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Take     *\u00bb\/J^J-\u00bb^\nBid Jump\n\u2014Pa&e Nine |\nWtt i\no\\,iLo\nTrail Seniors Beat Cubs\nin Ball Game\n\u2014Pa_\\eEi_\\ht\nNILSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNINO. AUGUST 1 1M5\n(VOLUMg M PIVI CENTS A COPY *   ' , ^_W NILSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING. AUGUST 5. 1MS NUMBER   V\n*-*-\u2014****.mm.mmm._-_-._mmmmm__. _mmf__\u00b1. ML_____\u2014__\u2014 -\u2014-\u2014-\u2014i \u25a0, -_-\u2014\u25a0--. _-_-_-_---_-----_--_- '\nARBITRATION MAY PREVENT A WAR\nStoma Soviet Airmen Forced to\nlone policeman Return to Their Hangar\nBut Nation Works to\nPrevent War; Fear\na Disaster\n'MAY MEAN WAR\nFOR BRITAIN\"\nSo S a y s the British\nPress; Coming Stage\nIs Difficult One\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (AP.-The\ngovernment begin work tonight\non tht progrim it wlll propose it\nth* coming three-power confer-\n\u2022no* on tht Italo-Ethloplan diipute, convinced tht Paris diicul-\ntiont will dettrmlne definitely\nwhether a peaceful solution of tht\n'irgumint un bt tound.\nInformed quirten uld now thit\nth* flnt itage of the peaot movu\nli over the ntxt itage It mor* Important and more difficult, and\nunleu tomt effective  meant of\nfirevtntlng hostilities ean be found\nn tha third stage of Geneva September 4 then mty be disastrous\nconsequences for world political\nrelatlonihlpi.\nAnthony   Eden,   mlnlitir   for\n(Contlnuid on Page Ten)\nBORROWING IS\nSIGN PROGRESS\nU\nS. Glad Canada to\nDo Financing in\nTheir Markets\nNEW YORK, Aug. 5 (Monday)\n(CP).\u2014Decision of the Canadian\ngovernment to comply with require-\nmenta of the United Statei Securi-\ntle- act and reiume borrowing here\nwai haneT'by the Herald Tribune\ntoday ai a likely ilgn that Canadian\nprovince! and municipalities will\nresume financial dealing! here.\nWord that a $76,000,000 luue ot\nDominion 2_ per cent bondi probably will be floated in New York\nwu laid by the newipaper to have\nbeen accepted in the financial district as a further sign that normal\ncondition! ire being restored in the\ncapital market.\nF. |. CALLAHAN KILLED\nAT MISSION; BROTHER\nLIVES AT CRANBROOK\nMISSION CITY, B. C, Aug. 4 \u2014\n(CP)\u2014Frank J. Callahan, 30, wat\nfatally Injured Fridiy night whtn\nht stumbled, apparently as ha\ntried to catch hold of the tnd of a\ncar of a fralght train moving eut\nof tht Canadian Paclflo railway\nitatlon, ind fell bttween the can.\nCallahan'i ikull wu frictured\nand om irm wu severed at tha\nelbow. He dltd In about 20 minutei. Joieph Callahan of Cranbrook, B. C, ll a brother.\n(OURTRULESNO\nTAX ON 6 BY 6\nLUMBER TO U.S.\nMay Mean More B. C.\nLumber Wii I Be\nExported\nSEATTLE, Aug. 4 (AP)-A declilon of the United States customs\ncourt, handed down at New York\non July It, ruled that lumber ilx\ninchei by iix inchei or larger ihall\nbe classified u \"timber\" and la not\nsubject to the exciie tix ot $3 per\nthousand, Newton W. OTtear. of the\nUnited States customs service here,\nhas disclosed.\nKe uid he did not know whether\nthe case was being appealed, but\nthat there was a 30-day period for\nsuch an appeal If one were planned.\nThe tax will continue to be collected until the expiration of tha appeal\nperiod.\nVICTORIA, Aug. 4 (CP)-No official opinions could be lecured\ntoday concerning the effect on the\nBritish Columbii Induitry of the recent ruling of the United States customs court removfhg th* IS excite\ntax on \"lumber\" six by iix Inchei or\nlarger.\nUp to about 19J2 Brltlih Columbia\nihipped aoproxlmatelv .00,000,000\nfeet annually to the United Statei,\nbut thl! amount has dwindled to\naround 50.000,000 feet a year and the\nnossible effect of the new ruling,\nit wu stated unofficially, would de-\nDend largely uoon the demand for\nthat class of timber in the United\nStates.\nQuintuplets Gel Rid oi Shyness\nand Make Up lo Newspaper Writer\nTo Plant 500,000\nFir Tress in B. C.\nVICTORIA, B. C- Aug. 4 (CP)\u2014\nThe foreit branch of the Brltlih\nColumbia department of lands li\nplanning to pltnt 500,000 fir treu\nwithin tht ntxt ytar, It wat announced yeiterday.\nTha program calls for reforuti--\ntlon of approximately 500 acru of\nland. On each acre wlll be planted\n1000 treei. The eoit rum from $10\nto $15 an acre.\nNANCY CARROLL\nHEARS HUBBY IS\nWED IN MEXICO\nRENO. Nev.. Aug. 4 (AP) .-Nancy\nCarroll, told of reports the husband\nahe came here to divorce had married a girl ln Mexico, uid today she\ndldnt know what she could do\nabout lt\n*l really don't know anything\nabout it or what I can do about it,\"\nHid the screen actreu. who Is establishing residence to divorce Boyd\nMallory.\n\"Aa far u 1 know,\" uid Mlss\nCarroll. 'Tm still married to Mr\nMallory, but I haven't seen him for\n\u2022 year and a halt.\"\nEducation Report\nSoon\nVICTORIA. Aug. 4 (CP) .-British\nColumbia will learn this week whit\nMilor H. B. King, the provincial\ngovernment's expert on educational\nfintnee, thinks ihould be done ibout\nreviling the system of distributing\nichool costs in the province.\nThe ctbinet discussed a lengthy\nreport compiled by Major King,\nwhich will be made public In a day\nor two.\nDr. Dafoe Comes Close\nto Losing Specs as\nFondles the Tots\nBy A. t. FULFPRO\nCanadian Press Staff Writtr\nCALLANDER, Ont., Aug. 4 (CP)\n\u2014Destined to live their llvei ln th*\nglare of publicity, the Dionne quln*\ntupleti have cut off early the dis*\nadvantages of shyness. No one is a\n\"strange baby; they \"make up\" instantly and capture the hearta of\nall who see them.\nSince they started appearing before the public four times daily from\ntheir hospital verandah, \"gatecrashing\" the nursery hu become\nalmost impossible.\nBut today a Canadian Preu representative found what friendly little\ngirls they now are when he wu\nfortunate enough to spend an hour\nwith them\u2014and actually a few minutes alone when Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe and the nurses left the nursery.\nThe visit recalled another when\nthey were four months old and\nlived in the humble home of their\nparents, Oliva and Elzire Dionne.\nThen they were pitifully weak little\n(Continued on Ptgt Tin)\nAIRMEN DIE IN\nATTEMPT TO SAVE\nCROWD CHILDREN\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (AP) - Two\nRoyal air force officen, R. L. Nlmmo and S. J. Marbutt, were killed tn\na crash today when Nlmmo refused\nto make a forced landing in an open\nfield because he uw a crowd of\nchildren playing there.\nShortly after they took off from\nHendon airdrome motor trouble\nforced a descent. When Nlmmo uw\nthe children he tried to rise again\nand cruhed Into a bridge.\nDad Switches Babes; Mother Unaware of It\nBALTIMORE. Aug. 4 (AP). -\nThere can be no names in this story\nbecauie \u2022 mother might be upset\nand a nurse might lose her Job, but\nwhat happened wu this:\n> A child wis bom to Mn. X ind an\nInterne told the nervoua father that\nIt wu a girl.\n( In two weeki the mother was able\nto leave the hospital with the child\nwhich she tucked happily away in\nthe nursery.\nI A few houn later the father\n(learned to hii dismay that the baby\nbut a boy. Attached to the llttl*\nwriat wu an Identification tag,\nshowing the child belonged to another couple.\nUnwilling to alarm hla wife, he\nslipped the child from the crib,\nreturned to the hospital, got his own\nchild\u2014a girl for iur* thla time\u2014returned home and placed th* Infant\nin tht crib.      ^^^^^^^^^^\nHe strolled nonchalantly out to\ngreet hii wife.\n\"John.\" lhe uld. \"we've got the\nbest baby\u2014not a whimper from her\n[wu ngt a fel ai lie had been toUL.I alT'the time you w\u00abr*Tgona.\"jt\"^\nOIL LINE GIVES\nTROUBLE ON THE\nTRIPVIA POLE\nCommission Will Go\nInto Cause of the\nTrouble\nTURN BACK WHEN\nOVER BARENTS SEA\nWere Well on their\nWay in 6000-Mile\nTrip to U. S. A.\nLENINGRAD, Aug. 4 (API-\nForced to turn back on their pro-\niected non-itop polar flight from\nrloacow ts San Franciico whll*\nover th* Barents ita Saturday,\nthre* dluppolnted Soviet airmen\nlanded hert in their red-winged\nmonoplane it 10:30 p.m. lut night\n(5:30 p.m- Pacific itandard time),\nblaming thilr failure on oil Una\ndifficulties\nSigmund Livaneffiky, tha pilot,\nwith hli co-pllot and navigator,\ndid not Immediately mike a state-\nmint concerning tht dttallt of tht\n\u2022II line trouble, but thty were\nexpected to twilt htr* th* arrival\nef a commiuion from Moscow to\nInvutlgat* th* plane.\nWhtn thty wlreleued thtlr decision to turn back thty wera wtll\non thtlr way on tht \u2022000-mlle hop.\nThey took off fram Moicow at 4:03\na-m. Saturday.\nBourassa Hits\nal Monied Power\nClaims King Only Boss\nof Party Not Mixed\nWith Money Men\nLAC DES SABLES, Que.. July 4\n(CP)-Claim that Rt Hon. Macken-\nxie King wai the only party leader\nin Canada who wu not tied up\nwith \"the monied power\" wu made\nhere today by Henri Bourassa, Independent member of parliament\nfor Labelle, at a rally of votera of\nthe diitrict\nMr. Bourasu said he had intended\nto retire from public life following\ndissolution of parliament this year\nbut had been persuaded by Mr.\nKing to continue.\nHe charged chlefi of the three\nfirincipal opposition parties were In\neague with what he termed \"monied powen.\"\n\"I do not uy,\" he declared, however, \"that Mr. Bennett personally\nls Uty of connections with thue\n: i. but the majority of his im-\ne intimates are and that ii\n> i say the Conservative party\nis in disfavor with the people. It ia\nthe ume with Mr. Stevena and Mr.\nWoodsworth.\"\nSTAY PROCEEDINGS\nIN COAST CASE\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP)-Af-\nter John Cameron, former pollce\nchief, Joe Celona and Lou Barrack\nhad been acquitted on a conspiracy\ncharge, Attorney-General Gordon\nSloan instructed Special Prosecutor\nDugald Donaghy to enter a atay of\nproceeding! to similar charges pending against Joe Swartz and Joe\nAlvaro.\nMagistrate Mackenzie Matheson,\nwho heard the preliminary inquiry\ninto the conspiracy trial, did not\ncommit Swartz and Alvaro for trial\nbut ordered them to post 329*00 bail\ntor their appearance in the higher\ncourt lf called by the attorney-\ngeneral.\nHugh Aird Dies\nin Saskatoon\nSASKATOON. Aug. 4 (CP). -\nHugh Aird, brother of Sir- John\nAird. died here Saturday. He wu\na vice-president of the Sawyer*\nMassev company for five yean, retiring in 1027. He had lived in\nSaskatoon lince 1907. Mr. Aird ts\nsurvived by one son, Hugh, and a\ndaughter. Mn. R. T. Hogarth. Hii\nwife died in 1933. The funeral will\nba held here Tuesday.\nINDIAN'S NECK BROKEN\nMERRITT. B.C, Aug. 4 (CP)-\nThe body of Tommy Peten, Indian,\nwn of Chief Peten, hai been found\non the ground beside the hone from\nwhich he had apparently been\nthrown while riding to Morgan's\nranch where ha wu haying. His\nneck wu broken.\nFEAR TRAPPER IS DEAD\nWILLIAMS LAKE. B.C.. Aug. 4\n(CP).\u2014Fred Johnston. 03-year-old\nWindy mountain trapper who hu\nbeen missing since May 20 when he\nleft for his trap-line to pick up hit\nfun and tnnt for the leuon, is\nfeared to hive met deith. Search ot\nthe diitrict hu been fruiUesa. e\nPlanes Crash in\nAir Killing Two\nand Injuring Four\nCHICAGO. Aug. 4 (AP)-Two\nmen were killed and two othen injured today when two airplanes\ndropping down to a landing at Stinson airport collided and plummeted\n100 feet to the ground.\nJohn D. Harvey, 3d, of Vlencoe.\nwas dead when dragged from the\nwreckage of the rented ship he wu\npiloting. Kermlt Hobbs, his friend\nand pauenger in the plane, died in\na sanitarium.\nDickson Webb, pilot of the other\nship, and Frank Krueger, his passenger, were taken to the sanitarium, seriously injured.\nBOLDLY WALKS\nOUT OF PRISON\nCHICAGO, Aug. 4 (AP).-PolIce\ntoday scoured old haunts ot Henry\n(Midget) Ferneku, diminutive\n\"public enemy\" of a decade ago, who\nwalked out of Joliet penitentiary in\none of the most audacious escapes\nln its history yeaterday.\nThey sought alio a mystery\nwoman, who visited him a tew days\nago. They suspected she might have\nhad some part in smuggling the\ncivilian clothu which Fernekes\ndonned to elude th* warders.\nAmazingly ilmple wu the undersized killer's exit from the old prison.\nAn attendant in the interview room\nwas handed a slip reading \"Amenn.\n4408\" by a small man in street garb\nwearing black glasses. The attendant told the pseudo visitor Amenn\nhad been transferred to the new\nprison it Stateville.\nUttering not a word, the pint-\nsized 39-year-old convict turned\naway. The attendant affably touching his cap. pressed a buzzer -signalling the entrance guard that a vilitor wu leaving. Thua the \"midget\"\nvanished.\nVancouver Home\nHit byUghtning\nRadio Broken, Plaster\nDamaged, Windows\nShattered\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP)-Two\nresidence! were struck by lightning\nwith extensive damage to one as a\nsevere electric !torm raged Saturday over the southwestern British\nColumbia mainland.\nThe home of W. O. Hautll In\nBurnaby wu itruck but memberi\nof the fimily wtrt uninjured. The\nrtdlo wu blown to splinters, electric fixtures wtr* pulled through\nth* will, plutar wai broken, fuiu\nwtrt blown out and all wlndowa\nIn two roomi wert ihattertd.\nIn Kamloops, where the storm was\nreported the wont experienced there\nin many yean, the home of Percy\nSimpson wu struck but none of\nthe four members of the family\nwere injured. The house wai damaged only ilightly.\nHeavy rain fell over the entire\nstorm area.\nRelief Marchers\nAre at Brockville\nBROCKVILLE, Ont., Aug. 4 (CP)\n\u2014The \"on-to-Ottawa\" marchen, 400\nstrong, were resting here today after\na 32-mile tramp from Gananoque\nyesterday. Neither a tag day nor a\nhouse-to-house canvass would be\npermitted Mayor T.. W. Major announced.\nArchbishop Will\nRest in Quebec\nSAULT STE. MARIE. Ont, Aug. 4\n(CP)\u2014Following a funeral wrvice\ntoday at St. Luke's pro-cathedral,\nthe body of the late Archbishop\nGeorge Thorneloe. 80, former metropolitan of the ecclesiastical province\nof Ontario, was taken to Lennox-\nvllle, Que, today. Interment will\ntake place there tomorrow night\nTuberculosis Officer\nVICTORIA. Aug. 4 (CP). - Dr.\nFrederick Klncaid will conduct\ntuberculosis prevention work for the\nBritish Columbia government on\nVancouver Island. His appointment\nu tuberculosis officer was announced yeiterday by Hon. G. M.\nWeir, provincial secretary. Dr. Kin-\ncald ts a specialist ln this field in\nVictoria and hu had long experience\nOld Indian Dead\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. Aug.\n4 (CP).\u2014One of the oldest Indians\non the Capilano reserve here. \"Old\nCronle,\" reputed to have been 101\nyean old. ii dead. Memben of the\ntribe claim the aged Indian'! great\ngrandfather was the flnt native to\n.sight Captain George Vancouver's\nI ship as it approached tha lite of the\neityinl792.y\nELECTION DATE\nWILL LIKELY BE\nSET JS WEEK\nBury, an Alberta Man'\nGains Appointment\nto the Bench\nWILL REORGANIZE\nCABINET AS WELL\nExpect Cahan to Make\nStatement About the\nList Shortly\nOTTAWA. Aug. 4 (CP)-Pre-elec-\ntion political activity wu on the upgrade last week, will continue so\nthis week and will keep on speeding\nup until lt reaches a climax on election day. Two important movei\nmust be made by the government\nbefore the election campaign begins\nin earnest. One is the fixing ot the\npolling day and the other Is the reorganization of the cabinet.\nBoth may come thii week. In the\ncabinet the portfolio! of marine,\nfintnee. post office, national revenue\nand fisheries are vacant or due to\nbecome vacant through retirement\nof ministers. Changes in other portfolios are expected in the general\nreorganization and Prime Minister\n(Contlnutd on Page Tan)\nPolygamy Charge\nMade in Arizona\nLatter Day Saints Ask\nAction Against\nEight\nKINGMAN. Ariz, Aug. 4 (API-\nEight federal relief clients ot the\nShort Creek community faced\ncharges of polygamy in prosecution\nendorsed by executives of the Latter\nDay Salnta church today.\nFour men and four women were\naccused of \"open adultry\" in complaints filed oy District Attorney\nElmo Ballinger. The maximum penalty upon conviction is three years'\nimprisonment The prosecutor uid\nthe people described themselves as\nbrethren of the \"united order\" and\nthat their belief in polygamy resulted in ex-communication by the\nLatter Day Saints church.\n\"We feel that it would be a good\nthing for the government to take\naction againit the offenders,\" uid\nDavid A.  Smith, member ot the\nSresiding bishopric of the Latter\nay Saints church at Salt Lake City.\nPolygamy, practised by some\nMormon pioneen, was abolished by\nthe church in 1890.\n\"When we investigated,\" said Bollinger, \"we found one instance in\nwhich three women gave birth to\nbabies last month and all of the Infants had the same father. To make\nthe situation more alarming, most\not the families have from nine to 15\nchildren and are on relief at least\npart of the time.\"\nNEW SNARL IN\nTHE NEW DEAL\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (AP)-\nThe alphabetical new deal ran into\na brand new snarl today. Thomas\nP. Henry, president of the motorists\nAAA, urged that congreu grant\n\"relief\" for infringement of ita copyrighted insignia.\nHe suggested AAA be changed to\nARA\u2014agricultural readjustment administration.\n150 YOUNG MEN\nWANTED FOR THE\nSIGNAL SECTION\nOTTAWA, Aug. 4 (CPWobs will\nbe available for 150 young men in\nthe royal Canadian corps of signals,\nit was announced here today by\nCol. E. Forde, director. These men\nwho must have senior matriculation\nwill be trained as wireless operators\nand other forms of signal work.\nThe extra men will be needed because of additional stations In the\nnorth as well as the signal stations\nrequired for the transcanada air\nmall route for which landing fields\nare being prepared by relief camp\nworken. The men will be recruited\nln each district corps headquarters.\nUniversity graduates in electrical\nengineering will alio be recruited\nto be trained as officen.\nIs B. C. Organizer\nof Women for the\nNew Stevens Party\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP). -\nMn. Walter Willis of Vancouver hu\nbeen appointed British Columbia\norganizer of women for the Reconstruction party.   -\nHow Europe Carved Up Africa\ntlORTIf\nAt LAM TIC\nOClAtt\nIt ii an old tatabllihed cuitom\namong nationa with imperial ambition! to look toward Africa. At\npreient ilx European nitloni havt\ndivided among themulvu practically tha whole continent Abyi-\nlinla remain! the only independent\nand th* largut \"virgin\" territory,\nand Italy, In the person of Slgnor\nMuuolini and compiny, are looking toward thii aru of 350,000\n\u2022quire mllea with avid eyu.\nFrance la the largest land owner\nIn Africa with Britain, even excluding Egypt, a clou ucond. Together tlfey control over half tha\narea and tha destinies of nearly\n100,000,000 natives.\nTha 11,400,000 .quire mllu that\nmake up Africa ar* divided ai followi:\nArea\nSq. Ml. Population\nPrane*  3,907,610   35,440,500\nGreat Britain . 3,409,092   47.251,900\nItaly    944,734    2,210,000\nBelgium      9.2,083   11,500,000\nPortugal _    787,808     4,894,950\n8piln     128,9*9       784,300\nEgypt     350,000   15.000,000\nEthiopia    350,000   10,000,000\nLiberia       45.000     1,750.000\nIf Italy succeeds in eonqutrlng\nAbyulnla, it will havt annexed\nland thret tlmu the size of Italy\u2014\na land of 10,000,000 people to buy\nItalian producta, and a land of inestimable wetlth In minerals and\ncotton.\nDavid Sloan, Managing Director of\nPioneer Mine, Dies From Injuries\nHeld for Picking\nBlind Man's Pocket\nTORONTO, Aug. 4 (CP)\u2014William\nBowman, 25, colored, stands charged\nwith having picked the pockets of a\nblind man early today. Two men\ngrappled wtth Neil Jensen, as he sat\nalone, one of them relieving him of\nhis wallet which contained S8. Bowman waa arrested. Hla supposed\naccomplice got away.\nAnother Arrest\nin Labatt Case\nLONDON Ont, Aug. 4 (CP)-\nGerald Nicholson, 34, was arrested\nin Windsor early today and brought\nhere, charged with being an accessory after the fact in the year-old\nkidnapping ot John Labatt, London\nbrewer.\nHe is a native of Muskoka and is\nsaid to live a few miles from the\ncottage where the wealthy brewer\nwas held captive a year ago this\nmonth.\nNicholson's arrest came as a sur-\nfirise. His name has not been men-\nloned in the case heretofore. Nicholson, who weighs 152 pounds and\nis five feet eight inches tall, is the\nfifth man to be arrested in connection with the kidnapping.\nDavid Meisner is already serving\n15 years for the abduction of John\nS. Labatt, the wealthy London\nbrewer. In jail Buil Bannon and\nKingdon P. (Piccolo) Pete Murray\nare awaiting trial ln connection\nwith thc cue.\nLut week Michael McCardell, arrested in Indiana and brought to\nLondon, pleaded guilty to a charge\nof kidnapping and wu remanded\nfor sentence.\nWarrant* are out for the arrest of\nAlbert Fegram, mentioned in the\ncase from the first, and u yet\nunapprehended.\nDIONNE LIBERAL CANDIDATE\nMATANE. Que.; Aug. 4 (CP).-\nMembers of a Liberal convention\nhere Saturday selected J. L. Dionne.\nnotary of Amqui. Que., as their candidate for the county of Matane-\nMutaoedia In the forthcoming Dominion election!.\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON\nVictoria\n.51\n________________________________________________     -81\nVancouver  \u00bb 54\nKamloopa  50\nPrince  George  _ 50\nEstevan Point 54\n52\n48\n38\n54\n54\n52\nPrince Rupert.\nAtlln   ....\nDawson\nSeattle\nPortland \t\nSan Francisco ..\nSpokane 82\nLoi Angelu - 58\nPenticton  44\nCalgary  '. 4*8\nEdmonton    58\nSwift Current 5\u00ab\nPrince Albert 50\nSaskatoon  - 64\nQu'Appelle   ....\nMoose Jaw \t\nWinnipeg \t\n... 50\n... 54\n.46\nFourth Victim of the\nAlta Lake Airplane\nCrash Tragedy\nSLOCAN COUNTRY\nWORKER IN 1902\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP).-\nDavid Sloan, managing director\nof Pioneer Gold Mlnu of British\nColumblt, Ltd., died In hoipltal\nhere todiy from Injuries received\nat Alta Laka July 30 in a plane\ncruh which took the llvei of Dean\nR, W. Brock, Mrs. Brock and the\npilot, William McCluikey.\nDetth came icarcaly 24 houn\nafter Vancouver had pild tribute\nat tha funeral of Dun ind Mri.\nBrock.\nEver ilnc* Mr. Sloan wu rushed\nto hospital htrt from Alta Lake\nby train, boat and ambulance, doctor! had labored diy tnd night In\n\u2022n effort to uvt hit lift but the\nshock, lou of blood ind hli numer-\n(Continutd on Ptgt Ten)\nURGE A PRINCE\nRUPERT-JASPER\nROAD PROGRAM\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Aug. 4\n(CP) \u2014 Completion of a highway\nfrom Prince Rupert to Juper, Alta.,\nand construction of a highway to\nconnect the Peace river with the\npresent transcanada highway are\nurged in resolutions passed at lhe\nannual convention here of the boards\nof trade of central British Columbia.\nOther resolutions of the convention recommended establishment of\nmodel farms by the Dominion government, abolishment of commercial fishing on lakes of the interior,\nadoption ot the land settlement\nscheme proposed by Brlg.-Gen. M.\nL. Hornby of Lethbridge. Alta.;\ntransfer of Mount Robson Park from\nthe province to the Dominion; construction of mining trails, and establishment of a stockyard at Red\nPus junction for the benefit ot\nshippen.\n3 POWERS Will\nMEET TO FIND\nSOME SOLUTION\nEthiopia Not Bound\nto Attend Meet\nin Ten Days\nFAILURE PUTS THE\nMAHER TO LEAGUE\nEden Emphasizes the\nBritish Wish for\nAfrican Peace'\nBy OEOROE HAMBLETON\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nGENEVA. Aug. 4 (CP Cable)\u2014After four days and four nights of\nnegotiations thc council ot the\nLeague of Nations has opened tha\nway\u2014it Is hoped\u2014to peace between\nItaly and Ethiopia. But It ls a way\nadmittedly itrewn with difficulties.\nIt provide! for procedure, but lt\nleaves the main issue where it stood\nbefore. It links with the league but\nis not a part of the league. It will\noperate not under terms of th*\nleague covenant, but on the basis of\nthe 1906 treaty concluded by Great\nBritain, France and Italy, defining\nspheres of influence ln Ethiopia.\nEthiopia never acceoted this treaty.\nMEET WITHIN 10 DAYS\nUnder the new procedure, form\u00ab\nally approved by the council befora\n(Continued on Page Ttn)\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy Th* Canadian Prtu\nToronto and Montreal: Industrial\nstocks closed higher.\nToronto mines: Slightly higher.\nNew York: Stocks higher.\nWinnipeg: Wheat up V. cent\nLondon: Bar silver and other\nmetals unchanged.\nNew York: Bar silver and other\nmetals unchanged.\nMontreal: Silver iteady.\nNew York: Other commodltlei un\u00ab\nchanged.\nNew York: Canadian dollar un\u00ab\nchanged at 09 29-32.\nHuge Damage in\nWake ol Typhoon\nThree Killed, Four Are\nMissing; 247 Homes\nAre Burned\nMANILA, P.I., Aug. 4 (API-\nThree known deathi and damage\nestimated by officials at $500,000\nwai reported todiy from flood!\nIn central and northern Luzon,\ncaused by several diyi of rainfall\nthit accompanied thl paulng of\ntyphoom.\nFour other men were reported\nmJsiing and many towni In north.\nern Luzon were Isolated. Mem-\ntime one child wu killed ind a\nman waa seriously burned In a\nflra which destroyed 247 flimiy\ndwelling! In Cebu. The flrt ltft\n2500 penoni homeleu.\nEight Killed in\nCrossing (rash\nCAMDEN, S.C, Aug. 4 (AP)-\nEight persons were dead and a\nninth was believed to be dying today of injuries received when a\nlight truck collided with a seaboard\nairline pauenger train at a crossing\nhere Saturday, throwing some of\nthem beneath the wheels of th*\nmoving train.\nThe dead: J. Van Baker, 55, owner\nof the truck, and Mn. Baker, SS,\nMurray Baker, 19, driver of the\ntruck; Samuel Baker, 22. and J. V.\nBaker Jr., 18, all sons of Mr. and\nMrs. Baker; Mrs. Steven Baker, a\ndaughter-inrlaw; Gordon Jordan,\n18, and Herbert Jordan, 10, of Kershaw county.\nSteve Baker, the ninth member\nof the party was uld at the hoi-\npittU to havo \"extremely llttl*\nchance\" for recovery.\nNINE YEARS AGO SINCE THE TALKIES\nFIRST DEMONSTRATED FOR HOLLYWOOD\nBy ROBBIN COONS\nAuoclated Pren Staff Writer\nHOLLYWOOD, Calif., Aug. 4 -\n(AP)\u2014Mondiy li the ninth birthday anniversary of the talking\nicreen.\nShirley Temple waint born yet,\nMae Weat was just a stage name,\nJohn Gilbert was stilt making cinematic love to Greta Garbo, and Will\nRogen was twirling ropes behind\nthe footlights on that Aug. 5, 1926,\nwhen New York uw the world premiere of vitaphone.\nIt was just a novelty, was the\nconsensus ln Hollywood after the\ntint talking screen program which\nfeatured Will Hayei In an address\ncelebrating the occasion, Marion\nTailcy and Giovanni Martlnelll nf\nthe opera singing arias, Mischa El-\nman playing a violin aolo. The fea\u00ab\nture \"Don Juan\" with John Barry-\nmore, wai \"illent\" except for a iyn\u00ab\nchronized acore.\nIt was mainly the Warner Brother*\nconcern, which had espoused vita-\nphone as a last hope in the movie\nstruggle, that took the occasion very\nseriously. Even then they were making ready Al Jolson's talkie debut,\n\"the Jazz Singer.\" to be released Jan.\n27. 1927, fallowed by Jolson in the\n\"Singln' Fool,' which emphasized\nwhit \"the Jazz Singer\" had etated\u2014\nthe public was willing to spend millions for talking pictures.\nThen Hollywood began a frantic\nrevolutionizing of its industry. In\n1928 none of the \"ten best\" picture*\nwrre talkirs; in 1929 there was not\na \"silent\" on this \"film dally.\"\nA\n \u2014\u25a0\n-____\u2014\u2014\n\t\n\u2022PAGI TWO \u2022\nTRAIL SMELTER\nCONVENTION IS\nRATIFIED, EAST\nBennett and a U. S.\nOfficial Sign\nProtocol\nTO ARBITRATE ON\nFUMES DAMAGE\n$350,000 for Damage\nto Farms to Be Paid\nby Canada\nOTTAWA, Aug. 4 (CP)-Ratlfi-\ncationi of the Trail imelter convention between Cmada md the United\nStates were exchanged here Saturday. Prime Minister R. B. Bennett\nsigned the protocol of ratification\non behalf of Canada and Pierre de\nI. Boal, charge d'affaires at the\nUnited States legation here signed\non behalf of the United States.\nThe convention provides for arbitration of the long standing controversy arising out of the operations of the smelter of the Consolidated Mining k Smelting company\nat TraU, B. C, and wai signed April\n16. Fumes from the smelter are alleged to have caused serious damage to vegetation md injured the\nproperty ot a number of farmers\nsouth of the International border.\nThe turn ot $350,000 will be paid\nby the Cmadim government on behalf ot the company to the United\nSUtat government on behalf ot the\nfarmers to cover damagei up to Jm.\n1,1932. The company hu alto tpent\nmillions of dollars in m effort to\nabate the nusiance md since that\ntime the fumes have been treated\nto remove the Injurious ingredients,\nthe chief of which is sulphur.\nAn international tribunal is tet\nup under the convention to arbitrate any damages since Jan, 1,1933,\nand pan upon the effectiveness of\nthe abatement meaiurei taken by\nthe company.\nHOUDAYTODAY\nIN MANY CITIES\nNot Celebrated in the\nMaritimes, B.C. or\nin Quebec\nBy the Cantdim Prtn\nThouundl of Canadian! in Ontario and western Canada today observe civic holidays\u2014originated in\nToronto 66 yean ago.\nWhile mode! of tnnsportatlon\nhave changed, Canadlm cltiiens\nwill celebrate the holiday in time-\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B. C, HOTELS\n\"Finttt in tht Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bua Service Geo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 25e to 60e\nLUNCHEON 35c to 50c        DINNER 35c to 65c\nRotary and Cyro Headquarters\nTtliphone 717 Ntlion, B.C. 422 Vtrnon St\nHUME\u2014Mr. md Mrs. L. Lawion,\nQ. Thompaon, A. Weroouald, H. Wllaon, M. Wallace, W. Harrli, J. Wut-\nwisle, Miss A. Lee, A. Jogoe. F.\nSmith, H. Fox, W. Dobson, Vancouver; DeWitt Peck, Butte, Mont.;\nMr. md Mrs. F. Buckle, Salmo; M.\nWards, J. Lewis, R. Steedman, Medicine Hat; J. Williams, Seattle; J.\nMarka, H. Maltin, W. Dingle, Mrs.\nR. Lidgate, Mr. md Mrs. G. MacDonald, Dr. A. Shau, md family, Mr.\nmd Mn. H Howardi, Mr. and Mn.\nA. William, Calgary; Dr. and Mrs.\nO. Barclay, Kaslo; Miss K. Wish.\nMlaa M, Wish, Mrs. B. Wish, Mr. and\nMrt. J. Daniels, M. Maxwell, Misa\nL Fisher, Spokane; Mr. md Mrs.\nC. Smith, Invermere; Mr. and Mrs.\nw. Eele, Queen mine: Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Stevenson, J. Walker, F. Hawkins, Victoria; H. Sargent, Mr. md\nMrs. J. Fisher, Miss E. Scott, Nelson; Mr. and Mrs. L. Selles, New\nDenver; A. Silvester, C. Yule, W.\nLawrence, R. Fraier, Penticton; A.\nGrlgg, A. Mitchell, Edmonton; Mr.\nond Mrs. J. Lowden, A. Kaplan,\nMontreal. Mr. md Mn. T. Sweeting. S. P. R, Winnipeg; Mn. A.