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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":" m\nT~\nm\u2014\nmith Wins Victoria\nGolf Championship\n-~Pd$e Seven\nFlour and Oats Up 10, E&s\nHi&herln Nelson\n\u2014Pa&e Ten\n\"^\u2022^\nJLUME  35\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-THURSDAY MORNINO. JULY 30. 1936\nNUMBER SS\nARE HELD IN FR\nINLY 9 SEATS UNDECIDED AND\n.EDS 7 M WIN OUT\nBut His Party Leading in Only two of Them;\n.Conservatives Elect 14 and Leading in\nTwo; C.C.F. Elects Four Members\nCOTAL OPPOSITION\n5LECTED NOW IS 27\n>ocial Credit Is Likely\nto Have Five Seats\nin New House\n\u25a0 Standings by parties In the\nManitoba general elections it 11\nf).m. C.8.T., (9 p.m. P.S.T.) today\nwere: \t\nLiberal-Progressives elected .    21\nConservitlvei elected   14\nSocial Credit elected    4\nCC.F. elected            4\nIndependent elected     4\nCommunist elected    1\nLiberal-Progressives leading .   2\nConservatives leading'    2\nCC.F. leading    1\nSocial Credit leading    1\nIndependent leading     1\nDeferred     2\nJTotal  ., 55\nOPPOSITION LEADING\nWINNIPEG, July 29 (CP'.-The\ncombined forces of the opposition\ngained a lead of four seats tonight\nIn the torrid battle for control of\nManitoba's legislature. It was the\nfirst time since counting of ballots\nstarted in Monday's general election\nthat Premier John Bracken's Libr\neral-Progressive party' had trailed.\nReports from five constituencies\ntonight brought more bad news for\nthe government, Seven went to the\nopposition while Hon. W. J. Major\nand Hon. J. C. McDiarmid; cabinet\nminister--, were- returned at Winnipeg tnd R. F. Shannon, i Liberal-\nProgressive, captured Springfield, a\nteat formerly held by an Indepen-\n'dent\nYAHK STORE IS\nROBBED\nYAHK, B.C.,\u2014The men*! furnishing and tobacco store owned\nand operated by Herman Peterson, wis broken Into it night.\nA quantity of cigarettes, tobacco,\nties and socks, etc., was stolen.\nSo far the' thief or thieves who\ngained entry by removing a pane\nof glass have not been apprehended. '\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nINJURED AT COAST\n.VANCOUVER, July 29 (CP)' -\nCumakuchi Endo was in hospital\ntoday with severe head and neck\nInjuries and bruises to his legs suffered when he fell from a scow to\na boom of logs on Burrard inlet.\nBRITAIN TO BUILD\nTWO WARSHIPS\nLONDON, July 29 (CP)-Plans\nfor construction of two new battleships included in the 1937 naval-\nrearmament program were announced today in the house of commons by Sir Samuel Hoare, first\nlord of the admiralty.\nSir Samuel said construction\nwould begin in January, ,1937, with\nfinal details as to the cost to be negotiated later with the contractors.\nSixteen-inch guns will be used\non the new warships, under tentatively-announced plans, in the hope\nother countries will follow with the\nsame sized pieces.\nHENRY FORD IS\n73 TODAY\nBIG BAY, Mich., July 29 (AP)-\nFollowlng. \u00bb wutom he_ established\na few years ago, Henry Ford will\nobserve hia 73rd birthday tomorrow at hii lodge In the Huron Mountain club acres, west and north of\nhere on the rugged- Lake Superior\ncoast. No birthday celebration was\nplanned.\nHURT   IN  COLLISION\n.NEW-WESTMINSTER, B.C., July\n29 (CP) \u2014W. Gourly today was in\nhospital with head injuries suffered when an automobile in which\nhe was riding came in colliiion with\nanother vehicle here,.\nKing Edward is Just About\nMobbed by Vimy Pilgrims\nTelks and Jokes Before 8000 Canadians Crowded Into\nGrounds of Buckingham Palace\nTHIS COLLISION\nNEED NEV\/ER WAVE\nHAPPENED.''\nBy THOMAS T. CHAMPION\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Jt-ly 29 (CP Cable)\u2014King Edwtrd hli never been nearer\nt real undisguised mobbing thin when he appeared it tht Duke of\nGloucester's garden party to 8000 Canadian  Vimy pilgrims todiy it\nBuckingham palace,\nGlrli struggled to pat him on the back and men thrust forward to shake\nhands. His bodyguard of detectives had to apply genial but unmistakable\ns: force to make way for him. He\nseemed to enjoy it thoroughly and\nwas all smiles when at lengtl), looking not at all disconcerted, he reached the comparative seclusion of the\nroyal enclosure.\nHis appearance was in the nature\nof a surprise, as it was the Duke of\nGloucester's entertainment primarily and there was doubt as to\nwhether His Majesty would be able\nto attend.\nBut lo delighted cheers and amid\na whirlwind rush of berets and hats\nof every feminine variety, the King\nwas eventually spotted, hatless and\nin a grey lounge suit striding across\nthe lawn!\nThousands oi visitors wedged\nthemselves around the royal enclosure, eager to catch even a\nglimpse of His Majesty and his companions, the.Duke and Duchess of\nGloucester and other, guests.\nAnd to complete the afternoon's\nenjoyment just as the company was\ndispersing, His Majesty made a little speech, as happy In style and\nmanner for such an- occasion as\nthat delivered amidst the ceremony\nat Vimy Ridge on Sunday. Obviously moved by the tumult ot acclamation he held up his hand for silence. In a voice carrying far across\nthe crowded* lawn, he said:\n\"OLD COMRADES\n\"Old comrades ind friends from\nCanada, none of us who were present at thc wonderful ceremony at\nVimy on Sunday <an ever possibly\nforget H. For-me personally my\nrecollections will: always be vivid,\nbecause it brought me in'ta contact\nagain with so many Canadians.\n\"It brought baclf memories to\nme, not only of the Canadian corps\nduring the war, but also of my four\nvisits to the Dominion. It was a very\nbeautiful and moving occasion, but\ninevitably tinged with sadness.\nTHE DRIVER TO\nTHB RIGHT WASTIT\/ING-\nTO BEATTHE REGULAR.\nCHANGE OP LIGHTS. THE\nLIGHTS CHANGED ANO HE\nFAILED TO STOPONACCOUHT\not\u00bb EXCESSIVE SPEED-\nEVEN THOUGH HIS BRAKES\nWERE GOOD\nSUCH A ORIVER SHOULD\nhave a GOVERNOR^\nIEGAUY INSTALLED ANO\nSEALED ON HIS MOTOR.\nST taatflan;    j\n(Continued on Ptgt Ten)\nARRESTED AT\nPROCTER FOR\nNELSON THEFT\nM. Krayvetz Charged\nWith Robbery of\nBush's\nATTEMPTED SELL\nTOBACCO CHEAPLY\nDenies Connection\nWith Other Recent\nBurglaries\nTo break lnto.1 Nelion tobacco\n\u2022tort ont night ind lift a quantity of tobacco is one thing,' But\nto try to dispose of the stolen\ntobacco the next day or two by\nhouie to house lilt In mother\ncommunity Is still mother thing.\nAnd It wis the fact that Mike\nKrawetz, who claims ht comes\nfrom Vancouver, was telling 75\ncent cans of tobacco In Procter\n\u2022t 50 centt t can, thit ltd to his\narrest yesterday. He now fleet a\ncharge of breaking md entering\nBush's cigar store In Nelion. Tha\npremises wtr* burglarized Mondiy night, July 27, and $21.70\nworth of tobacco and candy taken,\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nAGtAHCE\nBy tht Canadian Preu\nTorpnto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstock! firm to strong.\nToronto mines\u2014Irregularly higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat up JV\u00ab to 2H\ncents.\nToronto \u2014Bacon hogi off truck\nunchanged at 321.\n, London\u2014Bar silver and lead lower; copper and zinc higher.\nNeto York\u2014Bar silver and other\nmetals unchanged.\n' Montreal\u2014Silver lower.\nNew York\u2014Cotton, rubber, sugar\nand coffee lower.\nNew  York--Canadian  dollar up\n1-64 to 1.00.\nForest Fires Rage onMany Fronts; B. C.\n_ -m-L i A * \u2014-  \\ A\t\nGermany Admits\nArming Island\nBERLIN, July 29 (AP)-Refor-\ntlllcatlon of Heligoland was openly admitted here today following\nLondon reports of a discussion In\nthe bouse of commons on thi\ntiny North Set Island.\nThe Tigeblittfollowed a London\ndispatch with an explanatory note\nsaying:\n\"Military measures at Heligoland were \u2022 natural consequence\nof the restoration of Germany's\nmilitary sovereignty, Impaired\nthrough the Versailles treaty.\"\nSEEK   MERCHANT'8  RELEASE\n. VANCOUVER July 29 (CP)\u2014Mr.\nJustice H. B. Robertson in supreme\ncourt today reserved decision on an\napplication for the release of Bi-\nago Fedrigo, Powell River merchant,\non habeas corpus. Fedaigo was convicted on June 15 of supplying liquor\nto an Indian and fined $150 or three\nmonths in Jail. It was contended that\nlhe magistrate imposed hard labor\nwithout Jurisdiction.\nPIONEER H.B.C. EMPLOYEE DIES\nVANCOUVER, July 29 (CP) \u2014\nFuneral services will be held Sat-\nudray for John Calder,- 81-year-old\npioneer Hudson's Bay company employee who died here yesterday.\nCalder joined the staff of the Hudson's Bay company in 1876 and\nserved in the accounting department\nin the early dayi. He retired a\nnumber of years ago.\nCABINET CONSIDERS DROUGHT\nOTTAWA. July 29 (CE) - The\nlivestock situation in western Canada occupied the attention of\ncabinet at its regular weekly meeting today. At the conclusion of the\nthree-hour sitting,' Prime Minister\nMcKenzie King said* consideration\nwas being given to the,remoy-fl of\nfeeder cattle from drought-stricken\nareas in the west to place! where\nfeed would be available.\nDOUBTFUL ABOUT\nALLOWING THEM\nTOGO TO MADRID\n17 French Planes Also\n. Are Held Back by\nGovernment\nMADRID FACES\nA LONG SEIGE\nSixty per cent of all the forests in Canada have been destroyed by\nfire, government official estimate. The greatest percentage of these\nfires are caused by carelessness, especially by campers and hunters,\nThe result of a carelessly thrown match, or a poorly extinguished\ncamp-fire is shown at LEFT. Even with modern facilities for fire-\nfighting, it is impossible to cope with the rage of a burning forest,\nmore particularly in a dry season such as this. Be sure to put out\nthoroughly your camp-fire as the campers are seen doing at \"TOP.\nPenalize Taxes-\nUnpaid Saturday\nAmounts Due City to\nBe Increased 1Q\nPer Cent\nTwo New Fires in Nelson Area; Flames in\nAlberta and Montana Spreading; This\nDistrict's Total So Far Is M\nCurrent taxet due the. City of\nNelson which remain unpaid after\nAugust^ will automatically increase\nby 10 per cent, the penalty for nonpayment by this.date.\nProperty owners in large numbers\nhave been paying current taxes in\nthe list few days, and with only two\ndays of the month. remaining in\nJuly the total amount is expected\nto reach a considerable figure before the penalty date.\nNelson Pilgrims to\nVimy Pictured Boot\nSoiling ot Montreal\nRotogravure section of the Montreal Standard arriving in Nelson\nWednesday included a page of pictures of the departure of the Vimy\npilgrims from that port.\nOne of the pictures of the departing boats shows Stanley Bostock of\nNelson, minui hi! coat but itill\nwearing his pilgrim's beret, sitting\non a railing; while in the background Mrs. Leslie Pickard of Nelson ls seen with her son, Gordon.\nFormer Rossland\nLawyer Is Dead\nWINNIPEG, July 29 (CP)-Hon.\nAlexander Casimir Gait, 83, who retired in 1933 as judge of the Manitoba court of kings bench, died\nhere today. He was born in Toronto,\nson of Sir Thomas and Lady Gait.\nMr.,Gait wai called to the bar\nof Ontario in 1878 and practiced in\nToronto for 20 years.\nHe moved tb Rossland,' B.C., in\n1898 and practiced there until 1908\nwhen he came to Winipeg. He was\nballed to the bar of Manitoba in\n1906 and was created K.C. in 1909.\nAUTHORIZE ALBERTA\nREGISTRATION\nEDMONTON, July 29 (CP)\u2014 Authorising registration of Alberta citizens under supervision of the department of trade and Industry as\nthe first step toward payment of\nbasic dividend!, an order-in-council\nwas approved here today by the\nprovincial cabinet-in-council.\nPremier Aberhart announced the\norder, authorized under the Social\nCredit measures act passed at the\nlast session of the legislature, ha;\nnot yet been sent to Lieutenant-\nGovernor W. L. Walsh for his signature.\nTwo new fires, neither of them|\nlarge, were reported to forest branch\nofficials at Nplson Wednesday. One\nwas on Granite creek, below the\nSecond Relief mine, and was confined to a small area. A crew was\nput. on the fire immediately.\nThe second blaze reported Wednesday was in the Grand Forks\narea at the headwaters of How\ncreek, about 10 miles southwest of\nthe.Union mine. A crew was sent\nto, the scene. Since the fire was in\nterritory . where there have been\na number of fires, it was not expected to cause a great deal ol\ndamage, nor to spread to any great\nextent\nBerry, pickers, ai far as can be\nJudged by forest branch officials,\nwere responsible for a fire near\nYmir late Tuesday. The branch sent\na number of men out and the fire\nwas extinguished Wednesday.\nFire destroyed the home of William   Lucke at Taghum  Sunday\nevening.   Mix   Baskin   saw   the\n. flames on his way down from hli\nmill, called out his crew, then\ncontinued down the hill and phoned the forest branch. Two pumps\nwere rushed out md the dinger\nof  the  flames  spreading  to the\nbush wai eliminated.\n(Continued on Pige Ten)\nThree Months More\nfor Ontario Lawyer\nVICTORIA, July 29 (CP). -\nCharlei p. Mulvey, Ontario lawyer,\nwho pleaded guilty to three charges\nof obtaining,money by. false pretences from Victoria banks, was sentenced to three mbnths' imprisonment by Magistrate Jay in city police court today. Mulvey was sentenced to three months on each of\nthe three charges running concurrently and commencing at the expiration of three months' sentence\nhe received this week in Vancouver\nfor limilar offences.\nFRAMEWORK SUNK IN BRIDGE\nVANCOUVER, July 29 (CP)-A\n30-foot steel framework was sunk\nto the floor of the narrows at low\ntide,today to serve as a platform\nfor a diamond drill, machine which\nwill drill four holes for. testing the\nfoundation where a large pier will\nbe constructed for the new first\nharrows bridge.\nGOVERNMENT TO AID JUBILEE\nFUND\nVICTORIA, July 29 (CP)\u2014As thc\nresult of representations made today by a delegation Irom Vancouver, the provincial government has\nagreed to assist that city in financing a deficit in its golden jubilee\nfund caused by the removal of admission charges from certain attractions. Premier Patullo said assistance would be given after a conference.\nHINDU  MISSING\nVANCOUVER, July 29 (CP) -\nPolice today were searching for\nHaTbars Singh, Hindu, reported\nmissing from his -home since early\nyesterday. Delp Singh, who lives\nwith Harbars, told police the man\nleft for worh yesterday and failed\nto return. A note, written by the\nmissing man, partly in a Hindu dialect and partly - in English, was\nturned over to fiolice..\nDecision Reserved\nin Spokane Cose,\nGrand Forks Man\nSPOKANE, July 29 (AP)-Nick\nZmioff, 28, Grand Forks, B.C., who\ndetective Oscar Htukedal said tried\nlo sell 67 ounces of gold-plated lead\nas pure gold, must wait until August 7 for decision in his case by\n'Justice Frank Yuse. Zmioff.ls held\non a state vagrancy chfcrge tnder\n$500 bond.\nJustice Yuse released three Canadian miners, Alfred Kelly, James\nT. Herman and Anthony McDonald,\nwhoiwere held in connection with\nthe case.\nBest Advertising\nRevenue in Years\nNEW YORK, (AP)-The Magazine Printers' Ink reported a survey\nshowing that newspaper and magazine advertising is bringing in more\nreturns than for years.\nA travel firm, which refused use\nof its name, was quoted as saying\nthat with a 10-year average base,\nnewspapers in 1935-38 had an average efficiency of 416 and; magazines\nfor that period of 144. In 1934-35\nthe figures for newspapers were\n286 against 113 for magazines.\nBONUS FOR CHRYSLER\nWORKERS\nDETROIT, July 29 (AP)-K. T.\nKeller, - president ot the Chrysler\ncorporation, announced today an\nadditional cash bonus of $2,000,000\nwill be'distributed Aug. 10 to em-\npolyees'in Canada, the United States,\nEngland and Belgium. The bonus\nwill be Jhc second paid by the\ncorporation this year, $2,300,000 have\nbeen distributed to 59,000 employees on Feb. 14. The minimum\namount will be $25, with an e*ttra\npayment Of $1 for each additional\nyear df service up to 10 years.\nMercury Still\n(limbs Upward\nDay's Maximum Is 95;\n62 High Minimum\nof-Summer'\nStill climbing, the mercury\nreached 95 degree! Wednesday tt\nNelson to make It three successive days of over 90-degrea tern-\nperatures. Monday's high wit 93,\ntnd Tuesday's 94 degrees. A hot\ndry wind prevailed molt.of. the\nafternoon, while I blistering sun\nbelt down out of I cloudless iky.\nHighest minimum temperature\nof the season was recorded when\nthe   lowest   point   thl   mercury\nreached during the 24-hour period\nending at 5 p.m. was 62 degrees.\nBritish Planes May Be\nUsed to Evacuate\n'   Nationals\nMADRID, July 29 (AP).-Brlt-\nIsh alrllnen may bl used to evacuate   Britlih  ind   United   States  '\nrefugees   from   Madrid,   Britlih '\nsources said tonight.\nThe statement came after tht\ngovernment announced It bellev-\ntd there wil no necessity for*\n\u2022ending in International train\nfrom Madrid to Alicante tnd Valencia because normal rill service .\nto thoie pointi his been resumed.\nPLANES HELD\nPARIS, July 29 (AP). \u2014 Two\nsquadrons of planet, one French,\nthe other British, were grounded\nat French airports tonight while\nPremier Blum'a popular-front government debated whether to permit them to proceed to Spain.\n(Continued tn Pago Tin)\nBARGE SINKS\n.  CHICAJIO- im. -r f\\ wli\nsquall lent t big itnd birga\nwind\nt\u00bb\ntht bottom of Like. Mlohlgin\nWednesday with her Captain and\n14 of hiffortw. i*\nTht snubhosed bolt, \"Motor\nShipment Material 8ervlce,\" lurched suddenly to port and sink like\ni stone In tht dirknut of ttrly\nmorning \u25a0 milt off tht south Chi-\nctgo lighthouse.\nTha craft wint down Irt tht\nchoppy waves so fast there wu\nno time to mtn tht lifeboat!.\nMost of tht crew wu trapped\nasleep In bunks below decks.\nBordeaux Waiters\nStill on Strike\nBOURDEAUX, Frtnce, July 29\n(CP Cable)\u2014Bordeaux pissed a sad\naperitif hour todty.\nBecause they consider tips undignified, waiter! in hotel cafes tnd\nrestaurants are still on strike.\nBoulevard tnd squire have a lonesome look. Outside tables tnd chairs\ncustomarily patronized by buzzing\nthrongs, are piled up dejectedly.\nSome large cafes are cloied altogether. Many smaller ones carry\nnotice! assuring \"Messieurs let clients\" that the patron, hit wife tnd\ncl-ildren will mure lervlce.     '   '\nLord Tweedsmuir to Meet\nU. S. President Tomorrow\nFinal Preparations Completed for Welcome to Roosevelt\non Historic Occasion, at Quebec\nQUEBEC July 29 (CP)\u2014Final preparations for the welcoming President Rooievelt for hli one-diy with Lord Tweedsmuir Frldty wtn\nmade here today.\nMr. Roosevelt, at present at his summer home at Campobello Island,\nN. B., wiU arrive in Quebec at 10:48 Friday morning. Through the winding streets of the French Canadian^ -\ncapital he will be escorted to Duf-\nferin Terrace, a half-mile from the\nrailway station.\nFormal speeches of welcome will\nbe delivered on the Terrace by\nthe governor-general Primo Minister Mackenzie King.'Premier Gor-\nbout of Quebec and Mayor Gregoire,\nMr. Roosevelt will reply briefly.\nAt least two other Dominion government ministers will be present,\nPostmaster General Elliott and Hon.\nFemtnd Rinfret, secretary of state.\nMr. Mackenzie King and his colleagues will leave for Quebec tomorrow. At the' same time three\nparliamentary press gallery officials, President Thomas, Wayling\nand past president!, Ray Brown,\nand Joseph Fortier will leave for\nthe ahcient city to act as holts at a\ngovernment luncheon for American\nnewspapermen following the president's party.\nFrom Dutferin Terrace, Mr. Rooievelt will go to the citadel, summer\nheadquarters of the governor-general, where photographers will be\npermitted to take pictures.\n\u2022 Mr. Roosevelt wlll'lunch privately\nwith Lord Tweedsmuir and then\nwill be shown around the city, he\nwill have tea at the citadel in the\nafternoon and is scheduled to depart\nat six o'clock in the evening.\nMin   Ma\nNelson   - \u00ab 91\nVictoria, B.C 57 6*\nNanaimo  \u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 58 71\nVancouver  - 58 71\nKamloops  , - 62 9J\nPrince Rupert - 52 *\nAtlin' 52 5i\nDawson, Y.T 42 71\nSeattle 58 71\nPortland, Ore 80 \u00bb\nSan Francisco  54 71\nSpokane   -...- 60 9'\nLos Angelei \u00ab4 71\nPenticton    56\nVernon     \u2014\u25a0 58\nGrand Forks 50 9i\nKulo   50 -\nCranbrook  - 48 W\nCalgary  54 9*\nEdmonton ,54 8!\nSwift Current 58 91\nPrince Albert  \u201e 48 fr\nSaskatoon  - 50 8,\nQu'Appelle  48 I'.\nWinnipeg   \u00ab 71\nMoose Jaw .... 52 *\nNelaon and vicinity\u2014Moderate\nfresh shifting winds, fine and warm\ntnd dtngerously dry\n,.^__.\nMAmKA-AmmmjOLA^AAm^\n.      __\n^^^^.i^^lM.'!.^^\n\t\n\t\n\t\n TWO   -\nHt**ff -ff**Hti;tON DAILY NtWS, NELSON, \u00bb.C<-TrlUr\u00bbDAY MORNINO. JULY 30. 19M\nWAIT\u2014\nFOR THE FURNITURE EVENT OF\nFint Annual ^^^^^^^^^^^\nTHIEVES BUSY AT\nVANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER. July 29 (CP).-Po-\n11c* today were searching for thieves\nwho broke into the premises of a\nI drug company and escaped with $25\nI tnd two ounces of codeine from a\n| safe.   Entry to the strong-box was\nChoose\nWHITE HORSE\nSCOTCH WHISKY\n26'\/-. ox. |3.25\n. .dvertliement li not published\n((\u2022played by the Liquor Control\n' or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nmade by cutting a hole through the\nfire clay base with the blades of\ntwo pairs of scissors.\nShell Oil company officials reported to police the theft of more\nthan 1200 feet of submarine cable,\nweighing more than 1800 pounds,\nfrom Stanley park.\nA purse containing (125 and personal effects was reported stolen\nfrom the pocket ot Richard S. Stock-\ndale ln Stanley park.\nReception at Coast\nfor Tweedsmuir\nVICTORIA, July 29 (CP). - A\njoint provincial and civic reception\nfor Lord Tweedsmuir, governor-\ngeneral of Canada, will be held here\nAugust 15, according to plans now\nbeing worked out for the first visit\nto the coast of his excellency.\nMarriage Licence\nfor Nelson Pair\nMarriage licence hat been issued\nIn Spokane to Garnet Andrews\n(legal), Nelson, B. C, and Kate Darough (legal), Nelson, B. C.\nOn Your Next Spokane Visit Stop at the\nCoeur d'Alene Hotel\nCinidlin Httdquirtin\nMrs. Hirry Gotta, Mgrtu.\nHome of thi Ftmous\nDUTCH MILL\nComing Events in Spokane:\nAugust 1 -2\u2014Visit to Spokane of Ten Army Bombing\nPlanes from Hamilton Field, California.\nTune in on:\nIbt Dutch Mill Entertainers       Every Wedneiday. 3:49 p.m.\nOver KGA Radio Station. Every Friday, 7:30 .-i.m.\n___\\___W____\\ estaeotiAetnseiai SSilSHHilaiiiiMSBMMSiMMW\nMISS STENBACK\nFERNIE BRIDE\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\n-fret But Service Geo, Benwell, Prop.\n.4 . BREAKFAST 30o md UP\nLUNCHEON 40o to 50o DINNER 40c to 65c\n*\u25a0'\u25a0  ROTARY, AHD GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON,  B.C. 422 VERNON ST.\n. HUMS \u2014 Mr. and Mri. T. John-\n\u25a0tone, Salmo; R. S. Fraser, Penticton; T. J. Moron, Mr. ind Mrs. J. II.\nBUSiell, J. E. Dubberby, William H.\nMundle, H. D. Swtboda, Mr. Bore-\nham, K. W. McConnell, Vtncouver;\nMr. and Mrs. F. Brennan, Silverton;\nMrs, Collins, Gray Creek; Mrs. Ralph\nWhitley, . Crawford Bay; W. A.\nMohr, city; R. telghton, Ymlr; W.\nJ. Currie, Grand Forks; B. Aylmer,\nQueen's Bay.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Gueet Is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.      W. K. Clark, Prop.      Nelson, B. C.\nI\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n\"\u25a0_._>* FULLY LICENSED\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Tride Solicited.\nTree Bui meets all Greyhound arrivals.\nFrttPtrklmt     V_       NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\nnt Vernon SL Phono 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\n8PEC1AL   MONTHLY   RATEB\nGood Comfortable Roomi\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJA8. A. MADDEN   Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot tnd Oold Witer\nIn the HEART ot the City\nPHONE 58      BOn WARO RT\nEDGEWOOD, B. C\u201e HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nEDGEWOOD.\nLoglcil Stopping\nE. NIEDERMAN,       Cbmforttblt Rooms Plice on thl\nProprietor Qood Meals Roid to Vernon\nBC.   I\nr I\nion    \u00a7\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at th*\nHotel Volney\n410\nRiverside Ave,\nOpposite thl Paulsen Building\nIVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN OUE8TB\ngat thu\nSpokane,\nWllhlngton\nOUE8T8\t\nSTANFORD Hotel, Spokane\nat SPRACUE and MAD.SONRe\u201eon.Nb'le' c!f\" &.*!\u201e,\nFERNIE, B.C.\u2014A week-end wedding was celebrated In the United\nchurch on Saturday afternoon, July\n25, at 2 o'clock, when Miss Inez\nElena Stenback, daughter ot Mrs.\nand the late Oscar Stenback, became\nthe bride of John George Williams,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. J. 0. Williams\nof Fernie. Rev. J. H. Matthews performed the ceremony. '\nThe bride was given away by Mr.\nWilliams and was attended by Mrs.\nVerner Augustson of Kimberley,\nThe bride's dress was white allover\nlace with jacket and picture hai, and\nher bouquet of pink carnations. Her\ngolng-away costume was a yellow\nensemble with brown accessories\nand a brown, sand and yellow top\ncoat.\nThe bridesmaid was ln pale green\norgtndle with Jacket and also carried a bouquet of pink carnations.\nThe groom was supported by his\nbrother, Paul Williams. Following\nthe wedding a reception was held\nfor immediate friends at the home\nof the groom's parents. Mr. and\nMrs. Williams will reside at Lumberton.\nPrior to the vJeddlng showers for\nthe bride-elect were held by Mrs.\nBert Johnson, Mrs. W. Schad and the\nRebekah lodge.\nLONDON, July 29 (CP)-Recovering after a poor start, Hon. R. C.