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C. Titles Go to\nCoast at Kelowna Meet\nPage Seven\nFirst Contingent of Vancouver\nJobless Due in Nelson Today\nSOME OF PARTY\nEXPECT GO TO\nWORK SATURDAY\nFOR ALLOWANCE\nIndividual 'Bumming'\nIs Not Tolerated\nSays FJatt\nHOPE IS FOR\nWORK PROGRAM\nFirst eontlngent of Vancouver's\nunemployed single men who are\nmaking a relief-financed tour of\nthe province searching for work,\nIs due In Nelson today. It Is understood the party will consist\nof about 60 men, the first of four\nsuch contingent now on the road.\nThe men will probably spend\nfive or six days In Nelson. During\nthis time each expects under an\nagreement with the provincial\ngovernment to obtain three days'\nrelief work, for which he will receive $9.60 subsistence allowance.\n\u25a0 From Nelson the men will return\nto Kelowna, en route to Vancouver,\nfor their next three days of work.\nFour such parties are \"on the road\",\nthe main group having, split up at\nthe coast to take different routes\nthrough British Columbia. Nelson is\nthe easterly objective for each\ngroup.\nThe city has arranged for the\nunemployed group to occupy the\nunused portion of the Nelson tourist park, and in cooperation with\nthe provincial government, will\nhave tents erected for the men,\nAlderman Roy Sharp stated Wednesday night Used cooking equipment now stored in city warehouses will be available to the men\nfor cooking.\ntcd\u00ab_ini\u00ab timjrlwt\nNelson Officer Will\nBe  Police  Inspector\nTwo Stricken\nWith Infantile\nParalysis, Alia.\nROCKY MOUNTAIN HOUSE,\nAlta., Aug. 3 (CP)\u2014Serum was being rushed from Edmonton tonight\nfor the treatment of Glen Magoon,\n36-year-old rural mail carrier, and\nhis young son, Verne, stricken with\ninfantile paralysis.\nThe condition of the father was\ndescribed as critical while the son's\ncondition was serious.\nThere are six  children in the\nfamily. Two others were reported\nill today, showing symptoms associated with paralysis.\n\u25a0  1\nLikes Dog Teams\nMore Than Planes\n\u25a0EDMONTON, Aug. 3 (CP)-Peter\nI Matson, uninterested in the \"out-\nIt side!' after 10 years trapping in the\nI jibrth W\u00ab\u00abt Territories, told report-\nI*ers today that he would rather travel by dog team than airplane.\nA trader and freighter besides a\ntfapper, Matson ilew to Edmonton\nyesterday. It wss the first time he\nhad been south of Fort Norman, N.\nW. T, 1110 air miles north of Edmonton, since 1928.\n\"I'd rather hitch up a dog team\nand hike in,\" Matson said to interviewers while his wife was absent\ngetting her first permanent wave in\na decade.\nBarber to Return to\nNorthern District\nas Inspector\n' VICTORIA, Aug. 3 (CP)-Staff\nSergeant C. G. Barber, now stationed at Nelson, has been promoted to the rank of Inspector\nand will take charge of Prince Rupert detachment, It was announced\ntoday by Colonel J. H. McMullin,\ncommissioner of B. C. police. Inspector Barber has been a member of the provincial force for over\n26 years. He Is a native of dill-\ngrove, Sussex, England.\nInspector John Macdonald of\nNelson, who went to Prince Rupert following the murder of Acting Inspector W. J. Service a few\nweeks ago, will return to his post\non arrival of Inspector Barber at\nthe northern city.\nSERVED IN NORTH\nActive in the north before he\njoined the provincial police force\nin 1912, Staff-Sergeant Barber subsequently performed most of his police service in northern districts.\nFrom Green lake in the Cariboo\nhe went to Mission City in 1915, and\nwas transferred to Bella Coola in\n1919. In 1920 he went to Fort George,\nin 1921 to Pouce Coupe, in 1922 to\nFort St. John, in 1928 to Fort Nelson, in 1928 to Hazelton and in 1929\nto Prince Rupert.\nTransferred to Nelson In 1931, he\nhas remained in this city as head\nof the district force. He was the\nsenior staff-sergeant of the B. C.\nforce.\nIt was In Fort Nelson ln 1926 that\nINSPECTOR C. G. BARBER\nhe won promotion to the rank of\ncorporal, and a year after coming\nto Nelson was promoted again, becoming a sergeant. He received another promotion, to the rank of staff-\nsergeant, in 1936,\nInspector Barber will be officer\ncommanding D division of the provincial police, with headquarters\nat Prince Rupert. He will leave\nshortly for his new post,\nPitcher Breaks     '\nArm When Hits\nHead in Windup\nMEDINA, Tenn\u201e Aug. 3 (API-\nJake Slaugher, speedballer of the\nZlon Hill Billies, figured today\nhe'd have to change his windup\nIf he's to continue his career as\na pitcher.\nWith a 3-0 lead over the Webb\nFarmers In the sixth Inning, he\nbroke his pitching arm by banging It against his head during the\nKrecess of getting ready to throw\nIs fast one.\nIt stopped the game\u2014Slaughter\nwas hls.team's only pitcher.\nFRANCO'S MEN\nHARD PRESSED\nHENDAYE, France, Aug. 3 (AP)\n\u2014Confronted by a new Spanish government offensive, this time a threat\nagainst the insurgent headquarters\nfor Teruel province, General Franco\ntoday shifted air squadrons from\nthe Ebro river front to defend Al-\nbarracin.\nSeveral miles to the west of Al-\nbarracin, Franco's men were hastily\ndigging new trenches and raising\nnew barricades to meet a flanking\ngovernment thrust from central\nSpain. Insurgent planes were concentrated on air fields near Teruel.\nIn the midst of their struggle to\nwipe out government gains on the\nsouth Catalonia, or Ebro front, the\ninsurgents were caught off guard In\nthe Albarracin sector, about 20 miles\nwest of Teruel.\nLandowners on Reclamation Farm\nat Creston Will Rebuild Dykes\nWill Spend $40,000 to\nMend Breaks and to\nStrengthen Dykes\nMarion Elected\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., Aug 3\n(CP)\u2014A. Jules Marion former member of the legislature, was tonight\nelected to the Athabasca riding of\nthe provincial house, defeating W.\nJ. Windrum by 20 votes in the unofficial count Both men were Lib-\n, erals.\n\" Last ballot bos reached here today\nby canoe from Snake Lake, where\nMarion received 14 votes and Windrum 11 to bring their totals to 645\nand 625 respectively. Official count\nfor the deferred election held a week\n- ago, will be made tomorrow.\nPARKING METERS\nURGED AT COAST\n\u25baVANCOUVER, Aug. 3 (CP) -\n, Parking meters may be in operation\nI here by the end of September, if\nI Alderman Fred Crone, civic traffic\nchairman, is successful in a move to\nbe sponsored at the meeting of the\nI traffic commission Thursday.\nHe Intends to ask that the com-\n[ mission recommend to the city coun-\nI'ell that It call for tenders for between 1000 and 1500 meters.\nCRESTON, B. C, Aug. 3-Arrange-\nments for dyke reconstruction on the\nReclamation Farm were completed\nat a meeting of Reclamation Farm\nlandowners. Financial agreements\nfor the repair of the dyke along\nBoundary creek, which went out\nearly in June, flooding 7300 acres,\nwere arrived at in the arrangements.\nLandowners are prepared for an expenditure of about $40,000.\nA similar announcement from the\nCreston Dyking district owners,\nwhose 7300 acres were flooded when\nthe north end dyke went out June\n7, may also be looked for shortly.\nAlong with reconstruction of the\nbroken dykes it is planned to strengthen all exposed sections ot the levee\nand heighten them at some locations.\nIt Is the intention to thoroughly\nrecondition the entire embankment,\nregardless of expense. One of the\nlandowners, however, stated it was\nhoped to hold the outlay at $40,000.\nReconstruction will be largely dragline work.\nBoth Claim to\nWin in Battle\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 3 (AP)-Both\nChinese and Japanese claimed victory today in a large scale air battle near Hankow, provisional Chinese capital and target of the Japanese drive up the Yangtse river.\nJapanese asserted a Japanese air\nfleet engaged 54 Chinese planes,\nshot down 32, and destroyed seven\nmore in a bombing raid on Hankow which ended with only two\nJapanese craft missing.\nChinese declared they lost only\nsix planes and brought down 12\nJapanese raiders, including one\nbomber.\nJapanese ground forces were admitted by Chinese to have entered\nHwangmei, slightly more than 100\nair miles east of Hankow, but Chinese said the Invaders were \"under\nwater.\" The city was said to have\nbeen flooded by rising Yangtse river waters which poured through\nbroken dykes.\nInsurgent Planes\nAttack Barcelona\nBARCELONA, Aug. 3 (API-\nAided by the light of a new moon,\nInsurgent planes raided Barcelona\ntonight for the third time since\nbombing the Cathedral of Barcelona July 19.\nRoaring over the capital twice\nIn t spectacular attack five bombers plunged their cargoes squarely\nInto the city, spreading destruction through many of the central\nstreets.\nThe city was blaoked out at 10:40\np.m. by an air raid alarm effective\nfor three hours.\nFor the first time since the early stages of the war, the capital's\nsearchlights succeeded In picking\n.out the attacking planes and Illuminating them during their passage over the city.\nMore Victims of\nHorse Disease\nEDMONTON, Aug. 3 (CP)-With\nnew victims definitely diagnosed at\nNamao and Morlnville, Edmonton\nwas 'surrounded by outbreaks of\nhorse brain disease tonight. Cases\nhad been reported previously at\nMillet, Wlntcrbum and at several\ncentres east of the city.\nT. M. Long, farmer in the Namao\ndistrict 10 miles north of the city,\nreported a one-year-old colt on his\nfarm contracted the disease several\ndays ago but is responding to treatment.\nJames Sutherland, another well-\nknown farmer in the district, also\nhas an animal suffering from the\ndisease.\nCHURCH BURNED\nAT THRUMS THE\nTHIRD FIRE IN\nDOUK'BOR AREA\nLosses in Three Fires\nso Far This Year\nAbout $10,000\nINCENDIARISM IS\nAGAIN SUSPECTED\nThird fire of the year In Doukhobor areas of West Kootenay\u2014*\nchurch building near Thrums-\nbrought fire losses of this nature\nto date In 1938 to approximately\n510,000, as measured by replacement values.\nThe third fire, also believed by\nprovincial police to be of Incendiary origin, was a wooden church\nbuilding and the loss was estimated at $600. Although the\nbuilding was In the centre of a\ngroup of Doukhobor houses, ahd\nwas burned during Tuesday night,\nthe fire was not reported to police\nuntil late Wednesday morning,\nSCHOOL RAZED\nDuring the previous night a\nDoukhobor school building at Pass\nCreek, in the hills above Robson,\nwas destroyed. A wooden building\nof the older type, the school would\ncoast about $3000 to replace, it was\nestimated.\nThis fire was reported to police\nby forest branch lookouts, Doukhobors in the vicinity lalling to\nnotify the officers, it was reported.\nFirst of the season's fires was that\nwhich   completely  destroyed  the\nDoukhobor community hall at Tarrys, definite evidence of jn_______\u00bbr-^\nism being dis_ov_lWnStS_iS_#'___\nthe form of gasoline containers and\ngasoline-soaked rags. At the same\ntime an attempt was made to lire\na Doukhobor residence about a\nmile away, the occupant ami\"'\nsmoke and awakening in\nextinguish it.\nEvidence of Incendiarism\u2014a tot-\ntie which had been used for gaso-\nllne-rwas discovered also at one of\nthe recent forest fires south of Brilliant.\nHines Wins Point\nin Rackets Case\n_ft-k_-^M..__*A^\n_____\nNEWyYORK, Aug. 3 (API-Counsel for James J. Hlnes, the erstwhile\npowerful Tammany boss accused of\nparticipation in a vast policy rackets conspiracy, obtained a court order late today putting much of the\nprosecution's case in Jeopardy.\nUpon motion of Lloyd Paul\nStryker, Hines'. lawyer, Justice\nFerdinand Pecora directed District\nAttorney Thomas E. Dewey to show\ncause tomorrow why evidence based\non the long bill of particulars he\nfiled yesterday should not be barred.\nThat bill charged, among other\nthings, that accused policy conspirators not specifically identified \"intimidated, influenced or bribed\"\n?ublic officials, Including former\nammany District Attorney William\nC. Dodge; City Magistrate Hulon\nCapshaw; and the late City Magistrate Francis Erwin.\nStryker contended this specification was \"indefinite, vague\" and\nfull of \"generalities,\" as were others,\nand thus that all should be thrown\nout because they had not set forth\nthe \"specific facts\" which the court\nhad dlreeted that the bill must contain.\nU.TSCORCHED\nCHICAGO, Aug. 3 (AP)-Dog day\nheat plagued large sections of the\nUnited States today. '\nTemperatures ranging up through\nthe 90 s were reported ln the east\nand midwest.\nNew York city's noon reading\n\u201492.4 degrees\u2014set a record for the\n\u25a0date. The weather bureau predicted it would be just as hot tomorrow\nthere.\nA high of 91 was registered at\nChicago, one point under yesterday's summer peak, while officials\nestimated 690,000 persons sought relief pt beaches. Two deaths were\nattributed indirectly to the heat in\nupstate   New   York.   Jolliet,   111.\nwhere the thermometer reached the\n93-level, recorded one fatality.\nSouthern California and Arizona counted 14 deaths In the wake\nof a sultry selge.\nBull Terrier Gets\nAid for Drowning\nAberdeen Terrier\nVANCOUVER, Aug. '3 (CP) -\nBuster, a Boston bull terrier, became a hero to at least two people\nhere today, when he was the means\nof saving the life of his little Aberdeen terrier chum, Tinker.\nTinker had fallen In the water\nnear a wharf, and was unable to get\nout Buster tried futlley to rescue\nher, then dashed off to fetch his\nowner, Ross Cumbers. Cumbers arrived in ti|oe to save Tinker.\nHARVEST,TIME IN THE FAR EAST!\nCrews Get\nRUNCIMAN ASKS\nPATIENCE AS HE\nARRIVES PRAHA\nGives   Brief   Address\nto  Group  of  200\nNewspapermen\nTO MEET BENES\nPRAHA, Aug. 3 (AP)\u2014Viscount\nRunciman, Great Britain's unofficial adviser and mediator, to-\nnight counselled patience In attempts to reconcile differences between the Ciechoslovak government and the nation's 3,500,000\nSudeten Germans.\nIn a brief address to 200 news-\npspermen he Indicated hli friendly, private attempt to prevent an\nexplosion In Czechoslovakia\u2014an\neffort which enjoyed the unofficial sympathy of the British\ngovernment\u2014would not be a hurry-up Job of statesmanship,\n\"I come' as one with 40 years'\nexperience in various phases of political life in my own country,\" he\nsaid.\n\"I learned in this time that permanent peace in any question can\nbe achieved only on the basis of\nmutual consent.\"\nHe planned to meet President\nEduard Benes and Premier Milan\nHodza tomorrow, perhaps to get\nstarted with his patient \"explorations\".\nBORDER VIOLATED?\nBERLIN, Aug. 3 (AP)-The Nazi\npress today embazoned a reported\nviolation of the German border by\ntwo Czechoslovak planes as an \"object lesson\" to Viscount Runciman,\nBritish mediator, that Czechoslovaks are determined to \"continue\nthe role of a provoking agent aganst\nEuropean peace.\"\nThe Berlne Tageblatt declared the\nincident, at the very moment of\nLord Runciinan's arrival at Praha,\n\"shows how little Czech military\nmen are concerned over\" peaceful\nsettlement of the demands of the\nnation's 3,500,000 Sudeten German\nminority.\nW. J. Armstrong,\nOkanagan Pioneer,\nDead at Penticton\nPENTICTON, B.C., Aug. 3 (CP)-\nFuneral arrangements were prepared today for William John Armstrong, 64-year-old pioneer of this\nsouthern Okanagan district who\ndied at his home Tuesday night.\nBorn in Bruce county, Ont., he\ncame west at the age of 13 and was\na \"freighter\" in the early days\nthrough this district. For many\nyears he was'a stage driver on the\nPenticton-Hedley run.\nIn Czech Spotlight\nViscount \"Runciman, former\npresident of the board of trade\nin the Baldwin government, is\nmediator in the Czech-Sudeten\nGerman controversy.\nGas Takes Three\nLives al Coast\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 3 (CP)-Van-\ncouver police said tonight illuminating gas apparently accidentally released had taken the lives of Mrs.\nElsie Heads and her two children\nin their small Joyce road apartment early today.\nThe body of the woman and the\ntwo children, George, 9, and Helen,\n7, were found in their gas-filled\nhome by a neighbor who called the\npolice and fire department inhalator crews. The victims failed to\nrespond to respirators.\n\"As I see it at present the deaths\nare accidental.\" said Coroner Dr.\nJohn Whitbroad. No inquest has yet\nbeen ordered.\nDetectives D. M. Richardson and\nJames Dyer, investigating the case,\nsaid there were no suspicions.of\nfoul play and that the deaths were\n\"either accidental or suicide\u2014we\nwon't know until we complete investigations.\"\nBurns to Death\nPORTLAND, Aug. 3 (AP) \u2014 A\nneighbor's caretaker found the body\nof Russell H. Bayly, 39, socially\nprominent manufacturer, among\nthe debris in the basement today\nafter a fire razed a luxurious residence ln the Highland road district.\nBayly, trapped in. a bedroom\nby the early morning blaze, was\nplunged to the basement with a\nburning mass of timber and furniture when the fire gutted the interior of his $75,000 home.\nMost New Fires Under\nControl or Are\nNow Out\nForest branch fire crews \"Jumped on\" lightning-caused fires In\nthe Kootenay-Boundary Tuesday\nand Wedneday, and Wedneday\nnight, most of them were under\n\u201e control of extinguished. Four new\nfire were listed Wednesday, and\ntwo of thee were out.\nOne of the new outbreaks was\non the Brilliant side of Kootenay\nriver on the hillside above the\nDoukhobor suspension bridge.\nSince It was In Doukhobor territory, men of this sect were fighting It, with forest branch officers directing their work. Shortly\nafter nightfall the crew had encircled the flame and unless wind\nshould cause trouble they expected to have the fire In hand by\nthis morning.\nMORE LIGHTNING FIRES\nAnother new fire was in Farron\narea, the forest branch being notified of it by the conductor of a\nC. P. R. train passing through. The\nflames were on the hillside near\nPorcupine, about a mile above the\ntrack, and a crew was sent out.\nThis was probably another lightning strike.\nThe two other new fires were in\nNew Denver area and both were\nextinguished by Wednesday night,\nThese also were believed to be\nlightning strikes.\nControl was established Wednesday over the Dutch creek fire\nand big \"spot\" near It In Invermere area. These were probably\nthe most serious outbreaks of the\nseason. No report was available\non three other fires on Dutch\ncreek reported by an airplane\npilot,\nThe fire six miles west of Waldo,\nburning in country which had been\nlogged, off and burned over, v:as\nunder control.\nFIRES EXTINGUISHED\nOf the four lightning fires in\nKaslo area, two were out, a third\nwas nearly out. and the fourth\u2014on\nMilford creek\u2014was under control.\nIt'was expected the crew would be\ntaken off the Milford creek fire\nduring the night.\nNakusp reported two of its four\nlightning fires\u2014those near Camborne\u2014were out. No report was\navailable on the two at the headwaters of Fosthall creek, but lookouts said they did not appear to be\nspreading. Fire fighters sent in\nTuesday were expected to reach\nthese fires Wednesday.\nLatest outbreak in Grand Forks\narea, the fire reported Tuesday\nnight on Trapper creek near Beaverdell, was under control Wednesday and the crew was reduced to\na patrol.\nHOCKEY PLAYER DROWNS\nMONTREAL, Aug. 3 (CP) \u2014\nChristopher Kendrick, 23, was\ndrowned today while swimming in\nLachine canal. Former member of\nthe Royals Hockey club ot the senior group, Kendrick had been selected as a member of a Canadian\nteam scheduled to play several\ngames next winter in Scotland.\nBATTALIONS\nOF SOVIETS FAIL\nIN ATTACK ON\nBORDER CENTRES\nBlack-Out of Principal\nJapanese Cities Is\nOrdered\nPEACE DESIRED,\nBOTH SIDES SAY\nTOKYO, Aug, 4 (Thursday)\n\u2014 (AP) \u2014 Soviet Russia\nthrew four battalions against\nChangkufeng and Shachofeng\nat 10:30 p.m. Wednesday\n(8:30 a.m., E.S.T., Wednesday), but met a repulse in\nwhich they lost 200 men, a\nJapanese army communique\nsaid today.\nThe Russians advanced In a\ndense fog, Japanese reported,\nbut their ranks were exposed\nwhen Japanese suddenly fired\n\"thousands of flares\" into the\nsky throwing a goulish light\nover the battle.\nExamination of their uniforms disclosed the attacking\nforce was composed partly of\nthe 118th Novokievsk infantry, which is reported to be 1\nunit of the far eastern Red\narmy.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nCtARKEMOOTED\nAS CANDIDATE\nF0RPRESIDEN1\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (AP) - :\nUnited' States Senator Bennett\nClark's overwhelming rcnomination\nin Tuesday's democratic primary In\nMissouri prompted one of his senatorial colleagues to declare today\nthat Clark is an outstanding possibility for president in 1940.\nSenator Rush Holt (D-W. Va.) described Clark's victory as a \"great \u2022\ntribute   to   his   independence   of.:\nthought and action,\" and said It\n\"put him in a position for important\nconsideration ,for the democratic\npresidential nomination\" two year*;\nhence.\nClark, with the backing of the two\nmajor democratic factions in Missouri, snowed under two opponents,\nboth of whom swore 100 per cent\nallegiance to President Roosevelt\nClark has opposed some adminlstra-' I\ntion policies,\nHolt was not the only adminlstra*\ntion critic to rejoice over the Tuts-'\nday returns.\nFormer Governor Reed said at\nParsons, Kas., he would challenge'.\nthe course of the Roosevelt administration as a \"menace to the coun- ,\ntry\" that must be changed \"if our ;\nform of government is to be pre-1\nserved.\"\nCyclonic Storm\nHits Que. Village\nHERVEY JUNCTION, Quebec,\nAug. 3 (CP)\u2014A cyclonic storm\nspread havoc tonight through th*\nlittle village of St. Thecle, and\nreports relishing here said that 25\nhouses had been blown down oi>\nbadly damaged.\nSeveral persona were reported\nInjured by falling debris as tha\nwind and rain raged over thai\nsettlement 30 miles northeast of\nThree Rivers. While the extent of\ntheir Injuries waa not stated In\nskimpy reports reaching here before communication lines fell, It\nwas believed there were no fa-\nUlltles.\nMin. Hue,\nNELSON  45 82\nVictoria  62 6\u00ab\nNanaimo   48 TJ\nVancouver   54 78\nKamloops  -  54 Si\nPrince George   54 64\nEstevan Point  54 84\nPrince Rupert  52 88\nLangara    52 54\nAtlin  ..._  46 52\nDawson   40 40\nSeattle   56 TS\nPortland  -  58 74\nSan Francisco  56 74\nSpokane    54 88\nLos Angeles  66 90\nKelowna   47 81:\nPenticton  46 \u25a0*\u2022,\nGrand Forks _. 46 88\nKaslo   45 \u2014.\nCranbrook   42 m\nCalgary   46 78\nEdmonton -.. 48 Jl\nSwift Current  48 V\nMoose Jaw   50 80\nPrince Albert  54 74.\nSaskatoon     52 \u25a0\nQu'Appelle   46 16\nWinnipeg    82 7\u00bb\nForecasts:   Kootenay:   Light te.\nmoderate variable winds, fair mi\nwarmer. L I\n mm-mmmmmmm\nmmm\n\u2014mmw* \"-\"wjmmmimm\nPAGE TWO \u25a0\nAmerican Drivers Carry Off the\n'Major Honors as Ace Speed Boat\nRacers Clash at Kaslo Regalia\nMissoula Man Takes\n50-Mile   Hydro\nMarathon\nANNABLE, NELSON,\nINBOARD   WINNER\nI KASLO, B. C Aug. 3 - Challenging roar of giant inboards and\nthe staccato bark of tiny hydros\ncrashed and echoed across Kaslo\nbay here today as daredevil racers\nIrom Washington, Montana and\nKootenay centres vied for money\nawards in the Kootenay's greatest\naquatic event.\nIt was a field day for the American speedsters, especially in the\noutboard events. To Earl Joplin,\nWenatchee, Wash., went the greatest honor of the day\u2014the championship 'in the 90 mile outboard\nmarathon and the city of Kaslo\ntrophy.\nSEVEN  HYDR08\nSeven tiny hydros roared away at\nthe start of this feature race, but\nengine trouble and spills cut the\nJield to two, Joplin and his fellow\ncountryman, T. Croonenberghs of\nMissoula. Mont.'They finished in\nthat orde.r.\nThe two Americans also carried\noff top honors in the other hydro\nraces.\nBoth heats of the Class \"C\" events\ntvent to Joplin, while Croonenberghs led the field home in the\n\u25a0 Class B heats.'\nTwo Nelsonites surged to the\n. lore in the \"225\" inboard class race.\nJack Annable's little black streak\ncarried off the tOp prize, followed\nclosely t \u25a0 Dr. Ray Shav.'s entry.\nDavid Hartin of Kaslo came in\nIhlrd.\nAQUAPLANES, WATER SKIIS\nA splendid display of aquaplaning\nand wate.- ski Jumping was put on\nfcjt. Nelson funsters.\nr: warm weather and a quiet\nbarely stirred by a ripple\u2014\ngreeted the contestants. The day's\nprjgram, after a slow start due to\nthi late arrival of some of the Am-\n4eu)id)\nHCTCLI\nSPOKANE\nSpecializing\nIn Genuine\nCHINESE FOOD\n\"tn tb. Heart .1 Sp.ku.'\n.er... th. .tr_.t (rem tb.\n*W> Gr._.   Norllitrn.  Union P..\nA       cIRc   wirl   Au_o._nt\u00abnir__\u00bb\nDepot*   Mr-. Utiry  Com.\nM,r'  Ratei from $1.50.\nCASCADE\nHOTEL\n\"Fully Llcemed\"\nBANFF, ALTA.\nBANFF'S  MODERATE\nPRICED  HOTEL\nSpecial  Weekly Ratei\nFree Bui Meets All Tralm\nSight Seeing Trlpi Arranged\nW.  H. RITCHIE,  Manager.\nerican entrants,  was  carried out\nwithout \u2022. hitch.\nA monster dance in the Canadian\nLegion hall wound up the regatta.\nThe various committees follow:\nFrank S. Rouleau, chairman; J.\nA. Riddell, R. A. Chester and T. D.\nBowker, racing; Walter Wright,\nchairman, Ronald Hewat and C. S.\nPalmer, finance; Ronald Hewat,\nchairman. W. M. Gibson, P. V. Webber, and A. L. MacPhee, aquatic\nsports; E. C. Cherry, chairman, F.\nV. W.'bber, A. L. Grayling, W. M.\nGibson. C. J. White and R. Allan,\ncarnival; W L. Billing, chairman,\nF. V. Webber and J. A. Riddell,\ndance; S. S. Rouleau, publicity; H.\nT. Hartin, chairman, S. S. Chandler,\nand A. L. MacPhee, announcing.\nTHE RESULTS'\nResults of the various events follow:\nClass B hydroplanes:\nFirst heat. Two entries\u2014T. Croonenberghs, Missoula, Mont., first; J.\nA. Riddell, Kaslo, second.\nSecond heat. Two entries \u2014 T.\nCroonenberghs, Missoula, Mont.,\nfirst; J. A. Riddell, Kaslo, second.\nClass C hydroplanes:\nFirst heat. Six entries\u2014Earl Joplin, Wenatchee, Wash., first; E. Klet-\neko jr., Anaconda, Mont., second;\nWalter Towser, Kaslo, third.\nSecond heat. Three entries\u2014Earl\nJoplin, Wenatchee, Wash., first; E.\nKletetko jr., Anaconda, Mont., second; and J. Kaiser, Missoula, Mont.,\nthird.\nOutboard 50-mile marathon. Seven entries\u2014Earl Joplin, Wenatchee,\nWash., first; T. Croonenberghs, Missoula, second.\n\"225\" inboard class. Three entries\n\u2014Jack Annable, Nelson, first; Dr.\nRay Shaw, Nelson, second; David\nHartin, Kaslo, third.\nNelson's Junior\nBoxla Reps Will\nBe Chosen Today\nNelson's representative team for\nthe West Kootenay Junior boxla\nchampionship series, to get under\nway loon, will be choien tonight.\nOfficial! will be on hand at the\nHornet-F. A. C. clash tonight to\nwatch the boyi In action and following that contest and the Royals'\n\u2022cheduled   practice,  will   decide\nwho  will  carry  the  green and\nwhite In title war. The game openi\nat 7 p.m.\nBoys of the Hornet squad who are\nstill of juvenile age would probably\nbe recruited for the juvenile rep\nteam, it was said. Nelson plans to\nenter teams in the title series of\nboth divisions this season.\nLineups of rep teams must be re\nported to provincial executives at\nVancouver by August 15th.\nEuler to Visit\nBritain, Europe\nOTTAWA, Aug. 3 (CP)-Hon. W.\nD. Euler, minister of trade and commerce, has planned a trip to the\nUnited Kingdom and Europe. He\nexpects to sail the end of next week.\nThe minister will visit the Glasgow exhibition.\nBuy or sell with a Classified Ad.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel\n.. Nelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1,50 up\n\" HUME-Charlee Midgley, Mrs. C.\nMidgley, Oakland, Calif.; E. L.\nItcSweyn,  H.  W.  Seaman,  D.  H.\nae. Mr. and Mrs. Philip T. Rog-\n, J, G. Bramham, James J. Green,\n, P. Carter, H. N. Smith, Vancou\nver; D. McLeod, I. Bullivant, Medicine Hat; A. Jackson, Hollyburn,\nB. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Little, Winnipeg; W. M. Forbes, Toronto; Marguerite Link. Myrtle Link, Pincher\nCreek; H. D. Trunkey, Spokane;\nJ. J. Crawford, Creston.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietor!\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nFrie Parking NELSON, B. C, Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n.05 Vernon St.        Phone 697\nH. WAS8ICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nWHEN IT'S NEWS\nYou Read About It In the\nNelson Daily News\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\" Newly Renovated Throughout\nDuiierin Hotel A. paterson.T..'oi\nIMP Seymour St., Vancouver, B.q, Coleman, Alta., Proprietor\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen ir SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\nKrr HotelVOLNEY ,;:*,,\nI   EVERY COURTESY 8H0WN OUR CANADIAN GUEST8\nSTANFORD Hotel, spokane\nlit SPRACUE fr MADISON    nJ^^^S^m\nI\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 4,\n' fl')\nInnocent War Victims Stolidly Carry On In China\nInnocent victims of Japan's .war on China, Chinese peasants stolidly continue their humble existence amidst the horrors of war. Seemingly unperturbed, this Chinese farmer and his wife, top, partake of their rice repast while waters from the\nflooded Yellow river lap at their ankles and the\nvery threshold of their mud and reed home. Note\nthe kittens, left, taking refuge on the crude table.\nA Chinese baby walls piteously, bottom, as it liei\non its back, amidst a pile of rubble caused by a\nJapanese aerial bomb. Doctors, rushing their skill\namong hundreds of wounded, have just placed a\nplaster cast about its tiny, shattered leg. Heartrending as the scene il, the Chinese view it stoically since daily bombings by Nipponese air fleets\nproduce a score of duplicates of this Scene.\n1.38       \u25a0\u25a0 m.\nInternational\nCamping lo Be\nScouts' Object\n938 Camp Idea Will\nBe Carried on Says\nDronsfield\nAn annual-exchange of Canadian\nand American Scouts at summer\ncamps will probably result from the\nrecently concluded International\nScout camp held at Camp Busk,\nstated J. M. Dronsfield pf Nelson,\ndistrict Scout commissioner.\nAl the camp drew to a close leaders of the Kootenay and.Pullman,\nWash., Scouts, discussed at some\nlength mean! Of toying, on' further the lht-_rhation_l camp exchange,\nThey felt-a great deal'might be accomplished, Mr. Dronsfield said.\n\"While the plan is not completely\nworked ont, ft is probable that the\nleading Scouts in the various districts will be formed into patrols\nand visit other camps for short periods. Our Kootenay. boys might go\nto Diamond lake or Camp Laird,\nand we may'I; able to make contacts with Idaho and Montana\nScouts ori a similar basis. Ameri'\nCan boys would similarly visit various, JCooteqay camps.   \t\nWANT CARRY ON\n\"Our international camp wis\nluch a splendid success that we feel\nit is up to us to carry the idea further,\" he sold.\nBesides the Pullman; boyi the\nScouts in camp includes boys from\nSlocan City, Rossland, Pullman,\nWillow Point and Nelson. ,\nAt the Cub Camp boyi attended\nfrom Creston, Nelson, Kimberley,\nCranbrook and Willow Point.\nLeonafd Walttin, who \u00aberved as\ncamp secretary,, received his. probationary scoutmasters' certificate\nduring the camp. He will take'over\nthe Third Nelson troop.\nostSmwh\nTWO   GOING   TO\nALASKA VIA\nCANOE\nEDMONTON, Aug. 3 (CP) -\nBound for Alaska via canoe on a\n\"serious scientific expedition,\" two\nyoung New Yorkers stopped in Edmonton today to complete their\noutfit lor the last lap of their Journey.\nRobert Fuller, a sculptor, and\nRichard Slobodin, anthropologist,\nwill travel by rail this week to\nWaterways, Alta., and then paddle\ntheir canoe to Fort McPherson, N.