{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-06-08","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1939-07-12","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414909\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \t\n \u2014\nA      1\npun p Finance Labor for City\ncts \"Not Adequate\"\n\u2014\nPagt Two\n'OLUMI*\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\n::\u25a0\"*\u25a0\nSOU\nU. S. Neutrality Bill Killedq^\nMay Be Forced Through\nPtgt Thrtt\nfti'r'   L \/A**0 tin. BRITISH COLUMBIA,\n1      ?'? ft'* f_m_ \u25a0   mm\nCANADV-WIDNMDAY MORNINO. JULY 12, 1M\nNUMBER 71\nJapanese\nWar Over Border to Mongolia\nCALLED\nvessel ^weatjtt to TSi\nSoviet   Press   Warns\nRed Army Ready\nfor Battle\nMAY  END SOON\nBy FRANCO DE VUKEUTCH\nCopyright 1939\nBy The Htvti News Agency\nWITH THE JAPANESE ARMY\nNEAR THE MONGOLIAN FRONTIER, July' U(PP-Havai).\u2014Jap\naneie forces pushing the last So\nvlet-Mongol troops from this re\nmote border battle tone on the\nKhalka River were reported today to have received orders not\nto carry hostilities tcross the frontier Into Mongolia.\nTm. m taken as Indication\nthe Japaneie art ieeklng to terminate hostilities at the first possible moment\nThe commander of the Japanese forcei wai said to have Issued\nthe order and to have added that\nonce the Soviet-Mongol troopi\nwere back, In their own territory\nthe \"Incident\" wai to be considered closed.\n(At Hsklnking, the Kwantung\u2014\nmainland Japanese\u2014army announced that \"Manchoukuo territory is\ncleared- completely of Soviet-Mongol invaders.\" The communique\nclaimed Soviet-Mongol forces bad\nbeen driven back into Mongol territory on the west bank of the\nKhalka).\nJapanese spokesmen charged the\nRussians poisoned with bacteria\nthe sources of the Holsten river\nwhich the Japanese army uses for\ndrinking purposes.\nThe Japanese command said only\n200 Soviet-Mongol troops remain on\nthe East bank of the river facing\nthe Japanese. The Mongol troops\nface the alternative of surrenderii\nor being wiped but byv'ehclr<5n,i,\nforces, the Japanese, \u00abld.\nSTATE TROOPERS\nTO DUTY\nAT GJH. FACTORY\nML      L ;\nDETROIT,July 11 (AP).-Gover-\nnor Luret D. Dickinson today ordered Stale Troopers to prepare lor\nduty tomorrow at the gates of General Motors' Fisher Body plant in\npontlac, stene of two clashes in the\nlast two days ln connection with a\nCongress ff Industrial Organizations\nUnited Altfinsbllt Workers strike.\nCsjrt.' Uurence A. i,* ^ the\ngfcje'Polee said he would Be cm\nSnd witt 80 troopers, prepared to\nmake arrlsts under the State. Riot\nAct 11 fuither disorders occur.\nThe PoiJIac Fjsher plant is one of\ntl Genera Motora plants In which\n.-the U. A. W.-C. I. O. has called a\n1 ttrike of ikilled workers Tlie latest\nWhe affkted is the Cadillac plant\n.Mere, In vhich a strike was called\n\u25a0today,. Tte Corporation  estimated\n8750 menwere idle because of the\ndispute, i\n. Severalpersons were Injured today, nonr seriously, and six men\narrested hi connection with the\noutbretki,\nTsinctao Centre\nol (few Japanese\nJ British Friction\nBHAN\u00abAI Julj 11 (AP) - A\nBritish vHrshlp steamed into Telng-\ntao tola las that North China Port\nbecame jnew centra'of Increasing\nBritiih-Jpanese friction,\nThe Bitish Consume was.ston-\n_%^^^m_*^^^^M^^im\nhf? : fWUers.'-against-.Japan, at.\nthough they..siete Russia's' own.\n\u2022. \"In the pt\u00bbt tew weekt,\" declared\nPravda; the Communist Party or:\ngan, \"soviet troops fighting together with the Mongolian peoples\narmy,. have demonstrated to Japanese Imperialist beasts how serious was the warning Issued-by the\nhead of the Soviet Government\"\nGIVE8 WARN'V.G\nMOSCptVJuly  11   (AP).-The\n'i-maiaimyJUifiUtitil\t\n.   Oite-re port kt confll .\nthe Loweitoft ^ntol Blue-\nto protect *e Ctniulate, yh,\ndamaged by bricks and fin\n;\u00ab\u00bb.\u25a0'-   f   -,  i.y.'\" V,\n, Other BriUsh buildings, intruding the ] Iritish Hong Kong and\nShanghai Banking Cprporatloi?s\nBranch, alsd were j-eported \u00ab&-\ntged.'.\" '    ',,'\u2022_' 'r ',\ni i Brluth-J ipanese .hostility flared\n,\u00bbnew tt Tientsin, nhrth Of Tsing-\n,tao, where1 the Britiin reported an-\n. other Britc n was stripped by Japanese sentries at tbe border of the\nBritish and Freach concessions,\n' blockaded thy the Japanese army\nsince June, 14,\n\u25a0j !\t\nSpain\/and Italy Are\nTwo Great Fascist\n,   Nations Says Ciano\nTARRAGONA, gpaln, July 11 -\n,{A*i-T-Sptin tnd Italy were described by Italy'* Foreign Minister,\nCdunt Ciano, as \"two great Fascist\nNations\" linked by common ideals\nand sentiments,\ny Ciano, on a seven-day State visit\ni Spain, spoke as he unveiled a\nrente statute of the -Roman Em-.\nperor Augustus, gift from Premier\nMussolini to this city which once\nwas under Roman rule, ' '\nj, The unveiling followed a military\nparade ln Ciano's honor while\ncrowds shouted \"Viva Italia!\" and\n\u2022Mussolinil\"\nDolezal Charged\nin Torso Murder\nCLEVELAND, July 11 (AP).-\nFrank Dolezal,1 52, was. charged\nlate today with first degree murder in the decapitation slaying of\nMrs. Florence Polillo, 42, third,of\nCleveland^ dozen \"torso murder\"\nvictims. He was held to the July\n\u2022 ?4 Grand Jury without ball.\nMacleod K.C. to Run\nas Independent, Alta.\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., July 11 \u2014\n(CP)\u2014John L. Fawcett, K.C, of.\nMacleod announced today that he\nwill stand as an Independent. Candidate in Macleod Riding in the next\nProvinoial Election. He is an ex-\nmayor of Macleod and has been\nChairman of the School Board during the past 22 years.\nSPANISH FIGHTS\nSPREADING, SAY\nREFUGEE GROUPS\nBOURG-MAXAME, France, (at\nthe Spanish Frontier), July 11\u2014\n(AP).\u2014Refugees hostile to the\nSpanish Nationalist regime who\ncrossed the border from Spain by\nsmugglers' trails today reported\nfighting was spreading in various sections ot Spain.\nTheir stories could not be confirmed by Spanish Nationalist or\nindependent sources.\nThe refugees said much of the\ntrouble was between Falangists\n(Fascists) and Carlist's (Monarchists), two of the strongest elements\nsupporting General Francisco\nFranco in his Civil Wtr victory.\nThe refugees declared open clashes between Carlists and Falangists\nhad broken out in Andalusia and\nCatalonia.\nThey said strong police measures\nhad been taken before arrival ln\nSpain. Monday of the Italian Foreign Minister, Count Galeazzo Ciano, but they failed to stop the\nclashes. , ,-\u2022\"'\nTension was such they ji33, that\na nation-wide conflict, of the red-\nbereted Carlista gainst the blue-\nshirted Falangia& was possible.\non Says loo\nuth Pessimism\nEvident, Canada\nHeads Party\nPotter Resigns as Electrical and\nCivil Engineer for City of Nelson;\nHas Similar Post New Westminster\n[Council  Accepts  His\nResignation; No\nSuccesor Yet\nResignation of R. E- Potter, City\nElectrical and Civil Engineer, was\naccepted by the Nelson City Council\nTuesday  night. Mr.  Potter has a\nsimilar post in New Westminster.\nDiscussing a successor to Mr. Pot-\nr ter, Aid. T. H. Waters expressed the\nopinion the City should not place\nthe work of electrical engineer and\ncivil engineer in one man's hands;\nthat a practical man experienced\nJ In road building' should  be  em-\n| ployed for the one department, and\n, that a consulting engineer might be\nengaged for the electrical work.\nJ    Appointment of a successor wat\n[ lett over for discussion.\nTO NEW WESTMINSTER\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, July\ntl (CP). - Russell E. Potter, City\n\u2022Engineer at Nelson, B. C-, was appointed chief engineer in charge\nof all outside services for New\nWestminster, by the Ctiy Council\nMonday, it was learned today.\nThe appointment becomes effective August 15.\nMr.,Potter will fill vacancies cre-\ntted through the retirement of John\nDigby, City Electrician, and Thomas\nFumes, Works Superintendent.\n(Continued oh Page Two)\nr\u201e E. POTTER\n;     . By FRANK FLAHERTY\nAMQULQue., July 11 (CP).-An\nexpress train., rotred- through this\nvillage tonight, to interrupt a' po-\nHJiral \u2022\u201e ra#UM.;; as:. -ComemUyi\nLeader R. J. Mamon -Was dfifWuflntf\nthe railway prjjbltm ahd reaffirming his position to unification or\namalgamation qf the Canadian Na-\ntionl and Canadian Pacific\nRailways. \u25a0\nThe dramatic', appearance of the\ntrain appeared tp tickle' the crowd\nof 2J00, largest'and most enthusiastic audience to greet Dr, Manion\non his Quebec tour so far. The meet-\ning was held' outdoors and Dr. Man-\nIon spoke from (he steps of a store\nfacing the raih.jy tracks;\nFirst pdbllc indication of approval\nfor Dr. Manion1 and the Federal\nConservative party on the part of\nthe Union Nationale Party, now\ndominant in Quebec Proylncial politics, came tonight. Ferdinand Pa-\nradls, Union Nationale member of\nthe Quebec Legislature, occupied a\nseat oh the platform.\n\"A good.French motto for Canada\nwould be 'En Ayance',\" said Dr.\nManion, \"ahd when I say En Avance\nI mean We should all be optimists.\nThere is - too much pessimism in\nCanada. If we are optimists we can\nhuild up this country and give work\nand wages to all.\" ._>\nNetherlands Spends\n$50,000 Daily for\nDefence Measures\nTHE HAGUE- . July 11 (CP-\nHavas).\u2014The Netherlands is spending about 100,000 florins (about $53,-\n000) daily on extraordinary military defence measures designed to\nenable the nation to cope with any\nemergency, the interim Premier,\nHendryk Colljn, told the Lower\nChamber today in answer to a ques-,\ntion from a National-Socialist Deputy.\nSocial Credit of B.C.\nBacks New Democracy\nVANCOUVER, July 11 (CP)-\nThe Social Credit League ot British Columbia,' through its executive\nofficers, decided today on a policy\nof full cooperation with the New\nDemocracy movement founded recently by Hon. W. D. Herridge. \u25a0\nOfficers announced that a Provincial Social Credit conference\nwill be held soon in Vancouver.\nGeneral Heriberta Jtrt it .\ntured ttking his oatji whtn ha\nassumed the. presidency of Mexican National.- Revolutionary\nParty, the meat 'powerful political\norganisation in Mexico.\nW.P.A. Strikers to\nFace Pei\nUse force,\nWASHINGTON, Jul* H\nThe- United Statet Gov*\nsending G-Men into tn investigation\nof Works Progress Administration\ndisorders which led to\u00bbthe detth of\na policeman' at Minneapolis, Indicated tonight it would invoke penal\nprovisions: of the new Belief Act\nagainst W. P. A. strikers attempting\nby foi-ceor threats to preVent other\nWork Relief- employees trom staying\nob,t)M'jat>. \u25a0 \u2022 ,,V\u2022:,' v. ...'; T,\n-Y.tt'\u201eMtM while.:\u00ab\" \u25a0 isatHikit.fi jCcrt-\n** 'gress.to alter Relief \u00a3ct provisions\nwhich resulted in the.strlke failed to\nenlist supfcort of President Roosevelt. He said he thought the Administration would stick to the requirement that W,'P.-A. employees\nmust,work 130 h\u00aburs a month to\nmake their \"Security Pay.\" This,\nmeans many employees must work\nmore hours tb make tht same wage\nas heretofore.:'\nThe President said fee wtt informed about three percent of the\nrecipients of W., P. A. relief were\nout and that the strike was concentrated largely in two or three\ncommunities.\nLOGGER  INJURED\nVANCOUVER, July 11 (CP)-\nLeslle Delaa, 34, was brought, to\nhospital here tonight by the\ncoastal steamship Lady Alexandra\nfrom Squamish, B.C.,. 40 miles\nNotthof here at the head ot Howe\nSound, where he suffered a possible fractured skull in a logging\naccident. \\\nLOGGER KILLED\nVICTORIA, July 11 (CP).-Wal-\nter Obeck, an employee of the Industrial Timber Mills, was killed .\na logging accident at Lake 'Cowich-\nan today,.according to word received by division headquarters of the\nBritish Columbia Police here.\nLUMBER  OFFICIAL DIE8\nVANCOUVER,' July 11 (CP)-\nFuneral services will be held at\nCourtehey tomorrow for Charles P.\nMcAulay, official of the Comox\nLogging Company who died here\nSunday.\nWheat Flour Export \u25a0\nSubsidy to Continue\nWASHINGTON, July 11 (AP).-\nUnited States Agriculture Department officials said today the wheat\nHour export subsidy program which\nwas inaugurated last September,\nwould be continued indefinitely. The\nprogram is designed -to encourage\nsale of American flour abroad.\n10 DROWN OVER\nCANADIAN WEST\nIN SEVERE HEAT\nPrairie Temperatures\nin 90's; New Wave\nCrossing U. S.\nALBCRTA HIGH 100\nWIOTtlPKO, July 11 (CP). -*\nWestern Canada sweltered todty\nin the year's most severe bett\nwtvt which has ttken 10 lives by\ndrowning tt residents sought reliet tt beaches tnd in \"swimming\nholes.\"\nTemperatures ln Manitoba and\nSaskatchewan generally were In\nthe 60't todty tnd in Alberta the\nmercury hit tht hi|h'80't ln the\nlarger Cities. High River, 40 miles\nSouth of Calgary, reported t high\nreading of 100, however.\nIn Winnipeg's sultry hett the\nhigh mark was'83. Southern Saskatchewan suffered even more at\nRegina tnd Moose Jtw recorded\nmtxlmumt of 88. At Stskatoon it\n- wat M. Edmonton's high for the\nday was 88, Calgary 88 tnd\nLethbridge 83.\nTht intbnte hett wtt expected to\nbenefit cropt in most districts where\nhetvy rains htd built up the moisture reserve. The hett, however, revived the grasshopper threat tnd in\nMoose Jaw the pesta were reported\nmoving in until numbers.\nTht drowning toll of the last two\ndays In the West was: Northwestern\nOntario one, Stakttchtwtn Ave, Albert one, British Columbia three.\nNIW HEAT WAV!\nCHICAGO, JUly U (AP). - A\nnew hett wtvt moved Etttwtrd\nacross the Western Plains of the\nUnited SUtes today.\nAt many potato Wttt of *h\u00bb\nMississippi River temperatures in\ntbt 00's were registered while the\nWtathW Burttu Bwt predicted un-\nseasonable warmth would engulf\nmott ot the Middlewest overnight\ntnd tomorrow. - ; i ,\nThe hot tir flow-'fpllewed the\nsame general path as last week,\nwhen more than 50 <fetths were re-\ncomp....... ..,     \u2022-.\n.'An *--4im*,_tmW*'Jtt Hi* degrees wtt registered in Slodx City,\nIowa, late in the afternoon. Tht\nprevious top reading there fas 110.7\non July IT, 1838. Phoenix,-Aria,\nhtd 110.       . . '\nCalgary Prospector\nMokes Gold Strike\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C, July\nH (CP).\u2014A\\C\u00bbIgtry prospector\nand his partner brought news here\"\ntoday of 'a gold strike on Snako\nCreek near Atlln where the two\nhave been prospecting.\nEnroUte to his Alberta home,\nFrank Boyd displayed t htndful\not nuggets, etch weighing - two\nounces or more, which he slid he\nend Anjus Ctineron had rtcov-\ncrcd from bedrock, at a 20-foot\ndepth.\n. The pair operated a trip dam\ntnd ground sluice for coarse gold,\nthen picked up the nuggets on\ntht creek bottom. He estimated\n20 to 39 ounces daily could be recovered with proper machinery,\nSue* French\nPublisher\nCurrently seeking 1,000,000\nfrancs damage from the publisher\nof a Paris weekly newspaper it\nPoll Negri, above, former screen\nstir, who according to the testification ot witnesses, hid suffered much moral damage tfter the\npaper in queition htd printed a\nstory that she wat t friend of\nAdolf Hitler. Defence countel\ntried to show thtt knowing the\nGerman dictator wat no slander.\nGeorge Gallan, Consolidated Worker,\nKilled When Struck by Electric Train\nTRAIL,. B, C, July 11\u2014George\nGallan, 69, was killed almost Instantly when he wts struck tnd\nrun over by an electric trtln on\nthe smelter feed floor of the ConsoUdtted Mining 4 Smelting Co.,\nTtdtnte. plant tt .noon Tuesday.\nA coroner's Jury consisting of\nW.J. Rutledge, foreman; J, E.\nCarter, James A. Kinahan, John\nYoung,'   George   Bergeron   tnd\nGlen    Lehman,   was   impanelled\ntnd vltwed the body thit ttternoon..The inquest wat adjourned\nuntil 3 p.m. Wednesday.\nMr. Gallan was a singl man and\nhad been employed by the company since 1826. He resided at the\nMelrose Hotel.\nBody of Miner Missing Nearly Three\nMonths Recovered From the West Arm\nal (ily Wharf; Swimmers See Body\nLaunch   Party   Tows\nit Ashore; No\nFoul Play.\nSeen by two young men as it\nfloated In the lake.the decomposed\nbody of a man was recovered about\n100 feet out from the City Wharf\nTuesday afternoon. It was identified as that of Nels Hagkvist, 37-\nyear-old Swedish miner who disappeared from his room in the Queens\nHotel the night of April 28. Friends\nstated then he had been drinking\nheavily for some time, and had\nthreatened to commit auicide. He\nwas last seen the night of April 30,\nbut had left the hotel the previous\nnight.\nA liquor permit in the pocket, the\nonly Identifying article on him,\nidentified the man as Hagkvist. The\npermit' was purchased at Katlo\nMarch 23.\nGilbert Goucher and Brian Horstead, swimming at the City Wharf,\nwatched.the body floating for some\ntime aa the wind blew ft back upstream and In toward the Rowing\nClub float\nMr. and Mrs. George F. Lynch\nand Rev. T. J, S. Ferguson, going\nfrom tht boathouse float, toward\nthe wharf in Mr. Lynch's launch,\nwere railed by the young men, tnd\nMr. Ferguson put t rope tround\nthe body tnd towed it to shore.\nFrom there Lloyd Frtme, who\nwts swimming netrby, went up to\ncall the police, Sergt Robert Harshaw. answering the call. Dr. H. H.\nMacKenzie, Coroner, was called, and\nhe ordered the body removed to\nSomers Funeral Home, where it wat\nexamined and identified. Constable\nMalcolm Martin of the Provincial\nPolice alto examined the body.\nNO FOUL CLAY\nPolice tnd others who tint uw\nthe body thought there might htvt\nbeen tome foul play, as there wu a\nbad cut above the nose, but tfter a\nthorough examination, Dr. MacKenzie was\u2022\u25a0 satisfied the wound mutt\nhtvt,. been caused by rubbing\nagainst t log, or some other such\nctute.\nIt wts not known Tuesdty whether or not tn inquiry would be held\ntodty. The mttter depended on information obtained by the police.\nNeutrality Delay\nlo Make Action\nLater Difficult\nWASHINGTON, July 11 (AP).-\nBbaten in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, President Roosevelt warned Congress today thtt if\nit postponed revising the Neutrality\nAct, the outbreak of a foreign war\nwould mako it' extremely difficult\nto ttke tuch action biter. (Set Ptgt\nThree for dttallt). '.'\u25a0'\u25a0.\n. The President, asked liter for hit\nreaction to tht Committee's vote,\nttld he thought Hull's statement\nwts very good. However, he stid '\nbttt.'\n\u2022 Intently serious, he took them up\none tt t time, saying there wat no\nItw to keep American ships out of\nwtr zones, to keep American citizens Out ot, the zones, to require\nthat' belligerents' acquire title' to\nwtr purchases here before carrying\nthem twty, - to' regulate loans and\ncredits to warring nations, or tht\nsolicitation and collection of funds\nfor belligerent' . nations. Present\nlew he added, does contain authorization for the Munitions Control\nBoard, the sixth point ot the program,\n- (Later, State Deptrtment sources\naald the President had been misinformed on two of the polnta. Present law, they tald, doea contain i\nban on loans or credits to belligerents and does prohibit raiting funds\nfor belligerents).\nAlberta Crops Are\nLater Than Normal\nEDMONTON, July 11 (CP). -\nGrowth of cropt in Alberta is somewhat later than normal although\nthe major portion of the Province\nhat received an abundance of moisture, said t crop report compiled\nby the Deptrtment of Agriculture\ntnd Issued todty by Hon. D. B. Mullen, Minister of Agriculture.  >\n\"Tht length of the seuon it now\nthe main factor thtt. will determine\nthe yield of this\" year's crop in Al*\nberta,\" ttld the report. \"Except for\nthe area' Northwest of Edmonton\nand the Peace River District all\ndivision report from good to ideal\nmoisture conditions,\"\nChalledon Favored\nin Massachusetts\nBOSTON, July il (AP).-Formil\nentries for the fifth Massachusetts\nHandicap, $500,000 added, tt Suffolk Downs tomorrow, drew 17 eligible! today, and Challedon, the 3-\nyeaf-old bay In a field of 4-yetr-\ndlds and up, was marked at a 2 to 1\nfavorite.\nThe Pacific Coast horse, Llgaroti,\nJerome H. Louchelm's Pompoon,\nMrt. A. J. Abel's Honey Cloud tnd\nMrs. Parker Coming's. Thanksgiving are entered.\nMiss Donnell, Nelson\nand R. E, Burns,. Trail\nPass Medical Tests\nOTTAWA, July 11 (CPj-Total of\n362 candidates were successful ln\nrecent examinations of the Medical\nCouncil of Canada, the list was\nissued today by Dr, J. Fenton Ar-\nguc, registrar of the Medical council.\nThe successful candidates may become licensed to practise in any\nprovince in Canadi, without further examination, on payment of\nthe necessary fee and meeting other\nprovincial' regulations.\nThe Western Canada list includes:\nToronto: Margaret M. Donnell,\nNelson, B.C.\nVancouver: Robert t. Burns,\nTrail, B.C.\nPATTULLO RETURNS\nVICTORIA, July 11 (CP).-Pre-\nmier Pattullo returned to Victoria\ntoday after ten days in'California\nwhere he represented the Dominion on July 1, Canadt Dty, it tht\nSan Francisco Exposition,\nGerman\nIs London Report\nGermany Would Expect Polish Withdrawal\nFrom Anglo-Frfench Security League,\nFighting Reported Near Border\nBy PAUL-LOUIt BRET\nCopyright 1IN, by tht Htvu Newt Agency\nLONDON, July 11 (CP-Havu).\u2014Reporta retching London from\nBerlin tonight stid Chancellor Hitler will offer Warsaw a plan for joint\nGerman-Polish control of Danzig, with Reich authority predominating,\nTTie reports, which diplomatic circles viewed skeptically, said Chtn-\ncellor Hitler would offer to take over total administrative control of mott\nof tht disputed territory, but would share with Poland supervision of\nDanzig harbor and customs.\nTo compenstte the Reich for only\npertial tconomlc tuthorlty, Ger-\nmany would expect, according to\nthese reports:\n1. Pollih withdrawal trom the\nAnglo-French Security Utgut.\n2. Condution of t new Polish-\nGermtn Friendship Treety.\nJ. Resumption of Polish food tx-\nporttto Germsny.\n4. 'Demllltarizttion\" est tht Free\nCtty.\n5. Abolition of the Letgue of Nations regime tnd removal of Ge-\nncva's High Commissioner from\nDtmlg.   '\nDoubt tuch t plan, if tnd when\npresented, would find tny favor in\nWarsaw wu strengthened by reports Poltnd again hu underlined\nto Britain her Insistence thtt Dtn-\nzig mutt remain in International\nentity. , ,\nWARSAW, July11 (CP.-Ht\u00abt)\n\u2014 Tht Govtrnment newipaper\nKurjtn Poranny tiiirte'd tonight\n\u2022Germin deisrters, trotting Into\nPollih territory, rtporttd fighting tmong workeri, NUI Dlack-\nshlrt Guirdi and Regular German troops it vtrlout; points In\nlut Pruiilt near thi Pollih\nfrontier, j\nIt is stld' thtt near Filipow six\nentered Poland and seven\nlers came In near Grajewo.\nik place wart said to htvt claimed\nfrtt nine duerters tnd seven Germtn frontier, guards wert killed\nin t clash. .\nAir-Raid Shelter\nStands Bomb Tost\nLONDON,'July 11 (CPy.-The\npublic was told today that one\not the new ftmily air-raid shelters, put to on extreme bombing\ntest, ctme out unscathed. A Government White paper stld a 500-\npound bomb, which exploded 25\nleet from the shelter, dub about a\nyard-deep crater tround the refuge'but caused no damage to the\nshelter itself.\nWashington Gets\nElectric Reduction\nOLYMP1A, WUh-, July 11 (AP)\n\u2014The \"largest single electric rate\nreduction in the history of the\nttate\" wu announced today by\ntht Deptrtment of Public Service \u2014 a $700,000 tnnual saving\nto Puget Sound Power It Light\nCompany cuitomen.\nDirector Ferd J. Schaaf uld the\nreduction will benefit primarily the\nsmall user of electricity, but thtt\nlarge users also will profit by the\ncompany's action. The new rates\nwill be effective Sept 1.\nBRITISH PLANES\nEND BIG FLIGHT\nACROSS FRANCE\nLONDON, July 11 (CP). - Grett\nBritain's . wtr. wings sprttd  over\nFrince  today  as  moro  thtn   100\nplanes completed tn unprecedented '\ntrilning flight over continental territory. .\nBetween morning tnd mid-afternoon 12 bombing squadrons flew ln\n1000-mile   training   flight   over\nEngland's trans-channel neighbor in\nthe first of t series of manoeuvres\nagreed upon by French and Britiih\nair staffs.     \u25a0   I .    -\nThe flight, organized by the Air\nChief Marshal, Sir Edward Lud-\nlow-Hewitt, Commander-in-Chief of\nthe bombing force, wu believed to\nhave political u well u military\nsignificance.\nThe flight wu calculated, according to reliable sources, to Impress\nFrench citizens with the strength\nof the British Air Force tnd with\ntht lolldtrlty of Anglo-French relations. French squadrons trt ex-\nently\nVancouver Bank\nVANCOUVER, July  ll  (CP):- .\nPolice tonight'recovered tstolenctf\nthey utd had been used by two\narmed bandits who held up a branch\nof the Dominion' Bank of Canadi 9\non a busy downtown street and et- _\ncaned in noon-day crowds with an\nestimated $2700. \",\nThe car, reported stolen from its .;\nparking place two blocks distant '-.\nwhere ita California owner htd left.\nit, was found abandoned in the Kitsilano Residential District 2V4 mllei\nfrom the holdup scene. \u2014J\nJ. M. Duncan of Burbank, Calif.,\nuid it had been .taken whilt he '\nand his wife were lunching.. , ,   (I\nThe bandits, unmasked and wearing white gloves, walked into the\nbank, held up two omployees and j\nescaped shortly before police cut'\nroared up, wanned by N. Mclntyre \u2022\nwho noticed the holdup u he walked'  put   tnd   telephoned   head- I\nquarters. '   \"jus\nFIND BODY IN POOL JM\nFAWCETT, Alta., July- 11 (CP) j\n\u2014Body of Alexander Taylor, SB\nof Pibroch, Alta., was found ln \u25a0 I\nswimming hole in French Creek ,\nyesterday. \"-\u00bb\nNine Are Fined al Trail for Lack\nof Fishing Licence, Taking SmaH\nFish and Exceeding Ihe Bag Umi\nWeafig\nNELSON    \t\nVictoria     \t\nNanaimo    \t\nVancouver     \t\nKamloops\t\nPrince George   \t\nEstevan Point   \u201e..\nPrince Rupert  .\t\nLangara    \u2014\nAtlin        :\nDawson, Y. T\t\nSetttle       __\nPortland  \u2014\nSan Francisco  \u2014\nSpokane  \u2014\nPenticton     -\nVernon     \u2014\nKelownt    \u2014\nGrind Forki\t\nKulo     \u2014\nCranbrook  \u2022.._:\u2014.\nCalgary \u2014\nEdmonton     \t\nSwift  Current \t\nMoose Jaw\nMin. Max.\n.   55     89\n52\n69\n52\n70\n55\n69\n64\n80\n4,1\n67\n47\n63\n49\n60\n49\n60\n4fi\n5\u00ab\n53\n74\nM\n69\n58\n76\n55\n77\nfi3\n92\n56\n\u2014\n56\n\u2014\n54\n84\n53\n94\n^\n91\n52\n89\n55\n85\n63\n90\nPrince Albert     91 94\nSaskatoon A... 62 92\nQu'Appelle  59 95\nWinnipeg      61 93\nForecuts \u2014 Kootenay: .Fresh\nSouthwest winds, partly cloudy and\ncooler with local thunderstorms.\nCheckup in Fruitvale-\nArea Results in\nProsecutions    . 9\nTRAIL, B.C.\nolttlng the\n\u201e, July 11\u2014For vl-\nFlihtrlu  Aet, nine\npersons were fined when they to-\n\"   L. Hodge, \u00ab\u2022\npaired before E.\npendiiry Magistrate,\ntodty. TUt\nchtrgu wert Itld tgtlnst til nine .\nis the result of t check-up mide\nSunday it Buyer Cretk, near\nFruitvale, by provincial police.\nEtch wis fined tht minimum of\n$10 on each charge. .     '\nMarjorie Both, Bert Both tnil\nJohn Grieve of Fruitvale, and Jos- \"\neph Woogman of Trail each pleaded guilty to a charge ot fishing .\nwithout being the holder of a sutpT\u25a0\u25a0}\nsisting angler's licence. vr''-1\nHymie Corbin and Herbert Bei- ;\nnet   of   Trail   pleaded   guilty   to\ncharges of taking from the water -\nfish under eight inches in length,\nThomas Moon ot Fruitvale pleaded   guilty   to   charges   of   fishing.\nwithout a license and taking flsji\nunder eight inches in length,     ijjl\nOVER LIMIT,\nSMALL   FISH\nIan Fry of Rossland was charted with fishing without a licenl\nhaving a bag limit exceeding\nand taking fish under eight lnchei\nin length. He pleaded not guilty to\n(Continued on Pagt Two)\n4j|&gy&j^^^yMiri^\u00a3jgiii^|j.\n  \u25a0\u25a0ltiL_fo_____tfiJmit\nMB^^M\n 1 \u25a0\n***-' I\"*\"*\".\nPAGE  TWO\nGovernment Plan finance Labor for\n(ily Projects Io Aid Relief Men Is\nNol Adequate Nelson Council Holds\nPlaces \"Premium on\nRelief;\" Council\nto Study\nPlan of the Provincial and Federal Governments to finance labor\ncosti of Municipal construction\nprojects u a meant ot alleviating\nrelief was described by tht Nelion\nCity Council Tuesday night as encouraging men to go on relief rather thtn to stay off.\nA  circular letter  outlining  tht\nplan itated It wit applicable only\nto mm actually In receipt at \"material ltd\", except for key mtn tuch\nIt foreman, timekeeper!, . truck\ndriven and teamsters. Men ln thi\nlatter cltssiflettion given work under this plan must be thote in necessitous circumstances.\nThe Nelton CouncU ftH thli basis\nwas not adequate linet It would be\nImpossible undtr It to provide work\nfor men who had been unemployed\nfor some time and wtre in dire circumstance*, but who owing to\nthalr earnings lut yetr were not\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, Bt C,\nGEORGE benwell, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS     EXCELLENT DIN INC ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME \u2014 Ian C. McQueen, Victoria; D. J. McAlmon, G. M. Thorn,\nTJ. B. MfcCallum, PenUcton; 0. Sib-\nlty, Medicine Hat; Mr. and Mn. A.\nJ. Johnson, Erie; J. Shepperd, T. M,\nStephen and family, W. T. Crosby,\nVancouver.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nADDITION OP NIW ROOMS WITH BATH\nP, and L. KAPAK, Proprietor!\nEuropean Plan $1.00 and Up.\nnUEE PARKING BLK. FROM CIVIC CENTRE\nPH, 234\nKOKANEE LODGE\n\u2022   ROOMS     \u2022   MEALS     \u2022   CABINS\nExwllint Culilnt \u2014 Qood Such\nDn North Shore ot\nKootenay  Lake   l',4\nmiles   from\nAINSWORTH AND KASLO RESORTS\nVACATION DAYS ARE QRAND AT\nAlniworth Hot Springs Hotel\n\u2022 HIKING\n\u2022 FISHING\n\u2022 SWIMMING\n\u2022 BOATING\nWrite tor ratei and Information\nAllsebrooke Camp-Kano, b. ***\n\u2022   BOATING        \u2022   BATHING e   FISHING\nCABINS-Slngle, $1.00 dty-V.OO  week\nCABIN8-Doublt, $1.50 day-W.OO wllk      f   plww.Y\/v.,\n-\u25a0\u2022    R6WB0AT-41JS per day     T\"   '   'ilono Youi\nCabin'and Boat from tlO per week.\nReservations\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\u2022your vXNioOvER hJiBF-\nDufferin Hotel\nMO Seymour St,   Vancouver, B, C.\nNewly renovated throughout Phonei and elevator.\nA. PATERSON, lata ot\nColeman, Alta, Proprietor.\nSPOKANE Hotels and Restaurants\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nComplete Servlee Under One Root\nMS Rlverafde Ave. Spokine, Waih. Manaatr\nJOE\nPEDICORD\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\n4,o^,--HoteiyounsYI,r^\nIVIRV COURTI8Y SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\nATUNTIC HOTEL $1 to $9\nFIRST and MADISON-SPOKANE, WASH.      I Mm\nPOPULAR PRICES ,    ALL NIGHT SERVICE\nJW3S   NIMS CAFES  \u00a3\u00ab\n.    TWO MODERN AIR-CONDITIONED CAFES\nCANADIAN CURRENCY AT PAR\nTHI POPULAR  HOTEL  FOR  CANADIANS  IN  SPOKANE\nHOTEL RIDPATH   \u2122~\n1M outside roomi ill at moderate ratti.\nAPARTMENTS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE IE YOU DESIRE THEM\nTHE\nSPA\n1526 Sprague \u2014 SPOKANE\nDINE      DANCE\n\u2022 BREAKFAST\n\u2022 LUNCHEON\n\u2022 DINNER\nI A w^rm welcome is extended to\nour Canadian friends.\nThe Touraine\n100% Greoter Hotel\nRiverside at Monroe\u2014Spokine\n125 Rooms \u2014 ?1 and Up\nHolhr.an and Perklnt\u2014Prop.\nGALAX HOTEL\nThe cleanest Hotel In\nWashington\nRATES\u201491 to 93 per day\nMain & Bernard SpoKant\n[TRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenaer and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nM   H.  MclVOR. Prop.\n-NILION DAILY NEWS, NELSON. S. C^-WIDNEIDAY MORNINO, JULV 11, 1ISJ\nelijiblt (or relief. A speciil meeting\non Thunday, to further diicutt tht\nplin. wu irrtnged.\n\"PREMIUM ON RELIEF\"\n\"It ihould go further,\" Mayor\nN. C. Stibbi commented. \"It looks\nii it tbt plan ippliet only to tha\npeople it preeent on relief.\"\n\"It'i another premium on relief,\"\nuid Aid. Roy Slurp.\n\"ThU plin looks u if the Government wu trying to get u many\n\u25a0i possible on relief,\" aid Aid, T,\nH. Waters.\nCopiet of tht circular will bt distributed to Aldermen.\nThe plan propoied that tbe Provincial and federal Government!\nfinance labor costs and municipalities tht material for projects such\nu would not ordinarily be undertaken at thli time without tuch assistance. BuU of thi labor coit contribution wonld bt obtained by multiplying the number of heada of\nfamilies on relief by 1100; and in\nNelion'i cue, thtrt being 36 heads\nof fimlliu on relief, tht ium available would ba $W00.\nMORE ABOUT\nPOTTER RESIGNS\n(Contlnuid From Page Om)    '\nThe naw ana inter U 35 years old,\nmarried and has two children. Ht\nwu born In Winnipeg ind received\nhis eirly achoollng ln Saskatoon -\nHe a a graduate In electrical engineering of tbe Univenlty ot BritUh Columbia and wu graduated ln\ncivil engineering from the University of Saskatchewan ln 1918. Later\nhe studied electrical engineering it\nthe Univenlty of Michigan.\nHt hu been City Engineer in\nNeUon for five yein.\nTrail Softball\nPlayoffi Start\nSaturday, Ladies\nTRAIL, B. C, July 11 - Tlgerettei ind Jumboi will pUy a ludden\ndeath game Saturday to decide\nwhich team meets Monarchi, leid-\nen in the TraU Ladlei' Softball\nLeigue, in the finals. The,championship series wUl be pliyed July\n21 and 25, and If a third game ll\nnecessary, the date will be iet\nlater.\nWidening Crossley\nAvenue Suggested\nas a City Project\nA suggeition that, in view of the\nSroposed plan of federal-provincial\nnanclng of labor for municipal\nproject! u a relief meuure, the\nCity ihould widen and Improve\nCroialey Avenue, wu received by\nthe City Council Tuetdiy night\nfrom reildenti of that section. The\nsuggestion wat referred to the\nBoard of Worki.\nRepain Authorized\nRoof of Civic Arena\nCouncil approval tot rtpatai to\nbe made to the root of tho Civic\nCentre Arena waft1 given Tueiday\nnight after Aid. K H, Waten reported a plan hatt been evolved\nWweby the City would pay iM and\nthe Johni-Minvllle Company $68 of\nthe coit. A. H. Green Company Ltd.,\nwill do the work.\nHospital Plan lo\nRaise Rates Is\nApproved In B.C.\nThat clrtulan tent out to all\nhospitals ln British Columbia regarding raising of public rates\nwere meeting with favorable response wu ihown to the director!\nof Kootenay Lake General Hospital\nat their meeting Tuetdiy night,\nby correspondence received \u25a0 from\nvarloui hospitals. With the exception ot one or two; all were heartily ln accord with tha hospital's\nproposal to raise the feei from $2.50\nto $3 a day.    .\nI. S. Withers. General Manager\nof Royal Columbian Hoipital, Niw\nWestminster, and President of the\nBritiih Clumbia HoipltaU dlrectori\nof lix of the chief lower mainland\nhospitals and meetings would be\nheld in the near future to consider\nthe plan, The Royal Jubilee Hoipital In Victoria had raited iti\nratei to $3 and the move had resulted ln a gain in revenue, he\nreported.\nSome of the letten luggested\nhospitals' in the Kootenay District\nthould band together into an association io thit they could aet their\nown standard of rates. Thii suggestion met with favorable response\nfrom the directors.\nHoipital! answering the circulars\nwith more replies expected loon,\nwere the Royil Columbian Hotpital, New Wettmlniter; Nlcoli\nValley Hospital, Merrltt; Chemiln-\nui General Hospital; Kimberley\nHoipittl Society; St. Eugene Hospital, Cranbrook; Ocean Falls HospiUl Society, Ocean Falls; Vancouver General Hospital; North Vara\ncouver General Hospital; Trail-\nTadanac Hoipital; Arrow Lakei\nHoipital, Nakuip, and Royal Jubilei\nHoipittl, Victoril. ,\nMany Attend\nFuneral of\nJames Will\nA large number of Nelson and\ndistrict resident! attended funeral\naervicei held at Somen Funeral\nHome Tueiday afternoon for Jamei\nWill, former NeUon citizen. Mr,\nWill died at Cranbrook. Saturday.\nRav. Foster Hilliard conducted\nthe lervicei In the Chapel and at\nthe gravealde ln the City Cemetery.\nHymniiung wtre \"Jetui Lovtr of\nMy Soul\" and \"Oh Love That Will\nNot Let Me Go\". There, were many\nfloral tributes.\nPallbearers were Alex. McDonald,\nJamei Ringrose, Ernut Welsh, A.\nJ. Ringroie, Bert Jardine and B.\nWalton.\t\nSchuylar Club Has\nIts Annual Picnic;\n60 at Lakeside Park\nApproximately 00 penoni ut\ndown to tupper at'the Lakeilde\nPark   Tueiday   evening   u   the\nSchuylar Club fist Noble Grandi\nof-'the RebekahfLodge,1 held iti annual pldnic. \u25a0\u25a0_ \u25a0\u25a0 ' \u25a0 - \u25a0\nMn. G. F. Gilbert wai convener\nof the catering committee, Mrs.\nThomas McMillan and Mn. H. Cle-\nmenu being her assistants.\nCanadian Amateur\nBoxer to Turn Pro\nMONTREAL, July 11 (CP)-Hir-\nry Hunt of Montreal, youthful holder of the Cantdian amateur light-\nwtlght boxing crown, innounced\ntodiy hU jump to proftaiioml rtnki\nwith hU firat monled fight scheduled for tomorrow night it Quebec\nagalnit CamlUe Gouelin of Montreal.\nNelson Council\nBacks Embargo\nWar Materials\nNelson City Council Tu\nnight Indorsed a reiolutlon .\nSttnich Municipal Council urging\nan embargo on miterliU exportli\nto foreign natloni for war purposes.\nMaterial! listed ware scrip Iron,\nmeUU, ore and lumber.\nThe Nilion Council alio' indorsed\ntha Sunlch proteit agalnit Incorporation ot compinlei tn Canada\nby mtionili of othar counrtles, using Canadian clUitni' mmti.\nMayor FC. Btffiba believed clU-\nleni ihould Uke action to option\nsuch campaigns u the one being\nprosecuted in China by Jtpin,\nwhere war had not yet bien declired, and Aid. T. H. Waten wu\nopposed to permitting iuch exports\nfor purely commercial reetona.\nMORE ABOUT\nTRAIL FINES\n(Continued Prom Pagt OM)\nI  of taking undersized\nndlng that \"ha had to\nto  get  them  off  tha\nasserting that he \"might\nthem u throw them\nCity Is Not Able fo Refuse Licence\nlor Fortune Telling Council learns\nMacaulay Indorsed in\nContention Could\nForce\nissue\nInulng of a licence for fortune\ntelling to Mrs. Lena Penal, newcomer to NeUon, wai .authorized by\nthe City CouncU Tuesday night\nafter R, D. Macaulay, representing\nLeo Perras, her husband,, waUed on\nthe Council to fcrotett refuaal of a\ntrades licence and to-declare that\nhU client could force the City to\nissuo a Ucence by taking mandate! proceedingi. A >20 fee for the\nfint lix monthi of 1939 -wai accepted from Mr. Perm, and he wai\nInformed that another $20 would be\ndue after July Id for the ncond six\nmonthi of the year, licence feei being due semi-annually.\nW. E. Waiion, City Clerk, sUted\nthtt Mr. Perras1 applicaUon for a\nlicence for his wife had been referred to the City Police for checking, and that upon the basis of the\nreport received from the poUce, he\nhad refused to issue a licence. ThU\nwas the usual practice, he said.\nCOULD FORCE ISSUE\nMr, Macaulay, reading sections of\nthe City's Trade Licencing Bylaw,\ndeclared that in his opinion his cli\nent could obtain an order forcing\nthe City to Isaue the Ucence by Uking mandamus proceedings In Supreme Court; or that he could lately\nadvUe hU client to \"open u)j\" without a licence. Then, ihould he be arrested, he could plead not guilty\nby reason of having tendered the\nnecessary fee. It was Mr. Macaulay's\nopinion that a Magistrate would find\nmm nol guilty.\nMayor N. C. SUbbs and Mr. Waiion agreed with Mr. Macaulay, explaining to the Council that ln such\ncases, where It was believed inadvisable to Usue Ucences, the City's\npractice waa to make it as difficult\nas possible for the applicant to\nobtain one.\nPREVIOUS CASES\nSuggesUon of Aldermen C. W.\nTyler and Pi G. Morey that the\nquestion should be referred to C.\nB. Garland, City Solicitor, was\nwithdrawn when they were informed a reference had been made\npreviously and that the reply had\nbeen substantially as Mr. Macaulay\nset forth,\n\"We can't get away from It,\" said\nAid. A. G. Ritchie, moving that the\nlicence be Issued.\n\"Well, under those clrcumsUnces\nI'll second the motion,\" said Aid.\nRoy Sharp.\nHeart\nhad\" they\nConstable Mi\nhad the fish pri\npreserved oondition\nfendint wished thtn\nmeasured, Mr. Fry dt\nuk any further questions,\nReferring to Mr. Fry't reman*\nthat he had kept the undented\nfish ai he had to klU them to release the hook, Constable McKay\ntold tha court that \"there'd ba no\nsmall end to the number ot under-\nsized fUh being Uken\" lt tuch an\nexcuse were accepted.\nFOUND OUIUTY\nMr. Fry wu found guilty and\nfined.\nJohn Becker, Frultvile, pleaded\ngt Meter of a\nwu held\n., Rev, O. H\ntlni\nI wu born 19 yean\nago at Alntworth. He attended school\nand resided in the Ainiworth-Kulo\ndistrict until he went to Kimberley 19 yean ago. There he entered\ntha employ of the-Contolidited Mining li Smelting Company it the\nSullivan mine. He'became ill about\nthree weeki ago and died Friday.\nA bachelor, he is survived by\ntive sisters: Mn. Alfred Lane of\nNeUon; Mn. Michael Donahue of\nMontreal, Mn. Charlei Musser of\nBralorne, and Mn. H. T. Kirby and\nMri. S. R. Smith of Kimberley. All\nof them were with him in hU lait\nlllneii except Mrs. Donahue.\nLeigh Suggests a\nSticker to Sell\nHospitalization\nA suggestion by W. J. Leigh, Kootenay Lake General HospiUl Collector, that a small sticker of some\nkind be placed on all bills given to\noutgoing patients, pointing out\nwhere they could have saved a\ncertain percentages of their bill by\nhaving Hospital Insurance, met\nwith the approval of the Hospital\nBoard ot Dlrectori at their meeting\nTueeday night The sticker wiiulo\nhave to be carefully worded, the\nboard felt ,to prevent confuting the\npitlent or being misleading in any\nway. but It was a \"good Idea\",\nAt present there wu a total of\n1081) individuals being given protection under 091 contricU under\nthe   hospitalization    scheme,   Mr.\nLeigh reoprted. There had been 713\ncontracts, but 24 were cancelled tor\nvarious reasons, iome of them beciuse Uie penoni had left the dis-\nOf the  24  cancellations,  18\nhockey playen.\ncoat of hospitalization under\nfor the month ot June wu\nguilty to\nwithout a\nto tha charge of fish-\nnot\nhe wu not fishing for iport but\ntor food.\n'I tried to get relief both from\nthe city and Ute government but\nwai refused beciuse I am tingle\"\nhe.said. He mived to Fruitvale\nand Sunday wti catching fish tor\nsupper.\n\" couldn't afford a fUhlng licence ai I wai not working but\nevery other year I did have one,\nhe said.\nConsUble McKay pointed out It\nwu difficult tor an officer to prosecute one and not another. He considered Mr. Becker's cue unfortunate but could do nothing else\nbut ask for .a conviction. He said\nMr. Becker could have applied to\ntha game commission for a ipeclal\npermit. He uked tbat his Uckli\nshould not bo confiscated u in the\nother cases.\n169 Admissions to\nHospital in June,\nMiss Eidt Reports\nSuperintendent's report for the\nmonth of June, presenUd to Kootenay Lake General Hotpital Society\nDirector Tueiday ; nifht by Miss\nVera B. Eidt, Superintendent, showed 70 patlenU in hoipital at the flnt\nof the month; ltt admtoilona; 177\ndischarge!; and 02 remaining over\nat the end of the month. One new\ntuberculoili cue wai lUted and four\nnew InfecUoUl cues were reported.\nShe lilted 114 dayi of epecial\nnursing and 167 daya at vaeaUon.\nA total of 10,840 ineali were lerved;\nand the coit at food purchued wu\n$1248.26. ';_\u25a0\u2022,\nThere were 15 obstetrical cuei;\n65 X-Ray examinations; 91 operation!, with 84 general anaeithetlcs;\nand 667 laboratory teate\nIn the Uolatlon building there\nwere seven paUenta in at the beginning of the month; six admissions, five dlKhtrgei, and four remaining over at the end of the\nTot Dr. G. M. Weir, Provincial\nSecretary, had paid an informal and\nshort visit to the Hospital during\nthe month, Mlu Bldt tald.\nWhile Dr. F. P. Sparki wu on\nholiday, Uking pott-gradiltte work,\nDr. F.% Auld bad taken over the\nduU\u00ab of Medical Health Officer.\nMn. W. K Blair wai atlUting in\nthe patholdglcal work.\nIsolation Hospital\nScreens Replaced\nScreens had been replaced where\nneceiiary at the Uolatlon Hoipital;\nand convenion of a litUng room on\nthe second floor of the Nurses home\ninto two bedrooms Wti under consideration, stated a house committee\nreport by W. M. Walker and MUs\nGladys Ewing to the directors of\nthe Kootenay Lake General HospiUl Society Tueiday night.\nMr. Walker and MUl Ewing In-\nipected Uie HoipiUli on Mphday.