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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":" Visiting Pros\nBREAK PAR\nSee Page 7.\nPL. 28\nQfot iailu Ifo\nKootenay\nEXAMINATIONS\nSee Page 9.\nNELSON, B. C. THURSDAY NORNING, JULY 25, 1929\nNo. 84\niALT CRUISER PROGRAMS\n+    +    +    +    +    +    +    +    *    +    \u2666    +    +    +    +    +    *\n+    +    +     +    +    +    +    +    +    +    +    +    +    +     +    +\nSHE'S IN THE SWIM\nNot Begin Construe-\ni Until Opportunity\nres Consider Parity\nNATIONS WILL\nOT BE COMPETING\nI for Three U. S. A\nnisers WUl Not Be\naid Down This Fall\nAHHINOION.   July    84.\u2014In    a\n41 statement, Prealdent  Hoover\n\u25a0uced late today that the con-\n1**00   ol   the   cruisers   Included\nUa year's naval building* pro-\nwonM not begin until there\njmi   tin   opportunity   for   oon-\nrttlon. est   their   etlect    upon\nfinal  .agreement    for    naval\nj\u00bb   which  he   saw   he  epected\nkeen an opportunity  for con-\nMa   aner the   United   states,\"\npreelden   declared    be   had\nMth    real    satisfaction    the\niwtt   ol   Premier   MacDonald\ne today In the' house of con-all-over declared  the  Aitxrl-\npeopie   were   fleetly   computed\"   by   Premier   MacDonalds\n[anal _-nd tbat he would find an\natrial   welcome   la  the   United\nM.\n\u2022   PRINCIPLE\nMacDo-aaid,\", the prealdent aald,\nIntroduced the principle of par-\n[hich we now have adopted and\n-msummatlon means that oreat\nln the tfatted Statee hence-\nare not to compete In armament\njottntlal oppooenta, but to co-\naa   Iri-nda   ta  the   red-_ction|\n(jrtlng that he could not but\n;\u00abponstva to the principle entin-\nby Mr. MHcDonald, Mr. Hoover\nto the United Statee Joins the\nh Premier In hla efforts to ward\nt-uunent ln the same spirit.\n~awbonald haa indicated the\nwlll and poaltlve . intention of\nliritish government by suspension\nnatructlon of certain portions of\nyear's Brltlah proclamation. Mr.\n\\* tald.\nSHARK   OOOD   WIU.\na the deslro of the United Slate*\nu6w equal  good  will  ln  our ap-\nfti to the program.\nhave   three   orulaers   ln   this\nconstruction   whloh   have   been\ntaken   In   the   government   navy\nthe detailed drawings for which\n4n In course of preparation\ntual  keel, would, Mn the ordinary\nbe laid down  some  time this\nGenerally   speaking,   tho   British\nstrength   considerably   exceed.\nItsaa strength at tha present time\nUM  actual  conatruotion   of  these\ncruleera   would   not   be   likely\nemtelves to produce Inequality ln\nTlnal reault.\ne do not wish, however,  to have\nmisunderstanding   ot   our   actions\ntherefore we mall  not lay  theae\nuntil   there  haa  been  an  opor-\ntor lull  consideration  of  their\nVISITS CANADA\n^reat Britain and United States Are Aiming at Equality in Navies\nu ]\nBOATS S1AI\nMonster Fire in Berlin\nMM J\nDEPARTMENTS\nFIGHT BLAZE\nGerman Capital Shook by\nExplosions; Monster\nFire Follows\nJuly  17 aaw the arrival of another 'TWO   DEAD,   MANY\nfair Invader ln Toronto frem the weet.J a-ir-mjI^UC    i\\i IIiuE,*-1h\nMlat Catherine Harrop ot Seattle, Waah-1 UlMEaKB    LT(JUIVOU\nington (shown above), for the women's\nten-mile swim at the C.N.E.   Mlsa Harrop looke* like elitetn but telle the truth \u25a0_ W\u201e-l,_,     (_.._,\u201e_,     \/_f\nand acknowledges 34.    She la a husky UXygWl     WOrKS     OCtjne     Ul\nmaiden and haa won a number of awlms\naround four miles at Portland. Mlat\nHarrop haa Joined wtth Mlas Oeraldlne\nand Mlaa- Dorothy Wldmer, two other\nSeattle girls. Wltl-, Mlaa Olive Cotter -\ndam. who was second to Mlaa Ruth\nTertle laat year, Seattle certainly has\na fair entry\u2014and that \"fair1\ndouble for the entire Collection.\ngoes\nBORAH PLEASED\nAT RATIFICATION\nTragedy; Explosions Last\nTwo Hours\nWants   Treaty    Followed\nConference to Cut\nArmaments\nJiy\nBKRLIN, July 24.\u2014Fifty Berlin fire\ncompanies tonight brought under control after five hours of fighting one\nof the worst fire and explosions that\nthe Oerman capital haa known ln\nyears.\nThe entire Industrial suburb of Bor\nBlgwaldee was thrown into panic by i\nserlea of terrific explosions In the\nUnited Oxygen works which began at\nnoon and lasted two hours. Fire broke\nbut  after   the   first  explosion,\nAt least two workmen were belleev-\ned  to have perished  ln the explosion\nMotorist Charged\nWith Running Down\nMotorcycle Officer\nWINNIPEG. July 24\u2014 Charged wtth\nrunning down a provincial motorcycle,\npolicemen and driving an automobile\nwhile intoxicated. Matthew Alexander,\nIs being held without ban. The case\nagainst Alexander will be heard July\n31. Constable D. Sherrln. knocked from\nhis elele by a \u2022 car, alleged to hav-\nbeen driven by the accused man, and\nseverely Injured, commandered apasstng\ncar and arrested Alexander. The constable is suffering from Internal Injuries\ntoday.-\nGRADES (ii\nTotal   of   907   Candidates\nPresented Selves for\nExams in B. C.\nREVELSTOKE'S\nBEER PETITION\nTURNED DOWN\nPetition   Failed   Comply   With\nStatute Legal  Advisers of\nGovernment\nVICTORIA. July 34\u2014 Petition from\nRevelstoke and surrounding psrt of that\ndistrict asking for a plebscite ae to\nwhether the selling of beer by the glass\nunder the liquor act should be permitted has been refused by the provincial government. This course has been\ntaken because the petition presented\nfailed to comply, In the opinion of the\nlegal advlaiers of the government, wtth\nthe spirit of the statute under which\nsuch permission is granted.       \u25a0\nThe petition was signed not only by\nthe residents of the polling division\nwhich takes ln Revelstoke city but also\nby   those   of   another   polling   division\nWASHINGTON,\ntwelve were known to be Injured and\nothers had bean rushed to automobiles   removed some 30 miles from Revelstoke\n\u2014\u2014 ' to Berlin hospital. At an early hour j\n^^^^^^^^^ July N 34.\u2014Comment- tonight It waa Impotable to make an\nlo* upon the ratification today ofthe exact check oi casualties.\nKellogg anti-war treaty. Chairman Bor- The detwiatldns could be , heard\nah of the senate foreign relations com- M' far as the centre of Berlin and\nmittee declared the world naval situ- brought thousands of workers runn-\natlon to be a serious challenge to that ping rrom fgctories and homes in\n**\"\" fright   to   the  scene.\nFlying fragments of oxygen contain-\nwlthln    a    wide\nof   the   oxygen   works.   Clouds\nUpon   his   return   from   the   White _..,.___.  .                 .\nHouse- ceremony   putting   intq> effect era    caused    damage\nthe   treaty,   Borah   declared   the   next rtdius\nmeeting that these nation* ahould have\nNEW HOPES OF\nPEACE BROUGHT\nTO MANCHURIA\n______ _ -- -   of smoke  enveloped  the  whole  nearby\nahould   be  a  meeting to  reduce  their   ^^ban   section   aa   the   fire   spread\nfighting   machines   and   to   cut   down\nthe   armaments   burdens.\"\nHe expressed gratification over advices from London that the British\nLabor government waa moving for\nnaval reductions at the same time\nthe Idahoan noted that American\nand Oreat Britain are spending billions for navies and he declared\n\"navies are fighting machines; they\nare built ln anticipation of war.\"\nDIVORCE DECREE CANCELED\nLONDON. July 34.\u2014The house of lords\ntoday threw out the divorce decree\ngranted Lady Patricia Ross by Scottish\ncourts against Sir Charles Rose, thc\nrifle Inventor of Balnagowan, Scotland.\nCutter Bushes to\nAid Ship Driven\nAshore Up North\nWATTLE.    Waah.,    July    24.\u2014The\nupon   too   final   air-Mount   Ior4 \u00bbn\"\u00abl SWtaa coaat guanl cutter Halda\n^^^^^^^^^^^ waa expected to reach the Oceanic and\nOriental steamship Olid Forest late to*\nk which  we expect  to reach,  alto  our  hopes of relief  from,  al.. ___________________________________\nUon Ua more largely In the latter  \u00ab\u00bb\u00bb.  irlna *^on \u00b0n  *\u2122f,UMk J.\"\nto the Lindas artificial Ice company\nThe United xy.en company works\nand the Llndes Ice plant were completely destroyed by the fire and\nexplosions.\nAccording to one workman's story,\nthe first explosion occurred when a\ntank filled with acetylene bunt aa lt\nwaa being -carried from a work shop\nin the United Plant.\nOfficials    From    Either    Side\nMe\u00abt in Conference;\nTension  Lessens\nVancouver Firm to\nErect Buildings\nBurned, Rossland\nVANCOUVER, July J..\u2014Contract for\nreconstructing the publlc buildings at\nRoaaland has been awarded to the Vancouver contracting firm of Moncrlcf _t\nVistaunet. limited, according to advices\nfrom Ottawa. Coat of this work will\nbe  131,139.\nof  tlie  program  under  the law\nbar\n[Still Going Strong;\ncord Now 277 Hours\nLOUIS. July 34.\u2014Without visible\nji of  faltering, tb* monoplane  St.\n|s Robin and tta sturdy pilots. Dale\nJackson   and   Forrest   O'Brien.\n\u2022 on toward new fame tonight  as\nneared tbe snd pf their twelfth\nof sustained flight.\ney had left the old endurance re-\nof the Angeleno more than a full\nbehind  them, and  the  flyers, in\nspirit*, were confident of passing\n3(K)-hour   mark.    Tbey   hoped   to\n\u25a0blng  for 600 hours.    It  was  to\n.  teat to  the  finish   between   the\nUna   of  man  and  of  motor.    At\npjn. they had been up 277 hours.\nlac? .Coast Airman's\n[ea& Was Accidental;\n0 Expert Observed It\njtffCOUYfB. July *4\u2014The coroner's\nwhich thla afternoon Investigated\nfoul crash of the Aero Club of\nMi Columbia's moth plane on Lulu\n|ut fartt Monday morning, found\nPercy Heliytock, club Instructor.\naccidental death\nfltllem Tempi ston, superintendent of\nairport, could offer no theory of\nMcldent, as It had net been ob-\n;Mf by any flying expert.\nland among the rocky Aleutians. Th<\nahlp went ashore ln a westerly wind\nwhile on her way to meet the Halda to\nobtain medical aid for her eeoond officer, who was taken 111 with blood poisoning.\nRadio reports said no fear wae felt\nfor the safety of the crew of 35 signed\non at Ban Francisco.\nContract is Let for\nBuildings to Cost\n$60,000, Kimberley\nTOKIO, July 24. \u2014The day of the\nKellogg renunciation cf war pact ceremonies iu Washington brought to Manchuria today new hopes of peace ln ti\ndefinite effort by Russla>is and Chinese alike to dissipate th? war clouds\nhanging over the far east for tbe past 1\nMANY PASS IN THE\nKOOTENAY BOUNDARY\nMany     Granted     Partial\nStanding and Opportunity\nto Write Sup\nVICTORIA, B. C, July 24.\u2014Examination results ln Orades IX and X\nthrougotit the province were announced\nhere  today.\nOT the 007 candidates who presented\nthemselves for examination 356 passed\nIn all subjects, 249 were granted supplemental examinations, and 177 ware\ngranted partial standing.\nBy grades the results are as follows:\nKIMBERLEY\nOrade IX.\u2014Elva Violet Almas ts).\nCharles A. Bennett. Mary A. L. Clark.\nMary L. D'Hondt, Emily C. Helller. Alexins MacKinon. Reginald MacLeod is),\nMargaret T. McOown (s), Harry A.\nShannon. Ranka Thorleifson, Rose B.\nQ.   White    is).\nOrade X.\u2014James Joseph Bonner (sh\nLily W- Bray. Gwendoline A. Bryant (a).\nEthel G. Colthrop. John W. Douglas\n(s). Christian A. Foote (si. Janet M-\nHenderson. Yvonette La Metre is), Elisabeth Mason, Eileen L Montgomery.\nMargaret H. Morrison, Maxtne M. Murphy. Margaret MacKay. Annie at. Mao*\nKenzle is), Albert I. All rer. Wallace A.\nSChneKlcr (s>, Orsula M. Wlrth, Jean\nB. Young (si. Velma ak (si.\nNAKISP\nGrade    IX.\u2014One   candidate    granted\npartial  standing.\nCAKROI.K  LANDING   PI BL1C\nSfllOOL\nGrade   IX.\u2014One    candidate    granted\npartial standing.\nSII.U.RTOX\nGrade IX\u2014 Adeline F. Hanna. Mildred\nB. Harding. Randolph Harding. John W.\nKelly (s). Robert B. McAulay, Gunley\nA. Peterson. Edith M. Tattrie. Nell C.\nTattrte.\nOrade   X   \u2014   Harry   Lance   Emerson,\nJohannah F. Oroenhuysen  (\u25a0>.\nSLOCAN  CITY\nGrade IX.\u2014Gordon E, Batley (a), Jo-\nOF\nCRIERS TO\nEND BRITAIN\nPremier.   MacDonald.   Announced Plan for Reduction Naval Building:\nWOULD HALT SHIP\nAND SUB PROGRAMS\nMajor Victor McLaglen, 'star of the\nmovies, ls visiting Canada. \"I may be\nhard-boiled.'' .said McLaglen. whHe visiting Toronto, \"but I have a veit sympathetic heart.' He denies Hollywood\npeople are lax ln tr.?lr morals.\n[Going U. S. A. in October;\nEgyptian  High Commissioner Is Fired\nCOTTERELL IS\nPLEASED WITH\nTHE INTERIOR\nBusiness Conditions Never Better He Says; Talks of\nMines, Lumber\nfortnight. I wPh R. Bell  (s). Ena M. Dedrick, Har\nDespite   the   diplomatic   rupture   be-   old  L.  Rhodes.   Douglas D.  Ridge   it).\ntween Russia snd China Soviet Consul | Winifred    H.    Russell.    Marguerite    E.\nOeneral Mellnlkov of Harbin met Chang   Watts.\nTso Hslang, chief lieutenant of Oover-    KASLO\nnor Hsueh Liang of Manchuria and\nhimself head of tho Klrlau provincial\ngovernment, met in u crnfcrciK'i- at\nChang Chun.\nThe conference which was unexpected, waa regarded as a significant approach to direct negotiations betwecr.\nRussia and China for peaceful settlement of the controversy over the Chinese Eastern railway.\nRengo and other Japanese agency despatches reported marked lessening of\ntension at Harbin and also at the\nborder.\n* '    '   '..        !     J     '\nI      ,      I     r. *        - .1      .*i   U   #i\nVANCOUVER, July 3* \u2014Business conditions in .the Interior seldom, it ever,\nwere better than at present, according\nto C. A. Cotterell. general superintendent of the B. C. district, Canadian' Pacific railway. Just returned Pnm an Inspection tour over all lines of the railway In the province. \u25a0   -\nMr. Cottreil said he was Impressed\nparticularly with activities In the Slocan mlnjng dlatrlct where a number\nof properties that have been carrying\non development work are fsst aproach\nJ ing the shipping stage.\nThere is satisfactory progress being\nmade with the new Canadian Pacific\nline being built for 39 miles along\nKootenay lake.^from Procter to Kootenay Landing, Mr. Cotterell said. The\nright-of-way has been cleared over the\nmajor portion of the route and con\ntractors are now getting thetr equip\nment In readiness for construction of\nthe road bed.\nHolders of timber properties are benefitting by the brisk demand for poles,\nMr. Cotterell noticed.\nSplendid progress Is being made, with\ntbe company's very large program of\nwork ln B. C. which runs into millions\nof dollars and has provided a large\namount of employment throughout the\nseason and wlll continue to do so until\nlate ln the year.\nJohnson Landing Publlc School, Grade\nX.   Dorothy  A.  K.  Raper  <s>\nMirror Luko Public School. Grade IX.\n\u2014Mary V. Hefferman (s>. William D.\nHefferman.\nRiondcll Public School. Orade IX \u2014\nLeonard W. Davis.\nGrade X\u2014 Henry A   Davis' (s>, Philip\nA. Watts  (a).\nPROCTER\nProcter Superior School. Orade  IX. . __    _.__\u201e\u25a0*. .       ___________\nHarold Morrincld   (8),  William A.  Seal.    J \"ners   b\\   ]he   Dominion   of   Canada\n' Rifle association, it was announced to-\nCanada Will Not\nGive Reception\nTo Bisley Shots\nOTTAWA. July 24\u2014No formul  recep\ntlon will be given the Canadian Bisley\nTRANS-PACIFIC FLYERS\nTAKEOFF  IS   DELAYED\nTACOMA Wash., July 34.\u2014Delay tn\ncompleting overhauling and adjusting\nof Lieutenant Harold Bronley's trans-\nPacific monoplane, the City of Tacoma,\ntoday prevented the test flight which\nwilt precede tbe hopoff for Toklo, but\nthe flyer expected tonight that the1\nship will be ready for Its preliminary\nleap Into the sir tomorrow.\nBULLETINS\nROBS 291 HOURS\t\nBT. LOUIS, July 35.\u2014Tha at. Loula\nRobin continued on IU circular conns.\nover Lambert St. Loula field early thu\nmorning approaching the end ol lta\ntwelfth day In thealr. Atl 'Olo'cuoca\n(O. 8. T.) lt had been up 301 hpun\nand 44 minutes, exceeding the endurance mark of the Angeleno by SS houra.\nUP 50 HOURS \t\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn., July 34,\u2014Owen\nHaughland and Captain P. L. Crlghton,\nendurance flyer at t'40 p. m. had completed SO houra In the air.\nVANCOUVER. July 34\u2014Contracts for\na new $40,000 brick, and stell compressor\nbuilding at Klmberley has been awarded\nby the Consolidated Mining Ic Smelting\ncompany to Moncrlcf Sc Vistaunet, limited, Vancouver. It ta atated that a\n\u202210.000 stable wlll also be erected for\nthe  company.\nOrade X.\u2014John Peahce (sl.\nQueens Bay Public School. Orade IX.\n-Anne K. Hughes (s).\n\\KH   DKNVCK\nT-fiT HTTP   \"ITT-PTnUT A !    0r\"\" ,X\u2014M\u00bbr\u00ab,n,t '\u25a0 cf>\" Palrlc-\u00bb\nIU_j.HL-.J-i,   Vll\/IUKIA   M    Halre.   Arthur   W   C.   Jeffrey   (al.\n  Charles E. Kenneth  (s\u00bb. John B.  Kirk.\nVICTORIA.    July    34\u2014Premier JohA ' Charl-tte_P. Stoddart\nBRACKEN MEETS\nBracken of Manitoba took advantage cf\nhla brief visit here today to discuss\nwith Premier Tolmie, the administration of natural resources in Brltlah Columbia.\nManitoba expects to secure the administration of its natural resources\nwithin the next six montns, the premier said.\ndsy by Col. R. J. Blrdwhlstle. secretary\nof the association. Any reception which\nLieut.-Col. A. M. Blair or Lieut. Desmond Burke may receive will depend\non their own municipalities or military\nunits.\nTWINS NOW 86\nI'P A WEEK\nHOUSTON. Tex., July 34.\u2014Having run\nup more than a -full week ot flying\non lta barograph the endurance plane\nBillion Dollar dW*H)*0|lit waa rooming\ntoward au undertern_tne4 goal. Thetr\n\u2022hip wm working with preclalon.\nArchibald  Ollcl\ntheir Mth birthday lh Ouelph, making\nthe occasion with their excellent health,\nGilchrist,   twin   ttrethati.   ______________________ \t\nM**fflHl   IWUl,    ()AWtl\u00ab*fli   -Lanarkshire,    Scotland,    IMS      All\nIn  spite of  their  advance\nboth llorlste and\nOrade X.\u2014Ruby L. Clever (si. Oeorge\nW. Tier.\n(Rt'STON\nOrade IX.\u2014Agnes Louise Sinclair  (e*Y\nmm\nOrade IX.\u2014John O. Larmont\n\u25a0Nm  AMI  NATAL\nMichel   and   Natal   Superior   School.\nOrade  IX\u2014Alice  M.  Brown.  Albert  H\n| L.  The  (a).\n' MimVAY PI III II -( ikioi\nI Orade IX.\u2014Rosalie L. Brown (\u25a0>.\n| Mayneen V. Bush is), Vera L. Evans\nI. (a). Edward B. Johnston. Prank C.\nKrouten. Mae E. Sharp (a). Raymond\nC. Tipple (ar.\nIM.lt IM   MOVKTAIN   riBLIC\nSCHOOL\nOrade IX.\u2014Spencer W   R. Thompson.\nOrade X\u2014 Audley C. Brew.\nYAHK\nOrade   IX.\u2014Mable   C.   Anderson   is).\n1 Prances E.  Baum.  Ruth   L.   Clark   (si.\nI Agnes L.  Mclnnls   Is). Stanley  H.  Stewart\nI t'HUTYAl.t*\nPrultvale  Publlc School.  Orade  IX.\u2014\nArthur   E.   Barrow.   Margaret  J.   Smith\n| ts)\nErie Publlc School, Orade IX    Oeorge\ni I)   Aead.\n|  HAKIINKK\nI     Orade    X.\u2014One    candidate    granted\npartial standing.\nTHAU.  CENTER\nPrivate atudy\u2014Orade  X    William  R.\nParlee  and   Carl   R   Magee.\nXELHON  CIHTM\nKlnard   Public   School.   Orade   IX \u2014\nHelen P. KUlough  (a)\nPaaamore PtiWte School. Orade IX-\nBracken Back from\nFlight to Victoria\nVANCOUVER. July 34\u2014Premier John\nBracken of Manitoba arrived back ln\nVancouver at 0:36 p.m. this evening\nafter an air trip to Victoria ln a Western   Canada   Airways   seaplane.\nTlie Weather\nmembers of tbe family have been noted\nfor their longevity.\n(Continued   on\nProm     thc     Dominion    Meteorological\nOffice, Victoria.\ni    Mln.\nMax\nNanaimo                               50\n\u20223\nVictoria                                 S3\n04\nVancouver                             04\n00\nPrince Oeorge                      48\nM\nEstevsn                                    S3\n03\nPrince Rupert                      SO\nM\nDawson                                     64\n\u2014\n70\n74\nM\nM\nM\nVernon                   .            61\nM\nOrand Porks                       4T\n70\nKaalo                                  40\nM\nM\nCalgary                                  44\nM\nM\nM\nPrince  Albert                       90\n'    Quappelle                                 43\nOS\nM\nWinnipeg                             63\nM\nforecast\u2014 Nelson   and   vicinity\nfair\naod warm with local thunderstorms.\nLONDON. July 24.\u2014-The houue of\ncommons today swept from drama\nto drama In the most momentous\nsitting since the advent of the new\nLabor government to power.\nIn attentive sllcence the hout*\nheard Premier MacDonald announce\nthe government's proposal for reduction In naval ship building and\nIn a veritable turmoil It also learned that In effect the government\nhad dismissed Lord Lloyd, high\ncommissioner ln Egypt. Right Hon.\nArthur Henderson, foreign ttomUry.\nsaid he had sent Lord Uoyd such\na telegram as moAt people would\nhave accepted as an lnvltstlon to\nterminate bis service*. His resignation had been rwlvrd and accepted.\nPremier MacDonald find told of\nhis conversations wtth the L'nlted\nstate* ambassador, Qehereal Charles\nO. Dawes, who waf him wlf _ touted\nIn the distinguished strangers\" gallery along with other diplomats.\nThe government's purpose, he silil,\nwas to make the Keltofg anti-war\npact an effective Influence In International relations.\nPor the present the government\nproposed :\nI.\u2014To suspend all work on the\ncruisers surrey and Nerthumberlniul.\nnow under construction.\n2.\u2014Tn fiim-fl the building bf the\nsubmarine   depot   ship.   Maids!one.\n:t.\u2014Tu cancel the building of two\nsubmarines   already   contracted   for.\n4.\u2014To slow down  dockyard  work\nat  other  navnl  stations.\nWith regard   to the   1939-1930  building  program,  the premier said  in  any\ncase   no   further   commitments   would\nhave been entered Into before the autumn, but that  no steps at all would\nbe taken to proceed with  It  until the\nwhole matter had received further consideration.\nTO   l.  S.   A.   IN   Of  IOIIKK\nPremier MacDonald intimated October looked a likely month for his proposed visit to Washington for a conference with President Hoover for the purpose of advancing the objects of disarmament and world peace.\nAll the governments represented at\nthe Washington naval conference of\n1931 had been informed of thc anglo-\nAmerlcan conversations. As soon aa thc\nway was cleared for It they would bo\nInvited to a preliminary conference at\na place he suggested President Hoover\nmight select in recognition of the\nsplendid part he had played In thc\nnegotiations.\nAfter that would come a reference\nof the question to the preparatory disarmament commission of the League of\nNations, and Mr. MacDonald said he\nhoped a general disarmament conference would follow.\nLABOR i III l.Ks\nThe Laborites cheered again und ugain\nas the prime minister enumerated his\nreductions In the navat building program. A reference to the board of\nadmiralty opened the way for some\nConservative questioning. The board.\nMr. MacDonald said, had expressed their\ntechnical views on the minimum of\narmaments which they considered would\nbe necessary. They had furnished the\ngovernment with loyal help towards\nachieving Its object\nlieutenant Colonel W  Guinness, Conservative member, St. Edmunds, at once\nwanted   to   know   whether   the   boardV\nminimum  requirements  had   been   met\n' In the reduced  program.\n\"I have no doubt.\" Mr MacDonald\n' returned, \"that when an agreement Is\nj reached with the United States that\n1 minimum wlll be met,''\nRight Hon. Winston Churchill, former\nchancellor of the exchequor. then\nJumped to his feet with a demand that\nthe  premier answer the  question.\n\"The right honorable gentleman\nknows.\" Premier MacDonald retorted,\n\"that the government la responsible for\nits policy That ls the only answer\nthat can be given ln tha Interests of\nthe nation.\"\nThere was more Labor cheering and\nagain Mr. Oulnneas pressed hla question, but Mr. MacDonald again declined to go further.\nThe Right Hon. David Lloyd Oeorge.