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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":" _\nFrench Is Winner of the\nKind's Prize\n\u2014Pa&e Six\n\u2014-\n\t\n ,\u2014_\nVJ\na^\nReno and Sheep Creek\nStocks Jump\n\u2014Pa_e Seven\nVOLUME 34\nFIVE CENT! A COPY\nNELION. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-MONDAY MORNING. JULY 22. 1138\nNUMBER   75\nCANADA SLaPS TAX ON JAPAN GOODS\nHere Are Appointments as\nAnnounced by Premier\nOTTAWA, July 21 (CP) .-Following are the appointments announced\nby Prime Minister R. B. Bennett\nlate lut night:\nUnemployment and social insurance commission\u2014Hon. G. S. Harrington, Halifax, former premier ol\nNova Scotia, chairman; Tom Moore,\npresident of the Canadian trades and\nlabor council, Ottawa, and N. R.\nBeaudet, Montreal insurance manager, members.\nSenators:\nNova Scotia\u2014Hon. t. N. Rhodes,\nminister of finance. Ottawa; Col.\nThomas Cantley. Pictou, member of\nthe house of commons for Plctou;\nF. P. Qulnn, M.P., Halifax, and J.\nL. P. Robichaud, merchant and\nfarmer, Maxwellton, Dlby county.\nPrince Edward Island\u2014Hon. J. A.\nMacDonald. Cardigan, present member of the government without portfolio.\nNew Brunswick\u2014Hon. George B.\nJonea, M.P. for Royal.\nQuebec\u2014Hon. Arthur Sauve, St.\nEustachc, present postmaster general.\nOntario\u2014Hon. Donald Sutherland,\nformer M.P.. Ingersoll; CoL James\nArthurs. M.P. Parry Sound, and Mrs.\nIva Campbell Fallis, Peterborough,\nwife of Howard T. Fallis. farmer,\nJudicial\u2014Justice Patrick Kerwin\nof the Ontario supreme court to the\nvacancy on the supreme court of\nCanada caused by resignation of\nMr. Justice Frank Hughes; Charles\nT. McTague, K.C.. Windsor, to succeed Mr. Justice Kerwin. Hon. Alfred\nDuranleau. minister of marine, to\nthe Quebec superior court bench succeeding Mr. Justice Coderre; and D.\nMcKinnon, K.C., Charlottetown, to\nbe district judge in admiralty, Prince\nEdward Island.\nCommissioner of patents\u2014James\nThompson Mitchell, Ottawa, presently acting commiasloner.\nRhodes and Sauve Among 10\nSenators Named; 2nd Lady\nin Senate Is Mrs. H. T. Fallis\nDuranleau, Minister of Marine, Appointed to\nSuperior Court of Quebec; Unemployment\nand Social Service Body Named\nOTTAWA, July 21 (CP)\n\u2014Cutting deeply into hie\nown cabinet and disposing\nof half the important appointments awaiting his disposal, Prim* Minister R. B.\nBennett last night announced the name* of 10 new\nsenators, th* personnel of\n60 to Senate\nHon, E. N. Rhodei, Nova Scotia.\nHon. J, A. MacDonald, Prince\nEdward laiand\nthe unemployment and social insurance commission,\nseveral high judicial posts,\nand th* new commiuloner\nof patents.\nA feature of the announcement\nwaa tha elevation of three cab*\nInant minletora to the unati and\nona to tha Judiciary, and the aa-\nlectlon of a woman to be Canada'! lecond aenator of the female sex\u2014Mra. Howard T. Faille\nof Peterborough, Ont\nHon. Edgar N. Rhodes, minister ot\nfinance, and Hon. Arthur Sauve,\npostmaster general, will go to the\nsenate but will conUnue as ministers until their successors are appointed.   Hon.   Alfred   Duranleau,\nminister of marine, will go to the\nbench of the Quebec superior court\nHon. J. A. MacDonald, Cardigan,\nminister   without   portfolio,   takes\nthe Prince Edward Island Senate\nvacancy.\nMr. Rhodes will take ona of the\nfour Nova Scotia vacancies and the\nother new senators from that province will be Col. Thomu Cantley,\nmember of parliament for Pictou\nand a veteran parliamentarian;\nFelix P. Quinn, one of the Halifax\nmembers who waa elected first in\n1925, and J. L. P. Robichaud, French-\nAcadian merchant and farmer of\nMaxwellton, near Digby.\nIn addition to Mrs. Fallis the\nappointees to the Ontario vacancies\nare Hon. Donald Sutherland, Ingersoll, a former member ot parliament and cabinet minister, and\nCoL James Arthurs, present member for Parry Sound.\nHon. George B. Jones, a former\nminister and present member for\nRoyal, was appointed to one of the\nNew Brunswick senate vacancies.\nThere remain to be filled aeven vacancies in the senate, two in Manitoba, three in Quebec and two in\nNew Brunswick.\nMr. Justice Patrick Kerwln, prominent member of the Ontario supreme court bench, will go to the\nvacancy on the supreme court of\nCanada created aome months ago\nby the resignation of Mr. Justice\nFrank Hughes. He will be succeeded\nby Charles McTague, Windsor, Ont,\nlawyer, while Hon. Alfred Duranleau, minister of marine, takes the\nvacancy on the supreme court of\nQuebec vacated by Mr. Justice Louis\nCoderre.\nOF PATENTS\nIn accordance with amendments\nto the Patents act passed at the lut\nsession ot parliament, requiring the\nselection of a highly qualified commissioner of patents and greatly increasing the importance ot that office, James Thompson Mitchell, presenting acting commissioner of pat-\n\u2022\u2022.ontlnutd on Paee Eight)\nHon. Donald Sutherland, Ontario.\nBritain and France to Act in\nEffort Avert Ethiopian Battle\nTWO COUNTRIES\nWILL APPROACH\nTHEjTALIANS\nWill Act Separately\nin Confabs With\nMussolini\nHon. Arthur Sauve, Quebec.\nETHIOPIA STOPS\nITS SLAVE TRADE\nEthiopia Will  Fight\nto Save Territory   .\nif Necessary\nROME, July 21 (AP)--Well Informed eoureee tonight tald Brl\ntain and Franca wera expected to\nmake separate and extended et*\nfortt thla week to avert war between Ethiopia and IUly, but pet*\ntlmlim wai expreued ai to the\noutcome.\nBrltlth -clrclei uld they believed Sir Erlo Drummond, Brltlih\nambauador to Italy, will aak\nPremier Muaaollnl to tubmlt to\ntha League of Nationa hli whole\ndocumentation In tha Italo-Ethloplan controvert*\/.\nItalian government circles, how-\naver, uld Muuolini probably wlll\nrefuu this requeet\nTha French ambauador. Paul\nDa Chambrun, waa .expected to\nhava another audience with Premier Muuolini hart within a\nwuk concerning lateat develop-\nmenta In Ethiopia.\nWILL DEFEND LANDS\nADDIS ABABA, July 21 (AP).-\nEthioplans today gave endoraement\nto Emperor Haile Selessie'i1 determination to \"defend to the last\nman\" their teHttory -rosn Italian\ninvasion. ,    ,        ___..\nThe ministry ef foreign affairs\nIssued an official communique stating the slave trade in Djlnna, one\nof the issues stressed by Italy, hu\nbeen abolished.\nCount Vinci, Italian minister,\ncalled at the foreign office yesterday to protest verbally against the\naddress without waiting tor written\ninstructions from Rome.    -\nShortly before the emperor, citing Italy's increasing preparations\nfor war, appealed to the world to\nhelp  evert the  threatened  Italo-\n(Contlnuad on Pae* Eight)\nMoore Gets Post\nTom Moore, pruldent of the Canadian tradu and labor council,\nwho has bun appointed to the\nunemployment and aoclal lnaurance commlaalon.\nBUST WRECKS\nSCH00LH0USE\nDoukhobor Building Is\nBadly Damaged in\nSunday Explosion\nNo. I ichool at Brilliant, known\naa the \"Pltaunt\" Khool, wu\nbadly wrecked by an explotlon at\n4:SO o'clock Sunday afternoon,\npretumably by dynamite, and an\nInvettlgitlon Into the clrcum-\natenou of the explotlon li being\ncarried en by provincial polio*.\nThe blait occurnd In th* achool\nroom and considerable work wlll\nhave to be dona before It ll again\nuud.\nThe building, altuatad acrou the\nKootenay river from Brilliant In\nth* Doukhobor colony, a one-\nstony fram* structure, contltti\nef a Khool room and taacher'i\nliving quartan at th* rear. Mlu\nHaxal Hulla of Nelwn taught a\nclaai of 34 thar* lait term.\nFollowing the explosion Constable George MacAndrew of Castlegar, and Corporal David Halcrow of Nelton, mad* a preliminary Investigation.\nSTEVENS PLEAS\nFOR THE FARMER\nINlndSPEECH\nPromises Creation of\nAgricultural Board\nto Fix Prices\nOPPOSES CONTROL\nBY ORGANIZATION\nTakes a Slam at the\nBennett Reform\nBills\nST. CATHARINES. Ont, July 21\n(CP)\u2014A \"fighting chance\" for the\nCanadian farrn*r was the plea ot\nHon. H. H. Stevens, Reconstruction\nparty leader, here today. To give\nhim this fighting chance, he promised again to create a Dominion agricultural board, charged with the\nduty of seeing that the products ot\nthe soil brought a fair price to their\nproducer.\nIn Montebello Park here, while\nthe sun beat mercilessly down, the\nluder of Canada's youngest party declared his opposition to control of\ntrade by great organization!. The\nlivestock produce, h* uld, itood\nnot the faintest chance against the\npacking induitry. He must take the\nprices given him.\nIn tha retail trade, the small Independent store wu throttled at the\nstart A few huge organizations controlled the field.\nThe fruit producer could not de-\nmend a fair price from the canning\ncompeniet, with any possibility of\ngetting it Again, he must accept\nHOLD EQUITY\nUnder the circumstances, what\nwas the duty ot the governmnet?\n\"It is the duty of government to\nhold the scales in equity between\nthem,\" Mr. Stevens asserted. It was\nthe duty of government to see that\nall had a fair chance to succeed. He\nproposed. If elected to power, to\nsee that this chance was forthcoming. The agricultural board would\nfunction in this connection.\nWhile admitting constitutional difficulties which might be encountered in implementing a drastic re-\n(Contlnued on Page Eight)\nOn Commission\nHon. 0. 8. Harrington, Halifax,\nformer pnmler ef Nova Scotia,\nwho haa been appointed to tha\nunemployment and lociil lniuranee commlulon by Pnmler R, B.\nBennett\nMarkets at\na Glance\nToronto aod Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks irregularly higher.\nToronto Mlnea\u2014Lower.\nNew York\u2014Stocks slightly higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat unchanged to\nVI cent Higher.\nLondon \u2014 Bar silver and other\nmetals unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Silver alightly higher.\nNew York\u2014Cotton lower.\nBritish Troops\nFire on Moslems\nLAHORE, India, July 21 (AP).\n\u2014Brltlih troopi ware foned to\nfin on thne occailom today In\nan attempt to ditptrit rioting\nMotltmi, itrlvlng to gain pollution of the Qurwara Motqua, being\ndemollihed by Sikhs.\nTh* total deathi lince th* outbreak of tha trouble yuterday ar*\nutlmated at 10.\nCavalry and armored-car unltt\nware aummoned today to tupport\nthe Royal Scott Ouard.\nCDnunuiu   vn   r _\u201e_   \u00bb>_..., -  ,    - - _____\u2014,\t\nRailway Commissioners Reserve Decision on\nC. P. R. Application to Abandon Lardean line\nTimber, Marble and\nMining Interests\nProtest\nWRAGGE ACTS FOR\nBOARD OF TRADE\nCrossing Application\nMeets With\nDifficulty\nDecision wu reserved by the\nboard of railway commissioners ot\nCanada on the application of the\nCanadian Pacific Hallway company\nheard in Nelson* Saturday, for an\norder granting it leave to abandon\nthe operations of that portion ot\nthe Kootenay and Arrowhead railway, known u the Lardeau subdivision. The second application\nheard by the board, regarding the\nrequest for a crossing on a road\nsouth of China crek along the Columbia river, encountered a slight\nmisunderstanding, and the board\ndecided to have the copy of the application sent to the provincial department of public works for approval.\nDr. S. J. McLean, assistant chief\ncommissioner, wu chairman, T. C.\nNorris and G. A. Stone being the\nother members. F. F. Burpee is the\naccompanying secretary. In the first\nhearing, E. C. Wragge, chairman of\nthe special committee of the Nelson board of trade, opposed abandonment of the line by the Canadian Pacific railway, J. E. McMullen, C.PJR. general counsel of Vancouver, and B. Brydone-Jack, of\nMontreel, appeared for the railway\ncompany. In the second applications\nJ. D. Anderson urged the establishment of a crossing.\nFORESTS DEPLETED\nOpening the case for the railway\nregarding the abandonment of the\nLardeau subdivision, Mr. McMullen\npointed out that the largeat item\nof traffic over that line wu poles\nand posts, and that when the forest\nareu from which theae were obtained, became depleted, traffic\n(rom that source would be ended. It\nwas a different situation than if\nthe industry could be considered u\ngrowing. Instead the movement\nwould become smaller and the railway company's loues would rise.\nThe losses were heavy, and it wu\nincumbent on thc company to economize wherever poesible. lt was imperative that lines be abandoned\nwhere there wu little likelihood\nof improvement\nThe nmoval of the rallt, however, ha itated, would not mean\nthat tha district would ba cut off.\nTh* railway bad would remain,\nand thera would itlll ba tha bare*\n\u2022ervlc*. It merely meant a change\nIn method of tramportatlon, not\na cutting off. He quoted flgurea\nto ahow th* annual louu on th*\nllne, aome yaara going aa high aa\n$22,000.\nROAD WOULD NOT DO\nHenry   Nawcoman   of   Meadow\nCnek wu the flnt wltneu called\nby Mr. Wragge. The wltneu, like\ntha nine othera called In oppoalng\nthe application, firmly  declired\nthat a government road would not\ntake the place of the  railroad,\nbut would, rather, cauu tha virtual ruination of tho Lardeau dlatrlct The road would bo of no ute.\nMr. Nawcoman  maintained that\nflguret quoted by Mr. McMullen\nfor the deprution y**rt wera not\nfair, and that flguret ihould alio\nbe thown  for tho  yaara whan\ntlmu wera good.\nHe would estimate that there were\nthree billion feet ot timber ln the\nLardeau-Duncan   district,   besides\ngreat  mineral  potentialities.  The\namount of poles and posts he had\ntaken out had not been enough to\noffact the growth. There wu a lot\nof prospecting going on, and from\na point of view ol farming, things\nlooked bright Two familes of farmers had moved into the district ln\nthe last two weeks. Farmers there\nproduced more than they could use,\nand they shipped their produce to\nNelson, Sandon and Kaslo,\nGREATER INTEREST IN\nLARDEAU\nWith regard to mining, the district had deposits of silver, lud and\ngold, and the ore areu were adjacent to the railway. Since the price\nof gold had gone up there was a\nJreater Intereat taken in the Lar-\neau valley by the outside world.\nHe estimated he had a investment of $35,000 or $40,000 ln the\nLardeau. There had been several\nlogging Interests up there for a number ot years. As it wu not powible\nto drive logs on the Lower Duncan,\nit wu necessary to have the railway there to be able to carry on\noperations.\nThings were much different during good times, Mr. Newcomen statea. in put years he had shipped u\nmany u 200 or 300 cara ot poles\nhimself. He would estimate there\nwere about 13,000 acres of arable\nland there.\nQuestioned by Mr. McMullen, he\nrevealed that there waa heavy timber, besides the poles and posts. The\ncars he shipped would go to Ohio,\nMinneapolis, and Illinois points. He\ndeclared there wu mining being\npursued before tbe depression hit\nINVESTED $400,000\nR. Q. Dykes, who gave evidence pertaining to the marble Industry at Marblahud, Informed\ntha court that th* original company at Marblehead had Invested\nabout S400.000 In getting tha plant\nstarted and that tha company\nwhich ho represented had apent\nabout another $60,000. Than waa\nno better marble In the world\nthan wher* thty wtn iltuited,\nand In making thli itatement ha\nfully cognisant of th* quality of\nmarble produced In Italy, Scotland, England, Sweden and Germany. Further, tha tupply wu unlimited.\nHia company had taken over\nnine yurs ago, and had had to\nbuild up a market which had taken\ntime. It wai found impossible to\noperate both the mill and the quarry\nthere, and a plant had been erected\nat Edmonton. Their other products\nwere also used for stucco stone grit\nand catt atone. The latter product\nwu finding exceptional favor and\nappeared to be destined for great\nuh in building. Having ahipped\nthe big blocks of marble to Edmonton, the different producta of the\nplant were then aent to Ontario,\nManitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta\nand Britiah Columbia, to that the\nCanadian Pacific railway again benefitted in that manner. He believed\nthat in the future e tremendous\nbuslneu could be built ud in the\nmarble industry. Thev had an unlimited supply and, he submitted.\nIt would be an Injustice besides a\nhardship, on them, if the railway\nwere to be abandoned. The buslneu\ncould be carried on all the year,\nand wu not inconvenienced by\nsnow.\nSHIPPED 30 CARS\nDuring their best year, 1920, they\nhad shipped 30 cars\/but during the\nput few years had averaged seven.\nSome of the blocks of marble they\nhandled weighed u high as 20 tons.\nThey did not use trucks but as their\nsite wu alongside the railway, they\nloaded right on to the cars. Trucks\nwould be of no use to them, and he\nsaid a road would not help them.\nThere wu an improvement in the\nbusiness thir* year.\nGordon Mclnnis, lumberman of\nHowser, disclosed the fact that he\nwu operating a amall mill and wu\ngetting out cedar poles. He atated\nthere wu a considerable difference\nin the volume and price of lumber\nnow u compared with pre-depres*\ntion years.\nAll industriu in the upper Duncan and Howser districts were con*\ntributary to the railway. If the line\nwere abandoned be would have to\nmove out u he would not be able\nto continue. The putting in of a road*\nwould not help his predicament\nthen.\nGAS CAR IN WINTER\nHe had an investment up there of\nabout $25,000 and did not believe\nhe could ulvage any more than 23\nper cent ahould it be neceuary to\npull out. Winter service wu not so\nimportant in the Lardeau, and he\n(Contlnutd on Pag* Eight)\nTHE WEATHER\nTemperatures:\nNELSON   -\t\nVictoria   \t\nVancouver   ...\nKamloopa .....\nPrince George\nEstevan Point -\nPrince Rupert\nAtlln _.._\t\nDawson, Y.T.\nSeattle \t\nPortland, Ore.\nSan Francisco\nSpokane  \t\nLot Angeles\nPenticton\nVernon ...\nCalgary .\nEdmonton\nSwift Current\nPrince Albert\nSukatoon \t\nQu'Appelle\t\nWinnipeg  \t\nMoose Jaw ..._\nNOVA SCOTIAN\nIS EMPLOYMENT\nBODn HEAD\nHarrington Will Deal\nWith Unemployment\nin Dominion\nTOM MOORE ALSO\nNAMED BY PREMIER\nDOMINION SAYS\nTRADE TREATY\nOF UNBROKEN\nNew Measure Is in\nAnswer to Surtax\nby Japan\nIMPOST OF 33 1-3\nPER CENT PLACED\nnsurance Plans Wi\nBe Worked Out by\nthe Commission\nOTTAWA, July 21 (CP)- Described by Prime Minister R. B.\nBennett as the ifrst federal body\nto be constitutionally empowered to\ndeal with unemployment as a national problem, the new employment and social insurance commission wu named yesterday with Hon\nGordon S. Harrington, former premier of Nova Scotia, as chief com-\nmlssloenr. Official announcement\nwu made lut night by the prime\nminister.\nAasociated with Col. Harrington\nwill b* Tom Moore, Ottawa, president of the trades and labor congress of Canada, selected after consultation with workers organizations, and N. R. Beaudet, Montreal\ninsurance broker, representative of\nthe employers' interest\nWhile the primary duty of the\ncommission will be to establish machinery for setting up an unemployment insurance fund on a contributory basis, the commission ls also Instructed to make investigations to\nascertain what may be done for the\ncurrently jwemptayed. ... \u2022 .\nWill setupagencies\nThis commission wll alto be required to set up in each province\nemployment agencies designed to\nbring employer and worker together and to assist workers in reaching employment.\nOne of the early bills to be brought\ndown in the house at the last session, this measure carried out a\nfeatured Item in the prime minister's reform policy announced last\nJanuary. It became operative when\nit received royal assent and the\ncommission will now be in a position to go forward at once with organization.\nWhen machinery is ready to start\n(Continued on Page Eight)\nIs Result of Lengthy\nBattle Over Trade\nDifferences\nOTTAWA, July 21 (CP)r-Af\nplication by the Japanese government of a SO per cent surtax to\nCanadian lmporta entering Japan wlll be contldered a violation of the Anglo-Japanete treaty\nof 1911 to which Canada became\na algnatory in 1913, Prime Mlnltter R. B, Bennttt announced\nhere today. Japan'i action will be\nfollowed by Imposition of a 33 1-3\nper cent ad valorem turtax on\nJapaneu goodi entering Canada,\nMr. Bennett tald.\nThe prime mlnliter added that\nneither the new Japanue nor tho\nCanadian impost* would be applied to goodt now In trtniit\nFurther negotiation! wen In progreu to compote the trade difficulty between the two countrlu.\nMr. Bennett issued the following\nstatement:\n\"The Canadian government has\nlearned with great regret of the decision of the government ot Japan\nto impose a discriminatory surtax on\ncertain Canadian products, constituting approximately 50 per cent in\nvalue of Canadian exports to Japan.\nDISCUSSED 80ME MONTHS\n\"Trade relations between the countries have been the subject of discussion (or some months past, in the\ndiscussion, thc Canadian government made it clear complaints of\ndiscrimination against Japanese\nproducts were unfounded, Japanese\ngoods being subject to exactly tha\nsame laws and regulations as thoso\napplied in similar circumstances to\nUse products ot all other foreign\ncountries.\n\"The Japanese government was informed of certain revisions ot valuation procedure which have recently\nbeen adopted, applicable to all countries with depreciated currencies,\nand which it is considered take full\naccount of the extent of which rising\nlevels and costs of production in tho\ncountries concerned offset the export\nadvantage accruing from currency\ndepreciation.\nDISCRIMINATION\nCLAIMED\n\"The Canadian government indicated it was impossible lo accede to\nJapanese requests for abolition of\nanti-dumping and exchange com*\n(Continued on Page Eight)\nWeir Arrives Today lo View (old\nStorage; Talk Illustration Farm\nTouring Here\nHON. ROBERT WEIR\nDominion miniiter of igrlculture,\nwill be Nelton vltltor today.\nPARKSVXLLE, B.C., July SI \u2014\n(CP).\u2014Reece Hague, Conservative\norganizer lor this district, has chosen his. party's candidate for Comox-\nAlbernl in the Dominion elections.\nDominion Agriculture\nMinister Wires\nW. K. Esling\nHon. Robert Weir. Dominion minister of agriculture, now on a western trip from Ottawa, will arrive in\nNelson by Monday morning's train\nfrom the cast, to inspect the cold\nstorage installation just made here\nwith officers of the West Kootenay\nCentral Farmers institute the matter cf an Illustration farm for thin\ndistrict, respecting which a resolution was adopted at the convention\nat Robson a couple of months ago.\nNotification of the minsit'er's visit\nwas received Sunday afternoon in a\nwire to W. K. Esling, M.P., at Rossland. Mr. Esling at once getting in\ntouch with the various interested\nparties. ,\nDesirability of the Dominion experimental farms branch having an\nillustration or demonstration station\nin the West Kootenay district waa\none of the subjects raised at the\ninstitute convention, and a resolution addressed to the minister of agriculture, pointing out the need for\none in this important agricultural\nterritory, was unanimously adopted.\n$195,010 SUCCESSFUL BID FOR THE\nHARD-SURFACE WORK IN KOOTENAYS\nVICTORIA, July 21 (CP)-Con-\ntractt for hard-surfacing British\nColumbia roads this year under the\nprovincial government's fl,800,000\nprogram have been awarded by\nfive zones on a unit basis, Hon. F.\nM. MacPherson, minister of public\nworks, announced Saturday.\nThe successful bidders were:\nZone 1\u2014Vancouver Island: Taylor Engineering Co. Ltd, $105,880.\nZone 2\u2014Lower mainland to Hope:\nCarter-Halls-Aldinger Co., Ltd., for\n3242,000.\nZone' 3\u2014Okanagan area: Columbia Blthulithlc Co., $147,910.\nZone 4\u2014Grand Forks, Similkameen and south Okanagan: General\nConstruction Co.. $190,920.\nZone 6\u2014Eait and West Kootenay:\nGeneral Construction Co., $195,010.\nThe total ot the bids, uld the\nminister, was below tho departmental estimates for the work, and,\nu a result, 29 mllu more surfacing\ncan be done than wu originally\ncontemplated. This will bring the to\ntal of this year's program to 290\nmiles.\nMr. MacPherson slated that to expedite the awarding of contracts\nand to ensure the work being carried out quickly and satisfactorily,\ntlie government had invited five\nfirms of good standing to tender.\nThey had submitted bids for each\nzone, and the lowest bids by zonet\nwere awarded the contracts.\nApproximately $840,000 will be\nspent on actual hard-surfacing. The\nremainder of the money allotted for\nroad work will be used in improvements and preparing for surfacing\nin the future.\nAlthough the letting of contracts\nwaa handled u promptly as possible\nand all contractors have been instructed to proceed with the work\nimmediately, it probably will not\nbe possible to complete the entire\nprogram this season, the minister\nuid.\nIn all cases, contractors will bo\nrequired to use local labor.\n _\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014_.\n\u00bbAOE TWO -\nTHE NELION DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. JULY 22. 193S\nMRS LINEBAUGH DIES IN SMOKE, FIRE\nNelson Cricketers\nBealSpokane II\nIdeal weather favored the international cricket game between Spokane and Nelson at the Recreation\ngroundt yesterdiy. when ln a very\nevenly contested game Nelson wtre\n:   vlcton on the first Innlngi icore by\n10 runs.\nSpoktne won the toss snd i.alnst\ngood bowling and excellent fielding\nby the whole Nelson team, were dls-\nmlsied for only 66 rum. R. Main wu\nthe chief cause of their downfall,\ngoing on at the faU of the sixth\nwicket, he captured tour wicketa for\nonly one run.\nNelson did not make a good start,\nMoore being run out with only one\non the board. Agalnit Lockett'i\nbowling the home team were in\ndifflcultlei all the time, nine wickets falling for 45 rum, tnd It looked\nHANDIEST booklet n\n0? ^l\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B. C.; HOTELS\n\"Finttt in tht Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bui Service Geo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 25c to 60c\nLUNCHEON 35c to SOc DINNER 35e to 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nTtltphont 787 Ntlion, B.C. 422 Virnon St\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mn. Dunkerley,\nVictoria; T. Oakley, S. Siederman,\nWinnipeg; J. Streit, R McLeod, A.\nCrone, Salmo; Mr. and Mn. H.\nGeil, Mr. and Mn. E. Hamilton, Mn,\nW. Wilion, Spokane; E. Temple,\nMr. and Mn. H. Ctdlcott, Trail; H.\nRon, Erie; Mr. and Mrs. G. Kater-\nmaiv H. H. McBain, Portland; Mr.\nand Mn. H. Bartlett and family,\nDunville, Ont; R. Scott Gait Ont;\nE. Garrison, P. Broderick, W. Thorn,\nPenUcton; N. S. Beaton, Halleybury,\nOnt; Mr. and Mn. A. Lakei and\nfamily, Miu P. Malove, J. Jonei, R.\nBrown, B. Lttt J. McCloskey, A.\nLundee W. Walker H. Neilson. A.\nSmith, Vancouver; Mr. and Mn. F.\nBarclay. Kailo; G. Mclnnis, H.\nBoard. Howser; H. McCouisay, R.\nBrough, Medicine Hat; Mr. and Mn.\nJenkins and family, W. Morrison.\nN. Fraier, Calgary; J. Smyth, Lethbridge. '\n^The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kind\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers\n124 BAKER ST.\nJ. A. KERR. Prop.\nPHONE 19\nNELSON. B.C.\nSAVOY-E. G. Langley George\nL. Donovan, R. Morrow, C. Alder-\nton. W. J. Coell, C. H. Smith. C. M.