\nHill and sons, Mr. md Mn. W. Tav-\nlor, W. Hogarel, H. Foiter, Mn. G.\nMoore md family, Cranbrook; Mn.\nA. McElvey, Creiton; O. Simmons,\nA. Morriion, B. Flynn, Mr. and Mrs.\nShaw. Grand Forki; Mn. N. Cur-\ntii, St Louii, Mo.; Mr. md Mn. T.\nKing, Mr- and Mn. T. Evini, Lethbridge; J. Sutherlmd, Slocan City;\nMr. and Mrs. Storee, Rowland: W.\nWllcockion. S. Wiley, Sheffield,\nEng.; G. Mclnnes, Howser. Mr, and\nMn. T. Seale, San Francisco.\n\/TTze Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kind\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nMi BAKER ST. PHONB 19 NELSON. B.C.\nSAVOY-J. O. Wilion, M. Dillon.\nRay W. Thompion, H McLean. Vancouver: Mr. and Mn. George\nJacques. George Pinkney, J. Loftus,\nCalgary; W. G. Anlscough, Macleod;\nF. E. Parsoni. Cascade; J. A. Millar,\nNakuip; T. Fletcher, E. W. PBterson.\nFemie: W. Hubert, Burton: A. Burgess. W. R. Mitchell, G. Taylor. Vic\nErickson. John Olsen. A. Carrlngton, Salmo: R. T. Fraser, L. Dawson.\nTrail; G. Gaetz. Mr. md Mn. N.\nClarke. Lethbridge: Robert S. Lewis.\nSalt Lake City; Flora Pearson. Ella\nWizeman. Marguerite Lang. Alma E.\nLang. E. J. Murphey. E B. DeVoe.\nSpokane; Mr. and Mn. W. S. Bennett. Mr. md Mn. Jamea E. Gyde\nJr.. Wallace. Ida.: George C. Coryell. Rouland; R. R. McKinnon,\nGrand Forki; J. N. Murphy. Kulo;\nP. Dietrich. Erie. B.C.; Mr. md Mn.\nR. V. Wilcox.\nNew Grand Hottl\nP. L. KAPAK. Prop.\nHet and Cold Wattr\nSingle 50e up; doublt 60c up\nMonthly ratu 110.00 up\nPH. 2M       611 VERNON ST\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vtrnen St          Phont SI7L\nH. WASSICK, Prep.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nMlntn' Hildauirteri\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nPETE BORSATO, Prop.\nRoomi from SOc to $1.50\nMonthly 110 tnd up,\nStaam heated md hot md cold\nwater ln every room\n-306 BAKER IT.        PHONE M\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. A. MADDEN. Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot tnd Cold Witer\nIn tht HEART ef tht City\nPHONE SI      SOS WAPO ST\n-THI NILION. DAILY NIWI. NELION. B.C-MONDAY, MORNING. AUGUST 6. 1M5-\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND. B.C Aug. 4 - A\nnumber of friendi tendered a prettily arranged miscellaneous ihowtr\nThunday tvenlng to Mr. tnd Mrs.\nOliver Gowing In the Orange hall.\nThe young couple, who wera recently married, were the recipients\nof a number of pretty md useful\ngifts. The evening was passed pleasantly with games md dancing. Those\npresent included Mr. md Mrs. R\nAckerman. Mr. md Mn. Iitac Glover. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Herman, Mr.\nond Mrs. Walter Scorgle, Mr. and\nMrs. A. W. Kelly. Mr. and Mn. I. J.\nTrembath. Mr. and Mrs. B. Fried.\nMr. and Mn. Hume Pollock. Mr. md\nMn. Gunnir Erickson. Mr. and Mrs.\nFlovd Birch. Mr. and Mrs. Henry\nMetigar. Mr. md Mn. H. Wade. Mr.\nand Mn. O. Reinlke. Mr. and Mrs.\nDel Lukkar. Mrs. Bingham. Mrs. 3.\nPeten. Mn. S. Simcock. Mn. SUnley Alllbone. Mrs. Seth Martin. Mrs.\nN. J. Hamilton. Mrs. Butorac. Mrs.\nR. H. Mason. Mlss Clark (Syringa\nCreek). Miss Mav Martin. Miss Dora\nMillett Miss Francei Profflli. the\nMisses Sdao. Mlsi Thontenstein.\nMiu Tina French. Mlu Delphlne\nVetere. Miu Eda Vetere. Mlu Irene\nGlover. Miu Rose Pontine. Miu\nDorli Metrear, Mlu Dorothy McDonell. Mln Catherine McKay.\nFrank Singer. Samuel Hanna. Ced-\nrlc Cox. Andy Grubsclc. Alfred Albo.\nBud Pollock. William Tilden. Dun-\nrtn McLeod. Hllmer Hanson. Oeorge\nMcKay, John McKiy. Harold Ackerman. Dale Ackerman. Fred Hill.\nFrmk Conroy, Joseph Jorgemen\nmd Richard Martello.\ni' .\u25a0 a\nMr. and Mn. R. W. Chalmen of\nThrums were visiton ln the city\nSaturday.\ntta\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. Urquhart have\nreturned from spending a few days\nln Snokane.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nDr. and Mn. H. R. Chriitle are\nholidaying in Edmonton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. J. Roul have as\ntheir guests their dauehten. Mrs.\ni.. Camera of Chicago, Tlllnols and\nMn.   H.  Mclntry of  Washington.\nD. C.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nMilton Mircm nf Revelitoke was\nin the city Saturdiy.\n\u2022 *  \u00ab\nMlsi Mtry Stocksligtr hu returned to her home in Clnrkstnn\n\"fter soendinp the pas* wont***,n the\nelty. a twst of Mr. and Mn. William\nE. Costello.\nRichard Tlmms Is ipending a few\ndays In Spokine.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMlu Alice Nicholi ii holldiylng\nat Bonnlngton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. Urouhtrt and\n-hildren heve returned from a motor\ntrip to Spokane. \u2022\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlss VM\"***** Tflnelois li a gueit of\nfriendi in Kit-hcer.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nRetJinaW Harnblln of Deer Park\nIs viiltlne hii iliter here.\nhonored fashion, picnics, iporti md\na ouiet diy at home.\nRecordi reveil \u2022 Toronto citv\ncouncil meeting on Auguit \u00ab. 1869.\ndecided a dav of recreation wks\nnecessarv in August and set asMe\nWednesday, Auguit 18. ai a public\nholiday.\nBut the deciiion did not meet with\nunanimous tpnrovil. One merchant\nnrotested nn the grounds idleness\nshould not be encourteed. He argued\nagainst additional holidays, statin'\ntwo yesrs before (confederation\nvear) a holiday had been created\nby setting aside July 1 as Dominion\nday. The majority of citizens failed\nto agree with the marchsnt*. records\nihowlng the fint civic holiday wu\nenthusiastically observed.\nUp to 1875 the Auguit holiday\nwas proclaimed iccording to th'\ndecision of the citv council. In that\nyear the council fixed the flnt Monday in Auenst as the civic hnlidav\n\u25a0nd the ruling hti been followed\nsir\".\nOther cities In Ontario not to be\noutdone bv Toronto adopted the\nidea md todav a lirge number of\ncltlea celebrate civic holiday hut\nnot all on the flnt Mondiy of the\nmonth. The movement spread to\nweit'rn Canada md tbout 80 yean\nago Wlnnloe*: Inaugurated the holi-\ndiv on the flnt Monday ln August\nwith Edmonton following after the\nwar. S'skttoon tnd Cilgiry hive\nhalf holidays, the Saskatchewan city\nIn observance of Fair day md the\nAlberta center on Stampede day.\nThe holiday, however, Is not celebrated In Quebec, the maritimei or\nBritish Columbia.\nSTEVENS RAPS BANKERS IN\nVICTORIA CAMPAIGN SPEECH\nAre \"Not Supposed to Be Safety Deposits for\nGovernment Bonds\", But \"Supposed to\nSupply Lifeblood of Commerce\"\nVICTORIA,   Aug.   4   (CP)*\u2014Ca-\nnadian banks came under sharp\nfira when Hon. H. H. Stevens, Reconstruction leader, faced a Pacific\ncoast audience here Saturday night\n\"Banks of Cmada are not supposed to be safety deposits forgov-\nernment bondi,\" he proteited. \"They\nara luppoied to tupply the life-\nblood of Cmadim commerce.\" Ha\ncharged that commecrlal banki had\nitrangled buslneu by cutting down\nloans.\n\"In the last tive yean banks of\nCmada have contracted commercial\nloms by 1400,000.000. At the tame\ntime they have increaied their investments in government bonds\nand other lecurliiei by $375,000,000.\nI sty that when the banks withdrew $400,000,000 the effect was to\nstrangle busineu.\"\nHow wu Cinada to Increase her\nexternal trade? aiked Mr. Stevens.\nIncreased trade wu now being offered as the great solution of difficulties ln thli country. He took hli\naudence bick a few yean, stating\nthat markets in Europe had gradually been closed to Canada's main\nexport products. European countries\nwere making themselves lelf-ius-\ntaining. Their tariff md quota restrictions mtde it extremely difficult to trtde at all, let alone Increue trade.\nWORLD MARKETI\nTIGHTENED\n\"It's all very well to lay Increase\ntrade, but with such prohibitions lt\nII impossible to shoot the stuff into\nEurope. The long md short of it ii\nthat the mirkets of the world hive\nbeen tightened largely through fear\nof war. The nation! haven't got over\nthe lait one, but they tear another.\"\nThe government had been wrong\nln imposing exchmge dumping\ndutiu against Great Britain after\nthe Imperial conference, Mr. Stevens\n\u25a0aid. Dutiei ihould be lowered on\ntextllea end agricultural implement!.\nGenerally ipeiking dutiei ihould be\nbued on relative ltbor coata ln\nCanada md in the country which\n\u2022ought to plice ita goodt in the Canadian market.\nHe auerted thit 23 most-favored-\nnation treaties \"made by Rt Hon.\nMackenzie King himself are standing in tho way ot my rapid change\nin Canada's trade relations with\nother countries.\" As soon ai this\nDominion entered into negotiations\nwith a foreign country looking to\nimproved trtde relations, other\ncountriei enjoying favored nation\ntreatment muit alio be dealt with.\nInevitably thii made negotiation of\nnew trade agreements difficult slow\nmd cumbersome.\nTrade development wu important Mr. Stevens agreed, but there\nwere other matters of a more pressing nature. Whlt of unemployment?\nOne of the first steps to be taken in\nCmada wu a \"definite, clear-cut\npolicy of lowered interest ratei.\"\nBued on income tax returni over\nthe put five years, agrarians, retail merchants, wholesale merchants,\nmanufacturers and transportation\nmd public utilities had all suffered\nlosies in their returni ranging from\n00 per cent tor the farmen to 40\nper cent tor the manufacturers.\nFinancial house!, on the other hand,\nshowed a gain of 30 per cent.\nWhenever reduced interest ratei\nwere demanded, the cry went up\nthat iuch reduction would \"drive\ncapital out of the countr-\" uld Mr.\nSteveni. To that he replied that\ncredit muit be eaied at all costs.\nHe gave illustrations ln which, he\nsaid, credit refused by bmks had\ninjured the lumber buiineu in Quebec and on the Pacific coait He had\ntalked to a prominent banker about\nthe reluctance of the banks to lend\nmoney for legitimate commercial\nundertaking!. The reply had been\nthat banki were ready to lend on\ngood security.\n\"I told him,\" u!d Mr. Stevens,\n\"that if a man brought him a $1000\nvictory bond with his wife'i endorsement on it he (the banker)\nwould lend $750 on it\"\n\"Why isn't the law of mnply and\ndemand functioning?\" asked the\nReconstruction leader after stating\nthat Canada was about $900,000,000\nbehind in building construction.\n\"There is a woeful need in Canada\nfor modern housing,\"\n\"Because you haven't ihot the\nbankers\" lomeone in the hall\nshouted.\nIt wu because credit wai withheld by thoie who controlled capital,\nreplied Mr. Steveni. He would deal\nwith Canada's housing problem by\ncalling the bankers and those in\ncontrol of capital together, and telling them what was required. \"I\nwould give them two weeks, md if\nthey did not come back with a solution, I would have the government\nbrganlze a public corporation to\nfinance a housing program.\"\nHi dealt with tht tconomic tltuttlon it It affects youth, and tht\nproblem of tht unemployed tingle\nman. \"I dont think that tvery\nyoung mm who fllu off tht handle, If you llkt, tnd trcki Into\ntht cities, li a Communiit\" ht\nuld, On tht othtr hind, ht believed  In  ltw oburvmce. \"But\nIf you expect young men to live\nIn campi for ont, two, tven three\nyun, receive $S a month, and bt\nnippy, you art uklng too muoh.\nYoung mm cannot be aiktd to\nluppreu all their ambltlom and\naiplratloni for $5 a month.\"\nOnce again  tlie  Reconitructlon\nleader sketched immediate steps for\nunemployment  alleviation  already\noutlined in his manifesto. Completion of the transcmada highway,\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nI ARROW LAKES HOm^WJ i\nf        E. NIIDERMAN.        Comfortable Roomi        PI,\", on tht     I\n\u25a0 Proprlttor Oood  Maali Rotd to Vtrnon  |\nVANCOUVER, B. C. HOTELS\nI     \"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDufferin Hottl\nSCO Slymour It      Vtnoouvtr. B.C.\nNtwly Rtnevtttd Throughout\nPhonta    \u2022    lltvtter\nA. PATERSON. late _.\nColeman. Alta- Proprietor\nighout I\n'of\nm__3\nTRANSPORTATION \u2014 Motor Freight Lints\ni\ni\n\u25a0\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLIAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 i.m, tnd 10:S0 a.m. Except Sundty\n%? trail \\m COflp\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\n\u2022\nLARGE\nMODERN\nFireproof\nWarehouse\nFacilities\nYour Valuables\nAre Soft\nWhtn Stored\nWith Ui\nPhone\n33\nWEST\nTRANSFER CO.\nEit'd. 1899\nSocial and Personal\nNews of Trail\nThis column li In charge of Mn Glenn Quaylt of TralL AH\nevent! of a tocial niture of Interest it. Trail and Tadanic wlll appear\nln thli column. Mrt Quiyle will be glad to have my auch newt\ntelephoned to her at her home In Trail.\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 4-Pete Anderaon, who hai for the paat two\nyean been making hit home in\nDenmirk, hu returned to Trail\nwhere he expects to take up residence.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. md Mri. Jamei Wllllimion,\nRiverside, hive is their guests for a\nfew diys, Mn. Williamson's iliter,\nMn Charlei Kelmin ot NeUon md\nher house gueiti, Miss D. Reine-\nmann and Miss Freda Bremner ot\nMilwaukee.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. md Mrs. Alfred Benoit of\nPenticton are visiting in Trail with\nrelatives for a few days.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWilliim Harrlaon left rrlday on a\ntwo-week vacation which will be\nspent at the coait.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mn W. H. Munroe, accompanied by their diughter Joy,\nleft during the week-tnd for California when they will visit trlendi\nduring the next three weeks.\ntot\nMrs. C. Cutler md family left for\nVernon on a hoUday trip. They will\nvisit alio it Vincouver md Chilliwack.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHmi Jorienien ipent tha weekend at Christina Like,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. O. H. Nelion, Government\nroid, who with her family ii turn-\nmerlng it Robwn, visited in TnU\nSaturdav, leaving In the evening for\nWillow Point with Mr. Nelion where\nthey wlll ipend tha week-end. On\ntheir return to Robson they will be\naccompanied by Mlss Ruby Nelson\nwho hu been a gueit of Mrs. A. J.\nMcDonell during the put week.\nMn Ralph Carter lett during tht\nweek-end for Christina Lake where\nthe will spend i two-week holiday.\nm    *    .\nMri. A. Royce md diughter, Miu\nPeggy Royce left Frldiy for Spo-\n'tint where tney wtll ipend a ihort\n'.ollday, travelling from there to\nVmcouver. They expect to return\nto Trail ln about a month.\n\u2022 \u25a0  \u2022\nMn. B. Ntlion li ipending a holiday with her daughter it Christint\nLike ind will return to Trail about\nthe middle of Auguit.\na * f a\nGeorge Tether, accomptnled by\nhli diughter, Mlu Alice Tether, left\nFrldiy for cout cltlu where they\nwill spend t three-week holiday,\nt  \u2022  \u2022\nR. B. Dimock hu returned to Tnll\nfrom a ihort holiday at Kailo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. md Mn. K D. Croiby. Riverside, havt ti thtlr gueit, Mlu Ruby\nKing of Nelion.\n\u2022 .   t\nMlu Helen Thomu of Roulmd\nhu left for Vincouver where ihe\nwlll be a mett of her brother-in-\nlaw and iliter, Mr. md Mn W. A.\nWebb.\ntae\nMr. and Mn O. Atplund and children ara viiltlng for two weeki at\nChristina Lake.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. md Mn. A. O. Cameron have\nreturned to their home from Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMn Annie Marki left recently\nfor Spokane where the will viiit\nfriendi.\n\u25a0  *  \u2022\nGordon Lynn hM gone to Seattle\nwhtre he will viiit friendi md rela-\ntivei for two weeki.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBen Slmpion left Friday for Penticton where he will attend the convenUon of the B.E.S.L.\ntat\nMr. md Mn. Thomu Weir have\nleft for Vancouver where they wlll\nipend their vacation.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nRobert Cooper ii ipending a vacation at cout cities.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWalter Johnion wu among those\nfrom  Trail   visiting   at   ChrisUna\nUke during the week-end.\naet\nMr. md Mri. J. Prieitner md\nfamily will return to Trail during\nthe week-end from a hoUday ipent\nit Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. md Mn. H. D. Thtln md\nfamily, who have been gueiti ot\nrelatives at Nelson for two weeks.\nreturned homt to TnU tomorrow.\n.   .   .\nW. O. Wllllimi returni during\nthe week-md from a two-week\nvacation.\nSirdar Man Buys\na Horst     \"\u25a0\nSIRDAR, B. C, Aug. 4\u2014Dominie\nPisscuzzo was a buslneu visitor to\nCranbrook Wedneiday where he purchased a hone for rmch work.\nGeorge Sukeroff wu at Creston\nSaturday for supplies for the taw-\nmill. A truck load of hone feed wai\nbrought In at tha middle of tha\nweek alio.\nMlsi Victoria Paucuuo of Wy-\ndifft arrived here at tha fint ot\nthe week and will make m extended vlilt to Mr. md Mrs. Man-\nnarino.\nA heavy thunder md lightning\nitorm accompmled by heavy rains\nand hail was experienced hen Friday night The itorm wat more or\nleu local, and while It lasted was\nspectacular. No damage by the hail\nwai reported md the rain would\nbe beneficial.\nCharles Wilion wis a business vilitor to Nelson, going by car.\nFrank Hamilton of Kootenay\nLanding was a business visitor to\nCreston.\nMargaret Lombardo who ls here\non vacation left for Tye on Monday's train, where she will ipend a\nfew dayi with her brother, Frank.\nKenneth WaUace of Boiwell lett\nby Monday morning'i train for Nelion on a business trip.\nMrs. MUler of Kuskanook was a\nbusiness visitor to Creston Friday\ngoing by stage.\nThe water, as Indicated by the\ngauee at Slough bridge, reads 10.60,\na fall of 0.41 for the week. The heavy\nrainfall of the past few davs is evidently equalling the off flow. This\nwill make haying on the flats much\nlater than usual.\nM'sa Mary and Matilda Rochac\nleft here on Monday'! train to mend\na vacation with their brother at Tve.\nJohn Andino went to Nelion by\ntn'n to take in the Trail picnic,\nmd reports a good Ume.\nA large air tank has been Installed\n\u2022*tt the quarry at Atbara, this will\nincrease tne air capacity and enble\nmore pneumatic toola to be used.\nJames Mannarlnn wai a business\nvisitor to Creiton Fr'dav.\nMr. and Mn. J. S. Wilson were\nv's'ton to Mr. md Mrs. VanAcheren\not Onyon Saturday.\nSydney Rogers and D Passcuizo\nwere buiineu viliton to Creiton\nSaturday.\nPi^iwFj\nWILL CONTINUE\nSIRDAR, B. C, Aug. 4-Dlck Dennis of Nelion is spending a vacaUon\nwith Mr. md Mrs. Sam Bysouth\nat Kuskanook.\nSeveral flight! of pigeons from\nKimberley lofts were despatched\nfrom here during the week. It looks\nas lf Kootenay Lake is to become\nthe pigeon Newmarket, ai with the\nyoung bird! of thii year'! railing to\nbe trained by both the Crmbrook\nmd Kimberley clubi from lakeside\npoint, training flights will be a daily\noccurrence from now till faU.\nSydney Rogen md D. Passcuzto\nwere fishing at Kuskanook md secured a splendid catch. Fishing is\nextremely good at Kuikanook at\npresent\nAlfred Bysouth md Dick Dennis\nwere at Creston Thursday afternoon\ngoing by car.\nReports reach here from both the\nCrmbrook md Kimberley flying\nclube that mmy birds have been\nreturned to the respective club by\nKootenay lake people. There are\nstill many birds unaccounted for\nhowever, m appeal ii being made\nto forward any aeeured to the secretaries ot these clubi at the club'i\nexpenie.\nOVER 100 AT BAYONNE\nOperaUona at the Bayonne mine\nare going ahead with moit of the\nwork being done at the vicinity of\nthe mine. The erew hai been enlarged and now numben considerably more thm 100. Work ii proceeding at the Winconiin mint at\nMidge creek with a crew of about\n20. Many local men are employed\nat both placet.\nJohn Webb of Calgary Is a visitor\nst the home of Mr. md Mn. J. S.\nWilson and will go home by Nelson.\nThli locality experienced very\nheavy nim Saturday night ird\nSunday with low lying cloudi. Old\ntimen say It Is mmy yun since\nheav\u00bb ralni h-ve been encountered\nat midsummer.\nMILLION DOLLAR RACKET SAID\nTO BE UNCOVERED AT HEW YORK\nAliens Are Blackmailed After Entering the\nCountry With Faked Papers\nBy GARDNER BRIDGE\n(Copyright, 1935, by tht Auoclated\nPreu)\nNIW VORK, Aug. 4 (API-Federal investigator!, tmaihing through\ntha traffic in faked naturalizaUon\npapera, disclosed details Saturday ot\na nation-wide racket that has terrorized immigrants and taken a\nyearly tribute of more thm $1,-\n000,000.\nAfter three months of quiet sleuthing, Special Prosecutor Samuel\nKaufmm declared he and hit itaff\nhad uncovered a maze of racketeering that extended trom Ellis island\ninto virtually every large city in\nthe United SUtu.\nSufficient evidence to convict or\nIndict 10 government employees at\nEllis Island already has been amassed, he said, md his agents are concentrating now on the \"bralm\" of\nthe outside organization.\n\"We haven't caught the rlnglead-\nen yet but when we do we will havt\nthem right\" he said.\nKaufman disclosed he wu hot on\nthe trail of a Brooklyn organitaUon\nsuspected of being the nucleus ot\nthe enUre letup. In addlUon to pay*\ning from $80 to $2500 for faked records, Kaufmm disclosed, allene who\nenter the country illegally ara black*\nmailed regularly thereafter. Ha\npromised immunity from protetu*\ntlon to all aliens who woud testify\nagalnit the extortionists.\nBenjamin Bergman, luipected\npayoff mm from the Brooklyn organization, agreed lait June to coma\nin md tell Kaufmm all ba knew\nabout the system of forging the\nnames of smuggled alltnt on ihip'i\nmanifests in order to provide them\nwith the certificates oi arrival necessary for citizenship papen Tha\nnight before he wu to take hla\nappointment he took a lethal dole\not poison ln a Brooklyn lodging\nhouse.\nABERHART AND\nSTEVENS MEET\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP) -\nLeaden of Canada's two newest\npoliUcal movement! met tor Uie\nfirst time here when Hon. H. H.\nStevens of the Reconstruction party\ntalked with William Aberhart leader of the Alberta Social Credit\nleague.\nMr. Aberhart itated he had a\noleasant \"Informal\" talk with Mr.\nStevens but he did not comment on\nthe nature of the discussion. He\nsaid he plans to meet Mr. Stevens\nagain next week In Calgary.\nMr. Aberhart wiU leave today\nfor Calgary to mike final preparations for the Alberta elections ot\nAug. 22.\nbuilding of highways to the national park! and conseouent increase\nof tourist traffic, elimination of\nlevel crossings, an aggressive md\nactive housing program, were cited.\nIn connection with housing, he said\nthat a lui ,-ey recently showed only\n9 per cent of Cmada's farm homes\nhid bathroomi.\nHa wu convinced, after iome\nitudy of insurance, uld Mr. Steveni.\nthat it would be poulble to provide\nfor sickness, accident, unemployment and life insurance for approximately what wu now paid for life\ninsurance alone. He proposed to examine into the old age pension question, and believed that a lyitem\nmight be evolved which would cover\naU that wai neceuary tor the older\nmen at little additional cost\nLokt Down Stvtn\nFttt From Ptok\nDropping nearly half a foot over\nthe week-end, the Weat Ann at\nNcison stood at 8.27 feet above the\nlow water mark at S o'clock Sunday\nafternoon. Thc actual decline ln the\n48 houn since Friday afternoon waa\n.47 foot.\nThis is practically aeven feet down\nfrom the season's peak of 15.25 feet\nrecorded June 18.\nDon't M \u25a0! torwal yoa\ntiutmanur. Taka Tr-noW.\ntoa'i lUZ-MAB C-pw-a-\nEooopo nuMry of Hn, in-\nflr-Dod, Itchy trt. ud rao-\n*_t_| dom.    Bmthi mtll.   Etloy\nNo n-ok_t, nuffi, apnya.   No ' -\nNo bid n-utioia.  R_W\nooo II box\u2014or your vom? bt\ndranirt bow for s Mo or 11 bot\nTempleton'i RAZ-MAH\nHAY\nFEVER\nWelcome Visiting Gyros\nWe wlah yeu a successful convention tnd \u25a0\npleasant ttay in Ntlton.\nMONDAY IS\nDOLLARDAY\nSee the Scores of Values a\nDollar Con Buy\nwcomo-aiio an MAV ..10.\nIt's great\nto get back;\nHtrt I am back again to\nOsden's Fine Cut. Timet\nare better and I ctn afford\nto pty the little it costs\n\u2014tnd it's worth it. If\nyou're wise you will get\nback to Ogden's, too.\n\"Roll 'em\" in \"Vogue\"\nor \"Chtntecler\" papers\nor full satisfaction.\t\n51 Pokar Htndt, tny numben, new\n\u2022cctpted ai t compl ttt ut\nOGDEN'S\nFINE       CUT\nVour  Pipe  Knoici Ogdtn'i Cut   Plug\n \u25a0\n________\n\u2014:\u2014\u25a0\t\n\u2022 tyTl\n-THE NELSON. DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C\u2014MONDAY MORNING. AUGUST S. 1915\nPAGE THREI\nVISITING GYROS-WELCOME nelson\nCyre George Fleury\nDirector\nFleury'i Phirmicy\nCyre Elmer Horton^\nW. W. Powell, Co.. Ltd.\nGyro Alex Stewart\nChief of Police\nGyro ). B. Gray\nJeweler tnd Optician\nGyro Phil Sheffield\nDirector\nlnipector of Schools\nCyre Doug Cummini\nNorth American Life Auurance Co.\nGyro C. A. C. Walley\nDentist \u2014  Orthodentin\nCyro Charlei Morris\nMen'i and Boyi' Wear\nCyro Harry Maclean\nCurlew  Creamery\nCyro John Cartmel\nGovernment Afent\n\u25a0OP*\nCyro j. D. Notman\nC.P.R. Freight Dept\nTHE EXECUTIVE AND MEMBERS OF THE  HOST CLUB\nTAKE THIS MEANS OF WISHING YOU AN ENJOYABLE\nVISIT TO NELSON\nOn the Occasion of the Annual\nDistrict No* 8 Convention\nCyro Ed Mann\nPruldent\nMinn, Rutherford Drug Co.\nCyro Austin Carter\nDirector\nHudaon't Biy Co,\nCyro Dave Towntend\nCurlew Creamery\nGyro Syd Haydon\nKootenay Breweriei, Ltd,\nGyro Harry Horton\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nPROGRAM\nMonday, Aug. 5th\nMORNING\n.Registration\u2014Hume hotel lounge.\nMeeting of executive council\u2014Hume hotel.\nAFTERNOON\n2:00 pjn.\u2014Buslneu session: Council chamber, city hall.\n3:30 pjn\u2014Tea party for Gyrettei at the home of Mn. R. E. Horton.\n(Visiting Gyrettes be in the Hume lounge at 3:30 for transportation by car.)\nEVENING\n6:30 p.m_\u2014Dinner and stunt program: Silver room, Hume hotel.\nTuesday, Aug. 6th\nMORNING\nLeft open for golt and sight-seeing trips.   (If you prefer golf, iee\nGyro Arthur Balrd. if yo\nintereit, iee Gyro Gordon Bennett.\nSyro Arthur Balrd. if you would like a trip to iome place of\nAFTERNOON\n1:00 p.m. iharp\u2014Boat trip to Alniworth hot springs. (S.S. Nasookin\nleaves city wharf, which is three blocks from the Hume hotel.)\nBring your bathing suit.\n5:30 p.m\u2014Dinner at Ainsworth hotel.\nEVENING\n9:00 p.m.\u2014Boat leavea Ainsworth.   Dancing.\nWednesday, Aug. lth\nMORN INC\n9:30 a.m.\u2014Buslneu session: Council chamber, city hall.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Motor caravan leaves Hume hotel for trip ivia Gyro park)\nto Brilliant, headquarters of Doukhobor Society in Canada.\nAFTERNOON\n1:00 p.m.\u2014Ruulan dinner at Brilliant.\nEVENING\n7:00 pun.\u2014Governor's banquet and belli Silver room. Hume hotel.\nViyro Clye Emory\nEmory's  Ltd.\u2014Men'i Wear\nCyro Norman Lowei\nC.P.R. Pauenger DepL\nGyro Jack Greenwood\nStar Grocery\nGyro Ado Diebolt\nShell C-trCo.\nCyro Jack Morrii\nDeputy Governor\nWood, Villinct Hardware Co.\nCyro Vic Owen\nSecretary\nB.C.  Telephone  Co.\nCyro Harry Ferguion\nNtlun Transfer Co., Ltd.\nCyro Cordon Bennett\nBennett'i Ltd.\nCyro George Lambert\nTreuurer\nLambert Lumber Ltd,\nGyro Dick Barnei\nKootenay Breweriei Ltd.\nCyro K. E. Crerar\nNorth American Lift Auuranet Co,\nCyro P. E. Poulin\nStocks. Bondi ind Insurance\nCyro E. L. Buchanan\nGreat Northern Railway\nCyro Charlie Doctor\nWelcome! you to the\nCapitol Theater\nCyro Bill Meyen\nA. H. Green Co. Ltd.\nCyro Fred Ewing\nCanadian Pacific Railway\nGyro Herb Harrop\nKootenay Moton .\nCyro Ceo. Benwell\nHume Hotel\n__m,.\nCyro Ceorge Dill\nCyre Jim Laurie\nCanadian Pacific Railway\n \u2122\u2014\u2014\n-\u25a0\u2014-\u2022-\u2014-\u2014\n\t\n\t\n\u2022AGE FOUR\t\nFHREETEACHERS\nARE APPOINTED\nNELSON SIAFFS\nMrs. Birbeck, Wallach\n' Go to Hume, Fraser\nto the High\nI Three teacher! havc been appointed to thc Nelson school ittffs,\n[wo ot them to fill vacancies.\n. George Wallach. who taught at\nCrescent Valley Ior a number ol\n\u25a0fears, has been appointed to the\nHume school itaff; J. A. Truer, late\nErincipol of the Kaslo high and pubic schools has received a post at\nIhe high school and Mri. K. Bir-\nBeck. part-time teacher at the Hume\nichool last year, haa be\\i appointed\nto lhat staff.\nGETS MUSEUM\nSAMPLES HERE\nToronto Professor\nand Dr. Walker\nVisit Camps\n\u25a0 Dr. T. L. Walker, profeaaor of\nmineralogy at Toronto univeraity.\nl\u00bbnd head of the university'! museum, completed Saturday night a\nahort visit to thc gold camps of\nthe Nelson mining division, in company with Dr. J. F. Walker, provincial mineralogist, and left on\ntthe Sundav morning train on hii\n(home trip, taking with him a large\nlliumber of new mineral specimens.\nF With thc two Dr. Walkers were\n'Hartley Sargent, resident engineer\nof thc eastern mineral survey .district, and Dr. 3. S. Stevenion, as-\neislant engineer at Victorii, whom\nSir. Sargent relieved here last week.\n[ Mr. Sargent Joined the otheri\n\u25a0when they arrived Wednesdiy from\n'Cranbrook. and the party ipent the\nlast half of the week in the Ymir-\n[Salmo-Sheep Creek area, making\n;<5almo their headquarters, visiting\nthe different operating gold mines,\nand inspecting different showings.\nL Dr. J. F. Walker and Dr. Steven\nbon left Sunday forenoon for Vic-\nItaly Pushes\nMilitary Plans\n,    ROME, Aug. 4 (AP)-Italy'i military program was pushed at tht\naame ripid pace today despite agreement at Geneva upon a formula designed to settle the quarrel with\nEthiopia.  Political  circle!  laid lt\nwas in no way indicative of the\nissibility of a peaceful settlement\nthe problem within tho frame-\njrk of the league.\nTransports   embarked   workmen\nami supplies at Naples with sailingi\n! for  East  Africa  scheduled today\n[and lomorrow. Other larger ihlpi\nare returning from the colonics, and\nI will embark this week with heavy\nLcontingents of troops.\nI    Although the government claimed\nfit had achieved a diplomatic victory\nLit Geneva, it rigidly restrained Its\nJ apokesmen from characterizing thc\ncouncil decision as \"important.'\n\\   A government spokesman isserted\nthe hopes of the Italitns that their\ncountry'! needs in East Africa may\nbe met by treaties ire exhausted,\nand insisted Italy places no great\nimportance \"on the work of the\ncouncil of thc league of natloni.\"\nA SPORTING ACT\nI BATH, England. (CP). \u2014 Bruce\nMitchell, letding the South Africans\nagainst Someraet in the absence ot\nHerbert Wade, made a fine sporting gesture. I.. Hawkins. Somerset\namateur, strained hii tide while the\ntourists were batting. Mitchell taking hii place In the field. The touring crlcketa won a tight game by\n51 rum.