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BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNINO. JULY 13.1935\nNUMBER N\nLIVE UP TO PARIS PACT IS U. S. A. URGE\nPOLICE BAN THE\nSTRIKE MARCH\nTO THECAPITAL\nStrike Activity Seething in Three of\nProvinces\nSIX CONVICTED\nIN MONTREAL\nHepburn Refuses to\nGive Men Help; No\n* Riots Is Order\nBy tha Canadian Prate\nStrike activity aeethed ln three\nprovlncet ot the Dominion todty u\nbanda ot ttrlkeri from federal relief proje-ctt and welfare lists pre*\nSired to converge on Ottawi with\nemanda for work and wages from\nthe government\nIn Montreil ind Winnipeg relief\ninalcontenti prepired for their trek\naa authoritlei prepired to put down\nany attempt for a muted mtrch on\nthe capital.\nAa alx of a group of \"on-to-Ottawa\" marchen, trreited in Montreal, were convicted of vigrmcy\nand tentenced to two monthi htrd\nlabor, provincial police innounced\nany \"marchen\" leaving that city\nwould be arretted.\nQuebec provincial police aald\nthey had been offered cooperation\nby Ontario authoritlei ln quithing\nany attempted movement on Ottawa.\nHOLD TAG DAY\nSix hundred relief camp desert*\ntrt from tbe pralriee, massed ln\nWinnipeg, prepired to hold in authorized tag day to raise fundi for\ntheir Ottawa trek. The \"march\"\nwu expected to itart thii afternoon,\nfollowing the path taken by ilx\nitrike leaden to Port Arthur early\nIn the week.\nAuthoritlei ln Ottiwt meinwhile\neonferred with roytl Ctnadlin\nmounted police representatives to\nconsider preparations to deil with\n.ny body of mtrchen which might\nreach the city. Ottawa would not\ntolerate a repetition of the Regina\nDominion day rioti, it wai agreed.\nIn Toronto Premier Mitchell T.\nHepburn of Ontario made it pltin\njnarchert would receive no aid\nfrom hit government He declared\nthe propoaed trek ot weatern deserters wat not fetiible.\nrour more men Involved* ln the\nfatal Regina rlott were committed\nfor trial yeiterday, bringing the\ntotal to 34.\nOther centers were generally\nquiet\n2 WATERFRONT\nMEN ARE BEATEN\ni       . \t\nHaulted From Taxi;\nNThreatsManyin\nVancouver\nVANCOUVER, July 12 (CP) -\nDick Schreeberger and George\nVtcth, waterfront worken, were\nbeaten by longshore itrlken picketi early today. Schreeberger waa\ntreated in hotplttl for a split note\nand face injuries.\nSchreeberger told polict thtt he\nand Vtcth hired a taxicab to take\ntbem to Btlltntyne pier. The drivn*,\nha laid, pulled up on Heitley Ave.\nand tald to a gang of pickets, \"all\nright boya.\"\nThe two were dragged from the\ncab and attacked. They finally fled\nand etctped.\nGeorge Fitigerald, taxlcab driver,\nMd police two men who hired him\naa firet instructed him to go to the\n100 block, Powell itreet where he\nwu lurrounded by itriken who\nthreatened him with violence If he\ndrive atrike-breaken to city docks.\nPlcketa cut ropea on a truck-load\nof heavy rolli of paper causing the\nrolli to drop to the roadway.\nA ahip'a officer reported that his\nTerandii. bad been marked with i\ncrou, and aprlgi of holly, lymbolic\nof a funeral, hid been strewn ilong\nthe drivewty to hli home.\nA number of witerfront worken\nnported the receipt of telephoned\nthreat*.\nGas Bombs and Bayonets Used to Halt\nStrikers1 Demonstration Held, Tacoma\nGUARD.' MOTORS* SS&T*\nTRUCK IS VICTIM\nOF MYSTERY FIRE\nSeveral Men Badly.\nBeaten in Clash\nWith Troops\nBATTLE IS OVER\n4-BLOCK AREA\nGuards Halt Attempt\nto Parade Into the\nLumber District\nL\noweit Tenderer\n\"   Gett Bridge Work\n' VKJrORIA, July 12 (CP)-Robert\nBllton, Vlctorit, wu the lowest\ntenderer for reconstruction of the\nSan Juan river bridge, which wu\nwuhed away lut winter during the\nflood teuon, lt wu announced by\nHon. John Hart, acting mlnlater of\npublic works, when blda were\nopened here Fridiy. The tender wu\ni.\u00bb2l-l.\nOther bldi were u follows: Renfrew Logging compiny, Port Renfrew, J14.246.4S; Watton tnd Stew*\nSt, Vancouver, \u00bbJ,_-0.9_; Vlctorit\nle Driving compiny, Ltd., $8,-\n850.81; Vancouver Pile Driving tc\nContracting company, Ltd., $7,-\n\u202200-H, and W. Greenlett, Vaneou*\nVar t\u00bb,\\KM.\n7\t\nCol. Dreyfui Dead\n\/PARIS, July 12 (AP)\u2014Colonel\n{Alfred Dreyfui, chltf figure ef\nwnt of tht moit itnttflontl tnd\nanomtntout trial* In ill Frtnch\nhlitory, died todiy. Ht wu 71\nTACOMA. July 12 (AF) \u2014 A\nNttiontl Gutrd truck wu Mt en\nfire and burned during the con*\nfutlon of tht tlmbtr ttrlkira dt*\nmonitrttlon tt twtlfth itrttt and\nPiclflo tvenue tonight. Tht truck\nwu deitroyed by thl timt firemen\nreiehid tht icene.\nConflicting nporti wtrt that\ntht truck htd btcomt Ignited by a\nprematura thot from \u2022 tur gtt\ngun and thtt It hid bten tet on\nfire by a demonstrator.\nStreet fighting broke out when\nabout 1000 dtmonitrtton tried te\nruth put nttiontl gutrdtmtn ind\nparade acrou tho 11th itreet\nbridge Into tht lumbtr dlitrlct\nSeveral mtn wtre reported\nbtdly beaten.\nTht federal building tnd nurby\noffice bulldlngt toon filled with\ntttr gu ind i mtuitokt gu. Tht\nhtnd-to-htnd battling outtldt wu\ntoon itopped by the gu.\nOVER FOUR BtOCKS\nFighting wu In progrm for\n\u2022tvtnl mlnutu In a four-block\narea.\nThe center of actlvitiu ihlfted\nback to the bridge end tfter the\ntruck fire ihd the crowd momen-\ntirily grew larger, both in ttrike\ntymptthl-era end ipectaton. Police\nand guardsmen were able to keep\ntraffic linei open intermittently.\nSuddenly lomeone in the mob\nthrew i tetr gu bomb it the State's\nsoldien in llth itreet\nThe wind wu blowing towards\nthe guardsmen. A tall khaki-clad\ntrooper pitched the bomb back\nacrou the itreet into the foremott\nof the demonstrttora. iuit it the\nacrid yellow furnet begin ipread*\nIng.\nStriken returned It and the mob\ncheered at the impromptu gime of\nfootball which followed until all of\nthe KU wu discharged.\nThe nitionil guard troopi ln the\nfighting were companiet B. C and\nD. fint battalion, 161st inftntry, all\nfrom Spokane.\nBAYONET8 BARED\nThe crowd had filled a itreet at\nllth itreet when tuddenly tbout\n50 national guardsmen, with bayon*\nett bared and pointed before them,\nadvanced on them slowly, pushing\nthem back acrou the itreet\nOne of the itriken, a youngster,\ncarrying an American flag, was the\nlut to move. He retreated tlowly.\nwaving the flag, u the bayonets\nnearlv touched him.\nLoud boot and relit of diup-\nproval. iuch u \"Why don't you\ntroopen go home, io we cin work?\"\nsounded from the mined crowd.\nThe itreet wu cleired and tuddenly an army truck, loaded with\ntroops, rushed through, heading for\n15th itreet in the induitrial district\nAt 0:15 pjn., tdditionil national\nguard troopi irrived. and about 100\nof them formed double llnei.\nOfflcen. meanwhile, had been\ncirculating about in the crowds giving wimingi, \"you'll get hurt if\nvou ittT tround.\" md \u2022 Urge number of children were moved out. The\ncrowd wti now being pushed up\nllth itreet\nOne well-dretied youth, i ttrike\ntympathirer. refused to go md he\nwu wrestled tbout by two guardsmen md finally thrown ln a national\ngutrd car.\nTwo more tear gas bombe were\nexploded on a itreet clearing it a\nblock each way and the entire\nentry to the federal building wu\nnow clear.\nNine national guard trucks arrived, and in columns three trucks\nwide followed the walking nationil\nguardsmen u they cleared the\nttreett.\nPin Swallowed 66\nYears Ago Removed\nby an Operation\nFORT WORTH, Texet, July 12\n(AP)\u2014Slsty-ilx yun age, Alllo\nGarnas iwtllowid t pin.\nA pain In htr tldt rectntly\nprompted hir to consult a phyilclin. Tht doctor lincid and found\nthe pin.\nOrangemen Take\nShelter in Roman\nCatholic House\nTORONTO, July 12 (CP)-When\nrain pelted down on them, the Fermanagh boyi' band broke ranki in\nthe Orange pinde here end took\nihelter.\nWhere?\nUnder the portico of St Joseph's\nRoman Catholic college residence.\nGinger Rogtn locSi eo.- u a\ncucumber In thli uuonal thot\nbut thtrt tht rmmbltnct indt,\nuyi tht office boy, whe't hoping\nytiterdiy'l torrid weather will\n\u2022tay with ut over tomorrow to he\ncm Mt tomt ot Ginger's counter-\npirti it tiktildt pirk, whin Nelion md dlttrlet flock u thl temperatun soars.\nCYCLES ACROSS\nTHEDOMINIOH\nVANCOUVER, July 12 (CP)-A\n20-year-old .obleu farmhmd from\nNovt Scotlt hu i bit of idvice to\npau on to ambitious young Ct-\nnadlans who are unemployed and\ndetire to keep up their morale and\ngood hetlth. ,,,      _\nHit advice la\u2014Do tomethlng. He\nTwo monthi ago tomorrow Hubert Smith of Amherat, N.S, packed\nup a few belonging! including some\nblankets md a tent, packed them\non his bicycle tnd tttrted out\nTodty he arrived here, ruddy-\nfaced, happy md in the best of\nhealth after cycling 3750 miles over\nCanadian highwaya with hit 80-\npound load. ....   . \u201e,\n\"I feel fine,\" grinned Hubert. \"I\nhad no terious trouble on the roid\nand alept out every night. I'm taking the boat to Vancouver Island\nand plan to travel over there for a\nfew dayi.\"\nDuring the trip, which cost approximately $50, he purchased his\nmeals wherever convenient md\ncamped when night set ln. The expense he expects to offset by working during harvesting time on the\nreturn journey which he will start\nJuly 31.\t\nBetter Times in\nEngland Says Sir\nEdward W. Beatty\nMONTREAL. July 12 (CP)-Con-\ndltioni ln Grett Britain have greatly\nImproved in the opinion of Sir Edward W. Beatty, preiident of the\nCtnadlan Pacific railway, who returned home from England today.\n\"The confidence la the future\nthere it more thtn wtrrtnted by the\nprogress thtt country hu mtde,\"\nhe slid. \"There It the greitest good\nwill towtrd Cinada In England.\nFined for Refusal\nto Assist Folic*\nTWO KILLED AND\ntO INJURED IN\nBELFUT RIOTS\nBattle of the Boyne\nCelebration Has\nIts Fireworks\nPOLICE FIRE INTO\nTHE RIOTING MOB\nOrangemen Criticize\nAttempts to Stir Up\nReligious Trouble\nBy STEPHEN WILLIAMSON\nAuoclated Pratt Foreign Staff\nBELFAST, Northern Irelind,\nJuly 12 (AP)-Uliter'i gay uie-\nbratlon of the 245th annlveraary\nef tht bittlt ef Boyne, became\nrlotui afttr tundown whtn two\nptrtom wtrt thot dud and 40\nwounded.\nThe dead are Edward Wlthen\nand  Mn. Margaret Rodgera, 29.\nShooting  begin again  In tha\nitreeti ef Belfut after police, following an hour's stiff bittlt with\nrioters In which gunflrt crackled\nand stones wert thrown, gilned\ncontrol of tht tltuttlon.\nThe trouble beam with itonlng\nat a Scottish bank whleh participated In the demonstration.\nA record number of Orangemen\nin full regalia, their loyalist districts ablaze with bunting, participated in commemoration! of the\nhistoric bittle for protettmtltm.\nMra. Margaret Rodgen   28, wu\nihot in the abdomen md died quickly. Mn. Mary Lang, alio tbot ln\nthe abdomen, area reported in critl-\nidition.\npolice, who fired time after\ninto the crowd along York\nitreet, an extension of Royal avenue, Bellut't main thoroughfare,\nmanaged to restore order after an\nhour of ttlff rioting.\nA number of resolutions pasted\nby the Orangemen included plets\nthtt Protestanti resist propaganda\nagalnit their ftlth md criticism of\nattempt! to itir up religioui trouble!.\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy tht Cinidlin Preu\nToronto mlnee\u2014Irregularly lower.\nNew York\u2014Stocks cloted higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat down ilightly.\nLondon\u2014Btr illver lower; copper, lead md zinc unchuged; tin\nhigher.\nNew Yorlj\u2014Bar illver ud tin\nlower; export copper higher; lead\nud zinc unchmged.\nMontreil\u2014Silver lower.\nNew York\u2014Cotton higher; rubber\nud coffee lower; lugir unchtnged.\nNew York\u2014Cintdlu dollir unchuged it 98 13-19.\nWOMAN BEATEN\nAND ROBBED\nVANCOUVER. July 12 (CP) -\nConvicted In police court of refuting to tssist police when called\nupon to do io during the longihore\nriot Junt 18. Jobn Roblnton, garage\noperator, wu fined five dollira by\nMigistrate Mackenzie Matheton,\nwho wtrned him thtt he might hivt\nbeen punished by i Jill term.\nRACING BODY INCORPORATED\nOTTAWA. July 12 (CP)-Notlce\nof Incorporation of the .Prairie\nThoroughbred Breeder! It Ricing\nissoclition, Winnipeg, Is given ln\nthe current luue of thi Canada\nVANCOUVER, July 12 (CP)\u2014Mn.\nP. C. Pink wu badly beaten by two\nmen today, robbed of her purse\nwhich contained a imall amount ot\nmoney, ud left lying on the ground\nln an unconscious condition.\nMn. Pink wis itandlng at the intersection of Renfcew itreet ud\nBroadway when a truck containing\na number of men drove uo beside\nher. Two of them jumped from the\ntruck and attacked her, escaping ln\nthe vehicle with their companions.\nVICTORIA, July 12 (CP)\u2014Mn.\nMirv Ellen Owen, widow of Charlu\nN. Owen ud one of the clty'i bett\nknown old timen, died yesterday tt\nthe family ruldence, Woodstock av*\nenue.\nReform Watchword of the\nStevens' Reconstruction\nParty, Will Serve Youth\nSTEEL HELMETS\nARE DISSOLVED\nKARLSRUHE, Germany, July\n12 (AP)\u2014The ministry of the Interior todiy dlitolvid 45 groupt\nof Stttl Htlmttt, tht Germtn\nveterani orginlzitlon, on chtrges\nof subversive ttndtnclu.\nPLUG DYKES IN\nHANROWSECTION\n778,000 People Are\nStill in Danger\nFrom Floods\nHANKOW, Chlnt, July 13 (Saturday) (API\u2014A breach In the dykes\nprotecting Hankow from the flooded Yang&e river was closed after\nfeverish efforts early today, but\nauthorities laid the city of 778,000\nwas still in dinger.\nDispttchet trom northwestern\nHupeh indicated appalling lou of\nlife md dutructlon in the Yangtze's\nrampage, and Chlnue advlcea from\nPeiping said much of western Shantung province wu buried under 10\nfeet of water. .    _\nReports from Lachokow, In Hupeh.. uld 200 peraona -were dad.\nIOOO houset destroyed and 10.000\npersoni homeleu Chactlen, 60 milei\njouth of Ichang, wu reported submerged, with few* families surviving.\nChanges Made in\nthe Police Force\nVICTORIA, July 12 (CP)-With\nthe isiuuce of orden in council\ntodty, eight new ippointmentt to\nprovincial government lervice were\ninnounced, md three discharges reported.\nMoat of the appointments were to\nthe provincial police staff. These\ntre u followi: P. Kelsberg, con-\nittble at Prince George; H. Parker, constable at Mluion; W. A.\nSmedley, constable it Burntby; W.\nMiddleton. constable at Prince Rupert; C. J. Waddell, constable at\ntyilliims Like, md W. G. Bailey,\nconstable at Tort St John.\nDischirgu from the provinciil\npolice force ire u follows: Con-\nStable G. A. Wymtn of Fernie; T.\nM. Brltton of Kimberley, and A. T.\nEagel, of Princeton.\nAppointment of Charlee Derwent\nPogson, of Port Essington, u stipendiary magistrate for the county\nof Prince Rupert alao wu unoun-\nced.\nWalter Ernut Corry wu appointed assistant field engineer, in\nt temporary ctpicity, ln ihe water\nrights bruch of the government\ntervice in Vlctorli.\t\n64 Earth Shocks\nSANTIAGO, Chile, July 12 (AP)\n\u2014Earthquakes, which have continued 48 houn and included 84 distinct ihockt, were reported today\nfrom Copiapo.\nGENERAL LANGTON DIES\nTORONTO, July 12 (CP)\u2014Brig.-\nGen. J. G. Langton, general manager of the Toronto harbor commission since 1928, died today at bis\nsummer ruldence at Bala. OnL,\naccording to word received here.\nMORE THAN 300 CANDIDATES ARE IN\nFIELD; OF THESE 148 ARE LIBERALS\nMore than 200 candidates have been nominated for the Dominion\nelection! expected in September. A turvey by The Cutdiu Prest of\nnomination Hiti it party hudquarten lndicatu those seeking office at\nthe election will far outnumber the 631 in the field at the 1030 election.\nThe Liberal party hu nomlntted 148 candidates,' the Coniervative\nparty 80 and the Cooperative Commonwetlth Federation 77\u2014a total of\n309. The new party heeded by Hon. H. H. Steveni, former minister of\ntrade md commerce, announced the Intention to place candidates in all\nthe dominion's 245 riding!.\nFollowing li the lineup to date:\nProvince:\nNova Scotia\nPrince Edward Island ...\nNew Bruniwick\t\nQuebec   -\nOntario\nMultoba  \t\nSatkitchtwin\t\nAlbtrta  _....\nBrltlth Columbia ,\nYukon  __.\n(Seatt)\n(12)\n(4)\n(10)\n(89)\n(82)\n(17)\n(21)\n(17)\n(18)\n( 1)\nCona.\n1\nS\n0\n4\n48\nI\n15\n1\n2\n0\nLib.\nS\n4\n1\n5\n70\n14\n12\n15\nIS\n1\nCCF.\n0\n0\nTotal     (286) 80 148 77\nWhllt tht number of letli will be the ume\u2014245\u2014the allocation\nwill be different from the 1930 election. Under the Representation act\nof 1933, the number of constituency ln Alberta lnereued one and British\nColumbia two. New Bruniwick, under the act, lott one ud Nova Scotia\ntwo..,''\nUniformity in Tax;\nProbe of Monetary\nProblem Is Plan\nTORONTO, July 12 (CP)-Wllh\nreform ii ltt watchword, thi man*\nIfuto of tht ntw Reconstruction\nparty, embodying a 15-polnt program with propouli designed to.\ncarry It out wu issued by Itl\nluder, Hon, H. H, Stevens hert\ntodty. Sweeping propouli dialing\nwith ill phases of Canada's economic tnd aoclal difficulties art put\nforwird by tht fourth party.\nYouth muat have ltt chince to\n\u2022ecure remunerative work, and to\nthli tnd Mr. Steveni would establish meant whereby employment might be found on tha farm,\nIn the mlnu, the forests and other\nInduitrlil activities. The manifesto propose! uniformity in ttxttion,\n\u2022nd with thit tht taxttlon on tht\nIndlviduil operations of unit\/existing within ltrgt corporations.\nMr. Stevens will, he uid, investigate the whole monetary problem.\nHe promises vigorous implementation of the recommendations of the\nprice spreads commiuion; liquidation of ihe national debt in 25 yean;\nexpansion of public works; a national housing scheme with or without the cooperation ot financial institutions. He deals with labor, the\ntariff, which he would reduce on\nagricultural  implements  ud  textiles, the rallwaya problem, priion\nreforms and war veterans.\n\"I do no; deny certain measures\nhive been proposed, ud in some\ncases adopted, that have elements\nof helpfulness in them; but there\nhas been no clur determination by\neither ot the two major parties to\ngrapple with the underlying causes\not our troublu,\" the manifesto declares. Proposals of the new party,\nhe believes, would ruult in tuch\ndefinite md immediate Improvement, as would rapidly relieve acute\ndistress.\nThis party ls not concerned with,\nnor wiu it indulge in, as far it cm\ncontrol, personal recrimination or\nwhat it commonly known u mud-\nslinging,\" the manifesto states. \"We\nare concerned only with presenting\nour views and securing fair consideration of them.\"\n(Full text on Page 3)\nToronto Student\nIs Crash Victim\nBassano, Aita., juiy 12 tcpi-r\nJohn* G. Nicholson, 19-year-old university of Toronto student, was killed and his companion J. Jeffries. 20,\nwas cut about the face near here\nlast night when the automobile in\nwhich they were travelling to California overturned on the highway.\nBassano is 75 milu southeast of\nCalgary.\nNicholson died ln hospital from\nInternal injuries two houn after\nthe accident, believed caused by\nloose gravel and a flat tire. Jeffries, also a Univeraity of Toronto\nstudent, was driving the car, owned\nby Nicholson, at the time of the\nmishap.\nThe students were en route to Lot\nAngeles for a vacation.\nWoman Secretary\nFaces Charge of\nTheft of $31,000\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont, July 12\n(CP)\u2014Charged with theft of $31,000\nfrom the Niagara Falli Building,\nSavings and Loan association. Miss\nIsabella Benson, former tecretary*\ntreasurer of the association, today\nwas committed for trial by Magistrate J. B. Hopkins.\nQuake in Peru\nLIMA, Peru, July 12 (AP)\u2014A\nttrong iirth tremor rocktd Tru*\nJlllo, north of Lima, at 12:40 a.m.\ntodiy. Tht ihock, luting 40 ucondi, ctused no dimtgt but created wldupread panic,\nStevens' Plan\nIs No Solution\nSo Declares Leader\nofC. C.F.;Says\n. Action Late\nPOWER FIRMS SPENT\n$300,000 IN HOLDING\nCOMPANIES' BATTLES\nWASHINGTON, July 12 (API-\nFive mlnutet' invutigatlng today\ninformed the senate's new lobby\ncommittee that power companies\nspent more than $300,000 In battling\nagainst abolishment of their holding companlu.\nPlunging into the Inquiry with\nan abruptness that amazed even\nmemben of the committee, Chairman Black (D., Ala.) Kulckly loosed\na broadside ot questions that\nbrought calmly emphatic replies\nfrom one witness ud u \"I don't\nremember\" from another.\nCALIFORNIANS REFUSE\nUNLOAD A I. C. CARGO\nSAN PEDRO. Cal., July W (AP)-\nThe local waterfront today gained\nfint contact with the Vancouver\nlongshore strike boycott when local\nlongihoremen declined to discharge\ncargo from the British coaster\nKingsley, In from British Columbia\nports. It wu Indicated that the\nKingsley will remain here until\nthe Vmcouver tituition is settled.\nTORONTO, July 12 (CP)\u2014Tbe\nStevens' \u25a0 party platform consists\nvery largely of petty, tuperficiil reforms which offer no solution for\nCansda's problems\u2014md even the\nreforms it advocated are incapable\nof being carried out under our existing economic set-up,\" said J. S.\nWoodsworth, M. P., Winnipeg north\ncentre and Dominion luder ot the\nC. C. T., after reviewing the \"Reconstruction party\" manlfuto Issued\ntoday by Hon. H. H. Stevens.\nThe C. C. F. luder attacked Mr.\nStevens' record and uid, \"if Mr.\nStevens has known tor five yun\nwhat he professes to know now, ht\nshould have resigned from the Bennett government long ago. During\nthat time he ut at the right hmd\nof a government which repeatedly\nblocked the very reforms he now\nadvocates.\"\nReferring to the Buk ot Canada,\nMr. Woodsworth uid the C.C.F.\nparty had asked for an amendment\nnatonalizing the bank at the last\nsession. \"If Mr. Stevens wu in favor of this, and he says now he is,\nwhy did he remain tight-lipped and\nsupport the Bennett government?\"\nOn the quution'of monetary reform Mr. Woodtworth uld the Stevens manifesto was \"beautifully\nvague.\"\nHULL BELIEVES\nINSANCTIIYOF\nPEACETREATY\nTension in Europe Is\nEased by British\nStatement\nU. S. FLYERS JOIN\nETHIOPIAN FORCE\nMore Troops Massed\nin Italy for the    ',\nForeign Service\nBy The Auoclitid Prew\nLONDON\u2014Strain abroad tutd\nby foreign itcrettry'i moderate\nspeech, Britain tacklu Italo-Eth-\nlopltn crisis anew.\nPARIS\u2014Piul Du Barrier, for*\nmer U.S. commercial pilot reporta\n12 Amerlcin filers slgntd to fight\nfor Ethioplt.\nADDIS ABABA-Ethlopla glvu\nHubert Julian, Htrltm't \"Black\nEagle,\" Job undtr ilr dtpartmtnt\nROME - Offlclala, prtu uy\nBrltlih foreign lecrettry'i ipttch\nclarifies tltuttlon; mora troopi\nmut fer African lervice.\nGENEVA - Lugue ttlll hopet\nconciliation may luccttd.\nMONTREAL\u2014 Jtpan't ambit-\nudor of Germtny uyi Ttkyo'i Interest In Ethiopia only commercial.\nPORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad \u2014\n600 negroes protut Italy's \"pre*\nposed Invulon\" of Ethiopia.\nHULL CALLS FOR PEACE\nWASHINGTON. July 12 <AP)-\nWlth m eye toward tha Italo-\nEthiopian dispute. Secretary Hull\ntonight proclaimed America'! belief\nln the unctity of the Kelloga-Brimd\nPetce pact as an instrument for preventing hostllitiea throughout tha\nworld.\nIn a clear-cut itatement made in\nresponse to inquiries as to the definite policy of this government toward the Afro-European crista. Hull\ndeclared in effect that the United\nStatei looked to both Italy ud Ethiopia to .live up to their obllgi tlona\nundu tbe pact of Paris. '\nEvery Effort Being Made lo Gel\nJobs for Anyox Mining Workers\nFirst Citizen\nFRANK H. JACKSON\nRttvt of thl village municipality of Cruton, or chilrmin of thl\nvilligt commiuion. Ht ll now\nthird vlci-prtildtnt of the Wut\nKooteniy Central Ftrmtra lnitltute ai will.\nSuspended Terms\nin \"United Order\nof Nails\" Cases\nVICTORIA, July 12 (CP) \u2014 Rupert A. G. Wtlktr, convicted of\nwounding Wilbert Linditrom during an Initiation ceremony of\ntht to-ulltd \"Unlttd Order of\nNills\" wu glvtn ont yur't tut*\nKended tentence by Judge A. M,\nlirper In county court today.\nSuspended    ttnttnett    of    tlx\nmonthi ttch wtrt glvtn to Rolmd\nBurritt and  Donald Wood, convicted on the umt chirgt.\nCANNERIES MAY\nREMAIN IDLE\nSEATTLE, July 12 (AP)-Unleu\nsome uttlement Is reached ihortly,\nPuget Sound salmon canneries will\nremain idle this year, a payroll\nof thousands ot doilan will be lost\nto the state ud canned ulmon\nbroken will look to Alaska and the\nColumbia river for their principal\nseasonal supply of the popular food\nflah.\nRumor is Consolidated\nMay Take Over and\nWork Properties\nVICTORIA, July 12 (CP)-Bverr\neffort il being mede by the minu\ndepartment of the provincial gov**\nernment to abaorb the 1000 men who\nwill be thrown out of work -when\nIht Granby Mining h Smelting compmy shuts down at the end of thia\nmonth, It wai turned at the legiilative buildings today. The minu\ndepartment is now contacting the\nother mines throughout the prov*\nInce with a view to absorbing a\nlarge portion ot thote who will be\nout of work unleu aome provision\nls made for them.\nIt waa learned that a number of\nthe minu have been finding difficulty to secure good technical men\nud skilled labor of certain types,\nand that theae mlnu mty be tble\nto take over tome of thoie thrown\nout by the Granby shutdown.\nHowever, more encouragement\nwu given to the sltuitlon whtn tn\nunconfirmed rtoprt wu received\nthtt tht Contolldtted Mining A\nSmelting company wu consider-\nIng taking ovtr the Granby plent,\nTo whet extent the negotlttlom\nhive been cirried en, If tny, could\nnot be determined, but more definite newt ii expected before the\nend of the menth, whleh mty\nmian thit tht 1000 employees it\ntht Granby with thalr 2000 da*\npendents miy not hava to be\nthrown out on the labor market\nCaverhill Going\nto South Africa\nVANCOUVER. July 12 (CP)-\nChlef Poretter P. Z. Ctverhlll will\nrepresent Brltlth Columbli it tht\nTriennial Imperial Forutry con*\nvention to be held In South Africa\nshortly, lt wu learned ln forestry\ncirclet here today.\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON   _..  47 IS\nVictoria  _ _.-  88 IS\nNtntlmo   \u201e   M SS\nVmcouver    84 78\nKamlooos      92 84\nPrince George i  52 84\nEstevan Point  84 62\nPrince Rupert -  88 80\nAtlln   42 80\nDawson. Y.T.  42 SO\nSuttle      80 84\nPortland. Ore.   84 84\nSm Francltco ......-____._ 82 78\nSpoktne      84 83\nLos AngelM    82 84\nPenticton _.__  82 \u2014\nVemon      82 \u2014\nGrmd Porkt _ _ _ 87 88\nKulo    48 \u2014\nCrmbrook    47 88\nCalgary    48 SO\nEdmonton    82 8}\nSwift Current   44 88\nPrince Albert  88 80\nSaskatoon   82 82\nOu'Appelle     80 80\nWinnipeg   88 80\nMoote Jaw  _B2, 88\nNelson and vicinity\u2014Continued,\nfine, decidedly warm.\n :\t\n\t\n \u25a0\n\t\n ,\n\u2022?AQI TWO*\nHASKINS AGAIN\nHEADSGROWERS\nORGANIZATION\nMembers of the Tree\nFruit Board Are\nRe-elected\nMrs. Godfrey and\nMrs. Lakes Victors\nExpretslng thtlr approval ot tha\nwork carried out last year by the\nBritiah Columbia tree fruit board,\nfruit growera of tht Interior reelected the 1834 board, a count ot\nvotei at Vernon tonight revealed.\nWalter I. Hasklns, polling 1520\nvotes, wu again selected for chairman ot the hoard, a long distance\ncommunication trom George E.\nBrown, former Nelson buslneu man\natated. Oeorge A. Barrat, polling\n1312 votes, and 0. W. Hembling.\n1172, are the other members of the\nboard. Roger F. Borett received 711\nvotes and Oerrard Ford 477.\nCoi\nfou\nPrior to a luncheon-rotating at the\nolf club Thurtdty afternoon, lady\nitmbert of tht Ntlton Oolf tnd\n&\niuntry club -enjoyed a two-ball\nJOulaome. The event was won bj\nMn. Harold   Laket and Mrs.\nSpencer Godfrey.\nArrangementa wtrt mtde tor I\nfield day and tta on July 24 whtn\ntha program will include putting\nand approach contests. The public\nla invited.\nTHI NIUON DAILY NEWS\nFlashes Front the Wires\nSavoys lo Play\nDoubleheader\nCanada Billiards to Be\nin [kelson Sunday\nSavoy Hotel baseball club plays\na doubleheader Sunday afternoon\nwhen tha Canada Billiard squad of\nTrail comet to Nelaon. Tbe tint\ngame starts at 2:00 pjn. than) and\nthe tteond gamt will ba at 6:30.\nThit nromises to ba a fint afternoon of iport The vlalton hava\nplenty of pep and they cm phy\nball. During the past two or thret\nweekt tha Savoyi have bten in a\nterioui alump, but by tht way they\nwent through their workout Friday\nnight, lt apnears to bt uft ln uy\ning that thty art hitting thalr\nstride onea again.\nSome changu hava been mada In\nthe field and the management hopes\nto gain strength by lt Slim Kraft,\nDuffy Stewart and Frank Kraft ara\nready to do the chucking work.\nThe taam wlll be choien from\nthe following playen. \"Fat\" Richardson. Bill Vance, \"Slim\" Kraft\nBill Kirby. \"Shorty\" Bailey. Mark\nCrane, Ken Moore. Duffy Stewart\nBob Horswill. George Kulai, Frank\nKrsft. Walter Kitto.\nIndians Prepared\nlo Meel Nelson\nNew Grand Cubs to\nPlay in Trail\nSunday\nTRAIL, B.C, July lJ-Trall Indians are all set for their encounter\nwith the Nelson Cubs Sunday, hav\nInt completed a ilnal workout\nThursday evening at Butler park.\nThe dark-skinned lads were ail let\ntor a game with tht Rouland club\nThursday night but as the golden\ncity boys wtrt unablt to field t\nteam, Indlani put In tha tame tlmi\nln diligent practice.\nManager A. A. Davldton Is of\ntht opinion thtt hli Ttdanac Indians did well at Nelton lait weekend and feels that they ihould have\nno difficulty in edging out the viaiton Sundiy.\nDI8MANTLI BALLOON\nRAPID CITY, S.D.-8UU apparently unaware of what cauaed tbalr\n3,70u,0O0 cubic foot balloon to bunt\nearly today, just before starting a\n-ojected stratosphere flight of-\n_ .ilals of tha National Geographic\ntociety and army air corps tonight\nItarted dismantling expedition hud-\nquarters.\nPEOPLE MUST PUT HIM OUT\nNIW ORLEANS-Senator Huty\nP. Long, Louisiana's political \"dictator,\" today told a committee of\nMayor T. Semmet Walmeley's \"old\nrtgular\" organization that it mutt\nba the people who put him (tht\nmayor) out\nSCHMILING TO PIOHT LOUII\nBERLIN \u2014 Joa Jacobi, Unlttd\nStatu manager of Max Schmellng,\nformer heavyweight champion, tonight uid the German slugger had\nagreed to tight Joe Louli, in Ntw\nYork ln September.