\nFirby. Mr .and Mn. H. B. Collim,\nR. Peterson. Vancouver; S. F. Roe,\nOle Boody R. Roe, Red Deer Alta.;\nH. Cartmell. Creston; G. F. Clingan.\nOltawa; Hazel F. Convuse, Moose\nJaw; W. Barker, Kamloops; Louise,\nBree Katherine, Kroiss, Marie Pel-\nnar, Mrs. Mary Scott, Mr. and Mrs.\n3. E. Roberta, Spokane; D. H.\nJones, Kellog: W. Bumsldc, Toronto, Ont; J. A. Millar, Nakuip; T.\nFletcher. E. W. Pitanon, Fernle;\nN. D. MacKay, Grand Forks; Mr.\nand Mn. R. J. Clegg, Rossland; R.\nMadison. Percy Dietrich, Erie, B.C.;\nG. Taylor. H. Gladatone, Vic Eric-\nion. B. Lorcnz. Salmo; Mr. and Mrs.\nCharlei J. Co, Oakland, Ctl.: I..\nDawson. S. W. Drury. Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Manhall. Trail; Mn. H. S. Nelson, New Denver; A. D. Howett.\nCalgary; Mr. and Mn. C. Bridge\nand ion. Prince Albert; M. Wilion,\nMooiomin.\nNew Grand Hotel\nP. L. KAPAK Prop.\nHot end Cold Wittr\nSingle SOc up; double 60c up\nMonthly nttt S10.00 up\nPH. 234       616 VERNON ST.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nPETE BOR8ATO, Prop.\nRoomi from 60c to $1.50\nMonthly SIO ind up.\nSteam hetted ind hot tnd eold\nwiter ln every room\nSOS BAKER ST.        PHONE SO\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernen It Phone 6S7L\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nMlnen' Heidquirtirs\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcomi Awaiti You\nJAS. A. MADDEN, Prep.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot tnd Cold Witir\nIn tht HEART of tht City\nPHONE 66      606 WAPD ST.\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL \"^TOpem.\nE. NIEDERMAN,        Comfortable  Roomi Place on tht\nProprietor Oood   Mttlt Retd to Vtrnon\n>lns  I\n2   I\nnon   S|\nVANCOUVER, B. C. HOTELS\nI   \"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel\nW0 Seymour St      Vincouvtr, B.C.\nNewly Renovated Throughout\nPhones    \u2022     Elevator\nA. PATERSON. Ute of\nColemtn. Altt. Proprietor\nlike a Spokane victory. However, A.\nParker and Aldenmlth put up a\ngreat lait wicket fight and added\nthirty-one to the icore before thc\nlatter wai bowled, Pirker carrying\nout hli bat for 17, which included\na grand hit for ilx. Lunch wai then\ntaken.\nResuming the game at 1:30 Spokant atarted ita second inninga, and\nduring iti allotted time amassed the\nscore of 77 runs, which included a\nwell-played Inning by Mancapelle,\nwho compiled 39 runs before being\nbowled by Dawion. Lockett also\nshowed good form and was not out\nwith 10 to his credit\nNelson had only three-quarten of\nan hour to bat but it almost proved\ndisastrous, aa time alone aaved them,\nand when stumps were pulled the\nscore showed 45 runs for eight wlcketi, Dawion being top icorer with\n16, and Corbyn wai undefeated with\n10 rum to hit credit\nThe following were the scores\nand bowling analyses.\nSpokane first innings:\nA. Smith, b Corbyn \u2022   0\nJ. Mancapelll, c Smith, b Dawion 0\nC. Helder. c Corbyn. b Dawion 18\nA. Newman, b Dawion   0\nP. Lockett b Main 17\nRoben. c and b Corbyn    0\nF. Lake, c tnd b Corbyn   1\nJ. Matthews, lbw. b Main 11\nJohnson, not out     1\nR. Egerton, c Corbyn, b Main    1\nL. Ptyne, b Main   0\nExtrai 17\nTotal M\nBowling analysis:\nO.   R.   M.   W\nJ. Corbyn   9     20     1     3\nH. D. Dawion   6       8      2     3\nCD.Peanon   5      6     10\nE. Bowkett   3      11      0     0\nR Main   2       114\nH. Parker    1       S     0     0\nNelton fint Innings:\nCharlei Moore, run out _   1\nH. D. Dtwion (ctpt), b Lockett... 7\nR. Main, b Helder   6\nE. Bowkett c and b Lockett   4\nJ. Corbyn, c Newman, b Roberta 13\nH. A. Parker, b Lockett _..  3\nF. H. Smith, b Lockett    3\nC. D. Peanon, b Lockett   4\nJ. Wood, b Lockett   2\nJ. Aldenmlth. b Roberta   8\nA. Ptrker. not out _ 17\nExtru  -  8\nTotal _  78\nBowling analysis:\nO.   R.   M.   W.\nP. Lockett 16      19      6     8\nF.J. Uke    8      29      1      0\nRoberta   4      12      0      2\nC. Helder   4       8      11\nSpokane second inningi:\nA. Smith, run out     1\nJ. Mancapelll, b Dawson  39\nHelder. b Main     1\nNewman, o Corbyn, b H. Parker  7\nLockett not out  10\nRoberta, b Dawion    3\nLake, b Corbyn   t\nMatthewi, c Smith, b Bowkett....   S\nJohnion, not.out   2\nEgerton, b Dawion    2\nPlyne, c Aldenmlth, b Main   2\nExtrai    4\nTotal TI\nBowling analysis:\nO.   R.    M.   W.\nBowkett   3       5      11\nCorbyn       8.3   24      1      1\nDawson     7      17      1     3\nMain     6       7      2      2\nAldersmith    2       8      0      0\nPearaon     3       6     0      0\nParke*-;,    2       6      11\nNelion lecond inningi:\nC. Moore, run out     1\nBowkett b Roben    S\nA. Parker, b Helder     7\nH. D. Dawion. b Lockett  16\nMain, c Helder, b Lake    0\nCorbyn, not out   10\nH. Parker, c and b Helder    4\nF. H. Smith, c A Smith, b Helder   0\nPeanon, b Helder    1\nWood, not out  _    0\nExtrai   1\nTotal 45\nAldersmith did not bat\nBowling analysis:\nO.   R.   M.   W.\nHelder    6      16      1      4\nRoberts     3      12     0      1\nLockett    4     11      1      1\nLake    2       5     0      1\nUmpire\u2014Underwood.\nDuring the noon hour the Spoktne\nteam and their lady friends were\nentertained to a luncheon by the\nNelion club. Mayor J. P. Morgan wai\npreient and extended a hearty welcome to the viilton. F, J. Leke was\ncalled on and itated that cricket in\nSpokane waa growing rapidly and\nthat next year the club had been\npromised a ground by the parks\nboard. A. Smith, preiident of the\nSpokane club, also spoke ot the fine\nreception given them, and atated\nNelson was a city they all looked\nforward to coming to. H. A. Parker,\npreiident of the Nelson club, was\nmaster of ceremonies.\nBOAT PARTY HAS\nAN EXCITING TIME\nClutch Breaks in Trail\nLaunch; Runs\nWild\nMotorists Can Aid\nHard-Surfacing\nFast Driving Will\nSpoil Good\nJob\nThe work of hard-surfacing the\nroad out of Nelton to the top of Tag-\nhum hlU, and alio along the Weit\nArm road tor some distance trom\nthe north shore terry, is proceeding\nnpldly. The work Is being done by\nequipment owned by the General\nConstrucUon company of Vancouver.\nThe company representative on\nthe work has stated that lt would\nassist the progress and excellence\nof the work during the next few\ndays if care ii taken by the motoring public it pining men at work.\nDriving ilowly would greatly assist the men, and, where the new\nmaterial has been laid down, it\nwould give It a chance to get set.\nFast driving will damage the surfacing.\nEvery effort wUl be made on the\npart of the men, the repretentative\nassured, to facilitate the movement\nat traffic. It is expected that the\nwork laid out at preient will be\ncompleted by Fridiy which will\ngive the Tnll viilton to Nelion\nSaturday, a duitleii highway from\nTaghum, 2',j mile! or more toward\nNelion.\nTRAIL RATEPAYERS ASSOCIATION\nOPPOSED TO ACTION OF COUNCIL\n\u2666-\nOf Opinion That Two\nMembers Left in\nthe Dark\nTRANSPORTATION \u2014 Motor Freight Linti\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 s.m. end 10:30 a.m. Except Sundsy\nVM. LIVERY CO.\"?*\nloo _-5\nM. H. MtlVOft, Prep.\nTRAIL, B. C, July 21\u2014\"I do not\nIhink the city council is working\nas it should when the board of works\ntook it on itself to change the blacktop program,\" stated President Sim\nStewirt tt a regular meeting of the\nTrail Ratepayers' association in the\ncity hall auditorium Friday night.\n\"There is not the harmony ln the\ncouncil there should be. Alderman\nWoodburn and Aldenon knew nothing about the .change of the program untU they read about it in\nthe papen. I don't think lt the\nproper way to do business. It involves too much money not to be\ntlrst submitted to the reit of the\ncouncil. It wu the same with the\ngarbage bylaw. Aldermen Wood-\nburn and Anderion knew nothing\nof the budget unUl it waa brought\nup. There might have been some\nexcuse on the fint occaalon but the\nlecond ii inexcusable.\"\nHarry Burgess felt that there was\ntome misunderstanding regarding\nthe black-top Issue. He had been\nInformed that tht city wat using a\nhuge grader for thli work thit belonged to the C. M & S. compiny\ntnd due to lit site t lot of work\ncould be tccompllshed in one time\nover the rotd instead of repeated\noperations by a smaller machine.\nHowever he realised that roads on\nthe hillside were too narrow to allow this machinery to operate and\nan attempt on other street* would\nbe a waste of money. He stated that\na few yean ago Second avenue ln\nEast Trail had been spoken of u\nready for thli work and it wai\nonly being ctrried out ai planned\nHe felt that the ratepayen ahould\nlook around and see what roads are\nln readiness for the bltck-top sur*\nfiring.\n\"It le illly for the council to dli-\ntgree,\" contended Mr. Smith, \"Juit\nbectuie one member of the body\nhtppeni to live on Second tvenue\nPLSNTY OF DUST\n\"It people on this side of the river\nhtve tny objection to the black-top\nbeing done in East Trail, they\nshould come over and live ln Eait\nTrail for 24 houn and realize tha\namount ot duit there,\" tald another\nresident of the East ilde.\nMr. Stewirt tgtln ipoke ind\npointed out that the council planned to black-top Second avenue\nwithin two blocki of the city limits\nbut ifter t peUUon wu received\nthty decided to carry on tht work\nind complete tht ttreet to ltt term-\ninui. Hli chief objection wu the\nmethod of procedure of Uie boird of\nworkt. Ht Uved ln t tecUon of thl\ncity thit wu neutrtl tl no ptvlng\nwu llited In the progrim near hli\nhome, he nld.\nAlderman John Young, member\nof the botrd of workt itated It wu\nhit poller to do ont itreet tnd be\ndone with IL \"Pttchei tre no good,\"\nhe averred.\nHe pointed out thit much work\nwai necemry on Milligtn hill before the roid would be ready for\nsurfacing and stated that a new\nsidewalk muit be laid ou Oak itreet\nbefore any black-top could be put\ndown permanently. Nelson evenue\nis ready for the black-top and that\natreet will be attended to, he said.\n\"Alderman Woodburn and Andenon can't lay tbey knew nothing\nabout it for the board of works was\nappointed to do this work,\" averred\nAlderman Young.\nHorace Slmpion did not think\nthat Mr. Young's remarks lettled\nthe issue. He said that the city\ncouncil was appointed as a small\ngroup could handle the business of\nthe citizens more conveniently and\nthe board of works wu appointed\nto handle a certain leoUon of the\nbusiness more conveniently, but he\nbelieved that reporti ihould be tent\nbtck ot whtt u taking place. He\nwat ln ftvor of the rpogreitlve\npolicy regirdlng the bltck-top surfacing but contended that out ot\ncommon courtesy a committee or\nthe board of works should let the\ncouncil as a whole know what is\ngoing on.\n\"Cm you tell us how, when and\nwhy we tre going to piy thii gar*\nbige fee?\" asked G. E, Sanborn of\nAlderman Young.\nNOT GOING TO PAY\n'We're not gonna pay lt!\" Interjected e voice.\nAlderman Young itated that at the\npreient time men were checking up\non the water servicti In the city\nind it the same time making notations of the number of garbage\ncollections. He believed thit the\ngarbage collection would be bUled\nwith the water teet.\nHorace Simpson again took the\nfloor and told of hit experience with\na man who had called at hla houie\nHe said that on the form which wu\nsubmitted to him to sign wu the\nqueition \"do you want your garbage collected?\" Oppotite thit, he\nuid, the word yu or no wu written. He uid he winted hli garbage\ncollected but made a notation to\nthe effect that he wei not prepared\nto pay for it\nMr. Stewart recalled that tome IS\nyean ago, the bill for water wai\nstamped In red with the worda \"for\nwater and garbage.\" He tald he wu\nled to believe that the water rates\nwere fixed so that the collection\nwould alio cover the coit ot the\ngarbage at that time.\nADDITIONAL FIE\n\"Now,\" laid Mr. Stewert, \"they\nwant to collect an additional fee for\ngarbage but I have not noticed any\nreduction in water retee.''\n\"I don't tee how they (the city)\ncen put the garbage fee on the\nwater bill. I am ot the opinion that\nthere mutt be e leptnte bill.\" Mr\nStewirt itated thtt It wu going to\ncoit the city um uch to collect the\ngarbage aa the 29 cent fee.\nMr. Stewirt did not believe thet\nthere would bt i reduction ln water\nratet ln the city for iome tine, et\nleut until the householders were\nprepared to pay the actual coit of\nthe wtter connection for he did not\nbelieve thtt the $5 fie tor t connection began to cover the coit.\nTRAIL, B. C, July 21.-Four Trtll\npeople had an exciting experience\nfn the big launch of E. G. McLean\nThursday evening about I o'clock,\naccording to J. J. Sargeant, Rlver-\nalde avenue, who witneued the\nwhole procedure from hii back verandah.\nThe launch had eait off from iti\nmooring! in Swartz eddy and waa\nproceeding out into the river under\nmotor power when, on changing\ngean the clutch  broke.\nThe huge boat then was at the\nmercy of the iwlft folwlng Columbia and went down itream stern\nflnt most of the way. While going\nunder the bridge it came close-to\ncrashing into one of the concrete\npien, missing the huge mass by\ninchei.\nMagnus Lunde who ipends most\nof his time swimming againit the\nrlver'i current! went to the rescue\nin a row-boat and managed to tow\nthe launch to ihore a good half-\nmile down itream and ita passengers\nwere disembarked below the city\ndump.\nNELSON BOWLERS\nDEFEAT TRAIL\nTRAIL, B C, July 21\u2014The keenest competition of all times In lawn-\nbowling for the district occurred in\nlhe second meet ot Nelson and Trail\nclubi ln Brewery cup pley at Tadanac Saturday. Nelaon vititon ouited the local teami by a tingle point\nthe aggregate pointi being SO and\n81 respectively.\nAs a result of the fint Brewery\ncup play at Nelson on June 22 Trail\nwon 79 to 75 to gain a four point\nlead, but Saturday'a play whittled\nthis lead down to three.\nSometime in August teama of the\nTrail-Tadanac club will play in Nelson and a return and final meet at\nTadanac wUl take place in September.\nIt is customary for games to be\nheld at Nelion on picnic day but\nsuch arrangements would be lm-\nfiossible u many of the Nelson bowers will be absent from the city\nat that time.\nResults ot games with Trail rlnk\ngiven tint, were u followi:\nDeani 16, Morgan 17, Brereton 19,\nDraper 21, Davis 23, Armstrong 25,\nWeir, 22, Wheeler 18.\nT    N\nResult of flnt meet    79    75\nResult of second meet    80    81\nStanding to date       159   IM\nRinks were u followi:\nTrail: J. Deam, skip, R. Livingstone, E. Leyland and W. McCreadv;\nF. Brereton, skip, E. Provost, W.\nCameron and T. Hardman; D. David,\nskip, G. M. Watson, G. B. Watson\nand D. Longmulr; R. Weir, skio, H.\nJohnston. J. Cummings tnd W. Weir.\nNelson: J. Morgan, skip, G. A.\nMeeres, N. G. Lowes, and Dlr. E. M.\nWarren; J. Draper, ikip. H. Klngzett, E. L. Wright, and W. Calbick.\nJ. Armstrong, ilklp, J. Ball. N. Bradley, and S. Bate: F. Wheeler, J.\nGoulding, H. Fitzpatrick and J.\nGraham.\nDANNY STACK IN\nMANITOBA GOLF\nDanny Stack. Nelson hockey player and golf ace, hai left for hli\nhome in Winnipeg where he will\nenter the Manitoba golf tournament. Danny hu played in thii\ntourniment for the put eight yean\nand hai been medallist, and also\nsemi-finalist numeroui tlmei. He\nhu great hope! of taking the title\nthis year.\nHe won the West Kootenay championship a short while ago at Trail.\nGilbert Invited\nto Kaslo Regatta\nTrail Merchant Has\nCar Mishap in States\nTRAIL, B. C, July 20\u2014Joe Woogman, Trail merchant, who left Trail\nearly in the week for Vancouver by\ncar, figured in a car accident a\nfew miles this ilde of Colville. according to report! received ln Trail.\nIt wu reported that Mr. Woogman\nsuffered no Injury but his car was\nbadly damaged so he continued his\njourney by bus.\nNELSON MILL\nWORKER DIES\nM. VV. Robers Well\nKnown Fairview\nResident\nL. S. Gilbert, captain of the Nelson\nLaunch club, hai received a letter\nfrom F. S, Rouleau, of Kailo, inviting him to attend the Kailo regatta July 31 and August 1. Mr.\nRouleau, secretary of the Kulo\nLaunch club, itated the people of\nKaslo were always glad to iee him\nind hoped thtt he would again be\nable to attend and take a party of\nNelsonites with him.\nMr. Gilbert set a fait clip in\nmiking the trip to Kaalo and pack\nlast year.\nM. W. Roberta, well-known sawmill man and a resident of the district for many years, died at the\nKootenay Lake General hospital Saturday. For the put eight years he\nhas been ln charge of the various\nSchaefer-Hitchcock sawmills and\nwas employed at the company'i mill\nin Fairview up until hii death.\nMr. Roberta had not been in good\nhealth for leveral monthi, but was\nable to carry on at the mill. Early\nSaturday he took suddenly ill and\nDr. L. E. Borden and Dr. D. W. McKay were called and he was removed\nto the hoipital where he died ihortly\nafter.\nMr. Robert! wu born in Wisconsin and was 58 years ot age. He hu\nno relatives in the province but\nleavei a brother in Brawley. Calif.\nConcert Held af\nPark by lhe Band\nEntertaining a monster crowd\nthat gathered at Lakeside perk Sunday afternoon, the City band gave\niti first park concert of the year.\nUnder the baton of Spencer Newell the following program was given\nMarch - The Golf Girl, H. J.\nWoodi.\nOverture\u2014The ,New Dawn, Edward RusseU.\nWaltz\u2014The Silver Brook, Edmund Braham.\nSelecUona\u2014From H. M. S. Pinafore, Arthur Sullivan.\nTone poem \u2014 Apple Blossoms,\nKathleen A. Roberta.\nOverture\u2014The Golden Sceptre,\nB. SchlepeyreU.\nWaltz\u2014Daughter of Love, C. W.\nBennett.\nOverture\u2014Sunshine, Fred Jewel.\nMarch\u2014The Brazil Special march,\nGus Denis.\nThe King.\nRED SOX MEET\nACES TONIGHT\nRou Stewart, preiident of the\nNelion Ladies' softball club stated\nSunday evening that definite arrangements had been made to resume play in the local league this\nevening at 5:45, with the Hume Hotel Acet playing the Red Sox.\nIn four of the five games played\nbetween these two clubs this season, the Red Sox have led most of\nthe way only to blow up In the\ncritical moments, with the Hume\nclub icoring five of their seven wins\nat the expense of the Red Sox. If\ncondition and practise means anything the Red Sox should have the\nedge on tonight's game, u a number of the Hume playen have been\nout of the city, whllo the Red Sox\nhave been getting In regular practices.\nBoth teami are reported to be\ntrotUng out a new player in tonight's game. Isabel Donavon, formerly of Grand Fork!, hu been regiitered by the Red Sox, while E.\nGourley, formerly of Cranbrook.\nhai ligned with the Hume Acei.\nIt ii likely thit tn executive\nmeeting will be called following tonight! game, to aettle the claim\not the Toronto Star dub! for last\nMonday scheduled game with the\nHume Aces by default, also to ar;\nrange for the balance of the schedule.\nAGED NELSON LADY FOUND DEAD\nAFTER FUMES ARE SUBDUED IN THE\nCOLUMBIA BOTTLING CO. BUILDING\nApparently Suffocated in Sleep; Flames Break\nOut Close to One A.M.; Four Lines\nHose Used; Much Damage\n*\nFire thst broke out in the Columbi* Bottling Work*\nin the 600 block Ward street about 12:40 Monday morning took the life of tha invadided Mrs. John Linebaugh,\nwidow of \"Big |ohn\" Linebaugh. After battling flames tor\nmora than half an hour fireman ware able to force thair\nway into the burning building to where Mrs. Linebaugh\nwas living on the second storey. There wera no signs\nof burns and death had apparently coma through suffocation. Mrs. Linebaugh was 70 years of aga.\nMrs. Linebaugh narrowly escaped death April 19 when\nthe Nelson Opera house caught fire and she was carried out.\nFor a time she stayed with friends and then Mrs. W. H. Jones,\nFront street, took her to her home for a while. It was just\nrecently that she again took up quarters in the building.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. )ones, who operate the Columbia\nBottling Works have carried on their bottling business at tha\nWard street site for about three years. Their equipment and\nproduce was almost a total loss.\nAt 1:25, as the paper went to press, firemen were still\nbattling fitful flames near the front of the building.\n Fire which claimed the Ufe of Mrs.\nJAMES J. KELLY\nDIES AT TRAIL\nIn C. M. & S. Silver\nRefinery; in City\nfor 15 Years\nTRAIL, B.C., July 21.\u2014James J.\nKelly, 52, for 15 years a resident of\nTrail, passed away at the Trail-\nTadanac hospital shortly before 5\no'clock Saturday all.-moon. Mr.\nKelly wu the brother of Joe Kelly,\nwell known in Trail sport circles.\nBorn in County Down, Ireland,\nMr. Kelly reiided for a ihort time\nat Arrdire, Lanark-hire, Scotland,\nand since coming to Trail hu been\nan employee of the C. M. ts S. company, working in the silver refinery. Besides nil wife and brother,\nhe ii lurvlved by four daughters\nand one son, all residing in Trail.\nThey are Mra. Paul Barach, LUy,\nJosephine, Hannah and Arthur. The\nbody rests at the Clark Funeral\nhome and funeral announcement!\nwill be made later.\nAlleged Thief Is\nChased, Caught\nCherenkoff Is Said to\nHave Taken $5\nFrom L.D. Cafe\nSlightly Injured\nWhen Hit by Car\nJohn Carlion wai knocked down\nby a car driven by Jack Millar Sunday about noon ln the vicinity of\nthe Nelion tourlit park. Carlson\nreceived only minor Injuries.\nAccording to the city police. Carlson wandered off the sidewalk into\nthe path bf the car.\nJohn Cherenkoff, age 20, ll at\npreunt In the Nelion Jill and will\nappear In city police court thli\nmorning on \u2022 chirr; of stealing\nfrom a locil cite.\nAccording to Intormition by\ntha police, Cherenkoff, \u25a0 Doukhobor, wilked Into the L.D. cafe\nurly Sunday morning, ind after\ntalking with thi Chinaman thirl,\nquickly ring up the till, snatched\nup a It bill and fled.\nThree Chinamen itarted In pursuit, following Cherenkoff to\nWird itreet, down to Varnon ind\nthin In thi direction of Granite\nroad. Qeorge Mirquls, Hirold\nChipmin and Dave Bain took up\nthe chase and Chtrenkoffi capture wai effected, ind waa Immediately turned over to the\npollce.\nGOLF LADIES PLAN\nFIELD DAY\nThe Nelion Ladles' Oolf club Is\nholding a putting and approach\nconteit on Wedneidiy in connection with lti field diy it the Nelion\nOolf and Country club. The ladlei\nhave alio obtained permlulon to\nhave the tennis courts at the club\navailable and they will be open to\nthe public for play.\nJohn Linebaugh, aged Nelaon reildent, early thii morning gutted the\nupper storey ot the Columbia Bottling Work! on Ward street, where\nJuit over two monthi ego firemen\nbattled to save the atructure when\nthe old Nelson opera house wu\nrazed in a spectacular blaze.\nPaint wu hardly dry on the reconstructed wall of the BUl Jones\nworks that had borne the brunt of\nthe opera houie fire, and the building wu badly gutted before the\nflamea were controlled.\nTha fire broke out et 12:40 end ln\na few iecond! the upper itorey of\nthe building waa a man of flames.\nOnly a few seconds before several\npersons passed the building. Indicating the rapidity with which the fire\ntook hold.\nThe tire department wu on the\nscene only a few aeconda after the\nfire was first noted by Ray Kline,\nwho turned ln the alarm at the\nBaker-Ward Intersection. Kline uw\nthe flame! licking up through a\ncrack in a front door. Four hoses\nwere put Into play and the firemen\nmanaged to bring the tire ln the\nfront of the building under control\nin ahort order, but it made headway in the back. The old frame\nstructure burned rapidly in the upper secUon.\nlt was Juat three dayi over the\ntwo-month period that the aide of\nthe building wu gutted when tha\nold Nelion opera houie on the Victoria-Ward itreet intersection wu\nrazed. Then too the fire broke out\nIn a rapid manner.\nLess than a wek ago painters completed a job on the new wall that\nreared up alongnde of the side of\nthe opera houie and which waa\nbadly gutted at the time of the opera\nhousc fire.\nLike the first fire a huge gathering\nof Nelsonites turned out, some of\nthem in night atUre. Kerr apartment tenants turned out and watched the blase, thli time with UtUe\nfear of damage to their property\nowing to the Pig gap between the\napartment houie and the burning\nbuilding left after Uie fire of April\nIB.\nThere wai little chance of saving\nthe contents ot the building u on\nthc previous occulon u the fire\nhad taken too great a hold.\nBURY QUEENS BAY\nCHILD AT NELSON\nCleeve Joan Hint, six-year-old\ndaughter of Mr. and Mri. J. S. Hirst\nof Queens Bay. who died recenUy\nat Spokane, wu laid to rut ln the\nNelson cemetery Saturday afternoon.\nServices were conducted from St\nSaviour's church by Ven. Archdeicon Fred H. Graham.\nCranbrook Birds\nRace From Salmo\nThree baskets of plgeoni, the\nproperty of the Cranbrook Pigeon\nclub, were liberated at Salmo Sunday afternoon ln another homing\npigeon race.\nThe bird! came to Nelion via the\nC.P.R. and were, picked up at the\nstiUon ind taken to Salmo by Bud\nturn *-wiii>i-*w*>e\u00bbi isss,\n t-tt--------*^^^*\u2014'\n\u25a0\u2014^\u2014*\u2014 '\noi 0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. JULY tt 1939\nLETHBRIDGE LADY\nATSLOCANPARK\nSLOCAN PARK. B.C., July 21-\nMrs. E. Groom of Lethbridge was\nthe week-end guest of Mrs. A. Crebbln. Mrs. Groom will visit her\ndaughter, Milllcent, who is on the\nstaff of the Slocan Community\nhospital at New Denver. From there\nahe will go to visit her daughter,\nMrs. David Carlysle in Vancouver,\naccompanied by Miss MUUcent\nGroom.\nMrs. Percy Jonu and four children of Trail are holidaying at\nHappy Valley ranch.\nMiss Beatrice Damns of Castlegar\nis visiting her grandmother, Mrs.\nA. Crebbln.\nCharles Dickey made a business\ntrip to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Cursons and\nValues\nSavings\nIn Quality Footwear for\nthe entire family that\nyou should not and cannot afford to pass up\u2014\nOur Summer\nSALE OF\nSHOES\nContinues with new and\ngreater   bargains   in\nLadies', Men's and Chll-\n. dren's Footwear.\nR. Andrew\n\u2022feCOe.\n\"Leadera in Footfathion\"\nson Lloyd motored to Rossland to\nattend the funeral of A. T. Nichols.\nMr. and Mrs. Nichols formerly were\nresidents of Slocan Park, having\nmoved to Rouland three years ago.\nGRAND FORKS\nMAN IS DEAD\nHans C. L. Peterson\nHas Resided There\nNear 25 Years\nGRAND FORKS. B. C, July 21.-\nWith the death of Hans C. L. Peterson Monday, July 19, Grand Forks\nlost one of its most respected citizens.\nMr. Peterson was born In Denmark 80 years ago and had been\na resident of this city for nearly\na quarter of a century. He is survived by his widow, and five sons,\nFiner of San Francisco, Harold of\nPullman, Wash., Holgar of Moscow,\nIda., Alfred of Lewiston, Ida., and\nAnton (Tony) of this city, also\nfour grand children, Joan and Alfred ot Grand Forks and Harold\nand Aris of Moscow, Ida.\nThe funeral took place July 18\nfrom St. John's United church, Rev.\nD. M. Perley conducting the service.\nPall bearers werc Dan McKinnon,\nDonald McCallum, Fred Downley,\nPeter Hansen, John Movyboer and\nTom Wilkinson. Many beautiful\nfloral tributes were received.