGoldstein, 0 ..\nTotals \t\nNelaon\u2014\u25a0\np. ,- I 111, cf  \t\n(ttchardaon, c\nSchumaker,  rf\nOillctt,    lb   ..\nBay, u \t\nOlson.  3b   \t\nKraft, p \t\nHarrison   \u25a0\nWallace, J hy .\nToUl ....    \u25a0\nab r h p'>\n4 110\n1 it n D\n\\ 0 i l\n\\ I) 0 0\n\u20221 0 o 1\nt \u25a0: i i\n1 16\n1    4\nI 0\nI! il\n_. 1\ni 1\n0 0\n5 <1\n0 0\n0 0\n0 0\ntl    5 24  TU    2\nt.b r   l! po \u25a0\u2022\nU7    7 15 27 12    1\nPEARCE WINS IN\nSINGLES EVENT\nST. CATHERINES\nDetcats Myers of Philadephia;\nJoe Wright Thud; Time\nIl Slower\nST CATHEBINBS, Ont , Aug.\nBobby Pearce of Hamilton, Planumd\nSculls winner. Saturday von the\nsingles sculling champion!)hip. defeating Ken Myera of Philadelphia\nJoe Wright, former Diamond Sculla\nwinner, finished third.\nPeurce oovered regular Henley\ncourse of the mile and 650 yards In\nnine mlnuteu and three-fifths iec-\nond, [.lightly .lower than bla \u25a0 nnc m\nthe Diamond ficuUs too*,\nIT. LOUS INCREASES ITS LEAQVC\nLEAD\nCHICAGO, 111., Aug. a\u2014(AP) \u2014\nPaul Derringer and Charley Root\nwere both out to win their LSth\nvlctory of the season this afternoon,\nhut Derringer wo* the better of the\n\u25a0two, st. Louis defeating; the Cubs,\n6-2 ,and increasing its lead to 8V_\nS&mes over the Chlcagoa^. A crowd\nOI 43.000 watched  the game,\nRoot waa hit hard by the champions in the second and  third innings, though poor support got him\nIn trouble on the first occasion.\nSt.   Louis     023 000 100\u20146 11    1\nChicago  ooo oio oio\u20142 io   a\nDerringer and Wllioo; Root, War-\nnrke and Hemslcv.\nROBINS  ANO PHILLIES DIVIDE\nI HO GAMES\nBROOKLYN, Auc. 2-The Robins\ndivided a double-header with the\nPhillies, romlnq Irom far back to\n.win the second game, 7-ft. alter the\n'Quakers had captured a 5-^ decision\nln the opener.\n.Iini Elliott came to lhe rMfiUfl of\nSheriff Blake in time to Will the\ntret game vhilo Efelxnacb'a line relict pitching w^s wasted by Bvook-\nlpn*B hlttin- impotence.\nPhilBdelphiit . 8M Ooo 001\u2014B 11 o\nBrooklyn   \u25a0 000 000 020\u20142  11     1\nBlake, ,i. Elliott kbd D*vt\u00ab; Lukue,\nHeimach and U\nPhiladelphia    .. 401 000 000\u2014J> ]:'    1\nBrooklyn  .        003 ono 40x\u20147   R   a\nBo^rn,   Schtaler  and  Ma-\nCurdy;   Phil;  ,   D\u00bb\u00a5.  ThurLtou   ;tnd\nLopez.\nOIA>TH  WIN  TWO  FROM THE\nItltAMS\nNEW YORK, Aug. 2\u2014Thc Cunts\ntook both cuds oi tho Sunday\ndOUblt-bMdet Irmo tho Boston\nBraves by scores of 4-2 and 9-9.\nAfter five detenu. Clarence Mitchell turned back tho BrtV-M with all\nhits <o win tho opener. He\no borne run. BUI Walker's wile!\nbitching PviHtd the Otanta out in\nthe second game.\nBcbton     .      .ono ooo 200\u2014 ~   h   _\nNew   York .      . 001 301 00k\u20144 11    0\nCunnln ipohm; Mitch\nell and iiogHu.\nBoston   \u25a0 -,  OH 00\u00b0 0W\nNew York'.        'IV. 001 00\\\nZachary. Moae and Bool;\nWalker, Morrel  bad   n\nPIRATES  HCOU     HEIR THIRD\nSTRAIGHT   HHITTOV1\nCINCINNATI, Aur. a.--Pittsburgh\nPiratcH scored their third straight\nt-hutout over the Cincinnati Reds\nm at. maiiv days by trimming the\nred Icrs, ;-i-0. behind the live-hit\npUclnnp   of   Erwm    Brame.\nBram\u00ab depended on hin team\nmates for the win. l|e did not atrii-e\nout  a batter.\nPittsburgh      . oto '200 ooo\u2014a it   fl\nCincinnati       . ooo ooo ooo\u2014o   5   0\nBramc and Grace, Lucas and\ntiukefortU.\nSATLRAD   HAIL\nBoston  0.  New   York  2\nBrooklyn 8. Philadelphia   i\nCincinnati o, Pittsburgh  1\nBt. Louis 3. Chicago 3.\nINTKRN^WAlTrKAGUE\nNewark 10-0, Reading 3-1.\nBuffalo   3-3.   Rochester   4-3.\nToronto 1-8, Montreal 2-1\nBaltimore   _-_,  Jersey  0-3.\nThe Greatest Exhibition\nin the History of the West\nwill celebrate\nBritish Columbia's Jubilee Year!\nVANCOUVER, AUG. 22-29\nSeven glorious days crammed with\neducational features and thrilling\nentertainment spectacles.\nINTERNATIONAL TRACK MEET\nfall   as   leading\nbattle for aupirm-\ns Percy William*.\nEddie   Tolan,   the\naction.\n)\n*\u00bb\n- fi in   Q\nChaplin,\nMILLION DOLLAR LIVESTOCK PARADK\nSuperlative exhibit* of agriculture.\nIndustry, mining, automobile-., art\nand science . . . viridly portraying\nBriti-b Columbia's tremendous advancement during tho past sixty\"\nyears. Threo great new buildings.\nWORLD CHAMPIONSHIP\nSTAMPEDE\nClever cowboys In hair-raising rodeo\ncontests ... a breath-taking programme packed with thrills.\nMUSICAL FESTIVAL and\nPAGEANT\nHistoric episodes in the growth of British\nColumbia, brilliantly presented. Massed\nbauds in gorgeous uniforms against a\nglittering background of fireworks.\nGrand carnival of midway attractions, thrilling\nrides, entertaining shows and games. Wholehearted\nfun for thc entire faniih.\n*\nf\nFREE WORLD CRUISE\ny A Round-the-world Cruise (or rn\u00abh\ncnuivalrnt of $20W>.00), 2 PONT1AC\nCOACHES) and a II UIXEY-DW IDSO.N\nMOTORCYCLE gi*en away FJ__ECf\nOnly advance sale ticket holders eligible\nto participate in this great award. Get\nyour tickets early from local stores,\ndowntown street salesmen, or write the\n^ Canada Pacific Fxhlbition. Vancouver.\nSPECIAL PRIVILEGE TICKETS, 50c; 3 (or $1.00\nCANADA PACIFIC\nEXHIBITION\n.\n i_l>_   tlUHl\n\u25a0IHr.   NtLMIN   DAILY   NEWS.  NLLhON,  B.  C. \u2014 MONDAY  MOBMNG.   ALGtsr  3,   lg:il=\ni^s\"3\u00a3__ Wa nt Ad Pa^e\"^!^\nHAYMAKERS GET\nCUHIIOERMITS\nBetter Crop Than  in  1931;\nCutting General Next\nWeek\nCRBBTON, B. C, Aug. 2\u2014Hay-\nBiakere were much in evidence in\ntown yesterday, becunng the nece_-\ngary permit to cut a winter's supply\nof food on Creston flats. These licenses were Issued by W. H. Browne,\nthe provincial grazing ranger, assisted\nby Oeorge Nickel, secretary, :itid\nCharles Sutcllffe, president of Creston Valley Stockbreeders' association,\nall of whom were at Wynnes the\nday previous for the same purpose.\nOn the whole the 1931 hay crop ia\nbetter than a year ago when Just a\nlittle over uoo tons were put up m\none of the best haymaking seasons\nthat haa obtained for some time.\nDue to less flooding of the flats,\ncuts on the higher lands are n<>t\naa good as a year ago, while others,\nthat were too heavily flooded in\n1830, are showing a wonderful crop\nthis aeassjn.\nAt the two sittings, at Wynndel\nand Cret-ton, 136 permits were issued,\n47 of which were at Wynndel, where\ntbe demand is heavy for rushes f\u00abc\nstrawberry mulch. These called for\na total cut ol 1350 tons, 900 of\nwhich are rushes. It Is expected\nanother 20 permits will be issued requiring an additional  100 tons.\nPermits are issued on thc basis\nof ivle stork owned by the party requesting a license and lt Is figured\nthat two ton per head of cattle and\nhorses is sufficient for winter feed,\nwhich Is all that Is provided. Vox\nsheep and goats, and there are tit\nleast 100 of these, It In figured that\nthey require about one-seventh cf\nthe feed allotted for a horse or\ncow. The census taken by the\nassociation shows that local haymakers have about 1200 head of\ncattle and about 200 head of horses.\nThe area supervised by the association extends from Kootenay Landing\nto the Reclamation farm, and first\ncame under association control In\n1919.\nAssuming the crop Is better than\n1930 it looks as If the association\nwtll hare enough feed on its own\nlanda to meet thc demand, but to\nprovide for any emergency a deal\nhas been made with the department\nto cut feed on the Indian lands.\nThc Indians have been steadily inducing their herds until now it Is\nfigured they own hardly 100 nevl\nof cattle and very few horses. When\nth\u00bb association was first organized\ndifficulty was experienced In fixing\nthe boundaries of the. hay lands aa\nihe Indians were wanting plenty ol\nfeed for about 600 head cf llve-\nKtock they claimed to have at thnt\ntime.\nSome of um haymakeri itartvd\ntheir mowens immediately the permit\nwas secured, hut cutting will not be\ngeneral until th* first week M\nAugust.\nBISHOP OF LONDON IS|\nVISITOR CANADA\nINDtX 10 C-A*Mtl_D  ADS\nLEGAL NOTICES\nDEATHS\nQUEBEC, Aug. 2\u2014Thc Right Hon-\notanle nml night- Reverand A.F. Win-\nniugton-lngrtini. bialiop of London,\nEngland,       arrived       here. One\nof hla purposes lu coming to Canada, thc bishop declared, was to sec\nthe cathedral in Victoria, ot which\nhe  laid  thc  cornerstone.\nAlaENTf,  WANTED\nAl lOMOHIi Is KIR mm.\nAl l iiMHoml I s \\\\ INTED\n\\l I'lltKIUILE-   JOK  BALE\nBIRTHS\nlitt>\n(121\nIII)\ntui\n(l\u00bbl\n1!' I\nIH\nJunior Stock JUflMlrfeopfeOT\nTeams Receiving Good\nCoaching in Boundary\nGRAND FORKS, B, tt, August 2.--\nThc coaching of thc boys and girls\nwho arc contesting tor membership\non thc Junior stock Judging team\nwhich will compete al the Interior\nProvincial Exhibition at Armbtrom;\non September 24. 1031, hn.s ram-\nnienced In the boundary riiMrfrt*\nunder supervision of (.1. 1,. Landon,\ndistrict agriculturist at Grand Forks.