\nW. T., where they wil spend the\nwinter. Fort McPherson is near\nthe mouth of the Mackenzie river\nabout 1450 air miles north of Edmonton.\nThe pair said they would study\nIndian types at Fort McPherson\nduring the winter. After reaching\nNome, they intend to sail to Seattle\nby steamer.\nSocial...\nPASSMORE\nPASSMORE, B.C.\u2014A. Bennett has\nreturned to Trail after a short holiday at Maple Vale ranch, the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Saunders.\nMrs. G. Ward was a guest of Mrs.\nA. P. Whiteman Saturday.\nJ. Shepkie was a Nelson visitor\nMonday.\nMiss B.' Saunders spent Tuesday\nat Nelson.\nMiss B. Perry has returned after\nthree weeks' holiday at Vancouver.\nMONTANA WINS\nNEW YORK, Aug. 3 (AP)\u2014Small\nMontana, 111, of the Phillipine islands, former flyweight champion,\neasily outpointed Katsumi Morioka,\n109Vi, Japanese fighter from Vancouver, B. C, in a 15-round bout tonight.\nThe bout was the first of an elimination series expected to produce a\nsuccessor to Benny Lynch of Scotland as flyweight champion of the\nworld.\nNew Zealand School Party Revels\nin Kootenay Scenery, Hospitality\non First Day Visit; to Ymir Today\nSwimming,   Softball,\nPicnic, Campfire\n. Are Featured\nA bright, fun-packed picnic day\nat Cedar Point and a campfire program at Koolaree camp following\na launch trip on the West Arm provided an insight into western Canada outdoor life for 19 New Zealand students and their two headmasters who are making Nelson the\nheadquarters for a three-day visit\nto West Kootenay.\nSwimming, softball, and a grand\npicnic supper arranged by ladies at\nCedar Point filled the afternoon for\nthe visitors. They showed particular interest in the softball game\nand joined in the sport with enthusiasm. EA. Mann of Nelson, umpired the game.\n46 AT SUPPER\nAbout 46 persons, including the\nCedar Point parents and young\npeople sat down with the New\nZealand contingent at the picnic\nsupper.\nA splendid program \"of original\ncamp stunts and entertainments by\nthe various tribes of the senior girls'\ncamp at Koolaree was staged for\nthe visitors, when they arrived at\nKoolaree about 8:15 p.m. A splendidly conducted sing song and wein-\ncr roast wound up' the entertainment at the camp.\nIn the Maorie tongue, Mr. Har-\nfreave, headmaster, voiced the New\nealanders' appreciation of the girls'\nhospitality, and later translated the\naddress. Led by > their prefects, Mr.\nNeeve and Douglas Reid, the students gave their \"barkers\" or school\nyells.\nGertrude Patmore, camp leader,\nexpressed the girls' pleasure at having the visitors. A friendship circle\nand \"Taps\" ended the campfire.\nAs the visitors put off from the\nQ'\nrtftdaii-at\nAINSWORTH or\nLAKESIDE PARK\nNELSON,  B.C.\nJuly and August\nBoating, Bathing, Fishing\nONE DAY ROUND-TRIP FARES\nTRAIL TO LAKESIDE PARK   $1.00\nTRAIL TO AINSWORTH $2.00\nNELSON TO AINSWORTH    .  $1.00\n_'\/_-HOUR STEAMER TRIP\u201431\/,-HOURS STOP AT AIN8WORTH\nT0:00 a.m. Lv. TRAIL Ar. 11:20 p.m.\n12:15 p.m. Lv. NELSON (City wharf) Ar.    9:00 p.m.\n3:00 p.m. Ar. AINSWORH Lv.    6:15 p.m.\nLIMITED SPACE ON STEAMER\nBuy your tickets early from:\n]. E. CARTER, Agent, Trail, or\nN. J. LOWES, City Ticket Agent,\nNelion.\n(Ldfa\u00ae\nbeach, the girls with their lanterns\nlined the water's edge and lang\ncampfire farewell songs. The students answered with some of their\nschool \"goodbye songs.\"\nThe party docked at Nelson about\n11 p.m. Today they plan a trip to\nthe Ymir Yankee Girl mine, leav\ning here at 1:30 p.m.\nMcPherson to\nAttend Board\nMeet, Smithers\nQUESNEL, B. C, Aug. 3 (CP)\nLed by President G. E. Malcolm, a\nmotor caravan of delegates to the\nannual convention of the Associated\nBoards of Trade of Central British\nColumbia was today en route to\nSmithers, where the meeting will\nconvene August 4 and 9,\nOther delegates from McBride,\nPrince George, Vanderhoof and\nBurns Lake will join the group at\nvarious points along the route. West\nem delegates include members from\nPrince Rupert, Terrace and .Hazel-\nton. Other Cariboo boards represent\ned will be Williams-Lake, Wells and\nBarkerville.\nHon. F. M. McPherson, British\nColumbia minister of public works,\nand Hon. W. J. Asselstine, provincial minister of mines and trade and\nindustry will also attend the con\nvention.\nB. C. Crops to Be\nLight Due Drought\nOTTAWA, Aug. 3 (CP)-Grain\ncrops in western Canada are matur\ning \"too rapidly for optimum fill,\ning,\" but the potential damage from\nrust has been lessened, says' a crop\nreport issued today.\nDrought remains unbroken in\nBritish Columbia, and yields of all\ncrops will be light, the repbrt said.\nHarvesting is under way on the\nprairies and will be general in the\nnext 10 days to two weeks.\nEastern Canada has received\nabundant rainfall in the past two\nweeks, and warm, dry weather had\nbeen experienced from the head of\nthe lakes westward.\nDEATHS\nTORONTO\u2014Canon w. M. Loucks,\n69, retired Anglican minister who\nheld a pastorate in Winnipeg.\nPARIS\u2014Constantine Bataloff, 60,\nBulgarian minister to France and\nformer Bulgarian minister of foreign\nii f f fi i rs\nBRISTOL, England \u2014 Captain\nFrank Barnwell, chief designer of\nBristol Airplane Company since\n1912.\nLONDON\u2014Sir Malcolm Murray.\n71, comptroller of the household of\nthe Duke of Connausmt since 1906.\nSWAMPSCOTT, Mass.-Alfred J.\nSweet, 61, former millionaire shoe\nmanufacturer.\nMONCTON, N.B. \u2014 Monsignor\nHenri D. Cormier, 64, pastor of\nL'Assomption Cathedral here and\nfirst pastor of Assomption .parish.\nNORMANDIN, Que. \u2014 Napoleon\nPicard, 76, one of the founders of\nthis Lake St John district town.\nBARROW, Eng. (CP) \u2014 Record\nreceipts of \u00a39183 ($45,915) were recorded by Barrow, rugby league club\nlast season, A profit of \u00a3822 ($i\n110) wis reported to director!,\nCOOLERATOR\non display at\nWILLIAM^\nTRANSFER\nPHONE 106        WARD ST.\n...\u25a0Hii.   ii'littji\n_*\u00bb#_. IV.    1.  \/\u00bb...-\nTHE B00TERY==\nI    Men's, Women's, Children'! SHOES\nSeth Daniel Oitlund, Porthill\nlagger ohtrged with the murder\nof Mm. Liura Qreen of Nilion,\nwai remind.d fori further eight\ndiyi when he appeared before\nJohn Cirtmel, stipendiary magistrate, Wednelday.\nMri. Green's battered body wai\nfound In i railway cut near Tag-\nhum, and Oitlund, a former\nboardir it her houie, wu ir-\nretted and charged with her murder three days afterward.\nMORE ABOUT\nRELIEF PARTY\n(Continued From Pige One)\nNOT \"BUMS'\n\"Thii isn't a bumming expedition,\" stated Bert Flatt of the party's advance party as he explained\nWednesday night to a Nelson Daily\nNews reporter that the hope of the\nmen was to bring home to the government the need for a work program, and to mold public opinion in\nthat direction.\n\"Every man of our party is expected to look for work at every\nopportunity, but we are finding all\nalong the trip that each centre has\nits own unemployment and there\nisnt much hope for men coming into\nthe various districts from outside.\nWe do not tolerate Individual 'bumming' by the members of the party,\nand if the boys are so low in funds\nthat the government subsistence allowance is not sufficient to tide\nthem over we ihall seek other ways\nof raising funds\u2014a ball game, selling postcards,.a social or something\nlike that.\"\nNEED SHOES, CLOTHNQ\nMr. Flatt-stated some of \"the\nboys\" sorely needed shoes or clothing. In the four months since the\ngovernment project camps were\nclosed the clothes they obtained for\nthis work had become well worn\nand replacement was becoming\npressing for some menf In any case,\nhe explained, the clothing obtained\nat these camps was rubber shoes\nand clothes for wet weather.\nHe stated arrangements had been\nmade with relief department officials for the men to register Friday,\nand for some of them to go to work\nSaturday. Arrangements were also\nmadef or two of the party to obtain\ntheir three days' work by caring for\nthe personal effects of those out at\nwork.\nCOST LIVING HIGHER\n\"We have found the cost of living in the interior is considerably\nhigher than at the coast,\" Mr. Flatt\nstated, \"and the result ll that the\nallowance of $9.60 for three days'\nwork doesn't go as far ar lt might.\nWe'll have to do .ome scrambling to\ntide us over.\"\nI\nI\nI\n1\ni\ni\ni\ni\ni\nMEN'S\n(CALF SHOES)\nStyle oxfordi. A grand icleetion of young msn's\nNobel Oxfordi by J. Leckie Shoe Co. Large perforations. Patent trims. Colored stitched trims.\nTweeds, bluchers. Every new jlst represented\nin this assortment. Black and brown. Sixes 6-11.\n._\u2022\nWOMEN'S\nWHITE SHOE SPECIAL\nSandals, ties sport shoes. Block and cuban heels.\n(Broken lines). Not all sixes in every line, but\nall sizes in the lot. Sixes 3 to 8.\n$1-99\nTHE BOOTERY konomy\n411 BAKER STREET.    FOOTWEAR\nPEARSON CRITICAL\nVICTORIA, Aug. 3 (CP)-\"There\nIs definite evidence that officials of\nthe Relief Project Workers Union\nare urging unemployed single men\nfrom other prdvlnees, who undertook to leave British Columbia, to\nremain in this province,\" Hon. G. S.\nPearson, minister of labor, said today. He was referring to the movements of the single jobless men Since\ntheir departure from Victoria and\nVancouver.\nMr. Pearson lild he had direct\nevidence that at lent five men In\nInterior  British  Columbia towns\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.IINKIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nCANADIANS   SUE\nFOR  TUNGSTEN\nMINE\nSPOKANE, Wash., Aug. 3\n(AP) \u2014 Three Canadian shareholders of the defunct Roselle\nMining campany today filed suit\nin superior court against General Electric company of New\nYork to recover the .Germama\nTungsten mine about 40 miles\nnorthwest of here.\nPlaintiffs alleged ore worth\nmore than $1,000,000 has been\nremoved from the mine since it\nwas sold lor taxes and taken\nover by General Electric from\npurchasers.    . ,    _\nThe complaint, filed for Henry R. Eagles, Rossland, B. C.\nAlfred McMillan, Calgary, Alta.,\nand K. E. Mackenzie, Vancouver, B. C, asked that General\nElectric be decreed as trustee\nand be required to administer\nthe property as the plaintiffs\nspecify, if for any reason in\nequity the defendant cannot be\nmade to acquit and transfer the\npremises as demanded.\niimiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nwho hid NOT been memberi of\nthe group which gathered in Victoria hid ilgnlfied  earlier their\nwllllngnen   to   return   to  their\nhomei In other parti of thi Dominion  without  aulitince  from\nthe government, but on being approached by repreientatlvei of the\nunion, they had decided to remain\nIn British Columbia.\n\"The union is doing everything in\nits power to keep the men around,\"\nMr. Pearson asserted. \"It is deplorable, also, that the men are still\nmoving in groups through the interior. Though the groups are growing smaller, they have not yet broken up.'\nThe minister explained that the\ngovernment was giving the men\nwork at the different relief centers,\nso that some value would be returned for the monetary assistance provided, and so that it would not savor\nof a \"hand-out\".\nSafe-Blowing\nEquipment Found;\nThree Are Jailed\nSTRATHMORE, Alta,, Aug.. 3\n(CP)\u2014Discovery of a cache of safe-\nblowing equipment, including a\nsupply of nitro-glyceHne and several cap detonators, led to the arrest of three men' near Standard,\nAlta., by Royal Canadian Mounted\nPolite.\nIn court here, Richard Rogers,\nNick Pawluk and Edward Wilson,\nall from Calgary, were sentenced to\nsix months in jail for. being in possession of a rallworker's iledge\nhammer, stolen in Strathmore. On\na charge of possessing burglar's\ntools, they were remanded to the\nfilll  {IPSlZCS\nStandard is 40 miles east of Calgary.\nKASLO Social .\u2666.\nKASLO, B.C.-R. Kirby of Trail\nil a visitor in the city.\nA. C. Raper of Johnson's Landing\nwai a city visitor Wednesday,\nBert James of Silverton was a\nTueiday visitor in the city.\nW. Thomson of Trail is spending\na few days ln town.\nCapt. M. K. Harrison and Mri.\nHarrison arrived in Kaslo from Cor-\nri Linn Wednesday and will spend\na few days in town before returning to their home in Howser. While\nIn Corra Linn they were guests ot\nMri. Harrison's parents, Mr, and\nMrs. G. Noel Brown.\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Fraser and son\nof Nelson were visitors ln town on\nTuesday.\nRax Matthews ot Trail is spend-\nin, a few days in town witi. his|\nGilbert Goucher of Nelson was \u2022\ncity visitor Tuesday.\nT. J. Ainsworth has returned from\na visit to Nelson and Bonnington,\nand will visit Kaslo for a while before returning to his home at Howser.       i\nMils Lorna Speirs has accepted\nthe position of assistant post-mis-\nMrs. F.'S. Rouleau, nee Miss Laura\nDale, who resigned at the time of\nher recent marriage.\nKing Greenlaw of Lardeau is\nspending a few days ln town.\nMri. Ole Stenberg and children\nof Johnson's Landing are visitors in\ntown for a few days.\nMiss Eunice Goodenough of the\nMcLean school teaching staff at\nRossland ll spending the holidays in\ntown with her parents, Mr, and Mrs.\nHUMBOLDT TO\nVOTE TODAY\nHUMBOLDT, Sask., AU*. S (CP)\n\u2014Campaigning in the Saskatchewan\nprovincial byelectlon ih Humboldt\nriding came to an end tonight with\nindications that tomorrow's ballot-\nign will see a record vote cast.\nFor the voters it will be their\nsecond expression, on .government\npolicies in two months. Dr. J. .C.\nKing, Liberal, was elected in the\nJune 8 general election that saw\nW. J. Patterson's Liberal government sent into office again. Dr.\nKing resigned after It was found\nthat Hon. C. M. Dunn, minister of\nhigh wayi and transportation, was'\nwithout a seat irt the legislature.\nMr. Dunn was defeated in Melville.\nThe byelectlon finds Mr. Bonn\nopposed by Joseph Burton, the Cooperative- Commonwealth Federation eanddidate defeated by Dr.\nKing on June 8, when three candidates were in the running.\n(ily Band Gives\na Fine Program\nNelson city band Wednesday night\npresented a splendid program to an\nappreciative audience at the Vernon street shell. The band wu short\nof full strength, however. Listeners\nfilled the seats in front of the shell,\nand cars lined the block on either\nside. Fred L Irwin, bandmaster, directed the concert.\n\"Down on the Farm\" by Harry\nVon Tilzer drew marked applause.\nThe program follows: March \"Cavalry of the Clouds,\"\u2014George Roien-\nbrans; medey \"Down on the Farm\",\n\u2014Harry Von Tilzer; Southern memories grand fantasia \"Southern Memories\"\u2014Jaseph Hecker; waltz, \"Slgn-\nora\"\u2014A. M, Laurens; capricl \"Love\nand Kisses,\"\u2014Charles K. Harris;\nwaltz, \"The Man on the Flying Trapeze\"\u2014Julius S. Seredy; \"Eventide Serenade\"\u2014K. L. King; march,\n\"Man O' War\"George D. Barnard.\nNight Baseball\nWESTERN INTERNATIONAL\nWenatchee 5, Vancouver.^.   .\nBellingham 3, Tacoma i.-        -.\nPACIFIC COAST     .'\nOakland 5, Hollywood 0.\nSan Diego 1, Sacramento 9.\nDance, Raspberry   ,\nSupper, Passmore,\nProves a Success\n. PASSMORE, B. C,\u2014 Dance ind\nraspberry, supper held Friday under\nauspice! of;the .Women'i institute\nwas a success.      ...      ',,.,_,..\nMrs. F. Soucey and Mrs. C. Harrison were hostesses. W. Young vta\ndoor-keeper,\nW. R. Perry was master., pf mre-\nmonies and E. Fink called the square\ndances.     \u25a0 V ,   ,...'.'......;;'\nBowel Complairils of the Children\nDuring tho hot summer months\nmust children are subject to diarrhea, dysentery,' colic, cholera' infantum or sitae other bowel trouble.\nAll mothers'\"should' usi'' J)tl\ntress\"Tn\"the ioostToffice. replacing fowler's Extent of .Wild Strim.-\n  ..... borry on tho first sign of any looseness of the bowela.\n\"Dr. Fowler's\" is. iii old and\ntried remedy. It has been used by\n.thousands of Canadian mothers for\nover 00 years. Do not experiment\nwith your child\"\u00bb,. health,, by .using\nlo'me new and'nntried remedy,. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0-,-\nGet\" Dr. ITowler 'i' < and feel litis,\n1.S T, Mllbu*o Co., Ui., Toronto, Out.\n_____\n\u2022 A^.\n [\u2022\u25a0\nw^m'mvw^^wMi^^sii^^mm.\nicoT\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ, AUG. 4. 1938\n-PAQE THREE\nPure Jade, Found\nIn B.C., Is Given\nto the Museum\ni  \u25a0\u2022 *. \u25a0\nVICTORIA, Aug. 3 (CP)-Jade,\nthe precious rock only associated\nwith the Far East, has been found\nIn the pure state in the Lytton area\nof British Columbia.\nA huge chunk of it, weighing 50\npounds, two feet long and a foot\nthick was presented to the provincial museum today by Assistant\nCommissioner T. w. S. Parsons of\nthe provincial police, who is a collector of curios.\n' Mr.- Parsons said as. far as he\nknows it is the first time Jade -has\nbeen discovered on the North American continent, \"in situ,\" or in its\nnatural state as it comes away\ntrom the rock.\nOther pieces of jade have been\nfound in the Bridge River district of\nBritish Columbia but always in\nsmooth boulder form ground down\nby creeks and glacial action.\nMines department experts who\n.made a preliminary examination of\nThe rock said they believed it was\npure nephrite, or jade.\nIndians used jade for making\nspearheads and tools and the piece\nsecured by Mr. Parsons has the\nmarks on it where Indians scoured\npieces from it.\nMr. Parsons declined to reveal\nthe exact source of the find, but\nsaid that the rock, when found, was\nloose.\nTwo Men to Face\nForgery Charges\nJoseph Dunn and Robert Rankine\nwill appear before William Brown,\npolice magistrate, in city police court\nthis morning to answer charges of\nlorgery. The men were arrested by\nSergeant Robert Harshaw and Con-\nitable Richard House of the city\npolice force Tuesday night.\nBETTER  PLUMBING\nSERVICE\n\u2014PHONE 181\u2014\nB. C. PLUMBING\nand HEATING Co.\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nAnd You'll Jump Oat et Bed in th*\nMorning Ruin'to (0\nThe, liv.r should pour out two pounds ot\nlli__t fte-taf Mr, your too. dcWt di\u00abe_t.\nIt \u00a3t S3*Ttoth- bowelj Oa blo_t_ up\n,\u201e_f \u201e_om_-_. You frt cot-tip-tri. Hirmlul\npoiion. zo into thobo-y,ind jou leel bout,\nimnk tnd tho worid IooIm pimk.\nAmen bowel movement dom telwtyilrt\n\u2022t th. e-ux- You need eomethtal th_t work.\n-on the liver \u00ab well.\u00bb tfk\" th\u00b0\",lood'_iJ\niCutet'i Little Liv-T Pitta to get the., two\npound, ot hli. Bowtal ImlJ \u00abd mjke you\nfeel \"up end up\". Hennleee .nd lentle, they\ntubTh. bil. \u00abow f reely. They do the work\nof alotncl but h\u00bbT. no ettaM \u00ab mercuty In\n;t__5. A* lor Crter'. Littieli\u2122- Ml. by\n_._-... Etubboraly nfu\u00ab .nythloj el\". 2oc\n(Advt.)\nA Dally News Carrier\nWhen Mrs. Nomia Cursons, now of Cloverdale, B.C., lived in the\nSlocan valley her dog \"Jackie\" used regularly to carry the Nelson\nDaily News from bus throw-off to the home. He loyed it, and the\npraise he got for his cleverness.\nTWO PLEAD GUILTY TO THEFT OF\n$20,000 OF METALCONCENTRATES\nMONTREAL, Aug. 3 (CP)-Two\nmen awaited sentence tonight after\npleading guilty to charges involving theft of $20,000 of precious\nmetal concentrates from the International Nickel Company of Canada refinery at Port Colbourne,\nOnt, while two others went on trial for receiving the stolen metals\nand disposing of them.\nEdouard Dutil, 33, went before\nJudge Gustave Marin and admitted theft of iridium and palladium\nconcentrates while employed in the\nrefinery. He carried 60 pounds, tt\nthe concentrates, useful to jewellers, as well as to munitions makers, out of the refinery in his lunch\npail.\nWilliam Ackles of Toronto and\nSimla, third engineer of the lake\ntanker Simcolite, pleaded guilty to\nbringing the 'metals to Montreal\nfor disposal. He and Dutil will be\nsentenced Sept. 21.   '\nDutil and Ackles then testified at\npreliminary hearing of Arthur Co-\nderre, 35, Montreal and Jean W.\nTousignant, 40, Montreal, charged\nwith receiving and possession of the\nprecious metals.\nMexico Rejects\nArbitration of\nAmerican Claims\nMEXICO CITY, Aug. 3 (AP)-A\nforeign office source disclosed today\na Mexican note to the United States\nrejected \"in principle\" arbitration\nof American claims for expropriated\nfarm lands but left the door open for\n.further discussion.\nThe Mexican reply pointed out\nthat Mexican legislation provided\nforeigners could not have preferential treatment.\nThis country's agrarian code applied to foreigners and Mexicans\nalike,  and  therefore  it  was  im-\n\u00a7ossible  to  idemnify   the  United\ntates   owners   whose   properties\nwere taken.\nThe note added Mexico was willing to study the matter further,\nhowever.\n16 Youths Under\nForestry Plan to\nWork at Kokanee\nSixteen young men who for several weeks haveb e_n working at\nKing George VI park, Paterson,\nunder the Youth Forestry Training\nplan, will leave for Kokanee park\nthis week.\nA progressive beautificatlon program carried out by the youths under Thomas Dronsfield, foreman,\nhas transformed the once overgrown area into an attractive park\nand playground. Fencing, draining,\nditching and the building ot fireplaces nave all been carried out.\nAlthough the original plan outlined has not been completed, only levelling and the construction of pavilion remain.\nKIMBERLEY Social...\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nS. Lindquist from Two Harbours,\nMinneapolis with their daughter,\nEileen, are visiting Mr. and'Mrs. O.\nLindquist. They leave on Thursday\nto visit in Trail and will see Vancouver and Portland on their way |\nhome.\nBill McLay and his brothers Ian\nand Tom with Stanley Chambers\nand Fred Swann spent last week\ncamping at Sheep Creek. They are\ncamping this week at Wasa lake.\nAlice Swann is spending a week\nat Wasa.\nMiss Madeline Ward, who has\nbeen holidaying at Portland, returned Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. R. H. G. Edmonds\nII.OIIIOUS views of cool, gi- n forest*\nte one of the principal charms of this vacation land ... yet a moment of thoughtlessness In\nthrowing match or cigarette out of a car window can\nstart a forest fire that will ruin It all. Please help\npreserve oor forests by using every care with fire In\nthe woods.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA FOBEST SERVICE\nDept. of Lands\nv.\nPUT\nI CIGARETTE\nBUTTS OUT\n_\/\nu     }*\n^\nFOREST FIRES\nand family have returned from the\ncoast\nThe Kimberley \u25a0 Caledonian Pipe\nband went to Spokane Friday and\non Saturday to Kellogg, Idaho,\nwhere they played at the. big Caledonian picnic. On Sunday they played at Coeur d'Alene.\nThose making the trip were A.\nOliphant, A. Scott, H. Scott, J. Stout,\nH, Smith, A. Tait, R. Davidson, D.\nGold, J. McMahon, D. Smith and\nA, Graham of Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. Dave Robertson are\nholidaying at Lethbridge, Calgary\nand Drumheller, returning by way\nof Banff. Mr. and Mrs. J. Stelliga\naccompanied them.\nMiss Stella Patience with her\nniece Joan Boterill has left for a\nholiday at Weyburn, Saskatchewan.\nMrs. Edna Smith, who has been\nvisiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nCrooks, has left for Calgary.\nMiss D. Hild entertained Saturday in honor of Mrs. Wilfred Burrows of Flin Flon and Mrs. Edna\nSmith of Calgary.\nMiss Mary Whittaker of Michel\nis visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. Olson and\nMr. and Mrs. J. Bonner.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Hoglund have\nreturned from a vacation in Rossland. Nils Pearson went with them.\nAlbert Rouleau, who is stationed\nat Yellowknife writes home that\nStan Gray started the new mill\nthere last week.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Groslin and son,\nEarl and Mr. Kib of Trail are here\nfor six weeks.\nMiss Ruby Andrews returned\nTuesday from the coast.\nMr. and Mrs. George Clerf left\nSaturday with Harry Twells and\nLeona to visit Greenwood, Midway\nand Grand Forks.\nMiss Ruth Hepper, nurse in training at the Vancouver General hospital is Visiting her father, Henry\nHepper and her brother, William.\nMr. and Mrs. Garnet Patmore\nare visiting at Sand Point and\nCoeur d'Alene. -\nRonald Rebagliati of Penticton,\nwho is visiting here and Cleave\nCostain are spending a week at\nWasa.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Spencer and C.\nKinrad spent Sunday at Bonners\nFerry.\nRobbie Hutchinson had a successful fishing trip at Mathew Creek,\nbringing home 28 fine fish.\nJ. Bidder and Frank Kinrad are\nst St. Mary's lake.\nGeorge Walford, Ethel Parnaby\nend Ray Parnaby are at Bonnington\nFalls, where George Walford will\nwork this winter,\nMrs, Tom Ingram of Vancouver Is\nvisiting her brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. John Ellis of\nChapman Camp.\nMrs. A. Waller, Mrs. John Arbuckle and Miss Ruth Hepper are at\nWasa lake.\nMr. and Mrs. Ray Spence left\nThursday for Coeur d'Alene.\nMr. and Mrs. Dan Morrison and\ntwo boys, Mr. and Mrs. G. Scott,\nAngus Scott, Hamish Scott, and Mr.\nand Mrs. Archie Tait left Friday for\nCoeur d'Alene, \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. Campbell were\nvisitors in Regina. Mr. Campbell returned home Monday but Mrs.\nCampbell will remain for some time.\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Allan attended\nthe conference at Grand Forks,\nTheir daughter, Helen went with\nthem and Mr. and Mrs. W. Allan.\nViola Campbell has returned\nfrom Rowland.\nArt Andrews, Johnny Jnaedinger,\nLoftie Russell and Stewart Andrews\nclimbed Mt. Fisher last Sunday.\nGlacier Priest on\nHazardous Journey\nBARROW, Alaska, Aug. 3 (AP)-\nSomewhere off the bleak northern\nAlaska coast today Father Bernard\nR. Hubbard and his skin boat expedition thumped .over the Arctic\nocean on a 1000 miles return journey to King Island In the Bering\nStrait.\nIt took the \"Glacier Priest\" and\nhis party 17 days to travel from\nKings island's stony cliffs to this\nnorthernmost village at. the tip of\nAlaska. And, as tor the return trip,\nHubbard said before leaving:\n\"The next 1,000 miles will be the\nhardest and most dangerous.\"\nStales Arrested\nMan in Services\nThree Countries\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (AP)-Robinson\nWalker, 48, clothing merchant and\nformer employee of Vickers, Ltd.,\nwas quoted by a prosecutor at a\nhearing on Official Secrets Act\ncharges today as saying he was in\nthe secret service of three countries.\nWalker was arrested July 27 after\nleaving the home of John Frederick\nBirch, inspector at the Vickers Cray-\nford plant He was alleged to have\nbeen carrying two blueprints which\nwere handed to him by Mr. Birch on\nthe instruction of police.    .\nProsecutor Vincent Evans said\nWalker told the inspector he was\n\"in the secret service of three\ncountries and had been to Italy.\"\nMr. Evans did not name the countries but quoted Walker as tellihg\nMr. Birch he wolild take the blueprints \"to the Russian trade delegation who will take copies and they\nwill be sent to the authorities at\nMoscow.\"\nThe prosecutor said Walker refused to pay Mr. Birch in advance\nfor the plans, declaring the Russians\n\"would not trust him because he\nhad failed them on three previous\noccasions.\"\nThe plans were said to show details of the main casing of a fuse-\nsetting machine and were described\nby the prosecution as documents\n\"calculated or intended to be directly or indirectly useful to an\nenemy.\" The hearing was adjourned\nuntil Aug. 12.\nYouth to Die for\nSpokane Murder\nWALLA WALLA, Wash., Aug. 3\n(AP).\u2014A cocky 20-year-old youth\nwho told the jury that convicted\nhim of murder he was \"soaking his\nneck in brine to get ready for the\nrope\" will go to the gallows at the\npenitentiary shortly after tomorrow\nmidnight.\nThe youth is Stanley Knapp, one\nof three convicted for the slaying\nof W. E. Walker, customer at the\nSecurity State Bank of Spokane\nwhich the youths robbed in June,\n1937. He was captured in Sacramento.\nThe other two were Herbert Allen, 21, arrested at Williston, N. D.,\nand Leroy Knapp, 22, Stanley's\nbrother. Leroy died from wounds\nreceived when the three attempted\nto escape the Spokane country jail.\nAllen is sentenced to hang Aug. 16.\nCreston Ratepayers\nDiscuss Waterworks\nCRESTON, B. C, - The village\nwater supply formed the chief item\nof business at the August meeting\nof Creston Ratepayers' association\nMonday. In the absence of President Charles Murrell and Secretary\nW. S. Weir, the gathering was in\ncharge of Vice-President F. H. Jackson. V. M. Vasseur took the minutes.\nThe waterworks matter came before the meeting on a resolution\npassed by the executive which recommended that the village council\nbe asked to take up with the Goat\nMountain Waterworks company the\nmatter of the village purchasing the\nsystem. After the subject had been\ndiscussed from several angles the\nresolution was approved and it is\nexpected it will come before the\nvillage council at their regular meeting Monday.\nIt was agreed to send a committee\ncomposed of the president and Axel\nAnderson to the council meeting to\nsecure some wanted information in\nconnection with the new assessment\nJ. A. Stewart, provincial assessor,\nis at present preparing for the village and arising out of a request at\nthe annual school meeting in 1937,\nthat a re-assessment be made for\nschool purposes.\nIt was decided not to follow up a\ncomplaint of a non-member that\nequal consideration was not being\ngiven by the council in allowing tenants to work out taxes.\nGet Vour*_ob In the \"Want Adt\"\n^iritfottlAs \u20acamjmit&\nINCORPORATED  2*? MAY 1670\nChildren's  >.\nSWIM   SUITS\nBathers in pure soft\nwoot, for the older girls.\nHalter-tops, strap-backs.\nShorts style or with skirt.\nAll colors. Sizes 26-32.\nRegular $1.95.\n-Second Floor HBC\nTHURSDAY\nSPECIAL\n60 Bemberg or Silk\nCrepe   Slips.\nAll bias cut with front\nlace applique or tailored faggbtting. Tearose\nand' white in Sizes 32\nto 42.\nwf\n\u2014Second 'Floor HBC\nSHOPPING BAGS\nFor picnics or holding\nbeach togs you can't beat\nthese handy covert cloth\nbags. All waterproof-\ncolors blue, fawn, brown\nand grey with buckle\nfastening. Each\n29'\n-Main   Floor HBC\nLawson Consulted\nas 'Chiet Coroner'\nin Sidley Autopsy\nCounsel  Contends  Is\nIneligible to Hold\nan Inquest\nTORONTO, Aug. 3 (CP.-William\nHorlick Sidley, only son of the late\nMrs. Mabelle Horlick Sidley of\nRacine, Wis., said in an affidavit\nmade public today that befor his\nmother's death here July 6 he discussed with Coroner Or. Smirle\nLawson \"the question of an autopsy\"\non her body. After her death he\n\"gave instructions that an autopsy\nbe performed.\"\nHe said that \"at no time\" did he\nconsult Dr. Lawson \"in any capacity\nother than that of his position as\nchief coroner.\"\nCounsel Tor four executors of\nMrs. Sidley's estate who are seeking an injunction to prohibit an inquest, contended Dr. Lawson had\nacted as a private physician in the\nSidley case and therefore was ineligible to conduct an inquest into\nit. The motion for an injunction Will\nbe heard Thursday by Mr. Justice\nW. D. Roach.\nBefdre his mother's death Mr,\nSidley \"arranged with Dr. Basso,\neminent Chicago neurologist, to\ncome to Toronto for purpose of consulting With the physicians attending upon my mother.\" Permission\nfor Dr. Basso to see his mother had\nbeen obtained but when Dr. Basso\narrived here July 3 he was refused\npermission on three occasions lo\nsee Mrs. Sidley, the son stated in\nthe affidavit.\nMr. Sidley denied he had a telephone conversation, as stated in an\naffidavit filed July 26, with W.\nPerkins Bull, at whose home Mrs,\nSidley had been visiting for more\nthan a year and where she died.\nNAKUSP YOUNG WOMEN'S\nMISSION CIRCLE TO AID\nBELLA    COOLA    HOSPITAL\nNAKUSP, B.C.