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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":" Spokane Cricket Club Beats\nNelson 126-122\nPage Two\n_______\nVOLUME 37\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nC    V   flVW COLUMBIA. CANADA-MONDAY MORNINQ, JULY 18. 1938\nIndustrials and Mines Gain;\n.    Western Oils Off\nPage Nine\nm_\nNUMBER 78'\nRumored Arrest Qreen Death Denied;\nSun on Blood Reveals Scene of Kiiling\nWharf Tav Unfair        The\u2122''th\u00b0,pMt \u00b0'th* \"Bo,ton \u2122p,rty\"ln      1 JlUKI Ui A UAIE\nWil Nol Pay'Say\nSturdy Renafa Folk\nThere Is the spirit of the \"Boston Tea Party\" in\nthe battle raging at Renata on the Arrow Lakes\nbetween the Dominion government, which his\nImposed wharfage dues, and the residents who\nwill not pay them. But the battle Is on entirely\nlawful lines. Renatans limply don't use tha wharf.\nThe C.P.R. steamer pulls up on the beach and\noutgoing produce and Incoming supplies are\nhandled without benefit of wharf.\nPhotos above were supplied to the Daily Netvs\nthrough the courtesy of Robert Foxall, manager\nof Associated Growers at Nelson. Upper picture\nindicates substantial amount of traffic affected by.\nrecent Dominion government appointment of a-\nwharfingers with power to collect impost* tin all\nshipments handled over the Renata wharf. In the\nlower picture the wharf, now neglected in favor\nof the beach, Is seen to tho right. Sporadic efforts\nto collect wharf duer have always ln the past tailed in Kootenay. \u25a0  - \/  .\nAirman's Actions\nLead to Atlantic\nCrossing Rumors\nNEW YORK* July 17 (CP)-An\n\u2022unpredictable airman from Califor-\nInia, Douglas P. Corrigan, 31, announced at Floyd' Bennett 'field; to-\n'\u00bby he was taking off- nonstop for\nong Beach, Calif., and then soared\naway headed east, a move that arous-\n|cd considerable speculation; since\n_ong Beach is West of- New York.1.\nBe  was  piloting  a .dilapidated\n(tonoplane, of 1929 vintage, similar\no Charles A. Lindbergh's .\"Spirit of\nSt Louis\", which was capable of a\nans-Atlantic crossing when it wsa\new-in 1927.\nCorrlran's ship carried 300 gallons\npf gasoline, enough to keep him aloft\nabout 40 hours, long enough for an\nAtlantic crossing; and there were\ninoonfirmed reports around the air-\n'ield that he was going to try.\nTrail Scouts at\nDiamond Lake Win\nMarksman Status\nTRAIL, B.C., July 18\u2014Guests recently at Camp Cowles, Diamond\nake, Wash., Gerald Burch, Steve\napronoff and John Sjursen, all of\nFrail and George Speakman, Castle-\nV\u00bbr, have passed marksmen's tests\nWhich they took at the Boy Scout\nlamp. Average pass mark of the four\npoys exceeded 80 per cent\nHELIUM GAS FOUND\nIN BRAZILIAN STATE\nSAO PAULO, Brazil, July 17 -\n(AP)\u2014 Annibal Bastos Aires, director of the federal geological department said today that the presence of helium gas had been discovered by soundings in Sao Paulo\nstate. He added-his department had\ncomplete data on surveys seeking\nthe non-inflammable gas, of which\nthe United States has a virtual\nmonopoly.\n36-Ounce Baby\nHas Even Chance\nVAL D'OR, Que., July 17 (CP) \u2014\nBorn through a Ceasarean operation ln a miner's cabin, a baby girl\nthat weighed 36 ounces at childbirth lay behind the window glass\npanes of a Pinewood incubator hi\ntonight, with \"possibly\nchance\" against death.\nDr. J. Alme Carle who was summoned to the little home 10 days\nago when Dr. J. Belanger found\n26-year-old Mrs. Joseph Jean was\nhaving difficulty in childbirth, said\n\"an even break\" might leave life\nwithin the tiny frame of Baby Jean.\nMILLBROOKS, N. Y., July 17\n(AP) \u2014 Clajence E. Davison, 89,\nfor more than 20 years the holder\nof the world's record for skating 50\nyards from a standing start, and an\nearly partner of Samuel Insull in\nvarious Chicago utilities, died today\nafter a lengthy Illness.\niere\neven\n[CRUSH1NG0FFENSIVE REPORTED BY\nJAPANESE IN YANGTSERIVERDRIVE\nJ SHANGHAI, July 17 (AP)-Jap-\nIncsc reported today their army and\nlavy, paced by warplanes, were con-\nImiing a \"crushing offensive\" deigned to carry the Rising Sun banner into Hankow and  Nanchang.\nicy said five armed launches foreman entry into Lake Poyang, the\n-7-square  mile   body   of   water\nitch leads to Nanchang.\nhe main battle sector was Jong\nI Yangtse river between Kiuklang,\nJ miles downstream from Hankow\npd 100 miles north of Nanchang,\n1 Hukow, 15 miles further down\nle river.\nlit Is here, where Lake Poyang\nliters enter the Yangtse, that the\nInnese are striving to send forces\n\u25a0It against Kiuklang for the river\nlive in China's provisional capital\nId south against Nanchang to wipe\nIt a main Chinese air base and to\ndrive overland to cut the Canton-\nHankow railway.\nChinese reports asserted the Invaders suffered 10,000 casualties in\nbattles in the last two weeks below\nKiukiang. Several boat-loads of\nbodies, they said, were seen proceed-\n:\u2014 down the river.\ng.\nThey said the Japanese were pa;\nIng a staggering price ln materi\nas well as men ln their effort to blast\nlay-\nrial\n ____>\t\nChinese defences out of their path\nJapanese ignored the reports of\nheavy casualties.\nBoth sides asserted their air fore\nes were active, Chinese said their\nwarplanes continued raids on the\nJapanese naval units In the Yangtse,\n\"inflicting more damage.\" Japanese said their airmen ranged up the\nYangtse from Kiukiang to Hankow,\nshooting down eight Chinese pursuit\nships and two bombers and shower-\ning explosives on Chinese positions.\n______\n'Hoppers Darken   -\nSaskatchewan Sky\nARCOLA, Sask.. July 17 ,(CP) -\nGrasshoppers continued their attack of southern Saskatchewan\ncrops today, switching to the wheat\nfields after stripping many gardens. Farmeri were nurrledly cutting their rye, hoping to save it\ntor feed before the Insects take\nanother step in their war,\nDarkening. the sky, a cloud of\ngrasshoppers passed over here Friday. They were flying south. Wheat\nand oats crops ln the Weyburn district have felt the sting of the\nInsect attack, but In that district\ngarden stuff has hardly been touch'\ned.\nWITH A TRAVELER\nIS INVESTIGATED;\nINQUEST JULY 21\nBlows  on   Back   of\nHead Are Death\n.  Cause\nNOT EXCITED ON\nTRIP TO TAGHUM\n\"There have been no arrests\nmade 10 far,\" stated Staff-Sergeant C. G. Barber, who has\ncharge of the provincial police Investigation of the murder of Mrs.\nLaura Qreen of Nelion near Tag-\nhum early Friday morning, when\nhe wai questioned late Sunday\nnight as to an apparently well-\nfounded rumor that tha police\nhad a man In custody.\nHa stated the police were still\nchecking on a statement by Mri.\nDorothy   Norlund,   Mn.   Green's\ndaughter, that her mother had \"a.\ndata\" Thursday evening with a\nVancouver traveler. Mrs. Norlund\nIs reported to hava told  police\nher mother arranged Wednesday\nnight to meet a Vancouver man.\nWhether her visit to Fairview\nThursday night by street car or her\nlater trip to Taghum by taxi had\nany connection with such a \"date\"\nwas said to be a matter of conjecture\nAn Inquest will Be held Thursday, a coroner's jury having viewed\nthe body     \u25a0'..   ;\nIt is understood death was due\nto blows on the back of the head\nwhich caused several skull fractures, but the findings of the autopsy have not been revealed Dr.\nH. H. MacKenzle, Coroner,' gave tt\nas his opinion'that ''ie skull injuries caused Mn. Greani deaSi_ .-..\nBie -#^ViWlIfc-BTl-\u00abrto*y.\nDiscovery of the place where the\nwoman was murdered and elimination of a number of possible leads\ncomprised week-end developments\nln the provincial police investigation of tho brutal (laying of Mrs.\nLaura Green, formerly Mrs. A. B,\nHall of Nelson. The body was found\nabout 5:30 Friday morning in' a\nrailway cut about 100 yards west of\nthe C. P. R. bridge at Granite, the\ncrew on a westbound freight train\nfinding It   .\nBut discovery of the place where\nMrs. Green was killed gave the Investigators no new Information of\nvalue in tracing down her assailant. It was on rocky ground, and\nalthough there were signs ot a struggle, they were not pronounced. The\nnature -ot the ground eliminated\ntracks.\nBLOODSOAKED GROUND\nThe spot, about 50 yards back In\nthe brush from the cut where the\nbody was found, was revealed to\npolice searchers about 5 a.m. Saturday, morning by the slanting rays\nof the morning sun shining on the\nbloodsoaked ground.\n(Continued on Paga Seven)\nPioneer Woman of\nAlberta Drowned\nLLOYDMINSTER, Alta., July 17\n(CP) \u2014 Mrs, H. Sutton, a pioneer\nand wife of a well-known farmer\nin this district on the Alberta-Saskatchewan boundary, was found\ndrowned last night in a dammed-up\ncreek less than 100 yards from her\nhome. Survivors include a sister,\nMrs. A. Sutton of Kelowna, B. C,\nHORSES  DIE\nARCOLA, Sask.. July 17 (CP)-\nAn outbreak of encephalomyelitis\namong horse- of this district in the\npast four days has taken a heavy\ntoll. With 75 horses reported down\nwith the disease, It is estimated\nabout 15 have died.\nTWELVE INJURED WHEN\nSEAPLANE IS WRECKED\nCHERBOURG, France, July 17\n(AP)\u2014Twelve persons were Injured when a giant transport seaplane smashed on rocks shortly after\nsettling on the sea near here. The\nflanc  was  being tested for the\nrench navy.\nTwo naval officers and 12 civilian\nengineers aboard were rescued by\ncutters trom warships off the coast.\nNEW AIRMAIL SERVICES\nANNOUNCED\nOTTAWA. July 17 (CP) - The\nPost Office department announced\nSaturday a weekly air mall service\nhas been established in Alberta between Peace River and Fort Vermilion via Carcajou and North Ver-\nvilion. Thla replaced a land lervlce.\nThe department also announced\nan air mail service will be established about July 21 from Fort Nelson, B. C, to new post offices to be\nopened at Nelson Forks, B. C, and\nFortLlard,N.W.T.\nMINING STOCKS UP\nOTTAWA, July 17 (CP) - The\ninvestors' price Index for 24 mining\nstocks for the week ended July 14\nIncreased to 148.8 from 148.5 the\nprevious week. Year ago it was 142.7.\nThe index for 21 gold stocks rose\nfrom 116.9 to 118.81. A year ago it\nwai 110.1. The Index for three base\nmetals was 274. Tha previous week it\nwas 279.2 and a year ago 178.7.\nHepburn Plane\nLands Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, July 17 (CP)-Pre-\nmler Mitchell Hepburn of Ontario\nand three companions arrived at\nStevenson field tonight, after a flight\nfrom Toronto.\nThe premier was accompanied by\nJ. P. Bickell, Toronto financier, Ben\nSmith, New York financier, and Pilot Jimmy Towne at the controls of\nthe big Amphibian.\n\"Thi- Is not a political mission at\nall,\" said Mr. Hepburn as he discussed the flight that will take him on\nan 8000-mile plane tour of western\nand northwestern Canada. .\nPALESTINE STRIFE\nCASUALTIES RISE\nJERUSALEM, July 17 (API-Scattered disorders increased the toll of\ncasualties today in the-racial strife\nthroughout the Holy Land. The total\ndead since the outbreak July 5 included 70 Arabs and 31 Jews. Wounded during the period were 180 Arabs\nand 102 Jews. In addition, a number of Guerrillas have been killed\nor wounded and British troops have\nbeen injured in hill clashes.\nIn Jerusalem, truckloads of troops\nof the Black Watch regiment went\nthrough the city and searched pedestrians and vehicles.\nAmerican-Jewish settlers called\nupon the United States consulate\nin Jerusalem Saturday to aid them\nIn gaining protetlon. George Wadsworth, the American consul, wai\nunderitood to have brought the\nsituation to the attention of the\nstate deparment at Waihlngon.\nMrs. Boyes Has\nPlunge in take\nas Launch Afire\nFire In their laungch caused by\nthe engine backfiring brought to an\nabrupt end, before it started, a trip\non Kootenay lake planned by Mr,\nand Mrs. J, H. Boyes.\nThey were ready for their outing\nSaturday morning when the fire\nstarted, and while Mr. Boyes was\nsafe on the float at Walton's boat-\nhouses, Mrs. Boyes plunged into the\nUke. whable to swim, she held herself up by clinging to tha side of the\n\u25a0IronS. _led\" ffcKlnleyhelped Mr.\nBoyes pull her out of the water. '\nWhen tbe fire wai extinguished\nthe engine and all else of value In\nthe boat was removed and the hull\nwas pushed out into deep water and\nsunk. '\nMrs. Boyes bad a considerable\nsum in her purse and though the\npurse was damaged the money was\nIntact, it was understood. Earlier reports were to the effect she had lost\n$175. \t\nAberhart Urges\nPrayer to Peg\nPrice of Wheat\nCALGARY, July 17 (CP)- People of Alberta with prospects of\nan abundant harvest were urged to\nthank God for the bountiful crop\nin their prayers also ask God to \"peg\nthe price of wheat\", by Hon. William Aberhart, premier of Alberta,\nspeaking at the Calgary Prophetic\nBible institute today.\n\"We are sure there will be a good\ncrop this year and I hope we will\nall be grateful to God for His blessings,\" said the premier.  -\nThe people had not been ashamed\nto ask the federal government to\n\"peg the price of wheat,\" but apparently did not want others to know\nthey asked God to peg the price.\nThey were not ashamed of their\npolitics but appeared to be ashamed\nof their religion, declared Mr. Aberhart.\nGod should also be asked to protect the crop from the menace of\nhail, rust and frost and to maintain\ngood prices for the grain and livestock.\nFOUR KILLED AS\nEXPLODING OIL\nTANK FALLS ON\nFIRE AUDIENCE\n\"Ball of Fire\" Leaps\n200 Feet Across\nRiver\n$15,000,000 BLAZE\nFOUGHT BY 400\nWELL8VHLLE, N. Y. July 17\n(AP)\u2014Four men were killed tonight when an exploding oil tank\nleaped 200 feet acrou the Genesee river and frll Into a crowd\nof spectators watching the fire\nIn the $15,000,000 .Inclalr Oil\ncompany plant here.\nIt wai not Immediately known\nwhether other spectators might\nnot have been burled under the\nhuge missile.\nAs firemen from scores of towns\nbattled   desperately  against  the\nroaring flames within the plant,\nworkmen began cutting tha tank\napart In an effort to discover If\nthere were other victims,\nWitnesses said the tank looked\nlike a \"ball of fire\" as lt arched\nover the narrow river and plunged\ninto the ground.\nVictims were part of a group of\nat least 100 persons watching the\nblaze, in which 12 oil and Naphtha\ntanks exploded 14 stecl-ond-cork\n\"filling towers' were destroyed\nand a dewaxing plant destroyed.\nThousands of yards of sandbag\nand dirt dikes were hastily thrown\nup in a wide circle around the\nblazing area, in an effort to halt the\ndread flow of burning ofl.-,\nThree to four hundred firemen\nfrom towns as far 35 miles away\npitted puny hoselines against the\nblaze,, pumping water from the\nGenesee river because the plant's\nwater system \"Was wrecked when\nthe fire broke out late in the afternoon.. \u25a0\nThey were handicapped, too, because the lire when it broke out\nin the dewaxing plant almost immediately destroyed the steam lines\ndesigned as emergency extinguishers, and .wrecked W'-pawer fines,\n- - \\]    '' i'\u00b0\"\"'\" *\"   -\nlajeunesse Baby\nFormer Utilities\nMonarch Dies\nSAMUEL  INSULL\nPARIS. July 17 (AP)-Samuel\nInsull, 78, .White-haired ex-monarch of a $4,000,000,000 utilities empire he created in. the United\nStates, died Saturday from a heart\nattack in a Paris subway station.\nInsull had suffered from a heart\nailment several years and had been\nasked by .his wife \"never to take a\nsubway because lt was bad for his\nheart.\":\nMrs. Insull herself tearfully disclosed this when she learned of his\ndeath. She had left him to go\nshopping Just two hours before.\nTne eyes of the world were focused on Samuel Insull.when his\nvast utilities empire\u2014once valued\nat $4,000,000,000\u2014collapsed in 1032.\nHemoved from control of his extensive properties in June of that\nyear, he retreated to ESrope as the\ngovernment and the state of Illinois examined his complicated affairs.\nWith 10 associates, he went to\ntrial in the federal court in Chicago on the mall fraud charge. After\na lengthy hearing, fraught with details of Insull's frantic battle to\nkeep his companies in operation,\nthey were acquitted on Nov. 24,\n1934.\nInsull waa subsequently freed in\nthe bankrupcy case, too.\nTINY INFANT DIES\nVANDERHOOF, B. C. July 17\n(CP)\u2014A baby that weighed only\none pound and 14 ounces when it\nwas born here, July 11, to Mr. and\nMrs. Keith Peters, died .Saturday.\nHUGHES AND CREW TO\nMAKE GOODWILL FLIGHT\nNEW YORK, July 17 (AP)- A\nworld's fair official tonight said that\nHoward Hughes and his world-gird\nling crew will make a good-will tour\nof all\" South and Latin American\ncountries in about two or three\nmonths. The purpose of the flight\nwill be to invite government of\nficlals and fliers to the New York\nfair In 1039.\nImportant Diplomatic Meetings\nAre Expected During Visit of King\nPostponed Week\nContinuation of the Inquest In\nthe death of Carmen Lajeunesse\n18-months-old Ymlr baby whose\nbody was found in a creek above\nthe Ymlr-Yankee Girl mine, Ymir,\nafter she had been missing for a\nmonth, will be postponed to next\nMonday, provincial police stated\nSunday night.\nThe inquest was scheduled to resume at 2 p.m. today, but one of the\nmembers of the Jury has been called out of the city by business and\npostponement for a week is planned.\nU. S. Railroad\nHeads Plan Meet\nCHICAGO, July 17 (AP)-A new\nphase of the industrial conflict involving the United States railroads\nwill unfold next week when management and labor Wgin direct conferences over a proposed 15 per cent\nwage cut\nApproximately 900,000 employees\nhave a stake in the outcome of the\ndeliberations here. They constitute\nthe largest group ever Included in a\ncollective bargaining agreement.\nHONOLULU MEN\nSHOOT RAPIDS\nDAWSON, Y. T., July 17 (CP)-\nNine young adventurers from Honolulu arrived here today after negotiating the wild Miles canyon and\nWhitehorse Rapids in a 31-foot scow\nthey built at Lake Bennett, 300 miles\nsouth of here near the British Columbia border. The men left Honolulu June 17.\nThe nine described their trip as\n\"splendid\" and all were -In \"pink\"\nof condition. Object of the river\n\"cruise\" was .to take color movies\nof northern scenes.\nPRAHAH, Czechoslovakia, July\n17 (AP) \u2014 The' Czechoslovak government's concessions to Sudeten\nGermans and other minorities will\nreceive a final examin_.ion tomorrow at'a meeting between President Edouard Benes and the seven\npolitical members of his cabinet '\nThe-meeting which might, well\nbe the turning point toward peace\nor toward further misunderstandings, will be with the cabinet mem-\nbed who represent Czechoslovakia's various political parties.\nOn tha eve of the conference'\nministers and officials were irritated by what they said were false\nreports from German quarters Saturday that the Czechoslovak army\nwas mobilizing again.\nThere was speculation whether\nthe \"incidentf'might Influence the\ntrend of negotiations.\nOfficial denials of the mobilization were emphatic and complete.\nThe government Issued a statement\naccusing Germany of \"brutal and\ndisturbing\" interference.\nJapanese Protest\nSoviet'Invasion'\nTOKYO, July 17 (AP)\u2014The Japanese government was believed tto-\ndiy to be planning a second protest\nto Soviet Russia over last week's\nalleged invasion of .Manchoukuoan\nterritory by Soviet troopers. One official said Japan was prepared \"to\ntake stern measures.\"\nSoviet troops were alleged to have\npenetrated Manchouquo approximately four miles near Changku-\nfeng and occupied a hilly area where\nthe Japanese - charged they were\nerecting fortifications.\nRussia rejected a protest by Manchoukuo and a joint Japanese-Man-\nchoukuoan representation on the\nground the territory involved belonged to her.\nA renewed Japanese demand for\nwithdrawal of the Russian troops\nwas expected to be made after the\nforeign office receives a report from\nHarukhiko Nlshl, charge d'affaires\nin the Japanese embassy in Moscow.\nBy PAUL-LOUIS BRET\nCopyright 1938 by\nThe Havas News Agency\nLONDON, July 17 (CP-Havas)-\nColncident with the visit to Paris\nbeginning Tuesday of tht King and\nQueen, important diplomatic conversations will take place, bearing on\nthe Anglo-French attitude toward\nmajor international problems, particularly Czechoslovakia and Spain.\nViscount Halifax, foreign secretary, who ii accompanying King\nGeorge and Quean Elizabeth to\nParis, will review with Premier Daladier and Foreign Minister Bonnet\nall outstanding questions, ln order\nto bring about harmony In Anglo-\nFrench policy.\nCharles Corbin, ambassador to the\ncourt of St. James, left London today for Paris to act as the French\nrepresenatlve attached to the King's\nstaff in the ceremonies attending the\nRoyal vliit Before leaving he conferred with Lord Halifax preparatory to the*diplomatic talks,  ,\nTha program of the discussions,\nIt wai learned on reliable authority, Includes Europe and the far\neast. Anglo-French relation! with\nGermany will be examined thor\noughly, with regard both to the\npresent and the future. Tha problem Of the Sudeten Germans  In\niriiir^itiiiiiiiirilr\nCzechoslovakia remains of prim\nary Interest.\nLord Halifax and his associates are\nexpected to communicate to the\nFrench statesmen information received here from Praha and Berlin\nindicating that a German-Czechoslovak clash may be avoided if Praha\nmade all possible concessions to the\nSudeten German minority compatible With maintenance of Czechoslovak sovereignty.\nAs regards the Spanish question,\nit was understood, Britain's willingness to act as mediator ln the civil\nwar, it a suitable opportunity is presented, will be reiterated and the\npossibilities of mediation examined.\nSECOND HOLE IN ONE\nFOR CALGARY GOLFER\nCALGARY, July 17 (CP) - Bob\nKlely, Calgary golfer, plays his best\ngolf on Sundays.\nA week ago at the Bowness Golf\nclub he banged in'a hole-in-one on\nthe long 245 yards 11th and back on\nthe same course today, at the 145\nyards fifth hole, he repeated the\n\"Golfer's Dream\".\nBELFAST PAPER BOMBED\nBELFAST, Northern Ireland, July\n17 (AP)\u2014A bomb explosion in the\ncentre of Belfast early today blasted\naway the entrance to a branch office of the newspaper Daily Mail.\nExtensive damage was done to the\nbuilding and windows ln the neighborhood were shattered. No one was\nInjured. - \u25a0\nCANADIAN8 WIN\nBALTIMORE, July 17 (AP.)-The\nCanadlan Davis cup doubles team\nof Laird Watt of Montreal and Ross\nWilson of Toronto defeated Harold\nSurface, jr., of Kansas City, and\nElwood Cooke of Portland, Ore.,\ntoday to win the Maryland state\ndoubles tehnis championship. The\nscores were 7-9, 9-7, 8-3, 6-2. 'y.\nEXPECT CONTROL\nTODAY; CRITICAL\nCONDITIONS B.C.\nAND ACROSS LINE\n500   Fighters  Joined :\nby 300 Elks Falls\nDistrict\nBLOEDEL COMPANY\nTIMBER LOSS HUGE\nOne hundred men fighting a forest fire between Champion creek\nand German creek, on the eait side\nof the Columbia river south of\nBrilliant, had completed a trench\non the windward aide, of the fire\nearly Sunday evening' and forest'\nbranch officials at district head- -\nquarters, Nelson, hoped to hava .\nthe outbreak under control thla\nmorning,\nA crew of men rushed out dur. I\nIng the day was augmented by\nabout 00 more lata In the after-\nnoon, and tho crew of approximately 100 were gaining control\nearly In the evening.\nWind conditions would be the de* I\nterininlng factor, officials said. .\nLIGHTNING 8TRIKE\nA lightning strike at Buih river,\nnorth of Golden on the Big Bend\nhighway, was reported to district\nheadquarters Sunday. Beyond a report that 12 men had been sent out\nto fight it officials had no further\ndetails.\nThe fire reported Fridjy at -ha\nheadwaters of St. Mary's river, on\nthe divide between Grey Creek\nand Kimberley, was kept under close -.\nobservation over the week-end. The\noutbreak was at an elevation of 7000\nfeet and was burning in scrubby\njackpine amortg rocks. With no timber of value in danger and the flra\nalmost inaccessible owing to its altitude and the ground over which\nIt was burning, forestry men planned to keep close watch on it and\nto \"Jump on it'' if it threatened its..\nBet into valuable timber lower dpffl* .\nalong St. Mary's river. \u25a0 \u2022 .\u2022\u25a0[.,.\n! In'i-38 a fire burned in-this vi-;\ncinlty, in valueless timber, for about\na month without loss of good timber,\n300 JOIN FIGHTER8\nCAMPBELL RIVER, B. C, July .\n17 (CP) \u2014 British Columbia forestry branch officials today moved 300\nfire fighters into. Elk Falls district,\neight miles north of here, in a new\neffort to halt a forest fire which has\nburned over holdings of four logg-'\ning companies. The men joined 500\nother men including 300 forestry employees, 275 unemployed and loggers and volunteeis from as far\nsouth as Victoria and Duncan, 174\nmiles from here at the'lower end\nof Vancouver Island.\nThe new fire line was formed to.\nprevent flames from sweeping into\nComox operations, south and west\nof here. Forestry officials said their\nmain fear was a high wind which\nwould send the flames racing into\nComox slashings on a blazing trail\ndown the island towards Courtenay.\n40 miles south.\nThe men moved today were taken\nfrom Forbes Landing, nine mllea\nnorth on Campbell River after they\nbattled day and night to beat back\nfire which fringed the Landing and\nthreatened to destroy the hotel and\na number of summer cabins.\nNearly forty guests were ordered\nout of the hotel Thursday and the;\nroad from here to the Landing waa\nclosed to public traffic.\nC. J. Haddon, forestry official who\nflew from Vancouver yesterday to\ntake charge of the fire lines, said\nthe road would probably be opened\nwithin'two weeks unless a sudden\nwind sprang up to fan the fire Into ,\nnew life. .\nHeaviest loss has been to Bloedell\nLogging company where the flra\nstarted and dastroyed 2,000,000 feat\nof cut timber.\nThirty families were ordered to\nevacuate the Campbell Hiver timber company's camp and several\nfamilies instructed to leave the Elk:\nRiver timber camp number eight\nas precautionary measures,\n,'Meanwhile the most serious ot\n(Continued on Page Two.)\nSPANISH CITIES THREATENED IN\nCRUSHING NAVARRESE ADVANCE\nHENDAYE, France, July 17 (AP)\n\u2014The hard-pressed Spanish gov.\neminent'S lines were smashed today\nin a sector vital to the defence of Valencia by a crushing blow that may\nchange the whole picture of Spanish\ncivil war now entering its third\nyear.\nInsurgent General Jose Valera s\nNavarrese, striking deep into government territory south and east of\nthe Teruel-Sagunto lint; ln eastern\nSpain, swept Into positions, that\nthreatened not only Valencia but\npossibly also Cuenca and Madrid to\nthe west.\nThere was gloom ln Barcelona,\nthe government capital, and in Valencia as officials prepared war anniversary observances that will include a broadcast by President Manual A_ana tomorrow. But government leadets still confidently pre\ndicted final victory end exhorted\nworkers and soldiers to give their\nutmost.\nBoth sides seemed to have,concentrated every possible warplane,\ntank, gun and man in the scorching\ncountryside where the action may\nquick Insurgent General Franco's\nmarch toward Valencia and. lead\neventually, to a breach of communications between that port and besieged Madrid.\nGovernment advices said the insurgents lost \"thousands and thousands\" of killed and wounded. Insurgent reports mentioned between\n3000 and 4000 government prisoners\ntaken. *\nVarela apparently was taking advantage of unprecedented concentration, of government forces in the\narea, estimated at 180,000, about M\nmiles northwest of Valencia.\n PAGE TWO-\nSpokane Cricket Club Triumphs\nOver Nelson 116 te 122 Here Sunday\nSpokane cricket club defeited\nNelson cricketers 126-122 in an exhibition match on the Nelson pitch,\nSunday. Given the first field, the\nvisitors played risky cricket,1 tak-\n' Ing every opportunity to gain runs.\nThe fifth batsman for Spokane,\nLockett, paced the local bowlers\nifor 37 runs before he was stumped by Bowler S. Dawson. Both\nteams played their full Innings.\nIt was the classy batting of Harry\n' Parker that saved Nelson from a\n\u2022worse licking. The quick-eyed batsman bent the bat for 46 runs and\n; remained \"not out\".\n- Robert Main  and G.  Brabazon\nlor   Nelson,   and   Newman   and\nStocker for Spokane failed to break\ntheir \"ducks\" or zeros.\nThe bowlers were bowling Australian time, eight balls per \"over\".\nThe summary of the innings,, follows:\nSpokane innings:\nA. Smith, c Morey, b Parker     3\nH. P. Roberts, b Dawson    25\nHancock, b Main       15\nPeacock, b Main     2\nLockett, stumped Dawson    37\nNewman, b Main     0\nHilder, b Main     :    12\nLake, b Dawson     0\nStocker, b Dawson _     0\nCunningham, b Bowkett    15\nWarner, not out  ....\nExtras ......._    11\n126\nBowling analysis:\nJ. Corbyn    20 runs\nHarry Parker _      19 runs\nS. Dawson .; .,..   33 runs\nSORE FEET\nI NU-FEET INSOLES mediated\nwith beitlng suits bring liitinc\ncase to, burning, aching feet, control perspiration, banish <lC-\u00bb\nfoot odor. Price pet pair _*wC\nNU-FEET\nR. Main  \t\nTotal .__ _.._..\nNELSON INNING8:\n....   31 runs\n13 runs\n12.\n  10\nE.   Bowkett,   c   Stocker,   b\n    2\n     0\n  11\nH. Parker, c Newman, b Lockett  15\nF. H. Smith, b Lake ,...\n    5\n     0\nA. Parker, c Lockett, b Lockett   3\nG. Camm, c Cunningham, b Like    2\nTotal\t\n 122\nBowling analysis-\nLake       42 runi\nWarner        14 runs\nHilder          4 nlns\nThree Robberies\nat Coast Net $550\nVANCOUVER, July. 17 (CP) -\nThree, week-end robberies netted\nburglars and auto thieves more than\n5550 in various merchandise, including jewelry and clothing.\nMrs. F. E. Kleser said burglars who\nbroke into her home by way of the\nbasement, escaped with Jewelry and\nclothing valued at $318. Thieves\nbroke into the parked automobile\nof Harry H. Hammon 'and escaped\nwith $250 worth of various articles.\nJewelry valued at $40 was stolen\nfrom the downtown suite of Mrs.\nJean Shields.\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP) s-\nThomas P. Lake, 71, retired cannery\noperator, died at his home here today. Born in Lincolnshire, Eng., he\nhad managed canneries on the British Columbia coast for 50 years. He\nis survived by hit wife here.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nI    5=\nHume Hotel.Neison, b.c.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME-W. G. D. Walker, George\nF. Shaw, W. A, Lammers, J. B.\nPoole, H. Cutler, Mrs. R. W. Reeve,\nMrs.. P. LaRoche, H. H. Weber H.\nGreen, Rev. N. Elgar, H. C. Gibbs,\nMr. and Mrs, R. N. Boothe, Major\nC. H. Hill-Mr, and Mrs. A. R. Wick-\nBop. F. W. Mitton, W M C Greive,\nR. B. Wilson, S. M. Maysmith, D.\nA. McLeod, J. F. O'Dell, H. Macey,\n,W. Mulroy, Vancouver; Mr. and\nMrs. M C. Holden, New Westminster; B. Goodsell and party, Inga\nQuisset, Agnes Quisset, Arnia Hen-\netri-kson, Elva Meyer, Spokan; J. E.