\nNINE DROWN\u2014ORANADA\nGRANADA, Colo.\u2014Nlnt persons\ndrowned and $200,000 property damage was done by a flood that rushed\ndown upon the sleeping residents of\nOranada and nearby farms early\ntoday.\nCANADIAN IN MARATHON\nAMSTERDAM-A field ot Canadian and United States Olympic and\nnationally known runners will compete Sunday ln the full-course <2J\nmiles 385 yards) marathon which\nstarts here.\nfused accomplice In tht holdup\nslaying of Howard Carter Dickinson\nfeatured tha court appuranco today of the quartet of ''cocktail bar\nracketeers.\"\nCROWE-ILOAD8   ARRESTED\nVANCOUVER-Police tonight sr-\nruted Percy R. Srowt-Sworda, MO\nblock Burrard itrut and charged\nhim with making false lUttmenU\nPAIL IN QUEST, REOINA\nREOINA\u2014Permlulon tor wider\nlattitude in crou examination ot\npolice wltneieu at tht preliminary\nhearing of persons charted In connection with tha Dominion day relief camp striken riot here was\n\u2022ought unsuccessfully by defence\ncounul today.\nPURVIS REIIONI\nCHICAOO, July \u00bb (CPl-Aimost\na ytar after ht laid John Dllllnger\nlow, Melvin Purvis, one ot the nation's but known federal agenta,\nresigned today.\nThe 31 \u2022 year \u2022 old toft-spoken\nsoutherner, whou main convtru-\ntiom with gangland wtrt punctuated With splattering bulleta, Uld\nhe quit for \"purely personal rea*\nsons.\"\nNILION. I.C.-8ATURDAY MORN\nSafeways Beat\nWoodcutters 17-11\nSafewayi defeated thc Woodcutten in a mtn's toftball game at the\njunior high groundi Thunday nliht\n17*11 In a match that wu futured\nby loou fielding. Safeways led\nthroughout and oould not be uld to\nhavt Mtn in danger at any timt.\nFINED UNDER\nTHEWAGEACI\nFails to Make Record\nof Emplbyees'\nTime\nNO. JULY\nOld Tlmen Will\nPlay Boxla Reps\nMeet Thein at Rlnk on\nMonday Night\nSafe Speedy Relief\nImp neuralgia\nM-anlsIc pitalnf*.. h\u00ab_\nor My othir part of Uie body\nquickly t*_M by TM\nT*mWmm\nHa ana It at all amnio*\nNews Team Plays\nGirl Reps Today\nAn exciting challenge softball\nstruggle is anticipated for thii evening at 5:15 pjn.. whtn tha Daily\nNewt composing room Scoopt of\nwould-be softballers meet a pick-up\ntaam trom the local glrlt lugut. Ai\nWesley J. Simms, manager ot the\ncomposing room turn hat promised\nto havt a plentiful supply of let\ncream .'or the girl playtn, providing\nthty win. (Tht mtmbtn of hit own\nteam are supplying the frozen delicacies) it Is reported that at leut\n24 ladlu olayen will be out to\nassist the big-hearted sponsor! to\nempty the contt. Among the pltyen turning out with the glrlt pickup club are: Hazel Spiers, Allot\nDunn. Jaan Spiers. Clara Talberg,\nHilda Talberg, Elvira Matheson.\nWllma Milne. Ron Stewart. Agnu\nStewart Jean Paterson. Mary McDougall. Alvlna Arlt Lena Limacher. Barbara Klngtett Peggy Donaldson. Gladness Hontead. Janie\nWlgg. Peggy McOovtrn. Edna McKentle, Peegy Oibbon, Mary Horn-\nenham, Elaine Benton. Kay McDougall and Dot Jarbeau, ad Infinitum.  \t\nWANT ADS BRING RESULTS\nEAT 8KUNK MEAT\nITHACA, N.Y.-Tlred of eating\nthe same old thing? \"Why not try\na nict broiled skunk for a surprisingly delicious change?\" uks Dr.\nW. J. Hamilton of tht aoology department of tha New York itate\ncollege ot agriculture.\nFATHER OF 19 IIEKI PENSION\nENGLAND, Ark.-Slxty-flve-ytar\nold John Perkins, ntgro, father ot\n29 chlldrtn, Including seven tttt of\ntwins, hai fyled application for an\nold age pension.\nITIVENI MAY RUN\nIN EAIT KOOTENAY\nTORONTO-H. H Stevens, leader\nOt tht naw Reconstruction party,\nmay again run ln the riding of Iatt\nKootenay ln tht forthcoming gtntrtl dictions, hi tald tonight\nATTEMPTS TO EICAPI\nDETROIT\u2014An apparent attempt\nto escape by William Lta Ferrii tnd\ntht fitting of one of his thret con*\nACTION TO IND MARCH\nOTTAWA \u2014 Immedlata attention\nand action by the provincial government to prevent an invulon of\nOttawa by large bodlei ot unem-\nployad, li requested.\nTO INVESTIGATE ARREIT\nROME\u2014The nallan government\nmade ready tonight to Investigate\ntully the circumstances of tba arrest at Gondar, Ethiopia, ot tht wife\not tha Italian consul, Signora Raf-\nfaele dl Lauro, and htr reported\ndetention for two dayt.\nREMORSELESS WOMAN\nTACOMA, Wath.-Tht jury trying Mn. Margaret Thulin Waley for\ntha Oaorga Weyerhaeuser kidnapping heard htr detcrlbed' as t \"re*\nmorselesl womtn by Unlttd Statu\nDistrict Attorney 3. Charlu Dtnnis\nts he cloud tht governmtnt'i cut\ntoday.\nKIER WINS IHOOT\nHEALS RIFLE RANGE-Turninf\nln one o fthe mott consistent and\nmost phenomenal performances witnessed here for many a yaar, Str*\nJunt Jamu Kler, Uth (A.C.)\nquadron, R.C.A., (NP), Vancouver, today captured the All Comers'\naggregate in tha annual prltt meeting of the B. C. R. A.\nConvicted on a charge undtr a\n1035 amendment to the Mala Minimum Watt act, which maket it\nnectuary for all employers to keep\na record lh Engllih of the names of\ntheir employtes, houn ot work and\nother business dttallt. Nick Poohachoff wu sentenced by Stipendiary Magistral* John Cartmel in\nprovincial police court Friday to\npay a tint of $10 and $2 costs, or in\ndefault to serve 10 dayi ln JaU. He\npaid the tine.\nPoohachoff pleaded not guilty to\nthe charge of filling to keep a\nrecord of nil employees' time. Corp.\nD. Halcrow proiecuted and witnesses for tha prosecution were\nBliss W. Dysart, tha Informant and\ninspector of the department of labor\ntor Britiih Columbia, who approached tha accuttd on July 4 and\nasked for a statement of houn put\nIn by hit employee! ln a logging\ncamp tt Sllverton.\nJtmes Dronsfield, department ot\nlabor lnapector of Ntlson wu anothar wltneu. Poohachoff apptartd\non his own behalf.\nSafeways Down\nFairview U-t)\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B. C, HOTELS\n\"Finttt in the Inttrior*\nHUME HOTEL\nFree But Service Oto. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 25< to 60c\nLUNCHEON SSe te 50c       DINNER He to 65c\nRotary end Gyro Headquarten\nTtltphont 717 Ntlton, B.C. 422 Vtrnon It\nHUME-Mr. and Mn. A. H. Ferguson, Btrkalty; Mn. A. M. Luther\nond family. Los Angeles; Mr. and\nMrs, J. G. Deacon, Athabasca; J. t.\nBrown. Regina; W. R. Burgess, G.\n0. Cutle, Mr. and Mn. F. A. Hargrave, C. Doudaneau, Vancouver; J.\n11. Lewit, L. Allison, Medicine Hat;\nDr. and Mrs. N. J. Burkley. Kulo;\nH. W. Htlch, J. W. Patenon, Lath-\nbrldgt; W. Falrbank, Harrop; Mrs.\nJ. w. Hamilton and party, Cruton;\nMr. and Mn. O. Wataon, Sukatoon;\nMr. and Mn. R. B. McKay, Nakuip;\nA. E. Oravu, Vtrnon; M. Blum,\nCaltman.\nWith ont down ln tht ninth inning\nBill McKay tingled scoring Hendrtckson to win tha gama lor tha\nSafewayi and down the Fairview\nA.C. toftball ttam 14*13 at tht\nJunior high tchool Friday night It\nwai a huvy hitting game, but thft\nFairview boyi prevented It fron\nbecoming monotonous by rttorting\nto frequent erron. They committed\nU and apparently still had Idtu tor\nntw wayi to do them whtn tht\ngam\u00ab finished. Safeways got IS hits\nand mada three erron. Fairview\ngot It hlta and ona ot them wu\nwaterer s homt run, tht only ona of\ntha game.\nRoynon and Chrishop got two\nbase hlta tor tha losers, and L.\nSellnger doubled for the wlnnen.\nFawcett ltd tht hitters with tour,\n(The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kind\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel,\nMeny Rooms With Prlvite\nBaths or Showers\n124 BAKER ST.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nPHONE 19\nNtLSON. BC\ngc\nSpitn each got two. Hendrtckson\nwu on the mound for Safewayi and\nBrown for Fairview.\nAlex Mclnnis and \"Porky\" Stlruker refereed.\nScore by innings; R H I\nSafeways 401 304 002-14 It   3\nFairview ....... 831 000 402\u201413 It 11\nTumi wtrt:\nSafeways\u2014L. Selinger, M. Gopell,\nG. Lepinski, B. Hendrtckson, M.\nMeickle, Bill McKay, Danny McKay, P. Sellnger.\nFairview \u2014 Lu Skinner, Gtorgt\nFawcett Eddlt Waterer, Wilf Chrli-\nhop, Altx Ioanin, Bill Brown, Gordon Roynon, A. Fahrenholta, Stewle\nSpitn.\n8AVOY-H. Ron,\nVancouver; C. L.\n8. J. Douglas,\nMarchand, Cal*\n8try; C. S. Craig, Edmontoi.; Mn.\n[room, Lethbridge; T. Fletcher, Regina; F. Hlookoff. M. Plotnikoff.\nRobton; A. Hendrtckson, Mr. and\nMrs. Shapcla and family, Beaver-\ndel; Mr. and Mrs. J. Coupland, B.\nW. Dyurt Mr. and Mn. C. Jackion,\nMr. and Mn. C. Ouraford, Trail;\nMlu McKtown, Fernie; T. Fletcher,\nRegina.\nNew Grand Hotel\nIP. L KAPAK. Prop.\nHot and Cold Wattr\nSlngls 80c up; double 60c up\nMonthly ratu S10.00 up\nPH 234       818 VIRNON IT\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nPETE BORIATO, Prop.\nRoomi from 80e tt 11.80\nMtnthly 810 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and cold\nwater In tvtry room\n808 BAKER IT. PHONI 10\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vtrnon It Phoni MTL\nH. WASSICK. Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY BATES\nGood Comfortable Rooma\nMlniri'  Heido-arters\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaiti You\nJAS. A. MADDIN. Prop,\nComplttalv Remodiiled\nHot tnd Celd Water\nIn thi HIART af tht City\nPHONI U     MS WA\u00bb0 IT\n45 BOY SCOUTS\nTO GOTO CAMP\nAbout 49 Boy Scouts will go Into\ncamp August 3 at Kokanee, accord'\nIng to J. M. Dronsfield,\ntcout  commissioner.  Tht\ndistrict\nnumbtr\nwlll probably be augmented before\ncamp time, he itated. The Cubs\nwill not go into camp but they will\nbe invited up for ona wuk-end.\nLeaders' Camp at\nKoolaree Starts\nAbout M people, half that numbtr\nbeing mtn and half being women,\nwant into the Leaden' camp at\nKoolaree Wedneidiy, and they wlll\nba ln camp 10 dayi. Rtv. E. ft. McLean, provincial lecrttary ot tht\ncouncil it Vancouver It In charge\nof the camp, and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd\nMagar ara alio thare and will glvt\naddresses. Dr. Aihford. of India, who\nis visiting with Dr. Laishley la another visitor at tht camp. Rev. M.\nW. Leei of tha Knox Unted church\not Trail Ii ludlng Bible itudy\ngrout*\nNIGHT BASEBALL\nPtolflc Cout Lugut\nPortland l, Sacramento 10.\nMiaalom 4, Lot Angelu 3.\nHollywood 4, San Francisco 8.\nSeattle 2, Oakland 3.\nINTERNATIONAL\nBaltimore 3, Buffalo 8.\nNewark 0, Toronto l.\nAlbany 3, Montreal 11.\nAMERICAN AUOCIATION\nMilwaukee 4, Toledo 0.\nMlnnupolU 2, LouUvllle 2.\nBt, Paul 3, IndlanapolU 2.\nWestern Tennis\nSlars Defeated\nOTTAWA, July 12 (CP)-Doro*\nthy and Ruby Roberts, itellar Calgary net artists and last of tha western represenUtlvu in the npldly\nnarrowing Ontario tennis championships, were eliminated lata today tn tht leml-ftnali of tha women's doubltt.\nAfter taking the flnt ut from\nYvette Sawytr and Etflt Billing! of\nMontreal 8-4, the Roberts listen\ndropped tht second ut 3-8, and ai\ntht Montreal start put on tnt prei-\nture ln tht lut tat tha Calgarlam\nwero only tblt to ttkt two gamu.\nEarlier tht Roberta listers had\nentered tht umt-tlnali by defeating\nWlnnifred Melnnei and Wlnnifred\nMcFatrldge of Halifax, 8*2,8-3.\nCALL OFF GIRLS\nSOFTBALL GAME\nCUBS TRAVEL TO\nTRAIL SUNDAY\nThe New Orand Hotal Cubi bueball taam traveli to Trail on Sunday\nwhere thay will meat tha fast-stepping Tadanac Indlani in tht third\ngama between theu two clubs.\nJudging from rtporta coming from\nTrail ont of the largut crowds of\nthe present bateball season In Trail\nla expected to wltneu tht flnt Ntlion vt Trail baseball game playtd\nin Trail thit season.\nFrtd Hamann. flaehy tint ucker\nSt tht Cuba will be missing trom\nundty'i line-up ai ht it at present holidaying ln Spokane, but all\ntha rut of tha playen wtll make\ntht trip. Pete Kapak, manager and\nChum Arcure. coach ot tha Cubi\nwill accompany tha turn.\nIt wu reported on Friday night\nthat a number ot Nalaon bueball\nfani wert planning on accompanying the Cubi to Trtll on Sundty.\nFAYS COMMON\nDANGER FINE\nDr. Clare Btnnett pleaded guilty\nIn city polict court Friday morning\nbefore acting Magistrate John Cartmel to a charge of driving to tht\ncommon danger, and waa sentenced\nto pay a tlna ot $10. He paid the\nfint.\nThe chirgt arose out of an aocldent  on  Baker  itrut  Thursday\nnight whah tht car driven by Dr,\nBennett collided with a ctr driven I\nby I. S. Bndley at the Baker and *\nJosephint strut intersection.\nYouth tsd age takt the floor et\nthe rlnk Monday night when the\nold time lacrosse playen meet the\nrepresentative Nelaon ttam In t\nbox-lacrosse game at the rink. The\nrul old tlmen will itart tht game,\nand after playing for a ahort while\nthty will give way to pltriri not\nquite so old, but neverthelfti. pity*\nen ot another day.\nStarting tor the old timen will be\nBarney Archibald. Alt Jeffi. Art\nPerrier. Joe Thompion, Dud Blackwood. Dr. W. B. Steed and Aldtrmtn\nRoy Sharp. Taking the floor after\nthem will be Bill McKay, A. Wallace, L. McKlnnon. George Benwell.\nHerb Pitta. J. B. Curran, D. Proudfoot J. Rlngrou, W. Vance, Price,\nTony Banki and George Fawcett.\nThe rep team will include Gui\nWik. Stan Oenut, S. Jackion. Bert\nJardine, Gordon Fleet Vie Milnec-\ntuk, J. Bilhop, J. DeVoin. Mix DesBrisay, N. McLtod, A. Heatherlngton, J. Leemlng, Ron Buttle and\nCarl Oallicano.\nTha old tlmen hivt been uied to\ntht fltld ltcroue but thty art willing to lurn tht gama during tht\nfaw mlnutu thty art on, that la,\nsufficiently to but ttat babei.\nOLBSCRICKET\nCHAMPUOM]\nVAHCOUVIR, July 12 (CP1-\nVancouver Olbs, nuned tfter O.L.\n(Ottle) Bancroft, who organized the\nduo more than 20 yean ago, diluted Vincouvtr Auroraa by 113\nruna to maintain thtlr unbeaten\nrecord ln flvt mttchu and capture\nVancouvtr crlcktt week'i Utle for\nltW.\nBatting flnt Olbs, aided b\u00bb two\nfine Innings by Btker and Salt who\ncompiled 71 and 12 runa rupee*\ntlvely, mtdt 288 runi ill out wen\ndiamiued the Auroru ilde tor 143\nruna.\nWtnman, brilliant Victoria bauman, lid tht Uland repruentatlves\nto thtlr tint victory of tht wttk,\ndefutlng Burrardi, mnnen-up to\nOlbt, by 118 runi. Vlctorli icored\n294 runi for flvt wicktti declared\nwhllt the but Burrardi ware able\nto do wm collect 121 runi all out\nWenman made in rum.\nIn the other mttch ot tht day,\nVancouver wtdnteday compiled IM\nrum tnd dismissed the Oakantgin\ntidt tor 42 rum.\nI. McGregor to\nVisit in Nelson\nMn.\nH. McGregor  former vict*\n-Worsted Boardt\npreeldent of the\nof Women'i Imtltutu ot Canada,\nwtll be In Nelson Tueaday on her\nway back from tha conference held\nln ttat etst Her homt It ln Penticton.\n22,000 CLAIMS\nFILED AT NELSON\nSINCE YEAR 1887\nOver 22.000 mlntral elilmi htvt\nbun flltd In tht Ntlion mining\nrteordlni offlu ilnet It wu tint\nuttbllthtd In 1M7, according to a\ncheckup on tht records In tht\nloui offlu. Tht flnt claim rt*\ncordtd wu tht Ntllle, \"on tht\nwut ilde ef Koottniy lakt\", J.\nR, Mathuon btlng tht ruordtr.\ntht ftmoui Illvir King group,\nwork in tht way ot calcimlning and\nflux af people to Ntlun, giving\nrlu to tht formation of tht olty,\nwu rtoordid In tht umt yttr.\nJuk Klrkup wu tha recording\noffletr it that timt.\nNelson Team\nBeats Trail\nPickup Team Wins;\nMistake Made in\nArrangements\nAlthough It la gone-ally hard to\nget teams to travel, they were dashing ln all direction! Friday night\nFairview going to Trail to moet a\njunior team and that lama lunlor\nturn travelling to Nelson to meet\nFairview. The Hanna Bench Muad\ncame to Ntlion and then thay found\nthe team out of town that they were\nsupposed to play, they took the floor\nagalnit a pickup taam and loit 12-7.\niFwat a good game with pltnty of\npen and had the vlalton not en\ncountered so much difficulty keep\nIng their fut on the dirt floor the\nscore would have been much closer.\nThey lent Oaylord Richardson to\nthe locals to boliter the Nelaon defense, a full ttem not being available at flnt _______\nloe Gallicano and Don Beattie\nran away with tha malor share ot\nthe honon u they galloped ln\nfor five and two goala respectively.\nThe former got ona assist and the\nlatter three. Bud Barker, the smallest plaver on the rlnk showed great\nability to handle tha ball and came\nnur scoring several timet. He will\nmikt a namrfor himself ln future\nyean. Carl Gallicano and Bon Beit-\ntie showed up well, with Richardson\nproving to be tine on defense. Dingwall in goaf played a rare game and\nblocked Innumerable shots trom\ndoit In.\nBooney Stmmtrtlno. Temple, Jar*\nrett and Haley looked but for tht\nvlslton. They are fait and tricky but\nfound the floor trucheroua. John'\nny DeVoin refereed.\nFolowing are the teemi end toor*\nTnU \u2014 Doug Murdock, Johnny\nJarrett (1). Pat Haley (1), Francla\nBarchard. Phillip Barchard. Ralph\nTemple (1), Booney Sammartlno\n(3), Ed Grovet tnd Ditiy Hood.\nNelson\u2014John Dingwtll, Vic Melneczuk, Joe Oallicano (8), Carl Gallicano (4). Don Beattie (2). Ron\nButtle (l). Bud Barker.\nTotal Eclipse oi\nMoon on Monday\nA tkyward glance Monday night\nwill put Nelsonltu and many othera\nresiding on the globe south of the\npolar regions, in a ring-tide seat to\nsee ont ot the yeart moat unusual\nastronomical occurrencu, a total\necliptt ot the moon.\nClear weather providing, the\neclipse will begin at 7:12 Paelfle\nStandard timt end Tuch totality\nat 8:00. It will begin to diminish at\n6:80 and at 10:47 tht \"night-light\"\nwill tgtln be visible in lta tatirtty.\nAstronomers point out that all\npersons but those on tht northern\nend ot tht hemisphere, nurly all of\nAfrica, south-weit luropt, thl Atlantic and tht eutern Pacific will\nbe able to watch the moon pau\nthrough the ahadow cast by the\nearth from the sun'i rays.\nQM*\n7 bejjlad\nryou bought\nCRICKET STANDING\nLONDON, July 12 (CP-Cablt) -\nSUndingi ln the county \u2022 cricket\nchampionship Including gamu finished today follow:\nW\nL Wfl UI NR PU. Pet\nYorki\n10\n0\n1\nS\n0 170   70.83\nWrwk\n7\n1\n2\n4\n0 127   80.47\nDerby\n7\n3\n3\n1\n0 123   58.67\nMldd'X\n5\n2\n3\n1\n1   17   S8.lt\nKent\n7\nI\n2\n1\n1 122   SOU\nUnci\ni\n4\n3\n1\n1 111   -41.77\nNottj\n5\n3\n2\n2\n2   M   47.14\nSuuex\n7\ne\n1\n1\nt 129   40.28\nSutr'y\n4\n2\n4\n3\n1   U  4428\nLelcu\n5\nI\n2\n2\n0   tl   43.33\nGlam\nI\nI\n3\n1\n2 101   42.0S\nEssex\n4\n7\n2\n1\n0   73   14.78\nOlouc\n4\n7\n2\n4\n0   82   22.13\nWorce\n4\n11\n0\n1\n1   87   28.27\nSomer\n2\n7\n1\n3\n0   44  22.88\n2   41   19.82\nNorti\n1\n7\n3\n1\nHanlt\n2\n10\n1\n3\n0  44   1133\nThli idvtrtlstmtnt It not pubUihed\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government ot\nBritish Columbia\nH BEST VAC ATION YOO EVER HAD\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL'S\"^\nNIIDIRMAN,\nProprietor\nComfertablt Rooms\nQoed  Meelt\ntglul Stopping\nPlau en the\nRoad te Vtrnon\n171\nBr I\nnon   \\\nVANCOUVER, B. C. HOTELS\nI-VOUPf VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel\n900 Seymour It      Vincouvtr, B.C.\nNewly Renovtted Throughout\nPhonu    \u2022    Elevttor\nA. PATERSON. Ute of\nColeman. Alu.. Proprietor\nBatheri Out With\ntht Worm Wtather\nAfter a damp cola spell thtt left\nNelsonites wondering Juit when\nummer wuther wu to be their\not dull ikiet live way to the blut\n-hunday, and clur for tht tecond\n.onttcuuvt day. Friday, the mercury\nmoved up to SB degreea. The minimum wes 47 degrees.\nIt wu tht hottest day of the mm*\non and the iwtlterlng hut coming\nafter a cool spell tent e ltrgt number of young folki to the laktiide\nfor the much-delayed twlm. Thtrt\nwat alio an appreciable pick-up in\nthe number ot noon picnickers tt\nLakealde park-\nTrail Fire Truck Is\nOut on Smoke Scare\nTRAIL, B. C, July 12\u2014A imoke\ntctre on Bey avenue, ihortly before\nfive o'clock Friday evening, gave\nthe Trail fire truck a run to Mar-\nlast's store.\nNo ladlei aoftball game will be\nplayed on Sunday morning u anticipated on Thuraday evening when\nlt wtt planned to ruume operations\non Sundiy morning with tlie Toronto SUn meeting the Red Sox. The\nToronto Sun wire tlto scheduled\nto pliy tht Hume Acu on Monday\nevening. Inability ot Alvlna Arlt to\nturn out with tht Rid Sox on Sunday morning forced the Red Sox\nto call ott tht gtmt.\nMonday evening's game between\nthe sun and Acu will be pUyed\nu scheduled and a muting wlll be\ncalled to draw up a ichedult ter\nthe balmce of the lugue garnet.\nDEANS, HEYCOCK\nWIN TRAIL GAME\nTRAIL, B. C, July 12 \u2014 Jamu\nDum ind Emit Haycock won t\ndoublu compttltion it tht Trail*\nTtdintc ltwn bowling club greeni\nFriday night with 25 points. Bob Wier\nan* Dave Chalmtn took iecond\nplace with 22 polnu. Other teams\nwere Davii and Haycock, 21: Llv\nlngitont tnd Htrdmin. t. RuulU\nof first dnw were: Leyland and\nDuns but Livingstone and Hard-\nman 8-3; Deam and Leyland but\nWeir and Chamlers t-4. Third draw\n\u2014Weir and Chalmen but Livingstone md Htrdman t-1; Deem and\nLeyland but Davit and Htycock\n8-1.\nGOING VACATIONING toon? Start out in I\nntw Matter Chevrolet and assure tht success\no{ your holiday plans I You travel smartly In this\naristocrat oi low-priced cars. You travel dependably,\neconomically, cere-free. And beet oi all, you travel\nin Canada's most modem low-priced automobile\u2014\nthe only cat in its class with tht gait ntw Turtet Top\nbodlei by Fitter... with Knee-Action iront wheels\n. . . with Cable-Controlled Brakes, Blut Flame\nEngine end FUher no-draft Ventilation I Your nearest\ndealer cen make immediate delivery of your new car\n... cell ln and stt him today. At tht game time,\nlook ovtr tht ntw Standard Chevrolet, tht lowett-\npriced fully equipped car on tht marktt. Easy\nGMAC terms.\nTHE TURRET TOP... tke new-jet, utttt automobile body\nconstruction known. The roo! of tke car ii on tolld, tiimlue\n\u2022but oi lUel\u2014esUndtog down to itul Hdu and e itul floor.\nA ruber Body advantage, oiieied only on tkt Muter Ckevrolet\nin ill price clua.\nKNEE-ACTION . . . ownen aad engineers both agree, too\nBuit kave Knot-Action (rent wkeeli ior tkt ulHmtte ia riding\neeul Only tke Muter Chevrolet in Ike low-price field glru\nInn-Action plua beluoed weight\nBLUE-FLAME ENGINE . . . Chenofit'i littet development\nof Ike Umous valvt-la-kead sii-cylindtr inoini. Proved economy\nend dependability\u2014along with power aad ptrfonnanoe I\nCABLE-CONTROLLED BRAKE8 . . . Another eiolual-*\nChevrolet luture\u2014tor imooth, equalised, potltivt braking under\nall condition*.\nFISHER VENTILATION ... Ike stored, built-in No-DraB\n\u2022yi-sm ploaitrtd by Ckevrolet Actually coola tke oar interior\nin hot wuther.\nc-inc\n73 Firei to Date\nin Nelson Division\nOnly one tire wii reported In tht\nNtlton forestry dlvlaion for the\nwttk ending Friday, according ta\nInformation received from memben\not the forestry branch at Nelson. No\nflru were burning when the report\nwu mede.\nThU bring! the total for the ytar\nto 72,\nJudgments Uphold in\nCorbin Appeal\nJohn Macdonald, B. Dlvlaion provincial police lnipector, hu returned from Fernle whtrt ht attended\nthe eppeal heiringi of teven Corbin rloten. Hr. Judge O. A. Thomp*\nPRICED\nFROM\nDeUvered, M\u00bb ttaltptd. tt latitat.. Ottare. OW.\nrttllkl aad OoremnoM license only etfre.\nSTANDARD SERIES MODELS tt LOW M OT!\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nton upheld ill but one judgment\nand gave a stirring denuncUtlon of\ncommunistic practiii\nsUtes.\ndenuncU\nthe lnipector\nNELSON TRANSFER COMPANY, LTD.\nGeneral Motors Dealers for Nelson and District\nPHONE 33 323 VERNON STREET- NELSON, B.C.\n \u25a0      '\n\t\n\u25a0 *\t\n%v\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.\u2014SATURDAY MORNINO. JULY 11.1S3S\nHere's the Text of Hon. H. H. Stevens'\nReconstruction Party Manifesto\n\/T**!^\nTORONTO, July 12 (CP)\u2014Following is the text of the\nmsnifesto issued here today by Hon. H. H. Stevens, leader of\nthe new Reconstruction party:\nThe day has long passed when the only recogniied functions of government were to provide\n\u25a0for the defence of the country against\nfoes from without and to preserve\npeace and order within the frontiers.\nIt is now as much a duty of the state\nto ensure for its people the elementary\nneeds of food, clothing and shelter on\na civilized scale as to protect them and\ntheir property from molestation. Social\njustice and economic security are recognized as being the only firm foundation upon which national securitv\ncan be built.\nIn Canada the failure of government to preserve the living standards\nof great numbers of the people has\nprompted much questioning of our\ndemocratic institutions and of our ec*\t\nonomlc arrangements. When a country endowed with the\nmeans of supporting at least 50(000,000 people cannot support even 10,000,000 in decency and comfort there is obviously need for a change.\nUnfortunately the desire for change has led to much\ncareless condemnation of democracy and private enterprise and\nto the advocacy of panaceas*\nwhich go far beyond the needs\nof the situation and which provoke hostility to change of any\nsort.\nHON. H. H. STEVENS\nWhat Francis Bacon wrote 300\nyears ago is as true today as it was\nthen: \"It is good not to try experiments, except the necessity be urgent or the utility evident; and well\nto beware .... aa the scripture\nsaith, that we make a stand upon\nthe ancient way and then look about\nus and discover what is the straight\nand right way and so walk ln it.\"\nThe \"ancient way\" in a British\ncountry it the democratic way. Canadians must beware lest disappointment with an apparent failure\nof democracy lend attraction to\nschemes of rigid state control of life\nand organization. One need only\nlook at the old world east of the\nRhine to realize that one form of\ntreatment begets another and that if\nour age-won liberties are lightly\nsurrendered they will bc well-nigh\nirrecoverable.\nYet for many years ths people\nof Canada have been afforded an\nImpressive and painful demonstration of the ability of the controllers of existing Institutions to\ngear the nation's productive power\nto the nation's needs In the means\nof life. While the stock of food In\nthe national larder has exceeded\nall records of previous surpluses,\nhundreds of thousands of people\nhava not htd tnough to eat\nThough tha price ef wheat fell\nto a level below the cost of production to the average farmers,\nworkers In the east could scarcely\nafford to buy bread. While textile\nand garment workers are without\nJobs, workers In many other in-,\ndustrlea cannot buy clothes. While\nthouunds of lumber workers,\nbookmakers, and builders plead\nfor a chance to earn a living,\nother thousands of our free cltiaens huddle In slums. Whllt coal\nminers art hungry, those who art\nanxlout to provide them with\nfood, clothing, and shelter shiver\nfor lack of fuel,\n\"FAULTY ENGINEERING\"\nIn the tangle of the national economy Canadians recognize the failure of those whom they have elected\nto manage the country's affairs.\nThay realize that the shibboleths\nand Incantations of the old political\nparties will not rectify faulty engineering.\nThey aee that a change in the\neconomic system is needed and that\nit will not be procured while the\ndominant political parties are those\nwhose function\u2014despite fervid professions to the contrary\u2014is to resist\nall effective change and to cling to\nan obsolete system. In the view ot\na growing multitude, the boundary\nbetween policies and economics has\ndissolved, and on all hands the demand is heard for a political instrument which will not obstruct\nbut facilitate the necessary modifications of the economic system.\nFrom that demand the Reconstruction party has risen; it has been\nformed to meet an economic need-\nformed by the spontaneous and\nindependent action of groups of intelligent Canadian citizens scattered across the Dominion.\nThese Canadians have asked\ndard of living commensurate with\nthe resources of a developed country for every person .willing to\nwork? They have considered the\nabundance of material at hand, the\nworkera anxious to take part in\nIndustry, the equipment available\nand only partly used\u2014and they have\nanswered emphatically: Canada\nean!\nYet; Canada can! And, banded together In the Reconstruction party,\nthey say that Canada will. They\nrealize Canada's condition has become desperate through failure of\nthe government to recognize that\nthese conditions.called for adequate\nand definite remedies. They arc determined to help to reconstruct\nCanada's shattered national economy, to wage war on poverty, and to\nabolish Involuntary Idleness.\nPARTY'S POLITICS\nWith this determination the Re-\ntonstructlon party declares its policy aa follows:\nThs Youth of Csnsds:\nThe future happiness and prosperity of our people will depend\nupon our ability to absorb into\nUseful employment oVir young men\nand women. The older generation\nhaa Imposed upon the younger a\nburden of discouragement and debt.\nOur youth must be given the opportunity to surmount obstacles and\novercome handicaps which have\nbeen forced upon them.\nIt will, therefore, be the duty of\nthe reconstruction party when called\nupon to form a government, to open\nup avenues of opportunity fdr all\n,who are willing to work on the\nfarm, In the mine, ln the forest and\nIn other branches of industrial and\ncommercial activity; and, during\ntha period of economic construe\ntlon, to provide such work for\nthost who find it Impossible to secure any other employment as to\nenable them to retain their self-\nrespect and earn a moderate living.\nPublie Works:\nAll public works undertaken for\npurposes of recovery should be designed to serve public needs and,\nwherever possible, should be self-\nsustaining. The following projects\nfor the general advantage of Canada would be at once undertaken,\nbeing both economically justifiable\nand socially desirable:\n(a) Completion of the transca-\nnadian highway.\n(b) Construction, in cooperation\nwith the provinces, of highways\nfrom the southern boundary to Canada's national parks.