\nLiberal leader, asked lf the government\nproposed to endeavor to reach an agreement with the United States before approaching the allied powers Mr. MacDonald repeated that the effect Of the\nconversations with the United State*\nand the general results were being reported to the other naval powers.\n\"But how la the government keeping\nIn touch with the other naval powers?\" Mr. Uoyd Qeorge aaked. \"I can\nsay that personally I have Juat received\nContinued  on  paid t.\n TBE NELSON DAI\nICaWJL   In UK\nJUL! ZO, 19-H.\nWhere Superior Accomodation Is Obtainable\n[\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab-mMWMjyft^vi'H\nfUke Hume\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms With Running Water.   Private Baths en Suit*\nHeadquarters for all Tra-ielllii. Men, Minim Men, Lumber Men and\nTourists\nSpecial Sunday Dinner $1.00.    Rotarian Headquarters\nThe Most Comfortable Rotunda in the City\nCAMPBELL IS HEAD\nKIMBERLEY TORES\nKimberley Notes\nKIMB\u00abRI_(T, B. C. July 28.\u2014Mlaa\nMcAndrews o. Idmonton ls the house\nguest at Mrs. 3. McClay, Sullivan HIU\n  I    Miss Archibald ot New Westminister\nElected  President; A.  R.  Lilly to vl8lt'n\u00bb on sister Mrs 6. Fonresth\nIs Vice President; Many\nAttend\nHume\u2014G. 0. Castle, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nV. Toung and lamlly. Vancouver; J.\nPitzslmmons,, Nakusp; H. Morlson, A\nT. Mitchell, Victoria; I. R. Plugereld,\nSpokane; E. A. Jones, Clarkston, Wash.;\nP. Kern, Lewlston, Ida.; P. W. Calloway. Toronto; J. Oals, Rossland; G. D.\nClark, Orand Forks; L. P. Olelser. 8.\nGlelser, Erie; R. Orlmes, Sllverton; W\nG. Parrow, Spokane: H T. Maslow. Yakima: W. A. Torado, A. Clutro. Cal:\nP. R. McLean, G. A. Potter, H. D.\nGrant, R. Oreen, A. E. LaMothe. E. P\nI Short, Vancouver;  R. Strachan, Fernie;\nMr. and Mrs. R. Hutton, It. H Mlddle-\n' ton^ Calgary; L. T. Irveque. Erlckson: B.\n! Holiday Smith, Creaton; Mr. and Mra.\nIR. J. Carney, Monteaano, Waah,;  Mrs.\n3. T  McLeod, Powell River; Mrs. M. E.\nClark. Everett; W. W. Parker, O. Z.\n; HosweU, Calgary; A. Orant, Spokane; II\nA. Ross, Sandon: S, 8. Arch, Toronto;\nD. A. Eutaon, Burton; O. W. Bennett,\ni Milwaukee; Mr. and Mrs. G- Mcconnel,\nI Revelstoke; Mrs. A. a. Cassis, Fruit*\nI vale; H. R. Dunn, Denver, Col.\nt 11111 r 11111 it 11 irniTTii ii 111: it it 11 ii 11111 ii i u 1111\nWhere the Guest is Kin_\\\nTheS\navoy\nNELSON'S   NEWEST   AND   FINEST   HOTEL\nMANY    BOOMS    WITH    PRIVATE\nBATHS   OB   SHOWERS\nZ       J. A. KERR, Prop.\n7t \u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0 III It MMIIlltlllMMMMUlllllIMItllH\nSavoy\u2014 R. R. Taylor, Caleary; W. McKenzle, Sllverton; Mr. and Mn. R. Kellog, Spokane; Mre. Socket! New Denver; c. A- Smith and family, Seattle; J..\n8. Kennedy, Calgary; E. O. Braunel, Edmonton; S. Kuyy, Appledale; J. Burt K.\nTaylor, Vanoouver; Mr. end Mrs. J\nBllck, Pullerton, Oal.; MT. and Mn. F\nEvans, Kellogg, Ida.; L. Lommel, Portland, Ore.; Bin. 8. Walley and family\nTrail; O. N. Madden, Vancouver; J.\nJohnaon, Fernie.\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, July 33.\u2014 The\nannual general' meeting of the Kimberley Conservative aasoclatlon was\nheld In the K of P. hall Monday\nevening. The gathering was well attended.\nThe election of offtcen took place\naa follows: Hon. R. B. Bennett, honorable president; Hon. Dr. Tolmie,\nhonorable vice president; C. Campbell, president; A. R. Lilly, vice president; Oeorge Dalgren, secretary-treasurer; C. H. Phillips, Albln Johnson,\nS. Smltfi, H. Hogg, B. Kelr. W. Wan-\nnock, B. Bentley, H. Abbott, C. Bernard, C. D. Pearson, A. A. Ward, H. W.\nPoole,    executives.\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. July 23. \u2014 The\ndelegation appointed by the Klmberley Conservative association ln annual\nmeeting, to attend the annual district meeting to be held ln Cranbrook\non July 29, consists of the executive\ntogether with James Booth, L. Wan-\nnopp, George Noble, C. H. Pearson\nand A. Mellor.\nOlenn Jakes, 32 lineman was elec-\nrocuted at Vtekery. Ohio when he come\nontact with high tension wire.\nNelson s Cafes\nThe STANDARD CAFE\n.BU Baker Street, Nelson, B. (.\nOPEN  DAV AND Mdlll\n11:30 to 3:80 Special Lunch ... -  .1.\n6:80 to 8 pjn Supper   -Tt-\nPHONE  184\nThe ROYAL CAFE\nn.ASSK    KKSTAI KAM\nRefinement and  Delicacy  Preva-.1\nOPBN DAT AND NIOHT\nSpecial Dinner 11:80 to 3:30    ....86c\nSupper   6:30   to  8      36c\nWe specialize In Chop Suey and Noodle,\nPhone   183\nTrail Hotels\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE    CENTER    Or    CONVEMENCt\nHot and oold water in svsry room\nSteam Heated\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA  Modern  Brick  Building\n016  Vernon  Street,  Nrlvm.  h.i\nHot and Cold  Water and Telephon*\ntn all Rooms    Bteam Heated\nThroughout\nK>tpak   Proit\nKnnipran  Plan\nQueens\u2014J. Sharp, Salmo, A- J. HUll-\ngoss, Tacoma; Mr. and Mrs. Clark, Spokane; J. Lurtan, F. Norquiat, Lethbrldge; H. Irving, Marcus.\nQueens\u2014W. Durose, Vancouver; A\nCampbell, Copper Mountain; W. Jonea,\nYmir.\nNew Orand\u2014B. Kenyon and family,\nStockton, Cay.; O. L. Faadal, Term; E.\nDuford, Ymlr; A. Clare, Needlea; H.\nKlnltson, Nelson.\nDouglas\nHotel\nRooms with Baths\nt. h. AND A. OKM'TAOL      run.\n-Ir.un  llrntril\nTliroiishollt\nii.ii *ind dilit\nWster\nHoi <W6      Plaom MS     Trail, B.I*\nMadden Hotel\nT.  MADDEN.  Prop\n\"team   Heated   Kihioi.   b>   lh.   laa.\nWeek or Month\n* rrn consideration pthown ',   suest.\n1 Of    l-lkri    mil    Hum    Ht\u00bb     *____\u25a0\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n708 Vernon SL        Phone MIL\nH. -tVAHSICK   AND O. HNATIVH\nfifty  Rooms  of  Solid  Comfort\n!  Hesdqnarters for Lowers and Miner.\nKootenay Hotel\nMadden\u2014R. E. McCain, W. I. Slavs- I'NDEK   THI:   MAVtf.ir.MEM   Ot\nway,  Spokane;  J   Wattlns, Stewart;  3. WILLIAM   JONES\nC   Smith and famUy, Anne, Alta.;  J. 11.0011   1 I.KAN   HOOMX   REAHOVtm.l\nMauson.   Vancouver;   A.   Mitchell,   Csl- . RATES\nsary; H. Preum, W. J. Butler. Beaton.     , PHON* 76 616 VERNON HI\nAuto Runs 59 Miles\nOn Gallon Of Gas\nAutomobile engineers who worked for\nyears ln  an  effort  to  reduce  gasoline\nat Champman camp\nMiss Maatay, 'who has been vlsltln.\nher brother and slster-inlaw, Mr. and\nMrs. J. J. -tetCay. and her parents,\nRer. and Mtt. 'w. R McKay, left\no nMonday morning for Toroato.\nRev. E. A. Wright and the group\nof bays who wets ln camp last week\nat Aloriope, returned on Saturday,\nand all reported s wonderful time.\nMiss Ruth Sovennolm, delegate from\nUntied .Much to the leaders training camp at * Kokouee. returned on\nSunday afternoon. She ls resting up\nafter  the  glacier climb.\nKimberley Couple\nMarried; Reside\nat Sullivan Hill\nKIMBERLEY, B. ...July 33.\u2014United\nchurch was the scene of a pretty\nwedding on Saturday morning when\nHelen Lenora, youngest daughter of\nMr. and Mra. Noels J. Nlelson of\nSullivan HIU, became ths bride of\nJames Allen Love, The ceremony was\nperformed by Rev R. N. Mhthensen,\npastor of the TJnited church.\nThe ohureh wss tastefully decorated.. Mrs. Nesbltt presided at the\norgan. The bride was given away\nby her father.\nAfter the register had been signed\nthe young people, who are both well\nknown and popular on the hill received the congratulations of their\nfriend who had assembled to witness the  ceremony.\nFollowing a short wedding trip Mr.\nand Mrs. Love will reside ln their\nnew home on Sullivan HUI.\nCurrent Sweeps\nFishermen From\nFeet, Kimberley\nKIMBERLY, B. C, July 28.\u2014Wher,\non a fishing trip wading may have\nadvantages, but some uf Kimberley't\ncitizens are learning that the method\nIs almost as perilous for the fiBher\nman as it Is for the fish. On Sunday afternoon the swift current of\nSt. Mary's river, though not mon\nthan eight Inches deep; swept John\nWalker off his feet., and carried him\ndown stream more than 100 yard ,\nchance he caught hold of a log, the\nend of which protruded a few feet\nln front of a jam. Casey Jones, another member of the party hurried to\nhis assistance and succeeded ln\ngetting him safely to shore numbed\nwith the cold water and completely\nexhausted.\nOn Monday. Mr. Walker was iHM\nto be abou.t though ..raised utd\nsuffering rom shock.\nKimberley Team\nto Compete at\nFernie Is Named\nKIMBERLEY,  B.  C,  July   23.-\nconsumptlon  have  found   the  solution I wlmjer.  _,   _ u_^    n_t\nln s marvelous Invention that fits all\n*I lu\naid cup RFsi ltn\n. , are busy preparing for the East\ncars. An actual test made by one of \\ KooteI_.y .,\u201e. ,,\u201e competition to be\nthe engineers, showed 69 miles on a : kt)a \u201et ,\u00ab\u201e_,,,, on ja.,,^ 3\ngallon of gas. Thousands of car owners \\ Tne followlnK Is the team which\nhave already Installed this new lnven- ' win compet_ at the coal city and\ntlon. They not only report amazing which ls the Instruction of H. Pear-\ngas savings, but are also surprised to : son, w. Olanvllle, A. A. Watklns. Al-\nflnd Quicker  pick-up, instant starting, I .red   Oakes,   Mark  Bedus  and  Charles\nCATHOLIC PICNIC\nHELD AT PROCTER\nIS HUGE SUCCESS\nSecond Piettic Church of Mary\nImmaculate Sets   Record;\nMany Attend\nSecond picnic of the parish of the\nChurch of Mary Immaculate, Nelson,\nheld ftt Procter yesterday afternoon surpassed that ol 1927 to the extent that\nlt set a record that may take several\nyears to equal. Fun galore reigned\nfrom the time the first boat load disembarked until the whole crowd boarded the evening boat for home, tt was\nthe largest crowd of children to Invade\nProcter for some years, according to\nauthorities.\nThe first boat arrived some time before dinner and until dinner time the\nyoung folks Indulged ln baseball on\n\"their own hook\" while the elder foils\nprepared things for the main meal of\nthe day.\nImmediately after the mid-day meal,\nupon the arrival of the second boat.\nthe sports events began and held sway\nuntil shortly before the plcnicers boarded the boat on their return trip.\nYOUNO KIDDIES OOOD\nThe young klddlee' race which opened\nthe program was exceedingly exciting,\nseveral tiny tots struggling for the lead.\nAll who took part ln the race were\nawarded an ice cream cone and the first\nand second runners additional prizes.\nEach of tbe races trom\\ the six-year-\nolds to the 16-year-olds, proved Interesting and in each the winners were\nworthy of the honor.\nThe thread and needle race proved\ninteresting and was only settled after\n* second start. The I\\1les' egg and\nspoon race also had to be run twice\nbefore lt was settled. The first time\nall contestant* spilled their eggs before\nreaching the finishing line. Men's egg\nand spoon race was just as interesting,\nif not more so.\nThe three-legged race for both boys\nind girls drew many contestants and\nn\u00bb-oved one of the most exciting of the\nday.\nMRS.  O. LANG WINS\nTht* ladles' hammer and nail contest\nproved interesttnff and Mrs. O. IAmr\n?*iowed the spectators that s^e could\ndrive nails as well as her husbnnd If\nnot   i)\u2022\u25a0\u2022 iter.\nOforge Oellnas won hono*- w*en h*\u00bb\nromped home to victory In the sack\nme** a rondltinn of which wn that the\nfwit-wrtnnts chnns:e sack* en route.\nJean Burns proved ade^t at- *t>,r<w<nr*\nIbe r>scob-Hi snd MMN4 tho honors In\nthat contest which was clo\"\u00abw tftHh\nI \u00bbted\nrdMMTOfTT  SINOINO\nThi- trip Tinm*\u00bb cm thp Kur.kanook\nwhich hsd been ertartr-TPd fnr +_c dav\nwas enlivened by enmmitnltv \u25a0JBg.ng\n-md dancing on the forward main deck,\nl*d by Otmt* PouMn. Those e1n*\u00bb!ng were\nmrwtly kldd'es and thev sang the most\npopular and up-to-date songs ln fine\nstrW.\nMnv Marion t id tnd Fo'.le Kanik\n~?rr \"piendld exhibitions of the fTh.arls-\n*r>n and noffe Knpak did thr Highland\n^ing.\nOn arrival of the b^at at Nel\u00abnn three\nrouting errors and a t'ver wf*re tendered\nntv Father J C. McKenzle who. ln\nshirt \u00ab1etves snd minus collar, worked\nlike a trotan all afternoon to make the\ndav a success.\nGene Poulln. Marv Preno. Louis Penl-\nya. L. H. Choquette and A. O. Oellnas\nwere among those assisting at the tape\nA. A. Perrler was starter for most of\nthe races with Oene Poulln assisting\nlater.\nridge, first; Teddy Dallkowakl, second.\n^ttjltt' egg and spoon race\u2014Mn. p.\nE. Poulln, first; Mrs. O. Romano, seoond.\nLESLIE GETS YEAR\nIN SENTENCE FOR\nDIVERTING FUNDS\nWas Employed by West Kootenay Power;  Was Well\nThought Of\nJudge W. AO. Nisbett, after reserving Judgment for one week, sentenced C. D. Leslie, of Trail, to one\nyear of hard labor at the provincial jail here.\nLeslie had been employed by the\nWest Kootsnay Power & Light company\nof Trail, as cashier and hKad ln the\ncourse of 10 months diverted to his\nown use sums of money amounting to\ntlKS.\nLeslie, lt was established ln the evidence, was a sober conscientious man,\nwho was well known ln Trail, in\ncircles of amateur theatricals, musicals   and   religion.\nDuring two years.that he had been\nconnected with the Company \u00bbhe had\ncome to the attention of his employers ae a competent man and his\napprehension was received by them as\na disagreeable shock.\nLeslie, a war veteran, has a wife\nand two children in England and lt\nwaa in the attempt to have them\nbrought out to thla country that\nhe   had  taken  the   money.\nTHE PAIN OF\nRHEUMA1\n\"FroU.\u00bb.tww\"Ri<lHii\nTrouble of Long St\nA sufferer from i______t___ for j\nS. Floyd, Ntnaimo, B.C, tinned to \"\nirlieat\".   He writti:\n\"I. ai akon wbll. I Had sss\u2014L\nsmxkmtlits 9 e\u2014sm.\"\nDo ytro have tbe terrible -gooktnf i\nof rheumatism\u2014___t work, can't i\ntortuit all the time? \"^mit-Hiv-M'*]\nlive jrou relitf just as it bat Mfcd <\nsands of others. No mote pain foi\nrest of your daysl Get a boi to\u2014rf.\nat all druggists.\nL. John Hooker\nFractures Arm.\nin\nFalling from the verandah ralllitj\nhis   heme   L.   John   Hooker   pain\nfractured  his   left  arm  ln  two  pll\nbetwen   the  wrist   and   the   elbow^fl\nThe  accident   occurred  late  __\nevening when the lad was tsandin\nthe railing where he missed his ff\ning,   falling   only   three   feet   to\nground.\nHe was taken to the hospital wl\nhe remained after the bones were f\nuntil yesterday afternoon, when he|\nturned to his home.\nSPRITE BEST  POR BATON.\nThe spruce of northern Canada ts\nconsidered the most suitable raw material for the manufacture of rayon by\nthe viscose process. Cellulose, In the\nform or sulphite pulp, derived from\nthis wood, is now being shipped from\nCanada to all parts of the world for\nthe manufacture of artificial silk.\nVertical aerial photographs taken ln\nCanada during the season of 1938 by the\nRoyal Canadian Air Force for the Topographical Survey, department of the\nInterior   covered   31,400   square   miles\nno    nitvt.siE.it_-).\nREOINA, July  3s.No harvest txc\\\nslons trains from  eastern Canada\nbe sought this year by the\newan   government,   tt   was   a\ntoday by Thomas Molloy, deputy\nlater of railways,  Labor and Ihiui\nprior  to  his   departure  to attend\nconference   tomorrow   ln   Winnipeg j\nwestern Canada's harvest requlH\nOUR     INTERNATIONAL     BOUND.*\ni    The International Boundary\nCanada and the United States, lncl\n< Ing Alaska,  Is 6500  miles In lengtl\nSALADA quality never changes\nwhUe cheap brands constantly\nvary with  market  prices\nEA\n'Fresh Irom the gardens*\nFive** Day\nOcean Cruises\nsmoother runing motors, and disappearance of carbon. A. Oliver, 999-1686-\nE Third St. Milwaukee. Wise., for a\nlimited time, is offering a free device\nto  those   who   will  help   introduce   lt.\nCalgren.\nHotel Arlington\nTrail, B. C.\n4.  r.   LEVESQDE,   Prop\nCompletely Renovated and Refinisherd\nHot, Cold Running Water. European Plan\nSteam Heated Centrally Located\nRotary Sample Rooms in\nHeadquarters Connection\n*3**\\\nENLARGE PRINCE ALBERT  PARK.\nThe area of the new Prince Albert\nnatlnoal park, ln northern Saskatche-\nThey also need men everywhere to make j wan, has been Increased from 1377 to\nover $100 weekly ln their own terrl- ' 1868 square miles. This park was of-\ntory taking care ot local business, j Ilclally open on August 10. 1938. by the\nWrite Mm at once for free sample and ' Right Hon. Mackenate King, premier of\nbig money making offer\u2014 A_v. j Canada.\n\"Letthe CLARK'\nKitchens help yets*\nStart the meal to success\nwith\nCLARK'S SOUPS\nClark's Chicken, or Vegetable, or Tomato\nare old favorites\u2014but have you ever\ntried Clark's Ox Tail\u2014Rich, thick, savory, real Ox Tall, it is a well worth\nwhile soup.\n-Try It \u2014But any one of the 13Cuuuc Soups is\nappreciated\u2014Buy an assortment. The variety will\nbe enjoyed.\nSOLD   EVERYWHERE 1U-29\nW. CLARK Limited, Montreal, St. Rani, mad lUrrow,\nThe results were:\nChildren six years and under\u2014Oeorgle\nMorrison, first: Ernest Olralamo, second:\nIce cream for all in race.\nairla, eight years and under\u2014Marv\nMcDougall. first;  Elsie Bennett, second.\nBovs, ten and under\u2014Gilbert Mc-\nMulltn, first; Teddy Biulkouskl. second\nOlrls. ten and under\u2014Betty Beiner,\nfirst; Mary McDonald, second.\nBoys, la snd under\u2014OUbert McMul-\nlln. first; John Lang, second.\nOlrls, 12 and under\u2014Mary Realya,\nfirst; Edna Dahlqulst. second,\nBoys, 15 and tinder\u2014 Fred Arnott,\nfirst;   Adam Doyll. second.\nOlrls.   15   and   under\u2014Mary   Realya,\n{ first;  Ethel Ling, second.\n'     Ladles' needle and thread race\u2014Mrs.\nWilliam Desjardines, first; Mrs. L. Col-\nt lettl,  second.\nI     Ladles' egg and  spoon  race\u2014Mrs. L.\nCollettl, first; Mrs. William Desjardines.\nj second.\nOlrls,  egg  and  spoon  race  \u2014 Mary\n\\ Realya. first; Kathleen Pearson, second.\nMen's   egg  and   spoon   race\u2014Stanley\nDoyll,   first;   Frank, Baehynskl,  seoond.\n|     Boys' three-legged race\u2014Clarence McDougall and John Kuntz. first.\nGirls\" three-legged race\u2014Kathleen Mc-\n, Dougall and Annie Magllo, first.\nWomen's hammer and nails\u2014Mrs. O.\nLang, flrat.\nThrowing baseball \u2014 Joe Galllcano,\nfirst; C. Galllcano, second.\nsack race, change sack\u2014George Gel-\ninas, first: C. Romano, second.\nThrowing baseball, girls\u2014-Jean Burns,\nfirst.\nBoys' en and spoon race\u2014Henry Hart-\nTHE  GUMPS-FROM  THE GUMP EXPERIMENTAL  LABORATORIES\n#fl)T hu experimental laborm-ories\n<\u00a3ii AT LAKE Oa-NEVA- ANDY GUMP\nSTILL THINKS  **\u00ab0 THIMKS-   ORiNDS\nAND (\u00bbR>N\u00bbS-   ME   IS R-fV0LU-n0Ni7IN<_\nTHE  mwiN., INDUJTRV FOR  THE\nWORLD \u2014\n'  -tOUR'S FOR BtOfaER AND BETTER FISH\nIS  WIS  MOTTO \u2014\n1*4E   RAKE ~   MIS INVENTION\nPty*.  POLLING TMEM OUT OF TME  WEEDS, -\n,>r TNE FISM  ARE TuERE\nTHIS  VHH. GET  TMEI* -\nNOT a LURE -\nA\nGO 6ETTER -\nPhE NtlrXtM- GO-ROUND\n\"ANDVi  VERY LATEST-\nA S-VJkLL BATTERY KEEPS\nTHf   ARTIFICIAL MINNOW\nREVOL-JlNb  -VT A MI6W KATE  OF SPEED\nFISH CMOSC  THEM  FOR HOURS-\nWHEN  COMPLETELY   EVHAUST-cD\nTHE  REST IS EASY -\nONE  SOCK  WITH  THE\nOAR   AND   INTO THE\nMET  TUtY  (j0 -\n0U> COLD  STORAGE   IS THE  NANVB OF\nTNI*  (,UMP INVENTION \u2014\nTHIS (S THE TRICK THAT GETS THE HOUSE Wi   I\nA GLASS  TRAP- FISH ENTERS THROUGH\nGLIDING POOR -   NIBBLES AT BMT\nWHICH   PULLS    CORO THKT   CLOSES\nDOOR AUt, SPt LLS  BOTTLE   OF\nFREE1ING   SOLUTION \u2014\nLEAVING FISH IN A SOLID\nCAKE OF   ICE \u2014\nCAN BE   KEPT  ALL SUMMER -\nPULL UP AT   YOUK CONVENIENCE -\nHtipJ melp!\nSI NO  IN YOUR\nIOEAS   TO\n\u25a0LNftY GUMP.\ntele, (jOMP\nEXPERIMENTAL\nLABORATORIES-\nLAKE  GENEVA-\nWIS.\nSports\nNews\nThe Daily News give*\nvou the first news on all\nthe leading sporting event i\n\u2014Local, National, and International. Being published right in the center\nof the district it reaches\nyou first.\nGet your paper regulv-\nly and with the minimulu\ndelay by subscribing.\n60^ a month.\nS3.00 six months.\n99.00 a year.\nZSt* a week delivered\nby carrier.\n-\u2122--w___\u00bb-_-\u00bb-M__-_______aaBP^aB*\u00ab<\u00ab\u00ab\n\t\n___.\n____.\n NELSON DAUT NEWS,   THURSDAY NORNINfi, JULY 25, lft\u00bb\nTrafl News of the Day\nTRAIL, B. C, JUly a*.\u2014Mr. and Mrt.\nt Milburn at Vancouver arrived m Trail\nT. H Waters & Co., Ltd.\nBuilders and Contractors\ntta P. O. Box 885\nNH.SON,  B.  C.\ntl\u00bbB8,      BRICK,      CEMENT,\n\u2022BINOUM, COAST LCMBKR,\nMSB    AND    DOORS,    MILL\nWORK,  DRAIN   TILE\nlaat night to Uke up residence. Mrs.\nMilburn who wu formerly Miss Audrey\nBell, le well Known among the young\npeople ln the city.\n\u2022 * \u2022\nMrs. A. t. Churches and daughtw\nreturned to their home in Waneta\ntoday.\n9,   \u00bb.   \u2022\n8. O.  Blaylock hu returned  from ft\nshort   trip   to   the   coaat.\nMr.    and    Mn.\nNelBon   yesterday.\nToung    vlelted    ln\nMr. and Mra. B. A. Warden nave\nreturned from a short visit to Proeter.\n*   \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mra. F. L. Campbell were\nrecent   vlaltora   to   South   Slocan.\n\u2022    \u2022   <9\nR.   T.   Oarland   haa   returned   from\nTHE\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nYour Spokane Home\n\"Where Canadians Are Among Friends\nWhen in Spokane\"\nThe only hotel in Spokane with FREE\nBUS service and our own garage adjoining.\nBarber Shop, Cigar Store and Cafe. Com-\nplete service under one roof.\nJOE PEDICORD, Manager\nttt tO 819 RIVERSIDE 208 TO 218 BPRAODB\nSPOKANE, U. S. A.\nOur New Schedule\nLeave Rossland\nAllen Hotel\n8:10...\n8:10\n\u2022ic Sakei\n6:68  \t\n3:10..\n6:10.\n10:10...\nLeave Trail\nElectric Bakery\nA.1\n 6:1\n     8:88\ntM.\n   12:66\n     3:68\n     3:26\n 10:66\n 11:66\nUnion Garage\nAM.\n 7:10\n    ,,      10:00\ntM*\n 1:00\n 3:10\n 8:40\n 11:10\n 13:00\n7 Trips  Dally\u20147  Trips\nOCR   FARES   ARE:   ONE   WAT,   60c;   RETURN,   90c.\nBusses will plok up passengers or baggage at any hotel ln Trail\nor Rossland upon receipt of a phone call, 90 miirates before leaving time.\nLook  far  the  Oreen and   Orange  Bums.\nRossland-Tadanac-Trail\nTransportation Co.,\nJT. E. KELDERMAN, B. 8. TAfLOB\nOld Friends \"\nate best\nWHITEST PUREST #BtST\n\"TH&ME-AR.T   op  a    GOOD   COCKTAIL\nTins -idvrni-jniK-nt in not published or displayed\nby the Litjuor Control Board or by the Government\nof British Columbia. \u25a0*\/\n|)| \u20141 --\"M Illllllll\nKaalo where he spent a few days\nwtth his parenta.\n.       *       9\nRobert Bendrlcks spent a tew days\nwith his parents In Kaalo this week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nalias    A.    R.    Mitchell    of    Douflas\nMan, la visiting at the home of Mr.\nand Mra. a. L. Merry, Annable lift a\nahort   time.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nWilliam Hunch and C. Deferro of\nNelson epent  yesterday ln Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nNed Measles is spending a few days\nln   Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   _\nJack  Quale  left   for  the   Pend   d'Oreille today on a ahort trip.\n-   \u2022   \u2022\nA. Lean left today for a camping\ntrip of three weeks to be spent around\nProcter   and   Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nUrs. lyton leaves this evening for\nthe coast, where she wlll take up\nresidence.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Plckard, of 616 Victoria stret, -received a communication\nfrom Walnrlght yesterday morning stating that both properties owned by\nthem there had been destroyed by the\nterrific fire that wiped out the business section last week-end.\nNothing wes left of the one property\nthat wu the headquarters for the provincial police except a twisted metal\nmass that had been tho steel cage.\nLuckily there waa no one In the cell\nat the time of the disaster.\nIn the house adjoining the police\nbaracrks, the aecond property, Sar-\nseant John Stewart of the provincial\npolice was living and had only time\nto get his family out of their night\nttlre before the building was a total\nInferno,\nLESLIE BELL IS\nLAID REST TRAIL\nTrail, B. C, July 24.\u2014Leslie Bell\n21-year-old youth who was killed when\nrun over by curs In the C. P. R.