\nBarbour, Wilmur, B. C,i Leo Pop-\nerny, John Budge, Mr. and Mrs.\nK. W. Townshend, H. Tewksbury,\nLeigh Henderson, Mr. and Mrs.\nJames C. Mahaffey, Calgary; Mr.\nand Mrs. L. W. Sells, New Denver;\nMrs. R. J. Clegg, Mr. tnd Mrs. J. N.\nMcLeod and daughter, Rossland;\nMrs, T. L Clark, Mrs. W, J. Armstrong, Alexander Holmes, Lethbridge; R Crawford. Mr. and Mrs.\nW. McNeill and daughter,. Med-\n'icine, Hat; Lieut-Col E. Mallandaine, Creston; Miss I. Sinclair, F.\nL. Beebe, G. W. Hicks, Kamloops;\nMrs. John Kubla, Nakusp,    i\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nF. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors .\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\n.        ROOMS SIM AND UP\nFree Parking NEL80N, B. C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon 8t        Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLV RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nWHEN IT'S NEWS\nYou Reid About It In the .\nNelson Daily News\nEDGEWOOD, B C. HOTELS\nI Arrow Lakes Hotel\nEDGEWOOD, B. C.\nE. NIEDERMAN, Proprietor\nComfortable Rooms\u2014Good Meilt\nLogical stopping place on the\ntopping r\nroad to Vernon\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI \"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\" Ni\nDuffer in Hotel\n000 Seymour St, Vancouver, B.C,\nNewly Renovated Throughout\n\"\"'    Phones        Elevator\nA.   PATERSON.   late   ot\nColeman, Alta, Proprietor\nI\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at ths\n4,0Sde Hotel VOLNBYMr:\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS\nSTANFORD Hotel, spokane\nat SPRACUE & MADISON  i*_$______ia\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nIVI.' H. MclVOR, Prop.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C,\nNight Baseball\n'  WESTERN INTERNATIONAL\nTacoma 9, Yakima 0,\nTrail Softball\nGirls in Trophy\nSeries July 31\nTRAIL, fl, C, July Ifr-The Province cup softball series will get\naway in Nelson, July 31, according\nto word received by the Trail girls\nleague executive.   ,   \u25a0\u2022 \u2022\nThe Trail representative team\nwill play in a double-header there\non that date with the Nelson\nchampionship squid.\nNelson Passes\nThrough Hottest\nSpell in Four Years\nFor four days In succession, Nelson has attained a temperature of\n07 degrees or' higher, one of the\nlongest spells of sustained high\ntemperature tor many yean. On\nThursday the highest temperature\nrecorded was 97, Friday 09 (actual\niy 98.9), Saturday 98, Sunday 97\ndegrees, according to Howard Jeffery, meteorological observer here,\nhere.\nOld Sol beat down upon Nelson\nfor 13% hours Saturday and 14\nhours on Sunday.\nTemperature tables published\nin the Spokane Spokesman-Review\ngave Thursday's, Friday's, and Saturday's maximum in Spokane as\n101 degrees. In the case of Saturday the actual reading was 101..,\nthe highest ever recorded at Spokane for July 18.'.   ,\nCreston Pupils Pass\nMusic With Honors\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Two Creston\npupils in piano did themselves\ncredit at the examinations under\nthe direction of the Toronto Conservatory of Music at Nelson, the\nlatter part of June.\nPasses with honors were obtained\nby Audrey, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. W. McL. Cooper, third year,\nand Donald, son of Mr. and Mrs.\n\"Bud\" Andrews, first year. Results\nhave just been announced.\nTroopers Take Over\nState Penitentiary\nFLORENCE, Ariz., July 17 (API-\nTroopers of Arizona National guard\nmarched into the state penitentiary\nhere today while convicts cheered,\nand placed the badly overcrowded\ninstitution under military control.\nMore than 500 convicts ln the prison yard shouted approval, and a few\nbooed, when the khaki-clad guardsmen appeared on the wall.\nCARDINAL PASSES\nVATICAN CITY, July 17 CAP) t-\nOlulio Cardinal Serafine, 71, prefect\nof the congregation of the council\nand considered one of the most\nlearned members of the sacred college, died Saturday of uraemia after\nseveral days illness..\nSocial. . .\nSALMO\nSALMO, B.C.-G. G. Fair was a\nvisitor to Nelson.\nPercy and Donald Wilde are\nspending a holiday jn Nelson, guests\nof Mrs. A. Gibbon.\nMrs. C. McLanders of Nelson Is\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Cawley.\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Cawley and\ndaughter, Margery, and June Fair\nwere visitors to Nelson.\nMurrel Bush left for Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. M. C. Donaldson\nleft for Seaside, Ore,\nLawrence Kenney of Nelson is\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Roach.\nDr. and Mrs. N. E. Morrison were\nvisitors Jn Ymir Monday, the doctor\nbeing a speaker at a meeting called\nto explain the formation of a cancer clinic unit there.\nMrs. F. Waterstreet and daughter,\nDaryl, were visitors to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Miller and\nfamily left for Nelson where they\nwill make their home.\nC. W. Maddlson passed through\ntown. He will spend some time\nvisiting gold camps of the district.\nMr. Maddlson is special reporter\nand feature writer for Western Canada Mining News.\nMrs. Ida Gray was a shopper in\nNelson. .\nMiss Eva Leahy of Sheep Creek\nIs spending a holiday in town.\nMiss June King visited Nelson,\nAmong baseball fans motoring to\nNorth Port, Wash., Sunday were Mr.\nand Mrs. Arthur Moore, Mr. and\nMrs. A. McLeod, Mrs. A. McDougall,\nMrs. H. Read, Miss June King, R.\nAdams, E. Chenette, D. Watson, C.\nA. Cawley, Guy Cawley, Clarence\nCawley, T. Newton,-John Charlie\nand Howard Moore.\nL. R. Clubine was a recent visitor\nto Nelson.\nBill McLeod and Eddie Wanstall\nreturned from a motor trip to Vancouver. Allan McLeod accompanied\nthem to Vancouver where he will\nspend the summer.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Carrington and\nfamily of Reno mill left on a vacation to be spent in Princeton.\nGarth Binning left for prairie\npoints.\nMr. and Mrs. Howard Moore were\nvisitors to Nelson. fc\nP. F. Horton was a recent visitor\nto Nelson.\nMisses Pat and Georgina Leask\nreturned from a holiday spent in\nSpokane.\nMrs. J. F. Donaldson was a shopper in Nelson.\nMrs. J. Hearn entertained in honor of Mrs. B. Campbell, a recent\nbride. Invited guests included Mrs.\nJ. Sapples, Mrs.- J. F. Donaldson,\nMrs. G. G. Fair, Mrs. H. Grutchfield,\nMrs. C. Hearn, Mrs. O. Smith, Mrs.\nW. Milburn, Mrs. W. J, Grutchfield,\nMrs. H. A. McDonald, Mrs. P.\nCampbell, Mrs. J. Fraser, Mrs. A.\nBremner, Mrs. A. Lucas, and the\nguest of honor, Mrs. B. Campbell.\nB. C. RESORTS\nDELIGHTFUL\n5 Spend Your Holidays and s\n=        Week-Ends it the\n1     OUTLET HOTEL     \u00a7\n3        .      Procter S\nGood meals, friendly service. Excellent   fishing,   boating,    hiking,\nswimming. Furnished cabins. Grocery store In connection.     .\n>   W. A. WARD. Proo.\nMORE ABOUT\nFOREST FIRE\n(Continued Prom Page One)\nseveral blazes on the mainland \u2014\nalong Salmon Arm of Sechelt inlet-\nwas being gradually controlled. It\nhu burned through 3,500,000 feet\nof cut logs.\nThe Washington state forest fire\nsituation remained critical Augmented crews made gains against\nsome of the major blazes dotting\ngreen timberlands, but lowered humidity,-strong, winds and new fires\ncreated additional problems for firefighters.\nThe state's biggest fire, covering\nseveral square miles near Ryder-\nwood, in Cowlitz county, was gradually being hemmed in by fire lanes.\nTwo powder magazines where several tons of dynamite were stored,\nwere menaced by a 10-acre brush\ntin near Renton.\n.-MONDAY MORNINQ. JULY 18, 1938.\nKING RECOVERS\nFROM ILLNESS\nLONDON, July  17\nking,, fully recovered\ntack of gastric influenzi\nto Buckingham palace frori\ntoday by automobile. -\n. A cheering crowd greeted J\nthe gates of the palace. He '\ncompanled by Queen Elizabeth\ntheir daughters, Princess Elizab\nand Princess Margaret.\nSocial.,. .\nWARDNER\nWARDNER, B. C-Mrs. B. Crowe\nof Jaffray visited Mrs. A. Rosicky\nWednesday.\nMrs. M. McLeod returned to Lumberton Wednesday.\nMiss Ruth Hamrin returned to\nCranbrook after spending Wednesday with her parents here.\nMrs. A. Jacobson motored to\nCranbrook Thursday.\nMrs. P. Keyandowey visited Jaffray Thursday.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Anderson of Jaffray were in town Thursday.\nDouglas Holton. of Nelson was a\nguest of Norman KieviU.\nMrs. A. KieviU and family motored to Cranbrook Thursday.\nBeatrice and Patricia Embree left\nFriday for Lumberton to visit their\naunt, Mrs. E. Thompson.\nJ. Martinos visited Cranbrook on\nFriday.\nMrs. L. Olson was a visitor to\nBull River Friday.\nMisses Charlene Hamrin, Swea\nMoberg, Marjorie Chester, George\nThompson, Donald Hamrin, Gebrge\nMoberg and Andrew Rosicky motored to McBaihes lake, Thursday.\nThird Housing Loan\nfor Trail Approved\nTRAIL, B.C., July 16\u2014Three applications for construction of homes\nIn Trail and Rossland under the Dominion Housing act have been given\napproval at Ottawa, the latest approval having been received Friday by James Devito, who proposes\nto build at 1285 Tamarac avenue.\nOther applications already approved were from George Webb, East\nTrail and St. John Madeley, Rossland. A fourth application is being\nconsidered.\nRev. Mr. Burt New\nSalmo Missionary\nSALMO, B.C.\u2014Rev. and Mri. Burt\narrived from Ontario to take over\nUnited church work in the field recently vacated by Rev. C. E. Motte,\nThey have taken up residence in\nYmir.\nIntermediate Girls\nfor Koolaree Today\nFifty-eight girls of intermediate\namp age will today replace the\njunior boys' camp at Koolaree on\nthe West Arm for 10 diys. Mis*\nAmelia Hanna, camp director, will\nbe in charge. Girls going from Nelson will go by launch right to the\ncamp, and those from outside\npoints will be transported to McDonald's Landing on the north\nshore by truck, and will go from\nthere to camp by boat.\nPRAYER8 FOR JEWS\nLONDON, July 17 (AP)-Special\nprayers were offered in churches\nand synagogues In the British,Isles\nand Dominions today, Intercession\nSunday, for Jews In greater Germany.\nServices in Anglican churches\nwere requested by the Archbishop\nof Canterbury and Archbishop of\nYork. They were held also In free\nchurches and Roman Catholic churches.\nTREATY 8IQNED\nBUENOS AIRES, July 17 (API-\nApproval by both Bolivia and Paraguay of a peace accord to set up\ntheir century-old fight over the\nGran Chaco today apparently assumed formal signature of the treaty\nearly this week.\nDENTAL MAN DIES\nCHICAGO, July 17 (AP) \u2014 Dr.\nCharles Nelson Johnson, 78, editor\nof the Journal of the American\nDental association and former association president, died today. Born\nin Ontario, he had practiced dentistry here more than 50 years.\nDR. LYONS DIES\nBALTIMORE, July 17 (AP) -\nDr. Ernest Lyon, former United\nStates minister to Liberia aftd Li-\nbernian consul general to the United States since 1911, died of lobar\npneumonia today.\nSocial...\nMOYIE\nMOYIE, B. C-Mrs. Jack Fitch\nis a Cranbrook hospital patient.\nLaVaunc and Vincent Conrad\nwere recommended tor promotion\nto high school.\nAfter holidaying here with her\ngrandmother, Miss Mary Conrad,\nlittle Gertrude Currans, of Kimber-'\nley, has left for Spokane to visit\nrelatives there and at Chelan Falls,\nWash.\nMr, and Mrs. Babe Leask and\nchildren Week-ended at Kimberley with Mr. and Mrs. Graham.\nAfter visiting Moyie relatives\nMrs. Louis Desaulniers and Miss\nMuriel Edwards motored to Chapman Camp Sunday.\nMrs. G. Boake and son Eric, are\nvisiting at Kimberley.\nMr. ind Mrs. Nick McKenzie\nand daughter, Miss Jessie, of Kimberley, were Sunday guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. R. A. Smith. Other guests\nwere Mr. ind Mrs. Chris Foote,\nChris, Jr., and Archie Allan.\nMrs. Jack Fisher of Creston is\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nAndrews.\nCharles May, a pioneer of Moyie,\nsome 30 years ago, caUed at the\nhome ot Bobby Smith early In the\nweek. He was en route to the prairie provinces. ...\nVera Hyde, Cranbrook, is a guest\nof Mrs. Phil Conrad and family.\nMr.  and  Mrs.  Henry  Simmons\nSocial...\nYAHK\nYAHK, B.C.-At the annual meeting of ratepayers of the Yahk United rural school district Mrs. A. L,\nLythgoe, G. Warren ot Yahk and\nMrs. Bell of Klngsgate were elected\nto the board of trustees. Mrs. A.\nL. Lythgoe wUl also act as secretary for the board succeeding J. A,\nHamilton who resigned.\nAnglican W. A. who held   their\nmonthly  meeting Thursday  were\nguests of Mrs, John Tipper, Glen-\nMrs. Paul Rushcall is visiting relatives in Fernie.\nMr. and Mrs. A. W. Kometz have\ntaken up residence in Nelson. Mr.\nKometz will relieve there as C.P.R.\ndispatcher for some weeks.\nMr. and Mrs. P. Williams have\nreturned from Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. Forsberg, former\nresidents, were recent visitors from\nCanal Flat.\nMrs. Joe Brogan and baby son\nhave joined Mr. Brogan in Cranbrook.\n. Mrs. Stuart Blake ot Kimberley\nvisited her brother-in-law and sister,\nMr. and Mr_. Herman Petersen.\nWhile motoring through from Nelson to Band Miss E. M.>Paxton and\nMiss J. H. Paxton, secretaries for\nthe correspondence department of\nthe Anglican Sunday schools visited\nMrsi George Warren.\nMr. and Mrs. Trinfor and granddaughter, Jean McEldowney, have\nreturned from Spokane,\nMrs. S. J. 'McCartney and son,\nPaul, were Cranbrook visitors.\nAlex Rattray has left to take in\nthe stampede at Calgary.\nMr. and Mrs. D. D. Mclndoe and\nson, Billy, have returned from Victoria.\nRalph Rltigstaad was a week-end\nvisitor from Lumberton.\nMiss Helen Johnson, Mrs, James\nVigers and Harry Erskine of Canal\nFlat were visitors here recently.\nChess Righton has recovered from\na recent Illness.\nBert Eevans, who Is employed at\nCherry Creek, Is visiting his family.\nMiss Jean Rattray is visiting relatives at Woodhouse, Alta.\nCunningham Heads\nRossland Society\nROSSLAND, B.C.,. July 17-W1U-\niam C, Cunningham was elected\npresident ot the Rossland Co-operative Transportation society Friday\nnight, it was reported today.\n'Other candidates were H. S. Taylor, J. R. Bryan, J. R. Gordon and\nH, L. Christian.\nRossland Department\nAnswers False Alarm\nROSSLAND, B. C, July 17 -\nRossland fire department's seven\nweek no-run, no-fire record was\nspoiled by a false alarm late Friday night. The alarm, turned In\nabout 10:15 p.m., sent the truck on\na fruitless trip to the Rossland\nKnights pf Columbus hall.\nTrail Boy Hurt in\nBike-Car Collision\nTRAIL, a C, July 17 - Mike\nDavich, 13, received only slight\nscratches and bruises when his bicycle collided with a truck driven\nby W. Rogers at the intersection of\nCedar avenue and Victoria street at\nabout 8:30 tonight. Davich did not\nhave a light on his bicycle.\nJEW8 IN U. 8, 8UPPORT\nDEFENCE MOVEMENT\nNEW YORK, July 17 (AP)- The\nAmerican-Jewish congress announced today that 698,993 Jews in .543\ncities in 3d states have registered in\nsupport of the congress \"to mobilize\nAmerican Jews' in defence of the\nequal rights of Jews the world over,\"\nCongress officials said the figures\nwere not complete. They said the total probably would reach 750,000.\nCharming evening dresses have\nbeen developed in linen and lace for\nmid-summer wear.\nBenjamin N. Cardozo, noted liberal member of the United States'\nsupreme court and supporter of\nRoosevelt's. New Deal, died at Port\nChester. N. Y\u201e in his 68th year. Justice Cardozo was long acknowledged one of America's leading legal\nscholars. He was appointed to the\nsupreme court in 1932 by President Hoover, This is his latest studio\nportrait.\n\"Life\" Theme in\nScientist Church\n\"Life\" was the subject of the\nlesson-sermon in the First Church\nof Christ, Scientist) on Sunday.\nThe Golden, Text was, \"As the\nFather hath life in Himself; so hath\nHe giveh to the Son to have life\nln Himself\" (John 5: 26).\nAmong the citations which comprised the lesson-sermon was the\nfollowing from the fcible: \"But the\nword is very nigh unto thee, irt thy\nmouth, and In thy heart, that thou\nmayest do it.\" (Deut. 30: 14).\nThe lesson-sermon also included\nthe following passage from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science and Health with Key to the\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy:\n\"The Scriptures imply that God is\nAll-ln-alJ. From this it follows that\nnothing'possesses reality nor existence except the divine Mind and\nHis ideas. The Scriptures also declare that God is Spirit. Therefore\nin Spirit all is harmony, and there\ncan be no discord; all is Life, and\nthere is no death.\"\nWed at Coleman;\nto Live at Natal\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 A quiet marriage\ntook place at Natal recently when\nMiss Isabel Heck, only daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. C. Heck, VauxhaU,\nAlta., became the brido ot Max\nEberts, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Ebert\u00bb of NataL The wedding\nceremony took place at Coleman\nwith Rev. Beven officiating. The\nyoung couple after spending a few\ndays at the home of the bride's parents returned to Natal where they\nwill make their home.\nJobless to Send\nMert to Interior\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP) -A\nmass meeting of more than 2000 jobless tonight decided to ask prairie\nand eastern provincial governments to Investigate the unemployment situation in thefr areas with\na view to Raining support in a demand for a federal works program.\nThe meeting, sponsored by tho\nRelief Project Workers union, also\ndecided to start a movement of men\nInto the British Columbia interior\nin search of work.\nBURGOS, Spain, July 17 (API-\nInsurgent Spain has honored Italy\nand Germany by awarding decorations to Field MarshaU Hermann\nGoering, and Count Galeazzo Clano,\nItalian foreign minister. Goering\nwas conferred a grand knighthood\nand the collar of the great imperial\norder of red arrows. Count Ciano\nwas made a knight of the order of\nIsobel the Catholic.\nCitizens Resort\nto Lakeside Park;\nWater 69 Degrees\nLakeside park was' fUled with\npeople of all ages practically all\nday Sunday, when hundreds of\nswimmers and bathers entered the\nwater as a relief from the heat, or\nat least spent the hours in \"sun\nbathing.\"\nTemperature of the lake under\nthe diving float was 69 degrees,\nwhich is close to the highest point\nthat is ever reached.\nGreat numbers ot family picnics\nwere held, both by Nelsonites and\nby visitors from Trail.\nMarriage Licence\nIssued at Reno\nfor Nelson Girl\nRENO, Nev., July 17\u2014A marriage\nlicence was Issued Saturday to Cyrus\nArthur Moore, 38, Denver, Colo., and\nJean Marie Burns, Nelson, B. C.\nLight weight woollens, so light\ntheir weights are comparable to\ncrepes, will be used to a great extent In the new fall frocks.\nBanting Denies\nHas New Method\nof Resuscitation\nTORONTO. July 17 (CP) - Sir\nFrederick Banting said tonight reports he and his assistants had devised a new method, in the form\nof a serum, for resuscitating persons rescued, after being submerged in water were \"completely unfounded\" and were \"the figment of\nsomeone's imagination.\"\n$195 Collected in\nFines at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C-Monthly report of the police department showed that $195 was collected In fines\nand $37 in costs, making a total of\n$232. Sixteen prosecutions were\nmade. There were six criminal complaints received, aU thefts, the value\nof property lost or stolen being\n$108, of which $84 was recovered,\nThere were 103 Incidents noticed\non patrols and attended to, Including 30 intoxicated persons warned\noff streets, 66 transpients warned\nto leave town, two fire calls attended and four street lights not burning.\nThe administration ot the work\nof the relief department has been\ncarried out during the month, when\n38 married persons with 121 dependents, 14 single persons and 10 Chinese were given city direct relief\ntotalling $1271.80 of which the city's\nshare Is $254,38 against a total of\n$1373 (city's sare $274.62) for May.\nSeven persons and tour dependents were given city aid under the\ndestitute poor and sick section, to\nthe total of $101.00, about the same\nas for May. It is understood that\ngovernment assistance to the extent\nof 40 per cent will be given for\nexpenditures incurred on this account.\nOne married person with four dependents was Issued with provincial government direct relief.\nEdmonton Fair\nMarks Jubilee\nEDMONTON, July 17 (CP)- The\nEdmonton exhibition, marking its\ndiamond jubilee, swings into action\ntomorrow with larger entries in\npractically every event, a plant that\nhas been given a \"spring house-\ncleaning,\" and a program that calls\ntor two evening fireworks displays.\nParis Enthuses\nOver Royal Visit\nPARIS, July 18 (Monday): (CP)\n\u2014The King and Queen \"will feel the\nheart-beat of Paris,\" declared Gaston\nle Provost De Launay, president of\nthe Paris municipal council, ln an\nappeal to the people of Paris to put\nno check on the enthusiasm of their\nwelcome. tomorrow to the Royal\nguests.\n\"Bedeck your windows,\" he urged\nall Paris. \"Decorate your homes. See\nto it that the colors of the two\nnations always flutter intertwined.\nAcclaim the King, Acclaim the\nQueen.\nColorado River\nParty Is Safe\nGRAND CANYON, Aril., July 17\n(AP)\u2014A lone fire at the foot of Tanner Trail, 6 miles from here, signalled tonight the safe arrival of\nthe Neville expedition on the second\nlap ot its projected boat trip down\nthe treacherous Colorado river from\nGreen river, Utah. The party of\nsix left Lee's Ferry Wednesday afternoon.\n-SLIPS-\nDICE SATIN\nBROCADE\nSiies 32 to 44\n$1.00\n.1\nReady-to-Wear\nPhpiw73-        BurniBloek\nSoc! J...\nSunshine Bay\n\u25a0 SUNSHINE BAY, B.C.-C. May'\nreturned Monday after visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. Thompson of Cranbrook.\n. W. Donaldson spent Tuesday ln\nNelson shopping.\nGuests at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. Nick Dosenberger Wednesday\nwere Mr. and Mrs. C. F. MoHardjr\not Nelson, Miss Louise MacLean ot\nTrail and Wilmer McHardy of Balfour, also Al Smith of Nelson, C.\nSmith of Creston, their mother, Mn.\nSmith of Kamloops and their sister, Mrs. Swade of Salmon Arm.\nMrs. Oscar B. Appleton has returned to her. home from Nelson\nwhere she visited her lister, Mrs.\nH. H. Pitts.\nMr. and Mrs. L. W. Berg and\ndaught.r, Iris, of Trail were yit-\nItors here Sunday.\nCaptain and Mrs, J. Ferguson\nspent Thursday in Nelson.\nJack Sewell of Kimberley spent\nthe week-end at the home of his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Sewell,\nMiss Catherine Ferguson resumed\nto Nelson Monday.\nCaptain H. McCarthy spent\nThursday in Nelson.\nKimberley Boys Go\nto Peckham's Lake\nKIMBERLEY, B,C.,-Rev. B. L,\nWillis is at Peckham's lake with a\ngroup of 15 boys at summer camp.\nThis is the second group of boys he\nhas taken out, the first being 10\nfrom Chapman Camp.\nThe Boy Scouts held a party last\nnight in McDougall hall, 35 boys present with their scout master; Barney\nAllan. Thirty boys plan to leav.- for\nthe big Scout Camp Saturday. The\nScouts recently held a whist drive\nto get funds for camp. Twenty-one\ntables were in play and the drive\nwas a success in every wiy.\nBrig. Gen. Ponet Has\nDay Fishing at Pool]\nBrlg.-Gen. deB. Panet of Men-f\ntreal, chief investigator of the Can-I\nadlan Pacific, and a noted Quebec\nsportsman, arrived here Saturday\nnight, and spent Sunday at the\nPool at South Slocan fly-fishing. He\nreported he had \"fair stick.\" He\nwent out east on thii morning's\ntrain. .- -i\nSome yean ago the general and\nMrs. Panet were taken to the Pool\nby ,W. S. King, and both showed\nthemselves remarkable adepts. Ever\nsince then General Panet has kept\nln touch with Mr. King, and called\nhim up on this occasion. Mrs. Panet\nis holidaying at Lake Louise.\nWafer Level Is\nUnder 10 Feet\nContinuing its decline, the West\nArm passed the 10-foot mark Sunday, and at 6 o'clock Sunday afternoon stood at 9.98 feet above the\nlow water mark.\nSave Time and Labor\nGeneral Electric\n.   Washers\n$79.50   and ap\nNelson Electric Co.\nWE SAVE YOU MONEY ANPj\nSERVE YOU WELL    T\nAl HILLYARD'S\nFairway Grocery\nThe Coolest Store In Town\nPhone 264        Vie Crawford, MgrJ\nLayout\nDoes Your Telephone\nMeet Your Business\nA CHECKUP COSTS NOTHING\nIt pays to have your business telephone layout checked up at intervals. Conditions in your business may have changed or new telephone\nequipment may have beoome available since your present system was\ninstalled. A checkup by a telephone expert costs you nothing. Is\nit easy for your customers to reach your business by telephone? Have\nyou enough telephone lines? Are calls distributed to the right\npeople in your organization quickly, courteously and without confusion? Are telephones situated with a view to saving time and\neffort? These are some of the factors to be considered.\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   TELEPHONE   COMPANY\n\u25a0\u25a0Mill      \u2014TT-i.   --iT\u2014-.-\u25a0 Ii\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0_\u25a0*----<-*\n NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, JULY 13, 1933.\nHeavy Wool Twill\nand Mohair lo Be\nPopular for Coals\nBy RACHEL GAYMAN\npyrlght, 1938, by the Havas Newi\nAgency\nPAtUS, July 17 (CP Havas)-Coats\nfor the coming season will be made\nup mostly in ratteen and other thick\nwoollens.\n, Ratteen, a heavy wood twill which\nhas been neglected for a long time,\nreappears softer and more pliable\nthan ever. Previously considered\nstrictly sport and street material,\nIt has been brightened up by the\nintroduction of interesting new woven patterns. \u201e .\n\u25a0' Rodler features a ratteen called\n\"Dyjl\" Into which are woven unbleached or white threads producing a soft tone.\nAnother woollen which will be\npopular next winter is mohair, now\nsofter than ever before.\nJacques Malllett shows what he\ncalls an \"Astrakabawool.\" handmade in Picardy. a clever Imitation\nof Astrakhan. His \"Nejantin\" resembles Persian lamb. But most remarkable of all is Maillett's \"Astra-\nJult,\" in which slender strios of\nleather weave through curls of\nwool.    \t\nDEATHS\nVANCOUVER- Mrs. Alice Rowe-\nbottom White, 80, first white child\n.bom on British Columbia mainland. Born at Sapperton, 1858.\nRed Salmon Run\nSo Heavy Boats\nAre Endangered\nKOGGIUNG, Alaska, July 17 (AP)\n\u2014The heaviest run of red salmon on\nBristol bay In history was reported\nby canneries here, at Nakat and\nLibbyville today.\nIncredible tales of the profusion\nof \"swimming gold\" were Included\nIn the report. Fishermen said that\nnets were gutted with salmon In a\nmatter of minutes.\nMany boats have been endangered and near to swamping because of\nthe sheer weight of fish-choked nets.\nBuying in Aircrafts\nHeavy at Montreal\nMONTREAL, July 17 (CP). -\nHeavy buying in aircrafts strengthened an otherwise weak market toward the close Saturday. Canadian\nCar moved up a point to 18\"j and\nNational Steel Car five points to\n57. Steel of Canada issues strengthened Vt each with the common and\npreferred equalling former peaks.\n\u25a0 Shawinlgan gained a point but\nGatineau dipped %. Metals held\nsteady. Price and St. Lawrence Corporations edged up Vs.\nGainers of Vi point included McColl, Massey-Harrls, General Steel\nWares and Dominion Steel B.\nIs Candidate for\n'Forgotten Men'\n\u25a0 VANCOUVER, July 17 (CP) -\nJohn William Rogers, who was \"burled\" In France for six years before\nIt was discovered he was alive in\nWinnipeg, is one of Vancouver's\nfirst candidates tor membership in\nthe \"League of Forgotten Men,\"\nproposed in Toronto recently at the\nCanadian corps reunion.\nASK ABOUT THE '    I\nMA|OR\nSAWDUST   BURNER    \u25a0\nB. C. Plumbing    \u25a0\n& Heating Co.    1\n_______?\n*\u00bb_\u00ab\u00ab*_\u00bb\u00ab*\n\u201eB_*_fe__tt___ft_M_____\nAT THE  BOXLA GAME\nCRENFELL'S   POPCORN\nNot-a fad, it's a food.\nGrenfell's Cafe\nTht heme of finer meali\n_ws*ss\u00bbw\u00ab*s-\u00ab\u00ab_\u00ab-_-\u00ab\u00ab_-ess***M\nBy L. P. W.\nSummary of the International and\nDistrict Scout camp, Camp Busk,\nKokanee:\nCAMP OFFICIALS\nCamp Chief \u2014 Commissioner J.\nM. Dronsfield.\nScoutmasters \u2014 Barney Allen, 1st\nKimberley; L. George, 1st Nelson:\nAssistant Scoutmasters \u2014 James\nCornfield, Stanley Hodgson, Morris Aldersmith, Nelson; Assistant\nCubmaster \u2014 Frank Oliver; Camp\nSecretary and registrar \u2014 L. P. Walton; Camp cook \u2014 William Berrlng-\nton; First Aid Man\u2014Bolton Pearson,\nKootenay Lake General hospital.\nTotal number of Scouts and Scout\nleaders, 66. These include 29 Scouts\nfrom Kimberley under Scoutmaster\nBarney Allen; 21 Scouts from First\nNelson, . under Scoutmaster L.\nGeorge; and 10 Scouts Irom Second\nNelson, under Assistant Scoutmaster Stan Hodgson,\nCAMP ESTABLISHED\nSaturday, July 23, the International Scout Camp at Camp Busk\nopened. At 2 p.m. Scouts from Kimberley added to the number of\nScouts already in camp. The camp\nwas the scene of feverish activity\nall day, with Scouts busy erecting tents and straightening up the\ngrounds. The day ended with songs\nand a huge camp fire.\nSunday morning Rev. T. P. Free-\nney visited the camp and held a service for six boys of his congregation in one of the cabins. Commissioner J. M. Dronsfield and his leaders held the Scouts' service on the\ncamp grounds. Hymns and Scout\nprayers were featured.\nStan Hodgson and Morris Aider-\nsmith were presented with their Assistant Scoutmaster permits. George\nSmith and Edmond Harding of Kimberley were inducted into the First\nKimberley Scout Troop at the camp\nfire by Scoutmaster Barney Allan.\nSunday visitors included, James\nRobertson, Mr. and Mrs. A. Baird,\nMiss Patricia Baird, Nelson; Mrs.\nF. E. Baine, Winnipeg, and Mr. and\nMrs. L. H. Choquette, Mr. snd Mrs.\nWilfred Allen, Mr. and Mrs. W. J.\nSturgeon, all of Nelson.\nVisiting days for the camp will\nbe Wednesday, July 20, Sunday, July\n24 and Wednesday, July 27.\nRED TREE WINS\nCALGARY, July 17 (CP) - In\na day of thrills and spills, Red Tree\nwith Jockey Young up, romped\nhome to capture the Lake Louise\nhandicap, feature event df the closing day of the Calgary exhibition\nand stampede race meet.\nMajor Changes In\n'Brunswick Gov't.\nFREDERICTON,' N .B., July 16\n(CP) \u2014 Changes of major importance in the government ot New\nBrunswick were announced following the second Saturday session ot\nthe cabinet within the last eight\ndays.\nHon. A. A. Dysart, who will retain the premiership, has resigned\nthe post ot minister of public works\nand has accepted the chairmanship\nof the New Brunswick Electric Power commission. Hon. W. S. Anderson\nof Newcastle, ex-chairman of the\npower commission, was sworn in\nas minister ot public works.