\nMatthews' Canadian cricket team\nhad 97 runs for five wickets against\nRoyal Artillery in a two-day fixture\nat Woolwich today.\nDURING BABY'S\nTEETHING TIME\nThe Bowels Become Loots\nDiarrhoea, dysentery, colic, cramps,\nmanifest themselves; the gums become swollen, and cankera form in\nthe mouth. This is the time when\ntht mother should use\nCranbrook Miss\nWeds Trail Mm\nMary; Beulah Hill  Is\nPretty Bride of '\nJ. A. McN.Seaton\nplFOWLEfis\n*:xt-of \"\nstwawberpX\ntnd perhaps save the baby's life,\nOn the market for 88 years.\nPrice, flOc. t, bottle tt all druggists\nor dealers.\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-The home\nof Mr. and Mrs. A; G. BUI was the\nicene of a very pretty wedding on\nSunday morning at 9 o'clock when\ntheir only daughter Mary Beulah,\nbecame the bride of 'Junes Archibald McNalr Seaton of Trail, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Seaton of\nMarcancbe, Sask, Bev, E. I. King\nofficiated, Only relatives ind immediate friends wire present.\nThe bride, flten In marriage by\ner fattier, lookia laveljt [n a gown\not pale pink organza. Tlie dress,\nv.-nru over t pink taffeta slip, had\na close fitting top fastened at the\nwaist with a pink belt and t tilted floor-length skirt. She wort n\nshort matching jacket bf the same\nmaterial. The jacket liatl \u2022 ions\nsleeves with shirred hell shaped\ncuffs, and was finished at. the neck\nwith a wide shirred collar, fastened\nat the front with a small lu'mcli pi\npale mauve violets. She wore a pale\npink turban hat trimmed with I\nshort pink veil, thd carried t beautiful white bouquet of gladiolus,\nswainsonl and fern,\nMiss Eileen Moore, who acted is\nbridesmaid, chose a gown of pale\nblue organdie, made on princess\nlines With a full floor length skirl\nand cape sleeves. The front of hcr\nsmall while hat was trimmed wilh\ntn ornament of seed Pearls thd\nthe wore teed petit necklace thd\near-rings. Bht carried t bouquet dt\npink carnations and fern.\nBarry Hi il tcted ts best man. the\nWeddipg match Wis played by Mrs.\nJ. Miller.\nTht cerenibny Wis performed uil-\niii tin arch of White streamers centered with I large white weddinS\nbell, tnd banked at the sides With\nWhite sWeet pets, the rodtft* Were\ndeenrnted with white streamers thd\nwedding bells' and pink ind White\nsweet peas.\nMrs. Hill, mother of the bride,\nwore a gown of aquamarine, blue\nsilk crepe. The dress had long accordion pleated sleeves, a high neck\nline, and was fastened at the waist\nwith, a wide sash of matching material. The front of the skirt had a\nwide pannel of accordion pleating.\nShe wore a matching felt hat and\na corsage of white gardenias.\nFollowing the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served. Mrs. B.\nH. Moore and Mrs. H. Fyles presided at the urns. A lace cloth covered the table, which was centered with a three tier wedding cake,\npale pink sweet peas and pink\nIng were Mrs. W. D. Smith, .Mrs. E.\ncandles. Those in ctfarge of the serv-\nStaples, Mrs. P. Addalard, Miss\nMildred Bell and Miss Charlotte\nFandricks and Miss Isobel Summers\nof Kimberley. They were assisted\nby friends of the family.\nMany beautiful gifts were received by Mr. and Mrs. Seaton. The\ngroom's gift .to the bride was a yellow wrist watch set with small diamonds, he gave the bridesmaid a\nflat yellow gold and cream enamel\ncompact. To the organist, Mrs. Miller he gave a cut glass perfume\njar, and Barry HIU, the groomsman\nreceived a cigarette, lighter. The\nbride's gift to the groom was a\nsignet ring set' With a small diamond.\nFollowing the breakfast Mr. and\nMrs. Seaton left for their home in\nTrail.\nMrs. Seaton wore a brown taffeta\nsuit, trimmed with large bell shaped pink cuffs, and rows of pink\nFINK'S LTD.,\nTTFH\/U    n **\n*.       ' . ,;7\u00a3V\nCLEARING CinderdU SHOPPE\nSTOCK of CHILDREN'S WEAR\nDRESSES\nCotton prints, printed\nvoiles, piques. A large selection for your choice.\nSites a,. 4, 6, 8, 10, 12,\nClearing at\n\u2022 up\nThii Wat Ons of the Beit in Style ami Quality.\nCOMPLETE STOCK REDUCED\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014_\nINFANTS' ALL WOOL JACKETS\nPink or Blue trim.                               '  CA. Up\nClearing at 0\u00abr\nEOYS* COTTON\nWASH SUITS\nSites 2,4,6. CO*\nEach    dV\n'  BOYS'COTTON\nSUN SUITS\nBlue and white.     \\VM\nSizes 2, 4, 6 ..... du\n\\mmmmmamimM\ni ! ii \u25a0ems hi .i\nREADY-TO-WEAR\n'*l\"\"*\u00bbk HM| -mf*. \u00a3% fSfl f.     An outstanding selection of summer dresses including crepes, (h ^ 'CM\nI    IH  HVVhV     prints and stripes. Sizes 14 to 44. Regular to $4.95. _   \/ *7J\nt  flTAflTiTri     Bloomers\u2014Panties\u2014Briefs and Vests. (By Watson). Silknit    a r\\\nNlirK    r   inWhite'peachandFlesh'Smal1,mediumandlarg6,       \/lfLIC\n\u25a0f*\"^l a\/\"\\*tf% it^lHTHO     Two-way Stretch Girdles and pantie styles.    White and A -4    \/\\\/\\\nV-AJllwfc IO     PRICED AT  ^1\\\nn    H'mi'i\nWHITE SHOES\nBroken Lines\nRegular to $4.00. Ties, Straps, Sandals, Cuban,\nBlock and High Heels. TWO PRICES ONLY\u2014\n$1*59 and $2<5'9\nChildren's White or Smoked ELK SANDALS\nSites 5\u20147.\nPair  \t\nSixes 8 to 10.\nPal* \t\n$1.19\nSizes 11 to 2.\nPair \t\n$09\nReady<To-Wear     Shoes     Children's Wear\nPhone 73 Burns Block\nfagotting tt the neck. She wore a\npink felt hat, brown shoes and\ngloves. Mill Enid Shankland caught\nthe bride's bouquet.\nMrs. Seaton was born in Cranbrook, attended public and high\nschool here and ls a graduate ot the\nbusiness college here.\nMr. Seaton was born in Saskatchewan, coming to Trail about two\nyears ago, and since that time has\nbeen employed by the C. M. and\nS. company.\nCHAPMAN CAMP\nFOLK HOLIDAY\nSIMMER EXCURSIONS\nOn Sale May 15 to Oct. 15\nVltlt Banff and  Lake Louise en route\nFinal Return Limit, October 31\nHOUND TRIP PARKS      limit\nWinnipeg  72.00\nToronto 108.20\nOttawa 123.50\nMontreal   .........   129.8S\nQuebec   - - - 138.33\nSnl.it John 117.10\nIlallfai 133.45\nMinneapolis\nSt. Paul  - -\t\nChlotto  .........\nDetroit, via Chicago . -. <\nDetroit, via Toronto - - \u2022\nNew York\t\nHot-ton . - .   U2.25\nCormpondlngly low faros lo other destination-*.\nKix-uire about Coach and Intermediate Fares.\njtoi'tinfs may b* arranged via Canadian Pacific '\nCroat Lakes Steamship, June 14 to Sept. 19. (\nAils the Ticket Agent\nCctKaduvn Ohajjic\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nAngove of Chapman Camp started\nMonday morning on their vacation.\nTheir children, Edith and Billy, accompanied them. They plan to motor to SeatUe, Vancouver and spend\nsome time ln the Okanagan.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Shannon returned\nhome from their holidays at Vancouver and Kaslo.\n1    Jack and Joan Colvin went last\nweek to Cowley, Alta., to visit their\nJ grandparents,\nMrs. Sutherland and her daughter,\nHelen, are visiting for three weeks\nI at Kaslo.\nBilly and Dick Cavanagh are\naway for a three weeks holiday at\nKitchener.\nDorothy Chappel of Creston Is vis-\niting Mrs. Cavanagh and expects to\nstay two weeks among her old\nfriends.\nRev. Pierce Congdon of Semans,\nSask., spoke Sunday from the pulpit\nof the United church in place of\nRev. Galbraith, who is still at Armstrong with his sick son.\nMr. Congdon gave an Interesting\nand impressive sermon, centering on\nthe ceremony at Vimy, the unveiling of the Canadian memorial. He\nis a returned soldier.\nMr. Congdon ls taking his summer\nvacation ln the mountain! and he\nand his family are occupying the\nUnited church manse in Cranbrook\nwhile Rev. Hardy Is away for his\nholidays, Mrs. Congdon iccom-\npsmled him to Kimberley.\nRev. Galbraith will be back to\ntpke the service! next Sunday. His\nlittle ion ii much better and will\nsoon be able to make the trip.\n12.00\n72.00\n116.110\n101.70\n108.20\n133.13\nTitle Fight May\nBe in Afternoon\nNEW YORK, July 29 (AP).-H the\nNew York State Athletic commission ipprovei, the September hetvy-\nweight title bout between James J.\nBraddock tnd Mix Schmeling will\nbe fought in the afternoon, the fint\ntime a heavyweight championship\nhas been decided this way since\nDempsey outpointed Tommy Gibbons tt Shelby, Mont., ln July. 1923.\nJames J. Johnston, Madison\nSquire Garden promoter, conferred\ntoday with Braddock's manager, Joe\nGould. September 26 was selected\nas the tentative date for the bout.\nWEBBER GETS A\nCHICAGO POST\nVANCOUVER, July 29 (CP).-\nWord has been received here today\nof the appointment of Dr. G. Cuthbert Webber, graduate of the University of British Columbia, to the\nmathematics department of Armour\ninstitute, Chicago.\nDr. Webber, son of Rev. George\nG. Webber of Vancouver, received\nhis B.A. degree with first class honors in mathematics ln 1930 and two\nyetrs later wes awarded his M.A.\nfrom the university here with a fel\nlowship in mathematics at the University of Chicago where he won his\nPh.D. degree in 1933.\nMilitary Display by\nGermany for the\nOlympic Yachtsmen\nKIEL, Germany, July 29 (AP).-\nThe flags of 23 nations, including\nCanada, were hoisted today on the\nshore of Kiel bay as the entrants in\nthe forthcoming Olympic yachting\ncompetition stood at attention.\nPREMIER CAN'T\nCOME TO B.C.\nOTTAWA, July 29 (CP)\u2014It would\nhardly be possible for him to go wet}:\nand attend Vancouver's Jubilee celebrations, Prime Minister Mackenzie\nKing said todsy tfter t cabinet meeting. Cabinet ministers now in\nEurope were coming back soon, he\nsaid, when it was proposed to take\nup several important matters standi\nIng over until their return. He wat\n-toing to Genevt in September toy\nthe League ot Nations meeting, so a\nvisit to the west appeared almost\nimpossible. y\nNASH INVITES YOU TO SHAM mm\n2i>ANNIVERSARY\ni\n0 To win new customer! during eur 20th Anniversary Celebration, Nosh olTen th* greatest car-buying opportunity In ytartl\nDon't ftil to' come in tnd tee the beautiful Ntsh and LaFtyette\nmodels. Take one out and drive it. Then, compare our allowance\non your present car with any other you can get!\nIn 1936, Ntsh-LaFayette sales increases are almost twice tu Urge\nu those of the industry! We want you to ahtre our tuccess. Bring\nin your car during thit special event and find out how little it will\ncost ta drive out ia a brand ntw Nash or LaFaycttc!\nConvenient terms through in-\nthurlied Nash C.A.C. finance\nplan.\n$1090 to $1350\nlu.\niup.\n1.125\nLaFAYETTE $1090 and up\nNASH \"400\" $1350 and i\nNASH AMBASSADOR,:\ninch wheelbsse sedans with\ntrunks, $1575 to $1790. All\nprices delivered. Special\nequipment extra.\nnash and iafayette\nKOOTENAY MOTORS (Nelson) LTD.\nDistributors for Nelson, Tfail and Rossland\n303 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 117\nNELSON, B.C.\n PAGE THREE\nThere's Action andColot in These\nNew SPORT\nSHIRTS\nThe newest in men's dressy sport shirts.\nColors erf black, chocolate, wine and green\nin solid shades. For variety add orte or two\nof these to your wardrobe at this most attractive pricing.\nJ-Main Floor HBC\nBedspread Barg\n20 Only\nRayon Brocade\nEach*2'6*\nLovely bmcade spreads in three designs. Come in gold, green, blue, rose,\nor orchid. Full size 80x100. Ordinarily\nsold at $3.95.\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nJust Arrived for Month-End Selling\nMEN'S DRESS SHOES\n\u2022\u00bbX.9S\nA new lot just opened up and they are'better than ever. Fine appearance,\ndressy lasts, exacting workmanship are outstanding features.  Black calf,\noxfords with square or recede toes and black calf boots. All Goodyear welted.\nSires 6 to 11.\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nBOYS' TOREADOR LONGS\nBoys' black denim pants well rnade with wide cuff\n, bottoms and zipper pockets. Sizes 6 ffl Aft\nto 12 years. PAIR  ..iJl.vU\n-Main Floer HBC\nMEN'S DRESS SOCKS\nYou'll be well pleased with this new cotton dress\nsock. All in neat summer patterns. Sizes 10 to 11 'A.i\nStock up n6w with this        \u25a0       '    C QC\u00ae\n    J PAIRS VO\n-Main Floor H B C\nbargain\nar\nGREAT TUMBLER VALUE\nCrystal glass pptic tumblers. Very serviceable and.\nCrystal glass optic tumblers. Very      IA iM\n-Main-Floor HBC\nserviceable and good looking\nSALE OF CUPS AND SAUCERS\n200 cups and Saucers specially bought for this month\nand event. Choice of four decorations in fine      \u00a3.\nquality china, CUP AND SAUCER 0\n\u2014Second   Flopr   HBC\nDRESSY TRIANGLES\nA touch of color at the throat adds much to any dress.\nIn polka dots, coin spots and patterns as well.    jM\\()\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nas-plain colors. PRICED\nCLEARANCE OF JACKET DRESSES\nShop early for this super special. Attractive jacket\ndresses in colors of white and pastels. ff J QQ'\nSizes 14 to 44. Regular $5.95. EACH ^.OH\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nALL SUMMER HATS\nBe here at store opening! All our. regular $1.95 and\n$2.95 Ladies' Hats to clear at this ridiculously (M AA\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nlow price.\nWHITE PURSES\nA special selling price for three days only,\npriced at $1.00 and $.1.25. They are-\nexceptional value*at \t\n\u2014Main Floor H B C\nRegularly\n79*\nAnother\nHome Frock\nSALE\nSpecially Purchased for Month-End\nSelling\u2014Values to $2.95\n%\\*\nHere is the answer to your home frock requirements. Snappy, new, different styles\nin novelty piques, madricords and striped\nlinens. Sizes 14 tp 47.\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nShop Early\nfor Best Selection\nAnother \"Bay\"\nHosiery Sate\nPure Silk Crepe\nPERFECTS\nFull fashioned of pure silk from panel heel\nto garter welt. Seasonal shades including the\nnew copper tones.\n\u2014Main Floor HB C\nQoing Away! Buy Luggage Now\nLadies' Overnight\n!ases\n\u26662*\nOur stock of baggage is complete with every\nmodern idea and convenience. Value's are unbeatable. A special 18-inch Ladies' Dressing\nCase fitted with mirror and silk lined.\n-    \u2014Second Floor HBC\nftt^tftl^ \u20ac\n\u2022NCORPOR\/TiO  8?9 MAV 1670.\nCharge Account Customers\nYour purchases Thursday and Friday charged to your\nAugust account\u2014payabje Sept. 10th, 1936.\nNewspapers and News Reel Fined\nHeavily for Describing Incident\nas an Attempt lo Kill lhe King\nCaptions: \"An Attempt ori the King's Life,\"\nand \"The King: Assassination Attempt\"\nHeld to Be Contempt of Court\nLONDON, July 29 CCP)..\u2014Two\nnewspapers and a newsreel company\nwere lined a total of\u00a3l050 (about\n$5250) and about \u00a31000 in costs today lor publishing captions on July\n16 worded: \"An attempt on the\nKing's lile\" or \"The King: Assassination attempt.\"\nThat.was the day George Andrew\nMcMahon, a spectator at a military\nparade headed by the Kin*! on Constitution hill, drew a revolver as thc\nSovereign passed by on his horse.\nHe says he did not intend to harm\nthe King, but threw the weapon into\nthe street as a \"protest\" against police \"persecution\".\ni\nThe defendants were charged with\ncontempt ol court for prejudicing\ntlie case against McMahon..\nAn attorney lor Gaumont-British,\nthe motion picture distributor, tendered \"incere and humble apologies\" tor a poster exhibited outside\na cinema and said the caption had\nbeen changed irom \"attempted as-\nsasinatlon\" to \"dramatic return to\nBuckingham palace\" at 263 motion\npicture houses in England.\nThe editor and proprietors of the\nEvening News and the editor and\nproprietors bt the Daily Express\neach were lined \u00a3500 and two Gau-\nmont-British representatives were\nlined a total of \u00a350.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\n. CANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK '\n5:00 Georgian Singers, Toronto;\n5:30 Twlli-tht Echoes, songs, Toronto; 6:00 Program to be announced; 8:30 fouls Guenett's orchestra,\nQuebec; 8:49 Canadian Press hews,\nWeather Bulletin, Toronto; 7:00\nHorace Lapp's orchestra, Toronto;\n7:30 News, Vancouver, B.C. Net;\nLullaby Lagoon, Montreal, B.C. 7:45;\n8:00 Au Claire de la Lune, salon\nensemble, directed by Tom Gardner,\nRuth Morgan, soprano. Edm'ton; 8:30\nBy the Sea, ensemble, dir. Percy\nHarvey, Smile Sleuth, Vancouver;\n9:00 Rhythm Rebels, Winnipeg; 9:30\nMinkowsky's orch., Montreal; 9:45\nRemember,' Fred Jarvis, bask; Dorothy and Jack Norton, Calgary; 10:00\nNews Reporter, Vancouver, B. C.\nNet.; 10:15 Jack Williamson's orch..\nVancouver.*\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHG KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n690     820    640    880     920\n5:00  Women  in  thc  Headlines;\n5:30  Strlngtime,  dir.  Louis  Ford;\n8:00 Music Hall, Bing Crosby, Jimmy Dorsey's orchestra; 7:00 Amos\nV   Andy,   blackface   comedians;\n1:1b Show Boat, Gus Hacnschcn's\nband; , fi:15 Symphony brchestra,\ndirector, Alfred Hertz; 9:15 Hollywood Talent Parade, dir. Ben Alexander; 9:45 Ninety Days in Time.\nNews, KPO; Mark Fisher's orch;\n10:00 News Flashes, Sam Hayes;\n10:IS Carl Ravazza's orch.; 10:30\nHenry King's orch.; 11:00 Tom\nBrown's orch.; 11:30 Ran Wilde's or.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Jack Meakin, instrumental.;\n6:00 Colonel Frank Knox' accept-\nonce program; 7:00 Your Government, KGO;,Russ Morgan's orchestra; 7:19 Sports Headliners (KGO);\n7:30 Al Donahue's or. 8:00 Shandor,\nviolinist; 8:08 Jimmy Lunceford's\norch.: 8:15 Frank Watanabe, sketch;\n8:30 Eddie Duchin's orchestra;\nSports Forum; 9:00 Harbor Lights,\ndrama; 9:30 Waltz Time, Qeorge\nNick son, tenor; 10:00 Sterling\nYoung's orchestra; 11:00 Charles\nRunyan, organist,\nC.B.8.DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n670     610      940      1130   1270\n5:00 Trails of Yankee Trade, KOL;\n5:30 Arman<j Hand and his band,\nChicago; 6:30 The March ot Time;\n7:00 Hal Kemp's orchestra; 7:15\nRenfrew of the Mounted; 7:30 VtA-\ncent Lopez1 orchestra; 6:00 Benny\nGoodman's orch.; 8:30 Passing Parade, 9.00 Mobil Magazine,, variety;\n9:30 Jan Gather's, orchestra; 9*45\nNocturne, with Franklin McGor-\nmack, KSL; -'l0:00 Ellis Kimball's\norch.; 1.0:15 Benny Goodman's orch.;\n10:30 Harry Lewis' orch.; 11:00 Benny Goodman's orch.; 11:30 Harry\nLewis' orch.; 11:45 Gaylord Carter,\norganist-\n800 k\nCJOR\n499.7 m\nVancouver' 500 w\n5:15 Cariboo Cowboys', 6:15 News\nFlashes', 0.30 Frank and Archie, E.I;\n6:45 Wrestling interview 7:30 Victor\nRicci; 7:45 League Against War; 8:00\nRonnie Mathews, pianist 8:15 Wally\nPeters, guitarist; -8:30, Lacrosse;\n11:00 Len Chamberlain's orch; 11-30\nSlumber Hour; 11:45 News Flashes;\n12;00 Bob LyOn's oreh;. 12:15 Midnight club.\n1030 k \u25a0 CFCN 293.1 m\nCaljary . ' 10\\000 .\n5:00 Cecil and Saily, E.T:; 8:45\nWords and Music; 6:00 Adventure\nBound; 6:15 Rajput, E.T.; 6i80 Jerry\nFuller's orch.; 8:45 In the Crime-\nlight;   7:00   Peacock   Court;   7:15\nme.... \u25a0\u2022\u2022 -,   - .\nSlices of Life; 8:30 0,d Ttoe Dance;\n9:00 News; 10:00 Old Time Dance,\nSHORT WAVE PROCRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\n.      BRITISH EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nTho 'following frequencies will\nbe used: GSD, 11.) mc, 25.53\nm., and GSC, 9.68 mc, 31.32 m.\n6:00 p.m.\u2014Big Ben. Reginald King\nand his orch.\n6:60\u2014\"Ancient Monuments,\" by\nthe Rt. Hon. W. G. A. Ormsby-Gore.\nT.50\u2014B.B.C. Dance orch.\n-7:40\u2014News and Announcements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nParis 11:45 p.m.\u2014Relay from Radio-Pans: Italian Concert, the National orchestra. TPA3..25.2 m\u201e 11-88\nmeg.\nBerlin 2:15 p.m.\u2014\"Don Juan\", a\nSymphonic-poem by Richard Stra-*\ntsss. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 m-jg.\nTokyo 3:00 p. m.'\u2014\"Overseas Program'.\" JVH, Nazaki, .20.5 m., 14.6\nmeg.\nLondon 3:00 p.m.\u2014\"Ladies Night\",\n3:45 p.m.\u2014The Castle of Dumbarton, A reminiscence of days long\npost. GSP, 19.6 m, 1531 meg. GSF,\n\u2022^-.'\u25a0eifSJN \"'*\n193 ni., 15,14 meg., GSD, 25.5, m.,\n11.75 meg.\nMadrid 4:00 p.m.\u2014Children's Program; music; time signal. EAQ, 30.5\nm., 9,87 meg;\nBerlin 4:30 p.m.\u2014The Radiating\nRace of Airplanes and Motor Cars\nto the City of the Olympic Games.\nDJP, 25.4 ni, 11.77'meg.    ';\nCaracas 5*30 p.m.\u2014Popular orch.\nYV2RC, 51.7 m., 5.8 ineg.\nReturns to Kaslo\nCRAWFORD BAY, 3.C.\u2014Mrs. Fox\nwho was visiting' Mr. and Mrs.\nManwill, has returned to her home\nin Kaslo.\nMlJS Parker ol Lethbridge is\n.guest of Mr. and,Mrs. J. Derbyshire.\nMrs: I. Harrison and two daughters Irom England are visitinjj Mrs..\nGooch.\nMrs. Johnson and infant son have\nreturned home from Creston.\nIan Fisher is a patient in Victorian hospital, Kaslo.\nA well attended dance was held\nin the public hall on Friday eventing. Several people coming from\nBoswell.Gray Creek and Kootenay\nBay. Music was supplied by It.\nMeggy and G. Richardson. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Brundrit and Miss J. McGregor,\nCreston Girls\n(amp on Lake\nCRESTON,   B.   C-Members  ol\n\u25a0the senior C G. I. T. -jorps of Trinity;; United, church,  Creston,   are\naway on the usual two weeks camping at Lockhart beach, west of Bos*\nwell, in charge of their leader, Mrs;\nW. Fraser, assisted by Miss Clara\nMorrow, who is a holiday visitor\nfrom Trail. There are 19 in tlie party,\nwhich is made up ol Beryl Chappell, Ina Chappell, Muriel Raymond,\nGoldie Walker, Ethel Morrow, Lorraine Olivier, Ethel MacLaren, Anna Dickinson; Irene Pridham, Char-\ntte Wilks, Barabta Newton, Audrj\nNewton, Glenna Fowlle, Marguer\nite   Grant,   Mar'garet   Donaldson\nMarion Staples and her guest, Shirley Macdonald of 'Greenwood.\n.The camp is an annual affair, witl\nthis\" year's company somewhat lar|\ner than in 1935. Funds to help fll)\nnnce tl)c trip were raised at a pll\nales' tea and entertainment give\nin the church hall earlier in tn\nyear. As soon as the girls retuti\nW. J. Truscott, boys' leader, expeol\nto get away with his troop, for ]\ndays  under  canvas  at  LaFranc\nCVeek, which Is a lew miles eaj\nof Boswell. . :\"\u25a0\n.\u25a0\u2022\u2022*\u25a0\u2022\u25a0      H\n PAG I POUR-\n^^\"*\nI\nNEW PRESIDENT\n[ENS GUEST\nINER, TRAIL\nDr. Wollace Aims at\nClose Contact\nStudents\ni    \u25a0 '.\"\u25a0\u25a0'       \u25a0\u25a0 '?\u25a0\nEarl in the V. S.\nTHA1L, B.C, July 29- \u2014 \"Th*\ngreatest tlung any university can\ndo is to make cine contact between\nthe student and the faculty,\" stated\nDr. R. C- Wallace, new principal\nof Queen's university, Kingston, in\nan addrest to the Queen's Alumnae\nsoeiety cif this district at a dinner\nin his honor at Hossland-Trail Golf\nand Country club Tuesday night.\nDr. Wallace spoke highly of ex\nPnncipal Grant, who he believed\nhid held up that principle. He hoped to live up to that standard.\nGuests who spoke on behalf of\ndifferent universities in Canada\nwere S. 0. Blaylock, McGill; R. W.\nDiamond, Toronto; Dr. M. R. Uas*\nted, Maintobi; and Dr. C. H. Wright,\nUniversity ef British Columbia. All\ngave congratulatory remarks and\nexpressey pleasure in seeing tlie\nQMeen'i university obtain Dr. Wil-\nme.\nLyle Jestley, speaking for the\nUniversity 0f Alberta, of which Dr.\nWallace wai recent president, expressed regret that he was leaving\nthat institution. S. S. McDiarmid,\npresident of the Alumnae society,\non behalf pf Queen's university,\ngive an address of welcome.\nOther speakers were Rev. C. H.\nI)\u00bbly, Rossland; Rev. A. J. Donnell,\nKelson; and L. A. Campbell, Trail.\nMrs. Wallace, wife of the guest\nI of honor, responded to the toast\n[!'   \"To the ladies.\"\nThere were 35 graduate* of\n- tjueen's and Alberta universitiej in\nattendance.\nJUNIOR BOXLA\nSCHEDULE\nNELMN DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-THUH8DAY MORNINO, JULY JO.\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nNelson junior box lacrosse,schedules for Thursday and Friday are;\nThursday;\n2:30\u2014Panther midgets vs. Iroquois.\n3:30\u2014Fairview bantami practice.\n4:30\u2014Indians bantams practice.\nFriday:\nJ:ao\u2014Indian bantams vs. Fan-\nthen.\n3:$0\u2014Hornets Juvenile practice.\n4:30\u2014Fairview juvenile practice.\n7:J0-Fairview Intermediata\npractlce. ,-_-.\nAmong titled passengers aboard\nthe S.S. Queen Mary was tlie Sari\nof Dudley, shown above' as the\nliner docked at New York.\n'Dempsey'Goes\nfo Final Rest\nMany Friends Attend\nWhen Shoeshiner\nIs Buried\nI Charlotte Acres\nSwims al Park\nJohn Barner, 82, ihoeshiner familiarly known in Nelson as \"Dempsey\", was buried Wednesday. Services at the chapel of Somers Fun-\nneral Homo were taken by Rev. A.\nJ. Donnell, and Miss L. Annable\nsang a solo, \"Abide With Me.\"\nMany who knew \"Dempsey\" attended the service, and there were\nnumerous floral offerings.\nPallbearers were Howard Bush, J.\nSmith, Nick Cassios, A. Hamson, R.\nDeGirolamo and Vic DeFoe,\nChristina Lake Still\nFinest Swimming\nShe Says\nCharlotte Acres, former Grand\nFerks girl, who holds the women's\nprofessional swimming championship, appeared on the stage at the\nconcert given by her orchestra at\nthe Civic Centre auditorium Wednesday afternoon to. give the story\nof her career, she stated she enjoyed swimming at Christina lake\nmore than any other place she had\nbeen.\nIn thc evening she gave a demonstration swim before a large crowd\nat Lakeside park, illustrating her\n,, \"nx-bfat stroke and the sprint she\nWed 'n the last quarter mile of\nher long swims. Later the orchestra\nplayed for a dance at the Civic\nCentre hall.\nSHOP THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nAcreage of Small\nFruits Increasing\nGRAND FORKS, B.C-A small\nfruit survey of the Grand Forks\ndistrict made by District Agriculturist G- L. Landon shows a total\nof 61 acres in small fruits. There\nare in acres of strawberries, 21\nacres of raspberries, 13 acres of\nblack currants and seven acres of\nasparagus and one acre of red currants, gooseberries, etc.