\n(c) A system of development, for\nthe provinces, to make Canada's\ngreat northland accessible to visitors and nature lovers, and to secure\nthe greatest possible benefit from\nthe tourist industry. Canadian governments in the past have neglected\nthis most valuable source of revenue\nand field of business.\n(d) A country-wide reforestra-\ntion program, beginning on Dominion-owned land and extending to\nareas under provincial control by\nagreement with the provinces concerned. This work is of the utmost\nimportance, for already many watersheds are seriously denuded and\nsupplies of water and timber are\ndiminished.\n(e) Removal of level crossings. In\ncooperation with the provinces and\nmunicipalities, the Reconstruction\ngovernment* will undertake the\nelimination of these death traps.\nNational Housing Progrsm:\nMuch of the spare money of Canada has in recent years been placed\nin the custody of trust, loan and\nmortgage companies, which act as\nagents for the investor or directly\non their own behalf. The insurance\ncompanies also are great reservoirs\nof capital.\nThese are potential sources of\nfunds for construction projects. It\nwill be the policy of the Reconstruction party to Invite these institutions to cooperate in the development and execution of a national housing scheme, both urban\nand rural, by making funds available at rates of interest much below\nthose prevailing in\/ recent years.\nShould such cooperation not be\npromptly forthcoming, the Reconstruction party declares it to be the\nduty of the government forthwith\nto formulate a housing scheme to\nbe financed by the sale of bonds\nguaranteed by the Dominion treasury on a self-amortizing basis.\nThe Labor Problem:\nThe party emphatically protests\nagainst purchase and sale ot labor\nas mere merchandise. It demands\nthat all labor problems shall be approached from the human standpoint, realizing that unless the\nworkers secure fair wages and reasonable hours the whole standard\nof living in Canada must sink to\nlower levels.\nThe party pledges itself when\nelected to office to pass necessary\nmeasures to establish uniformity of\nwages and hours throughout Canada, and invites the provinces to\npass necessary enabling legislation.\nThis step the party believes to be\nessential to the unity of the confederation.\nFair-wage provisions in all classes\nof government contraction will be\nstrictly enforced, and it will be thc\naim to secure observance of such\nwage rates in industry generally.\nPeport of Price\nSpresdi Commiition:\nThe Reconstruction party will exercise all the power it may possess\nto give legislative effect to the\nrecommendations of the royal commission on price spreads and mass\nbuying. When placed in office, it\nwill vigorously administer all laws\nso enacted and at the first session\nof parliament it will introduce a\nmeasure to establish a federal trade\nand industry commission and to\nvest that body with authority to\nserve as referee in all commercial\nand industrial matters affecting fair\ntrading, unethical busihess practices, discriminatory discounts, and\nunfair competition generally.\nDebt and Interest:\nOne of thc most potent causes of\ndistress is the burden of debt. Not\nonly does the principal weigh heavily upon the debtor, but the rates\nof inlerest charges to the ordinary\nborrower have been inordinately\nhigh, and out of line with rates prevailing in other countries. To relieve the burden it is proposed to\nrestrict rates of interest to a much\nlower level, and generally and vigorously to exercise governmental\npower and administrative influence\nto reduce rates wherever possible.\nFive per cent on mortgages should\nbe ample.\nThe burden of the principal of\ndebt cannot be lifted by renewals or\nby refunding. It ls but an idle boast\nto claim credit for \"successfully refunding our maturing obligations;\"\nindeed, it is but mocking the overburdened taxpayer. What is required is a policy that will ultimately liquidate our national debt.\nThis   party,   when   returned   lo\npower, will address itself to the development of our latent natural resources, which, we are confident,\nare so vast as to be capable of paying off the national debt in 25 years.\nWe propose:\n(a) To explore and develop systematically the great \"goldahield\" in\nfederal territory by expert geologists and mining engineers under\ndirect government control, and with\nthe profits from production accruing to the Dominion government;\n(b) A fuel policy that will greatly\nincrease the use ot Canadian fuel\nby absorbing a larger portion of\nthe cost of transportation of coal\nfrom the producing areas to the\ncentral consuming area, and by\nutilizing the peat bogs Of central\nprovinces, all of which activities\nwill absorb thousands of mpi now\non relief.\nBy these and similar policies applied to undeveloped natural resources we are confident that sufficient new wealth can be procured\nto liquidate our debt. These measures the Reconstruction party believes will materially contribute to\neconomic recovery.\nMonetary Problems:\nThe control ot credit and of machinery of exchange is one of the\nmost vital function of our emonomic\nlife; it should be exercised at all\ntimes in the general interest of the\ncountry. When placed ln power, the\nReconstruction party will promptly\nconduct a complete investigation of\ncredit and monetary problems, with\nthe assistance of outstanding authorities from Canada and Great\nBritain. This Impartial investigation will be directed to devise a plan\nof monetary control best adapted to\nCanadian conditions.\nThe party further declares for\nthe nationalization of the Bank of\nCanada.\nAgriculture:\nThe farmers of Canada have been\nexploited by highly organized interests and can only with great difficulty combine to resist the pressure\nto which they are subjected. The\nReconstruction party, when returned to power, pledges itself to\npass such legislation as will ensure\nfair prices for the farmers' products,\nand to free the participants in Canada's prime industry from the oppression of the secondary handler\nof tbeir products.\nFurthermore, recognizing that the\nfarmers ot Canada desire a democratic form of control ot their industry, we pledge ourselves to the\nappointment of a provisional board\nto be known as the \"Dominion agricultural board\" \u2014This provisional\nboard to formulate a democratic\nscheme for the control and direction\nof the marketing of agricultural producta under four groups:\n(a) Cereals.\n(b) Live stock and poultry.\n(c) Fruit and vegetables.\n(d) Dairy products.\nThe objective is that as fac as\npossible the agricultural interests\nshall, through a nation-wide organization under ita own control, direct the policy of marketing lta own\nproducts, thus being enabled to successfully withstand the encroachments and competition of the large\norganized secondary interests who\nhandle their products.\nTaxation:\nPrevailing methods of taxation\ncause much confusion, inconven*\nvenience, inequity, and waste, not\nonly through the multiplicity of\nforms or types of taxes but also\nthrough the duplication of the machinery of collection by the federal\nand provincial authorities.\nThe Reconstruction party proposes so to administer federal taxation that a single set ot auditors or\ninspectors will suffice for all classes\nof taxation, and to invite thc provinces to join in a system which will\npermit one authority to impose and\ncollect the taxes and then divide the\nreturns on an equitable and agreeable basis. Thia would apply to Income and sales taxes, which are particularly subject to duplication.\nRevenue must be accrued and\nbudgets must be balanced, and it is\nproposed that taxes on large incomes shall be increased, and where\nnecessary be collected at their\nsource, alao that corporations operating on a multiple-unit basis\nshall be assessed on each unit\nTariff:\nThe principle motivating the customs tariff system of Canada should\nbe the protection of Canada's industrial workers and agriculturists\nfrom unfair competition from countries where the standards of living\nare lower than in Canada. This\nprinciple has not always prevailed\nand the consumer has sometimes\nsuffered in consequence. Caaes in\npoint are the duties on agricultural\nimplements and on all classes of\nprimary textiles, the customs duties\non which will be substantially reduced.\nIt will be the policy of the Reconstruction party to secure reciprocal\nagreemenU with other countries,\nwith a view to increasing exports of\nfarm and factory, and widening.the\nrange ot lmporta by commodities\nnot produced in Canada. Our foreign\ntrade must be Increased and we\nfirmly believe that this can be accomplished without injury to Canadian Industry.\nThe Railways:\nThe Reconstruction party doea not\nbelieve amalgamation under private ownership offers a solution of\nCanada's railway problems. Nor\ndoes lt believe that It should be to\nthe public advantage to tell the\nnational railways to any group of\ninternational financiers at this time\nor at tha valuation of today.\nA plan which it being drafted and\nwhich will be announced In the\nnear future, after consideration in\ndetail by a group of technical and\nfinancial experts will, we believe,\nat once commend itself to the people\nof Canada as providing a rational\nand practical solution of the railway\nBroblem.\nritiih North America Act:\nThe British North America it\nCanada's constitution and, in the\nmain, is admirably suited to needs\nof the Canadian people. In its preamble It declarea the achievement\nof national 'unity' to be its purpose.\nIt haa come to be regarded a contract between tha provinces by\nwhich certain powers were delegates to the central authority to ba\nexercised for the common weal.\nIt haa been the practice of successive federal governments to invoke the British North America\nact aa a pretext for neglecting to\nfind legislative remedies for obvious and flagrant wrongs. More\nover, the federal authorities have\nconsistently neglected to exercise\npowers conferred upon them by the\nact, especially in matters relating to\nthe regulation of trade and commerce,' which subject is declared by\nthe act to be within the exclusive\njurisdiction ot parliament.\nBefore asking the provinces to\nrelinquish any of their powers, thc\nReconstruction party holds that the\nfederal parliament should exhaust\nita own powers and rights.\nIt is recognized that owing to the\nrapid development and evolution in\ncommercial and industrial methods,\ncertain changes in the act may be\nnecessary to adapt the constitution\nto modem needs, but such changes\nshould in every caae be made only\nafter ample and amicable conference with the povinces and then\nonly when the mutual benefit to bo\ngained by amendment is clearly\nshown. In no case will this party\nseek to make changes that interfere\nwith the peculiar or essential rights\nof any province.\nWhere there exists overlapping in\nthe scope ot taxation (such us with\nfederal and provincia income taxes)\nresulting in excessive cost in collection and inconveniences to the taxpayer, the .reconstruction government will submit to the provinces\nspecific proposals for the adjustment of this anomaly, so as to ensure not only a more efficient system but larger net revenues through\nthe elimination of duplication.\nfnson Kstorm;\nBeuig fuuy convinced our penal\ninstitutions are archaic and tnat\ntnose In charge of tneir aominscru-\ntion are imoued witn the idea tnat\npunishment is more important than\nreformation of character, the Kecon-\nstruction party pledges uselt to conduct a thorough study of the prison\nsystem witn the object ot transforming the penitentiaries into humane establishments tor the rehabilitation of their inmates into\nuseful members of society,\nlhe Women of Csnsds:\nAll of what ia set forth in other\nsections ot this manifesto ls of interest to women much as to men,\nbut it is recognized that there are\nsuojects in which women take special interest, more particularly tnose\nrelating to social welfare among\nmembers of their tax.\nThe Reconstruction party pledges\nitself to give recognition to tne\nclaims ot women in all those government activities affecting the\nhealth and social well-being of the\npeople. The party will alao promote\nlegislation to protect women and\ngirls from exploitation by unscrupulous employers, and, where the\nservices rendered are oi an equal\nvalue, that remuneration shall be\nin accordance with the services\nand not prejudicial to the women\nworker.\nIt ia recognized tht responsibility\nof making the consumer's dollar go\nas far as possible rests largely with\nthe women. It will be, therefore, the\npolicy of this party to ensure that\nin every way possible exploitation\nof the public through unwarranted\nprofits shall be vigorously restrict-\nWar Veterani Welfare:\nAlthough the welfare ot the veterans of the Great war has received\nmuch attention from Canada's legislators, the Reconstruction party is\nconvinced much remains to be done\nto render full justlc to these citizens.\nA careful and sympathetic study\nwill be made of all existing legislation with a view to more fully implementing the pledgea made while\nthe war was on, and especially to\nprovide adequate relief to those\nveterans who are tht victims ot\neconomic vicissitude.\nTWO MAIN THOUGHTS\nThis manifesto ia luued to the\npublic with two main thoughts fluctuating those who are responsible\nfor its issue:\nFirst\u2014That it is absolutely etsen\ntial to the welfare and happiness of\nCanadians that there should ba a\nwider enjoyment ot thote things\nthat make for a happy Canadian\nlivelihood and, on the other hand,\nthat the people of Canada should be\ngiven the opportunity to declare\nwhether or not they wish to adopt\na policy of definite action in dispelling the causes of so much suffering\namong our people.\nWe do not deny that certain measures have been proposed, and in\nsome cases adopted, that have elements ot helpfulness in them but\nthere has been no clear determination by either of the two major parties to grapple with the underlying\ncause of our troubles.\nWe believe that our proposals\nas set forth in our manifesto, while\nmoderate, will result in such definite and immediate improvement\nas will rapidly relieve the acute distress and ultimately bring conditions that are consistent with our\nideals ot Canadian citizenship.\nThis party ia not concerned with,\nnor will it indulge in, as far as it\ncan control It, peraonal recrimination or what is commonly known as\nmud-slinging. We are concerned\nonly with presenting our views and\nsecuring fair consideration of them.\nIt hu been aaid that we are entering the campaign under such\nhandicaps as will make it impossible\nfor us to succeed. This, lt do not\nthink to be the case. Certainly we\nhave no funds and have no established orginzation, but already many\nare voluntarily offering assistance\nfinancially and w* are ove\u00bbv**.elm-\ned with offers of voluntary help and\nthere are such overwhelming expressions of sentiment in favor of\nour principles that we are convinced our only task now is to secure the most suitable and representative candidates, and to thts latter task we are addressing our im\nmediate attention. We face the Issues\nin this election with confidence\nthat our platform represents what\nIs In the hearts and the minds of all\ntrue Canadians.        \u2022\nOLYMPIC  PLANS ARE\nELABORATE\nBERLIN, (CP)\u2014Germany's Olym\npic village of 1936, which will be to\ntally unlike the 1932 village at\nLos Angeles, will have a separate\ndining room and kitchen for athletes\nof each nation. There is expected\nto develop an Informal competition\namong chefs\u2014If the cooks are in\nterested. ' '\nWorld's Tariffs Retard Recovery\nLeague Committee's Report Says\nUrges Nations to Cooperate in Solving the\nProblems of Farm and Industry\nBy OEORGE HAMBLEDON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, July 12 (CP)-Farm-\ners throughout the world will find\nfood for thought in a report on agricultural protectionism Issued by\nthe economic committee of thc\nleague ot nations.\nThe report minces no words. It\nchallenges the whole system ot excessive tariffs, embargoes and\nquotas on farm products to which\nindustrial countries of Europe havc\nrecent years had resort. It attacks them u bad for consumer\nand producer alike.\nIt observes that, if the policy of\nhigh agricultural protectionism had\nachieved ita object, it would be difficult indeed to criticize it But\nfacts are to hand which prove that\nthis exaggerated policy of protectionism, spreading from one country to another, is tending to prolong\nthc depression which it was designed to combat and to prejudice the\ninterests ot the classes that it aimed\nat protecting. In its present extreme form, it no longer hu anything in common with a moderate\nprotectionism, which is quite compatible with the normal functioning\nof international trade.\"\nSir Frederick Lelth Ross, chief\neconomic adviser to the British government quotes, in an accompanying memorandum, duties equivalent\nto more than 100 per cent on wheat\nimports into Germany. France and\nItaly. Chilled beef imports into\nGermany have to meet a duty of\n124 per cent Imports of frozen\nmeat Into Germany are virtually\nprohibited. The minimum French\nduty on butter Is equivalent to 184\nper cent of the London price. Belgium and Italy place prohibitive\nduties on imported butter. The sequel ais high prices and reduced\nconsumption. In 1934 butter sold in\nBerlin and Paris at twp and a half\ntimes the London price of New Zealand salted butter. Ten years ago\nthe British and German consumer\nboth ate an average of 115 eggs a\nyear. Now, the British consumer\neats 152, the German 101.\nAGRICULTURE\nAND INDUSTRY\nThe report examines the so-called\n\"scissors argument for agricultural\nprotectionism\u2014that is, the disparity between agricultural and industrial prices. It suggests the only way\nto cure this evil is a gradual demobilization of economic nationalism and the reestabllshment of\nmonetary order, which will bring\nabout not a rise in agricultural\nprices, but a simultaneous drop in\nindustrial prices and in the expenses of the agricultural producer\nin general.\nThe argument that high agricultural protectionism is required in\nthe interests of national defence ls\nmet by pointing out that u the\nlut war snowed, it is impossible for\nbelligerent countries to keep up\ntheir agricultural production owing\nto the mobilization of man-power.\nThis necessitates Imports. But to\nattempt In war-time to change over\nto a policy of importing quantities\n\u25a0 RITONS   WIN   IN   FRANCE\nPARIS (CP)\u2014Tha French open\ngolt championship hu been won\nonly twice by Frenchmen. The British professionals look after its winning year after year. Jamu H. Taylor started the fad back ln 1908 and\nmost of the leading present-day pros\nhave won the French event\n\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 PAOE THRU\n[CHURCH ESI\ni ttt A __% AAAAAAAAA\nof cereals, \u25a0*-\u2022\u2022\u25a0, mm*., and other\nproducts might create the gravest\nemonomic difficulties for the countrlu that had previously bued\ntheir policy on an attempt to bc\nself-sufficient\nThe main economic argument, the\nreport suggests, against high agricultural protectionism is that lt\nhurt the farmer, for recent experience showed, beyond all shadow\nof doubt that:       ,\n. . .Overproduction Inevitably\nleads to overproduction. ... Directly overproduction takes root\nin a country, the whole machinery\nof protection, set up and maintained\nat such cost, ceases to function.\nPricu drop and it becomes necessary to have recourse to increasingly burdensome and increasingly\nartificial methods (creation of\nstocks, carrying forward, fixing of\nminimum prices and various more\nsr less highly developed forms of\nplanned economy) which, u a rule,\nsimply aggravate the situation and\nincrease the discontent of the agricultural producer. It may be noted\nfurther tnat even a very small ex-\ncessof production over consumption\nis sufficient to bring about a drop\nin pricu out of all proportion to\nIhe actual excess. . . .\"\nEFFECTS AF PROTECTION\nThe report enumerates a number\nof indirect methods of excessive\nagricultural protectionism. One of\nthue ls the lon of Industrial marketa owing to the industrial countries being able to offer any very\nconsiderable advantages ln exchange for the concessions which\nthey demand from the agricultural\ncountries. This applies more particularly to the relations between\nthe industrial countries of Europe\nand the overseas agricultural countrlu.\nThe report concludes by expressing the hope that it may not be\nunduly optimistic to:\n\", .. .Hold that the agricultural\nproducers, having learned wisdom\nfrom the cruel experience to which\nthey have just been subjected, will\nrealize the necessity ot reducing\nagricultural protection of teason-\nable proportions and thus gradually\nreestablishing the pre-war situation.\n\"The neceuary transition might\nbe more easily engineered if exporters could manage to organize\nthemselvu so as to avoid uncoordinated and ruinous competition,\nwhich, by flooding the market with\nproducta offered at depreciated\npricu, tends to strengthen the protectionist policy of the Industrial\ncountries.\n\"The solution of the agricultural\nproblem can, of course, only be\nsought in an evolution tending toward the resumption of regular economic relations\u2014an evolution which\nmust occur simultaneously in the\nsphere of industry, commerce, currency and finance. But such an evolution cannot be the outcome of\nthe individual policy ot any one\nIsolated country; lt can be brought\nabout only by new tendencies\nadopted simultaneously by a number of coufltrlu.\"\nSocial and Personal\nNews of Trail\nThia column la ln charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of TraiL AQ\nevents of a social nature of Interest in Trail and Tadanac wiU appear\nin thit column. Mrs. Quayle will bt glad to bava any tuch newa\ntelephoned to her at her home In TraiL\nAIDS CAUSE OF WOMEN\nLONDON, (CP)\u2014A well known\nfigure ln the suffragette, campaign\n25 years ago, Mrs. Despard, sister\nof the late Lord Ypres, ls on a\nlecture tour for the Women's Freedom league. She ia 91.\nTRAIL, B.C., July 12\u2014J. T. Wilkinson leaves today for Deer Park\nwhere he will spend the week-end,\nreturning to Trail Sunday evening.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. Arthur Sherman\nleave this morning by car for cout\ncities and for Helena, Mont, where\nthey will spend a vacation.\n\u2022 .   .\nI. N. Allen is visiting at the coast\nfor a few days, luving here last\nnight and returning next Tuesdsy\nto Trail.\naaa\nArchie McTeer, son of Mr. and\nMrs. K. G. McTeer, ls spending the\nholidays at Hillcrut. Alta., with\nreiatlvu.\na  t  a\nDick McKinnon tpent Thursday\nat Robson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nCharles Haggerty has gone to\nHillcrut, Alta., where for two weeks\nht will be a guest of his parents.\n.  .   .\nSt. Francis Xavier church was\nthe scene yuterday afternoon of a\npretty wedding when Rev. L. A.\nHobson united in marriage Emma,\nyoungest daughter of John Cechelero of New Denver, to Ernesto De-\nRosa of Trail. Mlss Victoria Cechelero attended the bride and Romano\nBertolissi supported the groom. Following the ceremony a reception\nwas held at the future home ot the\nyoung couple. Pink and white carnations deoorated the serving table\nand the rooms. Mr. and Mrs. De-\nRosa will make their home in Trail.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\n\"Buster\"  Ewlng  is   spending  a\nholiday at Christina Lake.\n.  .   .\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Severn leave\nduring the week-end for Procter,\nwhere they formerly made their\nhome, on their summer vacation.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Truscott returned today to\nher home at Christina Lake after\nspending a few days with relatives\nln Eut Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCamllle Lauriente motored this\nweek to Calgary where he will attend the stampede.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAt a quiet wedding solemnized\nyesterday at the home of the bride's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Adamchuk,\nOlga, their eldest daughter was\nmsrrled to J. W. Farquhar, ton of\nMr. and Mrs. Farquhar of Murray-\nville. Rev. M. W. Lees of Knox\nUnited church was officiating clergyman. Mlu Lily Adamchuk attended the bride and William Farquhar supported the groom. The\nbride was attired tn a lovely drus\nof white satin of floor length. A\nlong net was draped softly to the\nhead and held in place by clusters\nof orange blossoms. Mlss Adamchuk\nwore a gown of putel pjnk moire\ntaffeta with matching accessories.\nThe bridal bouquet was of rosu\nand carnations and the bouquet\ncarried by the attendant wu of\ndelicately tinted aweet peas. Following the ceremony a reception waa\nheld at the home of the bride's parents, immediate friends only of the\nbridal couple being invited. Mr.\nand Mrs. Farquhar left on a wedding trip to Spokane and on their\nreturn will make their home in\nTrail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDan McLean visited at Robaon\nWednuday.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nMr. tnd Mrs. George Mlnnelaws\nhave left for the cout where they\nwill spend a vacation.\n\u2022 a, t\nGlenn Quayle leavu today for\nDeer Park where he will spend the\nweek-end. He it making the trip by\nmotorboat and will return to the\ncity Sunday evening.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFred Munroe has returned to\nTrail from New Westminster where\nhe has been visiting relatives.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nMrs. R. Sadner and ton have arrived in Trail from Greenwood and\nwill take up ruldence here.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJamu Melvin motored to Robson\nWednuday, spending the day with\nfriends.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Helen Mawdsley is luving\nfor the coast Monday whert she\nwill spend her vacation.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. W. C. Bradshaw accompanied\nby Mrs. Bradshaw and their two\nchildren, spent Wednesday at Cutlegar.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Dick Devltt are\nspending a short holiday at Robson.\nFred Popoff spent Wednuday\nwith friends at Cutlegar.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. O. P. Westhaver, Columbia\navenue, has with her family gone\nto China Creek for the summer\nholidays.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. t, G. Ringheim and family,\naccompanied by Mrs. Ringheim's\nsister. Mrs. Rose Severn, are leaving during the week-end for Christina Lake where they wlll spend\ntheir summer vacaUon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Kelly and\nfamily left Wednesday for Nelson\nwhere they will make their home.\n.   \u2022   .\nAlex Laurie ia ipending a vacation at coaat cities.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Cecil Strattoii. Riverside, has as their guuta this week,\nMr. and Mrt. McGregor of Bonnington.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlu Elsie Clark of Vtrnon It\nvisiting reiatlvu ln Trail.\n 1\t\nRubber balloons, uted In scientific work, ara found to keep their\nelasticity longer if stored where\nturpentine is evaporating.\nflrat\nBaptist (Slutrrh\nOfferi Warm Welcome\nHerbert W. Guscott, Minister\n11:15 A.M.-\n\"GOO'8 MINORITIES\"\n7:90 P.M.-\n\"CURIOSITY  COMPENSATED\"\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Church School\n\/\/ you have no church home\nwonhip with us.\nGLAD TIDINGS CHURCH\nRitz Hall Vernon St.\nHtar\nEVANGELIST C. C. UPSHALL\nSunday Services:\n11:00 a_n.\u2014Fellowship Service\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Sunday  School  and\nBible Class.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic.\nMeetings every week night except Monday and Saturday\nat 8 p.m.\nPASTOR C. R. BALL.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, .B.C., July 12-The\nspacious green lawn ot Sacred\nHeart rectory dotted with prettily\nset tea tables formed an attractive\nsettin_ for the annual lawi. party of\nthe Catholic Women's league. In\nthe evening a program wu rendered by the Rossland City band.\nThe following were in charge: Cash-\nier, Miu M. Curley; tea. Mrs. A.\nCameron, Mrs. M. Donahue; ice\ncream, Mrs. Frank Leeson, Miss\nHelen 'McDonell and Miu Tlna\nFrench; servlteurs, Mrs. Gerald\nHam. Mrs. W. G. Mara, Mrs. George\nDyson, Mlu Gladys Prestley, Miu\nKathleen Brown, Miss Eileen Mara.\nMiu Catherine McLean; general\nconvener, Mrs. Emll Leduc. assisted\nby Mrs. G. Townsend, pruldent\n.   .   .\nThe Rouland contingent from the\nboys' camp at Koolaree, has returned to the city, reporting a\nglorious time ln spite of the inclement weather. One little chap increased his weight from 78 to 90\npounds.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr, and Mrt. E. J. Gillard and\nMrs. C. J. Hurray, who wtre guuta\nof Mr. and Mrs. John  Roscorla,\nfirat GUfitrrii ot\n(Hfjriat fcrfentiat\nScientist In Boston, Mau.\n204 BAKER STREET\nA branch of the Mother Church.\nThe   First   Church   of   Christ\nSunday School 9:43 a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSubject Ltuon-Sermon\n\"SACRAMENT\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE  READING  ROOM  IN\nCHURCH  BUILDINQ-\nAll Cordially Welcome\nS*^ttnttri(Bl!urrl}\nnt Canaiia\nDuring July\nUnion Services\n11:00 aim.\u2014St Paul's Church.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Trinity Church.\nPublic Worship will be conducted\nat both servicu bv\nREV. JAS. BYERS of Regina.\nhave left for their home ln Richmond, Cal.\n.   \u2022   .\nDale Hartley ot Calgary stopped\noff for a day with Rouland frlenda\non his way to Vancouver.