\nDr. F. H. Laporte of Edmunston\nwas appointed minister of health\nand labor, succeeding Hon. Dr. W.\nF. Roberts, who died some months\nago.\nE. J, Henneberry, member for\nSaint John, was appointed president of the executive council, a post\nheld formerly by Hon. Dr, A. P.\nPaterson, appointed some months\nago as minister of education, federal and municipal relations.\nAuto Accident\nVictim Buried\nat Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - Services\nwere held Wednesday from St.\nAndrews Presbyterian church for\nthe late James Earl Shea, age 32,\nyounger son of Mr. and Mrs. Archie\nShea ot Kimberley, who died Sunday night following a motor accident. Rev. B. L. Willis officiated.\nPallbearers were; L. Sortome, C.\nSortome, J. Leith, E. Jahren, L.\nSimms and A. Reinhart.\nHis Is survived by his parents,\nthree sisters, Mrs. T. McVicar of\nChapman Camp, Mrs. J. Livingstone\nof Kimberley and Mrs. S. Crewe of\nKimberley; one brother, Clifford, of\nTrail. He was born in Wyoming,\nOnt, in 1906 and came to Kimberley\nin 1926. He has worked in Crowe's\nRetail Store, Mark Creek Store and\ntwo weeks ago was engaged at the\nKimberley hotel.\n50,000 Homes Is\nBritish Program\nLONDON, July 17 (AP)-Greal\nBritain is starting a rural housing\nprogram which envisages the building or reconditioning of 50,000 rural\nhomes in the next five years.\nIt has the dual purpose of checking the drifting of families from the\nfarms to the cities and of raising\nliving standards among agricultural workers.\nThe new homes, built from funds\nprovided by the government and local authorities, will be rented to\nfarm workers for an average of five\nshillings ($1.25) a week.\nRossland Social..\nBy MRS B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B. C. - Mrs. A.\nYearby and Miss Lucy Tortorelll\nwere Joint hostesses at the home of\nMrs. Yearby, with a miscellaneous\nshower in honor of Mrs. Orald Neal,\na recent bride. The room was prettily decorated for the occasion, a\ndoll in full bridal array being placed over the doorway, and yellow\nstreamers running to the corners\not the rooms. Dancing and games\nwere enjoyed throughout the evening, Delicious refreshments were\nserved at midnight by the hostess,\nthe table being centered with a\nprettily decorated cake, surmounted by a miniature bride and groom.\nThose present were Mrs. R. Knif-\nfen, Mrs. John Milliken, Miss Grace\nHolmes, Miss Eda Vetere, Miss Del-\n&hlne Vetere, Miss Ida Osing, Miss\n[ay Martin, Miss Mary MacAulay, Miss Curtis Triggs, Miss Vivian\nWoodward, Miss Ina Pollock, S.\nCohen, R. Helegan, James Pollock,\nStanley Hutchinson, Emest Beaulieu, Craig Ross, H. McDonald, S.\nThompson, Allan Dixon, James\nBennett, \"Boots\" Harold Clare,\nHenry Matthews, George Anderson,\nRobert Carr, A. Ramsay, Scotty\nThompson,   Robert Neubalt,  Ron\nald Hartney, Irvin Martin, Al Demers, W. F. McNeill, Benny\nO'Rourke, H. McDonald, Howard\nTaylor. Jack Neal, Frank Avis, Mr.\nahd Mrs, Paul Yarmoluk, Mr. and\nMrs. Mark Scott, Mr. and Mrs.\nRalph Scott, Mr. and Mrs. R. Wynn,\nMr. and Mrs. Ted Watklnson, Mr.\nand Mrs. Thomas Monkhouse, the\nhostesses and the guest of honor.\nMrs. A. Ponte and little son have\nreturned from Blairmore, Alta.,\nwhere they have spent the past\ntwo months.\nFrank Amaroso who has been\nspending the past two months in\nWinnipeg, has returned to the city.\nJ. Rodgers of Nelson is visiting\nin the city.\nR. McLean of Nelson Is the guest\nof friends in the city.\nT. Matthews of Vancouver is visiting Rossland friends.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Cherry and Mr,\nand Mrs. R. Park have returned to\nF,dmonton, after visiting here.\nMiss Myrtle Ingham of Vancouver is visiting here.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Crump of Edmonton have been spending a few\ndays in the city.\nGeorge Avison of Grand Forks\nis spending a few days here.\n-PAGE THRU\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Miss Mary Walker, Stanley\nstreet, has as her guest Miss Ellis\nMcLeod of Vancouver, ex-resident\nof Nelson, who motored to Nelson\nwith Miss Franses Lincoln and\nMiss Ruth Allen, who had been\nattending the Allan-Moore nuptials at New Westminster, which\ntook place Thursday.\n\u2022 Miss Jesn McGilllvray of\nKaslo visited town Saturday.\n\u00bb Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Vamer,\nJosephine street, had as their weekend guest Mrs. W. J. Barber of\nCranbrook, who leaves today for\nhome.\n\u2022 Mrs. Oscar Anderson and Infant son have left the Kootenay\nLake General hospital for their\nhome on Fifth street, Fairview.\n\u2022 W. W. King and family have\nloft for the coast on a holiday.\n\u2022 W. Kinahan and sister, Miss\nWinnie Kinahan, are spending a\ncouple of days in Spokane.\n\u2022 Master Melvin Bradshaw, son,\nof Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Bradshaw of Trail, who has spent the\npast couple of weeks in town at\nthe home of his grandparents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Joseph Bradshaw, Silica\nstreet, left yesterday for home.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Eric Paterson,\nwho were married in Kaslo six\nweeks ago, returned Friday night\nfrom their honeymoon spent motoring to Chicago.\n\u2022 Mrs. Atkinson Crossley and\nInfant son have left the Kootenay\nLake General hospital for their\nhome in Ymir.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Sullivan\nof Trail were Saturday visitors in\nNelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Elizabeth McKinnon,\nBaker street, is spending a couple\nof days in Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Mosses,\n1020 Hall street, have as their guest\ntheir daughter, Mrs. W. D. Manuel\nof Hollywood, Calif., who is remaining for the summer, Mr. Manuel to follow later.\n\u2022 Colonel J. S. Goode of Bonnington visited town Saturday.\nt Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dumas\nand Miss Fletcher of Ainsworth\nspent Saturday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Dr. Wright ot Trail spent\nthe week-end with members of his\nfamily, who are sunrmering at Willow Point.\n\u2022 Mra. J. P. McLaren and\ndaughters left on a vacation to\nCalgary.\n\u2022 Mrs. Thomas Moisey has left\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital for her home at 308 Robson\nstreet.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. Armson of\nGrand Forks were in town at the\nweek-end to attend the Willey-\nSchupe wedding yesterday morning.\n. \u2022 F. E Lee of Trail spent the\nweek-end with friends at Willow\nPoint.\n\u2022 Mr. Cooney, barrister of Winnipeg, was in the city Saturday en\nroute to Creston where he will\nvisit his brother, Rev. Maurice\nCooney\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Duck of\nBonnington were city visitors Saturday.\n\u2022 F. Brunton has returned from\na motor trip to the coast.\n\u2022 Miss Mary Genevieve Gamble\nof Spokane is the guest of Mrs.\nDavid Hartin on the north shore.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Stephenson of Vancouver and their daughter, Mrs. E. S. Planta, and children\nDawn and Teddy, spent the weekend at Whatshan Lake.\n\u2022 Roger Cornish of the office\nstaff of the Premier mine, who has\nvisited his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. J. Cornish, at their summer\nplace at Queen's Bay, has returned.\n\u00bb Arthur Perrier, who has been\nrelieving in Kaslo, has returned\nto Nelson.\n\u2022 Martin Varseveld, Kootenay\nstreet, has returned from a motor\ntrip to the coast.\n\u2022 Mrs. Wilfred Ogilvie -and her\nbaby boy have left the Kootenay\nLake General hospital for their\nhome at Harrop.\n\u2022 Mrs. Guy W. Davis, and\ndaughters, Pat and Anne, have left\nto spend a holiday at Riondel.   \u2022\n\u2022 Mrs. George White of Sheep\nCreek spent Saturday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. S. A. Curwen and\ndaughter, Joan, and Mrs. D. McKay\nand three children, Gloria, Dawn\nand Bruce, of Ymir, left yesterday\nby motor via Spokane to spend a\nmonth's vacation in  Vancouver.\n\u2022 W. H. Thomas and Miss\nYvonne of Sunshine Bay were city\nvisitors Frday.\nHeavier Tax on\nLow Incomes Is\nSurvey Subject\nWASHINGTON, July 17 (AP) -\nThe United States treasury intends\nto make an intensive survey this\nsummer on the feasibility of levying heavier income taxes on the low\nincome earners.\nNo decision has been made as to\nwhether the administration will\nsponsor any change in the low income tax brackets, but a study of\nthe subject was one ot the items\nhenry Morgenthau, secretary of the\ntreasury, assigned his experts before leaving Friday for France.\nCreston Old Timer\nL. N. Leamy Passes\nCRESTON, B.Cr-Death haa taken an old-time and familiar resident of Creston in the passing ol\nLouis Napoleon Leamy, at Creston\nhospital Wednesday after a lingering illness.\nDeceased, who was 79, was a\nnative of Hull, Quebec, and during\nthe construction of the Crows Nest\nbranch of the Canadian I'acific Hallway was a sub-contractor and in\ncharge of construction crews.\nLater he had headquarters at\nCreston and had much to do with\nthe removal of heavy stands of timber in this locality, as well as other\npoints .in Kootenay East.\nThe funeral took place Friday\nmorning from Holy Cross church,\nwith Father Brophy in charge.\nThere was a large turnout and many\nfloral tributes.\nDeceased was a member of Wild\nRose Lodge Knights of Pythias, and\nprevious lo the church services the\nfuneral rites of .the Pythian order\nwere read at the undertaking parlors. Six members of the lodge were\npallbearers, W. J. Craig, W. J. Truscott. W. V. Jackson, R. M. Telford,\nA. S. Reed and Wes Eddy.\nHis wife predeceased him about\nten years. Surviving are Mrs. Garret J. Bayle ol Yakima, Wash.,\nMrs. Herb Stanton o! Kimberley;\nJim Leamy of Trail, and Charles\nLeamy of Wynndel. The three latter\nwere here for the funeral. \u25a0\nFall From Fire\nEscape Is Fatal\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP)- A\nman identified as Gabe McCulloch,\nabout 35, fell 40 feet from the fire\nescape of a downtown ,hotel and\ndied en route to hospital Saturday.\nHe is believed to be a retired\nrailroad worker. His parents reside\nat Penticton, B. C.\nIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\t\n'HOPPERS   FOLLOW\nDROUGHT  TO\nMONTANA\nSIDNEY, Mont., July 17 (AP)\n\u2014Grasshoppers, which descended on grain fields \"like rain,\"\nappeared tonight to be swiftly\nruining promising crops in this\npart of eastern Montana in their\nmarch toward the fields of Saskatchewan.\n\"They took all my oats,\" said\nH. A. Schultz of Lambert. \"There\nare so many hoppers that poison seems no use.\"\nOthers told of similar devastation in this section, until this\nyear harassed by drought for\nfive to 10 years. Farmers likened the sound ol the approaching flight of the insects to the\ndrone of invading airplane motors.\nII 111t111 I \u25a0 I llll IIIII1IMI1I1I lil II1111I1111 lll>\n$660,000 HIGHWAY\nAND TRAIL WORK\nTO START\nVICTORIA, July 17 (CP) -\nBritish Columbia has completed\narrangements with the Dominion \u25a0\ngovernment for $660,000 worth\nof highway and mining trail development to get under way immediately through the province.\nPremier Pattullo announced\nsignature of agreements covering $300,000 to be spent on the\nfirst stages of the Blaine-New\n.Westminster highway; and $360,-\n000 to be' spent on mining trails,\nin joint programs. Later, contracts for the first eight miles ol\nthe highway project were\nawarded.\nRIEL VETERAN MAY\nQUIT LONDON FOR B. C.\nQUEBEC, July 17 (CP)- Frank\nH. Sodcn. 75-year-old Londoner who\nscouted for the government forces\nduring the Riel rebellion, arrived\naboard the Empress of 'Australia to\n\"look over\" British Columbia and\nperhaps settle ln Canada.\nSoden was working for the Hudson's Bay company at the time of the\nRiel uprising.\nALBERTA GIRL DROWNS\nCALGARY, July 17 (CP)\u2014In the\nswift waters of the Elbow river, two-\nyear-old Margaret Hughes, daugh\nter of Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Hughes,\ndrowned here Saturday.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H. 8. ALLEN\nTRAIL, B, C, July 17 - Don\nJones, who has been visiting in the\ncity for the past three days, left\nSaturday for his home in Vancouver. He was accompanied as\nfar as Penticton by Neil A. Mc-\nKelvie, the latter returned to the\ncity Sunday evening.\nMr. and Mrs. John Colligan, who\nspent a few days at Ross Spur, the\nguest'of Mrs. Colligan _ parents, Mr.\nand, Mrs. T. R. Swanson, have returned to the city.\nMr. and Mrs. Richard Forde left\nSunday morning by motor for\nKamloops, where they will take up\npermanent residence.\nMiss Phyllis Gray ol the stall of\nthe Trail-Tadanac hospital spent\nFriday in Netson, the guest ol her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Gray.\nWhile away Miss Gray attended\nthe Morley-Smith nuptials.\nNorman Manson has as his guests\nhis father and mother, Mr. and\nMrs. F. Manson.\nMrs. A. E. S. Bumpus, 1998 Quil-\nchena Crescent, Vancouver announces the engagement of her\nonly daughter, Miss Mavis M. Evelyn Holloway, to Ronald H. Lowe,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Lowe\nof Patricia Bay, B.C. The wedding\nwill take place on August 6 at\n3:30 p.m. in Canadian Memorial\nChapel, Vancouver, Rev. G. O.\nFallis officiating. The bride-elect,\nwho Is well known in the Interior,\nhaving taught three years in Trail\nhigh school, is a graduate of the\nUniversity ol British Columbia, and\ni\u00bb affiliated with Alpha Phi sorority. Mr. Lowe is also a graduate ot\nthe University of British Columbia\nand is on the teaching staff of the\nTrail high school. They will make\ntheir home in Trail.\nMrs. H. Vyse, who was a patient\nin the Trail-Tadanac hospital, has\nleft for her home in Fruitvale.\nMr. and Mrs. Ken Miles have\ntaken up Residence in Annable.\nMiss Marion Burnett has left for\nCranbrook, where she will spend\nthe coming two weeks the guest of\nher brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Bridges.\nAllan Merry and son, Phillip\nMerry, motored to Grand Forks Friday evening to visit Alex Sutherland. They returned Saturday night\nand were accompanied by Mr. Merry's two daughters. Miss Elizabeth\nand Miss Helen Merry, who have\nspent the past two weeks the guests\nof their cousins, Miss Dolly and\nMiss Margaret Sutherland.\nOscar Lauener lelt Friday evening on a two-months business and\npleasure trip to Europe. Mr. Lauener will spend some, time with his\nparents In Switzerland. He sails\nnext week from Quebec for France.\nMrs. Lauener and little daughter\nhave been In Switzerland for the\npast two months. They will accompany Mr. Lauener on his return.\nMiss N. W. Muftroe of Shawnigan\nFalls, Que., is spending a short holiday  in  the city visiting friends.\nMrs. F. G. St.Denis has left for\nVancouver where she will spend a\nholiday. She was accompanied by\nher sister of Nelson.\nNeil McColeman\nEstate is $8454\nNeil McColeman, well-known\nNelson prospector who died alone\nat his home recently and whose\ndeath was not discovered for about\ntwo weeks, left a net estate of\n$8454.55.    Letters    probate    were\nGranted to his brother, John God-\nicy McColeman of Stayner, Ont,\nby His Honor Judge W. A. Nisbet.\nThe estate consisted of $1335 In\nreal property, of which $85 was in\na lot, $1000 in nine crown granted\nmineral claims, and $300 in three\nclaims not yet crown granted; savings amounting to $2847.52; shares\nin various companies totalling\n$4664.50; and personal effects to\nthe value of $25.\nSTUNT PILOT DIES\nINJURIES   RECEIVED\nIN PLANE CRASH\nMOOSOMIN. Sask., July 17 (CP)\n\u2014Robert L. Gibson, 25-year-old\nBrandon. Man., pilot, died in hospital\nhere today of injuries received when\nhis plane crashed into the race-track\nhere July 1.\nGibson crashed his plane Into the\ntrack, rather than hit a holiday\ncrowd below when it went out of\ncontrol as he was stunting.\n111th BATTERY\nNELSON\nR. C, A. (N. P.)\nWeekly Order No. 18 by Major A, E.\nDalgas, M, C, Commanding. Week\ncommencing July 19, 1931.\nPARTI.   \u2022\nDUTIES;\nOrderly officer for the week commencing July 19:. Bty. Sergt. Major\nE. M. Gillott. Next for duty: A-Sec.\nLieut. A. M. Parker. Orderly Sergeant for the week commencing July\n19: L-Sergt. T. Lee. Next for duty: L-\nSergt. C. Boyt. Orderly Bombadier\nfor the week commencing July 19:\nBombadier W. J. Coleman. Next for\nduty, L-Bombadier R. Fraser. Limber gunners on duty for the parade: Gunners H. L. Davidson and\nW. A. Gold. Next for duty: Gunners\nJ. J. Singleton and C. W. Dunstall.\nTrumpeter on duty for the week:\nBoy G. M. Leask.\nPARADES:\nThe Battery will parade as usual\non Tuesday the 19th. Assemble will\nbe sounded at 1900 hours and fall in\nat 1915 hours.\nDRESS:\nDrill Order.\nEXERCISES;\nSimilar to last parade with this\ndifference that the O. P. will be outside and in full view ot the various\ntargets the guns will be laid on.\nAn interesting program which none\not us can afford to miss, Great preparation has been made for this\nscheme as a complete set of plans\nhad to be drafted and gridded.\nGENERAL:\nThere are now two parades only\nprior to leaving for Camp Shilo!\nThe exercise of this coming Tuesday night will be repeated in every\ndetail on the following Tuesday, the\nlast parade before camp. It. is therefore obvious how important It is\nthat all members ol the battery turn\nout All ranks will also notice that\nthe battery assembles at 7 p.m. The\nreason for that is to be able to observe the targets during daylight. So\nremember\u2014assemble at 7 p.m. sharp.\nA. R. JOHNSON, Sec. Lieut,\nfor O. C. Battery.\nNOTICE \u2014 Coffee and sandwiches\nas usual. Sergeant Mess Night every\nThursday night. The ladies will\nplease bring \"eats\". Any member of\nthe battery not a Sergeant may be a\nguest on that night. The miniature\nrifle range practice will in the future\ntake place Friday night instead ol\nThursday.\n109th FIELD\nBATTERY R.C.A.\nBattery Orders, by Captain W, H.\nTaylor, Officer Commanding\nPart One Orders No. 29, lor the\nweek ending July 28, 1938\nDUTIES\nOrderly officer, Lieut. F. P. Has-\nzard. Next lor duty, Sec, Lieut. A.\nD. Greenwood.\nOrderly sergeant, L-Sergt. M. M.\nMorrison. Next lor duty, L-Sergt. R.\nV. Wiley.\nPARADES\nThe battery will parade ln the\nArmory, Rossland, Thursday, July\n21, at 1945 hours. Syllabus ol training:\n1945 to 2015 hours\u2014Ceremonial\ndrill.\n2015 to 2045 hours\u2014Foot drill and\nrifle drill.\n2045 to 2215 hours\u2014Battery gun\ndrill and laying.\nAll signallers will parade for Instruction under Sgt. Boss, 2045-2215\nhours.\nDRESS\nDrill order.\nD.O.C.'S INSPECTION\nThe District Officer Commandng,\nMilitary District No. 11, will inspect\nthis unit Monday, July 25, at 2000\nhours. All ranks must make every\neffort to attend this parade. Dress-\nDrill order.\nTRANSPORTATION\nThe bus will leave the bus depot.\nTrail, at 1900 hours Thursday, July\n21, 1938 and Monday, July 25, 1938.\nFree transportation will be .provided for both these parades.\nEXTRACT DISTRICT\nORDERS JUNE 23, 1938\nNo. 168, Certificates\u2014The following certificates are granted:\nA-Sgt. G. P. Cooper, 109th Bty.,\nNo. 8614, V-T Class 1, May 21, 1938.\nL-Sgt. M.- Morrison, l6.th Bty.,\nNo. 8615, V-T Class 2, May 21, 1938.\nBdr. H. C. Douglas, 109th Bty.,\nNo. 8616. V-T Class 2, May 21, 1938.\nGnr. W. O. McLeod, 109th Bty.,\nNo. 8617, V-T Class 2, May 21, 1938.\nN. CRACK, Sec. Lieut.,\nFor Officer Commanding,\n109th Field Battery, R.C.A.\nIjWon^T^ (tmftity\nINCOI-PORATIO  *<t* MAY 1870.\nSale of DRESSES\nSummer Sheers\u2014Voiles\nCrepes and Wash Silks\nCOOL\nDresses\nfor\nHot Days\nHot weather won't have\nany effect on you in one\nof these smart, cool\ndresses in sheers, voiles,\ncrepes, and wash silks.\nWith new necklines and\npuffed sleeves. Selling\ntpl.lJ   to   tpJ.Jd\n\u2014Second Floor HBO\nSUMMER j.\nBlouses\nPerfect for wearing under\nthat light suit or with\nsummer skirts. Tailored\nand fUssy styles. In sheers\nand printed CI 01.\nsilks. Selling .. tpl.UU\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nSomething New\u2014Something Different\nKAHANE Cosmetics\nFreshette Compacts: Each   250\nFreshette Combination Jar and Compact: Set ... 750\nNailettes: Each    250\nNic-Off: Each    250\nShanghai Nite Perfume: Each  250\nPasteurized Milk Cream: Each  250\nHand Lotions: Each   250\nChampagne Bubble Bath: Pkt  150\nCold Creams: 1 Ib. jars: Each  580\nCleansing Creams: Each  250\nMRS. IDA L. CLARK\nOF THE\nH. W. GOSSARD CORSET CO., LTD.\nWILL BE IN OUR STORE\nTODAY, MONDAY, JULY 18th\nSHOWING NEW MODELS AND SPECIAL\nFITTINGS BY APPOINTMENT\nYahk Gets First\nRed Cross Post\nin the District\nYAHK, B. C\u2014In connection wi*\nthe presentation of certificates by\nHon. F. M. MacPherson to those\nwho were successful In the recent\nFirst Aid examinations, a first aid\npost sponsored by the Canadian Red\nCross and St. John Ambulance association was opened, This first aid\nunit reported as the first to make\nits appearance in the Interior is\nsupplied with modern equipment\nand every facility for efficiently\ncarrying on first aid to the injured.\nA. L. Lythgoe will be in charga\nof the work.\nThose to whom certificates wer*\nawarded arc Frank Nedelec, R. O.\nPotter, J. Paoli, H. G. Dickson,\nGeorge Walt. John Trainor jr., A.\nL. Lythgoe, H. Tipper, H. Mclnnis,\nPhillip Tipper, Kenneth Tipper,\nJack Anderson and R. Tipper. D.\nD. McLndoe received a voucher.\nMINERS DROWNED\nFLOODED TUNNEL\nLAMALOUS-LES-BINS, France,\nJuly 17 (AP)\u2014 Ei_.ht coal miners \u2022\nwere drowned Saturday by the sudden flooding of a tunnel In the Bos'\nquet mine when fissures let in wa\u00bb\nters of a Tarn River tributary.\nDentists recommend it \u2014 helps keep\nteeth strong and white, gives them\nneeded eiercise. Cleanaes by removing\nfood particlesremalnlng between teeth\nnftor eating . . . Aids digestion too.\nA simple aid to health! Enjoy Wrlgley's\ndaily \u2014 milium.': th I\n PAGE   FOUR\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.O-MONDAY MORNINQ. JULY 11. 1981.\nWHAT TO DO TO HOLD A MAN TAUGHT IN COLLEGE COURSE\nFive Men and 100 Girls Complete\nPreparation for Marriage Course\nBy LYNN THOMAS\nCentral Press Canadian Writer\nCLEVELAND, July 17- Loaded\ndown with learning on how to get\nyour man (or woman), 100 young\nwomen and five young men have\ngone out into the world to practice their newly-gotten knowledge.\nThis select group is made up ot\nWestern Reserve university's Cleveland college students who have jUBt\nHow to _et your man and hold\nhim.\nwound up a course in \"preparation\nfor marriage.\" The class, in session\nhere for the first time this last se-\n'mester, joins a growing list of marriage classes being given in schools\nthroughout the U. S. At least 300 institutions of learning now give this\ntype of instruction.\nGIRLS LIKE IT\nCleveland college's marriage class\nis one of tho most popular courses\ngiven at the school, but it's preponderantly female, It teaches everything from what makes a lover a\ngood bet to the reasons for divorce.\nOne young lady expressed the effectiveness of the course when she\n\u2022wrote on her examination paper\nthat, although she had lost her beau\n\u25a0while attending the class, the lectures had made her realize her lost\nlove had many \"undesirable personality traits.\"\nShe wound up with the assuring\nthought:'\n\"I know now how to get my man\nend hold him, and I'm going to\npractice it.\"\nAlmost all of the students were\nln their 20's, about one-fourth of\npsychological reasons for this and\nthat. Among the things lt taught\nwere: what Is falling in love, problems of getting acquainted, whom\nto marry, how to attract your mate,\nwhen giving back the ring is justified, how to be a good husband or\nwife, budgeting, child care, divorce,\nand women's careers and marriage.\nIt even went into the difficulties of\nthe unmarried.\nLOVER'8 AS8ET8\nStudents learned the biggest assets to courtship are a good physique, vigor, good sportsmanship,\ntenderness.\nTomato Plants Should Be Staked\nTomatoes are grown ln almost\nevery vegetable garden, since they\nare easy to raise and the fruit is\nnourishing and palatable. Each section ot the country has developed\nvarieties of tomatoes particularly\nadapted to its conditions. Before\nbuying plants or seeds, find out\nwhich types are best grown in\nyour region.\nAs shown ln the Garden-Graph,\nas the plants grow quite tall they\nshould be staked. For the small\ngarden it is best to prune each\nplant to a single or double stem at\nthis time. The stakes should be\nfive feet above ground and one and\none-half inches in diameter. Stakes\nnot set deeply enough or not strong\nenough will not be able to hold\nthe vine after it becomes fruit laden.\nStaking makes lt easier to cultivate about the tied-up plants, It\nalso allows them to receive more\nair and light and better resist disease. The fruit is clean since it\nis kept off the ground, and it will\nripen earlier since the sun reaches\nit. When the fruits are ripening it\nis well to defoliate the plants a\nlittle to let sun in.\nAvoiding growing palm in\ntomatoes\nWhen Is glvlng-baek-the-rlng\nJustified?\nThe wallflower Is just that because she is too eager or self-\nsclous or because she babbles endlessly trying to be amusing. A man\nchooses a wife for her personal\nattractiveness, her ability to cook\nand make him feel Important\u2014not\nher intelligence, the class learned.\nA practically sure-fire program\nfor getting your man was mapped\nout by Mrs. Helen M. Jordan, course\narbiter. This included starting early, improving your personality, being feminine, not fearing sex, learn-\ning to make men feel Important,\ntraining yourself for marriage and\ngoing where men are.       ,\nAlthough sex Information Is woefully Incomplete, being gleaned largely from popular reading, Mrs. Jordan feels students still are better\nequipped for the physical than the\npsychological angles of connubial\nbliSS' , .      .. 4\nHusbands and wives incune te\noverlook the big differences, but\nsnap at the little ones. Adjustment\nis the byword of a happy marital\nexistence, claims Mrs. Jordan.\nIf your husband is neat, try not\nto throw your clothes around the\nhouse with complete abandon. If\nHelen Jordon, Director of the Prepa-\nratlon-for-Marrlage Course\nthem engaged. Most of them went\ninto the course with some personal\nproblem they hoped would be ironed\nout.\nOne'of the chief bugaboos the\ncourse dispelled was fear of pregnancy after marriage; Although the\npsychological rather than the biological aspects of marriage were emphasized, health information was\ncomplete, and -students were taught\nwhere to go for any further knowledge.\nThe plan of study stepped boldly\nInto the middle of the romance picture and broke it up into good,\nTells How . . .\nFew People Know\nHow lo Brush the\nTeeth Correctly\nThis Is the forty-first in a series\nof health stories approved by the\nNelson department of public health.\nCHAPTER 41\nJack looked up from the pamphlet which he was reading.\n\"Say,\" he said, \"this little book\nsure tells you a lot, doesn't It? I'm\ngoing to see that every boy in my\nsquad gets a copy of this.\"\n\"Go ahead and finish reading it,\"\nsaid Dr. Young. \"Maybe you will\nlearn something else.\"\nJack returned to his reading:\nFew people know how to brush\ntheir teeth properly. Improper\nbrushing not only fails to clean\nthe teeth, but it may actually injure\nthe teeth and gums. Never brush the\nteeth with a side to side motion,\nas this method may push the gums\naway from the necks of the teeth\nand expose the tooth roots. It ts a\ngood plan to brush the upper teeth\nand the lower teeth separately. In\nbrushing the upper teeth, hold the\nmouth slightly open and place the\nbristles of the brush on the gums\nabpve the necks of the upper left\nmolar teeth. Sweep the bristles of\nthe brush downward over the gums\nand the teeth toward their chewing surfaces. This movement should\nthe bristles of the brush well up\non the palate and sweep them\ndownward over the necks of the\nteeth to the biting surface. The\nbest way to brush the inside surfaces of he upper front teeth is to\nplace the brush lengthwise in the\nmouth and draw the bristles downward and forward at least ten\ntimes.\nThe teeth in the lower jaw\nshould be brushed in the same manner as those in the upper jaw except that the bristles of the brush\nshould be swept upward over the\nnecks of the teeth instead of downward.\nDo no fall to brush the chewing\nsurfaces of the teeth. Place the\nbristles of the brush firmly on the\nchewing surfaces of the teeth and\nvigorously \"shimmy\" . the brush\nbackward, forward ahd sidewise.\nThis will help remove any bits of\nfood that may have been crushed\ninto the deep groves.\nAfter   brushing   the  teeth,  the\nmouth should be thoroughly rinsed.\nForce the rinsing solution (plain\nwater is effective) back and forth\nMore Liquids ...\nSummer Diet of\nChild Requires\nSlight Changes\nBy LOGAN CLENDENINO, M.D.\nFood tor children ln the summer\nis essentially no different from\ntheir food at any other time of\nyear. As the old doctor's slogan,\nwhich we quoted yesterday, went:\n\"Less to eat and more to drink in\nthe summer,\" it about sums up all\nthe wisdom of summer diet. The\ndrink may include sweet drinks,\nlike lemonade and pop and fruit\njuices which furnish easily assimilable energy ln the form of simple\nsugars, and these will furnish the\npower for all the extra running\naround and play of the summer\nmonths.\nThe basic principles of a child's\ndiet are:\nFirst, that there shall be plenty\nof milk. Milk Is the fundamental\nfor a growing organism.\nSecond, eggs. Milk is not a completely perfect food and does not\nsupply all the protein necessary for\na growing child. It is also deficient\nin iron. Eggs supplement meat in\nthese respects.\nShould a child have meat? There\nis no proof that meat is injurious\nto a child, but it is thought to be\nspecifically heating, so perhaps it\nhad better be cut down or eliminated ln the summer. It does not contain as much of the minerals and\nvitamins as do eggs and milk.\nThird, vegetables and fruits:For\nyoung children pureed vegetables\nand juices; for older ones, whole\nvegetables and fruits are must articles. Include a green leafy vegetable and a yellow on alternate\ndays. Potatoes, are good for children and are a valuable source of\niron and vitamins B and C. '\nCereals are an economical source\nof energy for chUdren\u2014thus good\nfoods summer as well as winter.\nWhole milk is better on cereals for\nchildren* than cream, a child does\nnot need' too much fat. It is probably better for a child to eat the\ncereal without sugar. Often when\na child demands sugar on his cereal\nIt is because in adult has suggested\nit to him.