\nThe small fruit surveys are made\nevery two years. The acreage devoted to small fruits is rapidly increasing.\nVISITORS TO DISTRICT\nG, M. Btewart, chief of the Dominion peed branch at Calgary, and\nD. W. Thompson, Dominion seed\ninspector of Vancouver, visited the\ndistrict in connection with the in\nspection cf vegetable seed crops\nand cereal crops.. They were much\nimpressed with the fine stands of\nonion and carrot seeds being grown\nin the valley this year.\n1936        , ..sset-jm.\nThis column ls in charge of Km Qlenn Quayl* of Trail. All\nevents ot \u2022 social nature ol interest la Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column Mrs Quayle will bl gild to have en} such newi\ntelephoned to her it [Mr home ta TraiL *\u25a0'\"..\nVan Dyke's Win\nTrail Baseball\nGame 8-2 Tally\nColored Players Give\nSmart Show os\nThey Win\nTRAIL, B. C July 29-Van Dyke's\ncolored House of David baseball\nteam handed an 9-2 defeat to Trail\nat Butler park Wednesday afternoon for their 87th victory ot the\nseason. During the season to date\nthey have lost only seven. A crowd\nof over 200 thrilled at the antics\nof the colored, loose-jointed \"naturals\".\nMays, Fisher, and Surratt performed the popular pepper game\nafter the seventh inning and Crump.\ncatcher, played the last Inning in\na comfortable position in nil rocking .chair.\nUp to the end of the fourth inning\nit was an even contest, each side\nhaving one run.\nIn the fifth the visitors bunched\nthree hits and scored four runs\nwhile Trail committed two errors.\nTlie next inuing the local! recovered one run but by playing\nsmart ball tlie colored lads pushed\nfour more across the plate ii. the\nnext three stanzas, bringing their total count to eight.\nCarl Loblick, hurling his third\nfull game for Trail, mixed them up\ncleverly but lacked his usual control. He walked one, struck out 10,\nand allowed 11 hits. Two batters\nwere safe at first on strikeouts when\nhis final pitch was too wild for\nFishewto hold.\nThe visitors used two hurlers,\nFisher pitching for two innings and\nPorter for six. Fisher walked one,\nstruck out one and allowed four\nhits. Porter walked one, struck out\nfive, hit one batter and allowed\nfive hits.\nPorter, playing first in the initial inning, pulled the only double\nplay of the game unassisted when he\ncaught a hot drive off Hall's bat\nand tagged first to put out Rothery,\nwho had left the sack.\nSurratt drove a siziler down left\nfield in the eighth for the only circuit clout of the day.\nHodges and Rothery topped the\nbatting, the former getting three for\nfour and the latter two for three.\nHouse of David 100 031 210\u20148 11   0\nTrail  001 001 000\u20142   I   2\ni ,       '  .i      =rssBsam\nTRAIL, B. C, July 28\u2014 Mrs. Tom\nBrown and Mrs. John W. Forrest\nleft this morning for Vancouver\nwhere they will spend a month's\nvacation. They were accompanied\nby Hiss Marion Graham pf Winnipeg, who hai been Mrs. Forrest's\nguest for the past two weeks.\n* '   *\nMin Helen Hebertson ef Vancouver ta the gueit of her brothel -inlaw ind sister, Mr. and afrs. Robert\nMorriion.\n* .  ,\nMiss Gladys Mawdsley and Miss\nFrances Mawdsley left todiy for\nVancouver where they wju spend\ntwo weeks vacation.\n\u2022' * \u00bb\nDavid D. Howat ot Troon, Sept-\nland ia visiting bl the city.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. K. Binns ef\nTacoma, Witt,' ipent Tuesday vis\niting in'the city.\nMiss Mona Shields and Miss\nGwen Davies left Saturday to spend\na vacation at Seattle and Vancouver.\n.     ,mi    j  ,     .     I\nPRAIRIE FOLK\nLATE NEWS FLASHES\nBORDEN 8EES CEMETERIES\nARRAS. France (CP).-Sir Robert\nBorden, wartime prime minister ot\nCanada, accompanied by Col. Frank\nHigginaon, chief administrative officer of the Imperial War Graves\ncommission, and Col. H. C. Osborne.\nOttawa, secretary of the Canadian\nWar Graves commission, toured\nsoldiers' cemeteries and memorials\namid thc battlefields of France and\nBelgium.\nBOY WITH STITCHED\nHEART DIES\nCORNWALL, Ont. (CP).-WiUred\nMane, U-year-old Alexandria, Ont.,\nboy whole heart was stitched by\ndoctors to close a wound inflicted by\nan automobile door handle, died in\nhospital Wednesday.\nB.C. MAN TO WED\nPALO ALTO, Celif. (AP).--June\nReynolds, daughter of Prof. Leon B.\nReynolds of Stanford university, and\nDonald Davidson, son ot Prof. James\nG. Davidson ot University of BriUsh\nColumbia, have announced they will\nmarry August 15..\nBISHOP OF LONDON COMING\nLONDON (CP cable). - The Bishop of London, the Right Bev\nArthur Wlnnington-Jngrem, hai announced he will sail for Canada in\nthe liner Queen Mary August 5 to\nvisit his 34 nieces and nephews,\ngreat - nieces and great - nephews.\nJokingly he said he expected the\nprime minister of Canada to erect a\nmarble statue to the Winnington-\nIngram family for doing its part in\npopulating tha Dominion.\nCOMMUNIST COMING\nLONDON (CP cable).-W. Galla-\nIo Mas Bontta\ncher, Communist member of parliament for Fife, will shortly visit\nCanada under auspices ot the Canadian Communist party. The Scottish Communist is due at Montreal\nAugust 8 and will lecture in different parts of Canada on the main\nthemes of peace and collective security.\nFARM WORKER KILLED\nFOBWARD, Sask. (CP).-George\nJessop, 60. wu knocked down and\nrolled under a farm binder when a\nteam of horses bolted. He died instantly.\nJOHN WHVLIE KILLED\nKELWOOD, Sask. (CP). - John\nWhylie. secretary of the .Manitoba\nFarm-Loan association, was Instantly killed when his automobile\noverturned in a ditch near here\nKelwood Is 85 miles northeast of\nWinnipeg.\nADMIRAL OF THE FLEET\nSEA8ICK!\nLONDON (AP) .-Admiral ot the\nFleet Sir Roger Keyw, retired, con\nfessed Wednesday that despite 51\nyears in the navy he wu unable td\nmaster sea sickness. Speaking before an education organisation. Sir\nRoger was reminded the greet Admiral Nelson also \"suffered from the\nmalady. Sir Roger replied: \"It takes\nmore than freedom from sea sickness to make a good sailor.\"\nFATHER QETS 80 DAYS\nBRIGHTON, Colo. (AP). - Bory\nHamblin, 42-year-old WPA worker,\nwas sentenced to 80 dayi tn jail and\nfined $50 for chaining hit two young\nsons to a post ln the basement of\ntheir home. The fine was \"remitted\nThe boys were endangered by fire.\nMOYlg, B.C.-Fred Perkins and\nfamily, (rom tha prairie, and Mr.\n\"ind Mrt Sam Fyles of Cranbrook,\nwere visitor*! it the home of Tin\nFarrell and Mamie Farrell.\nMiss Jessie Wilker and Min |\nPearlie Walker went Sundiy to\nvisit relatival.\nMr. and Mn. Net-on Smith and\nson ol Cranbrook were visiton at\nthe hoot of Mr. and Mrs. R. A,\nSmith here.\nClarence King, Gordon Robinson\nind Frank McHurly left tor Pen-\nlicton Sundiy. ,\nMiss Doreen Binnie of Calgary\nreturned home Saturday.\nMr. Fox of Cranbrook bal again\nbeen appointed caretaker of the\nMoyie forestry look-out.\nMrs. Geddes of Colombia, South\nAmerica, spent the week-end at\nMoyie with Mrs. Alfred Jewell and\nMrs. Gordon Jewell.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Desaulnleu and\nson, Neil, were Moyie visitors\nSunday and Monday guests at the\nBrlden home.\nMrs. Edwards left by cir Thursday tor California. Her mother\nMn. Braiden. and her sisters, Mrs.\nL. Desaulniers and Mrs. Verne\nBland, went with her. as far as\nSpokane.\nMaster Gerald Birch is here from\nTrail, coming from Koolaree camp,\nnear Nelso*.\nHay malting it on in full iwing\nand the hay crop is exceptionally\ngood this season.\nMrs. Gordon Jewell and Mrs.\nAlfred' Jewell wera joint hostesses\nat-a weinet and dancing party the\nevening of My 17. Atter a dtp in\nthe,lake, tne party adjourned to\nthe Jewell home, where dancing\nheld iway until 2 a.m. Weiaers, hot\nbuna and coffee were the refreih-\nmeats. Mrs. Geddes of California,\nMiss Doreen Binnie, of Calgary,\nand Miss Nancy Morrison, Kimberley were the guests of honor.\nThirty-two guests attended.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Birch, their\nyoungest son, Jackie, also Mrs.\nBciiiienatcr and daughter, Gloria,\nell of Trail, are bare on a couple of\nweeks vacation.\nLucien Korlen is a holiday visitor from Trail, a guest ef Mr. and\nMrs. A. J. Smith.\nMr. and Mrs. Mark Kennedy and\nyoungest daughter of Canal Flats,\nalso Mrs. Ernie Howard and Mlsi\nRuby Howard, Cranbrook, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kershaw here.\nMiss Mary Andrews is spending\na week in Moyie.\nAfter a three week'i atiy with\nMoyie and Kimberley relatives,\nMr. and Mra. Verna Bland left by\ncar for their Los Angeles home\nWednesday afternoon.\nGIRARD WINS\nPICNIC RADIO)\nLadies' Prize Goes to]\nWinnie Griggs of\nRossland\nRossland lo Curb\nWafer Wastage\nTo Place Meters on\nServices of Worst\nOffenders\nROSSLAND, B.C.\u2014To curb was-\nmm mmjmmm .  \u00ab       =\ntage of water ln various parts of\nthe city, the council Monday evening decided to purchase a number\nof meters which will be installed\non the witer lerviws of those believed to be the worst offender!.\nOthers will be installed at occasion requires. The complaint of\nRobert H. Mison that water pressure at his home on the Nickel\nPlate flat was practically nil during sprinkling hours was referred\nto the fire, water and light committee.\nA contribution of ?20 to the Rossland City band wai authorised by\nBefore buying a car you drive lit before buying a coat\nyou try it on| before buying a pen, saw, shoe* or anything\nelse you set some kind of tot or demon-trallon.\nWhat about tires. We don't Just sell tires, asking you to\nbuy them on faith. First, we demonstrate and prove to your\nsatisfaction that you are getting a BIG money's worth \u2014\ntlrei that possess every quality vou want.\nWe demonstrate the fact thit Supertwist cords retain\ntheir \"life** much longer thin ordinary cords thus keeping\nGoodyear Tires out of trouble md vastly prolonging their\nlife. And by a convincing demonstration we ihow how\nthe Goodyear All-Weather diamond tread stoutly resists\nskidding even on smooth, wet surfaces.\nTo prove to you that Goodyears give long, safe mileage\nwa show you tire \"footprints\"... taken from tires on our\ncustomer!1 cars\u2014some of them from your own lpcallty.\nSee how tha Goodyear tread stays safe after going long\nmileages.\nAsk to see these proofs be\/ore you buy.\nNELSON TRANSFER CO., LTD.\nPHONE 35\nGoodyear Dealers\nCORNER VERNON AND STANLEY STREETS     NELSON, B.C.\nWhich, in Spanish, means that\nSenorita Aurelia Jordan (above), of\nTrinidad, ha* been selected at thi\nmost attractive Latin-American at\nMiami, Fla\u201e where a sorority of\nsenoritas has been formed. She Is\nwearing a West Indian costume.\nPretty, what?\nMeeres Winner\nCountry Store\nHis Quartette Defeats\nLane 23-4 Lawn\nBowling\nthe council is a token of appreciation.\nHossland Lodge No. 21, Knights\nof Pythias, was granted the use\nof Esling park and the skating rink\nfor Labv* day, when the lodge will\nput on iti annual sports div for\nchildren. Proceed! of the celebration will be used to aid various\ncommunity enterprises.\nMrs. Marie Marino asked for the\nconstruction ot a concrete sidewalk\nm front of her property on Second\navenue, ottering to furnish the labor if the city would supply the\ncement. The council will approach\nthe other property owners in that\nblock to see if they will make similar arrangements.\nfireman Eldred Jewell was granted two weeks' holidays, starting\nAugust 1.\nA tender of $20 from W. E.\nThompson for lots 8 and 9, block\n48 wss not accepted, as Mr Thompson gave no assurance of having\nthe house be plans to construct on\nthe property completed by toe end\nof 1936.\nTwo relief recipients applied for\nan increase, but were told that tney\nwere receiving thc maximum allowance. '\nThe A. L. Johnson Tax Sale bylaw received three readings.\nMayor Arrowsmith stated that G.\nE. Murray of Trail had given aome\nvtluable advice on how to lay out\nthe city park, and had assured\nthem ot his willingness to unit\nat all t lines. An effort will be made\nto secure a landscape gardener to\nwork under Mr. Murray's instructions.\nHuckleberries Are\nPlentiful\nBLUEBERRY CREEK, B. C.~\nHuckleberries he*ve been very\nplentiful in the Blueberry district\nthis yeir, scores of pickers taking\nadvantage of natures bountiful harvest.\nThere has been great activity In\nB. McCreight's logging' camp, cars\nof polos being shipped almost daily.\nMr. McCreight hu just purchased\nanother huge tract of timber In the\nvicinity of Blueberry Creek.\nAt tha Blueberry Creek annual\nschool meeting N. Carlson wu\nelected trustee for the ensuing\nthree years, the other two remaining in office.\nMrs- Hornby ind her daughter\nfrom Trail ara staying it Blueberry\nfor the snmmn.\n\u25a0licit, TH>ny ind Douglas Hill\nwere in Trail.\nMike and Nick Semenotf were\nit the Trail Smelter Picnic it Nelson Saturday.\nA. Carlson and family hive moved to their tummer borne near\nCUUegar from their home up Blue-\nberry Creek it Pebble Creek Camp\nwhere Mr. Carlson recently finished taking out his winter cut of lumber.\nMrs. Lalonde, and har children,\nDennis and Mirceline, have returned from I few days at Birchbank.\nWASHINGTON (AP).-To gun 23\nnew fighting ships scheduled to\ncompletion this year, the navy hu\nstarted a selective recruiting drive\nfor 10,(100 sailors to boost its total\nenlisted strength to 100,000 men.\nRink skipped by G. A. Meeres\ntook home the groceries in Wednesday evening's country store competition ot the Nelson Lawn Bowling chin, trimming the rink skipped by A- G. Lane 23-4. In other\ngames J. S. Gouldmg's rink nosed\nout that of E. W- Penwill 13-12, J.\nDraper beat H. H- Wngjett 19-14,\nand I*- Doodson beet J. Ball 14-6.\nRinks were:\nG. A. Meeres, Mrs. A. G. Lane,\nH. H- Sutherland and Mrs. J. s.\nGoulding.\nA. G- Lane, Mrs. J. Ball, D.\nLaughton and. Mrs. A. Smith.\nJ. S. Goulding, Mri. P. E. Wheeler, J. Gratiam a|4 T- JPfWe.\nE. W. Penwill, W. Calbick, E. L.\nWright and Mri. A. T. Richards.\nJ. Draper, Mrs. J. Driper, Mn. J.\nT. Slndell and Mrs. E. Y. Brake.\nF. Doodson, Mn. S. N. May and\nC. I. Archibald.\nJ. Ball, Mrs. A. Wlgg and Mra\nW. T.CUbiek.\nSnap Contest\nEnds Saturday\nTRAIL, B. C, July 29\u2014Snapshot\ncompetition of the Consolidated\nEmployees' 1936 picnic ln Nelson\nSaturday closes at midnight Saturday. It was* announced Wednesday\nnight by H. W. Savage, vice-chairman and sports chairman, who has\nhad charge of the competition.\nMr. Savage has received a number of snaps entered for the special\nprize posted by the Nelson Daily\nNews. He is collecting the pictures\nin Trail and will forward them to\nthe News for Judging.\nThe competition was open, the\nonly qualification being that the\nsnap must be connected with the\npicnic.\nTRAIL, BC, July 29-E. Girard I\not Trail won the radio, men's prize,!\nand Winnie Griggs of Rossland the I\nclock, ladles' award, ln the guessing!\ncompetitions it the Consolidated I\nEmployees' picnic ht Nelion Satur*\nSay.\nQueues were based on the time'\na watch would stop. It stopped it\n1:11:10, one second earlier thin.\nGirard's guess of 2:15:11; and tout\n\u2022econds better than Miss Griggs*\nguess of 2:15:14.\nMinnesolan Is\nVisitor Perrys\nHarris Guest Parents;\nComplains Road\nCondition\nR. A. Harris of Laketield, Minn,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Harris of\nPerry Siding, has left for till home\naccompanied by I. R. Stone, also of\nLaketield, following a visit to Perrjr\nSiding. Mr. Harris owns a hatchery\nef 50,000 capacity at Laketield, and.\nil Minnesota state accreditation\npoultry inspector and poultry disease specialist. He is a graduate of {\nDr. Salsbury's college ot Charlei ,\nCity, lowi.\nMr. Stone wu lavish In hi* praise I\nof Nelson's beauty and scenic setting.  Mr. Harris noted particularly\nimprovement! In the city ln tha\nseven years he hi| been away, but\ncomplained ot the condition of tht !\nroad from the international boon- t\ndary to Nelion, which h\u00ab felt wig <\ncausing considerable loss to business)\nmen in this, vicinity. Jlmy United\nStatei tourists would visit Nelson,\nhe asserted, it the road wai good.\nScheduled Softball\nGame Is Postponed\nScheduled softball game between\nthe Bugle Band and the Safewayi\nwu called off Wednesday evening\nwhen only a tew players trom each\nteam turned out.\n.. mint,,   , ,.,,'..j   ,    \u25a0\na^m-tl^^t-^^lrl^jtl^^^^AW^nntlEr*!^.\nGOING ON YOUR\nVACATION?\n\u2014then buy your copy of th* Nelson Daily News from\nany of tho following agents.\nYou will enjoy keeping in touch with events at home.\nBEAVERDELL\nT. W. Clark\nCALGARY\nHarry's Newi A Tobacco\nStand. 109 8th Ave. Wilt\nCASTLEGAR\nR. A. D. Wut\nCRANBROOK\nBeittli-Noble Ltd.\nH. W Laktr\nJ. ft. MacDonald\nScott's Drug 4 Book Store\nCRESTON\nCreston Drug & Book Co.\nW. Fraser\nFERNIE\nW. A. Ingram\nFRUITVAU\nR. O. Eustls\nM. Watson\nCRAND FORKS\nCheerl-o Shoppe\nWoodland Drug Co.\nGREENWOOD\nGreenwood Drug Store\nKASLO\nChss. W. Webster\nKIMBERLEY\nChitian'i Confectionery\nKimberley Drug A Book Co.\nKlmbirliy Pharmacy\nO. M. Simuilson\nNELSON\nAvinui Service Station\nBishop's Nowstind\nCity Drug A Stationery Co.\nFleury's Phlrmaey\nHume Hotel\nMann Rutherford Co.\n77 Taxi Newt Depot\nValentines\nO. B. Wrlght-C.P.R. Lunch\nCounter\nROSSLAND\nH Cherrington\nNiMH Drug Store\nRossland Drug A Book Co,\nLtd.\nSALMO\nJ. F. Donaldson\nSPOKANE\n8. P. Jacoy-228 Stevens St\nTRAIL\nArlington Hotel\nCrown Point Hotel\nJ   M, Doughty\nErnie Hunt\nK A. Margeson\nScheir'i Gift Shop\nSchwint Confectionery\nTrill Newi Depot\nVANCOUVER\nP.O. Newitand\u2014302 Granville\nst-\nWYNNDEL\nA. W. Burch\nYMIR\n8. A. Curwen\nJohn Daly\nOn All C.P.R. Boatj end Traini ami Gov't. Ferry\nFrom Frasei'i bit-.\nwwwwwWwWwwwa-Ww-iwWwHwV\nlis-^m^immmmmeM\n EXTRA SPECIALS\nAt Andrew's Summer Shoe\nWomen's Sport OxSords\nWhite and Smoked Elk.\nLeather or Rubber Soles.\n$1.95,  $2.65,  $3-35,  $3-95\nJs,\nWomen's\nWhite Shoes\nCuban Heels in Pumps\nand Ties: fPO OP\nPair   *$\u00a3.-)J\nBoys'Hoots\nand Oxfords\nSires\nPair\nto*5'A;\nMisses'\nOxfords and\nSUppers\nSixes 2Vz to 3: (PI Ct\nPair\nChildren's\nOxfords and\nSlippers\n$05\nSizes 5 to\n12'\/-. Pair\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nNELSON DAILY NEWI, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, JULY SO. 19M\nBRITISH PARTY\nWILL SPEND 29\nHOURS IN CITY\nInspectional Tour Due\nAug. 21; Includes\nTimber Group\nForty-one names comprise the\npersonnel list of the government Inspection tour coming to British\nColumbia from the old country next\nmonth. Tbe party is due in Nelson\nabout 8:30 tne evening of Friday,\nAugust 21, and will leave at 1:29\nVITTUCCI\nPronounoed   (Vee-Two-Chee)\nOLIVE OIL\nThere  is   no  substitute for\nVittuccl  (Virgin)  Olive Oil.\nIt's  the   best,  preferred   by\nGood Housekeeping.\n(Beware ot Substitutes)\nmwAysTOP\nHIS LAST TEXT\nWOMAN'S  E8CAPE\nWORCESTER PARK, Surrey -\nICP)\u2014Reading from the lesson l*-om\nthe 8th chapter of Romans at a\nchurch here, Frederick John Mason read: \"for Thy sake we are\nkilled all tha day long.\" He faltered\nand tell dead.\nFOLKESTONE, England (CP)\u2014\nA car crashed through a barrier al\nthe side of a road, and plunged\nover a 20-foot embankment\u2014and\nMrs. Smurtliwaito of Cheltenham\nemerged without a scratch.\nNeat Dept.\nSPECIALS\nTENDER BABY BEEF\nROUND STEAKS:      0C\u00ab?\n2 Ibi.  0\u00abJ\nSHOULDER VEAL\nSTEAKS: 2 lbs.   .\nMILD CURED BACK\nBACON: Sliced;\nlb\t\nFINEST BOILED\nHAM: Sliced; lib.\n8AFEWAY  STORES,  LIMITED\n25*\n31'\n55'\n\u00bb.m. Sunday, August 23, eastbound,\nliving the party a stopover la thit\ncity of almost 2* hours.\nThe visitors are coming from all\nCet the British Isles) and one,\nGibbons, tram South Africa.\nIncluded in tb* party li a group\nlisted separately as \"tha timber delegation\" and comprising some ol tha\nheavy old country users ot timber\n-products.\nThe party as listed is:\nMrs. B. S. F. Baldwin, Southampton; Dr. Bertram-Watson, London;\nMiss A. A. Breakenridge, Glasgow;\nMr. and Mrs. Brierley, Chislehurst,\nKent; Mr, and Mrs. L. Snape Brown\nLondon; Miss Uyndman, London;\nMiss 11. Edmeston, Miss J. Robin-\nsou and Miss P. Kobinson, Colwyn\nBay; F. A. Endcra, Rayleigh. Sussex; Mist Gibbons, South Africa;\nMr.-snd Mrs. Hawkins, Bournemouth; Miss M. Holden, London;\nMiss Hunt, Altringham, Cheshire;\n1. D. Ling, Dorchester; S. W. Tilley,\nDorchester; Miss L. A. Lowe, Misa\nM. E. Mackenzie, Miss Ritchie, London; D. B. McNeill, Beliast; Mr.\nand Mrs. J. W. Richards, Miss H.\ntiichards, Miss D. Richards, Tiptop,\n.Staffs; 11. F. Wreidt, Waltham Cross,\ndcrts.; R. M. Ferguson, Alton, Hants.\nTimber delegation *\u25a0 E. H. B.\nBoulton, technical director, Timber\nDevelopment association; H. S.\nAuckland, Lamb Bros., limited, Liv-\n.-rpool; Mr. and Mrs, Gabriel, London; Mrs. Hemingway, manager ot\nScantlebury & Hemingway, London; H. Lees, managing director ot\nLamb Bros. Limited, Liverpool; A.\nMcVey, general secretary, Timber\nTrades federation ot the United\nKingdom; Mr. and Mrs. Mellier-\nSmith, Reigate and London; E.\nB. Monkhouse, president, Timber\nTrades federation ot the United\nKingdom; It. Douglas Roe, British\nColumbia timber commissioner; J.\nW. Taylor, Page & Taylor, Preston,\nLanes.\nSTOLE MILK FOR WIFE\nLONDON (CP)-Joseph HiU, 20,\nwas sentenced to 14 days in jail\nwhen be was charged with stealing\na bottle ot milk. He said it was foi\nhis wife, who was expecting a baby\nWriting of the marvelous sheep he\nsaw in Arabia, the ancient historian\nHerodotus said that one kind had\ntails so long \"that men attach them\nto a little trolley, to prevent them\nfrom trailing along the ground, and\nso contracting sores.\" ,\n' \u00bb\u25a0 i  \" \u25a0\u25a0- '\u25a0 - \u00ab,\nThe right way to\nBEAT THE\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\n\"   IN NELSON CITY\n\u25a0 sa   mv      so, ii\nThl| column li conducted by Mm. M. A. Vigneux. All news al a\nsocial nature Including receptions, private inlorteimneiiti, penooal\nitems, marriages, etc, will appear in this column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home, 519 Silica street\nno more mornings\nspent in hot kitchens\nfor me! kellogg's are\nsoeasytoserve..and\nalltherwiiyukesthem!\nBOTH you and your family will enjoy\nthese hot days more if you serve crisp,\nrefreshing Kellogg's Cora Flakes.\nThese light, satisfying flakes help you\nto forget the heat. They're fidl of\nnourishment*\u2014yet they don't overload the stomach. With fruit or\nberries, they're extra-delicious.\nKellogg's are an ideal hot>weather\nbreakfast, lunch or children's supper.\nA -wholesome bedtime snack. And so\nconvenient to serve! They come to\nyou crisp and fresh, ready to eat.\nWhen you ask for corn flakes, he\nsure to ask for Kellogg's by name.\nOven-fresh and flavor-perfect in the\npatented WAXTITE inner wrapper,\nSold everywhere. Made by Kellogg iu\nLondon, Ontario.\nNothing lakes tht place ol\ne#t%y*\nCORNFLAKES\nMr. and Mrs. Qeorge Schupe, Josephine street, announce the engagement ol their second daughter,\nHelen Frances, to constable William\nroster Arunon of Hosslanu, eldest\nson ot Mr. and Mrs, H. V- Armson,\n030 Sophia street, Vancouver. The\nmarriage is to take place in Nelson the latter part ef August.\n**.**>\nVT. JL Chalmerg of Thrums visited the city yesterday.\nft t\nMr. and Mn. M. McLeod and their\nguests an leaving today tor a visit\nin Spokane,\n, .  *\nOscar Johnson ot Procter paid a\nvisit in town yesterday.\n\u00ab   .   \u2022\nMrs. E. R. McCamon of Calgary,\nwho has been the guest M her\nmother, Mrs. J- L. Edwards In Nakusp ia arriving today to spend a\ncouple of <Uyi visiting Mrs. Drury\nDarley, Kootenay itreet.\n,  \u2022   \u2022\nM K. Bennett ot Howser visited\nin town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u00bb.  \u2022\nVisitors in Nelson yesterday Included Mr. and Mrs. McCormick oi\nthe Reno mipe. ,,\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. James Thatcher ot Trail and\nher two children, Grace and Jimmie, have taken up residence at\n220 Silica street for a few weeks.\n.  ,  \u2022\nMrs. J. F. Meagher, Cedar street,\nhas returned from a couple of weeks\niu Vancouver.\n...\nMiss J. C. McLean, Hall itreet.\nwho has been visiting friends in\nProcter, haa returned.\n.  .  .\nA. E. Allison oi Trail Is holidaying at the Aiasworth Hot Springs\nhotel.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. J. M. Sutherland\nof Winnipeg were city visitors yesterday.\n...\nMisa Sybil McLean, Victoria St.,\nhas returned trom Vancouver where\nshe spent a week, a guest at the\nhome of Krs. A. B. Dando, a former\nNelsonite.\n.  .  .\nMr. *id Mrs. Norbert O- Choquette ind their youni ion, Gilbert, Stanley street, have returned\nfrom a motor trip to endesville,\nwhere they were guests at the home\nof Mr. and Mri. Josegh DuMont.\nTbey were accompanied by Mrs.\nChoquette's parent!, Mr. and Mrs.\nOrphiv Bourgeois of Cranbrook and\nth.- latterl brother, Bev. Canon\nCanute Arseneau ot Nicolet, Que,\nwho ere now visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nGracien Bourgeois at Castlegar. Miss\nSimonne Bourgeois 11 also visiting\nher brother, Gracien, at Castlegar.\n.  .  .\nE. S. Jones, district engineer, with\noffice in Cranbrook, Is a Nlson\nvisitor.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nArthur Jackson has as his guest\nat his Cedar Point home, Mr. and\nMrs. F. Jackson of Key River, also\nMr. and Mrs. Osben ot Peace River\nLanding, snd Mr. and Mrs. Marshall ot Dorenlee, Alta.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nRev. and Mre. Norman Larmonth\nand their daughters Mary and Helen of Vancouver who are holidaying in Kaslo, were guests on Tuesday at the home of Miss K. V.