\nyards at Tadanac Sunday night, waa\nlaid to reat at thla afternoon In the\ncity cemetery ln  Tadanac.\nFrienda of the popular young man\nshowed their respect ln the numerous floral offerings attending his funeral.\nThe funeral was held from St. Andrew's Anglican church at 4 o'clock,\nR\u00abv, M. D. B. Larmonth officiating,\nassisted by P. W. Weaver, student\nmissionary ln charge of East Trail\nAnglican mission.\nThe pallbearers were Samuel Thomas, Phillip Johneon, Ralph Barlett,\nHarold Newton, W, Lyons and M. J.\nSleaons,   friends   of   the   young  man.\nH. C. Williams and EUgla Williams,\nuncles of the youth arrived here last\nnight with Cyril Bell, a brother to\nattend the funeral. Many Nelson\nfriends also came to Trail to pay\ntheir respects.\nOrpheum vaudeville circuit.\nAmong the other notables present\nwere H. M- Thomas, president of the\nPwnous fUtftn Canadian corporation,\nand C. Robinson, manager of tbe\neastern division of the corporation.\nAnnouncement    was   made that the\nsystem  known   to   movie  men   as   the\nthird dimension\" was nearlng a atagt\nwhere lt might soon be put Into ef\nfeet. The third dimension, Mr. pitner\nexplained, ls a process of lenses on both\nthe camera and projector that lends\na depth to the projected image that is\nnot experienced with the present equipment.\nMr. Pttaer stated that he had been\nquartered with Colonel Mordla, Mayor\nef Prince Rupert, who is well known\nto a number ef local war veterans.\nP. Pitner Attends\nAssembly Theater\nMen, at Vancouver\nRoyally    Entertained    During\nConvention; Many Ideas Exchanged   by   Managers\nPaul Pitner, just returned  from  th*\nwestern   managers,   of   Famous   Players.\nCanadian  corporation  convention,   that\nwas held  last  week in  Vancouver,  re-  ]\nports that everything was a great sue-  -\ncess.\nMr. Pitner motored down to the\ncoast and stated that anyone planning\non the trip should avoid going by\nWenatchee, due to the fact that roads i\nin that vicinity are ln a state of repair.\nOn the return journey he came by way '\nof Ellensburg, where he found the\nhighways ln a much better condition.\nOn the first night of the convention.\nafter tho preliminary business was disposed of, the entire peritonei of tho\nconvention numbering over 60 were\ntaken on a moonlight excursion on\nboard the Princess Patricia.\nAgain the next night the entire\nparty was taken to Wyclilfe to dinner\non board the yacht owned by W. D.\nDewess.\nOn the third and last night, of the\nconvention a banquet wai held ln thc ,\noval room of the Vancouver hotel.\nTables were set ln the form of a horseshoe and one of the novelties presented was a huge sign flashed out of the\ndark welcoming the delegation.\nDuring the course of the dinner\nmusic was supplied by both the capitol\nand Strand orchestras and following, a\ncomplete revue of %he_ Fanchon and\nMarcho vaudeville, then playing in\nVancouver, was put on.\nMuch of the business sessions was\nspent In exchanging Ideas more noticeably on the subject of talking pictures,\natated Mr. Pitner. One of the polnu\nthat was stressed during the convention\nwas the fact that, the installation of\nthe \"talkies\" would put the smaller\ntheaters on an even basis with the\nlarge houses except, of course, ln the\ncase of the legitimate stage shows.\nOne of the distinguish\u25a0Kl speakers of\ntbe session was Joseph Plunkett who\nwas formerly manager of one of the\nlargest theaters in New York, and was\nis  now   manager  of. the   Radio  Keith\nDRESSES\nWith Pleating\nExpertly and Carefully\nCLEANED\nH. K. FOOT\nHlsh-Clae\u00bb Dyer and Cleaner\nt'AIKVn-'W NKl.SON, B.C.\nFOR ACID\nSTOMACH\nThe first glass gives comforting relief, and\nthe regular daily draught quickly corrects\nthe conditions that cause acidity and inner\nsluggishness, because gentle, soothing,\nnon-habit-forming ENO eliminates poisonous, trouble-making waste matter from\nthe inner system; cleanses, purifies, protects.     But remember, there is only one\nmitt\nIHE NATION\nThrough the Wants Ads\nMr. Parmer, why not make quick  turnover on your live,\netock and produce?   A Dally Newa Classified Advertisement will\ndo tlw trick.\nWhy 1st that plow, harrow, rake or other (arm machinery\nnow not ln uae on your farm, rust away with no return to you?\nSome other farmer ln your dlatrlct may have need for Just what\nyou have discarded.\nTell them about lt ln The Dslly News Classified Advertisements.   The results wlll surprise you.\nJ\nClassified Ads Bring Results\u2014Try One\nJjnteonyT^iti dUmtwtt^\nINCORPORATED   2\u00bb\u00bb MAY 1670\nOther Branches at ^Innlpei, Yorkton, Saskatoon, Edmonton, Canary, lethbrldie, Vancouver. Bamloopa, Vernon and Vlettrla.\nMen's    BEDS and BEDDING\n\\X7r\\rlr A \u25a0 Ill lift A  good  night's\nVV KJt IV peaceful sleep, espec-\nJIJJUUWJUUlj^ ially   during   the\nP1^4.LJ.,rt st\/.    fnnrftW\\un warm ni8hts- adlls\nV__\/lOtllirMi      w.ffl.>j^julUuh-\u00bbJ m  Kreatl-v t0 the com-\nfort during the coming day.\n\"Restmore\" products are designed to\ngive that sleep which\nrests.\nTry a Restmore Spring and Mattress for just one\nnight and you will know the difference right away.\nRestmore Beds are made in 3 ft. 3 in., 4 ft. and\n4 ft 6 in. wide. They come in Cream or Brown Enamel.    Priced  *T.50 TO $29.50\nRestmore Springs are made in coil or cable. The\ncoil springs are fitted with the No-Sway patent and\nthe helical ties, giving a maximum of comfort. The\nsteel in the Restmore cables is tempered to stand any\nstrain.      Springs  $8.00 TO $19.50\nRestmore Mattresses are of the soft felt variety,\nknown tbe world over. Second to none, and induce\nrestful sleep. ___,__,\nRestmore Mattresses $12.50, $15.00, $10.50\nAND   - ?25-0\u00b0\nLower Grades at  - $9.00\n\u2014Second  Floor\u2014H  11  C\u2014\nMEN'S SUITS\nSpecial Reduced Prices\nMen's Tweed Suits. Single and double breasted\nmodels.   Some with 2 pair pants.\nRegular $25.00.    Reduced to  $15.50\nRegular $27.50 and $30.00.   Reduced to  $21.00\nSEE  WINDOW\nShoe\nDepartment\nUnion made from guaranteed materials that will\nstand  the hardest  wear.\nMen's Bib Overalls.\nHeavy Denim, S2.50.\nMen's Overall Pants.\nHeavy Denim, $2.25.\nMen's Khaki Pants.\nHeavy Denim, $2.25.\nMen's Carpenter Overalls with nail pockets. Extra heavy duck, $2.50.\nPainters' Bib Overall\nand smocks, $1.25 Each.\nBoys' Blue Denim\nPants with Red Flarr\nbottoa-m.AH sizes, $1.95.\nBoys' Blue Denim Gob\nPants, $1.05.\n\u2014Main   Floor\u2014II   B   C\u2014\n\u2014Msln   Flooi\u201411   B   C\u2014\nMEN'S\nWELTED\nOXFORDS\nIn black and tan calf,\nwith solid leather soles\nand rubber heels. Neat\nspade toe shape. Just the\nstyle the dressy young\nman desires. Price at\n$5.50.\nLadies' Beige Straps\nand ties, also patent leather ties with Cuban,\nSpanish or low heels.\nMacKay sewn soles. Made\nin half sizes. Price,\n$4.95.\nMen's black kid dress\nboots with flexible welted\nsoles and rubber\" heels.\nMade on a comfortable\nrriodel last and in half\nsizes.    Price, $9.50.\n\u2014Main   Floor-H   B   C\u2014\nDRY GOODS\nBargains in Luncheon Sets, Table Covers\nand Bedspreads\nIn attractive Oriental Designs on Heavy Crepe. These\nare obtainable in plain or hemstitched borders and\narc of a nice heavy quality. Secure several pieces of\nthese. The cost is so small you can afford to have a\ncomplete set.\nServiceavle in the home and attractive to look at,\nthe.-\u00bbe Cwpe Covers will lend a colorful and pleasing\neffect to'the home during the summer months.\nMake sure you obtain a set for your summer home.\nBuffet- Scarves. Full size. Each, plain or hemstitched  20** AND 25s*\nLuncheon Sets. 7 pieces, 36x36. Plain or hemstitched    BUt*\nLuncheon Sets. 13 pieces. 36x36. Plain or hemstitched  98\u00ab*\nTable Covers. 36x36. Plain or hemstitched . .49?\nTable Covers. Size 45x45. Plain or hemstitched 75<\nTable Covers. Size 54x54. Plain or hemstitched 98\u00ab*\nTable Covers. Size 60x60. Plain or hemstitched 98\u00ab*\nBedspreads, single, full size or extra large sizes, all\noffered at one price.   Kach $1.75\n\u2014Main   Floor\u2014II   n   < \u2014\nLadies' Wear\nPrettily Colored Beach Wraps\nMedium and full length $3.50 AND $4.50\nAll Wool Bathing Suits\nSizes 34  to 44.    Wood's- Hash,  Monarch  Knit  and\nJantzen.   Assorted colors and styles $2.25 TO $6.50\nLittle Tots' All Wool Bath Suits\nColors red, blue, etc '.. $1.95\nTable Full of\nGossard Wrap-Arounds and Corsets\nTO CLEAR AT HALF PRICE.\nThree Large Tables of\nSUMMER HATS\nStraws and light weight felts.   Special at\n$1.95, $2.95, $3.95\nOne Table of\nCHILDREN'S STRAW HATS\nBlack and Colored 50\u00ab*\n\u2014Second  I'laior\u2014II II C\u2014\n_____\n\t\n______\n_______________________\n-   -\n Page Pour\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY NORNING, JULY 26, 1929\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nbushed every morning except Sun-\nby   The   Newa   Publlahlng   Com-\nnmlted.  Neiaon. a O.\nneaa  lettera ahould be  addressed\nchecks  and  money .orders  made\nale to The Newa Publlahlng Com-\nlimlted, and ln no caae to Indl-\nmembera of the staff,\nrtlslng rate cards and  A. B. C.\nnents   of   circulation   mailed   on\nat, or may be seen at the office\nadvertising  agency  recognised\nCanadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   BATKB\n{country), Per month t   M\ngear  _  6.00\n(city), per year 13.00\ni Canada, per month      .76\nyear     tM\nper week        -ft\nFar  year       13.00\nPayable ln Advance\nAndlt   nnre__ af  circulation\nc\/4untrHet\n| \u25a0 THURSDAY,  JULT  36,   M2\u00bb\nRUSSIA AND CHINA\n\t\nPossibilities of serious warfare between China and Russia\nare minimized by the fact that\nneither country is at present\nin' a condition to put up much\nof, a fight.\nChina is torn by internal\ndissension. It possesses' no or-\nKiHiized regular army, no central government of sufficient\nstrength to weld into a disciplined and harmonious whole\nthe various armies which so\noften in recent years have been\neach other's throats under\nrival chieftains, armies which\nhave passed from one leader to\narj&ther, sometimes for a cash\nconsideration, sometimes for\ngreater hope of loot, occasionally as a result of political developments. China is short of\nw\u00a3r supplies and short of money, with which to purchase\nthem.\n\u2022Neither is Russia in a good\ncondition for warfare. Its in-\ndiktries and its peoples are dis-\noqfanized, its credit resources\nai\u00a7 slim, its army lacking both\nj iifnumbers and discipline.\nWevertheless Russia has en-\norftious military potentialities.\nN|poleon learned it in 1812,\nGerman learned it in the world\nw4r, the allies stubbed their\ntoes against it afterwards.\nK a Napoleon should arise\nin'Russia, a great military lead\ncapable of inspiring his\nm*n, capable of forcing the\nsubmission of his enemies within Russia and influenced by a\ncolossal ambition, he might by\nnitons of war weld the country\nirift a -cohesive, body, firmly\nbehind him, and throw the\nwiijkl into chaos.\nBut Russia is not France.\nTfte revolution of '93 created\npolitical and eeconomic disturbance but it left the French\nspirit of patriotism unweaken-\ned and if this patriotism was\nswept into battle behind the\nbanner of he revolution as\nsuch rather than the banner of\nFrance as a country there was\nlittle difference in the result.\nThe French fought to preserve the revolution, then they\nfought for the glory of France\nand finally they fought for the\nglory of Napoleon, the emperor. They won victory under the\ninspiration of all three motives.\nIn Russia as we know it today there is little likelihood of\nany such development fo patriotism in Russia, but it could\noccur.   ,\n\"I don't want no little snip Uke\nStella tellln' me the line ls busy when\nI'm rlngln' my own house to tell Pa\nnot to let the beans scorch.''\nThe\nLighter Side\nWell, folks, we inunt name the\nnew l*. S. A. paper money. Shall\nwe call It WlUle, meaning a smaller   bill?\nFable: Once a wife departed for a\nvacation without calling back: \"an.\niont  forget  to water  the  plants.*\nThe olive branch Isn't a symbol o\nleace, but of victory. It meant tl)\ndove from Noah's ark had at las\nfound   a   parking   place.\nIT  ISN'T PEAR OP  SPOIUNO  HE\nCOMPLEXION  THAT KEEPS MODERt\nWOMEN   PROM   CRYING.     WHAT   tt\nTHERE   LEFT   TO   CRY   POR?\nMaking a night record Is a hatef\nbustneaa. It doea you no good. \u25a0\n3ept for a moment, and Just ma *\nthings  harder  for the  next  fellow.\nGOLFER IN TROUBLE\nSljat %tig of\nfrntra\nBy JAS. W. BARTON, M. D.\nMEDICINE AND DENTISTRY\nOne of the encouragements In medicine la to aee the denial and medical students taking many of their\nlectures together.\nAnatomy, that is the structure of the\nbody; physiology, that Is the way the\nprocesses In the body work together; pathology the way the processes\nof the body work ln ill health; chemistry,   physics,  hygiene.\nI believe you'll agree that the aay\nIs not far away when the dentist wlll\nbe required to take full medical course\nfirst and then take up care of the\nmouth and teeth afterwards.\nAnd when you think of the Importance of the mouth and teeth to the\nentire body you oan see the reason\nfor   this.\nThe shape of tbe mouth and the\ncondition of the teeth depend to a\ngreat extent upon the gland system\nof the body.\nOood grinding teeth break up the\nfood stuffs, and make them soft and\nrender them alkaline so that they will\nforce the stomach to pour out s goodly supply of add stomach Juloa to\novercome this alkaline Juice, and by\nao doing digest the  food well.\nThis breaking up of the food stuffs\nln the mouth prevents the distress\nand pain of gaa formation further\ndown the Intestinal  tract.\nThe dentist ahould know the different foods and food values; the effects  of   111   balanced   diets.\nThen the infection that attacks\nthe roots of the teeth and the gums\nts without doubt the biggest factor ln\nIn the old days when aching teeth\ncausing rheumatism and heart disease.\nwere extracted there were fewer cases\nof heart disease. In our natural desire to preserve the teeth. Instead of\nusing artificial ones, we have been\nled into the mistake of keeping infected teeth.\nThe dentist with a ful medical education will be the flrat one to see\nthat this mistake  ts notified.\nWhile he wfll try to render infected\nteeth safe, he will be more inclined\nto extract them as he thinks of the\nterrible possibilities of infection upon\nthe system.\nIt should be a source of satisfaction\nto everybody to see these two associated professions getting closer together.\nVictoria-Vancouver\nAir Service Now\nUnder Consideration\nVICTORIA, July J4.~The creation of\na Victoria-Vancouver air servloe by the\nmachines of the Western Canada Air-\nwmya limited, la r.iw under consideration, according to W. L. BrlntnaH, managing director, who arrived ln th* city\ntoday by air from Vancouver at the conclusion of a trail breaking flight trom\nWinnipeg.\nrve pl*otog-*aph h-re shows a com-1 tarlo open golf championship, which\n3tltor ln difficulties on the fifth hole was won by Dave Spltal of the Royal\n: Lakevlek Oolf club during the On-1 York  club.\nEfficient      Flre \\\\? *-*\nHousekeeping '   to \"P6 N\u00bb a!\nGalloway, Morning\nBy  LAURA  A.   KIRKMAN\nThe rich man has a barometer to\nforetell the weather, but even the\npoorest can try to shake salt out of\na shaker.\nThe call of the great open\nspaces: \"Hey! Got any gas to\nspare.**\nTruth isn't really stranger than fiction. It Just seems a stranger because so few recognize it.\nThe Jungle haa laws. also. The punishment for sin ls death. Sin consists ln being caught.\nModernism: Exerting ourselves to\nthe utmost to pasB a law; repealing it\nby the simple expedient of pretending It doesn't exist.\nThe kind of \"loyalty\" the bosa likes\nIs the kind that gives him that nice\nmonarch-of-all-I-surveys  feeling.\nHEAT PROSTRATION: HIOHBROW\nPOR MEAN LIQUOR.\nThunder: A signal tnat it's all over\nand too late to squeal.\n\u2022*A man ls responsible for the evil\nthat results from hU acts.\" Yeah?\nWell, thousands starved ln Shangtung\nbecause  ladles  quit wearing  hair  nets.\nHANDIWORK   HINTS\nTomorrow's Menu\nBreakfast\nOrange Juice\nCereal\nToast\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dally News, July 25,   1909>\nSix thousand dollars has been collected from the residents of Nelson Icr\nthe purpose of advertU_n._ this city snd\ndistrict all over the continent. An attempt will be made to collect something   like   this  sum   here   every   ytar.\nLouis Blerlot, Prench aviator, succeeded In crossing the English channel from\nCafcls to Dover In hla flying machine\nto4ky. This la the aecond of M. Bler-\niotfc daring feats ln tne air. A few\ndafs ago he made a flight from Et-\nansfl-s to Orleans, n dlsUrc? of 2a\nnun*. He madt a t'.Kxestfui landlne.\ncoding the distance ln M minutes 10\nsctinds. Including a stop of 11 minutes\nmv  Thurey  to  exam'ne   his  airplane.\n^okane  Is sending  a   representation\nrack shots to the Ma) Nelton gun\ncuts shoot  to be h.-'l  here  Au_ust  5\nrrd 6\nThe one-way street would he\nmuch safer If drivers could agree\non   the   way   that's   the   one.\nExample of talkie culture: In an\nadvertising reel announcing \"The Desert Song.\" the star Introduces a captain  of  French  \"calvary.\"\nFriendly nations are the ones that\nkeep whetting their knlvea while\nassuring one another they wouldn't\ncut anybody except some troublesome\nstranger.\nIf you are caught smuggling\nquarts, you get shot: If you are\ncaught smuggling karats, you get\nyour  picture on  the society  page.\nCorrect this sentence: \"Mother went\naway for the day.\" cried the children\nIn chorus, \"and didn't tell ua forty\nthings   we   mustn't   do,\"\nI Ten Years Ago\nITgem The Dally Hews. July 35. 1919.)!\n\t\nShies   Anderson,  Kaalo   mining   en-1\ntinier, wue ln Nelson ye-terday.\n.   .   .\nlib.   I   M.   Butler   and   family  wlll\nlean   today   for   Xnglam'.   where   her\nBs\nnbuglas  Nagle and Clyd-J  Emory  returned from a holtdny trip to Vanrou-\nEgflVletorla. Seattle and Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nm Larson, wlti Ult bride, who was\n\u25a0W Miss Minnie O'Neill of Nelson,\ned back ln the city last, night after\na month's honeymoon tnt*.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMlas   Helen   Hodgsoa   returned   lsst\nfom a visit to ooast cities.\nTaxing of  malt extract  In Tennessee\nhaa   yielded   the  state   115,000  tn   first\nmonth.\nWhatthePr>e.s$ IsSayin\/*)\nTHE GARDEN WALL.\nIt is curious to note how the changing\nstructure of society Is reflecting itself\nln the aspect of urban streets. The first\nattribute of Victorian respectability\nwas exclusiveness; and architecture\nwaa expected to express lt. Blessed\nwaa the man who ha^ a garden: but\ntwice-blessed he who could prevent\nthe passer-by not only from entering\nbut even from seeing tt. Hence those\nmassive brick walls and ponderous\ngateposts that lined the streets In the\nresidential quarters of large towns.\nand preserved their proud possessors\nfrom the vulgarity of prying eyes.\nThe Victorian outlook may have been\nright, or It may have been wrong. At\nany rate, tt has become Impossible for\nour generation. Our minds move on\ndifferent lines, and what seemed to\nour grandfathers dignified we cannot\nhelp considering smug. So thoee walls.\nerected with such loving pride, are everywhere coming down. Oreen gardens,\nopen to the streel behind low hedges,\nare revealing themselves to the wayfarer, to his no small enrichment of\nthe amenities of the town. King Ed-\nwant I., who ruled that the natural\ngnus should be kept clear for 300 feet\non either aide of a publlc highway, was\naesthetically, as well aa politically.\nsound. Modern London cannot afford\nsuch spaciousness; but st least we can\ncooperate to border many of its streets\nwltb something more pleasing to the\neye   than   bricks   and   mortar.\u2014Dally\nDKHl NKIMl   lil.lll MiEHK.\nThere are two kinds of biography\nwhich are equally bad. The one errs\non the side of adulation; the other on\nthat of defamation. The one makes\nimitation angels of sll Its subjects; the\nother makes of them limbs of Satan.\nDebunken are entitled at least to this\nmuch credit; they have made sticky\neentamtenli zletaol etao etaolnetaol\nsentimentality unfashionable In blo-\ngrahplcsl writing. But the debunkers\nthemselves need debunking when tbey\npermit thetr method to degenerate into\n\u2022lander for profit.\u2014New York Sun,\nSoiled Eggs\nCoffee\nBaked Beans\nCatsup\nLeftover   Coldslaw\nRaisin  Bread\nIced Tea\nDinner\nBaked Pish\nTartar Sauce\nBaked   Potatoes\nString Beans\nLettuce\nChocolate   Pudding\nCoffee\nClothespin Bags: Every woman knows\nwhat a convenience lt is to have some\nsort of receptacle for clothespins which\nhangs on the line and cfih be pushed\nalong when one Is hanging clothes up\nor taking the dried clothes down. A\nbag. made on one of the hooked garment hangers, is splendid for this use.\nUse heavy material such as monk's\ncloth, rep or strong cretonne, cutting\nlt 34 Inches long and 18 inches wide.\nHem one end, then turn It up 12\nInches and stitch down the sides. Hem\nthe other end over a coat hanger,\nfirst rounding the material to the\nshape of the hanger* These bags,\npriced at a dollar, should bring a good\nprofit if put on sale at a woman's\nexchange or gift shop. (Do nto write\nme for such market addresses, however; you must find such places, for\nyourself, ln your own vicinity. Many\nsmall novelty shops wlll take handiwork   articles  odn  commission.)\nOilcloth Twine Bags for the Kitchen: These two, should bring a dollar\napiece. To make one, cut two squares\nof plain red (or any unflgured, colored) oilcloth six Inches squiire and bind\nthe two pieces together on two sides\nwith red cotton binding tape. Bind\nthe remaining two sdles separately.\nThe Uttle bag ls supposed to be hung\nup by one corner  (the unbound corn-\n>en by two loops of red tape. Make a\nhole ln the middle of one of the\nsquares (the oall of twine, which the\nbag holds,  will  be unwound,  as need-\n| ed, by having its end hanging out\nthrough this hole)  then bind the un-\ni sightly   hole   in   the   oilcloth   with   a\nI little  circle   of   red   tape;   or   over   It,\n! on the outside of the bag, placee a\nbrass ring covered completely around\nby red crochet cotton ln buttonholee\nStitch, cut \"petals of oilcloth using\ntwo Inches ln length, and one inch\nwide, (using all colors, mlxeed or Just\nthe   plain   red,   as   desired)   and   seew\n\u25a0 these around the hole where the string\n| comes through\u2014to give the effect of\nthe string coming out of the heart of\n; a   flower.\nj Oilcloth bags for dusters: Make a\nbag   exactly   as   described   above,   but\n'make no hole in lt. Tuck three colored   cheesecloth   dusters   tn   It,   each\nI with buttonholed edge. These also\nshould sll for a dollar, as they represent much work.\nTomorrow\u2014Borne   Oood   Pickles.\nELKO. B. C, July. 33. \u2014 A fire,\nstarted presumably by sparks from\na freight train that had passed Just\npreviously, burnt a considerable quan*\ntlty of mine props at Oalloway early\nSunday morning. These belonged to\nLeon Simmons, who lives close to\nwhere the props were piled, and who\nwas the first to notice the fire about\n4 a. m. Section men and others were\nJam aroused and the fire got under control. The loss ls partially covered by\nInsurance.\nCity Makes Grant\nof $250 Toward\n^\nj\nTwo eggs\nbeaten until light\ndetici\u00b0\nas\nf^'Jit\n2    One teaipoonfu\/salt\nOnt teaspoontul mustard\nFlashing Eyes\nLaughing Eyes\nDowncast Eyes |\nEyes tell\nYour Character\nBrown ere* for strength\u2014Blue\nfor generosity\u2014Gray eyes for\njealousy-\u2014Sparkling ayes indicate beauty, yes, and good\nhealth, too! Do your eyes\nsparkle? Are the whites clear\nor are they tinged with yellow\n\u2014indicating an out-of-sorts\ncondition \u2014 due to constipation?   If io, you need\nuncoo\/**.