\nSam Bentley in\nSlocan Hospital\nSam Bentley, who met with an\naccident Wednesday, July 17, breaking his ankle, ls receiving treatment at Slocan Community hospital\nNew Denver, and is making good\nEregress. He is being attended by\nlr. Francis.\nSocial Happenings\nin Nelson City\nThis column is conducted by Mrs. M. J. Vigneux. All news el e\ntocial nature. Including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc.. will appear ln thit column. Telephone Mri.\nVigneux at her home, 919 Silica itreet\n\u25a0\nMcFarland, who is summering in\nNelson, Mrs. Leslie Craufurd entertained recently at bridge and\ntea at her home on Stanley street,\nwhen her Invited guests were Mrs.\nA. D. McLeod of Kamloops, Mrs.\nH. Rosling, Mrs. C. D. Blackwood,\nMrs. F. Peters, Mrs. E. E. L. Dewdney, Mrs. E. G. Smyth, Mrs. W. T.\nFotieringham, Mrs. R. W. Hinton.\nMis. P. G. Morey, Mrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. Alex Leith, Mrt. James\nO'Shea. Mrs. R. W. Diamond of\nTrail, Mrs. A. C. Bell ot Calgary.\nMrs. Gordon Hallet. Mrs. t. C.\nWragge. Mrs. L. V. Rogers, Mrs. J.\nG. Bunyan, Mrs. Harold Lakes, Mrs.\nW. M. Walker, Mrs. J. A. Mackay,\nMiss M. H. Cameron, Mrs. W. A.\nNisbet, Mrs. H. H. MacKenzie, Mrs.\nGeorge Johnstone, Mrs. G. H. Fraser, Mrs. Harold E. G. Penny, Mrs.\nC. W. Tyler. Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson, Mrs. William Rutherford. Mrs.\nBurch, Mrs. Shortly of Peterborough, OnL, Mrs. N. M. Cummins,\nMrs. A. L. McCullough, Mrs. W. G.\nC. Lanskall. Mrs. Fred H. Graham,\nMrs. E. Ferguson, Mrs. Frank Paddon. Mrs. A. J. Dunnett, Mrs. R.\nW. Hinton, Mrs. B. T. O'Grady, Mrs.\nJames McGregor, Mrs. D. A. McFarland of Victoria.\n...\nT. R. Wilson spent the week-end\nat Mirror Lake, a guest at the home\nof Judge W. A. Nisbet and Mrs. Nisbet.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00bb\nMlsa Margaret Fuller and her\nfriends, Miss Violet Rebelletti of\nReno. Nevada, who have been guests\nat the home of the former's aunt\nDOCTOR -SAID SHE\nNEEDED \"BULK\" FOR\nHER CONSTIPATION*\nKellogg's All-Bran Brings\nRelief to Mrs. Maneely\nRead the following unsolicited\nletter:\n\"Up to five years ago. I knew no\nend of suffering cauaed by constipation.* I uaed all kinds of laxatives but only found relief till I got\nused to them. My physician told me\nto get eome Kellogg's All-Bran,\nand instructed me now to use it\n\"I did just as I was told by my\ndoctor, and today I send my highest praise for what your All-Bran\nhas done for me.\"\u2014Mrs. Jat.\nManeely, Jr. Addreu upon request\n\u2022Due fe mtHftcim-tl \"h__V \u2022)\u00ab\nAll-Bran provides gentle \"bulk''\nto help overcome common constipation. It ia alto a good source of\nvitamin B and iron.\nThe \"bulk\" of All-Bran is often\nmore effective than the \"bulk\" in\nfruits and vegetables, as it does not\nbreak down within the body. Two\ntablespoonfuls daily are usually\nsufficient If not corrected this way,\naee your doctor.\nIsnt this food much pleasanter\nand safer than risking patent medicines! Get the red-and-grecn package tt your grocer's. Made by\nKellogg in London, Ontario.\nKeep en the Sunny tldt ot Life\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMENUS, RECIPES and\nHINTS\nMENU HINT\nCreamed Chicken\nRice Croquettes\nButtered Butter Beam\nVegetable Salad\nGreen Apple Pie Cheese\nCoffee\nThe rice croquettes are nice to\nserve with cold meats as well as\nwith creamed dishes such at chicken suggested today. For variety in\nmaking the croquettea tdd one of\nthe following to the mixture and\nomit or change the seasonings as\nneed be: chopped hard cooked eggs,\nmeat, olivet, nutt or cooked fruits,\ngrated cheese, minced green pepper\nor mimentocs, one tablespoon sugar and one-fourth teaapoon nutmeg, or a teaapoon of marmalade\nor Jelly molded in the center of the\ncroquettes. These recipes are given\nby the home economict buretu of\nthe United States department ot\nagriculture.\nTODAV'S RECIPES\nRice Croquettes\u2014 Two-thlrda cup\nuncooked rice, two tablespoons of\nminced parsley, four 'tablespoons\nbutter, one egg, beaten; few drops\nof onion juice, one tablespoon lemon juice, one teaspoon salt, white\nor cayenne pepper, eggs and crumbs,\ndeep fat for frying. Cook the rice.\n! Ada the egg and seasonings, mix\nl well and mold Into croquettes. Roll\n' ln beaten  egg. and then in fine\nand uncle, Mr. and Mri. J. G. Bunyan, Silica street, have left by\nmotor for Banff and Lake Louise.\neea\nMrs. A. J. Dunnett and family,\nwho are summering at Queen's Bay,\nwere in the city Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. P<rrcy Young of Nakusp was\na recent shopper in Nelton.\ni.e\nDanny Stack left Saturday on a\nvisit to Winnipeg.\nC. Lane of Ymir visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mr. D. StDenis returned\nto Slocan City Saturday after spending the past week in Nelton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Annte Fournier of Crawford\nBay wat a city visitor Saturday.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u00ab\nHedley Wilton, Roy McKenzie\nand Clarence Foater left Saturday\nby motor for a couple of weeks'\nvisit to coast cities.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMrs. T. J. Smith of Kaslo wat in\ntown Saturday.\ntat\nMn. W. S. King and Miss Rosemary King, Kerr apartments, have\nleft by motor for San Diego, Cal.\nThey accompanied Mrs. King's niece\nMrs. W- M. Fuhrken and party who\nvisited her last week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMajor and Mrs. J. Hamilton\nStubba of Kailo visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Colenso of Rossland was a\nrecent visitor in town.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. James Morrison and\nthe latter's lister, Miss Bernice Todd\nwent to Ainsworth Saturday where\nthey will spend this week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nMr. and Mrt. S. Harris and daughter of New Denver vitlted the city\nduring the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. Fairbanks, accompanied by\nMn. Fairbanks who haa been a patient ln Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, left Saturday for their\nhome in Harrop.\nMn. Cox of South Slocan vltlted\nin the city Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mri. Roy Skillicorn, re\ncent residents of Greenwood who\nhave moved to their former home\ned Miss Alice Dunlop of Crescent\nBay.\ne; \u2022  a\nMrt. John Teague hat returned\nfrom visiting friends ln Bonnington.\ntet\nMrt. C. D. Risk of Vancouver, an\nex-resident of Nelson, ii the guest\nof Mr. and Mn. R. W. Hlnton, Hoover ttreet.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nAngus McGillivray, foreman of\nthe Ymir Consolidated mine was a\ncity ihopper Saturday.\n\u2022 .  .\nMr .and Mn. Jamei Davldton ot\nCastlegar visited Nelson Saturday\nevening.\nate\nSmith Curwen of Ymlr wu\namong shoppers In town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNeil McMillan of Vancouver has\nreturned from a visit to the Slocan.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nC. Holmberg of Willow Point visited the city Saturday.\nbread crumbs. Heat the fat ln a\ndeep kettle to 390 degrees fahren*\nheit, or until a cube of bread browns\nin 40 seconds. Place two or three i __-_r, -.-:-.,-\u201e__,,_ m.i\u2122 ...\u201e.a*.\ncroquettes at a time In a frying bas- jln Kul0- vi\"te? in, N,el,on Saturday,\nket and lower ilowly into the hot I ,,. ... \u201e\u201e w T M\u201en_\u201e,_.ii\nfat for about two minutei. or until I _[\\'nA Ji.\"*_Z\\iL ^*_Zlt\nthey are golden brown. Remove and X\"0,,^ 5*\u00ab,vl\"^ If\u2122 wTlli.m\ndrain on abtorbent paper. Serve I ft* honne of Mr-and Mrs William\nwith creamed chicken while hot,!cl,rk' h,ve \"turned to town and\n\u25a0PAGE THRIB\nURGE\n*>DIRH\nFireproof\nWarehouse\nFacilities\nYour Vriuabl.1\nAra Soft\nWhan Storrt\nWith Us\nfhone\nWEST\n9^jfirc,o.\nMaket tht\nFinest Mayonnaise\nVITTUCCI\nVIRGIN\nOLIVE OIL\nI Good grocers i\n.sell Itl\nFACTS AND FANCIES\nHow to Keep Popplet\nThe large oriental poppies can be\nkept fresh ln the house for a couple\nof days if, when picked, the stems\nare cut very short leaving about an\nInch below the blossom. Place the\nblossom in a large flat flower dish\nand the poppies will float on the\nwater, making a very effective\ncenterpiece. The popples can also be\nsaved by placing tne cut end of\nthe stem In a flame for a second or\ntwo. With the latter method the\nstems may be left long.\nCamping Neottiltlti\nOne bottle iodine, one jar vaseline for sunburn, one small jtr\nrubbing ointment, one bottle vinegar for mosquito bites, adhesive\ntape, surgical gauze of various\nwidths, tweezers for removing splinters, spool black and white thread\nwith needlt. Alto a fint aid booklet on what to do in case of emergency such as snake bite, drowning, electric shock, overcxhaustion.\nFOR THE PICNIC\nSour Cream Potato Salad\u2014Thirty\nsmall potatoes, cooked; two teaspoons talt, one teaspoon pepper,\none teaspoon celery seed, one cucumber, diced; four hard cooked\neggs, two onions, chopped; one\nteaspoon mustard, three cups sour\ncream, one cup vinegar, two tablespoons butter, one bunch radishes.\nCook potatoes, peel and cool. Cut\nln dice and mix lightly with ult,\npepper, celery aeed, cucumber, the\nwhites of the hard cooked eggs, and\nthe onions. Set aside. Mash yolks\nof eggs while still warm, add mustard, and a tmtll amount of tour\ncream. Add this mixture to the remaining cream heated with butter\nand vinegar. Stir until perfectly\nsmooth. Chill thoroughly. Just before packing toss ulad iingredients\ninto dressing. Line a salad bowl\nwith lettuce, fill with ulad and\ngarnish with additional slices of\ncucumber and radshes.\nare guesta at the home of Mrs._ Jo\nseph Sturgeon and Mn. M. J. Vigneux, before returning to their\nhome in Oakland, Cal. Mr. and Mrs.\nMcDowell will visit Vincouver tnd\nSeattle.\n\u2022 t   .\nMiss Mary Hawes of Vancouver\nhu arrived to visit her parents, Mr.\nand Mn. F. W. Hawes, Silver King\nroad.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nDr. Douglas Barclay and Mn.\nBarclay of Kaslo visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCharlei Pritchard, Fairview it\ntttendlng tummer tchool in Victoria.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. Joseph Potosky of South\nSlocan wat among city thoppen\nSaturday.\n\u2022 .o  a\nVisitors in town Saturday includ-\nShoppen from Hirrop Saturdiy\nIncluded Mr. and Mn. w. S. Ashby\nand daughter Joan.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. W. Thompton ot\nTrail were In the city during the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMayor \"W. V. Papworth ot Kaslo\nvisited Nelson Saturday.\nttt\nMr. and Mn. A. J. MacDonnell\nof Trail spent the week-end in town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nShoppers in the city included Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Rossman of Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. J. S. Farrow left yesterday\nfor the cout. .\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. Bolton Pearson,\nFairview, have as their guests Mr.\nand Mrs. L. Embree of Evansburg,\nAlta.\n\u2022 \u2022 *\u2022\nCharles Schmidt of New Denver\nand his daughter, Miss Kathleen\nSchmidt, were in town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nR. Rufley of Tye visited Nelwn\n.during the week-end.\n* \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nA. H. Green and W. M. Myen\nhave left by motor for the coast\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. T. Avison and her daughter\nMrs. Keniie McLeod and her son,\nT. Avison of New Denver, were\nweek-end visitors In Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nMr. and Mn. James O'Shea motored to Mirror Lake during the\nweek-end and were guests at the\nhome of Judge and Mn. W. A. Nisbet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. E. Harrop and Miss\nWinnifred Harrop of Harrop spent\nSaturday in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nShoppen In the city Saturday Included Mr. and Mra. Walter B. Johnstone and the Misses Johnstone of\nSilverton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiu Dorothy Blsson of the ataff\nof the Kootenay Lake General hospital visited her parenti In Rossland\nduring the week-end.\naet\nMr. and Mra. D. K. Knowler were\nIn the city over the week-end, guests\not the letter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Vyse, Fairview. They are en\nroute to their home in Fruitvale\ntrom their honeymoon tpent ln the\ncout cities.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. end Mn. George Helbecque\nJr. and the former's mother, Mrs.\nGeorge Helbecque of Bonnington,\nvisited Nelson Saturday.\ntet\nSidney Norman of Vancouver was\na vilitor in town Friday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiu Dorothy Fiwcett, Fairview.\nleft yetterday for a two months'\nvisit to the cout.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMiu Nalda Perrier, Joeehine\nstreet,  left Saturday momlng for\nVancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. C. A. Larson and her young\ndaughter Marie and Miu Connie\nSmith, htve returned from a few\nweeks' motor trip to Seattle, whero\nthey were guests at the home of\nMrs. Larson's arents, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. C. O'Neill.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiu Mary Monaghan of Taghum\nhas left to visit friends in Chewelah,\nWuh.\nt ,* a\nMrs. Hunter-Gardener of Nakusp\nis the guest of her son-in-law and\ndaughter. Mr. and Mn. Bolton Pearson. Fairview.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nC. R. Stephenson hat returned to\nTrail after a visit in the city.\n...\nMr. and Mn. E. M. Sandilands ot\nKaslo were week-end visitors in\ntown.\n...\nMr. and Mn. J. Ryan, Vancouver\nstreet, have aa their guests their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrt. Alfred Johnston of Winnipeg.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. Robert Walton  of Procter\nvisited the city Saturday,\naet\nMr. tnd Mn. George Fleming,\nBaker street, have u their guests\nMrs. Fleming's sister, Mrs. Lewis\nYoung, also Mn. Charles Artigues,\nMrs. Angus Morrison and Mrs. Richard Neilan. who have been touring\nthe several national parks and points\nof interest in the United States and\nCanada. They will leave tomorrow\nIor Victoria and their home in San\nFrancisco, Calif.\ntet\nMr. tnd Mrs. Arthur Keeler. High\nstreet, Fairview. have as their guests\nMr. and Mrs. Warren Crowe of\nWaneta.\nDr. Auld Reviews\nHealth Conditions\nHealth conditions in the four Nelson schools. Central, Hume, Junior\nHigh and High schools, during the\npast year, were reviewed by Dr. F.\nM. Auld. acting medical health officer and Miss Kathleen Gordon,\nschool health nurse, for members\nof the school board at the city hall\nFriday night.\nDr. Auld stated that the two outstanding features of tha, health\nphase during the school term Iiad\nbeen the diphtheria and poliomyelitis Outbreaks. There had been 15\ncues of diphtheria and six of poliomyelitis. Several diphtheria cases\nhad occurred since then but for one\nthey had not been serious.\nThe doctor's report embodied n\nnumber of recommendations. He\nsuggested   resurfacing   of   several\nblackboards to take off the shine;\npainting  dark  red desks  a light  1\noak:   recreation   facilities  for  the >|\nhigh  school,  and  repain for the\ncentral school grounds. These were\ndealt with by the board later.\nThe board advised the doctor\nthat some of thc boards hid been\ndone from time to time ind thtt\nthe high school repair work and\nCentral school grounds were receiving attention.\nDr. Auld also reported on the recent vltit of thc provincial officer\nof health, Dr. H. B. Young, and of\nthc willingness on the part of the\nfirovincial government to cooperate\nn health matten.\nFREE for ASTHMA\n\u25a0nd CHRONIC HONCHITB\nTEMPI-ETON'S RAZ-MAH Ctpoulw atop\nwhetting, choking, tuning, msks breathing\ntuy; tintbla you to work tad ilnp Ln comfort.\ntWo relief, gviekly.\nProve HAZ-MAII in jour own eooa* Buy \u25a0\nTOo or II boi from your dniggut: or, (ur\nim trial, *riU TEMPLETONTuWlfEri.\nProrinea Bldg., Vucoutm. B C\nC. D. ERVIN NOT TO BE\nMISTAKEN FOR A. C.\nERVINE OF NELWAY\nA. C. Ervlne of Nelway has written to the Nelson Daily News asking that the Charles David Ervin,\nwho pleaded gilty in Nelson city\npolice eort to a charge of obtaining\nmoney under false pretenses, and\nwas sentenced to six months In jail\nwith hard labor, should not be confused with him.\nHunters rarely see leopards becauie they rove chleflv at night.\nShop Monday\nBAY DAY\nfor\nScores of Money Saving\nBARGAINS\nin Brand New Summer\nMerchandise\n-mTm.mxe.ii3 as ha- >\u00ab._.\nSafewayStori\nEffective Monday Only, July 22\nSUGAR- {^TCi**..... 100-lb. tack $5.75\nBUTTER-Highway, lit Grada      Lb.21c\nLimit t\nTOMATOES-K. C. 2 Vis..._ 2 tins 19c\nLimit 4\nCHIPSO-Large (Limit2)   Pkg. 17c\nMARMALADE-Emprass     32-oz. jar 25c\nCORNED BEEF-Halmat 2 tint 15c\nLimit 4\nSHREDDED WHEAT 2 pkgi. 17c\nLimit 4\nDelivery on Sugar Only.\nNUMEROUS OTHER ITEMS ON SALE NOT LISTED!\nWI RESERVE THE RIGHT\nTO LIMfT QUANTITIES\nSAFEWAY STORES\nLIMITED\nDl STR I BUTION*^^! WITHOUT WAST\nL\nSocial and Personal\nNews of Trail\nThit column is ln chargt of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of TraiL All\neventi of a tocial nature ot Interest tn Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin thia column. Mn. Quayle will be glad to have any tuch newa\ntelephoned to her at her home ln Trail.\nTRAIL, B. C, July Jl-Mrs. Samuel Hepworth, McQuarrie street\naccompanied by her daughter, Mist\nMarie Hepworth are spending a\nshort holiday at Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. 3. McNab of Calgary,\nwho are malting a tour of British\nColumbia, ipent yetterday In Trail\nand Rouland after visiting friends\nat Willow Point and at Ainsworth\nAt Rossland they were the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Trembath.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFred  Olsen  tpent yesterdiy in\nNelton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJohn Christ ianson wtt tmong\nthote from Trail holidaying at Ainsworth during the week-end.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nSyd W. Drury left today for Vancouver on a two-week i holldty\nwhich will be spent at coast points\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nMn. E. B. Quayle of Rossland Is\nvisiting during the week-end with\nher brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mn. Glenn Quayle.\n\u2022 *   .\nMr. and Mn. D. P. Teak and son\nof East Trail have returned from a\nholiday at Ainworth.\n\u2022 .   .\nMr. and Mn. James Kirker return\nshortly from a holiday ipent at Calgary and other prairie points.\nMn. Jtmes Weir, who with her\nfamily has been holidaying at Kaslo,\nhn returned to Trail.\naee\nNadine fleury and Yvonne Fleury,\ndaughlen of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey\nFleury of Rossland, are vltltlng in\nTnil for e few diys.\n...\nMr end Mrs. Weiley Dwytr tnd\ndiughter are ipending a holldiy tt\nAlneworth.\n\u2022 *  *   t\nCharlei Haggarty, who hat been\nvtsltlng his mother at Hillcrest,\nAlta.. returns to Trail today.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRobert Fuzzell leaves thli week\nfor Nelson where he has been transferred and will make his home there.\n...\nMr. and Mn. Thomas Rlley are\nspending a vacation at Ainsworth.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.  and   Mrs.   Robert  Haggart,\nTadanac, left during the week-end\nI\non a holiday which will be spent\nat coast cities, making the trip by\ncer.\nThomas\nRobson,\nDunn  spent  today  at\nMn. A. B. Kirkpatrick and daugh\nter leave ahortly for San Diege\nwhere they will attend the fair.\n...\nMr. and Mn. Charlei Fransen and\nfamily returned yesterday to Trail\nfrom a motor trip to the cout.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nC .M. Cooper, who hu been visit'\ning his lister at Calgary, and who\nattended the stampede, hu return\ned to Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. J. A. McLeod and family left\nduring the week-end on a holiday\nto* be tpent at Christina Lake.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBert Weir tpent the week-end at\nRobton.\n\u2022 \u00ab   *\nMr. and Mrs. Harvey Fleury of\nRossland are holidaying at Barkerville with Mn. Fleury I father, A.\nTrcglllus of Nelton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. G. A. Burton and\ndaughter, Miss Margaret Burton, return thit week from a trip to the\nprairie where they viiited relatives\nand friendi.\nlet\nMr. and Mrt. Archie Millar and\nfamily left during the week-end on\na holiday to be spent at Chrittim\nlake.\ntet\nMr. end Mn. Cecil Burgeu left\nfor Willow Point yeiterday whtre\nMn. Burgeu will remain for about\na month. Mr. Burgeu returns to\nTrtU thit evening.\nMr. and Mrs. E. K. Thomai have\nleft on a holiday which will be\nspent at Christina Lake.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. H. D. Thain and\nfamily have left for Nelson where\nfor the next two weeks they will\nipend a vacation.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. T. A. Clarke, of Nelson, accompanied by her mother.\nMrs. Proudfoot of Nelson, motored\nto Trail today and were guests of\nMrs. W. F. Truswell, Victoria itreet.\n'YOUR TIME\n\u2014 cwtd OuhA\nPDKER HANDS\nani]. mmlm_.\nNOW ACCEPTED\nAS A COMPLETE\n\/~VUR Poker Hand scheme has\n^ become so tremendously\npopular, and involves so many\ndaily transactions that we make\nthis announcement in the inter*\nests of still better service to you.\nIt will enable you to save time\nin getting the presents you want,\nand expedite service in the\nPoker Hand Premium Stores\nbecause our attendants will now\nonly need jto count your Poker\nHands.\nAt this time we welcome the\nopportunity to express our appre*\nciation to the vast number of\ncustomers who have made the\nPoker Hand gift plan thc most\npopular thing of its kind ever in\nvogue in Canada.\nImperial Tobacco Company of Canada, Limited\nSavet\\ke\nPOKER HANDS\n \u2014\n\u2014\nFAOIFOUR*\nEiUbllihtd April 22, 1901\n\"Britiih Columbia'! Mott Inttritting Newipaper\"\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPubUihed  every  morning  exoept  Sunday  by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED.\nUS   Baker   Street,   Nelion,   BrlUsh   Columblt.\nPhont I'M. Priveti --.chingi Connecting ell Depertmonte\nMember of  the  Audit  Bureau  of, Circulation!  end\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nMONDAY, JULY 22, 1935.\nMAYOR MORGAN IS RIGHT IN KEEPING\nAUDITORIUM CONTROL OUT OF\nCIVIC POLITICS\nOne of the reasons that the Nelson auditorium bylaw\ncarried by such a large majority was that it was definitely\nunderstood that the business affairs of the auditorium\nwould be conducted by an independent board or commission.\nMayor J. P. Morgan, with that characteristic\nshrewdness and business ability which has marked his\nadministration of civic affairs, made it clear beyond\ndoubt that if the bylaw carried there would be no political\nconduct of the building. It would be operated by a commission entirely independent of civic politics. He was right.\nAnd the ratepayers, knowing that there would probably\nbe a direct loss on the operation of the building, but feeling that there would be a large indirect profit to the community as a whole, agreed with him.\nNot only was the mayor right in his views at the\ndiscussions prior to the passage of the bylaw but he is\nstill right. There should be no color, even, of civic politics\nin the administration of the affairs of the auditorium.\nIt should be completely and entirely independent of anything connected with municipal politics.\nThere is some demand for the early appointment\nof the commission or board, or whatever it may be called,\nbut there is really no urgency. It will be some months before the board has any important work to perform.\nThe board could be appointed by the city council\nor, better still, by the lieutenant-governor in council,\non the recommendation, of course, of the Nelson city\ncouncil.\nIt would be wise on the part of the Nelson city council to explore possibilities in this direction. As Mayor\nJ. P. Morgan has intimated, the further control of the\nadministration of the auditorium is removed from the\ncity council and civic politics the better it will be for the\nfinances of the auditorium, for the taxpayers and for\nthe members of the city council itself.\nNo one has recognized this more clearly than the\nmayor himself, with his wide experience of civic affairs\nand his more than usual acumen in such matters, from\nthe very commencement of the discussion concerning the\nauditorium.\n\"LOATH TO BELIEVE\"\nWhen Emperor Haile Selassie asked the United\nStates to invoke the Kellogg-Briand pact to prevent Italy\nengaging in war with Ethiopia he was notified that\nWashington \"was loath to believe that Italy and Ethiopia would fight about such things.\" In view of the tension\nof the situation this was not a comforting answer, since\ntoo, it was followed by instructions to the American\nlegation at Addis Ababa to get all Americans out of\nEthiopia. It seems, therefore, that the United States is not\ngoing to get mixed up in the situation in any way. It is\ngratified that the League of Nations is endeavoring to\nsettle the dispute, and that is all. It appears as if Great\nBritain is the only one of the Great Powers that is making strenuous efforts to avert a war in Africa. The other\nnations are quite neutral in their outlook. If there is war it\nmay well spell the end of any influence the League of\nNations has in such crises.\nHOW VETERANS FEEL\nEurope is generally admitted to be drifting toward\nwar. How do the European veterans of the last war feel\nabout it? As fighting men, do they welcome the approach\nof a new war?\nThey do not. Representatives of the war veterans\nof Germany and the allies met in Paris recently and passed a resolution calling for the maintenance of peace, abolition of war-like policies and the settlement of international disputes by arbitration.\n\"The veterans of all nations are passionately attached to the maintenance of peace,\" they declared.\n\"Men who incite war are not friends but enemies of their\ncountries.\"\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nTHI NELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. JULY 22. 1935\nWORK CALLS FOR FOOD IN SUMMER\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nI\nBy J. B.C\nA CONTRIBUTION\nHarry Steveni got a boost last\nweek so  today  I  am printing\nparody from the other side ot the\nfence.\nJ B C\nDear Sir\u2014I lubmit another par\nody on \"Juit Before the Battle\nMother\". You may do aa you pleaie\nwith it. All parodies are vile but\nmine is no worse thsn the one el-\nready pubUihed. To lay nothing\nof the poetic defects ot both\u2014and\nthey ere many.\nAnother Parody on\n\"JUST   BEFORE  THE   BATTLE\nMOTHER\"\n(Composed in 10 minutes).\nIn round English diction, Harry,\nGreat men think but light ot you.\nFor the campaign you are staging,\nOnly hu youisell in view.\nTime ne'er saw a greater sinner\n'Gainst all thai wc hold aa true.