\ntenton, Carbonate street.\nMrs. Norman McLeod of Procter\n*aa a city visitory Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00ab\nMurray Robison ot Medicine Hat,\nwho has been the guest of Mr. and\nMrs. S. P. Wade, Victoria street,\nhas returned.\n\u2022 \u00bb   *\nMr. and Mrs. J. Jewitt of South\nSlocan were Nelson visitors Tuesday.\n...\nMrs. E. W. Kopecki and her son,\nBobby, ot Rossland are guests at\nthe home of the former's sisters,\nMrs. J. V, Meyer and Mrs. Kirby\nGrenfell.\n\u2022 .   *\nHonoring Mr. and Mrs. James\nO'Shea's guesti, Mr*. V. M Newman and daughter, Harmony, of\nGloucestershire, Eng., Mr. and Mrs.\nPaul Lincoln entertained ah an informal evening at their homo on\nStanley street, when their invited\nguesti included Mrs. Newman, Miss\nNewman, Mr. and Mrt. James\nO'Shea, Mr. and Mn. John Cartmel,\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Appleyard, Mr\nand Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson, Mr.\nand Mrs, Arthur Baird, Dr. and\nMrs. H. H. McKenzie, Mr. and Mn.\nV- M. Walker, Mn. Alex Leith and\nMra. E. G. Smyth.\n. \u00bb \u2022  \u2022\nMre. Ralph Rufli of Kimberley,\nwho is holidaying it the home in\nProcter of her mother, Mra. E.\nMerrifield, wes a city visitor yesterdiy,*\n\u2022 si   \u2022\nR. Gifford ot Trail was a recent\nviattor in town.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMr. nd Mrs. H. D.\u201eDawson, Stanley street, left yesterday tor their\nsummer place at Kaslo, where the)\nwlUipenttslewtJayi.\nMiss Francei Barclay ot Toronto,\nwho has been spending the past\nmonth, in Nelson a guest tt the\nhome ot Mr. and Mn, Charles H.\nStark, Silica itreet, hag left tor Vancouver, where ihe will visit Mr.\nand Mrs. T. D, Stark lor a tew\nweeks. She was accompanied by\nher cousin. Mrs. Louis Choquette,\nwho will also visit the Stark home.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nH. I. McAlpine ot the Wisconsin\nmine vlsjted. the <*lty yesterday.\n\u2022 * \u00ab\nMr. and Mrs. T. M. Jones. Silica\nstreet, have returned from a weeks'\nv\u00ablt In Spokane and Colville, Wash.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nMrs. John Rlddock, Stanley street\nhas returned trom a week in Procter.\n.  .  .\nS. M. Manning of the Relief Arlington mine at Erie visited the city\nyesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00ab\nArthur Jackson and Ills daughter\nMiss Dorothy Jackson of Cedir\nPoint were city visitors yesterday.\nf  .   \u2022\nMr. Moor* ot Trail WW in the\ncity Tuesday to attend the funeral\not W. H. Ramsden.\nMr. and Mrs.  Peters of\nwere city visitors Tuesday.\nKaslo\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Spence are\nspending a day's holiday in Nelson.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nMn. Frances Lincoln, Stanley\nstreet, it spending a few days, at\nthe summer place ot Mr. and Mrs.\nIf. D. Dawson tt Kaslo the guest\not Mia Isabel Dawson.\n\u00bb  *  \u2022\nA. O. Sullivan, who has spent the\npast three months visiting friends\nin Nelson, Cranbrook tnd Banff,\nleft Tuesday for his home in Mill\nValley, Celll\nt \u2022 \u2022\nJames Buchanan ot Trill was a\nNelion snooper yestertiy.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nH. W. Power ot Vancouver, pioneer resident ot Kaslo, was in the\ncity Tuesday en route to the coast\n\u00ab  *  *\nMr. and Mn. Clarence Ogllvie of\nHarrop were Nelson visiton Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00bb\nVisiton in the city Included Mr.\nand Mrs. Conrad Thor and child of\nTrail.\n...\nt. Charles of Trail was in the\ncity Tuesday to attend the funeral\nof W. H. Ramsden.\n, * .\nMr. and Mn. Bryant ind Douglas\nJarrett, all of Kimberley, were ln\nNelion visiting the latter's mother\nand friends.\n.   ,   t\nMn. F. Carmicael and children ot\nNelion are visiting relatives in Kimberley.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u00bb\nMn. William Ogden tnd her Infant daughter Florence Ruth leave\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital today for their home ln Procter.\n\u00bb   \u00bb   \u00ab\nMr. ind Mrs. J. B. Stark hive\ntaken up residence in the Terrace\napartments.\n...\nA. Cronie of Trail was a resident\nvisitor in the city.\n...\nW. H. Harris la In the Bayonne district.\n,  ,  \u2022\nMrs. E. Caitlebery ot Wallace,\nIdaho, is a guest at the home ot\nMr. and Mrs. w. S. Pounder.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nHazel Spier*, wai known local\nsoftball player, returned to Nelson\nWednesday evening after a 10-day\nvisit ta Colville, Washington.\n\"LONG SHORTS\" MAKE DEBUT\nPAWS (CP).-Newest beach costumes are long \"ihorts\". These come\ndown to mid-calf, like plus-fours,\ntnd are said to make a \u00bbood bicycle\npint when the beach palls.\n-PAGE FIVE\nRECIPES\nMINUS\ntnd\nHINTS\nGood\nBv\nMrs.\nM\u00abrv\nMorton\nHousekeeping\nMENU HINT\nBroiled Steak    naked Potatoes\nFresh Vegetable Salad      Berries\nHoney Fruit Cooklei Tet or Coffee\nIn one of Us itoriei O'Henry, the\nfamous writer, whimsically described the proper method lor broiling a steak in this manner: \"Simply\nplace the steak in your pocket,\"\nsaid he, \"and walk slowly through\na red-hot kitchen. Then by the Ume\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nyou reach the other side, the steak\nwill be done.\"\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nHoney  trait  Cookiea-One-hilf\ncup shortening, one cup brown iu-\nSar, one egg, one-halt cup strained\noney, one-hilt cup idur milk, one\nteaspoon soda, one-half teaspoon\nsalt, two and one-half cups flour,\none teaspoon cinnamon, one-fourth\nteaspoon all-spice, one-fourth teaipoon ground cloves, one-fourth cup\nchopped raisins, on* Cup chopped\nnut j and shredded coconut Mix\nwell, and spread thinly in well'\ngreased shallow pans. Bake tt tit\ndegrees tor about 20 minutes. While\nstill warm spread thinly with icing\nmade by moistening confectioner's\nsugar with milk and flavoring with\nvanilla, When cold cut In scares.\n n\nShorts and Terry\n\u2022    Fine Quality\nDRILL SHORTS\nin sand, green, brown,\nmai;e, red, blye snd white.\nNice pleated styles. 'JQ.\nEACH   .,  IV\nDistinctive Knitted\nSPORTS SHIRTS\nCool and light in plain\ncolors of flesh, white,\nnary, green. Also\nstripei. EACH ...\nWell Mads\nSUMMER PRINT\nFROCKS*\nCOOKIE COATS\nand\nSMART STYLE\nSMOCKS\nFast color materials that\nwill give satlsfac- (PI CQ\ntory wear. vl-rtfB\n89*\nJERMAN HUNT'S\nDRY GOODS AND READY-TO-WEAR\nPhone 200 Baker St.\n5T=S\n\u25a0=\u2014S\nOPTOMETRIST ON\nWAY TO CUNIC\nSESSION\/COAST\nJ. A. C. Laughton, optometrist, left\nyesterday to attend the graduate\nclinic on care ol the eyes ol children,\nto he held the tint week in August\nIn Vancouver, B.C., under Dr. A. M.\nSkefflngton, director ot the Qitdu-\nate Clinic foundation, internationally known for hlj work in visual\ncorrection.\nThese graduate clinics in advanced optometrlc roethodi ol correcting the visual problem! of children are being held ln the principal\ncities, in connection with the extension program ot the American Op-\ntometric association.\nMr.  Laughton   statei  that  the\nmethod* of ii-elyting the ?auiei for\nocular problems in children of\nschool age have advanced so rapidly\nin the pist several years that limp\"\nkeeping abreast l\u00ab a tasjc, tot* t)\nconscientious optometrist.\nLess attention ls being given to\nwhether the child can simply see\nwell, and more to whether he ll\nvisually adapted to the demand! ef\nthe modern educational -requirements.\nResearch has shown method* of\ngraphing this inability to leant and\nabsorb and methods ot re-adaptitlen\nhave been perfected. It is to become\nfully conversant with these new\nmethod! that Mr. Laughton yearly\natttndi these graduate clinics.\nIn New York City, IS per cent ot\nthe young people between IS and\n25 yean of we are on relief;\nTEA\n104\nycumm\nYCIIR SUMMER B1CT\nWITH BENSON!*\nHot weather Is wearying To\nmaintain Energy and Strength\neveryone must get Balanced\nNourishment Give tt to your\nfamily In this delicious way.\n\u25a0Make the lightest, daintiest, frwen desserts\nand cool, smooth blanc-mangcs with Nourishing BENSON'S CORN STARCH\nUse \"CROWN WAND\" CORN SYRUP, the\nfamous Energy Food, as a sauce Thty provide the Balance of Health for everybody Id\nSummertime. They are delectable foods and\nmost economical\nFREE - AN APMIOVED fORTRAIT Or OUH\nBELOVED SOVEREIGN   HIS  MAJESTY  KINO\nEDWARD VIII\nA \u00bbH\" \u00ab IV ttprwlm lion in lull tolor et a\nream! picture painted by one of England's lor*,\nmatt portrait artiste.\nHERE'S HOW TO GET IT)\ntint take tin frost ot a carton Irom tny ons of\ntbe pwliKU lilted bole*. WriW your turns snd\nS plainly oo tha back, with the words\nI Pittuit\" ant) mail it to Tbe Canada\nCompany, limited. Boj 318. Montreal.\nCANADA CORN STARCH\nCHALLENGE CWN STARCr\n\"--.i\"!\nV\" *.. rv\"T:-*'\nBENSONS\nCORN STARCH\n, CANADA STARCH COMrANY. Limlttf I\n \u25a0 i\nPAGE SIX \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C..-THUR8DAY MORNING. JULY 30, 1938\nfc        ' Ibt\nEstablished April 22. 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\n\"'   ALL THI NEWS V7H1U 'n ffl'Mtw^**'7\nPublished   every   morning  except   Sundiy   by\n>   the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\nSIS   Baker   Street.   Ntlton.   Brltlth   Columbia.\n\u25a0   -\u2014q\u2014^\u00bbww ' in .' \"    ' I\nPhont 144. Private Exchange Connectliig All Deptrunent!.\n  \", ,|.        II'..,,        I.   II    Ml   ,1    .\nMember   ef  tht   Audit   Bureau   of  Circulations  and\nOtotoTt\nPress    Leased    Wirt    News   Service.\nTHURSDAY, JULY 30,1936\nBUSINESS CONTINUES'CLIMB\n, Business operations in the Dominion continue to show\nI an upward trend according to statistics presented by the\nDominion Bureau of Statistics. A factor in the pickup is\nthe mining industry and in the month of June export of\nline from Canada, one of the chief products of the Kootenays, jumped by- 88 per cent.\nBusiness operations in Canada as measured by the preliminary compilation of the index of the physical volume\nof business based on 39 out of 45 factors^showe'd an.advance\nof 11.3 per cent in June over the corresponding month of\nlast, year, factors of a general nature were- on- the whole\nat a considerably higher level than 12 months ago. The index\nOf wholesale prices advanced from 11. td72,3r.amLthe level\nof common stock prices was up from 93.8 to i'13,8, an increase jof 21.3 per cent. Financial factors including*- high-\ngrade bond yields and the deposit liabilities of the banks\n\u25a0howed considerable betterment. \u2022\nThe factors indicating the trend of mineral production\nWere predominantly greater in June of the present year,\n'although exports of copper in different-forms receded from\n87,746,000 pounds to 24,594,000. A gain, on the other hand,\nojf 43 per cent was shown in nickel exports. The increase\nin line exports was no less than 88 per cent and the index\nof asbestos exports showed a gain of nearly 13 per cent to\n12,226. tons.\nWith a few exceptions the prominent factors showing\nthe trend of manufacturing production were at a consider-\nibly higher level. The index of foodstuffs production advanced from 84.9 to 99.6, sugar manufacturing in the latest\n\u25a0four week period recording an increase of nearly 6 per cent.\nNewsprint production at 270,051 tons against 232,020\n*howed a gain of 16.4 per cent. A gain of more than 30 per\n<ent was shown in the exports of planks and boards, indicating improvement in the saw-milling industry. The outward\nshipment in June was 169,550,000 feet against 129,800,000\njn June of 1935. The exports of wood pulp and shingles, on\nthe other hand, showed a decline from the same month of\nlast year.\nI ; The iron and steel industry was more active',, ijhe out.\n{\u25a0Ut! of .pig iron increasing from 44,555 tons to 56,362,ahd of\nsteel ingots from 73,450 tons td 82,196. In spite of the heavy\n\u2022lead in automobile production during the last six months\nt)v<rjr the same period of the preceding year, the output\nshowed an increase from 15,745 units in June 1935 to 16,400\ntbnits in the month under review. The increase in the imports pf crude petroleum, indicating conditions in the oil\n^industry, was 161\/2- per cent. The inward shipment in June\nL-was 153,619,000 gallons. The daily output of electric power\n(\u2022increased from 60,542,000 kilowatt hours to 67,623,000.\nparked increases were also shown in both divisions of the\n^external trade, exports advancing from $59,400,000.to $79,-\n> 900,000.\nThe hundred yeomen of the guard, better known as\nI''Beefeaters\" in London have received permission from\nKing Edward to shave their beards. Another boost for the\nrazor manufacturers.\nBETWEEN\n-mm\nlac\nIn Rothamsted, England, in a large agricultural station\nhey are erecting air conditioned houses for bacon hogs. The\nI idea seems to be to give the pig sties the air.\nHOLIDAY MAKERS BE '   -\nPREPARED     '   \u25a0\nFor those people going; abroad on\ntheir holidays shortly I am handing\nout today some information obtained from the National Geographic whirh might be of aid in\nknowing the customs of the people\nviiited. Of course, on being introduced \u25a0 any good Canadian walks\nforward and offers his hand In\nhandshake. ;'\nA Chinese, to show how.pleased\nhe is to enco.uif-.er you, shakes his\nown hands.\nIn the Banks Islands of Uie Pacific, a man hooks the middle finger\nof his right hand with yours, and\npulls it away with a crack.\nThe strange white Ainu people of\nJapan make you welcome by rubbing their own palms together and\nstroking their beards.\nA Mohamrnedan, according to\nancient custofti, may shake hands\nwith, you with thumbs up, then\ntouch his breast, forehead and lips\nwith his hand to signify that you are\nentitled to a bit of osculation. *\nInhabitants' of bleak Tieri'a del\nFuego welcome the rare strangers\nwho come there with a bear hug\nand a back patting, meanwhile\njumping up and down.\nAn African West Coast negro, on\ngreeting a friend, may fling himself\nto his knees and kiss the ground\nthree times.  ,\nFrenchmen kiss each other on\n\u25a0both cheeks. Israelites of old bowed\nthemselves lo thc ground seven,\ntimes.\nAndaman Islanders blow into another's hands, with a cooing sound.\nIndians of the Gulf of Mexico blow\ninto each other's ears.\nAfricans of the French colony ol\nDahomey twist, their finger knuckles\nuntil they emit a loud crack, Eskimos rub noses, They are bewildered\nby the sight of handshaking.'assum-\ning it to signify that when your\nright hand grows tired your friends\nhelp you hold it.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTODAY'S GOSSIP\nAbout the town\u2014Ranee Blanchard\nwatching a mechanic perform on an\noutboard motor\u2014and making several suggestions \u2014 Chief of Police\nAlex Stewart pleased as punch about\nsomething around noon yesterday\u2014\nWm. Holmgren sitting behind- his\ndesk and discussing the forest fire\nsituation\u2014A lot of Provincial police\nofficers displaying new trooper hel^*\nmets-^and joshing me for wearing a\nScottish plaid necktie\u2014I told them\nit was a MacCurran tartan\u2014Cliff\nBums.trying to inveigle Pete Kapak\ninto a baseball bet-^Percy Andrews\nwondering how. big a staff worked\nat the Daily News\u2014John Marquis\ngetting a hair trim \u2014 Dave Wade\nspringing a new story\u2014A young\nlady walking down the street without stockings and wearing those\nwide open sandals\u2014displaying toe\nnails elegantly tinted a bright red to\nmatch her finger-nails\u2014Doug Hall\nrejoicing in an afternoon off\u2014so he\ncould take a dip at Lakeside\u2014Art\nGodfrey relating how pleasant it is\nto walk about eight miles down a\nmountain trail in the dead of night\n\u2014Jack Aldridge blowing-about his\n100 per cent average*, al skeets\u2014\nFrom what I gather he missed every\nbird in 100 rounds\u2014C. E. G. Fisher\nenjoying the House of David ball\ngame \u2014 George Dill remarking he\nwould sooner watch a good lacrosse\nbattle\u2014Dr. H. H. Mackenzie stretched out on the grass at the game-\nHank and Freddie Lauriente o(\nTrail taking in the tilt\u2014Joe Bradshaw among the fans\u2014while son\nChester watched the game from his\nback verandah \u2014 Dan Guy going\nsomewhere at a Utile faster speed\nthan is usual\u2014\nTHE DOCTOR\n7 7. SAYS.'\nLOGAN  CLENDENINQ.  M.0.\nABNORMALLY  EMOTIONAL\n\u2022 FOLK WORRY\nThe statement that an abnormal\nemotional state exists is not easy to\n,'xpiain on any scientific basis. .The\nproblem, first, implies a knowledge\noi what constitutes ' normal state\nof mind. This varies witn difleieht\npeople and different circumstances,\nor even under thc same circumstances.\nFor practical purposes, the average person will understand What\nconstitutes the normal- pattern ol\nconduct or reaction to a given stimulus, lt is well known that the average thing whicn makes people laiign\nShould not make them cry, Furthermore, an ordinary trivial annoy-\nonce, such as might occur to anyone several times a day, is treateu\nas such md soon forgotten,. while\nan extremely nervous or emotional\nperson may, and often does, dwell\nunduly upon it and worry about it\n\/or days.   ,\nOftentimes nervous people become extremely agitated over tlie\nsimple nunutae of everyday life,\nand become incapable of performing their' usual duties without suffering extreme fatigue. When something really serious happens, this\n| same person may Decome calm and\ncapable and able to endure the\ngreatest soocks \"or hardships. Apparently the shock of important\nevent or tradgedy c-.usesthem to\ntemporarily subdue the lmpluses\nemanating from the emotiona. centers, and substitme cold reason or\nlogic to carry them through the\nordeal.\nREACTION CAUSES\nI    EAKDOWN ,'    '     .\nFrequently tlie reaction carries\nthem to the verge of a major attack\nof \"nerves\" or \"nervous oreakdown''\nso thai life becomes a ser.es of irritating, dramatic ! or tragi experiences. Rarely are tney able to become placid and relaxed. Pessimism is the keyword of 'heir existence; the feeling is constantly\npresent that something unpleasant\nis sure to happen.\nIf, for a time, life flows on uneventfully, as 11 so often does, this\nis a Justifiable cause for unhappi-\nness and worry, o iceuse it is not\ngood for people to become too happy.\nIf there is no particular personal\nmatter to worry about, tlii\u201e type of\nperson casts an anxious eye about\nois list of frici. Is a.n ucqaintances,\nand can always find plenty to become concerned about in a dozen\nplaces.\nThis type cf person once inspired\na wit to remark, \", or old lady\nSmith, she lived to the .ipe old age\nof 83 before passing lo her reward;\nshe had a great deal o, trouDle *ll\nher life, most of whicli never happened.\"\nJust why some persons live largely upon emotional impluses and\nsuffer from mental agitation or nervousness is a very complicated and\nonly partlaily un'dertood matter.\nCertain schools of thought believe\nin the Freudian Uieory of juvenile\nrepressions i.uo Inhibitions of fan-\ntatic and often revolting nature, but\na more practical and sane tory\nor explanation rests upon the question ' oi inneritan - -, or acqu *u\ncharacteristics peculiar to certain\nfamilies. '.\nOne often hears the' expression\nKe father, like *on,\" \"like mother,- like daughter.:1. Tlie personality\ncharacteristics of the child so frequently resemle those of the molt\ndominmt parent.   ,  .\nCANADA\nA Fact a Day\nAUTOMOBILE PRODUCTION\nThe May production of automobiles in Canada at $20,006 units was\n20 per cent less than in April when\n24,951 cars were made*and 4 per\ncent lower than in May last year\nwhen the output amounted to 80.-\n765 units. Of the production in the\nlatest month, 16'i?9 ' were passenger cars and 3617 *ere commercial\ncars. \u25a0   \u2022\n10 YEARS AGO   j\nFrom Nelion Daily,News Files i\nCONTRACT\n\u2022  BRIDGE\n:,ByE,'V. SHEPARD.\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\n18 A SMALL SLAM POSSIBLE\nAn Elkhart, Ind,, inquirer asks if\nEast can. make a small slam at\nhearts. The opening lead being the\nAoe ot clubs, which was followed\nby the 8 of clubs.\n+S7SS1\n\u00bb43\n\u2666 J 10 7 5\n+ 65\ns> None\nf A 10 7 2\n\u00bbAVQ.(4|g     di|\nJL\nJULY 30, tow. -\nH. R. Gale, a three-time mayor of\nVancouver and a man prominently\nidentified with commercial and political affairs at -the. coast, will\ncarry the Liberal banner in West\nKootenay nthng, in the coming\nfederal election.\nDr. Michael Clark, publlcisit, orator, parliamentary d-Oater, writer,\ndied suddenly at his farm home at\nOlds yesterday morning after a\nbrief illness according to a dispatch\nfrom Calgary.\n.     0     .\nMr. and Mrs. George Johnson and\nyoung daughter, Phyllis, of Vancouver arrived by motor yesterday\nto spend a month here, guests of\nMr. and Mrs. G. Campbell, fair-\nview. '\n, \u2022   <\u25a0   \u2022 \u2022\nMrs, E. Howling and son, Sydney,\nThird street, Fairview, returned last\nevening after spending a short holiday-at Kootenay Landing.\ni   20 YEARS AGO   |\nFrom Nelion Daily News Files\n* . '\u2014-\u2014 i ^\nJULY 30, 1\u00bb1\u00ab.\nDiscovery of the Reno properl\/\nin the Fawn Creek basin in the\nSheep creek district was made by\nchance by W. B. Pool, who had\ntaken his son grouse hunting on\nthe mountain, it is recalled. The\nground had been covered tune and\nagain by prospectors 'and wa**\nknown to hold valuable mineral\nbodies but until Mr. Pool chanced\nupon it three or four years ago,\nthe showing had not' been found.\n-   \u00bb   \u2022\nBorn, on July 2d, to Mr: and Mrs.\nFrank H. Scott of Hall Mines road!\na daughter.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Templeton\nand two children of Calgary' are\nvisiting Mr.,Templeton's father-in-\nlaw, A. Larson, Vl9 Mill street.\n\u2022 .\u2022   *\nIt was announced yesterday that\nthe work on the high school addition would begin immediately.\nA   MODERN   DISEASE\nLONDON (CP>-\"One of the dis-\noutfits ot wearing apparel,\u2014News j \u00b0ases from whicli we suffer today is\nitem. vulgarity,  which is largely ighor-\nThen  they  disappeared  in their i ancc,\" said Headmaster M. L. Jacks\nI new Tweed suits,\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nI    Had they been union men they\n| would probably have taken union\nsuits.\n\u2022 ' \u2022\nIf they were huntsmen they likely\n1 took some white ducks.\n\u2022   *   *\nAnd as they wwe foot-pads they\n! probably got away with a couple\nj pair of boots.\n\"   '   ' iFUELI8H JOKE\nBURGLAR'S CHOICE \"Many Irish peasants never use\nTwo burglars entered a store at j anything except turf for fuel.\" For\nTweed, Ont., and stole two complele I the love of peatl\nof Mill Hill school. \"A vulgar people cannot be a great people,\" he\nadded.\nBED8IDE   MANNERS\nLIVERPOOL (CP)-Bet with the\nLancashire lad, cajole the Welsh,\nfrighten the Liverpudlian and wheedle the Irishman, a delegate to the\nNational Conference on Maternity\nsnd Child Welfare said.\n. When driven by hunger and hot\nweather, grasshoppers of some species grow longer wings and fly\naway, even to distances of 150 miles.\n\u2666 KQJ.4\n\u00ab*sKQ10 9\nS    .\n*K J8\u00ab\n\u2666 2\n+io t a\n+ AJ4\n\u2022 Q\u00bb5\n\u2666 1(8 8\n'.     +A9 83\nBidding went; South, 1 No Trump\nWest, doubled, intending to support either minor suit bid by partner to support hearts, it bid. or to\nshow diamonds in ase partner responded with spades; East, 2 Spades,\nas might have been expected; West\n3 Diamonds; East, 3 Hearts; West\n6 Heart*\u2014an amazing jump; South\ndoubled. Neither side was vulnerable.\nz'l'he opening lead was the Ace\nof clubs. To insure, entry to his own\nhand, decarer underplayed dummy's J. Probably that was disconcerting to the doubler, but he led\nhis 9 of clubs, having nothing better to do. Declarer was in with his\n10. So far East played the hand\nperfectly. Somewhere later he fell\ndown, and failed to fulfill his doubled contract. We will play.the hand\nin the normal way it should have\ngone after the second trick.\nLead the J of hearts. Probably\nthe doubler will not cover. For the\nmoment we will assume that lie\npasses the trick, and that the J\nholds. Lead the only diamond. Finesse the Q. It will hold the trick.\nLead back, a small diamond and\nruff In declarer's hand. Lead the 8\nof hearts. If South covers with the\n9, win with dummy's 10. Lead a\nlow diamond and ruff with declarer's K\\ The diamonds are established. Lead the K of spades. Whether or not South plays the Ace, ruff\nwith dummy's winning trump, picking up South's last trump. All the\ncards in dummy , arc good. These\nconsist of two good, diamonds and\ntwo good clubs, giving declarer his\n12 tricks total.\nSuppose that Soutli covers the\nJ of hearts, with his Q, at the third\nlead. That will not in the least\ninterfere with the general order\nof the play. It will only slightly\nalter the liext few plays. Win with\ndummy's Ace of hearts. Lead back\na low trump from dummy. Win\nwith declarer's K. Lead tlie 2 of\ndiamonds. Unless South plays his\nK, win with dummy's Q. Lead a\nibw diamond back. Ruff with one\nof the twp trumps left declarer.\nLead a club. Win in dummy. Lead\na low diamond. Ruff with declarer's\nlast trump, leaving dummy's diamonds established. Lead the K of\nspades. Have dummy ruff with its\nlower, trump. The two diamonds\nand K of clubs left in dummy will\nwin the last three tricks and give\ndeclarer his 12 tricks, as before.