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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":" mMwmmmmmmmmmmW\nWheat Prices Lower as Long\nClimb Comes to End\n\u2014Page Eleven\n.piigp^w^s'-^fi-g;^^\nii\\\nCotton Wins British Golf Open\nin Last Round Rally\n\u2014Page Eight\n\/RITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 10, 1937.\nNUMBER  69\n*l\nas Heat Wave Spreads\nFrance May Throw Open Her Frontier\nto Aid France if Crisis is Not Soon Solved\nTiny Rubber Raft May Mean Life for Lost Filers\nJritain Accepts Assignment From 27-Nation\nCommittee to Seek Solution to Impasse\nin Question of Isolating the War\nLONDON, July 9 (CP)\u2014Great Britain, In her familiar role of conciliator, tonight accepted an assignment by the 27-nation non-intervention committee to seek a solution of the Impasse reached over the\nquestion of Isolating the Spanish civil war.\nWithdrawal of foreigners from both sides of the itruggle will be\nthe cardinal point around which British efforts will hinge, It was Intimated as Foreign Secretary Eden began conferences with diplomatic\nrepresentatives here of the non-intervention nations.\nThe foreign office  instructed its* >\u25a0\nnbassadors  and  ministers  in  all\nuropean capitals to open inquiries\n1th a compromise in mind.\nToday's plenary session of the\nfull committee was confronted\nwith a new problem when Ambassador Charles Corbln of France\nintimated that unless the powers\ncan agree on some formul^ \"beginning next week\" France may\nthrow open her Spanish border\nto passage of arms and men.\nCorbin was understood to have\narned that France will end the sys-\nm ot international frontier super-\nsion unless the international nail patrol of Spain's coasts is re-\nored or British observers have re-\nirned to similar functions on the\njanish-Portugese frontier by then.\nJrtugal withdrew facilities for the\nrltish observers when the four-\niwer naval patrol broke down.\nLater the French embassy said\njrbin did not mean a flat repeal of\ne frontier control system Monday\n\"beginning next week\"\u2014an infinite date intended to give Por-\n[al time to reconsider her atti-\nle.\namrades Pay\nLast Respects\nto Jack Miller\n[elson business circles were wide-\nrepresented Friday afternoon at\nfuneral service at St. Saviour's\n\u2022cathedral of Jack McKim Mil-\na ton of Nelson, but of recent\nTS resident in Trail for the Mc-\nlald Jam company. The Asso-\n\u00a3d Canadian Travellers, and\niting commercial men, attended\na body.\nren. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham\nmer rector of St Saviour's, and\nplain of the Nelson council of\nTravellers body, conducted the\nirice, which embraced the Ang-\nn burial service based upon\nll's words to the Corinthians.\niw is Christ risen from the dead,\"\nApostles Creed, the hymn, \"The\nig of Love My Shepherd Is,\" and\nyer.\niterment was In the City ceme-\nwhere Archdeacon Graham\nnounced the commital.\nhe pall-bearers were F. A. Bak-\nS. Bradley, Felix Schroeder,\nMcDonald and Alex Martin\nNelson, and T. A. Temple of\nil.\nhere were many floral tributes.\nlokane Cricket\nub Here Sunday\npokane Cricket club will meet\nNelson cricketers at the Recrea-\ngrounds   here   Sunday.   The\nie opens at 10 a.m. W. S. King\nTom Dronsfield will umpire,\nelson lineup follows: H. D. Daw-\nF. H. Smit h,T. Nutter, N.\ndley, Alfred Parker, R. Main,\nBowkett, P. Brabazon, George\ninson and C. D. Pearson.\nSINO-JAPANESE\nCRISIS NOW\nPAST\nPeiping, July 9 (AP)\u2014Chinese\nand Japanese officials agreed tonight the clash of their troops\nwest of Peiping had been \"localized\" and one more dangerous\nSino-Japanese affray had passed from the military to the diplomatic stage.\nAll Chinese forces and most of\nthe Japanese had been withdrawn\nfrom the fighting zone around\nthe beautiful Marco Polo bridge\nand the walled village of Wan-\npinghsien, where several thousand troops had been in intermittent conflict from 11 p.m. Wednesday until this afternoon.\nPARIS HOTEL AND\nCAFE WORKERS\nTO STRIKE\nPARIS, July 10 (Saturday). (AP)\n\u2014The Union of Hotel, Cafe and\nRestaurant Workers early today\ncalled a general striteJfti.Barii.\n' The action, apparently effective\nimmediately, was voted In a midnight meeting of union delegates\nafter a conference with Premier\nChautemps who attempted to dissuade them from striking.\nA strike order was issued announcing a general strike was decided upon against employers in\nthe hotel industry \"refusing to apply\na 40-hour week in five eight-hour\ndays.\"\n\"Houses having applied the law,\"\nthe order said, \"will remain open.\"\nThe government decreed a five-\nday, 40-hour week last month, Owners, however, opposed the shorter\nwork week on grounds that operative costs would be prohibitive.\nCaledonia Lands\nat PI. Washington\nPORT WASHINGTON, July 9\n(AP) \u2014Imperial Airways' silver-\nwinged flying boat Caledonia dropped into the waters of Long Island\nSound off Port Washington late today to end the first westward transatlantic trip of a commercial seaplane\nOfficials who met the four-engin-\ncd plane and its crew of veterans\nregarded the flight as a routine venture preliminary to establishment\nof regular transatlantic passenger\nand mall service by the British company and Pan American Airways.\nThe 3300-mile flight from Foynes,\nIreland, which began Monday, was\nended by a three-hour flight from\nMontreal.\nTEREST KEEN IN BROADCAST OF\nPREMIER KING SLATED NEXT WEEK\npected to Give His\"\nImpressions of\nEurope\nTTAWA, July 9 (CP)-Retum\ny of Prime Minister Mackenzie\n[ and those who accompanied\nto the Imperial conference will\na midsummer period of great\n\u25a0'ity in government circles like-\ni extend over the next fortnight\nmger.\nitil the end of the present month\nexpected there will be frequent\nings of cabinet-council and a\ning up of the great volume of\nic and other important matters\nl have accumulated during the\nmonths' absence from the capi-\nf the majority of government\niers.\nearly development, possibly\nng at next Wednesday's cabi-\nsouncil, will be action toward\ninting Ihe royal commission on\nimic relations between Ihe\nnces and the Dominion. Grant\ning of contracts for mine-sweepers\nand other items in the defence program, measures to cope with the\nilensified drought problem in western Canada, and trade negotiations\nwill also be to the forefront of government activities.\nAlthough the prime minister appeared greatly refreshed by his travels and in the best of health when\nhe arrived in Ottawa today, he has\nhad an almost unbroken period of\ngreat effort since parliament assembled last January. It is expected\nas soon as immediate problems are\ndisposed of he will seek some rest\nand quiet at Kingsmere, his country\nhome in the Gatineau hills.\nConsiderable Interest attaches to\nthe message the prime mlnltter\nwill broadcast, probably next Friday, since he hat stated then he\nwill give some impressions of the\ncoronation, the Imperial conference, and of France, Germany and\nBelgulm, which he visited In the\nlast fortnight.\nHer Husband Lost\nAnxiously awaiting\nfrom tiny Howland Island, in the\nsouth Pacific, near where Miss\nAmelia .Kaf hart's, globe-circling\nairplane is believed iofted* down\nis Mrs. :Frtd Jfopnan,-? pictured\nhere at Oakland, Calif., wife of\nCapt. Noonan, Miss Earhart's\nnavigator. The greatest sea-hunt\nin U.S. history is under way in\nan effort to locate and rescue\nthe stranded fliers.\nMADRID FORCES\nTAKEQUIJORNA\nMADRID, July 9, (AP)\u2014Government Spain's troops defending\nMadrid, transformed Into an offensive force tha last four dayi,\ntoday captured QuIJorna, 18 milet\nwatt of the capital.\nA government communique asserted the drive alto carried the\nMadrid troops Into Brunette, Important road Junction Joint X\/i\nmiles toutheatt of Quejorna.\nGeneral Joto Mlaja't government army supported by widespread activity of Its aviation,\nshoved its attack against General\nFranco't besieging troops deeper\nInto Inturgent territory In three\ndirections.\nSUPREME COURT\nOF B. C. STATES\nMARKETING ACT\nIS INTRA-VIRES\nMacDonald Calls the\nVerdict ''Most\nImportant\"\nDISAGREES WITH\nJUSTICE MANSON\nVICTORIA, July 9 (CP)-Brlt-\nIsh Columbia's appeal court In\nan opinion delivered to the gov\nernment today declared unanimously that tha province's natural\nproducti marketing act wat within the power ef tht legislature\nto past.\nIn giving reatont for Judgment\nMr. Justice M. A. Macdonald said\nthe act did not create a hew deliberative body with the right to\nlegislate, thut disagreeing with the\nargument of Mr. Justice A. M.\nManton In tupreme court that\nthe legislature had unconstitutionally delegated Itt legislative functions to the lieutenant-governor-\nIn-councll. Mr. Justice Manson on\nMay 29 declared the act ultra vires\nand today's appeal court decision\nfollows the government's request\nfor an opinion.\nIn legislative circles.the opinion;\nwas not interpreted as upsetting\nJustice Manson's finding in favor oi\nWilliam A. Hayward and Independent Milk ProScan Co-operative\nassociation against the B.C. Lower\nI Mainland Dair'y'M-Sauttflibafd; but: I\n^fi-ifter as opening the way for ail\nappeal in that case.\nAgriculture'Minister K. C. MacDonald greeted the opinion as \"one\nof the most important in the history\nof the long-debated question of the\nright to control marketing.\"\nOriginally designed in 1934 to\noperate in conjunction with the\nFederal Marketing act, amendments\nwere passed at the last session of\nthe legislature designed to make\nthe provincial measure stand up\nalone when the privy council declared the dominion measure invalid.\nHOMES CLIMB\nCOAST BOXLA\nVANCOUVER, July 9 (CP) -\nRichmond Homes moved a step nearer vacating their cellar be:'th in the\nintercity box lacrosse league here\ntonight when they downed New\nWestminster Adanacs  23-16.\nThe win pulled Richmond from\nlone cellar occupants to a tie with\nBurrards in fourth place.\nRichmond led 11-7 at half time and\nafter an even third quarter romped\nahead outscoring the Royal City\nsquad 9-6 in the final period.,\nJenion led the winners with seven goals.\nTHREE CANADIANS\nWOUNDED IN SPAIN\nMADRID, July 9 (AP) \u2014 Three\nCanadians wounded while fighting\nwith Spanish government forces in\nthe current drive against insurgents\noutside Madrid were in hospital\nhere today with a number of British\nand American wounded.\nThe wounded, mostly with arm or\nleg Injuries from machine-jgun and\nrifle bullets, were, all pronounced\nout of danger,\nCanadians were Ed Cecil Smith,\nformer Toronto newspaperman and\nnow officer in command of one of\nthe three companies of the Canadian McKenzie-Papineau battalion\nof volunteers; Ben Murray, Toronto,\nand Eino Hallikanen of Port Arthur,\nOnt.\nWealtfigr\nMin. Max\nNELSON  -  56   89\nVictoria,  5i   73\nNanaimo   52   73\nVancouver   52   74\nKamloops  - 60   90\nPrince George  44  72\nEstevan Point  48  62\nPrince Rupert -  48  64\nLangara  _  46  60\nAtlin   34   46\nDawson, Y.T.  42\nSeattle   56\nPortland, Ore.,  56\nSpokane  60\nLos Angeles  -  58\nKelowna   51\nPenticton     52\nGrand Forks -  54\nKaslo  56\nCranbrook  52\nCalgary   56\nEdmonton   54\nSwift Current   62\nMoose Jaw  64\nPrince Albert   62\nSaskatoon  \u201e  68\nQu'Appelle   60\nWinnipeg  62\nOkanagan and Kootenay\u2014Fresh\nwesterly winds becoming strong,\nfine hot and dangerously dry.\nTrailites   Take   Out\nLicence to Wed\nat Seattle\nSEATTLE, July 9, (AP)-A marriage licence has been issued here\nto Frederick J. Butler, 26, and Hilda\nMay Duncan, 24, both of Trail, B.C.\nThe tiny rubber life raft which Amelia Ear\nhart Putnam, ace aviatrix is inflating with a small\nhand pump, may mean the difference between\nlife and death for her and her flying companion\nCapt. Fred Noonan, navigator. Down somewhere\nin the ^outh Pacific near isolated Howland Island\non an attempted 2600-mile ocean hop in their world-\ngirdling land airplane, Miss Earhart was believed\nto have broadcast a radio message to the effect that\nher craft was rapidly becoming water-logged and\nIn danger of sinking. Unless the lost fliers are on\na reef or tiny island, the rubber life raft would be\ntheir only method of keeping afloat if the machine\nsank. Meanwhile the greatest search in United\nStates aviation history was under way with navy\nwarships and airplanes, including an aircraft carrier with its complete flotilla of planes, rushing\ntoward the area where thefliers are believed down.\nGeorge Palmer Putnam, husband of Miss Earhart\nis pictured at LEFT waiting at an Oakland, Calif.,\ncoastguard station, for news of his wife. Mr. Putnam was reported almost exhausted by his anxious\nvigil.\ntJ7S. Navy Launches Its\nEffort to Find Woman Flier\nU.S. SWELTERS\nWHILE. MERCURY\nSHOOTS T0100 IN\nSPITEOFTHERAIN\nRecord Shattered for\nThird Successive\nDay in N. Y.\nMANY POINTS ARE\nHOTTER 'N' HELL\nCHICAGO, July 9 (CP)-The most\nprotracted heat wave of 1937 spread\nrapidly today to envelop most of\nthe United States east of the Rockies.* Paced by rising temperatures,\nthe total of deaths attributed to\nthe sweltering spell rose to 92.\nScattered showers and cloud formations in many parts of the country failed to break the siege. No\ngeneral relief was sighted.\nThe season's heat record was shattered for the third successive day hi\nNew York City. The official thermometer there registered 95.1 at 12.\np.m. P.S.T. The humidity was 38.\nNearby Newark recorded 98.\nResidents of Philadelphia and Wilmington, Del., watched the mercury advance to 97 degrees\u2014high\nmark for the year.\nThe torrid pall over the prairie\nstates of the west, the east and New\nEngland  extended into the south\nduring the day.\n89 AT CHICAGO\nChicago had a peak, temperature\nof 89 shortly after noon but lower\nhumidity eased the city's trial by\nheat. Ah unofficial 100 was reported\nin suburban Willow Springs.\nMajority of tha ttatet were be-\nlet by 80, 90 and 100 degree weather. At many points It wat hotter\nthan Hell (Mich.), where 93 waa\nthe top.  Perspiring  dlwlplet ef\nfather Dlvlno found his Hudton\nriver \"Heaven\" too humid and began an exodus.\nThese temperatures guaged tha\nscope and severity of the siege:\nPierre.'S. B, 101; Aberdeen, S.D,\n100;: Newark, 98; New;Haven, St;\nNew York, 95.11; Minneapolis, 94;\nWashington, 93.5; Baltimore and\nSpringfield, Mass., 93; Worcester,\nMass. 92.5; Centralia, * 111., 92; Cincinnati, Madison, Wis., and Detroit\n91; Columbus,. O., St.' Petersburg.\nFla., and Springfield, 111, 90.\nTHREE SUSPENDED\nIN POLICE PROBE\n\u2022VANCOUVER, July 9 (CP)\u2014Two\nmembers of the general office staff\nof Vancouver police headquarters\nand the police court clerk were suspended late today r.s members of the\nVancouver police commission opened .their investigation into theft of\n11500 in bail money from the city\npolice station.\nThe commission said the suspension of W. W. Crompton, clerk, and\nSergeants Everett J. Annesley and\nDonald Campbell of the general office staff was only temporary, pending an inquiry to be made by Chief\nW. W. Foster and City Prosecutor\nOscar Orr, which should take two\ndays.\nTwo Collisions\nReported Trail\nAvonson Faces Charge\nDriving Common\nDanger\nTRAIL, B. C, July 9 - Sibley\nAvonson will be charged with driving to the common danger as the result of an accident at the intersection of Victoria street and Cedar\navenue shortly before 4 o'clock this\nafternoon.\nA truck owned by George Popoff\nparked at the curb on Rossland\navenue was allegedly struck by a\ncar driven by Pete Bapurin about\n6:30 p.m., being forced onto the\nsidewalk and about $25 damage\ndone to it, according to a police\nreport.\nBILL  KAPAK  INJURED\nBill Kapak, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nPeter Kapak of Nelson, is receiving\ntreatment in Spokane following an\nauto accident while on the way to\nSpokane. He is not in serious\ndanger.\nSEVEN-YEAR RECORD OF BUS DRIVER\nEBBS AS VEHICLE GOES OVER BANK\nPacked 40-Passenger Bus and All Occupants Escape Serious\nInjury in Mishap on Highway Under Repair Near Yahk\nYAHK, B. C, July 9 -Striking\nsoft ground on a stretch of the highway under repair between Green\nBay and Palmer Bar Wednesday's\nwest bound bus met with difficulties which resulted in the \"bus overturning down a slight embankment.\nThe bus, one of the new 40 passenger type, with every seat occupied, was at the  time proceeding\nslowly and not one of the passengers was seriously injured nor\nwas the bus damaged beyond a few\ndents.\nThe mishap, however, was much\nregretted since the driver, W.\nBrown, had recently received recognition for seven consecutive years\nof \"no accident\" driving\u2014an outstanding record.\nLexington Sails From\nSan Diego With\n62 Planes\nHONOLULU, July 9 (AP)\u2014The\nUnited States navy launched Itt\nfinal eforftt to find Amelia Earhart In the vast equatorial Pacific\ntonight as the mighty aircraft\ncarrier Lexlnlton sped toward the\nEquator to puth her 62 planet Into\nthe far-flung hunt. '\nRefuelled after a dath to Hawaii\nfrom   San   Diego,  the   Lexington\ntailed from  Lahalna roads at 3:25\np.m. (8:55 p.m. EST) on a voyage\nof more than  1500  milet to the\narea under tearch.\nAboard the carrier, which expected to actively join the hunt Monday\nmorning, were 10,000 extra gallons\nof aviation gasoline to supply the\nplanes which can scan nearly 60,000\nsquare miles daily.\nThe destroyers Drayton, Lamson\nand Cushing accompanied the Lexington into the hunt, which found\nother rescuers virtually abandoning\nhope for the aviatrix and her navigator, Frederick J. Noonan, who\nvanished near bleak Howland island\na week ago on a world flight.\nSEARCH FRUITLESS\nPlanes which were catapulted\nfrom the battleship Colorado for\nthe third day flew over Gardiner\nand McKean islands, western extremities of the Phoenix group, and\nCorondolet reef, but sighted only\nruined Guano works and the wreckage of a tramp steamer, lost many\nyears ago.\nThousands of birds, frightened by\nthe roaring planes, took to the air\nfrom the islands, forcing the ships\nto climb higher for safety.\nCriticism of Miss Earhart's flight\nand the navy's conduct of the search\nwas voiced in the house of representatives in Washington.\nRepresentative Collins (D-Miss)\nobjected to the time necessary to get\nplanes into the search and said America would have slight chance of\nwinning a war if its air force performed no better than the naval\nforces seeking the aviatrix.\nTudhope at Edmonton\nEDMONTON, July 9 (CP)-Con-\ntinuing a survey flight for the projected transcanada air service,\nSquadron Leader J. H. Tudhope and\nparty of four aviation experts reached Edmonton airport at 3:45 p.m.\nfrom Calgary. They will take off\nat 7:00 a.m. Saturday for Saskatoon.\nMIDDLESBURY, V. (CP)-This\nboy should go far. Roland Walcott,\nwho has just completed his sophomore year at Middlebury college,\nhas operated a boarding house and\nmade good grades in his college\nwork.\nSir Gerald Wollaston (above)\nGarter, King-of-Arms who apologized for remarks he made\nbefore a club meeting in London referring to the Duke of\nWindsor's funeral arrangements\nfor King George V. The Duke\nreceived the apologetic reply\nafter a London newspaper quoted him as referring to Sir Gerald's remarks as \"a rotten story.\"\nSir Gerald had stated less time\nhad been allotted to funeral arranger-dents than any before.\n\"King Edward insisted that the\nfuneral must take place at the\nend of the week,\" he said. Following his apology, Sir Gerald\nrecalled the Duke as saying\nQueen Mary wanted the funeral\nthe day it was held.\n(AN OF (REAM\nGOES ADRIFT\nMaude Brander, Fort\nSteele, Wants to\nKnow If Found\nAppeal hat been made to flih-\nermen, boatmen and to on to keep\nwatch on Kootenay lake and river\nfor a 10-pound lard pall containing\ncream.\nWriting from Fort Steele, Maude\nBrander atkt that the be notified\nIf it It found. Tha can of cream\ndrifted Into Kootenay river, from\n' a creek jutt below Fort Steele.\n\"I would Jutt like to know from\ncuriosity If it wat ever found,\"\nthe ttatet.\nFierce Bush Fire\nRages in Alberta\nLAC LA BICHE, Alta,, July 9,\n(CP)\u2014Reinforcementt of men and\nequipment tonight were being\nrushed to fight what It described\nat \"one of the wont bush fires\nIn the hittory of Northern Alberta\". The blaze wat burning on a\nwide front between Lac La Blcha\nand McMurray along the Atha-\nbaika river.\nAlready 200 men have been tent\nto the scene from thit area and\ndamage to timber It expected to\nba heavy. Lac La Blche It 160\nmilet northeatt of Edmonton,\nU.S.A. CHEMIST DECLARES HIGH\nSTACKS, TRAIL, ADD TO DAMAGE\nOne Sole Witness  Is\nHeard in Tribunal,\nSpokane\nSPOKANE, Wash, July 9 (API-\nStewart W. Griffin, United States\ndepartment of agriculture chemist,\ntold the International Smelter Fumes\nTribunal here today that the 400-foot\nstacks erected by the T\/ail, B.C,\nsmelter had failed entirely to ale-\nviate fumes damage in Stevens\ncounty.\nGriffin, who said l.e had spent\nthe last eight years in studying the\n$l1000,000-claims ease of Stevens\ncounty land owners against the\nsmelter, told the tribunal the only\neffect of the high stacks was to\nspread the sulphurous fumes further\ndown the Columbia valley.\nThe stacks were built in 1925. Five\nyears later, Griffin said, the worst\nfumes blight in history covered the\nvalley. He said the fumes released\nthat year amounted to 662 tons dally,\nby scientific measurement.\nHe added the fumes were less during the depression only because the\nsmelter was operated to smaller percentage of capacity.\nHearing of Ihe case did not start\nuntil 3 p.m. today and Griffin was\nthe only witness. He is the first\nof 30 or more scientists and 100 farmers who will testify at the hearing.\n\t\n m\n\u2014\u25a0\u2014\n-\u2014\n\u2014-\n\u2014\n\t\n'WPPWWWP*!!!1*,!\nWWJII'T'\"^\n1    PAGE TWO -\ni    HAPPY DAYS AI KOOLAREE\n| Braves Find Huckleberries en Hike;\ni Mohicans Win Tribal Championship\n!\nFINAL CEREMONY IMPRESSES\n\"We'll See You Again\"\nNext Year Is the\nParting Call\nBy OARY BOWELL\nHippy Day No. 10:\nThe braves entered into their last\ncamping day determined to enjoy\nit to the full. It was difficult to realize that we had to pack up and\nsay farewell.\nIn the diving competition winners\nwere:\nSenior low' board \u2014 Brian Gore,\n\u2022first; George Russell, second; Ken\nJones, third.\nIntermediate low board\u2014George\nWilson, first; Ralph Stinson, second;\nWalter Thompson, third.\nJunior low board\u2014Tommy Griffiths, first; Delbert Smiley, second;\nPaul Hlookoff, third.\nSenior high board\u2014Brian Gore,\nfirst; George Russell, second; John\n(Bad-Man) McKay, third.\nIntermediate high board\u2014George\nWilson, first; Halph Stinson, second;\nStuart Mcintosh, third.\nJunior high board\u2014Paul Hlookoff,\nfirst; Delbert Smiley, second; Tommy Griffiths, third.\nThe winners had to be contortionists and balance artists as well as\ngood divers, for the camp diving\nstand has the peculiar habit of swaying to and fro whenever anyone\nstands on it.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel..]\n, Nelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor,\nSAMPLE ROOMS    !   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME-Mr. and Mrs. W. J- Coo,\nH. Shufer, Mr. and Mrs. Popermy,\nCalgary; R. G. Holmes, J. D. Can-\ntelon, S. J Maxwell, P. Dunkerley,\nVancouver';   Laura   Miller.   Ralph\nMiller, Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. Wallace, Walla Walla; L. Taller, H.\nFalls; Mr. and Mrs. H. Winde, Everett; Rev. Charles W. Hedey, Toronto; D. McLeod; Medicine Hat.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W, K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 834\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St. Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop,\nSPBCIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comtortable Rooms\n\u00ab    Fully Licenced     \t\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled,\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART of the City\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.Cc-SAT-JRDAY MORNINO, JULY 10, 1\u00bb87.\nAs camp drew to a close the\nbraves became enthusiastic over\ntheir projects. Several have mastered the shepherd's pipes, made by\nthemselves out of bamboo. Others\nproudly displayed twine belts and\nothers becarpe proficient in birch\nbark work. The cry of \"nothing to\ndo\" is completely foreign to camp\nlife, for when the individual has\nfinished his own project there is always the camp project. The senior\nbraves are proud of the progress\nmade in camp projects, particularly\nin building the stone walk before\nthe lodfie.\nThe afternoon of Happy Day No.\n10 was devoted to a hike up th?\ncanyon. It was hot, dusty climb but\nthe braves were rewarded with large\nluscious huckleberries when they\nreached the top, reaching a cairn\nbuilt by 1930 hikers and leaving a\nmessage in it.\nWright Mcintosh, finding he had\nto scramble for huckleberries, expressed a preference for \"the kind\nyou get in town.\" Mac also had the\nmisfortune to pay an unofficial visit\nto a nest of wasps and hurried back\nto the first aid room only to find\nthat your scribe was there before\nhim, suffering from a similar malady, \"Ah heck,\" said Mac, \"whatever\nI do that guy Bowell does me one\nbetter!\"\nMISSING BRAVES\nAfter a welcome swim the braves\nassembled at supper and proceeded\nto make vast quantities of soup,\npotato salad, tomatoes and cake\ndisappear. Suddenly someone noticed how peaceful everything was\nand exclaimed; \"Where's Jock Gray\nand Bob Morris?\" These braves,\nwonder of wonders, were late for a\nmeal. It transpired that Paul Hlookoff, Angus (Peggy) MacDonald, Ernie (Casey) Jones, Dave (Dictionary) Webster, Jimmie McLeod and\n\"Mrs.\" Stuart Mcintosh were also\namong the missing.\nThe leaders, holding a hurried\nconsultation, were on the point of\norganizing a search party when\ndown the path came a conglomeration of wild flowers with a brave\nunder them. It was \"Farmer\" Morris with his straw hat full of wild\nflowers. Soon the rest of the braves\nstraggled in, telling endless stories\nof endless climbing, of hidden lakes\nand cascading waterfalls, of wonders of nature which rendered them\noblivious of time and the grey hairs\nof a camp director. The remainder\nof the braves wished there was just\none more day ot camp, that they\nmight see these braves sweat on the\nwoodpile.\nFLASH! The Big Chiefs trimmed\nthe Little Chiefs at softball. Rev.\nJames Ritchie, Chief Funmaker, was\nthe hero of the hour when he manipulated a double play in the seventh\ninning and caught the Little Chiefs\nwith their hands in their pockets.\nJack the Cook showed the braves\nthat he could handle a baseball bat\nwith as much elan as he handles a\nrolling pin.\nTRIBAL STANDINGS\nAt supper the tribal standings\nwere announced. The Mohicans are\nthe newly crowned champions and\nthe big K winners with a total of\n605% points. The Kootenays had\n48av4; the Blackfeet 437; and the\nKristenots 420.\nKootenays won the table inspections and the softball, lacrosse and\nvolleyball championships, and with\nthem a big K, while the Kristenots\nwon tent inspection and a little K.\nSome of these block letters are already being proudly displayed in\ntown.\nAfter a short campfire program,\nthe closing ceremony began. To\nmany of the braves this ceremony\nmeans more than any other single\ncamp feature does. During it all\nIhe vivid impressions of camp present themselves in a beautiful, unified picture, and the whole purpose\nof the camp\u2014a closer fellowship\nwith man and God\u2014reveals itself\nin a crystal clearness. The braves\nassembled at the cairn, and after\ndepositing their fagots and the camp\nrecords, they moved slowly in single file to the chapel. George Wilson\nbrought the best wishes ot Camp\nElphlnstone, and Charlie Stewart\ndeclared that the bond between the\nOcean Park camp and Camp Koolaree was ever increasing.\nThe braves returned to campfire\nwith the farewell address of Big\nChief Frizzy ringing in their ears,\nand with a determination to carry\nback to their homes the true camp\nspirit in their hearts.\nThis has been a splendid camp\nThe direction, the cooking, the sleeping quarters and the weather have\nall been excellent, and what more\ncould a camper desire? Perhaps\nsome of the campers have developed\nbad cases of \"dishpan hands\", perhaps some have chronic \"mohican-\nilus\", perhaps some have sunburned\nbacks, but \"camp is camp for a'\nlhat,\" and the parting call of the\nbraves was: \"We'll see you again\nnext year,\"\nLORD AND LADY TWEED!\nConvention Trip\nto Trail Starts\nThursday, 9 A.M.\nStop  of  42 Minutes\nCorra Linn; Back\nfor Oldtinhers\nHour of departure of the special\ntrain to convey the International\nMining convention party next\nThursday to Tadanac, has been advanced from 9:30 a.m. to 9 a.m., by\nthe general committee, following\nconsultation with Lome A. Campbell, vice-president and general\nmanager of the West Kootenay\nPower and Light company, who has\ninvited the party to make an inspection of No. 4 plant, at Corra\nLinn, and with the railway authorities.\nThe train will arrive at Corra Linn\nfrom Nelson at 9:18 a.m., and over\nhalf an hour will be available for\na tour of inspection of the plant, In-\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nE.   NIEDERMAN,      Comfortable Rooms\nProprietor Good Meals\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.\nLogical   Stopping\nPlace on the\nRoad to Vernon\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"   Newly Renovated Throughout\nI DufEetin Hotel A. paterson,' Zil ot\n900 8eymour 8L     Vancouver, B.C.   Coleman, Alta., Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nCRESTON Freight Truck\n2 ROUND TRIPS WEEKLY\nLEAVE NEL80N 7:30 A.M. TUESDAY AND FRIDAY \u2022\nLEAVE CRESTON 9:00 A.M. WEDNESDAY AND 8ATURDAY\nPhone 342 Nelson or 16 Creston\nA8K THE RED TRUCK FOR 8ERVICE\nGLEN'S TRANSFER\nP. O. Box 539 Nelson, B. C.