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NEUON,  B.C.  \u2014   TmiBSDAT   MORNINO.   JULY   I,   191*1\nHagen Leads Par-Shooting\nGolfers in Scotland\n\u2014Page Seven\nHVI CENTS A COPT NUMBER\nPARLEY SUSPENDED\nFOUR BIG GRAIN\nEXPORTERS ARE\nIN AGREEMENT\nNew CJM*. Bridge\nAgree That Production\nand Exporting of Grain\nMust Fit Demand\nMUST ALIGN THE\nSMALLER NATIONS\nPrinciple of Temporary\nAdjustment Agreed on;\nRussia Is Willing\nBy OEOROE HAMBLETON\nLONDON. July 6 (CP cable)\u2014\nThe four greatest wheat \u2022export tng\nnations of the world having agreed\nproduction and exporting of the\nproduct must ke made to fit the\ndemand, If the prloe ls to be\nraised, are now going after tke\nsmaller exporters and the big Importers to see bow much cooperation tbey ran get. lf they cant\nget enough, In all probability the\nfour-power scheme wlll necessarily\nbe dropped.\nAfter many months of negotiating the wheat conference consisting\nof Canada, Australia, the United\n\u2022States and the Argentine, today at\nlaat announoed they were \"agreed\nin principle\" on a policy ln \"temporary adjustment ot production and\ntrade to world demand with .a view\nto Improving the prloe of wheat and\nliquidating surplus stocks now hanging on the market.\"\nThere wae an Important reservs-\ntlon to the communique In which\nagreement waa announced, however,\nframed to meet en insistent Australian demand. It read: \"Wa recognise,\nhowever, that the solution of the\nwbeat problem depends on tbe oo-\noperation of luropean countries.\"\nRussia, out of ttM. wheat export\nmarket tor aoifie time but potentially\none ot the largest eaportera, hto el-\nready indicated she u willing to\ncooperate*\nEXTEND TUNNEL\nON GOODENOUGH\nWork of extending the low level\ntunnel at the Ooodenough mine at\nTmlr ls reported to be progressing\nwell slnoe installation of the- air\ncompreasor.\nIt ls anticipated In this work to\npick up the downward continuation\not the main Ooodenough vein, which\nls exposed ln upper workings.\nBARRISTER GETS\nJA1LOTENCE\nNEW WESTMINSTER. July 1 \u2014\nArthur L. Kent, prominent barrister\nand solicitor of Ungley, wbo hu\npracticed law In the Fraaer valley\nIor the laat 10 feara. waa een-\ntenced to three yeara ln the penitentiary by Judge J. N. Ellla In\noounty oourt here thla afternoon.\nKent wa* oonvlcted of converting\nto hla own uae 11400 belonging to\nJoeeph Florltto, Italian farmer of\nlingley, and later pleaded guilty\nto four  similar  charges.\nFather of Convicted\nMan Goes on Trial\nVKHUCVIU-t. A1U.. July 5 (CP)\u2014\nLinks ln the chain of evldenoe which\naent William McLean to the death\ncell at rort Saakatchewan Jail, were\nput together again today aa the trial\nof Kenneth McLeHn. father ot William, got under way on a charge of\n\u2022laying Walter J. pantile at Mann-\nvllle   September  30  lut.\nWUllam wu oonvlcted Tueeday on\nthe aame charge and sentenced to\nhang at Port Saakatchewan JaU\nOctober 6.\nVernon Wlllea again told the atory\nof finding the body of Parallle on\nSunday. October 3, and of Parallle'e\nfaithful dog anuggled down agalnat\nMs muter. Percy WlUee. hta father,\nto'd of going to the murdered man's\nhome and finding an empty JOS\n\u2022hell.\nParallle wu shot and robbed.\nAbove la a view of tbe new ateal\nbridge which the Caaadlan Pacific\nrailway reoently oompleted at Kootenay Landing, mileage 83 18. Nelaon\nsubdivision. The i vertical Utt apan\nla ahown In the raised position.\nOverall length ot tbe bridge la approximately 400 feet. Hanking spana\nbeing lto feet. Tbe atructure bu\na navigable opening ot 70 teet wltb\na vertical Utt span of 50 teet above\nblgb water. Tbe bridge la motivated\nby a capstan block, aided by heavy\nconcrete oounter weights. Tbe ltft\nspan la of through plate structures\nand tbe flanking spana are through\ntrusses. Apart trom the faclllttee\ntbe bridge wtll give tor navigation\ngathering of driftwood and other\nflotsam wlll be reduoed to a minimum. Tbe structure wu fabricated\nand erected by the Canadian Bridge\ncompany, Walkervllle. Ont.\nBOND MIDGE\nCREEK GROUP\nCoast Capital Plans Diamond Drill Two\nGroupR\nLease and bond on the Wisconsin\nand Strathcona group ot mineral\nclalma. situated 11 mllu back from\nKootenay lake, on Midge cne,. stu\nbeen Uken by R J. Weeks and associates of Vancouver. The bondholders have been at work for\nseveral daya clearing . trail Into the\nproperty.\nAs eoon u preliminary tcmS\nbuilding wd cgmp site work la\ncompleted. I P. Crawford. Um.\nwbo ls superlnte\u00bbdmg *_\u00bb -work. In-\ntends ts Uke ln * <_\u00bb\u00abe>ond drill\noutfit. Irtensive exploring wlll be\ndone before development work Is\nstarted.\nIt Is sUtod tbe ore value of tbe\nWisconsin and Strathcona la chiefly\ngold, but oontalns many other mineral tracings. Thirty years ago when\ntbe claims were staked, the complex ore msde mining and treating\ndifficult, but It la believed that\nImproved methoda will make the\npresent propoeed operations profitable.\nBond on the Wisconsin wu acquired from Charles Hussey of Spokane, and B. C. Wragge. representing tbe Wetnblaugh and plemlng\nestates. TH* ' Strethoona bond wu\ngiven by Mr. Hussey. P. Mcfjulre\nand Mr. Wragge.\nKootenay Freight\nTraffic Improves\nIncreased Tonnajje Maintained In All Lines Traffic\n\"There ku been a noticeable\nImprovement In the movement\nof freight throoiboot the Kootenay division during tbe past\ntwo months.\" 3. M. Gordon, dla-\nIrkt freight agent for Canadian\nPacific rallwny stated Wedneaday\nafternoon.\nTbe Increuing tonnage, though\nalight, hu been maintained each\nweak, and may be a crttarlcd ot\ngeneral upward trend In Industrial\nactivltlu In the eouthern Interior.\nwhich hu been noted during tbe\nspring.\nWhile not quoting flgurea or making reference to one particular commodity, Mr. Gordon eald the lm-\nprovemenu were In all llnea of\nhaulage\u2014tbe carloads of polu and\nposts, of lumber, of general mer-\nctundtse and hardware ln and out\nof Nelson and other freight.\nMr. Oordon anticipated a sUsdy\nImprovement of buslneu ln the Immediate future rather than a phenomenal rise\u2014unlou there wu an\nearly return ot silver and other base\nmetal prlcea.\nMarkets at\na Glance\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Irregularity, developes In stock markets.\nToronto mlnea\u2014Most Issues dow\nIrregularly weaker.\nNarw Yark\u2014Stocks sag under\nprofit-taking.\nWinnipeg\u2014Oraln prlcea, erratic\nthroughout, close  fractionally\nLondon\u2014Bar sliver, copper, tin,\nlead and kino higher.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver unchanged; copper and tin op; lead firm;\nilnc steadier.\nNew York\u2014Cotton barely steady,\n\u2022agar, rubber and coffee ateady.\nBOYD HOPS FOR\nWASHINGTON\nAttempting: a Non-Stop\nFlight From Haiti to\nWashington, D.C.\nTARIFF HEARING\nSET FOR 1ULY 27\nVANCOOVUt. July 8 (CP)\u2014Plrst\nhearings ot tbe new Canadian tariff\nboard under the chairmanship of\nBoh. Oeorge H. Sedgewlck, K.C. wlll\nbe beld In Ottawa on July 31 and\n38, Recording to advlosa reoelved by\nthe Vancouver office of t)i\u00ab Canadian\nManufacturers'   association.\nMEMBER OF GOLD\nRUSH FAMILY DIES\nWILLIAMS LAKI. July 5 (CP) \u2014\nJohn Webster Campbell, 85, a member of one of the beet-known families of the early gold nuh ream,\nU dead here. He wu born in Glengarry county, Ont., and rame weet\nat  the  age of   IB  year*.\nGoes to 1.XI. Mine\nA large compressor and otber mining machinery haa bun taken 16 tbe\nI.X.L. mine at Roaaland. Installation of tba machinery, which wUl\nbe Immediate, wUl apeed up work at\nthe mlna. -\nOle Oslng and aaaoclataa of Rowland have been leasing on tbe\nproperty for some time and reoently\nshipped a car of high grade ore\nto tha Coneolldatad smelter at Tadanac.\nBelieve Suffocation\nin Mud Cause, Death\nVANOOUVKB. July I (CP)\u2014Suffocation ln mud may have caused\nthe deatb of Archibald Snow. 24.\nwbou body wu found today at tha\nfoot of Bldwell itreet on Coal Harbor. He wu apparently knocked unconscious when hs fell from a wharf\nand landed wltb hit rau downward\nIn the oo_e.\nr-ORT AV PKIM-E. Haiti, Jaly\n( (AP).\u2014Captain Errol Boyd. Toronto airman of transatlantic\nfame, and Co-pllot Robert Lyons\ntook ott at 0:20 p.m., (E.S.T.)\ntoday In the veteran plane Co-\nluaelUa for a non-stop flight to\nwuhlngton, B.C.\nBbyd, wbo crossed the Atlantic\nin the Columbia and landed on tbe\nwest ooaat of Britain soma years\nago. uld he expected to reach Wuhlngton In about 18 or 17, houra. He\nla carrying a letter and a gift of\ncoffee from Prealdent. vlnoent of\nHaiti to prealdent Roouvelt.\nFor several daya Boyd and his\ncompanion haw bun awaiting favorable weather tor tba return\nnlgbt. Tbey tlew here from New\nYork on an attempted non-stop trip\nbut wera forced down lust before\nreaching tbeir destination.\nCharge Fraud Against\nPioneer Directors\nVICTORIA. July \u00bb (CP)\u2014Clalma\nof conspiracy and fraud agalnat the\ndirectors who made the deal whereby\nthe original of the preunt Pioneer\nOold Mlnu oompany waa put Into\nbankruptcy and taken over by the\npreunt company, were made before\nthe court of appeal today by J. A.\nMclnnea. counsel for Andrew Perguaon tnd the heirs ot Peter Ferguson,\nprospectors.\nA majority interest tn the Ptonur\noompany Is st stake. Involving millions  of  dollars.\nMr. Mclnnes claimed that tbe\nliquidation of the oompany wu the\nchoice ot the majority, shareholders\nwho were ln a poaitlon to control\ntha liquidation.\nFINDS CLOTHES OF\nHARRY DONISTHORPE\nMR SQUADRON\nLANDS SAFELY\nAT REYKJAVIK\nItalian Air Armada Com\npetes Third Leg of\nChicago Hop\nSILVER CONFERENCE TO CONTINUE;\nPIHMAN BEUEVES NEAR RESULTS\nSenator Key Pittman of Nevada said the silver\nconference would be continued as long as there was\nany hope of reaching an agreement and he felt discussions among the chief silver holding and producing countries on marketing control were near achievement of real results.\nSIGNS OF BETTER TIMES\nNEXT FLIGHT IS\n1500-MILE ONE\nPlan to Stop at Southern\nEnd of Greenland If\nWeather Bad\nReykjavik,    Iceland,    Jaly   I\n(API\u2014Tbe Italian aerial squadron\nOf  14  seaplanes   arrived   here  late\ntoday from Londonderry, Northern\nIreland, completing  the  third leg\nof  a   projected   uven-stop   flight\nfrom orbetello,  Italy, to Chicago\nby  aay  of  castar*   panada.\nTbe  planea  camg   4pwn   on  the\nFiord here at 9:99 p.m.. local time\n(1:59 p.m. C_8.T.)  seven houra and\n19 mlnutas aftar the takeoff started\nat tbe northern  tip  ot  Ireland,\ndistance of 990 mllu.\nThere ware 34 motorboats. each\ncarrying three tons at benalne for\nthe flying ahlpa. anchored In the\nInlet to grut the armada, headed\nhy the Italian aviation minister.\nOeneral Italo Balbo.\nThe ' longest - hop of tba aerial\ncruise la planned from here, a 1500-\nmile flight to Cartwrlght, Labrador.\nPreparations ara made, however, for\nthe flut to atop at Itallabub, at\nthe southern end of orunland. If\nconditions maka lt Inadvisable to\nattempt to fly directly to tha North\nAmerican continent.\nTbe Italian flyers, about loo atrong\nhad bun held at Londonderry\nSunday because pi ' v*\nweather In the Iceland regl\nftrst step from Orbetello wu AA'\neterdam, Holland.\nTHREE BURN TO\nDEATH IN HOME\nWAPHXA, Baak., July S ten.\u2014\nThru persona wen burned to death\nearly today wben fire raaed the\nfarm home of Mr. and Mra. Fred\nWooski. seven mllM eaat ot here.\nBruno Wooakl, uven, and bla\nfour-year-old alater, wbou name wu\nnot learned, were sleeping upstairs\nat the time. It It believed tbey\nwere suffocated before tbe * flames\nreached them. Fred Wooski,\nfather of the two chlldnn. wu\nburned to death In a vain attempt\nto save the tota.\nMra. Wooakl sustained uven\nburna tn an equally vain rescue effort. Bhe wu driven from the houu\nby tbe flames, believed to have\nstarted trom a fin In tbe cook-\nstove.\nGirl Hangs Herself\nSuicides After Quarrel Over\nDishwashing\nMEDICINE KAT, Alta.. July 6\n(CP) .\u2014After a quarrel with her\nyoung sisters over waahlng dishes,\n13-year-o'.d Loretta Maura, daughter\nof Mr. and Mn. Chris Maun of\nIrvine, near hen, banged hetgelt in\na chicken coop at the nar of her\nbome.\nTha bodr ww found by a 18-\nyear-old alster. Following pollce inquiry dutb wu pronounced suicide\nand no Inquest wu held. The girls'\nbody wu found hanging by binder\ntwine attached to a rafter In tbe\nchicken coop.\nVANCOWHt, July 5 (CP)\u2014While\ncutting brush on McOilllvray creek,\neight mllu wut of Chllliwack, C.\nA. Thornton discovered clothing\nbearing Identification papen of\nUilot Harry Donlsthorpe of this\ncity.\nDonlsthorpe urnd with the Canadian forou during tbe war. Provincial pollc* an searching the\ncreek.\nWINLAW HOME AND\nCONTENTS BURNED\nWINLAW. B.C., July \u00bb.\u2014Tbe home\not P. Orltohen and all it contained\nwu burned to the ground Thursday evening All the men folk wan\nshunt. Tbe neighbors worked bard\nand, helped the woman, but their\nefforte wan In vain.\nVANCOUVEB    PIONEEB    IS    DEAD\nVANCOUVER, July 6 <CP>\u2014Philip\nOban, aged 7a, pioneer of Vancouver.\nIs dead at his home hen'on Kings-\nway.\nBishop of Kootenay\nLeaves on Monday\nVERNON. July 6 (CP)\u2014Th* Rt.\nHtr. A. J. Doull, whow resignation,\nafter 18 years u tbe bUbop of\nKootenay, l* ft matter ot regret to\nbli man\u00ab frlenda throughout the\nInterior, t* to leave on Monday next\nfor Montreal, preparatory to ailing\nwltb bla family for tbe old country,\nwbere be wtll assume tbe position of\nassistant blahop and archdeacon af\nSheffield.\nUntil his successor Is consecrated,\ntbe large dlooese will be administered\nby tbe aenlor archdeacon, tbe Ven.\nThomas Oreene ot Kelowna. Th*\nsynod to elect bis successor is to\nconvene   at  Nelson   on   October   38.\nMn. Doull and Mlas Peggy. Be*\nand Altx Doull left last month for\ntbe eaet to visit friends, The bishop\nwlll join tbem and bis sou Ronald,\nwho bas bean attending McOlll university, and they will sail for Bngland on  July  38.\nDuke of Connaught\nAppears to Be Well\nLONDON, July 6 (CP cable).\u2014\nTbe Duke of connaught, former\ngovernor-general of Canada, suffering from a ' oold for aome * daya,\nappeared well wben h* presided today over the meeting of the Patriotic fund.\nSawmill at\nCoast to Reopen\nVANCOUVER, July 6 (CP).\u2014The\nRobertson <fe Hacket aawmlll. Vancouver, closed for 10 months, will\nreopen immediately, employing 100\nmen.\nImprovement in lumber and generally improving conditions la reaponalble. O. R. Hackett, general\nmanager,   stated.\nReUef at End\nin South River\nSOUTH RIVER. Ont, July g (OP).\n\u2014Relief In this village has been\ndiscontinued with tp* lumber mills\noperating at capacity and employing\n\u2022 gnater number of men than\npnvloualy.\nMay Establish\nCannery in Burnaby\nEDMONDS. BC..1 July 8 (CP).\u2014\nArrangements ar* under way for\nestablishing  tn  Burnaby 'a canning\nfactory by Paclflo Coast Packers\nLtd- to preserve fruits and vegetables grown in the municipality.\nLater lt is proposed to pack shell\nfish.\nWben operation! begin the factory ls expected to employ approximately 80 Burnaby residents tn\ntwo eight-hour shifts.\nIndustrial\nExpansion Widening\nTORONTO. July 8 (CP) .\u2014'The\nexpansion In Industrial production\nduring June eo as to Include a\ngreater number of trades, thereby\noffsetting a seasonal decline In eome\nwhlcb wen among the'flnt to record Improvement.\" said the monthly\ncommercial letter of the Canadian\nBank of commerce, Issued today.\n\"The heavy industries. Invariably\nt*w last to share ln a general upturn, have become slightly mon\nactive, as also have numerous amall\nmanufactunn of special or luxury\ngoods, while tbe volume ot new\norders offend the textile mllla haa\nbeen beyond the capacity of aeveral\nunite to execute  promptly.\"\n\u25a0\u2022iw'wiiifraTw-w^-wwwwwwwwwww-ww\nMouths Water as\nVisitors Size Up\nKootenay Cherries\n\"Oh. boyi just look at theser\n\"Why they an tbe tint X\nhav* aeen for years!\"\nTbey wen strangere to Nel-\nT eon end their mouths wen\nwstgrtng.\nTbey \/mt* caging it t bli\nbea of Kootenay grown Blng\ncberWee on display In * local\n\u25a0   window.\nBoth expressed a hop* to pick\nBlngs direct trom the tree*. before tbey lett tbe Kootenay\noountry.      \u2022\u00ab--,..'\nee\u00bbi-feeMsvseef**swfMt\nGRAVE FEARS FOR\nLIFE OF FACTOR\ncmCAOO. July 8 (AP)->Jerome\nFactor provsaed tonight .to have\ngrave fears for tbe Ufe of bis father\nas tbe fifth dsy passed without word\nfrom tbe kidnappers of John Factor,\nalleged swindler of British investors\nJerome, son of John Factor, acknowledged that two messagee had\ncome by telephone demanding tint\n875.000 and tben 8300,000 tor hla\ntether's ransom, but he pronounced\neach - a  hoax.\n\"If tbey had been authentic, the\nkldnappen would probably have followed tbem up with something more\ndefinite,\" eald young Factor.\nMINING ACTIVE\nIN BOUNDARY\nA. Meeker of Midway la In Nal\naon. air. tieste:. ia mtereited In\na gold mining property aouth of\nNelson and la ban Is tnat connection.\nMr. Meeker reporta lnereaaed activity ta mining ln the boundary\ndlatrlct. Rock Creek and dlatrlct la\nhaving a email plaoer boom and\n\u25a0uklng, in the put few montha\nhave been heavy. Mr. Meeker report* aeelng ao ouncee of gold re*\noently plaoered  there.\nIn tba Beaverdell area cout capital la ahowlng greet Intereat and\nnew propertlea ara being ataked.\nTha Interest haa aot only extended\nlato tbe Oreenwood camp but proa*\npectora ara becoming active again\ntn tbe old Phoenix camp.\nYouth Injured in\nElevator Shaft\nVANCOUVER, July 8 (CP).\u2014Firemen worked with axes and picks,\ntearing out a section of wall, to releaae Leslie Thomaa, 18, when he\nwaa caught ln tbe elevator abaft of\ntbe Weetern Orooery building. Water\natnet, today. Tbe boy'a legs wen\ncrushed and bruised and he waa\nnmoved to hoepltal after nearly an\nhour's Imprisonment.\nThompeon, It Is stated, Jumped\non tbe elevator when lt was moving\nupward   and   slipped  and fell.\nFAMOUS OPERATIC\nHALL IS BURNED\nLIVERPOOL. July 6 (CP cable)\u2014\nLiverpool's Philharmonic haU at\nwhleh many famoua performers of\ntbe operatic and conoert stages have\nappeared, ws* destroyed by fin tonlgbt. Loaa was estimated at aeveral\nthousand pounds. Tbe hulldlng wu\nold.\nRESCUE PLANE\nFORCED DOWN\nPoor Visibility Sends Alexander Down in a\nHayfield\nPOWERS AGREETO A RECESS\nWHEN MONETARY DIFFERENCES I\nPROVE TO BE IRRECONCILABLE\nWill Suspend Activities Until Time Is More Propitious; Probably Will Be for at\nLeast Two Months\nMOVEMENT GROWS FOR CALLING\nEMPIRE ECONOMIC CONFERENCE!\nWould Be Continuation of Ottawa Meet; Canadf |\nInclined More Toward U, S, Policy\nThan United Kingdom\nResigns\nPRINCE  RUPERT,  B.C., July  8\n(CP)\u2014William   Alexander  and   Ms\n.three companions in the Mattern\nrescue   plane   shuttled   back   and\nforth  over British  Columbia  this\nafternoon  In an effort to ftnd  a\nplace to come down, and  finally\nfound It In a hayfield two and\none-half miles west of Terrace, on\ntbe   Canadian   National   railways.\n160. mllea' ran  of  hen.\n' Alexander     explained    that    poor\nvisibility after leaving Haaelton and\na shortage  of  gas  decided  hlm  to\nseek a landing  field  on  the  coast.\nHe flew to Prlnoe Rupert and falling\nto find a place to come down, returned Inland to Terrace when the\nnew-mown   field   of   Harry   Pranks.\nfarmer, offered promise of ssf* landing   and  a  successful   takeoff.  The\nlanding   was   good    snd   Alexander\nplans to get away tomorrow morning\nIn  continuation  of  hla  flight  trom\nEdmonton  to Fairbanks, Alaska.\nTne gallant rescue crew cauaed\nsome anxiety for their ufety as the\nlarge, fast Bellanca monoplane waa\nnported successively by various\npoints over a period of hours, aa lt\nroared over a 300-mlle wide territory between Hazel ton and Prince\nRupert. They circled every spot that\nlooked likely for a landing and finally  choee  the  hey fie. d  at  3:45  p_m\nKuhn, Loeb Company\nLoaned $88,000,000\nWASHINOTON, July 8 (AP)\u2014Bvt-\ndence tbat Kuhn. Loeb and company\nloaned more'than $88,000,000 to 175\nstock brokerage firms ln the five-\nyear period that saw tbe stock market boom and crash was msde public\ntodsy by the United States senate\nbanking Investigating  committee.\nThe evidence was contained ln an\nexhibit submitted last week at the\nrequeet of Perdlnsnd Pecora, the\noommittee ' oouneei, who haa been\nendeavoring to find out all sources\nof loans for stock msrket purposes\nup to and immediately following\nthe 19*39 debacle.\nMiss Baird Killed\nas Auto Overturns\nGRKNPILL, Saak., July 8' (CP)\u2014\nMlss E. L. Baird. of Swift Current,\nSaak., waa killed Instantly today\nwhen the automobile ln wblch ahe\nwaa riding turned over on the highway near ben.\nMrs. T. C. Hill, slso Of Swift\nCurrent, suffered a- broken rib and\nbruises. DT. W. H. Field, driver ot\ntbe car and alderman of Swift Current, and his two young daughters,\nescaped   with   minor   Injur lee.\nTRIPLE DROWNING\nIN QUEBEC LAKE\nHERBKRTVIU.E VILLAGE. Que.,\nJuly 5 (CP).\u2014Newa of a triple\ndrowning at Lac Sec, aome mllee\nfrom hen, was brought to tbe vlllsge today. Tbe victims wen Thomas\nLouis Thlbault, 31, Herman Oagne,\n18. and Noel Hudon, 17, all df thla\nplace. The drownings oocurred yesterday.\nBy GEORGE HAMBLETON\n(Canadian Presa Staff Writer).\nLONDON,.July 6 (Thursday) (CP Cable).\u2014The worlcj\neconomic conference, scarcely four weeks old, will suspend\nactivities today, beaten for the moment by an irreconcilably\ndifference between monetary policies of the United Statea\nand Europe's gold bloc countries, led by France.\nAfter conferences American and gold country leadera\ndecided early today there was no useful purpose to be\nserved by continuing parleys under present unpropitio\\j\u00a3\ncircumstances. A resolution will be presented before tht\n^Steering committee later today asking a recess, probably\nfor two months.\nThe final scenes of thit ****\not tbe confennoe wtll take pUfl\nat a plenary session, today or J\nmorrow, and most of the delega*f*\"\nwill go bome.\nEMPIRE MSET\nWhile tha world conference fg^M\ned, however, a movement, at\ncalling for gn Empire *couom|M\nconference that would be a sort\nof contlnutlofi nf last years Ot-,\ntwa meet.\nPint euggested Tueeday in tH\npresidential addreaa of Str Artivfl\nShirley Benn befon the Kmpllt\nchamben of commerce, the appegl\nwae given added foroe today by ttM\nFederation of British Industrie*\nwhose eiecutive called for the meet*\nIng In an unanimous resolution.\nDefinite word tbat the world con*\nfennoe had failed temporarily cams\nafter delegations of British dominions, meeting privately under leaf*\nenhlp of Canada, had decided on \u25a0 i\nunited effort to prevent Indefinite\nadjournment. To the extent the conference will be \"recessed'* only, thgfl\nappeared to have met with suoeetg,\nINCLINED TOWARD\nU.S.  POLICY\nMeanwhile   It   wu   revealed   la\nusually  well-informed  circles that\nCanada and the reat of the Brlt.\nl\u00abh  dominions were Inclined  mort\nfavorably  than   the   United   King*\ndom toward the  American  moner\ntary policy, and to the attitude ef\nPresident   Roosevelt  that  prosperity   shou Id   be   restored   t h rougfc\nprice raising measures.\nThe United Kingdom, off the gold\nstandard for two years, wee reportgi\nstanding half-way between attitude!\nof   statee,   against   stabillestlon   ol\ncurrencies, and that of the Europeu\ngcld-bloc  which   held   nothing   usgJ\nH. U, MOFFAT\nSALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia.\nJuly 6 (Cp cable).\u2014After six yesrs\nln offloe, H. U. Moffat today resigned the premiership of Southern\nRhodesia, youngest of the self-governing partners of the Bmpln. He\nwas succeeded by O. Mitchell, minister of mines snd agriculture.\nVerigin to Apply for\nNaturalization Papers\nKAMSACK. Sask.. July B (CD \u2014\nMaking his flnt appearance In\npublic since he was released by\norder of Mr. Justice R. A. Robson\nat Winnipeg from custody of Immigration officials who hsd twice\nattempted to deport him as an\nalien, Peter Verigin, Doukhobor\nleader, told 2000 of his followers\nfrom all parts of Saskatchewan\nand Manitoba, he had completed\nhis five yeara residence ln Canada\nand he Intends to apply for naturalisation papen.\nIn the course of an address which\ndealt largely with religious matters,\nthe eplrltusl as well ae temporal\nbead of the Christian community\nof Universal Brotherhood, appealed\nto hla audlenoe to donate money to\nhelp Buffering memben of the Community ln Russia.\nIndependent Doukhobors at the\nmeeting expressed the opinion the\nfirst duty of the Community lay\ntoward those of Canada'a 10,000\nDoukhobore who an suffering.\n(Continued on page Eight)\nRELIEF WORKERS Al\nDRUMHELLER STRIKI\nRANCHER KILLED\nBY ENRAGED BULL\nSTRATHMORI. Alta., July 5 (CP)\n\u2014Pioneer rancher of the Ell wood\ndistrict nesr here. L. P. Plnkerton,\n50, waa killed today by an enraged\nbull. Plnkerton, while riding horseback on bis rsnch. wss attacked by\ntbe hull, thrown from his mount\nand gored to death.\nDRUMHELLER, Alta.. July 0 (Of)\n- Dlsaatief led wtth nllef grant*\nDrumhelier valley nllef worker\nwent on atrlke today.\nExplanations by the Alberta go*\neminent that reoent changes In UM\nnllef acheme gave lnereaaed pounfc\nage on grocery orden failed to ew\nIsfy the men. All relief work ln tM\nvalley, wltb the exception of operg<\ntions in Drumhelier city and 9\nRosedale, waa tied up.\nBOLIVIANS LOSE\n1000 SOLDIER!\nU. S. GOVERNMENT\nPAY CUT CONTINUES\nWASHINOTON. July 6 (AP) \u2014\nPresident Roosevelt today luued an\nexecutive order continuing the 16\nper cent cut In pay of United\nStatee   lovemment   employee*.\nDOMESTIC COPPER\nREACHES NEW HIGH\nNEW YORK, Jaly 5 (Ap).\u2014Domestic copper was quoted at a\nnew high today, 8H cents a pound,\nalthough no actual salee were reported at that figure.\nASUNCION, Paraguay. July 6 (AI)\n\u2014A communique of the ministry f\nwar laaued today satd the Bolivia*\nloat 1000 aoldlen when Paraguay^\nrepulsed a atrong attack in t\u00a3\nNsnawa sector yesterday.\nTHE WEATHER\nMln.   lid\nNB-MN  49       M\nVictoria  _ _  Jl      a|\nVaneouwr       48      74\nKamloops    __ _  SO      M\nEstevan Point  49      M\nPrlnoe   Rupert    _  41      \u25a0\nDawson, TT  49       M\nSeattle      M       71\nPortland. On\"  33      M\nSen   Frmclsoo _  93       41\nSpokane         _  60      g\nPrlnoe Oeone  94      g\nLoe Angeles  40\nPenticton _ * 47\nVernon    _ 44\nGrand  Forte   \u201e.... 44\nKaalo  41\nCranbrook       37\nCalgary   44\nEdmonton      W)\nSwltt Current  44\nPrlnoe   Albert     48      7l\nQuAppelle     43      71\nWinnipeg       64      li\nNanaimo     __ _ 46      11\nHooee Jaw _   43      ?