\nSalad'dr*\nTry\ncourt* for \u2022 inoctl\nperiod. Your eye* will\null tbs itory.\nAVtgtitUt\nProJuft\nRent tbout CJurtcter from tke Eytt kt\nfuturf. Betehtm Advertisements.\nStltt Agtutt Harold F. Mitblt tt CoT,\nBEAT vigorously all Ingredients, except vinegar, for a few minutes.\nAdd vinegar, stir well and\nget aside for a few houra\nto thicken. This dressing\nwill keep for weeks.\nIhe Borden Co. Limited, I lomer Arcade fildg., Vancouver, Dept. A.\n^ Please send me, free, Eagle Brand Recipe Book.\nNAME\t\nADDRESS .\nMining Exhibi\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet   ae   figure  your  bills  of\ninildiiit* Material   Coast Lum-\n'fi a specialty\nJohn Burns & Son\nCarrying out the decision Informally\nreached by tho mayor and aldermen\nlast week, when they heard representations from a delegation from the Chamber of Mines of Eastern British Colum-\nb'a, the city council Monday night voted (250 to the fund being raised for\nthe two district exhibits\u2014that for the\nVancouver and New Westminster exhibitions and the Spokane mining convention, and that for the Toronto exhibition and for eastern publicity\npurposes.\n<*?\nEVINRUnr Speeditwin,\nfull 20 horse power and\nweighing only 95 lbs., il\nbuilt for speeds up to:\n45 M. P. H. oo Hydropltat\n2S .t*. P. H. oo Runabout*\n25 M. P. H. oa V-Bottom\nfensM\n20 M. P. H. ott Fist-Bottom\nRowbotts\n20 M. P. H. oa Light Ctuisets\nLast yesr, Evlnrudes were the\nworld's most victorious motors ind\nSpeeditwin alone held IS out of It\nClan C speed records. For 192\u00bb.\nSpeeditwin's horsa\npower is incrfessed\n, 25'\", giving a speed\nrange of 6 to\n_..._ 45 miles per\nhoar and of-\ntrlng more features\ni evtr before.\nThree other twin cylinder models to choose\nIrom: Folding Spor-\ntwin 2% H. P., J ta\n13 M. p. H.; Fleet-\nwin 6 H. P., 4 to 2$\nM. P. H.j tnd Fast-\nReplacing of men by women as stewards on liner out of New York marks\npassing of ancient tradition of ocean\npassenger   service.\nF. C. R0DGERS\nCteslon. B. C.\nDealer for\nEast and West Kootenays\nLawn Mowers\nWe Have Now in Stock a Full Line of the Latest\nModels in High-Grade\nLawn Mowers\nPRICES TO SUIT ALL POCKETS\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale Sc Retail QuatttyHHaMwa**\nNELSON B.C.\nMADE    IN    CANADA\nKNOWN    THE    WORLD    OVER\nGenuine\nGillette\nBlades\nThe millions who have used\nGenuine Gillette Blades from\ntheir very first shave -<g\u00bbj^>-\nsee no reason for changing\n-^^^\u00bb In one year alone \u00a9ver\n20,000,000 new users <jggi>\nNot in one errantry alone but\nin every country in the world\n*e^^^- the quality\nand performance of\nGenuine Gillette\nBlades is known\nand  insisted  upon.\n-Gillette\ntint in the field . . . and the\nworld's (Undard throughout 27\nJeart of constant improvement.\ntM^eht-tt-l\nTha only man in hittory,\nanciant or modern, whota pic*\nfurs ami autograph are found\nin ovary city and town, in ovary\ncountry of tha world it KUt\u00a7\n\u20ac.. Gillattf.\nGILaKTTE SAFETY RAZOR COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED - MONTREAL\n\u25bc ITH     THE     FINEST     EDGE     STEEL     CAN     II II\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY NORNING, JULY 25, 1929\nSHOES\nWomen's SUppers\nIn. Patent   Leather,   Kid\nLeather and Tan.\nf3itS,'f4.3S,?4.85\nChildren's Sandals\nTriced\n\u00bb1.35 TO $1.95\nMen's  Oxfords\n$3.65, $4.85, f 7.35\nMen's Mole Boots\nChrome Soles -f2-2*\nBoys' Mule Boots\nChrome Soles  $1.05\nMen's Brown\nCanvas\nShoes and Oxfords..?_..45\nBoys' Brown Canvas Shoes\nor pxfords .$2.15\nRi Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nThla column la - conducted by\nlira. M. J. Vlgneux. AM' stew, ot\na social natu-fe, including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marrlagaa, ato., wll)\nappear ln thla oaUws. Si\nlira. Vlgnetfr at her home.\nUrs. D 3. Derley and het two -.bll-\ndrap, Doreea and Oeorfe of Medicine\nHat   will   arrive   tonight   to   be   the\n[jjuest ot Mrs. Darlay's parents, Mr. and\nMrs   Gcorte Johnston?.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Lewis, p. A. Johnstone\nand daughter. Jacqueline Louise Oolden,\nwho have been in towp for tha past\ncouple ot weeks, gueeta at the home of\nMr, Johnstoije's parenta, Mr. and Mrs.\nOeorge Johnstone, leave thla morning\ntor their ho-rie in Oolden.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nRobert Yulll, pioneer of Lockhart\nbeach, who (las pees, a city vlaltor for\ntta past couple dayt leaves thla morning for his Home.\na     .      \u00ab\nMr. and Mrs. R. A. Simmons of Vancouver are city vlaltora.\na     \u2022     \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. OUker of Bonnlngton, paid a visit to town yeaterday.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nW. M. Vance of Lethbrldge. formerly\nlocal manager of the Associate Growers\nla In the city.        ,\n\u2022 \u2022'   \u2022\nJ. R. Hunter and Oeorge Steel caught\n10 rainbow trout at Taghum Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. Prampton, Miss\nWilms Frampton and Morris J. Prampton, wbo have been holidaying In town\nleave this mqrnlng for Sanca.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nw C. E. Koch has returned from\na visit to Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJames Broley, government road contractor of Nakusp, paid a visit to Nelson yesterday, and lett last evening for\nhis home.\n\u2022 \u25a0\u2022   \u00ab\nArthur Keeler of the Imperial Bank\nof Canada atatf ls having hie vacation.\n-1   \u2022   <\nMr. and Mrs. O. B. Appleton of Sunshine Bay were among shoppers to Nelson yeaterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Harold Dales. Terrace apartments, entertained at a charmingly arranged ( bridge recently complimenting\nher sister, Mrs. Kenneth Coates of\nEdgewood.\n\u2022 e   e\nMrs. J. It. On- and Miss * Ruth Orr\nleft laat night for the coast on a vacation.\n* \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nD. A. McPherson, Hoover street ls\nholidaying at Proctor.\n\u2022 #   \u2022\nMiss Irene Bradley, daughter of Mr.\nand Mra. W. W. Bradley formerly ot\nNelson and now of Vancouver, la the\nguest of Mrs. Mary Kerr, Kerr apartments.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. E. W. Kopeckl of Valllcan were among outsiders to attend\nthe picnic given at Proctor yesterday\nby the members of the pariah of the\nchurch of Mary Immaculate.\nFor Summer\nLIGHT MEALS\n\u2022 Little\nBOVRIL\nMakes a Lot\nofPiffefence\nTi\n11ll I i*a\nNAME ENTERS\nTRIAL\nJohn McEntee Bovmian. native of\nToronto, millionaire president of Bow-\nban-BHtmore Hotels corporation, whoae\nname entered the story of Ecco Odynne,\nln the trial of Edward Gwynne, ln New\nYork, upon forgery charges.\nDick Poole has returned from Vancouver where he went to attend the\nfuneral of his mother.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMre. Jack Kllner of Wenatchee, am!\nher eon Pat are the gueeta of Mr. and\nMrs. J. T. Beardby, Three Miles, Mrs\nKtlner's parents.\n* \u2022    \u2022\n. Percy   Coates  is  tn   town  from  Sllverton.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Qeorge Ferguson, Stanley street have as their gueat Mrs. Cecil   Dawson  of  Okanagan,   Wash.,  Mrs.\nDawson was before her  marriage Miss\ngJl.^dUh Oreen of the Central echool staff.\nfi\u00bb$\u00bb\u00bb4< *l^<\u00bbl^H-i \u2666\u00bb>\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb4\u00bb\u00bbf \u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\nFer Your Daily Toilet\nCuticura Soap and\n:   Cuticura Ointment\n'. There ie no simpler, daintier or more affective method of caring for the skin and hair\nthan le afforded by the daily use of Cuti-\n' cork Soap for cleansing end purifying and\nCuticura Ointment for soothing and healing irritated surfaces.   Cuticura Talcum\nI P-owdar cools and perfumes.\n. *\\*tsmMc, Otatoont>tnd Mr Talwm~*. Utusfi*t**k tn*\n, ZSSia 0U*. V**fsai  3. t. Wall Offlnpuy Limit*!. Ihatntl\nALL-ELECTRIC RADIO\nNjilurally the Phllco\nIs a favorite among\nmakea In districts\nwhere reception Is\ngood . . . bnt Philco\nis a necessity where\nreception is indifferent or tricky ...\nit ia thrrr Philco\nproves.its true\nworth.\nAsk your'dealer.\nDistributors for British Columbia i\nRdJio falei tntur linlteJ\nVMCQUVI*     t\u201e<      VICTOIU A\n-*-      Ae.iki\nCoal! Wood! Coal!\nLet us fill your orders today for Dry Wood\u2014sny length\nGait Lump Coal\nNELSON TRANSFER CO., Ltd-\nCar. Vernon ano Stanley Sta. NeUon. B. C\nPHONE 35\n\u25a0   ..I^JLILMMB\nShe will also visit her parents in\nKaslo.\ne ,\u2022' e\nJudge and Mrs. w. A. Nesblt have\nhad aa their guest Mrs. T. A. Vale, who\nleaves today for Calgary.\n\u2022 *   *\nThe Misses Frances and Margaret\nScanlon left last night for a visit to\nthe coaat cities.\n\u2022 *   *\nDick  Jones < and  Paul Bougeois  were\nweek-end visitors at Crescent Valley.\n.\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. E. Hughes has left for a few\nweeks' visit to Vancouver and Victoria.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nA. P. McLeod, manager of the Royal\nbanl; here, Mrs. McLeod and daughte'\nEllis have returned from a vacation\napent at the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Miriam Hughes haa returned\nfron). a thrje-weeka, visit motor trip\nto Windermere, Banff, Lake Louise and\nCalgary. WhUe ln Calgary she attended the stampede\ne   e   s\nMr. and Mre. J C. OUker, Miss Jean\nOilker, Miss Louise Richardson and A.\nBarty Oilker motored to Proctor yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nOscar   H.   Burden   of   Crawford   Bay\nwaa a city visitor yesterday.\n\u00ab   *   *\nMrs. c. V- Oagnon and her son\nJames H. Oagnon motored to South\nSlocan Tuesday, where they were\nguests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E\nWatts.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. J. Thompson, Strathcona hotel,\nhas a\u00bb her guest Miss McDonnell of\nOakland, Cal.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlse Simonne Bourgeois, Miss Miriam\nHughes and Bruno Bourgeois motored\nto Rossland where recently they were\nguesta of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Aiken.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. Olen of Trail and\nthetr baby nre spending a week's vacation ln Nelson and attended the picnic\nto Proctor yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs H. C Ward of Pittsburg, Penn.,\nwho has been the guest of Mr. and\nMrs. Pali Lincoln Stanley street left for\nthe coaat last evening.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. R. L. McBrlde and MUs Helen\nMcBrlde have returned from a motor\ntrip to Kalso, Sllverton and Sandon.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Irene Lees left last night for the\ncoast.\nWarden and Mrs. W. R- Jarvls havs\nas their guest at their summer place\nat Procter, Miss Vera Craig of Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nFred  Jarvls,  custom  officer of  Uan-\neta,   spent   Tuesday   evening   in   the\nctty. *__.__&*\n\u2022   \u00bb    \u2022\nMiss K. Gillies of Kaslo paid a visit\nto town yesterday.\nsee\nH. Jackson and A. McDonald both of'\nYmlr, who have been ou a business\ntrip to Spokane were In Nelson yeeterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT. Helse of Balfour was among shoppers io town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nDouglas Forln intends leaving the end\nof the week for Vancouver, where he\nwill visit his brother. Judge and Mrs.\nJ. A. Forln.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nDr. J. P. Oussin ls leaving this mom -\nIng for Winnipeg on a couple ot weeks'\nholiday.   .\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMisses Edna Hartson ant; Irene BrnJ-\nley of Vancouver, are vlaitlng Mrs.\nKerr at the Kerr apartments.\nLOB. 1\t\nDHSTRESS ATTENDS\nNELSON CHAPTER\nIs Presented With Fitting Tokens of  Esteem;  Confers\nDegree\nSincerity .Lodge No. 841 mat twice\nrecently, the guest of honor being Mis-\nFlorence Williams of Vancouver, grand\nmlstreas of Brltlah Columbia.\nOn th* ootuion of har flrat visit\nthe manahan exemplified the flnt degree and yeaterday the grand mlat rees\nconferred the second degree for the\nbenefit of those members who had not\nyet received lt.\nAfter the regular business waa concluded the members ot th* L.OL were\nInvited In and the grand mistress gave\na most Interesting address on th* foundation of the order .also laying stress\non the work being don* by the L.OB.A\nand the I O.I. for th* Loyal Protestant\nChildren's home ln New Westminster.\nThis Institution has been erected at a\ncost of approximately \u00bb75.000 and house*\n76 children. The home ls kept up entirely by donations from L.O.B.A. and\nL.T.B. lodges with the assistance of a\nfew private Individuals and institutions.\nThe grand mistress was extended a\nmost hearty vote of thanks for her\nInstructive talk and was presented With\na beautiful boquet of roses and a silver\ncard tray by the worthy mlstreas, Mrs.\nJ. C. Hooker.\nDainty refreshments wen served on\nboth occasions.\nMrs. Helliklev Is\nBuried Here; Many\nFloral Tributes\nHusband    Conducts    Services\nMere and in Cranbrook Twice\nEach  Month\nFuneral of Mrs. L. o Helliklev of\nCranbrook was held here yesterday, Rev.\nW. A. Mawhinney officiating.\nMrs. Helliklev died in Cranbrook\nwhere her husband has been preaching two Sundays of each month. Thc\nother two Sundays of each month he\nconducts services ln Neison.\n'    Mrs. Helliklev and her husband came\nto cranbrook from North Dakota some\nseven years ago.\nPallbearers were:   Ivan BJertnes, Olaf\n' Fosley, E .Mastberg and M. Nicholson\nof Nelson and  A.  John  Anderson  and\n[ Nils Larson of Canyon City.\n| Among those sending floral tributes\nwere cross from Bcandanavlan Ladles\nAid, Kimberley Cross\u2014Mr. and Mrs. O\nJohnson,   Nelson   Harp\u2014Mr.   and   Mrs.\ni Galilean. Nelson  Wreaths\u2014Canyon City\n! friends,   Canyon  Olty;   Mrs.   Maartman\nj sr.,    and    Mr.    and    Mrs.    Maartman.\n\u2022 Cranbrook; Scandinavian Ladles Aid.\nNelwn; O Klangtwl. Mrs Erlckson\nand Mrs- Moer,, Mr. apd Mrs-H Olsen,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Mast-berry, and Anne\nNelson. Sprays\u2014Mr. and Mrs- O. Holm\nand family. Wardner \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nCarl Jensen, Mr. and Mrs E. H. Anderson, Mr- and Mrs. B. Aason, Mr. and\nMrs. O. Osnls, Cranbrook; Mr and Mrs.\nHans Fethle, Mr. and Mrs. Carlson and\nfamily. L. Jacobson and family Kimberley; Mr. and Mrs- Oustafscn, Mr. and\nMrs. Laurlte, Mr. end Mrs. F. M. Peterson. Mrs. M. Oausdal and family, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Levlne. and family, Mr. and\nMrs. H. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. L. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Johnson, Mr.\nand Mrs. H. Mlchelson, Ogla and Iver\nBJertnes, Mrs. I. M. Matheson. and\nMargaret, Mr. and Mrs. P. Aspend, Mrs.\nElizabeth Hanson. Miss Dessy Paterson\nand Mrs. Bmeaton, Mr and Mrs. U. E.\nStevenson, Mr. and Mrs. R. Mills and\nfamily. Mrs. A. Collie and Lillie. Mrs.\nH. E Roek, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Carlson\nand family. Nelson.\nTREE BEARS TWO\nWALNHTVTORONTO\nDream of Pastor From Ukraine\nComes True; Peach Grew\nThere Once\n^X\nTORONTO. July 24.\u2014In the garden\nof a small home tn this city a triumph\nhas been achieved by mother nature\nand an enthusiastic minister. Rev. Paul\nCrath baa been eager for years to show\nCanadians that nuts from his beloved\nUkraine could be grown In Ontario,\nand In other spots beside his garden\nhla faith has been Justified in good\npromise. But tlie six-year-old nut tree\nunder his eye ls this year bearing two\nnuts, walnuts, large ones, with thin\npaper shells; much nut meat If all\ngoes well.\n-It waa another local clergyman, however, who o nee grew a lovely peach on\ntk tree In his back yard. The ownership of thc luscious morsel when rlpr\nyam disputed by membcra of thu family,\nbut (lunlly it was promised to the uld-\nopt girl And then, one Mid murnln l:\ntin* \\\\abh woman nunc In, niunrhlng ll\n\"\u00a7\u00a9 fine is thit* peach; not for lone\nhave I tinted ope like rt.\"\nThe clergyman's younge&t d_.ug.itcr\nactuated   by  tho  highcM,   motives   ol\n\u25a0*MJ\u00bb__^_J*fei\nf        s**{   vim-\nAttempt Is Made\nTo Remove Float\nFrom Sand, Park\nThe bathing float at Lakeside park\nthdt was blown away from Its moorings\nlast week, onto the sand inshore, again\nchanged Its position yesterday.\nIn attempt to clear the foundered\nhulk off the sandbar one end of\ncable was attached to the float and the\nother end to a pile further out from\nthe shore. Headway to the extent of\nswinging the float around snother 40\ndegrees was accompllshed before the\nprocess was finally given up aa a bad\nJob.\n1\n\u00ael\n\\\n\\\n\"]\nIng\nbul\nout\nclas\nstn\nexc\nhen\nwht\ngra\nme\nfae\nthc\nto-d\nnow\nBt\n__,\nJilt\nver\ndm\nin\n\u2022, |\nrle\nml\n.   e\nP\nIPS\nIt,\n. a\nri>\nilr\n.   !\u00ab\nP\n___\\\n'?\u25a0\nsh\nV  1\n1   V\nget\ntill\nI V\nelv\nnpl\nr(xl\not\nII m\n1   1\nia.1i*\nhi\nl-lel\nid\n_\nSB*\nColumbia Is expand-\nst.    There Is a great\nrogram  being  carried\nient.    And the better\nilclings-fcre being con-\nIth   B.   C.   m*ter|els.\nThere are 83 firms\nnylng   1300  workmen.\nice  the   very  highest\nbrick,  cut stone,  ce-\nl,  tiles,  fire-brick\u2014lu\nhe  materials used  in\nuction of modem, up-\nlldtngs,   whether   nf-\nrtes or homes \"\nwets fiikuu\noJMea\\_her's\n611 Baker Street.     Phone 200\nStore News<^d\nSpecial Prices on \u00a7ilks, Wash Goods arid Staples\nBov Thursday Shoppers\nDress Voiles to Clear\nAt 49c the Yard\nImported voiles in a range of smart designs. Full 36 inches wide. UNUSUAL\nVALUE AT 48* THE YARD.\nNovelty Silks\nHalf Price\nGood quality Crepe Satin and Novelty\nSilks. Rich materials. 40 inches wide.\nRegular $3.50 to $5.00. CLEARING\nAT ?1.75 TO $2.5\u00a9 THE YARD.\nPotters' Cambric\n50c the Yard\nImported cambric io a range of sf*iall\nneat patterns. 32 inches wide. Fast\ncolors. CLEARING AT 50< THE\nYARD.\nNew Chintz\nTo Sell at 50c the Yard\nA new shipment of Chintz in a wide\nrange of designs. 36 inches wide.\nSPECIAL VALUE AT 50e* THE\nYARD.\nTea Towelling\nSYardsforSl.OO\nPure linen Tea Towelling in assorted\nchecks. SPECIAL AT 5 YARDS FOR\n$1.00.\nEnglish Broadcloth\n45c the Yard\nA splendid material for women's or\nchildren's Dresses. Comes in good finish. 36 inches wide and fast colors.\nAH assorted colors. SPECIAL AT 4tty\nTHE YARD.\nBallantyne Is the\nActing Fire Chief\nof Gryfoe Hall\nFire Chief Maloney Attending\nConvention of Fire Chiefs\nin  Vancouver\nFor the past few days J. G- Ballun-\ntync has been filling thc position of\nActing Fire Chief of the Nelson Fire\ndepartment In the absence of Fire Chief\nD. Maloney who ls away attending a\nconvention of the Pacific coast fire\nchiefs,   being   held   at   Vancouver.\nIt le expected that Chief Maloney\nwill be away for some three weeks\nlonger.\nvAtkljle\nhot\nHerb's a new, delicious treat\nfor the kiddie*. Heat Rio*\nKrispiet in the oven, butter\nand salt and serve them like\npop corn!\nRice Krispies is die new\neereal that's to criip it\ncrackles in cream-or milk.\nGreat for breakfast, lunch\nor supper. Toasted rice I\nAtfrooers. Made by KelloK\nin London, Ontario.\nsi.\nMCE.KWSFffS;\nA VALUABLE redpe book for\nmaking delightfully \"differ-\nent\" frozen desserts and salads\nwith the new Frigidaire Cold\nControl awaits yon free at onr\nshowroom. Get your copy. Also\ncomplete information on tbe\nmany other Frigidaire advantage*. Frigidaire operate* from\nindividual electric plant* or central station current.\nHill (I.  KOBINKON  I.Ill TKIi    ili.i .i   LTD.\nVancouver \u2014 Vlrtorlai\nl III I MHIl  EUCCTBIC  LIMITED\nhlmhnley \u2014 NHm>ii. B. C.\nC.   N.   McKINNON\nSpecial Representative\nFRIGIDAIRE\n< Olw QUIET 0\u2014amalic ntftUfwmlen- )\nPrinted Dimity and Pique\n49c the Yard\n25 pieces printed dimity and printed\npique. 36 inches wide. Regular 65c\nto 75c. ALL ONE PRICE, 4\u00bbf THE\nYARD.\nStriped Damask\n49c the Yard\nDrapery Damask in rich stripes. 36\ninches wide. Regular 75c. SPECIAL\nAT 48*} THE YARD.\nJapshan Silks\n81.75 the Yard\nEnglish Japshan in plain colors or\nchecks. All smart designs. 36 inches\nwide. Regular $2.25. SPECIAL AT\n$1.75 THE YARD.\nFlat Crepe\nAt $1.95 the Yard\nHeavy weight Flat Crepe in a wide\nrange of colors. 36 inches wide. SPECIAL AT fl.95 THE YARD.\nHeavy Pillow Cotton\n50c the Yard\nCircular pillow cotton in good heavy\nweight. 42 inches wide. SPECIAL\nAT 50** THE YARD.\nImported Sheeting\n90c the Yard\nHarrick's English Sheeting in extra good\nweight. 81 inches wide. SPECIAL\nAT 90\u00ab* THE YARD.\n1\n1\nI\nCurlew Milk Is\nPasteurized for Safety\nMedical health officers all over the continent advise the use of pasteurized milk for\nboth babies and adults.\nThey do so because pasteurization is the\nonly method of making milk safe. It kills\nany deleterious germs, but leaves the important vitamins with their good qualities\nunimpaired.\nFor Guaranteed Delivery Before 6 a.m.\nPHONE 290\nCurlew Creamery Co., Ltd.\nn*l.  rm AM\nBUTTER\nAll Perfectly raitesrlted rrodncta\nClassified Ads Bring Results\u2014Try One\naaaa\t\n kmB^-Mmmtzi^HH':\nr Page Sb\nttf NTO-SON DATT.Y NEWS, TftTTMhAY HORNING, JULY 25, I9\u00bb\n\u2014\u25a0\u25a0 i liaaaaaaaaaMaaaaa\u2014.    in .    ..'*.....*. ..       I    I  . '    \"       '          \"\"\nMarkets and Mining\nTORONTO MARKET   !    Metal Markets\n'ERY IRREGULAR\n^\u25a0fe .Strong  Bot  Oils Are\nWert; Hone OH Off\n15 Points\nTORONTO, Jul; 34\u2014Following weak-\n\u25a0   In   New   York   and   tb.   -bearish\nKlallie  of  the ' crrjp  conditions, the\nMttto   stock    exchange    experienced\nW*l>\"' trading today.\n^^\u25a0ples.   ahowed   strength   featured\nTsg.-a three point gain Ln Power Cor-\niaj_tlon and -an advance of one Polna\nt|MK   by   Brazilian\nC.   Packers   opened   at   lt   and\nat   ao.   while   Canada   Oypaum\nthree  pointa  to  reach   114V..\nltcn   Bridge   wa*   another   atock\ngain ..points\n; Albert*   Pacific   Oraln   supped   one\n4_.   Masaey-Harrls   **,   and   Maple\naankf 3\n'Standard Steel of Canada wen weak,\nUm format gagging 4 to 98. The Ul\nfb-re were quiet and soft while spec-\nalstlve oil* were active but uneasy,\nforce oil -sagging IS pointa, and\nBoyallte 5.\nNEW TORK. July 94\u2014Copper ateady;\nelectrolytic apot and futurea. 1* oenta.\nIrion\u2014Steady  and  unchanged.\nTin    Steady,    apot    M7.50;    futures,\nLead\u2014Steady, apot New Tork. M.75;\nlaat Bt. Loui*. t*\u00bbt.\nzinc\u2014Steady, laat St. LouU apot and\nfuturea; K1.80.\nAntimony\u2014*\u00bb.S0*. M43.\nAT LONDON\nStandard   copper\u2014Spot   179   3a   W,\nfuturea, \u00a373 17a fld.\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot, \u00a384; future*. \u00a384\n10*.\nTin\u2014Spot, \u00a3914 ltt,' future*. \u00a331* II*.\nLead\u2014Spot \u00a333 7* Sd; futures, \u00a333\n13s \u00abd.\nIns\u2014Spot, 35; future*. (35 6s.\nCOAST LEADERS\nTENDING LOWE\nCal&ary Oil\n*__P  .  Consolidated   \t\nftrltlsh    Dominion\nCalmpnt\nIfcicury\nDeihoulae    \t\nDallas      ..\nttveMsh   \t\nilehfleld\nBom*   Oil     \u25a0'_\u25a0\u25a0,\t\nlUt-nota-Alberte\nMcDougall ex\t\nMcLeod\t\nMadlaon\t\nMill    City\nModal    \t\n-fflghwood pfd.  \t\nStockman   \t\nHlghwood\nHomestead    \t\nIkeehold\nOkalta   com.   new\nBoyallte\nSignet   HIU\nSpooner   \t\nUnited\nll.\nA**d Oil\n-Hargal\nwaalt-p\n.   4.06\n.     .79\n4.43-ft\n1.40\n3.99*4\n9.66\n.     .60\n.84 Va\n93.06.\n.     .01\n.   3J7**.\n.   4.10\n.MS\n. 0.76\n.93\n6.96\n. .30\n... AO\n. l.OO\n. 1.49 V,\n. 330\n167.60\n.341.\n.    l*7Vi\n. no\n'  Al\n.   4.46\n.   1.47K\n.    L09!.\nGood Demand for Mines. Oils;\nGeorge Copper Under Further Pressure\nVANCOUVER, B. C, July 94.\u2014With\nthe exception of Home OU and A. P.\nConsolidated, the active Issues were all\ntending lower on the stock exchange\ntoday. A good demand came out for.