\nButter is the most easily digested fat, but it should not he given\nto children In large quantities because too much fat tends to retard\ndigestion. Just enough bu.ter to\ngo on bread and vegetables is\nneeded.\nShould children eat sweets? With\na well-balanced 4let, including\nfruits and fruit juice drinks, a\nchild will have all the sugar he\nneeds. Sugar hu the quality of\nblunting the appetite so that foods\nneeded for growth are not eaten.\nOrdinary white sugar is pure carbohydrate and has no vitamins nor\nminerals. It Is pretty hard to follow thc:e austere rules where\ncandy Is concerned, and In the active playtime of summer we will\nhave to be human enough to allow\na little latitude.\nExercise ...\nThighs Must Be Attractive\nFor Modern\nbe repeated at least ten times so\nhe cheek surfaces of the up-\nmolar  teeth   are   thoroughly\nWhy are there wallflowers?\nyour wife' is quick in movement\nand speech, try not to laze through\nlife at a snail's rate of speed.\nGrowing old, Mrs. Jordan says, Is\nthe biggest adjustment of all. She\nexplains: \"You may grow into two\ndifferent people, liking opposite\nthings. Children help a great deal by\nproviding a common ground for\ngiving and taking. Differences in\nrace, religion and age make the\nHardest adjustments.\"\nIdeal ages for marriage, the student learned, are 22 to 30 years for a\nman, 22 to 25 for a woman. It theoretically works out best if the man\nis three to ten years older than his\nwife.\nStudents ripped into their examination papers with gusto, having a\ngreat deal to say on what they had\nlearned of love and marriage.\nSOME CONVICTIONS\nIn answer to the question: \"What\nmotives in a lover make marriage\nwith him a poor bet?\" they turned\nout this kind of answer: \"A selfish\ndiiniL foiu\nfauMWWSLL\nBy MR8. MARY MORTON\nMenu Hint\nSpanish Tongue and Rice\nFresh Vegetable Salad\nBeet Greens Prune Delight\nIced Tea\nThe recipes were tested in Good\nHousekeeping Institute. Canned\nmeats may be used frequently in\nsummertime. It is a good idea to\nhave a few cans of meat and fish\non your shelves for unexpected\ncompany which is much more likely to descend upon you at this season of the year than at any other.\nToday's Recipes\nSPANISH TONGUE AND RICE\n\u2014Six tablespoons uncooked rice,\none and one-half teaspoons salt,\nthree-fourths cup sliced peeled onion, one and one-half tablespoons\nfat, one and three-fourths cups of\ncanned tomatoes, two tablespoons\ndiced green pepper, two whole cloves, one small bay leaf, one and one-\nhalf teaspoons granulated sugar, one\n10-ounce jar tongue, sliced. Cook\nthe rice until tender in boiling water to which one teaspoon of\nthe silt has, been added; drain.\nMeanwhile cook the onions in the\nfat until tender. Add all remaining\ningredients but tongue and simmer\n15 minutes. Remove cloves and bsy\nleaf; add rice and tongue. Heat well.\nServes four.\nPRUNE DELIGHT - Sixteen\nlarge prunes, packaged or homemade\nsponge cake,, cream. Cover prunes\n\u2022with cold water, and bring to a boil.\nSimmer for bne-half hour then boll\nfor 10 minutes. If sweeter prunes\nare desired, add two tablespoons of\ngranulated sugar during last five\nminutes. Chill; then pit the prunes\nby making a slit in each and removing the pit. Arrange three or\nfour prunes with some of the prune\njuice on each sponge cake slice.\nServe with cream. Serves four.\nFACTS AND FANCIES\nMint Salad\nOne package lime gelatin, two\ncups hot water, two sprigs fresh\nmint, one-half cup crushed pineapple, one small pimento, chopped;\none cup diced celery, one or two\nsweet pickles, chopped. Dissolve\ngelatin in water. Add mint, first\nwashing well in cold water. Let\nstand until gelatin starts to thicken.\nRemove mint. Add remaining ingredients. Turn into molds rinse<f in\ncold water and chill until firm-\nMrs. R. W. Homuth.\nWash Flower Vases\nFlower vases should always be\nwashed thoroughly with soap and\nhot water when wlthefed t>lossoms\nare being discarded, lest bacteria\nwhich decays the stems of flowers\nsurvive in the vase and shorten the\nlife of the fresh blooms which are\nput into it. Slender vases which cannot be cleaned inside with a cloth\nmay be washed out with the aid\nof a bottle brush.\nGREEN GOOSEBERRY JELLY\nCook gooseberries In a double boiler until the juice flows freely. Turn\ninto a jelly bag and let drip. If\nclogging checks the flow of juice\nscrape the inside Of the bag occasionally .with a wooden or silver\nspoon. For very clear Jelly strain\nthe juice through a second bag. Measure the juice ant) put an equal\nnumber of _up* of sugar In the OveA\nto heat. Let the juice boil vigorous\nly about ten minutes. Skim as need\ned. Then add the hot sugar, and as\nsoon as the jellying point is reached\nturn into glasses that have been\nsterilized. Longer boiling before the\naddition of the sugar is needed if\nwater be added to the gooseberries.\nGooseberry jelly is much improv\ned if one cup of currant juice be\nadded to each three cups of gooseberry juice. Or the gooseberries and\ncurrants may be cooked together\nfor the juice.\nrushed. Then move the brush forward and repeat this action over\nthe bicuspids and cuspid. Then\n)lace the'bristles of the brush on\nhe gums over the upper front\nteeth and with a rolling motion\nsweep the brush downward from\nthe gums to the biting edges. This\nshould be repeated at least ten\ntimes. Next, brush the outside surfaces of the upper right molars and\nbicuspid teeth just as you brushed\nthose on the opposite side.\nBrush the inside surfaces of the\nteeth as well as their outside surfaces. In brushing the inside surfaces pt the upper back teeth, place\nor dominating personality la bad, as\nwell as a dependent or clinging vine\ntype. And the immature, 'drugstore\ncowboy' is certain to land the venture on the rocks.\"\nThe class was unanimous in the\nopinion that to make marriage a\nsuccess you ought to know some-\nthing about it. And after the four-\nmonth study the students were sure\nthey had developed the correct attitude to make happy homes. -\nbetween the teeth for four or five\nseconds. This will remove any remaining food particles that have\nbeen loosened oy the brush,\n(To Be Continued Next Monday)\nTeach Unselfishness\nChildren Should\nShareToysWilh\nOther Playmates\nBy GARRY  C.  MYER8,  Ph.  D.\n\"Dear Mr. Myers: I have two\nchildren, a girl five, and a boy two\nyears of age, and they are quarreling almost constantly, so it seems\nto me, when they are together.\nThey both want the same thing at\nthe same time, and neither one\nwants to give in to the other, and\nif it isn't one yelling and crying\nit's the other, and so often both. I\ntry to reason with them, and make\none give in one time and the other\nthe next, and usually get things\nsettled satisfactorily to both, yet It\nisn't but a few minutes and they\nare into it again. It seems I spend\nmost of my time trying 'to make\nthem agree. I dislike very much to\nsee them grow up this way; besides, It is so annoying to have to\nlisten to them quarreling so much.\"\nMy reply: I admire you for your\npatience, but you try too hard to\nreason, explain and persuade.\nMost of their quarreling seems to\nbe over property. Define the ownership of, each; let each have his\nown things; have no toys in common except, perhaps, a few, such\nas a swing or hobby horse, to be used in turns. You be policeman and\nsee that neither uses the other's\nthings without the owner's consent.\nSoon they wiU learn to cooperate\nand share. Be especially vigilant\nthat the younger does not appropriate nor injure the toys of the\nolder child. If there is a set of\nblocks in common, and they quarrel\nover them, remove the blocks for\nseveral hours or days.\nDON'T HAVE TRIAL\nWhen a quarrel arises, don't have\na trial to find out who was the\naggressor. Do nothing, or merel;\nseparate them for a definite perio.\nSometimes it will be well then to\nassign one child to one place, the\nother to another, to sit doing nothing tor twenty or thirt; minutes.\nDon't expect these children to be\nsole playmates. Each needs playmates also his own age, and the\nolder they grow tha more will this\nbe desirable. Please recognize that\nthe girl is three years older than\nthe boy; treat her so.\nCotton print bra-halters are on\ndisplay among the many tricky\nbeach clothes.\nHandicapped . . .\n\"Not Wanted\" By\nLover's Friends\nGirl is Unhappy\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nNot wanted has a problem that\nraises a very lnterestuu! question.\nI firmly believe\u2014and statistics prove\nthat marriages between young folk\nof much the same social position are\nhappiest\nNot Wanted's boy friend is not of\nher set She admits she lives In the\nslums of her own town, and the boy\nfriend Is \"in society\". His friends\nare nice to her face, she says, but\nthey do not like or accept her. They\nget him to go out with them, so as\nto keep him away trom her, she\nclaims.-She waits tor him until all\nhours, and her heart aches over it\nThey also say she is after his money,\nbut she denies this and says she\ntries to help him save.\nShe has given up smoking for\nhim, and has ho bad habits, she\nsays, hu even given up her girl\nfrlehds because of him, as he does\nnot like her chums. She wonders if\nshe should give him up, but she loves\nhim so much that she can hardly\nface that prospect. \"Won't you please\nhelp me?1' she writes, and I'll take\nany advice you give me.\"\nSTARTS WITH HANDICAP\nWell, dear, a good deal rests with\nyoa If you are going to be conscious of your \"Inferiority\", always\napologetic before his friends and on\nthe defensive, you are not going to\nbe happy married to this boy. He\nwill get tired of defending you and\nbegin to look down upon you, too.\nIn that case I think you had better\ngive him up now, for you both are\nyoung and will get over the hurt in\ntime. Another difficulty Is that if\nyou don't like his friends and he\ndoesn't like yours, things are going\nto be difficult\nIn any event you start with a han\nBy JULIET SHELBY\nIf you aren't happy about the\nshape of your thighs in your new\nbut brief bathing suit, try giving\nthem a little added workout at\nhome. You can trim them down to\nthose youthful proportions ln short\norder if you'll add these exercises\nto your usual summertime routine\not swimming, golf and walking.\nLie down on your back with your\npalms down at your sides. Raise\nboth legs straight up, toes extended. First, spread your legs apart\neach leg going toward the floor at\nthe side, not moving front-or back.\nKeep your knees straight. Two,\nbring your legs together again,\npointing straight up, with your toes\nextended Do this sixteen times.\nThis exercise stretches the muscles and tendons on the inside of\nyour thighs as the legs go down,\nso force your legs as far apart as\nyou can. When you bring your legs\ntogether again the same muscles\nare exercised and fatty tissue is broken down.\nThe next exercise is really three\nmovements, but they can all be\ndone from the same starting position.\nLie on your back on the floor.\nRaise both your legs and throw\nthem over your head. While your\nback is raised up off the floor place\nyour hands on your back with your\nelbows on the floor. If your thumbs\nare pressed into the side between\nthe top of your pelvic bones and\nyour ribs you will get a firm hold\nand will be able to stand on your\nshoulders, This Is reaUy not neais'\nly as hard as it sounds, so If you,\ndon't succeed the first time, try i\ndlcap because you are not his equal\nln the eyes of your town. You know\nthat you are a nice girl,- however,\nand if you build up your self-confidence so that you feel aU through\nyou that you are good enough for\nany man, and act so, he, ana later\nhis friends, will take you at your\nown value.\nWhy do you not plan to improve\nyourself? Your letter was rather\nungrammatlcal. You can learn to\nwrite better than that. You see, you\nhave not only the handicap of a lower social position, but your previous\nreputation to fight against as you\nsay your lovers friends say you\n\"ran around a lot\" before you met\nhtm!\nSince you are sure the boy loves\nyou, try to improve your appearance and your manners, and gain\nself-confidence. It may be that when\nyour boy friend is old enough to\nmarry\u2014which will not be until at\nleast another yeuv-neither of you\nwill be in love with the other, but\nat least you wiU have gained a\ngreat deal by this affair. If you cannot gain the poise you need, better\nnOt marry the boy, no matter how\nmuch you love each other, at least\n| unless you can go to live ln another\ntown.\n8U8AN HAYVVARD\n... Does her dally routine\nagain. You'U be surprised at how|\neasy it is to get into position.\nDO THIS EIGHT\nTIMES\nThe first exercise that you do in J\nthis position is to thrast both legs\nout and up together. Next lower]\nyour knees toward your face, get- j\nting as close as you can. Then]\nthrust your legs back up again. Do J\nthis eight times.\nThe second exercise is the scissors\nmovement The principle is the\nsame as is used in swimming, but\nyou do it in the air instead. Beginning with both your legs thrust out,\nlower your left leg until the toe\njust misses touching the floor. Then\nkick up with your left leg and lower the right one. Do this eight times\nalso, but remember to keep your\nknees straight.\nRest between each movement of\nthe exercises. Now for the last movement. Get back into your original\nposition with your legs raised\nstraight in the air and your hands\non your back. Rotate your leg) alternately as if you wew pedalling\na bicycle. Your feet, will deiorfh- -\ncircle ln the air if you do the r\nelse correctly.\nSerial Story\nFIESTA\nBy OREN ARNOLD .\nCHAPTER 40\nON ANY big cattle ranch the loss\nof steers, heifers, calves, horses,\nmules and colts is a routine item.\nOne animal may die every day, on\nthe average; sometimes more. The\nloss of 20 cows from the Dale-Durango ranch thus, waa of minor importance, and when thieves came\nand took 10 more it suggested only\nthat a strict guard should be kept\nfor a while until the thieves .were\ncaught. Ellen could not understand,\ntherefore, why Bill appeared so upset about the rustling.\n\"Maybe the Indians or whoever\ndid it were just hungry,\" she sug-\n\u00a7est_d, \"and stole to get food for\nleir families.\"\n\"Maybe,\" BUI agreed. \"But that's\nnot enough.\"\nHO knew something, apparently,\nthat he hadn't told. At least he suspected something, and wanted to\nshoulder the responsibility himself\nwithout burdening the girl .who hired him. When he wouldn't talk\nmuch, she ceased to worry. A man\ncan be stubborn, she had discovered;\nand she had utmost confidence in\nBill Baron.\nHe plunged into serious work for\na day after his return. With the\nmore efficient cowboys he outlined\na week or two of branding, culling,\ndoctoring, fencing, feeding, all the\nthings that make up ranch routine.\nHe inspected weight records that\nEllen and her secretary, Reynita\nYbarra, had been keeping on test\nherds of animals. He took time out\nto doctor a troubled mare and help\nher fine, long-legged stallion foal\nto be brought into tne world. He sent\nI cowboy with a broken arm in to\nsee a physician. He' stopped to shake\nhands and be Alee to some visitors\nfrom Nogales who wanted to see\nthe ranch. He made Buckshot BrOwn\nboss ot a crew of Mexicans throwing\nup' a dam across their mountain\nstream so that irrigation water could\nbe diverted onto an acre-sized plot\nfor raising table vegetables which\nwould help feed the ranch personnel. He worked like a slave until\n7 p. m\u201e then snatched a bite of sup\nper and drove hurriedly into town.\nIn Nogales, he went directly to the\nnight office of the United States\nborder patrol.\n\"Howdy, Mr. Mclntyre,\" he greeted the divisional chief of the patrol. \"I'ye got news.\"\n\"Sit down! How are you, Baron?\nGlad you got back safely. Sit down\nand tell us what you learned.\" Two\nother patrol inspectors were present. They listened attentively.\n\"That cattle rustling, gentlemen,\nis as you suspected, a blind. It is\nbeing done by a band of smugglers.\nThey are bringing over quite a few\naUens, and some opium, cocaine,\nmarihuana and heroin. Mostly aliens.\nThey ride over at night with the\nforeigners, who leave the party one\nby one. Then the smugglers pick\nup cattle to drive back and cover\nthe trail Of course, they find a market for the cattle, too. It makes a\ndouble profit on the night's operation. But mostly it's a blind to divert attention. Do you see?\"\n\"Exactly!\" said officer Mclntyre.\n\"They make it appear to be Yaqui\nIndians, simple cattle thievery. That\nwouldn't attract much attention\nfrom Uncle Sam. It's a county sheriff problem. It's a good blind. But\nhow did you learn all of this?\"\nBill grinned at that\n\"I went down there and got smug-\nlied in! Dressed up and posed as a\nMexican, and paid an agent $150 to\nbring me over the line!\"\n\"No! Detective, eh!\" Mclntyre\nsmiled approvingly.\n\"Yep. They had nearly a dozen\nother 'aliens' that night. We had to\nwalk, but horses followed us and\ncovered our tracks. Quite a long\nhike up to where we stopped, too.\nThey took 10 of my own cows, off\nthe Dale-Durango I mean, and drove\nthem back. They rode horses without shoes. They dropped a few other\nclues to make it look like Yaqui\nIndians. Actually there wasn't a\nYaqui in the bunch. Some of the\nsmugglers are Mexican and some\nAmerican I think It's being directed\ntrom this side, but I'm not sure.\"\nBill gave the border force such\ndetailed report as he could, and ended up by agreeing to do further detective work as occasion presented.\nHe had first been motivated, he explained, solely by the hope of breaking up a band ot cattle thieves, reasoning that he could protect not\nonly the DD stock that way but\ncould render a valuable service to\nother ranchers as well.\n\"That's why I put on the Mexican\nact and went down there,\" said he.\n\"I had an Idea it was just rustlers,\nuntil I talked to you people before\n(Continued on Page Eight)\nrj\/ie ^^*Wv^.B___h\nWho Is Ironing by Hand\u2014\nTHIS HOT WEATHER!\nDO THE\nBETTER\nLET THIS\nBEATTY\nStanding\nLIFTING\nPUSHING\n$99 so PULUNg\nTHE WRINGER POST IRONER\nfc   $49.50\nATTACHED TO YOUR\nWASHER WILL ALSO\nDO THE JOB\nLET SCIENCE HELP YOU IN THIS HOT WEATHER\nAND THE REST OF THE YEAR\n-WE'LL FINANCE YOU-\nMP _ _\u00aef$(RS____\nHfBEATTV Bros\nBOX 99\nNELSON FACTORY BRANCH\nPHONE 91\nNELSON, B. C.\n V >\n_____\"_____\u00ab\nNEL60N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-MONDAY MORNING. JULY 11, 1938,\nsPAtXl   FIVI\nKootenay Young Folks in Varied Roles\n1   l__l    a \u25a0    :\n!______* \u25a0' .____\nI-       1\n__i_i____l\nIt     |\n1^\" ^-B\npf-. >SIB\n1 _^______________________HB               J_f   '\" _i__H\nl';.  f\nJH\nH          '\nK      t I\nL\nV   __________\n1      *' 1\n!|s*\u00bb w-'T J*,\n.p..fe?\nS     _R____\np^kjfr v \u2022!\n\u00a5       ^Hg\n[te\/'l\n______D_____________________E_<I\nlllsl__l_B_ft''' '\nIVfVMKk. (v^SjHj^H\n___p_\u00bb' \u25a0\n1\nt ftlliH   1          ____\u25a0-     f\n\u25a0 > 1\ni-WWafcwy\n___rr   . -   *t._M\nFive years out of school, the Creston high\nschool class that graduated in 1933 celebrated Dominion Day with a dinner at Hotel Creston, followed\nby a dance, and organization of a students associa\ntion fo assure future get-togethers. Standing, left\n'to right, George Connell, Sydney Scott, Elsa Willis, Muriel Thurston, Betty Speers, Edith Avery,\nHerb Dodd, \"Bud\" Miller; seated, Minnie Downes,\nFay Tompkins, Opal LaBelle, Iris Taylor.\n'-.'\u2022   ___ree-year-old Mona Helen Grutchfield of Sfclmo, and her kitty.\nShe lithe daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Grutchfield.\nBaby Gladys Elaine Fitchett\nof Harrop, aged 19 months, can\nboast of seven living ancestors,\nall residing at Harrop. Mrs. R.\nG. Pope is her great grandmother; Mr. and Mrs. C. D.\nOgilvie and Mr. and Mrs. J. E.\nFitchett are her grandparents;\nand her parents are Mr. and\nMrs. B. J.-Fitchett, little Gladys\nbeing their youngest daughter.\nLevon Papazian, Nelson boy, who recently won a scholarship at\nMcGill university. He will be in his third year next term, and It\nstudying to be a medical doctor. He is the adopted son of Mr, and\nMrs. A. D. Papazian.\nFrance will welcome King George and Queen\nElizabeth to Paris tomorrow, on their first state\nvisit to that country, which will also be the first\nstate visit to France of a British monarch for'24\nTf\u00abJJ1>. Their majesties' visit will be concluded on\nJuly S2, when they dedicate the Australian war\nmemorial at Villers Bretonneux. President Albert\nLebrun will act as host to' the royal couple during\ntheir visit, and has arranged an elaborate military\ndisplay around the Arc de Triomphe, which will\nemphasize the close friendship existing between\nEngland and France.\n.\u25a0\u2022'.,...\u25a0\n\u25a0 Frank Waters, aged three, and his little brother Bobble, 15\nmonths, little sons of Mr, and Mrs. Arthur, Waters, Robson street,\nNelson. Alderman T. H. Waters'is their granddaddy. and Mrs. Henry\nWaters their great grandmother.   '\n\t\nSmiling at you over the top\nof her autobiography Is Mary\nA. Sullivan, New York's No. 1\npolicewoman, who has Incorporated the thrills of 27 years of\npolice work in the story of her\nlife, called \"My Double Life.\"\nPolicewoman Sullivan thinks\nthat police work is a great car- \u25a0\neer for a woman, if she is of\nthe right type. \"You've got to\nhave what it tal.es,\" she says\u2014\n\"stamina, courage, stability of\ncharacter, and foresight. You've\ngot to be a swell actress on 'fop\nof everything.\"\n. When the Gyro district convention met ot Cranbrook recently,\nthese executives were the center of things. Left, Governor William\nB. Cromarty, of Calgary; right, Lieut.-Governor Reed S. Geddes, ot,\nCranbrook.\n Established April 22. 1902\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nevery  morning except  Sunday   by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY  LIMITED.\nPublished\nthe NEWS\n266   Baker\nStreet   Nelson    British   Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers ot tbe Audit Bureau ot Circulations and\nThe Canadian  Press  Leased  Wire  News  Service.\nMONDAY, JULY 18,1938.\nTHEIR LORDSHIPS WERE'PUZZLED\nAmong the many other novelties in government that\nthe Social Credit government in Alberta has offered to the\npublic view has been its action in continuing the appeal\nagainst outlawing of an act after it had expunged that\nvery act from the statute-books.\nUnder the heading, \"The Lords Were Puzzled,\" the\nWinnipeg Tribune thus summarizes what occurred:\n\"The legislature of Alberta in 1937 passed 'An Act to\nRegulate Credit,' and another one to regulate newspapers.\n\"The lieutenant-governor of Alberta withheld his assent; The bills were referred to the supreme court of\nCanada, which declared them ultra vires.\n\"The government of Alberta appealed the supreme\ncourt's decision to the judicial committee of the privy\ncouncil.\n\"The legislature of Alberta, three months before the\nappeal was heard, repealed the \"Act to Regulate Credit.\"\n\"When the matter came before the privy council, their\nlordships were puzzled. It is unusual, not to say unprecedented, for appellants'to\/cut the ground from under\ntheir feet,' as Col. J. L. Ralston put it, by repeal of the act\nwhile litigation was pending.\nAny other government would have withdrawn the\nappeal. But the Alberta gdvernment is amateurish and inexperienced. It has. in fact, remained amateurish and inexperienced for a remarkably long period of time. Even an\namateur might have seen that it was idle, and wasteful of\nthe taxpayers' money, to let the appeal stand. But the Alberta cabinet was so busy carrying on a campaign in\nSaskatchewan that it did not have time to attend to its\nown proper affairs.\n\"fheir lordships would not have been so greatly\npuzzled if they had realized how frightfully busy the Alberta cabinet ministers really were.\"\nThat constant desire of pleasing, which is the peculiar\nquality of some, may be called the happiest of aU desires\nin this, that it scarcely ever fails of attaining its ends,\n.when not disgraced by affectation.\u2014Fielding.\nONTARIO MOTOR DEATHS JUMP\n40 PER CENT\nDetails of motor vehicle accidents in Ontario during\n1937 are set forth in a pamphlet issued by the motor vehicles branch of the department of highways. In 18,906\naccidents reported during the year 766 persons were fatally\ninjured, 12,092 others suffered varying injuries, and there\nwas a damage loss in vehicles and other property totalling\n$1,712,467. As compared with 1936, all accidents increased\nby 22.1 per cent.\nThere is in the bulletin an exhaustive analysis of the\ntypes of accidents and their causes. Increases over the\nprevious year are recorded in collisions with other vehicle\ntypes (41.6 per cent), collisions with pedestrians (27 per\ncent), collisions with bicycles totalling 1285 (9.2 per cent),\ncollisions with fixed objects (9,1 per cent), while accidents resulting from overturning, running off roadway,\netc., increased by 6.3 per cent.\nThe number of persons fatally injured during 1937\nwas greater than any previous year in th\u00a3 history of the\nmotor vehicle in Ontario, and represented an increase of\n40.S per cent from the total of 546 deaths reported during\n1936.\nIn view of al! the efforts that have been made toward\npromoting traffic safety, this is a discouraging picture.\nGravity of the situation is accentuated by the fact that,\nj while all accidents increased by 22.1 per cent as compared\nwith 1936, there was an increase of but 6.2 per cent in the\nnumber of motor vehicles registered in the province.\nChildren bore a shocking share of the year's tragedies.\nDuring that year, 126 boys and girls under 14 years were\nfatally injured, and 2440 suffered more or less serious injury. For 1936 the figures were: Fatally injured, 75;\n\\:: injured, 2174.\nContinuing the analysis of accidents, it is found that\nin 1937 there were 134 hit-and-run unapprehended drivers\n\u25a0involved, as compared with 111 the previous year, another\ndepressing increase. The number of accidents was greatest\nduring daylight hours and in clear weather. Between the\nhours 5 to 8 p.m., a period of extra congestion, accidents\nwere vastly more numerous than at any other time. The\nweek-end\u2014Friday, Saturday and Sunday\u2014provided the\nlongest list of traffic crashes of various kinds, and Monday's news has carried ample vertification of this. Women\n: drivers were involved in only 1300 of the total accidents\nrecorded for the year; surely an evidence of care on the\nhighways, as their number is large. Drivers between the\nages of 25 and .40 head the accident list.\nThe year 1937 added a black chapter to the history of\ntraffic accidents in the eastern province. Commenting on\nI this, the highways department bulletin concludes that the\n\"Care, Courtesy and Common Sense\" slogan and other\nplans which depend upon the voluntary cooperation of\nmotorists and pedestrians to improve their traffic be-\n\u25a0 havior are not sufficient. It is suggested that there is nec-\niessary q safety program, \"applied and sustained over a\nlong period,\" to include the modernization of streets and\nI highways, and the training of adults and young people as\n| to proper conduct, whether driving or on foot.\nBut the primary necessity to better traffic conditions\nI is acceptance by the individual of his personal responsibility for observing the rules of safe driving. How to establish that frame of mind is the chief problem to be solved,\nnot only in Ontario, but in British Columbia too.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY MORNINQ. JULY 18, 183S.\nSALLY'S SALLIES\nThere may ba splinters in the ladder of _uccea_-. but you don't notice them unlets you are eliding down.\nKOOLAREE KAPERS\nBy ERNEST BALL\nDAY NO 7-r\nAt present the main centre ot Interest at Camp Koolaree Is the camp\nlaunch, the Koolaree Clipper, run\nby the commadore, Stuart Macintosh. One tribe goes for a cruise\nin the morning and another in the\nafternoon. This morning thi Sis-\nwashes cruised around the lake and\nlanded at Ferguson's point There\nthe boys enjoyed a swim before returning to camp tor lunch. In the\nafternoon the Mlcmacs -landed at\nMacDonald's landing after taking a\nshort cruise.\nStuart receives a great deal of advice from some tl the younger beys.\nOne will yell out, \"Hey, you are\nheading straight for th* shore!\" Others say \"Why don't you pull this arid\nSUsh that?\" Every brand ot advice\ni offered. They don't seem to realize that Stuart knOws how to run\na launch.\nThis afternoon the tribes not using\nthe boat went on hikes in their\ntribal group. The braves of one tribe\ncame back victoriously, each wearing a Wither or two frOm an eagle.\nAnother tribe brought back owl's\nfeathers and claws. B1U McMordle\nwas wearing so many feathers that\nen first sight one might have taken\nhim for an Indian chief. However a\nsecond look would tell you the truth.\nFrank Dolman was so excited at\ngetting an owl's claw that lt took\nhim until supper time to explain to\neveryone where he fOund it ahd\nhow he happened to be the lucky\none to get It.\nWAHOOED TOO LONG\nThe Wahoo tribe spent too long\nwah-Oiftg up at Hussel's landing this\nafternoon. Clayton Kennedy should\nbuy a decent watch, or at least one\nthat w_\\lgo.\nThe tribe came gaily into camp at\n6:19 instead of 5:30, blissfully unaware ot how late they were, as\nthe only watch In the party was\nClayt\u00abnrs and his wouldn't rtin. They\nquickly lost their smiles when they\nreached the dining hall and found\nthat the rest of the camp had nearly\nfinished eating. Extra long faces\nwere noticed on Don BfOwn and\nJerry Jefram, who both ..ought that\nthey wouldn't get any supper at all.\n. Nevertheless, Director Freddy\nwasn't quite that cruel; he had ample\nsupper saved for them.\nThose who have letrtwd the TVsil\narid skill-exerting work. All boys\nWing projects seem very much in-\nterested and occupied with their\nwork.\nDISCOVERY OF\nAMERICA\nThi- evening the campfire program featured the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus. The\npity wat produced by the braves\not the Bleed tribe. The story wis\ntold by Bob MOrrit. Columbus was\nplayed by Bob Cheyne. Buster Smith\nwas King Ferdinand. Bob Mitchell\nwas Queep Isabella. The other members of the tribe played the parts of\nIndians arid of sailors, with the forming of the friendship circle, the\ntinging ot \"Abide With Me\" and\nthe closing \"Taps\", the tired braves\nwandered toward their respective\nabins with the star sprinkled sky\noverhead and the moon, keeping\nwatch. ,\nV* Questions tl\nANSWERS\nThit column ot questions and\nanswers it open to any reader of\nthe Nelson Dally Newt. It) no\ncase will the name of tbe person\nasking the question be published.