{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-24","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1932-07-16","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0405221\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Burke Wins Grand Aggregate\nSecond Time at Bisley\n\u2014Page Seven\n..LIME II\nLt Q-ri   ' *(_\" v NKW8, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 -ATU-DAY MORMNO,\n  '        '\u25a0\nFlying Feet of Pearson _5r\/n_.\nHope to Canada, Olympics\n\u2014Page Seven\nI1VE CENTS A COPY\nREVIVE SCHEftw OF PATHOLOGICAL\nSHUKIN DENIES\nMIGRATION OF\nDOUKHOBORS\nColonization   Manager\nStates .Verigin Willing\nto Leave\nSAYS HE ASSURES\nGENERAL LEAVING\nOttawa States No Application Made on Behalf, Verigin\n\u2022ASKATOON, tatt., July 15\u2014\nPeter P. Verigin li willing to leave\nran aria for Mexico and take the\nwhole Doukhobor community of\nInlTfmai Brotherhood with him\nto settle In that country If he I*\nreleased on parole by the federal\ngoverrnnejt.\nThis  statement  was  made   this\nafternoon    by    John    MacDourall,\nfeneral manager of the American\nColonization company, of New Jersey,   which   controls   500,000   acres\nln  Mexico.  Mr.  MacDougall   Interviewed   Verigin   In   Prince   Albert\nJail Monday and Tuesday and said\nhe received assurance ot the Doukhobor leader to this effect.\nDenial   that   there   might   be   i\ngeneral    migration    of    Doukhobors\nfrom   Canada   to   Mexico,   however,\nwa*   made   this   morning   by   J.  P.\nBhukln,   first  vice-president   of   t.\"\u00ab\nChristian   Community   of   Universal\nBrotherhood,   Ltd.,   who   arrived   ln\nSaskatoon from prince Albert, where\nhe  haa  been   In  consultation   with\nthe Doukhobor leader,\n\"Ths question has never been discussed.\"   he   said,   \"and   representation*   made   by  certain   lawyers   are\nabsolutely   without   foundation.\"\nNOT    REPRESENTING\nVERIGIN\nfihukln denied that Philip Ney,\nWinnipeg, or Ben Foster. Canora.\nwere representing the Doukhobor\nleader. \"They are not representing\nMr. Verigin ln any manner,\" he\nstated, \"'and are not authorized  to\nPreliminary Payment\nDemand of Annuities\nSaid Reason of. Failure\nLONDON, July 15 (AP)\u2014A British demand for payment of the\nland annuities d Hauled June 30\nM a preliminary to arbitration by\na joint committee was reported\ntonight to have caused the failure\nof the conference between Premier\nRamsay MacDontld and President\nEamon   de   Valera.        t\nIt wu understood the two were\nagreed on a Joint committee to\nexamine the questions of the\nland annuities with the exception\ntha; Mr. MarDonnld pointed out\nnero-tln J ins regarding the future\ncould not afreet the \u00a31,500,000 payment defaulted at the end of\nJune, while Mr. de Valera Insisted\nthe payment should be embraced\nln  the   proposed   negotiations..\nWilliam Norton, Irish !_a*or leader who arranged the meet*ng. said\nthere seemed to be no loophole\nthrough whloh negotiations could\nbe resumed. He declared the Labor\nparty would continue to support\nMr. de Valera.\nFORESTS FOR\nRANGER SLAYER\nMany Volunteers Join Police as Reedouble Ef-\n.  forts in Man-Hunt\nWIFE OF MANITOBA\nRANGER MAY LIVE\n(CONTINUED  ON   PAOE   TWO)\nRETURNS INDICATE\nGOVERNMENT GAIN,\nMANITOBA YOUNG\nBracken Haa Majority of 595\nSeven Polls to Come; McPherson Leading\nWINNIPEG, July 15 (CP)\u2014A gain\nof two seats ln the Manitoba legislature for Premier John Bracken's Liberal-Progressive government Is Indicated ln returns from deferred elections ln the northern ridings of The\nPaa and Rupert's Land held yesterday. The party representation ln the\nhouse as the result of the deferred\nelections ls now: Government 38,\nConservative 10, Labor 5, and Independent  a.\nWith only seven polls unreported from Tho Pas, Premier Bracken's\nown seat, he had a majority of 895,\nJand his reelection Is assured. In\nRupert's Land, although returns\nwere far from complete, Hon. Ewen\nMcPherson. provincial treasurer, was\ncomfortably ahead of two other can>\ndidates with o majority of 80 votes\n\u25a0for four out of 15 polls reported.\nThe standing ln The Pas was;\nPremier Bracken, 1731: N. S. McDonald, Independent Labor party, 1057;\np. Maulson, Independent Conservative,  161.\nThe four polls reported from Rupert's Land gave McPhers*ri 178; H,\nO. Beresford, second Government\ncandidate, 47; Captain N. Evana^\nAtklnwn, independent, 49. These\nresults are believed Indicative of tbe\nvoting throughout the riding and\nthe provincial treasurer's election\nIs considered certain.\nHowling windstorms ln the north\ncountry delayed the gathering of\nreturns last night for several hours,\nWind which whipped across the\ncountry at 50 miles an hour at\ntimes, Interrupted telegraph and tele\n' phone service between the northern\nridings and the southern end of\nthe  province.\nPOOLEY TO BE\nASKED  RULING\nSLOT MACHINES\nNotebook Is Missing, Cabin Searched; Strengthen\nTheory of Crime\nBOSSBl'RN. Man., July 15   (CP>.\n\u2014More   than   160   Royal   Canadian\nMutinied    pollce    and    volunteers\ncontinued  c o m b t n g  the  forests\nnorth of here  tonight  ln   one  of\nthe  greatest  man-hunts  In  Manitoba's history, redoubling their efforts to capture the two men who\nshot    and    killed    Lawrence    Lees,\nRiding    Mountain    National    park\nranger,   and   seriously  Injured   his\nwife  ln  a  night  attack  at  their\ncabin,  14  miles  from  here.\nMrs. Myrtle Lees, 24-year-old wife\nof the ranger, ls ln Shoal Lake hospital with a bullet wound through\none side of her neck and lower Jaw.\nHer condition was reported improved\nthis   evening   and   some   hope   was\nheld for her recovery.\nZealous performance of his duty\nls believed by police to have led\nto the shooting of Lees. Since taking over his work as park ranger\nand warden three years ago, he has\nvigorously prosecuted trappers and\nhuntera who have Invaded the park\nlimits.\nFAIL TO FIND NOTEBOOK\nThis theory was strengthened today when polico failed to find the\nnotebook he was known to carry. It\nwas from this notebook that he\nmade up his diary covering each\nday's activities. Tlie diary was found\nentered up to July 13. It also ls\nknown that on last Wednesday Lees\nwas on a tour gathering evidence\nagainst poachers, police believe that\nIf the notebook can be found It\nmay provide a valuable clue to the\nIdentity of the killers,t\nThere ls also some evidence that\nthe killer, or killers, searched the\nranger's cabin after the shooting.\nAn airplane, brought here to aid\nln the search, made several flights\nover the heavily-timbered park area\ntoday.\nThe Inquest has been adjourned\nuntil July 21.\nMICHAEL MANSON\nBURIED.JANA1M0\nSeveral Members of Legislature Attend Last\nTribute\nVANCOUVER, July \\6\u2014Attorney-\nGeneral R. H. Pooley will be asked\ntor a ruling on the city's power to\ncontrol slot mechlnes, the bosrd\nof police commissioners decided thla\nafternoon.\nCtty Solicitor J. B. wllllama ln a\nletter satd that a slot machine, according to supreme court of Canada,\nwas a legal machine and there could\nonly be prosecution In the case of\nan Illegal transaction. \"I am not\nsatiified with that,\" declared Aid.\nW. C. Atherton. 'The city would be\nfilled with the machines and we\nwould actually have to catch people\ngambling.'-\nChief of Pollw C. E. Edgett remarked that lt would mean a heavy\nburden on police, anil make It nec-\n\u00abwary to employ stool pigeons to\nwatcb  operations of  the  machines.\nNANAIMO, B. C-. July 15 (CP)\nWhile pioneers with bowed heads\npaid tribute, the funeral of Michael\nManson, M.L.A. for MacKenzle, was\nheld here today, Mr. Manson sue\ncumhed suddenly at Bella Coola\nMonday.\nServices were conducted ln Bt.\nAndrew's First church and at the\ngraveside by Rev. W. P. Bunt. Hymns\nsung were \"Lead Kindly Light\" and\n\"Abide With Me,\" while a duet, \"The\nChristian's Good-night.\" was sung\nby Evan Jones ahd Mrs. L. Jones.\nHon. W. Atkinson, minister of agriculture, represented the British\nColumbia government. Several other\nmembers of the provincial legislature   also   attended.\npall-bearers were Senator A. X.\nPlanta, A. Teit. J. Wilson, M. Robertson, T. O'Connell and J. M. Rudd.\nV, S. RIVER AND HARBOR\nALLOTMENTS   FOR    EXPENDITURE\nWASHINGTON, July 15.\u2014 Allotments for expenditures of \u202242.313,392\non Improvement of rivers and har\nbora were made this afternoon by\nSecretary of War Patrick K. Turley\nThey Included: Por Columbia river\nat mouth, Oregon and Washington.\n1700,000; Itt Columbia and Lower\nWillamette below Vancouver, Wash.,\nand Portland, Ore., \u00bb535,0OO.\nBENNETT WUL\nLIKELY PRESIDE\nEMPIRE  MEET\nDelegates on Empress\nState Inviting Government Head Presides\nHAS BEEN CUSTOM\nIMPERIAL   MEETS\nState Also Probable Ca.\nnadian Be Appointed\nGeneral Secretary\nCapture Alleged Slayers\n1\n.;\ni\nPR\n^3\nfSBL\nth\n\u2022\nfttf   \u25a0**\n.\u00bbv____l\n\u25a0_____\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nH\nm\n1\n1\n______\n\u2014\". JS\n88. EMPRESS OF BRITAIN, at\nBea, July 13 (By wireless from\nGeorge Hambleton, C P staff\nwriter)\u2014Prime Minister R. B. Bennett of Canada ls expected to preside over the Imperial economic\nconference  at   Ottawa.\nThe rhalrman ot such a gathering of course can not be appointed until after the conference\n11 self Is formally opened and ts\nunder way. But It Is customary for\nthe head of the Inviting government In such a case to preside.\nThis ls the course thst has always\nbeen followed ln Imperial conferences at London.\nMembers of the delegations that\nare now travelling to Ottawa on\nboard this lln.r, from Britain, South\nAfrica, India, Northern Ireland and\nthe Irish Free State, expressed the\nbelief that Mr. Bennett would become chairman, In the course of ln-\nf or val conversations.\nIt Is pointed out Mr. Bennett has\nbeen regarded by the governments\nof the empire throughout the long\npreliminary negotiations as a sort of\nacting chairman and there ls no\nreason to believe that Ottawa will\nbe any exception to the historic Imperial conference policy of having\nthe head of the chief attending member of the inviting government\nas the chairman.\nIt ls also bribable a Canadian\nwill be appointed general secretary\nto the conference. ,\nWILD   CHASE   CAt'SKS   SUICIDE\nThe Saskatchewan man-hunt for the alleged murderers of Corporal\nLeonard V. Ralls of the Royal Canadian Mounted police came to an end\nwhen, with Mike and William Kurulak already pollce prisoners, William\nMiller, at the end of a day's lone flight from justice during which he fired\nIneffectively at his pursuers a down times, turned hla rifle on himself\nand died. The above picture shows the bullet-riddled bandit car found\ntwo miles south of Llntlaw, after the gang made thetr get-away on foot.\nS. A. Anderson, one of the civilians in the posse, is Indicating with his\nrlfie tbe three bullet holes on the side of the car. Bullets also smashed\nthe windshield, headlight, and the rear glass. They were apparently fired\nby Corporal Ralls. Inside the back of the car can be seen one of the\nseveral cans of gasoline and stolen store loot. Corporal Ralls, 44 years old,\nof the Royal Canadian Mounted police, met death when he tried to stop a\nspeeding automobile near Poam Lake. The occoupants of the car, alleged\nto have been the two Kurulaks and Miller, fired on the officer as their\nautomobile  swept   by.\nHITLER STARTS\nHIS CAMPAIGN\nFOR ELECTIONS\nHonor,   Liberty,   and   Bread\nWill Be Pillars of New\nState, He Says\nBERLIN, July 15 (CP).\u2014Adolf\nHitler started his whirlwind campaign for the relchstag elections\nJuly 31 by declaring In a speech\nat Tilsit tonight the pillars of the\nnew state he would erect In Germany would be honor, liberty and\nbread.  There  were  loud  cheers.\nVirtually the entire 40,000 Inhabitants of historic Tilsit heard the\nNazi chieftain speak. He asserted the\nday of reckoning ln Oerman politics\nwas at hand.\nMeanwhile here In Berlin one of\nhis relchstag followers, Hermann doe-\nring, told an election meeting at\nthe Sportpalast the Nazi battlefront\nwas equally against the Catholic\nchurch and Marxism. Both, he satd,\nled   to   Bolshevism.\nThe Centrist (Catholic) party telegraphed to Prealdent von Hlnden-\nburg demanding protection against\nwhat were termed continued Insults\nto the Catholic religion by Nazis.\nThe constitutional rights and liberties of the church were being menaced,  the   telegram   said.\nSENATE APPROVES\nINVESTIGATION OF\nWATERWAY TREATY\nWASHINGTON, July 15\u2014The United States senate approved an Investigation by its foreign relations\ncommittee of the St. Lawrence waterway treaty between Canada and tte\nUnited  States.\nWithout a record vote, lt passed a\nresolution by Chairman Borah, Republican, Idaho, authorizing an Inquiry Into the treaty by a sub-committee of the foreign relations committee, -^Ith power to hold hearings\nduring  th* summer.\nBorah's plan ls to have most of\nthe preliminary committee work needed on a treaty done when that\npaper, still to be signed, Is presented for ratification. Thla will expedite ratification.\nBorah was careful to point out to\nnewspapermen that the inquiry\nwould not be \"based  on suspicion.\"\nPILOT IS FOUND\nAFTER WANDERING\nFOODLESS, 17 DAYS\nMEXICO CITY, July 11 (AP)\u2014\nClarence MrEIroy, Medaryvllle, Ind.,\nairplane pilot, was found txlay\nafter he had wandered for 17 days\nwithout food through dense tropical Jungles ln the state of Oaxaca.\nwhere  his  ptame  crashed  June 27.\nIlls partner In the fllp;.t, Roy\nflordon, president of Tegucigalpa,\nHonduras, was killed. Neither Gordon's body nor the wreckage of\nthe plave was found by the res-\nrue party.\nPremier Henry Drives Last\nSpike in Railroad, Opening\nMoosonee to Rest of World\n\u2014$\nHOOVER RULES\nHIMSELF $15,000\nCUT IN SALARY\nWASHINGTON, July 15 (API\u2014\npresident Hoover today ruled himself a 91 ft,<H>0 a year reduction In\nsalary, and simultaneously reduced\nthe salaries of his cabinet officers\nby IS per cent.\nPOLICE SEEK MAN\nWHO INQUIRED THE\nWAY TO REYNOLDS\nWUTSTON. SALEM, N. C, July 15\n\u2014An unidentified man who asked\ndirections for reaching the Reynolds'\nheme a few hours before the fatal\nshooting of Smith Reynolds, 30-\nyear-old heir to millions and husband of Llbby Holman, Ota actress,\nwaa sought today by Sheriff Trans-\nout Scott.\nPursuing Ms Investigation ln an\neffort to determine how the youngest son of R. J. Reynolds, the lace\ntobacco king, met death July 6, the\nsheriff sail he had obtained \"new\nevidence\" slnco adjournment of the\ncoroner's Judy. A verdict of death\nby a gunthot would inflicted by a\nperson or persons unknown was returned  after  tne  Inquest,\nU.S. RELIEF BILL\nPUSHED TO LAST\nSTEP, COMPLETION\nWASHINGTON, July 15.\u2014By pushing the relief bill to within one step\nof completion, the United States\ncongress tonight virtually had cleared\nthe decks for final adjournment\naome   time   late   tomorrow.\nThe relief bill, assured of President Hoover's signature despite presence In lt of a clause requiring\npublicity on all loans to be made\nby the Reconstruction Corporation,\neven to banks, lacked only final\napproval   of   the   senate.\nCabinet Minister, Fur-\nTrader, Indians See\nSpike Driven\nMOOSONEE, Ont., July 15 (By\nCarl Thornlng, Canadlsn Presi correspondent). \u2014 Cabinet ministers,\nfur-traders and Indians met at\n(his, Onltirfo's new seaport, Inda.v,\nwhen Premier (.eorge 8. Henry\ndrove home the Inst spike In the\nTemlskamlng snd Northern Ontario\nrailway line to James Bny. It was\na golden \"Pike, snggesf Ing the vast\nmineral wealth now open to Canadian enterprise, and the premier\nswung his mallet forcefully and\ntrue, like the men who built (he\nrailway to Up the riches of the\nnorth.\nNot since the daring Captain\nJames arrived here ln his English\nship, 300 years ago today, havc the\nInhabitants of these shores witnessed\na stranger sight than the ceremonies\nopening the port of Moosonee to the\noutside world. It began when a special train steamed into the town,\nbearing three white chiefs, leaders\nof three different governments of\nprovincial history. They were Chief\nJustice P. R. Lntchford, E. C. Drury.\nand Premier Henry, all of whom had\nplayed an Important part in build-\nin? the T. & N. O.\nTIKNIM.    OF   FIRST   SOO\nWondering eyes of more than BOO\nIndians, half the Inhabitants of the\nJamea Bay area, looked on as Chief\nJustice Latchford drove the first of\nthe three spikes. It symbolized the\nturning of the first sod for the\nT. & N. O., which he performed\nnear North Bay on May 10. 1902,\nwhen he was commissioner for public works ln the government of Hon.\nO.  W.  Ross.\nHe was followed by P. C. Drury,\nformer U.P.O. premier, who turned\ntho first sod of the James Bay extension   at   Cochrane   In   1921.\nTlie last spike sank beneath the\nblows of Premier Henry, under whose\naegis the line has been completed.\nAfter centuries of Isolation, depending on dogBled. canoe and supply-\nship, the trappers and prospectors\nof James Bay have been linked by\nsteel   to   the   outside  would.\nJUDGE LAMPMAN SUGGESTS A\nSINGLE GOVERNING BODY FOR\nU. B. C. IN REPORT TO BOARD\nMakes No Definite Recommendations; Senate\nToo Large Now\nVANCOIVER, B.C., July II\u2014The\nboard of governors of the University ot British Columbia at a special   meeting   tonight  adopted  the\nreport of Judge Peter S. lampman\non his recent enquiry Into 'troubles'\nat the university. No definite recommendations are made tn the report but it suggests that there be\nonly   one   governing   body  rrther\nthan two, board of governors and\nsenate,   as   at   present.   Copies   will\noe sent to the minister of education,    members   of    the   university\nsenate and the Alumni association.\n\"I am not  moved  to this conclu-\n3ion by  reason of any  action taken\nby senate with  which  I am not in\naccord but by reason of my opinion\u2014\n\"1,  That   one   governing   body   ls\n>\nPREMIERS\nTO REACH AN a\nIRISH SOLUTION\nsufficient and Is better than two governing   bodies.\n\"2. That with more than one governing body there is additional room\nfor friction and\n\"3. That as at present constituted\nthe senate Is by far *\u00b0o largo a body\nH *\"' 36 people meeting as seldom and\nfor such short times as the senate\nmeets can be expected to properly\ndiscuss and consider the business\nthat cornea before them, I am unable\nto understand. Generally speaking, lt\nmust be directed and dominated by\nvery few and If this were not the\ncase it would have to remain In ses-\nion for days at a time. It ls probably better that a few should dominate\nbut if they do, why have all the\nothers?\"\nJudge Lampman was appointed by\nthe board of governors to make an\nenquiry Into university affairs ln May\nafter some members ot senate and\nthe   Alumni   association   had   voicPd\nFAIL Do\nThree-Hour Meet Leaves\nEach Party Holding\nSame Ground\nDAIL EIREANN\nPASSES BILL\nMeasure Goes to Senate\nMonday; Cannot\nDeadlock It\nctors Offer Idea\ns to Appointment\nof Health  Officer\nSuggest  City   Council  and   School   Board  Name\nPathologist for Vacant Office and\nHelp Launch the Laboratory\nCLAIM IT COULD BE STARTED WITH THE\nFUNDS ALREADY PROVIDED BY NELSON\nDrs.\nAuld and Gusson Appear Before Board\nWill Later Appear Before Council; Mayor\nMorgan Asks Joint Action\nand\nLONDON, July 15 (CP and AP\ncable).\u2014\"Neither party was able to\nd'part from the position taken up\nIn published despatches.\"\nThese words of an official com-\nmunlque spelled the failure of\nJTlme Minister Ramsay MacOonald\nand President Eamon de Valera of\nthe Free State to reach, In their\nrortferciiPe here tonight any formula for settling the Anglo-Irish\ndispute and averting economic warfare.\nThe conference, dramatically announced ln the early hours of today\nfollowing intervention of William\nNorton, Irish Labor leader, lasted for\nthree hours. No progress was made\ntowards breaking the deadlock over\nthp composition ot a tribunal to ar.\nintra to the land annuities dispute.\nTomorrow President Eamon de Valera returns to the Pree State less\nthan 24 hours after his arrival' here,\nwhile Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald flies to his Scottish home at\nLossiemouth.\nTRIBCNAL NO NEARER\nPresentation by William Norton of\na plan for a four-member tribunal,\nmembers evenly divided between\nBritish and Pree State appointees, on\nhis arrival in London to arrange the\nconference between the leaders, led\nto expression, of optimism both here\nand in Dublin regarding a settlement. The outcome revealed clearly\nthat thts was no nearer.\n\u2022President Eamon ds Valera arrived\nin London this evening, having accepted by telephone the Invitation oi\ntiie British prime minister, extended\nthrough Mr. Nor_on. He was greeted\nat the station in London by two factions\u2014one shouting \"up de Valera\"\nand the other \"down wltn da Valera,\"\nMr. de Valera proceeded Immediately to No. 10 Downing street, the\ntorled official residence of British\nprime ministers. He was closeted with\nPrime Minister MacDonald for a time,\nLater Lord Sankey lord high chancellor, and Sir Thomas Insklp, attorney-general, were called. Sir Thomas had welcomed Mr. de Valera to\nLondon.\n\"Conversation was begun between\nPrime Minister MacDonald and Mr.\nde Valera and continued with the lord\nchancellor and the attorney-general\npresent \" said a communique UHHU\nwhci; ihe meeting had concluded\nthree hours lat:r, \"Thc situation between tho two countries was considered, but neither party was \u25a0____!\nto depart from the position taken up\nin published despatched.\"'\nPresident  de   Valera   was   accom-\nMORE THAN SCORE    i\nDIE   AS   U. S.   IS\nHIT BY THE HEAT\n.CHICAGO, July 15\u2014Tho first\nrea] scorcher of 1932s summer tods;' sent th* mercury near or\nabove t ht 100-degree mark over\nmost of the sweltering United\nStates. More than a score of persons dropped dead as hot winds\nswept down the sun-baked southwest.   _\nKansas   and   other   plains   states\nreported   loo-plus   temperatures.\nFRENCH ADD VOICE\nTO CORRECT IDEA,\nUNITED DEBT FRONT\nDeclare That Restrictions on\nBritain to Deal Would Be\nAbsurd\n(CONTINUED  ON   PAGE   TWO)\nPARIS, July 15 (CP and AP cable*\n\u2014The Prench government today\n' Joined the British government in\nemphasizing that the new Franco-\nBritish accord cannot in any way\nbe construed aa Indicating attempts\nto form a united European front\ntoward the United States on the\nquestion of war debt revision.\nThe government declared any assertion that Great Britain, under the\nterms of the Franco-British consultative pact, would be restricted In\ndealing with British debts to the\nUnited States, was \"palpably _jj-\nsurd.\"\nSuch a statement\u2014that Great Britain could not settle her American\ndebts without consulting France\u2014\nwas attributed to Premier Herriot\non Wednesday by the Havas 'French >\nnews agency, and at the time was\nconsidered  semi-official.\nThe Havas news agency informed\nthe Associated Press tonight that jt\nhad made no correction of Its report\nof M. Herriot's assertions concerning\nthe Franco-British accord, mid it\ne:.pcctcd   to   make   none.\nLORD IRWIN IS TO\nBE PRESIDENT OF\nEDUCATION BOARD\nBOY DROWNS AS\nRAFT IS  SWEPT\nOUT INTO LAKE\nLONDON,   July   15   (C   P   cab!e>-\nLord Irwin, former viceroy of India,\nhas been appointed president of the\nboard of education in the British\ncabinet in succession to t.e lati Sir\nDonald   MacLean.\nLord Irwin is a Conservative, walle\nthe late Sir Donald was a Nation.-!-\nLiberal. Lord Irwin Is personally\nextremely popular and recognized as\none of the foremost statesmen o'\nGr.at Britain but his appointment\nwill lead to some Liberal dissatisfaction.\nAs a member of the htnue of\nlords, Lord Irwin naturally will tot\nneed to seek a seat ln the commons\non his appointment which was officially  announced  tonight.\nThere are now ia Conservatives\nIn the cabinet, four National Laborites   and   four   National   Liberals.\nMATLOCK.   Man.,   July    13\u2014Swept\nout   Into   the   d ep   waters   of   Lake\nWinnipeg when the raft he w-as paying on was caught ln a strong wlnd.j\nJa.nes Reld, 13. was drowned at _*4\\\nbeach  here   today.\nThree Deaths in\nDoukhobor Ranks\nof the Imprisoned\n(CONTINUED   ON  FACE  TWO)\nTHE   WEATHER\nTemperatures:                 Min. Mux.\nNELSON   43 70\nVictoria     51 53\nVancouver     54 64\nKamloops   58 68\nEstevan    Point      50 54\nPrince  Rupert   48 66\nAtlln     48 56\nDawson,   T.   T  50 72\nSeattle      58 70\nPortland.   Ore  60 76\nSan   Francisco   _.  54 73\nSpokane      _.  56 82\nPrince Oeorge   42 64\nLos Angeles   80 80\nPenticton      65\nVernon     51\nGrand Porks  _  50 74\nKaslo   45 87\nCalgary      46 74\nEdmonton    __ 44 74\nSwift Current   48 78\nPrince Albert   56 76\nQu'Appelle      53 78\nWinnipeg     68 84\nNanaimo  54 59\nForecast for Nelson and vicinity\u2014\nPartly cloudy and moderately warm,\nwith   showers.\nVANCOUVER, B- C. July 15 (CPi.\n\u2014Three deaths are reported in the\nranks of the Doukhobors ln the cus-\ntcdy or care of the British Columbia   government.\nTwelve-months-old Andrew Baba-\n'koff and 3-months-old Bill Postnlkoff\nidled ln the infants' hospital. Their\nmothers were granted leave from\nCa_;alla Jail to hold their children\nin their arms during t elr illness,\nJohn Rozenkln, aged 85, died in\nGeneral hospital. The aged man was\ntaken 111 shortly after entering\nOakalla.\nDIE TO\nN.mUAL   CAISES\nVANCOUVER, E- C, July 15.\u2014\nDeath through natural causes was\nthe verdict of a coroner's jury which\ninquired into the demise of John\nRozenkln, aged 85, one of the group\nof Doukhobors sentenced to three\nyears\" imprisonment in Oakalla prison\nfarm for parading In the nude at\nThrums. The aged man was taken\n111 shortly after entering and was\nremoved to General hospital, where\nhe  died   several  days   later.\nMysterious Exlosion\nRocks State Capitol\nFROVIDENCK. R. L. July IV-A\nTnyMeriotiR explosion in the slate\ncapiiol this afternoon rexerbrated\nthrough the marhle xtriirture, caviling a near panic among scores of\nslate employees aud earing holes\nln the celling on the north side\nof the building, lt wit believed the\nexplosion resulted from a short\ncircuit in the electric, wiring over\nthe, third floor.\nBy filling !H* vacant post of medical officer of health for the city of\nNelson and for the Nelson achool\nboard with a qualified pathologist,\nNMson's governing bodies, coordi-\nnatinsr their efforts with thone of\nK:o'j fiay Laka Oeneral hospftal and\nor the provincial department of\nhealth, may bring Into existence In\nthe Inrnediate future the long projected Kootrnay pathological laboratory.\nA proposal that the school board\nand the city council. In making\n'. eir choice of a medical officer for\ntheir respective bodies to succeed\nthe late Dr, E. C. Arthur, should\nmak_ tt on these lines, was outlined\nto the school board Friday night\nby Dr. P. M. Auld and Dr. J. P.\nGussin, representing the Kootenay\nMedical association, and will similarly be placed before the city council Monday night at Its regular\nsession.\nMONET    AVAILABLE\nTO   START\nWith the \u00bb1350 voted by th* city\ncouncil of 1931 at the beginning of\niti year, om, I80O set aside by Kokanee chapter, I. O. D. K., toward\nthe proposed \u00bb2500 to be provided\nby the interested communities, out\nof a final W000, of which the government was expected to provide\nhalf, lt wai stated by the doctors\nj thai tiie laboratory oould be Initiated in the Immediate future, balance\nof Ue equipment being procured\npradually, until the laboratory was\nfully standard. It woifd be housed\nIn the basement of the Isolation\nhospital, which was offered by tha\nhospital board for Its aceo-mmoda-\ntlon, and would necessarily be administered as a department of th\u00ab\nhospital.\nWhile from the first tha pathological laboratory would Justify Ua\nexistence by the service lt would\ngive, and would earn considerable\nrevenue by private work, in addition\nto the public work for wfclch the\nprovincial department of health,\nwould be Immediately wlf-supporting, though he said It was the\nMstory of such institutions that\nthey tOOWtOt became so. The apportionment of maintenance cc-st\namone ttv font Interested bodies, he\nsaid, would bc a matter to be worked out.\nnOMtOS   PART\nChairman John Notman, Tru*N\u00bb*\nDr. John Gansner, and other dim*\nbtt* ol thc board pointed out that\nIf the scheme was cirrled out, the\nschool board would really have mth-\nIntf whatever to do with the pathological laboratory, either as to maintenance or mannxen.ent. and that\nita part of the sheine would be to\npay a 5hm of the total salary of\nthe director, proportioned to the\nshare of Ms s?nlc;s tktt It required.\nThe board actually is figuring on.\nhaving a fuil-tl:re school Burn.\nand VIS require but a little of '.he\nmedical  officer's   time.\nKa.Mo city council, and s;me ct'.rr\nKootenay municipal bodies, voted\nvarious sums toward the Ir.ltai\nequipment,  a   year  or   two   370.\nThe doctors put the proposal before '.he b:ard In general terms cn'.y\nimttlt.ni that the occasion of securing a Joint med.c&I offtc;r tm\nthe city and the board, as was understood to be contemplated, could\nbe utilized to t.e advantage of t:ie\ncity and the Ko_>*ena:,-, and Mkt-E_g\nthat the rcpre.scntatlrns made should\nbe consid-rcd.\nMAVOR MOMAM\nA PULJ.C.ATE\nMayor J. P. Morgan appeared before the board as a delegation fro^n\nthe city council, and a-ked permission of the board to advertise in Us\nname for a medical heal:h officer,\nwhile advertising for one for the\ncity.\nBy formal vote, the board gave\nthis permission, and alio accepted\ntlie invitation of t e city council to\nmeet in Joint sc\u00ablon with It when\ndealing with tlie applications that\nwould   be   received.\nReception for thc\nDelegates   Worked\nOut in Every Detail\nOTTAWA. July 13 (CP.\u2014Preparations for the reception of delegations to the Imperial economic\nconference have been worked out to\nthe smallest detail, Tlie officials and\ncommittees, which for weeks have\nbeen working out the arrangements,\nexpressed confidence tonight the big\norganization would function perfectly\nln looking after the comforts and\nconvenience of the visitors. The machinery for the conference Itself\nhas also been built \\ip with great\ncare and many adjustments. It ls\nexpected to move along with precision   and   coordination.\n \u2014a     TIIE  NELM-f  I1\\IIY  MW   .  Mr. ON,  B.  C.  \u2014  S.T__D_T  MORMNC,  _t_l   18.   113?\nNelson, B. C, Hotels and Cafes\n422 VERNON STREFT\nDinner\n75c\nTHONE 787\nLuncheon\n50c\nHume Hotel\nNELSON,  B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHUME\u2014J. McDougll. Vernon; Mr.\nnd Mrs. Lewis McLewis. Wenatchee;\nJ. M. S. Talc. J. V. Smith, E. C.\na William. M. J. SproiUIe. J En-\ntwlbtle, Vancouver; L A. Bay and\nMtt. Lethbridge; George M*:lnna_.,\nWynndel; H. V. Dawson, Kelowna;\nW. H. Baxendale, Trail;   R.  Q. Mux-\nworthy, A. Anderson. Medicine Hat;\nA. H. Cuthbert, Winnipeg; R. T.\nTiffin, Cranbrook; Mr. and Mrs,\nEarl Howell. Princeton; Mr. and\nMrs. C. F. Bun-as and son. Waco\nFer&z; Mr. and Mrs. G, C. Shapter,\nCalgary; W. L. Matthews, Toronto;\nO.   W.  Humphrey,  South Slocan.\n' f^iS-^Jl Zi_ \u25a0 ^\u00a3_?J__5_?^T^____iL _3.\n, Where (lie Gueit Is King\nKELSON'S NEWEST AND FINEST HOTEL\nMANY   HOOMS   WITH   PRIVATE\nBATHS OR  SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n12<   BAKER  ST.\n.. l\u201el il.\nSAVOY\u2014 Abraham HarMey. England; .. E. Talbot, Salmo; Mr. and\nMrs. V. M. Coop*., Cr-.tnn; Mr. ttlvl\nMrs. W. )____, Troup; Jurors II. Law,\nN.kusp; Mr. and Mrs. J. Ellis. Mlss'Evans, Edmonton.