\u2022;\nForecast:   Neleon   and   vicinity-\nContinued fine end warm.\n\t\nA\n trtett  TWO\nMIAMI NOT\nTO MAKE TRIP\nGeorge Wallach Meets the\nChamp; Relates Story\nof Cartwheel\nFight fans of the Interior will be\ndisappointed to learn that Jlmmle\nMcLarnin, welter weight champion\nof the world and fistic idol of\nthe west, will be unable to maka his\nproposed trip to crtnbrook. Oeorge\nWallach who is going to summer\nschool tt the cottt had the opportunity of making his acquaintance recently and he told Mr. Wai-\nHEALTH MEANS CHARM\nAND HAPPINESS\nSparkling eyes\nua smiling lips\nspeak of health\n\u25a0ad vitality. Cletr\ntkin tttracts. Tbe\nhealthy set ive girl\nis both btppy and\npopular.\nPerhaps you\nsre not really iU\nyet when tbo ^^^^^^^\nday's work is done you ars too tired\nto enter into the good times tbat\nother women enjoy. For extra energy,\ntry Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound. It tones up your general\nhealth. Gives you more pep\u2014more\ncharm.\nRemember tbat 98 oot of 100\nwomen report benefit. Let It help\nyou too;\nItch tbat his plant prevented tbe\ntrip.\nMr. Wallach in his letter to. J.\nB.   Curran   states:\n\"Last night whUe renewing acquaintances ln Victoria I had the\ngrut pleasure of meeting Jlmmle\nMeLamln. present welterweight\nchampion of the world, t also met\nhis fiancee, his father and hit\nmother. He Is on hit way to Los\nAngelu, where ht is to make a\nseries of 'shorts' for the MOM-\nI wu surprised at his frttndllntss\ntnd hit Itck of affection which\nwould bt excusable in t follow of\nhis   position.\n\"He lt certainly a fins looking\nchamp and doesn't bear any noticeable scars of former battles. He\nIs about five feet, 10 Inches ln\nheighth tnd very ttoeklly built.\nMy fingers still havt difficulty ln\nguiding thli since his htndciup\nIs Impressive to sty the leut. Judging by hla choice of a bride, Jimmies eyesight htt never been Impaired by any physical encounter.\nFAMOUS CARTWHEFX\n\"I uked him about thtt famous\ncartwheel he performs when his\nopponent'klsui ths canvss', whether\nit wu a publicity stunt or not.\nIt happened that whllo ho was\ntraining for a fight ln Detroit one\nyear hc was greatly admired hy the\ncook of thc camp who showed his\nadmiration by cooking special 'goodies' for Jlmmle. Jlmmle speaks very\nhighly ot hts friend tho cook, particularly hit culinary attributes. Tn\nthe flgbt Jlmmle won a very sensational victory and wu so elated\nover the outcome he turned a\ncartwheel. Everybody wu greatly\npleased with Jimmy tnd congratulation, were profuse. On returning\nto camp he uked his highly respected cook how he had enjoyed the\nfight. The reply was 'Huh tne fight\nwun't much, but that cartwhell.\nboy that was wonderful 1' So after\neach victory, partly ln honor of\nhis dear friend, the cook, and\npartly in elation, Jlmmle turns his\nfamous  cartwhell. \u25a0\n\"Ho It also very adept In this\nbranch of sport. He maintains that\nit   la   very    useful    ln    developing\nVANCOUVER, July 6 (CP)\u2014Irregularity pr.Valled on the Vsncouver\nstock exchange todsy as quiet, trading continued for the third straight\nsession. Golds enjoyed the greatest\nactivity although distillery and bass\nmettl issues were ln fair demand.\nOther  groups were  unusually  quiet.\nBralome continued firm throughout the day and Cosed up 38 points\ntt 7.10 tfter touching 7-30 In late\ntrtdlng. AP. Consolidated advancei\na point and Wayside gained l_ but\nother So-d Usues were down. Meridian dropped three points, Morning\nStar and Bridge River Consolidated\ntwo each.\n-Sh\n -.Ht-IUM flWSAT-flW AT TOTS _ EttVlfK   '\n\u00ab   *    OE LUXE BARBER SHOP\nNEXT     Special   Attention  to  Commurlml   Truellcra\n\u00ab04 HIKER ST. OPP. IMPERIAL BANK\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C., Hotels\n\"Finest in\nBreakfut\n25* to 80c\nLuncheon\n35* to 50*\nIhe Interior\"\nDinner\n35* and 65*\nPhone 787\nHUME HOTEL\nNelson, B.C.\nFree Bus Service Oeorge Benwell, Prop.\nRotary  snd  Oyro  Headquarters\nHUME\u2014M. S. Ooodenough, Rossland; E. M- Atkinson, Montreal; O.\nC. Cutle. W. C. Orleve, T. Q.\nfttokes, D. D. Lapsley, Vancouver;\nA. C. Meskeg, Midway; Annie Bendls,\nA. Bhutty. Kaalo: Mary Buchna,\nTrtll;  L. Wool, R. Mos-coe, Spokane;\n0. L. Irish, Toronto; 11. Crawford,\nA. Anderson, Medicine Hst; A. J.\nBalment, Cranbrook; C. O. Rodgers,\nF. Rodgers, Creston; Mrs. A. J.\nWatson, Kootenay Bay; Mrs. D.\nFisher, Port Crawford; R. S. Choms-\nley, Crawford  Bay.\ncUhe Savoy\n\"Where the Guest Is Kin&\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nttStttrt'.'.'j \u25a0 '*.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n134  BAKER  ST. PHONI  It\nV.:.. I .** e;; tMMMMMM\n6AV0Y\u2014Mr. and Uri. J. P. sutli.\n\u2022eland. Sloean City, I. A. Barker.\nMr. and Ur,. P. Jamea, Vancouver;\nMr. and Mra. J. c. Martin, Nakusp;\nManila paecal, Seattle; Mr. and Mra.\n_. S. Chandler, Kaalo; Mlaa R. Black.\nE. II. Vlpond. Trail; Mlaa L. M\nWellwood. Kamloopa; Mra. L. Brenll*\nson, Ballour; Oeorge Carter, Kelowna\nMr. and Mra. H. Donald, M. P. Oale\nSan Francisco\nNew Grand Hotel\nP.   L.   KAPAK,   Prop.\nWeakly tnd Monthly Ratea\nUot  and  Cold   Water\nStatu _0c up     Double ll.SU st.\nRooms $10 o Month aad Up\nOccidental Hotel\nTOB Vtrnon Bt Phone BI?L\nII.   WA83ICK\nFifty   looms   of   Solid   Comfort\nHeadquarters  for   Loggers\nsnd Miners\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS.  E.   MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot  and  Cold   Water\nIn   th,  HEART  ol  tho  Clly\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA.    I.APOIME.   Prop.\nRooma Irom SOc to gl.jo Monthly\n910 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and cold\nwater   In   every   room\n(OS Baker St. I'hone m\nTRAIL, B. C.\nNEW CROWN   ;\nPOINT HOTEL :\nEurope\"'.* Plan\nHti-Dlll AlUtBs O\nCommercial and Tourist Trade \u2022\nSample Room,\nCOMMERCIAL   HATE.. \u2022\nHllhnul     Bath        JIM \u2022\nttlth Bath .... f'.ini und **.._0. J\nTRAIL, B. C. J\n\"A Palace *\nin the Kootenays\" \u2666\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nClassified\nAds Produce\nResults!\nPhone 143 or 144\n\u2666\n\u2666\na\n\u2666\ni\n:\ne\n\u2666\n:\n:\n\u2666\nTRANSPORTATION - Freight and Passenger\nSPOKANE\nBY BUS\nL_\t\n\u25a0\u25a0        7:40 a.m.\n^g Leaving   Dally,  except   Sunday\n~~M       via Trail at 10:00 a.m.\nI Amazingly Low I ar-s\u2014( anadl.\n'\u2014* an   Money   Accepted   at   Par.\nFor further Information  aee\nYour Local Greyhound\nAgent\nOK PHONE no\"\nNELSON-TRAIL\nFREIGHT\nCareful Handling\nEfficient Service\nLow Rates\nlet ue carry your\nTRAIL-NELSON   FREIGHT\nNelaon   -   rnoM.1   \u2014   Trail\n77 A 78        (BuU-Vaut) I\nBLUE LINE\nFREIGHT\nCOLORED GIANTS\nTO MEET TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., July B.\u2014A bssebsll\ngsms thst wlll be of great Intereet\nto persons thst wers st sny time\never Interested ln bssebsll, is scheduled to Uke place Mondsy, July\n10, whsn thl Qllkeraon's Union\nColored   Olsnts   from   Detroit   wlll\nro game with the Trail senior\nteam at Butter park, commencing at 4:30 p.m.\nOeneral report from parts In whleh\nthey hsve appeared Is that the\ncolored hoys play fast baseball and\nhave a team that plays ln resl\nteamwork  fashion.\nGeorge Snyder, pitcher for the\nLewis team, Spokane, wbo played\nin the July 1 tournament, stated\nhe had seen the darkles perform,\nand spoke well of them.\nG0LDSACT1VE\nDistillery and Base Metals In\nFair Demand\nALL BIG LEAGUE\nGAMES POSTPONED\n1-ncw YOftX, July \u00bb <APWThe\nall-star game between the picked\np.syers of the American and National leagues hss left no room\nfor other baseball on the major\nleague progreu tomorrow. Only two\ngames were originally scheduled,\nBrooklyn and Pittsburgh In the\nNational league and Chloago and\nPhiladelphia In the American, and\nsfter the almost-open date wu\nchosen for the all -stay encounter\nboth were postponed to give all\nplsyers s chsnee either to tske part\nIn the contest or to see It.\nTrail Ladies Are\nWith Girl Guides\nTRAIL, B.C-, July 5.\u2014Aceorapsny-\nIng the 46 Olrl Guides who left\nTuesdsy morning for Sunshine Bay\nwhere they went under csn vas.\nwere Mrs. W. A. Owen, captain, first\ncompany, Mtss D. Dockerill. lieu-\ntenant. In charge of doth oompany\nI.O.D.E., Mrs. T, V. Lord, commandant, Mrs. D. P. Stewart, life\nguard and Mrs. E. __,, Payne, cook.\nMlss D. Vyse, captain, left also\nwith the contingent in charge of\nthe   Prultvale  company.\n-THE  NELSON  DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON,   B-C.  \u2014   THURSDAY   MORNING,   JVLY   S,   1933 -\nNELSON BOYS\nPASS EXAMS\nStewart Russell and Vera Irwin\nof Nelson and Allan Willey, who\nhave attended Calgary Technical\nschool during the past term, have\nreceived notice that they were successful ln their recent examinations.\nRusseU received aa average of 63\nand Irwln an average of 13.\nVANCOUVER PRICE ON GOLD WILL BE\nPAID IN NELSON STATES WIDDOWSON\nNELSON TEAMS WIN\nHORSESHOES, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., July 6.\u2014Two horseshoe teams from Nelson came here\nWednesdsy and won both the\ndoubles and singles contests In\nchallenge gamea with the Trail\nHorseshoe and Quoits club. The\nNelson teams took the former with\na score of 341-306  snd  the  latter\n167-57,\nJ. Bremner Jr. and B. Sammar-\ntlno derated Vassar and Bmlllte of\nNeleon 6S-96 ln a contest tn which\nringers   only   counted\nA banquet wss held tn the evening st ths Savoy.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B.C.. July 6. \u2014 Mrs. p.\nKohluk; Second svenue, entertained\nyesterday for her daughter, Betty, on\nher third birthday. Games were\nfestured. A delightfully arranged\nsupper was served, Mra. Kobluk being assisted in serving by Mrs. J.\nYurkoskl. The tsble was gay with\nsummer flowers and a large birthday\ncake with three lighted candles centered the table. The guests were\nPauline Coris, Mary Farnuro, jean\nWilson, Jennie Patten, Olga Shsn-\nkaruk, Billy McOory, John McCory,\nBilly Parnum, Jlmmle Adlo and\nJoseph  Kobluk.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBert Geraoe, who underwent an\noperation In the Trall-Tadanao hospital, ls reported Improving rapidly.\nHe expects to leave for hts home at\nthe end  of  the  week.\n\u2022 \u2022    s\nHoward Bayley returned home last\nevening after spending four and s\nhslf months visiting friends and\nrelatlvea at points in England. Mr.\nBayley went to Sngland and returned via the Panama canal.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlss Dorothy Bird, who Is ln\ntraining at st, Paul's hospital, Vsnoouver, ls spending a vacation at\nthe home of her parents. Mr. and\nMrs. Charles Bird, Riverside avenue.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE. M. LeFluffy Is holidaying with\nhis family  at the  coast,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCharles Tyson has left to vlalt at\nVancouver snd other points at the\nooaat.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Brothers of Texas,\nwho are visiting ln Trail, were gueate\nof Mr. and Mrs. 0. O. Cummlng at\nthetr summer home at Robson during the week-end. \u2022\ns   e* s\nMr. and Mrs. S. O. Hill snd\ndaughter Shirley, left today to visit\nMrs. Hill's parents. Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Beech of crsnbrook. Shirley wlll\nspend the school vacation with her\ngrand parenta.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. K* M. Spenoe and\nMr. and Mrs. Prank Sindel left\nyesterdsy sfternoon by car for Nelson, en route to Cslgsry to attend\nths stampede. They will visit friends\nst Kimberley en route. They expect\nto return through Banff.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nD. C. Pateraon returned Monday\nfrom the coast, where he hu beeu\nspending a vacation. Mrs. paterson\nand   baby   have   not   yet   returned\nhome.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. E. E. Weeks and son Harold\nof Vancouver, who have been gueets\nof Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Reading, Tadanac. for the past month, have left\nfor their home. They were accompanied by Mrs. Reading and son\nRalph, who wlll holiday at the\ncoast during the summer.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL    HOUSES    AND    LOTB\u2014IN-\nsuranoe. Notary. J. D. Anderson.\n(7619)\nThat the hanks ln Nelson were\nnot buying gold, but thst hs hsd\nnever refused to purchase tbe findings of the plaoer miners WBS the\nstatement of W. E. Widdowson. local\nsssayer, Tuesdsy night. Mr, Widdowson ststed thst the Dominion government was only paying 130.60 ptr\nounce, fine, plus s united States\npremium which, varies. This, explained Mr. Widdowson, was the\nssme prloe a* paid by the Vancouver\nassay offloe. Any man can get the\nVancouver price in Nelson.\nMr. Widdowson stated that ths\nssme basis wtll shorty spply In\nNelson as lt does in Vancouver\nunder new instructions from Ottawa\nwhleh sets the rate in the Dominion\noffice there of >i per fine ounoe\nundsr Montreal equivalent on London rate. Official notice of this\nhas not reached  Ne-son  yet.\n\"Anyone .wanting to sell go'd can\nget the Vancouver price here aod\nfor any Quantity of gold,\" stated\nMr. Widdowson.\nTrail which hu been paying Ottawa prloes hu Just received a\nsettlement for April account. The\nbuls wu |6.98',i premium on gold\ncontent  for April.\nMr. Widdowson explained that\nmany meu refused to accept the\nVancouver rate because they weir\nstudying mint prices from Ottawa\nwhleh appear ln the dally press.\nLATE NEWS FLASHES\nNBW YORK\u2014Dr. Stephen S. Wise\naald todsy that lf \"tbere ts no recession from the Hitler oppression\"\na movement to bring the Jewish\npopulation out of Oermany should\nbe started.\nHAMILTON\u2014Mrs. Janet Hamilton\nbequeathed \u266618,000 to home mission*\nof tho United ohurch, and $10,000\nto foreign missions.\nPONCA CTTY\u2014Price of crude oil\nskyrocketed with the posting of\nnew quotstlons by the Continental\nOil company.\nOTTAWA\u2014Approach of the pound\nsterling to parity with the Canadian\ndollar will doubtless encourage Brlt.\nIsh capitalists to Invest ln Canadlsn securities.\nPARIB\u2014 Bd ouard Herriot became\nthe first notable Frenchman today\nto defend Roosevelt.\nSUPREME ORDER\nTO MEET IN TRAIL\nTRAIL. B. C. July S.-Udles\nof the Royal Purple ln Canada and\nNewfoundland wlll bold their fourteenth annual supreme Lodgs sessions at Trail, July 18, 19 and 20.\nIt is the first time tho supreme\nlodge  has  met  ln  Trail.\nAmong the vlaltora will hs Mrs.\nGibson of Calgary, supreme honored roysj lady; Mrs. E. Deane of\nVancouver, supreme secretory trees,\nurcr and Mrs. B. Cutler of 'Vancouver, supreme three-year trustee.\nADVANCE GUARD\nDUE HERE TODAY\nTo Discuss Plans for Big Picnic Party From Trail\nFARLEY BEATS\nREITH TWO UP\nWASHINOTON\u2014A new- all-time\nmarriage low of only 7.87 marriages\nfor each 1000 population wu eet\nIn tbe hard tlmu year of 1033*\nPORT OP SPAIN\u2014Recaptured after a manhunt In the Savannah\nforest, two escaped convicts were\nsent to prison. Pollce Investigated\nthe death of their companion.\nBANPF, Alts., July 6 (CP).\u2014Two\nyoungsters of golf battled brilliantly over tbe Banff Springs oourse\nthis afternoon In tbe final of the\nPrince of Wales trophy plsy, Phil\nFarley of Toronto, touring tbe\ntricky hills ln three under par to\ntake tbe lead, two up, over Bobby\nRelth, of Winnipeg, ln the ftrst\n18 holes.\nIn one of tbe greatest golf die-\nplays ever seen bere, the 31-year-old\nTorontonian emerged  victor by'two,, \u2014 \u2014r_.  _    -___.\nup over his 18-year-old rl\u00abJ who ls I a.reedy   st   Lakeside   park\nManitoba   amateur   champion.   AW -\"**\u2014\u25a0-   *-  *\"\" \"_ulrt-*to\"\nthough Relth played  like a veteran, Parley's greater tournament experience finally csrrled blm through\non top.\nOnly OS strokes were required\nby Perley to cover the mountain\ncourse, while Relth recorded 00.\nsmashing par flgurea also.\nSt. Andrews Has\nNew Club in Trail\nstamina In ths sarly stages of bis\npreparation for a tight-\n\"Tbe watch he reeelved In Vancouver is a 'beauty' and bears the\ncoat of arms of that city. Jlmmle\nIs very proud of It. He also regretted that he wouldn't bs able\nto make his trip to tbs Interior\nbut lt wu quits lmposslbls st\npreunt since he ls too busy. Before leaving we were all very fortunate ln receiving his autograph.\nWell between you and me I certainly wouldn't like to meet blm\nIn  a  dark  alley.\"\nTRAIL, B. 0. July 6.\u2014Formation of a club for membets of Bt.\nAndrew's Junior choir vu one of\ntbe main topics of a special meeting when Mrs. R. S. C. Anthony.\nconductor, entertained the choir,\nRev. L. A* Morrant snd C. D. Gtee-\nson, organist. It wss decided that\ntbe club be formed, the official\nname to he \"The St. Andrew's\nJunior Choir club.\" Bdlth Best wu\nelected pruldent, Audrey poubieday,\nsecretary, and Dorothy Hope, trees-\nurer.\nWinners of prlees for sttendsnee\nwere:\nPlrst class\u2014Cbrlssle GUlls. Betty\nMor rent snd Nora Hart\nBecond class- Edith Best. Doreen\nCurrsn and Eileen Marahall.\nARGYLE RINK\nWINS BOWLING\nNEW GRAND CUBS\nBEAT PICK-UPS\nTbs New Orand Hotel Cubs won s\nhard fought game from a pickup\nnine on Wednesday afternoon by the\nscore of 6-9 In uven innings. Both\nteams played practically errorless\nball, and the pickups were in the\ngame all the jray. Both teams soored\nonoe ln the nrst inning, and wers\nblanked ln the second. The pick-ups\nscored twloe In the tblrd and the\nCubs replied wltb a like number\nln their half of the inning. The\nCubs added two more runs ln the\nfourth to finish the scoring for the\ngame. PssecreU and Ball pitched\nfor the Cube, with oalllcano, Spiers,\nand Mclnnla on the mound for tbe\nlosers. Bud Cooper behind the plate\nfor the pick-ups plsyed s ateady\ngsme, u did Brubaker and Morris.\nAll ths cubs plsyed snappy baU.\nBill Preno umpired tbe game. The\nJuvenile league games will be resumed on Baturday morning, wben\nthe New Orand Cubs will meet the\nPairvlew   Athletic   elub   nine.\nJ. H. Argyles bowlers scored an\n18-13 win over J. Armstrong's rlnk\nIn a gams on tbe lawn bowling\ngreens at the C r.R. flats Wedneeday\nevening.\nRinks were:\nJ. Armstrong, E. penwill. W. Mel-\nnecsuk and  J. Ball. .\n' J. H. Argyle, J. Draper, J. R.\nThomss and  D   Eccles.\nYOUNG LIBS TO\nPLAY IN SLOCAN\nThe Toung Liberals intermediate\nball nine ls booked to play st\nBouth Slocan today. The team whlcb\nhu pulled out of a slump to win\n.the  lut  couple of  gamu,  will  he\nbut  tn  full  force.\nDream of Ball Fan Comes True Today\nas Pick of Two Leagues Meet in Game\nJOHN ANDERSON\nPASSES IN TRAIL\nTRAIL. BC, July 6\u2014John Anderson, who died here yesterdsy wu\na Trail resident of long standing.\nHe wu horn In Sweden. July 80,\nIMS.\nBecoming an employee of tbe Consolidated Mining it Smelting company in May 1917, he remained In\nthe employ of the company until\n1034. On June 1 of that year he\nfell as he was proceeding along a\nrailroad track. Ke wu afterward\npensioned for life.\nA sister, Mrs. Ida Olsen of Seattle,\nIs his only known survivor.\nJOHN EREMENKO\nPASSES IN TRAIL\nTRAIL. B C, July h -John lers-\nmenko. aged 39, of Cutlegar. died\nat Trall-Tadanac hospital, ths culmination of a cold he caught during\na besvy storm  In  IMI.\nHe had been fighting a slrkneu\nsince, Us veiling to csl If orals for\nntns months in sn endeavor to\ncombat it. snd Uklng hospital treat.\nment. He had returned to Castlegar only a montb ago. Hr wu\nbrought to Trall-Tadanac hospital\nSunday.\nThe young man wu born In\nRuasla but had spent most of bis\nlife in Csnada. lie lived In TraU\nfor eight snd a half years, snd\nsince 1930, at Cutlegar, where his\nfamily ls ln buslneu. He leaves\nbesides his perente, two sisters, married and living in the United States,\nand a brother, AJex, at Cutlegar.\nNothing; Definite in the Respective Lineups\nBy PAt'L MICKEUON\nAssociated Preu Sports Writer\nCHICAOO. July 5 (API\u2014Baseball's\ndream comes true tomorrow,\nOut at Comiskey psrk, scene of\nmany of bawball's displays, tbe\nmightiest array of sluggers ever u-\nsembled unpscked their wsr clubs\nfor sn afternoon's bombardment\nthat may still the diamond's most\npersistent arguments regarding the\nsuperiority of the Amerlcsn and National lssgue.\nEighteen stars, handplcked for\nevery position, wlll represent each\nmajor league tn the dream game.\nMarshalling the all-star forou will\nbe the fiery John McOraw, drawn\nout of retirement to lead tbe National leaguers, and the stately\nConnie Mack, one of the g rea tut\nmuter minds bssebsll hu ever\nknown.\nPorty-nlne thousand speetstors,\npromised a clear, oool day. already\nhad tiielr precious putebosrds to\nInsure a capacity throng st the\nWhite Sox battleground by game\ntime,  19:30  p.m.   <CS.T.)\nAs tbe aero hour neared the big\nbattle between such Amerlcsn league\nsluggers u Babe Ruth, Lou Oebrlg.\nAl Simmons, Jlmmle Pon and Joe\nCronln and the National league big\nBerthu Uke \"Chuck\" K>m. Paul\nWaner, Prsnkle Prleeh, snd Lefty\nO'Doul, nothing wss definite ln tbe\nrespective lineups esospt that the\naforementioned power houses would\n[swing into setlon.\nTbe pitching selections hsd svsry\nons guessing but st s late hour ths\nbut gueu wu tbst BUl Hallahan.\nace southpaw of St. Louis Card-\nInals would oppose Oenersl Alvln\n.Crowder of Washington at the start.\nRED SOX BEAT\nTHE HUSKIES\nThe Red Sox softball nine went\nInto a tie for second p'ace In tho\nwomen's softball loop by handing\nthe Huskies a 34-9 trimming, ln an\nexciting game played on Wednuday\nevening. Tbe Red Sox scored once\nIn tbe first Inning, after blanking\nthe Huskies. Huskies came back\nwith three runs ln tbeir half of the\nsecond inning, but the Red Sox\nevened tiie score with two runs in\nthe last of the second. Huskies\nscored one run in the third, but\nthe Red Sox took a commanding\nlesd by crossing the plate for five\nruns ln the lut of the third. Both\nteams were held, scoreless In the\nfourth. Huskies added one run ln\nthe first of tbe fifth, only to have\nthe Bed Sox reply with uven In\ntheir half of the Inning* The winners added six more ln the sixth\nand thru In tho ninth. Huskies\nscored onoe In the seventh and three\nruns In the eighth. Rosa Stewart.\nLena Lepage, Nalda Perrler, May\nMcDonald, Jean LePage, and Agnes\nStewart scored three runs esch and\nAlleen Rahal, Juni* King and Key\nMcDougall crossed the plate for two\nruns each. Jsannette LePage, diminutive first baseman for the Red Sox\nplayed a sparkling game, to cut off\nmany wild throws, knd hard hit\nballs, Alleen Rahal, May McDonald,\nLena LaPage and Nalda Perrler played snappy ball in the field with\n,11 the p.ayers playing heads up\nball. Oladys Jarrett, Peggy Oibbon\nand Edna McKenzle played a hard\ngame for the losers.\nKootenay Belle Pb\nA complete new survey of tbe underground workings of tbe Kootenay Belle mine on Sheep creek bu\nJust bun oompleted by H. D. Daw-\neon. B.C, LB., and s thorough\nsampling of the property wlll be carried out under the supervision of\nMessrs. Weeku & Crawford, consulting engineers, who recommend Immediate doubling of the compressor\ncapacity for the purpou of rapid development.\nMeantime, tbe old mill hu been\ndismantled to make way for the proposed successor of 99-ton capacity.\nThe mine is ahlpplng an occasional\n\u25a0carload of ore while proceeding with\ndevelopment. The latest wu shipped\nto th* smelter at Trsll on June 38.\nThe previous csr of 41.86 tons\nbrought s return from the smelter\nof I13041B. tt 131.10 per ton. after\npaying railroad freight and smelter\nchargu. Tbls brtngr the total receipts   from   ore   shipments   since\nFebruary,   1993,  to  $6002.(16\nBUILDING PERMITS\n$1366 IN TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C, July 9\u2014Building\npermit* to the value of IUS_. all\nfor repalra and alterations were laaued br D. H. Bayley. city build-\nIns lnapector. during June.\nTbla figure brought th* total for\nthe yeer to date to \u00bb\u00bb,3J0.\nFollowing were the permits Isauad:\nJ. M. Curtla    '..    * *~*\nn    Skelton   \t\nW,   A.   Curran    .-..\t\nE.  royle  Smith   \t\nTotal\n\u2022 1IW\nDRIFT WOOD IS\nMUCH LESS HERE\nAnother slight decline wu ree\nord\u00abd for the Wut Arm Wednesdsy.\na reading uken st 7*0 *n tbe\nmorning being UM t**t above uro\nsnd resdlng st 6 p_m., WM fut\nabove\nWith the gradual decline the\nheavier drift wood Is grsdusUy being left on tbe banks of tbs river\nsnd now only a smsll amount of\nsticks and logs srs floating on the\nArm in tbs vicinity of Nelson.\nTo renew the stove polish brush,\ntsck s piece 1 old velvet over the\nworn out brletlu of the store polishing brush. It will polish as well\nu ever. Rep. aoe the velvet when It\nis worn out.\nArchaeologists   exploring   tne   old\nnsrket plaoe at Athens found in two\nmonths 7000  coins, many of them\nlost ln dirt floors of the ancient city\nTBAIL, B.C., July 5.\u2014C. W. Qulll-\naume.-J. Hart snd J. Sargent wero\nappointed by ti s committee of the\nConsolidated Mining Se Smelting\ncompsny limited employee's plenlo\nat a meeting Wednesday night, to\nvisit Nelson Thursdsy to make final\narrangements there for tbe huge\npicnic to take plaoe Saturday, July\n23. No final arrangements were re*\nported u regards handling the plenlo, but a general Idea of what they\nwill consist of wu brought to Ught.\nA sports program Is being lined\nup and will be run off from about\n11 o'clock to 3 o'clock. Tlie commlttw is endeavoring to line up\nthe Trail Ctty band, the Maple\nLeaf band and the Nelson City band\nto give a progrsm of muslo throughout the day. Old time .numbers will\nhe played so that yflie old folks\nmight have square dances and quadrilles, los cream, peanuts, candy\nand soft drinks wlll be on hand for\nthe children to be distributed by\nmeans of tickets.\nPlve lifeguards have heen appointed to assist ths Nelson guards\na.ready at Lakeside park. Pree\ntickets fcr transportation will be\ngiven out from and including July\n10 to July 14,\nINSTALL COURT\nELLEN OFFICERS\nTRAIL HAM IS\nVICTOR AT CASCADE\nMlu K. Mesuy wu Installed\nchief ranger of tbe Court Ellen\nA.O.P. at an Installation of officers\nln the Knights of Pythias baU\nWednesday nlgbt. J. J. Balless. Installing offloer. aulsted by Mrs. J,\nJ. Joy, Installing woodward, officiated. Following tbe function cards snd\na   social   evening   were   enjoyed-\nOfficers installed were: MUs K*\nMassey, chief ranger; MlM N* Jarvis, BUb-ebtef ranger; Mrs. L. Beas-\nell, treasurer; Mrs. R. Vyu, secretary; Mrs. L. Dunk, unlor woodward; Mrs. J. Ball, Junior woodward.\nMrs. A* E. Cuthbert. senior beadle;\nMrs. J. Brown, Junior beadle.