\nThe team members will Judge dairy\ncattle, beef, cattle, hogs, sheep and\nheavy horses. The following ooya\nand girls who rac members of various Junior clubs are contesting i.ir\na place on the team.\nWalter   Madge,   Rock   Creek,   Mil\nHOirs LAUNCHES, 1 OR RENT HJ)\nIHIAl.N, III M Hf, HIK SALE (441\nIlliMs. LAI V llr>. WANTED (4:,l\nHlSlNtSS  lll'I'OKII Milts (JO]\nCANARIES   K)K  SALE <\u00ab,\nCATS AMI DOUS Kill SAIL (921\n< ITS  \\ND Dot.S \\\\ INTtD <SI\u00bb\nDEATHS (!i\nDEATHS (2)\nDNEB.MAKIMJ (!)\nkoiii CE   <:in\nALE     U)6)\nAM.I. Ulll\n(IK   DALE   OK   KEN I (2!)\nI I HNIMILD UOO.MS (OR RENT do,\nKKMSIIII, BOOM- n ANTED    IH>>\nI I KNITI KE   (OR  SALE\nHELP WANTED\nHOI SEN  I OK KEN I\nHOI SIS  WANTED\nIN .MEMOKIA.M\nINSURANCE\n|N\\ ESTME.NTs\nLITERACY\nLIVESTOCK  EOK SALE\nI in sum K  WANTED\nLOST   AMI   (OIND\nMAI IIINERV\nMARRIACJti\nMINIMI.   IIMIII.H,   UMBER\nmini ii i.\\m:oi s\nMISI CLI.AM.OI s  IOK   SAI.E\nMISCELLANEOUS   VMVIED\nMUSICAL   INSIKI'MI.NTs\nNOTK Es\nNI KSERV I'KUDICT-\nM KSlMi\nPERSONAL\nPLANTS\nPOI I.TRV   AND  LOUS\nPKOI'ERIV    IOK   SAIL\nPKOPEKT-   WANTED\nRABBITS   IOK   SALE\nBAM TIES   IOK   HINT\nBurton Takes League\nBaseball Game From\nNew Denver bv 21-6\nin favor of Burton City,\nYOUNG PEOPLE\nHAVE PARTY AT\nBIGEL0W BAY\nNEW  DENVER. B.  C\u201e   August   2   -\nA. E. Axlson was a week-end visitor\nIn Rossland, the guest of his sister,\nMrs. K. McLeod.\nMra.   If,   Hill   and   daughters,   Miss\nToutte    and    Mltllcent,    and    son-.\nGeorge   and   Kermlt,   of   Vancouve.*.\nare   visitors  in   twon.   thc   guests  of\nMr   and  Mrs. M. R.  Hill.\nP.   McGuire.  mining   man   of  slocan Ctty. Is a patient, in the Slocan\nCommunity hospital\nRev.   and   Mrs    .1.   Herdman   ......\nsons, (rank and Jackie, havc returned [rom camping at the _<__\nof  the lake.\nMiss Patricia Hane and Jack Kirk\nhacv received word that they have\nsuccessfuMv pHsscti ihelr junior matriculation examinations.\nBlgelow  Bay  was   the   sccno  of   a\nvery  enjoyable beach   party  on   f-.l-\nurday  evening,  when   a  number  of\nthe    young    folks    gathered    tb\u00abr_\nAmong    these    prcsenl     acre    ICt_H_\nTools and  Millicent. Hill  of Vancouver.   Robbie   Rutledge,   Hosle   Zadra,\nKlty  Tingle.   Edna   Angrlgnon,   Dor,\nPendry,   Hazel   Marshall,   Helen   M:,s-\nsircm. Anne Kennett, Greta Sinclair\nNEW DENVER. B. tt,  August 2.\u2014   and   Emily   Dlmick   and   Messrs.   T\nThe local   baseball   team  motored   to   Angrlgnon,   J    Kirk,    \"Bankv\"    ami\nBurton City on  Sunday,  where they   Debbie Irwin, r   Kennett   A   Anrrtg-\nplayed  their  league  game   with   thejnon.    P.    Kennett.    A.   Tric'trtt     s\nurton team.   Tho result was 21-U '.epher, A. Kent, A. Jeffrey, J. Smith\na.id H. MacPherson.\nBOOMS TO KENT\nKOOMS WANTED\nSCHOOLS\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSTORES   TO   BENT\nTEACHERS   WANTED\nclub project; Reginald Pitman. Rock j room ANu BOARD\nCreek, Calf club project; Christine\nBrew, Kettle Valley, Poultry :lub\nproject; Daniel Bolt-, Boundary Falls,\nSwine club project; Gordon Roberts.\nMidway, Poultry club project; Robert\nForshaw, Greenwood, Calf club project: James Forshaw, Greenwood. Cnlf\nclub project; George Roper, Grand\nForks. Poultry club project; Crystal\nMason, GrBiid Forks. Poultry club\nproject; Helen Stewart, Grand Forks,\nPoultry club project; Aulay Miller,\nGrand   Fork* Poultry club project.\nThe team will consist of three\nmembers who make the best ahowing\nthe practise Judging and they\nwill compete for medals and ca.h\nprizes at the above fair.\ni Hi l\ndill\nt:ii\n1 nn\nill\n(US)\n11*1\nllil\nli.il\n<;i>\ni hi\n(.-.in\ni.ii\n..IS I\nI2\u00bb\nI til\n(.'\u00ab)\n(.11\n(ll\n(I.I\nIII.\n1ST\nI.VII\n(Jl.l\n,111\nCIS. I\n(SS)\nllil)\n(171\nit'll\nlit)\nit; i\nnn\n(..ii\n(13.\n(SI\nSMILLIE-Stewart. age 61 Tears,\npaaed awav Saturday, tfody reals at\nthe Howell Funeral Home uatll 1:46\nTuesday alternoon, thence to St.\nPaul's church, where funeral services\nwill be held at 2 o'clock. Rev. T. J.\nS.  Ferguson officiating. (6671)\nHELP    WANTED\n(10)\nWANTED   AT   ONCE   \u2014   COOK   TO\ntake over and run Dining Room.\nApply Salmo Hotel, Salmu, B. C.\n(66011\nrUKNISHLD_BOO,M9_tor_reilt_(l-)\nFURNISHED    SUITE   IN    TERRACE\napartments for one or two months.\nApply P. E. Poulln, Phone 627.\n16382)\n\"POUND DISTRICT  ACT\"\nWhereas   nolle,,   has   been   duly\nflven of the intention to constitute\nbe following district as a pound\ndiatnet, under the provisions o, Section 3 of the \"Pound District Act,\"\nnamely: that certain parcel or tract\nOl land situated at Renata In the\nKaslo-Slocau Electoral District and\nconsisting ot bub Lots 10. 18 and 37\nof Lot 6817. and Lots 5547 and\n8069,   Kootenay   District:  '\nAnd whereas objection to the constitution of such proposed pound\ndistrict, has been received Irom\nseventeen proprietors of land within\nsuch proposed district:\nTherefore notlcP ts hereby given\nthat Li. majority of the proprietors\nof land within tlie above-mentioned\ndistil, t   Biuat,   within   thirty   days j furnished ROOM\u2014411 SILICA 8T.\nfrom  the posting and publishing ol I (6608)\nthis notice, forward to the Minister 1 _____\t\nof Agriculture their petition In tne\nlorm required hy Section 5 oi tlie\nPound District Act. or otherwise\nsuch pound district will not be cun-\ntlitut-d.\nWM.   ATKINSON.\nMinister of Agriculture.\nDepartment of Agriculture.\nVictoila.  B.  C.\nJuly 6th. 1031, (6427)\nROOMS AT THE RITZ BLOCK, BY\nday. week or month.   023 Vernon.\n 16681)\nFURNISHED   SUITE.     MRS.   COVE.\n507 Carbonate, pnone 390R   16633)\nFURNISHED    ROOMS\n715  Baker St.\nIOR\nRENT.\n(63u4)\n.MI8(EI,LANE0iVS_E0__SALK_(-;)\nBIRTHS\n(1)\nNEFF\u2014At the Kootenay Lake General hospital, to Mr. and Mrs, John\nNeff, corner of Hendryx and Obscrv-\natorv streets, July 30, a son.\nl'i IISONAL\nIH\nWANT   AMI   (I.ASSIHLD\nADVERTISING\nOne insertion 10 cents a line\nSix Insertions 40 cents a hue\nOn. month $1.30 a line\nMinimum two lines.\nNo  extra   charge  is   charged.\nBirth   notices   free   ut   charge\nDeaths,    marriage;    and    cards    uf\nthanks,   20   cents  per   line\nFuneral   flowers   15   centa   per   Hue\nNewa   of   th.   Day   items,   20   cents\nSer line.\nO EXTRA COST II   CHARGED\nElizabeth Thompson\nIs Home After Visit\nSLOCAN PARK. B. tt, August 2 \u2014\nMiss Elizabeth Thompson bl rl -\nturned to her home ln Bonnlngton, after spending \u25a0 week, tho\nguest of Miss Alice Nichols.\nMrs. C. Glendlnning of Nclfi.il\nspent a week-end here recently with\nMrs.   A.   Smilh.\nJlinmy Thompson cf Bonnlngton is\nspending a few days wllh _-W_I_\nNichols.\nMiss   Euphemia    I'lshcr\nCKE-CENTIA.   THE   WELL  KNOWN\nSCEINTIST\nwll send horoscope, with advice on\nhealth and finance, zodiacal Infill-\nen,y on fatrlmony and partnerships, changes voyages and .'our-\nucys, adaptabllltlea, fortunate days\nand numbers. Send birth date with\n50 cents. \"Cresccntla,\" 19 sparling\nApts.,   Winnipeg. (6279)\nLET MME. FOSS. ASTROLOGIST,\nCrystal Clairvoyant, solve your\nproblems, 6 questions 91. lloro-\nacope Readings 91. Send birthplace and date. 1370 E. 12tn,\nVancouver. (6245)\nTHE MASTER KEY WILL HELP\nsolve every problem Mailed to\nany horn, on receipt of 25c to\nMaster Key Exchange. P.O. Box\nNo. 377, Lcthbrldge. Alta,. Canada. (66551\nFEMALE DISORDERS AND OBSTET-\nncal Specialist. Write to Dr.\nFromm, s. P. 5152 Arcade Bldg.,\nSeattle.    Treatment   by   mall.\n16656)\nIF YOU WANT TO MARRY A RICH\nWIFE?\" or \"Wealthy Husband'.'\"\nWrite Box 100-EA Detroit, Mich.\n(6635:\npent o few days here last week, Ihe\nof   Ncl.'n  i_ut  .-I   tin.  M.  Buskin.\nFRANCIS-BARNETT LIGHTWEIGHT\nmotorcycles give 120 miles to the\ngallon, 50 miles an hour, fitted\nwith balloon tires, I soeed gear,\n2 brakes. $175 at Vancouver sold\non easy terms. Write for Catalogue. Fred Deelev Ltd., Canada's largest motorcycle store, 915\nW. Broadway, Vancouver.      (6595)\n100,000 rtXT GOOD USED\npipe- all sizes, black and\ngalvanized, large stock cf pipe\nand fittings, valves, etc. Inquiries\nsolicited. Swartz Pip. Yard. 220\nEast First Ave., Vancouver, B c.\nI665T)\nSTOCKAID KEEPS FLIES OFF CAT-\ntle. Gallon tins Only. 'Black\nleaf 40\" for poultry lice, and lor\napliids. Flour sulphur. Tobacco\nPowder. The Brackman-Ker Mlllg\nCo.  Ltd. (6642.\nSITUATIONS   WANTED\n-(\"I\nMALE. EXPERIENCED IN HOTEL\nwork, desires position. Could take\ncharge. Good referencea. Address\nL. Feme, Bow Island. Alta.   i6583)\nHIOH SCHOOL GIRL DESIRES\nhome In return for services. Phone\n736R. \/   (6664)\nSEWING IN YOUR HOME OR MINE.\nPhone   321L3. 16505)\nAGENTS   WANTED\nJ13)\nRELIABLE MAN FOR ONE HUN-\ndred store route; this district;\nexperience unnecessary; no selling;\ndistribute and collect. Should\nnet seventy dollars weekly. Sha-\nmaa Mfg. Co.. New Toronto. Ont.