\nThe altting room In the Huriei\nHome Wu now being used aa two\nbedrooms with only curtains acrosi,\nMr..Walker said. \u25a0\nTaps ln the Operating room nia\nbeen repalfcd.      \t\nBack Debts Being\nCollected, Hospital\nBack d*Me of Kootenw Lake\nGeneral Tlowltal niiced Mn the\nhandi Of Northern CridlU Corporation wet* balhg collected and tt-\nvorable tumi were being turned\nln, W. J. Leigh, Collector, reported\nto the HospiUl Board tueiday\nnight. ThOre Were people calling at\nthe hospiUl' every day to inquire\nabout the bills or to pay something\ndn account, he said.\nMr. Leigh is collecting current\naccounU.\nguiding\n\u25a0hsls\nRi\nby the Ri\n*23.007, J. K\nitated at the\nday evening.\nClassification follow!; tight\nldenees, fl7,000; 1 iaWTi\n12000; repairs and alterations,\nSheep Creek Man Is\nFined at Rossland,\nNo Driver's Licence\nROSSLAND, B. C July 11-Iven\nBlair ol Sheep Creek pleaded guilty\nto driving a car without a licence,\nand wis fined $5.00 ind costs by\nMtgistrate R, E. Plewman In the\nRoisllnd PoUce Court this morning.\nFifty Attend Scout\nat Fruitvale\nAmark in Top Form\nat Pacific Tennis\nTACOMA, With., July 11 (AP).\u2014\nEd Amark. of San Franciico, lott\nonly three games in two matches u\nhe opened the defence of his men'i\nsingles championship in.the Pacific\nNorthwest TennU Tournament here\ntoday.\nAmark, top-iteded entrant, arrived In Tacoma lut nlgbt after a\n20-hour automobile trip from Salt\nLake City, but the drive apparently\nhad little effect on hli game. He\nmowed down Paul KrthbTil ot Tacomi. 6-0, 6-1, and Charlei O'Neill\nof Portltnd, 6-1, 6-1.\nRev. N. Daly lo\nReturn Rossland\nROSSLAND, B. C, July 11-Bev,\n_  ilj\npei\nLillooet during early iprt of thii\nweek. They will Uke up residence\nat the house formerly occupied by\nMr. and Mn. A, E. Wright and family.\nMr. and Mn. Daly an well known\nIn the Golden City, Mr. Daly having occupied the pulpit at St An-\ndrew'i United Church previoui to\nH. Daly and Mrs. Daly are elected to arrived in Rossland from\nUking charge of the parUh at Lillooet three years ago,\nHospital $500 Ahead,\nDr. Coughlin's X-Ray\nServices,  Board Told\nThat the Hospital wu about U00\nahead through Uie X-ray services\ngiven twice monthly by Dr, W. A.\nCoughlin of Trail, wu Information\ngiven to Kootenay Lake General\nHospital Dlrectori by Miss Vera B.\nEidt, Superintendent, Tuttdty \u00bbl*m.\nSince Dr. Couihiln'l flnt vUit in\nJanuary, 1938, a total ot $1601.50 had\nbeen paid to the Hospital tor the\ntreatments. There was in unpaid\nbalance of (904, and Dr. Coughlin\nhad received (1060, leaving a balance on hand of (521.50. Several\nimall items cime out of tha (521.50,\nleaving the final balance at about\n(500, MUa Eidt said.\nLeaver Asks City\nfor Approach to\nHouse, Anderson\nApplicaUon of E. W, Leaver for\nan approach to hU home on Anderson Street, between Douglas and\nlew Streets, wu referred by the\n'   Council Tueeday night to the\nlo, Worki Committee.\nJOuot\nTHE WORLD'S I\nCHESTERFI\nWESTERN INTERN*\nVancouver 8, Ytkia _\nWenatchte 0, Tacoma 1,1\nINTERNATIONAL:\nNewirk 1, Toron\nJeney City 9,\nBaltimore 7, ~\nRochester 4, 13, ,\nPACIFIC COASTl\nHollywood I, Sei\nSacramento 8, Si\nOakland 8, Port\nSan Diego 5, \"\nCITY TO RE\nISOLATION\nThit the City wou]\nresponsibility ot repaii\nUon HospiUl Bulldl;\nMayor N. C. Stibbi\nProvincial Governmn\naid would be given,\ntion given tile dlrecton\nnay Lake General Hoi\nmeeUng Tueiday nlgl\nWhimiter, Chairman\nPlani for r.n\u00ab'nng On\nY*.n  maae  by  W,\narchitect\n_ -**\nCamp\nFRUITVALE, B. C, - Approximately Vj Boy SequU from Trail\nand District arrived here on Frldiy\nfor two weeks tt the Fruitvale\nBeaver Scout Camp.\nFor the flnt week G. W. WiUon\nwill be Camp Chief wilh Newton\nSherwood as Assistant Camp Chief.\nSteven Saprunoff, Quartermaster,\ncompletes the iteff. John Glbion\nand Andrew Alliion ot Rossland\nwill be Camp Chief and Assistant\nrespectively for the second week,\nA number of Wuhlngton Scouts\nwill vUIt with the Canadian Scouts\nfor three days and an international\njamboree will be held commencing\nJuly 14.\nNo Word Yet as to\nReceipt Iron Lungs\nDr. H. E. Young Provincial\nHealth Officer, told the directors\nof the Kootenay Lake General HospiUl Society in a letter Tuesday\nnight that he had no word yet as\nto when the \"iron lungs\" being donated to hosplUls by Lord Nuffield would be received. The\nlungs were being distributed\nthrough the Dominion Department\nof Health, he stated, but he would\nsee that every effort was made to\nsecure them as early as possible.\nHinitt Asks Curb\nto Aid Boulevard\nCommending the City Council for\nlis efforts to improve boulevards in\nUie City by posting prlMi, H. Hinitt In a letter received by Uie Coun.\ncil Tuesday night sUted he was im\nproving the boulevard fronting his\nEroperfy and alked the City to aasist\ny lnitelling a curb. The request\nwu referred to the Board of Works.\nOld Timers Picnic\nAugust 9 Approved\nApplication of the Nelson and\nDistrict Old Timers' Association for\nuse of Lakeside Park for a picnic\nAugust 9 was approved by tho City\nCouncil Tuesday night.\nCITY COUNCU APPROVES\nLIGHTS CATHOLIC SOCIAL\nApplication ot L. S. McKinnon\nfor the IniUUation by the City of\nfree lights on the lawn of H. Gag-\nnon's residence, 510 Carbonate\nStreet, for the annual Catholic\nlawn social, was approved by the\nCity Council Tuesday night It was\npointed out the City provided one\nsuch free installation annually for\neach church.\nROSSLAND FIRE CHIEF\nON FORTNIGHT'S LEAVE\nROSSLAND, B.C, July U-K*n-\nneth Marfin Rossland Fire Chief,\nwai granted holiday leave, commencing July 18, by the Rossland\nCity Council Monday evening\n. Eastern Boxla\nSENIOR \"A\" ONTARIO\nLACROSSE ASSOCIATION;\nOrillia 14, Brampton 10.\nFergui 11, St Catharines 7.\n\u2022 '   liiiirttiliitifiliiliriiiiii\nICATION\nCOUNCIL\nE. V. Doug-\ntor service\nCouncil\nTwo Games Slat\nThis Mornit\nBantam B\u00ab  Bl\nThe Nelson Banttro linbtll\nLeague again swings \u25a0 \u25a0)\nthis morning with two tinet. At\n9 o'clock the Tigen tnd hi Bl\nmtet in the opening I\n1030 the Cubi tnd tha 1\nicheduled to Uke the]\nTlie league-leading j\nIdle today but will\nmorning agalnit  the\ngen and Dodgen clul\ner  Siturdiy,   Cubs\nday off then.        *_.\n '       '*_\nSalvation Army\nRonland Bfl\nKoolaree ttUHticad-9,\n76 in Junior Boys\nKoolaree; Boys\nOpening Ceremony at\nCairn and Chapel\nIs Held\nBy IAN HUMPHRIES\nJUNIOR8 ARRIVE\nAs the 9:28 train pulled up at\ncamp, the senior boys of 1939 btde\ngoodbye to old' Koolaree for another year. The camp seemed deserted with just a few iround, But\nnot for longl\nAt approximately 1:30 p.m. Director Fred Robins greeted some\n60 junior boys from Trail and Nelson districts and from that Ume on\nthere has been UtUe quieU Louis\nMillin of Creston and Jack Blaine-\nof Cranbrook were the first Juniors\nto get into camp.\nRev, William Selder and Mrs.\nSelder arrived with Mrs. Foster\nHilliard, the camp nurse. The\nyoungest brave in camp is Bernard\nSelder, 13-month-old ion of Mr. and\nMrs. Selder. Already he hai become\na favourite and your writer U going to adopt him as his whole\ntribe!\nThe afternoon was spent in getting the boys settled in their cabins.\nThe Bie Chiefs who will guide\nthe youngsters throughout camp\nare E. Ball, G. Barnes, I. Humphries, R. Stinson, A. Oromble, W.\nAffleck G. EllUon, J. Guesiord,\nJ. Hand, and Mr. Selder.\nNO SECOND CALL NEEDED\nA quick swim was much enjoyed\njust before supper, while needless\nto say, the gong for \"eats\" only\nhad to be rung once! As we had\nonly two days till Wednesday In'\nwhich to accustom the braves to\nthe camp routine, visitors' day yiiU\nnot come around till July 19.\nAfter sundown, all the campers\ngathered round the cairn tor the\nopening cimp ceremony. Frotn the\ncairn everyone repaired to' tha\nchape), where the meahlng and\npurpose of camp wai explained By\nBig Chief Robins. Back to the cairn,\nthe recorda of lut yetr'i camp\nwere opened and placid In tht\ncustody of Jack Grey. FrOm the\nsmaller tribal fires all the braves\njoined In the big campfire and\nplaced the blankets of membership on tha shouldcrt of those who\nhad come to camp for the tint time.\nA ihort iliig-tcng <\nrcforls  and ill wen\nbS. *\nSo,  till morning\nGod li nigh.\nThe 1936 Junior can\nCabin 1, Sarcpi\neit Ball, Nelion;\nLeMolgne,   Erlcl\nCranhrook; Will\nton; Harold Moen\nISast Trail; Clifford\nCheesham,  Peter\nFrank   Dolman,   NL\nHoover, Allan Temple, I\nert Peebles, Trail.\nCabin 2, Mohicans\nGarth Barnei, Little\nLeonard, Donild Wutzlt\nWilson.  Trail;  Evan Jdi,\nMcBride, Crinbrook; Den\nEwing's  Landing;  Georgl\nNtkusf;   Lawrtnce   Bond;\nMorden Hoyte, John Gordo\nland; George Dunlop, Eut'\nCabin 3, Iroquois \u2014 Bigl\nRalph Stinson, RossUnd;\nChief John McDonald, jy!Tn>\nMoynes, Tnil; William Strom, David\nWonfold, William Horner. Ian Mae-\nKentie, William Baird, Nelson; John\nBlaine, Cranbrook; John Melville,\nJohn Zentner, Richard Glbbard,\nKeith Jamieson, Rossland.\nCabin 4, Kootenais - Big ChlM\nAlex Crombie, Robert Clerihue, Qt-\ntoe Walker, East Trail; Uttle Chief\nDonald Lane, Sheep Creek; Jamei\nHenniger, Grand Forki; Peter Verlgln, Ymlr; Terry Clegg, David\nGlover, Archie McTeer, Rossland:\nLoull Millin, Cteston; Steven Mc-\nIiaac, Trail; Robert Dolman, Nakusp; Robert Mitchell, Lumberton.\nCabin 5. Camachees - Big Chief\nWilUam Affleck, WUliam Humphries, Thomas Heslop, Michael Worsfold, Nelson; Little Chief John Gray,\nWilliam Harris, George Watte, Trail;\nOordon Spain, Calvin ^ota, E\u00abt\n\u25a0Ball; HuA Urquhart, Rowland;\nPeter Graham, Jamei Sutherland,\nCranbrook; Edward McArthur,\nCastlegtr.\n. The iteff consists of Fred J. Roblni, TraU, Director; Rev. William\nJ. Selder, Vmir; Gordon Ellison, Un\nHumphries, Trail; John Oue)rford,\nand John Hand, last Trail, Lenders;\nMra. Foster Hilliard, Nelson, Nutiai\nMn. Strom, NeUon and Robert Mac-\nIntoth, TraU, Kitchen Staff; Stuart\nMacintosh, Ntlson, Launch Oipera-\ntor; Mrt. Seldtf and Bernard Selder,\n=\n\u25a0\nWe will move your furniture and belongings quickly ahd safely anywhere in\nthe city,\nPHONE 33\nWest Transfer Co.\nESTABLISHED 18*9\n Sam McReynoldsr\nU.S. Congressman\nDies, Heart Attack\nWASHINGTON, July 11 (AP) -\nBam D. McReynoldi,. democratic\nmember of the United States house\nof representatives for Tennessee\n\u2022nd chtlrmtn of the houae of foreign relationi committee, died todty tged tfl.-        -\nThe cause of death wu a heart\nattack.\nTbt Cbtttanoogan wai a cloie\nfriend ot state lecretary Cordell\nHull and was active tn promoting\nadministration matten touching on\nall aspects ot foreign .affairs. Hit\nabsence from the floor at this tei-\nlon wu a factor, friends uid. In\npreventing the Rooievelt administration to fir from getting neutrality legislation in tne form it de-\ntired.\nMcReynoldi had been t member\nof congreu tinee 1922. In 1933, he\nwu an American delegate to the\nInternational monetary and economic conference in London.\nSwiss Hunt Mother   '\nof Murdered Son\nEDMONTON, July 11 (CP) -\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Police at\nthe request of Swiss authorities\nconducted in investigation last\nyear Into the disappearance of\nMaurice Nicolet, son of Mrs. Ernest\nSchupbach, who will be tried at\nBlel, Swltrerland, in September for\nthe alleged poisoning of her first\nhusband, Paul-Henri Nicolet.\nWith the assistance of a map allegedly drawn by Schupbach for\npolice ln Switzerland, It. C. M. P.\nrecovered part of a child's skeleton\nand a boy\u2022 shirt, identified ai re-\n' main! of Maurice.\nPolice charge the boy died after\nI severe beating and was burled\nlome distance from the Schupbach\nfarm at Bay Tree, Alta., dug up and\npartially destroyed by wild animals\nand later reburied at a more remote tpot\nSchupbach will be tried for the\nlad's murder alia u under Swlu\nlaw citizens cap be tried at home\nivcn If Uie alleged crime is committed abroad.\nSirdar Fishermen\nReport Good Catch\nSIRDAR, B. C. - Jack Sfnlth, F.\nTrevellyn, D. Trevellyn, Miss Lillian and Miu Dorothy Trevellyn\nwer* at Canyon Creek and got a\ngood catch principally of trout lut\nweekend. Tlie weather wn. Ideal\nfor fishing. Several, other parties\nwere out both at HaU and Canyon Creeki reporting good sport and\nresults. Fishing It at ib beat at theie\nElints, along the weit aide of the\nke, although the water ot the lake\nit inclined to be rough at timet.\nGood fithlng it reported on the eut\ntide of the lake trom Kuskanook to\nGray Creek also.\nPLENTIFUL CAME LIFE\nSEEN AROUND SIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B. C. \u2014 The number Pt\nducks here and all along tho Slough\n- and back waters of the Kootenay la\nreported to be titoniihing. The\npheasants recently liberated aeem\nlo ba coming Into nice shape and\nhave not gone fbr away. Grouse are\nSuite tame and to tar tha Increase\nl numbers should ensure good\niport in Uie till. Deer are coming\nInto the ranches and ara also very\ntame.\nSIRDAR ROADS GRADED\nSIRDAR, B. C. \u2014 The road grader\nwas here Friday going Over the\nroada which were beginning to\nahow signs ot wear owing to heavy\ntraffic. The surface has now been\nbrought to better ihape and is much\nappreciated by motorltti.\nFINED $50 KEEPING\nA BETTING HOUSE\nVANCOUVER, July 11 (CP) -\nTeruo UJlye wu fined $50 with\nthe option of one month ln jail in\nVancouver city police court today\nfor keeping a betting houie.\nST. CATHARINES, Ont. July\n11 (CP>;-Theft of 300 iticki of\ndynamite from the Queeniton\nQuarries, Ltd. near St. Davies, 15 miles eut of here, wu reported today.\nCOOLING\nEQUIPMENT\n\/or homes, office, store or shop.\nI. C. Plumbing tr Heating Ce.\nFirst 'Round the\nWorld Air Tripper\n-  Soys \"It Was Nice\"\n.    fly DEVON FRANCI*\nPORT WASHINGTON, N. *__, July\nU (AP).^-Three weeks igo Normm\nList, \u2022 New York broker, wtlked\nInto tn tirline office ind plinked\n$1300' en the counter 'and uld \"I\nwant to go around the world.\"\nHe got back today.\nIt took him Juit houn leu than\nthree weeki to circumnavigate the\nglobe by icheduled tirline, the tint\nmm ever to do it. He mfde no\nrecord in time but he did make a\nrecord in the spirseness of hit conversation in describing the trip.\n\"It wu nice,\" he uid.\nKing ond Queen\nStart Busy Round\nLONDON. July 11 (CP)-After a\nbrief rut following their triumphant\ntour of Canada and the United\nStatei the King and Queen are once\nagain busy with social engagement!.\nThe King will hold investitures\nfor those included In the birthday\nhonors today and Thursday, the\nfirst at Buckingham Palace and the\nsecond at St. James's Palace.\nThe fourth and fifth court! of the\nyetr   take   place   tomorrow   and\n\u00a3bursday. Twenty Canadians will\n! presented tomorrow.\nOn July 18 the King will hold a\nlevee at St James's Palace and the\nroyil garden party will take place\ntowards the end of the month.\nThe Queen will be present it the\nToe H garden party at Hampton\nCourt Palace July \"\nn\nROYAL CITY MAN FALLS\nFROM BOAT, DROWNS\nKAMLOOPS, B. C, July 11 (CP)\n\u2014Frank Leek of New Westminster\nB. C, drowned lut night when he\ntoppled from the boat ln which\nhe wu fishing at Knouff Lake, 20\nmiles west ot here. Leek, alone in\nthe rowboat at Uie time, ia believed\nto hive suffered a heart seizure.\n\u2014NELION DAILY NEWI, NELSON.\nBuilding Up Paul\nMcNulf for 1940!\nWASHWGTON, July 11 (AP) -\nPretldtnt Rooievelt nomlmted Ptul\nV. McNutt todty to be United\nStatet federal security tdmlniitra-\ntor.\nMcNutt, who now ii American\nhigh commissioner to Uie Philippines, hu indicated be wUl retain\nnil presen' pott for several vfeeks\nin order to clear up details.\nThe nomination, if confirmed will\nbring into Uie administration the\ndemocrat whose candidacy for the\npresidency in 1940 bu been openly advocated by hli friends. Whether Preiident Rooievelt is giving\nhim a boost towird tht democratic\nnomination for preiident in 1940, or\nwhether Uie president is merely\nproviding him t chance to ahow\nwhat be can do, wu an argued\npoint\nSenator Wheeler (Dem.-Mont.),\nwho recently declined consideration u a vice-presiden'.iil candidate, nld flatly the object' wu\n\"to build up McNutt for 1940,\"\nThe former governor of Indiana,\nwill head one of three new agencies created under a plan for reorganization of the government. It\nwill give him control over Uie social security board, civilian conservation corps, national youth administration, public health tervlce\nand various other agenclu.\nAGED MAN BEATEN\n.   BY THUGS, DIES\nWAKAW, Seik., July 11 (CP)-\nVicUm ot in attempted robbery\nin which he wu mauled brutally\nby two thugs who lnvsded his home\nMartin Gadgala, 80, died in hospital here today. The aged man was\nUed hand and foot and dragged\nacross the floor of his cabin near\nFish Creek in the attack Sunday.\nHe had only 4 few cents, not having cashed an old age pension\ncheque. A neighbor found nlm.\nW^\u00ab^^M5W\u00ab\u00ab5*\u00ab\u00abM\u00bb*!*W*5\u00ab5*J\u00ab4\u00ab\u00abJ*\u00bb\u00ab5\u00ab*\n$S$$$5\nON THE AIR\nttttttmtttttettttttttm\nJhn SdaL Jodau.\n4:30-Hobby Lobby\n5:00\u2014Stadium Concert\n5:30\u2014Idea Mart\n8:00\u2014Kay Kyser's program\n7:30\u2014Paul Whiteman's orch.\n7:30\u2014Tommy Dorsey's orch-\n8:00\u2014Honolulu Bqund\n8:00\u2014What's My Name?\n8:J0\u2014Lighti  Out.\n8:30\u2014Geo. Jessel't celebrity prgm.\nNETWORKS mTd STATIONS\nNBC-KFl. Lot Angelei: KGA, KHQ\nSpokane; KGO, KPO, San\nFranciico; KGW. Portland;\nK Jit. SeatUe; KOA. Denver\nCBS-KNX, Lot Angelei; KSL Salt\nUke City; KFPV. Spokane;\nKOIN. Portland\nDL Is MBS-KOL, SeatUe; KFRC,\nSan Franciico.\nP.M.\u2014       ~\n4\u00ab\nNBC-^e Mth'i Family\nNBC\u2014Raniom Sherman Pretenti.\nCB\u00bb-TIMi tor Two\nNBC\u2014Goldman Band\n4:30\nNBC-Hobby Lobby\nNBC-Musical Vlgnettei\ntsoo\nNBC\u2014Fred Waring's orch,\nCBS\u2014Stadium Concert\nNBC\u2014Horie and Buggy Dayi\nNBC\u2014In the Good Old Days\n5:30        1\nNBC\u2014Idea Mart\nNBC\u2014Story  Town  Express\n0:00\nCBS\u2014Stadium Concert\nNBC\u2014Kay Kyier'i program\nNBC-Roy Shield'! orch.\n1:30\nNBC\u2014Public lntereit ln Democracy\n7:00, 1 .\nNBC\u2014Fred Warlng'i orch.\nCBS\u2014Arnot 'n' Andy\nNBC\u2014Yucha Borowsky's .orch.\n7:15\nCBS\u2014Barry Wood's orch.\nNBC\u2014Stanford University prg,-\u00ab\nMBS\u2014Capt Heme, news.\n7:30\nCBS\u2014Pau) Whiteman'i orch.\nNBC\u2014Tommy Dorsey's orch.\nNBC\u2014Kelsey's Alrnanac\nMBS\u2014Lone Ranger, drama\n8:00\nNBC\u2014Newa; tropical moods\nCBS\u2014Honolulu Bound, Phil Baker\nNBC-Whafs My Name?\n8:15\nNBC\u2014Hal Kemp's orch.\nDlr-Frank Bull sports\n8:30\n8:30\u2014Geo. Jeuel'i celebrity pgm.\nCBS\u2014J. B. Hughei, news and sporti\nNBC\u2014Larry Clinton'! orch.\n\u00abS\u00abM\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abK\n9:00\nDL\u2014News\nNBC\u2014Sleep Serenade\n9:30\nNBC-Ran Wilde's orch.\nCBS\u2014Muizy Marcellino's orch.\nDL\u2014Stan   Myer's   orch.\n10:00 '\nCBS\u2014Clark Ross, songs\nNBC\u2014Clyde Lucas' orch.\nNBC\u2014News Reporter\n10:15\nNBC\u2014On With the Dance\nNBC\u2014Blue Moonlight\nCBS\u2014Nightcap Yarns\n10:30\nNBC\u2014Bdutrdo Chaver' orch.\nNBC\u2014Pinky Tomlin's orch.\nDL\u2014Geo. Redman's orch.\nCBS\u2014Ted Weems' orch.\n11:00\nCBS\u2014Kenny Baker's orch.\nNBC\u2014Gary Nottingham's orch.\nNBC\u2014Paul Carson, organist\nNBC-News\nDL\u2014Marvin George's orch.\nC B C NETWORK\nCJCA       CFCN       CJAT        CBR\n730 1030 910 1100\nP.M.\u2014\n3:0O\u2014Dinner Music\n3:30\u2014Crackerjacki\n3:45\u2014Matter's Musical\n4:00\u2014Ransom Sherman presents\n5:30\u2014Music by Faith\n6:00\u2014Roy  Shield's orch.\n6:30\u2014Dan McCowan, naturalist\n6:45\u2014Lieder Recital\n7:00\u2014News and Weather\n7:15\u2014Summer Symphony concert\n8:0O\u2014Everyman Theatre\n8:30\u2014The Cariboo Miner\n8:45\u2014Happy Felton's orch.\n9:00\u2014Percy  Harvey's orch.\n9:30\u2014Joe de Courcey's orch.\n9:45\u2014News and Weather\n10:00\u2014Sydney Kelland, organist.\n10:30\u2014Ted Weems' orch.\n11:00\u2014Stan Meyers' orch.\nC)AT\u2014TRAIL-910\nA. M.\u2014\n7:0O\u2014Request program\n7:30\u2014News\n7:45\u2014More Requests\n8:00\u2014Bulletin board\n9:00\u2014The Happy Gang\n9:30-Road of Life\n10:00\u2014Big Sister\n10:15\u2014Life and Love of Dr. Susan\n11:00\u2014Mary Marlin.\n11:15\u2014Ma Perkins\n11:30\u2014Pepper Young's Family\nll:45^-The Guiding Light\nP. M.\u2014     \u2022\nKilH-Club Matinee.\n12:45\u2014News\n1:45\u2014Closing Stock Quotations\n8:00\u2014Headlines ln Sport\nFOR   F I N A N CI A I\nGOLD COULD\nNOT BRING\nBACK HIS\nLIFE\niiwie m tm iNimm \u00ab> mine hum i\u00bb\n\u25a0roe\nMUTUAL[IF|\n\u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 OF CANADA INMHI\nItUtUtHIOMt\nHIAD OFFICE-WATERLOO,ONTARIO\nSU LT   ft   REPRESENTATIVE Of   THIS COMPANY\nAlice Marble to\nHave Movie Career\nHOLLYWOOD, July 11 (API-\nAlice Marble, who plays tennii\nwell enough to win Wimbledon's\nhistoric cup, tnd who lings well\nenough to win praitt from New\nYorki' night clubbers, toon will\ntry a movie carter.\nrank Onetti, Hollywood tgent\nnld he had signed a contract\ntor her, but that it forbids any\nrole u a tennii player. Her acting will not interfere with her\namateur status u a tennii player,\nhe added.\n m\u2014\n3 Worken Drown\nin Septic Tank\nGALT, Ont, July 11 (CP).-Threa\ncity employees were drowned in\nthe septic tank of Gait's sewage\ndisposal plant today when they were\novercome-by lewer gu. .\nThe dead are Harry E. Weitwood,\nicwage Inipector; Albert Hatfield\ntnd Peter Brltton,\"the men, all\nlong-time employees of the city, had\nbeen aent to clean the plant thla\nmorning. __\nThe drownings were discovered\nby William McEllan, public workt\nsuperintendent who went to the\nplant at noon to take the men back\nto the city, a ihort distance north\nof the plant. McLellan and a mechanic called firemen after tailing\nto locate the men. Firemen recovered the three bodlei.\nNearby residents told officials\nthey had seen the men come out\nof the plant at interval! for air, and\neach time they had been wearing\nrubber boots. The fact Weatwood\ndid not have on the rubber boots\nwhen his body wu recovered led\ninvestigators to believe he losphis\nlife In in attempt to rescue the\nother men.