\nboth mines and oils on the recessions.\nOeorge Copper waa subjected to further pressure, selling down to t*M snd\nclosing at 69.36 for a loaa ot 90 cenu.\nPend Orellle eaaed off 96 centa to 68.66;\nPremier, Rufus Argents, Kootenay Florence. Kootenay King and Snowflake\nwere ln good demand and flnnlshed\nfrom ont to two point* stronger.\nHome Oil at 693.40 up 16 cenU and\n' A. P. Consolidated 64.05 up 10 cenu\n, were the only Issues ln the oil division\nI to close higher. Calmont was under\n' selling pressure all day, closing at 64.43,\ndown 36 cenU. Royallte waa off five\ndollars at 8155.00; Southwest Petroleum\nI lost 35 cenU to 150.75;  Dallas 15 cents\nat 63.50.\ni\t\nLIST CLOSES\nDOWNJN N. Y.\nPinch   in   Call  Money   Cheeks\nForward Move; Steels\nBid Up Sharply\nNEW YORK, July 94.\u2014Another forward movement on the stock market\nwa* upset by'a pinch ln call money\nten\u2014y, and the list ln general cloeed\nmoderately lower, although a sprinkling of Issues continued to advance.\nCall loans renewed at 7 per cent\nhM successively moved up to 8, then\nto 8 per cent. Banks called about\n640,000,000 ln loans, which wat sufficient to send up tbe caU loan rate.\nCalling of loans was -Aid to represent the withdrawal of funds both\nby Interior and foreign banks.\nSome of the steels, rails, utilities\nand communication Issues were bid\nsharply. United States steel reached\na\u25a0 new peak at 91014 was an outstanding strong stock, rising more\nthan 8 polnu to a new high at 257'\/,.\n-and cloalng within a fraction of tho\ntop. Boston and Maine climbed\nabout 16 points to a new high prtce,\nUd Baltimore and Ohio and Erie\nreached new record levels.\nGeneral Oaa and Electric was a\natrong spot ln the utilities, rising\nmore than alx points across tbe 100\nmark for the flrat time, ln response\nto report of a split Up and a more\nliberal dividend policy. Pacific\nLighting waa alao buoyant, \u25a0 rising\nmore than. * polnu to a new peak\non merger prospects. Allied Chemical\nand General Electric aold up 6 and\n7 points, only to lose thetr gains tn\nthe reaction.\nAviation stock* were under marked\nj pressure,  United,   Wright  and  Curtlss\nlosing  3  to 4  points.\nTotal  tales 3,778,960 shares.\nNSW  YORK  STOCKS\n315V4\n60y.\n163 It\n131%\n131 Vi\n6414\n108\nmtaaoti'\ni^Exchan&e Rates\n:_I\u00abW  YORK,  July  94\u2014Sterling  ex-\neiange steady at 6460  1-18 for 10-dey\n\"   -and at *46A 13-16 for demand.\ntn bar ellver^-63>.  cenU.\nUlan dollar\u2014 V cent discount.\nac*\u20148.10% cenu.\njtttt*\u20146.99  11-16 cents.\n\u2022aSelson   aproxlmate   rate   of   sterling.\nToronto Mines\nAconda        .08\nAmulet      im\nArgo\nArea   \t\nAtlaa \t\nBarry    Holly\nBldwood \t\nCan     Loratne\nLogan tit Bryan\nSTOCKH,   BOMW,    COTTON,\nIamASS ! '\nMKMBKHV\n\"Hew York. Montre*! and Vancouver Stock Exchangee. Chicago\nBoard cf Trade. Winnipeg Oraln\nExchange and other leading exchanges.\nI OFFICES:\nVaitcurrr,   Spokane   and   Seattle\n.01\n.15\n..\n.26\n.    -17\n.    .30\n.     .114\n.    .06(4\n.35\n9)4\n5.65\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nWeek-End\nReturn Fares\nNelson- Procter-\nBalfour\n81.25\nOn aale Saturtlny and Sunday.\ngood to return on nr before Monday following.\nCrown Reeerve ...\nDupra* ii, .-\".,\nGranada     \t\nGrover   Daly   ....\nHoUy \t\nHudson  Bay   16.50\nJackaon    Manlon        AT\nKirk   Hunton       XII\nKootenay   Florence   14(4\nLake   Shore    95.00\nLaval      -     .06\nMacaasa  -    JO\nMcDougall    _ 43\nMclntyre    15.75\nMining    Corp      4.00\nNewbeo  49(4\nNlplssing      9.70\nNoranda      57 A0\nPend .Orellle    5.70\nPorcupine Crown   5.70\nPioneer     -    38\nPremier     1.70\nPotteer   Doal       .01(4\nPreaton    _   .01(4\nRlbago      .01\nSan  Antonla    13(4\nSherltt-Gordon     7.66\nStadcoona     .07(4\nSudbury   Basin     8 50\nSylvanite      1.10\nTeck    Hughes      8.30\nTough Oakea    A3 (4\nTowagamac  1.60\nVlpond    ._ .60\nWakenda       6.75\nWright  Hargreaves     1.70\nWeat Dome Lake  03\nJ. S CARTER,\n0. P. A.\nNi'lson   B. C.\n.00\n.60\n\u202201(4\n\u202215(4\nXII\n.27(4\n\u20229714\n.03*\n16.75\n.08\n01(4\n.15\n96.95\n.06\n.31\n16.00\n4.10\n44)4\n9.78\n68.00\n.02\n\u25a009(4\n.14\n7.75\n.08\n8.60\n1.90\n8.35\n.04\n1.74\nA5\n600\n1.73\nAlleld  hem  394(4   31614\nAndes\t\nAmer.   Can  167      16314\nAm. Fgll. P.   136       131(4\nAmer. Loco.    131(4   19014\nAm.   Stl.   Fdy      66%     0414\nAm   S. At F  100       107H\nAmer.   Tel  967(4    94814   956%\nAmer. -Itob  17914    17814    17814\nAnaconda      11814   11014\nAtchison  967(4    969(4\nBait. Ic Ohio   137*14    136(4\nBeth   Steel     19114    11814\nB. H. tc 8  146\nCan.   Pacific     93914   930\nCerro  de  Pasco   .     94\nChrysler          7414     71\nCorn  Prod     10914   101(4\nDupont     1*0(4    18614\nFlelah.   Co      0514     93(4\nPord   (Eng)    _.\nPord of Con _     \t\nPreeport   Texas   ..    43(4\nOeneral Motors  ....     7014\nOeneral Electric   .. 370(4\nOranby          78*4\n\u2022 Great   Weest   Sugar   37\nHowe  Sound        67(4\nHudson  Motors 9714\ntn*.  opper  >:.*!.....    43%\nInt. Nickel      48%\nKelly  Spring        13\nKenn. Coppeer  .... '88%\nKresge S. S      48\nKree. A Toll \t\nMack   Truck     07\nNash   Motors     86%\nNat.  P. At L  65\nN.   Y.  Central     34314\nNorthern   Pacific 116%\nPackard  Moton  .. 193(4\nPhillip  Pete     87%\nRadio  Corp  86\nRock   Island     140%\nSchulte       SO.%\nShell   U.   Oil '      36(4\nSinclair Con      94(4\nSouth.  Pacific    14A%\nRead the Advertisements\nWISE SHOPPERS DO IT\n-  I*\nProfit Possibilities\nFALCONBRIDOE. with IU indicated probabUtty of being the second largest copper-nickel property. creaUs an atmosphere of confidence for  the  long  pull.    Important developments pending.\nSUDBURY BASIN haa sound value and shows good market proa-\npecU for a hold.\nVENTURES LTD, which ls so largely Interested In Sudbury\nBasin and Falconbrldge, should be a good purchase for the patient\nInvestor.\nR.P.Clark&Co.,(Va nc.) Ltd.\nINVESTMENT BANKERS\nNELSON*, B- G- PHONE tu\nThe Consolidated Mining and\n{Smelting Company of Canada, Ltd\n***  Offtoe. 8-uIU>g aad ReflnlM  ikpwmbmi\n\u2022 TBAIL,   BBITIRB  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchaser* )f Gold, Silver, Coppsr, Lesd ud Zinc On*\nProducers of Gold. Silver. Coppsr. Plf Lesd and Zin.\ntadanac nun.\nStn. Otl ot Cal.\nSUn. Oil of N.\nStewart Warner\nTex.   Corp\t\nTex. Gul. Sul\t\nU.  Otl ot  Cal.  ..\nUnion   Paa    \t\n71%\n66%\n7114\n69\n74\n46%\n979(4\nU. 8. Rubber       48%\nU. S. Steel     910%\nWest.   Electric        306(4\nWillys Overland   ..    34%\nYellow   Truck         30%\nCon. Oa* of N. Y.  151%\nRad.   Keith  Or.   ..     37%\nSo. Cal. Ed      73%\nInt. Tel. 1W\u00bb    113\nOn.   Av '..\nBendlx   Av.   \t\nExchange\u2014Marks 33.83.\nKronen  36.78%.\n49(4\n67%\n363%\n36%\n66%\n85)4\n49%\n47%\n19%\n84%\n47%\n96%\n84%\n83%\n339\n113\n199%\n86%\n83%\n139%\n\u2022:;%\n36%\n38%\n146%\n70%\n61%\n75%\n61%\n73\n48%\n371 .\n47\n906%\n199%\n93%\n36%\n148%\n36%\n69%\n100%\n113\n366%\n187%\n118%\n130\n936\n94\n71\n101%\n186\n93%\n17\n48%\n43%\n66%\n364\n76%\n36%\nTRAIN WKECK IN TIIE EAST.\nPWCESMOYL\nUP AT TORONTO\nAjax Leads Oils; Amulet Most\nProminent Mining Issue\nof Day\nTORONTO, July 34.\u2014 WhUe share\ntransactions on tha Standard mining\nexchange feU oft aharply today, price*\nIn moat Issues moved to slightly higher levels.\nIn the oil stocks, Ajax again lea\nln sale*. It opened \u00abt 93.49 touched\na low of 62.36 and closed at 62.33\nfor \u00bb total lc*\u00bb o' * P0\"\"*-\na-uasoclated gaa loat 25 eent* to M;\nWainweU 1(4 AB \u00bb\u00bb\u2022 Canary \"H1 \u25a0**\nmouum 10 poanu to 68. whll* Uowanr\nFete loat 15 cent* to JMO-\nAmuiet wa* *vul tne moat prominent\nstoc* in us* one* m*t*i group, but\nreceded today closing a* \u00bb!\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb for a\ndecline   ot   4   points.\nNoranda closed 60 cent* lower \u00bbt\n\u2666&I.0U and lnt*rnatlon\u00bbl Nickel dropped\nIO . to Caose at 648.\nTne L-nosasy group waa fairly atrong\nunder limited -trading, witn emures lo\ncenu up at *8Jo ana snsrrltt-uordon\nup ten cent* at 6770.\nVancouver Stocks\nAm    Mln    It\nB*yvlew   \t\nBig . Missouri\nBluebird\nWhen two CNR. freight trains met |\nln  a  head-on  collision  Just  north   ot\nLeaslde, Ont., at Oriole station, two of\nthe crews were Injured,..one locomotive\nderailed and cars reduced to wreckage,\nit ls reported the south-bound freight\noverran the switch. The photograph\nhere shows a general view of wrecked\nfreight cars.   No. 2, Fireman H. E. Fir-\nMONTREAL HAS A\nSTRONG MARKET\nSome  High   Records  Made  in\nFirst Strong bay\nFor Weeks\n43\n47(4\n12%\n84%\n47%\n38%\n96\n84%\n69%\n349\n113%\n199%\n37%\n84%\n139%\n90%\nDummy Criticizes\nPoor Handwriting\nMONTREAL, July \"*S*. \u2014 Renewed\nstrength with leadership ln the leading\nutility stocks, made todays session\non the Montreal stock exchange the\nfret of  real  strength   In many  weeks.\nWith transactions In*. 18,635 ahares.\nShawlnlgan was strong throughout the\nday. selling up at ono time to 95.\na new high for the yea*- but softened\non profit-taking at tr-lajploee to 93%.\na net gain'for the da\/Saf 2% points.\nW(4 Montreal Power was siaf* In activity..\nVi with soles tn 750 stlurtR, and at thc\nclose was' Al* points hixhcr at 121\nBraalllan came third With a gain of\n1%  points to 59%.\nA fairly * strong tone was evident\nln most of the \u25a0 otkt. groups. The\nfarm Implements were the only exception, with Massey-Harrls off a point\nat 53.\nCanada Gypsum recorded thc greatest\n116%, a new high. Smelters suffered\na small loss, being off 6 points at\n386.\nTotal sales 63,915:  bonds 641.400.\nU.OSIM.   QUOTATIONS\nAT   MONTREAL\n\/Tir ,p MAP lb Mf-iKfe\nA FlAY ON Trt' MST\nI UP. W PAtira WOOIP\nV\/HAVE MtUM \"\"\n,_th       -rej\/fierAwWY\"\n\"-\u2022 60sX TAKti\n\"CAHAtre\n*ATH\" ANP\n, PA8H OUT OF\nHftE -ewsHousE\n_K>R NO PlAffE\njn Particular\nman.- 913 Royce Ave., ' Toronto, and\nBrakeman George Altchleon ot New Toronto, were the two Injured, and 3. a\ndiagrammatic sketch of how accident\ntook place.\nChief New Check\nWas Not F Bucks\nCork Province \t\ncotton Belt  \t\nGeorge  opper   _\t\nIndependence     \u2014\nueorgie Blver   -\nGladstotfe     -\t\nUui-ouda\t\nGrandview\t\ninter. .Coal   - \t\nKootenay -*ioren-ce \u2014\nKootenay    King    \t\nLucky    Jim    \t\nMouawk     \t\nMorion   WoolaAsy   \t\nMarmot    Gold    \t\n'.iuru.oc   Metals   -\t\nNatl.  Silver   \t\nNoule   five   \t\nPend  Orenle  \t\n.07\n.03%       .0*   .\n1.46 1.46\nA0\n.10       .10(4\n.60\n9-16 9.30*\n'     sft     *\n\u25a0     .08%\n1.01 1.04\n,.44,       : .44(4\n.36 \u00bb\u00bb\n. . __-!__.    .14-.\n...      _\u00bb\u2022 .     .34\nII.10-\nM      \t\n.     .06%      MVi\n     x\u00bb\n.     .03%\n.     .13 .13\n83%\n.   5.66 5.80\nritenuer        1.66\n.Porter Idano        48%\nReeves  McDonald    .   1.76\nKuius Argent*    ,  3*\natuth  Hope       -38\nI -suver ureat       .06%\nj Salver  Cup    -    -80 . .\nj Silverado      -     -66\nSlocan   King    04\nSnowflake          -87(i\nTerminus         -.09\nTopley   Rlchtield        .36\nWellington         M\nWoodbine     04\nA. P. Consol \t\nDalhousle    \t\nDevlnlsh    \t\nHome OU  \t\nIlls.   Alt*   \t\nMcLajod    \t\n4.06\n3.90\n.50\n93.40\n.93\n.   4.05\n1.74\n\u202262\n1.80\nAO\n.0*\n.70\n.05\n.38\n.05 \u2022\nJ7\n.05\n4.10\n3.95\n.95\n38.60\n.95\n4.20\nIII AL DEMAREE\n(Former Pitcher New York' Giants)\nBall players are allowed four or\nfive dollars a day to eat on and can\nsign checks ln thr. dining room of\nthe hotel wbere they an staying to\nthat amount.\nOccasionally, however, tbey bring\nln a friend, or their own appetite\nbecomes particularly voracious and\nthey run over that amount. In\nthis dilemma they usually pick on\nsome player who ls a frugal and\nenroful cater and affix his monicker\nto the \"..-ad r.:r. .\nThe_lnrvi'rV:o squawk doesn't come\nuntil the s\u00bbl\u00bbry checks are paeted\nout and then It's too late.\nHeinle Zimmerman,    the   old Giant 1. The   print   Jacket    with -  frock   In\nth|rd    sacker,    signed    \"Chief\"    Mey- double   breasted   effect   Is   a   summer\ner's   name   to   a   six-dollar   breakfast vogue,\ncheck one day.\t\nWhen   Meyers   saw   the   check   later   -\nhe  let  out   an  awful  equeww. |\n\"That's not my check,\" he yelled.\n\"Look up the hotel checks for the\npast ten lyears and yo.ull see I never\neat anything but grape-fruit, ham\nand  eggs,  toast  and  coffee!\"'\nCANADA'S  IBON-MAKINO  CENTERS.\nThe three Iron-making centers ln\nCanada are: Sydney, Nova Scotia, on\ntht Atlantic coast, ahd Hamlltoh and\nSault St. Marie ln the province of Ontario.\n148(4\n71\n56%\n76\n61%\n73\n46%\n273\n47\n306\n199%\n34\n38%\n148%\n87\n89%\n109%\n128\n100%\nBank    of    Commerce\niBank of Montreal\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG.   July   24.\u2014Grain   quota\ntlons:\nWheat\u2014        Open    High    Low   Close\nJuly     173%    179%    168%    169%\nOct 164%    166%    161%    169%\nDH 160        163       152       158%\nOats\u2014\nJuly   68%      68%   '67(466%\nOCt  71%      71%     69%     70%\nDec  69%      6t%     67%     66%\nBarley-\nJuly     86%    86%   86(4    85%\nOct  87 68%     65%\nDec     . 66       88%     85%\nDec 86       88%    65%    85%\nNew  Dec  84%\nFlax-\nJuly    364       378%    963%    263\nOct. 357       367%    358\nOK. - 2.61    369       351\nRye\u2014\nJiiiy \t\nOct 119%    119%    117%\nDec 119%    119%    117%    117%\nCaah whnt No. 1 northern 169%: No.\n3 northern 169%: No. 9 northern\n166%: No. 4 160%; Ho. 6 139%: No. 6\n109%; feed 88, track 166%\n85%\n86%\n357\n35654\n114\n118\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPED, July 34\u2014Dominion war\nIssue price*:\nWar lo_n*\u20141931, 999.70 and 89990:\n1987.  6101.30.\nVictory loans\u20141923. $100.60: 1934.\n6100.46 and 6100.60: 1997, 9104.60 and\n9104.75.\nRenewals\u20141993.   999 76   and   110010.\nRefunding loans\u20141949. 6106.36 and\n610*940; 1944. 606W MS 696.00; 1940,\n\u2666MHO: 1948. t*4.78 and 99910.\n296\n351\n39*\n371\n46\n. 10\n0\nton\n69%\n49%\n. 43\n.... 76\nBank  ot  Nova  Scotia\nRoyal    Bank    \t\nAbltlbl Power  &  Paper\nAsbestos    Corporation\nAtlantic   Sugar   -\nBell   Telephone\nBrazilian T.  L It Power\nBrit.   American   OU\nBrompton   Paper\nCanada    Bronze - ..__\nCan.    Car    Ic    Foundry     134%\nCan.   Cement      38\nCan.   Converters  95\nOana.   Industrial   Alcohol           33%\nCan.   Cottons 92\nCan.   Gen?  Electric 373\nCan.   Power      31%\nCan.    Steamship    Lines            36%\nCons.  Mining  Sc  Smelting      385\nDominion    Bridge 109%\nDominion   Glass    300\nDom.    Textile  90(4\nA.  P.  Oraln     45%\nHlllcrest   Colliers    550\nLake   of   the   Wood* .__ 65%\nMaaaey    Harris 62\nMontreal    Power     131\nMont.   Telegraph          48l\/a\nMontreal   Tramways        - 186\nNational   Breweries        138\nNational   8teel   Car 95\nOgilvle    Milling 605\nOntario   Steel   Produrts 29 Vs\nOttawa L. H.  &  Power 109\nPenmans,   Ltd.    . 85\nPower    Corpn 117\nPrice    Bro*  goT's\nQuebec   Power     90(4\nShawlnlgan      93'*\nBherwln   Williams  46\n80.   Canada   Power      41\nSt.   Lawrence   Flour   Mills     36\nTuckett   Tobacco    135\nWayagamack     __*-  80%\nWestern   Orocer6 ..-  24\nWinnipeg    Railway         79*%\nWinnipeg   Railway    108\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, July :>4.\u2014Butter higher;\ncheew qu)\u00abt;  eggs unchanged.\nChecw\u2014Blneit westerns 18c to lB^c;\nfinest euttrn*.   17 c a  17'\/.c.\nButter\u2014No.'\" 1 pasteuriwd 38% ac.\n38*c.\nEgp,fr\u2014Fresh Htru 40c; fresh firsts,\n32ac, 33c.\nBl AL DEMAREE\n(Former   Pitcher   New   York   OUnts)\nBall players of today as a clan\nare well educated but In the old\ndays a lot of good players used to\ncome up from the mines and the\n''\u25a0sticks,\" who couldn't even read or\nwrite. But they would never let up-\nand a good many of them got by\nwithout anybody ever knowing about\nit. They would get their roomies to\nread and write their letters and always pretend that they could read,\nwhether they could or not.\nI remember ono of these fellows\nwho had hin roomie read his love\nletters and then answer them. T\/he\nfellow who could read prided himself  on  his   suberb   penmanship.\nOnce when the \"dummy\" was dictating a love letter for him to write\nout, he said, \"Put a P.\" S. on there,\nnow.\"\n\"P. 8.?  What  for?\"\n\"Say, P. 8.,\" aald the illiterate\nplayer. \"Please excuse poor handwriting.\"\nOne time this same feellow received\na telegram. He handed lt to another player, but happened to land\none that also happened to be Illiterate, but had kept lt a secret.   .\n\"What do you think of that \"\nasked  the first dummy.\nThe other one looked at the telegram and answered, \"Say. that's\nhell,  ain't  it?\"\nI don't dare to name these two\nplayers as they may have learned\nto read since.\n(\\CM(a   *\nIpACIFIC\/\nSunday Train\nService\nRossland\u2014Trail-\nNelson\nTrain 701. 702 between Rossland,\nTraU and Nelson Mil be withdrawn from Sunday service and\noperated 6 days per week only,\neffective July 31.\nLast Sunday train\nJuly 28.\nJ.   S.   CARTER\nD.  P.  A.,  Neiaon\nCanadian Pacific\n\u2022    Sailinqs\nfflj^k TO   J\n*    EUROPE\nFROM St. I.AWBENCF PORTS\nMONTREAL \u2014 QUEBEC        '\nAug 7  - - Montroyal\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton\nAug 9  -  Montroso\nTo Cherbourg-SoutL---\nAug. 14   Duche*s Yoi*)c\nTo Liverpool\nAug. 15   Met-gama\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton-Antwern\nAug.  17   Mellta\nTo Belfast-Llverpool-OUagow\nAug. 20 Empress scotUnd\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton\nAug. 21  -Duchees Atholl\nTo Liverpool\nAug. 31    ..MonV\u00bbUu\nTo Plymoulh-Cherbourg-Southampton\nand Hamburg\nAug. 37  _  Montroyal\nTo  Cherbourg-Southampton\nAug. 38   Duchesa Bedford\nTo  Liverpool\nAug. 29   '  Montclare\nTo  Cherbourg-Southampton-Antwerp\nAug. 31  _  Mvnnedoaa\nTo B*lf*st-LlvMjx\u00bbl-Qla\u00abiow\nAug. 31  Duchess Richmond\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\nSept.  3    Empress Australia\nTo Cherborugoouthhamplon\nSept. 4  Duchess York\nTo Liverpool\nPull   details   with   rates   from   any\nagent, or write\nill. CARTER\nDUtrlct Passenger Agent. Nelson, B. C\nJam Raspberries\n10 Cents a Pound\nPrice of raapberrlsa for taot 4n_r-\nposes am 10 centa today, tbe McDonald Jam company advancing the price\nfrom eight cents httkerto paid.\nE&& Markets\nOTTAWA, July 34.\u2014There appears\nto be a better undertone developing\non the larger egg markets today.\nVancouver report* a substantial price\nadvance.\nToronto\u2014The local egg market ls\ntending firm although prices are\nstill unchanged. Dealers are quoting country shippers for ungraded\neggs, extras 38c; firsts 35c; seconds\n31c.\nMontreal\u2014There is a oetter demand\nhere for extras and the market ls\nsteady. Egga are jobbing on spot\nat extras 34c; firsts 38c; second*\n24^ There la a feeling here that\nthe   market   wlll   improve   shortly.\nChicago\u2014Spot 81 ^ to 32c; November 87%c.\nEXCURSION RATES\nEAST\nToronto   $116.90\nOttawa   129.60\nMontreal    184.10\nSt. John  152.20\nSt. Paul   76.60\nChicago     90.30\nNew York  151.70\nWEST\nVancouver $32.90\nVictoria  37.30\nSeattle 41.75\nAlso circular tours at\nattractive rates to Pacific\nCoast and Canadian\nRockies.\nOn Sale Daily Till Sept. 30\nReturn Limit Oct. 31\nAsk for rates from and to any point East or West.\nDetails from any agent, or write <\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A., Nelson, B. C.   '\n THE NEL550N DULY NEWS. THTTRSOhr NORNING, JULV 25,\" 1923\nVage Sot-Nt\nSPORTS\nU. S. A. SWIMMER\nISHINGTON IS\nWINNER; YANKS\nMAKE COMEBACK\nll Back in Game bua Goes\nHitless;    Athletiics and\nRed  Sox  Victors\na shrdlu cmfwyp vbgkgj cmfwyp\nISHmOTON, July 34.\u2014Behind the\ng pltchin. of Burke. Washington\n.ted Chicago today 3 to i. Both\nie and* Thomu allowed eight hlta.\nthe former waa steadier ln the\nice.\nR. H. X.\n\u00abo    ail\nUngton    _    3   8   1\ntterlee\u2014A.    Thomaa    and    Berg,\nand Ruel.\nYANKS COME BACK\nW YORK. July 14\u2014The Yankees\nited   up   from   the   rear   with   a\n'run rally ln tbe elgth to nip\nlit for the Tiger's sixth straight\n.t. The Yanks won 7 to 6. The\nry 'marked Ruth's return to the\nIng line up after a week on the\nlines due to a strained leg muscle.\nBambino failed to get a hit but\nperformed without a trace of a\nDickey, rookie catcher hit a\nar and three singles ln four times\nR. H. B.\nlot       6   11   3\nYork ...:    7   14   3\nktterles\u2014Uhle and Hargreaves: Pen-\n| and Dickey.\nLOUIS   LOOSES\nDSTON,    July   34.\u2014The   Red   Sox\nled on the Pitchers Ogden \u2014maty\nOray ln  the seventh  inning  to-\nfor  five   runs   and   defeated   St.\nla 3 to 7.\nR. H. E.\nLouis   _    7   13   3\nIfW         9    14    2\natterles\u2014Ogden. Gray. Coffman and\nIng;   Russel,   Morrlss,   Ruffing   and\ny.\nFIFTEENTH    WIN\nBtLADELPHIA, July 34.\u2014Big Qeorge\nuhaw, star right hander of the\nladelphla Athletics, registered his\nI victory of the season here today\ndefeating Cleveland 5 to 3.\nR. H. E.\n\u25a0Hand       3   8   1\npdelphla       6   9   1\nlatteries\u2014Shaute,   Holloway,   Hander\nL.   Sewell;   Earnshaw   and   Coch-\nDomestic Receipts\nCatch Eye on the\nChicago Grain Pit\nCHICAGO, July 34\u2014Sellers of wheat\nInstead of buyers did most* of the\nbating today and speculators focused\nattention more on big domestic receipts than on crop damages.\nCloalng quotations on wheat were\nunsettled, H to* IH under yesterday's\nfinish. Corn closed 1 to Hi net decline; oata '.i oft and provisions varying from 3 cents setback to a rise\nof 1 to 10 centa.       -*\nCUBS CLIMB TO\nLEAGUE LEAD IN\nNATIONAL RACE\nDefeat New York While Pittsburgh Takes Beating From\nthe Robins\nOHIAGO, July 34\u2014The Cubs climbed\nInto first place ln the National league\ntoday by defeating New York 8 to 7,\nwhile the Pirates dropped another\ngame to the Robins. The game waa\nhalted for over an hour ln the sixth\ninning when a cloudburst broke over\nthe field. The Giants, trailing by four\nruns, climbed aboard Bush for three\nscores before the storm started and\ndrove the league's leading pitcher\nfrom the box. When play was resumed the Giants continued the assault on Nehi and Malone, running\ntheir total to '( for the Inning. Wilson\nhit bis 34th and 36th homers, while\nHornsby hit ms 30th ln tbe first Inning.\nR    H    E\nNew  York   \u2022    7     \u00bb     0\nChicago       8   13     3\nBatteries\u2014fltzslmmons, Mays, Scott\nand Hogan, OParreil; Bush, Nehf, Malone, Cvengros, Hoot and Taylor.\nVISITING PROS\nMAKE HAY-WIRE\nOF KANAWAKI\nContestants   For   the   Cai-wi-an\nOpen    Have    Gay\nPractice\nMANY BREAK PAR\nBY. FIVE  STROKES\n\t\nChampions  and  Ex-Champion*\nof Continent Clash\nToday\nKanawtakl, Que.. July 34.- It was\nJust as well for the dignity of the\nancient Kanawakl Oolf club's sport\ncourse that the rounds today\npractice for the Canadian ol\npionshlp  and   not  the  tltlee   quest   It-\nBy dozens and scores* Rni:\nscended on the course stretching out\nover what was once the homestead of\nthe Kanawakl Indians and took it to\npieces to see what made It tick. Any\nnumber of scores under 70 tfere\nturned In the final tuning up games\nand if the weather continues aa Perfect aa it was today there will be eoaie\nvery low scoring in the 73 hole medal\ncompetition getting under way tomorrow.\nMIM*     MAKE    280\nIt was freely predicted br the  vis-\ntronto Holds\nIts Eeight-Oar\nCanadian Title\nCARDS  WIN\nST. LOUIS, July .14.\u2014The St. Loula\nCards toaay pounaea out a six to lour\nwin over tbe Philadelphia Nationals,\nmaKing lt two straight. Hoettgcr, Red\nngnt fielder, hit a home run ln the\nsixth  witn the bases full.