\nC. Ellis. Miss r. Ellis, John W. Jack\nson, Calgary; r. Ft. Harding, Toronto;\nMr. nnd Mrs. J. H. Wnlk.r, Trail.\nMlss ll. Hall, Grand Forks; Thomas\nCook,   Vancouver;   Mr.  and   Mrs.   L.\nNew Grand Hotel\nV.  I.  hU'AK,   prop.\nWeekly or Monthly Bates. angle,  50 cents and  up.\nHot and Cold  Water.\nPHONE Wl\nDouble,   $1.50  and  up.'\nI\\   O.   BOX   1061\nBOARD APPROVES\nCHANGING BASIS\nOF TWIN HIGHS\nRogers   Father  of   Plan\nDrop Commercial at\nSenior High\nto\nADD EXTRA YEAR FOR\nJUNIOR NOX-ACADEMIC\nTransfer Star Pupils to Senior High After VIII\nto Save Year\nNEW GRAND\u2014W. C. Mulrhead. R.] gon    City;    O.   Rlnghetm,    Creston;\nStemosheck,   G.   Gurley,   G.   C.   Nor-   John    Kllyluk,    Klmbflley;    D.    Mc-\nstrom, Vancouver; E. F. Smith, David   Alltster, Nelson.\nMunro, Trail;   Richard Murray, ore-j\nWith only Trustee G. A- Brown\ndissenting, the school board Friday\nnight expressed approval of \u2022 plan\nsubmitted by Principal L. V. Rogers\nof the senior high school, for eliminating the duplication of commercial worlc at the Junior and senior\nhigh ichools. adding an advanced\nclasa to the Junior high school, and\ntransferring Junior high achool pupils of special ability to the senior\nhigh school at an earlier stage so\nas to permit them to get through\nthe high school grades In three\nyears, In the same resolution the\nboard decided to submit the plan\nto the department of education for\nits approval, and to furnish Principal H. McArthur. of the Junior high\nschool, who ls now taking a summer course at BrltlEh Columbia university, with a copy of Principal\nRogers' communication.\nwnv drown  dissents\nTrustee Brown's dissent was on\nthe ground that Principal McArthur\nhad made an outstanding success of\nthe junior high achool. and ehould\nbe heard on the plan, as much as\nanyone else,  beforo  It was  adopted.\nChairman John Notman stated\nPrincipal Rogers had been present\nwhen Principal Rogers made his\nproposals verbally, and had had the\nopportunity then  to irtve his views.\nTo this. Trustee Brown replied\nthat principal McArthur had had no\nknowledge of the proposals until\nconfronted with them nt the meeting, and had been ln a position\nonlv  to  dive   his  first   impressions.\nThe recollection of principal Rogers, and of members of the board.\nwas thBt principal McArthur had\nseemed to be favorably Impressed\nwith thc Idea of extending the\nJunior high school work by an\/extra\nyear of technical and academic for\nthose not proponing to continue\nwith the senior high school, but\nhad seemed less enthusiastic on thr\nproposal to hand over to the senior\nhigh school after grade VIII. the\npupils Of special ability.\nTHREE   PROPOSALS\nprincipal Rogers' proposals were\nthree  ln  number,  aa  follows:\n1. That the commercial course be\ndiscontinued at the senior high\nschool, except that during the school\nyear 1932-33 pupils promoted to\nthird   year   commercial   should   be\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA. LAPOINTE, Prop.\nHot snd cold water In every room\nSteam   Heated\n60S   Baiter   St. Phone   90\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St. rhone 6S7L\nII. UASSICK\nFifty Rooms of Solid Comfort.\nHeadquarters   for  Logteu\naud Miners.\n^_\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\W_\\^_\\^_\\Wmmmmmmmmmm*aty   WALTER   MARTIN\nBEATS RAINVILLE\nTO UPSET DOPE\nNunng Proves Too Strong for\nYouthful Opponent in\nToronto Tennis\nTORONTO. July 15 (CP).\u2014Two of\nCanada's outstanding racquet welders clash here tomorrow, Gilwrt\nNunns._ Toronto, and Waiter Martin. To'ronto and R<>gina, meeting to\ndecide the eastern Canada singles\ntennii title. The pair, both of whom\nwere membera of Canada\"! Davis\ncup squad this yiar, eliminated\nstrong Montreal opponents to _nter\nthe final iuge.\nMen's alng.es provided the high\nspot* today, with Martin upsetting\nthe dope In startling fashion when\nhe whipped Marcel Rainville, diminutive Davla cupper. In straight sets.\nOff to a slow start, the wiry Mont-\nrealer dropped the first set to Martin, 8-2. Trailing ln the second, 3-2,\nhe made a gallant comeback to\nbring gumes to S-all, and had game\nadvantage until Martin broke through\nhis service to lead !0-9. Martin took\nno chances here, and with the help\nof service aces won the game and\naet,  11-9.\nBig and strapping, Martin appeared badly tired at the start of\nthe thisl set, but quickly recovered\nand ran it out to 0-2. It was his\nfirst w.n over Rainville ln the live\ntimes  they  have   met.\nNunns, who is defending the title.\nwas much too steady for hie youthful opponent, Roland Longtln, and\nnever gave him a chance to take\nthe lead.\nWIN IN' doubles\nAlthough defeated ln singles play,\nRalnvllle and Longtln were more\nfortunate in men's doubles, winning\ntheir semi-final match from Dr. A,\nJ. Ham and Brian Dnherty, Toronto.\nAfter losing the first set 0-8. the\nMontrealers pulled themselves together to capture three in a row, 7-8,\n0-2, 7-B.\nNunns and Martin had lese trouble in their semi-final match with\nJohn Procter and J. Grant McLean,\nToronto, winning In straight sets,\n6-8, 0-3, 8-0.\nUsing an effective chop stroke to\nadvantage, Mlss Marjorle Leemlng.\nVictoria, easily defeated Mrs- O. E\nOray, Toronto, 0-3, 0-1, to enter the\nwomen's Angles final, where she win\nmeet Mlss Beasymons. Toronto, who\ndefeated Mrs. K. Salmond, Toronto.\nMlse Leemlng partnered with her\nsister, Mrs. Salmond, and won a\nstraight-set victory over Mlsa Symons and Mlss Jean Burritt, Toronto,\n7-5, 0-3. They will play in the women's doubles final tomorrow against\nMiss Olive Wade and her sister, Mrs.\nGray.\nEX-KAISER'S SON  REVIEWS FASCIST  TROOPS  IN  PROTEST RALLY\nPrince August Wilhelm, son of the former kaiser, given the Tascist\nsalute as he reviews National Socialist drill units and students In a huge\ndemonstration ngainft the Versailles peace treaty on the anniversary of\nthe signing of the pact.   The demonstration was held In Berlin's famous\nLustgiuteii.\nMORE ABOUT\nIRISH\n(CONTINIKU   FROM.   PACE   ONE)\npanled to London only by a secretary.\nMr. Norton has a conversation with\na British government spokesman early\nln the day and then met Dc Valera\nat  the   Crewe railroad   terminal   and\n             . _    ______ the two conversed while ln the train\ngiven  the   opportunity   to   complete I proceeding to Loudon,\nthe course. COMMUNICATE   WITH\n2.   That an advanced class be or- I MINISTERS\nPRUSOFF WINS\nWAY TO FINALS\nVICTORIA TENNIS\nSome   of   Finest   Tennis   in\nYears   Witnessed,   B.C.\nLawn Title Play\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E.  MA Hll N\nCompl   fly   K.tno_.!l._\nHot  and  fold   ...till lho HUM of tlie tltj\nL. D. CAFE\nThe PilUtt in the City\nOPEN ALL HOURS\nFresh Food\u2014 Delicious Chop ?uey\nprompt   Sen ice\n%Ot*     EoUIltiilil\nROOM!   TO   KENT\nStirling Hotel\nBlocks East of Post Office\nHot and Cold Water\nSteam Heat\nModerate Rates\nP. H. Bush, Prop.\nThe Royal Cafe\nCLASSIC  RESTAURANT\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevail\nOPEN DAV AND NIGHT\nSpecial  Dinner,  11:30 to 8  p.m.  S3i\nSpecial   Sunday   Chicken   Dinner   5Uc\nspecializing in Chop Suey and Noodles\nrilO.NE 183\nTRAIL, li. C, HOTELS\nArlington\nHotel\nCentrally\nLocated\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. P. I.EVC_Ql't, fro..\nnOUGLAC\nMAW HOTEL   *m\nP.OOMS and BATH\nE.  I_   and   A. \u201eRO-.A__:,  I'rop.\nBtrom   HMtrd Hot and Cold\nlhr.u.liout Water\nBox __36 rhone 263\nTRAIL, B. C.\nganlzed at the Junior high school, 1\/\nwhich commercial technical and academic subjects shall be taught .to\npupils who have elected to discontinue academic work or who have\nshown that they cannot successfully undertake academic work, to\ninclude pupils who have Jailed ln\nJune, 1932.\n3. That pupils who have shown\nability at the Junior high school to\nundertake academic work, be promoted to the senior high school at\nthe end of grade VIII.\nTHE   BENEFITS\nPrincipal Rogers, in sum marking\nthe proposed changes, eet forth that\nevery pupil enrolling at the Junior\nhigh would have the same opportunity as at present of completing\nan academic course, with the added\nadvantage of saving one year if able\nor desirous of doing ao, and of taking regular high school subjects In\none Institution. Others, not wishing\nor able to undertake academic work,\nwould be given a chance to attend\nfor another year at the Junior high\nand derive the benefit of Use of the\nequipment for training in technical\nwork. Those definitely deciding to\nundertake commercial work after\nleaving school could either take the\nregular academic course at the senior\nhigh, or the special course at the\njunior high, and for final preparation for office work could attend a\nregular buslnesa college.\nHe figured a net saving to the\nstate of 13000 to $4000 directly annually In the salaries of two teachers,\nand of \u00bb80OO indirectly, the latter\nbeing 1200 for each of 30 pupils\nwho would save  a year.\nMembers of the board commented\nthat the changes appeared to be ln\nthe interest of the pupils, and that\nthe board would be on saf_ ground\nln   moving   in   that   direction.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nVAN( Ol 'VER, B.C.\nNorfolk Hotel\nMODERN and NEWLY\nRENOVATED\nRates: $1 Daily and up,\n$4 Weekly and up.\nIlous.ke.pinfr Rooms and\nSuites.\n)__.   lo   Orph.nm   Tll-at.r\n8.6 r.ramlll. Bt. rhone 8.) 6._9-0\nHOTEL HUDSON\n.73 UYMOI It .1.\nRE-OPENED WITH NEW\nMODERN FURNITURE.\nFIREPROOF\nREASONABLE   RATES\nGERMANY ALL BUT\nCLENCHES CHANCE\nFOR DAVIS FINALS\nRead The Nelson   Daily\nNews Classified Ads.\nDufferin Hotel\nVANCOUVER, B.  C.\nBright   H'inms   \u2014   Central.\nModerate   Rates.\nA.   Patterson,   lair   of   Cnleman,\nt row's  Nest, Proprietor\n!)<K>   Seymour  It Scj.  4*3\nROME, July 15  (AP>\u2014Gen-pany al]\nbut   clinched    the   right   today\nface  thc  Unlied  States  team  In  the\nchallenge    round    for    the    historic\nDavis   cup   in    Paris   next   weekend\nWith the losa of but one set,\nDiqlel Prenn and Oottfrlrd von\nGramm swept to two easy victories\nover Italy In ti* opening singles\npiny of tho European zone final\nleaving the Italians with the aU\nbut Impossible task cf winning the\ndoubles tomorrow snd the final pair\nol singles Sunday to take the aeries,\nKidney Troubles\ncause poisons to accumulate In the system and bring on persistent Backache,\nLumbago, Rheumatism, or Sciatica\nTake Gin Pills to restore the kidneys It\na healthy condition and eliminate tbe\npoison from your system.\nPROCTER, B. C.\nOUTLET\nTourist Hotel\nPROCTER, n. C.\n1 ully   Licensed\nIfnme  Conked   Meals  at  all  hours\nTourist    <\u00abhln\u00ab,    fv.ril s    for    mit,\ngood  fishing,  riroccrv store In\nromi. . tion.\"\nW.   A.   U Mth.   prop\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nColumbus 5, Kansas City %,\nINDIANS   (,ET   THO   VIARS\nEACH   IOK STEALING   CALF\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, July\n15 (CP).\u2014Johnny Thompson and\nFred Weallrk, Indians, were this afternoon convicted 'In county court\nof the theft of a calf from John\nVcBrkie. June 8, at l>ro^he, end\nvert Benlcncrd hy Judzr- p. W.\nHovay    to    two   j.nra   cn.l.    m    th-2\nIn the meantime, by special wireless\ntelephone with thc liner Empress of'\nBritain travelling to Canada, London\ncabinet mitJaters communicatee, witn\nthose British ministers on board tht-\nstealer who r.re members of the cabinet's Irish sub-commit tee.\nIt waa all to no avail. The deadlock remains. The Free State has defaulted the half-yearly payment of\nland annuities, which nmouut to \u00a33.-\n000,000 In a year; the British government's duties on Irish Free State\ngoods went into effect today in an effort to recoup the defaulted sums;\nthe Irish dall rushrd through all\nstages a measure cmpov.crinE President Eamon do Vr.lera's government\no Imp-isc duties at their own discretion.\nDAim PASSLS BILL\nDUBLIN, July 15 (CP cabe)\u2014The\ndall elreann tonleht had apssed\nthrough all stages the measure winch\nempowers the Republican government\nto Impose duties of any amount, giving thc government a we.ipon of retaliation for the Bnltsh duties on\nFree State goods that went into effect\ntoday. The measure goes to the senate\nMonday; bein? a nuncy bill it cannot be blocked.\nWith the failure or the conference\nbetween Prime Minister MacDonald\nand President Eamon de Valera in\nLondon tonight, there waa every expectation the government -would Utilize the powers conferred by the bill\nto Impose duties on British goods\nnext   week.\nThe final government ma.lortty ln\nthe dail was 11, tho vote being 6R\nto   57.\nTangible evidence of the economic\nws-fare that is setting in were not\nhard to seek. For the first time* within living memory not a single head\nof cattle was offered for sale at the\nSt. Swithin'fl fair ft Oarrlck-on-\nShannon. The BrltlF.. duties on Irish\nimports were reflect^ in the cattle\nmarkets  throughout   the  Free  Stale.\nl\\WRE~ABOUT\nU. B. C. REPORT\nVICTORIA, July 15 (CP) Borne of\nthe finest tennis witnessed here ln\nyears was displayed at the \u25a0yvinown\nclub today as tho finals of the British Columbia lawn tennla championships   were  reached.\nIn the men's tingles, Henry Prusoff, hard-hitting Seattle ace, and\nJohn Murio, San Francisco Hawaiian\nstar, won their way to the last\nbrackets, while Mary Campbell, Victoria see nnd former tltleholder, and\nGracyn Wheeler, Santa Monica,\nreached the finals ln the women's\nsingles. In all singles matches played\ntoday, three sets were required to\ndecide the winners. The men'a final\nwill start tomorrow at 1:30 o'clock\nand the women's at a  o'clock.\nThe men's doubles will be an all\nAmerican affair, with Murio and Sl-\nmurs. San Francisco, opposing Prusoff, Seattle, and Bay Casey, San\nFrancisco.\nMra. B. B. Wilson and Mlss Mary\nCampbell will meet the winners of\nthe Miss Swartz and Miss Wheeler\nMlss Miller and Miss Helen\nCampbell match for women's doubles\ntitles.\nThc mixed doubles wtll find Miss\nThco Smith, Pasadena, and Williams,\nVancouver, opposing the winner of\nthe Mrs. WilBon and Radford vs\nMlss Swartz and Ray Casey, San\nFrancisco, match, which was halted\nby darkness tonight after each had\nwon one set.\n((ONTINHH   KROJH   PAW!   OMI)\ncriticism   of   the   ndinlnlsiration  ol\nPresident L. S. Kllnck.\nHe held sessions for three weeks at\nthc university.\n\"The root of thf trouble lies In the\nfeeling of the faculties of arU and\napplied science\" the report sUteg,\n\"that the faculty of agriculture lias\nbeen nourished while they have bee;\nallowed to struggle as best thry could\nand In my opinion there is much to\nindicn'-e thftt this Icellng is justlllcd\nNOT WISE TO,\nKill, TIM;  (iOOSi:\n\"The faculty ol arts is very much\nmore nearly self-suppozling than la\ntho faculty of agriculture and while\nI am not a believer ln a policy of using the fees of students only in the\nmaintenance of those studies they arc\ntaking, still that aspect of the matter\nshould have considerable attention-\nIt Is not wi.\u00b0e to kill the goose that\nlays the golden egg.\"\nThe good work accomplishes by the\nfaculty of agriculture la perhaps not\nas generally understood as lt should\nbe, Judge Lampman  found.\n\"I would like to see a greater proportion of the agriculture gradual\nengaged ln actual farming,\" he add-;\nhowever. \"There are not many of\nUiern fnrmlng and this occupation\nshould not bc left almost entirely t\nthose student* who take only thc\nshort courses.''\nMORE ABOUT\nDOUKHOBORS\n(CONTIM'En   FBOM   PARE   ONI!)\nCONNECTION WITH\nBESSBOROUGH VISIT\nDelegation   Will   Meet   Vice-\nRegal Tarty at Station;\nCeremony at Cenotaph\nfiOOSS OFT&N PULL\n.$#07$ ThatMkm 7%e _,\n&OBPV e)ONBS        ^,^,_\ns*~i. sAm^tttyNMtm j\nBy AL DEMAREE\n\"Hundreds of dub golfers make\nhots every day that would make the\nstsr performer turn green with envy,\"\n\u25a0aid Bobby Jones the other day.\n\"I remember playing In Atlanta\nseveral years ago, when two of the\nfoursome who had great difficulty\nbreaking a 'hundred.' made to marvelous shots Both of the men were\nplaying the same make e~nd color of\nball. They both drove perfect shot*\nover a hill to a blind hole. When we\narrlvej on the green, one ball was\nIn the cup and Wi other three feet\nfrom It. As both were playing the\nsame brand of bail and both were new\nball with no cuts or dtscoloratlons,\nneither one knows to thla day who\nmade the 'hole in one\/\n\"I remember another peculiar ahot,\nA member of our foursome drove hit\nbaj on the club house roof at the\n18th hole. Not undaunted he found\na ladder, playe^ his shot off thi roof\nand almost sank It. laying lt etoqe\ndead to the cup.\"\nPARTY TO TAKE IN\nTHE FAIR EXHIBITS\nmake any statement relative to the\nDoukhobor leader or the affairs of\nthe   Community.\n\"Peter O. Makaroff ls legal adviser to our leader,\" said Mr. flhuklu,\n\"and no statement his been made of\nany plana either to s-.ek a parole\nor in connection with migration to\nMexico.\"\nATTEMPT' TO\nPREJUDICE\nMr. Shukln said no meeting of\nDoukhobors had been held at which\nthe question of migration to Mexico\nhad been discussed, and the state-\nnents in the press would appear as\n\"an attempt to prejudice the position of ths Community in  Canada.\"\nException was also taken to the\npress dispatches which Intimated\nthe achool situation ln Mexico was\nan added inducement to the Doukhobor leader to migrate. He pointed\nout that Mr. Verigin had always\nencouraged his followers to take ad'\nvantage to tie limit of the educational facilities provided ln Canada,\nand had built numerous schools for\nthe education of Doukhobor children.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nlhe following column of social\ni\\\u00a3\\:s and happenings tn Kosslund\nIs conducted by Mrs, Bessie B. Ferguson. Phone Mrs. Fer,\" son at her\nhome ln Kossland and giver her details of events or In rest to tills\ncolumn.\nRO&SLAND, B. C. July 15.\u2014\nRossland and Trail lodges of L. O, h.\nfind L. O- B. A. enjoyed a delightful picnic at Pnterssn Tuesday,\ncelebrating the glorious twelfth. Bae-\n9 t lunches were \"pooled\" and' tho\ncompany sat down as oue big family.\nGames races and other sports made\nthe time puss all too rapidly for\nthe youngsters of the party. In the\nevening the lodges entertained with\na dance In the Knlghta of Pythias\nhall, wh-.re a fairly large number\not  people attended.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nMlss Grace  Newman,  who  teaches\nat the Indian school near Alberni\nIs spending the month of July with\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. John\nNewman, Seventh avenue. Mlss N.w-\nman returned home via Seattle,\nfiyinc from the sound city to\nSpokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. E. Thompson and sons have\nleft   for   the   coast.\nEncounters Continue\nDespite   Reports   of\nPeace at Itatiayan\ni\nRIO DE JANEIRO. July 15 (AP..\u2014\nDespite reports that peace between\nProvisional President Getullo Vargas\naud rebels ln his native state of\nSao Paulo was about to be effected,\ndespatches from the south today\ntold of an engagement at Itatiayan\nIn which four rebels were wounded.\nThis was the first actual military\ncontact between the loyal federal\ntroops of the president and the\nrebels, and further reports during\nthe day indicated federal planes had\nbombed the rebel pos|t(\u00abns i_! north-\ncm   5^0   Paulo. t%\nNO  APPLICATION\nRECEIVED\nOTTAWA July IS\u2014No application\nfor clemency has been rece'lved on\nbehalf of Peter Verigin Doukhobor\nleader it was officially stated tonight. If a request ls formally received It will be considered tn the\n\"usual  course.\"   tt wsa  added.\nThe view In official circles it was\nintimated ls that any application for\nthe *arly freedom of Verigin on\ncondition that he and his followers\nleave Canada for Mexico, would have\nto be supported by prima facie evidence that they would be accepted\nln Mexico before the request would\nbe fully considered. This \"ciearcut\"\nevldencs of acceptance In Mexlo\nwould likely be asked so as to guarantee against the Doukhobors being\npressed back Into C\\nada, lt was\nIntimated.\nAbout two ffNta ago, the supreme\ncourt of Canada refused an application of Verigin for leaving to appeal\nagainst a conviction In the Saskatchewan courts In May last for perjury, The length of 'he sentence was\n18 months in Prince Albert penitentiary.\nMISS DAUPHINEE\nHEADS BUSINESS\nWOMEN'S CLUB\nNew Officers Ar\u00ab Elected at\nThird Convention at\nCoast\nVANCOUVER, P. C-. July 15 (CP).\n\u2014Mlss A. J. Dauphlnee of Vancouver was elected Dominion- president of the Canadian Federation of\nBusiness and Professional Women's\nClubs at the third session of the\nconvention of the organisation in\nsession here today. Mlss Dauphlnee\nIs past president of the Vancouver\nclub and convener of the present\nconvention. Other officers are as\nfollows: Honorary president, Mlss\nDorothy Heneker; past president,\nfirst vice-president, Miss Hazel Taylor, .Montreal; second vice-president,\n(a newly established office), Miss\nMary Mount, Ontario; secretary-treasurer, Mlss Mary E. Thornton of\nWinnipeg, who has held office since\nformation  of  the  club.\nProvincial vice-presidents, by appointment, are aB follows: Quebec\nMiss Gertrude M. Sparrow, Montreal;\nOntario. Miss Olive Matthews, Kitchener; Manitoba, Miss Hilda Hesaon,\nWinnipeg; Saskatchewan, Mlss Edna\nShultis; Alberta, Mlss Cora Robertson, Calgary; and British Columbia,\nMiss Jessie  Murray,  Vancouver.\nThe Invitation of the Hamilton\nclub to hold the 1933 convention ln\nthat ctty was accepted by the federation. The business of the day Included several minor changes In\nthe constitution. There will henceforth be two vice-presidents Instead\nof one as -formerly. Arrangements\nwere made for pro rata payment\nof fees by clubs entering the federation aftei the beginning of the club\nyear. Candidates receiving the highest number of votes In office elections will be duly declared elected,\ninstead of the former 51 per cent.\nA new office, known \u2022 aa archivist,\nwas created, and the position accepted by Mlss Btodgill of Winnipeg. Her duties will include the filing and Indexing of all publications\nrelating to . the federation tn the\npresa or from other sources.\nA round table discussion on public\nrelations was introduced by Miss\nHazel M. Taylor of Montreal. Shs\noutlined club purposes, and was followed by Mlss Pansy Pue of CMgary,\nwhose subject was \"participation In\npublic Affairs,\" Mlss Olive Snider of\nVictoria spoke on \"Unemployed\nWomen.\"\nRepresentative Citizens With\nBand and  Honor Guard\nMeet Party at Station\nAt a public meeting in the city\nhall rrldsy night, called to make arrangements for the visit of the Earl\nand Countess of Bcssborough an 1\nparty to this city on September IG, '\nlt Vij decided that this year's re- *\nceptlon would differ from that ot\nother reo'ptions tendered to prevlou .\nvice-regal parties ln as much a I\nthat this year no elaborate aidres.\nto the visitors will be prepared. Instead this year Mayor J, P. Morgan\nwiy offer a brief welcome to tha\nBessborougha and their party at\nthe cenotaph on Vernon street where\nthe official welcome will be tendere.i.\nDue to the fact that the party will\nonly make a two-hour stay here it\nwaa thought It would b-s best to OXtt\nthe program short so as to 'allow\nthe party ample time to look over\nt.-.e city.\nThe gathering of representative\ncitizens and membera of the city\ncouncil including Mayor J. P. Morgan, Alderman J. B. Gray, H. B.\nLindsay. R. W. Dawson and City\nCler.. W. E. Waseon, and members of\nsev ral other organizations, mappe i\nout a rough plan which ts to be\nfilled out and corrected In committee meetings before July 30 when a\ncopy of the program will be sent to\ngovernor-general's  secretary.\nThe   cenotaph   on   Vernon   street\nwas   unanimously    chosen,   as    tho |\nplace  where  the  weloom?  and presentation!   would   be   made   to   ttt\ntouring  party.\nAlthough the program baa not\nbeen definitely settled y*t, the gen- '\neral plan ls to escort the party from )\nthe ocnotaph to the fair exhibits\nwhere each exhibit wllj be explained.\nIt was suggests that local industrial firms make special exhibits of\nthe work at the fair this year ao an\nto enable the reception committee\ntcv explain \"verythlng under one roof\nbut this plan has not been definitely settled, although undoubtedly the\npetty will be shown through the fair\nbuildings which will be the skating\nrink this year.\nTne motion of Mrs. N. Murphy\nthat the public ' notified that\nanyone who knew . j of the party\npersonally get in touch with the\ncommltt.e in charge waa heartily\napproved.\nA definite program will be released\nsoon as to the parts to be taken ta\nthe ceremony by the Girl Oulde*.\nand their younger auxiliary organizations aa well aa the Boy Scouts and\nCubs, war veterans and other organizations.\nBesides the Earl and Countess cf\nBessborough, the vlce-regaj party,\nwho will arrive here at 3 o'clock on\nSept. 16 and leave at 5 o'clock the\nsame afternoon, will he composed\nof A. P. LMMUm, M. V. O., M. C,\nsecretary to ths governor-general;\nMaJ>- Eric D. Mackenzie, D. 3. O.,\ncomptroller of the household; the\nHon. Mrs. Gordon Ives, secretary to\nher excellency; Lieut. D. H. Puller,\nR. N., aide-de-camp; Captain R.\nStuart French, aide-de-camp; Captain sir John Child Bart, aide-de-\ncamp; Lord Duncannon, his excellency's son; and Robin Baring, his\nexcellency's  nephew.\nAlderman J. B. Gray acted as\nchairman of the meeting while W.\nE.  Wwion  acted  \u00ab secr-tacy.\nTba suggestion that several citizens whg have won medals for\nvarious feats of honor be decorated\nby the governor-general will be\nlooked Into and will likely be Included   tn   the  program.\nHUTTON DENIES\nANGELUS TEMPLE\nIS TO BE SOLD\nL06 ANGELES, July 15\u2014Repeated\nvisits of other evangelists to thc\nLike Elslnore home of Almee Semple\nMcPherson Hutton where she ls recovering from a severe Illness have\nno significance with rumors ttiat\nAngeles Temple ts for sale, Devld L.\nHutton said today In denying any\ndeal had been started with Paul\nCader, an evangelist.\n\"Only last Thursday Rader's representatives were told that und*r no\ncircumstance* would Mrs. McPherson\nsell her church,\" Hutton said as he\nInformed Angeles Temple followers\nthat the Los Angeles evangelist\nwas improving.\nOTTAWA. July 1^\u2014Hon. R. J.\nManion, minister of railways and\ncanals, will meet the Irish Pre* State\ndelrg-nion to the Imperial conference\nwhen It arrives In Montreal on the\nS. 8. Laurentlc. Hon, C. H. Cahan,\nsecretary of state, Hon. Alfred Duranleau, minister of marine, and Hon.\nMurray MaeLaren, minister of pensions, will meet t;-e delejjatrs arriving on the Empress of Britain.\n\"Behaviour\" Clinic\nOpened at Coast\nVANCOUVER. July 15\u2014To carry\nout preventative work with regard\nto children's mental ailments, th\"\nprovincial government's \"behavior\"\nclinic was opened today. Dr. A. Increase and Ml_ts J. Kllburn, superintendent, and social service worker,\nrespectively, at Essondale mental\nhoepltal, ars In charge of the establishment, wlilch ls located ln Hornby street. The Institution will admit\ncsaes  one  day  each  week.\nNATIONAL GUARD PATROL\nROl'TB   INSURGENTS\nMANAGUA, Nicaragua, July 15\u2014\n(AP)\u2014A national guard patrol en^\ngaged in a battle wtth a band of\ninsurgents In northern Nicaragua\ntoday. The insurgents, well armed,\nw;re routed, leaving 12 dead.\nSUMMER  COMPLAINT\nCAUSES MANY DEATHS\nAMONG INFANTS\nThousands of mothers throughout\nCanada  have   used\nv_\u00a7__y_?\nD'.rowiFR_\nSafe Speedy Relief\njjjjf RHEUMATISM\nP-b Mope Rllle. com.,\nquickly ., rheum-tic poi__\nil removed by _gj\nT-R-c'\u00ab sm\nttt and $1 at all druggists\nduring the past 80 years tt has been\non the market, and their child's life\nno doubt saved by its timely use.\nPrice. 50c. a bottle at all druggists\nor dealers; put, up only by The T.\nMilburn. Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.\nFKUM   MUNlKUAL-tiUEUEC\nMontcalm \u2122     July 3d\nDuchess of Bedford   ,   Aug   o\nEmpress   of   Britain    \u201e\u201e.___   Aug    O\nDueliesB of Vork   \u00ab    Aug IM\nDuchess of Richmond  .   Aug l!i\nEmpress of Britain      Aug -u\nEmpress of Australia _.\u201e   Aug -'<\nMontcalm    _..,..     Aug Sfl\nDuchess   of   Athol   ..\u201e..._....._.    Aug W\nMmitrosg     \u201e..._    sppt\nDuchess of Bedford ............   \u00bbept   _!\nEmpress of Brltan      Sept   :i\nDuchess of Vork     !\u00abept    !\u00bb\nMontclare  \u201e    Rept lu\nEmpress of Auilnilta     Sept  It\nDuchpss of Richmond     Sept IH\nEmpren. or Britain     Sept  I.\nDuchess  of   Athol      Kept n\nMontrose      Sept.   99\nEmpr*,yj   of   Britain        Oct    i\nDuchess of Bedford       Sept. ;.<>\nFull details with rates and pnssporL\ninformation from anv agent or wrlto\nJ.  H.   CARTI-R\nT>MH.-.   n*-*.-.,;*   Unit.  \\p|<on.Rf.\n CRESTON COUNCIL\nGIVES A DONATION\nTO THEFALL FAIR\nT**il!   Impro\\e    Approach   to\nCws-ton From Highway\nto Port Hill\nTKSTQN. B. C, July IR.\u2014At the\n-finflar monthly meeting of thc\n(Ullage council, held on Monday.\nJuly II, t report vu piesenteri\nshowing that tax collection., were\nhping well maintained. The sum\nof WrtTl-M haa been collects up\nto June 30 this year, out of t total\ntax levy of 13430 28 Thia compare.\nWith 92 397.17 collected out of a\n\u20228,881.03 levy laat year. Taxes unpaid   July   1   Bre  subject   to  penalty.\nAn application for a donation to\nthe Creston fall fair ret-ulted In a\ngrant of t&O toward* that objective,\nIn addition to which the counc;:\ngrant* the uae of the community\nhall free of charge.       , *\u2022\nWednesday, July 27, was declared\na full public holiday In Creston, by\nway of encouraging attendance at\nthe  Boswell  regatta on that date.\nCommissioner Jackson presented\na detailed report regarding hla attendance at the Union of B. C.\nMunicipalities convention at Nelaon.\nChairman McFarland was author-\nired to incur such expenditures as\nmight be necessary to improve the\napproach to Creston from the highway to Port Hill. Thia work will\nrequire  aome  grading.\nCurrent accounts totalling 1275.95\nwere passed and ordered paid.\nEAST KOOTENAY\nOLD TIMER DIES\nAT INVERMERE\nTNVEIIMERE, B. C, July 15\u2014Robert Jackson, age 80, old it mer of\nLake Wir.derm._-e district, passed\naway lut vock at the district\nhospital, after a long period of\nIllness.\nPot many years Mr. Jackson wa*\nln partnership with John Harris\nWalsh ln running what Is now known\naa \"The Meadow.\" ranch. He is the\nlast person to hav\u00a9 been tn continuous residence in East Kootenay\nwho can date back to 1883.\ntfuitrfc (Eimrrh\nnf Cfcmai.it\nGlume _n_ st. y__r_\nUNION SUMMER\nSERVICES\n10.00 t,m.\u2014Sunday   Schools,\n11:00 a.m. \u2014TRINITY\nCHURCH.\nSubject:     \"The   Lure   of\nLiberty.\"\nSoloist:   A.   A.   Pagdln.\nMembera of the I..O.L. and LO.\nBA.   l_odgea  will  worship\nwith   us.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014 ST. PAUL'S\nCHURCH.\nSubject* \"A Lover erf the\nLaw.\"\nRev. W.  c. Mawhjnney, Minister\nIn charge.\nT-rf. >rf *nv p\\0S NEWI, NELSON, B   C. \u2014 SATtBDAY MOBMNG, JIXT 1*.   1912\ntttUktm Mam Fm Lam Day of Congress\nSTREETS   OF   DIBLIN   COMit-MED   BV   CROUD*\nAa far as the eye can see, ln tho streets, on bulld-\nlnga, and In the squares, over a million Catholics are\nmassed  for  the   benediction   at  O'Conncll   bridge,  the\nconcluding   ceremony   at   the   Eucharistic   congress   ai\nDublin.\nIir*t (Eljm-rl? uf\nQHjrifit \u00a3>rinttifit\n20!.   BARER PTRF.ET\nA Branch of the Mother Church.\nThe   First   Church   of   Christ\nScientist. In Boston Massachusetts.