\n(6661)\nHOUSES  IOR RENT\n(24)\nHOUSE FOR RENT\u2014CEMENT BA3E-\nment, furnace, garden, garage,\ncloae ln.   406 silica 8* (6599)\nHOUSE FOR RENT\u2014CLOSE IN. CE-\nment basement. Apply 712 Josephine St. (6605)\nFOR     RENT\u2014SEVEN-ROOM     FUR-\nnlsbed from July 16th. Phone low.\n(MM\nFOUR-ROOM FURNISHED HOUSE\u2014\nApply   D. Magllo.  phone  483R.\nFOR   RENT\u2014THREE-ROOM   CAMP,\nlakeshore. Nelson.   Phone 271R.\n(6591)\nCOTTAGE WILLOW POINT.\n402R3.    Rosllng. P.. R. 1.\nPHONE\n(3586)\nFOR   SALE   OR   RENT\nSIX-ROOM  HOUSE WITH GARAGE.\n816 Mill St.   Apply 411 Silica St.\n(66071\n\u25a0MISCELLANEOUS\n(20)\n IM111111II11J M11111111 II111,1 \u25a0 \u25a0\nWilliams Transfer =\n= Fireproof   Storage,   Ice, i\ns 3oal,     Wood,     Freight j\nBicycles-School   closing   sale      Rebuilt,    guaranteed    gents'    bicycles, , \u2014\nevery bicycle solid and strong.    Ask ' S  Hauling, FllinitUl'e MOV- =\nfor   list.     We   pay   freight.     W.   M.   =\nRitchie, 1470 Commercial Dr., Vane.\n(6660)\nMAIL YOUR UNWANTED JEWELRY\nto us. Cheque, otter, return mall.\nIV C. Smelting Co, 1701 Burnaby\nSt.   Vancouver.   B.   C. (66361\nBEATTY COPPER TUB WASHER,\nrepossessed, will sell for balance\nowing. Beatty Washer store In\nHipperson's. (6648)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS, KEGS, BUR-\nlap sacks, white sugar sacks. McDonald Jam Co. (6247)\nFOR SALE\u2014HAY BAILER. 12 X 18,\nin good condition. C. Mason.\nFrultvale. B. c. (6637)\nAUSTRIAN SCYTHES FOR SALE.\n*2 each. Morgan, Box 417. Nelson. (6658)\nDAILY    NEWS   WANT    ADS    BRING\nQUICK.   RESULTS\u2014TRY   ONE.\nS ing,  Express and Cart- _\n_ j,ge, Gas, Oil, Etc., Etc. =\nphone loe\n(6640)  3\nTi i \u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0 i \u25a0 11111111111111111 \u25a0 11 r in 111111 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 j j i \u2022 H1\nJ30)\nTIOPI.KTY   IOR   SALE\n(31)\nIHIIIIIIIMIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII'\nCALGARY\nFOOTHILLS |\nE 480   acres   raw   land,   fenced. S\n_; Excellent pasture,  good  water, \u2014\nZ 50\"\u201e   arable.   Adjoining   gravel S\n2 road to Calgary. Good school, _:\n\u2014 912.00 per acre, 92.00 per acre S\n_; cash.   Terms.   Apply:\n=       J.   W.   LITTLETON,   Ltd.       =\n5    816  Center  lit. Calgary   S\n.6667) S\n.illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Ill\nAUTOMOHII.I.S   IOK   SALE\n(401\nIMIIllllMIIIIUIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllll\nG. M. C.\n5    CANADIAN   MADE   TRUCKS 3\nPrices   Rc<iu,'\",l\n= Model  T17A.   1-Ton    9920.00 _\nS Model   TI7B,   1-Ton   ... 985.00 =\n= Model   T22A,   l--TO_   1100.00 _\nS Model   T22B.   l'j-Ton   1190.00 S\n_\\       Prices   F.O.B.   Vancouver _\nNelson   Dealers:\n_ Nelson Transfer i\nCo., Ltd.\n_\\   GENERAL MOTORS  TRUCKS _\n= I6S68I S\n\u2022 HMIHIIIIHIinilllllllllllllllllllllllllllTl\nPOULTRY   AND   EGGS\nCal\nFOR SALE\u201450 LEGHORN HENS,\nSolly strain. 91.00 each or 94o.u.\nfor the lot. George M. Mille,\nRobson   B. C. (6669.\niiusiness  and  Professional\nDirectory   \t\nAccounting\nROGER  M.  HOYLAND\nChartered  Accountant\nP. O.  Box  1358. Trail, B.  C\n,65591\nCiiAS.   F.  HUNTER\nPublic Accountant. Nelson\nMunicipal   and   Commercial   Audits\nMM. i\nAssayera\nE. W  Wtddowson, Box Alios Nelson.\nB. O.    Standard  western charge,\ntMii\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY. G1LKER BLK\u201e NELSOM\n(6334)\nDR. M1TTUN. X-RAY. CRANBROOK\n(683a)\nJJentists\nDR. O   A. C. WALLEY\u2014205 Medical\nArts  Building.    X-Ray.    Nelion.\n(63361\nDressmaking'  and  Designing\nDItFSSMAKING AND DES1GNINO\ntaught\u2014 Academv of Useful Ana\nNO 4 Write to Marv E. Rodgen.\nBoi 352, Rossland. .62-1 >\nCHRISTIE TRUCK AND CAR PARTS\n1630 West 1st Ave.. Vancouver\nB. C. Largest reliable wrecking\ncompany, power plants, trailers\nand parts. (66691\n1929 FORD SPORT COUPE win\nrumble seat, first class running\ncondition. Applv Box 6610 Nelson\nDally  News. (6610)\nPOR SALE\u2014LATE 1929 MODEL Essex sedan. Cheap. Plioiir- .,(.:,\nRoom 9. (6672)\nBOATS, LAUNCHES   I pit  .___!__!-111\nIII MM.SS    OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE\u2014SMALL CIGAR STORE\nbusiness. Well located in Trail, a\nbargain for cash. Owner leaving\naccount Illness. Apply Nupget\nCigar Store, Trail. (6666)\n(31)\nHOW-OAT'S ROWBOATS\nSmooth built, anv length 8' to 16'\nTheSp   boats   are   strong,   seaworthy\nbut  not  too heavy,    special   pncea\non  application  to\nChappeil   Bros..   Boat   Builders,\n1770 W. Georgia St.. Vancouver  _ 0.\n(6324)\nEngineers\nCHAS   MOORE AND H. D. DAWSON.\nEngineers    and    Land   Surveyor!.\nK. W. C. Blk.. Phone 285, Nelaon.\n(6338)\nr'lonsts\nGrlzzelie's Gi-eenhouses, Nelson. Cut\nflowers and floral designs.    163391\nNELSON * LOWER SHOPPE. fun\nline cut flowers at all times: floral\ndealgns.    Phon.  283. (6340)\nJOH..SONS GREENHOUSE. Phone\n342. Cut floweri. Potted Plants\nand Floral Designs (68411\nInsurance and Keal Estate\nFOR SALE\u201416-FOOT CETERBORO\ncedar canoe. First class cjikIi'ioc\nApply   77  Taxi. (OOldi\nBOATS,   |\u201eM NTIIES,   WANTED     (I,,,\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014LAUNCH IN\ncood running order. Box 6670\nNelson  Dally  News. 16(1701\nLOST   _.ND   FOUND\nLOST\u2014BLACK METAL SUITCASK\nbetween Syrlnga creek and Trail.\ncontaining wearing apparel. Consolidated share certificate. Return\nto Trail Times or Phone 209L. Reward 910. (6665)\n111 is\n(3.-> I\n17 HIVES ITALIAN BEES IN 10\nframe hives 80 extra hive, one\nhoney extractor, i honey day and\nthe season's crop of honey Anv\nreasonable offer accepted, c Ay-twin.  New  Denver. (6663)\nR. W DAWSON Real Estate. Insurance, Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware.   Baker  Bt. ,6342)\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe   Ark.   dealers   In\ngoods    Phone 634.\nsecond   hand\n(6343)\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\n\u2014i. coai Ai>r\nPhone   106 083441\nBAGGAGE   COAI   AND WOOD\n'06\nATKINSON   TRANSFER,    coal   and\nWood.    Long Distance houllng.\nWood Factory\nLawson', Wood  Factory.   817 Baker\n8t     We   Dlease  our  customers\n(6\u00ab4\u00ab\nTHE  GUMPS \u2014NOT  AMONG   HIS   SOUVENIRS\nThe German benate ordered the\n\u2022ugar future exchango Lcmponinly\nrlMcd. Official quotation;, had oea.'--\nrd lor ;iomc time. Liqulation nt\nmgafrfinenh, for AukusI, and later\n\u25a0wtll be postponed until Un CtoBtH\nntuati<->u li cleared, a mm \u25a0&-\nnoimced.\nyourself        ,\nrespected for\nfulfilling obligations\nPAY.\nPhone\nYour\nWANT-\nADS\nToddy or tonight\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\n144 or 143\nYMIR PYTHIANS\nARE HOSTESvSES\nTO SALMO LODGE\nYMIR, b  r , August a    The Ymlr\nPythian   Bliterg   wet*   bosteiflet   t\nsome of thr- Balmo Staton on Thurt\nday rvenin? in the Oulld hall.   The\ntvmto ttom Balmo were  Wi,   Et. V.\nBuah, Mr.-, Ctrl w. Undo*, Itt*. A.\nBremner. Mn. W. Miller, Mrs. Jtmefl\nHearn, Mrs. Fred LlncUtrom, Miss\nMarie] Llndow \u00abnd Mr,\\ Waltrr\nBhiells, n. c. Booh and Walter\nyhleli.s at Balmo were aupper guests.\nThe   hosle sr.   wan   Miv     M.   Peters,\nMrs.  a.  b. Clark, Urs,  w.  b. Uc<\n[awe,  Mra. .1 h Clarice,   Mrs   _t      \\\nBond and Mrs. Wendell Bbrum.\nMra, Latto Named As\nConvcntion Delegate!\nVALUCAN, B. C Alien | j) -. The\nBIocbq Vallry Wonirn's instltui\nIta reffulai\" monthly meeting in the\niirdaj afternoon, Nine mem-\nbora wtra pnaent and one Mali \u25a0<\nii, arts decided to send Mrs. Latto\nr.f Paa more ;> ddetate to tne ron-\n'veiitton st Edgewood. After bu\u00bbt-\ni naaa waa over, tea n. itfvad hi\nUm ViaHtcan membtrs\n\u25a0     Miss    t.    (\"Irrn^n    Wlio    ha -    been\nholidaying   st   Deer   Para   ri\nham* Saturday.\ni Mr. and Mrs. (. Benttl \"I Va \u25a0\ncou^n   spam    Monday    hart,    the\nguaets ol  Mr. and  Mrs.  Rolta&da.\nIfiM E. Coleman lett for Lytton\nhoapltal, taking a BOattldti a\u00bbl\ninn-Sinn  staff.\nBrunette Jaekson oi\" Trail left f^r\nhis home Thursday alter apepdlng .1\nlew weeks' holiday hart, thc gUCft\nol   Mr.   and   Mrs.   Rolland.\nMessrs. Coleman and W Beaton\nhavP left for Kaslo to transfer a\nlaunch to Nakusp lor the foreatry\nbranoh,\n-MIR   NOW H\nYMIP, B r. rYugutl 3 Mfl M\nStevens rnttrtalatd informally st fif,\nte* hour on Tburvdaj     Tha guesta\n04    Mrs    OOTdCt    V'^*-    _jirj    Mr;\nw,  p   Mclftsae\n\u25a0 -J Mi t' r\"ter;.^a hs_ a_\n\u2022\u25a0h^ir t'ie--f3 od Wadpasday c -entui**\nMr. sod Mrr 0 \u25a0* CWTtS an<-J M.'^\nGordon Peters.\nJo\u00ab Kublskl has taken a position\net the Wilcox mine.\nMany great intellects are found\nin small heads, ..ceo di g to Dr.\nB-.-rnard Hollander, the autJior 0\/\n\"Brain, Mind and External Signs\nof Intelllgnece.'* Mental ability can\nnot be Judged by the size of the\nDniin.\nTHE VMHlPpLfc \"&PHCIAL HIT\nSCf^Ar-1&OLA AMD IKt THE\nCOLLISIOM    MAC'S   CAI^ LAMDtD\nO\"    fHE     ~XC&    OF     THE    VVjHiPPLf'\nRACEe -\nVAjHlf^PLE     CLAIMS    THAT   ^iS\nWA%    txuST   A.    