\nWENT OVER BIO\nLONDON, (CPi. \u2014 Don Budge,\nyouthful Calilomian, was playing\nBaron Gottfried von Cramm in\nWimbledons center court when\nQueen Mary entered the royal box.\nThe baron bowed stiffly. Budge\nhitched his trouien, looked embarrassed and finally waved and grin-\nend at her Mijesty. The Queen\nbowed and imiled.\n* Britiih phyilclin! warn that a liquid poison ihould never be kept in\nan ordinary bottle, ai it often ii, but\nonly in the bottle in which lt wai\nbought, properly libelled.\nClarence Graham\nof Hudson Bay Rail\nFame Passes Away\nSASKATOON, Aug. 4 (CP) -\nTrail-blazer and pratcical dreamer\u2014\nthe man wbo spied out the land for\nthe famoua Goose Lake line 1909\u2014\nthe man who saw a vision of many\nyean realized in the completion of\nthe ribbon of steel to Hudson bay\nto carry Saskatchewan'! wealth to\nmarket \u2022\u2014 Clarence Graham died\nearly Sunday at the home of a\nbrother at Neepawa, Manitoba.\nDeath followed an illness of three\nyears which necessitated his withdrawal from active interest in questions of the day, foremost among\nwhich was the Hudson Bay railway.\nPOPE BETWEEN\nTWOSTORMS\nClaims Italy's Move Is\nViolation of Peace\nin Colonization\n\u25a0y ANOP.UI BERDING\nAuoclated Prtn Foreign Itaff\nCASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, Aug.\n4 (AP)\u2014Pope Piui, torn between\nconflicting principles, was represented today at believing one of\nthem\u2014peaceful coloniutlon \u2014 ii\nabout to be violated by Italy'! move\non Ethiopia.\nBut throuth that violation the\nother princlple-'spread of the Catholic religion\u2014may be fulfilled.\nPrelates said recent developments\nin the Italo-Ethiopian struggle had\nplaced thc pope, now in summer\nresidence herc, in a delicate position.\nOn thc one hand is hii love and\nconcern for the Ethiopian. He himself had the Ethiopian college built\ninside the Vatican, the only foreign\ncollege inside its walls. On the\nother hand are hli friendly relation with Muuolini's Italy\u2014closest\nlince 1870.\nMoreover, propogation of the\nCatholic faith has not been rapid ln\nEthiopia, lt likely would be more\nso if Italy wtre to take control. But\na conflicting principle ii that of\nnon-reiort to force.\n-THI NILION. DAILY NEWI. NILION. B.C-MONDAr MORNPNO. AO-aOIT I. 1MS '\nDRESS TOUR HAIR TO SUIT HAT\nCARTOON RILES\nTHE JAPANESE\nWASHINGTON. Aug. 4 <AP)-\nThe Japanese ambassador. Hirosl\nSaito. hurried back toward Wtth-\nington from an Interrupted vacation today to determine whit ihould\nbe done tbout a United Statei magazine cartoon caricaturing Emperor\nHirohito.\nSiie of the August issue of Varlty\nFair, which carried the cartoon,\nwas banned ln Japan.\n\"The affair results from a difference in viewpoint,'' one itate depirtment official uld privately.\nfHere we think nothing of limpoon-\nIng our high officials. Including tht\npresident, but thc Jtnaneie consider\ntheir emperor lacrea.\"\nHeaded \"five unlikely hiitorlcil\nlituatiom by ont who Ii sick ot the\nume old headlines,\" it pictured the\nemperor carting away the Nobel\npeace prize, J. P. Morgan on a toap\nbox denouncing cipitalitm, William\nRandolph Hearst ai ambassador to\nSoviet Russia, Senator Huey Long\n(D\u201e La.) in a monaitcry tnd Admiral Byrd In furs \"wintering\" in\nTahiti.\nWEATHER STILL\nCOOL, NELSON\nContinued cloudy and damp\nweather tent the mercury Into further retrett over the week-end tnd\nSundty evening wu exceedingly\ncool. A clear spell at night after an\nexceedingly heavy ihower about 1\np.m. wai partly responsible for the\ndip. Sunday the mercury varied bo-\ntween 91 and 62 degrees.\nCHINA WILL NIVIR\nBECOME JAPANESE IN\nOPINION OF BANKER\nQUEBEC, Aug. 4 (CP)-Were\nJapan to lucceed in controlling\nChina, the country would be better\noff economically, D. E, Sassoon,\nprominent member ot the banking\nhouse of Sassoon, ot London ana\nChina, uld here Stturdiy before\nsailing for Englind tbotrd the liner\nEmpreu of Britain.\nIt wai alio probable, however,\nMr. Sassoon uid thtt eventuilly\nthc Chinese would assimilate the\nJapanue. Certainly China would\nnever become Japaneie.\nUilong tummtr hat, ekttchtd In Parlt, li worn over exactly tha right eolffure te tet It off.\n\u25a0y LUCIIN LILONQ\n(Special Cablt to Centril Prtn)\nPARIS. \u2014 During the lummer\nmonths and their attendant heat,\ncoiffurei assume much mort importance than thev do at any other\naeaion. Permanent waves have\nlargely answered tht problem of the\nsummer coiffure, but even to, with\nfrequent tea excursion!, etc.. more\ntime and attention hai to be devoted\nto it. Consequently, lt must be more\nstudied, and not too elaborate, to\nfar ai thoie charming but time-tak\ning ringlets are conctmed.\nYourcoiffure mult continue.\nof course, to be studied ln relation\nto the hats you choose. Are you\nwearing one of those hats with the\nbrim that sweep! forward, revealing a good portion of the back of\nyour head? Or will you wear one\nthat reveals the forehead and part\nof the hair? Those capelinea in\ntransparent lace also preient a\nproblem, for they muit cover a\nsleek head beneath.\nWith thc hat that hai its brim\nsweepin* forward, visor fashion,\nsmart women are wearing a few\nsoft and large cuds massed rather\nlow on the head. With the hat\nthat Is swept back from the forehead they expose either a neat\ntrim line at the forehead, with a\nmodest row of curli at the nape of\nthe neck, or some smart women continue to have a few flat curls at the\nsides of the held and showing a\ncenter or side parting. Thii latter\ntype ot coiffure is alio worn with\nthe broad-brimmed hat\nTRAIL GIRLS\nTAKECOUPLE\nGo Into the Lead in\nLadies'Softball\nPlayoff\nTaking both enda ot thc Sunday\ndoubleheader at Trill with Nelson\nreps. Scotty Rosi' AU-Stan of Trail\nwent Into the lead in the race for\nthe Wert Kootenay ladies' aoftball\nchampionship and possession of the\nVancouver Province trophy now\nheld by Nelion. With the score itand-\ning at 12-12 at the end of the -seventh Inning in the morning pme,\nthe Trail club went on a wild bitting rtlly in the eighth which coupled with costly errori, netted them\nnine runi. the fintl icore ot the game\nreading Trail 21, Nelion 15. Trail\ntook the lead- ln Uie fourth inning\nof the afternoon game and wai never\nhetded, but the Smelter city aggregation had to stave off a wild Nelson scoring ipree in the eighth Inning when the Nelson team collected\nseven hlta. which coupled with errors, gave them eight runs. The Nelson nine icored three more in the\nninth but were unable to reach\nTrail. The final icore of thc iecond\ngame wu 23-16.\nFollowing the games the team\nmanagen agreed to play the fifth\nand lixth garnet in Nelson next\nSunday.\nThe Nelaon manager and playan\nrepeatedly proteited Umpire Cam-\ncron'l calll of ball! and strikes, ai\nwell ai leveral decisions on the\nbasei. Sundty evening Gilbert Rowling, manager of the Nelion team\nstated that Nelion had requested\nthat both Cameron and Cronie be\ndrooped from further participation\nin tha series ai officials.\nSENSATIONAL PLAYI\nA drizzly rain spoiled the mom*\nIng game and made fielding and\nDitching difficult, but deiplte the\nfict thit seven errori were chalked\nup against both clubi. several players on both clubi pulled a number of\nsensatlonil plays.\nTrtll outhlt Ntlion 17-12 In tha\nmorning gtmt, Isabel Wright tnd\nJotlt Ron ttch gtttlng thrtt hits.\nand Mary Grlplch tnd Annt lip-\nrunoff two tteh. Allot Dunn wu\nwu tht big striker for tht Ntlion\nrept with two homt rum tnd a\ndoublt. Ron Ittwart and Piggy\nDontldton ttoh got two.\nBoth teamt uied two pltcheri,\nHelen Ling replacing Helen Mawdsley in the fifth tnd Hazel Spien replacing Rosa Stewart In the eighth\nHtzel Mawdsley. Anna Gavrilik\nand Iubel Wright were exceptionally effecjlve in waring drlvei that\nseemed to be sure hits. Alice Dunn\nof Nelson pulled down five hird-hlt\nballs In center field for putouls.\nElvera Matheton, Peggy Dontldson\nand Mary McDougall came through\nwith icveril nice cliches,    Rou\nStewirt, Alvlna Arlt and Peggy McOovern, all played well for tho\nlosers.    Peggy  McGovern,  Nelion\ncttcher, wu nit behind the etr by\nthe flnt Trill batter and knocked\nout. but after a ihort reit pluckily\ncarried on and received a big hand\nfrom the crowd.\nSummary by Innlngi:\nNcison .32 202 102-13   12   7\nTrail . 191 000 4lx-21   17   7\nHome rum\u2014Alice Dunn, 2; Iubel\nWright, Agnei Stewirt; three-btsc\nhits\u2014Mtry Grlpich. Lilly Saprunoff:\ntwo-bue hiti\u2014Alice Dunn. Iubel\nDonovan. Tina Mandeville, Joilc\nRou: double playi\u2014Matheion to\nMcDougtU to Arlt\n\u2022ECOND OAMI\nHuel Splen took the mound for\nNelion in the afttrnoon game,\ntanned ilx batten and walked leven.\nShe repeatedly proteited bills and\nstrike! and aht wai backed up by\nteammatei and official!. Cora Miller\npitched nice ball for Trail after being touched for four hit! and a like\nnumber of runi ln the opening Inning. She iteadied down then for a\ntime but wu driven from the box\nIn tht eighth when Jean Spiers\ndrove a homer, and Wilma Milne\nand Hazel Spiers followed with two-\nbese hits. Helen Ling again relieved\non the mound but she wai hit freely.\nNelson added three more in lhe\nninth. Elvera Matheson and Peggy\nDonaldson singled, Alvina Arlt doubled and two fielders' choice, accounted for them. Huel Mawdsley\nand Liza Edward made two imart\nplays to retire thc side.\nTrail'! big innings were the fifth,\nsixth and ninth, when they icored\nfour in each.\nTINA GETS FOUR\nTina Mandeville cime through\nwith four nice hits, including a\nhomer, for Trail, Isabel Wright got\na homer and two singles, while\nRoie Severn and Anne Gavrilik\neach got two singles.\nPeggy McGovern wu Nelson's big\nhitter with tour smacks, Alvina Arlt\ngot two doubles and a single, and\nJean Splen. Hazel Spiers and Elvera\nMatheson each got two hlta.\nHaul Miwdsley and Iubel\nWright wtrt tgtln the milnsttyi\nof tht Trail Infield, with Roit\nSevern and Tlna Mtndivlllt alio\nturning In good gimei. Tht latter\npulled off a ont-hindad catch to\nrob Jean Spitn of a home run.\nWllma Milne, ucond buemin\nfor Ntlion, who wu making htr\nflnt appttrtnet In tht uriu for\nNelion, made two catchu In tha\nthird Inning thit wtrt of ienu-\ntional varltty. Iht ran nttrly to\ntha right fltld foul Una to rob\nMirgiret Minduct of a hit. Allot\nDunn wai credited with four out-\noutt, while Piggy McGovern\npltytd htr uiuil inippy gtmt behind the plite.\nTommy Bird and Johnny Aurelio\ncoached the Nelson team ln the\nabsence ot Anthony Scanlan.\nSummary by Innings:\nTnil  020 364 034-23   16   5\nNelson  400 001 083-16   17   8\nHome runs\u2014Isabel Wright, Jean\nSpien, Hazel Spiers; three-base hits\n\u2014Elvera Matheson, Tina Mandevllle:\ntwo-bue hiti\u2014Alvlna Arlt 2, Peggy\nDonaldson, Tlna Mindevllie.\nTeami were:\nNelion\u2014Alice Dunn, Row Stew\nirt, Peggy McGovern, Iubel Donovan. Jean Spiers, Elvera Matheson,\nPeggy Donaldson, Alvlna Arlt,\nWilma Milne, Hazel Splen, Agnes\nStewart. Mary McDougall, Berna\nKline. Dot Jarbeau.\nTrail\u2014Margaret Manduca. Anne\nGavrilik. Iubel Wright, Joiie Ross.\nLiza Edwards, Rose Severn. Haiel\nMawdsley. Tlna Mandevllle, Lilly\nSaprunoff. Cora Miller. Helen Ling.\nMary Griplch, Helen Mawdsley,\nLilly Griplch.\nJohnny  Cameron of Trail  and\nAlex Melnnii of Nelion refereed.\n_\nCalgary Woman Is\nKilled in Crash\nLEWISTON. Ida., Aug. 4 (AP)-\nMn, C. A. Herald, 68, Calgary died\nin a Lewiston hospital early this\nmorning from injuries received in a\nhead-on automobile collision four\nmiles west of here last night on the\ninland empire highway.\nMn. Herald wu a pauenger In\na sedan driven by her son-in-law.\nJames Templeton, Lewiston, which\ncrashed with another sedan driven\nby George Alford, Everett, Wash.\nAlthough each car carried seven\npassengers, the other occupants of\nthe machines escaped injury.\nSheriff Dennis Costello, Ascotin\ncounty, said both drivers appeared\nto be at fault and neither was held.\nCommunists Will\nBattle Fascism\nMOSCOW, Aug. 4 'AD-Com-\nmunists are ready to participate\nwith \"certain bourgeois organizations'' In the estabUinment of united\nfront governments in natloni where\nFascism threatens, lt wu asserted\ntoday in reports read at tha seventh\ncongress of the Third Internationale.\nAlthough Communists will Join\nwith such \"bourgeois\" groups, it\nwas laid, thc \"masses' must realize\n\"final salvation\" can come except through establishment of Soviet power. .*\nWheal Samples\nAre Excellent\nSmiley Shows Wheat\nGrown at Creston\nReclamation\nJ. W. SmUey. of NeUon. who hu\njust relumed from a trip to Cruton brought leveral fine umplei ot\nwhett trom the reclamation area\nand itatei that a bumper crop li expected there this year. AU umplu,\nwhich ha itatei were average\ngrowth! and not in any way picked\nfor ipeclal exhibition, would itand\nabout iV, feet ln height, with exceptionally large hcidi in nearly\nevery cut.\nMr. Smiley states that most of tiie\ncrop will go about 40 busheli to tha\nacre u tht atand it heavy and there\nis not a weed to be seen.\nThe tour umplu which ha had\nwere from varioui pieces of ground,\nthe grain being town with different\nsoil preparation, AU samples were\nMarquis.\nThe fint umplc wai town on\nJune 3 and lt had been disked ln.\nAfter 59 days thera wai an ample\ngrowth of straw and large headi.\nThe kerneli had not itarted to fUl\nout. but, ihould the weather be fev\noraole during the milk-stage, there\niano doubt that this wheat wUl go\n30 bushels to the acre.\nFINE SAMPLE\nThe lecond sample wai from late\nspring plowing, and had been growing SV dayi. The headi were larger\nand better developed. The third\nwas from fall plowing, pulled after\n63 dayi growtn. Thla lamplt wu\nconsiderably better, and a fine\nstand like that, trta from weeds,\nwould quite easily go 40 to tha acre,\nit was believed. The fourth ample\nwas from ipring plowing but trom\nlind that had been broken tour or\nfive years ago and allowed to go\nback. Thli sample wu u tine u\none would wish to see and there\nwas every Indication of very large\nkernels. This particular simple wu\n65-day wheat.\nIn all there li about 390 acru In\ncrop ln both reclamation projects,\ndeclared Mr. Smiley. Ot thli only\nabout 26 acru had been a failure\nand tests had shown tha reason for\nthat ai being too much lime. All\nvegetable!, except peas, had been\ngrown with great succeu.\nWith regard to oata, uid Mr.\nSmiley, Guy Constable had a itand\nthat he estimated would UlUy go\n75 or 85 busheli to the acre. He had\nobtained 62 samples of wheat and\nhad planted them In small plots.\nEach sample had thrived exceptionally well.\nHighlanders at\nFuneral of Dean\nand Mrs. R.W. Brock*\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP)-Wilh\nImpressive military ceremony,\nfuneral services for Lt.-Col. R. W.\nBrock and Mn. Brock, victim! of\nTuesday's air crash at Alta Lake,\nB.C.. were conducted in St. John's\nchurch Baturday.\nOfficers and men of the flrat battalion, Seaforth Highlanders of\nCanada, of which Col. Brock was\ncommanding officer, formed the military cortege. Behind them walked\nmemben of the faculty of the Unlveralty of British Columbia, representatives of Dominion, provincial\nand civic, government and people\ntttm all section! Of Vancouver's\nbusiness and social Ufe.\nKASLO MISS IS\nATEAHOSTESS\nLaura Giegerich Pays\nHonor to Guests\nin Town\nKASLO, B.C., Aug. 4. - Mill\nLaura Giegerich entertained a few\nfriends tt the tea hour Tuesday\ncomplimenting Miss Eileen Garland\nand Miss Elizabeth Colwell of Winnipeg and Mrs. G. A. Sandercomb\nof Trail, the two latter ladles being guests of Miss Garland, a former\nKasloite who is holidaying at Mirror Lake. Miss Giegerich'i other\nguests were Mrs. Richard Erb ot\nCalgary, Mrs. F. V. Harrison and\nMrs. G. E. L. McKinnon of Cranbrook and Mrs. J. H. Stubbs and\nMrs. J. W. Power of Kaslo.\nGeorge Johnston was down from\nthe Utica mine to take in the regatta and water sports. He returned to the mine Thuraday.\nMrs. J. P. McLennan of Trail.\nwho is ipending the lummer in\nKaslo, had as her guest Miss Butter\nof Pitlarchy, Scotland, who ii touring Canada. Misa Butter has left\nto visit coast cities.\nMr. and Mrs. Beaumont and children of Lethbridge have lecured\nthe Abey cottage for a month, while\ncompleting their hoUdays begun\nsome weeks ago.\nA. H. Wood of Trail arrived in\nthe dty Thuraday to ipend a few\ndayi holiday.\nMin Gladys Coombi, who had\nbeen viiiting friendi ln the city.\nleft Thunday for her hqme in New\nDenver.\nMr. and Mn. O. McDougall, former Kuloltu, now realdent in Ron-\nland, are ipending a few davs ln\ntown visiting relativu and old\nfriends.\nMn. Carl Hlld left Friday to vlalt\nfriends and relatives in Kimberley.\nAlgot Nordquist was ln fram Salmo during the week, a luest of Ws\nmother, Mn. Charlei Lundberg.\nMr. and Mrs. E. M. Eaton ware\nThursday vlilton in Nelion.\nC. J. White hu returned trom\na buslneu visit to Ferguion.\nSCHOOL PRINCIPAL\nWUUam Glbion of Duncan, B.C.,\nhu been appointed principal of\nKulo high and public schools to\nsucceed J. A. Fraser who hu resigned and accepted a position ln\nNelion. Mr. Pruer was well liked\nby hli pupils and membera ot the\nteaching itaff. Both ha and Mn.\nFruer were populir ln loclal clrclei\nand will be greatly mlued after a\nresidence in Kaslo ot tour yean.\nJohn Pope hu returned trom\nHall creak: where he had been\nplacer mining In company with J.\nJ. Skillicorn.\nErnut Girrett hu returned trom\na visit to Ferguion.\nMrt. J. A. RiddeU and children,\nKate and Jlmmle, hava returntd\nfrom a visit to Alniworth. where\nthey wtre guests-of Rev. and Mn.\nT. E. Reed.\nMitt Flo Griyling hu returned\nto Ymlr attar a ahort vlilt to her\nfathtr, A. L. Grayling.\nF. T. Abey ot Rowland ipent t\nfew days In town with Mn. Abty\nduring tha week.\nJ. E. MlUer was a Thundiy vliitor ln Nelson.\nMr. and Mn. Zabrlskt and children ot Raymond, Alta., ara holidaying ln town and have secured\nthe Mrs. Robert Hendricks' home\non the hlU lor their stay ln the\ncity.\nRev, and Mn. A. L. Elliott have\nleft for their home ln Taber, Alta.,\nafttr apendlng a month in town.\nDuring his stay here Rav. Mr. Elliott conducted icrvices in St. Andrews United church during the\nabsence of the pastor, Rav. T. W.\nReed, who with tils family, la holidaying at Ainsworth.\nMrs. H. T. Hartln and sons have\nreturned from visiUng friendi and\nrelative! ln Kamloopi.\nMr. and Mrs. S. W. Miller of\nVancouver wera recent viaiton in\nthe city coming in to attend a meet-\nLtt't tat, who't thli? Thrtt\noueuei. Right, Jun Harlow, In har\nnewest itudlo portrait mort allur.\nIng thin ever. If neeuury.\ning of the Bluebird Mlnu, Limited\nGerrard Rudkin of Vancouver ti\na vilitor In the city, a guett ot hit\nparenta, Mr. and Mn. W. P. Rud\nMr. and Mn. Frank Wilion and\nfamily have moved from the Abey\ncottage on A avenue to the Archer\ncottage on C avenue, near Vimy\npark.\nMin Margaret Gllker who re\ncently returned from a visit to Nel:\nion, hai been viiltlng trlendi in\nAinsworth during tha put tew\ndayi.\nMlu Katherlne Gillis hu returned from a visit to Nelaon.\nYoung Henry Beaumont li a paUent ln Victorian hoipltal. Ha Is\nthe ion ot Mr. and Mn, Buumont\nof Lethbridge who ara ipending the\nholldayi here.\nMln Irli Clarkt and Mln Mabel\nBeck were vlilton it Alniworth.\nRoland Edward ot Ymlr wu a\nrecent vliitor in tha city.\nCubs May Play\nIn E. Koolenay\nKapak Plans Take His\nYoung Ball Stars on\nThree-Day Tour\nPete Kapak, manager of tht Naw\nGrand Cuba ball team, which put\nup a great game against the Trail\n\u2022enlon on Sunday, etated Sunday\nnight that the team had received Invitation! to play at Cruton, Kimberley and Cranbrook. He bellevu\nhe will bt able to take hli chargu\non this tour shortly if financial arrangements can be made. No definite date for tha three-day tour\nhas been aet\n1\n\"DUKE\" WAIMAN\nIS INNEISON\nFormer Hockey Star\n\"Pitches His\nTent\"\nTrail Wins Cricket\nGame From the Forks\nTRAIL, B.C., Aui. 4. - Trail\nCricket club defeated Grand Forki\n90 runi to 21 ln a match played\nat Tadanac Sunday afternoon.\n\"Dukt\" Wait-in. tht old waa-*\nmaiter ot former Nelson hockey\nteami. but lately of Oldi, Alta.. has\nreturned to tht city and li thinking\nof pitching hli tent heritor awhile.\nDukt latt Nelion in lttt and has\nnlived for leveral Alberta teams\nsince then, acquitting himatU com-\nmendebly.\nHe la imprened aad plautd with\ntha auditorium project and btUavaa\nlt wlll do much for Nalion, atpaciilly\nin tha hockey world.\nDukt played on the tamt forward\nUna u Bob Penny and Roy Hucl-\nmtr and tht Nalaon ttam rod* htgh\nin thou yun. Sinct luving ha hu\nplaytd for Drumhelltr, Luicar an.\nOldi. He coached tha B.C.-Albtrti\nintermediate chimpi of Linear.\nPIGEON RIDES\nBLINDBAGGAGE\nKimberley Bird Beat\nIts Way Penticton\nto Midway\nKlmbtrley Homing olub hat\nplgtoni thtt fly. Thty ilio have\nplgaoni that do ntt btlltvt In\nflying\u2014far. Thty alw hava ana\nplgton that dou not balltva In\nflying or yat ilttlng Idly an umt-\nont'i houittop. Thli bird, KHC\n66-36, hu arrlvtd In Ntlton and\nIt came by train.\nIt wai aaught ai Midway en\ntha draw-bar of a freight Mr bitting Ita way aaitward, pruumtbly\nto Klmbtrlty. All effort! ta dli-\nlodgt tht bird, which wat flnt\n\u2022un on tht train at Ptntlcton,\nfilled, lut at Midway It wu Matured and brought to Nelion by\nR. I. Grerar. Hi Is naw feeding\ntha plgton which ht uya \"Is\npntty will ftggtd aut\"\nBRITISH MEDICAL\nMEN IN TORONTO\nTORONTO, Aug. 4 (CP) - In\nroutt to Mtlbournt. Australia, tor\ntheir annual convention, 150 mtmben ot tha Britiih Medical auociation arrived har* today.\nTh* delegatu wiU laav* her* tomorrow for Port McNIcoU to nil\nfor Fort William. They will ipend\ntwo dayi at Banff and will uld on\ntha Aorangl from Vancouver on\nAuguit 12.\t\n\"Love\" Subject\nof Lesson-sermon\n\"LOW wu th* iubj*d of the\nLeuon-Sermon in First Church of\nChriit, ScHnUit, on Sunday.\nTht Golden Text wu: \"Tht Lord\nhith appurtd of old unto mt, uylng. Yu, I hav* lovad the* with\non everluting love: therefor* with\nloving klndnau hav* I drawn thu\"\n(Jeremiah 31: 3).\nAmong the citation* which comprised the Leuon-Sermon wai the\nfollowing from the Bible: \"For God\nhath not glvan ui the spirit ot fur:\nbut of power, and of love, and* of\na lound mind\" (II Timothy 1: T).\nThe Leuon-Sermon aln included\nthe following pauage trom the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\nand Hulth with Key to tht Serlp-\nturei\" by Mary Baktr Iddy: \"The\npower of God bring! deUverance\nto tha capUve. No power ctn withstand  divlna  Lovt.\"\nFur leal stomachs are being obtained trom Indian hunten on the\nwut coast of Vancouver island for\nthe purpose of obtaining additional\nInformation concerning the food of\ntheie inlmili during their annual\nnorthward migration,\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED DEPT.\nREAD FOR PROFITS - - USE FOR RESULTS\nAIL CLASSIFIED-AD\nORDEE FORM\nFill in Below and Figure the Cost of Your Ad. Yourself\nRATI!:\u2014 11c ptr lln* per day, Ilx eonitcutlvi dllly Iniertlom far tha prloe tf 4.\nMinimum ooit of Imertlon 22c   Minimum numbtr tf llnu chtrgtd, t   Ratu ar* lut\n10% for prompt payment   Nam*, addreu and bax numbtr (whtn uud) art part ef ad.\nand therefore ehirgeiblt.   Uu thli form and write plainly.\n\u25a0m\n  \u2014X\u2014\u2014     \u25a0 J\u2014\u2014ft-\u2014\u2014.m\n\u2022trut (er P.O. lox No.) ..-__.*.\nNam* ..._._:\nClaulf Italian ._\nNumbtr of Dtyt ....\n: Offle* ....-_____.\nAmount Incloiid I .\nFor Speedy Results\u2014Try the Classified Way!\n Eutern brook trout cinnot wlth-\ntand competition, with other ipe-\nlei of fish; but they thrive lf pro-\nscted ln high mountain likes, In\nooli, and quiet itream!.\nGarden lovers are reviving Inter-\nit in \"old\" roiei that ware grown\n1 gardens before thi modem hy-\nrids were dtvtloptd.\nOur\nSale\nContinues\nThtre ii ne rtaton\nwhy tvtry mtmbtr\ntf tht ftmlly ihould\nntt htvt r 1111 y\nimart ftttwur ti\nlong ai wt irt offer-\nin*;\nSuch\nExceptional\nValues\nIn ihoti for mtn,\nwomtn and chlldrtn\n\u2014DON'T DELAY!\nTtkt advantage of\nthttt truly wondtrful bargaini!\nR. ANDREW\n&co.\nLeaders in Footfathion\n._\u25a0_\u25a0-.-\u2014-_\u25a0-\nTHI NILION. DAILY NIWI. NILION. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. AUGUIT 9. 19S5\n..._-.____._.._._._.____-_________\u2014\u2014\n0{\\%\nSocial Happenings\nin Nelson City\nThli column It conducted by Mrt. AL J. Vlgntux. AU newi of a\n\u25a0odal nature, Including reception* private enftrtilnmmti, ptnontl\nitems, mirritgci, etc., will appear in thla column. Telephone Mra.\nVigneux at her bomt, 519 Silica itraet.\nA. D. McLeod, miniger of the\nRoyal Bank of Canada at Kamloopi, formerly of Nelion, arrived\nSaturday to ipend his vication in\nNelion. Mn. McLeod and daughter\nEllis havt been htrt for tht past\ncouple of weeki.\n.  .  t\nMlw Eleanor Merrifield ot Procter visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nVlilton In Nelaon Saturday Included Stanley Thomai of Perry\nSiding.\n\u2022 ii\nMn. Neilson left yeiterday for\nVanoouvar.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nVan. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham and Mn. Grahim had as their\nweek-end guests at their Willow\nPoint home, their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrl. Jamei Bryden of Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. WUllam Taylor.\nSilica itreet, hai returned from\nipending t week at Queens Bay\nwere they were gueiti of Mr, and\nMn. A. 3. Cornish.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nC. D. Jarvii hai returned to Procter after a few dayi ipent in Nelion.\ntat\nMiss Janet 0. Leslie, Stirling hotel, has as her guesti her parents.\nMr. and Mn. Leslie of Okanagan\nLanding.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. R. Hunter of Creicent Valley\nand her sons Bobby and Lawrence\nwere in town Saturday.\n.  .  .\nMn. A. S. Ritchie and son Paul\nof Procter ipent Saturday ln Nel-\nMr. and Mn. Oscenon of Erit\nviiited the city Siturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. Dally, luperlntendent of the\n\u25a0Queen mine, wai a recent ihopper\nin town.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nMn. T. M. Auld tnd family art\ncamping on the North Shore.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. C. P. Perry of tht\nReno mlna were viaiton in town\nSaturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAlbert Nelson ipent the weekend at the home of hia parenti,\nMr. ind Mri. D. Nelion, Crttcenl\nValley.\ntea\nLorna A. Campbell left Saturday\ntor tht coast cities.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nVlilton ln tha city Saturday included J. E. Mathieson ot New Denver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Dawn Sharp, Hoover street,\nhas returned trom Crescent Bay\nwhere she has been the guest of\nMiss Muriel Whimster.\ntti\nMn. G. T. Ironside ot Silverton\nwat a weak-end visitor at the homc\nof Mr. and Mrs. C. Norris, Fairview.\nShe was accompanied by her guest,\nMn. Graham of Durango, Colo.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nJ. Rowe of Balfour visited town\nSaturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. J. P. McFadden and\ndaughters, the Misses Louise and\nBarbara were In town Saturday\nfrom the Kootenay Bella mine\nwhere Mr. McFadden ii luperlntendent.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMln Jeannette Plckard, Victoria\nitreet, haa returned from a couple\not weeki viiit at the home ot Mr.\nand Mn. M. Bostwick.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nJ. Arbeuagh of Spokane viiited\nthe city during the week-end.\nMn. J. H. Wensley and her daughter Mn. T. W. Smith of Crescent\nBay were among shoppers ln town\nduring tht week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00bb\nMist Adeline Nlcolieiit of Pernle\nis the guest of Mn. F. Marapodi,\nHigh street.\naaa\nMn. McKtlltr of Creicent Valley viiited town Saturday.\na . i\nMn. A. H. Dennis of Fort William.\nOnt., who has been the house guest\nof her brother and aliter-in-liw,\nMr, and Mn. Joeeph Bradihaw.\nSilica itreet, left yeiterday for a\nvisit to coaat cities.\na  t  t\nMn. A. Slpea haa returned ta\nVancouver after attending the golden wedding annivenary of ner\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs.  J.  E. Annable,  Hall  Mines\nroad, which took place a week ago\nFriday. At the ceremony fifty yean\nago Mn. Slpea wu ona of Mn,\nAnnible's bridetmalds.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMlu NalUt WaU of San Franciico,\nCalif., left Saturday for tha aouth\nafter viiltlng har parenti, Mr. and\nMri. Thomu Wall it La Franct\nCreek.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMln Crlbbon of Slocan Park,\npoit mlitr-eu, viiited Nelion Saturday,\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMn. T. Ktelt of South Pork, who\nhai baen viiiting ln town for a\nfew days, returned Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nJohn Hewlett of Trail It viiltlng\nhii family in Nelion.\nMr. and Mn. F. Bucklt of Boulder\nivere week-end viliton ln tha city.\nMn. H. Brunner of Grand Forki\nspent the week-and ln Nelson the\ngueit of her daughter, Mn. F. Marapodi, High itreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. W. H. Slmmona of Sitcum\ncreek visited in Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. R. Green of Spokane\nare guetti at the home of the latter's\nparents. Mr. tnd Mn. J. A. Irving.\nThey wtre accompanied here by\nMri. Qreen'i lister. Mlss Norma\nIrving, who has been spending the\nput couple ot weeks in Spokane.\nWhllt here they are attending the\nGyro convention.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Hancock of the ReUef Arlington mine li viiiting hit family on\nCcdir itreet\n\u2022 .  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Reginald K. DiU\nhive taken up residence in their\nNorth Shore home, lhe Valhtllt.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA. Ling of Fruen Landing viiited\ntown Saturday.\n\u00bb  \u2022  \u2022\nMn. A. F. McDonald of South Slocan ipent Saturday ihopplng in the\ncity.\na \u2022 a\nLee Martin left Saturday via the\nC.P.R. for Chicago.\n\u00bb   \u2022  \u2022\nMr, and Mn. Stuart Fletcher and\ndaughter Roiemiry of Calgary, who\nhavt been spending the past couple\nof weeks viiiting it the home of\nMr. and Mrs. A. McL Fletcher,\nNalion avenue, Fairview, and Mr.\nand Mn. George Helbeque. Bonnington. leave today for their home.\n\u2022 i   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. L. H. Choquette, Latimer itreet, havt is their gueitt Mr.\nmd Mn. Joieph Choquette of Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nErnut Manden of the itaff of tht\nRelief Arlington mine it viiiting\nhii fimily on Baker street.\n...