\n2 Days for Children\nSaturday and Monday we will devote to displaying some\nvery extra specials for children and babies' wear.\nA SUMMER SALE THAT REALLY IS A SALE.\n100 Childs dreisei, silk, piques, organdies, georgettes: Sizes fiQft\nto 4 yean: Up to $1.96. Now.... a*Y\nChildren's Coats:\nAs low as \t\nRubber Pants\u2014\nBaby's -.\nDresses\u2014Child's\nprints\t\nDresses\u2014Vollei,  prints,\nbroadcloths to $1.50 .....\nCoats\u2014Childs':\nTo 6 yrs\t\nMisses  Tweeds\u2014\nTo 14 yrs \t\nAllen-A Ankle Sox\u2014\nPair\t\nBabys' 8llk Bonnets\u2014\nAlio organdies, at\t\nBonnets\u2014\nSilk  Crepe\t\n$1.25\n 1W\na#\n49*\n$1.25\n$1.95\nW\n59<\n... m\nCombs\u2014\nBoys' to 10 ...\nBowns\u2014\nFlannelette \t\nBaby Wools\u2014\n36o Ball \t\nBabys' soft\nshoes   \t\nBoys' Wool\nPants\t\nBathing Suits-\nWool \t\n50*\n49*\n19*\n39*\n89*\n85*\nTHE GREAT STAMP^T OffGARY\nCowboys and Indians Head Proce!|tbn From\nthe Station to the Stampede Grounds;\nKiddies Cheer Vice-Regal Party\neluding control dam. At 6:55 the\njourney will be resumed.\nArrival at Tadanac is timed for\n11:20, and cars will be available to\ntransport the convention party at\nonce to Warfield, for a tour of the\nchemical fertiliser plant of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada. The company will\nentertain the visitors at luncheon\nat Tadanac at 12:30, and the tour of\nthe plants will be resumed in the\nafternoon.\nDeparture for Nelson will be at or\nnear 4 o'clock, and the tourists will\nbe back In Nelson in time for the\nannual banquet of the Nelson District Oldtimers association, for\nwhich many of the visitors, as well\nas convoying Nelsonites, will be\nable to qualify.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR RENT - FULLY MODERN\nhouse, near tennis court; good\ngarden, garage, to reliable tenant.\nApply 416 Second Street, Fairview.\nPhone 847-L. (1462)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nThe best malted milks In town\nare at GELINAS' Try them. (1248)\nBy GUY E. RHOADES\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCALGARY, July 9 (CP) - The\ngovernor-general and Lady Tweedsmuir came here today for their first\nvisit to the famous Calgary stampede and were greeted at the station by Mayor Andrew Davison\nand a following of gaily dressed\ncowboys and eagle-plumed Indians.\nTheir excellencies had a busy\nday, They received the Mayor and\nMrs'. Davison Informally within little more than an hour of their arrival and went almost immediately thereafter to the children's show\nof the stampede.\nDuring the afternoon his excellency faced a blistering sun as he\nwatched the plainsmen and the\nfoothills Indians compete in the\nsemi-finals of the bronco and wild-\nsteer riding events the calf-roping\nand steer-decorating contests.\nAs the party stepped from the\ntrain the governor-general caught\nsight of the colorful lineup of cow-\npunchers from Canada and the\nUnited States and the Indian chiefs\nof three tribes. \"This is delightful,\"\nhe exclaimed, stepping forward to\ngrasp the hand of Andy DavlBon.\nLARQE RECEPTION PARTY\nMayor Davison headed a large reception party which included Lieutenant-Governor J. C. Bowen. The\nvice-regal couple chatted with those\nwho had come to greet them, then\nhastened to acknowledge the salutations of the Indian chiefs, David\nBearspaw of the Stony, Duck Chief\nof the Blackfoot and Big Plume of\nIhe Sarcee.\nHis excellency noticed at once that\nBearspaw, whom he met last year,\nhad a new mount. \"How is Black\nEagle?\" he asked, and the old chief\nreplied: \"He's just fihe.\"\nThe cowboys and Indians headed the parade to the exhibition\ngrounds with the vice-regal and\nwelcoming parties following in\nautomobiles. The population, uproarious in its greeting, lined the\nstreets along the route.\nAs their excellencies mounted the\nband platform at the grounds 20,000\nchildren rose in the stands and\nshrilled their welcome.\nMercury Holds High\nin Eighties Friday\nContinued hot weather kept the\nmercury in the high eighties and\nNelsonites  sweating  Friday.\nThe thermometer again measured\nan 89-degree high, while the minimum temperature of 56 represented a five-degree rise from that of\nThursday.\nYORKTON, Sask. (CP)-Col. T,\nR. McNutt of the Saltcoats militia\ntravelled 5000 miles with the Canadian contingent to participate in\nthe coronation, but admits he will\nhave to go to the movies now to\nsee it. Troop schedules and vast\ncrowds prevented the officer from\nobserving the ceremony personally.\nCotton is a perennial plant in its\nnative home in the tropics, but in\nthe temperate zone it is usually\nplanted each year.\nTwo used Electrlo ranges for sale,\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOU8E. (1270)\nDance tonight to the Troubadors,\nEagles hall, 9-12. Usual prices. (1321)\nAinsworth   Hot   Springe   Hotel\nDANCE TONIGHT. Good Music.\n(1435)\nFRIGIDAIRE. 8AVE8 ENOUGH TO\nPAY FOR ITSELF. HIPPERSONS.\n(1413)\nHOT    LOOKING    BUT    COOL\nDRIVING. B. B. TAXI. PHONE 93.\n(1453)\nFor hot weather eolffure, Phone\n244, MILADY'S BEAUTY SHOPPE.\n(1460)\nCIVIC   THEATRE   neeepte   Cards\nPunched 5 times All day TODAY.\n(1378)\nSPECIAL\u2014Guarantsed CONNOR\nWasher, $75. McKAY A STRETTON,\n(1458)\nGET YOUR \"KODAK\" FILM8\nAND DEVELOPING AT VALENTINE'S. (1324)\nBRITISH NEW8PAPER8 AND\nMAGAZINES. BISHOP'8 NEWS\nSTAND. (1325)\nSEE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOLSTERING AND DRAPERIES. 120\nHIGH STREET. (1307)\nSEE THE SHOW OF GOGGLES\nAND SUN GLASSES AT VALENTINE'S. , (1324)\nOur 9c notions are still on display-\nSuch values as 150 yd, spools r\\A\n2 for  <fr\nBaby Rlbbon-\n7 yds\t\nLaces\u2014\nAs   low   as  ...\n9*\nl*yd,\nRAMSDEN'S\nAI R C O Medium Brood Bee\nFoundation, Queen Excluders. Hipperson's. (1413)\nBuy a ROYAL TYPEWRITER \u2014\nFinest In ths World. H, R. KITTO,\nAgent. PHONE 964. (1326)\nCOOL SPORT SHIRTS\u2014Inexpensive and comfortable for thes hot\nJuly days. JACK BOYCE.      (1282)\nCanadian Legion Special General\nMeeting Tuesday evening at 8 sharp.\nProvincial Convention Business only\n(1464)\nOH BOYI HOW DELICIOUS! Ask\nfor CHOCOLATE MILK\u2014the MOST\nPOPULAR DRINK IN TOWNI\n(1317)\nNELSON TO\nVANCOUVER\nONE WAY RETURN\n$ll\u00bboo     $19.80\nTRAVEL THE CANADIAN ROUTE\nBY GREYHOUND\nCIRCLE TOURS RETURNING\nVIA SEATTLE\nNO EXTRA CHARCE\nInterior Greyhound Lines\nLimited\nPENTICTON, B.C.\nLOW FARES\nPROM\nNELSON\nTO\nVANCOUVER and VICTORIA\nOne Way      Return\nCOACH CLASS .... $11.45 $20.60 30 Day Limit\nFIRST CLASS     17.10     22.80 30 Day Limit\nVia Kettle Valley both directions.\nFIRST CLASS SUMMER TOURIST $28.60, limit Oct. 31\nwhich can be routed via Kettle Valley both directions\nor going via the Arrow Lakes or Okanagan Lake and\nreturn via Kettle Valley.\nAbove tickets are good for stop-over.\nDAILY SERVICE DINING FACILITIES\nSTANDARD SLEEPING CAR\nApply to nearest agent for further particulars or\nN. J. LOWES, City Ticket Agent.\nNelson, B, C. Phone 203\n6wJuM((?d4c\nEverybody Welcome at Joe Pay-\nant's Chicken Coop Hoe Down at\nSalmo, Tuesday, July the 13th. Good\nMusic, Pri7.es, Ladies 26c. Gents 50e.\n(1448)\nDANCE TONIGHT\nWillow Point Athletic club. Margaret Graham's orchestra. Refreshments. 75c couple. '(1427)\nCASTLEGAR FERRY\nCommencing Monday, July 12th.\nand until further notice the following special trips will be made by the\nabove Ferry tn accomodate vehicles\nhaulins gasoline, Naptha, empty\ncontainers. Dynamite or other explosives, on Mondays, Wednesdays,\nand Fridays, Leaving Castlegar\ntide 9 a.m. Leaving Robson side\n11 a.m. On Tuesdays and Thursdays:\nLeaving Robson side 1 p.m.; Leaving\nCastlegar side 6:30 p.m.\nSigned\u2014Department of Public\nWorks, Rossland Trail.\n(1463)\nCALGARY STAMPEDE\nRound trip for the one-way fare.\nJuly 2nd, to 10th. Return limit\nJuly 15th. Sample fares:\nNelson to Calgary \u2014 $10.50 R.T.\nTrail to Calgary \u2014 $12.15 R.T.\nKaslo   to   Calgary \u2014 $11.50 RT.\nGreyhound Lines\nNelson Depot - 205 Baker St.\nPHONE 800\n(1264)\nMany Happy Returns to\nthe District Boys and Qirls\nAge\nJuly  1\u2014Fred Maglio     9\nJuly  3\u2014Allen Basil Clarke .....',   7\nJuly  6\u2014Harold  Rowley     8\nJuly  B\u2014St. Clair Duffy   7\nJuly  8\u2014Douglas Dunn  10\nJuly 12\u2014Allan Kalstrom  11\nJuly 14\u2014Marie Stangherlin    8\nJuly 14\u2014Dick  Santor   10\nJuly 15\u2014Richard Thain   11\nJuly 15\u2014Doug Winlaw  13\nFor Children's Page\nSee Page 10\nRossland Social,,\nBy MRS. B, B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B.C., July 9. - Carl\nOsing Is visiting Marble.\nJoseph Wiillims of Wetaskawln\nis a guest of Earl Mellett, en route\nto Vancouver.\nMiss Lilian Barton has left for\nRevelstoke en route to Calgary,\nBanff and Waterton National Park,\nMiss Anne Holoboff has left for a\nsix-week vacation at Vancouver and\nVictoria.\nMr, and Mrs. John Newman are\nvisiting Spokane.\nRichard Wilson has left for Calgary.\nMrs. Wallace Hocking and baby\nare spending a month with Mrs. H.\nPhelps at Oliver.\nMrs. C. McDonald of Calgary is\nhere.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Littlejohn,\naccompanied by Mrs. Littlejohn's\nsister, Miss Elizabeth Campbell of\nTrail, have returned from a holiday\nat Victoria and Penticton.\nDr. Robert Anderson, son of Mr\nand Mrs. Robert Anderson of this\ncity, assumed his duties as house\ndoctor at Vancouver General hospital July 1.\nRobert Foulkes of Kimberley is\nholidaying at his home here.\nH. W. A. Minion of the local staff\nof the Bank of Montreal has been\ntransferred to New Denver.\nMrs. J. Burnstill, who was on a\nholiday with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. H. Cherrington, has returned\nto her home at Beavermouth.\nFor Better\nQuality\nFurniture\nsnd\nHome\nFurnishings\nCommence Work,\nNew Ferries for\nCreston, Harrop\nConstruction of two new govern\nment ferries to be put into lervici\nat Creston and Harrop is unite\nway on the beach just above thi\nLakeside park. F. R. McCharle* o\nVancouver, general contractor, se\ncured the contract for the buildim\nof the ferries and is himself li\ncharge of the crew of 10 employed\nThe Creston ferry which is to re\nplace the one in use, is the large\nof the two, being almost twice a\nlong as the Harrop one and foil\nfeet wider. It is 90 feet in lengt\nand 28 feet in width whlls th\nHarrop ferry measurej 48 by 2\nfeet. Both will be smaller tt\u00bbn th\nNelson ferry plying between tt\nNorth shore and Nelson, which\ncapable of transporting 12 can. Th\nCreston ferry will carry about 1\ncars and the smaller one six.\nHeavy coast fir is to bo use\nthroughout In the construction (\nboth. Engine, at least the Cresto\none, is to be Installed here. Whe\nfinished will be hauled by tug t\nnew births,\nThe ferries will be about six we\u00abl\nin construction and ready tbot\nAugust 15.\nAttempting to build a hous\u00ab t\nlast 1000 years, an experimenter .\nconstructing lt of stone with a moo\nroot\nEvery Rural Horns\nIs on *\nROCKGA\nLlm-\nTin luxury ot hot watoti tho ItirS\nof < modem coot stow th*\ncloon. cosy warmth of ,u hoot\n\u2014All thou an economically\nyours with ROCKGA5, no mettit\nwhom you live.\nAit your dsaler today about tho\nlow cost And eonvanitnso of\nROCKGAS service In your homo.\n:ALL TEL. BW\nKOOTENAY  PLUMBING  4\nHEATINQ  CO,  LTD.\n313 Baker St.       Nelsen, B.C.\nWith the holiday season here, and your thoughts of vacation\nand a car, drop in and look over these bigger and better values in\nused cars.\n1936 Dodge Sedan $975.00\n1935 Dodge Sedan. $875.00\n1934 Chrysler Sedan $825.00\n1934 Ford Sedan $575.00\n1934 Plymouth\nCoupe  $675.00\n1928 Buick, like new $375.00\nSPECIAL\n$300.00       Hupmobile or Willys-Knight Sedan       $300.00\nOur new car department has just unloaded our 125th Chrysler-\nPlymoMth car this season. We have on hand a choice of Plymouth Sedans\u2014Coupes, Convertible Coupes, and the famous\nChrylser Royal Sedan\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nLIMITED\nChrysler - Plymouth Distributors\nPHONE 119 NELSON, B.C.\n \u25a0 \" \u25a0\",\n\u2014\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, JULY IQ, 1937.     \t\n* \u2022\" *'\"'--*  \u00ab*;-.,, -      .,**,,.-;,\u00ab,\nkAllAAAAAAAAAA\nHnttrb (flljurrfi\nnf Canada\nSt. Paul's\u2014Trinity\nJoint Services in Trinity Churc.1\nduring July, with Rev. J. A.\nDonnell in charge.\nPublic Worship at 11 a.m. and\n7:30 p.m.\nSermon subjects: Morning, \"The\nParable of Ihe Importunate Widow.\" Evening, \"What Is a\nChristian?\"\nChurch Schools meet in both St,\nPaul's and Trinity at 10 a.m.\n\u00a7t. Snljn'a\nfttrtljrratt (Eljurrlj\nSanlcy  and   Silica   Streets\nRev. V. L. MEYER, Pastor\n11 a.m.\u2014Sunday School and Service, \"Pharisaic Righteousness\nand God-Pleasing Righteousness\".\n7:30 p,m.\u2014Service, \"Quenching\nthe Thirst of the Soul\".\nI   A Cordial Welcome to AU\nWarrant Issued\non (Heck Charge\nWarrant has been issued on complaint of Sergeant Robert Harshaw\nof the Nelson city police for Robert\nMaitland, alleged to have forged an\n1 Associated Growers check for $11,60\nand to have cashed it at a Nelson\n^beer parlor.\nThe check was obtained, Sergeant\n[Harshaw reported, in a burglary at\n1 the Associated Growers' warehouse.\nIC. P. R. flats, entry being effected\n[through a skylight. A sweater. $1.50\n[in cash and stamps were stolen.\nLEAVE SANCA FOR\nBURNABY\nSANCA, B.C\u2014Miss Anne Slanden\nland Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Bostock have\n\u25a0left for their home at Burnaby ac-\nIcompanied by the la tier's daughter,\n\u25a0Miss Elaine Bostock, who, after the\n\u25a0summer holidays will again have\nIcharge of the Sanca school as\n|teacher.\nDick O'Neil has disposed of his\nproperly here and has left to re-\npide at Kuskanook.\nCarl Hoppe is back for a week or\n1*50' from   the   Wisconsin   mine   at\nflidge Creek.\nMr. Knight and son. George, from\nVictoria were here on a visit to the\n[former's .son-in-law and daughter.\nAr. and Mrs. S. Spence,\nRalph Johnson, old-timer of Santa and Mr. and Mrs. Percy Stevens\nand Leonard and Alice, of Victoria\npre here visiting relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. Woods and family of\nCochrane, Alta,, visited Ihe former's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr, and\nHrs. Jack Woods of Turner Bay.\nFrogs and toads are valuable to\nnankind, because they eat such\n\u25a0quantities of insect, pests,\nCONSTIPATION IS A\nMISERABLE THING!\nIt takei the pep right out of you\n-makes you leel tired and irri-\n\u00bbble \u2014 ready to worry over the\nilightest thing.\nYet it can be corrected in most\nases so easily. Common constipation is usually caused by lack of\nf'bulk\" in the foods you eat.\nMillions of people have learned\nhat Kellogg's All-Bran ends constipation By putting \"bulk\" back\np the diet. Within the body, All-\nBran absorbs twice its weight in\n(rater, forming a soft mass and\nntly Bponging out the system.\nKellogg's All-Bran also fur-\nlishes vitamin B to tone the intestines and iron for the blood.\nTwo tablespoonfuls daily as a\nfcreal with milk or cream, or in\n[ccipes, are sufficient. Three times\naily in severe cases.\nSold at all grocers\u2014and guar-\nYnteed by Kellogg in London.\n(Advt.)\nFINEST\nSAND\nAND\nGRAVEL\nFOR\nBUILDING\nPURPOSES\nFairview Fuel\ntpply 6c Teaming Co.\nPHONE 701\nfirst (Eljurrlj nf\n(Eljriflt Sriputifil\n209   BAKER   STREET\nA Branch ol The Mother Church\nThe first Church of Christ,\nScientist,   in   Boston,   Mass.\nSunday   School   9:45  a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\n8ubject   Lesson-Sermon\n\"SACRAMENTS\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE   READING   ROOM   IN\nCHURCH   BUILDING-\nAM Cordially Welcome\nPROMOTION LIST ANNOUNCED FOR\nSTUDENTS OF THE NELSON HIGH\nFollowing is a report of promotions at Nelson high school. The\npartial standing that may be granted to students who have failed in\ncertain subjects will be determined\nat the reopening of school In Sep-\ntember. The marks obtained by students who have not obtained the\npass requirements have been mailed\nto tfteir parents. Some students are\npromoted on trial for two months in\nthe hope that by a special effort\nthey may carry the year\"s work.\nMATRICULATION COURSE\nPromoted to Grade 12 on this\nyear's record\u2014Margaret Ball, Allan\nBarton, Daisy Croy, Isabel Donovan, Herbert Eliason, Douglas Elsdon, Joy Ferguson, Robert Fleming, Rosemary Fleming, Leo Foster,\nHarry Green, Henry Hartridge,\nDuncan Heddle, Gerald Heffernan,\nGeorge Heighton, Dorothy Johnson,\nEnid Latornell, Jessie Lutes, Doris\nlllth. BATTERY\nRoyal Canadian Artillery\nNELSON, B. C\nBATTERY ORDER NO. 21\nBy PROV-MAJOR A. \u00a3. DALGAS. M.C.\nSUNDAY THE 11TH OF JULY, 1937\nPART ONE\nParagraph 1, Duties-Orderly officer for the week commencing July\n11th, Sec. Lieut. G. C. Wallach (until\nJuly 14th inch). Next for duty from\nJuly 15 the incl., Lieut. A. M. Banks\nOrderly sergeant for the week commencing July 11, Bombadier R. I.\nWood. Next for duty: Sergeant J.\nDawson. Orderly L. bombadiers and\ngunners cancelled pro. tern.\nPara. 2, Parades\u2014The battery will\nparade as usual on Tuesday, July\nthe 13th al 2000 hours. The N.CO.'s.\ndetailed for the Shilo camp will par-\narde in full marching order in the\narmories Thursday morning at 0015\nhours.\nPara, 3, Leclure\u2014Special parade\nfor officers and N.CO.'s on Tuesday\nnext at 1915 hours.\nPara. 4, A-O.C\u2014In the absence of\nIhe O.C. bejwecn the 15th and the\n26th of July, Captain A. W. Parker\nwill be acting O.C.\nPART 2\nPara.   1,   Inspeclion-The   Shilo\ncontingent will be inspected by the\nM.O., Captain H. H. MacKenzie,\nduring Tuesday night parade, next.\nPara. 2,-The battery field day\nwill take place on Sunday, July the\n11th .The battery will assemble.at\n0730 hours and \"fall in\" at 0800\nhours. Otherwise as per the \"Orders\nof the Day\" posted in the armories.\nPara. 3, Shilo camp-Unless otherwise instructed the Shilo contingent\nwill leave Nelson Thursday morning\nat 0124 hours. Dress: Officers uni-\nfor, swords will not be carried.\nN.CO.'s, uniform bandoliers, lanyards, spurs (where possible) and\ninfantry pack; the latter will be\nissued at Tuesday night parade.\nPara. 4, General\u2014The duties of\nthe orderly officer and sergeant as\nusual. The relurn boxing bout will\ntake place on Monday night. July\ntiie 12th in the Nelson armories.\nThe officers and N.CO.'s detailed for\nShilo are reminded to be present at\nthe lecture on Tuesday night at 1915\nhours. This is very important.\nSigned \"J. B. Curran\", Sec.-\nLieutenant, orderly officer.\nMINISTERS TO WED\nCISTERS\nST. CHARLES, Mo., July 9 (AP)\n\u2014 Marriage licences were issued\nhere yesterday to two Saskatchewan\nministers who will wed sisters in\na double ceremony Sunday. Rev.\nJoseph Mann, 26. of Loon River.\nSask., Canada, will be married to\nMiss Walda Reidcl of Augusta, Mo.\nRev. Adolph Otke. 27, of Duval,\nSask., will marry Miss Hilda Reidel.\nThe romances began while both\nministers were students at Concordia seminary here.\nWhy Not a Want Ad?\nWEEK-END RADIO\nCANADIAN  BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION   NETWORK\nSATURDAY\n5:00 Legepde D'Peuple, Montreal;\n6:00 Toronto Little symphony; 6:30\nOur heritage of freedom, talk, Montreal; 6:45 News and weather, from\nToronto; 7:00 La Hacienda, Latin\nproduction, from Vancouver; 7:30\nHorace Lapps orch., from Banff;\n8:00 Rhythm and Song, Calgary;\n8:30 Sport week, Henry Viney. Lethbridge; 8:45 Good Evening, news.\nVancouver; 9:00 Joe DeCourcey's\norch., Jasper; 9:30 Watcrton lakes\norch.. Lethbridge; 10:00 News, Vancouver; 10:15 Stan Patton's nrrh.,\nVancouver; 10:45 Wether forecast.\nVancouver,\nN.B.C.-KPO  RED NETWORK\n5:00 Rhythm and Romance; 6:30\nEmery Deutsch's orch,; 7:00 Carlos\nMolina's orch.; 7:30 Circus, variety;\n8:00 Hollywood Extra, Francis X.\nBushman,, m.c; 8:30 Orchestras \u2014\nCharles Barnet; Don Fernando;\nKing's Jesters; Will Hollander; Jimmy Grier; Archie Loveland; Bob\nYoung; Harry Lewis.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n5:00 Education today; 5:30 Meak-\nin's musical news; 6:15 Concert\nparty; 7:00 National Bain Dance;\n8:00 Orchestras - Rudy Vallee;\nGeorge Olsen; Eddie Varzos; Carlos\nMolina; Lou Bring; Ellis Kimball;\nGeorge Breecc; 9:30 On the Mall,\nKGO; 11:00 Paul Carson, organist.\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\n5:30 Hcadlincr's club program;\n6:00 Your Hit Parade and sweepstakes; 6:45 Patti Chapin, songs; 7:00\nBunny Bengali's orch.; 7:30 Johnnie presents; 8:00 Professor Quiz\nand his brainbusters; 8:30 Orchestras\n\u2014Glen Gray; Mark Fisher; Al Lyons; Billy While; Jan Garbcr; Glenn\nLee; George Hamilton; 11:00 Pasadena Civic auditorium.\nSUNDAY\nCANADIAN  BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n2:00 Grenadier Guards, Mon.; 2:30\nWeekly news review, Edmonton;\n2:45 Two-piano recital from Toronto; 3:00 Helen Tranbcl, soprano,\nN.B.C.; 3:30 Melodic slnngs from\nToronto; 4:00 Piano magic, Montreal;\n4:30 Rex Battles' orch., Tor.; 5:00 International Varieties, Montreal; 5:30\nMusic time, from Toronto; 6:00 Fugitive melodies, from Toronto; 6:45\nNews and weather, Toronto; 7:00 Atlantic nocturne, from Halifax; 7:30\nTudor string quartet, Winnipeg;\n8:00 Romance of Sacred Songs, dr..\nfrom Vancouver; 8:30 Concert trio,\nfrom Banff; 8:45 Good Evening,\nnews Vancouver; 9:00 Interlude, Regina: 9:30 Glee Singers. Calgary\n(not CRCV); 10:00 News. Vancouver; 10:15 Sacred cameos, organist.\nVancouver; 10:45 Weather forecast\nVancouver.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\n5:00 Manhattan Mciry-Go-Round\n5:30 Album of Familiar Music; 6:30\nJi.se Ramirez and Argentine;, 7:00\nMorin sisters, ranch boys, songs;\n7:15 Cliffe Engle, voice of exposition; 7:30 Jane Froman, Don Ross.\nD'Artega and his orchestra; 8:00\nBarney Rapp's orchestra; Behind the\nmicrophone, Buddy Twiss, KPO;\n8:30 One Man's Family, Carlton\nMorse drama; 9:00 Passing Parade,\nJohn Nesbitt, narr.; 9:15 Night Editor, dramatic narrative, Hal Bur-\ndick; 9:30 Carlos Molina's orch.; Don\nAllen. Hollywood news, KPO; 10:00\nNews flashes, Sam Hayes; 10:15\nBridge to Dreamland, organ; 11:00\nBob Young's orch.; 11:30 Beaux Arts\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n5:00 Rippling Rhythm revue; 5:30\nWalter Winchell. gossip: 6:00 National music camp program; 7:00\nJudy and the bunch, vocal; 7:10\nPress radio news; 7:15 Concert petit;\n7:30 Eddie Varzo's orch.; 8:00 Read-\ned's Guide; 8:30 New Penn, orch.;\n9:00 Tales of California (KGO); Don\nFernando's orch.: 9:30 Concert Hall,\nE.T. KGO; King's Jesters orch.; 9:45\nWill Hollander's orch.; 10:00 Hall of\nfame; 10:30 Reveries, instrumenta:\n11:00 Charles Runyan, organist.\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\n5:00 Universal rhythm. Rex\nChandler's orch.; 6:00 Lewisohn stadium concert, symphony orch.; 6:30\nMan to man, sports; 6:45 Vocals by\nVirginia Verrill: 7:00 Community\nsing; 7:30 Charles Gaylord and\nhis orchestra; 8:00 Jimmy Wal-\nlington, m. c. and company; 8:30\nJan Garber and orch.; 9:00 Army\nand navy bands; KVI; Nocturne with\nEddie House, baritone; 9:15 Billy\nWhite's orch.; 9:30 Al Lyons' orch.;\n9:45 George Hamilton and orchestra;\n10:00 Newstime; 10:15 Sunday Evening on Temple Square, organ, violin,\ntenor; 10:45 Glen Gray's orch.; 11:00\nDoor to the Moon; 11:30 Jan Gar-\nber's orchestra.\nLemmon, Cecil Maloney, Richard\nManning, Harold Mayo, Ralph Myers, Betty MacDonald, William McEwan, Daisy Norris,, Alexander\nStrudwicke, Frank Swerydo, Violet\nWagstaff, Billla Wallace, Dick Wallace, Doris Wesley.\nPromoted to Grade 12 on final\nexamination\u2014Thelma Bird, Bill Kapak, Frances Linville, Gerry Mann,\nKen McBride, Margaret McNichol,\nReg Smith, Bill Stillwell.\nThe following are promoted to\nGrade 12 on trial\u2014Wilbert Anderson, Clarance Cawley, Florence\nSheill, Donald Watts.\nPromoted to Grade 11 on their\nyear's record\u2014Morris Aldersmith,\nBill Affleck, Ellen Allison, Ernest\nBall, Marjory Brown, Frances\nCampbell, Peggy Dunnett, Allan\nEmmott, Fred Forslund, Arthur\nGraves, Jack Gray, Connie Hamson,\nBetty Holt, Don Hunter, Iris Johansson, Asia Johnson, Pearl Kennedy,\nGordon Lindskog, Doreen Long.\nKathalccn Maber, Ingeborg Marts-\nchinke, Iris Moore, Rhona McLanders, Isabelle Oxley. Catherine\nPearce, Nancy Pond, Iverson Rup-\npel, Albert Salo, Conway Ruther-\ngien, Edna Steed, Monty Strudwicke, Bill Taylor, Georgina Williscroft.\nPromoted to Grade 11 on final\nexamination\u2014Sybil Bradley, Howard Campbell, Mary Campbell, Barbara Carlisle, Arthur Guscott, Vir-\ngina James, Olga Korolak, Shirley\nManning, Bill McCracken, Stuart\nMcintosh, Peter Hugh, Herbert\nRamsden, Oscar Salo, Bob Sand-\ngrcn, Ruth Wright, Pauline Wright.\nPromoted to Grade 11 on trial-\nAda Andrews, Roy Blake, Peter Ewart, Douglas Gallaher, Isabel Graham, Violet Hillyard.\nGENERAL COURSE\nCommercial department:\nThe following have completed\nGrade 11 in the subjects taken\u2014\nAlvina Arlt, Ruby Gibbon, Marjorie\nHowe, Margaret Lahaise, Verner\nLinden, Lois Mansfield, Albert Maxwell, Frances Norris, Hazel Stout,\nEileen Teague, Minnie Wetterhuus.\nCompleted Grade 10\u2014Eileen Collins, Tanis Coulter, Carmella DelPuppo, Eva Hendrickson, Frances\nJones, Alice McMillan, Lena Rolick,\nJames Ryley.\nNelsonite at Kaslo\nKASLO, B.C.-Mrs. C. Calway of\nNelson was a week-end visitor in\ntown.\nS. N. Ross, manager of the Whitewater mine, was in from Retallack Wednesday.\nMiss Katherine Gillis of Ihe Trail\nschool teaching staff, left Wednesday to visit Toronto and other\neastern Canadian cities, after spending a short holiday here with her\nmother, Mrs. H. Gillis.\nMrs. M. Murphy is seriously ill at\nher home here.\nMis. M. McQueen and Miss Margaret McQueen were visitors to\nBalfour.\nMrs, Dunbar of Trail is spending\na few weeks a guest of her sister,\nMrs. Walter Newton, also of Trail,\nwho is spending the holidays at her\nsummer home here.\nMiss J. C. Gibson, R.N., has returned from a month's holiday at Ihe\ncoast, and has resumed her duties on the nursing staff of Victorian\nhospital.\nJune King of Salmo was a visitor\nin town.\nMrs. Cora Fyfe and son, Stewart,\nof Nelson are spending the summer at Kaslo.\nFlex Schroeder of Nelson was a\nKaslo visitor Wednesday.\nMi*, and Mrs. Fred Aydon have\nreturned from a visit to Vancouver,\nMiss Beatrice Brown R. N. of the\nVictorian hospital nursing staff, has\nleft for a month's holiday at coast\npoints.\nF. T. Abey was a visitor to Nelson and Trail.\nMiss Mary Mucha is visiting\nfriends at Trail for a few weeks.\nMrs. D. P. Kane was a visitor in\nNelson Tuesday.\nE. H. Latham has returned from\na short visit to his son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Mar-\nleau at Lumberton.\nL. McLeod of Salmo was a visitor\nin town.\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Latham of\nTrail and infant son are holidaying\nin town.\nCity Clerk H. T. Hartin has relumed from a visit to Nelson.\nVernon Taylor of the Trail hospital\nstaff  left Thursday   for  his   hoiie\nafter spending two weeks here.\nW. E. Johnston, ieasor of the St.\nPatrick mine near Argenta, is spending a few days in town.\nOscar H. Burden of Port Crawford\nwas a Wednesday visitor here,\nA throat specialist says that Ihe\nearlier a boy or girl matures, the\nshorter the vocal cords and the higher the singing voice is pitched.\nWorking for the C. P. R.\n';\u00aba\nm\nPAGE   THREE\n'\nH> - ^ji   \u25a0 I    &J( &\nRut this engine is not a locomotive. It is (he city's steam rollrr\npushing a scarifier (hat is ripping up roadway at the C.P.R. station,\nwhere the railway company is making extensive improvements, including i hard-surfpeed road\\\\n> around the Nation building.\n^ofaotty'Ba^ (tmttjmng.\nINCORPORATED   2??  MAY 1670.\nMAIN AISLE\nHALF PRICE SALE\nTonight\u2014SATURDAY NIGHT\nCOME  EARLY FOR THESE  BARGAINS\nNOT SHOWN IN STORE WINDOWS QUICK ACTION THE ANSWER\nCOVERS OFF AT 7:00 P.M.\n5 ONLY LADIES'PRINTED VOILE DRESSES.Sizes\n14-16-18-20. Reg. QQ\n$1.95. Half Price . JOC\n1 ONLY BLACK SKIRT.\nReg. $3.95. $1 QO\nHalf Price  ....tPl.JO\n1 ONLY LADIES' FLANNEL COAT. Reg. $13.95.\nPrice Ipb.JO\n4 ONLY  LADIES'  SILK\nCREPE    DRESSES.    Reg.\n$1*48, 7Q\nHalf Price iJt\n2 ONLY SILK REDING-\nDAT COATS. Sizes 14 and\n16. Reg. $3.95. ffl QO\nHalf Price fll.30\n5 ONLY CREPE PANTIES.\nReg. 49c. OC\nHalf Price Lois\nMen's\nCOMBINATIONS\nEnjoy the luxurious comfort of silk in these new\n\" Aerosuede \" combinations. That button at the\nshoulder. Strong and\nclosely knit and above all\nrun-proof. Sizes 36 to 44.\n|ULY SALE,\nPair\t\n79c\nSHIRTS AND\nDRAWERS\nShirts and drawers of\naerosuede material. Cool\nand comfortable. Drawers\nwith elastic waist band.\n|ULY SALE,\nPer garment\n39c\nMen's\nSPORT SHIRTS\nYour choice of a wide selection of colors in these\nhot weather shirts for\nmen. Crew, V and button\nat neck styles. All sizes.\nJULY SALE,\nEach\n79c\nMen's\nWORK PANTS\nHard wearing trousers of\ndark serviceable material.\nStrong pockets and finished with belt loops and\ncuff bottoms. -fljl QC\nIULY SALE, Pair Jl.JJ\nWORK SHIRTS\nFor the man who wants\na quality garment. Full cut\nwith breast pocket. Khaki\nand assorted blue shades.\nSizes 14'\/; to 17-\/2\nIULY SALE, CI Cft\nEach J>1.JU\nLadies'\nHandkerchiefs\nSmart prints, stripes and\nchecks in gay combinations of colors. You can\nnow get one to match each\ndress. Pure linen and fine\nlawn. 1A\n|ULY SALE, Each     IVC\n\u2014Main   Floor   HBC\nNO PHONE, C. O. D. OR APPROVALS ON THESE\n ITEMS, PLEASE \t\nWomen's Wear\n8 ONLY HOUSE DRESSES. Regular $1 69. ar\nHalf Price   5DC\n10 ONLY LADIES' SHORTS. Regular $1.00. TA\nHalf Price   OUC\n4 QNLY NURSES' UNIFORMS. Regular $2.95. <M   AQ\nHalf Price    4>1.40\nKIDDIES' WEAR\n8 ONLY KIDDIES'SHORTS. Regular $1.00. Cfl,,\nHalf Price   dUC\n6 ONLY KIDDIES' PLAY SUITS Regular $1.69.      