\nSunday  School 0:45  a. m.\nSunday Service  11  a, m.\n|Ht>J_H*-   ltttttB Sermon:\n\"UF!.'\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting,\n, 8 p. m.\nFREE   BEADIM.   ROOM   IN\nCHCECH   BC1LOINO\u2014\nOpen   ,1   tr,  5   Hail).\nAH Cordially  Welcome\nJirat\nfh-esbytrnait\n(Elutrrh\nBat. .T.  Youngson.  BP.  Minister\nAnnable Block Phone 844R\nMorning Service,  ll o'clock.\nSubject: \"The Everlasting Arms\"\nEvening   Service,   7:30.\nSubject:      \"The      Twilight     of\nTrembling.\"\nNO   SUNDAY   SCHOOL\nSt lolui's\nUullirran (Ehurrh\nStanley  and  Silica  at.\nOflMnan Serrlee,' WDO'i. m.\nflfcmtjey   School    (English),   11:15\na.  m.     \t\nBngltah  Service,  7.30 p. m,\nService ln salmo, 3:00 p. nv\nEVERYBODY WELCfcUfc.\nCARL C. JANZOW, Paator.\n(Eljurrlj\nH_r_.rt W. OiuKott, Minister\n11.15 im.\u2014Church   Service.\n7:\u00bb0 p.m.\u2014Subject; \"__\u25a0___,\"\nUM _.m\u2014 OUR. H   SCHOOL.\nSummer   wrvU-en   w_l   be   brief.\nMINE ASSOCIATION\nOF EAST KOOTENAY\nHOLD COMPETITION\nllth Annual Competition; a\nLarger Entry List Shows\nIncreased Interest\nFEPNir, B. C, July 15.\u2014The Bast\nKootenay Mine Safety association\nare holding their eleventh annual\ncompetition Bt Fernle on Saturday.\nThere is already a larse entry list\nfor the six competitions to bc held.\nMany valuable prizts for these competitions are on display In one of\nthe city'a store windows,\nThese competitions arouse a large\nInterest in East Kootenay and the\ncontests are keen in the mine rescue\nand [lilt aid event;*-. They have\nst.imula.ied considerable enthusiasm\nIn first aid work, as exemplified by\nthe large incrcaae in first aid classes\nheld each year.\nIn the mam event of mine rescue\nthere are six entries, two teams for\nCoal Creek, two from Michel, one\nfrom corbin and one from Kimberley.\nIn the senior first uld competition in teams have entered, four\ntrom Kimberley, three from Michel,\ntwo from Fernle. one from Corbtn.\nIn the ladle& first Bid competition a\nt_\u00abm ls entered from Fernle and\nOO* from Michel-\nIn the first, year first uld competition Iwo teams from Mfhel \"nd\none from Corbin have already entered.\nIn the junior first aid Ferni*.\nMichel and Coal Creek have each en-\nttred  \u00bb team.\nIn addition to these com pet it ion 1\nthere ts the junior confined competition restricted to those under\n18 >ara workinc about the mines,\nand also a senior confined compel tion.\nThe Hon. William McKenzie, minister of mines, is expected to be In\nattendance, ire is to arrive in\nPOttH* on Friday niEht,\nSotnm DtckMtti chief  inspector of\nmines  for   B   C,   1*   already   m   the\nFernie riisttl't and Will be present,\nLarge Gold Nuggets\nTaken at Wild Horse\nCreek; Import Drill\nFOR STEELE, B. C\u201e July 13.\u2014\nThere has been ittnt activity on\nWild Horse creek this week although the wjter haa hern too hmh\nfor much alui .ing. This week a\ndrill arrived with a crew of six\nmen. It Is rumored this will hn followed hy a dvedRirg outfit, should\nthn around yield gold in p.ijnis;\nquanMlies, _\nThe Fori. Steele softball -team de-\nfrated'ihc Cranhrook All-star ..oft hsll\ntamo by a score or 18-8. Eugene\nUradaliHW ref.reed the game.\nAnnie and Msry Kcll, Pauline\nand Feinand Sa varies, Jim and\nLeonard Werden, mrived home Bun-\nday from the St. Eugene mission\nwhere   they   have   been   holidaying,\nArthur Wrlgia and R. Da war of\nWactport wire Cranbrook visitors\nWednesday.\nF. Bin more VU a bu.unes_. visitor\nto  Cr.mbrook   Wednesday.\nF. S. Ryckman and children were\ncallers in town Sunday afternoon.\nMiss Constance Blnmorc spent the\nweek-end visiting with lncnd5 ln\nCranbrook.\nMrs. E- Oalbraitli was Cranbrook\nvisitor Wedn\"aday.\nA gold uugijet valued tt til was\ndiscovered on Boulder creek recently\nby  the Swan  brothers.\nMi*, and Mrs. Coble of Princeton\nhave taken up residence in the\nK C. depot. Mr. Coble tm recently\nbeen appointed agent here.\nArthur Ho war motored to Canal\nFlat Baturday. Mrs. Howard tnd babv\nwho have been visiting friends there\nfor the past two wecka returned\nwith him.\nMlss 8u.*an Oould of Cranbrook\nwas a g UM t of M l\u00ab Jen n N lcol\nov?r   the  week-end.\nMr. and Mrs. John Sowerby of\nWasa were in town Wednesday motoring trom, their ranch at Bull\nriver,\nMr. and Mrs, George Neily and\ndaughter Joyce were visiting Mrs.\nW.   Nelly   Sunday,\nMr. and Mrs, MoBurney and Mr.\nand Mrs. Knickerbocker of Calgary\nwere  visitors   ln   town   Saturday,\nE. Howard of. Cranbrook and S.\nHill of Trail were in town Tuesday.\nA snappy game of softball was\nplayed WediiPKla-y. evening when the\nlocal boya defeaied tJie church oi\nEngland  team  from  Cranhrook.\nPOLICE DECIDE\nHUNTED MAN IS\nNOT BAGLEY\nVANCOUVER, July 13 (CP.-After\nInvestigation British Columbia provincial police have decided that tu_-\ntwo mi_n for whom a hunt was\nstarted in the mountainous country\nnorth of here, were not William\nRagiey, escaped convict, and a, companion. The search hat been dropped.\nCONSOLIDATION OF\nSCHOOLS REDUCES\nCOSTS, INVERMERE\nAppropriations   for   1032-33.\n11*09) H. C'leland\nAuditor\nTNVERMEBE. B. C . July Ht\u2014A\ngoodly reraesentative body of ratepayers was In attendance on Saturday arming at the annual meeting\nof the Athalmer-Invermere consolidated whool, to hear ihe report of\nthe school trustees for the season,\nwhich has just passed and to outline at thf instigation of the trusters,  a   policy  for   JS3.1,\nThe report of Auditor W. H. Cl\u00a7-\ntand showed that thrmiRh economy,\nwithout, psrst money, the board had\nclosed the ypsr with a surplus nf\nover *400, wtth all the program\ncarried out.\nFor HH3 it Is proposed to start\nwith thla rredlt balance while th*\ntrustee*: were empowered to raise\ntheir limit, of #3fino, making Knnoo\nfor expenditures In all, still effecting\na HTtttf of  three  per cent Jn   la^es.\nThis savins is in put broughl\nabout through brine able to reduce\nthe staff and combine the high\nschool at Athalmer under one roof\nwith th* OolUOUiUttd MthQQl at.\nIm-erin^rp The room presided OfW\nby Mlss MarRaret. McQueen, who\nhas left the staff, ts now combined\nwith one of the lower grades and\na man teacher, Mr. McCormick of\nVancouver, provided. Mr. Harm*\nrema'ns as principal hut moves his\nclass up from Athalmer to the\nquarters lately occupied by M'w-\nMarcaret McQueen. The former Miss\nBOttt, hy reason of her recent mar-\nrioae t\/O Thomas N. Weir, retired,\nleaving her class to Mlsa Winnie\nHarrop, In the estimates for the\ncoming year provisions have been\nmade for exterior painting of the\npreeent school building and a foundation laid for the erection of an\naddition  to  it,\nUr. F. Wt Coy, who has been the\nhoard's efficient secretary for many\nyears, was re-elected as trustee,\nwith   W.  Howard t'Wand  as auditor.\nmrsTkofecki and\nbaby son return\nto rossland home\nAPPLEDALE. B. C. July 9 -Mrs.\nH H. Curne and son, Ian. of\nNelson and Mr-', T. MncUonald of\nVictoria, who have been spending\na few days here, the guesta of Mr.\nand Mrs. D. F. Peters, returned to\nNelson.\nMrs. D. Hird of South Slocan\narrived on Tuesday to take home\nher daughter Doreen. who has been\nspending a. few weeks with her\ncrnnd-pnrrnts. Mr   nnd Mrs. A. Cant.\nMrs. \u00bb W. Kopocki and baby\nson returned to Rowland, having\n*pent two weeks wltb h\u00bbr mother.\nMrs It, Bowpuskl and sister, Mn.\nJ. V.  Meyer.\nMr. and Mrs l.ar<on and -Children\nof Nelson were week-end guests of\nMn. J. V. Meyer\nNMVri-Xkil.*   HONORED\nFive of the fix prizes awarded In\nthe Oeorge Washington bi-ccntennial\nna'tonal poetry contest wer** given\nwomen, and only one to a man.\nMr. and Mrs. Bruhn\nand Daughter to\nVisit in Vernon\nNAKUSP. B C\u201e July 15\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. R. H. Bruhn left by car for\nVernon Tuesday, accompanied bv\ntheir young daughter Gladys. The\nlatter will stay with her grandparent\/* for the summer vacation in\nVernon,\nMrs, Jamea Vestrup l*ft. on\nWednesdays boat for her home In\nRevelstoke, having ppent the put\ntwo weeks the gueat of Mr. and Mrs.\nR.   H.   Bruhn.\nJ, R. Cookson of Burton waa a\nvisitor  to   Nakusp   Wpdnewlay\nMr. and Mra. T. Hansen of Belllngham, Wash., arrived by car Monday and are the guests of Mrs.\nHansen's tincle and Mat, Mr, and\nMrs, George Jordan.\nAlbert Woodhouse of Vernon arrived on Wednesday's boat and is\nth* houae-guest of Mr. and Mrs. R,\nPatterson.\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nSCHOOL BOARD\nDISCUSSES WATER\nMay Havc Water Piped to the\nSchoolhousc; Appoint\njNew Tr.is.w_\nBOUTH SLOCAN, B. C, July 15.\u2014\nMVs Ma line Chapman kartea hy\nmotor on Saturday for the roast where\nshe will spend the next two weeks\nvisiting friends, bhe will be accompanied on her trip by Misa Jean\nLambert of Nelson,\nLeonard Baiky haa returned to\nTrull after spending the. past few\ndays with hla parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Batley.\nMrs. J. L. Purdy and non, Leonard\nhave returned from Nelson ta spend\nthe aummer months at their home\nhem,\nMIm Dorothy 3'urg\u00abKs was t -visitor\nhere on Thursday, the gueat of Miee\nMax I lie Chapman.\nLeonard Truscott of Nelson wa* the\nguest of Mr. nnd Mrs. J. Batley during the week.\nMrs. R. O. Long who ha* been\nspending a. week a* the sueet of her\nmother, Mrs. R. G. Elliott, has\nturned  to Nelson.\nThe annual meeting of the echooi\nboard waa he!d in the hall on Baturday evening with a record number of\nratepayers  attending.\nJ. D J'Aatman chairman of the\nboard, presided.\nO. W. Humphry was elected \u00bba\nauditor. There were auc nominations\nto fUl the vacancies of two retiring\ntrustees j. D, Yeatmen, WhOM term\nof atOm expired and Mrs. Edward\nWatts, secretary to the board, who had\nleft the district. Wilson Whiteicy\ntm* elected for three years and Ivor\nJones for two year.-? The question of\nhaving' water piped to the school\nwas diacuwtd. Tlie chairman said tt\nh-id already been taken In hand and\nu*ster riKht* oht-.ti.rd. RwtMfy t**b\nhad l-teen wt aside   for this purpose,\nThe matter of tnftglag the te.rhe.;,\nfor the next, term was left to the\nnewly appointed ttVBttt* who wtt)]\nF. H. Pns-.ell made up the board\nTli- te._hfra for the **M term, Ul**\nM, Chapman and Miss A, R. Mitchell\nhad both resiened. The BMMamenl\nfor the ertMiIng year was pet, nt\nftiano, a. Utile ie,.* than the prtTiouj\nftwt wbttOh was |isdo.\nDELEGATES OF THE\nANTIPODES SPEED\nEASTWARD BY RAIL\nSprakern at ^'ftnco^ve^ Board\nof TraHe Lunchron Express Confidence\nVANCOUVER. July U 'CPi-The\nAustralian and New Zealand de!e-\ng.itrs were travelling e*-st by spec!.\u00bbl\ntr.iin taolglit, through the Eraser\ncanyon and up the back bone of\nthe continent, before coming down\ninto Canada* flat pralrl* land to-\nrr\u00abCTfOW en route u> Ot'awa and t'.ia\nimr-t'Tisl   economic   conference.\nAt t Junchec-n Uwtay given by the\nVancouver board of trade representatives of the delegate pe-affinned\ntheir confidence that success will\nOroya the meeting tn the Canadian\ncapital,\nHon. H. fi. Oullett. minister of\ntrade and customs of Australia, tnd\nHon. Downle Stewart, minister of\nfinance and customs for New Zea-\nla nd. were the speakers.\nWIDENING of AOnEMIlfT\nEt\\>m th -1 r distant positions in\nthe Southern Pacific, Australia and\nNew   Zealand    watch   their   approval\ntiie tandanataa (ft tie weatam Canadian provinces to trade in their\ndirection, Mr, Gullett said. He expressed the hope lhat an incidental of the Ottawa conference\nwould be a widening of the trade\nagreement between Canada and Australia.\n\"We come to Ottawa.\" he said,\n\"Where our aim Is ambltioua, our\nua-k gigantic, But if w\u00ab work In a\nspirit of unity, moderation and un\n.selfishness, we ahall not fall. Oreat\nforces and oonelderatlona lmpell ua\nti supreme endeavor, and 1 venture\nto predict that we shall, by one\nmean* or aiiofther, live up to the\ntraditions of our forefathers, who by\ntheir achievements In every part of\nthc world, have made this empire\nof  ours what it  ls.\"\n\"Thl* powerful Dominion of Csn-\nada,\" aald Hon. Downle Stewart,\n\"we have to thank for our system\nof government; Indeed, so do the\nother donations. Thoum we have\nmodified the system, we tftJW our\nfoundations and our principles from\nCanada.\nM.KMS  ALMOST   *\nCXSOLYAMJ\n\"H la difficult to realise that 100\nyears ago the problem of self-government and at the same of maintaining   allegiance   to   the sovereign\nseemed almost, unaoWable. Tt was\nsolved by C*n*ria throi.^i. the gen-\n*ua of Lord Durham in his cls-wlc\nreport of 1W7, when he evolved. *\nsystem of gowrnrnent wMch we all\nnow   erloy.\n\"So. aifo now, although ew difficulties spjiear at lime insurmountable. I have abiding faith. My faith\nI* based on the pMt, By mutual\ngood will we will surmount the\nproolems to be d'scus.'+d   at Ottawa.\n\"Bui. r-member t his. if we are\nrom Pi mon* in dlstrcs.', so we ar*\nfcmpanioni. in g-x-d fortune. We en-\nJoy the inestimable privilege of belonging   to   the   British   En plre.\"\nMr. Stewart said be looked for-\ni ward with eagern -a* to meeting Hon.\nH. H. Stevens and to continue the\nfriendly relations w.slch start-?.! with\ntlie negotiation of lhe New Zealand-\nCsnada trade  treaty at  Honolulu.\n\"If all the del-gates at Ottawa\nare as reasonable aa he was, it\naugur* well for the tBOOttt of the\nconference,\"    dechred    Mr.    Stewart.\nTAOf TUMI\nFERNIE BOARD OF\nTRADE ENDORSES\nMOYE OF COUNCIL\nI.ettprs In (iovrrnm-pnts Support Stat^mrnt of\nRelief\nMiss Lynes Is Given\nFarewell Dance and\nGift at Slocan City\n| SLOCAN CITY, B. C, July 13.-A\nI farewell danoe was held In the\n1. 0.0. F. hall for Mis* M. Lyne*\nvho haa ben principal of the public school here for the past two\nyears. A number of Miss Lynes'\nfriends were present and a moet enjoyable time wa.. spent. Supper waa\nserved at, midnight. Music wa* furnished by Mrs. Nye, MIsb M. Myers\nof Appledale, E. J. Pinchbeck, H.\nC. Nye, A. E. Palmquist, W. E.\nGraham. During the evening a amall\ngift, tt a token 'of appreclatiJn\nand esteem with an appropriate address was given to the guest of\nhonor by the hockey and baseball\nclubs for her willingness to help ln\nall form* of spori* during h_r two\nyears in Slocan City. Thc presentation wa* mad# by W, E. Oraham.\nMiss Carol Purney, nurse-In-training at Kootenay l_ak\u00ab Oeneral hospital, arrived home on Wedneeday\nfor her holidays.\nMr. and Mrs, H. C. Herman and\nfamily who have been the guest*\nof Major Swan for some tun* have\ntaken up their residence ln tht\nUnited church manse.\nMrs. Whit*, Ml*. D. White and C.\nMcKlnnon of Silverton were guest*\nof Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Pinchbeck\nand  family during  the  week-end.\nWlliam Haldalne of Montreal who\nwas at one time o resident of\nNelson arrived by car a few days ago\nand Is the guest of Mr. and Mra\nK. popoff anci family. Mr. Haldalne\nexpert* to vlalt at the coast before\nreturning to his home.\nTTPftt. B. C, July 18,\u2014The a-\nerutlvs of the fernie board of trade\nmet on Wednesday evening. Secretary Beck reported on the tourist\ncamp site and stated that the\ntourist travel wa* _*<* this\" year\nthan last, but that durtng the laat\nfew davs there hsd been t large\nIncrease of tourist* stopping \u00bbt the\ncamp.\nA letter waa read from J. R. Hunter, secretary of the Associated\nBoards of Trade, thanking rernie\nfor their hospitality during the\nannual meeting which wu held here\nthis year.\nThomas Whltehouse stated that\nthere were * number of people looking for land. He said some 8000\nacres had already been taken up\nthla year hy settlers In the vicinity\nof Fernle,\nA letter was read from, the city\ncouncil presenting the city'a financial condition. Copies of this letter have been tent to the Dominion\nand provincial authorities. The letter pointed out the difficulty the\ncity would have in providing for\nunemployment relief in the future.\nFernie had about gone the limit in\nthis respect.\nConsiderable discussion arose over\nthis matter,  and   lt  was  decided   to\n*-r.d   a   letter   t-   \u2022\u25a0 *   ;\n'- \u25a0' \u2022 !   a   \u25a0     \u25a0     -*   -\nstatements    contained    wtthin    th*\noonnell'a  letter  snd  sola   pointina\nout,   the   difficult   condition   Fernie\nwaa    in    for    providing\nunemployment\nHEITFIL   IRIf-   Bt\u00bbiifc    UN\nEPILEPSY\nir *nu or sny friend -utters frum this\nrtfaij di-pa-e, <-iip nil* *.(\u25a0..i.ement\nand send for I KM. book ot part.CU-\ninr*. on Trevrb - Unrld Famous\nremedy for I ptlepv snd Flta. sin pte\nhorn,, tr-MimiMtt. 40 lears' s.ireess.\nthousands   of   Trillmonlai_.   Addresa\nIKFNt HS    KEMFntF.H    I td .    Oejt\nI't'i,   19    Adelaide    \u2022*( ,    K,    Toronto.\n(Cut   this   out   iioh)\nWedding\nGifts\nWt are showing a beautiful teleetion of all that.\nit best and newest in\nWedding Gifts.\nCajsseroles,   Tea  Sets,\nSugar and Cream\nSets. Trays, Cake\nPlates, ....\nJ. B. GRAY\nJEWELLER\nPhene 33 407  Baker   _t.\nHe prepay all mall orders.\nThe Better Kind of\nShoe\nRepairs\nWe offer you the following: Besf Material\"\u2014Highest type of workmanship\u2014New low prices.\n\u25a0ILL   WOMEN'S   WORK   SfWM\nWatson Shoe Co., Ltd.\nMrs. George Piatt\nEntertain at Tea\nBONN1NOTON  FALLS    B.   C. Julv\n15, \u25a0 Miss  Bla  Phillips 'of Nelson  is\n\"pending a few dnys here, the guest\noi Mr. and Mrs,   E. C. Johnson.\nMiss  Rum  \u25a0wiiicy hs* rattvnad\ntrom Vancouver in spend the school\nvacation with her p_reu'e, Mr. and\nMrs. Andrew Willey,\nMrs, Oot-pe putt, wss a charm\" -\nhoatess at the lea hour on Thursd-\nwhen fihe entertained In honor of M '\nA bcrvold, a recent btttO. Thc i-\ntable was exquisite in Its arra.n.\nment, centered with a mlnlatu*-\nbride. The floral decoraUona were ear-\nned out with sweet pcaw |n dMIleate\nshades of mauve and pink. Mnuv.\nt-npers added to the (laltlllll\u2014 ol\nthe table. Mist. Maxine Chapman pour-\nad and Mijs Dorothy Sturgess cut\nthe ices, Thc invited gueata included: Mrs. O. F. Chapman, Miss Maxine\nChapman, Miss Dorothy Sturgess, Mrs.\nD. IA. Bdrideley, Mlss Myra Humphry. Mrs. R. Kennedy. Mrs. ft, Mr-\nKim Mrs. |, c. Johnson, Miss Kiln\nPhillips, Mrs, Jack flilkei-, Mrs, Cos.\nM:m June McKlnney. ol Trail, snd\nMrs.  A.  Servold.\nAcids in Stomach\nCause Indigestion\nCreate MMft Oas and Pain.\nHow   to   Treat.\nHadJcal suhorltles gtsta 'hat near.\nly nine-tenths ol the cases of stomach trouble, Indigestion, sourness,\nburning, gas, bloiting, nausea, etc.\npre due to an excess of hydrochloric\nacid In the stomach. The delicate\nstomach lining is irritated, digestion\nIs delayed and food sourp, causing\nthe    disasrceahlc    sxmutonis    which\nevery atonncl, sufferer knowa eo\nwell.\nAriifin.i dtgesients are not needed in sueh rases spd may do real\nharm. Try laying aside all dint-\ntive atris and instead get Irom any\ndruggist, some Bisura'rd Magnesia.\nand take a tea-spoonful of powder\nor four tsbfets in water right af'ev\neating. Tins sweetens the stomwh,\nprevents the formation of excess\narid and there is no nourness, gus\nor pain. Bisurat\/'d Magnesia tin\npowder or tablet form\u2014never liquid\nor milk) is harmless to the stomach,\ninexpensive to taka and Is the moet\nefficient, form of magnesia for stomach purposes. It is used bv thousand l or people who enjoy thrtv\nmmis with no more fear of indigestion.\nWHAT'S\nback of it?    \u2022\nBack of the tremendous pop'\nularity enjoyed fey Winchester\nCigarettes lie certain definite\nfactors...\nOutstanding quality, which is\nthe result of years of experience\nand research by Canada's largest\ncigarette manufacturers ...\nw The pick of the world's tobacco\ncrops\u2014an assurance of matchless\nflavour.. \u2666\nA blend of fine tobaccos\u2014per*\nfected by experts .. \u2666\nThe most up'to-date machinery\nand methods known to the\ncigarette industry.\nThere is something in\nknowing how to make\ncigarettes.\nWinchester\nCIGARETTES\nBlended Right!\nImpwi*^Tobacco Co-op-ny o. Csn\u2014els, Limi*c_I\n_____________________\n\t\n Summer Desserts for the Home\nIHE I^ELSON DAILY KBWB, NtLSON, ft.  C. \u2014 8ATLRDAT MOKNTNO. JTLT Ml IMJ\n\u25a0      ' '   -*'il     1>\"'W '.'f\u00bb    UMlflllV ,\n. -i    ir- -rt>   1 !!\"-\u25a0*>   h:!_ \u2022\u25a0\nlouitthment.   cnft   nn^   beauty,  ine |\nBU-VT    <.f_wrt    P'P\"; :ally    ran    1\u00ab. -\n*i: . '\u25a0.   t-j   provide  much   nourhh- '\nthf   men.    The   iin\\_ri-.i-\ni |    in   inr   .i<-*-vrt   il*-\nmined  hv   thf  rr-'   cl  the m\u00abi. I\n\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\"   tlie   c-iliiTtcH   and   obn\u00abive |\np    leln  cu[_t,ui.ed  ln  the  mam j\n.:<    uf   the    menu.   II    the   JlrH |\n\u25a0Mb   ot   t   luncheon   la   a   firsi |\nVain;,  to _ji. a (lessen, made of rody, \\\nad    iv   is   noi   suitable.    If   th'; [\n- il   course h..a heen t heavy roast. |\nI   cooling   desert   should   be |\nBut   when   thft  meal course j\ni    hu    weather,    fhe    c_M*ert    c.. :i I\n| . bwn light, nr- in often the ea*e j\nt.l  w***t up the nocewary proton ,\nI it* milk end rph's.\n\\   \\ery   sweet,   dewtert   often   adds j\nIUi h   to  the fuel   value of  a m\u00bb!, I\n...   iug\u00abr   is   a   quick   energizer  or j\nttmulnnt.   m   \u00bbummer   the   tweet* i\nI -s   ol   dewMTti*   ehould   be   given !\nI n_f-ii    attention.    It    Phoulri,   o_\nnwf.  be aweel. enough   to be pal* |\nfttable. but (Tv\u00ab--Mrt_*etenlng produces\njurt th*t much e\\trw hMt.\nIf   ihe meal  has  been  lacking  in\nChoose Your\nPLUMBER\nCarefully '\nCan you imafrine thc above\nbeing changed to, \"Choose\nyour Doctor Carefully\"?\nWhat unnecessary advice\nthat would be.\nVour plumber'.' work is\ndoubly important, having\na bearing on both property\nand health. May we, therefore, make, a suggestion to\naid you in selecting- him?\nSuppose you are investigating this shop. First, get\nrrom us a list of customers\nwe. serve. Phone several of\nthese. Ask about the satisfaction we gave: our reasonable prices; the cleanliness, courtesy, industry of\nour men. Ask about out-\nprompt response to rush\ncalls.\nA lest of this kind will not\nlead yon astray. We invite\nvnii to select us as your\nplumbers, if you first carefully satisfy yourself of our\nliolicy of full value. We\nhope  we   may  serve  you.\nPhone 181\nfor Service and\nSatisfaction.\nB. C. Plumbing li\nHeating Co.\nbulk  and hread.ituifa, a rKe or cer-\nei\\ pudding fil'\u00bb ,h\" need.\nCONTRAST   IN  <ntKSES\nIf   the   meat   and   vegetables  ha\\.\nbeen expensive, nerve an inexpensive '\ndewert. This does not men.1 t com-\ni icnplacc one, but rather one that [\ntl Staple, reci'ilring no larg\u00ab amount \u25a0\nof    cre_ni    nor   expensive   elaborate ]\ningredientF,   Contiaat   Is   alwaya   essential snd  a simple flcMwrrt ahoula j\nfoliow au elaborate mom course.\nl*utt is the Ideal tmotTt far sum- ''\nmer  on  several  counts.  One  of the ;\ncriticisms of  the food of the aver- j\nage family ls that too little fruit is !\nused in the daily dietary. The wrv-\nlog of fresh fruit saves time, an im- *\nportant factor  in a  busy  mother's\nday.   Waste  can   foe   avoided   If  se\\.\nerai   varieties  a-re  cut  up  together, j\n.Served   lu   combination,   none   neea !\ngo    begging    because    there's    itU i\n\u2022Bougb    tu    \"eo    round.\"    Slightly J\nnwee_ened nnd chilled, there's noth- )\nIng   more   refreshing   than   a   fruit\ncup.\nFruit tv&tm stiffened by the addition    of   gelsttne   make   excellrn*\nhot weather dvswrts for almost an\nages and  types. 'Die  person who is\ndieting to reduce may have this dessert -without   cream,   while   the one\nwho  wants  to gain  ln  weight  w!Jl\nfind   the   frutt   stimulating   to  the\nappetite   with    the    cream    lidding\nuuny calories to his diet.\nRice   pudding   aJwaya   nre   acceptable and can be aa Inexpensive ar.fl\nslmple  as  one   wishes,  when  made\nwith  milic  and eggs, they tre vi.j\nnourishing and are particularly suitable to serve after a summer vegetable-plate   dinner.\nCHILLED OftANGE SOlKflE\nThrp,, eggs, 1  lemon, 1 tablespoon\ngranulated   gelatine,    ',    cup   cold\nwater. 2 oranyrs.   % cup sugar, few\ngrains salt,  \\_  cup whipping cream.\nSoften gelatine ln cold  water fur\nfive   minutes.   Beat   yolks   of   eggc\nwith   OOfm   and   _________   juice   and\nconk over hot water until tlilckcn-n,\nStir ln softened gelatine and let\nstand until cool. Add pulp of\noranges freed from skin snd seedE,\nwhites ol eggs beaten until \"tiff and\ndry and cream whipped until firm.\nMix lightly an^i 'urn ln,f R mold\nttM stand on Ice for two hours or\nlonger until thoroughly chilled and\nfirm.   Unmcl.   snd   serve.\nWOMAN'S PAGE\nPrince Marries 18-Year-Old Countess\nAnswers by\nBeatrice\nBrother's Crowd Are\nPettcrg\nDBAA MI88 FAIRFAX:\nMy brother has been talking\nabout me k> mtlcb to hi* crowd\nthat the girls decided to make a\nparty and invite me, Juat to eet\nwhat I was like. While at the\nparty tbe boys wanted to pet and\nklw nw. I didn't let them, for\nthat Isn't my idea of a good time.\nMy brother gave me * dirty look.\nAfter that we began to sing and\ndance, which ls more my Idea of\na good time, while some of the\nextra-dumb ones necked and kissed.\nSince then I have not been in-\nvited by his crowd to any more\nof their parties. He doesn't eecm\nto care. They're good enough, and\nI like them and would like to be\none of tbem. but don't want to\nchange my ideas of a good time\nto suit theirs.\nBASHFUL\nThere are plenty of young people\nwho, like yourself, do not think immediate and promiscuous petting le\nnecessary to a good time. One such\ngirl wrote me this morning and\nsaid, \"to Tiegln petting any Jane\nor Jlmmle the moment you start\nout. proves you're even too dumb to\ntalk.\"\nSooner o* later, you're bound to\nmeet boys and girls who have your\nldeaa of a good time. Till then\nyou're quite right to be discriminating. Walt till the right one comes\nalong and you'll be happier that you\nhaven't been too free wltti your\nfavors.\nCEREMONY   TAKES   PLACE   IN   LONDON,   ENGLAND\nPrince Leopold of LoewenBteln-Werthelm-Freuden-\nberg (Count of I_oewenstein-Scliarffencck) was married\nto the   18-year-old   Countess  Blanca  von  Treuberg   at\nPrince's Row registry office, London, recently.    Photo\nshows the bridal couple leaving the registry office.\nMRS. C. ALLEN IS\nGUILD HOSTESS\nAT BOSWELL HOME\nBOSWELL, B. C, July 15 \u2014Mrs. ,C,\nAllen was hostess at the July meeting\nof the Church guild. After the business meeting a pleasant social hour\nwas f-pent In honor of Mrr. W. L.\nHunter of Lumberton a guest at tlie\nmeeting. Tlin.se present werc Mrs. C.\nAlien Mrs. A. Kennedy. Miss E. H.\n'Smith, Mrs. W. L. Hunter, \"lis. J. B.\nHtggtns, Mrs. F. M. Hughes, Mrs, A.\niDuford,  Miss  Janet  Hughes,\nMr. nnd Mrs. B. A, Albert were the\nItUtitS of Mr. and Mrs. T_awwm Hcph-\nj er on Tuesday ant Wednesday.\nI Mn, Wmnilrcd Hunter of Lumber-\n; ion and her two children Alice and\n'(.ramie, \u2022aro vetting Mrs. Hunter.\niparents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Ken-\n! nedy.\n'llOOGERWERF HAS\nANKLE FRACTURED\nIN FALL, FRIDAY\nLaslBf hH bilanc? while making\nwire Installations on ihe, front of\nthe new y-t.cv.ii- building oppOttU\nthe Kootenay Motors on Bnker\nrtfWt, Jack Hoozcrwerf, well known\nNelson electrician, tumbled to U\\e\npavement rraoturtng bft ankle, Fri-\nd*y. He turned a complete somcr-\n;..H,   UadtHf  Wl   his   f^'-\nAnother workm-in. who was work-\nin-; near BoOfKTtttrf narrowly es-\nctptd tumbling from- the scaffold\n| with him whin the los. of t.20ger-\n| wrf's weight CKUM4 the IKftflQM to\n:, HMf.\n) H.-'Ogrrwerl was M0hO6 to the hos-\n'pltai where the fractured boM wae\n'set  Immediiitely.\nSKYSCRAPER\n^^  By FAITH BALDWIN\nSPECIAL\nDining Room\nFurniture and\nBaby Carriages\n9.piece solid oak, Olde English finish Buffett, without\nmirror, 60 inches twig-. Table extends to 6 feet. China\ncabinet with linen drawer; 6 chairs, slip Cl C7 Kf\\\nseat leather. Special \t\nTerms, 1-3 down, balance 9 equal payments.\nBaby Carriages\nLloyd Loom     $27.50 to $31.00\nEnfjlish Carriages  $32.50 to $35.00\nSulkies ?-_.00 to $13.50\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nTbe Store of Service and Satisfaction\np1*to House Furnishers KELSON, B.C.\nCHAPTER T.VKNTV-THHLE\n(CONTINUED.\n\"About   U*f*t   Should   I   go   up\nthere  now,  Jennie,  and  sec   what  I\ncan do?\"\nJennie, creamliia; her fao? at the\nmirror, turned, \"Well. no. Are you\nout of your mind? There's nothing\nwe can do for her except give her\na   bed   If   Bill   kick.1   her  out.\"\n\"He can't do that,\" Lynn reminded  her.  -She pays  the rent.\"\n\"Well, maybe Bhe can't. Well ffee\nDid you wc Dwiglit? What did he\nhave  to   offer?\"\n'\u25a0__> offered me a Job with him-\nI'm not going to take it.\"\nNot going to tike It.\" gapped\nJennie. \".Sec here, does that mean\nyour or Ten?\"\n\"Tom, I siippofc. He felt Ideas.\nI know he'd tray, hut what can I\ndo about It,\" o*M Lynn. \"Hc\naaya ht won't marry RM if I lake\nit, and flll I was taking it for WM\nto set married. There isn't much\nBU.    ia    Here?\"\n\"Men!\"  Mil  Jennie.\nThat nigh', before the went to\nbed I.ynn ftt out her bent mono-\ngrtnunad writing oonxt \u00bbnd wrote\nto Dwight.. _t MS an awkward letter, without life or .color, ' How\ni could thw tell him the 'truth?\n| It sounded so conceited on her\npart, to childish on Tom's; ehe\nwould never be hblr to meet, Davit\nDwli-ht frankly (tftlS if th* told\nhi in.\nUM wrote -that alter lh inking it\nover Sarah waa right and it *ft*\nbetter t\/> stay where *he was and litM\nnot inmr the po..sihtllty of clis\nI mlppai by marrying immediately. Slie\nhad talked It over with Tom, and\nhe had agreed, After :\u2022 1 her position\nwsa exrelknt h the Seaconst com-\nI pany; ahe had a chance of a fo*\ni ture there. It had been So kind nl\nj Mr. Dwlpht. She appreciated U,\njetc\nShe mailed the note on her way\nj to work, When it reached Dwight,\nj he read it twice, swore once, and\nthen laughed.\n! Young 8h\u00abpard of course. H-id\n! more sense than he hnd given him\ncredit fcr. AH  for the bfst, he eup\nmoment. \"What are you going to\ndo?\"\n'May I stay here. I'll pay my\nshare. I won't\" ahe said viciously,\n\"have   BUI   to   support.\"\n\"Of course you must stay here\nuntil you find a plaoe,\" Lynn told\nher, \"That ls If Jennie doesn't\nmind.\"\n*'l don't mind,\" aeid Jennie,\nyawning, '1 hsve t double bed.\nYou can sleep in it If you want to,\nprovided you don't snore or kick.\nCHAPTER   THES1V-    IOIB\n\"BU]_o a best,\" wa.. Mara's only\n.xprssslon of gratitude, \"Going with\nthat cheap ll'Ue woman behind\nmy   bark.\"\nJennie asked, gravs-ly, \"Sure It wn*\nall Ills fault, you haven't paid\nmuch attention to him lately?\"\n\"If you mean Prank.\" Mara said,\nflaring up, \"there Isn't anything\nto it. Bll] hasn't any rlgiit! Frank's\nk-nesome, that's all. So waa I.\n94pk and tired of going home to a\ngrouch. Nothing was ever right. I\ncouldn't do anyi.hing to please him,\nBill, I mean, Besides,\" she added,\n\"Frank's got. a drag. Nowadays you\nneed &U the drag you can get.\nWell, why shouldn't I stay on the\nright m.ic of someone who has in-\nonly got din-T.erg and ahowe, Hnd\nperfume and flowera an dstocklnga.\nW*;ll, a pay for these wtth my\nbright and cheery company; It Isn't\nworth any more In the open mar\nnet, see?\"\nLynn laughed. \"You're the limit,'\nshe   said,   affectionately.\n'I saw Millie Halnea on ths\nstreeet today.\" Jennie told her, ir\nrelevantly. \"She used to work with\nme for Canton and Stein, the\nwholesale suit and coat house. She\ndarned near ran over me driving a\nbig sports car. She stll] works for\nCanton and Stein and gets forty a\nweek.