-Mrs. George Keys\nentertained members of the Young\nWomen's Mission Circle Monday\nevening. During the business session\npresided over by Mrs. R. Brodie\nit was decided to send a Christmas\nbox of toys and clothing to Bella\nCoola hospital in addition to the\nlayette which is this year's allocation.\nThe study book review taken by\nMiss Ivis Ferguson was an interesting account of work in the mission hospitals of Canada. Miss Nellie\nJohnson was in charge of the devotional period.\nMrs. Keys served refreshments.\nIn the absence erf the pastor, Rev,\nC. Addyman the evening service at\nNakusp United church was conducted by members of the Young\nWomen's Mission Circle, A number\nof well known hymns were chosen\nand preceding the singing of each,\nMrs. R. Brodie, president of the\ncircle, read accounts of the lives of\nthe various hymn writers. Two\nnumbers, \"I Heard the Voice of\nJesus Say.\" and \"O Love That Wilt\nNot Let Me Go\" were rendered as\nanthems by the choir and Mission\nCircle members.\n17 PERSONS CO TO JAIL\nREDDING, Calif.. Aug. 3 (AP)-\nSeventeen persons convicted of\ncharges filed in connection with a\nsit-down strike at the state relief\noffice here April 5 were sentenced\nto six months in the Shasta county\njail today by Justice of the Peace\nR. P. Stimmel.\nTO CLEAR\nBATHERS\nSpecially priced for summer clearance.\nWell-known for perfect fit and styles.\nChoose yours from these colors. Turquoise, blue, coral, grey and red. All\nsizes. To Clear\nRegular $4.95 $2.95\nRegular $5.95 $3.95\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nBROADCLOTH SLIPS\nFor every day wear\u2014Slips tailored from\nfine white or peach broadcloth. Sizes\n34 to 42.\n39\n\u2014Second   Floor  HBC\nARTIFICIAL FLOWERS\nAn array of very realistic flowers in a\ngrand color selection including roses,\n'mums and carnations. Three blossoms\nto a spray.\nPer Spray\t\n19c\n-Main   Floor HBC\nPRINT APRONS\nDainty styles and neat prints in these\naprons make them very appealing for\nkitchen use. Stock up on these      OQ_\u00bb\n-Main   Floor HBC\nnow! Your choice\nPURE SILK\nHOSE\ne    Semi Service\nTake advantage of\nthis opportunity and\nshare in this hosiery\n' scoop\nSeason\nable shades in every\nsize 8'A to lOVi.\nEvery pair with panel heel and cradle\nfoot. S i x good\nshades. Pair\n59\n-Main   Floor HBC\nj'\n'-\nRecent Visitor to\nKootenay\nDr.    George   Henderson    of\nVancouver.\nNew Pastor and Wife\nWelcomed at Creston\nCRESTON, B. C. - Rev. J. Jl.\nArmitage, the new pastor of Trinity\nUnited church, and Mrs. Armitage,\nwere given a cordial welcome to\nCreston by members and adherents\nof the church, at a reception in the\nchurch hall, Friday evening,-which\nwas largely attended, and included\nrepresentatives of the-congregations\nat Canyon and Wynndel.\nW. J. Truscott was in charge of\nproceedings and in appropriate\nterms welcomed the new minister\nand his wife to their new charge\nand to the community. Rev. Mr.\nArmitage replied in suitable terms,\nassuring of his best endeavor to\ngive the three congregations and the\ncommunity .freely of his time and\ntalent, and thanking them for the\nhappy reception.\nThe evening was featured by a\nwell balanced program of entertainment which included a duet by Mrs.\nKolthammer and Mrs. R. G. Pen-\nson; vocal solos by Mrs. Penson and\nCharlie .Kolthammer; violin solos\nby Alfred Moores; literary numbers\nby Mrs. Howard and Mr. Bale; and\nthe family trio of William J., Percy\nand Donald Truscott.\nThe affair was arranged by Trinity Ladies' Aid who served refreshments.\nMaximum Temperature 100 in July Is\nHighest Since 193.; 330 Hours of Sun\nSays Policeman\nWas Real Killer\nSOUTH PARIS, Me., Aug. 3 (AP)\n\u2014Paul N. Dwyer,, 18-year-old convicted slayer of a country doctor, today named former deputy sheriff\nFrancis Carroll as the man who\ncommitted the murder for which\nDwyer now is serving a life sentence.\nDwyer, a few months ago sent to\nprison for life after confessing the\nmurder of Dr. Littlefield, was said\nby Prosecutor Ingalls in his opening, to have taken the blame after\ndeath threats by Carroll, whom he\ndescribed as a \"vicious killer.\"\nPINKISH RUST IS\nMEW FALL COLOR\nPRIS, Aug. 3 (API\u2014Pinkish rust,\na new color named cornaline and\nsponsored by Patau, was shown in\nwinter style displays.\nThere were many front-draped\nskirts with bloused backs, and some\nhad bishop sleeves and boxpleat\nskirts. Enameled flower clips were\nfavored as jewelry,\nMany day skirts were circular-\nflared. Some very tight evening\nskirts were shown, but full skirts\nalso shared attention.\nEiong showed striking full-skirted eyening dresses in emeral lace,\npink tulle and white moire. Much\nvelvet was used for day wear in\nwine reds and duck greens.\nEighth Time Mercurf.\nUp to 100 Degrees -\nSince 1908\nExperiencing in its midst the hot-\ntest day and the longest continued\nheat wave for years, July was a\nfeature month for the weather man\nat Nelson. He recorded 330 hours of\nsunshine, 22 hours more than July !\nlast year. There was a period of 11\ndays with more than 13$ hours'\nsunshine.\nPeak temperature for the summer to date was reached July 22,\nthe day before the C. M. St'S. Co.\nemployees' picnic, when the mercury soared to an official-100 degrees. Last year the season's peak\nwas reached at 82 degrees on July\n24, the day of the Trail picnic.\nThis was the eighth year since \u25a0\n1908 in which the mej-cury reached\n100 in Nelson. In 1934, the maxi-\nmum was 103, but since then- until\nthis year, the mercury had not gone\nabove 92 degrees.\nJuly's minimum temperature was -\n46, marked up on July 9. That day\nwas also the one with the most\nhours of sunshine, 14.1 hours being \u25a0\nrecorded.\nRain totalled 1.43 inch during the\nmonth, with .42 inch falling on July'\n24, the day following the Trail picnic. The maximum wind velocity\nwas 16 miles' per hour, also on\nJuly 24. J\nRainfall in July. 1937, amounted\nto 1.80 inch, with the greatest,\namount, .64 inch, on Julyt 12. ;\nBuy or sell with a Classified Ad. ;;\nbush fire soon under\nControl at kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-A bush fire\nthat might have proved dangerous\nstarted Sunday evening on the hill\nabove that part of Lower Blarch-\nmont known as French Town. By\nthe time it was discovered the fire\nhad spread through the bush and\nwas making rapid headway. Men\nwere rushed to the place and soon\nhad it under control..\nv. p. i. a a p.\nWhich means Vice President in\nCharge of Purchasing. One of\nthe many important positions\nheld by the Lady of the House.\nThis position, like all other\nresponsible positions, requires\na background of sound information. And this information\nis conveniently supplied by the\nmerchants of your city\u00bbin the\nadvertisements that appear in\nyour daily newspaper.\nThese advertisements point\nthe convenient way to quick,\nintelligent buying. They are\nyour greatest aid in making\nyour job of purchasing a success. They merit your careful\nreading.\nBuyers and Sellers Both Profit From\nNewspaper Advertising.\n <\u2014.\u2014<\nmmm\u2014mm\u2014m.\npage row-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ, AUG, 4, 1938\nFIND MORE BOYS THAN GIRLS AMONG PROBLEM CHILDREN\n:12 Points . . .\nMinimize Faults\nof the Figure by\nWearing Corsets\nBy. JULIET SHELBY\nPauline Gordon, the young designer of foundation garments five\nus a few hints on how to minimize\nyour finger fault* and emphasize\nyour good points. She claims that\nthere are six major faults in the\nmodern American .female figure,\nbut there it t way to overcome\neach.\nIf you have been i lazy bones\nwhile the other girls have been\nbusy with their daily dozens, then\nyou 11 have to fall back on corseting to get the desired lines. Having followed these pointers you\nmay succumb completely to this\neasy way of reshaping. Here are\nth* thoughts to bear in mind when\nyou are picking a foundation that\nwill control the bulges and bring\nout the sylph in you:\nFirst: Don't try to change your\nfigure too radically. Wear foundation garments which mold rather\nthan constrain.\nSecond: If your hips are large,\ndon't accentuate your waistline too\nmuch. Wear a straight-hipped garment.\nThird: II your Bust is large, don't\n\u25a0wear too extreme an uplift. Distribute and mold your lines.\n!\n\u25a0\nluJH___l_i____\nK\n____P__^^2_K__B_.\nWy   ,    .fa j&Wmxl\nLtifT     w\nr^\n1 \\ -  V\u2122__\\\n1 \/J\n_eIgb__________i    \"^n\nH______p^ ^ '*'\n______\u00a5>'\nBBBBfe \"\nKJK99MM ist' f * __\n$a_w\ns~W\nHQ>M . '   _f ^_{\n___)t\\         \u00ab,    1\nHimT l      _____\nMass..'.   '    *\u25a0\nH_\\ i%\nJ?.\n**:lll_h_i\\\u00a3_&''*      1\/\n_WKmW\u00a7k*&\n\u25a0*J^_f^\/T'J^|\n_______\u25a0_!   i\/   JT\nNImI'vj-___$  -\nilk-- ________ll;':'i_;_______B_____K\nWRB_*&ffifil_m__M\n\\\\\\\\j^_^_W__W'\nm. <\u2022\n1\n1\nF\nHon ?^________h___BSSp__ *\u25a0 __\n\\\nV_H\u00a3\u00bb_\u00a7_|i' te\nfc_^^_^\u00ae_W<\nEthelrcdi Leopold\ni i i  hfi i perfect figure\nFourth: If your bust is' small in\nproportion to the rest ot you, and\nyour hips and abdomen are large,\ndon't let yourself flow into a solid\n< line so that you look square. Lift\nyour bust and accentuate your\n(waistline.\nFifth: If your waistline is thick\ntnd you have the well-known roll,\ndon't wear a separate girdle and\n: thort   brassiere.   Wear   either   an\nall-in-one or a girdle with a long\nline brassiere,\nSixth: If your hips are large tnd\nyour waist is small, don't attempt\nan all-in-one. Wear a separate\nbrassiere and girdle.\nSeventh: If your weight is in the\nback, don't wear foundation garments that have elastic fabrics\nwhere you need to be flattened.\nWear a garment with t materltl\nback of firm fabric such as satin,\nbroadcloth or batiste, which will\ncontrol and hold in the fullness.\nIF THIGHS ARE HEAVY\nEighth: If your weight is in your\nthighs, don't wear too short t foundation. See that it is long enough to\navoid the bulge.\n. Ninth: Don't look stiff and steely.\nUse bones only where they are absolutely necessary. -\nTenth: If you have a Urge abdomen you must employ approximately the same technique over\nyour stomach as in the case ot the\nfull back. You will want a garment designed, through construction\nand material, to hold your abdomen\nfirmly\u2014lor example, inner panel\ncontrol of the stomach, or material\nfront firm enough to produce the\nsame result, or one of tne new patent constructions that are now on\nthe market.\nEleventh: Don't box your lines.\nMtke the most of your belt fet-\nture.\nWhen you are buying t girdle\nalways ask for specific directions\nabout wishing li\nLeafhopper Attacks\nGrape Leaves\n\u25baWW LBWHOPPER.\ni\nI'jiilHV\nIH'ii'\n'\ntt\nm\nGunning: for the grape leafhopper\nYear after year the grape leal-\nhopper plagues the commercial\ngrape grower, as well tl the home\ngardener who carefully tends i lew\npet gripe vines. When attacked by\nthis pest the grape leaves turn a\nlight greenish-yellow, the vines lack\nvigor, and the entire plant takes on\nt run-down tppeartnee.\nThe grape- let-hopper, greatly enlarged, is Illustrated in this garden-\ngraph. These small, but very active\ninsects, are usually found on the\nundenide ol the grape leaves. They\nare pale yellow in color with red\nspots.\nThe pest is difficult to control,\nsince it feeds by Sucking the sap\nfrom the foliage tnd not by eating\nthe leaf itself. The best control\nmethod is to spray or dust with\nSicotlne, II Bordeaux mixture is\nelng used on the grape vines tor\nother diseases, then add nicotine\nsulphate to it tt the rate ol one pint\nto 100 gallons ot spray. The sprty\nshould be applied about the time\nthe newly forming grapes begin to\ntouch one.another.\nSWEDISH GIRLS WORK\n\"Every girl in Sweden has learned\nto be independent and earn her own\nliving,\" Sweden's only woman senator, Miss Keratin Hesselgren, now\nin the United States, is reported as\nsaying.\n\"An increasing number keep right\non at their Jobs titer marriage.\nThere Is no law against lt, and tne\nextra pay check means couples can\nmarry younger.\"\nWomen have equal right with\nmen in Sweden, this feminine lawmaker states. About the only positions they can't hold at present\nare those ol an officer in the army,\nor a state clergyman. And that, she\nsays, \"is only a question of time.\"\nTHE ONE MINUTE 'PULPIT\nEven a child is known by his doings, whether his work be pure,\nand whether it be right.\u2014Proverbs\n20.11.\nBy MRS, MARY MORTON\nMENU HINT\nf Run Ring Scalloped Potatoes\nButtered Carrots\nGreen Salad\nBlueberry Upside-Down Cake   Tea\nThe recipes lor ham ring and\nblueberry   upside-down   cake   are\n.from Good Housekeping, and have\n] been tested in the institute. Having\nfart ol a ham on my hands, which\nbought  lor  picnic   purposes,  I\nthough some of you might be in\ni like situation, so am giving you a\n: good way to finish up the last little\nbits.  You  can use  sweet bottled\nI milk in the recipe instead ol evaporated.\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nHAM RING\u2014Three cups ground\nL Cooked ham, two egg whites, two\ncups evaporated milk, speck cay-\nf enne, two cups cooked or canned\npons. Combine ham and unbeaten\nPurity\nFLOUR\nMAKES  BETTER   BREAD\nftmf.\\l' Pwi, s<' fji-irsO\nVITTUCCI\nVIRGIN\nOLIVE OIL\negg whites. Slowly add milk and\ncayenne. Pour into greased eight-\ninch ring mold and bake in moderate oven ol 375 degrees F. lor 30 to\n40 minutes. Unmold on a platter;\ntill centre with peas, spinach, or\nother vegetable. Serves five to six,\nBLUEBERRY UPSIDE - DOWN\nCAKE\u2014One and one-half cups fresh\nblueberries, one Oup granulated su-\n?:nr, six tablespoons water, one-\nour cup shortening, one egg beaten: three-fourths cups jplus t\\vo\ntablespoons sifted cake Hour, one\nteaspoon baking powder, one fourth\nteaspoon salt, one-fourth cup bottled\nmilk or two tablespoons evaporated\nmilk and two tablespoons water,\none-fourth teaspoon vanilla extract.\nCook together lor 10 minutes the\nblueberries, one hall cup ot the sugar, and the water; cool. Meanwhile\nuse the rest of the ingredients in\nmaking a plain cake batter in the\nusual way. Arrange the blueberries\nin a greased and lightly floured\neight-inch layer-cake pan and cover\nwith the cake batter. Bake in a\nmoderate oven ol 378 degrees F. lor\n25 to 30 minutes. Turn out upside\ndown and serve warm with ice\ncream on top. Serves six.\nFACTS AND FANCIES\nPrevents Deficiency\nAddition of cod-liver oil to t\nminimum-cost or t r_strict_d diet\nis t cheap tnd practical way to\nhelp prtvent t deficiency ol vita-\nmint A tnd p.\nLinoleum for Shelves\nOne woman stys Ihe cuts small\nremnants ol linoleum tor her pantry shelves, and all it takes to keep\nthem clean is a damp cloth. She also\nkeeps a remnant on her kitchen\ntable.\nKeep It Cool\nVnnilla flavoring should be kept\nin a cool place and well corked, so\nthat its flavor will not escape.\nPleasure\nBusy Mother\nManages lo Go\n(lasses at Night\nBy GARRY C. MYER8, PH, D,\n\"Detr Dr. Myers: Both my hus\nband and I read your articles each\nday with great interest. Articles re-\nlating to the home or school I enjoy\nso much, as I was a teacher before\nmy marriage.\n\"I am attending adult evening\nclasses in home arts. I enjoy them\na great deal, as I have met people\neach night we have our class that I\nprobably would not meet otherwise.\nI am tied at home during the daytime with our little family of live\nchildren, ranging in age one to\neight. It surely means a great deal\nkeeping them in clean clothes alone,\nwith all the Other daily demands on\nAte.\n\"My husband has been out of\nwork so much of late and we haven't\nthe means to take in entertainments\nthat cost I try and go to P.-T. A.\nmeetings and such school activities\nas we can afford, when he can stay\nwith the children. I just get myself\nready, when I go alone, and leave\nthe children'to him to get ready for\nbed, even the baby. When I have the\ncare of them all every day, hearing\nall the noises, quarrels and answering Questions of the most trying sort,\nit surely is a relief to get out at\nnight once in t while,\nHASN'T ENOUGH\nPATIENCE\n\"The letter which you published\na few weeks ago, written by that\nmother who was expecting another\nchild seemed to apply to me so much\nas I lelt as though I haven't the\npatience I should have in a great\nmsny instances. Then at night after\nworking all day long, there is so\nmuch mending or other tasks to complete before going to bed. Hardly\nany time to read or enjoy an evening. Alter going to bed, il baby or\none ol the others cries, mother has\nbeen getting up and caring lor their\nneeds. It keeps me nervous and so\ntired all the tme. . . We have had\nso much hard luck since our marriage; sickness, doctor bills, nurse's\nbills, hospital bills, having to give\nup our big farm, then the small\none....\"\nFine that you are taking that\ncourse and can get away occasionally trom the children. Let\nDad care for them at night Let\nmore things go about the house\nand find more rest for yourself.\nNever rebuke yourself for getting\nnervous; only lor being too exacting in housekeeping and doing\nmore than what js absolutely necessary. I am sure you are a good\nmother\u2014too good for your own\ngood, perhaps.\nREMOVE8 WHITE 8TAINS\nTo remove those white water\nstains from hardwood floors, first\nrinse the spotted area with cold\nwater. Then rub it well with a\ncloth dipped in two cups of clear\nwater In which two tablespoons of\nspirits of camphor have been placed. Next wipe the area dry and\napply floor polish.   .\nFront pages ol newspapers showing big news breaks from 1861 to\n1938 provide an unusual wall cov\nering In a hotel in Rock Island, 111\nBecause it would be impossible to\nduplicate most of them, the owner\nis negotiating for their insurance.\nA smart style whimsy is to embroider your initials on the band\nof your hat   .\nWoo! Swim Suit\nIs Sleek\nOne-pleoe knit wool swim suit\nBy Central Press\nIf you are young and slim and\na good swimmer a maillot or one-\npiece swim suit is the correct costume lor you when you are emulating a sea nymph.\nThis charmingly youthlul and\nsleek-fitting maillot in mateiasse\nknit wool is aquamarine blue in\ncolor with deeper blue wool braid\nhalter lie and deep blue buttons\nat the Bodice front.\nBonny Babe\nConrad Ferris,'seven months\nold son ot Mr. and Mrs. J. Ferris Smith, 122 High street, Nelson.\nIn the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have\novercome the world.\u2014St. John 16:33.\nTreatment . . .\nIonization for\nHay Fever Not\nAlways a Success\nBy LOGAN CLENOENING, M.D.\nThe ionization treatment ol hay\nlever arouses a good deal ol interest, especially among those victims\not this disagreeable condition who\nhave tried everything else, with\ntailure as a result. They hear conflicting reports about it, and although I can give nothing but conflicting reports, by request I will\ndescribe it.\nIonization is applied directly to\nthe mucous membrane of the nose\nin the atteVnpt to destroy it partially by electric current. At least\nto destroy the part that swells up\nand gives trouble in hay lever. The\nlogic of the idea ol the treatment\nshould be plain enough trom that.\nWife Preservers\nSerial Story . . .\nTWO WORLDS\nBy MAUD MoCURDY WELCH\nREAD THIS FIRST:\nNoel Shayne, wealthy society girl,\nis in love with Dr. Julian Paige, a\nserious-minded young physician who\ndeclares he will not permit himself\nto fall in love with <Noel because of\nthe contrasting werlds in which they\nlive. Determined to show Julian she\nhas stamina, Noel gives up a long\ntrip with her aunt, turns over her\nincome of $100,000 to her uncle who\nis in financial difficulties, buy:; her\nfirst outfit of inexpensive clothes\nand tells Julien she is going to find\na job. After moving to a dingy rooming house, she finds an ad for a\ngoverness. About to start on her new\nadventure, she finds her purse has\nbeen, stolen, leaving her with only\nSi Applying for the governess post,\nNoel is given a cool reception and\nno job. Later, dropping In at Julian's\noffice, she is irked by the antagonistic manner of Ruth Chester, his\nSretty nurse. Finding nothing else,\n[oel takes a job as a taxi dancer,\ntemporarily. She offers to share her\nroom with Laurie Evans, a girl she\nmet in the park, Laurie has just lost\nher job at the same' dance hall.\nThen Noel runs into Julian. Noel\ndoesn't tell Julian where she is\nworking, leading him to believe she\nexpects to land the governess post\nDuring a scene with Ruth Chester,\nthe nurse tells Noel that her \"plan\"\nwill never work.\nNOW GO ON WITH THE STORY:\nCHAPTER 7\nNoel had never heard so much\nrestrained fury as there had been\nin Ruth Chester's voice when the\nnurse had spoken her mind. She\nhad said that Noel would never\nmarry. Julian. -Paige - for \"a darn\ngood reason\". Noel pondered over\nthat a long time. She couldn't\nimagine what Ruth Chester had\nmeant\nAs Noel walked to her job at the\nPeacock that night, she could hardly get her mind ofl of Ruth Chester\nand how coldly furious she had\nbeen. From the first moment she\nhad seen her, Noel had thought\nRuth Chester was madly in love\nwith Julian. Now she had given\nherself away, even though Julian\nmight be thoroughly unconscious of\nit\nAlso Ruth Chester was even prettier than Noel had realized. And\nshe had the advantage of working\nin the clinic next to Julian's office,\nand could run in and see him all\nduring the day when she was nbt\nbusy. She had every chance in the\nworld to win Julian's love, Noel\nhad to admit to herself; And Julian\nadmired Ruth very1 much. He was\nalways saying something complimentary about her.\nThere wasn't any use trying not\nto see it, Noel told herself unhappily. Ruth Chester was a dangerous rival, and a very determined\none.\nBut NOel finally managed to dismiss her from her mind. She had\nto put all her thoughts on her*work.\nIt wasn't going to be easy even\nthen, though Laurie had given Noel\na number of pointers on what to\ndo, and what not to do. So Noel\nwasn't going to work in ignorance\non her first evening.\nAs soon as she entered the Peacock, she went to the dressing room\nand slipped into the gold tulle\nevening dress and the high-heeled\ngold sandals, which she had brought\nwith her in a pasteboard box.\nThere were many girls in there,\nputting on makeup, and adding last\nminute touches to their hair. Most\nof them spoke to her, recognized\nher as a new girl and seemed\nfriendly enough.\nNoel found dancing at the Peacock wasn't nearly so unpleasant\nas she had. feared it would be. All\nthe men with whom she danced\ntreated her with respect. Noel\nhadn't been sure they would. She\nhad been afraid because she was\npaid to dance with them, and anybody could ask her for a dance,\nthat some of them might feel they\ncould take liberties, might even insist on going home with her.\nBut nothing like that happened.\nNoel learned that it was against\nLutgi's rules for the girls to accept\nthe patrons Of the Peacock as escorts home. \"Just one ol Luigi's\ncrazy idea.,\" one of the girls told\nher. But it gave Noel a sense of\nrelief.\nAt 1:15 the Peacock closed. Noel\nwas given her $2, and left to her\nown resources.\nQuite fortunately for her, the\nPeacock was only about five blocks\nfrom the rooming house on Court\nStreet, So she walked the short distance alone.\nLaurie was there in the lumpy\nbed, sleeping soundly. Noel crawled\nin beside her, and suddenly, it\nseemed as if her whole body was\none intense ache. Once she was relaxed, she found even the slightest\nmovement meant agony.\nIt seemed to Noel thtt she had\nbeen asleep only about 10 minutes\nwhen Laurie awakened her the\nnext morning.  But lt was 8:30.\nLaurie wu up, looking rested\nand refreshed. \"I hated to call you,\"\nshe said, \"but we've got to be up\nand doing, you know. Besides, I've\ngot you some hot coffee.\"\n\"Coffee! Where on earth\u20147\" Noel\nsat up in bed. To her surprise, she\nfound the pain was all gone, even\nthough she had felt when Laurie\nawakened her that nothing on earth\ncould ever induce her to move\nagain,\nThen Laurie was pouring the col-\nfee in a 10-cent store cup which\nwas badly chipped. Once Noel\nwould have turned away in loathing from such a cup, but the aroma\nof the coffee was irresistible. She\nheld out her hand eagerly,\nLaurie, rummaging around in the\ncabinet of the old-fashioned wash-\nstand, found a saucer to go with\nthe cup, even though it didn't match.\nThen she placed the cup and saucer\non the upended top ot the small\ndrawer she had wihdrawn trom the\nwashstand just above the cabinet\npart. \"Modom, here is your tray,\"\nshe said playlully, \"Shall I draw\nyour bawth now?\"\n: Noel didn't look.at her lor a moment \"How on earth did you menage such a miracle?\" she asked at\nlast\nLaurie explained that she had\nbought the coffee with lome ol the\nmoney.Noel had given her, saying\nthat it was lots cheaper to have ia\nbit of breakfast in their room than\nto go out to a cafe,\n\"Yes, I suppo:\nthoughtfully. &en she said, \"?ou'ii\nsuppose so,\". Noel agreed\nhave to teach me to\u2014make coffee.\"\nLaurie's eyes grew wide. \"You\nmean you don't know how?\"\n\"Not how to\u2014to make it as you\ndo,\" Noel evaded.\nThen Laurie said, \"Feel stifllsh\nthis morning?\"\n''I was just-about dead until you\ngave me the coffee. But I'm feeling grand now.\" Just to prove It,\nNoel sprang up and did a little\ndance step around the room In her\npajamas, the cup and saucer still\nip her hand..\n,   \"Be careful of the china,\" Laurie\ngiggled. \u25a0 \"It might get chipped.\"\n\"That would be too\u2014too twlul\nNoel laughed.\nThen Laurie wanted to know\nhow things had gone at the Peacock. \"Better than I hoped,\" Noel\ntold her, beginning to brush her loose\ngolden curls, and wondering how\nsoon she'd be able to manage a\nbath in the bathroom down the hall.\nYesterday she had made lour trips\nwith soap and towel before she had\nfound it unoccupied. When she had\na chance to get in at -last, she found\nit most uninviting. So much enamel\nhad peeled off the tub, lt looked as\nif it had a bad case of scrofula.\nBut Laurie, it appeared, had already managed a bath., '.'You have\nto get there early,\" she said in answer to Noel's question as to When\nit would be best to try for a bath.\n\"Any time around 8 o'clock you'll\nget the busy signal.\"\nThen she explained that in an\nemergency you could get a bath of\nsorts in the bowl. Noel looked at\nit in superb distaste.\nBut Laurie was still thinking\nabout Luigi's. \"So everything passed\noff okay, did it?\"\nNoel nodded. \"Nobody tried to\nget the least bit fresh. But I had\nto dance every dance with a lot ol\ncut-ins. Guess that was why I was\nso tired.\"\n\"If the men are not respectful,\nLuigi has them thrown out on\ntheir ears,\" Laurie said. \"That's\nthe one nice thing about the place.\nIt isn't the men you have to dance\nwith that you have to-\u2014\" but she\ndidn't finish.\nNoel was digging in her purse.\n\"Here's your half. ol last night's-\nhandsome proceeds.\"\nLaurie's little freckled face flushed. \"Maybe I won't need it today.\nI've still got 50 cents left Maybe 111\nfind a job.\"\n\"Listen, you take this money,\"\nNoel thrust it into her unwilling\nhands. Then she said, \"You're going to stay with me, aren't you,\neven when you get a job?\"\n\"Do you want me to?\" Laurie\nasked.\n\"Yes, I do. I want you very\nmuch. You see, I like you,\" Noel\nsaid earnestly.\n'So that was all settled.\nThe two girls soon started off in\ntheir search for jobs. Noel had,\nmore confidence than she had had\nbefore. When you had one job, the\nchances were you would find an*\nother.\nBut she also knew that dancing\nwas hard on her shoes. The gold\nsandals, although expensive, were\nnot made for the hard service they\nhad received last night She'd\nhave to have money for another\nEair before long, if she stayed at\nuigi's.\nOnce again she sat in the park\nand studied the ads. She found\nseveral this morning that looked\npromising. A girl to work in a\nflorist's shop. Noel believed she\ncould do that But when she made\napplication, the dread word experience bobbed up, and the next thing\nshe knew she was out on the street,\ncourteously but firmly refused..\nA girl had to find a job before\nshe could get experience. And she\nhad to get experience before she\ncould get t job- So what could ih<\ndo?   She decided to ask Laurie.\nBut Laurie hadn't found t job\neither. She looked so discouraged\nwhen Noel got back to the room,\nthat neither of them talked, very\nmuch. And the next day passed\nand things were, just the same. No\njobs for either ol them.\nThat night before they went to\nbed, Laurie said, \"I've been wanting to tell you something about\nLuigi, Noel. He's the one you'll\nhave to watch at the Peacc-ck. They\nsay he's in some kind oil racket. I\njust thought I'd better wan you.\"\n(To Be Continued)\nSiyi Mrs. H. T. Uk., I slwiyi shrink\nmy fth\u00bb wrap pins it In > clean white\ncloth, putting it m > Itwmtr over boiling-\nwi__rsndlettintit-t-.___n_.ur. After\nthat I undo my knlttinj with no I_r_.tr,\nwon? ibout i_._t_.i_.-,\nIt the symptoms of hoy fever are\ndue to swelling and irritation \u25a0 ol\nthe Mucosa of th. Inside of the\nnose, then; it that is gone, there will\nbe nd hay fever,\nIn performing the operation; a\npositive electrode is placed on the\nmucous membrance of the inside ol\nthe nose\" and another held in the\nhand or placed on some other .external part of the body. The nose\nis lirst rendered insensitive and\nthen zinc sulphate solution is painted on it. The positive electrode ol\na special design, wrapped in cotton,\nis inserted,' and .tttgr, the- negative\nelectrode, is In.contact, .the current\n\u2014a mild oi)e-7.is .turned ,'dn. There\nis some discomfort in the nose for\nfew- days and then a kind of\n?;eIatinous  plus  Comes  away  and\nhe deed is done.\nREPORTS CONFUSING\nReports as to results . are very\nconfusing, and after, examining\nthem one does not wonder that\nthere Is some doubt in the minds\nol the prospects. I have talked to\nseveral people who had it done and\nthey are divided about fifty-fifty as\nto the benefits. Nobody, got complete .relief. In th'. scientific literature one early'worker reported\n100 per cent good results in 30 cases.\nThis. was five or six weeks ago.\nAt the other end .of the line, in\n6 is t report, of a doctor who\nfailed completely with this method\nin regylar seasonal hay fever, but\nhad .good;. results.in .th* chronic\nnatal catarrh that.con.es from house\ndust -Molt observers claim fairly\npood results in about half the cases,\nfew permanent cures;\nThis is not surprising to me, for\nhay fever is by no means local in\nthe nose. -In fact, it long has been\nmy belief that the pollen grains\nget into the eyes more than the\nnose, are dissolved Irt the salty\nsolution from the tear glands, and\nreach the nose ih this Solution\nthrough the tear ducts. Certainly\nthe hay fever victim complains as\nmuch about his eyes as his nose.\nBesides that, the asthma that often\ncomes on is due to a systematic reaction, rather than one local in the\nnose.\nSTAINS REMOVED FROM RUG,\nCARPET\n\u25a0Keep a supply ot corn meal, ful\nler'l earth, talcum power or French\nchalk at hand for'use when any\nliquid is spilled on a carpet or rug.\nSpread some on the spit, work it\naround with a blunt instrument\ntnd then remove it with your vacuum cleaner. II all the stain is\nnot removed, repeat the operation\nuntil as much, as possible has been\nobliterated,\nWhite is lirst color preference\nlor formal Paris affairs.- Then the\nchoice falls on pale blues tnd vio-\nlety pinks.\nSharkskin Print\nMakes Bra of\nSwim Suit\n_*ti\n'y:cr\n'^mm^l\nMin Jean Hill\nMisi Jean Hill is all ready for a\ndip. She is wearing black trunks\nWith printed bra of celanese rayon\nsharkskin and has a catalin fish\npin on her hip, of all places!