\n3. G. Btnnett and hla lister Mn.\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMENUS, RECIPES and\nHINTS\n\u25a0PAOE FIVE\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nMenu Hint\nDeviled Eggt in Tomito Aspic\nCreamed Potatoes Buttered Carrots\nBlueberry Cobbler\nIced or Hot Coffee\nIf you thing this menu too fancy\nfor family consumption, you can\ntry lt on guuta for lunch, or Sunday night supper. You need not\ndtvil the eggs, either. If you prefer simple, hard-boiled eggs. But\ndeviling will gtve them an extra\ngood taste. Any berries may be used\ntor the cobbler, or apples, peaches,\netc. Add a bit of cheeie. grated, to\nthe creamed potatoes. Or. it you prefer not to serve potatoes with this\nmenu, mske cheese biscuits to serve\nwith the iilad.\nToday'i Raelpii\nDeviled Egga In Tomato Aipic \u2014\nTwo cuna tomito Juice, one-half cup\ncelery, cut fine; one-fourth imall\nonion, iliced; one package unfavored, tlilhtly iweetened gelatin,\nthree tabletooons vinegar; ont-half\nteaapoon aalt one teaspoon Worcei-\ntenhire. if deiired: iix deviled eggi.\nSimmer tomato Juice, celery and onion together for 10 mlnutu. Do not\nboll. Strain, and mix with the gela\ntin. Add tha other seasonings and\nflavorings. Cool in a ihaUow, oblong pan. and when partially congealed, press the deviled egg halves,\ncut side down, into tht mixture.\nChill until firm, turn out and serve\nfrom a larg* platter garnished with\nlettuce. Serves iix.\nDeviled Eggi\u2014ShtU hot. hird*\ncooked eggs, cut them in halt lengthwise, and remove the yolks. Mash\nthe yolks and season highly with\nsalt, pepper and salad dressing or\none tablespoon of melted butter\ncombined with one tableiooon vinegar. Chopped paraley. onion Juice,\ndeviled ham, celery teed, or other\nseasonings may be used If desired.\nRefill tha whites with the yolk mixture, and lerve cold or as directed\nabovt.\nBlutberry Cobbler \u2014 Two cups\nberries, one ttblupoon flour, one\ncup lugar. one-tourtn teaspoon\ncloves, one-eighth teaspoon aalt. two\ntablespoona lemon juice, one-half\ncuo water, three tablespoons butter.\nThoroughly wash and drain berries.\nAdd flour, sugar, cloves and ult.\nPour Into a buttered shallow baking oan and add rest of ingredients.\nCover with crust.\nMabel Rocllffe expect to have as\ntheir gueit during the Gyro convention Mr. and Mrs. Lee Evanson\nof Spokane.\n.   .   .\nMr. and Mn. G. 0. Fair and\ndiughttr Clive ot Salmo visited\ntown Saturday.\nbaa\nMaurice  Bourgeois  ot Creicent\nVaUty ipent Saturdiy in Ntlton.\ntea\nA. Trtgillui. Nelaon tvenue, Ptlrvlew, hat it hii guesti hii diughttr,\nMrs. Htrvey Fleury of Rossland,\ntnd her two children.\nMn. J. H. Reid and Mn. P. W.\nCtrtwright, Sheep Creek, wert\nJoint hostesses at a lawn party recently. One of the features oi tht\ntftemoon't entertainment wu a\npie-naming contest won by Mn. J.\nP. McFadden. Mrs. T. Often won\nconsolation. Invited guuts were Mn.\nJ. P. McFadden the Minu Louise\ntnd Barbara McFadden, Mn. W.\nGalloway. Mn. J. Gillowiy, Mn. J.\nMcNab, Mrs. C. Nairn, Mrs. B. York,\nMrs. T. Olsen, Mrs. C. McDonoghue,\nMn. J. Hansen, Mn. E. Halbauer,\nMrs. S. Ellli, Mn. 0. Williams, Mn.\nBeck and Mn. A. Duncan.\n\u2022  \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mn. J. H. Raid, and Mn.\nF. W. Cartwrlght ind family, Sheep\nCreek, were week-end vlalton in\nNelion.\nMn. R. S. Nichols' and daughter.\nMia Blanche Nlcholi, of Vincouver, are vtcttlonlng in Nelson,\nguuts at the home on Robson street\nof Mrs. Nlchola' father and brother,\nJohn Jackman and Jamu Jackman.\nMrs. Nichols wu a resident of Nelion up to about 29 yean ago, coming hare with her parenti u a\ngirl nearly 40 yean ago-\nNone of tha California Indiam\nwere farmen: they depended on\nhunting, fiihing and gathering wild\nplanta for their food.\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMIUION NITWORK\nCKOV CJCJ CJCA OHWK CFQC\n630       (90       730       7(0       140\nCFJC\nHO\nCJAT CFAC  CKY  CKCK  CRCV\n010       030       IM     1010     1100\nCJOO\n1230\n5:00 \"Varletiei\", Detroit (exc.\nB.C.): 8:30 Old Time Frolic. Sukatoon (exc. B.C.); 6:00 BablUage. ore.;\nJeanne Dujardlni. soprano; rhixtd\nvoice quintet. Montreil; 7:00 Nitionil Liberal issoclition. CKWX\ntnd B. C. Net; 7:00 News md Weither Forecut; 7:15 Jesse Crawford, organiit, N. B. C. \u2022 Chicago:\n730 Earle Hill's orch., Ban.!;\n8:00 Wutern Radio Playen, Winnipeg; 8:15 Isaac Mamott, 'cellist: Wilfred Davidson, baritone:\nNestor Ivimtv. accompaniit. Winnipeg; 8:30 Newi (B.C. Net.); Al Oliver'! Hawaltans, Edmonton, exc. B.\nC; 8:46 Gene Fogarty and orch. Jasper; 0:00 At Eventide. Kamloops;\n9:15 Jimmie Noble. Scotch comedian. Chilliwack; 9:30 An Earful\nof Music, director Huel McDomld.\nGlidyi Cooper and 0_zio Rois. vo-\nctlists. Vancouver; 9:45 Romany\nMoodi. trio, loloist, Edmonton; 10:00\nValley Echoes. Chilliwack.\nN.B.C.-KPO NITWORK\nKHQ KOW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\n590 120 640 610 920 970\n6:00\u2014Beaux Arta Trio; 5:30 Meredith Willson's orch.; 6:00 Contented\nProgram. Lullaby Lady, orch.; 6:30\nDouble Bell, drama: 7:00 Amoi 'n'\nAndy, blackface comedians; 7:1.1\nTohy md Gus. Mario Chamleo:\n7:30 Voice Of Fireitone. William\nDilv's orchestra: operatic stirs,\nguut artists; 8:00 Henry King's\norchestra: 8:30 Eddie Duchin's\norchestra; 0:00 Leonard Keller's orchestra; 9:30 Marshall's Mavericks; 9:30 Fort Dea Moines orch.:\n(KPO); 10:00 Newi Flashes. Sam\nHayes: 10:13 Anti-Sleep society, variety; 11:00 Sid McNutt's orchestra:\nLamolit Hour, organ (KPO); 11:30\nJimmie Grier's orchestra.\nC.B.I-DON LII NITWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n570 610 140 1130 1270\n5:00 Radio Theater: 6:00 Wayne\nKing's orch.; 6:30 Lilac Time with\nthe Night Singer; 6:46 Tito Gulur.\nMexican ttnor; 7:00 Ate Lyman's\nStands, comedy teams; 8:00 Delmar\nEdmondston. DL; Bert Black's orch.:\n8:15 Jav Eilick md Orch.. (DL);\n8:30 Bill Hoaan's orch.: Road to\nFame, amateur thow (DL): 0:00\nHoracio Zlto'i orch.; Headline! of\nthe Put. John Nesbitt. (DL); 9:15\nBill Fltck't oreh.; (DL); 9:30 Jtn\nGarber's orchwtra. (DL); Floyd\nTown's orchestra: 10:00 Jimmy\nDavis'   orch..   (DL);   10:30   Merle\nCarlion'i orch.. (DL); 11:00 Grift\nWllllimi' orch. (DL); 11:30 Lu\nHlte'i Dmce orch.. (DL).\ntOO k CJOR 499.7 m\nVANCOUVIR 600 w\n5:45 1% md Zeb, I.T.; 6:15 Newi\nFluhei; 6:30 Oroh.; 6:45 Waterfront\nPublicity committee talk; 700 Real\nLife Dramai: 7:15 lmmedlite Issues.\nMclnnes: 7:30 Financial Talk: 7:45\nStudio Program; 8:00 Bud Steele,\nsongs: 6:15 Cltiiens Leigue of Cin-\nida; 8:30 Snorts: 10:00 News; Other\nperiods: Records.\n1030 k CFCN 291.3 ni\nCALOARY 10,000 w\n6:30 The Red Held Fimily: 7:00\nReal Life Drama; 7:13 Maurice Gill.\nflutist: 7:30 Prince Mus-Kee-Kee;\n7:45 W. R. Howson, Liberal; 8:00\nAlbum of Melody; 8:1.1 Economic\nSifety Leigue; 8:45 C. F. Jamleson\n9:00 News.\nBRITIIH EMPIRE PROGRAMS\nShort Wave\u2014Pacific Standard Time\nTRANSMISSION  6\nTwo  of tht  following frequtnclet\nwlll bl uied; Q8D 11.750 kcs. (25013\nml; CSC 9-10 kci.. (31.32 m): GSL\n6110 kci. (49,10 m).\n7:00 p.m. Big Ben. A Recital by\nEileen Pllcher. contralto md Guy\nWeizt, organ; 7:45 News. Dairy Produce and Pig and Poultry Notu; 5:00\nCloie down.\nHEAR\nrt.hon. MACKENZIE\nKING\nS to 5:30\nPacific Standard Time\nTONIGHT\nCFCN\u20141030 ke.\nC|OR-\u00ab00 kc.\nCJAT-910 kc.\n\u25a0difiiilliCilHtHtdi\nof the MEAGHER'S Ltd.\nSTOCK\nUnchallenged Values\nThis Stock Must Be\nCleared at Onee\nDrastic Price Cuts\nMONDAY-Last Day at These Prices\nCOATS\nOriginal prices disregarded \u2014 every coat\nmust go! No matttr!\nLangburne, Del Monto-Hickay or Laiare Novek. (Every\none beautifully furred).\nSPRING\nSUITS\nValuei to $85\nSale Price\nValues to $69.50\nSale Price\n$lrj.95       SI4.W\nViluai to\n$39.50. SALI\n$9.95\nSALE OPENS 9 A.M.\nCORSETS\nYou've never seen prices so low on these quality garments by Nemo-Flex and D. & A.\nValues to $7.50 Values to $16.50\nSale Price Sale Price\n95\n>1\u00ab\nVALUES You'll Never See Again\nDRESSES\nNothing held back! Every dress ridiculously reduced.\nEarly shopping will pay. Dresses by Queen Dress, Golflex,\nNational Dress, etc. Not a dress over $6.95. Dresses for\nevening, afternoon and street wear.\nValues to $50     Values to $35   Values to $29.50\nSale Price Sale Price Sale Price\n$\u00a395     $4.95     *2-'s\nOutstanding VALUES in YARD GOODS\nNOTHING HELD BACK-EVERY YARD MUST GO!\nPrinti, Mirquliettei, Flinnilittn,  Muilini *^k_\nValuai to 45c yard. 0C\nSALE PRICI, YARD , W\nVollei, Organdlei, Broadclothi, Cretonne!, Rayon Silks, Towelling. Valuai\nto 75c yird. SALI PRICI, YARD\t\n19\u00ab\nWooleni, Cretonnit, Curtaining!. Valuei\nto $1.35 yard.\nSALI PRICI, YARD i\t\n29.\nSilk!, Velvet!, Draporlei, Felts ind Lin-\ning*. Valuei te $1.50.\nSALI PRICI \t\n59\nSKIRTS\nSilk or wool. Rif. $5.50.\nSALI\n$1.19\nBEDSPREADS\nRiyon. Reg. te $5.50.\nSALI\n$1.95\nSOCKS\nChildran'i ill wool.\nSALI\n19*\nOLOVES\nKidi. Rif. to $5.00.\nSALI\nm\nUNDERWEAR\nChildren'! illk ind wool.\nSALI\nm\nHOSIERY\nSilk and wool. Rif.\nto $1.25. SALI\n*9*\nOLOVES\nSilk. Rof. to $1.25.\nSALI\n9*\nANKLE SOX\nSALI PRICI\n9*\nBRASSIERES\nSilk creee.\nSALI\nH\nGLOVES\nKiyier'i.\nSALI\n19*\nLace and Ribbon\nThread, Floss\n*\nUNDERWEAR\nLadlei' Silk md Wool.\nReg. to $2.95.\nSALI\n49*\nBRASSIERES\nNemo-Flex.' Reg. to $2.75.\nSALI\nm\nSHORTS and\nMIDDIES\nSALI\n49*\nWRAPPED\nMERCHANDISE\nPARCELS\n10*\nNO\nREFUNDS\nEXCHANGES\nAPPROVALS\nI\nTHIS SALE IS CONDUCTED BY\nFINKS LIMITED\nStoro Fixtures for Salo\nShow Cases\u2014Cash Register\nFiling Cabinet, etc.\n \u2014\n~\u2014\n\t\n .\u2014\nPAGE SIX \u25a0\n:.!_\u2014 r.-CVDAY MORNING. AUGUST B. 193S-\nNHamt Daily Um*\nEitabttihed April 22. 1001\n\"Britiih Columbia'! Most Intereiting Newspaper\"\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPubUihed  every  morning except  Sundiy  by\ntbt NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY 'LIMITED.\n216   Baker   Street   Nelaon,   BriUih   Columbia.\nPhont 141 Private Exchange Connecting aU Departmenta\nMember  ot  the   Audit   Bureau   ot   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian   Preu   Leued   Wire   Newi   Service.\nMONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1935.\nLLOYD GEORGE WILL FIGHT\nThe political situation in England is as complicated\nas in Canada and when the election rolls around there\nare certain to be, as in this country, at least four parties.\nThere is first the National Government dominated by\nthe Conservatives, but with Labor represented principally by Ramsay Maconald, and James Thomas and\nLiberal Nationalists led by Sir John Simon. Then there\nis the Labor party, which is the largest opposition today\nand the only party which is in a position to challenge\nthe present administration. It has weak leadershtp,\nwhile its ablest representative, Sir Stafford Cripps, has\nintimated he would wipe out parliamentary institutions.\nThen there is the official Liberal party led by Sir Herbert\nSamuel. It is the remnant of the once powerful Liberal\nparty which seems to be disappearing as a political factor;\nFinally Lloyd George has thrown his hat in the\nring.Lloyd George has a new deal program which he\nlaid before the National Government. The Cabinet has\nrejected his scheme for ending unemployment and rehabilitating Britain generally. So Lloyd George is hot and,\nlike Hon. H. H. Stevens in Canada, is organizing his own\nparty. He is planning to have independent candidates\nthroughout Britain and is supposed to have a large\nsupport from the Nonconformist churches, which have\nindorsed his views. Lloyd George at 72 seems still to have\nthe vigor of youth. He is the most picturesque and,colorful figure in British politics. He will liven up the battle\nwhich up to the present looked like a walkover for the\nNational Government. Lloyd George has not much chance\nof winning, but he will provide a lot of spectacular\nfireworks.\nENGLAND AND GERMANY\nFrequently the dispatches bring reports of speeches\nby notables in England, advocating greater friendship\nfor and closer relations with Germany.\nJust as frequently come speeches by other notables,\ncalling attention to the excesses, of Nazidom, and warning the English people to keep aloof.\nThe fact is England is in a quandary. If it were not\nfor one thing, the English and the Germans would be\nenjoying close national relationships and a community\nof interest would be developing rapidly. Every consideration of national policy suggests, for the United\nKingdom, good working relations with Germany. But\nevery instinct of good government, and fair play, and\npublic decency, in the English breast, is affronted by\nthe things that take place in Germany under the Nazis.\nIt is not merely the fact that Germany is under a\ndictatorship. The Englishman is broadminded enough to\nadmit other countries may find dictatorships better suited\nto their national temperments and conditions than democracy. If other nations choose the path of autocracy he\nis inclined to pity them, but makes no objection.\nIt is the things that are done under the dictatorship\nthat rouse his resentment The persecution of the Jews,\nthe assassination of leaders who will not slavishly follow\nparty dictation, the brutal treatment of intellectual leaders of the nation\u2014these and other things of the sort make\nthe Englishman wonder whether he is dealing with a\nnation of barbarians. He cannot stomach them.\nThat is why some Englishmen, seeing clearly the\ndesirable trend of international affairs, continue to advocate friendly relations with Germany. To all such well-\nmeant efforts there is an immediate reaction from those\nwho cannot overlook the things that are done in the name\nof thc dictatorship.\nPOTATOES HAVE EARS, TOO!\nRussian scientists are by no means through with\ntheir triumphs. They have, it will be remembered, announced a diet that will keep anyone who misses a firing\nsquad alive for 188 years. They have bred strange animals\nand fruits. And now they have discovered that potatoes\nhave ears as well as eyes. Delicate ears they are, too.\nEars so sensitive that they hear sounds that man can only\nknow are there by turning them into light. Stranger still,\nhowever, is the fact, vouched for by the Russian scientists, that the potato is strangely responsive to this music\nof the spheres. Put on a concert of supersonic waves, anything from 400,000,000 cycles a second will do, and the\nseed potato will show his gratitude by bursting in bloom\nearlier and by producing anywhere from 64 to 69 per\ncent more little 'taters than will his untuned brethren.\nSo if you would crash the news columns with a\nregular Believe It Or Not potato crop, arrange to sing\nit a silent song away up in highest C, somewhere about\n199 stories up. How one produces these non-audible\nnoisps is a question to discuss earnestly with someone who\nruns a \"House of Magic.\"\nA DEFECT\nAs Mr. Lloyd George once bluntly\nexpressed it: \"Democracy is a funny thing. If people did not persist\nin taking up my time asking for\nJobs, I would then havc time to\nthink up ways and means of creating Jobs.'' \u2014Winnipeg Tribune.\nIt Is very easy to demand reform!. And reformi may be nccei-\nsary. But it may be just as well\nthat we pause occassionally to count\nthe cost, to consider that all of these\ngood things mean money, and that\nit Is thc taxpayer who must provide thc money.\u2014Ottawa Journal.\nENGLISH HUMOR (HAI HAI)\nDEPT.\n\"My dorter's playin' Beethovln tonight.\"\n\"Yer dont syc so! Well 1 do ope\nshe tvins.\"\nPIPE PERIL\nLatest movement to get _ fillip\nis the anti-tobacco crusade. Lightning knocked thc pipe from thc\nmouth of a Saskatchewan farmer.\nThat's important evidence against\nIhe weed habit. \"Out of his own\nmoulh,'1 as il were.\nThe farmer was dazed. \"It all\nhappened in a flash,\" he said.\nNervous addicts arc abandoning\nthe pipe. As a safety measure, the\nhabit of chewing has been revived.\nThe western incident has led to\na flurry on the market. Pipes wiih\nlightning rods arc now on the way.\nPipes were knocked from mens\nmouths only once before, we understand, and that was during a\nriot in Scotland.\nHabits change. A few years ago,\nthc bolt that glanced off that Western farmer would have hit a cigar.\nWHY QUARREL?\n\"George,\" she asked, \"if we were\nboth young and single again, would\nyou want me to be your wife?\"\n\"My dear,\" he answered,  \"why\nstart a quarrel just as we've settled\ndown to enjoy a quiet evening?\ntat\nNO TEACHERS WANTED\n\"Why,   Noah!\"   exclaimed   Mrs.\nWemster, as she found him kissing\nthe maid. \"I am surprised!\"\n\"No. my dear,\" he returned. \"I\nara surprised. Your arc astonished.\"\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA POEM, LONELY\nAS A TREE\nThc aged elm which inspired\nJoyce Kilmers poem \"Trees\" has\nbeen removed by the tree di\nscasc control department. But so\nfar. unfortunately, no sopranos have\nbeen chopped down.\n.   ,   .\nHOWLER8 FROM ALL\nSOURCES\nContralto is a low sort of music\nthat only ladies sing.\n*   t       \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nDust is mud with the juice squeezed out.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThe theory of exchange, as I understand lt. is not very well understood.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWells' history is a veritable millstone on the road to learning.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA mugwump is a bird that sits on\nlhe fence with its mug on one side\nand iti wump on the other.\n.   .   .\nA door knob is a thing that a revolving door goes around without.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPROBABLY\nA New England spinster was visiting in a southern home, where the\nold negro mammy was used to\nspeaking her own mind.\n\"You ever been married. mlss?'j\nshe asked the spinster.\n\"No!\" was the ihort anawer.\n\"You got any children?\"\n\"Of coune not!\"\n\"My!\" drawled the old Mammy.\n\"Ain't you been lucky!\"\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nNOR IN A WEEK\n\"Alaskan settlers Impatient over\ndelay ln getting homes erected.\"\nThey should remember that Nome\nwasn't built in a day.\n|   10 YEARS AGO   I\nI From Nelion Dilly Newi Fllei I\nAUG. 5, 1926\nJamu H. Gagnon. Silica itreet.\nhas returned to Nelson after a month\nfighting fires in the Edgewood district.\nIt!\nC. Major of Procter wai a Nelson visitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. McDonald. Mill\nstreet, have as their guest their\ndaughter Miss Jessie McDonald who\nhas completed her first year as\nnurse in training at St. Luke's his-\npital. Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nMiss Helen Sloan, head of the\nBriUsh Columbia Telephone company at Grand Forks, with her sister. Miss Frances Sloan of the Central school teaching staff here, arrived In town Monday. They arc\nguuts at the homc of Mr. and Mrs.\nA. J. Dill.\n\"We must not beat him quite to death\u2014he is the only Jew in the\nplace and we want him for further action.\"\u2014Der Simpl (Prague).\n20 YEARS AGO\nFrom Nelson Dally Newt Fllu\n<i> m)\nAUG. 6, 1916\nL. A. Mclntyre, former member\nof the Nelson Daily News staff, is\nincluded in the draft that will be\nsent overseas from the 47th Battalion at Vernon.\nt. t   \u2022\nMrs. Lorne A. Campbell of Rossland is visiting in Nelson.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nAmong thoie on leave herc from\nthe 47th Battalion nt Vernam are:\nPrivates Fred Miller, W. R: Cutler.\nE. Audet. George Roc, H. C. Baker\nand J. Jerram.\ni .i  t\nMrs. Paul Larson. Paul Larson and\nGrace Larson arc camping at Ainsworth.\n|   35 YEARS AGO   |\nFrom Nelion Dilly Tribune Fllu,\nAUG. 5,  1900\nD. W. Moore, ore purchaser for the\nTrail smelter, announced at the second annual sessions of the associated boardi of trade of south-eastern\nBritish Columbia that he had juit\nreceived word from Trail that the\nsmelter is to be enlarged at once by\nthe addition of two more lead furnaces.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nAbout noon yesterday P' E. Whalley was capsized in a sailing craft\non the lake opposite Nelson. The\nsteamer Nelson nicked him ,up a\ntew minutei later.\ng t a\nIn a quoits contest J. E. Annable\nlost to C. E. Miller. 31-20: E. G.\nSmvlhe lost to G. H. Wallace. 31-22;\nand W. Irvine lost to B. Whalley.\n31-23. Judge Forin has still to play\nGeorge Nunn.\nEYE TROUBLE APT TO BE EXAGGERATED\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nI iat today in the clinic ot what I\nsuppose every oculist would acknowledge to be the greatest hospital for eye diseases on earth\u2014\nMoorfield's in London. Two things\nimpressed me the most. First, that\nso many eye troubles can be helped\nby such simple means: second, that\neye troubles so often are nothing\nmore npr less than a local expression\nin the eyes of a general bodily disease.\nLet us try to exemplify these\nideas in the order named.\nThat most eye troubles are serious. And, in a way, I mean they are\nexaggerated.\nIt is natural to exaggerate them.\nHeaven knows, when your eyesight\nseems to fail you naturally worry.\nBut here is an example:\nA middle-aged man came in, led\nby his grand daughter. Both eyes\nwere bandaged. He was fairly blubbering with fright and .fear. He\nhad wakened up that morning to\nfind the sight in his right eye gone.\nHe was blind in one eye, he kept\nrepeating. He had promptly Iiad\nboth eyes bandaged and come to\nMoorfield's. He was sure the whole\nthing was due to iome very potent gin he had consumed the night\nbefore.\nThe doctor made a rapid examination and smiled. He put a drop ot\ncocaine in the offending eye\u2014and\nthen removed a fair sized cinder.\nThe inflammation caused by the\ncinder had blinded the eye, and the\ngin had only played the role ot an\nanesthetic\u2014it had covered up the\npain of the cinder's entrance.\nOther patients came and went. In\ngeneral, the spectator gathered that\ntheir troubles were not nearly so\nserioui u they thought. They were\nmore cheerful as they left\nThe attending oculist, who sees\nthousands of these cases a year,\nshowed a most curious illustration.\nThe patient was a woman of\nthirty-five, plainly clothed, but neat\nand evidently educated. She had\ncome to thc hospital several weeks\nbefore, because of constant dimness\nof vision. Careful examination revealed very little. She wore glasses\nwhich were found to be correct.\n(How seldom will most eye-examiners admit that your glasses are\ncorrect.) The eye grounds and optic\nnerve ihowed no diseue. The only\nthing noticed wu that the pupils\nwere large and did not contract to\nUght. The natural suggestion wu\nthat she had been using atropine.\nBut she denied the use of any drugs,\nunUl after careful questioning she\nsaid she had been ualng suppositories, which it was found contained\natropine.\nAfter discontinuing them, her eye\ntroubles cleared up.\nADVANCE WEATHER BULLETIN\nFor Wutern tnd Ctntrtl Canada,\nembracing British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba\nand Ontario.\nMon., Aug. 5, 1935.\u2014Generally\nclear and warm in west, slightly\ncooler eut; mild disturbance but\nonlv a few showery rains in southwest of central regions.\nTues., Aug. 6. \u2014 Somewhat un-\nlettled and probably some light\nrains along southern borders and\ndrifting to southeast; turning cooler.\nWed., Aug. 7\u2014The rains ihift\nto southeast sections, leaving thc\nnorthwestern sections of central\nprovincu fairly clear; a cool spell\nis indicated in all parts except\nthe Pacific slope.\nThurs., Aug. 8. \u2014 Unsettled in\nsoutheast and about the Great\nLakes sections, but clearing in the\nnorthwest; remains cool in most\nparti of central regions.\nFri., Aug. 9.\u2014Cool and clearing\nweather in most sections with unsettled conditions drifting to the\nsoutheast; mild disturbance about\nPacific southwest.\nSat., Aug. 10\u2014 Unsettled about the\nPacific southwest and southwest\nof central provinces, where it is\nprobably cooler; in the east somewhat warmer and in most sections\nclearing.\nSun., Aug. 11. \u2014 Showery rains\ncome into central provinces from\nthe   southwest   and   temperatures\ndecline; about the eut and great\nlakes country remains clear and\nwarmer.\nWeek ot Aug. 5 to 11, 1939, in\ncentral provincu begins with clear,\nwarm weather in the wut, but loon\nslow moving, scattering and showery rains drift through from the\nwest, causing a decline in temperatures. After some clearing, especially about wut and northwest\nsections, an unsettled, rainy condition drifts ift from the Pacific\nsouthwest, probably covering much\nof the country, but with very light\nprecipitation, except in spots, mostly about aouthwest and on southern\nborders. Cool west, but last of week\nrather warmer in eut\nThis second week of Auguit is\nexpected to be cooler than usual\nand somewhat more rainy than\nnormal, yet In some' sections the\nrains may bc very light as the character of the rainfall seems to be\nscattering and ihowery. In the central regioni there ii normally lomewhere around 2 inches of rain to be\nexpected in August and this year\nthc long range forecut indicates\nsomewhat above normal everywhere\nexcept in the northwut sections.\nMost of thc rains thia month drift\nin from southwest, only a tew coming by way of the northwut therefore it Is expected there wiU be less\nthan normal rainfall in north and\nnorthwest, but about up to normal\nin south and southeast.\nWHAT THE  PRESS  IS SAYING\nMOONS EFFECTS\nFor most persons, voung and old.\nthe moon has romantic associations.\nIt is. however, mainlv regarded in a\ndetached way. as something very\nbeautiful when it sheds its sheen on\nthe waters, when it throwi cloud\neffect! into relief, when it lights up\nglades and silhouettes forests against\nthe vault of night. When there is an\neclipse, as there wu a few nights\nago. the moon seems to acquire a\nnew significance. Thc fact that it\nshould be blotted out for a brief\nsnace of lime and that the periodicity of this happening can be foretold to thc exact seconds impresses\nitself on the human imagination and\nthe moon seems to acquire a more\nthan usually important placc in the\ncosmos.\nAs time goes on lt is possible that\nmore and more attention will be paid\nto the moon, for it is now believed\nto have a connection not only with\nthe weather but with insects as well.\nWhat the latter connection is has\nbeen the subject of recent research\nwork. The belief is that it may be\npossible in thc future to foretell epidemics of insect pests. Experiments\nhavc proved that moonlight has a\ndiscouraging effect on the night excursions of insects and that a floodlight fails to produce the same effect.\nThe suggestion is that moonlight reduces the physical activities of insects. It cannot be governed for thc\npurpose of reducing those activities,\nbut research work may be able to\ndetermine, according lo the amount\nof moonlight what pests can bc\nexpected. It is known already that\nmoonlight exercises a considerable\neffect on the growth of plant life,\nthat It is responsible for weather\nvagaries. It mav be that It has its\ninfluence on human nature itself.\nIt is believed indeed that there is\nmore \"love ln idleness\" when it ls\nat It! full and when Shakesnc.ire\nenvlaaged \"Cupld all-armed flvlng\nbetween the cold moon and thc\nearth.\"\u2014Victoria Coloniit.\nSAILORS' LIVES\nTwo cargo boata which tank In\nthe Atlantic with their crewi, the\n\"Milloool\" in October lait, the\n\"Blairgowrie\" in February, have\nrecently been the aubject of Inquiry. In the latter cue the court\nhas now declared its findings. It\nis disquieting to note the discrepancy between the favorable evidence given by surveyors and other\nexperts who had the duty of reporting on her, and the-unfavorable\nevidence of officers and men who\nhad served in her at sea. In heavy\nseas she shipped water, her shell\nin various areas cracked, rivet!\nworked loose, and weter accumulated. It wu shown that she had serioui defect: as a sea-going ihip,\nthat entriu about soundings were\nfalsified, and lhat though \"technically\" she had a sufficient complement of deck hands, ai a practical\nmaiter she had not. No \"wrongful\nact\" could be proved agalnit the\nowners, and yet, it appear! that\nmuch wu wrong, and that thoie\nwho served in her knew it. \u2014 The\nSpectator.\nSTATISTICS ON DRINK\nPresenting the figuru tor consumption of alcoholic beverages in\n1917 and In 1935. the United States\nNews actually often a riddle. The\npopulation of the United Statei has\nincreased by 26,000.000 in the past\n18 years and thc number of states\nin which liquor can be sold has increased from 20 to 37. but the con-\nsumpUon of beer has fallen one-\nsixth, that of wine one-third and\nthat of whisky one-third. In the\nume Ume federal revenue from\ntaxation of alcoholic beveragu hai\nincreased 40 per cent. How many\ngallon! of whisky, wine and beer\nwerc consumed on which no federal\ntax was paid? That quutlon haa to\nbc asked before Americana can congratulate themielvu on the growth\nof temperance.\u2014New York Sun.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Toachers\"\nWHAT CAN SOUTH  WIN?\nMatch point icoring in duplicate\ncontests hu taught Uie importance\nof playing for the lut profitable\ntrick and at the most profitable\ncall. There wai a period during\naucUon dayi and playing for stakes\nwhen South would not have bothered much to play for an added\ntrick worth only ten points, unless\nit could mean another 100 pointi to\nbe collected, as money games werc\nsettled on a basis of the nearest\nhundred. Now he plays for every\npossible trick. See how many hc\nshould win.\n\u2666AQJ87\nVKQ5\ntAKI\n\u2666 AQ\n\u2666 10 8 2\n\u2666 94\n\u2666 QJ54\n\u2666 K976\n5.\n\u2666 KM\n\u2666 J 10 7 2\n\u2666 98 7\nAJ43\n\u2666 94\n\u2666 A8 6 J\n\u2666 10 8 2\n\u2666 10 8 5 1\nBidding went: North. 2 spades,\nthird hand; South. 3 no trumps,\nwhich North let alone.\nThe opening lead was the 6 of\nclubs, although diamonds offered a\nbetter lead, saving the K of clubs\nfor a high-card of entry. Dummy's\nQ won. Declarer saw in sight a\nminimum of two spade, three heart,\ntwo diamond and two club tricks.\nNot needing to take a spade finesse\nto fulfill his modest contract, declarer refused to use his only entry\ncard to lead spades from his own\nhand. Dummy'i ace of spades won\nthe second trick. The Q lost to East's\nK. The J of clubs was led. leaving\nWut with a tenace over declarer\nand taking dummy's ace.\nThree spade tricks were run. East\nlet go his last club and lowest diamond. Declarer discarded two diamond! and the 8 of clubs. West let\ngo his lowest heart and lowest diamond. There were ilx more tricks\nto be played.