\nVote againit him, Father, Mother,\nOr your own lure shipwreck rue.\nChorus:\nVote agalnit hli crude dictation,\nOr prosperity is slain.\nIf he tries hia schemes Utopian,\nWe can ne'er recoup again.\nSee from Russia blaze the warning,\nAll iuch tchemes ftil at the test,\nThen across our wide Dominion\nVote against him East and West,\nTo our youth he is debauching,\nWith wild dreams of unearned\npay,\nMay we scape this senseless dreamer\ntvery good Canadian pray.\nTALKING  OF  EXPENSE\nA wealthy Indian land-owner\nbrought hit wife In trom the dlitrlct\nfor a consultation. The doctor told\nhim she wis seriously ill, but would\nin all probabiL.y make a speedy recovery if admitted to hospital and\noperated on without delay.\nThe husband retired under tbe\nshade of a tree in the hospital gar\nden and appeared to be in deep\nthought, At last, somewhat annoyed by thii delay, the doctor asked\none ot his assistants: \"What is he\ndoing?\"\n\"Oh, Sahib, he is making a calculation es to which will bc the\nleait expensive to cure this wife or\nmarry anotherl\" waa Uie reply.\nSHE SAW IT\nA dear old lady on board ship in\nthe tropics was very anxious to see\nthe equator. The captain, to satisfy\nher, handed her a telescope, at the\nsame time pulling a hair from his\nhead and holding it ln front of the\ntelescope at the old lady eagerly\npeered through. \"Oh, yes,\" she\ncried, \"I see it\u2014and there's a camel\nwalking along it,\"\nShould the diet be changed radically In the summer?\nBehind this question is the assumption that the digestive organs\ndo not work as well in hot weather,\nand that the body does not require as\nmuch \"heating\" in that nerlod.\nNeither assumption is entirely\ntrue. On extremely hot dayt, all\nbodily function! are depressed, especially the movements of muscles\nof the itomich and intestine are\nsluggish. But they are capable of\ndoing their work lust as the heart\nmuicle ii. The heart doesn't beat any\nleu itrongly or frequently during\nthe summer months, and we may\ntake it as typical ot the subconscious\nfunctions ot the body.\nThe other assumption\u2014that the\nbody requires less heat during the\nsummer\u2014Is undoubtedly true. It requires, at least, less heat from internal combustion of food, because the\nbody needs to dissipate its surolus\nheat, not accumulate heat. Also exertion tends to be reduced on vcry\nhot days, so such energy requirement Can be cancelled.\nFor the summer athlete, however.\nUie exercise he takes requires energy, and with vigorous golf and\ntennis, it may well be that a person\nrequires more food in the summer\nthan ln the winter. If so, if the appetite caUs for it, it should be taken\nwithout fur that the digestive system will be sluggish.\nThe digestive system, like all the\nvegetative parts of our body, has\nenormous powers of adjustment. II\nresponds to various demands excellently and with great efficiency-\neven when part of it is afflicted with\na local lesion (such as ulcer). The\nless we think about it, the better\nit will be. Just give it work to do\nand the work wlll be done\u2014in all\nkinds of weather. You could not ask\nmore of a faithful servant than that.\nIf the work is too much for it, it\nquits in a very complete, unanswerable way\u2014by the act of vomiting\nor diarrhea. It isn't the kind of servant who argues with you\u2014it just\nquits.\nThe nancreas, which Is the most\nimportant digestive gland in thc\nbody, has three ferments: one digests nrotelns, one starches and one\nfats. They are all very powerful and\nall flow together In response to stimulus. So that no matter how mixed\nyour foods, the pancreatic ferments\nwill digest all parts of it. And even\nif you could separate the starches\nfrom the protein foods, one ferment\nwould be lost and have nothing to\ndo but make mischief. But the adjustment is very delicate, and the\narticle to which I refer showed that\nwhen fat food predominated, the\nfat-splitting ferment predominated;\nwhen starchy food predominated,\ntho starch-splitting ferment predominated, and likewise with protein\nfood and the protein-splitting ferment.\nADVANCE WEATHER BULLETIN\nPROBLEMS\nReligious and Social\nQuestions Answered\nBy DR. WYLIE CLARK\nIt It true that China end Japan\n\u2022rt mort Intereited In becoming\ngrut Induitrlil ind military pow-\ntn thin thty art about becoming\nChrlitlan?\nW.M.S.\nAi far as we can iee, Industrialism\nand militarism have a grip on these\ncountries which leemi to be more\npowerful than any thought of religion. While in the appearance of\nthings thli ieemt true, yet there\nare influences at work which are\nevidently itrongly influencing the\nthinking of mmy of the people. Just\nhow far this has gone it is impossible\nto say, tnd we cannot guess how\nlong it will take before it will assume control and dictate the policies.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nIt tht word \"Onioni\" found In\ntht Bible? D.R.\nYes, in Numben 11:5.\nMon., July 22. 1935\u2014A clear, cool\nspell in nearly all the country except\nlight showers and unsettled about\nPacific southwest and south central\nsection!.\nTuei, July 23\u2014In north and northweat clear, but in southwest and\nalong southern border sections light\nmini, drifUng to great lakei and\neast: remain! cool.\nWed.. July 2. \u2014 Rains become,\nsomewhat heavier and more general,\nbut are mostly about southeast sections of central provinces and great\nlakea country. Turns warmer.\nTnun., July 35 \u2014 Unie^tled and\nrainy conditions drift to eastern sections, leaving clearing weather about\nthe northwest: warmer generally.\nFri., July 26\u2014Few Ught. showery\nand scattering ralna conUnue about\nthe south and southeast, but in general moit of country clearing: warmer.\nSat.. July 27\u2014Mild disturbance\nwtth light ralni about louthwest\nsections, but nearly everywhere else\nclear weather; cool about central regions and east, but warmer about\nsouthwest.\nSun., July 28\u2014Light, scattering\nrains drift along southern border\nsections to southeast and weather\ngenerally rather cool for the aeason.\nespecially about the great lakes re\ngions.\nWeek of July 22 lo 28. 1935, in\ncentral provinces begins with a\nclear, cool spell ot thort duration.\nThla it toon followed by unsettled\nconditions, at first about Pacific\nslope and southwest central sections.\nBy about mid week the unsettled\ncondiUon will probably become\nquite general and in some sections\nrather heavy rainfall. Around last\nof week the rains become few, showery, scattering and drift along southern border sections to the great lakes\nand southeast. In weit warmest\nabout 24th and east 25th, then suddenly cooler for two days.\nDuring the last part of July in\nthis country this year rather unusually rainy weather is to be expected\nand also wide fluctuations in temperature, there being aeveral very\nwarm and also some cool days,\nthough lut few days of month probably near normal temperatures.\nThe normal rainfall in the middle\nlections ot the central province: in\nJuly is about two and a half inches,\nand this year not much more than\nthat is to be expected, and this\nshould come mostly around tint and\nlast of month, with a dry period between. In the country generally,\nhowever, no very notable dry ipell\nIs expected at this time.\n\"By the way dear, which day does the gardener come to mow the\nlawn?\"\u2014Humorist.\nSERAJEVO HAS GROWN SINCE START\nOF THE GREAT WAR\nNamed citv of 100 mosques, Hi\nrooti ln the valley and ltt suburbs\nspreading up the mountain sides\naround. Serajevo has grown in area\nand populaUon. but otherwise is\nlittle changed in topography since\nthe thott of a Serbian student drew\nthe llfeblood of an Austrian archduke and his wife on the city streets\n21 years ago today, writes the Canadian Press. It is still a city ot pronounced Muslim characteristic!.\nBut Serajevo is more peace-minded than on June 18, 19H, when the\nroyal assassination sounded the tocsin for the war\u2014the greatest armed\nconflict In history. The preient city\nis a center of progressive Yugoslavia, the post-war union of Bosnia,\nSerbia and others in a \"Kingdom of\nthe Serbs. Croats and Slovenes.\"\nTwenty-one years ago Bosnia was\nan Austrian province with the Serbian border but a few miles away\nfrom Serajevo. Seven years previously Bosnia had been Serbian.\nbut in 1908 found henelf annexed to\nAustraia following one of the sanguinary Balkan wars.\nSerbian flags stood out in the decorations and Serbian patriotism\nfilled the air that Sunday in 1914\nwhen the Austrian Archduke Fram\nFerdinand and his morganatic wife.\nPrincess of Hohenburg. drove\nthrough Serajevo on an \"official\ntour of inspection.\" He was heir to\nthc throne of Austria-Hungary. On\nthe way to the city haUTor the reception the archduke stopped with\nhis arm a bomb intended for him\nself and his wife. It wounded two' assassin.\nof his aids as it dropped outside the\ncar.\nFUSILADE OF SHOTS\nWith the return journey the assassins gained their objective. There\nwas a fusilade of pistol shot! from\nthe ranki of the ipectaton. The\narchduke died almost instantly from\nbuUet wounds and hti wife succumbed later In hoipltal.\nToday there is a monument to the\nArchduke Ferdinand and his wife\nat the place of assassination. Alao\nthere Is a tablet on a building near\nthe river docka in honor ot the\nassassin. Gavrio Prlniip. an 18-year-\nold student He died in 1915 in an\nAustrian orison to which he was\nsentenced for the act. Three othen.\nIncluding a former Serbian officer,\nwere executed for the conspiracy.\nIt is notable, too, that one ot the\nbridges across the tributary to the\nBosna river through the city is\nnamed Prinzio bridge. Serajevo, by\nthe way, is less than 100 miles from\nthe Adriatic aea, but 5,000 feet above\nit. The Bosna meanders down to the\nfamous Danube and out to the Black\nsea. taking 1000 mile! to do It.\n\"The cavalcade moves on.\" On October 9. 1934. about 20 yeen after\nthc death of the Austrian heir-apparent on the streets of Serajevo,\nKing Alexander of Yugoslavia, who\nruled \"in hii itead.\" wai killed in\nthe French city of Manellles by a\nfellow countrymsn.\nThere is a grim tradition ln Serbia that iti rulers meet death either in exile or at the handi of the\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Ttachtrs\"\nWHAT CAN SOUTH SCORE?\nThe following hand appeared during a nine session of experts competing tor the Wernher pair trophy.\nVarioui contract! and reiulti were\nreached. I think the most Interesting\ncontract was 3-no trumpi, by the\nhand marked South, with the opening lead the 10 of hearts. How many\ncan South make against the belt subsequent defence?\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nYOUR GARDEN NEEDS SOME ATTENTION\nIt tht word\nIn tht Bible?\n'Cucumber\"\nfound\nD.R.\nWife (duiting down huibtnd who hu been chued, chivvied, md\ntossed by bull):: \"Never mind, deitr. We won't let a little uoiet like thtt\nspoil our holldiy!\"\u2014London Opinion.\nNo. \"Cucumber\" li not; but \"Cucumbers\" is. Numbers 11:5 Isaiah 1:8.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00bb\nIt It t tin to ust our Imialni*\ntions? I hivt bten told thtt It It.\nF.R.N.\nImagination is one of our greatest\npowen and has unlimited possibilities of development By it we can\ninvent, build and construct without\nthe cost of material or the delay in\ntime. Through it we can solve problems, see unseeable beauties and\nerect impossible castles.\nIt ii true that we may tin through\nour imaginations. By letting them\nloose amid the evils of life we can\neasily use their powers for the de*\nstruction of high thinking and re*\nspectable living.\n.   \u00bb  .\nSomt ehurehet   administer tht\nLord's Supptr to thtlr own mtmben and refuse It to all othen. It\nthat not en unchristian attitude?\nS.S.T.\nThote who do thli think they ire\ndoing the right thing and consider\nit an unchristian attitude that mem\nben of other denomination! ihould\nexpect the same privileges as their\nown membenhip. We muit not forget that denominations mean a certain amount of narrowness and all\nof us within the denominations are\nmore or less tainted or controlled.\nWe are apt to misi the fact that in\nthe very place we think wc declare\nour broadness, we show our narrow-\nnets.\ntea\nli wonhip \u2022 duty or i motility?\nCHURCH MEMBER\nIt It both. It we believe In God\nwho il Creator, tnd Providence, then\nwe surely owe Him lomethlng. We\nshould render Him homage and obedience. This we miy do through\nwonhip end lervice.\nIn our own make-up we realize\nthit there muit be aome penonality\n\u2022hove and beyond ourtelvai. We\nfeel the neceulty of being ln touch\nwith thli pertonility ln order to at-\nttln the full development ot our\nown. Thit we find poulble through\nwonhip.\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCtntral Prtw Garden Exptrt\nEveryone desires to hive their\nflowen bloom jutt it long as possible, and in order to secure the most\nfrom your garden in bloom and\nbeauty, it is necessary to give it\nsome attention during these two\nmonthi.\nNow thit your annuals are blooming and bushing, do not neglect\nthem, thinking they will ttke care\nof themselves. Often in September\nor October we visit gardens which\nare a mast of blooms, and othen we\nviiit have a dull outlook with scant\nflowen.\nThe reaion plants stop blooming\nand growing ia either because of lack\nof water or. In the cue ot many\nannuals, because they have been allowed to go to seed. Annual plants,\nand especially the tender annuals.\nare very likely to stop growing and\noften die as soon u they have matured seeds. This trait, or a tendency\ntoward it, is common to all the herbaceous plants, and' aa a rule they\nihould be prevented from going to\niced.\nSome biennials, however, such as\nhoUyhocki and foxgloves, are often\nallowed to form seedi, which drop\nand start new plants yearly\u2014thus\nensuring a crop of flowen each year.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nWhen the fint bloom of the delphinium it over, says the Garden\nFile of House Beautiful, keep a few\nseeds of the choicest specimens on\nthe stalk unUl ripe, then plant\nthem at once ln a garden aeed bed.\nSoon they will germinate and form\nhusky little plants that winter well\nwhere they are. and are ready to\ntransplant into permanent quarters\nin the iprlng.\nHollyhocks miy be treated ln the\ntime manner by towing the fresh,\nripe seed. If you especially like the\ncolor of one variety, protect the\nbloom with a glatsine bag while the\nleed is forming, to keep off the bees.\nSome time during July, when\ngrowth has stooped, and a dormant\ncondition is indicated, dig up a good\nroot each of bleeding heart, anchusa\nand Oriental poppy, cut long root\ninto Inch pieces, and plant them\nwhere soil hu been made a mixture\nof und and rich loam. Keep fairly\nmoist. Will be reedy for permanent\nquarten ln the spring.\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\nCKOV CJCJ CJCA CHWK CFQC\n830       (90\n780       840\nCJAT\n910\n5:00\nCFAC\n930\nNatal grau from Afrlci wu introduced into Florida yean ago and\nhas proved uieful as a cover crop\nIn citrus fruit groves.\n10 YEARS AGO\nj From Nilton Dllly Ntwt Flltl\nJuly 22,1925\nThe trial of John Thomu Scopes\nat Dayton, Tenn., on a charge of\nteaching evoluUon theoriei ln thc\npublic schools in violation of the\nTennessee law. ended yesterday ln\na verdict of guilty. The minimum\nfine of $100 waa imposed and ball\nfor appeal wu set at $500.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nFourteen carloadi of newly minu\nfactured itrawberry jam. in one\nmammoth heap on the warehouse\nfloor ot the McDonald Jam company, greeted scores of visiton who\naccepted an Invitation of J. A. McDonald, manager, to inspect it\nThere were four or five carloads of\nother varieties, alio.\ntot\nFire deitroyed the imill three*\nroomed frame house ot A. Clark.\nFairview. about 5.45 o'clock yeiterday afternoon when tar which Mr.\nClark wu heating on the itove,\nboiled over.\n20 YEARS AGO   |\nI From Ntlton Dilly Niwi Fllu I\nJuly 22, 1915\nBom to Mr. and Mri. M. Mlckel-\nson. at Nelson, July 19, a ion.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. C. Blanchard. S. Mclntoih and\nfriendi htve returned to Nelion\n\u2022fter ipending two weeki cimping\nat Six-mile.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nIn a letter to the Nelion Dtily\nNews Htrry Broadwood uyi there\n\u2022re itill 20 Kooteniy boyi left in\nthe trenches and that the reit ire\nby no meani all dead. Hc states that\nhospitals in England md France\n\u2022re miny Kootenay men. Many omen are prisoners.\n\u2022 .   .\nR. W. Chalmers of the Waverley\nranch. Thrums, hu iuued a notice\nthat a demonstration of silo tilling\nwill be given at hli ranch by the\ndepirtment of agriculture aoon.\n35 YEARS AGO   |\nFrom Nelion Dllly Trlbunt Fllu I\nO \u2666\nJuly 22, 1900\nJ. K. Strachan, city clerk, hat\nreturned from an extended visit to\nthe old country.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 I\nE. Grizzclle hu loit over a thou-\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n730\nCFJC\n880\nCKY  CKCK  CRCV\n980 1010 1100\nCJOC\n1230\n\"Varieties\", Detroit (exc.\nB.C.); 5:30 Old Time Frolic, Saskatoon (exc. B.C.); 6:00 Bablllage. ore;\nJeanne Desjardlns. soprano; mixed\nvoice quintet Montreal; 7:00 Newi\n\u2022nd Weather Forecast; 7:15 Jesse\nCrawford, organist, N.B.C.-Chicago;\n730 Eerie Hill's orch., Banif;\n8:00 Western Radio Playen, Winnipeg; 8:15 Isaac Mamott, 'cellist; Wilfred Davidson, baritone;\nNestor Ivimey. accompanist Winnipeg; 8:30 Newt (B.C. Net); Al Oliver's Hawaiians, Edmonton, exc. B.\nC; 8:45 Gene Fogarty and orch. Juper, ex. B.C.; 8:00 Saxophone Trio,\nkamloops; 9:15 Jimmie Noble,\nScotch comedian, Chilliwack; 9:30\nAn Earful ot Music, dir. Hazel\nMcDonald, Gladys Cooper and Oz-\nzie Ron vocalists, Vancouver; 9:45\nRomany Moods, trio soloist, Edmonton; 10:00 Musical Biographies,\nChilliwack; 10:13 Marjorie Whitehead, contralto, Vancouver.\nUie Night Singer; 7:00 Abe Lyman's\norch.; 7:30 Pick and Pat, One Night\nStands, comedv teams; 7:45 Frankie\nMuters orch.*, 8:00 Delmar Edmonson, DL; Bert Black's orch.;\n8:30 Roed to Feme, amateur\nshow (DL); Ted Fio-Rito'i orch.;\n9:00 Horacio Zlto'i orch.; Bill Fleck's\norch.; 8:30 Floyd Town's orch.; 10:00\nJimmy Davis' or., (DL); 10:30 Merle\nCarlson's orch., (DL); 11:00 Don\nBestor's orch., (DL): 11:30 Les\nHite's Dance orch., (DL).\nN.B.C.-KPO NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\n690    620     840     880    820     970\n5:00 To Be Announced; 8:00\nContented Program, Lullaby Lady\norch., dlr. Morgan L. Eastman; 6:30\nLucky Smith, play starring Max\nBaer; 7:00 Amoi 'n' Andy, blackface\ncomediam; 7:15 Tony and Gus, Mario Chamlee; 7:30 Voice of Firestone,\nWilliam Daly'i orch.; operatic stan.\ngueat artists; 8:00 Henry King's\norchestra; 8:30 Freddie Martin's\norchestra; 9:00 Leonard Keller's orchestra; 9:30 Marshall's Mavericks; 9:30 Fort Des Moinei orch.;\nI KPO); 10:00 Newi Fluhei, Sim\nHayei; 10:13 Sid McNutt'i orch.;\n10:55 Preu-Radio Newi; 11:00 Freddie Martin'a orch.; Lamplit Hour,\norgan (KPO); 11:30 Jimmie Grier'i\norch.\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI   KFRC  KOIN  KSL  KOL\n670      610      940    1130     1270\n5:30 St. Louli Blues; 6:00 Wtync\nKing'i orch.; 6:30 Lilac Time with\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVANCOUVER 500 w\n5:45 Eb and Zeb, E.T.; 6:15 Newi\nFlashes; 6:30 Orch.; 6:45 Waterfront\nPublicity committee talk; 700 Real\nLife Dramas; 7:15 Immediate Issues,\nMclnnes: 7:30 Financial Talk; 7:43\nWilliam Font baritone; 8:00 Studio\nprogram; 8:15 Citizens League of\nCanada; 8:30 Sports; 10:00 News;\nOther periods: Records.\n1030 k CFCN 291.3 m\nCALGARY 10,000 w\n5:15 Indian Serenader; 6:45 Musical Highway; 7:00 Real Life Drama;\n7:15 Maurice Gill, flutist; 7:30 Indian Serenader tnd Arvella; 8:00\nW. R. Howson, Liberal Party; 8:15\nContinental Quartet Ruth Marcus;\n8:45 C. F. Jamieson. talk; 9:00 News.\n\u2666 A10 8 8\n\u00abA4\n\u2666 J. Q 10 I\n+ AQ7\nAt my own table bidding went:\nSouth, l*diamond; Weit 1-heart;\nNorth, doubled; South, 2-no trumps;\nNorth, 3*no trumps.\nThe opening lead wu the 10 ot\nhearts, which of coune I won with\nthe Ace, The only chance for game\nappeared to be establishment ot\ndummy's clubs, and that had to be\naccomplished before losing the 4 ot\nhearti\u2014the only entry to the exposed hand.\nThe Ace of clubs was led, dropping West's K and making possible\nthe establishment ot dummy's long\ntuit with lou of a alngle trick there.\nThe Q of clubs wis led.'West discarded his lowest heart. The aeven\nof clubs was led. Weit let go his\nlowest diamond, to make certain that\nhis partner did not lead that suit.\nEait captured dummy'i 8 ot clubs\nwith his J. He led back the 8 ot\nspades. I played low and Weit was\nln with thc J. giving hii tide its second defensive trick. We had 3 tricks.\nWest hid an 8-card problem, he\nneeded 3 added trlcka to defeat the\ncontract and he had to lead. Tlie\nholdings about the table ire shown\nbelow.\n790 k KGO 379.5 m\nOAKLAND 7800 w\n7:00 To be announced; 7:30\nMusical Grab Bag; 8:00 Stanford university Program; 8:15 Talk of the\nTown E.T.: 8:30 Hollywood Comedv Stan; 8:45 To be announced;\n9:00 Tune Types; 9:30 Marshall's\nMavericki; 10:00 Announced; 10:15\nHenry King'i orch.; 10:55 Press-\nRidio News; 11:00 Freddie Martin's\norch.; 11:30 Jimmy Grier'i orch.\nBRITISH EMPIRE PROGRAMS\nShort Wive\u2014Piclflo Sttndird Tlmi\nTRANSMISSION 1\nGSD 11,750 klc (25.53 rn) tnd GSB\n9510 kci. (3146 m)\n8:30 Big Ben. A running commentary on the Davii Cup Inter*\nZone Tennii Final (Second Dty);\n8:40 Chamber Music. The New London Trio; David Wiie, violin; Norlna\nSemino, vlolincello. and John Pauer\npianoforte; 9:25 Talk: \"Foreign Affaln.\"; 9:45 May, June and Julie in\nFriendly Harmoyn; 10:15 News;\n10:30 Close Down.\n\"I've read that a widow's life\ninsurance don't lut longer'n\nfive yetn, but Marry Anne ain't\ngot no relatives to borrow hen.\"\nsand camaUon plants through the\nattack ot a until green worm which\nhaa appeared in thousand! and done\ngreat damage to Nelion gardens.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. F. Teetzcl It Co. shipped complete assaying outfits to the Venui\nand the J. B. Townsend mining\ncompanies the nut week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA uwmill plant hu been ihipped\nto the Molly Gibson mine.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. J. Goepel. Nelson, inspector\nof government officei. li on e trip\nto Windermere and Golden.\n'MOON, SO ROUND\nAND YELLOW\"\nMoon, to round and yellow.\nLooking from on high;\nHow I love to iee you\nShining in the tky.\nOft and oft I wonder.\nWhen I iee you there.\nHow they get to light you,\nHanging in Uie air.\nWhere you go at morning,\nWhen the night is past.\nAnd the sun comes peeping\nO'er the hills it lut.\nSometimei I will witch you\nSlvly overhead.\nWhen you think I'm sleeping\nSnugly in my bed.\nMalfhlu Barr\nWHAT THE PRESS  IS SAYING\nSIMPLIFYING ENGLISH\nA scheme of \"basic English\" teemt\nto have originated at Cambridge. It\nprofesses to offer a prospect of getting over the difficulties of our\nlanguage and making it in the fullest sense a universal tongue. If you\ncan uy anything you want in e\nlanguage ot 850 words, life would\nbe simplified for those who have\nUtUe linguistic talents.\nIn Japan, China and Russia, and\nelsewhere, this residuum ot English\nIs already being taught ln the\nschools. Lengthy books, published in\nBritain, on it, have been neither\ndull nor obscure.\nAny estimate! about the ordinary\nman'i vocabulary muit be guesswork. Among public men, Mr.\nChurchill has probably the largest\nwith Mr. Lloyd George second. Mr.\nBaldwin. In his ordinary speeches,\nlias always uud a limited vocabulary.\nThe largest vocabulary ii credited\nto scientists, who use many technical terms. I should hive thought\na technical terminology limited the\nnumber of words used. I know thit\nIn the Wer, If one mutertd military termi In a strange tongue, it wu\npoulble to get on very well with the\nscantiest knowledge of the rest of lt\n\u2014Attleui: London Sundiy Timet\nLIGHT AND HEALTH\nAn Invettlgitlon hu just been\ncommenced Into the amount of light\nneeded ln different occupation! to\nget them done properly and to protect ourselves over the Immente\nwork put Into tn Inquiry of thli\nkind, and to be smart about the\ntechnical termi in which ltt result\nis expressed. But no one now would\nQuestion in Inquiry into whether a\nfactory gets enough freth tlr. Investigations or this kind are good\nfor health and wealth. \u2014 London\nDally Herald.\nThe best defence of West will\ngive him only two added tricks, and\nallow South to go game. It West\nleads the K of spades South li assured 3-odd. His Ace will gtve him a\nfourth trick. Three heart! and 2\nclubs in dummy assure 8 added\ntricki. The ume is true if Weit leads\nback the low spade. If West lead!\na heart dummy will win the trick\nand run oft 2 spades, then lead a\ndiamond, putting West in with his\nAce of that suit It make! no difference what Weit doei, all the def end-\nen can win agalnit perfect play by\nSouth are 2 spades. 1 club and 1\ndiamond trick.\nWOMAN'S WILL\nMen. dying, make their wills, but\nwlvea\nEsctpe a talk to ud;\nWhy ihould they mike whst all\ntheir lives\nThe gentle damet htve hid?\n\u2014John Godfrey Sexe,\nT. C. Morgan\nWell known Merchsnt\nTailor of Vancouver is\nnow at the HUME\nHOTEL with a full\nrange of the latest\nsamples Including the\nfinest imported fabrics\nfrom London, Eng.\nTake advantage of this\nopportunity to consult\nMr. Morgan whose\nlong experience and\nwide knowledge of\nstyle and quality is\nwithout equal in the\nWest.\nPHONE 787\nfor appointments.\nHAYMOWS k\nand\nRAKES\nNow is ths timt to purchase a new mower or\nrake for your hay making. We have them in stock.\nMower Repairs for Most of the\nPopular Makes of Machines\nQUICK SERVICE!\nNelion Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\n **>\u2022-_.\u2014-_\n\u2014\u2014\u2014^__\n\t\nail\nnLson\nTHE NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. JULY 22. 1916\n\u25a0PAGE NVI\nNrteiut laily Wwb\nMember of tba Canadim Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTILEPHONI 144\nPrivate Exohanse connecting to\nill Depertmtntt\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy . 1  M\nBy carrier, per week     JJ'\nBy carrier, per yeer _.\u2014 13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areat. per month, 60c;\nthree monthi, $1.60; iix monthi,\n$3.00; one year, $6.00.\nUnited Statu and Great Britain, one month, 79c: six monthi,\n$4.00; one year, $7.90.\nForeign countries, other than\nU. S., aame es sbove plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\nMinimum 2 Llntt\n2 lines, once  $ .22\n1 lines, once   JS\n4 lines, once      .44\n2 lines, 6 times     .88\n3 lines, 6 timu  1.32\n4 lines, 6 tlmu  ... 1.76\n2 lines, 1 month  2.86\n3 lines, 1 month  4J\u00bb\n4 llnei, 1 month  5.72\nAll ebove lui 10% for prompt\npiymtnt\nIf you hive room for roomers ln\nyour home\u2014md room for their\nrent in your pocket\u2014remember\nthere is room tor your Ad in the\n\"Rooms for Rent\" column.