QC .\nHalf Price    OJC\n7 ONLY BOYS'DRILL SUITS. Regular $195.    tf\u00ab1 AA\nHalf Price tj)l.UU\n8 BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS. Regu lar 69c Q C\nHalf Price JjC\n9 ONLY KIDDIES' RAYON PANTIES AND VESTS. Or\nRegular 49c. Half Price LoC\nMEN'S WEAR\n60 SILK TIES. Regular 50c. or\nHalf Price LOK,\n8 ONLY MEN'S BROADCLOTH PYJAMAS. Q7n\nRegular $1.95. Half Price \"it\n50 MEN'S BROADCLOTH SHIRTS. Regular $1.00. TA\nHalf Price    DUC\n32 MEN'S BROADCLOTH SHIRTS. Regular        $1 AA\n$2.00. Half Price <J>I.UU\nFOOTWEAR BARGAINS\n10 PAIRS MEN'S SPORT SHOES. Black and white; brown\nand white. Sizes 1-9, 2*-9-\/2, 4-10, 3-*0>\/2.       <M QQ\nRegular $3.95. Half Price  ipl.jO\n4 PAIRS ONLY WOMEN'S PLAIN WHITE KID PUMPS.\nSpike heels. 1-5C, 1-6'AAA, 1-7AA, l-7'\/2A.   tfO -TA\nRegular $5.00. Half Price s)L.O\\)\nCHINAWARE\n15 ENGLISH BON-BON DISHES. Regular 59c OA\nHalf Price    OUC\n6 ONLY )ARDINIERS. Regular $1 00. CA\nHalf Price   dUC\n1 ONLY CUT CLASS BOWL. Regular $2 50.      $1 OC\nHalf Price    \u00abpl.\u00a3J\n3 ONLY CUT CLASS SUCAR AND CREAMS.     <M QQ\nRegular $3.95. Half Price .pl.jO\n6 ONLY FANCY MIRRORS. Regular $1.00. PA\nHalf Price    dUC\n6 ONLY NOVELTY |UCS. Regular 35c. 1 Q\nHalf Price     IOC\nDRY GOODS\n8 BRIDCE SETS. Regular $3.75. <M QQ\nHalf Price    (J)1.00\n300 YARDS FANCY MARQUISETTES. Regular      1 Q\n35c yard. Half Price    IOC\n6 ONLY PADDED CHAIR SETS. Regular 79c. OQ\nHalf Price   JjC\nTOILETRIES AND NOTIONS\n10 ONLY ASSORTED TALCUM POWDERS. 1 O\nRegular 25c. Half Price 1 Jt\n13 ONLY ASSORTED FACE POWDERS. 1 O\nRegular 25c. Half Price. Box   101\n14 ONLY STRIPED TABLE COVERS. Reg $1 95    AQ\u201e\nHalf Price   \"OC\n20 CARD TABLE COVERS. Regular 79c. ylA\nHalf Price, Each 4UC\n6 ONLY TAPESTRY PICTURES. Regular $1 79.      QA\nHalf Price 3UC\nHARDWARE SPECIALS\n3 ONLY CARDEN FORKS. Regular 79c OQ\nHalf Price  OVZ\n38 FLASHLICHTS. Regular 49c. OC\nHalf Price     Ld\\.\n7 ONLY LADIES' COR-\nSETTES. Reg.      <\u00a3O CA\n$5.00 Half Price $L.O\\J\nLADIES'    BRASSIERS.\nLarge sizes only.     QA\nReg. 79c. Half Price J\"C\n3 ONLY LACE CARTER\nBELTS. Reg. $1.00.\nHalf Price . .\n50c\n4   ONLY   KIDDIES'\nSKIRTS. Reg. 79c.\nHalf Price\t\n39c\n5 ONLY KIDDIES' RAY-\nON PYJAMAS. Reg. CA\n$1.00. Half Price . DUC\n2  ONLY   INFANTS'\nSWEATERS. Reg.    OA\n79c. Half Price . . . JjC\n4 PAIR ONLY INFANTS'\nWHITE BOOTS. Reg\n$1.25. PQ\"\nHalf Price   JjC\n7 ONLY INFANTS' SILK\nBOOTIES. Reg. 25c. IO\nHalf Price  . . . 1JC\nLADIES'\nPYJAMAS\nCan't sleep these nights?\nThen perhaps your trouble\ncomes from having night\nclothes which are too\nheavy for. this warm\nweather. Try the new\n\"Shorty\" knee-length pyjamas. Soft silk web kn.it.\ng.5ALE:..,$l,95\nLADIES' STRING\nKNIT SUITS\n12 ONLY in this group of\nstring knit suits. Very\ncomfortable and right up\nto the minute in style. Assorted sizes. d*1 \"7Q\n|ULYSALE, Each\u00abj)l.I\"\nWomen's White\nSHOES\nChoose a pair of these\ncool summer whites from\nseveral patterns. Featuring ties, sandals and wide\nstraps.\n|ULY SALE\nBLEACHED\nSHEETS\nYour last chance at this\nprice. 48 ONLY Wabasso\nbleached sheets in a size\n70 by 90. Reg. $1.39 each\n!\u00a3\"!\"?. $1.00\nLAST DAY FOR\nWINDOW\nBLINDS\nWe have a limited quantity to go out at this bargain price. Sizes 36 ins.\nby 72 ins. Cream or green.\nIULY SALE,\nEach   \t\n49c\nBEACH   BALLS\nHeavy gum rubber beach\nballs that will stand the\nhardest wear. Mottled\nbright colors. 10 inch and\n1 ? inch   |ULY SALE\n79C    and     $1.00\n -\n\u2014\u2014\nmmmmmmmmrnmmMmmmmm\n\\Bim\\imm\u00bbmmimm\nr'3jppuw\u00bb\n'Wyt-.^qg^^pMBieyy;*;\nPAGE FOUR *\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, JULY 10, 1987.\nTYPICAL PORTION IN ONE OF NELSON'S LOVELY GARDENS\nAnita Louise Says . . .\nBulgy, Pudgy Hips Ruin Figures;\nKeep Them in T rim With Exercise\nBy GLADYS GLAD\nBack in the days when knight\nhood was in flower, the average\ndamsel had nothing to do except\nBit in her turreted castle and wait\n<or her knight to come riding along\nIn that era most women were soft\nand definitely inclined toward fat\nBoss. Encased in the heavy, con*\ncealing velvets and brocades of their\nperiod, they did not appear too fat\nand unshapely.\nAnita Louise, well-known cinema\n\u00bbtar, has a very shapely form. She\njaserts that bulgy, pudgy hips do\nmore to ruin the symmetry of\ngirl's form than any other figure\ndefect. Louise, of course, leads a\nvery active existence. Because of\nher career she does plenty of ex\nercising every day.\nWomen often write and ask if I\nthink it necessary for them to wear\ngirdles.\nIt is my personal opinion that a\ngirdle really isn't an absolute necessity for preventing the hips from\n\u25a0spreading and becoming fat. But 1\ndo think that a properly fitting girdle is a help. Such .a girdle of\nBourse, doesn't really make the hips\n$ny slimmer, but it does hold the\nflesh firm and tends to make them\nat least seem more slender.\nEXERCISE IMPORTANT\nThere are, of course, a good many\nexercises that are effective for keeping the hips firm and slender, and\nthe following are among them:\nLie flat on your back on the floor,\n,\u00bbrms extended sideways at. should-\nStjS level, elbows stiff. Then bring\nyour right leg up, cross it over your\nleft and try to touch your left hand\n\u2022pith your right toes. Relax, and then\nrepeat , trying to touch your right\nhand with your left toes. The knees\nBABY* \u00a9WN SOAP\nBui fatA tjou and Sdlttf ioo\nANITA LOUISE\nShe  exercises,   keep*  slim,  lovely,\nshould be kept perfectly stiff dur-\nng this exercise.\nStand erect, hands on hips, legs\ntogether. Keeping the knees stiff,\nraise your right leg sideways as\nhigh as posible, and return first to\nposition again. Then repeat with the\nleft leg, and continue alternating\nthe right and left legs for 20 counts.\nLie on your back on the floor,\nand try to get your body up on\nyour Ehoulders, using your arms to\nsupport your body. Then rotate\nyour feet in forward circles, alternating them in bicycle-riding fashion.\nWhy Be Afraid ...\nDread of Electric\nStorms and Snakes\nIs Quite Needless\nDfi.  GARRY  C.   MYERS,  PH.  D.\nTwo types of fears generally\nlimited to summer time are those\nof electric storms and snakes. And\nhow much needless suffering they\nentail! Usually the child learns\nthese fears from adults who are not\nself-controlled or have been filled\nwith terrifying superstitions.\nBut for the foolishness of adults,\nmost children would enjoy observing electric storms and snakes\nand other lowly creatures. The\nchief problem is with grown-ups.\nThey can, if they c-are, learn to\nmaster these fears, certainly not to\nexpress them before young children.\nIn case electric storms terrify\nyou, it will help you to feel more\nsecure if you will observe a few\nsimple rules. Don't stand under a\ntree. Lean not against the wall,\nespecially near a chimney. It may\ngive you comfort to wear rubbers\nthen. About the safest place is in\nan automobile if there is not a wind\nstorm. The tires are good insulators. Provided you feel terrified\nby a storm at night, put a drinking\nglass under each leg of your chair\nand rubbers on your feet. Then\nread from your favorite book or\nmagazine and \"let her rip\". Anyway, you should know that your\nchance of being struck is so small\nas not to warrant your bothering.\nWhy suppose that, you are going to\nbe the one picked out from among\nseveral hundred thousand?\nA good way to overcome fear of\nan electric storm iz to sit with the\nfamily and watch a receding storm,\nadmiring the indescribable beauties of it, feeling safe. If a little\nchild is frightened out of sleep by a\nthunder clap, say he is over three\nor four, induce him to look out of\nthe window with you as the lightning flashes, making it a game to\nsee as many thinks outside *as possible with each flash.\nNO POISONOUS SNAKES\nAnd the needless sufferings from\nfear of snakes. In most sections\nof our country there are few or no\npoisonous snakes. The beautiful\nlittle garter snake is as harmless\nas a kitten. Unfrightened by adults\nor older children, runabouts will\neagerly observe these lowly animals, or even carry them carefully\nabout in their pockets.\nThe modern school is helping\nchildren grow up without fear of\nBEAUTY IN A NELSON GARDEN .\n.....         \"\u25a0\u25a0*>\u2022\u00ab\u25a0                          .*'*  .       '\u2014**\u00ab\u2022\u201e::,*     *'*\u25a0   ' \u25a0\nwwwswfaK^:.\"^    -\u25a0                             .*         He ,*,.                *, ,    I -\u25a0<*   \u25a0\n'\"\u25a0***\u25a0.\u00ab**\u00ab*'.               ' \u25a0\u25a0*<-*               * . \"' '           '\u25a0     . '             . -    f       V\nam ... ,                     '       .,-'..:\u25a0,,,\n,                    -atsmt. f-i r!t;   ..*                   .   \u25a0 t                                 %\/\nv. *.*     \u25a0\u25a0'   *,':'.'.*'\u25a0 **'     \u25a0\"**\u2022-   *\u25a0*                                         i'***           *   t     '*..         \"*\u25a0      ,**\u25a0&\"\n'\u25a0\u2022\u2022 ,....-'..?', y, i*.           ,*.,\u00ab    .:.,-' .       i                           fi\n'\u25a0'     \"\"*V   \u2022     ,*  \u25a0*'\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0              ,*-          ,-.    \u25a0*\u25a0\u2022\/             :        .ja^K**\n' \\ t.      : *..\n' *-*\u2022.\u201e\u25a0\nml\n*3P*     t\"   #*>*\u00ab:\u2022\u2022'*'           v .   .                           ',*?\u201e:,.*        i   .\n,'*;\u25a0.*   -t*iW    $*?\u00a3\u2022\"'    \"       \u25a0'.     -:'\u25a0''\u25a0.   \"'-.-    '*'\"    : *;,*-'**,\u2022     \u25a0*     * .<\u25a0 <\n*;'%\u25a0*\u2022\u25a0\u2022,\u25a0\u00a7\u2022\u2022*.\u25a0\u2022\u2022-'*.      \u25a0 \u25a0.*\u2022*' |     '*\u2022'*'\u00bb\u25a0,.    .-iTjiiftdtat'Jt'.'   '<\u25a0\u25a0*\u2022   *:    *\n, - jA*3j8|\nf ''!\u00bb,> *%.\u25a0\u25a0\u2022      *\/\"\u2022\"*\"     ' ^:~JlJh *    \u25a0\ni   *Wf,,-v \u2022--*...:. \u2022* *,\u00ab,    m t \">\u2022              \u2022,%*\n... ,*j.._.- .,-,   - \u25bc\"..\u2022. -mmm^ \u25a0\u25a0\nmm         \" \" -      \u2022\u2022   ' *$r.2, .            ' * ?*\nlift* \u2022'SSfFv- \u2022 '^HL .*\u25a0.&.\nThe rockery at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Wragge, Ward and Observatory streets,  is a\ncolorful beauty spot\nIt Is Wise to . . .\nLike What You (an\nIf You (an'l Have\nWhat You Want\nBy   VIRGINIA   LEE\n\"Whatever your lot in life, it's\nmerely a challenge to your resourcefulness, a set of materials with\nwhich to work. Maybe you would\nrather play polo than ping-pong,\nbut if you've got an old ping-pong\nset and no poniea, you'll get a lot\nmore fun out of life from being a\nping-pong champion than from taking a dispirited whack with a polo\nmallet every now and then,\"\nThus does Marjorie Hillis repeat\nin her own sprightly way my favorite quotation that, \"if you can't\nhave what you like you must like\nwhat you can have.\" This is another\nquotation from \"Orchids on Your\nBudget\".\nOf course I don't always live up\n'tt&HOT.felta!\nMows the time fo buy\nCORN FLAKES\"\nsnakes, frogs, toads, turtles and\nthe like. I have seen all such creatures moving comfortably about on\nthe floors of classrooms. Children\nwill bring these creatures to school,\nwhere they are cared for, and enjoyed as pets. How much better\nthan that these children should\nrun with fear on seeing one of these\nor should beat or kill it?\nOne day when my younger boy\nwas about six, he and I were walking down a country road. Suddenly\nI almost jumped, though my action,\nfortunately, was not observed hy\nthe lad who, on seeing a snake that\nhad been killed by an automobile\nsaid, \"Poor thing, I will lay it here\non the bank; maybe it will live\nagain.\" My childhood education had\nbeen very different from his, concerning snakes.\nIn sections of the country, of\ncourse, where there are a few poisonous snakes, as the copperhead or\nrattler, children can be taught, calmly, to recognize and stay away from\nthem.\nto my philosophy, and I venture to\nsay that Miss Hillis probably does\nn't either\u2014not every minute. We\nhave our low moments, just like\nanybody, but the trick is not to let\nthem get you down definitely or\npermanently. If you have a firm re\n6olve to make the best of things and\nto get a lot of fun out of life, you\nare pretty apt to do it. And you\nbound up from your moments of depression like a rubber ball.\nWe all have acquaintances who\nseem to be the special butts of misfortune. I know one couple who\nhave been taking the hardest kind\nof knocks for years. It seems to me\nthat no sooner do they rally from\none and I sight and hope fervently\nthat is their last\u2014than Old Man\nHard Luck takes another sock at\nthem. They have suffered sickness,\ndeath, worry over a wayward child,\nfinancial reverses. But they still are\nnot licked. I marvel at them. Whenever I get low I think of them and\nrally.\n*   \u00bb   \u2022\nNatalie is a very young girl, but\nis large for her age and so people\nthink she is older than she is. She\nis not allowed to go out with boys,\nbut during a horseback ride alone\nshe met a boy, also on horseback\nand they talked and he asked her\nname and she told him what it was\nand where she lived. He also told\nwho he was, and he said he was\ngoing to come to see her.\nHow can she explain to her people\nhow she got to know this young\nman?\nJust tell the whole episode at\nhome, my dear. You don't need to\nbe afraid. Such things happen to\nevery girl, and if they don t she is\ndisappointed. If the young man is\nnot a suitable friend your mother\nwill know how to deal with him.\nNo harm is doije.\nAnd don't worry because you are\ntall and look older than you are.\nJust \"walk like a queen\", and keep\nwell and proud of yourself, and\nthings will adjust themselves. When\nyou are 20 or over you won't look\nany older than you do now.\nONE MINUTE PULPIT\nSix days shall work be done: but\nthe seventh day is the sabbath of\nrest, and holy convocation\u2014Leviticus 25:3.\nTHREE PACKA6ES OF KtliOSO'S\nCORN FUKES, PLEASE.\nHY FAMILY EATS AtOTOTTHEH\nIN HOT WEATHER\nVES-ANO\nI SELL\nA LOT,\nTOO\/\nNO MORE MORNINGS IN\nIMt KITCHEN FOR ME I\nKELLOGG'S.READYTOStME\nSAVE\nHot weather doubles your enjoyment\nof Kellogg's Corn Flakes. They're bo\ncrisp and refreshing! With cool milk\nor cream, they're a wholesome energy-\nfood\u2014yet light and easy to digest.\nExtra delicious with fruit or berries\nadded.\nOrder plenty of Kellogg's Coi'n\nFlakes from your grocer, and serve\nthem often. An ideal hot-weather\nbreakfast, lunch or bedtime snack. Convenient too. Ready to 6erve without\ncooking or bother.\nKellogg's are kept oven-fresh and\nflavor-perfect by the patented heat-\nsealed inner wrapper. Sold by grocers\neverywhere. Made by Kellogg in\nLondon, Ontario.\nFruit Pie\nhints for\nhousewives\nSonnysayings\nthought I'd do some r<\nt'day an' leave Baby t'. explain\nabout the goldfish!\nEven silverware hasn't escaped\nthe ensemble idea. Silver plates,\ntea sets, and so forth, may be obtained to match flatware\u2014knives,\nforks and spoons.\nA linen shoe with circles of multicolored suede scattered like confetti over it is one of the novelties\nof the summer.\nHalters for beach and sports\nwear are being shown in bright\ngabardine.\nPromotes Safety...\nShoes Should Be\nComfortable, Cool\nfor Healthy Feel\nM.\nBy LOGAN CLENOENINQ\nA traveling salesman said to\nme, 'My feet would make me\nlose thousands of dollars it I did\nnot take care of them. When my\nfee hurt I am grouchy, impatient\nand unreasonable. I lose all my\ntact and diplomacy.\"\nSome department stores employ\npediatrisU on their medical staffs\nto keep the feet of their salesgirls\nhealthy. They consider it a\ninvestment, because they know\nhow easy it is for a weary, footsore salesperson to lose business.\nIn industry, employers recog\nnize that the care of the feet aids\ngood health and promotes safety,\nNo factory employe is trustworthy\non a delicate, complicated machine\nif attention is constantly distracted by a painful foot. Defective\nshoes are a source of accidents,\nparticularly in the case of women,\nthey being the greatest suffers.\nOld shoes should be barred as a\nsafety health measure. Women in\nshops should wear oxfords, medium,\nwides toes, with flexible soles and\nkid leather upper parts and heels\nnot over 1% inches in height. Rub\nber heels will absorb the shock of\npounding on hard floors. Men in\nshops should select shoes with flexible soles to prevent exertion in\npending the feet, and with upper\nparts of lightweight calf, or elk for\nheavier work.\nFOOT'S DANGER AT PLAY\nThe foot is also In danger at\nplay, as witness the term which\nhas become so popular, \"athlete's\nfoot\". This is an infection with\na microscopic fungus plant, which\ngets into the skin of the feet which\nhave been macerated by standing\nin a shower bath. Naturally one\nperson with an infected foot can\nleave enough on a gymnasium floor\nto infect the feet of an entire club.\nPeople differ in their sensitiveness to this infection. I knew one\nman who was so susceptible to it\nthat he had to give up bathing in\nthe locker of his club entirely,\nand did all of his changing at\nhome in his own bathroom. Even\nthen he had to keep the floor\nrubbed with an antiseptic so as to\nbe 6ure that he would not reinfect\nhimself.\nPoor shoes also play a part in\nthe production of athlete'i foot.\nMoisture and heat accumulate in\nheavy shoes and keep the skin soft\nand macerated. Feet need ventilation.\nThose who are troubled with reinfection of athlete's foot should\nkeep a formaldehyde pad In the\nshoes over night.\nSerial Story . . .\nLove is for Tomorrow\nMENU   HINT\nCold Tomato Juice    Codfish Cakes\nMixed Vegetable Salad\nGreen Peas,      Red Raspberry Pie\nCoffee or Tea\nThis is a delightful time of year,\nas there are so many delicious fresh\nberries and vegetables 'on hand\nto use. I had red raspberry pie for\nlunch the other day and it was\nGOOD! Some home economics writers advise baking the pie crust a\nlittle before putting the berries in.\nI never have done this. I put some\nof the sugar and some flour mixed\nwith it in the bottom of the pie.\non the lower crust, before putting\nin the berries, then sprinkle the\nberries with sugar, also mixed with\na little flour, on top. Cut the pi?\ncrust with a liberal hand so as to\nhave enough to tuck in around the\nedges to prevent the juice of the\nberries from oozing out. Put in hot\noven to brown the crust quickly and\nso hold in the juice of the berries.\nAfter 10 or 15 minutes, you can\nlower the heat* to, say, 350, and bako\nuntil well brQwned. It takes a berry\npie about 40 minutes to bake.\nTODAY'8   RECIPES\nSalt Codfish Cakes\u2014Wash fish,\npick in small pieces until you have\none cup. Put in frying pan, add one\nquart lukewarm water and keep\nwarm from 30 minutes to one hour,\ndepending upon the saltiness of fish.\nWash, pare four potatoes, cover with\ncold water, let stand one hour. Drain\noff and boil potatoes in one quart\nof wqter until soft  Dram potatoes,\ni>mash. There should be two cups.\nl Drain fish and add to potatoes, then\nadd one egg, well beaten, a little\npepper. When thoroughly mixed\nmake round, flat c?kes three-quarters inch in thickness. Roll cakes in\nflour, coating surface well, and set\naside to cool. Cut fat salt pork into\none-fourth inches slices, cut slices\nin strips lengthwise of pork and\nnearly to rind, but not severing it-\nFry out pork in hot frying pan, turning frequently to prevent burning.\nWhen well browned, remove pork\nand use fat in pan for frying fish\ncakes, pouring off some of it if\nthere is too much. Fry cakes on\none side, turn and brown the other.\nRemove to hot platter and garnish\nwith salt pork scraps.\nDURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nFACTS AND FANCIE8\nSUCCESSFUL  FRUIT PIES\nWhat makes a fruit pie a success''\nasks Esther Kimmel in a recent\nPictorial Review article. The crust?\nLight, flaky, tender and evenly baked to a golden brown is the goal\nfor crusts\u2014both top and bottom if\nit's a two-crust pie.\nA soggy undercrust may be* the\nfirst stumbling block. All berry and\nearly cherry pies arr juicy\u2014you\nwant them that way! So chances for\nsogginess run high. The most important prevention we have found is the\nbaking temperature. It, must be high\nenough to set the crust before the\njuice begins to run from the fruit\nand continuously high so it will\nbrown on the bottom, and crisp up\nbefore the baking period is finished.\nThen, though the lower crust may\nbecome moist, it will never have\nthat unpleasant, doughy, raw taste.\nIs the fruit, filiing pleasantly\njuicy, or is it, too, too \"runny\"?\nThe critical moment, for run-away\npies is during the lijst 20 minutes\nof baking. Then if ihe temperature\nis too high, they will boil over no\nmatter how many precautions are\ntaken to keep Ihe juice in its proper\nplace. Some slight amount of thickening agent should be added to the\nfruit, only enough to make the juice\nand sugar slightly syrupy.\nThe edge of the pie is Ihe dan*\nger point for most run-overs. We\nlike to eliminate this by an extra\nfold around the edge of the crust.\nBy VIRGINIA SCALLON\nCHAPTER 22\n\"Why, hello Marcia,\" Sandy came\nstriding across the studio room to\nclasp her hand. Marcia had time\nto admire his earless good looks, and\nthe friendyly smile that came so\neasily to his lips. Purposely disregarding Paula, studying the pictures\nwith renewed interest, she greeted\nhim effusively.\n\"I felt the need of a mental\ncocktail,\" she said in explanation\nof her visit to the studio in the\nmiddle of an afternoon. She was\ntoo sensitive about her recent unpleasant experiences to confess she\nhad resigned from Acme, knowing\nthat he would demand more complete explanation than she cared\nto give at the moment.\n'Why not browse around and refresh your soul for a while, then\nwe'll all three have some real firewater,\" he invited, and was genuinely puzzled when she did not\nseem pleased,\nHe didn't realize that the inclusion of Paula in the party had antagonized Marcia, for she still retained an unreasoning distaste for\nIhe younger artist. She would have\nbeen insulted if anyone had told\nher she was jealous. Instead she\nhad built up a sincere case against\nPaula: convinced herself that she\nwas sly and undependable, that she\nhad inexcusable nerve to force her-\nseif and her inexperience upon generous Sandy.\nRefusing to notice the sudden\ncoldness on Marcia's part, gandy\nmotioned to Paula and included\nher in the conversation. To his\nsudden amazement, sparks began\nto fiy from the first moment. Several times his sense of humor almost, forced him to take relief in\nloud laughter.\nHe attributed their mutual dislike to a professional jealousy, and\nwas amused to see to what lengths\ngirls would go to get the better of\nan argument. Stubbornly. Marcia\nadmired what Paula ridiculed, as\nhe led the two belligerents on a\ntour of the exhibit. If Marcia expressed distaste. Paula took delight in pjaieing.\n\"I understand you've left\u2014,\"\nPaula began, and Marcia interrupted quickly. She was -not yet\nready for Sandy to jearn that she\nhad left s\\ane, particularly for him\nto get a distorted view from this\nusurper.\n\"Yes, I left the office early today,\" she said desperately, and\ndared the other girl to expose her\nsecret. Marcia forced heiself to a\nsemblance of friendliness when\nPaula was good pport eneugh to\nkeep silent, but found later it\nwould have been hest if the cat\nhad escaped from the bag when\nshe was present to correct any\nmisunderstandings.\nPaula ws;s sidling closer to Sandy,\nnd childishly told Marcia how\npleased he was with her work, \"Aren't you. Sandy?\" The man did not\ncatch the affectionate tone, which\ndecidedly was not lost on Marcia.\n\"Beyond a doubt. And we c*-m't\nbe grateful enough to Marcia for\nbringing us together,\" he said with\nunconscious irony.\n\"Cataclysmic,\" Marcia said cattily, hoping to remind Sandy of the\ntime when they had talked about\nthe miracle that had brought them\ntogether in far-off peaceful La\nCresta. Sandy was quick to catch\nthe inference, then a startling\nthought occurred to him. Of course,\nMarcia was jealous of Paula! What\nan astounding thing, what a break\n(Continued on Page Five)\nAlpine\nMilk\nThe new evaporated milk\neverybody is talking\nabout. Have you tried it?\nIf not ask your grocer to\ninclude a few tins with\nyour order today.\nIts Creamy\nFreshness\nis instantly noticed, and\nyou'll find Alpine especially good for growing\nbabies. It whips\u2014makes\ndelicious home, made ice\ncream and other frozen\ndesserts. Excellent for all\ncooking needs too.\nA Western\nProduct\nfor Western\nPeople\nBuy with\nConfidence\nat your\nlocal\ngrocer.\nNew BREAD Diet\nReduces You Safely\nDoes not weaken\nmuscles or cause\nlossofEnergyt\nFOLLOW THIS\nBREAD DIET PUN\nThil Diet Flu tlTea about tUO\nCalories a day\u2014the reducing allowance of the avenge woman.\n\u2022 BREAKFAST\n1 ftlau fruit Juice\nSmall ncrvluil meat, fish or eggi\n3 SLICES TOAST, 1 iq. butter\n1 cup coffee (dear) 1 up. eugax\n\u2022 LUNCH OR SUPPER\nModerate serving meat, fish, ot\negga\nAverage nerving 1 green vegetable\n1 SLICES BREAD, < \u00ab<\u2022. butter\nAverage aeniog fruit aaiad\nIgluamllk\n\u2022 DINNER\nH glaaa fruit or tomato juice\nGeueroua aervlog  meat,  fish,  or\nfowl\nAverage  eervlng   7  vegetables,\n1 green\nSmall serving simple dessett\n\u2022 SLICES BREAD, 1 aq. butter\n1 cup coffee or tea (clear) 1 tap.\nsugar\nTHB Bread Diet ia unlike the extreme\ndiets, which often break\ndown vital tissues. You\nshould never follow an extreme diet without a physician's advice.\nBread is not just a\n\"starchy\" food. It combines carbohydrates, for\nenergy, and an especially\neffective form of protein\nthat helps to burn up fat\nwhile you are reducing.\nEveryone should  know\nthat bread itself is not fat'\ntening. You can reduce on\nthe Bread Diet \u2014 and be splendidly energetic all the\ntime, not weak, tired #id irritable.\nThe new Bread Diet makes reducing safe and easy. \u2022\nIt gives you the main part of your energy food in appe-,\ntite-satisfying bread.\nLet Your BAKER Bake for You\n mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm\n\u2022\nammmm\nw-*|.'W.*\u00bb:r'**y^.'T-*'T*^^^\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C*\u2014SATURDAY MORNINO, JULY 10, 1937.\nAPPLICATIONS\nFOR BUILDING\nPERMITS OFF\nFive in Past 10 Days\nfor Total $1370\nIssued\nApplication! lor building* permits\nhave fallen ott in the lait fortnight\nor so, total value o; permits in the\nlast 10 days being down considerably in comparison with similar\nperiods earlier in the year. During\nthe 10 days five applications, for\npermits totalling $1370, were made\nai follows:\nC. Wilson, to build house, Houston\nstreet, $800.\nT. H. Waters St Co., Ltd., to re\nshingle roof and repair verandah,\nVernon street, $200.\nB. McCreight, to build garage,\n$190.\nMary A. Nelson, to reshingle porch\nAnderson street, $20.\nGrace Clifton, to reshingle with\ncomposition shingles, $200.\nFour Brothers\nSurvive Slocan\nPioneer, H. L. Fife\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C. - Harvey\nLewis Fife, of Slocan City, who died\nat Slocan Community hospital, New\nDenver, June 23, and who was laid\nto rest at Slocan City, is survived\nby his widow, two sisters, Miss\nPhoebe Fife and Miss Elizabeth Fife\nof Peterboro, and four brothers,\nStewart of Edmonton, Richard ot\nTwo Hills, Alta., Charles of Ontario,\nand George, the youngest, at the old\nhome in Lang, Ont.\nMr. Fife was for many years a\nprominent resident of Slocan City.\nm* em   \u2122  ms ws   ms tHBIs m*mp\nFOR WARM\nSUMMER\nDAYS\nYou'll need at least two pair\nof these delightful white\nshoes for your summer holidays. Our stock includes the\nright shoes for morning, afternoon, evening and sport\nwear.\nHICH AND LOW HEELS\nALL SIZES\n$2-95\nTo\n$4\n.95\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nButcherteria News\nT. S. 8HORTHOUSE\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nPICNIC 8H0UI-DER8-|Q-J\nPOT ROA8TS BEEF-     ayA\nLb , and up ***r\nOVEN ROASTS BEEF-    |M\nLb and up *\u00b0V\nROASTS OF BEEF-        -a-sA\nRolled! Lb. and up *Sr\nBUTTER\u2014Cloverdale Creamery! with meat order: It?A\nPer Ib *>Y\nMUTTON-Legs and agA\nLoins: Lb  *3Y\nMUTTON-Lean  Stew:     -aseA\n3 lb  *3Y\nSHOULDERS- an A\nPer Ib.  *\"V\nSTEAK\u2014Minced: *\\*A\n2  lb *>V\nSAUSAGE\u2014Breakfast:      -am A\n2 Ibs *J\u00a5\nROUNDSTEAK- Asej,\n2 Ibs BV\nSIRLOIN STEAK- yoA\nVEAL 8TEAK-\nLb\t\n170\nCOTTAGE       -**A    1QA\nROLL8-Lb.    *>JYt.o *m\nPHONES 527-528\nVEAL CHOPS- 2C*}\nOVEN VEAL ROASTS- JM\nLEG VEAL ROASTS-    22<!\nBACON\u2014Breakfast:      -yt\\A\nby the piece: Lb *7y\nRUMP ROASTS\u2014Veal: ytkA\nJELLIED VEAL\u2014 -afsA\nPOTTED MEAT, JQA\nJELLIED TONGUE- A*A\nSPICED  HAM- AQA\nCOTTAGE CHEESE- -*QA\nMUSHROOMS- AQA\nFresh   Killed  Fryers  Arriving\nToday\nFREE DELIVERY\nMARASCHINO CHERRIES\nSOUTH AFRICAN PINEAPPLE\nSHREDDED COCOANUT\nThese three delicacies are all combined to\nmake this week-end's\n\u00bb\nCurlew Ice Cream\nS-P-E-C-I-A-L\nIn Brick or in Bulk at All Curlew Dealers\nPALM DAIRIES LIMITED\nSerial . . .\nLOVE IS FOR\nTOMORROW\n(Continued From Page Four)\nfor hlml For the first time he saw\nclearly that his forced neglect of\nMarcia during his busy weeks, and\nhis casual Interest in Paula, was\naffecting the girl more dramatically\nthan his most ardent courtship.\n\"All's fair in love,\" he thought\nsilently, and on the spur of the\nmoment decided to play Paula\nagainst hissweetheart, hoping Marcia might experience a Jealousy that\nwould make her realize that he was\nall-importtmt to her happiness. Vis-\nloning a day when she would come\nto him of her own accord, and admit that her love for him overpowered all else, he turned deliberately to Paula.