TT_nc\u00bbc    Of   MAC'S\n\"TC       tAVE      C3AS   -\nPEf^SOMALLV    vuE    THIKJK.\n^'WlPf\u00bbLE\"    l^      VAiROMO\ncNEcau^E   MAC    \\ajax   \/_z_LEB9\nAT   THE   VmhEEL   \\Mf\\BhJ   HE\nViAS     HIT\n cfbfo\n\u00bbTH_ NELSON DAILY  NEWS.   NELSON,  B.  C.  \u2014  MONDAY   MORN;:.(..   UGl'ST   J,   IM!\u2122\"\nfAOE   f Nt\nMarket and Mining News\nCONDITIONS IN\nEUROPE REFLECT\nON WAI1 STREET\nMarket  on  Whole  Is  Dull;\nGrains Steady;  Cotton\nSags; Turnover Small\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK.- Aug. 2\u2014Metals nom\nlnally unchanged.\nForeign bar ailver 271* centa.\nAt London: Metals, nominally\nunchanged.\nLISTLESS DAY\nHAD AT TORONTO\nNEW TORK, Aug. 3.\u2014The 1250,-\n000,000 credit to the Bank of England, the rlee in the Relchsbank's\ndiscount rate ana the proposal to\n\u25a0ell surplus wheat and cotton to\nGermany provided the leading de-\nvelnpments of financial interest yesterday.\nShares on the stock exchange\nfirmed after some early easiness, and\nEuropean bonds reflected a mow\nfavorable attitude toward condition**\nacross the Atlantic. Grains were\nsteady, although cotton sagged\n\u25a0under the Influence of selling from\nEurope. On the whole, however, It\nwas a dull day In all directions.\nThe turnover in stocks amounted\nto 398.650 shares, not much larger\nth&n the volume for tna' dull Sat\"\nurday three weeks ago. Net gains\nwree modest, hardly exceeding *\npoint In principal issues, u.^. Steel\nand Bethlehem were each up \\%.\nAmerican Telephone, American Can,\nSouthern Pacific, Rock Island. Atchl-\n\u2022on, Wool worth and Sears Roebuck\nimproved 1 to I1,, under the stimulant of week-end covering. A few,\nIncluding Coca Cola and American\nTobacco, gained two. 'J. T. Cwe\nbroke 3 to a new low and then reduced Its loss to !%\u25a0\nNickel Turnover 2193 Shares\nfor Loss of a Half\nPoint\nFOREST HRES PEP\nDEMAND FOR EGGS;\nPRODUCTION HOLDS\n  \u2022\nLocal Eggs Sell at a Premium But Producers Ate\nSatisfied\nTORONTO, Ont., Aug. 2\u2014(CP) \u2014\nApart from a downward movement\nIn International Nickel, trading on\nthe Toronto exchange on Saturday\ncontinued listless. Nickel turned\nover 2193 shares for a loss of a half\npoint to 13! _. Turnover totalled\n3100 shares.\nThe leading oils traded only  150\n\u25a0hares.   British American gained\nto 1034     Imperial was !_  weaker at\n12     and     International     Petroleum\nclosed unchanged at 12-\nMontreal Power gained \\. point to\"\n44%. while Brazilian and C. P. R.\nwere unchanged at 18 Vi and 25 respectively. Steel of Canada gained\na point to 28.\n[New York Stocks\n^^^^B Hlirh\nAllegheny         \u00abl4\nAllied   Chemical I07\u00bb.\u00ab\nm Can       \u00bbS\".i\nAm For Power..   SI _\nm Much & Fdy   32\nAm Smelt & R   8-H\n,m Telephone .. 171\nm  Tobacco   .... 121\nnacanda       25!i\n.tchlson      lfi3\n\u2022It  &.  Ohio  ..   48'i\nendlx   Aviation   31U\n-th  SUel        37'-\n_n  Pacific       25\nlies & Ohio ..   35Vi\nlirysler    \t\nOm ti South....\nton Gaa NY..\nm   products..\nWrlht pfd  ..\njpont   ... \t\natman   Kodak 137\",\npower _. _   37%\nord   Enllsh   ....   \u2014\nore!  of  Canada   \u2014\nIrst Nat Stores   56%\nrreport Texas  ..\n^en  Motors  \t\nen   Flectrlo  ....\nJen Poods ........\nIole]   Duat   \t\n} N nfd \t\nIt    West    Buar\nfowe sound\nfudson Motors..\nnt   Nlcltel       12%\nnt Tel ii Tel \u25a0\u25a0   27%\nCenn Copper ....\nCreae  B  S  \t\nCross \u00ab: Toll ..\nl_c_ Truck\nglt-aukee   pfd..\nrash Motors ....\nlet Dairy Prod   34\nit Power  & L\nY  Centra!  ..   74\n'ackerd Motors..     7V4\neon R R \t\nllllps Pete\n_,_lo Corp       ,.,,\nk-dlo Wth Or   14 \u00bb\n,.m    Rand        \"\u00bb\u00ab\n_ Island     36-\natomy  Stores    63\nLouis ft S F   15 \u2022\nbell Union OU     \u00ab \u00ab\nInclair Con     1\u00b0!*\npacific    \u25a0   \"\ntan Oil of Cal   36V.\ntan OU of Ind   \u2014\n,tan Oil of N J   \u00ab\u00ab\nitewart   -Warner   10-\nitudehaker      18\nexas  Quit  Bul   JJ\nn carbide     \u2122\nn Oil Cal \t\nS Pipe & Tat\na Aircraft ...\n1 S Rubber  ....\nI  S Bteel   , ..\nnilvs   Overland\nellow Truck  ..\n24 \\\nm -\n65\nsm\n37%\n4(1%\n49\n27%\n4Hi\n9%\n19\n13'_\n18%\n26%\n18%\n32\n8%\n26 Vi\n44%\n7V4\n17%\n16\nItt\n27%\n13%\n86%\n4'-\n7%\nLow\n6\n105%\n91%\n27\n31\n169%\n119\n24%\n46\n20 %\n35%\n21\n91%\n64 Vi\n86%\n134%\n37'.\n37%\n89%\n48%\n27%\n13%\n12\n26%\n18%\n17%\n31.\n8%\n26\n33%\n73%\n7\n44\n7%\n16%\n14\n8%\n36\n62%\n5%\n10%\n76%\n36%\n37%\n23\n35%\n48%\n8%\n26%\n13%\n86\n4%\nCORN PRICE IN\nFOUR CENT JUMP\nIN CHICAGO PIT\nClose\n6\n107\n98%\n27%\n32\n31%\n171\n121\n25%\n163\n48\n20%\n37%\n25\n35%\n24%\n21%\n92%\n64%\n4%\n61%\n136V.\n38\n11%\n16%\nMtt\n28\n35%\n40%\n49\n27\n41%\n9%\n19\n13%\n12\n27%\n18%\n26%\n18 Vi\n31%\n8%\n26%\n34\n24%\n74\n7\n44%\n7%\n17'.=\n14\n8%\n36%\n63\n15%\n6\u2014\n10%\n77\n36%\n24\n37%\n10%\n18\n28 \"j\n33%\n49\n16\n8%\n27\n13%\n85%\n4%\n7%\nCHICAGO, 111., Aug. 2.-A Jump of\nalmost four cents In the corn market yesterday gave evidence that\nbelievers In lower prices had a rough\nroad ahead. Speculators were quick,\nly stamped who dared to sell corn\nshort despite knowledge that the\nbulk of readily available supplies for\ndelivery on September contracts were ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nIn the hands of men who captured !*tea_y.   Thc   broiler   eeason\ncontrol In the month Just ended\nA buying rush that followed; earl.'\nselling .based on news ol rains in\ndrought districts, lound offerings\nscorce. and corn rlosed houyant at\nthe day's top figures.\nCom finished active at V, lo 3%\ncents advance. Wheat was sluggish,\nsagging under the nll-ttme bottom\nprice record for September contracts,\nhut. rallter] by corn, closed % to %\nhigher, with oata % to % up. and\nprovisions unchanged to a raise of\n12   centa.\nMontreal Stocks.\nBank of Commerce      301\nDominion Bank     208\nImperial   Bank       207\nBank or  Montreal       275\nBank of Nova Scotia     312\nRoyal   Bank   \t\nBank of Toronto \t\nAbitlbi  Power  -fa   Paper\nAsbestos Corporation \t\nAtlantic   Suar\nThe egg market in interior British Columbia continues steady with\na gradual firming tendency developing to bring prices at all points to\nnearly the same level, says S. R.\nBoweil. Dominion egg inspector. Local egga are at a premium everywhere, but cheaper supplies fram, , _-^\u201e_\nAlberta and the coast prevent the ] Ior exP\u00b0r*\nprices of local eggs irom rising as |\nfast as they would otherwise do.\nLocal producers, however, are very I\nwell satisfied with present quotations, realizing as they do that\nthey represent a considerably higher\nlevel than the average for Canada.\nProduction hold* up quite well, but\nwith the moulting season at hand\nit is reasonable to assume thnt It.\nwill likely be curtailed steadily till\nUu pullet laying season opens. The\ndemand at most points is now\nkeenest   for  extras   and   specials.\nThe forest fire situation at some\npoints is creating a brisk market\nfor eggs, but as the demand here\nis mainly for firsts and seconds, it\nls being met with outside supplies\nPrices are:\nWholesaler to producer \u2014 Extr.is,\n21; firsts, 19; pullet extras, and\nseconds,   15.\nRetailer to producer\u2014Ex tm, BJS-\n30;   firsts,   23-25;   pullet   extras,   20.\nRetail\u2014Extra*, 33; firsts, HO; pullet extras, 25.\nWhere specials nr? bcl ng offered\nthey are meeting t good demand\nat 40 cents retail. A tow itortft\neggs aro beginning to appear, i-ui\nit is not expected that they will\ncome Into general use for mm\n\u25a0weeks  yet.\nThe    poultry    market    continues\nia   on\nCotton Aid Will\nHelp Germany, Her\nWheat Crop Good\nBERUN. Aug. 2.\u2014<APi\u2014 Suggestion from the United States that\nGermany might buy wheat and cotton there on liberal credit terms has\nattracted  wide  attention.\nThe consensus seems to be tha',\nbusiness could be douP In cotton,\nsince cotton stocks at Bremen, the\nchief importing port, have been reduced to 357.320 bales because of\nthe  recent financial  restrictions.\nAs for wheat, the situation Is different, because this year Germany\nexpects crops well above the average\nunci Is ln fair way to become self\nsupporting. The wheat acreage increased this year about 937.500 and\na yield of 4,570,000 tons ls expected.\nThere   probably   will   bc   a   surplus\nTeac-ier for Sixty Years\nHEAVIER SALES\nNICKEL ISSUES\nMontreal Exchange Has Dull\nSession; Canadian Pacific\nDips, Recovers,\nwane,   moet   of   the   Leghorns\n,.ivlng been  cleaned  up.\nMONTREAL, Que,. Aug. J\u2014Heavier\nHot Weather Ib\nCutting Into the\nSoviet Wheat Crop\nWASHINGTON, D C, Aug. 2 \u2014\n<A*>\u2014 The agriculture department\nsaid today its foreign representatives\nhad reported that Russian grain\nprospects were being reduced by hot,\ndry weaXher.