\nTo Be Continued\nYour Children\nBYOHi-e Roberts Barton\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nSr LAIBA A. IIMMAJ*\nTOMORROWR   MEM'\nBreakfast\nPlums\nCereal\nScrambled Efcgs\nToeat\nCoffee\nDinner\nRoast Chicken\npotatoes\nBplnach\nOrange Custard\nCoffee\nSupper\nWaiflea\nSirup\nLettuce Salad\nwith\nThousand Island\nDressing\nCookies\nOingerale\nSELF-BERVICE   PARTIES\nThe latest fad is to 1st your gu\u00abt\u00bb\nmake their own sandwiches after the\ncard party! This vogue was no\ndoubt started because so many women\u2014In fact, men, too\u2014Sre trying to reduce their overweight these\ndays. It ls a satisfaction to the\nhostess to serve rich, fancy dishes,\ntopped with whipped cream and\neffectively    garnished   with    ground  at one end of the table.\n-**--*mm**ammm-*--*^a*-***mm-***M****m\nnuts\u2014but often her ******* Mt tntk\ncoodlM with fear and tr*nbliat Ib\nrt?ard to putting on another pound!\nSo a sensible solution to this\ndiet problem Is to set your dlnmg\ntable with plates of dry bread (out\nthinly for an afternoon affair, but\nslightly thicker for a night pattf,\nas people are hungrier late at nlgf-ft)\nIso have a plate of butter bailey\nanother pints of single lettuce leaves,\nand still other plates bearing the\n' makins*' of sandwiches, ror instance, these fllllugs could be: 1,\nhaid-bolled \u00abBg mixed with a little\nmayonnaise and colored with bits\nof pimento; 2. cream cheese mixed\nwith chopped stuffed olives; 8, marmalade; 4, Jam; 5. devilled ham; 8,\ntuna fish mixed with chopped sweet\npickles and wet to a paste with a\nlittle mayonnaise; 7, slices of cold\nboiled chicken; 8, slices of spiced\nbeef loaf and a dish containing\nmustard pickle.\nIt will be interesting to ths hostess to watch her guests prepare their\nown refreshments! The strong-minded women, bent on reducing, will\nno doubt lay a slab of that meat\nloaf between dry slices of bread\u2014\nand proceed to eat! The weaker\nmembers of the ought-to-reduce class\nwill Indulge themselves with butter\non the bread and some of that aweet\nJam or cream cheese mlxturel Of\noourse, cookies and cakes should also\nbe on the table, and hot coffee or\ntea should be poured by the hostess\nTEACH CHILDREN\nI \u00abn going to digress from the\nchildren today because there t\u00bb\nsomething to be \u00abald about older\nfolk, And, after all, there Is a lea-\nson In lt, too.\nIt is about thoroughness.\nIn these times of stress anj trouble it seems to me there is more\ncarelessness rife In the world thsn\never there wae before, why it is, I\ncannot aaf, for Jobs are swpet and\nwork scarce.\nYet many of those who hava worlc\nare not appreciative enough to fill\nthe positions they havft properly.\nIs that It-\u2014or is tt because farces\narc cut ao thst. the remainder must\ndo double duty and have less time\nto be accurate? I am trying to be\nkind.\nInside of a week several things\nhave occurred to irritate me, and I\nBQmA. lie, Dwight, hadn't let her: pretty rotten, .wing her bring\ndown; he had made good his olfcrjhtme the bacnn and slice him bis\nof friendship. And ihlnEs were asishare, with remainders. Then after\nthey had been. Lynn wouldn't marry a while, I suppose, h; got used to\nthc youngster for h-aven knew how it.  But  they've  led  a   cat  and   dog\nlong;    and   In   thc   meantime   perhaps she would change her mind.\nyes.   possibly    all    for   the   best,\nhe    thought,    and     wrote    her    a\nfluence?     .\n\"You'r?  riding  to a  fall,\"   was all j am  not  easily  Irritate*  H\u00ab*e   they\naire.\nI took a dress to a cleaner. The\nbuttons that featured tlv dress were\nremoved and lost. I neerled the\ndress very much for a certain occasion but tho buttons did not turn\nup. They did In someone else's pock-\net later, but meantime I had to\nwear the wrong thing at a wrong\ntime because the clerk ha^ no system of numbers.\nWe needed nappies or small (ance\ndishes. I went to town and bought\n12. When I opened the package\nthere were 11. It was too far to go\nand protest about one dish. I had\nnothing to prove I did not break\none. I shall always be a dish shprt\nbecause t\\% packing girls was careless.\nThe grass needed attention. We\nhave two small mulberry trees that\ntrail their branches on the ground\nand make Interesting green bowers\nif they are left alone. I tola the\nman to keep away from those trees\nto lift the branches up and run\nthe mower under. When I went\ndownstairs again the branches were\nJennie  had  to offer.\nLater when Mara Wtt running\nwater in tho tub and making herself st home ccnernlly. Lynn had n\nword   alone   with   .Jennie.\n\"Look here,\" said Lynn. \"This It.\na nrss, isn't lt? It irn't fair to you\nto have Mara here. Of course, we\ncan put up a cot In the living\nroom If she sUys on but\u2014It'a putting you out, and you don't even\nlike her very much.\"\n\"I don't mind,\" replied Jennie.\n\"No, I. don't IUM her particularly.\nSfte's neither one thing nor the\nother.\"\n\"What   do  you   mean?\"\n\"\"Well she isn't good or bad. Not\nthat I think anyone is cither, one\nhundred per cent, brt that's the\nirarcst I can get to it. 1 den't blame\nBill    much.    He    must    have    felt\nlife for months so far as I can see\nso   I  figure   ho   turned   around  lind\nPaste Thig in Your Hat,\nShy Young Men\nDEAR MISS  FAIRFAX:\nFor a longtime now I have been\ngoing with a boy I used to be\ncrs?ry about, but now 1 only like\nhim a little. This Is the reason,\nMlss Fairfax. Every place we go\nand everything we do, I always\nhave my own way, but I Just long\nto be told what to do and be\nbossed by a strong, determined\nman. Do you think I should\ncontinue to go with a msn who\nhasn't any mind of his own?\nADDIE\nHere's a girl who Is looking for\nsomething In the cave man li\nThe gentle and complaint young man\nwho doea whatever she wants, goes\nwherever she suggests, has lost out\nShe ls no longer \"crazy\" about him\nand now only likes him a little.\nThere is no reason why sho should\nkeep on with him. Better leave him\nto some of the girls who write me\nthey're sick and tired of being bullied. They can never do what they\nwant, or go where they want to go.\nbecause the boy frinds are utterly\nover-be arin ff.\nWhat's that old fable about Jove\ncricking all the walnut shells, nnd\nthe halveh going through life seeking the halves that fit?\nAgain the Triangle\nDEAR MISS FAIRFAX:\nI am a married woman snd love\nmy husband with all the love any\nwoman can give a man, but he ls\ngoing out with a married woman\nwho haa a husband and child. We\nhave lived as happy as any couple\nfor 15 years. Of course he denies\neverything, but says If I feel that\nway, we will separate. Do you\nthlnfc i ought to let him go? I\ncannot get it off my mind night\nor day. I am a wrecJt and I\nnever have mentioned It to a soul.\nI love him too much. t-t*m advise   me. HEARTBROKEN.\nThere are only a few wise old\nformulas to fall back on in a situation like yours, my dear. One Is\nnever to let th* erring husband\nknow that you are aware he has\nbeen disloyal to you. When you\nthreaten and upbraid, he has nothing\nfurther to conceal and takes refuge\nIn defiance. In your case, he suggests a \"separation if you feel that\nway\" which would only be playing into the other woman's hands.\nAfter 13 years of married life,\nbeginnings are hard. You love your\nhusband, and my best advice to you\nIb to salvage what is left. He will\nnot like the notoriety of a separation, and often men who have been\nchasing around after vampa recover\ntheir reason. They have a lucid interval and realize the gams is not\nworth the candle. Make up, and\ndon't ever speak to him about thts\naffair.\nmade   passes   at   someone   who   told, cut off seven feet above the ground\nhim how wonderful h? was and what\nbrief n-'ite regretting her decision U success he was going to be.\nj but abiding by it gracefully, and] \"Mara never told me that, All she\ni concluded that before the summer. did was tell me he was a failure.\nI was over he hoped Mie would spend j so he is, perhaps; but maybe it's\n| f. week-end on Lung Island as hit j partly her fault. Tb-n, as to this\n! puest. Ho would s.sk Sarah, too. | Frank     business,     that's     her     own\nFor   three   days   Ljnn   looked   for ] affair.   Only   the   point   ls,   lt   isn't\nMara in the rest room, and did not m    afalr.    she    hasn't    the    nerve.\nfind her. She disliked going t\u00bb the\nInsurance office and tried several\ntimes, ev.nlngs, to ring up the\napartment. Twice there had been no\nanswer, once a strange woman had\nanswered and had hung up Immediately; and the fourth time\n, Bill had ansv.-red\u2014had announced\nI heatedly lhat Mara wasn't home;\nhe didn't know where _*he was. On\nHie third night Mara arrived with a\nsuitcase.\nJenne a nd Lynn were at home.\nTom was out with young Rawlson\nI again. Mara came in, her fftcs ashen\nj under   _'.er   rouge.\n\u2022Ttt left .i.m for good,\" she announced.\n\"Mara!\" Lynn sprang to her\nfeet. ''Here, let me take your things\nand your bag. \"You can't mean it?\"\n\"I do mean lt. I went homo early\nthis afternoon. That woman was\nthere. Not for the first time, I\nsuppose.\"\n\"What did you do?\"\n\"I told her something. JShe left\npretty quick. I told BlU he oould\nleav-', too. He said he wouldn't, th*\nplaoe suited him. I sali I'd paid for\nIt. He aald thi lease was ln hts.\nname. If I wanted to go I could,\nhe'd stay on till the end of the\nm-nth. I said I'd divorce him. He\ntold nv to go ahead\u2014but tn what?\nAnd ho M'd he had as much on me\nss   I   had   \u00ab n   lnm \"\n\"Don't   cty,\"   .\u2022md   Lvnn,   ifter   a\nYou'd have to respect her if she\nhad.\"\n\"*\"ou don't realy mean that, Jcn-\niil?,   do   MUf\"   aswed   Lynn.\n\"Sure I mean it. Personally I'd\nrespect her more If sh: was paying\nfor whatever influence that bird may\nhav?, Instead of taking it and giving him a let of hope that doesn't\nmean a thing. I like to pay on the\nnail.\" Jennie explained, \"If I get\nanything   worth   while.   So   far   I've\nand will take months to grow again\nEvery time I look at them I will\nwonder how many men tramplnn\nthe street for work would have\npaid attention while thts fellow wae\ntoo stupid to do as h* was told.\nIt Is dlscouarging and tiring to\nhave to spend one's life correcting\nmistakes! I could go on with this\nstory but you must be aa weary of\nlt as I am.\nThe lesson can be applied to the\nchildren. Teach them accuracy, to\ndo whatever they have to do thoroughly and well. I think people\ngrow up careless, believing that\nnothing really matter. This type of\nboy or girl will never get ahead. An,j\nyet, as I say, thousands of competent workers are walking the streets,\nWbat Is wrong?\nThe 40th Anniversary\n\"SALADA TEA\nHI\nFinest quality for 40 years\nhas built the largest sales In\nNorth America.\nCherie Beauty\nShoppe\nSuite  101\u2014 Median  Aril  Bid*.\nWttt St.\u2014Entrance\nrhone 869 for  Appointments\n1)0 YOU envy your girl\nfriend her long eye\nlashes? Why not have\nsome of your own? Come\nin and have us show you\nour nice new long eye\nlashes.\nHAVE YOU seen any of\nour Charm-oil Perman-\nents? Notice how natural,\nglossy and silky our per-\nmanents leave the hair.\nWE EXTEND our introductory price of J6.50\nfor one more week only.\nOUT-OF-TOWN PATRONS, write in for an\nappointment.\nRemember our Motto\u2014\n\"WE AIM TO PLEASE\"\nCome in and get\nacquainted.\nummer\nj-rocks\nNew!\nExciting!\nStyles\u2014\nLadies' Pure Silk and Rayon Dresses,\ncoat styles, also with scarfs. flJ7 Q_\nA full rack at tDI.OO\nLADIES' VOILE, celanese and linene\ndresses, the newer kind. $0 CQ\nA full rack at  \u2022**\u00bb\nHATS, in the latest fashions; made to\nsatisfy.\nGroupedi\n5atisfylat $1.69, $2.69,83.69\nBROADCLOTH, 86-inch, all colors, \"I Op\nper yard  titx*\nRAYONS, PRINTED, 36-inch. rjq\nnow, yard .-._,.>\u2022.._.  \u2022 00\nRAYON SLIPS, just in, assorted colors     Cl OK\nand shades, your advantage  , *\"*\u25a0'*'\"\nINFANTS' BROADCLOTH DRESSES, high   OK-\nquality, each  VOK' \u2022-\nRAMSDEN BROS.\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\nH-E-A-L-T-H\nBY TAKING\nCAL-SPA\nMINERAL WATER\nIt builds your resistance ... a natural Calcium Tonic\n... corrects acidity of entire system ... eleven weeks'\ntreatment ?6.25. Single bottle $2.26 . . . shipped\nanywhere.\nS. H. MURDIN-LOCAL AGENT\nP. O. BOX 872 NELSON, B. 0.\nSOLE DISTRIBUTORS FOR CANADA\nD. A. McKINNON & CO., Grand Fork*\nVassar's Cash Meat Market\nGOOD BUYING FOR SATURDAY\n\"20c\"\n25c\n14c\n50c\n43c\n35c\nSALMON\u2014Fresh Red Spring,\nper lb\t\nHAMBURG STEAK\u2014Fresh Made,\n3 lbs. for\t\nCOTTAGE ROLLS\u2014Small, Boneless,\nper lb\t\nFOWLS\u2014Fresh Killed,\neach \t\nEGGS\u2014Strictly Fresh,\n2 doz\t\nCREAMERY BUTTER\u2014\n21bs\t\nCHOICE STEER\nBEEF\nT. Bone Roast,        OO r,\n13c\nper lb\t\nBlade Rib Roast\nper lb\t\nSMALL LEAN\nPORK\nPork Steak, 10r.\nper lb  ^-^\nPork Shoulders, 1Ar\u00bb\nper lb  XUi'\nVeal Roast,\nper lb.\nVeal Chops,\nper lb. ...\n13c\nISc\nLamb Legs,\nper lb.\nLamb Chops\nper lb. ...\n25c\n20c\nPure Lard, 1- lb.     OOc\ncartons, 3 lbs. .. *?v\nPea-Mealed Back ,   Oflp\nBacon, by piece   *'u*\/\n \t\nJHr. NIL50N DAILY M\\l.\u00ab. NELSON, B. C. \u2014 RATI RIMY  MORNING, JUT  18,  1.3.    m\u2014\nlumtveveCiit!\nIt will pay you to investigate\nour $2.65 Counter Values in\nthe ordinary way up dj^ sic\nto$7-NowCutto * &\nVALUES UP TO $9.00\nNow $3.15, $3.65, $4.65, $5.35.\nEnna Jetticks\n$5.95 &. $5.95\nEntire Stock\nBargains for every member of thc family\nRt Andrew & Co*\nLeaders in Footfashion\nD. C. Art SKoppe\nJUST THE DRESS YOU WANT.\nJUST THE PRICE YOU WANT TO PAY.\nFrocks, all colors at $G\u2014 $7.50\u2014$8\nA full range of sizes and styles in\nwash silks or crepes\u2014as you prefer.\nThey're something to boast about in\nthe way of value. Com. see them for\nyourself.\nWomen's Misses' Voile Dresses at\u2014\nif 1.05\u2014$2.25\u201493\nPajamas ip2.25-if2.50  -\nChildren's Play Tajamas, 05\u00a3\nSize 6-7.\nLinen sport handkerchiefs, 50< each\n20% clearance in art needlework.\nHemstitching 10^ yard.\nDunk & Conway\nPure Food Market\nWeek-end  Specials   in   Choice   Government\nInspected Meats, at reasonable prices\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nNEW LAID EGGS, EXTRAS\u2014\n2 dozen for \t\nTIP TOP CREAMERY BUTTER\u2014\n2 lbs. for \t\nFRESH KILLED BROILERS\u2014\nEach   \t\nFRESH KILLED FOWL\u2014\nPer lb\t\n45c\n35c\n50c\n18c\nNo. 1 Steer Beef\nChoice Boiling Hr,\nBeef, per lb.   ..      ' c\nChoice  Pot   Roasts\nfber 8c, 10c, 12c\nChoice Rib 1 Ar,\nRoasts, per lb. .. -\"^\nRolled Prime Rib O Op\nRoast, per lb. .. -mK\/\nChoice   Fresh   Minced\nSteak, OCp\n2 lbs. for  \"\u2022OK\/\nYoung Grain-Fed Pork\nPrime Shoulder\nRoasts, per lb. ..\nPrime Leg Roasts\nper Ib\t\nPrime Loin Roasts\nper lb\t\nPickled Tork\nLegs, 2 lbs. ..\nPork Hocks and\nFeet, 3 lbs. ..\n10c\n15c\n15c\n15c\n25c\nFresh Killed Spring: Lamb and Local Veal at\nSpecial Prices.\nWe have a very choice assortment of Cold, Cooked\nMeats all ready for your Ticnic Basket or Table.\nNo Fuss. No Worry, to prepare.\nHormel Flavor Scaled Products.\nWhole or .Half Chicken, Chicken a la King,\nSpiced Ham, Lunch Tongue\nQUALITY \u2014 CLEANLINESS - SERVICE\nBURNS & CO., LTD.\nPHONE   91)\nWEST KOOTENAY BUTCHER CO.\nFHOSE  I\nSociety\nThli column la condii' 'e_ by\nMn. M. J Vlfl-riii. AM iirwi ot I\naortal nature, Including receptions, prl.au entertainments, persons! tifirn. marriagFt, _lc., will\nappear In thla rolumn. Te|rpit..i.fl\nMrt. Vtrncui at btt home, 9)9\nS;iirS atreet.\nMra. William Ramsay and daugh-\nten Jean and Belle hive lelt by!\nmotor lor a visit to Vancouv r. They'\nare accompanied by Mrs. R-a-nsay's!\nslater, Mrs. MacLeod and her nephew'\nRonald Fraser of Vancouver, who\nhave apent a few daya vlaltlng\nNelaon.\n\u2022 \u2666    .\nMaster   Olaf   Moen   celebrated   the\nanniversary of his sixth birthday\nthla w.ek at the MM of hit parents on Hall Mines road when his\ninvited guests were H_M OU* M>cr,\nMlss Alice Stacyn. Mm Frances Madden, Mlsa Jessie Byers, Mlss Betty\nByers, the Warn Swanela, Beda\nand Chrltlna Mo\"n, Master Stanley\nStacyn, David Slader, Tommy MJd-\nden, Joe and Andrew Sellnxer and\nArvid  Moen.\nMr. anrl Mrs. William J. Siurgeon\nand Mlas Florence M. Richards motored   to  TraU   yeaterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nH. Hall of Orand Forks paid a\nvlalt to  town   yeaterday,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Dunk, Mrs, W.\nM. Vance, Mr. and  Mrs. R. E.  Allen,\nRead The Nelson Daily News\nrilONE  It- I.IO.N-   M\nBUTCHERTERIA\nMM .00 buy \"ETTKR m-nt\nfor LESS. And our lrl_!<l\u201el..\nequipment nu-rnnt*.. that >ot]\nr.r.lv. rY.rMh.lng In pert... -on-\nliitlnn.\nMoney Bating Specials\nfor Saturday\nROLLED ROASTS choice (HUB-\nCM steer beef, \u00abA_\nper  lb  20P\nPOT BOAST choice grain-..,!\nMM    beer. Q\/. to 1 ___\nper   Ib. Op       12\u00a3\nSTEWING BEEF, lean and _,_ u\nbonelew. 2  lbe       *\u00ab.V\nROLLED  ROAST  jouni  mllk-\nleti  teal,  per   Ib      20c\nOVEN  \u25a0___T ,oun_   mllk-feil\nveal, per Ib  He\nCHOI'S or  STEAKS  juiing\nnillk-f.'l   teal,  per   ll#.  20e\n. LAI. for l_M_Hf, '\u25a0' tb!<  2S_\nSIIOI !,[>.;_  ROAST  ..nun;\nlamb,   \u00bb. r   Ib  i;.\nLUiS joung lamb, whole or\nhalf, per Ib .25c\nI.AMI!   (HOI'S,   tier   Ih  2.V.\nLAMB for fit.vi.n_, 3  It\u2122.  _..c\nAYR. HIRF)  B\\( ON. per  lb. ....   15c\n_____   Pit KILO   LEtiS\nrtlRK. tier  Ib  let\nSHOtl.DER   ROASTS  ._un(\npork,  per Ib  10c\nDELICATESSEN\nSPECIALS\nCOOKED  HAM,  aUced,\nper  lb\t\nROAST   PORK   with   dcll-\ncloui dressing,  lb\t\nMEAT   AND   CHEESE,\nsliced, per lb\t\nBREAKFAST  SAUSAQE.\nper  lb\t\nPURE PORK and TOMATO\nSAUSAOE. per lb\t\nBEST   ORADE   BOLOGNA,\nper   lb\t\nOLD   COUNTRY   STYLE\nTORK  PIES.  4  for .\nJELLIED   CHICKEN   INDIVIDUALS, each \t\nFRESH   MINCED  STE.K,\nper  lb\t\nEXTRA    SPECIAL\nFRESH    ROASTED   YOUNO\nCHICKEN\nCHOICE CREAMERY BITTER,\n_   lbs S5.\n!___, suitable  for  roasting.\nper   lb  20.\nBROILERS,   each     \u00bb5.\nIf .ou are looking to save money,\nour winnow  will aluaj.\nhtterest,  you.\nPHONE   1IH \u2014   FREE   DELIVERY\n350\n38..\n250\n100\n180\n150\n250\n150\n100\nMr.   and   Mrs  fl'-nit;. repeat !v   vlsltM j\nat   Bi Rmv   w .ere tfcrtc   teufbt_m\nare   en   a   coupl.   of welts'   camping\nvacation\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nNoblt Blnm of Trail was a city\nvisitor   yesterday.\nMlsa Ellen E Ahnel of Naku-p\nwai a v.suor to Nel_on yesterday.\nMli_s A. BrlT left laat evening to\nVancouver.\nM^s. Ft. P. Brown 3n1 party of\nRAtimngton -apent jesterday in the\ncity.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nW. A. Ward of Procter paid a visit\nto   town   yesterday.\nMr, and Kirs. John McPhail, Silica\nstreet, i.ave aa their guest* the.r\ndaughter-in-law and granl daughter,\nUtt Walley McPli.il! of AJlenby anl\nB verley J ;y. They also had Mrs.\nMcPhnll Jr., mother and filter, Mr_.\nUndcryou am Mies Har-el Lan-Jcr-\n>ou of Calgary, who have returned\nby moior.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. R. A. Bcott Lauder of Queens\nB.iy   spent   yesterday   In   town.\n\u2022 \u00ab    \u2022\nW. Byers of Trail has returnee\nifMt a ttlW days' visit to hla parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. By.rs, Hall\nMines   road.\nMr,   anJ   Mrs.   H-try   H,   B    Horton\nand  Mlss Moira McLcol are camping\nnear Slocan  Cliy.\nMr. ani Mrs, H. J. Burlcxaster of.\nCalgary and their ton Harvey Allan !\nare visiting at the lone of Mra.'\nBuck master's parents, Mr. and Mrs.'\nW.  E.  Coles,   Josephine   street.\nMr. and Mrs. H. M. BMNflB.  Gran- \\\n-JWIB .WWIWIIIIimHWIIWIMM-H-l\n---------- \u2014 \u2014\u2014iimmmhM*^\nV.a   tOiA_   have   taken   up   residence\na. 015 Stanley street.\ni Ik\nI\nWm Wrlc Donovan of Orand \u25a0 ;\nPorks arrived last evening to ffjien I ' j\nat the home on Stanley street oi | |\nMr.   and    Mra.    Charles    M.    Murray.'\nColonel Fr-d Lister of Camp Utter\nwas a business visitor to town yesterday.\n\u2022 i   \u00ab\nMrs.   R.   Byers   cf   CNMMIt   Valley I\nhis   returned   fr?m   Spokane   where\nshe  vislied  her  parents,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe Mliws Annie snd Blanch Hall \\\nnf 1HI] are spending lb* wrekend In]\nKel-^n, Riirst of I heir cousin, Mlss\nDarot. y   Hail,   Gore   street,\nMrs, Henri Bourgeois of crescent\nVil.e;., HCTonpiul-M Mr, and Mrs.\nIferbtrt Ciiorjuctte to Spokane Thursday   morning.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nS. Uary tx-M.PP, was a recent\nvisitor  frcm  Nakmp.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Qttl Llndow of Salmo moior-d to town bo ahop yesterday.\nA. Downbprger nf Harrop spent\n| yc3'.erday in the city.\nThe past noble grands anl the\nuumbttt ct the Rebekah lodge\nheld a auccssful picnic at L.keslde\n772 e Smart\nPLACE\nTo LUNCH\nCO quiet and restful.\n*** Sucli good food.\nDaintily prepared.\nAnd graciously served.\nIs It a wonder both\nmen and womm take\nreal pleasure In lunching  at  the\nGolden Gate Cafe\nSPECIALS\nBRAID'S TEA\u2014l's. 3 lbs. .. $1.00\nSALMON\u2014Pink, l's 10\nWAX BEANS\u20142's 15\nMARMALADE\u2014Little Chip.\nBottle 23\nCOFFEE\u2014Our Special. Lb. .    .25\nPURE LARD\u20143-lb. pails ...    .35\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235 418 BAKER ST.\n\"Made. Its Way by the Way It's Made\"\nOn AU\nOccasions\nServe Curlew\nIce Cream\nWhether it be for a\n(_>\u00ab____ party, bridge,\nor luncheon, .erve\nCurlew Brick or Bulk\nIce Cream. Its rich,\npure flavor nukes it\npopular with everyone, anrl it is .0 convenient to .erve.\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nru.i Dimies, _m\nICE CnFA.M BUTTTH MILK\nau, rrarECTLv rASTEiinizFi) rnonucTs\nTODAY ENDS OUR\nJULY CLEARANCE SALE\nTHIS SALE HAS BROKEN ALL RECORDS FOR VALUE GIVING AND ATTENDANCE NEVER HAS THERE BEEN A MORE ENTHUSIASTIC RESPONSE ACCORDED THIS THRIFT OPPORTUNITY TO WHICH EVERY DEPARTMENT AND SECTION THROUGHOUT OUR STORE CONTRIBUTES ITS\nQUOTA OF EXTRAORDINARY SAVINGS FOR YOU! TAKE ADVANTAGE OF\nTHESE CLEARANCE SPECIALS OFFERED FOR THE LAST DAY . .. TODAY.\nWomen's Better Coats\nat Half Price\nA wonderful opportunity to buy a good coat at tremendous saving. Coats of the finest woolens in plain\nor mixed cloths. Self or fur trimmed. All best colors and black. Sizes for Misses and Women. No two\nalike Regular values ?33.50 to W9J50 each.\nSALE PRICE, EACH  f 16.75 TO *3t.75\nWomen's Tailored Suits\nSmartly tailored suits.   Made of fine wool worsteds\nor tweeds.    Coats are silk lined.   Sizes 1_ to -10.\nRegular values to $29.50 each.\nSALE TRICE, EACH   \u2022\u2022 .f 17.05\nWomen's Knitted Suits\nat 20% Less\nThere is a large range of\nall the good knitted suits.\nThrec- or four-piece styles\nof Botany Wool or Bramble\nKnit. In all wanted colors.\nSizes 32 to .2. Regular\nvalues $21 to $33.50 each.\nSALE PRICE-\nEACH $16.80 TO J26.80\n20% Saving on\nAll Better\nDresses\nHundreds of dresses of the\nbetter kind. Dresses for immediate or future wear.\nPlain or printed crepes,\ngeorgettes or sports silks.\nRegular values $20 to\n$19.50 each. Now is your\nchance to save.\nSELLING AT 20% LESS\nTHAN REGULAR.\nWomen's\nHouse Dresses\nGood quality Print Dresses.\nFast   colors   and   smart\nstyles. All sizes.\nSALE, SPECIAL-\nEACH    70^\nWomen's\nPorch Dresses\nSmart dresses that can be\nworn anywhere. Made of\nfast color Printed Broadcloth in a range of styles.\nSizes 16 to 42.\nJULY SALE PRICE-\nEACH    fl.65\nTable Cloths\nPure linen Table cloths of Irish manufacture. Full\nbleach.   Two vards square.\nSALE PRICE, EACH $2.30\nLuncheon Cloths\nPure linen cloths with colored borders.   M inches\nsquare.\nJULY SALE PRICE, EACH $1.10\nBleached Sheeting\nHeavy weight full bleached  sheeting.    81  inches\nwide.\nA SALE SPECIAL, THE YARD  .o,.\nPillow Cotton\n42-inch Circular Pillow Cotton in good qualilv\nSALE TRICE, 3 YARDS FOR  .fg\nPillow Slips\ntfhs\nFull size slips of good nualitv bleached cotton.\nJULY SPECIAL,  1 FOR  $1\nBedspreads\nStriped Cotton Spreads in large size. All  wanted\ncolors.   Regular values 12.60 each.\nSALE PRICE, EACH    Jfl.os\nMillinery at Half\nPrice\nAll colored Hats. The season's\nsmartest models. Regular selling\nprice $7.50 to $15 each.\nJULY SALE PRICE-\nEACH  $3.75 TO $7.50\nHoleproof Hose\nFull fashioned pure silk  hose in chiffon or seml-\n. cm'ce weight. A full range of sizes and colors.\nTIIE PAIR S0<*\nCrcpc'dc-Chinc Slips\nLace trimmed atlips of heavy crept-\nde-chine. Colors are flesh or eggshell. Sizes 31 to 411.\nJULY SALE PRICE\u2014\n\"ACH   IH2.I)5\nmen's Dance\nSets\nPantee. and Brasaiere.\nof   pure   silk   crepe-de.\nchine. All colors.\nJULY SALE PRICE\u2014\nTHE SET  9t.lt\n\\      Silk\nPajamas\n* Fine   Rayon   Pajamas in wanted cnl-\n_rs. Values to $6.75\nthe ,uit.\nLy\"   TO CLEAR  AT\u2014\n\u2022V   THE,  SUIT   f&M\nmen's Pantees\nMade of good quality Rayon.   All colors.\nEACH  30^\nQ^Mea^her Vx)\n607 Baker St.\nI W^^W^^W^W^^^^^^W^mWiW%^\nPhone 200\npark Thursday af:crncon when about\nG3 nmMM and guests were present.\nGB.v<es, races and refreshments com-\npo_c_ the afternoon's program. '.*bflM\nin charge w:re Mrs. J. t. Brown as\ncomener, ns.M_.te_ by the president\nof the lodsre, Mr*.. J. H. lemmon,\nMrs. T. Dolphin and Mrs. A   Q. Lane.\nFreddie Lee of Trail tm* In Nelson\njattotdt*. atttt a holiday spent in\nKftkwp and ^Un*w->rth,\n\u2022 i   \u2022\nO. Desmond of Kaslo \u00bbp\u00abnt yes-\nt-rday   in  town.\nMlM K-vthleen Butler of Kaslo Is\nIn the city the guest of Mlss Winona\nRouleau,  Front street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. anl Mn:. A. C. Irvine end *nr\\\nKeith,   w Uo   have   apent   the   pist\nweek visiting at the home of Mrs.\nIrvine's parents. Mr. and Mrs. D.\nRees, Water street, left yeaierday by\nmotor for tl-.elr rom-1  ln Vancouver.\nk  \u2022   a\nMl ss Jessie Byers Is spend tn \u25a0 a\nfew daya at .he home of her brother-\nin-law and sist'r, Mr. and Mra. W.\nT.   Easibn,   at   Four   Mile.\n\u2022 #  i\nMrs. H Fairbanks of Hajrop pild\na, vls\\t to town yesterday,\n\u2022 *   \"\nMr. and Mrs. James Byhsr* an\nmd family of Trsll were ln the city\nen route to their summer plao\u00ab at\nFour Mile,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nVcnard Jackson of South Slocan\npalfl a visit t) town  yesterday.\nMr,  Church cf  Slocan Fark  sp*__'_\nyesterday ln the city shopping.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nColon-\"! and Mrs. John Murray of\nSouth Sloaftii were in Nelson yesterday.\nGeorge Heald and his daughtrr.\nMlas Catherine Heald of Pon.la.nd\nwho formerly re-si-kd In Nelson, are\nvisiting here en rout\u00ab t\/> the Crow\nd 1st r Jet.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. BJoiardson, who Is summering on the north thora was a city\nshopper   yftsterday.\n\u00bb   *    \u2022\nA most enjoyable birthday party j\nwas given Thursday with Miss Ruhy J\nEmily McNsudhton as hostess, the j\noccasion betni? Die Anniversary ot!\nhr 1-.*t.i birthday. Af'er sponrtlncj\nth* ane'TV\" svlnmipg at t a QfW'\np*rk,   Kfre^hmeiUs   were   edj.-yed   ll\nthe home of Ruby's parents, oo\nUnion street when the guests included Miss Jean Archibald, Mim\n$mttO Byers, Misses Mars vet and\nDonalda Dlr.gwell, Wm Joan Fergu*\nton, Mlss Joy Guscott. and th*\nMisers Kathleen ani Mart-ha McNaughton.\nNew Storm Sewer Is\nBeing Built, Fernie\nFERNt__, B- C, Julv 15\u2014A nr-tr\nrity ttotm sewer is iv-irig built along\nThompson street ss a city unemployment relief men sure. Thla sewer will relieve the spring flood a\nwhich have done considerable damage for several years near Central\nsrhnnl.     TO   nh1i.lt.    t'n\u00ab    tlrrtlnnae   \u00bb\nn>.>n pxcarttlnn  had to bt made in\nthe   rtettUtj   of  Ho-lfid  avenue.\n alir 2Mh0u Bailg Sfruu.\nTHE .NELSON DAILV NEWS, Nt;SON, B.  C. \u2014 RATI RfUV   MOBMXG. ICtf  1*.   UH\nPut>u*i\ntl   l__m.:\nMtTUbei\n.ri  corning except Sunday by News Publishing Com-\nVrlBOI).   B    C.\nCanadian  tr_aa  leased  Wlr* news service.\n)wtlaiB_r   rata  cards   and   A.   B.   C.   statement*   of   circulation\ni   ua  request, or may  bt aeen  at  tba office of any advertising\ni   tecognized by tb* Canadian Dally Newspapers' Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBv    Bail    (country),   per   mnnMr    ,\t\nP*t   >\u2666.._                     \t\n,.., |    .60\nOutSIae  ranada,  prr  mnnth   ,__\nPer    yttir __.....\u201e\t\nPer   year    _,_.,\t\n  1300\nPi.-bl. In advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ot circulation.\nSATURDAY, JULY 16, 1932.\n\u2022    Spohane Finds Over-lapping\nMany governments and cities havc been done a service by the financial stringency, which has forced them\nto review the services they maintain, and see where\nthey can reduce their budgets.\nSpokane, faced by a shrinkage of 15 to 20 per cent\nin the taxable value of its assessment roll, is looking\nfor new points at which to retrench, and Mayor Funk\nhas discovered that at five points the city has overlapping fire halls. He asks for the elimination of fire\nhalls and 30 to 40 firemen, and proposes a proportionate reduction in the police force.\nWhen the hard times have passed, many governments, communities, and individuals, it is to bc hoped,\nwill have learned valuable lessons on spending.\nIt is possible that the depression has effectively\nchecked, for an appreciable period, the tendency for\ngovernments to extend their activities to new fields,\nand may leave an idea! of necessity and efficiency, as\nthe standard for governments, large and small.\nBritish Parole Recommendations\nFollowing thc outbreak in Dartmoor prison a committee was appointed to investigate the question of\ndealing with persistent offenders. In its report to the\nhome office the committee has recommended longer\nterms for hardened criminals, and has suggested that,\nthe secretary of state should be empowered to parole\nany prisoner after he had completed a third of his\nsentence if detention had effected its purpose and there\nwas reasonable probability that the offender would abstain from further crime.\nThe latter recommendation is of interest here in connection with the recent release from the penitentiary\nof brokers who have served little more than half the\nterm to which they were sentenced. The pivotal point\nin both the recommendation of the British committee\nand that of the parole board in the case of the brokers,\nis whether the detention has \"effected its purpose.\"\nWithout an explanation this must remain a puzzle to\nthe layman.\nSentences which are imposed in open court after\nhearing the evidence rarely go the limit which the law\nallows, and are generally supposed to bear some relation to the offence, lt may therefore prove perplexing\nto find that a parole board which works behind the\nscenes may cut the sentences in two.\nThe punitive feature of imprisonment is today rather\nin discredit with penologists. Its deterrent'aspect stands\nscarcely higher. Its main importance is ascribed to reformation. How the extent of reformation is gauged is\nnot clear, especially in the case of men whose only vice\nis disregard of the law in the accumulation of wealth.\nIf sentences are to be determined, not by the courts,\nbut by parole boards, it is desirable that it shall be\nclear that the parole board works on a definite plan,\nand that the reduction of sentences is equally applicable\nto all prisoners who qualify under that plan. It would\nbe unfortunate for the idea to get abroad that social\nposition is recognized by preferred treatment.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nNBC   PROT.RAM\nRATI RDAV,   JUL*   IS\n\u2022 00\u2014 Dance   Hour;   KGO  chain.