\ntmaaa.ammmmaaama.a......\ni\n............mm.....*...'.\nCHAPTIR M\nLia slipped abruptly to her feet.\n\u2022\u25a0\"My marriage was a miitake, the\ncried defiantly at her father. You\nmight u well know that I Intend to\ndivorce Val.\" _i_.__.vi_.\nGarenne Jerked forward tn hit\nchair when hit daughter told him\nahe intended to divorce Val. You\nhad better think very carefully before you throw away your lecurity, he cried harshly. \"I warn\nyou, you need expect no further\nhelp from me, financial or otherwise,\"\nLia cast him a icornful smile. \"Oh,\nyou needn't worry about having\nme on your handi. I suppose it\ndoesn't occur to you that I need\nneither you nor Vil? That someone elie might care for me?'\n\"Get it out of your silly head\nthat Cordray wanti youl\" Gsrenne\nsnorted in in excess of irritation.\n\"He'd run to cover at the first hint\nof open scandal.\"\n\"That is where you are mistaken.\nthe cried triumphantly. \"If you must\nbe told, he is quite mad about me.\ni He was in a rage at my going oft\nwith Val for his leave. I am different from anyone Maurice has ever\nknown. I stimulate hla every lm*\nIpulse for beauty. He hat created\n|wonderful thingi since he hu been\nlends with me-\u2014\"\n\"Are you retlly tuch a fool to\nilieve  that  twaddle!  Wake upl\n..he mm is merely flattering you\nUnto persuading your husband to\nbell him his invention. I've utis-\nBled myself on that icore. And be\nSure that when Cordriy content-\nilites min-iige he will insist on dis-\nIncUon, fimily ind money.\nHer eyes blued. \"I im \u2022 Gtrenne\nnd my mother wu t Fiti-James.\n-Uld even Maurice Cordray could\nask for no bluer than royal blood,\n[could he?\" Garenne's face darken-\nd forbiddingly. \"As for money.\"\nJi itormed on disregarding hii\nilick lookt, \"this seems a very good\n.Jme for you to tell me what you've\nIdone with my mother's estate. I\nlave tried  repeatedly to  dltcusi\nrill lubject with you but you never\ndll listen. Now I insist\u2014\"\nShe broke off u i door slimmed\nit the btck of the house. Then she\niwung iround ibout to fice Vtl\nivho strode through the hill to halt\nibniptly In the doorway.\nThe young mtn'i eyei burned,\nill Jiw was set in a harsh line. He\ntu nonpulsed, however, to find\nlarenne there and ai he itared\n\u25a0om Lia to her ftther he tented\nie electric itmoiphere in the room.\n\"How ire you ilr?\" he greeted\nie older man. Nothing to do now\nit make the belt of his presence.\n\"Well enough,\" Garenne aniwer-\n. ihortly. \"Though I mutt idmlt\nfind your wife nther difficult.\"\nThe old boy wu in e rage about\nimethlng.\nri am only asking for what belongs to me, Lia broke in defiantly. \"I hive a right to demind in\n\u25a0recounting. Whlt ibout my mother's\nlimlly tilver md the portraits?\n\"That about her pearls? I know you\nive them. You havo all the money\n.le left, too. And then there ll the\nilng't neckltce. It needn't remain\nIn the Metropolitan any longer,\nlurely. It can be converted Into\n:uh. It Is worth i fortune ind I\nihould like my share. In fact, I in-\n\u00abt on IL\" \u2022\nThey were both In a fury. \"Sup-\nie you talk about this some other\nline,   Vil broke ln.\nGtrenne hid Jerked to hit feet.\nBoring Vtl't attempted interfer*\nict he inirled at Lli, \"You insist!\nIndeed,   thit'i   good!   You   Insist!\nTell, let me inform you thit the\n[etropolitan bought the necklace\n.tree yean ago. It partially financed  my last  expedition into  the\nTobl.\"\nHis bald  statement    took    her\nireeth for a moment \"You told\nbe  neckltce!\"  ihe  finally  cried.\n'But you hadn't the right. I ihould\nIhire In my mother'i eitate. It ii\nit liw. If you hive told the neck*\njce ind pocketed the money, thit\nIt iteallng. I will demand a lettlement I will go to i liwyer. He\nihall force you to turrender what\nelongs to me \"\nGarenne towered as If he would\nitrlkt the girl and Val stepped forward between them. \"Calm down\nllr.** he ordered. The older man's\nree glowered like live black coals;\nle thrust back Vil's restricting\nlends. Benctth hli clipped mous-\naehe his mouth drew Into \u2022 itraight\nh-uel line. \"I've itood tnough from\nrou.\" he said Mvagely to Lia. \"Be\nllent\"\nI There wu no quieting either of\n[hem. They were like two snarling\nSlack panthers. The girl was br-\n|lde herself is the piced the floor,\nier imill hinds gesticulating violenl-\n\"I won't be atlll. You hive cheit-\nmd ttolen from me! Ftncy \u2022\nirenne t thief! Wtll, you must\npay what you havt taken. Or I\n11 till everyone how you dellb-\nitely pocketed whtt wu mine\nn my dead mother,\nht itepped ihort before the\nting blick eyu. As lt he were\nbruiting \u2022 knife Into her he uld\nllitlnctly: \"You havt uked for\nnil, my girl. Now you ire going\no get lt. My wife'i blood doesn't\nhow ln your veins, think God! Ag-\nIthi Fltz-Jtmei wu not your motn-\nBr. But the ptrt thit moulded you\nle easily Into \u2022 Mtnchu, you ctme\nly honestly. Tell this fellow COrd-\nTay ht Isn't the creitive artiit he\nImagined himself. You are my\ndaughter by a Chinese woman, do\nyou hearl You are part yellow!\"\nA garotte seemed to tighten about\nVal'i throat and shut off hit breath.\nLia. her hmdi still upraised, every\nvestige of expression wiped from\nher fice. stood transfixed. All three\nhad become motionless at wax fig*\nures.\nWhat was thit devasting, hor\nrlble thing Garenne had Just shouted at Lia? He couldn't have meant\nit! He had said ahe was part Chin*\nete! Val Preston's wife a Eurasian\nwoman. His blood turned to ice.\nAnd with it flashed the sudden\nthought, thtt now more than ever,\nhe must be rid of her. Jm couldn't\nask him to stand by after a thing\nlike this. Now he could be free.\nAt a little whimpering sound from\nLia, he glimpsed realization dawn.\ning in her eyu. At the itared et her\nupraised honey-gold hands, he mw\nthe momentary paralysis give way to\nhorror. He knew what she was\nthinking. Yellow hands! She was\ntrying to spesk. A pitiful croaking\nwhisper came from ner tight throat.\nChinese! A half-caste! He only said\nit to frighten me!\"\nThen the Spell snapped md the\ncried out wildly \"You lied to uve\nyour face! You are trying to frighten me!\"\nVal shook off his stunned InacUon.\nHis voice britUe, he snapped at\nGarenne. \"Why tall her a rotten\nthing like that? Do you wmt to\ndrive her mad?\"\nThe older man'i fice worked convulsively. There wu remorse md\nfelr ln hit eyei. \"I have tried to\navoid thli, Preston. I loit my head\nJuit now. But you've got to know\nthe truth. I have been in a terrible\nquandry for weeks. Now you must\nboth be told.\"     .\nTo Be Continued\nPERSONAL\nUP TO $60 EACH PAID FOR U. S.\nIndian head cents. We buy all\ndates, regardless of condition. Up\nto $1.00 each paid tor Lincoln\nHead centt. Up to $190 each (or\nCanadian colna. We buy Stamp\nCollections, Medals, Books, Old\nPaper Money, Gold, etc. Send 25c\n(coin) tor large illustrated price\nllit and Instruction!. Satisfaction\nSiaranteed or 29c refunded. Hub\noin  Shop,  159-3 Front Street,\nSimla. Ont. (2372)\nManufacturers' Distributors \u2014\nSuper Quality Latex\u2014Seeing Is\nbelieving\u201420 for $1.00; 0-iOc,\n72-$2.75. Assorted, postpaid.\nFeminine Hygiene Information\nupon request. Send 3c stamp.\nDIEZ SALES CO.,\n406 Maclean Blk., Calgary, Alta\n(2219)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods. 29 Latex assortment for $1.\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain. Free catalogue. National Importers, 218-eth. St Weit\nCalgary, Alta. (2478)\nEXPERT DRESSMAKER. FUR RE*\npaired. 911 Carbonate St Ph. 893L.\n(2377)\nEciema Itch Piles Ulcers Try Oeo Lee\nChina Remedy at Hudson's Bay Co.\n  (2391)\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED: SCALER, B. C. License, must have 1939 first aid\ncertificate, for portable mill in\nEast Kootenay. Apply stating\nwages, to Box 2620 Daily News.\n(2820)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nSAANAN BILLY TO RENT OR\nbuy. State age and price. A. Leaf,\nTaghum, (2636)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS.  ETC.\nFURN. OR UNFURN. APTS. BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts. bldg.\n(2403)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nFrigidaire equipped suites. (2405)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms. Apply 918 Kootenay Street.\n(Z339)\nFURNISED    HOUSEKEEPING\nroomi for rent Annable Block.\n(2404)\nWILLOW POINT PARTLY FURN.\nlakeside cottage. W.J. Dunn.R.R.I.\n(2609)\nWANTED\nWILL PAY THREE CENTS FOR\ndripping and 114 centt for fat, per\npound. Trail Chemical company.\n(2597)\nWANTED TO BORROW, FOLDING\nreclining chair for invalid. Roy\nPollard. (2614)\nCreston to Hear\nAhoul Cripples\nDr. Wace, Supt. of the\nSolarium, to Visit\nin August.\nCRESTON, BC. July 18-The\nJuly meeUng of Creston and District\nWomen's institute wis held at the\nhome of Mri. R. Steveni. The chair\nwu taken by the vlce-preiident.\nMrt. C. Murrell, In the absence ot\nthe president, Mrs. H. W. McLaren.\nThirteen memberi ind five visitors\nwere ln attendance.\nCorrespondence Included letteri\nfrom Dr. Young, provinciil officer\nof health, and Dr. Wace, medical\nluperlntendent of the Queen Alexandra eolarium. The latter it arranging a lurvey of the crippled children of British Columbia to ascertain the number of children requiring treatment, the facilities for\nproviding iuch trutment in any\npirticulir irei, tlso to review cuu\nthat have been under treatment.\nArrangement! were made for a public meeUng to hear Dr. Wace August 9.\nThe union library plan was discussed md the Institute wu in fivor of Dr. Helen Stewirt putting\non a publicity campaign later ln\nthe year. Date ot ichool fair wai\nnot let but will be fixed it the\nAugust meeting. It is poulble the\nfilr will be held In the new ichool\n\u2022t thc Ume ot opening In October,\nwhen lultable opening proceedings\nwill be staged.\nMn. Hayes reported for the cemetery committee, including a meeting\nwith the village council, which had\npromised to take care of hall rent\nfor a meeting in this connection at\na later date. A vote of thinks wu\ntendered Mrs. Hiyct for the ute of\nher home and grounds for the July\ntea and sale of cooking.\nMrs. Stevens reported for the\nneedlework committee, asking for\nplain sewing and crochet work, tuit-\n?ble for the Vancouver exhibition\nor which entries must be made bv\nAugust 18. She is arranging all\nsewing and needlework.\nA musical program followed the\nbusiness session. Those contributing\nwere Mrs. J. E. Johnston end Mils\nEdith Johnston, plmo duet: Joan\nLangston. recitation; Goldle Walker,\npiano aolo.\nThe tea holmes were Mrs. Stevens and Mrs. McLaren.\nSaskatchewan Folk at\nPassmore\nPASSMORE, B.C. July 21-Mrs.\nMcEachern and family and Mlss M\nJohnson. Mervln Johnion ind J.\nPond ire vlilton here from neir\nWeyburn. Saik.. gueits of Mr. and\nMrs. E. McNary.\nHelen Sanden of Trail ii a visitor here at the ranch for \u25a0 few dayi.\nMn. W. H. Stunden has returned\nto Trail for a short time.\nDrawers will not itlck if floor\nwax is rubbed on the sides and alto\non the drawen. Poliih well, because\nunless rubbed in thoroughly the\nwax forms i sticky costing.\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelson Dally Newi endeav\non to print only truthful classified idvertlsing md wlll appreciate having lti attenUon called\nto my advertiiing not conforming to the higheit standards of\nhonesty.     ,\nMAKE IT A DAILY\nHABIT\u2014READING\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISEMENTS\nRead Them! Use Them!\nIT PAYS!\nFor Service Phone\nJean Robertson at\n.1 44'\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nCLEAN COMFORTABLE HOTEL.\nFurnished cottages on beach.\nReal camping. Fishing and swimming, etc. Write to Outlet hotel\nW. A. Ward, Procter, B. C. (2382)\nAtPINE HtU, CHRISTINA LAKE,\nvia Cucade. Ideal holiday resort.\nBeautiful surroundings. Sporti.\n(2376)\nBALFOUR BEACH FOR HOLI-\ndayi. Modern furn. cottages. Boats.\nG. H. Green, Balfour, B. C. (2499)\nFOR SALE\nWE HAVE EVERYTHING AND\neverything ln the small rubber\nlines. Order by mail direct from\nmanufacturer and uve 79%. All\norden are mailed postpaid by ui\nin plain wrapper. Mail order catalogue sent free on request. Nov\nelty Rubber Mfg. Compmy, Box\n353, Dept K.5, Hamilton, Ontario.\n(2400)\nNEW HIND GEAR FOR MASSEY*\nHarrit freight wagon. Steel arms\nand tires, axle reinforced with\ntteel. Burns Coal It Cartage Com-\npany, Nelson, Phone 53.      (2599)\nDID YOU EVER THINK OF ADVERTISING IN\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED COLUMN\nLOST AND FOUND\nIt's Surprising How a Small Advertisement Will\nGet Results! TRY IT!\nFor Service Phone Jean Robertson at\n144\nOut of Town Readers\u2014Prompt Attention Given\nto Mall Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nUSED MORE    Largest in the Interior    READ MORE\nPOULTRY AND -CCS\nWe carry largut stock reconditioned\nPipe end fittings suitable for all\npurposes. Write Swarti Pipe Yard\n220-lst E Vancouver, B.C. (2492)\nTELEPHONE\n144\nFOR CLASS AD.\nRESULTS\nSACRIFICE FOR QUICK SALE.\nRockford adjustable saw-table, 2\nH.P. Engine. Almost new, 220 Vernon St. (2608)\nFOR SALE-BARRELS KEGS. Sugar sacki linen. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B.C.       (24931\n100 TONS HAY, SOLD STANDING,\nor put up on shares. Write L. E.\nMerry, Kimberley. B. C.  (2606)\nLAWN SEATS AND CHAIRS, BAR-\ngaln. Lawson's Factory, Nelson.\n(2613)\nPIANO TUNING\nTune. Clean. Demoth, Repair, special. Vancouver Tuner. Est 25 yrs.\nWrite E.C. Woodrow, Thrums, B.C.\n(2549)\nLEGHORN PULLETS\nVery   choice,   vigorous   birds,\nbred to lay and raised on clover\nrange.   8 weeks old, S5c each;\n10 weeks 76c md 12\nweeks 85c.\nSpecial pricei on lots of\n100 and over.\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nMilner, B.C.\n(2638)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nTWO COWS JUST FRESHENED.\nJ. Dosenberger. R.R.I. Nelton.\n(26071\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non euy terms in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Write for full information to 908-Dept of Natural Resources, C.P.R., Calgary, Alberta.\n(2375)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog a pocketbook, Jewelry or fur or anything else of vilue telephone\nThe Dilly Newi. A \"Found\"\nAd will be inserted without\ncost to you. We will coUect\nfrom the owner.\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nFILMS DEVELOPED-ANY SIZE,\n25c Wltb 1 print from each negative Extra prints 8 for 25c. Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon. (2374)\nNIUON DAILY NIWS CLASDI-IKD\nada. The leidlng \u2022aletmen ud\n-uven (or Nelton ud turroundlni\nMAD THI CLASSIFIED ADS.\nAdvertisers who desire msy\nheve repliei addrejaed to a oox\nat the Nelton Dally Nawt ud\nforwarded dally to their addreu. A chirge of 10 centa ii\nmade (or thli service. In thli\ncase add four words (Box \u2014\nDaily News) to the count for\ntht number of worda.\nBusiness and Professional Directory\n. Accountants Insurance and Real Estate\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, SJJ..E.\nInternational Accountant\nP.O. Box 1091     Nelson, B.C.\n  (2406)\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Anayer, Chemist Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer;\nSampling A ents at Trail and Tacoma Smelten. 301*305 Joiephlne\nSt. Nelaon, B, C. (2407)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer md Chemlit 618\nBaker Street Nelion. B. C.  P. O.\nBox No. 726. Representing Ship-\npen' intereit at Trail, B.C. (2408)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d.c palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelson.\n  (2514)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUT6M66lU_ MVtl-\nance. P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70. (2421)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Phone 135.      (2422)\nE.  M.   WARREN  D.C.   BOX  872,\nGllker Block, Fhone 115 or 755L.\n(2514)\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES-Thb Electric Store.\nSupplies and Installation!\nPhone 766                P. O. Box 1065\n (2409)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nA. H. GREEN CO., LTD 516 WARD\nSt. Phone 264 Nelson. B.C. (2410)\nH. D. DAWSON.       Nelson. B. C.\nMine Surveys and Reporta\nB. C. Lmd Surveyor.\n(2411)\nBoyd C. Affleck Fruitvale, B. C.\nLands, Mineral Claims, Waterworks, surveys, plans, eitlmatei.\n(2412)\nLOST-BROWN BROCADE POCK-\nctbook. Keep money, please return letters md keys, have no\nothen, 301 Medical Arta Bldg.\n  (2639)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nMODERN 7 ROOM HOUSE, FURN-\nace, fireplace, stone foundation,\nacre of land, fruit trees, garage,\noutbuildings, apply Mrs. Sinclair.\nStanley St. (2523)\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR\nList of wanted inventions and full\ninformation sent free. The Ramsay\nCompany, World Patent Attorneys, 273 Bsnk St Ottawa, Canada\n(2373)\nE. L. WARBURTON It COMPANY\nNELSON, B.C.\nMine Surveys. Plans and Estimatei.\nAgents Oils, Greases, Specialties. Bituminous coals from Crow'i\nNest Pus. Mine supplies and machinery. Ph. 239. P. O. Box 6*38.\n(2379)\nFlorists\nSprays, wreaths, symbolic deslgni.\ncarefully made at reaaonable prlcea.\nShipped anywhere. Cut flowen and\nSlants\u2014Phone 233\nN FLOWER SHOPPE\n  (2413)\nFurs\nGUARANTEED STORAGE-EX*\np-aft remodelling md repairing:\nlow rates; prompt service. Polar\nFun Ltd., 548 Granville, Vanc'r\n  (2498)\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD\nTHC BUYER AND SELLER\nOF THE  KOOTENAYS\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD.\nReal estate. Insurance, -entals.\n217 Baker St.        (24161\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estata. In-\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardwire, Baker Stree.      (2417)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery dcicriptlon. Real Eit Ph 99.\n(2418)\nH. E. DILL. A*0 Al-ft *TRE IN*\nsurance. Real Estate. 508 Ward. St.\n(2419)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE,\nrental!, Insurance. Annable Block.\n(2420)\nMachinists\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all classes ot Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.\nMotor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon Street\n(2423)\nMaternity Homes\nELIZABETH PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician In attendance. Ph. Broad. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wash.\n        (2424)\nMining and Mill Machinery\nEMPIRE MACHINES. LTD. NEL*\nson Mining and Mill Machinery.\n  (2360)\nPhotographs\n\"PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEASE\"\nGEO. A. MEERES. 715 Baker. Ph. 46\n (2425)\nSash  Factory -\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY Hardwood merchant. 217 Baker Street\n       (2426)\nSecond Hand Storea\nSEE ARK RECONDITIONED COOK\nstovei before buying new one.\n(2427)\nDRESSES AND SUITES AT MRS.\nRadclilfe's.  (2428)\nTypewriter Service\nNELSON TYPEWRITER AGENCY.\nSalei and service. Phone 197.\n        (2415)\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST, REASONABLE Work\nguiranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St.\n(2429)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nWELL-IVE OOT MAGGIE\nTHINKIN' THAT IAA ABOUT\nBROKE -1TU.BE 6REAT\nTO GO BACK TO THE\nOLD NEIGHBORHOOD AN\"\nUVE LIKE WE DID\nYEARS AGO-\nHUHl HERE COMES MAGGIES\nSINOIM'-TEACHEB- I GUESS HE\nALSO HAS HEARD THE NEW5*\nAN'THANK GOODNESS HELL\nMOT BE BOTHERING ME WITH\nMIS SIMOIN'LE*&SON&-IMU&T\n, LOOK SAD WHEN\njMlHE COMES IN-\nAWIMB.JIG6S-IM\nSOURY-IV\/E HEARD\nTHEeADNSWS-\n\u2014\nSTILL-YOU SHOULD BE\nHAPPY-AS YOUR WIPE\nWIU- NOT HAVE TD GIVE\nUD HER VOCAL LESSONS;\nSHE PAID ME POR\nTWO YEARS IN ADVANCE-\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Ruas Westover\nWEU, IT*\nEITHER\nV1BDOIN6\nBBJ-S R>1!\nTiuue\nORAL-**\n\u00bburr ro.\n\u2666looooc\nIT WOKE\nMACS\nXSAPPEAW\nAH, YOU'RE\nSUPERB \u2022 AND\nNOW,MY UTUE\nBRIDE-TO-BE,\nSMHERE SHALL\nVMS 60 ON OUR\nHONEYMOON-\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Sidney Smith\nWILL YOU LOOK. AT\nTHIS- A PERFECTLY GOOD\nGLOME LYING MERE ON\nTHE STREET-THE VERY\n. BEST QUALITY OF KID\n\\ **VNO PRATICALLV  J\n \u25a0\u2022\u25a0-\u25a0\"\n\u25a0\u2014****-\n\t\nMRS. MOODY SMILES\nRowing - Tennis - Sczcer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling '\nSPoRTft\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nTHE NILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.\u2014MONDAY MORNING. JULY 22. 1935\n\u25a0PAOE SIX\nFRENCH WINS\nmm PRIZE\nArmorer-Sergeant Has\n$1250 in Cash, and\nMedal and Badge\nBISLEY CAMP, Eng., July 21\n(CP Cable)\u2014On his ninth appearance in the final stage, Armorer-\nSergeant F. S. French Saturday\nwon the .King's prize, classic of\nempire service rifle shooting.\nFrench, formerly of the Hertford*\nehlre yeomanry, posted a fine 289\nout of a possible 300, despite bad\n\u25a0hooting conditions, to take the\nKing's prize of $1250 cash and the\nN.P.A. gold medal and gold badge.\nBest of thc nine Canadians in the\nfinal. Captain A. B. Coulter of Ottawa, with 284, finished in seventh\nplace, annexing an N.R.A. badge\n\u2022nd $50. Last year he was awarded\nthe King's medal for Canada for\ntbe \"best shot\" In the Dominion.\nPrivate A. S. Smith, formerly of\nthe Black Watch, was second with\n186. to win $200 and Sergeant L.\nSankey of thc Ordnance corps with\nUS was third, winning $125.\nGQLF\nB MORRISON M\n*-7TX\nIn looking at slow motion pictures\npf many swings, the outstanding\npoint about every incorrect swing\nu the knee position.    \u2022\nWith the average player the\nknees .are more or lesi separated\nthroughout the swing. It's just thc\nopposite with the expert.\nThe fault invariably originates\nin the starting position. Where the\nweight is about evenly divided between both legs in addressing the\nball, thc knees have a tendency to\nbend forward toward the baU. The\nleft does bend outward as thc back-\n. ewlng is made. Then, as the club\ncomes down, the right knee bends\ntoward the ball.\nThii outward bending keep! the\nknees decidedly apart thereby making the body balance very unsteady.\nA iteady balance while in motion\ncan be had only when the knees\nbend toward each other.\nH6n\\e.Rui\\s\nBy tha Associited Prm\nHome runs yeiterday: Ott, Glanti\n1; Dinning, Giants, 1; Jackson, Giants, 1; Stalnback, Cubs,']; Herman, Cubs, 1; O'Dea, Cubs, 1; Selkirk, Yankees, 1; Solters, Browns,\n1; W. FerreU, Red Sox, 1; Richards,\nAthletics, 1; Piel, White Sox. 1.\nSaturday home runs \u2014 Higgins,\nFoxx. Athletics, L. Berger, Indians,\nW. Berger, Braves, Klein, Cubs,\nVaughan, Pirates, Davis, Giants.\nThe leaders: Greenberg, Tigers,\n26; Ott, Giants, 22; Johnson, Athletics, 19; J. Collins, Cardinals, 18;\nBonura, White Sox, 18; Berger,\nBraves, 18; Foxx, Athletics, 18.\nLeague totals National 416; American 404; Total 820.\nYANKS AND THE\nBROWNSDIVIDE\nTigers Lose and Now\nTrail by Half\na Game\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW.     L.\nNew York  M\nDetroit 52\nChicago 4J\nBoston 44\nCleveland .--. 41\nPhiladelphia  3d\nWashington  36\nSt. Louis 26\n31\n34\n33\n41\n40\n44\n49\n96\nPel\n.617\n.605\n563\nS18\n.506\n.450\n.424\n.317\nCALIFORNIA IH\nA CLEAN SWEEP\nTakes All Five of the\nTennis Titles at\nVancouver\nNEW YORK, July 21 (CP). -\nYankeei divided a hard-fought\ndoubleheader with St. Loui! Browm\ntoday, winning the first game 2-0 and\nlosing the 10-inning second 2*1. The\neven break moved them half a game\nahead of the defeated Tigers.\nFirst game:\nSt. Louii  0   2  J\nNew York 2   6   1\nWalkup, Van Atta and Hemsley;\nBroaca and Dickey.\nSecond game:\nSt. Louia  2 11   1\n.New York   1   \u00bb   1\nKnott, Van Atta, Coffman and\nHemlsey; Tamulls and Dickey.\nWIHHERS AT\nBISLEY\nBISELY CAMP, Englind, July 21\n(CP cable).\u2014Principal winners in\nthe seventy-second annual N.R.A.\nending Saturday:\nThe Kings' prize\u2014Arm.-Sgt. F. S.\nFrench, Hertfordshire.\nKing'i lilver medal \u2014 Lt. C. A.\nSutherland, late Black Watch.\nKing's bronze medal\u2014Sgt. Matthew Penman, Montreal.\nPrince of Walei prize\u2014Mijor\nBanks-East. Gold Coast.\nQueen Mary's prize \u2014 Sgt. T.\nMoore, Hertfordshire.\nGrand aggregate\u2014Capt. C. H. Vernon, late R.A.M.C.\nAll-comers aggregate\u2014Cadet H.\nLeaver. Reading.\nKolapore cup (teami) \u2014 India\n(Canada defended).\nMacKinnon cun (teami)\u2014England (Canada defended).\nSt. George's challenge vase\u2014Lt. C.\nA. Sutherland, late Black Watch.\nCorporate of the City of London\u2014\nLieut. C. A. Sutherland.\nStock Exchange cup\u2014Clr.-Sgt. T.\nHickman. England.\nDonegall Challenge cup\u2014Lt. F. G.\nBooth, London.\nDaily Telegraph cup\u2014Sgt. Trivett,\n12th Lancers.\nDaily Mail cup\u2014Arm.-Sgt. F. S.\nFrench.\nKing's medal (best shot In the\narmy at home)\u2014Sgt.-Maj. T. Moore,\nSmall Armi ichool.\nEngland Names\nCricket Lineup\nLONDON. July 21 (CP cable).-\nLlneup of the team to represent\nEngland in the fourth test cricket\nmatch with South Africa was announced today as follows:\nWallv Hammond. R. ***.. S. Wyatt,\nJ. Hardstaff. D. M. Smith, A. Mitchell. W. Barber. W. E. Bowes. H.\nVerity. Clay, Robins, Leyland. Talc\nand Duckworth.\nThe last match at Leeds. July 17.\nendrd in a draw as did the first at\nNottingham, The Springboks won\nthc second at Lo\u2014\"\nTIGERS BEATEN\nBOSTON. July 21 (AP) .-Pinch*\nhitter Wes Ferrell'i long home-run\nsmash In the ninth inning with -two\nmen on base, gave Boston Red Sox\na 7-6 decision over Detroit Tigers\nhere today.\nWes batted for \"Lefty\" Grove and\ngave \"Lefty\" hi! twelfth victory of\nthe year and his sixth in a row.\nDetroit  6   13   1\nBoston  7   13   1\nBridges and Hayworth. Cochrane;\nGrove and R. FerreU.\nWHITE SOX WIN\nWASHINGTON. July 21 (AP>.-\nChlcago White Sox defeated Washington 4-2 here today as Ted Lons\nrang un his eleventh victory of the\nseason.\nThe Sox scored three runs In the\nfifth Inning when Plet hit a home\nrun.\nChicago  4   11   1\nWuhington       2    8  0\nLyons and Seweil; Newsom. Russell and Bolton. Holbrook.\nMEL HARDER WIN8\nPHILADELPHIA, July 21 (AP).-\nMel Harder pitched the Cleveland\nIndians to a 6-4 victory over the Athletics today, but he had a narrow\nescape in the ninth inning. A barrage of hits scored all thc Mack runs\nin the ninth and drove Harder off\nthe mound.\nCleveland  I   10   1\nPhiladelnhia 4   13   1\nHarder. Hudlin and Phillips; Blaeholder. Dietrich. Turbevllle and\nRichards.\nMiss Paget'* Colt\nBossover Wins\nANDOWN PARK, Eng., July 21\n(CP Cable)- Mlss Dorothy Paget's\ncolt Bossover won the rich national\nbreeders' produce stakes, one of the\nseason's greatest racei for the two-\nyear-olds, finishing two lengths in\nfront ot J. A. Dcwar's Sansonnet\nover five furlongs. Saturday.\nH. T. Barclay's Chiberta wu\nthird, only a neck behind Sansonnet. Thirteen ran.\nThe race, first run in 1889, was\nworth  approximately $27,000.