\nIt was believed Westwood was\nfirst out pf the tank when the job\nwas finished and had changed when\nhe heard cries of help from Hatfield and Brltton.\nFRENCH MINISTERS TO\nSTAY PUT FOR PRBSBNT\nPARIS, July 11 (AP)-The French\nCouncil of Ministers, meeUng with\nPresident Albert Lebrun, voted to\nprohibit \"until further order\" all\ntrips by ministers during the present international tension.\nFARMER AND WIFE\nTO BE TRIED, SEPT,\nBIEL, Switzerlind, July 11 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014 Ernst Schupbacch, \u25a0 former\nfarmer of Bay Tree. Alta.. and his\nwife, will be tried Sept 13 for the\nalleged poisoning of the woman's\nfirst husband. Paul-Henri Nicolet,\nprosecuting authoriUes said today.\nPOLITICAL PARTIES\nCLASH, 25 KILLED\nMEXICO CITY, July 11 (AP)-\nAbout 25 persons were reported\nkilled or injured yesterday near\nCelaya, Guanajuato state, when\nAgrarians opened tire on members\nof a nationalist political organization known as \"Slriarquislas.\"\ni YOUTHS SENTENCED\nPRINCE GEORGB, B. C\u201e July U\n(OP)\u2014Three youth* were conylcted\nof breaking and entering an automobile theft charges here and sentenced to penitentiary terms.\nGeorge Clark, 19, was given a\nthree-year sentence.\nE. F. Strain, 18, and a juvenile\nwere each sentenced to two years\nfor complicity in the crimes.\n22 JOBLESS ARRESTED\n\u2022 LONDON, July 11 (CP). -\nTwenty-two unemployed men\nwere arrested today when they\nrefused to leave Huston Station,\nto which they had marched with\nsome 30 others to uk the station\nmuter for work.\n9 HEAT WAVE DROWNINCS\nWINNIPEG, July 11 (CP)-Nine\npersons lost their lives through\ndrowning during the last two days\nof Intense heat in Western Canada\nDNE8DAY MORNING. JULY \u00ab, 1f\u00bb-\nSuggest Alaska\nHighway Follow\nFORT ST. JAMIS, B. C, Julyl 11\n(CP)\u2014Three Canadian members of\nthe International commission studying the propos' . construction of a\nBriUsh Columbia to Alaska highwiy, left late yuterday on an aerial\nsurvey ot various routes advocated\nfor th* road ln Um northern part\nof the province.\nYuterday the three turveyon\nmet memben of the Fort St Jural\nboard of trad* which suggested\nUie northern route follow the preient highwiy lyitem to Germanun\nLanding, then over the Germanacn-\nLake Aiken lake road\u2014now under\nconstrucUon\u2014thence north to two\nbrother lakes near the headwaters\nof the Stlkine river.\nThere lt would connect with a\nroad partially conitructed from\nDease Lake to the headwaters of\nthe Turnagain River, and go up\nthe wut ilde of Dease Lake to the\nYukon boundary.\nThe information wu given by\ndlitrict residents tnd oUicrs who\nuid they had travelled the suggested route both afoot and on horseback. Thay claimed it would utilize the present highway system.\nwould not deviate more than a few\nmilei from a straight line drawn\nfrom Ashcroft to the Yukon and\nthus would be the. cheapest route\nand serve the largest area of known\nnatural reiourcei of any proposed\nroute.\nGRENFELL WILL RETURN\nNORTHERN TERRITORY\nNEW YORK, July 11 (AP).-Sir\nWilfred Grenfell, famed u \"The\nGood Samaritan of Labrador,\" will\nreturn soon' to the northern territory where he spent 40 years serving the needs of fisher-folk, Indians and Eskimos. Ill health Interrupted his missionary work in\n1934.\nThe Grenfell Association of America announced today that Sir Wilfred, 74, would nil next Monday\nfrom Montreal tor St, Anthony,\nheadquarters in Uie territory for\nthe Grenfell social service.\nHe will be accompanied by his\ndaughter, Rosamond.\nGIRL STARTS NORTHERN\nTRIP TO WEDDINC\nEDMONTON, July 11 IC?\\ -\nBlanche Yakovlev of Vancouver\nleft Edmonton by Northern Alberta\nrailways today for waterways on\n\u2022the first lip df her trip Into the\nNorth West Territories, ending with\nher marriage.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nMONTREAL-Walter Brown Henderson 55, professor of English at\nDartmouth College, Hanover, N. H.\nSUDBURY, Ont.-Joseph Alexander (Steve) Yankojki, 41, former\nprofessional hockey player.\nEAST ORANGE, N. J.-Charles\nRichard Abbott, 66, founder and\nmanager of the News Photo Service of Underood and Underwood.\nQUEBEC\u2014Thomu Hugh. Holmes,\n36, a member of the all-Ireland association fobtball' tarn and 'prominent in other athletics in hii youth.\nLQNDON-Admiral FrancU William Kennedy, 77, commander of\nH.M.S. Indomitable during fint two\nyeart of the Great War.\nFLYER SAFE\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld, July 11 (CP\nCable)\u2014Dr. Alexander Forbei,\nwhose seaplane had not been re-\npor'.\u00bbd since it took off from\nNorthweit River, Labrador,- lait\nFriday on a flight to Ryan Bay,\nwu safe at Indian Harbor.\nWise Men Read\nStars for Hitler\nNIW YORK, July' 11 (AP). -\nChancellor HlUer maintains an advisory staff of five astrologers, Dr.\nNicholas Murray BuUer uid today,\nto read the stars and tell him what\nthe future holdi. '\nAt Um present ume,\" Dr. Butler\n\u2022aid, \"th* advice of theie wise men\nla that tb* climax of HiUer's career\nwill come early 'n September and\ntbat whatever he is to do to add\nto hi* fame must be done before\nthit date.\n\"This may sound like nonsense,\nbut it the tort of nonsense which\nmay easily give to modern civilization another terrific ihock.''\nCreston Knights at\nNtlion to Discuss\nAugust Convention\nSIRDAR, B. C.~ A deputation\ntram WUd Roie Lodge No. 39,\nKnighti of Pythiis at Creiton, con-\nsisti. \u2022; of A. E. Rudd and Joe Romano, past chancellors, and James\nS. Wilion, chancellor commander,\nvliited Nelion to meet representatives ol Nelson lodge regarding the\npropoied convention to be held in\nthat city on tht occasion of the supreme chancellor's vliit in August.\nAt the same time tentative plans\nwere made lor a convention In\nCreston July 15, at which represen-\ntatives trom Salmo, Trail, Rossland,\nNelion, Kimberley and Bonners\nFerry, will be present,The Creston\nlodge members-saw a display of\ndrill work by the Nomads of Avrudaka. It wu hoped arrangement\ncould be made to have thli team\nbrought to Creiton after its viilt\nto Boise, Idaho. .\nSUMMER SCHEDULES\nAT CRESTON CHURCHES\nCRESTON, B. C.-The hot weather\nhu brought the usual lessening of\nchurch services at Creston. Rev. A.\nS. Partington, Rector of Christ\nChurch, Mrs. Partington and family, are visiting at Winnipeg and\nAnglican worship is withdrawn unUl the end of the month. Chriit\nChurch Sunday School is alio on\nvacation for July and August    .\nAi cuitbmary, St Stephen'! Prei\nbyterlan Church evening service is\nwithdrawn for July and August, but\nUie Sunday School is conducted aa\nutuil.   7\n\u2022 At Holy Cross-Church two Sis\nten have been here from Cranbrook\nfor some days conducting Uie usual\nchildren's Summer School, which it\nin session at the old edifice at Victoria Avenue and Hillside Road,\nand is largely attended.\nSHIP ANCHOR BREAKS\nLINES TO ANCEL ISLD,\nSAN FRANCISCO, July 11 (AP).\n\u2014 All communication with Angel\nIsland \u2014 scene of the deportation\nhearing of Harry Bridget\u2014wai-disrupted today when\" ah anchor from\nthe Japanese ship Atutasam Maru\nbroke telephone and telegraph car\nblcs when it was dropped In San\nFrancisco Bay.\n-gap\n*AOI THMf\nttylHfr'&tQ (WfUMg.\nIP  *-* t*H\\Yl97Q.        ;\u25a0'_\nJuly Sale\nContinues\nGr YOUR SHARE OF\n\"BAf SUPER VALUES\nWedneiday Morning\nMundays Return\nBELLA COOLA, B.C., July 10\n(CP)\u2014Fears for the safety ot\nDon Munday, Vancouver mountaineer, and an expedition which\nattempted unsuccessfully to\nclimb nearby Mount Saugstad\nwere ended today after the party\nwu reported returning to Bella\nCoola.\nEXPECT 400 AT C.CF.\nCONVENTION, EDMONTON\nEDMONTON, July 11 (CP). \u2014\nFour hundred delegates are expected to attend the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation provincial\nconvention to be held here July 31,\nAug. 1 and 1, it wu stated by party\nofficial! today. 1\nGrant C. MacNeil, MJ>. for North\nVancouver, is expected to be the\nprincipal gueit ipeaker at the convenUon. ;\nAUSTRALIAN MINISTER\nREBUKES NAZI CONSUL\nCANBERRA, Auitralia, July 11-\n(CP Cable). - Sir H*nry Gullett\nminister for external attain, today,\nrebuked acting German Consul\nSeger in connection with a reference to the Danz)g question by the\nfirst secretary of the German con-\n1 sulate at Melbourne.\nTha secretary uld \"Great Britain Is putting her finger in a pie\nwhich doei not concern her.\"\nCYCLIST INJURED, VAN.\nVANCOUVER, July H (CP).-\nWllllam Guoiay, 56-year-old cycltit\nwai taken to hotpital today suffering a possible fractured skull, suffered wh^n he collided with an\nautomobile near Uie outskirts of\nVancouver earlier*\nWitness Tolls of\nCommunist Plans\nat Bridges Hearing\nSAN FRANCISCO, July 11 (AP)\n\u2014Laurence Milner, a key witneu\nln Uie United Statei labor department's deportation hearing agalnit.\nHarry Bridges, testified today h*\nhad heard a Communist revolution\nplot described in \"mtny speeches\nand conversations\" with Communist leaden ln the Pacific northwest\n\"They ipoke of building up an''\norganization in labor unioni, causing labor strife, and then perhap*',\nin case of war taking advantage\nof the situation by force and violence,\" Milner aald under cross-examination by \u25a0 Attorney Aubrey\nGrossman ot the Bridges' defence\ncounsel.\nMilner uid Morrii Rapport, Seattle alien now under deportation\norder, wu one of thote who had\ndiscussed programs of telling factorial and communication! when\nthe Communist insurrection came.    I\n\u2014 r\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\ntunditrand  Adding  Michlnei\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fliher Ltd.\nSM Ward 8t. Phont M\nHAULING\nPHONE xpe\nWilliams Transfer\nYOUTH'S BODY, FO^ND\nBREMERTON, Waih., July 11\n(AP)\u2014Searchers found Uie body\nyesterday of Rodney Burris, 35, ot\nCentralis, on the Hood Canal beach\nat St. Avis Bay. He drowned Sunday night when a small skiff capsized.\nU.S. Neutrality Bill Killed; Possible\nPresident May Force It Through\nWashington,~Juiy n (AP) -\nThe United SUtes Senate Foreign\nRelations Committee.voted today to\npostpone unUl the next-session of\nCongress conil\"    \"      ---\u2022\u2014\u00bb\u2014>\nity legislation.\nCongress, consideration of neutral-\nThe'vote for postponement wu\n12 to 11 with Senators Guv Gillette (Dem.-Iowa) and Walter\nGeorge (Dem.-Geogla), the previously doubtful members of the\ncommittee,. voUhg tor the delay.\nThe postponement came at a\ncrushing blow to Administration\nhopes for forcing action of Uie law\nin thli Muion in the. hope ot obtaining repeal of the arms embargo of the preient law.\nThere were immediate reporti,\nhowever, Democratic Leader Berkley would leek to take the issue\nto the Qoor despite the committee\naction. He could do thli It he could\nget Senate approval of a motion\nto discharge the committee from\nconsideration of the legislation.\nThe vote disclosed a greater unanimity of purpose among opponents of the administration neutrality program among opponents of\nthe Administration neutrality program than had been indicated prior\nto the committee teuton.\nHULL MAK\u00a38 STATEMENT\nWASHINGTON, July 11 (AP) -\nUnited States Secretary of State\nHull announced today ihortly after\na Senate Committee had voted for\npostponement of neutrality legislation until next Session, that in\nthe interest of \"peace and security\"\nthe Administration would continue\nto urge adoption of iti program.\nHull's itatement was made after\nhe Conferred with President Rooievelt\nIt followed by about two hours\na 12-11 vote ot the Senate Foreign\nRelations Committee ln favor of\ngiving no further consideration to\nrevision ot the neutrality law at\nthis session.-.\nDisclosure of the Administration\nstand Indicated to many that President Rooievelt had no intention of\npermitting Uie committco's decision\nlo itand in the way of new legislation before adjournment if he\ncan swing a majority ot the Senate\nto hli view.        1 \u25a0\nThis would mean a possibly bitter\nfight ln the Senate Over whether\nto force the houte approved\nBiU out of the committee am, .0 the\nSenate floor where administration\nleaders claim they can obtain\nenough votes for repeal of the armi\nembargo provision of the present\nlaw.\nHull's face wu grim u he road\nhit itatement\nHe reiterated the tix polnta of\nthe administration  program  thus:\n1. To prohibit Americin ships,\nirrespective of what they may be\ncarrying, from entering combat areas.   \u2022.\n2, To restrict travel by American\ncitizens in combat areas. .\ni. To provide that the export of\ngoodi destined for belligerents shall\nbe preceded by transfer of UUe\nto the foreign purchasers.\n4, To continue the exlsUng legislate, respecting loam and credit!\nto natloni at war.\n5. TV> regulate tile solicitation and\ncollection In thii country of fundi\nfor belligerents.\nt. To continue the national munitions control board and Uie tyitem\nof arms export and import licenses.\nCRESTON Social\n\u2022 \u2666\u2022\u2022\nCRESTON, B. C-Donald Archibald, accompanied hla father, W.\nM. Archibald to Spokane, on a trip\nUie latter it making further South.\nMn. Fenwick of Lot Angelu,\nCalif.,' Is a guest of her aant, Mrs.\nW. H.'Watcher here.\nMr. and Mrs. H. M. Cox have left\nfor Bonners Ferry, Idaho, where\nthey expect to make their home In\nfuture. , \u25a0'\u201e\u2022\nH. M. Finlayson ttt Vancouver\nwu a guest ot H. A. Powell here.\nIan Simpson \u25a0 of Victoria was . a\nguett ot CoL E. Mallandaine.   .\nMr. ahd Mn. J. G, Connell and\nsoir, George, visited at Spokane.\nMrt. T. Thmieath bf Wynndel wat\na guest of Mr. and Mri. R. Steveni.\nMrs. C. P. Bruner has left for Calgary, where she will be a vlaltor\n(or the Stampede.\nQUICKER STOPS!\nHere's Ins Secret:\nGoodrich engineers\ntested tread designs by j\nthe hundred. Finally\nthey developed thit\nLift-Saver Tread thtt\nacts like a set of windshield wipers. At\ntht row upon row of never-ending\nspiral but toll over a dangerous film\nof water, (hey iweep the water right\ntad left\u2014force it out through tbt\ndeep drainage grooves \u2014 mike a dry\ntrack for th* rubber to (tip. No\n'wonder . thit new Goodrich Safety\nSilvertown will Mop you quicker.\ntaftr on a wet pavement than you've\nerer itopped before!\nGOLDEN PIY BLOW-OUT PROTECTION, TOO!\n% A marvel of tire engineering\u2014inside tod,,\nout! Plenty of local motorists are saying just\nthat about the new Goodrich Safety Silver-j\ntown. And no wonder. On the outside iti '\nhas the Life-Saver Tread\u2014the new Good-]\nmmm rich non-skid development that sweeps wet\nroads so dry you can light \u2022 patch on its track! And!\non the inside it hu the famous Golden Ply protection\nagainst high-speed blow-outs;\nIf you want the quickest non-skid stops you've ever\nhad\u2014if you want real blow-out protection in the\nbargain\u2014come in and have this \"Silvertown Safety\"\nput between your car and the road.\nNO BUM COST\u2014Bat remember, to protect yourself\nagainst a possible skid or blow-out tomorrotv, you mutt ta\ntoday. For safety's sak* com* in tnd hive your car equipped\nwith streamlined Goodrich Safety Silvertowns. \"rL\u2014 \u2022\u25a0 -*\nextra cost and they may saveyo.rlije!\nThtrt \u00ab \u00bb\u2022\nGOODRICH-IWer\/nTlr.\nSataty, with Golden Ply Blow-out\nProtection md the road-drying non-\nskid LifeSavcr Tread... now gives\nyou the first 2-way Safety Inner Tube.\nIt'e Ihe new, perfected Seil-o-matic\n-the tm 1-wiy Safety Tub\u00ab...\ntbt enuring 60% stronger tube\nthat Mils itself, li infinitely tt.\nduces tht risk of death, injury ot\ndelay from blow-oat accidents.\nfor it reduces even big cuts sod\nbruises\u2014which formerly meant\nbed blow-outs\u2014to slow, safe\ntula.    It protects rou against\nsudden Bits from' spikes,\nscrews, clc\u2014sells such punctures\ninstantly while your cat roils on.\nSEAL-O-MATICS COST  NO\nMORE than \"pr etnium\" tu bea without 2-way Safety\u2014they outlast tires\n\u2014 owners report dres west 23%\nlonger. For safety and economy, see\nyout Goodrich Dealer today.\nGOLDEN  PLY BLOW out  PHOT\n' WMT KOOTENAY GOODRICH DISTRIBUTORS\nQUEEN CITY MOTORS LIMITED\n561 JOSEPHINE STREET NELSON, B. C. TELEPHONE 43\nRIVIR8IDE MOTORS\nTrail, B. C.\nHUNTER BROS. LIMITED\nRoulind, B. Ci\nGRAND   FORK8   OARAGE\nGranfl Forki, B. C.\n\u25a0 \u25a0'*.'\u25a0\n\t\n______\n .   .      m  \u25a0-,       .\n\\WMMUMmtMtm\n\u2022MMMMMmBMMmM'imtm >. \u00bbl| Wftll 111\nAQI POUR\n'-NnSON DAILY NEWI, KELSON, B. C.-WEDNEIDAY MORNINO. JULY 11, IM-\nPARISIENNES WILL SOON LEAVE CITY FOR SUMMER VISITORS\nReflectors\nRoutine Care Is\nNeeded to Keep\nNails Attractive\nBy DONNA GRACE\nCare of the hands and manicure\nmethods have been made so intriguing during recent yean. that\nthere are few women who neglect to\nkeep tbe hands well groomed.\n, It has been observed tbat the\nMils reflect the character and culture of the owner. The best plan\nis to always go to the same opera\ntor, for there are some little individual peculiarities about the nails\njust as in the skin texture and hair.\nA good manicurist will find all the\ndefects and know just what treatment yoa need, as well as the shape\n' ef nail best suited to your hand.\nIt you have plenty of time and\n\u2022re clever in handling the various\nmanicure instrument!;, you can do a\ngreat deal to keep your hands lovely\nami attractive.\nl Alwayi begin your routine by re\nBloving all polish, then file the nails\nat both hands. The oval or almond\nihape is generally the most\nbecoming.\nI   Use peroxide for any stains under\nthe nail or cuticle. Soak the tips of\nthe fingen In soapy water for about\nfive minutes. Scrub carefully with\na fine nail brush and dry. Then\napply a good bleach and whltenar\nunder the tip* and remove with\nbrush.\nDry the hands again before applying your cuticle oil and be sure\nto Include the sides of the nails.\nYou may leave the halt-moon and\ntip free from .coloring or oover the\nentire nail, Including the half-moon.\nEither is smart\nRich Moist Soil\nNeeded by Celery\nIt It advisable for the ordinary\n' ird gardener to buy celery\ni that are ready to be set out\ny is a good succession crop\nean follow where the early\nI or beans were planted. Celery\ni rich toil and loti of moi-\nCelery muit be transplanted repeatedly to develop the type ot root\nlystem which will grow good stalks,\nmd that is why it is better tor the\nhome gardener  to  purchase  his\nf culture in the homt\nfardan\ns  ready  for final  planting.\n.  In the final transplanting Tt\nbs neceiiary to cut back the\nI about three Inches. Prune the\ni roots, leaving them only two\nthree Inches long.\n't celery plants are set out dur-\n! a hot spell, protect them for a\ndays from direct sunlight by\n' with newspapers.\nDuring ttw summer months lt Is\ntt to give frequent cultiva-\nthe garden to maintain a\nmulch ot soil. With the soil\nih, plants are not likely to suf-\n1 from lack of moisture ln dry\nither.\nCleonliness...\nEssential Rules\nlor Baby's Health\nBy  LOGAN   CLENDININO,  M.D.\nAside from the Infant diet which\nwe have been stressing, the baby's\nfirst lummer requlrei care of the\nikln and muscles and general health\nExcept for the skin, which ihould\nhave especial attention, thli care\nli no different in the summer than\nthe winter, but there. are certain\nadvantagei to summer in, that there\nis more freih air and sunshine\nwhich should be taken advantage\nof.\nThe greatest number of Infant\ndeathi come from two lourcet\u2014improper feeding and infectioui dl-\nleate.\nGeneral bodily care of the baby\nwill do much to minimize the danger! of infection, Infection comes\nfrom contact with other people,\ndirty clothing, dirty akin, from insects, such as mosquitoes, files and\nfleas.\nGOOD ADVICE\n\"Keep other people away from\nbabies as much as possible,\" says\nDr. 0. F. Bradford, an experienced\npediatrician, \"especially thoie who\nare sick or who have colds or sore\nthroats.\"\nClean clothes and clean bed\nclothei made of cotton are fundamental requirements. They should\nbe thoroughly washed in soapy water and rinsed tour times in clear\nwater and then boiled from 10 to 20\nminutei. This scrupulous cleanliness prevents many infections in\nthe form of boils, colds and diarrheas. It also prevents excoriated\nbuttocks and diaper rash.\nTHE BABY'S BATH, lint, how\nto lift the baby: UnUl tbe baby is\nable to sit up alone\u2014that is until\nthe sixth or leventh month\u2014he\nshould never be lifted without supporting the head and spine. Place\nthe palm of the right hand under\nbuttocks With the fingers extended\nup the spine, and put the left palm\nunder the upper part of the spine\nextending the fingers up to support\nthe head.\nA daily tub bath should be given\nafter the cord separates. The best\ntime for the bath is half to three-\nquarten ot an hob before the lecond morning feeding.\nWATER TEMPERATURE\n\u25a0The temperature of the bath water ihould be 88 to 100 degrees F.\nAfter the tint three monthi this\ncan be reduced to 05 degreei. Use\niint enough soap to insure cleanliness. Never leave the baby in the\nwater more than three or four minutei. Dry with a clean, soft cotton\ntowel. Never use powder on the\nskin unless there ii iome definite\nindication for it, in excoriated or\nirritated skin.\nThe leu interference with the\nnose and mouth and eyes the better.\nSome mothers make a severe ritual\nof this part of the toilet.\nSUNSHINE..In the summer the\nsun bath can be given the baby beginning at the age of two weeki.\nTin best time ot day to expose the\n'baby to the sun's rays in the summer Is before 10 o'clock in the\nmorning. The baby's head should be\nshaded. On very hot days the sun\nbath should be omitted entirely.\nThe length of the sun bath will depend on the day's temperature\u2014it is\neasy to overdo it.\nEXERCISE. Babies require exercise just (he same as adults. Move\nits legs and arms around, pull it\nand make it roll Itself over.\nBalance...\nJWUtj\nGET OUR 5\u00bb BIRTHDAY\nQUIN'tEASPQONS!