\nShe is standing on the rail of\nthe smallest of five new bridges\nnow. being\" built across the St.\nLawrence and Thousand Islands\nand comprising the Thousand\nIslands International bridge system\nthat President Roosevelt has been\ninvited to open on Aug. 18.\nGirls Receive More Sympathetic\nTreatment and Hide Mental Upsets\nNEW YORK (CP)-Boys outnumbered girls two to one ln the total\nof ''problem children\" treated by\nthe Child Guidance Bureau of New\nYork City schools, according to the\nreport of the Department of Education.\n. The cause of this wide-deferential\nwas attributed, in part to the sympathetic treatment girls receive\nirom teachers and, In part to the\ninclination ol girls to hide personality disturbances.\nfile report shows that nearly 75\nper cent ol \"problem children,\"\ntaken Under the bureau's wing, had\nbeen helped to satisfactory or partial adjustment of neurosis and\nother psychiartrlc, psychological\nand physical troubles.\nFive years ago the department\nof education inaugurated the Child\nGuidance Bureau which In addition\nto treating,children tor various disaffection-!, Undertakes to train\nteachers and parents to detect many\ncauses of youthful, disturbances.\nCase studies were cited to show\nthe important bearing home conditions' have on a child's school progress. A bOy of nine, normally\nbrilliant who tailed constantly, was\nfound to be the butt of a bitter feud\nbetween  his  mother  and  grand-;\nmother who lived with them. When \u2022\nthe situation was cleared up the boy\nbecame a model pupil.\nParental harshness was found to\nhandicap many boys and girls, Re-,\npressed at home, the children sought\nemotional release at school. The''\nreverse, was often the case where\nteachers attempted to wield more\ndiscipline than the parents. The report also found a high correlation\nbetween malnutrition and mental\ndelects, and suggested that since '\nschool failure is often the forerunner of misi-havior, malnutrition\nshould be detected and remedied'\nat once. i\nChildren entering school for th.\nfirst time are in need of careful\nattention and handling. In the early\ngrades the teacher becomes a mother-substitute and depending upon _\u2022\nthe child's upbringing the teacher\nbecomes either a sympathetic friend\nor a bitter enemy.\n\"The extent to which lt is possible\nto improve the conduct ol children\nis determined by the degree to\nwhich it is possible to change the,\"\nattitudes and methods ot training-\nused by tdults,\" the report con-;'\neluded.\nEarly Attention\nVery Important\nin 'Polio' Cases\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe British Columbia department\nof health warns against delay in\ncalling a physician.in the preparalytic stages of infantile paralysis ln\na statement concerning the disease.\nThe six-part, statement deals with\nthe disease's history, cause and\nmode of spread, nature, symptoms,\n\u25a0treatment and prevention.\n-That dealing with the symptoms\nfollows: ' .\nThe onset ol poliomyelitis Is usually rather sudden.\nThe common history is that ol a\nhealthy child becoming suddenly\nill with lever, headache, a leeling\nol drowsiness and soreness ot the\nmuscles. There is usually a loss ol\nappetite, a lack ot interest in the\nsurroundings, and the young child\nis apt to appear irritable and to\ncry easily when disturbed. Vomiting\nand constipation may occur. Often\nthe characteristic symptoms ot cold\nor sore throat are present.\n.. As these early symptoms are more\nor less characteristic of any acute\ninfection it is Often impossible to\nmake a definite diagnosis without\nan examination of the spinal fluid\nWhich is obtained by the physician\nby means , of a slight operation\n(Lumber puncture).\nSTIFFNE88 OF SPINE\nOn examination of the child\nthere may be stiff nets of the neck\nor spine, or resentment at attempts to bend the head forward.\nWhen the child sits up In bed ha\nll unable to bend his head down\nand rest his ohln on hli knees,\nThere may be sensitiveness of the\n\u2022kin of the arms and legs, and a\nweakness of certain muscle\ngroupi. These signs, together with\nthe fact that the child does not\nwant to be held, played with or\nfondled should indicate to the\nparents that the child hai not a\nsimple Illness.\n\"It Is in this important preparalytic stage that the physician should\nbe called. To delay may be dangerous. It is the doctor's duty, not the\nparents', \"to diagnose poliomyelitis\nand he should be called in all cases\nof fever, headache, vomiting, stiffness ol the neck, tenderness ol the\nback, drowsiness or irritability.\nIn many cases ol poliomyelitis\nthe condition does not go beyond\nthis stage and terminates after four\nto 10 days illness, with complete recovery. There are the \"abortive\" or\nThen Sparks Flew\nISS\nEverything seemed calm and\nserene as red-headed Hedi Heusser\nlit up a cigarette after calling off\nher love sit-in strike in the mansion of wealthy Rollo K. Blanchard\nat Irvington, N. J, but a few. minutes later fireworks flared. Miss\nHeusser interviewed the press at\nher hotel suite ottering to tell the\nstory ot her strike. A reporter\nasked a question that stirred Miss\nHeusser to anger. Swinging a chair\nwith uncanny accuracy she barked\nseveral shins ol the fourth estate\nbefore they could reach the door.\n(Mr. Blanchard was still at bay on\nhis yacht.)\nnon-paralytic cases which ire just\nas important a lactor in conveying\ninfection as are the more serious\ncases.\nHowever, in other cases, the disease . proceeds into the paralytic\nstage irt which there is marked irritability and drowsiness. The patient becomes mentally disturbed\nand the hands and feet may show\ntrembling or twitching. Definite paralysis ol one or more groups ol\nmuscles supervenes and may even\ninvolve muscles necessary lor respiration.\nStatistics show that In the majority of cases muscles of one or both\nlegs are affected, and in nearly 50\nper cent of the cases the paralysis\nis limited to the legs.\nUnhappy\nGirl Decides She Does Not Love\nYoung Man Who Has a Bad Temper\nBy VIRGINIA   LEE\nBewildered loves a girl, and after going with her for some time\nshe has decided that she doesn't\nlove him any more. He thinks it\nis because he has a I ad a temper but\nhe succeeded in controlling it very\nwell for a long time before she\ntold him the awful truth\u2014that they\nwere through. He went right up in\nthe air at that news, and made a\nscene.\nSo now she won't have anything\nat all to do with him, and he wonders how he can win her back, and\nis sure he can control his temper\nagain il she will only reconsider\nher decision.   ,\nT_he best thing to do is to work\nhard to get that temper ol yours\nunder control right now, and keep\nIt under.\nYou will recover from your attack of love sicknesa\u2014believe it\nor not. But you may easily spoil\nyour whole life hy lack of self-\ncontrol. You have controlled it before, for her sake, you say; then\ndo so now and henceforward lor\nyour own.   '\nYou may even win the girl back\nwhen she sees you are making an\nearnest etfort to overcome your\nfault. But- even if you don't, it will\npay big dividends.\nGood luck to you, lad. I hope\nyou get the girl back, but if you\ndon't, you'll meet some other girl\nin time, and be happy if you persevere with your reform program.\nUndecided is 15 and a member\nof a large family. Her lather wants\nher to leave school and help at\nhome so her older sister can go\nto work and earn money. She has\nbeen going with a young man ol\n22, and her father doesn't want her\nto go with boys. She wants some\nwise advice.\nI am so thorough a believer in\ngetting a good education that I\nhate to tell you to give up school.\nWhat does your mother say? It\nseems to me that the work at home\ncould be arranged among all of\nyou so that you could still go t6\nschool and help at home in your\nspare time. Try hard to see if it\ncannot be so arranged.\nAs to the boy friend, you are\nright about being too young to\nmarry. That is sensible. And you\ncertainly won't have much time\nto go out with boys if you help at\nhome and keep up your school\nwork. I believe, however, that you\nshould have some recreation, in\nfact, that it Is necessary. There are\nalways Saturday nights and Sundays, however, for that. Try to\nconvince your lather that it is to\nhis advantage, as well as yours,\nthat you finish school. You will be\nable to earn more later on, il you\ndo.\nHi\nCool and refreshing!\nSAUDA\n \t\n\u2014\nNew Silhouette\nTightens Waist\nEmphasizes Hips\nBy' ALICE MAXWEL1\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nf PARIS, Aug. 3 (AP)\u2014A new silhouette; emphasizing the hips and\n. tightening the waist, has developed\nfrom,new Paris fashion collections.\nA higher neck and more elaborate\ncollars accompanied the new trend.\nSwanky hairdressers followed the\nmove, decreeing more curls higher\non the head.\nHeim named a new wide-hip silhouette after a popular soda maker,\nlaying further stress on. the \"pop\nbottle'* effect of the new dresses\nwith narrow skirt hems and widely\nshirred out hips.'\nNovelties include the Astrakham,\nmuffs that collapse like Chinese\n\u2022lanterns and fur scarfs which can\nbe used as hat trimming.\nMulti-color   harlequin   diamond\nmotifs are inset in day and evening\nbodices\u2014chinon diamonds in satin\n. dresses and fur diamonds in wool\ncoats.\nBig gauntlet gloves of plain and\nstriped fabrics match tweed morn-\n' ing ensembles. lfur trimmings include Persian lamb, sealskin and\nbroadtail fox. A new skunk cape\nhas long front ends in a shawl ef-\n'fect.\nTO FACE MURDER CHARGE\nDETROIT, Aug. 3 (AP)-Salt\nLake City detectives today prepared to return John W. Deenng, 39,\nto Utah where he will face a murder charge in the holdup killing of\nOliver R. Meredith, jr., wealthy\n. merchant,, last May.\nDeering signed a confession last\n.night in the Meredith case.\nFOR PROMPT, INDIVIDUAL\nDELIVERY SERVICE TRY\nI HJLLYARD'S\nFairway Grocery\nThe Coolest Store in Town\nPhone M4        Vlo Crawford, Mgr.\nJUST TO\nLET YOU\nKNOW OUR\nShon\nSak.\nIS GIVING\nMANY\nBARGAINS FOR\nTHE ENTIRE\nFAMILY\n; R. Andrew\n& Company\nLeaders in Footfashion\n.\u2014\n\u2666 \u2666\nAUNT HET\nay UOBEBT qdillkn\nI\nBy MRS. M. i. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F. 3. Norris, 711\nSilica street, announce the marriage\nof their elder daughter, Josephine\nRoberta Eliiabetfi (Beth), to Thomas Robertson Alexander, younger\nsOn of Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Alexander\nof Winnipeg, will take place. at\nSpokane, August 8. '\u25a0 j.\n.. Miss Lillian Ashman of Calgary, who has been a guest of Miss\nBeth Norris, 711 Silica street, leaves\nthis morning for Spokane to attend\nthe Norris-Alexander wedding,  .   ,\n\u2022 Bert Auld had as his guest at\nthe home of his parents, Dr. and Mrs.\nF. M. Auld, Nelson avenue, Fairview,\nR. R. King and W. R. Hudson, students of the Wai Tahi boys high school\nAomaru, New Zealand, who are On\nthe Goodwill tour.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Forsyth, who was visaing her son, William, in Montana,\nwas in the city en route to \"her\nSandon home.  ' ,\n\u2022 W. S. Dale and son of Creston\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. C. Wragge entertained\nmembers of the Church Helpers'\nBridge club at her summer place\nat Willow Point when those participating were Mrs. P. G. Morey,\nMrs.' Leslie Craufurd,,, Mrs. John\nCartmel, Mrs. E. G. Smyth, Mrs. H.\nRosling, Mrs. Gordon Hallett and\nMrs. C. W. Appleyard.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Herman\nof Trail and children, Bob' and\nGwen, attended the regatta at Kaslo\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Cora Barrat and Miss Lois\nSheffield, Terrace apartments, have\ntaken up residence in the Victoria\nblock, Baker street.\n\u2022 Mrs. Wallace McPhail and\nchildren; Jackie and Joy, left last\nnight for Allenby to remain until\nthey return to take up residence at\nCorra Linn.\n\u2022 Miss Rosie Kapak, nurse in\ntraining at the Sacred Heart hospital Spokane, is visiting her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Kapak, Vernon\nstreet.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holt of\nBalfour were city visitors Tuesday.\n\u2022 W. R. Fromson of Renata spent\nyesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Higgin-\nbotham of the north shore have as\ntheir guests, Mrs. E. C. Higginbotham\nand daughters, Joan, Merle and Patsy of Calgary. They are also visiting\nMr. and Mrs. L. 0. Walton, Stanley\nstreet.\n\u2022 Miss Nora Trainor, Stanley\nstreet, is at Trail a guest of her uncle\nand aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Donald McKinnon.\n\u2022 Mrs. Evelyn Davis of Van\ncouver is visiting at the home ot her\nparents, Mr.' and Mrs. E. H... H.\nApplewhaite, Willow Point.\n\u2022 Mrs. Low left yesterday for her\nhome at Penticton after a week's\nvisit at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. E. Dobbie, Carbonate street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. Sulnner of\nVancouver, who were visiting their\nson at the Kootenay Belle mine,\nhave returnled to the coast\n\u2022 Mrs. A. W. Rash, Terrace\napartments, has returned from\nGrand Forks where she was a guest\nof her sisters, Mrs. Mills and Mrs.\nBrinkman.\n\u2022 Harry Horton, D. McKay and\nW. McDonald attended'the regatta\nat Kaslo yesterday.\n. \u2022 Mrs. M. Hodge of Butte, Mont.,\nand her grand daughter, Evelyn\nBailey, of Marshalltown, Iowa, are\nguests at the home ot Mr. and Mrs.\nH. J. Wilson, Victoria street\n> Mrs. P. W. Wiebe of Ymir\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\n> Mrs. Myers ot Fauquier il a\ncity visitor.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph DuMont of\nBrldesville are to visit Paul Bourgeois at the Rene mine'after visiting relatives in Crescent Valley.\n\u2022 Mn. F. RosS has left'for her\nhome at: Seattle after in extended\nvisit at the home of her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. George\nH, Wellington at Kaslo, als.o with\nher granddaughter, Mrs, Ernest Ries-\nterer, Fairview, Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. D. St. Denis, Kerr\napartments, attended the' regatta at\nKaslo yesterday.\n> Mrs. J. Sime of Riondel haa\nreturned after a couple of days in\nthe city.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Hoogerwert\nand son, pobby, Nelson \u2022 avenue,\nFairview, have returned from Christina Lake where they were visiting\nat the summer home of Mrs. Hooger-\nwerf s parents, Mr. and Mrs. 0.' 6.\nDunn.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. Kendrick of Fauquier\nis a city visitor.\n\u2022 Major and Mrs. Fred Bailey,\nformer residents of Nelson, now residing in Marshalltown, Iowa, are\nspending a few days in town.\n\u2022 Andy Wilson of Penticton is in.\nthe city for a few days.\n\u2022 Alex Fleming attended the regatta at Kaslo yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Gamble, Carbonate street, have as their guest\ntheir daughter, Mrs, Fred Campbell\nof Calgary.\n\u2022 L. V. Rogers, Kerr apartments,\nwho spent several weeks holidaying\nat Sydney, Vancouver Island, has\nreturned.\n\u2022 Mrs. Harold Lakes,' Mrs. Waldo W. Ferguson and Miss Connie\nSmith are holidaying at Whatshan\nLake.\n\u2022 W. B. Bamford, Vernon street,\nhas as his house guests his neice,\nMrs. E. M Taylor and daughter,\nMiss Ruth Taylor of Montreal.\n\u2022 Rev. and Mrs. Billiard and\ntwo children arrived last night from\nShaunavon Sask.,. to make -. their\nhome in. Nelson, where Mr. HiUiard\nwil take over his pastoral duties\nat St. Paul's United church, replacing Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson.\n\u2022 Miss Daisy Norris has received word from the Associated Board\nof the London College of Music\nthat she passed her Grade V (Higher) harmony with honors.\n\u2022 Mrs. George L. Porteous and\ndaughter, Peggy, who were guests\nof Mrs, E. Ann Ryley, 70S Victoria\nstreet, for a few days, returned to\ntheir home at Queen's Bay.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N. ELC^-THURSDAY MORNING, AUO, 4, 1938\nBlind Girl Asks\nKing lo Allow Her\nDog Into England\nL6j_00N,;Au\u00ab. 3 (AP).' - Hazel\nHurst, 22-year-old blind American,\nappealed, to King George today to\nwaive quarantine restrictions which\nprevent her from taking her Alsatian dog guide into England.   '\u2022\u2022\nShe rejected the -offer ot a one-\neyed man to have his eye transferred to her by surgical means. She\nalso refuse^ the offer of a British\nguide dog.. , ;  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0...\u2022\nrae blind girl telegraphed the\nKing: \"Making my last appeal to\nyour majesty to permit me and my\n'seeing eye' to enter your country.\nMy dogis'my eyes.1 know you can\nhelp me.\" : . ;\nSocial...\nMichel-Natal\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. J.\nSmith and family left for Vancouver where they, will viBit.\nMiss Vicky Androlick of Natal is\nholidaying at the coast.\nMiss Sophie Chala of Natal is\nspending her holidays at Fernie at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs, James\nEckersley.   .\nThe first forest.fire-near Natal\nwas put out quickly last week-end\nwhen it started near Baldy.\nThe Natal. Flannelettes softball\nteam staged a successful dance at\nNatal recently. The receipts went\ntowards the purchase of new soft-\nball sweaters.\nNatal Catholic girls softball team\ndefeated the Natal Married ladies\nby a one-sided score of 38-6 recently. The win was the third in a row\nfor the young ladies.\nSave Time and Labor\nGeneral Electric\nWashers\n$79.50   and up\nNelson Electric Co.\nLADIES'\nClearance SALE\nTHURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY\nThe entire balance ef our beautiful stock of LADIES'\nDRESSES, COATS, SUITS and MILLINERY, all must be\ncleared at drastically reduced prices.\n$5.00 DRESSES $5.00\n50 only brand new SUMMER SUITS and DRESSES in laces,\nlinem, chiffons, etc. Regular values to $14.50\nSixes from 12 to 46\nAUGUST CLEARING AT .  $5.00\n$7.95\nDRESSES\n$7.95\n60 only better afternoon silks, crepei, chiffons, linens, etc.\nThese are all new and top grade merchandise. Regular\nvalues to $17.50\nSixes from 12 to 46.\nAUGUST CLEARING AT $7.95\n$1.49 MILLINERY $1.95\nThe entire balance of our SUMMER MILLINERY including all white and leghorn straws. Regular values $3.95 to\n$6.95.    \"\nAUGUST CLEARING AT $1.49 and $1.95\nRECOMMEND UNITED\nSCHOOL DISTRICT\nGREATER VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, Aug. 3 (CP)-Form-\nation of a united school district to\ncomprise all the area now included\nin the four municipalities of greater Victoria, was recommended in a\nreport to the department of education today by a committee of inspectors. _ '\u25a0-\nDELEGATES SAIL TO\n.   SIDNEY CONFERENCE\nVANCOUV__B, Aug. 3 (CP)-Can.\nadian and British delegations to the\ncommonwealth relations conference\nat Sydney, Australia,' sailed today on\nthe Canadian Australasian liner\nAorangi.\n\"Women didn't get the upper hand\ntill men started shavin'. It just didn't seem right to talk sassy to a\nfull-bearded man that looked like\nMases.\". -   \u25a0 \u2022 ' \u25a0\nSuicide Attempt\nThwarted; Girl 17\nSaved From Ledge\n.i  ,'...,  \"     v...\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (AP).\u2014Emily\nAfkwell,- 17, gave'policemen and\nfiremen some anxious moments\ntoday as she emulated John\nWarde, spectacular New York\nsuicide, and defied attempts to\nrescue her from a ledge 50 feet\nabove the ground.\nClad only in a nightgown, the\ngirl, an inmate of the East Croy-\n' don moral welfare home, climbed\nfrom her room to the ledge and\nthreatened to jump if anyone\n\u2022Went near her. \u2022        \u25a0\n\u2022 Firemen spread, a jumping\nsheet and padded the street with\nmattresses and pillows collected\nfrom nearby houses.\n.Two extension ladders were\nmn UP to the ledge as the girl\nagain threatened to jump. She\nswayed and almost fell.\nBut unlike the yoOng New Yorker who plunged to his death\nfrom a 17-storey ledge, the rescue attempts had a happy climax.\nWhile the girl's attention was distracted from below, watchers\nreached out a window and seized\nher wrists.\nShe was taken to a hospital for\nobservation.\nNew Denver Garden\nCarnival  Realizes\n$300 for Hospital\nNEW DENVER,\u2022 B.C.-The. monster garden carnival held July 27 in\naid of the Slocan Community hospital was a great success, over $300\nbeihg realized. Committees for the\naffair were composed of members\nof every organization in New Denver. By kind permission of Dr, and\nMrs. A. Francis, the carnival was\nheld on their lawns which were\ndecorated with festoon of colored\nlights. The midway proved attractive to the many visitors and lawn\nbowling, tennis, miniature golf, or\npitch and put golf for which prizes\nwere provided, were efljoyed. The\nNew Denver band was in attendance during the tea hour and ice\ncream ahd soft drinks were available.\nThe feature of the afternoon and\nevening was an exhibition of fancy\nand acrobatic dancing by Miss\nDonna Cobley of Winnipeg.\nSupper was served to over 200\npeople. Final event of the day was\na jitney dance for which part of\nthe lawn was roped off.\n\u2022 PAGE   FIVI\nClearance of\nWash Fabrics\nCrisp, smart Cottons in the better qualities. Striped\nSuede Taffetas, just the thing for sport frocks and\nshirt blouses. Fancy flowered voiles. Smart patterns\nin muslins and spotted Swiss organdies. Large\nfloral effects so suitable for formal frocks and crease\nresisting materials in Maize, Blue and Fawn in conventional designs. 36 inches wide. REGULAR TO 85c, now\n49c Per Yd.\nFINAL CLEARANCE\nOF  MILLINERY\nSmart dark and light straws,\nfelts\u2014all this season's models.\nYou'll need an extra hat at this\nlow price. OA_\nYour choice, each .... VWv\nNEW SILK HOSE\nFull fashioned silk hosiery with\nthe new openwork toe for your\nsporty shoes. Excellent summer shades. Phantom f\nfashioned. Pair ...\nPHONE\n200\nF^-l\nM^\nQimsR\n596\nBAKER ST.\nCRESTON Social...\n12 ONLY BLOUSES.\nRegular to $4.95\nClearing at \t\n$.J.OO\nCRESTON, B.C:-Mr. and Mrs. H.\nCrosby have returned from Spokane,\nwhere they attended the marriage\not their daughter. Miss Marjorie, to\nMr. Bowman of Vancouver.\nCol. and Mrs. Mallantlaine left\nSunday on * visit at Vancouver and\nVictoria. Tiie colonel is representing\nthe East Kootenay zone-at the B.C.\nconvention of the Canadian Legion.\nIt. J. Forbes, manager of the\nBank of Commerce, is on vacation,\nwhich will be spent in the district\nHe visited Cranbrook Monday.\nMisses Gwen and Yvonne Putnam\nhave left for Nanaimo, where, they\nwill visit their sister, Miss Madeline\nPutnam.\nC. H. Messinger visited Bonners\nFerry, Ida., Friday.    ....\u2022'\nDr. and Mrs. J. V. Murray and\nthe Misses Mary and Babe Watson\nreturned Monday from Vancouver\nand coast poihts.        '-'   ':\nW. J. Evans is Visiting \u00abt Three\nHills and other points in central\nAlberta.\nMr. and Mrs. Anscomb.of Victoria,\nwere Creston visitors Saturday. The\nlatter is a former capital, city mayor\nand prominent in Conservative circles. They spent the weekend at\nCranbrook.\nMrs. Allan of Vancouver, accompanied by her daughter, Miss\nAllan, are visiting the former's son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr, and Mrs,\nC.W. Allan.\nMiss Ina Fisher of Nelson is a\nguest of Mrs. C. Cotterill..-    .\nMiss Betty Kemp has returned to\nWinnipeg, after visiting her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Kemp.\nMiss Ruth Cartwright is home\nfrom Kimberley.\nMrs. M. McLeod and children of\nVancouver are guesta of Mr, and\nMrs. __. W. Klingensmith.\n. Col. and Mrs. Fred Lister have\nreturned from visiting their daughter,-Mrs. L. Anderson at Chatcolet,\nIdaho; Mrs. B. B. Stallwood of Nelson, made the trip with them.\nMiss Carol Helme of Vancouver\nis, visiting her brothers, Harry and\nJim Helme, at Camp Lister.\nMrs. Stapleton is visiting in Vancouver.\nGeraldine Cobb of Mission City is\nvisiting her grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. W. Liphardt\nRossland Social..\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B.C., Aug. S-Rev.\nand Mrs: W. S. Beames and three\nchildren of Penticton are guests of\nMrs. Beames' parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nT. H. Brown, Kootenay avenue.\nThe Sunday school of Sacred\nHeart church lield its annual picnic\nMonday afternoon at the ball park.\nRaces, games and tugs-of-war were\nmuch enjoyed by the youngsters\nand to' c\u00abp it the girls defeated the\nboys at softball. Those in charge of\nthe picnic were Miss Eda Vetere,\nKathleen Dorey, Rt. Rev. Msgr A.\nK. Maclntyre, V.G., Ralph Redding\nand Bruce MacAaulay. The winners\nin the various events were:\nGirls 1 and under\u2014Betty Jean\nVetere, Dorothy Fox, Betty. Laface.\nBoys 10 and under\u2014John Dugan,\nJack French, Robert Mcintosh.\nGirls 12 and under-r-Loulse Ve-\nter*, Helen Schley, Mary Vetere.\nBoys 12 and under\u2014Wilfred Dorey, Richard Marcozzi, .Robert Mcintosh. ._.,''\nGirls 14 and under\u2014Helen Schley,\nLbuise Vetere. Mary Vetere.\nBoys 14 and under-^Wilfrid Dorey, Robert Mcintosh, Carol Schley.\nGirls' relay-Louise Vetere, Lorraine Santori, Mary Vetere and\nHelen Schley. \u201e\u201e___.\nBoys' relay\u2014Bruce Ham, Wilfrid\nDorey, Walter Chaley and Carol\n[Opp. Capitol Theatre.\nI 569 WARD STREET.\nPHONE 970\nNELSON, B. C.\nGrenfell's Cafe\nDON'T   FORGET\nIt's All Home Cooking\nWhite Help Only\nSchley. .   i\nTug-of-war, boys 12 and under-\nBruce Ham, Jack French, John Dugan, Billy Sabacick, Raymond Kne-\nver, Lundy Hamilton, Stephen\nJuba, Clement Cameron and Kenneth Rouso.\nTug-of-war, boys 10 and undei^-\ni_ouis Corrado, Robert Mcintosh,\nJerry Monahan, Pat Currie, Alfred\nZannussi, Richard Marcuzzi, Tom\nHam and Bernard Fourt.\nMiss Theresa Cran, who is spending the summer at Christina Lake,\nspent Monday in the city.\nMiss Mildred Purcello, who is employed in Spokane, is spending\nthree weeks at the home of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Purcello.\nBruce Vemire and1 Herman Thorsteinson spent Monday evening in\nNelson.\nFraser Mitchell has returned from\na fortnight's holiday at Salmon Arm,\nwhere Mrs. Mitchell is spending the\nsummer with her'parents, Mr. and\nMrs. R. N. Jeffers.\n.. Mr. and Mrs. Thurlow Fraser and\nson'Derrick have returned from a\nholiday at LOon Lake, Wash.\nMr. and Mrs. S. E. Mills and family spent the week-end at Christina\nLake. \".', \u2022. ,,, \u25a0 \u25a0\nMrs. Thomas Wood is attending\nthe annual convention of the Women's Auxiliary to the Canadian Le-\n8ion, B.E.S.L , in Vancouver. After\n_e convention, Mrs. Wood will holiday with her mother at Bowen\nisland.\nMrs. E. Banford of Vancouver is\nvisiting her son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. B. P. Sutherland.\nMiss Edna Johnson is holidaying\nin Spokane en route to Salt Lake\nCity.   .... i\nFreeman & Leew Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115\n\"THE HOUSE OF FURNITURE STYLES\"\nEAGLE BLOCK\nNELSON, B. C.\nCLEARANCE\nBETTER ODD CHAIRS\nDRASTICALLY REDUCED TO CLEAR\n\/T\u20143TY.1\n'   1_\nURGE WING CHAIR\nUpholstered in floral tapestry,\nRegular $59.50 \u2014 Sale\n39-SO\nOccasional\nChair\nSolid Walnut Frame\nRegular $24.50\n$\n|9.50\nChesterfield  Chair\nRust Rayon Cover, Reversible Cushion. Reg $25.00\nSALE\n$ 10-50\n19\nTUB CHAIR\nRust Crushed Mohair.\nRegular $37.50, SALE \u2014\n$29\n.50\nTi^^T^TS!**^\nMODERN   CHAIR\nSpring Cushion. Lovely\nCover. Reg. $32.50 SALE\n$\n2450\nMOHAIR CHAIR\nSand Crushed Mohair.\nSolid Walnut Frame. Reg.\n$26.50\n>I9-S0\nODD CHAIR\nVelvet Cover.\nRegular $41.50\n$29'*\u00b0\nRoll Arm Chair\nFloral Tapestry\nRegular  $22.00\n$1*50\nWALNUT\nCHIFFONIER\n4-Draw-r,  with  Waterfall\nEdge. Reg<d*r $39.50\n$29\n.so\n3 Pes. Mohair Chesterfield SUITE\nA Snap In A Beautiful Suite, Tailored In The New\nStriped Mohair \u2014 Reversible Cushions.\nREGULAR\n$149.50\n$119\n50\nODD DRESSER\nA High Grade Dresser With\nCircle Mirror, Matched\nFront. Regular $60.00\nI\n$39.50    f\n mmmm.\nPAQE SIX \u2014\nJtoott laity Km*\nEstablished April 22.' 1002 -\nBritish Columbia's Host Interesting Newspaper\nPublished  every  morning  except\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\n266   Bakei   Street.   Nelson\nSunday  by\n j uj-hm\nBritish   Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\n'.\nMemben ol tba Audit Bureau ot circulations and\nTht Canadian Press Leased Wire News Service.\nTHURSDAY, AUG. 4, 1938\nASLAP INTHEFACEFORTHESEIZERS\nOF AUSTRIA\nMost unusual was the action of the British government in nator\/lizing and in a few days honoring with a\nknighthood tihe man who was Austrian minister in London when Hitler seized Austria. It was a slap in the face\nthat the Nazis must have resented.\nWhen Austria was absorbed by Genhany the Austrian\nminister in London was Baron George Franckenstein.\nHe had served as an attache of the Austro-Hungarian\nminister in London before the World War. In 1920 he was\nappointed the ambassador in England for Austria. His\nfather before him had been minister for, the old dual monarch. He has had long and deep-rooted connection with\nGreat Britain.\nFollowing the annexation of Austria he was recalled\nby the Nazi government. However, he had no sympathy\nwith Hitler. He regretted the disappearance of his country. He decided that he did not want to live iij an Austria\ncontrolled by Germany. He elected to remain in London\nand applied for naturalization as a British subject. The\nusual formalities were waived by Sir Samuel Hoare, home\nminister, on the grounds that the circumstances were sufficiently widely known. He became a British subject and\ntwo days later he was knighted by King George.\nThe honor came to him as recognition of the British\ngovernment's high regard for him personally. It was also\ninterpreted as a hint to Hitler, as to what Britain thought\nof the annexation of Austria. It is perhaps significant that\non the very day he was knighted, The London Times, which\nis supposed to represent the official yiew, criticized the\nNazis for honoring the murderers of Chancellor Dollfuss\nand urged mercy for the former Chancellor Schuschnigg\nheld by the Nazis.\nEach day is the scholar of yesterday.\u2014Publius Syrus.\nORGANIZING MODERN AIR TRAFFIC\n\u2022      IN EUROPE\nNineteen years ago, in the summer of 1919, and as a\nresult largely of British enterprise, experts representing\npioneer air companies came together at the Hague, in\norder to consider the formation of an international organization, to promote cooperation between the air-lines of\nEurope.\nIt was a British pioneer, the late Sir Sefton Brancker,\nwho presided over that first meeting; and as a result, the\nInternational Air Traffic association was formed\u2014an asso-\nciatiori; to which the air travelling public owe a very considerable debt of gratitude, seeing that its unremitting\nwork has smoothed the way for regular international air\ntravel', and has. solved innumerable problems in connection\n, with the making of air journeys from one part of Europe\nto another.\nThe other day, flying from all parts of the continent,\nmembers of the I.A.T.A. assembled at Budapest for an\nannual conference at which many traffic problems were\npassed under review.\nThe one or two pioneer organizations which were instrumental in forming the association jn 1919 have grown\nin numbers until there are now nearly 30 air-line companies\nwho are members of the association; while the mileage\nof Europe's airways has increased from a few hundred\nmiles in 1919 to over 60,000 miles in 1938.