\nFORT ROUGE WINS\nVANCOUVER, July 21 (API-\nCalifornia tonight claimed all five\nof western Canada's grass courts\ntennis titles, which concluded he:_\nSaturday, most complete domination by any state or province lince\nthe tournament's inception.\nJohn Murio, San Francisco and\nCanadian singles champion of 1933,\nled the southern parade with a four-\nset victory over lanky Gene Smith\nof Berkeley In the men's singles.\n9-7, J-6, 6-4, 7-5.\nMrs. Catherine Rose, Los Angeles\nveteran, ousted Jean Milne of Vancouver, in straight sets, 6-3, 6*2, in\nthe women's singles event.\nMrs. Rose teamed with Mrs. Margaret Laird of Glendale, Calif., to\neliminate the last Canadian in the\ntournament in defeating Mrs. J.\nRoss of Vancouver and Margaret\nOsborne of San Francisco, 6-3, 5-7,\n7-5 for the feminine doubles crown.\nRay Casey of San Francisco, veteran doubles star and one-tlinc\nWimbledon ace, and his youthful\npartner, John Law of Pasadena,\ntook the measure of Wayne Sabin\nand Ed Cooke of Portland to capture the men's doubles title, 6-3,\n5-7, 8-6, 3-6, 7-5.\nThe fifth and final tiUe assured\nto California in an all-southern final, went to Gussle Raegener of\nSan Francisco and Howard Blethen\nof Berkeley who downed Margaret\nCharles Welsner of Berkeley, ETA\nOsborne of San Francisco and\nCharles Welsner of Berkeley. 6-4.\n3-6, 6-3.\nDIVING\nNEVER OVERLOOK FINE POINTS\nIN FORWARD DOUBLE SOMERSAULT\nWINNIPEG, July 21 (CP)-Dead-\nlocked in their bid tor Manitoba's\nsoccer title, Fort Rouge Rangers\nand United Weston rested today in\npreparation for a third game that\nwill decide provincial representation\nin Dominion Football associations\nplaydowns.\nA two-game seriei wai extended\nto three here Siturday when Rangers defeated Weston, 1934 champions.\n3-1 to knot thc game-count. A third\ngame will be played Tuesday and\nthe winners, drawn against West\nFort William Wanderers in a two-\nTame series here next Monday and\n\"uesday.\n5cou\u00bbcT\nYATES WINNER\nAMATEUR TITLE\nCOLORADO SPRINGS, July 21\n(AP).-Charley Yates of Atlanta, recent graduate of Georgia Tech. won\nthe western amateur golf championship on the panoramic mountainside\nBroadmoor course here today by defeating the medalist, Rodney Bliss\nof Omaha, dapper 22-year-old Insurance salesman. I and 3.\nYatei puUed out of a midday deadlock with steady, consilient golf to\ngain his decisive margin and succeed\nZell Eaton of Oklahoma City as the\nwestern champion.\nPlay was mediocre through the\nfirst 18, each finalist ihooUng 37\nout and 39 bick for 71a. six over par.\nThey went to lunch all square.\nMRS. FALLIS IS\nSECOND WOMAN\nOTTAWA. July 21 (CP)-An eloquent and pubUc-spirited wife of a\nPeterborough OnL farmer, Mrs.\nHoward T. Fallis, today held thc distinction of being the second woman\nmember of the Canadian aenate.\nShe ii the third of her tex to hold\na seat in Canada'! parliament, and\nthc only woman on the government\nside ot the red chamber.\nThe name of Mrs. Iva Campbell\nFallis appeared among Ihe list of\n10 senaton named by Prime Minister R. B. Bennett last night. She is\na daughter of Ontario who has\nknown the rigors of life on a Saskatchewan prairie farm, and combines the ability of performing most\nof the heavy duties of farm life\nwith that of an eloquent platform\nspeaker.\nMrs. C. Wilson of Ottawa wag the\nfirst woman senator, summoned in\nFebruary 1930 by the then Prime\nMinister W. L. Mackenzie King.\nLong before that, in 1921, Miss Agnes Macphail was elected to commons, the first of her sex to tit in\na Dominion parliament.\nFemie Wins Most\nin Mine Contests\nEditor'! Note: Thli li om bf a\nseries of 10 articles on diving written by the famoui authority, Fred\nSponberg, the man who developed thl sensational Plte Dei Jar-\ndinei ind who haa been coach of\nAmerican Olympic diving teami.\nAnother article wlll appear In our\nnext issue.\nBy FRED SPONGBERG\nFimoui Olympic Diving Coach\nThe take-off ln the forward double somersault ls the same at in the\none and one-half forward somersault, which was the subject of the\nprevloui article.\nTh tuck in the forward double ii,\nof coune. held a little longer ln\norder to make the two turna and the\nfeet-firat entry into the water.\nIn the double somersault with\ntuck, as here shown, the tuck must\nbe distinct uo to the point ot final\nrelease of the legs, for the straight-\nNo, 7-Forward Rouble Somemult fning out of the body and the entry\ninto the water.\nThe forward  double  somersault in the entry the leg! muit be\nis one of the most difficult dives to stnlght,  armi  at side, toes  well\nperform successfully. pointed.\nIt is not that it so difficult to A common difficulty ia in com-\nmako two lomenaulti in the itr pleting the iecond somersault high\nfrom a running spring, but that it enough above the water to permit\n1 is difficult to observe all the fine the full  straightening out of tl*\nI points of good diving form at the body at the moment of entry.\nsame time. This dive is an optional The pike may also be used In per-\ndive in diving competition. forming this dive.\nBUDGE WINS FOR\nU.S. IH TENNIS\nBeats German Youth\nin Only Match in\nDavis Cup\nWIMBLEDON, Eng., July 21 (AP)\n\u2014Red-headed young Donald Budge,\n\"scared stiff\" by hli own admission,\nbut nevertheless able to settle down\nand play grown-up tennis when\nreally threatened, got the United\nStates a-'ay to a running start Saturday by whlp-iin? Germany's\nequally youthful Helner Renkel be\nfore rain washed out the other half\nof today's Davis cup competition.\nAfter scrambling around for three\nsets of tennis that looked more like\na prep ichool match than an international duel of nnking players.\nBudge outscored Renkel, 7-5, 11-9,\n6-8, 6-1. Thus he poited the tint\npoint for America in the interzone\nflnali. the outcome of which decides\nEngland'! challenger.\nRAIN STOPS THE PLAY\nWUUam AUIson, 1**e Texan, and\nGottfried von Cramm, Germany'!\nNo. 1 man. then ut around ln their\ntennii clothes for more than an hour\nwaiting In vain to itart the second\nlinglei mitch. It rained steadily most\nof that time and the center court\nwai kept covered. Then, when the\ndownpour ceased, there wasn't\nenough time left to play more than\na set or so and the team captains\nagreed on a postno\"\u00bbment of the\nplay until Monday.\nCubs Down N.Y.\nTwice; Cards Do\nSame to Dodgers\nGiants' Lead Is Cut to\n1 1-2 Games\nNATIONAL LEAGUI\nW   L\nPet\nNew York _.... 53   28\n.654\n.W\nChicago    51   34\n.60C\nPittsburgh  46   41\n.Mi\nBrooklyn  38   44\n.462\n.4S.1\nPhiladelphia 36  47\n.43-\nBoston  21   65\n.244\nFERNIE, B. C, July 21-The 14th\nannual contests of the East Kootenay Mine Safety association werc\nheld in Fernie Saturday, teams\nfrom Kimberley, Michel, Coal Creek\nand Fernie entering.\nIn the mine rescue event the\nshield and first prize wai won by\nthe Coal Creek team headed by Joe\nHaile with 95.4 per cent. The iecond\nprize went to the Fernie team led\nby William Chapman with 92.5 per\ncent and the third by the Michel\nteam led by H. Adams with 92 pcr\ncent.\nIn the confined senior event of\nthe first aid section the Fernie team\nled by Albert Smith won first place\nwith 92 per cent. Second place was\ntaken by lhe Kimberley team led\nby Joe McLay with 88 per cent and\n(hlrd by thc Michel team led by J.\nFcrrlon with 86 per cent.\nIn the ladies' event the Femle\nteam led by Peggy Minifee won fint\nplace with 97 per cent Second place\nwas taken by the Coal Creek team\nled by S. Arrowamith with 89 per\ncent.\nIn the Junior lection fint prize\nwai won by Harrv Green'i teim\nfrom Femie with 98 oer cent. Second ol-.ee wai taken bv the Coal\nCreek teim led bv George Anderson with 90 ner rent.\nIn in Eait Kootenav football\nleague game between Fernle and\nKimberley In Femle Saturdav. Kimberley took the lead at the first of\nthe game and kent It all the wav\nthroufh flnlshlnir with a score of\n3-0. Benn\u00bbt nf Fernle w\u00bbs awarded\na penalty kick but milled.\nBEAVERS WIN OPENER OF TRAIL\nBANTAM BASEBALL LEAGUE I to 5\nResults\n^    0\t\nSATURDAY RESULTS\nNATIONAL\nNew York 2, Chicigo 7.\nPhiladelphia 9. Cincinnati 3.\nBoston 2-3, Pittsburgh 14-6.\nSt. Louis-Brooklyn, rain.\nAMERICAN\nDetroit 6, Boston 5.\nCleveland 15-2. Philadelphia 3-5.\nChicago 1-2. Washington 0-9.\nNew York-St.  Louis, rain.\nPACIFIC COAST\nPortland 7, San Francisco 11.\nSeattle 15. Hollywood 2.\nLos Angeles 3. Oakland 6.\nMissions 3, Sacramento 4.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMontreal 0-1, Toronto 4-0.\nRochester 8, Buffalo 5.\nNewark 11, Syracuse 0.\nBaltimore 4, Albany 3.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMineapolis 16, Columbus 1.\nKansas City 10, LouisviUe 4.\nMilwaukee 7, Indianapolis 9.\nSt, Paul 6, Toledo 7.\nSUNDAY RESULTS\nPACIFIC COA8T\nPortland 4, 2: San Francisco 2, 0.\nSeattle 5, 1, Hollywood 3, 5.\nl.oj Angeles 1, 4; Oakland 5, 4.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nSt. Paul 1,13: Toledo 7,13.\nMilwaukee 4, 3: Indianapolis 3, 4.\nKansas City 17, 5; Louisville 5 4.\nMinneapolis 4, 8: Columbus 5, 7.\nINTERNATIONAL\nBaltimore 6-3, Albany S-0.\nMontreal 2, Buffalo 4.\nToronto 8-12, Rochester 4-6.\nNewark 3-5, Syracuse .1.\nWINS LIPTON CUP\nMINNEAPOLIS, July 21 (CP).-\nThc Linton cup. emblematic of the\nchampionship of the Northwestern\nRowing association's annual regatta,\nwaa on lti way to Fort William tonight.\nBy a margin of more than 50\npoints Firt WUliam crewmen raced\nover Lake Minnetonka Saturday to\nwin the cup for the fint tir**e in\nyean, the cup that with almost monotonous regularity had been won\nannually by rowers from Winnipeg.\nNANAIMO WINS TITLE\nVANCOUVER. July 21 (CP).-\nNanalmo City eleven tonight were\nBritish Columbia's representatives\nin the Dominion Football association\ninterprovinclal playdowns for the\nConnaught trophy after a convincing\n7-4 over Westminster Royals, onetime Dominion champions. In the\nprovincial final here Saturday.\nBoth Teams Play Fine\nType oF Baseball\nTRAIL. B.C., July 21\u2014With bases\nloaded, In thc fifth, Erickson poled\nout a three-bagger which won for\nDoc Muir's Beavers thc opening\nTrail City bantam league baseball\nfixture from Harry Rothery's Cubi\nat Butler park Saturday afternoon.\nAlter that three-bagger, Michealy,\nCub hurler, was yanked and Frisby\nsubstituted. In the fateful fifth Michealy only allowed two hits but\nthree batters reached first on balls.\nDespite a few untimely erron.\nthe game had all the earmarks of\na senior fixture for chuckers of both\nteams werc working splendidly and\nreceiving worthy support from the\nfields.\nBoth squads coUected runs in the\nopening inning, Cubs 1 and Beavers\n2. Saprunoff was a little erratic at\nthe outset, for two batters that\nfaced him walked. However one\nman was thrown out at third and\nSaprunoff struck out two, to reUre\nthe side. One of the three men to\nreach fint scored on erron. Julie\nBllesky made a circuit clout for\nBeavers in the same inning to icore\ntwo runi.\nNo hiti were allowed by either\nchucker in the second and third\ninnings. Beavers collected one run\nin the fourth and Cubs two, to tie\nthe score 3-all.\nCubs were held hitless in the fifth\nand sixth but collected two runs In\nthe seventh, Beaven' streak of luck\nin the fifth having given them an\nadditional four runs to win.\nSaprunoff, who went the route\nfor Beavers on the mound, struck\nout nine, walked five and allowed\nonly three hits.\nMichealy who hurled for four innings and part of the fifth, struck\nout seven, walked four and allowed\nsix hits. Hc retired the ilde in the\nthird inning via the itrike-out\nroute. Allan Frisby, during the two\ninnings of pitching allowed no hits\nand itruck out one. He received\nsplendid support.\n\"Scotty\" Ross umpired.\nRHE\n7 6 2\n5   8   2\nBeaven _ 200 140 \u2022\nCubi     100 200 2\nThe teami were\nBeaven\u2014Dickie Price, 2b, Harvey\nSmith. 3b: Erlckaon, n; Julie Bllesky, lb; Butter Smart cf; Gerald\nSimpson, c; Sam Sapronoff, p; Reg\nSmart, rf; and Brick Edmund!, lf,\nCuhi\u2014Billy Burke, If; Earl Dwyer, 2b; Donald Michealy, p; Brownlee, c; Hugh McLeod, ss; A. Balano,\ncf; Allan Frlsby, p; Donald Twaddle, 3b: G. Wilby, rf; and A. Dodimead, lb.\nUSE THE WANT ADS\nCHICAGO, July 21 (API-Chicago Cubs cut down the Glanti in\nboth games of a doubleheader today,\n5-4 in 11 innings and 11*5, to reduce\nthe New Yorkers' lead over St.\nLouis in the National league to 11-2\ngames.\nFirst:\nNew York    4  11   2\nChicago     6   10   1\nHubbell tt Danning; Carleton,\nRoot & Hartnett.\nSecond:\nNew York     5    I   1\nChicago     11   11   0\nSout, Smith, Chakncn It Danning;\nLee, Warneke It Odea.\nCARDS TAKI TWO\nST. LOUIS, July 21 (AP)-Back\nin championship stride, the world\nchampion Cardinals today cut the\nNational league lead of the New\nYork Gianti to 1 1-2 gamea, taking\nboth endi of a doubleheader from\nBrooklyn Dodgen here 13-7 aad 7*5\nwhile the Glanti were dropping a\ntwin billing to the Cubi at Chicago.\nFint:\nBrooklyn     7   11   3\nSt. Louli     13   15  0\nMunns, Vance, Mungo Is Phelps;\nHainei, P. Collim tt Delancey, Davii\nSecond:\nBrooklyn       8   12   1\nSt. Loiui 7   14   1\nLeonard, Clark, Heusser, Bablch\ntt Lopez; J. Dean, Walker tt Delancey, Davis.\nPHILADELPHIA TWICE WINS\nCINCINNATI, July 21 (AP)-Curt\nDavis and Joe Bowman pitched\nPhiladelhpla to two ihutout vlctorlei\nover Cincinnati today, Davii taking the Tint 4-0, and Bowman the\nnightcap, 2-0 Bowman allowed five\nhits and Davis six.\nFint:\nPhiladelphia\nCincinnati\nDavis & Todd\nErlckson.\nSecond:\nPhiladelphia      2   8   1\nCincinnati   0  5  3\nBowman tt Todd; Hollingsworth,\nNelson tt Lombardl.\n7-0 FOR PIRATES\nPITTSBURGH. July 21 (AP)-Be-\nhlnd the four-hit pitching of BUl\nSwift Pittiburgh downed Boiton 7-0\ntoday to make it four itraight for\nthe Piratei and the Bravea' 15th\nconsecutive defeat.\nBoston     0\nPittsburgh 7\nBrandt tt, Hogan; Swift tt\nden.\nCLOSE!\nTop Row, next rail wlm close race fram Vlear at Empire City.\n3attii\\A\nBy tha Associated Pnu\nArky Vaughan carried hii batUng\naverage back up into the rarefied\nregion near the .400 mark when he\nhad a perfect day at the plate with\nthree nits yesterday. That added\nseven points to hii mark to hoist\nit to .396 but he couldn't shake his\nleading big six 'rivals. Joe Medwick and Bill Terry each hit five\ntimes in eight times at bat for six-\npoint gains. Bruce Campbell of\nCleveland broke In at the bottom\nof the sextet, replacing Jlmmle\nFoxx, who failed to hit and lost five\npoints. Campbell connected twice in\nfour attempts.\nThe standing\nG AB R H Pet.\nVaughan, Pirates 73 265 67 105 .396\nMedwick, Cards 82 342.75 128 .374\nTerry, Giants ... 84 355 61 125 .352\nVosmik, Indians .. 81 341 46 119 .349\nCramer, A's  _ 80 356 57 123 .345\nCampbell, Inds . 69 258 50   88 .311\nCOOPER TAKES\nST. PAUL OPEN\nSmashes Scoring Mark\nby Seven Strokes;\nWins $5000\n\u2022 ST. PAUL. Minn., July 21 (AP).-\nOn his happy hunting groundi of\ngolf, Harry Cooper, 141-pound ihot-\nmaking wizard from Chicago, fin*\niahed hit greateit scoring spree to*\nday to win the $5000 St. Paul open\nchampionship with a record 72-hole\ntotal of 271 shoti. Cooper smashed\nthe scoring mark for the St. Paul\nshow 'by seven blowi ind finished\nfour shota ahead of the former record-holder at 178. Horton Smith of\nChicago, whose total of 13 under par\nfor 275 got him second place.\nCooper shot a 68 In the Initial\nround, came back with a 67 yesterday and then stayed out in front today with mother pair of 68s.\nHis scoring outbunt, most of It accomplished under a burning sun,\nwai worth 81200 in prize money.\nCooper was 17 shoti under par,\nbut the icoring wis so dizzy thit two\nplayen who broke par by one thot\nwith 187s found themselvei Ued for\ntwelfth nlace.\nBill Kaiser. Louisville pro, won\nthird nlace with successive rounds of\n68-70-67-74-279, with Frank Walsh\nof Chicago and Pat Sawyer, Minneapolis amateur, tied for fourth.\nWalsh shot 68-73-71-71\u2014283. while\nSawyer easily won the low amiteur\nmedal with 70-75-70-68.\nRay Mangrum, Loi Angeles pro\nwho led the field with in opening\n67, finished in l sixth place deadlock\nwith Denny Shute of Chicago, at\n284. Mangrum had 67-69-75-73 to\nShute'i 72-71-72-69.\nR. J. Relgh of Winnipeg, only Canadian in the conteit. finished far\ndown the Hit with i total of 298.\nLAWN BOWLING\nTITLES SPLIT\nVancouver and the\nIsland Break\nEven\nVANCOUVER, July\nVancouver Island and mainland representatives split even Saturday\nin the windup of the British Columbia Lawn Bowling association'!\n13th annual tournament with three\ntltlei going to the Iiland and the\nothers remaining in Vancouver.\nWillie Kenmare, last year'a cham-\niion of champions from Cumber-\nBnd, captured thc Seaton open\nsingles silverware when he defeat\ned Fred Harmon of the Burnside\nclub, Victoria, 19-15 in the final.\nDave Ewens and Joe Barton of\nNlnaimo downed their fellow\ntownsman, Jock Sutherland and\nJohnnie Christie, 15-10 for the Mercer doubles title.\nNanai\/io, with an entry of three\nrinks and an average of 8 2-3 shots\nup, won thc Barnard rlnk trophy,\nfinal event of the tourney.\nTom White and Bob Gray of\nVancouver won the Wee McKay\ntrophy; Jimmy Boyd and Walter\nFowler of Burnaby, B.C., captured\nthe Oakland doubles, and Jimmy\nRichmond ot Vancouver skipped his\nrink to victory in the Nelion final.\nTENNIS TITLE\nPUY TODAY\n    4   11   1\n0    6  2\nDerringer, Frey tt\nVICTORIA, July 21 (CP)-The\ngateway to Canada'! 1935 tennis\nchampionships opens tomorrow with\na near record list of 140 net wield-\nen entered from British Columbia,\nManitoba, Saskatchewan, Ontario\nand the United States Pacific coast.\nWith play starting at 11:00 a.m..\nleven of the 14 leeded playen will\nget into action tomorrow, headed by\nWalter Martin of Toronto and Regina, ranked third in the tournament listings.\nRidley Trounced\nal Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, July 21 (CP)-\nTouring Ridley college cricketers\nleft here today en route to Victoria\nfor two gamei with an iiland city\neleven and hopes of bettering their\nBrlUsh Columbia record which now\nstands at two straight defeats.\nVancouver Colts, a representative\nmainland team, downed the easterners for their second loss ln ai many\ngarnet here Saturday In the moit\none-sided matches since the Ontario .quad itarted the tour.\nDismissing Ridley for 73 runs, the\nColti, led by Noran Pearson and\nDave Carey, his up 257 for one\nwicket\n4  1\n13   0\nPad-\nEdmonton Soccer\nTeam Advances\nCALGARY, July 21 (CP)-Edmonton Radiali were waiting here\ntonight to meet Lethbridge Supinas\nfor the right to represent Alberta\nIn the Dominion Football anocii-\ntion champlonihlp pliydowni following their overtime 2-1 victory\nover Calgary CPJt. here Saturday.\nBIRTHDAY GREETINGS\nBy Tha Canadian Prm\nTo Carl Owen Hubbell, thi screwball king of major league baseball.\nThe great New York Giant lefthander is 32 yean old today. He\nhai been one of baseball's greatest\nhurlen since 1932. He comet from\nCarthage, Mo.\nTRAIL TROUNCES\nSPOKANE NINE\nRothery, Hall, McTier\nPole Out Home\nRuns\nTRAIL, B.C., July 21\u2014Three double playi and three home rum wire\nthe itar attainment! of the Trail\nsenior baaeball nine when they\nhumbled McGoldrick lumber company team of Spokane, 9-1, at\nButler park Sunday afternoon.\nHarry Rothery. Tick Hall and\nGordie McTier hit the onion for\ncircuit clout! while Tick Hall, Tommy Harrison and Slivers Decimbrinl\nfigured in the three double plays,\nHarrison and Hall each making a\nfiut-out and an assist on two ot tha\nhree snappy playi.\nThe icore might have been more\nErodigioui but fortunately for tha\numbermen Hall waa fint man to\nbat when he poked out hii homer ln\nthe teventh and McTier and Rothery repeated the feat successively.\nHowever a strange field for the\nviliton gave the homc team an advantage, the Spokaners being accustomed to a grass field ana flat\ncountry. With a mountainous background the fielders claimed they\ncould not see the ball until it wai\nwell Into the air.\nBogstie allowed only two hits dur*\ning nil five on the mound. Hi\nstruck out six and hit one with I\npitched ball. No man facing htm\nreached flnt on balls. Ruddell, who\nwent in ln the sixth, struck out one\nwalked one and allowed three hlta\nThe mysterioui Thomai, who hae\na peculiar etyle of hii ewn, pitchec\ngood ball but lacked lupport. Hi\nstruck out five, allowed 18 hits anc\nwalked one.\nReco Martin and Maxie Pllui\nwere umpires.\nThe score: R H 1\nSpokane  000 000 100   1   5 \u25a0\nTrail    002 022 30-   9 18\nThe teams:\nSpokane \u2014 Goodwin.. Henderson\nEdge, Day, Hagenan, Elixman\nSwanson, Brown and Thomai.\nTnU\u2014Demore, Rothery, Morria\nHonwill, Decimbrinl, Fairbaim\nHarrison, Hall, McTier, Riddell and\nBogaUe.\nCRICKET SCORES\nLONDON, July 21 (CP cable).-\nRain throughout the countrysidi\nhimpered fint dayt' play in thi\ncounty cricket competlUon Saturda:\nwith the result that fint innlngi ll\nmany gamei could not be com\nPleted.\nCloiing icores:\nSurrey 304 rum for iix wicket\nvi. Lancashire at the Oval.\nKent 36 for no wicketa vs. Middle\nsex at Maidstone.\nYorkihire 110 for four vi. Not\ntinghamshire at NotUngham.\nHampshire 196; Glamorgan 93 to\nsix; at Bournemouth.\nSussex 208 for four vi. Wirwlcki\nihire at Birmingham.\nWorcestershire 93; Nothampton\n\u2022hire 80 for three; at Northampton.\nSomenet 56 for four vs. Essex e\nClaxton.\nGlouceatenhlre 234; Derbyshin\n148 for two; at Burton-on-Trent\nGRADS\nCL^aA^btee\/*\nt~* Save tlx*\nSen* the\nPremium Cards\u2014\nAnil S3 Maki a set\nO. Grothe Ut.\nMtnult-turtn\nGRADS\n \t\nG\\6\n    THI NELION DAILY NIWI. NILSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. JULY tt 1938\nRussian Army Coat Proves\n\"Open Sesame\" to Fascism\nBlackshirts Heap Honors on Visitor Attired\nAs a Soviet Officer; Big Surprise\nBy PIERRE VAN PAASSEN I\nCentral Press Canadian Writtr\nTRIEST, July 31\u2014It wu Sunday\neorning when the ship on which\n! had taken passage from Cyprus to\nPrieite hove ln light of the ancient\n:lty of Brlndlal. We hed been buffeted on the Ionic sea by a roaring\nempest which had been so bad that\nrven the Italian uilon had joined\nn the ilnging of interceislonary\nrns to the \"Star of the Sea.\"\nhad come through, however,\nelth the lou of one funnel and one\nArabic gentleman, a deck-passenger,\n\u00bbho was iwept overboard, and we\nHere now running into Brlndlsi,\niccompanied by two roaring hydro-\n\u2022jlmei whose pilots signalled to our\nseptain on the bridge. I tiled to\nInterpret these signals by what had\nbeen taught me long ago ln the late\nSwn Hughes' army on the undy\nplains of Borden camp, but it wu\nwon plain to me that the Italians\nbave an entirely different code.\n'Advance in spread-out formation\"\nbu no meaning to a ihlp, nor hu\nthe order \"close to the ground\" to\n\u2022 seaplane. Anyhow, passengers\nwere told that they may go ashore\nin Brlndlsi for three houn and I\nwas one of the few who availed\nlimielf ot this opportunity to see the\nplace where Cicero once sweated\nKt profusely ln fear of capture.\nBANOITS' BIRTHPLACE\nBrlndlsi miy not be worth looking at\u2014modern guide-books don't\nley an awful lot about It\u2014but the\n\u2022My hu a very respectable past Not\nsnly wu it once the chief port at\nlhe end ot the great Roman highway for Greece  end  the whole\nOrient, whence Pompey and Tltut\nind Julian set out for their conquest\nbf the eut, but it li -lso the birthplace of several celebrated poets,\nwiton. Mint! tnd popes. After so\nmtny renowned men and u If to\nstrike a Juit balance tn the order\nDt thingi, nature alio arranged that\nlhe moit redoubtable bandit of the\nlut  century,    Rlnaldo   Rlnaldini,\nihould have teen the light of day\nn  Brlndiil.  Adoletcentt  In Ittly\nitlll retd of hit exploit! in penny\nlreidfuli,   whoie glaring   get-up\nrith flowing blood prominently dismayed on the outtide cover, re-\nnlnded one of our own Nick Carer and Lord Letter eplct.\nIt wu bitter cold  in  Brlndlsi.\n\"he whole European climate ii out\nf order this year tnd Italy it no\nrxceptlon. I wu glad when I got\nshore to have taken my overcoat\nlong, a huge cloak, which cornea\ntown to the heels. Thli coat, the\nooat useful cover I have ever poi-\netied,  it of  Russian  origin.     I\nwapped it for a raincoat with a\nloviet cavalry officer in Magnito-\ntrol two yeari ago. I put up the\nlollar and with a  Basque beret\nlulled iliek over my held felt noth-\nng of the biting wind.\n'ASCIST8 8TA0E\ntXPOSITION\nThe streets were deserted. The\n\u2022lm treei on the main square bent\nloubie under the onslaught of rain\nind wind. A church bell wu toll\nng a melancholy lament somewhere\nn the distance. I dropped into a\ntoffee-house and had a \"capuccino\",\nehlch is a double-distilled coffee\nwrved with cream one of the de-\nIghti of Italy, which I herewith\nrecommend to \u00bb11 prospective tra*\nrellen in that country. Juit uy:\n\"tin' capuccino!\" and pronounce\n\u2022toon kapootchlno.\"\nThen I ventured forth again.\nIttle dreaming what extraordinary\nulventure awaited me around the\ntext comer. Above the entrance\nst an official-looking building I\naotlced a sign. It read: \"Exposi-\nion of the Fascist revolution. Under\nIhe auspices ot the Fasclo of ex-\nloldlen.\" Ought to be worth lee-\nng. I thought by myself tnd steooed\naside. I pushed open \u2022 thick,\n\u25a0uind-proof leather door and\nejangp I stood facing a squad of\nTucist militia men. The squad was\n(resenting armi and tome officers\nn gold-braided uniforms, tbelr\nireasts glittering with decorations,\nbad raised their anna in the Fascist\nlalute. I recovered my wilt tnd\nsaluted btck, the first time I ever\ntailed my right htnd in the Romtn\nItyle*\nMADE HONORED GUEST\nImmediately one of the officen\nItepped forward and asked me If\nle might have the honor of guiding\nBie  around.  I  forthwith   granted\nhim the privilege while thanking\nim for his courtesy. In thli way\nuw the exposition, which con*\nlotted  of  t  collection  of  photo*\nUraphi of riott. photoi of socialist\n\u25a0newspsper officet wrecked, of pro-\nBminent liberal! beaten up and ei-\nHcorted to jail and the physiogno-\n\u25a0mlet of an endless low of generals,\n\u25a0iiii j ont of whom wu ntmed to me\n\u25a0with til Mi title* tnd the victoriu\nhis  credit  There  were  fur\nthermore copies of manifestoes limed by the Duce ln thoie hectic\nhoun when Fascism Installed ltaelf;\nlieces of broken furniture from the\nlomes of opponents; tom flags;\nnewipapen under glau; photoa of\nFascists killed ln the scramble, with\nwreaths of oak leavei tround the\nframes, very beautifully done. In\nt comer burned a votive Ttrtxp, 'To\nthe memory of the ions of Brlndlsi.\n'caduti per un' plu grande Italia,\"\nfallen for a greater Ital.\". I bowed\nmy hetd for \u2022 moment while thinking of the ardent youth of this\ntunny lind whose generoui blood\ndyed red the snowi of the Julian\nAl] ^^^\u2122\nMarket and Mining News\nAlpi.\nSUPPLIED WITH ESCORT\nA troupe of peasant! from the\nneighborhood came ln and I noticed how they kissed the torn battle flags that had once flown on\nthe Carzo an dthe Plane and at Vit-\ntorlo Veneto. Then I had to go. My\nboat wu leaving ln an hour's time.