\nEACH SPOON ONLY lOe PLUS BUCK BANDS\nIROM 2 CAKES OP PALMOLIVE SOAPI\nChild Should Be\nTaught lo Relax\nas Well as Work\nBy GARRY C, MYERS, Ph.D.\nMany a chUd growing up today\nlacks habits at work. For some,\nhowever, the greatest need il release\nfrom the being-bmy conscience imposed upon them by adults who have\noveremphasized industry as a\nvirtue.\nThink ot the elderly men and\nwomen of today who, having passed\ntheir prime and bodily strength and\nvigor, still are trying to foot themselves, and others, that they are\nbusy. Even tbe elderly penoni being tenderly cared for by their loving children ofteh make their children and themselvei miserable becauie as creatures of habit, they\ndon't know bow to relax now that\nthey have nothing to do.\nThere are'parenti who, brought\nu(i In an atmosphere in which idle-\nness wai sinful, cannot allow themselves to enjoy complete relaxation\nwhen they ihould. How many of\nmy readers are afflicted by the feeling, \"I ought to be doing something,\" even when there is nothing\nthat needs to.be done, and when\nthey most need to have a carefree\nfeeling! 1 must admit that I suffer\nsome from this malady myself.\nA   great   many   of   us   should\nacquire a conscience for relaxation,\nought to think, indeed, that it is sinful not to take better care of\nourselves.    *\nTASK NOT EAIY\nCultivating in our children a\nhealthy balance ot habits of hi'\ndustry and relaxation is not easy.\nA sel f-sacrificing unmarried\ndaughter writes: \"My father, now\nin his 70's, ind mother came from\npioneer families in which the\namount of work done wai appalling.\nI can't keep up with either ot them,\nthough I am 39.\" Then she describes bow her father grows vexed\nat ber every time the takes off to\nrelax or enjoy some recreation. I\ncan understand bow this daughter\nlutfen, alio how the father must\nfeel annoyed at her. I remember a\ngrandmother who, when I was a lad\non the farm, not only wu annoyed\nwhen I played, but let me know she\nwas.\nI should like to beg ot my readen\nwho have an overwhelmingly busy\nconscience that they guard themselves against hanging iuch a burden on their children's necks. We\nparents need to help our children\nearly in their childhood to budget\ntheir time so that they can play at\ncertain intervals without any feeling of guilt or fear that some one\nwill be charging them with wasting\ntime. This does not mean, however,\nthat we shall not train them ln good\nhabits of work.\nKILLED BY TRAIN\nSALTCOATS, Sask., July 11 (CP)\n\u2014Alec Wier, 80, prominent Saskatchewan hone breeder wai killed today after he fell in front of\n\u2022i train.\nSERIAL STORY .\nWINGS OF YOUTH\nBy HELEN WELSHIMER\nTry the new improved Palmollve\nGtt these lovely Quia Teaspoons\nTike tliis irind opportunity to set u miny ltt.\ndeilre of these valuable Carlton siimpUte Quln\nBirthday Ttfitroom! You're mr. to want a complete\nS\u00ab, for they're almost s lift. Yoa set each ipoon fot\nnly 10c in com tod tbt buck bands from\nist 2 cake) of Plhaoliyi Soap.  Seed to'\nroett today.\nDr. Dafoe chose Palraol i ve lor the Dionne\n' Palmolireii made with Oltt*\nOil end foe that reason is.gentler, mote\nsoothing to tbe tender skin of the Quins!\nSince their first soap tnd water bttn, tht\nQuins have used only Palmolive!\nWhy don't seat try the new Improved\nPalmolive? lluy Palmolive today tnd send\nfor your Quln spoons! Remember, thty\n: be bought _.i sny store. Use coupon.\n_____t___Wi\\-\nKet tftftrmt ipemt\n! for etch Quln,\nwith her likeness end\nname on the handlel Send for is\nmany u yon like! JM be nut to\nsend 10c tnd the bands from 2\ncakes of Palmolive foe met ttam.\n Use IMs Coupon \u2014-',\nSENSATIONAL OFFER       '\u2022\nColiite-Palmollve, Toronto, Ont. -     .      j\nPleasestndme,postpaid...\"Quin\"  \u00a5****\" I\nm**wO\u00bb__y*mv:-__t ^\u00a3S \\\nid Mads trom....cakei rains*     mammm    |\n-ip.   (Check f toons winted \u25a1 Anneett    i\n10c ind 2 bands for each p ctc||e      i\n\u25a1 Emille     !\n'\u25a1Muit      i\nMires, O Yvonne    I\n\u25a1 Complete !\nltt J\nOfe a'iia Bf'p'l! m, VMlVaiedin DiXti J Ceaada inly'\n\u25a0^jjt\u00a3^^___}tii_i&s__ii\nSYNOPSIS\nSARAH ANNE MELTON, minister's\ndaughter and close friend of\nJUDITH DRAKE, daughter of lux\nury, who had a childhood romance with\nJACK COURTNEY, who attains\nsudden fame by flying the Pacific.\nTo PerryviUe flies\nBOB KENNEDY,  close friend ot\nJack'i receiving a broken leg in\na crash at the airport\n\u25a0*. *  *\nYESTERDAY: Sarah Anne has to\nmin the civic banquet for Jack\nwhen her father asks her to visit\nthe Miller twins at the hospital.\nCHAPTER 11\nThb thought came to Sarah Anee,\nstanding at the bottom of the wide,\nwhite steps that led to Judith's\nveranda, that the lilac scent from\nthe flowering bushes was unbearably sweet. Then she forgot the\nlilacs, for the man spoke again,\nand it was Jack. Sbe knew it,\nthough emotion, bewildered and revolting, hurt and seeking, dlscol-\nlored the tones until only traces\nof the voice she knew came\nthrough.\n\"But what's it all about, Judy?\nWhy\u25a0:did his happen to us? God\nknows, we didn't want it toi\"\n\"Not for all the stari in the sky!\"\nJudy's voice was breathless, low,\ninfinitely lad, yet\u2014yet joyful too.\n\"I love you. I want to put it in\nwords, Judy. But how that it's\nsaid, you must never think of it\nagain, never remember I said IL We\naren't going to hurt Sarah Antiei\"\nHis voice became rough in its fierce\ndetermination.\n\"I can get along with those three\nwords\u2014forever,\" Judy was saying\nproudly. \"Go ahead, Jack, forget\nyou said them. But I won't And\nthat will be enough.\"\nSarah Anne couldn't see Judy,\nbut she knew how ihe must look;\ntall and fair like a scimitar that you\nfelt though-you could not see It\nJudy\u2014\n\u25a0 and Jack\u2014\n\"Oh, darling!\" The man's -arms\nopened and the girl at the foot of\nthe steps drew, nearer \u2014 near\nenough to see the other girl walk\nInto their shelter.\n. Then she knew, swiftly and clearly what she must do. Knew it just\nas though a still small voice had\ncommanded her. It was as though\nshe had been walking toward this\nmoment tor days.\nShe ran up the steps, treading\nfirmly so her sandal heels .would\nmake a sound against the steps.\nThen she managed a low laugh.\n\"Jack . , . Judy , , . you darlings, is it HEAL?\"\nThey moved apart She saw the\namazement ln their eyes. Saw the\nquickness with which each strove\nfor a careless note, one that would\nmake a kiss a casual farewell,\ngiven in laughter by a boy to a\ngirl who had been nice to him for\nan evening.\nShe saw how they groped for the\nright words, and she spoke before\nthey found them.\n\"I'm so glad! Nothing\u2014not anything could make me happier! Oh,\nwhat a load you've rolled away\nfrom my shoulders!\"\nShe sat down on the low balustrade. Not because she wanted to\nlit but because her legs wouldn't\nsupport her. ,-- \u2022\n\"Burden?\" Judy asked, moving\ntoward her.\n\"You see, Jack and I had some\nsort of a schOolboy-and-girl romance. I guess it was all the glamor\nand fanfare and drums that got me.\nAnd then I woke up and found that\nI'd been mistaken.\n\"You mean that you discovered\nyou don't want to marry me, Sarah\nAnne?\" Jack asked curiously, as\nthough he didn't like the idea that\nshe had reached the conclusion\nthough he held the same one.\nShe laughed again. \"Something\nof the mrt And isn't it lucky you\nwere getting you're eyes opened,\ntoo? I can't think of anything more\nwonderful than you two\u2014you and\nJudy!\"\nShe. stayed while the bewilderment and fear in their faces gave\nway to Joy and calmness. She heard\nthem tell her she would always be\ntheir closest friend.\n\"But what made you change your\nmind?\" Judy asked with almost\nclairvoyant perception. \"Something\nhad to. Speak up, Sarah Anne.\"\nAn unseen motor was making\nher voice speak, her. lips laugh, her\nhands g-sture. She laid. \"It's pretty\nmuch a secret. But it's Bob\u2014Bob\nKennedy! We were caught up Just\nas you two were, only . ..\"\n\"Bob? Why the old\u2014Sarah Anne,\nthat's great!'' There was no mistaking the exuberance in Jack'i voice.\n\"Stealing my girl from under my\neyesl\".\nIfcititfii ii r-1 '*\"*\"'* *:\n(\"The girl you didn't want when\nyou grew up, grew famous,\" Sarah\nAnne said, but she kept the words\nin her heart.)\n\"But what about Bernice?\" Jack\nasked. \"Is that over? I never did\ncare tor that dame. I can congratulate Bob twice\u2014once on getting you\nahd once on ending that.\"\nBernice! The girl who smiled\nfrom the leather picture frame.\nWell, Bob would be well and gone\nsoon and this nightmare would be\nended. She would have to tell him,\nwarn him,\nShe managed to say a word now\nand then, and finally stood up to\nleave.\n\"Don't go, Sarah Anne darling!\"\nJudy -put her arms around the\nsmaller girl. \"Tell me something,\nwhen you asked me to take that\nplace beside Jack tonight was it\nbecauie you already were beginning to know that you shouldn't\nbe there?\"\n\"Yes,\" Sarah Anne lied. \"Already\nI knew. Now I must run along. I\njust dropped by to \u2014 to\u2014\"\nShe had just dropped by to ask\nwhere Jack was. Now she knew,\n\"Goodnight\" she called, and went\ndown the walk, out ot the gate,\nalong the quiet street She waited\nat the corners until the traffic lights\nswung red lanterns and the spoke\ncordially to the people she passed.\nAnd always she had this sense of\nbeing ethereal, unreal. She must\nhold to it. Because it she didn't\nshe would be 111, far worse than\nshe had been that day at the flying\ntield when Jack's ship had crashed.\nThere wasn't anything true, stable, lasting. Nothing you hold to\nfirmly and forever. Not even that\nevasive, intangible substance called\nlove. She must remember that now.\nAlways. It would not be difficult\nSurely one couldn't feel this way a\nsecond time, or if one could the\npain would be easier. You would\nknow that after awhile lt would go\naway. Everything went away.\nShe came to the church, and\nwithout conscious intent she opened\nthe large outer door. She blessed\nthe janitor who so often forgot to\nlock it She went into the dark,\nshadowy auditorium, dropped down\non the last pew; put her head on\nher arms'on the seat in front of\nher.\n\"Dear God, please don't let it\nhurt so. Make me brave\u2014braver\nthan this. Give me pride, something\nto help. Don't -let anyope know!\"\nShe got up finally and crossed\nlawn to the parsonage.\n\"Sarah Anne, Where's Jack?\"\nher mother called. \"Cbrae on and\njoin us dear. Miss Anne's just back\nfrom the drugstore with some maple ice cream and Mattle tried a\nnew walnut sauce. It's delicious.\"\nIce cream. People could still eat\nice cream! But she dipped a lilver\nspoon into the creamy concoction\nand forced it down her throat in\nslow bites. She must go on with\ntl.e pattern of living\u2014eating., sleep\ning, reading, teaching, telling ito\nries, calling on 'the sick, playini.\nthe piano for Christian Endeavor,\nand never again would the feel the\nbeatl.g ot wings and smile as her\nheart looked upward.\nTrue, sharp pain wai brief. But\nmaybe, the dull agony which followed was harder to bear. She did\nnot know. She would find out\nShe took a warm shower, then\nlet the cold needles beat against\nher slim body. She brushed her\nhair until it was a dark halo, and\nfinally sat down on the flower-\ncushioned window seat to think a\nlittle while. She must plan tomorrow. Flnt she would ask Bob to\nguard her secret She could tee his\ngray eyes lifted quizzically. But ihe\nwould be matter-of-fact about it\nall. \u2022\n\"Both Judy and Jack have some\ninane idea that I'm putting my\nheart through romantic cartwheels\nfor the young airman. It's stupid!\nWe're just friends, but to get them\ntogether. I had to tell them that I\nwas head over heels ln love With\nsomebody else. Sorry, but you were\nthe only reliable victlml\"\nThen he'd say, \"Humph! Second\nhelping, is it?'' br something of\nthe sort. \"So you aren't carrying a\ntorch for the lad? Goodi Now I have\na clear coast\"\nAnyway, ho would be gay and\nbanterinc about it and help her.\nOnly, when she told him the\nnext afternoon, sitting quietly ln a\nwhite iron chair with her curls\ndark at the nafid ot her white peck,\nand a yellow tennis dress staking\nher dMde her age ln two, he didn't\nanswer the way she expected him\nto. He gave a long low whistle.\nThen- he said: \"My dear Mln Arranger, ii this going to be good!\nYou bet I'll play up\u2014don't look so\nscared, honey\u2014but we are about to\nencounter a danger, a threat in\nshort, a galloping cyclone)\"\nTo Be Continued\n\u2014*\u25a0\u00ab-\u00bb\u25a0\nOdd Bits...\nPeople Who Know\nHow to Use Spare\nlime Can Do More\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nWe were discussing the beautifully marked linen In a home\nwhere we were visiting when the\nhostess cams into the room. \"I've\ndone every stitch ot the handwork myielf,\" she said, \"snd moit\nof It has been done ln scraps of\ntime. I'm afflicted with the habit\nof being ahead of time \u2014 always\ndreued and ready to go before\nanybody else il. So I keep a little sewing kit and a piece ot work\nIn every room ln tbe houie. Some\ndays I work ao three or four different pieces. You'd be turprlsed\nhow loose minutei add up into\ntime. It'i terribly boring and irritating to tit and wait but If you\nhave something to occupy your\nmind, time flies.\"  >\nCome to think of it, there's the\ndifference between efficiency and\ninefficiency. People who know how\nto use scraps always accomplish\nmore, go further and have more to\nshow than people who discard the\nscraps. There'i a real art In using\nodd bits ot time, money, food and\neverything else we handle ln thii\nlife.\nI know a woman who hasn't\nmuch money and will have lets as\nthe yean pau. She goes shopping\nend If there's a penny or two coming to her In change she laughingly\nuys to the sales person \"Keep the\npennies for luck\" and out she goes.\nShe won't be bothered with waiting\nfor a penny which Is one reason\nwhy she's poor and alwayi will be.\nI  know   another  woman   who\nXtliL ftVL\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nCaked Ham With Macaroni\nSliced Tomatoes on Lettuce\nButtered Beets\nRaspberry Chantllly\nCoffee or Iced Tea\nBAKED HAM WITH MACARONI\nIngredients: One Slice ham ons\nInch thick, one cup cooked macaroni, one-half cup grated cheeie, one-\nfourth cup brown sugar, one teaspoon dry mustard, two and one-\nhalt, cups milk.\nSoak ham in cold water one hour,\ndrain and wipe dry. Rub with mustard, work ln brown sugar, put in\nbaking pan and add two cups of\nmilk. Bake 49 minutes in moderate\noven. Add cooked macaroni to\nham with rest of milk, cover with\ncheese and return to oven until\ncheese is melted and sauce bubbles.\nRASPBERRY CHANTILLY\nIngredients: one pint fresh berries or one can can berries, one\ncup cream, whites two eggi, one-\nfourth cup powdered sugar. Crush\nfreih berries or drained canned\nberries, chill in refrigerator.\nBeat egg whites stiff, add to\nstiffly-beaten cream with sugar.\nTou berriei In thia mixture. Fill\ntall glasses with mixture, pour over\nit a very little raspberry syrup and\nserve very cold.\nPINEAPPLE TOMATO ASPIC\nTwo cups solid pack tomatoes,\none teaspoon dried thyme; teaspoon\nsalt six cloves, one-fourth bay\nleaf, one-fourth teaspoon grated onion, one-half teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, one-eighth teaipoon\nihire sauce, two drops tabasco\nsauce, one-eighth teaspoon cayenne\n(optional), small can asparagus\ntips, two tablespoons gelatin and\ntwo cups pineapple juice.\nSimmer the tomatoes with all of\nthe seasonings and the water from\nthe can of asparagus about 20 minutes, or until tomatoes are very\nsoft Strain through a fine sieve,\npressing through as much af the\npulp as possible.\nWhile this Is cooking, soak the\ngelatin in one-fourth cup pineapple\njuice. Over this pour the hot tomato Juice and stir until gelatin li\ndissolved. Add remainder ot pineapple juice.\nRinse individual molds ln cold\nwater, place the asparagus tips in\nthem in a regular design, pour ih\na little of the gelatin mixture, and\nreturn to refrigerator to harden. As\nsoon u mixture Is set, add more of\nthe gelatin; continue adding small\nquantities ot the gelatin mixture\nuntil the mold is full. Thus the aiparagui li kept at the bottom of the\nmold, which, when Inverted, becomes the top of the ulad. Serve on\ncrisp lettuce with mayonnaise. Six\nto eight servings.\nTANOY DRESSING\nDelmonico salad dressing is very\ntangy. It is made with one cup oil\nor butter, one cup vinegar or lemon\nJuice, one-half teaspoon pepper, one-\nhallf teaspoon dry mustard, four\neggs, teaspoon salt dash of paprika\nor cayenne. \u25a0\nPour oil and vinegar ln a bowl.\nSet in hot water. When the mixture\nis hot add the eggs and beat very\nquickly and hard with a dover\nbeater until the whole ii u thick\nas cream.\nSet in a pan of cold water and\nbeat two minutei. Add seasoning.\nThis dressing keeps welL Servei IS.\nTOMATO DRESSING\nTomato Salad Dressing is made\nwith 12 ounces tomato Juice, three-\nfourths cup vinegar, one-half cup\nolive oil, tablespoon Worcestershire\nuuce, three tablespoons grated\nonion, three-fourths cup sugar. Put\nthe ingredients in a quart Jar In the\norder given.\nMix well together and to one-half\ncup of the mixture add one teaspoon each salt, paprika, and dry\nmustard.\nMix theie until well blended and\nthen add to the reit of the mixture.\nSeal jar with rubber ring as in canning fruit Keep Jn refrigerator\nand shake.well before using.\nCOTTAGE CHEESE\nCottage Cheese Dressing is made\nwith two-thirds cup evaporated\nmilk, one-half cup vinegar, one-\nhalf teaspoon salt three-fourths teaspoon dry mustard, one-halt cup\ncottage cheese.\nBlend thoroughly the milk, vinegar, salt mustard and paprika.\nForce cottage cheese through a sieve\nand add-to mixture, beating until\nsmooth. If desired, a three-ounce\npackage cream cheese may be used\nIn place of cottage cheese. Makes\none and two-thirds cups,\nA salad dressing for uncooked\nfruit is made with one cup evaporated milk, two eggs, one-half cup\nvinegar, one-halt cup butter (melted), one-half teaspoon dry mustard and one-half teaspoon salt\nBeat egg yolks and whites separately, then beat together. Add\nmilk, butter, mustard, salt and\nvinogar. Beat thoroughly and\nplace in a glass fruit jar.\nWaning Season Enlivened by Many\nSpedacular Parties and Fetes\nPARIS, July 11 (CP).-Tha Parisian social season will lengthen\nout as usual, to mid-July  when\nthe celebration of the 150th anniversary of the French Revolution\nwill bring all social activities to a\nclose. Parisians will then shut up\ntheir apartment! and depart tor the\ncountry, leaving the city to the invading hordes ol Engliih and American tourists.\nThe \"tracks\" are lined with dressmakers' creations of rustling silks\nand taffetas complete with petticoats reminiscent of the Ws, a weird\ncollection of millinery \u2014 the new\nfoliage hats which are covered with\neverything but the fruit and vegetable basket; the thick-soled sandals which add height to milady and\nthe billowy minikin sunshades barely\nbig enough to cover one bow on\nthe hat\nThe only surviving coach and\nfour carried a bevy of Parisian\nbeauties from the Place de la Concorde out to the race coune followed\nby a number of modern \"gallants*\non horseback. The \"auto elegance''\ncompetition had tbe fashionable women in one another's hair and ihow\nthe itreamllnlng ingenuity of coach\ndesigners. The Eiffel Tower\"! 50th\nanniversary gala (only about the\n20th already this year) is another\npretext for a social splash,\nAmong the private parties this\nyear'i most spectacular Includes Ont\nof Lady Mendl at her home. Villa\nTrianon, an 18th century structure\nadjoining the Venalllei Park. It is\nthe 'Circus Party\" and the four\nmoit beautiful belles ot Parisian society will ride elephants tn th*\nparade\u2014while in a ring on the lawn,\ncircui entertainers will ihow performing horses, dog, monkeys and\nzebras.\nJuly 12-14 will be given over to\npopular festivities with the streets\nand the sidewalks turned into open-\nair cafes and three-day-and-night\ndancing to finish with a torchlight\nprocession by the Paris Military\ngarrison.\nwould wait at the counter as long\nas necessary to collect a copper\ncent and I've seen her turn an automobile Inside out looking for a coin\nshe couldnt account for. A trifle\ntoo thrifty to be attractive, you uy?\nMaybe so, by that thrift runs like\na golden thread through all her life.\nShe can take a few dishes of left-\noven from her icebox and concoct\na meal that would tempt a gourmet.\nShe can take a couple of her husband's old shirts and make kitchen aprons that look good enough\nfor Christmas gifts when she's finished with them. Any scraps that\npau through her hands are tram-\nformed Into something useful and\nwhen small coins psu out of her\nbands she gets something - back\u2014\nher money's worth.\nWhat do you do with your scraps,\nreader, put them to work or pitch\nthem away? Minutes, money, material, however small the bits have a\nvalue to those who have imagination\nand are willing to use head and\nhandwork to patch them Into the\npattern of. life. Unfortunately, most\nof us can't be bothered.\nBargains In the \"Classified\"!\nEX-SERVICE WOMIN\nORGANIZE, VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVEt, July 11 (CP) -\nMrs. A Dauby Smith wu elected\npresident of the newly-formed ex-\nservice women's bran.'.i of the Canadian Legion in Vancouver, at a\nmeeting Monday night\nMn. J. R. Barker wu named\ntint vice-president snd Mn. E. B.\nHordisty second vice-president\nwhile Mrs. E. L. Slevln was appointed secretary and Mn. E. McArthur\ntreasurer.\n\"Our object is to be of service\nln cue ot national emergency,\"\nMn. Slevin said.\nMODERN HEALTH PUN\nFOR DEFENCE FORCES\nLONDON, July U (CP Cable). -\nA war office spokesman today denied that health problems were being neglected'In the vast expansion \u25a0\nof Britain's defence forces.       .,',\nHe said provisions for the ment\nhealth were elaborate and scientifically up-to-date.\nTresh Fruit is so Cheap\/i\nMAKE JAM andJELLY\nNOW..BUT BE SURE TO USE\nCERTO . IT'S QUICKER-\nEASIER - GIVES BETTER *\nRESULTS\nv'Mff)'^ \u25a0\u00ab'!!! 1(1.^\nThese 5 important CERTO advantages will\n\u2022ave t|on time, monet|,work and worrtj *\nOTNE CERTO WAY 6 6 YOU GET BETTER TASTE-\nTHE QUICKEST WAY- BRIGHTER COLOUR\nOnce your fruit is ready you\ncan complett a whole batch\nof jam and jelly in only 1}\nminutes!\ns\nQfTS THE EASIEST WAY\nWith Certo you give only\na one-minute to two-mujute\nfull rolling boil for jam...\nfor jelly only a half-minute\nto a minute!\n\u00a9AND IHE MOST ECONOMICAL\n.-.'   You get about half again more\n|M   jam or jelly from tha game\njOLamount of fruit! That's bc-\ni **W* cause practically none of the\nW juice eau boil away in such a\nvery short boil.\n.. i. Certo jams and jellies taste\nW. and look like ftesh, ripe fruit\n'\"fThe boll ia so short it cannot\n'affect the freih, natural flavour or darken the colour.\n\u00a9RESULTS ARE SURE-\niMl       If you follow closely the test-\n\"**\/    . ed recipes given free with.\nCerto you need never worry?,\u2014\nabout results. ^\n'\u00a3m*A&&*\u00ab*~\n<**-*._...\nYes\u2014Certo has taken the drudgery\nand monotony out of jam and jelly making. %u end up as fresh as you began.\nYou get finer results, yet the time and\neffort needed are surprisingly small.\nSeize your opportunity tiew to try Certo\n\u2014.tlie sensible, Modern way of making\njam and jelly.\nCERTO\nFREE BOOK OP\n72 RECIPES\n\u2014\u2014-- Under tin label of every bottle\nnpn^fl ot Certo there is * book of 72\nteated recipes fpr jama, jellies,\nmarmalades and conserves.\nSines different fruits used different handling, Certo gives\nyou a separate recipe foe each\nfruit... Be jure to follow each\nrecipe exactly.\n \u25a0\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, I. e_WEDNESDAY MORNINO, JULY 11, IfSt-\n-s.  PAGE  FIVll\n\\\nEVENT\nSTARTING\nTHURSDAY,\nJULY ll, 9 A.M.\nRemoval Sale\nNELSON SOCIAL|<\"N\u00ab \u00ab\nIs Boy Seaman on\nEmpress Canada\n, By MRS M. 3. VIGNEUX\n\u2022   On   Mondiy,  July   10,  at 7\ning,  a  i\nwedding wu solemnised at St. Sav\no'clock   In   the  evening,  a smart\nfour's  Pro-Cathedral,   when  Mary\nTho initial move of this all-important transformation will present a complete REMOVAL SALE of all CONFLICTING LINES of FOOTWEAR, visioning tha importance of retaining for style-minded people a policy of\nservice second to none. R. ANDREW fir CO., to assure Ihe clearance of theie conflicting linei, have made the\nreductions decidedly draitic on iuch linei ai Georgina, Arch-Grip and Tread-Easy, Stridor, Dr. M. W, Locke,\nWilkin Glove-PMt for Men and Women, Arch Preierver, the famoui Astoria, Worthmorc and othen; They\nare all included in thii important REMOVAL SALE, for a ahort time only, itarting Thursday, July 13, at pricei\ndictated by the man in charge. Your positive guarantco of SUPER BARGAINS.\nSee the 4 page Circular In your mail box on Wedneiday. Ifs loaded\nwith values. Positively no exchanges, refunds, or approvals.\n300 Pair of\nWomen's\nSHOES\nIn pumps, tics, oxfords.\nAll shados and sixes.\nValuei  to  $6.50  are\nimathed to per pair\n95\nWomen's\nWhite Shoes\nIncluding ties, pumps. .All\nsize* snd heels. Going st,\nPer Pslr\n$J.95\n200 PAIR OF\nMen's\nOxfords\nSuch makei ai Barclay and\nothers.   Values   to   56.50.\nGoing at, per pair\n$2\u00bbs\nR. Andrew* Co.\nBAKER ST. NELSON, I. C.\nNelson Mondiy\nA.  Lindssy  ol\nElizabeth, third daughter ot Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Phillips ot Nelson,\nbecame the bride ol James Joseph\nAtkinson, son ot the late Mr. and\nMrs. William Atkinson ot Fernie.\nVen. Archdeacon F.iH. Graham performed the ceremony. Miss May Atkinson, sister of the groom, was\nmaid of honor and Frank Phillips,\nbrother of the bride, acted as belt\nman. The bride's other attendants\nwere her ssiters, Mrs. F. W. Cart-\nwright ind Miss Msrguerite Phillips. Given in marriage by her\nfather, the bride was Tn a floor-\nlength fitted model of white marquisette on bolero style over taffeta caught with tailored bows for\nthe traditional \"something blue\". A\nveil of silk net over a halo of orange blossoms set off the charming\nbride, who carried a shower bouquet of deep pink roses. The attendants wore pastel triple sheers\nwith flowing skirts and fitted jackets. Miss Atkinson chose green with\na bouquet of yellow roses. Mrs.\nCartwrlght and Miss Phillips wore\naqua and canary and carried mauve\nsweet peas. Their tiny flower hats\nwere white with contrasting veiling. Miss Margaret Graham played\nthe wedding music and Miss Ella\nPhillips sang \"Because\" during the\nsigning of the register. Jack Fletcher and Korval Germin were ushers.\nMrs. Frank Phillips, mother of the\nbride, was attired in a rosewood\njacket frock with white accessories and Mrs.' Beatrice Good, aunt of\nthe groom, chose black flowered\ncrepe also with white accessories.\nTheir shouiderettes were white and\npink carnations! The reception was\nheld at the.Golden Gate Cafe, Pink\ntapers in silver holders and rose\nbuds of the same hue graced the\nbride's table which was centred\nwith a four-tiered wedding cake.\nMr,. Graham proposed the toast to\nthe bride to which the groom re-\nnavy box coat over -\nMen's Astoria\nSHOES\nIncluding the new ro-\nceeding toe. All popular light and dark\nshades. Regular $10.50\ngoing at per pair\n\u00bb845\n\u2022 Shopperi\nincluded Mrs.\nSouth Slocan.\nMr. and Mn. Bolton-Pearson,\n502 First Street had as guests the\nlatter's brother snd lister-in-law.\nDr. and Mrs. J. Smith Gsrdener of\nWetaskiwin,  Sask.\ne Honoring Miss Jean Boomer,\nwhose marriage to Gordon Allan\ntakes place today, Mrs. A. E. Murphy entertained lut evening at a\nsmart buffet supper at her Summer home on the North Shore. Pink\nroie buds were the flowers used\nto adorn the living rooms and table.\nThe guests included Mils Frances\nWheeler, Miss Shell* Stewart, Miss\nGladyi McLeod, Miss. Phyllis Gray\not Trail, Miss Margaret Steel and\nMlis Alison Younger.   .\ne Miss Grace McDonald, Mill\nStreet, hu returned from a couple\not months vacation in LaJola, San\nDiego and San Francisco, Calif.,\nwhere she attended the Fair. She\nwu accompanied by her sister, Miss\nJessie McDonald ot Salem, Ore.\ne A. M. Ham of Silverton\nvisited town yesterday.\ne Mrs. V. Hotkin and daughter\nVivian spent Monday in Nelson.\nMrs. Leonard Batley and infant son have left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital for their home\nat 701 Baker Street\ne G. Kvist of the Relief Arlington mine hu returned after a few\ndays in Nelson.\ne Mrs. Burwuh of Slocan City\nvisited town yesterdsy.\ne Visitors in the city yesterdsy\nincluded J. F. Donsldson of Salmo.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Clark of Calgary\nhave arrived and taken up residence\nat Six Mile.\ne Miss Winnifred Palethorpe attended the King-Davis wedding in\nCreston yesterday.\ne George Dosenberger of' Sunshine Bay spent Monday in Nelson.\ne   In honor ot her sister, Mrs.\nRobert Hobson, nee Mabel  Latta,\nMrs. E. W. Butler entertained Mon-\n... .  _ .   . \u201e\u201e\u201e . i day   evening 'at   a   miscellaneous\n9SS^'Jt, Ll S^nS'L'ZSiti! \u00bbh\u00b0wer at her hom,> \u00bb' HU-Koote-\nttomin striped sheer ^h matching        sfe  t ^ve)     ^ nKtll   uts\naccessories and  a shou derette of      ' a    \u00bb ^\nThomu Speakman, son of Mr. and\nMrs. Joseph Speakman of Caitlegar,\nil on the high seu bound for Honolulu. Manila, China and Japan. He\nhu shipped aboard the Empreis of\nCanada u a boy seaman, a Summer\ntraining ship.\nThe lad received the appointment\non the basis of warm recommendations forwardtd by his school principal, his Scoutmaster and his pastor.\nDuring the voyage he will stand\nwatch twice daily, each watch being\nof four hours, will study signalling\nand will take physical training.\nOrdinarily the preference in such\nappointments is given Sea Scouts,\nbut the Cutlegar lad, who is active\nin the Boy Scouts, won an appointment on the strength of the recommendations given him.\nHe will return home late in August in time to return to school. He\nplans to go to University upon completion of his high school\ncourse.\nShsJuW\nPlain colored rayon sheers\nfor your summer frocks.\nShades are rose, fuschia,\nSaxe, turquoise, grey, patio, navy, white and\nblack.   40   inches   wide.\nSjv-daL ...79c\n|) flm-rmanlftunt |f)\nPhone 200\nBaker St.\nR. & R. Grocery\nThe Home of Bitter Foodi\nQUALITY GROCERIES AT\nSAVING PRICES\nPhone 161   Free Delivery\nObray Given Added\nRemand on Charge\nReckless Driving\nCyril Obray of Mountain View,\nAlta., whose car figured In e collision with that of Gabriel Gerace\non the Thrums Flats the night of\nMay 24, and who has been held in\nNelson Provincial Jail since, was\ngiven another eight-day remand on\nTuesday when he appeared before\nJohn Cartmel, Stipendiary Magistrate, on a charge of driving in a\nmanner dangerous to the public.\nHearing of the charge has, been\ndelayed Bince Miss Vivian Harding\nof South Slocan, wno was seriously\ninjured, is still in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, and cannot, appear in court. Her condition Tuesday was reported as improving.\nR. D. Macaulay appeared for\nObray. Sergt. J. W. Hooker\nis prosecuting.\nSAFEWAY\nWEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIALS\nChipso\nI Large pkt\n20c\nJELLO, 4 Pkts. 25c\nALL FLAVOR8\nMATCHES: Eddy's, 3 boxes .... 25^\nMARMALADE: Picked in Tumbler 15<i\nGINGER SNAPS: Freeh, 2 Ib 25?\nTOMATOES: 2 Vi'i, 2 tint  10<i\nWHITE CORN: Aylmer, 3 ting ..25?\nAYLMER SOUP: Vegetable or Tomito,\n3 tins 23?\nCanteloupes, 2 for 19c\nLARGE SIZE\nFORK AND \"BEANS: Aylmor,\nindividual tin      5?\nHAMBURCER STEAK: Lb 10*\nSMALL PORK SAUSAGE: Lb. ... 20?\nFRESH PORK TENDERLOIN: Lb. . 30?\nSHOULDER VEAL STEAK: Lb. ... 15?\nBACON ENDS: 7. Ibs 35?\nBANANAS 3 lbs. 21c\nWax Paper\n100 ft. roll\n21c\nTEA\nHighway\nLb. ... 39e\nCHEESE\nKraft\nLb. .._ 25c\nOld Dutch\nCleanser\n2 tins 15c\nSAVA-WAVE\nBATHING CAPS\nAbsolutely watertight\nPHONE 963\nGINGHAM   SHOPPE\nOpposite Daily News.\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nWEDNESDAY\nSPECIALS\nGraham Wafers:\n1 Ib. cello \t\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO\nLIMIT QUANTITIES\nSAFEWAY STORES\nUMITFD\nPICNIC\nSHOULDERS\nTendered, Jgfi\nCHEESE: Kraft,\n2 1b. box\t\nSALAD DRESSING\nWhip,\n32 ox. jar\t\nSALAD DRESSING: Miracle\nWhip, V)m\n16 oi. jar OLl\nCHEESE: Kraft,\n1\/2 lb. pkt. ...\n55c\nMiracle\n47c\n17c\nCONDITION   DEFOE\n\"ABOUT THE SAME\"\nErnie Defoe. Nelson youth\nwounded by shotgun pellets while\npicking cherries from the ranch of\nHenry Anderson Saturday at Tag-\nhum, was reported as \"about the\nsame.\" and 'progressing\" Tuesday\nafternoon. Shot in the face and body,\nhe has been under treatment for tile\nwounds in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital.\nR. Marsh7 Former\nRossland Mine\nManager, Dies\nSPOKANE, Wash.. July 11 (AP)\n\u2014Richard Marsh 80-year-old mining engineer and assayer,, died tonight after an illness of several\nmonths. He had been in the assaying business in Spokane for 35\nyears.\nIn the early days Marsh was\nwidely known through the mining\ndistrict of Colorado and Arizona\nand before coming to Spokane was\nthe Manager of Mines at Rossland,\nB.C.\nFormer Nelson Girls\nAre Visiting Here\nMiss Phyllis Paterson and Miss\nElizabeth Thompson, both former\nNelson girls whp were schooled\nhere, are visiting in the city, stay*\ning at present at the home of Miss\nMonica Brewer, a former classmate.\nMiss Thompson is a nurse-in-\ntraining at Victoria and Miss Paterson is training at Essondale. They\nhave been here for about two weeks\nand' plan to leave for the Coast\nSaturday.\nSIRDAR CROPS GOOD\nSIRDAR, B- C, \u2014 All fruit crops\nhere are reported to be in fine\nShape with good weather and a\nreal fine crop is expected. Cherries\nhave not suffered as far as can be\nseen at present.\npink roses was the bride's going\naway costume. The honeymoon will\nbe spent in Spokane and Kootenay\npoints. Mr. and Mrs.' Atkinson will\nreside in Natal, B. C. Out of town\nguests were Mr. and Mrs. T. W.\nCartwrlght and family, Mrs. John\nTonkin, Miss Grace Tonkin, William and Frank Tonkin, Mr. and\nMrs. H. Cosnett and -family all of\nSheep Creek, Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nStevens and family of Ymir, Mrs.\nJohn McLeod and Miss Mabel McLeod of Iron Mountain, Mich., Mr.\nand Mrs. Robert MacEadden of Bonnington, Reg Heaven of Grand Forks\nand Romeo Cimalini of Michel.\n\u2022 Miss Nancy Dunn and Mrs.\nH. H. Pitts motored to Edgewood i\nto attend a meeting ol the Needles\nWomen's Institute after which Miss\nDunn spoke to the members on\nher nursing welfare work.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. E. Wheeler and her\ndaughter, Miss Frances Wheeler,\nwere recent visitors in Spokane.\n\u2022 Rev. and Mrs. J. G. Holmes\nand sons John Philip and Brian, and\nFred Irvine returned from a motor\ntrip to Banff and the Windermere\ndistrict and were guests of Miss\nGladys Pitts.\n\u2022 Mrs.. Joy ner of Moose Jaw has\ntaken up residence at Seven Mile\nfor the remainder of the Summer.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hobson,\n,who have spent the past few days\nvisiting Mrs. Hobson's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. A. Latta, Vancouver\nstreet, left yesterday for Victoria\nto take up residence at 1304 Vining\n\u2022 Mrs. W. O. Rose and Mrs. H.\nH. .Pitts visited recently at the\nhome.of the latters son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. John C.\nWaldie, Robson.\n\u2022\u2022 Mrs. T. E. Levasseur, Silica\nstreet, has \u25a0 returned from an extended visit to Seattle and coast\ncities attending the royal visit ln\nVictoria ln May and later attending\nthe wedding of her niece, Miss\nPearl Chisholm in Victoria.\n\u2022 Miss Alice Dunlop of Crescent\nBay visited town yesterday.\nket and presented to the bride by\nher nieces, Miss Leona Butler, Miss\nFrances Butler and Miss Hazel McLeod. A profusion of many colored\nroses were used for the tloral decorations. The hostess wat assisted by\nher two daughten and Miss Hazel\nMcLeod, Miss Gladys McLeod and\nMrs. Arthur QuantriUe. The Invited\nguests Included Miss Elsie Smith,\nMrs. C. E. Bradshaw, Miss Queenie\nGerman, Mrs. G. A. Latta, Miss\nBlanche Beattie, Mrs. Leslie New-\nlove, Miss Julia Potosky, Miss Edna\nWatts, Mrs. David Kerr, Mrs. William Marshall, Mrs. W. A, Triggs,\nMrs. J. Ryan, Miss Cora Barrat,\nMiss Mary Muraro, Mrs. John Latta,\nMiss Dorothy Coles, Mrs. T. C. Lam-\nbert, Mrs. Arthur Stringer, Miss\nEmily Hamson, Mrs. Horace Ward,\nMrs. B Atkins, Mrs. Percy Jeffery.\nMrs. Alex Tulloch and Mrs. W. A.\nLatta.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Duff of Moose\nJaw have taken up residence at\ntheir Summer place at Seven Mile.\n\u2022 Roy Pollard, Baker Street, has\nreturned from Spokane, where he\nhas been a patient in Sacred Heart\nHospital for the past few weeks.\n\u2022 M. Olson of the Relief Arlington mine has returned after a few\ndays in the city.\n\u2022 Mrs. P. H. Sheffield and daugh-\nter Rhoda have arrived from Van\ncouver to spend the remainder of\nthe Summer at their Summer place\nat Seven Mile.\n\u2022 H. Hamson of Erie visited town\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Peggy Porter of Ymir\nspent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 Captain C. R. Higgins visited\nTrail yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. William Graham, S10 Latimer Street, have as\nguest Miss Janet Crosby of Glasgow, Scotland, who has been teaching in Toronto on the teachers' exchange plan for the past year. Miss\nCrosby will sail from New York in i\nAugust for Scotland.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Hall\nof Trail and their baby were in town\nyesterday en route to Willow Point\nto spend part of their vacation. They\nwill also visit Mr. Hall's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. R. D. Hall, Josephine\nStreet.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Sanders of Crescent\nBay apent yesterday shopping in\ntown.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Genest\nof Spokane were weekend visitors\nat the home of Mr. Genest's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. H. L. Genest, Vernon\nStreet.\n\u2022 Mrs. William Cox and infant\ndaughter have left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital for their home at\n618 Latimer Street.\ni Miss Rhoda Sheffield of Vancouver is a guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nAlan Willey at Bonnington.\n'i   Mrs. W. A. Bennett and daugh\nter Lillian are spending a couple\nof days in Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Macdonell\nof Trail were recent visitors In\ntown.\n\u2022 Miss Eileen Dill, Mill Street,\nha6 returned from a vacation in\nVancouver and on Vancouver Island.\n\u2022 A. Mitguard, Roadmaster; B.\nE. Burr, Division Engineer; H. Tore-\nson, Master Carpenter, and H. M.\nPetry, District Roadmaster, Great\nNorthern Railway, all with headquarters in Spokane, were in the\ncity yesterday on tour of inspection.\nWATCH FOR'OUR   .\nWeekend Specials\nBradley's Meat\nMarket\nPHONE 832\nWE SAVE YOU MONEY AND\nSERVE YOU WELL\nCRAWFORD'S\nFairway Grocery\nCOMBINATION   SPRAYER\nAND INSECT KILLER\nJust Attach to Your Hose\nMac's Greenhouses\nCedar and Front Sts.     Phone 910\nWASHING MACHINES\nREPAIRED\nFull stock of repairs on hand.-\nFree estimates given.\nBEATTY BROS. LTD.\nNEtSON FACTORY BRANCH\n321 BAKER PHONE 91\nLINEN DRESSES\nPLAIN AND dJO CA\nPRINTED \u00abDO.OU\nJo-hion, JuiaL Shop.\n436 Baker St. Nelson. B. C.\nmmmm\nSSK\u00bbSSWS5\u00ab\n\u2022ry^.\/^*\/^*\n453SSS5SSSWS\nSUMMER DRESSES\nARRIVING DAILY\nm Baker St Phone 970\nLOWERY'S\nFOOD MARKET\nQUALITY AND SERVICE\nALWAYS RELIABLE\nLaurita.Bldg,, Fairview\u2014Ph. 40\u00ab\nAPRICOTS\nKaledon, No. I,      QA.\nper crate tft\/y\nPUFFED WHEAT\nTowels,\nVi buihei sack only\nTOMATOES:\nHot House, 2 Ibs. ..\nCANTALOUP:\nUrge, 2 for\t\nWATERMELON:\nWhole, Ib\t\nTee\n39c\n23c\n19c\n3c\nPhone 707     Free Delivery\nFor Light Lunch\nSuggestions\nSee our special afternoon menu\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\nWe Carry All the Better Makes of\nWATCHES\nLongines,. Bulova, Walthams,\netc We guarantee them, also\nour repairs.\nMahusujm- ^bUsM.\n497 Baker St Nelaon,' B.C.\nPhone 264\n384 Baker Ot.\nTRY KOOTENAY\nCHOCOLATE MILK\nTHE HEALTH  DRINK\nPHONE 116\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nDRESS SPECIALS\n$3.95\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Baker St Phone 874\ni*t9*9&tttStt9\u201499669ttttttd&\nButcherteria\nPhone Mouyc Phone\n527   n-9***m   528\nNELSON'S PREMIER MARKET\nHorswilFs\nGROCERIES\nThe best servlee in town.\nPHONE 235\nWEDDING AND\nPRESENTATION\nBOUQUETS\nOUR SPECIALTY\nKootenay Flower Shop\n364 Baker St. Phone'962\nWed. \u2014Thurs.\nChoice Veal Chops\nLb\t\nVeil Stew:\n2 Ibs.\t\nLean Beef Stew:\nLb.\t\nFresh Minced Beef:   1 \u00a3.\nBaby Beef Liver:\nLb ...\nSpare Ribs:\nLb\t\n25c\n25c\n15c\nISc\n15c\nDaMfiotr.\nTHEY CRACKLE\nJN CREAM ;\nCRACKLE...\nF0P...SNA?\/\n\u2022 Here \"Hungry he-man enjoys\nbreakfast\u2014thanks to clever wife\nwho Berves Kellogg's Rice Krispies]1*\nIn fact, whole fnmilio- clamour for\nthese better-tasting, criiper rice\nhubblei that *tay crisp to the laat\nspoonful t\nOrder a package of Kellogg's\nRice Krispies tomorrow. From the\nmoment kiddies hear that POP-\nCRACKLE-SNAP that starts as\nsoon as the milk or cream goes on,\nthey'll be KriDpicsfans forever. Made\nby Kellogg's in London, Canada I\n*' MODERN\nPHONE 1009 num\n\u25a0aSMHMB       1940       MMMB\n5-TUBE RADIO\nSMALL AND MIA Qfi\nCOMPACT.     9*<Wrj\nNelson Electric Go.\n574 Baker St. Phona 260\nHorner's Grocery\nPHONE 121\nFor Real Service and Quality\nLARD: In bulk,\nIb.  ..'\t\n(Cash and Carry)\n10c\njellied Chicken: Per\nMold, each\t\nPork Pies: Oven\nFresh, 4 for \t\nDelicious Ham:\nLb\t\nLoaf Headcheese:\nLb\t\nBacon: Sliced,\nLb\t\n15c\n25c\n45c\n20c\n,35c\nCash and Carry\nPot Roasts: 1 A*\nUp from, lb llv\nBoiling Beef: IA.\nBreakfast Sausage: OC.\n2 lbs. .......... t**J*>\nFREE DELIVERY\nPRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY ONLY\nDates: Fresh Sairs, limit 2 lbs., 2 Ibs.\nPrunes: Large 2 Ibs.\nPeaches: Dry '.    Lb.\nSeedless Raisins 2 Ibs.\nGrapefruit 7 for\nLemons: Large .   Doz.\n12c\n19c\n15c\n21c\n25c\n25c\n4c\n17c\n15c\n25c\nWatermelon: Whole  Lb.\nTomatoes: Field ..   2 Ibs.\nVanilla: 2 oz., pure ...... Bottle\nGrape Nut Flakes  3 pkts.\nQUALITY MEATS\nFresh Hamburger  Lb.  10c\nCalf Hearts _ _  Lb. 12c\nRoast Pork:\nLb\t\nSpiced Ham:\nLb\t\nCheese Loaf:\nLb\t\nChicken Loaf\nLb\t\nCOOKED MEATS\nHead Cheese:\nLb\t\nBologna:\nLb\t\nBoiled Ham:\nLb\t\nWeiners:\nLb\t\n65c\n40c\n35c\n40c\n28c\n20c\n65c\n26c\n___-_ui._\n PAGE SIX\n'\n\u00a3folsxm Eathj Htvm\nEsttbUihed AprU it. 1903\nBritish Columbia'! Mott Inttrtttlng Ntwtpaptr\nPublUhtd every morning except Sundiy by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANV. LIMITED.\n286   Biker   StreeL   NeUon.   BritUh   Columbia.\nPhone IM. Private Exchinge Connecting AU Departmenti.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS\nWEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 12,1939.\nWILL ABERHART TAKE PLUNGE?\nDiscussion haa been general of late as to the time of\nthe new provincial election. An Edmonton weekly predicted a few weeks ago that the government will make the\nplunge in the latter part of July or early in August. It predicates this assumption on two main facte. First, that the\ngovernment does not want to face another session following a year's operation of the so-called treasury branches\nand be forced to report a deficit of several hundred thousand dollars. The second fact is that the serious falling off\nin membership in the Social Credit league during the past\n12 months or so is causing much perturbation in government circles.