\nTODAY'S\nGARPEN'GRAPH\nBy DEr\\N HALUDAY\nypvetcM, im, turned frm AuttMtlitsh j\u00abc\nThe foliage of peonies is handsome ln itself, for it la always'so\nclean and shining in appearance, yet\nafter peonies hive finished blooming many gardeners cut the plants,\nback severely. This,is not a good\nplan, and, in, fact, may even -result\nin the death of the plant. The leaves\nhive the special duty (o perform of\nfurnishing nourishment necessary\nfor next year's blooms.\n.If peonies are grown against an\nevergreen background, as shown\nin the accompanying Garden-Graph,\nthen after blooming time the to-,\nliage can be allowed to grow .as it\nwill, and merged with the grain of\nthe proper evergreen background\nit will not be objectionable on the\ngrounds of looking untidy. The (rid\nbloom heads, however, should be\nremoved as soon as they start to\nshrivel and drop. *\nProper  Background  for Peonies\nAUNT HET\nBv  RDBEKI   QU1L1.EN\n\"I hated to see my younguns\ngrow up and leave home, but it\nwas nice' in one way, Not havin*\nthem to look after gives me- time\nto be sick\"\nEMPIRE  TRADE\nKing Edward VIII, says a London publicist, has probably more\nnatural ability than any British\nmonarch since Elizabeth and a consideration of the new King's\nspeeches in past years as Prince of\nWales gives an idea of the breadth\nof his -interest in the affairs of the\nrealm over which he is now called\nupon to rule. There is, for example,\nhis comment on the. development\nof tlie intra-Empire trade only\nabout a year ago; \"There is hardly\na commodity, be it either necessity or luxury, which the British\nEmpire does not and cannot, produce in ample quantity and finest\nquality. We must not, and we shall\nnot, neglect our foreign trade, but\nit is by fostering trade within the\nEmpire that we shall prosper.\"\u2014\nSault Star.\nElephant setls are sometimes 22\nfeet lohg.\nHandy Material\n(or. Handy Man\nUse Cottonwood Panels\nfor improving your\nhome. Nelson Panels\ncan be stained, oalnted\nor kiltpmlned..\nWood\\ Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nDistrict   Distributors\n\"Build B. C.  Payrolls\"\nThe\nGrowing\nDemand\nTha letters -from patrons\nand the growing demand\nfor Pacific Milk speak\nclearly of the readiness of\npeople to discover a milk\nthat is pure, fresh arid rich.\nThis excellence is partly\ndue to the aid given by vacuum packing which' is disclosed to the user by a finer\nflavor.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Court*\nPROTECTION   OF  EGYPT\nHis invasion of Ethiopia and tlie\nsending of large bodies of troops\ninto Libya, the Italian protectorate\nthat adjoins Egypt, has awakened\nresponsible Egyptian leaders to a\ndanger that they had not seriously\nconsidered. If BriUsh troops wete\nwithdrawn from Egypt, what more\nlikely than the Italian dictator might\ndecide to. add the latter country to\nhis African conquests? As a result\nBritish protection has suddenly assumed different value in their eyes.\nThe realization should make the ne-\ngotiati&n of a new and mutually\nsatisfactory, treaty easily possible.\n\u2014Calgary Herald.\nITILUE THE TOILER\nBy Run Wcsto\nYES, POOR BOY\u2014HE'S \"SUST\nSVTTiNS OM THE \u00a9EACH\u2014 I'D\nUkE TO Say A FEW TEMDER\n\\\\MOfcDS TO HIM J '\t\nIT   ISM'T TEWDEte VAJOEDS MAC\nWANTS--HE  NEEDS A TENDER.\nSTEAK ABOOTjJOVaJj\t\n4\n0\nnou know^mac bet he could\n\u00abrAVcW DEVIL'S ISL\/iNO A MONTH\nVMiTH NOTHlMs BOT A BATHtrJS-\n\u25a0SUIT AMP A POCKET-KM IFB \u2014\nSheriffs Sale\nIn the County Court of West Kootenay\nHolden at Nelion\nHARRY BURNS, PLAINTIFF.\nYMIR DUNDEE COLD MINING CO., LTD. (N.P.L.),\n.      DEFENDANTS.\nUnder and by virtue of a WARRANT OP EXECUTION, issued,\nout of tlie above COURT, dated the 24th day of June, 19M, and to\nme directed, I have seized all right, title and interest of the above\nnamed DEFENDANTS in the following goods and chattels and\nwill offer the same for sale at the mine, Ymir, B. C, on Saturday,\nthe 1st day of August at the hour of 10:30 o'clock in the forenoon.\n4 Ore Cars, 1 Drifter, 1 Stoper, 5 lengths 2 inch pipe, 1 length 1%\ninch pipe, 11 lengths air pipe and Elgow, 1 roll fuse, air hose, tools,\ntaps and discs, vice and pipe vice,. 2 pipe dies, blacksmith tools,\nabout 15 sacks coal, .2 fans and ventilation pipe, Steel rails, about\n3000 feet lumber, tool steel, steel cots, mattresses, heaters, air pipe,\n3 inch and 2>i inch\u2014large quantity.\nTerms of sale. CASH.\nDated this 27th day of July, 1936.\nM.E.HARPER,\nSheriff of South Kootenay.\nmi GUMPS\nBy Cut Edson\n\u2014 AND\nAiT POLICE\nHEAPQUARTERS,\nJUST-A-FEW\nBLOCKS AWAY\nTRIP\nSUNDAY, AUG. 2\nTO\nProcter-^Ainsworth\nand Kaslo\nLEAVE NELSON CITY WHARF 12 NOON\nARRIVE BACK 9:45 P.M.\nRETURN FARES FOR DAY ONLY\nProctor           75\u00ab?\nAinsworth     91.00\nKaslo   ?1.50\nLimited Number Cirrled, Purchase Tickets Eirly.\nChildren 5 and Under 12 Half Fare\nNo Passes Honored\nPHONE 2M\nN. j. LOWES\nCity Ticket Agent\nNELSON, B.C.\nr ii  'rfii-Biit\n'-\u25a0\u2022*- ^--\u2022---\u25a0 ^V! 11 ii r i.Ti.iiiiiMitfiimii^iiitiiiil\n__\n LEGION SPORTS\nPLEASE NAKUSP\nLong List of Prize\nWinners in Big\nCelebration\nNAKUSP B. C.-Fine weather\nmarked July 21, thi day chosen for\nthe annual Legion Celebration.\nActivities commenced at 1 p.m.\nwhen the Boy's Bugle Bind under\nthe direction of J. W. Bailey and T.\nSteenhoff paraded up Broadway\nand from the cenotoph to the Legion hall In front of which the iport\nevents took place. A crowd of spectators WU present. Winners ot thl\nvarious even's were:\nSO yard rices. Boys 6 and under;\nBillie Barrow, Arthur Berrard.\nBoyi t\u2014t yeirs; Orin Hoy,\nHoy Olwn.\nGirls 6 and undir; Ivy Cinn, D.\nBrown.\nGirls 8\u20148 years; Dorothy Herridge, Stella Horrey.\nBoyi 8\u2014JO years; Bobbie Clark,\nLeslie Baird.\nGlrli 8\u201410 years; Glidyi Olwn,\nPamela Herridge.\nBoya 10\u201412 years; Delbert Olson,\nRaymond 0111.\nGirls 10\u201412 Yeirs; Joan Dougan,\nVera Johnion.\nBoyi U\u2014U yeirs; Frank Green,\nJohn Cann.\nGirli a-U yuri; Betty Davison,\nMartha Steenhoff.\nPotitoe Races:\nBoys t and under; 0. Hoy, Roy\nOlwn. | .\n-?\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Bqwboll - Boxing -Wrestling\nPAM Mvfn\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horso Racing - Soft Ball\n\u2014-       NIL80N DAILY NEWS, NgttQN, \u25a0.Cr-THUMPAV MORNINd, JDLY 30, ItW     ' jB\n\u25a0AGE \u00bbIVIN\n-\u25a0  '   \u25a0-\nSALMO WINS AT\nSULLIVAN LAKE\nSALMO, g.C.-Scoring in five) of\nthe levin Innings of the bwebill\ngame at Sullivan Like on Sundiy\nthe Salmo nine romped home witli\na 14-4 victory over their American\nhost**.\nTemmtaammsmmm\n>w' on the. neOnd tor the\nliomistirs, pitched Mi uiuil |arne\nof bang-tip ball with Hale playing\na heady gam* behind the plate,\nThiy wire given alrtiost air-tight\nsupport in the field.. Rlchirdi *M\n&e chucking for_ tlie American!\nwith Bowen on lb* receiving and.\n\u25a0it waa an ion day'\u25a0 for Salmo,\nwith all players turning in a wonderful display\" of 'ball  while   tha\nSullivan Lake boys vara disorganized. \"'*\"\u25a0 '\n*^'      e.iiiiu   ' I \"imwia\nFOR A\nGOOD\nGREASE\nJOB\nHendricks,\nWhaley ltd\n\"tatlifiitlon li Our Aim\"\nSalei  Kfttt Service\nGirls 8 ind under; Stella Horrey,\nDorothy Herridge.\nBoyi II and under; Delbert Olwn,\nAlfred Dunn.\nQlrli 12 and under; I'amell\nHerridge, Gladys Olwn.\nBoyi 14 md under; Frank Green,\nGiorge Hoy.\nGirls 14 ind under; Monica\nButlin, Bitty Davison.\nBun and treacle competition:\nBoyt 8 and under; Roy Marshall,\nOrin Hoy.\nGirls I and under; Stella Horrey,\nIL Marshall.\nBoyi 8\u201414; Freddie Billow,\nHeblrt Hoy.\nGirli 8-14; Nellie Horrey, Qlidyt\nOlwn.\nUgliest ficc in horse collar com\npetition.\nBoyi 8 md under; Gordon\nSutherland, Oran Hoy.\nBoyi 8-14; Hirold Cinn, Melvin\nBeurge.\nGirls 8 |nd under; Joan Brown,\nDorothy Herrldge.\nGirls J-14; Gladys OU on,\nBeatrice Steenhoff.\nGuessing horses weight contest:\nWeight 1928 pounds. A. t. Bennett\nguessed 1140, H. W. Herridge guessed 1848.\nMother and wn race\u2014lit. Mn,\nSteenhiff and Bobble; 2nd. Mrs.\nDunn and Alfred.\nFather and daughter race\u2014 Mr.\nSteenhoff and Martha; G. Pavisoti\nand Betty.\nSack races:\nBoyi 12\u201414 yein; Frank Green,\nJohn Cann.\nBoyi 8-12 yein; Alfred Punh,\nLeslie Bsrd.\nGirls 8 and under; Dorothy\nHerridge, Stalls Horrey.\nGirls 12 and under; Dorothy\nHerridge, Glldyl Olwn,\nGirli 14 and undir; Betty Div-\niwn, Martha Steenhoff.\nBlind rice; Bobble Steenhoff,\nG. Hoy, A. Dunn, Bill Rushton\nJ. Bailey, L. Reilly, O. Hoy, A\nDunn.\nVeterani 100 yard daih-F. A\u00bb-\nerton, H. W. Herridge.\nBoys quarter-mile bicycle rice;\nF. Green, M. McCamon.\nBoot and ihoi races:\nBoys 8 md under;  Oran Hoy,\nCharlie Cartie.\nGirli 8 and under;  G. Clarke,\nDorothy Herrldge.\nSteenhoff, M. McCimon.\nOld timers' race\u2014T. Leurtngton,\nC. B. Hambling.\nIn the evening a special talking\npicture wu given ln the Legion\nhall ahd immediately following the\nfloors were cleared tar dancing,\nC. B. Hambling wu master of ceremonies, Assisting with thl music\nwere G. H. Gardner, C. Campe and\nC. Picard.\nCOMMITTEES\nMemberi of the various com\nmlttees for the diy were: Sports;\nC. B. Hambling. G. C. Martin, A. E.\nBennett, G. Piviion; F. Atherton.\nDance-c. b. Hambling, G. C.\nMartin,\nDoor- F. Atherton, G. Better-\nshall, p. Chadwick, I. (Spain.\nConvenor of refreihment committee, Mrs. H. W. Herridge.\nHORTON SMITH\nVICTORIA CHAMP\nThree Under Par for\n72 Holes; Nelson\nIs Second\nOne of Nelson's\nleading Oarsmen\nOAK BAY GOLF CLUB, Victoria,\nJuly 29 (CP)-Horton Smith, Chicago pro, won the 13000 Victoria\ngolf championship today with i 72-\nhole total ot 289, three strokes undir par tor the four IB hole rounds.\nSmith finished up with a par 68\nin today's afternoon round after a'\nmorning 72 to add to previous\nrounds of 64 and 86 Monday and\nTuesday respectively.\nByron Nelson, Rldgewood, N.J.\nprofessional, took second place with\nan even 272 par for tlie meet with\nTed Longworth of Portland, Ore.,\nmother tour strokes back with 276\nin third place. Tied in fourth were\nCharley Shepherd of Los Angeles\nand Neil Christian of Yakima with\n277'!.\nDon Sutherland ot Vancouver\nGolf and Country club, one of two\nCanadians to get into the tint 14\nfor cash awards was alone ln sixth\nplace with 278,\nThe two Zimmerman brother! Al\nand Emory, from Portland, Ore.,\ntied for seventh place with 279's.\nPhil Taylor of Victoria the other\nCanadlin in thl money finished in\n\u25a0 three-way tie tor ninth place with\nRalph Guldahl of St. Louis and\nMacDonald Smith from Nashville,\nTenn., with 280.\nThree American pro'i Jimmy\nHines of Garden City, Long Island,\nClirince Doser of Rochester, N.Y.,\nind Lawson Little ef Chicago each\nfinished with 281's in the last money\nbracket\nCOOKE RETAINS\nTENNIS TITLE\nVICTORIA, B,C\u201e July 29 (CP>.-\nSmooth-itroking Elwood Cooke, 22-\nyeir-oid Portland netter, today retained his Pacific Northwest Sic-\ntional men's singles title, by defeating Colin Milne, young Vancouver\nplayer, in a four-let battle, 6-4, 4-8,\n6-2, 0-3.\nBoth players uncorked some brilliant tennis. Cooke, more experienced and the wielder of a brilliant\nbackhand stroke, made telling placements and gained a number of good\npoints on net ihoti u the ball just\ndropped over. Milne, 81-year-old\nmainland net star, made a game bid\nto win the title.\n\"Chubby\" Greenwood, one ol the\nenthusiasts of the Nelson Rowing\nclub, caught by tha camera as he\nemerged from a foun race.\nMONEY WINNERS\nAT VICTORIA\nCANADIANS GET\nINAWORKOUT\nLONG SHOT WINS\nAT SEATTLE\n9-MS H*\u00bb\nRNB> TOUCH IN\nHis SHOUT \"SAME.\nSEATTLE, July 28 (API-Turning on the heat u he came Into the\nstretch, N. McQueen's Whisper, a\nlong shot in. the betting, pounded\nunder tha wire four lengths to the\ngood to take the feature race it the\nLengacrei track here today.*\nThe gelding three-year-old, with\nJockey J. Adams up, jumped into\n\u25a0econd place at the start and kept\nup there until the laat ilxtconth pf\nthe six-furlong rice. The time was\n1:12 tUL Lady Waite wu second\nand-Guaranty third.\n- Whisper paid thi biggest odds et\nthe day in tha mutuels, returning\n841.80 $15.80 and $6.00. Lady Waite\npaid $5.60 and $8.60, and Guiran\nty (2.90.\nGet Your job in the Classified!\nAMAZING  FACTS\nIn Borneo... as a '\nPROTECTION, NATIVES SPRAY\nTHE AIR WITH POWDERED\nLEAVES AND TIGERS' WHISKERS\nTO STIFLE THEIR ENEMIES...\nIn Can ada... di iu i it sprays\nevery Blue Gillette Blade with a\nPOWERFUL ANllSfPTIC TO ASSURE YOU\nOF GERM-FREE SHAVES...\nSPXAVIO with a special antiseptic btfora It II\nnaled In hi individual leaitiry woid wrippir\n\u2014thaBlue GilletU Mad* reaches you absolutely germ -\nfree- sterile u a surgical instrument. For tha coolest,\nmost comfortible ihivu you ever hid, buy a package\nef Blue Gillette bladea from your dealer today,\nVICTOWA, July 29 (CP). - The\n14 money winners in the $3000 Victoria golf championship which concluded todiy at the Oik Bay course,\ntheir scores for the 72 holes and\ntheir awardi;\nHorton Smith, Chicago, 269, 8700.\n\u2022Byron Nelion, Rldgewood, N, J.,\n272,8460.\nTed.  Longworth,  Portland,  276,\nmo,\nC. Shepperd, Los Angeles, 277,\n8280.\nNeil Christian, Yakima, 277, $250.\nDon Sutherland, Vancouver, 278,\n\u00bb180.\nA. L. Zimmerman, Portland, 279,\n81\u00bb.\nEmory Zimmerman, Portland,\n279, |190.\nHill Taylor, Victoria, 280, \u00bb108.\nRalph Guldahl, St. Louis, 280,\n8103.\nMacDonald -Smith, Nishville,\nTenn., 280,8103.\nJ. limes, Garden City, Long liland, 281, 870.\nC, Doser, Rochester, N, V., 281,\n$70.\nLawson Little, Chicago, 261, $70.\nHomeRuns\n\u25a0us        i Q \u2014I** i.i i\nYesterday's homers: Medwick,\nCardinals, 2; Whitehead, Glints!\nGehrig, Yinkees; Averill, Trosky,\nCimpbell, Indians; Allen, Cubs;\nKuhel, Senitors; Boltomley, Browns,\nom each. ,\nThe leaders: Gehrig, Yankees, 31;\nFexx, R\u00abd Sox, 29; Trosky, Indians. 27; Ott, Giants, 21; Averill, Indian!, 20; Camilli, Phillies, 19.\nLeague totals: American, 494; National, 411; totals, 905.\nIf you want\nTHE CHAMPAGNE OF GINGER ALES\nask\nfi\nor\nCANADA\nFALCONS AND\nWESTQNS TIE\nWINNIPEG, July 29 (CP)-Fal-\neonbrldge Falcons and Winnipeg\nUnited Weiton played to a goalless draw in the first fo a three-\ngame semi-final series tor the Dominion football association soccer\ntitle here tonight. The second game\nwill be played Friday and a third,\nSaturday.\nBERLIN, Juy 29 (CP Cable) -\nThe Olympic setting wai bathed In\nsunshine lata thii afternoon after\nanother momlng ot rain and the\neager athletes of many nlttons,\npointed for the opening of competition Sunday, seized th* opportunity\nfor the beat training session in dayi.\nManager Sam Manson ot the Canadian team and the various coaches\nturned loose their charges almost to\na man\u2014and.woman.\nSharing, interest wai the opening\nsession of the international Olympic committee end its proposal that\nthe Nobel Peace prize be awarded\nto Baron Pierre De Coubertln, of\nFrance, whole suggestion 40 years\n\u2022go resulted ln the modern revival\nof the games.\nA bid on behalf ot London tor the\n1940 Olympics was withdrawn, leaving the field to Tokyo and Helsin-\ntors, with chances favoring the\nJapanese capital.\nChairman Mulqueen announced\nabout 176 Canadian athletes ind officials will pirade Saturday ln the\ncolorful ceremonies formally opening the games.\nAmerican League\nNew York ..    260 060 000-13 16   2\nDetroit  000 010 200- 8  9   2\nRuffing, Malone ind Dickey; Sullivan, Auker, Kimsey and Myatt.\nFIRST GAME\nWashington .. 005 000 nil) - 6 12  1\nCleveland . . 351 020 00x-U 10 0\nCohen, Appleton and Millies; Lee,\nHildebrind and Pytlik.\nSECOND GAME\nWashington .. 102 10! 000- 5 10   1\nCleveland       200 200 20a- 8 11   1\nWeaver and Millies; Galehouse,\nLee and Sullivan.\nPhiladilphla .. 104 000 000- 5 10  2\nChicago 002 010 40x- 7 11   2\nFink, Gumbert ind F. Hayli; Cain\nand Sewell.\nBoston      ..    010 001 000- 3   9   1\nSt. Louis  302 010 03x- 9 14   0\nOstirmuller, Russell, Wilson ind\nBerg; R. Ferrell; Hogiftt end Giu-\nlimi. \/\nBoob Home Four\nal Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, July 29 (CP) -\nAfter swing victories in the first\nthree racet of the day, Joeltty Cotton Barnett, \"diminutive apprentice,\nbrought H. J, Perry's Marcus Docile home lately in the $1000 Canadian championship, feature event\nat Rastingi Park trick today.\nThe youngster received a great\novation trom the crowd as hi\nbrought hii fourth winner home.\nHe rode Trlissic te win in the\nfirst rice and Lady Coldstream In\nthe second. In the third rice, young\nBarnett, mounted Lady Torchtlla, a\n21 to one shot and brought her\nhome after a hard stretch drive,\nitavlng oft Sweet Pekoe and Was*\natch Dell who finished ln that order,\nThe Dilly Double, Lady Gold-\nstream to Lady Torchiiiu, paid ott\nat 8241.20, one ot tha largest thli\nseason, and the one-two bet, Jllllon\nand Lakeland, returned $8.69.\nNational League\nChicago  2   6  2\nNew York  7 12  1\nLee, Bryant, Root ind Hartnett;\nGaoler and Mancuso.\nFew people know how will Hil\nSims, thi bridge expert, can perform on the links. Hmy pros know\nto their sorrow.\nIn a round over tha difficult\nQuaker Ridge couth }ust before\nthe Metropolitan Open, Bum beat\nthe bait ball of three very well\nknown pros. Hii card wu even\npar while the pros ran to the high\n70's, and one shot In the BO's. The\nmoney players, on thli occasion,\ncould not compete with the fine\nshort game ot the amateur player.\nSims ls a huge person, but he\nhu the hands and touch of a fine\nmusician. When It comes to playing\nan approach shot or putting, he can\noutplay the much touted ihort game\nwlzhrdi.\nHii performances around the\ngreens are not spotty, he keeps\nsending the ball up to the pin with\na consistency that ia most annoying ta hli opponents. Few players\nrealize that the ihort game requires\ntouch, a touch that comes only trom\na smooth, eisy swing.\n3&ttii\\A\nLeaders\nLou Gehrig, New York Yankee\nslugger, belted out three hits in\nfour times it bat yesterday to boost\nlus average {our percentage points\nto .380 and climb back to the top\nof the American hitting race. Earl\nAverill ot Cleveland, leader the\nprevious day, tell to second hy getting only two hit! in seven chances,\nwhile Rip Radcliff retained third,\ntied by nil White fSojc teimnwte,\nLuke Appling, at .977. In the National league trio ln baseball's big\nsix, each pt the three leaders picked up i little ground, paced by\nDucky Medwlck of the Cirdlmls.\nThe standings (first three places\nin each league);\n0. AB. R, H. Pet.\nGehrig, Yankees 97 866 111 139 .380\nAverill, Indians 94 867 88 149 .376\nRadcliff, W, Box 81 36*. 78 188 .277\nAppling, W. Sox 80 801   69 116 377\nMedwick, Cards n m m m ,m\nDemaree, Cubs.. 92 369  99 180 Z.2\nP. Waner,\nPirates  89 860  63 126 .360\nFour Prbi Chosen\nLONDON, July 29 (CP Cable)-\nFour professionals ware Selected today for the English cricket team to\ntour Australia next winter. Eleven\nplayers, Including two amateurs,\nhive now been invited, seven hav\ning been chosen July 20.\nThe four asked today v\nDuckworth,    Lancashire   \/wicket-\nhe four asked today were George\nNow mihblc la new hir-ir ham nclsm\nkeeper ind veteran of mmy tests,\nT. Worthlngton and W. H. Copson,\ntwo promising players from Derby\n\u2022hire and _%. Fagg, one of Kent's\nwell in county cricket thii\nopening\nformed\nMlion.\nCricket Scores |\nLONDON, July 29 (CP clble),-\nJohn Mercer, Glamorgan fast-medium bowler, reached Into his bag\nof tricks against Worcestershire today and took all wickets for 91 runs\nIn on English county cricket championship game at Worcester. As a\nresult, Worcestershire was able to\nring up a first-innings score ol only\n143.\nClosing scores in other matches:\nKent 379 for eight (Ashdown 101,\nChalk 89) vs Nottinghamshire; at\nNottingham.\nNorthamptonshire 189 (Timms 97\nnot out, Tate five for 60); Sussex 28\nfor three; at Hove.\nMiddlesex 127 (Smith 66, Smalles\nseven tor 22); Yorkshire 253 for\nthree (Sutcliffe 110 not out, Leyland\n107); at Scarborough.\nLancashire 98 (Herman tour tor\n21, Boyes six for 16); Hampshire 90\nfor three; it Southampton.\nHALL AND ROBINSON WIN\nFirst game:\nSt. Louis     7   7   9\nBrooklyn    22 21   I\nParmelee, Heusser and Davis;\nMungo, Baker ind Berres.\nSecond game;\nSt. Louis :.:.\u00bb   8   9  0\nBrooklyn \u00ab   7   I\nErnshaw, Haines md Ogrodowski; Clark, Butcher, Biker and\nPhelps.\nFirst game.;\nPittsburgh      1   9  2\nBoston  4 10  8\nSwift, Welch and Padden; Mac-\nFaden and Lopez.\nSecond game:\nPittsburgh         10 18   1\nBoston    4   9   2\nWeaver, Brown ind Padden, Finney; Smith, Chaplin, Hell and Mueller.\nCincinnati at Philadelphia, postponed, rain.\nFRENCH ATHLETES\nOFF TO BERLIN\nPARIS, July 29 (AP).-A team\nof 214 French athletes entrained\nfor Berlin todiy, finally rlispill-\ning fears of nen-partlefpatlen In\ntha 11th Olympic names August\n1-16,\nTWO U.S. BOXERS\nSENT HOME\nBERLIN, July 29 (AP)-Durlng\nanother itermy day with the athletes of 60 nations struggling to\npractice in between thunderstormi\nand elaborate machinery moving\nat full speed for tha grand opening\nof the Ulli Olympiad Saturday, the\nUnited States contingent contributed anothir chapter of disturbing\ndevelopments.\nTwo boxers, Howell King and\nJoe Church, labelled \"homesick\n\u00abasca\", ware shipped home on the\nManhattan; the Washington crew's\nbrilliant stroke oar, Don Hume,\njoined thi rapidly-growing sick list;\nand enough other casualty reports\nwere received to make prospicll\nsomewhat discouraging.\nBirthday Greetings\nBy ths Canadian Prill\nTo Pete Leplne, veteran poke-\nchecking centre with Montreal Canadian! In tbe National Hockey\nleague from 1925 to 1936, when hi\nwent to thi Canadian-American association. He was born In Sta. Anna\nde Bellevue, Quebec, 36 years ago\ntoday. Before turning pro he played\nin his native town, Montreal and\nPittsburgh.\nOLYMPIC TORCH ON WAY\nVIENNA, July a (AP) .-Police\ndispersed a disorderly crowd which\nmade a spirited anti-Nazi demonstration as the Olympic torch wai\ncarried through Vienna today, en-\nroute to Berlin from Greece.\nWINNIPBO, July 29 (CP)--Bruce\nHall and .Gordon Robinson of Toronto played idperb tennis to win\ntheir quarter-final matches at tha\nwestern tennis championships tournament hire todiy. Hall defeated\nLome Nell of Winnipeg In straight\nsets, 6-3, 0(4 while Robinson turned\nbick George Bmmtyne of Winnipeg, 9-7, 8-1.\nThousands an killed or injund every year\nwhan blow-outs throw cdn out of control\nWHY YOU SHOULD ENLIST\nNOW IN THIS GREAT WAR\nTbouaandg of people are killed or iniured in traffic,\naccidents every year. Many ot theso tragedies occur\nbecause motorists \"lake a chance\" on worn or unsafe\ntire**, \u25a0 '    --    .-.-- -\u2022\u201e'\u25a0.   .\nWhat if you had \u2022 blow-out speeding along with\" yew\nfamily in the car? 'Would you be among the \"lucky\nones\" who came out aliveP Don't take that awiui\nchance. ..\nFREE INSPECTION\nHere's what we: do for your protection i\n1. Inspect your tires for signs of failure.   \u25a0\u00bb\n2. Remove puncturing objects that might cause\nserious trouble.      ,7   -,;,    -.'.'.-.    ''\u2022;\u2022:,\n3. Check air pressure of all fires including spare. .\n4. Check for dangerous weak'apota-that might\nmean a blow-out\nwhen you least expect it. ,\nAnd if you need\nextra safety, extra\nblow-out protection\nfor carefree driving\nlet ui ihow you the\nnew Goodrich Safety Silvertown\u2014the\nonly tire in the\nworld that gives you\n, Golden Ply Blow.\nout Protection.\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the J-iquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nPhone43 Nelson B.C.\n .M:'m^^:S::,;.\n\\m.Mw\n, \u00a3S&t^M\ntsti6mtxmm*^immhtmia&^m**l*t**mg*^\n^^\n \u2022^\u25a0^\"^^\u25a0^\n KINGSGATE PORT\nIS BUSY PUCE\n1100 More.Cars Pasr\nThan in Same Period\na Year Ago\nKINGSGATE, B.C.\u2014Although\nthe peak of the tourist trade Is\nnot' yet nearly reached for tha\nsummer, the number! of thou\ntravelling li already away beyond that of last year, In the first\n22 days of July there were 1100\nmora ears passed through the port\nthan for the corresponding per-\n. lod of list year. Thli Is not taking\nInto account the* travel by bui\nII, at I very conservative estimate,\nat least four times at heavy.\nThere have been passengers from\nevery province In the Dominion\nand every state In the Union, as\nwell as cara from Europe and\nAustralia. Baby cars share the\nroad with 12 cylinder machines\nand huge cavalcades of busies.\nTen of then containing 217 people\nfrom Atlanta, Ga. Mere a picturesque sight, each bus with Iti colored attendant and IU occupant!\nattired In every variety of costume\nfrom riding breeches and boots\nto the most ibrevlited of abrevlat-\ned shorts.\nThere has also been four busses\nwith students from Mississippi college and a large party from the\nUniversity of Illinois. Colored'ball\nteams and Bible Students headed\nfor the college at Three Sills, Alta.,\nprovided a variety that makes each\nday one of new interest. It Is rather noticeable that every state and\nprovince provide tourists with some\nkind of sticker or souvenier with\nthe exception of British Columbia.\nEastport last week after a vacaUon\nin California.\nWilliam Andrewi of Spokane was\nthe guest of Mr. and Mn. Hull.\nMrs. J. P. Patrick of Los Angeles,\ncousin of Mrs. John Suns, called on\nher relatives here on her Way to\nBellevue.