\nE. Loggle of Summerland is\nguest of Ro;\nftossland reiatlvu.\nClifford Yolland -of Vancouver\nand Harry Yolland of Lilloet ara\nguuts ot Mr. and Mrs. Thomas\nYolland.\n.   .   .\nMrs. Adrian Cotnolr it enjoying a\nholiday at the home ot her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. W. G. Chahley, Grand\nForks.\nSOCKING 'EM  HIOH\nLONDON. (CP)-In golft early\ndays trick feats were popular in\nBritain. In 1850 Donald McLean, a\nScot, won a substantial wager by\ndriving a ball over the Melvillo\nMonument in St. Andrews Square,\nEdinburgh\u2014a height of 154. feet.\nOld Tom Morris was uid to have\nsent a ball 400 feet into the air.\n.To measure the effect of moving\npicture scenes on children, Soviet\neducators use apparatus recording\nthe child's sighs and other breathing\nruponsu.\nA BIG DAY AT\nTHE BAY\nSaturday and Monday\nBriefs From the\nBig Ad\nSummer Voiles, Special, yard 25c\nWhitt and Pastel Flat Crept, yard,_._. 69c\nMisses' String Knit Suits ...... $3.95\nWomen's Rayon Panties, pair ............ 25c\nMisses'Shorts, pair \u2014     75c\n50 only, Silk Crepe Slips, each  $1.29\nWomen's Wash Frocks, each     $1.00\nWomen's and Growing Girls' Sport\nOxfords, pair _._ ___.       $3.45\nMen's Work Boots, pair  $3.95\nPerfect Silk Hosiery 65c pair; 2 pairs $1.25\nWashable White Handbags, each .. 69c\nWashable White Gloves, pair....        69c\nHammock Special, each .... $3.79\nFine Quality Suits  $22.50\nMen's Flannel Sport Jackets  $4.95\nWork Shirts  ..$1.69\nDress Socks, regular 50c pair _   39c\nDress Pants, pair $3.95\nEnglish Broadcloth Shirts _ ..$1.00\nMen's Black and White Sport Oxfords,\npair _-... $2.19\nSee Oar Grocery Window for the\nBest Food Bargains In town.\n* \u25a0**\u2014 -\"\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0-'\u2014\u2014 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014.I.   T-\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u2014--   -__J\n-KoasrtAU.il l_ mtm mo. \u25a0\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n^_^^^^___%\\\nPAoe pour \u25a0\nTHI NELSON DAILY NIWS. NIIION. B.C.-SATUHDAY MORNING. JULY It. 1t\u00bb\nGeorge Seymour\nDies al Creston\nCRESTON, B.C., July 12-George\nSeymour, a long time and well\nknown resident of West Creston\ndied at Creston hospital Tuesday\nafter a somewhat lingering illness.\nHe was 50 yean of age. The funeral\nwas held this morning at 11 o'clock\nfrom the Presbyterian church, in\ncharge of the Legion. Mr. Seymour\nwent overseas from Creston early\nin the Great War.\nAngus Maclnnis, labor M.P. for\nSouth Vancouver, ls to speak in\nTrinity United church hall Monday\nunder the auspices of the Creston\ntind Canyon C.C.F. clubs. Mrs. Mac-\nCAN'T SLEEP\nIT'S YOUR NW VIS\nRelief tssm., tata\nwith uie of\nDr. CHASE'S\nIlllll IOOI)\nInnis will speak at Canyon the same\nevening.\nR. Sinclair Smith hu returned\nfrom a buslneu visit to Vancouver.\nDr. Hendenon is Uking a few\ndays vacation, and In his absence\nfrom Cruton hia practice is being\nlooked after by Dr. W. 0. Green\nof Cranbrook.\nJune revenue at Cruton office ot\nthe provincial police was quite\nbuoyant the toUl Intake running in\n$1420. The revenue under the Motor\nVehicle act wu (972. Minen licenses brought in $302.\nLOST LIFE FOR HAT\nNEWPORT, Eng. (CP)-In an effort to regain his hat, blown to\nan adjoining roof while working\non a chimney. Albert Mansfield\ncrashed through the roof and was\nkilled.\nOne serious aspect of toil drifting that ls seldom mentioned is the\nimpossibility of keeping the dirt out\nnf the home during dust .storms.\nGrit and grime must be endured ln\nfood. In beds, in furniture and on\nthe floors until the wind subsides.\nThen it is necessary to clean thick\nlayen of loose soil from everything.\nonly to have the experience repeated\nwith the new wind storm.\nOVERWAITEA\n100% B.C.\nLIMITED\nNELSON\nPHONE 707\nSPECIALS SATURDAY AND\nMONDAY\nSOAP\u2014Pearl Whltt 10 cakes for 33<\nRINSO Large Package 2U\nKETCHUP\u2014Aylmer  12-ei. bottle 15<\nB.C. Sugar, 20 lbs. for\n$1.29\nSODAS\u2014I. B. C. Family silt Package 17<-\nSOAP\u2014Palmolive 4 cskes for 18f>\nCOCOA\u2014Fry's  Vi-lb. tin 21<\nPicnic Hams, per lb 20c\nPAROWAX  Mb. package'l3<\nFirst Grade Alberts. Extra Sptcisl 3 lbs. for 80<*\nBANANAS   Lb. 10*\nButter, 3 lbs. for 69c\nFRUIT |ARS\u2014Meson Sure Seal tnd Safety Seal quarts;\nPtr doien    $1.56\nFOR TEA DRINKERS\nTry a pound of Overwaitea Best Per Ib. 50c)\nFresh Fruit and Vegetables\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMENUS, RECIPES end\nHINTS\nMINU  HINT\nTomato Juice Cocktail with\nCheese Cracken\nTasty Liver Cakes\nRadishes       Berry Tarts\nTea\nCheeie may be spread on plain\ncrackers and then the crackers may\nbe put under a low broiler flame for\njust a second to brown the cheese\nto serve with the tomato juice. The\ncommercial    cheese    wafers    and\ncrackers will also serve here. Do you\nknow, I think a little formality, even\nln family meals, helps sometimes.\nFor Instance, a perfectly plain tomato juice cocktail served before the\n-meal with cracken, such as I have\nsuggested, may be served in the living room or on the porch before the\nmeal is served. It can also be served\nas a first course at thc table, of\ncourse.\nToday'i Recipes\nTasty Liver Cakes\u2014One cup cook*\ns-wss-wsssssms\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\n*\u00ab\u00ab*_\u00bb\u00abS\u00ab*W\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab5*\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbWS4\u00ab<\ned liver, ground; one cup riced potatoee, one egg, beaten; one imall\nonion, ground; salt and pepper. Mix\ningredients well, form Into flet\ncakes and try in bacon drippings until well browned. Serve topped with\nslice of tomato and strip ot crllp\nbacon. Makes six medium sized\ncakes.\nFACTS AND  FANCIES\nOrange Bread\nSimmer the rlnda of two large or\nthree small oranges In water to\ncover 10 minutes. Drain, cover with\nWater again. Cook until tender.\nDrain and shred with scissors. Add\nOne-half cup water and one-halt cup\nsugar and cook slowly till syrupy\nand transparent. There should be\nhalf a cup. Sift together two and\none-half cups flour, five teapsoons\nbaking powder, one-half cup sugar\nand ohe-fourth teaspoon salt. Combine three eggs, well beaten; three-\nfourths cup milk, one-fourth cup\norange juice, one teaapoon lemon\nJuice, two tablespoons melted shortening and the cooked orange rind.\nMix the dry and liquid mixture\nonly till the dry It thoroughly\nmoistened. Bake in greased loaf pans\nat 390 degrees tor 45 minutes. This\ntype ot bread should not be sliced\ntill thoroughly cooled.\nBON TON NKT.\nPHONE 84\nend 29Z\nWe do eur own killing\nOur meats are alwayi frtih.\nFREE\nDELIVERY\nChoice No. 1 Vtal\nGood Oven rossts, 1 C<*\nRolled Oven roestt, OAe)\nIO*\nMinced bttf,\nIb.  \t\nLttn ttewing bttf,  10'  <\nBreskfett ssustge, 10':.\nIb  IL\nGood pot roests\u2014      1Ac1\nRoiled Bontitts       19'\u25a0\u25a0'-\u00ab>\nroestt, Ib   IL\nOven roests (btby   lOli-f\nbttf), Ib IL\nPrlmt ribs,\nIb\t\nRolled thick ribt\nbtby bttf, Ib.  .,\nGood tttskt,\nIb\t\nSausage mtat,\nIb\t\n16'\n15*\n15*\n10*\nHtvt you tritd our Vtsl tnd Lamb croquettei?\nTHEY ARE DELICIOUS\nFhe whole familq is waiting\nto talk to ipu, Mother\"\nThere is great excitement in the \\\nJones home. Mr. Jones has called\nup his old mother in Nova Scotia\nby long-distance telephone, and\nthe whole Jones family is ready to\ntalk to her.\nEven little Irene, aged four, who\nhas never seen her grandmother,\nwill have a word. Dad will act as\n\\master of ceremonies and see that\n. no one talks too long.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\nWhat a busy few minutes it is\ngoing to be on that telephone line!\nAnd what pleasure the -call will\ngive every one!\nCreston Institute\nHas a Lawn Social\nIntake Is $25; Miss\nMory Murrell\nIs Home\nFord Oolng Into Politics?\nCRESTON. B. C, July 12.-None\ntoo favorable weather greeted Creiton and District Women'i lnitltute\nfor their lawn social at the home of\nMri. C. F. Hayes Saturday. In addition to the tea there wai a sale of\nhome cooking, with a caih Intake\nof almost $25. There was e short\nmusical program to which Mrs. J.\nT. Rose, Mrs. G. Vlgne and Mlss\nMarguerite Grant contributed vocal\nnumbers, with Mrs. W. Fraser at the\npiano. Mlsa Evelyn Oliver favored\nwith two piano solos.\nMiss Mary Murrell. who wai a student at the University of B. C. the\npast term, arrived Monday for the\nsummer holidays with her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Murrel.\nF. V. Staples was a business visitor at Nelson a couple ot dayi.\nMrs. M. J. Willis ot Elrose, Sask.\nis visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. G. Irvine. She Is accompanied\nby Mr. and Mrs. E. Kutz and young\naon.\nThe weather which has been\nshowery es well u chilly over\nthe week-end, commenced to warm\nup Wednesday and real summer\nweather ii again in evidence. The\nrainy spell waa much to the liking\nof the raspberry growen.\nA second vacancy ln the public\nichool teaching staff has been announced, with the resignation of\nMlss Marion Learmonth, who has\nbeen in charge of Division 4 for\nthree years.\nMrs. A. Wade with Earl and Norma and H. B. Johnson were visiting at Fernle.\nS. G. Cl\u00bbrk has assumed his former position on the office staff at\nthe C. 0. Rodgers box factory.\nMrs. L. Mclnnis left Saturday on\nher return to Howser, after spending three weeks at their home here.\nMr. and Mrs. K. Kettlewell of\nTrail spent a few days liere with\nthe latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Anderson.\nMlu Florence McDonald, wbo\nteaches at Stony Plain, Alta., arrived Friday to ipend the summer\nwith her mother, Mrs. H. W. McDonald.\nMr. and Mra. Flood of Bassano, Alberta were here for a few days with\nthe latter's mother Mrs. H. W. McDonald.\nMUs Cecille Olivier was with Nelson friends a few days.\nA. J. Kent, a well known reeltor\nof Bonners Ferry, Ida., was a Creston vlaltor Tuesday. He states 32,000\nacres of dyked land are in crop in\nthe vicinity of that town and the\noutlook is for the best yields harvested in the past 12 years. Peai and\nwheat look particularly fine.\nCreiton News\nof tht Day\nFOR SALE - PRESERVING\nitrawberrlei. Pick your own. Fred\nLewis, Creston. (2560)\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nPIPE MUSIC FOR SCOTCH\n\u2022ULTANA\nIt may Interest both your Scotch\nand Irian readers to letm thtt Mil*\nayana like the bagpipes and some\nof them play them quite well. It\nls less than two yean since the Instrument wes introduced to the people. Already the Johore military\nforcea have given their first public\nperformance\u2014and it was a great\nsuccess. The bagpipe demonstration\nwaa given et a military tatoo arranged as a farewell to the Sultana,\na Scotswoman who hails from Ed-\nIngurgh, and la commander-in-chief\nof the forces.\nBefore her departure for Europe\nthe wu serenaded by a band ot\npipers. These, however, have not\nyet advanced to the dignity of wearing the kilta.\u2014James McDougall. of\nLoch Lomond, Cape Breton, Writes\nto the Sydney Post-Recorder.\nA NOVEL REASON\nLONDON, (CP)\u2014\"I cannot attend court as I have recently obtained a poiition as a driving Instructor,\" wrote a motorist who was\nfind $10 at Kingston tor driving\non the wrong side of a traffic islind.\nOwens Is Wed\nMinnie Ruth Solomon, comely\ncolored Cleveland mln, li now\nMn. Jeiie Owens. She and the\ngreat negro treck ace wore wid In\nClevelmd ei Jen. stopped off en\nroute to Buffalo for another track\nmeet Above the hippy ptlr are\n\u2022hewn. \u25a0\n\"    at\nSome suspicion It being voiced In politlcil circles In the United\nStatei that Henry Ford's move to create e committee to find new\nmeant ef using farm products In Induitry li somehow linked up with\nthe 1936 presidential election! end the Republlctn party. General\npolicy, however, of the committee It to Increau the purchasing power\nof the American farmer. 8ome of the thlngi the committee wll Investigate are substitutes for guollnt; uie of toy beam In making\n\u2022teerlnq wheels, horn buttom, etc.; rubber from chemical compound;\ngoat hair for upholstering.\nlist U. S. election!.\nHenry Ford endorsed Herbert Hoover In\nYOUNO MAY RETURN\nMONTREAL, (CP)-Although he\npromised to itay away from the\ngridiron after graduating trom McGill where he  starred  with the\nRedmen for several years, Don\nYoung Just poulbly will play next\nfall for Montreal Wheelers of the\nBig Four. Young, an Ottawa boy,\nratei as one ot the game's greatest\ndefensive halfbacks.\nVemon St. Groceteria\nFAMILY GROCERS\nPHONE 122       J. A. Laird tr Sons       FREE DELIVERY\nSendee With Satisfaction Our Aim\nAll eur cuitomeri BENEFIT ind SAVE MONEY ag wt\nirt In a poiition to sell eur mtrchandiH at\nVtry Attractive  Pricei!\nApproved charge accounts may be opened\nITEMS\nIN BRIEF\nSelected from Somt of\ntht Speeiili our PRO-\nCRESS SALE CONTAINS\nThit Salt tndi on Monday\nthe 15 th.\nHATS \u2014All ihapej and\ncolors including (PI\nWhitt, Each .. \u00abPl\nLadles' Silk Crepe and Pique,\nOrgandy and Voile d\u00bbA QQ\nDresses all aelllng ssltDAi.OtJ\nSilk Suits long and &H AC\n\u25a0hort coata    aO I .tlO\nLadlei' Linen Suite, aome\nwith wrap around skirti, aln\npleati, tfO fJK\nthe iult   -U. 10\nBaltic Girdles new-   CQm\ncit in white  0571*\nBest Quality Silk Hose, silk\ntoe to top chiffon, full fashioned, guaranteed no rings,\nalio in crepe chiffon KQm\nand aervlee, pair . _ OafXr\nJeraey Silk Silos. Bias eut,\nlace trim all sires with adjustable straps, QRa\nonly   IWL\nFancy Panties and      QQn\nBloomers, pair   \u2014  Qajlj\nThe newest Summer Gloves,\nflare cuffs, etc., valuea EQA\nto $1.99. for   U\u00ab\/C\nAnother lot also ln     QQ\/\u00bb\nwhite, at  OJ7-L\nAllen-A ankle iox,     1 Q _\nper pair   X\u00ab7v\nHand Crochet Cluny       (? _\ndoilies, all sizes  \u00abJC\n3-8-inch crou stitch (M   J A\nlinen tea teta wlefitl\nPillow Cases. Maderla hand*\nrker $1.49\nChlldren'a print dressei, alao\nparty itylet, vslues to $1.99.\nSlzea J yn. to 14,        \u00a3Q.\nChildren'! white bloomen\nand vests, fine knit OR.\ncotton, reg. 49c for LOm\nChildren's hata, all tfl AA\nreduced 39c to tBleW\nLittle boy's waih luita, CQn\nChildren*! rompen,    *7Km\nbroedcloth    I OK,\nChildren's Slacks, Shorts. Sun\nsuits, hiking suits, coveralls,\netc.. all reduced.\nBathing auita. children1! S te\n10 ytan. black and navy,\npure wool, tun       (PI  \"IA\nSime thing ln the *1 (TA\nlarger ilzea tDXeuIF\nRAMSDEN'S\n$22 Btktr St it Stanley\n(or Dessert TONIGHT\nFINDTHE HAPPY ENDING\nFOR ALL SUMMER MEALS\nDiicovtr an taiy-to-tervt dcnert... ont that'i pure\nand wholesome, and popular with everyone. Chooie\na favorite flavor, and get tht vtlvtt tmtothntu that\nonly rich cream and pure ingredients can give. Serve\nIt alone or with fruit or cake ... lut diicover Itt\ngoodnen tonight !\nAT YOUR CURLEW DEALERS\n H\nm%\t\nPACKED IN BRICK OR BULK\nCurlew Ice Cream\n_\n ___-\t\n\t\n-w.\n\u2022\u2014*.\n'\u25a0AHIKI QQURAOE\n\/-BANGOR, Walu (CP)-When hii\nmatter wu attacked by e bull, Rover, a Welih iheep dog seized it by\nthe nose until the man crawled to\nufety. Rover hai a new collar md\nmedallion from the aoclety for the\nPrevention of Cruelty to Animals.\nTOOK CREOSOTE POR BRANDY\nJOHANNISBURG. (CP)-A verdict of accidental duth wu returned here at the lnquut Into the\nduth of Alfred W. Still who awoke\none morning feeling unwell and\t\ntook creowte tn mistake for brandy, ind dilnty, feminine details\ntOIS'TO LEPER COLONY\n..ONDON, (CP) \u2014 Dr. Robert\nCochrane hai volunteered to ipend\nfive years among lepers ln Madras\nand hli wife and three children will\naccompany him and live \"lomewhere nur\" the leper lettlement.\nIf you have to itay In the clt;\ntheee warm daya and want a dresj\nyou can put on late ln the afternoon\nand feel well dressed for the rest\not the evening, consider the cotton\nlace ensemble made on tailored\nlinei. lf you're the type that wears\nthem with distinction; or leu severe\n\u25a0tyling with ihort puffed ileeves\nTHI NIUON DAILY NIWS. NILION. Mo-SATURDAY MORNINO. JULY 18.1888\nSt. Joseph's Academy\nResidential and Day School, Nelson, B.C.\nClasses in Primtry, Elementary, High School and Commercial Education. Pupils prepared for Normal\nEntrance and Matriculation Examinations.\nMusic pupils prepared for Toronto Conservatory,\nTrinity College, Royal Academy and London\nCollege Examinations.\nTERMS MODERATE\nFurther particular! gladly given by the Sitter Superior.\nInquiries and Ruirvatloni Invited from out-of-town parenti.\nSocial Happenings\nin Nelson City\nThli column is conducted by lta. It J. Vlgntux. AU newi of a\nsoclil nature, including reception!, private entertainment!, pereonel\nitemi, marriages, etc wlU appear ln thla column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux et her home, 318 Silica itreet.\nMr. and Mn. John Argyle, and\nthe latter's sister Mrs. I. L. Hedley,\nhave returned from Hedley where\nthey went to attend the Mclnnei-\nJonw wedding Wednuday evening.\n.  \u2022  .\nMn. T. A. Whelldon of South\nSlocin wu a city ahopper yuterday.\n\u2022 .  i\nVlilton ln Nelaon yeiterday Included Oicir H. Appleton of Sunshine Biy.\nt  t  .\n0, Auton luvu thii morning tor\nVancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mn. G. G. Taylor of\nCranbrook visited the city yuterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. Harry Burnt, Ctr*\nbonate atreet, have as their guut\nMlsi CeclUe OUvler ot Cruton.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nS. Ahler of Victoria la here to\nvlait Mlu Ahier of the itaff of the\nFIG BARS\nFRE8H\n2 lbs.\n29c\nSafeway Stores\nYou buy the best Cor less at Safeway\nALL MERCHANDISE SOLD UNDIR MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE\nPINEAPPLE ^Tutr.\" 1 tins 19c\nCORNED BEEF u-i, < 2 tins 19c\nFRY'S COCOA \u201e . 1.2 lb. tin 19c\nRubber Rings. J pkg. 19c\nCORN FLAKES it\" 3 pkg. 19c\nBoiled Dressing J::,;. u oz. jar 19c\nMAPLE SYRUP n. pint bot. 19c\nAll Abov* Specitli on Salo Saturday Only. Stlf-Strvict and Non-Dtllvtry\nPhone 865*866 ter CO.P. Specials. Free Delivery\nSUGAR *\u2022\"'\" Sptciil.\u00b0noHncMtd\". 10 lbS. 60C\nJtWILL SHORTENING .. 2 Ibi. 29*\nCHICKEN, Bontltit Tin 27*\nTomato |uict, Bulmsn't It, 3 tint 25*\nCHEESE, Coldtn Loaf .... Lb pkg. 25*\nTEA, Brtid't Blut Label .... Ib. 43*\nBUTTER, Highway lit gradt, 3 lbt. 75*\nWOODBURY'S SOAP .... 3 ban 25*\nJELLY POWDERS 6 pkg. 25*\nCERTO Bottla 29#\nTOMATOES. K.C, 2 '\/it .. 2Hnt 21*\nMARMALADE. McDonald'i, 4 lbl. 45*\nKETCHUP Aylmer.... 12oi.bot. 15*\nTOILET TISSUE 8 rolli 25*\nCOFFEE, Excollo, froth ground, Lb. 35*\nFLY COILS   5 for 10*\nSALT. 3Vi Ib. uck Each 10*\nFLOOR WAX, Johnion' Tin 69*\nPAROWAX      Pkg. 15*\nFULL LINE OF PRESERVING SUPPLIES\u2014BUY YOURS TODAY\nFRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES\nW ATERMELLON Up From SSe\nFREE Siie* of Wittrmillon for all Kidditt tccomptnltd by tholr parontt.\nSTRAWBERRIES 2 boxti 19*\nRASPBERRIES ........ 2 boxei 25*\nBANANAS     2 Ibi. 23*\nORANGES   2 doi. 49*\nGRAPEFRUIT 5 for 25*\nCANTELOUPI 2 for 29*\nLETTUCE 2 htadt 19*\nTOMATOES, H.H  Lb. 22*\nGREEN PEAS 2 Iba- 19*\nCARROTS OR BEETS .. 2 bunchei 15*\nCARROTS    4 lbt. 25*\nNEW POTATOES   5 Ibi. 25*\nQUALITY MEAT SPECIALS\n165 \u2014 PHONES \u2014 866 \u2022\n865 \u2014 PHONES \u2014 866\nCHOICE YOUNG STEER BEEF\nDon't Miss These Soecials \u2014 Thev Are Real Values !\nTHICK RIB ROASTS\nCROSS RIB ROASTS1\nBLADE ROASTS\nloc\nALL ONE\nf PRICE\nCHUCK ROASTS and ROUND BONE ROASTS\t\nIf You Don't Cot Down Town Early Phono Your Ordtr In and W* Wlll Soloct Your Rottt\n.25'\nLAMB\nSHOULDERS LAMB    Ib. 15c\nLAMB CHOPS Ib. 17c\nSTEWING LAMB ..._2 lbs. 25c\nRIB BOILING BEEF Ib. 7c\nFRESH SAUSAGE\nMEAT   ._ lb. 10c\nLEAN STEWING BEEF\nMINCED BEEF. 2 Ibi. for ..\nCUBE STEAKS Eoch 8c\nFRESH MADE\nHAMBURGER , Ib. 10c\nPURE BULK LARD WITH\nMEAT ORDERS, 2 lbs. 29c\nOur meats are strictly fresh. Satisfaction guaranteed\nor money refunded. We invite you to Inspect\nour sanitary meat premises.\nWt Reaervt the Right to Limit Qutntltln\n\u2022AFEWAY STORE* LIMITID\nwho la 111\nOeneral hoapltal,\nHr. and Mrt. W. T. Ledingham\nhave returned from a motor trip\nto Spokant.\n\u2022   *  .\n' Hr. tnd Mn. John McPhail and\nMill AUce McPhail, SUIca atreet,\nhive returned from a motor trip to\nAllenby where they viiited tnelr\nion ind diughter-ln-liw Mr. and\nMri. Wallace McPhail. They were\naccompanied there by Mlss Alice\nMayme McPhail who is holidaying\nat the coait\n...\nMn. W. Munnlng and her baby\ndaughter have left the Kootenay\nLake Oeneral  hoipital  for  their\nhome on View itreet, Fairview.\n...\n0.0. Fair of Salmo vlalted Nelaon\nyeaterday.\nMlu Florence Stephenaon leavei\nig for vi\t\nVancouver island where she will\nthia morning for Vancouver and\nhave a ihort vlait. She will then return to Vancouver and nil on the\nPrlnceu Louli, July IT, for the\nAlaska cruise.\n...\nMln S. G. Timaeus, formerly of\nNelion ind now ot Corbin, hu taktn up reiidence at 41B Innes street.\n...\nI. 0. Nelwn. A. H. Oreen and P.\nG. Morey motored to the Whitewater mine yeaterday.\n...\nMra. F. W. Wllaon, Joiephlne\nitreet, hu returned from a couple\nof weeki ipent at the cout, the\nreturned Thursday night from Trail.\nwhere ihe went to meet Mr. and\nISfoti,\nice\nAll accounts duo to\nMeagher's Limited aro\npayable at the office of\nwragge and Hamilton,\nBarristers, Baker St..\nNelson, B.C.\nMeagher's\nLtd.\nMn. Harold Coatea, recently married In Spokane; who were en rout*\nto Fire Valley.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHr. and Mn. H. H. Pitta, Cedar\n\u25a0treat, have u their gueit Mn.\nPitta\" couiln, Harry E. Tyrrell, of\nSpokane,    \"\n...\nHr. and Hn. B. F. Whiteside,\nVictoria itreet, have is their gueits\nMn. Robert Heap of Sirdar, and\nMr. and Mn. D. H. Q-.iglej** of Lethbridge.\n...\nD. E. Calvert of Kaslo wu ln town\nyeiterdiy.\n...\nMn. J. J. Mclntyre and daughter\nDorli leave Sunday for Toronto and\nother eutern citiei.\n...\nHr. and Hn. George Atkinson,\nRosemont, have returned from a\nmotor trip to the cout cities.\n...\nMn. L. Pattenon, Gore itreet,\nleaves this morning for the cout\n...\nMr. and Hn. David Laughton,\nEdgewood avenue have u their\nguest their grandaon David of Edmonton, who hai been visiting his\naunt Mn. Angus Hayei in Vincouver.\n...\nMn. Minnie Brine ot Niklma ll\n\u2022pending a couple of weeki ln Neleon a gueat at the Strathcona hotel.\n...\nMiu Irene Denny of WlUow Point\nviiited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nHonoring Mn. W. T. McDowell of\nOakland Cal., who Is vlaltlng In\nNelson, Mn. Joseph Sturgeon and\nMn. M. J. Vigneux entertained yesterday at an informal tea when they\nwere assisted by Mn. James H.\nGagnon ot Trail.\n...\nMn. W. M. Archibald of Creston\nand her granddaughter were city\nshoppers Thunday.\n...\nS. K. Wallace of Tarrys wu t\nNelaon ihopper yesterday.\nHr. and Mn. R. G. Kelly of Trail\nhave taken up reiidence at 904\nMill street\n...\nWti. Leonard Walton left yeaterday for Sicamous.\n...\nMlsa Queenie German, Hoover\nstreet li going to apend the weekend in Trail at the home of her\nsister-in-law, Mn. Reginald German.\n...\nHn. G. Rohac and infant daughter have left the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hoipltal for their home In\nFarron.\n...\nHn. Len Walton and ion Garry\nleft yeiterday morning for Slca-\nmoui. B.C, where they wiU visit\nMn. Walton\"! brother and liiter-ln-\nliw, Hr. ind Mrs. R. F. Young.\nWEEK-END RADIO\nA identlit calculates that there\nare lix trillion spores In a giant\npuff ball, each spore being capable\nof producing another one of these\nbig fungus planta under favorable\nconditions.\nSATURDAY NIOHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NITWORK\n800 New York Philharmonic orch.\nstadium concert, dir. Joae Iturbl,\nM.B.S., exc. B.C.; 5:30 SolUloquy-\nlmtrumental group, mala quartet\nsoloist; 8:00 Don Pedro Presents\n\u2014Fiesta, from Vancouvet, to C.B.S.;\n8:30 Summer Follies from Montreal;\n7:00 Newi and Weather forecast;\n7:15 Charles Dornberger's orch. Montreal; 7:30 Ray Noblee\" orch. N.B.C.-\nN.Y.; 8:00 Mart Kenny's orch, Leke\nLouise; 8:15 Al Oliver's Hawaiiens,\nEdmonton; 8:30 Newa. B.C., Net;\n8:45 Marion Bowles, violin, Helen\nReeves, piano, Kelowna.\nN.B.C.-KPO  NITWORK\nKHQ KQW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\n690     820    840     880     (20     S70\n8:00 Radio City Party, J. B. Kennedy, m.c; Frank Black's orch.; 5:30\nChateau, Al Jolson, m.c. guest artist\nJack Stanton, Peggy Gardiner, vocalists, Vic Young i orch.; 6:30 Carefree Carnival, Ned Tollinger, m.c.\nMeredith Willion'i orch.; 7:00 National Barn Dance, vart'y; 8:00 Freddie Martin'i or.; 8:30 Paul Pendarvls'\norchestra; 9:00 Walti Time, Meredith Willson's orch. Pat O'Shea,\ntenor; 9:30 Pan Americana, Jose Ramirez, tenor; Argentine Trio; 10:00\nBeaux Arts Time (KPO); Quartet\nTime; 10:15 Henry King's orchestra;\n10:30 Al Morris' orch. (KPO); 10:55\nPreu-Radio Newa; 11:00 Slumber\nHour, orgtn (KPO); Dick Jurgen's\norch.; 11:30 Mann Brothen' orch.\nC.B.S.DON LIE NITWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\nBTO 810 140 1180 1270\n5:00 California Melodiea, variety\n(Don Lee); 6:00 Don Pedro Preienti \u2014 Fiesta CRC; 6:30 Jan\nGarber's orch.; 7:00 Abe Lyman's\norch.; 7:30 Claude Hopkin'i orch.;\n8:00 Merle Cirlson'i orch.; (DL);\n8:30 Little Jack Little'! orch.; Jimmy\nDavii' orch.; 9:00 Bill Hogan'i orch.;\nBob Kinney's orch., (Don Lee); 9:30\nAl Dien's orchestra; Orville Knapp's\norchestra; (Don Lee); 10:00 Orcheetra (DL); 10:30 OrvlUe Knapp's\norch. (DL); 11:00 Don Bettor's orch.\n(DL); 11:30 Lu Hite's orch. (DL).\nSUNDAY NIOHT\nC.R.C.\n2:00 Band of HM. Canadian Grenadier Guards, Montreal to N.B.C;\n2:30 Continental Varletiei, Kloists,\norch. N.B.C.-N.Y.; 8:00 Rex Battle's\norch., Toronto; 3:30 Serenade, Ly-\nrique. Lyric Trio, vocalist!, Montreal; 4:00 Putel Panels, soloists,\nstring em., Regina; 4:30 Band Box\nRevue, Detroit; 5:00 Radio Theatre\nGuild dir. Rupert Caplan, Montreal: 5:30 Horace Heidt's Concert,\nM.B.S.-Detrolt; 6:00 La Petite Symphonic de Radio Can., Quebec; 6:30\nThe Road to Yeeterday. orch. and\nsoloiits, Toronto, to N.B.C. 7:00 News\nWeather forecast; 7:15 Rubin Kru-\nner's cello quar. Mont; 7:30 Atlantic\nNocturne, readinra organist, violln-\niit. Halifax; 8:00 Tlie CeceUan String\nQuartet Vancouver; 8:30 News (RC.\nNet); Concert Group. Banff, exc.\nB.C.; 8:45 Sundiy Evening at Homc\n\u25a0acred songs, Sukatoon; 9:00 Prairie Pastorale, soloists, itrlng quin\ntet direction Jttcha, Oalperln, Calgary (Weatern Net via CKMO);\n8:30 Peggy Cook, loprano, Trail.\n(CKMOi; 9:45 label Hurray Campbell, Kelowna, (CKMO).\nN.B.C.-KPO\n5:00 Manhattan HerryGo-Round;\n5:30 Musical Revue, Gustave Haen*\nscnen's orch.; 6:00 Uncle Charlie's\nTent Show, Don Voorhtu' orehutn; 7:00 Sunset Drtama Morin sisters, Ranch Boys; 7:16 Cornelia Otis\nSkinner, actreu. mono'logulst: 7:30\nJick Benny, Miry Livingstone.\nFrank Parker. Don Beitor'i orch.;\n8:00 Miurlce Spitalny*! orch.; 8:30\nOne Man'i Family, Carlton Morse\ndrama; 9:00 Bennie Walkei'i Enter*\ntainen, Jonu Boys (KPO); Leonird Keller's orchestra; 9:30 Arlle\nSimmon's orehutn, KPO-KOA;\nReaders' Guide, J. H. Jackaon; 10:00\nNewa Flaahee, Sam Hayu; 10:18\nBridge to Dreamland, Paul Canon,\norganist; Paul Pendarvls' orchestra.;\nI KPO); 10:55 Preu-Radio News\nService; 11:30 Tom Genu's orch.;\n11:05 Charles Runyan, organist\n(KPO).\nIF YOU WANT TO SAVE VISIT THIS\nDISTRIBUTION Egrf WITHOUT WASTE\nALL STYLES\nREDUCED !\nWOMEN'S SHOES\nSHOES Hi\nfor tho #\u00ab\u00bb\u2022\nBOY or r\u2122*\nGIRL\nIvory pair of the new tummer whites and\nothtr itylet included in thit gentroui reduction. Linn at\n$1'35 to $4*85\nNEN'S STYLES\nPerforated calfikln itylet\nfor hot weather, white\nbucki for all occaiioni, golf\nitylet in white or tmokod\nelk and blackt and tant aro\nincluded in thli group of\nihoei.\n$2-15 to $7-65\nSIZES LIMITED\nComf-Ese itylet\n$1*65 to\n$335\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaden in foptfoihion\nButcherteria\n\u2014Newi\u2014\nt. a. shorthouse\n  I      PAU   t\\Hm\\\nCIA-DON LII\n5:00 To Ba Announced; 8:00 Wayne j\nKlng'i orch.; 8:30 Gen. Douglu Mc-.\nArthur, National Detenu; 7:00\nMuilcil Mirror, Loa Angelu; 7:30\nPreu-Radio Newa; Minute Melodiea\n(DL); 7:35 Johnny Hamp'i oreh. Atlantic City; 8:00 Joe Ha-rmea' orch.;\n8:30 Frank Deiley'i orch.; Salon*\nModerne. DL: 9:00 Hondo Zito's or.;\nThomu Lee frnenti, (Don Lee);\n8:30 Floyd Town's orch.; 10:00 Slim\nMartin's or. DL; 10:30 Orville\nKnapp's orch. (DL); 11:00 Ray Herbeck's or. DL; 11:18 Cecil Teague,\nJohn Emmel (DA.); 11:30 The Wanderer, DL.\nHORNER'S\nGROCERY\nSat and Mon.\nSPECIALS\nBuf Pet Route\u2014\nner lb., un from\t\nBeef Oven Roaata\u2014\nper lb -   r\nRound Steak\u2014\nGood, per lb.    -_\u2022-,,\nSirloin Steak-\nGood, per lb. \t\n\\nt\nCrumery Butter*\u2014\n2 lbe. \t\nAH\nVul Rolled Routiner lb. _\u2014 _-__\nvul Le\u00ab Roaata\u2014\nper lb.  _.._ .:._\nShoulder Lamb Route\nper lb, \t\n20*\n22*\nw\nSteak and Kidney\u2014\n2 lb.\t\nw\nBnakfaet Bauiage\u2014\n2 lb. for ____._...\nMinced Steak\u2014\n2 lb. for\t\nCottagi Cheeie\nper lb   ____.-\nWelnere\u2014 \u2014*-*-\u2022\u25a0\u2022\nGood, per lb. . ...+LaL.\nBelagna- -\u00ab--s_-v-\nGood .per Ib. _\u2022*\u2022_'\u25a0\nCorned Beef\u2014 '-*-*\u25a0-\u00bb\u2022-\nGood, per lb. _-.___\n25*\n2#\n20(\n22*\nPHONES\u2014527\u2014528\nFREE DELIVERY\nSPECIALS\nPaper Serviettes\u2014     IA*\nNujtl and Luthiii jelly OO**\nPowden. 3 pkg. L J\nClirkt't Pork and Beana\u2014\nlViiiietin, OC*\n3 for *-0\nEmpreti Coffee\u2014 *1 QO\n3 Ib. glass jar .. tPlih)\nBrtid't Coffee\u2014        iO*\n1 Ib. gltta jar ...       4..-\nPalm Pimento Cheeie 1 r *\nVt Ib. package ....    1J\nChateau Cheese\u2014     1 C*\nVi Ib. package ....    