\nToday the association is actively at work in many important directions, it being the general aim to simplify in\nevery way possible the ever-increasing flow of traffic\nover the network of European air-lines.\nfonjbw\u00b1\nfijridqsL\nShepard Barclay\nTel |s How to Bid\nand Play\n\u25a0AVE THE LONG THUMPS\nWHEN YOU have only (our\ntrumps In the eloeed hand opposite three in dummy, lt Is highly\ndangerous usually to ruff with the\nfour-card length so you ctn no\nlonger protect yourself against si\nfour-trump bunch ln the hand of\na defender. Sometimes you have\nno option ln the matter, but frequently you can find a way to save\nthe long trumps.\ntAjet\nKQ7\n\u2666 KJ2\n. +754\n\u2666 K865\n982\n\u2666 853\n+ KQJ9\nN.\ns\n\u2666 Q102\n\u00a50864\n\u2666 10 7\n\u2666 A 10 6 3\n_>78\n\u00bbAJ_05\n\u2666 AQ864\n+ 82  '\n(Dealer: South. -Oast-West vulnerable.)\nNorth and South reached a. contract of 1-Hearta on this deal and\nWest started the defense with the\nlead ot the club K. When the 6\nwu played by Bast, West continued the suit for two more rounds.\nEtyuth ruffed the third with the\nheart <\u2022   H* then led out three\ntrumps and wu disappointed to\nAnd East held one more. The diamonds were next tried and on the\nthird round East ruffed. He cashed\nhis club A and switched to a spade.\nWeat'a K forced the A _.nd declarer\nlost the next two tricks to Bast.\nInstead of rufflng the third round\nof clubs, South should have tossed\none of his spades. With the set up\ndiamond suit, he could then have\nafforded to take four rounds of\ntrumps and tn that way only the\nthree club tricks would have been\nlost,*\n\u2022  \u2022  \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\n+ 10842\n\u00bb 97 3\n\u2666 KQ8\n+ A76\n\u2666 I. .1705\n8\n\u2666 4\n+ K10 4 8\n3f   ..\n\u2666 A\u00bb\nVXQ104\n\u2666 752\n+ 882\n\u2666 Q\nWASS\n\u2666 AJ108I8\n\u2666 QJ\u00bb\n(Dealer: Eaat. Neither aide vulnerable.)\nWhat is the but play for South'!\n8-No Trump contract, West having\nbid spades and East licartn and the\nheart jack being lea?.\n_____\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 4, 1988\nIn Nelson\nBypaths\nWhile bint songs have been almost stilled* at the time I am writing this, perhaps by the time it Is\nin print the feathered songsters will\nbe caroling again, as freedom from\nnesUng duUes confers leisure. At\nany rate, some notes on the calls\nor.songs of some of the smaller\nbirds may be of interest, and we'll\nnominate two or three ot our commonest sparrows for attention.\nASSERTION WEAVER FINCHES\nBefore coming to the sparrows,\nthe weaver finches, the most obtrusive of our small birds, can be\nconsidered. They, alight in flocks\non pavement and sidewalk, buzz into the trees, and as fall arrives they\nwill be holding assemblies that will\ncause the trees to be almost vocal.\nThe male weaver finch is a brown,\nsparrow-like bird, with a gray un-\nderbody, a broad gray band from\nback to front of his head, somewhat\nlike the tonsure of a Russian monk,\nand a big black jabot on neck and\nbreast The female is much like the\nmale except for the jabot, but is\nslighter.\nI forgot to say that the weaver\nfinch is better known'as the English or house sparrow, but the new\nclassification removes it from the\nsparrows, and puts it among the\nweaver birds. The lodse messy nest\not grass and feathers it throws together in a nest-box or any wooden\nor metal cavity gives no Hint of the\nwonderful globular structure it can\nproduce when driven to building in\nthe trees. However, this discussion\nis supposed to have to do with vocal\ncords, and it is only necessary to\nmention here the shrill, even strident, chirp of the garrulous house\nsparrow, familiar to everyone, even\nthe least observant. Trace down\nIn a tree or bush the loud notes of\na bird conversation, and every time\nyou will arrive at this street gamin. I can't say I have ever heard a\nhouse sparrow sing, though Seton\nThompson tells ot one that 1 arned\na canary's song,\nComing to the real sparrows, we\nhave three common kinds in Nelson, two of which are very easily\nIdentified by their songs.\nOne of these is the chipping sparrow, the dainty little fellow with\nthe top of its head colored a brick-\nred, the patch being roughly diamond-shaped. It is chiefly met with\nin the grass, and on the railroad\ntrack I nave succeeded in passing\none as it intently foraged for seeds\nin the grass tunnels at the ends of\nthe ties. But when it sings It Is\nnormally in a tree, though not invariably. You will know its call by\nthe faint little, \"Chip,\" Chip,\" always on the saihe note, and its\nsong by the very high trill, also\naU on one note. In fact, to some\nthe trill .ounds like the shrill song\nof some Insect But once you have\nidentified song and singer, you will\nalways know when a chipping sparrow is singlnj; in the tree you pass.\nThe trill will stop after perhaps 10\nto 15 or more syllables, and perhaps be repeated ln a minute or\ntwo. At intervals our chlplng sparrow will remember to give its frill,\nbut there is nothing resembling the\nsustained singing of the robin, catbird, or red-eyed vireo.\nBIRD THAT\nCROON8 \"SQUEE\"\nThe other little singing sparrow\nwith a simple, easily identified song\nis the savannah sparrow, the tiny\nbird with the striped breast, that\nfeeds on the thistle seeds. It is hard\nto syllabize its song, but at a little\ndistance is rounds like \"Squee,\" an\nunmelodious sqawk. One who follows birds around enough will sooner or later \":rA one just at his elbow willing to sing for him, and\none morning this summer a savannah sparrow crooned for me at a\ndistance of two or three feet. Seated\non a branch, it slightly opened its\nbill, and'breathed-out softly, and\nthe \"Squee\" at close quarters was\na softly uttered 'Sreee,\" or \"Threee\".\nIts ordinary call is a short chirp,\nsomewhat like the chipping sparrow's call, but not exactly a \"Chip.'\nThen we have our melodious\nsinger of the bush, the song sparrow. Our particular sub-species ap-\nEears to be the rusty song sparrow.\niark stripes on the song sparrow's\nbreast come together in a knot or\ndark spot, From behind, the bird\nhas a reddish or rusty over-wash.\nI have heard it in February here,\nand so has Mrs. H. E. Thain, and it\nis just about our earliest singer of\nthe year.\nSONG SPARROW NR8ATILE\nThe song of the Bong sparrow\nstarts off with a double bar, and\nTaverner notes that it has been rendered, \"Pres-Pres-by-teri-eri-erian,\"\nbut that would apply perhaps to\nthe average version. However, this\nsweet song of the bushes is very\nvariable. Many years ago a song\nsparrow alighted on a twig and\nsang for me a song very like '.he\nPresbyterian version mentioned,\ngiving me a first identification.\nBut one day I found a bird that\nlooked like a song sparrow including in his song a \"fie\". For years\nI tried to identify the birds giving\nthese \"tze\" versions\u2014there was a\nwide.variety of them\u2014and finally\na couple of years ago I was able to\nfind a bird that gave me not only\nthe Presbyterian version, but half\na dozen other versions, too, which\nintroduced the \"tze\" at different\nstages of the song, including the\nfinal note. It was thus clear at last\nthat all these songs were variations\nfrom one song, put out b- one bird.\nHEAR YELLOW\nWARBLER\nWhile with the little birds. I might\nmention the yellow warbler, one\nof the smallest of them all, and one\nof the most widely distributed, according to my notion. This little yellow bird, which you will hear endlessly in spring and early summer,\nbut will very seldom see closely\nenough to observe its yellow color\nand identify it by appearance, has\na pleasing little song of several\nphrases, which it can utter several\ntimes in a minute. In the spring the\nsong is more elaborate than it is\nin the dog days, and I cannot closely describe it with the alphabet,\nbut anyone reading this column\nwill be able to identify the song\nfrom its concluding phrase, \"Swlss-\niss-iss,\" with the last syllables\ncrowding each other, This phrase\ncomprises about a sixth of the song.\nI was years making my identification of the yellow warbler. Hundreds of times I peered into some\ntree, trying to see the singer, who\ninvariably Kept screened. It was not\ntill 1937 that I knew the singer was\na yellow bird. From that point, progress was rapid.\nBecause of the difficulty I have\nhad in identifying some or our commonest birds. I nave wished that\nsome qualified ornithologist would\nmake gramophone records giving\nthe songs and calls of all our Canadian feathered friends. Then every\ntree would talk to us ln recognizable language as we walked bv.\nTIIE STROLLER\nfiamMina.\ntsosyotv\nDemocracy Carries\nIts Critics With It\nIn two adjoining compartments\non the special train carrying President Roosevelt on his recent crosscountry tours have rattled the typewriters of four journalists who represent great newspapers opposed\nthe Roosevelt administration. ,\nBut you can't quite imagine critics\nof Stalin, hitler or Mussolini riding\non the same-train with them and\ntelegraphing .adverse dispatches\ndaily, eh?\nSunspots\nEveryone will agree, says an\neditorial, there are too many nations in Europe., Not everyone-*\nthe munitions manufacturers, for\n.   instance.\nThe recent let-up ih air bomh-\nings in Spain is easily understood.\nIt's no fun blowing up ruins with\nno one in them.\nScientists say butterflies' legs\nare 1600 times more sensitive\nthan human underpinning. We'U\nhave to take their word for it,\nsince no one has ever seen a\nbutterfly use his.\nFear of Roosevelt\nCreates Hate\nFinally, we weary of the Innum .\nerable and ubiquitous minor Roose-\nvelts, all sharing the family self-\nconfidence and all wearing the family smile with a fixedness suggesting that the laugh is on us. There\nIs no unanimity as to which of the\ngroup is most annoying, but, in a\nfair election, I think tne popular\nchoice would be James We. After\nall, Father Roosevelt was born rich,\nwhereas James has acquired wealth\nand position somewhat vicariously.\nUnder the circumstances, instruction from James proves more provoking and less humorous than his\nmother's counsel on coal-mining and\nbringing up children. Both adjectives apply to James\" unconscious\ncandor. The country Is still debating\nwhether he says \"we\" and \"our\nroyally, or editorially, or only a$\ndid the famous gentleman with a\ntapeworm. \"Senator Pepper,\" quoth\nJames, using his influence for that\ndistinguished Floridian, \"Senator\nPepper has been loyal to the Administration. .. . and lt Is our sincere hope he will be returned'to\nthe Senate.\"\u2014Charming Pollock In\nAmerican Mercury.\ntt Questions tl\nANSWERS\nThii column ot questions and\nanswers is open to any reader of\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will the name of the person\nasking tha question be published\nS. E.. Nelson\u2014My dog often eats\ngrass. Is this because he is not\ngetting the right type of food?\nGreen grass has been called the\ndog's medicine chest and he should\nhave constant access to IL\nG. A. M-, Slocan\u2014What'can be done\nto keep a raincoat from getting\nstiff?   .\nWhen It's not ln use a raincoat\nshould be frequently sponged with\nwater to keep It In good condition.\nA.  B.   C,   Cranbrook\u2014Please  tell\nme what is meant by free trade?\nFreedom of trade is a term used\nto describe tbe removal,of all restrictions on commerce that favov\none form at the expense of another. It involves In particular,\nequal treatment of home and foreign products. Und - this system no\npreference li shown to either class\nand consumers can choose the most\nsuitable article without having to\npay-a penalty for their selection.\nThis policy is derived from the\nteaching of Adam Smith.ln Wealth\nof Nations.\nM. C. K. Nelson\u2014How Is wood\ntreated to make it bend and what\nIs the best kind of wood to use?\nHickory, ash and oak are the\nmost reliable woods to be used for\nbending purposes. They are treated\nby steam under pressure.\nW. st, Rossland\u2014Can you tell me\nwho Johnny Appleseed was and\nwhat he did?\nJohnny Appleseed Is discussed in\na long poem by Vachel Lindsay.\nThla Interesting character was\nJohn Chapman. He crossed the Appalachians, carrying with him\nseeds which he planted in the hope\nthat they would someday cause\ntrees to grow and bear fruit in\ntheir season. Johnny Appleseed\nwas born In New England in 1775.\nIn an editorial he is described as\n\"a sort of secular mendicant friar.\"\nHe lived to see his trees bearing\nfruit over a territory of 100,000\nacres.\nL. A., Nelson\u2014How long will fruits\ncannc:'. In glass jars keep?\nIf the cans are properly sealed,\nthe contents will keep indefinitely,\nthough after two or three years\nLooking Backward..>\n.   TEN YEARS AQO\nAugust 4, 1928.\nPeter Verigin, leader ot the Christian Community ol Universal\nBrotherhood, was severely shocked\nand shaken up when-his car went\nover the bank and rolled over 18\ntimes just west of Taghum.\u2014A two-\nstory store and office building has\nbeen started for W. K. Esling, M_P.,\nACTIVE IN\u25a0_.,:. ,'.-:\u2022\nKOOTENAY LIFE\nRoy W. Hunter, a leader in\nrailroad circles, prominent as a\nmember of the Nelson chamber\nof mines, takes strong interest\nin federal and provincial politics.\nthe product is apt to become soft\nor mushy and there is a loss of\nflavor.\nB. R., Nelson\u2014Is it true that one\nshould  not  indulge  in  mental\nwork directly after eating?\nIt Is considered more or less injurious to indulge la mental work\ndirectly after eating a meal because of the fact that the blood is\ntaken away from abdominal organs\nto, the brain and this arrests the\nprocess of digestion.\nBIRMINGHAM, Eng. (CP)-\"Kill-\ned' at the Battle of Crecy (in the\npageant here), two men being carried off the field ln a cart sat up and\njumped when the horse bolted. Nobody was hurt.\nat the corner of Bay avenue and\nSpokane street in Trail.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Ernest Harris ol Calgary are\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. W, A. Thurman on the north shore.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. R. L. McBride have as their\nguests Mrs. George E. McBride and\nMiss Helen McBride ot Edmonton.\nTWENTY YEARS AQO\nAugusts, 1918.     ''\nMrs. A. D. McLeod returned to\nRosslaqd after visiting friends at\nthe, coast for a month.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. H. Schorlemner and son left\nRossland for Seattle.\u2014Fire, thought\nto have started from a stove tilled\nwith rubbish, destroyed a house belonging to Miss Blanche McAstocker\non Robson street.\u2014Owing to the\ncity's financial condition and decrease ln revenue, it was decided\nto dispense with one policeman,\nleaving Chief Long and Sergeant\nAlex Stewart to patrol the city, '\nTHIRTY YEARS AQO\nAugust 4,1908.\nF. J. Deane left 'for Victoria. \u2014\nFred G. Perry ol the Ashdown Hard-\n\u2022IITTTltmTITItltini\n\"Build BC Payyills\"\nBETTER\nBONES\nAND\nTEETH\nIrradiated to build sounder\nbones and teeth and packed\nunder vacuum seal to give all\na better milk. 'Pacific is\nknown as a first quality,\npure, rich, fresh milk with the\nnatural flavor ... the very\nthing for growing children.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, ot Course\nUlltlllllllllllltllll)\nware company office staff left for\nChicago to be married.\u2014Adolph\nLaPointe, recently connected with\nhotels In Kamloops, took over Mrs.\nClark's Interest in the Queens hotel.\n\u2014Mrs. L. V. Rpberta returned from\nSJpokane.\u2014Four hundred 10-pound\nboxes of cherries off 25 acres ot\ntrees Is the record harvest for this\nyear from the Durban ranch, two\nmiles south ot Nelson.\u2014J. C. Cam-,\nerson, chief engineer of the steamer\nKuskanook, lelt for Vancouver on\nhis vacation. \u25a0\". , .\nron\nMINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable (or\nall mining and other\ncamp buildings. Thay\nai\u00ab Strong, waterproof,\nlight and very easy to\nhandle.\nDistrict Distributors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nHove You a\nBICYCLE\nNotlnUtt\nWhy Not Turn It\nInto Cash?\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser \u25a0\nTwo (2) lines 8 times 80c net\nTwo (2) line* one e 20c net\nNelson Daily News\nRHONE 144\nFOR A REAL REST AND VACATION \u2014 STOP AT THI\nKOOTENAY COTTAGES\n\u2022    FOUR MILES FROM THE FERRY AT CRAY CREEK\n\u2022 Every cottage a small\ndream home fully equipped\nfor your every comfort.\n\u2022 A fine boat for fishing\nor boating Is included in the\nprice of your cabin.\nt One of the finest tennis courts in the Interior Is\nat your disposal.\n\u2022 You may cook in your\nown cosy kitchen or dine at\nthe adjoining lodge, whatever it may be your pleasure\nto do.\nRATES FROM $5.00 PER DAY or $25.00 PER WEEK\nWRITE FOR FULL INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONS\nTHE IDEAL HOLIDAY RESORT\nTOURISTS\nBALFOUR\nSERVICE\nAuto and Tourists Service\nSHELL GAS and OIL\nIce cream, grocery, soft\ndrinks, confectionery\nBUNGALOW\nAUTO CAMP\nAT FRASER'S LANDING\nMealt \u2014 Lunches\nClean rooms, cosy cabins,\nArrow Lakes Hotel\ni    EDGEWOOD, B. C.\nE. NIEDERMAN, Proprietor\nComfortable Rooms\u2014Good Meals\nLogical stopping place on the\nroad to Vernon\nGRAY CREEK\nAUTO CAMP\nLocated at th* Kootenay\nLake Ferry Landing,\nGray Creek,\nA delightful place for a\nrestful vacation.\nCABINS \u2014 MEALS\nRunning water, store,\nmilk, fruits, vegetables.\nMake your reservations today, for a truly enjoyable\nvacation at a moderate cost.\nWhile You're\nAWAY\nhave the\nJfotam\nlattg Sta*\nDelivered to your\ncamp or cottage.\nHERE'S\nYOUR VACATION\nSPOT.\nBALFOUR BOAT\nLIVERY\nFRANK SEAL\nYou canndt catch fish sitting on the beach, get a\nboat and use it. Lots of good\ntrout and several salmon\ncaught last Sunday.\nBALFOUR, B. C.\nVACATION IN THE KOOTENAYS\nWILLOW-POINT\n-STORE-\nICE CREAM\nICE COLD POP\nComplete Stock of\nGroceries, Tobaccos and\nConfectionery\nFREE AIR\nGAS and OIL\nLocated at Willow Point\nWharf \u2014 Open days and\nevenings. .   , ..\nThe Greyhound Cafe\nand Soda Fountain\nFor   really   good\nmeals you'll enfoy\nTravelers . . .\nStop and see us on your,\nnext trip.\nCRESTON, B. C.\nVISIT ANY ONE OF THESE KOOTENAY\nRESORTS AND YOU'LLNEVER FORGET\nTHIS SUMMER'S VACATION\nKOKANEE\n-LODGE-\nA mile and a half from the\nNelson Ferry\nHotel \u2014 Cabins \u2014 Meals\nFISHING - HUNTING\n, BATHING in Season\nDELIGHTFUL\nVacation\n2 Spend Your Holidays and -\nS        Wcek-End. at the \u2022     s\n|     OUTLET HOTEL     i\n= Procter 5\nGood meals, friendly service. Excellent   fishing,    boating,    hiking\nswimming  Furnished cabins. Grocery itore ln connection.\nW A. ward: Prop.\nW^\nw\n<_*    'S\nf j,\n4\n\/^__* \"\"\"\n__________?_\u25a0\nVt\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'y:;  {_$$\n1 ^^\nBALFOUR\nBEACH INN\nes\nFine Safe Beach      Boating      Fishing\nAfternoon Teas \u2014 Light Lunches\nBalfour B. C.\n20 miles from Nelson\nJess Sandon, Mgr.\n\u25a0\u00bb^l__ww\u00abpiw-w\u00bb.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ. AUG. 4. 1938\nOld Goalie In Heavy Training\nIfgggjHHiSjtJMti^^\nAlfred Dupuls, former goal tender of the Trail Smoke Eaters of\nhockey fame, conditioning at Hosmer.\n28 HITS AS PIRATES TAKE BOSTON\nBEES,.-. AND 5-3, TO BOOST LEAD\nRapping out a total of 28 hits, the\nPittsburgh Pirates overcame both\nthe Boston Bees and 95-degree heat\nIn two contests yesterday, 9-4 and\n5-3, to widen their National league\nlead to,.',_ games.\nThough the Bees couldn't get to\nCy Blanton with any success in the\nopener, the heat finally did, and the\nPirates' ace hurler left the box at\nthe end of the seventh while leading 7-4. However, he received credit\nfor the victory and became the first\nPirate hurler to win eight games in\na row, a figure neither Bob Klinger\nnor Mace Brown could reach, al-1\nthough each won seven straight\nearlier this year;\n27th HOMER FOR\nGOODMAN\nA three-run ten-inning rally that\nincluded Goodman's 27th homer of\nthe season with one on base, gave\nthe Cincinnati Reds a 6-3 victory\nover the Phillies.\nThe Gianti broke out their home\nrun bats today and walloped the\nChicago Cubi 8-3 In a 12-liit attack featured by four round-trip\nclouts.\nA three-run rally in the 11th inning, featured by Rookie Joe Gordon's 14th homer of the year, gave\nPutting\n0. G. GaUaher is taking this\none carefully at the Nelson golf\nlinks.\nthe New York Yankees a 10-7 victory over the Tigers in a free-hitting American league game. Red\nRuffing also hit a homer lor the\nYanks.\nINDIANS AND\nBOSTON SPLIT\nThe Cleveland Indians split a\ndouble header with Boston to stand\ntwo games behind the first place\nNew York Yankees. Jack Wilson\ntamed the tribe to win the first for\nBoston, 4-3. Earl Whitehill and Bob\nFeller pitched the Indians to victory in the second, 8-8.'\nThe Philadelphia Athletics blasted\nChicago White Sox pitchers for a\ntotal of 33 hits to win both ends of\na doubleheader, 14-2, and 13-5. Bob\nJohnson made his 19th and 20th\nhome runs of the season in the first\ngame.\nThe St Louis Browns evened their\ncurrent series with the Washington\nSenators, 8-3. Harlond Clift hit his\n15th homer of the season in the\nseventh;\nScoring a run in the tenth inning\nthe St. Louis Cardinals whipped\nthe Brooklyn Dodgers 3-2 in a nightcap and halted a Dodger winning\nstreak of tour straight. A crowd of\n36,129 was in the stands.\nHANSON MAY\nBE MISSING\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 3 (CP)-Fritzy\nHanson's fleeting form may be missing from western Canada gridirons\nthis fall. The colorful running back\nof Winnipeg Blue Bombers injured\nan ankle in a spring exhibition\ngame and the member is responding very slowly to treatment.\nBombers, who lost out to Toronto\nArgos in the Dominion final last\nyear, pranced through workouts on\nTuesday night. Hanson left the field\nwith his injured left ankle tired and\nsore,\nFive Players of\nIndians' Team at\nCoast Going Home\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 3 (CP)-Five\nstar players will be missing from the\nline-up of the North Shore Indians\nlacrosse team tomorrow night when\nthey take the floor against the Canadian champions, New Westminster\nSalmonbellies, in an inter-city box\nlacrosse league match.\nRussell (Beef) Smith, Fete Martin, Jack Squires and Chubby Smith\nleft here by automobile last night\nfor their Ontario homes. Angus\n(Buckshot) Thomas left by train\ntonight for his home on the Caug-\nhawaga reservation, Montreal,\nThe players were granted permission to go home at a special meeting of the cellar-dwelling Indian\nclub, when it was decided the team\nhad no chance of winning a playoff berth in the league.\nBIG LEAGUE BASEBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL\nFirst game:\nPittsburgh   9 18  1\nBoston     4 10  3\nBlanton, Brown and Todd, Berres;\nTurner, Hutchinson and Lopez, Riddle.\nSecond game;\nPittsburgh   5 10  1\nBoston     3   8  1\nBauers, Bowman and Berres; Reis,\nErickson, Turner and Mueller.\nCincinnati      6 10   1\nPhiladelphia      3 12  2\n! Grissom, Cascarella, Moore and\nHershberger; Passeau, Johnson and\nV. Davis.\nChicago     3 11   0\nNew York     8 12   1\nLee and Hartnett, Grabark; Gumbert,  Coffman and Mancuso.\nAMERICAN\nNew York  .:  10 17   2\nDetroit    7 15   1\nRuffing and Dickey; Auker, Benton, Eisenstat, Murphy and York,\nFirst game;\nBoston    4  9   2\nCleveland     3   8   2\nWilson, Ostermueller and Peacock, Desautels; Harder and Pytlak.\nSecond game;\nBoston     6 11   3\nCleveland     8 13   0\nHarris, Midkiff, Rogers, Heving,\nBagby and Desautels; Whitehill,\nFetlej. and Hemsley.\nFirst game:\nPhiladelphia   14 18  0\nChicago     2 10  1\nThomu, Smith apd T. Hayes;\nWhitehead. Boyles, Russell and\nSewell, Schlueter.\nSecond game:\nPhiladelphia     13 16 0\nChicago .            5 12   1\nCaster and Brucker; Rigney, Gab-\nler and Rensa.\nWashington       3  6  2\nSt Louis     5 11  0\nWeaver, Deshong and Giuliani;\nNewsom and Heath.\nSt. Louis      3    8   1\nBrooklyn          2   10   3\nMcGee, Weiland and Owen; Tamulis, Posedel and Shea, Campbell.\nSPORTING NEWS\nAustralian Stars\nat Montreal to\nTake on Japanese\nMONTREAL, Aug. 3 (CP)-Aust-\nralia's Davis cup challengers came\nto Montreal today to tune up for\ntheir North American zone final\nround with Japan, conquerors of the\nCanadian team here last week.\nFresh from a clean sweep over\nMexico at Kansas City, the players (rom down'under expressed confidence they had a good chance\naainst the little Japanese in their\nseries to be played here August 11,\n12 and 13.\nThe four-man team was in a peak\ncondition.\nPARKER COOLLY\nBEATS HALL\nTORONTO, Aug. 3 (CP)-While\nthe rest of the field strove and\nsweated in the sun, Frankie Parker\ncoolly fashioned a 6-0, 6-1 victory\nover Bruce Hall of Toronto today\nto advance into the quarter finals\nof the Canadian Tennis championships.\nThe solemn young master of control applied his sparkling court\ncoverage once in a while, opening\nup almost for the first time in the\ntournament, but most of the way\nhe was content to slap Hall's bounding drop shots for points or to lay\nthe ball perplexingly at the blond\nyoungsters feet\nA blistering sun beat down upon\nthe clay courts for the third consecutive day Of the seven others\nwho qualified for the fifth stage,\nonly Laird Watt of Montreal advanced easily Watt defeated Cuthbert Hopper., Toronto, 6-1, 6-2.\nMURRAY PRESSED\nEven Bobby Murray of Montreal,\nCanada's No. 1 player, was pressed\nat every turn to defeat Dr. Georges\nLeclerc, Montreal, 7-5,6-3. Ross Wilson, Toronto and Doug Cameron\nof Vancouver had even sterner\nfights. Wilson eliminated one of the\ntournament's surprises, Bill Pigott\nof Hamilton, 6-3, 2-6, 6-3, and Cameron stopped Don McDiarmid of\nOttawa, 6-1, 10-8.\nWilmer Allison turned back the\nbid of a youngster most of the\n\"named\" players had feared, Bob\nMadden of Detroit, 6-4, 6-5. Gordon\nRobinson of Stamford, Ont., gained\nthe right to play Parker tomorrow\nby beating Fred Syme of Hamilton\n6-3, 3-6, 6-4.\nCarl Fischer of Detroit, Michigan\nstate champion, downed Roger Dur-\nivage of Montreal 6-1, 7-5.\nArmstrong Resumes\nHis Boxing Drills\nPOMPTON LAKES, N. J., Aug. 3\n(AP) \u2014 Wearing a specially designed headgear, Henry Armstrong\nwas able to resume his boxing drills\ntoday in preparation for his 15-\nround world lightweight title meeting with Champion Lou Ambers\nnext Wednesday night.\nArmstrong suffered cuts on the\ninside of his lower lip and on his\ncheek while Sparring Sunday and\nsince then had done no boxing.\nYon Bet it Makes a Good Picture!\nParadoxically enough, this is\nhardly sporting but you must\nadmit it's fair. Marjorie Ges-\ntring is the shapely miss sailing\nthrough the ozone accompanied\nby bunches of balloons. Marjorie is the Olympic 10-foot\nspringboard champion and she's\nkeeping in shape (no pun) with\nthis novelty dive at Los Angeles.\n\"\"\u2014\"\u2022\" ^r;e\" \u2014 \u2022\u2014 -\nLow Score Bowlers \u2022\nWin Country Store\nLow scorers were winners at the\nC. P. R. Lawn Bowling club's Country Store competition Wednesday\nnight. Jack Draper, Fred Doodson\nand E. W. Penwill skipped their\nteams to victory, but the cards were\nagainst them and the low scorers\ngarnered the groceries.\nThe results follow:\nDraper 13, J. S. Goulding 12.\nDoodson 15, H. H. Sutherland 11.\nPenwill 16, E. L. Wright 11.\nTeams in order of skip, sec end and\nlead follow:\nDraper, Mrs. T. A. Richards and S.\nBate; Goulding, Mrs. J. T. Sindel,\nand C. I. Archibald; Doodson, Mrs.\nF. E. Wheeler and Al Smith; Sutherland, A. T. Richards and F. C.\nDavis; Penwill and Mrs. B. Ross;\nWright, Mrs. J. Draper and F. Graham.\nElk Valley Senators\nDefeat Natal Miners\nNATAL. B.C. \u2014 Playing against\nElk Valley Senators. Natal Miners\nwere handed their second setback\nof the season recently at the Elk\nValley ball park when they were\ndefeated 8-7. After spotting the Senators six runs in the first three innings the Miners settled down and\ncame from behind to tie the game\nat 6-all in the eighth, only to have\nthe Senators come back to score the\nwinning runs in their turn at bat.\nT. Krall went the route for Natal,\nallowing but six hits while Lemm\nallowed eight for the Senators. The\ngame was umpired by L. Foster of\nNatal.\nBatteries\u2014T. Krall and Weaver;\nLemm and Hampton.\nWOLVERHAMPTON, England\n(CP)\u2014This city's English football\nleague team has signed W. J. Crin-\ngan, 20-year-old nephew of W. Crin-\ngan, former Scottish international\nplayer, for next season.\nLANARK, Scotland (CP)-Short-\nly after crossing the finishing line\nin first position, Sparkler, four-\nyear-old racehorse, collapsed and\ndied. Death was due to a ruptured\nheart\nCanadian and B.C. Titles Go to\nVancouver al Kelowna Regatta\nKELOWNA, B. C, Aug. 3 (CP)\n\u2014A Dominion and a British Columbia title went to Vancouver today as coast aquatic stars flashed\nohampionshlp style in the opening\nday of the thirty-second annual two-\nday Kelowna regatta on peaceful\nOkanagan lake.\nPetite Lynda Adams, veteran diving campaigner despite her 19 years\ntook the five-metre standing diving\nCanadian title with two other Vancouver girls\u2014Violet Mellish and\nJean McLeod\u2014finishing second and\nthird.\nLynda, who went to the Olympic\nGames in 1936 and the British Empire Games this year, scored a total\nof 31.7 points for an easy victory\nover her coast rivals.\nETHEL SYMES WINS\nEthel Symes of Vancouver scored a surprise victory in the Wrigley half mile junior swim for girls,\nbeating out Vancouver's favored\nJoan Langdon, another British Empire Games campaigner.\nThe Langdon girl took the lead\non the second lap and held It until\nnear the finish when Ethel splosh-\npait her to win by a length and\ntake the British Columbia title,\nVancouver also won the men's\nmedley relay with Kelowna taking\nsecond. The Victoria entry scretch-\ned. The winning team was composed of T. MacAulay, J. Pomfret and\nF. Sully and they completed the 300\nyards in 3:39 2-5.\nThe 150-yard medley relay for\nwomen also went to Vancouver.\nThe team of E. Hamersham, Pat\nO'Hara and Joan Langdon beat\nout the Kelowna team of Betty\nPoole, Dot Andison and Alice Thomson. Victoria's entry of Eleanor Ped-\nen, H. Smith and F. Byatt was third.\nThe time was 1:48.\nVICTORIAN FIRST\nGordy Lawrence of Victoria won\nthe 440-yards freestyle with an easy\nvictory over T. MacAuley of Vancouver and B. Doherty of Victoria.\nHis time was 4:46.\nJoan Langdon gained a measure\nof revenge for her defeat in the\nWrigley event when she took the\n100-yard breaststroke swim from\nEthel Symes of Vancouver. Eleanor\nPeden of Victoria was third. The\nwinner's time was 1:26.\nVictoria's Robert Doherty placed\nsecond behind Terry MacAuley of\nVancouver in the 25-yard butterfly stroke event for men with Jack\nPomfret of Vancouver third. MacAulay did the distance in 13 seconds.\nlite\n<2S3___3]___Mi-^^\nNATIONAL\nW L Pet.\nPittsburgh  59 33 .641\nNew York   55 40 .579\nChicago  52 42 .553\nCincinnati  52 42 .553\nBrooklyn  44 50 .468\nBoston     42 49 .462\nSt. Louis  39 54 .419\nPhiladelphia  29 62 .\nAMERICAN\nNew York   58 31 .652\nCleveland  54 32 .628\nBoston 52 37 .584\nWashington  48 48 .500\nDetroit   47 48 ' .495\nChicago    37 46 .446\nPhiladelphia   32 54 .372\nSt. Louis 29 60 .326\nResults\nWESTERN INTERNATIONAL\nWenatchee 5, Vancouver 14.\nPACIFIC COAST\nPortland 1, Seattle 10.\nLos Angeles 2, San Francisco 4.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMontreal 3. Newark 6.\nBuffalo 0, Jersey City 5.\nRochester 3, 3, Baltimore 0, 2.\nASSOCIATION\nSt. Paul 5. Kansas City 4.