\nMr. and Mra. Jack Barret, Miss\nCollins and Les Lane of Chapman\nCamp had a rather lucky day while\nhuckleberry picking here last week\nend.. After an afternoon'! berry\npicking they were coming back to\ntheir camp near the first bridge\nwhen Miss Collins kicked up\ndirty old little cotton bag winch\nclinked when it moved. On investigation the bag was found to contain about three dollars in silver\nand an English gold half sovereign\nworth 12.50 at par but worth considerably more Ip these tiroes. The\ncoin was dated ID'S and from the\nappearance of the coins they must\nhave lam there for some considerable time.\nMr. and Mrs. S. E. Gunn, son\nBobby and Mrs. Gunn's mother,\nMrs. Burnett of Stat City, Sask.,\nwere Cranbrook visitors Friday.\nDavid Graham was down from\nLumberton seeing his folks.\nA, E. Brooks of Winnipeg, who\nhas been acting as relieving immigration officer here left Wednesday for Carway, Alta., to which\nport he has been transferred.\nBerry\ni'\nPickers\nGet Bag Silver\nBag Also Contained\nGold Coin; Found\nNear Kingsgate\nMISS M. KELLY OF\nSILVERTON GOES\nON COAST VISIT\nKINGSGATE, B.C.-Mrs. Green\n' of Eureka, Mon., has been visiting\n* for several days with her. father,\nFred lWO.\nMiss Lela Birch spent the weekend m Spokane.\nMr. and Mn. John Mauldia and\nfamily went to Spokane, returning\n. home Sunday evening..\nMr. and Mrs. Tommy Balf have\nreturned from a visit to Roosville,\nMon., where they were the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wetterer.\nMr. and Mn. Leonard Williams\nwere down from Kimberley over\n. Sunday.\nJino Ciprian took a trip up to\nCanal Flats laat week to see his\nsister Mn, Basso and his brother,\nLee.\n'Norman Dunbar of North Portal\nAlta., broke his journey from Vancouver to stay over with his couain\nBill Dunbar.\nMrs. Pearl Stachler returned to\nSILVERTON, B. C. - Mr. and\nMn. L. Prickett and son of Spokane were the guests of Mr. and\nMn. H. Dewis.\nW. G. Finley and friend of Trail\nwere visitor! to town.\nMn. W. Barclay left Friday for\nSpokane for several monthi.\nMr. and Mn. Farran Archibald\nand children, Mrs. T. Bishop, and\nMiss Jean Archibald- of Trail spent\na few days in town. ,\nJoe Tattrie of Sandon is the guest\nof Jack Kelsall..\nMr. and Mn. Morrison and son\nof Trail are the guests of Mrs. M.\nEmerEon.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Wilson of\nEdgewood were the guests of Mrs.\nH. Wilson.\nC. Robinson spent Wednesday in\nNelson visiting his family.\nCharlie Thring Jr. was the guest\nof D'Arcy Watson on Wednesday.\nMiss Mae Kelly left Saturday\nfor,Vancouver where she will visit\nfriends.\nMiss Magaret Johnson of Trail\nwas the guest of her mother, Mrs.\nT. Anderson.\nMr. f-nd Mrs. H. Dewis add son\nSeamen,   have   left  for   Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Haigh and son\nof Nelson were the guesjs of Mrs.\nP. Harding.\nMrs. F. Liebscher, accompanied\nby her son Harry, left Monday for\nVancouver where she will visit her\ndaughter, Mn. W. Boisvert\nMn. W. Munroe and daughter\nJoyce, were the guests of Mrs. J.\nKelly over the week-end.\nA large crowd attended theC.CF.\npicnic on Saturday. A bonfire and\na weiner roast was held in the evening .\nDr. and Mrs. Dimock and daughters, Pat and Carol and Miss Irene\nDimock are in town visiting. Mrs.\nH. Dimock.\nCHAPTER 38\nWhat right had Donald and\nShiela and the others to force this\nthing on her! Even- Betty Goodsell\nand her sister, Dorothy. All of them\nevery person to whom she mentioned Julian Sloane's name bad Jumped immediately, to the conclusion\nthat she was in love with him.\nCouldn't they uhderetand friendship and the deep admiration she\nhad for him? Wasn't there any\nother emotion in the world but\nlove? Shouldn't she know what\nlove was and now the world was\ntrying to force her into believing\nthat she was in love with a man\njust because she happened to be\nthrilled with his work, because she\nhad a real affection, for him, because she spoke of him with a different quality in her voice.\nWasn't it natural that she should\nbe full of him? That was no sign\nthat she had given him her heart\nwith her admiration. She was tired\nof it. Very tired of it.\nAll ot this she poured out heatedly when Donald offered her his\nhand. When she was finished, high\ncolor burned in her cheeks and her\neyes sparkled witli anger.\n\"Oh, please!\" Donald pretended\nto ward off her raining blows.\n\"I'm sorry,\" she said in a subdued\nvoice. \"I can't help it though and I\nwanted you to know how I feel.\"\n\"Sure that you don't mean that\nyou wanted to make sure how you\nfeel yourself?\" \u00bb\nJoan nodded emphatically. \"I'm\nvery suit about that.\"\n\"Then where do I come out on\nthe latest count?\"\n\"I thought you just withdrew all\nhonorable proposals of marriage,\"\nshe taunted him.\nMuch to her surprise, Donald appeared to be embarrassed. He wet\nhis lips and walked over to the\nfireplace.\n\"It's all okay just the same,\" she.\nsaid with relief.\n\"I've seen Linda,\" he said suddenly.\n\"And?\"\n\"She. . . er. .. she proposed that\nwe .. .\" He kicked the coals. \"I\nhadn't told her about you yet and\nshe wants to start all over again.\nThat's why I was so anxious to see\nyou.\"\nJoan had a glimpse of the future\nthat might have been and, within\nher, freedom from that was a joy\nthat was almost painful. She saw\nnow how terribly wrong it would\nhave been for her and Donald if\nshe had agreed definitely to set a\nmarriage date.\n\"I'm glad,\" she said simply. \"I got\nawfully mixed up about you. If you\nNfUmu M[\\] Nruta\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nI\nWherever You Go\nThis Summer\nKeep Up With the\nNews From Home!\nTake the Nelson Daily News with you on\nvacation. Keep tab on the prices of your\nfavorite stock, on the doings of the folks\non the comic page \u2014 continue reading\nthe serial story. Take the Daily News\nwith you and keep posted on marriages,\nengagements, births, deaths \u2014- all the\nnews from back home.\nPlace your order with your Postmaster or Agent or\nPhono or Writ* to tho       .\nJfelntt latlg Neroa\nGYRO RETURNS\nTO CRANBROOK\nFROM EDMONTON\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\u2014Mrs. Roscoe\nhas returned to the city after spending two weeks in Edmonton.\nHonald Haymes, who has been relieving In the Royal Bank here,\nhas returned to Fernie.\nMrs. Atchison of Bull River spent\nthe week-end in the city visiting\nher parents Mr. and Mrs. Haynes.\nMiss Elizabeth Spreull, who has\nbeen the guest of Miss Shirley Home\nat Boswell for the past month, has\nreturned to her home here.\nDr. Green returned Saturday after spending a two week holiday at\nMirror Lake.\nJ. Atchison returned Sunday from\nEdmonton where he was attending\nthe Gyro convention.\nMrs. Fergie, Bill and Katherine\nFergie are spending a few days\nvisiting in Spokane.\nE. S. Home and Miss Harriet\nHome spent the week-end at Boswell.\nMrs. Elton and son are spending\na few days visiting in Calgary. They\nwere accompanied by Mrs. Elton's\nmother, Mrs. Dufour of Nelson.\nBarry Hill of Canal Flat spent\nthe .week-end visiting In the city.\nMr. and Mn. K. Mackln of Bull\nRiver were city visiton at the\nweek-end.\nMrs. Potter and Herbert Potter\nof Kimberley were city visitors\nMonday.\nDr. Fergie, who has been attending the Gyro convention In Edmonton, returned to the city Sunday.\nJ. Doebell arrived in Cranbrook\nSaturday and take over the radio\noperators work at the Provincial\nPolice station.\n\u2014\u2014\u25a0\nOf the two kinds of leaves possessed by the walking fern, only\nthose with long-drawn-out, slender\nOps are able to \"walk\" and grow\nnew plan's.\nhad been free, I think I would have\nmarried you and that, would have\nbeen bad for both of us. This way\nit is best.\"\n\"Could you tell me that you\ncared?\" Donald didn't look at her.\n\"No, I can't,\" she answered honestly. \"I cared once for someone\nbut he was young and ... well,\nIt blew up.\"\n\"Young love often does. Never\ntrust a young man.\" Donald said\nwisely.\nJoan didn't know whether there\nwas anything pointed in his remark.\nThere was but Donald was as anxious as Joan not to reopen the subject.\n\"Strange, Isn't it, how much more\nat ease people feel with each other\nat times like this?\" she asked. \"I\nmean now that you don't have to be\nunduly gallant and I do not have\nto expect you to be?\"\n\"I'm always gallant, Joan. But\nsince, as you say, honorable pro\nposals are out, ia there any hope for\na dishonorable one?\"\n\"Not a chance,\" she answered\nlightly. \"In fact about the most\ngallant thing you could do for me\nwould be to take me home.\"\n\"I hate to do it. I think as a gesture of your good faith you should\neccept my hospitality but I don't\nsuppose you will?\"\n'\"Frald not.\"\n\"Well, if you ever change your\nmind and decide that you want to\nlearn about life, my hospitality is\nstill extended.\"\nJoan flushed et the light note the\nconversation had taken. In spite Of\nall she had learned about other\npeople's point of view regarding\nfreedom, it still seemed pretty\nloose to her. Mentally, she shrugged\nher shoulders. Why try to make\nherself over? ,\n\"I'll remember,\" she said aloud.\n\"But if you'll take my advice, you\nwill really make a fresh start with\nyour wife, and just by way of doing\nsomething unusual, you might try\nconsidering your marriage from the\nold-fashioned angle. It used to work\nwith a lot of people who where\nmodern in their day.\"\n\"Joan, Joan! Your'e making me\nregret my loss of you already.\nLinda-would laugh at your advice.\"\n\"Maybe she would but I don't\nimagine she Is so very different\nfrom every other woman that she\nscorns the security of knowing that\nher husband looks at marriage as\na relationship in which a man and\na woman have enough respect for'\neach other to be faithful.\"\n\"I hope you're right, JoanfDo you\ngo about through the world teaching people to be good?\"\n\"You told me I was prissy once\nand I didn't mind but I'd hale to be\nlooked upon as a reformer,\" >\n\"I didn't mean it that way and I\ndon't want you tb take it that way\nI meant it as a sincere compliment.\nIf there were more girls like you,\nere'd be more men unlike myself.\"\n\"Donald, when 1 came to New\nYork first I thought I was all out of\nstep but I've decided that New\nYork isn't the biggest place in the\nworld. Small cities and towns conform to the same standard as mine\nand I'm proud of it. I don't think\nanything would be much fun if it\ncost one one's self-respect. And\nnow, that's enough of that. It's after\n12 and I'm going to have a tough\nday tomorrow.\"\nJoan was glad that Julian had insisted on her going out that night.\nShe had tied up all the ends of the\nDonald affair and with, it off her\nmind completely, she experienced\nbroader feeling 0f her own integrity.\nThere   was   a   light   in   Julian's\nstudy.\nShe knocked at the door softly.\n\"Come in,\" Julian called with unutterable weariness. And when he\nsaw her:\n\"Have a good time   \"\n\"Very,\"  Bhe  said. \"But I  see 1\nshouldn't have left you.\"\nJulian's desk was in a state of\nhavoc spread with his books, with\npages covered with neat figures,\nhis checkbooks and the box compartments of his safe.\n\"What on earth are you doing?\"\nSecretaries who were supposed to\nknow about their employer's business could ask questions like that.\n.Julian sighed and dropped his\nhead to his hands.\n\"Proskauer has withdrawn his\nmoney, Joan, but that show is going\non!\"\nJoan sat down\u2014hard. Proskauer\nwas the backer who had promised\nto put up $40,000 for the production.\nJoan hadn't the sllghest Idea of\nJulian's actual wealth but she\nknew that his lnvestmenl was already very heavy and that he had\ncounted on  the money from  his\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchangi connecting to\n\u25a0II OeMrtminti\n si \u2022 \u2014\nSubscription   Rates\nSingle copy  \u2666\" -M\nBy carrier, per week      Sts\nBy carrier, per year .:..  1300\nBy mall ln Canada, to subscribers living outllde regular\ncarrier area! pet (nonth 60c;\nthree mouths $180. six mouths,\n$3.00: one rear $0.00.\nUnited Statei md Great Britain, one mOnth 75c; six months,\n$4.00: one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUS., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\n11c (Line\nMinimum 2 Lines\n2 lines, once  $ 22\n3 lines, once     .33\n4 lines, once  ~  -44\n2 lines 8 times    ft\n3 lines 6 tiroes 1*\n4 Unes. 6 times  1.76\n2 Unes. 1 mouth   2.86\n3 Unes. 1 month   4.29\n4 lines. 1 month ...   872\nAll ibove less 10% for prompt\npayment\nEXCEPTIONALLY DESIRABLE\nResidence on West Arm, fully\nmodern & up to date, to rent for 2\nor 3 months. 2 miles trom Ferry.\nBox 1945, Daily Newi.        (1948)\nAPARTMENTS. MEDICAL ARTS\nBlock. Two bedrooms Chas. F\nMcHardy. '        (1602)\nMODERN 8-ROOM HOUSE, FA1H-\nview. Apply Balding. Blewitt B.C.\n(1920)\nFURN. SUITES, KERR\nApts. $30 and up        (1603)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block\n(1604)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form F)\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICE\nSilver Bell mineral claim, situate\nin the Nelson Mining Division of\nKootenay District, located on Fawn\nCreek.\nTAKE NOTICE that 1, A. II\nGreen, acting as Agent for Neil McColeman, Free Miner's Certificate\nNo. 25104-E, Intend, sixty days trom\nthe- date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate\nof Improvements for the purpose of\nobtaining a Crown Grant of the\nabove claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85. must be commenced before the Issuance of such\nCertificate of Improvements.\nDated this 11 th day of June,\nA.  D.   1936.\nA. H. GREEN,\n(1322)\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrlgidalre equipped suites. (1605)\nHOUSE FORRENT.  PHONE 322L.\n(1932)\nWANTED\nWANTED TO PURCHASE 10 to IS\nac. country property, at least S ac.\ncultivated, with ample water supply for Irrigation, price must be\nreasonable, Write Box 1955, Daily\nNow!- . (1968)\nWANTED - HAY PRESSEB AND\nhay rake. M. Berukoff, Fruitvale,\nB.C. (1939)\nTEACHERS WANTED\nAPPLICATIONS   WANTED   FOR\nTeacher Box Lake School. Apply\nSec. Box Lake School, Brouse. B C.\n(1922)\nWANTED .EXPERIENCED MALE\nteacher for Wycliffe rural school.\nSalary $780. Secretary, Wycliffe.\nB.C. (1889)\nDOCS\nREGISTERED SPRINGER SPAN-\nlel brood bitch and puppies. R. S.\nSears, Kamloops, B.C. (1957)\n6 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT, UN -\nfurnished.   808 Baker.        (1936)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nA NEW PROFESSION IS OPEN TO\nStenographers and General Office\nHelp. There are thousands today\nimpatient of the opportunities for\nthem for advancement and worthwhile employment. If you are one\nof these with ambition, will and\ndetermination to succeed, there is\ntoday opportunity of which you\nare at present unaware. Complete\ninformation is at your disposal.\nBox 1948, .Dally News. (1949)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPOSITION    AS    HOUSEKEEPER.\nDr's. house pfd. Box 1890, D. News.\n(1890)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nYOUR HOLIDAY IS COMPLETE\nonly when you have your Nelaon'\n'Dally New! coming to yon at\nyour vacation home, Order It tor\nday (rom your carrier, postmaster or direct\nOUTLET HOTEL, IDEAL VACA;\ntion spot Boating, swimming, fishing. Hates by day or week, Write\nA. Ward, Procter, B. C.        (1753)\nFARM  LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta ud\nSaskatchewan. Write (or full information to 908 Dept of Natural,\nReiources. C.P.ll Calgary, Alta, I\n(1801)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nFOR SALE - 16 FOOT SQUARE\nstem boat. Nearly new, with outboard motor. Pair oars. 7 miles;'\n$125. P.O. Box 1073, (1968> I\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD.\nTHE BUYER AND SELLER\nOF  THE  KOOTENAYS\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAccountant!\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED FARM HAND, MILKER\nBox 1923, Nels. Daily News. (1923)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nVEL\n1  LOT  WITH  WELL BETWEEN\nCowley's Store and  Community\nhall. Also 2 lots on Railway Ave.,\nSalmo. Apply Box 760, Trail, B C.\n(1944)\n2 ROOM FURN. CABIN IM MILES\nout Ymlr Rd. O. Dajgren.   (1875)\nFOR SALE\nPERSONAL\nNEARLY 800 HAVE JOINED OUR\ngroup forming to provide each\nmember with $1000 protection for\nloss of life from any cause, up to\n60 years of age accepted without\nmedical exam estimated cost $10\nto $12 per year, write for our\n\"Over the Top\" drive offer and\nparticulars. Western Mutual Benefit Ass'n., Vancouver, B.C. (15771\nGET AFTER THAT HAY\nFEVER AND ASTHMA\nWith \"Davis Asthma Remedy\nNo. 7895\" at your Druggist.\n$3.50 for 3 to 6 weeks' supply or\nE. R. DAVIS PRESCRIPTION CO.\nNew Westminster, B.C.\n(1754)\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW\nOstrcx Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorators and other\nstlmulihits. One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted,\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCalli write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n(1684)\n\u2022 Small, Modern\nBUNGALOW\nGood   aS   New,\nFor particulars\nPhone 492Y   ,\nBetween  12  and   1  Noon.\n(1942)\nWe carry largest stock reconditioned\npipe and fittings suitable for all\npurposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yard,\n220 1st E. Vancouver, B.C    (1930)\n10 TONS OF MTnE hails, IS, 18\nand 20 lbs. Also large quantity of\nblack pipe. All in first class condition. Box 32, Nelson. (1890)\nCHAS   F   HUNTER, S F A E.\n213  Medical  Arls Building.\n', O. Box 1091,       Nelson, B  C\n(1611)\nAssayer*\n! W WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst. Assayer. Chemist Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agent! it Trail and Tacoma smellers 301-305 Josephine\nSt. Nelson, B. C. (1612)\nGRENVILLE  H.  GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker street  Nelson,  B.C   PO\nBox No  276, Representing Shippers' Interest at Trail, B.C. (1613)\nChiropractors\nj. r, McMillan, d. c. palmer\n'graduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelson\n(1614)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd\n250 Prior St.       Vancouver, B  C\n(1606)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\n_Co, Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (1607)\n3, 2, U4 IN.\" WOOD PIPES\"FOR IR.\"-\nrigation. W. W. Oneroff, Castlegar.\n (1953)\n10 TUBE VICTOR RADIO. BAR-\ngain for cash. Box 1954, Daily\nNews. (1954)\nHOUSES WANTED\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment for $1\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain. Free catalogue National Importer, 812-Centre St..\nCalgary, Alta. 11608)\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014 YOUNG DOG, BROWN\nwith white ring on neck, white\nspot on face, from 1011 Cedar St.\nNotify D. BeatUe. \u25a0   (1946)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nPURE BRED JERSEY BULL, 8\nmonths. From great butter cow\nBest B.C. stock. J. H. Hoskin. Balfour. (1952)\n8 WEEKS PIGS $6 EACH, YOUNG\nsow. J. H. Hoskin. Balfour. (1899)\nWall Street operator freind Pros-\nauer.\n\"I don't know,\" he said. \"But tomorrow we've got to find a way or\nshall be ruined in the theater,\"\nTO BE CONTINUED\nWANTED UNFURNISHED HOUSE\nfor rent in Fairview, 3 bedrooms,\nreply Box 719.         J1895)\nWANTED - 2 OR 3 FURNISHED\nrooms close to business section\n_Apply Box 357^ _  (1959)\nWANTED'TO BUY SMALL HOUSE\nclose in if possible. Box 1941, Daily\nNews. (1941)\n[ M. WARREN, D.C. OFFICE\nclosed until Aug. 17. At Chicago\nfor Post Graduate work.    (1615)\nInvestmenti\nLIVING PROTECTION\nINVESTORS   SYNDICATE\nF. A. STUART. BOX 389.\n(18291\nMachinist!\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work. Lathe\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Cii-ind-\nIng.   Motor  Rewinding,  Acetylene\nWelding.\nTelephone 393.    824 Vernon Street.\n(1680)\nMaternity Homes\nELIZABETH   PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private Confidential Physician in attendance. Ph Broad. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wash.\n(1831)\nNotaries\nElectrical\nNEW AND. REBUILT MOTORS\nGenerators, etc, in all sires.\nIMMEDIATE  DELIVERY.  WRITE\nriROSSMAN ELECTRICAL\n\u25a0jtfACHINERY   no.,   T TD.\n61 Alexander St.    Vancouver, B. C.\n(1886)\nJ. V. COATES. The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installation!\nPhone 766. P. O. Box 1063\n(1616)\nEngineer! end Surveyors\nE. L. WARBURTON, AGENT, NEL-\nson, B. C. Ph. 53. Res. 239 P. O.\nBox 668, Oils, etc. Mine Machinery and Equipment, Steam coals.\n(1617)\na D DAWSON.        Nelson, a C\nMine Surveys and Reports\n  (1618)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n\u2022    (1619)\nD. J ROBERTSON. NOTARY PUB-\nUc Office 305 Victoria St Nelson.\n(1632)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted Inventions antl\nfull  InformaUon lent free. The'\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorney!, 273 Bank SL Ottawa.\n(1633) .\nPhotography\nPREMIUM CERTIFICATES ON\nvaluable merchandise given With\nfilms developed, including one\nprint (rom teach negative, 25c.\nExtra prints, eight (pr 25c Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon.\n (1634)\nFILMS DEVELOPED1 AND PRINT-\ncd, any sire, 25c. Reprints, eight\n(or 25c. Deckled edge prints. Valuable coupon, \"Better prints at\nlower cost\" KRYSTAL PHOTOS,\nWilkie, Sask. (1635)\nI\nSanitariums .\nCHRONIC DISEASES MIND AND\nbody. Dr. Aldrlch, Spokane, E.\n4504 Frederick  .' (1836)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\n6 ROOM  HOUSE. 3 BEDROOMS\nFurnace. Apply 702 Latimer St\n(1561)\nMISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE\nICE-WOOD \u25a0\nFurniture Removing\nand Storage\nWilliams Transfer\n609 Ward Street\nPHONE 106\n(1708)\nA H GREEN CO, LTD 516'WARD\nSt Phone 284, Nelson, B:C. (1620)\nFlorists\n. CARNATION FLOWER SHOP.\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut (lowers,\nwreaths, sprays tt etc. Phone 215\nMrs. Hagarty. Box 29 (1621)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal estate. Insurance, rentals, 217\nBaker St. (1622)\niCw. DAWSON. Real Estate, Insurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware,  Baker Street    (1623)\n(TD\nBLACKWOOD  Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\n(1624)\na E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate, 508 Ward St\n(1625)\nJ! E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE\nrentals. Insurance. Annable Block\nT1626)\nLIFE,' FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70 (1627'\nCHAS F MeHARbY INSURANTS\nReal Estate. Phone 135.       (1628)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker St.\n(1637)\nSecond Hand Storei\nCLEARANCE SALE. REFRIOERA-\ntors trom $4.50.  Ark Store.\n(1638)\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon SL\n(1639)\nWigi and Toupeei\nLADIES AND GENTLEMENS\nwigs and toupees, etc Free Illustrated Catalogue Over 20 years\nin B C We buy cut hair. Hanson\nHair Goods Co. P. O. Box 601,\nVancouver. B. C. (1640)\nTELEPHONE\nfor Classified Ad\nRESULTS\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\n\"\u2022\u25a0--\u25a0-*\u25a0\u2014*\u2022\u25a0*-- liiii(irii.1i^iiriiwiMMil\",,^\"^'-^\"^;-:v '\t\nt^amiijjiisu^_______m^m\n TT\nmmt\nopb\ni'.'-l \u25a0\u25a0-'y^'^iy   .    \" N\u00abL\u00abON DAILY NEWS. NEL80N, sMV-THUrttDAY MORNINO, JULY *\u00bb, IMS   7^-1-\t\n>\narket and Mining News\nOwen Action Over\nPioneer Gold to\nBe Heard Again\n___ i\nAppeal Allowed by\nPrivy Council\ntONDON, July 29 (CP eable)-\nAppeal of Vernon Lloyd Owen\n\u2022gainst A. E. Bull and others, all\nof Vancouver, in connection with\nftl'e formation of a new company to\nreplace the old Pioneer Gold Mines\ntompany, wis allowed today by thc\nHdlclal committee of the privy\n\u00a9until.\nThe decision of the privy council\nI no way affects the standing of\nie new company, the Pioneer Gold\nlinea of British Columbia, Limed.\nThe old company known as Plon-\ner Gold Mines was wound up sev-\nral years ago and R. C. Salter appointed liquidator. Prior to that\nrime a syndicate headed by R. B\nSoucher thd others, Including A. E.\nBull, had agreed to advance money\nKir control of the company.\nA new company called Pioneer\nSold Minei of British Columbia\nLtd., took over. An action was then\nwrought by Peter and Andrew Fer-\nuion, brother!, then of Victoria.\nhr orlgintl chief shareholders, to\nlecure t minority interest in the\ntew company.\nDISMISSED ACTION\nThe supreme court of British Col-\n:unbla dismissed the action and the\nprovince's appeal court dismissed\nthe Ferguson's appeal.\nThe appeal wtt carried to the\nprivy council, where Counsel J. W.\ndeB. Farris of Vtncouver and Wilfred Green, K. C, of London, now\na judge ot 'the British court ot appeals, raised the point the Fergusons hid no right to me contending\nonly the liquidator could do IO.\nThe privy council concurred, dismissing the appeal on thit point\nalone without deciding on. its merits although they found no fraud\non the put of the new company tnd.\nassessed costs against the appellants\nThe appellant! applied for permission to start a new action In the\nname of the liquidator. The iiiprcme\ncourt tnd tha appeal court of British Columbia ln turn rejected their\nendetvor. The privy council granted leave to tppeal.\nAllowing of the appeal by the\nprivy council will permit the caie\nto begin again in the Britilh Col-\numlba court! in the name of the liquidator, J. C. Salter.\nVancouver Soles\nVANCOUVER, July 29 (CP1-\nMinlng shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nListed: Big Miss 2500, Bralorne\n825, B R X 500, Cariboo 1100, Dentonia 1900, Koot Belle 3500, Minto\n47,700, Pioneer 280, Premier 600,\nReno 900, Sheep Creek 900, Vidette\n17,575, Wayside 500.