\nMany Frequent\nLakeside Fark\nWltb better weather swimmers srs\nsgaln frequenting Lakeside park in\nlarge numbers and Life Ouard James\nKinahan and Swimming Instructreu\nMlu Helen Perguaon are again on\nthe  job.\nThe water is now below the retaining wall and In another two\nweeks the beach should be showing\nup. At present tbere ls s little\ndanger  of   the   new  portion  of  tbe\nTRAIL. B.O., July ft.\u2014A pick-up\nteam from Trail went to Cascade\nTuesday to play a game of baseball with a team from that district\nln connection with a four-day celebration staged at Cascade and\nChristina lake, and returned the\nume nlgbt with a 12-6 victory.\n\"Sootty\" Ross, wbo holds down\ntblrd base fcr tbe Trail union\nhurled throughout the entire game\nand L. Demore, Trail southpaw, wu\nat the receiving end. J. Johnson\nplayed first bsse, \"Spuds\" Pagnan,\nsecond, Johnnie Buckna, third beu.\nOrsnny Toung, short stop. The outfield consisted of H. Cooper. Mike\nBuckna and \"Bunny\" seiman.\nWOOD BUTCHERS UP\nIN TRAIL SOFTBALL\nTRAIL, B.C. July ft.\u2014Tbe Wood\nButchers defeated Transportation 6-3\nin the first of a three-game playoff\nurles betwun two teama to decide\nthe ehamplonahlp of tbe c.s_A\nSoftball league here, Wednesday. The\nwcond game will be played Ptlday.\nBatteries for the Butchers were\nJ. Stewart and S. Murdoch and\nfor the Transportation, J. Morris\nand  Mystery  DiP&squafe.\nMERCURY HITS\nA HIGH OF 84\nWith the sky cloudless all day the\nu-mgci   wi   ..\u00ab.-  -mt\u2014  w_       .   \u2014 .mercury shot UP to almost the ua-\nlawn being scalded as tbe water ls son's hlgb Wednesday. Temperatures\nstill lying on lt In pools. A general I were 84 and 43 degreu. The weather\nclean up of branches and other was slso particularly calm and the\ndebris left by recent storms and I West Arm wu smooth u s mill\nhigh water Is now ln progreu pond  all day.\n3 DAYS SPECIAL\n(Thursday, Friday and Saturday)\n\u00bb2-\"\nWHITE PIQUE DRESSES\nWide and narrow stripes. Sleevelera and ahort sleeves.\nSizes 14 to 20  i\t\nWHITE FLANNEL JACKETS\nJust in. Priced at\t\n$*.95\nNEW POLKA-DOT DRESSES\n*9.H to *14\u00bbs\nWIU) swagger JtckeU Ttoer ilto\n-specially amart. A dress that\ndocs double duty. Dork backgrounds in blue. Mack aod\n\"arown. sires 14 to 44\t\nBATHING SUITS\nAll wool, sun backs. All shades. Sizes 34 to 42. O W \u20225\u2122\nEach\nSAND CREPE DRESSES     $^95\nA  complete selection ot  shades,  including     ml*\nwhite. Sizes 14 to 44         **\nOrgandie and Cropo Blouses   $ j #69\nmartent stvlM of the season. Specially priced at       A\nSmartest styles of the season. Specially priced\nHOSIERY\nChiffon Hosiery by Weldrest Manufacturing Co. Closing out this line. Pure silk\nthread  cradle  foot. Full  Fashioned\t\n79\u00ab\nFOOTWEAR tor SUMMER\nWHITE FABRIC SANDALS   !$\u2022\u2022\u2022\nWHITE MESH TIES    \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022;\u2022\u25a0\u2022 \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022 J*\u00bb\u00bb\nA good selection of White Kid Footwear at S3.95 to S7.-J0\n- FINK'S\nMedical Arts Building\nREADY-TO-WEAR   m\nSHOES HOSE   \"\nBaker Street\n lo-n\nThe earth would be pelted to\npieces by meteors If lt were not for\nthe layer of atmosphere around it\nFriction, caused by air reeiitanc\nburns up most of the \"shootin.\natan\" befon they  reach  us.\nSome    aquatic    whirligig    beetles\nhave one  pair   of  eyes,   so   divided\nhnt half the eye ls directed up to\n?ep s lookout for danger, wht'e the\n.her half  Is scanning the  water  tn\n\u25a0\u25a0earch of prey.\nB i  r  k s \u2022\nPINEAPPLE\nTRY THIS NEW\nPINEAPPLE\nCOSTS LESS I\n.   TASTES BETTER!\n-THE  NEUON   DAILJ  NEWS,  NELSON,   D.C.   \u2014   THURSDAY   MOBNINO,   JULY   4,   1933-\nMOI  TBBf*.\nPROMOTIONS ARE\nMMAT KASLO\nConcert Held at School;\nHonor Rolls Given\nNOW enjoy the most delicious end flsvounoms Pine>\nspple of sll and buy it for almost half the price\nsf Pineepple of s smilsr quality.\nJust think of it! Perfect golden ilicet, cut from only tha\nchoicest of hand-picked, juicy Pineapples, which hsve\nheen tenderly ripened in British soil, under wsnn, tropical sunshine. Every csn of Birlu Pineapple is guaranteed to be of th* same high uniform quality\u2014every slice\ncarefully selected for its even texture end proven flavour.\nTry Birki Pineeppl* Slices todeyl Wt a rert\ntttt* treat et a tower, cott than ever before.\nTHE BRITISH EMPIRE\nINEAWLE\nPRODUCT    OF    BRITISH    MALAYA\nDISTRIBUTED \u00bbY BIHKS-CRAWFORD LTD.. VANCOUVER.  B.C.\nKASLO, B C\u201e July fi \u2014 Kaslo\nschools cloeed Pridsy for the summer holldsys. On Wednesdsy afternoon the pupils of division 3 entertained thetr parents and friends,\nnumbering about 20. at an informal\nconoert which was held In their\nclassroom. Thc room was decorated\nfor the ocasslon, with exhibits of\nwork done by the pilplls. To give\na touch of color there wen many\nlovely flowers added to the decorative\nscheme. Iu the mualcal program\nthe winning hoy was Teddy Hotner\nand the winning girl Betty Dykstra.\nThla psrt of the program wae followed by the presentation of honor\nrolls and prizes arter which a\nchorus waa sung. The parents of\nthe children decided thc winners of\nthe   elocution   contest,   by    ballott.\nThe public school report for\nJune and the List of promotions\nfollows.\nDivision 1\u2014promoted to grsde 6\n(in order of merit) Billy Chandler,\nBobby Strachan, Molly McOlbbon.\nConnie Cherry, David Hartln, and\nPeggy Sutherland. On trial June Gllker.\nPromoted to grade 7 (in order\nof merit) Kate Rlddell, John togus.\nDonne Llnd, Joyce Brooks, Ronald\nMatthews, Bessie McOlbbon, Murdock\nMacPherson, Clara Horner, Hene Llnd,\nMargaret Oliker and BUly Hendricks.\nPromoted to grade g (In order of\nmerit) Edward Costello, SUnley\nLockhard, Archie Reuter, Eleanor\nHorner, Helen Wone, Ronald Carter.\nPromoted to high school on recopi-\nmendatlou of examining committee,\nnames ln alphabetical order, Qussle\nCarney, Dorothy Hamilton, Virginia\nHendricks, Frances Lockhard, peter\nPapworth, Taylor Papworth. Kenneth\nSmith and Lorna Speirs. When\nthe honor rolls were preeented Kate\nRlddell won that for proficiency,\nJohn Logus for deportment and\nBobby Strachan that tor regulsr\nattendance.\nIn division a (In order of merit)\npromoted from grsde i to grade fr\u2014\nTeddy Horner, Myrtle Leet, Joe Pur-\nlak. Kenneth MacPherson. Arthur\nBennett   and' Jsek   Hartln.\nPromoted from grade 3 to grade\n4\u2014Oordon Reed, Maldle Palmer, Betty Dykstra, Jimmy Tinkess, Jimmy\nStrachan, Winnie Chandler, on trial\nJtmmie Mayses.\nPromoted from grade 3 to grade 3\n\u2014Edna Robson, Rsymond Lockhard,\nJoyce Palmer, Joyce Austin, Jock\nMayoe*, Louis Furlak. Promoted unranked Clifford McHardy,\nPromoted from grade 1 to grade 3\n\u2014Hedley Dunn, Teddy Hendricks,\nMary Jo McHardy, Winnie Palmer,\nRita Robson, Louise Dykstra, Iris\nMayws and Helga Augustine.\nThe following honor rolls wen\nawarded\u2014proficiency, Gordon Reed;\ndeportment, Jimmy Speirs; attend.\nance. Winnie Chandler, Maldle Palmer, Winnie Palmer and Louis\nFurlak.\nRaymond Lockhard won the prlu\nfor showing the greatest Improvement In writing and Winnie Chandler that for being the hardest worker.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN   RADIO\nCOMMISSION   NETWORK\nCJCA CFQC CKY CKCK\n870 890 BIO 1010\nCFCN CRCV CWC        CKOV\n1030 1100 1120 1300\n6:00-8:30 Canadian Folk Lore, from'\nMontreal\n6:30-7:00 Singing    Strings,    soloists\nand orch. cond. by Alex. Chu-\nhatdln. Isobel Mutch, soprano,\nsoloist\n7:00-7:30 Program   of   Dance  Music\nN5C-K0O  NETWORK\nKOW      KFI      KGO    KOMO\n630      * 640 790        920\nCentury   of   Progress   Festival\nOrch.. Dr. Frederic Stock\nAmos V Andy, blackface com.\nSam   Rcbbln's  Orch.\nDeath Valley  Days, \"Old Ranger'\nSymphony Hour\nCaptain  Henry's Show  Boat\nNewa  Flashes\nAnaon Week's Orch.\nOrgan  Oonoert   (KGO)\nKay   Kyser's  Orch.\nE. BUSH ADDRESSES\nSLOCAN CITY LODGE\nSLOCAN CITY. B. C, July 6\u2014\nEd. Bush, grand treasurer of tbe\nGrand Orange lodge of Britiah Columbia, visited the local membera of\nthe L. O. L., No. 1683 and the\nLadles Orange Benevolent association on Thunday evening, June 39.\nMr. Bush addressed the memben\nln open meeting on varloua questions of interest to the order. At\nthe close of the meeting strawberries\nand cream wltb all the usual finishing accompaniments was served. D.\nTattrie and E. Nelaon of New Denver\nwen vlslton and enjoyed the meeting.\ntun.\n390\n6:00\n7:00\n7:13\n7:30\n6:00\n9:00\n10:00\n10:16\n11:00\n11:30\nCBS-DON    l,EE   NETWORKS\nKVI      KFRC      KOIN      KSL      KOI.\n370        610 940     \u25a0  11.10        1270\n6:00 John Henry, Black River Giant\n6:16 Windy   City   Revue\n6:45 Symphony   Orch.\nMaude  Rooney,  soloist\n7:13 Pbll   Regan\n7:30 Guy  Lombardo's  Oreh.\n7:30 Vagabonds of Hills  (Don Lcc)\n7:43 Musical  Revue   (Don  Lee)\n8:00 Glen  Gray's  Orch.\n8:30 Ben Pollack's Orch. .\n8:45 Johnny   Homp's   Orch.\n9:00 Gus   Arnhelm's   Orch.    (Don\nLee)\n9:30 Tlie   Buccaneers   (Don   Lee)\n9.45 Olga Steeb, pianist (Don Lee)\n10:00 Orville   Knapp's   Orch.   (Don\nLee)\n10:45 Berceuse   (Don Lee)\n11:15 To be  announced   (Don  Lee)\n1100 k CRCV 872.7 tn\nVANCOUVER 300   W\n6:00 See Cftc Network\n7:30 News Flashes\n7:45 Mac  and  Hts  Guitar\n8:00 Instrumental   Trio\n8:30 News  Bulletins\n6:50   Hodge-Podge\n9:00 Vancouver Police Choir\n1210 k CJOR\nVANCOUVER\n6:00 Balladeer\n6:15 Stock  Quotations\n6:30 Musloal  Prg.\n7:00 Musical Program\n7:30 Ted   Williams\n8:0n Jlmmle Hill\n8:15 Wishing  Well  Orch.\n610  k KFRC\nSAN   FRANCISCO\n0:00 Headlines\n6:30 Sports    Parade\n9:48 Persons Uty  Trio\n10:00 Newa Editor\n11:00 Midnight Request*\n347.8 m\n500   w\n491.8   m\n1000   W\n680   k KPO 441    m\nSAN   FRANCISCO 50,000   w\n6:00 Tone   Portraits\n6:30 Federsi   Business\n6:48 Irving Kennedy, tenor\n7:00 Edns  Fisher,  piano\n7:15 Municipal   Government\n7:30 U.  S.  Army  Band\n8:00 Don   Bestor's   Orch.\n8:30 Dancing,  Twin  Cities\n9:00 Doric   Quartet\n9:30 The   Orch.\n10:00 Rhythm  Aces\n10:30 Voices  of   Pan\n11:00 Abe Lyman's Orch.\n11:30 Organ   Concert\n\u25a0i.ii   k KJR 309.1   m\nSEATTLE M00   W\n6:00 Light Opera Gems\n6:30 News   Edition\n6:45 Helms  and   H.ukln;\n7:00 Hymn  Tunes\n7:30 Orpheus   Ensemble\n8:00 4  Star  Fun  Feet.,  E.  T\n8:15 Conoert   ln   Miniature\n8:45 Benjoland\n9:00 Mystic   Asia\n9:30 Modern   Concert   Ens.\n1080  k KNX\nHOLLYWOOD\n6:00 Buchanan, News\n6:15 Cowboy   Revue\n6:30 Marlon  Mansfield\n6:45 Growln*  Up.  K.  T\n7:00 Frank   Wstanebe\n7:15 Concert   Orch.\n7:45 Count of Monte Crlsto\n8:00 Rev,   Bob   Shuler\n8:15 KNX Parade, variety\n8:46 Drury Lane, tenor\n9:00 Buchanan.   News\n9:15 Miles of Melody\n283.3  m\n23,01)0    w\nMr., Mrs. John Deam\nVisit, Slocan City\nSLOCAN CPTT, B. C. July 5.\u2014\nMr. and Mrs. John Dean of Rlondel\nare here for a few days the guests\nof Mr. snd Mn. T. Arnold.\nMlas Catherine and Mlss Peggy\nCurtis who hsve been the' guests\nat the home of Mr* and Mrs. J.\nC. Harris of the Boson Ranch, New\nDenver, for the peat two weeks, arrived   home   on   Saturday   evening.\nMies B. Muir went to Nelson on\nMonday.\nMlss Marie Burn* ot the Kimberley\nteaching, staff Is a visitor ln town\nthe guest of Mrs. E. Rogere and\nfamily.\nThe Misses Marjorle and Vernon\nLynes of Armstrong sn bere, tbe\nguests or Mr. and Mn. E. j. Leveque. Mlss Marjorle taught school\nhen for a couple of yeara.\nair. and Mn. James Howard sod\nllttle daughter arrived hen from\nChllliwack oh Monday evening to\nvisit with Mrs. Howard's family\nMr. and Mra. John Muir tor a time.\nRev. J. stDenls of the flnt Presbyterian church. Trail, conducted\nservloe in St. Andrew'a churoh hen\non Sunday morning, also administering the sacrament of the Lord's\nSupper, Mr. StDenls was the guest\nof Msyor Swsn while ln town.\nMlss F. Nye was a visitor to Nakusp on Sunday evening-\nMayor P. \u25a0 Swan was a visitor to\nNew Denver snd silverton on Sunday.\nHarold Swan wu the guest of hli\nfather. Mayor P. Swan, tor afewdaya,\nleaving  for Creston  on Mondsy.\nThe    following    from    here   wen\namong thoee who sttended the July\n1 celebration st Nakusp: Mr. and\nMrs..W* E. Onham, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Muir, Mr. and Mrs. J. Bolsvert,\nF. M* Hufty, w. Greenwood. Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Swing, Mrs. J. H. Pinchbeck, Hsrold Pinchbeck. J. Cecchlnl,\nthe Misses E. and N* Cecohlnl. Mn.\nW. A. Blackb-mrne. MUa A. Black-\nbourne. Mln Beth Gage, the Misses\nFnnoes snd Ruby Nye. Mr. and Mrs.\nE. J. Leveque. snd the girls softball\nteam   and   the   baseball   team.\nSALMO PUPILS\nARE PROMOTED\nSAIiMO, B. O., July 5\u2014Promoted\nfrom gnde 6 to grade 6\u2014Elmer Hoak-\nonson. Olga Hoakonaen, Hazel Jmaiff,\nAlan McLeod Francis Kubak, Hazel\nDorey.\nOn trial\u2014Virginia Bemle, Edward\nHearn,  Raymond  Bush.\nPromoted from grade 6 to grade\n7\u2014Nettle Leahy, Kathleen Hearn,\nDoreene Fair, WUUam Kalmakoff,\nMary Miller. On trial\u2014Edward John\nStella Dorey.\nPromoted from grade 7 to grade\n8\u2014Guy Cawley, Clarence Cawley\nHonor rolls tor the yesr. 1933-33 \u2022\nDivision II\u2014Proficiency \u2014 Naomi\nLindstrum. Deportment \u2014 Maxine\nLlndow Regularity and punctuality\n\u2014Lawrence   McLeod.   Keith   McLeod\nDivision I\u2014proficiency \u2014 Nettle\nLeahy. Deportment \u2014 Olga Hoakonaen. Regularity and punctuality-\nShirley Lindstrom. Alan McLeod,\nRaymond Bush, Elmer Hoakonaen\nPerfect attendance for June \u2014\nVirginia Bemls, Raymond Bush, Harel\nDorey. Elmer Hoakonaen, Edward\nHearn. Kathleen Hearn, William Kalmakoff, Frances Kubak, Nettle Leahy.\nShirley Lindstrom, Alan McLeod,\nMary  MUler.\nPercentage of sttendance for'June:\n94.33.\nDivision II\u2014Flnsl examinations\u2014\nStanding:\nGrade 1 \u2014 promoted \u2014 Marjorle\nCawley (with honors), Jacqueline\nJohnstone, June Fair. Lois Browne.\nGrade II\u2014Promoted \u2014 Keith McLeod (with honors), Muriel Bemls.\nBlUy Stewart. Dorothy Hansen. Nick\nBerukoff, Donald WUde. On trtal\u2014\nAUeen Boettger.     ,\nGrade III\u2014promoted \u2014 Maxine\nLlndow. Eva Leahy, Mona MUler,\nMaudie Stewart, Helen Jmaiff. On\ntrial\u2014Mary Kubak, Gerald Hansen.\nGrade IV\u2014promoted \u2014 Naomi\nLindstrom (with honors), Lawnnce\nMcLeod, Roy Browne. Joyce Bremner, Anule Jmaiff, Mable Bradley,\nCarl Llndow, Percy WUde, Merlin\nJohn, Annie Berukoff, David John.\nOn trial \u2014 Ronald Needham and\nHarry  Smith.\nPerfect attendance for June \u2014\nAnnie Berukoff, Mable Bradley, Carl\nLlndow, Joyce Bremner. Naomi Lindstrom, Lawrence McLeod. Ronald\nNeedham, Roy Browne, Gerald Hansen, Mary Kubak, Eva Maude Leahy,\nMaxine Llndow, Mona MiUer, Muriel\nBemls, Nick Berukoff, Dorothy Hansen. Keith McLeod, Marjorle Cawley, June -Ptlr.\nPercentage of attendance for Juns\n-87.33.\nMrs. Cyr of Alberta\nIs Wardner Visitor\nWARDNER, B. 0. July 4\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. L. H. Havey have as their\nguests their daughter, Mrs. L. B.\nCyr  of   Dorothy.   Alta.\nAlbert Munn has accepted s position with the B. C. Spruce Mills\nat Lumberton.\nMlss A. Livingstone, Junior room\nteacher, left on Saturday tor her\nhome at North Vancouver.\nMlas Mona Mlgglns, Mrs. E. Thomp-*\nson, Mlss Grace Taylor. John A.\nlAwson. Lewen and Gordon Mlgglns motored to Spokane tor the\nholiday.\nMr. and Mre. George Pratt and\nchildren of Castlegar, former rest-\ndents of Wardner. spent the weekend hen aa the guests of Mr, and\nMrs.   George   Renlck.\nMn. A. Roslcky has as her guest,\nher alster, Mtss Sophie Mader, who\nteaches at Michel.\nRev. Archibald Gives\nFarewell Sermons\nORAND FORKS, B. C, July 8.*-\nRev. J. G. Archibald, delivered his\nfarewell addresses in St. John's United church, at the Sunday morning\nand evening servioes.\nAt the morning service seven young\npeople Joined the chufth, also a\nmember by transfer was welcomed\nand   there   were   two   baptisms.\nIn the evening during his farewell\nnddress, Mr. Archibald thanked the\ndifferent organizations ln the church\nto- their loy\u00bbl support and many\nktndnesaw during his pastorate at\nSt. Johns, and urged the congregation to continue giving their best\nsupport to his successor. The senior\nchoir sang his favorite anthem\n\"Go Forward Christian Soldier.\"\nMn. Oowans aleo sang another of\nMs favorite solos \"The Holy City.\"\nThe churoh waa filled to capacity\nat both morning and evening services.\nCertificates Are\nAwarded at Wardner\nWAKONER B C. Jul, 5\u2014Wtrdner\nSenior aehool promotion list ls ss\nfollows: To grade 6\u2014Beverley H.a-\nney. Bdnt* Johnson. June Thompson.\nEddie Kamo, Florence  Holmer*\nTo grade 7\u2014Harry Kamo, LoulM\nMoberr. Inee Renlck. Annie Rader,\nWUllam Dayi. Roy Holmes, Catherine   Coffey.   Fumi  Mlyaaakl.\nT*o grade 8\u2014Keith Thompaon, Loretta Renlck. Earl Lovlck. Robert\nMcpentle, Florence Thompaon. Ruth\nHamrln, Andrew Roalcky.\nAwarded senior writing certlflcatea\n\u2014Wlnnifred Daye. Ruth Hamrln.\nIrene Rader. Loretta Renlck. Florence Holmes, charlene Hamlin. HJor-\ndls Johnaon. Aya Mlyaaakl and\nKatherlne  Ttoslcky.\nAwarded Junior writing certlflcatea\n\u2014Catherine Coffey. Louise Moberg,\nAnnie Rader, Hoy Holmes. Ine*,\nRenlck, Buate Powers and Marie\nRenlck.\nAwarded progress certificates\u2014Eric\nRodgers. Frldolph Hellman. Charlie\nMlyaaakl. and Grace McKenzle. B.\nO. Iverson, teacher.\nHALF the (an of a ttirrlng round of cxer*\nciie ii the long, cool refreshing drink el\nthe end. And here there are no Io\u00bbero.\nFor impartially, The Champagne of Ginger Alea bring) winner and loser alike its\nwelcome test.\nTired and hot you may be... but the\nfirst sip of Canada Dry makes you feel a\nlittle less tired and a whole lot cooler.\nSip by sip, as your drink goes down, your\nspirits go up.\nThis fine old Canadian beverage is a\ntreat at any time. But it takes a hard,\nfought set of tennis, or golf, or badminton to make you realize just how good it\n1st For then it always hits the spot. Then\nits coolness is like the glacier snow. Its\nflavour the very essence of the sunny\nJamaica ginger fields.\nHave a case or carton of Canada Or]\nsent home. Most stores sell them.\nMAGNUM 25e\nPlus Ee fwfii* deposit\n12-OUNCE SIZE .... lSe\nPlus 3c bottt* deposit\nD RY\nMrs. Gowans Fetes\nSunshine Choir\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, July 6\u2014\nThe Bunahlne choir of St. John's\nUnited church was entertained at\nthe home of the leader, Mrs. W.\nOowans. on Frldsy evening. Choruses, solos, and muslcsl games textured the evening's entertslnment.\nDuring the evening, Audrey Donaldson, president of the choir's social\nclub, presented Ur. Archibald with\na gift, as a souvenir of the choir.\nMr. Archibald responded ln a few\nappreciative words. After refreshments were served, a hymn was sung\nand appropriate good wishes for\nMr. Archibald's future success wrre\ngiven by the choir.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Lynees of Trait\narrives in the city this week. Mr.\nLyness returns to Trail In a day\nor two but Mra. Lynesa and little\neon will remain for the summer\nholidays with the former's father,\nP.   Downey.\nRct. J. Dunn of Knox Preabyterlan\nchurch, left on Monday for a brief\nvisit   to   the   coast.\nMr. and Mrs. J. T. Simmons\nreturned on Saturday evening from\nSpdkane,\nMrs. E. Bailey has ai her guests\nthis week, Mrs. T. Roberts and\ndaughter   Pauline   ot   Greenwood.\nMlss Jean Grey, nurse-ln-tralnlng\nat Vancouver, arrived in Grand\nForks on Sunday to spend a holiday with her parents, Mr. and Wra.\nW. Grey. West Grand Porks.\nMisses M. and E Kldd were visitors to Bpokane  thla week.\nJ. Hutton and sons Chester and\nMac, also Junior Woodhouse, spent\nthe weekend at their summer cottage on tbe North Pork.\nMr. and Mrs. Helgsr Peterson and\nchildren of Moscow. Idaho, and H.\nJ. Peterson of Pullman, arrived. by\nmotor tn Grand Porks on Sunday\nand are visiting their parents. Mr.\nand Mrs. H. OL L Peterson snd P.\nA.  Peterson  of this city\nRev. J. G. Archibald cf St. John's\nUnited church left on Monday for\nVancouver where he will take up\nhis new chsrge as pastor of North\nLonsdale  United church,\nMr. and Mrs J. B McDonald and\ndaughter Jean, spent the Dominion\nholldiy   In  Trail\nMr. and Mrs. G. B Russell and\nsont of Nelson spent the holiday\nand weekend with Mra. Russell's\nmother, Mrs. Harrlgan of thts city.\nMlss Archer, matron cf the Grand\nPorks hospital, returned from the\ncosst on Saturday and left the same\nday for Nelson where she will continue her holidays for a few daya.\nW. R. Gibbon, accompanied by\nMiss Peggy Gibbon and Master\nDonald Gibbon, motored to Grand\nPorks on Monds y and are guesta\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. W.\nOowans.\nMowat Oowans returned on Monday from Nelson where he had been\nattending the track meet held In\nthst  city on  Dominion  day.\nTIMBER CRASHES\nTHROUGH AUTO\nMOYIE. B. C- July 4\u2014John Kadln and party of Kimberley m?t\nwith an accident cn the Aldrldgr\nbridge, two miles west of Moylr.\nThe csr in going over the C. P. R.\ntrack skidded and smashed th\"\nratling and the piece of timber\npassing right through the wind\nshield and between the two nvn\nin the front seat, knocking the hat\noff the third man ln the bad;\nseat. The car was badly faneahed\nand It was neceeaary to get \u00ab\nwrecker to tow it into Cranbrook\nfor  repair. *\n(ttilld  B.  C.   TajrolK\"\nWhen\nNothing\nElse\nWould\nBabies hava been UJted to\nhealth, when no other food would\nremain with them, by Pacific\nMilk. We have Mores of letters\nfrom mothers who eay this. It\nhaa Just the nourishment a baby\nneeds when 111. \"breaks up\" easily, which helps a baby mlsthtlly\nat any time and ls recommended\nby physicians.\nPacific Milk\n100%   B.C.   Owned   and   Controlled\nplant   at   Abbotsford\nMISS E. WIGHTMAN\nVISITS IN HARROP\nHARROP. B 0. July 5 -Mlas\nHaael Knauf hss sa her guest this\nweek. Mlss Evelyn Wightman of\nMedicine Hst.\nThe Misses Holme, sud psrty of\nfriends from Trsll sre holidaying\nat the  Holmes' ranch.\nMr. and Mrs H. Wlibtman ot\nMedicine Hst. Alts., are spending\nthe week with Mr. snd Mrs. J. P.\nBtevenaoo. \"Braeslde\" ranoh.\nMlas Jessie Harrop WW the weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. Annsble\nJr. Nelson, returning bome Mondsy\nMr. snd Mrs. H. Palrbank. Ethel\nand Davii Palrbank. Mrs. J. C.\nPiper snd VV 8. Ashby wers Nelson\nvisitors Mondsy.\nTha Social club's danoe Prlday\nevening was well attended locally.\nTbe Orest Buddbs at Knmakura.\nJapan, wears 830 curls upon hla majestic hesd; these curls, according\nto legend, represent snails wblch\nonce crswled upon the original dlety\nto shelter his bald hesd from the\nsun. '\n^lytjJottvl^Mi (Iitmimng^lf\n' IHCQWPOftATSD   Sft MfcY lg7Q,_\nSHOP FRIDAY AND SAVE\n100 Only\nSummer\nFrocks\nWon't Last Long at\n\u00bb2-w\nAnother shipment of celanese\ndresses in pastels and White that\nare so cool and refreshing. Beautifully made with capes, puff sleeves\nand sleeveless. 12 smart styles.\nSizes 1*1 to 41. Shop early.\nWOMEN'S FABRIC SHOES\nSmart fabric shoes In fawn with mesh fronts ln\nties and sandals T-strap style. So stylish and cool\nfor summer, made with leather solea, Cuban hecla.\nAn opporunlty to save on your summer shoes.\nAll slses ln lot. Regular \u20222.85.\nJuly Clearance price\t\n$2-4\u00bb\nIRISH LINEN SETS\nPine double Damask sets of  1  cloth slue,  13x3.\nand 8 dinner napkins to mstch.   A limited number  only   to  clear  out.    Regular   \u00bb8.49   set.   but\nworth  more.\nJuly   Sale,   set    _ -\t\n$6-95\nLinen Hankies at Less\nThan Half Price\nHand embroidered Irish and\nSwiss fine linen hankies. 60\ndozen to select from. Values\nto SOc each. IO\"*\nJuly   Sale,   cell      .. **M\nBOYS' RAYON\nPOLO SHIRTS\nJust the shirt for tlw boy to\n\u2022car during his holldsys. Color, green snd sand. Sizes 32\nto 34. AO(\nJulv Sale  price    **'\nMen's Moleskin Pants   c * d9\nHare's a resl bargain In men's work pants. Panls  \"mf   \u25a0   \u2022\u202247\nsll full cut. and strongly made   Slaes 30  to 42. *M\nJuly Sale  price\t\nChildren's STEEL GARDEN SETS\nA hoe. rake nnd upade.   Regular $1.00 per >et. g\u00a3r\nJul|  Bxiti  price\t\nCLEARING KNITTING YARN\nFinal clearance ot full one-ounce balls including Brush     ^m\nwools, worsted knitting and 4-ply  flng'Hn*. CV shades , ^Q\nonly. ***^$\nPridsy.   ball     ^J\nStaple Briefs That Mean Savings\nTurkish Towels, each      *t\nPillow Slips, pair  \u2022***\nRemnants, Prints, Silks\u2014Half Price.\nStriped Turk Towelling, 2 yards   _\u2122f\nFrilled Curtain Scrims, yard  *Jf\nGrass Mats, 27x51  tt*\nCups and Saucers, set     vi~\nService Grocery      GROCETERIA\nQuaker Corn  Flaket;    \u2022%&(_\n3 pkts  for         **\nreu\u2014Columbia    brand. 1S(?\nslam 6; 2 tins tor ... m~*\nunrney'i Baking chocn. . f*(-\nlate: per Vlb. pkt  *~~\nMlnota  Tapioca; *e<!\n2 pkta. for   \t\nSunlight   Soap;\n18c\nper carton ot 4 cakes...\nHBC Fekora Blend tea; \u2022*\u00a7\u00bb*;\nper  lb\t\nBest   Food,   Mayonnaise; m\\Q\nper   Jar     ,\u2022\t\nClark',   roroato   soup; mmt\n3 tin, for    \u2022*\nMonarch  Pastry  Flour; mf}*?\n7-lb   bag      *\nLlbby,   Corned   Beet\u2014 2KG\nFinest quality;  J tlna\nHelm  Baked  Beans\u2014  **ft*}\nMedium size tins; tin   ~*~*\nwm\n ttat ton\n\u2022 THE   NELSON  DAILT  KOTS,   NElSOtf,  B.C.   \u2014  THCTISDAT   MOBKINO.   JtXT   I,   USS-\nSip Nelson laflij Npuib\n\"interior 0\/ British Columbia's Family Newspaper\"\nall rm mws while n is niws\npublished miy morning except Sunday oy IU NIWS\nPUBLISHING OOMPANY. LIMITED, _i\u00bb Bakar street. Nelson.\ntC     Uem\u00bber ol CANADIAN  PRESS Leased  Wire Serrlee\nADVBtTUUNO   BATIS ON   APPLICATION\nCr rate oarda may oe seen at tba olltce ol any Advertising Agency\nrecognised by tb* Canadian daily newspapers association,\nINO. 01 which tbe Nelson DaUy News la . member\t\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nBy mau (oountry). MT month \u2014__\u2014___-_\u2014\u2014\u2014_\u2014___\nfar rear \t\nBt mall (olty), per year ________\noutsids Canada, par month    \t\nPar  year ,,      .\nDeu.ered (dty by carrier)   per week\nPer yaw\n_\u00bb   _\u00bb\n.   8.00\n- M-00\n_. .11\n_   7J0\n- at\n_ IIjOO\nPayable In advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ot emulation.\nTHURSDAY, JULY 6, 1938.\nRESPECTING EXPERTS\n'Between You\nand Me\"\nBy \"J.B.C.\"\nExperts in many fields have sustained some loss\nof prestige during the last two decades, says the Christian Science Monitor. The World War, like every great\nconflict at arms, destroyed many reputations and exalted others. Military repute crumbled under the impact of new methods of attack; but*leaders with imagination enough to grasp the meaning of the changes\nand to devise methods to combat them rose in stature\nand quickly became authorities under the stress of the\ntimes.