\n\u00ab7*5\u2014The    Bluettes--vocal    trio    \u2014\nKGA,   KJR,   KEX.\n7:00\u2014Amoa   'n'  Andy.    KGO chain.\n7:00\u2014Tom Mitchell, baritone.   KPO,\nKOA.   KJR,   KEX.\n7:16\u2014 Bank   of   America   program,\nKGO,  KFI.\n7:15-Merle   Thorpe-Talk,   KPO\nchain.\n7:30\u2014Sodero's NBC  Concert orchestra;  KPO chain.\n7:4fl\u2014Kenneth    Spencer,    baritone;\nKGO,   KHQ.\n8:00 \u2014 Hundley  Twins,   KPO.\n8:15\u2014Hollywood     Bowl     Symphony.\n.^dII^u,...,,     ,__.. \u00ab.,_,.., 111:00\u2014Henry iTalstrsd   and  orchestra\n8:00\u2014 Ralph  Kirherj - Dream Singer, I ,\u201e ,rin    -\u25a0 , _.  __  _,__\nKGO chain.\n6:00\u2014Music That   Satisfies\n6:18\u2014Columbia Public Affairs\n6:45- Coral   Islanders\n7:00-Irene Beasley\n7:15\u2014Don   Redman's orcheatra\n7:30\u2014Chandu,  Magic, n\n7:4.r>\u2014Hftrol-t  Stern's  orchesra\n8:00\u2014 Smith   Ballew\n6:30\u2014Noble Sissies orchestra\n9:00\u2014 The Merrymakers\n9:15\u2014Crazy   Quartette\n9:30-The   Merrymakers \u2022\n10:00\u2014Anson  Week's orchefra\n11:00\u2014 Henry   Halstead s   orchestra\nkfrc \u2014 mn nuivcisco\nfit(i    K IOOO   H 4ftt,5   M\nB:00 -Smith Ballrw's orchestra\n8:30\u2014Isham   Jones'  orchestra\n9:0O\u2014 Merrymakers\n10:00\u2014Anson   Week, DLBS\n12:00\u2014Vagabond of the Air\n8.05 \u2014 Buddy Roger's orchestra, frcm\nNew York  to KOO chain.\n8:30\u2014John   end   Ned,   vocal   instrumental   duo.   KPO  chain.\n8:30\u2014Associated Bpotttfbt Revue\u2014 j B50\nThe Coquettes, vocal trio; Annette '\nHastings; Marjorle Prlmley, Imelda\nMontagne; Cyrnl Four, male quartet; Max Waixman, Monroe Upton, Harold Peary, B<.bhe I>ane,\nCapt. William H. Boyle, Bennle\nWalker; Cecil Underwood, master\nof cere mon lea; orchestra direction\nWalter Beban. KOO, KHQ, KOMO,\nKOW,  KFI.\nDance\u2014variety,\nS -45\u2014The      Barn\nKPO  chaM.\n10:00\u2014Mora   Lowe,     cheer     leaders;\nKOO,   KHQ.\n10:00\u2014 Hal    Krmp'i   orchestra;    KPO\nchain.\n10 30\u2014Around    the    Network,    Kro.\nKOA. K.IR. KXX.\n10.30\u2014 Musics!   Echoes:   KGO rhaln.\nJl ;00\u2014Ted   Fio   Rito's   orchestra   \u2014\nKOO.   KHQ.  KFI.\n11:00\u2014NBC  Soutii   Americans, dance\norchestra,  KPO chain.\n11:30\u2014Charles   Kaley's   orchestra.   \u2014\nFrom Los Angeles to KOO. KFI.\n11:30\u2014Organ Concert- Dollo Sargent,\nKPO chain.\n(.FtN   \u2014   CALGARY\nJWt   R lO.fWW   IV 30?,*   M\n6:30--,Opening   I'srket   Peport\n6:45\u2014Good   Morning   program .\n8:15\u2014Reckltt's   Blue  program\n8:30\u2014Mid Market Reports\nP:00\u2014 Program\n10:30\u2014Weather Reports\n11:00\u2014 Musical Selections\nCJOR   \u2014   VANCOUVER\n1210   K 500   W 247.1\n6:30\u2014 News   Flashes\n6:45\u2014Musical program\n11:00\u2014Dream Pictures\n12:00-Program\nKVI   \u2014   TA if Ott A\n9'n   K MM   II ttt\nKMO \u2014 TACOMA\nHI   K 5'lft W 318.fi  M\n6:45-Musical  _jo<-k  program\n9:30\u2014Syncopated  Riddles\nNews  Flashes\n10:00\u2014Home Harmonies\n10:30\u2014Organ  Recital\n11:00\u2014Varied   Melodies\nKN.\\   \u2014   MO.LY.VOOn\nin,-,o  k MM  w MM M\n8:O0\u2014Cnlmon   Lnbovlski\n9:00-News   Items\n9:15\u2014Dreamln's   Tim*\n8:30\u2014Arizona   Wrnnglero\n10:00\u2014Taylor  and   orchestra\n12:00\u2014\"Phenomena\"\nKSL \u2014 MIT LABI CITV\ni no  k ;.fwo w        _ \\tt_ti N\n8:15\u2014Variety  progr .m\n9 oo\u2014King Sister* Trio\n030\u2014 Dance Mimic\n25 Years Ago\n(From   The.  Daily   sens  of  -July   16,\n1307)\nRich   ore  Is  being  encountered   at\nthe Jewel mine near Greenwood.\nMlas M. K. McKeon-n of Quebec Is\napendlng a few montha with her\nrelatives, Mr. snd Mrs, 1 nomas\nMadden.\n\u25a0   \u2022   4\nThe Installation of the Kntahts of\nPythias  officers  will   take   place  tonight with Dr. w. O. Rose officiating.\nttt\nAlthough the berry peak has been\nreached 400 crates were shipped\nfrom Nelson yesterday.\nCoppen, Wade. Bourke, El very. Pat-\nttngton, Oraham, Treglllts, Hamilton, Msson. Teague and Morris\nwill    represent    Nelson    In    a    crlck-t\nmitch with cwttetv this week.\n\"Between You\nand Us\"\nBy    \"J.B.C.V   COLLEAGUES\nWa hope thit there ta nothing\nominous for the dogs in the discovery that in the first half of 1932\nthe city of Nelson has received only\n803 In dog taxes, out of an expected\ntotal for the year of |500. There are\nvarious moratoriums extant\u2014for Germany, for European nations owing\nUncle Sam, for British Columbi\nmortgagors\u2014and, in times of stress.\nwhen there ls a shortage of funds\nto protect man's best friend from\nthe dog-catcher, why shouldn't there\nbe a moratorium on dog licences.\nWhen so few licences have teen\ntaken out, it means the owners of\ndogs, wtth exceptions of course. Just\nhaven't the money. It is a case where\nthere is no choice. We kind of hope\nthe city authorities won't probe into\nthe dog revenue too closely this\nyear. After normalcy returns, the\ndogs no doubt will see that their\nowners\u2014the real owners, from the\npoint of view of interest and possession, are usually the klda\u2014pay up\npromptly.\n\u2022    |    \u2022\nWhile on tho subject of the city's\nreceipts snd expenditures for six\nmonths, we observe an item of 9%\nrevenue from road tax payments,\nout of an estimated 8750 for thc\nyear. The road tax collections are\nusually made in the fall, when the\nchic election is not many months\naway, and as payment of this tax\nla one of the qualifications for\nvoters\u2014in the case of non-property\nowners\u2014Ulll 32 bill will be Joined\nby many others before the city's financial year closes. But at that, to\nour notion, there are never enough\nof those 12 bills turned in. Only a\nvery small minority of the \"householders.\" as the act calls them, value\nthe city franchise enough to complete their qualification. And although this leaves the choice of our\ngoverning authorities very largely to\nthe sturdy citizens who have (c-\nquired property, lt ls a pity, for it\nshows a lack of interest ln the re-\nponsibillties and privileges of citizenship that bodes ill for the nation.\nFpokane has a tree-planting campaign on. we notice by the Bpokane\nSpokesman-Review, and It sounds all\nright, except that the proposal is to\nornament many of the suburban\nstreets with Norway maples, the city\nln fact sending away for them. Now\nthe Norway maple Is the tree that\nunfortunately was planted here profusely in the early days, millions of\nseedllnga springing up ln Nelson\nevery spring on lawns, boulevards,\nvacant lots, and every corner where\nsoil can find lodgment. We have\nNorway maples springing up in thc\ncracks between curb and cement\nsidewalk, poking their heads through\nplank sidewalks, and even through\nthe iron gratlnpp that protect coal\nwindows on Baker street, It speaks\nmuch for the stamina of the Norway\nmaple that tt can grow under almost any conditions, but ls stamina\nall that is wanted in a shade tree?\nNelson ts raising several hundred\nseedlings of the rock or IUfW maple.\nwhich is a glorious crimson ln fall\nfoliage. If Spokane is making a beginning with maples, lt should avoid\nthe mistakes of others, snd choose a\nwinner,\n\u2022 * * i\nWonder when the last Cottonwood\nIn Nelson will be extirpated. Here Is\nanother tree that is a fast and lusty |\ngrower, but in maturity is too prolific a seeder. Its cotton constitutes\na nuisance, and it annually sows Its\nseeds all over Nelson, Few vacant\nlots are without their potential\ngroves of cottonwood. If Nel-ion 18\nto be cleaned of cottonwood, owners\nof land will have to bc on their\ntoes. Lots that were cleared of lofty\ncottonwoods during the unemployment of 1920 have now B*W growth\nthat Is 30 feet high. It Is a case of\nbeauty-lovers sleeping on their arms,\nor on their axes and  grub-hoes.\n\"NO! we're not looking for any CROONERS!\"\nTHE WEATHER BULLETIN\nFor western and mitral Canada, eni-^\nbracing British Columbia. Alherta.\nSaskatchewan. Manitoba and Ontario.\nMONDAY, July 18,- In western\nanrl middle Canadian provinces the\nweather now tends to clear, except\nabout the southeast quarter, where\nthere nre heavy clouds and intermittent shower?. Temperatures near\nnr slightly below the seasonal nor*\nniHl.\nTUESDAY, July 13.\u2014Light nnd\nscnt.tcring rains now shift to the\ngreat lakes sections and near the\nOntario borders. Generally clearing\nabout tbo west and northwest. Temperatures  near  normal   but  rising.\nWEDNESDAY, July 20.~Abo.it this\nlime warm and clear days expected\nIn all middle and western provinces.'\nalthough Just on the southern borders there may be light, scattering\nand showery rains.\nTHURSDAY. July 21\u2014Should be\nnear midst of a warm spell in most\nparts of the country, but in British Columbia and north we.t Alberta rain clouds and unsettled.\nAlso llnht rains indicated ln the\nsouthwest, about or east of Winnipeg-\nFriday. July 22.\u2014While the prediction is for generally clearing and\nwarm weather in most parts of\nCanada, it seems unsettled conditions may still remain about the'\nAlberta  sections.\nSATURDAY. July 23.-About this\npart of the week sudden decline In\ntemperature expected; clear in middle provinces, but to the west prob\nably   light   rains   in   spots.\nSUNDAY, July 24.\u2014Along south-\ncm borders of the mid-Canadian\nprovinces expect light rains today,\nextending to east Ontario. In central plains sections temperatures\nnearly  stationary   or   slowly   rising.\nFor week of July 13 to 24. 1838.\nIn the western and middle provinces.\nweather p\"ncrally phould be warm\nnnd clear. At this season of the year\ncloud drifts often stream or roll in\nfrom the west, causing sudden show-\nera tn scattering localities. In some\nyears these cloudbanks pass without\ndropping much rain, hut thia season considerable precipitation is expected. At Barkervllle. Edmonton\nnnd Montreal the normal rainfall in\nJuly Is nearly an Inch each week;\nst Prince Albert, a little over half\nan Inch; while in the Inges regions\nabout Winnipeg It is about three-\nquarters. These normals should be\nfully equalled this year. Normally\nthe hottest days of the year in\nmid-plains sectloua occur near the\nlast fortnight of July, and this year\nIt la expected the hottest days will\nbe about the llth, 21st. 26th and\n31st, while a cool spell ls looked\nfor around the  16th.\nIu the Hudson bay end northern\ndistricts tho rainfall maximum of\nthe year occurs late In the season.\nAt MoOM Factory, Fort Churchill.\nPort Nelson and about Fond du Lac.\nthe rainfall peak is in August, and\nthis year these late occurring ralna\n-it\\y he expected to considerably re-\n010 the seasonal Advance of the\n_ariy   autumnal   frosts.\nAuction and\nContract Bridge\nBy   the   Worlds   leading   Authority,\nMILTON   C. WORK\n(This Article is intended for Contract\nBridge   Beginners>\nWHEN SAFETY DICTATES\n\"DELAY\"\nThat Body of Yours\nB7   .AMES   V..   H..R-ON\nVITAMINS  AND  HBALTO^ *- \u00a3 *\u00a3..'\" *\u2022\u00bb H\nThe above  hand  might  be  bid ln\nany one of the following ways:\nEast\nP\n.011(11\nWest       Xorlh\nIH\nP\n.H<->\n.H\nOR\nIH\nP\n3D(b)\n3H\nP\n4H\nOtt\nII\nP\n-DM\nII\nP\n411\nSTONE ACE LOVE SCENE\n| UNEARTHED IN FRANCE\nWhat appears to be s Stone Age aeolosrtsf, who hni studied his prized\nJove sc.ne between the cave man ikOQOtfty carefully, suggests that the\nand his lady Is the l*ta*t discovery j artist meant the figure., to be un*\nof Stone Age art from caverns of EteKtood H standing side by side.\n,'outhcrn France. And the cave man .HXPN LIFT Vfll.\nis pursuing the woman. He has no. ON TlIU NTONL A OK\nclub, but a harpoon point has been] The woman's head ia broken off.\nsi-nt into rer leg. | She   wears   a   ncklioa   and   around\nThis  scene  recorded   In   art.   \u00aboin?  her ankle is a bangle. Cave men\n20.000 yeara ago. Is  the 'discovery of  often\nFrench   archaeologist,   Count   Rene\nde St. Jerlcr, reported in  the scien-\n(n) The double raise showing four\nsupporting tricks (Official!, or four\nand a half playing tricks (Approach-\nForcingi.\n(bl The forcing Jump-shift.\n(c> The bid made by those who\nconsider the North hand too tyeak\nfor either a double raise or a forcing Jump shift.\nThe Auction bidding would be\nSouth one Heart, West pass, North\npass, Eaat one Spade, South two\nHearts. If West should bid two\nSpades, North's raise to three Hearts\nwoudl end  the  Auction.\nIn the contract play West led the\nKing of Spades and East dropped\ntlie Eight as a card of encouragement; so West led the Queen to\ntrick 2\u2014East dropping the Deuce.\nWest led *ie Jack of Spades to trick\na and South ruffed with nn honor.\nTricks 4-5 were trumps and wl: 11\nEast discarded Wer.t was marked\nwith two more and it took all\nSouth's trumps to exhaust West.\nAfter drawing trumps South led a\n(.mall club to dummy's King. East\nwon with the Ace. and proceeded to\ncash his two remaining Spades. Declarer discarding winners. Declarer\nwon the laat three tricks with his\nestablished Clubs and dummy's Diamonds, but was set two tricks. East\nand West took four Spades and a\nClub. How should thla hand have\nbeen played?\nTHE CORRECT PLAY\nWhen East discarded at trick fl.\nDeclarer should delay drawing any\nmore trumps until he had established hts Clubs. He should lead the\nSeven of Clubs to trick fl. and play\ndummy's King. East would have\nno reason to hold up the Ace. East's\nbest lead would be another Club,\nbecause a fourth round of Spades\nwould permit Declarer to trump in\ndummy, while discarding from closed\nhand. Eas,rs Club return would bs\nwon by South who then would complete the drawing of trumps, and\nhave a showdown for the remaining\nHe   would   lose   two   Spades\nYou ar* reading and hearing every-\nwhere the;e days about vitamins ln\naelen'lflc journals; in food mag**\nsines; In popular magazines and\nnewspflpers. and In every form of\nadvertising \u2014 newspap-T, magazines,\nposters  and  the  radb.\nPerhaps you are now of the\nopinion that fere Is nothing so\nImportant as the vitamins and thst\nthey are the moet necessary food\nstuff   known.\nThe first point to know then fa\nthat vitamins are not rally foodstuffs. Second that no matter how\nmuch cf every known v.fsmin you\ntake Into your system, lc doesn't\nne'-ewwrlly mean that y-u wlil havs\nsufficient food and right kind of\nfood  to ensure good heilth. !onion.,\nTrlrJ,   that   while   especially   pre-J^    ^'\npared    f'ods    are    rich    In    certain\nvitamin*,    it   should    not   be    necessary for the ordinary Individual to\nhave t> eat these special foods.\nIn cases of illness. In run down\nconditions, in attempt* to prevent\norrtaln ailments, there ls no question but that these specially prepared foods, rich lu certain vitamins are of real value.\nIf vitamins dj not belong to\nany of  the regular classes of foods,\nTbey sre simply a part of tha\nregular food stuffs, whlrh when present In the proper ani<mnts in tiie\nordinary every day foods we cat, helpJ\nto maintain body tinsue, proinot-tj\ngrowth, r*slst Infection, and msk<\ndifferent food stuffs work ao muc-il\nbetter together that more real fool|\nvalue ls obtained  In the  br>dy.\nHow can you be sure that you]\nare getting all the vitamins daily?\nSimply by eating just the or*\\\ndlnary everyday foods to which miy|\nbe   added   some  raw   vegetable.\nAll    dairy    producta\u2014milk,    butter,!\ncream,   eggs,   leafy   vegetables,   fruit*\nand  1-ver,  c_r>ln  all  tlie   vitamin-'\nThus    eggs,    inllk,    butter,    bread,I\ngr:en    vegetables,    bananas,    supply!\nvitamin   A,   Lettuce,   beans,  apinsch.f\nmd    milk    supply    vttamli\nyolk,   cod   liver   oil,   milk, I\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Daily News. July 16.1912)\nMary Miller and Charles Storey of\nNelson were united in marriage yes-\nterdaj.\nC. patey, C. Gray ond O. W. Humphry were elected school trusteed\nat Slocan Junction tiila week.\n\u2022 a * a\nMrs. K. BJerkness of Mirror Lake\nhas returned from a trip to Chicago. Minneapolis and other eastern cities.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBorn on July 1_ to Mr. end Mrs.\nw. J. Turner of Ymlr, a aon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. J. Toy's new mahogany launch\nwas launched yesterday and proved\nto be a apeedy craft. William Thurman has also launched a new boat.\nC.   Egg\nsupply   vitamin   D.\nWhile It. Is believed that .._\ntain organs may atcre small quantities of vitamins, health demandi\nthat* a ttttb supply of vltamlni\ndally be taken Into the ayatem.\nHowever, this doesn't require much\nthought on our part. If we thini\nof tb* above list of foods.\ntricks.\nand one Club\nuflc journal I'Anthropologic. Explcr\nIng   the   PMMHi   of   the   Grotto   of\nLsturitz,    ln   southern\nthOffl In modern art as hairy\ncreatures. This Stone Ags w.;m\u00abn M\nshown by the artist contemporary as\nhiving quite a hairy body. Thc man\nhas bobbed  hair, and  wears a n?ck\nWriting to this column respecting\nthe recent paragraphs on keeping\nthe city  neat, a citizen comments:\n\"More power to you. Colleagues.\nHowever, please emphasize the point\nthat sweepings from stores ahould be\ngathered up inside the stores instead\nof being swrpt out on to main\nstreets. Tlie city collects from refus\u2122\ncontainers, sweepings from building..\nIf floor dust and other matter n\nswept out on to the street In the\nform of dusl. Wind scatters such, to\nthe detriment of citizens, Into whose\nsystems It is taken instead of to\nthe Incinerator or other places provided by the city. Take a walk, any\nweek-day morning, down Baker\nstreet between 8 and 0 fl, m. Further\nproof ls not required, or a least it\nwas not, up to today.\"\n\u2022    *    \u2022\nOn   this  matter,   it   would   mot*\nthat the police could aid, by n\ncouple of timely inspections. it\nshould hardly be necessary for tfoe\nlaw to be invoked, unless there\nshould be some defiant offender. TIt**\ncity   council   ll   taking   authority   to, - \t\ndeal   with   those   who   Interfere   with   flMd  observations  In   an  cnde.iv,.r   to\nhe   proper  enjoyment   of  the   park,-,    \"\npnd    presumably   has   power   to   see\nthat  abuse  does   not  o-cur   in  connection   wltli   the   itlfftl.\nFrance, the'lac and bangle. His head, fhown in\nc?unt has foi;nd two important art j profile. _*** a receding forehead. Both\nobjects from  the MfiiliTllii  period'\"\"     \"\nof   Stone   Age   human   history.\nOne object Is a little brown bear\nsculptured in sandstone, and si\ncleverly sculptured tbtt lt Ih hailed\nby ttM archaeologist as a gem of\nMellette art. The other object Is a\nlong piece of b.uie, with pictures\nengraved on both sides. On one side\na bison hunt, and en the other\nsi.ie a bmd and woman of the old\nSton-   Ape.\nIn order to depict th\u00bb man and\nwoman on the long, narrow piece of\nbone, the artist placed the woman\nentirely shove the man. T:at Is. so\nthey appear when the bone obje;t\nis   held   vertically.  Th*  French   arch-\nthe figures have their hands uprated   In   a  gesture   of  supplication.\nThe French archaeologist Interprets\ntlie harpoon in the woman's leg as a\nsymbal of conquest. Th.? man's flt'.l-\ntudp. he points out, daes not appear\nhostile. ^\nWhat th\u00bb rites ot courta:;Ip\n.10.000 years ago in Europe, 1.\nknowledge. The Count de St. Perier\ncomments that the engraving of th\nBft9 and woman ll \"a document\nwhich should be preserved in the\nh?rc thit some day new discoveries\nwUl perxlt further raising cf the\nveil whic.-i bides from our eyes MM\nmental processes of tho Stone Age\npeople.\"\nARRANGE TOURS\nTO ITALY\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally News. July lfl. 19221\nNelson's senior baseball  nine took\nTrail  into  camp  5-3  yesterday.    T.\nScanlan  hurled   for  Trail  and   Edward Langlll for Nelson.\n\u00bb    \u2022    \u2022\nGeorge Redpath. son of Mr. and\nMrs. E. R. Redpath ls home for a\ntwo-week'a holiday from Portland,\nOregon. where he la attending\ndental college.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nW. J. Grove of OroWllo, Wash., is\nIn the city relieving at the Great\nNorthern offices.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nBorn at the Kootenay Lake General hospital, July 14, to Mr. and\nMrs. William stilwell, a son.\nGlenairley   Farm\nFor a restful holiday by the\nita. Oood accommodation,\nboats, warm bathing, tennis.\nIndoor badminton, dancing,\netc. Home-made bread, Jersey\ncream, fruit and vegetables;\ngood sad \"e horses (only extra). One hour'* drive from\ntflctorla. Phone or wTlte, Major Cavenagh, \u00ab:aat Bo->ke, V. I.\nMOTHER   ON   VACATION\nThe first Intimation or Italy's\npreparation for showing that country to tlie delegat?s of the World's\npoultry congress, commencing th*\nmorning of the 16th of ^September,\nand continuing until the evening\nof the 24th\u2014nine full days serin?\nthe high spDts of Italy and en-\nJoying official receptions from tbe\nhospitable   Italians.\nThe itinerary makes provision for\nleaving  Ro.ne\non   the   Itth  ot  Sep-\nObserving for Crown Rot\nin Apple Orchards\n(i:\\perl ment :il    Farms    Note|\nThe   labratory   nf   plant   pathology\n'    '.umerlfind    has    mad?    extensive\nat.\nRHIYES HER STATE\nMrs. Harry Bradieye recently tu\npresented with an achlev-ment award\nas the woman wbo performed the\ngreat-tot civic service during 1910\nand 1931. A* health chairman of\nthe ttlti district of the Alabama\nFederation of Women's club-s. she\npromoted a health program In th*\nclubs   of   her   atate.\nrtftea notleeab'e growth variatlniii\nw;lch would Indicate the Initial\nattack of crown rot. Early bronzing\nof |Jm leaves In autumn was found\nto be the only evident indication\nof the presence at the dtsea.se. This\nsymptcn, however, wag rarely perceptible unit] i\\tter the r.-t wis well\nadvanc-d and had seriously reduced\nthe vitality of the tree, miking it\nmore  difficult   to\nIn the c:irly spring si that affected trees may be inarched when\nfound. Remove carrfulty with a\ngarden trowel the soil from the\ncrown. As the rot lesion Is not\nalways well defln.-d close observation wf.l be necc totj to detect\nlie first slight discoJordti-m of th?\nouter bark. In er'rfme cases the\nn fleeted area will appear slightly\nsiinkrn, the rot Involving the entire bark tissue which turns dark\nbrown and sometimes frels soft anl\nslimy to the touch. It may be\nnttttmtt to cut Into doubtful areas\nwith a sharp knife, although Ui-\ndiscrimate cutting should be molded.\nA   certain   amount   cf   dark   colored\nAUNT HET\n\"1 never talked to Satan personalty     but   r e   said   means    things\nabout him beforp. Emmie and fhc'll\ntell   anybody  what,  you   My   ibottt\n\u25a0HCOmfully   apply j bark  will  be  encountred on   healthy\nremedial measures. For this illliin tt \u2014^\nla advisable that th* orchardlst, in\ndistricts wl-ere crown rot Is prevalent,      should      carefully      Inspect\nfrees which usually tak's the form\nnf dry corky tissue, rarely very\ndeep. These constant Inspection, wtll\nvery often reveal the presence of\ncrown nnd upper rojtjcrown rot svra] years b-fore\nsystems of each  individual   tK\u00ab, J perccptlbl\nThe   exanlnitlon   should   be   mad'\nt.tmber and apendlng the 17th at\nAncona and Perugia, tf)* 18th fit\nArezzo nnd on to Florence for the\nnight, then next day and night will\nbe enjoyed at and around this\nbeautllvi \u00abpot. The 20th will be by\nauto to Leghorn whera the rest of\nthe day will be spent, the 21st\nat Allcsandria and Placenza, the\n3;nd the university town of Bologna and on to Lugo and Hovigo,\nand to Venice for the nlgiit. The\nto;irlsts will remain two nights and\nOM day In this most Interesting\nnpot of all Italy, and on the morning\nof the 34th will go on to Padua\nreaching Milau at night, where the\ntour ceases. Fro to here on the\nCanadian tour will continue.\nGovernment receptions ar_ arranged for at many _.f these stops, and\nsuch places aa Naples and other\nnearby Interesting slgut* will be\nvisited during the eight days of the\nc ngre&s. During the same time\nample opportunity will be given\nfor sight seeing throughout old\nRome and for individual  visiting.\nThis and other InformJtJ-io concerning the 193.1 evrnt has been received by the Canadian member of\nthe Itsilan congress executive, F.\nC. Elford.\nNow a tip to mother as to how\nshe can enjoy her holiday on the\nbeach with the rest of the crowd and\nstill have a nice dinner for the\nhungry bunch after the bathing is\nover. Put |\u00a3t roast oh ln tie morning -ii\u00bb>tle preparing breakfast and\nlet lt get choked alj but the time It\nwill take for the vegetables. Have\nthe vegetables ready for the stove\nand when returning from bathing\nstart all the flames. By the time\neveryone is dressed the dinner Is\nready to servo and everyone lias had\na gcod time.\nSpecial Line of\nHot Air\nFurnaces\nfor House Heating.\nEstimates of Cost, FREE\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING\n& HEATING\nCO., LTD.\nJ. A. SMITH        T, 8. JEMSON\n313 Baker St. Phone 6G0\nIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllUIIIIIIJlllll |\n\"BUILD   B. C   rAVBOLLB\"\nNOT   ALL   TVPISTS!\nOperating typewriters Isn't tho\nprincipal task of office workers any\nlonger, according to a survey which\nthe w-mien's bureau of the United\nStates department cf labor recently\nconduct?d In Philadelphia. Only one\nout of every nine women who operated office machines worked on a\ntypewriter. The others were employed as bookkeeping or billing machine operators and tabulating, addressing, kep-ptmch and duplicating\nmachine operators. Dictating and\ntranscribing machines figured prominently, too. Tlie extensive uae of\noffice machines has not resulted In\ndischarge of employees, the report\nrevealed.\nPacific\nDoes the\nImpossible\nWhen Pacific Milk began its\nexperiments toward packing\nmilk in vacuum cans, experts\naald It was Impossible. Dry\nfoods, yes, but milk could not\nbe handled like a dry product.\nBut knowing how vacuum processes retain dry food flavors\nwe were anxious to attain that\nperfection for Pacific. And we\nhave done the \"impossible,\"\nPacific Milk ls vacuum packed.\nPacific Milk\n\"J00% B. C. Owned and Controlled\"'\nriant it AbboU-ord\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIMIIIII\nCATTLE PRODUCTION\nGROWS   IN   CANADA\nthe\n; t*>p  growth\nCertain Important conclusions may\nbe  arrived  at   from  a  study  of  the\nttle   da.a   presented   ln   the   12th\nannual   report   on   tiie   Origin   and\nQuality   of   Commercial   Live   Stock\nketed  In  Canada  in   1031, Issued\n\\ by the Dominion Live Stock brancn.\nIn  the first place,  the figures ln-\nchange takes place In tlie'-\"--'-   -\u25a0   -\nWhen in VANCOUVER stay al the\nGLENAIBD APABTMENTS\n1018  OBANV1UJ   STftBET\nIn Heart of City adjacent to Theatres, Beaches and Beautiful Stanley Park. 75 Sleeping Rooms, Housekeeping Rooms, and U-room Suite*.\nf3.50, ft.OO and HM P\u00ab Room per IVeek. 24-hour Service\n\u25a0 mn   um-ernca* n   tent\n\\Mt*** U a  bull.'\nrcful.   Mabd     On-   r>r   tha**\n\u2014The   Humorist.\ndicatc (hat while production may\nbc now on the up curve, aupplles of.\ncattle are fsr below normal, a sltua-l\nHon calling fjr fairly intensive attention to production and conservation. If volume Is to Im brought\nback to normal within a reas;nable\nperiod.\nThe nummary shows tint In l(i;il,\nas compared with five years ago,\ncal tie marketings were 46 per cent\nItfhttr, anci that in 1930, the marker-\nInes, as compared with 1037, wer; 4t)\nper cent ll:rht*r. Production if on\ntup up curve, is at a much slower\nr.te than would be the case were\neconomic and trade conditlona more\nn'ariy normal.\nIntent lens t:. lncreaae production\nare indicated, not so much in IM\nfact thit store cattle purchases we.'e\nsome 10.000 more than ln the previous year and the heaviest eir.ee\n1928, but mere becauae of a vc.y\nmarked curtailment to the liquidation of cows and heifers. Despite\nan increased aale over th? previous\nyear some 23,400 cattle of nil kinds,'\nih-re wa.. n decrease In 'he numbs?\nof ran \u00bbnd htttttt Ot ttMt li*id.\nor  of  approximately  six  per cent.\nSt, Joseph's c\/lcademy\nK..!(l.iiHnl   and   Day   hchool\nClasses in Primary. Elementary, High\nSchool and Commercial Education. Pupils\nprepared for Normal Entrance and Matriculation Examinations.\nMusic pupils prepared for Toronto\nConservatory,   Royal  Academy and\nLondon   College   Examinations.\nTERMS  MODERATE\nFurther particulars gladly given by the Sister Buperlor\nNelson, B. C.\nHOLIDAY SPECIALS\nIF   VOU   WANT  A   FEW\nSNAPS LOOK AT THESE...\n_\u00bbCAN YOU BEAT THEM?\n'    CANOE CUSHIONS, Regular\nvalues ,1.50 to ,2.25.   $1.00\nNow, each       -\nWOOL FLOOR MOPS\nR.gular value fl. Now\nTENNIS RACQUETS-HALF PRICE\n79*\nNelson Hardware Co,\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON, B.C.\n THE SEUON DAILT SEWS, SEL.OV, Fl. C. \u2014 .All EDA! wnHMNr,, JILT 1\u00ab, 133-\nM\u00abW  _lr__1\nFLYING FEET OF EASTERN PAIR\nRAISE CANUCK OLYMPIC HOPE\nftSHITWORLDMARKS, TRYOUTS\n')\nS-Year-Old Bart Pearson Burns Up Track to Do 100\nMetres in 10 2-5 Seconds, as Fast as Any\nMan Except Percy Williams\nXEX WILSON RUNS AWAY WITH FIELD IN\n400 METRES TO BEAT BALL BY FIVE YARDS\nlartello Finishes Sixth; Bricker Beats Field of 17\nby Wide Margin in 10,000 Metres; Ravensdale\nWins 110 Metre Hurdles\nSTADIUM, HAMILTON, Ont., July 15 (By Elmer Dul-\niage, CP staff writer.)\u2014A couple of tow-heads with flying\n>et boosted Canada's Olympic stock to a new hi\u00a3h level for\nle year as they outclassed brilliant fields at the Canadian\nlympic track and field trials today, equalled or neared world\n?cords and more than made up for a sorry showing by the\n\u25a0eightmen, also trying for positions on thc Dominion team.\nBetween them, blonde Bart Pearson, as great a sprinter\ns the east has ever developed, and Alex Wilson. Montreal\nensation, who is just as fair headed, stole ?..m:.st all the\nlory on the first of the two- ^ \" \u25a0\n\u2022ty   tryouts   to   decide  the martello is \\\nliuad Canada will send to the mJ!__$__*_l_\u2122-_l\nSIXTH\nthe  event  st the\n____>   a\u00ab_*_.i.,\u00ab, \u00ab.\u00ab.\/._. | Manitoba trta's WOt* thsn a week ago\np$ Angeles games. ln tlw tm% tirno u Wllg0n nemi,\nPearaon. sn ia-yw-old Khooltwy.) \u201ed tfMUyi |at-t a galum fluUlh to\nY.0 second plsca Iron Ray Lew!*,\nIamllton   colore;!   star.   BlU   Frits.\n>n tha 100 metres event in 10 3-1\nrondo,   the   world's  record,  and  as\n1st as any man ev_t has careened; Windsor,   Ont.,   waj   fourt.h,   H-   **\u2022\nfilth,   and   Fred\n0. sixth  In  the\nrinal.\nOnly other  trackman to mske\nm the d*th distance with the ex-1 Hart  ot  Montreal.\n|ptlon  of  Percy Williams,  Vaneou- Martello, Trail   B.\ndouble    Olympic      champion, I\nios\u00ab  io 3-10 s-conds ttme has yet |\nbe    accepted    by    international I _,   , ,, _.     #  __,.._.\n' \u25a0 comparatively   small   crowd   of   6000\nthink In terms of Olympic titles was\nCliff  Bricker,   Gait  distance   runner,\nwho  won   t;.e   lO.ooo  metres  ln  31\nminutes,   42   seconds.\nBEATS   FIELD   OF   17\nBricker   had   no   trouble  heating\n|i\u00abk authorities.\nTARTS UKI  A BILLET\nOut of his starting holea like a\nlllet, driving low and hard to the\nilsh, Pearson outclassed every\nrlnter he faced in two heats ana\n* final. Edmonton's great dash duo\nlater Brown and Harold Wright,\nllshed as \u00ab, tesm behind Pearson\nthe final, Brown taking second\nlace.\nA distinct menace to the world's\nInner* at either 400 or 800 metres,\nItlson won the first of tr.e two-event,\njal he has set for hlmwlf In the\n.tla. He soundly trounord Jimmy\n|.il of Winnipeg ahd others over\n\\* 400-metre route, broke Ball's rec-\n\u25a0:nlwd Canadian record of 48 3-5\n|oonds by covering the distance in\n1-fl and finished ln a trot.