\nIll\nBatteries: McOraw and Lerlan; Johnson and Wilson.\nThU Is a photograph of Mlm Llaa\nLlndstrom of the Women's Swimming\nclub of New Tork. It was persistently\nrumored that following the national\nchampionships at Honolulu, Mtss Llndstrom would come to Toronto and compete tn the C.N.E.-Wrigley ten-mile\nswim for women. Th:s swimmer Is national back stroke champion for 230\nyards and was a member of the U. S.\nOlympic swimming team of 1928 at\nAmsterdam.\nllant 65. \"Hey, that wasn't low,\"\nof 280 would be necessary to win the\nchampionship, and some bold spirits\ndeclared the winner would have to\n\"tweak\" 280. It takes four rounds\nof. 70 par for the course to total 280,\nso' the sharp shooters are figuring\nay who fall victims of par golf are\noat of the winning picture.\nLeo Dlegel, the defending champion,\nwas congratulated on scoring a brilliant 60. \"Hey, that wasnt low,\"\nsaid the Irrepressible Leo, \"there were\nseveral  scores  better than  06.\"\nHorton Smith was around ln 64.\nThe modest Smith said hts score was\n\"around 70\" but Tommy Armour, playing with htm, contributed some rebuttal testimony. \"Don't tell me.\" said\ntbe former open and Canadian champion. \"I had a 09, and I was three\ndown  to  Hbrton.\"\nAndy Kayj the Toronto pro., was another low scorer. MacDonald Smith, a\nformer champion, played well, although\nbe did not take ethe round seriously\nand Oeeorge von Elm, the Detroit am\nateur, admitted that he was satisfied\nwith   tils   same.\nBill Mehlhorn, fresh from a victory\nin the metropolitn open with a remarkable 288 score for the stern Lido\nCourse, regarded Kanawakl as a welcomed respite from the harsh demands\nof the Seaside links. Rose Somervllle,\nthe well-known Canadian amateur, gave\nthe lay-out a thorough testing.\nFRONT RANKERS OALORE\nWalter Hagen reached the course\nlate in the afternoon and started\nto explore it at once. Oene Sarazen\nWas  another   late  starter.\nAl Watrous,  who has held  the title,\nplayed twice, but once was enough\nfor \"Long Jim\" Barnes. Billy Burke,\nAbe Esplnosa, and many others of the\nchallenging pros.\nThe big field will start out ln\npairs tomorrow morning for the opening round, the first pair leaving\nthe first tee at 0 o'clock. It will be\nlate in the afternoon before the last\nones set out. Another 18-hole round\nwill be played Friday, with two rounds\nclosing  the  competition Saturday.\nUNITED   WESTON   AND\nALBERTA   ELEVEN    TIE\nWINNIPEG. July 24.\u2014\u00abU11 deadlocked\nwere United Weston, Winipeg, Manitoba\nchampions, and the Canadian National\nRailway eleven, champions of Alberta\nafter 00 hectic minutes of play here\ntonight, ln the first game of tbe semifinal Bertes to decide tbe west's representative for the Dominion Football\nassociation final.\nBrilliant from the first minute, the\ncontest reached its peak in.10 minutes\nfrom full time, when Weston flashed\nInto the lead with a sparkling goal-\nonly to have the far west rallwaymen\nequalise within 30 seconds. The final\nscore was 1-1. The teams meet in the\nsixth game of the series on even terms\nhere Friday evening.\nTwo Weeks Remain\nBefore Athletes\nMake Coast Trqi\n\u25a0H\nInternational Race\nJersey  City  I;  Toronto 0.\nNewark  3;   Rochester 3.\nBeading 4-3:  Buffalo 3-0.\nBaltimore  3;   Montreal  4.\nTwo weeks from today flfe\nhigh school athlete* to Into actton at\nthe Vancouyer e-chlblUon track meet.\nTor tbe paet week the boya bane\nbeen literally llTlm at the Beans turn\ngrounds, wbere tbey hold their practices under A. Wallach, ***\u2022 alt *eeoes-\npany them to their first provincial\nmeet.\nThe boys are all rounding Inio good\nform in their varloua events, and stand\na fair chance of coping some of the\nhonors while at Uae coaat.\nThe system of ha-rtnaj a meet that\nwill embrace all high --tool boya of\nthe province hu been Inaugurated title\nyear In an endeavor to develop athletes\nthat wlll be of high caliber enoughito\ncompete for Canada at th* Milt Olympiad to be held at Loa aVnueles In 1*13.\nPACIFIC COAST\nLEAGUE GAMES\nMissions, 3-0, Portland 0-0. (Second\ngame,  7  lnings).\nHollywood 0-0, Seattle  4-3.\nCacrameau 2. Loe \u00a3ngeles 3. tTen\ninnings.)\nOakland 8, San Francisco 2.\nIIODUEKS   VICTORS\nPTTT6BUKOH, July 24\u2014The Dodgers bounced Pittsburgh out of the National league iead today by taking the\nsecond straight game ln the series 0\nto 4. With the oases loaded and two\nont ln the ninth, Lloyd Waner failed\nto produce a hit that would have\nsaved' the game.\nR    H    E\nBrooklyn       0   10     0\nPittsburgh    4    10     0\nBatteries\u2014Clark and Plclnlch; Melne,\nFrench and Hargreeaves.\nT. CATHERINES. Ont., July 24.\u2014Uni-\nslty of Toronto retained the interstate eight oared rowing champion-\np by defeating McQlll university,\nntreal, by one length and a quarter\nr the Royal Canadian Henley regatta\nine here today. The time was 7:13.\nsh university has won the annual\nnt twice, McGlll winning in 1920-27\nI Toronto the last two contests.\n\u25a0Mty tool the lead shortly after the\nrt and maintained lt to the finish.\nsattle Lacrosse\nTeam Undefeated\nSISI.ER HITS TRIPLE\nCINCINNATI, July 24.\u2014Boston hit\nRlxey for four runs ln the first two\nInnings here today and put down a\nlate Cincinnati rally winning 5 to 3.\nSiller's triple, which scored two runs\nln the second Inning Set Rlxey to the\nshowers.\nR    H    E\nBoston    5   10   1\nCincinnati        3     8      1\nBatteries\u2014Cunningham, Smith and\nSpohrer; Kolp, Lucas, Rlxey, May and\nSukeforth.\nTeddy Loney Wins\nWestern Bred in\na Close Finish\nVANCOUVER, July 24,\u2014Featured bj\none of the most thrilling finishes of\nthe season, the western bred champion\nship for a purse of $1500, leading event\nat Hastings park this afternon, was won\nby Teddy Loney, five-year-old gelding\nowned by T. R. Stone nnd ridden by\nCralgmyle. Little.-Boy Blue -wat' second, aud Catch Me, third. Tlie time\nfor the mile and 70 yards was 1:48.\nTeddy Loney came from far back ln\nthe stretch to win by a head from Little\nBoy Blue, who mode place by a head\nfrom Catch Me, half a length ln front\nof Duchess of York. A blanket would\nhave covered the first four horses.\nTork Home, favorite, finished sixth.\nTeddy Loney paid 060.05; 96.10 and\n$400.\nAmerican Association\nLouisville 6, Kansas city 6.\nIndianapolis  2,   Wtlwaukee   10.\nColumbus 5, St. Paul 6.\nToledo 5;  Minneapolis 8.\nlEATTLE. Wash., July 24. \u2014 With\nt three games remaining on the\n19 schedule and having gone thus\nundefeated the Seattle Lacrosse\n*B* Is preparing for an extended\nir of Canada. So Impressive has\n\u00bb local club's record been that aev-\nJ fine teams In the east have ten-\nred invitations offering exhibition\nnes.\n4any of the Seattle club's backers are\nling th* team to enter a challenge\nthe Mann cup, which ls emblem-\nc of the world's championship.\nUTUMMOl S   SAND   IN   CANADA.\n\u25a0Tiere  is   no   established   production\n'bituminous sand  In Canada as yet.\ntor to 1927  approximately  2000 tons\n\\ been shipped from the Alberta de- j\n^its for use In conectlon wtth laborer Investigations and for demonstra-'\npurposes.   During   1927  shipments\niregsting upwards of 3000 tons were I\npd ror demonstration purposes at Ed-\nKnton and Jasper. Alberta, chiefly for\nfacing roads and walks.\nSenators and\nCadets Battle\nHere Tonight\nSenators, who are crowding the\nLive Wires for second place and a\nberth ln the playoffs, tangle tonight\nwith the Cadets, who upset the dope\nTueaday*1_y handing the league leading Married Men a defeat ln the\nTrafalgar league. The game wlll get\nunder way at 0 o'clock at the Junior\nhigh school grounds\nSenators will field their strongest\nUne up ln an 'effort to keep right\nwith the Live Wires, while the Cadets\nwlll make a desperate try to pull out\nof the rut into which they dropped\nat the beginning of the season, by\nhanding thc Senators a defeat tonight.\nThe leading hosiery colors in New\nYork are suntan, beige, gray, atmosphere and gun metal.\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nAdditional Service\nNelson-Kootenay Landing\nCommencing Wednesday, July 24, S. S.\nMOYIE will leave Nelson 12 midnight,\n' calling at all landings en route on signal\nto pick up fruit.\nMOTOR\nFERRY\nThere is ample space for Motor\nCars east or west on this service.\nLv. Nelson 12 midnight eastbound.\nLv. Kuskanook 10 a.m. westbound.\nJ. S. CARTER, Dist. Passgr. Agt.\nNSLSON\nAl Money Mad for\nAsking $50 Split\nIW_H)ST30U>Y<W\n16 Tut: 6WTS FOU\nftFTY THOU3AH0\n000 K8-You RtfttflT\nt&'bm Tomorrow!\n.TWB.'SUP\nIme a count\not'thoo*\npip'nYCost\nWoo AniT\u00abM*S\nMMT.'AKE-TbonciM\nhtiP?-ALirou HoDlRH\nBAIL PWYEKS At*\u00a3.\nSoRWlY CoflMERClAU.'\n?\/\nBl AL DEMAREG\n(Former  Pitcher   New   York   Olants)\nWe hear a great deal about commercialism In baseball and big money\nand all that, but usually It applies\nto the payer holding out or who wants\nsome of hts purchase price or something. A mogul Is Justified tn holding up somebody for 060.000 or \u00bbioo,-\n000 for a mediocre player, but lf the\nplayer want? * hundred dollars of\ntbat money, he Is a scroundrel gone\nwild about crass materialism and so\nforth.\nI remember when I was sold to\nthe Olants. They gave \"Baby Doll\"\nJacobson, Oene Paulette and 00000\ncash for me. When I asked' the late\nMike Finn, my manager for 000 of\ntbat money, he wrote me a letter\nbawling the daylights out of me and\nsaying that he guessed the Big Town\nhad   made   me   money   mad.\nThe moguls are always peaved when\na star hold! out for more money\nln the spring, but they never seem\nto understand that the players and\nnot the moguls sre the ones who\ndraw thc customers through the turnstiles.\nWilliam W. Farnum, 85, former treasurer of Yale University, ls dead at New\nHaven, Conn,\nGOOUYEAR\nM ELECTOR BELT\nRUNS\n27, 960\nCOXSECUTIVE\nHOURS\nGOOD FOR SIX MONTHS MORE\n(A\nia\nHI\n-*\nM\n..-MS\n\u25a0  -'es*\n\u25a0iet*\ns\u00bbnH\n' i.uO\nXJ ERE'S a magnificent service re*\ncord made by a Goodyear Wet\nOre Elevator Belt in the plant of\nthe Cobalt Reduction Company at\nCobalt, Ontario:\u2014\n1,165 days of 24-hour, day-in, day-\nout service, and, 'reports the plant\nsuperintendent,\" It still looks good\nfor six months' of further service!\"\nThink of the supreme satisfaction\ngiven to the user of this Goodyear\nBelt through its low cost operation!\nr**t* Says the user\nPerformance such as this is available to all users (large or small) oi\nGoodyear mechanical goods\u2014in\nconveyor belts, transmission belts,\nhose, packing, valves. Write, wire\nor phone any Goodyear branch.   ,\nThe Goodyear Tire and Rubber\nCo. of Canada, Limited, Halifax,\nSt. John, Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa,\nToronto, Hamilton, London, Fort\nWilliam, Winnipeg, Regina, Saskatoon, Calgary, Edmonton, Van*\ncouver.\n\u2022\ni\nri\n\"J!\nQoodyear means Qood Wear\nBELTS\nIN CANADA\nPACKING\nVALVES\nGoodyear Selected Dealer in Nelson Is\nThe NELSON TRANSFER Co., Ltd.\nCorner Vernon and Stanley Streets\nPhone 35\n_______\n-\n THE NELSON DAILY\nee^feOfeeefffffeeffmetfffWffeewff nfwetfwi\n\u2022The Foolish Virgin'\nBy KATHLEEN NORRIS\n i\t\nnassst\" \"T*\"nm\u00bbm.\n\"And coming to America?\"\n\"Coming to California. She used to\nlive here, here In Carterbridge, when\nmy father was born\u2014she thinks It's\n\u25a0till a village, wtth dirt roads and the\n..post office ln the grocery store. She\ncom to America about 10 years ago,\nwhen I was a kind about 16, and I\nvent on to the east and spent the\nsummer with her.\"\n\"I-dldnt know that!\" She was a Uttle impressed. The English grand\nmother and the trip east seemed to\ngive   him   a   little  Importance.\n\"She's   old\u2014she'll  probably  sit  ln  a\nchair a lot .but she's really a \" Re\nhesitatel. looked at Pamela with wide-\nopen eyes, and shook his head from\nside to side. \"She's tremendous!\" he\nsaid seriously.\n\"She sounds so!\" the girl said,\nlaughing at his manner.\n\"And with her\u2014she's on her way\nhere now\u2014are her grandson. Bob Charters, my cousin, and his Uttle girl,\"\nsaid Oregory\n\"Her grandson and a baby I No\nwonder you need help!\" Pamela aald,\nlaughing again.\n\"She's not a baby, Audrey Charterls;\nshe's about  14,\" said Oregory.\n\"Oood gracious! And how old is\nthe grandson?\"\n\"Oh, he's about 35 or 36, I guess.\nMy grandmother wss married when she\nwas 10, the first time. He was wounded\nIn tbe war. He's an invalid. His wife\nis dead.\" \u00ab\nPamela's attention was riveted at\nlast.\n\"Do you tell me that an old, old\nlady and an invalid man and a young\ngirl you never saw are all coming to\nv4alt you?\"\n\"Well, it Isn't exactly a visit. They're\n\u2014they sort of intend to stay,*' Oregory\n\u25a0aid  somewhat uncertainly.\n\"To stay!   At the ranch!\"\n\"Well, that's what my grandmother\nkeys here.\" He looked at the letter\nhelplessly. 'She says that she and Bob\n\u2014she calls *Colonel Robert Charterls\u2014\nwant to try California, and that an\nEnglish girl they know is teaching in\na .Santa Barbara schpol and the little\ngirl oould board there, and they're sick\nof coldness and fogs and streets and\ntaxes and war debts and everything\u2014\nand they\u2014weU, anyway, they're on a\nDutch ahlp, coming through the canal,\nand they get here ln about 10 days.'\ni \"And will yoti have them go to the\nArms?\"\n\"Oh, no\u2014my grandmother hates hotels. They're coming right down to\nMolino. I've had some rooms cieanea\nup. . . .\"\nShe had a vision of the rancho. Old\nplaster-walled rooms, cowboys, slipshod Mexican servants, cattle, mud.\nbarns and mildewed haystacks. And\nplunged Into tt an aged woman, a\ncrippled roan, a strange little English\ngirl, and\u2014Oregory Chard, ln his faded\nahlrt and worn cords.\n\"Now, how about this servant?\" Oregory  asked.\nThe servant? She had almost forgotten the advertisement and the purpose of his call.   She roused herself.\n\"Tou see,\" he said, \"I've got nothing\nbut those half-breed women down\nthere, and while they cook all right\nand take pretty goad care of the boys,\nthey cant do whst an old lady would\nlike. And besides, there's the kid. And\nthen Colonel Charterls may be fussy.\nI wouldn't want her to cook\u2014there's\nDO of them there, now, to do thst \u2014\nbut sort of tell them what to cook, do\nyou  see?*1\n\"I see.\" She was thinking, eyelids\nI half lowered, a faint frown on her\nforehead.\n\"Is ahe middle-aged?\" he asked suddenly.\n\"Is she\u2014?\" Pamela had been thinking only of herself.\n\"The woman you know of?'* he\nprompted.\n\"Ia  she ?   Oh,  no;   she's  young.\"\n\"I dont want a lady.\" he said flatly.\nHer chin went up. Her face reddened.\n\"Tou don't,\" she repeated mildly.\n\"No, I don't want anyone,\" he explained, \"who will pull a lot of class\n\u2014be to proud to do things. I want\nsomeone wholl help\u2014I'm going to be\nln a lot of trouble If I dont get some\nhelp. I don't even know\u2014oh, a lot of\nthings. I don't know whether my\ngrandmother will want the little girt\nte sleep ln her room, or how much\ncovers  they  want \"\n\"Why. but. my hear Qregoo.\" Pwn*\nela aald smiling, \"you surely can wait\nuntU they get here and aak them\nthings like that!\"\n\"Oh, well, a lot of things,\" he went\non vaguely. \"She may want her breakfast on ft tray\u2014my grandmother. I\nmean\u2014and Colonel Charterls, my cousin, may not come to meals at aU, and\nthen I cant ait down and eat with \u2022\nkid of 14\u2014she wouldn't like lt, anyway.\"\n\"You'd have this woman\u2014this aerv-\nant\u2014have her meals wtth the child?\"\n\"WeU, lf she wanted to. I wouldn't\ncare\u2014I want her to settle all that.\nI've had the boys unpack a lot of my\nmother's china\u2014It's Prench; I suppose\nit  was  brought to her  mother ln ft\nsailing Ship around the Horn. They\nbroke a lot oi* tt \"\n\"Oh \u2014!\"  walled Pamela,   putting\nher hands over her face. \"Oh.\" she\nlaughed at him through her fingers\nas she took them down; \"it waa prob-\nabhr Sevres! What are you doing down\nthere!\"\n\"Well, they only broke a soup t\u00abreen\nand some platers, .ftnd nobody uses\nsoup tureens any more,\" Oregory said\nunexpectedly.\n\"How do you know that?\" the girl\naaked, surprised.\nHe loked at her honestly, reddening\nslightly, as if he thought she. might\nlaugh at him again.\n\"I have a book about\u2014well, It's called Manners Today,\" he said.\nPamela dfd not laugh. She was\neven ashamed of the Impulse to do so.\nThe poor blundering Idiot, she though\npityingly.\n\"Have you sheets and ..(<>\u00ab-\u00bbW**n<l all\nthat sort of thing?\" she asked practically.\nHis face brightened; it was pathetic\nto see the eagerness In his eyes and\nhear lt In his voice.\n\"I ordered lots of them, from cat\nlogues-\u2014 -\"\n\"Oh, Gregory, you're *erriblel\" the\ngirl laughed again, as be paused, looking at her hopefully.\n\"Why. was that wrong?\" he asked\nquickly\n\"WeU, it wasn't wrong. But\u2014but it's\nsuch fun to shop!\" Pamela explained\nyouthfully.\n\"I hate it.\" he said, scowling.\nThere was a silenc; Pamela's thoughts\nwere busy.\n\"Oregory, could I help?\" she asked\nsuddenly.\nHe looked at her gratefully.\n\"I'd be awfully obliged If you would,\nhe said. \"And lf you could get me\nthis woman\u2014or let me go ae her \"\n\"You're talking to her now,\" Pamela\ninterrupted impulsively, as he paused\nIt somehow sounded rather flat, nnd\nhis blank, almost annoyed expression\nmade her feel even further embarrassed.\nI mean\u2014the housekeeper,\" he explained carefully.\n\"Yes, and so do I.\"\n\"Oh 7\"  said  Oregory   Chard,   and\nthe gtrl flushed to hear the slow-\nthlnklng man's resentment and suspicion creep Into his voice'\n\"I have to do something,\" Pamela\nwent on, resolutely and pluckily. \"1\ndint know lt was you, ot course. Bvt\nI answered the advertisement for myself.\"\nThe man's face was red.\n\"No,\" he said heavily and perplexedly\nthat wouldnt do. I nouMn't-tl would\nnot allow\u2014thoee servants of mine don't\nknow anything\u2014you're certainly kind\u2014\nBoth were now embarrased. Pamela'3\nface as flushed as his own.\n\"I would be delighted to try it. anyway, Oregory\"\n\"Why, you '* His gesture indicated the Carter mansion, In whose gloomy\nand decayed shadow they sat. \"You\ncouldnt take a Job like that!\" he stammered.\n\"No, of course not. Of course not.\nIt was Just a silly Idea. Of course\nThey both laughed awkwardly.\n\"I guess you don't need money thst\nbad,\" he said Jocosely.\nI\nShe hated him. She despised hereelf for betraying the family's neeu\nand poverty to thla brown-faced,\nwhite-toothed man. In her anger she\nwas made than ordinarily, friendly and\nbright. She asked ah undred questions about his expected visitors, and\npromised to do her best to find .him\nthe right sort \u2022 of helper, a middle-\naged-woman, practical and clean\n\u2014Swedish, mifrbe, or a Oerman girl.\n(To  be  continued.)\nNEWS\nWorld News\nLocal News\nDistrict News\nSports News\nMilling News\nStock Markets\nSubscribe to\nThe\nDAILY HEWS\n60f \u2022 month.\n$3.00 six months.\n1.00 * year.\n* weak .delivered\nby carrier.\nSINER DEFEATS\nAimrawwns\nRoutis   Floored   Three   Times\nIn Second Round; title\nNot at Stake\nBROOKLYN. July 84.\u2014Al Singer, New\nTork, won from Andre Routis, of Prance,\nworld's featherweight champion, on a\ntechnical knockout ln the second round\nof a ten-round fight here tonight.\nThree times in the second round\nRoutis was floored by Singer's crackling\nright hand punches before the referee\nstopped the fight to save the game little\nPrenchman from annihilation. At no\ntime was the featherweight champion\nable to make the least impression on the\nshifty Singer.\nRoutis' title was not at stake. He\nweighed  128\",;  Singer, 189.\nJack (Kid) Berg of England received\nthe decision over Mushy - Callahan of\nCalifornia, in the ten-round semi-final.\nCallahan was warned five times for low\npunching.\nEn&lish Cricket\nLONDON, July 24 -A great Innings\nby J. C. White, the England and Somerset player, for his county against Nottinghamshire at Taunton was the high\nlight of Individual effort in English\noricket matches today. WL,:te nit up\n182 runs and at the end of the day\nwas still undefeated. In the match\nbetween Kent and Lancashire at Maidstone, A. P. Freeman, the International\nbowler, took all ten Lancashire wickets\nln their first innings for Just over 13\nruns apiece. Scores in matches at the\nclose of play today were:\nNavy 101; Army. 246 tor two wickets\n(Dynes 127 j.\nDerbyshire vs. Sussex; \u25a0 Derby 324.\nDnrwlekchlre vs. Yorkshire; Warwick,\n239.\n|  Yorkshire, 112 for one wicket.\nLeicestershire   vs.   Middlesex;   Leicester\n377.   (Sbipman   133,  Astlll   181).\nLancashire, 347; Kent 34 runs for\none wicket.\nHampshire vs. Essex Hants 340\n(Brown   137).\nGlamorganshire vs. uyrcestershire;\nGlamorgan 356 for eight wickets.\nSomersetshire vs. Nottinghamshire;\nSomerset 391  for eight  wickets.\nDurham; South Africa. 209 for seven\nwickets.\nZim in Hurry to\n-Get Hotel Chair\nR0SENBL00M SIGNS\nTO MEET DILLON\nPORTLAND, Ore., July 24\u2014Max C\nRosenbloom, spectacular New York light\nheavyweight, has been signed by Joe\nLevy, matchmaker for the Portland boxing commission, to fight ten round,\nhere July 30, with Harry Dillon of\nWinnipeg.\nVICTORIA. July 24\u2014Announcement\nwas made here today that racing would\nbe held at thc Colwood Aile enclosure\nfrom August 8 to 15 and September\n4 to 11. A local syndicate will operate\nthe track under the name of the Colwood   park   association.\nrut ruw wi\u00bb\nfoOllaNV WAD A\nun* usuAirf\nnaa.otaoa.sUEP\nthis matutia*\npAfBt iftVn\npOAeasAI** atsSmst\nBl AL DEMAREE\n(Former   Pitcher   New   York   olants)\nBall players are about the fastest\ndressera In Uie world. I was Bitting\nIn the White Sox clubhouse at Chicago the other day talking to Willie\nKamm. Morning practice had Just\nbeen called off. and one of the players wanted Kamm to drive down to\nthe bank with him o cash  his check.\nOne moment Kamm waa sitting\nthere In his ball suit. I turned to\nsay \"Hello\" to Manager Lena Blackburne; when I turned to Kamm\na*aln a seoond time, it seemed o me\nhe was lust tying his necktie, fully\ndressed In his civilian clothes.\nMost ball players are like that. I\nfigure that they ore fast dressers\nbecause they are so nervous and high\nstrung. Matty was always like that,\nand I've often wondered lf some ball\nplayers don't contract T. B. from\nrushing outdoors so soon after changing   from  the  \"monkey   suits \"\nFred Snodgrass used to be half\nundressed by the time the Isat man\nwas out, he was ln such a hurry to\nget Into his srteet clothes and get\nout of the ball park. He would\nhave his socks down, shoes unteld.\nshirt unbutoned and belt loosened\nwhen the last man came up, and\nhe'd be praying that a fly wouldn't\ncome  his  way.\nI've seen Heinle Zimmerman rush\ninto the showers and out, dress in a\nflash, dash down to the hotel, bawl\nout the waiter for being so slow\nwtth the meal, and then go out and\nsit In a chair It front of the hotel\nand   loaf   the   rest   of   the   evening\nClassified Advertisii\nClassified Advertising Rates\n\u25a0\u25a0oral Rending Notices\u2014Three cents\nper word each Insertion. In blackfjaoe\nor machine capitals 6c a word. Twenty-\nfive per oent discount lf run dally\nwithout change of copy for one month\nor more, where advertisment Is -ft\nout ln sh|ort lines the charge la 18c\na line for Roman type. 20c for blackface and 35c for blackface capitals.\nMi'-'m.iin 35c. If charged 50c.\nWant and Classified advertising \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per Insertion. If paid ln advance Sc per word\nner week, or 22(.c Der word per month\nTransient ads accepted only on a\ncash-tn-ativance basis. Xach Initial\nfigure, dbiiar sign. etc.. counts as one\nword. Minimum 26c. tf charged SOc.\nBirth Notices and Social Items\u2014rree.