\nSimilarly the casualties of the depression embrace\na list of financial reputations which seemed shock-\nproof a few years ago. Here inability to prophesy correctly and point a certain way out of distress proved\nto be what mechanical engineers call \"yield points\"\nunder the tension of popular disappointment Again,\nfailure to win successive political victories discredited\nnot a few specialists in this field. The failure of some\nexperts to live up to the highest standards of professional honor hurt them in public regard, and the limitations of the venerated brought down many of the\nmighty from their seats.\nYet specialists are still highly considered by intelligent persons and are, of course, vitally necessary to\ncivilization. The world has used them from the earliest days of the division of labor. The expert is in no\ndanger of permanently losing his place among men,\nthough the-popular mind is more aware of his limitations than it used to be. Probably too much was expected of him. His standing was not always enhanced\nby demands upon him for ex cathedra opinions on matters outside his field. Even inside his bailiwick, the\nspecialist has to watch his step lest he assume that\nwhat he does not know is so. The witness stand has\nbeen the Waterloo of many a reputation for this reason.\nThe expert's future prestige is assured, but it\nwill be higher if he maintains the humble attitude of\nthe natural scientist toward his work and has sympathy for the layman, while carrying on with fine\nmastery of technique in his chosen field. Recognition\nof his worth goes far beyond the mere superiority of\nhighly individualized training and skill. His most\nvaluable attribute is his judgment, and the use of this\nis often involved with problems concerning foresight\nthat specialists are not to be condemned for differing\nin their opinions when there are honestly reached. It\nis one thing to interpret the past and quite another\nto sense the best future course. The public errs when\nit expects experts to discern the future almost as\nthough they were freed from human limitation.\nThe greatest of men are usually charmingly modest about their abilities. They may, for example, respect the value of versatility, but will be hesitant to claim\na degree of it Inconsistent with their place as specialists. Respect for specialized knowledge and ability\nwill increase if the expert lives up to the code held\nby the best of his kind, and his star will shine long\nand brightly in the firmament of reputations.\nAmong the 1,100 prisoners in St. Vincent de Paul\nPenitentiary the average age is 23. There are 600 of\nthese prisoners only 20 years of age. \"A terrible situation must be faced,\" says Mr. Justice Wilson. \"The\ngreat criminals of today are 20 years of age.\" He\nsuggests that those who interest themselves in social\nproblems should find the cause and remedy the position.\nIn these days when world peace and internationalism are on so many lips, it is a strange paradox that\nnever before has there been -so much disagreement between nations on so many subjects. That is illustrated\nat the discussions of the World Economic Conference.\nJoe Carter hsa left for tha coast.\nHe wu honored before departure\nby Nelaon citizens when a puree of\nmoney wu preeented to him. in\nthat aame old spirit ot his, that ol\nthinking of others. Joe turned the\nmoney over to hli bank manager\nto go Into s savings account for\nhis son. Joe Carter wu not a mere\ncltlwn ef Nelaon. He wu an Institution  In   himself.\nI   a   ,\nJoe will not only be missed among\nhis msny railroad friends. Ha wlll\nnot only be missed by hla bualnees\nusoclates. Be will ba mlaaed by\nnumerous organisations and by\nyoung and old alike.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nJoe wu a sportsman from the\nword go. While others ln tha elty\nbave been named the \"daddy\" of\nthis sport and of that. Joe could\neasily be called tba \"great-grand\ndaddy\" of all aporta. There wu noth\nIng Jos would not do for a hookey\naggregation. He stole tbe fsmous\nStanley cup trom Montreal in tbe\nearly dsys and hired a special trsin\nto spirit hla players trom Winnipeg\nout of the city before they were\nmobbed. He wu one of tha Instigators of the flret Nelaon Amateur\nAthletic association He. In his capacity u district passenger agent,\nnever missed a trip on a special\ntrain. On that train he cared Ior\neveryone's wants, joe wu a sport\nfrom the word go. Any sport suited\nhim He would roll tbe bones, deal\nthe cards, tall a atory or do anything to keep anyone In good humor.\nJoe will be missed. But I wish him\nand his health and his prosperity\nst the  cout.\nAnd spsaklng of Joe. 1 aooompanled him to TraU one time as his\nguest ln Use C. P. R. superintend*\nent's private car. It la not out of\nplsce to tell this now for Joe should\nworry about the superintendents\nor even the prealdent. But the game\nwu over and tbe train wu nearlng\nNelson. Suddenly we all stirred and\nwere shaving and dressing before\narrival. Joe wu a busy man. It\nappears the Bdmonton boys owed\nhim something like 111 and he had\nto collect before tbey left Nelson.\nBut Jos could not llnd his tie.\nHe searched high and low. It did\nnot sppear. Then grabbing my\nneckpiece he tied it on bis collar\neipertly and with \"Wbat In H\t\ndoes a newspaperman need a tie\n(or anyway. Besides I oould not\ncollect thst 111 without a tie.\" Joe\nstill hu the tie. But that Is Just\nan example of Joe. Had he needed\nan undershirt someone would havo\nloaned him one but I bave often\ntbougbt It would have been too\nbad   bsd   Jlmmle   Oordon   offerred\nhla.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nIf we had a dollar for every bucketful of printers* Ink used up on the\nsubject of the Ottawa Conference, we\nwouldn't be caring whether tbls\ncolumn wu written or not.\nsaa\nIf tbe nationa ware to go In for\nona huge Clau Day questionnaire,\nthen the 193S poll might read somethings sa follows:\nDone Most for Hla Claaa\u2014Flnt,\nFranklin P. Roosevelt; aecond, Adolf\nHitler.\nBeat All-Round Man\u2014Ramaay Msc-\nDonaid; Hs's been everywhere.\nBest Athlet\u00bb-Prlce of Wheat.\nBest speaker\u2014Oandhl; he dow lt\nby luting.\nBeet Actor\u2014Bernard Sbaw.\nMost Popular Man\u2014Stalin; no one\never   votee  against   him.\nMost Likely to Succeed\u2014Jspanese\nOenersl Staff.\nWittiest Man\u2014Man who proposes\nto get more revenue by ralalng income taxes.\nFavorite Novelist\u2014Herr Ooebbels,\nauthor or \"Aryans I Have Found.\"\nMost Dignified\u2014The ex-Katser;\nthese lut few months he hu been\nextremely thoughtful.\nFavorite topic of Conversation\u2014\n'Now  II  silver  would  only\u2014\"\n\"The Institution ot marrt*_ge,\" de-\nclans a local seer, \"wiu soon be mere\nscraps, don't you, mister?\nwraps, dont yu, mister?\n25 Years Ago\n(From The Dally News of July 6.\n1908)\nThe Tale Columbia Lumber com\npan; vaa granted a 15-year exten\nslon on a leaae ot the toreebore, at\na meeting ot the council laat night.\neee\nTwo cara of ooooentratea have\nbeen shipped to Trail from the Second Relief and one from the Pern\nmine.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWltb the completion of the road\nJuat laid out by W. 6. Drewry, P.L.8.,\nbetween Balfour and C, W. Busk's\nranch, there wlll be a contlniyHU\nroad along the north ahore from\nFive Mile to the Outlet.\nTen Years Ago\n(From  The  Dllly   Newa   of  July  6,\n1028)\nMUa   Constance   Martin   left   laat\nnight for Victoria to attend aummer\nachool.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlas Greta Steevea of the Central\nschool   teaching   staff   leaves   today\nfor Calgary.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. W Ferguson successfully paaaed\nhla final law exams ln Vancouver\nand haa been summoned to Victoria\nwhere he will be formelly called to\nthe bar.\nAuction and\nContract Bridge\nBy the World's  Leading  Authority,\nMILTON C. WOR\u00bb\nWHEN    BAD    LUCK    BECOMES\nGOOD   FORTUNE\nTHAT BODY OF YOURS\nBy JAMES  W.  BARTON,  M.O.\nWBY   HEAT   RELIEVES\nRHEUMATISM\nA  PROPHET   WITHOUT  HONOR\nHitler: \"I bave all Oermany under my laah. Only my own Austria\nresists ms.\"\u2014Le Rlre. Psrls.\nX&S*tS)SSjilsjS\u00bbtott#SSSS&)&&SStt&SSS&^^\n\"SHARLIE\"\nBy BEATRICE BURTON\n>3$\u00ab$5$5$$\u00ab5$$\u00ab$\n(Continued)\n\"Contract bridge?\" aaked Sharlle. 'Tm aorry. X don't know how\nto play.\" If lt hed been poker,\nnow, or dice. . \u25a0\n\"We have a grand llttle game\nthat we cell 'Horses,'\" aald Mrs.\nBaker. \"We play lt on a board\ntbat we made, ourselves, on the top\nof a bridge table. It'a a lot ot\nfun.\"\nShe got out a box lined with\nmetal horses, painted blue and\ngreen and red end yellow while\nMr. Baker brought out the board;\nand for tbe next hour they all\npleyed \"Horses.\" It waa fun, too,\nalthough Sharlle thought at first\nthat It too much like a child's\ngame.\nAt the end of the evening Mra.\nBaker took SharUe Into the bedroom where her ooat lay spread\nacross one of the snowy twin bade.\nMrs. Baker's dressing table waa a\nlong low one that all but filled one\nwall of the room. It was covered\nwith ailver toilet tblnga. . . two\nhsir brushes, a clothea brush, a\nwills* broom, a whole crystal tray\nof little aUver implements for manicuring. But there wu only one\nbox bf white face powder on tt\nand a tall silver-topped bottle of\nlavender water. There wasn't a\nbottle of real perfume, a box of\nrouge or a alngle lipstick In alght.\nAnd going down the narrow ataJrs\nbeside Jim, Sharlle quietly removed\nall of the Ruby .418 Up salve from\nown mouth.\n\"They're nice people aren't they?\"\nJim asked when they were out ln\nthe dark street, getting Into the\ncar.\n\"Lovely.\" said SharUe. \"The girl\nls the moat faaclnatlng-Iooktng\nthing I ever saw. Jim, I don't believe ahe weara a bit of makeup\nexcept eome powder. , I believe\nthat'a her color.' '\n\"Sbe certainly looka 'big Ume,'\ndoesn't ahe?\" .'im agreed. \"A lot\nof tbeee high brow people dont\nlook like anybody, but she doea. . .\nTou know who her folks are, dont\nyou? The FUUngbams that have\nthat big white houae out on the\nDawley Pike. . . the plaoe we've always  been  so  crazy  about.\"\nVaguely Sharlle knew that the\nFUUnghams were an old and very\nwealthy family. She had aeen thetr\nbeautiful old houae many tlmea\nwhen ahe *~* out driving with\nJim, and she had aeen thai'1 name\nin the aoclety news of th*- papera aU\nher Ufe.\n\"It muat be terrible bard for a\ngirl Uke her to have to do her own\nwork,\" she said alowly. \"She muat\nhave been used to all klnda ot servants.\"\nJim turned the comer of the\nstreet neatly. \"A lot of theee young\ncouples, whoee folks have money.\natart out Juat the way the Bakera\nhave,\" he eald. \"I Imagine they\nenjoy It. . . . having to struggle a\nllttle bit. The Bakers seem to be\nhaving a pretty good time.\"\nSharlle never had Uked him ae\nmuch as abe did Just at that moment. Re seemed to belong to\nher. . . . end the two of them\nseemed somehow to belong to the\nsame claaa that the young Bakera\nbelonged to. The young people who\ndon't mind a atruggle because they\nare ln love with each other. She\nknew, for tbat moment, that she\nwould probably never know what\ncomplete happiness was lf she married Mr. Collins- . \u25a0 To think ahe\ncould marry him had been absurd.\nWhy, a man like him must meet\ndozens of lovely girls and women\nall the time. Olrls like Mrs. Baker.\nOlrla who were absolutely correct\nand utterly lovely ln every way because their life-long training and\ncare had made them so. . . If Jim\nBarniim had asked her to marry\nhim then she would have aald Yea\nwithout a second's hesitation.   But\nUneven distribution often -mattes\na hand easy tor an expert when It\nU totally beyond tbe ability of\nthe average player to handle lt correctly. The majority of the atar\nplaya that the Bridge table produces are made possible bt unusual\ndistribution.\nhe didn't. . . . and the moment Mlp-\n| ped eway Into another moment.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u00bb\nIt was the fifteenth of October\nbefore Mr. Collins came back trom\nhla trip. He had driven home and\nhe had stopped off at two or three\ndifferent places, according to Edna\nwho knew all his buslneaa ae usual.\nHe came baok very tan and\nhealthy looking, and before htr had\nbeen In tbe offloe two houra Shar\nUe was Just aa Infatuated with him\naa ahe ever hid been.\nAt noon, on that flret day after\nhla return, Mr. CoUlna came out of\nhla private offloe and walked straight\nacross the outer room to Sharlle's\ndesk.\nShe was getting ready to go out\nto lunch and ahe looked up at him\nabove the powder puff that ahe\nheld In her hend.\n\"How'd you Uke to take over\nEdna's work while she's away on\nher vacation?\" he aaked. \"Think\nyou can manage It?\" He smiled\ndown at her, bla eyes crinkling at\nthe   corners.\n\"I can try.\" Sharlle's heart\nleaped. Thla waa a lucky break for\nher, ahe thought. To be ln Edna's\noffloe, day after day, for two solid\nweeka, where all ahe had to do, to\nset Mr. Collins, was to turn her\nhead, and look through ttw doorway into his private room* To alt\nat the corner of his deak taking\ndictation. To be right In the Une of\nhla vision all day long where he\ncouldn't help noticing her . \u2022 \u2022\nAnd ahe would aee to it that he\ndid notloe hert Sbe wasn't going\nto be quiet and selt-ettadng, aa\nEdna always had been ... a bit of\nanimated offloe furniture. Not ahe I\nShe was going to make Mr. Collins\nrealise right from the atart that\nahe waa a young and attractive\nwoman who was half tn love with\nhim.\nTbat night abe washed her hair\nand aet it ln waves . . . deep burnished wavea that looked Uke aatln.\nShe did up all her cuffs and collars so that they were white and\nwithout a alngle crease. She manicured her nails and gave her teeth\nan extra cleaning with pumloe\natone.\nNothing out of the ordinary happened the first week of Bdna'a vacation. SharUe aat tt her deak,\ncopying Mr. Collin's letters, waiting for the sound of hla bell summoning her Into hla offloe. She\ntook his dictation, called numbers\nfor him on the telephone, did sll\nof her work aa quietly as Bdna\nhereelf could have done It.\nShe did not have a single chance\nto do anything else. Except for\nthe things he had to aay to her. he\nseldom spoke to her.\n'Tm getting nowhere with him.\"\nSharUe told herself on Friday night\nJust before aha dropped off to\nsleep. \"I've Juat taken Edna's place\nln hla mind. I'm Juat hla offloe\nslave.\"\n(To   Be   Oontlnued)\nWhen South opened the above\nhand with a modest bid of one\nClub he laid the ftrst step for ft\ntesta of hla partner's ability. With\nEaat and West passing throughout.\nNorth bid one Spade (a One-Over-\nOne) and South mode a Jump\nshift by bidding three Hearts (which\nalmoat certainly showed a four*\ncard suit). North, then bid three\nNo Trumps. North emphasized his\nSpade strength by bidding five\nSpadea which Justified South's small\nslam call ln No Trumps.\nWith North the Declarer and the\ncontract alx No Trumps, East's\nopening lead was the Jack ot Spadea. North won and led the Queen\nof Diamonda which East correctly\npermitted to ride through uncovered. South played the Jack and to\ntrick 3 North led the Ten. Bast refused a second opportunity to cover.\nWhen a third round failed to drop\nthe King of Diamonds, Declarer\nswitched to clubs and ran Into another 4-3 distribution which came\nto Ught when three rounds failed\nto drop the Jack. After winning a\nsecond round of Spadee ln closed\nhand and cashing a third Spade,\nDeclarer decided that his only\nchanoe for a alam wae tbe Heart\nfinesse. Weet won with the Queen\nand set the contract by leading the\nJack of Clubs. Should the slam\nhave   been   made?\nTHE CORRECT PLAY\nThe uneven division that oould be\nmarked in every ault ahould have\nsimplified Declarer's task. With\nBast holding up the Diamond King,\nDeclarer ahould take three Diamonda, three Cluba and three Spadee, discarding one Heart from\nSouth. The exact distribution of\naU three suite having been disclosed,\nat trick 10 he ahould win one Heart\nln dummy and then throw West ln\nthe lead wltb a fourth round of\nClubs* Weat, marked with nothing\nbut Hearta, would be forced to\nlead up to dummy's tenace, giving\nDeclarer the alam tor which he\nhad contracted.\nFor many years heat ln various\nforms hu been used In the different types of rheumatism. The\nheat eases tbe pain and seems to\n\"loosen   up\"   the   Joints.\nAs a considerable number of sufferers with rheumatism suffered\nmore with oold handa and feet\nthan those who were not afflicted,\nresearch physicians have now discovered that ths temperature of\nthe skin ls below normal tn these\ncases.\nDrs. LllUe M.  Wright  and 'Ralph\ni Pemberton   state   that   Wie   temper-\ni ature  ot the  akin  waa  below  normal   ln   63   per   cent   of   arthritic\n! (rheumatic)   patients   measured   on\nthe  base   of  the  finger  nail.  They\natate   that  the   tiny   or   end   blood\nvessels   ln   these   patients   contain\nless  blood  and  are  lighter  ln   color   than   ln   normal   persons.   This\nmay be due to the fact that aome\nof   these   blood   vessels   are   actually closed, or that they are smaller   than   normal.\nThus they found that tfis blood\nflow waa slower and more fre-\nmatlo cases than ln normal peraona.\nDrs. Joeeph Kovaee, Irving 8-\nWrlght and A. Wilbur Duryee, New\nYork, studied 80 casei of chronic\nrheumatism ot the Joints. They\nmeasured the flow of the blood\nIn the llttle vessels and found the\nnumber of blood veaaela leas and\nthe flow ot blood slower than\nnormal ln the majority of caaea.\nThey were unable to say whether\nthe disappearance of a number of\nthe blood vessels ls reaponalble for\nthe changes ln the tissues or whether the changes ln the tissues eaust\na decrease ln the number or alze\nof  the   small   blood   vessels.\nThe temperature of ths akla was\nlower tban normal In more than\nhalf   of  these   arthritic  cases.  This\nexplelne why rheumatic or arthritic\npatients often complain of numbness and cold handa and feet.\nOr   what   use   ls   this   knowledge\nto   sufferers   with   old   or   chronic  t\nrheumatlam?\nIt means that those who are *\nable to get about, are able to\nmove their Joints, can lncreaae the\nblood flow and help remove deposits about the Joints which not\nonly cause pain, but interfere with\ntbe movement ot the Joint.\nPor thoee who ars unable to gst\nabout it means that heat wlll hslp\nto open up a Uttle wider the blood\nvessels about the Joint, and thus\nIncrease the flow of the blood. The\nIncreased flow should remove de-\npoults or prevent formation of more\ndepoalts.\nClimbers wbo ascended Mt. McKinley lut year found the thermometer\nleft 19 years before by the first\nparty to aacend the peak, and noted\nthat the indicator had reached lte\nlowest possible mark, 35 degrees below aero.\nA bee csn Uft and carry 35.5 tlmea\nIts own weight, whereu a man's\nlimit of weight le about equal to\nhimself. t,flH\nfor\n\u25a0\u25a0_\u00a7 *    \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nMINING CAMPS!\nUnssnded Cottonwood\nPanels era a suitable\ngrade (or all minim\nand otber camp buildings. It la strong,\nwsterprool, light and\nrenr  easy  to   handle.\nWood, Vallanee\nHardware Can tttt.\nDlllrlrt   Distributors\n-HUM \u25a0    \u25a0 __________\u25a0\nTHE RHYMING\nOPTIMIST\nBy  ALINE  MirilAELlS\nBT VALLEY  AND  HILL\nBy forest and plain, by valley and\nhill,\nEver changeful, the road I must\ntravel   atlll;\nWith never a day through the sunlit  land.\nWith meadow larks singing on\neither  hand.\nBut there must be seasons ot groping   on\nThrough foreata whose branches obscure the dawn,\nWith never an hour on a hlgb\nhill's   crest\nAnd the tides of rapture a-flood in\nmy   breast.\nBut there must come times when\nthe thick inlets rise.\nAnd tbe valleys Us dim before my\neyes.\nBy forest and plain, by valley and\nhUl.\nEven ao through ths world I must\nJourney  atlll,\nWith never a lltt to life's happy\nheights\nBut Is reached through some valley\not  lost  delights.\nThus the plain hu been ordered\nand   thus   muat   remain,\nBy valley and hill, by forest and\nplain.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From  The   Dally   News  of  July   fl,\nmm\nAlex Carrie yesterday morning set\na   new  reoord   for   the  Nelson   rifle\nrange when he scored 101 out of a\npossible  105 at three ranges,\nsee\nMr. and Mrs. J. Mclnnla and Mlas\nMacleod of Nelson were the guute\nof Mr. and Mrs.' Ferguson of Procter\non Sunday.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nOscar H. Burden of Crawford Bay\nIs a guest In the city,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nl>d by the marahall. WUUam\nLynch, members of the Orange lodge\nheld their annual church parade\nyeaterday.\nAUNT HET\n\"Bxra uys the scheme ls\nlegal, but I don't trust blm.\nHe'd think hell wu ft good\nthing If lt paid 8 per osnt.\"\nTHE GUMPS-\nTHE DATE AT EIGHT\nVN.U. AMU-IE - THIt It THE\ntvoc i've been lookinc forw-xrc*\nto por months- our proud\nBeauty hm finm__.y unbent a\nUTTLE btr- \\ THOOtrWT SME'C. COME\nTO TIMS      WUfcM | STARTEO PRESSING\nTHA.T\n**4,000.\u00ab\nNOTION\nTHE\nTO-W-iWT AT EI6HT-\nI MEET THE JjDVELY QOEEJ-H\nANO WTTH A LITTLE  _Ri_)Ht_ '\nt THINK SMS CAM\n~ vUARNTO\n.LOVE\nME-\nMtmtt*- Itt ONLT^ f^tttUJL-\nFORTOUR SAKE    k uu lie.\nlit*. 60M4fa OUT WflW\nTHAT MAN-\nIP TOO kNE* MOW\nI ABHOR\u25a0_*- -,-*4iv* COUMTS\n__O0O <7BAC-__\nUntil viecAN\nWkYOPFTHkT\nMILLIE.-\n_T'iv\u00bbuvr\nTHIt ONE\nTiMR-wr\nAAU-rr KEgP\nDon't know whot to eat\nIs TOUU appetite Wd to pleate in hot\nweather? What yon need ia Kellogg's Com\nFlakea\u2014criip and oven-fresh, wared with\ncold milk or cream and fruit.\nKellogg's are delicious and extra refreshing. Rich in energy\u2014and ao eaay to digest\nthey don't \"heat yon np.\" Fine for lunch.\nMade hy Kellogg in London, Ontario.\nThe Coeur d'AIene\nHotel\nIn the Heart\nof\nSPOKANE\nANNOUNCES\nRooms newly furnished throughout in preparation for our usual excellent Spring and Summer'patronage from our friends in Canada.\nHARRY F. GOETZ, Mgr.\nTba HOTEL COEtH\nd'ALENE continues Itl\npoller of accepting\nCanadian money at\npar In payment ot\nroom accommodation\nTha Coeur d'AIene Is\ntbe only botel In\nSpokane tbat baa\nfor years consistently\nmaintained tbls policy in retard to\nCanadian  money.\nSPOKANE, Wash.\nJiaiiiHiHHiHiiiaii\n\u25a0 CAMP CHAIRS \u25a0\n\u25a0 i~\n1 We have a nice assortment of CAMP I\n2 CHAIRS and TABLES J\nm Prices 93.60 to f 5.50 \u25a0\n\u25a0 I\n2 NELSON HARDWARE CO.\n* Wholesale and Retail Quality Hardware \u2022\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0IB\nJl.l'.HN,   ,li   ||J\n (o^\n.lttt   NELSON  DAILY   NEWS.   NELSON,   B.C.\nTHT ___\u2022_*\u25a0 _Y   MORNINO,   JULV   8.   MW\nnoi rm\nAstoria\nThe Best\nGood Shoe'\nfor Men.\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nBEHAN MOVED\nTO IHE FORKS\nT. H Behan. roadmsster of the\nNelson division of the Canadlsn\nPacific Railway company, has been\ntransferred to Grand Forks. His\nplaoe Is being taken by P. Parnaby\n\" Princeton, former roadmaster on\nhe Kettle Valley line.\n, Kozsk, whose post Mr. Behan\ntaking, has been trsnsferred to\nttlnceton.\nMRS. BELL PAYS\nVISIT TO NELSON\nPARK 8IDINO, B. C. July 6\u2014\nMr. and Mrs. J. P. Bell with Mr.\nand Mrs. L. A. BeU and Palth\nPsulkner motored to Trail.\nMrs. Max Baskln of Nelson paid\nher son Penrod a Visit st Park\nBiding.\nBill Houston of Balmo epent\nMondsy and Tuesday visiting at\nhis sister's, Mrs.  Lsw Bell.\nMrs. Kelly Kellogg returned to\nNelson sfter spending a' few days\nrenewing acquaintance at Park's\nand Ross Spur.\nMrs. J. Law Bell and sons Robert\nsnd John, Mlss W. McAlplne and\nJ. P. Bell spent the weekend ln\nNelson, the guests of Mrs. Bell's |\nfather snd sister, H. Houston snd\nMlss  Toots  Houston.\nJ. z. Lepage motored to Nelson\nfor the weekend.\nMr. snd Mrs. Vain were visiting\nat Mr. and Mrs. Law Bell's Mondsy evening.\nT. J. Tremblay epent the day\nshopping ln  8almo Tuesday.\nEddy Tremblay returned home\nsfter spending a few days ln Trail.\nHON. MR. STEVENS URGES KOOTENAYS\nTO AID FERNIE COMEBACK BY USE\nOF COAL; WOULD AID  FERNIE DEBT\nMaurice Walker to\nVacation at Coast\nBONNINGTON FAU4. B. 0.. July\n,v -Mr* and Mrs. Andrew willey,\nMlss Ruth Willey snd Mrs. Bmer\nflpeir have returned after ependlng\nDominion day and tbe week-end\nat Christina Lake where they went\nby motor.\nMaurice Walker, Principal of the\nschool left on Prlday to spend the]\nsummer  vacation  ln  Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. BIddlecomb were\nmotorists to Christina Lake for tbe\nDominion day aporta.\n(Chapman Camp\nGirls Visit Moyie\nMOTIB.   B.   C.   July   6\u2014Softball\n.tween the Wildcats and the Maple\n(iSafs   of   Chapman   Camp   was   an\niy victory for the Moyle Wildcats,\ni soore  being   12-4.\nMre.   Oonrsd   has   as   her   house\n\u25a0liests  her  two  llttle   grand-daughters,   the   Misses   Curran   of   Chap-\n^^Tpmp.\nMrs. J. Smith  le vleltlng ln Nelll.\nUt*. D. Brooks and little sons,\n\u25a0eturned home after a six week's\nvisit with her parents ln Chsmplon,\nlltt.\n\u25a0 Mr. and Mre. Tnd Hanscom snd\nJbUdren of Calgary. Alta.. are tho\n1 guests of Mrs. Hanscom'a psr-\n|nte. Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Braiden.\n|lr. and K*ys. John Kills cf Chap*\nsa Camp spent the weekend at\neyle. the gunts of B. McLaren\n.  Aldrtdge.\nMr. and Mrs. ta. Blrkbeck on thetr\nsy bsck to Cslgary, from a motor\nPrlp to Seattle, visited at the home\n* Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Andrews. Mlss\n\u25a0lary Andreas acco\/npanled them on\n^hetr   wsy   back   a..d   ahe   wlll   be\nguest of Mrs. Blrkbeck.\nTen Write Exams\nat South Slocan\n\"SUver, Just Silver\"\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C\u201e July 5\u2014\nMr. and Mrs. O. V. Hunt and family were motorists to Rossland for\nDominion day.\nMrs. W. R. McDonald has left for a\nvisit to Seattle.\nMr.   and   Mrs.  w.  T.  Jones  hsd\n1 their guests on Trldsy, Mrs. K.\nPopoff of Slocan Ctty. Mr. and Mrs.\nO. Kitchener of Neleon, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Bailey and Mlss Rlndler of\nSlocsn  City.\nMr. snd Mrs. P. Scott snd Mlss\nMonelle. Scott were motorists to\nRossland to spend Dominion day.\nMr. and Mrs. Bert Davis apent the\nweek-end at Christina Lake. *\nJohn Lawrle was a visitor ln Trsll\nand at Ohrlstlna Lake for the weekend holiday.