10\nHormel Splcsd Ham\u2014Off*\nKellogg'i Wheat Writ- OP*\nplot\u20142 pkgi    LO\nMalkin'i Beit Tea\u2014 d-7*\nBacon\u2014Slabt ebout\n3 lot. etch. Lb\t\nTomatoes-\nLb\t\nStrawberries\u2014\n2bnkttt ,\nCrapefruit\u2014large\ntlso; 3 for \t\nWatermelon\u2014\n2 lbs.\t\nSr: 29 39 49*\nCroon Peas\u2014 Ol*\n2 lbs    Ll\nNew Potatoea *)C.\n5 lbt    LO\nFrtih \"ilk tnd cresm.\nFrigidaire Equipped\nPhono 121\u2014Free Delivery\n25*\n22*\n19*\n25*\n15*\nat-\nHORSWILLS'\nCOFFEE, Chase \u00bb Sanborn!  39*\nBUTTER, Sprlngbrook Lb. 26*\nCORN FLAKES  3 for 25*\nRICE KRISPIES Pkt. 11*\nNIPPY CHEESI Lb. 28*\nPORK AND BEANS, Clark's Jumbo Cant .. Each 17*\nTEA, Braid't Blue Label 44*\nSWEET MIXED PICKLES\u2014Fraier Valley .. bottle 35*\nQUEEN OLIVES, Heins 17Vi 01. bottle 35*\nCREEN PEAS 2 Ibi. 23*\nCRAPEFRUIT Each   5*\nNEW POTATOES   Lb.   5*\nINTRODUCING\nBRAID'S DOUBLE ACTING BAKING POWDER\nIT GOES TWICE AS FAR\n8 ox.\t\n 20c \u201416 ox.\t\n30c\n2V?lb*.\n._...__ 70c\u20145 IBb. .____.\n$1.25\n.  .\nIT NEVER FAILS\nHorswill Bros.\nFree Delivery\nPhon* 235\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\n831\n832\n_JASSAR'S\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying for Saturday and Monday\nChoice Steer Beef\nRump Roait, Ib 16*\nRoll Rib Roaat, Ib. .. 20*\nPot Roait, Ib 10*\nBoiling Beef, 2 Ibi. .. 15*\nBlade Roait, Ib 13*\nShort Rib Roait, Ib. . \u25a0 15*\nLtgt Real Lamb, Ib. . 25*\nShoulden Limb, Ib. .. 16*\nLtgt Mutton, Ib 18*\nShoulders Mutton, Ib. 12*\nLsmb Stewing, 3 lbt. 25*\nVssl Fillet Roast, Ib. . 20*\nVeal Oven Roait, Ib. . 14*\nPork Oven Roait, Ib. . 20*\nEggi, local A-large,\n2 dos\t\nEggt, Crtde C, dos.\n63*\n20*\nCreamery Butter, with meat\norder, Ib 21*\nDairy Butter, 2 Iba. .. 35*\nMuihroomi, freih ttock\nfrom Vancouver, Ib. 45*\nSmall Frying Chicken, local,\nIb 33*\nFowl, Special Saturday,\nlb.  20*\nRoaiting Chicken, good,\nIb. 28*\nCheeie, mild Ontario,\nIb 21*\nSmall Pork Sauaigt, fresh\nmads, Ib 20*\nBreakfut Stuiage, freth\nmade. Ib 12*\nHamburger, freih and good,\nib. ..; ...10*\nSmoked Cottage Rolli,\nIb.  28*\nSwift't Bologna, Ib. \u25a0 \u25a0 17*\nSee our Frigidaire Window for Good Buying.\n ____________\n\u2022 \u2022\n\t\nPAGE SIX-\nTHE NELSON 0\/\"'.Y NEWS. NELSON S.C.-8ATURDAY MORNING. JULV 1!. 1988\nftttam Mg Wt ma\nEitabllshtd April 22. 1801 B\n\"Britiih Columbia'i Mott lnteretting Newipaper\"\nALL THE NSWS WHILE IT 18 NEWS\nPubliehtd  every  morning  except  Sunday by\ntbt NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED.\n218  Baker  Street,  Nelaon.  Britiah  Columbia.\nPhona 141 Private Exchmge Connecting all Deptrtmentt\nBetween\nYou and\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teicher of Ttsehers\"\nSATURDAY, JULY 13, 1935.\nAN OFFICIAL THINKER\nPolitical humorists in Britain are merrily twitting\nPremier Baldwin over the appointment of Lord Eustace\nPercy to the cabinet without portfolio. As Lord Percy\nhas had considerable experience both as a diplomat and\nas minister of education, some surprise was expressed at\nhis exclusion from more active cabinet rank.\nPremier Baldwin.has replied that it is because of\nthis experience that Lord Percy has not been given a\nportfolio. He has purposely been left free from departmental business to think out long-term policies for the\ngovernment.\nAs might have been expected, this explanation has\nbeen gleefully converted by the opposition press into a\nfrank confession by the government that it has no brains\nwith which to do its own thinking.\nPremier Baldwin, of course, is only doing what many\nother premiers and governments have been doing for a\nlong time. The only novel feature about it is that he is\ndoing it openly. The complexities of modern government\nare making such a course a necessity. The multiple duties\nwhich fall to the lot of the present-day cabinet minister\nleave him very little time for real, undisturbed, constructive thinking. It was never intended that it would work\nout that way, but theories have a habit of sometimes failing in practice, as Mr. Lloyd George once bluntly expressed it: \"Democracy is a funny thing. If people did not\npersist in taking up my time asking for jobs, I would\nthen have time to think up ways and means of creating\njobs.\"\nPremier Baldwin can smile at the chaff being thrown\nat him. All governments have their \"thinkers\"\u2014but they\nare unofficial \"thinkers\" whose thinking in many cases\nis inspired by private interest.\nLANGUAGE CHANGES WITH DAILY USE\nBesides enjoying a reputation associated with the\ncooking of the humble Bean, Boston is famed as the home\nof pedantic culture. On a recent occasion that city rose\non its hind legs in defence of its claim to meticulous accuracy of speech. It appears that the announcer of a\npopular trans-continental radio program had referred to\nBoston as a place where many historic events had \"transpired.\" In the next mail he was deluged with letters\ncarrying the Boston post-mark. Over one thousand fans\npointed out to him that the word \"transpire\" had been\nwrongly used.\nThe incident is recalled by the fact that twice in a\nrecent address Premier Bennett referred to \"what has\ntranspired in Canada.\" Dictionaries agree with the Boston critics that in such a meaning the word is improperly\nused. It is defined as (1) similar to \"perspire\"; (2) to\nexhale as vapor; and (3) to leak out, to gradually become\nknown. After a fourth meaning, \"to occur\" appears the\nwarning note, \"an improper use.\"\nIn defence of the word \"transpire\" as used by the\nannouncer and Mr. Bennett, it may be pointed out that\nwords change their meanings and that use gives authority to new meanings. While it is desirable from the standpoint of accuracy of expression that words shall not lie\ncarelessly used, if a sufficient number of people understand \"transpire\" to mean \"occur,\" then it does mean\n\"occur\" and dictionaries can do nothing about it but record the fact.\nUse, for instance, has given the word \"perspire\" a\nvery different meaning from that it once had. What it\nmeans today it is not necessary to define in the sultry\nweather of July. But*nce it meant \"to breathe or blow\ngently through anything.\" That meaning is now obsolete.\nBostonians who were glad to perspire instead of sweating\nafter the vulgar fashion, should not be so stiff-backed iu\ntheir repudiation of a new meaning for the word \"transpire.\"\nCONTENTS OF MOTION PICTURES\nTHE POOR RICH\nPlay golf in rain at exclusive club.\n\u2014Headline.\nTheie days, even the weather is\nsoaking the rich.\n\u2022 *   \u00bb\nDUMB DORA\n\"It has been discovered,\" laid thc\nprofessor ponderously, \"that the\nhuman body contains sulphur.\"\n\"Sulphur!' exclaimed a girl student wonderingly. \"How much sulphur is there in a girl's body, Pro-\ntesBor?\"\nHe shrugged his shoulders. \"Oh,\nthe amount varies, of course,\" hc\nreplied.\n\"I see,\" she went on; \"and is that\nwhy some of us make better matches\nthan others?''\nttt\nRED HOT NEWS\nKASLO\u2014Low level of Kootenay\nlake, at the peak of the bathing\nseason, is attributed to the number\nof ladies who have been reducing.\nSLOCAN CITY-The endurance\nrecord was broken here lut night\nwhen a prominent business man attended a garden party and danced\nfor three hours in a dress suit.\nTRAIL\u2014Soda fountain dulers\nare excited over the invention of a\nnew reinforced straw for cold drinks\nwhich can be used several times before being thrown away.\nNELSON\u2014Several people suffered burns when a rope gave way\nwhile thousands watched the ceremony of frying an egg on the city\nhall steps.\nROSSLAND\u2014Failure\u2014due to pollce objection to congested highways\u2014has dogged efforts of enthusiasts here who tried to stage a reunion of the Smith family,\nCRESTON \u2014 Ruponding to an\nalarm, firemen succeeded in rescuing 9-year-old Homer Hicks whose\nface became tightly caught in a\nwedge of water melon.\nWILLOW POINT \u2014 Miss Susie\nJones, a visitor from the city, reports loss of a change purse containing 27 cents, several stamps and\nher bathing suit\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTHE PEMBINA\nHere's some verse that arrived\nin the mail:\nHOW MANY TRICKS CAN\nNORTH WIN?\nHere ts a very interesting hand,\nunusually well played by North. The\nopening lead was the King of Clubs,\nfollowed by the Four of Diamonds,\nwhich Dummy's King won. The\nquutlon was wether tour-odd could\nbe made.\n\u2666 K 10 7\n919-11.\n\u2666 J\u00bb87\n\u2666 10\n\u2666 AQJ\nf 8 5\n\u2666 Q 10 \u00ab\n\u2666 AQJ9\nt\n4864\nf 10 8 X\n\u2666 4\n\u2666 K884\nIt\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letters to the editor muit be ilgned with the nama ot the\nwriter.   A nom de plume may be uied tor publicaUon if desired.\nLlnu in typewritten copy ihould bt double ipaced.\nGIVE LANT&RN A\nCORNER BY  ITSELF\nENERGY MEDIUM OF EXCHANGE\n(Third and Last of a Series)\nOh, those days of long ago,\nPiling lumber row on row.\nWhere the glad Pembina flows,\nIn the days of long ago.\nI would that I could live again\nThose gladsome days so free from\npain,\nPiling lumber in the rain.\nWhere lhe bright Pembina flows.\nThe sweet scent of the fruh-sawn\npine,\nThe Albertan air with a kick like\nwine,\nOh, believe me, live was devine,\nIn the days of long ago.\nOh, those dtys of youth and strength\nThe  lumber  piled  up  length on\nlength,\nAnd appetites keened to the -enlth\nIn the days ot long ago.\nPerhaps! I yet again may go\nTo where the glad Pembina rolls.\nAnd climb ita bamboo and wooded\nknolls,\nAt in the dtyi of long tgo.\nBy brightest chince I may again,\nA fragment of the charm regain,\nMuy haps prosperity will reign,\nAs in the dayt of long ago.\nWars thunderous voice shall yet\nbe heard.\nOn earth's green fields and deserts\nreal.\nBut Pembina still sweetly flow,\nAnd never held all wan alarms.\nMan's stubborn will and haughty\npride\nWill yet be tumbled in the duit,\nBut long, long ago afterward\nGay Pembina will still roll on.\nYet may the eternal diet\nSee fit to choose an empire bright,\nWith spirit kin to Pembina.\nThou emblem of eternity!\n\u2014Slvorp Ecoroh\n|   10 YEARS AGO   ,\nI From Nelson Dally Newi Fllu I\n4 \u00ab\n(July 13, 1828)\nThree near drownings have occurred it Lakeside park the last\nfew dtys. Jack Smith of Fairview\nrescued a girl of about 15 yuterday. Her identity was not learned.\nFriday Uuly 10) Tommy Allen and\nGerald McLury rescued two nurses.\nMrs. Guy Wright and others revived the girl, but the nurses had\nnot lost consciousness.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. John Cartmel mo-\nMttl\n.7 4\ntltl\nBidding went: South, one Diamond: Wut one No TrumD*. North,\ntwo Hearts: East, three Clubs; South\nthree Hearts; West, four Clubs;\nNorth, four Hearts, which Wut\ndoubled.\nHaving lost a Club trick and won\na Diamond trick the Declarer took\nthree rounds of trumps, winning the\nlast one fn Dummy. He uw that\nleading the King of Diamonds would\nbe fatal, u his Jack-Nine would\nblock him from further entry to the\nexposed band.\nAt the sixth trick a low Diamond\nwas led from Dummy. West's Queen\nwon. Hg ruffed North with a Club\nlud. North took his Jack of Diamonds, then he overtook his last\nDiamond with the Ace, ran off Dummy's last Diamond and discarded a\nSpade from his own hand. A Spade\nlead from Dummy caused North to\nlose his third and last trick, as he\nhad left only the Ace of trumpa md\nthe good King of Spades.\nHad West refused to win the sixth\ntrick with his Queen, Declarer's\nJack would have captured opponents Ten. ind a return lud of a\nlow Diamond, Dummy playing low.\nwould have put Wut in the lead,\ngiving North his four-odd just as If\nWut had won the second Diamond\ntrick with his Queen. Had North so\nchosen he could have taken the third\nround of Diamonds with Dummy's\nAce, thus losing no Diamond tricks.\nThen by leading a low Spade trom\nDummy North could have made his\nfour-odd, by losing two Spade tricks\ninstead of one Diamonb. and onr\nSpade. Perfect play insured four-odd\nafter East led the singleton Diamond\nat the second trick.\nA lud of a trump, instead ot a\nDiamond, as East's second lud.\nwould have enabled North to fulfil hit contract, by the same means\nhe employed. A second lead of Clubs\nat the tecond lead would hive\ngiven tour-odd to North, juit at thc\nDiamond lud did.\nHid Eut led \u2022 Sptde. Instead of\nt Diamond, at the second trick.\nNorth must have lost to the Ace, and\nthen won with his King of that suit,\nbut he still must have lost a Diamond trick to Wut. then opponents\nwould have won a fourth trick with\nWut's good Spade, before the Declarer could hive reduced his Spade\nlength by discarding one of them\non in utabllshed Diamond ln the\nDummy.\n\u2022 a\ni\ni\n-\u2666\nThe Editor, Nelton Daily Newi:\nSir\u2014An energy medium of exchange can be issued on a nation's\nunspent men and mechanical energy, under the following rules and\nregulations:\nThe nation must first appoint an\nexchange governor, who must have\nfull jurisdiction for issuing an energy medium of exchange on the intrinsic value of thc energy spent,\nand expressed in dollars and cents.\nThis energy must be io issued,\nthat it neither can be stolen, lost\nor dutroyed, nor used for illegal\npurposes.\n1\u2014The exchinge governor will\naccept orders from the government\nemployers or producers, stating the\nvalue in dollars and cents for the\nenergy delivered. The owner of the\nenergy vilue so spent will then be\ncredited on a liquid assets account\nln the name of the holder and debit-\nted on the liquid assets account\nof the issuer.\n2\u2014For ute of this liquid assets\naccount as legal tender, the owner\nwill receive a checkbook with his\npicture, finger-print and serial\nnumber pif nted on uch check.\n3\u2014And u use tor small change,\nhe will be given (in book form)\ndenominations in 5, 10, 29, 80 and\n100 cents issues, and each of these\ndenomination's units will also bear\nthe picture, finger-print and serial of the owner.\n4\u2014Those checks and denominations that are to function u legal\ntender instead of money or promise\nto pay\u2014must not be used more than\nonce, and not transferable to the\nthird party.\n5\u2014For each transaction as exchange they must be returned to the\nexchange governor, or his represe-\nentative, to be entered on the liquid\nassets account ot the depositor, and\ndestroyed.\nThis will facilitate legal exchange\nsmall or large\u2014unrestricted, without risk of loss or fraud of any\nkind.\nEnergy builds health and moral\nchtracter.\nMoney has dutroyed both.\nTake your choice:\nAgriculture is the mott difficult\nindustry to operate on a permanent\nscale of prosperity for two reisons:\n1\u2014(Agriculture) Farmers ire (so\nto speak) in partnership with some\nof nature's uncontrollable energy (so\nessential for giving full reward for\nthe energy delivered\u2014be it mental.\nphysical   or  mechanical)   for  the\nmanufacturing of his producti ln\ncooperation with nature.\n2\u2014Because nine-tenths of the farmer! have to carry the capitalistic\nleech on their back. An energy medium of exchange removes thue\nleeches from the farmers' backs,\nwhich will be an enormous relief,\nbesides facilitating capitalizing of\nfederate unspent energy with\nwhich he can control energy exchange value for the distribution\nof his products, and prevent duplication of dlstribuUng energy cost.\nAn energy medium of exchange\nwill also facilitate the fruit growers\nI to convert their perishable products\nInto less perishable commodities, besldu enabling fruit organization!\nhandling perishable fruit to equip\nthemselves with fleet! of airplanes\nfor distributing their perishable\nproducti; all of which will help to\nstabilize agriculture on a basis of\npermanent prosperity.\nLet   ui   comider   Henry   Ford't\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"A man thinki he wmti to\nconsult his wife ibout thingi,\nbut ill hc wanta is somebody to\nlisten while he makes up his\nmind.\"\ntored to Queen's Bay yesterday lo\nvisit their son Edwin, who is viiiting Roger Cornish.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. G. Lambert, Fair-\nview, have at guests the latter's\nsister, Mrs. Agnes Wort, and Miss\nPearl Robinson of Avenmore, Ont.\nEdgar Dale of the Bureau of Educational Research\nof Ohio State university has studied the themes of 1500\nmoving pictures, choosing 500 feature pictures released\nduring each of the three years 1920, 1925 and 1930 by\nmajor producing organizations.\nThe great bulk of the pictures dealt with the three\nthemes of crime, sex and love. The love theme dominated,\nalthough almost as many pictures dealt with crime. The\n1930 pictures showed a marked increase over those of\n1920 in the percentages of crime and sex. Such subjects\nas history and travel made a pitifully small showing.\nComedy, a minor phase, showed a steady increase.\nQuality of the characters, the goals sought by the\nleading men and women, how recreations, liquor and\ntobacco were treated, what kind of clothing was worn,\nand the extent to which crime and vulgarity obtruded,\nwere studied.\nMr. Dale recognises the importance of the moving\npicture as a new asset of civilization, and is very liberal\nand modern in the latitude which he believes can wisely\nbs allowed to adolescents in their attendance. But he*\nfinds tbat far too often the objectives of the pictures they\nmm art in deplorable opposition to the wholesome and con\nserving influences with which careful parents wish to\nsurround their children.\nThe error he thinks is largely a matter of emphasis.\nSome pictures unnecessarily distort relative values. The\nremedy is not in the wholesale condemnation of certain\ntypes of picture or of certain themes or situations. He\nsees the answer to the problem of improving motion\npicture content as being in \"effecting a more desirable\nbalance.\" '\nautomobile industry ana uy thit\nMr. Ford and his stockholders in\nthe Canadian branch of .this Industry have invested in Canada\none hundred million dollars, with\n5000 employeu. and a yearly payroll of twenty-five million dollars\nfor energy and materials.\nWhen Canada adopts an energy\nmedium of exchange Mr. Ford can\nnot operate his plant in Canada\nwith money and energy mixed, as\nnow. The one hundred million of\nmoney invested became frozen (the\nbankers term for capital not working) and Mr. Ford will have to\nadvise his five thouund employees I\nto incorporate or cooperate them-1\nselves for operating hit plant with\nenergy only. And If the direction\nstaff wishes Mr. Ford to remain as |\ntheir presiding officer, a price will\nbe put on his energy value, which\nwilf be credited on Mr. Ford's i\nliquid usets account and charged\nto the employees' \"General Energy\nCooperative or cooperation account,\" ot this Canadian industrial\nbranch.\nAnd out of the proflta Mr. Ford\nwill only have his pro-rata share\nof the energy value contributed\nfor the operation of his automobile\nplant in Canada.\nProfits will first accrue after the\ngovernmenti have levied their pronto thare on all unused liquid assets accounts for balancing their\nbudgets (as under an energy medium of exchange system, there\nwill be no taxu or dutiu ot any\nkind levied or collected. Second, a\nsinking fund will be charged and\ncollected from the profits of each\nindustrial organization, so u to\nfinally cover its capital investments.\nThe remaining profit will then bc\ndistributed pro rata on the energy\nvalue delivered by each of the employee! in their respective organization.\nIn rupect to Mr. Ford's Canadian\nInvestment of one hundred millions\nthe linking fund will be credited\nto same u long u Mr. Ford prefers\nto leave his investment on a frozen\ncapital account.\nIf Mr. Ford wants his hundred\nmillion dollar investment withdrawn\nat once, his frozen capital account\nis simpiy transferred to his liquid\nassets account, subject to payment\nin any commoditiu available for\nexport, be it gold, wheat or other\ncommoditiu.\nUnder a natlon't energy medium\nof exchinge system, there will always be a corresponding exchanging exchange medium on the total\nnation's liquid assets accounts to\nbalance Uie value of the nation's\nexchangeable wealth.\nThla will prevent periodic Inflations and deflations, which is unavoidable with our present monetary system.\nInternaUonal exchange must be\ngovernment function, and bued upon the rspective value of the commodities exchanged whether service or merchandise. And an I.O.U.\ngiven (bearing no interut) at stated periods to balance the account,\nand which should be exchangeable\nwith other nations.\nA debtor nation may appeal to a\ncreditor nation for facility to settle\n| international accounts with tourist\ntrade, where commodities are not\nforthcoming, which will promote\nfraternity amongst men and na-\nUons, instead of war.\nO. J. WIZEN\nINTESTINAL INFECTIONS INFANT'S\nGREAT DANGER IN SUMMER WEATHER\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nBabu can stand nearly anything\nexcept Infection. If they are not\ndressed up in too many clothu, lt\nis surprising how well they stand\nhot weather.\nTheir dinger in hot weather\ncomu from the poisibilty of implantation of germs in their Intut-\nmal canals.. The germs enter with\nthe food, especially milk.\nThe most severe manifestation of\nsuch infection is the prostrating\ndysentery or infantile summer\ndiarrhea. In its worst form, it is accompanied by fever, vomiting and\ncolicky pains in the bowels. Thue\nconditions are alwayi caused by\ninfection from milk.\nBut there are many milder Intestinal upsets that the baby ls liable\nto, and no set rule can be made u\nto just what the normal standard\nof functions here should be. There\nis no rule as to how many stools a\nbaby should have a day. Babies\nnursing their mothers usually hive\nmore numeroui and totter stools\nthm those on formuli. Some babies\nhsve only one or two stools i diy.\nOtheri in equally good health havc\nsix or seven.\nBABY EASILY UPSET\nThe new baby ii mosUy digestive\ncinil so lt is not to be wondered\nst thtt thii central mechanism easily gets upset. Some slight chinge\nin the quality of milk may rauie\ndiirrhu, with the passage of numerous watery stools but without\nprostration. Forcing the btby to\nut or flnlih hli pottle when he\ndoun't wtnt lo, miy ruult In the\nume thing. In hot wuther the\nbaby'i appetite It capricious jutt\nu yours is, ind forcing too much\nfood on him simply ruults in t revolt.\nThe trettment ot thne Intestlnil\ntroublu depends on the severity of\nthe condiUon. All thit miy be necetury, In mild cuu, li to reduce\nthe imount or number ot feedings.\nDO YOU FEAR THS.\nWIND?\nDo you fear thc force of the win\nThe slash of the rain?\nGo face them and fight them,\nBe savage again.\nGo hungry and cold like the wolf,\nGo wade like the crane:\nThe palms of your hands will\nthicken.\nTlie skin of your cheek will tin.\nYou'U grow ragged and weary and\nswarthy.\nBut you'll walk like a manl\n\u2014Hamlin Garland.\nCUSHION SOCKET^\nCOMFORT\nFor Old A New Llmbi\nCALOARY ARTIFICIAL LIMB\nFACTORY\u2014Calgary, Alta.\nFOR DOORS\nB. C. Larch Panels  i\nare of b e a u t i fu I\ngrain. They are hard '\nand of smooth finish.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nDlitrlct Distributor*\nI <_Wd_msw___n_mi__-^\n\"Build B.C. Payrollt\"\nCook\nWith\nIt\nChlnttt  Lanterns, whtn dried,\nmtkt attractive   Indoor\ndecorations.\nBy   DEAN   HALLIDAY\nCentril Preu Gtrdtn Expert\nMost of us have, somewhere In\nour grounds, a place where the Chinese lanterns can be grown. It il\nalmost impossible to use them in the\nflower garden, for this perennial\nplant has an underground creeping\nroot stock which spreads rapidly.and\nis apt to choke out our more delicate flowers. Therefore, if you can\ngive them a corner by themselves\nyou avoid a great deal of trouble.\nThe Chinese lanterns love moisture and plenty of food. They prefer a rich sandy loam in a sunny location. They should be watered freely to get iarge sprays of lanterns,\nwhich, by the way, should be gathered before frost.\nThe balloon stems are quite stiff\nwhen allowed to dry naturally for\nindoor decoration, and it is there-\nfore best to shape them into the de-:\nsired shapes before they dry. After I\ndrying they may snap and break. I\nIt is also well to bend them so that\nthe balloons will drop away from >\nthe stems, making a more attractive\narrangement\n\u25a0*-\nPacific Milk hat a lovely richness, due to high quality and\nthe virtues of vacuum packing.\nThis excellence comu out\nstrong In cooking. Letters\nfrom enthusiastic patrons tell\nof its economy ind the satisfaction it givu.\nPacific Milk\nI   35 YEARS AGO\nFrom Ntlun Dtlly Trlbunt Fllu\n\u2022 \u00ab\nCereels or cod Uver oil or other\n\u25a0olid foods should be discontinued.\nWster is the most important thing\nto give the sick baby. The heat and\nthe lost of witer in the stools thoroughly dries him out. The water\nstould be boiled and then cooled and\nfed by a medicine dropper or bottle,\nor the phyiicim mty even decide\nto give it hypodermically lf the\nstomach ls too upset\nIn severe cues, ill food, except\nwiter ind well cooked birley water, ihould be stopped. A baby can\ngo a long time without food lf it\ngets enough water,\nCathartics usually should not be\ngiven. If the baby is known to hive\nreceived some spoiled milk, a small\ndue of cutor oil should be given,\nbut lt li but to attempt to treat!\nthue lummer intestinil trouble! j\nwithout the uie of medicnu.\n20 YEARS AGO   \\'\nFrom Nelion Dally Newi Fllei I\n<g. * .\n(JULY 18. 1818)\nRev. ind Mn. H. R. Ragg of Fruitvale are on a visit in Nelson.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. F. C. Ingram tnd ton Williim hive returned from t flve-wuk\nvisit to the coast.\n...\nForut Ranger A. M. Black and\nForut Guards T. Roynon and H.\nMawdsley have returned from a\ntrip of inspection to Midge creek.\n*   *   *\nLouit Pratt formerly a resident\not Nelson, Is ln France In connection with the sale ot war supplies\nfrom western Cinada to the French\ngovernment\n(JULY 18, 1800)\nConsiderable dissatisfaction ls being caused by mail service In the]\nKootenays,    particularly    between\nTrail and  Nelson.  Mail  must be!\nposted in Trail before 7:35 a.m. and\nreaches Nelson 12 hours later. This!\nIs becauie, after going to Robson,\nit Is held there until 8 p.m. Like*\nwise mail from Nelson for Boun*!\ndary points takes 30 hours for the i\ntrip. It lies in Rossland, en route, I\nfor 12 hours. The same applies to j\nmail for thc United Statet and east* j\nern points.\nModernize\nNOW\nA charming new bathroom can be yours at a\nsurprisingly low cost.\nAvail yourself of this opportunity now while\nprices are low.\nEstimates Without\nObligation\nPHONE 666\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBINC b HEATING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nCARDIFF, (CP)'Walu and Monmouthshire,\" is the title of a new\nofficial journal of the Industrial\nDevelopment council of South Wales\nand Monmouthshire.\nHAYMOWERS\nand\nRAKES\nNow ii thc tim* to purchase a ntw mowtr er\nrake for your hay making. We havt thtm in ttock.\nMower Repairs for Mott of the\nPopular Maket of Machinet\nQUICK SERVICE!\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholeiale ind Retail Quality Hardware\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nI'M GLAD I THREW THAT CjUYOUT\nTHAT HAD A PROPOSITION TO |V\\AKE\nA MILLION -DOLLARS FOR ME, WHEN\nI'M TRYIN' TO OIT RID OF ME DOUGH,\nIM SO PAR INI SOCIETY OM ACCOUNT\nOF MAtiBIE-THE ONLY WAY TO OIT\n  OUT OF IT IS TO GO\n  BROKE*\n\"V\n-    -\nBy Gto. McMtnut\nSAY- I HEARD ABOUT\nTHE GUV MX) THREW\nOUT OF YOUR OFFICE\nJI&6S-\nYES-HE\nWANTED\nTO MAKE A\nMILLION DOLLARS FEB\nME-\n;,*-*!\nJ\n -\n'\u25a0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. I.C-SATURDAY MORNING. JULY It UJS\nV\u00b0(\n\u25a0PAGE SEVEN\n\u2022Nrlamt Satly Nftm.\nMember ot the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange oonnaetlng te\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy    Dl\nBy carrier, ptr week     -I\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\nBy mall ln Canada, to subscribers living outside regulsr\ncarrier area., per. month, 60c;\nthree months, $1.80; six months,\n13.00; one year, $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month, 75c; six months,\n14.00; one year, $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU. 8, same as above plut any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\n11c s Lint\nMinimum 2 Ltnss\n: lines, once t 32\n3 lines, once  33\n4 lines, once     .44\n2 lines, 6 times     M\n3 Hues, 6 times   1.32\n4 lines, I times  1.7S\n2 lines, 1 month  2.80\nI lines, 1 month  4.29\n4 lines, 1 month   8.72\nAll above lest 10% for prompt\npayment\nIf you have room for roomers in\nyour homc\u2014and room for their\nrent in your pocket\u2014rqrnember\nthere is room for your Ad in the\n\"Rooms for Rent\" column.\nCHAPTER 44,\nVal wondered what Jan would\nhave done when he was trapped in\n\u2022ih\"oraat As if he didn't Ww!\nA girl like Jan would never have\nhesitated an instant to* make her\nway into the depth;, over every obstacle, until sheW found her man.\nThat was the love that a real woman could offer. Something fierce\nprotective, magnificent. She wasnt\nthe sort who would only demand\nand take from a man. She would\ngive-\nBut ha must not think of Jan.\nNeither must he dwell on today s\nracking events. There in the forest\nhe had not been quite sane. He must\nforget the ufly thoughts that had\nharried his distraught mind. With a\nquick movement he set Lia abruptly\non her feet and pulled his own weary\nbody upright \"1 am very hungry\nand tired, he said evenly. \"I am\nsure you are also. When we have\nscrambled together something to\ncat we must sleep.