\nN.B.T., Nakusp\u2014Where do ytv, write\nto, ahd to whom, for information\nto recommend anyone for the\nLife Saving megal? -\nWrit* to H. E. Waterman, Imperial Building, Hamilton, Ont He is\nHon. secretary of the Royal Canadian\nHumane association.\n;___,, Trail\u2014Who wm lt remarked\nthtt if women were eductted the\nmen would be educated too?\n\"Educate the women and the men\nwill be educated\" is a saying aftrib.\nuted to Mary Lyon who wa.sresp.-n-\ntible for tbe founding ln 1836 of Mt\nAUNT HET\nxiy LlOBERT QUILLEN\n\"I wouldn't have a pr\u00bbtty bus-\nbind like Sam. Hit conscience\nmight keep him loyal to hit\nwife, but hit vanity keeps him\ntryln\" to win somebody else.\"\nHoly-ke Femtle Seminary. Erom\nher work at Holyoke sprang modem\nhigher educatlonior women in America,\nCURIOUS, Ofty Creek-Can tour-\niitt in England visit the Bank of\nEngland?\nA note written a few days beforehand will make it possible for a\ntourist to visit this bank and see\nits store ot wealth ln bullion and\nnotes. Arrangements may also be\nmade in,thit way for visits to the\nBoyal Mint, Egyptian Hall, the libraries and chapels of Lincoln's and\nOray;s Innt, The Hou\u00bb* of Parliament can be seen only on Saturday\nunless one presents an order from\na member.\nV.A.C., OaUowiy-s-Can you give m*\na recipe for making saskatoon and\nchoke cherry wine?\nChoke cherries contain to much\nstone thtt if many -tones are broken\nthe wine will contain too tnuOh tannic acid. Fill a barrel about one-\nthird tull of the fruit (this recelpe is\ngood for both choke cherry and\nsaskatoon wine): mash the fruit\nwell with a,pounder. Add an equal\namount oi hot water (this brings out\nt(ie color) and keep ln a warm place\nuntil the fruit slnkt^about 10 dtys.\nThe mixture thould be stirred once\nor twice a day. Alter the fruit has\nsettled to the bottom remove the\npulp by training through a coufse\nburlap. Add cold water equal to the\namount of juice and about 3_\npounds of sugar to each gallon of\nliquid. Let stand in a warm place\nand skim off froth and stir once or\ntwice a day, repeating until little\nor no froth remains, about 10 days\nto two weeks. Put into a barrel\nwhich hit a bunghole on the side\u2014\nthe barrel should be put on its\nside with the bunghole on top\u2014fill\nuntil the liquid overflows the bung-\nhole. Keep some of the Juice in another container to be used to fill the\nbarrel as the liquid goes down. JCeep\nup tor several weeks, depending on\nthe temperature, until little or no\nfroth comes off. Carefully siphon\noff being careful not to get ai\u00a3y of\nthe i_diment from the bottom. This\nwine should be raoked off three or\nfour times before using to obtain\nbest results.\nLooking Backward**.\nTEN YEARS AQO\nJuly 18, 1.26\nJohn Peharron of Trail and Andrew Petrie of Rossland are dead,\nand Hunter woodburn, foreman, and\nDominic J. Giampletre, are ln Trail-\nTadanac hospital suffering from\nburns as the result ot an explosion\nof copper mttte in a reverb^ratory\nfurnace at th* Consolidated copper\nsmelter at Trail, July 18.\u2014Miss Robertson, teacher at Fernie resigned\nto accept a position in Nelson.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. R. G. Coupltnd of Vegre-\nvllle, Alta., are guests of Mr. and\nMrs. S. C. Latornell.\u2014Commander\nand Mrs. Hincks of Howser and\nMies Hincks of England were city\nvisitors.\nTWENTY YEARS AQO\nJuly 18, 1918\nJoseph-Terry of Slocan City, who\nenlisted with 11th C.M.R., and was\nwoundujS at Vimy.over a year ago,\nhas been honorably discharged and\nhas returned home.\u2014Mr, and Mra.\nW. J. Meagher of Grand Forks, who\nwere visiting at Portland, Ore. returned home.\u2014Samuel Fawcett snd\nG. N. Gilchrist were elected trustee\nand auditor, respectively of tfce\n'Hume school district.\u2014Roy Maurer,\nwho graduated from a Portland dental college, has returned home.\nTHIRTY YEARS AQO\nJuly 18, 1808\nMiss Loult* Gilchrist, who went to\nthe Dominion fair at Ctlglty is\nthe winner of the Dtily News popularity contest, hat Mturned ind Is\nagain attending to h*r duties at the\nposfoffiee.\u2014Hume school trustees\nwere authorized to borrow $2800 to\nerect and furnish a new room addition to the school, and to purchase\nsix lota at the rear of the ichool\u2014\nFirst huckleberries of th* season\nwere brought ln by Indians July\n13.-W. A. Macdonald, 8_C, is in\nGreenwood. \u2014 John Klrkup, gold\ncommisisoner of Rossland, returned\nto hit home trom Nelson.\nShepard Barclay\nTells How to Bid\nand Play\nTHE TRUMP COUP IDEA\nIT IB A GOOD thing for every\nplayer to know the principle of tht\ngrand coup and Its simpler brother,\nthe trump coup. These are based\nmainly on the Idea that, If you\n'hav*'no trump left.ln the dummy\nto lead for a finesse against an\nhonor held by the opponent who\nhad the suit bunched against you,\nthe tame purpose, can be accomplished by having tome other ault\nled through him lat* in the hand,\nwhen be hat nothing left' but\ntrumps. You therefore get the last\ntrack at htm with your own\n'.rumps. Thit principle of play\nnay be employed In various ways\no protect you against unfortunate\nrump breaks.    .\nAT.'S\nIMI|\n\u2666 \u00bb\nf J7J4\n\u2666 9682\n*K853\n\u2666 KQ8\n*J96_\nK   _.\u00ab\nHosts\ni\n\u2022 1032\n\u2666 J 10 5\n*72\n\u2666 AK-Qjr\n\u00bbK\u00bb\n. \u2666AT*\n+ AQ10\n(Dealer:   South.   North-South\nvulnerable.)\nNorth and Sou* reached a contract pf 6-Spades on this deal In a\nrubber game.\nWhen the heart . wu led, South\nwon with tht K and cashed the\nspades A and K. South mi disappointed oa the second round to\nfind that Eaat held at many trumps\nas himself and in addition he had\nto count on a possible club loser. ..\nHe managed to make the contact by twitching then to the heart\n8, whioh he won with the Q. On\nthe heart A be discarded a diamond. Tbe diamonds A and K\nwer* then cashed aad on the diamond Q he totted a dub. Instead\not finessing the club then, he went\nright up with the A and played a\nclub, not caring who won it No\nmatter what West then played,\nSouth, with a Q-J-9 holding In\ntrumps, wu able to capture East't\n10-8-6, to that South made the eon-\ntract.\ni \u2022 \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\nAQJ9T5\ni-W-\n\u2666 J.2\n*82\nJsAKlO   ...... \u25a0  \u2666-\n\u00ab96 fe1-2\n\u2666 .85       *\u00bb        Ail\n*58 L-2t-J \u2666 A10JT\n'        I8\n|KT8\n\u2666 AK1063\n*K t_JJ6\n(Dealer: North. North-South\nvulnerable.)\nWhat It the best defense against\nSouth's 3-Diamond contract?\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nMAY END JAPAN\nWe are perhaps teeing the utter\nfolly ot a war ot aggression demonstrated on a glgantjc scale. We\nmay even be seeing the beginning of\nthe end ot Japan as a world power.\nIt the Japanese statesmen and generals' are familiar with European\nhistory, they will recall thtt Napoleon once \"conquered\" a gOod part\nof Russla.-_New York Times.\nLIQUOR FATAL\nOne of our contemporaries draws\nattention to the taft that there were\n106,000 fatalities and 9,900,000 persons injured as th* result of accident! in the United States list year,\nand asks just what percentage ot\nthese figures could be eliminated by\nordinary precautions. We contest we\ndo not know. But we do know, from\nordimry observation, thtt many act\ncidentt could be avoided if we\u2014and\nwe mean, the people\u2014wOuld take\nliquor off the road.\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nNOR FORD TO F. D. R. '\nTheother day we came upon this:\n\"You have now had four years of\nit. You have threatened every corporation and every endowment ln\nthe country. You have examined\ninto everybody's affairs. You have\ncriticised every profession and vexed\nevery trade. No one Is certain of his\nproperty and no one knows what\nduties be may have to perform tomorrow.\" No, it witn't Mr. Bennett\nto Mr. King. Nor somebody to Mr.\nAberhart. It wis Disriell talking to\nGladstone in I872.i-The Ottawa\nJournal\nNON-PAYINQ VOTERS\nIt li an evil thing tor a self-gov-\nerning people to hav* in their midst\na vast number ot voters who pay no\npirt of the expenses of maintaining\nthe schools, building the highways\nand supporting the government. And\nwhile it is Just and right for the most\nable financially to pay mott of the\nbills, it lt the part of wisdom to r*\u00bb\nquire all dtlwni to pay a part of\nthe bills\u2014Daily Oklahomin.\n,      DROP TITLES\nApparently military title* are considered best dropped on attaining\nBritish cabinet rank.. C01. Colville,\n__m_s_s\u00bb_ffss_____-s^s^i____s__s_sss\u00abs*ss\u00bb_\nIn Nelson\nBy'Paths\nThere it e quietude- before Jhe\nraucous day, a quietude to which\nOne who is reasonably alert to the\nsounds of nature may detect voices\nnot perceived at other times.\nThough It Is now July, there Is\nan astonishing volume) of water going over Cottonwood Falls for the\nliSe of year. In the night time or\nin the eariy morning before traffic\noundsMi the other sounds given\noff by mm in his myriad activities\nhave Wended to drown .the. voices\nof naftre, the rear of Cottonwood\nnSay be heard on Baker street.\nStanding on Baker to front of\nthe Bahk of Montreal, one may\nheir Cottonwood's subdued roar reflected from the face of the Simpson block. Moving further west, In\nfront of the Daily News, one gets\nit from the Bus Station or from\nKootenay Motors. Moving eastward\nalong Biker, say about Patenaude s,\none Is to the exact zone of reflection from the Morgan block. It is\nnot much use still further east, as\nthe air aisles are too broken by\nbuildings to'pipe the sound through-\nEvery seuon, when the streams\nare up. one may know it in Nelson by catching this resurge of\nsound in the two blocks mentioned.\nIt is louder of couree when the\nstreams are at their peak, and softer when they are just coming up, or\nare dropping back.\nVOICES CARRIES ACR08S CITY\nOne may also hear this roar by\ngetting above the level of the intervening buildings. Stand any\nearly morning where Morgan street\ntakes oft from Park street to wind\nback of the hospital, and if Cottonwood is to June form, you will hear\nIts voice carrying over the top of\nthe business section. And there is\na music to it\nLater to the day, of course, static\nfrom a hundred directions will obliterate this musical message, and\na stranger would not be aware of\nits existence.\nOf course,, to get the rare harmony from this throbbing harp in\nits wild fulness, one must pay a\nvisit to the Falls. Price\u2014two blocks\not walking.\nROAR OF THE RIVER\nAnother pleasant roar or thunder,\nopen to Nelsonites, is that of the\nKootenay river at the Groham rapids.\nIn the diys when there wis only\none road out of Nelson\u2014that to the\npower plant\u2014people used to- walk\ndown the C.-f- R- track much as\nthey would walk along a park road\ntoday.     . '.-     \u25a0>\nS.day the mountalnide is green,\nthero is no sign yet of, the\nautumn glory, the yellows and\nbrowns that will bedeck lt after\nthe first frosts com*.\nBut later the north shore of the\nlake, the Grohtoan valley, and the\nsteep sides of the Kootemy river\nicfoss Grohinan rapids will all be\na panorama of color, tthOugh not\nauite to the flame-colored extent a,\nte maple woods of the east. .\nWrtlSTLE RIC6CHET8      \u00bb   .\nYou walk up from Taghum or\nGrahite, a pleasant four miles, on a\nSunday afternoon, and perhaps a\nlight engine is out on the line. If so,\nas it whistles for way, you will hear\nits whistle repeated by the various\nwalls of the valley, from this\nmountain and that perhaps, after\nseeming to have been spent, its\n_________________________________________\u25a0\na&tssmosiimsmommBmttt,\nfiamiuvmi\n*$$$$$$\n|oke\nJones: \"How it your ton getting\non at college?\"\nSmith: \"He must be doing pretty\nwell to languages. I have Just paid\nfor three courses \u00a32 for Latin,\n\u00a32 for Greek and \u00a3?0 for Scotch.\"\nSuckers Still\nThe chaip letter it gone, but \u00bbst-\nrology is here. The more it changes,\nthe more it's the same foolishness.\n-Ken.\nWho Owns Industry?\nIn view of all that hat been said,\npro and con, on the subject of big\nbusiness, monopolies, \"soulless\"\ncorporations, etc., it is-interesting to\nlook Into the structures of America's industrial enterprises to ascertain who atually owns them. So\nmany contradictory statements have\nbeen made on this subject which\nhave resulted In much confusion\nof thought, that it is enlightening to\nstudy the facts recently compiled\nby the American Federation of Investors, as published ln Commerce\nIn a survey ot lie leading American\ncorporations ta wldjely diversified\nindustries, the Federation reported\nthat 86 per-cent of the stockholders\nowned one hundred shares or lest,\nor 3,572,620 out of a total of 4.149,-\n666. The study also revelled that\nthese 110 companies had in aggregate payroll in 1937 exceeding four\nbillions of dollars, and that the number of stockholders was almost double the number of employees.\u2014\nValve World.\nAlmost An\nOkopogo\nThe weather is too fine thet*\ndayh for residents of Western Ontario to grow excited, even\nover seesonil rumors of ses-ser-\npents, is The Fordwtch Record\nshows:\nReport! thit in eight-toot, seallike creature has been seen at Wa?\nsaga Beach do not excite \"Slim the\nWhittler,\" a long-time resident who\nsleeps ln a tent Just 20 feet from\nwhere the creature wis seen.. Slim\nsaid the object was a loon swim-\nmlng in the water. Atmospheric con-\nditions have magnified the creature\nto huge proportions, he declared. \"I\nsaw it and tut* enough it looked u\nlarge as a rowboat, twam very rapr\nIdly and its held did resemble a\nhorse or something, due entirely to\natmospheric conditions,\" Slim eald.\nvoice muffled will echo back once\nmore frm a distant cross-range.\nNothing Is sweeter that one may\nthink of, than the echo of the engine whistle up the valley, coming toward Nelson.\nA lesser counterpart, with fewer repetitions, may be heard is a\ntrain arrives at Nelson from ftoc:\nter and whittles it Lakeside park.\nTo. a new-comer to the mountains, the clear echoes, ready to\nanswer in multiple repetition, are\namong. Nature's rarest charm.\nSTAMP CORNER\nBy JAMES MONT AGNES\n.   . \u2022     '      \" ,  ..   .'..\n-                  '\u25a0\u25a0           ,\n: ;.       \u2022'.->'\/' i\n! J! -'     ...     \u2022   ;                   '\n:            '; 1! S3\nil *ft\n-\n. \u25a0, tmmimm*imim*rmmw&\nAlbania Issued the stamp at left on the occasion ef the wedding of I\nKing Z\u00bbg. Two values of Jugoslavia's hew child welfare set ire shown\nalongside\nThe news announcement that the\neldest sister ot young King Farouk\nof Egypt it to soon marry the son\not the Shah ot Pertlt, brings the\nstamps of that remote country to\nwestern Asia to the attention ot\nphilatelists, for a wedding stamp\nmay bo expected from both Egypt\nand Persia, now officially known is\nIran, Its ancient name.\nsince 1870 when th* first issue featured the coat-of-arms, a Hop hold,\ntog a sword with a rising sun to\nbackground. These early stamps af*\n.'ly stamps\nappeared   on\nTj, and hive\nscarce. - The shahs\nstamps of Iran in 1871. ,\nbeen featured on postal paper since.\nIran etrly began issuing overprints end surehirges on Its si \"\nThese have been more nun .\nprobably than frtm any oth<\ncountry, and appear _! lata as 19!.\nwhen ihe name of the country was\nchanged! to Iran ind aU stamps\nwere overprinted with \"Postes a-\naniennes.\"\nThe lirst. plctorW ttamW*p\u00bb*Wr\ned, to 1815 featuring ruins and\nwere Issued as a commemorative\nfor th* coronation ot 5h_S.AhAied,\nwho was deposed in 1828, when\nthe present ruler, Riza Khan Pahl-\navl, a former stab)* boy, led the\nrevolt and become dictator. Previous issues were overprinted to commemorate the event, and to 1926\nthe new ruler was pictured on a\nnew issue. A new set portraying\nthe ruler hat been issued nearly\nevery year. In 1889 on the tenth\nanniversary of his rule, Rita Khan\nPahlavl Issued the first long pic.\ntorial set, showing new developments ta the, country since he seized power, featuring also Iran's air\nforces and small navy,\nDuring the world war, British\nforces occupied put of Persia, and\nil4lj_l\ncupatlon.\" These 1916 Issues ate\nthe scarcest of all the country's\nstamps.\nA(r man stamps h*v* been issued\nsince 1927, revenue aid regular\npostage 6tamps -being surcharged.\nIn 1930 the first air mall stamp appeared with Pahlav) ttd an eagle\nflying over mountainous country\nbeing featured. There hit also been\nnewsp\u00bbper, parcel post' ind offlclil\nstamps,\nRECENT ISSUES\nThree values of the new Bahamas George VI issue ate to be released soon ... the 4, 6, and 8 penny valuta . . . Liberia, Independent African republic, is to issue a\nnew air mail set early to August\n. . . Brazil hat issued a stamp to\nmark the centeniry of the National\nArchives Building .. . Because of\na change in currency valuation,\nseveral. changes have beep, mad*\narid new values created to Indochina's pottage, air mail and postage due stamps . . . France has I\npCliUWWln^S\nmonia! dress to advertise chem-1\npagne wine and mark the 800thi\n-intvtrsary of th* inventor of thai\nmm, Dim Puignon. T& ,\u00ab_5||\nto-mark th* visit Of King Geofttf\nand Queen Elizabeth on July 17,1\nfftturls clasped hands in centre, I\nwith the London parliament bu\"' \"\ntots on left and Paris Arc de ...\nomphe at right . . .Liechtenstein,,\nsmall European principaUty, will j\ne a souvenir sheet to mark the J\nthird Liechtenstein stamp oil\ntlOn late this month.. . . Tw6 sUt-l\ncharged Spanish stamps have been\nissued to m*rk the f*stivtl ot tn-.\nbajo on May 1, the stamps, surcharged being th* 1985 Don Quixote issue.... The United Statit, Issue* on July 11, the 4H-t*nt .M&r\n\u00ab*y White House stamp thd on\niH the five-cent blue James,\nof the new presld-\nRoumanta'FTiJ\nMOnM* ttamp\n\u00abntial serifs . . . _  ._\nvalue commemorative tit to King\nCarol's 8th year ot rule wu ltsuM,\nJune 8, tnd features htos men and\ntwo women in R6t)mania't hlitorjr,,\nincluding King Carol... Plan* *r\u00bb.\nn6w being prepared to hive thai\nBritish post-office issue a commern-\nOrative one-penny stamp to May,\n1940, to mark one hundred years of 1\npostage itatop use, the first stamp j\nIn the world having been issued in I\nEngland on May\" 6, 1846: Othei\" i\ncountries are expected to celebrate\nthe O-casiOh sttS-lafly. \".-*(\u25a0\nfiat-til\n^,v-;_t4_ti.c\nl,wMt.5'f>fft\u00a3..U 1\nPortugal Issued this ttamp In 1931\nto commemorate the fifth centenary of the death of the celebrated\nPortuguese warrior, Nuno Alvares\nPereln.\nthe new secretary ot state for Scotland, It tho only on* left who still\nuses the title, the minister of health,\nMr. Waltar -CUJot, ijroppe4 the \"Major\" on appointment to the cabinet,\nas did Mr. Duff-Cooper, tint lord\nof the admiralty. Mr. Hore-Belisha,\nsecretary of state for war, also hu\nthe military rank of major, but prefers, to known u \"Mr.\" Many of the\nunder-secretaries ind other high officials, however, still use their military titles.\u2014Edmonton Bulletin.\nKINDNESS\nWhile critical, the White House\nspeaks ot business in a kindlier tone.\nAs the old-time end man putit \"They\nsajd you weren't fit to sleep with the\npigs, but I slid you were.\"\u2014Detroit\nNews.\nTWIN SOULS\nShirley Temple called on President Roosevelt it the. White House\nyesterdiy. The two hive considerable to common. Both have enraptured a nation, and both have left the\nnation wondering what it was all\nabout half in hour later.\u2014Windsor\nStar.\ne, c. f. flop\nThe Leader-Post has always felt\nthat the C. C. F, should'have done\nbetter ln vote-getting ln Stekatche-\nwan ln the list five year.. Conditions were exactly as a party of protest would Uke them. Yet the C. C. F.\nleaders failed to get to the front\u2014\nRegtal Leader-Post.\nOPPORTUNITY\nOpportunity knows no limits in a\ndemocratic country like (Janade.\nThis remark is occasioned by the\nfact thtt Canada's minister ot fin-\nante the Hon. Charles A- Dunning, came to this country from\nEngland while still in his 'teens,\nand engaged as a farm boy at 810 a\nmonth.\u2014Oshawa Time's.\nWHY THIS PESSIMISM?\nVancouver does not intend to\nhave the summer business ot 1938\nwrecked by industrial unrest. There\nis no reason why recent events\nshould happen here more than elsewhere ta western Caned.*, save the\n*\u25a0\nVERSE\nA TRIP TO AINSWORTH IN\nSPRING\nThs north shore road winds to and\nout\nBetween the ranch homes hit by\ntrees\nPsst orehirdi white with cherry\nblooms\nWhose fragrance scents the bfeeie.\nBALFOUR\nHere iconic splendour greets the\nview,\nWhere main like tnd tbe west\narm meets.\nAnd the ferry boat glides to and\n\u2022 fro,\nIn the shadow of the snow capped\npeaks.\nCOFFEE CREEK\nWhere the mountains pierce the\nsky line,\nAgeless glaciers glistening white\nAre the source of foaming waters\nCoffee creek roars day and night.\nAINSWORTH,\nAnd we come to the caves of wOn-\nder,\nWhere the waters bubbling hit\nForm a pool for health and pleasure\nAinsworth. Nature's beauty spot.\n-SOPHIE WADE.\nNelson, B.C.\naccident of geography. The reoent\nOutburst in Vancouver might have\nOccurred equally well ta Alberta\nor Saskatchewan. Only terminal\ncondltlOns, and a mild climate for\nbackground have brought abiut a\ndamaging blow ta prestige to fall\non Vaheouv_r_ra.her than on some\nsitter city. The' community has\nbuilt up a ftoe mercantile reputation. Its tourist atttactlons ate\nwidely known, both for its own\nCharms, aid as the spring board\nfor the famous Northern B. C.-Al-\naaka   cruises.   We' welcome   the L\nSrompt manner to whlph the te_\ntil merchants have told governments how recent events affect business here. Why should business\nsta_\u00bbatar-why should there be a\nslowing up of activities because of\nconditions for which the individual clti_ehs have no responsibility?\nThere are a thousand things want\ndoing\u2014the summer Is the best time\nto do them. \u2014 Vancouver News-\nflerfild.       ,\nC0IT1PLETE?\nPrompt & Efficient\nand Economical\nwith years of experience behind us we ean offer you\nservice in moving that can not be obtained elsewhere.\nWest Transfer Co,\nPHONE 33 ESTABLISHED 1899\nJ\n w\nVegetables Down,\nHew Entries Are on\nMart; Sales Good\nLast Strawberries On;\nCucumbers, Beans,\nCherries Enter\nHousewives busy in their canning\nseason, thronged the city market\nSaturday morning, taking advantage of prices dropped considerably\nfrom the week before. Dealers. reported the market was ln full\nswing and business was \"good.\"\nNew beans sold at three pounds\nfor 25 cents, dropping from two\n?>ounds, head lettuce dropped from\n0 to five cents a head, green peas\ndropped from 10 to five cents a\npound, new potatoes sold at 10\npounds for 29 cents instead ot six\npounds, rhubarb sold at eight\npounds for 25 cents instead of two\npunches for 15 cents.\nCucumbers and marrows at from\nfive to 15 cents each, wax beans at\nfour pounds fr 25 cents, and field\ntomatoes at two pounds for 25\ncents, entered in the vegetable line.\nA large assortment of cherries,\nalong- with black currants and\ngreen apples entered ln the fruit\nsection. Bing cherries sold at 25\ncents for a three pound basket,\nLamberts at 25 cents for a tour\npound basket, pie cherries at five\ncents a pound, and Royal Annes\nat five cents a pound. Black currants were 10 cents a pound or a\nthree-pound basket for 25 cents.\nGreen apples were six pounds tor\n25 cents. The last of the strawberries sold at 20 cents for a three-\npound basket, or 80 cents a bucket.\nLamb prices were down slightly, selling at from 18 to 28 cents a\npound, marking the only change In\nmeat prices.\nCut  flowers  were  15  cents  a\n\u2022 bunch.\nFurther list follows:\nVEGETABLES\nWax beans, 3 lbs _    30\nNew beans, 3 lbs      J5\nCelery, bunch       .10\nBroad beans, 3 lbs  -...    .25\nCooking Onions, lb \u2014    .06\nDried Beans, 3 lbs         2b\nHead Lettuce, head      .05\nGreen Peas, lb -     .05\nPotatoes, sack       1.00\n16 lbs _       .25\nKew potatoes, 10 lbs.      .25\nRadishes, bunch ___.    .05\n3 bunches  -       .10\nSpring onions, 12 bunches     .30\nNew cabbage, lb \u2014._    .06\nDried peas, 3 lbs.      26\nLeaf lettuce, bunch     .05\nSpinach, 2 bunches     _-    .15\nRhubarb, 8 lbs _     2b\nNew beets, 3 bunches 10\nNew carrots, 3 bunches     .10\nMint, bunch  05 to    .20\nBronze head lettuce, head ....    .05\nSwiss chard, 3 bunches 10\nCauliflower, head 10 to     .15\nCucumbers, each     .05 to .15\nMarrow, each     .05 to .15\nField tomatoes, 2 lbs. \u2014    .25\nFRUITS\nStrawberries, 3 lb. basket ..... __\nBucket  _ .80\nRaspberries, basket  \u2014 .05\nRed currants, 4-lb basket  .25\nGooseberries, lb ,  .10\n3 lbs - .25\nBing cherries, 3-lb. basket - .26\nPie cherries, lb    ' .05\nLambert cherries, 4-lb. bask. .25\nRoyal Annes, lb _ .05\nBlack currants, lb - .10\n3-lb. basket   2b\nGreen apples,' 6 lbs.  _ 20\nMISCELLANEOUS\nWooden spoons, forks _ 15\nHoney, lb     20\nBedding plants, doz. \u201e.\u201e... _    .15\nEGOS\nGrade \"A\" large doz      .38\nGrade \"A\" medium.--doz _    .33\nMEATS\nLamb, lb _    .18 to 20\nDAIRY   PRODUCTS\nButter, lb     .35\n3 lbs     .65\nCream,  pint           .30\nCottage Cheese, lb. ._ 10\n3 lbs     .25\nNew cheese, lb 15\nWhipping cream, Vs pint 15\nContest Program of\nTrail Picnic Water\nSports Is Drawn Up\nTRAIL, B.C., July 16\u2014Program\nof water sports Introductory to the\n\u2022ports program of the C. M. & S.\ncompany employees' picnic at Nelson on July 23 at the Jubilee swimming pool has been released by Carl\nBaillie who is in charge, as follows;\nDIVING-\nBoys, Compulsory\u2014Front plain\ndive, Jacknife or swan. Back dive,\niront half twist\nGirls, Compulsory\u2014Front dive,\nJacknife, swan dive, running plain\ndive.\nThree optional dives for girls and\nboys (not repeating any dive they\nhave already done.)\nSWIMMING-\nHandicap races:\nOne length, 30 yards, free style.\nOne length, 3 yards, back stroke.\nTwo lengths, 60 yards, free style.\nTwo lengths, 60 yards, free style,\nboys and girls, 12-15 years.\nOne length, 30 yards free style,\nboys and girls, 11 years and under.\nMixed relay race (four to a team).\nTrail Schedule\nGirls   Softball\nto August End\nTRAIL, B. C., July 16\u2014Schedule\nfor the second half of the Trail girls'\nsoftball league has been released\nby T. H. Negus, president All\ngames will be staged at Victoria\npark. August 23, 26, 28 and 30 hive\nbeen reserved for postponed and\nplayoff games. For exhibition and\ndistrict playoff fixtures, July 24,\n31 and August T have been reserved.\nSecond halt league schedule follows:\nJuly 19: Monarchs vs. Tigerettes.\nJuly 22: Tigerettes vs. jumbos.\nJuly 26: Jumbos vs. Monarchs.\nJuly 29: Tigerettes vs. Monarchs.\nAug. 2: Jumbos vs. Tigerettes.\nAug. 5: Monarchs vs. Jumbos.\nAug. 9: Tigerettes vs. Monarchs.\nAug. 12: Jumbos vs. Tigerettes.\nAug. 14: Monarchs vs. Jumbos.\nAug. 16: Monarchs vs. Tigerettes.\nAug. 19: Tigerettes vs. Jumbos.\nAug. 21: Jumbos vs. Monarch.\nWANT ADS GET* RESULTS\n\u00ae$___WWi$5\u00a3m\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL ,   .\nPittsburgh 7, New York 3.\nBrookly., 12, Cincinnati 5.\nPhiladelphia 2, St. Louis 1.\nChicago 8, Boston 7.\nAMERICAN\nNew York 7, Detroit 5.\nWashington 3, Chicago 2.\nCleveland 9, Phlladelpha 6.\nSt. Louis 8. Boston 3.\nASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis 6, Louisville 5.\nIndlanaoolis 16, St. Paul 8.\nMilwaukee 7, Columbus 6.\nToledo-K8nsas City, rain.\nPACIFIC COAST\nHollywood 5, Seattle 3.\nOakland 4, Portland 0.\nWESTERN   INTERNATIONAL\nVancouver 3. Spokane 0.\nWenatchee 0, Bellingham 0.\nTacoma 3, Yakima 2.\n* SUNDAY\nINTERNATIONAL\nNewark 5-5, Rochester 4-3\nSyracuse 5-6, Buffalo 6-8\nBaltimore 2-5, Montreal 3-6\nASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 2-2, St. Paul 5-5\nLouisville 3-0, Minneapolis 4-1\nToledo 0-4, Kansas City 3-3\nColumbus 1-6, Milwaukee 0-8\nPACIFIC COAST\nPortland 4-3, Oakland 2-1\nHollywood'5-4, Seattle 4-8\nSan Diego 7-3, San Francisco 3-1\nLos Angeles 5-2, Sacramento 1-13.\nYANKEES WALLOP\nDETROIT, 16 TO 3\nNEW YORK, July 17 (AP) -The\nYankees clouted tour homers and\nwent on their biggest run-making\nspree of the season today to wallop\nDetroit Tigers 16-3, stretch their\nwinning streak to seven straight,\nand maintain their game-nnd-a-half\nedge at the top of the American\nbaseball league.\nMurderers row put on its display\nof pitching execution against three\nTiger fllngers, to make it 18\nstraight wins on home grounds.\nDetroit        3    9   3\nNew York     16   11   1\nAuker, Coffman, Wade and York;\nChandler and Dickey.\nGROVE IN UNIFORM\nBOSTON, July 17 (AP) i- The\nRed Sox' long distance sluggers\ndrummed a merry tune against the\nfriendly left field wall today to submerge four St. Louis pitchers' under\na total of 30 hits while sweeping\na doubleheader 11-5 and 14-4.\nLefty Grove appeared in uniform\nfor the first time since his arm\nwent \"dead\" against the Detroit\nTigers last Thursday. Grove said\nhis arm was regaining strength\ngradually but it was indefinite\nwhen he would attempt to pitch\nagain.\nFirst game:\nSt. Louis     5   11   2\nBoston    11   13   0\nNewsom, Cox and Heath; Dick-\nman and Desautels,\nSecond game:\nSt Louis            4    7  2\nBoston     14   17   0\nLInke, Cole and Sullivan; Bagby\nand Peacock.\nTRAIL BALL NINE\nHAMMER.0UT2.\nWINATROSSLAND\nROSSLAND, B, C\u201e July 17 -\nComing through with two singles,\n\u2022 double and a triple Trail managed to eka out a 2-0 vlotory\nover the Rossland baseball club\nhere this afternoon. The win gave\nTrail an undisputed hold en the\nWest Kootenay baseball league\nlead.'\nWith Uffelman, Trail mounds-\nman pitching three-hit ball Rots-\nland was handcuffed for the\ngreater part of the game, while\n\"Red\" Tullock for Rossland\nstruck out five, and allowed r.lne\nhits.\nHanson, the shortstop, and Gl-\ndlnsky played splendid ball for\nRossland. Trail runs came In the\nfifth Inning. Up to that time Tullock held the Smokey City lads\nto two hits,\nFELLER GETS TENTH\nPHILADELPHIA. July 17 (AP)-\nBob Feller, Cleveland's fastball\npitcher, got credit for his 10th win\nof the season today, a 7-6 triumph\nover the Athletics, but lt took the\nrelief twirling of John Humphries\nand three fast double plays in the\nclosing innings for the Indians to\nwin.\nCleveland  ...  _   7  11   0\nPhiladelphia       6    8   3\nFeller, Humphries and Hemsley;\nCaster, E. Smith'and Brucker.\n80X WIN 12-1\nWASHINGTON, July 17 (API-\nChicago White Sox belted three\nWashington pitchers for 16 hits and\na 12-1 victory today. Monte Stratton scattered seven Washington\nblows and won his eighth game.