\nMlss Rita Jones waa a Nelaon visitor on Saturday.\nAmongst those writing their entranoe examinations at Bouth Slocan\noenter were My as Dolly Irving of\nThrums, Mlss Rita Jones, Thomss\nHunt, David McDonald, Robert Walk-\nley, Elmore Ridge of Bonnlngton, Mike\nGallo. Oeorge Kslmakoff of Glade.\nNick Oglo of Shoreacres, Robert Cunningham of Crescent Valley. Mlas Elsie\nOansner supervised at the sitting.\nA. P. Kent of tbe Bank of Mon\ntresl sUff Rosslsnd was tbe week-1   A   .  *       *-___ TkAfM^^H\nend guest at the home of Mr. and    ACt IOr JtHlge  1 nompSOn\nMrs. O. W. Humphry. ^^^\nMrs. X.  H. Barwood and children     J[iAt%   w.   Ai   Klibtk   ct   Ntlion\nof  Nelson  are spending the  day at wlII Mt \u201e qccmJoq requires ln the\nSummerhlU,    the    guesta    of    Mlss pia^ of judg, 0. H. Thompson of\nMyr\u00bb Humphry. Cranbrook  who Is at  present oh\n \u25a0\u2022 visit ln eastern Canada, judge Nlsbet\nHawka and eagles are aald to sleep ls   at   present   summering   at   his\nstanding up. Mirror Lake summer home*\nSilver hu soared comet-like\nthrough mankind's Imagination, giving men astounding dreams of prosperity, showering the world with\nsparks of economlo theory, ssys\n'\u25a0Fortune'' In sn article ln Its July\nIssue, entitled \"Silver, Just Silver.\"\nRene Leon, once foreign exchange\nexpert of the Guaranty Trust Co.\nof New York. Is ths indefatigable\ncaptain of the companies of missionaries spreading the gospel of\nsilver In the United Steles, this\narticle  polnte  out,\nSince Columbus discovered Amerlc\u00a9 some i vwm.ooo.w ounces of\nsilver have been tsken from the\nworld's mines and little of It has\nbeen lost. 1\n\"There ls no estimating how much\nsilver may be circulating on ths\nworld's dinner tables In the form\nof   knives,   forks  and   plate.\n\"The whole world's monetary\nstock oT silver ts estimated sbout\nfi ,000,000,006 ounces.\n\"But a still greater stiver reservoir\nexists, tbe Orient. In China sliver\npasses for money not only In the\nform of coin, but slso ln shoes (ingots.)\n\"Ths chief Item in the world's\nstock of silver,  then, sre:\nCurrency        f>.000,000,000 oe.\nChina's holdings  ..    3,000,000,000 os.\nIndia's holdings   ..   4,000,000,000 os.\nTotal      12,000,000.000 oa.\nJudge Nisbet WUl\nAn appeal to the Nelson board\nof trade to \"Induce as many of\nyonr members and cHtxens In yoor\ndistrict is possible to use Fernle\ncoal In preference to that brought\nIn from outside\" has been made\nIn s lei ter fo the board from Hon.\nH. ll. Stevens, minister ot trsde\nand commerce.\nMr, Stevens reoently visited Pernle\nsnd presided over a conference including representatives of the Crows\nNest Coal company, the Canadian\nPsclflo railway, board of trade of\nPernle, provincial mines department\nand tbe Dominion. fuel board. At\nthat conference arrangements were\nmade for the Canadian Paelftc to\ntake a quantity of coal within the\nyear up to 03,500 tons. Mr. Stevens\npoints out that in order that the\nooal oompany may be successful ln\noperating lte mine It must have a\nminimum outgo of 125,000 tons. It\nwas on assurance from Mr. Stevens,\nthtt every cooperation would be\ngiven to secure the balance of this\namount over and above what the\nCanadian Paclflo will take, that tbe\ncompany decided to reopen.\nMr. Stevena polnta out that ln\nthe Immediate vicinity of Nelson and\nln similar districts of the southern\ninterior about 70,000 tons of coat\nare brought In from outside the\nprovince.\n-The mlnlater declares that his\nreasons for interfering ln the Pernle\nmatter Included: That Fernls ts a\nsubstantially built city with a municipal debt ot approximately 1500,-\n000 and well, equipped ln sewers,\nwster works, school system, Ste;\nthat Pernle was almost entirely dependent upon Its mining operation;\nthat permanent closing of the mine\nwould mean the ruination of Pernle\nand in all probability substantial\nrepudiation of its public debt. Tills\nln turn, he declares, would seriously\naffect the credit or all the municipalities in the interior ot British\nColumbia. Ke states It is a necessity\nfor people of the Kootenay to do\nall within their power to sustain\ntbe credit of Pernle. Tbls could be\ndone by taking a larger quantity of\ncoal from the Coal Creek mlnea at\nPernle.\nSociety\nTtslt column 11 conducted by\nMr.. M. J. Vlfneux. All new, of\na social nature, Including recep*\ntlona. private entertainment.,\npersonal ttem*. marriage., etc.,\nwill appear In thli ooiumn. Telephone Mis. Vigneux at her home,\nHit  SUIca   street.\n. cMea&her'sfd\nMANY VISITORS\nAT QUEENS BAY\n.TESTED    RECIPES    OF    TEMPTING    INTEREST.\nDEVWJ.ED EGG SALAD\nLENGTHWISE\nSplit til herd-boiled tjg> lengthwi,\u00ab end rtmovt tht yollo. To th*\nyolks \u00abdd 1 \\_ teaspoonfuls ol butter, 1 teaspoon!*, lof cre*m, 2 libit*\nspoonsluls ol vinegar, scant teaspoonful of Colman's Mustard, pinch\nof cayenne and \" i teaspoonful of salt. Mix to form t paste. Refill lh*\nwhite of eggs and serve on cold-boiled spinach with mayonnaise.\nPlease do not forget that teaspoonful of Colman's Mo-tard. It if very\nimportant to tht success of this salad. It brings out tht true flavom; gives\nit a real apptttcing touch. Not only salads but tvtry kind of Ash,\nmeat, poultry, game and chtest are mort interesting whtn eaten with\nthis rare English mustard.\nJuan's\n*\u2022\u25a0' Mustard\nAIDS    DIGESTION\nQUKEN8 BAT, B. C, July 5.\u2014\nThe Rev. J. M. Prltchard of Lethbridge, who spent his summer holldsys here last year, has again rented\nthe house of the Attree brothers.\nsir. Prltchard Is accompanied by\nhla wife and family, snd Mlss Mc-\nOlffen.\nMr. and Mrs. Richard Astley,\nand baby son. who esme by motor\nosr from Lee Angeles, hare been\nspending a few days wltb Mr. Astley's\nparents, Mr. snd Mrs. w. J. Astley.\nThsy have left for a* visit to bis\nuncle at Banff.\nSybil Seott Lauder ls spending her\nsummer holldaya at the home of\nher grandmother the Dowager Lady\nAylmer.\nR. M. Thompeon, who oame from\nVancouver with his wife and two\nchildren hae rented the house and\nranch of Mrs. A. J. Budd.\nMlas Milne hss reoently arrived\nfrom .tdmonton, on a visit to her\nniece, Mrs.  George Porteous.\nMr. and MTa. A. J. Cornish, of\nNelson have again rented the cottage\nof Lord. Aylmer, where tbey are\nspending the summer holidays.\nMr. and Mra. j. Hirst and family,\nwith Mlss Charberlaln, whose headquarters are ln Vancouver, are staying for the summer with Mrs. Hirst's\nmother,  Mrs.  Attree.\nMr. snd Mra. Kenneth Attree and\neon, Dick, were visitors at Bouth\nBlocan, where they enjoyed the\nprivilege of going over the West\nKootenay power plant.\nMrs. J. s. Mahood spent Sunday\ntn Nelson.\nTne itev. J. fl. Mahood, was a guest\non Monday, of tho Ministerial\nassociation of Nelson, at the summer home or Archdeacon snd Mrs.\nP. H. Oraham at WlUow Point.\nH. E. Mahood visited Oray Creek\non  business.\nMrs. a. Attree ls spending a few\nweeks In Spokane.\nMr, and Mrs. J. J. Campbell of\nWillow Point, were vlaltora In the\nBay on business and calling on a\ntew  friends.\nThere is every prospect here of a\ngood cherry crop. A few pails of\nstrawbetTlee have been shipped to the\nMcDonald Jam factory In Nelson,\ntfeseal Letters\nProbate in Estate\nof Manitoba Man\nTbs church of Msry immaculate\npresented   a  picturesque  scene  yesterdsy morning st 9  o'clock when\nVery   Bev.   J.   c   McKensle,   V.Q.,\nunited ln marriage Marlon Mackintosh, daughter of Mr.  and Mrs.  C\nDudley   Blackwood,   and   Dr.   Theo\nHenry    Bourque,    son    of    Joeeph\nBouruue and the late Mrs. Bourque\nof   Vancouver.   Mlss   Marie   Outhrle\nof   Seattle,   cousin   ot    the    bride,\nacted    as    brtdeema ',     and     R.lt.\nBourque  brother ot tbe groom  was\nbest tntt. The bride,  who entered\nthe church to the strains of Lohengrin's   wedding   march,   plsyed   by\nMlss Marguerite Gagnon,  wss given\nIn marriage by her father. Her wedding sown was of white crepe chiffon  In  double  caplet.   floor   length\nstyle.   Hsr   veil   wae   finished   with\ndainty  duchess lace  with  becoming\nJuliette styled cap. Her bouquet was\na gorgeous shower cf Johanna HUl\nrosebuds.   The   bridesmaid   wore   a\nshell   pink   embroidered   linen   bat\nand Rccesaorles to match. Her bouquet   was   mauve   and   shell   pink\nsweet   peas.   At   the   Offetlry,   Mrs.\nJ.   E.   Bennett   ssng   \"O*   Salutorts\"\nand durihg the signing of the register, Mrs. M. J. Vigneux snd  Mrs\nPrank   Murphy   sang   \"Ave   Maria*\"\nMlss Marguerite Gagnon played the\nwedding music. Appropriate apeech*\nes and toasts were  given ny Very\nRev. J. C, McKensle. Ven Archdeacon\nPred   H.   Oraham   and   ths   bridal\nparty. The deooratlona in the church\nwhich were carried out in blue and\nwhite, on the main altar, and pink\nand  white on the side  altars, were\nsupervised   by   Mrs.   M.   J.   Vigneux\nand Mrs. C. V. Oagnon, assisted by\nA.   Marshall.   After   a   honeymoon\nspent at the coast, where the doctor's' father   resides.   Dr.   and   Mrs.\nBourque * will make  thetr home  ln\nNelson.   Por    receiving   the    guesta\nMrs.   Blackwood   wore   a   becoming\nensemble of sailor blue and hat to\nmstch. Among those at the informal\nreception were Mr.  and  Mrs.  C. R.\nHamilton.   Mr.   and   Mrs.   A.   Bruoe\nRitchie ot  Trail:   Mr.  and  Mrs.  R.\nW.  Diamond,   Mr.   and   Mrs.  K.  W.\nHaslewood,    Mr.    and    Mrs.    J.    J.\nPlngland,    Mr.    and    Mrs.    O.    W.\nHumphry    of    South    Slocan    and\ndaughter, Myra. A. T. R. Lindsay of\nVsncouver, Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Mansfield,   Mlss   Alleen   Mansfield,   Mr.\nand  Mrs.  E.   E.  L.   Dewdney,  Mrs.\nPeters,    Mies    Bve    Dewdney,    Mr.\nand   Mrs,   J.   Buchanan.   Mr.   and\nMrs.   O.   Spencer   Oodfrey,   Dr,   and\nMrs. L. E. Borden, Mlss M. Cameron,\nMr.  and  Mrs.  C.  V.   Oagnon.  Mr.\nand Mrs. T. A. Whelldon of South\nSlocan,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   Oeorge   A.\nHorstead, Mr. snd Mrs. H. Rosllng of\nWUlow  Point,  Mr.  snd  Mrs.  c.  W.\nMscBey of Trsll, Mr. and Mrs. A. L.\nMcCulloch,    Mr.    snd    Mrs.    L,    V.\nRogers,  Mr. and  Mrs. P.  P. Psyne,\nMr. and Mra. W. M. Cunllffe, Mlss\nLouise Cunllffe, Mr. snd Mrs. W. T.\nPothertnghsm,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  W. S.\nKing,  Mr. 'and   Urs.  R.  X.  Horton,\nMlas Carmen  Horton,  Mr. and  Mrs.\nH. Morton, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Robertson. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Jarvla and\ndaughter Mary ot Procter, Mr, and\nMrs.  Nelson  Murphy   and   daughter\nHelen,   Ven.   Archdeaoon   Pred   H.\nOraham   and   Mlss   Dorotnea   Oraham. Mr. snd Mrs. R. R. Taylor, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. I. Archibald, Mlss sybil\nArchibald, Mr. and Mrs. John Cartmel, Mr. and Mrs. I. O   Nelson, L.\nK.   Laraen,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   E*   W.\nHsslBwood,  of  Trail;   Mr.  and  Mrs.\nArthur Balrd,  Mrs.  William  Waldle\nand Miss Jean Waldle, Mr. and Mm.'\nH.  B. Horton,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J. O.\nBunyan, Mr. and Mra. James O'Shea.\nMr. snd Mrs. Leslie  Craufurd, Mlss\nRuth craufurd, Mr. and Mrs, c. W.\nAppleyard,  Senstor  and  Mrs. R.  P.\nGreen ot Victoria, Mr. and  Mre. j.\nA.    Oliker.   Mlss   Jean    Oliker,   A.\nBarrio Oliker. Mr. and Mrs .William\nJ.  Sturgeon,  Mrs.  Joeeph  Sturgeon,\nMrs.  M. J.   vigneux.  Mr.  and  Mrs.\nE. Colllnson. Dr. snd Mrs. H. O- L.\nLindsay of Pasadena, Calif., Mr. and\nMrs.   WUUam   B.   Hunter   of   Trail,\nMlss Dudley  Blackwood,  Mlss Marie\nOuthrle of Seattle and R. R. Bourque.\n\u25a0jBBJBPWBWBWWWBBHB\nPhone 200\nJuly Clearance Sale\nQUALITY MERCHANDISE AT SACRIFICE PRICES FOR THE\nFIRST FIFTEEN DAYS OF THE MONTH\nWomen's Model Dresses\nA direct saving of 20 per cent on every model dress\nin the store. Many of these have just been placed\nkv\n1\nUl      Ul.     -Wl..     n_,v       _\ninto stock and every one is the last word in Btyle,\nquality and workmanship. Every new material in\none or two piece styles. A complete range of sizes\nup to 42.\nRegular Value 120.00, Selling at EACH\nRegular Value J25.00, Selling nt EACH\nRegular Value $35.00, Selling at EACH\nRegular Value $.0.00, Selling at EACH\n$16.00\n\u25a0f 20.00\n$25.00\n$30.00\nWomen's\nHand Tailored Suits\nLangbourne  suits  of all  wool  worsteds  of  heavy\nFrench crepe. Single or double breasted coats with\npleated or wraparound skirts. Better quality tailoring.\nSizes 14 to 40. Values to $35 each.\nSALE PRICE, EACH  $10.05\nWomen's Dressy Coats\nDel Monte Hickey and Langbourne dress coats in fine\nquality imported woolens. All richly lined with self\nor fur collars. Light or dark colors. Sizes 14 to 40.\nReguar Value $27.50, Selling at EACH .... $18.00\nRegular Value $35.00, Selling at EACH .... $22.50\nRegular Value $49.00, Selling at EACH .... $33.00\n  Mn.   AMerm-lth.\nbirthday  cake |Mohr 'end Uri. Danny.\nnett*   Wlnlaw,   Mlu   Patricia   Balrd   Dn.ni*.    thow    InTItM    being\nand Mlas fY'lices Aldersmlth. Game**,  Thompson,\non tht lawn and r   '*''\u2022*******  \u25a0*\u2022**\u2022*\u25a0 I itr.,,. and\nwere much enjoyed.\n...\nRev. Leo Robson and his mother\nand slater and brother of Trail,\nwere vlslton yesterday at tbe home\nol very Hav. 3. C. McKentle, and\nalso visited later at the home at\nCedar Point ot Mr. aad Mn, J. D.\nMcDonnell.\nMrs.\nMrs.\nMr. and Mn. J. Uwrenoe Smith,\nFtlrvlew, have as their gueata. Mrs.\nsmith's brother-in-law and sister.\nMr. tnd Mrs. Wtlter Peten of Victoria, who. after a couple of weeks\nIn the city, will return home  via\nRevelstoke.\n...\nMr and Mrs. Howard Bush, Robton itreet, tre holldtylng In Spoktne.\n...\nEll johnaton left yeeterday for a\nholiday  to  be  apent  In Vancouver.\n...\nH. Annshtw leaves this morning\nfor Vanoouver via the C.P Ft.\n.   .   .\nMlas Marcla Towgood of Sandon\nis spending a tern tntt* In tt.\ncity, the guest of l\u00bber brother-in-\nlaw and alater. Mrs. William J. Sturgeon, 414 SUIca street.\n...\nMra 3 3. rlngland ot Trsll Is\nholidaying st Flvc-Mllc at the aummer home of Mn. B. W. Diamond\not Trail.\nApplication for nasallng of letters\nprobate In tbe estate of Stanley\nKenyon Watkln, late of St. Boniface,\nMan., has been granted hy Judge\nW. A. msbet. J. P. Meagher made\ntbe application. Lettera probate htd\nbeen granted by surrogate court ln\nthe eutern Judicial district of\nManitoba at Winnipeg. Mr. Meagher's\napplication was under power of attorney from the executrix and bene-\nllclarj Alios Maud Watkln*. widow.\nTbe eatate Includes 1300 In nal\neatate In British Columbls snd\nM8S3.M  outtide.\nWILLIAM STEWART\nHOLIDAYS AT YMIR\nTMm. B C, Julr 5\u2014 CHrenoe\nMclaaac wd Mra. Athol Mclaaac ware\nbusiness vtnitorn to Nelaon on Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. Coates of the Ooodenough mine wero weak-end vUttora\nto  Nelaon.\nA number of Ymlrltes motored to\nSalmo on Baturday to attend the\nDominion day aporta.\nWilliam Stewart la apendlng hla\nholldaya In Tmlr.\nJoe KutaUkl or the Emerald mine\nspent the week-end at his home here.\nC. Fraaer hu atarted work on\nhla     clalma  on  Wild   Horae  creek.\nSAM GRIDLEY\nESTATE $33,304\nLettera probate have been granted\nby Judge W. A- Nlabet ln the eatate\nol Samuel John Orldley late ot\nNelaon. Application on behalf of\nthe executrix and aole beneficiary.\nAda Emily Orldley, waa made by\nW. W, Ferguaon. The estate la\n$33,304.01.\nThe flrat reoord of using explosives In mining goes back lo 1(531.\nYMIRITE'S ESTATE\nGOES TO UDY\nHilr the horeepower in Major\nCampbell's apeed car wu used\ncombat wind friction ln hla run on\nthe aanda of Daytona Beach,\nWord hu been received fram the\nConservatory of Mualc that Leonard\nJenne hu \u25a0uccessfullly passed hts\nIntroductory   piano   examinations,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mra. H. u. Pitta, Cedar\natreet, have had u their guesta,\ntheir grandchildren, Billy and Jackie\nWaldle ot Robeon, who have also vlalted Mrs. WUllam Waldle and their\ncoualns Her ble and Bobble Pitts,\nFairview.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   and   Mra.   P.   Kane   left   lut\nnight for Lethbridge.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW, Cameron of Trail hu nturned\nafter attending the funeral of hla\nalater, Mra. Stoll whlcft took place\nTuetday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nIn   honor   of   MUs   M.   Cameron's\ngueata her slater and cousin, Mrs.\nMackay of London, England. Mrs.\nSoott-Rlddell cf Aberdeen, Boot-\nland, Mra. E. t L. Dewdney entertained at bridge\" Tueaday afternoon. Peonies of varloua shades\ngraced the living rooma and tea\ntable. Among the Invited guesta\nwere Mrs. H. Rosllng, Mra. E. C.\nWragge, Mrs. W. M. Walker. Mrs.\nA. D. McLeod. of Kamloops, Mrs.\nI. Q. Btnyth, Mra. Leslie Craufurd,\nMra. W. T. Fotheringham, Mrs.\nGordon Hallett, Mrs. W. M. Cun\nlltfe, Mra. Alex Lelth, Mra. WUUam\nM. Hunter, or Trail, Mra. J. O.\nBunyan. Mrs. L. B. Borden, Mrs. F.\nF. Payne, Mra. C. D. Blackwood,\nMra. N. Murphy, Mra. A. L. McCulloch, Mra. WUUam Waldle, Mrs. R.\nL, McBride. Mra. Hugh W. Robertson, Mra. P O. Morey, Mra. H. H.\nMcKenzle. Mra. R. W. Diamond,\nMrs. J. J. Flngland, Mrs. Roy Pollard, Mra. Jamfs McOregor. Mra. W.\nR. Orubbe, Mra. R. W. Hlnton, Mrs.\nOreen of Oranbrook, Mrs. John\nCartmel, Mra. L. V. Rogera, Mrs.\nJames O'Shee. Mra. Harold Lake*.\nMlaa Ottlllle Wruge and Mlw tv-\nDewdney  aeaUted  in serving.\nMlu Helen Archer, mttron at th*\nOrtnd Forks hospital, who hM\nbeen vlaltlng in Nelaon, tbe guut\not Ur. and Uri. C I. Archibald,\n\u2022Unley street, left lut evening for\nber home.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nB-Boeatiy MUe Pamela Dewdney,\nyoungest daughter of Mr. and Mra.\nE. E. L* Dewdney celebrated the\nooculon of her ninth birthday,\nwhen her guesta were Mlu Evelyn\nDunn, the Mlaaea Kathleen, Doreen\nand Constance Manahan, Mlss Owen\nOarland, Mlu Eleanor Caddon, Mlss\nDiana WUllama, Mlss Avonla Strw-\nert,  Mlu  Mary   Beatty,  Mlu  Jean-\nMr.   and   Mrs.   T.   Player.\nstreet,   left    yesterday    for\nweek's vacation at the oout.\nBaker\n\\   two\nMlu Catherine McLeod hu received word rrom the Toronto Conservatory of Music that she passed\nher introductory pianoforte examinations with honors.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMUs   Bel's   McGauley   leavea   thU\nmorning for Victoria whence she\nwlll uU around the Panama to\nNew York where ahe wtll remain\na few days before going to Chicago\nto attend  tho  world'a  fair.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe home of Mrs. E- R. Boyer of\nWlUow Point wu the scene of a\ngay blrthdsy party Wednesday when\nsbe entertained In honor ot Joan\nThompson's seventh blrthdsy annl-\nverury. Nine children besides the\nguest or honor were preaent. Ther\npresented a pretty picture u they\nenjoyed games on the lawn, dreaeed\nln white, blue and pink frocks. A\ntable sround which the llttle guwts\nwere seated wu centered with a\ncake bearing seven candles. Mlu\nJoan reoelved many gifts. The Invited gueets were Helen Sutherland,\nKathleen Sutherland, Joyoe Denny,\nFrances Aldersmlth. Betty Alder-\nsmith, Betty Holt, Msrjory Learmonth, Agnea French, Susan Tawes.\nArter tea Mlu Susan Tawes danoed\nthe butterfly and other dances on\nthe lawn. Mrs. Boyea served tea In\nthe drawing room  asaUted  by   Mrs,\nApplication for lettsre of admlnu-\ntration wltb win annexed ot tbe\neatate ot Joeeph Nolan, formerly of\nTmlr and latterly ot Spokane, made\nby Jamea O'Shea, K.C, of O'Shea\nand Oarland bu been granted by\nJudge W. A. Nlsbet. Mr. O'Shea\nmado application under power ot\nattorney from the executrix and\nao'e beneficiary Minnie Lovell of\nSpokane. The estate wu 92636. Mr.\nNolan held an eighth Interest in\nthe  Ooodenough  mine.\nSon and Daughter\nBenificiaries hi\nLyonnals Estate\nLetters ot administration on behalf\nof M. V. Harper, official administrator, ln the estate of Edith Lyonnals hsve been granted by Julge W,\nA. Nlsbet on application ot J. F.\nMeagher. The estate Is M339.45\nmade up chiefly of real eatate. Bene-\nriclarlea are Stella Mary Derkson\nof Los Angelu and Clarence Josepli\nLyonnaU of Tacoma, daughter and\n^^^^\u25a0\u25a0\u2022^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0\u2022wsBaaBal\nFor Health's Sake\nDRINK\nCURLEW\nMILK\nDuring the warm months ot tba ie.r everr mother takea added\nprecaution In Mfefuarrtint her baby's food, and eo Inelnta on\nCURIjEW MILK for her children.\nMother knowa tbat CURt__W MILK li eater and purer, becauae\nIt le pasteurised. P sateurlaatlo^ kills 90 per oent of the bacteria\nln milk, and entirely destroys the germs of typhoid.\nPhone 200 today and have us start daily delivery!\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nPalm Dairiii, Ltd.\nice caiam buttkr milk\nall mnrtcvly mstbunixid products\nENRICHED WITH\nSUNSHINE VITAMIN\nExclusive health feature\/\nD\na.uBfl\nQuaker Corn Flakes\n\u00bbIONPMACK CUAKANTt- MINTED ON IVHY I\n*\n IMQt tut\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON,   B.C.\nGRAIN PLUNGES\nIN LATE SALES\nClimaxes Day in Which\nPrices of Nearly Three\nYears Were Upset\nWINNIPEG.   July    5    (CD\u2014Climax   of   another   day   of   erratic\npriced,    during    which    new    high\nrn*r6* for nearly three jean were\nptrt up. wheat futures prices tumbled as a late outburst of wiling\nUroke o\\er the pit on the Winnipeg   irrirn   market   today   to   close\nmore than a half cent lower\nPushed   up   to   the   highest   levels\nsince September ft. 1030. ln an opening   splurge   of   buying,   valuea   receded  swiftly   in   the  final  dealings\nto flnlah   '\u00ab   to   '*   cent  under, the\nprevloua cloae,  July  future at 7\u00bb'v\nOctober    81%     to    8l!\u00bb.    December\n83>fc   to   83>i   snd   May   87.4   md^\ni Late-session announcement of fairly good export sales failed  to stem\ntlie   abrupt   cloelng   decline.   Disregarding   the   efrect   of   the   foreign\nsales-estimated    from    500,000     to\n1,000.000   bus lie Is\u2014profit-takers   unloaded  their  holdings In  a  rush  to\ncollect    their    earlier    proflte    sivi\nvaluea   broke  aharply.\nConstruction, Steel\nIssues Advance Well\nTORONTO. July \u00bb (OP).\u2014Valuee\nmoved Irregularly today on Toronto\netock eichange. Alter a firm opening there waa a recession around\n11:80 a.m., a -rally at noon, another -weak spell during the afternoon but a cloelng recovery which\nresulted In galna outnumbering\nlosses 45-35 st the flnlah.\nBest sdvances of the day were\nln the construction and steel Issues snd the banking group. Distilling Issues were Inclined to weaken ln profit-taking and many of the\nfood   atocka  slipped  fractionally.\nRARPBERRIES\nSELL, NELSON\nLocal Grown Fruit snd\nVegetables Lower the\nWholesale Prices\nCanadian Dollar and\nSterling at New High\nNEW YORK, July 5\u2014(CP)\u2014New\nhighs for the pound, the Canadian\ndollar and \"gold bloc\" currenclee\nwen registered at the opening of\nthe New Tork foreign exchange\nmsrket  today.\nThereafter the market turned Irregular, dipped considerably below\nMonday*, closing rates, snd tben\nstiffened to bring prices up to\nlevels slightly shove those prevailing at tba close Mondsy.\nMarkets were closed yeeterday, Independence day.\nThe Canadian dollar oppened at\nS',3 per cent dlaoount, or 934\ncents, the highest level ln a yeir\nand later slipped down to 93%\nand then rallied to wind up the\nseeelon at 93!. for a net gain of\n%  of one per cent.\nSterling opened st 4.61, up 3<A\noents from today'a close: franca at\ntill'1,, up > polnte. and the beige\nat llat, up 40, and Dutch Oulldera\nat 54 oenta. up 1.10.\nThe pound later dipped to a low\nfor the day at t4 4 5'-, before finning to cloee at 6449%, up 3** oenta\non  tbe day.\nWltb the arrival of locally grown\n[rulta and green vegetables, prloes\ntor the commodities have dropped\nslightly. Local grown rsspberrles were\non the market Monday for the first\ntime this year and tha atrawberry\nmovement la now. In full ewlng.\nSome toeal grown Black Tartarian\ncherriea and \u25a0 Okanagan Blnga were\noffered thla week.\nA substantial aupply of new potatoee. carrote, beets and cabbage U\nnow on tbe market.\nWhile fruit and vegetables de-\nSllned slightly, meet wbolesslers\nboosted tbe prloe of pork half ,a\ncent and pork cute a cent. Cooked\nmeata are moving out In fair volume\nnow that the warmer weather Is\nhere.\nEggs are moving to the consumer\nalmoat aa rapidly u tbey srrlve but\nprices are  still  unchanged.\nA ateady advanoe In groceries wss\nreported for the past week. A car\noi milk, two of mixed grocerlee, two\nof sugar and one of baking powder\nwere among tbe car arrivals. Other\nthan a 30-oent rise In flour reported Tueeday few changea bave\noccurred during the paat two or\nthree daya on the feed market. Car\narrivals Include one of hsy and\nona of oorn.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nDOMINION LIVI\n:sto(\n(CP)\u2014\nRe-\nW1NN1PBG,    July    5\ncetpts:   Cattle   860,   calves  370,\nbofs\n1620,  sheep   305.\nSteers,  up to  1060 lbs\n:  Ooo-\nand\nchoice, M  to W.\nSteer*,   over   1050   lbs\n.   Ooot\nand\ncholoe,  M  to  14.75.\nHeifers: Good s\nnd choice. S. to 64.\nPed   calvee:   Oood   and  choice,  M\nto 15.20.\nCows: Oood. \u2022;\nto ,331.\nStocker and feeder steers: Oood $3\nto  13-75.\nVeal  calvea;   Oood   aM   choice,   M\nto HM.\nHogs:  Select   bacon,  91   per\nhead\npremium:  bacon.\nIS.4(1;\nbutchen, 11\nper   head   dlaoount;    heavy,\n14.95;\nextra heavy, 93.45\n; lights snd feeders\n15   to  95.45;   sows,   93.75.\nLambs:   Oood\nnandywelght.\n18  to\n97.\nSheep: oood heavies, 91-50 to\n91.78\n1\n8%\nNEW VOKK si\nrocK\n4 It\nMl\nna'.\n137\n139%\n\u00bb6%\n93%\n98\nAm P Power ...\n18%\n17%\n17%\nAm M It Pdry .\n-_'.\n30'i\n31%\n18%\n14S\n18\nAm B A:  Hrf  ..\n38'.\n37%\n37%\nAm Telephone  .\n131%\n139'.\n130%\nAm Tobacco  ...\n931.\n90%\n91\n19%\n16%\n19%\nn\n70S\n77\nii\n99 %\nM%\nBaldwin    \t\n16%\n14%\n16%\nBait Is Ohio ...\nlit,\n33%\n38%\nBendlx   Av   ....\n19'.\n18%\n19\nSeth Steel   ....\n46*4\n44%\n48%\nCanada Dry   ...\n391.\n34%\n39\nCan   Pacific\n19V.\n18%\n19%\nCerro de Pasco\nmtt,\n39%\n29%\nChes ts Ohio   ..\n46%\n44\n48%\n38%\n31%\n37%\nCom t. South  .\ni\n4%\n4%\nOon Oss NT..\n80 H\n88',\nS3*.\nCorn   Prod   ....\nBM\nao\n80\nC Wright pfd  ..\n\u2014\n\u2014\n8%\naa %\n79\n79%\nEastman    Kodak\nss\n81%\n83\nB P Is Light  ..\n14'.\n13%\n13%\n33\n31\n33\nPord  English   ..\n\u2014\nV*\nPord  Csnsds\n\u2014\n\u2014\n13%\nPlrst N Stores  .\n69%\n98%\n89\nPreeport Tex   ..