\nWith true masculine lack of intuition, he never dreamed that impressionable Paula already worshiped him for his kindness to\nher, and that even, the slightest\nInterest might turn her feeling6\ninto a demanding love. Already\nshe resented Marcia's place in his\nInterest, and somewhat slyly she\nbegan to lead the conversation into\na new channel.\n\"Are you taking a vacation this\nsummer, Miss Madden?\" she asked,\npurposely making the other girl\nfeel older because of her formality.\n\"I've been trying to persuade Sandy\nI need some time off; I'd like to go\neart to see my family. At the most\nI'd only be able to take two weeks,\nand it wouldn't leave me much\ntime.\"\nWhy don't you fly?\" Marcia\nasked absently, and gave her the\nopening she wanted.\n\"Oh, I'm afraid. Do you fly, Miss\nMadden?\"\n\"No,\" she said briefly, for \u25a0 moment thinking Paula referred to\nactual piloting. She didn't realise\nthat her reply was taken in a different sense by her listeners, and\naccounted for Sandy's strange reaction to her next remark.\nBut then what were you doing\nIn the airplane with Hartley last\nValentine's day? J was at the airport when you got out, all decked\nup in orchids,\" Paula said. Was\nthere real malice In her statement,\nor was she innocent of any deliberate insult? Marcia could have\nslapped her childlike face when she\nsaw Sandy pale with anger.\nWith quick Intuition, she turned\nfrankly to Sandy. \"That was the\nday Ellen was married, remember? We must have just returned\nwhen you saw us, Paula,\" the said\nsweetly to the other girl. \"Tony\nsent me a bridesmaid corsage of\nthe biggest orchids.\"\nSubtly she had allayed Sandy's\nsuspicions, by readily admitting\nand explaining her presence at the\nHORNER'S\nGROCERY\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nGrocery Prices Sam* at\nSalmo.\nButter: Numald, lit  QO\ngrade, 3 Ibi *>L\\,\nSALADA TEA\nYellow Label, CO\nSalmon: Clover Leaf,   OC\nPink, tails, 2 for .... L JC\nLOBSTER\n'A's .. 21*    Vi's .. 35*\nCorn: Aylmer, Choice OC\nquality, 2 tint   LOKs\nPeas: Royal City,       OC\nsixe 5'i, 2 tint LO\\i\nCocoa: Cowan'i,        OO\nPineapple: Singapore, OQA\n2'i, 2 tint &JC\nBiscuits: Chocolate fingers,\nregular 45e Ib. t)C\nFig Bar Biicuiti:        01 \u201e\nLb    LK\nMAZOLA OIL\nPints 32*    Gallons $1.95\nCarrots and Beeti:      1A\n3 bunchei   wC\n\\sTTl. 15c 18c\nBananai: OC\n3 Ibs UJl\nPeat: Freih local,      OC\u00ab\n2 Ibi LO\\,\nLettuce: Large heads, IP\n2 for  IJC\nHot Houie Tomatoes: OC-\n2 Ibi 0DC\nNew Potatoei: OC\n6 Ibi CdZ\nWatermelon: Whole     C '\nor half, Ib     ol\nCucumben: 1C.\n2 for   lol\nPhone 121\nFree Delivery\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. John Teague\nhave as their guests, Mr. and Mrs.\nWalter Ward and daughter of San\nFrancisco, Calif,\n\u2022 Mrs, Alex Sutherland of Grand\nForks is a guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nB. F. Whiteside, Victoria street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Janson of\nProcter spent yesterday In town.\n\u2022 Mrs. Albert Smith, Edgewood\navenue, who was at Victoria for a\nmonth owing to the illness of her\nmother, has returned.'\n\u2022 Mrs. i. D, Serres and daughter,\nMiss Barbara Serres of Harrop,\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Shoppers in town yesterday included Ronald Edwards of Ymir.\n\u2022 , Mr. and Mrs. George Brown\nof Walkers Landing are Nelson\nvisitors.\n\u2022 Miss Dorothy Corbie went to\nKoolaree camp yesterday to be of-\nfical camp nurse.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Joyner of Moose\nJaw are camping at Cedar Point.\n\u2022 - Miss Florence Stephenson\nleaves today to spend her vacation\nIn Southern California.\n\u2022 Miss Louise Wamvig left\nyesterday, for her home at Calgary\nafter a three weeks visit at the\nhome of her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Stallwood\nof the north shore.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. H. Walker, Baker\nstreet, had as her guest, her daughter, Mrs. R. Battersby of Bull River\nand her young daughter, Julie, who\nhave returned.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. P. Herron was hostess\nThursday night in the Knightj of\nPythias hall to members of the\ncircle of the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate when Mrs. Henri Gagnon's\ncircle met. Present were Mrs. M. J.\nVarseveld, Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon,\nMrs. Phillip J. Rahal, Mrs. M. Scally,\nMrs. Vito Romino, Mrs. Fred C.\nDavis, Mrs. P. Bilowski, Mrs. J.\nMuraro, Mrs. H, B. Lindsay, Mrs.\nJ. P. Herron, Mrs. J. H. Vivian, Mrs.\nHenri Gagnon and Mrs. A. G.\nGelinas.\n\u2022 Major A. W. Davis of the Durango mine at Ymir visited town\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Kana of\nCalgary are guests at the home of\nMrs. Kane's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. Robertson, Mill\nBtreet.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. Denton, Kootenay\napartments, Is holidaying at the\nhomeof her son at Grand Forks.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Watmaugh of\nCalgary are guests at the home of\ntheir parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robertson, Mill street.\n\u2022 R. A. Willis of Montreal visited\ntown yesterday.\n\u2022 E. Henniger ef Grand Forks\nvisited Nelson yesterday,\n\u2022 Mrs. Harold Lakes, Mri. Dodding, Miss Mayme Currie and MUs\nConnie Smith expect to return today\nfrom a week's vacation at Whatsan\nlake.\n\u2022 Rev. Sister Benard, superior of\nSt. Joseph's academy, has as her\nguesta, Rev. Sister Seraphlne and\nRev. Sister Austin, both of the Mater\nMiseracordlae hospital at Rossland,\nand Rev. Sister St. John of the\nHoly Family convent at Fernie.\n\u2022 Mrs P. Kapak, W. Kapak, Miss\nMary King and George Gelinas\nmade a brief visit to Spokane, returning last night.\n\u2022 C. S. Fowler of Riondel was a\nNelson visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. C. Kettlewell, Chatham street, Fairview, entertained\nmembers of Circle No. 1 of Trinity\nUnited church Thursday afternoon\nwhen those present were Mrs. E. M.\nFleury, Mrs. J. J. Foote, Mrs. G. F.\nHunter, Mrs. J. H. Wallace, Mrs.\nArthur Terrill, Mrs. W. I. Coles,\nMrs. G. B. Stallwood, Mrs. L. Hanna, Mrs. J. A. Irving, Mrs. George\nLambert, Mrs. J. A. Donnell, Mrs.\nRosa, Mrs. W. H. Towhey, Mrs. King\nof Calgary, and Mrs. W. C. Kettlewell.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Archie Lenar-\nducci and young daughter, Frances,\nof Trail visited at the home of the\nlatter's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Dominic DeFerro, Robson street.\n\u2022 Mr. and MrB. A. DeFerro, Robson street, have as their house guests\nMrs. DeFerro's parents, Mr, and\nMrs. E. Grassi of Calgary, and her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Farrar of Turner Valley,\nwho made the trip by motor. They\nwill be in Nelson for about two\nweeks.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Bird, Victoria\nVISIT AINSWORTH\nAINSWORTH, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nIvor Jones and family of South\nSlocan were visitors here.\nMr. and Mrs. G. V. Hunt, Mrs.\nHunt's sister, Mrs. Ford and Mr. R.\nBurgess were visitors to the Silver\nLedge.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Nelson of Fruitvale were visitors here.\nMr. and Mrs. W. McLeary of Trail\nspent the holiday here.\nFred Webber of Kaslo, district\nforest ranger, was visitor here. Bill\nHansen has been appointed local\nforest ranger,\nMrs. W. E. Ogden and baby of\nProcter are camping here. Mr. Ogden is employed at the Banker mine.\nMrs. Ogden has as her guest Noel\nHirst of Procter.\nMrs. Abbott and her daughters of\nKimberley are occupying the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. A. A.\nSkead, for a month.\nMiss Ruby Whitfield was a weekend visitor in town.\nA. Kennedy of Spokane has left\nstreet, have as their guest their\ndaughter, Mrs. Gallicano, and her\ntwo sons, of Revelstoke.\n\u2022 T. H. Willits has returned from\na six-week visit to Chicago, Rock-\nford and Waukegen, 111.\n\u2022 At a quiet ceremony In the\nmanse of Trinity United church,\nNelson, June 26, Rev. J. A, Donnell\nunited in marriage Miss Mildred\nIsobel Traynor, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. John Traynor of New Denver and Leo Palma Angrignon of\nNew Denver, Mrs. J. A. Donnell\nand Mrs. George Ross of Nelson\nwere witnesses.\nairport Tha mention of tha bridal\ncorsage was sheer luck, for In the\nrelief he felt at this information\nSandy neglected to quiz her further about Hartley. His attitude\nshowed that ha regretted his unfounded flare of Jealousy, and his\nthanks that an open break had\nbeen averted.\n\"Well, now what about that\ncocktail I promised?\" Sandy asked\nin a more normal tone, He too\nfelt the strain of the afternoon,\nbut his absurd pleasure in discovering a vulnerable spot in Marcia's\narmor had established him in rare\ngood mood. \"Let's go to Andre-\nyov's, and then to a show?\"\nMarcia felt confident that if she\nrefused his invitation, the other\ngirl would take advantage of the\nsituation and go alone. Resolving\nto take the conflict to familiar\nhoma fields, she said suddenly,\n\"Why not come to my apartment\nfor supper? You stop and get\nsome bitters, Sandy-I think I have\nthe mixings for lome Martinis.\"\nPaula looked somewhat surprised ta be included In tha invitation, and even Sandy was amaied\nthat she asked his assistant. With\nthe new conceit he felt after discovering her badly concealed Jealousy, he wondered that she would\nbe so hospitable to Paula. He\ncouldn't realize that Marcia would\nfeel much more comfortable In her\nown environment, that Paula might\nbe 111 at ease in the Other's home.\nWithout much ado, the strangely selected three piled into Sandy's\ncar and headed for Marcia's apartment. The man deposited his two\ncharges at the doorway, then with\nan amused smile he went off In\nsearch of the biters and other\n\"trimmings.\"\nMarcia took Paula upstairs, and\noutdid herself to be kind. \"Maybe,\"\nshe thought, \"I'll find out Just how\nmuch the baby thinks of him.\"\nBut Paula was on her guard, and\nIf her growing regard had ripened\ninto love for Sandy, she took pains\nto conceal it from her hostess.\nEnviously she looked at Marcia,\nwho had taken* refuge in the eternal feminine habit of self-adornment and was entrancingly beautiful in a brocaded Chinese tea\njacket.\nSandy's approving glance was repayment for her efforts, and Marcia led her guest to the tiny red\nand white kitchen. Surveying her\ncupboard, she enumerated the\ndrinks available, \"What shall it be,\nthe Martini, a pink lady, or\u2014\"\n\"How about a Horse's Neck?\"\nSandy said inelegantly, then whirled\nto answer the phone. A second\nlater the girls heard him say, \"How\nin thunder did you know I was\nhere?\u2014Oh, that important?\u2014I'll be\nthere In five minutes.\" And he slammed up, the receiver. \u2022\n\"A Horse's Neck lt is,\" he said\nwryly,.explaining he had to leave\nimmediately on and important Job.\nMarcia wondered If he was going *> leave Paula with her, when\nshe saw him hastily gathering his\ncoat. \"Is it bad news? Will you\nbe back? What about\u2014?\" but she\nwas talking to the closed door as\nSandy dashed out with a preoccupied \"Goodby\" to the two girls\nhe left behind him.\n(To Be Continued)\nA Willis Purchase\nLeaves No Re&rets\nAn aristocracy of refinement and musical\nculture is constituted in ths thousands of\nowners of ths Willis.\nFor nearly seventy years its incomparable\ntone and beauty of design have maintained its great reputation.\nEasy terms and good allowance on any\nmake of piano in exchange,\nKootenay Music House\nNelson, B. C,\nSPECIALS\nat HorswilVs\nSOAP\u2014Pearl White 5 for 23*\nCHEESE\u2014Chateau Lb. 29*\nSOUPS\u2014Aylmer  3 for 25*^\nSODA BISCUITS\u2014Snowflake Pkg. 22*\nSWEET MIXED PICKLES\u2014Heinx Qti. 45*\nCRAHAM WAFERS\u2014Ormond's Pkg. 22?\n1 Ib. Maxwell Houie Coffee and 1 pkg. Huikiei for 45?\nSNAP HAND CLEANSER Tin 21?\nFANCY FREE DESSERTS 3 for 23?\nSANDWICH SPREAD\u2014Heinx 22? and 42?\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Blue Label, cruihed 2 tlni 29?\nCANTALOUPS 15?, 20? WATERMELON, Ib. . 5?\nNEW SPUDS, 6 Ibi.   25? CAULIFLOWER,   Ib. 12?\nSTRAWBERRIES\u2014British Sovereign ... 3 for 29?\nBananai, 3 Ibi 25? Tomatoei, 2 Ibi. ... 35?\nCarroti, Beeti, 2 bch. 15? Plums, Peachei, bikt. 39?\nCabbage, Ib     6? Grapefruit, 3 for ... 23?\nLettuce, large, 3 for. 25? Orangei, juicy, 3 dox. f 1\nCucumben, Creen Onioni, Radishes, Creen Peai,\nCelery, Rhubarb\nHorswill Bros.\nafter spending a holiday at the hot\nsprings.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Brooks and\ndaughter of Spokane were among\nvisitors to the hot springs.\nMrs. D. Haddad of Spokane spent\nthe week-end at the hot springs.\nAl. Beatty of Nelson, Bill Stark of\nSummerland and Miss Patty Mat-\ntersdorf of Ymir were at Welcome\nInn.\nMr. and Mrs. H. B. Penny, H. A.\nParker and Miss I. Rowe from Nelson were guests at Welcome Inn,\nIsabel Lane and Ruby Hansen are\non a short Camping holiday across\nthe lake.\nPHONE 235\nFREE DELIVERY\nTwo scientists report that Sargas-\nsus weed from the Gulf Stream contains vitamin D, and that rats treated with oils from this weed were\ncured of rickets.\n ,w page ri\\\nGrand Forks Girl,\nNelsonite to We<\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, July til\nThe marriage ot Miss Ruth Elizabet\nHesse and Albert H. Kinahan take\nplace In St. John's church July 1\nat one o'clock.\nSince  cachew  nuts  from  Indi\nhave  gained  popularity,  India\nmanufacturing a by-product oil ob\ntained from cachew shells.\nWeek-End Specials \u00ab\nLowery's Groceteria\nBerry Sugar\u2014\n2 lb. carton \t\nRubber Jar Rlngs-\nPer doz\t\nSardines\u2014King Oscar,       ftA\n2 tins  **>\nParawax\u2014\nPer pkt\t\n150\nWide Mouth Jars\u2014 (ba Ata\nKerr, qts. doz  9*\u00ab*3r\nm\nJam Jell\u2014\nPer bottle ..\u201e\t\nEconomy Jar Caps\u2014 f.Q\/'\nPer doz my\nSpaghetti and Cheese\u2014     IfkA\nLibby's, per tin *\"r\nCorned  Beef\u2014Helmet,      tHA\n2 tins  *>>\nSyrup\u2014Rogers,\n2 lb. tin \t\nCantaloups-\nLarge 36's \t\nWatermelon\u2014Ripe and\nJuicy, per lb\t\nCucumbers\u2014Large\nhothouse, 2 for\t\nw\nm\n50\n25*\nFREE\u20141 large pkt. HU8KIE8,\nwith 1 Ib. tin Maxwell A\u00a3A\nHouse Coffee, at *\u00bb*Jr\nNew Potatoes\u2014\n6 lbs. for\t\nCauliflower\u2014\nlUach \t\nLettuee\u2014\n2 for\t\n25U\nm\nWe Sell Milk and Cream Freih Dally\nPHONE 406 FOR FREE DELIVERY\nDON'T\nMISS\nOur Special\nSUMMER\nCLEARANCE\nEntire; StocK\nExclusive Fashions\nfor all\nSummer Occasions\not\nDrastic MarlCdowns\n\u2022;\n^fatmn$hnt1^\nReady-to-Wear and Dry Goods\nPhone 200 Baker St.\n=\nVASSARS'\nGASH MEAT MARKET\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\n831\n832\nGood Buying for Saturday and Monday\nChoice Steer Beef\nJuicy Round Steak,\n2 Ibi  45*\nRound Steak Roast, Ib. 22-f\nBlade Roast, Ib  141\nPot Roait, good, Ib. .. 12*\nBoiling Beef, Ib  10*\nRump Roasts, Ib  20*\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibs. .. 29*\nVeal Oven Roast, Ib. . 15*\nVeal Fillet Roast, Ib. . 24<\nVeal Rump Roast, Ib. 181\nPork Shoulder Roast, Ib. 20*\nPork Steaks, Ib  20*\nMutton Chops, Ib. ... 18<\nShoulders Mutton, lb. 10*\nLegs Mutton, Ib  20<*\nVeal Stewing, 2 Ib. .. 23*\nPure Lard, 2 Ibs  35*\nLarge Bologna, Ib.  .. 18<*\njowl Bacon, Ib  20^\nCreamery Butter, Thistle\nBrand, with meat order,\nLb 25*\nEggs, local A-madium,\nSpecial, doi 26*\nSwift's Breakfast Bacon,\nfresh sliced, Ib 32*\nRoasting Chicken, Ib.   30*\nFry Chicken, fresh, Ib. 35*\nBoiling Fowl, Ib 22*\nMushrooms, fresh' from\nVancouver, Ib 35*\nCheese, Old Nippy, Ib. 30*\nSausage Meat, seasoned,\nLb 12*\nPork Sausage, small,\n2 Ibs  45*\nSwift's Smoked Picnics,\nLb  19*\nHamburger, fresh made,\nLb  10*\nCottage Rolls, all meat,\nLb  28*\n\u25a0^H\n \u2014\u2014\nmmmmm\nmmmmimiimmmm^m\nAGE SIX \u2022\nMmx Satly Jfauia\nEstablished April 22, 1002.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n210  Baker  Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember  ot  the  Audit  Bureau   ot   Circulations   end\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nSATURDAY, JULY 10,1937.\nIMPROVING OUR HOMES OR\nBUILDING NEW ONES\nThe Home Improvement plan is going over in a large\nWay in every, part of Canada. Kootenay is in the forefront.\nOf the three leading cities in Canada, of a population up\nto 10,000 to take advantage of the home improvement plan\nloans provisions, two of these three are in Kootenay. They\nare Nelson and Trail. In Nelson 63 loans have been made to\na total of $31,688, all of which has been spent on improving\nand renovating and enlarging homes. Trail has more loans,\n84, and has spent almost as much money, $29,212.\nThe scheme is a good one. It is so simple. It is so easy\nunder this governmental plan\u2014which has the outstanding\nmerit that the government really has very little to do with\nit\u2014to go to a bank and borrow money to build more rooms\non a house, to improve a residential property or farm\nbuildings in almost any way desired. Where the government\ncomes in is that it has guaranteed the banks up to 15 per\ncent against losses, but beyond that it has very wisely kept\nits fingers pretty well out of the pie.\nSo successful is the home improvement scheme that\nthere seems no reason why it should not become a permanent part of Canadian government policy.\nIf some genius could work out an equally simple and\neffective scheme to provide funds for building new homes it\nwould be of wonderful benefit to Canada and its people.\nThere are difficulties in the way, but experience has proved\nthat the present home loan scheme is not of much benefit to\nany part of the country outside of the large cities. The Esling plan under which the cities would take the place of\ntrust companies in the federal plan for financing new\nhomes\u2014the cities borrowing from Ottawa and relending to\nhome-builders\u2014haB not yet quite caught on, but is not that\nbecause we have not thought enough about it, or realized\nhow tremendous is the need for building of new homes in\nsuch cities as Rossland, Trail and Nelson?\nNOT ALL FOR ENTERTAINMENT\nThe American people, we learn from the magazine\nModern Mechanix, spend more than $5,000,000 a year for\nfireworks. This information comes to hand just as we\nlearn that for the first time in thirty years no deaths due\nI to fireworks occurred in the most recent Fourth of July\ncelebrations in the U. S. A. But we also learn the annual\nexpenditure for fireworks is not for the exclusive entertainment of little boys and girls, nor for more sensational\n-carnival display. Industrial concerns and government bureaus injthe U.S.A. are the big buyers. The flares and\nsignal lights used at sea, in military maneuvers and by\nairplane^ ahd landing fields, account for full half the product of fthe pyrotechnic industry there.\nILooking Backwards.\nTEN YEAR8 AGO\nJuly 10, 1927.\nCalgary r- Hurling down houses\n\u25a0 and barnS, telephone poles and\nI wires a stpall tornado cut across\n; the Macleod trail near Dewinton,\n:20 miles south of Calgary. Alfred\nLynn, 13-ycar-old was seriously injured.\n* *   \u2022\nW. H. Jones of Castlegar Is a\n..guest at the New Grand.\n.' .   .\nMiss Margaret H. Mawdsley of\nI Trail and James Nelson York were\nmarried by Rev. N. D. B. Larmonth\n\u2022 in Trail.\n\u2022 *' *\nMrs. A. G. Sullivan returned from\nI visit to Spokane and the coast\n* * * \u25a0\u2022\nFloyd Irwin has returned from\nhis school at Westbank and is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. F.\nL. Irwin.\n* \u00bb   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Argyle and\nfamily are camping at Midge creek.\n\u2022 \u00ab   .\nW. G. Lane was installed noble\ngrand of the Rossland Oddfellow's\nlodge.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nL. F. Gilbert, George Horstead and\nG. A. Bladworth were appointed to\na committe in charge of the annual\n.; regatta   of  the  Kootenay   Launch\nI club to be staged here August 10.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nJuly 10, 1917.\nRoy L. Langill of Nelson was reported killed in action.\n\u2022 t   *\nAngus McLeod of Nelson was\namong a group of war veterans to\nland at Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022 .\u2022\nLONDON\u2014Twenty-two airplanes\nof. the Gotha bombing type took\npart in an air raid over London\nrecently. Three of the raiders were\ndestroyed as were six of* the escort\nplanes.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nIJjssian troops in their second\nsuccessful thrust against enemy lines\nin ten days captured, besides larg?\nsections ot terrain, 7000 men, 131\nofficers, 48 guns and 48 machine\nguns. Halicz, key of the capital of\nGalicia, is seriously threatened by\nthe Russian advances.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. W. P. Morton of\nSalmo is a guest at the Queen's.\n.   .   .\nCol. B. F. Millard, the Alaska\nCopper magnate, returned to Nelson\nlast night.\nSallys Sallies\nThe only place an abbreviation is not\nfollowed by > ccrloS is on the beach\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\nJuly 10, 1907.\nDr. W. 0. Rose has been appointed\ndistrict medical health officer.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRobert Dunn, late of the editorial\nstaff of the Colonial, has accepted\na position as managing editor of\nthe Star at Golden.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nT. G. Procter has left on a fishing\ntrip to the South Slocan pool.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 \u2022\nDr. Gilbert Hartin has purchased\nIhe residence of David McB-eath's\non Baker and Fall streets.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\n6. C. McFarland Is a guest at the\nBartlett.. .\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas\nRaynon, Fairview, a son.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA. H. MacNeill, K. C, of Rossland\nleft to spend a holiday in England.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPrincipal A. Sullivan returned\nfrom Kaslo, where he was conducting high school examinations.\n\"Gardening can be made a game,\"\ncries an enthusiast. But those who\nhave tried an overlapping grip on\na hoe say it cramps the swing.\u2014San\nFrancisco Chronicle.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSfN, B.C--8ATURDAY MORNING, JULY 10, 1937.\nBUSY LINE\nLondon reports 830 telephone girls\nleft the service last year to get\nmarried.\nPlenty new lassies are required\nto fill the jobs of those retired, and\nstill the bosses wonder why so many\n\"Hello\" girls say \"goodbye.\"\n\u2022 *   *\nCOOL IN 8PITE OF HEAT\nThief stole property from a Toronto home while the occupants\nwere taking the air on the front\nverandah. He was cool enough,\neven though inside,\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nEGGSACTLY\nAlter 47 years of railroad work,\na Toronto man will manage a poultry farm. In time he should know\nall about runs, railway and chicken.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTOUGH 8PORT\nTennis is hard on the legs, all\nright. Scores of sport fans stood in\nline all night in order to see a final\nin England.\n\u2022 *   *\nGETTING SATISFACTION\n\"Well,\" said the Englishman (you\nknow him) to the Scot (you know\nhim, too), as the alighted from\nthe London-Glasgo express, \"it's\nbeen a long and tiring journey.\"\n\"Aye,\" said the Scot, \"an' so it\nought tae be, for the money.\"\u2014\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTHE WONDER OF IT\n\"Pat, Pat!\" said the minister In\nreproach, \"sinners stand on slippery\nground.\"\n\"So Oi see, yer reverence,\" said\nPat, \"but faith, it's more than Oi\ncan do.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHERE AND THERE\nW. B. Bamford minus a coat attaching a fcose to his garden tap\u2014\nAnd I could not help but admire his\nbeautiful flowers \u2014 The Bamford\nroses are extremely beautiful at the\npresent time-George Dill turning\nout his light just after midnight*-\nMax DesBrisay explaining how Nelson lost a boxla game at Trail\u2014Dr.\nH. H. McKenzie driving towards the\nferry\u2014and he was minus a coat\u2014\nand who wouldn't be in this heat-\nJack Allen resting on an automobile\nfender\u2014Fred Hartwig and S. C.\nLatornell in conference in the shade\nof a Stanley street building\u2014Ven.\nArchdeacon Graham having a laugh\nwith a tire repair man or garage\nattendant\u2014Pete Hunden getting a\nbreath of cool air\u2014Bill Coles walking down the street with an ice\ncream cone in his hand\u2014Fred Hamer adjusting a ladder.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nWHEELER FENDER HIT BY\nFENDER'S WHEEL\n\u2014\"The left rear wheel of Mr.\nFender's car hit the right front fender of Mr. Wheeler's car\u2014\"\nMunicipal Judge Bailey Lipfert\ninterrupted the witness in a North\nCarolina court.\n\"You're not kidding me, are you?\"\nA glance at the docket showed\nthe witness was not.\nD. W. Wheeler and Henry Fender\nwere on trial on charges of reckless driving. The charges were dismissed.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHow will this do for an answer to\nMr. Applewhaite's riddle about the\npussy cat:\nA man of deceit\nCan best \"count her feet\" (count\nerfeit)\nAnd do I suppose\nCan best count her toes.\nVery clever of me to think this\nout isn't it!!\nYours Truly,\nBURARRD A. SMITH,\nR. R. No. 1\nP.S.\u2014I knew the answer 55 years\nago. I was told it by my father\n(but don't tell anyone). My father\nprobably had it from his father and\nso ad infinitum. I wouldn't like to\ndeceive you into thinking me more\nclever than I am hence this P.S.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThat's correct Commander Smith.\n1 have Capt. Applewhaite's answer\nbefore me.\u2014J. B. C.\nNow You Ask\nONE\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader ot\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will the name of the person\nisking the question be published.\nC. L., Rossland\u2014Could you give me\nthe address of a firm that makes\ncolored glass.\n\u2022Suggest you write to one of the\nfollowing: Western Glass Co., Ltd.,\n158 W. Cordova St., Vancouver. Bor-\ngardus-Wickens Ltd., 1000 Homer\nSt., Vancouver. Hobbs Mfg. Co. Ltd.,\n1107 Homer St., Vancouver or W.\nHolt & Son, 400-436 W. 2nd. Ave.,\nVancouver.\nW '.T. P., Grand Forks\u2014What baseball team in either league enjoyed\nthe longest winning streak?\nIn 1916 the New York Nationals\nwon 26 straight games.\nF. T. F., Nelson\u2014Was the late W.\nWildie a lumber or a mining man?\nThe late Mr. Waldie was a pioneer\nmining man of the Kootenay district and under his operation the\nQueen mine at Sheep Creek produced many thousands of dollars\nworth of gold. In later years he was\npresident of the William Waldie and\nSons mill at Castlegar.\nP. B., Creston\u2014How can I remove\nletters from flour and sugar\nsacks?\nSoak over night in kerosene and\nwater, about a cup of kerosene to\na gallon of water. Boil, rinse and\ndry. Any stains which reptain can\nbe removed with any commercial\nbleach.\nTRACING THE WILD BIRD8\nSince 1920, over two million wild\nbirds have been banded in North\nAmerica. If a wild bird wearing b\nnumbered metal leg band comes to\nyour attention, you can assist the\nCanadian government in studying\nwild bird-life by reporting the\nnumber on the band, the date on\nwhich the bird was taken, and the\nmanner and locality in which il\nwas taken. Your report should be\nsent to the National Parks bureau,\nOttawa, which will in turn advise\nyou as to the kind of bird, and tell\nyou when, where, and by. whom it\nwas banded\u2014Quite Sun,\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"Strangers I meet think I'm a\ngood listener, but it ain't politeness.\nI've exposed my ignorance in lots o'\nways, but never by listenin'.\"\nSO THEY SAY\nTHE DOUKHOBORS AGAIN\nThe intolerable nuisance of Douh-\nobor activity has been revi \/ed in the\nNelson district with burned houses,\nparades and other tiresome antics.\nRailway equipment was damaged\nand tear gas had to be employed\nto control the howling : rob of fanatics.\nThe history of these people in\nBritish Columbia has been one long\nweary record of violence and disorder and indecency.\nSchool houses have been destroyed. Property has been damaged.\nRailway tracks have been wrecked.\nAnd the sensibilities of honest citizens have been outraged by their\nbarbaric nude marches.\nWen their leader has behaved In\nsuch a way as to land himself in\njail.\nCanadians are a patient people.\nWe would not like it said that they\nare also a stupid people.\nBut every day we continue to\ntolerate the fantastic nonsense of\nthese mischievous aliens, we are\nlaying ourselves more open to the\nlatter charge.\nIn their own country, the Doukhobors would have been lashed into\nobedience. That, we believe, is cruel\nand inhuman.\nBut surely there Is some way of\nsending these people back to the\nland of their origin where their\nfoolishness would be dealt with with\nmore peremptory firmness.\nIt is not fair that the law-abiding\ncitizens of British Columbia should\nhave to live under the reproach of\ntheir ludicrous proximity.\nIt is not fair that the heavily burdened citizens of this province\nshould have'to be taxed.to maintain\na young army of policemen in these\ndistricts to secure that peace and\norder which is the right of every\nCanadian.\nOnce and for all this\/nuisance\nshould be firmly abated.f-Vancou-\nver Sun.\nCONTRACT  AiWbT\"\nBRIDGE BARCLAY\nLETTING A TRICK GO\nAn entryless dummy necessitates\nthe utmost precaution in finding\nsafety plays to assure the setting up\nof its single suit. Sometimes it is\neven advisable to give up a trick\ndeliberately in the suit in preference\nto trying any kind of a finesse.