\n_1_\nCLASSIFIED   DIRECTORY\nBIRTHS\nDEATHS\nMARRIAGES\nIN    MtMOKIAM\nPERSONAL\nHELP WANTED\nSITUATIONS  WANTED\nAGENTS   WANTED\nTEACHERS  WANTED\nNURSING\n(1)\n(t)\n(\u00bb)\n(4)\n(S)\n(10)\n(HI\n(II)'\n(IS)\n(14)\nFURNISHED     ROOMS\u2014To   Rent\u2014(IS)\nFURNISHED    ROOMS\u2014Wanted\u2014 (IS)\nROOM  AND  BOARD (If)\nROWS\u2014Wanted\u2014 (IS)\nROOMS\u2014To  Rent\u2014 (19)\nHOUSES  WANTED (IS)\nHOUSES  TO RENT (11)\nFOR  SALE  OR  RENT (22)\nLIVESTOCK  FOR  SALE (28)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED (14)\nRABBITS   FOR  SALE (IS)\nPOULTRY AND BOOS (IS)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR   SALE (I?)\nMISCELLANEOUS  WANTED (IS)\nMISCELLANEOUS (IS)\nBUSINESS    OPPORTUNITIES (30)\nLOST AND FOUND (31)\nSCHOOLS (31)\nINSURANCE (SS)\nPROPERTY   FOR   SALE (34)\nPROPERTY  WANTED (SS)\nFARM   PROPERTY\u2014for   Sal.\u2014 (36)\nFOR  SALE  OR  EXCHANGE (37)\nMINING  TIMBER  AND   LUMBER (SS)\nFARM  AND   DAIRY   PRODUCE (SS)\nAUTOMOBILES   FOR   SALE (40)\nAUTOMOBILES   FOB   HIRE (41)\nAUTOMOBILES WANTBD (41)\nBOATS and LAUNCHES\u2014for Rent\u2014(43)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\u2014for Sale\u2014(44)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\u2014Wanted\u2014(45)\nFURNITURE   FOR   HALE (48)\nNURSERY   PRODUCTS (48)\nBIRTHS\n(1)\nCurran\u2014At Kootenay Lake general\nhospital to Mr. and Mrs. James B.\nCurran, 714 Carbonate street, a\ndaughter, July 24.\nFletcher\u2014To. Dr. and Mrs. Joseph D.\nFletcher at St. Paul's hospital. July 21.\na son.\nFearing her son 13 months old\nmight become Infected. Mrs. Evelyn Albln, Omaha, Neb., sues for divorce\nfrom  her  tuberculosis-stricken  husband\nOUR COASTAL FISHERIES.\nThe inshore or coastal fisheries of\nCanada Is carried 'on ln small boats usually motor driven, with crewa of two\nor three men, and In a class of small\nvessels will' crews ot from four to seven men. The means of capture employed by boat tlshermen are gill nets\nand upbto-llnd ln*s. both hand lines\nand trawls: whilst from the shore are\noperated trap cftt. haul seines and\nweirs.\nMi WILLIAMS  AND PARKER\nTIED IN MANITOBA GOLF\n\u25a0WIHinPEO. July 24.\u2014A. Carson Mac-\nWllllama of the Elmhurst club and\nHarold Parker, Norwood, tied here today IB the Qualifying round of the\nManitoba amateur golf championship\nwith 75 strokes each. One hundred and\nsix golfers played over the Winnipeg\ncourse and cards of 86 or better go\nInto the championship flight.\nRebou* haa revived the old style tarn,\nwith ornamental pin pulling the velvet\nup over the left eye.\nEven at Ascot this year women chose\ntight-fitting felt hata to go with their\nflimsy gowns Instead of traditional\nAscot creations.\nBranch\nOffice\nWe have a branch office In your home\n&\n8\nIn 9 convenient location; too. Wherever your telephone is, there you can get ln immediate touch with\nthe Indispensable service rendered to many Nelson\npeople by our Classified'Advertising Section.\nThe moment you call 144 or 143 and ask for\n\"Classified Ada\" you .ttt, ln> a position to satisfy many\nof the needs and frnd a way out of many of the\nemergencies of your evtrydpf life.\nWhen you need domestic help\u2014when you liave lost\nsomething\u2014when you want to buy or sell household\nfurnishings, a home, a car, more advantageously than\nyou could in any other way\u2014you will find that a\ntelephone call to our office is the Xirst step in quickly\nand satisfactorily accomplishing what you want.\n&\nThe Daily News\nClassified Advertising\nDepartment\nPhone 144 or 143\nRose\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.  Oeorge  Rose\nof Cresent Valley, a son. July 23.\nBUILDING OF\nCRUISERS TO\nEND, BRITAIN\n(Continued* from Page One)\nHELP  WANTED\n(W)\nCHAMBER     MAID\u2014Wanted     at   onoe.\nMidden Hotel. (97M)\nWANTBD \u2014 Two first-class palntera.\nOood wages to the right men Tlm\nPlayer,  Nelson. (9806)\nWANTED\u2014Por the month of August at\nBoswell. a woman cook. Wages SSS\nMrs. E. Home. (9832)\nWANTED\u2014Bxperlenced Mine Surveyor\nholding B. C. Certificate, for extensive coal mine. Applicant please\nsubmit experience, salary expected to\nBox  9818.  Dally  News. (9818)\nTEACHERS  WANTED\n13\n1UAL-,  PRINCIPAL,   for   Hume  School\nFive   rooms.   Apply   with   Inspector's\nreferences to Fred L. Irwin, secretary.\n(9788.)\nSITUATIONS  WANTED\n(11)\nMAN AND WIFE\u2014Want work cooking\nIn camp. Will furnish references. Apply Box 9802 Dally News. (9802)\nWANTED\u2014Painting, paperhanging. cal-\nsomining Work guaranteed. Phone 77.\nCall at 913 Water St. (9799)\nVETERAN WITH TWO TRADES BUT\n40 per cent disability wishes to remain In the Kootenays for family reasons. Seeks light or part time position\nWould oonsider taking house rent or\nreal estate as payment for services.\nPhone 344L2. P.* O. Box 438.      (9781)\nAGENTS  WANTBD\n(12)\nSALESMAN WANTED\u2014To call on shoe\nand departmental stores. Newly Invented shoe lace. Easv to make 115\nto S20 a day. North American Elastic\nShoe Lace Co.. Ltd.. 376 Broadway.\nWest. Vancouver, B. C.  Canada.\n(9819)\nROOM AND  BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD\u2014Phone 755 L.\n(9787)\nROOMS\u2014TO  Rent\u2014\nFURNISHED   ROOM   614   JOSEPHINE.\n(9779)\nROOM\u2014Private house. 810.00 per month\nApply 921 Stanley St., (Lady preferred (9804)\nHOUSES TO RENT\nCD\nFOR AUGUST OR LONOERr-FurnlBhed\nOn Lake shore. Ideal location for\nholiday.   \u00bb40.   Naylor.  Edgewood.\n(9800)\nJ_\nFOR   SALE   OR   RENT\nmi\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u201440-acres pasture\nand small house, good dairy proposition.   Applv Box 875. Nelson. (9816)\n(24)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nWANTED\u2014Young  goats.   Box Z Fruit-\ndale. (9790)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR   SALE\n(27)\nFOR SALE\u2014No. 1 timothy hay. SIS\nper ton. Oeorge Lavolette. Lumby,\nB.  C. (9813)\nROYAL ANNES\u2014Five cents a lb .Tartarians. six cents a lb., to pick yourself,\napply Mrs. J. H- Orondln, top of\nStanley street.\nMODERN   PLAYER   PIANO.\n622  Mill  St.\nTERMS.\n(8778)\nthe   ambassadors  of   the   other   powers\nconcerned.\"   returned   the   premier.\nANGRY SCENE\nRight Hon. Arthur Henderson's announcement of the resignation of Lord\nLloyd was followed by an angry scene.\n'.'If I have to state the reasons.\" he\nsaid. \"I must say I had sent an Intimation to Lord Lloyd before he left\nEgypt, which was based on the attitude he had adopted towards the policy\nof the government.\"\n\"Are we to understand,\" demanded\nRight Hon. Winston Churchill, \"that\nthis resignation was extorted, that If\nlt had not been forthcoming, dismissal\nwould have followed f\nFor the moment Mr. Henderson remained seated but the Conservatives\nshouted \"Answer, answer.\" Finally he\nrose and said gravely, \"the telegram I\nsent Lord Lloyd was of auch a character\nthat moet people would have accepted\nas an Invitation to terminate his position \"\nJ. H. Hudson. Labor, Huddersfleld.\nasked sharply lf Mr. Churchill was In\norder in saying the resignation wae extorted. But Mr. Churchill was on his\nfeet again with a demand for the production of papers.\nDECLINES PROMISE\nMr. Henderson returned he would be\nprepared to meet any statement made\non the adjournment of the house on\nFriday.\n\"And  lav  the papers on the table.\"\nexpressed Mr. Churchill.   This Mr. Hen-\nj derson  declined   to   promise.    He  said\nI he had discussed the matter of production of papers with  Lord  Lloyd  who\nhad agreed lt would not be ln the Interests    of    oood     relations    between\nOreat Britain and Egypt.\nI    Mr.   Churchill  remained  standing  at\n! the table and his words were almost Inaudible ln a storm of Labor Interruptions.    \"I shall put the question If lt\ntakes  an hour.\" he  was finally heard\nto say.\nThe Copservatlvc back benches bobbed\nup and down demanding an opportunity\nto debate the matter.\nThe storm ended In a touch of comedy as parliamentary storms are apt\nto do.\nThe house adjourned until Priday.\nPATROLLING   OVR  HIGHWAYS\nPatrols and wrrk gangs maintain\nnearly 45.000 miles of roads In Canada\ninr epalr at an annual cost of over\n116.000.000.\nFOR SALE\u201415 H. P., PAIRBANKS-\nIlorae engine end hoist, 1600 fiet\n'..-inch plow steel cable also 10-ton\nlight steel rails, fish plates and bolts,\nWrite McRae Creek Pole Co., Orahd\nPorks,  B.  C. (9770)\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED\n(US)\nNOTICE TO FRUIT GROWERS. SHIP\nyour Cherries and Berries direct to\nthe dealer, and get the high prairie\n? rices and save the profits between\nhe broker and the wholesaler. Returns\nmade one day after shipment received\nREOINA PUBLIC MARKET, Corner\nBroad and 10th Ave.. Regina. Sask.\n(9780)\nFOR SALE\u2014One registered Holsteln bull\neleven months old. X. C. Traves,\nEdgewood. (9772)\nHOUSES  WANTED\n(20>\nWANTED TO RENT\u2014Small furnished\nhouse, modern. No children. Leave\naddress at Dally News office.    (9748)\nWANTED\u2014Unfurnished house with\nthree bedrooms, furnace, modem Improvements, by 1st September. Oood\ntenants.   Box 9773 Dally News. (9773)\nPROPERTY    FOR   SALE\n(34)\nPOR SALE\u2014Camp buildings at City\nPower Plant. Inquire Stuart Cameron\nand  Co. (9764)\nPOR   SALE\u2014Firtt-olass   hotel.     Oood\nprospects.   Part cash.   Terms reason-\n. >           (98111\nFOR SALE\u2014Small house and three\nlots, planted ln fruit. Mrs. A. E.\nWilson. Cherry and Lntlmer streets.\nNelson. . (1814)\nFOR SALE\u2014Choice .residential, lot oh\nNorth Shore 2-3 mile from ferry\n(north) Improved with lawn, fruit\ntrees and small fruits 73 feet frontage on lake with sand beach and\ngood boat house, 340 feet depth. Y.\nE. Tily, R. R.  1 Nelson B. C.  (9774)\n(29)\nMISCELLANEOUS\nThis Is the Time for\nICE\nand\nHAULING\nWith Fuel supplies later.\nSee or Phone\nWILLIAMS\nTRANSFER\nBUI\nCANDY\nTheatre,\ntwo-bole\nBox\nSS    fltPO-BBTNl-MM\nSTOW\u2014Por   sale   in\n\"\u2022\u2022\u2022 _m7ot  flxtmoe  lql\nide Frigidaire and eabli\nFOR RENT\u2014EQUIPPED BARBER I\nApply Niys--.ce Hotel, pernle.\nINSURANCE\nAUTOMOBULE\nACCIDENT POLKfi\nPremium\u201488.00 per Tear\nCovers all automobile accident*.\n81,600.00 in case of fatal Injury.\n825.00 per week while injured pai\nlaid up or If Injury of miner a\nPays 11250 per week for partial\nof time.\nC. F. McHai\nReal Estate\nPhone 1SS Neiaon, B. O]\nBABBITS  FOB SALE\nRABBIT\nBreeding Stock]\nChinchilla Does.  88 and  aa each J\nChinchilla Bucks, 85 and 86.60 eaeh.f\nMoney Invested ln Rabbits has\nquick return.\nP. E. POULINl\nRoom i Aberdeen Bto-kl\nNelson\n<95l|\nBUSINESS,    PROFESSION!\nDIRECTORY\nAuctioneer and Bailiff\nUMES  H.   DOYLE\u2014BalllfJ,  Auctl-1\nNelson, B. C. {\u2022\nPhotographers\nEOROE  A.  MEERES\u2014Artist Mid .\ntographer. 716 Baiter Bt\nDentists\n|R.  O.  A. C.   WALLEY\u2014Orlffln  Bit\nNelson, B. O. (Ull\nAccounting\nHARRY    D.    RAMSDEN.   Puhllo\ncounting. P  O. Box 1176. Neiaon.\nMM\nCHARLES   F.   HUNTER\u2014 AUDITOR,\nDonald Jam Building    Bag Wll. 1\nson, B. O. (881*\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Box AU08\nB.   0.    Standard   western   ohai\n*l\u00bbrg\u00ab\n(9511\nMonuments\nKOOTENAY     MARBLE     _\u25a0     GBANIT\nWORKS\u2014Nelson. B.  C,     Write,\nprices.\n\"\u00ab\\s&\\\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u2014Baggage.   0M\nand wood. Phone 106. (BSW\nWood Working  Factory\nLAWSON \u2014 Baker St., Carpenter ta\n'   Hardwood.\n(MM\nJoiner.     Sash and\nFlorists\nORI27ELLE-9    GREENHOUSE,    NsM\nOut  nowers  and  floral designs.\nMM\nWM.   8.   JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone 842 Cut Flowers Potted Han*\nand Floral Emblems. (941\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Batata. Insurans\nRentals. Next Hlpperson Hardwan\nBaker street.  (M2S\nH.  E. DILI^-niWBANCE\nFABM AND CITY PROPERTY\n 688 Ward gt. (9624\nD.     A.     McFartaild,     Real     EMU\nInsurance, Coal.   Board of Trad*\nTelephone 40.   P. O. Box M.\n(MM\nChiropractors\nDR. MITTON, XjiBtty. CRA.NBROOK\nDB.   ORAY.   O'LKER   HI*,   NELSON\nEngineers\na. D. DAWSON\u2014Land  Surveyors n\t\nIng and  Civil  Engineer Kaalo, B. O\nO. 8. MEAD\u2014Mine Surveying  and   Aeria\nTram   Construction.     Kaalo.    B.    C\nout\nA.    H.    GBEEN     CO.\u2014CONTRACTOM\nFormerly Oreen Broe, Burden Neuoi\nCivil    and    Mining    Engineers\nB.  c,  Alberta  and   Dominion   Lane\nsurveyors. ,(9528:\nAMBULANCE    SERVICE\nModern-Sedan Ambulance \u2014 Jiromp\nand efficient 24-hour service. Reason\nnlde prices. Lady attendant, standan\nUndertaking   Co.   Phone   252       (978*8;\nD. N. McLeod. Mortician. Procter,  tl\nyears of experience as mortician. If yd.\nare In trouble consult me and I shal\nrelieve you of the worrying details.\n S__A_>\nBRINGING UV FATHER\nBy (aeorge McManu*\nJOWT LOOK AT THAT Ll*bT Or\nGOOD KAT&- ft_L.  PaVM> U\u00bb THE\nciOH-T___.ivj-oa>{y   onrr to-day\nBOY IT\u00ab> GOMWa\\ TAKE\nTWO WAITK\u00bb*<b TO CAWY\n)M THE POOD I'M GOaOMA\nOIV\/E IK4TO- MOW- LET\nME <=>EE ?\nOMMR-JI-1G6-IM MR\u00bb'CH\"iTT*_H-\nTOOR WII-ETOLD MR Too V\/\u00abWK 0*aj\nTHE FAMOOS DIET- IWT 1T 0O*bT\n'WONDERFUL.? I've LOST TWO\nPOOKJp_6 >W THE PAVT -H-tad 0\u00abft*\nEAT HWt.lWBirf   i\u2014\n?\"\n\u2022SHE*) WATCMIWM M\u00a3-\nftO I'LL. HAVE TO\n\u00abnCK TO THE DIET-\nI *WI%H -%HEt) LOS*\nHER EVE-Sal GHT-  _J\n\u25a0\u2022lECOWO D-AY\nONE-THIRD Or\nA ftARDISJE\nA -1L1CE OF\nCUCOMSEI\nTHE\n\u25a05HEU.\n-\u25a0' \"  i\u2014i \u25a0\nr* \"   W^WJW*P*V' > **\n\u25a0'\"\u25a0\u25a0\"\nmmt-e,-Wim.>-9*-^m- ,11   a*, aay.*.*.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   THURSDAY NORNING, JULY 25, 1923\n'sg\u00ab\nKootenay District'Pupils\nSuccessful in Examinations\nfor Entrance to High School\nATHELMEWB-INVEKMEBE\nCENTER\nWUiner\u2014Carmen  F.   Da  Costa,  t_;\nmen TE. Lake, 808.\nARROWHEAD  CBNTER\nCrawford   grsefc-*.   Asm.   Boutlller,\nMYNES  LAW  CENTER\nBeynes Uko\u2014Viola V. Vluak, 444;\nWinifred a. a. Tre\u2014on, *48\u00bb; UMan II.\nV14sak. 874; Eleanor L. Addph, 300.\nBig lend eraet\u2014Jackson a. Payne,\ntSt;  Josephine M. Desroslers, 406.\nBOSTON CENTER\nArrow Park, tost\u2014James II. A. Maue-\nMlhe, 440; Rl_h.nl H. Wilson, 411.\n\u00bburtone__e\u2014Lily B. Marshall, 491:\nBobert Johnson, 402; A. Pred Millar,\nttt.\nCarroll's   Landing\u2014Marie   J.   Oreen.\n38}; Florence Oreen. 879; Oeorge Hardy,- 383.\nCASTLE<}A\u00bb CENTER\n_-itlei_i*_Herbert o. Olson, 3H; Josephine I. McKlnnon, 369.\niiiiiiiiiiniiniiiimnii\n\"BUILD    B.    C.\"\nPacific\nMilk\nOut\nCamping\nAt the end of 'he sum'ner\nnearly every year some lady Js\nkind enough to tell us by letter\nthat Pacific Milk was Included\nwith the food and how good the\nmilk was. Ws have letters in\nour file from patrons who say\nthe first time they used Pacific\nMilk was st a summer camp.\nPacific Milk\nFactories at\nAbbotsford and Ladner\nRobson\u2014Oeanor L. Vanderhoof, 401.\nCRANBROOB   CENTER\nOranbrook\u2014Eileen M. M. Moore, SU;\nEdwin O. Batten, 403; Doris R. Haley,\n4*$; Oladys E. Ratcllffe, 384; Oeorgina\nA. ft. Cox. 871; Allen W Patmore, 300;\nBarbara I Worthlngton, 300.\nPromoted \"on recommendation: Sig-\nfrad Batten, Louis ft. Bridges, Roberta\nM. Colttna, John A. Catslrells, Mary \u2014\nCameron, Joseph V. Daoust, Sherman D.\nEvans, Doris I. Eley, Bdlth M. Faulknet*.\nElizabeth Q. Oenest, Eleanor Oreen, Agnes ft. Orey, Ada S. Oammon, Robert\nP. Oagnebln, Stanley A. Holse, Frank\nH*. Hern, A. Barrle Hill, Oeorglna Had-\ndad, Norman A. Hall, Stephen C. He-\nbert, Kenneth H. Haynes, Dorothy J.\nJohns, Owen M. John, Frederick T.\nKollsnek. Rudolph A. Koaak, Esther M.\nLeonard. Ruth M. Lundy,( Ralph V.\nManning, Barbara Mulrhead, Berta Alive\nMarsh, Frank F. Mono, Klchi Malgawa,\nSamuel M. McCreery, 3. Frank CcClure,\nMarshall F. MacPherson, Edgar B. Of-\nfln, Angelo F. Provenzano. John R. Par.\nkin, Orrtl M. Robertson, Albert Robbe-\nrecht, Hilda M. Robinson, E. Jamea\nStone, Oertrude M. South, Florence I.\nStender. Helen M. Spruell, J. willard\nSlple, Robert Stevelv, Ethel V. Swab,\nEdith D. Sullivan, Shlela Stewart, Phyllis Wallace, Bdlth M. Walker, Joseph H.\nWard, Edythe B. Wells, Gwendoline E.\nWilson.\nFort Steele\u2014Nicholas Harmas, 494;\nThomas Harmas, 419; Hazel |_ Pulton.\n373; Dorla Richardson, 360.\nLumberton\u2014Doris M. Hutchinson, 496;\nOladys J. Downey, 403; V. Marguerite\nRobinson. 379.\nWycllffe\u2014Margaret C. Cox, 403; Edltha\nM. Clark, 375.\nCRBHTON   CENTRE\nCreston\u2014Arthur N. Nichols 436. Fran-\ncat M. Lewis 408, Minnie Downes 400,\nE. Jean Henderson 360.\nPromotion on recommendation; Jack\nI. 1. Toung, Roland D. Miller, Dorothy\nL. Marshal, M. Iris Taylor, Herbert L.\nDodd, Evelyn H. Linn, Sarah qulnn,\nPaye D. Tompkins, Elsa J. WUUs. Marjorle E. Learmonth, LeRoy E. Johnson.\nCanyon City\u2014Robert F. Hale 408,\nHolly B. M. Bond 377.\nErlckson\u2014Muriel R. Thurston 499,\nSydney Scott 379.\nHuscroft\u2014B. Muriel Tedford 413, Alice\nDemchuk 396.\nMl tji IJLl.t; J 1,1 1 ; I f    Kitcheners-Richard     Molander     4g8,\nBdlth A. neleon 484.\nBDOEWOOD CENTRE\nEdgewood\u2014Patrick 3. A. D\u00ablr 880.\nJnonoaklln\u2014Can D. H. Hopp 888*.\nFERNIE   CkNfKB\nFernie\u2014Margaret A. McOiadrey 373,\nStanley piesUkowakl 370. Jame* R. Shaw\n370. Leonard Brett 364, Marjorle H.\nBryant 804, Jamas B. Megale 360.\nPromoted on recommendation: Douglas Alexander, Novah Baker., Kathleen\nCurrle. Thalma Damour. Esther Gates.\nFrank Inghram, Kate Jakubieo, John\nJakublec, Rodney Johnson, stay* Kas-\nmar.   Ada   Kuskl,   Margaret   McKenzle,\nRobert Mills, Ethel Oakley, William\nPaton. Emma Polak, Helen Schupe,\nLinda Smith, Ralph Snow, Joe Smollk,\nDorothy Stowe, Mike Tlmchuk, Allster\nWhite, Ernest Wilson.\nCoal Creek\u2014Jessie McNsy 411, John\nH. Raeva 893, Sybil Arrowsmlth 8T1,\nEvelyn M. Lee 361, Kate Sopko 360,\nAnnie Walls 300.\nHoamer\u2014 Jean Murdock 410, Angelina\nV. Cltra 363.\nHolyl Family\u2014Margaret M. Bella 449,\nEmma Shulllka 394, Ethel I Sbulalka\n387.\nI Rl'IT VALE CENTRE\nFrultvale\u2014Harry M. Smith 487, James\nH. Davis 484, Nellie D. Barrett 388, Fred\nW. Cole 386, Alex J. Webster 384.\nParka' Siding\u2014 Louise w. Swanson\n418.\nSalmo\u2014Aubrey B. Burgess    863,   w.\nJohn Liness 363, J. Clifford Hearn 860.\nMuriel C. Llndow 300.\nGOLDI?N CENTRE\nOolden\u2014Promoted on recommendation: Ronald Da we, Yvonne Gendron,\nBoy Oould, Leonard Halrslne, Henry\nLarson, Norman Lind, Annie Ottoson.\nOlga Ottoson, Robert Routledge, Eleanor Sanborn, Joe Yurlk.\nHarrogate\u2014Irwin T Alton 360.\nHone Creek-Jessie R. McBeath 408,\nPearl A. Habart 383.\nParson\u2014C. Ellzabsth ONell 430.\nGRAND   FORKS   CENTER\nGrand Forks Central\u2014Mary L. Dorner 477, Alberta L. Blddlecome* 408,\nLaura M. Sweazay 397, Charlee W. A.\nEgg 386, John W. MacDonald 367.\nGrace M. K. McLeod 380.\nPromoted on reaommertlatlon\u2014\nJohn A. aker, Irene G. Blekerton\nRveiyn B. Cooper, Dorothy B. Donaldson. Albert R. Euerby, Ernest A. J. Fitzpatrlck, Thereesa B. F. Brankovltch,\nAlma. A. Frechettte, Edith A. Oray.\nBessie M. Henderson, Clarence W.\nHenderson, Isabel R. uffHman, May\nE. Hones, Barbara B. Love, Daisy M.\nMalm. Hazel B. Mason, Robert N. Murray, Euphemla M. McCallum, Florence\nH. T. McDonald, Minnie C. McNevln.\nClayton W. Patterson, Randolph F.\nSandner. Tony Santaneo, George A.\nSavage, Polly M. Vatkln, Delwln A.\nWaterman,   Oordon   L.   Wllklns.\nCascade\u2014Swanhllda   S.   Helmer   401\nen do we eat?\"\u2014and WHAT?\nif\n.TKensj7blaJu.i\nFlfe-Ceell* Tedeaoo 344,. Julia Maz-\nZoccht 400.\nOKAY  rtCEEK  CENTER\nSand Uraek-i-Frank R. Oliver 388.\nGHHtHWDOOD   CENTER\nOreenwood\u2014Beatrice    R.     MacLaren\n46, Ruth L. Cox 388, Oliver H. New-\nmarsh 388, Arnold L.  Bomblni  361.\nKAHLO   CENTER\nKaslo\u2014Annie M. Coulter 439. Opal\nc. LaBelle 418, Elsie E. Rouleau 396,\nAnnie O. Lundberg 381, Marjorle Cadden 366, Oladys M. Coombs 360.\nMirror  Lake\u2014arry  A.  Saarlee 461.\nKIMBERLEY   CENTER\nKlmberley\u2014^Promoted ' on' recommendation D.ora Anderson. Katherlne\nAnderson, Arthur Andrews, ' I. R.\nArchie Doran, V. May arvey, A. Louis\nHolm, Phyllis Holt, Lucy M. Lye,\nTheresa M. Marzocco, Jean* B.\nMcDonald, Agnes McKay, C. Allen Mc-\nLeish, Patricia J. Murnhy, Soder-\nhold, Mildred C. Taylor, Laura H.\nThorlelfson, Robert T. watkinu, Margaret B. Whebell\nMarysville\u2014Haseell   M.   Owen   417.\nMICHEL   AND   NATEL   CENTER\nCorbin\u2014John  W.  queen 489.\nCrow's Neat\u2014Lorna M. Leonard 406.\nMichel ahd Nate) Center-Promoted on recom-eaendatlon Ruth Ahlgren.\nJennie Anaelmo, Jane M. Ball, Celes-\nter  8.   Oris,   Kathlyn   A.   C.   Phillips.\nasle   '-.\"-rui-an\nMIDWAY   CENTRE\nMidway\u2014Helen M.    Casseiman    447,\n\u2022Ethel   L.   McArthur   447,   Gladwin   W.\nSharp 421, Kenneth  C. Johnston lfl,\nWilliam W. Tipple 361.\nNAKUSP   CENTRE\nNakusp\u2014Jean M. Balderston 463.\nNavy lullp 439, F. Claire Balderston 425, W. Boy Ventrop 404, Margaret\nD. Jettley 401, Reginald W. White\n399, LUllaa A. Kerr 877. M. Louise\nCualck 876. Walter Meaktna 367, Laurel K. CarterC 306, Katholeeen M. Fowler\n360.\nNELSON  CENTER\nPassmore\u2014James B. Forbes, 386.\nTaghum\u2014MlUle F. Morton. 375.\nYmlr\u2014John A. Rankin, 377.\nSt. Joseph's Academy\u2014Catherine G.\nRahal. 487; SlUe J- Cody, 394; Beatrice\nP Lutklwich. 394; Ruth M Rlxen. 390;\nLawrence D. Sellnger, 387; William\nLeahy, 884; Klleen E. Dubar, 360.\nNEW DENVER CENTER\nTJgtw Denver\u2014Grace E. Doyle, 419; L\nPalma Angrlgnon. 415; Lome E. Vandergrlft, 404; J. Oordon Cory. 405; John A\nSanderson. 396; M. Helen Williamson,\n379; Constance P. Sells, 376; Emma A.\nCechelaro, 370; Maude B. Latto. 361.\nPRINCETON CENTER\nAllenby\u2014F. Marlon Sawrey, 496; Alfred W. Pitney, 410; Millie A. Pitney,\n378; Roland Brooke, 371; Lorraine M\nWharton, 3\u00ab9;  Helen M. Goodeve,  360\njura\u2014Stephen P. Dldcote. 441; C\nVictor Long, 861.\nPrinceton\u2014Bmlly Wardle, 386; Beryl\nMcDlarmld, 418; Arnold B. Wilson, 399;\nChristina Samuel, 390.\nPromoted on recommendation: Ken.\nneth L. MoO. Dodd. John Ewart. Ells\nworth B. Hansen. Edna V. Pughe, Fred\nC. Waterman, May S. White.\nThat's what you\ncan count on hearinn\nfrom the men of the\nparty when you go\non a camping trip. There's nothing\nlike life, out in the open to put a keen\nedge on Appetite, and give an almost\nunbelievable appreciation of even the\nsimplest tire.\nSurely in the fact of such interest and\n\u2022uch expectations you won't fall short\nin your role of camp cook. A little\nplanning in advance, and a little ingenuity in using the perhape limited camp\nfacilities, and you will find yourself able\nto concoct the most delectable meals,\nno matter how deep in the wilds you\nare.\nAnd when the men come back hungry after a day of fishing to the big\ncamp tire, when the trout and bacon\nare sizzling in the pan, the johnny-cake\nturning a golden brown and the coffee\nsending its delectable aroma into the\nair\u2014then you'll know how big a part\nyou are playing in making the vacation\na glorious success.\nCarnation tolvat th*\nmilk probl*tn\nDon't forget, if you want to do a real\njob, to take with you a generous supply\nof Qarnation Milk, eo that\u2014no matter\nhow far away you get from civilization\n\u2014you can have plenty of pure, sweet,\nrichmilk. Not only is it wonderful for\n\"creaming\" coffee, but it actually gives\nbetter results in cooking than even the\nbast of battled milk.\nCarnation ia net as aome people\nthink, a sweetened, condensed milk.\nIt is simply pore, high-grade milk from\nselected nerds, of a controlled and uniformly high quality, evaporated to\ndouble richness and sterilized for safekeeping.\nBecause it has a double portion of\ncream in it, it is fine for creaming\ncoffee. That is the way many people\nfirst come to know about it\nBut it is in cooking that you find it\nmost wonderful. Here it gives uniformly successful results, because it is\nalways pure and sweet, always the same\nin quality. You need less butter and\ncream in cooking when you use Carnation, becauae of its double aeaminess.