\n31V.\n37%\n38\nOen  Motors   ...\nsm\n30%\n81%\nOen  Electric   ..\n361*,\n38%\n33%\nOen   Foods   ....\n38%\n37%\n37%\nOold Dust \t\nas\n34%\n38\nia\n18%\n17%\nOranby    \t\n16\n13%\n14%\nOt Nor pfd   ...\n37%\n39%\n37%\nOt   West   Sugsr\n31 Vt\n39%\n30%\nHowe Sound  .. \u25a0\nam\n24%\n38%\nHudson   Motors\nia>.\n13%\n13%\nfna  Copper   .  .\n\u2022 Hi\n8%\n\u00bb'.\nInt  Nickel   ....\n30 .,\n19%\n30\nInt Tel Is Tel  .\n30%\n19%\n30\n43\n41\n41%\nKenn oopper\n33%\n33%\n33%\nKresge   SS    ....\n19\n13%\n18%\nKroegg ft Toll   .\n34 %\n33%\n34%\nI#hn fc Pink  ..\n33 V.\n33\n33\nMack Truck   ...\n43 *.\n43%\n43%\nMilwaukee pfd  .\n6'i\n8\n8%\nNash Motora\n33'.\n33%\n34%\nRadio Corp  .  .\n10%\n8%\n10%\nHadlo K Or  ...\n4'i\n4\n4\nRem  Rand   ....\n10\n\u00bbH\n9%\nRock Island\n8%\n8H\n8%\nM\n\u2014\nM\n8 I. fc S P      .\n\u00bb'.\n8%\n3%\nShell Onion\n10'i,\n10%\n10%\nS Csl Edison    .\n35%\n38%\n38%\nSouth Pacific  .\n3S\n33%\n38\nStan OU Cal\n39 >i\n88%\n39\nStan Oil  Ind    .\n\u2014\n\u2014\n33%\nStan oil N .1\n40\n88%\n39%\nStew Werenr\nSH\n7%\n8%\nStudebaker   .\n0%\n8\n\u00ab\nTexaa   Corp   .   .\n96%\n38%\n38%\nTexaa Oulf Sul\n94 H\n33%\n39%\nTlmken Roller  .\n34%\n33%\n33%\nUnion Carbide .\n44\n43%\n43%\nUnion OU Cal .\n33 \"i\n31%\n31%\nOnlted Air  ....\nMH\n38%\n37%\nOnion Pacific ..\n139\n138%\n138%\nO t Steel  \t\n63%\n\u20220%\n63%\nVaaad St*el   .\n29'.\n38%\n36%\nWest. Electric\nin\n48\n49\nYeUow Truck   .\n6%\n8%\n6%\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials   102.74 off 1.03\n20 rails        54.86 up    .98\n20 utilities       35.86 off   .79\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW TORK. July 8 (AP)-Coppel\nfirm; electrolytic, apot and future\n8%.\nTin strong: spot and nearby 47.00:\nfuture,  47.12.\nIron  quiet;   unchanged.\nLead firm; apot. New York 4.30;\nEaat St. Loula 4.16.\nZinc eteadler; East St. Louis, spot\nand future, 4.60.\nAntimony  spot 7.00.\nBsr  silver   unchanged;   36%.\nAt London:\nCopper, atandard, spot, \u00a388 13s 6d:\nfuture \u00a338 18s; electrolytic, spot\n\u00a342   10s;   future  \u00a343.\nTin, apot, \u00a3236 8s: future \u00a3334 10s\nLead, apot, \u00a313 13s 6d; future.\n\u00a313   17s 6d.\nZinc, spot. \u00a318: future, \u00a317 17s 6d,\nBar   silver   firm:    1-6   higher   at\nia 15-isd.\nFINANCE LISTS\nWITHOUT TREND\nStocks Generally  Lower\nUntil Late Flourish\nby Rails\nCORN SOARS 4\nCENTS BUSHEL\nProfit-Taking Wipes Out\nGains Made by Other\nGrains\nMMM\nBid      Aak\nBearer .SUver       \u00ab6H -06%\nBralorne        '\u25a0\"> \u2022-\u00bb>\nBig   Mlaaourl        Al -28%\nBluebird, laat sale .04\nBridge   River  Con.  _..    Al S3\nOeorge   Copper 80 .96\nOeorgla River  _ 08% .06%\nOolconda      SI -19\nOrandvlew    .-       06 .07\nOold    Belt          \u2014 100\nInt C * O  _ \u2014     10 \u2014\nKootenay   Plorenoe    01% .02\nKootenay Belle, laat aale .34\nLucky  Jim   04% .0441\nMeridian,  laat aale .48\nMorning Star, last aale .33\nNational  Silver   06% .06%\nNoble  Plva  -i \u00bb ._l~*\nPend  Orellle    l-M ISO\nPioneer   Oold -  13-18    18.78\nPorter   Idaho  ...       10% .11\nPremier     -   ldg >\u2022\u2022\u00bb\nBrevet  McDonald   _     .28 JO\nReno   Oold       3.18 330\nRuth    Hope     \u2014     \u2014       08\nSUvercreet     \u2014._     \u2014 \u2022_\u00bb\nWellington     OJ% .03\nWhitewater     \u2014 *1J\noas\nA P Consolidated  _ 18\nC and E Landa  08\nCommonwealth  -_\u25a0\u25a0.       -10\nDalhousle     _ -      m\\\nEastcrest     _ Wh\nFreehold    \u2014 _      -~~\nHargal    _       09\nHome   Oil --     Ul\nMcDougall  Segur  Ex   04\nMcDougall Segur New       .05\nMayland          1*4\nMercury   ' \u00bb JJ*\nMcLeod     - ~~\nMIU    City 16\nOkalta  Com    **>**\nRoyalite     -.     \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\nSterling   Pacific   ___________      .33\nVANCOUVER SALES\nVANOOWZR.   July   6   (CP)\u2014Mining   ahares  aold   on   the   Vancouver\natock exchange today:\nLISTED   ,\nBeaver  Silver  600.\nBralome .3748\nBridge Blver Con. 6300\nOeorgla   River   7000\nOold Belt 300\nOrandvlew  8200\nInt  C. As C.   1000\nNational Silver  16.000\nPioneer   600\nPremier Border 3000\nPremier Oold  1750\nReeves MeDonsld 1600\nReno Oold  2900\nINUSTED\nBig  Missouri 8400\nOeorge Copper 300\nOolconda  1000\nIndian   Mlnee   IOOO\nKootenay  Florence   1500\nLucky Jim 600\nNoble Plve 3000\nPend   Orellle  8800\nSUvercreet  6000\nPorter Idaho 2800\nWellington  1000\nWhitewater 8000\nCURB\nBayvlew  10.000\nBig Slide 4000\nBluebird 5000\nBridge   River   __-..   360u\nCariboo   Oold   2000\nCork   Provlnoe  2000\nDalhouale 2600\nOolden Bell 676\nKootenay Belle 3100\nMarmbt  Mat.  6000\nMeridian   13480\nMorning  Star  9900\nNative sons 3300\nNlrola   700\nReward  1300\nRufua  Arg    16.860\nSnowflake   6400\nWaverly  T.  4600\nWayalde   13.300\nBT JOHN P. BOl'OHAN\nAssociated Press Market Editor\nCHICAGO,   July    .-\u2014(An\u2014With\ncorn   In   the   lead,   aU   deliveries\nor all  grains today  outdid recent\nhigh   price   records,   corn   soaring\nmore than four cents a bushel.\nMUltons  or  dollars   damage   which\nthe   new   corn   crop,   espcclslly   ln\nIllinois and lows, hss suffered from\nchinch bugs, wss responsible for upturns of values. In addition to corn\ncrop  uncertainty*,   with   the  critics!\nperiod   of   growth   shesd   snd   un-\nrsvorsble   westher.  the  corn  market\nalao  was stimulated  by  Washington\nplana ror aharp curtailment of corn\nacreage.\nBig profit taking salea on advanoee.\nhowever, ted to late setbacks In\nprloes, more than wiping out galna\nmade by wheat and oats.\nCorn closed flurried, 3%-8% above\nMonday'a rtnlah, wheat %-l% down.\noata 1%-% off. and provisions showing a rise to 3 centa to 25 cents.\nBy JOHN  L. COOLEY\nlitorlatrd   presa   Financial   Writer\nNEW YORK, July 6 (AP)\u2014Most\nfinancial marketa drifted Ineonelu-\nalvely today aa governments endeavored to keep breath In the\nLondon   conference.\nStocka were generally lower untu\na late flourish by rails boosted that\ngroup and helped otheta reduce\nearlier loaaea.\nWheat sagged about a cent a\nbushel, but corn reached the beat\nlevel ln more than three years.\nCotton was rather heavy and bond!\nhsd a somewhat Irregular market,\nalthough their average made s new\nhigh.\nDollsr exchsnge begsn the day\nweakly but eventually hardened.\nPerhape the rally of the. United\nStates dollsr against sterling prompted profit-taking m stocks sfter midday's Inflationary spree: at one\ntime aharea, Including rails, showed\nlosses of 1 to 6 points un*_er active\nrealizing. By closing time carriers\nhsd become atrong, si though neither\nindustrials, ss \\_4__ole, nor utilities\nwere sble to flnlah even at the\nfinal prloea of the previous session.\nTrading ln all marketa waa brisk,\nstock ssles totalling 6.922,010 sharea.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nTHURSDAY   MORNING,   JULY   I,   1933\nMines Sag After\na Firm Opening\nTORONTO, July 5 (CP) .\u2014Firm\nopening price* did uot hold today\non the standard mining exchange\nand both golds and base metal\nIssues sold Irregularly lower a* the\nday wore on. A slight firming-up\noccurred netr the close, though\nnot enough to orercome tht day's\ndecline.\nInternational Nickel caused un-\nsettloment in the base metal group\nby. slipping sway from a morning\nhigh to end at 31.35. off .96. Dome\nIn the golds was off about 235\nand other high priced Issues followed these lenders downward, end*\nIng   generally   a   bit  lower.\nCLASSIFIED SECTION\n\u2022May We Serve You?'\nPhone 35 tor Taxi-Safe, Reliable\nBuick Cars. NELSON TRANSFEK\nCo.,   Limited. _\nFAIRVIEW SERVICE STATION. Oas,\nOU, Oreaalng Waahlng. coyle batteries, Dominion tires and tubea.\nWe will, eerve you. Pbone 605.\nRadio Repairs, Installations! Tube\ntesting. KOOTENAY MUSIC, Ph 585\nPAINT INO AND KALSOMININQ.\nC. MUler. Phone T90L.\nGains in Majority\nof Montreal Stocks\nMONTREAL, July 5 (OP).\u2014After\nmore than a soore of Issues touched new .high levels for tne yesr,\nMontreal atock exchange listings\nturned Irregular lfl the afternoon\nsession today but the majority ot\natocka cloaed with advanoea. Many\nlasuea had their early galna eraa-\ned In late dealings 'but a recovery\nmovement was underway at the\ncloae whleh lifted many or them\nabove their lows of the day.\nCar equipment atocka were the\nfeaturea of the market with Canadian Car common active leader.\nOeneral selling which came lnfco\nthe steels failed to halt the upward surge of Canadian- Car which\ndisplayed marked resistance and\nclosed at IO1,. a gain of half a\npoint and a new high. Dominion\nBridge and National steel Car were,\nhowever, vulnerable with Bridge loelng  two  polnta and  Steel  Car   1%.\nNelaon Dally Newa Job Department\nfor alt klnda of commercial print-\nlng. Phone 144,\t\nPREMIER SERVICE STATION - Q.\nOraham, oaa, OU, Oreaalng, Waah.\n.  ing. special Ratea. Drive  1.1 Now.\nRAMP SODY AND PENDER WORKS.\nDuco Painting. Welding, Body Repairs on all cara. Pbone 119.\nEXCHANGES\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS. July 5 (AP) \u2014\nWheat, No. 1 northern 99% to 101',.\nNo. 1 red durum 90', to 91%. Julr\n961,. -SePt, 97H, Dec.  99'\u00ab\nCorn:   No.   3   yellow  61%   to  53%.\nOaU: No. 3 white 43', to MH-\nPlai:  No.   1.   193  to  196.\nHour 20 higher; carload lots family patent, 6.90 to 7.00 a barrel In\n96-pound cotton sacks. Shipments\n11.633. Bran  16.60 to  17.00.\nBank of Commerce \t\nBank of Montreal \t\nBank or Nova Scotia \t\nRoyal Bsnk \t\nBell   Telephone   \t\nBrazilian TLA Power ...\nBritiah  American  OU  \t\nCanada  Bronee   \t\nCanadian car It Foundry .\nCanadian    Cement    \t\nCockshutt Plow \t\nCan  Industrial  Alcohol  ...\nC   P   R   \t\nicons Mining & Smelting\nDominion   Bridge   \t\n'Dominion  Textile  \t\nA  P Oraln  \t\n[Imperial  Tobacoo \t\nLake of the Woods \t\nMaaaey Harris \t\nMontresl    power    \t\nNstlonsl   Breweries   \t\nNational  Steel  Car  \t\nOgllvle   MlUIng   \t\nPenmans Ltd \t\nPower   Corporation   \t\nQuebec   Power   \t\nShawlnigan   \t\nI Sherwin    Wllllama    \t\nSo Canada power \t\n\u2022Bteel of Canada \t\nWinnipeg Railway \t\n. 173\n.... 316\n... 370\n.... 171\n.... 110\n....    Mf,\n...    15\n....    19\n....    10',\n...     IV,\n....   14\n....    10%\n....    30%\n,_. 136\n...   30\n...   66\n....     8%\n...    lO'.i\n....    17\n....    10%\n.      38'i,\n...   26\n....    16%\n.... 178\n.... 44\n.... 14\n. 20\n... 19\n.... lg\n.... 181.\n.... 39-\n.-     4%\nMONTREAL, July 6 (CP)\u2014British\nsnd foreign exchsnge currencies ln\nrelation to the Canadian dollar * as\n; oompllaj by the Royal Bank of Can-\nI ada   oloeed   today   as   foUows:\n\u25a0Argentina,    peso     3459D\nlAUstrslla,   pound     3.8351A\nAustria,   achllllng    .1743A\n'Belgium,   belga _......\u201e. 3032a\niBraztl,   mllrels    _ 0819D\njBulgaria.   lev    0134U\nChina,   Hongkong  dollars   346SA\n> Czechoslovakia,   crown     0440A\nDenmark,   krone    21MA\nFinland.   Ilnmark 0241A\nFrance, rranc   0565A\nOermany.   relchsmsrk       _344_A\nOreat  Britain,  pound    4.620&A\nGreece,   drachma    0O82A\nHolland,   florin    6786A\nHungary,  pengo  2628A\nIndia,   rupee 3673A\nItaly,   lire       .0771A\nJapan,   yen     J046A\nJugoslavia,   dinar       .0309D\nNew   Zealand,   pound     3.8504A\nNorway,   krone    _ 3434A\nPoland,   Blot!    1716A\nRoumania,   leu   ..       _ 0103A\nBouth   Arrica,   pound     4.8101A\nSpain,   peseta       .1207A\nSweden,   krontj       -1494A\nSwltaerland, frano  2789A\nUnited   States,  dollar,  7%   per  cent\npremiums.\nI    D\u2014Decline;    A-A3vance;    U\u2014Unchanged. .   .\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON. July 5 (AP)\u2014BratUlan\nTraction 617%: C. P. R ,2V',.\nHydro Elec 610%; Intl Nickel \u2022_\u00bb'\/,:\nBrlt Amn Tob tl'_; Dlatlllera 72s;\nDunlop Rubber 83s 9d; Ford 33s;\nHudson Bsy 28a, od: Imp Chem\n38a, 3d: Crowna 19; Springs \u00a36%;\nRoyal Dutch 138: Vickers It. hslt.\nIsh 3'i per cent Consols \u00a371*,,\nBritish 8% on cent war loan _98%.\nUttle Expenie tnd No Delay Buying or Selling the Classified Way\nEverything Listed in the \"Want*Ads\"\nMAIL WANT-AD-\nFORM\nFill Out and Mail or Bring It to\nThe Daily News Want* Ad Dept.\nFIGURE OUT THE COST OP TOUR AD POR YOURSELF: Ratea an tie per llne psr day, \u2022\nconsecutive dally Insertions for ths price of 4. Minimum coet of Insertion. 33c Rates are'len\nIO- tor prompt payment. Minimum number ot llnea charged, 2. Nama, addreaa land box number when uaed) ara part ot ad, and therefore chargeable. USE THIS FORM, AND WRITE\nPLADTLT. '\nHave those mars or scratchea removed trom your furniture. The\ncoat Is reasonable. Phone KOOTENAY   MUSIC   HOUSE,\t\nA.  TERRILL,  Upholstering, Furniture\nrepairs.  Phone 435R1.        \t\nSPENCER\n DECORATiNO ___^_\nReliable Auto Repairs-with modern\nequipment. NELSONTRANsraR._\nPor  lower  rates on  Auto  Repalra\u2014\nPhone    8\u2014Kline's    Service.\nAVENUE  SERVICE. Oas, blCwSE-\nIng. greasing, etc. Drive In  todsy\nOEO. A. MEERES\u2014For Oood Photo-\ngraphs\u2014Ask   Anybody\u2014Phone_46.\nJ. T. COATES\u2014Registered Profes\"\nalonal Electrical Engineer. Con*\ntractlng,  Supplies. Phone 766.\nIDEAL TAILORS\u2014Odorless and Ban-\nitary  Dry cleaning.\t\nE COLLINSON- Expert Watch\nClock and Jewelry Repalra. Prompt\nService at reaaonable rates Write\nto P.O. Drawer 1103, Nelson.\nAuto parts tor all Cars - KRAPT\nAUTO   WRECKAOE.\nT.  PLAYER\u2014Painting and  Decorat-\nlng   for   Spring.\nTrucking  and  Haulage\u2014Pbone  613.\nCentral  Transfer   Prompt Service.\nMacOregor     Bros.     Photographs,\nFilms developed, printed. Bog 641.\nSTANDARD ELECTRIC. Phone 638\nfor Electrical, Wiring. Contracting,\nInstallations. Reaaonsbl* -wte:.\n\u2022May We Serve You?'\n(Continued)\nARTHUR HOMERSHAM, Nelson, For\nQueens,  Bees,   Honey, c^mbs. etc.\nTaxi Service\nPHONE 77\nDyr or Night\nELKS T. T. _i\nLTD.\nShce Rebuilding ls not a new van-\nture with us. 30 yeara experience\nbehind every lob. C. Romano,\nldesl Shoe shop. Stanley St. Op*\nposlie B. C. Telephone.\n(Continued)\n(31\nCOTTAGE. 4 ROOMS. NEWLY Dtb*\norsted. High St. Pbone 663.\nPULLY     FURNISHED     HOiOt-B\nSUIca  si.    Phone 662. (78^\nFURNISHED    BUNOAI_6W!    cSffl\nBox 96. -Nelson,   phone 318 L.    ,\n(768g|\nR. H MABER, Tlnsmlthlng. Fur-\nnace Repairs. Roofing.  Phone 655;\nTennis Racquets Restrung, 93.50 und\nup New shipment of Out. H. n.\nKITTO, Baker  St.\nPlumb.ng aud Heating. Installations\nand euppllea Work ouaranteed.\nPhone  Julius Relsterer at 659L3.\nTire  Repairing-While   you   wait  \u2014\nDESJARD1N8, at DIUa.\t\nPor   good    brakes   DILL'S   S.S.S.\u2014\nPhoy   g,\nK & T, Auto Repair Shop, Ex-\npert  workmanship.  Low  Rates,\nFor cleaning, pressing, alterations,\nTHE   WARDROBE.   417   Hall   St\nHEMSTITCHING*\u20148c per yard   D. C.\nART shoppe!\nPlumbing and heating installations\nand aupplles. we guarantee all\nour work Prices very reasonable\nPhone   181,   B.   C.   Plumbing   Co.\ncapitol   Beaut?   shoppe   tx-\npert   Marceillng.   phone   18.\nPrompt   Service     -    Watch,   Clock\nrepalra   -   NOXQNS   JEWELERS\nPhone 93\u2014B. B. Taxi, Day or night\nService.\t\nSHORTY'S REPAIR SHOP FOR DEPENDABLE  REPAIRS. \t\nH.   E.   STEVENSON -Electric   and\nacetylene welding; ateel worka.\nAutcrooblle    Motor   Repalra\nBody   Repairs\nOas \u2014 Oreaalng \u2014 Oil\nWashing \u2014 Batteries\nKOOTENAY   MOTORS\n Pbone  117   -   Bakfct St.\n, FRIdiDAIRE\nSALES  ANU  SERVICE\nPhone 838. J. TALBOT.     Box 295.\nFor your spring Permanent  CaU  96.\nTHELMAS  KEAUTY SHOP.\nUVESTOCK_rt>B_B^LE (til\nAYRSHIRE COW, 7 YEARS OLA\nfreshened July 2, gave 8000 Iba,\naverage 4.5 milk last year on test\nJ. D. Macdonell, R_R. 1, Nei-o-\n  <763\u00ab\nMIS( l;i.I.,tM.ot.1  FOR  SALE      til\nAsk Your\nConfectioner\nfor\nSherbicles\nThey can supply you.\nFred Williams\nWholeeale  Distributor\n600   Ward  Bt. ,       Nelaon\n(7886)\n100.000 FEET SECOND HAND RE-\nconditioned pipe aultable for al\npurposes. All sizes. Write Kj\nSwartt Pipe  Yard, 330,  Iat Ave.\n Vancouver, B.C...   .    . .     .    (75891\nUAWN SEATS AND SCREENS MADE,\nLswson's Factory, Bsker St.\n .  (7571)\nBonds at New High\nNEW TORK, July A (AP).\u2014Sharp\nrallle* in some secondary railway\nliens and foreign obligations today\naided a somewhat uncertain bond\nmarket to close at new high levels\nfor   the   year.\nTransportation mortgages, up one\nto five or more points on report*\nof further substantial Increases In\ntraffic earnings, Included some of\nCanadlsn National and Canadian\nPacific.\n, BIRTHS\n(1)\nTORONTO STOCKS\nArno    \t\nAJai\t\nAmulet   \t\nA. P. Conaolldated  ....\nAshley   \t\nBase Metals  \t\nBarry  Hollinger  \t\nBig   Missouri    \t\nCalmont   \t\nC.   and   E.   Lands   ....\nCentral  Manitoba  \t\nChemical  Research  ....\nClerlcy\nIfAMl\t\n8TRKBT (or PO   Boi Mo.)\nPOST   OFP1C1\nCLASSIFICATION\nNUMBER   OF   OATB\nAMOUNT    ENCLOSED   \u2022\nDaily News Want-Ads Bring Results\n.03\n1.08\n.41\n.18S\n1.16\n3.35\n\u25a010'i\n.38\n.10\n.77\n.13'i\n1.20\n.03\nDome       MOO\nDalhoUBte          jo\nEaatcreat   ..' 15\nEldorado        3.53\nFalconbrldfa          4.06\nOranada        1.18\nBome  OU        1.33\nHowey    B0\nHollinger     0.35\nHudson  Bay       9.50\nInternational    Nickel      31.35\nKlrkland Lake         _18\n.Lake  Shore     41.50\n* Macasss      , 66.4\nManitoba Baaln         ...1\nMalartlc   It\nMclntyre        33.00\nMining   Corp       3.15\n1 Mayland         1.03\n> Murphy    03\nNewbec    0414\nNlplsslni        3.70\n1 Noranda       33.06\nI Pend   Orellle        1.30\nPremier Oold        1.31\nSan   Antonio        1.18\nSherrlt  Oordon:       1.43\nSudbury Baaln       1.66\nBterllng  Pacific         M\nSlscoe         1.48\nStadacona          .04'.\nTeck   Hughes        630\nThompson   Cadallao     08 \\\nVlpond     61\nVenturea        1.11\nWright  Hargreaves        8.36\nWalte  Ackerman        1.80\nORR-SIMPSON\u2014Bom to Mr. nud\nMrs. W. Orr-Slmpeon st Ko-te**- nt\nLake Oeneral hcspltsl on July 4,\na son.\nROOMY SAFE POR SALE. P.O. BOX\n607  or  M0  Ward  St. (768J1\nSIMPLEX     IRONETT_f-8168     NEW\nUsed one year. Apply Noakes. Bai.\nlour.  (76181\n8LABWOOD  FOR  SALE  \u2014  PH6S1\n460 R. (76331\nMISI'tXlANKOtS   IVANTKD\n118\nDEALERS   IN   HIDES   AND   SCAAl\nmetala. 8. Pearl, 411  Hall at.\n  (7339)\nIII SI NEKS   OPPORTUNITIES       (30!\nIN   MEMORIAM\n(II\nIn  Memory  of  our  Friend,  Mrs.  s.\nHlllyard. who passed away July 6.\n1033:\nAlthough we cannot clasp your hand\nYour faoe we cannot aee,\nBut let this little token ahow\nWe shall nlw.iys remember thee.\n\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Bob Slmpsoiv\n(76331\nOPPORTUNITY OF A LIFlmMt,\nacre farm, 8 acres ln orchard\nchiefly bearing cherry trees, sat\n7 acrea cultivated, oata, alfalfa\nsmall fruits, outhouses, l_mplem<\nente. tools, piping, good wat*\n; aupply. Immediate possession. Thl\nI year's crop will psy large part 0\nprloe whleh Is alooo. half cash\nBox 7638 Dally News. (7638\nII TOMOBII.ES IOR SALE\nHO\nPERSONAL\n(6)\nVISIT    HALCYON    HOT    SPRINGS\nnnd save one cent a mile.    (7631)\nONE DESOTO SIX SEDAN O\nsplendid condition, two eparai\nmounted In front fenders anl\ntrunk on bsck, a snap. See Peebla\nMotora Limited. 176801\nnilMSIltl)   ROOMS 1UB KENT 115)\nFURNISHED- SUITE. 507 UAllBU.*.-\nate Street. Phone 300R. (7616)\nFURNISHED SUITE\u2014507 SILICA ST\nPhone 440X. (7567)\nROOMS FOK HEM (13)\nFOR   RENT - APARTMENT  OVER\natore.    J.    W.    Oallaghrr,    Nelson.\n  (7387)\nmil sis  11 IMI n\n(30)\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINN1PEO.   July   5\nmarket\nauotattons.\nWheat-\nOpen\nHigh\nJuly    ..\nSO\n81 !4\nOct..    ..\n86 S\n66\nDec.    ..\n87\n67\nMay    ..\n90\n90H\nOate\u2014\nJuly     ..\n3814\n38'4\nOot.     ..\n39 *,\n40\nDec.    ..\n40~4\n40'4\nBarley\nJuly    ..\n4614\n46H\nOet.    ..\n4914\n48',\nDec.    ..\n50',\n50*4\nFlat\u2014\nJuly    ..\n167%\n170%\nOct.    ..\n17H4\n17314\nDec.\n171\n173\nRye-\nJuly    ..\n67*4\nn_\nOct.    ..\n71*4\n71%\nDec.    ..\n73(4\n73%\n(CP).\u2014Oraln\nLow    Cloee\n79 79%\n81%\n83'4\n87%\n36%\n38%\n39%\n45\n47\n48\n81%\n83%\n87%\n37%\n38%\n39%\n45\n47\n48\nCash   Oralns   Close\nWheat\u2014No.   1   hard\nNor.  79%;   No.* 3  Nor\nNor. 74%:  No. 4 Nor,\n66%:  No. 6 84%; feed\n76%;   No.   1   Dur.  77%.\n161%    163\n164       184%\n163       163\n66% 66%\n68% 68%\n89%     89%\n79%; No.   I\n76%; No.   3\n69%: No. 6\n63%:   trsck\nFURNISHED HOU8E NEAR LAXB-\nslde park with 3 bedrooms Ior\nmonth. Apply 609 Nelaon Ave.,\nor pheno  100. (76.141\nFOR RENT Cl)\nFOR RENT\u2014 MODERN TWO-R6OM-\ncd Cabins at Mirror Lake. Rates si\nper day. |3o per month. O. R.\nAbey, Mirror Lake, B.C.        17590)\nFURNISHED SUMMER COTTACIE\"ON\nUke Shore. Willow Point. Howard\n_Roellng. RR. 1 Nelscn. (7614)\nTHE    FINEST    EQUIPPED    APART-\nmentaln the Interior. \"The Trrrei-e.\n17597)\nFURN.    OR    UNFURN.    APTS.    BY\nweek or month. Mcllcal Arts Mug.\n(7590)\nCANADA BONDS\nWINNIFEO.  July  t   (CP)-Dominion of Canada  bonds:\nUlll   LOAN\n6,   1937.   108.35;    109.75.\nVICTORY   LOAN\n6%,  1933,   100.00;   100.75.\n6%,  1934,   100.85;   101.76.\n5%.  1937,   108.60.   110.00.\nRt.llMlIM,   LOAN\n5. 1941, 103.00: 104.00.\n4%, 1940. '100.36; 100.75.\n4%, 1944, 100.00; 101.00.\n4%, 1946,  100.00;   101.00.\nI (INVERSION   LOAN\n4%.  1956,  99.00:   100.00.\n4%,  1957. 99.00;   10000.\n4%,  1958,  99.35;   100.00.\n4%,  1969;  99.75;   100.75.\nNATIONAL   si mn 1    LOA)\n6, 1936. 103.-5; 103.36.\n5.   1941.   103.00;    104.00.\n1932 LOAN\n4,   1935.   99.60;    100.50.\n4,   1983,   94.00;    94.76.\nTORONTO INDUSTRIALS\nBell    Telephone      110\nBraiJIlan     -_  16%\nB  A Oil -.. 15\nCinada  Dredge    \u201e   II\nCanada   Oypsum   ..._ _  1%\nCons   Bakeries   .'. _  13%\nCons Mining    137\nDistillers    Seagrams      31%\nFord of  Canada \"A\"    14\nHiram  Walkers   _  35%\nImperial   Oil  15%\nImperial  Tobacco    10%\nInduatrlal   Alcohol     10%\nInternational Nickel   31V.\nInternational Peta  30\nLoblaw \"A\"   1414\nMassey   Harris     10%\nOranada       33.03\nflervlee Stallone   ID ,\nnOATS. LAUNCHES TOR BAH    144!\nFOR QUICK 8A___~l6507Tr..fr\nCruiser, Atteglrl. Engine in goo<\norder, try it out. see equipment\nWalton's   Boat   Houae.   Box   7671\n_ Dally News.   (751\u00bb]\nIIKMTIRE   FOR   SALE\n(Ml\nUSED CHESTERFIELD. DREB6SM\nbuffet, wardrobe, nerlect condition\ncheap. Apply Hunter Kectrte\nWard  -*t^_ (76t\u00bbi\nCLASSIFIED   DISPLAY\nWE DO EVERYTB-NO IN\nPRINTLNO\nBOOK   B1NDLNO\nPAPER RUUNd\nCorrect atylea ln Wedding Invitations, Announcementa. aad.\nInvitation  Carda.\nTHE DAILY  SEWB\nJOB   PRINTING - DEPARTMENT\nBusiness and Professional\n Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER. 8. P.. INT. A, 0\nMunicipal ano Conimnrcial Audits\nP.O. Box 1191, Nelaon, B.C.  (7800\nAssayers\nE  W. WIDDOWSON. eaubUabed 1900\n305 Josephine st. Neleon, B. c,\n_(7_01\nORENVILLE   H   QRIM'.VOOD.  P-33\nBox  418.  Kaslo. B.C. (7003\nB. C. Land Surveyor\nR. O. LESLIE B. C7~L. 8. 3oTl__H\nBlock, Nelson. Phone 376L_|7608\nCHAS MOORE. B. cTXTS. BoTfifl\nKW.C. block, Nelson. B.C.    (76.4\nChiropractors\nR. t. Orsy. b.C, Ph.(_C Oliker Bloel\n             _ (760*\nJTr. MACMILLAN. DR. OF CHlftd\npractlc. Aberdeen Blk., Pb. 313.\n         (7801\nMimiN AND OEDDE8. X-RAY am\n_ MCM, cranbrook and Trail. 17607\n Florists\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES, phon\n343    Cut   tlowers.   potted   plsntl\n_ and Moral dealgns. i760S\nNELSON \"FLOWER SHOPPE. FULI\nllne cut flowers ai nil times. Flor\nal designs. Phone 333. (7W|\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR W DAWSON, Real (.state in\n.urance Rentals. Next Hlppenu\nHsrdwarr.  Baker street (7610\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S  SASH   FACTORY  BARD\nwood merchsnt. 317 Baker atreet.\n(7611\nTILLIE THE TOILER:\nBv Westover j\nCOOK Mmrei\nKAC \/\u2022**\n-.ST-rin\npieoM\n^HIPPLl\nTEL-LIN\u00ae\nMB   ALL.\nAROUT\nVOUJ,\nlUVSUTlOU\n*\nna_WV,\n\"THAT\n__ou_.ua-\nceoasiios,\nMU6- . TBLO\nHIM  MOT\nTO   TSU_\nANO   I  flSBT\nA   LSTTffl\nFfcOM   THB\nBOSS - lT%_\u00bbfS\n'TO  *^OI*tfB*r TH\nPt-iya-ecT yrE-\nMO<S_VAF\u00bbHBR\nAWB sbt\n\u2022-SACK OM THS\nToo* Haass\nR*AD IT L.\nTH.5   li  THE\nvAJoresT  i_\u00abTT-srj.l\nI      EVBPL   SAVAJ    .\n31 y   MlSTAteKS I\nIM TH-esC       _,\nlaABAaRA^-HSV\n km\nrr\n\u2014 nit nelson milt nwa num.. \u00bb* - MW \u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\"\u00ab\u00bb\u2022 \u2122T * UM-\nMSI\nBy Geo. McManoa\nJjxwtingNews\nBRINGING.UP FATHER:\nI\nBAU VICTOR\njlson Beaten Second\nPime; Score Is Seven\nOne\nvisiting Rathdrum baaeball\n_ made It two straight oyer the\n\u25a0J seniors by handingthem a\ntrimming st the B^r\u00ab\"\u00b0n\nmds on Wedneaday afternoon.\n\u2022ftdrum outhlt the locsls 12-2. and\nfaded ln their col'ectlon was two\n-bagger, by 8. Anderaon and\nhoVe in tha first Inn M. and\nMiderson s three-base hit in the\n(th   Inning. .    ,       .._\nMan on the mound for the\nshowed plenty of stuff and\nsli Rathdrum batters, but\nI the vlslton did hit thay\n\u201e*d out bit* oetostl thaWMfc\nSho fielders. AU the \u00ab\u2022*\u2022*\u2022\n'ir. sholred plenty ot batting\nSy, and were dangerous at all\nV O. Anderson, on the mound\nBatbdrum. held th. locsls W\n, \"Sts, and fanned three, although\nmlk-d four to first MM. a. Ass-\nalso  starred  at   bat  with  a\nNOTED STALLION\nDIES\n. LEXINOTON. Ky., July 8\u2014 (AP)\u2014\nOuy Axworthy, for many yeara premier aire at Walnut Htll furm.\nworlds leading aire or futurity win*\ntiers and oofialdered by many horsemen greatest of all producers of\nthe standard breed, died Tueaday on\ntbe farm wbere he had Uved since\n101C. His death was announced today\nby Boy Miller, manager of Walnut\nhall.\nThe noted stallion waa 31.\nWHITE SOX IN\nFOURTH PLACE\nBeat Cleveland; Oliver\nPitches Athletics to\na Win\nMBU.O'. .%TH.%MR*i-\nHUGH -MlOtTY?\nftTOP V\/0*K ON\nMV BEACH 6UIT-V\nWE DECIDED NOT\nTOCO TO THE SEASHORE-\nHAGEN LEADS PAR-SHOOTING\nGOLFERS OVER ST. ANDREWS\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nWaahlngton       \u00ab   g   Jg\nNew York     JJ   2B   .618\ni-batier.\nommy Harrlaon wu back ln hla\nI poaitlon  on  aeoond   baae,  and\nftdled    wren    ehancee    perfectly.\ni   at   shortstop   aleo   starred   In\na field  with  six   chances.   Olllett\nbelled  12 chances cleanly*\nWee  errors  were eharged  up to\nlocals, al: of them to the out-\n,   .Wallace,   Harrison.   Hall   and\norawui got tbe only Nelaon hlta\nG.   Anderson,   Horswlll's   clout\nDC for two baws.