\nCurb: B C Nickel 2850, Can Rand\n200, Congress 1500, Fawn 1000, Fair-\nview 2700, Federal 4400, Gold Mount\n2000, Grandoro 1000, Grtndvlew\n1000, Grange 10,000, Hedley Amal\n500, Home 1500, Nicola 25,500, Noble\nFive 1000, Pend Oreille ISO, Pilot\n70,700, Reliance 5000, Relief Arl 2100.\nReward 1900, Taylor Wind 200,\nUnited Emp 500, Viking 1000, Waverley 1500, Wesko 1000.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, July 29 (CW-iStlei\nof 100 or more shares on the Toronto\nstock exchange, Industrial lection,\ntoday: HOO Abitibi; 798 Brazilian;\n300 B C Pow B; 498 CF R; 328 Con\nSmelt; 888 Ford A; 9339 Nickel\nMONTREAL, July 29 CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Montreal itock exchange > today: 890\nBrazil; 534 C P R; 938 Smelters; 989\nNickel; 1289 Noranda; 205 Shawinlgan.   r\nDow-Jones Averages\nJept  \t\n0 Industrials\t\n0 rails \t\n0 utilitiet\t\n0   bondi   \t\nOpen   High   Low   Close\n    44.91    44.51    44.91    44.50\nYtfm\n54.41\n35.57\nLow\n189.13\n5140\n35.07\nClose Chtnge\n185.87-off 1J4\n93.91-off .88\n35.14-off .46\n103.68-off   M\nMontreol Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, July 29 (CP)\u2014Silver future! closed itetdy today, five\nto 15 points off. Sales five September contracts.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nJell Tel - 147y\u00ab\nC Picking  8%\nIrazll   12%\n1C Power A  -. 30\nluild Prod -._  41\nJan Bronte   31M\nSui Car Fdy    8%\nJan Cement        SM\nJan Cement Pfd.\u2014 - 78\nIndAlA     814\nInd Al B -  5%\nCPR  12%\nStan __ -. 2\nfceishutt   8\nIon M & S   57\n)om Bridge - 40ft\n-torn Gliss   no\ntopi Text  87\n%rd Can A ...._  19V\u00ab\nJn St Ware! -. 34.\nfoaiGurd   5\n[amilton Br \u2014 -. 5%\nnt Nickel   50y,\n[tssey Harris  tM\nfentreal Power - 31\nat Steel Car _  18\nItt Brewing  44Vi\nJgilvle    ...   '.  215\n'ower Corporation  14V\u00ab\nrice Bros  4**4\nluebec .'.  16S\nShawinlgan\t\nSherwln Williama ...\nSouth Can Power ...\n-Steel of Canada\t\nCURBS\nAss'd Breweries\t\nBrew le Dlst   \t\nB A Oil   \t\nBruck Silk \t\nCan Celanese .- -\nCan Dredge     \t\nCan Malting \t\nCan Wlneriei _..\nDom Storei     \t\nDryden Paper \t\nImperial Oil \t\nImp Tob Can    \t\nInternational Petrol..\nMcColI Frontenac ...\nMitchell Robt \t\nPage Heney \t\nBANK8\nCanada \t\nCanadlen \t\nCommerce \t\nDominion   -\t\nImperial \t\nMontreal     \u2014\nNova Scotii \u201e\t\nRoytl  \t\nToronto  \u201e....\n18%\n18\n12%\n68%\n9%\n.90\n24%\n9\n27%\n47%\n32%\n3\nWi\n5%\n20'\/,\n13%\n35\n14%\n6%\n57\n138\n165\n200\n219\n193\n284\n173\n230\nWINNIPEG JUMPS\nWTNNIPEG, July 29 (CP)-Stlm-\nuinted by export sales ot 4,000,000\nbushels of Canadian wheat future's\nprices advanced 2%-2% centt on the\nWinnipeg grain exchtnge todty.\nJuly cloied at 98%, October 97%-98\nand December 97%-%.\nBullish, too, wai the Dominion\ngovernment report predicting the\nlightest crop ln yean.\nStrength in outside markets aided\nWinnipeg's trend. Chicago was up\nthree cents, tnd Liverpool 171%d.\nCash-grains spreads improved.\nCoarse grains prices followed wheat.\nAuto Production\nShows Increase\nOTTAWA, July 29 (CP)-An Increase of four per cent wai shown\nin production of automobiles in\nJune tt 16,400 againtt 15,746 In\nJune, 1939, the Dominion bureau ot\nstatistics reported today.\nOt tbe total 14428 were passenger can and 3274 commercials compared with 12,276 passenger and\n3469 commercial in June last year.\nCan tnd trucks mtde for sale ln\nCanada totalled 10,662 against 9910\nthe ume month a year ago.\nUS. DOLLAR STEADY\nMONTREAL, July 29 (CP). -\nPound sterling advanced 5-16 cent\non Montreal foreign exchanges today to 15.02%. United States dollar\nat par and the French franc at 6.61\ncento were even.   \t\nVIDETTE SOARS\nVANCOUVER, July 29 (CP)-\nVldette gold featured heavy trading on the Vtncouver itock exchtnge todty, doting wilh t net\ngain of 18 cento tt 1.48 titer selling\nup to IM. Other golds were strong\ntnd the market cloied with t rising\nprice trend tl 240,849 share! were\ntraded.\nMinto gold again wit active but\ndropped two cento it 92 while Pilot,\nalto t heavy trader, cloied unchanged at 8%. Bralorne wai up 5\ntt 7.79 tnd Premier firmed I at\n2.73. bland Mountain at UI. Reno\nat 1.26 and Sheep Creek it 76 each\n\u2022dded one cent\nHEAVY TRADING\nTORONTO, July 29 (CP).-Indui-\ntrltl shares traded in heavy volume\nat iteady pricei todiy.\nUnited Steel touched 4 up % Steel\nof Canada Issues cloied higher.\nLiquor! advanced fractionally.\nOils were soft\nLIQUORS STRONG\nMONTREAL, July 29 (CP)-En-\ncouraged by strength ln liquors,\nbuyen raised their bids on the Montreal stock exchange today.\nOntario Steel preferred jumped 10\npoints to 93 and the common four\nto 10. Seagrams firmed'1%.\nNickel lost % at 50%.\nMoney\nBy tha Canadian Press\nClosing exchange atet:\nAt Montreal-Pound 5.02%; US dir\n1.00; franc 6.61.\nAt New York-Pound 5.02 1-16;\nCdn dir 1.00; franc 6.60%.\nAt Paris-Pound 7559 Fr.; US dir\n15.14 Fr.; Cdn dir 15.14 Fr.     '\u2022\nIn gold-Pound 12s 2d; US dir\n59.32 cento; Cdn dir 59.33 cento.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nVancouver Stock Exchange\n.hied Bid\nP Con 14\njnal Oil .......;      .12\nllg Missouri  58\nirtlorne Mines ..    7.75\nIrlt Dom Oil       .22  .\nJrldge Rlv Con ..     .05tt\ni R X 13\nItriboo Gold Q ..   1.75\nfc E Corp         1.50\nZoast Breweries .. 12.85\n*out Brew Rt.-* . 7410\nCommonwealth   O      .06\nlentonla M 17\n'old Belt Mines        .25\ntome Oil            1.01\nnter Nit Coal 20%\n_il Mount Mlnei .. 151\ntoot Belle Gold .. .63\nSiccar Gold .. .04\nIcD Segur Ex .... .09\nIcLeod Oil New ..      \u2014\nlinto       ..). 52\ntodel OU       .22%\nlorning Star  01%\nlit Silver        SUM\n'loneer Gold ...:....    8.30\nTe-mler Gold      2.73\n-rem Bord Gold ..     .01\n-ittolno Cop Gold     .01'i\neno Gold .    1.26\neeves Mac Mines      .06\nilly Mines  07\nalmon Gold        MM\nheep Creek r- ....      .76\npooner Oil     02\naylbr Bridge .... .09\nanalta Ltd       .05%\nidette  -.  1.48\nriyiide Gold       .10\n'ellington OU .... .07\nURB\nultconda Oil        .05%\naltac OU              .03\nlyvlew Mining ..      .00V4\neaver Sil 02\nC Nickel  34\nC Silver      2.40\nR Mount Golds\nin Rand Gold 08V4\ntlmont Oil           \u2014\nongreas  Gold .13\nork Prov Mines       .00%\notton Belt Mines      \u2014\nrows Nest Oils ..     .12%\nalhousie Oils        .66\njvenlsh Oils 03\nIctator Gold 02%\nunwell Mining ..   . {<S3M\n!\u00a3view Amal 03%\nAsk\n.15\n.12%\n.39%\n7.80\n.22\n.00\n.14\n1.79\n1.55\n13.00\n8.00\n.17%\n.29\n1.04\n.21\n1.54\n.65\n.04%\n.10\n.37\n.53\n.24\n.02\n.03\n8.40\n2.74\n.01%\n.02\n1.28\n.10\n.09\n.80\n.01\n.10\n.06\n1.50\n.11\n.08\n.06\n.01\n.02%\n.37\n- .14\n.14\n.13%\n.00%\n.02\n.13\n.67\nMh',\n.02%\n.04\n.04%\n-    .    .00%\n.02\n.19\n.12%\nFawn Mining        \u2014\nFederal Gold       .08\nFreehold Oil      .09\nGolconda  .        \u2014\u00bb\nGold Mount  12\nGeo Enterprise ....     .02%\nGeo River Gold ..      .01 Vi\nGrandview Mines       .03\nGrange Mines     \u201e      .01%\nGrull Wlhksne G     .10\nHaida Gold       .01%\nHedley Amal    18\nHedley Sterl Gold -\nHighwood Sir O ..      .25\nHome Gold  03%\nInter Oold  -     \u2014\nIndependence M ..     .00%\nKoot King Min\nLucky Jim       .01%\nMidlson Oil      .01%\nMir Jon Oil  10\nMercury OU   11%\nMeridian Min       .07Vi\nMcGillivray Coal 20\nMid West Pete ....      .04\nMill City      .09\nMorton Wolsey      .00%\nMarmot Metali ...     .00%\nNicola Minei  19\nNoble Five  .:..     .02%\nNoranda Mines 12\nOkalta  Oils      18\nOkalta OUs Pfd ..   19.00\nPacalta      .06\nPend Oreille M ..      .86\nPilot GOld        .08%\nPorter Idaho      .04\nRanchmem            .35\nRed Hawk Oold .     .09%\nReliance Gold ....     .05%\nRelief Arl              .92\nReward Mining .     .05\nRoyallte Oil     29.00\nRufui Argenta .....     .01 Vt\nRuth Hope Min ... \u2014\nSilvercrest M New \u2014\nSnowflake Mining      .08%\nSouthweit Pet 11\nSunloch Minei 16\nTaylor Windfall...     .14\nU D L      .60\nUnited Em Oold .     .03%\nUnited OU         .07\nViking Gold      .02%\nVulcin Oil           .43\nWaterloo Mir.es ..      \u2014\nWaverley Ting ....      .00%\nWellington Min ...      -\nWeiko           .20\nWhitewater Mlnei \u2014\nYmlr Yan Girl ....     .40\n.65\n.06%\n.09%\n.11\n.13\n.01%\n.02\n.12\n.02%\n.17\n.03\n.26\n.03%\n.08\nBinkfleld\t\nBarry Holllnger\t\nBase Metals    \t\nBear Exploration\t\nBig Missouri.....\u2014\nBobjo \t\nBralorne _-_....-\nBRX     \t\nCan Malartic\t\nI Castle Treth\t\nCentral Mtn\t\n1 Central Pat.  ....\ndhlbougamou \t\nCotit Copper ..;\t\nCoptrium \t\nCons M te S\t\nDome        \t\nDom Explor'\t\nEldorado \t\nFalconbridge  \t\nGod's Lake\t\nGranada  .i\t\nHardrock\t\nHolllnger\t\nHowey     _\t\nHudson Bay\t\nInter Nickel\t\nJ M Con\t\nKlrkland L\t\nLake Maron\t\nLakeshore  \t\nLltUe Long Lac\t\nMacassa\t\nMaple Leaf\t\nMalroblc      -\t\nMcLeod Cockshutt\nMclntyre\nMcKRLGold\t\nMcVlttie Gr\nMcWltten Gold \t\nMining Corp \u2014\nNipissing\t\nNoranda  -\t\nPirkhiU  \t\nPiymaster .\t\nPend Orelllt\t\nPickle Crow\t\nPioneer -....-.\nPremier\t\nReno  ...\u2014\n.23\n.00%\n.00%\n.16%\n.02%\n.14\n.20\n.06%\nXI\n.09\n.04%\n.10\n.06\n.35\n.05\n.01%\n.02\n.08\n.75\n.04 VI\n.02%\n.46\n.04%\n.01\n.01\n.21\n.80\n.05%\n.25\n.63\n.58\n.24\n7.8b\n.15 \u2022\n1.30\n1.40\n.47\n4.60\n1.80\n3.00\n2.30\n57.00\n53.87\n.05%\n.89\n9.50\n1.17\n.30\n3.38\n1929\n.87%\n26.50\n50.50\n.15%\n58.90\n6.45\n4.85\n.29\n.05%\n4.60\n42.50\n2.09\n.21\n1.52\n1.45\n2.75\n62.75\n.22\n1.03\n.87\n7.55\n8.40\n2.70\n1.28\nSin Antonio   3.30\nSheep Creek   75\nSherritt Gordon   1.65\nSitcoe .   425\nSmelter! Gold      SSI\nStadacona     -      St\nSt Anthony         .29\nSud Basin    \u201e. 4.85\nSylvanite    3.42\nTeck Hughea   6.29\nToburn         1.80\nTowagamtc         .41\nVenture!     2.25\nWaite Amulet  1.35\nWayside       .10%\nWhite Eagle        .04%\nWright Hargreaves  8.15\nOILS\nB A Oil   29.00\nC & E Corp ..  - 1.55\nChem Research  1.15\nDalhousie  _ 69\nHome-      1.02\nImperial   20.75\nInter Pete  .._   35.73\nNordon  13\nRoyallte   29.50\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros _  10%\nBell Tel   147%\nBrazilian     12%\nBrew Jr. Dlst... _  .90\nCan Bread  8%\nCan Car & Fdy    8%\nCan Cement  6%\nCan Dredge _  47%\nCan Malting  32%\nCPR         _  12%\nCons Smeltera _ 57\nDom Bridge      40\nDlst Setgrami  22%\nDom Storei  _... _ 8%\nFord Ctn A -  19%\nGoodyetr Tire  70\nHiram Wilker - 33\nLoblaw A  a    20%\nMassey Harrli _  4%\nSteel of Ctntdi   66%\nWalker Brew  2\nQuotations on Wall Street\n3\n21%\n29V4\n57Vi\n14%\n12%\nHigh\nAUied Chemical 222%\nAmerican Can 133%\nAm For Power 7%\nAm Ma & Fdy 23%\nAm Smelt te Re 69%\nAm Telephone 171%\nAm Tobacco . 101%\nAnaconda    39%\nAtchlton    87\nAuburn Moton 35%\nAviation Corp 5%\nBtldwin    \t\ni Bait** Ohio....\nI Bendix Avia .\n! Beth Steel \t\nCanada Cry .....\nCan Pacific .\nCerro De Pasco   54\nChea et Ohio .    68%\nChryiler . 122%\nCon Gil N Y .. 43%\nCorn Prod 70%\nC Wright Pfd . 6%\nDupont 167%\nEastman Kodak 178\nEI Pow \u00abt LI     16%\nErit       15%\nFord English .... 7%\nFord of Con 19%\nFirst Nat Storei 48%\nFreeport Texas 26%\nGeneral Electric 44%\nGeneral Foods 38%\nGeneral Moton 71%\nGold Duit     11%\nGoodrich\t\nGrtnby\nGrt Nor Pfd    .\nGrt Wst Sugar\nHowe Sound\nHudson Motors\nInter Nickel\na\n41\n35\n51\n17%\n51%\nInter Tel & Tel 13%\nLow Close\n221 221\n131% 132\n7%      7%\n23% 23%\n87 88%\n171% 171%\n100% 101%\n38%    39\n88 89\n33%    33%\n5%      5%\n3 3\n21%    21%\n28%    28%\n55%    99%\n14 14%\n12% 12%\n53 63*4-\n67%    67%\n120% 120%\n42%    42%\n67       67\n6%      6%\n168 165\n174% 177%\n16%     16%\n15 15\n7%      7%\n19% 19%\n45% 45%\n26 26%\n43% 49%\n37% 38\n70       70\nia     13%\n20% 20%\n1% 1%\n39%    99%\n84% ' 38\n90%    91\n16%    17\n50%    90%\n19%    13%\n84       84%\nKenn Copper\nKresge S S\nKroegger Gro\nMack Truck\nMont Ward ...\nNash Motors .\nNat Dairy Prod 27%\nN   Pow   tt   LI   12%\nN Y Central\nPacific G & E\nPackard Moton  11\nPenn R R     37%\nPhiUipt Pete .\nPure Oil   \t\nRadle Corp\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand\nSafeway Stores  29\nShell   Union       19%\nS Cal Edison .\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan OU of Ind\nStan Oil of N J  64%\nStewart Warner   19%\nStudebaxer\nTexas Corp\nTexas Gulf Sul  38\nTimkcn   RoUer 66\nUnderwood Type 84%\nUnion   Carbide  97\nUn Oil  of Cal   22%\nUnited Aircraft  28%\nUnited  Biscuit   27\nUn Pacific     138\nU S Pipe 49%\nU S Rubber ,     30%\nU S Steel 66%\nVanadium Steel  20%\nWarner Bros       11%\nWest Electric     141\nWestern   Union   90%\nWoolworth     64%\nWrlgley .   64%\nYellow Truck ..   21%\n44%\n26%\n21%\n37%\n47't\n16%\n41%\n40%\n45%\n20%\n12%\n6%\n19%\n32%\n41's\n39\n37%\n12%\n39%\n43% 44%\n26 26%\n21% 21%\n35% 37%\n46% 46%\n16 16%\n28% 28%\n12% 12%\n39% 39%\n40 40%\n10% 10%\n36% 38%\n44% 44%\n19% 19%\n11% 12%\n6% 6%\n19 19%\n27% 29\n16% 19\n32 32\n39% 40%\n38% 38%\n37    , 37\n63% 63%\n19% 19%\n11% 11%\n39% 39%\n38% 36%\n85% 65%\n83% 84%\n96 96%\n.22 22%\n27% 28%\n27\n136\n27\n187%\n49% 49%\n26% 29%\n,64% 64%\n20 20\n10% . 11%\n138% 13*%\n88% 88%\n54 54%\n64% 84%\n20% 20%\nTHIS HOUSE WILL REMAIN \"IN STYLE\"\n *\u00bbAQI MINI\nPlan \u00a3-11. Courtesy Curlie Service Buret.\nColonial simplicity and refinement of detail characterize this economical two-story home, which alwayi will remain \"ln ityle\" throughout\nthe years.\nIt contains a Itrge living room with fireplace tnd built-in bookcase,\nIf desired, dining room and kitchen on the first floor, with a nice porch\nto encourage outdaor living.\nThree sizable, cross-ventilated bedrooms, good closeto, linen tut\ntowel storage and bath tre all accessible from a central hall on tht second floor. There ls no waste space.\nKvery inch of ipace on the tint floor li usable, well lighted tod effectively arranged, with wall space for necessary furniture, A pair of\ncases for china, such as suggested in the living room pictures, would idd\ncolonial atmosphere to the Interior.\nPOWER PUNT AT\nGOAT RIVER IS\nSEEN BY MANY\n277 Visited  Plant\nin Creston Part\nDuring June\nNEW COMBINES\nARE UNLOADED\nCedar Fence Posts\nGo Out From\nKitchener\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Since the power\nplant of the West Kootenay Power\nand Light Company, Limited, tt\nGoat River Canyon was completed\nlate in 1933, the records kept by the\nplant superintendent, S. G. Parker,\nshow that more than 8000 visitors\nhave looked the plant over up to\nthe end of June. And that there\nls still much interest In the Industry\nis indicated in the fact that there\nwere 355 visiton in May and 277 in\nJune.\nMrs. R. Parks left at the end of\nthe week on a visit with friends at\nRaymond, Lethbridge and other\npoints in southern Alberta.\nMrs. F. H. Jackson left on Saturday for a month's holiday visit with\nfriends at Vancouver, Victoria and\nother coast points.\nMr. and Mrs. T. S. Dawson of\nKimberley are visitors this week\nwith their son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mn. G. 11. John.\nMrs. W. Dtfoe and young daughter of Nelson are on a visit at the\nhome of the former's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Ferguson.\nCol. and Mrs. Mallandaine returned on Thunday from a two\nweeks' motor trip to Vancouver,\nVictoria and Nanaimo.\nMrs. W. K. Brown and Mrs. It, S.\nBeaven are home from a three\nweek!' hoUday visit at Vancouver,\nmaking the return trip by auto wills'\nthe latter's daughter, Mrs. M. Leitch,\nand her friend, Mrs. Hannay, both\nof -Vancouver.\nThere is continued activity at\nKitchener In the loading out of\ncedar fence posts, according to\nvisitors from that town. G. A. Hunt\nhas contracted to ship several carloads, and they are being trucked\nto the loading platform by W. Blair.\nMrs. Gray of Regina is at present\na Creston visitor, a guest of her\naunts, Mn. F. Rose ind Mn. W. H.\nWatcher.\nMr. and Mrs. Sherwood ot Smith's\nFalls, Ontario, are guests of John\nSherwood. They are en route to\nvisit at Vancouver.\nJim Cherrington ami Dave Brown\nof Nelson, were guests of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James\nCherrington, a couple of days list\nweek.\nFranklin P. Levin of kimberley,\na former high ichool principal at\nCreston, is renewing acauaintances\nhere a guest of Mr, and Mrs. E, Marriott He hai just completed i short\nsummer course in the University of\nIdi-hoit Moscow.\nT. DUgdile was a visitor at Bell\nvue, Alia., a few dayi last week.\nJohn Currie was home for a tew\ndays from TraU last week, with hli\nparents, Mr. tnd Mrs. W. Currie.\nMiss Mary Watson tnd little Carol\nJohn hive left for K'mberley on\nt visit with Mr. md Mra. Archie,\nChisholm,\nMrs. Davis of Coeur, d'Alene, Ida.,\nwai i visitor i couple of days last\nweek, with her sister, Mn. W. K.\nBrown snd Mrs. R. S. Bevan,\nMr. and Mn. H. Schmidt of Cund-\nhirat, Sask., are on a visit with\ntheir sister-in-law, Mrs. A. Schmidt,\nGrandview heights.\nMrs. S. Fraser and daughter, Miss\nMargaret Fraser, were Spokane\nvisiton last week.\nMrs. LeMoigne and son, Harry,\nare on a visit with friends at Bow\nIsland, Alta., and will also visit at\npoints in Saskatchewan before returning.\nTo cope with the larger grain\ncrop this year four new combines\nhave been unloaded at Creston the\npast week, and are being conditioned\ntor active service. One of them is\nfor W. M. Archibald, who will be\ncutUng fall wheat this week, and\nthree othen are for the Creston\nFarmers' institute.\nWm. Christensen of Oennessee,\nIdaho, ls on a visit with hii brother,\nHenry Christensen.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, July 29 (CP).-Grsln\nquotations:\nWHEAT:\nOpen\nJuly . .. 95%\nOct.    _ 96%\nDec.       96\nOATS:\nJuly . .. 45%\nOct. ..... 44%\nDec.       43\nBARLEY:\nJuly . . 54%\nOct.     .52%\nDec.       51%\nFLAX:\nJuly ... 170\nOct.\nDec.\nRYE:\nJuly .... 60V(\nOct ... _ 60**\nDec.       61\nHigh  Low  Close\n98%    98%    98%\n96%-\n05%\n98%\n43%\n46\nOM\n56%\n53',4\n52%\n169%\n168%\n45%\n44\n42\n54%\n51%\n50%\n170\n169%\n171\n171\n188%   167%\n61%\n62\n62%\n60%\n60%\n60%\n97%\n46%\n45 Vi\n43%\n55\n53%\n52%\n170%\n170%\n168%\n60 V,\n61 Vi\n62Vi\nCASH WHEAT:\nNo. 1 hard 99%; No. Nor. 98%-.No.\n2 Nor. 97%: No. 3 Nor. 94%; No. 4\nNor. 89%; No. 5 wheat 83%; No 6\nwheat 81%; eed 64%; No. 1 Garnet\n93%; No. 2 Garnet 91%; Durum\n1M%; No. 4 Spcl 80%; No. 5 Spcl\n72%; No. 6 Spcl 70%; track 97%.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, July 29 API-Copper quiet; electrolytic spot and future 9.75; export. 9.45-50.\nTin firm; spot and nearby 43.37-\n43.50; future 42.50-42.62.\nLead steady; spot New York 4.60-\n65; east St Louis 4.45.\nZinc dull; east St Louis spot and\nfuture 4.80.\nIron, aluminum, antimony, quicksilver platinum, and wolframite unchanged.\nBar silver iteady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nAt London, closing:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a338, future \u00a338, 5s; electrolytic spot bid\n\u00a342, asked \u00a342 10s.\nTin, spot \u00a3186 10s, future \u00a3183 9s.\nLead, spot \u00a316 10s, future 16\n8s 9d.\nZinc spot \u00a314 ls 3d, future \u00a314\n3s, 9d.\nBar sliver easier, % lower at\n19 7-16d.\nGOVERNMENT  BONDS  UP\nNEW YOKK, July 29 AP)-More\nactive trading in United States government bondi at generally higher\nlevel! contrasted with dullness tnd\nmixed movement! in the corporate\ndivision of tht listed market todiy.\nThe foreign list wis Irregular.\n\"HINT TO FATHER\nBRITISH TIMBER\nMEN COMING\nVANCOUVER, July 29 (CP) -\nThe British Columbia inspectional\ntour, which includes representatives of a number of United Kingdom timber firms, will arrive in\nVancouver on Aug. 12, it was learned today.\nW. A. McAdam, acUng agent-\ngeneral at London for British Columbia, arranged the tour which will\nbe headed by R. Douglas Roe, British Columbia's timber commissioner ln London.\nOn Aug. 13 an additional party ot\n39, another contingent of the tour,\nwill arrive here. They wUl be entertained by the Vancouver board\nof trade.\nCreston Elevator\nIs Now Completed\nCRESTON, B.C.-The Alberta\nWheat Pool'i new 60,000-bushel elevator at Creston is completed and\nthe workmen of the McDougall Construction Company, Limited, of Calgary, who had the contract, have left\nfor a point near that city where they\nwiU construct a new Pool elevator\nof slightly larger capacity. Almost\nrecord time was made on the erection of the local grain warehouse,\nwhich is a twin brother to that of\nthe Midland It Pacific Grain corporation erected last year on a site\nabout 200 yards north of the Pool\nstructure.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, July 29 (CP) .-Butter close, Que. 23%\u2014%.\nEgg spot, Ont. A\u2014large 28B.\nWheat, No. 2 Nor. 1.04%; barley,\nNo. 3 C.W. 63%. Oatt, feed No. 1\n47%. Flour, spring wheat patent!\n6.10.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR AT PAR\nNEW YORK, July 29 (AP) .-Foreign currencies continued to reflect\nuneasiness over the Spanish political situation today. Found sterling\nfinished % ot a cent improved, and\nHolland guilders closed .04 of a cent\nnet higher. Canadian dollar finished at par, up 1-84.\nBOY'S MANIA\nLONDON (CP) - Charged with\nbreaking into a house and stealing\na suitcase of women's clothes, * 15-\nyear-old boy was stated to hive a\npassion for dressing up in girls'\nclothing. He was remanded.\nA French chemist who was trying\nto make gunpowder for Napoleon\ndiscovered iodine.\nMINES ACTIVE\nTORONTO, July 29 (CP).-Aettvt\ntrading evolved from t slow start is\nactive listings met fair demtnd on\nthe Toronto mining exchange todty.\nO'Brien traded 63,000 shares it 75,\nup 5.25, tnd Red Like finished at\n2.20, up 15 centt. McLeod Cockshutt\nadvanced 20 centa. Likcshore dropped 2.\nSteels and Motors\nOff at New York\nNEW YORK, July 29 (AP)-P\"--*-\nit-takers concentrated their Are on\nsteels tnd moton today and with\nthe exception of favored specialties,\nmany recent stock market leaders\nJoined the casualty list for declines\nof 1 to 2 or more points.\nThe news on the whole wu itill\nconstructive markctwise and fintn-\ndil analysts were inclined to attribute much of the day's telling pressure to so-called professionals who\ndecided thit t technical correction\nwas overdue ln view of the lengthy\nadvance. . .\nThe Associated Pren average ot 60\nstocks lost .6 of a point tt 68, (-quilling the largest single day's reversal\nsince June 29. Transfen totalled\n1,947,880 shares against 1,903,470 the\nday before.\nFIXED VALUATION ON\nCANTALOUPES, MU8KMELONS\nOTTAWA, July 29 ,(C?).-A toed\nduty valuation on Imported cantaloupes tnd muskmelons wtl put\ninto effect today by Revenue Minister May ln all parts of Canada\nexcept the Maritimei. tt equals two\ncenta a pound on the Invoice value.\nBAR  OOLD  DOWN  TWO\nMONTREAL, July 09 <CP)-Bir\ngold in London, down two centa\nat $34.83 an ounce ln Canadian\nfunds; 138s lOd In British. The fixed\n$39 Washington price remained at\n$35 with the United Statei doUir\nat par.\nTURNED TO CRIME\nLOUGHBOROUGH, England -\n(CP)\u2014Ignored by'hit friendi whet.\nhe came out ot an institution, Stewart Hoare, 19, went back to hli old\nways. He appeared in court charged\nwith 95 thefts and wu sentenced.\nLONDON (fcP)-\"I am not a\nmatrimonial agent, but there is such\ni -thing u marrying again,\" a ma-\n-tlitrite told the father of a boy de-\nfendWt.'Sii wife' died four yeara\nago, leaving him with five small\nchildrtn.      \u25a0\nSUES FOR BREACH AT 80\nGLASGOW' (CP) .-James McAn-\n.arneyi'SO, We's sued for $10,000\nbreach of promise damrees by 42-\nyear - old Catherine McKeown.\nJudgment was withheld.\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany ol Canada, Limited\nTRAIL - BRITISH COLUMBIA\nMANUFACTURERS OP\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Photphatcs \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete FerHlliert\nX PRODUCERS AND REFINERS OF\nTadanac Brand Metals\nGOLD SILVER\nELECTROLYTIC\nLEAD ZINC CADMIUM BISMUTH\n'\u2022\"frtri\n PAQI TEN -\nFINE PUBLICITY\nGIVEN NELSON\nPULLMAN TRIP\nScouts Questioned at\nEvery Turn About\n* the District\nKEEN INTEREST\nIN IT AROUSED\nRadio Questionaire\nFeature Visit to\nLewiston\n*\nOne ot the principles of scouting\nis thit eich Boy Scout do a \"good\nturn'' at least once a day. Nelson\ndistrict Scouts who spent last week\nas guests of the Pullman. Wash.,\nScout association put that principle into action by doing a good\nturn for this district which cannot\nbe evaluated, according to Scoutmaster Fred Gill, one of the leaders\nOn that trip.\nThe party as a whole and as individuals boosted the Kootenays at\nevery turn. The Scout uniform attracted attention everywhere and\npeople were continually stopping\nthe lads on the street to ask them\nwhere they had come from.\nAlmoit invariably when the\nScouts replied they were from Nelion district, they were then asked;\n\"Whit's it like there?\" \"How's the\nfishing there?\" The answers given\nby the Scouts, according to Mr. Gill,\nwere uncolored statements such as\n\"night be expected from young fellows of that age. But the Scouts\nwere io enthusiastic abdut their\nhome district and1 aroused so much\n' Interest in it that the trip developed\nan unexpected value for the publicity it gave this district.\nAt Lewiston, Idaho, as well as at\nPullman, the Scouts were featured\non a radio broadcast It took the\nform of a questionaire concerning\nthe district, with Rover Scout Murray Robinson of Medicine Hat, Alta.,\nanswering the station announcer's\nqueries. This in particular was a\n' boost for the Kootenays obtained\nat no cost and of a value impossible\nto estimate.