\nflrld of 17, He finished 300\n> arils In front of Bay Oliver of\ntt*tW Glasgow, N. 5. and BUly\nReynolds,   Gait,\nArt HHHHtflllt. Cobourg, Ont.,\nwaa an easy winner in the 110\nmetre hurdles, being caught ln 15\n2-5 seconds\u2014the Canadian Olympic\nstandard. The Cobourg &c*, who\nrun\u00bb for Marquette university, ran\naway with H. M. Baker, Montreal\npoliceman and Bob Cooper. Cobourg\nhigh school boy. in the final after\nwhining hit heat wlt-hout trouble.\nPbll  Edward's victory  ln the .1500\nHooks and Slides\n$5y William Broucher\nThe Athletics will not go anywhere\nhis year unless one young m-an\ntope clowning and Roes to work,\n'hat m.tn la George Earnshaw,\nho can take his baseball or MtH\nalone. Lately George has been\"\n'avtiiff it alone.\n\u25a0 Here ls a gent who can b* the\nest pitcher in the league (except\ntrove, If you wish) when he wants\np be. Yet for weeks at a time hc\nill do as uttle pitching as pos_~\n\u2022.\u25a0Ut and go through his routine M-\numlng an attitude of studies and\nomlcftl nonchalence.\n\"For a collcge man,\" said Connie\ntack the other day, \"George cer-\nilnly    doea   some   funny    things.\"\nMr.   Muck   was   asktcl   what   was\n\u25a0 rong with the Big Moose.\nj \"Darnetl if I know,\" Mack re-\n[Ued, and when h\u00ab said It wasn't\nmilling.\n\u2022    \u2022    *\n\"UST   FOOLING\nA few weeks ago. Earnshaw \u00abid\nmttt were tied with seven victories apiece. As Grove continued\nn run his string, George lapned int*\nhe attitude of refined languor that\nnight be expected of _ country\n:ontle-man taklni an afternoon on\no name a new litter of hounds.\nUST A FEW HOMSU\nIn one game the Yankees combed\nIm for eight hits In five Innings.\n\\fter the game George Jovially rt-\nnarked\u2014\n\"Why, that isn't bad. They only\nn three trinities off me. The other\ni'lve hits were hom<- runs.\"\n' Watching Earnshaw go about his\nptlnt recently, it is almost impossible to holl^ve ne was tlie ours win\naood thc Cardinals on their Mn\nn the 1930 world series.\nNEEDS INCENTIVE\nGeorge was walked once this yesr.\nHe walke-t painfully to first. After\nthe Inning hc said. \"I guess that\npitcher is trying to get me all tired\nout running  around the bases.\"\nGeorge has wealthy connections ln\nPhiladelphia. He Is a social reglsw.-\nIte. and related to the Quaker City s\nvery most bon ton families. He is\none of the few ball players In any\nleague who know what to do witn\nan artichoke.\nONLV A LITTLE FIN\nEarnshaw llmpe(1 painfully after\ncollision during the second game of\ntho 1930 world series. There were\ngrave fears for his foot. After every\ninning. Doc Ebjlng, trainer, enxlous-\nly examined the Injured member.\nThen, after the last out was made,\nOeo-ge fik.ppefj and danced to the\nclubhouse.\n\"My foot?\" he replied to eager\nquestions. \"Nothing at all, I limped around a little because I'm lust\nnaturally a clown, I guess. Just\n'needling- thc Cardinals a little.\"\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nIN  TIIE rOLICE  L1NEIT\nLast August Big Oeorge lured\nMickey Cochrane, Roger Cramer an,j\nEarl Mack, son of the manager, to\ngo with him to a police station and\nposo in a police lineup for a Joke.\nThe Joke became a little more\nthan nn idle prank when a woman\nIdentified Ea>rnshBw as a robber who\nlooted her apartment, stealing a\nwatch and a camera among other\nthings.\nThc woman still refuses to believe\nthe police statement of Earnshaw's\nidentity.\nAnd this is the aame man who\nwon 74 ball (tames in four years In\nthf majors, an^ who pitcher 25 innings in the 1930 world series, allowing only two runs!\n-. A. GERMtol SlWKD D06, Ou>.\u00a3D EV\nTo m) Wl tiff in *H moors m 52 Mwufei\nTne sow mtti seSmbo^ 151933.\n' fa tost\nOWE IN   ,\nop KM*'\nmetres was hardly as Impressive as\nhis pre-01ymplc perfir-nances in\n1933. Edwards' time was four minutes 2-5 seconds. Thc standard set\nby the Olympic committee wss\n3.68   2-5.\nJumpers and weight throwers failed dismally to show the form necessary for Olympic competition.\nCharles Herman, giant strong-man\nfrom Glace Bay, 1.. S., was the\nonly double winner of the day but\nhis throws In the discus and *hot\nput were far below Olympic standards.\nHerman toesed tlie dlscu* 120 feet,\n9V\\ inches, MH 35 feet short\nof the world mark. Laughren, Glebe\ncollegiante, Ottawa, was second and\nAbe Zvonktn, Hamilton, third. Herman put the 16-pound shot 41 feet,\nll.i Inches, falling bhort of Olympic record by ll feet. Bob Eallman,\nOshawa, Ont., took second to Herman ln this event and H. Walla, Fort\nWilliam,  third.\nSllrn Ollle Holland, Hamilton school\nboy Jumper, won the broad Jump\nwith a leap of 23 feet, 6'\/4 inches,\ndefeating the British Empire chain-\nploi;, Len Hutton of Montreal, by\nthree Inches. George Hamilton, Lethbridge, Alta., was third, but Holland's brst Jump was under the 24-\nfoot  standard  of   the  committee.\n\u00a9-\nMK.H ScmxL'S S-7AP- PiTcHER, f:\nAT4\"\u00bbA.M, s\\ettbCs_m UNW\nNooM-Tnew RUSHED oThEj 9ta\nVWERE HgPilc_.DAC*01.8l__-'',SA'1!\nUJINN1W& BcTH SAM'S BV A SHUG.T\nTHEM DASHED HOME 16 0O\n\u2022ffiEM\u00ab.VN&-AWD    '\n-\u25a0\u2022them To bed\u2014\n*\u2022        __toe as im.\nJ\nExtra\ndvantages\nyet you pay no\nPrice-Premium\nAnti-Carbon . . . new heat-resisting\nqualities give greatest economy, longest\nmileage ... lubricates'at 20\u00b0 below\nzero. Always a rich film of oil and full\nprotection.\nVEEDOIL\niMacIterrzie, White & Dun.muir, Limited,\nDistributors\nViclori,\nNt\u00ab W>rti-ii\u00bbtt>\n100%\nPENNSYLVAKIAl\nMADE\n100%\nBETTER\nMOTOR\nOIL\nWORLD RECORD\nMARKS MADE IN\nU. ^OLYMPICS\nEddie Tolan Equals His Own\nRecord; Two Other Marks\nBroken\nSTANFORD STADIUM. Pnlo Alto.\nCal., July 15 (By Alan Gould, Associated Press sports editor) .\u2014Three\nworld record performances contributed to a sensational beginning today for the final American Olympic\ntrack and field tryouts as upset.\neliminated some of the nation's outstanding stars.\nTwo stalwart MWtCflMn. ten Scc-\ntong and John Anderson, both of\nthe New York A. c. surpassed world\nmarks in the shot put and discus\nthrow, respectively, after Eddie Tolan, Detroit negro flash, equalled bl*\nown world record of 10.4 seconds,\nagainst the wind, in the 100-metre\ntrials.\nBreton* upped the shot putters\nwith a mighty heave of 51 feet, fl\nInches on his most feared rival,\nHerman Brlx of the Lo* Angeles A,\nC., barely gained tlic fifth qualifying place by the thin margin of\n\u25a0''b Inch with a put of only 49 feet,\n3 Inches. Scrtong'R toss was '_ Inch\nbeyond the official world record.\nAnderson hurled the discus 1655*\nfeet to surpass the listed world\nrecord of 163 feet, 8'. Inches, madt*\nin 1039 by Eric Krenz. S-_.ce then,\nhowever, Paul Jessup's new American\nrecord of 169 feet, 81;, inches has\nbeen put up for world record np-\nproval. Jewuip was second lodny at\n156.37   feet.\nTouring Aussics\nRegister Second\nStraight, New York\nBfinWA-X TAPK, Hev Vork. Ju'y\n15     <CP>\u2014The     famous     Australia.!\ncricket   team   rtftstntd   its   MM&d\nftratccht victory over another ttmt\nIndlsn eleven by eight, wlckei* after\na treat, display of free hitting ftt\nInnisftll park today before 3000\npeople.\nDon Bradman, fully recovered from\nyest-rday'a stifling heat, turned In n\ngreat Innings of 117 runs in which\nthre\u00a9 sixes and 19 fours made up\nthe majority. Stan McCabe was also\na big factor in the downfall of the\nNew York team with a fine contrl-\nbullon of fia which included 15 fours\nand one six.\nCOLVILLE BALL\nCLUB PLAYS AT\nNELSON, SUNDAY\nTo Play Nelson Senior;; in Exhibition Game; Kraft Is\nNelson Hurler\nBaseballs Big\n- Six -\nD.'splt* the fact that B\/*f>1ind\nsnd Grand Fork., decided mt to,\ncirry on with the K-x>tetiay B3--veb-..l\n\"casus after the withdrawal of the\nTrail club from t;.e league, the\nNelson Baseball association will en-\ndeivor to bring to Nelson first class\nbaseball teams from oth:r parts of\nthe continent.\n(Oi.viUE um IWfB-AY\nOn Sunday the c-'^'ille seniors,\nthe team who defeated N.-sin tn\nthe July 1 baseball tournament .it\nTrail, wilj meet Nelson ou the local\ndiamond    Sunday    afternoon.\nTh^ Colvillf team is raled an one\nof the be<t. amateur clubs In the\nnorthwestern states and will be able\nto give Nelson fans a reaj baseball\nexhibition Sunday.\nAfter their final workout Thursday\nnt(r:-t, the Nelscn ball squad is\nready to meet th? Invaders. Manager\nJ. Brennan declared that the Nelson\ntesm wa* In the pink of condition\nand playing better ball than they\nhtft*  since   the   first  of   the  reason.\njfraft will do the honors on the\nNflaon mound Sunday with Richardson on the receiving end of the fire.\nIn the estimation of the local\nfollowers, the Nelson Infield will\nkfjp Vbft Colvllle team on their toes,\nwith the able rapport of Bebunuk-.r,\nArcure and Horswil]  in  the outfield.\nNelson's team Sunday will be\nKraft. Richardson. Glllett., HarMs-in.\nft*y, Wallare, Roynon. Amir\". Horswill,   Schumaker   and   Allison.\nKENT EDGES BACK\nINTO CRICKET LEAD\nO AB R H Prt\nB7 336 \u00b09 125 .372\n79 332 59 123 .367\n84 330 68 115 .359\n87 371 96 131 .353\nS5 359 68 123 .343\n80 318 33 108 .340\nFoxx. Athletics .\nP. Waner, Pirates\nHurst, Phillips ...\nKiem. Phillies ...\nAverlll, Indians .\nJolky.  Red   Box   . ^^^^^^^^\nHnme   ru   leaders:\nHorn*   run   leaders;\n26;    Klein,   Phlll-eis,    25:    Simmons,\nAthletics.   24;    Avenll,    Indians.    21;\nGehrig. Yankees, 20; Wilson, Dodgers.\n116;   Collins.   Cardinals,   16.\nSTAR LACBOtH PLACER\nOF B. C. Dltl\nNEW WESTMINSTER July 15 (CP\u00bb\n\u2014\"Sonny\" Douglas, one of British\nCo.umbla's star lacroswc players and\na member of tlie SalmonbeUies wot.\nlast year lost to Brampton Excelsiors\nin the Mann Cup final, die^ her.\ntills morn-im from double pneumonia.\nPACIFIC roAUT Laura\nAt   Snn   Francisco: R      H    E\nPan Francisco      7    13    1\nIdMkms    9   12   l\nDouglas   and   Brenzel;   Brlggs,   Os-\nborn. Bowler and Hofmann.\nAt     Sacramento: R      H    E\n.Seattle        1     8   o\nSacramento        2      8    0\nFafjc   and   Cox;   Flynn   and   Wirts.\nLONDON. July 15 (CP cabled.\u2014\nKent edged back into -tha lead in\nthe first-class county cricket championship ts*le tonight by Tlrtu* of\na first-innings win over Warwickshire, while Yorkshire were Idle.\nYorkshire, champion county of las'. \"'\nseason, holds second place, onlv\nthree points bark of Kent, and 17\npoints shesd of the third-place\ncounty  eleven,   Sussex.\nThe county table tonight w*s m\nfollows;\nW   LWFILFE  NR   Ttl\nKent    \u201e  0      2      1      5     3      163\nYorks     fl      2      3      1      \u00ab      160\nSussex    _.  8     0      1      3     S      143\nNotts    8      3     3      11      1*3\nLanes     \u201e 8     3      9      1      3      111\nMiddlesex \u201e\u201e 5 2 5 8 0 Jl*\nLeicester _.\u201e 4 8 9 1 1 P2\nSomerset   ...,43083        J>0\nDerby    - 4      7     3     2      2        m\nHants     4      8      14      1        81\nWarwick    .... 2      6      ft      8      2        78\nEwiex       3      8     3      2      0       81\nGlamorgan 2 6 18 1 57\nGloucester ..38313 86\nNorthants .... 2 8 2 3 3 84\nWorcester    .18      13      4        43\nLegend -W.FI., won on first ln-\nnincs; L.FE. lost on first innings;\nN.R..   no   results,\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nLouisville  7,  St. Paul  8-\nToledo  4.   Milwaukee   fl.\nIndianapolis    8.    Minneapolis    10\nColumbus   at   Kansas   City,   night\ngsme.\n\"Ago is What Counts\"\nLEMON-HART\nDEMERARA RUM\nM'I'KTI\/.IM.    .NI) I ..[(.OU MINI.i\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nCANADA MOVES TRIUMPHANTLY\nTO CLIMAX, BISLEY SHOOT, AS\nBURKE WINS GRAND AGGREGATE\nCaptain Houlden of Shcrbrooke Beats Sergt. Alec\nParnell of Verdun as Tic for Silver\nMedal, Second Stage, King's Shoot\nBISELY CAMP, Juiyls (CP cable).\u2014Canada marches\ntriumphantly to the climax of the National Rifle association's great Empire meeting.\nHer marksmen have led all the famous military shots\nof the Empire in two of the most difficult tests of the meeting. Lieut, Desmond Burke of Ottawa. King's prize winner\nof 1921, today captured the grand aggregate for thc second\ntime in his career as a rifleman of the first rank; Captain\nJ. \\V. Houlden of Shcrbrooke\nwon thc silver medal for highest score in the second stage\nof the historic  King's prize.\nAnd Captain Houlden's closest rival\nfor th-s silver medal in today's state\nof the empire's greatest marksmanship event was another Canadian\u2014\nSergt. Alec Parnell of Verdun, Que ,\nlike Houlden, a man of expertence\nBlsley's wid; reaching WBfM,\nParnell and Hould'n recorded thc\nsame total, 146 out of a poaslb'e\n150, as they fired among the 300\nellgibles in the second stage.\nJ-HOOT OFF FOR MFDAI.\nIn the shoot-Oit for the gmM\nmedal .which is next to the gold\nmedal and the King's prlz>?, the two\nCan.n'.ans battled \u00bbhot for shot, but\nIt was not long before Houlden haj\ntaken the medal while P.inicll shared the congratulations. Houlden scored a bull's eye, parnell an inner, a\npoint less. But HUM were the first\nshots, Houlden scored t bull's eye;\nParnell duplicated tt. Ti-.en Houlden\nhit the Inner, Parnell the bull's eye\nand they were even. Th? next shots\ndecide ;l It\u2014Houlden another bull's\nOOOt 19 out of 20 possible points,\nand Parnell an Inner, 18 points.\n10   CANADIANS   IN   FIELD\nTen Canadians ga Into the final,\nIncluding six crack marksmen who\nare making their first appcaranca in\nthe  King's  hundred.\nThe Canadians in thc flnaj ftage\nand t'-elr scores today, rcrorded it\n300, 000 and 600 yards, are Hmildcn\nand Parnell Wtth 1*6; Sgt. T. A.\njHMtt of Innisfail,. AHa., and Sgt.\nH. I?. Parker of Saint John with\n10; A, E. Evans of Esquimau. B. C.J\nand Lt. G. A. Molecty of Winnipeg\n\u25a0with 141; Lieut. A. C Lucas of\nToronto, Sgt. F- V. Shepherd of\nOttawa and young Lieut H A Sweet\nof Hamilton with 140s and C S. M.\nH. Rusk of Ottawa with 139. Husk\nhad to go Inti a Ueshoot to gain\nhis place, but he made It.\nl.leiil. Both* was not the only\ngold nic.iajiwt ivlio fulled In the\neffort, tn again enter the final\nstJJfe. Nha M3r.fo.le Foster, (he\nonly woman to ever win the Kins'*\nprize\u2014she raptured lt two years\najo\u2014was ellmlnaled with a score\nof nil, whloh was one under\nI-turkf's. Four English gold medal-\nIbis remained In lhe hunt. Including the redoubtable Hergi. a. O.\nFulton wli. last jesr hemme the\nonly man to e\\er win the King'*\npri?* three times. He had IU\ntodav.\nPAItNEU. IS THK\nVETI.RAN\nOf the Canadian .finalists, parnell\nls the veteran. He wis ln the King's\nhundred four years running\u20141924\nto 1927\u2014although he failed to reach\nthe top. The latter year P.* shared\nhonors In the grand aggregate with\nEngland's finest marksman, Sergt.\nFulton. Houlden was in thi final\ntwlc;\u20141926 and   1929. BwM  of Otta\nwa and Lucas or Toronto went\nthrough the g;1nd In 1929.\nThe other six are making their\nflrat appca.rai !\u25a0\u25a0> among t'ne select\nranks of King.* prize finalists. Lieut.\nSwept of Ha.nil ton, who has been\nr.hooVng with consist\" nt excellence\nthis year, was over at Bidcy as a\ncadet only two or three years ago.\nJensen cf innlsfali is a former winner of thc Canadian governor-general's match at Ottawa. Molecey Is a\nfamiliar figure at Blsley, whil? Evans,\nParker and Shepherd nre newcomer*\nwho have demonstrated they arc to\nbe. reckened  with.\nAnnouncement of th* Prince of\nWales prize list tonight showed Captain Houlden, leading Canadian, m\nsixth place with a total of 67 out\ncf a possible 70, to wli\\ $15. Sgt.\nF. V. ttUf&Kti of Ottawa scored 69\nIn '.his match but was not eligible\nfor the Prince of Waie.. prize, taking\nthe Associated Northland award of\n\u2666 100. TM winner of the Prince ct\nWales tttm itwlf, tMQ, ma Sgt. T.\nW. Henderson of the Scottish borderers, w'ho score was the same a..\nShepherd's.\nPICKED CANADIAN\nTEAM WILL PLAY\nAUSSIESJULY 29\nTo Re First and Only Test\nMatch Ever Tlayed in Canada; at Winnipeg;\nWINNIPEG, July 15 (CD.\u2014The\n.licked cricket team representing all-\nCanada, which will piny the first\ntOt only test, match ever played In\nCanada, tftlOfft the AuMrnlhn cricket tesm herc July 29 and 30. war\nannounced here today by D. A.\nPink, secrctBry of the Western Canada Cricket association, who are\nbringing   the  Ausstes  here.\nO, p. Davis of Winnipeg will captain the all-Canada tesm, snd the\nfollowing are tho other t4\u00abvers; E\nCarlton. Toronto; C. Falck, Cslgsry,\nR. Wenmsn, Victoria, t. A. Kelstead,\nWinnipeg; J. A K. Rutherford. Toronto; P. Johnson. Edmonton; T J.\nBroadbelt, Montreal; R. Foster, Regina; T. Reed. Vancouver; L. C. Bell,\nSt. Catharines; J. M. McParlanc,\nWinnipeg.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nJersey  City  3.\nPending fl.' Ro\nMontreal\nbCftei o.\nVisit Our Special Showing of\nTHE NEW\nFORD CARS\nA Display oi Various Body Types of the\nNEW FORD \"V-8\" AND THE\nNEW FORD \"4\"\nIs Now on View at\nOUR SHOW ROOMS, BAKER AND FALLS STREETS\nWe Want You to Not Only See These Cars, But to\nDRIVE THEM YOURSELF\n*     *     *\nA New Motoring Experience Will Be Yours When You\nDrive These New Cars\n*       *        *\nInspect These Bargains in\nUSED CARS\n1928 CHEVROLET SEDAN- 1929 FORD TOWN SEDAN\u2014\n1932 License. Good Rubber. A 1932 license. Perfect mechanical\ngift at\u2014 condition\u2014\n$335.00\n$300.00\n1929 1,0KD BEDAN-De Luxe      J929 FORD TRUC'K-(Jood Rub-\nUpholstcry, New Tires\u2014 ber. This year's license\u2014\n$275.00\n$250.00\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\n(NELSON) LIMITED\nSALES <||||    SERVICE\n205 BAKER STREET PHONE 117\nL\n\t\n \u2014\u2014-\nPAGE   HI.HT\ni     IHE NEL.ON DALLY NEW., NELSON. B.  C. \u2014 5 ATlRtUT MORNING, -ITT U, 111%\n^s^OPPOCTimiTYlKKTHEWANTAW-^\nifii_.._ET LETTER\nFKtDiaS UGHT\nRASPBERRY CROP\nRaspberry Arrivals on rrairie\nRepeorted in Poor\nCondition\nINDEX TO CLASSIFIED ADS\nAge [._\u00a7   wanted   _.._\nAutomuDiles  tor  Hire  ......\nAutomobiles ior bale       ,\nAutomooUea   wanted   ,\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\nBee-   ~  \t\nBirths    -. _ \t\nBoats, jjaunches for Rent __,,\nBoat*,   Launche*   for   Bale  ___,._\nBoala,   Launches  Wanted\t\nBusiness   OpportuuHies   ___.\u201e\nCanaries  for  Sale   _. ~\u2122__\u2122_\nCats and Dogs for Sal* ___.\nCats and Dogs Wanted _.____.____.\nDeath*\nDressmaking      ,.,., ,,    7\nParm  and  Dairy  produce __.\u201e_ 9a\nParm  Property   for Bale  _._...... 38\nFor SaJe or Lxchange _.\u201e .\u201e J7\nFor   Sale   or   Rent    .\u201e - aa\nVICTORIA, July 15\u2014The supply of\ngsapberrles 1* limited owing to rain,\nreporta a market neVs letter fr^m\ntbe department of agriculture at\nVictoria, on agricultural products.\nThee* are quoted \u00abt #2.40 per crsie\n\u25a0wholesale. Logans are selling\nvarious prices. The peak of the\nBing cherry aeason has passed and\nthe Lambert peak will be on this\nweekend. Bings and Lamberts are\nquoted at #2.50 per crate. Crawford\npeaches are on t e market at \u00bb1.85.\nreays and plums sre expected ln\nfrom California today; pears will go\non sale at #4.73 per box and plums\nfrom #225 to #3 75. New Graven-\nateln apples from California are sell*\nfag at #3.75 per box. Tomatoes No.\n1 at (3 per crate snd No. 2 at\n#250. Cabbage Is quoted at 2'_ cents\nper pound, and nw carrots\n#225 per sack. Potatoes are quoted\nat #1.75 per cwt. for locals and #1.35\nfor   mainland   products.\nThe following cable has been received from our markets representative, London: \"E?g market itoady\nImportations into London during\npast month show a dccr~a\u00ab of 45\nper OOth although decrea\u00ab Into\nUnited Kingdom only 25 per cent\nlower than 1931. Heavy decrease of\n60,000 great hundreds from France,\nBelgium and Holland compared with\nsame p?r|od last fmt. From China\nan Increase cf 17.000 is shown.\nPrices, English 9s 61 to 13s 6d\nIrish. 10a 3d to 12s 21; Polish, to ti\nDanis-i. Dutch. Beltr:au and Swedish.\nSs 6d to 9s;  EtUHUn 6s to 7s.\"\nEd-nonton\u2014Strawberry arrivals, are\ndecreasing rapidly, paspberry arrivals are moderate at, #2.75 to #3\npe crste. Loganberries, gooseberries\nand currants are In slow demand\nCherry arrivals are heavy and mar*\nke _. overstocked; Bings and Lamberts are quoted at #2, Windsor,\nDedoon, etc., at 35 cents less; Royal\nAnnes #150 to #1.60 and Sours 20\ncents less, Hothouse tomato arrivals are heavy with demand slow\nat #3 to #3.25. Hothou-s* cucumbers\nare quoted at #1 to 11.10 per dozen.\nBritish Columbia celery is arriving\nIn small lots with quality fair at\n6 cent* to 7 cents per pound. British\nColumbia new cabbage, carrot* and\nbeets are plentiful at 4 cent* per\npound and new potatoes at #1.70 to\n\u00a71.80 per cwt. Local new potatoes,\ncarrots, beets, peas, etc, will be\nplentiful In a week or 10 days. Arrivals from British Columbia for\nweek:\nberrt-i   1418   crates   and   10   cars   Of\nfruit and   vegetables.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Weather cool and\n\u2022bowery. The cherry market is practically clean today. Bings are selling at #2.75; Annes snd Windsors\nat #2.25 and Tartarian** at #2. Raspberries are arriving In poor condition wltb good demand. Strawberries\nars cleaned up. The new potato\nmarket is getting heavy as the local\n\u2022lock is exptfted in a week or two.\nCabbage U quoted st 4 cents per\npound; cauliflower at #2 per dozeo\nand carrots at 7 cents per pound.\nTomatoes in lugs at #3.75. Car receipt* from 5th t- 9th inclusive:\nBritish Columbia, 10 cars potatoes\nat #2 35 per cwt.; three of mixed\ncabbage and cauliflower; three strawberries and three of cherries in 4-\nbasket crates. Imported: two cars\nof raspberries two ol Arkansas tomatoes in lugs; one car of plums\nfrom California and two cars ol\nTransparent apples from Washington   at   #2-50   per   box.\nFurnished  Rooting  for  Rent\nFurnished   Rooms   Wanted   \u201e\nFurniture   fc_   Sale    \u201e\t\nHelp    Wanted      \t\nHouses   for   Rent  \u2014 -\u2014\u2014.\u2014.~\nHouaes    Wante^    _..\nIn   Memorlam    - .-._\u201e....\nInsurance  \t\nlu.estments  ___. ___.\u201e_..\nLivestock   for   Sale    \u2022_...._.\nL) vestocg   Wanted    -_.._.-...\nLiterary \u201e. \u201e-\u201e\u201e,._\nLost   and   Found    -. _\u00ab\nMachinery     ,.\u201e  \u201e \u201e\nMarriage,,\n...- 15\n  lb\n_.., 46\n  10\n-mm   ti\n 2U\n     _\n,..- 33\n  48\n 23\n___. 34\nMM        6\n 31\n  66\nMining,  Timber, Lumber\nMiscellaneous     \u201e\nMiscellaneous for Sale ...._\nMiscellaneous   Wanted  ......\nMusical   Instruments ........\nNotices     amtsm-mim\nNursery   Products    \u201e___...,\nNursing     \u201e_...\u201e.,_,_\u00bb\u00ab.\nPersonal              \u201e\nPlants     nmm\nPoultry and  Eggs  -\t\nProperty   lor   Sale    __.\nProperty   Wanted    _\nRabbit,   for   bale   \u201e ._-*,.\nRanches for   Rent _ \u2014.\nRoom  and  Board   .......\nRooms for F^nt  _.\u201e___.\nR^oms  Wsnted       ^\u201e__.\nschools   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- '\"\".'. ~r.\nSituation!  Wanted    \u201e\t\nStores   to   Rent    _\n Ht.\n, 28\nZJZZ 28\n - 54\n.... 47\n_.. 14\n.... 6\n.._ H\n.... 34\n.... 35\n.... '40\n.... 49\n_- 17\n_ 19\n__. 18\n..\u201e 33\n..- 11\nCLASSIFIED   AUVERTIMNQ\nLocal   Kraditig   tsotnet\n(.Minimum   tuo   lines)\n22c   a    Hue.    Display    type   larger\nthan 0 pw.nL, charge at rale of -l-ic\na   line   6   point;   i.e.,   on\u00ab   line   12\npoint, charge 44c; oue line 14 point\ncharge 66c. pally for one month or\nmore deduct 25 per tent space disc,\nfrom    above    rates,    minimum    for\nmonthly   advertisement,   #11.44   less\ndiscount.   Minimum   charge,   44c.\nCLASSIFIED\n(Minimum  tao  lines)\nlie a Ime per insertion, six consecutive   insertions,   44c   a   line;   per\nmonth.    #1.43    a    line.    Minimum\ncharge.   22c.\nMarriages, death* and In memorlam notices, 32c a line, Lists of\nflowers at funerals, gifts at weddings, etc.,  1 fc a hoe.\nBOX   M.MM1.KS\nIf  a  Daily   News  box  Number  Is\ndesired there ls on extra charge of\nlie.\nLEGAL   NOTICES\n16o  a   line   first  insertion,   13c  a\nline additional   insertions.\nPBOltSMIONAl.    OK   BUSINESS\nCABDI\n(Minimum  tao  lines)\nYearly contracts\u2014\u00bbl._t_ a line per\nmonth.\n* Six months' contract\u2014#1.37 a line\nper month.\nTransient\u2014#1.65 a line per month.\nCLASSIULU DISPLAY\nSame rate an transient or contract\ndisplay, according to classification\nand space used. Minimum 1 Inch,\nwith aame provision tor casn discount\nAbove rates are les* 10 per cent\ncash discount when accounts nre\npaid on or before the 20th of\nmonth   following   publication\nPROPERTY   FOB   SALE\n(34) I -\n\u25a0    PROPERTY    FOR   SALE\u2014Continued\nlllltlllltllltltltlMtlllllllllllllllllllHIMM j millllllllllllllllMIIIIMIMIIJIIIItltllllMJJ\nll SPECIAL 1\n\" I VALUE I\n5   Cl OCA Bungalow.    2    bed-   E\nI OWN Your\nI Own HOME\nMRS. A. MACKIE IS\nREELECTED SCHOOL\nTRUSTEE, BOSWELL\nReports   Prove  Favorable;\nNon-Taxpayers    to    Be\nAsked for Small Sum\nLEGAL NOTICES\nNOTICE\nI, Eleazer William Green, will not\nbe responsible for any debts contracted In mv name by anyone from\nihls  date.  Signed\nBLEAZBti   WILLIAM   OREEN\nDated at Nelson, B- C. July 16, isnz\n(30201\nTERSOSAL\n(-\"\u00bb)\nMARRY\u2014Join the Canadian Correspondent Club. Established 1024.\nReliable: Successful. Many marriages\nprove this. Members all over Canada. Hundreds In pr*.rle provinces\n\u00abnd British Columbia. Many lady\nmember., introduction bv private\ntetters.  Write  for particulars  which\n= A modern, new stucco\nr dwelling, consisting of | =\n1 two Bedrooms, Living- =j =\nI room, Dining-room, =j =\n= Bathroom, Kitchen with III\n= built-in cupboards and \u00a7 5\n\u00a7 fixtures. Up-to-date = \u25a0 5\n= white plumbing. Stone \u00a7is\n= foundation, well located =|S\n= on two lots. This house |j =\nI is only just completed. \u00a3 $\nI Price |9450 with terms.\n= room,   bathroom,   kitchen,  ce- s\n\u25a0 ment foundation. Excellent lo- S\nZZ cation,   close   in., 2   lots,   and E\nX garage.  Terms  arranged. ~\nFOR   RENT =\nG<yy  MONTH\u2014 Bungalow,   5 \u25a0\nV*-\"*-\" rooms   and   bath,  all S\nrooms   redeci_rated, __\nMONTH\u2014 House,    close Z\nfurnished.   4   bed- zz\nrooms.  Good   location. __\u25a0\n$30!\nWhitfield & Sturgeon\nReal E_t_t. and Insurance\nROOM \u00ab. BOYAL BANK\nTHONE 167       1287.)\n= A new 1'_-storey dwell- I\n5 inpr,  consisting  of  pan- =\n_j elled Dining-room. Kitch- I\n= en with built-in features, I\n= one bedroom. This house I\ns requires  a   few   dollars |\n= more   expenditure   for ~ -\nI plumbing, and two more =\nI bedrooms could be com- I\nI pleted at a very moder- I\ni ate cost. Located in Fair- I\n= view on two lots. A bar- I\n| train at far less than co. t. =\nI Trice $1250. _\n= A   five-room  Bungalow, |\nI not quite completed, lo- I\nI :ated on two lots in Fair- =\n= view. Could be completed I\n\u00a7 for a few hundred dol- 5\n\u00a7 lars.   A snap at #500. =\nIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllll\nCRAWTORD BAY. 17 ACRES CHER-\nry land _ In clo\\cr. aeveral .lashed, easily cleared balance. On mam\nroad ..50 C-Rli. AlKO 20 acres, 6\nIn gras* .flOO half caah. Owner residing Vancouver. Kor quick Bale\nApply H. Murray, Crawford Ba>.\nB. C. 1-977)\nBOSWELL, B. C, July 15\u2014There\nwae a large atwndanc1 on Saturday\nat  t'.ie  llH'i  annual   achool   meeting.\nT.e chair waa taken by B. H.\nSmith.\nThe trustees report stated that\n11 pupils were enrolled. Excellent\nr-porta had been given by the Inspector who had comented favorably\non the fact that the se_ool had\nbeen de-uated. Manual training\nclasses had been held with C. H.\nBebbln.:n as Instructor. These w.re\nto ba continued during the coming\nyear. Mrs. w. L. Hepher bad conducted singing classes, and hcr pu-\n8tr.*be.r;ra in. crs.es. r\u00bb_p- _\u201e\u201e \u201e^ taken part In a concert\ngiven In the spring. A new woodshed\nhad been built and new windows put\nwill be sent vou In Plain, sealed en. , =   tt,       -hnvp    l| = tin_-q    nip =\n.elope   Address P. o .Box 128. Cal-   S   I \u00bbe   atm.e   listings    ale s\ngary.   Alberta                      (J788) 11   the   best   bll.VS   We    liaVe I\never had listed with us, I\nand are a wonderful op- =\nup every scalp'trouble  __-_.! toll  portllllitv if VOU are Con- 5\n* '*'\"'\"- \"\"\"' r \u2022\"\"s,*n-'| ,,-dering' owning   your I\n| swfl home. \\~\nLook in or phone our of- I\nfice. It will pay you to I\ninvestigate. We phall he =\ntriad to show you over 5\nthese properties. =\nMALAYS  HAIBON  BAER TONIC IS\npofiltlvclv   growing   hair   nn   completely-bald   bended   men.   Clears   _Z\n-'\u2022?ry scalp trouh'e   send #1  toll\nProducts of B. C.. 32\u00ab. .stan- is\ndard Bank Bldg., Vancouver. B. O.\n(2<>97,\nmre ber   goods   at   bargain\nprices. Write tnr pric* list snd\ndcurriptl^ns. international Distributors. Dept. D. P- O. Box IQ9,\nToronto.  Ont. (29611\nPPIVATE KINDERGARTENS PAY.\nArtvir-e given free. Canadian Kindergarten   institute,   Winnipeg\n(2782)\nQUEBEC.   July    17    (CP).-During\nApril of this yesr the inrsntllo mortality rate in the province  of Quebec   reached   the   lowest   point   ever\nIn \"the\"school, \"fbt\"~Wtor'sW\u00abMrt| w*lBtlWed'   8tRtlR,'lrl'   \u00ab\u00bbv\"\u00bb   out   by\nd-scrlbed   the  Uf&Ung M \"adequate\" Ithp   Provincial   hygiene  service show.\nsnd     the    school    environment\ni Tho death  rate   in   general   through-\nnut    the    province    was    placed    at\nhealthy.\nDuring   (he   session   lhe   children '125Z- ancI  that oi lJlfantll<!  mortal-\nha-d  clearer!  brush  from  the school  \u25a0*> nl Sfl\"\ngrounds and had started gardens.\nJ. H. Smith was re-elected as\nauditor.\nMra. A. Mackle, the retiring trustee, was re-appointed by acclamation.\nThe trustees were empowered *o\na-sk non-taxpayers whose children\nattended schoij to pay a small\ntax to help defray additional tt*\np-enses.\nThe meeting suggested that thc\nachool fence should be repaired and\nthat the entrance to the school\ngrounds  should   tv   grade,   to  allow\ntruck, to get  to  the woodshed.\n| R.W.Dawson |\nI Real Kstate Insurance I\n5 Hipperson Block =\nI Box 733 Phone 197 =\n= (30211   I\niillllMllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIli.\nRoad The Nelson   Daily\nNews Classified Ads.\n.SITI'AIIONS WANTCP\n(II)\nCAMP COOK DESIRES JOB FOR\nsummer month., .mail crew. Anywhere.   Box   3012,   Dally   New*.\n(30121\nSTENOGRAPHER. EXPERIENCED,\nwell .rnicfited, cnpible. Box anil.\nDaily   Now.. - (3011)\nDRESSMAKER AJJD TAILORESS\ndesire, wwlng dally. Mra. Lee,\nPhone 287L. (2845)\nr__U.l__.I_l BOOMS FOB RENT   (11)\nIIOUSEKFEPINn  R.OOMS. MBS   Me-\nLean. Op posit. Oaa Worka, Nelaon.\n(3015)\nFURNISHED    SUITE.    MRS.    COVE,\n_07 Carbonate St. Thone 390R.\n(MM)\nFURNISHED  PUITK  50?  SIUCA  ST.\nMfs. i.eaile. Phone 440X.       (2842)\nSUITES\u2014ASHMAN'S\n715 Baker atreet.\nAPARTMENTS\n(2846)\nROOM  AMI  BOARD\nCOMFORTABLE' BEDROOM WITH\nboarrf rlosc In. Private lamlly. Box\n673. Nelson,  B. C. (296r.)\nMIX. WANTED\n(10) FUILTBY AND EG08\n<?m\nLOOK AHEAI>\u2014OET INTO THE C-V-\n1! Service aa Poaln.an cierk customs\nExaminer immlg. Ir spec'or. etc. Full\ndetails (rea tha M-C.c. Winnipeg.\n(2781)\nHOISES  FOR  KENT\n(21)\nFOR RENT-FIVE-HOOM HOUSE;\ntliree-room house; Jour-room lur-\nnished house: pool hall. Phone\n8U8L. D. Magllo. (2833)\nHOUSE FOR PENT \u2014 CORNER OF\nJosephine a_4 Victoria Pnone\n7B4L1. 1_.7.)\nFURNISHED COTTAGE FOR RENT.\nApply A. Barnea, Willow Point.