\ni\u00ab   visitors   got   three   runs   In\nfirst   Inning,   McCartney   firat\nup, hit to oenter field, 8. An*\nEon  alammed  a  two-bsae  bit  to\n%  fie.d,   McCartney  waa   thrown\n: at tbe plate, Horswill to HaU to\nbardeon.   Marlowe   bit   a   two-\ncenter  field  to  aoare  0.\nMtraon.   steel  reached  second  on\n[Horswlll's error, Marlowe  scoring\nBey   overthrew   the   ball   to\nG,    Anderson    bit    between\ntoad   and   first   to   score   Steel.\n|yerskl reached flret ou a fielder's\nitee,   o.   Andereon   being   thrown\n>-%t second* shore was thrown out\nrrleqn  to OlUett.\nthe aecond Inning the Rath-\n4 team added another run. A.\n\u2022non bit aong third baaa line,\nI seoond and scored on 8. An-\non's hit to left field, por the\n% thnt Innings Luther shut out\nil .visitors aod beld tbem without\nlit. He wu given splendid support\ntbe  whole infield.  In  tbe  slxtb\niy added one more fun when O,\nderaon alammed a three baae hit\nAsep oenter field, and sco.ed, on\nyerskl's   sacrifice   fly   to   center\n4. In tbe eighth Steel bit over\npud,   stole   seoond,   advanced   to\nrd wben H. HorswUl took Wayer-\n'a fly ln deep oenter, and scored\neu Shore hit to left field. A. An*\nbit   to   right   field   scoring\nwhich   ended    tlie    visitors*\nIfelaon scored their only run ln\nl\u00bb fifth. Wallace walked, went to\nftrd wben Harrlaon made a clean\njgle, and scored on Hall's bit to\nBer field.\nPhiladelphia\nChicago   ..\nCleveland\nDetroit    ..\nBoston    \u25a0 \u2022\nSt.  Insula\n37 M .507\n37 38 .493\n36 40 .487\n36 39 .480\n31 42 .435\n28 50 .359\nBIG GAME TO\nDECIDE ISSUE\n\/fur\/tvey\/ts-m'TiMM\nPosts a 68; 22 Others Find\nPlaying Ideal; Somerville Gets 73\nCLEVELAND. July 5 (AP).\u2014Chicago White Sot battered their way\nback Into fourth plaet at tha expense** of Cleveland Indiana today\n10-0 by making ona big Inning\ncount. They converted alx hlta Into\naeven runa In the sixth.\nChicago     10   I   0\nCleveland        \u2022 10   3\nKlmsey. Faber, Oregory, Lyona\nand Orube; Harder. Connally, Pearaon and Myett.\nOLIVES PITCHES ATHLETICS\nTO  WIN\nPHILADELPHIA, July 8 <_*_.).-\nDlek Oliver, a young right-handed\npitcher grabbed off the aand lote\not Philadelphia, made hla starting\ndebut ln the malor league today\nand pltrcbed Philadelphia Athletlca\nto a 4-3  victory over Boaton  rted\nSox.\nStriking out eight and allowing\nonly erven hit,, Oliver kept the\nSox away from tha plate ln every\nInning  exoept  the  eighth.\nBoaton        2   T   0\nPhiladelphia     4   6   0\nWelland. Kline, Brown. Welch and\nPerrell;  Oliver and Madjeskl.\nORIDOES HOLDS THE DBOWNS\nAND  WINS-\nST. LOUIS, July S (AP).\u2014Tommy Brldgee held St, Loula Browne\nto alx hlte and atruck out nine\nmen   and   Detroit   Tlgera   took   the\n-'--   *__-_    a..\nf?\/tBBir^\/*tKAf\/V\/Ue,S.S.\nMT d\/ilftSS,     I'-'B.\neASEY Stengel, R.F\ndosnP*vof?e,  L.f-*.\nOOSSY fiOlAAl,    CF.\nMUE LATHAM. &*\u25a0\nB'U STUMPt* ZM-\u00b03\nlAn\/fY\/^LSAN,     o\nBuss Raymond   p\n\/fUBSWAODBLL,   P.\nMM ,AL7?-ac_r_..   P.\nHOME RUN\nSTANDING\nHome runs yeaterday: McNalr. Athletics; Hafey, Reds: Vaughan, Piratea;   Oreenberg,   Tigers,   one  each.\nThe leaders: Poix. A thle t ice, 34;\nRutb, Yankees. 18; Gehrig, Yankees\n17; Klein, Phillies, 17; Berger, Braves\n16.\nLeegue totals: American 833; He*\ntlonal 346: total 577.\nCRAWFORD AND\nVINES IN FINAL\nToday ie the day thet the\nball    fane'   moat   fantastic    dream\ncornea   true.   A   star   team   picked\n_^_^^^^^^^ Irom   the   National   league   playa   a\nmen   and  Detroit Tigera  took  tne i similar  team picked   from  all  the\nfinal gama ot the aerlea today, 9.4,1 etara ln  the  American  league.\nBrldgee had only one  bad  Inning. I   Thla   game   of   the   century   will\n\u25a0he box eeore:\nlethdnim.\neertney,   Jh\n| Andet-on. n\nsrloie.   c   \t\nMl.   rt\nAnderaon,  p  _- 6\nkerakl, It   \u2666\nlore,   cf        4\n] Andereon, JB \u2014 4\nMH, lb - 4\nAB R HPO A E\n1    1\n3   I\n0 1\n1 1\n\u25a0I   I\n1 11\ntotal, 41   . ia n w\n\u25a0Helion*.\nIchxrdK*.\",  e  4\nI Horewlll, rf  _ J\nHonwlll,  et .... 3\nlt   *\nrllett.    lb\nther,  p\ndlaoe,   3b\n  4\n.... 3\n\u2022leon, 3b _ -\n1   1\n0 \u2022\n1 0\n0 s\n0 3\n0 11\n0 0\n1 0\n1 I\nBriogea   nr.u   u,_,   .....   \u2014\nthe   alxth,   when   he   allowed   two\nhlta  end   one   walk   and   hit   two\nmen with pitched balla, giving  the\nBrowna three of their rune.\nDetroit       9 IS   0\nBt. Loula       4   (I   1\nBrldgee and Hayworth; Blaeholder,\nMcDonald and Shea.\n[WARDNER DEFEATS\nWALDO TWICE\nWARDNFR. B. C, July 6\u2014Wardner\naoHball teams kept their undefeated\nrecord Intact when they defeated\nW\u00abldo ln a doubleheader at Waldo\non Friday evening. Wardner ladlei\ndefeated tbeir rivals 17-7 ln a well\nplayed game and the men won in\na close contest 13*8. Rollle Thompson got tbe only homerun of the\nevening on a long smash to left\nfield.\nThe lineups: Wardner men\u2014Renatrom, T. Roland, Moberg, O. Thompson, Storey, R. Thompson, B. IV hind,\nEmbre* and Sinclair. Waldo men\u2014\nDaajardlns, Q. Beattle. II. MeNsb,\nThacker, Palmer, Bandberg, Nelson,\nH.  Beattle  and   Saunders.\nIHI!        |WH< -m ....\nbe played in Comlakey park in Chicago as part of the century of pro-\nBy  FRANK   H.  KINO\n(Associated Press Staff Writer).\nST.   Andrew*,   Scotland,   July\n8.   (AP).\u2014Led   by   Walter   Hagen,\nDetroit's   grand    old    warrior   of\ngolf,   ti   of   the   117   challengers\ntor the British open golf rbamplon-\nsblp today found  St.  Andrews so\nIdeal for low scoring that all shot\nper   golf   or   better   tn   the   first\nround of the titular bunt proper,\nHagen.   winner   of   the   Canadian\nopen   at   Toronto   two   years   ago,\nJumped into the lead with a brilliant 68, five  under  par.  It wu a\nstirring   aftermath   of   tbe   record\nbreaking   87   William   \"Pat\"   Nolan,\namtllng    Irish    professional,   posted\nyesterdsy   to  clinch  the  qualifying\nmedal, and   tbt Hagen  mark  withstood   every   attempt   to   abaks   It\ndown aa tbe  big  field, accustomed\nby  now   to   tbe   eunscorchtd   fairways and   blistering  fwt  greens  ot\ntbe \"old course,\" tore through tbe\nflrat 18-bolea of the 72-hole championship   play.\nPOSTS AT ri\nMan after man blew up on critical holes tn the noma stretch trying to catch Hagen. C. R. \"Sandy\"\nBomervllle of London, Ont., however, wae not among theM. The Canadian bolder of tbe United States1\namateur title, noted for bis stolid-j\nIty when tbe going ls tough, Journeyed coolly around to turn In a\nbeautiful  card of  78.\nBandy made tbe turn over tne\ntricky fairways and greens In 37.\none over perfect figures. Tba inward nine, whlcb almost spelled\ndisaster tor him tn the qualifying\nrounds, were Just another nine today aa be came In one under par\nwith a 36.\nKKTAULIMII.D  FAVORITE\nHagen, winner of the British open\nIn   1923,   1924,   1928   and   1B2B   and\nANNUAL MINES\nREPORT RECEIVED\nFormer Eliminates Satoh\nWhile Latter Downs\nCochet\nCrawford   because   of   his   accuracy\non tbe ground.\nOn bla form today Crawford la\nrattd an almost even choice to win\nthe coveted title, it wUl be the\nsecond dash between the pair at\nWimbledon and their eighth this\n! season. Vines beat ths Ansae ln\nthe 1932 seml-flnsls after turning\nhim back ln Davis cup play. Wben\nVines  toured  Australia  last  winter\n\u25a0 Crawford    won   two   out    of    five\n\u25a0 matches   from  blm.\nContaining extensive Information\non prorlnctal mining activities.\nthough allghtly smaller than usual.\ntbe 1988 annual report, ot tbe provincial minister of mines bas been\nreoelved ln Nelson by B. T. O'Orady,\nrealdent mining engineer. Sufficient\ncopies are on hand to fill tbe dlatrlct mailing list.\nThe volume contains tbe latest\npublished Information on lode and\nplacer operations, under reporta of\nresident engineers, ln addition to\ntables and summaries of tbe Industry's activities during the put\nyear.\ntartarianTare\nbe1ngjh1pped\nBlack Tartarian cherries are moving to market from the Kootenay\nand Arrow Lakes districts. Wltb the\npresent weather continuing it ls\nexpected tbat Royal Annes and Blngs\nwill be moved from tbe lower Arrow\nlakes district by tbe first of next\nweek. The cherries are ln excellent\nisH.e this year. Several early ahlp-\nIntents bave been made but prloes\nare   high   as  yet.\nEarns High Honor\nTINNING WINS\nFIFTH IN ROW\nChicago Downs Cincinnati; Pirates Nose Out\nSt. Louis\ncago as part of the century ot pro-1 in   \u00bb\u00ab\u00ab,   .\ngress exposition. Whll* one game now established fsvorite to snare\nwill not decide the superiority of the honors from stocky Oene Sara-\netther   league,   lt   will   be   a   great  \u2014   h-M   \u25a0   two-itroke  margin  on\nPRODUCE HOLDS\nrun--.      -w-rn-mr,     ..       .\nthrill   and   a   great   show.\nThe Idea could be carried further now thnt a precedent |s set.\nHave a game between the wild\nmen of either league and the fellows who save their money and\ngo   to   bed   at   8   o'clock.\nTEN   YEARS   AOO   TODAV\nJuly 6, 102:.\u2014 Tom Gibbons, who\nlost to Jack Dempsey yesterday\nat Shelby, Mont., patched up an\nold quarrel with his brother, Mike,\n\"Tlie Phantom\" Otbbons. who taught\nhim much that he knowa of the\ntight   game.\nMINOR LEAGUE\nBALL SCORES\nINTEBNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nAlbany 3: Rochester \u00bb\u25a0\nJeraey City 2; Montreal 3.\nBnltlinore 7: Toronto I\nIMl'IFIC COAST LEAOl'E\ns\u00bbcr\u00abm-nuo 5. Ot-ltrul I\nHollrwood 4. Stn Francuco J-\nbtate _  39    1   A 31 IS   S\nleon by Innlnfi: RHE\nIthdrum    310 001 030\u20147   11    1\nIteo    ...-  000 010 000-1     4   I\n\u2022truck out by Lath,:. 8, Ander\/ton\num on ball* olf Anderion. 4.\nwo bts. mu, s. Andereon. Mv*\nI  a.  Honwlll.\nI-ynree Out hit, O. Andereon.\nDouble play*. Btrtl to Angell.\nLelt on  buee,  oethdrum  6,  Nel-\nn 6.\nUmpire,. BUI Preno end Earl Hunt.\nolf Invaders\nReach Vancouver\nIvANCOUVIR, July 6 <CP).\u2014Van-\nuard of the golfing army that\nEl Invade Vancouver for the clae-\np Canadian amateur tournament\nJrivsd today* Under the watchful\nm* of Captain C. C. \"Happy\" Prsa-\n|, tho Quebec Inter-provincial tesm\n\u2022 resting tonlgbt after a practice\nI tnn the Bhaughnessy heights\nKirse In preparation for the Will-\nftgdon cup matches Saturday. Bev-\nTel United (Hates ehotmaeters ars\niso studying score cards of their\nftltlal practice tours.\nIrrnwr nnd his Quebec sharp-\n^^ including    ths    defending\nuoipion. Oordon Tsylor. t. A.\ntoes snd Carroll Stuart, all of\nItntreal, and Prank Corrigsn. Ot-\n,   oame   direct   to   Vancouver\nKm Banff, where tbey played In\nI qualifying round of the Prince\nWales tourney but scratched\nthe championship play. Tbey\npressed themselves as delighted\nths condition ot tbe shaugh-\nwmt course today but refused to\n\u25a0Bunent on their scores,\nI Several members of the Ontario,\ntanltoba. Saskatchewan snd Alberta\njams are expected tomorrow, while\nbe remainder wlll reach herr Fri-\nby after having remained at Banff\npr the final of the Prince of Wales\ntent between Phil Farley. Toronto,\nIna Bobby  Relth,  Wlnnlpsg.\n\u25a0 Pressed wood, a rather new build-\n|ig msterlal, waa i\u00bbM ln hundreds\nt tbe buildings at tbe Chicago fair.\n^jrC^tZr*>7n<ryu^\ntne nonuts \u2022\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 n. .\nsen, held a two-stroke margin on\nthe closeat ot tbe field, three strokes\non the medalist, Nolan, and two\nother British professionals, Herbert\nJolly and Fred Robson; tour stroksa\non Sarazen and five strokes on the\nBriton etill considered the outstanding challenger, Henry Cotton, bard\nhitting professional now residing at\nWaterloo, Belgium.\nNolan's sub per 71 today vaa\njust one shot tn the barrage of\nlow scores. Three shot 70's, Thomas\nR. Fernle, of St. Anne's. England,\nCyril Tolley, burly, long driving\nBriton snd Ed Dudley. ConeordtUle,\nPa., professional.\nGrouped with Somerville tn tbe\n73 class were some of Britain's\noutstanding golfers among thsm\nErnest Whltcombe, w. T. Twine,\nr P. Vickers and Willism Spark\nand two United Btates stars, Densmore Shute and Horton Smith.\nCOMPSTON   AND   DUNLAP  A   72\nArchie Competon and S. S. Weast-\nall were two of the noma forces\ngrouped wltb Oeorge T. Dunlap. Jr.,\nSaracen and Joe Klrkwood, the Au-\nstrallan trick shot artist In tbe 72\nbracket.\nThe other of the 10 members\nof the United States Ryder cup\nsquad and the two professionals\nwho paid their own way, Johnny\nFarrell from New York and Joe Xser\ntrom Waco, Texas, finished their\nrirst rounds anywhere from two to\nfour strokes above par. Leo Diegel\ntook a 79, Paul Runyan and Olln\nDutra 70s. while BUI Burke. Crate\nWood. Farrell and Bear needed 77\nstrokes   esrh.\nO.C. CRICKET\nLONDON. July ^*~tC? Cable.\u2014\nScores st tbe end ot ths dsy's play\nIn flmt-clses cricket matches getting\nunder way today were as follow*!\nM.CC. 133 snd 19 for one (Owen-\nSmith all for 61). Oxford 128 (Bowes\nalx for 41)  at Lords,\nGloucester 128 (Freeman five for\nlg) Kent 224 for two wickets (Ames\n103, not out. Todd so, not out)\nit  Folkestone.\nSussex 307 tor four wickets (J.\nParks 01. James Langrldge 100 not\nout)  against  Lancashire kt Hove,\nNorthamptonshire 2S2 for four\n(Timms 123, Jupp TO not out)\nagainst Somerset st Northampton.\nHampshire 200 (Kennedy 87, Mayer\nfive for4 70). Warwickshire 30 ror no\nwicket at Southampton-\nNottinghamshire 166 (Smart four\nfor 30) Olamorgan u; for seven.\nat Swansea.\nDerbyshire 300 for six (Siofer 00,\nSkinner 05, Towner nd Bl not out)\nsgslnst Essex at Leyton.\nI H. D. a* Leveaon-Qower'a eleven\n:256 (Welling* 136, Davles four for\n73) Cambridge 00 for three wickets,\nst  Eastbourne.\nOlentman   V.  players at  the  oval\ncancelled.\nDISMISS YORKSHIRE\nFOR 240 RUNS\n JlT     \u2014.\u2014_\non Montreal dairy and produce\nmarket jenerally beld at yeeter-\nday'a final lev*la durlnj light trad-\nIns   today.\nWIMBLEDON.  Enr,  Jul?  >  (CP\nant Ar cableet\u2014AuelnlU or (lnlted Mat*\u2122 wl)J be the 1033 home\nof   the   Wimbledon   Uwn   tennla\nslnflea   chimiplofuMp.   Thle   wu\ndecided today Ohen Jack Crawford,\nyouthful Australian star and Ella-\nworth  Vlnee Jr., Wimbledon and ]\nUnite!   States   tltllst,   won   their I\nsemi-final   matches  to  qualify   to j\nmeet In the final Satnrday.\nThe   match   between   Vines   and\nHenri Cochet, Wench aoe, headlined\ntoday'a program at famous Wimbledon and for the third time In tbeir\nthree   meetings   elnoe   last   summer\ntbe American amasbed through the\nonoe  mrlnelb't aoe to a 6-3,  8-8,\n3-8.   8*1   triumph.\nCrawford handily disposed of\nJlroh Batoh. of Japan, 8-3, 8-4, 3-8,\n8-4.\nThe tall, rubber-legged Vlnee,\ntowering a head orer the Uttle\nFrenchman, completely dominated\ntbe play throughout and at the end\nCochet, apparently oonvlnced he at\nlast had met his master, warmly\ncongratulated Vines aa they met at\ntha net.\nVlnee ahowed himself a real champion aa be rallied from 3-5 to take\nthe eeoond eet and then ran all\netralght gamee ln the fourth to end\nthe match, frequently leering Cochet\nstanding flatfooted shaking hla bead\nas the terrlflcally-hlt ball sped paat\nhim like a ballet.\nWith the exception of the third\nset, when Satoh attacked with well\nplaoed forcing ahota, Crawford dominated his match with the llttle\nJapaneae. He played his usual brilliant game and ecllpeed the Nipponese's strong rolleylng with pses-\nlng  drlvee.\nSatoh'e stop-volleys, which stopped\n\"Bunny\" Austin, Britiah ace. ao\neffectively,    were    ueeleee      agalnat\nNew Tork\nSt. Louis ...\nPittsburgh\n| Chlcsgo\nBoeton\nNATIONAL   LEAOCB\nBrooklyn  \u2014_______\nCincinnati ______\n'Philadelphia  \u2014\n.. 37    ,<00\n40 14    J41\n33 38   ATI\n30 33    .808\n17 tt\n33 88\n33 43\n31 48\n.403\n.488\n.418\nr.   D.   CUMMINS\nof the Nelson agency of the North\nAmerican Life insurance company,\nwho by writing 8138,000 life Insurance ln one year, haa gained sci-\nmlsslon into toe Nslaco club of his\ncompany. This ls the third consecutive year that Mr. Cummins,\nwho was aeoond hlgb ln western\nCanada last year, bas received this\nhonor.\nCHICAOO, July 6\u2014 (AP)\u2014A big\nflrat Inning, during which tbey\nscored four runs, three of them\nwhen Manager Charlie Orimm hit\na double with the bases loaded, gave\nLyle (Bug) Tinning .and Chicago\nCubs a 6-3 .victory over Cincinnati\nRr<__ today. It waa tbe fifth con-\nsecutlve winning start for Tinning,\nyoung right-hander and lt gave the\nChlcagoans the short aerlea, two\nigames   to   one.\nCincinnati    8   10   J\nChicago    \u2014 .* til\n'   Derringer, Johneon, Prey and Betas,\nley, Manion, Tinning and Hartnett.\nprrrsBU-tau.   juit   8   (*_\u2022>_-\novercoming a five-run lead. Plata-\nburgh Pirates broke looee wtth a\nsavage attack ln tba llth and seventh Innings today to defeat Bt.\nLoula Cardinals 7-6 and advanoe\nwithin one gam* of eeoond place.\nFloyd Vaughan oonnected with a\nbome run to drive ln two ot hla\nmates after one run had baen\n\u2022cored  earlier in the fifth Inning\nSt. Loula 8   11   1\nPittsburgh       1   14   0\nSILVER FUTURES\nNEW   YORK,  July. 8   (AP)\u2014Silver\nfutures closed steady; sales 8.438.000\nounces. July 36.30. Sept.  36.86,  Oct.\nI37.10N.    Dec.    37.66,    Jan.    38.90N\nMarch   38.40N.\nN\u2014Nominal.\nWalker, Johnaon. Mooney, Carte-\nton and Wllaon; Meine, Smith, Hoyt,\nFrench and Plotnloh.\nIne Kanaaa atate aenate haa paaaed\na bill which prerldee that no recovery for injury may be had by any\nI night pedestrian on state highways.\nUnless at the time of tha accident\n'\u25a0he'-WM carrytnt . tm, light ylalble\nfor 800 feet.\nHARROCIATI. England, July 8\u2014\n(OP Cable)\u2014Tbe Yorkshire orleket\neleven, champion county, wera dismissed for a first Innings total of\n940 runa by tha Britiah Wast Indies\nteam today, and before tba cloae of\nplay the West Indies had acored\n30  runa  for  no  wickets.\nTinkling Bells,\nand the Clink of Silver\nIN A Chlneee fairy story one reads about the Emperor's garden,\nwhere rare and colorful plants from all over the world were constantly flowering.\nIt wu the duty of the honorable head gardener to watch for the\nmost beautiful of the blooms and tie to the stem of each a tittle sllvei)\nbell. As the flowera swayed In the breeze, the bells tinkled with sweet\nmusic. Thus the courtiers and the distinguished visitors, strolling along\nthe paths, were sure to see the finest specimens.\nThis waa the Emperor's way of saying \"I have something extra fine\nthat you ihould see: look thla way and you'll be repaid.\"\nIn the advertising columns of this paper are similar messages addressed to YOU. Read them and you will hear the clink of silver. Our\nmerchants are aaying \"We have some extra values. We have some\nespecially seasonable articles that you ahould see. Come to our stores\nam) you wtll be repaid.\"\nYou have nothing to lose when you accept this invitation. In fact,\nwhen you fall to do so, you're missing some of the very news for which\nyou bought thia peper!\nI\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nr\nI'lriniii!!!:':''!!*\" i'i\" ;'iiii\"\n I\nPAOI   ElflHT\nFOUR RAILROADERS RETIRED\nFROM SERVICE C.P R. JULY 1\nChoate, Francis and Bradshaw Retire Here; Belanger at Cranbrook\n\u2022Inly  1  mw   tlw  retirement  ot\n, two  veteran   railroaders   from   the\nservice   of   the   Canadian   Pacific\nRailway   company,   Joeeph   Charles\nBradshaw   of   Nelton   and   Joseph\nF.   Belancer   of   Cranbrook.   William   Thomas   Choate  and   Oeorge\nLeonard Franots, long; ln the employ  of  the   c.P.R.   were  also  on\nthe   retirement   list.\nMr-   Bradshaw   boasts   ths   longest\nrecord   of   the   four   having   started\nwith    the    compsny    back    ln    \"97\nat Revelstoke.  On  August  B of the\ntame year he was promoted to conductor and In June 1898 wss transferred   to   Nelson    He   hss   been   ln\nNelson  ever  since.\nMr. Belancer. who started the\nrailroad game one year later, retires\nat Cranbrook. He was first employed\nss a trainman at Cranbrook. August\n18. 1898. On his retirement he\nheld the position of yardmsster.\nMr. Belanger was born ln Renfrew,\nOnt.,   April   5.   1887.\nMr. Choate comes next in seniority, having joined the servloe of\nthe company July 33. 1001. August\n1, 1007. he was made train dispatcher\nat Nelson, a position which he retained until his retirement. Mr.\nChoate waa born in Glanford. Wentworth   county-   Ont.,   November    16.\n\u00a3^3\nJ. A.C. Laughton, R.O.\n0PTOM_rmi8T-OPTI0UN\nMite 201, Mrtlrtl  Artl  ll__l._l.__t\n1870. A* a atower ln the NeUon\nfreight ahed Mr. Prancla vaa flrat\nemployed by tbe CP.R. April 30.\n1907. Re hu worked In different\ncapaclttea  at the  ahede alnoe  then.\nSilverton Attracts\nHoliday Makers\n-THE  NELSON  DAILY   NEWS,   NEUON,   B.C.  \u2014   THVMMT   MOBNINO,   _T_LT   9,   1918\nSmythe's Mosquito Lotion\nParticularly uaeful aa a protection from Moaquito and Fl;\nBltea. Hay be uaed freely without injury to the akin.\nSmy thea Pharmacy\nShop with us hy mall      Phone I\nMrs. Carruthers Is\nHostess in Honor of\nDaughter in Nakusp\nNAKUSP. B. C. July 8.\u2014The\nmonthly meeting of the women's\nmissionary society was held at the\nhome of Urs. Oeorge Keys. It was the\nDiamond Jubilee anniversary of the\nbeginning of missionary work ln\nJapan snd Mrs. Kershaw real a\nfascinating paper on the lives of\nDr Davidson McDonald snd Dr.\nCochrane, the first Japanese missionaries. Following a short buslneu\nperlo-1. afternoon tea was served\nby the hostess\nW, Carruthers hu left for Nelson.\nR. E. Bruhn and daughter Oladys\nleft for Enderby. They were accompanied ns fsr as Vernon by Mlss\nEileen   Pound.\nMlss Winnie Jordan ot Edgewood\n1\u00a7 the guest of Mr. and Mra. W.\nO.   M.   Hakeman.\nMrs. W. Carruthers entertained\nto honor her daughter, Mlas Eunice\nCarruthera of the Kootenay Lake\nOeneral hospital, Nelson, who la\nspending her vacation here. Three\ntables of bridge were in play. Prize\nwinners were Mlse Robertson and E.\nLeveque. Later dancing waa indulged in and detectable refreshments were served. Thoee preeent\nwere Mlas Bessie McWhlrter, Mlae\nMolly Isllp, Mlss Robertson. Mlas\nNorah Mitchell, Mlas Nellie Johnson,\nMlss Wlnnifred Jordan, R. Fowler.\nX. Leveque, H. Oardner, R. Jordan,\nP. Fowler, J. Harrla and A. Harris.\nI J. Pope returned Wednesday from\nKaslo,.\nMr. and Mra. Thomaa Held and\nInfant daughter sre the guests of\nMrs. Reld'* parents. Mr. and Mrs.\nW. H. White.\nMrs. Hansen of Belllngham ls\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. S.\nLeary.\nFrank Howltt of Edmonton Is\nthe guest of his parents, Mr. and\nMra. Howltt of Nakusp.\nM--S. Arthur Stanley returned trom\nTrail.\nMrs. Clsrldge of Calgary ls the\ngueet of her parents Mr. and Mrs.\nAlley.\n6H.VERT0N. B. C, July \u00bb.\u2014J,\nRogers of Arrow park la the gueet\nof  hla daughter,  Mrs.  I.  Ftinhurst.\nMr. and Mr* C Marahall or Burton were visitors here. .    .\nA. Mclntyre and O Bergman of\nth* Reno mine, spent.the holidays\nat their respective homes her*.\nO. Thompson of'Trail wu a weekend vlaltor.\nT. Cleary wu a recent vlaltor to\nNelson.\nMlu Irene McAulay who teachu\nat Rou Spur, hu arrived to apend\nthe vacation at he* home at the\nOalena   farm'\nJ Fleury, principal of the school\nleft on Bunday for his hom* in\nNelson.\nMlu Marjorle Oorrlnge, of the\nteaching staff, hu left to spend the\nholidays at her home in Vanoouver.\nMrs. t. Burley is vlaltlng friends\nln  Nelson.\nMrs. 3. McDougal of NeUon wu\nrenewing old acquaintances her*\non   Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Dimock of the\nMolly Hughes, were the guests of\nMr. and Mrs. E. Matthews, over the\nholiday.\nP. Johnaon. who ba* been the\nguest of Mrs. W. Marshall for the\nput   week,  hu   returned,  to  Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. spenoe, Mc Pass-\nmore and the Misses Passmore of\nSaskatchewan, were visitors In the\ndistrict  on  Saturday\nMlu Ella Johnaon of TraU.\nthe guut of her parents, Mr. and,\nMra. T. Anderson, over tb* weekend.\nMrs. E. Butchart and son Robert,\nwere the guest* of Mr*. J. Johnson\non Saturday. ^^^^^~\nMr*. Dowden and Mta. McDermid\nof Threo Forka were .holiday\nguuta of Mrs. J. Kelly.\nMlss R. Zsdra and Mlu K. Cechelero of New Denver, WW* tne -guests\nof -Mlu  M.  Emerson,  on Baturday.\nUr. and Mrs. M. McDermid aod\nbaby of Three Forks, were reoent\nguesta of Mrs. P. Larson.\nE. Mstthews, who spent the holl\ndsy   here   at   hla   home,   hu   r*>\nturned   to   Rossland.\nH. Oeorge and D. White of New\nDenver, were visitors here on Sunday.\nMISS IMS'\nSTORY THIRD\nThe following story submitted\nby Winnifred Lutu wu awarded\nthird place in ths recent high school\nliterary contest!\n\"OPPORTUNITY COMES BL'T ONCE\"\n\u2022* 'Opportunity comu but once\/ \"\nsuted. BlB-tbeth Weldon. \"and Vm\ngoing to grup mln*. now, mother.\nSo you needn't try to ohang* my\nmind- Dad uld he oould get me that\npoaitlon u librarian and I'm going\nto    take   it-   That    Woodman    girl\nhas only * high school education __^ m \u201e-_, \u201e,.-. -\u00bb_. -\u00ab .\nWhat good could she tte in buUdlng j ^atn patiently to the telndow.\nup our library? She'd have ih* same!  \\_Z__\\ \u2022.\u201e\u00ab,.J    r   thm*   __tt__vt   m\nsum to know what, to do or. uy.\nhe stood on on* foot and then\non th* other and succeeded ln\nlooking very uncomfortable. Finally\nhis face brightened u he hit upon\na happy thought and very awkwardly Introduotd his mother. \"Thts\nla ma. You'll have to 'scuse her\nIf she seems kinds fidgety 'cause\nshe's awful anxious 'bout Jean.\nJean's my slater, y'lenow She's out\nhuntin' a lob .but 'oourw aomeone\nbest ber to It- she uya tbe other\nglrli! be better anyhow, but we\ndon't tblnk so. Do we. ma?\"\nTbe.old lady, who had been eagerly\nwatching th* path outalde the house.\ntum*d her quick. bird-like eyu\nOh Elisabeth. Then she answered\ntn a thin, quavering voloe* \"We\ndon't know. Jim Just let us hope\nshe will find s vacancy before lopg,\"\nWith a weary llttle sigh she turned\nhour On Saturdsy mornings; nature\nclaaau; and travel talk*. And r.l\nhave classes aom* morning during\nth* wwk when I'll _#_i my puplla\nwhat books to mad. the best authors,\nan**   so  on\"\n\"Really,   .dear,\"   mother    put    in. -.\u25a0\u25a0_- _-___,   _-_   __.\t\ngently, \"couldnt you stay home fori*   W*   \u2122*}*   *on*   *?9V*\na while?1 You'v* bun in that Toron-! P\u00bb*?\u00ab- AtB * th4t rtgnt' MU-?\nanythin' an' better, th*n anyone\nelu.' toa Toughta know her, Mlu.