\nThe Immediate result of the boosting done by the party was that a\nnumber of Pullman residents arranged to drive to West Kootenay\nnext week, Mr. Gill said. He believed other parties also were planning trips to this area.\n' \"Next year Pullman Scouts are\ngoing to visit us,\" Mr. Gill added,\n\"find I only hope the people and\norganizations in.Nelson district will\nmake it as interesting for them as\nthey made it for us. We expect to\nhave about 100 Pullman boys in\ncamp with us next season.\"\nA musician in Philadelphia has\nconstructed a harp similar to the\none found in the tomb of Pharaoh\nTutankhamen.\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 668      610 Kootenay St\nTENNIS RACKETS\nRestrung\n20% Discount\nHOLLAND'S\nPhone 544\n514 Stanley\nNORDSTROM AND\nLANGLIE WIN\nVICTORIA, B.C., July 29 <CP).-\nLloyd Nordstrom and Howard Langlie, Seattle net team, today won the\nfinals in the Prcific Northwest Sectional doublei from Colin Milne and\nGeorge B.' Snarling of Vancouver in\nfive lets,3-\u00ab, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. .The\nSeattle duo turned on the heat when\nunder a handicap of two sets and a\n4-1 game deficit to Milne end Sparling.\nMORE ABOUT\nKING EDWARD\n(Continued From Page One)\n\"Today we meet under less solemn and certainly happier circumstances\u2014although, I am sorry to\nsay, somewhat damper circumstances.\"\nThis raised an outburst of laughter. \"We don't care. We are enjoying ourselves,'* shouted one pilgrim\nas the King glanced ruefully upward at the teeming heavens.\n\"I dont tike any responsibility\nfor the riln,\" continued tha King\n\u2014which   raised   another   merry\nshout. \"I can only hope you have\nnot got very wet. and when  I\nknow how badly the rain Is needed In Canada, especially In the\nwest   (\"Alberta\u2014High   River,\"\u2014\nInterrupted a pilgrim), I can say\nthat we certainly have the rain\nIn the wrong place.\n\"I want to assure you what a very\ngreat pleasure It is to welcome you\nat Buckingham palace and to see\nyou before you sail for your homes\nin  Canada. I sincerely hope you\nwill enjoy every minute of your\nstay here, and carry back memories\nof the great pilgrimage to hearten\nyou in the years to come.\"\n\"JOLLY GOOD FELLOW\"\nAs the King finished, there was\nanother storm of applause, someone started \"For He's a Jolly Good\nFellow,\" 8000 voices taking-up the\nrefrain. ,\nThere surely never previously\nwas such a gathering on the widespread lawns of the palace. The reception was a repetition in miniature of that at Vimy.\nNot one man in a hundred was\nwithout the beret and button of the\nCanadian pilgrimage, with, in most\ninstances, the additional adornment\nof a row of medals on his civilian\nlapel.\nAnd the womenfolk; they were\nattired as if the Duke and Duchess\nhad said to each personally : come\njust as you are. No fuss or feathers,\nmind.\" And they did. Everybody\nwas thoroughly at his or her ease.\nLONDON, July 29 (CP Cable).-\nCanadian veterans today heard the\nBritish prime minister declare that\nif no better means than war can\nbe found to settle disputes \"the\nworld deserves to perish.\"\nThey heard him outline a hope\nfor.the future on the evidence ot\ncomradeship existing today between\nmen of the Great War's opposing\narmies, and attribute many of the\nworld's present troubles to the loss\nof young potential leaders in war.\nPrime Minister Baldwin, meeting\nthe Canadian Vimy pilgrims in\nWestminster hall, 700-year-old progenitor of present parliaments,\ngreeted them warmly as men who\nhad \"sprung to the side of Britain'\nln the great crisis of 1914-1918. .\nLater the pilgrims\u2014veterans and\nthe km of those who died at the\nfront\u2014held service before the cenotaph in Whitehall, the service under Rt. Rev. Winnington Ingram,\nbishop of London, beginning with\n\"O Canada,\" and continuing with\nprayers, and the strain of \"O God\nOur Help in Ages Past.\"\nAbout 2000 of the Canadian pilgrims left for Scotland today for\nceremonies tomorrow at Edinburgh\nand Haig's tomb at Dryburgh.\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nAttention,\nFISHERMEN!\nfor a limited time only\nwe have decided to allow\na discount of\n20%\nOFF ALL\nFISHING\nBASKETS\nThis is your chance to CET A BASKET AT A BARGAIN.\nWe also have a complete stock of Fiihing Tackle and\nFishing Licences for sale.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd:\nREPS LOOK GOOD\nGirls Practice for\nDouble-Header\nWith Trail\nThe Nelson girls' representative\nsoftball club, which meet* the Trail\nall-stars in Nelson in two games\nSunday afternoon and evening,\nwere put through a stiff hour and\na half'i practice on Wednesday\nevening at the recreation grounds\nand the team appears In good shape.\nWhile local players and officials\nare ho-fjhg tor a double victory\nthey ara-. not over confident as\nmost of the Trail players have played on the Nelson field for two or\nthree, seasons.\nHazel Spiers returned Wednes*-\nday from Colville, Wash., where\nshe spent 10 days, and during the\npractice the well known local speed-\noall artist showed she has lost none\nof her effectiveness, she has fully\nrecovered from the injured finger\nwhich bothered her in the games\nin Trail.\nThe Nelson club will be stronger\nthan in the two games in Trail\nwhich were split, one each, as Alice\nUillett and ?eggy Donaldson have\nreturned to Nelson and have attended a number of practices. This\nwill give the local club more reserve strength, although both may\nstart in the first game.\nMost of the Trail players are well\nknown to Nelson fans and have m\nthe past proven themselves good\nsports and, while the local fans\nwill be strongly behind their favorites, the Trail club will have plenty\nof support as the latest reports are\nthat scores of fans are planning\nto accompany the team to Nelson.\nThe Nelaon team will hold another practice Friday evening and\nthe following players have been\nrequested to be on hand, and it is\nlikely all will be asked to turn oul\nfor the games Sunday. HazeJ Spiers,\nMildred Horrigan, Jean Spiers,\nAlice Uillett, Aria Saare, Rosa\nStewart, Mary McDougall, Elvera\nMatheson, Peggy Donaldson, Isabel\n\"Red\" Donovan, Pauline stangher-'\nUn, Mary Campbell, Agnes Stewart,\nPat Leask and Deannie Wallace.\nMORE ABOUT\nHELD FOR THEFT\n(Continued From Page One)\nKrawetz was arrested in Procter\nWednesday by Corporal G. W. A.\nBarwis of the Provincial police and\nChief Alex Stewart of the Nelson\ncity force. Upon being accused of\nthe store robbery Krawetz, according to the officers, broke down\nand confessed to the crime. He\neven offered to show the officers\nwhere he had cached two boxes of\nchocolates near Bealby's point, three\nmiles from Nelson.\nENTERED OVER RrJOF\nThe tobacco store was entered by\nmeans of prying the glass from a\nskylight. Money in the till, a small\nsum, was untouched, but Howard\nBush reported the theft of 16 tins\nof fine cut valued at $12; eight tins\nof plug but valued at $5.60; two\nmore tins of plug cut valued at\n$1.70 and two boxes of chocolates\nvalued at $2.40. The thief departed\nvia the back door leaving it open.\nIt was on Wednesday morning\nthat Procter residents, particularly\nthose who smoke, found a bargain\nin tobacco. A chap was making a\ndoor-to-door visit selling tobacco\nregularly priced at 75 cents for 50\ncents. He had a sack on his shoulder according to Frocterite.s.\nWhen W. A. Ward and Mr.\nSmith of Procter heard of the tobacco sales they became suspicious ..and telephoned to Chief\nStewart of Nelson.\nIn company with Corporal Bar.\nwis, Chief Stewart went to Balfour and Procter and found traces\nof the tobacco salesman who had\ncalled at several hornet. He was\ntraced to the ipot commonly called\n\"the Jungles\" In Procter and there\nIdentified, after questioning.\nThe accused man, according to\nnolice, broke down completely under questioning and admitted the\ntobacco and candy theft. He handed over three tins of tobacco and\nhad $4.81 in cash on his person.\nLater he took the officers up the\nhillside near Bealby's where thc\ncached candy was discovered.\nKrawetz, when questioned by the\nofficers about other recent robberies and breaking and entering cases\nin Nelson, denied any connection\nwith them.\n Krawetz was released June It\ntrom Oakalla prison, where he\nwas serving time for breaking ind\nentering, ind stealing, provincial\npolice records reveal. Hit record\nIncluded two charges of vagrancy,\ntwo of theft and one under the\nRailway act He was formerly a\nSaskatchewan farmhand.\nDairy and Phones\nat Recreation\nThe B. C. Telephone vs. Kootenay\nValley Dairy Men's league softball\n\u25a0jame scheduled for the junior high\nichool grounds this evening has\nbeen switchde to the recreation\ngrounds M the midget baseball\nplayers, who were alloted the recre-\nition grounds on a switch with the\nGirls' Softball association, will not\nbe using it. The Kootenay Valley\nDairy team has been showing vastly\nmproved form every game and has\nwon four of its las*- five g-smes to\ntake third place in th? local league\nThe Telephone crew has copped 11\nconsecutive games in league play\nut will bs without the' aervices\nf some of its regular players this\nwenmg. However with Len ?ck-\nicll and Bob Patersdn doing the\nttattery duty the Dairy club will\nhave its work cut out to obtain\nhits. Bicknell has pitched five two-\nhit games this season in league\ngames.\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C^-THUR8DAY MORNINO. JULY SO, 1930\nTroil tad Wins Governor-Generals\nMedal in Entrance Examinations\nmm\n\u2014Photo by Hughes Bros. Studio, Trail.\nBy ARTHUR R. JOY\nTRAIL, B. C, July 24\u2014Henry\nDouglas Gray, 14, winner of the\nGovernor-General's medal In recent\nJune entrance exams is the son of\nMrs. and the late' J. R. Gray of\nthis city.\n\"Is Doug's first name Henry?\" I\nasked his younger brother as I entered the yard of the Gray home on\nSpokane street.\n\"Yes,\" was the reply with an air\nof inquisition.\n\"Is he home?\"\nJust at that moment Mrs. Gray\ncame around the corner of the\nhouse.\n\"He is delivering his papers,\" she\nreplied.\n\"Doug has won the Governor-\nGeneral's medal,\" I told her.\n\"My, isn't that lovely!\" she exclaimed in a voice composite of- excitement and pride. \"He did not\nwant to write for lt but Mr. Cam-\neroh figured he had a' good chance\nand talked him into it.\" ,\nW. M. Cameron is principal of\nthe Trail Central school .which\nDouglas attended.\n\"I'm going down to the Times to\ntell him, \"interposed 10-year-old\nJack as he hopped on his wagon and\nsped down the hill.\nApparently that old axiom\u2014\n\"Early to bed and early to rise,\nmakes a man, healthy, wealthy\nend wise.\"\u2014holds some truth for\nDoug is a carrier for*.the Nelson\nDaily News in Trail and is usually\nwaiting for the ti-Jick from'Nelson\nto arrive with his route bundle, before 5. a.m.\n' A shewd businessman is this little fellow with a broad forehead\ntopped by a thick crop of red hair.\nDuring the summer holidays he is\nalso delivering a route for the Trail\nTimes, while the regular carrier Is\nenjoying a vacation.\nAll work ahd no play would make\nDoug a dull boy so he plays bantam\nhockey in winter and epjoys swimming in summer.\nMORE ABOUT\nMANITOBA VOTE\n(Continued'From Page One)\nThe Liberal-Progressives had 21\nand the opposition 25. Conservatives held 14 of the opposition seats,\nthe C.C.F. four, Social Credit four.\nIndependents two and Communists\none.\nFOUR MORE TORIES\nErrick Willis, the youthful Conservative leader, picked up four\nmore followers through the election\nof Gen. H. D. B. Ketchen and J. A.\nBarry at Winnipeg and J. S. Poole\nin Beautiful Plains and J. P. Lawrie\nin Norfolk. Both latter seats were\ngains from Liberal-Progressives.\nThe Cooperative Commonwealth\nFederation leader, S. J. Farmer, won\none of the 10 Winnipeg seats as tired\ncounters completed the 12th count of\nballots in the big proportional-representation constituency.\nAnother former Liberal-Progressive seat was lost to the government\nwhen F. Wawrykc, Independent,\ncaptured Gimli.\nElection excitement ran high In\nManitoba tonight as the second day\nsince the election passed With no\nclear indication of victory for apy\nparty.\nTwo cabinet ministers in the\nBracken government, two Conservatives and one Cooperative Commonwealth.' Federation candidate were\ndeclared elected in Winnipeg tonight, completing the slate of 10\nmembers in the city.\nAttorney-General W. J. Major and\nJ. C. McDiarmid, minister of natural resources! were under the\nquota set, as was Marcus Hyman,\nC.C.F., but were declared elected\nwhen distribution ot ballots **as\ncompleted on the 16th count.\nGeneral H. D. B. Ketchen and J.\nA. Barry, Conservatives, reached\ntheir quota on the final count.\nTwo 'Liberal-Progressive, three\nConservative, three C.C.F., one\nCommunist and one Independent\nmember wril represent Winnipeg in\nthe next legislature.\nThe 16th and final count gave the\nfollowing totals:\nW. J. Major, (LP) 6848; J. S. McDiarmid, (LP) 7030; H. D. B. Ketchen, (C) 7771; J. A. Barry, (C)\n7251; M. Hynian, (CCF) 5871.\nMORE ABOUT\nSPANISH\n(Continued From Page One)\nPearson Will Talk\nOver KGA Tonight,\nDistrict Beauties\nDescription of Nelson district, its\nscenic beauties and its extensive\nresources, will be featured' tonight\non the radio program \"Northwesl\nOn Parade\" over station KGA, Spokane. H. A. Pearson will represent\nthe Nelson board of trade on this\nprogram, and will deliver the descriptive address. The program goes\non the air at 9 o'clock.\nA model In the Hall of Man al\nlhe Buffalo museum of science\nsnows the human body functioning\nas a factory with various departments.\nSeventeen French planes, built in\n1929 and traded in to manufacturers for new ships, stood at Etampes\nairport, awaiting export licence.5\nfrom Paris before they can be flown\nto government authorities in. Ma\ndrid.\nFour British airliners were held\nat Bordeaux while Paris authorities sought to \"verify their papers.\"\nA foreign office official reiterat\ned the government would refuse to\nauthorize the flying of French\nplanes to the Spanish government,\nPURGE  ORDERED\nMADRID, July 29 (AP). \u2014 The\nRepublic tonight ordered a merciless purge of enemies within its\ngovernment and leftists guardedly\nadmitted the rebels outside the capital ri|ight be able to wage a leng\nthened siege.\nArmy officers, officials and even\nwomen of prominence suspected of\nfascist activity were among those\narrested. Three hundred rebels were\nheld in a prison ship at Barcelona,\nThere were the usual conflicting\nclaims of victory in tattles both on\nnorthern and southern fronts.\nThe government still held the\nterritory east from Madrid to the\nseacoast. Rebels retained Seville,\nCordoba and Malaga to the south\nand Valladolid, Segbvla and Zaragoza on the north. San Sebastian\nand Santander were in loyalist\nhands.\nA loyalist submarine, with a crew\nof 40, was reported sunk by rebel\nbombs off Gibraltar. Another submarine was believed crippled in a\nsecond engagement. A third of the\nloyalist flotilla escaped.\nTwelve rebel airmen were shot\ndown in their planes.\nLoyalists claimed aapture of La\nLinea and San Roque garrisons, on\nthc south. Troops massed for attack at Zaragoza on the north,   .\nThere was a new formation of\ntroops to besiege Sevdle and Cordoba, southern rebel strongholds.\nRebel reinforcements spsd toward\nZaragoza to cut oft Madrid's land\nconnections with Barcelona. This\nwould sever the two principal fortresses of the Liberals.\nRgsjalts\n:,'ITERNATIONAL\nBuffalo 5, Newark 8.\nRochester 18-4, Baltimore 4-3.\nToronto 7, Albany 3.\nMontreal 1-0, Syracuse 0-7.\nASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee 3, Louisville 1.\nMinneapoMs 7, Toledo 8.\nKansas City 3, Indianapolis 1.\nPACIFIC COA8T\nLos Angeles 1, Dan Diego 5.\nSan Francisco 3, Missions 4.\nFLOUR, OATS\nUP 10 (ENTS;\nEGOS HIGHER\nChfeese Also Higher;\n'Canned Goods\n' Move Up\nVEGETABLES,\nFRUIT MOVE\ning the put week. Watermelons are\nstill coming in from California and\nare moving fast owing to the hot\nweather.\nBlack Rivier and Red Malaga\ngrapes from California ihow the\nfinest quality local wholesalers\nhave received in early shipment!,\nand are enjoying a ready sale,\nCar-lot arrivals were fewer.\nAmong them were one of cans for\nJam, one'of'W-ai*. two of mixed\ngroceries and two of cured and\nfresh meats.  '\nMORE ABOUT\nFOREST FIRES\n(Continued From Page One)\nLocal 'Cukes' Selling;\nCantaloupe LbWer,.\nPlentiful\nNelson wholesalers were advised\nlate Wednesday afternoon that flour\nhad advanced 10 cents a barrel and\nrolled oat! 10 cents per 80 pounds,\nThese advances were in line with\nthe highest wheat quotation in a\nlong time. Hot weather was the\ncause of a one-cent per dozen advance in egg prices. Cheese was up\nhalf a cent a pound. These were\nfeatures of the past week reported\nby Nelson wholesale houses Wed\nnesday.\nAlmost every mall brings to\nwholesalers notices of advancing\nprices for canned vegetables and\nfruits, due to short packs. The Australian pineapple pack is so short\nit is unlikely Canada will receive\nany supplies from that source this\nseason and will rely on Singapore,\nSYRUPS HIGHER\nSyrups are 10 cents a case higher;\nculinary starches are up; and rnaca-\nlonl quotations are at a higher\nlevel due to flour advances.\nA few raspbelrries and black currants for jam are stiir arriving, but\nthe quantity is not great. No cherries have been accepted for nearly\na week.\nOh the other side of the picture\nthe fresh fruit and vegetable market is active with movement of all\nlines fairly good due to the hot\nweather, There is no shortage of\nsupplies.\nSupplies of new Traiteparent ap-\nplei are plentiful, and some early\nplums are arriving from Brilliant\nand Robson districts. Cucumbers\nhave been coming from these points\nfor sortie; time, and supplies are\nalso being obtained in the city.\nCANTALOUPE   LOWER\nTomatoes are plentiful and prices\nleasonable in the Okanagan. Canta\u00ab\nloupe, on the market for two weeks,\nare becoming plentiful in that district and the price has declined.\nApricot* are finished, and preserving peaches will not be on the\nmarket* until about August 15. A\nsmall quantity of Washington peach\nes for the retail trade has been received.\nThe orange market ls strong, having shown additional strength dur-\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST-BETWtEN NELSON AND\nFruitvale Saturday morning black\nsuitcase. Address Callxte Arsenau\npretre, Seminaire de Nicolet, P.\nQuebec, Return to Nelson Daily\nNews. Reward. ;-'     (1983)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n' Next Kinsmen's Dance Willow\nPoint, Sat, Aug. 1st. (1961)\nNext Kinsmen Dance\nCrystal Hall, Willow Point, Saturday, August 1. (1926)\nFor   Comfort   Arrow   8eamless\nCrotch Shorts at\u2014JACK BOYCE.\n(1873)\nTwo only, Vacuum Cleaners. Reg.\n$42.50 now $21.50. McKay & Stretton.\n(1576)\nDANCE AT QUEEN'S BAY HALL\nSat., Aug. 1st. Min Graham*! orchei\ntra. Good refreshments.  75c couple.\n(1960)\nA most complete stock of radio\ntubes. An efficient radio department\nat your service. Call the Kootenay\nMusic House. Phone 585.       * (1940)\n3 DAY8 SALE\nDRESSES\u2014All sizes. Rack at half\nprice. Rack at $7.96. Rack at $6. Evening dressei very 8peclil price.\nD.C. DRESS 8H0PPE\n(1958)\nATTENTION \u2014 \"O R I G I N AL8\nCLUB\" 1914 MEN \"RED CHEVRONS\" MEMBERS are requested to\nattend the FUNERAL of Comrade\nJAME8 HURST, 7th Battalion, at\nthe pro cathedral on Friday at 11\na.m. G. K. A8HBY, 8ECRETARY.\n(1951)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nUpon arrival of Kettle Valley train\nthis evening, the body of H. H, Pitts\nwill be conveyed to the Davis Funeral Service Parlors, where it will\nrest until 3 p.m., Friday, 31st inst.,\nthence to Trinity United Church\nwhere service will be conducted by\nRev. J. A. Donnell. U962)\nROUND TRIP, WEEK-END\nEXCURSION  RATES\nNelson-Trail  $2.10\nSelson-Kaslo  2.10\nelson-Nakusp _ S.75\nGREYHOUND LINES\nPhono 800\nNelson  Depot  205  Baker  SL\n(1581)\nElsewhere in the southern in-\nierior 'the fire situation was little\nchanged   Wednesday.\nMONTANA FIRE8 SPREAD\nMALTA, Mont., Jdly 29 (API-\nRoaring forest fires in the Little\nRocky mountains spread to new territory tonight only a lev* hours after\nit was reported under control.\nThe resettlement administration\noffice here reported that the blase\nhad leaped to Mission peak and\nwas eating It way Into green\ntimber of the rugged mountain\nwilderness.\nAs the fire ate deeper into the\ntimber, Phillips county authorities,\nforest service officials and Fort Bel-\nKap Indian reservation officers\nunited their investigation to determine, if pyromaniacs set the blaze\nthat has blackened 20 square miles\nof forest lands and killed three men.\nBIG JUMP IN B.CFIRE8 ,\nVICTORIA, July 29 (CP)\u2014Hot\nweather of the last ten days, brought\nan increase in the -number of forest\nfires in the southern interior and\non the coast, the forest branch reported today.\nThere was 90 outbreaks throughout the province during the last\nweek, including 14 in the Vancouver forest district, which includes the big timber district of\nVancouver Island, there were 34\nin the Nelson area and 29 in the\nKamloops section. *.\"\nThe number of fires to date thl\u00ab\nyear In the province It 710, as compared' with 544 last year and 618\nIn 1934. Forest branch officials\naald losses had not been severe.\nThe valuable timber In the coast\nsection has not suffered severely-\nyet. There have been only 100\nfires In the Vancouver district\ncompared with 223 at this time\nlast year.\nPHONE LINES BURN\nCOLEMAN, Alta., July 29 (CP)\n\u2014Telephone lines between this\nsouthwestern Alberta town and the\nCastlemount ranger station were\nburned down late today as a forest\nfire sweeping through the Castle\nriver valley assumed a more menacing aspect.\nThe fire, which last week broke\nover the provincial border from\nBritish Columbia and destroyed\nhundreds of acres of rich forest and\ngrazing lands, appeared to be burning more-fiercely than ever. Dense\nclouds of smoke were seen here,\ncarried from the scene only a few\nmiles away by a strong wind.\nThe forestry station in Coleman\nhad no reports as to the .progress\nof the blaze.\nAdditional men were sent to fight\nthe flames today.\nMany ranches were in the path\nof the advancing fire, being fought\nby hundreds of men hastily recruited from surrounding towns. Ranch\nriders and farm hands were rounding up grazing cattle, taking them\nto points of safety.\nOther fires Jn this foothills area\nalso continued to advance, destroying additional acres of rich\ntimberlandi. In the Elk river valley, a serious blaze burned near\nthe Bow river timber reserve,\nhardly checked by the efforts of\nthe fire fighters.\nWATERSHED THREATENED\nLILLOOET, B.C., July 29 <CP>-\nA fire at Texas creek, 12 miles south\nof Lillooet, today threatened to\ndestroy a large watershed along the\nwest bank of the Fraser river unless\nrain falls soon to assist fire fighters.\nYoung fish are fry until they are\nan inch long, after which they become fingerlings, and at one year\nthey aro yearlings.\nA Real\nCleanup\nSTRAW\nHATS\nWe want to close out\nevery Strew Hat we have\nso we will give them\naway at     ;\nHalf Price\nHat\u00bb Worth $1.75\nNOW 88\u00abr     ,\nHats Worth $2.50\nNOW ?1.25\nBetter Get Yours\nToday\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nMarket Gardens\nSuffering Hea\nSprinkling Hours Nol\nSufficient Cover\nthe Ground\nSprinkling regulations Instituted\nto conserve Nelson's domestic wate-\nsupply during the current hot apel]\nare causing a great deal of appre\nhension among market gardeners;\naccording to wholesalers and store\nkeepers in contact with these gardeners.\nMost of the market gardens cove\na fairly large area and require a ful\nday to sprinkle adequately. Re\nstricted to three .hours sprinklinj\nthe gardeners find themselves un\nable to. give their vegetables sufficient water and tha crops' are sitf\nferlng from the heat'.\nSome of the gardeners have lh<\nformed city officials of their plight\nit is understood, and it appeari\nlikely other interests will make representations on their behalf.     ^\nVANCOUVER, July 29 (CP) \u00abjj\nVancouver's city council and civ*\nstaff will have no official home to\none month after Nov. 30, lt, we\nmade known today with the an\nnouncement that the new city hai\nwould not be finished for full occupancy until the end of Decern\nber. The city's lease on the Holder\nbuilding, temporary city hall, ex\npires on Nov. 30.\nJ.A.C. Uughtoi\nOptometrist\nSuite 208 Medical Art! Bldg\nAn Emergent communication of Nelson Lodge No. 23\nA. F. & A. M. will be held at\n10:30 a.m, Friday, July,31,\nfor the purpose of attending\ntho funeral Of Bro. Jimei**\nHurst.\nVialtlng  brethern  cordially\nInvited. ,\u201e    .. 71\nBy order of tha Wonhlpful\nMaster.\nJNO. TEAQUE,\n' Secretary.\nOUR SECOND ACE HIT\u2014On the 8creen at 3:30 snd 8:30\n|OAN MARSH\u2014BEN LYON\u2014EDDIE NUGENT\nln,J?\u00abSld\u00a3S\"dy\"DANCING FEET\"\n\u2014COMING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\u2014\nShirley Temple      \"Capt. January\"\nL^^j-^jU.\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_1936_07_30","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\/1.0412420","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1936-07-30 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1936-07-30 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}