\nThere may be some basis for these deductions, but the\ngeneral opinion is that the election will be deferred to next\nyear. It is felt that the great majority of the present Social\nCredit following in the legislature run the risk of failing\nto gain a repeat nomination and they are anxious to draw\nanother sessional indemnity. The Aberhart system of selecting candidates is bound to create local animosities.\nMany men who thought their claims and ability superior\nto those selected by the premier and his inner committee\nwill again assert their right to nomination.\nBut apart from thgt consideration altogether, it is\ncertain that many of the present members will be defeated\nat the polls next time. There will be no repetition of the\nlandslide of 1935. It will be impossible to recapture that\nmixture of religious and economic fervor that swept the\nprovince four years ago. And for the best of reasons. In\nfour years the government has completley failed to demonstrate the benefits it promised would accrue from a \"social\ncredit\" administration. Its extravagant promises have not\nbeen fulfilled and the fallacy of Social Credit theories have\nbeen exposed.\n\u2014NILSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON. B. C-WIONESDAY MORNINO, JULY it, Ittt-\n\u00bb.\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nW\"WJ\nJ ?. Questions l]\nANSWERS\nThU column of question! ind\naniweri is open to iny reader ot\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncue will the name of the person\nasking the question be published.\nthen waih In plenty of water, and\nlet dry in a cool, shady place.\nJtui yjDumtf.\nS5\u00abJ\u00bb\nBusiness Man, Grand Forks-What\n. is the name ot some farm implement house in the United States\nthat has no interest in Canada?\nJohn Deere Plow Company. 102\nSpokane internaUonal Right of Way,\nSpokane; Hofius-Ferris Equipment\nCompany,    728   Mallon   Street,\nSpokane.\nM. T., Nelson-What is a parsec?\nI It is a unit of length used in expressing Uie distance of stars. One\nparsec is almost exactly 206,265 times\nfee mean distance of Uie earth from\nthe sun. A star is at a distance of\none parsec from the earth if its annual parallax amounts to one second of arc.\nN. B., New Denver\u2014What is high\nlow poker?\nIt is a form of draw poker. The\npot is equally divided between the\nhigh and low hands, the high hand\ngetting the odd chip if there is one.\nJ.  H,   Salmo-Which langusge  is\nolder, Latin or Greek?\nGreek is considerably older than\nLaUn, which s shown by the fact\nthat Latin was profoundly influenced by Greek during Its\ndevelopment.\nG. K, Nelson-How can Cannas be\nkept so they will bloom again\nnext year?\nCannas should be lifted from their\nSummer quarters just as soon as\nthe foliage is blackened by the first\nfrosts. Cut off the flowering stems\nabout six inches from the ground.\nThey should be closely packed together in boxes using dry sand, and\nstored away where frost will not\naffect the rhizomes.\nG. T., Trail\u2014Can you please tell\nme how to clean wiekerwork\nbaskets?\ni Make a solution of one part of\nchloride of lime with 20 parts of\nwater; mix well, Uien let itand, and\nrun off the clear liquid into a\n\u25a0wooden tub. Dip the baskets In this\nand let them stay half an hour; remove them from this solution, then\ndip in hydrochloric acid and water\n(1 to 20); let remain a quarter hour.\nWordi of Wisdom\nHoiuees ire built to live in, more\nthan to look on, therefore let use\nbe preferred before uniformity, except where both may be had\u2014Ba-\nDid You\nEver Think..\nWhat a difference a new\nsink would maka in your\nhousework? The sink is\nthe hub of a well planned\nkitchen, and will save\nsteps and labor. We will\ngladly help you plan your\nkitchen and furnish estimates free of charge.\nCONSULT US FIRST\nPHONE 666\nKootenay Plumbing\n& Heating Co., Ltd.\nSS7 Biker Street\nHlnti on Etiquette\nIf you have to sit tt a table with\nf^ra m} rMt*\"Fiu>t. \u00bbnd they\nare talking, do your best to pay no\nattention to their conversation. It\ns embarrassing to hive a itranger\nlistening  to  private  conversation,\nsJrnS .'\u00a3\"?' ,ma5, ** nothin\u00ab \u00bbn\nthe talk that should not be overheard.\nToday't Horoscope\nMuch good fortune is in store for\nth-. mI\u00a3,t0<lay\u201e,1'e celebrating\ntheir birthdays. They will make\nsome   wonderful   friendships.   The\n?hniykwa!'.1ing.lsvthat ih<y \"teguard\nthe heath of the women of their\nhousehold. The child born today will\nbe endowed with a firm will and\ncharacter, persistence, syntpathy. intuition and originality. He or she\nwill be well fitted for a successful\npublic career.\nOne-Mlnute Test\n1. For what do the letters \"R\"\nand \"I\" stand for when written or\nprinted after King George VI's\nname? \u25a0\n2. What woman novelist started\nher career ss a nurse?\n3. From what conquerors did England derive its name?\nOne-Mlnute Test Aniweri\n1. Rex et Imperator \u2014 meaning\nking and emperor.\n2. Mary Roberts Rinehart.\n3. The Angles.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nTHE FASCIST BRAND\nAnswering a question which had\nbeen asked her, the First Lady of\nthe Land implies that what is\ncalled a \"campaign\" against employment of married women in government service bears the taint ot\nFascism. This is just a little more\nodium for a much over-worked\nterm\u2014everything we don't happen\nSAIIV'S SALLIES\nf 50- Vou *A5\n(TAlKlN'vWe*\n[ yon oawrO;\nBEE*,\n*l*>\nCm l'i\u00bb t*t tm**. mmtm Ut.\n*JmU r,l,\u2014~i\nMost self-made men would be all the better for a\nfew finishing touches from somebody else.\nfoifdtoudL\n(BhidqiL\nShepard Barclay\nTells   How  to  Bid\nand Play\nUlTLE MARGINS DECIDE\nHAIR-TRIGGER decisions fre-\n(Uently constitute the difference\noetween winning and loilng\nbridge. Many a hand depend! upon\nwhich coune It taken\" at one crucial point, and thcro U very Uttle\nevidence to guide the player tn\nhit selection. One of the marki of\nthe fine cardiman li hli ability to\namass a pretty fair average in hit\njudgments which are ao clost that\nthey are barely removed from a\n(ueaa.\n4 None\nf AK J9\u00bb4\n\u2666 9753\n+ Q10 6\n4AJ973\n#10 7 3\n\u2666 K82\nA3*\nAf.\n*     i'l\n\u00a3.\n\u2666 K854\n\u00bbQ8\n\u2666 AJG\n. A98D\n4 . 10 \u00ab t\n\u2022 82\n\u2666 Q104\n*K733\ntOealer: South. Eait-Wett vulnerable.) , \u201e\nNorth made a third-hand shutout bid of 4-Heartt on thit deal\nln iplte of the tact that he did not\nhave the number of playing trlcki\nuiuaUy contldered essential. He\njustified It latjr by the fact that\nhe wai totally void ln ipadea and\ntherefore felt that a game would\nbe certain for the opponenti ln\nthat iuit, a turmlit ln which he\nwu definitely wrong, at an Inspection of the holding! will disclose.\nEast promptly doubled and led\nthe diamond A, followed by tht J\nto the Q and,K, the spado A being\nreturned for a raff. North law no\nway to avoid, a loser ln clubi, and\ntherefore had to prevent any\ntrump loser. Hli big question wu\nthe location of the heart Q, which\nhe Anally dropped by playing hli\ntwo high onei.\nNorth'i line of reasoning was\nthat Weit, who had not doubled,\nhad already ihown the diamond\nK and the apade A; If he held any\nmore carda of defensive value,\nEut probably would not hava\ndoubled. Consequently, Eut probably had the heart Q. If to, It\ncould not be ihut out except by\ntailing lt to be a doubleton and\ndropping It.\n.   .   .\nTomorrow's Problem\nas\u00ab\niKQ.lt\n\u2666 A 10 5 4\nA10 9 8\n\u2666 K754\nA None\nV A J 10 2\n\u2666 QJT   \u25a0\nAKJ70B3\n(Dealer: North. Both sides vulnerable.)\nIf Eait makei an absurd original bid of 4-Spadea on this deal,\nwhat should be the ensuing course\nof the aucUon? \u2022\n^Copyright, 1933, King Failures Syndicate, lac,\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"I liked to trade at Joe's\nplace 'till he got to doin' so\nwell. They can all be polite and\nnice when they're scratchin'\nhard to get a start, but Joe'6\nkind get arrogant when they\ndon't need you any more.\"\nVERSE\nSHE\n(Elizabeth\u2014Our Queenl)\nShe\u2014So gentle and so beautiful,\nShe\u2014Whose tender heart was filled\nwith pain, because of ninety-\nnine brave men we iU could\nspare,\nSet   down   to  die   beneath   the\nmighty sea\nAt far off Birkenhead.\nShe\u2014So gentle and 10 beautiful\nHad   taught   herself   In  sterner\nschool than ours, ^he rigid truth\nThat self comes always last;\nHad put aside the pain to make\nThese few brief days among us\nA shining golden memory ln our\nlives, and in the lives of friends\nacross the line.\nShe\u2014Queen of a mighty land. Empress of millions; It took but a\nsmile from her\nTo make us her slaves. Decendant\nof Scottish Kings, come back\nagain to us.\nShe\u2014Ever faithful to duty wa hail!\nJ. E. W.\nto like In this country Is Fascistlc-\nexcept when Us Communistic; and\nmuch of- the time we may as well\nshake the dice for the term to be\nused. But as applied by Mrs. Roose\nvelt there is a double-edge. She asks\nof her interrogator, \"Do you wish\nus to become a Fascist nation which\ntells one when to work and how?\"\nThis suggests that she may not be\nLooking Backward..\u2666\nTEN  YEAR8 AQO\nFrom Daily News of July 12. 1929\nExcavations are being mtde for\na new two storey building on Ver-\n1 non Street, G. Ferguson, minager\nof the Nelson Transfer Company,\nbuilding it at an estimated cost of\n$6000 on the lots direcUy acron\nfrom the Nelson Tnnsfer. Mr. and\nMrs. E. C. Richardson ind their\nfamily have arrived in the city\nfrom SeitUt and hive taken up\nresidence at 911 Carbonate Street\u2014\nHelnie Manush, St. Louis Brown'i\nleft fielder, hit safely ln both gamei\nof a doubleheader agalnit Philadelphia AthletUi' yesterday to run\nthe total of consecutive gimet to\n18.\nTWENTY Five YEARS AQO\nFrom Daily News of July 12, 1914\nDuring July the Pretbyterim and\nMethodist Churches will hold joint\nevening services m the Methodist\nChurch, with Rev. J. J. Mclntyre\nconducting the servicei. J. A. Curran was elected a trustee to fill\nthe vtcancv caused by the exoira-\ntion of the term of George H. Keyes\nat an annual meeting of the ratepayers and residents of the Hume\nschool district. R, C. Tevietdale was\nelected auditor for the year.\u2014Born\nto Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Symondi of\nQueen's Bay at 316 Robson Street\na son.\u2014W. E. Zwlcky of Kaslo,\nmanager of the Payne mine at Sandon, is visiting in the city.\nfORTY.YEAR8.AQO\nFrom Daily Miner of July 12, 1899\nA telegram wai received to the\neffect that a daily mall service\nhat bten inaugurated between\nCranbrook, Fernie and Kootenay\nLanding.\u2014The Silver King mine\nhu received a new 6ii-ton boiler,\nthe largest ever taken up to the\nmine.\u2014Ale* Stewirt hu sold lots\n\u2022even ind eight in block three. Two\ncottagei wUl be built on the lots.\u2014\nWork will itart on the Chapleau\nmine in Uie Slocin next Tuesday,\n\u2022wording to J. R. Williims, who re-\ntumid from Sloew City on Fridty\nnight\nkeeping ln very cloie touch with\nthe Labor Relations board, the Wage\nand Hour administration, Uie social security exactions, and other\nmeasures enforced not only to say\nwhen the work and how, but also\nto say who may work for whom at\nwhat and where, and for how much\nand how long if tt all.\u2014SeatUe\nTimes.\nfor the BOYS and GIRLS\nFeeding Animals in Captivity Is\nJob That Keeps Experts Busy\nBy SETH  HARMAN\nLeopardi, lions, elephants and\nhippopotamuses are fun to look at\n\u2014when they are safely confined\nbehind the bars at the 100. And\ntea horses, sea lions, alligators and\nman eating sharks are just as interesting, when we watch them\nthrough a glasi-walled tank. To\nkeep these unusual creatures\nhealthy and contented, the big city\nzoo or aquarium runs the strangest\nboarding house In the world.\nMealtime at the zoo Is a sltfit\nworth seeing. The next time you ire\nnear a zoo, try to see the animals\nfad. usually .this happens late in\nthe afternoon. This doesn't mean,\nhowever, that the keepers limply\nload up a cart full of raw meat and\nvegetables tt that hour, and make\nthe rounds of the cages. For hours\nbeforehand a special cook hu been\nbusy, in the zoo kitchens getting\ntht rtieal reedy, when it Is served,\nyou may be sure it is as carefully\ntested for vitamins and calories u\nln any modern diet kitchen.\nTake the toothless ant-eater's\nmenu, for example. A typical meal\nincludes a generous serving of\nchopped, cooked beef. It must be\nlean beef, for fat Is bad for ani-\nmali. He washes this down with six\nquarts of eggnog, made from fresh\nmilk and eggs Deaten to a froth.\nTwice a week he also gets 300\nsquinny meal-worms, which the\nzoo chef has hatched especially for\nthe purpose in a barrel of fermented\ngrain.\nBONES ARE DANGEROUS\nBears, lions, leopards and tigers\ndo eat their beef raw \u2014 about 10\npounds each every day \u2014 but even\nIn their case the heavy bonet ipust\nbe rounded off at the ends to pre-\nvent the hungry ahlmals from tearing -the linings Of their mouths.\nFoxes, coyotes and raccoons must\nhave cooked beef, which keens a\nbig caldron boiling for at least\nthree hours every day. Once a\nweek all meat-eating animals get\na generous serving ot calves' liver,\nkidneys and beef hearts.\nAn elephant doesn't eat so much,\nconsidering his size. Fifty pounds\nA zebra eatt about what a horse\nwould consume, A grown camel\nneeds a couple of pounds ot carrots daily, in addition to hay and\noati. Mrt. Hippo topi off her daUy\nmul of 20 poundi of hay with a\ndainty ulad of raw cabbage, weighing 40 pounds!\nPolar bean have big appetites,\nAn average meal Includes a dozen\napples, three loaves of bread and\n10 pounds of fresh mackerel. Oc-\nculonally they eat cooked beef, and\nof course, they must have their\nraw liver regularly. Monkeys are\nperhaps the ' pickiest boarden at\nthe zoo. They feel cheated unlesi\ntheir afternoon menu readt about\nas follows:\nFresh Milk Sliced Bread\nBoiled Sweet Potatoes\nRipe Bananas Apples\nOranges and Grapes\nBIRDS ARE SPECIAL PROBLEM\nThe birds otter a special problem\ntor the zoo housekeeper Because\nthey come from every climate and\nrequire all sorts of peculiar bugs\nand plant life. Foods etpecialljr imported for them are Russian shrimp,\ndried ant eggs, and seeds ot various\nkinds. Many soft-billed birds, like\nmacaws, eat quantitiea of boiled,\nchopped beef. An average coUectlon\nof imported birds may comuroe u\nmany at 25 different kinds of fruit\nTo tempt their tppetites the zoo\nchef also prepares hard-boiled eggs,\nhemp and mUlet seed, dried tues,\nant eggs, cheese, sunflower leedi\nand mice.\nMealtime at the aquarium is quite\ndifferent matter.   Fish are very\nof hay and two bushels of oal muh finicky about when and what they\nevery afternoon keep him happy.  Sat. TOe best their keepers can do\nli to watch them for signs ot hunger.\nUsually a hungry flih cruises\naround ln the water, but tometlmei\nthli ii only because It it restless.\nFish food is expensive, tnd if uneaten it may contaminate the water.\nMoit water animals tnd fiih eat\nother fiih or raw meat. Ne food fish\nis thrown into tho tanks alive however, for fetr thit lt might itttck\nthe specimens on exhibition. Moit\naquarium boarden dont mind gulping down dead flih, but the iet\nhone It an exception. He insists on\neiting only Uve gtmmtrl, a Uny\nshrimplike animal. These he chases\nabout all day. At sundown, he hooks\nhis tail around the \"hitching post\"\nacross hit tank and rests there unUl daybreak.\nMeali at all houn li the rule at\nthe aquarium. Night feeders are ted\nat night and sleep aU day though\nyou would never guess tney are\nnapping becauie they have no eyelids to cloie. Otben hibernate, and\neat no food at aU during long periods. The alligator It the acquarlum's\nmoit indifferent boarder. Be sleeps\neight monthi, opens one eye and\ndowns a fish or two, then tildes\nback Into the water for another\nnap. But Judging from hia appearance, it'i no 'beauty ileep.\"\nWater li quite u Important u\nfood to the finny fellows. Some fish,\nincluding Uie tiny guppies, demmd\nbrackish water, and of coune they\nge It Salt water fish need sea\nwater, inland fish can live only in\nfresh running water, ad necessary\ntemperatures run aU the way from\n30 to 80 degrees. So aU things considered, underwater and jungle\nboarden keep plenty ot people\nbusy.\nWith tli\u00a9\nEDITOR\n-1-\nWe hope you wont mind being\nreminded of your plane geometry,\neven if It Is vacation time. Thia\nhexagon, which it t figure having\nlix equal sides, makei a nice puzzle, doesn't it?\nTHE HIXAOON\nTHE MISSING MEDAL\nBy W. BOYCE MORGAN\n\"Captain,\" he said, 'I've just had\na talk with a boy who works at\nthe poolroom where the Franklin\nstreet gang hangs out. He told me\nthat Jed went there last night to\nsee Joe, and got into a fight with\nJiggs Lane.\n\"One of the other fellows in the\ngang knocked Jed out, and the\nboys tell me that Jed was still\nlying unconscious in the alley when\nthe poolroom closed. The kid was\nworried and went out to look at\nhim, but he was afraid to tell anybody about it. This Jiggs Lane and\nhis Franklin street gang have all\nthe young fellows in that neighborhood scared to death.\"\nCaptain Furey turned to Joe. \"Is\nthat true, Pollock?\" he demanded.\n\"I suppose Jiggs Lane had Jed\nMallettfs medal last night. Didn't\nhe? I'll bet he's the man we want\"\nFor a moment Joe was silent. Then\nhis eyes lifted, and he saw the\npleading look on Mabel's face. He\nnodded desperately.\n\"Yes!\" he cried. \"They took Jed's\ntnedal after they knocked him out\nThen Jiggs said they'd break into\nsome store and plant the medal\nto get Jed in wrong. I wouldn't\nstand for that, and I left them,\nbut Jiggs laid that it I squealed\nhe'd ...\"\nThe captain got to his feet and\nturned to officer Coughlin. \"Coughlin, you know that gang. I'll get a\ncouple of detectives to. go with you.\nI want you to go out and bring in\nthis Jiggs Lane, and any of the\nrest of the gang you can find. And\nafter we're through with him, he\nwon't do anything to Pollock here,\nor anybody else, for a while.\"\nCaptain   Furey   walked   around\nhis desk, crossed the room, and Itld\na hand on Jed's shoulder.\n\"Mallett\" he said. \"I'm sorry a-\nbout this. Bqt at least it proves\nyou have a real friend In Pollock\nhere\u2014coming in and taking the\nblame for you like that\"\nJoe Pollock stepped forward. \"You\nhave got the wrong slant there,\nCaptain,\" he said. '3ai't the one\nthat did the real favor for me.\"\nCaptain Furey threw an arm\nover each of their shoulders and\nwalked with them to the door.\n\"You two just stick together,\" he\nsaid, \"and you won't need to be\nafraid ot Jlggs Lane and his gang,\nor anybody else. Good luck to you.\"\nThen Captain Furey turned and\nclasped   Mabel's  hand,   smiling.\n\"I guess you had a pretty big\npart in this too,\" he said. ''Well,\nyou'd better hurry up and walk\nhome with them. Maybe you can\nkeep them from feeling too self-\nconscious toward each other.\nMabel nodded and hurried after\nJed and her brother. Between them\nshe walked down the street toward\nhome. Very UtUe was said on that\nwalk. But once Jed, stealing a\nglance across Mabel, caught Joe's\neye. Joe grinned sheepishly. And\nJed knew that he had.won back a\nfriend.\nTHE  END.\nHOWLERS\nSoma more howlen. \"The Romant\nmade their rotdi itrilght so thit\nthe Britoni could not hide behind\ncornen.\"\n\"Thomu A. Becket lived a dli-\nilpated life. Three nights  klUed\n\"It rained cats and dogs and when\nit had flnlihed It left a lot ot UtUe\npoodles in the road.\"\n\"Shakespeare wu a polite man.\nHe often laid \"Go to\u2014but never\nfinished the sentence.'\n\"Lloyd  George wai the\nmixture of England.\"\n\"Tbe Mediterranean and the Red\nSea are joined by the Sewage canal.\"\n\"The penalty for bigamy Is leven\nyean and two mothers-in-law\"\n\"George Wuhlngton wu a remarkable man because he wu an\nAmerican and told the truth.\"\n\"The ciUes of the plain were So\ndom and Begorrah.\"\nprime\nThe DefiniUons;\nHORIZONTAL\n2.   Foremost\nt.   A sound of pain\n8. To ring slowly, u a bell\n11. Near\n12. Greek letter\n14. Neuter pronoun\n15. A slx-ilded figure\n16. Exiit\n17. Summer month (Abbr.)\n18. Interrogitory exclamation\n20. Boy't ntme\n22. Finishes\n24. Merchant's establishment\nVERTICAL\n1. Either.\n2. Musical note\n3. Inaccurate\n4. To totter or reel\nB. Toward\n6. Mother\n1. Not the itme\n9. Drew Unes upon    ,\n10. Light (Abbr.)\n13. Greek letter\n16. Same u 16 horizontal\n19. High School (Abbr.) ,\n21. Part ot verb to be\n23. Point ot the compass (Abbr.)\n25. Upon\n_j_\nWe like Uie word \"hexa'gon\" so\nwell'that we are ming lt in a word\ndiamond. The second line in thli\ndiamond is a spider's home, the\nthird means increases, the fifth la\nstart, and the sixth is a male child.\nForm the diamond.\nH\nHEXAGON\nG\nO\nN\n-\u00bb-\nTake a four-letter word for part '\nof a house, add O, rearrange tha\nletters and form permit\nTake a four-letter word for as\nache, add O, rearrange Uie letten\nand form a musical instrument\nLittle Bobby wm playing >on the\nsecond floor porch, and stepping\nbackward, fell.down the stairs. His\nmother hearing the noise, came to\ntlie door and called down to see\nwhat the bumping *as. Bobby\npicked himself up and called back.\n\u25a0'Nothing happened. I just dropped\nmyself.\"\n, DON'T WE ALL7\nJohnny,   trudging   drearily   to\nschool just after vacation, encountered the nice old lady who loved\nto ask questions.\n\"And how do you like school, my\nlittle man?\" she asked in her most\ndulcet manner.\n\"I like It closed,\" replied the\nUttle man.\nHEARD IN KENTUCKY\nJudge (to man arraigned for Illicit dltttllingl-Defendant, what Is\nyour name? .   .\nDefendant\u2014Joshua!\nJudge\u2014Are you the man who made\nthe sun stand still?\nDefendant\u2014No, sirl I'm the man\nwho made the moon shine.\nThe missing words in the sew I\ntence below are spelled differently,\nbut  pronounced alike. What are,!\nthey?\n\"I can't go because   poets   are'\n ,\" said the .\nPete .(after being badly beaten\nln election): \"Did you vote for me?\"\nRepeat: \"Yes, I was the one.