\nShe'* .es' about your age. ain't she\nmi' Ws m tropin* she'd get a\njob cauw we need the money I'm\nthe man o' th* houu 'Course I\nwork   but   what  a   (tiller  get*   from\nMORE ABOUT\nCONFERENCE\n(Continued  rrom  Pip  One)\nANNOUNCEMENT\nTo My Clients and Friends\nOwing to 111 health, I hare arrived at the point where\nI fret 1 wnnot any longer give my buslneu the attention\ntt deserves. Therefore, I have disposed of the same to\nMr. T. I). Rosllng, a young man welt known to many of\nyou. He wtll have charge of all business arter July 1st, and\nwill have my strong, reliable companies and continue to\nRive you  very  favorable  rates.\nI wlsli to bespeak for hlm a nonllnuance of the favors\nyen hate given me In the past, and to thank you sin-\ncaraly for the business you entrusted to me for so many\nMM\nMr. Rosling Has His Office at    ,\nRoom 3 Royal Bank Building\n\u2014 C. A. Hunter\nMIKE CHERBO OF\nSIRDAR IS ILL\nRetail Lumber Prices\nNo. 1 Dimension S4S   *25.00 per M\nNo. 2 Dimension S4S       $18.00 per M\nNo. 1 White Pine 2x4 and 2x6 S4S ... f 22.00 per M\nWhite Pine Shiplap $15, *20 and *25 per M\nKir Shiplap $18.00 and $22.00 per M\nWhite Pine Drop Siding $20 and $28 per M\nV. Joint $28, $30, $35 and $50 per M\n  $4.50 per M\n $3.50 per M\n $4.00 per M\n  $3.00 per M\n $7*00 per M\n $6.00 per M\n  Free Delivery  In  Clt)*\nPrice, ire subject to 3% Dlicount for caah with order.\nW.W.Powell Co., Ltd.\nNo.  1 XXX Coast  Shingles\nNo. 2 XXX Coast  Shingles\nNo. 1 XXX Local Shingles ...\nNo. 2 XXX Local Shingles\t\nNo. 1 Idaho White Pine Lath .\nNo. 2 Idaho White Pine Uth .\nWe Pay 9% Bales Tax      \u2014     \u2014\nPHONE 178\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nSIRDAR,  B.C., July  3\u2014Mr*.  James\nPucueso, who hu been vlaltlng\nfriends and relatives at Trail and\nRossland, returned io ber, home laat\nireek, accompanied by ber Utile\nniece. Evelyn. Cooper, who will apend.\nthe  next  month   hart.\nSirdar softball playera; Journeyed\nup to Creaton on Sunday to play\nagainst the Pine Rata and returned\nthe  victor  by a 26-4 score.\nMr. and Urs. k. D. Bridges and\nMlss Bridges, Mrs. Kealy and Mlss\nHealey all of Cranbrook. and Mrs.\nCory and Mlas Jane Cory of Hamilton, Ont., spent the July 1 holiday\nhere, guests of Mr. arw) Mrs. James\nPascuzso.\nMrs. T. Rogers was a visitor et\nCreston on Saturday, attending tbe\nsports sponsored by  the K.Pa.\nA. Ooodwln was a business visitor\nat Creaton on  Monday.\nSam Cherbo of Sirdar left for\nWinnipeg by bicycle ' via Calgary.\nHe expects to create a record by\ndoing the dlstence IA seven and a\nhalf days. Prom Winnipeg he may\nproceed through United States. He la\n| using the aame bicycle as he used ln\n| his fast run to Cranbrook a ahort\nwhile ago.\nI John Webb end Ut. Perry bf Calgary, and Mlas Perry of Victoris.\nj were Sunday visitors at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. Jsmes Wilson, proceed -\ni ing to Calgary.\n! Mr. and Mrs- New*]] of Boise.\nIdaho, were buslneaa visitors at\nAtbara on Saturday, proceeding to\nNelson the same dsy,\nAdtm Roberteon, principal of tba\nschool here, returned to his honpe In\nCreeton after the. eloelng of the\nschool  for the summer holldsys\nMlas Daisy Rogers, waa the only\none trying for entrance st the examination center in Wynndel this\nyear.\nMra. P. Cherbo and daughter,\nUlss Lena, are at preeent is crenbrook, where Mike is confined to\nhospital.\nA. C. Whitehousa of the department of the interior water branch\npassed through here on his way to\nNelson and the Slocan district.\nAlec Perry of Tahk. wss a weekend\nholiday vlaltor at -the home of- Mr.\nand   Mrs.   Jamea   Wilson.\nMlss Owen Wilson returned-to her\nhome on Wednesday, after spending\na few days at the home of Mr, and\nMra. J. E. Van Aekeren.of Canyon.\nA caravan containing 15 residents\nof Saskatchewan are stopping off\n[for a short while on their way to\n.the   Cariboo.\n| Mike Cherbo Is at present an inmate of the Bt. Eugene hospital,\n! Cranbrook, where he hu undergone\n1 an operation for Appendicitis.\n, Pat McDonald and party of the\nbridge crew* stationed here were at\nCranbrook during the weekend.\nCarlo LavarelH wu at Tahk during\nthe week, appearing u witness ln\nthe reoent case of theft at Sirdar\nMlu Prances and Sylvia Talarlco\nwbo have been attending school st\nCreston have arrived to spend the\nsummer vacation  at their home.\nwhile? You've oeen in that Toron\nto library slnoe the summer holidays\nand now you are planning to go to\nwork at the beginning of the New\nYesr And, dear perhapa tbat Wood-.\nLman girl needs this money.\"\n\"Yeah, that's what I say. And\nmaybe .abe wouldn't,hava such high\nIdeas of reform- Gee. It'll soon be so\na fellow can't go to the library\nfor a book without listening to a\nlecture on Sbakesp*\u00bbre or something, when like at not all he wanta\nis 2$ne Grey's latest western.'' Although .teddy wsa only three years\nyounger than Elleabeth she thought\nhim \"ren'ly quite young and undignified.\"\n' \"Well, Teddy, lf yon must uu\nsucl. Juvenile language, please try\nto refrain .from broadewtlng lt to\nthe whole town. And mother, u\nfor Jean Woodman needing the money\n1 want to earn my own living too,\nand not always bave you and dad\nsupporting me. Besides, it's tbe work\nI love. Oh, mother, you can't understand how anxious I am to begin.\nJeap Woodman can do anything,\nshe ..can get another poaitlon. But\nmy chief ambition ts fo be a librarian. Of course If you srould rather\nI didn't \"\n\"No, but I thought .\"\n\"Well, that's settled. I'll start\nco'lecting information for mj talka\nright away. By the way, dad, when\ndoes  the library board  meet?''\nElizabeth's father, a tall, broad-\nshouldered, elderly gentleman whose\nlively, intelligent expression would\nreveal to the onlooker why he wu\nregarded, in Kmhurst. u the moat\ncapable and trustworthy banker\nIn the city, had been silent'during\nthe previous conversstlon. With a\ncheerful twinkle In hla blue eyea.\nhe now turned to his eager. Impulsive,   young   daughter.\n\"In a day or two. I ahould uy,\nElizabeth. So It's all settled, It it?\nWell., well, I'm glad that you'M going to make use of riur MoOUl\n\u2666isintn*?. I'm proud 'o think 'hat\nyou want to go ahead and mak* a\na'ucceu of it. _iut Join you let tnu\nrascally, young brother discourage\nyou. Comt, Ted, drive me to\noffice, and give our ambitious Ml\nlibrarian time to think ovw\nplans.\nAa Mr. Weldon and bts ton left\nthe   house,   Elisabeth   row   to   clear\n\"Jimmy, the young lady doesn't\nwant to hear of our troubles She\nprobably hu many of her own.\"\nWith another glance at the window,\n\"Jimmy, miybe you'd better go to\nthe corner to aee If you can see your\nsister.\"\n\"O K., ma.\" He turned to go.\n\"Walt a minute, Jimmy\" Elizabeth roee unsteadily. \"Thank you\nso much for your hospitality, and. 1\nhope your daughter finds a vacancy.\nOood-bye,\" -ahe aald u she left the\nhouse.        \u2022\nJimmy gave her his arm and they\nmade their way up the street. At\nthe corner she left htm, thanking\nhtm for rescuing her from the ori-\noomlng oar. 8he then started for\nhome,\nMother had been right, Jean\nWoodman oertainly needed tbt\nmoney, iw really wu selfish of\nher to hold a poaitlon Just because\nshe Uked the work. But how waa\nshe, Elisabeth, to know that Jean's\nmother wu an invalid and a widow?\nWell, she'd tet Jean take her place\nand she'd stay home for a while\nu mother had suggested. And\nfurthermore, she'd teU Jean aU\nher Ideas. It would be Jean,\nnot EUaabeth. who would tell beautiful, fanciful tales to the wee tots,\nand Interest tbe older onu In the\nwonders of nature and far-away,\nglamorous lands. Jean would open\nup to hungry, barren minds the\nriches or gnrat literature. Jean's\nwould be the great opportunity ahe\nhad longed for. Here ihe wu at\nthe bank. She's tell dad. He'd understand.\n\"Hello, dad. fee coma to find\nout If you have told the board\nthat I wu going to accent the\nlibrarian   position.\"\n\"No. EUaabeth, why do rou uk?\"\n\"I wanted to tell you that I've\ndecided not to tak* the position.\n01 ve it to Jean Woodman, dad.\nShe   needs   It..\"\n\"But - Elizabeth. I thought your\nhoart wu ut on this work. Are\nrou sure and  want to- give it up?\"\n\"Tm. Pm aure. Jean Woodman's\nthe name. You'll be homo at 12:10?\nFin*, ni hurry now and get your\n*tlnntf ready. *Bye.\"\nShe'd done it. The librarian's\nposition now belonged to Jean. She\nsupposed Jean would do It all right.\nful oould be accomplished  without\nstabi Ilea tion.\nEffect of suspension of the world\nconference on the four^power wheat\nconference, In which Canada la Interested vitally, wu uncertain at\nthe moment, but tt appeared likely\ndifficulties of that parley would be\nincreased.\nThe world oonferenoe, launched\nin a spirit of gnat optimum reflected In many opening speeches,\nbegan to falter early when the\nquestion of currency stabilization\nwu raised.\nSTABILIZATION   ESSENTIAL\nInability of the United States and\nPranoe to see eye to eye on the\nquwtlon cauaed efforts by Prime\nMinister Ramuy MacDonald ot\nOreat Britain, chairman of the conference, to have the problem removed temporarily from the agenda.\nPrance, however, maintained stabilization   wu  essential.\nAlmost continuous negotiations\nended yesterday with a further pronouncement on the situation by\nPruldent Rooeevelt who reaffirmed\ndetermination of the* United States\nto have nothing to do with stabilisation   at   present.\nThe president's message uld\namong  other   things:\n\"Revaluation of the dollar In\nterms of American commodities U\nan end from which the government\nand people of the United States\ncannot  be  diverted.\n\"We wish to make this clear. We\nare interested In American commodity prices. What U to be the\nvalue of the dollar ln terms of\nforeign currencies ls not and cannot be  our  Immediate  concern.\"\nThe message aald of restoration of\nprosperity:\n\"The first taak U to restore prlow\nto a level at which industry and.\nabove all, agriculture, can function   profitably   and   efflcently.\n\"The   second   taak   is   to   pr<\nthe   stability   of   this   adjustment.\nonce schleved.**\"\n\"We conceive, therefore, that the\ngreat problems which Justify the\nassembling of nations are u present today and u deserving of exploration u wu the caae a few\nweeka ago; and we find It difficult\nto conceive that the view which lt\nhw been our obvious duty to take\non the minor issues of temporary\natablltzatlon ean ln any way dlm-\nInUh the advisability of such discussion.\"\naway the breakfut dishes. The osnk-   Ahe thought she ought to feel up\nJuly Specials\nSilk   suits  and  dresses  of  washable\ncrepe in pastel Bhades and white. Regularly $10.95, 58.95 and ?5.95.\nNOW\n$8.95 ~ $6.95 ~ $4.95\nKlingtite and Leonard swim suits\nstyled to flatter your figure and fashioned  for perfect ease  in  swimming.\n$1.95\u00b0 $4.50\nPhone 151\nLook for the Neon Sign\ner's family could eully afford\nmaid but whltebalred, home-loving\nMother Weldon disapproved so there\nhtd never been one. Now. u ahe\nwaahed the dishes, and her mother\nbusily polished 'sUvecware and Inspected the table linen. Elisabeth\nchattered excitedly of the forthcoming library work. When the\nhousehold tasks were finished, tbe\ndaughter, after unsuccessfully urged\nher mother to accompany her, joyfully s*t out for a long tramp ln\nthe woods to gather greens for\nChrlatmu.\nElisabeth Weldon wu an arresting\nfigure u she swung briskly along\nthis Deoember morning, jaunty red\nberet and swagger navy-blue coat\naccented the scar et ot her cheka\nand sparkis of her exproulve dark\neyes. The clear, frosty air, tbe\ngolden sunlight glistening on new-\nfallen snow, the cold, ineffable blue\nor thf cldudlus dome of sky, all\nfilled per with a sense of exhilaration\nat their crisp, freah loveliness. For\nthe brig-it winter morning reflected\nher own glad thoughts. With a\nthrill of expectancy she planned for\nhe.-   future   tork.\nThe first of January\u2014not far off.\nShe'd bejin at once to gather -information for her talks Walt until\nshe started telling stories to the\nwee tots. And sae knew bow to te l\nthem, too\u2014hadn't they told her\nso at Toronto? She'd show Ted.\nInside of a month the library would\nbe a different place. Wbat morning\nwould she have for her literature\nclasses?  Wednes\u2014\n\"Look  out I\"\n, A . screeching horn,. a grinding\nof brakes, a quick jerk on her arm.\n--All over \"in a seoond. she found\nherself on tbe curb, shaken and\nbadly   frightened.\n\"That sure wu a cloae call, Mlu.\nDidn't you sw that car? You muet've\nbeen thlnkln' .pretty hard. Msybe\nyou better come home with i\nWill you, Mlu? ju' ukt a-hold\nmy arm. There, that's it. Kow, thla\nwty \"\nElizabeth wu being propelled to\nsards . s small white houu in-\ne \\tttd hy a neat picket fence. It\nwu   \u00bbet   back   from   the   street\nU'd.aUCU     Ut      \u00ab0-U_t.      .hi- . t      Mtea      i\nto   Uie   weak   gir,   it   wemed   _p!ie*_\nPunny bow the path swerved.\nThankful for that steadying ana\naround her waist. Oood thing she\ndidn't hsve to walk boms. Would\nhave had to wait Ihr. a streetcar.\nNone in sight. Never Wu one when\nyou most wanted It, Can't seem to\nfind the step* dtfps xeep 'moving\nGetting dark. But this wu morning. Queer how he. knees ahook.\nSit down and reat *\nWhat had happened? Here ahe wu\nI n a stra nge room Oh, yes, ahe\nremembered. The horn, the hand\nsnatching ber back, the long walk\nto the  little  houae.\nElisabeth glanced about tbe room.\nRer roving eyes caught gllmpau of\nchina on shelves, an o|d grandfather\nclock; a thread-bare otrpet; frayed\nover-stuffed chairs; In the corner an\nold-fubioned organ with many photographs on top. Theo her wandering gain found a withered old woman seated In a wueelchair by the\nwindow And, there, coming through\nthe door, a small boy, (about twelve\nyears old ahe thought!, earring a\nglass  of  water.\nShe took a alp of tbe coo: witer\nthe boy gave her. and then slowly\nrose to a sitting position.\n'To whom do I om ttr Wo?\" the\naaked shakily.\n\"Oh, that's swrlght, mlu. I Jes'\nuw you walkln' along a* if you 4*d-\nn't  e*e   the  car.\"  The   boy - dldnt\nlifted or something. Well, ahe didn't.\nShe only felt an aching wnn of\ndisappointment. But. no, she\nwouldn't whine now. But that wu\nThe only work ahe realty wanted\nto do and she's thrown tt away.\nOh. why be ao silly? Jean could do\nIt Just u weU u she oould, perhapa better, u little Jlmmle had\nuld.    Anyway, lt waa- done.\nInalde of ten minutes she wu\nsitting In an easy chair, a crackling fire ln the grate, and a glass\nof hot lemonade at her elbow.\n\"And,\" she. concluded her story.\nI wont and .told dad. Now the\nboerd will give Jean the job I\ngueu that enda the librarian episode.\"\nHer mother had been listening.\ngiving sympathetic Uttle clucks now\nand then, and reeling exceedingly\nproud of her daughter for giving\nup  her  cherished  desire.\nThe sllenoe that followed the\ncompletion of EUwbeth's story wu\nshattered by a ring at the door.\nBefore either of the two could rise,\nthe door wu flung open, and ln\nwalked a tall, stout man with\nmucb the same features u Mr.\nWeldon. With him came a smiling,\nbrown-haired,   llttle   woman.\n\"Uncle Bob and Aunt Lena I\" When.\nwhere, why, howl Oh. tell me.\nQuick!\" Blrabeth had not aeen her\nuncle and aunt for four years.\n\"When\u2014about ten mlnutu ago.\nWhere\u2014from Ooppertown. Why\u2014\nbecauae we wanted to see you. And\nhow\u2014by train. Now, any more\nquestions, young lady?\" Uncle Bob\nhad the ume humorous twinkle\nIn hta blue eyu u his brother.\nThe women went upetalra and\nElizabeth began to ply ber uncle\nwith    questions.\n\"Why didn't, you tell us? Tou\nalmost gave me heart-fall ure. Really,\nUncle Bob, you ahould have let ua\nknow.\"\n'\"We wanted it to be a surprise.\nBy the wsy. Beth, what are you\ngoing to do now that you have\nfinished   your   schooling?\"\n\"I have nothing ln view. Mother\nwants me to wait awhile but of\ncourse Td Uke to start working\nright away If 1 oould find a Job.\"\n\"Well, young lady, do you still\nremember the plaoe where we live?\nIt'i been four years since you were\nthere snd then only for a week.\nBut maybe' you remember our Uttle\ntown, do you?\"\n\"All I know, la that you and\nAunt Lena live a good many miles\nfrom nowhere, ln the mountslhs\nof B. 0 Tou tre an influential\nmtn  around  there, aren't you?\"\nBefore her uncle bad ttme to\nanswer, hts wife. Mrs. Weldon. and\nTed came in.\n\"I've Just been uktng how much\nshe remembers of B. C. So you\ndon't remember that three-quarters\nof the population of Ooppertown\nere Indians: tiny, hi .rk-eyed youngsten; ftt. flat looted squaws: tnd\ndtrk. grim-mouthed, shallow-cheeked men? Do you know that since\nyou were there we have built a\nschool and library? l-ut fall I\ntook a trip and picked up about\ntwo thouund booka. I dumped\nthem ln the library and wu kinds\nplanning on taking aomeone back\nTlth. me.   Of course i can get some-\n?ne from Nelson or somewhere, but\nhtd sort of hoped you might\nconaept to come batt with me,\nSHubeth.\"\n\"What for, Undo Bob?\" queried\nthe   girl.\n\"Dont be -ao dumb, Us. Uncle\nBob's tbe auperibUhdtSt flf a mining company ln \u2022Ooppertown, and\nAe wants to ttke you bock wltb him\ntm  hit prlvtte secretary  tnd  chief\nadvisor or maybe genertl manager.\"\nTed hod been unusually quiet but\nho now burst out.\n\"No, not quit* thtt* Ted. I\nthought Beth would tike to be my\nlibrarian. Of course, Beth, you'd\nhavo a hard time trying to understand the Indhns at first, but you'd\naoon learn. You'U find the miners'\nwlvu very obliging. They are a\nproud and rather reserved lot, ti-\nthough they haven't much of thew\nworldly possessions, poor things. The\nmining business Isn't very thriving\ntt preeent. WeU, Beth, whtt do\nyou uy? Will you come?\"\n\"Sty. lent thtt good? Whoop*!\nUs wilt htve a swell time tctch\nIng the Indians to read Shake\nspear* Do your reforming ln cop\npertown, sis, they need It more than\nwe do. To think wo may be spared\nthla literary cultivation. Oh! Oh!\nI faint wtth hopel\"\n\"Ted Weldon, stop making ec\nmuch noise, so I can talk. Oh,\nUnele Bob. of couru I'll be glad\nto oome and be Coppertown's librarian. It's a wonderful opportunity.\" Elisabeth rose and went quickly   upstairs.\nOn the following morning, the\nWeldon break fut-table wu again\nthe scene ot a lively discussion. At\nMrt. Weldon slipped \u00bb pltfe of hot\nmuffins before her husband, sho remarked, with a quirt air of pride\nand satisfaction, \"I an} sure EUr-a-\nbeth wilt do very welt- at her work\nltt B. C. She ts ao enthusiastic tnd\nfull of Ideas.\"\nAnd thank heaven It's Copper\ntown, not' us, that hu to suffer\nher ideut Ooah, every time\nthink of Lis out there trying to\ncultivate the poor natives, I almost\nlaugh out loud. Pact I would, lt\nI didn't pity the victims so much\nOoeh!\" Ted wu momentarily speech-\nleu tt he enjoyed the fragrant,\nsteaming coffee hla mother placed\nbefore   hlm.\n'Oh, ldeu, mother! I'm going to\ntry my but to Interest thou dour\nminers' wives ln good bookt, and\nnature! I'm going to help thoee\npoverty-stricken people to tpprecl-\nste the besuty' of their surroundings. Just think, there'll be betutlful mountains, tnd glorlcus hikes\nslong steep trslls, snd gorgeous\nsunsets between towering tnow*\nctpped peaks. Imagine my Saturday morning classes of little Indian\nchildren I Oh. it's going to be wonderful 1\" Elisabeth's eyu shops u\nshe spoke.\nWith that humorous quirk to hit\nmouth which showed he wu secretly\npleased cr amused, Elisabeth's father\nnow sddressed her. \"Planning a*\nexuberantly u ever, eh? Well, you\noertainly are a awtft young ltdy.\nAfter you duhed into my offlos\nyesterdsy morning with that wild,\ndetermined look, I thought you'd\nthrown awty thtt famous 'opportunity you were telling ut about.\nBut now here you are with a\nbrand-new one. evidently Juit u\ngood u tbe flrat I'm afraid that\nmotto or yours hu proven Itself\nfalse, thle time.\"\n\"Yes, dad, after I left you yesterday, I thought there wu absolutely\nno future left But now Jean\nWoodman and I both have our\nchance. And, by the wty. I'm\ngoing to write Jetn tnd tell her\nall tbout Coppertown and Its Indians snd miners. We'll be able to\nexchsnge    Ideas.\n\"Tu. dad. thst's t pessimistic old\nproverb I'm fond of quoting. I'm\ngoing to chtnge  It\n' \"Opportunity comu but onoe,\nbut lf you pus it on, It's aure to\ncome again,'\" Ellubeth Weldon\ngladly   announced.\u2014Leanora   Andley.\nCOOL UNDERWEAR\nWart-ei1 weather\nwill make you feel\n-like getting into\nsome cooler underwear. Our stock is\ncomplete of both\ncombination and\ntwo-piece.\nHatchway\nCombinations\n9*j and fl.25\nB. V. D.'s\n$1.25 and ?1.50\nkd#h* . --m\nWatson's Balbriggan Combinations in long or short\nsleeve or in two-piece. ffl OC\nSuit  \u00abP1^J\nSI.00\n91.50\nSilk Combinations\u2014Flesh or White ....\nSilk Combinations\u2014Quality Controlled\nAthletic Shirts\nSVuB^fh       C   a*-**     \u00b0\nMrs. Clever and\nMrs. Thompson Are\nHostesses at Bridge\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nAsk   your   dealer   fcr   McDonald's\nnew pack strawberry Jsm.       (7571)\nFot Rent*--Sixteen furnished rooms\nover Stsrland Theatre. Very \u2014\naonable.   phone   12.\n(7588)\nAlneworth Hot Springs Silver\nliftdge Inn (fully licensed), room\nand meals. Single gia.tw mek;\ndouble IHIO week. Hot mineral\nwater  btth  ln hotel. <70M)\nNEW DENVER. B.~ C. July 5.\u2014\nThomu OtmpbeU tnd E. Alexander\nmotored In (rom Vancouver tnd tre\nguests of Mr* tnd Mrs. C. J. Campbell tt their summer home tt Bosun.\nJ. J. Streit, principal ot the local\nschool has left to spend the holiday at his home tn Kulo.\nMr. tnd Mrt- Pred Burgeu tnd\nson Ross Frederick ot Brllllsnt. were\nweek-end guests at the homo of Mr.\ntnd Mrs. J. B. Matheson.\nD- St. Denla of Slocan City wu a\nSunday visitor in town.\nLeslie Burgeu ot Trail wu the\nweek-end guest of his parents, Mr.\nand  Mrt   8.  Burgeu.\nMlu Alma Smlllie of the local\nscbAol staff, hu left to spend the\nholidays tt her home lo  Nelson.\nMlss Gladys McPherson tnd Mrs.\nC. Kennett tnd Teddle McPherson,\nwere shoppers  in Nelson  Prlday.\nW. Ahler who hu been the guest\not Mrs. J. R. Thompson left for hit\nhome tn Nelson.\nO. Thompson of the Bsnk nf\nMontreal staff tn Trail, formerly at\nNew Denver, spent Sundsy in towu\nrenewing old acquaintances\nH. Hawkins of the Bsnk of Montreal staff in Trail wu a Sunday\nVlaltor ln town.\nWUUam Morrison wu the wukend guest of Harold MacPherson.\nE. Cook of the Slocan Herald and\nVirgil Cook of Sandon, left Sunday\nI for the WhaUhan Lakea. Edge-\nwood, where they will apend the week\ntubing.\nMr. and Mrs. M R Bill tnd Mrs.\nE. Cook motored to Edgewood on\nSundty, going u ftr u the Whatshan Lakes.\nMlu Mtrgery Hamilton who hu\nbeen the guest ot her sister. Mlu\nP. Hamilton of the local hospital\nstaff haa left for her home ln\nCreston.\nMisses Kathryn and Peggy Curtis,\nwho have been guests of Mr. and\nMrt. J. C. Harris of ths Bosun\nranch, havi left for their home ln\nSloctn Clt>\nMlu Ednt Angrlgnon who teaches\nin the Ltrdeau has arrived home\nfor tbe summer holidays.\nAlbert Angrlgnon. teacher tt Deer\nPtrk, is spending the hoUdayt at\nhis home here.        N\nMrs. H- Clever wu a charming\nhostess on Thursday evening when\nahe entertained at three tables of\ncontract. The Invited guests included\n< Mrs. T Flint, Mrs. James Draper,\nMrs. A. Prancla, Mlu N. Aylwln, Mrs.\nH. L. Butchart. Mrs. H. Q. Ounn.\nMn. J. E. Matheson, Mrs. R. B.\nKirk. Mlu M. Oroom, Mlu B. Port-\nberg. Misses Dors. Emma tnd Adeline Clever tnd Mrt. H. Clever. First\nprise wu won by Mrs. H. L. But-\nchart, second Mrt. J. Drtper.\nMrs. J. R- Thompson entertained\ntt bridge recently when her guests\nIncluded Mr ani Mrt J. J. Irwln,\nMr. tnd Mn. L. W Sells. Mr. snd Mrs.\nC. J. Campbell, Mlu Phyllis Campbell tpd C. F. Ntlton, W. Abler,\nDeb snd Bankte Irwln, Mlaws J.\nLandrl.   Connie   and   Dorothy   Sells.\nMn. R. B. Kirk entertained at two\ntables of contract recently in honor\nof MIm M Hamilton of cretton tnd\nthe Misses Curtis ot Blocan City.\nThe guests included Mrs. A. L.\nHarris. Mrs. E. Cook. Mlu K. Harris,\nMlu P. Hamilton, Mtu M. Hamilton,\nMlss Kathryn Curtis, and Mlu P.\nCurtis.\nD. F. McDonald of Revelstoke is\nrelieving in the local vendors In\nthe absence of J. Tingling.\nE. Kennett and W. Clever are\nspending a week at Nakusp Hot\nSprings.\nCrawford Bay People\nMotor to the Coast\nCRAWPORD BAY. B C, July 6\u2014\nMrs Qooch and A. C. Houghton\nleft for the cout by car on Thursday where they wlll meet Mr. Houghton's four children who have been\nattending school there and will .loin\nthem ou a trip up north. Mn.\nPourmier ncoompanled them i-om\nCrawford Bsy to Vancouver, when\nI she will visit hor daughter and\njson-tn-law, Mr and Mrs. T. Uver-\needge  of  thst city.\nMr snd Mrs. jsmes McOregor snd\nthree sons motored ln trom Kimberley  on  Pridsy.\nAlbert Derbyshire motored up\nfrom Blairmore on Saturday accompanied by hit two sons tai Mrs.\nTinllne who will spend the summer\nholldsys  here.\nI    Robert Francis    Is home from his\nJ school ln Vancouver, and will apend\nthe    summer    holldaya    with    his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Francis.\nMist Jtcquu who tiu been teaching school here, hu returned to her\nhome in Vsnoouver, for the summer\nholiday..\nMlu Jacques, school teacher, took\nall h\u00abr pupils for a day's outing\nto Kootensy Bsy, on Wednesdsy.\nThe children plsyed gamu. Before\nleaving Mlsa Jacques took them to\nthe Kootenay Bay store tnd bought\nthem candy ihd oranges.\nStrathcona\nHotel\nThe Ideal Place For\nYour Vacation\nRates Sharply Reduced.\nAll Classes of\nMETAL WORK, LATHI\nWORK. DRILLING, BOR\nING AND GRINDING\nMOTOR REWINDING\nACETYLENE  WELDING\nBENNETT'S LTO\nTENNIS\nRACKETS\nRESTRUNG\nwith   genuine   English\nsheep gut from\n$3.50 to *f8   I)\nJ.HOLLAND\nLeather  \u00abnd   Sportlm  Omxlt ]\nRenwick's\nWill handle your needs In\ncoal and wood in a manner that will give the\ngreatest value for\nyour money.\u2014\nJust Col!\n797\nRENWICK'i\nTRANSFER\nCoal   Wood   Haulla\nLast Times Tonight\n7:30\nJEAN HARLOW\nIn\n\"RED-HEADED\nWOMAN\"\n.  and \t\nTHE DELIGHTFUL\nMUSICAL   ROMANCE I\nOF HAUNTING\nMELODIES\n\"BLUE\nDANUBE\"\nTOMORROW\nYou'll Meet Them\nAll on\n\"ROME\nEXPRESS\"\nA Screen Triumph\nRoaring Through an\nAmazed World!\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1933_07_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0405584","@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":"1933-07-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1933-07-06 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\/1.0405584"}