\nSt. Paul 3, Kansas City 2.\nToledo 2, Indianapolis 6.\nLouisville 6, Columbus 7.\nSmith Is Leader\nBoxla Scoring\nMARCUS SMITH\nflashy young Trail wing, leads\nthe Kootenay Lacrosse league\nindividual scorers with 35 goals\nand 16 assists for a total of 51\npoints. Bruno Merlo of Trail is\nsecond, three points behind him\nwith 4B points, and Ian Dingwall of Nelson is third with 43.\nSmith has four more goals than\nMerlo and one less assist.\nWar Admiral in Action at Last\u2014Wins, of Course\nIt looked for a while as If Sam Riddle might be\nsaving his mighty thoroughbred, War Admiral, for\na museum piece, but the fans got a glimpse of him\nagain on opening day at Aqueduct Park, N. Y., when\nhe went to the post ln the Queen's County handicap. Boos and catcalls were the greetings he received from the fans, who had fresh in their minds\nfM\u2122wW-'$<-*\nhis late scratching from the Suburban at Belmont,\nbut they changed lo cheers when the sturdy four-\nyear-old came home a length In front of Snark,\nSuburban winner, to register his 11th straight win.\nHis time of 1:36.8 for the mile was just 4-5 of a\nsecond off the track record. The Admiral and Snark\nare seen crossing the finishing line.\nHouse ol David,\nNelson Nine to\nBattle Tonight\nA big dish of baseball entertainment for Nelson and district fani\nis on tap todiy when the Negro\nHouse of David team faces the Nelson senior nine at the Recreation\nground.\nA long line of victories already\nthis season is stretched behind the\ntourists, but the home crew is expected {o supply plenty of opposition for them. The House of David\nsquad last week stretched their win\nstreak with a double victory over a\nleading Spokane nine.\nThe green and white shirted lads\nhave been out on the practice diamond twice this week and will be.\nready for the big fellows tonight.\nHeaded by a battery of Steve\nSmith, pitcher, and Gordon Richardson, catcher; the Nelson lineup\nincludes \"Speed\" Bell lb; Lou Palm\n2b; Al Euerby ss; Tom Mclnnes 3b;\nWalt Gilling If; Hughie Wilson cf;\nand Tom Morgan rfj Jake Alles and\n\"Lefty\" Mydanski, utility.\n(lose ol Play\nCricket Scores\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (CP Cahle)-\nClose of play scores in English\ncounty cricket championship\nmatches started today follow:\nMiddlesex 395 (Edrich 159); Warwickshire 14 runs for one wicket.\nNorthamptonshire 220 (James\n101); Sussex 32 runs for one wicket.\nHampshire 313; vs. Worcestershire.\nGloucestershire 388 runs for three\nwickets (Hammond 117 not out,\nNeale 100); vs. Glamorgan.\nEssex 402 (Wilcox 102); vs. Nottinghamshire.\nKent 329 (Fagg 134); Lancashire\n64 for three.\nLeicestershire 297; Yorkshire 23\nruns for no wickets.\nSomerset 352 for six (Lee 162);\nvs. Derbyshire.\nFAMOUS \"GREEN\nGABLES\" TO BE\nUSED AS LOUNGE\nOTTAWA, Aug. 3 (CP)-Golfers\nvisiting Prince Edward Island Na\ntional park next summer will lounge,\ntea and change in the farmhouse at\n\"Green Gables,\" the picturesque setting used in L. M. Montgomery's\nnovel \"Anne of Green Gables,\" the\nmines and resources department an.\nnounced today. The old ham beside\nthe farmhouse will be,fitted up as\nlocker-rooms and a ' professional\nshop.\nNatal Miners Swamp\nHillcrest Seniors\nNATAL, B.C.-Starting on \"Skinny\" Price in the first inning and\ncontinuing the heavy barrage of\nbase hits on his four successors,\nNatal Miners broke a record in\nruns and total base hits when they\nswamped Hillcrest seniors by a 35-8\nscore. The win boosted the Miners'\nchance of winning a playoff berth\nin the Crow's Nest Pass Baseball\nleague as they kept pace with the\nBlairmore Canucks for top place.\nEach team has suffered only two\ndefeats this season. Hillcrest had\npreviously held high score in the\nleague \"when they defeated Blairmore Canucks 20-6. \"Lefty\" Brandies, who recently received his release from ihe Elk Valley Senators,\nchalked up his first win for the\nMiners as he allowed but four runs\nand six hits in five innings, while\nhis successor, T. Krall, gave up\neight hits and four runs. For Hillcrest, Price started on the mound\nbut went quickly to the showers\nafter the first inning, being followed in quick order by Tabor, Draper,\nBamborough and Elick who managed to finish the game although\nbeing hit hard. The two Natal hurlers chalked up 10 strikeouts. The\ngame was umpired by T. Thomas\nof Michel.\nBatteries: Price, Tabor, Draper,\nBamborough, Elick and Slugg Brandies; T. Krall and Weaver.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Press\nPhil Edwards, British Guianan\nrunning for Canada at the Los Angeles Olympics six years ago today,.\npushed the 1500-metre field to record time as he himself set the early\npace. He finished third to Luigi\nBBeccalli of Italy. Edwards was voted Canada'B greatest athlete in 1936\nand now is practicing medicine in\nBarbados.\nTrail Boys Land Some\nictfC\n\u2022 PAGE SIV1I.\ntorn Pople (left) and Harry Rothery of Trail while on a fishing\ntrip on Kootenay lake.\nGiants Buy Wittig\nNEW YORK, Aug. 3 (AP)-The\nGiants tonight announced the purchase of John Wittig, 22-year-old\nright-hand fast ball pitcher, from\nBaltimore Orioles of the International league.\nThe deal was a straight cash transaction. Wittig has won 10 and lost\nnine so far this year.\niimiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiimiiiii-iiiimii\nBUDGE \u2022 IS   GIVEN\nBEST ATHLETE\nAWARD\nNEW YORK, Aug. 3, (AP)-\nThe Amateur Athletic union finally caught up with Donald\nBudge today and presented him\nwith the James E. Sullivan Memorial trophy as the outstanding\nUnited States amateur athlete\nof 1937.\nBudge, the first tennis player\nto receive the award since it\nwas instituted eight years ago,\nwas in Australia last January\nwhen the committee announced\nhe had won by a landslide. He\nreturned home only last Sunday.\niiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiMii\nAlberta Trooper\nWins at O.R.A.\nTORONTO, Aug. 3 (qP)\u2014Trooper\nJ. Wilson of Innisfail, Alta., today\nwon the Tait Brassey match at the\nOntario Rifle association meet at\nLong Branch ranges. He defeated\nLieut. R. A. Sweet of Hamilton and\nC. S. M. N. J. McLeod of Toronto\nin a shoot-off after the three had\ntied in the three-stake match.\nShooting at 200, 500 and 600 yards\nthe three top marksmen registered\n103 each, two below possible. Wilson and Sweet posted possibles at\n500 yards, McLeod at 200.\nLieut. Steve Johnson of Calgary,\nBisley team member, was the un-\nluckiest man in the match. He scored possibles from both shorter distances to hold the lead alone but\nfinished in a four-way tie for fourth\nby taking a 32 from 600 yards. Johnson started with three inners at the\nthird range, then hit his stride and\nran out with bull's eyes.\nOthers with 102 were Pte. F. Wallace of Toronto; Sergt. L. M. Gibault\nof Vancouver and A.C.I. T. W.\nGregory of Ottawa.\nPick Winners and\nWin $1000 for 10c\nCHICAGO, Aug. 3 (AF)-Wash-\ningtpn Park's experiment of giving\naway $30,000 free, to patrons to pick\nthe most winners has proved a booming business stimulant.\nThe idea is brand new, It is no\nlottery. One need not buy any tickets. All one has to do is invest 10\ncents in a daily program.\nThe attendance at the horse park\nis up 50 per cent above that of a\nyear ago and come next Saturday\nthe crush should be tremendous.\nFor if no one picks the first seven\nwinners of the daily eight-race program by then the prize will roll up\nto $5000. Somebody then, is a cinch\nto win, since the selector of the most\nwinnefs on that day, not necessarily seven, will take the pot of\ndough. If there are ties, the pot will\nbe split.\nBatting Leaders\nBy The Associated Pren\nBatting \u2014 first three in each\nleague:\nG A P Pn\nFoxx, Red Sox 89 335 81 120 .358\nLombardi, Reds 79 292 34 104 .356\nAverill, Indians 87 313 71 111 .355\nTravis, Senators 91 353 62 123 .348\nBerger, Reds .. 65 240 51 82 .342\nMedwick, Cards 88 356  58 120 .337\nHome runs:\nAmerican league \u2014 Greenberg,\nTigers, 37; Foxx, Red Sox 29; York,\nTigers 22; Johnson, Athletics 20!\nDiMaggio, Yankees 19; Dickey,\nYankees 18; Keltner, Indians 18.\nNational league \u2014 Goodman,\nReds 27; Ott, Giants 24; Mize, Cardinals 15; Camilli, Dodgers 15.\nRuns batted in:\nAmerican league \u2014 Foxx, Red\nSox 105; Dickey, Yankees 80; Greenberg, Tigers 79; York, Tigers 76; DiMaggio, Yankees 74.\nNational league \u2014 Ott, Giants 81;\nMedwick, Cardinals 75; Goodman,\nReds 71; McCormick, Reds 69; Rizzo,\nPirates 66.\nPLYMOUTH, England (CP) \u2014\nPlymouth Argyle's loss last season\nin the English football league was\n\u00a34,161 ($20,805), heaviest since the\nclub joined professional ranks 35\nyears ago.\nSPORT SIMMERINGS FROM WIRE\nBy ALAN RANDAL\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nNEW YORK, Aug. 3 (CP)-Base-\nball reputations apparently die the\nhard way.\u2014The Yanks are not worrying much about Detroit Tigers\nbut as recently as three or four\nweeks ago no Yankee would admit\nDetroit wasn't a pennant threat.\u2014\nIn 1929, when the Yanks lost their\nchampionship to the Athletics it\nWok Connie Mack years to quit\nworrying about the Bronx Bombers.\nAfter two- lightning fatalities at\nKansas City links this summer the\nUnited States Golf association has\nrecognized lightning as a hazard.\u2014\nIn a bulletin to members the U. S.\nG. A. lists a flock of precautions\nagainst it\u2014Such as staying away\nfrom isolated trees during a storm.\n\u2014Tossing your clubs away when\nlightning is active,\u2014Something\nmany a golfer has wanted to do\neven without lightning.   \"\nWith Armstrong the 13 to 5 favorite, there's little betting money\nshowing on Broadway for the Ambers-Armstrong clash. \u2014 Dorothy\nBundy, plump little tennis star, says\nshe keeps her legs in tournament\ntrim by cycling daily.\nThe new yellow baseball and the\nregular white one are all the lame\nto Babe Ruth\u2014\"What's the difference?\" he asks\u2014\"They're ill round\n\u2014I hit three over the fence in practice\u2014The same mild Babe.\u2014Fred\nPerry, the pro tennis ace, has mixed in his last dog fight\u2014he tried to\nsettle a canine argument the other\n\"dog day\" and almost had his little\nfinger torn off.\nThe boys are wondering how long\nCarl Hubbell can keep up this \"meal\nticket\" business\u2014They point out\nthat since 1929 Hubbell has almost\nsingle-handedly carried New York\nGiants to three pennants.\nSONNY JONES IS\nWINNER AT N.Y.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 3 (CP)-Sonny\nJones, 147-pound Vancouver welterweight, battered his way to i decision over Seaborn Ashley, 148%,\nBayonne, N.J., negro, in a six-round\nbout tonight, capturing every round.\nJones sent Ashley reeling into the\nropes in the opening round with\nvicious lefts and rights to the body\nand jaw and staggered his opponent\nin the second with a hard right hand\nsmash to the chin. Ashley came back\nstrong at the close of the round\nand gave as good as he received.\nIn the third Ashley sent over a\nhard right to the jaw that sent the\nCanadian back on his heels. Jones\nclinched until his head cleared.\nWhen the referee separated them '\nJones had blood streaming from a\ncut over his right eye but he tor*\ninto Ashley with both fists flying.\nA short right to the point of the\nchin sent Ashley down for a count\nof nine. When Ashley rose Jones\nagain tore into him and sent him to\nthe canvas again with another right\nto the jaw. Ashley got up without\na count and Jones battered him from\npost to post for the remainder of\nthe round.\nFIGHTS\n(By The Associated Press)\nNEWARK, N.J. - Tippy Larkin.\n136, Newark, knocked out Eddie\nZivic, 138, Pittsburgh (1).\nDETROIT\u2014Ted Keating, 175, Tdr\u00ab '\nonto, outpointed Henry Palmeri, 182,\nCleveland (10).\nLOS ANGELES-Chuck Crowell, I\n215, Artesia, Calif., outpointed Big\nBoy Bray, 210, Los Angeles (10).    I\nWENATCHEE, Wash-Wild Bill\nBoyd,   190,   Seattle,   knocked   out,\nJohnny Morris, 186, Detroit (2).\nFor perfect grip and safe\ndriving \u2014 CUTTA PERCHA\nTIRES\nSHORTY'S REPAIR SHOP\n714 Baker Nelson, B.C.\nGutta  Percha\nWholesale\nDistributors\nWood Vallance\nHardware\nCompany, Ltd.\nBaker St.        Nelson, B. C.\nGutta Percha Tires\nSold by\nShorty's Repair\nShop\nSHORTY PERASSO\n714 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C\n PAGE EIGH\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C^-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 4, 1938\nYoull Find a Round Up of Opportunities on This Page Daily\nWhen New Fire Truck Had Its Official Tests\nWhen F. F. Dowling of Vancouver (left), chief\nengineer for the B.C. Fire Underwriters association,\nput the new Nelson fire truck through its paces\nthe tests were watched closely by the group on the\nright\u2014Mayor N. C. Stibbs, Alderman Roy Sharp.\nN. Layflcld, master mechanic of the Vancouver fire\ndepartment who was \"loaned' to Nelson to instruct\nfiremen on the use and core of the new equipment,\nand M. H. Maloney, fire chief. This Nelson Daily\nNews photo was taken on the city wharf.\nSocial. . .\nSHEEP CREEK\nSHEEP CREEK, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. E. Kincaid and sons, Lou, Lennox and David of Ashcroft, B. C. are\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. C. Lane,\nMrs. 0. White has returned from\nHarrop where she was a guest of\nMr. and Mrs. McCormick. Miss Betty McCormick came here with Mrs.\nWhite for two or three weeks' visit.\nMr. and Mrs. McDowell of Kelowna are visiting their son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Vere\nMcDowell.\nGeorge Miller spent a few days\nwith his brother, Andy, at the Queen\nmine.\nBert Swanson is a patient at Kootenay Lake General hospital, Nelson.\nF. Abear and son Gordon of Shu-\nswap Lake are visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nNystrom.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Larson have returned from a motor trip to Idaho.\nWhile there, Lome Larson broke his\nDonor and Partner\nWin Graves Cup in\nKaslo Golf Tourney\nKASLO, B.C.-The postponed two\nball mixed foursome handicap golf\ntourney was played Sunday on the\nKaslo Golf and Country club links.\nThe trophy, the Graves cup, was\nwon by the donor, R. H. Graves and\nhis partner, Miss Katherine Gillis.\nA large number of players and\nvisitors enjoyed tea, Mrs. Walter\nWright and Mrs. G. D. Bowker being hostesses.\nThe only other tourney scheduled\nfor this season will take place early\nin September when the club championship will be decided. The trophies are the Armstead cups.\nPublic Works Engineer\nPays   Visit,   Creston\nCRESTON, B. C.-O. G. GaUaher,\nof Nelson, public works engineer\nfor West Kootenay, was a visitor\nSaturday, and a few days earlier\nhad visited Creston with W. R. Bavin, of Victoria, the provincial inspector of black top highway construction.\nheTse visits are taken to indicate\nan erly start on the rehabiltation\nof Canyon street from Victoria\navenue to the C.P.R. crossing at\nthe west boundary of the village,\non which strip of highway it is anr\nnounced 18-foot mulch surface will\nbe laid, along with a seal coat\nstretch of Canyon street east which\nws black topped last fall.\nSome mulch will be put down on\na stretch of th main highway between Erickson an dCreston.\nDODGE DENIES HE ACTED\nIMPROPERLY IN SCHULTZ\nBILLION DOLLAR RACKET\nNEW YORK, Aug, 3 (API-Former District Attorney William C.\nDodge today issued a statement emphatically denying assertions by^his\nsuccessor, Thomas E. Dewey, he\nhad been \"influenced, intimidated\nor bribed\" by overlords of the late\nDutch Schultz, $10O,0O0,0O0-a-year\npolicy racket.\nDodge was named by Dewey in a\nbill of particulars yesterday in connection with the numbers case investigation.\nAlso named were Magistrate Hu-,\nIon Capshaw, who was immediately\nrelieved of his duties, and the late\nMagistrate Francis Erwin.\nDodge termed Dewey's action an\n\"outrageous and malicious assault\"\nupon his character, asserting that\nnever in his 20 years in public office had he \"been asked to do, or\nhave done, any improper act.\"\nON THE AIR\nItO k CJAT 319.6 m\nTrail 1000 w\n7:30\u2014All-request program\n8:15\u2014Morning Bulletin Board\n9:00\u2014The Happy Gang\n8:30\u2014Street scene\n9:45\u2014Waltz Time\n10:00\u2014Big Sister\n, 10:15 Organ Reveries\n10:30 Good Morning, Neighbor\n11:00\u2014Mary Marlin\n11:15\u2014Ma Perkins\n: 11:30 Pepper Young's Family\n11:45 The Guiding Light\n; 12:00 Round-up\n,12:30\u2014Vocal Varieties\n12:45 Sport Page of the Air\n1:00 Dance Hour\n1:15\u2014Backwoods Breakdown\n1:30\u2014Edward Goodyear xylophone\n1:45\u2014Closing stock quotations\n2:00\u2014Rakov's orch.\n2:30\u2014Tea time musical\n3:00\u2014From the Pacific\n3:30 News\n3:45\u2014On matters musical\n4:00\u2014Theatre News\n4:30 Times Presents\n5:00\u2014Promenade symphony con.\n, \u00ab:00-Music Hall\n7:00\u2014 News\n7:15\u2014\"Listen\"\n7:30\u2014Mart Kenney's orch.\nI 8:00\u2014Play Time '\n8:30\u2014Dance Delight\n9:00\u2014String orch.\n9:30 Slumber Hour\n9:45\u2014News\n110:00\u2014Epilogue\n110:30. Swing Time\n110:45\u2014A Sweet Goodnight\nCANADIAN   BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n0KOV  CJCJ  CJCA CHWK CFQC\n690       730        780 840\nCFJC   CJAT   CKY CFAC CJOC\n880        910        910        930 950\nCKCK CBR\n1010 1100\nCJOR\n4.99.7  m.\n500  w\n293.1   m\n10.1)00 w\n\u25a0Vancouver\n1.030 k.\n\u25a0Calgary\n\u00bb:00 P.M.\u2014\nIWallenstein's Sinfonietta (CBC)\n14:30 P.M.-\n\u25a0Summer Theatre (CBC)\n|5:00 P.M.\u2014\n\u25a0dmenade Symphony (CBC)\n:I5 P.M.-\nChrij for Kiddies (CJOR)\nDi#c Tracy, drama (CFCN)\n30 P.M.\u2014\nimy Allen's Adventures (CFCN)\n5:45 P.M.\u2014\nHowi^Wing, drama (CJOR)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\n.Bing Crosby, Music Hall (CBC)\nMetropolitan Tabernacle (CJOR)\n6:30 P.M.\u2014\nGeorge Hall's orch, (CJOR) .\nHawaiian Serenade (CFCN)\nHenry Weber's revue (CBC)\n6:45 P.M.\u2014\nLate Sports review (CJOR)\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews, weather (CBC)\nWrestling interview (CJOR)\nSalon orchestra (CFCN)\n7:15 P.M.\u2014\nTropical Sunset (CJOR)\nA Student Tramp (CBC)\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nMart Kenney's orch. (CEO\n7:45 P.M.\u2014\nRadio Rascals (CJOR)\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nPlay Time, drama (CBC)\nNew flashes .CJOR)\nGeorge McLeod (CFCN)\n8:15 P.M.\u2014\nWilliam Nelles, organ (CJOR)\nNews flashes (CFCNi\n8:30 P.M.\u2014 '\nDance Delight (CBC)\nOzzie Ross, tenor  (CJOR)\n8:45 P.M.\u2014\nTeller of Curious Tales (CJOR)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nString orch. (CBC)\nNews Flashes (CFCN)\nWrestling Interview (CJOR)\n9:15 P.M.\u2014\nOld Time Dance (CFCN)\n9:30 P.M.\u2014\nPersonalities I Have Met (CE__)\n9:45 P.M.\u2014\nNews and weather (CBC)\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\nEpilogue (CBC)\n10:30 P.M.\u2014\nNews (CJOR)\n10:45 P.M.\u2014\nWilliam Nelles, organ (CJOR)\n11:00 P.M.\u2014\nMusic (CJOR)\n11:45 P.M.\u2014\nSlumber Time (CJOR)\nSocial...\nPROCTER\nPROCTER, B. C. - Mr. and Mrs.\nDobie of Nelson, and Mrs. Lowes\nof Penticton were Procter visitors\nSunday. They visited Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Parnaby.\nAllan Barton of Nelson Ls spending a week at the home of Captain\nand Mrs. M. MacKinnon.\nMrs. J. P. Bourne had as her guests\nover the week-end Dr. and Mrs. R.\nMorrison and Mrs. F. E. Morrison\nof Portland, Ore.\nMiss Evelyn Adams returned to\nher home at Grey Creek Sunday after visiting her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. T. Knowlson.\nShe was accompanied by Mrs. W.\nMerrifield and Miss Barbara. Lapointe.\nRev. Father T. P. Freney and\nparty of Nelson motored here Sunday.\nRoderick MacKinnon left Monday\nfor Bonnington.\nMrs. E. Millar and son, Ronnie,\nspent Sunday at Grey Creek.\nMiss Violet Adams of Grey Creek\nis visiting her sisters, Mrs. W. Merrifield and Mrs. T. Knowlson.\nW. R. Baxendale of Trail visited\nat his summer home over the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar Johnson and\nchildren, Henry, Edith and Morley\nleft Sunday by motor to spend a\nholiday at Spokane.\nGilbert McMullin and Geoffrey\nand Henry Hartridge of Balfour\nleft, Monday to spend a few days\nat Kaslo.\nMr. and Mrs. P. Bauer had as\nguests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. R.\nNolte of Nelson.\nMrs. 3. H. Bennett and son, Allan,\nof Nelson were week-end guests of\nMrs. 3. P. Bourne.\nMr. and Mrs. H. C. Carne and Max\nwere Sunday visitors at Gray Creek.\nMiss Morag MacKinnon, R. N\u201e of\nthe staff of the Trail-Tadanac hospital returned to Trail Tuesday after visiting her parents, Captain and\nMrs. M. MacKinnon. She had as her\nweek-end guest Miss Catherine\nDuke of Trail.\nSocial...\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C. - Mrs. K.\nPopoff was a visitor to Trail Friday.\nMiss Marie Patterson of Calgary\nis spending her holidays here, a\nguest of Miss V. Clough.\nRoy and Alec Ewing returned\nfrom. Trail Friday night after\nspending a week's holiday with\nrelatives.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Ewing of Trail\nspent the week-end here, a guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. D. Ewing and family-\nMrs. W. Wildes of Farron is\nvisiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nBaillargeon.\nMr. and Mrs, R. Grossland and\nchildren left Sunday for Trail.\nToo Much jam\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 3 (CP)-\nFire Warden Archie King, investigating fire which destroyed a\nwarehouse here yesterday, is in\na \"jam.\"\nThe jam, part of the building's\nstock, has run throughout the\ndebris and has \"gummed up\" the\ninquiry.\n\"There is so much jam and debris that we won't be able to find\nout anything definite for several\ndays,\" he said.\nRobbed While Asleep\nCALGARY, Aug. 3.(CP)-Ro-\nbert A. Lachman of Chicago, is\na sound sleeper.\nHe parked his car in a public\ngarage in downtown Calgary last\nnight, left both front windows\nopen and his trousers over the\nseat. He then went to sleep on the\nback seat.\nWhen he awoke this morning\n$120 in cash was missing from\nhis wallet.\nROYAL YACHT IS EN\nROUTE TO SCOTLAND\nGREAT YARMOUTH, Eng, Aug.\n3 (CP-Havas). \u2014 The royal yacht\nVictoria and Albert, w4th the king\nand queen and Princesses Elizabeth\nand Margaret aboard, sailed from\nhere for Scotland today.\nThe departure from Scotland was\nattended by some excitement. Two\nlaunches from the destroyer which\nis accompanying the Victoria and\nAlbert crashed into a pier. After a\nbrief delay, however, the yacht and\nits convoy got underway.\nNclmin Daily Nruta\nMember ot the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll  Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy $   .05\nBy carrier, per week 2b\nBy carrier, per year  13.00\nBy mail ln Canada to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months $1.80; six months\n$3.00: one Vear $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six- months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, othei than\nUnited States, same as above\nplus any extra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nHe a Line\n1    (Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per insertion .$ 22\n2 lines. 8 consecutive\ninsertions\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines per insertion __.\n3 lines. 6 consecutive\ninsertions \u2014.\n2 lines. 1 month\n. _33\n. 1.32\n, 2 ti6\n. 4.29\n3 lines. I month\t\nFor advertisements ot more than\nthree lines, calculate on\nthe above basis.\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LE88 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nRate for advertisements under\nSituations Wanted. 25c for required number of lines for six\ndays, payable in advance.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED FOR COUNTRY - Woman who can do plain cooking and\nhelp with housework generally.\nGood pay and a good home. Apply\nBox 2587 Daily News. (2587)\nWANTED AN ENGLISH MIDDLE\naged woman to take care of house\nand 3 boys for 2 weeks. Apply\n708 Third St. (2592)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nJOB REQUIRED BY ENGLISH-\nman, aged 31. Educated. Travelled.\nVersatile. Well dressed. Much\npractical experience with the stage\nmusic and opera, mechanics and\nelectricity, etc. Can do. has done,\nand willing to do anything and\neverything. Box 2521 Daily News.\n(2521)\nMIDDLE AGED WIDOW DESIRES\nhousekeeping Job in around Nelson. Mrs. R. Brooks, Rossland.\n(2506)\nTWO NEAT CAPABLE GIRLS DE-\nsire work by the hour. Willing to\ndo' house work or mind children.\nPhone 158 X. (2534)\nTEACHERS WANTED\nWANTED, MALE TEACHER ON\nprobation for Rural School Salary $850. Apply J. L. Syddall, Sec.\nShutty Bench School Board,\nKaslo, B. C. (2527)\nTEACHER WANTED FOR GRADES\n4, 5 and 6. Applications must be\nreceived by August 8. Apply,-secretary Kaslo school board, Kaslo.\n(2568)\nWANTED TEACHER. MALE PRE-\nferred. Small rural school. Salary\n$780. ,E. Hardy, Sec. Carrolls\nSchool Board, Burton, B. C.\n(2520)\nINJURED WHEN TRUCK\nPLUNGES INTO DITCH\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Aug.\n3 (CP)\u2014Joe Kovacs was in hospital\nhere today with head injuries suffered when the truck in which he\nwas riding plunged into a ditch near\nhere Tuesday. The driver, W. H.\nMoreshead, and three passengers\nescaped uninjured.\nAGREE TO MEDIATION\nCHICAGD, Aug. 3 (AP)-Hope-\nlessly deadlocked, representatives of\nmanagement of class one railroads\nand the Brotherhod of Railroad\nTrainmen agreed today to refer\nconsideration of a proposed 15 per\ncent salary cut for railroad workers\nto the national mediation board.\nPERSONAL\nNEW PEP AT 40 FOR MEN AND\nWomen. New OSTREX Tonic\nTablets contain 2 stimulants from\nraw oysters plus 4 general\/tonics\nto pep up whole body. Try package today. If not delighted, maker\nrefunds its low price. Call, write\nMann. Rutherford Co. (2187)\nHAVE YOUR RUGS & CARPETS\nthoroughly cleaned \"the Schradei\nWay. Satisfaction Grtd. Ph. 564 or\nwrite for estimates and list of satisfied cstmrs. Home Rug Cleaners.\n(1826)\nMEtTS SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubber. Send $1.00 tor 18\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n51.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co.. 18 Hastings St..\nW. Vancouver. (213)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD\n25 for $1.00 or jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue). National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton.\n(214)\nANY SIZE ROLL DEVELOPED\nand printed 25c. Reprints eight tor\n25c. Mail to Interior Photo Supply.\nBox 2133, Trail, B. C.        (2526)\nMETROPOLE HOTEL VANCOU-\nver, $1.00 per day up. Private bath\n$1.50. Best value in Vancouver,\n320 Abbott St. (2307)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nONE OF CANADA'S LARGEST\ndistributors now offers the opportunity to financially responsible\npeople to enter a clean, profitable\ncash business. Experience unnecessary as we teach you our proven\nmerchandising plan and help you\nselect your location. Many stores\nsuccessfully operating. Wonderful\nopportunity for man and wife. All\nreplies in confidence. Box 2585\nDaily News. (2585)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMINERAL ACT .\n(Form F.)\nCertificate ot Improvement]\nNOTICE\nDouble Cross Fractional Mineral\nClaim, situate ln the Slocan City\nMining Division of Root-may District\nWhere located:\u2014At Ottawa mine\non Springer creek.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. L. Purdy,\nacting as Agent for W. R. Green\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 43018E\nintend, sixty days trom the date\nhereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements tor the purpose of obtaining\na Crown grant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85. must be commenced before the issuance of such\nCertificate of Improvements.\nDated this 27th day of June, 1938.\nA. L. PURDY.\n(2170)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\n'   AND    APARTMENTS\n5 ROOM HOUSE, GOOD GARDEN,\nby first September. 608 Innes St.\nApply Ph. 242R evenings.    (2588)\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS\nClean and comfortable. Apply at\nThe Ark. (2528)\nCOTTAGE FOR AUG. EL. LT. GD.\nswimming beach. I. L. Kerr, R. R. 1\n(2553)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block.\n(219)\n5   RM.   UNFURN.   SUITE.   ALSO\nfurn. suites. Kerr Apartments.\n(220)\n4   ROOM   FURNISHED    HOUSE\nfor rent. D. Maglio, Ph. 808L.\n(2313)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.    (221)\nNEWLY   FURNISHED   SUITES.\nGas. Apply 140 Baker St.    ' (2544)\nFURNISHED   HSKPNG.   ROOMS\nfor rent. K. W. C. Block.     (2583)\nFRONT ROOM AND BREAKFAST,\n642 Wasson street. (2530)\nFOR RENT-STUCCO HOUSE, 406\nSilica street. (2581)\nNEWLY FURNISHED HOUSE. 608\n5th Street. (2591)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog, pocket-\nbook, jewelry or fur, or anything else of value, telephone the\nDaily News. A \"Found\" Ad. will be\ninserted without cost to you. We\nwill collect from the owner.\nLIVESTOCK\nFOR SALE, COW, FRESH JERSEY.\nVery cheap. Box 2576 Daily News.\n(2576)\nFOR SALE 1 YEAR OLD BULL E.\nSlako, Ymir, B. C. (2562)\nDOCS, PETS. FOR SALE\nTWO    REGISTERED    SPRINGER\nSpaniel males, 8 mos. One registered Airedale, 6 mos., $15 each.\nWhalshan Kennels, Needles, B. C.\n(2541)\nWANTED\nTRANSPORTATION EAST. GOOD\ndriver. Mechanic. Share expenses.\nBox 2571 Daily News. (2571)\nLOST SATURDAY, PAIR OF HORN\nrimmed spectacles, finder please\nreturn to Daily News. Reward.\n (2567)\nLOST WIRE HAIRED TERRIER, 214\nVernon St. Finder please return.\n(2575)\nFOR SALE\nPIPES, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main SL\nVancouver, B. C.\n(216)\nPIPE AND FITTING\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior SL Vancouver, B. C.\n(215)\nSACKS, BAGS ALL KINDS. ALSO\nPipe St Fittings all sizes \u2014 Active\nTrading Co., 916 Powell Street,'\nVancouver. (1499)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C. (217)\nMILL   ENDS   BIG   LOADS   $3.75.\nSaw Dust $4 unit. Ph. 434R1 or 163.\n(2515)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nLAUNCH -  $100.  W. MACK,- -75\nHigh street. Ph. 835Y.        (2470)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nRENT OF HOUSE PAYS PROFIT\non this desirable Fairview. residential site. One acre, home and\ngarden property. Build one home\non it or up to six. Magnificent\nview. Elec. light. City water. Cone.,\ncellar. Sacrificing for friend $750,\nD. Louis Kerr, Nelson.        (2554)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\noo easy terms tn Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 90S Dept of Natural\nResources, C. P. R\u201e Calgary, Alt*.\n(226)\nSMALL PROPERTY, FAIRVIEW,\n$1350. 3 lots. $200 will handle.\nLarge house. 500 block Carbonate\nstreet. Very suitable for rooming\nhouse. Terms. C. W, Appleyard.\n\u25a0 (2572)'\nWANTED TO BUY FOR CASH, 6\nroom house, good condition, close\nin. Box 2531 rJaily News.   (2531)\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayer*\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C. (182)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 420\nFall Street. Nelson, B. C P.' O\nBox   No.   9.   Representing   shipper's inlerest, trail, B. C.   (183)\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representative for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.    (184)\nChiropractors\nJ. R. MCMILLAN, D. C , NEURO-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk.\n(185)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C. 16 years' Ex-\nprnc. Ph. 969 Gilker Blk., Nelson.