\nOne of the offlcen. the Count Or*\nsinl, uked me whether I would use\nhis car. I thanked him, but uld I\npreferred to walk. If I Insisted on\nwalking, then I must at leut accept an escort of honor. An escort?\nThere wu no getting away from it.\nI ihook handi all around and\nstepped back, clicked my heels,\nraised my hand Roman ityle once\nmore\u2014funny how quickly one gets\nthit habit\u2014and then I marched\nback through the main streeU of\nBrindisi with cltiiens to watch the\nprocession, four blackshirts' bayonet! fixed behind, four blackshirts'\nfixed ln front and by my tide a\nlieutenant with a steel hat tnd\ndrawn sabre. So I got back to the\nship, where my arrival wu greeted with a roaring hip-hip-hurrah\non the part of my fellow-passengers.\nwho were hanging over the starboard rail.\nCLOAK DID IT\nBefore ascending the gangplank\nI had to go through the motion once\nmore ai my honor guard itood at\nthe preient Then u I ihook handi\nwith the lieutenant he said: \"It hai\nbeen an unusual privilege to ihow\nour exposition of the Fascist revolution to a Russian officer like yourself!\"\n' A Rusalan officer? Heavens\nabove! Now I had the secret of the\nwhole performance. The overcoat\nhad done it.\nFor the reit of that journey to\nTrieste nothing was good enough\nfor me on that ahlp. When we\nsteamed into the magnificent harbor of Trieste I wu hobnobbing\nwith the captain on the bridge. I\nwaa introduced to the port authorities and needn't even ahow my\npassport. What a power a coat has!\nMONTREAL OFF\nVOTES TO COUNT\nFROM ABSENTEES\nElectors Away to Cast\nBallots at Nearest\nPolling Place\n\u2014\u2014\u2014 ^\nOTTAWA. July 21\u2014(C*\u00bb)\u2014 Absentee voting will be Introduced for\nthe flnt time ln Dominion elec-\ntioni at the coming general election\nand may delay the completion of\nreturns in constituencies wbere numerous voters are away from home.\nThe privilege of voting away trom\nhome Is extended to mlnen, uilors,\nfishermen and lumbermen only.\nThose who, in normal course of\nthetr occupation, are away from\nhome on election day may register\nthtir votu at the polling station\nneareit to their place of work providing It is In the ume province.\nCompletion ot the necessary\nforms and document! as well as\nInstructions to returning officers\nto enable the new provision in the\nlaw to be carried out hu added\nconsiderably to the work of the\nchief electoral officer, Jules Caston\nguav and his staff.\nThe abientee voter must mark\na special ballot which ls Disced\nin an envelope and lent to the returning officer of hii own con-\nitituency. The latter cannot complete hii final count of ballots\nuntil all the abientee votei cast In\nother constituencies have reached\nthem.\nShould the contest be close and\nshould there be leveral hundred\nabsentee votes, as Is poulble In\nsome constituencies where the occupations of mining, fishing, shinning and lumbering are widely followed, the reiult of the election\nmight not be definitely determined\nfor \u2022 week or so ifter the election\nday although a speedy unofficial\ncount will be mide possible by\ntelegraphing the number of abientee votei cut for uch candidate\nfrom the place of polling to the\nconstituency of the voter.\nThe final count, however, muit'\nawait the arrivtl of the actual ballots ai they must be checked over\nto ensure that no vote has already\nbeen cast for the abientee voter\nand that all formalities have been\ncomplied with.\nFERNIE DEATH\nINQUEST OPENS\nAdjourned Till Today;\nGalloway to Come\nUp July 27\nDow Jones Averages\nHl|h\nSO industrials  122.91\n20 rails  33.44\n20 utilities _. 22.14\n40 bonds  \t\nLow\n121.99\n33.22\n21.97\nClou     Chinee\n122.69\u2014up .36\n83.41\u2014up .06\n22.04-o'ff .06\n96.99-off .09\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED Bid\nA P Con  05%\nAmal OU  10\nBig Mluourl  _     M\nB CPa-ken 13.00\nBradian  _   2.00\nBralorne  -   4.99\nBridge R Con     .03\nBRX Gold         .0814\nCariboo Gold Q .....   1.03\nC tt E Corp  50\nCoait Breweriw ._    \u2014\nDentonia Minei .....    .29\nGold Belt  _    21\nHome OU  _    .91\nInt Coal     .20\nKoot Belle  _    .34\nMak Siccar  _    .12\nMcLeod OU  _    .30\nMeridian  _    .0314\nModel Oil  18\nMorning Star  _    .04%\nNat Silver     -    .03%\nPioneer Gold       8.73\nI Premier Border      \u2014\nReno Gold         1.23\nSalmon Oold  11%\nSheep Creek  _    .93\nTaylor Bridge IT\nVanalta\nWayside         .1-H\nWellington O & G\nAsk\n.96\n2.09\n8.00\n.04\n1.07\n.95\n13.73\n.30\n_W\n.54\n.35\n.15\n.04\n.20\n.08\n10.25\n.00(4\n1.25\n.   .11\n.95\nJO\n.03\n.13\nCURB _________________________________________\nAnaconda Oil      .01*4\nBeaver Silver _    .05*4\nBluebird      01%\nB C Silver     1.50\nB C Nickel    _.._    .28\nBrew It Dist  SO\nBunker H It S 43.00\nCan Rand        _.     \u2014\nCongreu Gold      30*.\nCottonbelt       _    .03\nCork Province       \u2014\nCrows Nest Oil 1014\nDalhousie Mines ....    .00H\nDslhousle Oil!      .24\nDicUtor Gold  _     \u2014\nDunwell           \u2014\nHistcrest  _    .08\nFairview Amal .....    .OS\nFawn  -    .30\nTederxl Gold      \u2014\nGeo Copper  1614\n,04 -\n.02\n.06%\n.01%\n1.59\n44.00\n.05\n.sott\n.09\n.OOtt\n.01\n.27\n.01\n.04%\n.08\n.09\n.34\n.08\nGlacier Creek _    .OOtt\nGolconda Lead _    .18\nGold Mounttln     M\nGeo Enterprlie _     \u2014\nGeo River      .OOtt\nGrandvlew      J)ltt\nGrange  _ _    .Oltt\nGrull Wihkine  09\nHecla \u201e 10.75\nHedley Amal 18\nHedley Sterling ....    .05\nHighwood  Sarcee       j09\nHome Gold    04\nIndian Mine:     .01\nIndependence       \u2014\nIiland Mountain ....    .77\nKoot Florence      .OOtt\nLakevlew Mlnei .._     \u2014\nLucky Jim      .02tt\nMar Jon Oil  08\nMercury Oil \t\nMerland Oil \t\nMill City    _..\nMlnto Gold \t\nMorton Woliey ..\nNicola    \t\nNoble Five\t\nNordon Oil\t\nOkalta OUa\t\nPacalta \t\nPend Oreille\t\nPUot Gold \t\nPorter Idaho \t\nQuesnelle Q \t\nRanchmen'i \t\nRewird     \t\nRelief Arlington\nRoyilite Oil     22.75\nRufut Argenta      .01\nSilvercreit   OOtt\nSilverado Con     .02\nSilvenmlth           .03\nStandard SUver ...._    .70\nSunshine         - 21.00\nUnited Empire      .03\nUnited Oil    _    .03%\nVldette Gold  18\nViking Gold     _    .01\nWaterloo Mlnei  02\nWaverley Tang     .00H\nWellington  Oltt\nWhitewater ..    .06\nYmir Yankee Girl      _\u00bb\nSTRAWBERRIES\nABOUTAT END\nRaspberries  Starting;\nRoyal Annes Are\nGoing Strong\nBUTTER OFF, IOCS CAIN\n.Utt\n.18\n.06\n.07\n.08'4\n.06%\n.02\n.60\n.02\n.08\n.10\nS3\n.02\n.29\n.Oltt\n30\n.08H\n.05\nDl\n.03\n.0-\n.06\n11.26\n31\n.08\n.10\n.06\n.01\n.80\n.00%\n.01\n.0SH\n.08\n.12\n.21\n.08\nm*.\nm\n.08\n.07\n.0814\n.09\n.65\n.04\n.08V4\n3.\n.02H\nJO\n23.50\n.02\n.03\n.03*.\n.71 tt\n22.00\n.05\n.04\n.23\n.01V4\n.07H\n.30\nMONTREAL, July 21 (CP)-But-\nter worked fractionally lower, end\ncheeie ihtded ilightly, whllt eggs\nfirmed and potatou held unchanged\nat Montreal lait week..\nNo. 1 butter 20H centi per pound.\nCheeie: 9<\/s centt for No. 1 current Ontario..\nEggs were 23 cents s doten for\nA-large.\nSlU Million. In\nNew Insurance\nCRESTON, B.C, July 21-Thli\nweeki wei the valley at tht In-\nbetween point in tht berry season.\nStrawberrlei are pretty well over\nat all pointi except Wynndel, where\nthey are itlll coming and wlll be\navailable unUl at leut the 25th,\naccording to official! of the Cooperative Fruit association at that\npoint Raspberries are coming but\nvolume li not is great as might be\nexpected, ifter the ralni early latt\nweek, and the hot weather that h__\nprevailed ilnce then.\nWynndel reporti the outgo of\nsome Blng cherries and larger quantities of Royal Annes, with aU commodities going through the pre cooler. Un UU Thurtdty morning 27\nstraight carloadi of strawberries had\nbeen moved.\nAt Creston the Exchange reports\nthe 1933 strawberry detl cloied\nand raspberries beginning to come\nin fair volume. Royal Annes tre\nthe biggest ihlpper ln the cherry\nline with Bings ftlrly plentiful,\nand expected to come itrong early\nnext week. Black and red currant!\nare on in iome volume and are ln\ngood demand both tor Jam tnd\ncrate ihlpmenti.\nLong Allan It Long Limited report the itrawberry deil closed\nwith them tt Erlckion Creiton tnd\nthe Reed tt Mtther ihlpplng polnti.\nbut limited luppllei ire itlll avail-\nable at Wynndel. Raspberries are\nin sufficient volume to take care of\nall orderi tt a firm price, at ii the\ncase with Blng tnd Royil Anne\ncherrlei.\nCreiton ihl-jplng houses welcome\nthe let up tn itrawberrlei. Theie\nhave been available for the more\nthan a month tnd the public teemi\nto be pretty well \"fed up\" on them.\nIn tddition to thii, dut the wvere\nhett or other ctuiet the berriei ire\nnot itandlng up ti well tt earlier\nin the tenon and claimi for rebates htve been numeroui ot lite.\nTORONTO. July 21.\u2014New ordinary life Insurance written ln Ctnada and Newfoundland by 19 com-\nClei hiving 80 per cent of the\nLneii in force, iccording to fl*\ngures given out todty by the Life\nlniuranee Sale! Research bureau,\nfor the flnt iix monthi ot thli year,\namounted to $182,000,000. Sales by\nprovinces for the month of June\nwere as followi:\nBriUih   Columbia\nAlberta  \t\nSaskatchewan \t\nManitoba    ...\nOntario \t\nQuebec\n-PAOI SEVEN\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMONTREAL, July 21 (CP)-Mld-\nlummer dullness ruled on Montreal\nstock exchange Saturday whUe the\nprlcei crept quieUylower.\nLake of the Woods preferred\ndropped 16 pointi to t new low of\n84 while the common eased tt to 8.\nSimon ts Som eued a point to 12\nwhile Nickel weakened to 26tt, off\ntt point NaUonal Steel Car at 14\nand Dominion Coal preferred new\nat 17% were down % each.\nAlexandria   \t\n.Algoma    ....\nAshley Gold \t\nBtrry Hollinger .\nBue Metali \t\nBankfield \t\nBetr ExploraUon\nBig Missouri \t\nBobjo \t\nBradian    \t\nBralorne\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, July 20 (CP)-Greln\nquotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\n80H\n80*%\n43%\n31V4\n29H\n35H\n35H\n35H\n121'4\nlit*\nxwi\n36\n38tt\n____________________________________________________       *\u00b0\nJuh wheat: No. 1 hard and No.\n1 nor. 80H: No. 2 nor. 77H; No. 3\nnor. 72%: No. 4 nor. 65tt: o. 9\nwheat 58%; No. 6 wheat 58%; feed\n54%; durum 68%; track SOH.\nWheat:\nJuly  \t\n80H\n80H\n80%\nAug\t\nOats:\n80%\n81\n80%\nJuly\n44 tt\n44tt\n44\nOct\n31%\n31%\n31%\nDec.\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\nBarley:\nJuly\n35%\n\u2014\n\u2014\nOct\n39tt\n35%\n3514\nDec\t\n39%\n33%\n35%\nFlax:\nJuly  .\n121'4\n\u2014\n\u2014\nOct\n120\n120\n119\nDec.\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\nRye:\nJuly\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\nOct\n38tt\n38%\n38%\nDec.   _\n40%\n40%\n30%\nOIL MACNATE IS DEAD\nMEREDITH, N. H.. July 21 (AP)\n\u2014Charles Bisraark Ames, oil magnate and chairman of the board of\nthe Texu comptny, died of t hetrt\nattack tt hli tummer home here\ntodty. He wu 64.\nFERNIE. B.C.. July 21.-Inquest\nInto the death of Dimitrl Swidenkl\nwas opened at Fernie Friday before\nCoroner Robert Duthle.\nDeath waa due to fracture ot the\nspinal column, stated Dr. George\nKelman, who performed the poat\nmortem. Other witnesses called were\nTom Mlnchuk, George Roberta,\nGeorge Oakley and Hugh Anderson,\nrlden on thc truck; Robert Ken*,\ngovernment road foreman; Joe\nLetcher, mechanic at the government\nyards, and Percy Bean, automobile\nmechanic.\nThe inquest wu adjourned until\nMondiy in order to obtain the evidence of John Bellt, who rode with\nthe truck driver, tnd who is in hoi\npital. seriously injured.\nJames Galloway, driver of the\ntruck, who is charged with manslaughter, wiU come up for hearing\nJuly 27.\nTne accident occurred Wednesday\nafternoon when a truck containing\nabout 13 government worken ran\noff the road and turned over ln a\nbunch of stumps two miles west of\nFernle. The drop at this point ii\n\u2022bout 20 feet deep and the men were\nthrown out or cruihed under the\nheavy vehicle.\nDimitrl Swidenkl, more than 50\nyetn of tee, wu lmtantly killed.\nThomu Payne had t badly Injured\nleg. Leon Miacovltch suffered t\nbroken trm tnd broken ribs tnd\nJohn Belli htd in injured leg. A\nnumber of other men luffered slight\nInjuries. Word wu lent to town tnd\nthree docton were quickly on the\nicene. The injured men were tt\nonce removed to the Femle hospital.\nThe cause of the accident il t\nmystery, ts the driver, James Gallo*\nway, ls said to be s man ot experience and the truck was going about\n12 or 15 miles an hour. Mr. Galloway\nsaid something went wrong with the\nsteering gear and the truck waa over\nthe bank before he could do anything.\n.01%\n.03%\n.10\n.03%\n.72\n.47\n.66\n.54\n.18%\n1.91\n4.90\n.02%\n.08%\n.01%\n2.75\n.01\n.07%\n.01%\n.61\nBrett Trethewey \t\nBRX Gold\t\nBrownlee  _\t\nBuf Ankerlte \t\nBuf C\u00abn Gold \t\nBunker Hill  ....\t\nCan Klrkland \t\nCan Malartlc      -1\nCariboo Gold Q     1.00\nCaiUe Trethewey ... _    1.03\nCentral Manitoba        .03%\nCentral Patricia  _     1.72\nChibougtmou        .17\nClerlcy       _ OS\nCoast Copper      2.00\nCobalt Contact -      .02\nConarium     1.60\nCons M tt 8  164.50\nReno Gold \t\nSakoose\t\nSan Antonio \t\nSheep Creek _..\nSherritt Gordon _\t\nSiscoe   \t\nSmelten Gold \t\nSouth  Tiblemont  .....\nStsdacont     ,\nSt Anthony  \t\nSudbury Basin\t\nSylvanlte   \u2014\nTeck Hughes \t\nToburn     -\t\nTreidwell  \t\nVentures \t\nWaite Amulet \t\nWayside\nDome\nDom ExploraUon  \t\nEldorado     -....\nFalconbrldge  \t\nGod's Leke  \t\nGnnada  \t\nHardrock  \t\nHollinger  .....\nHowey \t\nHudson Bay  _.\nInt Nickel    __\t\nKlrkland Lake\t\nLake Maron    _\t\nLittle Long Lae \t\nLake Shore     ... \t\nMcLeod Cockshutt ...\nMclntvre     \t\nMcVlltie Grahamme\nMeWatten Gold .......\nMacassa  \t\nMalroblc \t\nMaple Leaf  \t\nMining Corn\t\nMoffatt HlU\n37.50\n.04V4\n1.87\n3.85\n1.72\n.23%\n*4T\n13.00\n.68\n14.75\n26.37tt\n.40\n.03tt\n4.65\n50.25\n.05 i\n39.00\n,12tt\n1.23\n1.35\n.00%\n.03\n1.43\n.Ottt\n130\n.05tt\n3.90\n.80\n.60\n2.75\n.07tt\n.03\n32%\n.16%\n1.42\n2.14\n4.10\n1.11\n.15%\n.83%\nM\n       .IS\nWhite E\u00bbgle            ~2\nWright Hargreaves     7.85\nOILS\nAcme   .\nAJax\nB A OU\nCtlmont\nNew Bruniwick\t\nPrince Edward Iiland .\nNewfoundland    _.,\nS 2,239,000\n1,179.000\n1,207,000\n1.844,000\n14.558,000\n8,020,000\n666,000\n119,000\n118,000\nTotal   ....\n332,112,000\nN.Y. UP LITTLE\nNEW YORK, July 21 (CP)-Al*\nthough iharei chugged uphill a\nlittle in moderate trading on the\nNew York exchange today, they did\nnot recover Friday i decline ln fuU.\nAnalysts ttld t demind for equities repreeented, In part, idle funda\nattracted to the market by the lower prlceg itruck ln the preceding\nsession.\nIn termi of the Associited Press\niverage of 60 itocki, the mtrket\nmoved thetd .1 of t point to 45.6.\nTrading wu t little leu tcUve\nthin Friday at 428,500 iharei.\nC & E Corp\t\nChemical Research\t\nDalhousie\t\nHome OU  .1.....\nHomestetd O tt G \t\nImperial Oil\t\nInt Pete  _\t\nMerland  _____\nNordon  \t\nOU Selections\t\nOlga    \t\nRoyalite   \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Broi A \t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian      \u25a0\nBrew tt Dist.\nNipissing\" _...._\u201e     2.'0\nNoranda  _   _      .38\nParkhill       30\nPaymaster     _._ 26\nPend Orellle  61\nPickle Crow     2.39\nPioneer Gold        8.90\nPremier Gold      1.41\nQui\n3tat\nHigh\n157%\nions on Wall J\n>tre\n8%\net\n8%\nLow\nClote Int Tel it Tel\n8%\nAl Chemical _.\n167%\nKenn Copper ..\n19%\n19%\n18%\nAm Can  _.-\n141%\n140%\n141%\nMick Truck ...\n21%\nattt\n21%\nAjn For Pow ...\n24%\n\u2014\n3%\nMont Wird\n30\n28%\n30\nAm Ml It Fdy .\nAm Smelt St Re\n34\n24%\nNuh Moton ...\n13%\n13%\n13%\n43\n\u2014\n42\nNi D\u00abiry Pro\n17\n16%\n16%\nAm Telephone\n127\n126%\n126%\nN Pow It Ll\n8%\n8%\n8%\nAm Tobscco .._\n87\n95%\n87\nN Y Central ....\n17%\n17%\n17%\nAntcondt \t\n1544\n15%\n15%\nPac Gai 4 Elec\n24%\n34\n24\nMchlton\n81%\n51\n51%\nPack Motors\t\n5\n4%\n8\nJtldwin    _\n2%\n\u2014\n2H\nPenn R R  _\n24%\n24H\n24%\n\u2022It _ Ohio .....\nlltt\n10%\nlltt\nPhllllpi  Pete\n20\n18%\n19%\nwidlx Av \t\n17\n16%\n17\nPure OU\n8%\nS\n8%\nleth Steel\n32%\n11%\n32%\nRidio Corp\t\nRadio Keith Or\n6%\n6%\n6%\nCantdt Dry .....\nlOtt\nlOtt\n2\n\u2014\na\n_tn Picifle\n8%\n8%\nStt\nRem Rend .\n9%\n8%\n9%\nSerro de Pttco\n58\nB7H\n57%\nSaf ewty Storei\nSheU Union ...\n39\n88%\n88%\n_3iei & Ohio ....\n44%\n44%\n44H\n8%\n8%\n8%\nJhrytler \t\n84%\n83%\n54%\nS Cal Edison\n18%\n18%\n18%\nJon Gu N Y ....\n25%\n28\n25\nSouth Pacific\n18%\n33%\n18\n18%\n2\u00a9m Prod\n71\n70%\n70H\nStan Oil of Ctl\nS3\n33%\n23%\nJ Wright Pfd....\n7*H\n7%\n7%\nStan OU of Ind\n25%\n'35%\nlupont  \t\neit Kodak\n106\n105%\n108\nStan OU of N J\n45%\n45%\n45%\n147%\n147\n147%\nStewert Warner\n12%\n11%\n12%\n1 Pow It Li\n3\n8%\nz\na\nStt\nStudebaker   ....\nTex Corp \t\na%\n18H\ni.%\n18%\nord English ...\n'ord of Cm ...\n'list Ns Stores\n. ,\n2-3\nTex Gulf Sul\nTlmktn RoUer\n33%\n48%\n33%\n44%\n33%\n48\n.JM\nmm\n64\nUn Carbide\nUnOtfofCel ...\nUn Aircraft ..\n\u2022JH\n63%\n64%\nfreeport Tex ...\nlen Eleetric ...\n26\n27%\ni\nas\n27H\n17H\n17\n~l\u00ab\n17%\n16%\nSen Foods\n17\n36%\n36%\n37\nUn Ptclflc . .\n106\n108%\n106\nlen Moton ...\n36%\ntt\nU S Pipe ..\nU 8 Rubber ..\n19%\n12%\nam\n18%\nloM Dust\n16%\n7%\n16%\n13H\n12%\n\"ii*\n7%\nU 8 Steel\n38\n88%\nSS\n8%\n8%\nStt\nVtn Steel \t\n16%\n15\n15%\nM Nor Pfd\n20%\n30%\n20%\nWerner Brot .\n4%\n4\n4%\nIrt Wett Sugai\n2SH\n38\n28\nWett Electric\n60%\n88%\n60%\n{owe Sound\n48H\n\u2014\n48%\nWoolworth\n82%\n6214\n62%\nIndian Moton\n8%\nSH\n8%\nYlW-Vm- -\n80\n\u2014\n80\nipt Nickel \t\n26%\n26%\n26%\nYellow Truck ..\n3tt\n\u2014\n3%\n_      .18%\nJ50\n- 15.90\n- T_M%\n_      M\n.. 1.34\n35\nJl\n.. ,04tt\n.. 18.50\n.. 34.50\n.. .19\n.. S .11\n._ .04\n_> _04\n..   23.25\n....   10\n... 130\n     8H\n.60\nRENO AND SHEEP\n(REEK IN A JUMP\nVANCOUVER, July 31 (CPl.-TTie\ngold Issues were itrong and active\non Saturday'a short session of the\nVancouver stock exchange. Salei\ntotalled 88,128 iharu.\nBralome led with an advance of\n13 at 4.99. Dentonla and Reno were\nthe most acUve luuu, gaining 3 at\n29 and 1.22 reipectively. Cariboo at\n1.03. Sheep Creek at 83 and Congreu it 29% also gained 3 each.\nBradian tdvtnced 5 to 2.00. United\nEmpire wai unchanged at 3. Pioneer\nand Vidette were practically the\nonly gold luuu regiitering loues.\nthe former off 3 tt 8.75 ind the latter\ndown 4 at 18.\nGOLDS ARE DUH\nTORONTO, July 21 (CP)-On\nthe mining share market Saturday,\nMcKenzie Red Lake closed 7 cents\nhigher at 130 and Gunnar closed 3\ncenta up at 74.\nNoranda featured bue metals,\nclosing at 38, up %. Falconhridge\nadded 5 cents, Sudbury ^asln 9 and\nBase Metals Corporation weakened\n2 cent! to 71. Silver shares were\nfirm.\nSenior gold itocki were almost\ndormant\nCan Bread     3%\nCan Cement        .6%\nCan Car and Foundry\t\nCin Ind Ale A .....\nCm Dredge\nCtn Pac Railway\nCom Bakeries \t\nDist  Seagram  \t\nDom Stores\n6%\n8\n29\n8%\n14%\n20%\n8%\nWINNIPEG UP\nWINNIPEG. July 21 (CP) .-Bullish crop news from wutern Canada\nleft wheat pricu unstirred on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange Saturday.\nAfter another dull session, values\ncloied % cent higher to unchanged.\nConfirmation of the belt ulu of\nCtntdltn whett tbrotd in dtys\u2014\n500.000 bushels\u2014ctme too lite to\nbring out the buying thtt hid been\nawaiting a pick-up In foreign wheat\nsales. July closed at 80% and the\nAuguit future at 80% cents.\nJAMES STRACHAN\nIS LAID TO REST\nRegalia Held al\nLake Windermere\nFord of Cantdt  -    26%\nGoodyear Tire     70\nHiram Walker     29%\nImperial Tobacco\t\nLoblaw A \t\nMassey Harris\t\nStandard Ptvlng .\nSteel of Canada\nWalker Brew\n13%\nIB\n4%\n.80\n50%\n3\nMontreal Stock Prices\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK. July 21 (CP) .-Sterling exchange firm at $4.95% for 60-\nday bill! and it $4.96 for demand.\nCanadian dolltn: Saturday 1-16\ndlicount; yeiterday % diicount;\nweek ago 5.32 diicount.\nFranc 6.63% centt.\nLire 8.26% centi.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR UP\nNEW YORK. July 21 (AP).-In\nStturdiy'! foreign exchinge mirkcts\nthe pound iterllng wtt uo % of t\ncent to $486. The Canadian dollar\nreduced lti discount from % to 1*16\nper cent while the French franc,\nclosing tt 6.63% cents, showed t gain\not .00% of t cent\nU. S. DOLLAR STEADY\nMONTREAL. July 21 (CP). -\nLeiding currencies were quiet on\nMontreal foreign exchtngu Saturday. Tht pound iterllng tdvtnced\n1-32 cent to 4.97% wblle the United\nStatu dollar it 1.00% end the French\nfranc et 6.84 centt htld unchsnged\nst previous clous.\nIAR COLD DOWN ONI\nMONTREAL. July 31 (CP)-Bir\ngold In,London down ont cent to\n$3408 tn ounce ln Cinidlin fundi:\n. 141b %d in Brltlih fundi. The fixed\n| Wuhlngton price imounted to $35.03\nin Cinidiin.\nBell Telephone  -\t\nB C Picking  _\t\nBrazil  ; \t\nB C Power A\t\nBuild Producti\t\nBuloli        \t\nCtnida Bronte\t\nCan Car Fdy  ....\nCanadian Cement...._.\t\nCan Cement Pfd \u2014\t\nCan Ind Al A    \t\nCan Indl Al B \t\nCPR\nCanadian Steamers \t\nCockihutt        ~\t\nCom Min It Smelt\t\nDom Bridge     -\t\nDominion Glut \t\nDominion Text\t\nGen St Waret -...\nChu Gurd    \t\nHamilton Br    \t\nInternational Nickel \t\nMassey Harrla\t\nMontreal Power _\t\nNational Steel Cer\t\nNational Brewing \t\nOgUvIe     \t\nPower CorporaUon\t\nPrice Brot         _\t\n130\n.65\n8%\n22%\n31\n.   35\n30\n.    6%\n.    6%\n82%\n. 8\n. 7%\n. 9%\n. 1%\n. 7%\n. 165%\n28\n110\n,   70\n.    3\n.    4\n.     3%\n.   26%\n.    4%\n.   30%\n.   14\n.   36%\n. 132\n.    7%\n1.60\nQuebec \t\nShawlnigan\t\nSherwin Willlami\t\nSouth Can Power\t\nSteel of Ctntdt _\t\nCURBS\nAssociated Brew\t\nB A Oil  \u2014\t\nCanadian Celanue \t\nCanadian Wineriu\t\nDistillen Seagram\t\nDryden Paper _.___...\nImperial Oil _\t\nImperial Tobacco Can\t\nInternational Petroleum\nMcCoil Frontenac \t\nMitchell Robert\t\nP\u00bbge Heney -.\nBANKS\nCanadt _ -\t\nCtnadlen \t\nCommerce\t\nDominion  ..\u2022_.\t\nMontreal  \t\nNova Scotia\t\nRoyal    \t\nMISCELLANEOUS\nDominion Storu\nFord Can A.\n14\n16\n12%\nlt\n80%\n12%\n15%\n23\n4%\n30H\n3\n18%\nISH\n84H\n12%\n3%\n81\n60\n128\n144\n163\n185%\n265\n148\nMontreal Silver Prices\nMONTREAL, July 21 (CP).-Silver futures closed\nsteady Saturday, unchanged to 14 points higher. A total of\n4 contract\", all in September, was traded.\nOptn High Low CIom\nI Sept ,    67.75        67.75      67.75      67.75\nINVERMIRE. B.C.. July 21. -\nSundiy. July 14, tn acquatic regatta,\nsonsored by Mr. Horwood. manager\nof the Lake Windermere bungalow\ncamp, took place on the waters of\nthe lake below the camp. A large\ncrowd attended tnd Joined whole\nheartedly in the competition! prodded, swiming. high and fancy diving, canoe races. canoe-Ulting and\naquaplane riding.\nThe main event of the afternoon\nwas the speed boat race between\nLloyd Tegart tnd R. Bavin, racing\nover a triangular course of five laos.\nLlovd Tegart coming In flnt The\njudges were Mr. Tunntcllffe. Mr.\nRichardson and R. Smith, and the\nofficial itarter wat Mr. McGuinneis.\nThe annual meeUng of the Windermere ichool board waa held in\nthe ichool-houte. Windermere. Stturdty. July 13. and wai well-attended. Suppliei were voted for the\nforthcoming year and R G. Newton wai elected truitee. taking Uie\nplace of A. M. Chiaholm. who retired\nthis year.\nA general meeUng of the Windermere District Farmer's Institute was\nheld in the Athalmer \u2022 Invermere\nConsolidated \u00abchool Friday, Julv 12,\nto hear Mr. Waby, district agriculturiit. roeik on general firm topics.\nAfter Mr. Waby'i talk, R. G. Newton ihowed interettlng lantern slides\n\u2022nd gave t lecture on \"Canadian\nHomes, from Coait to Coait.\"\nAmong the many vlaliton ln Invermere are R. Macdonald and Cam\nGibson. Mr. Macdonald is an old-\ntimer here, tnd for many veart wti\nconnected with the Ptridise mine,\nbut lately hat been raiding in Seattle. Cam Gibson htl been working\nln the Petce River tret minei. ind\nli here for t short hoUdiy, vltlUng\nold friends.\nCommander J. Copley Powlei.\nR.N., of Brookibtnk, Invermere,\nmotored to Kulo tnd will be i gueit\not Mr. tnd Mrs. E. M. Stndllindi tor\n10 divs.\nIONDS BETTER\nFERNIE. B.C., July 21.\u2014Funeral\nof James Strachan. who died July 16,\nwai held from the United church\nFriday afternoon. Interment was in\nSt. Margaret's cemetery, beside his\nfather and mother.\nFuneral tervice of Dr. Douglas\nCorson, pioneer resident of Fernle.\nheld ln the Anglican church. Archdeacon F. H. Graham officiating\nWednesday afternoon, were attended\nby the local Masonic lodge and the\nwar veterans ti well as a great num\nber of friendi. A long procession foi\nlowed the hearse to St. Margaret'!\ncemetery where Interment took\nplace.\nIndustrials Dull\nTORONTO, July 21 (CP).-Sum-\nmer dullness Just about touched\nbottom Saturday at Induitrlil volume dwindled to 5500 iharea. Stock\noffering! were light and pricei were\n\u2022ble to maintain t firm level, the\nexchange index gaining .08 to 108.57.\nWalkera common closed at 29% for\na net gain of % and DlstiUers Seagrams had a net tdvtnce ot % to\n20%.\nConsiderable selling for a minor\nrecession appeared in Nickel and\nConsolidated Smelters was dormant.\nBrazilian gained % and InternaUonal\nPetroleum pushed up H.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, July 21 (API-\nFlour unchanged. Shlpmenta 21,773.\nPure bran 17.50 tq 18.\nWheat cash: No. 1 northern 1.12%\nto 1.14%. No. 1 red durum 77%.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, July 21 (CD-\nMining shares told on the Vancouver stock exchange Saturday:\nListed \u2014 Big Min 100; Bradian\n1200: Bralome 1350; BRX IOOO,\nCariboo 1500; Dentonia 11,600; Meridian 3500; Morning Star 2000; Pioneer 500; Prem G 100; Reno 3300;\nSheep Crk 1000; Wayiide IOOO.\nCurb\u2014Beaver 600: Congress 2800;\nFtlrvlew A 3500; Gold Mntn 1000;\nGeorge Ent 500; Georgia R 1000;\nGrange 16,000; Island Mntn 2600;\nIndependence 1000; Nicola 800; Noble Five 1500; SUveramith 6000;\nToric 200; Vidette 400; Waverly\n1000.\nEastern Sales\nBOUNDARY TO\nTEST (ROPS\nGRAND FORKS, B.C, July 18\u2014\nThe following crop tests have been\norganized ln the Boundary district\nfor 1835 by Diitrict Agriculturiit\nG. L. Landon, In cooperation with\nthe various farmen' Institutes.\nA-CRESTED WHEAT\nGRA88\nAndrew Johnson, William Johnaon, E. Procter and Jamei Lindsay\nof Rock Creek; R E. Norrli, Bevan\nGene, Wlllltm Bruce tnd Stanley\nBubtr of Kettle Valley; H. H. Pan-\nnell, R. A. Jackson, Mike Caron,\nRoy Biggin, A. Lander, Eric Erickion and Mn. A. Tipple of Midway;\nJ. C. Boltz ot Boundary Falls; B,\nFonhaw and H. Hartley of Greenwood; R. E. Scott, J. T. R. Lawrence, Arvid Andenon, Carl Numet-\niler, John Holmberg, Oscar Pennoyer and A. E. Hales of Grand\nForks; R. A. Ball of Cascade and\nGeorge Rusch of Rock Creek. They\nare testing out plots of crested wheat\ngrass as this forage crop has done\nio well In this district during the\npast three years.\nB\u2014CEREAL CROP TESTS\nFall wheat tests\u2014George Hlgglnbotham of Bridesville and Edward\nMadge ot Rock Creek.\nSpring wheat tests\u2014Charles Weed\nof Midway and J. C. Madge of Rock\nCreek.