\nYou can buy Carnation anywhere on\nyour trip. It ls hermetically sealed;\nsterilized; safe. Nothing can contaminate it; and no refrigeration is required\nfor it. Once you have known ita convenience on a camping trip, you will\nnever be without it at home.\nSend far free Carnation Cook Book\nbefore you go on your Dip. Address\nCarnation Milk Products Co., Limited,\n13. Abbott St., Vancouver, a C   ....\nCarnation Coffee\nri cup coffee, ground medium. J.\ness. -M cup cold water, 3 cupe boiling\nwater, y, cup cold water. Mix leg\nant yi cup cold water and add to\ncoffee in the pot. Add boiling water,\nboil up once, stir with a spoon and boil\nup again. Add the % cup cold water\nto settle coffee. Serve immediately;\ncream with undiluted Carnation.\nServes 5.\nWhen do we Eat?\n\"A hundred miles from nowhere\" you'll always have\npure, rich, delicious milk\u2014if\nyou have Carnation. Great\nfor creaming coffee. Fine for\ncooking. And just as hne for\neveryday use when you get\nback home.\n(See recip* above)\nEaat ftlliceton\u2014hay \u00a3.. Uso*sVm.\nPROCTER CENTER\nBalfour\u2014Margaret I. Una, 376.\nHarrop\u2014Robert J. Sewell, 380; Hazel\nKnauf. 887.\nProcter\u2014Morag M. MacKlnmon. 818.\nREVK1.DTOKE   CENTER\nRevelstoke\u2014Harry D. Norbeit, 891.\nPromoted on recommendation: Brneat\nFafaro. Eleanor M. Beaton, James Burn,\nTheresa J. Carmichael, Etta M. Cowan,\nElsie Dabell. William Darling, Charles\nH. Davenport, Elsie B. Davidson. Mary\nM. Defoe, Henry L. Dltomassl, -John S.\nEnglish. Beatrice J. Ferguson, Esther R.\nGastaldlni, Arthur A. Qranstrom, F.\nElisabeth Orlmes, Florence R. V. Han-\nden. G. Bernlce Johnson, H. Marlon\nJohson, Margaret L. Jonas, Victor R.\nKeith, Kim Kwong. Colin V. Laughlan,\nAnnie V. Laurlente, T. R. Undsay Law,\nBdna E. Ltndholm, Dorothy I. Little,\nMargaret A. Lowden, Kenneth R. Mac-*\nDonald, Bernlce A. McKlnnon, M. Marr\nMlddleton, Woodrow J. J. Mlddleton.\nClara M. Morrison, Oeorge A. Nicolson,\nDoris R. Rear, Edward It Rear, Odell\nM. Roger, Louise M. Ross, Sarah J.\nRoss, Ronald M. Rutherford, Mary Sanders, Mary A. Sandsrvlno, John M.\nShaw. M Elizabeth Soans, Oeor'.e H.\nStorrar, Margaret W. Thompson, Martin\nC. Upper, Helen A. Vance, ESsel E. West-\nman. Margaret R. Woodland.\nBig Eddy\u2014Lydia K. Olreon, 881; Solve\nJ. Midtle. 378.\nOreensllde \u2014 Harold W. McCarmlck,\n493.\nThree Valley\u2014Charles N. Rutherford,\n373.\nROCK CREEK CENTER\nBrldesvlUe\u2014Frederick R. Schorn, 407.\nRock Creek\u2014John L. Anderson, 434;\nJohn   E.   Burdlck,   385j   Kathleen   C.\nWheeler, 379.\nROSM.ANH CENTER\nRossland\u2014Helen N. Stevens, 458; T.\nAlexander Woods, 444; Marguerite L.\nIrvin, 431; George T. Tomictr. 399; Sa-\nblno A. Sdao. 389.\nPromoted on recommendation: J.\nRichard Ayres, Eric W. Blackwell, Mary\nE. Culllnane. Theophlle D'Amour, Lloyd\nW. Heldler. Oeorge H. HIU. Louise M.\nIrvin, Ida F. Kent, Reggie Lefevre, Jack\nMcDonald, L. Joseph McDonell, Annie\nMacLeod, L. Laura Newman, Mary E.\nOzeroff. Arthur J. Sdao, James R.\nThompson, Leslie J. Treverton.\nSANDON CENTER\nShndon\u2014Oordon A. McWUlan, 474;\nWilfred A. Rudkln. 468; Voltto Koskl,\n416; Lillian J. Jordbro. 373: Laabel M.\nHerron.  360.\nPrivate atudy\u2014Daniel P. McKay, 472.\nNlkVKKTON  CENTER\nSllverton\u2014Audrey    J.    Watson,    387;\nMarjorle E. Tattrie, 384;  Annie Cooper,\n301.\nSI.PC.1N  CITY  CENTER\nSlocan\u2014Marlon T. Olstad, 441; Beryl\nL. Talent, 413; Agnes M. Muir. 395; lta\nM Hlrd, 363: Linda J. Reynolds, 361;\nFrank  R.  Hill,  360.\nAppledale\u2014Mildred U. Flynn, 421; Elisabeth M.  Cant 384.\nSlocan Park\u2014Norma G.  Curzon,  390.\nWlnlaw\u2014Ivy G. Edey. 369.\nSLOCAN  JINCTION CENTER\nBonnlngton\u2014Jesse  H.  Ridge,   360.\nWARDNER CENTER\nBull River Bridge\u2014Arthur J. Ruffle.\n447; Frederick Look, 430; Michael Rossi,\n413; Ellen M. Johnson, 409; Lenore O.\nCasaJdy, M0; Jeannette Deeeoch-re, 80S\nJaffray\u2014Olga B. Rosen. 380.\nMayook\u2014A MacBaln Rothwell, 396;\nMart L. EdmunAa, 387.\nWardner\u2014Josephine B. Boslcky, 383;\nWalter H. Mackenale, 860.\nWYNNDEL  CENTER\nWynndel\u2014Alice   M.   Davis,   399;    J.\nWhitfield Abbott. 380.\nYAHK  CENTBR\nYahk\u2014Lena Madelec, 482; June Hamilton, 418: Ethel Hamilton, 406; Iver C.\nPedersen, 388.\nLARGE   ELECTRIC   POWER   SYSTEMS.\nIt has become tbe custom to rate ae\nlarge electric power systems those Inter-connected plants under one financial control and management with\nan annual output Of 100,000.000 kilowatt-hours or more. The latest fig-\nurea avallablee show that Canada has\n17 auch systems, of which nearly two\nand' a half burton kllowatt-houre per\nannum. The Interconnection of elec-\ntrie power plants Into large systems\nhas been proved to give great advantages In economy, efficiency and reliability of aervice, and these 17 systems represent over 90 per oent of the\ntotal central station output in tba\nDominion.\nMINERALS IN  CANADIAN ARCTIC.\nExploration haa indicated that tha\nreeks of the Canadian Arctic mainland\nand archipelago are similar to those\nthat characterize the southern and better known parts of the Dominion. A\nto exist at different polnte. although\nthe extent and value of theee deposits,\nand Tertiary age. and graphite, mica\nwhich include coal of Carboniferous\nand native copper of Precambrlan age,\nnumber of economic minerals are known\nhave not yet been determined.\nEXAM RESULTS\nGRADES NINE,\nTEN, ARE WT\n(Continued from\nOne)\nCharlee Richarda, H. Forbes. Private\nstudy, Orade X., Msry F. Barns, (s).\nGRAND FORKS CENTER\nOrand Forks High School. Grade IX.\n\u2014Harry W. Murray (a). One candidate\ngranted partial standing.\nOrade X.\u2014Marvin (. Bailey, Helen C.\nBerran (s). Jean M. C. Orer <e). Pear\n8. McCallum. Duncan B. McDonald (#>.\nMildred I. Patterson (s), Elmer f. teat*\n(s). Four candidates granted partial\nstanding.\nGREENWOOD CENTER\nOreenwood Superior School, Orade nt.\n\u2014Eileen A. Bryan (sl. Valet* A. Cud-\nworth (s). Robert P. Porshaw (a). Ounner H. E. Halstrom. Ellen Keboe (a).\nRobert B. Mitchell, John M. Morrison,\nAleen M. Ritchie.\nOrade    X\u2014One   candidate    granted\npartial standing.\nSOOTH SLOCAN CENTER\nSlocan Junction Publlc School. Orada\nIX.\u2014Oordon I. Batley (e), Joaeph R.\nBell (e). Bna. M. Dedrick, Harold L.\nRhodes, Douglas D. Ridge (e), Winnlfred H. Russell, Marguerite Watts.\nTHB PENDULUM CLOCK.\nA pendulum clock gained, owing to\nthe Increase of gravity with latitude,\nabout one minute and 20 seconds a day\nwhen taken from Ottawa to the mouth\nof Maokmn-ie rtver. Northwest Territories, by the Dominion Observatory\nln connection wtth lu gravity week.\nTaken about 5000 feet up a mountain\nside ln British Columbia lt loat about\n13 seconds dally.\nLucky Children Indeed, If Their\nMothers Know and Serve\nSHREDDED\nWHEA\nWith all the bran\nof ihe whole wheat\nChildren don't have to be coaxed to eat it\u2014they like die\nCrisp, crunchy shreds of baked whole wheat They have tu\nchew it\u2014and that means sound teeth and good digestif-\nentente\non (Af labal meant EVAPORATED MtLK of highest quality\n\u25a0>\"\"       '  ' \u2014temtas-zmm**-\n$*m\u00ab\u00a3o*\nOut of the West comes\nthe 1929 sensation...\na straight wall, low\npressure tire having a\nrare combination of\ndesirable qualities.\nMade in\n.British Columbia\nGREGORY TIRES are made in\nBritish Columbia-the product\nof an industry operated and controlled by British Columbia capital.\nEvery Gregory Tire represents the workmanship of skilled men who maintain\nfamilies and homes In British Columbia.\nTherefore the flrat choice of every B. C.\nmotorist thould be Gregory Tires.\nHPHE Gregory De Luxe is a masterpiece\nx of tire design and workmanship. It\nwas built primarily for speed and punishment and is the only tire made and tested\nfor speeds in excess of 100 miles per hour. With\nsturdy shoulders and anti-skid tread, it is a perfectly balanced tire that brakes quicker, and better,\nand makes steering easier. Examine this new sensation at any Gregory dealers.\nThc mark is on the\nsidcwall of every\nenuine Gregory\nLuxe tire and\nis a guarantee of\nabsolute quality.\n'tJAe Best ^ires ore Gregory \\Ti&s\nGREGORY TIRE & RUBBER (1926) LIMITED\n\u00ab        VANCOUVER, B. G\n*-*sv I\nW. Desjardins - - At Dill's S. S. S.\nas*. ,..j**r* \u25a0\u25a0    -\n_________\n_________\n Pap> Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY NSftNING, JULY 25, 1929\nSWIMMING SHOES\nand BATHING CAP\nSpecials\nIn order to make certain that we carry none of\nthese over we will sell our atock at greatly reduced\nprices.\n16c Bathing Caps NOW .10**\n40c Bathing Caps NOW  25-f\n50q Bathing Caps NOW 35*\n60c Bathing Caps NOW 40*\n$1.00 Baiihing Caps NOW  70*\n\u00a3\u00bb6c Children's Swimming, Shoes NOW  7*0**^\n$1.00 Flappers' Swimming Shoes NOW  75*\n,' $1.00 Ladies' Swimming Shoee NOW  75*\nMANN, RUTHERFORD CO.\nDispensing Chemists\nCareful Service Prompt Delivery\nChicago Dresses\nFOR SALE\nReduced Price\nNew\nPLYMOUTH\nSEDAN\nNever Been Run\n90 days Free Service\nWith This Car\nCAPITOL\nMOTORS\nGEORGE    W.    PEASE,    Manater\nBox 783, Phone 6'S, Nelson, B. C.\nOpposite Post Office\nNelson News of the Day\nPark Grocery Refreshment Room now\nLakeside Park. Ice cream, soft drinks,\ntea. C. Hooklngs. Proprietor        T9.71)\nWANTED \u2014 Painting, naperhangtng.\ncamming Work guaranteed phone\n797.   -Call  at 013 Water St.      (>7M)\nCOME WITH THE CROWD TO HAB-\nHOP DANTE FRIDAY, .ULY 2li.   tlOOD\n-U*!-~\nMUSIC.   FREE   KERRY.\n(97M>\nDon't forget the dance at the Outlet hotel. Procter, BC. Saturday 27\nBraches Orchestra. (96081\nCARD   olFlflUtiKK.\nMeeting of the Nelson Conservative\nassociation executive win be held at\nthe Canadian Legion building tonight\nrt 8 p. m. All members of the executive   are   requested   to   attend.     (98231\nI take this means of thanking my\nfriends ln Cranbrook. Klmberley. Canyon City, wardner and Neiaon. for their\nmany kindnesses to me during the sickness and loss of my loving wife. Lydia.\nL. O.'RCLLIKLEV.\n(9820)\nWe wish to thank all the friends\nfor their sympathy and kindness to\nus during our recent sad bereavement, and for the beautiful floral of-\nferlngs. Mrs. W. O. Sears. Muriel.\nDoras. Irene. Wilfred and Robetl\nProctor.\nSAYS KOOTENAYS\nSHOW APP AUNG\nLACK INITIATIVE\nH. B. Thompson, Food Controller During War \"Tips Off\"\nDistrict\nSAYS KOOTENAY RANCHER\nSHOULD   CAN   HIS   FRUIT\n\t\nBritish Colombia Weakest Commercially of any Canadian\nProvince\nIk\nJust arrived. Some very marvelous numbers in Flat Crepe and Canton Silks, in-\ng.     eluding  some  ensembles.       Correct  in\n,    ,**. \u00bb\\\\ \u2022 shades, very reasonable in price.\n$17.50 AND $21 50\nHatt\nToday we open up 8 dozen of some of\n.'  .  >'\u00bb    the later styles in Summer Hats.\nSHOP AT THE POPULAR\nSTYLE SHOP      .\nSautstott IroB.\nMATCH BLOCK\nWOOD\nWe have a good supply of Match Blocks and can make\nquick delivery.\nOrder Your Supply Today\nPrice in Fairview and Uphill Pcints, $5.25.\nPer load downtown district, $5.00.\nW.W.Powell Co.. Ltd.\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nPhone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nWANTED\nA Machinist\nFor general lathe and\nshaper work.\nBENNETTS'Ltd.\nASSAY SUPPLIES\nCHEMICALS\nCrushers,     Furnaces,     Crucible*,\n(Jlassware, Porcelain, Adds,\nQuicksilver. Etc.\nCAVE AND COMPANY\nLIMITED\nB67 Hornby St., Vancouver, B.C.\nFormerly ...... .\nTHE  B.C.   ASSAY  A  CHEMICAL\nSUPPLY  CO, LTP.\nA Superior Product\u2014Imported From\nthe Olive Slopea of Sunny Ital,.\nVITTUCCI\nVIRGIN\nW. R. Campion\nTOCB OBOCIB\nOur Phone No. It 121\nTHE TBUTH ABOUT APRICOTS\nOo you realize that the Apricot\naeaaoD la no* at ltt batt. Only\na moderate aupply available. To\navoid   disappointment,  buy   now.\nMoorpark's Wo. 1, crate  I2.85\nOood Dairy Butter. 3 Iba. for SM\nOrapefrult. t tot Me\nCucumbera   ic,   10c  e\u2014t   ISc\n8m our window display of\nPrult Jan and accttaorlet.\nFreah Vegetable, and Frulta of\nall  klndt.\nDELIVERIES   TWICE   DAILY\nUphill and Palrview\nPERSIAN BALM\nIf you have a Sun Burned Face,\nChapped Hands or Lips, you should\ntry some of our Persian Balm.\nWe alao have a number of other\nwell known \"Sun Soothers\" always ln\nstock.\nSMYTHE'S PHARMACY\nPrescription Specialist Phono 1\nCity Drug Co.\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022Hon', Dispensing Channlata\nfilm,.    Kodak,.    Brum,   Stationery\nHall   orden   promptly   despatciaed\n'OX   I0U     NELSON,  B.C.    PHONE   X\n\u2022Va-me In and OM  Vnor r>i\u00abm  sr,*.\nKIDDIES'\nWATER DAY\nKeep in mind the monster day of water sports\nfor Nelson kiddies.\nAt Lakeside Park\nWednesday, july 31\nHot Dogs, Peanuts\u2014All Free\nAuspices  Nelson Rowing Club\nSAW MILL SUPPLIES\nAxes\nSaws\nPeavies\nCant Hooka\nLogging Tools\nChain\nCordage\nCotton Waste\nEngine Packing\nLubricating Oils\nRubber Belting all sizes\nPrompt attention to mall 'orders\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWhole\u00abal\u00ab NELSON, B. C. Retail\nHOW\nINTERESTING\n\"Last week Bob and I took\na drive through the Praaer valley and we were delighted with\nthe lovely looking farina through\nthere\u2014modern, well^fept barns\n\u2014fine looking cows and other\nlivestock. We visited the can\nned milk factories at Abbots-\nford and Sumas and are convinced that there's no reason\nfor using any other than B. C\ncanned milk,- It's canned under the most sanitary conditions\nand is second to none ln quality. We are certainly supporting the local farmers henceforth.\"\nE.C.PRCDLtTS BUREAU\nTHE VANCOUVER. 80ARO Of TRADE\nElks' Taxi Transfer\nPhone 77\nSedan   \u2014  Cars\nDay   and   Night   Serrlce\nRa._a\u00bb and  Express\nLearn to Earn\nNelson Business College\nVernon - Etigewood\nStage\nLeave,  Edgewood\u2014Tuesdaya,  Thursday,\nand   Saturday,.\nleave,   Vernon\u2014Monday,,   Wedneeday,\nand   Friday.\nTRAVEL  BV   STAOE\nand aave  time  ln getting to tha\nCall Us For\nLight\nDelivery\nAlso\nTeaming\nCoal, Wood\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\nClassified Ads Bring Results\u2014Try One\nDANCE\n- TONIGHT -\nLast Appearance\nKing's Kanadiens\nOJOC Broadcasting Artists\nDirect from Waterton Lakes\nEAGLE HALL\nDANCING AT 9 O'CLOCK\nYour Last Chance\nI am amazed at the appalling Ignorance of the people ol thla dUtrlct and\nof the whole of thla province ln fact.\nThey think t^at everything la fine, that\ncondition, are prosperous and of the\nbeat while the reat of Canada and the\nOnlted State, outstrip them ln almoet\nevery line of production. And yet they\ncontinue to pat themselves on the hack\nand congratulate themaclvea on thetr\nglorioua Ood-glven country.\" With thli\noutburat H. B. Thomson, food controller for Canada during the laat two\nyear, of the war, and now managing\ndirector of the Tidewater Smelting oompany, prefaced a aerie, of Instructive\nremarks on commercial conditions In\nBritish Columbia and of the Kootenay\ndUtrlct tn particular.\n\"In the early days In Nelson Mr.\nThompson was one of the first aldermen. He waa on Oeorge Neelanda' council In 1888. After a stay here ot six\nyears he finally left for Droader fields.\nHe was, h, states, presented wltb a gold\nwatch by the citizens .of Nelson on hi,\ndeparture.\nWEAK SISTER     .\nContinuing hit talk, Mr. Thomson declared that to begin with British Columbia is the Weak auter among (hs\nCanadian provlncea. She hat alwaya\nbeen one of the richest, lf not the\nrichest ln possibilities, and Is still nothing more than that. Shs ls the lextest\nand least productive province lo tka\nDominion and the Kootenay dUtrlct U\nnociception to thu. rhe Kootenay,\nMr. Thomson states, U stagnating. It\nU being beaten on lta own ground at\nevery turn by tbe state of Washington.\nBut to return to the whole of BrltUh Columbia.. \"Do you know,\" Mr.\nThomson asked, 'that during the tims\nI W8s food controller, when Canada\nneeded every ounce of food production\nshe could possibly scrape up, BrltUh\nColumbia, Instead of exporting to help\nthe boys over there was actually Importing tremendous .quantities of food\nstuffs. British Columbia actually Imported 7.500,000 pounds of butter during 1916.\n\"And where do you think that butter\ncame from?\" Mr. Thompson queried. \"It\ncame thousands of miles by sea from\nNew Zealand. And Britiah .Columbia ls\nsupposed to ba a butter producing\ncountry.\"\nIt waa not only butter, however, that\nthis province waa forced to Import at\ntbat time. Million, of cana of fruit\nand enormous quantities of canned\nvegetables. \"Canned fruit and canned\nvegetable. Imported Into BrltUh Columbia!\" ejaculated Mr. Thomson, \"And\nwhen needed badly across the see.\"\nThis was the case under, wartime\nconditions he continued, and it wu\nJust as much the case now. British\nColumbia, which should be one of Use\nbig source, of ths supply of fruit and\nvegetables for the entire world, lut\nyear Imported for home consumption,\nover three million cana ol fruit and\nclose to the same number of cans of\nof tinned vegetables. Case egg, wen\nIm-oorted from the Orient.\nTALK. OF EGOS\n\"Take eggs now,\" he continued,\" you\nboast of this country aa being tha ogg\nproducing country. Well, Alberta and\nSaskatchewan produce many timea the\namount of eggs you do. Por that matter the state of Washington under exactly the aame conditions as exist here\nproduce far more than you do.-'a\nThe state of Waahlngton for Instance,\nwas shipping canned fruit of all kinds to\nEngland while Kootenay fruit growera\ncomplained about market condition,.\nNsw Zealand apples wen ihe staple apples ln Oreat Britain at the proM&t\ntims, according to Mr. Thomson aqtt\nKootenay apple growers, producing a\nfruit far superior ln quality to the New\nZealand commodity, sell next to no apples In England. \"Thu 1_ due to tit*\ntact thatt he apple growera of New\nZealand are hustling go-getters. They\nhave copped the market while BrltUh\nColumbia ranchers sit bock and talk\nabout the unfairness of middle-men\nand Injurious market conditions,\" be\ndeclared.\nThese conditions are to be tound In\nall lines of BrltUh Columbia commer*\nclal activity, with the exception possibly\nof mining. Mining haa undoubtedly\ngone ahead as the Increase ln BrltUh\nColumbia mining atocka dividends\nshows. For the year 1928 for Instance,\nBrltUh Columbia mine, have paid out\nIn dividends practically five times tbat\npaid ln 1033. In 1933. \u00bb2.8oo,ooo waa\nthe total figure, while ln 1938. tht\nfigure waa well over \u00bb11,500,000, according to Mr. Thomson.\nSELF SIDE\nThis wss due In great measure _0\nthe smugsel pride of British Columbian,\nand to the fact that malting a living\nwas so easy In the province that people were not forced to get out and\ncompete for world markets, Mr. Thomson suggests. \"In a ahort time, bow-\never, this country wlll begin to feel the\npressure of hustling competition and\nperhaps wake up to the danger threatening,\" he stated.\nKOOTENAY  FBl'IT  CONDITION\nWhen asked regarding the fruit\ngrowing industry ln the Kootenay, Mr\nThomson says that thU district U to\nbe condemned for not showing more\nenergy and Initiative both ln producing and marketing lta fruit. There\nshould, he believes, be an intensive advertising campaign In prospective markets, and special agents should be appointed to do the actual marketing Intelligently.\n\"Por Instance, It Is an established\nthat the Kootenay Uke cherrlea are\nunbeatable anywhere, and yet then U\nonly a very restricted market tog them-\nIt ahould be easily possible to far more\nmU Kootenay cherries than an being\ngrown at preeent and at good prloe,, I\nhsve had snough experience w)tb food\nstuffs to know that Tl would he easy\ntd educate a strong demand for them-\"\nEven lf district rancher, should har,\na surplus, tbey should institute a co\noperative canning factory and tin th,\nsurplus, Mr. Thomaa auggeats. Thla U\ndone, profitably ln Waahlngton, whloh\ngrows cherries much Inferior to Kootenay cherries. Canned cherries an\nmarketable all over tbe world and have\nthe additional value of being non-per-\ntehablt. \"It ls surprising that Kootenay ranchers cannot, aee this fact, it\nshould be obvious to anyone,\" he declares.\nCherries, he continued were of course\nnot the only fruit which Is profitable\nto can tn large quantities. Every possible fruit may be treated in this way.\n1*0* aapie applied to many varieties of\nvegetables.\nTo point to Washington again, Mr.\nThomson went on to sa;', they were\ncanning practically all milts there, aud\nWhat waa a Serious aspect of thU, wen\nactually marketing their, canned goods\nln the prairie provinces in competition\nwith Kootenay raw fruit. Their trade\n10 thU 110, h,d increased enormously\nduring the past \"two or three yean, he\nsaid.\nPOINTS  SEASON\n\"I don't wuh It thought that I am\ntrying to run down Brltlah Columbia,'\nMr. Thomson stated ln -oncl-aston. \"But\nIt issems to me that lf tacts such aa\nthsee were ted to British Columbians\nwith more regularity they would begin\nto realize tbelr position.\n\"If people would leave the moving\npicture shows and bright lights alone\nand get to work ln the wilds and\ncountry parte where the greatest wealth\nof British Columbia Ilea, ttla _ oowngl\nwould start to hum aa'.t'should ana\nthis province would take Its rightful\nplace with the reat of the Canadian\nprovinces aa a real factor ln the trade\n0} the world.\" he stated.\nEEOI8TE* DISAPPROVAL\nLONDON, July 24.\u2014Disapproval- of the\naction of Conservative.headquarters ln\nrefusing to recognize Sir John Ferguson,\nchosen by Twickenham Conservative association to contest the by-election\nthen, Is being voiced by a number of\nConservative members of the comxdons.\nFall-Tag 1000 feet from aeroplane be\nfore he oould open parachute, Bdwanl\nBackus, dropped uninjured Into Lake\nMichigan, near Milwaukee, WU.\nWANTED\nRaspberries\n10 cents per pound\nfrom this date.\nMcDonald\nJam Co.\n'Nelson Brand' Jams\nNELSON, B. C.\nBATHING\nSUITS\nEnjoy a dip in one of\nour aJl wool bathing suits.\nMade in all the new colors\nand styles, both two.fcieee\nand one-piece; also the\nnew racing model.\n$4-50 TO $4.50\nI..J\nr<<\nLIMITED\n\u2014\u2014\nSLABS\nWhen in nfced of eoal,\nand dry wood, any. |en\u00abtb,\nalso slabs and trjttmli^s\ntrom the saw milt. Bee or\nphone .- r '\u2022?:.-. \u25a0\nMacDonald\nCartage &\nCompany\nSOS Baker St\ni  ritaaa.tH\n-*f-*-\nIt's Risky Business\nImposing on the public's confidence.\n-WO- fiture that it la far safer, and Infinitely more profitable, to conduct our\nOrocerV bualneas ln such* a.way as to\nearn and retain their good will. That-,\nwhy, when you buy groceries trom us,\nyou csn be certain that they are right\nboth ln quality and price I\nTHE ELITE GROCERY\ntSS-t Baker Street\nPhone 122 Nelson. B. C.\n44 TAXI & TRANSFER\nPhone 44       Cob Co^a-daa      Box H\nPrelgbt and Kxprese seryloe Dally.\nIncluding all Intermediate points.\n9 a.m., Nelson to TraU and Roaaland.\n1 am., atpean City, SUverton,  Nsw\nDenver and Sandon.\nCity Drug Co.\nNslsn'i Plapraatag Chamleta\nrums,   Kodaks.   Drugs,   BWIIBIIJ.\nMall   orders   promptly   despatched.\nBOX 10U    NELSON. B. C,    PHONE il\nCome In and Utt Tour Weight Free\nHEADACHE\nVery few HEADACHE^ will persist altar tbe application of our\nipecial gluses snd treetmeot.\n\/ \u25a0\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and Optician\n1 1\nExpert Optical Servloe.\n-<\nA. D. Papazian\nWATCHMAKER,    JEWELER\nAND GRADUATE OPTICIAN\n413 HALL STREET\nWISE SHOPPERS DO IT\nRead the Advertisement. '\nI\n1   Billie Dove  \"\nIn\n'Adoration'\nFrom the palaces of Im- n\n\u2022 perial Russia to the slums \u2022\nof Paris. '\nI\nA red-blooded college yard t\n'Win That\nGirl'\nComing Tomorrow\nBuddy Rogers\n\"VARSltV\"\n1\nt\n\u25a0\n9\n1\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_1929_07_25","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\/1.0405902","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1929-07-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. 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