\" Before he entered the house, however, he made a\ncareful circle of the brush about\nthe clearing to make sure that none\nof'the clgarets Lia had carelessly\ntossed from the porch should be\nleft smoldering there.    ...,,.\nIn the cabin, after he had built a\nroaring fire, ne looked about the\nflame-lighted room and frowned impatiently. The bunks were unmade,\nsticky breakfast dishes still littered\nthe Uble. A pile of magaiines on\nthe couch betrayed how Lia had\npassed the waiting hours.\n'\u2022While I cook dinner, you must\nclean up this place\", he said sharply.\nThereafter he paid her no further\nattention but went on to the tiny\nkitchen where, before long, the coffee pot bubbled merily; eggs beaten\nto a golden froth in a blue and white\nchina bowl stood ready to be converted into an omlet; on the skillet\na thick slice of ham simmered and\nsent forth little savory gusta of delicious fragrance.\nWhen he carried the hot plates of\nfood into the living room, Val paused at thc door, surprised to see how\ntidily Lia had carried out hia orders.\nBeds were made, thc hearth brushed\nclean, the table neatly set the lamps\nlighted. He made no comment but\npulled out her chair, then seated\nhimself.\nNever had food and boiling coffee\ntasted ao good. Half way through\nthe meal he saw thc color creeping\nBIRTHS\nSIMMS-To Mr. and Mrs. Percy\nSimms of Invermere, at Windermere district hospital, July 6, a\ndaughter.\nY5UNG-To Mr. and Mrs. Donald\nYoung, at Creston hospital, July 7,\nn daughter.\t\nPERSONAL\nUP TO $50 EACH PAID FOR U. S.\nIndian head cents. We buy all\ndates, regardless of condition. Up\nto $1.00 each paid for Lincoln\nHead cents. Up to $150 each for\nCanadian coins. We buy Stamp\nCollections, Medals, Books, Old\nPaper Money, Gold, etc. Send 25c\n(coin) for large Illustrated price\nlist and instructions. Satisfaction\nguaranteed or 25c refunded. Hub\nCoin Shop, 159-3 Front Street,\nSarnla, Ont. (2372)\nS.C.W. MORRIS, M.D.CM.\n214-6th Ave, W. Calgary. Specialist in Diseases ot the Skin and\nScalp. Physical Therapy. All forms\nof electrical treatment for neuralgia, neuritis, myalgia, lumbago,\nSciatica, Chronic Rheumatism, stiff\njoints, paralyzed muscles, asthma.\nBronchitis. Air and water-cooled\nquartz light therapy. (2331)\npaddle In the canoe. Every sunset,\nevery patch of wild flowers, every\nlacy branch against the stars impelled him to turn and share the\njoy of lt with her. With golden\nnair flying she ran down the trail\nto meet him, She sat by the fire\npressed close to his side. Her low,\nthrilling voice came to him in the\nsong of the brook, the sighing ot the\nnight wind through the forest.\nAlthough at first he had exerted\nall his wul not to recognize this beloved comrade, he began to live in\nthis inner world and, preoccupied\nby his thoughts he ceased to take\nmuch notice of Lia beyond observing the ordinary courtesies. It was\nonly on the seventh day of their\nstay when exercise, good food and\nmountain air had brought some\nmeasure of adjustment, that he\nrealized his neglect ot his wife.\nThey had dropped down after a\nhike around the lake and as Val\ngazed abstractedly before him.\nsomething in the weary, discouraged\ndroop of Lia's small body compelled\nhis interest. It had been days, he\nsuddenly realized since he had consulted her wishes about anything;\nsince he had, in fact, even carried\non more than an absent-minded conversation with her. That had been\nunfair! Now he thought of It she\nhad\u2014after that first day\u2014proved\nherself a good little jport Wherever\nhe had led, she had tried to follow,\neven when lt must have taxed her\nstrength. Not only that, ahe had\ndont more than her share in the\nhousehold tasks and without complaining.\nWhat a selfish dog he had been!\nHe had brought Lia here that they\nmight become friends. And now it\nwas he who had not played the\ngame. The rest of the afternoon he\nexerted himself to be a more congenial companion. And in the succeeding days, although there wu\nstill no nearer relation than a friendly truce between them, a renewed\ntest of living seemed to Uke hold on\nboth.\nA mile and a half from the cabin\na trout stream poured IU jade\nwaters into the lake and there along\nita wooded course they spent long\nhours. Lia's small felt hat, like\nVal's, bristled with flies\u2014hackles\nbrown and gray, doctors and royal\ncoachmen. The young man often\nsmiled to see hia wife standing in\nthe shallows\u2014a pair of child's rubber boots from Towner's pulled on\nback into Lia's pallid cheeks and felt over her jodhpurs\u2014obeying his di-\nhit own spiriU reviving. When rections\u2014\"Your line is too slack\nthey had finished their cigarets he Keep the tip of your rod high-reel\nwas again amazed to see his wife faster\u2014let it go again\u2014let it sing-\ncarry out the dishes without being now! Bring it up short!\"\ntold to do so. Not long afterward\nthey sought their respective bunks\nand fell at once into exhausted\nsleep.\n* .   t   .\n1    On tht night ot hit accident Val\nhad been nagged by his yearning for\na drink until exhtustion had sent\nhim Into quick forgetfulness. But\nthe following afternoon, when his\naccustomed cocktail hour drew near,\nhe knew at lut that ht wu in the\ngrip of a craving that amazed and\nfrightened him.\n'    Not. he told himself, that ha had\never been a heavy Imbiber. Oh sure.\nhe had got himself plastered now\nand again when the ship came into\nport and he wanted to let off steam.\nBut since his marriage, he now admitted, he had become a more consistent drinker, one who had come\nto depend on alcoholic stimulation\nat regular intervals and in gradually Increasing amounts. And In that\ndirection, he had the good sense to\nknow, lay real danger.\nBut he had always prided himself\nthat he could take his liquor or let\nIt alone! Well, that wu true. He\njust hadn't realized it was getting\nlo be a habit A habit wu easily\nconquered. JVhen you understood a\nthing like this, you had it more than\nhalf licked from the beginning.\nA long swim in the lake's bracing\nwaters helped matters. Again, after\ndrinking Ink-black coffee with his\ndinner he was fret for a while. But\nu the evening wore on. the goading\ndesire returned to set him nervously paelng the porch. The realization\nfreer that it wu himself, and not\nla. who wu to prove the real problem of this lUy at Paradise lakt.\nAnd hours later. staring with wide,\nwakeful eyea Into the darkness, he\nresolved to leave this place on the\n-morrow and set out for civilization\nonce more.\nOnly the danger of taking Ma\nover  badly  marked   trails,   with\nmora than an eVen chance of losing\ntheir way In that great expanse of\nvirgin timber, kept him from obeying this intense urge. During the\n\u00ab following days, his lithe, bronzed\nbody clad only In bathing trunks,\nhe sought relltf in hard swimming,\nIn striding about tht lake on stren-\nunui hikes, tn paddling the canoe\nwith strong, sweeping strokes that\ntent It skimming across the wtter.\nYtt despite his exertions, at night\nwhen Lis lay in deep sleep, he ut\n\u2022wakeful before the smoldering fire\nor paced tht clearing. And before\nlong he grew to understand that It\nwas not only the craving for liquor\nthat tortured him almost beyond\nendurance.\nAlways, just at the edge of his\nconscience,   his   longing   for   Jan\nlay In wait to lure him into dreams\nof her. Always It seemed u If he\nhad only to permit himself to look.\nIn Order to see her there, his con-\nrtant companion. She swam beside\nManufacturers' Distributors \u2014\nSuper Quality Latex\u2014Seeing ia\nbelieving\u201420 for $1.00; 9-50c,\n72-$2.75. Assorted, postpaid.\nFeminine Hygiene Information\nupon request Send 3c stamp.\nD.EZ SALES CO.,\n408 Maclean Blk., Calgary, Alta.\n(2219)\nMARRY-INTRODUCTIONS BY\nprivate letters. Hundreds of\nmembera everywhere. Teachers,\nnurses, farmera' daughters, widows with farms Bnd property.\nAlso ranchers, farmera, business\nmen and railroad men seeking\nmates. Particulars, 10c Canadian Correspondence Club, Box\n128, Calgary, Alta. (24S6)\nTune, Clean, Demoth, Repair, special. Vancouver Tuner, Est 25 yrs.\nWrite B.C. Woodrow, Thrums, B.C.\n(25491\nWading in the quiet sunshine, the\nair fragrant with the warm scent of\nbslsam and sweet-smelling leaves\nthey shared the Ineffable thrill that\ncame with the feel of a strike, the\nsound of the reel's wheeing, the\nsight of the rod bent and the line\ntaut in a riffle 20 or 30 feet distant\nTheir pulses quickened to feeel the\nquiver of a vital resistant thing at\nthe end of the line, to glimpse a\nfluh of silver beneath the green\nwater\u2014a fielitin f \/urve of glistening\nscales darting into tht air.\n,\u2022\/      (To Be Continued)\nPicture Banned\nw_\\\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods. 29 Latex assortment for $1.\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain. Free catalogue. National Importers, 218-6th. St. West,\nCalgary, Alta. (2478)\nEXPERT DRESSMAKER. FUR RE-\npaired. 511 Carbonate St. Ph. 853L.\n(2377)\nEczema Itch Piles Ulcers Try Geo Lee\nChina Remedy at Hudson's Bay Co.\n(2391)\nLOST AND FOUND\nIf you find a cat or dog a pocketbook, Jewelry or fur or anything else ot value telephone\nTha Daily Newt. A \"Found\"\nAd will be Inserted without\ncost to you. We will collect\nfrom the owner.\nMAKE IT A DAILY\nHABIT\u2014READING\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISEMENTS\nRead Them! Uss Them!\nIT PAYS!\nFor Service Phone\n;   Jesn Robertson st\n1144\nLET THE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED COLUMN\nSUMMER HOMES\nRESORTS AND\nCAMPS\nHELP YOU TO PICK\nOUT A REAL\nVACATION SPOT\nNEED CASH FOR YOUR HOLIDAY?\nRent Your Home for the\nSummer Months\nthrough\nan Advertisement on\nthe Nelson Daily News\nClassified Page\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nFor Service Phone Jesn Robertson st\n144\nOut of Town Reeders\u2014Prompt Attention Given\nto Msil Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nUSED MORE    Largest in the Interior    READ MORE\nFOR SALE\n500 ROLLS EXTRA HEAVY MIN-\neralized Surface Roofing with\nNails and Cement (about 80 lbs\nper roll) $2.50 per roll; NO rolls\nlight ply roofing containing 125\nsquare feet (without nails and\ncement) 75c per roll. Full line\nnew and used Galvanized and\nBlack pipe and Fittings. New\nand used Corrugated Galvanised\niron; Poultry Wire Netting 3 and\n6 feet; full stock ot steel split\npulleys; Potato and Grain ucks;\nbarbed wire, wire rope; canvas;\ndoors; windows, garden and air\nhose; boom chains; merchandise\nand equipment of all descriptions.\nEnquiries solicited.\nB. C. JUNK CO,\n135 Powell St Vancouvtr, B.C.\n(1464.\nICI DELIVERIES\nWE HAVE EVERYTHING AND\neverything in the small rubbei\nlines. Order by mail direct trom\nmanufacturer and save 75%. All\norders are mailed postpaid by us\nin plain wrapper. Mall order catalogue sent free on request. Novelty Rubber Mfg. Company, Box\n353, Dept. K.5, Hamilton, Ontario.\n(2400)\nTons of Ice\nWe can taka care of your ICE\nneeds this warm weather, either\namall or large quantities.\nJUST PHONE 106\nWe'll do the rest\nWilliams Transfer\nIce, coal. Wood. Storage,\nGas, etc.\n(25291\nFINANCIAL\nPIANO TUNINC\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR\nList of wanted invtntlons and full\ninformation sent fret. The Ramsay\nCompany, World Patent Attor-\nneya, 273 Bank St Ottawa, Canada\n(2373)\nFOR RENT. HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS. ETC.\n30 ACRE RANCH. PEND\nd'Oreille, nominal rent to suitable couple. Castle, Fruitvale, B.C.\n (JB16)\nFUWl.' OR' UNFURN. APTS. BY\nweek or month. Medical Arta. bldg\n (2403)\nt-DRrtlisiD Hdttstki-a-iNG\nrooma for rent Annable Block.\n_^^ (2404)\n5 ROOM HOUSE. APPLY P. O.\nBox 196 or 707 Victoria Street.\n(2S41)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms. Apply 918 Kootenay Street\n _ (2539)\nTftR_!_S hbOM HOUSt Witt. GAR*\nden. Phone D. Maglio, 808L. (2259)\nTERRACE, APTS. Beautiful modern\nPrlgldalre equipped suites. 12403)\nFURNISHED SUITE. APPLY~507\nSilica or Phone 440X.\n(2310)\nFURN. HOUSE PH. 409R2 OR\nwrite Bot 488 Nelton, B. C. (2824)\nHOUSE FOR RENT. APPLY TO\nI. W. Somers, 702 Baker St (2531)\nWOMEN WANTED\nWOMIN WANTED TO START\nprivate Kindergarten Schools In\ntheir own homea this coming fall\nPree booklet on request Canadian Kindergarten Institute, Win-\nnlpeg. Established 1927.      (2468)\nACENTS WANTED\nWANTED FOR INTERIOR TOWNS\nmen anxious to earn a good living. You can do this. See for partlculara or write L. J. Desharnais,\nCranbrook, B. C. (2386)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nTWO EXPERIENCED WAITRESS-\nes want summer resort or hotel\nwork. Box 2481, Dally News.\n(2481)\nEXPERIENCED CHAMBERMAID\nwanta work immediately. Box 2482\nDally News.    <2482)\nNgiaOflDAttY HBW8 CUSOTIID\nads. The leading salea_un and\nbunn (or NtUon and surrounding\nFOR SUMMER BREAKFASTS,\nPurity Wheat Flakes ln VI, lbs.\nbags, Purity Wheatlets ln 5's and\n10's. Ask your grocer. The Brack-\nman-Ker Millg Co- Ltd.     (2552)\nSTOBE WITH LIVING QUARTERS\nand  garage\u2014two  lots adjoining\ncity tourist park\u2014Seven hundred\ndollars\u2014half cash\u2014Phone 662.\n        (2554)\nJOHN MORRIS (Financial Advertising Agent) 1237 Market Street,\nPhiladelphia, Penna. prepares papers and prospectuses to meet either\nexemption or registration under new\nUnited States requirements. Supplies lists and lays out campaigns\nfor your local printtr to handle.\nWork  guaranteed. Moderate lee*.\nUSED CARS\nMOTORCYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nFrancis Barntts up to 120 miles\nto a gallon $195.00 up.\nB. S. A. from $315.00 up.\nIndian up to 100 miles to a gallon and $395.00 up.\nAn Indian Scout just won the\n200 mile national championship\nroad race ln Florida and the same\nday broke a world's record at Day*\ntona against English and American\nmachines.\nPALMER RUTLEDGE\nRide a winner\nTrail, B. C.\n(2465)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nSUPERIOR BRASS BED, OSTER-\nmoor matt, new springs. Large\nrug, dishes, tools. Phone 598L1.\n \u2022       (2507)\nWe carry largest stock reconditioned\nPipe and fittings suitable for all\npurposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yard\n220-lst E Vancouver, B.C. (2492)\nONE FORD LIGHT DELIVERY\n1927; one blacksmiths drill, power\nor hand. C. Mawer, Fruitvale, B.C.\n  (2528)\nFOR SALE-BARRELS KEGS, Sugar sacks liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd.. Nelson, B.C.       (2493)\nPHILCO   RADIO   FOR   SALE,   9\nlubes. Good condition. Phone 843L.\n(2503)\nGAS AND COAL COMBINATION\nrange.   Good\nPhone 843L.\ncondition.\nCheap\n(2504)\nMODERN 7 ROOM HOUSE, FURN-\nace, fireplace, stone foundation,\nacre of land, fruit trees, garage.\noutbuildings, apply Mrs. Sinclair\nStanley St.         (25231\n2H-TON GRAHAM TRUCK, LONG\nwheel base. Apply Renwlck's\nTransfer.  (2510)\nFOR QUICK SALE. 8 ROOM\nhouse, 10 lots in lawns and garden\n$1800. Cash $1200 balance on terms.\nCraufurd, Nelson Iron Works.\n(2559)\nFRUITVALE-COLUMeiA GARD*\nens Road, 10 acre wood lot\u2014frontage cleared. Castle, Frultvale. B.C.\n(2515)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nCLEAN COMFORTABLE HOTEL.\nFurnished cottages on beach.\nReal camping. Fishing and swimming, etc. Write to Outlet hotel\nW. A. Ward. Procter, B. C. (2392)\nKOOTENAY BAY FOR HOLI*\ndays. Summer cottages to rent\nGood Beach. Good bathing and\nfishing. Apply Storekeeper.\n(2161)\nCOTSWOLD HOTEL, BDGEWOOD.\nIdeal place for a holiday. Limited\nnumber of rooms. Hot and cold\nwater. Terms moderate. Write T.\nK. Llttlewood, proprietor. (2332)\nALPINE INN, CHRISTINA LAKE.\nvia Cascade. Ideal holiday resort\nBeautiful surroundings. Sports.\n (2376)\nBALFOUR BEACH FOR HOLI-\ndays. Modern turn, cottages. Boats\nG. H. Green. Balfour, B. C. (2499)\nHELP WANTED\nA LESSON FROM THE DEPRES-\neion\u2014Be a civil servant\u2014Postman Customs Examiner. Clerk.\nStenographer, etc. Free Booklet\n\"How to get a Government job\"\nM.CC. Civil Service School,\nWinnipeg. (2467)\nSINGLE CYL. MOTORBIKE VERY\ncheap. Box 2530 Daily News.\n  (2630)\nSNAPPY DRUM OUTFIT CHEAP.\nPh. 388R or Box 2546 Daily News.\n (2546)\n6 TUBE FADA TABLE RADIO AND\nfloor lamp. Phone 12,\n(2550)\nGARDENING AND\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nF. Pumphrey\nBekins Building      Vancouver\nImporter of Japanese\nLily Bulbs\nAuratum and Auratum\nPlatyphyllum, Speeiosum\nRubrum and Album etc.\nAugust Flowering.\nPhilippinese Formosanum\n(The hardy Easter LUy.)\nFlowera Intermittently throughout the year, commencing -in\nJune.\nNovember\u2014December arrival.\nThese perfectly hardy Lillet are\nthe best value It Is possible to\nplant. Upward ot 100 Blooms per\nbulb otten in the second and\nthird year.\nNorthern   Glganteum    (Easter\nLily.) For forcing under glass.\nOctober-November arrival.\nPlanting Instructions sent with\neach order.   Prices on application. Discounts to the Trade according to quantity.\n1934-5 PASSENGER COUPE CHEV-\nrolet, built ln trunk, gone about\n8000 miles good as new. Apply O.K.\nParry, Beauty Shop, Creaton, B.C.\nFARM  UNDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms ln Alberta and Saskatchewan. Write tor full information to 908-Dept of Natural Resources, CPJt., Calgary, Alberta?\n    12375)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\n1 LAUNCH, 1 BOATHOUSE FOR\nsale cheap. A. Ling, Balfour, B.C.\n.  (24501\n16 FT. CANOE. 3 FT. BEAM. GOOD\nshape. $25. Phone 508R1.     124761\nBEAUTY SCHOOLS\nMOLER BEAUTY SCHOOL. OUR\ngraduates are always in demand.\nEnroll now at reduced rates. Write\nfor free catalog and information.\nMoler Beauty School, 217 Wash.\nSt.. Spokane. Wash. I2479>\nBEE SUPPLIES\nBEE SUPPLIES, NURSERY LAB*\nels, etc. 1935 catalogue will be\nmailed on request. S. P. Hodgson\nIt Sons, 551-13th Ave:, New Westminster. (2538)\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nFILMS DEVELOPED-ANY SIZE,\n25c. With 1 print from each negative. Extra prints 8 for 25c. Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon. (2374)\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED ADS.\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, SJAJt\nInternational Accountant\nP.O. Box 1091     Nelaon, B.C.\n\u2022 (2406)\nAsssysrs\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst. Assayer, Chemist Chemical and Mttallurgictl Engineer;\nSampling A ents at Trail add Tacoma Smelters. 301-305 Jottphlnc\nSt Nalaon, B. C.  (2407)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker Street, Nelson. B. C. P. O.\nBox No. 726. Representing Ship-\npars' Interest at Trail, B.C. (240*8)\nChiropractors\n. R. MCMILLAN, D.C. PALMER\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelson.\n(2514)\nE.   M.  WARREN  D.C.  BOX  872,\nGilker Block, Phone 115 or 755L.\n(2514)\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES\u2014Tht Eltctrlc Store.\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 768 P. O. Box 1065\n(2409)\nEngineers snd Surveyors\nA. H. GREEN CO, LTD 516 WARD\nSt Phone 264, Nelson, B.C. (2410)\nD. DAWSON.       Nelson, B. C.\nMine Surveys and Reporta\nB. C. Land Surveyor.\n(2411)\nBoyd C. Affleck. Fruitvale. B. C\nLands,   Mineral  Claims,   Waterworks, surveys, plans, eatlmatea\n(2412)\nE. L. WARBURTON & COMPANY\nNELSON, B.C.\nMine Surveys, Plans and Estimates.\nAgents: Oils, Greases and Specialties. Bituminous coals from tha\nCrow's Nest Pass. Mine supplies\nand machinery. (2379)\nFlorists\nSprays, wreaths, symbolic designs,\n-irefully made at reuonable prices,\nhipped anywhere. Cut flowera and\nSlanta\u2014Phone 233\niN FLOWER SHOPPE\n(2413)\nFurs\nUARANTEED    STORAGE-EX-\nfiert remodelling and repairing;\now rates; prompt service. Polar\nFurs Ltd., 548 Granville, Vanc'r\n(2498)\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD\nTHI BUYER ANO SELLER\nOF THE  KOOTENAYS\nInsurance and Real  Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD.\nReal estate, insurance, **entals.\n217 Baker St.        (2416)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Esta'e. In-\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker Stree.      (2417)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery dc-.cription. Real Est Ph 99.\n (2418)\na E DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate. 508 Ward. St.\n (2419)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE,\nrentals, Insurance. Annable Block.\n          (2420)\nLIFE, FIRE. AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulln, Ph. 70. (2421)\nCHAS F McHARDY INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Phone 135.      (2422)\nMachinlsti\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.\nMotor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon Street\n  (2423)\nMaternity Homes\nELIZABETH PEEI,\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician in attendance. Ph. Broad. 3073.\nW-1324 Broadway. Spokane. Wash.\n(2424)\nMining snd Mill Machinery\nEMPIRE MACHINES LTD. NEL-\nson. Mining and Mechanical En*\ngineers.\t\n(2360)\nPhotographs\n\"PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEASE\"\nGEO. A. MEERES. 715 Baker. Ph 46\n(2425)\nSaih  Factory\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY Hardwood merchant 21? Baker Street\n(2426)\nSecond Hsnd Storea\nSEE ARK RECONDITIONED COOK\nstoves before buying new one.\n(2427)\nDRESSES AND SUITES AT MRS.\nRadcliffe's.           (2428)\nTypewriter Service\nNELSON TYPEWRITER AGENCY.\nSales and service. Fhone 197.\n  (2415)\nWatch Rspslring\nSPECIALIST, REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St\n12429)\nThe mueh-dlacusied Cieehoslo-\nvtk film \"Ecstaey\". In which Hedy\nKelaler (pictured), Is heroins,\nfailed to crash ths gates, whan \u2022\nU. S. federal Jury rejected It at\nbtlng unfit for the American\nscreen. An appeal from ths verdict\nwlll bt taken by Eureka Productions, Inc., Importers of the film,\nand, meanwhile, tht two cant In\nwhich It arrived will remtin in\ncustody of the gevtrnment.\nstam*\u00bb imNQjriia~suM\nLONDON (CP)-A 12-cent United States stamp of 1861\u2014smuggled\nout ot Russia by its owner, Prince\nOldenbourg, who stitched It In thc\nlining of a roat\u2014brought $2623 at\nauction In London, the stamp having\nbeen tound after the Prince's death.\nEGG POISONING\nBERMONDSEY, Eng. (CP)-John\nThomas Smith, a dock worker, was\nJoisoned  by  eating  an  imported\nucks egg which was contaminated\nby bacillus, according to the jury's\nUjD. \u2022__.\u2022*.   with him, wellded a finding at the inqutst\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Sidney Smith\n -_-_\n\u25a0\n\t\nI\u2014\" \u25a0\u25a0'\nPOLO\nt__\\___mt__._ ~w i\nMary Pickford, center; Capt. F. Ballet, left and F. Ledgerer. at polo match.\nHAGEN WITHIN AN INCH OF TIE\nFOR GOLF LEAD WITH 2 OTHERS\nMangrum and Nelson\nLead Way in the\nNiagara Event\nBy W. R. WHEATLIY\nCinadlan Prm Staff Writer\nLOOKOUT POINT GOLF CLUB,\nFONTHILL. Ont.. July 12 (CP>-\nTwo young itar profeaiionali from\nthe United Statei tonight moved\nInto the lead foi* the $1000 first prize\nmoney in the General Brock Hotel\nopen golf tournament. They were\nRiv Mangrum ot Pittsburgh, and\nBvron Nelson, of Ridgewood, N.J.,\nwho posted 36-hole cards of 143 and\nescaped bv one stroke the late\nthreat of Walter Hagen, Detroit veteran who missed making \u2022 three-\nway tie by an tnfch at the ninth\nhole. Scores of 158 and better qualify for the 36-hole grind tomorrow.\nA high wind bothered the players\ntodav and there was not a par-\nequalling 70 for the 18-holcs. The\nclosest waa 71 by Nelson and Henry\nPicard of Hershey, Pa., but Picard,\nbig money winner In the United\nStatei winter campaign, waa five\nstrokes iwav from the leaden.\nGOOD SCORES\nMangrum, 21-year-old younsstcr\nwho tied for fourth place In the\nUnited Statea open with Denny\nShute, found th* going tousher today after a aenaational 69 yesterday.\nGoing out thia momlng he ran into\ntrouble on the tint nine and made\nthe turn In 39. but settled down to\ncome home with a fine par 35.\nNelion, a native of Texarkan.\nKan., now playing pro at Ridgewood, put on much the same exhibition he did yesterday. He waa out\ntoday in 34. one under par, and back\nin 37, adding to his 72 for thc first\n11.\nA GAME COMEBACK\nWith a large gallery trailing him.\nHagen was the showman for the\ndav. Backed by a 71 for yesterday's\n18 holei, \"The Haig\" was two over\npar going out with a 37. Needing par\n35 to tie the leaden Walter thrilled the onlooken as he marched\naround the iecond nine and came\nto the eighteenth needing a par\nfour to tie. He caught a bunker\nwiih his second and blasted out to\nIMt on the green -Oicet from the\npin.\nWithout deliberating, he rapped\nl.ls putt straight for the cup. It\nslopped an inch short. Grinning\nbroadly in the face of his bad luck.\nHagen carefully sighted his ball\nwhile Ihe gallery roared. With a tap\nho was down In five on thc heels of\nlhe leaders.\nOnly two strokes behind the\nleaders came another American\ncontender. Clarence Doser, pro at\nthc Rochester, N.Y.. Country club,\nwho added H to his par 70 of yesterday for a 36-hole total of 145.\nCanada'a best bid came from her\namateurs. Jack Cameron, of the\nLockout Point club that is host to\nthe big field, and Joe Thompson.\nBurlington star, both had 73's to\npost 36-hole cards of 147. but they\nwere headed by Tony Manero, pro\nfrom Greensburg, N.C.. and Denny\nShute. of Chicago, former holder\nof the British open title, who added\nun 146 for the two dayi' work.\nBURNS FIVE DOWN\nBobble Burns, of Montreil. wai\nthe only Canadian professional\nwithin five strokes of the leaders.\nHe had a 36-hole total of 148. scoring a 40 and 38 today to add to hts\nprevious par 70. At the lame figure\nifter two dayi' pliy wai Bud Donovin. young Winnipeg amateur, who\nTry Our\nSpecial for\nBreakfast\nTwo Eggt, cooked in tny\nof our popultr stylet.\nFried Potatoei\nTosit\nCoffee\n25c\nNICK'S\nGOLDEN GATE\nCAFE\nFOR...\nSAND\nGRAVEL\nPHONE\n797\nPrompt Service\nRENWICK'S\nTranifer Co.\nJOHN R. COBB\nSALT LAKE CITY. July 12\n(API\u2014Sir Malcolm Campbell wlll\nhave no difficulty In attaining hli\ncoveted goal of SOO milei an hour\nover the Bonneville Silt flats.\nJohn Cobb, fellow Brltlih racing\ndriver, believes.\nCobb wn preparing today for a\n24 hour endurance run over the\ncryitalllne coune weit of thli\nelty, after having Ht two dozen\nmarks In an hour's run yuterdiy\nthit he clilmi are new recordi.\nShould Sir Malcolm attain hli\n300-mile goit and retire from racing, ai he hai announced hit Intention of doing, Cobb plans to obtain a machine in a clan with\nCampbell'! Bluebird, and go on\nfrom where Campbell leavei off.\nopen golf chtmplonihlp at Muir-\nput together two 38s today with\nhis 72 of yesterday.\nJack Littler, of Ottawa, posted 149\nto tie Wild Bill Mehlhorn of New\nYork; Clarence Clark, Bloomfield,\nN.J.. ond Gene Kunes, of Morris-\ntown, Pa.\nThe entire Japanese entry of iix\nQualified for tomorrow'! play. Tommy Niyamoto, captain of their team\nled the way with a 75 today and a\n36 holes total of 148. Sammy Chin\nand Bob Asami stood at 151.\nIn the competition for the Seagram Gold cup. played simultaneously with the 72-hole medal tournament, the American born team\nof professionals led the way for the\nsecond day. They held a total of 889\nagainst 916 for the Canadian born\npros and the Japanese team, tied\nfor second place.\nTonight It seemed It wai up to\nHagen or Doser to halt the parade\nleaders.\nWalter Hagen. Detroit, 37-36-71-\n144.\nX\u2014Bud Donovan. Winnipeg. 38-\n38-76\u2014148.\nGordon Brydson. Toronto, 41-37-78\n-150.\nGene Kunee, Morristown, Pa., 37-\n39-76-149.\nGeorge Hutchlnion. Sault Ste.\nMarie. Ont.. 40-37-77-161.\nJ. Mortucci. Rivenide, N.J., 88-\n40-78\u2014156.\nX\u2014Jack Naih. London, 38-37-75\u2014\n151.\nWillie Lamb, Lambton HilU, 38-\n38-76-152.\nW. Kerr. Toronto. SS-39-78\u2014152.\nV. Eldred. Pittiburgh. Pi., 38-41-\n79\u2014158\nT. Groeart, Weiton. Ont., 40-J9-79\n-158.\nR. T. Gray. Jr., Sandwich. Ont., 40-\n37-77-152.\nX-Phll Farley. Toronto, 39-38-77-\n-153.\nLex Robson, Toronto, 40-36-78\u2014\n190.\nW. Martin. Toronto. 40-42-82-158.\nLou Cummlng, Toronto, 45-37-82\u2014\n156.\nX\u2014W. Lathroo. ronthlll. 38-40-82\n-163. \t\n3ro.ftiS\n e\nBy thi Auociited Pren\nJoe Vosmlk of Clevelmd again\ncime back to the big six yeiterday\nand Johnny Stone of Washington\nwent out as Vosmlk hit twice in four\ntimes up against the Yankees while\nStone failed to connect agiinst Detroit. Vosmlk picked up two pointi\ntn bring his average to .340 and tie\nBill Terry for the last place in the\nsextet. Charley Gehrlnger suffered\na four-point drop to .344 as he failed\nlo hit in four attempts while Bob\nJohnson, American league leader,\nkept hii .352 mark unchanged with\none blow in three timei tip.\nThe standing:\nG AB R H Pet.\nVaughan, rirates63 233 58 91 .391\nMedwick, Cards 72 302 60 109 .361\nJohnion. Athletici 72 290 63 102 .352\nGehrlnger. Tlgen 79 326 70 112 .344\nTerry, Oianti 74 309 52 105 .340\nVosmik,  Indiam 72 303 38 103 .340\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nP*XOI EIQHT -\nTHK NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNINO. JULY 13.1935\n\u2014   1HDI3 30Vd\nHe Should Be Easy to Beat\u2014But Isn't\nTamulis Gets  By\nWith Nothing\non the Ball\nEditor'! Note\u2014Thli li the lelt\nof \u2022 series of flvi stories o . the\nremarkable rookie pitchen of 1935.\nBy BILL BRAUCHER\nCentral Pnu Cinidlin\nSporti Writer\nVito Tamulii is one of those pitchers who ought to be easy to beat.\nBut the fact is. the Yankee lefthander is one of the most puzzling\nhurlera in the majors thla year.\nWith \"nothing on the ball.\" the\n23-year-old flinger from Cambridge,\nMass., managed to win six of hii\nfirst seven games and has made\n.some of the league's toughest left-handed hitters look very bad.\nHow doei he do it? The answer\nii control. \u2022\nI let Bill Dickey (catcher for the\nYankees) do my thinking for me.\"\nsays Vito.