\nChicago      12   16   1\nWashington      1    7   3\nStratton and Sewell; Kelly, Kra-\nkauskas, Appleton and Ferrell.\nUnited Weston in\n7_0 Soccer Victory\nWINNIPEG, July 17 (CP)-Un-\nited Weston of Winnipeg advanced\nto the semi-finals of the Dominion\nFootball association's interprovlnclal\nplaydowns by overwhelming Fort\nWilliam's Westfort Wanderers 7-0\nhere Saturday night.\nWeston took the best-of-three\nwith the Lakehead eleven two\nstraight, having captured Friday's\nopening tilt by the same score.\nLane and Wheeler\nBattle to a Draw\nin Argyle Bowls\nAfter 15 ends, A. G. Lane's rink\nand E. W. Wheeler's rink remained\neven at 11-11 in Friday night's play\nfor Argyle lawn bowling cup at\nC. P. R. lawn bowling lawns. J. Ball's\nrink took E. W. Penwlll's rink into\ncamp by a 19-11 score. J. S. Gould-\nIng's quartet outscored Jack Draper's\nsquad 17-12.\nTeams in order of skip, third, second and lead, follow:\nA. G. Lane, N. Lowes, J. Simons,\nF. N. Emmott.\nE. W. Wheeler, D. Laughton, W.\nWoods, T. Davis.\nJ. Ball, B. Allen, F. A, LeMay, W.\nG. Twist.\nE. W. Penwill, A. T. Richards, J.\nGraham, J. Simon.\nJack Draper, E. L. Wright, A.\nSmith, C. I. Archibald.\nJ. S. Goulding, S. Bates, P. Dyck,\nf. Collins.\nJn Thursday night's games. J.\nBall's rink overcame J. P. Morgan's\nrink ln Argyle cup competition by a\n19-9 score. Teams in order ot skip,\nthird, second end lead, follow:\nJ. Ball, H. Allen, r. A. LeMay and\nJ. S. Goulding.\nJ. P. Morgan, H. Sutherland, F.\nDavis and F. Doodson.\nCETS AFTER BOOKIES\nVICTORIA, July 17 (CP)-Book-\nmaking In Vanouver Is to be halted, Hon, John Hart, minister of\nfinance, announced.\nThe government loses revenue because of beta 'going through bookmakers during the racing season instead ot through the pan-mutuels.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-MONDAY MORNINQ, JULY 18, 1938.\nSPORTING NEWS\nRossland Boxla\nTeam to Invade\nNelson Tonight\nWhen Rossland Redmen and Nelson Maple Leafs renew their West\nKootenay boxla leaeue warfare at\nNelson tonight \"Curly\" Wheatley\nof Trail and Bob Paterson ot Nelson\nwill be in charge, with instructions\nto clamp down from the start and to\nkeep the players In hand all the way\nthrough. Rene Morin of Rossland\nwill substitute for Wheatley in Trail.\nRedmen have been showing Improved form In recent games, particularly on the Trail floor, and the\nboys feel they are about ready to\nturn the tables on Nelson. They were\nclose to trouncing Trail Friday night,\nlosing the decision in an extra period.\nLeading the league and to date\nunbeaten on the Civic Centre floor,\nMaple Leafs will be out to keep\ntheir record Intact\nMORE ABOUT\nGREEN CASE\n(Continued From Page One)\nInvestigators viewing the battered\nand cut condition of the body when\nlt was found against the bank of\nthe railway cut were of the opinion\nfrom the small amount of blood\nthere that she had been killed elsewhere and carried to the cut There\nwere four fractures in the back of\nthe skull, a deep cut under the chin,\nseveral cuts on the hands including severely gashed fingers, and a\nbroken ankle. Several leg bruises\nwere also ln evidence. The injuries\nindicated a desperate struggle\nagainst an assailant apparently armed with a knife.\nPolice stated Sunday that the Investigation has resolved Itself into\na process of elimination, each lead\nthat develops being traced to its end.\nSuch leads are few, however, and so\nfar have led each time to an impasse.\nNO RESPONSE\nTRAIL CAR\nSo far there has been no response\nfrom the Trail party which had tire\ntrouble be.weeh Nelson and Tag-\nhum hill about 2 o'clock Friday morning, and whom the provincial police asked to come forward. While it\nwas considered unlikely they would\nhave information of material value,\nthe police hoped to interview them\nto discover whether they had seen\nMrs. Green at Taghum after Egil\nAlstead, taxi driver, left her there;\nor whether they had seen anyone\non the road.\nPolice stated one of their chief\nbarriers to progress was complete\nlack of Information as to Mrs.\nGreen's movements from the time\nthe taxi left her at the gas pump\nat Marsden'a store until the discovery of the body at 5:30 a.m. by\nthe train crew. Minute search of\nthe ground failed to assist In this\ndirection,\nNOT EXCITED\nAlstead, last known person to see\nMrs. Green alive, stated she did not\nappear to be excited, perturbed or in\nany way concerned during the trip\nto Taghum.\nThe taxi driver said she approached him late Thursday night and arranged to be driven to Taghum at 2\no'clock \"to meet friends.\" Apparent-\nly Intent on leaving precisely at that\ntime, she paced back and forth on the\nstreet for five minutes before leaving at 2 o'clock.\nJohn Chernenkoff, a Doukhobor\nliving on the south side of the Kootenay river near Taghum, was given\na \"lift\" as far as the.old Granite\nPoorman road.\nWhen the car reached the top of\nTaghum hill Mrs. Green's casual\nconversation ceased, Alstead said,\nand she began to look for car lights\nin the direction from which her\n\"friends\" were to come.\n\"I'LL BE  ALL  RIGHT\"\nAt the gas station Mrs. Green got\nout of the txai, and when Alstead\nasked If she would be all right or if\nshe wished him to wait with her,\nshe replied: \"My friends will soon\nbe here. I'll be all right,\" the taxi\ndriver stated.\nHe lett then, returning to Nelson.\nJames Summerville, driver for the\nsame taxi company, stated he had\noften driven Mrs. Greene to points\nIn Nelson but did not remember\ntaking her to any outside destination.\nFriends and acquaintances ot Mra\nQreen who saw her Thursday ln\nNelson have been questioned, as well\nas various persons who saw her go\nout to Fairview on the street car\nThursday night, proceed easterly\nalong the railway track using a\nflashlight, and then return to the\nbusiness section by the midnight\n1 street car,\nM_t\nStill Pursuing the Spy Ring\nUnited States Attorney Lamar Hardy, and his daughter, Mlchellne,\nare pictured on the-S.S. Normandle as they sailed from New York for\nEurope. The young lady is going to Europe for a vacation, but the attorney is going to run down several \"definite leads\" in his inquiry into\nthe widespread ramifications of the Nazi spy ring. Sensational new disclosures were promised. He will not visit Germany where 13 persons,\nwho are under spy indictments are said to be living.\nTrail-Tadanac Lawn Bowlers\nBeat Nelson in Brewery Opener\nTRAIL, B. C, July 17-Trall-Tadanac Lawn Bowling club established\na 16-point margin toward the Brewery cup when four teams chalked\nup a total of 83 points \u25a0 compared\nto 67 by Nelson, in the opening session of West Kootenay play at the\nTadanac greens here Saturday.\nThe second and last session will be\nstaged at Nelson on July 23, play to\ncommence at 5 p.m. Total points of\nthe two meetings will decide the\nwinners,\nThe Nelson bowlers enjoyed the\nday, and warmly praised the strong\nrinks that competed against them.\nCompetition was keen in all four\nmatches. An eight-point margin by\nRobert Weir's rink over E. W. Pen-\nwell's, with a 20-12 win, and a nine\npoint margin of Jim Dean's rink\nover Alt Lane's, 23-14, accounted\ntor Trail's victory. N. B. Bradley's\nteam ot Nelson defeated \"Dod\"\nWatson's crew 22-21 far the visitors'\nonly win, and the Brereton rink of\nTrail squared off 10-10 with the\nsquad skipped by F. E. Wheeler of\nNelson.\nRefreshments were served near\nthe green by William Rae, president,\nand Robert Livingstone, secretary,\nTrail club.\nRinks in order of skip, third, second and lead follow:\nNelson \u2014 F. E. Wheeler, Jack\nDraper, William Brown, F. C, Collins; E. W. Penw.ll, Jack Goulding,\nDave Laughton, Albert Smith; N. B.\nBradley, E. L. Wright, Eugene Stangherlin, James \"Dad\" Graham; A. G.\nLane, Sam Bates, Fred Davis, Jim\nSimmons,\nTrail Fred Brereton, Herb Johnstone, Johnny Ferguson, Nels Say-\nnor; Robert Weir, Taffy Jones, Gordon Hollington, Jim Rigney; George\n\"Dod\" Watson, Hugh Thompson,\nBrim Smith, Erney Leyland; Jim\nDeans, Alex Laurie, John Steven,\nDave Chalmers.\nNorth Shore Up\nGame on (allies\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP) -\nOne game up on Calgary Callies ln\nthe far-west playdowns of the.Dominion soccer series. North Shore\nUnited of North Vancouver, B. C,\nwere favored to take the second\ngame of the best-of-three series\nhere Monday and move into the\nwestern finals.\nAlberta's latest hepe for Dominion soccer honors took a 8-2 beating\nfrom the heavier British Columbia\nplayers in the first game Saturday\nand seemed doomed to the failure\nother Calgary teams have met in\nformer years.\nIf a third game Is necessary, lt\nwill be played Tuesday, with the\nultmate winner travelling' to Winnipeg to meet United Westons in\nthe western Canada final.\nMISTER GANDER\nSCORES AGAIN\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP) -\nMister Gander scored his third consecutive win with a half-length\nvictory over the favored Wracia in\nthe feature $1000 Shaughnessy\nhandicap at the closing day of the\ncurrent Brighouse park meet Saturday Flying Bud was third.\nTaking the lead at the half, he\nfought a stretch duel with Wracia\nand did the one and one-sixteenth\nmiles in 1:45. The winner returned\n$8.15, $5.00 and $3.85.\nB. C. Cricketers\nWin Three, Alto.\nEDMONTON, July 17 (CP) -\nVancouver's touring junior cricketers scored the most decisive victory of their three-day stay here\nSaturday by trouncing an Alberta\njunior eleven 210 to 100. Vancouver won all three games.\nStarting the coast team on its\nroad to victory, G. Robinson and\nA. Salt teamed for a first wicket\npartnership that was good for 123\nCalmer Golf Title\nWinner, Manitoba\nWINNIPEG, July 17 (CP)\u2014Ernie\nPalmer of Winnipeg won the Manitoba amateur golf crown Saturday,\ndefeating his fellow townsman Jack\nHopwood 5 and 3.\nPalmer fired a 138 for the 39 holes\nplayed at the Pine Ridge course.\n'Biscuit Renews\nRecord in Victory\nINGLEWOOD, Calif., July 17\n(CP) \u2014 Seabiscuit returned to his\nwinning form Saturday, taking the\nHollywood $50,000 Gold cup handicap by a length ln a great driving\nfinish after trailing the field off to\nstart. He set a new track record of\n2:03 4-5 for the mile and a quarter.\nSpecify was a photo-finish second and whichcee, owned by Major Austin C. Taylor of Vancouver,\nB. C, was third.\n(lose of Play\n(ricket Scores\nLONDON, July 17 (CP Cable)-\nClose of play scores in English first-\nclass cricket matches started Saturday follow:\nYorkshire 144; Middlesex 58 for\ntwo wickets; at Lords.\nKent 337; Surrey 81 for no wickets.\nSussex 124; Essex 28 for three; at\nColchester.\nSomerset 150; Glamorgan 143 for\neight; at Cardiff.\nLancashire 365 for eight; vs Gloucestershire; at Bristol.\nHampshire 97.4 Northamptonshire\n27 for no wickets; at Northampton.\nRain prevented play in the Derby\nshire-Leicestershire and W-rwick\nshire matches,\nAustralians 243; Nottinghamshire\ntour for one; at Nottingham.\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nN4W YORK, July 17 (AP)-Go.d\nmorning and is Grimm still mantling the Cubs? ... Note to the California Chamber ot Commerce: the\nPirates are reported to be toying\nwith the idea ol training in Miami\nnext spring! . . . Hack Miley, former New York sports columnist\n(who once fought Dizzy Dean) hai\njust sold three sports stories to as\nmany national magazines.\nColonel Ruppert pays himself only $15,000 a year for being owner\nand president of the Yanks which\nis considerably less than some of his\nhired draw down...,\nThe Italians in Phllly went so\nwild over Tony Galento, they had\nto take him out to Slmmlt, N. J\u201e\nto finisl. training for the John Henry\nLewis bout.... \"They just wouldn t\nleave the big bum alone,\" explained\nmanager Joe Jacobs.\n\"Beans\" Reardon, the national\nleague umpire, is a wis* old bird.\n... You don't fool him on the: hot\ndays.. .. Before going to the park\nhe hunts up a vegetable joint and\nbuys a head tt cabbage.... He soaks\nthe leaves ln Ice water, places them\nunder his cap and then proceeds\nto enjoy the ball game, , . . Thole\ngood-looking reds have the dolls\nflocking to the park.\nOld Tom ClagK was the real goat\nIn the managerial change at Jersey\nCity The move that sent Travis\nJackson to the Giants as coach may\ncost Tom (now a scout) a fat cut of\nworld series money..., Don Budge\nmay turn pro, but his brother Lloyd,\nwho taught Don most of his tennis,\nthinks not\nMcBRIDEVICTOR\nOF JUNIOR GOLF.\nDEFEATS ALLAN\nKen McBride became the victor\nof Nelson Golf club's junior golf\ntournament and holder ot the Appleyard trophy, when he defeated\nJimmie Allan on the eighteenth\nhole the the Nelson Golf and\nCountry club golf course, Sunday.\nMcBride and Allan were the only\nentries ln the competition, the age\nlimit of which was under 21 years.\nBoth McBride and Allan have handicaps of five, and this made the\nmatch that much tighter.\nAt the end of the first nine holes\nAllan was two up on McBride. And,\nas the second round opened, Allan\ncontinued to play steady golf. McBride on the other hand, made a\ntimely recovery and after being\ntied on the seventeenth, won the\neighteenth hole and the match.\nLast year lt wu Allan who won\nthe tournament from McBride, and\non the same hole, by the same\nscore.\nDIZZY DEAN WINS\nCHICAGO, July 17 (AP)-The\none and only Dizzy Dean\u2014and the\nrest of the Chicago Cubs\u2014came\nthrough in spectacular style today.\nAt the cross-roads ot his career,\nthe pitcher for whom the Cubs\npaid $185,000 axd three players, and\nwho had been nursing a sore arm\nsince May 8, went to the mound\nand   hurled   t   brilliant   four-hit\nSame to whip Boston Bees 3-1 in\nie opener of a double bill.\nIn the nightcap Chicago won 4-0\nbehind Bill Lee's five-hit hurling,\n!living Chicago fix straight wins in\nour days and measurably brightening pennant hopes which only\nrecently were fading badly.\nThe Cubs went into third place,\nreplacing Cincinnati Reds, who lost\na doubleheader to Brooklyn Dodgers.\nFirst game:\nBoston   14  0\nChicago    3  7   1\nTurner and Mueller; Dean and\nHartnett.\nSecond game:\nBoston      0   5   0\nChicago    4  8   0\nMacFayden, Lanning and Riddle;\nLee and O'Det.\nPIRATES RETAIN LEAD\nPITTSBURGH, July 17 (AP) -\nThe Pirates retained their slim National Baseball league lead over\nNew York Giants today by coming\nfrom behind ln the nightcap to tie\nthe score 7-7 after dropping the\nfirst game 2-1. A crowd ot 43,000\nsaw the Pirates' chance to divide\nthe twin bill go glimmering when\nthe second contest was called in\nthe first of the 10th because of\nPennsylvania's Sunday law.\nCarl Hubbell won his 10th against\nsix defeats In the first game.\nFirst game:\nNew York    2   5   0\nPittsburgh     1   7   1\nHubbell and Mancuso; Tobin and\nTodd.\nSecond game:\nNew York     7 11   0\nPittsburgh      7 14   0\nCastleman, Coffman, Melton, W.\nBrown and Mancuso; Bauers, M.\nBrown, Brandt and Berres, Todd.\nDODGERS WIN TWO\nCINCINNATI, July 17 (AP) -\nBrooklyn Dodgers scored five runs\nIn one Inning of each game to take\nboth ends of a doubleheader with\nCincinnati Reds today. The Dodgers\ntook the first 5-3 and the final 7-4.\nFirst game:\nBrooklyn   5  8  1\nCincinnati       3   5   1\n.Pre_sncll, Hamlin and Shea; Davis and Lombardi.\nSecond game:\nBrooklyn   7 12  0\nCincinnati       4 U   2\nButcher, Hamlin and Shea; Derringer, Cascarella and Hershberger.\nPhiladelphia at St. Louis, double-\nheader, postponed on account of\nrain,\nHerman Under Is\nStampede Champ\nCALGARY, July 17 (CP)-\"Smll-\ning Herman, one of the Linder\nbrothers trom Cardston. in Alberta's deep south, carried home\nwith him tonight two top championships after a week of hard riding and roping in the Calgary exhibition and stampede.\nAt the close of the stampede Saturday, before a crowd of more\nthan 10,000. he was awarded, for\nthe sixth time, the North American all-round championship title\nand for the seventh time the Canadian all-round title.\nThe veteran puncher also won\nthe Canadian saddle bucking contest and the wild steer riding contest His brother, Warner, captured\nthe wild steer decorating contest.\nThree times world champion\nbronk rider from Casa Grande, Arizona, Earl Thode was the winner\nof the North American bucking\nhorse riding title, premier event.\nGrove Allowed\nto Watch Game\nBOSTON, July 17 (AP) - Attendants said Lefty Grove. Boston\nRed Sox pitching ace, left St. Elizabeth's hospital to watch the Sox-St.\nLouis Brown game Saturday but\nadded the Injured hurler would return to his bed after the contest.\nThe 38-year-old veteran hurler\nhas been In the hospital since\nThursday. He Injured his throwing\narm in a game against the Detroit\nTigers. Grove's release for the game\nfollowed conflicting reports as to\nwhether he would De permitted to\nleave the hospital.\nTROTTERS OPEN AT MAINE\nOLD ORCHARD BEACH, Me.,\nJuly 17 <AP)-HaB-mUe trotters\nand pacers opened the Grand circuit's nlne-dsy Maine meeting over\nth* kit-shaped mile track her* Saturday with Straight heat victories\nChalked up in two of the three\nevents.\nThe Maine-owned pacer, Federal, posted the fastest clocking of the\nday, a 2:02 mile in the final dash.\nHEADS RUGBY LEAGUE\nBLACKPOOL, England (CP)-\nG. F, Hutchins, Oldham who has\nbeen associated with the game for\n45 years, has been appointed chairman of the English Rugby League,\n\u25a0 PAGE SEVEN\nCANADIAN MARKSMAN WELL UP\nAS BARLOW WINS KING'S PRIZI\nBy EDWIN JOHNSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nBISLEY CAMP, England, July 17\n(Cp Cable)\u2014By a comfortable mar-\ngin Captain J. A. Barlow of the\nWest Yorkshire regiment, England,\nwon the King's prize and was acclaimed victor in the Empire's premier event for military marksmen\neven while his 09 rival fnallsts\nwere still flving, Saturday,\nBarlow finished the long grind\nwith an aggregate of 287 points out\nof a possible 300 for his second\ntriumph in the classic. He wss seven points ahead of a trio of sharpshooters that included Aircraftsman\nT. W. Gregory, 22, of Ottawa, making his first trip to the Empire\nmeeting of the National Rifle association here.\nThis group was deadlocked at\n280. and to break It up scores were\nchecked and Sgt. E. M. Wade of Oxford university was given second\nplace, the N.R.A.'s badge and $250\nin cash. Gregory placed third to\nwin the badge and $125, and Major\nB. M. Ransford of the Suffolk regiment was fourth, winning the\nbadge and $100.\nTo break the tie preference was\ngiven marksmen with best scores in\nSaturday's thjrd stage, the entire\nplacing being based on the aggre\ngate scores In the second and third]\nstages.\nYoung Gregory made a gallant\neffort to become the first Canadian\nto win the classic since Lt.-Col. R.\nM. Blair of Vancouver triumphed in.\n1920. Only six Canadians have won\nsince the match started in 1880.\nGregory, of Saint John, finished\nstrongest in the whole field, scoring;\nseven bull's eyes in a row at thi.\nlongest range of the shoot, the 1008\nyard distance, but Barlow was tool\nfar ahead.\nFour other Canadians were in\nthe King's final. Sgt. L. S. Vainet\nof Montreal with 278 was eiRh'h,\nwinning the M.R.A. badge and S50\nin cash. Captain T. E. Hayhu-st-\nof Windsor, Ont., whose father la-\n1895 was the first man from over-\nseas to win the big match, finished\n35th with 273, winning the Dadgr\nand $15. The badge and $15 also\nwent to Lieut. G. A. Molecey CM\nVancouver, 43rd with a score of\n272, and Lieut. C. F. Kennedy of\nHilden, N.S., 68th with a score at\n260.\nThe King's prize final marked'\nthe end of the fortnight's meetln*'\nduring which the Canadians picked\na team of eight men and captured\nthe Rajah of Kolapore's imperial\nchallengge cup.\niliW4*l!W*W.I*W4*l*I\u00bbl\nNATIONAL\nW L Pet.\nPittsburgh  46 28 .622\nNew York  49 30 .620\nChicago 44 35 .557\nCincinnati  42 35 .545\nBoston    34 38 .472\nBrooklyn  36 43 .456\nSt. Louis  30 43 .411\nPhiladelphia 20 51 .282\nAMERICAN\nNew York 49 27 .845\nCleveland   47 28 .627\nBoston    45 32 .584\nWashington    40 41 .494\nDetroit  38 43 .469\nChicago    33 38 .485\nPhiladelphia    29 46 .387\nSt. Loula 23 54 .299\nFourth (ricket\nTest Match to\nStart on Friday\nLONDON, July 17 (CP Cable) \u2014\nEngland's test cricket selectors continue to experiment with fast bowlers in an effort to find a combination capable of breaking down Australia's strong defence. The fourth\ntest is scheduled to start Friday at\nLeeds.\nAlthough rain prevented a ball\nbeing bowled in the third test at\nManchester, Morris Nichols, Essex,\nand T. F. Samiles, Yorkshire, pace\ntrundlers selected for that match,\nhave been dropped. Kenneth Fames,\nEssex amateur, who played ln the\ndrawn encounters at Nottingham\nand Lord's comes into the side together with William Bowes, 30-year-\nold Yorkshire star.\nA fractured finger suffered at\nLord's Saturday will keep Leonard\nHutton, youthful firat-wicket batsman, out of the team, .while Leslie\nAmes, Kent wicket keeper, is also\nunable to play through a similar\ninjury,\nPeter Gibb, Cambridge university\nand Yorkshire, has again been chosen to fill Ames' place but the amateur also was injured at Lord's and\nif he Is not fit by Friday the selectors have decided to play -William\nPrice, Middlesex 6tumper who has\nyet to play in a test match.\nThe 13 players eligible for the\nLeeds match are W. R. Hammond,\nGoddard and Barnett, Gloucestershire; N. W. D. Yardley, P. A. Gibb,\nVersity and Bowes, Yorkshire; K.\nFames, Essex; Paynter, Lancashire;\nHardstaff, Nottinghamshire; Compton and Edrich, Middlesex; Wright,\nKent.\nLouise' Ambition\nto Be Policeman\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP) \u2014 Joe\nLouis, heavyweight champion,\nwants to be a detective. And he's\n\"serious about it,\" according to\nFred Frahm, superintendent of Detroit police.\nThe department would be glad to\nget him Frahm said as he arrived\nhere for Toronto's annual police\ngames.\n\"We have to wait before anything will be settled because some\nof the members of the police commission are away on holidays,\"\nFrahm said. \"Joe wanted to be a\ndetective right off but we have a\nrule that beginners on the force\nmust start from scratch, that Is with\npatrol duty. Joe would have to do\nthat for three years-at least.\nRUNYAN TITUST\nINPROTOURNEYI\nBy BILL BONI\nAssociated Press Sports Writer\nSHAWNEE-ON-DELAWARE, PaJ\nJuly 17 (AP)\u2014Paul Runyan, a pint-\nsized golfer from White Plains, N.Y^\nSaturday finished oft Sam SneadL\nthe West Virginia walloper, 8 ana\n7 in the final round of the United\nStates Professional Golfers association championship.\nIt was a hollow victory for Run*\nvan who had to go 38 holes to beat\nCraig Wood for his first title at But*\nfalo, N.Y., in 1934. But it was hollow\nonly because Snead, biggest disappointment in the National open at\nDenver last month, folded up com*,\npletely in the face of a game that\nwith rare exceptions, was as straight\nand true as a plumb-line.\nRunyan broke the record for th*\nmo'st decisive margin in a P.G.A.\nfinal, supplanting the 6 and 3 scora\nby which Jim Barnes beat Fred Mc\nLeod in 1919, and which Walter Ha<j\ngen and Leo Diegel tied in beating\nWild Bill Mehlhorn and Al EspiM\nosa in 1925 and 1928, respectively.\nCarl Carlson Is J\nWinner of Medal\nSweep With a 64\nCarl Carlson walked away with\ntop honors in the medal sweej)\nhandicap golf competition of thi\nNelson Golf club Sunday, when hi\nturned in the lowest net score, OT\nHe made a 69 in the 18 holes ant\nhaving a handicap of 5, made\nnet 64.\nL. A. McPhail and Harold Lakei\ntied for second place with nets oi\n67 each. McPhail shooting 79 mimi!\nhis handicap of 12 made 67, whlll\nLakes shot 78 to make 67 with \u2022\nhandicap of 11.\nOther entrants were: Bob Crerat\nand Vic Owen, 84-9, 75; Watte.\nDuckworth, 77-7, 70; Jim Allan, 73.\n5. 68; Bob Watson, 74-6, 68; Jack\nFingland 82-12, 70; Jim Cherring,\nton, 87-19, 68. There were 13 carol\ntoken out.\nB. C. Golfers Go\nto Title Tourney\nVANCOUVER. July 17 (CP) -\nFive British Columbia linksmffl\nleave here for London, Ont., Tuei\nday night to represent the provlno\nin the annual Willlngdon cup gol\ntournament and the Dominion jua\nior amateur golf championship.\nThe team is composed ot Jimm\nTodd of Victoria, Don Gowan, Fran]\nWiley and Ken Black, all of Van\ncouver, Hughies Morrison, who M\ncently won the British Columbt\njunior title, is to represent the pro\nvlnce in the junior event.\n'____n\n\\m$0m*\n4S\/SWSON\n\u00abS     _^rr\\M   JW,V\nSPECIAL'\nm\nPETER   DAWSON   LIMITED-SCOTLANO-'\nThls advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Conti\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\n mm*m*m:***mmrmwmmm**mmmm*.*m iw-ww mm vw-iwpw \u00bb\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0 ...j \u25a0_._,\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0.,,i. __..\u00bb!..,..,,. t\u201e,m\u201e.v^,..\nPAP-F  EIOHT.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. JULY 18. 1938,\nit's Where, What and How You Advertise That Counts-Use a Classif ied Ad\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayeri\nCorsets\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C. (182)\nGKENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 420\nFall Street. Nelson. B. C, P. 0\nBos No. 9. Representing ship-\n\u25a0per's interest, Trail, B. C. (1831\nHAROLD S. ELMES. \"ROSSLAND\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representative tor\nshippers at Trail Smelter.   1184)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk.\n(1851\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 18 years' Ex-\nprnc. Ph. 969 Gilker Blk, Nelson.\n(186)\nSpencer Corsets, Surgical Belts M.\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St., Ph 668.\n(187)\nEngineers ancf Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B' C,\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(188)\nNelson\nD.   DAWSON,\nEngineer Si Surveyor\n(1922)\nMachinists\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all Classes ol Metal Work. Lathe\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewiring. Acetylene\nWelding.\nTelephone 593      324 Vernon Street\n(1991\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert, Mortician        Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(190)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal   Estate,   Insurance,   Rentals.\n\u25a0   347 Baker St., Phone 58.      (191)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est. Ph. 99.\n 092)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE Insurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St.\n(193)\nSEE  D.   L.   KERR,   AGENT   _'UK\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rales\n'    (1941\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance.   Annable Blk\n(195)\nCHAS. F. M.HARDY, INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Phone 135.        (196)\nR. W'. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.\n(197)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY,   SELL  &   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.\n(207)\nH. E. STEVENSON. Machinists.\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph\n98, 708-12 Vernon St.. Nelson.   (201)\nMine 6 Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON. Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases.\nPaints, etc. Agt. Mine Mchnry, &\nequip... etc. Steam coals. Office\nChamber of Mines, Ph. 994. Box\n28,  Nelson. 203)\nDJrIiun. Hatly faa\nMember ol the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Departments\nSubscription Rates \u2022\nSingle copy , J   .05\nBy carrier per week       .25\nBy carrier per year   13.00\nBy mail In Canada to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c:\nthree mouths SI 80, six tnou.hs\n$3.00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50\nForeign countries, otlm, than\nUnited Slates, same as above\nplus any extra postage.\nJlassii\nAdvertising Rates\nHe a Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per insertion ._! $ 22\n2 tines. 6 consecutive\nInsertions  .88\n(6 toi the price ot 4)\n3 lines per insertion     3b\n3 lines. 6 consecutive\nInsertions  ___. 1 32\n2 Hues   1 month   2ti6\n3 lines. 1 mouth 4.29\nFor advertisements ol more than\nthree lines, calculate on\nthe above basis.\nBox   numbers   lie  extra   This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL  ABOVE  RATES LESS  10%\nFOP PROMPT PAYMENT\nBIRTHS\nBOYCE - To Mr. and Mrs. E.\nBoyce, 812 Hall street, at the Kootenay Lake General hospital, July\n14, a son.\nSHUKIN - To Mr. and Mrs. William Shukin, 710 Gore street, at the\nKootenay Lake General hospital\nJuly 15, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nPATERSON - To Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Paterson, 808 Nelson avenue,\nat the Kootenay Lake General hospital, July 16, a daughter.\nPhotography\nVACATION TIME IS SNAPSHOT\ntime. Add to your holidays pleasures by making sure your films\nare properly developed and printed, thus keeping an everlasting\nmemory. Films developed and\nprinted 25c. Krystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask. (205)\nSash Factory\nHOME FURNITURE\nbuy  sell & Exchange, also repair\nand upholster. 413 Hall St.   (1575)\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker St.\n(206)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwalch it is on time all the time.\n345 Baker St., Nelson. (209)\nDEATHS\nDEATH NOTICE\nGARLAND \u2014 Margaret Jean, wile\nof C. B. Garland, died at Nelson,\nB. C, July 15th, 1938.        (2388)\nWant to Sell Something?\nPhone\n144\nON THE AIR\n910 K. CJAT 319.6m.\n7:30 a.m.\u2014All-Request program\n8:15 a.m.\u2014Morning Bulletin Board\n9:00 a.m.\u2014The Happy Gang\n9 \u00bbU a.m.\u2014Uldtuner\n;.'II45 a.m.\u2014Organ fantasy\n10:00 a.m.-Big Sister\n10:15 a.m.\u2014Rhythm   Rambles\n10:30 a.m.- Good morning neighbor\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Mary  Marlin\n11:15 a.m.\u2014Ma Perkins\n11:30 a.m.\u2014Pepper Young's Family\n11:45 a.m.-The Guiding Light\n12:00\u2014Club Matinee\n12:30 p.m.\u2014Vocal varieties\n12:45 a.m.\u2014Sport Page ol  the Air\n1:00 p.m.\u2014Dance Hour\n1:15 p.m.\u2014Backwoods Breakdown\n1:30 p.m.\u2014Gloom Chasers\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Penumbra\n2:15 p.m.\u2014Our Songs\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Fanfaje\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Songs for summer\n3:_0 p.m.\u2014News\n3:45 p rn.--Lavender and Lace\n4:00 p.m.\u2014Theatre News\n4:15 pm.\u2014Kootenay echoes\n4:30 p.m.\u2014Times presents\n4:35 p.m.\u2014O'rchestra\n4:45 pm.\u2014Concert Time\n6:00 p.m.\u2014Dinner Varieties\n6:30 p.m.