\nle Ida per acre were said to be\ndecidedly below last year, especially\nfor late-sown spring crops. The\nlower yields, hoftever, probably will\nhe offset by an Increase of about\nseven per cent in this year's acreage.\nBWTISH WHEAT\nACREAGE LOWER\nNOW THAN EVER\nDrop of 25.000 Shown in Cen\nsus of  Agricultural\nWorkers\nBIG MISSOURI\nIS AN ACTIVE\nISSUED COAST\nActivity  on  Exchange  Confined to a Few Leaders;\nOils Listless\nToronto Stock.\nAbana\nAconda\nArno.   .\nAJax\nAmulet\nAmity\nAssociated,   ask   \t\nBaldwin \t\nBaldwin  _,.\nBaltic  oil\nBritish   American Oil  .\nBase Metals     1.05\n\u25a004%\n\u25a001 fi\n.02',\n]*J0\n.17\n.01\n.OB\n.01\n,01\n.03\n10,40\nselling of International Nickel was\nthe only feature of Saturday's dull\nsession of the Montreal stock exchange. Nickel lost *3 to ctosp st\n12. Price movements were narrow.\nCanadian Pacific, after dipping to\n94%, recovered to par shortly before\nthc close while Bra_d.liun Traction,\nex-dividend. recorded \u25a0 slight gain\nof 18'i. Montreal Power and Canada Cement each lost \u2022 fraction.\nFinal quotations I ncludod B<*ll\nToirphoiif, lag on broken lots; Canadian car. unchanged at 11; Canada '\nQtmtnl off '., at, n1.: Dominion\nBrldfa, up out it 32, rx-nhidmd:\nMcColl-Frantcnuc. unchanged at\n11'_: Bank of Commerce, off one\nit 201. \u00abnd Royal Bank, ott ', at\n340'.. Winning Electric rirnpprrf\na polu to ''lose at in while Shawlnigan  Power held unchanged.\nTotal    HJM    4021    shares.      Bonds\nC1050.\nSOFT TENDENCY\nON MINES LIST\nHollinger Consolidated Up 20\nCents;  Mclntyre is Off\n50 Cents\nMr. Edmund Echeuer. who lor 80 yeara tu taught Canadian Jewish\nchildren tlip tenets of thetr faith. He ebtabl_hed thc Itrst Jewish\n-aoba'.li School In Ontario ln Hamilton in  1871.\n24014\n219\n4\n'.4\n21\nUT_\n11\n0-\n31\n29\n3\"4\n10\n9JV4\n32\n'.IB\n'J \"'4\nBell' Telephono    \"'\nCanada  Bronze        .       \"\nCanada Car & Foundry\nCanada cement \t\nCanada cement ptd\nCanada ConverteTa \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nCanada Industrial Alcohol\nCanada  Cottons  . .     \t\nCanada   Gen   Electric       200\nCanada Power\nCanada steamship L nea \t\nCons Mlnlnj & Smcltlnj \t\nDominion   Brldje   \t\nDominion Glass ,\nDominion Steel & Coal    B\nDominion Textile         J\u00bb\"\nA. P. Grain            ?'\nHlllcrest   Colliers         to\nLake ol the Woods          J.J\nMassey   Harris         \u00bb'\nMontreal   Power          .\u00ab\nMontreal   Tcleraph        \u00ab\nMontreal  Tramways       W'\u00a3\nNational Breweries      fj\nNational Steel C\u00bbr         \u00bb\u00bb\nOntario   Steel  Products         U%\nOttawa L H     Power  .\nPenmans   Ltd.\npowre corporation     Jj\n107-\n33\n43\n.06 'i\n.091;\n.22\n.26\n.10\n1.05\n02U\n1 Bldood\t\nBarry  Holllniier\nBig   Mlasourt   \t\nC. and E. Lands\nCentral Manitoba   \t\nChemical   Research   .\nClerlcy ... \t\nDome   11.33\nFoothills  15\nFalconbrtdge Nickel       100\nHome OH .50\nBarker Gold 01\nHollinger G00\nHudson Bav     3 80\nInternational   Nickel    .     .      1350\nKeelly  23\nLake Shore 23.10\nMacassa     .35\nManitoba   Basin .08',2\nMining Corporation 1.82\nMurphy .02'i\nNew Imperial Oil   12.25\nNipissing  90\nNoranda, . 18.50\nPremier Oold, _h1c      .65\nSan  Antonio .14 'Y\nSherrlt Oordon    62\nSudbury Basin       .38\nSlscoe    47t;\nSt.   Anthony         .08'4\nStadacona       013i\nTeck   Hughes   .     6.40\nVenturea        40\nWright Hargreaves     2.75\nWalt3 Ackerman     1.00\nfill Study German\nCredit Needs End\nof the Present Week\ni mSFL Switzerland. Aug. 2 <**>\u2014\nEss bA3\u00ab\nfcHianVJoVCt'cre'dlL\nl_f meet here next Saturday, it\nKm _e.ia.e- today by the board ot\nfcreci\u2122Tth^o_rld_3ank.\n(The V. S. government will know\n,r tho first time In Ita 15\u00bb years\n'intelligence.\" Mental ability can\nowns, where It Is located and\now  much  lt  is  worth.\nPric.   Bros\nQuebec Power \t\nShawlnlan    \t\nSherwln Williams  \t\nRo Canada power \t\nSteel of Canada ,\nSt. uwrence Flour Mills .\nwabasso   Cotton\nWestern Orocera   ,\nWlnnloeg Railway       ' -\nWinnipeg Railway pT_\t\nBANKCLEARINGS\nHalifax   .\nSaint John\nQuebec\nOttawa\nLogan & Bryan\nGRAIN, \u2022\nSTOCKS, BONUS, COTTON\nMIMBERS:\nNew York. Montreal and  Van-\n,-llTCr   Stork   Hxehanges,   Chl-\ni_sn Board ot Trade, Winnipeg\nGrain   Exchange,  and   other\ntrading exchanges.\nprivati:   WIRE\nOFFICES:\nVancouver,   Spokane.   -Cattle\nMonthly bank clearings for July\n1931. and correpondlng month. 1930:\n13.192.099 17,209.838\n9.149.389\t\n30.874.230     \t\n-vi,_\u201e.        26.103.089 32.229.257\nMontreal     431,853,768 583,163.989\n3,255.472 4.4B4.&16\nrevero-i,        3,386,328 4,725,191\nToronto     392.277,146 471,064,077\nHamilton      21.135.899 25,733,708\nBranttord      4,260.693 5,109,854\nLondon         14,112,195 14,468,099\nWindaor      13,438.571 17.826.a84\nSarnla           1.930,949 3.081.832\nSudbury            3,111,706 6.160,924\nFort    William     3.204,382 4.087.879\nWinnipeg      187.000.312 228,441.238\nBrandon        1,788.813 2,297,994\nHeglna      13,754,533 30,363,324\nSaskatoon         7,290.389 10,341.758\nPrince  Albert.     1.563.805 1,958,854\n19.27B.846 24.743,283\n23.054,780 20.176,722\n1.806,205 2.477.833 I\n72.175.003 84,830.330\n2.610.337 3,890,175\nNELSON SCOUTS\nBEAT TRAIL IN\nSOCCER TOURNEY\n(By mi RCHMftl\nThe team of thjp Nelson Bov\nScouts in camp at Kokanee. defeated\nthe First Trail team of thr **toa\ncamp ln a soccer game on Thursday evening.    The score was  3-0.\nThe game was ho one-sided thnt\nthe Nelson ftoalle got live klekl it\nthe ball during the whole game.\nHugh WcWhlnntc relereed lhe\ngame.\nThe teams were:\nTrail \u2014I. Holmes. &oal; Donald Mc-\nKensste and J. Gibson, backs; Oeno\nPagnan. St. Clare Lewis, halfbacks;\nStan BOivrock, R. Taylor. R. Smith,\nI. McDonald, Jack stewBrt, forwards.\nNelson\u2014D. Webster, goal; O, Bates\nand Walter Erlckson. backs; C. Galll-\ncano J. Affleck. Sidney Horswill,\nhalfbacks: O. Bawell. F. Graves.\nStan Horswill. D. Beattle and G.\nBeattle,  forwards.\nTORONTO, OUt., AUR. 2 -(CP1 \u2014\nWith aggregate turnover nt 208.180\nshares, the Standard stock and mining exchange cm Saturday was irregular with a tendency to ioftnew.\nThe day's irregularity pervaded all\nsections of the list. Hollinger Consolidated at $6.20 was up 20 cents\nand Mclntyre at $21 was off 50\ncents.\nSeveral oil issues did not even\nmakp un appcaranrc. British American was off Jfr OtOtl to close at\n$1060.\nInternational Nickel was sharply\nlower to close at $12. wllh a net\nloss of 75 cents. Noranda wan off\n10 cents to close at $18.30.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Man . A_J, 2 -Futures\nQuotations:\nOpen Hlctli Low     Close\nWheat:\nOct    54% 55% Mti\nDec    55% 56% MH\nMay        50 61 59\nOats:\nOct     28'i 30 28%\nDec.    ..   .    27% 38 27%\nMay   ... .   30Vi 30% 30%\nBarley:\nOct 32% 33% 32%\nDec    32% 3,1 :>_ -,\nFlax:\nOct.    ......  117%     117%     117%\nDec    118       119       118\ntilt:\nOct.    .   ..    31%      32%      31%\nDee.   .       33';,     :il%     33%\nCash prices:\nWheat: No. 1 hard 55%: No 1\nnorthern 54; No. 2 northern 50%:\nNo. 3 northern 45%: No 4 40%; No.\n5 38%; No. 6 34%; feed 30%; track\n54: No. 1 Durum 61%; |cre\u00abnln|\u00bb,\nper ton, 50c.\n55 .\n56%\n61\n30\n38\n30%\nMM\n3.1\n118%\n119\n32%\n34%\nEXCHANGK RATES\nNEW YORK. Aub. 2\u2014Sterling exchange Irregular at 84.81 9-16 lor\n60 day bob, \u00bbBd al \u00bb4.85% lor <ie-\nmand.\nCanadian   dollars   5-lli   cent   disc\nPnuui 3.92  1-16  ctttl \u25a0\nLire   5.23%   cents.\nUruguay   46.75   ce\nMarks   23.83   ettU.\nKronen 28 74 cents.\nNelson approximate sterling ex<\nchange rata 84.87*4.\nAID COMPETITION\nTO BE STAGED BY\nFERNIE SOCIETY\nTenth   Annual   ttvent;   First\nAid Tests for Coal\nMiners\nrawni,  b.  o., Auiuit  _  th*\nlUt Ko>-iicn-iy Mine Bifity awsocln-\ntlon will hol'i their tenth annu.il\ncompetition on \u2022tUffUtt Ll \u25a0\u2022' thi\nmine rettcuo station ln Fnnle. All\nentries for the dtfrema events, tor\nwinch ih'-rc ;% bu durge. mtttt be\nmade to lhe secretary, E, Morns'in.\nnot,  later  than  Saturday,   ftllfUit  8\nTin' dltfvrtnt oompeUtlOBI and\nprim to hfl Kivcu lor them in\nas  folIov.fi:\nEvent One: Mine re?jcu\" competition, commencing i) a.m. for the\nKing shield and oihrr *\npr_Mt Pvihleni'i arranged and judg-\npeleetM- by Inspector of Mines\nStoat* Dickson. Thl* event, i% optU\nto thc province.\nEvent. Two;  Open  junior  first  Bid\ncompel it Ion,  connnem'hig   it   1   P.W.\ntor thl Lho, corson und BonneU cup\nand other print,  for  all  punlon,   18\n... e and under.\nEvent Three: Confined Junior\nfirst aid competition, itirttBg nt\n1:45 p.m. for prfMt, All Juniors\n18 yearn of age aud under working\nin and around the mlon of thc __ut\nKootenay   district  may   enter.