\nSuch procedure can sometimes protect the declarer against the most\ninhospitable division of the missing\ncards.\n\u2666 AQ10648\n*\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\n4753\n\u2666its.\n4J982\n?K63\n410 9\n*KJ42\nN.\ns.\n\u2666 K\nVQJ7S2\n\u2666 KQ6\n\u2666 10 9 7 3\n\u2666 75\n\u00ab A 10 9 4\n\u2666AJ842\n*AQ\n(Dealer: West. Neither side vulnerable).\nThis deal came up in a recent duplicate and at several tables the\nfinal contract was 3 No Trumps,\nafter bidding of a third hand Heart\nby East, 2 Diamonds in the South,\n2 Spades in the North, 2 No Trumps\nby South, 3 Spades by North and\n3 No Trumps by South. The contract was made at some tables and\ndefeated at others.\nIn each instance the Heart 5 was\nWest's opening lead, covered by the\nJ and Ace, Each declarer now tried\nout the Spade suit and his success\nor defeat depended upon his handling of that suit. Most declarers finessed the Spade 10, which lost to\nthe K. A Heart was returned, won\nby West with the K, and a Heart returned to East's Q. South won the\nnext Heart lead and now finessed\nthe Spade Q and cashed the Spade\nAce. Then the suit had to be abandoned because West had the next\nwinner In it. The Diamond 3 'as\ncovered by the Q and von with the\nAce. When the 9 fell from West's\nhand, the Diamond J was tried, in\nthe hope that the K was in that hand,\nbut East captured the trick and cashed his Heart 7. A Club return lost to\nWest's K and the Spade J cashed,\nso that the contract was set three\ntricks.\nWhere the contract was made,\nthe declarer, realizing that he needed several Spade tricks to be successful in making the contract, led\nthe Spade 5 to the second trick and\nlet it ride. In that way he cashed\nfive Spade tricks instead of two, and\nmade the contract.\n.   .   .\nMONDAY'S PROBLEM\n\u2666TrTi\n\u00bb\u00ab\n\u2666 863\n\u00ab78542\n\u2666 10\nf Q J 10 8\n543\n\u2666 Q 10 0\n*K3\nft.\ns.\n489\n4AKJ5\n42\n*A 10 0 8\n4KQJ84J\n\u00bbAK72  \"\n47\n+QJ\n(Dealer: West. East-West vulnerable).\nAgainst successive Diamond leads,\nhow should South play for 4\nSpades?\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nCOPPER IN DEMAND\nLured by the mounting price of\ncopper and brass, local thieves have\nbeen taking heavy toll of water\nfaucets and plumbing fittings culminating in the height of impudence\nwhen the nozzles of fire hoses in a\ncity hotel were stolen.\nBut lest they should think that\nthey\u2014or is the copper thief a lone\nprowler? \u2014 are establishing something new in line of pilfering, the\nexploits pale beside the novel audacity of facing bulls in the Toronto\nstockyards and, armed with bull-\nhook and screwdriver, removing\nthe copper rings from the animals'\nnostrils under cover of darkness.\nFrom other localities stories are\nbeing reported where copper, apparently graduating from the base\nmetal to the precious metal stage,\nis inspiring curious thefts. Copper\nconnectiqns bonding the \u25a0 railway\nrails hsye been stolen at New\nWestminster, leaking roofs have disclosed that copper sheathing has\nbeen stripped from the ..buildings,\nthit rnen have risked more than\na court sentence in .trespassing\naround high 'voltage lines in this\nquest for the metal. Even \"moon\nshiners\" have to be on guard over\nthe copper tubing of their illicit\nstills to insure that others than law\nofficers do not confiscate their\nplant.\u2014Calgary Herald.\nBRITAIN'S  NATIONAL\nSTABILITY\nCalmness characterizes public\nopinion in Great Britain. Neither\nthe Spanish war nor possible changes\nin alliances and friendships in Central Europe have unnerved the British government or the press. This\nstability of opinion may bo due to\nthe success of the National government in maintaining its prestige,\nas shown in the recent by-elections,\nor to the progress of the British\nrearmament scheme, which has enabled Londoners to look at European\nmatters from a somewhat detached\npoint of view. Yet isolation has made\nno advances in Great Britain. The\npeople appreciate that the Increase\nin armed strength had to come because of the country's close association with the fate of Europe. The\ncalmness of British public opinion\nis often a pillar of* peace in the\nmind of intelligent observers in\nEurope. \u2014Politika: Belgrade.\nOver 300 hospitals In the United\nStates are using air-conditioning\nequipment\nHome\nImprovement\nCover your floors with Cottonwood Panels, and finish tn\nlinoleum effect by dapple-art\npainting.' You will have a sanitary, durable floor.\nDistrict Distributors)\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls\"\nMrs. D.\nGives\nReasons\nMrs. H. P. D. prefers Pacific Milk and gives reasons that explains. \"Its\nuniformity, never varying,\"\nshe writes, \"makes it an\nideal food for baby. It Is\nrich in cream. Ideal fot\npicnics and camping,\nSplendid for cooking.\"\nMany thanks, Mrs. D., for\nthese excellent reasons,\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Course.\nModernize\nYour Home\nThrough ths\nHOME\nIMPROVEMENT\nPLAN\nRemodel your present\nbathroom\u2014install an extra bathroom. Remodel\nthe kitchen sink with a\nnew pattern fixture.\nIt will pay you to call 666\nbefore doing any remodelling.\nPhone 666\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING & HEATING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nP.O. Box 6*16      313 Baker St\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Gus Edson\nNO-NO -MY PEAR MISS MOSELLE\nMY WIFE IS A SWEET UNDERSTANDING WOMANAND I'M\nSURE SHE'LL UNDERSTAND\nOUR FRIENDSHIP-\nTRUE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\nHWE YOU SOT THE TICKETS\n0PEN1N-S PEI2K3KMANCB\nOK RANDOLPH\nDI-SBy<S NEVM\n |^^L^M^ii.;*.r*^\u00aby,*V':* - * ;--:.---*. \u25a0-v'-r-^^^^rrrir-rr^T:-.\u2122--*:---..*!, *-,***   * \u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0-*-*\u25a0'* *;**          :.\u201e...........\n\u2014 \u2014 \u2014\u2014      NELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B. C-8ATURDAY MORNING, JULY 10, 1937.\nPAGE SEVEN\natviii   '\nWest Kootenay < Boundary\nFarmers at Qrand Forks\nProminent Men at Central\nFarmers' Institute Meet\nK. WALLACE\nBoswell, secretary\ntreasurer\nT. A. LOVE\nGrand  Forks  mayor,\nwelcomed meet\nJ. B. MUNRO\nDeputy minister of\nagriculture\nQ. B, BALLARD\nRobson, presided\nover sessions\nA. H. NOAKES\nBalfour, first\nvice-president\nF. H, JACKSON\nCreston, second\nvice-president\n0. B. APPLETON\nProcter, advisory\nboard member\nC. H. BEBINGTON\nBoswell, institute\ndelegate\nD. CARTER\nRobson institute\ndelegate\n\u2022ail Boxla Stars Setting\nFast Clip In League Race\nBert Repton, Trainer Ed Charle\u00ab, Manager\nAll photos by Hughes Bros. Studio, Trail.\nAmericans Inspect Venus Mine\nF. J. Kruger (left) and E. S. Smith, respectively of Tacoma and\nittle, snapped by the Daily News camera on Josephine street, near\nleer, after a trip to the Venus-Juno gold property on Morning\nuntain, overlooking Nelson, owned by Robert Heddle.\nCAPT. P. HARTRIDGE        H.  KER8HAW A.  D. MeLENNAN\nBalfour institute      Nakusp, Arrow Lakes       Rock Creek institute\ndelegate institute delegate delegate\nPassmore Old'Timer Cracks\nDown Upon the Brush\nH   BRUCE\nKettle Valley institute\ndelegate\nPROF. E, A. LLOYD\nPoultry head B. C.\nUniversity\nC. V. MEGGITT\nGrand Forks institute\ndelegate\nF. E. ATKINSON\nSummerland station\ncanning specialist\nDR. H. R. McLARTY\nSummerland station\npathologist\nWILLIAM  ROACH\nVancouver chemical\nrepresentative\nH, H. PANNELL Q. L. LANDON A. W. FINLAY\nMidway institute       Grand Forks district  New Westminster, pro-\ndelegate agriculturist vincial apiarist\nJ. T. WEBSTER\nRobson institute\ndelegate\nW. H.*CURRIE\nBureau of provincial\ninformation\nP. CAPOZZI\nKelowna wine\nmanufacturer\nWhen J * Ea Annable and\nM. R. McQuarrie Mayors\nThe above photo of A. 0. (Bush Hook) Green of Passmore was\ntaken by William Young of Passmore, who in a letter to the Daily\nNews says: \"You published recently a photograph of me as the Pass-\nmore barber. The photo was taken by A, O. Green. I will be glad\nif you will kindly return the compliment and publish a photo of\nMr. Green, who is all set for a day's hard work.\"\nR. E. N0RRI8 C. A. 8. ATWOOD P. TJEBBES\nRock Creek Institute   Grand Forks institute Grand Forks, B. C. Land\ndelegate delegate    . Operating company\nAldermen I. A. Austin, G. M. Bartlett, John Bell, Mayor J. E. Annable, Aldermen W. O. Rose, M.D., James Johnstone and J. A. McDonald.\n'--*--***\u25a0*\u00ab,,\nW. A. C. BENNETT\nPresident* Kelowna\nboard of trade\nE. 0. HUNT\nNelson, district\nagriculturist\nD.D. TOWNSEND\nNelson board of\ntrade envoy\nREMEMBER - Years Ago?\nFire Inspector\nWhen W. A. Thurman, \"Billy,\" conducted a tobacco store business that was second to none in Kootenay\u2014and when canes sold\nby the wholesale\u2014and there were slot machines and music boxes\nwhere pennies could be spent? Mr. Thurman is shown above.\nAnd when Nelson had one policeman, and he was Paddy Miles\u2014\na well known Nelson character you see up above leaning over the\ncounter in Frank Tambly's emporium\u2014and there were bottles of\nvarious brands on the shelves and heaps of cigars in the case? That\nwas years ago, and Paddy died an untimely death when he was\nswept over the falls at Bonnington.\nJ. E. MATHESON\nforest ranger at New Denver, is\nacting as fire inspector for the\nNelson district while William\nHolmgren is busy getting the\ninstructional camps started.\nSHMBPf*^ :    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0f^mm^--- * * .'.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0';\u25a0 mm^\n'*\"\"\"\"      M \u25a0    \"\u25a0\u2022   --. o\n\u25a0.,.*:\u25a0 ''-m ^; \u25a0;\u25a0?. :'\u25a0.':\n\u25a0\u25a0'^'V*:V:V*'':^*:::*;?\n\u25a0;:.\u25a0:\u25a0 ....\u2022lui***-,-. , .i:i:--J]-:0':.C..^y:::ll'M.L\u00a3:'}\nAldermen I. A. Austin, J. A. McDonald, Harold Selous, Mayor M. R. McQuarrie, Aldermen John Bell, W. 0.\nRose, M.D., John Burns.\nHELPING TO MAKE YOUR PAPER\nA general view of the main office of the Nelson Daily News, with members in charge of various\ndepartments at their desks. In this office advertising is received and checked, subscriptions are\ntaken, orders for job work are received, and numerous other duties necessary for production of a\nnewspaper carried out.\n 1   \u25a0\"   '\n-\u2014\u2014\n- \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0 '      -\u25a0 ~\nstMmmsm^.^.vv^wtr>vvn\n'7!W>^W^'S^.l*'*f<Wf^***^!P\u00ab!yTSfS>PBllf\nPA0II1QHT.\nNelson Nine lo\nPlay Rossland\nal Home Sunday\nHaving scored three consecutive\nwins In their last three games the\nNelson senior baseball squad will\ntravel to Rossland Sunday afternoon, determined to continue their\n\u25a0winning ways and remain in run-\n* ning for a place in the league playoffs. At present four teams have an\nexcellent chance of making the second place berth in the West Kootenay International league now head-\nGordon Stewart, former Edmonton player, who -will patrol\nthe outfield In Rossland 8unday\nfor Nelson.\ned by Metaline Falls with five wins\nand no losses.\nThe Nelson club will have four\nchuckers available for Sunday's\ngame against the Rossland club,\nMydenski, Smith, Robinson and Mclnnis all are making the trip, Gordon Richardson will be behind the\nplate.\nThe local club went through a\nstiff workout Friday evening, and\nif pep has been missing from recent\ngames an\/, workouts, the boys more\nthan made up for this lack in Friday's workout. The balance of the\nNelson team will be chosen from the\nfollowing players\u2014Euerby, Niven,\nWaterer, Stewart, Schumaker, Brennan, Denis Ball and Art Ross.\nBatting\nLeadens\n1 Qr> '\nJoe Dimaggio, the Yankee' young\nbelter, hit five for five yesterday\nto climb into baseball's batting big\nsix, despite an increase in the batting averages of five of the leading\nhalf dozen during the day's- play.\nDimaggio boosted his average 12\npoints to .359 to take third in the\nAmerican league behind Lou Gehrig\nand Gerry Walker.\nStanding of leaders (first three in\neach league):\nG AB R H Pet\nMedwick, Cards 67 264 64 108 .409\nP. Waner, Pts. 69 279 58 110 .394\nHartnett, Cubs 46 143 21 55 .385\nGehrig, Yanks 68 249 59 94 .378\nWalker, Tigers 64 267 45 96 .360\nDimaggio, Yanks    62 262 65 64 .359\nMAPLE LEAFS TO PLAY\nSALMO AND ROSSLAND\nHazel Spiers, captain of the Nelson Maple Leafs girls' softball club,\nwho have scored eight wins against\none loss this season, annuonced on\nFriday the club will probably travel\nto Salmo and Rossland for games\nSunday. Although some of the players are out of the city most of the\nregulars will make the trip for the\ntwo games which are arranged with\nthe expressed purpose of giving the\nsecond string pitchers. Iris Johansson, Doreen Long and Jean Spiers\na chance to get in some mound\nwork.\nHoirfeRnns\n, \u00a9ZJb\u2014\n(By the Associated Press)\nYesterday's homers \u2014 Dimaggio,\nYankees 2; Gehrig, Yankees; Bell,\nBrowns; Walker, White Sox;-Sol-\nters, Indians; York, Tigers; McCarthy, Giants; V. Davis, Reds; Myers,\nReds; Lombardi, Reds; Medwick,\nCardinals, one each.\nThe leaders\u2014Dimaggio, Yankees\n22; Greenberg, Tigers 18; Medwick,\nCardinals 18; Selkirk, Yankees 17;\nOtt Giants 17.\nLeague totals\u2014American 332; National 317; total 649.\nFIST FIGHTS AS\nYANKS WIN, IM\nNEW YORK, July 9 (AP)-Joe\nDiMaggio slaughtered the pitching\nof Carl Fisher and Ed Linke today\nto lead Yankees to a 16-2 victory\nover Washington Senators in a game\nfeatured by a free-for-all fist fight\non the field.\nDiMaggio clubbed out two homers, his 21st and 22nd, a triple, double and single and drove in seven\nruns.\nThe fist fight broke out in the\nsixth and was precipitated by\nthose old feuders, the Yanks' Jake\nPowell and the Nats' Jo\u00a9 Kuhel.\nTaking Buddy Lewis' throw on\nPowell's grounder, Kuhel put out\nthe Yank fly-chaser, and gave the\nshoulder as he crossed first base.\nImmediately, the two squared off\nand began throwing fists, and\nplayers from both clubs poured\nout of dugouts and in from the\nfield to toss punches at each other.\nThe umpires broke It up, banishing Powell and Kuhel.\nScore;\nWashington    2 11*   1\nNew York  18 17   1\nFischer, Linke, and R. Ferrell,\nMillies; Pearson and Jorgens.\n11-7 FOR CHICAGO\nCHICAGO, July 9 (AP) - St.\nLouis Browns dropped the opener\nof a four-game series to White Sox\ntoday, 11-7, when the Chicago team\npiled up 18 hits off three St. Lpuis\npitchers.\nScore:\nSt. Louis     7 14   1\nChicago     11 18   1\nWaikup, Blake, Thomas and Huffman; Dietrich, Rigney and Sewell.\nDETROIT WINS, 10-8\nDETROIT, July 9 (AP)-Tigers\npoun->jd Willis Hudlin and Whitlow\nWyatt for nine hits in the first three\ninnings to account for all the Detroit runs in a 10-8 victory over\nCleveland Indians today.\nScore:\nCleveland     8   8   1\nDetroit   10 14   1\nHudlin, Wyatt, Brown, Galehouse\nand Pytlak; Auker, Lawson and\nTebbetts.\nFOUR HOURS TO WIN 12-11\nPHILADELPHIA, July 9 (AP)-\nAthletics and Boston Red Sox played nearly four hours today before\nthe Sox won 12-11 in 12 innings.\nBehind four in the ninth as a result of a six-run Mack rally in the\neighth, Boston tied the score. They\ntabbed three more in the 10th, only\nto have the Athletics tie the score\nwith three in the home half of the\ninning.\nScore:\nBoston    12 17   1\nPhiladelphia     11 1,9   4\nNewsom, McKain, Ostermueller,\nWilson, Walberg and Desutels; Tur-\nbeville, Kelley, Thomas and Bruck-\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C.\u2014SATURPAY MORNING, JULY 10, 1937.\nSPORTING NEWS\nBALL GAME IS\nMOVED AHEAD\nSlim Kraft, manager of the Nelson\nsenior baseball squad, announced\nFriday, that the Tadanac Indians\nversus Nelson league game scheduled for Sunday, July 18, will be\nmoved ahead and instead will be\nplayed on Wednesday, July 14. The\ntwo clubs have arranged two exhibition games and the Nelson team\nwill travel to Trail on Sunday, July\n18 with the Tadanac team playing a\nreturn game in Nelson on Wednesday, July 21.\nNo Afternoon Boxla\nWhile Weather Hot\nWhile hot weather prevails or at\nleast until further notice from the\nleague executives no afternoon practice or games will be held for teams\nof the Nelson city boxla league.\nNext week's schedule will feature\nevening games and practices only,\nOpening Play in\nClub Net Tourney\non Lower Courts\nTwo teems of the Nelson Tennis\nclub go into action on the lower\ncourts in the opening game of the\nclub tourney Sunday morning.\nNumber of players to each team\nhas been changed from nine to 12,\nseven men and five ladies. Each\nplayer will take part in two games,\neither ladies' or men's singles, ladies' or men's doubles or mixed doubles.\nTeams to take part follow:\nFred Morris, captain, Fred Romano, John Aurelia, Norman Mahon, Bob Nelson, Don Wilson, \"Red\"\nCarr, Mrs. B. Nelson, Mrs, N. Mahon, Miss Pauline Stangherlin, Miss\nGrace Haydon and Miss Alma McDonald.   .\nArt Mills, captain, Ed Stromstead,\nWilliam McLean, Col. S. P. McMordie, Dr. Norman Jones, G. Soot, Don\nMcCormick, Mrs. S. P. McMordie,\nMrs. E. Dononey, Miss Isabel Dawson, Miss Peggy Barclay and Miss\nWelma Mclntyre.\nGRANDSTAND\nGOING AHEAD\nLeask  Is  Progressing\nin Construction\nof Stand\nWith lumber on the ground, construction of the grandstand at Nelson recreation grounds is moving along. Delay in arrival of the\nlumber held up the work for some\ntime.\nGeorge R. Leask, contractor, is\nbuilding the grandstand under contract awarded by the city council.\nThe present project embraces the\nfirst section of a grandstand plann-\nned so that it may later be extended.\nThe section under construction will\nscat 450 persons.\nStringers are all in place on concrete foundations and flooring is\ngoing on rapidly.\nAces Win a Game\nPet.\n.833\n.667\n.167\nNEL80N GIRLS' SOFTBALL\nLEAGUE STANDING\nP   W   L Rf Ra\nMaple Leafs     6   5   1   8!)   45\nRed Sox     6   4   2   81   (14\nAces     6   1   5   69 130\nDisplaying their best batting\npunch of the season, the Aces girls'\nsoftball club sprung a surprise on\nThursday evening when they defeated the Red Sox club 19-14 In a\nleague game_ They played the game\nwith eight 'players. The winners\npiled up an early lead of 16-6 in the\nfirst four innings and managed to\nstave off a late rally by the Red Sox\nwho scored six runs in fifth.\nGertie Whitehead on the mound\nfor the Aces pitched her best game\nof the season fanning six batters\nand a number of the runs scored on\nher were from errors. Isabel Donovan, Carmella DelPuppo, Phyllis\nWallace and Day Jacques hit homers\nfor the Aces with Mary McDougall\nand Edna Gormeley getting circuit\nclouts for the Red Sox.\nElvera Matheson led the batters\nwith five hits in six times at bat.\nRosa Stewart, who has a sore\narm, went the route on the mound\nfor the Red Sox due to Mildred Horrigan being unable to get in for the\ngame.\nTeams were:\nAces\u2014Margaret Thompson, Carmella -DelPuppo, Elvera Matheson,\nIsabel Donovan, Phyllis Wallace,\nDay Jacques, Gertie Whitehead,\nReta Weatherhead.\nRed Sox\u2014Agnes Stewart, Lillian\nHicky, Edna Gormeley, Rosa Stewart, Georgina Eberley, Francis Kol-\noski, Mary McDougall, Louise Colletti, and Sybil McLean.\nWOODSTOCK, Ont, July 9 (CP)\n\u2014Bowlers of district No. 3, playing\nagainst the touring South Africans\non the greens of the Woodstock club\nhere today, scored a win over the\nvisitors 118-102. The district men\nled by a considerable margin during\nthe early end, the tourists showing\ngains in form after they accustomed\nthemselves to the greens.\nHIRAM WALKER ...\nGUARANTEES ITS QUALITY\nTHE GOVERNMENT\nGUARANTEES ITS AGE\n16 ox. $1.50 25 oz. $2.25\nHill AM\nWALKERS\nm\nWHISKY\nPar Punisher\/\n\u00bb\u201e,  HIRAM WALKER t SONS, LIMITED.   ESTABLISHED 1858\nDISTILLERY AND HEAD OFFICE: WALKERVILLE, CAN.   MONTREAL, 1448 PEEL ST.   LONDON, ENGLAND\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed bv the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\nBrighouse Park\nEntries\nVANCOUVER,  July  9   (CP)   -\nOvernight entries, Brighouse park,\nfirst day, Saturday, July 10.\nFIRST RACE\nClaiming, three-year-olds and up.\nFive and one-half furlongs.\nKitzmiller 115, Bed Canoe 115,\nCkazzan 115, Triassic 110, King\nBeauty 115, Royal Chef 118, Jungle\nHen IM, Humorous 118, Love Us\n108, Keaton 118, Happy Madge 103,\nCandid 111.\nSECOND RACE\nClaiming, three-year-olds and up\nbred in western Canada. Six furlongs.\nAdam Somers 117, Mopeek 114,\nDoctor Larry 111, Mar Tee 109, Firm\nMint 100, Simonette 103, Princess\nSally 106, Help Yourself 114, Queen\nAvondale 109, Shawnigan 111.\nTHIRD RACE\nClaiming, three-year-olds and up.\nSix furlongs.\nMa Bertie 101, Vanbank 115, Miss\nNoyes xl08 Dutch Boy 118, Instigator 118, Warrior Lyons 115, Lucky\nThirteen 106, Elkhart 115.\nFOURTH RACE\nThe Marpole Handicap, three-\nyear-olds and up. Six furlongs.\nShasta Racket 106, Be Mine (A)\n103, Guaranty 111. Bebest 103, Wra-\neia (A) 102, Wise Ace 107, Whisper\n(B) 111, Don Marcus (B) 110, Khay-\nrrx\nCrocked\nPf\nCHARLES GEHRINGER\nFor all-round ability afield and at\nbat, there is none to equal Charles\nLeonard Gehringer, veteran Detroit\nTiger infielder. Charlie has compiled some great fielding marks and\nhas often been well up with the\nleading sluggers, generally batting\nover .300. His average for 13 seasons\nof major league play is .325\u2014which\nplaces him with the best of ballplayers of all time.\nIt was back in 1924 that Charlie\nentered big league ball. Manager Ty\nCobb of the Tigers thought much of\nhim as a fielder, but opined he'd\nnever make the grade with the stick.\nAfter a couple of seasons with the\nminors he started to click as a rookie. He soon got his big chance to\nplay second and has held it ever\nsince.\nHe was born in Fowlerville, Mich.,\nMay 11, 1903. He is a left-handed\nbatter ond right-handed thrower,\nstanding five feet 11 inches tall and\ntipping the beam at 180 pounds. At\npresent he makes his home in Detroit.\nVictim of a healthy wielded stick, It is said, Hube Smith,\nabove, has a broken rib sustained in the Trail-Nelson lacrosse\ngame Thursday night at Trail.\nSmith, playing coach of the Nelson squad, will be out of the\ngame for a time as a result.\nyam 111, Leelarious 112, Jessie Cloud\n103.\n(A)\u2014H. M. Fullerton entry, (B)\n\u2014Neil McQueen  entry.\nFIFTH  RACE\nThe Richmond Handicap, three-\nyear-olds and up foaled in western\nCanada, One mile and 70 yards.\nHappy Jester 116, Adam Somers\n(A) 106, Primrose Day 108, Some\nGift 102, Ina Mae (A) 104, Mac\nPhalaris 113, Big Pine 114, Help\nYourself 118.\n(A)\u2014J. L. Scobey entry.\nSIXTH RACE\nClaiming, three-year-olds and up.\nOne mile.\nPeace Leg 114, Little Satin 111,\nModern  Maid  xl06,  Biddy's  Toy\nxl06,   Jillion    114,   Leeward   111,\nSource Circe 111, Billy Easter 109.\nSEVENTH RACE\nClaiming, three-year-olds and up.\nOne mile.\nStar Simon 114, Exeterl xlOO,\nJeanne Son xlOl, Teeny Weeny 109,\nBooster Twist 114, Ken Kling 114,\nMahukona 114, San Clemente 114,\nLince X109, Rox Regent xl09.\nEIGHTH RACE\nSteeplechase, the Cheltenham\nHandicap. Four-year-olds and up.\nOne and one-half miles.\nDavaar (A) 146, Vancouver Express 157, Quince Lad 151, Somers\nChoice 151, Grey Cloud (A) 142,\nHodge Podge 149.\n(A)\u2014Spuraway-Munro entry.\nx\u2014Apprentice allowance claimed.\nWINTER HOST TO\nSOFTBALL GIRLS\nCalvin Winter was host to the\nthree local girls' softball clubs at\na theatre party on Thursday evening. The girls witnessed a program\nthat featured the California girls'\nsoftball title holders in action.\nCricket Standings\nLONDON. July 9, (CP Cable) -\nStandings in the English county\ncricket championship, including\ngames played today:\nWLWfiLifN.R. Pts. Pet.\nYorks ... 9 12 3 0 154 68.44\nSussex ... 9 1 5 2 0 166 65.09\nGloucester 7 5 2 2 0 121 50.41\nMiddlesex 5 4 110 83 50.30\nDerby   ....   6   3   1   4   1   111   49.33\nNotts     4   0   5   4   0    97   49.75\nEssex     6   6   0   11    97   W.19\nWarwick 4 3 3 2 0 81 45.00\nLanes .... 4 1 7 5 0 118 43.13\nGlamorgan 5 5 2 5 0 100 39.21\nWorcester 5 7 0 3 0 84 37.33\nSomerset 4 7 13 0 74 32.88\nSurrey .... 2 4 4 12 61 31.28\nKent   ....    4   9   1   0   0   . 65   30.95\nHampshire 2\nLeicester 0\nNorthants   0\n7   4   10\n5   3\n0\n3   1   0\n53 25.23\n33 15.71\n18   10.00\nDesigners of farm implements are\ntrying to equip general purpose tractors with implements that can be attached or detached quickly.\nVernon Slumps\nand Ends Third\nin B.C. Cricket\nFINAL STANDING\nPWL DPt.\nPoint Grey  5   3   117\nVictoria   5   3   117\nBurrards   5   113  5\nJuniors     5   12   2   4\nVernon 5   2   3  0  4\nWednesday L 5   13   13\nVANCOUVER, July 9 (CP)\u2014Defeating Vernon by a margin of 122\nruns while Point Grey was being\nheld to a draw by Vancouver Juniors, the Victoria eleven finished\nin a tie with Point Grey for lirst\nplace in the standings of the B.C,\nCricket week which concluded today at Brockton Point. As the Victoria players were unable to stay\nover another day to play off to decide a winner, it was agreed that\nthe two teams should jointly hold\nthe title. Burrards and the Wednesday League played to an even draw\nin the third game of today's schedule.\nVernon's batsmen made a sorry\nshowing against the Victoria bowlers, Prowse, Tomkins, Karn and\nBredin being the only ones to reach\ndouble figures. N. Pite came out\nwith flattering figures for his five\nwickets for the Islanders. Darcus\nand Cooper made more between\nthem than the entire Vernon total,\nand both retired without losing\ntheir wickets. N. Pite also played a\nsplendid not out innings.\n1-7 FOR CARDS\nST. LOUIS,'July 9 (AP)-*-St. Louis\nCardinals came from behind today to down Cincinnati Reds 8-7\nCards scored five runs in the eighth\nafter Reds had taken an early lead.\nScore:\nCincinnati   7 10  3\nSt. Louis     8 10  1\nGrissom, Schott and Lombardi;\nWeiland, Johnson, Ryba and Ogrodowski.\nBEES AGAIN WIN\nBOSTON, July 9 (AP)-Only one\nof the Phillies reached second base\ntoday when Jim Turner, 30-year-\nold righthander, gave the Boston\nBees their 11th victory in their last\n13 starts by pitching a five-hitter\nfor a 5-0 shutout.\nScore:\nPhiladelphia   0  J  2\nBoston     5   9   2\nPasseau, Jorgens and Grace; Turner and Lopez.\nPIRATES WIN 13-1\nPITTSBURGH, July 9 (AP)\u2014\nPirates pounded three Chicago Cub\npitchers for 19 hits and a 13-1 victory today In their series opener.\nThey climaxed their clouting\nwith a nine-run spree on 10 hits\nIn the seventh,\nScore:\nChicago    1   7   2\nPittsburgh  13 19   2\nCarleton, Shoun, Bryant and\nHartnett, Bottarini; Bowman and\nTodd,\n15-2 FOR DODGERS\nBROOKLYN, July 9 (AP)-Dod-\ngers climbed aboard the pitching of\nHal Schumacher, Harry Gumbert\nand Tom Baker for 20 hits and a\n15-2 victory over New York Giants\ntoday.\nThe 31-year-old rookie, Luke\nHamlin, handcuffed the Giants with\nfive hits.\nScore:\nNew York    2  5  5\nBrooklyn   15 20   1\nSchumacher, Gumbert, Baker and\nMancuso, Danning; Hamlin and\nPhelps.\nHENRY COTTON COMES FROM THE\nREAR TO WIN BRITISH OPEN GOLF\nNudges Out Reg Whitcombe by Two StrokeJ\nWith 29*0; Charles Lacey Is Third and\nCharles Whitcombe Ends Up Fourth\nBy 8COTTY REBTON\nAssociated Preii Sports Writer\nCARNOUSTIE, Scotland, July\n9, (AP) \u2014 Tall Henry Cotton,\n\u2022loughlng his way through n wild\na itorm as ever blew In off the\nIrish coait, came from behind today to win the British open golf\nchampionship with a 72-hole score\nof 290.\nFavored to win over one ef the\ngreatest fields ever assembled, the\nrain-sodden distances In.73-71,144,\nraln-sodde ndlitances in 73-71,144,\nonly three over par, on his last\ntwo rounds to overtake his\ncountryman, Reginald Whitcombe,\nand score his second win In three\nyears.\nStriding along in a brilliant red\nsweater under a yellpw and brown\numbrella, Cotton gave one of the\ngreatest exhibitions of chipping ever\nseen in a major championship to\npass Whitcombe, who took a 76 on\nhis last round and finished in second\nplace with 292.\nVictory for Cotton, who first won\nthe crown In 1934, was not only\nindividual accomplishment but \u25a0\nrevenge for British golf after losl\nto the United States In the W\ncup matches.\nThere was no doubt of Brltal\nsupremacy on this final day, Char!\nLacey, the big, blond United St\u00abl\nprofessional who placed third,\nshot behind Reg Whitcombe, leu\ned his golf In England before got\nto the United States 12 years ago.\nThe first native American In t\nfield was Byron Nelson, pro\nReading, Pa. Nelson finished til\nsix shots behind Cotton at 296.\nIn fourth place, with 294,\nCharles Whitcombe, captain of t\nBritish Ryder cuppers and old\nbrother of Reggie ,who looked\nIf he might make a family batl\nof it until Cotton, four strokes b\nhind the leader at the start todi\nand still three behind after 54 holi\nwithstood the worst part of tl\nstorm and came home with a crov\nof 10,000 at his heels to take 111\nprize.      \"\nStandings\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW. L. Pet.\nChicago  \u2022 44   26 .629\nNew York  42   28 .600\nPittsburgh  39   30 .565\nSt. Louis  38   30 .559\nBoston  32   38 .457\nBrooklyn   30   37 .448\nCincinnati  27   41 .397\nPhiladelphia  26  44 .371\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW. L. Pet.\nNew York  45 22 .672\nDetroit    40 28 .588\nChicago 41 29 .586\nBoston    36 28 .563\nCleveland 32 32 .500\nWashington   30 36 .455\nSt. Louis   21 45 .318\nPhiladelphia  20 45 .308\nNEW YORK (CP)-Many critics\nwho indulge annually in the pastime of picking the 10 best this and\n10 best that ore plunging for Maurice Evans \"King Richard II\" as the\nseason's best performance.\nVancouver Wins,\nLoses, in Tennl\nKELOWNA, B.C., July 8 (CP)\nColin Milne, Vancouver, was ott 1\ngame this afternoon when he at\nRuss Kennington, also of Vance\nver, met the Seattle duo of j\nDranga and Bobby Odman In t\nsemi-finals of the men's doublet\nthe Interior British Columbia T(\nnis tournament.