\u2014Dan McCowan\n6:15 p.m.\u2014Piano Recital\n7:00 p.m.\u2014News\n|:I5-\"Listen\"\n.7:30 p.m.\u2014Horace Lapp's orch.\n3:00\u2014King Jester's orch.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Variety Hour\n9:30 p.m.\u2014It's Happened Before\n9:45 p.m.\u2014News\n10:00 p.m.\u2014Jerry Fuller's orch.\n10:30 p.m.\u2014Swing Time\n10:45 p.m.\u2014A sweet goodnight.\nCANADIAN   BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\nI CKOV CJCJ  CJCA  CHWK CFQC\n690       730       780       840\n'\"CMC   CJAT   CKY   CFAC   CJOC\n910       910       930       950\nCKCK CBR\n1010 1100\n600 k. CJOR             4.99.7\nVancouver 500 w\n11080 k. CFCN           293.1 m.  Its Happened Before (CBC)\nCalgary 10.000 w\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nMale quartet, violin, (CFCN)\n6:30 P.M.\u2014\nDan McCowan, nature talk (CBC)\nThe Red Heads (CFCN)\n6:45 P.M.Evelyn Eby. pianist (CBC)\nLate Sports Keview tCJOR)\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews, Weather (CBC)\nMarion   Downes,   pianist   (CJOR)\n7:15 P.M.\u2014\nParisian Rhythm (CBC)\nCardo   Smalley,   violinist   (CJOR)\n7:30 P.M.Horace Lapp's orch, (CBC)\nFor Mother and Dad (CFCN)\n7:45 P.M.-\nRadio Rascals (CJOR)\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nKing Jester's orch. (CBC)   '\nNews flashes (CJORi\nHarmony Hall (CFCN)\n8:30 P.M.-\nVariety hour (CBC)\n8:45 P.M.-\nWings Over the World (CFCN)\nLacrosse Broadcast (CJOR)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nVariety hour (CBC)\nNews  flashes  (CFCN)\n9:15 P.M.-\nElgar Roberts, organ  (CFCN)\n9:30 P.M.-\n4:00 P.M.--\n[(...'.dies in contrast (CBC)\n[l4:30 P.M.-\npCafc in Bucharest (CBC)\n|5:00 P.M,\u2014\nBtmlide Echoes  (CFCN)\n15:15 P.M.-\nI Club foi  Kiddies (CJOR)\nI Dick Tracy, drama (CFCN)\nK5:30 P.M.\u2014\nIJimmy Allen's Adventures (CFCN)\n5:45 P.M.\u2014\n(Howie Wing, drama (CJOR)\nSALMO PEOPLE\nHONOR MILLERS\nSALMO, B.C.-Mrs. G. G. Fair\nland Mrs. G. T. Matthew were co-\nHtost-sses Monday night at the home\nlof the former when they entertain-\nled a number of friends at a fare-\niwell bridge party in honor of Mrs.\nIw. H. Miller, who with her family\n\u25a0left Tuesday to reside in Nelson.\n\u25a0Prize tor high score was won by\n|Mrs. J. Payant, consolation honors\ngoing   to  Mrs.   Henry John.   Mrs.\nTliller was recipient of a guest gift.\nAmong guests present were Mrs.\n|A,  Bremner.  Mrs. i,. Fraser, Mrs.\nJohn. Mrs. G. Waterstreet. Mrs.\n|C. Bush, Mrs. R. Binning. Mrs, J.\nSapples, Mrs. D. Gibbon, Mrs. W\nCray. Mrs. O. Anderson, Mrs. J.\n[Payant,  Mrs.  F.  Dorey,  Mrs.   W.\n9:45 P.M.-\nRhythmic Age (CFCN)\nWeather and  News   ICBC)\n110:00 P.M.-\nj Jerry Fuller's orch. 'CBC)\n10:30 P.M.News (CJOR)\n10:45 P.M.\u2014\nRhythm Wranglers (CJOR)\n11:15 P.M.-   *>\nPete Cowan's orch. (CJOR)\ni U:45 P.M.-\n' Siumbei  hour  (CJOR)\nGrutchfield, Mrs. L. G. Moir Mrs\nJ Hearn, Mrs. S. Kitchener. Mrs.\nE. Gibbon and Mrs. J. F. Donaldson\nand the guest of honor, Mrs. W H\nMiller,\nAfter ca.ds a lunch was served\nby the hostesses' and the evening\nwas brought to a close with the\nsinging of 'For She's a Jolly Good\nFellow.\" and \"Auld Lang Syne\".\nThe Salmo Community hall was\nthe scene of a lively party Mondav\nnight when the younger set gathered together on farewell to Misses\nMona and May Miller who left on\nTuesday to reside in Nelson. Music,\nsinging and dancing held sway, till\nthe wee small hours. Coffee and hot\ndogs were served at midnight. Music wss supplied by Mrs. R. Cox,\nMiss Dorothy Roach,\" Jim Roach, R.\nGibbon, Ken Binning and T. Newton.\nSerial Story . . .\nFIESTA\n(Continued From Pa_o Four)\nleaving. You had the right hunch.\nNow I guess it's your move, since\nit's smuggling too.\"\n\"We can do little without definite evidence,\" Mclntyre declared.\n\"It is awfully hard to get a conviction. We don't care simply to pick\nup a few of the unfortunate aliens\nwho were brought in; we want to\nget at the organized leaders who are\ndoing the smuggling.\n\"When you get any furlher news\nat your DD ranch, or hunches of\nany sort, Mr. Baron, let us know at\nonce. Consider yourself as a specially commissioned officer. We will\nstart our machinery tonight also,\nand let you know as soon as anything develops. Between us, maybe\nwe can effect something worth\nwhile.\"\nThey went further into details of\nthe matter, working out tentative\nplans of operations in event of increased efforts by the smugglers.\nThe officers were grateful. \"It is\nnot often,\" Mclntyre said, \"that private citizens will bother to render\nthis much aid, Mr. Baron. They leave\nit up to the official force, when we\nneed all the cooperation possible.\nThanks for helping; it proves you're\na good American.\"\nBill went away glowing under\nthat tribute. All too seldom does\na grown man get a pat on the back\nlike that, a moment of appreciation.\nHe gave some thought to the officer's choice of words; Mr. Mclntyre\nonce had said \"your DD ranch\".\n\"It isn't mine,\" Bill told himself,\nslipping back into the driver's seat\nof his car. \"I wish it were. Or rather\nI wish it was ours. Ours!\"\nHe sat there in the darkness alone,\njust resting and meditating for a\nminute or two. He had been so busy\nin recent weeks that he had given\nno thought at all to Ellen Dale as a\ngirl. He had worked diligently for\nher as an employer, earning his\n$100 a week. Come to think of it, he\nspent almost none of that, for ne\nhad no living expense; he must\nhave a couple of thousand saved.\nBut what of that? Two thousand dollars is but a drop in the bucket compared to a fortune of nearly half\na million. He couldn't buy into business partnership with a woman\nwho had made big money in moving pictures\u2014and saved it. And he\ncouldn't marry her, either; in a year\nor two she'd likely lose respect for\nhim, and he'd lose respect for himself.\nHe kicked the starter of his car\nrather unnecessarily hard, and\nswung around to 'o back home. He\nwasn't in a good mood. \"I'll see her\nthrough the spring and summer,\"\nhe promised himself. \"That ought\nto get the outfit running smoothly\non the profit side. Then I'll head\nback for Texas where I belong,\"\nGoing through the business district of Nogales he saw another\nrancher whom he knew, and stopped to swap talk for another hour.\nThus it was nearly 11 o'clock when\nhe finally started :or the ranch, and\nnearly midnight when he got there.\nEven from a distance he saw lights\nin Ellen's house and wondered about\nit. Ordinarily she didn't stay up very\nlate.\nIt had worried Bill that a pretty\nyoung woman should live thus in\na big ranch house anyway. But he\nand she had carefully hired very\nhigh type servants, women who\nwould be more nearly companions\nfor her. One Mexican girl who had\nduties as a sort of nominal secretary\nwas in reality becoming Ellen's genuine friend. She was the girl named\nReynita Yba'rra, a large-eyed person of remarkable beauty who had\nbeen graduated from the state university at Tuscon, after great stinting on the part of her parents, Shy\nof each other for a long time, the\ntwo girls had of late approached the\nstatus of chums. And that, both Bill\nBaron and Buckshot Brown had\nsaid, was well.\nBut tonight it wasn't just Ellen\nand Reynita who stayed up late on\nsome girl doings of their own. When\nBill stopped his car he heard sounds\nof music and hilarity, men and vo-\nmen obviously in high jinks.\n\"It's a house full of people,\" he\nmuttered. \"What's Ellen doing,\nthrowing a party?\" He couldn't imagine what had occurred; Ellen had\nnot had time to make many house\nparty friends here in the southwest.\nBill walked sjowly toward her\nhouse\u2014then heard a voice and saw\na profile that he instantly recognized.\n\"Good glo-ory!\" Bill exclaimed.\n\"Sid Bromberg!\"\n'Jn B_ Cnntlnund)\nMARRIED MAN FOR GENERAL\n(arm work. Free cabin. Vegetables,\nmilk, fuel. $35 month. Wife can\nmake $15 to $30 washing during\nthe summer. Write or phone \"The\nMeadows,\" Fairmont Hot Springs.\n(2387)\nWANTED - GIRL FOR GENERAL\nhousework, must be fond of children. No one without references\nneed apply. Mrs. W. Laishley.\nPhone 263. (2330)\nEXPERIENCElTGIRL F__TFRUTT\nranch. Apply 1418 .Vancouver St.\n(23771\nAUTOMOTIVE\nFOR SALE, OPEN TRAILER, Vs-\nton eapacity. Licence, Price $20,\nPh. 871, Crescent Dairy, Fall St.\n(2386)\nDOCS. PETS, FOR SALE\nFOR SALE THOROUGHBRED\nChesapeake dog, year old. Box 33,\nNelson or Phone 280. (2346)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nLAUNCH FOR SALE, GOOD, CON-\ndition. Apply 311 Houston St.\n(2248)\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n' Rate for advertisements under\nthis beading 25c for any required number ol lines for six\ndays, payable in advance.\nEXPERIENCED GENERAL AND\nDairy Farmer, good milker wants\nfarm work, or for widow. Single,\nage 32. Steady man and good worker. Joe Hospar, Nelson, B. C.\nPost Office.\t\nYOUNG GIRL (18) GOOD AP-\npearance and neat, experienced in\nstore and housework. Wants work\nin Nelson or close vicinity. Apply\nBox 2399 Dally News. (2399)\nTWO B.\" C. ENGINEERS. 2nd. AND\n3rd., class, want positions. Experienced, trustworthy and best references Box 2224 Daily News.\n  (2224)\n2\" CAPABLE AND EXPERIENCED\ngirls, 20-22, clerk, waitress, steady,\nor housework by the hour. Sleep\nout, Phone 364-Y2. (2343)\nEXPERIENCED WCJT^lFCOOk\nwants position ln mine or lumber\ncamp. References. Apply Box 2339\nDaily News. (2339)\nPERSONAL\nNEW PEP AT 40 FOR MEN AND\nWomen. New OSTREX Tonic\nTablets contain 2 stimulants from\nraw oysters plus 4 general tonics\nto pep up whole body. Try package today. If not delighted, makei\nrefunds Its low price. Call, write\nMann. Rutherford Co.        (2187)\nEXPERIENCED HOUSE CLEANER\nneeds work by the hour, 20c hr.\nMrs. Mary Sydor, Gen. Del. Nelson.\n(2349)\nMAN WANTS DAIRY WORK, Experienced. Box 2370 Daily News.\n(2370)\nFRUIT   AGENTS\nFRUIT   GROWERS\nShip all varieties of fruits. Cherries\nand berries by express, other fruits\nin straight or mixed cars. Receive\nbenefit of the highest prairie market prices. 'Returns made every\nSaturday.\nTHE  ROYAL  FRUIT CO.\n1703   Broad   St. Regina,  Sask.\n(2022)\nWANTED\nWANTED  OLD  COWS,  HORSES,\nfor mink feed Box 2275 Daily News\n(2275)\nWANTED TO RENT ONE CANOE\nfor summer. Ph. 462-L2.     (2392)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD.'\n25 for $1.00 or jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue). National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton.\n(214)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubber Send $1.00 tor 18\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co.. 18 Hastings St..\nW. Vancouver.        (213)\nIMMEDIATE RELIEF FOR\u2014EC-\nzema, Athlete's Foot. Calluses and\nTrench Feet. Sample 45c. Busson.\n177 West Cordova, Vancouver.\n(2089)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND    APARTMENTS\nWILLOW   POINT.  FULLY   MOD-\nern  furnished (i-room bungalow.\nA complete comfortable home tor\n. rent Aug. 1. J. Gaskell, Willow Pt\n(2358)\nFOR RENT - 6 ROOMED JTJRlT-\nished, fully modern bungalow on\nbeach, garage and rowboat. near\nKaslo. Vacant July 23. Mrs.  G.\nRasmussen, R. R. 1, Ph. 678-R2.\n(2394)\nFOR SALI\nPIPES, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B. C.\n(216)\nF U R N I S H ED  HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block.\n,     (219)\n5   RM.   UNFURN.   SUITE.   ALSO\nfurn. suites. Kerr Apartments.\n(220)\n4   ROOM   FURNISHED   HOUSE\nfor rent. D. Maglio, Ph. 808L. ,\n(2313)\nMINERS - WE GUARANTEE TO\nfind your ore bodies with our\nScope. Testimonials of our success\nfurnished Write or call for Information. G. E. Perret, Madden\nHotel, Nelson, B, C.       _(2055)\nHAVE YOUR RUGS ..\"\"CARPETS\nthoroughly cleaned the Schra'der\nWay. Satisfaction Grtd. Ph 564 or\nwrite for estimates and list of satisfied cstmrs. Home Rug Cleaners.\n(18261\nWANTED $200.00, 7% INTEREST.\nRepayable $15 per month. For\nfurther particulars anr_ reference\nBox 2338 Daily News.        (2338)\nMETROPOLE HOTEL VANCOU-\nver, $1.00 per day up. Private bath\n$1.50. Best value in Vancouver.\n320 Abbott St. (2307)\nTRUTHSEEKERS:    READ   JOHN\nHovorka's Messenger, Strathcona,\nMinn., U. S. A. Trial 6 mos. for 25c.\n(2401)\nLIVESTOCK\nFOR SALE REG.. ABERDEEN AN-\ngus bull. 3 yrs. old. T. B. tested.\nApply J. G. Todhunter, Elko, B. C.\n(2402)\nFOR SALE 2 YEAR OLD FRESH\ncow at Conrad's Ranch, Balfour.\n(2385)\nFor Want Ad\nService\nPhone 144\nYOUNG BULL WANTED READY\nfor service. Box 454 Rossland.\n(2383)\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.    (221)\nNEWLY FURNISHED SUITES.\nGas. Apply 140 Baker St. (2345)\nBEDROOM WITH TTWTN BEDS. 614\nSilica St. Phone 656X. (2378)\nCOTTAGE, MOSTLY FURN. OUT\nFairview. Ph. 328L3. (2403)\nTEACHERS WANTED\nWANTED EXPERIENCED MALE\nteacher. First Class Certificate.\nSmall school. Salary $780. E.\nHardy, Sec, Carrolls School Bd.\nBurton, B. C. , (2357)\nWANTED EXPERIENCED TEACH-\ner for Rural School. Apply Mrs,\nWm. Belanger, Secretary Big Sand\nCreek School Bd. Jaffray, B. C.\n(2374)\nWANTED LADY TEACHER FOR\nJunior Room Robson School. Apply W. T. Waldie, Sec. Robson\nSchool Board. (2400)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find s cat or dog, pocket-\nbook, jewelry or fur, or anything else ot value, telephone the\nDaily News. A \"Found\" Ad. will be\ninserted without cost to you. We\nwill collect from the owner.\nLOST - SUNDAY, POSSIBLY ON\nBaker St., Green Parker fountain\npen,finder return 77 Taxi, Reward.\n(2381)\nFOUND, ROW BOAT. APPLY TO\nCrosbie, Russell's Landing.  (2391)\nSPECIAL THIS WEEK ONLY MILL\nends, white pine. 3 loads $10. Fir\nand tamarack 3 loads $12. Apply\nMike Hlookoff, Ph. 434-Rl.\n (2311)\n\"       PIPE AND FITTING I\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B. C\n(215)\nSACKS, BAGS ALL KINDS. ALSO\nPipe tt Fittings all sizes \u2014 Active\nTrading Co., 916 Powell Street,\nVancouver. (1499)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C. (217)\nCOMBINATION GAS AND COAL\nrange in perfect condition. W,\nKline, 213 Victoria St.       2364)\nSTRAWBERRIES - PICK THEM\nyourself, 2c lb. M. Malina, Blewitt,\n .(234?)\nSAWDUST $4.00 UNIT. GUARAN-\nteed for year round. Ph .434R1.\n(2328)\nSAFE  FOR   SALE  CHEAP   FOR\ncash. Apply Vernon Rooms. (2362)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nNELSON SUBURBAN BUILDING\nproperty. Present rental revenua\nshows profit. About 1 ac. Nice\nland, beautiful view, site for six\nhomes or good investment as\nstands. .Rented house has city\nwater, elec. It., con. basement\nHomes being built all around it.\nFriend asks me to sacrifice, $750..\nD. Louis Kerr, Nelson, (2266)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Writ* for full Information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources, C. P. R., Calgary. Alta.\n(228)\nFOR SALE - 2 LOTS FOR SALE.\nGd. location for store. 104 High St\n (2393)\nFOR SALE 4 CLEARED LOTS oti\nHouston St. Phone 242R.   (2336)\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\ntrom. out-of-town residents given\nprompt attention.\nAW THAT WASH TNOTHIH FOR A FELLAH\nmOEATSGRAPE-NUTS EVERY MORrllll\nBUTIGOT TOGETGOIN-CANTKEEP\nMRS.THOMPSONWAITIN'FORHCR\nCRAPE-NUTS!\nHURRAH\/\nOUR\nGRAPE-\nNUTS\nAREHERE.\nAHD HERBS OUR HERO\nWd.UUST HEARD\nALLABOUrTHE RUNAWAY OVER THE\nPHOHE.YOUSIT\nRIGHT DOWN HARRY\nAND 6ET YOUR\nREWARD-A DISH\nOF THESE DELICIOUS\nGRAPE;\nNUTS\/\niVl'IIMMYGRAPE-NUTS\nTHIS MORNW'MRS. THOMPSON\nWTICANALWAYSGOFORA\nSECOND HELPIN.   YOU BET!\nTHEYtjtVE MEtOTSOF ENERGY\/ j\nUM-M-M FOLKS! MRS.THO.MPSON SURE KNOWS WHAT\nI LIKE! GRAPE-HUTS ARE THE BEST TASTIN'BREAK--\nFAST DISH EVER! AND THEY'RE GOOD FOR YOU, TOO.\nMY BOSS SAYS THAT JUST TWO TABLESPOONFULS\nOFGRAPE-NUT$ WITH WHOLE MILK OR\nCREAM AND'FRUIT PROVIDES MORE VARIED\nNOURISHMENTTHAN MANY A HEARTY MEAL.\nBETTER GET SOME FOR TOMORROW I\nGrape Nuts\n^j^^JlXTHE BLUE ANDVEILOW PACKAGE\n____&_\u25a0;;\u25a0..' ___& -i\\^.isxih__\n.        :tk:^si^Amlirt\\tVtmtlA^\n^^i_..ii.T t t- \u25a0 \u25a0 iiff.T.Tii.ifcig^^\n i.*wwmmw*m.m-mmmmmMmm\n^..\nWeek Shipments\nTe the Tadanac\nPlant 12,785 tons\nTotal of 12,758 tons ot ores.and\ntoncentrates 'were received at the\ntadanac plant of the Consolidated\nMining (i Smelting company in the\nsecand week of July, bringing receipts for 1938 at July 14 to an aggregate of 329,862 tons.\n\u25a0 Company mines contributed 11,-\n, 017 tons of the week's total, and\n305.395 tons of the grand aggregate,\nwhile receipts from customs mines\namounted to 1741 tons ln the week,\nbringing their total for the year to\ndate to 24,467 tons. The custom aggregate was made up of 17,861 tons\nof ores and 6806 tons of concentrates.\n\u25a0 The week's custom shippers were:\nE Ores \u2014 Arlington, Erie, 44; Bell\nmineral claim, Slocan City, 23;\nCalifornia, Nelson, 5; Daylight, Nelson, 12; Dentonia, Greenwood, 99;\nEureka, Republic, Wash., 849; Gold\nStandard, Penticton, 8; Highland\nBell, Beaverdell, 89; Humming Bird,\nSlocan City, 9; Kilo, Lemon Creek, 7;\nMogul, Westbridge, 28; Morning\nGlory, Republic, Wash., 48; Number\nSeven, Boundary Falls, 149; Palmita,\nSandon, 70; Yankee Boy, Grand\nForks, 81. Total\u20141471.\nConcentrates \u2014 Durango, Ymlr, 49;\nNugget, Salmo, 10; Wesko, Ymir,\n40; Yankee Girl, Ymlr, 128; Ymir,\nYmir, 43. Total-270.\nAllows Loan on\nJam Business\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP) -\nMr. Justice. A. M. Manson in supreme court granted George Leonard Salter, receiver for the Christian Community of Universal\nBrotherhood's properties in the interior of British Columbia, the\nright to borrow $BO0O for operation of the brotherhood's jam factory at Brilliant, B. C.\nSalter was appointed receiver for\nthe properties some time ago on\nthe application of the National\nTrust company which has commenced action to enforce foreclosure of a $350,000 mortgage held by\nthe company on 5600 acres owned\nby the brotherhood.\nMr. Justice Manson also authorized Salter to employ eight watchmen to look after the community's\n\u2022various busifiess and other properties subject to the mortgage.\nWinnipeg Wheat\nMarket Inactive\nWINNIPEG, July 17 (CP)-Com-\nplete inactivity marked the pre-\nweekend session on the Winnipeg\nmarket Saturday and wheat prices\nhovered within a narrow range\naround Friday's close. Final quotations were %\u2022% cents lower with\n_%ly at .97*, October 76%':%, November .76%, ahd December 75-7514\ncents.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNINQ. JULY 18, 1938.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, July 17\n(CP>-\nGrain\nquotation!\ni:\nOpen\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nWheat:\nJuly\n98%\n08%\n96%'\n97%\nOct.\n11V,\n77%\n76%\n76%\nNov\t\n11\n77\n76\n76%\nDec.    ,  .\n75%\n75%\n74%\n75%\nOats:\nJuly\n48%\n34%\n43%\n43%\n43%\nOct.   ..\n34%\n34%\n34%\nDec.    \t\n32%\n32%\n32%\n32%\nBarley:\nJuly\nOct.   ..\n48V.\n48%\n48%\n48%\n47\n47%\n46%\n47\nDec\t\n45\n45%\n45\n45%\nFlax:\nJuly\n145%\n\u2014\n\u2014\n145%\nOct.\n\t\n\u2014\n\u2014\n146%\nRye:\nJuly    \u201e\nOct.     , ,\nXV,\n50%\n40%\n49%\n50%\n33.\n51\n50\n51\nCanadian Stocks Maintain Upward\nSlant Toronto; Trade in Golds Heavy\nCash prices:\nWheat: No. 1 nor, 97%; No. 2 nor.\n94%; No. 3 nor. 89%; No. 4 nor.\n79%; No. 5 wheat 94%; No. 6 wheat\n58%; feed 56%; No 1 garnet 92%,\nNo. 2 garnet 89%; No. 1 duruu 69%:\nNo. 4 special 75%; No. 5 special\n61%: No. 6 special 57%; track 91%;\nscreenings 25.\nOats: No. 2 C W 43%; No. 3 C W\n40%; Ex 1 feed 40%; No. 1 feed 39%;\nNo. 2 feed 37%; No. 3 feed 34%;\ntrack 39%.\nBarley: No. 8 C W 47; No. 2 C W\n44%; No. 5 C W 43%; No. 6 C W\n42%; track 47.\nFlax: No. 1 C W 145%; No. 2 C W\n141%; No. 3 C W 130%; No. 4 C W\n115%; track 144%.\nRye: No. 2 C W 49%.\nNEW YORK GAINS\nBy ALEX PRINGLE\n(Canadian Press Financial Writer).\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP).-Des-\npite mid-summer heat, absence of\nholidaying traders from board\nrooms and intermittent weakness of\nthe New York market, Canadian\nstocks maintained an upward slant\nthis week, developing the greatest\naction on days of price strength.\nBase metal shares registered the\nwidest general advance but, aside\nfrom the sensational performance\nof Walte-Amulet, the heavy trading was in medium-price and junior\ngolds.\nInformation regarding results of\nthe early summer operations on a\nnumber of the newer producers and\nprospects is beginning to seep southward, disclosing promising ore discoveries on lower levels and giving\nthe share market a stimulus Tn re-\necent sessions, Chesterville Larder\nLake, MacLeod-Cookshutt, Hard\nRock, O'Brien and Naybob all thrived in the latest period oft drill-core\nnews. The gold share index of the\nToronto list gained .51.\nThe base metals index advanced\nto a new high for the year at 91.44,\na gain of 1.72 for the week. Waitc-\nAmulet set the pace with a net advance of $1.30, closing yesterday at\n$0.30. Announcement was made in\nthe week that the capacity of the\ncompany's concentrator would be\nIncreased.\nHudson Bay advanced $1 while\nInternational Nickel, Consolidated\nSmelters and Noranda were un:\nchanged to slightly lower. Quite a\nfew of the junior golds pushed\nalong to higher prices on substantial turnover.\nSteel stocks registd-ed the expectations of executives for a slice\nof the British government's war aircrafts business, National Steel Car\nadvanced about $6 to a new high at\n$51.50 and Canadian Car and Foundry common also posted a new high,\ngaining more than $1 in the week.\nImplement stocks continue to\ndraw support from the promising\ncrop outlook and net gains for the\nweek were recorded by the Massey-\nHarris stocks and Cockshutt Plow.\nBuilding and Utility stocks dragged\nand beverage stocks, while generally firm, were comparatively dull.\nMild weakness appeared in the senior oil group.\nIrregular price movement marked western oils. Royalite lost some,\nground and recessions of 50 to 10\ncents were chalked up by some of\nthe medium-price issues, Including\nCalgary-Edmonton and Okalta,\nBut the penny issues firmed generally. Net gains are showing for\nDavies, Highwood-Sarcee, East\nCrest, Prairie Royalties and Pacalta.\nTriplet Calves Make Bovine History\n-PAGE NINf\nNEW YORK, July 17 (AP) -Selected stocks tacked on further advances running to around a point\ngenerally in Saturday's market;, with\na few enjoying wider swings.\nWhile dealings were not exceptionally lively, steels, motors, coppers and an assortment of specialties absorbed, profit selling without great difficulty In the closing\nhour and most emerged near top\nlevels. A number of new highs for\nthe year were posted during the\nbrief proceedings, but gains were\nreduced substantially at tiie end.\nInspiring the buying brokers said,\nwere forcesasts of a sharp slump\nin next week's steel mill operations\nand signs of betterment In the majority ot other industrial fields.\nSTOCK AVERAGES OFF \"\nOTTAWA, July 17 (CP)-A reaction sent averages down In Canadian stock markets in the week\nended July 14. The Investors' price\nindex for 96 common stocks tell trom\n107.0 the previous week to 105.4. Last\nyear it was 131.9.\nThe index for 68 industries was\n173.2 against 174.4 and 216.1; for 101\nutilities, 48.2 against 48.9 and 63.1;\nand for nine banks, 85.4 against 85\nand 90.6.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL,-July 17 (CP) -\nBritish and foreign.exchange closed\neasier Saturday. Nominal rates for\nlarge, amounts:\nAustralia, pound, 3.9575.\nBelgium, belga, .1703.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3100.\nCzechoslovakia, crown, ,0348.\nFranc*, franc,- .027805.\nGermany, reichsmark, .4044.\nGheat Britain, pound, 4.9552.\nHolland, florin, .5536.\nHungary, pengo, .2997.\nIndia, rupee, .3705.\nItaly, lire .0529.\nJapan, yen, .2893.\nNorway, krone, .2491.\nSouth Africa, pound 4.9320.\nSweden, krone, .2556.\nDow-Jones Averages\n30 industrials\n20 rails ...\t\n15 utilities\n40 bonds ...\nHigh\n, 13814\n.   27.29\n,   21.50\nLow\n137.69\n27.11\n21.26\nClose    Change\n1.23\n138.53-up\n27.18\u2014up\n21_\u00bb\u2014up\n89.06\u2014up\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAlton Mines \u2014\u2014\nAldermac Copper ...\u2014\nAmm Gold\nAnglo-Huroniaii __\t\nAmUIeld  \t\nAstoria Rouyn Mines \u2014\nAztec Miniiig -.\t\nBagamac Rouyn \t\nBankfield Gold \t\nBase Metals Mining\t\nBeattie Gold Mines\t\nBidgood Kirkland \t\nBig Missouri \t\nBobjo Mines ....- \u2014\nBralorne Mines \t\nBrett Trethewey\t\n.03\n.55\n.22\n3.00\n.18\n.03\n.12\n.18\n.70\n.35\n1.17\n. .24%\n. .34\n. .10%\n. 9.50\n. .03\n. 16.00\n.12\n.91\nSASK. DEFICIT\nLEAST IN YEARS\nREGINA, July 17 (CP)- The\nSaskatchewan treasury closed its\nbooks for the fiscal year ending April 30,1938, with a revenue deficit of\n$191,940.60, the smallest deficit since\n1928-29.\nBuffalo Ankerite\nBunker Hill Ex ....:\nCanadian Malartic\t\nCariboo Gold Quartz   2.52\nCastle-Tretbewey 90\nCentral Patricia -.   2.50\nChibougamau  21\nChromium M _. S _ 57\nCoast Copper   2.80\nConlaurum Mines     1.30\nConsolidated M & S 60.00\nDarkwater       .09%\nDome Mines  28.90\nDorval-Slscoe  - - 11%\nEast Malartic _-      -SB\nEldorado Gold  2.40\nFaloonbrldge Nickel  6.20\nFederal Kirkland _    .05\nGillies Lake .._   .16%\nGod's Lake Gold     .48\nGold Belt , 45\nGranada Gold Mines _    .06%\nGrandoro Mines  05%\nGunnar Gold  71\nHard Rock Gold    2.75\nHaxker Gold  11\nHollinger 14.75\nHowey Gold  27\nHudson Bay M \u00ab. S 29.60\nInternational Nickel  50.00\n3>M. Consolidated \"\nJack Waite\t\nJacola Gold \t\nKerr-Addison \t\nKirkland Lake \t\nLake Shore Mines\nLamaque Contact \t\nLapa Cadillac  61\nLeitch Gold 76%\nLebel Oro Mines 06\nLittle Long Lac    3.50\nMacassa Mines     4.60\nMacLeod Cockshutt     3.50\nMadsen Red Lake Gold 36\nManitoba & Eastern  02%\nMandy    15\nMclntyre-Porcupine   43.50\nMcKenzie Red Lake     1.12\nMcVittie-Graham  16%\nMcWatters Gold  66\nMining Corporation    2.05\nMinto Gold  03\nMoneta Porcupine   .1.90\nMorris-Kirklsnd        .10%\nNiplssing Mining     1.66\nfioranda  68.50\nNormetal  85\nO'Brien Gold     3.95\nOmega Gold  49\nPamour Porcupine       3.35\nPeulore        .09\nPaymaster Cons  47\nPend Oreille     2.20\nPerron Gold     1.50\npickle Crow Gold    4.55\nPioneer Gold     2.95\nPremier Gold    2.17\nPowell Rouyn Gold\t\nPreston East Dome ........\n-inohec Gold\n11\n.53\n.16\n1.80\n1.18\n81.00\n.03%\n2.11\n.94\nRed Lake Gold Shore 09%\nReeves MacDonald     .40\nReno Gold Mines -     .45\nRitchie Gold Mines     .02%\nRoche Long Lac _.\u201e     .12\nSan Antonio Gold _.   1.25\nShawkey Gold _.     .11\nSheep Creek Gold \u2014..    .95\nSherritt Gordon  , 1.85\nSiscoe Gold    2.23\nSladen Malartic     1.18\nStadacona Rouyn .    .56\nSt Anthony       .11%\nSudbury Basin      2.75\nSullivan Consolidated 95\nSylvanite . : _   3.30\nTeck-Hughes Gold    4.55\nToburn Gold Mines ..._    2.07\nTowagmac  \u201e     ,45\nVentures   _ _    5.55\nWaite Amulet      6.95\nWhitewater  04\nWright Hargreaves  -.\u201e.   7.50\nYmir Yankee Girl     15%\nOILS\nAjax    18\nBritish American  21.75\nChemical Research  55\nImperial   17.50\nInter Petroleum    25.75\nMcColl Frontenac    12.00\nPantepec     ,5.25\nTexas Canadian  .   1.80\nINDUSTRIAL\nAbitibi        3%\nBeatty Bros      0%\nBell Telephone      162\nBrazilian T L tt P  <13\nBrewers It Distillers      5%\nBrewing Corp \u201e    1.05\nBrewing Corp pfd    21\nB C Power \"A\"    30%\nB C Power \"B\"       3\nBuilding Products    54%\nBurt F N     19\nCan Bakeries pfd    25\nCanada Bread       4%\nCan Bud Malting  i      6\nCan Car It Foundry     15.4\nCan Cement     10%\nCan Dredge    22%\nCan Malting      33\nCan Pacific Rly          7\nCan Ind Alcohol A      2%\nCan Ind Alcohol B      2%\nCan Wineries      3\nCarnation pfd 101%\nCons Bakeries     14%\nCosmos      22\nDominion Bridge      31%\nD Tar tt Chem pfd     82\nDistillers Seagrams      15%\nFanny Farmer .      18%\nFord of Canada A     19%\nGen .Steel Wares      8%\nGypsum L It A      7\nHarding Carpet       2%\nHamilton Bridge      7\nHamilton Bridge pfd    40\nHinde DauChe     15%\nHiram Walker  .-    40\nIntl Metals ,   7\nIntl Milling pfd  101%\nImperial Tobacco     ISH\nLoblaw \"A\"    23\nLoblaw \"8\"    20%\nKSlvinator    H\nMaple Leaf Milling      3%\nMassey Harris       0%\nMontreal Pqwer     29\nMoore Corp    35\nNat Steel Car    55%\nOnt Steel Prods     10\nOnt Silk Net      \u00bb\u25a0\u2022'\nPage Hersey    11%\nPressed Metals _,..\u2014   17%\nSttM tt Can.-,    -?'\u00bb\nDominion Bonds\nWINNIPEG, July 17 (CP) -Dominion of Canada bonds:\n'4% Sept. 1, 1940 105% 107%.\nSNov'lS. 1941 1_0 112.\nB Oct. 15, 1943, 118 118.\n4 Oct. 15, 1945-43 109% 109%.\n4% Feb. 1, 1946, 111% 113%.\n3% OCt. 15. 1949-44 103% 105%.\n8% NOV. 15, 1951-48 101% 103%.\n4 Oct. 15, 1952-47 107% 107%.\n3 June 1, 1955-50 98% 100.\n4% Nov 1, 1958-48 111% 113%.\n4% Nov. 1.1959-49 112 113%.\n3% June 1,'1866-56 100 101%.\n3 perpetuals 88% 90.\ncom Moil set pace\ncalgary exchange\nCALGARY, July W '(_*) - In\nquiet trading, Commoil set the pace\non the Calgary stock exchange Saturday, It advanced 4 to 65. Founds\ntion was up 1% and 19%.\nFractional gains were posted In\na number of other stocks, including\nfirestone and sunset, each up %.\nTransfers during the short Saturday session totalled about 20,000\nshares.\nWheal Prices\nSlump, Chicago\nCHICAGO, July 17 (AP)-Wheat\nprices slumped more than a cent a\nbushel again Saturday and fell to\nwithin less than a cent of the 1938\nlows.      -   ,\nUncertainty regarding the effect\nof the government loan and acreage\ncontrol program on market supplies\ncaused most dealers to act cautiously, and with buying power limited\nhedging sales depressed quotations\nfurther,\nWheat closed 1-1% cents lower\ncompared with yesterday's finish,\nJuly 69-69%, September 69%-%;\ncorn was 1%-1% down, July 58%-%,\nSeptember 59%-%; oats lost %\u25a0%.\nMARKETS AT A\nGLANCE\nBy The Canadian Press\nTorohtp: Mines and Industrials\nhigher; western oils slightly lower.\nMontreal and New York: Stocks\nclosed higher.\nWinnipeg: Wheat % to % cents\nlower.\nLondon: Silver and other metals\nsteady. \u2022  4,' .   \u25a0-.,\n,  Montreal: Silver unchanged.  \u2122\nNew York: Cotton lower. '\n\u25a0New York: Canadian dollar up\n1-16 to 9!) 13-32.          VWs.. '\n \u2022 _\nWorld   Exctianqes\nNEW YORK, July 17 (AP)-Clos-\nIng rates follow (Great Britain in\ndollars, others in cents):\nGreat Britain -4.92%, 60-day bills\n4.82%; Canada, Montreal in New\nYork 99.40%; New York in Montreal 100.59%; Belgium 16.93; Czechoslovakia 3.46%; Denmark 22.00;\nFinland 2.19%; France 2.76%; Germany 40.19, benevolent 20.40, travel\n22.90; Greece .1; Hungary 19.85;\nItaly 5.26\"%; Jugoslavia 2.35; Netherlands 55.04; Norway 24.77; Poland\n18.87 Portugal 4.48%; Rumania .75;\nSweden 25.40%; Switzerland 22.90%;\nArgentina 32.87N; Brazil (free) 5.90\nN; Mexico City 20.90N; Japan 28.70;\nHong Kong'30.85; Shanghai 18.7.