\nLITHUANIAN ORIGIN\nVito's actual name is Vitautis\nCharles Casimirus Tamulii, in honor of a famoui Lithuanian patriot.\nHis home is Cambridge, where he\nwas born July 11. 1911. He was\ncaptain and pitcher at English high\nschool when major league scouts\nbegan to look him over In 1930. Hc\nbad been averaging 14 strikeouts\nper game, and never allowing more\nthan four or five hiti. During the\nsummer he pitched In the Cape Cod\nleague.\nBoth Boston teams sought his tervlcei, but Gehe McCann of the Yankee! wai the icout who grabbed\nhim. New York sent him to Cham-\nberaburg in 1930. He pitched and\nplayed the outfield because of his\nbatting ability. ,  ,\nVito hat had loti of work In eutern leiguei. Besides his Chambers-\nburg service in 1930, he alio sew\niction in an Albany uniform. In\n1931 he pitched for Albany, Scranton and Cumberland. Hti earned\nrun everage of 1.93 at Cumberland\nis one of the best marki in baseball.\nUP THERE AT LAST I\nTamulii wai with Albany. Newark and Binghamton in 1932. and\npitched for the same teami in 1933.\nHe pitched all leuon for Newark\nlait year, winning 13 games and losing seven, striking out 135 and allowing 208 hita In 217 innings. Thoroughly schooled, he wai considered\nready for the majora.\nThe itory of hli oltchlnjt \u00bb far\nthii seison heirs out McCann'i pre-\nWhen the first English sparrows\nwere welcomed into the United\nStates, about 1850. it was thought\nthey would destroy canker wormi,\nthen rampant.\nVito Tamulii\u2014the Yankeei' \"nothlnj pitcher\"\ndiction that Vito will be another\nHerb Pennock. Though he itill\nlacks the poise of an experienced\nmajor leaguer. Tamulis has the\nknack of putting the pellet where\nit's hard to hit.\nVito spends his winters at home.\nHe is thc support of a widowed\nmother and lister. He playi baaketball and soccer and bowls during the off season to keep down the\nweight, which is nearly 190. Vito\nsays that'i too much for a man five\nfeet 10 to weigh.\n15 Ties in Donegal and to in\nConan Doyle Event for Bisley\nCanadians Keep Up\nWith Other Shots\nParnell in Pack\nBISLEY CAMP, England, July 12\n(CP Cable)\u2014Fifteen tiei In the\nDonegall challenge cup and 10 in\nthe Conan Doyle Challenge Statuett\n\u2014all with perfect scores\u2014confronted the official* today as the empire\nmeeting of the National Rifle ai-\nsociation got down to business.\nThe two principal matchei of thc\nfirat day of intenilve open competition among the crack military ihots\nfrom all over the empire produced\na remarkable showing of all-around\nexcellence, but thc Canadians stuck\nwith the pace.\nThe veteran company quartermaster\u2014Sergeant Alex Parnell of\nVerdun, Que, earned the right to\nshoot off with the other 14 Donegall,\nbut the best Canadian in the Conan\nDoyle, Lieut James Boa of Montreal,\nwas one point below a perfect icore\nachieved by 10 of the entrants.\nThe Conan Doyle was fired at 300\nand 500 yardi. At the fint range 52\nhad possibles of 35, including Boa\nand two other Canadian!\u2014Capt A.\nW. Hunt of Winnipeg, a newcomer\nto Biiley, and Parnell. At the second range 81 turned in perfect 35s,\nincluding Corporal E. E. Wright of\nMontreal, another Camdian making\nhii firat appearance here.\nOnly 10 managed to get to the\ndouble.\nON SHORT RANGE\nThe Donegall wai fired at the\nihort range, 200 yardi, and when\nthe match proper wai over 59 had\nregistered posiiblei of 50. Including\nParnell and young Lieut Roger\nSweet ot Hamilton.\nThe possibles were given three\nextra roundi immediately md thli\nreduced the ties to 15, Sweet going\nout Parnell staying.\nTomorrow, newspaper day, will\nsee the hundreds of marksmen firing at all range! from 200 to 900\nyards all day long, probably as\nlong aa the light lasts. The program\nincludes The Times, at 200 yards;\nthe Stock Exchange at 200, 500 and\n600 yards, the NRA Journal fired\nconcurrently at 200 and 500 yards;\nThe Daily Mall it 500 yirdi: the\nWimbledon Service Rifle mitch at\n600 yardi ind the Duke of Cambridge at 900.\nTHE SCORING\nCanadim scoring ln the Conin\nDoyle match follows:\n300-500\u2014total.\nLt. James Boa, Montreal 35-35\u201469.\nCapt. A. W. Hunt, Winnipeg 35-\n33-68.\nSgt. C. Iddiols, Calgary. 34-34-68.\nCams. Alex Pirnell, Verdun 85-\n33~\u00ab.\nSgt. M. Penmn, Montreal 84-\n34\u2014^8\nLt. R. A. Sweet, Himllton 84-\n34\u201488\nSgt. 1\". Wellice, Mount Dennli,\nOnt. 34-34-68.\nCant A. B. Coulter, Ottawa, 34-\nH-fl.\nLieut. Neal Dow, Saint John 33-\n34-67.\nLieut. A. P. Williams, Ottawa,\n34-33\u2014fi7\nCpl. E. E. Wright, Montreil 32*\n88-67.      ,~.\nINTERNATIONAL\nSyracuse 8. Rochester 6.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nKansas City 4, Columbus 6.\nNATIONAL RACE\nNational: Philadelphia at St. Louis,\nrain. Only game scheduled.\nTadanac Plans\nTennis Tourney\nTRAIL. B.C.. July 11. - Fifth\nannual city tennis tournament, with\nRossland. Tadanac and Trail Memorial clubs competing will be held\non the Tadanac courts beginning\nAugust 10.\nPreliminary arrangements were\ncompleted at a meeting held Wednesday evening at Memorial hall at\nwhich a committee composed of\nthree to conduct tlie tournament\nwas appointed as follows: Jack\nSalter, Tadanac; Ned Rhodes, Trail\nMemorial: T. Yolland, Rossland.\nPlay will likely be concentrated\nduring the week-ends of August 10\nand 17, with some seta being played during  the week.\nEvents will consist of men's end\nladies'   singles,  men's   and   ladies'\ndoubles and mixed doubles.\nTITLE HOLDER8\nHonors in these events arc at\npresent held as follows: Men's\nsingles, A. M. Chesser. Tadanac;\nladies' singles. Kay Bingay, Tadanac; men'i doubles, J. McDonnell and\nC. Harrison. Rossland; mixed\ndoubles, Kay Blngay and George\nHamson. Tadanac; ladles' doubles,\nBetty Wright and Mrs. P. Halliwell,\n.Tadanac; men's consolatidn, A,\nLundy.\nENDEAVOUR WINS\nBy The Auociited Preu\nHome runi   yesterday:    Gehrig,\nYankees,  1;  Croiettl, Yankeei,  1;\nHiggins. Athletlci. 1.\nThc leaders: Greenburg, Tigers.\n25: Ott, Giants. 19; J. Collins, Cardinals. 17; Johnson. Athletics, 17;\nBerger. Braves. 17; Bonura. White\nSox, 17; Camilli, Phillies. 17.\nLeague totals: National 38; Americans 379; Total 761.\nGermany Divides\nWith Ihe Czechs\nPRAHA, Czechoslovakia. July 12\n(AP)\u2014Germany's Davis Cup tennis team, led by Baron Gottfried von\nCramm, became heavy favoritea to\nwhip Czechoslovakia in the European zone finals after the firat two\nsingles matches had been evenly\ndivided today.\nVon Cramm, finalist against Fred\nPerry in the recent all-England\nchampionships at Wimbledon, blasted his way to an easy straight set\nvictory over Jon Caska, 6-2. 6-4, 6-2,\nbut 19-year-old Heiner Henkel stole\nmajor honors of the day.\nHenkel was beaten but the youngster carried Roderlch Menzel, No. 1\nranking Czech and a power ln in'\nternational tennis for yeara. to five\nsets. Menzel won after a gruelling\nbattle. 7-5. 6-1, 4-6. 2-6. 0-4.\nLE HAVRE. France. July 12 (CP-\nCiblei\u2014T. O. M. Sopwith's Endeavour, unsuccessful America's cup\nchallenger, today beat the Boiton\nyacht Yankee in the second race of\nthe series for the Count de Paris\ncup today.\nEndeavour covered the 22-mile\nfour-comered course in two hours.\n53 minutes, 38 seconds, Yankee being second In 2:55.23. The King's\nBritannia was lixth out of seven\nfor the second time.\nH Entries lor\nRinks Contests\nVANCOUVER. July 12 (CP) -\nWith an all-time record entry list,\nincluding trundlers from three\npoints in Alberta and seven in the\nUnited States Pacific coast, the 13th\nannual British Columbia lawn bowling tournament will get under way\nMonday on the greens of 10 Vancouver clubi.\nSeventy-four entries have been\nreceived for the rinks competition\nwhich opens the tournament with\nfour games being played In the\nBowser rinki trophy event.\nThe Seaton single! competition\nstarts Monday night with 166 entries. The pairs will get under way\nlater in the week with 148 entered.\nEntries include San Diego, Clare-\nmont, Pasadena, Oakland, and\nBerkeley In California; Seattle and\nBellingham in Washington, and Calgary. Edmonton and Medicine hat\nin Alberta.\nLt.-Col. C. W. G. Gibson. Hamilton, 33-33-66.\nLt. P. J. Martinson, La Tuque,\nQue. 33-33\u2014_.\nSt.-Maj. J. Tralnor, Toronto 33-\n34\u201466\nLt.-Col. F. W. Sutton, Toronto\n32-33\u201465.\nLt. W. H. Edsell, Ottawa 30-34\u201464.\nLt. H. D. Proctor, Ottawa 30-33-63.\nHARROW IN LEAD\nLONDON. July 12 (CP Cable) -\nAt the close of play ln the ennual\nEton-Harrow public school! mitch\nplaved at Lord'a todav. worei were:\nHarrow 249; Eton 138 for five.\nLOS ANGELES. July 12 (AP) -\nSanta Anita park made ita bid today for the leading thoroughbreds\nof the country to compete here this\nwinter with the announcement that\nmore than $500,000 In purse md\nstake money will be posted for the\n59-day meeting opening Christmas\n\u2022tor-,'\nYANKEES HOLD\nTHE LEAGUE TOP\nDetroit in Second\nPlace Also Turns\nin a Victory\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW   \\_ Pet.\nNew York 47   26 .644\nDetroit 48   SO .615\nChicago    40   31 .563\nCleveland   38 \u00ab8 .521\nBoston   40   377 .519\nPhiladelphia    31   41 .431\nWashington    31   44 .413\nSt Louie 21   32 .288\nYANKS WIN FROM INDIANS\nlteW YORK, July 12 (AP)\u2014The\nYankeee kept their slender American league lead intact today when\nthey downed the Clevelmd Indians\nfor the aecond itraigh. time, 5-2,\nand swept the abbreviated series.\nHome rum by Frank Croietti and\nLou Gehrig got the Yanks oft to a\ngood start and they never let up as\nCharley Ruffing and Monte Pearson\nbattled on almost even terma under\nthe broiling sun which beat down\non the pitching mound. Ruffing\ngave up nine hits and Peanon 10\nbut both were fairly effective except for the two Yankee clouts\ninto the bleachers.\nCleveland       2    9   0\nNew York     6   10   0\nPearson md Phillips; Ruffing and\nDickey.\nDETROIT KEEPS AHEAD\nWASHINGTON. July 12 (AP)-\nThe Detroit Tigers again worked\nthe favorite trick of coming from\nbehind to victory today ai they\nturned back the Senators. 2-1, and\nheld their place in the American\nleague pennant race a game md a\nhalf behind the league-leading\nYankeei.\nIt waa Detroit'! 12th victor; in\nthe lait 13 gamei md gave the\nTigen the leriei here, 2*1.\nDetroit _.   2    7  0\nWashington     1    5   2\nCrowder md Cochrane; Linke\nand Holbrook.\nCHAMP TRAINS\nExpecting to tight King Levinsky In Auguit, Bnddock keeps In trim\nCZECHOSLOVAKIA\nAND GERMANY\nEVEN\nWHITE SOX WIN\nBOSTON, July 13 (AP)-Jimmy\nDykes' third-place Chicago White\nSox pounded four Boiton pit:hera\nfor a 13*2 victory today to square\nthe four-game series. The visitors\nslammed out the handsome total of\n17 hits but clinched the game ln the\nopening frame, when they pounded\nJoe Cascarella, latest addition to the\nCronin pitching corps, for three\nruns.\nChicago    18   17   0\nBoston      2   10  2\nKennedy and Seill; Cascarella.\nRhodei, Hockett, Ostermueller md\nR. Ferrell.\nA'S BLANK BROWNS\nPHILADELPHIA. July 12 (AP)-\nThe Athletics gained an even break\nIn the four-game series with the\nSt. Louii Browni by coming through\nwith a 9-0 ihutout win today.\nGeorge Blaeholder, pitching for\nthe Mackmen against his old teammates held the Browni to teven\nhiti. Pinky Hlggini' ninth home\nrun of the leason aided the A'l\ncauie.\nSt Louia    0    7  0\nPhiladelphia     9   14  0\nThomai, Wilkup, Andrewi and\nHemsley; Blaeholder md Berry,\nYorkshire Well\nin Cricket Lead\nLONDON. July 12 (CP-Cable) -\nThe County Cricket' chimpiomhip\ntable provided a different aspect\ntoday. Yorkshire drew away from\nthe field with a 153*run victory over\nKent at Tonbridge, but Derbyihire\nrelinquished the runner-up position\nto the fut-travelllng Warwickshire\neleven. Middlesex and Kent were\neach down a rung.\nIn games concluded yeiterday\nNottinghamshire won by an innings\nmd 45 runs over Northamptonshire\nwhile Lancashire added valuable\npoints beating Essex by an innings\nand 84 runs. The South Africa side\nand Norfolk played to a draw.\nToday's icores:\nYorkshire 326 md 245; Kent 171\nmd 247. !\nGloucesterahlre 250 and 208; Der-,\nbyshire 233 and 157.\nGlamorgan 239 and 89; Warwick-1\nshire 150 md 179 tor four.\nHampshire 183 and 314; Sussex \\\n423 and 45 rum for no wickets.\nHockey Games in\nSummer Season\nLAKE PLACID, N.Y., July 12\n(AP)\u2014Four ranking hockey teems\nin the United States md Cinada will\nbe seen ln action here between July\n21 and Auguit 11. during the mid\nsummer indoor ice leason, it was\nannounced today.\nThe first hockey leriei will be\nheld July 27 md 28 when Montreal\nRoyals will defend the Baous challenge trophy against the St. Nlcholi! club of New York city. The\nOttawa All-Stars will meet the Lake\nPlacid Athletic club team ln two\ngamei. Auguit 3 ind 4.\nIn addition to the hockey games\nan ice gymkhana will be held July\n31 and the fourth annual mid-summer figure skating \"operetta,\" August 9 md 10.\nMILLER VICTOR\nDUBLIN. July 12 (CP)-Freddie\nMUler of the United States, world\nfeatherweight champion, tonight\nwaa awarded a technical knockout\nover Jehu Welsh ifter the latter had\ninjured hia hand ln the fourth round.\nPRAHA. June 12 (API-Germany and Czechoslovakia split\neven in the firat two singles\nmatches of the Europe zone\nDavii cup tennii finals today.\nRoderich Menzel. towering\nCzech, barely lasted to defeat\nthe 19-year-old Teuton, Seiner\nHenkel. 7-5. 6-1. 4-6, 2-6, 8-4 In\nthe Spenng match. Baron Gottfried von Cramm, German ace,\nthen gave the Teutons an even\nbreak by disposing of Jon Caska\nin straight sets, 6-2, 6-4, 6-2.\n\u25a0*- ->-.-.-.\u2014m, \u2022**\u2022-aaaaan\nSCHMELING WIU\nFIGHT ANYWHERE\nBut He Wants to Meet\nMax Baer or Louis\nin the Ring\nBERLIN. July 12 (AP)-Irked\nat the failure of the Germm promoter. Walter Rothenburg, to match\nhim with Max Baer in Europe. Max\nSchmeling said today he Is ready\nto sign for bouts with Baer or Joe\nLouis, regardless of where they are\nheld.\nThe German heavyweight laid he\nis under contract to Rothenburg\nuntil Aug. 8 \"provided Rothenburg\nsucceeds in signing me up'to fight\nBaer ln Europe.\"\nJoe Jacobs. Schmeling's American\nmanager, said the German Is willing\nto sign a contrict tor \u2022 milk fund\nfight with Louis If it should develop\nBaer ls definitely out of the picture\nfor the time being.\nVILLAGE DESTROYED BY FIRE\nMADRAS, India (CP)-Once a\nprosperous village with 350 houses .\nand many fine buildings Denduluru,\nnear Ellore has been destroyed by\nfire. Three person! perished and\n2000 were rendered homeless.\nINJURIES HIT\nBRITISH ELEVEN\nLEEDS, England, July 12 (CP\ncable)\u2014Beset by Injuries, England\ntonight prepared to meet South\nAfrica in the third teit cricket\nmatch starting here tomorrow.\nIn,the three-day match England\nwill seek revenge for the 157-run\nvictory scored by thc Springboks\nin the second test at Lord's. Tha\nfirat test at Nottingham ended in a\ndraw when rain prevented play on\nthe third day.\nHerbert Sutcliffe, powerful Yorkshire batsman, will be missing from\nthe English eleven due to 111 heelth.\nJames Langrldge, Sussex high icorer. wai selected to replace him.\nA device to protect automobile\ndriven trom falling asleep at the\nwheel hai recently been placed on\nthe German market\nEXTRA\nTROUSERS\nFREE\nAT\nJack Boyce's\nExclusive Men'i Shop\nYee air: FeUowi:\nIt is a fact\u2014If you order\nthat new suit now, we offer\nthe extra trousers absolutely\nFREE. And boys we are lure\nselling lots of suits. Really\nwe are surprised at the quantity, and our Customen are\nsure pleased with the quality.\nSo get busy now\u2014the offer\nwill terminate July Slit A\nsmall deposit puts your luit\non miking.\nAnd another feature\u2014Der-\nhaps you are figuring on a\nnew suit for Fall\u2014Now liiten,\nplice your order thli month-\nbudget your salary and you\ncm have the suit arrive sometime in September.\nPositively you save from\n$7.00 to $10.00 on the extra\npants. Pricei run from $30.00\nto $47.50.\nDon't put It off. Do it now.\nPerfect fits Guaranteed.\nYours,\nJACK BOYCE.\nPhoni 160\nFREE LESSONS\nIN DIVING\nBeginning Monday Nelson Daily News presents s\nseries of illustrated articles on diving. These should be of\ngreat interest to every reader who swims. '\nThe series, illustrated with composite photographs mads\nup from special motion pictures, is by Frederick A. Spon-\nberg, famous Olympic diving team coach and the man who\ndeveloped Pete Des )ardines into a great star.\nThe articles which are brief, simply written snd easily\nunderstandable sre especially interesting at this time\nwhen selections for divers and swimmers for the teams\nwhich will compete in Olympic games next yesr in Berlin\nare about to be made.\nThe illustrations show clearly the different funds-\nmental dives in all their important stages \u00ab*\"\"\nDon't Forget\u2014Monday in His\nNelson Daily News\nTTTTTTT\nnil! nun*!!\n\u2022\u00bb-\u25a0 \u25a0\u00ab   mtm   mmmt  \u00ab\u25a0    \u25a0\nIL fill\nli-JIJI\nurvti_%ut\nThm'i ae uibttttiitt fer\nttt. Thli ntllow llqutut\nwhliky li bltedtd (ran\nthe hint old ScoWih\nmtlb.\n25\nHot..      -W_\n16 eu.\n40 en.\nTHE BRITISH COLUMN*\nDISTILLMY CO. LTD.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor 11\nControl Board pt by \\__ Govc.rnrainJ 9] British Columbis.\n \u2014\n\t\n.SgD\nTHI NILSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. I.C.-IATURDAY MORNINO. JULY 18.1888\n\u2022PAOE NINI\nRENO IS UP 3\nVANCOUVIR July 12 (CP) -\nPrice changu wera mixed ln the.\ngolducUon ot the Vancouver Stock\nexchange today while B. C. Nickel\nfuturea the bue metal section,\ndropping iteadlly throuahout the\naeision to clou with a lou ot 8 it\n48. Trading wai more active with\n140,396 iharu aold.\nPlonur Gold lut 13 at 8.48. Sheep\nCreek wai off 34 at 89 and Cariboo at 88 was down 2. Bralorne advanced to 4.49. Reno wu up 8 at 1.29.\nCongress (lined 2 at 23 and Dentonia firmed a cent at 36. United\nXmplre wu unchanged at 3.\nB. C. Silver lost 8 at 128. Golconda at li*. and Pend Orellle at SO\nwere unchanged. Noble Five used\n\u2022H at IVt ml Beaver Silver at 11,\ntnd Silversmith at 8K uch firm*\ntd Va.\nRoyalite loat 80 at 88.80 with no\nules tranucted. Dalhousle was off\n14 at 22. Other oil iharu ware un-\nthanged.\t\nPRODUCE STEADY\nMONTI-HAL, July 11 (CP)-Prl-\ntte wtrt gtntrally itudy on Montrul produce marketi today.\nButter wu 21H centi per pound\nfor No. I.\nCheeu wu 10% centi for No. 1.\nSHI were 32 centa a doten for\nA-larft.\nNew potatou were 80 to 80 cents\nper 80-pound baf\nCanadian Dollar\nLowtr\nNIW YORK, July 12 (CP)-In the\nforeign exchange markets today thc\npound iterllng Wll off Vt at $4.95*%.\nThe Canadian dollar extended its\ndiscount from 8*32 to 8-16 per cent\n\u2022while the French franc, closinp at\n8.81-H oenU. ihowed a lou of .00H\nOf t cent\t\nLondon Close\nLONDON, July 12 (API-Trading\nen the itock exchinge developed\ntba uiuil wuk-end dullneu and\nrealirlni cauaed industrials and\nglltedged ucurltlu to ease. Court-\nauldi sharei were weak on the disappointing dividend. Oold mining\nJisuu were firm. The close wai\n*$oat-Bru Tract 884. CPR *10O,\nInt Nickel $28. Brlt Am Tob \u00a38,\nDistillers 83i 3d, Hudaon Bay 7ii >d,\nImp Tob \u00bb9i 4Hd, Mining Truit\nLtd 41 \u00bbd. Rand Minei \u00a38, Rho-\ndesien Anglo Am 10s 8d, Rhokam\nCorp \u00a39, Crown Mlnu \u00a313H,\nSprings 4-1 8d, Vlckeri 14s.\nBondi\u2014Britleh 2V, per cant con-\nMil \u00a38814, BrttUh SH per cent wir\nloin \u00a3106M, British funding 4s\n1880*80 \u00a3118%.\nPRAIRIE CROPS\nPROGRESSING\nWINNIPIO, Men., July 13-WIth\nfurther precipitation during week\nand warm weather generally, prairie cropi have continued to make\niteady progreu and wheat ii heading out ln many dlitricti. the weekly crop turvey of Canadian Pacific\nrailway notu today.\nTwenty five to 78 par cent of\nManitoba and uitern Sukatchewin\nwheat ihowi a good length of head,\nwhlll elsewhere tha bulk of fields\nare ln ahot blade.\nCHICAGO BREAKS\nCHICAGO. July 13 (AP)-Auipl-\neloui conditions prevailing at least\ntemporarily both tor the domutic\nwinter wheat harvest and for spring\nwheat progress caused material\nbreaks In wheat valuu today.\nSharput downturn! of Chicago\nwheat pricei came luit at the last,\nwith enlarged  selling because  of\nSronounjjd  weaknus  shown  by\nansas City and Minnupolli markets alike. ,   ,  ,\nWheat cloied at the dayi lowut\nlevel. 1K-24 lower, Sept. 82M1-V1,\ncorn unchanged to H down, Sept.\n74-ft-H, oati H1H off.\nGOLD UP A CENT\nMONTRIAL, July 12 (CPl-Bar\ngold in London up a cent at $34.97\nan ounce in Canadian funds; 140\u00ab\nUd ln British fundi. The fixed 839\nWashington price amounted to 338.00\nin Canadian. \t\nCANT SUE THE U.S.\nGOVERNMENT ON THE\nDOLLAR DEVALUATION\nWASHINGTON, July 12 (AP>-\nThe United Statu house of representatives banking committee today\napproved an administration bill to\nbir eulti against the government to\ncollect alleged damage arising out\nof devoluatlon of the american dollar.\nMonty\nBy the Canadian preu\ndoling exchange ratu:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.88 11-18,\nfrinc 9.93 cents, U S dollar 1.00 3-16.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.95*4, franc\n6.61H  cents,  Canadian  dollar  .89\nAt Parli\u2014Pound 74.92 franu, U S\ndollar 19.12V4 franci, Canadian dollar 19.09 franci.\nIn gold-Pound 12s Id. U S dollir\n89.19 cents, Canadian dollar 89.10\ncenti.\nA Poisonous Spider At Home\nTht dreaded blaek widow ipldir, whleh hai ciund wldeiprud\ntkkneu tnt uveral duthe In mld-wut, ii ihown at homi with hir\nprupwtlvefamily In thli unusual photograph takin In Oklahoma City,\nwhleh hu Mrffered mut from the Iniect'i polionoui bit**. In th* plo-\nture trt thru ball* ef egg* with arrow indlutlng a baby widow\npldar whleh hu crawled out from thi egg at left. Two home fllu\ni may ba uen tangled In the web.\nMontreal Stock Prices\naplda\nalu i\nMarket and Mining News\nWINNIPEG DULL\nWINNTPIO, July 12 (CP)-Bur*\nIsh and bullish market Influence!\nwere about even In their effects on\nthe Winnipeg Grain exchange today.\nTrading sank into tha doldrums,\nwheat prlcei doling a dull Mision\nunchanged to H cent lower.\nAt the finish, the July future wu\nitlll on iti \"pegged\" minimum, 80\ncents \u25a0 bushel, md August at 80-H*.\ncents, H centa over htelevel under\nwblch exchange regulation! forbid\nfuturea being lold.\nRust reports from many sections\nof the United Statu iprlng wheat\nbelt conflicted but at Chicago, 2*V\ncent loises were recorded. Liverpool wss \"id higher it the close.\nCuh and coarse grains were quiet.\nLEJUJEJpfMB\nMONTRIAL, July 12 (CP)-The\nleaders marched steadily upward\nduring today'i session of the Montreal Itock exchange.\nCanadian Industrial Alcohol\nlhares continued to be in the limelight. The A issue advanced _ of i\npoint to 9% while the B isiue gained\n\\ ot a point to IVt.\nNew sharei of Dominion Coal\nf referred advanced 44 of a point to\nSVi in late dealings after Holding\nstead earlier ln the day. Dominion\nSteel It Coal B roie H of a point\nto SVi.\nC.M.&S.UP\nTORONTO, July 13 (CP)-Rlie\nIn liquor aharu wai pushed along\nvigorously today and gains rangea\nup to better than a point, This leadership turned the rest of the Toronto Industrial share market up and\nthe exchange index at the close\nitood it 108.97 against 108.03 at the\ncloie Thursday.\nWalken Common advanced IH\nto 20%. Distillen Se\u00abgr*ms added H\nto 21H and Industrial Alcohol \"A\"\nand \"B\" to  _ uch.\nNickel cloied up V* at 27%. Coniolidited Smelten also added a\nsmsll fraction. In tha oils Imperial\nwu told in some volume tor a mln*\nor lou and International Petroleum\nImproved 4. Supertut Ordinary\nmoved up a point to 28.\nBUSINESS BETTER\nWINNIPIO, July 12 (CP)-Whlle\nbuiineu conditions generally remained at a level over that of thla\ntime lait year, Saskatoon continued\nto be the brightest ipot ln the Dominion's fimncial firmament, according to the weekly report todiy\nof the Canadian Credit Men'i Truit\nassociation.\nAll centen reported the ilow,\nateady recovery that Ht ln aome\nmonthi ago wai continuing.\nTENDERS ACCEPTED\nFOR TREASURY\nBILLS\nOTTAWA. July 12 (CP)-Hon.\nX. N. Rhodu. mlnliter of finance, announced today tenden\nhad been accepted for the full\namount of 320.000,000 Dominion\nof Canada treuury bills due\nnext Oct. IS.\nThe average discount price\nof the accepted bids was\n99.63211. equivalent to the rate\nof 1.388 per cent.\nMetal Markets\nDow Jones Averages\n80 Induitriali........   122.63\n20 Rails     88.31\n20 Utilitie.     22.42\n40 Bonds  ;    \t\nLew\n121.29\n82.826\n21.99\nClua     Change\n122.20-Up  0.27\n83.21-Up 0.32\n22.28-Up 0.07\n96.76\u2014Off 0.18\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED\nAmal OU  ....\n__)i| Miuouri\t\nii C facken\t\naradlan \t\ndruorne\t\ndriage R Con\t\nBRX Gold\t\nCariboo Gold \t\nxj ts & Corp \t\nCout Brew\t\nDentonia  \t\nOold Belt \t\nHome OU\t\nInt Coal \t\nKoot Belle\t\nMak Siccar _\nMcDougal Segur -\nMcLeod\t\nMeridian  ....\nModel Oil\t\nMorning Star _\nNat 811 ver\t\nPioneer Oold\t\nPremier Oold \t\nPremier Border\t\nReno Oold    _\nSalmon Gold  -\nSheep Creek ._\t\nTaylor Bridge\t\nWiyiide  \t\nCURB\nAnaconda  _....._.\nBeaver SUver _\nBluebird  \t\nB C Silver\t\nI C Nickel....- _\nCan Rand ............\nCalmont   _\nCongreu   \u201e\nCottonbelt _\nCrowi Nut _\nDilhouile Mlnu ....\nDilhouiie Oils\t\nDictator\t\nInterest   _._\nFairview \t\nFawn  \u201e\t\n\u25a0Id\nAlk\n.10*\n.12\n-*.*.\nJ4\nISA)\n\u2014\n1.78\n1.80\n4.48\ntM\n.03\n.03-**.\nM\nm\nHi\n1.00\n.50\nii\n13.26\n13.00\nM\nJO\nM\nJO\n62\nJO\n___.\nJO\n\u2014\n.12\n.18\n.03\n.0314\nJO\n.04\n-04 Vi\nJO\n\u202221V4\n.0414\n.03 Vi\n.08\n.04\n9.48\n8.90\n1.44\n1.49\n\u2014\n\u20220OH\n1.28\n1.26\n.11\nM\nM\n\u202210'i\n.88\n.88\n.11\nn\n.02\n.06\n.01\n,01\n1.38\n148\n-I\n.29\n*\u2022**\u2022\u00bb\u2022\nM\n*4*H\nm.\nJ3\n.24\n.03\n.08\n.10\n.11\nme,\nM\nJ3\n\u2014\n.01\n<***\n.08\nJ.9H\nJO\n.38\nFederal \t\nFreehold \t\nUeo Copper\t\nGlacier creek\t\nUalconda\t\nGold Mountain ......\nUeo ..nterpriM \t\nGeo River \t\nurandview \t\nGrange\t\nGrun Wlhktne\t\nHedley Amal \t\nHignwood Sircee\nHome Gold\t\nIndian     \t\nindependence \t\nisland Mountain\nLucky Jim \t\nMar Jon  _.\t\nMercury  \t\nMerland    \t\nMcGillivray \t\nMill City   \t\nMlnto Oold  \t\nMorton Woliey \t\nNoble Flvt\t\nNicola  ....\nPend OreUle\t\nPacalta  \t\nPilot Gold\t\nPorter Idaho \t\nQuemell Q \t\nRanchmen'i \t\nRelief Arlington\nRewird\t\nRoyalite  \t\nRutin Argenta \t\nSllverrces.\t\nSilverado   _\u00bb..\nSUversmith \t\nSnowflake\t\nStandard SUver\t\nSunshine \t\nUnited Implre\t\nUnited OU    -\nVidette Gold\t\nWaterloo \t\nWaverley Tang \t\nWhitewater   \t\n.ISH\nDl\nMV,\nM\n.00'4\n.04\nJO\n.09\n.04\n.01\n.74\n.03*4\n.10\n.10%\n.18\n-        JO\n.08 V4\n.0*\n.01V4\nJO\nMV,\n.0614\n.00%\n.03\n.0314\n.06\n.22\n.0914\n.08\n.01\n.76\n.0314\n.06\n\u2022oen\n.MVi\n.08 ll\nJO\nm\n.08\n.10\n.33\nJ7\n23.00\nJl\nMa.\nHi\n-03H\n.74\n.03\n.03%\n.1314\n.03\nJOH\n.0614\nJT\nJl\nT\n.92\n.0414\n.09\n.08\n.40\n2.\n.02%\n14.00\n.01\n.03\n.04\n.00%\nJO\n22.90\n.14\nJl\n.00%\n.07%\nToronto Stock Quotations\nN.Y. HIGHER\n\u25a0y FRANK MeMILLIN\nNIW YORK. July IJ (k_) -\nStock market bull forces got their\nfeet under them todiy after their\nlittle tumble of the prevloui session\nind began again th* ilow push up\nthe hill.\nInduitriali and iptelaltlu led the\nway during most of the teuton, Including aircraft aharu, alcoholi.\niome of the moton and acceuories\nind chemlcil itocki.\nNew highs were acored by a variety of Issues.\nSentiment, generally, inpured to\nbe cheerful ln the Wall itrut diitrict ind many commentators point*\ned to the day'i market action as con*\nfirming their earlier feeling that\nthe recent reaction wu largely ot\na technical nature. Washington rumors that President Rooievelt might\nnot insist on paauge ot the wealth\ndistribution tax meuure at the preunt seuion helped feeling in some\nquarters.\nThe Associated Prett avenge of\n60 ulected itocki finished with a\ngain of .3 ot a point at 43.4. Trana*\nfen totalled 1.097,000 shares.\nGood Resulb in Sheep (reek (amp;\nSecond Relief Expects Put In Mill\nB. T. O'Grady's Report Points Out Activity in\nNelson, Ymir, Salmo Camps; Some\nRevival in the Slocan\nAlexandria.._..__._...___ Jl\nAlgoma    J3%\nAsniey Oold  . JO\nBarry Hollinger   _ .02%\nBase Metals\nBankfield \t\nBear ExploraUon\t\nBig Miuouri  .....\nBobjo     _\nBndlan   -      ....\nBralorne\nAl Chemical 137%\nAm Can  138%\nAm For Pow 8%\nAm Ma ..Fdy 33%\nAm Smelt & Re 33%\nAm Telephone  127%\nAm Tobacco  97\nAnaconda   16\nAtcblaon   49%\nAuburn Mo   23%\nBaldwin          2%\nBait tt Ohio    10%\nBendlx Av    16%\nBtth Steal    30%\nCanada Dry ...  12%\nCan Pacltlc    10%\nCerro de Pieoo 88%\nChu It Ohio .... 44%\nChrysler .  83%\nCon Gu N Y 28%\nCorn Prod. .. 77%\nC Wright Pfd     I\nupont       106%\naat Kodak 148\njlec Pow A LI     3\nru .... J\nt Na Storu 84%\niport Tex 38%\nElectric .... 36%\nFooda _ 87%\nMoton  36%\nBold Duit -  16%\nlOoodrlch      6\n\u25a0Oranby       3%\nOrt North Pfd 31%\nirt Weat Sugar 38%\ntwt Sound  48\n\u2022udwn MO      8%\nHat Nickel  38\nU Ol A Tel     8%\nLow\nCloie i\nJewel Tu \u2014\n61\n80\n61\n%\n167%\n138%\nKenn Copper....\nKruge S S \t\n19\n24%\n18%\n24%\n18%\n24%\n3%\nXroegger It Toll 29\n28%\n29\n33%\nMick Truck   .\n\"\u00bb\n19%\n20%\n43%\n43%\nMUwauku Pfd\n__,\n1%\n133%\n137\nNuh Motors    ..\nNa Dairy Prod\nN Pow It LI \t\n14%\n13%\n14%\n99%\n19%\n99%\n16%\n16%\n16%\n16\n9\n8%\n8%\n48\n4D%\nNY Central *...\nPao Gu A Xiao\n17%\n24%\n16%\n17%\n24%\n33\n33%\n2%\n23%\n3%\nPack Moton..\n4%\n4%\n4%\n10%\n1%6\n10%\n16%\nPenn R R\t\n23%\n23\n23%\nPhillips Pete\t\n21%\n21%\n31%\n29%\n30%\nPure Oil \t\n9%\n9\n8\n11%\n11%\nRadio Corp \t\nRadio Keith Or\n6%\n6%\n6%\n10\n10\n2\n\u2014\n2\n87%\n87%\nRem Rand\n9%\n9%\n9%\n44%\n44%\nSafeway Storei\n40%\n40\n40%\n10%\n81\n82%\nShell Union ....