\nThree heart honor! were run off.\nThe diagram below shows the three\ncards heid by each of the three first\nplayeri at the end of the tenth trick,\nwith South in the lead. West must\ndiscard one of his remaining cards to\nthe tenth trick. Which shall he let\ngo?\nNATURE PRESENTS\nPolar Bmp\nWHERE FOUND\nEdges of the Polar sea.\nPHYSICAL FEATURES'\nEight feet lone, tour feet'\nthree Inches high; wldt\nhead, broad, tapering mouth\nand narrow snout; narrow\nmouth . wllh large, sharp\nteeth; legs itrong and thick,\nwith padi ot hind feet cov.\nered with hair to glvt a grip\non the Ice: fur thick and\nharsh, reaching: neirly te\n(rround under the body\nColor\u2014yellowish    whit*;\nvery bright, brown tytt.\nWhllt other bean hug their prey to duth, tht poltr bur kill* with\nhit teeth. When the ihort Arctic summer It over, the bur and hli\nmate go Inland where lhe buries henelf In the mow for the winter\nand producti her cubi In the iprlng. Then he returni alona to the\nshore when he remains, occasionally doling In a ntarby uve. Hit\nwhite coat blendi io well with hii surroundings of tnow tnd Ict thit ht\nll tlmott Invisible. A great swimmer, the polar bur lovt! hot weither.\ncontrary to gtneral opinion. The sun's radiation from tht mow li\nextreme In tht Arctic regioni and tho heat Is ilmoit terrific it tlmn.\n\u2666 A Kl\n\u2666 QJ5\n\u2666 K\nN.\n5.\nts\n\u2666 -\u2022>\n410\nf.\n\u2666 \u00bbl\nThe iqueeze hu worked per-\nfectly. East alone could guard hurts.\nHe had to trust West to care for the\ntwo minor suits. If West lets go a\ndiamond the three cards ot that suit\nin dummy will yield a imall slam.\nIf West keeps hii three diamonds\nand let! go hii top club, declarer'!\n10 of cluba becomes good for the\neleventh trick and the two ton diamonds in dummy must complete the\nsmall slam. South bid only game, but\nhe can make a small slam, which, of\ncoune. neither North nor South\nwould have been justified bidding.\nFLOWERS ADD\nMUCH BEAUTY\nTO THE TABLE\nPROBLEMS\nReligious and Social\nQuestions Answered\nBy DR. WYLIE CLARK\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCentral Press Garden Expert\nThere is nothing which adds so\nmuch beauty to the dining table as\ndou a graceful flower, or arrangement of flowers.\nThere are certain rulu to be observed when arranging flowers for\nthe dinning table. Heavy massei are\nto be avoided. It ii much better to\nhave too few flowera than too many!\nFragrant flowen or foliage add\npleasure, but flowera of heavy scent\nshould not be used.\nThe size of the flower container\nused should be in accordance with\nthe size of the table. The arrangement itself should not be over 12 to\n15 inchei in height, so that one may\neully chat with guests across the\ntable, over the flowers rather than\nthrough them.\nFlowen whose foliage becomes\nslimy rasUy should not be used, unleu the bottom leaves are stripped\nfrom the stems, io that the water\nwill not become foul.\nWhen using flowen under an artificial light, we find that pale blue\nand iavender fade out and our arrangement makes an entirely different effect than wc planned.\nNO MORE QUARRELS?\nThc British Medical' Journal reports that a successful eye operation\nwas performed In England on a\nblind woman whose sight has been\nrestored by grafting part of a man's\neve on hers. It remains to be seen\nwhether the operation will enable\nher to share the same views as her\nhusband.\u2014Fort Erie Times-Review.\nA ihort time ago a preacher\nuld in a termon: \"We are itill a\ngreat way from complete unity.\"\n'll thtt true?-*-B. F, G.\nWe do seem to be so tremendously\ndivided that anything Ukc complete\nunity appear! as a complicated\ndream of a wandering brain. Thii is\na time of emphasized difference.\nDisagreements are proclaimed in the\nstreets and shouted upon the air.\nWe are in a jungle of confused\nthinking. Yet we are on the road\u2014\nthe right road to get out. The end of\nthe road may be nearer than many\nthink. We are travelling swiftly towards some goal. There is much light\nupon the way. The time of arrival ls\nbeing shortened.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDuring holiday time do not moit\nChristians ut ulde what llttlt\nChristianity they have?\u2014CM.\nThi! deal! with the liberty we\ntake at holiday time. Thii liberty\nhaa extended itself until it is huge\nin lize. We are away from our ordinary work and routine, therefore\nwe are away from all restraint.\n\"Nothing counts and nothing holds.\"\nMany years ago I asked one of the\nfathers of the church about starting\na bit of my holiday journey on a\nSunday night. His reply was: \"Remember you are not in your own\nparish.\" I was a long way from homc\nand therefore need not stick too\ncioie to rules. We should never forget that at all times we represent\nChrist. We are tuUfying before\nothers. They may judge Him by\nwhat we say and do.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nWhat chince hn a child In a\nhome when the parents are alwayi nigging, naity tempered and\nquarrelsome:\u2014P.S.N.\nThe chance is poor. Thc ladk ot\nthe finer sentiments of home life is\na handicap in the development of\ncharacter and there is a stront:\ntendency for the children to be liki\nthe parents. Children brought up in\na home where there is a harmony\nand good will have a decided advantage. While this is true yet there\nare exceptions. Some excellent\nhomes turn out children which are\nterrors, and some miserable homes\nproduce children who arc models\nof good breeding and fine manners.\nPerhaps in the former case training\nhas been overdone and in the latter\ndisgust has played a part.\n\u2022 t ttt\nWhy are to miny public men\ngetting  Into  flninciil  trouble?\u2014*\nD. N. E.\nIt would seem as if the questioner\nwas thinking of those who* misap\npropriate funds or lomethlng lik<\nthat instead of the whole businui\nsystem of risks and speculations. Thi\ndepreulon, the outcome of the ays\ntern or the waya ot using the system\nhu brought many into Ught corner\nwhere they needed a little read:\nmoney to help them out They couli\nnot borrow it. They had no securlt\nto offer. In a moment ot desperaUo\nthey have yielded to temptation, bt\nlieving they would be able to mak\nit right Once in they found gettin\nout an impossibility. No intention (\nbeing dishonest\u2014but all thc um\nheld gUilty.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nWhtre and how ofttn Is tht tx*\npruiion \"unquenchable fire\" uut\nIn the  Bible?\u2014Judgment\nTwice Matthew 3:12; Luke tS\ntit\nll \"unrebukable\" In the Scrip*\nturn\u2014Judgmtnt.\nOnce\u2014First Timothy 6:14.\nRESIGNATION\nWhy,  why  repine, my  penaiv\nfriend, .\nAt pleasures slipped away?\nSome the stern Fates will neve\nlend.\nAnd all refuse to itay,\nI iee the rainbow ln the iky,\nThe dew upon the grass;\nI see them, and I ask not why\nThey glimmer or they pass.\nWith folded arms I linger not\nTo call them back; 'twere vail\nIn this, or in some other spot,\nI know they'll shine again.\n\u2014Walter Savage Landor\nAUNT HET\nBv ROBERT QUILLEN\n*-\u00a7^-\n\"Maybe it don't look elegant,\nbut when a man ls eatln' a din*\nner I've cooked, I like to aa*\nhim lean and loosen a button.\"\nHAYMOWE\nand\nRAKES\nNow it the time to purchase a ntw mower or\nrake for your hay-making. Wa havo thorn in itotk.\nMower Repain for Moit of tho\nPopular Makei of Machinal\nQUICK SERVICE!\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholeiale and Retail Quality Hardware\n ' \t\n<V)_\n\u2014 THE NELSON. DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. AUGUST 5. 193S-\n-PAOE (EVEN\nT\n1\nI\nJfaUwit Satly _Nr ma\nMember of the Canadian DaUy\nNewipiRin AiBiclatlon\n.         \u25a0 *'    \u25a0 \u25a0*\"\" \u25a0 \u25a0    i\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Ixchingt conntctlng te\n$11 Otptrtmentt\nSubscription Rates\nSlnglg co\u00bby  $   .05\nBy carrier, per week     .25\nBy cirrier, per year _ 13.00\nBy mall ln Canadl, to tub-\nacriben living outline regulir\ncirrier arear. per month, SOc:\nthree monthi, $1.80: ilx month!,\n$3.00; one year, $5.00.\nUnited Stites and Great Britain, one month, 75c: six months,\n$4.00; one yetr, $7.50.\nForeign countries, other thin\nU. S, umt ti above plui tny\nextra postage.\nPERSONAL\nUP TO $50 EACH PAID FOR U. S.\nIndian head cents. Wc buy all\ndates, regardless of condition. Up\nto $1.00 each paid for Lincoln\nHeld cents. Up to $150 each (or\nCanadian coins. Wt buy Stamp\nCollections, Medals, Books, Old\nTaper Money, Gold, etc. Send 25c\nIcoin) for large illustrated price\nlist and instructions. Satisfaction\nguaranteed or 25c refunded. Hub\nCoin Shop. 159-3 Front Street,\nSarnla, Ont. ' 27891\nHighest quality rubber\ngoods. 25 Latex assortment Ior $1.\nOrder direct and be iun ot best.\nPicked plain. Free catalogue. National Importers, 812-Ccntre SI.\nCilrary, Alta. (24781\nEczema Itch Pilci Ulcers Try Geo Lee\nChini Remedy at Hudson's Bay Co.\n(27001\nNEUSUN  DAILT   NIWS CLAIVJIKIEU\nids. Thi leading salesmen and\nbuyers lor Nelion ind eurroundlnj\ndistrict.\nINFORMATION WANTID\nANYONE KNOWING THE WHERE\nabouts of Herbert Atherton, formerly of Fernie and Trail, com-\nmutilcale Immediately with Box\n879 Vernon, B. C. [**__>']\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nGIRL    WANTS    HOUSEWORK,\nmorning. Phone 478R. '27JS3I\nHELP WANTED\nTHOROUGHLY EXPERIENCED\nwaitress wanted it once. Highest\nwages paid. Must be attractive.\nApply Home Cafe, Rossland.\n127401\nROOM ANDJOARD\nNEAR LAKESIDE PARK. PHONE\n524L or apply 902 Nelson Ave.\n(27841\nHOUSES WANTED\nFOR RINT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS. ETC.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms. Apply 918 Kootenay Street.\n^^^^^^^^^ (2539)\nFURN1SED    HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Anntble Block.\n(2404)\nFURN.  OR  UNFURN. APTS.  BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts, bldg\n(2403)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nFrigidaire equipped suites, (24051\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nCLEAN COMFORTABLE HOTEL.\nFurnlihed cottages on beach.\nReal campi.ig. Fishing md iwimmlng, etc. Write to Outlet hotel\nW. A. Ward, Procter, B.C, 12791)\nHOUSE WITH 3 BEDROOMS AND\ngarden. 1st or 15th Sept. Ph. 338Y.\n(27851\nWANTED TO RENT CHEAP\nshack in Nskusp. Reply Box 2853\nDaily News. (2853)\nALPIN-! INN, CHRISTINA LAKE,\nvil Catcade. Ideal holiday retort\nBeautiful surroundings. Sports.\n^ (2792)\nCABIN   WITH   VERANDAH   ON\nfood beach, fruit and vegetables\nncluded, Phone G.A. West, Sbully\nBench, Kaslo. R C. (2742)\nFOR SALE\nREAD THIS FIRST:\nDriving through a terrific thunderstorm in western Canada. Blair\nRodman skids off the road and Into\na ditch. A light through the trees\nbeckons him. Blair comes upon\na large house but a homely woman servant refuses to admit him.\nForcing hit wiy ln, the mistress\nof the houie. a lU-angcly-looking\nperson, uyi ihe can do nothing\nfor him. A huge, fierce dog in-\npears. Blair rum from the house\nwhen Ihe animal leaps tt him\nand returns to his crippled ctr.\nBltir walki levenl miles before\nfinding a town and a shelter. Next\nmorning he goei to a garage to\nhave hii car towed trom the ditch.\nMcClure, the owner, telle him\nthere are \"devlli\" ln the \"big\nhouse\". McClure tells Blair that a\nMiss Boisevain. a strange woman\nlives in the old house with only\na servant named Nita and Uiat he\ntakes groceries to her regularly\nbut never aces her.\n(NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY)\n_^_H      Chapter t\nMcClure. the garage man. drove\n_ truck out of hli garage, threw\naome rope Into it. and waited for\nBlair to get in. Juit ts he was turning out of the nirrow driveway\nthe bus from Winston stopped and\na girl got out of the front teat, while\nthe driver hoisted two suitcases nt*.\nof the bick compartment She stood\n\u2022puzzled for I moment, then went up\nthe tnlck where the two men were\n\u25a0tllng.\n\"Where ran I find Mr. McClure?\"\nthe tsked toftly.\n\"Thit'i me.\"\n\"Miu Boiievaln... do you know\nher? ... wrote me that a Mr. McClure would take me up to her\nflace, l few miles beyond Boisevain.\nam Janet Lord, and Fm to bt her\ncompanion.\" She imiled engagingly.\nMcClure looked her un and down\nbefore he aniwered. Blair law a\nalisht frown touch hii open, frank\nlace.\n\"Why, yei, I luppoae I can. In\nfact I am on my way there with\nMr. Rodmin. You can hop in. I'll\ntell the bui driver to bring your\nfcagi.\"\nBlair slipped out of the smtll seat.\nIntended to sit behind, when the\n\u2022girl moUoned him back. \"I'll sit ln\nfile back. It'll be fun.\"\n\"But not verv comfortable.\"\n\"Oh. thit'i ill right...\"\n\"Ctn't I tit bick with you? I'm\nafraid vou might fill, and there im't\nNancy Divorces\nlipintid fir mort than a yur\nJfrom htr huibtnd. Bolton Mallory,\nINaney Carroll, screen itar, ll htrt\nen en wiy te Rtno, Ntvtdi.\n[then to flirt dlvorot procttdlnoi.\nHumor ttyi iht wlll wtd toiin.\nroom for three in the front.\"\n\"Surely.\" With that, sho climbed\ninto the btck. on top of One of her\nsuitcases which the bui driver hid\nlust brought. As soon os she was\nsettlMI. she nulled off her snug fitting reit hat, and ran her fingers\nlightly through her yellow, short\nhtlr. Is If it wn a tremendous relief\nto set lhe tight hat off.\n'Tve worn it ill day.\" she apologized and her eyes met Blair's . . .\nbig violet eyes, with a hint of\nfatigue in them. Her face was pale.\nBlair thought, too pale, and her skin\nshone luminously. Thin, almost too\nthin she seemed, and her hands when\nshe drew off her gloves were slender\nand as fragile ts dellctte chint.\nShe closed her eyes end drank in\nth* fresh, clean air. Lashes of dark\nbrown swept her cheeks, touching\nthe faintly dark rings under her\neyes. There was a childish, elfish\nlook about the girl, as she sat there,\nher hands limn on her knees, her\nheid thrown back. A small nose, a\nsmtll orimson mOulh. slightly turned un it the corners... cheecks that\nheld no color at all... these Bnd her\nboyish figure made Bliir think of\nher ts i child. Everything about her\nexcept her eyes suggested extreme\nyouth. Her eves seemed older than\nher body, infinitelv older.\nA simple dark suit. blue, with a btt\nof white it the neck wis slmost too\nwirm for the summer dsy. Janet\nLord fanned her face with her handkerchief and unbuttoned her ihort\njacket.\n\"Hot, Isn't It?\" she said simply, In\na tired, small voice.\n\"Rather. I haven't told you mv\nname. It's Blair Rodman, and mv\ncar is stuck in the mud up by Miss\nBoisevaln's. I had to walk six miles\nlast night In thc storm and mud. so\nthat's why I look like a tramp.\"\nThe truck lerkcd along and once\nthe girl put her hand on Blair's\narm to steady henelf. She took it\niwiv Immediately, however, and\nBlair saw a flush of color on her\noale cheeks.\nPoor kid. going up to thtt houie.\nand thtt womtn! Blair wondered\nwhy the was going, and if she knew\nanvthlng about Miss Boisevain. She\nmiiht be a distant relative ... or\na slight acauaintance. . ..\nAt any rate, he pitied her. But\nhis pitv changed In in instant to\nInterest when a slight wind blew her\nblond hair over her eyes, and she\npushed the bright strindi bick\ntncefully with her fingen. Lovely\nhtlr. tnd with the sun on it. it glittered like spun gold...\n\"Do you know Miss Bolsevtin?\"\nhe asked abruptly.\n\"No. do you?\"\n\"No.\" the man iniwered ibrutly\nMinting a Cobra\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you (ind i cat or dog a pocketbook, Jewelry or fur or anything else of value telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\"\nAd will be inserted without\ncost to you. Wo will collect\nfrom the owner.\nAfter all he didn't know Miss Boisevain: had never even known her\nname until he came upon McClure.\n\"No. I don't,\" he repeated. \"I'm a\nstranger here. But you\u2014how do you\nhappen to be going to such a lonely\nplace? For you must know It's lonely In these hills.\"\n\"Oh. I'm going to love lt!\" Her\neyei sparkled, and her hands clasped tightly in her lap. \"You see, I've\nnever been in a place like this before. Never. Not even in the country.\nAnd I'm tired of the citv. and hammering a typewriter all day long.\nI've stood it now for four yetn. day\nIn and day out from eight o'clock\nin the morning until five it niaht.\nworking every minute in a big\noffice, where I'm iust one of fifty\ngirls who do the same thing. Then, I\nwork at night, too....\n\"I'm sick and tired of the grind,\nand always I've planned to go away\nand do something else ... I didn't\nknow what it would be . . . but I\nknew I would go. My... obligation;\nare all paid now. every eent of them,\nso I'm free to do as I please, as long\nas I earn some kind of a living for\nmyself. For besides working all\nday at the office. I've been working\nfour and five nights a week, too. to\nmake extra money. But I don't need\nto any more ... I'm free. I thought\nthis poiition with Miss Boiieviln\nwould rest me for six months or so.\nuntil I get a new grip on life, So\nwhen I saw her ad in the paper, I\nanswered it and got the iob.\"\n\"Her id ... did she put an ad In\nthe paper?\"\n\"Yes. in the Press in Vancouver.\"\nBAKERY BUSINESS\nFOR SALE   .\nAt FERNIE, B.C.\non account of death of owner.\nStock and fixtures may be inspected on application to undersigned and offers for business\nwill be received un to August\n19th. 1939.\nj. R. Nolan\nAdministrator Estate Annie\nBurUiicks.\n(28091\nWe carry largest stock reconditioned\nPipe and fittings suitable for ill ;\npurposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yard *\n220-lst E. Vancouver, B.C. (2797)\nWhere Are You\nHolidaying ?\nFor a prospective vacation spot read the\nNelson Daily News\nCLASSIFIED  Column\nSummer Homes\nResorts and\nCamps\nFor Service Phone lean Robertson tt\n144\nOut of Town  Readers\u2014Prompt  Attention Given\nto Mail Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nUSED MORE    Largest in the Interior    READ MORE\nTHOTOCUrH*\nFILMS DfcVELOPED-ANY SIZE.\n25c. With 1 print trom each net-\nalive. Extrajirintl i tor 29c. Sai-\nkitchtwtn Photo Supply, Sukatoon.  (2796)\nMAKE   AND   SAVE   MONEY\nUie the\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR\nLlit of wanted InvenUoni ind full\ninformttlon sent free. The Ramsay\nCompany, World Patent Attorney!, S73 Bank SL Ottawa. Cansda.\n(27951\nREAD THI CLASSIFIED ADS.\nun   Uttm-lt   parai\nBusiness ond Professional Directory\nAccountant! |  Inturtnct tnd Retl Estate\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, S.F.A.E.\nInternational Accountant\nP.O. Box 1081     Nelion, B.C.\n(2814)\nAiitytrg\nfc W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst. Assayer, Chemist. Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer:\nSampling A ents at Trail and Tacoma Smelltri. 301-309 Josephine\nSt., Nelion, B. C. (2819)\n\u25a0    \u25a0_-.i-.a___LlJiJUl,_i -i'-iv-\nj     GRENVfLLE H. ORiMW-OOD\nProvincial Aisayer and Chemist 618\n!    Baker Street, Nelton. B. C., P. O.\nBox No. 728. Representing Ship-\ni    pers' Interest it Trail, B.C. (2816)\nChiropractors\n.i. ft. McMillan, d.c. palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelwn.\n^^^^^^^^   (2817)\nF.   M.   WARREN  D.C.   BOX  872,\nGilker Block, Phone 119 or 759L.\n(2818)\nElectrical\n* J. F. COA,TES-Th_ Electric Store,\nSuppUi\nThone f\u00ab-\nes and Installation\nP. O. Box 1065\n(2819)\nEnglnttrt tnd Sunnyort\nFOR SALE-BARRELS KEGS. Sugar sacks liners. McDonald Jam\n_Co., Ltd., Nelson. B.C,   _J27M*\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nMODERfJ 7 ROOM HOUSE, FURN-\nace, fireplace, stone foundation\nacta of land, fruit trees, garage\noutbuildings, apply Mrs. Sinclair\nSUnley St. (25231\nTEAM OF GREY HORSES-\nweight 2800 lbs. Price reasonable\nfor cash. F. Simister, Creston, B.C.\n(27731\nUSED CARS\n1927  CHEVROLET  TOURING\ngood condiUon cheap. Ph. 789L1.\n(2774)\n3 ROOM HOUSE, ONE LOT, RE-\ncently redecorated, Close to Lakeside Park. $990. J100 cash, balance\naa rent. A Hall, Gordon Road.'\nNelson. (2812)\nFULLY   LICENSED   HOTEL   IN\nSood mining town. Going concern,\nlox 2780 Daily News, (27801\nbaMSin for QUicTTTiffi-n\nroom house, two level lots. Fruit\ntrees, garage. Close In. Ph. 137L.\n(2763)\nDOCS\nSPRINGER SPANIEL PUPPIES\nexcellent shooting dogs. R.S. Sears,\nKamloops,  B. C. (2810)\n(To Be Contlnuid)\nFOR SALE-BOSTON BULL PUPS.\nPhone Trail 424R1. (2891)\nPOULTRY AND ECCS\nLEGHORN PULLETS\nVery   choice,   vigorous   birds,\nbred to liy ind raised on clover\nrange.   8 weeks old, (9c each:\n10 weeks 75c and 12\nweeks 19c.\nSpecial prices on lots of\n100 and over.\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nMilner, B.C.\n(27931\nI FOR SALE-'30 FORD, MODEL A\nI   sports roadster. A-l shape, $225.\nShorty's Repair Shop.       (2890)\nFOR SALE, 31 FORD MODEL A\nsedan. Excellent shape. Terms. Box\n2856, Dally News,     (2858)\nFOR EXCHANGE\nSWAP JERSEY BULL. DE-HORN-\ned, quiet. Box 2760 Daily News.\n  (2760)\nTUITION\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Write for full information to 908-Dept. of Natural Resources, CP.R., Calgary, Alberta.\n(2794)\nBECOME AN EXPERT MINE Accountant. 20 yetrs' experience en-\n\u2022blei me to train you properly.\nWrite A. S. Baillie. 1010 Hall\nBuilding. Vancouver, B. C, (2811)\nPIANO TUNING\nTunc, Clean, Demoth. Repair, ipeclal. Vancouver Tuner, Est. 25 yrs.\nWrite E.C. Woodrow, Thrums, B C.\n(2941)\nE. L. WARBURTON Jt COMPANY\nNELSON, B.C.\nMine Survevi, Pltni tnd Eitlmite!.\nAgents Oili, Greties. Specialties. Bituminous coali from Crow'i\nNttt Pisi. Mine supplies ind michlnery, Pb. 239. P. O. Box 688.\n, (2823)\nH.~D. DAWSON.       Ntlton, B. C.\nMine Surveyi tnd Reporti\nB. C. Land Surveyor.\n^^^^^^^ (2831)\nBoyd C. Affleck, Frultvale, B. C\nLands. Mineral Clilmi. Witer-\nworks, surveys, pltns, estimites.\n (2822)\nA. H GREEN CO.. LTD 516 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelion. B.C. (2820)\nFloriifi\nSprays, wreithi, symbolic designs,\ncarefully mide at reasonable prices.\nShipped anywhere. Cut flowers and\nplants\u2014Phone 233\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE\n . (SUM)\nFun\nGUARANTEED STORAGE-EX-\npert remodelling and repairing:\nlow rates: prompt service. Polar\nFun Ltd... 948 Granville, Vanc'r\n________ (24M>\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD\nTHI tUYER AND SILLER\nOF THE  KOOTINAYS\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD.\nReal estate, insurance, *-entals\nJTLBaker St. (23251\nR. W. DAWSCN, Real Esta-e. In-\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hipperso.i\nHardwire. Baker street.      (282U)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery dticription. Real Est Ph. 99.\n^-m-~-~-m-m-m-~-m*w (2827)\nH. E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate. 308 Ward. St.\n(2828)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE,\nrentala, insurance. Annable Block.\n^^^^^^^^^ (2829)\nfJFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance, P.E. Poulin, Ph. 70.      (2830)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE,\nReal Esttte. Phone 135.      (2831)\nMachinist!\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor til classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding,\nMotor Rewinding, Acetylen;\nWelding.\nPhone 593           324 Vernon Street\n (2832)\nMaternity Hemtt\nELIZABETH PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Privtte. ConfidenUal Physician In attendance. Ph. Broad. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Waih.\n(2833)\nMining tnd Mill Mtehlntry\nEMPIRE MACHINES LTD. NEL-\nwn. Mining and Mechanical Engineer!.     _ (2834)\nPhotographt\n\"PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEASE\"\nGEO. A. MEERES. 715 Baker. Ph. 46\n  13835)\nSash   Ftctory\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY Hardwood merchant 217 Baker Street\n  (28361\nSecond Htnd Stores\nSEE ARK RECONDITIONED COOK'\nstoves before buying new one.\n (2837)\nGood chairs, kitchen tables, cook-\ning utensils at Mrs. Radcliffe's.\n  (28331\nTyptwrlttr Strvlct\nNELSON TYPEWRITER AGENCY\nSales and service. Phone 197\n  (2833)\nWitch Repairing\nSPECIALIST, REASONABLE Work      a\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St.\n(2840>\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nly Gto. McMtnui\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Run Weitover\nMAC. VOU CERTAINLY VWED Mf]\nLIFE BY 6ETTIMS -ME OUT OF\nMARRYlNff OOM\nALVARADO\nAmf3, \"ZARO TIMO\nHELPED ME-SHS'5\nDtlnt tha milking\u2014but a dan-\ngtrout Job. Ctrl Stryktr li ihown\nholding tht httd of t deadly king\neobra and forcing tht reptile to\npour out itt vtnom Into tht receptacle. Tho cobra wat milktd to\ntupply venom for a serum ore\npared bv Dr. Samuel Ptck of\nef Mount Sinai hotpltil, Ntw\nYork, The lerum ll used to Imtn\npain of canctr, hilt hemorrhtget\nand In treatment of tht bltedlno\ndilute, hitmoohlllt. Oni cubic\netntlmttir of pollen wn drawn\nfrom thi mtkt\u2014tnough for 1500\ndem of lerum.\nSummer ittlni are cool to look at.\n| wearable and tubable. and you will\n: include a frock of thla material ln\nI your lummer wtrdrobe if you are\nwiie. They are especially smart thii\nseuon.\nYou'll welcome the news thst ba-\nlistes and lawns arc being made into\nlingerie as pretty and smart as any\nsilk models.  Batiste  pajamas are\nEartlculirly cool and light for these\not lummer nights.\nCOME , LET ME ^HOVaI YOUTHE\nTROUSSEAU \u2022 t DON'T KNOVvl\nmt    ^NAIHATTODOWITHITI\nHuh: ivws.\nMO PROBLEM\n\u25a0MAfcfcY   ME,T.LU6\nANO YOU CAN USE\nYOUR. TROUSSEAU\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Sidney Smith\nN A SOOALID LITTLE\nBACK STAIRS ROOM.\nON POVERTY ROW,\nMAMA>OE*TROM\nHA* F1K.MJ.V FOUND\nAN ABODE -\nA MARTYR, TO\nTHE'CRUELTY\" OF\nHER BILLIONAIRE\nSON-IN-LAW -\nI HOPE BlrA &UMP\nWILLBEtAYlSRED\nNOW VnHEN HE SEES\nV-JHA-T HE HAS, DRNEN\nME. TO-AND WHEN\nTHE NEIGHBORS\nPINO OUT HOW HE\nTREATED ME-\nIWONDER HOW PROUD\nOP HI* ACTIONS\nHE'LL Bt THEN\nf HE IN AU. HI* LUXURY-\n\/ I IN THI* FILTHY OLD HOVEL-\n(      I 0U6MT TO ONE A PARTY- INVITE\n') AU- HIS BNE FRIENDS- LET THEM\n(    SEE WOW WE HAS REPAID INE WO-VAN\n\\    WHO SAT THROUOH SO MANf LONO\nI V WEEKS,DEVOTEDLY NURSIN6 Hl-V.\nA BAfctCTOLIFE-\nWELL- SAVINO It A OREAT TNlNO -\nNOT ONLY POR YOUR OLD AC,E-\n\u2022auT WHEN YOUR* THROWN OUT OP\nYOUR HOME BODILY St* TOUR SON-IN-LAW\nAND LEPT TO STARVE - BUT THERE'S\nN&THIMct I CAN DO NOW- ONLY CAIN\nAND BEAR .T\u00ab.-\u00ab$j0OO.--* 6,*X>-\nS 7,000.-\n\u25a0*7.5*OQ.'\n<&*   ^\n^v\nY N'tv* tygjQj\nfl^f-H-L,  f\n --_-__,\u2014I ,\u2014\u201e    ,.,,.,m .\t\nHOUSTON STAR\nMln Eunice Dean, itir from Houiton, Taxu, at Seabright #P4GE EIGHT\nGIANTS TAKE 2\nCUBSWIN ONE\nCardinals Win Couple\nin Doubleheader;\nPhils Get One\nRawing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\nictiln\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\n\u2022THE NELSON. DAILY NEWS. NEL80N. B.C.-MONOAY MORNING. AUGUST 8. 1935-\n-PAQI UOHT\nAMATEURS\nNATIONAL  LEAGUI\nW.\nNew York  \u00ab\nChicago Oi\nSt. Louli    M\nPittsburgh  M\nBrooklyn  \u00ab\nCincinnati. 4*\nPhiladelphia \u00ab\nBoston  \u00ab\nL.     Pet.\n38 .960\n39 .821\n.602\n39\n47\n\u25a0\n86\n\u25a0\n74\n.444\n.440\n.439\n.253\nQIANTS WIN TWO\nNEW YORK. Aug. 4 (AP).\u2014New\nYork Giants started tlieir ace hurlers. Hal Schumacher and Ciri Hubbell. today and both came through\nwith fine pitching performances as\nthe league leaders whipped Boston\nBraves 9-2 and 3-1 before a crowd\nof 20,000.\nIn turning in his sixteenth victory nf the leason. Schumacher held\nthe Bravei to Ilx hits and scoreless\nafter the firat inning while.Hubbell\nchalked up No. 15 in limiting the\nTribe to eight scattered Mows.\nSchumacher got away to a bad\nitart when Wally Berger tagged him\nfor hli twenty-iecond tomerot the\nseuon with one on in tha flrit The\nitir righthander ata-tri \u25a0*\u2022 *g'\nrolling lor the Glanti la the fourth\nhowever, when he drove te two of\nthe first three Newjork rtms with\na single. Travia Jackson hit a home\nrun with two on in the fifth and his\nilnale drove In another in the seventh. _______________ _,\nThe Bravu got to Hubbell for\ntheir onlv run of the nlght-cao in the\nthird tnd held the lead until the\nTerrvmen put on their winning rally\nat the expense of Huck Betts ln the\nfifth.\nFirst game: ._\nBoston  J    '   \u201e\nNew York    ... _ \u2022*\u25a0 \u00bb   l?.  \u00b0\nFrankhouse. Benton and Mueller.\nSrhumtrher tnd Mincuso.\nSecond gime: ..__,\u00ab\nBoston     I   5   \"\nNew York ...__\u2022\u00bb\u2022\nBetts. Cintwell ind Spohrer; Hubbell md Danning.\nCUBS AND REDS IPLIT\nCINCINNATI. Aug. 4 (AP).-Chl-\nca.o Cubs and Cincinnati split a\nI'oubleheader todiy. the Reds pui-\ntin\u00ab over one big inning to clinch\nthe first 5-1. but dropping the second\n4-3\nThe nightcap of the bill wis\nmarked bv Uie election from Rosley\nfield of Mamger Chirley Grimm\nnd Outfielder Georae Stainback nf\nthe Cubs, ifter \u2022 vtln protest to\nUmpire Miscrkurth against an \"out',\ncolled on Stanley Hack in trying to\nStretch a triple into a home-run.\nFirst game:\nChicago     J   \u00b0   J\nCincinnati       \u201e * ,\u00bb   J\nWarneke ind O'Dea; Derringer\ntnd lambirdi.\nSecond game:\nChicago ;   I   1\nCincinnati \u2022    '   8   '\nRoot. Lee. Henshaw and Stephenson; Frey. Schott and Cartipbell.\nCARDS WIN TWO\nST. LOUIS. Aug. 4 (AP).\u2014Last\ninning attack! netted the world\nchamoion Cardinals two victories\ntoday is they defeited Pittiburgh\nPirates 4-3 in the 10-lnning opener\nof a Sundav doubleheider and then\ntook the nightcap 6-5. Thc games\ndrew 16.000 tins.\nPittsburgh 3   10   0\nSt. Louis .....'. 4   12   3\nBlanton. Hoyt and Padden. Grice;\nHallahan. Heueier. P. Dean and\nDelancey.\nSecond gime:\nPittiburgh        _    5    \u00bb  \u00b0\nSt. Louii 6   14   2\nBush. Swift tnd Grace; J. Dem.\nP. Detn, Wilker ind Delincey.\nVICKERS GETS\nINTOJEFINAL\nWill Battle With Vic\nRipley for Amateur\nAlberta Title\nDODGERS AND PHILS SPLIT\nPHILADELPHIA. Aug. 4 (AP).-\nThe Dodgers ind Phillies split t\ndoubleheader today. Brooklyn winning the first game 4-1 md dropping the nightcap 5-4.\nLefty Clark held the Phils to eight\nhits in the opener. The Phils nosed\nout the victory in the iecond contest\nbv nicking Munni for two tallies in\nthe lixth inning ind then itivlng off\nBrooklyn rallies in the eighth ind\nnintli frames\nFirst gime:\nFirst gime:\nBrooklyn      ..... 4   10   1\nPhiladephii ......       1    S' 1\nClark ind Lopez; C. Divis ansf\nTodd. *-w\nSecond gtme:\nBrooklyn       4   15   1\nPhilidelphii   8    \u00bb  0\nMunns. Vance ind J. Taylor. Lo-\npei: Bowmtn. Penullo tnd Todd.\nA hooked shot ls one thing md\na pulled shot ls entirely different.