\nKennington's steady play pi\nlonged the match to three sets, b\nthe final result in favor of the Sei\ntie team was 6-4, 5-7, 6-3.\nAnother Vancouver teem of Do\nCameron and Jimmy Skelton far\nbetter when they defeated Ed For.\nVancouver, and T. Forbes, Keto\nna 6-4, 6-4.\nEarlier in the day's play Dran\nmoved into the finals of the me\nsingles by defeating Ed Forst, (\n6-3. He will meet Cameron, Vi\ncouver, who defeated Skelton,\nteammate of this afternoon's d(\nbles, 6-2, 6-3.\nPROCURABLE\nSCOTCH\nWHISKY,\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Lijt\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nWhile on YOUR Vacation\nYou'll\nWant to\nKeep in\nTouch With\nEvents at\nHome\nThe easiest and most economical way is through your\nnewspaper, the Nelson Daily\nNews.\nOrder your vacation subscription from any agent, carrier,  postmaster or direct\nfrom the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Daily Newspaper\n Three Canadian Pilots Die as Airplane Wing Crumples\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 10, 1937.\nvamm^-^ewafismm\nw\nPAGE NINE\nThree men. all licenced Canadian pilots, died\nIn the piled-up wreckage of (his Puss Moth airplane which left Barker field. Toronto, for De-\n' troit, but crashed into a wheat field near St,\nMarys, Ont. Federal aviation officials are seeking\n\"cause of the crash. Observers report lhat a wing of\nthe machine crumpled and tore away while the\nairplane was high in the air. Dead are Arthur Leav\nens of Belleville, Ont.,, part proprietor of Leavens\nBrothers Air Services and a veteran flier; Alfred\nOgden of Toronto, and Charles Sockett, president\nof Murray Aeronautical Corp., also of Toronto. The\nairplcjie .'id not dive into the ground, but plowed\nalong the field for several hundred yards before\npiling up in a crumpled heap. Farmers living near\nthe jcene are shown examining the wreck.\nFREDERICK NIVEN WRITES OF\nKOKANEE GLACIER PARK IN NEW\nBOOK ON CANADIAN ROCKIES\nARTIST'S WORK IS BEAUTIFUL\nLovers of the mountains, of cool\nnights spent in pine-scented camps\nafter hard days on the trail; amateurs of fishing who care more for\nthe fishing than for the weight uf\nthe catch; lovers of alpine flowers\nand shrubs and the tiny and large\ninimals which frolic among them;\nthose who can feast on virile beauty\nthe forms which last longest in\nhe memory, will spend many happy\nsvenings enjoying \"Colour in the\nCanadian Rockies'.\nIt is by Walter J. Phillips, the ar-\nist, and Frederick Niven, the writ-\nir. A beautifully printed book,  it\npublished by Thomas Nelson &\nions, Limited, contains more than\ni illustrations in color and over\nscbre or so of stimulating small\nIrawings in black and white.\njMr. Phillips evidently embarked\nlpon his work saturated with the\nrtagnificence of the Rockies and the\n>est of work in 'this book\u2014and there\n5' little which does not rise above\nhe mediocre\u2014is striking for its no-\nMlity of conception, and its power.\n)ne looks at Mr. Phillips paintings\nind realizes why so many of our\n\u25a0ancestors thought mountains godlike.\nTo his task of writing the descrip-\nive matter, Mr. Niven went well-\njquipped.  He  knows  the  Rockies\nid the Selkirks. He has spent so\nnany happy days on their trails, in\nheir camps. It is quite evident that\nie immensely enjoyed writing this\nlook. It is a delightful piece of\nvork, accurate in its facts, no hyper-\nwle in its descriptions, infinitely\nlore illuminating than could have\neany textbook, yet just enough\nightness of touch to make the read-\nir first of all wish that there were\nhany more pages of it and. next,\n0 consider whether \"that next holi-\nlay\" could not be spent in the Ca-\nladian Rockies.\nIt is evident that while Mr. Niven\nvas asked by the publishers to write\nibout the Canadian Rockies, he liked\n;oo much our Kokanee Glacier park\nit the southermost tip of the Sel-\ntirks to refrain from telling about\nFREDERICK   NIVEN\nthat comparatively little known area\nof mountainous glory. He mentions\nalso Mount Revelstoke park. But he\nmade such a good job in his story\nof the Rockies that it is evident\nlhat publishers would not have complained very much if Mr. Niven\nhad wandered farther, even possibly\nto the Andes, of whose mountain\nglories, his life history suggests, he\npossesses affectionate memories.\nHe describes Kokanee Glacier\npark and tells how to get to it. \"This\npark may be entered by motor car\nfrom the charming little city of Nelson on the west arm of Kootenay\nlake or, again by car, from Kaslo\non the main lake, a mining town\nwhere one may sometime read the\nannouncement, on the closed door of\na store. 'Shut for tne day. Gone\nfishing.' A scenic road round the\nlake   shore   connects   Nelson   and\nKaslo, and there has been talk for\nsome time of continuing a road between the end of the one that climbs\nfrom Kaslo and the end of the one\nfrom the west arm of Kootenay lake,\nso that visitors may drive their can;\nin the summer months into the high\npasses. The existent roads that I\nhave mentioned are but old ones\nleading to mines, not to the glacier.\nWhere they end one must be his\nown packhorse shoulder his load and\nbear the burden and heat of the day\nfor the sake of what Kokanee Gla-\nier park officers\".\nMr. Niven names creeks and peaks\nwhich have had for him \"the quality\nof ballad music\"\u2014Kokanee creek\nNilsik creek, Lemon creek, Sitcum\ncreek. Coffee creek, the Glory basis,\nthe Crazy Jane basis. Esmeranda\npeak, the Lone Dutchman trail. Who\nwas Crazy Jane he has not been\nable to discover.\nThere is mention of the Lone\nDutchman, the German after whom\nsome mineral claims and a trail were\nnamed, and who left during the war\nfor parts unknown. \"Of square-set\nand sturdy build he had a stoop\nsomewhat like a scholar's from packing heavy loads on his back up\npreciptious places. He had a cabin\nin the Glory Basin, and when any\nvisitors climbed so high he would\nnever allow them to partake of their\nown food, though all he had he carried up on his own back. If they\nwere hunters he had one plea*\nWould they abstain from shooting\ngoats on the rocks nearby? For he\nwas taming them, a sort of Robinson\nCrusoe of the High Country.\"\nKootenay people should read this\nbook. They'll like it.\nF. Wheeler's Bowlers\nBeat Draper's 18-15\nF. E. Wheeler's quartette rang up\nanother win in the Argyle cup tourney of the C.P.R. Bowiing association Friday night when they beat\nJ. Draper's team 18-15.\nTeams in order of skip, third, second and lead, were: Wheeler, E. L.\nWright, E. W. Somers and J. Lang;\nDraper, J. Simms, F. Davies and W,\nWood.\nAn archaeological expedition to\nColorado will excavate about 10\n.\u25a0small Indian pueblo ruins that were\ninhabited over 1000 years ago.\nDaring Soviet Pilots Make Flight Across North Pole\nPresent Pins at\nCranbrook School\nGraduation Dance\nCRANBROOK, 6. C.-The graduation dance at the Cranbrook high\nschool took place in the auditorium\nwhen about one hundred and fifty\nstudents and graduates were .^resent.\nA school pin was presented to\neach graduate, the presentations being made by G. C. Barclay, princi*\npal. and each of the girls wore a\ncorsage of purple and gold iris,\ntied with purple and gold ribbon,\nthe Lschoo] colors.\nMiss May Maltman and Miss Margaret Henderson were in charge of\nthe arrangements, and they were\nassisted by Miss Margaret Erickson,\nMiss Catherine Fergie, Miss Norma\nSpence, Miss Nan McLeary, Miss\nEleanor McKowan, Miss Helen MacDonald and Miss Joyce Maidment.\nMembers of the graduation classes\nare, senior matriculation: Miss\nPeggy Spreull, Miss Mae Voisey,\nMiss Mary McNeil, Miss Dorothy\nPhilpot, Miss Isabel Pattinson, Miss\nBernice Quick. Miss Dorothy Thompson. Miss Helen Sutherland, Bill Me-\nGrudcr, Donald Sneath. Leonard\nDingley. Stewart Flett. Frank Hinton, Don Edwards and George Ward\nThe members of the junior matriculation class are: Miss Delia College, Miss Phyllis Ruffle, Miss Irene\nCountryman. Miss Jean Rattray. Miss\nJessie Gammon. Miss Florence Curie,\nMiss Patricia MacDonald. Miss Elsa\nBrandt. Miss Margaret Brown. Miss\nBetty McLeary. Miss Florence Johnson, Miss Doris Baird. Miss Mary\nFrost. Miss Joan Flower, John Edwards, Frank Harrison, Peter Edwards, Stephen Lafleur, Eric Coleman, Bill Haynes. Bruce Cameron,\nWalter Walsh and Leonard Cox,\nMr, and Mrs, James Taylor and\ndaughter, Marylyn of Vancouver,\nare visiting here, guests of Mr. and\nMrs. G. Taylor and Miss Kathleen\nand Mf. Gordon Dezali.\nMrs. W. A. Fergie, Miss Catherine\nand Bill and Frank Fergie and Donald Sneath spent the week-end in\nSpokane.\nMiss A.' Woodland has left for\nVancouver where she will attend\nsummer school,\nDr. and Mrs. F. B. Miles and\nJudge and Mrs. Thompson are on\na motor trip to San Francisco.\nMiss Gertrude Patmore has left\nfor Vancouver, where she will spend\nthe summer months.\nMiss Florence Johnston has arrived in the city and will spend the\nsummer with her parents here.\nMiss Elsie Wilby has left for her\nhome in Victoria where she will\nspend the holidays.\nA. Guthrie and G. C. Barclay left\nSaturday for Vancouver to spend\nthe summer. Mr. Guthrie will leave\nin the fall to attend Perdue university.\nR. E. Lawrence of Seattle is visiting his daughter, Mrs. P. A. McGrath.\nJ. B. Munro, deputy minister of\nagriculture from Victoria, was a\nrecent visitor.\nMiss Ludia Resnekenko of Maple\nCreek is the guest of Mrs. May-\nberry.\nKenneth Wickens, who has been\nwith the Imperial Bank of Canada\nhere for three years, has been transferred to Banff.\nGeorge Ward left this week for\nFairmont springs, where he will\nspend the summer.\nD. H. Tupper of Montreal was in\nthe city this week conducting examinations for the McGill Conservatory of Music.\nMiss Claribel Lugsdin is spending\nthe summer in Vancouver.\nS. Senior has left for Nelson where\nhe will reside.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Jackson and Miss\nHazel Jackson have returned from\na motor trip to Rochester, Minn., and\nHouston, Texas.\nMiss Laura Hall, who has been\nthe guest of Miss Louella Keliy at\nRadium Hot Springs, has returned\nto the city.\nMrs. C. Dale and daughter, Carol\nClaudia, of Creston are the guests of\nMrs. Dale's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. J. Collier.\nMr. and Mrs. Claude Wilson of\nNew Westminster were guests of\nMrs. Ray Lynch during the week.\nR. S. Geddes, who has been attending the Gyro International convention at Point Pequat, Minn., as\na delegate from the Cranbrook club,\nhas returned to the city.\nScout Leaders Welcome 25,000 lo Washington Jamboree\nAmid official Soviet secrecy, three daring Russian aviators took off from Moscow and flew nnn-\n! stop across the north pole to Vancouver, Wash.\nThe fliers, \\ising a single motored mrptanp, crossed\nthe pole* several hours ahead of scheduln.  In  the\nI upper photograph are shown, left, to right, A, N.\nTupolen,  noted  Russian,airplane  designer,  under\nI whose supervision the Ant 25. shown in the lower\nphotograph, and in which the fliers made the\nflight, was built; Alexander Beliakov, navigator\nof thr plane; Vaieri Chkalov, pilot, find George\nBaidukov, ro-pilot, Only the last three men mentioned made the flight, most epic since that of Col.\nCharles Lindbergh's flight across the Atlantic\nocean in 1927.\nMRS. PENWILL'S\nTEAM TAKE WIN\nLADIES' BOWLING\nSwamping Miss Grace Laughlon's\nbowlers 19-9 Friday night Mrs. E,\nPenwill's team claimed the second\nwin of the Ladies' doubles tourney\nat the C.P.R. Bowling association\ngreens.\nTeams were: Mrs. Penwill, skip,\nMrs. A. T. Richards, lead and Miss\nLaughton, skip and Mrs. H. Ross,\nlead.\nSEAMAN KILLED\nIN PLANE CRASH\nBREMERTON, Wash, July 9\n(AP)-Seaman W. H. Myers, Billings, Mont., was killed and Bruce\nL. Harwood, 29, Claremont, Cal., a\nnaval aviation cadet, was injurad\ntoday when a navy seaplane crashed\ninto Pugent sound near Three-\nThree point, south of Seattle.\nDoukhobor Juvenile\nRecaptured at Grand\nForks After Escape\nDoukhobor juvenile found guilty\nof depredations at Grand Forks recently and sentenced to two years\nat reform school at the coast, escaped from the school and was recaptured by provincial police at\nGrand Forks, says the Gazette of\nthat city. The lad was -ken to the\nschool June 20 and by July 1 escaped and made his way back to\nGrand Forks by freight trains.\nThese three leaders of the Boy Scout movement\nin United States are shown as they opened the International Scout jamboree at Washington, D.C., and\nwelcomed 25.000 Boy Scouts from all over the world\nto the tented city that is their home during the\ngathering.  Left to right the scout chiefs are Dr.\nJames E. West of the United States scout executive;\n'Uncle\" Dan Beard, national scout commissioner;\nand Theodore Roosevelt, United States vice-president of the Boy Scout movement. Canada has a\nlarge delegation at Jhe jamboree.\nJuniors lo Meet\nBoxla Rossland\nTRAIL, B.C., July 9- Preliminary\nto^the senior West. Kootenay boxla\nfixture at Rossland Monday night,\nwhen the leading Trail squad meets\nthe home club, and exhibition game\nbetween two Trail junior teams\nwill be staged. Gassossas meet Tailors, the lineups boing;\nGassossas\u2014Murdoch, goal; Richardson, Weir, McDonald, defense;\nLanglois and Lewis, rovers; Bob\nKendal and Barchard, centres, Cu-\nsick, Kennedy, Milne, Savage and\nWilson, wings.\nTailors \u2014 Morrow, goal; Turik,\nKirby, Tognotti, and Foxlee, defence; Hood and Coccia, rovers;\nSmith and Battistella, centres; Dem-\nbicki, Paalini and Zinio, wings.\nMilwaukee Pastor\nLectures at Nelson\nBasing his lecture on a tour of\nEurope made last year, Rev. H.\nGrueber of Milwaukee gave an interesting talk at St. John's Lutheran\nchurch, Nelson, Friday night. His\nsubject was of deep interest to his\naudience.\nWant Ads Get Results\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. GLENN QUAYLE\nTRAIL, BC, July 9\u2014Quietly solemnized at the manse of Knox United church, Friday July 9, was Ihe\nmarriage of Miss Irene Weig and J.\nDunlop, Rev. Dr. M. W. Lees officiating. Miss V, Wilcox and H. Moody\nwere  witnesses,\n\u2022 Frank Ashe and his brother\nhave returned from a holiday at\nSyringa   creek.\n\u2022 Mrs. William F. Truswell and\nson, Billy returned Friday to Trail\nfrom Spokane where they wer?\nvisiting relatives at a family reunion.\n\u2022 Ash Bayley left Friday on a\nholiday to be spent at Slocan City.\n\u2022 Dr. F. M. Keeley left Friday\nfor Vancouver where he anticipates residing. .\n\u2022 Mrs. Richard Price and children have left for Needles to spend n\nvacation.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. F. Downie and daughter, Miss Jean Downie were visiting Fruitvale Thursday.\n\u2022 Joe Tonelli, who was visiting\nthe coast, returned Thursday to his\nhome in Trail.\n\u2022 Carl Christiansen is expected\nto return Monday from Calgary\nwhere he spent a 10-day holiday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Camelle Lauriente, old timers of Trail, have left\nfor Spokane to reside. Accompanying them was their daughter. Mrs.\nArchie Vass. who will spend a\nmonth's vacation before returning to\nTrail,\n\u2022 Miss Olive Bryans of Maidstone. Sask,, is the guest of Mr. and\nMrs. M. Tebeau. Green avenue.\n\u2022 Mrs. Charles Bradbury and\ndaughter left Friday for Needles\nwhere to spend a holiday with\nfriends.\n\u2022 Harold Petersen is expected to\nreturn shortly from Calgary where\nhe visited friends.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, Robert McAdam\nhave left on a holiday trip to iVc-\ntoria. On their return they will be\naccompanied by Miss Elvera McAdam, nurse-in-training at Victoria,\nwho will visit Trail for three week?..\n\u2022 Walter Sahl, a guest of Danish\nVice-Consul Eric Petersen at Calgary for 10 days is expected to return Monday to his home in Trail,\nVANCOUVER. July 9 (CP)-At-\ntorney-general Gordon S. Wismer,\nK.C. announced today the appointment of J. Pitcairn Hogg, Vancouver barrister, as legislative counsel\nto the provincial government. He\nwill take over his new duties at\nonce.\nFormer Nelsonite\nReceives 619 al\nLutheran Meeting\nRev. Mr. Meyer States\nRev. Mr. Janzow\nHonored\nReturning from a Lutheran conference at Stoney Plains, Alta., Rev.\nV. L. Meyer of St. John's Lutheran\nchurch, Nelson, reported that the\ntwenty-fifth anniversary in the ministry of Rev. C. C. Janzow, former\nNelson pastor now at Vernon, had\nbeen celebrated by the convention.\nMr. Janzow was presented with a\npurse  by  the delegates.\nForty-four pastors and 20 lay delegates representing 200 congregations and preaching stations in Alberta and British Columbia attended. Part of each day was devoted\nto discussion of doctrinal essays on\nthe means of grace, the gospel, baptism and the Lord's Supper.\nA highlight was the special service at which Rev. H, Grueber of\nMilwaukee, second vice-president of\nthe synod, spoke on church conditions in Europe. Another interesting address was that of Earl Miller,\nmissionary serving in India, who\nspoke of his experience in the foreign field.\nMr# Meyer preached the morning\nsermon on the Sunday of the conference at St, Matthew's church,\nStoney Plains.\nTrail Softball\nWin First Half Crown\nas Beat Cubs Two\nStraight\nTRAIL. B.C., July B,-Cal Park-\nhurst, burly moundsman for Giants,\nwon his own game to give his squad\na 3-1 victory over Cubs and garner\nthe second game of a best two o\u00a3\nthree series, taking the senior men's\nsoftball league first half championship at Victoria park here tonight.\nParkhurst stole home in the second inning and bombed out a circuit clout in the seventh to give the\nGiants a 2-1 lead. Wanless followed\nParkhurst t obat and poled out another home to set the game on ice.\nBoth teams played heads up ball,\nenjoyed by a large crowd of enthusiastic fans who perched on anything available to take in the deciding tilt.\n*25 Reward |gg\nI Ell CORN Ml.VI. f0r .\u201e, corn or cal-\nloua THEY cannot remo*a with ihta\nwonderful tinw iclfnitlfic preparation fot\nCORNS OR CALLOUSES. Il d\u00ab-Miiai-\nUmi and rellevea pain with first application.\nSOC   at   ALL  BETTER DKUr.  STOKES.\nCETAN\n85-H.P. VALVE-IN-HEAD SIX\nlor Smoothness, Performance and Unequalled Economy!\nONCE, you had to sacrifice low run-\nuing costs to get the driving thrill\nof power, pep and \"pick-up\". But not\nsince Chevrolet stepped-up the famous\nValvc-in-Head economy engine to 85\nsmooth, eager horsepower! J Twenty-\nfive and more miles to the gallon of\ngas! ... that's the kind of economy\n... for economical    # j**^:\ntransportation\nreported by this year's Chevrolet buyers. And they're all enthusiastic about\nthe way Chevrolet rides. J \"My \"Knee-\nAction Chevrolet glides over the\nbumps like a $1500 car!\" say many.\nOthers, safety-minded, put Chevrolet's\nperfected Hydraulic Brakes first in the\nlist of quality extras. All enjoy the\nadded roominess, beauty and protection of the exclusive Unisteel Bodies\nby Fisher. J You get the only complete\nlow-priced car when you buy a Chevrolet. And you save money every day\nand mile you drive!\n*On Mailer De Line Models.\nAbove Xf.lt\u2014Chevrolet Matter D. l.nrrt Sedan with Trunk.   Above Right\u2014Chevrolet Matter Coach with Trunk.\nCHEVROLET=n\nMaster 2-Paisenzer Buiintis Coufi Jdelivered al factory, Oihiwa. Government\ntaxes, license and freight additional.\n[Prices subject to change without notice.)\nMonthly payments io iuit your purse on\nihe General Motors Instilment Plan.\nNELSON TRANSFER COMPANY, LIMITED\n323 VERNON ST.    GENERAL MOTORS DEALERS for NELSON and DISTRICT      NELSON,  B.C.\nMANLY b MILLER\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.\nDOMINION   CARACE   &   SALES   CO.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nCRESTON MOTORS\nCRESTON, B.C.\nWHEELER MOTORS\nCRANBROOK. B.C.\n  'W^w.\n\"\u2022yyfsyg^Jfffgw'fflw^^\n<^r.J'^\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022!JyT?y^^\u25a0\u25a0Tr^\u00b1\u2022':f*?\u25a0r~*:\"~\u2022\u2014'j'v*\nPAGE TEN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 10, 1937.\nNelaon Baily Nrms\n: Member ot the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\naer  i ., am     - *\nI- '\nTELEPHONE   144\n,       Private Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy*  $  .05\nBy carrier per week     25\n: By carrier per year  13.00\nBy mall In Canada, to sub-\n:   * scribers living outside regular\ncarrier  areas,  per month  60c;\nthree months v1.80; six months\n$3.00: one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\n'Foreign countries, other than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorators and other\nstimulants. One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n (1343)\nWOMEN WANTED TO START\nPrivate Kindergarten Schools in\ntheir own homes this coming fall\nFree booklet on request. Canadian Kindergarten Institute. Win-\nnipeg. Established 1927.      (1312)\n\u2022\u2022.y-\u00bb. -\u2014\u25a0*\u2014....   -\t\nIT MADE OF RUBBER, SEND FOR\npersonal goods list. Guaranteed\nsafe grades. Established 1896. Universal Speciality Co., Box 2704.\nP.P. Montreal. (716)\nJRESH SAN1TAHY RUBBER LA-\ntex special 25 for $1.00. Write for\nfree catalogue. National Importers,\nBox 244, Edmonton, (1017)\nyES, I WANT THEM. STEVE\n(1430)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nTENDERS WANTED\nTenders will be received by the\nRossland Co-operative Transportation Society for the installation of\nthe Plumbing and Heating in the\nReinforced concrete building 58 feet\nby 72 feet together with alterations\nto the existing buildings on the present site and the aforementioned\nabove building, at Rossland, B.C.\nThe drawings and specifications\nmay be obtained on and after July\nfltb 1937 from the Secretary on payment of a deposit ot $26.00 which\n\u25a0will be returned on receipt of a\nbona-fide tender accompanied by\n\u202211 the above named documents and\ndrawings.\nSuch payments and application\nmust be made between the hours\nof 10.00 a.m. and 4.00 p.m. and all\ncheques must be made payable to\nthe Rossland Co-Operative Transportation Society. Tenders must be\nenclosed in a sealed envelope addressed to the Secretary and endorsed \"Tender for Plumbing and\nHeating for Rossland Co-operative\nTransportation Society Garage\" and\nmust be delivered to the office of\nt)ie secretary not later than Noon on\nJuly 16th 1937.\nThe successful tenderer must post\na Bond equal to 20% of the amount\nof the Bid.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nSigned\u2014\"D. G. McArthur\"\nSecretary\n (1421)\n* TENDERS~WANTED\nTenders will be received by the\nRossland Co-operative Transportation Society for the construction of a\nreinforced concrete building 58 feet\nby 72 feet, together with alterations\nto existing buildings at the present\nilte in \"Rossland, B.C.\nThe drawings and specifications\nmay be obtained on and after July\n6th 1937 from the Secretary on payment of a deposit of $25.00 which\n\u2022will be returned on receipt of a\nbona-fide tender accompanied by all\nthe above named documents and\ndrawings.\nSuch payment and application\nmust be made between the hours of\nten a.m. and four p.m. and all\ncheques must he made payable to\nthe Rossland Co-operative Transportation Society.\nTenders must be enclosed in a\nsealed envelope addressed to the\nSecretary and endorsed \"Tender for\nRossland Co-operatice Transportation Society Garage\" and must be\ndelivered to the office of the Secretary not later than Noon on July\n16th 1937.\nThe successful tenderer must post a\nBond eq^ual to 20% of the amount\nof the bid.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nSigned-\"D. G, McArthur\"\nSecretary.\n(1420)\nELECTRICAL, MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\nHOIST MOTORS\nWound  rotor motors  In  stock\nfrom 10 h.p. to 250 hp* at various speeds.   Enquire\u2014\nCROSSMAN MACHINERY\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\n59 Alexander St., Vancouver. B.C.\n(1311)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n\u25a0SELLING OUT FRESH MILK\ngojts $6.00. Pry nanies $3.00. JL B.\nDeWolf, Perry Siding, B*C. (1380)\nfeEGlSTERED AYRSHIRE BULL,\ntwenty-seven months old. Apply\nA. Mer?, Balfour, B.C.        (1404)\nTRESH JERSEY COW. FIRST Calf.\nGood  Milker.  Hamilton,   Perrys\n(1342)\nHELP WANTED\u2014\nINSTRUCTION\nIF YOU LIKE TO DRAW, SKETCH\nor paint\u2014Write for Talent Test\n(No Fee). Give age and occupation. Box 1389\u201e Daily News. (1389)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS,\nETC.. FOR SALE\nLAKESIDE HOME\nWe have instructions to sell at\nonce a 6-room cottage with one acre\nof land and lake frontage. Electric\nlighted, water under pressure to\nbuilding. Boat house and piling on\nbeach. Telephone. Close to City. Can\nbe used as permanent residence,\nBearing fruit trees and good garden\nground. Taxes low. Price $1500.00.\nSee us for terms and further particulars.\nROBERTSON REALTY CO. LTD\nExclusive Agents\n(1444)\nSACRIFIcrSALE\nOwner has left the City and instructed us to sell at once his 4-room\nBungalow with bathroom (3 piece)\nfull cement floor basement, furnace,\nfireplace, recently thoroughly renovated. Level lots. Good garden in\ndesirable location. Price $2,600.\nMonthly terms.\nROBERTSON REALTY CO. LTD\nExclusive Agents\n(1443)\nONE OF NELSON'S BETTER\nhomes, three bedrooms, two large\nliving rooms, large dining room,\nnice kitchen, modern plumbing,\ndirect hot air furnace and full\ncement basement, well located on\ntwo lots all in first class condition.\nApply P.O. Box 67, Nelson, B.C.\n(1461)\nTHE KANE RESIDENCE AT KAS-\nlo. B.C. House contains living,\ndining, den, breakfast end sewing\nrooms, also 4 bedrooms and garage, etc. Very fine garden. To be\nsold at a sacrifice. Apply to Ronald Hewat, Official Administrator,\nKaslo, B.C. (999)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. C.P.R., Calgary, Alta.\n(1310)\n27 ACRE PROPERTY, 2 PLANTED\nto trees, lovely garden, close to\nlake. Modern home. For particulars apply Mr. or Mrs. C. M.\nAllen, Boswell, B.C. (1452)\nFARMS, GOOD LOCATION FOR\ndairy, and 7 acres at Fairview.\nCheap for quick buy. Terms. N.\nBystrom, Mountain Station. (1451)\n6 ROOM BUNGALOW. THREE\nlots. Apply 110 Wasson Street\n(Roseniont) or Box 1457, Daily\nNews. (1457)\nFOR SALE-5 ACRES LAND WITH\nhouse 114 miles from Nelson. For\ndetails write Box 1398, Daily News\n(1398)\n2V,  ACRES. SIX ROOM HOUSE.\nWrite C Trueit, Robson, B.C.\n(1256)\nFOUR  LEVEL,  CLEARED   LOTS\non Houston St. Phone 242R. (1449)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nGIRLS WANT JOB BERRY PICK-\ning near Nelson, Phone 792R1.\n(1447)\nHELP WANTED\nWE HAVE HELPED HUNDREDS\nobtain Civil service positions as\nPostmen, Clerks, etc. Free booklet,\n\"How to get a Government Job\".\nM. C. C. Civil Service Schools,\nWinnipeg. (1313)\nRELIABLE MAN TO TAKE CARE\nstore route, pistribute, collect,\nNew Products. No selling, Earn\nexcellent weekly income. B. St W,\nNut Co, St. Paul, Minn.     (1456)\nYOUNG MAN WANTED FOR Office work. Apply in own handwriting, stating age to Box 1431,\nDaily News.       (1431)\nAN   EXPERIENCED   MAN   FOR\ndairy farm. $30 a month and board.\nApply Box 580, Kimberley, B.C.\n(1327)\nWANTED, ABOUT MID JULY, 3\ngirl cherry packers, 8c per lug 10c\nper crate. L. Clark, Gray Creek\n(1407)\nCAPABLE WOMAN TO TAKE'\ncharge of house. Phone between\n8 a.m. and 5 p.m. at 13.        (1395)\nMALE INSTRUCTION\nMEN TO TAKE UP AIR CONDI-\ntioning and Electric Refrigeration\nand better themselves. Must be\nmechanically inclined, willing to\ntrain in spare time to qualify.\nWrite. Utilities Inst, Box 1455,\nDaily News. (1455)\nFOR SALE\nNEW AND USED GALVANIZED\nPipe and Fittings, all sizes\u2014Extra\nheavy slate surface Roofing with\nNails St Cement, about 80 lbs. per\nroll, $2.75. \u2014 Light ply Roofing\n(without Nails and Cement) 125\nfeet by 12 inches wide, 70c per\nroll.\u20142-V4\" Nails $3.50 per 100 ibs.\n-Wire Rope; Belt; Pulleys; Galvanized Iron Roofing; Grain St\nPotato Sacks; Canvas; Doors &\nWindows; Hose\u2014Merchandise and\nequipment of all descriptions-\nHundreds of our customers without exception testify to our $2.50\nper gallon guaranteed Paint for\nall purposes; Colours, Grey,\nGreen, White, and Cream.\nB.C. JUNK CO.\n125 Powell St.        Vancouver, B.C.\n(1308)\nICE-ICE\nPHONE 106\n609 WARD ST.\n(1272)\n(Continued In Next Column)\nInvestment Opportunities\nWe have some excellent buys in Real Estate showing good returns\non the investment.\nNelson Real Estate is steadily increasing in values. Now is the\nTime to buy.\nINVESTIGATE OUR OFFERINGS\nAPPLY TO\nR. W. Dawson\nP.O. BOX 733\nGENERAL INSURANCE\nHIPPERSON BLOCK\nPHONE 197\n(1459)\nFOR SALE\n(Continued)\nWONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY TO\npurchase High grade English\ndinner ware. Has been used. All\nfirst class condition. 54 pieces,\nenough to serve 6 people, $6.75.\nSame quality enough to serve 4\npeople, 38 pieces, $4.90. Office\nKerr Block. (1320)\nPIPE  TUBES  FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B.C.\n(1344)\nHYPRO STOCK SPRAY, IN\nquarts, half-gallon, and gallon\ntins; Stockaid in same sizes, Hand\nSpray Pumps, White Fluid Disinfectant. The Brackman-Kerr Milling Co. Ltd. (1454)\nLOT, CLOSE 3 BIG GOLD MINES.\nNice location. Suitable for any\nbusiness. Cheap for cash. Apply\nBox 1379, Daily News.        (1379)\nB.S.A. BICYCLE IN FIRST CLASS\ncondition cost $65. Sell cheap for\ncash. Box 1382, Nelson News.\n(1382)\nPIPE AND FnTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company Ltd*\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B.C.\n(1345)\nFIREWOOD FOR SALE - MILL-\nends $3.75 per load or S loads for\n$10. Phone orders to 168.    (1410)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo, Ltd, Nelson, B.C.        (1346)\nWE SELL EVERYTHING AT BAR-\ngain prices. The Ark Store    (1350)\nGOOD USED GAS RANGE, PRICE\n$3. Kerr Apartments. (1351)\nDOCS, PETS, FOR SALE\nPEDIGREE   WIRE-HAIRED   FOX\nTerrier pups for sale. Write P. O.\nBox 1091 or Ph. 761, Nelson, B.C.\n(1405)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nIndian, from $342.00\nVilliers, from .   $165.00\nFrancis Barnetts, from,. $185.00\nB.S.A, from  $250.00\nHarley Davidsons, from.. $500.00\nWRITE FOR LITERATURE\nSend In your Motors for Repairs\nPALMER RUTLEDGE\nTRAIL, B.C.\n(1309)\nHARLEY-PAVIDSON Motor-Cycle,\n74 Twin. Good condition; cheap\nfor cash. Nelson Auto Wreckers,\n(1442)\nIVk T. CHEV. TRUCK, \"36. Wft\n2000 miles New tires. $750. Flnk'a.\n(1252)\nWANTED\nWANTED FOR MONTH OR .SIX\nweeks, clean, comfortable bungalow for three. Good tenants. Box\n1450, DailyNews. (1450)\nWanted; 6 room house, or 3\nroom unfurnished suite, close in.\nPhone 728X after 6 p.m.     (1434)\nWATER PUMP, MUST BE GOOD\ncondition. P. M. Sheloff, Thrums.\n(1433)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFURNISHED BARBER SHOP FOR\nrent at Cranbrook, B.C Apply\nP. O. Box 548. (1387)\nFOR   SALE,   ICE   CREAM   AND\ncandy shop. P.O. Box 796, Nelson.\n(1250)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\n0\nPULLETS\nRaised from the\n\"Chicks Which\nGive Results.\"\nLeghorn* S weeks $65 per 100\n10 weeks     75 per 100\nBarred Rocks (nd\nLight Sussex, 8 weeks  78 per 100\n10 weeki .   85 ;ier 100\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nLANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C.\n(1384)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nGOOD FAMILY MOTOR BOAT.\n$125. Mm. Mack. P.O. Box 236,\nNelson, B.C. (1253)\nFOR SALB-rLAUNCH, 28 FT. 6-\ncylinder, auto engine. Cheap.\nPhone 954. (\\m\nFOR   SALE,  SPONSON  MOTOR\ncanoe. Apply P.O. Box 135, Nelson.\n(1352)\nFOR SALE-20  FOOT LAUNCH,\nPhone 148, P.O. Box 70, Nelson.\n(1330)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annablo Block\n (1348)\nBUILDING,  40  X  26.  SUITABLE\nfor store. Apply L. D. Cafe, Salmo.\n(1422)\nFOR RENT, 6 ROOM HOUSE, 1011\nStanley St. Phone 67 or 408L.\n(1439)\nTERfiACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites. (1347)\nFURNISHED SUITES IN THE\nKerr apartments. (1286)\nFRUIT AGENTS\nSHIP YOUR BERRIES AND CHER-\nries direct and receive the benefit of the highest prairie market\nprices tor yourself. No profiteering between the shippers and ourselves, no connections whatever\nwith any fruit combine. Wa also\nhandle straight and mixed carloads of fruit Returns ara made\nevery Saturday tor all shipments\nreceived during the week. Royal\nFruit Co. Regina Sask.       (1160)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nFOR A QUIET VACATION SPEND\nYour Holidays at the Outlet Hotel,\nProcter. Furnished Cabins on the\nLake Front In the Shadey Orchard. Grocery store in connection. W. A. Ward. (1340)\nPHONE 144\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt^jJelson, B.C. (1353)\nGRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 618\nBaker Street Nelson. B.C   P.O.\nBox No. 726.   Representing shipper's interest Trail, B.C.    (1354)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairi\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(1355)\nChiropractors\nj. r McMillan, d.c. neuro-\ncalometer and X-ray.   16 years\nexperience. McCulloch Blk. (1356)\nW. J. BROCK DC X-ray. 15 Years'\nExperience. Gilker Blk. Nelson\n(1357)\nEngineers and Surveyor!\nH. D. DAWSON Nelson, B.C.\nMine Surveys and Reporta\n & C. Land Surveyor (1358)\nBOYDC. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B.C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(1359)\nFuneral Director!\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert. Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(1360)\nDAVIS   FUNERAL   SERVICE\nEmbalming & Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Assisting\nPhone 95.   ' Nelson, B.C.\n(1391)\nMaehiniiti\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe |\nWork. Drilling, Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593    324 Vernon Street!\n(1368)|\nH. E, STEVENSON. Machinists,!\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\/\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfac-fl\ntion guaranteed. Mine Ss Mill work a\nspecialty Fully equipped shop. Phi\n98. 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (1369)f\nMine fr Equipment Machinery*]\nE. L. WARBURTON, AGENT: C. C\nSnowdon Oils, Greases, etc. Richardson Road Machinery Co* Culverts, Graders, Scrapers, Plow*\nScreens, Gravel Equipment, etc,\nMine Machinery, Steam Coals,\nOffice 518 Ward. Ph. 53; Res.. 239.\n(1370)\nNotaries\nD. J. ROBERTSON. NOTARY!\nPublic, Nelson, Phone 157L. (1371) |\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted Inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St, Ottawa.\n(1372)\nPhotography\nInsurance and Real Estate\nMutual Benefit Health Is Ace. Assoc.\nWorld's largest. Al. W. Foote, Dist\nMgr. Hume Hotel, Nelson. B.C.\n(1361)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\n311 Baker St. Phone 68.      (1362)\nR, W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Ip\"-\nsuranee, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St   Phone 197.\n(1363)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.  Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99\n(1364)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate. 508 Ward St\n(1365)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE,\nRentals. Insurance. Annable Blk.\n(1366)\nSEE D. L. KERR, AGENT FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates.\n(1319)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.       (1367)\nOUR BUSINESS FOR 1936 AL-\nmost doubled that of 1935. There\nmust be a reason. A trial order\nwill convince YOU of the superior\nPhoto Finishing done in our plant\nYour film developed and printed\n25c. Reprints, eight for 25c. KRYS1\nTAL PHOTOS, WTLKIE, SASK\n(1373)\nSanitariums\nDR. ALDRICH, SPOKANE, WASH.I\nHeart, Stomach, Kidney, Bladder]\nDiseases treated.  X-ray work.\n(1374)|\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker St\n(1375)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,  SELL  &  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc   The Ark Store.\n(1376)|\nWatch Repairing\nWALK A BLOCK AND SAVE Jt\nDollar. Boyle the Jeweller. (13771J\nmm\u00ae\nCORNER\nHere we have a nice, friendly cat,\nwho should purr contentedly when\nthe puzzle is completely solved.\nKITTY,  KITTY!\nThe  definitions:\nHORIZONTAL\n2. A house pet\n4. To make a kind of lace\n6. Something cats love to eat\n10, A young cat\n12. Something else cats love to\neat\n14. Exist.\n15. A kind of tree (pi.)\n18. A ladle for drinking water\n20. Pulls\n21. Saint (fern, abbr.)\nVERTICAL\n1.   What cats sometimc-s calch\n3. A small nail\n5. Deceived\n7. Greek  letter\n8. Tries\n9. Males\n11. The point of a pen\n13. Looks narrowly\n16. Long Island (abbr.i\n17. Blot or blemish\n19. A female sheep\nWe next give you a word diamond\nbuilt around a kind of cat. The second line contains a word for not\nmany, the third is what the conductor collects, the fifth means\nghostly, and the sixth means unhappy. Can you complete the diamond?\nP\nE\nR\nPERSIA!*!\nI\nA\nN\n-:(3):-\nAnother kind of cat is hidden in\nthe sentence below:\nMarjorie sang or acted In every\nschool  entertainment.\nAnswers to Puzzles\n2. The diamond is R. sob, shoal,\nrooster, bathe, lee, R.\n.3. Lope, over, pear, and errs.\n4. Tractor, wagon, and haystack\nTHE BOYS AND GIRLS PAGE\nHints Are Given on How to Cut\nFirewood With Speed and Safety\nCorrect  Stance,  Grip\nAdd Power to\nthe Stroke\nBy JIM  EMMETT\nTo watch a Michigan lumberjack\ndr a North Woods guide handle an\naxe, is to see an exhibition of speed\nand grace coupled with amazing\nskill. A favorite trick is to stick\na five-foot stake into the ground\nthirty feet from the base of a tree\nto be felled\u2014the falling tree then\ndrives the stake the rest of the way\nin.\nThese experts do not make hard\nwork of chopping. They put their\nbody into the stroke by using the\ncorrect rhythm, then relax. There is\nno hard gripping of the handle, or\nthat sticking of the axe which marks\nthe unskilled wielder.\nA woodsman is as much a crank\nover his axe as he is about his gun\n\u2014it is his next best friend. Some use\na double bitted type, others prefer\nthe common single. It may be the\nMichigan pattern popular among\nlumberjacks there, or the Wisconsin type, or the Oregon style, and\nso on. The single bit variety has\nonly one cutting edge, and a flat\nhead for driving stakes; but the\ndouble axe has both edges sharp.\nThe handle of the double axe is\nstraight, that of the single gracefully curved. The standard length\nis thirty-six inches and the usual\nweight between five and six pounds.\n18 HONED REGULARLY\nDouble bited axes are popular because one edge can be kept razor\nsharp and thin for cutting through\nhardwood, and the other thicker for\nrougher work and soft stuff. A good\nwoodsman always spends a few\nminutes honing his axe with a stone\nbefore setting it aside\u2014he would\nas soon put his gun away dirty as\nhis axe without this attention.\nA lumberjack stands as carefully\nand grips his axe as precisely as\nany gotfer. As you follow this explanation, think of yourself as holding an axe and chopping a small\nlog. The feet should be about\ntwenty-four inches apart\u2014less if\nyou ere under five and a half feet\ntall\u2014and the toes should point\nahead for best balance. The axe\nshould be held with the left hand\nthree inches from the end, while the\nright hand should grip the handle\nthree-quarters of the way to the\nhead.\nIn swinging, bring the head over\nthe right shoulder until it is behind your back, always keeping\nyour eye on the spot where you intend to strike. The axe head is then\nbrought down and around in a\nrhythmic swing, the right hand\nsliding down the handle as the\nhead descends; until at the time the\nblade strikes, both hands are together. The head is then pulled free,\nand the hands slide on the handle\nas the axe is swung back to the\noriginal position. This, the most\ncommon chopping stroke, is known\nas the forward swing. The reverse\nis the backhand, performed in the\nsame way except that you turn and\ndeliver the blow at an angle opposite to the forward swing.\nHOW AN EXPERT CUTS\nThe expert stands on large logs\nbut behind smaller ones when chopping. He makes one cut with the\nforward swing, then another with\nhe has \u00bb deep notch. Beginners in-\nthe backhand\u2014when his cuts meet,\nvsriably cut this too narrow, m\u00bbk**\ning for harder work. On a fairly\nlarge log jt should be at least ten\ninches wide. If the axe is simply\ndriven into the log, it will stick,\nsnd time and effort will be required to wrench it loose.\nThe cuts must be properly placed.\nThe first should be in the upper\nsection, and leave a little of the\nblade sticking out; the next into\nthe lower part, again with some of\nthe blade out; and the next into the\ncenter. Lumberjacks call a notch\ncut like this a flying cut.\nFor larger trees, the broken chip\ncut is used\u2014first a flying cut, then\na single cut into one of the edges,\nand then the wood chipped out be'\ntween to enlarge the notch. The\ndouble break cut is made by cutting\ninto both edges to enlarge the\nnotch. Then there is the box cut,\nkeeping one edge square. It is\nmerely half a flying cut and half\na straight up-and-down cut. It is\nused when felling trees and cutting\nlogs for a cabin.\nLumberjacks always try to drop a\nstanding tree in the direction of its\nnatural lean. When it must fall another way, a big cut is first made\ninto the falling side, halfway\nthrough. Then the other side is\ntackled, and a box cut made a little\nhigher than the first cut, continuing\nuntil the tree totters and falls.\nOne must stand well away from\nfalling trees because they often\ndrive back or \"ride the stump.\"\nLikewise, in exing small branches,\nalways cut with the branch, and\nnever into the crotch. Also see that\nthere are no overhanging boughs to\ndeflect your axe.\nFew accidents occur in cutting\nlogs or standing trees\u2014they usually\nhappen through carelessness when\ncutting small stuff for firewood. Always chop on a solid surface, preferably a large log, and never\nstraight into the wood, but at an\nangle. In this way you pin the\nstick down and neither part can\nfly and injure you.\nWhile practice will make almost\nEarliest Men Began\nCustom of Feast\nAfter we h?ve shared a meal with\nsomeone, We feel much better acquainted, don't we? The custom of\nintroducing strangers to one another\nat a feast dates from ths time of the\nearliest men of whom we have any\nrecord.\nWhen a tribesman brought home\na bride from a neighboring tribe,\nit was rlatural that his friends should\nlook upon the stranger with suspicion. She might be possessed of evil\npowers. She might be the cause of\ncalamity among them.\nSo, in order to make her one of\nthemselves, a feast was prepared,\nMeat was roasted upon a great fire,\nand the newcomer shared the food\nwith her husband's people. Then the\ncaptive woman was considered a\nmember of the tribe, and she was\nno longer feared by those among\nwhom she had been brought to live.\nRIDDLE ANSWERS\n1. Dates. 2. Go to the butcher and\nget a kidney (kid knee). 3* To the\nbutcher and get a weinie (wee knee).\n4. Nose. 5. In a barrel. 6. Durbin\n(Deanna), Power (Tyrone), Ameche\n(Don) and Havilland (Olivia de).\nSECOND CHANCE\n(A SERIAL STORY)\nBy W. BOYCE MORGAN\nINSTALLMENT 8EVEN\nMr. Breyer had ..orked out a complete daily schedule for the campers. A bugle call summoned them\nfrom their cots for setting-up exercises, followed by a short dip in\nthe lake and breakfast. After breakfast they had a half hour to prepare\nfor room inspection, and it was then\nthat Bud went to work. He drove\nand wheedled the other Mohawks\nuntil they were modtls of neatness,\nand every morning Wally's team got\nits full ten points for a perfect room.\nThe rest of ^he morning was devoted to sports. The first day, Bud\nwatched his teammates lose at volley ball and win ut softball. Then\nhe went to Mr. Breyer and got special permission to spend his sports\nhour in the lake.\n\"I'm no help to you in those\ngames,\" he explained later to Walley, \"so I might as well get In some\nA Good Salesman\nOnce when I was living in a small town\nnear a large city, I used to walk from my\nhome down into the business district of the\nlittle town each afternoon, to buy an evening\npaper. During the walk I passed probably a\ndozen newsboys selling papers on various\ncorners, end I would buy my paper from any\none of them, as the fancy struck me.\nBut after a short time my attention was\nattracted to the boy who sold papers in front\nof the post office. He was a chubby little\nfreckle-faced lad, always smiling and alert.\nI would give him a nickel for my three-cent paper, and as he fished\nin his pocket for the change, he would try to sell me another two-\ncent paper to get the whole nickel! When I smilingly refused, he\nwould say \"All right. Thapk you. Come again.\"\nHis conduct was so unusual that I did go back again, and again.\nSoon I would buy my paper from no other boy. And always he\nhad his smile and his \"Thank you,\" and a word about the important news of the day. That boy will \"get along\". He is a real\nsalesman.\n\u2014The Editor.\nRiddles Were Sent\nby One Who Liked\nThem When Young\nToday the Riddle M?n has five\nriddles for you which came to him\n\"from a party who liked them when\nshe was young.\" He hopes you can\nguess them, and that you'll still like\nanyone an expert axeman, you must\nfirst master the principles as to\ncorrect standing, swinging, and\nstroking. The axe is a truly North\nAmerican tool. It holds interesting\npossibilities for exercise and wilderness craftsmanship about ihe summer camp\u2014it is one of the outdoor-\nman's best friends.\nriddles when you're old.\n1. What is the favorite fruit of\nhistory?\n2. If \u00bb boy broke his knee what\nwould he do?\n3. If a bsby broke its knee, where\nwould it go for help?\n4. Whjt smells most in a drugstore?\n5. In what place are two heads\nbetter than one?\n6. Below are the last names of\nfour newly prominent motion picture stars. The letters are mixed up,\nbut you should be able to straighten\nthem out.\n1. UNBIRD\n2. PROWE\n3. ME ACHE\n4. HALL VIAND\nextra time in the water and\nready for the swimming meet.\"\nFrom then on, Bud was in Vol\nwater every morning, as well at\nduring the regular swimming period in the afternoon. He had beef\na good swimmer for several years'\nbut. now he improved rapidly with\nconstant practice. He speeded up hi!\ncrawl stroke until he could do short\nsprints at surprising speed, and hi!\nwind improved until he could swim\nlong distances without tiring. H<\nalso practiced diving, and his form\nimproved steadily.\nAs the days passed, the point\ncompetition developed into a rous*\ning fight between the Mohawks\nWallys' team, and Fred Hill's team\nthe Sioux. The battle was so bittei\nthat, those few points for room inspection became more and mon\nimportant. Two days before camj\nwas to close, the Mohawks got demerits because a dirty sock wai\nfound under Bud's bed. It wasn'\nBud's sock, and it hadn't been then\nthree minutes before inspection\nThe Mohawks were sure that om\nof Fred Hill's Sioux had put it then\nbut they couldn't prove anything.\n\"Never mind,\" said Bud grimly\n\"We'll beat those guys' ears dowt\nin the swimming meet tomorrow\nThey are only thirty points aheat\nof us now, and we can make tha\nup easily.\"\nThe swimming meet was sched\nuled for the last afternoon of camp\nDuring the rest period after luncl\nthat day, Bud was sitting on thi\nporch of one of the cottages whei\na familiar-looking car turned in ti\nthe lane. Mildred Harper waved ti\nhim from the back seat, where shi\nwas sitting with two other girls\nMrs. Harper was driving, and be\nside her sat Sally.\nBud hurried down to meet then\nas they parked the car, and severa\nof the other campers, who knev\nthe girls, followed him.\n\"Well!\" exclaimed Bud. You fin\nally did get. out to visit camp\u2014oi\nthe last day!\"\n\"We've been planning to coiw\nfor ages,\" Mil explained. \"But Da<\nhas been out of town with the car.'\nShe lowered her voice, so that thi\nothers would not hear her question\n\"And how's camp going? Are yot\nglad you came?\"\nBud nodded. \"I guess so,\" he re\nplied. \"But I won't, know for sun\nuntil after the swimming meet thl\nafternoon.\"\n\"Stil feeling you aren't so goot\nas the other fellows, are you?\" sail\nMil banteringly. \"Well, I'm certain\nly glad I'm going to see this trl\numph in the waler.\" \u2022\n(Continued on July 14)\n|t A.\n wppp^ip\n\u2014\nWjjpjwp^^\nSecond Flight\nPens Add Most\nPoints Today\nWhile the A. W. Schofield pen\nholding its great margin ot points\nover its nearer rivals in the British\nColumbia laying contest at the\nDominion experimental farm at\nAgassiz, the best weekly record\nis now being made by four second-\nflight pens that at the end of the\n35th week are too far behind to be\nconsidered challengers at this stage.\nFor the week C. Headey added 70.9\npoints, W. J. Schiebler added 69.1\npoints, W. Whiting 65.5 points, and\nM, Lawson 65.1 points. These pens\nrank from fifth to eighth among the\n46 pens in the contest.\nThe period is still ahead when the\npens will be very irregular in their\nperformance, with slumps occurring\nwhen different hens go into the\nmoult. When that period arrives,\nanything can happen to the leaders,\nalthough the Schofield pen at present has a lead over the next pen of\n129.2 points, a nice margin to gamble\nwith.\nFollowing is the standing at the\nend of the 35th week, omitting the\nday-by-day record and the week's\neggs;\nBreed and Wks. Tot, Tot.\nOwner Pts. Eggs Pts.\n8. C. White Leghorns\nAppleby P F  51.2 1472 1522.7\nChalmers, J 52.- 1644 1738.2\nEvans, F. C  64.- 1649 1916.7\nFalrweather, W. M... 52.9 1385 1445.-\nGolding, C. G  48.6 1372 1495.2\nHeadey, C 70.9 1783 1892.2\nKennedy Bros 42.7 1707 1656.2\nLawson,   M  56.1 1728 1874.7\nMetcalfe, C. P.   44.3 1614 1652.-\nWindermere Ex S .... 59.2 1443 1631.9\nMcCurrach, J  57.3 1690 1672.7\nOliver, D. L 55.4 1346 1497.5\nPollok, G. L. H 52.3 1541 1659.6\nPrendergast, Mrs  62.7 1514 1537.9\nRuttledge, M. H  59.9 1866 1940.7\nSangster, R. B  52.8 1618 1820,2\nSchiebler, W. J 69.1 1627 1829.9\nSchofield, A. W 61.8 1812 2069.9\nSmith, T. J 59.6 1478 1645.1\nSwensson, P 53.9 1254 1327.1\nVroom, C 51.- 1699 1742.2\nWatson, A. G  54.2 1773 1773.8\nWhiting, W  65.5 1786 1834.9\nBarnevelders\nFitz-Herbert, H. G... 43.2 1397 1861.-\nBarred Plymouth Rocks\nUniversity of B.C. .. 62.1 1508 1647.1\nAggassiz Ex. Fm  53.6 1587 1585.8\nCram, Jack 53.9 1581 1737.5\nGolding, C. G 45.6 1327 1372.9\nLambie, Jas  50.6 1322 1456.6\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, JULY 10, 19S7.\nRoberts, C. Jt Son .... 43.3 1541 1659.8\nSwastika P. F  43.1 1180 1236.-\nS. C. Rhode Island Reds\nAllen, Mr. & Mrs  47.2 1503 .1655.9\nArnould. H. K. A  55.1 1769 1902.2\nBolivar Hatcheries . 58.- 1519 1654.2\nBrown, Jack  48.1 1297 1419.B\nBurgess, J  39.6 1364 1566.*\nFinch, L. H  57.6 1350 1583.8\nGame, Geo. W  55.6 1521 1622.4\nGoodman, J  58.8 1423 1669.5\nJackson, Colin F  45.6 1419 1635.4\nMaynard, W  39.6 1113 1235.7\nPenzer's Red Fm  55.8 1436 1600.3\nRussell, D  22.4 1401 1540.6\nSwastika P Fm  49.2 1252 1451.-\nThomson, R. G 46.9 1667 1808.\nWclsumers\nFitz-Herbert, H. G... 37.9   836 1014.4\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy the Canadian Press\nToronto and Montreal \u2014 Stocks\nclosed lower.\nNew York\u2014Stocks lower.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat down 1 to Vis\ncents.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver, zinc, lead and\ncopper firmer.\nNew York\u2014Copper, zinc, lead unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Silver higher.\nNew York\u2014Cotton higher, rubber, coffee and sugar lower.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, July 9 (CP)-Van-\ncouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight Tough\nNo. 1 hard   139>A 137V4\nNo. 1 northern   138% 136%\nNo. 2 northern   135% 133%\nNo. 3 northern   132Vi 129*14\nNo. 4 northern   128% 125V4\nNo. 5 wheat   121% 119\nNo. 6 wheat  >  110% 108\nFeed     90% 88\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, July 9 (CP)-But-\nter spot\u2014Quebec (92 score) 25%,\ntraded; eggs spot\u2014Ontario A-large\n24A. Sales\u2014Butter, 200 boxes Quebec fresh (92 score) at 25V\u00ab. Futures\n\u2014Butter steady, unchanged to Vs\ncent higher; July 25%-25%. Sales\n\u2014one November contract at 26%.\nWheat, northern No. 1 .53; barley\nc.w. No. 3 .84; Oats, c.w. No. 2 .71%;\nbran, ton 27.25; shorts 32.25.\nNEW YORK, July 9 (AP)\u2014Bonds\nmoved narrowly and finished irregular today. Issues totalled $7,-\n441,000, against $9,298,000 yesterday.\nChanges in U.S. governmen issues\nwere small, and the federals were\nfirm.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAfton 04\nAldermac       1.11\nAlexandria   02\nArgosy   41\nArntfield  39%\nAstoria Rouyn       .09\nBagamac 18\nBankfield  75\nBase Metals ..      .26\nBeattie Gold      1.20\nBidgood Kirkland 43\nBig Miss  45\nBobjo  13\nBrett Treth     * .07\nBuf Ankerite      9.00\nCan Malartic      1.05\nCent Man  06%\nCent Pat .'     2.75\nChibougamau       1.00\nChr M St S -      .70\nConiaurum       1.20\nCons Min & Smelt    80.00\nDarkwater 53\nDome    40.50\nDorval Siscoe  45%\nE Malartic  06%\nEldorado        2.95\nFalconbridge     7.90\nFed Kirkland      .11\nFrancouer   68\nGillies Lake  37\nGod's Lake  55\nGranada      .20\nGrandoro  08\nGunnar Gold  72\nHardrock      1.26\nBarker Gold 14\nHollinger     11.25\nHowey 34\nHudson Bay    31.35\nInt Nickel     62.00\nJack Waite 67\nJ M Con  21\nKerr Addison     2.46\nKirkland L  *..      1.28\nLake Shore     50.25\nLamaque C  05\nLeach Gold 66\nLebel Oro 16\nLittle L Lac      5.15\nMacassa        5.25\nMadsen R L       .86\nMandy 34\nMan East  02%\nMclntyre     35.50\nMcLeod Cockshutt     2.00\nMk Red L     1.20\nMcVittie    27\nMcWatters  45\nMining Corp      3.50\nMinto Gold  15\nMoneta      1.44\nMorris Kirkland  21%\nNipissing      2.55\nNoranda ,    64.75\nNormetal       1.88\nO'Brien      6.60\nOmega 50\nParkhill 22\nParmour P     2.11\nPaulore M 21%\nPaymaster  56\nPend Oreille     3.60\nPerron 85\nPickle Crow      5.80\nPioneer ....      3.85\nPremier Gold     2.40\nPorcupine Creek 03%\nPowell Rouyn 95\nPreston East      1.00\nQuebec Gold  30\nRead Authier      3.35\nRed Lk Gold    \t\n 41\n.73\n 80\nRitchie G\t\n.04%\nRoche L L      \t\n 13\n      1,65\nSheep Creek \t\nSherritt Gordon \t\n.51\n.78\n      2.60\nSiscoe  \t\nSladen Malartic .\nSlave L Gold \t\nStadacona   \t\nSt Anthony\t\n3.65\ni.oo\n.85\n1.25\n.18\nSudbury Basin     3.80\nSullivan      1.24\nSylvanite      3.20\nTashota  08\nTeck Hughes      4.75\nTowagamac      1.05\nVentures     8.00\nWaite Amulet     3.00\nWhite Eagle  02%\nWhitewater .*       .12\nWright Hargreaves      6.25\nYmir Y Girl      .22\nOIL8\nA P Con 40\nB A Oil    23.50\nC St E Corp ,     3.15\nCalmont       .80\nChem Resh  80\nCommonwealth  37\nDalhousie    99\nEast Crest  - 15\nFoundation  41\nFoothills       -    1.21\nHighwood Sar 25\nHome Oil     2.14\nImp Oil   20.90\nInt Pete    34.35\nMercury  35\nMonarch  44\nOkalta       2.15\nPacalta  21\nRoyalite     48.00\nS W Pete 90\nTexas Can     1.75\nUnited  28\nVulcan   -    2.03\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Pow      7%\nBeatty Bros    17%\nBell Telephone  167%\nBrazilian     24\nBrew St Dist      7\nB A Oil     23%\nBrew Corp      3\nBerw Corp pfd    21\nB C Pow A 34%\nB C Pow B     4%\nBuild Prods    60%\nBurt F N    40%\nCan Bakeries A      4\nCan Bakeries pfd    57\nCan Bud Malt     7%\nCan Car Fdy       15%\nCen Cement pfd    103%\nCan Dredge     41%\nCan Malting     37%\nCan Pac Rail     11%\nCan Ind Alco     6\nCan Ind Alco B     4%\nCan Winneries     2\nCarnation pfd   102\nCons Bakeries    20%\nCons Smelters new    80\nCosmos       25\nDom Stores     9%\nDom Tar & Chem     12%\nDist Seag     21%\nFanny Farmer     22%\nFord A    22%\nGeneral Steel     13%\nGyp L St A     14Vi\nHarding Carpet      5%\nHamilton Bridge    14\nGoodyear Tire    90\nInt Metals     14%\nInt Milling pfd   97\nImp Oil     20%\nImp Tob      14V*\nInt Nickel     81%\nInt Pete     34\nLoblaw A     24%\nLoblaw B     22%\nKelvinator     31\nMaple Leaf Mfg       6%\nMassey Harris     10%\nMcColl Front         9%\nMcColl Front pfd    88%\nMont Pow     30%\nMoore Corp     42%\nPage Hersey   101%\nPow Corp        21\nPressed Metals    26\nSteel of Can     84\nShawinigan       28%\nStan Paving  \u201e     5%\nHiram Walker     47\nMarket and Mining News\nCranbrook High\nSchool Students\nPass Final Exams\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-The students\nof the Cranbrook High school who\npassed their final examinations\nwere: Grade XI, promoted on recommendation\u2014Fred Brjen, Evelyn Nelson, Catherine Fergie and Norma\nSpence. Passed on examination \u2014\nJack Caldwell, Arthur Taplin, Stanley Olson, Gertrude Evans, William\nMoore, Roy Thompson, Bob Murray,\nJoan Bowley, Kathleen Bell, Mar-\ncelle Nedelec, Harry Haynes, Dorothy Thompson, William Draper,\nGeorge Blumenauer, Myrtle Gum*\nmer, Joyce Maidment, Edward Eber-\nlein. Passed with supplementals \u2014\nDorothy Brown, Margaret Erickson,\nElizabeth Walthers, Dave Reekie,\nMaldwyn Miller, Osborne McClure,\nFlowence Williams, Melvin Roberts,\nFrank Futs, Jack Kuhnert, Gordon\nFinley and George Harrison.\nGrade X. Promoted on recommda*\ntion\u2014Nan McLeary, who was winner of the principal's gold medal\nAllen Bakken, Aileen Hayden and\nJack McFadden. Passed on examina\nlion\u2014Laura Bulkot, Margot Van\nBraam, Eva Bartholomew, Eddie\nFrey, Joan MacDonald, Bill Gib\nbons, Minnie Howard, Mary Louise\nAttridge, Dorothy Leonard, Leslie\nJohns, Jim Whitting, Jack Heise,\nGladys Guthrie, George Malcolm,\nEthel Staples, Fred Moore, Hilda\nAtkinson, Gladys Haynes, Gordon\nBorgstrom, Helen MacDonald, Marian Thompson and Douglas Eley.\nPassed with supplementals\u2014Lucille\nHamilton, Margaret Tolfree, Alex\nCaldwell, Frances Carver, Douglas\nKerr, Bill Henderson, Murry Wheaton, Paul Fanning.\nGrade IX. Promoted on recommendation\u2014Mary Philpot, who won\nthe principal* gold medal, Margaret\nBrien, and Robert Phillips. Passed\non examination \u2014 May Davey,\nMichael Provenzano, Jean Countryman, Frank Fergie, Charles Harrison, Bill Walker, Fred Stevenson,\nBeryl Archibald, Bill Purvis, Nelson Bardgett, George MacKinnon,\nJohn George, Betty Carroll, Muriel\nOlson, Arthur Draper and James\nBaird. Passed with supplementals\u2014\nDorothy Curie, Douglas MacKay,\nJames Gibbons, Lois Dickinson,\nMarjorie Bronsdon, Collin Wood,\nDavid Peterman, Harvey Graham,\nRonald Walton, Thelma Carson,\nHarry Lancaster, Lucille Johns,\nErnest Offin, Eleanor McKowan,\nIrene Barrett, Jack Soden, Archie\nReekie, Jin Soden, Archie Kary and\nKenneth Carver.\nThe pupils of grade VIII who\nwere recommended to High school\nby J. E. Brown, district school inspector, G. C. Barclay, principal of\nthe high school and Miss Woodland,\nprincipal of the central school, are-\nRichard Banks, Mary Bardgett, Fred\nBarnhardt, Roger Bertoia, Gordon\nBlumenauer, Margaret Briggs, Helen\nCaldwell, Leone Carroll, Carl Colledge, Henry Colledge, Thelma Dale,\nEthel Dingley, William Flodin,\nEileen Gammon, Ruth Hardy, Suzanne Harrison, Shirley Home,\nGeorge Huggins, Darcy Ironside,\nRobert Jarvis, Myrtle Jones, Katherine Jones, Lawrence Kary, William\nKelly, Pearl Kennedy, William Klu-\ndash, William Laurie, Emily Lind-\nberg, Robert Lunn, Ida Mann, Jean\nMacDonald, Bernice McFadden,\nMurray Mason, Pearl Moore, Mary\nNaso, David Parkin, Cesira Pelegrin,\nJoan Quaife, Ethel Quick, Helen\nScott, Isobel Sneath, Elizabeth\nSpreull, Dorothy Staples, Alex\nSteele, Lars Thompson, Millicent\nUkrainetz, Lorraine Waters, Faith\nWebster, Annie Withers and Zuba\nZilii.