\n(29511\nFIVE ROOM HOUSE 308  VICTORIA\nSt. Thone 691R4. (_.5_)\nMISCFLLAN.OIS    FOB   SAI.E    (.1)\nSEI.FXTra. WHITE LEOHORN PUL1--\ncls, 1. weeka 70c. 8 weeks 6'jC\neach. Immediate shipment' (ree\ncrating, seurj caah or will ship\nc. o. tl. ECIC. 4552 Woodiazitl St .\nNew Westminster. (2376)\nMIM E1.LANEO.S\n(23)\nIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH\nALTOMOBII.rS   FOR   SALS\n(U\n(3016)\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nGALVANIZED IRON PIPE AND FIY-\ntlnga. Belting, etc\u2014Full Hue ol\nnew and used Galv. and B^ack\nPipe and Fittings; _ Galv, new\n61 _ c; 1\" Black bc; 2\" Black, cult-\nable lor Irrigation and water una\n12c,  other  sl_es  low   prices;   New\nCorrugated Galv. iron ... per IDO IIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIII\nBQuaic my, t'ouliry wire netting.!- FILMS DEVELOPED ^g\\A \u2014\n3  an,,   6   [Ml  Full  stock   of st .'1   -     ,\u201e\u201e    ,R,N1   _ _\u00bbUV    I\nSpilt Pulleys; Pot. to and Oraln .= *\u2122D \u25a0'\" ,\"_s_~___ _ Z =\nSacks. B.irbcd wire; Wire Rope: - plus Postage. Rol. or 6 Ex- \u25a0\nCanvas Doors. Windows; Roofing'- posures. Cash wit; order. En- =\nFelt Garden and Air Hose; Bonm . s lar-cment fref wltll every \u2014\nChains;   Merchandise   and   Equip- j -_ order. _:\nment  of al descriptions. EtiQUir-1 z        HOLLYWOOD STUDIOS\nlcs  solicited\nB. ('. JINK CO.\n135 rowell  it..  VANL'UL\\\u00a3R, R. f-\n(2784)\nSTOVES   AND   PARI\nWe carry all pans for any make of\nringe. write us and we will gladly\ntry and fill your orders. If we cannot supply tbe repair part required,\nit cannot be had alsewbere. _\nFranks, 625 Seymour Street. Vancouver. B. C. (2787)\nSECOND HAND PIPES, FITTINGS.\nValves, etc. We carry a full stock\nof reconditioned pipes suitable fcr\nall purposes, write to Swartz Pipe\nYard. 220 1st Ave. East Vancouv.\ner. B.  C. (2786)\nCATTLE SPRAYS; CHANNELI.'S.\nStockitd, and ____. all In one\ngallon cans. e'.et Continuous Hand\nSpr.vers. Thc Brackman-Ker Mil!,\nCo.,  Ltd (3002)\nWOODYATT    MOWER     12\"    O.    K.\ncondition .3.50. 823 Josephine St.\n(29541\nFOR   SALE-BING   CHERRIES,    lot\nlb.  .08  Innes  St. (3005)\n(3D\nLOST   AND   FOUND\nLOST\u2014HEART-SHAPED DIAMOND\nbrooch between L. D. Cafe ana\nPettv Apts Apply Mrs. Budd. Petty  Apts.  Reward. (3010)\nMOTOB(.'_C___ FOR SALE\n(60    MOTORCKIU.! FOR SALE\n(60\nINDIAN MOTOCYCLES\ni5S.?JMi_ii\u00abfi'_*5\nGOOD USED BUYS:\n1 rNDIAN BCOUT  \u00bb125 nn\n1 INDIAN   SCOUT 150,00\n1 HARLEY  TWIN, 1928    12500\n1 HARLEY TWIN, 1929     15000\n1 HARLEY TWIN, 1929   175.00\n1 HARLEY ~?.IN AND DELIVERY BOX. like new .. 400.00\n1  INDIAN   CHIEF     225 00\n1 INDIAN   SCOUT    325.00\nTERMS ARRANGED\nALSO AGENCY POR _____ and  FRANCIS BARNETTS, $195.00 AND UP.\nPuna hltllix.f, trail, bc.\nTATMORE BROS..  Cranbrook (2933)\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nj LOOK OUT\n| for the New\nI G.M.C.\nz  Combination Truck and\n= Trailer\nI ALL YOUR .RO AD AND\nz LOAD REGULATION\nI WORRIES ARE AT\n_     AN END.\n= |Is Enquire from your\nI Williams'Transfer ill Chevrolet or G.M.C.\nz Dealer or write direct\nI for details.\n=   General Motors\n|        Products of\nz      Canada, Ltd.\n\u2022 O.  M.  C.  TRUCK  DIVISION\nZ 1200 WEST GEORGIA STREET\nZ \/ANCOUVEB\n= (2818)\niTlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n\u25a0 when   you   desire   a   moving \u25a0\nS Job. transfer work, gr vel haul- S\nS Ing.     furniture    storage    and S\nS (hipping, coal,  wood,  Ice,  gas, Z\nS      oil,  etc.   We  are  equipped S\nS to serve you. z\nZ Edmontoa\nSaskatoon  Z\n(2783)        Z\niimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimuii\nSEE   C.   W.  APPLEYARD  FOR   CAR\nlnsuranoe in rellablo companies.\n(2844)\nIOR  SALE  OR  EXCHANGE\n(37)\nEXCHANGE BARLEY OATS WHEAT\ntruck loads for fruit. Give full Information.   James   Thomson,   1023\n10th Ave. West, Calgary, Alta. (2989)\nPRINTINO\n.!\"\nllil 11 llil 111 If IIIIII It III III )M III 11 It i\nLoose Leaf Equipment\nBINDERS   FOR ANY   SHEETS\nLOOSE LEAF SHEETS\nFOR  ANY   BINDEB\nNelson Daily Newi\nJOB DEPARTMENT\n' Phone 144\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIimillllllllllHIIIIII\nBUSINESS and PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, S. F. INT. AC.\nMunicipal and commercial Audita.\nP. O. Box 1191, Nelson. B. C.\n(2858)\nAim. en\nE. W. WIDDOWSON est-bllshed 1900\n305 Jo.ephlns s'... Nelson, B. C.\n(2848)\nORENVILLE   H.   GRIMWOOD.  P.   O.\nBox 418,  Kaslo. B. O. (2849)\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY. GILKER BLK.. NELSON.\n(2850)\nDR.   MACMILLAN.   GRAD.   PALMER\nSchool. Aber Blk., Nelson, ph. 212.\n12852;\nMITTUN AND OEDDES. X-RAY and\nMCM. Cranbrook and Trail. (2851)\nFlorists\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES\u2014Phone\n342. Cut flowera, potted plants\naiid  floral designs. (2855)\nStorage\nSTORAGE.  MOVING;. COAL, WOOI\nPhone ... Burn's Coal _s c&rtag.\n(2859\nEngineers\nH. D. DAWSON. B.C.L.B. ROOM 12\nK. W. C. Block, Nelson,        (2860\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate, Ir\nsurance Rentals. Next HIpperso\nHardware. Baker street.       (2892\nSecond Hand Store*\nWE BUY CLOTHING, MUSICAL _N\nstruments rifles etc 217 Ba_er.(2B57\nTh_   Ark\u2014Dealers  In   8econ_   Han\ngoods. Phone 53. (2856\nTransfer\nATKINSON TRANSFER, ROSEMOV-\nCoal   and   wood. (2863\nWood Factory\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE FULL\nllne cut, flowers at all time's. Floral designs. Phone 233. (2854)\n_.!__-___ Greenhouses. Nelson, cut\nflowers and floral designs. (2853)\nLAWSON'S WOOD FACTORY HARD\nW'ood  merchant, 217 Baker street\n(2864\nCLASSIFIED ADS SERVE CONTIN\nououslv\u2014Why not atart one _erv\nIng vou todajf\nTHE GUMPS \u2014WE HAVE WITH US TODAY.\nB.C. EGG LAYING\nMr. and Mrs. Mackie\nof   Boswell   Have\nGuests From Trail\nBOSWELL. B. C, July 15\u2014Mr.\ntnd Mrs, A. Marine had as their\n_ru\u00ab\u00bbt* for t few day* la*'. WMfe\nmttt eon, Alex Mutt! of Trail and\nhi* two chlklren. Ernest and  Phyllis-\nMrs. Jam's Yorke and Ml\u00bb A.\nMawdol-y olao of Trail. The party\nreturned  to  Trail   on  SaturSay.\nMr. an_ Mrs. W. AffltCk ol Nel-\n\u25a0on were the g\\ic_ta of Mr. and\nMra. W. tdwaou HfftMT on Sun-\ndiy. On t'r.elr return t>iey were\naccoTp.-iiv.ec! by the'.r -\u00bbotw, BUIt snd | Green.\nTedCy, who b*4 heen ftrltfofl MM *\"\"\nHepher    tor   a    we:.:.\nC. S. Boxitna ci Trail * former\nresident ol JBoowtli, oio* o recent\nTlsltor  here.\nThree Homes Being\nErected at Ymir\nTMIB, B C, July IS.\u2014Mm. E. Dftly\nwaa the guest of Mm. J. Leahy and\nMrs. Carl W. Llndow of Salmo on\nWednesday.\nJ. Daly and John Rankin of Tend\n(TOrelUe spent a couple of days this\n\u25a0week at their homes here.\nThree hnn.es are betng erected ln\nTrlr al the present time and two\nother residence* arc havlns addllone\n\u2022dded to their homea.\nYmlr hsd a b\"wi thunderstorm in\nthe eirly hours ot Thursday morning.\nSome road worlc 1* heinR d\u00abne on\nthe WUcox road, under thc auper-\nvlslon of H. Jon\u00abs.\nMr. and Wrs. L. Slattery and family\nof the Howard mine are spending a\nday or two In town this week.\nWeekly report for t...rty-slxth week\nof British Columbia ejtg-laying con-\nteat:\nTotal Total\nOwner               W.    Ptfl.    Egga Points\nWHITE WYANDOTTE\u2014\nCant.   A  43    40- 1399 1471.fi\nUoyd,    Miss    R BS    58 9 1.A9 1578.7\nMorton, John - 55    68.4 1685 1607.9\nEx.    St.    Sidney 38    43 5 1349 1476.3\nWHITE   LEGHORNS\u2014\nAppleby,   P.   W. 38    403 1355 13P2.5\nChalmers.   J.   .. 42    4B.fi 1221 13285\nChalmers,   RW. 43    46 3 1425 1452.5\nDa r bey,\nP    A;   Sons H    55 - 1538 1623.6\nDlederlchs,   J.C. 44    43.9 1425 13318\nEvans. P, C        55    65 4 1450 1450.7\nFairweather.  W. 48    84.3 1517 1661.2\nParrlngton   Bro. 54    56 8 1628 16603\nJ  50    58.3  1315 1506.3\nHcaricy.   C  51    57.5 1447 1603.6\nHolland (V Sons 30- 34.8 1349 1416.-\nHoman. M. L. ,. 48    $0.8 1362 1434.2\nKennedy   Bros... 69    59 7 1633 1700.9\nLawson,    C. W... 49    56 2 1590 1738 9\nLucille   p.   Pm. $4    Hi6 1550 1478 2\nManor P, Pm. .. 54    60 4 1503 18048\nMetcalfe, C. P... 33    37 6 1152 1213.2\nRankin,   Oeorge 43    51.1   1449 1500.9\nRobertson,  A.  _ 26    29 5  1203 1374.6\nRump   ii   Send 43    51 8 1320 1511.-\nRuttledRe,   MH. 46    54.7 1430    1834.3\nSchofleld,    A.W. 47    6IJ 1627 1817.7\nShannon    Bro.. 61    58 3 163.*. 1835.3\nSmith   Broa.   _. 51    58 5    1578    1818.-\n-FjSjVE *TH0US^C> EPLIARS* CASH \u25a0\n~V& VYHA.Y   TOWNSEND ZAKJt>Et%.\nPAWNED   HENR>tTTA'S.  PHWJl-\nNctKLACe for:- he has it\nIM WIS  pOCKtT-   THAT ANBYHE\nPAViM T.CKfcT-  ANC\u00bb )*& OOT\nWANT-AD\nRESULTS\nUniv.   OJ   B.   C. 57 X67.-  1743 \u201e1.3\u00bb.5\nVercher..  T.  O. 36   40.8 1561 1604.5\nWard, George _ 41    46 2 1607 1767 2\nWBtson.   A.   O... 62    55 1 1675 1644.5\nWhiting.    W.    .. 4S    49.-  1498 1532.4\nWilson   Bros.   .. 36    39,4 1454 1567.4\nANCONAS\u2014\n___t_,    F.    _.. 48    47 5 13O0 1117,8\nBLA(K   MINORriS\u2014\nMsrtln.   S.  S.   . 33    38- 1338 1422 6\nB.RKED BOCKS\u2014\nLamble,   .Iss.    .30    33 I  1467 1504.7\nPennington.   A. 39   44 2 1630 1655.2\nTrarton,  C. H.. 49   62,1  1448 1546.6\nWllllnms.     Mrs   47    61.4 1341 1363,1\nMODE   IMAM)   BEDS\u2014\nArnould,   H.   K. 33    37.8 1615 1618 1\nBron-n.   Jack       48    516 1208 1300,8\nPenzcr's Red P. 4',\"- 51.- 1328 1458.6\nRussell.   D    .      41    47.7 1603 1774 8\nSo'Mtlka   P.  Fm 44    60 9 1503 1851.-\n2030 3240.. 65103 70O.8-\nProd'jc'loi., 64 44  per cent.\nBrldesvlle Men\nto Stand Trial\nGREENWOOD, B. C. Jul. 16\u2014G\nH Courtney and J. Vellocette of\nBridesville appeared before stipendiary Magistrate c. Nichols on Saturday, chargpd with assault occasion-\nin? grlpvous nivltiv harm to c\nHolm, a neighboring farmer. They\ntn\u2014 co___B.tt*_  for trial.\nIfffVlE  PIR-ST R5\/_.l_ HAIR CUT\nV    IK V_*.R _ -   THE FIRST\nSHAVE  IN MONTHS-\nMOT TOWEL* OX M$ PA_E-\nA PAtlAI. MA-_SA_,_. - NAILS\nMAr.K_URF.I--\nanc. pR-j-yro \u2014\n<^7ov.- vou c_vr The- ibEA-\nOf-C-: A   SPENDTHRIFT- ALVk\/ATS\nA SPEND THRIFT- MON .V NEVER\nDID STAY \\H T0Wr.S_.N_.-_  HANDS\nFOR   ANY   LENGTH   \"    '-'\"\"\nQ)Nt>  NOW-\nVlE SEE\nNDER-\nIN   \"TWE\n^E\\N SUIT\nHE ORDERED\nANB\nPHb FOR-\nCONTlNUED- V^-fl\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\n\"lOO H-ARD   WHAT I *_AID-\nFI^OFE __OR C-r.i-'f WILL CALL\nON VOU ANO \"VOU PAV HIM FOF.\nCO   .UM.    .O-NISHT IO ->!!._-\nI AM PHOFE.'jbOF. CLlfT-\nmy charge. . por\nGiving a concert\nl_ fifty Dollar _\n\\..MV WIFE\nJU-T 'PHONED\nTO ME A0OLVT\nVOU-\nV - HAT TlM_\nWO_1_0 VOU\nLIKE FOR MF.\nTO APPEAT.'J\nME.ER- I'll Give\nVOU A HUNDRED\nDOLLAR.   IF VOU\nDONT   _HOW UP-\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nM0.M\u00bb_y\nIS\nBy Westover\nKIOKrJ __MEH_E_,\n\"THE _HOVAJ _TAli-r_\nAT    8  A.M.   _HAf.P\nOH, you'___.\n\"JUST HAVE\nTO    GET\nSOMEOME\nELSE \u2014\n____\u25a0\n %%\nTHF. SELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 SMinDAY MORNING, Jl'LV 18, 1131\nMarket and Mining News\nf_0\u00ab   HINI\nIH IK LIST\nveral Leaders Three\nPoints Higher; Tobacco Shares Up\n\u2022WW YORK, July 15 (By John L.\nolty. A P financial writer)\u2014\n\u25a0erattons (or tbe advance were rimed la today's atock market and\nind  traders Tilling   to  participate\na moderate mark-up.\nBomw hesitation wae evident In\n\u25a0* early dealings, hut with activity\n-jttlng progressively duller on the\njictlon efforts to turn, the trend\ncountered little resistance. Tobacco\nare_ started the rally which was\nned ln turn by rails, oils and\nher classifications. \\t the close\n\/eral leaders were one to three\nint-s higher, but the average gain\njl somewhat short of Wednesday's,\njansactlons totalled C16.80 shares.\nAmerican Telephone's long-awaited\nmlngs statement had Uttle effect\nirk-twlae, the stock selling off 1%\nd rallying to close IH to tbe good.\nTobacco shares were stimulated\n' recant reports that June clga-\n,te consumption showed a smaller\n.dine from 1631 than, ha\u00ab been the\ni>e reoently. American Tobacco *'B\"\nned from two points and Liggett\nI Meyers \"B\" three points ln active\n.ding. The rise In rails, carrying\nw Tork Central. Santa Fe and\nilon Pacific up one to two points,\na perhaps traoeable to speculative\n-er-st    In    posstbls    developments\nthe forthcoming meeting of rall-\ny  executives  who  are  to  discuss\n\u25a0ther means of economising, note-\nly through eliminating dupllca-\n.n of some services. Industrials\n|jwed fair strength, Steel common\ning ftp nearly a point, while gains\nvirtually the same extent were\nUe by Amerlean Oan. Weatlng-\ntuae, Cms and Standtrd Oil of\nlllomla-\nNEW YORK S_\nroot\ns\nH\n1 _\nH\nled    Chemical\n*9_\n**%\n48',\ni  Om . .\n38\n13 V.\n34%\nler For Power\n<va\n3\nIU\ni.   Mi  *   Fdy\nM\nIH\n0%\nii Smelt te Re\nt.\n8\nIH\nier   Telephone\n75 ii\n71H\n74%\nleric    Tobacco\n88 H\n83 V.\n85%\necondt   mmm...-\n1\n3'_\n3\nchlson   ............\n3*H\naavs,\n94\nburn   Motors..\n\u00bb.'.\n48\n51'\/.\nIt   __.   Ohio   ..\nM\n554\n\u00ab_\nndix   Aviatton\ne\n8\nth  Steel  ......__\n014\no_\n0%\nII\n0\nnadlaa Pacific\n-OK\n\u00bbH\n1014\nas   &   Ohio  -\n19\n-OH\n11%\n\u2022 _\n8H\n8%\ni m   tt   South..\n-_\n2\n3%\nn Oas N Y....\nni\n35.4\n87%\nrn Producta _.\n30*1\n38 H\n30%\nWright pfd _\n1%\n_\u00abS_\n35\n-l_\nstm&n   Kodak\n30\n37_\n38%\n( Power \u00abfc Lt\navfc\nin\n3%\nto   \t\n3',.\n3.\nird English ....\n'rd  of Canada\n3\n6 V,\nM Nat Stores\n40_\n39%\n40%\nleeport Texas ..\n1__\n13V4\n13%\n-neral  Motors..\n0\n8%\n0\n1 neral   Electric\n10 V.\n0%\n10%\nraeral Foods ..\naa\n20%\n23\neat North pfd\n8_\n7H\n8%\nMd   Dust   \t\n1-V.\n10%\nHW\n\u25a0\u25a0eat   W   Sugar\n1\n6,4\n7\n\u25a0>we  Sound  ....\n8_\n51.\nidson   Motor*\n\u00ab.\nltt\n6%\ns  Copper \t\n1%\n1%\n;ternat    Nickel\n8 V.\n8\n514\n'iter Tel _fc Tel\nHi\n4H\n5%\nmn Copper \t\nM.\n6H\n6%\n81.\n8\nltt\nAck   Truck   ....\n13'\/\u00bb\n13%\nllwaukee   pfd.\n..      1\nli\nish   Motors   ..\n10V.\n10'i\n10%\nfit   Dairy  Prod\nl-Vi\n18\n16%\n\u25a0  Power   &   Lt\n8%\n*w York Centr\n13\nHH\n13%\ntc Os\u00ab tt Elec\n30%\n30\n20%\n:akard  Motors..\nIV.\nIH\n1!\u00bb\n._,\n1\\\n814\niiiuips   Pete   _.\nw\n3%\n4\n3H\nSH\n3%\nadio    Corpora..\n4\nHi\n4\nadlo  Keith Or\na_\nIM\nkco   Island   ....\nM\n3%\nafeway   Stores..\n35 _\n34\n35%\nLouis  it 6  F\n1\n1\nhell  Union  Oil\nIH\nSV4\n3%\nouth   Calif   Ed\n10'.\n1. '.\n19%\nouth  Pacific  ..\n0\n8\n0\ntan Oil of  Cal\n30!,\n10V.\n3(1%\ntan Oil of Ind\n18%\ntan Oil of N J\n3814\n35%\n38%\n3 .\n3_\n314\nexas Coropra ..\n10%\n10%\n10%\nexas   Oulf   Sul\n15'.\n14%\n14%\nnlon Carbide ..\n17%\n1\u00ab%\nMS\nnlon  Oil  Calif\n8%\n0\n\u00bb%\nnited   Aircraft-\n8%\n9%\n9%\nnton   Pacific   ..\n33'.\n80%\n32%\nS Pipe % Pdy\n8\n8\n8 Rubber \u201e.,\nHt\n314\n1   8   Steel   \t\n24\n33%\n23 1,\n18 _\n17%\n18%\n\"lllye Overland..\n1\n%\n%\nj         EXCHANGES\nMETAL MARKETS\nNIW TORK, July 16 \u2014 Copper\nquiet, electrolytic spot and luture 614.\nTin barely steady; ipot end nearby\n3112.   luture   31.35.\nIron   quiet,   unchanged.\nLead quiet; apot new Tor. J.70;\nBtat St.  Loula  3.83. ,\nZinc steady; Eaet st. Loula apot\nanl future 9 60.\nAntimony 5.00.\nQuicksilver 64.00 to 68.00,\nAt London;\nStandard oopper, apot \u00a338; tuture\n\u00a335 10s; electrolytic spot UO; future  \u00a330.\nTin spot \u00a3137 10s; future \u00a3139\n3s ed.\nLead, spot \u00a3.   13s 8d;  future \u00a310.\nZinc, spot \u00a311 is; luture \u00a311 15s.\nCOPPER INTERESTS\nOF PROVINCE SEND\nTOLMIE REQUESTS\nAsk Preference On AH Empire\nCopper on British\nMarket\nVICTORIA, July U (CP).\u2014British\nColumbia oopper interests desire a\npreference on all Empire copper In\nthe British market conditional upon\ncopper prices within the Empire to\nbe no higher than those prevailing\nin other parts of the world. This request has been eent to Premier 8. F.\nTolmie. who ls In Ottawa.\nWith copper being produced In\nvarious parts of the Empirs, lt is\nheld that this plan would Insure\nBritish users of the metal supply at\na low price.\nShould such a preference he granted, It would prove a great stimulus\nto the industry la this province,\nwhich la facing a crisis owing to\nthe increased duty on copper imposed\nby the United States government recently.\nBritish Columbia produces approximately 100.000,003 pounds of cop-\nper per annum. It has vast copper\nmlnee so  far  undeveloped.\nTORONTO STOCK\nMARKET IS FIRM\nProfit-Taking in Issues That\nScore Widest Gains;\nNickel Strong\nTORONTO, July 1ft\u2014But for some\nprofit-taking m a few Issues that\nscared the widest gains in Thursday's\nbrisk advanos. the tone of the Toronto stock exchange today continued firm. Local group leaders and\ninterllsted stocks were buoyed to a\ncertain extent by the Improved showing at New Tork, where gains topped\nlosses In a ratio of around three\nto one.\nTrading throughout the morning\nwas dull and eventless but, In the\nearly afternoon, a heavy buying\nwave developed In International\nNickel and the stock soared to the\nday's peak of 9V*,, at which level a\nblock of 1000 shares changed hands.\nThe Issue eased slightly to close at\n8 H. up Vt. with ealei totalling\n6525 shares.\nStrength In Nickel had a stimulating effect on the rest of the list\nin late trading which, together\nwith the New York firmness, accounted for a trading ratio on the\nlocal list of 21 gains to 14 losses,\nwith 23 unchanged. Volume was\nsomewhat lighter at BflM shares.\nUtilities were unchanged to stronger, with Brazilian Traction a group\nfeature on reports that current\ntroubles In Brazil were being Ironed\nout. The stock recovered from a recent decline to cloee fractionally\nhigher at 10. B- C. Power \"A\" and\nInternational Utilities \"A\" tlao perked up slightly, while Montreal Power\nand power corporation seemed content to lag along at unchanged\nprice levels. Shawlnigan lost \\\\ to\n13 ft.\nE\n{I MONTREAL, July 15 (CP)\u2014Brlt\n' [h and foreign exchange ln relation\nIf the Canadian dollar, as compiled\nir the Royal Bank of Canada, closed\n|M-y as follows:\n{ gentlna,   peso   \u201e    .3800\nHistralla,  pound    32801\nli-ilglum,    belga 1603\nMl, mtlrels  .\u00bb, \u00ab 0880\nhechoslovakla,   crown   -    .0343\nlemmark.    kirme     _ 2221\nInland, flnmar*   _.   .0185\nhinoe,   franc    - -   -0452\n-\u2022rmany. relchsmark _. \u201e 2738\ni-eat Britain, pound  4.0900\nydla,    rupee     3092\n->Uand,  florin   4644\naly,    lire     0590\nrpan, yen - 3245\nisroelavia.    dinar     0198\niw   Zealand,   pound   - 3.7181\n! irway,   krone  \u00ab \u2014\u00ab\u2022\u2022   -2031\n\"land,   Blotl 1304\n||)umanla,    leu     \u2014\u2022\u2014 \u00b0071\nfj.uth   Africa,   pound   -  5.5(110\n, mln.    peart* 0928\nfUden,   krone    2100\n[k-lteerland-   Tranc 2245\nijmed States, dollar, 15% per cent\n[1117-ml ura. i\nOTTAWA. July 13.\u2014(C- ?\u25a0)\u2014Ever\nsince the beginning of the present\nintensely competitive era ln International trade, about the close of\nthe 19th century, men have felt all\nover the world that purchasing pow\u00ab\ner waa a thing to be Jealoualy safeguarded, and not ta be allowed to\nexpend it*;if beyond the territory\nof one's own country any more than\ncould bt avoided. Nations, as was\nremarked In the beginning of these\narticles, must sell where they can,\nbut they can buy where they choo**-.\nAs selling became more difficult, It\nhas been felt that the power to buy\nshould be used as an Instrument\nfor helping to sell. This is tbe\nstate of mind that has led, first to\na general policy of exsreme nationalist protection, and mors recently, to\nthe dei-elopment of economic groups\nof nations agreeing to buy and sill\namong  themselves.\nOwing to the free trade policy of\nits chief memlxr. the British Empire\nhas never hitherto been able to organize Itself effectively Into such a\ngroup; only the recent abandonment\nof free trade by Great Britain has\nmade it possible for the whole Empire to direct Its trade consciously\nInto imperial channels, and Is was\nthe prospect of thus directing Empire trade that made possible the\nabandonment of free trade by Great\nBritain, which Is much too highly\nsp-dalized ln Its productive opera-\ntlonj to be able to live largely within Itself like the United States.\nThe chief consequences of this new\nsituation, for member countries like\nCanada, ls that It Is no longeronec-\neseary for them to aim exclusively\nat ka?plng their purchasing power at\nhome as much as possible. They may\nnow aim at keeping their purchasing\npower within the Empire. A dpllar\nsent to the United States hs\u00ab long\nbeen * dollar whloh had only % very\npojr chance of returning to the\ncountry which sent It. A dollar\nsent to Oreat Britain last year had\nno assurance of so returning, although its chance wai mueh better.\nBut Empire money sent to Oreat\nBritain under Its present Imperial\ntorts policy wlli be money which is\nsure to stay ln the Empire, and which\nwill ln the natural course of events\nget  back to Its own country again.\nFor the sake of tbe puro truth of\neconomic science, lt may aa well bs\nadmitted here that In % world ln\nwhich the monetary system was\nlunctlonlng properly, undisturbed by\na burden of International debts be\nyond lt\u00ab power to carry, the Idea\nthat purchasing power once directed\noutside of a country was lost to that\ncountry was never entirely valid.\nImports must always be paid for ln\nthe long rm* by exports, and lt is\nnot, under ordinary circumstances,\nnecessary that thc Imports saould be\nfrom the same country as accepts\ntr.e exports. But the present circumstances are not ordinary; and the\nfact that countries with enormous\nbalances due to them on war debts\naccount refuse to accept goods in\nsettlement and demand payment In\ngold makes It imperative for other\ncountries to avoid parting with gold,\nand therefore to do no buying except from countries which will im-\nmeclhitely  accept goods in exchange.\nNobody likes bo kiss a dollar good\nbye t;-.at went out of Canada no\nmatter which way It went. Considering the state of world finance,\nthere was some reaaon lor the feeling. We can still feel that about\ndollars that go to most foreign ooun\ntries. We should no longer feei that\nabout dollars that go to other countries In the Empire.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nNEW YORK, July 15\u2014Sterling exchange eaay at 1353 for flO-day bills\nand at $3Mli  for demand. .\nForeign bar silver 37.\nCanadian dollar 13% per cent disc.\nFrancs  391   U-lfl  cents.\nLire   5.11   o:nts.\nMarks  33.72  cente.\nUrusujy *7-25 cents.\nDIVIDEND-PAYING\nGOLD STOCKS HOLD\nINTERESnORONTO\nPractically   AH   Close   With\nSubstantial Gains on\nMining Market\nTORONTO, July 1ft <CP>\u2014Dividend-paying gold stocks created special Interest on the standard Mining\nexchange today snd practically all\n\"csed   with   substantial   gains.\nMclntyre was the feature of the\nday's market deriving special strength\nfrom the declaration of a dtvldend\nof five per cent, and an extra of\nBtt per., cent, payable In United\nStates funds.     *\nMclntyre, under active buying,\nclosed at * 18.75 showing a net gain\nof 11. Dome advanced 30 cents to\n>11.45; Hollinger at \u00bb515 and B. C.\nPioneer at 13.73 each moved up 15\nofnts; Nlplasing Jumped 13 cents to\n80 oents, apparently on the strength\nof developments at the Beattle;\nWright-Hargreaves and Conlaurum\ngained five points to close at 12.85\nand 40 cents, respectively, the betterment in both instances being due\nto favorable news from the mines,\nMacaavi advanced two polnta to\n25 cents. Teck-Hughes and Slscoe\nwere the weak spots during the session. Teck lost 1\u00bb oents to \u00bb4-33 and\nSlsooe fell 3V4  cents to 88^  cents.\nNoranda developed a stronger stand\nand under steady buying pressure\nclosed up 30 cents to $16.50, while\nInternational Nickel, according to\nofficial figures, sold off 15 cents\nto $3 75.\nSale* lor the day rose to 3flfl,000\nshares.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nArno \u201e \u201e 02\nAJax     \u201e &5\nAmulet  _...\u201e \u201e  11 vi\nA P ConaolldaWt _.        .04\nAssociated     _ \u201e 01 %\nBase   MeUls    \u201e        .38\nBidgood      02 H\nBarry Hollinger        .07\nBig  Missouri   \u201e 00\nCalmont    04\nC and E Land*  \u201e 14\nChemical   Researoh   _,     l.oo\nClerlcy     \u201e       .01 .i\nDome     11.25\nDalhousle      \u201e \u201e 06\nEldorado         1.22\nFoothills    02\nFalconbrldg*      \u201e _.       .85\nGranada    71\nHome   Oil    17\nHowey    .., \u201e 47\nHollinger         5.10\nHudson   Bay         1.76\nInternational   Nickel        6.10\nKlrkland   Lake    \u201e       .34\nLake   Shore    ,  2830\nMacassa     \u201e.,       .33\nMandy    - - \u201e      .03\nMalartlc     \u201e 04ft\nMclntyre         18.60\nMining   Corp         1.20\nMnyland     06\nNpwbec       01 *.\nNlplasing     80\nNoranda     -     16.40\nPend   Oreille    45\nPremier    Gold     47\nSlierrit Gordon  37\nSudbury Basin  _,      ,33\nSlscoe   \u00ab..\u2122 m      .881(\nTech    Hughes        4.25\nVlpond     273,4\nVenture* _,      .45\nWrlKht   Hargreaves    \u00ab      2.82\nWhite    Ackerman     \u201e      50\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINITIAPOLIS, Minn, July 16\u2014\nPlour 15 cents lowed. __..___ lot,\nfamily patents quoted 4.05 to 4.15\na   barrel  In   98-pound   cotton _ack_.\nShipments 25,621. Bran 9.00 to 9.50\nWheat: No. 1 nor 51',. to 52\".;\nNo. 1 red durum lit, to ._\u00bbi; July\nto1.;   Sept  4.H;   Dec.  49.\nCorn:  No.  s  yellow  S4V,   to S5_.\nOut,:  No.  ..   white   m;   to   il _.\nflax;   No.   1,   97_   to  1.01;..\nMINES\nBid       Ask\nBig Mlwourl  _   .08       .1.\nGeorgia  River  _    .02 vi   .02 .i\nOolconda    10       .UVi\nGrandvlew  02       \u2014\nInt  C   is  C   08       UM\nLorne   Gold 0-V.    .08\nNational Silver _    .01V.    \u2014\nNobis   Five    _   .02 Vi    .0J\nPend Oreille  44      .45\npioneer Oold  _ 3.70    3.75\nPorter    Idaho    _   .0.       .03%\nPremier 48      _0\nReeve* McDonald _ IH.    .20\nRen\/.  OOld  39        \u2022-!\nSllvercrest   ..._ _   .01        \u2014\nWhitewater 01      \u2014\nOILS\nA P con-olldated  04\nCalmont    03\nC  ana  E Lands   _. 17\nCommonwealth   .      .07\nrabyan     \u2014_ 00 _\nHome   OU    .'. 18\nMayland    _.        .03'\/,\nMercury     03..\nMcLeod     33\nStirling Pacific  08\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nEXCHANGE RATES\nDEFINITE TREND\nIS LACKING ON\nMONTREAL LIST\nEarly Weakness Attributed to\nProfit-Taking; Canada\nCement Softens\nMONTREAL. July 15 (CP).\u2014A lack\nof definite trend eharseterized the\nMontreal stock exchange market at\nthe doting today. The list wsi\nweaker m tfle morning trade. Despit.\nlack of constructive- news from either\nNew York or London, prices rallied\ntomewhit In the lato afternoon,\nhowever, leaving the list at the close\nwith a fairly even distribution of\njains   and   losses,\nEarly weakness was attributed to\nprofit-taking. Canada Cement issues,\nwhich featured yesterday's \u2022rally,\nsoftened today. The common stock\nlost 'i to 8. Cement preferred only\nappeared In odd lots, and sold at\n30,   off   6.\nConsolidated Smelters lost 4% to\nSO, and bh&winlgan was .\u25a0 lower at\n13%. Canadian Pacific sold down to\n11 Vi In the morning and later rallied to 12V\u00ab. where It was up \\.\nBrazilian was % higher at \u2022%. and\ninternational Nickel up U at 9,\nequalling its high for the recovery\nmovement.\nOther changes Included: B. C-\nPower \"A\", up. !4 at 19; Canadian\nIndustrial Alcohol, up % at 2; Cockshutt Plow, 0ft V\\ at 5V-_; Masoey-\nHarrls, off Vi at \\%\\ Quebec Power,\noff % at 13; Eastern Dairies, off\nat 8.\nMontreal Power was a strong spot.\nclosing at 32, up %, Steel of Canada preferred registered an advance\nof 5 points at 26. Canada Car and\nFoundry preferred was unchanged\nat   Utf.\nBank of Montreal lout a point at\n197. and Royal Bank was unchanged\nat   147.\nTotal stock sale* were 16,290, and\nbond w-lss wern J40.100.\nSterling closed at M.09, and United States funds at a premium, of\n15V_   per  cent.\nWHEAT FUTURES\nCLOSE HIGHER\nATWINNIPEG\nRise Ia Due to Strength On\nSouthern Markets; Gain\nIs Fractional\nWINNIPEO, July 15 (CP).-Wheat\nfutures closed fractionally higher on\nthe grain market here today, as ths\nresult ot strength In south markets.\nExport   was   reported   sllBht.\nJuly gained \\k to 83%: October\nand December each Y* to 99 and\n87ft, respectively.\nThe market displayed a firm tone\nthroughout, although trade was on\nthe light side- The small buying In\nthe pit was largely from the Important Interests whose support has\nbeen the chief sustaining feature of\nlate.\nPrlcea In cash wheat and coarse\ntrain Inclined higher ln sympathy\nwith wheat, but trade was very\nquiet.\nBOND HEADWAY\nLESS MARKED\nU. S. Governments Are Barely\nSteady, Some Foreigns\nReact Moderately\nCALOARY. July 16 \u2014 ReMlpt*\nHoga   099,  sheep   23,\nSte-rs: Oood and cholc*, M to\n\u26664 35; medium \u00bb!M to 13.75; common,   $2.50 to \u00ab3.25.\nHeifers: Oood and choice, $3.50 to\nM; medium $325 to 13.50; common.\n|2.50   to   *3.\nPed calves: Good and choloe, $4,75\nto t5; medium, |4 to 14.60.\nCows: Good. $2 to $235; medium\n$1.50 to $1.75; common. $125 to\n$1,50.\nBulls: Good, $1.25 to $1.50; common,  $1   to $1.35.\nLambs: Good handy weight*, $4\nto $4.80.\nSheep: Good handy weights, $2 to\n$3.50.\nLONDON   CLOWE\nLONDON, July 15 (AP),\u2014Closing\nQuotations:\nBrazilian Traction $11V Canadian\nPaclflo $13H; Hydro Bectrle $7;\nInt Hold. Inv. Co. Mt; Int. Nickel\n$8; Brlt. Amer. Tob. \u00a34 2s fld; Distillers \u00a32 9s 3d; Dunlop Rubber lis\n0d; Tord Ltd. 17a 6d; Hudson's Bay\n18s; Imperial Tobacco \u00a34 7s \u00abd;\nShell T. d. T. \u00a31 15s; Vickers 5s 9d:\nBritish 6 per cent war loan 1947\n\u00a3101 10s; British i\\i per cent war\ninnn \u00a3102 5e; British 4 per cftnt\n1960-90   \u00a3108.\nNEW YORK, July  15\u2014Bonds con\ntlnued to make headway In moderate\ntrading, although the movement wag\nsomewhat l-too uniform.\nThs U. S. governments were barely\nsteady, and some of the foreigns re\nacted moderately, but among the\ndomestic issues striking; gains were\nmade Jn spot*, particularly among\nsecond-grade rails and ln the oils.\nSome of the gilt-edged Issues were\nInclined to soften, possibly reflecting some switching In search of\nbetter pleldi. The price Index of 60\ncorporata Issues again galnad 1-5 to\na point. The turnover approximated\n$9,893,000 par value, virtually duplicating   yesterday's.\nIn the rails, a feature was a large\nturnover and an advance of more\nthan four points In the Nickel\nPlate 6's. Substantial gains also\nappeared in such Issues as Rock\nIsland refunding 4's. New Haven\nconvertable  6's  snd  others.\nTbe   utilities   eased   slightly,\nIn the oils, gains of about one to\ntwo points were made.\nIn the foreigns. German governments recovered from an early Mf\nto clow about steady. Argentines\nreacted. United Kingdom %%'t sagged    %    of   a   point   and   rrench\n7'\/i>.   %.\nGRAIN COLLAPSES\nNEAR ALL-TIME\nLOW AT CHICAGO\nSudden Bulges In Corn Rally\nMarket for Time; Bust\nDamage Said, Remote\nCHICAGO, July U (By John P.\nBoughan, A P market editor)\u2014-Sudden bulges In corn values rallied tho\ngrain market* today after widest had\ncollapsed to within \u00bbi of the all-\ntime bottom-prlc* reecrd.\nReports that the T'ansas corn crop\nwa* being hurt by dry, hot weather\n-were largely responsible for the ac>\ntion of corn, wheat was beari3hly\nInfluenced by domestic primary receipts much larger than a week ago,\nwith foreigners persistently minimizing purchases from North America, and by advice* from both sides\nof the Canadian border tha; danger\nof black rust damago was dally\nbecoming  remote.