\nThe first finds tne ball itarting\non fhe proper line and then curving to the left. The second finds\nthe ball travelling to thc left ol\nthe intended line Irom the time\nIt is hit.\nThe pulled shot invariably finds\nthe body turned toward the lell\ntoo much at the moment of impacts. Sid Brews, thc open champion of South Africa, suffered from\nthis fault. To correct it he adopted\na closed stance with the left foot\nwill In advance ot the right.\nKeeping the right foot back from\nthe ball, Brews figured (as do many\ngolfers), would prevent him from\nturning too much to the left as hc\nswung at the ball.\nThe body turn does effect the line\nof flight, but you can't correct the\nbody turn until you get your head\nln the proper position.\nKeeping your chin pointed back\nof the ball is the best corrective\nmeasure in iuch cases.\nShaw and Bence\nin Nel Finals\nMcKush, 1934 Titlist,\nBeaten; Mrs. Pirt Is\nLadies' Champ\nREGINA, Aug. 4 (CP)\u2014Defeating\nManitoba and Alberta stare over\nthc week-end Doug Shaw, Regina.\nupset tlie dope in the western Canada tennis tournament and earned a\nplace in the finals along With All\nBence, of Saskatoon.\nShaw defeated Eddie McKush, of\nWinnipeg, 1934 titlist, Saturday and\nwent ahead to eliminate Ernie Anderson, of Calgary, 6-4, 7-3. Bence.\nholder of the Saskatchewan single:,\ncrown, beat J. Adams, of Winnipeg.\nthird ranking Manitoba star, who\nSaturday had ousted Jimmy Wilson,\nRegina city champion.\nEddie and Otto McKush, famed\ntennis pair of Winnipeg, stroked\ntheir way to the doubles championship, trimming Adams md Mc-\nCaughen, of Winnipeg. 6-4. 8-6, 6-2.\nThe ladies singles title went to\nWinnipeg, when Mrs. K. Pirt won\nin the finals from Mrs. Eustancc, of\nCnlgary.\nMrs. Pirt shares another final honor, when, teamed with Miss M. Mclnnis of Calgary, they captured lhe\nfinal of the women's open doubles\nfrom Miss C. Ehman and Mrs. Mc-\nCirthy, Regina, 6-4, 6-4.\nIn her third triumph of the meet\nMrs. Pirt with Eddie McKush. won\nthe mixed open doubles final, by\ndefeating Ernie Enderson and Mrs.\nEustace, 6-2, 6-0.\nF. H. Bourassa. of LaFleche. Sask.,\nwon the veterans' doubles by defeating A. 3, Wickens of Moose Jaw,\nin a hard extra-set final, 8-10, 6-1,\n8-6.\nWinner of the Junior singles title\nwas J. Thompson, of Moose Jaw,\nwho defeated A. Hayworth, Regina,\n6-0, 6-1.\nWickens and Flavelle. of Grenfell.\nteamed to defeat Wallace of Moss-\nbank and Mackey, of Regina. In the\nveterans' doubles final. 6-8, 6-1.\nFinals iu the men's open event.\naole_remaining match of the tournn-\n; will be decided Monday.\nB. C. CYCLIST IS\nSECOND\nWASKESIU LAKE, Sask.. Aug. 4\n(CP)\u2014Establishing \u25a0 new record M.\nPothier, of the St. Boniftce (Man).\nBicycle club, won the Manville trophy in the second annual Prince Albert Waskeslu cycle marathon Saturday afternoon.\nPothier completed the 72-mlle run\nover gravelled highway In four\nhours, 13V4 minutes. George Robinson, of Vlctorli, B. C. was tecond, 45 minutei behind the leader.\nRobinson recently reached Prince\nAlbert ifter i 1400 miles cycle trip\nfrom the coast.\n\u25a0W*_\nF.A.C. BEATS\nWOODCUTTERS\nTike 17-3 Softball Came at\nJunior High\nFiirview Athletic club men'i aoftball teim look the lowly Woodcutter! into rimp 17-3 in a game at thr\nJunior high school grounds. Four\nruns in the first Inning and 12 in the\nsecond, gave the F. A. Cs plenty of\nroom to come and go on.\nWoodcutters did not score until\nthe four Inning when they got two\nof their three runs. Bert Walton\npitched for the winners.\nF. A. C\u2014Lei Skinner. Ruisel\nFrench. George Fawcett, Wilf Chrishop, Bilhop, A. Fircnholtz. Hirriion. Alex Ioanin. Bert Walton.\nWoodrutters-H. Bate. F. Graves.\nA. Mclnnei. P. Lutehwich. T. Bite.\n.1. Stlraker. P. Kuntr, Latorneil,\nN. Lutehwich.\nCALGARY. Aug. 4 (CP). -\nCrowned Alberta open golf champion Friday. Stew Vickers of Calgary today advanced to the provincial amateur final along with Vie\nRiolev, also of Calgary. They will\nmeet for the amateur title tomorrow.\nVickers. amateur champion In 1932\nand 1933. eliminated Johnny Chis-\nton of Calgary 2 and 1 ln the semifinal while Ripley, forward for St.\nloula Eagles of the National Hockey\nleague, defeated Emil Martell of\nEdmonton by the aame margin.\nBefore succumbing to Vickers' birdie barrage. Chaston furnished the\ntourney's big upset, winning from\nBobby Proctor of Edmonton, the defending champion, two up.\nBig Entry for\nTennis Tourney\nClose to 40 Singles\nEntries for Tjrail\nEvent\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 4\u2014Preparations for the fourth annual. Trall-\nRossland - Tadanac tennis tournament are practically complete and\nentries are flowing In at a rapid\npace from the three clubs, according to Ned Rhodes, tournament committee member for the Trail club.\nEntries are also being received from\nHie newly formed East Trail club.\nA record entry is expected. The\nnumber of men's singles applicants\nwill probably be 40. compared to 26\nlast year, while entries ln the other\nevent! are holding their own.\nIt has been decided to hold the\njunior singles competition about the\nmiddle of September as many of\nthe younger playeri are now away\non holidays.\nPlay will itart at Tadanac courts\nAuguit 10 at 1.30 p.m. It is proposed\nto have play continued so that finals\n\".'ill take plaet the following weekend.\nElite Cafe Beats\nHume In Softball\nTake Game in Nelson\n7-5; Visitors Bat\nWell\nElite Cafe, fait itepping softball\ntetm of Trail, downed the Hume\nhotel men'i team 7-5 ln a game st\nthe Recreation ground! Sunday afternoon. The Trail batting was superior to the Hume's and it was in\nthis category the game was decided.\nThev repcadedly hit to points between the infield and outfield.\nHume took the lead In thc second\nhalf of the third, but the Elite came\nback in the fourth to bring in four\nruns md get a lead they never relinquished. In thc fifth the Hume got\nin three runs and for a short time\nhad the visitors' infield disorganized.\nJoe Fierro went into the box for\nIhe heals in the fifth inning end held\nthe Elite to one hit in the remaining\ninningi. MacRae went the route for\nthe visitors md allowed iix hlta.\nIrrori were evenly divided with iix\nbeing chalked up to each.\nSnowarl. first baseman for Trail,\nled the batters with three hits, Bates.\nBrown and Bishop getting two.\nRenwick. Culley. Patterson. Cuter. Kulai and Fierro each got singles\nfor the Hume.\nBert Hendrtckson and Bill Kirby\nrefereed.\nSummary bv Innings:\nElite Cafe       000 410 110-7   11   6\nHume Hotel    001 030 010-3    I  6\nTeams were:\nTrail Elite Cafe\u2014M. Spowart, J.\nBates. K. Clarke. M. Mahon. K.\nNolhe, G. Brown. J. Stavert, A.\nBishop and D. MacRae.\nHume Hotel\u2014H. Renwlck. Tanny\nRomano. TV Culley. Speed Bell. F.\nKraft. Patterson. L. Carter, Bialkow-\nski. Art Latham, and G. Kulai.\nONEILL NAMED\nMANAGER OF THE\nCLEVELAND CLUB\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 4 (AP)-Steve\nO'Neill, coich of Clevelmd lndltns,\ntonight wn named manager of the\nbaseball team ai Walter Johnson resigned.\nCOWES IN GALA\nATTIRE FOR RACES\nCOWES. Isle of Wight. Aug. 4\n(CP Cable).\u2014Blick and gold on a\nblue sea, Ihe king's yacht \"Victoria\nand Albert\" lay at her moorings\nIn Cowei Roadi tonight, ready tor\nthe official opening tomorrow of\nthe Cowei regatta.\nFor the four dayi' racing progrim\nof the royal yacht squadron. Cowes\nis putting on its gala dress. The\nweather was perfect this week-end\nwith the prospect of good iport\nRacing Saturday wai under the\nburgee of the Royil Southampton\nYacht club. The king, the Ducheu\nof York and Lord Jellicoe competed in the 41-mile race for clan J\nyachti. T. O. M. Sopwllh'i America's\nnip rontender Endeavor finished\nj first but Astra wti winner on corrected time.\n In the Batting Battle\u2014No. 3_\nVosmik Stars in Home\nTown Park\nEDITOR'S NOTE: Thli ll oni of\nt itriti of itorlei on the men\nlighting for big league batting\nleadenhlp.\nBy BILL BRAUCHER\nCtntril  Prtw Canadian\nSporti Writtr\nFew of the brighter miior leigue\nstars have made good In their home\ntowni. Jimmy Dykei and Jimmy\nWilion. Philadelphians; Johnny\nMurphy. Lou Gehrig and Frank\nFrisch. New Yorkers and Joe Vosmlk. left fielder of the Cleveland\nIndians, ire notable exceptions to\nthe rule that big league ball players come from such places as Mish-\nawaka, Sudlersville, FowlerviUe.\nand Centralla.\nVosmik. fighting for the batting\nleadership of the American league\nwith an average of around .350, is a\nstar now in the nark from whic|i\nhe was ejected as a truant kid onlv\na few vears ago. The blue-eyed Bohemian blonde is the reason for\nthose hundreds of (lowing handlebar\nmoustaches in thc field stands when\nthe Indians plav at home.\nA STAR AT 18\nJoe was 18 vears old, a student in\nEast Tech hieh. when Roger Peck-\ninough. former manager of the Indians, who also is an alumnus of\nEast Tech. first gave him a tumble\nin 1928. Joe was starring in landlot\ngames. The  youngtttr  was  given\nvaluable pointers on fielding by\nTris Speaker and the veteran In\ndims' left fielder, Charlie Jamieson.\nCleveland aent him to Frederick.\nMd.. for schooling in 1929. md it wis\nFrederick which got the schooling,\nwith Joe In the role of teicher. Vol-\nmik bitted .381 at Frederick and led\nthe league ln fielding. He wai lent\nto Terre Haute In 1930 where he\nbumed up the Three-Eye league\nwith a .397 hitting average. Since\n1931 he has been a regular, compiling for the years '31. '32 md '34 the\nimpressive batting average of .308.\nHis severest slump wn in 1933 when\nhc hit only .263. Lait year'i mark\nwai .341.\nLIVES WITH PARENTS\nJoe ii unmarried, and is he is\nonly 25 now, looks forwird to more\nthm 10 years as a big league ball\nplayer. He lives with his parents.\nMr. and Mrs. Joseph Franklin Voa-\nmik. Sr.. on East boulevard in\nCleveland. His father for years has\nhad charge of the stock room of a\nlarge electric engineering plant\nBoth his father and mother were\nborn in Bohemia.\nVosmik was runner-up for hit-\nUna honors in the Blue Ridge\nleague for the year he was there,\nand in the following season led the\nThree-eye. Leading the American\nleague is a different matter, but\nJoe says he will do that. too.\nStrafaci Wins\nOver J. Coria\nINDIANAPOLIS. Aug. 4 (CP>-\nFrank Strafaci. 18-year-old Brooklyn. N. Y\u201e schoolboy, is the new\npublic links champion of the United\nStates. The youngster defeated Joe\nCoria of St. Paul on thc 37th green\nyesterday in one of the most exciting finals in thc championships history.                 \t\nHoifteRuns\n -g)  N   \u2014.\nBy the Auociited Prtu\nHome runs yesterdiy \u2014 Higgins.\nAthletics. 2; Cronin, Red Sox 1:\nWilliams. Red Sox, 1: Radcllff.\nWhite Sox, 1; Selkirk. Yankees. 1:\nBurns. Browns, 1; Clift. Browns. 1;\nBerger, Braves. 1; P. Waner, Pirates.\n1: Jackson, Giants, 1; Klein, Cubi, 1;\nYoung. Pirates. 1: Frisch. Cardinals.\n1; F. Herman, Reds, 1; Leslie, Dodgera* 1* _,\nSaturday-Greenberg. Tigers. 2;\nVosmik, Berber. Indians; Johnson,\n(\/nOTlli. Athletics; Solter. Browns;\nThompson. Braves: Byrd. Reds;\nKoenecke, Dodgers; Medwick, Cardinals, one each.\nThe leaders\u2014Greenberg, Tigers.\n30; Ott. Giants. 24: Berger, Braves,\n22: Johnion, Athletics, 21, Camilli,\nPhillies, 20.\nLeague totals \u2014 National 481.\nAmerican 107. Total BM.\nULSTER UNITED\nBEAT CARSTEEL\nMONTREAL. Aug. 4 (CP).\u2014The\nveteran George Graham pivoted Ulster United to a 8-2 victory over\nMontreal Carsteel today in the second of a two-game total-goal series\nfor the Nationil Soccer league champlonihlp of 1934 tnd thc belated title\nwent to the Toronto team by i 8-2\ncount, Ulster won the first game at\nToronto 2-0 lait till.\ne&ders\nBy Thi Auoclitid Prtu\nWhile the leaden in basebill's big\nsix easily retained their positions\nyesterday there was a general shift\nin the battle for third place, both In\nIhe National and American leagues.\nArky Vaughan connected with four\nhits in a doubleheader to add two\npoints to his average and end the\ndiy with .98 while his nearest rival.\nJoe Medwick, held hit own at .379\nwith three blowi in eight trip! to\nthe plate. Gabby Harnett, thc Cubi\nveteran catcher, took third pltce\ndespite his enforced idleness when\nJohnny Bucher lost ground, while\nin tlie American circuit Ruddy Myer\nHnd Wally Moses moved into a two-\nway tie for the last pltce, ousting\nCharlie Gehringer, ind Roger Crtm-\ner.\nThe standings:\nG    A     R   H   Pet\nVaughan,\nPirates 88   322   78   12.1   .398\nMedwlck.\nCardinals 98 399 90 151 .379\nVosmlk,\nIndians 92 387 52 137 .354\nHartnett.\nCubs 82   294   44   102   .347\nGreenberg,\nTigers 100   422. 87   143   .339\nMyers.\nSenator! 96 390 74 129 .331\nMoies.\nAthletics      73   290   52    96   .331\nRIFLEMEN MEET\nLONG BRANCH, Ont, Aug. (CP)\n\u2014Rowi of tenta md marquees were\nstrung out alongside Long Branch\nrifle ranges tonight housing more\nthan 300 crack Ontario and western\nriflemen, ready for their best efforts\nin the annual Ontario rifle meeting.\nStarting tomorrow and continuing\nuntil Friday the marksmen, turning\nlhe ranges Into a peace-time train-\nina camp, will shoot ai long \u25a0\u25a0 the\nlight lasts.\nDETROIT WINS\nBYM\nWallops   Cleveland;\nYankees Lose\nby 11M0\nAMERICAN LEAGUI\nW L Pet\nDetroit       62 37 .626\nNew York     54 38 .587\nChicago       51 41 .554\nBoston     51 46 .526\nClevelmd     46 48 .489\nPhiladelphia     40 49 .449\nWashington    41 57 .418\nSt Loula    83 62 .347\nBRIDGES DOES IT\nDETROIT. Aug. 4 (AP)-Behind\nthe four-hit pitching of Tommy\nBridges. Detroit Tigers blanked\nCleveland Indiana 7-0 today to sweep\nthe three-game seriei md chalk\nup their loth victory in 20 starts\nthis seaaon agalnit Walter Johnston'! charge!.\nBridgei wai in rare form ai hc\nhung up hli 16th victory of the\nseason. Harder, ace ot the tribe staff,\nstarted but gave way to Lee before the Tigers were retired in the\nsixth. He wai charged with the lou,\nyielding five rum ind seven hiti.\nCleveland    0    4  2\nDetroit         7   10  0\nHarder. Lee and Phillips; Bridges\nand Hayworth,\n11-10 AS SENATORS WIN\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (API-\nWashington bittered four New York\npitchen for in even doien hits today to whin Yankees 11-10 and force\nthe New Yorkers another full game\nback of the sprinting Detroit Tigers.\nAfter scoring a run in each of the\nfint three Inningi the Senator!\npuihed across four in the fourth and\nadded four more ln the seventh.\nYankees scored once in the iecond on Selirk'i home run and after\npicking up single runs ln the fourth\nand fifth rallied to score two in the\nseventh, two more In the eighth, and\nthreatened the Semtor'i leid ln the\nninth with three rum on five hlta.\nNew York     10   14   1\nWashington 11   12   1\n\u2022 Tamulis. Deshong. Murphv. Malone and Dickey; Nelson, Russell,\nLlnke md Bolton.\nBROWNS TAKE TWO\nCHICAGO, ni., Aug. 4 (CP)-The\nrevived St. Louis Browns routed\nTed Lyons 10-2. in the opener and\nfollowed up with a 4-2 victory on\nhomers by Irv. Burns and Harland\nClift in the afterpiece to take both\nend! of a doubleheader from the\nslumping White Sox before 30,000\ntoday.\nThe twin wins gave the Browni a\nclean sweep of the seriei, excepting\nyesterday's tie, and tumbled the\nChicagoans to a point T.i games out\nof the lead,\nFlnt:\nSt. Louia     10   11   2\nChicaao          2   10   4\nWalkup and Hemsley, Heath; Lyons. Salveiton and SeweU.\nSecond:\nSt. Louia   4   11   1\nChicago     19   0\nAndrew! and Hemiley; Tietje and\nShea.\nRED SOX AND ATHLETICS\nSPLIT \t\nBOSTON, Aug. 4 (AP)-Boiton'i\nlargest baseball crowd of the seal-\non. 40.000 taw the Red Sox and\nAthletlca split a doubleheader today, Boston taking the tint 7-6 in\n10 inningi, and Philadelphia the\nlecond 4-3 In eight Inning!. The\nnightcap wai cut ihort becauie of\nthe Sunday curfew.\nWea Ferrell chalked up hit 18th\ntriumph of the season in the opening game, as against 10 defeat!.\nFirst:\nPhiladelphia      8   IS  1\nBoston   1   13   4\n(10 innings).\nMahaffey. Benton. Wilshere and\nRichards; W. Ferrell and R. Ferrell.\nSecond:\nPhiladelphia    4   11   3\nBoston      3    6   0\n(8 innings).\nMarcum and Berry: Welch, Wilson and Berg, R. Ferrell.\nSCULLERS GIVEN\nCIVIC WELCOME\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP) -\nMonty Butler and Johnny Dickinson, Vancouver scullers who won\nfour championships at the Canadian\nHenley regatta at Port Dalhouiie.\nOnt, lait week, were given a civic\nwelcome Saturday when they returned home. Each wai presented\nwith an Illuminated icroll tfter\nbeing escorted from the railway\nstation to the court houie by a\nwelcoming parade.\nNew York Catholic Boyi' club boxtn an route to Chicago.\n\"Big League\"\nBASEBALL\nPEVtnope.p\naVu>at~\nSiPW\/eenz:\nPADDLER WINS\nOLYMPIC TRIP\nFrank Amyot, Ottawa,\nLeads Way in Canoe\nRace at Ottawa\n\"The knuckler.\" said Wes Ferrell,\n\"is a fooler. You don't have to be\nparticular with it\u2014I us it against\nright handen or left banders. The\nthing is. it breaks down. The idea\nis to get 'em looking for a knuckler\n\u2014then give them a fast one or a\ncurve. And visa versa. Any good\nhitter will slam one through you\nif you don't out-guess him.\n\"Some days. If I throw 100 balls\nup there, fifty of them might be\nknucklcn. Maybe not I won one\ngame md only threw six. And the\nbest thing tbout a kunckler, it\nworki when the wind ii against\nyou. In fact its worse.\"\nCOUNTY (PICKET\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (CP cable)-\nClose of play scorei ln first-class\ncounty cricket matches started Saturday follow:\nEuex 372, Worceitenhlre 44 for\nno wicketi, at Chelmsford.\nDerbyshire 314 (Towmend 103\nnot out), Wirwickihire 57 for one\nwicket at Derby.\nHampshire 261 vi. Somenet at\nSouthampton.\nKent 335 (Todd 128 not out). Gloucestershire 29 for no wickets, at\nCanterbury.\nLeicestershire 317, Northamptonshire 139 for tour wickets, at Leicester.\nNottinghamshire 345 for eight\nwickets vs. Surrey, at the oval.\nSussex 363 vs. Middlesex, at Hove.\nYorkshire 325. Lancashire 26 for\nfive wickets, at Bradford.\nSouth Africans 309. Glamorgan 108\nfor three wickets, at Swansea.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 4 (CP). - Four\nstrong-armed paddlers from Winnipeg today received congratulations\ntor their placing fourth in the Canadian Canoe association regatta\nhere Saturday in borrowed boats.\nThe Ganmoque Canoe club nipped Palmy Beach Canoe club of\nToronto for the aggregate points\ntotal In the last race of the day\n23 to 22. It was the third success-\nlve win for the Gananoque club.\nGrind Trunk Boating club of Montreal was third with 16 points.\nThe greatest paddler ever pro-\nduced-that was what Frank Amyot\nof Ottawa wai being called today\nfollowing hii victory yesterdiy in\nthc senior singles. It was hii lixth\nvictory since 1924 and earned him\na trip to the Olympic gamea in Berlin next summer.\nThe eight paddlers from Winnipeg returned home with a first,\ntwo seconds and a third. Harry\nDadion, Dick Dadson. Doug Groff\nand Tom Dadson won the intermedlite fours from Balmy Beach\nbut the Toronto crew reversed the\ndeciiion in the Junior foun. Groff\nplaced iecond to Barclay in the\njunior ilngles.\nAmyot a 200-pound, fair haired\ngiant from the Britannia Boating\nclub, walked away with the linglei\nby three lengtha from Russ Ga.li-\npo of Carleton Place, Ont With\nDave McCullough, Sudbury, Ont,\nin third place. It was m easy win\nfor Amyot who laid ott the early\npace to the turn, which wai ret by\nAlien Longstaft and Gordon Sala\nof Toronto.\nSaturday\nOttawa lea Taam\nBeats Lake Placid\nLAKE PLACID, N.Y., Aug. 4 (CP).\n\u2014With combination thrust! lhat\nsmacked of winter form, in Ottawa\nall-star hockey team won over Lake\nPlacid 5-2 today to atone for a single\ngoal defeat the lakesters handed\nthem Saturday.\nThe Placid teim beit Ihe Ot-\nlawani 7-6 Stturdiy in the flnt of\nthe two-gtme mid-summer exhibition series, but on total goals for the\ntwo tilts the Cihidltm were victors\n11 goili to 9, \u2022\nLONDON, (CP)-Dlrerton of Tottenham Hotspun have been a long\ntime deciding on a suitable successor to Percy Smith is team manager. They have selected Jack Tres-\nadern. a former Weit Htm halfback who gained an Engllih eip\nagiinst Scotlmd In 1923. Trcsadern\nhai been the guiding light of the\nCrystal Palace club ln recent yean.\nThere li itill a cemetery In Oceana\nCounty, Michigan, where Indlmi\n\u2022re buried iccording to old \"pagan\"\ncuitomi.\nNATIONAL\nBoiton 2, New York 3.\nBrooklyn   1-1,  Philadelphia  2-5.\nChicago 11, Cincinnati 3.\nPittiburgh 0, St Louli 6.\nAMERICAN\nPhilidelphii 4, Boiton 5.\nSt Louis 7. Chicigo 7 (called end\n10th, rain and darknew).\n. New York 13, Waihington 2.\n\u25a0Clevelmd 3, Detroit 7.\nINTERNATIONAL\nBuffalo 3-9, Newirk 6-1.\nToronto 8. Biltimore 16.\nMontreal 3-3, Syncusc 6-4.\nRochester  2,   Albany   5    (night\ngame).\nASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 1. Milwaukee 7.\nToledo 2. St. Paul 14.\nColumbus 11. Minneapolis 7.\nPACIFIC COAST\nSan Francisco 3. Loi Angeles 4.\nHollywood 5, Missions 2.\n.   Sunday\nINTERNATIONAL\nBuffalo 3-0; Newark 6-3.\nRochester 10-11; Albany 3-2.\nMonlreal 1-3; Syncuse 8-5.\nToronto 14-0; Baltimore 11-8\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nLouisville 4-6; Kansas City 5-8.\nIndianapolis 4-1; Milwaukee 1-7.\nColumbus 6; Minneapolis 8.\nToledo 13-0; St. Paul-11-6.\nSecond  Columbus-Minneipolis\ncalled end fourth, curfew.\nPACIFIC COAST\nHollywood 4-4; Missions 5-14.\nOakland 11-1; Seattle 2-4.\nSan Francisco 5-1; Los Angeles 7-4.\nSacramento 2-1; Portland 4-11.\nDoes Long Swim\nFORT ERIE. Ont, Aug. 4 <CP)-\nStan Paullk, tow-heided Buffalo\nyouth in training for the Cmadian\nnational exhibition iwlm tt Toronto,\nyeiterdiy swim the 13 miles across\nLike Erie from Buffalo to Crystal\nBeach in eight and a half houn.\nOnly two swimmers have completed\nthe distance In the last 36 yean.\nNEW SOCCER MANAGER\nHARTLEPOOL, England, (CP).-\nJames Hamilton, who spent 10 yean\nwith Crystal Palace, has been appointed managed of Hartlepools\nUnited, third division, northern section club of the English Football\nleague. He succeeds Jack Carr who\nleft to take up an appointment with\nTrmmere Roven.\nTrail Seniors\nBeat Cubs 7-3\nNelson Team Does\nWell in Fast\nCompany\nScoring two rum in two different inninga, and getting one in\nthree others, the Trail senlon downed the New Grmd Hotel Cubs at\nthe Recreation Sunday afternoon In\na good game ot baaeball. Walki\nand errors aiiisted Trail materially\nin their counting, three playen who\ngot walki icoring, while errors set\nthe itage for two more counti.\nA futurt of tht gtmt thit\nbrought forth much comment from\ntht mtny Ntlton fini, wai tha\nfact that ilx of thi Trail pliyen\nwtrt former Nelionltei.\nThey outllit the Cubi, however,\n8-4, but Smith kept them well teat\"\ntered. \"Lefty\" Fairbaim got th\u00bb\nonly home run of the afternoon\nwhen he lent a long one to right\nfield that Jackie Bilhop misjudged\nmd it rolled nearly to the eaat\nfence. He chased Hughle Horswill\nin ahead of him, HonwiU having\nsingled.\nWhile being the losing pitcher,\nSteve Smith, portsider for the Cub!\nenjoyed something of a field day\nhimself, striking out eight of tht\n10 Trail playen who participited\nln thc game. Louii Demore, Hughit\nHorswill and Tommy Jenkini si ruck\nout twice. Tick Hall and Bogstia\nwere the two to survive Smith's\nwiles.\nTrsil wu held icorelen until thl\nthird inning, Smith retiring the fint\nthree men in the opener by thl\nitrikeout route. He got into a how\nin the iecond when he walked\nthree men. He made Harriion fly\nout to Cherrington, itruck out Jen\"\nkim, and Hall wai forced out at\nsecond on a fielder's choice.\nTrail counted one ln the third,\nanother in the fourth, two in tha\nfifth, one in the ilxth md two tfl\nIhe wventh.\nCUBS SCORE IN SIXTH\nCubi counted their three ln tht\nsixth, oft Rlddell. Bogstie Iiad held\nthem hitless for five innings and\nthen gave way to Riddell. It wn\nwhgt the Cubs had been wailing\nfor. Langill, fint up, slipped out t\ntwo-bagger to left field fence, Bishop singled, icoring Langill. Anderson ilngled. Goble fliea out to\nHill. Cherrington singled, icoring\nBiihop md Andenon. Then Jenkins changed hli catcher's mitt .and\nthe next two batters filed out. Bailey to Demore, Pasacieta to Roth\"\nery. The Cubs got three on bases ia\nthe seventh but failed to count\nFairbaim led the hitters for thl\nday with two hits In three official\ntrips, Demore, Jenkins, Rothery,\nHorswill, Decimbrinl and Bogsttt\nand Jenkins each getting one. Tha\ntint two got doubles. Langill, Bl'\nshop, Anderaon and Cherrington\ngot hits for Nelion.\nDuring llil time on the mound\nBogstie got six strikeouts and walk\"\ned one natter. Riddell, after gat-\nting away to a shakey start struck\nout four and walked two.\n\"Slim\" Kraft and Anthony Scan\"\nlan refereed.\nScore by innings: R H\nTrail  001121200-7   8\nN. G. H. Cubi.... 000003 000\u20143   4\nTeams were:\nTrail-Demore, Rothery, Horswill\nDerlmbrini, Fairbaim, Hirrison\nHill, Jenkins. Bogitie. Rlddell.\nN. G. H. Cubi\u2014Bilhop, Ander*\nion. Goble, Cherrlngton, Bailey\nPasacreta, Smith, Cooper and Lan\ngill.\nKELLY LOSES TITLE\nCHARLOTTETOWN, Aug. 4'\n(CP).-Pete Kelly, forward of tit\nSt. Louii Eagles ot the Nationa\nHockey league, today was minu\nhis Prince Edward Island golf tltl\nhe won lait year. Kelly Satin\nday lost two down to Charlie Mac\nKinnon of Chtrlottetown ln tha I\nholei of match play.\n \u2014\u2014-\n<w\n\u2022THI NILION. DAILY NIWI. NILION. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. AUGUST I. INS'*-'\nHow Canada Stands in the\nBritish Market\nCantda had tint place in the Brit-\nmarket in import! of whut in\nit tint lix months of 1939 with 16.-\n.4362 cwt, Argentine being second\n'th 14,702,776. Australia third with\n\"1,482 and Rour-   ia fourth with\nErltish   imports of wheat\nve declined considerably i>* tha\nit two yean and in the fint half of\nules by Canada amounted to\nC.149 cwt. Australia 17.176.C58\nid the Argentine. 13,477.969.\nCanada was third In barley with\n.1,11)4 cwt, the Argentine being\nIrst with 1.365.987 and Roumania\nicond with 789.630. Barley import!\nIS the United Kingdom havt also\nlean declining but purchases from\nCanada have increased.\nCanada was fnt in   oati   with\n.453,938 cwt out of a total of 1,654.-\n177. Import! of oati by Grut Britain\nlave d Jlned f-e-n 2.790,473 In the\ntame period two yean ago but the\n\u25a0eauirementi from Canada have in-\nMeied from 695.201 c**t.\nCanada was tint in wheatflour\n\u00bblth l.C 6,346 cwt. Australia being\necond with 77 287, France third\n\u25baIth 577,205 r-1 Italy fourth with\n\u25a04,741.\nCanada wu secord in the total\nfain and flour with a value of\n7.787.902, Argentina being flnt with\n\u20228.848,163. Australia third with\n3,072,733 and France fourth with\nll_.t40.932.\nCanada wai iecond ln cattle with\n1124 head, the Irish Free State being\nInt with 261,558. Importations from\nhe Irish Free State have increased\nnniidcrably over two years ago ', ut\nrom Canada the\" have declined, in\n.833 being 20,202 and last year 23,-\n.38.\nCanada wu second ln bacon with\n135.918 cwt, Denmark being fint\nvith 1,887,972. In the lame period\nr* 1933 Canada wai ilxth with 199.-\n191 cwt. and Denmark was tint with\n1,988,295. The other countrlu which\ntad larger quantities of bacon in\nhe British market in that period\nvere the Netherlands. Poland. Lith-\nlania and Sweden.\nCanada was second in hams with\n04.891 cwt. the United States being\nInt with 213,608 and Poland third\nviUi 9708. Imports from the United\nStates hav; been decreasing but\nhose f om Canada have been I\u2014\nfraaiinr.\nI Canada wu fifth In total meets\nrith a value of \u00a32.723,908. Argentina\nelng first with \u00a38975.720. Denmark\nteond with \u00a38,045,715, New Zealand\nUrd with \u00a37,789,840, and Auitralia\nCTth with \u00a33.655,055. In the r-me\neriod ct 1933 Canada >a in ninth\nlace with \u00a3993,430, while the Ar-\nmUne wai tlrst with \u00a310.331,769.\nlit other countries which Canada\nla luoerseded are Poland. Nether-\nndi. United Statei and Uruguay.\nCanada had no bu 'er in the Brit-\nh market In the -\"nt half of th\"\nit three vears. Th*- year Australia\nth 1,479,676 cwt and New Zealand\nth 1,435.053 have both superseded\nenmark with 1,098.794.\nCanada vas fifth in cheeie with\n,127 r-t. New Zealand being first\nlth 1.106,297. Netherlands t:.ond\nlth 112,791. Australia third with\nJ17 ar ' Italy fourth with 47.291.\nuro yean ago Canada wu fourth\nith 46,267 cwt. and New Zealand\nil fin' then alio with 1.320,797. At\ne time Canada wai flnt in the\n\u2022iUsh market with -heeie.\nCinada was thirteenth in the total\ndairy produce with a value of\n78.224. New Zealand being fl-t\nwith $8,588,737, Australia iecond\nwiih $6,135,674. Denmark third with\n$5,836,262. Netherlandi fourth with\n$2,192,246. Irish Free State fifth with\n$1,077,618. China sixth with 1717,627,\nSoviet Russia seventh with -482.705,\nFinland eighth with \u00a3411.790, Sweden ninth with \u00a3409,038. Poland\ntenth with \u00a3234.078. BriUih South\nAfrica eleventh with \u00a3202.138. Italy\ntwelfth -*vith \u00a3189.489.\nCanada wu iecond in applu with\n900,867 cwt, AuitraUa being tint\nwith 1.273.722. Unl 'd Statu third\nwith 780,790 and New Zealand\nfourth with 277.480.\nCanada wu fourth ln canned aalmon with 40,254 cwt, United Statei\nbeing flnt with 203.658, Soviet Rui-\nsia aecond with 87,650 and Japan\nthird with 54.982.\nCanada was fint ln Iobatan t ith\n9,753 cwt out of a total ot 11.012.\nCanada wu iecond with unmanufactured tobacco with 6.984,714\npounds, United Statu being fint\nwith 49.979.219. Britiih India third\nwith 3.932.115 and Southern Rhodesia fourth with 3.502.321.\nCanada was tint in copper ore\nwith 7.723 tons. Spain being aecond\nwith 1429.\nCanada wis iecond ln wood and\ntimber with \u00a31.900.696. United Statei\nbeing flnt with \u00a32.040.426. Finland\nthird with \u00a31.699,116. Sweden fourth\nwith \u00a31.583.066 and Soviet Russia\nfifth with \u00a31.468343.\nCanada wu second ln hidei ind\nikins with a value of \u00a3918.851. United States being flnt with \u00a31.488.420.\nSoviet Russia third with \u00a3591.752.\nCanada was iecond in unwrought\ncopper with 26.879 tons, United\nStates being fint with 28.130. In Uie\ntwo previous yean Canada wu far\nahead of aU other countrlu wiUi\nthat commodity.\nCanada wai flnt ln copper rod!\nend sections, wire, etc., with 90,339\ncwt out of a total of 90.676.\nCanada wai second in pig lud\nwith 47.292 tons. Australia being first\nwith 92,028, BriUsh India third with\n24,050 and Mexico fourth with 8350.