\nEvent Four. FirM, year aid competition commencing at, 2:30 P.m.,\nprizes offered. Open to all persona\nwim havc passed their first J**t\ntint Kid fxami nation dunnp tlw\nyear preceding the competition Olid\nhave ntvtr von a prt\/o in flrht\naid work, and who also work in\nand around the mines of the Int\nKootenay district.\nEvent Five: Ladlc.V first, aid corn-\npetition commencing at 3:lfl. for\nprises. Open to East Kootenay district.\nEvent  Six:     Confined   senior   first\nd competition commencing at 4\np. m. For the Rotary shield and\ndepartment of mines cup and Othar\nprizes. For ptnoni workinir ln and\naround the mines of the East\nKootenay district.\nEvent Seven: Special open senior\nfirst aid competitinn storting 6\np. m. for the Fernle Elks Lodge\nNo. 81 trophy and other prizes.\nOpen to Western C anada for all\npersons except doctors and  nnr-cs.\nThe problems will be irrangtd --'\"i\njiuiced bv the local dOctQM, The\nStandard for the first aid work will\nbe thc 38th edition of thc bt\nJohn's Ambulance book.\nNo event will be gone on with\nunless there are two or more mtrtM\nand no third prizes wtll bc awarded\nunelss there are four or more entries.\nALBKKTA   KII1TKK   AND\nCHEESE EXPORTED\nNKW W_-STMIN8_T_R. B I\nI Exports to the United Kinrdmu\nlast month included a shipment, ot\nbutter and rh--f:v. trom Alberta\nwhich formed part of Ltofl cargo ot\nthc n> Tiojiiu 9tai, Th*''\nB9t0 kmna of batter and -m bowi\nOtflttalt of the liarbm*\nboard said It wiih the llrnt iXDOh\nof this nature and it would be fol-\nluwed likely by other atttpmcnti\nWHEAT PRICES\nMOVE AHEAD IN\nWINNIPEG PIT\nLONDON. Aug. 2\u2014 <C P. cable) \u2014\nThe lowent wheat acreage retorde:!\nin the btator-y ol Great Britain is\nannounced in the annual return\nsubmitted by tlie ministry of agriculture. Thc total for 1931 It Il.\u00ab\n970.000 as compared with 13,460,000\nlast year.\nTlie 1930 figure, In turn, was low.\ner than that of 1939. llnn '\"27,\nwhen there was an upturn, the trend\nof the statistic* On wheat acreage\nhas been gradually downward.\nA decrease of 2,510.000 acres, to\n9,500.000. Ii shown in the total\narable acreage reported.    There was.\nhowever, an incfeaM of 1.490.000\nto 15.000 000. the number of acres\nunder permanent grass.\nA drop oi 35.000 is shown In thr\noentua or agricultural worker* in'\nEngland and Wales.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 2.\u2014Although volume or trading waa comparatively heavy for tha short aoa-\nslon, activity waa confined to a few\nleaders on the Vancouver atock etching* Saturday. Prices ware mind.\nthe tendency being slightly on the\nfirm  bide.\nMine Issues led the activity with\nBig Missouri being responsible for\n3800 of the 12.000 shares total for\nthe session. Thli stock aold steadily\nat 22 centa and closed at that\nquotation with no bdls. pioneer, h,\nfair activity, t-old tt 2.30 and closed\nat 2.25. unchanged. Premier Oold\nat 60 cents bid was off two.\nOils were listless and trading prac-\nllcally negligible. Mercury wa* tha\nonly lsv,e in this division to register\na change and closed off two at seven\ncents bid.\nWIinrlQ Man Aug 3 -CCP1 -\nWheat prices moved forward on the\nWinnipeg market yesterday, moatly\nhecuuBe traders atrayod away from\nth0 pit and placed no obstructions\nIn the way of the goctle upswing.\nThere v.n*. no itport Interest and\nthe tradh Lrtly local.   The\nadvance WM % to om cent at the\nclan.\nOctober oloaed nnts; De-\nrember at 56^4 and M I I\nwmat  values   were  onchangad  and\neoarnc   grains    heir!   firm.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTRKAl,. Auk. 'J\u2014Eggs att-\nv.incofl-    BuOcr    and    thee.se    town\nEkc  priest  to nUllffa  will\nvaneod  cue cMtt !>er dozen   gficvally\ntomorrow on ihr Montreal 1\nmarket, it Is aanonnoad The new\nll \u25a0 i U011, the flrat prloa btln\n1 tdtu ami bha noond 'or\nloo?c ion: Apodal brands, ;i2, 3o,\nitraa 80, 28; fraah rirsta, 26.\nB4;   frnh  neonda, 39,31.\n.  [QllOWl  *trady\nI v prtn\nThe   gtnvral   earlot   market   at   the\nquoted at 29\nror nttm, n 10 M foe ftrata\n0   to   '-i   [er   noottdi   with\nI Colunbln   one   cent   higher.\nChaan,   Toronto    12',_,   Queve<-    It,\nButier, No.  1 finest fret>h 20',a.\nebso, tto*h spacUUs in cwtona 32.\nIggB,   Iresh   rxtrati   In   enrtona. ;i0\ntnab tiMta W.\nMINNEAPOLIS OBAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS. Aug. 9 -Hour unchanged. Shipments ;12,408. Bran\n10.50   to  1100.\nWhfit: N-- l nr>r. ,vri to t;nv,\nNo. 1 red durum 49U to Mfc; Sep\ntoraber   43H;   Ueeember   M%;   May\nCorn: No. .3 yellow 59 to 60.\nOata: No. ;i whin 88H to 233i.\nFlax:   No.    I.   1.63'4   to   1 -55 Va.\nVancouver List .\nMINES\nBid\nAak\nDip    Missouri    \t\n\u2014\n.2J\n\u2014\n.01\nDuthie         \t\n\u2014\n.04\nOeorge   Ent    \t\n\u2014\n.03\nOeorgla  River   ___\nm\n.03\n.04\n.19\n\u2014.\n\u2014\n.01\nMorton   Wollesy   .\t\n.01\n\u2014\n04 _\n-60\nPend    Oreille    \t\n\u2014\nJO\n.04\n.OS\n_.\n_fl\n.oi':-\n.05\n.01\n_2\nTopley   Richfield       -\n.01\n\u2014\nOILS\n.10\nC. \u00bbud E. Lands  \u2014\n,\n.0.r'\n\t\n.in\n1     \u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nM%\nMeDougaU Senur new\nm\nOkalta urw   \u2014.\n\u25a0\ntt\nSltrllng Pacific, aak ..\n....\n10\nINTER-CITY SOFTBALL ON PROT.KAM\nAT TRAIL 1'ICNIC\nGilbert Rowling aim,tao Friday\nnight that he had got in touch\nwith Chairman Savage of tha sports\ncommittee In Trail In connection\nwith the monster picnic nera on\nAugust a ot tht_ employees of tha\nconsolidated Mining ft Smelting\nCompany of Canada, ln retpect to\nintercity softbali possibilities, and\nthat as a result, a number of soft-\nball games will probably bo on the\nday's program at the Recreation\ngrounds, between Trail and Nelson\nteams, including possibly girls teams.\nReds Orderly, Edmonton'\nEDMONTON. Alta.. Aug, 2~Tnter-\nnational struggle Day\" was observed\nSaturday by Edmonton Communist*\nin mi orderly fashion. A large mass\nmeeting In the city market aquare\nand a parade through city streets\ncomprised  lhe day's activities.\nFantastic Areop lane at Hendon\nEdmonton\nCalgary\nLethbridge\nVancouver\nN Westminster\nVictoria    .   . \".      8,827,843    12,194,197\nA total of 35.805,632 motor vehicles were registered In thc world\nen January 1, and of these 26.697,-\n308 were owned in the United\nStates.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelt-\ning Co., of Canada, Ltd.\nTRAIL\u2014BRITISH COLUMBIA\nri'SfDuTui I  Ammonium  Phosphate\ni-LbFHAIN 1 Sulphate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\nBrand\nCHEMICAL   F-RTILI-HRS ,\nBOLD BV NATIONAL FRl'IT CO., NLLSON\nProducara   and   Raflnera   or\nTADANAC\nKrancl\nELECTROLYTIC\nLead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\nMILTON C. WORK\nwrites on the\n1\nMany a strange \"bird\" took part :n the recant noyai t\naerial    demonstration    that   revealed    (Mtt    Rntaln's s\ncraft la \u00bb talllees  Pterodactyl  Mark;  iv machine  and Ita appearance is sufficient\nname. I\nNew 'OfficiaP System\nof Contract Bridge\nNow Running\nOut of the confusion caused by lhe many opposing systems\nof playing Contract Bridge has emerged a new, simple and better\nmethod developed and recognized hy foremost bridge experts.\nTo outline and explain this \"Official\" Contract Bridge syestem\nThe Nelson Daily News has engaged Mr. Milton C. Work, international bridge authority. In a scries of articles starting today,\nMr. Work interprets thc new \"Offficial\" Contract Bridge system\nto exist and why it is the only method to follow.\nFollowing this series, Mr. Work will invite articles on Contract\nBridge for The Nelson Daily News showing how to play, how to\navoid mistakes, and how to improve your \u201eam*\\\nRead MILTON C. WORK\non BRIDGE\nEvery day exclusively in\nGlljr Nrlaun Hatty NruiH\nram\n \u25a0\nr.tn. TEN\n>Tm   H-ISON DAILY HUTS, NEWON, B.  C \u2014 MOVDAT MOKNTNO.  ATJOC8T  8,  IMI*\nWriting Paper\nSpecials\nBoxes of Paper and  Envelopes,  in  Blue, Gray,\nMauve and White.\n60c VALUE FOR\n43c\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPHON-     TAXJ   a||d\nA A TRANSFER\nDally Freight Schedule\nto Trail and Rossland\n\" eaves    Nelson    10    a.m.\nTrail Depot\u2014Dominion Garage\nRossland   Depot\u2014L.   D.   Cafe\nCON   CUMMINS\nRead The Nelson Daily\nNews Classified Ads\nONLY 10 FAIRS\nARE SCHEDULED\nFOR KOOTENAY\nWest Kootenay Has Only Six;\nEast   Kootenay   Will\nHave Five\nWest Kootenay faira will be the\nsmallest in number thla fall for\nmany years, according to tbe circular of dates Just received by B. C.\nHunt, district horticulturist. There\nare only six being held ln West\nKootenay. the centers holding them\nbeing Harrop, Frultvale, Trail, Edge-\nwood,   Nakusp   and   Creston.\nThis leaves out of the picture, in\naddition to Nelson, which has not\nyet replaced Us burned fair building, the centers of Grand Potka,\nSlocan City, Boswell and Crawtoi\\l\nBay.