\n10%\n10%\n39%\n29%\nS Cal Edison   ..\n19%\n19%\n19%\n77\n77%\nSouth Pacific\n18%\n3414\n17%\n18%\n104%\n8\nStan Oil ot Cal\n34\n34\n106%\nStan Oil of Ind\n29%\n28%\n23%\n48%\n148%\n148%\nStan Oil of N J\n48%\n47%\n2%\n3%\nStewart Warner\n12%\n11%\n13\n8\nStudebaker  \t\n2%\n19%\n34%\n2%\n\u2014\n8%\n27%\nTex Corp\nTex Gulf Sul\n20\n85\n20\n34%\n_\n64%\nTimken Rollers\n42%\n88%\n84%\n41%\n42%\n36\n38%\n26\n26%\nUnder Type .. .\nUn Carbide\n63%\nW\n88%\n86%\nUn Oil of Cal\n16\n17%\n18\n34%\n36%\nUnited Air .. ..\n24%\n104\n19%\n16%\n16%\n16%\nUnited Bli .\n24%\n24%\n8\nUn Picifle \t\n103%\n106\n7%\na\nU 8 Pipe\t\n10%\n19%\n19%\n31%\n31%\nUS Rubber\t\n13%\n12%\n13%\n28%\n28\nU s stul\t\nsa\n58%\n36\n36%\n48%\n48\nVm Stul\n57%\n14%\n7%\n8%\nWest Electrical\n88%\n37%\n28\nWoolworth   \t\n82%\n61%\n62%\n\u00bb%\n\u00bb%\nYellow Truck....\n3\n2%\n3\nNIW YORK. July 12 (API-Copper itudy:electrolytic ipot and future 8.00: export 7.92%-70.\nTin euv: loot and nearby 53.10;\nfuture 31.37.\nIron dull, unchanged.  __\nLeid itudy; loot New York 4.10-\n4.20: Eait 8t. Louli 4.00\nZinc dull; Eait St. Loula ipot and\nfuture 4.30.\nAluminum 19.00-32.00.\nAntimony ipot 12.73.\nBar illver wsy. -14 lower at 88%.\nAt London doling; Copper, standard, spot Ml 7s 6d; tuture \u00ab3110*.\nElectrolyUe. ipot -34; future OS.\nTin, ipot -231  10i; tuture -224\nLead, ipot ind future \u00bb14 17i 6dl\nfuture \u00ab14. ,\nBir lilver euy, 3*16 lower at\n31*141\t\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO. July 13 (CP)-Salu\nof 100 or more ihiru on Toronto\nstock mirket today: 600 Braiil; 1000\nBrew A D la; 359 B A Oil; 4629\nC In Ale; 1170 C In Ale B; 146 C P R;\n17 0C Smelt: 880 D St tt C B; 3169\nInt Nkl; 6438 M Walken.\nMONTREAL, July 12 (CP)~Salea\nof 100 or more ihires on Montreal\nstock markit today: 239 Can Car:\n2189 Ind Al A: 1670 Ind Al B;! 243\nCPR: 139 Smelter: 2771 D Coal Pfd:\n6589 D S tt C B: 920 Imp Tob; 630\nInt Nickel; 1173 MU Power; 545 Nat\nBrew.        \t\nVancouver Sales\nBrett Trethewey\t\nBRX Oold \t\nBrownlee   \"\u2014\nBuf Ankerite _\nBuf Can Gold  - -\nBunker HIU  \t\nCan Kirkland _ ....\nCan Malartlc  _.___\nCariboo Gold Quartz ______\nCastle Trethewey _..._\nCentral Manitoba  .\nCentral Patricia  _____\nChibougamou  _..._..__.._\nClericy  \t\nCoait Copper _._\t\nCobalt Contact \t\nConarium  _\u2014\t\nCom MAS _ \u2014\nDome  __\t\nDom ExplonUon _.\t\nEldorado    * -\t\nFalconbrldge ..- _....._\nGod's Lake  \t\nGranada  _____________\nHardrock   \t\nHollinger   \t\nHowey      _ \t\nHudson Bay ......._\u2014\nInt Nickel\nKlrkland   Lake   -\nLake Maron    \t\nLittle Long Lae\t\nLake Shore \t\nMclntyn     \t\nMcVittle Grahamme .\nMeWatten Gold\t\nMacassa  \t\nMslrobic    ~\nMaple Leaf \t\nMining Corp .....\nMoffatt Hall\t\nNipissing  ...._.._..\nNonnda ..........__.....\nParkhlll\nPaymlster   \t\nPend Orellle ..\nPickle Crnw ...\nPioneer Gold .\nVernier Gold\nReno \t\n.63\n.14\n.56\ns\n.19%\n1.73\n4.40\n.03\n.08\n.01\n2.62\n.0114\n.06%\n.01%\n.61\n.95\n1.03\n.03%\n1.68\n.17%\n.03\n1.88\n.02%\n1.89\n163.29\n38.12%\n.05\n..89\n8.76\n1.84\n.20\n.42\n14.00\n.71\n18.37%\n27.87%\n.34\n.03\n4.60\n61.00\n40.90\n.13\n1.17\n1.61\n.00%\n.03%\n1.46\n.01%\n2.10\n37,00\n20%\n_te%\n.90\n5.29\n9.69\n1.48\n1.26\nSikoou _._\t\nSin Antonio ........-___...\nShup Creak ...._._...\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSlice* \t\nSmelten Gold __\t\nSouth Tibleraont\t\nStadacona   \t\nSt Anthony \t\nSudbury Buln \t\nSylvanlte  _ _.\nTeck Hughu ........._.._.-\nToburn    ______\nTowagamac\t\nTrudwell  \t\nVenturei _..\nWilte Amulet \u2122\nWayiide  ___\nWhite Eagle  -._\nWright HargrttvM\t\nOILS\nAcme  .. ~_\nAJax  \t\nB A Oil  \t\nCalmont  ___\nC_I Corp \t\nChemical Reiurch\t\nDalhouiie\t\nHome Oil \t\nHomestead O and G\t\nImperial OU\t\nInt Pete \t\nMerlind \t\nNordon  _ .....\nOil Selection! \t\nOlgi\t\nRoyalite\n.04\n3.57\n.86\n.83\n2.83\n.04%\n.03\nJj\n.18\n1.38\n2.13\n4.13\n1.10\n.16\n43%\n42%\nJO\n.01%\n.03\n7.88\n.18%\n.31>\n18.62%\nSH\n.SO\n1.00\n,23\n.88\n.04\n19.78\n36.28\n.18\n_07\n.04%\n.04%\n23.78\nFreight Rale an\nEquitable Tariff\nVERNON, B.C., July 13 (CP)-\n\"Freight rates set up under a Dominion government board offer a\ngreater impediment to equitable\ntndlng conditions ln thli country\nthan would any propoied scheme\nInvolving control of Imports into\nthis province from eluwhare ln\nthe Dominion,\" declared Hon. K.\nC. Macdonald, mlnliter of agriculture, ln addreulng a public meeting here lest night.\nA logical development from the\npresent Market act he uld, li tht\nstrict governing of conditions by\nwhich producti from other parti of\nthe Dominion can be dumped into\nareu of thli province where at*\ntempti hava bean mada to itabtliit\nthe ulu of varloua cropi.\n'To thou who raiie tha argument\nthit iuch a move on the part of\nBriUih Columbia would be to offer\na tariff itructure within the nation,\nand to build up an Impediment to\ntrade, It ahould be pointed out,\" he\ndeclared, \"that tha pruent freight\nrate structure already com'.itutu a\nmost Inequitable tariff, working to\nthe disadvantage of British Columbia.\"\n8.T. O'ORADY\nMining acUvlty in No. 8 mineral\nlurvey dlitrlct li generally good.\nLode-gold mining ls largely concentrated in the Nelson-Ymlr Salmo\nand Rouland campi, and alio ln the\nCranbrook-Lerdeau and part ot the\nSlocan areu. The Increased price\nof lilver ii reviving activity in\nthe Slocan camp and wveral propertlei are being prepared for producUon. The future of the Slocan\ncamp will, however, largely depend\non niver production at there seems\nto be litUe likelihood of high prices\nbeing obtained ln the Immediate\nfuture tor lead and tine.\nLOOI-OOLO DtPOSITS\nThe Sheep Creek camp near Salmo continues to respond to development, and good results are reported\nfrom the 9th level of the Reno mine.\nThe new mill on the Queen property of Sheep Creek Gold mines is\nbeing operated at 120 toni dally.\nA new lower level la being driven\n\u2022t the Kootenay Belie mine where\nthe Hardinge-Hadsell mill Is reported to be operating very succeuiully.\nDevelopment li proceeding at the\nGold Belt and Fawn properties lu\nthii camp, and alio the Clubine-\nComstock near Salmo.\nDevelopment at the Second Relief\n(near Erie), controlled by Premier\nGold Mining Company, warrants\nthe expectation that construction ot\na 75-ton cyanide mill wlll be provided according to the company\npllns.\nIn the Ymir camp the Ymlr-\nYankee Girl mill ll operating at 100\ntons per day and deeper development hai been itartad at thii property.\nShipmanti from tha Ymlr-Dundee\nhave been ruumed and development at tha Center Star, Blackcock,\nFern, and Durango ls being continued.\nThe 100-ton mill at Ymlr Consoli-\nINDUSTRIALS\nButty Broi A _    8%\nBeU Telephone   129\nBrazilian     .- 8%\nBrewen A DlstUlen  _  .40\nCm Brud  \u2014___ 2\nCm Cement     4%\nCan Car ti Foundry _ _ 4%\nCan Indui Alcohol A   814\nCan Dredge           U%\nCm Pac Railway   9%\nCom Bakerlu        14%\nDistillers Seagram   31%\nDominion Storw  -  4%\nFord of Canada   37%\nGoodyear Tire  _  72\nHiram Walker  -  80%\nImperial Tobacco   13%\nLoblaw A\nMassey Harrli \t\nStandard Paving .\nSteel of Canada ..\nWalker Brtw\t\n19\n4\n70\n49%\n3\nQuotations on Wall Street\nVANCOUVER, July 13 IC?) -\nMining sharei sold on the Vancouver itock exchinge were:\nLUted: Big Miss 2350. Bndlan 80S,\nBralome 819, Cariboo 1028; Dentonli\n\u25a0iflO. Onlr! B <*00, Inter C A C 8600;\nKoot B 200. Meldlan 6000, Morning\nSUr 5600. Pioneer 360, Prem G 4460,\nReno 1190. Salmon 1900. Shwp\nCreek 3700, Tivlor Bridge 3106.\nCurb: Beaver SUver 200, B C Nlc-\nel 16,000, B. C. Silver SOO, Congrui\n2300, Cottonbelt 4000, Canadian R\n1000, Fiirview A 8000. Feder\u00bbl 1000,\nFawn 1000. George Ent 900, Georala\nR 200: Golconda 1900, Grange 7000,\nGrull W IOOO. H\u00bbdley A 2300, High-\nwood S 600. Home 1800. laiand\nMourtli\" 3600, Luckv Jim 800, Mlnto 800. Nlenli SOO. NoWe 'lve 1700.\nPilot 110; Portar I 9000, Hedley St\n'00. finunell Q 1000. SUvtrerMt\nWOO. Silvenmlth 3000. Sunih'M SOO,\nUnited E 1000. Waverley 3000.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS. July 13 (AW-\nWhe't: cuh: Nn. 1 northern 1.02%*\n1.0'%; No. 1 red durum 78%.\nFlour 10 lower. Cirload loll fim-\nUy pitenti 7.28-7.49. A barrel In 98\nlb. cotton lacks. Shipments 23,368.\nPure bnln 17.90-18.00.\nQuebec Power\t\nShiwlnlgan _\t\nSherwin Willlami .\nSouth Can Pow\t\nSteel ot Can ___-\nCURBS\nBrew It Dlit\t\nB A OU    \t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Malting \t\nCm Winerln\nBell Telephone 138%\nB C Packing .40\nBnilUin  6%\nB C Power A ___\u2014_\u2014_-   31\nBuild Prod  30%\nCm Brome \u201e____; 38\nCm Car Fdy     4%\nCm Cement     4%\nCm Cement Pfd    83%\nCm Ind Al A .     9%\nCm Indui Al B 6%\nCPR   \u2014   \u00ab%\nCm Stumen ___. 1\nCockihutt  PI  .      8%\nCon M A S  162%\nDom Bridge 29\nDom Glau , 110\nDom Text  68\nGn St Wiru     I\nChas Gurd ___.._     8\nHimilton Br     3%\nInt Nickel  _____    27%\nMaisey Hirrli      4\nMont Powr       30%\nNat Steel Car     14%\nNat Brewing      36%\nOgllvle   - 136%\nPower Corporation  -    7*4   MI8CELLANIOUS\nPrice Broi        1.96 Dom Storei \t\nDlitlllen Seagraml.\nDryden Paper \t\nImpl OU ..\t\nImnI Tob Can \t\nIntl Petrol \t\nMcCoU Frontenac ..\nMitchell   Robt   \t\nBANKS\nCmada\t\nCamdlenne \t\nCommerce ______\nDominion _ .__....\nMontrul  _ _\nNove Scotia _ _\nRoyal \t\nToronto  _\t\n:: 8t\n...  12%\n....  11\n.-   49%\n\u201e      JO\n... 15%\n.... 33%\n.... 33V,\n._    4%\n... 31%\n....    3%\n  19%\n.... 13%\n... 15\n.... 11%\n...    3%\n::,\u00a3\n.... 14514\n  143\n.... 184\n 270\n  148\n.... 200%\n....    7%\nMontreal Silver Prices\nMONTREAL, July 12 (CP)-Sllver futuret cloted weak\non ths Csnsdisn Commodity Exchtnjr* todsy, 80 to 125\npoints lowtr. A total of SB enntrteta wss traded, 16 July, 7\nSept., 12 Oct\n.\nJuly\nSept.\nOct.\nOpen\n    68.50B\nHlth\n69.10\n70.06\n70.00\nLew\n69.10\n69.6S\n70.00\nClue\n68.90B\n    70.M\n70.00B\n69.S0B\n79.80N\nBONDS WEAKER\nNIW YORK. July 13 (AP) -\nWeakneu emong iome of the lower-\npriced uUlity luuu unsettled the\ncorporite bond market today and\npricu ln meat all dlvlilom dropped\nmoderately lower.\nApparently reflecting unusinetl\namong holden of power and light\nbonds that the latest turn in the\nholding compmy legislative tangle\nln Waihington contained disturbing\nelement!, aame loam ln thli division\nwere offered at conceulom ot more\nthin 2 polnti before finding taken.\nForeign bonda were generally\nhigher.\nH.G. BYRNE TO\nGO EAST\nVANCOUVIR, July 12-Hugh O.\nByrne, for 33 ytan with Canadian\nPacific railway and ln Vancouver\nfor the patt 14 yean ai local treaiurer, ll luving tha coast Sunday\nfoV Winnipeg to become treasurer\nof MenitoBa-Saskatchewin-Alberta\nterritory. Local officials of the compiny mide him a presentation of a\nclub bag u a token of uteem. J.M.\nMacArthur superintendent of Van*\ncouver division, and formerly of\nRegina and Medicine Hat mada the\npreientation.\nU.S. DOLLAR UNCHANCEO\nMONTRIAL, July 12 (CP) -\nWhile the pound sterling advanced\n.01 of a ctnt ta 4.96 11-16 on Montreal foreign exchanges today, the\nUnited Statu doUar held unchanged\nat 1.00 3-16. The French franc wu\ndown .01 of a cent to 8.63 cents.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPIO, July 12, (CP)-Gnln\nquotations:\nOpen  High\nLOW   Close\nWHIAT:\nJuly  ...  80      -\n-       80\nAug    80%    80%\nOATS:\n80%    80%\nJuly     44%    44%\n44       44%\nOct.    11%    31%\nDec   \u2014       \u2014\n31       31%\nBARLIY:\nJuly ....  35       35U\n34%    38\nOct   ....   34       34%\n33%    33%\nDec.        \u2014      \u2014\n-       34%\nFLAX:\nJuly ..... 122      122\n130%   120%\nOct   ..... 116      118%\n117      117\nDec    -       -\n-     117%\nRYE:\nJuly .....  83%    -\nOct   .._  17%    17%\nDec    38%    38%\n-      33%\n36%    3614\n37%    38%\nCASH WHIAT:\nNo. 1 hard and No. 1 Nor. 80; No.\n2 Nor. 77; No. 3 Nor, 72; No. 4 Nor.\n64%; No. 5 WhMt 58; No. 6 wheat\n57%; fud 54; Durum 70; track 80.\nExchanges\nMONTRIAL, July 13 (CP)-Brit*\nIsh ind foreign exchinge cloied irregultr. '\nAustria, \u25a0chilling  1901\nBelgium, belgt 1684\nFnnce, franc 0443\nGreat Britain, pound 49668\nGreece, drachma    .0088\nIUly, Urt    .0824\nSpain, peuta   1874\nSwitzerland, franc     .3281\nUnited Statu, dollar, 3-18 per Cent\npremium.\n(Compiled by Ute Royal Bank ot\nCanada).\nFANS AWAIT WSItAND\nBOSTON, (CP)-Hockey foUow\nen hart are wondering what kind of\nreception the fana will have for\nCooney Welland, midget center who\nreturni to the Brulni nnt leuon\ntrom Detroit ln a deal for Marty\nBarry and Involving two othtr playen. In hli hey-day is leader of the\n\"Dynamite Trio,\" Welland wu a\nBoiton hero. Barry wu a hero, too.\ndated Oold mlnu wu put Into operaUon July 8.\nRoad construction ii proceeding\npreliminary to conitructlon of a\nsmall mill it the Bayonne mine in\nthe south Kootenay lake aru.\nThc Midway property in the Crmbrook diitrict Is under option to\nNewmont Mining Corporation.\nDevelopment li alio proceeding\nat the Quartz Mountain property on\nSawmill creek in this district.\nIn the Lardeau area the Meridian\nmill is operating on low-grade gold\nore.\nSILVER   DEPO8IT8\nThe increased price of silver hai\nrevived interest in the Slocan area.\nThe Noble Five mine has been reopened and the mill tl operaUng\non one ihift dally.\nIt Is reported that the Mammoth*\nis being prepared tor producUon\nand the McAllister property ls be*\ning examined with a view to possible re-opening of the mine.\nIn the Windermere area the Thun-\nderblrd properly is being developed\nby 3. P. Farnham of New York.\nBASE METALS    '\nThe Sullivan mine ot the Consolidated Mining and Smelting company at Kimberley has been operating at capacity. This mine, the largest lead-zinc producer In Canada,\nil alio Canada 1 pnmler illver producer.\nIt li reported that the mill at tht\nMonarch mine near Field will bt\nput into operation shortly. Development has been carried on at thla\nlud-ilnc-illver property ilnce tha\nmill was cloied down earlier ln tht\nyeir.\nThe smelter of Consolidated Mining and SmelUng Company at Trail\nis operating at capacity. The company is spending $2,500,000 on an\nelemental tulphur recovery plant\nand In addition to the existing chemical plant.\nBright Spotf\nof the Week\n(By the Canadian Prui)\nPINE FALLS, Man. \u2014 Plant of\nManitoba Paper company here operating thii week for first time ilnce\nFebruary. 1933. Two hundred men\nemployed.\nTORONTO\u2014 Tourist stream Into\nOntario from United States heaviest\nln five yean according to Ontario\nOovernment Publicity department.\nTHOROLD. Ont.-B\u00abver Wood\nFibre company announce! a flvt\nper cent wage increue. retroactive\nto June 1. Imployeu were given a\n7% ptr cent increase a year ago.\nSTRATFORD. Ont\u2014Sharp Scarcity of farm help reported by government employment aervlct,\nTORONTO- Recently about 900\nfamilies have been removed weekly\nfrom the relief rolls, welfare commissioner Laver reporti.\nINVESTIGATING\nSTOCK TRADING\nNEW YORK, July 12 (AP)\u2014The\nNew York itock exchange is conducting an invraUgation into recent\ntransacUons in the common stock of\nthe American Water Works A Electric company lt was reported in\nWall street today.\nThe exchmge would not comment on the report.\nElimination of tha dividend wai\nannounced on July 2 md on thet\nday the stock broke from an opening price of 313.02 a share to a low\nOf 810.90.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, July 12 (CP)\u2014Receipts yesterday, 184 cattle, 28 calves,\n916 hogs, 71 sheep and lambs. Today up to noon, 78 cattle, 15 calves,\n192 hogs. 223 ihiep and lambs.\nHogi steady; selects 88.39, biconi\n87.89, butchen $7.36, off trucki.\nNo cattle market utabllshed.\nMATLOCK, England <CP>\u2014J. W.\nReddish, 59, of Nottingham, died\nsuddenly at the throttle of the\nengine of a London, Midland and\nScottlih nllwiy tnln en route from\nManahaettr to London. The fireman\ntook chargt.\nGOLDS HIGHER\nTORONTO, July 13 (CP)-Med*\nium-priced gold shares showed modest sized gains on Toronto mining\nsection today. Lake Shore was the\n\u25a0trongeit of the senior issues, cluing % up at 91%. The index for\nmiscellaneous mines wu off .62.\nChemlcil Research lost 11 centa at\n31.00. Dome gained % to 38% and\nBnlorne loit 30 cente to 4.30. Tnde\nwas substantial in Central Patricia.\nGod's Leke, Siscoe and Sylvanlte\nwith Siscoe advancing 14 cents to\n2.83.\nHudion Biy and Bate Metali Cor-\ngontlon firmed modentely while\nudbury   Basin   and  Falconbrldge\nweakened slightly.\nWayside Case to\nBe Heard in the\nVancouver Court\nVANCOUVER, July 13 (CP) -\nAnnouncement wu made here today\nbv Attorney General Gordon Sloin\nthit chargu, trlilng out of the investigation Into Wiyiide Consolidated Mines. Ltd.. will be preferred\nin Vincouver police court.\nBreaches of the Securities act\nwill be charged.\nThe attorney-general itated ha\nwould press for stiff finu. Individuals, he said, are liable to maximum\nfine of 31000 and companlu to t\nmaximum fine of 825.000.\nSeveral companies and individual!\nare Involved, uld Mr. Sloan.\nThe case ariies out of an InvuU*\ngaUon conducted into Wayside by\nG. L. Fraser, Vancouver barrister,\nwho was appointed special invesU*\ngator by Mr. Sloan.\nExchange Rates\nNIW YORK. July 12 (CP)-Ster-\nllng exchange easy at $4.94% for\n60-day bills and at $4.95% for demand.\nCanadian doilan today 3-16 discount, yesterdiy 6-32 discount, week\n\u25a0go % dlicount.\nFranc 6.61% centi.\nLire 8.22 centi.\nMANY DEATHS FROM HEAT\nSECUNDERABAD, India (CP)-\nWith the temperature reaching 124\ndegrees in the shade many deaths\nwere reported. A schoolmaster md\nhli diughter died within a few\nhoun of uch other at Adllabad.\nFRUIT GROWERS\nShip your Strawberries. Raspberries and Cherries direct and receive\nthe benefit of the Higheit Prairie Market Prices for yourself. No\nprofiteering between the ihlpper and ourselves, no connectloni\nwhatever with any fruit combine. We handle mixed carloads of\nfruit Returni are made every Saturday tor all ihlpmenti received\nduring tne week.\nTHE ROYAL FRUIT COMPANY\nTHE INDEPENDENT FRUIT HOUII\nREOINA. SASK\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL - BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nELEPHANT Brand\nChtmletl Ftrtlliitrt\nAmmonium Photphatta\u2014Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\u2014Complete Ftrtlliitrt\nProduceri tnd Refiners of\nTadanac Brand Metali\nCOLD\nSILVER\nELECTROLYTIC\nHAD \u2014 ZINC \u2014 CADMIUM - BISMUTH\n \u25a0MMM*\n\t\nPAGI TIN \u2014\nHolly's\nChocolates\n40c snd 75e\nSapp's\nChocolates\n$1.00 snd $2.00\nMana, Rutherford\nDrag Co.\nUNUSED OLD\nJEWELRY\nBecomes Valuable Precious Metal when sold to\nvs for Old Oold. Ton get\nthe highest pricei at\ni\nCollinson's\nJewellery Store\nSPECIAL VALUE!\nCampana'e\nItalian Balm\nfor Sunburn st\nSmythe's\nThe Prescription  Druggist\nPHONE  1\nSEE WELL AND\nLOOK WELL\nNowadays, the smart woman\nchooaei her eyeglasaei with the\nlame care lhe gives to matching\nher powder to her akin.\nWith all the modem knowledge ot facial harmony, md the\nvariety of fancy and dainty\nmountings, and lenses made to\nharmonize with your features,\nthere ii no need to heiitate to\nwear glasses.\nIt ii false unity to strain your\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nOptometrist\nSuite 206 \u2014 Medical ArU Bids.\nBACK AGAIN\nI wiih to anneunee to my friendi\nand customers that I'm baok to\n\u2022erve you.\nGuerantied perfect fit on Made*\nto-Meaaure Suits.\nCleaning\u2014Prenlng \u2014 Alteration!\nTAILOR, S. SORENSON\nNixt door te Murphy Wall Paper\nShop.\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter urvlce In plumbing repilri and\niltentlont.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nAnnouncing\nTHE OPENING OF THE\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nAbove J. B. Gray'i Store\nKOOTENAY\nRAINBOW\nsnd\nCOLUMBIA\nLAGER\nStimulating snd\nappetizing been\nof   perfsction.\nTHE NILSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNINO. JULY 18.1MS\nNews of the Day\nCryital butter is alwaya freah. lo, Tueeday ud at Trail and Ron-\nAsk your Groc\u00bbr or Butcher. (2557)  land Thuraday. (-5061\nOrder your Home Hindyman now\nat Bishop's News Stand.       (2389)\nBible Class Sunday, 10 i.m. Trinity United Church. (2888)\nProf. Franklin licensed palmist\nand astrologer, Queens hotel. Phone\n90. Readings strictly private. (2543)\nDANCE \u2014 TONIOHT \u2014 DANCE\nRainbow Ballroom. Niw Trouba-\ndeun. Admiiiion SOc and 28c.\nPhone 321, Crmbrook, B. C. The\nPioneer Paint Shop tt Wallpaper\nstore for East Kootenay.      12488)\nDoubleheader baaeball Sunday.\nCanada Billiards vs. Savoy, 2.00 and\n8.30 p.m. Sunday. (2862)\nKinsmen Dinoe, Willow Point,\nTONIGHT. Admiiiion 1123 a couple.\nRefreihmenti. (2861)\nSee our announcement on thli\npage. Haigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon.\n(2886)\nFOR RENT. Furnished suite, electrical refrigeration. Kerr Appts.\n(2388)\nMonday, July 15th, 1935.\nA ipiclous, modern Buuty Parlor that wlll specialise In\nMm of Beauty Culture.\nMRS, EDITH HAIGH, Proprietress,\nformerly of the Capitol Beauty Parlor.\nPHONE 327     ' m. BAKER\nSpecial Purchases\nthat we are passing along to you\nTHE MANUFACTURER TAKES THE LOSS\nDRESSES\nWhites and Pastel Shades.\nFormerly $8.95. Now\u2014\n$5.95\nSUITS\nWhites snd Pastels. v_\nFormerly $12.95 to $15.95. Special-\n$7.95\nBATHING SUITS\nNew shipment of Klingtite.\n$2.95 to $3.95\nExtra pair of trousers free with\nevery suit ordered during July at\nJACK BOYCE'S (2447)\nGive your lady friend a treet\nBring her to the electrically cooled\nRainbow Ballroom TONIGHT.\n(2881)\nFOR   UPHOLSTERING,   DRAPERIES, SLIP COVERS AND AWNINGS, PHONE 43SR1. A. TERRILL.\n(2409)\nC.CF. public meeting Eagles' hall\nWednesday, July 17, 8 p.m. Speakers: Mr. and Mrs. Angus Maclnnis,\nMP., md Candidate Herridge. All\nwelcome. * (2867)\nSpecial lummtr Excursion fates\nby GREYHOUND now In tffect to\nBtnff, Like Loulie, Sylvan Lake,\nind Witerton Laku. Set your locil\nagent or Phone 800. (2808)\nMn. H. McGregor coming direct\nfrom convention in New Bruniwick\nwill addreu a public meeting on\nFederated Women'i Initltutei of\nCanada in Nelson Women'i Institute Roomi on Tueiday, July 18th.\n(2848)\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOUND-SCREW JACK OWNER\nmay have same by applying at\nf;ate house of Consolidated Min*\nng tt Smelting compmy and paying for this ad. (2864)\nWANTED, YOUNO WOMAN FOR\ngeneral housework. Must cook.\nTwo children. Good home. Box\n2568 Daily News. (2568)\nTry the Fountain lunch at\nWRIGHT'S CIGAR STORE-Cool\nand refreshing. (2384)\nDANCE \u2014 TONIGHT \u2014 DANCE\nEagle   Hill.   Muilc  by   Belmont\nDmce Bind. Gents 38c, Ladlu free.\n(2863)\nSHORTY'S AUTO REPAIRING\nfor dependeble repairs, 712 Biker\n\u25a0treet, or Phone 171, (2865)\nTRY CT. SPECIAL TOB. FINE\nAND COURSE SOc '\/, Ib. at VALENTINE'S. (2390)\nMr. and Mrs. Angus Maclnnis.\n,P\u201e will be at Ainsworth md Ku-\nDON  BRADMAN  UNWELL\nADELAIDE, (CP)\u2014Don Bradman,\nacting upon medical advice, will\nnot accompany the Australian cricket team to South Africa next season.\nHe has not been well for aome time\nmd it ii felt that iuch a tour would\nprove too strenuous for the world's\ngreatest batsman. He is expected\nto be fit for the next visit of the\nM.C.C. to Australia.\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTING\nWe Repair and Overhaul\nAnything Electrical\nGeneral Electric Appliance!\nStandard Electric\nJaok Hoogerwerf\nPhone S3S 816 Baker St\nj\nDiamonds\nWs sre showing s fine\nselection ot Diamond\n'  Rings\nBeautiful  Gems  In  the\nnewest settings. White,\ngreen, or yellow gold.\nThese rings sre highest\nquslity and are reasonably  ;\npriced,\nGenuine Diamond Rings\nfrom $15.00 to $400.00\nVERSATILE DONOGHUE\nLONDON, (CP)-Steve Donoghue\nmay be i veteran but the famous\njockey rode in three countries in\n40 hours recently and travelled\nnearly 700 miles. He rode at Gat-\nwick on Saturday. In Belgium the\nfollowing dav and on Monday morning figured in early morning training gallops in Paris. That afternoon\nhe was back in England.\nTONIGHT ~ - TONIGHT\nAnother\nKINSMEN DANCE\nAT WILLOW POINT\n$1.25 psr coupls, including supper.\nAgents for the Queen Dress\nROLLMAN\nCHERRY\nm_. SEEDER\nThis perfect cherry\nseeder does not crush\nthe cherry or cause any\nloss of juice; a practical machine for large,\nsmsll or California\ncherries. The seed extracting knife drives\nthe seed into one dish snd actually throws the cherry\ninto another. The marks of the knife can scarcely be\nseen on the seeded fruit. It seeds from twenty to thirty\nquarts per hour, .{f - _\nPRICE $2.00\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd*\nThat You Cannot\nAfford to Miss\nCome in and let us show yon the car that will salt\nyour budget\u2014All cars in A-l condition.\n1927\nBUICK\nCOACH\n$200\n1929\nDODGE\nSEDAN\n$375\n1929\nOLDSMOBILE\nSEDAN\n$350\n1931\nCHEVROLET\nLIGHT DELIVERY\n$400\n1931\nCHEVROLET\nSPECIAL COUPE\n$450\n1927\nPONTIAC\nCOACH\n$225\n1929\nCHEVROLET\nSEDAN\n$300\n1926\nCHEVROLET\nCOUPE\n$75\n1929\nCHEVROLET\nSEDAN\n$250\n1926\nCHEVROLET\nSEDAN\n$100\nPHONE 35\nCompany\nLimited\nNelson Transfer\nAgents for Chevrolet, Oldimobils snd Buick Csrs\n323 Vernon St Nelson, B.C.\nWe Buy Old Gold j\nJ. Ba GRAY\nJeweller, Diamond Merchant\n407 Baker St      Nelion, B.C.\nPhont 333\n*M\u00abM\u00bbr\u00bbM\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb*!\n*\u00bb5*\n**-**_*_*-__*\nrrrrrr.\nSWIMMING\nSUITS\nTrunks are tho most\npopular swimming garment shown this season.\nOur assortment of Jantzen, Woods, snd Klingtite is complete in Block.\nBlue, Maroon, Creen snd\nBrown. New weaves snd\nnew styles.\n$1.50 te $3.9$\nEMORY'S\n**    Limited     W\nCor Loadings\nOff for a Week\nQUALITY\nMEATS\nOTTAWA, July 12 (CP) \u2014 Car\nloadings on Canadian railways tor\nthe week ending July 6 totalled 39,-\n835, decline of 112 Irom the corresponding week a year ago, and of\n5601 from the preceding week, according to the weekly report of the\nDominion bureau ot statistics.\nAll commodity groups with the\nexcepUon of lumber, coal and pulp\nand paper registered decreases. The\nindex with 1928 representing 100,\nstood at 73.33 for the week.\nCoal increased by 195 cars, lumber 90 and pulp and paper by 97,\nJIT.0' W 12*\nRound Steak, OA<\npsr Ib LV\nSirloin  Stesk, <)C.\npsr Ib LO\nPrims Ribs Rolled,    0\u00abK\nptr Ib LL\nKtb Boiling Bssf, O.\npsr Ib O\nShoulders of Spring     1 Q<*\nLamb, psr Ib  10\nOven Rossts of Vssl, 1 C.\nner Ib    10\nVssl Chops, on<\nper Ib L\\)\nVssl Cutlets, 0\u00abV\nper Ib LL\nMinced Stssk, *X\u00a3i\n2 lbs. for   LO\nHamburger Stesk,       1M\npsr Ib   IU\nBreakfaat Ssussgs,      Q-T^\n2 Ibi. for  00\nSmsll Pork Ssussgs,    OCf\n2 Iba. for  00\nVosl Psttisi, <W\npsr Ib LV\nFresh Killed Spring Chicken\nsnd Fowl\nBURNS\n& CO. LIMITED\nPHONI 50\nJ. A. IRVING\n\u2014St COMPANY\u2014\nGROCERIES\nPHONE 161\nEffective Saturday\nand Monday\nTomatoes\u20142-lb. tins; 1 Hf\n2 tins   11\nSweet Mixsd Pickles 0\u00abK\n13-ox. jsr  LL\nSalmon\u2014 *i\\.  pink;   OCt?\n3 tint   LO\nTomatoes\u2014large tins; OO*^\n2 tint   LO\nIodised Salt\u2014 11-?\nPtr csrton  11\nSwift's Ssussgs\u2014      Q Jc-\nptr tin   L'i\nMtlogrsln Htslth 00^\nOats, 4-lb. pkg OL\nStrawberries\u2014Cans- 1 Q(f\nnsrs; 2 baskets   1V7\nHeins Vinegsr^sii U>i\nkinds; 16 si  10\nOur Own Cocos\u2014 *IH.\nctllo pkg.; psr Ib. \u25a0.  11\nNsw Psss\u2014 111\npsr Ib  U\nBulk Nsw Carrots\u2014 OPf\n4 lbs LO\nCarrots snd Bests\u2014 *i\\Z.\nIsrgs bunchsi; 2 for   1J\nNsw Csbbsgs, Cucumben,\nCantaloupes, Celery, Radishes snd Onioni.\nR. H. MABER\nTINSMITH    .\nROOF REPAIRS\nPhone 855        610 Kootanay 8b 1\nAbyssinia ls on a plateau almost sa\nhtgh aa that of Tibet\nm__^__ii_^___-^__^im^isiii\nDEVELOPING\nPRINTING\n\\ENUR(.IN(.\/\nAllen'sArtShoppe\nA Greeting Carpi for Every\nOccaiion\n' Vl__,____\\m\\y&W-mfm___m't--_&\nSummer Fuel\nFOR A QUICK FIRE IN YOUR RANGE\n12 INCH DRY CEDAR WOOD\/\n$2.50 per Rick    .(.. %)} '\nBurns Coal and Cartage Co.\nPhons 53 Nelson, B. C, 518 Ward St.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0MB\u2014\u2014\nCITY DRUG CO.\nCOMBINATION SPECIALS\n35c Jasmine Shaving Cream and SSe tale\u2014 _0_\nBoth for  - ___.\u2014 m~*>\nSIM Jasmine Face Powder; Chromium loudlar Tny\u2014    fiJ(QQ\nBoth        _.- \u25a0*\nSS Sheet Llnsn Writing Tablet and Envelopes\u2014     -\"'      'Vt*\nBoth  for   _-.-,a.,.vii-    ~*r\nMl 91 Tooth Powder and 25c Tooth Brush\u2014 M\u00abJ\nBoth for  \u25a0\u25a0 jn._tmn\u25a0*\u25a0__;.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 **^<r\nRadio Band Fife and He Rexall tooth Pasta **__\nBoth for  \u2014_,__mm~__. m-*T\nForget-Me-Not Faee Powder and 50c Perfume\u2014 CJ AA\nBoth for _  _-\u2014_-- ?<****\"*\nGardenia Shaving Cream and Me Talc\u2014 _Q_\nBoth for - j...\u2014v\u2014m__ ***'\n25c Tincture Iodine and 26c Readymada Bandage\u2014 *9A|t\nBoth for  - .....___-m_-~ \u2022*\u2022*\u00bb'\nLirge Chamois and a Velvet Sponge\u2014 8_t_\nBoth for  \u2014_.^j__ \"T\nBakelite Soap Box and 25c Jasmine Soap\u2014 _\\_Wt\nBoth for  _ ---\u2022>'.__\u00bb . mm**\n1k Scrip Pencil, ISc Leads and 2k Writing Tablet- _tQA\nAll for  .-\u2022\u2014 '\"\u00bb'\nDEVELOPING,  PRINTING,  ENLARGING - FRISH  FILM\nphone     CITY DRUG CO.       \u00bb#\nE^r_m?iTOPAYj\nSTARTS\n1 P.M.\nIT'S THE CREATEST\nSHOW ON EARTH!!\n\"Mickey Mome\"\nSilly Symphony     ,\t\n'Ths Grasshopper snd ths Ants\"\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1935_07_13","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0405953","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1935-07-13 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1935-07-13 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\/1.0405953"}