\nCanada wu first in crude ztnc\nwith 48,222 tons, Belgium being second with 12,139. Australia third with\n5975.\nCanada wai tint tn the total ot\nnon-ferrous metali and manufactures with a value of \u00a33.138.484. Chile\nbeing second tfith \u00a31.925.374. Auitralia third with \u00a31,302.583. Northern\nRhodesia fourth with \u00a31.246.188 and\nUnited Statei fifth with \u00a31.181.057.\nCanada wai third ln machinery\nwith a value of \u00a3418.369, United\nStatu being tint with \u00a32.959.420.\nGermany iecond with \u00a31,759.767.\nCanada wai fourth in the total of\nmanufactures of wood and timber\nwith a value of \u00a3280.709. Finland being first with \u00a3626.405, Soviet Russia\nsecond with \u00a3457,780, United States\nthird with \u00a3316.872.\nCanada wai fint ln patent leather\nwith 6288 cwt. United Statei second\nwith 2468. Germany third with 520.\nCanada was second In newsprint\nwith 783,788 cwt, Newfoundland being first with 982,691, Finland third,\nwith 680.101. Norway fourth with\n272,389.\nCanada wai fourth ln the total\nof paper with a value of -883,611,\nSweden being fint with \u00a31.325.-39.\nGermany second with -842,906,\nFinland third with \u00a3751,988.\nCanada was fint ln rubber minu\nfacturei with a value of \u00a3287.978.\nGermany iecond with \u00a3108,467. United Statu third with \u00a382,293. Japan\nfourth with \u00a318.874.\nIINES ARE DRAB\n5RONTO. Aug. 4 (CP)\u2014Toronto\nIng mirket closed the week with\n[drab session, enUvcned only by\navy selling of God's Lake at a\n1 low ot 3 cent! to 1.33. Volume\ni down to 127.000 sharu.\nDior golds were almoit out of\ntrade. Teck Hughes gained 2\nlta to 4.05 and Wright-Hargreaves\n.centa to 7.50. Other issues were\n\" anged except for a loss of 15\nDta for Pioneer.\nar Exploration puihed up to\ncenti for a gain ot 4. Eldorado\nI off 3 centa to 1.72 and Nipissing\nsped a cent Bue Metals were\n|Gold Up Two Cents\nIONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CP)-Bar\nid in London up 2 cents at $34.96\nounce in Canadian fundi; 140s\nin  BriUih  fundi.  The  fixed\ni Wuhlngton price amounted to\nB.03 in Canadian,\n[Minneapolis Grain\nEAPOLIS, Aug. 4  (AP)-\nur unchmged. Shipment! 18,269.\n1 17.00 to 17.50.\n. hut No. 1 northern 121% to\n|ty, No. 1 red durum 11. to 80'*.\nhe United Statu ii manufactur-\nI a new kind of cheeie known as\nI-Paese, and heretofore imported\n\"\" Italy.\nCanadian Dollar\nUnchanged\nNEW YORK, Aug. 4 (CP)-Lud-\ning currenclu held about study\nagainst the United Statu dollar in\nSaturday'! foreign exchange market!.\nGuilder! closed .04 of a cent higher\nat 67.92 centa. The French franc\nwas up .01 of a cent at 6.634 cents.\nThe pound sterling wu off V\u00ab\ncent at $4.85% while the Canadian\ndollar remained unchanged at a discount of 3-32 per cent\nC. P. R. Earnings Up\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CPJ-Eem-\nlngs of Uie Canadian Pacific railway for the week ended July 31\nwere $3,834,000, in increue of 8339,-\n000 over $3,435,000 ln the corruponding week lut year.\nEastern Sales\nMarket and Mining News\nFOREST SPEED\nTICKLES LAKES\nCenter Star's Permit\nFire Reported in\nThree Minutes\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CP)-Salu\nof 100 or more iharu on Montreal\nitock exchange yuterday:\n223 Brazil, 645 CPR. 275 Imp Tob,\n1450 McC Front 505 MU Pow, 207\nPower Corp, 260 Shawlnigan, 9750\nPow Debs.\nTORONTO, Aug. 4 (CP)-Salu\nof 100 or more shires on Toronto\nitock exchange yuterday:\n325 Brew & D, 210 Fanny Farm,\n890 H Walker, 400 Union Gu.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nHad Chemical ltftty\nperlcan Can\nTor Power\nI Mch & Fdy\nl Smelt k Ra\nI Telephone\nRMnda \t\nlinn \t\n|Tobacco\nMoton\n_dwin Loco\nIt it Ohio\n:_.  Avlafn\nStul ..\nada Dry\nPacific\n. de Paico\nI di Ohio .\ndar \t\nSu n y\nl Producti\nright pfd\nRt\nKodak 144\nBw 8s Ute    4ty\n146\n6ty\n34\n42'i\n132V.\n16*4\n63%\n:oo\n26H\nSty\n14\n16%\n36'i\n9\n10(4\n87\n46\nssv*\nSlty\n?7ty\n106 V4\n1 English\ni of Canada\nort Texu\nal Elec\nal Food!\nal Moton\nI Dust.\t\nJrich\t\nEbv\t\nINrthrn pfd\n|Wut Sugir\ni Sound\nton Moton\nHckrl\n> Tel k Tel\nt Copper....\n9%\n25-H\n21%\n36',\n89\n16'i\n7B-.4\nOty\n18H\n29ty\n4814\n27$\nllty\n19ty\nLow\n158ty\n144 ty\nSty\n131ty\n1ST*\n53\n99ty\n\"ft\n13'i\n16ty\n35\n8ty\n8ty\n45ty\n58\n29ty\n~H\n105\n25ty\n28H\n38*4\na\n19ty\n29 Vi\n47 ty\n27ty\n10ty\nWty\nClou\n158ty\n148\n6ty\n42ty\n131 ty\n18\n83%\n100\n26ty\n3ty\n14\nWty\nS5ty\nlOty\n87\n48\n88ty\nSlty\n71ty\n7ty\n10514\n144\n4ty\n27 ty\n25ty\n28'i\n36ty\n39\nWty\n78ty\n9ty\nWty\n29ty\n47ty\n27ty\nllty\nKruge S S  23ty\nK&T           SOty\nMack Truck  23%\nMont Ward 32 ty\nNuh Moton Wty\nNat Dairy Prod Wty\nN Pow & Ute lOty\nN Y Centnl 20ty\nPaclf Gai k El 26ty\nPackard Moton 5'i\nPennRR 26ty\nPhilllnWete ... 214\nPure Oil  94\nRCA  64\nRKO  2ty\nRem Rand\nSafeway Storei\nShell Union Oil\nS Cil Edison .\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStewart Warner\nStudebaktr \t\nTexai Corp .\nTexu Gulf Sul\nTimken   Roller\nUnion   Carbide\nUnion Oil of Cal\nUnited Aircraft\nUnited    Biscuit\nUnion Pacific\nU S Pipe    ...\nU S Rubber\nU S Stael\nVanadium Stael\nWarner Broi\nWutrn Electric\nWoolworth\nWeitern   Union\nWrlglev     78\nYellow Truck....    4\n19%\n39ty\n11\n20ty\nWty\n23ty\n26ty\n47ty\nWty\n4\n20\n34%\n49%\n62%\nWty\n24 ty\n104ty\nW\nWty\n43ty\n%\n68\nSlty\n444\n104ty\n- II\nWty WU\n424 434\nWty Wty\n5 54\n- 88\nSlty Slty\n434 444\n- 78\n3% 4\nDow Jones Averages\n30 industrials.\n20 rails\t\n20 utilities.\t\n40 bonds \t\nHigh\n12*6.11\n84.98\n25.15\nLow\n124.95\n34.66\n24.05\nClou      Chingi\n125.70-up .97\n34.84\u2014up .16\n25.03-up 1.11\n96.81-up .04\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nThree mlnutu from lighting of a\npermit slash fire at the Centar Star\ngold mine,on JubUee* mountain,\nnear Ymir, \u00bb receipt of notif icaUon\nregarding It from the forut branch,\nwu a record that tickled Manager\nHarold Laku of the Wesko Mining\ncompany three or four dayi ago.\nHaving a pile of slash to bum.\nfrom clearing of aitu for two or\nthree new mine itmcturu, Mr.\nLakei got a permit for burning lt,\nand on a suitable day had a lighted\nmatch dropped into the bonfire pile.\nIn Just three minutu he wai called by the ranger office at Salmo\nwith the query:\n\"Do you know you have a fire\ndown the hill lust below you7\"\nREPORT RELAYED\nAi Salmo hain't a direct view\nof the Center Star, the Information\nregarding the outhreak must been\nrelayed from lomewhere. Pruum-\nably the lookout man on the summit of Beaver mountain, at the\nlower end of the Salmon valley.\nW. E. Mitchell ipotted the imoke\nwith his glasses as soon u it ap-\nneared, and phoned the location to\nAssistant Ranger W. H. MUler at\nSalmo. who paued along the information to the people he knew\nwou'd be most interested.\n\"It tickled me to have thli demonstration of the forut b-anch'i intent watch.\" commented Mr. Laku,\n'n describing thia incident later in\nNelion.\nSMELTERSGAINS\nTORONTO, Aug. 4 (CP)-Although trading on the induitrlil\nlecUon of Toronto exchinge wu\nreduced to a dribble of 6000 iharu\nSaturday, the amallut of the year\nto date; pricu held to the up ilde,\nencouraged by a buoyant tone on\nthe New York board. Liquor itocki\ngalm ranged up to a half point giving itrong leadenhlp to the rut of\nthe boird. In the Index an advance\nof .40 to 109.26 wu regiitered.\nWalken .common led in trading\nvolume and gained ty point to 27.\nDistillen Seagrams added ty. Oils\nwere generally iteady. Conaolldated\nSmelten wu up a point and Nickel\nty point lower at 27 ty.\nWINNIPEG DULL\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 4 (CP)- A\nholiday at Liverpool and imminence\nof an extended week-end here restricted trading on the Winnipeg\ngrain exchange Saturday. After a\ndull session, the August whut future clued at 84% centi, ty cent\nhigher.\nThe English holiday curtailed foreign demand for Canadian grain,\nwith a resultant lapse in trading interut on the local market Futures\nfluctuated sluggishly within a hall-\ncent price range, with buying and\n\u25a0eUing operations at a minimum.\nRAILS STEADY\nNEW YORK. Aug. 4 (AP)-Ag-\ngressive demand tor bonda ot\namusement companlu and a iteady -\nto-flrm tone among lower-priced\nrail Jaiuu, were futuru of the\ncorporate bond mirket Saturday.\nUnited Statei governmenti were\nlifeless and about unchanged.\nThe Auoclated Preu average of\n20 rail bond! advanced .2 of a point\nto 82.1, and the averagu ot other\nCpi were mostly unchanged,\nsfen aggregated $3,498,000, par\nvalue compared with $3,487,000 last\nSaturdiy. The turnover in United\nStatu governmenti amounted to\nbut $100,000.\nButter, Cheese ond\nEggi Higher\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CP)\u2014Butter, chuie ind egg prlcu advanced\non Montreal product market thla\nNo. 1 butter wu 21 centt per\npound.\nCheeu wu 10 centi for No. 1.\nEggi were 28 centi a do-en tor A\nlarge.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 3 (CP)-Grain\nfuturu quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Cloie\nWhut:\nAug. 844     Mty    M       Mty\nOld:\nOct 82ty    834    32ty    82ty\nDec. Slty    Slty    Slty    Slty\nBirley:\nOct. 38       SSty    88       88\nDec. 3J4    88%    SSty    SSty\nOct\"'    128      WJty   Wlty   123ty\nDee.        122      122      119%   121\nOct?\"'      40       40ty    88ty    8\u00bbty\nDee. 41ty    43       4lty    41ty\nCaih wheat: No. 1 hard. No. 1 nor\nand trick Mty; No. 2 nor. Slty: Noi.\n3 nor. and 2 garnet 76ty; No. 4 nor.\n70%: Nu. 8 and 6. SSty: feed 60*%:\nNo, 1 durum 77ty; No. 1 A. R. W.\n72ty: No. 1 garnet 78ty; icreeningi\n29 centa per tan.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 4 (CP) -\nMining iharu told on the Vancouver itock exchinge Saturday:\nLlrted-BIg Mlu 200. Bndlan 118.\nBRX 1000. Cariboo 6\u00ab0. Dentonli\n700, Mik Siccar 1600. Meridian S300,\nMornlnt S 2000, Nat S 3000, Prem\nG 400. Reno SOO. Shun Crk ISM.\nCurb-Be\u00abver 8 1800. B C Nickel\n3000. B C SUver 100. Federal 8200,\nGeorge Copper 200. Georgli R 3000.\nIsland Mtn 2900. Noble Five 700.\nSilvercreit 8M0. Silvenmlth 6000,\nVidette 200. Waterloo 800.\nLISTED\nA P Con \t\nAmal OU _\nBig Missouri\t\nB C Packera\t\nBndlan  .:\t\nBralorne  \t\nBridge R Con\t\nBRXGold     .\t\nCariboo Gold Q .....\nC k E Corp\nCoast Brewerlu\t\nDentonla      \t\nGold Belt _ \t\nHome OU \t\nInt Coal     \t\nKoot Belle  \t\nMak Siccar   \t\nMcDougal Segur .._\nMcLeodOil  -\nMeridian        _\nModel OU      \t\nMorning  Star \t\nNat SUver      ._\nPremier Gold   \t\nPremier Border\t\nReno Gold     \t\nSalmon Gold  \t\nSheep Creek\t\nSpooner OU    \t\nTaylor Brldje - -\nVanalta\t\nWayside\nWellington O k G...\nCURB\nBuver SUver \t\nBluebird       \t\nB C SUver\t\nB C Nickel     _\nBrew St Dirt\t\nCalmont Oil\t\nCongreu       _\nCrowi Nut  \t\nDalhouiie       \t\nDictator Gold \t\nDunwell ..___\n\"Utcrest \u2014_\nFairview Amal\t\nFiwn M'-iIng \t\n\u00ab\"eder\u00abl Oold ....\nlYe-h-M OU\t\n\"\u2014 '\"\"'oper _\n\u2022Id\nAik\n.054\n\u2014\n.10\n.Wty\nti\nM\n13.00\n\u2014\n2.10\n_\n8.30\ntM\n.03\n\u2014\n.08H\n.094\n_\u00bb\n_)7\nJl\n.98\n13.80\nW.75\nM\n_H\nM\n.26\n.91\nM\n.20\n_\u00bb\n.30\n-14\n.11\n.llty\n.Olty\n_32\n\u2014\n_)4ty\n.204\nJOS\n\u2014\n.034\n.044\n.03\nm\n1.48\n1.49\n\u2014\n\u2022OOty\n1.12\n1.18\n.11\n\u2014\n.98\n1.00\n.Wty\n.20\n.17\nM\n\u2014\n.03\n.13\n.Wty\nM        -\nMttal Markets\n.04ty\n.Olty\n1.60\n.24\n.04\n.10\n.24\n.034\n.09\nJ)7ty\n.Otty\n_04ty\n.Wty\nitl\n.014\n1.68\n.25\n1.00\nJ)5ty\n.30\n.llty\n.01\n.Mty\nJO\n.12\n.09\nGlacier Creek\t\nGolconda \t\nGold Mountain\t\nGeo EnterprUt\t\nGeorge River \t\nGrandview .    \t\nGrange Minu  _\nGrull Wihkane \t\nHedley Amal  \t\nHighwood Sarcee .\nHome Oold \t\nIndian  Minu  \t\nIndependence  \t\nIsand Mountain \t\nKoot  Florence \t\nLakevlew\t\nLucky Jim .:__\t\nMar Jon Oil _\t\nMarcury Oil\t\nMerland OU\t\nMIU City     \t\nMinto Gold    \t\nMorton  Wolsey  ...\nNicola  ._,\nNoble Five\t\nNordon Oil\t\nOkalta OUi \t\nPacalta\nPend Oreille\t\nPUot Gold    \t\nPorter Idaho\t\nRanchmen'i\t\nReward      \t\nRelief Arlington ...\nRoyaUte \t\nRufus Argenta\t\nRuth Hopa\t\nSilvercreit     \t\nSilverado Con -\t\nSilvenmlth \t\nSnowflake\nTaylor Windfall ...\nUnited Emipe\t\nUnited Oil\t\nVidette Gold\t\nViking Gold -\t\nWaterloo        \t\nWaverley Tangier\nWaUlngton \t\nWhitewater\nYmlr Yankee Olrl\nJl\n.004\n.034\n.Mty\n.02\n.Olty\nJ4ty\nM\n.Mty\n.044\n.01\nJl\n.03\n.Wty\n.19\nJ7\n.07ty\n.M\n.034\n.12\n.Mty\nJl\n.03ty\nJ7\nJO\n.Olty\n29\n23.00\nJOty\n.02\n.014\n.Mty\n.034\n.Mty\nJO\nJlty\n.02\nJOty\n.Olty\nJS\nJO\nJlty\nJO\n.10\n.09\n.01\n.024\n.02\n.OS\nJl\n.10\nJS\n.01\n.92\n.Mty\n.01\n.03\n.Mty\n.14\n.Wty\n.08ty\nJl\n.10\nJSty\n.13\n.09\n.09\nJSty\n.08\nJ9\n.03\nJ3\n23.50\nJlty\n.02\n.03\n.M-y,\n.19\n.05\nJ5\nJS\nBIG INCREASE IN\nB.C.MYR0-LS\n$113,567,000 in 1934\nAgainst $99,J 26,000\nin 1933\nToronto Stock Quotations\nNEW YORK. Au|. 4-Bar lilver\nquiet and unchanged at 87ty centa\nLondon\u2014Bar illver steady and\nunchanged at 30 3-Wd (U.S. equivalent 67.40 cent)). .\nAlgoma\nAshley   Gold   \t\nBarry HoUinger\nBase Metala \u2014\nBankfield\nBear Exploration!\nBig  Miuouri\nBobjo\nBradian\nBralorne\nBrett Treth\nBRX ..._._\nBrownlee\nBuf Ankerite\nBuf Can Gold\nBunker HUl...\nCan Kifkland\nCan Malartlc\t\nCariboo Gold Q\nCuUt  Treth\nCentral Man\nFalconbrldge\nGod'i Lake\nGranada   ...\nHirdrock\nHollinger\nHowey\nHudson Biy\nInter Nickel\nKlrkland    L\nLike Mann\nLltUe Long Lake\nLake Short \t\nMcLeod Cockihutt\nMclntyre\nMcVlttle Or\t\nMeWatten G\nMacassa\nMilroblc\nMaple Leaf\nMining Corp\nMoffatt Hail\t\nNipissing\nNoranda _\nParkhill _\nPaymuter\nPend  Orellle\nPickle Crow\nPioneer Gold _\nPremier Gold \t\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBeU Telephone .\nB C Packing\t\nBniil     \t\nB C Power A\t\nBuild Prod\nCanadian Bronte ...\nCan Car Foundry\nCan Cement\nCan Cement pfd ...\nCan Ind Ale A\nCan Ind Ale B\n1M4\n70\nSty\n24\n31\n29ty\n7ty\n64\nMty\nBty\n7ty\nCanadian Pacific RaUway _  10\nCinadlan Steameri '.     J\nCockihutt  .\u2014    7ty\nCoiuol Mining <t Smelting .   1684\nDominion Bridgt    -   Mty\nDominion Olau     IW\nDominion Textllu __.,\nGn Steel Waru \t\nChas Gurd     \u2014\u2014_\u2014\nHamilton Br   \t\nInt Nickel     _,\t\nMuiev Harrii.\u2014 \t\nMontreal Power\nNational Steel Car ...\nNational Brtwlng \t\nOgllvle\t\nPower Corporation\t\nPrice Broa \t\nQuebec     \t\nS\n4\n3ty\n27ty\n44\n81\nWty\n364\n159\n7ty\n198\n82\nShawinlgan  \t\nSherwin WUllama\t\nSouth Can Power _.\t\nSteel of Canada \t\nCURBS\nAisociited Brewerlu\nBrewen ti Distillen ..\nB A Oil\t\nCanadian Celanue\t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Malting.\nWty\n10\nllty\n49ty\n12j1\n16\n224\n294\n33.H\nCan Winariu  _     4ty\n21\n3\n19\nWty\nik\n34\n79ty\nDlitillen Seagram.\nDryden Pioer \t\nImperial OU\nImperial Tobac Can\nInternaUonal Petrol .\nMcCoU Trontenac\t\nMitchell Robt\t\nPage Heney \t\nBANKS\nCanada \t\nCanadianna\t\nCommerce  \u2014\nMontreal   \t\nNova ScoUa \t\nRoval     \t\nMISCILLANIOUI\nDominion Storu  \u2014     7ty\nFord of Canada A  J7ty\n::::: !SH\n...._... 184\n 270\n\u201e 14Sty\nMontreal Silver Prices\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4.\u2014Silver futurt* closed ste\u00bbdy, 5\nlower to 5 higher; sales 1 contract.\nHigh Lew Clou\nMarch r --.-    69.90      69.90      69.75B\nU. S. DOLLAR IS\nUNCHANGED\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CP)-WhUt\ntht United Statu dollar at 1.004\nand the French franc at 6.64 centi\nboth held unchanged, tha pound\nitarting advanced 3-16 of a cent to\n$4.96ty on Montreal foreign ex-\ncimttt Saturday.\nExchang* Ratal\nNEW YOIUC. Aug. 4 (CP)-8t\u00abr*\nling exchange eaay at 84 94ty tor 60-\nday bUli and at $4J6ty fr- demind.\nCanadian doUan Saturday 3-83\ndlicount yuterday 3-32 dlicount\nweek ago 3-32 diicount\nFranc S.S3ty centa.\nLire 8.11 centi.\nVICTORIA, Aug. 4 (CP)-Mlnl-\nmum wagu fixed by the British\nColumbia board of industrial relations have been a material factor ln\nsubstantial gain! in the Induatrlal\npayrolls of the province slnct thc\nboard wai established in 1934, lt is\nclaimed In the annual report\nThe industrial payroll of the province, eitlmated on returni filed with\nthe department of labor, increased\nby roughly $14,000,000 from 899,126,-\n000 ln 1933 to $113,567,000 Ul 1934.\nWhile the board dou not lay\nclaim to thii increase being entirely\ndue to the utabllshment of minimum wagu, they have been a deciding factor ln recording such a\nlarge gain, the report states.\nApproximately 110,000 wage earn-\nen in the province come under the\n30 minimum wage orden passed by\nthe board.\nSigned by Adam Bell, chairman,\nDr. W. A. Carrothen, C. J. McDowell, Jamei Thomion and Fra-\ndena Eaton, the report outlinu the\nneed for wage rutoration.\nWith 3192 employen reported on\nwomen'i working conditions against\n3912 the previous year, an increase\nfrom 17,898 to 19J79 In the number\nemployed wu recorded.\nGrouping aU occupations, the\nbotrd shows the iverage working\nweek ln 1934 u 41J1 houn ai\nagainst 41J3 hours in 1933 and the\nwage level u $14.78 againit $14.87.\nCHICAGO LOSES\nCHICAGO, Aug. 4 (API-Not-\nwithstanding extremely peuimistic\ncrop reporti from spring whut\nareas both north and south ot the\nCanadian border, wheat pricu Saturday cloaed lower.\nAn outburst ot week-end profit-\ntaking ulu proved more than mf-\nfient at the lut to counterbalance\nthe effect of indications that millions ot acru of domestic spring\nwhut wlU not be worth threshing.\nA contributing late bearish influence wai the tact that domutic\nprimary recelpta of wheat today\nwere the largest yet this leason.\nCLOtlN-a STATUS\nWhut cloied nervoui, ty to 1\ncent under yeiterday'! finish, September 89ty to 8814 centi; corn ty\nto Ity cent down, September 77ty\nto 77ty centi; oati, 1 to Ity centa\noff, and proviiion! unchanged to a\nrise of 15 centi.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CP)-Brit-\niih and foreign exchange cloied\nhigher Saturday:\nArgentina, puo L   .2681\nBraiil, milreii     .0828\nFranct, franc      .0684\nGermany, reichsmark  4046\nGreat Britain, pound 4.9649\nUnited Statu, dollar, ty per cent\npremium.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCinada).\nCanada Bnad Profit\nli $72,004\nTORONTO, Aug. 4 <CP)-Det_Jll\nof the plan ot reorganliatlon ot\nCanada Bread Company have been\nmailed to shareholders along with\nthe financial statement for the year\nending June 30 1934, which shows\na profit of $72,004 after full proviiion for depreciation and bond interut The plan will be voted upon\nat a meeUng ot ihareholden called\nfor Auguit 27.\nGreen ipples\non Local List\nOne Vendor Cleaned\nOut of Entire\nDisplay\nOne vendor at the Saturday market on Vernon itreet, wai cleared\nof produce about I o'clock ln the\nafternoon, which wu a fair criterion\nof how the goods sold. It was one of\nthe best Saturdays this year.\nGreen applu appeared on the\nHit Felling at five pounda tor 25\ncents, and scarlet runner beans sold\ntwo pound! for 25 cents. Eggs were\nunchanged at 38 centa for extra\nlarge, but they were scarce and the\nprice ii expected to be up next\nweek.\nSpring chicken wu quoted at 25\ncents per pound.\nPricei were:\nVEOETABtES\nPotatoei, 9 poundi  $ ii\nSpinach, pound T    .05\nParsley, punch  _     .05\nMint bunch    _ _...   .03\nGarlic, pound      .18\nCabbage, pound _ - _..    .06\nTurnips, 10 pounds     .28\nRadishu, 3 bunchu _ _   .10\nLettuce. 3 bunchu - _..   .10\nParsnip!, 7 poundi _     3A\nGreen onioni. 3 bunchei    .10\nSage, bunch _ _     .05\nOnioni, 7 poundi     .25\nArtichokes, 4 pound!    .28\nAiparaaui, pound       JO\nRhubarb, 7 pound! __._   3~\nBeeti, 8 bunchu     23\nNew carroti. 3 bunchu   .10\nTurnips, bunch     .05\nBeani, 2 pounda  _   33\nPRODUCE\nEgg:, grade A large, dozen   .35\nButter, pound  - _ _   SI\nCream cheeie, pound ii and   .33\nCurdi, pound      .20\nHoney, 4-pound tin..._ 75\nHoney, 9-pound tin _  1.55\nDairy butter, pound    .25\nPrime cheese, pound - _    .33\nGoat cheese, pound  _   ii\nMEATS\nPork, pound .15 to  .23\nBeef, pound _._ _ .05 to   iO\nSpring lamb  _ .10 to  ii\nHead cheeie, pound _ 10\nOxtail _ _ 15\nBacon,   pound    -     .23\nBacon, home cured, pound __  .30\nComtd beef, 3 poundi  _   ii\nGarlic sausage, pound .   .17\nBeef drippings, pound _ 08\nSpring chicken, pound    .30\nSuet 3 pounds _     .28\nLiver sausage, pound     .18\nBologna uusage, pound    .15\nFowl, pound _   _   iO\nFRuif\nApplu. 5 pounda _     J25\nReno to Poy Threo\nCent Dividend\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP)-\nDlreeton ef Reno Cold mlnu,\nLtd., hava declared a quarterly\ndividend of 3 centi a ihirt, payable October 31.\n\u25a0PAOl NINI\nNEWHIGHSON\nWAUSTREET\nHeaviest Saturday\nTrading in Over\n\\     a Year\nNEW YORK, Aug. 4 (AP)-UUli-\ntiei led the Hit Saturday ai tha\nstock market rallied to a naw 1888\nhigh in tht huvlut trading tor a\nSaturday ilnce May 12 lut yaar.\nMeasured by the Auoclated Praia\naverage ot 60 stocks the market's\nnew top stood at 47.4. an advance of\n.6 of a point over Friday's clou.\nAnalysts said that although tha\nfirm tone ot trade newi afforded a\nbackground for the rise, the continued pressure of turplui money tn\nsearch ot profitable work wai likewise a factor.\nCAUSE DOUBTFUL\nOpinion wai split concerning tht\nforce in back of the demand for\nutiliUes. Some uld it was a belated\nresponse to the house vote agalnit\nthe holding company \"duth lentence.\" Others put the buying down\nto thc further rile in power consumption and to eirningi reports.\nihowlng favorable net returni.\nThose who believe Improvement\nIs under way for the huvy induitriu were Impressed with bookings\nof structural iteel in Juna which\nlumped to 91,642 tom from 43,871\nin May. Gaini ln icrap ateel prlcu,\nalways a barometer ot industry to\nWall street, likewise gava sentiment I boost.\nSheep (reek and\nReno Lower\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP)-Ae-\nUve trading in oU sharu futured\nSaturday's session of the Vancouver stock exchange. Ranchmen'i\nwai the luder and gained 8 at 80.\nPrice changu in the rut of the Hit\nwere mixed. Salei totalled 106.300\niharu.\nBralorne advanced S to SJO tnd\nisland Mountain wu up $ at 61.\nDentonia at 24, Mak Siccar at 11.\nPremier Gold at 1.48 and Gold Bait\nat 24 wert all up t ctnt Reno lott 4\nat 1.12 and Sheep Creek and Vldette\neach lost a cent it 98 and 30 rupee-\nMvely. United Emplrt eaaed ty at\n34.\nB.C. Silver wu off 8 at 1.80 and\nBeaver Silver loit ty at 4ty. B.C.\nNickel at 24 and Pend OrelUe at 81\neach firmed a point\nMercury Oil wu alio an acUva\ntrader but eued ty at 13ty. Ctlgtry\n6c Edmonton wai up t cent tt 81\nnnd Highwood Sarcee at Oty and\nPacalta at 44 each firmed ty. Mtr-\nland gained Ity at 19.\nMONTREALUP\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CD-Montreal stock exchange pricu cloud\nhigher Siturday.\nMontreal Power advanced ty to\n31 while the debenture! were up ty\nto 49ty.\nAnother firm ipot in tht power\ndepartment was Canadian Central\nElectric preferred whleh gained a\npoint over ita lait board lot aale\nof 59. Power corporaUon mounted\nty at 7ty while Shawinlgan at Wty\nwaa up ty.\nMinor recessions wert recorded\nby Brazilian TracUon at Sty, Canadian Industrial B at 74 Imperitl\nTobacco at 13'4, McCoil Frontenac\nat 22'. and Nickel at 27ty.\nSTOCK CERTIFICATES\nORDER FORMS\nMINE ond MILL FORMS\nPAYROLL FORMS\nSPECIAL RULED FORMS\nTIME SHEETS\nMining\nCompanies\nConsult the largest and\nmost modern printing\nplant in the interior of\nB. C. for Printing Require*\nments.\nWe Give Service\nletterheads\nenveWes\nvoucher Chicks\nSYNOPTIC form;\nLEDGER LEAVES   \\\nLOOSE LEAF BINDERS\nWI COULD ENUMERATE MORI . . . but wt would like to impreii tht fact\nthat wt make everything In our own plant . . . which enabltt us to |ivt eur\ncustomtrs a penonal strvlct In all thtlr varied printing needi.\nLET US QUOTE YOU ON YOUR\nNEXT ORDER\nOUR PHONI NUMBER IS 144\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCommercial Printing Dept\nNELSON, I. C.\nBOOK BINDING \u2014 RULID FORMS \u2014 LITHOGRAPHERS\n \t\n_\nPAGE TEN\nTHS NILSON. DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B.C\u2014MONOAY MORNINO. AUGUST \u00ab. IMS\nHOLLY'S\nCHOCOLATES\nFrtih Stock\n400 and 75*\nMana, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nVOTERS INCREASE\nBY 20 PER (ENT\nComing Election to Be\nBiggest Job of the\nChief Officer\nOTTAWA, Aug. 4. (CP)\u2014Approximately 180 tons of paper forms including ballot paper will be used\nin recording the votes of the Canadian people at the coming general\nelection. The supplies, accompanied\nby full instructions for their use,\nhave been sent to returning officers\nin all constituencies and the appropriate articles will be distributed\nby these officials to the deputy returning officers in charge of all polling stations.\nTwo factora make the coming election the biggest job ever undertaken\nby the chief electoral officer and\nhis staff, an increase in the number of voters and the number of\npolling stations and the introduction of a Bystem of absentee voting.\nThe number of voters in Canada\nhas increased by approximately 20\nper cent In the five yean that have\nelapsed since the last general election. This involved an increase in\nthe number of polling stations. In\n1920 there were 28,000 and this year\nthere will be between 33,000 and\n35.000.\nUnder the absentee voting system, sailors, miners, fishermen and\nlumbermen absent from their home\nconstituencies on election day in\nthe normal pursuit of their callings\nmay register their votes at the nearest polling stations to their work\nproviding it is in the same province.\nThe recording, checking and transmission of these absentee votes to\ntheir proper constituencies necessitate a special form of ballot and\nnumerous other documents and will\nmean more work for returning officers and deputy returning officers.\nIn all about 100 forms must be\nfilled in by deputy returning officers, returning officers md candidates in the course of the election.\nPostcards will be sent to all voten,\nnotifying them their names are on\nthe list and where to cast their\nballots. The 6,500,000 cards provided\nfor that purpose weigh 30 tons and\ngo to swell the total paper shipment\nof the 180 tons.\nVirtually all voting supplies are\nsupplied by the government. Pencils, stationary, telegram blanks and\nscaling wax are sent for each polling station but the deputy returning\nofficer must provide himself with\nInk and a bible on which to administer oaths.\nVenizelos Reported Hiding\nin Athens Awaiting Break\nGrand Old Man of Greece Will Fight the\nMonarchists to Last Ditch\nMORE ABOUT\nOTTAWA DOINGS\n(Continued From Paoe One)\nR. B. Bennett will go to the electors\nwiih a new cabinet.\nFIX DATE THIS WEEK\nThe election date will be fixed\nthis week although os yet there is\nno indication when the announcement will be made. Hon. C. H. Cahan. secretary of state, will be back\nin Ottawa early in the week from a\nvacation and will be able to inform\nthe government as to how the printing of voters lists and other election\nmaterial stands.\nThe Liberal opposition provided\nmost of the material for political\ndlicuulon during the week as Rt.\nHon. Mackenzie King, Liberal leader, unfolded his policy in two radio\nipeeches. He will make the third\nand final one Monday night and\nWednesday night will speak at\nKingston. Mr. King said his party\nwould stand by the platform propounded in 1933 and offer \"no armful of promises.\"\nAppointment of A. U. G. Bury,\nConservative. Edmonton East, to\nthe bench as district judge in thc\nnorthern Alberta judicial district,\nwas announred over the week-end.\nOther appointments to the bench\nand seven appointments to the senate are yet to be made and will likely be announced in a few days.\nThe cabinet held meetings daily\nduring the week but decided to observe civic holiday and will hold no\nmeeting tomorrow.\nThe Cullon Leper Settlement ln\nthe Philippine Islands is the largest\ninstitution of the kind in the wor.'\n'SEE\nVIC GRAYfeS\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your *j*#edi In plumbing repilri alteration!, and\nInitiUitloni.\nPh. 815        Opp. CITY HALL\nFound  Dead In Om Homt\n10,000 Bed Bugs\nKilled by\nSmythe's\n(lack Death Exterminator\nPHONE 1\nBy P1ERRI VAN PAASSEN\nCentril Pren Canadian Writer\nPARIS, Aug. 4\u2014At the moment\nthat King George II li getting ready\nto leave London for Athena to re-\noccupy the Hellenic throne, Eleu-\ntherioi Venizeloi, heroic md irrepressible storm-center of Greece for\nalmost as long as any Greek can remember, is on his way back to his\nfatherland to fight the king and the\nmonarchy and the faiclit dictator-\nihlp which ll planning to restore\nthe monarchy. In March. I saw Venizelos weep as he boarded the ship\nthat carried him from Crete to Italy\nand heard him say that he was\nthrough with politics. Today there\nis a price on his head. There is a\nreward out for anyone who kills\nhim. His houie ln Peril Is guarded\nnight and day by the police. But\nVenizeloi is no longer there. Nobody knows exactly where he is. All\nhis ion would say wai \"Father has\ngone back to tight. It's a fight to the\nbitter end thii time. No quarter is\nasked and no quarter will be given.\"\nThe Greek people are to vote in\na plebiscite in November whether\nthey want the monarchy restored.\nThe outcome of that referendum is\npractically certain. King George will\nbe called back.\n\"If that man is restored,\" laid\nGeneral Papanastasiou, one of the\nanti-royalist chiefs, also in exile in\nParis, ''if that man is restored (he\nwas speaking ot King George), \"it\nwill inevitably mem civil war. Democracy will disappear, for the\ncrown is only a poor disguise for\nthe symbol* of fascism. There will\nbe a perpetual civil war in Greece\nuntil he Is gone again or destroyed.\nWe are determined to fight as we\nnever fought before. If the plebiscite is conducted fairy, the fate of\nthe republic is not in doubt in the\nleast. But the plebiscite will not be\nconducted fairly.\n\"It is being traveitied. The republic has been in danger for some\ntime. Venizelos saw its peril. His\narmed intervention waa a failure.\nIt wai premature. But the next\narmed uprising will not be a failure. We will chase the Gluecksburg\nand his works. (Gluecksburg is\nthe dynastic name of the Greek\nroyal family). The monarchi|ti are\nso little sure of the people,\" went on\nthe general, \"that they dread an outburst my moment. That ia also the\nreason why the ex-queen refused to\naccompany the ex-king on his proposed trip back to Athens. The ex-\nqueen is a sensible woman. She\nrealizes that even it she gets back\non the throne, the Joy won't last\nlong. Greece is going to be swapped with blood. The queen divorced\nher huiband rather than follow\nhim.