\nEast Kootenay is nolckng up much\nbetter relatively In tlie matter of its\ncustonury fairs,  and  wil]   have  five,\nwhich will be held respectively at\nNatal, Fernle, Invermere, Cranbr.-ok\nand Parson.\nThe department of agriculture is\nnow appointing the Judges to Judg_\nthe different sections at the fairs.\nDates of the 11 Kootenay fairs\nare aa follows:\nNatal,   August  36.\nFernle.   August   31-8eptember   2.\nInvermere,   September   1-3.\nHarrop,  September  3.\nCranbrook,  September  3-5.\nFrultvale,  September 9.\nTrail, September  11.\nParson, September 13.\nEdgewood, September  14,  16.\nNakusp,   September   34,   3D.\nCreston,   October  8,   7.\n___E__j\nGASOLINE\nQuick Starting\nand Constant\nANLY thc highest test Gasoline lhat fits local\n\" climatic conditions is sold here. It's the kind\nof Gas that gives you the getaway you demand.\nCOMPLETE SERVICE\nPhone 35\nNelson Transfer Lctd;\nAUCTION SALE\nMONDAY, AUGUST 3rd., 2 P. M.\nAT LITTLE JOHN'S, Ward St., (Next Opera House.)\nThe following Roods received nn roii*lKninent will be offered:\nKitchen I'temlK Tools, Oott Clubs, Fishing Baskets and Tackle,\nscale*. Card Table, Wine Pedestal, Chest of Drawers, Desk, Wicker\nChairs. Eleetric Light Fixture. Braaa Bert, Iron Bed, Bug-*, Carpets.\nMooter Cabinet, corner rahtnets, child*' Desk and Chun'*. Bearing\nMachine. Center Table. Two Seta of Heat* Harness. Nine Men's Islta,\nnew, riM \u2022** to 49. and numerous other articles. Goods on view\nmorning of sale.\nTERMS  CASH\u2014 tt   HORSTEAD,   Auctioneer\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nWe will be pleased to have you\ncall and discuss your\nlumber problems.\nPhone 176     Foot of Stanley St.\nARE\nYou Making Full Use oS\nELECTRICITY\nEvery modern, iv HI-equip pert home should contain the following mentioned tlmc-savtng, labor-aavlng, leisure-creating Electrical\nAppliances:\nAu Electric Ranee. Washing Machine, percolator, Waffle iron,\nCurling Iron. Toic-ter. Iron, Heater, and alt the other Electrical\nAppliances obtainable. They make every household task a pleasure,\nand  arc  moM.   economical.\n\\nd MftMl should he Installed In yonr home wherever vou\n<,in   ii-c   them,   because   thev   m*  time  and   effort.\n\u2014The City of Nelson\nTools for All Trades\nThis is an important branch of our business\nand we keep only first quality tools.\nAxes Augers\nSaws Chisels\nRules Wrenches\nGauges Screw Drivers\nHammers Etc., Etc\nLET US SUPPLY YOUR WANTS\nWooc-Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale - NELSON, B. C. - Retail\nMOTHER OF TRAIL\nMAN DIES; COAST\nMrs. (TDel! Pioneer of Van-\ncomer; Musician of Note;\nSon Hubert Here\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. a.\u2014Newi hftj\nbeen received here of the death ot\nMrs. William O'Dell, mother of\nHubert H. O'Dell. of Trail, at miner, near Vancouver, following a\nlong   illness.\nMrs. O'Dell was a pioneer resident of Vancouver. She waa the\ndaughter of the late Henry Lake\nof London, who edited Belgra wi.i,\nonce a well known magazine.\nArriving in Vancouver 40 years,\nago, bhe Joined the staff of St.\nLake's home as a nurse-in-training.\nFollowing her marriage Mrs. O'Dell\nmoved with her husband to Nh-\nnalmo, but residence at the Island\ncommunity was a short duration,\nand they  returned  to Vancouver.\nMrs. O'Dell waa a musician, serving for many years as organist al\nSt. Michael's church, Mount Waaa-\nant, Vancouver. Several years ago\nshe took up residence at Mllner, in\nthe Fraser valley, seeking to lmprove\nher health.\neBsldes her husband snd her sen\nHubert of Trail, she is survived bv\na aon Eric and a daughter Constance,   both   of  Vancouver.\nTORONTO. Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014Communists rallied held in Ontario centers\nyesterday in protest against war,\npassed off quietly and only ln Toronto  were any  arrests  reported\nELECTRICAL\nWORK\nCall   us   for   any   electrical\nwork that yao may need ln\nyour home.   Reasonable rales.\nSatisfaction guaranteed,\nPHONE   8\nL. B. Electric\nCanadian Professional Golf Champion\nSONS OF FREEDOM\nPETITION OTTAWA1\nRELEASHRIENDS\nAt  Same  Time   Adhere   to\nNudity and Stand on Taxes\nand Schools\nWhen Andy Kay of LamDton. Ont., started out on hla queet for the\nCanadian Professional Oolfera' association championship at Toronto. Ont..\nhe scored a 71. which was one stroke under par. In hla second round lie\nliterally blasted his way over the course, shooting his first nine in 30\nstrokes, and flnlahinj with a 67. This gave him a 36-hol. total of 138\nand   the  association  title.\nSMELTERMEN TO\nHAVE CARLOADS\nFUNAT PICNIC\nNovelty Events at Lakeside\nPark Will Keep the Fun\nat High Level\nTRAIL, B. C, August 2.\u2014Pun bj\nthe carload is In store for smelter-\nmen and their families at the Consolidated employees' picnic at Nelaon next Saturday.\nFeature events arranged by thc\nsports committee, to be staged at\nLakeside park, will keep the fun at\nCHILDREN\nParents must realize that children know nothing of eye delect,\nand that your children look to\nyou for help and guidance. If\nyour boy or girl hsd you Intelligence, he or she would probably\nsuspect that Kmartine. tired eyes,\nor frequent headaches, in most\ncases  meant  defective  vision.\nJ- 0. Patenaude. R. 0.\nOptometrist  snd   Optician\nExpert Optical  Service\nia- high level. One of the most interesting of these will be an obstacle race ln the water, which is\nto include clambering over barrels\nand other obstructions. There is no\nage limit In this race.\n! Nor is there any age limit in tho\ngreasy pole competition. In this it\nis likely to be a case of \"first omc\nfirst  ducked.\"\n\"Swans\" are now being made here\nfor the swan race, in which contestants will mount wooden buds\nwith paddles for Implements of\npropulsion.\nCompetition will be keen when it\nand will probably be more keen\nwhen the \"dirtiest face\" or children\nunder two ia chosen.\nLadles will be able to give vent\nto their feelings by \"bringing up\nfather,\" a rolling pin and dummy\naffair in which most hits will count\nThe picnic committee will meet\nMonday afternoon to bring,arrangements closer to completion. Transportation for smeltermen will be on\nsale  next  week.\nHunter Electric\nand Plumbing\nPhone 530 Box 191\nMaterial and Supplies\nWholesale and Retail\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST and  OPTICIAN\nSuite IM-tM, Medical Arts Bids.\nContract\nBookkeeping\nTo business men unable to give necessary\ntime to your books.\nWe will give them\nregular and expert\nattention at very\nmoderate  charges.\nHo E. THAIN\nQualified Accountant\nBox 343 Nelson\nMiss Carr, Cranbrook\nGoes to Tranquille\nCRANBROOK. B. C August 2.\u2014\nMiss Marion Carr, who graduated\nrecently from the St, Eugene hospital, has left for Tranquille where\nshe will become a member of the\nstaff nt the sanitarium. She made\nthe Journey via Golden.\nMrs. Thompson entertained at a\nfarewell luncheon for Mrs. McCrcery,\nprior to her departure for the en*'\nPraying the minister of Justice to\n' please release our brethren from\nthe Oakalla prison at once,\" 54 Sons\nof Freedom of Glade, Thrums and\nGrand Porks declare in their petition, which was apparently mailed\nJuly 30, \"It is absolutely impossible\nfor us to stop nudity,\" and forecast\nthat soon all the Doukhobors will\nbe marching 10.000 strong with tbe\n3ons of Freedom in walking nude. |\nrefusing to send chidien to school,\n[and refusing to pay tuxes.\n' The \"brethren\" whose release they\nj are asking are the Sons of Freedom\nwho were sentenced to Jail terms\nI for census disorders at Grand Fork;\nI which were accompanied by violence\nland nudity.\nI In the lengthy letter, oi which i\nicopy has been supplied to The Nelson Daily News, after the usual\nj ground is covered as to alleged corruption of the present civilization\nand alleired persecution of the\n! Doukhobors by th<; Canadian ,u*\nthorlttes, and alleged deceit aa to\nthe real objects of the census, tht\nfollowing paragraphs deal with mutters of public Interest:\nOOIKHOBORH   AWAKING\n\"Most of the Doukhobors, including the Independents, who have\npromised to be faithful to your\nlaws, begin to realize Into what\nyoke they have chained themselves.\nThe only difference between Russian and British yoke is that the\nlatter one is better polished from\nthe outside. No doubt it gives a\nlittle more relfection, but or^:n -\nically lt Hi built of the same .substance.\n\"Doukhobors today have perfectly\nunderstood that your educational\nsystem is hiding behind a terrible\nmonster. You are training children\nwith great intensitlveness and w.th\na direct purpose to adapt them to\nthe egotistical needs of the government. They also began to realize\nthat by paying taxes they are creating a state of moral decomposition, because all wars, bloodshed,\nand all manners of violence depend\non taxes.