\nThe wheat tests are being made\nln cooperation with the agronomy\ndepartment, Unlvenlty of B.C. and\nthe board of railway comminionert\nfor Cantda at their Winnipeg lab-\nrstory.\nOat variety twtt\u2014Maurice Jewell\nof Rock Creek, continuing the variety teits of oati commenced In\n1833\nRye teit\u2014R. E. Norrli of Kettle\nValley, making t teat or prolific\nrye.\nCom tests: (a)\u2014Test! of garden\ncorn varieties are being made by\nA. C. Lawson of Grand Forkt. The\nvarieties under teit ire Golden\nBantam, Sixty Day Golden, Golden\nSumhine, Dorinny, Golden Bantam X Banting and Banting X\nGolden Bantam, (b)\u2014Broom Corn\n\u2014Teita of broom com tre being\nnude by Frank Plant and Karl\nJepaon of Grand Forkt. The varieties tested are Tennessee, Evergreen, White Italian, Illinois Favorite and Black Spanish. Thii it\nthe tint time broom com haa been\ntried in the Boundary district\nTobacco Teit!\u2014D. S. Taylor of\nNeUon: Juan Puddy, S. AJanien\nand C. V. Meggitt of Grind\nForks; A. Lander of Kettle Valley\nand E. Procter of Rock Creek received tobacco seed of Standup Resistant or Judy's Pride Burley Tobacco for testing.\nField crop union teiti\u2014Under the\nB.C. Field Crop union the following\nteit! are being made in thia district thii year: James Lindsay of\nRock Creek, testing western rye,\nBrome and crested wheat grass;\nJ. T. Lawrence of Grand Forkt\ntesting four varieties of alfalfa,\nnamely, Grimm, Cossack, Ladak\nand Ontario Variegated; C. C. Heaven of Grand Forks testing Harbin\nLesptdeza aad Common Lespede-\nza; Andrew Johnson of Rock Creek\ntesting seven varieties of barley,\nnamely. Regal, Trebi, O. A. C. 21,\nHimalayan, Haanchen, Colsess ana\nNewal; Joe Dumont of Bridesville\ntesting potato varieties.\nFertilizer testa\u2014These testa are\nbeing made ou alfalfa and onion\nseed in cooperation with the CM.\nItS. Co. fertilizer division at TraiL\nJ. T. R. Lawrence, Thomas Gaw-\nrelitz and R. F. Simpson of Grandi\nForks are making the alfalfa teats\nusing ammonium phosphate (3-14)\nand complete 4-10-10. In connection with these tests analyses of\nsamples of hay will be made at the\nC.M.S.S.   laboratory  at   Calgary.\nOnion seed plots\u2014A. R. Mudia,\nC. C. Heaven and A. H. Pennoyer\nof Grand Forks are making fertilizer testa on onion aeed using\nammonium phosphate (3-14) and\ncomplete 4-10-10.\nAlfalfa'plot testi\u2014In cooperation\nwith the Rock Creek\" farmera' inititute a icrici of Grimm alfalfa\nplot teats have been organized, each;\ncooperator to grow one acre of alfalfa. WUllam Johnson, E, Procter,\nA. D. MacLennan, G. A. Pitman,\nJ. C. Madge, James Lindsay and\nEdward Madge of Rock Creek and\nJ. T. Hindmore, William Bruce and\nLawrence Graham of Kettle Valley\nare making the tests,\nIN8TITUTE FIELD DAY\nPreparations are under way for\nthe annual field day o.' the Grand\nForka Farmen' institute to be held\nWednesday afternoon July 24 commencing from the Court House at\n1 p.m. Visits will be made lo cropi\nof interest and it is expected that\na demonstration will be given ot\nthe apple grader developed by J.\nT. Lawrence and Pete Tamilin.\nCan will be provided for those who\nwiih to make the trip around the\nvalley, and refreshments will be\nserved at the Sunnyside farm.\nNEW YORK, July 21 (AP) .-Better than average moves among a tew\nluuet Included Mtntti Sugtr 7%, off\n4% polnti at 23%; Murrty Body 6%i\nup 2% tt 125; Ptrtmount-Publix\n5%i. up 1 it 98; Southern Railway\n4i, off 1 at 30% tnd Jspsneie 5%s\nat 1965. off 1% at 87%.\nMONTREAL, July 21 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more sharei on the Montreal itock exchange Saturday: 300\nBrazilian; 150 Dom C Pfd; 110 G Stl\nWares 430 Imp Tob; 401 Int Nkl; 110\nShtwinlgan.\nTORONTO, July 21 (CP)-Sa!et\nof 100 iharei or more on the Toronto itock Saturday: 275 B A OU; 140\nDom Steel; 410 Ford A; 150 Steel of\nCan; 275 H Walken.\nCHICAGO GAINS\nCHICAGO, July 21  (AP)-Sug-\nfeitioni black ruit it now threaten-\nng 50 per cent damage to spring\nwheat in the Dakotas and Minnesota gave wheat values notable\nstrength Saturday,\nWheat closed 1% to 1% cents\nhigher, September 85% to 85%,\ncorn unchanged to % up, September 75% to 75%,    ' ~*\u2014\u2014^^\u2014\nto % up.\n, oats also unchanged\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, July 20 (CP)-British and foreign exchange cloied\n\u2022teady.\nArgentina, peso      .2863\nChina, Hong Kong dollara       .5332\nFrance, frtnc .1665\nGermany, relchsmark .4048\nGreat Britain, pound 4.9712\nJapan, yen      2928\nUnited States, dollar, % per cent\npremium.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCinada). * I\nFRUIT OROWERS\nShip your Strawberries. Rispberrlet tnd Cherrlei direct end receive\nthe benefit of the Higheit Prairie Market Prlcea tor yourself. No\nprofiteering between the ihlpper tnd ounelvei. no connection!\nwhttever with my fruit combine. We handle mixed carloadi ot\nfruit. Retumi are made every Saturday tor all ihlpmenti received\nduring the week.\nTHE ROYAL FRUIT COMPANY\nTHE INDEPENDENT PRUIT HOUSE REOINA, SASK\n PAGE EIGHT \u25a0\nTht Summer Candy\nFLAG TOFFEE\n35c per pound\nNana, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nMORE ABOUT\nRAIL BOARD\n(Continued From Page One)\nbelieved the train service for summer u lt wu at present, with the\nservice of a gu car in the winter,\nwould be quite satisfactory. The gas\ncar would have to be able to contend with snow conditions. The\nheavy mow slide at Howser last\nyear was the biggest one he could\nremember \u00abnd he stated that snowfall there last year wu exceptional.\nIn reply to Mr. McMullen he declared he had to truck his lumber\nWHO IS HE !\nWE SEEK HIM HERE, WE SEEK HIM THERE,\nTHOSE FRENCHIES SEEK HIM EVERYWHERE!\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORN\ntwo miles to the track, and that lf\nhe had to truck it 12 mllet to Lardo\nin the event of the line being abandoned, he could not continue to\noperate. He did not think the C.P.R.\nright-of-way could ever be made\ninto a good: road. The fills, and to\non, were too narrow. Hit mill was\nnot a portable one.\nM. K. Harrlton, of Howur,\nfourth wltneu, ttated he had bttn\nlogging thtrt tlnce hit rtturn\nfrom tht wir In 1922. He averred\nthat tlmea wtrt much bttttr btfort tht dtprtulen than they were\nnow, but did not think the In-\ndustrlet of tht Lardtau had bttn\nscratched yet A highway could\nnot bt kept free of mow there in\nwinter by tht government ai tht\ngovernment had not tht mow-\nduring tqulpment poututd by\nthe riilrotd. Ht wat authorlxed\nto tpeak for tht ptoplt of tht\nvilley thtt they would ba unified with tht service being given\nat preient, and that a truck during tha winter would be sufficient.\nHe believed there wai mining going on in the Trout lake country,\nand thought that lumbering in the\nLardeau was due for better times.\nDistricts adjacent to the railroad,\nin more favored parts of B. C. were\npractically cleared of timber and\nlumberment were being compelled\nto go to the more remote districts.\nThere wm a lot of good farm land\nin the Lardeau.\n0. Q. Gallaher, anlstant dla*\nFORESTS Of TOMORROWI\nNatural young growth will restock cut-over\nland if fires are kept out. You con help\nprotect theee forests of the future ... be\ncareful with fire near theee zones.\nBe Sure Your Match, Cigarette or Fire it Dead Before You Leave It.\ntrlct tnglnttr of provincial public workt, ttated that tht department of public worki of tht provlnct would hot oppoit tht cancellation of the road, on the understanding that tha railroad bed\nto ba handed ovtr to thtm to bt\nuted for a highway.\nWENT IN IN GOOD FAITH\nT. J. Alnaworth uid he had been\nin the Lardeau 25 yean and that\nwhen he flnt went there, three\ntrains travelled the line every week.\nPeople moving in there with him\nhad done ao in good faith that fruit\ngrowing could be made a success.\nThey had been encouraged in this\nthought by the government and the\nCanadian .Pacific railway. If the line\nwere abandoned now it would work\nuntold hardships. It was absolutely\nout of reuon to think that the government could keep the road open\nif the CP.R. coula not. He would\nestimate that tbere were about 100\npeople living from Lardeau to Gerrard, and he believed there were\ntwice that number when he first\nwent in. Tlie population fell off partly becauae of failure ln fruit growing, and partly because of bad times.\nFruit growing, however, wu not\ngoing to make that country\u2014it\nwould be lumbering and mining.\nJoe Gallo informed the court he\nhad been in the Lardeau country\nsinoe 1927 and that he believea it\nto be as good as the Ymir and Sheep\ncreek districts. Lut year he had an\naverage of 29 men working for htm\nup there, but ao far this year he had\nnot started.\nPLENTY OF ORE\nJ. W. Thompson, agent for the\nMagnate mines, declared the company which tie represented had\nspent about $6000 In mine development on their property near Ger-\nrad station. Most of that work wu\ndone lut year. Silver, lead and zinc\nwere the three main kinds of metal\nto be tound. He stated it would be\nimpossible to make a road from the\nCPJt. road-bed. And lt would be\nimpossible to make a road from the\noperations if they had to move their\nore by truck. Expenses and upkeep\nlor trucks were too high. There was\nplenty of ore there worth development\nMn. John Keen also give evidence regarding mines md ore of\nthe Lardeau. She atated there were\nabout 15 mine operations in that district\nSteve McDonald stated ha had\ninterest in 80 claims in the district.\nIt was lust as hard, he remarked,\nto get money for properties In the\nSheep Creek md Ymir districts u\nit wu for Uie Lardeau. The depression affected the silver and lead\nprices and the mlnei of the district\nhad not been able to operate. He\nproduced a map showing the mineral claims of the area md itated\n.that the old Ume protpecton were\ngenerally admitted to know \"their\nstuff md that the heavy claim tiling wai an indication there wu\nplenty ot ore. Only assessment work\nwu being done at present ln nearly\nall cases. Some of the claims had\nbeen filed for over 20 years. He believed It would kill the country to\ntake the railroad out.\nPLAN OPERATIONS\nIn summing up his cue, E. C.\nWragge read a statement trom the\npresident of the Kootenay Cedar\ncompany, itatlng that the company\nI wu considering resuming opera-\n1 tiont but could not guarantee to\nwhat extent They had big holdings\nNG, JULY 22. 1938\nin the district that they had not\ntouched.\n'the company had not touched\nthese resources becauie they had\nthought tbey had an appreciating\ninvestment They could nave tola\nsmall blocki in theie reserves but\nhad preferred to hold the entire\narea.\nTne railroad, submitted Mr.\nWragge, wu trie only means of\ncommunication .or a considerable\narea of mining and lumbering country, and that the Trout lake and\nDuncan river districts were included in the area terved by thia railroad. There would be more activity\nin the Lardeau when the price of\nlead came back, even thougn silver\nwent no higher than the figure\nquoted for it at the present tune.\n'ihe abandoning of the line would\ndelay the future of the Lardeau.\nHe knew the C.P.R. wu operating at a lou too. The people ot the\nLeardeau were ready to accept a\ngu car service for the winter.\nTo give some idea of the amount\nof ore produced, Mr, Wngge quoted figures trom the minuter of\nminei report showing the amounts\not gold, silver, lead, line and copper that came from the Lardeau\ncountry.\nINTEHE8T8 LOOK AT\nLARDEAU\nWhile there had not been a depression in mining during the put\ntwo yean, Mr. Wragge contended\nthat it tooK longer for capital to get\ninto the back districts. Moneyed interests were inquiring about the\nLardeau. Outer districts were not\ntailing to get money because they\ndid not have the ore. The Slocan,\nfor instance, had been shut down.\nThe minister of mines of the\nprovince alto objected to the removal of the railway.\nWhile  touching on  Industriu,\nthtrt  wat tht  ponlbllity of a\npulp Induitry. Pulp whleh oould\nbe produoed thtrt would provldt\na ver**-  high  grad* of paptr, \u25a0\ngndt whkh tout ptopli eould\nhot compete with.\nIt one took the recent report of\nSir Edward W. Beatty, preiident\nof the C.P.R.. he would learn that\nthere wu little likelihood ot the\nCPJt  going   bankrupt and  that\nthe traffic of the put year had not\nbeen at a lou. In concluding, said\nMr. Wragge, he would submit that\nit wu unfair to use the figures of\nthe put few years as if conditions\nhad been normal. The Lardeau had\nexperienced boom years too. And\nhe thought that it the people ot\nLardeau were to be ruined, they\nshould be ruined on better data than\nhad been produced in favor of abandonment of thc line,\nCaptain James Fltzslmmons wu\ncalled to give evidence by Mr. McMullen. He stated the railroad wu\nbuilt on the strength of what wu\nMeagher's Ltd. Stock\nTHE CUSTOMERS FROM OUTSIDE POINTS ARE SATING:- \"DONT\nMISS GETTING TO NELSON FOR THIS, THE SALE OF SAIES!\nTHEY'VE GOT THE GREATEST BARGAINS EVER OFFERED.\"\nBARGAINS SUCH AS THESE\nRayon Bed Spreads, 80x100, Reg. to\n$5.75. Sale   $2.98\nFall Coats, Reg, to $165 Sale $39.50\nSpring Coats, Reg. to $69.50, Sale $19.95\nSpring Suits, Reg. to $39.50 .... Sale $9.95   Printed Voiles, Reg, to 60c       Sale 39c\nCotton Prints, Sateens and Voiles, Reg.\nto 25c. Sale  - 14c\nLinen Cloths, 70x70, Reg. $3.50,\nSale _. $1.95\n54-inch Woolen Suitings and Dress Goods,\nReg. to $2.95. Sale .._ $1.19\n27-inch Corduroy, Reg. to 75c. Sale 29c\nPrinted Silks, Reg. to $2.25. Sale... $1.19\nAwning and Canvas, 30 inches wide,\nReg. to 55c Sale 29c\nbeing produced by Uie Silver Cup\nmd Nettie L. Mines. He stated that\nore wu hauled by sleighs to Beaton during the winter ln the early\ndays, and wu ihipped via the Arrow lakei.\nHe admitted that the Slocm mines\nran high in lead and zinc, and that\nalthough the prieet were very low\nthc mines hu ceued to work, but\nthey were not abandoned.\nDID NOT JUSTIFY\nCONTINUANCE\nMr. McMullen declared the evidence given disclosed clearly there\nwu nothing to justify Uie continuance of the line. Protest against\nabandonment ot the line wu bued\non the movement of poles and\nmarble. Mr. Wragge stated the\nC.P.R. had not quoted figures previous to 1931, but the line hid been\nlosing money since 1914. The revenue from Uie line hid been t source\nof worry tor tome yetrt.\nThe lou on tht llm for tht put\nMORE ABOUT\nETHIOPIA\n(Continued From Pagt One)\nEthiopian war lett peace covenants\nbecome mere scraps of paper.\nEMPEROR'S POINTS\nReiterating Ethiopia's unwavering\ndetermination to defend itt territory, the emperor made these points\nln hit cue against Italy:\n1. The Italian altitude threatens\nto destroy the efficacy ot the League\nof Nations.\n2. It promises to convert the Kel-\nlogg-Bnant pact outlawing war into\nmere pious nopes.\n3. \"A drunken brawl between na\nUve employees of a commercial\nagency md local police\" is the best\nexcuse Italy can find for her apparently impending invasion.\n4. Italy \"ls seking a pretext for\na campaign of vilification with '\nview to eventual conquest.\"\nMORE ABOUT\nHARRINGTON\n(Continued From Page Ont)\nthe contributory upeet of the insurance scheme it will be proclaimed\nin the Cmada Gazette.\nCol. Harrington wUl receive a salary of $10,000 and the two commissioners S_,000 each. Headquarten\nwUl be in Ottawa. Just what de-\npartment'of government wlll have\njurisdiction over the commission\nhu not yet been decided but it is\nlikely the minister of labor will be\nthe responsible government member.\nCENSUS OF UNEMPLOYED\nThe commission will be expected\nto come to close grips with the unemployment problem. One of the\nfirst duties will be to compile records of the unemployed md employable population, the tint official\neffort in that direction since the\ncensus of 1931.\nThe insurance scheme Itself applies to a wide list of selected classes of employment while certain\notheri are excluded. It appliea to\nmen and women worken who will\nbc required to contribute small\namounts weekly, their employen\nsimilar amount! md thc government\na leaser amount but carrying the\nadministration costs. A worker must\nmake 40 weekly contributions before he or the becomes eligible for\ncompensation which rmges from $6\na week downward.\nThe commission will also take\nsteps to set up means of occupational and physical training of unemployed men to prepare them for vocations when work may become\navailable.\nThere will also be insurance of-\nMORE ABOUT\nTRADE PACT\n(Continued From Pagt One)\nnentation dutlet md fixed valuations, and for aateitment of ordinary duty at the depreciated current\nrate of exchange. Such a coune\nwould In practice involve discrimination againit other countrlea. including Great Britain, and place Japan\nin a privileged position In our markets.\n\"The Japanese government wu Informed the government of Canada\nwould consider the Imposition of a\nsurtax on Canada goods a violation\nof the equal treatment guaranteed\nby the Anglo-Japanete treity in\n1911. to which Canada became a\nparty In 1913. md that in such case,\nthe Canadian government would\nhave no opUon but to impose on\nJapanese goods the surtax of 33 1-3\nper cent ad valorem provided for\nin tecUon VII of the Cmadian customs tariff, ai wu done in the case\nof Germany in 1933.\nMORE ABOUT\nSTEVENS\n(Continued From Pagt One)\nform program, he made a plea that\nthe Dominion go aa far ai possible\nIn its own field. Constitutional difficulties, he urged, should not be\nused u an excuse to bar progressive\nsteps.\nBUTTER SURPLUSES\nHe suggested that, when butter\nsurpluses threatened to cause price\ndrops, a government would be justified in \"lifting off\" the market\nlarge quantities of this commodity.\nReform legislation of the government came in for some ridicule at\nthe hands of the Reconstruction\nleader. Prime Minister Bennett, he\nsaid, had been referred to as the\n\"father of reform,\" Mr. Stevens said\nthat the test of parentage wat to\nbe found in the answer to such questions as: \"Are the children healthy?\nAre they well nurtured and vigorous?\"\nHe applied thli test to the five\nreform bills of the prime minister.\nThese bills, he declared, had been\nturned over by their father to \"foster parents,\" in the person of Hon.\nC. H. Cahan. and Hon. Hugh Guthrie.\n10% Off\nLEISHMAN and\nFASHION-CRAFT\nMADE-TO-MEASURE\nCLOTHES\nFor the balance of this\nmonth Leishman and Fi-\nshion-Craft are giving \u2022\n\u202210% DISCOUNT off all\nmade-to-measure suits,\nbee the samples today.\nFit and Satisfaction guaranteed.\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nTOO UTE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST - ONE   PAIR   TORTOISE\nshell rimmed bl-focal glasses between Josephine itreet md cemetery. Apply DaUy News. Reward.\n(2649)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nFREE   PANTS   SALE   DURING\nJULY.  IDEAL TAILORS.     (2442)\nring\nh, 31\nSmith, 318 Baker St. Phone W\u00ab.\n12350)\nAfternoon Dresses, Reg. to $50,\nSole   $14.95\nEvening Dresses, Reg. to $39.50,\nSole _ $10.95\nCorsets, Nemo Flex, D. & A., Nu-Bock,\nFront Lace Foundation, Reg. to $3.75,\nSale $1.69\nBrassieres, Nemo Flex, Reg. to $2.50,\nSale  : .._\u25a0 .  - 89c\nBrassieres, Reg. to 75c, Sale _ 29c\nScrims, Voiles, Marquisettes, Reg. to 45c,\nSale _  19c\nPay your City taxei on or btfort\nAug. 1st and avoid tht paymtnt of\nany ptntlty. (2612)\nEagles' whiit drive and dance,\ntomorrow, Tue., July 23rd as usual,\n(2644)\nPythian Sisters Buket Picnic at\nPark Wed.. July 24th. Knlghta ot\nPythlas md children of same are\ninvited. (2636)\nDaughters of England meet tonight, Memorial Hall, 8 o'clock.\n(2637)\nfour yeart hid betn about $22,-\n000 a year and It would taka 200\nmore cart ptr annum to get tht\ncompany out of tht rtd on thtt\nbranch. Thtrt did not Htm to bt\nmuch hope of that Tht marble\ncompany had not shipped 42 cart\nin four ytan. Thty had only\nshipped 30 cart In their beit yttr,\n192_. Tht tvidtnet wu ill agalnit\ntht railroad gtttlng tnough to\nbring It anywhtrt ntar operating expeniei.\nMINING ONLY A PROSPECT\nIn view of that, why thould the\nC. P. R. be uked to maintain md\noperate, and pay taxea on a line,\nJust on the chance that in years to\ncome the traffic would pick up? The\nmining there wu only a prospect.\nThe final conclusion should not\nrest on the amount of personal investments in the district. The railway situaUon wu in a delicate situation and it wu essential that the\npublic at large should be proected.\nTherefore, it would be in the intereit! of the public to abandon the\nline.\nMr. Wragge in rejoinder pointed\nout that the company wu given\n$153,000 bonui tor building the line,\nand he doubted if the total loss\nwould equal that amount. Figures\nhad not yet been produced for the\nyears prevloua to 1914, which were\nundoubtedly years of profit.\nChairman McLean declared there\nhad been such a wealth of matter\nSiven that the board would reserve\neclalon.\nAlthough the other application,\nseeking for a railway crossing, was\ndelayed, the Canadian Pacific railway opposed it on the grounds that\nIt would be haurdous, owing to the\nlimited view westbound trains would\nhave of the crossing; also because\nthat there was a slight down-grade\nthere and the trains were not under\nthe best control.\nNO\nRefunds\nExchanges\nApprovals\nEVERY SALE\nMUST BE FINAL!\nPay your City taxei on or btfort\nAug. 1st and avoid tha paymint of\nany ptnalty. (2612)\nBugle band dance Canadian Legion building, Saturday, July 27.\nTrail Premier dance bmd. Admiiiion SO and 29. Cool hall, good floor.\nDancing 8:30 till 12. (2641)\nNelion Golf and Country club\nfield day next Wednesday, July 24,\napproach and putting conteit. Ten-\nnil courta open to the public. Tea\nfrom 3 to 7, 29 cents. Everyone invited. (2643)\nficers appointed in each province,\nas well as local employment agencies, and an insurmce advisory\ncommittee of not more than six\nmembers and not serving full time\non a salary basil.\nSTUDY HEALTH INSURANCE\nAnother duty of the commission\nwill be to study md report on proposed methods ot health Insurance\nin cooperation with provinces and\nmunicipaliUes, md make recommendations to the governor-in-council.\nCol. Harrington was born in Halifax, 1883, and wu educated at Dalhouiie univeraity in that city. He entered provincial politics in 1929\nwhen he was elected tor Cape Breton centre md became Nova Scotia\nminister of works and mines. Elected again in 1928 Col. Harrington\ntook over the premiership when\nPremier E. N. Rhodes resigned in\n1930 to enter the Bennet government\nu minister of fisheries.\nHii acceptance of his new position will mean a vacancy in thc\nNova Scotia legislature with choice\nof a new Conservative leader in\nthat province.\nTom Moore for 17 years president\nof the trades md labor congress\nof Canada hu been appointed labor's representative of the employment md social lnaurance commission. Aged 97 years, Mr. Moore has\ngiven many years to organized labor. He took an active part in mediating labor disputes during the war.\nMr. Moore wu a member of the\nCanadian National railway board\nfrom the time It wai created until\nIt wu superseded by the board of\ntrustees in 1933. He was a member\nof the royal commission on industrial unrest in 1919. He has been a\nmember since 1922 of the governing\nbedy of the international labor office In Geneva.\nGREYHOUND LINES now maka\nIt poulble for you to travel from\nNtlton to Vtrnon in 10 houn, to\nKtlownt 11 1-2 hours, to Kimloopt\n13 1-2 houn. Bui leaves DAILY at\n1:00 a.m. (2969)\nThis Sale Conducted at the Former\nMeagher Location\nFINK'S Ltd.\nOur Staff\nof 60 Will\nNolle Tour\nShopping\nEasy.'\nCARD OP THANKS\nMr. and Mra. J. S. Hirst of Queens\nBiy wish to think til friends for ex*\npression*; of kindness and symotthy\nduring their sad bereav-ment In the\nlost of their dear girl, Cleeve Joan.\n(2640)\nFUNERAL NOTICE*\nRobert\u2014MW., it Nelion paued\nawty Siturday. Body retti it Davit\nfuneirl oirlori unUl Tueedty when\nlt will be conveyed to the church\nef Mtry TmmicuMe where funeral\ntervice will be held at 9 i.m., Father\nMcKentle officiating. . (2642)\nIf Your Thlnty Thut Hot Dtyt\n.        Get t Bottle of\nENGLISH   HEALTH  SALINE\nat\nSmythe's\nThe Pnwrlptlon Druggltti\nPHONE 1\nPHONE 815\ntor bttttr and prompttr urvlce In plumbing rtpalrt and\nilttrttiom.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nMORE ABOUT   (\nSenators Named\n(Continued From Pige One)\nents md copyrUjhtt, hu been ep-\npointed commissioner.\nD. MacKinnon, Charlottetown\nlawyer, was appointed district Judge\nin admiralty lor Prince Edward Island.\nNumerous other important ep-\npointmentt remiln to be filled by\nthe prime miniiter, including the\nCanadian wheat board of three\nmembers, several deputy ministers,\nseven senators, and mmy lesser ad-'\nministraUve posts.\nIn addiUon there will be the necessity of replacing the four min'\nisters who were effected in yesterday's appointments, md the likelihood of further vacancies in the\ncabinet before the general election,\nHon. Hugh Guthrie, mlnltter ef\nJuttlce, it expected to bt made\nchairman of tht board of railway\ncommissioners, to bt succeeded by i\nHon. J. L. Bowman, ipeaktr of\nthe houie of commoni; J. Earl '\nLawson, mtmbtr for Eut York\nand pruent Dominion Conservative organlxer, It expected te be*\ncomt minltttr of thl nttiontl revenue to replace Hon. R. C. Mat-\nthtwt who hu tnnounctd hit intention of rttirlng. Hon. T. G.\nMurphy, minltttr of tht Inttrior,\nhat been tentatively slated for one\nof tha tenatt vacancies In Manitoba.\nPOSSIBLE CABINET\nMEMBER\nW. G. Ernst, member for Queena\nLunenberg, hu been prominentia\nmentioned at minister of f isherie*\na portfolio now carried by the mln*\nister of national defence. He wii\nbc the new Nova Scotia represent*\native in the .cabinet, but no name\nhave been mentioned u the pouibli\nsuccessor of Mr. Rhodei u minlstei\nof finance. Sam Gobeil, member foi\nCompton, la said to be in line foi\nthe postoffice portfolio.       ^^^^\nFor the Canadim wheat boardi\nit is understood the government haa\nsought the services of John I. Me\nFarland, general manager of thl\nCanadian Cooperative wheat ProJ\nducen, Limited, Robert McKee]\nVancouver wheat exporter, ana\nPaul Bredt, head of the Manltobd\npooli.\nAlthough Mr. Bennett was\nleave tonight for an extended holl*\nday md rest, he said it did not neeJ\nessarily follow that further appoint'\nmenti would await hii return. U\nis believed, however, there will be\nno cabinet reorganizations until he\nis back in hli office, and that thd\nlection date wUl be announced alsd\nat that time. ^^\nto)\nI\n<-*_{\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW.W.Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot ef Stanley Sf.\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1935_07_22","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\/1.0406754","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1935-07-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1935-07-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}