\"\nUNDER SENTENCE\nOF DEATH\nGeneral Papanastasiou has left for\nthe U.S.A. to rally the Hellenes in\nAmerica to the Slae of the republic.\nHe will await the outcome of the\nplebiscite in New York, but thereafter plans to return to Greece, in\nspite of the fact that he is under\nsentence of death md that his good!\nare confiscated.\nOver in London. ex-King George\ntold Stephm Lauzanne. of the Pans\nSoir newspaper that he was ready to\nreascend the throne. \"I am anxious\nto bring peace and prosperity to the\nGreek people, from whom I have\nmomentarily been separated. It was\nall a mistake, our exile,\" he said.\n\"Venizelos fastened the blame for\nthe debacle in Asia Minor on the\ndynasty. We were defeated by the\nTurks, because we undertook a war\nfor which we were not prepared.\nBut that war was not desired by the\ndynasty. It was foisted upon us by\nMr. Lloyd George. He urged us on,\npromising British support, but in\nthe decisive moment he failed us.\nWOULD END STRIFE\n''It is not true that I plan a bloody\nreaction upon my return. I am letting bygones be bygones,\" continued\nthe king. \"I will place myself above\nparty rtrife and work for the good\nof the whole people. Reaction ii out\nof the queition. Thit would be re-\nverising the process of nature. I believe in progress. Greece is sick and\ntired of and almost exhausted by the\nceaseless warfare among the politicians. I intend to make an end to\nthat. My admiration for the Greek\npeople has never left me. Greece is\na poor land, and yet wi took in two\nmillion Greeks from Asia Minor.\nWe are packed together as closely\nas the proverbial sardines.\n\"Venizelos made the mistake of\ntrying to gain absolute power. He\nwanted to be president in the American style, that is, chief of state,\nchief executive and prime minister\ncombined. The man's ambitions are\ncolossal. But the Greek people have\nsuch ^airong sense of equality that\nthey^annot bear one of their own\ntSft to lord It over them. They\nChased Venizelos. Everybody knows\nthe outcome of hii last bid for\npower. That was the end of him.\"\nSo far King George. It is not quite\ncorrect to say that Greek people\nchased Venizelos. A group of military men. led by General Kondylis\nand Metaxas. who want to exercise\nand who are excercising a military\ndictatorship at present, smashed\ndown the Venizeloi revolt last\nMarch, because of the \"grand old\nman's\" democratic principles and his\ndetermination to itlck to them. The\nelite of the Greek army and navy\njoined with Venizeloi, but thc re\npressional apparatus in the hands of\nthe military dictators was too strong\nfor them.\n\"One of the'Venlzelist chiefs in\nParis, who refused to say whether\nthe old chief had actually returned,\ndeclared: \"The blundering among\nGreek statesmen at present is ter\nrific. The people do not want the\nmonarchy restored. But the military leaders (rant the king back\nmerely to strengthen their dictatorship. They are grossly unfair to the\nking himself. If the plebiscite li\nconducted fairly King George will\nnever return. The monarchiiti never\npolled more thm a third of the total\nvotei at any election md they will\nnot now. But the dictatorship will\nno doubt falsify the returni.\nVENIZELOS IN ATHENS?\n\"The queition of the return of\nVenizeloi ii a foregone conclusion.\nHe is the only man who can save\nGreece. If he luddenly appeared.\nseven-eights of the people would\nrally around him. He may be ehot\nwithout trial. He ii an outlaw. But\nhe knowt hli duty. Venizelos ia itill\nin the fight,\"\n\"Hai M. Venizeloi returned or\nnot?\" I asked point-blank.\n\"Mr. Venizelos is on hii way. He\nwill appear at the right moment in\nAthens. He il hiding at the present\nmoment.\"\n\"In Greece?\"\n\"He's right in Athens!\"\n\"Alone?\"\n\"Perfectly alone!\"\n\"A brave man,\" aald I. \"But what\nii he waiting for, for the king'i re\nturn?\"\nWe ire not that far yet. There is\nmany a slip betwixt the cup md the\nlip, don't you know. General Mat*\naxas and General Kondylis are\nquarrelling among themselves at\ntne present moment, who shall be\nthe first In the kingdom that does\nnot exist yet They might come to\nblows one of these days.\"\n\"That's the moment Mr. Venizelos\nwill appear, I suppose?'\n\"I can't say. All I can tell you is\nthis. The fight is on. Even if the\nGluecksburg gets back, there will\nbe serious trouble. Last year's military intervention was child! play.\nBefore many weeki are over the\nbattle will be on in earnest\"\nMORE ABOUT\nDAVID SLOAN\n(Continued From Page One)\neui Injuria* proved too much for\nan overtaxed hetrt. Both legi wen\nbroktn at the ankle, hli arm and\n\u2022houlder wert frtctured and hit\nJaw broken In the plana crash\nwhleh occurred ai Pilot McCluikey wn taking off at Alta Lake.\nMcCluikey ind Oean Brock wire\nIniUntly killed. Mn. Brock dltd\nat Honethoe Bay ai lhe wai btlng\nput into an ambulanct with Mr.\nSloan for tht daih to hoipltal here.\nTwo brotheri md a iliter alio\nsurvive. They are Robert md Miss\nMarearet Sloan of Vancouver md\nAlexander Sloan of Perth. OnL\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nOn a summer day in 1323 a sunburned, work-hardened man walked\nInto an office Irt Vancouver's financial district, deposited a newspaper\nparcel on the desk and mnounced\ntersely:\n\"Guess that'll fix the overdraft\"\nThat man was David Sloan and\nthe newspaper contained the first\ngold brick from the Pioneer Gold\nMines of British Columbia, destined\nto be one of the greatest gold producers in Canada,\nSOLD HIS MINE\nJust 40 days before Slom had proposed to a group of Vancouver men\ninterested in the Bridge River dis\ntrict to nut uo cash for development\nwork on the Pioneer, then known as\nlittle more than a \"hole-ln-the-\nground.\" the work to be carried out\nunder his own direction. The group\nwas jo put up an equal amount and\nby Uie time hii money md theirs\nwas expended, he could either claim\na half intereit in the property or\ndrop out and take his loss.\nHis proposal was accepted and\nSloan went bick to the property on\nrushing Cidwtllider creek. Expenses were heavy and it was to a\ndrained bank account that he returned with that gold brick which\nnetted $3263 at the Dominion assay\noffice.\nWAS IN KOOTENAY\nDavid Sloan waa bom ln Perth.\nOnt.. in 1881. Educated at Queen's\nuniversity. Kingston, where he\ngraduated in mining engineering, he\nfirst came to British Columbia in\n1902 to work In the Slocan district.\nWest Kootenay. with his brother\nRobert.\nFrom there he went to the Surf\ninlet property on Princess Royal\nisland, off the northern coast of\nBritish Columbia, where he was assayer. Later he went to Nevada but\nthe gold fields of British Columbia\nbeckoned and he returned in 1921.\nFor lack of something better Sloan\nwent Into a partnership in the tea\nimporting business with a resultant\ndisastrous experiment in importing\nHolland bulbs. The shipment was almost a total loss.\nTwo yean later he agreed to have\na look at a \"hole-in-the-ground\" in\nthe Bridge River. Ten days of Investigation and he returned to Vancouver to broach his proposal which,\naccepted, was later to reap a golden\nharvest for himself and his associates.\nIn addition Mr. Sloan was president of Wayside Consolidated Gold\nMines, Ltd., and B.C. Nickel Mines.\nLtd.\nAbout two months before the Alta\nLake crash Mr. Sloan had a narrow\nescape from death when the plane\nin which he was a passenger with\nCql. Victor Spencer struck a tow\nrope as it taxied to the landing stage\nin Coal harbor. The machine overturned but the occupants escaped\nwith a ducking.\nMORE ABOUT\nTHREE POWERS\n(Continued From Page Ona)\nadjournment Saturday night, rep-\nreaentatlves of the three great powen will meet in Paris within 10 days\nto \"facilitate a solution of the difference! existing between Italy md\nEthopia.\" Ai Ethiopia did not sign\nthe 1908 treaty she ii not officially\ndesignated as participating in the\nconversations of the signatories.\nBut Ethiopia will be called ln\nwhen progress is made with the Italian case. There ii no inteption of\nimposing a settlement on Ethiopia,\nsay British clrclei.\nMEET SEPTEMBER 4\nAnthony Eden, Britiih mlnliter\nfor League of Nation! attain, will\nreport success or failure of the\nParis conversations at the next session of the council. The council in\nany case will meet Sept. 4. If a settlement is not reached, lt will be the\nduty of the council to deal with the\nwhole question aa it then exists.\nTwo resolutions were tdopted at\nthe public session of the council\nlast night, but neither ipecifically\nmentioned the procedure contemplated under the 1906 treaty. Eden\noutlined the proposed procedure in\na ipeeeh and declared nil intention\nto report the reiulti of the tri-power\nconversations to the council.\nThe fint resolution revived the\narbitration commission limited to\nsettlement of the Ualual incident of\nlast December, in which both Italians md Ethiopians were slain. A\nfifth and neutral member will be\nappointed to this commission.\nThe second resolution was adopt*\ned with Italy abstaining from voting. This provides for a meeting of\nthe council Sept. 4 \"to undertake a\ngeneral examination in its various\naspects of the relations between\nItaly and Ethiopia.\"\nApart from speeches, the only reference to the 1906 treaty was in the\ncommunique issued to members of\nthe council by Eden. And on the\nother hand, the communique itself,\nin which the tri-power procedure\nwas explained, made no reference\nto the league.\nBRITAIN'S AIM 18 PEACE\nIn justification of this unusual\nprocedure, the point Is made that\nit offers the most expeditious method\nof effecting a general settlement.\nThe great powen will get to work\nimmediately, and when they report,\nthe issue will again be before the\ncouncil.\nEden, as though to dispel my\ndoubts, took the opportunity to give\nemphatic assurance that the British government would devote every\neffort to secure a pacific settlement\nof the dispute, \"In harmony with the\nprinciples of the league covenant.\"\n\"They are fully mindful.\" he added, \"of the issues at stake, and\nmindful of their obligations as\nmember of the league.\"\nThe arbitrators of the Ualual Incident, who met in Holland, separated ln disaweement last month because the Ethiopian representative\nraised the point whether Ualual\nwas In Ethiopian or Italian territory.\nThe Italians claimed this was beyond the icone of the reference to\nthe aribtratlon commission.\nThe arbitration commission resolution adonted by the council sun-\nports the Italian view, declarine the\ncommission must not concern it\u00abHf\nwith other elements In dispute. The\nfour arbltratora therefore are tn appoint a fifth and return to work.\nMORE ABOUT\nBRITAIN'S PLAN\n(Continued From Ptgt Ont)\nCOKE CAR TRUCKS\nDERAILED\nA weit-bound freight train wu\ndelayed for a ihort time between\nTye md Drury Stturday when a\nsmall rock earned a illght derailment. One aet of coke car trucka\nwai derailed.\nFIRE STARTED\nINMATTRESS\nEntirely External to\nPaintShop, It Is\nPointed Out\nDistrict 8 Gyros Arrive for a\nThree-Day Convention, Nelson\n4000 ATTEND\nTHIS PICNIC\nEDMONTON, Aug. 4 (CP)*\u2014Paying tribute to their homelmd and\nhonoring their adopted country. 4.-\n000 German-Canadians held their\neighth annual reunion and picnic\nhere today. Representatives of the\nprovince, of the city, of Germany\nmd of political parties delivered\nspeeches from a flag-draped platform in front of the grand stand\nand patriotic songs of Germany and\nCanada were sung to the accompaniment of a German brass band. The\ncelebrations included a banquet Saturday evenlnff. and a snorts program and music feitlval today*\nleague affaln, had tht full endorsement of Prime Minister Baldwin and Sir Samuel Hoare, the\nfonlgn secretary ai will ai that\nof the other minliten, In hli\nitrong ipeeeh tt Genevt lilt night\nAPPROVE EDEN'8 TALK\nThe government particularly approved the passage in his speech\nwhere he said:\n\"We\" have named the day by\nwhich the negotiations must succeed or else the league of nations\ncouncil will have to discharge the\nobligations placed upon it by covenant.\"\nThe cabinet, however, still adheres to its previous policy of believing any action at Geneva' must\nbe of a joint character. Great Britain will not become a lone policeman for the league, it was stressed.\nThe Sunday Dispatch splashed a\nheavy black headline across the\nfront page: 'This may mean war\nfor Britain,\" although moit of the\npress saw cause for optimism in the\nagreement on procedure.\nThe newspaper printed In full\narticle 16 of the league covenant\nunder the heading \"This ls the trap,\"\nand asserted negotiations for peace\nmust succeed or the council would\nhave to discharge obligations of the\ncovenant.\n(Article 16 is the pledge to collec\ntive sanctions against a nation de\nclared by the council to be an ag\ngressor state.)\nThe compromise reached at Geneva,\" said the Sunday Times, \"retain! thc essential principle of\nleague responsibility.\"\nSeeks Junior Record\nfor the Vancouver-\nMexico Air Trail\nAn ancient excelsior mattress, stuffed beneath the building probably\nby the late Jimmy Grant, lti former\noccupant, before he became ridden,\npossibly to protect water pipea, wai\nthe origin of Friday night'i fire,\nlliat attacked the base of the frame\nbuilding externally, A. E. Murphy,\nmanager of Murphy Broi. painting\nfirm, pointed out Saturday. .It ls\nfive or six yeara ilnce Mr. Grant\nmoved out of the building.\nThere were no oily ragi, ai re\nported, in the case, he pointed out,\nand no fire In the building, md\nthe damage was confined to boards\npulled off the foundation posts by\nthe firemen in applying the chemical that quenched the blaze. Rags\nkept oo the premises are unused\nones.\nThe one-story frame building.\nused ln part by Murphy Bros, as\na point shop, is separated from the\nbrick Kootenay Cigar company\nblock In which the firm has its\nstore, by a passage a few feet wide.\nUnless the fire was set, which Mr.\nMurphy suggests is very improbable, its origin muit almoit certainly have been spontaneous combustion in the mattress, as accidental igniting, through someone\nthrowing down a burning match,\nis practically ruled out, by the fact\nthat the foundations were boarded\nup. The part of the building used\nfor a paint shop was over the small\noutbreak only at its extreme corner.\nFive Convicts\nMake Set-Away\nFULTON, Mo., Aug. 4 (AP)\u2014Five\nof six convicts who escaped laat\nnight from the criminally iniane\nward qf Missouri state hospital\nhere, roamed the countryside today\nwith officen in pursuit.\nThe men were believed itlll afoot\nanil unarmed except for a sharpened file uied in forcing a guard to\nsurrender hli keys.\nHenry SL John, 23, one of two\nconvicted murderer! in the group\nclassed by priion official! is dangerous,\" returned to the hospital\nand surrendered early today.\nMit Maa Ask\nWood Privilege\nTRURO, N. S\u201e Aug. 4 (CP)-\n\u2014Mic Maca of the reaervttion near\nhere went back to pre-confedera-\ntion dayi tonight md recalled their\nold friend Joieph Howe In efforti\nto prove Indlani had the right to\ncut baiket-wood on any unenclosed\nlots in the province.\n\"It's a poor dog thai wont fight\nfor his bone,\" declared Chief Joseph Jullen In announcing his tribe\nwas determined not to accent the\nruling of the department of Indian\naffairs. Ottawa, regarding the case\nof Michael Thomas, convicted here\nlast week on a charge of ste\u00abling\nwood from property of Gordon Kennedy \u2022\nThe conviction was the fint In\nthe history of Nova Scotia, the\nchief added, contending the Mle\nMaes ilwavi had been privileged\nto cut wood on unenclosed lots.\nAnother Carrier\nPigeon Is Found\nAnother carrier pigeon hai turned\nup in Nelwn, thii time In the Mills'\npigeon flock near the skating rink.\nThe*bird bears bands with the markings K H C 36-23 and H-30.\nRaise Over $200\ntor Boys Band\nParents Hold Tag Day;\nBoys Give Street\nConcert\nRegister This Morning\nand Business Meet\nin Afternoon\nMAURERS RETURN\nFROM TRIP SOUTH\nDr. Maurer Attends Dental\nClinic at Longbeach\nWell over $200 toward Instruments for the Nelson Boys band was\nraised Saturday in the all-day tag\nfor that purpose, organized and\ncarried out by well-wishera of the\nband, under the initiative of John\nDraper and Mrs. L. Pickard.\nTagging started in the momlng\nby a band of girls and boys. From\n2 p.m. to 5 p.m. members of the\nBoys band tagged, and In the evening the mothers carried on the\nwork.\nUnder the 'baton of S. J. Newell\nthe Boys bard gave a street concert\nand from 7:30 until 9 p.m. played at\nthe corners of Ward and Baker and\nFalls and Baker, and at points on\nVemon street.\nAmong those who tagged were\nLillian Fisher, Helen Wieg. Margaret Dingwall. Donela Dingwall,\nDoreen Maclean. Connie Wlgg, Annie Bird, Isabell Arnott, Marjorie\nBradley, Joy Guscott. Cynthia\nNlcholls. Winnie Jardine, Vema\nBlackwell. G. Homer, I. Paterson,\nMarie Donavon, Mary McDougall,\nSybil Bradley, Phyllis Jones. Gwen\nJones, Betty Chantz, D. Romano, G.\nVenables. Margaret Forbes, D.\nSmillie. Mary Beattle, Agnes Gibson, Isabell Graham. Barbara King-\nzett. Muriel Newell, Delia Whitfield. Beryl Wilson. Lllla Boweil,\nVelma Macintosh. Gertie Cooper,\nBob Beattie. Bob Graham, A. Ward,\nStewart Fyfe. Bobbie Halcrow. Donald Brown. S. Boweil, D. Gibbon,\nJ. Doyle. J. Beittie. R. Hunden, D.\nWiniiw, J. Ruppell. J. Gallicano,\nH. Guicott. G. Pickard, J. Wilson.\nL. Blackwell. A. Guscott. A. Strud*\nwicke. M. Strudwicke, R. Myen.\nB. A. Bragagniole. Mrs. L. Pickard,\nMra S. J. Newell. Mn. B. Blackwell.\nMn. David Beattle, Mn. S. R.\nBoweil. Mrs. P. Hunden and Mrs.\nW. M. Myen.\nM Railway Ad\nCases in July\nAltogether 64 Railway act cases\nhave been dealt with in provincial\npolice court at Nelson during July\nfollowing instructions to put m end\nto freight riding.\nSaturday three more prisoners\nwere brought in by R.CM.P. Officer\nS. F. Cunnington. The three men.\nPeter Kowl. C. Sarkharchuk and\nHerbert Manhall pleaded guilty and\nthe former was sentenced to pay\na fine of $15 and costs or in default\nto serve 30 days in jail, while thc\ntwo latter received a month's sentence. Tliey appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel in\nprovincial police court.\nMemben of the Nelion Gyro club\nwere busy Sunday evening in unofficial capacity, welcoming a vanguard ot delegate! to the 1835 District eight Gyro convention which\nopens In Nelion thii morning. For\nthree dayi the gyroicope, club emblem, will be prominent ln Nelion,\nduring which time the promotera\nof \"friendship\", will have the keyi\nof the city. American viilton, and\nabout half of the Cmadim club\nrepreientativei arrived Sunday and\nthe remainder will be in thia mom*:,\ning.\nSunday night E. L. \"Buck\" Buchanan and G. C. Arneson, hotel\ncommittee men, had a real task in\nfinding a room md a bad for the\nvisitors.\nRegistraUon md a meeting of the\ncouncil is billed for this morning.\nThe real buiineu of the convention\nget! under way in the afternoon\nat a business session commencing\nat 2 p.m. In the evening a dinner\nwill be followed by a program of\nclub stunts and an informal danoe.\nDuring convention days Nelion\nGyroi will wear red ties, not in\nan effort to emulate the atyle ot\nEx-Miyor L. D. Taylor, but to dli-\ntinguish them from other citizens.\nAmong delegates and their families for whom reservations have\nbeen made, are the following:\nCalgary-\"Alf H. Williams, international vice-president, and Mrs.\nWilliams, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Shore\nand child. Mr. and Mn. E. C. Hlgglnbotham and two children, Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry Howard, Mr. md\nMrs. Harry Lliter, Fred Aspden,\nRobert Conn, Allan B. Crawford,\nHarold Hailing, Byron T. Ransen,\nand Roy H. Teasdale.\nCranbrook\u2014Mr. and Mn. W. B.\nTaylor, T. V. Hogarth, E. D. Taylor.\nG. W. Hanna md Mr. md Mrs.\nW. A. Fergie\nEdmonton\u2014Mr. md Mn. J. A.\nBlazard and three children, Morley\nGrigg, Alex Mitchell, Mr. md Mrs.\nL. V. Jones and Mr. md Mn. D. B.\nLeitch and three children.\nGrand Forks\u2014A. D. Morrison,\nBasil Flynn and S. J. Simmoni.\nLethbridge\u2014Mr. and Mn. Thomas\nEvms, Mr. md Mrs. Fred King,\nMr. md Mrs. A. E. Neworth.\nRossland\u2014Mr. md Mn. George\nDyson, Mr. and Mrs. J. F Cooper,\nMr. and Mrs. Dm MacNaughton\nand Mr. and Mn. Edgar E. Perkins.\nSpokane \u2014 Mr. md Mn. R. E.\nGreen. Shirley Waterhouse, E. J.\nMurphy, Ernie DeVoe, D. R. Fitzgerald, William A. Kommers, Mr.\nand Mrs. Jamei B. Maxwell, Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry Goetz, Mln Spokane md Mr. md Mn. Robert W.\nOwen.\nTrail\u2014Parker Williami, Dr. C. A.\nMittun and Dr. W. C. Bradihaw.\nWallace, Idaho\u2014Mr. md Mn. W.\nS. Bennett, Mr. and Mn. James E.\nGyde md Mr. and Mn. W. C. Rull.\nmm and child.\nDr. and Mn. L. J. Maurer hive\nreturned from t trip to California\nwhere Dr. Maurer attended the\nPacific Dental conference at Long-\nbeech. They left Nelson about the\nend of June and returned to Nelson near the end of the week.\nAt Seattle they picked up Dr.\nMaurer's father and mother and\ntook them south. While down there\nthey visited Agua Caliente before\nthe authorities cloied up the track\nand gambling houses. They also visited San Diego while the big expo-\nlition wai in progren. .\nLOS ANGELES, Aug. 4 <(AP).-\nFrmk Kurtz, 20, member of the\nAmerican high platform diving team\nat the Olympic gamei of 1932, seid\ntoday he may take off tomon\"*.'\nfor Vancouver. B.C., from which\ncity he hopes to start Thursday ln\nm effort to set a Junior aviation\nrecord for the 1200-mile hop from\nCanada to Ague Caliente, Mexico.\nOn his way north Kirtz will land\nat Bakenfleld and Sacramento.\nCalif., Medford. Ore., md Portlind\nto make refueling arrangements for\nhis three-flag flight which he hopes\nto accomplish in 12 houn.\nKurtz plane is the aame In which\nhe set a Junior landplane speed\nrecord anci Junior east-west and\nwest-east transcontinental ipeed\nmarki.\nPolice Raid Four\nPlaces; Get Liquor\nOwners of Premises to Appear\nin Court This Morning\nLeaves to Meet\nNew Gov.-General\nQUEBEC, Aug. 4 (CP)-Col. Eric\nMackenzie, comptroller of the government houie at Ottawa, sailed for\nLondon here Saturday. In London\nhe will meet Lord Tweedsmuir,\n'Canada's next governor-general,\nwho it ll understood will arrive\nhere Oct. 10.\nThe Nelion city police with the\n\u2022ssistanee of Corporal D. Halcrow\nand Constable R. H. Mclntoih of\ntye provlncltl police of Nelson,\nraided four residences on Ltke\nstreet Saturday night, securing liquor at each of the four places and\nthe ownen. Mrs. Rosie Ayres, Mrs.\nMable Wade, -Miss Kay Johnson\nand Mn. Jenny Mclntyre will appear In city police court this morning to answer charges of unlawfully keeping liquor for sale. The\nraid was made about 11 o'clock\nSaturday night under the direction\nof Chief of Police Alex Stewart.\nOther offlcen on the city force\nIncluded Sergeant Robert Harshaw.\nConstables H. E. G. Penny, R. House\nand W. Fowles.\nCaptain Hopcraft\nDies in Seattle\nSEATTLE, Aug. '4 (AP)-Cant.\nW.' Dixon Hopcraft, 66, \u2022 colorful\nfigure ln Pacific cout maritime history, died at hli home here Siturday.\nThe caotaln'i cireer begin ln the\nmiddle '90s when he sailed the liner\nEmpress of Japan from England\naround Cape Horn for Pacific coast\nservice. He later became captain of\nthe Empreu of Asia.\nThreaten Strike\nIf War Declared\nEDMONTON, Aug. 4 (CP) -\nPledging themselves to participate\nin a general strike in the event of\nan outbreak of war Involving Canada, a man meeting of over 500 citizens today observed the 21st annivenary of the outbreak of the\nGreat war. The meeting was held\nunder the auspices of the Canadian\nLegion against War and Fascism.\nThe following resolution was\npaised: \"For the purpose of demonstrating our abhorrence to settling\nof International disputes by force\nof arms, we hereby pledge ourselves to do out utmost to prevent\nCanada from participating in any\nfuture Imperialistic wars, and we\nprotest also against huge expenditures for armamenti and will call\nfor a general itrike in the event of\nan outbreak of war:\"\nSwollen Streams\nPile Up Damage\nGREENSBURG, Pa., Aug. 4 (AP)\n\u2014 Rain-swollen stream! gushed\nthrough Westmoreland county today\nin the wake* of week-end storms\nthat lashed western Pennsylvania,\ncausing two deaths and thousands\nof dollars worth of damage to property and cropi.\nVeronica Lamprotolis, 28, of Lat-\nrobe, was drowned and Fire Chief\nL. Huber wu drowned while leeking to rescue the young women.\nApproximately 20,000 were forced\nto flee it Llgonler lut night where\na reservoir threatened to overflow\nand flood the community.\nGOEBBELS MAKES\nBITTER ATTACK\nUPONTHE JEWS\n(Copyright, 1936, by tht Hivu Newi\nAgtncy)\nBERLIN, Aug. 4 (CP-Havas)-In\nthe bitterest attack on Jews, Catholic! tnd policies of other nitloni\nyet made by \u2022 first-ranking Germm\nofficial, Propaganda Minister Paul\nJoseph Goebbels today excoriated\nopposition to Nazism In a ipeeeh before the party'i reglontl congress\nat Essen.\nIn the same address came apparent admission that there is trouble\nin the Nazi ranks, for Dr. Goebbells,\nreferring to \"false foreign reports\nof a crisis In the Germm itate.\"\ndeclared: \"It is simply a question\nof cleaning up, purely a purging\noperation.\"\nDerhousoff to Face\nCommon Danger\nSteve W. Derhousoff. of Rossland, will appear in city police court\nthU momlng on a charge o( driving\nto the common danger. Derhousoff\nbacked into Dr. W. Laishley's car\non Ward street Saturday evening,\ncausing damage to the latter's car\namounting to about $60. Headlights,\nfender and radiator of Dr. Laishley's\ncar were damaged.\nAnderson Baby\nDies at Nelson\nAyllsse Marylyn Andenon. 14-\nmonths-old diughter of Mr. md Mn.\nCharles G. Anderson, Kootenay\nitreet. died at thc family home Saturdav evening. The family recently\narrived in thc city from Vancouver.\nPOLICEMAN DROWNS\nTtEGINA BEACH. Saik.. Aug. 4\n(CP)\u2014Thrown from a cmoe 100\nyardi from ihore Comtable Donald\nMacBeth of the royal Canadian\nmounted pollce, drowned here late\ntoday. He lank in the rough waten\nof the lake, choppiest of this season,\nas he attempted to reach shore.\nWith MacBeth at the time ot the\naccident wai a companion. Constable Mast, alao ot the R.CM.P. Mast,\nwho swam with the upset canoe to\nshore, climbed out on the beach to\nlrtrn MacBeth had drowned in the\nwhite capped waves. MacBeth wu\na strong swimmer.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR SALE-ELECTRIC SINGER\ntewing michine enclosed in walnut table. Cost $195 new, will sell\n$76 cuh. phone 667Y. (2858)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nRosslmd vs. Nelson box-lacrosse\nFriday night 6:15. (-860)\nSons of Englind meet tonight ln\nthe Memorial hall at 8 o'clock. (1862)\nTrucking and moving. Phoni Atkinion, Roi.mont, Nelson.       (2741)\nGolf club luncheon Thunday next,\nAugust 8,1 o'clock. (2859)\nElectrical Supplies md repiin\nF. a Smith, 313 Baker SL Ph. 666.\n(2786)\nEXPERT RADIO SERVICE AT\nSTANDARD ELECTRIC. Pholfe 838.\nL. M. Bice. (277$)\nThe regular general meeting of\nCanadian Legion will be held Tueiday, August 13th instead of Aug. 6th.\n(2847)\nSUIT\nSALE\nVALUES UP TO 527.50\n$18-75\nVALUES UP TO $35.00\n$24-75\nDon't put off getting ont\nof these high grade suits.\nIf you need a suit now,\nif you'll need one in tht\nFell ... GET IT NOW,\nHERE!\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nMORE ABOUT\nQUINTUPLETS\n(Continued From Paaa Ona)\nbibles,  lying helplwsly In taen>\nbaton.\nLIKE THEIR BATH\nToday they were brought tn from\ntheir bath md were howling vigorously at being taken from the water\nwhen Dr. Dafoe and the reporter\narrived before 7 o'clock. Al Nursei\nCecile Lamoreux md Eva Gigni\nbrought them one by one Into th<\nnuriery to be dried, powdered and\nweighed, they gave up the battle (01\nlonger baths md began to take in*\nterest in the new face at thell\nnursery window.\nYvonne was placed In a bed dl\nrectly below the window md lmme\ndiately grasped the sides and stool\nup for a good look. Nothing ah;\nabout Yvonne.\nAi Annette joined her ln that bai\nmd Marie, Cecile md Emille war\nplaced in mother beside it Yvonn\nattempted to snatch a pencil througl\nthe plate glau md fell back a\nAnnette. Annette didn't like that 1\nall and retaliated by ilttlng on ba\nsister's stomach.\nPLAY POR HIS SPECS\nWhen Dr. Dafoe took tha babi*\nfrom the beds md returned tha\nduring the busmen of aiding th\nnunes dreu md feed them, he wa\na 10 to 1 bet at my time to lose hi\nspectacle!. Yvonne snatched at thai\nu he wu carrying her md Emlli\nmd the othen took turni at tryln\nto knock them from their mooring:\nIt took tome adroit ducking by Dl\nDafoe to escipe the eiger htndt,\nMarie, Cecile md Emilie, all 1\none bed for the moment, rolltcke\nabout in the playful mood tb\nnunei ity they retain throughou\nthe day.\nIf there It a thy one tmong th\nftve it ii Cecile. She poked her lei\nIndex finger into her mouth wha\nshe met the visitor's eyes md burle\nher head in the bedclothei. At otne\ntimei the wu aa precocioui u ba\neiiten.\nREYKJAVIK, Iceland, Aug. i -,\n(AP)\u2014Thor Solberg, Norwegiar\nAmericm filer, flniihed mother la\nof hli easy-stage Journey by plm\nfrom New York to Norway wht\nhe landed here lut night\nHit flight from Angmigiallk wi\ndelayed at Bildudil where he col\nlided -with a cutter while landin\nin the harbor.\nWELCOME!\nGYROS and GYRETTES\n(District Vlll)\n1935 CONVENTION\nAN EVENT IN YOUR\nLIFE AS IN THEIRS!\nLIBERAL ORGANIZATION\nMEETING TO BE HELD IN GELINAS HALL TUESDAY EVENING,\nAUGUST 6, AT S P.M. (2881)\nWanted\u2014Tnnsportatlon to Vancouver and return for two, within\ntwo weeki. W. Fife, Willow Point.\n(2855)\nCherrlei\u2014Pick your own. Royal\nAnn. two centi, Blng. Lambert, three\ncenta. Laddera lupplled. Mrl. Sarah\nWood, Cemetery road. (2857)\nGREYHOUND  LINES offer reduced lummer ratei to til polnti In\nEutern   Cinidi   tnd   the   Unlttd\nSUtei. Su your local agent today.\n(2775)\nExtra!\n'College Scandal\"\nMyiterloui Terror....\nRomance and Laughter\nwith\nArline |udfe\nKent Taylor\nCOMPLETE  SHOWS\n2-7 and 8:30\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1935_08_05","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0405442","@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":"1935-08-05 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1935-08-05 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\/1.0405442"}