\n(186)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert. Mortician        Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(190)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\n347 Baker St., Phone 68.       (191)\nCD. BLACKWOOD, Insurance cf\n, every description. Real Est. Ph, 99.\n(192)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St.\n(193)\nSEE  D.   L   KERR.  AGENT  FOH\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(1941\nFRUIT   AGENTS\nFRUIT   GROWERS\nShip all varieties of fruits. Cherries\nand berries by express, other fruits\nin straight or mixed cars. Receive\nbenefit of the highest prairie market prices. Returns made every\nSaturday.\nTHE ROYAL  FRUIT CO.\n1703  Broad  SL        Regina,  Sask.\n(2022)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES. ETC.\nFOR SALE, YEAR OLD WHITE\nLeghorns. Good layers, $1 each.\nPhone 468L. (2574)\nJ   E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE\nRentals, Insurance.   Annable Blk\n(1951\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.        (196)\nR.  W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. Phone 197.\n(197)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,   SELL  St  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.\n(20-7)\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY, SELL,\nExch., Rpr. Upholster. 413 Hall St.\n(1575)\nCorsets\nSpencer Corsets, Surgical Belts. M.\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker SL, Ph. 668.\n(187)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n 088)\nH.  D.  DAWSON, Nelson,\nEngineer Si Surveyor\n(1922)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes ot Metal Work, Lathe\nWork. Drilling, Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding.\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(1991\nH. E. STEVENSON, Machinists.\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson.   (201)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. U WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt. Mine Mchnry. &\nequipt., etc. Steam coals. Office\nChamber of Mines, Ph. 994. Box\n28,  Nelson. 2031\nPhotography\nVACATION TIME IS SNAPSHOT\ntime. Add to your holidays pleasures by making sure your films,\nare properly developed and printed, thus keeping an everlasting\nmemory. Films developed and\nprinted 25c. Krystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask. (205)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker St.\n(206)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch it is on time all the time,\n345 Baker St., Nelson. (209)\nWant to Sell Something?.\nPhone\n144\nNOW- WH5PE DO MAGGIE\nPUT (AY MEDICINE 9  ME\nFOOT IS BEGINNING TO\nACHE AGIN'-\nit's mabder to find\nmedicine in this\nhouse than it is to\nget maggie to\nstop Singing\nHELP-HELP- SOME -\nONE--GET THIS\nBUCKET OFF    ME\nSORE   FOOT-\n!   \"\n !\t\n '\u25a0   SI   H   _.'  V\n|Hf Aclivily In Gold Shares\nGives Life lo New York Market\nHE* YORK, Aug.\nIttle'toing in gold\nmparted a flicker of life to a sleepy\n'3 (AP). \u2014 A\nIttJe'lJUying in gold mining shares\nlock market today. Transfers ap-\niroximatod 800.000 shares.\nTraders iturned to the yellow\nnetal group when the market drift-\nid into a stalemate after prices rose\nind feli in gentle swings in the\noraioon. Detuings entered one of\nhe quietest periods since the rous-\niiR June upswing started.\nDiverting., attention to the gold\nniiiing issues was a further advance\nn the London open market price\ntor the metal, accompanied by con-\nlinued decline in the British pound\n:o ''the lowest figure In many\nmonths.\nThe drop In foreign currencies\n_g_lnst the dollar, together with\nhoarding demand for gold in London, seetned to keep Wall Street in\nI cautious moOd pending a clearer\nIdea. .What the explanation of the\niisposition in trading camps to wait\ntor business at home to demonstrate\nmore conclusively its recovery\npower. .\nWhile news trom steel and other\nindustrial centres was considered\npromising, speculative markets were\nbecalmed in a narrow zone they\nhave occupied for more than a\nweek.\nA tinge ot irregularity crept into\nthe bond market in late trading\nafter the list had made some progress during the forenoon.\nAt the beginning of the tinal hour\ngains of fractions to more\" than a\npoint were shown by' Armour 4s,\nBethlehem Steel 3%s, International\nHyroelectric 6s, Santa Fe Adjustment 4s and Southern Pacific 4%s.\nMarion Steel Shovel 6s Jumped\naround 8 points on light turnover.\nOn the losing side were. Nickel\nPlate 4%s, Northern Pacific'4s, Studebaker 6s, Western Union Bs and\nChilds Co. 5s.   . '     ,,\nThe foreign list showed extreme\nunsettlement and .further heavy\nlosses were shown by Japanese issues. A half dozen government and\nprivate obligations, including the\ngovernment 6 V_s, wire down 2 to\nmore than 5 points.\n. U. S. governments were narrow,\n3-32ds lower to l-32d higher.\nBears in Raid\ndi. Berlin Mart\nBERLIN, Aug. 3 (API-Leading\nstocks dropped one to two per cent\non the Berlin Bourse today as a\nbearish movement continued for the\nsecond day.\nFinancial newspapers ascribed the\nslump to the increased corporation\ntax announced yesterday, far eastern developments and strained relations between Germany and\nCzechoslovakia.\nOne financial news service said\nthe drop had reached a point where\nnil gains of 1937 and 1938 were wiped\nout.\nIt was generally agreed the bear\nmovement was led by large lirms\nwhich are disposing of securities to\nobtain toady cash. Many firms were\neald to have .calculated too low when\nmaking plans for enlargement ol\ntheir plants under the four-year\nplan and to need funds to finance\nadded expenditures.\nNelson Business Is\nNewly Incorporated\nNotice ot the incorporation of\nGllkers' limited, 548-548 Baker street,\nis given in the current issue of the\nBritish Columbia Gazette. Authorized capital of the company is $20,-\n000, divided into 200 shares of $100\neach.\nThe company Is established \"to\ntake over and acquire as a going\nconcern the men's clothing and furnishing business now carried on by\nJames Arthur Gilker, Elizabeth Gil-\nleer, Jean Elizabeth Gilker and Arthur Barrie Gilker.\"\nTO DECIDE WHEAT     \"\nPRICE THURSDAY\nOTTAWA, Aug. 3 (CP)\u2014Western\nfarmers will likely learn tomorrow\nthe minimum price they will receive for their wheat this year. It is\nexpected the cabinet will then decide the price the Canadian wheat\nboard will pay for wheat trom the\ncrop now ripening.\nIf, on the year's operations, the\nboard shows a profit the farmers delivering wheat to' the board will\nreceive additional per bushel payments. If the board shows a loss it\nwill be borne by the Dominion government.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ, AUG. 4. 1931\n,r\n\\pvD\nitting News\nOverseas Export of\nWheat Shows Decline\nOTTAWA, Aug 3 (CP)\u2014Overseas\nexport clearances of wheat amounted to 1,594,408 bushels for the week\nending July 29, against 2,335,710 for\nthe same week a year ago. Exports to the United States for con.\nsumption and milling in bond to\ntailed 3000 bushels, compared with\n284,000 a year ago.\nTotal exports for the year amounted to 78,839,756 bushels, compared\nwith 189,365,397 tor the year ending July 31,1937.\nOverseas export clearances from\nAugust 1, 1937, to July 29, 1938 include: Vancouver-New Westminster\n10,035,378 (1938), 32,024,954 (1937)\nPrince Rupert 910,939 (562,613).,\nLeadsmith Mines\nWill Change Name\nNotice that Leadsmith Mines limited, 415 Baker street, intends to\nchange its name to Metalsmith Mines\nlimited, is given in the current issue of the B. C. Gazette.\nDow-jones Averages\nHigh      Low\n30 industrials _ 143.40     141.10\n20 rails  ,     28.60       28.01\n15 utilities      20.71       20.36\n40 bonds   \t\nClose Change\n141.73\u2014off .24\n28.05\u2014off 1.28\n20.38-off .25\n90.09\u2014off   .25\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAfton Mines\t\nAldermac Copper .\nAmm Gold \t\nAnglo-Huronian ..\nArntfield Gold _...\nAstoria Rouyn\t\nAztec Mining .\nBagamac Rouyn _______\nBankfield Gold\t\nBase Metals Mining \t\nBeattie Gold iMnes -  1\nBidgood Kirkland       .\nBig Missouri      ,\nBottjo Mines _.     \u2022\nBralorne Mines   9.\nBrett Trethewey \t\nBuffalo Ankerite  16.\nBunker Hill Extension\t\nCanadian Malartic _    .\nCariboo Gold Quartz   2.\nI Castle-Trethewey      1.\nCentral Pat  2.\n1 Chibougsmau  -\t\nI Chromium M tt S _.    .\nI Coast Copper  -  3.\nI Coniaurum Mines _...   1.\nConsolidated M & S .... 80.\nDarkwater\t\nDome Mines _. 34.\nDorval-Siscoe - -\t\nEast Malartic   2.\nEldorado Gold  - -  2\nFalconbrldge Nickel\t\nFederal Kirkland\t\nFrancoeur Gold\t\nGillies Lake\t\nGod's Lake Gold\t\nGold Belt  _\t\nGranada Gold Mines\t\nI Grandoro Mines\t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHard Rock Gold    2.\n1 Harker Gold\t\nj Hollinger  15.\nHowey Gold \t\nHudson Bay M & S  30\nInter Nickel  49.\nJ-M Consolidated\t\nJack Waite  -\t\nI Jacola Gold _ -     .\nI Kerr-Addison    2:\nKirkland Lake      1.\nLake Shore Mines   52.\nLamaque Contact\t\nLapa Cadillac \t\nLeitch Gold i\t\nLebel Oro Mines\t\nLittle Long Lac    3\nMacassa Mmes    4.\nJ MacLeod'Cockshutt    4.\nI Madsen Red Lake \t\nI Manitoba St Eastern \t\n1 Mandy\t\nI Mclntyre-Porcuplne    48.\nI McKenzie Red Lake     1\nI M-Vittie-Graham\t\nlMcWatters Gold \t\nI Mining.Corporation   2.\nI Minto Gold \t\nI Moneta Porcupine ..     1\nIWorris-Klrkland  .-.\t\nlNipissing Mining    1\nI Noranda. 73.\nINormnt.il\t\n8'Brien Gold     3\ninega Gold \t\nI Pamour Porcupine    4.\nIPaUlore   \t\nI Paymaster Cons  ......\nIppid Oreille    2.\n\u25a0 perron Gold.    1.\nIgickle Crow  , f,    4.\n\u25a0 Pioneer Gold  ....    2\nIPremler Gold ,   2.\n[Powell Rouyn Gold     2.\nIPreston East Dome   1\nIQue^ec Gold *\t\n.03%\n.53\n.19%\n3.40\n.18\n.03\n.06\n.22'A\n,75\n.30\n.22\n,34\n.32\n,10%\n65\n02%\n50\n11\n95\n55\n10\n.60\n.26\n75\n10\n46\n25\n09\n00\n11%\n22\n.25\n25\n.06%\n.38\n.18\n,55\n.45\n.09\n.06 Vs\n71\n61\n10\n00\n28\n.00\n75\n11\n.52\n18\n30\n32\n75\n.03'!\n.60\n.85\n.00\n,50\n80\n.10\n,55\n,01 Vt\n,17\n75\n.22\n.16%\n82\n10\n.04\n,86 \u2022\n.14\n66\nSO\n.94\n.85\n.84\n,40\n,00\n.54\n,05\n58\n115\n.95\n30\n50\n.81\n.42\nReeves MacDonald .....\nReno Gold Mines\t\nRitchie Gold Mines ....\nRoche Long Lac \t\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nShawkey Gold  __,\nSheep Creek Gold .....\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSiscoe Gold \t\nSladen Malartic \t\nStadacona Rouyn\t\nSt Anthony .'. \t\nSudbury Basin \t\nSullivan Cons \t\nSylvanite \t\nTeck - Hughes\t\nToburn Gold \t\nTowagmac\t\nVentures   __.._\u201e_\u201e_\nWaite Amulet \t\nWhitewater\nWright Hargreaves.. ..\nYmir Yankee Girl .....\nOILS\nAjax  \t\nBritish American\t\nChem Research\t\nImperial \t\nInter Pete\t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nTexas Canadian\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power\t\nBeatty Bros \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian \u201e.\nBrew __ Dist\t\nBrewing Corp    \t\nBrew Corp Pfd\t\nB C Power A\t\nB C Power B \t\nBuild Prods \t\nBurt F Nl _..\u201e...\nCan Bakeries Pfd .......\nCanada Bread \t\nCan Bud Malt \t\nCan Car tt Fdy\t\nCan Cement\t\nCan Cement Pfd \t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Malt _\t\nCan Pacific\t\nCan Ind Ale A \t\nCan Ind Ale B\t\nCan Wineries\t\nCarnation Pfd\t\nCons Bakeries \t\nCosmos  ....\nDominion Bridge \t\nDom Stores \t\nD Tar & Chem \t\nD Tar St Chem Pfd ....\nDist Seagrams\t\nFanny Fanner \t\nFord of Can A\t\nCep Steel Wares \t\nGoodyear Tire\t\nGyp L & A\t\nHarding Carpet\t\nHamilton Bridge    \t\nHamilton Brige Pfd ..\nHinde Dauche \t\nHiram Walker\t\nInt Metals\t\nInt Milling Pfd \t\nImperial Tobacco \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nKelvinator \t\nMaple Leaf Mill \t\nMassey Harris \t\nMontreal Power\t\nMoore Corp \t\nNat Steel Car   \t\nOnt Steel Prods\t\nOnt Silk Net\t\nPage Hersey\t\nPower Corp  \t\nPressed Metals \t\nctool  Af ITtn\n. .33\n.    .46\n.    .01%\n.     .15%\n, 1.23\n. .05\n.    .98\n.. 1.41\n. 2.26\n, 1.22\n. .58\n,     .13\n, 2:85\n, 1.20\n. 3.30\n. 4.55\n, 2.05\n,    .45\n. 6.15\n. 7.65\n.    .05\n. 7.85\n.    .15\n.    .22\n. 21.75\n. .45\n. 17.15\n. 26.35\n. 11.00\n.   1.55\n3\n.      9%\n.   163\n.     12%\n5%\n.      1.85\n.     20\n.     30\n3\n.     57\n.     22\n.     28\n5y\u00ab\n5.\n16'\/.\n10%\n.     95   .\n.     20%\n.     32%\n.       6%\n3%\n2%\n3\n.    101%\n15\n22\n,     36y.\n5%\n8\n82\n16%\n19%\n.     19 Vs\n7\n3\n8%\n42\n16%\n43\n8\n101\n15%\n22%\n20%\n.13\n' 3%\n8%\n28%\n37\n63\n10\n5\n90\n15%\nHI'A\nBoron Injection\nCures'Corky Bore'\nin Apple Trees\nFEDERICTON, Aug. 3 (CP)\u2014In-\nS' iction of a chemical known as\noron into the trunks of apple trees\nafflicted with \"corky bore is said\nto give almost 100 per cent control\nover this bane of apple growers.\nThe discovery is reported ty horticulturist L. c. Young and associates at the dominion experimental\nstation here. After several years'\nwork they are experimenting to\nsee if boron can be applied as a\nsoil treatment.\nThe staff also is experimenting\nIn an effort to produce a hardy\nwinter variety of apple.\nWheal Unchanged\nlo Higher, Chicago\nCHICAGO, Aug. 3 (AP).\u2014Possibilities Russo-Japanese hostilities\nwould spread did much today to\nlift Chicago wheat prices about 1%\ncents, but late reactions largely cancelled gains.\nTalk was heard should Russia become involved in a prolonged war,\nit would remove that country as\na source of supply.for deficit nations. On the other hand price setbacks later were promoted by on\nestimate Europe's crop this season\nwould be the largest since 1933,\n30,000,000 bushels larger than a 1-\nyear-old average,\nChicago wheat futures closed unchanged to Vt cent higher compared\nwith yesterday's finish, Sept. 67%\u2014\n%, Dec. 69\u201468Vs, corn Vi\u20141% down,\nSept. 54%-%, Dec. 52\u201452%,' and\noats unchanged to Vt ott\nSee Signs Expansion\nConsumer Purchasing\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (AP)-\nThe United States commerce department saw on the business horizon today \"definite. signs\" of expansion\nln consumer purchasing. It also\nnoted a healthier inventory situation in both the retail and capital\ngoods divisions.\nRichard C. Paterson, jr., assistant\nsecretary, said a mid-year summary\nof retail trade showed the June tendency toward better retail conditions was further strengthened in\nJuly.\nAutomobile stocks are not high for\nmidsummer and signs point to sales\nimprovement during the second\nhalf of 1938.\nA study of available figures indicated the large quantity of merchandise accumulated in the latter\npart of 1936 and early 1937 has\ngradually been liquidated and for\nsome lines, stock levels are back\nagain to normal.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 3 (CP)\u2014British and foreign exchange closed\neasier today. Nominal rates for large\namounts:\nArgentina, peso, .2621.\nBulgaria, lev, .0129.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3075.\nFrance, franc, .02732.\nGermany, reichsmark, .4030.\nHungary, pengo, .1989.\nIndia, rupee, .3682.\nJapan, yen, .2869.\n' South Africa, pound, 4.8880.\nSweden) krone, .2533.\nUnited States, dollar, 7-16 per\ncent prem.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (AP) .-Closing:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a341 13 9d,\nfuture \u00a341 18s 9d, both up 10s.\nElectrolytic spot, bid \u00a347, unchanged; asked \u00a347 15s, up 5s,\nTin spot \u00a3195, up 7s 6dj future\n\u00a3196, up 5s.\nBids: Lead spot \u00a314 12s 6d, up\nIs 3d; future \u00a314 l'j 3d, up 2s 6d.\nZinc spot \u00a313 17s (id, future \u00a314\n2s 6d, both unchanged.\nBar gold 142s 'Ail, up 4% pence.\n(Equivalent $34.78).\nBar silver 19 7-16d, off %.\nNEW YORK\nCopper firm. . llectrolytic spot\n10.12%; exDOrt 10.40\u201449.\nTin barely stea.' \u2022; spot and nearby 43.65; forward 43.70.\nLead steady; spot, New York 4.90\n\u201495; East St. Louis 4.75.\nZinc steady; Eaat St. Louis spot\nand forward 4.75.\nBar silver 42%, unchanged.\nMONTREAL\nSpot: Copper' electrolyte, 11.9P;\ntin 46%; lead 4.50; zinc 4.40; antimony 15; per 100 pounds f.o.b. Montreal, five-ton lots.\nBar gold in London v.\" one cent\nto $34.90 in Canadian funds; 142s\n%d. The fixed $35 Washington price\namounted to $35.13 in Canadian.\nSilver futures closed easi.r, 30\npoints off. No sales. Bids:' Aug.\n42,40; Sept. 41.85; Dec. 41.50.\nSlocks Lower on\nMontreal Market\nMONTREAL, Aug. 3 (CP).\u2014Resistance to selling orders melted\naway near the close today and', the\nstock market drifted fractions to\nmore than two points lower.\nSt. Lawrence Paper ptd. dropped\n2Vii. Price pfd. fell 1%, while losses!\nof about a half were distributed\nthrough the rest of the group.\nNational Steel Car tumbled near\n2% with Canadian Car common and\npreferred down a half each.\nSmelters slipped a point and\nNickel Vs but Noranda firmed a\nhalf to a new high 1938 of 73%.\nCanada Cement dipped %.\nGains of % each were marked up\nfor-Montreal Power and Shawinigan.'\nOils gained small fractions but\nIpiperlal Tobacco sold off actively.\nAshcroft Farmers\nMay Lose Crops\nASHCROFT, B.C., Aug. 3 (CP)-\nPossibility. of total loss of 400 acres\nof potatoes and tomatoes today faced\nfarmers near here as the result of\na fire which destroyed the Boston\nFlat supply pumping station valued\nat $10,000 on the Bonaparte river.\nRain will be the only chance the\ncrop, valued at $35,000, will have to\nripen.\nWorld   Exchanges\nNEW YORK Aug. 3 (API-Closing rates (Great Britain in dollars,\nothers in cents):\nGreat Britain 4.89%, 60-day bills\n4.88%; Canada, Montreal in New\nYork 99.56V., New York in Montreal 100.43%; Belgium 16.91%;\nCzechoslovakia 3.45%; Denmark 21.-\n83; Finland 2.18; France 2.74; Germany 40.12, benevolent 20.10, travel\n22.60; Greece .90; Hungary 19.85;\nItaly. 5.26Vi; Jugoslavia 2.34; Netherlands 54.57; Norway 24.58; Poland\n18.87; Portugal 4.45%; Rumania .75;\nSweden 25.21; Switzerland 22.85%;\nArgentine 32.60N; Brazil (free) 5.90\nN; Mexico City 30.35N; Japan 28.55;\nHong Kong 30.64; Shanghai 16.60.\nRates in spot cables, unless otherwise indicated.\n(N)\u2014Nominal.\nDividends\nMcColl-Fron nac, common, 10\ncents.\nInternational Coal and Coke Co.,\nLtd., lVz cents.\nC.P.R. EARNINGS DOWN\n\"MONTREAL, Aug. 3 (CP).\u2014Earnings of the Canadian Pacific railway\nfor the 10 days ended July 31 were\n$3,760,000, a decrease of $292,000 or\n7.2 per cent compared with $4,042,-\n000 in the corresponding period lost\njear,\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain     4%\nAssoc Brew ot C-8.    15\n10\n101-\n20\n13\n05\n17 \"i\n4'A\n15.i.\n11*\nBathurst P & P A\nCftn Bronze pfd\t\nCan Car St Fdy pfd\nCan Celanese\t\nCan Celanese pfd ...\nCan North Power ..\nCan Steamship\t\nCan Steamship pfd .\nCockshutt Plow \t\nCon Min _. Smelting   59Vi\nDominion Coal pfd  18%\nDom Steel Sc Coal B  14%\nDominion Textile   64\nDryden Paper  7%\nFoundation C of C   14\nGatineau Power  '. 11%\nGatineau Power pfd   83\nGurd Charles     7%\nHolt Renfrew   14\nHoward Smith Paper  16%\nH Smith Paper pfd  95V_\nImperial Oil  17\nInter Petroleum   26%\nInter Nickel of Can  49%\nLake of the Woods  15\nMcColl Frontenac   10%\nNational Brew Ltd   42%\nNat Brew pfd   42\nOgilvie Flour new     29\nPrice Bros     17%\nQuebec Power     17%\nShawinigan W St P     20%\nSt Lawrence Corp     5%\nSt Law Corp pfd     18%\nSouth Can Power     12%\nBANKS\nCommerce  174\nDominion   205\nimperial 205\nMontreal  210\nNova Scotia  300\nRoyal  184\nToronto  235\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd   25%\nBathurst P __ P B  '....    4%\nBeauharnois Corp      4\nBritish American Oil    21%\nCan Marconi  1.35\nCan Vickqrs     10\nCons Paper Corp      7%\nFairchild Aircraft      7\nInter Utilities A     7%\nInter Utilities B  .75\nLake Sulphite      3%\nMecLaren P & P    13%\nRoyalite Oil     46\nUnited Dist ol Can    85\nWalker. Good & W     43%\nWalker Good pfd     7\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAm Can \t\nAm For Pow ....\nAm Smelt __ Re\nAm Tel \t\n,Am Tob \t\n'Anaconda \t\nBaldwin   \t\nBait __ Ohio ....\nBendix Av \t\nBelh Steel \t\nBorden  \t\nCan Dry \t\nCan Pac \t\nCerro de Pasco\nChrysler \t\nCon Gas N Y ..\nC Wright pfd ..\nDupont  \t\nEast Kodak  ....\nFord Eng \t\nFord of Can ....\nFree Texas \t\nGen Elec\t\nGen Foods \t\nGen Motors \t\nGoodrich \t\nGranby\t\nHowe Sound ....\nHud Motors\t\nHigh\n99\n4%\n.51\n140%\n89\n:i(i-'_\n10.i\nWi\n21'A\nM:>.\n17%\n19%\n6%\n47=.,\n72.;,\n28%\n5%\n128%\n177 Vi\n4%\n10._\n29%\n42%\n35\n44%\n24%\n7%\n47%\n9%\nLow\n98'A\n4%\n50 Vs\n140'A\n88%\n35%\n9%\n8,1\n20\n573.\n17%\n10\n6%\n47%\n70\n27%\n5%\n127\n177\n4%\n19%\n29'it\n\u202211':,\n_-t'\u201e\n42',i\n23%\n6%\n47\n9%\nClose\n99'\n4'A\n50%\n140 V.\n88%\n:;_'_\n9'A\n8%\nHO'l\n57..\n17%\n10%\n6%\n47%\n70'.\n_7;'.,\n5%\n127%\n177%\n4%\n19%\n:_>\".-.\n41'A\n31''i,\n42%\n23%\n6%\n47V.\n9%,\nInter Tel __ Tel\nKcnn Cop \t\nMack Truck ....\nMont Ward \t\nNash Motors ....\nN Y Central\t\nPack Motors\t\nPenn R R \t\nPhillips Pete ....\nRadio Corp \t\nRem Rand \t\nSafeway Stores\nShell Un  '.\t\nS Cal Edison ....\nStan Oil of N J\nTexas Corp \t\nTexas\" Gulf Sul\nTimken Roll ....\nUnder Type ....\nUn Carbide\t\nUn Oil of Cal ..\nUn Aircraft\t\nUn Pile  ....\nV S Rub \t\nU S Steel \t\nWarner Bros ....\nWest Elec ...<\t\nWest (Jn \t\nWoolworth \t\nHigh Low\n9%     8%\n42V, 41\n26% 25%\n47% 4614\n10% 10%\n19%\n6%\n18%\n5\n21% 20%\n41% 41%\n7 6%\n16% 18%\n20% 20V.\n11V, 16%\n23V, 23%\n57% 57\n47% 46\n35 34%\n48V. 48%\n64V. 64%\n83V. 82>\/i\n21% 21%\n28% 28\n82 82\n45% 43%\n60% 58%\n6% 6%\n104 V4 101\n31% 30%\n47% 4\u00ab%\nClose\n8%\n41\n26\n46y_\n10%\n18%\n5\n20 V.\n41%\n\u2022 6%\n16%\n20V4\n17%\n23%\n57\n46\n34%\n48'\/,\n64'A\n82%\n21%\n28\n82\n43%\n50V.\n6%\n101%\n30%\n47\n_1S14_\nMinor Losses on\nToronto Market\nTORONTO, Aug. 3 (CP)-A mildly weak tone marked the Toronto\nstock market in the closing period\ntoday. Minor losses predominated\nin mining groups and the Indus-\nPreston Bast Dome Gold went up\nto 1.83 for a net gain ot 2.\nKerr-Addison steamed up to a\nnew high at 2.48 but final sales\naround 2.40 represented a loss of\nabout 5 cents.\nThe close was down 10 to 15 for\nMacassa, Pamour and MacLeod-\nCockshutt and 5 or more for O'Brien, Hard Rock, Bralorne and\nUchl.\nDome and Mclntyre advanced to\nnew high prices at 34 and 46% respectively. In the base metals Noranda sold at a new high.\nDistillers-Seagrams posted a new\nhigh price for the year at Ills and\nWalkers Common fired a half.\nInternational Petroleum and British American oils added fractions\nwhile the utilities and steels weakened. Abitibi pfd weakened more\nthan a point.\nWestern oils changed early gains\nfor minor recessions. Dalhousie and\nCalgary-Edmonton fell back 5 to\n10 and Calmont and United were\ndown slightly. Royalite lost a point.\nMARKETS AT A\nGLANCE\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto and New York \u2014 Stocks\nclosed lower.\nMontreal \u2014 Golds and utilities\nhigher; other industrials lower.\n. Winnipeg \u2014 Wheat % to a cent\nhigher.\nToronto \u2014 Bacon hogs off truck\n50 cents lower at $10.\nLondon \u2014 Bar silver lower; copper and lead higher; zinc unchanged.\nNew York \u2014 Silver and other\nmetals unchanged,\nMontreal \u2014 Silver lower.\nNew York \u2014 Cotton lower; rubber, coffee and sugar higher.\nNew York \u2014 Canadian dollar\ndown 1-16 to 99 9-16.\nPound Sterling\nWeakens Sharply\nNEW YORK, Aug. 3 (AP).-Tho\npound sterling, leading currency in\nworld trade, weakened sharply\nagain today, rellecting the intensified political conditions in Europe\nand the far east.\nThe demand for gold in the London open market was one of the\nlargest in years as speculators and\nhoarders unloaded balances of sterling. United States dollars Were in\ndemand, but not to the extent of\nthe demand for gold.\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal - Pound 4.91%; U. S.\ndollar 1.00-7-16; franc 2.75 5-16.\nAt New York \u2014 Pound 4.89%;\nCanadian dollar .99 9-16; franc 2.74.\nAt Paris \u2014 Pound 178,26 franc;\nU. S. dollar 36.40 tranc; Canadian\ndollar 36.30 franc.\nIn Gold \u2014 Pound 12s; U. S. dollar\n59.43' cents; Canadian dollar 59.23\ncents,\nINCREASE INCOME\nTAX COLLECTIONS\nOTTAWA, Aug. 3 (CP). - With\nincreases recorded in nearly all\ndistricts, income tax col!_ctlons during the period from April 1 to July\n31 amounted to $106,170,182 compared to $86,455,388 in the corresponding period last year. .\nCollections during July declined\n$68,023 to $4,648,750 from $4,716,728\nin July, 1937.\nLE HAVRE (CP)- Since her\nmaiden voyage ln June, 1935, the\nFrench liner Normandie has crossed\nthe Atlantic more than 100 times and\ncarried 230,137 people.\nWalla Walla Mining,\nCompany Registered\nB. C.; Office Kaslo\nCommodore Mining company of\nWalla Walla, Wash., has been registered in British Columbia as an\nextra-provincial company; with' its\nprovincial head office at Kaslo, according to a notice ln the B. C. Gazette. ,\nAttorney of the company \"appointed pursuant to the Companies\nact\" la Agnes Singel of Kaslo.\nPaid up capital is $19,275.75.\nWheat Futures\nUp al Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 3 (CP).-Win-\nnipeg wheat futures advanced more\nthan a cent today due to higher\nLiverpool prices and political tension in the far east. Final values\nwere %\u20141 higher, October 76%,\nNovember 76, December 75% and\nMay 77%.\nThe initial buying flurry, mostly\nnervous covering, followed reports\nof warfare between Japan and Russia along the Siberian border.\nCanadian export sales of 250,000\nbushels, favorable inter - market\nspreading, and comparatively firm\ncash wheat prices off-set any bearish influence caused by beneficial\nrains in western Canada overnight.\nLiverpool closed IH\u2014Id higher.\nChicago was firm and Buenos Aires\nunchanged to % cent down at noon.\nNo. 8 Northern spread advanced\na cent with Nos. 1 and 2 off a cent\nor more but steady compared with\nfour-cent setbacks yesterday. Durums were unchanged.\nCoarse grains averaged fractionally higher near the'close in sympathy witM wheat.\nForecast Largest Crop\nWheat Since'31, U.S.\nCHICAGO, Aug. 3 (AP)\u2014 The\nthird largest wheat crop in United\nStates history was forecast todsy by\nthe six Chicago crop experts. Their\nfigures, when averaged, indicated a\ntotal wheat production of 936,000,000\nbushels, largest since 1931 when the\ntotal was 941,800,000 bushels. The\nall-time record production was 1,-\n026,000 bushels ln 1915. Harvest last\nyear totalled 873,900,000.\nProbable Canadian spring wheat\nproduction in western provinces is\n340,000,000 bushels.\nDominion Bonds\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 3 (CP)- Dominion of Canada bonds, bid and\n4V4, Sept. 1, 1940, 105%, 106%.\n5, Nov. 15, 1941, 109%, 110%.\n5, Oct. 15, 1943, 112%, 113%.\n4, Oct. 15, 1945-43, 107%, 108%.\n4%, Feb. 1,1946,111%. 112%.\n3%, Oct. 15, 1949-44,103%, 104%.\n3%, Nov. 15, 1951-48, 102, 102%.\n\u2022 4, Oct. 15, 1952-47, 107%, 108%.\n3, June 1, 1955-50, 98%, 99%.\n4%, Nov. 1, 1958-48, 111%, 112%.\n4%, Nov. 1, 1959-49,112%, 113%.\n3%, June 1,1966-56,100%, 101%.\n3, perpetuate, 89, 90.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 3 (CP). -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStrt.    Tough\nNo. 1 hard 77%       75%\nNo. 1 Nor 77%       75%\nNo. 2 Nor 73%       71%\nNo. 3 Nor.. 69%        66%\nNo. 4 Nor 66%       63%\nNo. 5 wheat 62%       59%\nNo. 6 wheat 58%       55%\nFeed 51%       48%\nFRENCH FRANC EASE8\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (AP). \u2014 The\nUnited states dollar advanced to\n$4.89% to the pound in toreign exchange trading today, a nc. gain\nof 1% cents In terms of sterling. In\ncontrast, sterling was quoted to\n$4.90% in New York overnight.\nFrench francs eased moderately,\nclosing 178.31 to the pound against\n178.12 yesterday.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nMINE8:\nAztec\nB C Nickel\t\nBig Missouri\t\nBluebird   \t\nBralorne   \t\nBridge Riv Con\t\nB R Mount \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nDentonia   \t\nDunwell   \t\nFairview Amal\t\nFederal  Gold  \t\nGeorge Copper\t\nGolconda\t\nGold- Belt  ...\"\t\nGold Mount\t\nGrandview   \t\nGrull-Wihksne \t\nHaida   G6ld   \t\nHedley Mascot\t\nHedley Sterling ....\nHome  GOld  \t\nIndian Mines \t\nInter Coal & Coke\nIsland Mount\t\nKoot  Belle  \t\nLucky Jim \t\nMak Sic Gold \t\nMcGillivray \t\nMetaline M __ L ..\nMinto   Gold   \t\nNicola M __ M \t\nNoble  Five    .....\nPend   Oreille  \t\nPilot Gold \t\nPioneer Gold-\t\nPorter Idaho \t\nPremier Border\t\nPremier Gold \t\nQuatsino   \t\nQuesnelle Q\t\nReeves MacD \t\nRelief  Arl  \t\nReno Gold \t\nReward      .....\nSally Mines \t\nSalmon Gold \t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilbak Premier\t\nSilver   Crest   \t\nSunloch Mines \t\nSunshine       \t\nTnvlnr B R\nBid\n.30\n.01%\n9.50\n.02\n2.55\n.04\n.02\n.08\n.01\n.25\n.46\n.01%\n.04%\n.03%\n1.06\n.01 Vi\n.26\n1.23\n1.37\n.02%\n.01%\n.20\n.04\n.03%\n.02%\n2.00\n.01\n2.90\n.03\n.01\n2.22\n.03%\n.09%\n.35\n.14%\n.44\n.03%\n.03\n.12\n.98\n1.85\n.01%\n.15 \u25a0\n.13\n.03\nAsk\n.07\n.091\/,\n.34\n9.70\n.02%\n.04\n2.60\n.04%\n.08%\n.30\n.07\n.46V.\n.03\n.04%\n.03%\n1.09\n.03\n.01%\n1.24\n1.40\n.02%\n.72\n.04%\n.04\n.03%\n2.15\n.01%\n3.00\n.04\n.01%\n2.24\n.04%\n.10%\n.38\n.16%\n.45\n.04\n.05\n.14\n1.00\n2.00\n.03\n.16\n.04\nVidette Gold \t\nWaverly  T   \t\nWellington   \t\nWesko Mines \t\nWhite  Eagle  \t\nWhitewater  \t\nYmir Yank Girl ...\nOILS:\nA P Con\t\nAmalgamated \t\nAnaconda     \t\nAnglo   Can\t\nBaltac    \t\nBrit  Dom  \t\nBrown  Corp  \t\nCalgary & Edm ...\nCalmont   \t\nCommonwealth   ...\nCrows  Nest  \t\nDalhousie \t\nDavies Pete \t\nEast Crest \t\nFirestone Pete \t\nFoothills   \t\nFoundation Pete ...\nFreehold Corp\t\nHargal   \t\nHighwood Sarcee .\nHome     \t\nMadison    \t\nMar Jon  \t\nMcDoug Seg \t\nMcLeod new \t\nMercury    \t\nMerland    \t\nMill City Pete \t\nModel    \t\nMonarch Roy \t\nNordon Corp \t\nOkalta com  \t\nPacalta   \t\nPrairie Roy \t\nRoyalite     \t\nSouthwest Pete\t\nSpooner   \t\nUnited   \t\nVanalta \t\nVulcan   \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nBrew tt Dist \t\nCan Pac \t\nCapital Est\t\nCoast Brew \t\nPacific Coyle\t\nUnited Dist\n.07\n.00%\n. .01%\n.02%\n.01\n.15%\n.00%\n.02y4\n.02%\n.02\n.06\n.16%\n.18 -\n.01 .01V4\n.08 .09\n1.40 -\n.03 -\n.30\n2.40\n.32%\n.27\n.01%\n.43\n.30\n.07\n.14%\n.50\n.16\n.05%\n.16\n.12\n1.22\n.04\n.07%\n.14%\n.15\n.10%\n.05\n.07\n.21\n.12\n.10\n1.33\n.06%\n.35\n46.50\n.40\n.10\n.12\n.05\n5.00\n0.5O\n1.90\n1.30\n.15\n.90\n.35\n2.45\n.28\n.01%\n.35\n.16\n.06\n.18\n_).28\n.04%\n.07%\n.16\n.11\n.24\n.13\n1.26\n.12%\n.90\n7.00\n2,00\nf35\nLOO\n-PAQE ni\nSilver Mining In the Slocan\nConcentrator at the Ottawa mine near Slocan City. Spokane capital is interested in a company of which W. R. Green is president.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 3 (CP) .-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High  Low  Close\nWHEAT:\nOct    76%    77%    76%    76%\nNov _   -       \u2014       \u2014       76\nDec   75%    76%    75%    75%\nMay      77%    78%    77V4    77%\nOATS:\nOct    32%    32%    32%    32%\nDec    30%    30%     30%    30%\nBARLEY:\nOct    44%    45       45       44%\nDec    43%    44%    43%    43%\nFLAX:\nOct 143%   143% ,143      143\nRYE:\nOct   46       46%    45%    45%\nDec   47%    47%    46%    46%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT-No. 1 Nor. 86%; No. 2\nNor. 83%; No. 3 Nor. 80%; No. 4\nNor. 70%; No. 5, 64%; No. 6, 68%;\nfeed 56%; No. 1 Garnet 80%; No. 2\nGarnet 77%. No. 1 Durum 71%; No.