\nCora closed unsettled '_ to '\u25a0'\u00bb\nabove yesterday's finish; wheat unchanged to tk blgber; oats V* off\nto yB up; and provisions unchanged\nto five cents down.\nWh;at weakness developed In th*\nface of comparative strength shown\nby quotations at Liverpool, a circumstance ascribed to scantiness of\nshipments (rom Argentina, only 645,-\n000 bushels this week, tlie smallest\nin many months. Traders wire sharply watching unusual firmness shown\nby quotations at Winnipeg, where\ncfflcl.il buying was assarted In some\nquarters here to mark Canada's entry Into the price stabilization field,\navj. constitute a fresh menace In\nthe   International    wh-pat   situation.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials.   4S.47 up 1.13\n20 rails     J...66 up   .85\n20 utilities   18.31 up   .56\nPRECIOUS METAL\nGROUP LEADS AT\nVANCOUVER LIST\nActive Issues Hold Ground on\nStock Market; Premier,\nReno Gold, Up\nVANCOUVER, July 15 (CP)-Active\nissues held the.r ground made yesterday In a dav of rather dull trading on the Vancouver stock exchange\ntoday. T:e precious metals group\nwas again in the lend in point of\nactivity. Premier and Ileno Oolds.\nboth selling up two c-nis. closed\nunchanged at 48 and 38 respectively.\nBig  iyliMour!  eased   1   to 8.\nCrow's Nest In the olla aection was\nsofted at 2V down a quarter. May-\nland at 6\", gained one and a half\nfrom  yesterday's close.\nOther active Issues closed unchanged   ln   scattered   trsdlng.\nLIVESTOCK REVIEW\nDOMINION TO PAY\nRAILWAY INTEREST\nTO B.C. IN STERLING\nMANITOBA BOND\nISSUE SELLING\nAT A PREMIUM\nWINNIPEG. July 15\u2014Manitoba's\nbond la.ue of $3,000,000 bearing Interest at six per crnt. taken up In\nthe past few days, has met a big\ndemand la now selling at a premium,\naccording to word received in IocaI\nbond circles. Excellent crop pro\u00bbp*cte\nr%'e a general improvement in monetary condition, war* factors in the\nsubttantlal  advance.\nOTTAWA.   July   15   (CP)\u2014Wee'ern\ncattle markets continued fairly ftrong\nand wher# quality Is available, de-\nm.ind has be-?n brisk, but prloes la\nthe east were somewhat ea-ier with\nsome curtailment of trade due to\nwarm weather.\nIn a weekly review, la-ucd tonight.\nthe department of agriculture reports t->p cattle selling st Toronto tt\n*6 bO this week, being somewhat\nea-M-r. Montreal had a top of $0 40.\nWinnipeg $6; Calgary M-7S: Edmonton, 9f>; Moose Jsw I3.SQ and\nP.eilna snd Saskatoon 13 25. Calf\nmarkets  generally  held  steady.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nAbitlbi Power & Paper  ty\nAtlantic    Sugar      30\nBell    Telephony      IM\nBrazilian  T  L  _k  Power         9-1!\nBrlt    American    Oil             8'\u00a3\nCsnada    Bronae    12'j\nCan Car &  Foundry  _.         0\\,\nCan Car & Foundry   |_H|\nCan    Cement,     \u00ab.        5\nCan   Cement   pfd      31\nCan Industrial Alcohol         1%\nCt\\n   Steamship   Lines     35\nConn Mining & Smelting  51\nDominion    Bridge       14'i\n\"Dominion   Glass    \u201e  40\nDom  Textile    _  40\nImperial     Oil __._         B3_\nLake   of   the   Woods    \"....,       4\nMassey   Harris    ,        4'i\nMontreal Power _  31'^\nMont   Telrpraph     40\nNational  Breweries   14'a\nNational Steel Car          7.\u00ab\nPower    Oorp      10\nQuebec  Power    tk%\nShawlnigan     ,..\u201e  13 y3\nSo   Canada   Power     17\nSteel    of    Canada,     _  15\nWinnipeg     Hallway     ..._.\u201e_         3%\nWould  Save   Vast   Sums   on\nBorrowing by Not Paying\nCanadian Money\nVICTORIA, July 16 \u2014 Announc.\nmer.t received here that the Dominion Rovernment In future will P*y\nInterest on ana.* of Ita railway borrowings in British Instead of Canadian money has caused the Britiah Columbia government sosae coi:-\ncer_t. The province holds approximately *4.<K)Q,oOO In federal securities sffecrcfl- by this change, and\nwill lose about |30,000 a year in\ninterest as a result of the fttttof\npayment in sterling.\nTlie lsat.es in question were made\nby Canadian r\u00bbl'nyi. which were\nlater taken over by the Dominion,\ngovernment and merged In the Canadian Natlonsi sys-.em. The stocks\nwere floated In sterling and by their\nactual terma are payable both aa\nto principal and Interest in BrltlBii\nmoney. But the Dominion government has always made payment in\nCanadian -funds, even when the\npound depreciated after the war. ...\nfuture, however, lt will abide by the\nletter of the contract and pay in\nsterling, thus saving substantial\nsums. Tlie British Columbia go'-\nernment has written to the -Dominion finance department to ascertain whether the present ar-\nransement ls a permanent policy\nor not.\nFRENCH  SENATE APPBOVM\nfrlNANCE    BILL\nPARIS. July 15 (AP)\u2014By a show\nof hands tonight, the senate approved the government'i finance biil\nwhich already lird been adopted by\nthe chamber of deputies. The aim\nof the bill Is to balance t,h* Preneh\nbudget.\nMAILING A CHEQUE\nSAVES TIME AND FOOTSTEPS\nLast Day\nfor Discount\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\n\u25a0WINNIPEG,   July   15\u2014Grain market  quotations:\nOpen     High    Low Close\nWheat:\nJuly         53          531.      53 33',\nOct     55',i      50 .      55'a \u00bb>_'_\nD;c    67_     571.     57', 57._\nOata:\nJuly       33 .     \u2014       _- M_\nOct     28          JB1,      37T. -7'n\nDec _   \u2014        \u2014        \u2014 23_\nBarley;\nJuly         35*i      35'.      36.. 35ti\nOct    31.,      31*.      31 _ 3H,\nDec.    ......   \u2014        \u2014        \u2014 31',\nFlu:\nJuly         \u00ab7 .      Q7'4      67 . 08\nOct     70         71 jj      70 711,\nDec    721.      75! 1     721,. Wi\nRye:\nJuly        \u2014         \u2014        \u2014 32H\nOct     33\",      33_      33 >_ 33V.\nDec    \u2014         \u2014         \u2014 34',\nCash  grain  close:\nWheat:  No.  1  hard  34;   No. 1   nor\n,;   No.   2   nor   50%;   N-. 3   nor\n48!.;.No.   4   nor   46%;   No.   6 43>;\nNo.  0  36%:   feed   34%;   track 53%;\nNo.   1   dur  58%.\nTORONTO INDLSTIUALS\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA. July 15\u2014 A quiet, unchanged trend la prevailing on\nCanadian  egg  markets  tod.y.\nToronto: Tela egg mark.t ls agnln\nsteady and unchanged today with\nthe exoeptlon ol extras which are a\nlittle difficult to keep clear. Supplies are generally about equal to\nthe demaad. The poultry market la\neasy and prlcea are about one cent\nlower.\nMontreal: Egg receipts here today\nwere 1011 cases aa oo.npared to 2484\ncase, for the corresponding day last\nyear. The market continues very\nquiet and graded shipments on spot\na . selling to wholesaler! at extras\n20, first- IM to 17, seconds 13'..\nto lt.\nCHURCHILL. Man., July 15\u2014Tha\nHarris sparrow, rare member of the\nsparrow family, which winters In\nthe Mississippi valley and for the\nlocation of whose nests bird enthusiast* have searched for year_.\nlays Its eggs In the far north. Nests\nof tj:eae plea,, ng birds were found\nhere  this year. \"\u2022\nBell Telephone ..\nBr.i7.Ulan    \t\nB   A   Oil   \t\nCanada    Dredge\nCanada   Gypsum\nCanada   Malting\nHis    SeagranV\nFiord of Can \"A\"\nGo.civear     _\nImperial Oil ...\nInter   Nickel   ....\nInter   Pete   \t\nLaura Secord _\nLoblaw \"A\" ....\nMassey Harris ..\nPage H-rsey ..\nService Stations\nSuperusst _\nHiram    Walker\n80\n78u;\nlti,\n12':\n11\n7\n80\n\u2014 \u2014 4\n71.\nS3\n8_\n8%\n5%\nII _\n60\n8%\n\u00ab'.\n10%\nIH\n4%\nttt\n45\n44\n45\n\u00bb'.\nM\n3 _\n13\nM\n13\n4'i\n4%\n4_\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL. July 15.\u2014Prices held\nfirm on the produce and dairy\nmarket here today.\nButter was unchanged at 17c a\npound for carlots or less of No. 1\nbrand. To retailers, solids Ml 18c\nend  prints at   19c.\nCheese waa quiet, Ontarlos being\nquoted at BVbc to 9^c, and Que-\nbees at fl'fec to 9^c a pound.\nEgss held steady, quotations being\n20c for extras, 17c for first* aad\n13l_c  to   14c   a  dozen.\nPotatoes   were   firm.\nAn 84c\nWANT-AD\nSold That House\nAn enthusiastic user of Nelson. Daily-\nNews Want-Ads write* us to cancel his\nad immediately, because in two days he\nfound a prospect who purchased the\nhouse advertised . . . Thc total cost of\nthis Want-Ad was 84 cents\u2014apain proving the economy and the resultfulness\nof The Nelson Daily News Classified\nSection.\n\/\/\/\/\/\/iMYHB\nMotto\"\nYes\u2014The Nelson Daily News Want-Ads are\nquick\u2014silent\u2014sure and inexpensive salesmen\u2014They've been producing results like\nthat described above for years . . . You'll\nfind profit in\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nWANT-ADS\nPHONE 144\n_______\n _\nIHE SEL50S DAILY SEWS, M.L-0N, B,  C. \u2014 SATURDAY MOBS-NO, JULY U,  15.2\nTEK TOOTH\nBRUSHES\nfor (leaner Teeth.\n50ccach-\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\n__ TAXI\n35\nlhe Best of service\nCareful. Courteous\nDrltert\nN\u00ab\u00bbion Transfer Co., Lid.\nr-NEED-A FOOT LOTION\nFor  Tired,  Sweaty,  Achlui  Feet\nSMYTHE'S\nPHARMACY\nPrescription-   Onr   Specialty\n______   1\nPHOM;\n_A    TAXI   and\n44     TRANSFER\nDaily Frel\u00ablit Schedule to Trull\nand Rohsland: Co:\"** Nelson at\n10 a.m. Trail l>epnf, Dominion\n..-irngr. Rossland Depot, L. D.\nCafe. CON   Cl'MMISS.\nAmerican\nBaseball\nDFTROIT 11;\nPHII-ADEl.I'HIA  If\nPHILADELPHIA, July 19\u2014Detroit\nTli,-e?s won a heavy-hltrlng 11-ln-\nning contest from the Athletics, H-\nto-10. today, to even the series herr\n*t on* gan^ apiece.\nTying the score at I0-to-10 with\na two-run uprising In the eighth\ninning ,the Bengals won out when\nthey pushed over the \u25a0 winning run\nSn the  llth.\nSimmons and Stone led tly onslaught that found five pitcher.\nworking for the Tlgera and two for\nthe Mackmen. Simmons hit three\nhome runs and a. double, driving\nln six runs ait_ running his total\nof homers for the season to 24,\nStone hit tw0 for the circuit u__\nhls first two times at bat, each\ntime with a man on base.\nDetroit         1|    U    ]\nPhiladelphia       io   ia   |\nUhle. Hogsett. Marrow, Goldsteii.,\nWhitehill and Ruel. Hayworth; Walberg, KniuMe and  Cochrane.\nT-IeteEy dispelling thf ]1n_c the\nBrowns have h'ld off* them. Washington Senators to___y _efeRt*,j St.\nLouis for the second time in the\ncurrent series. 8-u>-7, and boosted\ntheir winning stre&Jt to aeven games.\nWashington bu<-_.-_.5. c..]y beat off\nt five-run raJly by the Browns in\nthe eighth a_nd then Oronin'a double, scoring Rice from first with two\nout, won the gam, for the &enato<\"\u00bb.\nWeat got four hits Including three\ndouhlea  In  four  times   at   bat.\nSt. Loula  __,    7    18   u\nWashington        8    IS   0\nBlaeholder. Oray. H&dley snd Ferrell; Crowder, Coffman, Weaver,\nThomas  and  Spencer.\n-touched for nine hit*, had Uttk\ntrouble chalking up his 15th win.\nThe Castilian had lost his laat\nthree   previous   starts.\nIn addition to pitching well, Oo-\nmez shared hitting honors with Lou\nGehrig, each driving across threc\nruns. Jack Russell, who relieved\nFerrell in the fourth, allowed only\nfive hit* the reat of the  wsy.\nChalmers Clseell .collected three\n; of the Indians' nine hits off Gomez.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nI    Ferrell. Russell and L. Seweil;  Oo-\nmez and Jorgens.\nCHICAGO   4;   BOSTON   2\nBOSTON. July 15\u2014Chicago White\nSox defeated the Red Sox. 4-to-_j\nin II Innings, repeating their performance ot yesterday, which also\nwent two extra Innings;\nSingles by Appling and Funk, ei-\nrors by jolley and Connolly and\nHayes' triple produced tlie wlnnintr\nmargin. Hayes also made t home\nrun In trig eighth and accepted 16\nchances in the field.\nChicago        4   9    1\nBoston    ..     2    7:.\nFrazer, Faber, Lyons and Grube;\nBoerncr,  Durham   a_nd   Connolly.\nWASHINGTON 9;\nST. I Oils 7\nWASHINGTON,   July   15\nCom-\nFor\u2014\nSERVICE\nPRICE and\nQUALITY\nSTAR\ngjCPOCERYtg,\nPhones 10 and 11\nGLASSES-\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R. O.\nOPTOMETRIST  AND   OPTICIAN\n*UITF MMM MrDlCAL ahts suiloino\nNF.W  YORK, 8:\n0L_.VI.LANI>, S\nNW YORK, July 15.\u2014Blasting tt**\nPVrrell from the mound ln the\nfourth Inning, when they scored five\nruns, the Yankees went on to Interrupt Cleveland's winning streak.\n8-5, ln the second game of the\nseries  today.\nWhere Ferrell, seeking his 17th\nvictory, was unable to cope with\nthe leaders' big guns, Lefty Gome?,\nreturned    to    form,    and    although\nWINNIPEG OARSMEN\nEARN RIGHT TO GO,\nCANADIANJENLEY\nTake a Long Lead in North-western International\nRegatta\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e July 15.\u2014Mrs. John\nAllison, who is leaving shortly for\na trip to Scotland, was surprised\nwhile Earl Averlll hit his 21\u00bbt homc Wednesday evening by a number of\nrun of the year ln the eighth ln- friends who called at her home,\nnlng. B. H. E. | Third avenue, to wish her \"bon voy-\nCLei eland     - 6   9    3 | age.\"   Music   and   games   were   fea-\nNew  York     8 10_ 0  tured, songs being rendered by Mrs.\nArthuf Fletcher, Mrs. James Thomson, Mrs. Betsy Strachan and Mrs.\nFrederic S'.. Denis. Mra. Duncan\nDownle gave a recitation. Mrs. Edward Laarz presented the guest of\nhonor with a beautiful bouquet of\ngarden blooms. Mrs. Allison was also\nthe recipient of a lovely brush, comb\nand mirror set. John Groom gave\nher t small fancy chair he had specially made. Refreshments were served by Mrs. J. B. Doig, Mrs. Sarah\nYoung and Mrs. Downle. Other guesta\npresent were Mrs. Daniel Duffy,\nMrs. Welton, Mrs. John Adamson,\nMrs. H. Boemer, Mrs. Archie Day.\nMrs. D. E. Benton, Mrs. Edward\nSwanson, Mrs. John Murray. Mra.\nDonald McLeod, Mrs. James Young.\nMrs. David Livingstone, Mrs. Daniel\nMcCabe, Mrs. Herbert Lamb, Mrs.\nJoseph Hardle, Mrs. Robert Forbes\nand  Mrs.  David  Smart,\nSXANDAR\u00a5%\nCAFE W\n3.0 DAKER ST.        PHONE 134\nLSTABLISHLD   l.ll\nDinner 11M a.m. to 8:00\n.p.m. 35<!\nSpecial   Dinner   Sunday\n5 to 8 p.m 50C\nCooked Just Right\nTallies for Parties\nWe Specialize in Salads\nTry One These Hot Days\nAsk for Your Favorite\nFresh Fruit in Sea. on\nIce Cream     Cool Drinks\nCourteous Waiters\nOnly\n*650-\u00b0\u00b0\n1\nBUICK SPECIAL 6 SEDAN-Has heavy duty\ntires. The upholstery is spotless and thc hody\nhas been refinished in a beautiful Cobalt Blue\nDuco. Tt is not very often you have an opportunity to buy a high grade car like this at\nsuch a low price. Terms if desired.\nNelson Transfer\n\u00a3\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nPHONE 35\n___.\nLUMBER AND\nBUILDING MATERIALS\n\"\u25a0\"       At Moderate Prices\nFor that Construction or Repair Job, you\nwill want the best in Lumber, Building Materials and Workmanship\u2014such as we offer.\nTake advantage, NOW, of the low pries.\nLUMBER of AU Kinds\nShiplap, 2x4, Flooring, Siding, V-Joint,\nMatched Lumber, Drop Siding, etc., etc.\nQuality Building Materials\nStucco, Lime, Cement, Brick, Plaster,\nWindows, Roofing, Shingles, Ply-wood,\nDoors, Flooring, etc.\nA. H. GREEN __?_,.\n(Su-C-Mors to John  Burn, At Son)\nBUILDING CONTRACTORS, ENGINEERS ANU SURVEYORS*\n-NELSON and ROSSLAND\nFACTORY*   AND   UMBER   YARD\u2014 .01   Front   St.     Phone   Kg\nOFFICES\u2014516 Ward St. rhone 264\nANNUAL REGATTA\nKOOTENAY LAUNCH CLUB\nLAKESIDE PARK\nSATURDAY, 2 P. M., JULY 23, 1932\nCLASSES  B.   C and   OPEN   FOR  OUTBOARD  MOTORS.\nJO-MILE   OPEN   FOR   INBOARD   MOTORS.\n30-MILE   OPEN   FOB   PATENAUDE   SHIELD   AND   CHAMPIONSHIP\nOF KOOTENAY  LAKE.\nCASH   PRIZES  IN  ALL   EVENTS.  '\nALL RACES  START  ANO  FINISH   Mak.    .rjlrl.-   with    Secretary\u2014\nAT LAKESIDE  PARK. ti. HORSTEAD,  Box   Ht,  Nelson.\nRollman Cherry\nStoners\nThis machine will seed\nfrom 20 to 30 quails per\nhour, leaving the fruit\nwhole and without loss\nof juice.\np\u2122\u00ab $2.00 Each\nWood, Vallance\nHardware\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nNelson B.C.\nWholesale Retail\nRemoval Notice\nWe will be in our New Office in the Medical Arts\nBuilding at 108 1-2 Baker Street, Monday morning\nnext and open for business.   Our Phone is 68.\nRobertson Realty Co. Ltd.\nCar Ignition Supplies\nContacts, Condensors, Caps, Rotors, Cables, Coils,\nand Terminals.\nGenerator and Starter Brushes, Armatures,\nField Coils, Cut-outs, etc.\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFORT WILLIAM, July 15 fCP).\u2014\nWinnipeg oarsmen took t long lead\nover rivals from Port William, Kenora, Duluth and St. Paul as the\nfirst day's events in the northwestern\nInternational regatta were completed\nhere tonight. In the race for the\nSir Thomas Llpton trophy, the Wln-\nnlpeggera piled up 70.25 polnta to\n56 5 for Kenora end 49.5 for Port\nWilliam. Duluth and St. Paul scored\nvictories, but most of their events\ncome tomorrow.\nBy their triumph In the senior\neight, the Winnipeg crew won the\nright to go to St. Catharines for\nthe Canadian Henley Monday. The\ntime waa 6.30 minutes, and the Kenora team was second, only half a\nlength behind, with Port William In\nthird  place.\nCovering the distance In the same\ntime as the seniors, the Port William juniors took first place in the\nJunior eight races.\nJANE    .VEILER   WIN*   WESTERN\nt_OI.T> CHAMPIONSHIP FOR WOMEN\nMILWAUKEE, Wis,, July 15\u2014 Mlss\nJan* Weller ot Chicago, a slender\ngirt Just out of her teens, today\nwon the women's western golf championship, triumphing ov-?r Miss June\nBpebe, 19, Chicago, last year's champion, five  up  and  four  to  play.\nLAST MINUTE\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nWANTED\u20143 or 4-ROOMED HOtfSE\nwith bath, must have cement or\natone foundation, cheap for tmh.\nDrawer   1042,  Nelson. (3025)\nMrs. C. W. Gulllaume, who Is\nspending the summer months at\nRobson, was a city visitor Wednesday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMlss Tracey Defeo and Mlss Irene\nDefeo of Castlegar were the guests\nof Mlss violet Bell, Second avenue,\nWednesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Eric Brown and tw6 children\nof Rostand are the guests \u00ab_. Mrs.\nBrown's brother-in-law and sister.\nMr. and Mrs. Denis Thain, for t\nfew   days.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTrail Pythian Sisters called at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. John Gibson,\nCarlson addition, Monday evening.\nwhen Mr. and Mrs. Olbson celebrated\ntheir silver wedding anniversary.\nGames and music were enjoyed. During the evening Mrs. Gibson was\npresented with & beautiful sliver\nflower basket filled wtth carnations.\nMrs. T. J. Riley and Mrs. George\nHollingson\nHolllngton served refreshments. Others present included Mrs. Thomas\nAlly, Mrs. Stanley Alllbone, Mrs.\nCharles Morrow, Mrs. J. C. Murdoch.\nMra. \"Pete\" Shields, Mrs. James\nThompsori, Mrs. Daniel Williamson,\nMrs. Ernest cook, Mrs. D. J. Duffus,\nMrs. Ortle Scott, Mrs. Charles Thow**\ndale, Mrs. William Wood, Mrs. J. W.\nDwyer, Mrs. Charles Duncan. Mrs. P.\nPartridge. Mrs. Lorne Partridge, Mrs.\nHarold Townsend or Kimberley; Mrs.\nCharles Shields. Mrs. Hugh Bell, Mrs,\nN. P. Norris, Mrs. Ernest Clay, Mrs,\nB. J. Simpson. Mrs. R. II. White,\nMrs. Benzles, Mrs. Forgle Thompson.\nMrs. Charles Fransen, Mrs. William\nSpooner. Mrs. Duncan Downle and\nMlss Mary  Duncan.\n\u2022   *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. A. McLaren,  Cedar avenue, have had as thetr guests\nthis week Mr, McLaren's aunt, Mrs.\nA. McLaren of lethbridge, her daughter. Mlss C. McLaren, and son, H. A\nMcLaren,   and   Miss  A.   Hannan.   all\ncf   Lethbridge.   They   left   by   motor\nElectric fngidalre. Kerr Apts, (2790.    Wednesday   morning   for   Vancouver\nand  point* at the  coast,\nChccoJate Malts\u2014They are our special.   Try one for lunch. Gcli. as.\n(2073)\nShirt'Sal?\nHundreds of sKirts are presented in our most important\nselling event of the season. Shirts tailored by Forsyth,\nTooke and Arrow from our regular stock, including separate collar, collar attached, polo and golf styles. Popular solid colors, as well as an extensive selection of patterns, subdued and cheery. Most men will lay in a season's supply at these prices.\n$\n$\n1\n1\n.45\n3 for\n$4.25\n.95\n3.or\n$5.50\nValues to $2.50\nIn plain shades of, Blue, White\nand Tan. Also an extensive selection of patterned shirts.\nSizes 14 to 17.\nValues to $3.75\nLuviscas, Broadcloths, and\nRayons, neat patterns in all\nstyles. Sizes HH to 16!_.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nTwo-room furnished suite for rent.\nStirling   Hotel. (3026)\nDAKCI AT AINSWORTH TONIGHT.\nltKDUl.li PRUTS. G1KTI .\">\u00ab CBNTS,\nLADILS   ...I CMS. <30'-7)\nPumUhed an^ unfurnished sul'es.\nAttention! Extra pants free-during\nrrinth of July at Ideal Tailors.\n(2835)\nHats cleaned, blocked. Reasonable\nratea. Ill It Baker St. t30O3)\n\u25a0MULL.    IVSUOM VS.   COl.-\nVtUA WASH. SUNDAY, :!.30. (2980)\nWatch our windows for cwh specials. J. A. Irving A. Co. Pree Delivery. (3791)\nWanted sour cherries, clean black\ncurrants,   raspberries,   yellow   trans-\n! parent apples. McDonald Jam Co.\n(2982)\nNOTHING   RESERVED\nWatson's Shoe sale still continues.\nEvery pair In store greatly reduced.\n(30001\nDISTINCTIVE    DANCE    PARTY-\nDANISH    MIDMTE    M'PPER\u2014ITI.i.\nMra. George Dimock. who has been\nvisiting her sister in Seattle, returned  home  Wednesday  evening.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nH. J. Foster, who has been spending two weeks' vacation at points in\nthe Okanagan, returned to '-.Tall last\nevening.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMlss Mary Grt left this week Ior\nBelllngham, Wtth.\n\u2022 \u25a0   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs, Carson McLeod of\npenticton are guests of Mr. and\nMrs. R. R. Burns. They will visit\nMr. and Mrs. McLeod's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Ross McLeod of Grand\nForks, before returning to Penticton.\n\u2022 \u2666   *\nM. Calle left yesterday to spend a\nholiday  ln  Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar Pennoyer of\nGrand Forks, who havo been visiting In Trail, returned to their home\nWednesday, accompanied by Mr. Pen-\nr.oyer'a mother, Mrs. HArrlct Pennoyer.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr.   and   Mrs.   T.   A.   Wilson   and\nSILK POLO SHIRTS\nBlue, Green and\n.White\t\nSHIRTS     j .t\n95c 10*\nQuality  \u2014  Service  \u2014  Satisfaction\nNational\nBaseball\nNEW   YORK   It   8T.   LJIIS   4\nST.   LOUIS,   July    15\u2014Three   big  chalked   against,   them   In   favor   of\nInninga, two of which were climaxed  Philadelphia   pitchers.\nby  home  runs .with  plenty  of   men;Philadelphia     4   10   1\non the bases gave New York Giants Cincinnati      3      10\nwas worth to defeat Cincinnati Reds\n4 to 3 In 12 innings.\nIn the first Inning a double play\nnipped off a pending run. In the\nsixth the. garden work intimated\nGrantham so that he threw away a\nchancx: to score and stopped at\nthird. Desptto Herman'., ho.ner ln\nthe third and a bunch of doubles,\nth_. Reds had 15 left on the bags\nto   outweigh   l-.aving   no   strikeouts\ntheir second straight over the Card\ntittl*  today,   12  to 4.\nThe Giants Jumped on BlU Hallahan early, soaring five runs in th;\n--econd inning, Riid Freddie Lindstrom disposed of the southpaw lor\ngood wr.en he hit. one^ut of the lot\nwith the bases full in tho fifth. Mel\nOtt provided three more runs in the\nsixth with a homer off Stout.\nJim BottomJoy hit two homers and\nJl_n Collins another to account for\nthree of the losers' runs off Fltzslmmons.\nNew    York      13    13    1\nSt. Louis     4      7    1\nFltzslmmons and Hogan, O'Par-\nrell;   Haila.ian,  Stout  and M-mcuso.\nMOON\u2014BALI'Ol R   BEACH   WW*. | jitmny 0f Revelstoke  are spending\nfew   days   ln  the   city.\nTry the new Rum and Butter\nmilkshake,\u2014 It'a the best in town,\nGreyhound   Coffee   Shoppe.       (3023)\nSpecial clear-drip coffee at th*\ncent* a cup, Greyhound Coffee\nShoppe. (3024)\nAlfred Coverdale is on a vacation\nat Vancouver and other points at\nthe coast,\n\u2022   \u2022    \u2022\nMlss Gertrude Cook, who has been\non duty at Trall-Tadanac hospital\nduring the past two weeks, has returned to her home ln Grand Forks.\nMlss Annte Matovlch and Mlpi\nMary  Matovlch  are  holidaying  with\n___j i_    __     oi.......     n-.i-i,     nn.l    Ifn .n\nAre you Hungry? If so, let's eat at\nthe G way hound. Coffee Shoppe. Ham\nand eggs with toast and coffee, 25\ncents   Sandwiches 10 cents.      (3022> J frlenels at Shutty Bench and K&fio\n . j \u2022    |    \u2022\nDance  to   good   muslr   In   ft  rom      Mr.   and   Mrs.   H.   B.   Fuller   and\npat Dion      tonlslit.      TROl BADOl K daughter  Joy,   accompanied   by   Miss\nDAMx PAVILION. Dancing 9 to 12. j Dorothy  McKay,  who  are holidaying\nLadles'   25c.   Gents   '..'.c. (301U) at   the   Fuller  summer camp  at   Sy-\n \u2014 -\u25a0 i ringa Creek, were visitors In the city\nTrail picnic, July 23. boat regatta, yesterday,\nsport*. Lakeside Park followed by a \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nmonster dance at Eagles Hall. Music      Mlss Doris Cawston. who has been\nby Commsnclers Orchestra, Trail. at   Ainsworth   for   a   week,   returned\n<300flj to  Trail  Wednesday evening.\n  \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nPANCf\u2014oi TIF.T  HOTEL,  PROC-     Mrs.   Robert   Sommervllle   and\ntkk. IATCRDAY. JULY 10. AMOS- daughter   Eileen   left   Tuesday   for\nSION   r,nc   nnd   %bt,   FREE   FEUI.V Edmonton,    Alta.    Mlss    Sommervllle\nTILL  1   O'CLOCK   EVERY  NIGHT.\n(3006)\nRadio Engineers of B- C. 'Vancouver) are again In town. \"Scientific Radio Repairs and Service.\"\nNow at Kootenay Music Houw.\nPhone   585- (3018)\nThe funeral of the late Mrs. William Clough of Slocan City, whu\npassed away July 14. will take place\nfrom the Unlte^ Church, Slocan\nCity, Sunday. July 17. at 2 p. m.\nFriends and acquaintances win\np'.ease accept this intimation. (.-.014)\nCHIRCH  PARADE\nMembers L. O, B. A. an<] L. O, L.\nand sojourning sisters arid brethren\nwill meet at K. P. hall 10.15 a. m.\nSunday, July It, an^ parade to\nTrinity United Church for divine\neervloe, <301*J>\nM MI tl 111111M J111111II1111111 r JIIIM111M\nZ   SPEND   THE   WEEK-END   AT \u00a3\nZ   AINSWORTH    HOT    SPRINGS. =\n=   HOT MINERAL WATER CAVES \u00a3\n-*   AND      HliIMMING     POOL. S\nS   TAHTY,     WELL     COOKED =\n=   MEALS   AND   TEAS.       D\\NTE Z\nZ   EVERY     SATURDAY     NIOHT. =\nZ (3008) Z\nwill enter a hospital ln Edmonton as\na nurse in training.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. H. Berry of Grand Forlp has\nbeen spending a few days ln the\ncity.\n\u2022 *   *\nMlss Mary Fomcnko haa returned\nfrom two weeks* vacation at Sirdar.\nEn route home she visited Mrs. Bud-\nberg   of  Nelson.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL    HOUSES    AND    LOTS\u2014 IN-\n\u00bburance.  Notary.   J. D. Anderson.\nCHICAOO   8\nBROOKLYN   3\nCHICAGO, July 15\u2014Lonnle War-\nneke got off to a shaky start today,\nthe Brooklyn* rapping him for two\nruns in the first inning, but from\nthere on the big fellow from Arkansas was at his best and sailed\nthrough to his sixth straight victory,\n8 to 3.\nCharlie Grimm's home run with\nBarton on bas-. put the Cubs ahead\nin thc second Inning and they were\nnever headed, hitting Cy Moore,\nPhelps and Mungo Impartially, johnny Frederick's homer gave the Dodgers their other run in tb* eighth.\nBrooklyn    3     8   2\nChicago     8    12    3\nA. Moor?, Mungo, Phelps and\nPlclnich, Sukeforth; Warneko and\nHartnett.\nMONTREAL, July 17 (CP).-For\ntwo nights ln each week during tho\nsummer months a portion of one of\nMontreal's streets ln a congested\ndistrict is thrown open as a playground for the boys and girls of the\nneighborhood. Here the children en-\nJoy their games under the direction\nof volunteer workers without danger\nfrom traffic, which ts directed Into\nother channels by the police.\nBOSTON   0\nPITTSIUROH   1\npirrsBURGH. July n\u2014a bni-\nll-int bit of pitching by the veteran\nRemy Kremer allowed Pittsburgh\nPirates to even their series with\nBoston Braves today, 1 to 0.\nThe Frenchman, displaying his best\nform of ti\".^ season, let Boston down\nwltt three hits. Hub Pruett hurled\nmastfrful ball for the Braves, giving the Pirates but five hits. Both\npitchers were given errorless support.\nPittsburgh scored the game's only\nrun in the fourth Inning. Vaughan\ndumped a slngl. be .'.ind short and\ntravelled all the way home on Bar-\nbee's double to the score board.\nBoston         0     3    0\nittsburgh    15   0\nPruett and Hargrave; Kremer and\nGrance.\nPHILADELPHIA   4\nCINCINNATI  3\nCINCINNATI, July 15\u2014Out-hit and\nout-pitched, the Phillies nevertheless\nmade smart fielding count for all lt\nRheni. H. Elliott, Berly and V.\nDavis, McCurdy; Lucas, Benton and\nLombardl, Manion.\nChildren Allotcd\nStreets on Which to\nPlay in Montreal\nStarlings Spoil\nThird of Cherry\nCrop in Ontario\nLONDON, July 15\u2014 Varl-ua _x-\nperlraenta carried out In an endeavor to atop the destruction ol\ncherry cropa by starlings have prov.\ne_ futile and already the birds have\ndestroyed c_r 35 per cent of the\nchf.ry crop, according 'to lnforma.\ntion r.o:lved from the department of\nagriculture.\nFor Modern Plumbing\nat Moderate Prices\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nmaster runnn\nOpp.  lily  Hall Phone 815\nWOOD\n14-inch Split Cedar\n$5 Load\nBURNS\nCoal &. Cartage\n\"AROVLE'S\" DIGESTIVE   TONI\nInvigorating Ner.e  Tonic\nDigestive Stimulant.\n\u00bb_..(l TER BOTTLE.\nSPECIAL   KODAK   AGENTS\nSee the new 620 and 61S Kodak\npriced   at   .10.25   and   .11.25.\nFILMS,   PAPERS,   CAMERAS,\nThis store open Sunday.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's   Dispensing   Chemist,\nSaturday Specials at\nELLIOT'S\nBAKERY\nPINEAPPLE OR raurr       mm.\nCAKES\nDATE   AND   NUT\nCAKES   _\t\nGOLD\nCAKES    \t\nMEAT PIES\u2014\n6 for\n:S\nas\nPASTRIES\u2014\nDozen   _\u201e_\nPINEAPPLE   TARTS\u2014\nDozen    :\t\nDEVILS FOOD CAKB\nwith Marshmallow ..\nPHONE  195   \\VE DELHI\ns\nYour\nWatch\u2014Clock\nand\nJEWELRY REPAIRS\nwill receive prompt\nattention here.\nOur work is satisfactory\n\u2014charges moderate\nE. Collinson\nJEWELER\nC. P. R. Time Inspector\nMr. and Mrs. Barchard\nReturn to Robson\n\u2022  PLAZA CAFE\nTo Music Lovers\nROBSON, B. C, July IS.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. William Barchard have1 ^\nreturned from a weck'g motor trlp!^\nto Cranbroo). and ~eturn by wav o_ j A\nKlnftsgat*. Couer d' Alene and Spo-1 w\nkane. T;:\u00aby were accompanied by A\nMiss Phyllis and Bernadlne Barchard ^\nwho will be th- guesta of their A\naunt, Mlas Mary Wilson, for aome J __T\ntime. \u00a3\nMr. tnd Mrs. Arnold Lauriente ^^\nof Tratj were week-end guesta of I ^P\nMr.  and  Mrs.  W.  Barchard  at  their _\u25a0__: .\nSUNDAY EVENING DINNER, from 6 p.m.\nMiss Maro Ajcmian, Gold Medalist of New\nYork City, will play selections from Bach,\nMozart, Chopin, Schubert, Mendelssohn,\nLiszt and Lavalce.\nNO COVER CHARGE\niTlllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllll a-mn-.-r camp at  Hobson.\n\\\\-W-\\U\/\/\/\/A\nTHEATRE\nShowing 2\u20147\u20149 p.m.\nLast Showing of\nBUSTER KEATON\nJIMMIE DURANTE\nPOLLY MORAN\nin\n\"The\nPASSIONATE\nPLUMBER**\nOUR NEXT WEEK.\nPROGRAM\nMONDAY   and   Tl'ESDAY\n\"THE MIRACLE MAN\"\nWU>N___.AT   and   THURSDAY\nDouble   Bill\u2014\n\"THE VIKING\"\n'THE SECRET WITNESS\nFRIDAY   and   SATURDAY\n\"FIREMAN SAVE\nMY CHILD\"\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1932_07_16","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0405221","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1932-07-16 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1932-07-16 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0405221"}