\nRates in spot cables unless otherwise indicated. (N)\u2014Nominal.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Jiily 18 (AP)- Bar\ngold 141s 2%d, up % penny. (Equivalent $34.81.)\nBar silver 19 5-10d, off 1-16.\nNEW YORK - Copper steady: electrolytic spot 9.78; export 980.\nTin steady; spot and nearby 43.25;\nforward 43.30; - lead steady: spot\nNew York 4.90-95; East St. Louis\n4.75.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis and\nforward' 4.75. Quick-silver 80.00-\n81.00.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Spot: copper, electrolytic 11.85; tin 45%; lead 4.65;\nantimony 15.50; per 100 pounds F.\nO. B. Montreal five ton lots.\nBar gold In London up one cent\nto $35.04 in Canadian funds; 141s\n2%d in British. The fixed $35 Washington price-amounted to $35.21 in\nCanada.\nSilver futures closed steady and\nunchanged. No sales. Bids: July 42.70,\nSeptember 41.20, December 41.20.\nEight Sales of\nTimber Recorded\nForestry Office\nEight timber sales in the territory from Fort- Steele to Grand\nForks, and from Nakusp south were\nrecorded at the Nelson office of the\nforest branch in the period July 7 to\n13.\nThey were made to:\nW. L. Shlell, Nakusp-29,000 board\nfeet ot sawlogs and 4855 lineal feet\nof cedar poles on Columbia river\nestimated revenue $155.\nN. N. Kazakoff, Grand Forks \u2014\n40,000 board feet ot sawlogs on Hardy\nmountain; estimated revenue $64.\nN. L. Shukin, Passmore\u201430 cords\nof wood near Passmore; estimated\nrevenue $19.\nH. H. Mlchels, Arrowhead-8740\nlineal feet ot cedar poles on Upper\nArrow lake; estimated revenue $179.\nIra H. Lum, Fort Steele\u201480 cords\nof wood on Wildhorse creek, estimated revenue $48.\nW. Marcolli, Burton-1980 lineal\nfeet of cedar poles, Columbia river,\nestimated revenue $40.60.\nO. Jostad, Cranbrook\u20144800 hewn\nties, on Deer creek; estimated revenue $413.\nF. Cousins, Beaverdell \u2014 523,000\nboard feet of sawlogs, near Carmi;\nestimated revenue $1218,\nTwin calves are unusual, and triplets are almost\nunheard of in the bovine world. But a cow on the\nfarm of Fred Mitchell, near Oxford, 0,, gave birth\nto three heifer calves and they're all healthy as\nyou can see. The whitest calf was born a week\nbefore the other two.\nHALIFAX, (CP) - Hog shipments by Nova Sfotian cooperative association during the first five\nmonths of 1938 totalled 1960 head\ndepartment of agriculture reports\nsaid. During the same period last\nyear shipments were 1177 head.\nPrice Trend Firm\nCoast Market\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP)-A\nfirm price trend prevailed in all\nsections during the short Saturday\nsession on Vancouver stock exchange. Trading continued to centre\nmainly in the gold division and\ntransactions totalled 47,375 shares.\nPremier was the only senior gold\nstock to register a change in price\nas the issue gained one cent at 2.18.\nActive golds which held unchanged\nwere, Island Mountain at 1.04, Kootenay Belle at 1.18 and Cariboo Gold\nQuartz at 2.50.\nIn the base metals, Pend Oreille\nwas down 3 at 2.12 and Nicola at\n3%, Reeves MacDonald at 40, B.C.\nNickel at 9% and Whitewater at 5%\nwere among the unchanged stocks.\nOils were quiet. Okalta lost 2 at\n1.48 while Calgary and Edmonton\nat 2.35 and Home at 1.15. each\neased 1. United was fractionally\nlower at 14 and remaining prices\nwere unchanged.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, July 17 (CP> -\nVancouver wheat casn prices:\nStraight Tough\nNo. 1 hard     90%      88%\nNo. 1 nor    90%      88%\nNo. 2 nor    86%      84%\nNo. 3 nor    81%      78%\nNo. 4 nor.     76%      73%\nNo: 5 wheat    64%      61%\nNo. 6 wheat     58%      55%\nFeed       51%      48%\nRelief-Arlington\nGold Production in\nJune Is 1090 Ounces\nRelief-Arlington Mines Ltd. In\nJune produced 1040 ounces of gold\nand 476 ounces of silver from 2585\ntons of ore milled, reports a coast\nbroker. The estimated operating\nprofit before taxes, depreciation\nand depletion was $10,285.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, July 17 (AP)' -\nButter quotations moved slightly\nlower on Canadian commodity exchange produce section.\nButter spot: Que. fresh (92 score)\n24%-%.\nEggs spot\u2014Ont* A-large 31A, A-\nmedium 29%A.\nButter futures-_teady, unchanged to % cent lower; July 25%-%.\nBOND8 NARROW\nNEW YORK, July 17 (AP)- A\nnumber of corporate bonds were in\ndemand at higher prices but the\nmarket generally prolonged its wait\nIn a narrow range.\nUnited States treasury loans walked more steady with top-grade corporation issues.\nThe Associated Press composite\nprice of 10 industrial bonds touched\na new 1938 top at 98.9, up .2 of a\npoint, rail and foreign averages\neased slightly.   '\nReaction to U.S. Farm Loan\nInfluences'Peg Wheal Market\nTone Strong on\nToronto Exchange\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP).-Stocki\nregistered a strong tone on Toronto\nexchange Saturday and volume for\nthe two-hour market passed the\nhalf million share mark.\nNational Steel Car advanced five\npoints or more, setting a new high\nfor the fourth time. Canadian Car\nand Foundry common also touched\na new high for the year along with\nSteel of Canada,\nMassey-Harris preferred advanced about 1%. Ford A, Imperial Oil\nand British American Oil, were\nhigher, liquor shares were barely\nfirm, papers and foods posted only\nminor changes.\nWaite-Amulet advanced steadily\nand reached 7.10 before profit-taking put it back to around 6.90. Small\ngains appeared for International\nNickel, Smelters, Noranda, and Oreille and Normetals.\nEldorado gained about 10 cents.\nGold list leaders included Chesterville and Creston. The former touched 1,62 an dthe latter 95, both up 50\nto 10 cents.\nWestern oils turned a bit soft\nand narrowing lower prices were\nand narrowly lower prices were\nboarded by Royalite, Okalta, Home,\nDavies and Anglo-Canadian. East\nCreston finned a fraction.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nShawnigan W tt P ..'  22%\nSt Lawrence Corp      6%\nSt Law Corp Pfd  .t.  16\nSouth Can Pow   12%\nSteel of Can Pfd   65%\nWestern Grocers   49%\nBANKS:\nCommerce - 183\nDominion       203%\nImperial      200\nMontreal       200\nNova Scotia   300\nRoyal  175\nToronto      235\nINDUSTRIALS!\nAlta Pac Grain  _.. 4%\nAssoc Brew of Can  15\nBathurst P _. P A  9%\nCanadian Bronze   38\nCan Bronze Pfd   101\nCan Car & Fdy Pfd  29%\nCan Celanese   .'  12\nCan Celanese Pfd _  90\nCan North Power  17%\nCan Steamship      4\nCan Steamship Pfd   15%\nCockshutt Plow _ 12\nCon Min It Smelting  60\nDominion Coal Pfd  _ . 18%\nDom Steel & Coal B  15%\nDominion Textile  -  63\nDryden Paper       7%\nFoundation C of C   13%\nGatineau Power  11\nGatineau Power Pfd  83\nGurd  Charles        6%\nHolt Renfrew  14\nHoward Smith Paper  16\nH Smith Paper Hd  95\nImperial Oil  17%\nInter  Petroleum  \t\n\u25a0Inter Nickel of Can  49%\nLake of tht Woods  15\nMcColl Frontenac   12%\nNational Brew Ltd  41%\nNational Brew Pfd  42 '\nOgilvie Flour new  29% I Walker Good & W\nPrice Bros   18% Walker Good Pfd\nWINNIPEG, July 17 (CP)-Ner-\nvousness ot traders over reaction\nto the United States farm loan and\nuncertainty regarding the new American crop acreage allotment program over-rode bullish influences on\nthe Winnipeg market this week.\nFutures prices ranged from unchanged to 2% cents lower and\nclosed Friday with July at 98, October 77%, November 76% and December 75% cents. -\nTrading was sluggish throughout\nthe week and with the exception\nof Thursday, sessions were dullest\nof the year. Action filled the closing half of Thursday's operations\nwhen wheat futures skidded nearly\nfour tents .,\nJuly wheat was the heavy ioser.\nAfter topping the dollar mark early\nin the week for the first time in\nmore than two weeks, it tumbled\nfrom $1.02 to 98 cents.\nBuyers appeared to lack confi\ndence, particularly In the export\nfield which was almost deserted.\nOverseas buyers also bought sparingly with Australia accounting for\nmost of the business, including sale\nof two cargoes of flour to the orient.\nBusiness in Canadian Wheat was\nfeatured by improved sales ol drums,\nwith Greece the best buyer. Sales ot\nthis variety were estimated at 500,-\n000 bushels. Old crop red springs\nrecorded odd sales.\nSmall sales of new crop Russian\nwheat were confirmed at about 89\ncents, approximately 20 cents below\nprice of old crop No. 1 northern.\nOverseas buyers generally appeared\ncontent to await new crops In Europe and North America.\nPit trade in course grains was dull\nand featureless most of the week.\nFlax was the only gra_in to show\nimprovement, moving 1% cents\nhigher. Prices ranged from 1% lower\nto 1% higher during the week.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nCURB:      m\nAbitibi 6 Pfd   26\nBathurst P & P B .-      3%\nBeauharnois Corp         3%\nBritish .American Oil  \"21%\nCan Marconi     1,35\nCan Vickers        8%\nCons Paper Corp        8\nFairchild Aircraft       7%\nInter Utilities A      7\nInter Utilities B  .70\nLake Sulphite    _      3%\nMacLaren P & P  13\nMcColl Frontenac Pfd   97\nMitchell Robt      14%\nRoyalite Oil .'.  43\nUnited Dist of Can  .85\n     39%\n     18%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAm Can     99%\nAm For Pow ..6%\nAm Smelt & R   49%\nAm Tel  141%\nAm Tob     79%\nAnaconda     35\nBaldwin   ,.    9%\nBait _ Ohio ....    9%\nBendix Av    17%\nBeth Steel     59%\nBorden       16%\nCan Pac      7%.\nCerro de Pasco   45%\nChrysler     68%\nCon Gas NY-   29\nC Wright Pfd ..    5%\nDupont  124%\nEast Kodak  175\nFord English .. 4%\nFord of Can .... 19%\nFreeport Texas   28%\nGen Elect    42\nGen Foods     34%\nGen Motors ....   40%\nGoodrich    18%\nGranby      6%\nG N Pfd    21%\nHowe Sound .... 47%\nHudson  Motor* __.\nLdw\nClose\n99%\n99%\n5%\n6%\n48%\n48%\n140%\n141%\n79%\n79%\n34%\n34%\n9%\n9%\n9%\n9%\n17%\n17%\n58%\n59%\n16%\n16%\n7\n7\n45\n45\n67%\n67%\n28%\n28%\n6%\n5%\n121%\n174%\n124\n175\n4%\n4%\n79%\n19%\n28%\n28%\n41%\n41%\n34%\n34%\n40%\n39%\n18%\n18%\n6\ne\n20%\n20%\n47\n47%\n8%\n8%\nHigh\nInt T __ T     10%\nKenn Copper .. 41%\nMack Truck .... 25%\nMont Ward     45%\nNash Motors ,\nN Y Central\nPack Motors\nPenn R R ....\nPhillips Pete\n10%\n18%\n5%\n21\n43%\n7%\nR C\nRem \"Band ...... 15%\nSafeway Stores 18%\nShell Union   17%\nS Cal Edison .... 24\nStan Oil of N J 55%\nTex Corp   46%\nTex Gulf Sul .. 34%\nTlmken   Roll... 46\nUnder Type .... 59\nUn Carbide ..... 80%\nUn Oil of Cal .. 22%\nUn. Aircraft  28%\nUn Pacific   80\nU S Rubber ..:... 40%.\nU S Steel  59%\nWarner B*os .... 7%\nWest Elec .......... 101%\nWest Un   31\nWoolworth     47%\nLow\nClose\n10\n10\n40%\n41\n25%.\n25%\n44\n44'\/,\n10%\n10%\n18%\n10%\n3%\n5%\n20%\n20%\n42%\n43\n7\n7%\n15\n15%\n18%\n18%\n17%\n17%\n23%\n24\n55%\n65%\n46%\n46%\n34\n34\n46\n46\n59\n09\n78%\n80%\n22\n22\n28%\n28%\n80\n80\n39%\n39%\n58%\n58%\n7%\n7%\n}00%\n30\n47%\n100%\n-i\n_>\nBid\nMINES:\nAztec             *\u00bb\nB C Nickel       -09%\nBig Missouri  34\nBluebird     0J\u00bb\nBralorne      9.43\nBridge Riv Con ....      -02%\nB R Mount        \u2014\nCariboo Gold     2.50\nDentonia           -0J%\nDunwell             -02%\nFairview Amal 08\nFederal Gold  01\nGeorge'popper       -25\nGolconda -07\nGold Belt   \u00ab\nGold Mount  01%\nGrandview          \u2014\nGrull-Wihksne    ....      .05%\nHalda Gold  03%\nHedley Mascot ....    1.05\nHedley Sterling       -\nHome   Gold          \u2014\nIndian Mines  01%\nInter Coal tt Coke      .25\nIsland Mount      104\nKoot  Belle        1.1-\nLucky Jim  02%\nM\u00abk Sic Gold  01\nMcGilllvray      20\nMinto   Gold          -03%\nNicola M tt M 03%\nNoble Five  02%\nPend   Oreille        2.12\nPilot Gold  01\nPioneer 'Gold    . .2.95\nPorter Idaho        .02%\nPremier Border ...      -01%\nPremier Gold      2.16\nQuatslno     04\nQuesnelle'  Q    09%\nRed Hawk Gold ....      \u2014\nReeves  MacD   40\nRelief Arling       .14%\nReno Gold  *2\nReward .          -03%\nRufus Argenta       .01%\nRuth   Hope    02\nSally Mines      .03\nSalmon Gold .11%\nSheep Creek  92\nSilbak Premier     1.95\nSilver   Crest          \u2014\nSunloch Mines 15\nTaylor B R  02%\nVidette Gold -     MM\nAsk\n.10\n.35\n9.30\n.04\n.04\n.05%\n.04\n.08%\n.01%\n.35\n.09\n.48\n.02%\n.10\n.06\n.04%\n1.09\n.03\n.01%\n,02\n.31\n1.08\n1.20\n.03\n.03%\n.03%\n.04\n2.20\n.02\n3.05\n.03\n.01%\n2.20\n.04%\n.10\n.05\n.45\n.18\n.03%\n.02\n.03\n.14\n.93\n2.00\n.04\n.25\n.04\n01\nBid\nWellington     02\nWesko Mines       .02%\nWhite Eagle       .01\nWhitewater   05%\nYmir Yank Girl 14\nOILS:\nA P Con  19%\nAmalgamated   01\nAnaconda        .08%\nAnglo-Canadian   ..    1.25\nBaltac             .03\nBrit Dom       .08\nBrown Corp 37\nCalgary It Edm     2.35\nAND WHILE ON VACATION\nYOU CAN GET YOUR COPY\nOF THE\nHt bou lailg Hnm\nFROM ANY OF THESE AGENTS\nCalmont\nCommonwealth   .\nCrows Nest \t\nDalhousie    \t\nDavies Pete \t\nEast Crest \t\nFirestone  Pete  .\nFoothills    \t\nFoundation Pete .\nFour Star Pete .\nFreehold Corp       .05%\n.32\n.28\n,01%\n.42\n.31\n.08\n.15\n.55\n.16\n.14\nHargal\nHighwood Sarcee .\n.18\n.13\nHome     1.15\nMadison\nMar  Jon\n.04%\n.06%\nAsk\n.02%\n.02\n.00%\n.16%\n.01%\n.04\n.09\n.37%\n2.40\n.33\n.31\n.33\n.09\n.16\n.10\n.17\n.08\n.15\n1.20\n.05\n.07%\n.16%\n.13\nMcDoug Seg  15%\nMcLeod new  16\nMercurv           .11%\nMerland     05 \u2014\nMid-West Pete        .02% -\nMill City Pete 07 .08\nModel       _      .22% -\nMonarch Roy  12._ \u2014\nNordon Corp  15 \u2014\nOkalta com      1.48 1.50\nOkalta pfd     25.00 -\nPacalta  07%\nPrairie  Roy   36 .36%\nRoyalite              43.00 -\nSouthwest Pete 40 \u2014\nSpooner           .11 .12\nUnited     .    14 -\nVanalta      05 -\nVulcan     90 \u2014\nWest Flank      10% -\nINDUSTRIALS:\nB C Elec           .... 109.50 -\nBrew & Dist        5,50 \u2014\nCapital Estates     1.95   a 2.00\nCoast Brew         1.18 \u2014\nPacific  Coyle   15\n____U)_________________i\nAINSWORTH !\nAinsworth  Hot  Springs\nHotel\nBALFOUR\nC, Holt\nBOSWELL\nR, C. Yager\nCALGARY\nHarry's   News   tt Tobacco\nStand\nCANAL FLATS\nJ. L. Roberts\nCASCADE\nH. P. Ritchie\nCASTLEGAR\nR. A. D. West\nCRANBROOK-\nBeattie-Noble Ltd.\nH. W. Laker\nJ. R. MacDonald\nScott's Cranbrook Drug \u00ab\nBook\nCRESTON\nCreston Bakery\nCurrle's Pharmacy\nPalm Confectionery\nWinter & Co.\nFERNIE\nW. A. Ingram & Son\nFIFE\nC. Maziochl\nFRUITVALE\nFraser Brothers\nM. Watson\nGRAND FORK8\nCheerl-o Shoppe\nWoodland Drug\nGREENWOOD\nAcre's Drug Store\nKASLO\nChas. W. Webster\nKIMBERLEY\nChatson's Confectionery\nCosy Nook Confectionery\nKimberley   Drug  J.  Book\nCompany\nKimberley Pharmacy\nLUMBERTON\nL. Hilton  ,\nNAKUSP\nF. H. Jordan\nNATAL\nW. J. Thompson\nNELSON\nAvenue Service Station\nBishop's Newsstand\nBush's Cigar Store\nCity Drug tt Stationery Co.\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHume Hotel\nMann, Rutherford Co.\nSavoy Hotel\nValentine's Newsstand\nWait's News Depot\n0. B. Wright, C.P.R. Depot\nNEW DENVER\nH. G. Gunn\nNEEDLES\nGeorge Craft\nR0S8LAND\nCherrington's Confectionery\nRossland Bus Depot.\nRossland    Drug   It   Book\nStore\nJ. C. Urquhart\nSALMO\nJ. F. Donaldson\nSHEEP CREEK\nSalmo-Ymir Meat Market\nSPOKANE\nS. P. Jacoy, 226 Stevens St.\nTRAIL\nArlington. Hotel\nCanadian National Institute\nfor the Blind\nCrown Point Hotel\nJ, M. Doughty\nErnie Hunt's Confectionery\nJofle's Confectionery-\nK. A. Margeson ,\nStrand Soda Fountain\nSchwanz Confectionery\nSwiss Confectionery\nTrail News Agency\nVANCOUVER\nPost Office Newsstand\nWorld Wide News Centre\nWILLOW   POINT\nWillow Point Store\nWINLAW\nJ. Winters\nWYNNDEL\nA. W. Burch\nYAHK\nS. J. McCartney\nYMIR\nJ. Daly\nS. A. Curwen\nON C. P. R. TRAINS AND KOOTENAY\nLAKE FERRY\n mmmsm\nTT\n,J1 II1M.  .\u00ab I. .  I 11   ||\nPAOI TEN\n, MSS&S&i&SSM&tSWS&SWit&SOSMtsi^^\nTODAY\nAND TUESDAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 and 8:28\ni The BIG music-splashed fun-show!\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON, B.O-MONDAY MORNING, JULY 18, 1938.\nDISPOSABLE\nDIAPERS\nDennison Baby Pads . SO*i\nJ.J.Chux   25\u00ab. and $1.25\nMann.Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPickle Crow Has\nProduction Record\nTORONTO, July 17 (CP)-Plckle\nCrow Gold Mines reported a new\nmonthly production record in June\nat $233,104, derived from milling\n9052 tons of ore averaging $25.75.\nIn the first six months of 1938\nrecovery was $1,368,979, compared\nwith' $975,955 in the first half of\n1937. During the period 55,929 tons\nof ore were treated, against 41,097\nthe year before while millheads\nwere $24.48 and $23.67.\nWANT ADS GET RE8ULTS\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Mrs. Ron Lid'\ngate of Edmonton, has been visiting\nher brother and sister-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Ray McKeJvey. She left\nThursday for Nakusp to visit her\nmother,\nMr. and Mrs. Donald Archibald\narrived home from their honeymoon last week.       . t\nMr. and Mrs. G. R. John are holidaying with the latter's parents at\nKimberley, and will visit Spokane\nbefore returning.\nA. B. Ness has returned from\nCranbrook, where he has been employed.\nMrs. Smyth of Toronto Is visiting\nher son, Rev. W. E, Smyth, recently\ninducted pastor of SL Stephens\nPresbyterian church.\nDr. Bruner is visiting Calgary\nfriends this week.\nMX. and Mrs. Armstrong bf Ver-\non, Alta., visited the, former's\nsister, Mrs. L. A. Shrigley.\nMiss Richmond of the hospital\nnursing staff is back from Cranbrook.\nMrs, Webster and Mrs. Reid of\nWinnipeg, who have been guests of\nMr. and Mrs. T. W. Bundy, have\nreturned to the Manitoba capital.\nF. Brunskill has returned duty\nat the Bank of Commerce after a\nKIMBERLEY Social...\nWORKING MEN'S CLOTHES\nto Fit Every Job\nBIB CALLS, Caribou or C.W.C., pair $2.25\nSmocks to match, each $1.95 to $2.25\nCOVERALLS. Blue or Khaki, Caribou, suit $2.95\nPainter's White O'Alls. Caribou, suit   $1.25\nCarpenter's White O'Alls. Heavy 10 oz. duck Caribou\nbrand, standard pocket), pair $2.45\nCarpenter's Khaki Leg Aprons, each $1.45\nTeamsters or Warehouse Aprons, each $1.45\nShop Caps, Sleeve Protectors, Work Cloves and\nGauntlets, Bandana Handkerchiefs.\nGODFREYS' Ltd.\n378 Baker St.        Cambridge Clothes        Phone 270\nIf you are troubled with bed bugs,\nfumigate with Smythe's\nBLACK DEATH TO BUCS\nAT SMYTHE'S\nPrescription Druggist      Phone 1\nINVESTIGATE\nALLEN   MOTOR\nTUNE-UP\nERIC'S\nPhone 75        295 Baker St.\nLeague Boxla Game\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA\nTONIGHT\nJULY 18\nNelson vs Rossland\nDoors Open at 7:30. Came at 8.: 15\nAdmission; Adults 25c, Children 10c\nReserved Seats\u201440c\nAvailable at Nelson Civic Centre\nOffice\u2014PHONE 118\n-^v-_rfl\nHli'\n#\n:'-\\  U|b\\\n\\I\n1\nm W\nyW-  Its-'\nIt\nrp\nELECTRIC\nFANS\nBreezy Comfort\nThe sun can beat down on the scorching pavements In\nvain\u2014if you have provided your home or office with\nan electric fan. This great d\u00bb\/\u00bb \u00a3h d\u00bb10 mm\ncomfort costs very little. ...  \u00abP\u00ab\u00abP\" to   **\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u00ab\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd*\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Mlss Ethel\nDiemert of Champion, Alta., Is visit!\ning her brother, Paul and her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Hugh Frame.\nMr. and Mrs. Mack Carroll of\nBrant,' Alta., are visiting Mr. and\nMrs. Hugh Frame.\nMrs.  J. '-Pickthall  has returned\nfrom the hospital.\n' Miss Cora Arbuckle of Coal Creek\nIs visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Arbuckle.\nMiss Thelma Davis and Miss Dorothy Nesbitt left Sunday for Spokane, Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle.\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Sims have\nreturned from their honeymoon.\nMiss Inga Hchdrickson is to exchange schools with a teacher from\nOntario.\nMrs. R. Smith of Moyie visited\nfriends in town Thursday, accompanied by Mrs. Nelson Smith of\nCranbrook and her two sons, Eddie\nand Eugene. Mrs. James Whitehead\nalso accompanied her and Miss\nAlice Whitehead went home to\nMoyie with them for a vacation.\nMiss Winnie Paquette left Sunday to visit her sister and brother-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. D. Oscarson, in\nLumberton.\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Ellis, who\nhave been visiting Mr. and Mrs. J.\nGlanville, returned this week to\nKamloops.   \u2022\nMrs. Henry Littler with Bobbie\nand Julia motored to Crows Nest\nfor the week-end, accompanied by\nMrs. N. Thomason.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Leask of Moyie\nspent the week-end with Mr. and\nMrs. George Graham.\nMrs. Gauthler, her two sons and\nher daughter, returned, recently\nfrom Dolard, where they visited\nher parents.\nMiss Gauthler has returned to her\nwork at the St. Eugene hospital.\nOn Tuesday evening a number of\nfriends surprised Mrs. C, F. Clark\nof the Townsite on her birthday.\nCards were played, the winners\nbeing: Mrs. M. Chambers, first; Mrs.\nR. Beck, second; Mrs, G. Graham,\nconsolation. Men's first. Mrs. J.\nKelly; second, J. Clark; consolation\nMrs. Phenuff.\nNews of the Day\nWanted Huckleberries and Bing\ncherries. McDonald Jam. Co. (2365)\nREFRIGERATION SERVICE. PH.\nW6, F. H. Smith, 351 Baker St (224)\nFOR YOUR FLOOR NEEDS 8EE\nOR PHONE H. RONMARK.   (1910)\nNo need to miss any of the news\nfrom home when you can have the\nDally News sent to your summer\naddress. (1988)\nAnother Shipment of Westlnghouse\nRefrigerators just arrived Including\nthe DeLuxe 7 foot model now on\ndisplay. Buy your Westlnghouse today and save your money for\nTomorrow.\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOU8E\n(708)\n8ome Refrigerators may save you\nmbney In one, two or even three\nways\u2014only to watte It In tome\n\"hidden extravagance.\" Play Safe,\nCome In and tee the 1938 FRIG'lO-\nAIRE which tavet you more In every w\u00aby there It to save. On display\n$124.00 up.\u2014At Hlpperson's.     (761)\n8EE JACK  HOOGERWERF\nStandard Electric\nfor\nElectrical   Contracting\nPHONE 838        611 WARD 8T.\n44 TAXI\ncon! cummins\n50c up to 5\nAny place in the city\nNew Empire Ironer at Nelson\nElectric Co. Only $39.50. Phone 260\nfor free demonstration. (2324)\nNORGE Quality at Low Cost Real\neconomy. New Model with 10 year\nguarantee, $174,50, Terms to suit.\nMcKAY A 8TRETTON\n(706)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nGARLAND -Mrs. Margaret Join,\npassed away July 15, 1938. Funeral\nservice will be held at St. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral, Nelson, B. C, on\nTuesday, July 10th, at 2 p.m., Rev.\nJ. G. Holmes officiating.'       (2389)\nNELSON-TRAIL\n4\nROUND   TRIPS   DAILY\nLeave Nelson 9:40 a.m., 1:00\np.m., 5:00 p.m., 7:30 p.m.\nLeave Trail 7:00 a.m, 1:00\np.m., 5:00 p.m., 7:30 pan.\nOne way running time:\nTWO  HOURS\nGREY\/HOUND\n(237)\nFRANK A. STUART\nThe Insurance Man\nPhone 980    577 Baker St.\nNELSON, B. C.\nvacation at Swift Current and other\npoints in Saskatchewan.\nMrs. Donald K. Archibald, a June\nbride, and Mrs. Nels Archibald of\nVancouver, her house guests, assisted Mrs, W. M. Archibald at \u00ab delightfully appointed tea at the home\nof the latter Tuesday afternoon. The\nhome was decorated with a variety\nof blooms. The tea table wu adorned with a Venetian lace tea cloth,\nand centred with mauve and white\nsweet peas and tapers. Mis. Gilbert\nSinclair poured tea, and the servlteurs were Mrs. A. J. Gilroy, Mrs.\nF. C. Rodgers and Mrs. r. V.\nStaples. Mrs. H. H. Wilks Invited\nthe ladies to the tea room. About\n30 guests werO present\nR. McKay of Blairmore, Alta., has\narrived to take one the work of\nmechanical superintendent at the\nCreston Review.\nMiss Opal LaBelle has Joined the\noffice staff at Creston Co-operative\nFruit exchange.\nMr. and Mrs. \u25a0 O. M. Samuelson\nhave returned to Kimberley after\nvisiting the former's father, A. G.\nSamuelson.\nMr. and Mrs. E. E. Cartwright are\nhome after visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nFenton Smith, Kimberley.\nMiss Margaret and Angus MacDonald of Detroit have been visiting relatives at Creston, after an\nabsence from the Kootenays of a\ndozen years.\nMr. and Mrs. Nelson L. Ball and\nfamily aVe visiting friends at Nelson.\nJoe Romano was a visitor at Nelson this week.\nMISS A. HECLUND WEDS\nH.\u00bb HEUSCHER, KIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-A pretty wedding was solemnized Thursday; July\n14, at 4 p.m. at the Presbyterian\nchurch, Cranbrook, when Annie.\nHeglund of Beaver Lodge, Peace\nRiver became .the bride of Hans\nHeuscher of Kimberley, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Heuscher. Rev. J. F.\nBell officiated.\nThe bride was lovely ln a white\nsatin gown with the Queen Anne\ncollar and yoke faced with lace. She\nwore a long cell caught into a cap\nwith a wreath ot orange blossoms\nand carried a bouquet of sweetheart roses,\nBridesmaids were Miss Betty Heuscher, sister of the groom, who wore\na sheer pink gown with white accessories and Miss Jean Smyth who\nwore pale blue sheer with white accessories. Paul Heuscher supported\nthe groom After the ceremony the\nwedding party returned to Kimberley for supper at the home of the\ngroom's parents.\nThe happy couple left by auto for\na honeymoon trip through the Banff\nWindermere area.\nOn their return they will live at\nCherry Creek.      ; .\nRENOVATE UNITED .\nCHURCH, KIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - Kimberley\nUnited church has had its floors\npainted, * its woodwork varnished\nand will be kalsomlned as soon as\nthe roof is put in; proper shape.\nSeveral men of the congregation are\ndoing the work this week.\nNatal Miners Win 6-3\nNATAL. B.C.-Behind the six hit\nSitching of T. Krall, their ace hurler,\nie Natal Miners, after allowing the\nElk Valley Senators three runs In\ntbe first Inning tightened up to play\nshutout ball for the remainder of\nthe game and came from behind to\nwin by a 8-3 score. The defeat, their\nninth to.date lh the Crow's Nest\nPass league shoved the Elk Valley\nteam further in the cellar while the\nwin for the Miners kept them ln a\ntie for first place with the Blairmore\nCanucks who won their game against\nthe Lundbreck team. The game was\nplayed recently at Natal tall park\nand was umpired by J. Josay of\nNatal.\nT. Krall pitched the entire game\nfor the Miners and strucsk out 10\nopponents while for the Elk Valley,.\nSadlish lasted six inning, being relieved by Brandies who finished'the\ngame allowing but ode run.\nBURY BURTON MeLEOD\nCRANBROOK CEMETERY\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.\u2014The funeral\nof the late Burton Hedley McLeod\nwas held Wednesday at Cranbrook.\nHe was 20 years of age and was\nsurvived by his widowed mother,\nand twO elder brothers, Reggie and\nMurray, also one sister, Betty, all\nof Kimberley, Rev. B. L. Willis\nofficiated.\nHot Weather Specialt at\nLEDINGHAM'S\nQold Cake, Lemon and Lime Cake,\nSponge Cakes. Also a dainty assortment of small cakes.\nRobinson't\nLEMON BARLEY\nCRYSTALS\nMakei the Ideal summer\ndrink\n25c per tin\nTry Jt ind be convinced\nOLDEST CLUBS MEET\nELTHAM, England (CP)-Brlt-\natn's two oldest golf clubs met here\nrecently, Royal Burgess, Edinburgh,\ndefeating Royal Blackenheath, Lon\ndon 9_ points to 8_.\nAWAY\nAttending Northwest Congress at Seattle\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\n'36 DODGE SEDAN\nHeater, Trunk, etc,\n$845.00\nAt KLINE'S CITY SERVICE\nJack McDowell    Howard Thurman\nBathing\nSTJITS and\nTRUNKS\nThe water's fine\u2014so are\nour bathing suits. All the\nnew styles and materials.\nWisp-o-Wool by Jantzen,\nLastex by Catalina and\nwools by Harvey Woods\n\u2014Figure fitting fabrics\nthat assure a trim athletic\nappearance.\nTRUNKS\n$1.95, $2.95 to $4.95\nBATHING SUITS\n$2.25 ta $3.25\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nBraid on accessories la predicted\ntor fall wear, including gloves, bags,\nshoes, neckwear and blouses,  >\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0-\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n| HOT WEATHER  |\n| MEALS AT THE  |\n|Star tale |\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 6SS     610 Kootenay St\nPHONE 25\nPreicriptiont\nAccurately\nCompounded\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Arts Bloek\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needs In plumb\nIng repairs, alteration., and\nInstallations.\nPh. S1S        S0t VICTORIA St\nCOSTS ONLY 12\u00ab. 13\nTESTED and APPROVED by\nGOOD HOUSEKEEPING\nINSTITUTE\nConducted by Good Housekeeping  Magazine\nWhat you might expect  \u2022\nThis big COOLERATOR with ample storage space,\nroom for everything\nYes, Coolerator is a big refrigerator for little money ...\neconomical to buy, economical to own. Often it costs Only\none-third as much as other refrigerators ot comparable\nsize, yet lacking Coolerator's all-Important advance ...\nair conditioning. Ice has always been the ideal refrigerant... now Coolerator USES ICE IN AN ENTIRELY\nNEW WAY to bring its unique qualities into full play.\nFoods stay fresher in Coolerator, covered dishes are not\nnecessary. Less drying out of foods, less exchange of odors\nis the happy experience of all Coolerator owners. Investigate today this MODERN way of preserving foods.\nPatented Air Conditioning Chamber\nGivei the Four Essentials of Refrigeration\n1, Constant Cold 3, Balanced Humidity\nto check bacteria growth   to reduce drying out\n2, One Way Circulation     4, Washed Air\nto minimize exchanging    to remove most food\nof flavers odors and gases\nCoolerator, Air Conditioned Refrigerator\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFER\nPHONE 106\nEstablished 1918\n613 Ward Street\nTODAY and TUESDAY\nMATINEE EACH DAY AT 2:00 P.M.\nEvening Shows at 7:00 and 9:00  \u2014  Prices- Evenings, 40c, 25c.   \u2014   Matinees, 30c, 15<\nCIVIC\nKNOWING THAT PEOPLE DEMAND\nTHE BEST LUBRICATION \u2014 WE OFFER YOU THE\nSHELL CERTIFIED\nSYSTEM\nWE HAVE THE MOST UP TO DATE\nEQUIPMENT AVAILABLE, INCLUDING THE ONLY\nINTERNAL MOTOR CLEANER\nAVAILABLE IN THIS DISTRICT\nIT COSTS NO MORE - WHY TAKE LESS\nTransfer Co.. Ltd.\nGENERAL MOTORS AGENCY\nCHEVROLET \u2014 OLDSMOBILE\n35      -   PHONES   -      36\n\u25a0    a  ll.lrl.b_Mki_,_,l_,llr.-\u201e\u25a0-.,,       \u25a0  i-ii\"-. ^  ,,llf.-'-^-^-.:--^------^^.d-^--^.. . ,\t\nmMmm\nT\n_ -\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_1938_07_18","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\/1.0414533","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":"1938-07-18 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":"1938-07-18 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":""}]}