\n4 special 65%: No. 5 special 58%;\nNo. 6 special 54%; track 81%;\nscreenings 25 cents per ton.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 33%; No. 3\nC. W. and Ex. 1 feed 30%; No. 1\nfeed 29%; No. 2 feed 27%; No. 3\nfeed 25%; track 32%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6- and\n2-row Ex. 3 C. W. 43%. Others:\nNo. 3 C. W. 42%; No. 4 C. W. 40%;\nNo. 5 C. W. 39%; No. 6 C. W. 38%;\ntrack 43%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 142; No. 2\nC. W. 91; No. 3 C. W. 127; No. 4\nC. W. 122; track 141.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 43.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Aug. 3 (CP)-Gen-\neral tone of the produce section of\nCanadian .commodity exchange improved slightly today. Second grade\nbutter and Quebec cheese were in\ndemand,  prices  gaining  about  %\nButter spot\u2014The fresh (92 score)\n24%-%.\nCheese spot \u2014 Ontario white 14-\n14 1-5, Ontario colored 14B, Quebec\nwhite 13%B, and Quebec colored\n13 11-16B.\nEggs spot \u2014 Ontario A large 27%A.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (AP) .\u2014Closing:\nBrazil $13%; C. P. R. $6%; International -Nickel $51%; tl. S. Steel\n$62%; Babcock & Wilcock 38s 9d;\nCent Mining \u00a322%; Consol Gold\nFields 76s 3d; Crown \u00a316%; East\nGeduld \u00a312%; H. B. C. 23 6d; Metal\nBox 79s; Mex Eagle 5s; Mining Trust\n2s 6d; Springs 29s 4%d.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent Consols \u00a375%; 3% per cent war loan\n\u00a3102%; funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3114.\nCANADIAN WHEAT IN\nSTORE SHOWS DECREASE\nOTTAWA. Aug. 3 (CP)-Canad-\nian wheat in store for the week\nended July 29 totalled 19,709,319\nbushels, a decrease of 2,064,235 compared to the previous week and 13,-\n575,962 compared to the corresponding week of 1937.\n(OUT WEAKENS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 3 (CP)-Pri-\nees weakened a few cents on Vancouver stock exchange today and\nthe closing trend was mixed. Sales\ntotalled 56,516 shares.\nGolds accounted for most of the\nactivity. Bralorne declined 18 at\n9.50 while Hedley Mascot at 1.06 and\nSheep Creek at 98 each dipped 1.\nBig Missouri at 30 and Premier at\n2.22 were down 3 as Pioneer held\nsteady at 1.90. Cariboo Gold Quartz\ngained 5 at 2.55 and Kootenay Belle\nfirmed 4 at 1.37,\nBase metals were quiet and mostly unchanged. Nicola was fraction,\nally higher at 3%  while Reeves.,'-\nMacDonald eased 1  at 35. B. C.\nNickel at 9 and Lucky Jim at 2',_ ,\nwere unchanged,\nCalgary __ Edmonton oil lost 6 at;\n2.40, Okalta 5 at 1.33 and Home 3 at,,,\n1.22. Royalite was down 50 at $16.50,,\nBrown two cents at 30 and United \u201e\nslipped 1 at 12. Other stocks were_j_\nquiet.\nBONDS LOWER\nNEW YORK, Aug. 3 (AP)- Ths\nbond market today closed,lower.\nContinued Russo-Japanese hostilities bore down on Nipponese sccuri-1\nties. Japanese government 6%j lost\n5Vi at 62%; and the J%s ended down\n2% at 44. Tokyo City 6%s of '61 clos-4\ned at 42%, off 4%; Tokyo electric.,\nlight 6s of '53 at 40%, off 4, and ,\nYokohama 6s at \u00a361 at 43%, off 2%. _\n\u2022\u2022'\u25a0\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Aug. 3 (CP).-Re-':,,\nceipts to noon today: Cattle 163;'-'.\ncalves 41; hogs 81; sneep 217.\nCattle prices held fairly steady.\nGood butcher steers 4.75\u20146.00; common to medium 2.50\u20144.50; common\nto medium heifers 2.00\u2014l.OOi good\ncows 3.00\u20143.25; good veal -calves\n4.50\u20145.00; good stacker steers 3.50\u2014\n4.00; medium to good stocker heifers\n2.50-3.25.\nNo hogs sold to noon; Tuesdays\nsales; Selects 10.75; butchers 9.75;\n0ft trucks; bawns 10.25.\nOILS DOWN AT tALCARY\nCALGARY, Aug. 3 (AP)-Senior\noils weakened on the Calgary stock\nexchange today.\nAt the noon close Okalta was 4\nlower at 1.38; C. & E. was bid 6\ndown at 2.42 with no sales.\nCommoil traded steady at 64%:\nFirestone was up VI at 15% and\nPrairie Royalties 2 at 36. Sunset,\nheld steady at 36%.\nTransfers during the morning totalled 11,500 shares.\n\u25a0ORANGEVILLE, Ont., (CP) \u2014\nIt's not'grasshoppers, but the saw-\nfly that's worrying fanners mar this\nDufferin county town and they want\nthe government to do something\nabout it.\nBUTTER WRAPPERS\nWE HAVE A LARGE\nSUPPLY OF ATTRAC\nTIVELY PRINTED\n'BUTTER WRAPPERS\nIN  STOCK\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\n$1.75 for 400\n$1.25 for 200\n$ .75   for    100\nNo Sales Tax\nPHONE 143\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT f\n\u25a0\n IPF up\nPAGE TEN '\t\nfti____8(_>(WWt<W_-I^MW\u00bbW^^\nTODAY\nAND\nFriday.\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 and 9:02\nr\nAt_2j4, 7:24, 9:36.\nPlu:\nNITE 15c and 25c.\nCOLORED CARTOON, NOVELTY and NEWS.\nSocial...\nWARDNER\nWARDNER, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nA Kievil and Miss E. Lundbom,\nand V. Lundbom, spent Sunday in\nFernie.\nV. Rhine, T. Muir and H. Renstrom of the Crow's Nest camp,\nspent the v\/eek end in town.\nMrs. A. Anderson and son Harold,\nwere guests at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. Johnson Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Anderson of Jaffray visited town Sunday.\nW. Fisher and son Ivan, were\nCranbrook visitors Sunday.\nA Damstrom and Miss E. Con-\nstanza of Jaffray,  were in town\nMr. and Mrs. L. Rader ol Fort\nSteele, were visitors Monday.\nMrs A. Kievil and son Norman,\nmotored to Cranbrook Tuesday\nwhere Norman had his tonsils removed. . ,\nL Flesberg and Mrs. L. Lovick,\nwere Cranbrook visitors Monday.\nV. Lundbom motored to the\nCrow's Nest camp Monday.\nUrges Christians\nto Work for Peace\nMELBOURNE, Australia, Aug. 3\n(AP)\u2014Ten thousand delegates to\nthe World Christian Endeavor Union conference, representing 4,000,-\n000 members in 126 nations of 100\nreligious denominations, were urged to \"lift a voice against the bomb-\nl of open cities.\"\nFollowing two impressive cere-\nonies, lighting of the convention\ntorch and the grouping of flags of\nall the nations, President Daniel\nPoling urged the members at the\nopening session last night to work\naggressively throughout-the world\nfor Christian peace.\n'36 Terraplane Coupe\nGood Running <CC7^\nOrder        \u00abPd'd\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\n(NELSON) LTD^-PHONE 117\nWAMPOLE'S\nGRAPE SALT\nTht morning refresher.\n50c and $1.00\nMann,Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nSAYS BUSINESSMEN\nSHOW MORE COURAGE\nCALGARY, Aug. 3 (CP)-Busi-\nnessmen of the United States are\nshowing \"more courage,\" James A.\nFarley, postmaster general of the\nUnited States, told interviewers here\ntoday.\n\"Conditions in the United States\nhave Improved and are improving,\"\nsaid the postmaster-general. \"We\nanticipatea good upswing by fall.\"\nSocial...\nLONGBEACH\nLONGBEACH, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Challoner and family, who spent\nJuly here, have returned to Victoria\nMrs. E. D. Rutherglen and sons,\nBill and Ted, are holidaying here.\nDavid Smith and Tudor Rutherglen have left lor a 10 day canoe\ntrip to the Lardo district.\nMiss Lillian Dickinson spent a\nlew days here, a guest ol Mr. and\nMrs. H. Leggatt and Com. and Mrs.\nB. A. Smith.\nMr. Hagan has lelt lor the prairies.\nCom. B. A. Smith, with W. S.\nAshby ot Harrop and Mr. Eastham,\nplant pathologist spent three days in\nKokanee Park recently.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Sowerby ot Nelson spent the weekend here.\nMr. and Mrs. Madden and family\nand friends are holidaying in one\nof the Smith cottages.\nMr. and Mrs. S. Bostock and\ndaughter of Nelson are spending a\nholiday here.\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Kerr spent a\nfew days yatching on the Main\nlake.\nD. G. H. Sargent and Ted Rutherglen are camping on the main lake.\nMrs. H. N. Major had as a visitor\nrecently Mrs. Annandale of TraiL\n' \u25a0\nCARDINAL TO VISIT ROME\nQUEBEC, Aug. 3 (CP)\u2014Cardinal\nVilleneuve will leave for New York\ntomorrow where he will board the\nliner Conte Di Savoia lor a trip\nto Rome. He will visit Pope Puis\nXI at his summer villa in Castel\nGandolto.\n6 Trail Athletes\nEnter Caledonian\nGames at Coast\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 3 - Six\ntrack and field stars of this olty\nleave Thursday for Vancouver to\nparticipate In the Caledonian\nGames August 6. The local athletes have been practicing diligently and regularly for the past few\nweeki.\nTHe three Haley brothers, Joe,\nPat and Paul, again will be carrying Trail colors In the time meet,\nPaul returning to the sprints titer\n> layoff of two years necessitated\nby a leg Injury sustained In t race\nat Vancouver. Both Pat and Paul\nwill enter the 100-ytrd iprlnt, Ptt\nthe 220 and Paul the quarter mile.\nJoe will confine his efforts to the\nhigh Jump event\nOrlando Battistella proposes to\ncompete in the high and broad Jumps\nand the 100-yard dash. Len Richardson in the quarter mile and 100-\nyard event.\nRichardson', Battistella, Pat and\nPaul will combine their running\nprowess to enter a Trail relay team.\nNorman Bowsher, who has copped\nprizes every time he has competed\nin Vancouver sports, will,enter the\nweight throwing events.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 4, 1938\nBantams and Old Timers Produce\nDizzy Baseball in Trail Exhibit\nScorekeepers Go Into\nHuddle, Come Out\nWith 11-11 Tie\n'TRAIL, B. C, Aug. 3\u2014Some say\nthe Bantams were victorious, some\nsay the Old Timers triumphed, but\nout of the muddle the score keepers\nfound an 11-11 score which pleased\neveryone When Trail's extraordinary baseball fixture of the season\nwas called ln the 'middle of the\nninth inning on' account ot darkness. It was played before the greatest and most cheerful attendance of\nthe season at Butler park this eve.\nning. The struggle was under way\nat 5:30 p.m. arid it was nigh on 8\np.m. when the boys \"called it quits.\"\nPlay was keen and cautious-for\nthe lirst live innings, with Bantams leading 2-0, but the game went\nthe way ot most ball games in the\nsixth when Iree hitting commenced\nand the old fellers were forced to\nwheeze around the bases. Although\nthe Old Timers started oil in lun,\nthey soon got into the old spirit of\nthe great game and lought lor all\nthey were worth. H. R. (Hank)\nLauriente, who began the pitching,\nhandled his team in lacrosse or hockey lashion, pulling a man in when\nhe appeared tired, resting him a bit\nand then sending him out tor an\nother spell.\nFans  were  handed laugh alter [pired.\nlaugh as fielders missed flies in the\nfield, as three men got into hot boxes at the same time, when t hot blow\nalmost knocked tjlxne over at third\nbase,, and when pitcher and catcher\nendeavored to retrieve a bunt at the\nsame time.\nHank Lauriente, \"Doc\" Muir,\nJames Buchanan and Leo Letcher\neach had a crack at hurling on the\nOld Timer club, Letcher tossing 'em\nln there as though he had played\nhis last senior game yesterday instead ot ten years ago, \"Buck\" had a\nperfect day at bat, getting two hits\nlor two times at bat.\nThe diminutive Billy Molifky was\nup to his old tricks, getting the Ban.\ntarns involved in arguments to pull\nthe hidden ball stunt, and on another\noccasion to permit a man to steal\nhome.\nScore by innings:\nOld Timers  000 003 170-11\nBantams   ' 200 003 42x\u201411\nTeams were:\n.Old Timers\u2014Molisky, Muir, Lauriente, Letcher, Morgan, Maze, Di-\np'asquale, Mclntyre, Matovich, Clark,\nH, Lauriente, F. Lauriente, Garland,\nButorac, Gus McDonald and Buchanan.\nBantams\u2014Price, Pagnan, McLeod:\nMonaldi, Wagner, Norberg, Toltolo,\nLauriente, Maitland, Jones, Smart\nand Edmunds.\nCasey Jones and Jimmy Toole urn-\n20 Visitors See\nWork of Senior\nNews of the Day\nDance at Vallican, Aug. 3. Innes\nOrch. Good Eats. Adm. 35c.    (2570)\nFOR YOUR FLOOR NEEDS SEE\nOR PHONE H. RONMARK.   (1910)\nDANCE IN YMIR AUGU8T 5th.\nGOOD MUSIC. (2503)\nDance   at   Ainsworth   Saturday\nNight. Ernie Leschlutta orch.\n(2582)\nWanted early Applet and Plum!.\nMcdonald jam company.\n(2365)\nNew Fall Suit Samples Just Arrived\nJACK BOYCE\n._;.>\nSale of three coat White and Red\nEnamelware, -any piece $1.39. See\nour Windows.\u2014Hlppersons.      (751)\n- 93   PHONE   93 \u2014\nB. B. Taxi All new can.\n(2321)\nTODAY - BASEBALL \u2014 TODAY\nColored House of David vi. Nelson.\n6:30 p.m. Adm. 35c, Kids 15c.\n(2589)\nHAGER'S NEWS STAND\nNext to Rex Cafe\nOPEN FOR BUSINE8S\n(2590)\nEaiy Washers are now available to\neveryone with the new Eaiy Budget\nPlan. Ask us about It today\nKOOTENAY MU8IC HOUSE\n(708)\nAINSWORTH HOT SPRING8\nEnjoy a swim In the PURE, WARM\nMINERAL WATER. Weekly ratei on\ncottages and cabins. (2573)\nNELSON'8 LABOR DAY SPORTB\nFoot races, Scotch dancing, blr.y-\nI tie races. Entry formi to A. Wallach,\n908 Latimer St., Nelson, B. C. (2586)\nThe new Super-Duty FRIGIDAIRE\nwith the METER-MISER It made\nonly by FRIGIDAIRE Division of\nGeneral Motort and It on display at\nHipperson'-. (751)\neSocial...\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP,  B.   Cj-Among\nwho motored to\nthose\nto be\nFauquier\nguests at the home ol Mr. and Mrs.\nFunk were Mr. and Mrs. R. Buerge,\nMr. and Mrs. N. A. Herridge, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Sheills, Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Barlow, Mr. and Mrs. A. Dunn,\nMrs. E. Olsen. Miss B. McWhirter,\nMiss M. Adams and H. Bowes.\nA. H. Russell ol Fort Vermilion\nwas a recent visitor.\nMrs. A. Johnson ot Burton spent\nSaturday in Nakusp.\nMrs. W. Morgan is visiting relatives in Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank McDonald ol\nVancouver spent Monday in Nakusp.\nH. McCall and K. Lawes ot Vernon motored to Nakusp Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Wales who have\nbeen guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. W.\nBill have left for Vancouver where\nthey will visit Mr. and Mrs. H.\nJones.\nMrs. O. Salstrom and two daughters and Mrs. Salstrom's mother.\nMrs. C. B. Hambling have returned\nfrom Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Lee Johnson ot Nelson were visitors Monday.\nMrs. Nasby of Glendevon was a\nvisitor Monday.\nM. Cusick of Trail spent the week\nend here.\nD. Spain who with his family has\nbeen holidaying here returned to\nTrail. Mrs. Spain and two sons will\nremain in Nakusp lor some time.\nJ. Chambers of Trail was in town\nMonday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. A. Harrison of\nNelson were Monday visitors.\nMiss Bernice Jordan has returned\ntrom the girls camp at Koolaree.\nMr. and Mrs. R. White lett Saturday for Penticton where they will\nvisit the latter's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Nesbitt.\nT. Howe lett Saturday lor Vancouver.\nMrs. G. Hunter Gardner Jr. and\nson Philip Hunter have lelt lor\nVancouver where they will visit\nMrs. Gardner's mother, Mrs. P. H.\nSheffield.\nORANGEVILLE, Oht. '(CP) -\nJames Brown rigged up a workable\ndiving outfit from old auto parts\nand as well as having fun is doing\nquite a lost and found business\nfrom the bottom ol Caledon lake,\nAbout 20 visitors Irom Nelson, Na*\nkusp, Balfour and Procter Wednesday afternoon visited Camp Koolaree on the West Arm, where some\n24 girls with seven leaders comprise\nthe senior girls' camp ol the Kootenay Religious Education council.\nFour cars Irom Nelson and lour\nlaunches made the trip. _\nInspecting the camp, the visitors\nsaw handicraft ol many kinds, including plaster bf Paris casts of nature work, baskets, plaques, printing\nand paper parchment work.\nA camp paper is'being published,\nthe paper being run off on a hectograph built by one girl's lather,\nand brought by her Irom Cranbrook.\nNo program was'presented tor the\nvisitors as the girls w_re planning\na big entertainment' lor the touring\nparty ol New Zealand high school\nboys with their headmaster, and a\ngroup ot Nelson boys Who were to\nvisit the camp Wednesday.night.\nTRAIL CUSTOMS\nTOTALS $10,762\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 3\u2014Customs\nand excise revenue in Trail district\nin the month ot July amounted to\n$10,762.45, ol which $1458.12 was\ncollected at the outport ot Paterson\nand $28.44 at the Rossland postal\ncollection station, $9275.89 being received at the Trail customs olfices.\nSullivan Mine Team\nAgain.League Winner\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-The Sullivan\nMine football team played Fernie\nSunday at Lindsay park in a Crow's\nNest Pass league game, ending in a\ndefeat lor the visitors with a score\nfor the locals ot 5-0. Art Nicholson\nscored three-goals and Scotty Ness\ntwo.\nThis was the last game ol the\nseason with the Sullivan Mine team\nagain winners ot the league.\nW, Faulds relereed the game. The\ntci..m_i.\nSullivan Mine\u2014V. Dick, goal; W.\nJones and A. Forrester, backs', G.\nMcFarlane, C. Greenland, J. McFarlane, halfbacks; S. Ness, J.\nSweeney, A. Nicholson, G. Ure, S.\nSmith.\nFernie\u20140. Oakley, goal; W. Martin and J. George, backs; J. Flem-\nmlng, J. Cairns, L. Milburn, halfbacks; Benisky, E. Peterson, S.\nWomack, M. Atherton, G. Plnoth,\nWOUNDED CANADIANS\nCONVALESCE IN PARIS\n, PARIS, Aug. 3 (CP)-Sixteen Canadians were among a group of 200\nmembers of the Spanish international brigade brought here today\nto convalesce from wounds.\nThey included David Harvey and\nArthur Tozzaman, Vancouver; Mi-\nhaley Vilechko, Winnipeg; Albert\nLloyd Evans, Regina; and James\nWilson, Edmonton.\nDenis Kozma was listed as ol Saskatchewan and Helmut Kraut bl\nAlberta.\nGet Your Job In the \"Want Ails\"\nConcealed Automatic Pump quickly\nand efficiently dralnt the tub, laving time and labor. No heavy pails\nof water to lift The new CONNOR\nWashen now at\nMcKAY A 8TRETT0N\n(706)\nREGINA\n$3395\nRETURN\nDaily Through Service\nBY BUS\nPhone 800 for further\nparticulars.\nGREY\/HOUND\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST -' RONSON CIGARETTE\nlighter, Lakeside park. Engraved\n\"N. S.\" \"Norm from Helen.\" Return Safeway Store. (2593)\nFOR SALE \u2014 GOOD HOME ON\nfinest site in Nelson. Grand view.\nFive level lots. Stone foundation,\nfurnace, sleeping porch. Two car\ngarage, fruit trees. On view -10\na.m. to 12. Call at 532 Baker St.\n(2394)\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H. 8. ALLEN\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 3-Miss Freda\nEdwards returned to the city Sunday evening after spending the past\ntwo weeks in Kimberley, the guest\nof her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. Edwards. En route Miss Edwards was\nthe house guest of Mrs. Harry Stewart in Nelson for three days.\nAfter spending the past five\nmonths in Norway, Mrs. M. Carpenter and son Arthur arrived, back in\nthe city Tuesday evening.\nMr. and Mrs. Ernest Stevens, Second avenue, have as their guest the\nformer's mother, Mrs. R. Stevens\nof Camp Lister.\nMrs. J. Wilkinson and daughter\nare visiting in Robson, the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. William Porter,\nFULLER \u2014 8MITH\nA lovely wedding took place at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Cyril B.\nSmith, 1202 Second avenue, Monday\nmorning at 11 o'clock, when Nora\nAnne, second daughter ot Mrs. M.\nE. Smith of Vancouver, formerly of\nthis city and the late Harry S. Smith\nof Trail, became the bride of Charles\nAston Fuller, Pend d'Orellle, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Fuller ol\nWallinglord, England. The ceremony wis performed by Rev. C. H.\nDaly In a floral setting formed by\ngold and green baskets ol blue delphiniums, multi-colored gladioli and\nsweet peas.\nThe bride was given in marriage\nby her brother, C. B. Smith. She\nchose a navy floral sheer alternoon\nfrock, navy straw turban with nose\nveil and accessories en tone. Blush\npink rosebuds comprised her bridal\ncorsage. She was attended by her\nsister, Miss Josephine E. Smith, who\nMENNEN'S\nShaving cream and ikin\nbracer. Reg. 75c \u2014 while\nthey last \u2014\n47c\niwm\nBlame Hepburn In\nDelay in Building\nFASHION-CRAFT\nFREE PANT SALE\nFor a limited tirtie only Fashion-Craft are giving an\nextra pair of trousers free with every maderto-meas-\nure suit. Save at least 25% by ordering that new suit\nnow. Fit and satisfaction absolutely guaranteed.\nEmory's Ltd.\nWINNIPEG,. Aug. 3 (CP)-Sen-\nator J. T. Ha_g, K.C., of Winnipeg\ntoday placed the responsibility for\ndelay in constructing an international bridge at Niagara Falls: on\nPremier Mitchell Hepburn of Ontario. -   \u2022\nIn a statement at Goldbridge, B.\nC. the Ontario premier said Senators Haig, A. D. McRae of Vancouver and W. A. Griesbach ol Edmonton had interfered to delay the\nbridge job when the Ontario government applied. to parliament lor\npermission to launch .the project,\n\"We envcr killed his bill,\" maintained Senator Halg. \"He withdrew\nit.\"\nwore a lovely powder blue crepe\nIrock, white felt hat and white accessories, and a corsage of pink rosebuds. The groom was supported by\nRobert Boyle of Trail. Mrs. T. F.\nCullen played Mendelssohn's \"Wedding March.\" During the signing of\nthe register, Mrs. Stanley Jones, sister of the bride, sang \"At Dawning\"\nand Mrs. C. B. Smith sang \"I Love\nYou Truly.\"\nAt the reception which followed,\nMrs. Smith, the bride's mother, attired in white silk crepe dress with\nnavy shoulder cape, navy hat and\nmatching accessories, and Mrs. C. B.\nSmith, the bride's sister-in-law, in\na lovely dove grey gown trimmed\nwith blue and rose, navy hat and accessories, and each wearing a corsage of rosebuds, assisted Mr. and\nMrs. Fuller in receiving the guests.\nFragrant summer flowers were artistically arranged throughout the\nrooms, while the brides table, covered with a handsome Belgian outwork\ncloth, was centered with a three-tier\nwedding cake flanked on each side\nwith roses ln silver baskets. Rev. C\nH. Daly proposed the toast to the\nbride.\nMrs. Smith was assisted in serving the wedding breakfast by Mrs.\nS. Jones, Mrs. W. E. Benton, Mrs.\nCullen and Miss M. Manducca. Mr.\nand Mrs. Fuller have left for Spokane to spend their honeymoon and\non their return will reside at Pend\nd'Orellle.\nMr. and Mrs. Stanley Jones- of\nFruitvale, brother-in-law and sister of i the bride, and Mr. and Mrs.\nD. Lancaster of Pend d'Oreille were\namong the out-of-town guests.\nMORE ABOUT\nRusso-Japanese\n(Continued From Pane One)\nThe Soviets abandoned 15\ntanks and 25 pieces of light\nartillery, advices from the\nfront related.\nJapanese casualties were not\nstated.\nDespite the dally, encounters,\nJapanese official quarter! Insisted they do not want t genuine\nwar with Russia.\nOfficial circles declared Japan\n\"li fully prepared If necenary\"\nand repeated their itand that the\ncourse of the incident, molt serious In a long teriei of border\nclashes, depended upon Russia.\nWith the Changkufeng area recaptured, authoritative sources said,\nJapan would not advance further.\nRussia has contended that the sector is Soviet territory While Japan\ninsists it is a part of Manchoukuo\nAdvices reaching Tokyo said Soviet tanks and motor lorries rolled\nalong the road between Novovivsk\nand Fashish through the day, apparently in a concentration of\nstrength for an attempt to recapture\nChangkufeng and Schacholeng\nhills.\nDefence headquarter! for the\nJapanese mainland Issued orders\ndarkening all outdoor lights In\nTokyo, Yokohama, Kobe and\nOsaka and other cities and towni\nof eastern Japan.\nOn the Asiatic mainland, the\ngovernment of Korea ordered a\nblackout and air defence measures throughout the northern\narea.\nKorean advlcei said residents\nof village! In and near the battle\nzone were evacuating,\n\"PURELY DEFENSIVE\"\nMOSCOW, Aug. 3 (AP)\u2014Officials declared today that the Soviet\narmy's operations in clashes with\nJapanese on the Manchoukuo border were purely defensive, but the\npublic is being prepared for the\npossibility of an emergency.\nThere were indications that Rus\nsia wished to reach a peaceful settlement even though a government\ncommunique warned of possible\n\"serious consequences\" if Japanese\n\"provocations\" continued.\nMoscow residents calmly went\nabout their workaday tasks and the\ncity showed no outward evidence\not the crisis.\nHowever, newspapers, which tor\nseveral days had printed only the\nbriefest mention of Japanese-Russian fighting near the junction of\nKorea, Siberia and Manchoukuo,\nwere crowded with reports of patriotic mass meetings, resolutions\nand  letters  to  the  editors  from\nf[roups and individuals promising\noyalty to the death in defence of\nthe Soviet Fatherland.\nFor the first time newspapers\npublished maps showing the location of the fighting.\nFLEET READY\nSailors of the Baltic fleet sent a\nmessage to Moscow that \"the fleet is\nready to deliver a destructive blow\nto the enemy\" and demanded \"merciless punishment ot the aggressors\".\nSoldiers of the Moscow garrison\u2014\nat present more than 4000 miles\nfrom the tar eastern Iront\u2014voted a\ndetiant resolution declaring: \"Let\nthe Japanese bandits remember that\nil they attack us they will break\ntheir heads against granite walls ot\nthe Socialist Fatherland. II the government calls us we will race to\nthe Irontier and exterminate the\nFascist aggressors.\"\nAn indication the Russians were\nnot forgetting Germany in their\npreoccupation with the far east was\nseen in a resolution ol workers ol\nthe southwestern Russian Kiev district which was prominently displayed In Izvestia.    .\n\"We know very well that Japanese Imperialists are hand In\nglove with German Fascists who\ndream of occupying the Ukraine,\"\n. the reiolutlon said In reference\n' to German designs on the rich\nsouthwestern diitrict.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 3 (CP) -\nSenator W. A. Griesbach ol Edmonton today replied to Premier\nHepburn's \u25a0'\u2022 criticisms of western\nsenators With the declaration that\nthe \"unity ol Canada will best be\npreserved by the maintenance ol\ncontractual obligations and justice\nand fairness and common decency\ntn the transaction ol public business.\"\nSocial...\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C-Mrs. F. M.\nBrady was hostess at the tea hour\non Friday honoring Mrs. H. K.\nJohnstone prior to her departure\nlor Vancouver where she will live\nin.the future. Refreshments were\nserved on the lawn, Miss Nellie\nAlywin assisting the hostess. Guests\nincluded Mrs. H. K. Johnstone and\nbaby daughter, Lois, Miss Nellie\nAlywin, Miss Hope Taylor, Mrs. A.\nFrancis, Mrs. H. E. Nelson, Mrs. A,\nAvison, Mrs. K. McLeod, 01 Edge-\nwood, Mrs. 0. Enockson and daughter, Evelyn, Mrs. L. W. Sells and\nMrs. J. Taylor.\nMiss Francis Jackson lelt Friday lor her home in Milner, B.C.\nMrs. F. Campbell has returned\nfrom Calgary.,\nMrs. Angrignon has returned\nfrom Lardo.\nIvan Deator ol Penticton Is a\nguest ol his grandfather, E. Shannon.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Smeale have\nleft for their home in Drumheller,\nAlta.\nMrs. E. Caisley and family ol\nSlocan City visited here Friday.\nMiss Evelyn Gunn returned to\nNelson Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Miller were visitors Irom the Reno mine, Sheep\nCreek.\nArthur Meers ot the Kootenay\nBelle mine visited his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. B. Meers, at the weekend.\nMiss Helen Van Bram, R.N, has\nleft lor Creston.\nA. A. Perrier of Nelson is relieving A, Coombs, who is on holidays.\nTeddy Shannon lelt Monday for\nSalmo.\nJack Boudier ol the Kootenay\nBelle mine, spent the weekrend\nwith his mother, Mrs. F.. A. Boudiei1,\nThree Forks.\nMiss Mary Patterson ol Slocan\nCity spent the week-end in Three\nForks, a.guest ol Mrs. E. A. Boudier.\nMiss Vera Coombs returned Monday from Trail.\nMrs. Ivor Johnson of Burton was\na recent visitor.\nMrs. F. L. Beggs left Saturday\nfor Vancouver. Mrs. Beggs is the\ndelegate from New Denver to the\nLegion conference in Vancouver\nthis week.\nD. P. Morgan was a Saturday visitor to Nelson. \"\t\nWomen's Institute members who\nattended the conference at Nakusp\nwere Mrs. J, Taylor, Mrs. H. Gunn,\nMrs. J. Nyman, Miss D. Clever,\nMrs. H. H. Pendry, Mrs. A. Francis,\nMrs. R. W. Crellin, Mrs. D. Shannon, Mrs. O. V. \u25a0White, Mrs. J, A.\nGreer, Mrs. B. Sanderson, Hrs. C.\nThring, Mrs. D. Powell, Mrs. M.\nDuMont, Miss R. DuMont and Mrs.\nO. Johnson. Mrs. F. M. Brady and\nMrs. J. Draper were visitors.\nFIND BODY IN INLET\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 3 (CP)\u2014The\nbody ot a middle-aged man discovered in the waters ol Burrard Inlet\nnear Burnaby has been identilied\nas that of James Cameron, no stated address.\nAnnable lo Have\ntetter Delivery\nTRAIL, B. O, Aug. 3 \u2014 Mail carrier service to Annable will begin\nMonday, according'to J. B. Twaddle,\nTrail postmaster.\nFurther consideration of extension\nof the service to Warfield will be\ngiven when the present construction program ol the C. M. & S. company is completed, he said.\nItaly Bars Foreign\nJews From Schools\nROME, Aug. 3 CAP)\u2014The government announced; today all foreign\nJews would be barred from Italian\nschools beginning with the fall\nterm,\"\nAt the same time it announced a\nnew program to increase the efficiency of the nation's armed forces.\nThe ban on Jewish students presumably does not apply to the 47,-\n000 Jews who are Italian citizens.\nHUDSON SEDAN\ntrade for lots or what\nhave you?\nAt KLINE'S CITY SERVICE\nJack McDowell    Howard Thurman\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nSuite 203\nOptometrist\nMedical Arti Bldg.\nFRANK A. STUART\nThe Insurance Man\nPhone 980    577 Baker St.\nNELSON, B. C.\nCIVSC\nTODAY\nOne of the Creafeit Picture*\nof All Time.\n________ i\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Art! Block\nI \u25a0 _____\u25a0__\u25a0_\u25a0 \u25a0 I\nSTOCKHOLM (CP) - Number of\nregistered unemployed and applying for government relief this year\nis 12,300 compared with 15,791 in the\nsame period ol 1937.  . ,\n|  HOT WEATHER\nI MEALS AT THE j\n|Star Cafe |\n_*!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014IIITTf\t\n8EE JACK  HOOOERWERF\nStandard Electric\nElectrical\nPHONE 838\nfor\nContracting\n811 WARD ST.\nm\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 88S     510 Kootenay St.\nTESTED\u2014QUALITY\nDOUGHNUTS\nFresh Daily '\nAT THE\nPERCOLATOR\n| W. KQPECKI-50-t Baker.\n\u00a3%tt$*tt\u00bbttttig&S$&\u00bb\u00ab\u00abtt&$$$.\n44 TAXI\nCON. CUMMINS\n50c up to 5 passengen\nAny place in the city\n>SSSMZSX&&&ZS!*^^\nFIRESTONE\nTIRES\nEric's Motor Service\n295 Baker St. Phone 75\nPHONE   815\nfor better and prompter ier-\nvice In plumbing repairs and\n..Iterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nAik   your   Grocer   or   neareit\nService   Station  for\nLEDINGHAM'S\nSliced   orDDBsn\nUnsllced    IMU-._fl_l_f\nFRESH   DAILY\nw\u00bb_\nROBERT DOMAT\nELISSA LANDI\nCartoon:\nMICKEY'S RIVAL   and\n\"RED SALUTE\"\nwith\nBarbara' Stanwyck\nRobert Young   and\nCliff Edwards.\nComplete 7:00-8:30\nAdmission 25c-15c-10e\nTHESE FOUR!!\n\u2022 OUR Modern Equipment\n\u2022 OUR Trained Employees\n\u2022 OUR 40 Years of Successful\nBusiness\n\u2022 OUR Guarantee Covering\nAll Repairs\nENSURE YOU OF A SATISFACTORY JOB\nFOR YOUR CAR.\nNelson Transfer Co. Ltd.\n35   PHONES   36\n\u25a0\u25a0______,.;..,.....',,\u25a0    ' ....    \u25a0\u25a0_, ,._^.___.._i_________________..________^^\n______\n\t\nT\n_____________\n____________\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1938_08_04","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0414726","@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":"1938-08-04 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1938-08-04 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\/1.0414726"}