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh\n30 Industrials   178.36\n20 Rails  .*    64.85\n20 Utilities     28.48\n40 Bonds     \t\nLow\nClose   Change\n176.65\n177.40\u2014oM   .30\n54.25\n64.30-off   .41\n28.06\n28.18\u2014off   .08\n\t\n101.55\u2014up   .08\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, July 9 (CP)\u2014Silver futures closed firmer today, 10\npoints higher. No sales. Bids: July 44.90; Aug. 44.80; Sept. 44.65; Dec.\n44.60; March 44.50.\nWhy Not a Want Ad?\nBright Spots\nof the Week\n(By the Canadian Press)\nTORONTO\u2014Authorities estimate\nexpenditure in Canada by tourist\nvisitors this year will reach $325,-\n000,000, a gain of 27 per cent over\n1936,\nMONTREAL\u2014Dominion Oil Cloth\nSt Linoleum Co. will spend $100,000\nin the enlargement of their Montreal\nplant.\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont. \u2014 About\n$44,000,000 will be spent during the\nnext three years in construction of\nnew pulp and paper mills and ex*\ntension of present ones in the pro*\nvince, states Hon. Peter Heenan,\nOntario minister of lands and forests.\nCOATICOOK, Que. \u2014 La Salle\nelectrical manufacturing company\nwill lease the new $35,000 factory\nbeing built here.\nVANCOUVER \u2014 Canada Packers\nwill erect a $300,000 abattoir here.\nTORONTO\u2014Canada Cycle Sc Mo*\ntor announce a $50,000 addition to\ntheir west Toronto plant.\nSAINT JOHN, N.B.\u2014Customs and\nexcise receipts at this port jumped\nto $312,353 for June this year, compared to $163,561 for the same\nmonth last year.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, July 9 ,(CP) - Receipts to noon: cattle 182; calves 8:\nhogs 50.\nCattle market slow: common to\nmedium butcher steers 2.50-5.35\ncommon to medium heifers 2.50-\n4.75; no choice offered; good cows\n3.75; good vealers 4.50-5.00; good\nstocker steers 3.50-4.50.\nHogs continued steady; selects\n9.35; bacons 8.85; butchers 8.35.\nLambs lower; good handyweight\n7.50.\nCAR LOADINGS UP\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP)-The first\nhalf of 1937 saw an increase of 108,*\n881 car loadings, or 9.7 per cent over\nthe first half of last year, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported\ntoday. Miscellaneous freight increased by 74,013 cars, merchandise\nwas up 16,289, ore 12,116, other forest products 4729, pulp and paper\n12,986, pulpwood 11,351, lumber tails and livestock 1130. Grain was\ndown 31,082 cars and coal and coke\nshowed a small reduction.\nFRANC GAINS\nNEW YORK, July 9 (AP)-New\nstrength was given to the French\nfranc today following publication of\nthe tax increases by which the\nChautemps government hopes to\nweather the latest finance crisis in\nFrance. The franc ended the day up\n.00% from yesterday at 3.87%. Other\nleading currencies also gained\nagainst the United States dollar.\nThe pound sterling was up 9-16 of\na cent above yesterday at 4.95 15-16.\nAllowing for size and weight of\nindividuals, brains of men and women are approximately equal in\nweight.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED\nA P Con .\nAmal Oil .\nAztec  \t\nBig Missouri \t\nBralorne  \t\nB R Con\t\nC St E Corp\t\nCariboo Gold \t\nCoast Breweries\t\nCommonwealth  Oil\nDentonia Mines \t\nGold Belt Mines ....\nHargal Oil \t\nHome Oil \t\nInt Coal \t\nIsland Mout \t\nKootenay Belle \t\nMak Siccar \t\nMcDougal Segur Ex\nMinto Gold \t\nModel Oil \t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Gold \t\nPremier Border\t\nQuatsino \t\nRelief Arlington\t\nReno Gold \t\nReeves McDonald .\nSalmon Gold \t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilbak   \t\nTaylor B R\t\nVanalta \t\nVidette \t\nWesko   \t\nYankee Girl \t\nCURB\nBaltac Oil \t\nBayview  \t\nBeaver  Silver \t\nBluebird    \t\nB C Nickel\t\nCalmont Oil\t\nCapital Estate\t\nCongress \t\nCork Province \t\nCrows Nest new\t\nDalhousie Oils\t\nDevenish \t\nDunwell Mining\t\nEast Crest Oil \t\nBid\n.09\n.44\n7,0\n.03\n3.15\n1.55\n13.40\n.37\n.13\n.22\n.22\n2.12\n.21%\n.65\n.73\n.02%\n.33\n.13%\n.50\n3.90\n2.40\n,02%\n.04%\n.17\n.80\n.70\n2.05\n.04%\n.10\n.33\n.15%\n.22\n.07\n.00%\n\u25a001%\n.18\n.78\n6.65\n.03%\n,01\n.04%\n1.00\n.06\n.02%\n.13\nAtk\n.41\n7.10\n.04\n3.20\n1.65\n13.50\n.39\n.14\n.24%\n.70\n,80\n.02%\n.33%\n.14\n.62\n3.95\n2.43\n.02%\n.04%\n.18\n.85\n.74\n.09%\n.78\n2.25\n.12\n.38\n.17%\n.08\n.01%\n.03\n.19\n.80\n7.25\n.05\n.01%\n.05%\n1.03\n.03\n.14\nFairview Amal\t\nFederal -Gold \t\nFoundation Pete ......\nFreehold Oil \t\nGeo Enterprise \t\nGeo River \t\nGolconda \t\nGold Mount\t\nGrandview \t\nGrange Mines \t\nGrull Wihksne \t\nHaida \t\nHedley St\t\nHighwood Sarcee ..\nHome Gold \t\nIndian Mines \t\nKoot Florence \t\nKoot King\t\nLakeview Mines\t\nLucky Jim \t\nMadison Oil \t\nMar Jon Oil \t\nMercury   \t\nMeridian new \t\nMcGillivray Coal ....\nMid West Pete \t\nMonarch  \t\nNicola   \t\nNoble Five\t\nNordon Oil\t\nOkalta com\t\nPacalta \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPorter Idaho \t\nPilot Gold \t\nQuesnelle Quartz ....\nRanchmen's \t\nReliance   \t\nReward Mining ......\nRoyalite Oil \t\nHufus Argenta \t\nRuth Hope \t\nSilver Crest\t\nSilversmith  \t\nStandard S L \t\nSunloch Mines \t\nU D L\t\nUnited Oil \t\nViking Gold\t\nVulcan Oil \t\nWaverly Tang new\nWellington Mines ...\nWhitewater  \t\n.07%\n.02%\n.38\n.11\n.06%\n.04\n.17%\n.01%\n.08\n.00%\n.24\n.02%\n.021\/4\n.01%\n.00%\n.01%\n.05\n.09%\n.15\n.35%\n.01\n.19\n.11\n.42%\n.05\n.05%\n.15\n2.18\n.20%\n3.70\n.04%\n.07\n.27\n.08\n47.00\n.02%\n.03\n.04%\n.02\n.41\n.20\n.90\n.29\n.01%\n2.00\n.00%\n.03%\n.13\n.03\n.40\n.13\n.03%\n.02%\n.07\n.04%\n.18\n.01%\n.09\n.02\n.26\n.03\n.02%\n.02%\n.02\n.05%\n.09 Vz\n.17\n.36\n.43%\n.04%\n.08\n.15%\n2.19\n.20%\n3.85\n.05\n.04\n.29\n.02%\n.08%\n50.00\n.03%\n.07\n.30\n.01%\n2.05\n.01\n.13%\nWINNIPEG LOSES\nWINNIPEG, July 9, (CP)-Ner-\nvous selling jjased on expectations\nthe United States government winter-wheat crop report after the\nclose would be bearish resulted in\nwheat futures closing 1 to 1% cents\nlower on the Winnipeg grain exchange today.\nWheat rallied from low points of\nmore than three cents under the\nprevious close on a buying splurge\nbelieved to have resulted from the\noversold condition. July wheat finished at $1.44, October $1.37%-% and\nDecember $1.35%.\nSlump in prices was checked during the first part of the session by\nexport sales of Canadian wheat estimated at 500,000 bushels.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG,\nuly 9\n(CP)\u2014Grain\nquotations:\nOpen\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nJuly     145%\n146\n142%\n144\nOct  139\n140\n135%\n137%\nDec 136\n137\n132%\n133%\nOats:\nJuly       65\n65\n62%\n63%\nOct    54%\n55%\n54\n54%\nDec    52%\n52%\n50%\n51\nBarley:\nJuly      72%\n72%\n72\n72\nOct   68\n68\n66%\n66%\nDec    68\n68\n65\n65%\nFlax:\nJuly    179%\n180\n179'\/,\n180\nOct  183\n183\n180\n181%\nDec   \u2014\n\u2014\n_\n180%\nRye:\nJuly    143\n144   .\n143\n144\nOct  103\n103\n98%\n98%\nDec    98%\n98%\n96\n96%\nCash wheat: No. 1 hard 144%; No,\n1 northern 144%i No. 2 northern\n142; No. 3 northern 138%; No. 4\nnorthern 135; No. 5, 125; No. 6, 119;\nfeed 103; No. 1 garnet 139; No. 2\ngarnet 136%; No. 4 special 123; No.\n5 special 119; No. 6 special 122;\ntrack 144.\nNEWYORKSLIPS\nNEW YORK, July \u00bb (AP)-After\nadvancing for seven consecutive\nsessions, the stock market today\ngave ground under mild profit selling.\nRecently strong steels, motors and\nrails led the quiet retreat. At the\nsame time, advances were plentiful\nat the close, with farm implements\nand specialties conspicuous on the\nupside. '\nBusiness news generally was\npleasing, but brokers found many\nof their customers inclined to cash\nin some of their gains after the\nlengthy recovery on the theory a\nsetback was overdue.\nAnalysts were cheered by the fact\nvolume dwindled appreciably on the\ndecline and that closing recessions\ngenerally were confined to fractions.\nTransfers amounted to 845,420\nshares compared with 1,033,390 yesterday.\nMONTREAL EASES\nMONTRJAL, July 9, (CP)\u2014Prices\ntended to ease on the stock exchange today as the majority of\nthe issues recorded fractional losses.\nNickel lost % at 61% and Noranda added % at 64%, C.P.R. touched a low for the year at 11%.\nBrazilian tracked on the minimum fraction while Montreal Power\neased % and Bell Telephone %.\nMassey Harris lost % at 10%.\nA gain of % showed for Fraser\nVoting Trusts at 46% on the curb.\nConsolidated sold off % at 17%.\nMassey Harris preferred slipped\nthree points at 57. Royalite Oil sold\nat 47 for a loss of 1%.\nEldorado gained 15 cents at 2.95\nwith gains of five cents each posted\nfor Falconbridge and Siscoe.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, July 9, (CP)-ClosIng:\nBrazilian $24%; CPR $12%; Int.\nNickel $61%; U. S. Steel $110%; Brit\nAm Tob \u00a31 7s 6d; Courtaulds 51s\n10%d; Corn \u00a312%; Ford 27s 3d;\nH. H. C. 36s 3d; Mining Trust 4s 9d;\nRand \u00a37%; Rhodesian Anglo Am\n30s; Springs 30s; Venterspost Gold\n7s 6d; Vickers 28s 9d.\nBonds\u2014Brit 2% per cent Consols\n\u00a374; Brit 3% per cent War Loan\n\u00a3100%; Brit Funding 4s 1960-90\n\u00a3110.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nAlta Pac Gr A     3\nAssoc Brew of Can  14\nBathurst P & P A  20%\nBell Telephone '\u201e  168\nBrazil T L St P  24%\nBrit Col Power A  34%\nBrit Col Power B      7%\nBuild Prod A   62\nCan Cement  17\nCan Cement pfd   105\nCan North Power  21%\nCan Bronze   48\nCan Car & Fdy  15\nCan Car & Fdy pfd  25%\nCan Celanese  24%\nCan Hydro Elec pfd   76%\nCan Pac Rly  11%\nCockshutt Plow   14%\nCon Min St Smelt  80\nDist C Seagrams   22\nDom Bridge   49%\nDom Coal pfd  20\nDom Steel St Coal B  22%\nDom Textile  80y4\nDryden Paper  16\nFoundation of Can   24\nGen Steel Wares  13%\nGurd Charles   11%\nGyp Lime St, Al  14%\nHamilton Bridge   14\nHamilton Bridge pfd  75\nHolt Renfrew   14\nHoward Smith Paper  30%\nHow Smith P pfd  -  104\nImperial Oil   20%\nImperial Tobacco  14%\nInt Nickel of Can  61%\nInt Pete   30\nMassey Harris  10%\nMcColl Frontenac  10\nMont L H & P  30%\nNat Brew   39%\nNat Steel Car  51%\nOgilvie Flour  241\nPower Corp of Can   21%\nQuebec Power    18\nSt Law Corp     12%\nSt Law Corp A pfd    34%\nSt Law P Mills    87%\nShawinigan W & P    28%\nSth Can Power     14\nSteel of Can     84\nSteel of Can pfd    77\nWest Grocers    69%\nBANKS\nBank of Canada    58%\nCanadienne    160\nNova Scotia  320\nRoyal  202\nToronto  , 250\nCURB\nAbitibi P St P     7%\nBathurst P St P B     9\nBeauharnois Power     7%\nBrew Corp of Can     3%\nBrew Corp of C pfd    21\nB A Oil    23%\nB C Packers    18\nCan Malt    37\nCan Marconi     1%\nCan Vickers .,     9\nCan Wineries  1.90\nCons P Corp     17%\nDonnacona P A    16%\nDonnacona P B    15%\nFord Motor A ,- 22%\nFraser Co     45\nInt Utilities A    Jo%\nInt Utilities B      1%\nMacLaren Power    32%\nRobert Mitchell    22%\nPage Hersey  100\nRoyalite Oil    47\nUnited Dist of Can 85\nWalker Good & Worts    46%\nWalker Good pfd    19\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAl Chem  228%\n102%\n8%\n20%\n92%\n169\n79%\nAm Can \t\nAm For Pow ....\nAm Mac & Fdy\nAm Smelt It Re\nAm Tel .\nAm Tob\nAnaconda     56%\nAtchison      83%\nAuburn   Motors   17\nAv Corp      7\nBaldwin        6%\nBait St Ohio    29%\nBendix Av     20%\nBeth Steel    92%\nBorden     24\nCan Dry    27V*\nCPR    12%\nCerro de Pasco   70-%\nChes Si Ohio    55%\nChrysler    105%\nCon Gas N Y ....   36%\nCorn Prods    63%\nC Wright pfd ....\nDupont   \t\nEast Kodak \t\nEl Power St Lt\nErie \t\nFord English ....\nFord Canada ....\nFirst Na tStores\nFreeport   Texas\nGen Foods     38\nGen Motors     53%\nGoodrich     40%\nGranby        9%\nGreat Nor pfd ..   51%\nGreat West Sug\nHecker Prods ..\nHowe Sound ....\nHudson   Motors\nInter Nickel\t\nInter Tel & Tel\nKenn Cop \t\n6'.z\n157%\n177%\n19%\n16%\n6%\n22%\n42%\n28%\n35%\n12%\n78%\n16%\n62%\n11%\n60%\nLow\n228\n101%\n8\u00bb\u00bb\n20%\n91%\n168%\n78%\n55%\n82\n16%\n8%\n6%\n29%\n20%\n90%\n23%\n27\n11%\n70\n51%\n103%\n36%\n63\n6%\n156%\n177\n19\n16%\n6%\n22%\n42\n28%\n37%\n53\n39%\n9%\n51\n35%\n12\n78\n15%\n61%\n11%\n60\nClose\n228%\n101%\n8si\n20%\n92%\n169\n79\n55%\n82\n17\n7\n6%\n20%\n20%\n00%\n23%\n27\n11%\n70%\n51%\n103%\n36%\niV\n6%\n156%\n177%\n19%\n16%\n6%\n22%\n42\n28%\n37%\n53\n39%\n9%\n51\n35%\n12%\n78\n15%\n81%\n11%\nKresge S S\t\nKroegger St Toll\nMack Truck\t\nMilwaukee   pfd\nMont Ward\t\nNash Motors ....\nNat Dairy Prcds\nN Power St Lt ..\nN Y Central ....\nPac Gas St El ....\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R\t\nPhillips Pete ....\nPure Oil \t\nRadio Corp\t\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand \t\nSafeway  Stores\nShell Un \t\nS Cal Edison ....\nSouth Pac \t\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStew Warner ....\nStudebaker   \t\nTexas Corp\t\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTimken Roll ....\nUnder Type \t\nUn Carbide\t\nUn Oil of Cal ....\nUn Aircraft \t\nUn Biscuit\t\nUn Pacific _\t\nU S Pipe\t\nU S Rubber \t\nU S Steel \t\nVan Steel \t\nWarner Bros ....\nWest Elec \t\nWoolworth \t\nWrigley \t\nYellow Truck ..\n22%     22%\n21        20%\n45%\n2\n45%\n2\n61% 60%\n18% 18%\n20% 20%\n10% 10\n41% 40%\n30% 29%\n9% 9\n40% 40\n59 58%\n20% 19%\n9% 9%\n8% 8%\n25 24%\n33% 33%\n28% 28%\n24% 24%\n48% 47%\n43% 43\n44% 44\n68% 68%\n18%\n14%\n62\n36%\n1B%\n13%\n61%\n35%\n62% 62%\n86 85%\n103% 102%\n43% 43\n30% 29%\n23% 23%\n131\n54\n129%\n54\n62%     61%\n109% 108%\n30% 29%\n14%     13%\n148% -47\n46% 46%\n69% 69%\n25% 25\n22%\n20Vi\n45%\n2\n60%\n18%\n20%\n10\n40%\n30 Vi\n9\n40\n59\n20\n9%\n8%\n24%\n33%\n28%\n24%\n48\n43%\n44\n68%\n18%\n13%\n61%\n36\n62%\n86\n102%\n43%\n29%\n23%\n130\n54\n61%\n108%\n29'A\n14%\n\u2022148\n46%\n69%\n25\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, July 9 (AP)-Cop-\nper quiet; electrolytic spot and future 14.00; export 14.10-20.\nTin, easy, spot and nearby 59.37-50;\nfuture 57.75-87.\nLead, quiet, spot, New York 6.00-\n6.25; East SL Louis 5.85.\nZinc quiet, east SL Louis spot\nand future 6.75.\nIron, aluminum, antimony, quicksilver, platinum and wolframite unchanged.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nLondon, closing: Copper standard\nspot and future \u00a356 6s 3d; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a362; asked \u00a364.\nTin spot and future \u00a3263 5s.\nLead spot \u00a324 16s 3d; future \u00a324\nlis 3d.\nZinc spot \u00a322 10s; future \u00a322\n13s 9d.\nBar silver firmed, up 3-16 at\n20 3-16d.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, July 9 (CP)-Brit-\nish and foreign exchange closed\nhigher today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, .3031.\nAustralia, pound, 3.9665.\nBrazil, milreis, .0666.\nChina, Hong Kong dollar, .3032.\nIndia, rupee, .3751.\nJapan, yen,  .2885.\nNew Zealand, pound, 3.9985.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9431.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2294.\nNOBLE FIVE OFF\nVANCOUVER, July 9 (CP)-Oil\nIssues drifted fractionally lower on\nVancouver stock exchange today in\ndull trading. Golds and base metals\nwere mostly unchanged as transfers\ntotalled 127,561 shares.\nVulcan Oil declined 7 at 2.00,\nOkalta 3 at 2.16 and A. P. Consolidated 2 at 40. Home dropped one\ncent at 2.12 while Model at 59 and\nFoundation Petroleum at 38 both\nslipped 3. Calgary & Edmonton at\n3.15 and Dalhousie at 1.00 were unchanged.\nIn the base metals, Grandview was\ndown 1 at 17% while Whitewater\nat 13 and Noble Five at 5% dropped\nfractions. Pend Oreille at 3.70 and\nB. C. Nickel at 18 held unchanged.\nU.S. DOLLAR STEADY\nMONTREAL, July 9 (CP)-Pound\nsterling advanced % cent on Mon-\nreal foreign exchanges today to\n196 25-32. The French franc moved\n.01 cent higher to 3.88 cents while\nthe United States dollar was unchanged at 3-16 premium.\n\u25a0 PAGE ELEVI|\nTORONTO STOCK\nMARKET FALLS\nTORONTO, July t (CP)\u2014Torontt\nstock market fell into t downward\nslant today following a week of rt*\ning prices.\nMassey-Harris pfd weakened CM\nto 55 and the common was down %\nto 10%. Losses of minor friction\nshowed at the close for Dominion\nSteel St Coal \"B'V United Steel.\nHollinger, Lake Shore and Me\nIntyre finished unchanged and\nDome registered a minor loss. But*\nfalo-Ankerite was off 20 cents in\nslow action.\nLosses of 5 to 15 cents were board'\ned for Chibougamau, Kerr-Addison,\nLaguna, Macassa, Little Long Lae,\nMacLeod-Cockshutt, O'Brien and\nSiscoe.\nStrawberries\nAM al Peal\nRoyal Anne Cherries*\nMoving; Bings Are\nDue Next Week\nStrawberries are about at thett\npeak, and will probably be ovei\nshortly, reports Robert Foxall, man:\nager of Nelson sub-central of tht\nAssociated Growers.\nRoyal Ann cherries are beglnnlnl\nto move from the Arrow lakes dls*\ntrict and Bings are expected to 1*\non the market next week. It i\nprobably also that raspberries wU\nbegin to move next week.\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Preii\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.90 25-J!\nfranc 3.88; U.S. dollar 1,00 3-16.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.95 15-U\nfranc 3.87%; Canadian dollar\n51-64.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 128.12 franci\nU.S. dollar 25.92% francs; Canadlai\ndollar 25.80% francs.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12s Id; U.S. dollar 59.43 cents; Canadim dolls:\n59.28 cents.\n\t\nBAR  GOLD   UP   ONE\nMONTREAL, July 9 (CP)-Bt\ngold in London up one cent at $34.81\nin Canadian funds; 140s 5%d\nBritish. The fixed $35 Washingtol\nprice amounted to $35.06 in Caw\ndian.\nINVESTMENT SERVICE\nStocks and Bonds\nBought and Sold\nA. M. Webb & Co., Ltd.\nBird & Tailing Ltd.\u2014Vancouver Correspondents\nPhone 923 516 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nVOUR\nHave the Daily News Sent to Your\nVacation Address or\nBuy Your Copy From Any of Theie Dealers\nAINSWORTH\nSilver Ledge Inn\nCALGARY\nHarry's News & Tobacco\nStand, 109\u20148th Ave., West\nCASCADE\nH. P. Ritchie\nCRANBROOK\nBeattie-Noble Ltd.\nH. W. Laker\nMac's News Stand\nScott's Cranbrook Drug &\nBook Co. \u2022\nCRESTON\nCreston Bakery\nCreston Drug St Book Store\nPalm Confestionery\nWinter St Co.\nFERNIE\nW. A. Ingram\nFRUITVALE\nR. G. Eustis\nM. Watson\nCRAND FORKS\nCheeri-O-Shoppe\nWoodland Drug Co.\nGREENWOOD\nGreenwood Drug Store\nKASLO\nChas. W. Webster\nKIMBERLEY\nChatson's Confectionery\nKimberley Drug & Book Co.\nLtd.\nKimberley Pharmacy\n0. M. Samuelson\nNELSON\nArmstrong's Grocery\nAvenue Service Station\nBishop's News Stand\nCity Drug St Stationery Co.\nC.P.R. Lunch Counter\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHume Hotel\nMann-Rutherford Co.\nSavoy Hotel\nValentine's News Stand\nWait's News Depot\nROSSLAND\nCherrington's Confectionery\nRexall Drug Store, J. C.\nUrquhart\nRossland Drug & Book\nStore\nRossland Bus Depot\nSALMO\nJ. F. Donaldson\nSalmo-Ymir Meat Market,\nSheep Creek\nSPOKANE\n, S. P. Jacoy, 226 Steveni St.\nTRAIL\nArlington Hotel\nB. B. Taxi\nCrown Point Hotel\nJ. M. Doughty\nHunt's Confectionery\nK. A. Margeson\nScheer's Gift Shop\nSchwanz Confectionery\nTrail News Agency\nVANCOUVER\nPost Office News Stand\nWYNNDEL\nA. W. Burch\nYMIR\nS. A. Curwcn\nJ. Daly\nOn C. P. R. Traini, C. N. Traini and Kootenay Lake Ferry\nFrom Fraser'i Landing.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nmm\n ,it.*.M'W-aip*)fiHWAbJ*w\n-    NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, JULY 10. 1J87.    \t\nP^lS^W^f'BWTf^;*^\n:.\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0.   \",:\u25a0;-,-\u25a0 \u2014 .\u25a0\u25a0:-\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.-\u25a0\u25a0..-.-. .\nILMS\nTo Fit All Camerai\nlann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nHEW> OF THE DAY\nSEE PAGE TWO\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\n\u2022Iterations,\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nRE: DUNK AND CONWAY-BANKRUPTS\nTenders will be received by the undersigned up until 12 o'clock noon,\nWednesday, July 14th, Inst., for the whole of the stock and fixtures\nof the above Bankrupts, situate at 510 Ward street, Nelson, B.C.\nTenders may be for both parcels or may be for one, teperate from\nthe other. Inventory may be seen at the Office of the Trustee, Clvlo\nCentre Building, Nelson, B.C. Stock has an Inventory value at cost\nof approximately $1400.00. Terms; Cash. The Highest or any tender\nnot necessarily accepted.\n>\nD. StDENIS, Trustee.\nGOOD     THINGS    TO     EAT\nKEEP\nCOOL!\nHow about the L.D. I     0ur Fountain experts will de-\na\nfancy Fountain dishes.\nL.D. CAFE\nNELSON'8   FINE8T   RE8TAURANT\nLOOK!\nBoys and Girls\nFREE SHOWS\nThis summer Kelly, Douglas & Co., Ltd., makers of\nthe famous NABOB brands of good foods, want\nevery boy and girl in British Columbia to have a real\nsummer holiday. So they have arranged to provide free\nshows, until further notice, at your leading theatre,\nevery Saturday afternoon. All pictures will be full\nlength features with aclded attractions and admission\nwill be by NABOB coupons which mother gets in her\nNABOB tea, coffee and baking powder.\nEVERY SATURDAY MATINEE\nCAPITOL\nHere's all you have to do. Save three NABOB coupons and present them at the box office. They will ad-\nTHEATRE\nmit you to these free shows.\nNABOB\nTO KEEP YOUR LAWN BEAUTIFUL\nYOU MUST HAVE\nA Good Lawn Mower\nv&f^L\nis\nFrom 14\"\nto 21\" wide.\n1\nl^eW-^sl\nFrom\n$10.15\nto\n$29.00\nEach\nSee our stock\ntoday.\nSturdy well\nbuilt Canadian\nmachines that\nwill give you\nsatisfaction\nand last a life\ntime.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nfor Sunday Dinner?        light  you   with   their   really\nNelson Business\nCollege\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\nCommence Any Time\nSMYTHE'S\nBLACK DEATH TO BED BUCS\nAt SMYTHE'S\nPrescription Druggist\nPHONE 1\nSATURDAY\nONLY\nWe have been fortunate\nto procure 8 tweed sport\njackets at an exceptionally low figure. Regular\nvalue $10.00. We are offering them for today\nonly at $6.45.\nJACK BOYCE\nSTYLE SHOP\n(0> Baker St. Phone 160\nAGENERAL\nFAVORITE\nColumbia\nLager\nCOMING\u2014MONDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY\nGonttol ifoutia\/jf;\/.\nThey're coming on\nskates I Listen lo*\nth* cheering in\nthi streets I\nBilibint\u2022 Herriel Hooter * Math by Oeorga\nGerthwln. Lyrlct by Ira G.rtkwln. Directed by '\nMark Sandrlcb. A Pandro S. Barman Production.\nIIO\nIA0IO\nPicture\nKootenay\nBreweries\nLimited\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government o(\nBritish Columbia.\nWant Ads Get Results\nThe\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nSPECIALS \u2022\nFor July 10 and 12\nCAMPERS' NEEDS\nBurns Beef Stew\u2014 (Just\nfine): 1 Ib. tin ..'.\t\nBurns Sandwich Meat\u2014\n(Just fine) 1 Ib. tin ......\nPotted Meats\u2014\n; tins for  \t\nKipper Snacks\u2014\n4 tins for \t\nPickles\u2014Sweet Mixed:\nQuart jar\t\nGherkins\u2014Sweet:\nQuart jar.\nKraft Boiled Dreislno\u2014\n12 oi. Jar .'\t\nLettuce\u2014Large:\n2 heads for\t\nTomatoes\u2014Fresh Hot\nHouse: Per Ib\t\nSugar\u2014Granulated:\n20 Ibs. for\t\n8almon\u20148ockeye:\nVt Ib. tins, 4 for\t\nCoffee, 1 Ib. and 5 Ibi.\nGranulated Sugar for..\nEggs\u2014Fresh Local:\n2 doi. for -.\nPurex Tissue\u2014\n6 rolls for\t\n8trawberry Jam\u2014-\n2 Ib. tin \t\nMaxwell House Coffee\u2014Huskies\n(Wheat Flakes)\u2014 AtA\n1 large pkt.: Both for *\u2022*\u00bb*\n210*\n28\u00a3\n25*\n30<!\n23*\n25*\n18*\n$1.35\n 55*\n50*\n55*\n45*\n40*\nPHONE 110\nFor all fresh Vegetables, Ice\nCream, Fresh Cream and Milk\nContinuous Deliveries to 6 p.m.\nSell It With a Want Ad\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhono 665     610 Kootenay St\nFountain Dishes\nat the Star\nIt really Is awfully\nhot these days\u2014But\nthere is one really\nnice place for you\nladies to cool off in\nNelson and that is\nat the Star\u2014their\nfountain dishes are\n5crumptuous.\nS-T-A.R\nCAFE\nGROCERY\nSuccessors to J. A, Irving A Co,\nPHONE 161\nEffective\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\n1 All-Wheat Flakes, 1  Kellogg's\nCorn Flakes and 1 Mixing <t\u00a3-ft\nBowl\u2014All for *3V\nBottle Caps\u2014Box of 144 yt\\A\ncapi: All for *Kfr\nWater Glass\u2014Large tins:  f Aft\nBuy now: Per tin \"JrV\n1 pkg, of II hi, 40 plecea or 1 pkg.\nof Cheese  Bites\u2014Christies: re A\n10*\n37*\n17*\n19*\nEach pkg.\nToilet Soap\u2014\n3 dlff. bars ..\nDry Peaches\u2014Very fresh:\n2 lbs\t\nKetchup Ideal\u201414 oz\nbottle: New: Each\t\nLibby's\u2014Pork  &  Beans:\n16 oi. tins: 2 tins\t\nWe have our complete stock of\nFruit Jars and Fittings in now\nat prices much  lower than  last\nyear.\n1 Maxwell House Coffee and 1\nlarge pkg. of Huikies\u2014 ACA\nAll for tJr\nWATER   MELON8\nON ICE ALLSIZE8\nPeaches for slicing\u2014\nPer bask\t\nTomatoes\u2014Hot house:\n2 Ibs\t\nOnlono\u2014Green new:\n4 bunches\t\nCarrots\u2014Large and new:\n2 bunches \t\nBeets\u2014 Good tops:\n2 bunches \t\nCantaloups\u2014Jumbo,  firm yaA\n2 for  SiY\nHead Lettuce\u2014 Firm, large f f\u00bbA\n2 heade  OV\nCucumbers\u2014\nEach 6c and 3 for\t\nNew Green Peas\u2014\n3 Ibs\t\nNew Potatoes\u2014\n6 Ibs\t\nBananas\u2014Firm and ripe: tL*A\n3 Ibs OV\nFREE   DELIVERY\n39*\n35*\n10$\n15*\n75*\n25*\n25*\n23*\nPlan Now to Attend the\nInternational Mining\nCONVENTION\nNELSON B.C.\nWEDNESDAY\nJULY 14th\nTHURSDAY\nJULY 15th\nFRIDAY\nJULY 16th\n\u2022 Outstanding Speakers\n\u2022 Mineral Exhibit\nThe Largest Ever Assembled in the Interior of B. C.\n\u2022 Inspection of Trail Smelter\nA Special Train Leaving at 9 a.m., Provided by the Chamber of Mines Will\nTransport All Visitors to Trail and Return. Tickets can be purchased by Nelson\nResidents at Excursion rate of $1.00.\n\u2022 Visit Famous Mines\nCars Will Be Provided by Nelson Residents\nFree Privileges to\nVisitors\nIncluding Ladies\nBy registering at the Convention Headquarters at\nthe Civic Centre, visitors\nmay receive FREE tickets\nfor the train trip to Trail,\nbanquet, dance, etc.\nNELSON RESIDENTS\nAre especially invited to\nattend the banquet Wednesday night\u2014\nTICKETS $1.00\nAttractive Social Events That\nAssure a Qrand Time for All\nBOXLA GAME\nThursday Evening, 9 p.m.\nBANQUET\nWednesday Evening, 6:30 p.m.\nLawn Bowling: Tennis\nGolf: Bathing: Boating\nDANCE\nOn the largest dance floor in British Columbia to the\nmusic of Margaret Graham and Her Orchestra.\nADMISSION\nTOUR BITS'\nCONVENTION HEADQUARTERS\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE\nLadies\nHere Is Your Program\nAfternoon tea at the Nelson Coif and Country club.\nGarden Party at the residence of S. G. Blaylock.\nScenic Auto Trips Along\nBeautiful Kootenay Lake.\nGolf any time\nDancing Friday Evening\nYOUR\nHOSTS\nChamber of Mines of Eastern B. C.\nThe Corporation of the City of Nelson\nThe Nelson Board of Trade\nDistrict Mine Owners\nSEEK SHARE FOR YOUNG\nBABE\nVANCOUVER, July 8 (CP)-Mr.\nJustice Manson in supreme court\ntoday reserved judgment concerning the $1,000,000 estate ot David\nSloan, mining engineer killed August 4,1935, in an airplane crash. Mrs.\nMonica Alexandria Sloan sought a\nshare in the estate for Frances Dav-\nida Sloan, born December, 3, 1935,\ntour months after the accident. The\nwill specifically named the three\neldest children.\nWhy Not a Want Ad?\n- YOUR OWN -\nCIVIC\nContinuous From 1:15\nFRED MacMURRAY\nJACK OAKIE\nJEAN PARKER in\n\"The Texas\nRanger\"\nThe Glorious Fighting Romance of America's Bengal\nLancers.\nA Poramount Pictuie\nAT 2:00, 4:50, 7:10, 9:55\nPLUS\nSLIDE\nNELLIE\nSLIDE\nTWO   GRAND   SHORTS\nThe   Fourth   Installment\nPLUS\nVincent\nLope*\nand His\nOrchestra\nFlannel\nand Tropical\nSLACKS\nBe comfortable this summer in a pair of flannel or\ntropical worsted* slacks.\nIdeal for sport, business\nor dress wear in plain\nshaded stripes and checks.\n$4.95 to f 7.50\nFMORY'C\n*-'     Limited       W\nJOHN BECKER DIES\nVERNON, B.C., July 9 (CD-\nJohn Becker, resident of Vernon for\n30 years, died here today. Born In\nPerth, Ontario, Mr. Becker lived In\nCalgary before coming here. He is\nsurvived by his widow and a son,\nWilliam.\nand-\nON OUR STAGE\nAt 4:05 and 9:05 p.m. Only\nMcCULLOCH and\nSHARP\nWho will delight you with\na program of novelty dancing\nCOMING MONDAY\nRichard Barthomless in\nThe Spy of Napoleon\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 309\nMedical Arts Bldg\nUnivex Cine \"8\"\nMOVIE CAMERA\nWith F. 5.6 lens\n$14.95. 30 ft. standard film 95c.\nAs(c to see It at\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nHeadquarters for Cameras and Films\nA Greeting Card for\nEvery Occasion\nLAST\nTIMES\nTODAY\nCONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 1:00 P.M.\n-    VOU WANT IT\nI ro BR!\nThe screw'' \u25a0M\u00abhleM\nUdy ol \u00ablu\u00bb<>ur\nm row*\n\"*'        in the \u2022\"\u00bb\u2022\u00bb',_, -,\nIRR01HWN\n0i-Green Light\nAnother Down\nrKi$$S\nHerbert M\u2122*'!^ DieTERLE\nM\u00b0\"0AW.\u2122\u00abBr\u00ab.Wu\"\nFeature Starts at 1:54,4:40, 7:26, 10:12\nTHIS WILL TICKLE YOUR RIBS\nJANE WITHERS\nIN\n\"ANGEL'S HOLIDAY\"\nBOYS and GIRLS\nFREE\nSHOW\nCHILDREN I\nOVtoUUilL\nIRTURDIIV\nFREE\nSHOW\nJust bring 3 coupons of 1 pound package of Nabob Tea,\nCoffee or Baking Powder, and the Cashier will give you\na ticket.\nSpecial Matinee for Children at 1:00\nSerial \u2014 \"BURN 'EM UP BARNES\"\nMickey Mouse\u2014DON DONALD\nOswald\u2014MONKEY WRETCHES\nTerry Toon\u2014CIRCUS DAYS\nmmmmiamm\nm\/tmmmm\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_1937_07_10","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\/1.0412207","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. 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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. 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