\nNUDITY BASK\n\"Regarding nudity: it is a Batter\nof little consideration. Nudity Is a\ncult which is freely practiced ICNtOI\ntn many countries. Our motto:\nBack to Mother Nature, only In her\nhands will we find the key that\nwill unlock all our life problems.\nTherefore it Is absolutely Impossible\nfor us to stop nudity, for nudity la .\nlife.\n\"We not only hope but can foie-\neee that in the near future nil\nDoukhobors. including most or tlu>\nIndependents, will he marching, to\nyour surprise. In t^n thousHiici\nstrong, and will Join the ranks ot\nthose who do not. send their children to school, not paying ta.vs.\nand walking nude. They not oaty\nwill do it, but will be compelled to\ndo it, because thla constitutes a\nstep of their unavoidable life path,\nBut if they will continue to __r-\nguise themselves under faJei Mining, they will forever miss the\ngreat name 'Doukhobor.' which baa\nbeen bought dearly and fJiabed\nwith the blood of our ancestors . . .\n\"In conclusion, we are asking you\nsincerely, please release our bretlin\nConsider the Savings\nin This\nSALE OF FINER\nSUITS\nScour the entire community ... but we\ndoubt if you'll find\nthc equal of Values\noffered in this great\nsale. Its been many\nyears since you were\nable to even tie the\nprices presented in\nthis sale.\nTHREE GROUPS\nthat will please\nall.\n$22\nValues to $32.50\n$27\nValues to $37.50\n$32\nValues to $45.00\nOther    g-\u00abts    were    Mra.     Elmore | from  the  Oaaalla  prison   at   once.\n(LKAMMi\nPRESSING\nRF.PAIKlMi\nALTERATIONS\nIDEAL    TAILORS\nand\nDRY CLEANERS\nNext C. F.  II. Telegraph Offices\nWe want -four business\nKootenay Plumbing\n6c Heating Co.\nat Old Grill  Block,\nBaker St.\nREPAIRS\nby  Experienced   Workmen\nPhone 666\nJOHN A. SMITH\nSTANLEY .HMS0N\nFor Modern Plumbing\nat Moderate Prices\nKfl\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER  PI.IMBER\nOpp. City Hall Phone Sir,\nSUPPLIES\nSor Repair Work\nWe carry a complete stock of building materials\nand can supply your needs promptly. If you want\nmen to do thc work, we can send you efficient workers.\nPlaster, lime, brick, cement, shingles, roofing.\nFireproof Giproc Wallboards, B. C. Veneer.\nSee the attractive colors we can supply in California Stucco.\nA. H. GREEN _?_..\n(Successors to John Burns & Son)\nPLANT BaM st' OFFICES SoSS,**\n\"d SALES OFFICE\nStaples.   Mrs.   Chester   Staples,  lira.\nBeale and Mrs. Nelson.\nMlsa Hester Thompson left ou\nThursday for Toronto where she will\nresume her position in the referriuo\ndepartment of the public library.\nMiss Thompson hHs hern visiting ber\nparents for six weeks. During hat\nstay she visited the coast, and point,\nin the Okanagan as well.\nMr. and Mrs. V. Edwards and tCUi\nreturned on Thursday from Munroe\nLake where they spent thetr holidays\nIn a cabin. BUly and Francis tatSt*\nwere their guesta during their stay.\nMr. and Mrs. M. McCreery i?ft\nThursday by motor for Belleville,\nOnt., where they will in future make\ntheir home. Mr. and Mrs. McCreeiv\nhave been residents of the city for\nmany year\u00ab and will be greatly\nmissed by a wide circle of frlenda.\nMr. McCreery was a member of the\nfirm of McCreery Brothers which\nclosed out their business in the city\nin the early summer. Mr. and Mrs.\nMcCreery were accompanied by their\nson and daughter. The McCreery\nhomc will be occupied by Mr. and\nMrs. George Meade.\nThe resignation of Miss Mercer of\nthe school sjaff has been receive:!\nby the board, which will : lean thnt\nthe board will be able to retain the\n! services of Miss Speers who. as one\nof the most recently hired of the\nteachers, had been notified that the\nboard would not be able to retain\nher services.\nMrs. Jacob Large of Windsor,\nOntario, has arrived for a visit with\nher sOn, Dr. H. L. Large and Mrs.\nLarge.\nMrs. Fergie entertained at a delightful luncheon on Thursday in\nhonor of Dr. Fergle's mother of Los\nAngeles, California, who has been\nspending the summer months with\nthem. Mrs. Large won high honor..\nat bridge and Mrs. McKowan at\nNewmarket. Other guests were:\nMrs. Wilson, Mrs. Price. Mrs. Schcl'\nMrs. Large, Mrs, MacPherson, Mr?,.\nMarsh. Mrs. Bracknctt, Mrs. McQuaiu.\n'Mrs. Ironside, Mrs, MacDonald, Mrs.\nMcKowan, Miss Woodland. Mrs. Fcr-\nI gie senior returns to her home next\n1 week. She will be accompanied to\n. teh coast by Miss Frances McBroom.\nI Mrs Marsh was a bridge hostess\non Thursday evening in honor of\n' visitors ln thc city. Prizes were won\n[ tay Mrs, Ironside, MtsR Woodland and\nMrs. Kleinstivcr. The guests were\nMrs. McQuald, Mrs. Macdonald. Mrs.\nPrice. Mrs. Fergie. 8r., Mrs. Fergie.\nMrs. Ironside, Mr.s. McKowan, Mrs.\nWilson. Miss Woodland, Mrs. Brackett, Mis, Large, Mrs, MacPherson,\nMrs. Ward, Mrs. Kllenstlver. M^b.\nBalrd. Mrs. Wheeler.\nWith kiDdest regards, hope 70u\nwill understand us nnd at once\nleave the parliament buildings and\nat once go to Mother Nature for 11\ncomplete rejuvenation, and Join the\nuniversal brotherhood for the service\nof mankind, and thus clear yourself\nof thc errors you have mad\u00ab toward\nyour   brothers   by   creation.\"\nFire Department is\nCalled to Bush Fire\nROSSLAND, B. C. Aiicr. 2 \u25a0 \\u\nalarm at 1:15 Sunday afternoon called the fire department to a brl^k\nbush fire In tlie area between Sixth\nand Seventh avenue and Seattle\nand Monte Carlo streets. The conflagration was thought to have been\nstarted from a eareless.y discarded\ncigarette butt. Damage was negli\nglble.\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER\nJEWELER,\nand Graduate Optician\n413  MALI.   \u00bb1 H-B\nLAST MINUTE\nADVERTISEMENTS\nLOST\u2014CAR RUMB.'.E SEAT LID\nhandle, Baltcmr road. Return\nNelson Transfer.    Reward.     (6673)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n\u00a3\"S TAXS\niNelson Transfer Co., Ltd\nThc   nest   nf   Service\ncareful. Courteous\nDrivers\n\"IHE    HOMi:    OF    CO.M.Urtt\"\nStrathcona\nHotel i\ntside Rocrrm\nPer Night\nBATHING CAPS\nSPECIAL\u2014 Retulai 73c.     CtlA\nOn   SALE  3M\u00bbV\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPhone   ]\u2014Prewrlpllon   Specialist\nSHOP   WITH   IS   BY   MAIL\np_3c::3 tasi\n77\nFreight Schedule\nDally to Rosslant\nhikI Trail, io a.m\nTrail   Phono   181\nII h>   T.   T.   __   F.  LTD.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's   Dispensing:   Chemists\nAlways at Your Service\nS]\u00bbfliUl     Lull's    (I\nSons   of    England    meet\nMemorial   Hall,\ntonight\n(6662;\nFor rent\u2014Furnished suite. Electri--\nrefrigeration.     Kerr   Apts. (6623;\nSincerity Lodge, I. O. O. F\u201e meets\ntonight, K. P. hall. 8 p.     in.    (6670>\nFor Rent\u2014Sfngle Housekeeping\nrooms, also two-roomed (suite. Annable  Block. (6624)\nThe   New   Denver   beer   plebiscite\nwill  be  held  on  Saturday.  8.\nEdwin Tlndale. Returning Officer.\nKOOTENAY    Ml B1CAL    I KSTIVA1.\nsociety now Incorporated. Meetiim\nwtll he held hi cjlv hall this ew-\nnlnir. 8 o'clock. Membership fee\ni r.n cents for a two-year ttrni. open\nIn alt Interested. Attendance Of l\">\nreunlred lo complete organization\ndetail,        Convention    report   win\n1 lir    prc-pnteit. (W\/o\nDOUKHOBOR GIRL\nDIES, DIPHTHERIA\nNancy Savinkoff, 11-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mre. John Savin-\nkoff, member of the Christian\nCommmunltv of Universal Brotherhood at Pass Creek, died Sunday\nafternoon from an attack of diphtheria,\nShe had-been ill only three days,\nand had reached the city only a\nvery short time when ahe died. Dr.\nF. M. Auld was in ehur-fc of the\nMM,\nTransfer\nPhone 797\nCOAL\nWOOD\nHAULING\nPermanent  (luesti\nm^\u2014i7\u2014eetM\u2014*a\\*,fy_s\u2014n\nPHONE 34 BOX 1083\ntall und _<t vour correct\nwel\u00abht   FREE.\nTWO   SHOWS\nMCiHILV\n7  AND  9  P.  M.\nMATIN EL\n%    O'CLOCK\nTODAY\nTuesday\nA MOST INTRIGU1NC\nAND FASCINATING\nROMANCE\nDRAMA\nACTION\nSUSPKNSK\n'Bo\u00a37\"<Sour\nWITH    THE    EVER-1'OPl I.AR\nCHARLES FARRELL\nAND    HIS    NEW    LEADINO ,\nLADY.    THE     GORGEOUS     AND\nTALENTED    ENGLISH    STAR-\nELISSA LANDI\nIII MPHKEY   BOGABT MYBNA   LOI\nA STORY OF A YOUNO AND ROMANTIC\nAVIATION OFFICER WHO FA1XS IN LOVE\nWITH A GIRL, ONLY TO FIND THAT SHE'S\nACCUSED   OF  BEING   A  SPY\u2014\nRomance and Thrills Above thc Ground\nand Beneath  the Clouds\nCOMEDY\nTHEY'RE    HERE    AGAIN\nIN   ANOTHER   RIOT   OF   LAUGHTER\nLAUREL and HARDY\n\"CHICKENS COME HOME\"\nFOX NEWS\nAlways   interesting\n\\r\\t    Attraction\nKxbt.   Montgomery,   uoiit.   Ames,\nAnita Page, In\n\"WAR NURSE\"\nmiDAY-NATl KIlAY\u2014Musical   Comedy   Romanrr\u2014\"SPLINTERS\"\nRead The Nelson Daily Netw\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_08_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\/1.0405802","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":"1931-08-03 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":"1931-08-03 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":""}]}