\"\nA  REAL 8IQHT\nMiss Gushei>-How wonderful to\nsee that volume of water tumbling\ndown Niagara Falls.\nGuide (bored)\u2014How much more\nwonderful it would be to see it aU\ngoing up the other way.\nDoggy Dramas Present...\nNippie's Nightmare \u2014 Scene T\n^am^^ji^jatmgg^jgm^m-^^^j^^\n SHUTE LEADS WAY INTO 3rd ROUND\nOf P.G.A.; SEVEN STARS OUSTED\n'\nBy BILL BONI\nTrail Old timers\nMidgets in Ball\nGame Wednesday\nTRAIL, B. C, July 11\u2014The date\not the baseball game ot the year, as\nfar as this city is concerned, is rapidly nearing. On Wednesday Butler\nPark will be the scene of the -Old\nTimers-All Star Midgets go.\nJames Buchanan, Manager of the\nveterans, has doped out a list of\nmonickers for his crew which follows\n\"Rubenstein' Ralph Garland,\n\u2022Miss and Run\" Mystery DiPas-\nquale, \"Jug Handle\" Mel O'Brien,\n\"Cork Screw\" Leo Letcher, \"Style\nPlus\" Doc Muir, \"Steel Arm\" Hank\nLauriente, \"Poo6h 'Em Up\" Pete Mclntyre, \"Long Bill\" Curran, \"Rabbit\" Mollsky, \"Clark Gable\" Joe Ra-\nnetta, \"T-Bone\" Steve Matovich,\n\"Three More\" George Cady, \"Bullet\nProof Dr. Krause, \"Suitcase\" Dr.\nEndicott, \"Box-Car\" Ray Maze,\nTwo-Ton\" Frank Hudoklin, \"Circulation\" Scotty Ross, \"Charge and\nGrab It\" Patsy Morgan, \"Throw It\nAnd Duck\" Fred Lauriente, \"Dead\nPan\" Gus McDonald, \"Pansy\" A. B.\nClark.\n\"Jesse James\" Casey Jones will\ncall balls and strikes.\nThe Bantams are to appoint the\nOther \"Blind Tom.\"\t\nCanadians Have\nBisley Success\nBy EDWIN JOHNSON\nBISLEY CAMP, England, July 11\n(CP Cable) i-Canadians hsd a successful day at the National Association's Imperial Meeting today as\n'Intensive competition opened. Corporal H. D. Whitehead of the\nQueen's Own Rifles, Toronto, tied\ntwo United Kingdom marksmen for\ntop scores ln the first stage of the\nBt George's Challenge vase and\ntwo other Canadians qualified for\nthe final Saturday while four more\nCanadians have a chance to reach\nthe final through a tie shoot.\nA Canadian slso tied the best\nacores in the Duke of Cambridge\nmatch at the long MQ-yard range\nand will shoot it out for the trophy.\nBe was Capt A. C. Lucus of Toronto who equalled top score of 40\nout of a possible 50 posted by four\nmarksmen from the United Kingdom.\nPrivate Garnett of the Hull Rifle\nClub, England, won the Duke of\nGloucester's priie of JJ50 and gold\nbadge, with an aggregate of 84 out\not a possible 95 points at 300 and\n000 yards. Best Canadian in this\nmatch was Major R. S. Harrison of\nToronto with 82.\nTwo other matches were fired,\nthe Alexandra Challenge Cup and\nthe Wimbledon Service Rifle Cup,\nbut placings in these will not be\navailable until tomorrow. Best Canadian score in the Alexandra was\n47 out of a possible 50 at 600 yards.\nPasted by Corpor T. W. Gregory of\nOttawa and Sgt. C. E. Moore of\nOttawa.\nI Private Garnett Of the Hull Rifle\n(Club, England, won the Duke of\nGloucester's prise of $250 and gold\nbadge, with an aggregate of 84 out\nof a possible 85 points st 300 and\n000 yards. Best Canadian in this\nmatch was Major R. S. Harrison of\nToronto with 82.\nCaptain Lucus and Major R. S.\nHarrison of Toronto led Canadians\nIn the Wimbledon with 48 out of a\npossible 50. '\nST. LOUIS, July 11 (AP).-The\nlowly St. Louis Browns made lt an\nAmerican League day all the way\naround by shelling the Cardinals\n14-4 ln a special exhibition game\nhere for the. city championship.\nNIW YORK, July 11 (AP).\u2014Denny Shute, halped by 51 fellow-pros\nto a victory over tha executive committee that got him Into tbe tournament, went out single-handed today to knock oft two members ot tha\ntournament committee of the Professional Golfers Association and lead\nthe way into the third round of the United Stales ?.GA. Championship.\nQualified for malch play only through the unprecedented action of\nPresident George Jacobus, Shute first defeated Ted Luther of Pittsburgh\none up, and foUowed that up with a 3 and 1 victory over Leo Diegel of\nPhilmont, Pa. Diegal, twice former champion and also s former Canadian\n-yopen champion, had been one of\nthe men most instrumental ln getting Denny into the field.\nWhile seven members of the\nP.G.A., U.S. snd British open titles\nwere shunted to the sidelines ln\nthe two rounds of 18-hole matches\nat the Pomonok Country Club that\ncut the field from 64 to 18 survivors. 'Shute walked into what may\nturn into a grudge tight tomorrow.\nTO MEET Koesia\nHis next opponent will be Em-\ncrick Kocsls, the Orion, Mich., long\nhitter who shared medalist honors\nwith three others in the M-hole\nqualifying round. Kocsis wu one\nof the non-signers ot the Shute petition, snd agreed to play Denny\nonly after he had a talk with Walter Hagen. 'The Haig\" persuaded\nhim that since Shute had come this\nfar without player protest lt would\nbo silly to take a solo stand now.\nHagen lost to Tony Manero, 1938\nUnited States open champion, by\none up in tbe morning round, the\nsame stage which saw Gene Sara-\nsen, Jug McSpaden, Jimmy Thomson, Harry Cooper, Sam Parks and\nWillie Goggin wind up on the outside.\nGULDAHL BEATEN\nIn the afternoon's matches, as defending chsmplon Paul Runyan\ncame through again, the carnage\ncontinued. Ralph Guldahl, U. S.\nopen champion ln 1037 and 1938\nbut uneasy in these sudden-death\nepisodes, found his worst fears confirmed when he bowed to 30-year-\nold Clarence Doser of Ardmore,\nFa., two up. Ran Mangrum, the\nOakmont, Pa., \"Human No. 1 Iron,\"\nwho toured tbe course ln 88 yesterday, ran into a 3 and 2 shellacking\nat the hands of Horton Smith.\nManero went only one step beyond his defeat of Hagen, tor he\nwas put out by Johnny Revolta,\n1935 P.G.A. winner, 3 and 2. Ky\nLatfoon, who tied with Kocsls, Ben\nHogan and Dutch Harrison for the\nmedal, bowed to Tom O'Connor\ntwo up.\nSarazen. Hagen and Diegel among\nthem have won 10 of the past 21\nP.GA. tourneys.\nRunyan was as consistent as ever\nin his two triumphs, by 3 snd 1\nover Mortle Dutra and 3 and 2\nover Frank Champ of BedfordTlnd.\nHove You o\n,      Used\nTennis Racket\ni\ni\nWhy Not Turn It\nI nto Cash?\nA WANT AD\nWill Fieid a\nPurchaser\nrwo (2) Unas 6 times 80c net\nTwo (2) lines once 'We net\nNelson Doily News\nPHONE 144\nSports Roundup...\nDARN THE SOX\nNEW YORK WAIL\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, July It (AP)-New\nYork fans now are saying darn the\nSox ... baseball barons here for\nthe all-star game agree something\nmust be done about the St. Louis\nsituation, but what? . . . Jimmy\nGrippo, manager of Melio Bettina,\ncrashed Billy Conn's workout yesterday just in time to see Conn bop\na sparmate through the ropes . , .\nThe next gong Joe Jacobs hears\nwill be wedding bells\u2014in about a\nmonth . . . Tony Galento collected\nfour grand tor four appearances last\nweek . , .\nToday's gueat star-\nGeorge Taylor, New York Sun:\n\"You wouldn't. call that dramatic\nsit-down strike of the golf pros\nmutiny on the high tees, would\nyou?\"\nHave the seven other American\nLeague clubs signed a round robin\nasking the Red Sox to do more air\ntravelling? . . . Louis vs. Pastor at\nDetroit ln September will be officially announced Friday ... Barney\nRoss has taken over a $250,000 printing business here.\nSalmo Trounces\nRossland Miners\nSALMO, B.C., July 10-Salmo\nsprinted home to a 13-1 decision\nagainst Rossland Miners at a senior baseball game held here Sunday afternoon.\nHonors were almost even up until\nthe end of the sixth, one run being collected by Gendle for the\nMiners, and one apiece by Thompson and Esche for Salmo, during\nthe third innings. At the beginning ot the seventh round, Salmo\nbroke loose, with Esche, Kelley,\nHumble, Liebscher Henderson and\nClever crossing the plate through\ntwo errors, a walk, a fielder's\nchoice and three hits. The Salmo\nboys staged another rally In the\nninth, bringing in five more runs\nfrom Thompson, Eschee, Kelley,\nHumble and Liebscher.\nSalmo got 11 hits and the Miners\ntwo. Ko nome runs were brought\nin by either team, Chow Sdao\nbringing heavy-hitting honors to\nthe Rossland team, driving out two-\nbagger in the third.\nClever, on the mound for Salmo\nfanned 11 men. Bert Gibson, Ross-\nland's pitcher, collected seven\nstrikeouts.\nLineups were:\nRossland\u2014Bert Gibson p, Duke\nSeodeUaro c, Rusty Wynn lb, John\nCameron 2b, J. Densky 3b, Chow\nSdao ss. R. Gendle If, J. Morasco\ncf and Bill Hartnett rf.\nSalmo\u2014Clever p, Kelly c, Humble lb, E. Gibbon 2b, Esche 3b, R.\nGibbon ss, Thompson If, Liebscher\ncf, and Henderson rf.\nBURGESS\nFLASHLIGHT AND RADIO\nBATTERIES\nAcme Automotive\n611 Baker Supply Phone 1040\nBRAKE RELINING\nWe have the proper machinery\nfor rsgrlndlno brake shoes.\nShorty's Repair Shop\n'14 BAKER BT. NELSON B.O\n        I    -NILION DAIUT Htm. NfttOK, B. O-WE0NE8DAY MOMMNO, JULY ft\n-\nMQE itvni\nSPORT\nJhn ICifmhL Om.\nWest Kootenay\nGirls Softball\nIn Trail Sunday\nTrail Ladles' Softball Reps will\nopen their defence of their West\nKootenay title and the Daily Province trophy Sunday afternoon at\nhome against the Nelson team,\nNelson officials reported Tuesday.\nA double-header will be played.\nThird and fourth games of tbe\nseries will probably be played ln\nNelson July 30, although this date\nis'still tentative.\nA cheering note In the cimp ed\nthe Nelson club Is tha announcement that Huel Spiers hu been\nsigned and will be used for pinch-\nhitting in the playoffs at least.\nHaiel suffered a double fracture ol\nthe third finger on her pitching\nhand a tew weeks back in an exhibition game. She wtll be out at a\npractice ot the team at the Recreation Grounds tonight\nTony Arcure, Head Coach, said\nTuesday that Millie Horrigan and\nRosa Stewart would take the mound\nfor next Sunday's games. Other positions are not yet assigned but will\nbe filled from the following players:\nMargaret Rickard, Georgina Eberley, Isobel Donovan, Elvera Matheson, Deanie Wallace, Phyllis Wallace, Lillian Hickey, Doreen Long,\nGrace Kilgren, Iris Johansson, Louise, Coletti, Agnes Stewart and Huel\nSpiers.\nAIL-STAR GAME\nBOXSCORE\nYANKEE STADIUM, New York,\nJuly 11 (AP)\u2014Following is the\nbox score of the seventh annual\nall-star game between the American and National leagues today:\nNATIONAL\nAB R H 0 A\nHae'-, Chicago, 3b ....   4  0   111\nFray,. Cincinnati, 2b..   4  0   10 4\nGoodman, Cin. rf ....   10 0  0 0\nHerman, Chicago, \"10  0  0 0\nT. Moore, SL Lou. cf   1  0   0  0 0\nMcCormlck, Cin., lb  4  0  0   7 1\nLombardi, Cin., c \u201e..   4  0   3  8 0\nMedwick, St. Lou., lt .4 0  0   1 0\nOtt N. Y., cf-rf     4  0   J  4 0\nVaughan, Pitts., ss ..   3   1   1   4 1\nDerringer, Cin.. p ....   10  0  0 0\nCamilli, Brooklyn \u2022   1  0  0  0 0\nLee, Chicago, p   0  0  0  0 0\nPhelps, Boston \u2022\u2022\u2022 ..   10  0  0 0\nFette, Boston, p    0 0  0   10\nMire, St Louis \u00ab\u2022\u2022\u2022..   10  0  0 0\nTotals    34   1   7 34 7\n'\u2014Batted for Derringer ln 4th.\n\u2022\u2022\u2014Batted for Goodman In ith,\n\u2022\u2022\u2022-Batted for Lee in 7th.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022-Batted for Fette in 0th.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nAB R H O A\nCramer, Boston, rf ..  4 0  1  8 0\nRolfe, New York, 3b  4 0   1   1 0\nDiMaggio, N. Y., cf ..   4   1   1   1 0\nDickey, N.Y, c     J   1   0 10 0\nGreenberg, Detr't lb   3   1   1   7 1\nCronin, Boston, ss ..   4  0  1  2 3\nSelkirk, N. Y., lt    3  0   10 0\nGordon, N. Y, 2b ....   4  0  0  2 5\nRuffing, N. Y., p   0  0  0  0 0\nHoag, St, Louis, '..10000\nBridges, Detroit P ..   1   0  0   1 0\nFeller, Cleve, p     10  0  0 0\nTotals    31  3  6.27 \u00bb\n\u2022-Batted for Ruffing ln 3rd.\nNational League  001 000 000-1\nAmerican League ... 000 210 OOx\u20143\nErrors\u2014Vaughan, Cronin. Runs\nbatted in\u2014Frey, Selkirk, DIMaggio. Two base hit\u2014Frey. Home\nrun\u2014DIMaggio. Double plays\u2014Gordon, Cronin and Greenberg. Earned runs^Natlonal league 1, American league 2. Lett on bases\u2014National league 9; American league 8.\nBases on balls\u2014Off Ruffing 1\n(Goodman); off Bridges 1 (Vaughan); ott Lee 3 (Dickey, Greenberg,\nSelkirk); oft Feller 1 (Hack); off\nFette 1 (Selkirk). Struck out-\nby Ruffing 4 (Hack, Medwick, Derringer, McCormlck); by Derringer\n1 (Hoag); by Bridges 3 (Camilli,\nHack, Herman); by Lee 4 (Cronln,\nBridges, Cramer, Feller); by Fette\n1 (Gordon); by Teller 2 (Mile,\nHack.)\nPitching summary \u2014 Ruffing, 1\nrun, 4 hits ln 3 innings; Bridges, 9\nruns, 2 hits in 2 1-3 Innings; Feller,\n0 runs, 1 hit ln 3 2-3 innings; Derringer, 0 runs, 2 hits in 3; Lee 8\nruns, 3 hits In 8; Fette, 0 runs, 1 hit\nIn 2. Winning pitcher-Bridges; losing pitcher-Lee, Umpirei\u2014first 4H\ninnings, Plate, Hubbard (A.L.); first\nbase, Goetz, (N.L.); second base,\nRommel (A.L.); third base, Mager-\nkurth (N.L.); second ltt innings\u2014\nPlate, Magerkurth; first Rommel;\nsecond, Goetz; third, Hubbard.\nGame time\u20141:35. Attendance\u201463,-\nEddie Shore Buys\nSpringfield (lab\nNEW YORK, July 11 (CP)-Blg\nEddie Shore, one ot the greatest\ndefencemen the National Hockey\nLeague hu ever known, partially\nbowed hlmselt out ot tha playing picture todiy with an announcement ho had purchased and\nwould manage the Springfield Club\nin the International-American\nleague   next sesson.\nThe Alberta farmer who starred\nwith the Boston Bruins said he\nwas still on the roster of the Boston Club and subject to recall for\nhome games atter Dec. 15 but thit\nthis probably would take effect\nonly if the Bruins needed him.\n(A Joint statement by Presldint\nWeston Adams and Manager Art\nRoss of the Bruins at Boston said\nShore was on contract for all home\ngames next season and all playoff\ngames at home and abroad. The\nstatement added the Boiton Club\nwould give Shore every assistance\nIn planning his new organization\nsnd that he will be a free agent\nMay 1, 1940.)\nHalifax Veteran Wint\nNova Scotia Golf\nHALIFAX, July 11 (CP).-hank\nC. Mlelke, Halifax veteran, who\nhad pliyed only five rounds of golf\nthis year until two days ago, won\nthe Nova Scotia amateur golf cham-\nSonshlp har* today with a total of\n1 tor ttt* 72 holes of medal pliy.\nJimmy Rlmmer. Aahburn profes-\nslonil snd formerly of Jasper, Alta.,\npliyed around bis home course ln\na pair of 70'* to salt away Uie Nova\nScotia professional Utle with a 72-\nhole score of 271.\nPucksters Take\nTop Place With\nWin Over K.P\/s\nSmashing; the offerings of two\nopposing pitchen, Puckiters gslned\nsoje possession ot the top spot in\nthe Nelson Men's Softball League\nMondiy it the Recreation Grounds\nby trimming Knlghti of Pythias\n21-5.\nLen Bicknell, winning pitcher,\nhurled the first five lnningi for the\nPucksters and gave up only two\nruns, both scored in the first on\nDenis Ball's homer with Frame on\nthe base paths. Hal Bergstrom took\nover for the last four frames when\n.\"Bick\" had to go to work. He\ngive up four hits, one of them being\nBall's triple scoring Drew.\nDon Domeij started for th* K.\nP.'s and yielded 11 safeties and a\nwalk which wtre good for 13 rum\nIn 2 2-8 Innings. Lloyd Frame wtnt\nthe reit of the route, tnd f avt up\nthree runs on eight nits. Don Liz-\nItr, ice moundnnin, wss unable to\npitch u ht wu out of town.\nSam Pisacreta, with two walks,\na homer, a double and a tingle in\ncoven trips to the plat*, also drove\nin two runs snd scored four himself to lead the Pucksters to their\ntriumph Yernle Ahrens batted ln\nfour runa with his double and a\ntriple. Llpsack and Culley also hit\ndoubles and Drew hit for two\ncushions for the losers.\nFrame walked four and fanned\ntwo. Bicknell struck out four for\nthe Pucksters and Bergstrom whiffed six and walked one.\nPucksters  - 21 19  4\nK. P.'s     5 11   C\nUmpires were Ken McBride and\nPett Kuntz, Bill Kapak rtplacing\nMcBride after the latter received a\nfac* Injury when itruck In th*\nface by a foul.\nTeams were:\nPucksters - Jim Allsn, Hal Bergstrom, Sam Pisacreta, Jesse Seaby,\nVeml* Ahrem, Ty Culley, Scrub\nBialkowskl, George Lipeack, Len\nBicknell and Bill Freno.\nK. P.'s \u2014 Gib Goucher, Lloyd\nFrame, Dick Drew, Denis Ball,\nElon Domel], Daynard, Stan Edey,\nGordon Flnlayson, Norm Norcross\nand Eddie Boyei.\nINDIANAPOLIS TO\nPLAY IN INT.-AM.\nNEW YORK, July 11 (d>)-In-\ndlanapolls was granted a franchise\nIn the International-American\nHockey League tonight the League\nBoard of Governors announced,\nextending the league to nine clubs\ntor the 1939-40 season.\nThe franchise Is owned by James\nNorris, wealthy Detroit grain operator and owner of the Detroit Red\nWings; Arthur Wirtz, Detroit \u00bbnd a\ngroup of several Indianapolis\nsportsmen.\nNorris said organization of a\nteam tor Indianapolis is almost\ncomplete on paper. Last year he\nheld financial Interest In Pittsburgh Hornets of th* In.-Am. but\nin anticipation of getting tha Indianapolis franchise, ha sold out to\nJohn Harris owner of th* Pittsburgh rink snd Norris' partner in\nth* team ownership.\nTh* player nucleus of Indianapolis will com* trom Pittsburgh as\nNorris owned th* contracts of many\nof th* players there. Herb Lewis,\nDetroit left-winger, is likely to be\nplaying manager.\nGloucestershire\nleads Cricket\nLONDON, July 11 (CP Cable)-\nGlouceitenhlre went into the leid\nln th* English County Chrlcket\nChampionship today by virtue ot a\n234-run victory ovtr Essex. The\nWestern County now sets the\npace with an average of 9.14.\nMiddlesex took first-innings\npoints fro . Yorkshire snd holdi\nthe runner-up position with an\naverage of 9.09. The Yorkists dropped into third place with 9.06,\nSomerset and Worcestershire\nplayed to the first Ut ln English\ncricket line* 1930 when the Australian! and Gloucestershire finished\non equil termi. Strangely enough\nSomerset figured ln th* last tie in\nEnglish County Cricket against\nEssex at Chelmsford in 1926.\nBatting tint Worcestershire mad*\n130 rum and followed lt up with\na second-Innings total ot 142. Somerset replied with totals Of 111 and\n141.\nYorkshire 171 and 172 for ftv*\nwickets; Middlesex 291.\nGloucestershire 48) and 241 tor\nseven, Essex 300 and 189.\nWorceitenhire ISO and 143; Som-\n\u2022net 131 ind 141.\nSurrey 186 and 890 for Mvtn, declired (Fishlock IK. Whltefield\n109); Kent 817 and.334 tor three\ngames 186 (Mt out).\nNorthamptonshire 146 and 157;\nHampihire 169 and 186 tor two\nwlek*ts.\nGlamorgan 386 for sight declared, and 88 tor three; Sussex 263.\nNottinghamshire ill; D*rbyshlr*\n210 and 139 for three wickets.\nWest Indies 284 and 114 tor two\nw|ck\u00abt\u00bb; Llneithirt 325 tor four,\ndeclared (pSc* 164).\nNelson Goes to\nRossland for\nBoxla Tonight\nStrengthened Redmen\nConfident of\nFirst Win\nOne ot the choicest morsels for\nRosslind boxli addicts to indulge\nIn tonight will be on view at the\nniw Golden City box when the\nMaple Leafs from Nelson, already\nhaving scalped their opposition\nseven itralght times, taka on the\nmuch-Improved Redmen, action\ncommencing at 8:16.\n\u25a0Aocordinf to thetr Coacfc, Rots\nSaundry, the Redmen ar* all set\nto go on a little scalping party of\ntheir own tonight and ar* even\nmore confident wltt) the realization\nthat they will have three of their\nstars together for the tint time-\nErnie Carkner, Al Simm and Ron\nForreit Carkner arrived home from\nholidaying at th* Cout ln tim* to\nparticipate to tonlght'i contest\nNeither team wss able to charge\nmore than one goal tn front of the\nother In last Frlday'i gime at Rossland until the Leafs' condition began to tell late in th* fourth, and\nto* bre*ks went their way for them\nto soir to th* fore tor a 13-9 decision. Enthusiasm is perhaps\nkeener in Rossland than In any of\nthe other cltiei, rabid fans packing\nth* bleachers tor th* last gama.\nHOOKER BACK\nNtlson, though, will also be\nstronger. At lut ready to floor something Ilk* his full team. Coach\nJock Walmsley announced Tuuday\nthat Al Hooker will start tor the\nfirst time in * few gamei. The grey-\nhaired matter mind wai not ture\nwhom Hooker would replace although It would be either Leo McKinnon or Harold Mayo that he\nwould take otf.\nTh* te\u00bbms will b\u00ab:\nNelion \u2014 Dave Gibbons; Bill\nTownsend, Pat Egan, Bud Cooper\nand Stan Morris; Doug Blals and\nHowdle Campbell; Al Maxwell and\nReg Miller; Al Hooker, Foster Mills,\nGeorge Bishop and either Mayo or\nMcKinnon.\nRossland \u2014 Johnny Gldlnski; Ace\nBailey, Sid Simcock, Gordon Lynn\nand Orvald Nell; Ross Saundry and\nEmle Carkner; George Anderson\nand Fred Ostrlkoff; Joe Laface, Ross\nForrest, Gordon Ezart and Al Simm,\nNew York Golf\nResults\nNEW YORK, July 11 (AP).-Re-\nsults  of  first   and second   round\nmatches in the National P.' G. A.\ngolf championship today:\nFirst round\nPaul Runyan, White Plains, N.Y.,\ndefeated Mortle Dutra, Royal Oak,\nMich., 3 and 1.\nBen Hogan, Whit* Plains, N.Y.,\ndefeated Steve Zappe, Springfield,\nOhio, 7 and 6.\nDick Metz, Lake Forest, 111., defeated Pat Circelli, North Tarryton,\nN.Y., 7 and 6.\nHerman Barron, White Plains,\nN.Y, defeated Jimmy Thomson,\nShawncc-on-Delawarc, Pa., 2 up.\nBilly Burke, Cleveland, defeated\nJim Foulla, Hlnesdsle, HI., 1 up.\nAbe Esplnosa, Los Angeles, defeated Tony Joy, Youngstown, O.,\none up (19 holes).\nTom O'Connor, Yardley, Pa, defeated Alston Morley, Binghamp-\nton, N.Y, 7 and 5,\nFrank Champ, Bedford In, defeated Fay Coleman, Culver City,\none up.\nKy Lafoon, Ravtnla, HI, defeated\nDick Shoemaker, Grafton, Pa, 3\nand 2.\nHenry Plcard, Hershey, Pa, defeated Earl Martin, Inglewood,\nCalif, 6 and 4.\nAl Broach. Firmlngdsle, N.Y, detested Reggie Myles, Columbia Station, Ohio, 1 up. v\nJack Ryan, Louisville, defeated\nGene Sarazen, Brookflild, Conn, 1\nup.\nJo* Zarhardt Flemlngton, N.J,\ndefeated Louis Chlaretta, Sylvanla,\nOhio, 3 up.\nKen Tucker, Everett, Wuh, defeated Harold McSpadden, Winchei-\nter, Mais, 2 up.\nCobb May Try Salt\nFlats in August\nL08 ANGELES, July 10 (CP).-\nEirl Gilmore, oil compiny executive, said today John Cobb, British\niportamin, again would attempt a\nnew automobile speed record at\nBonevlUe Salt Flats, Utah, lp August. Cobb retched a speed of 350\nmiles sn hour in September, 1938,\nbut his mark was shattered by\nCaptain G. E. T. Eyston. another\nBriton who sped the measured mile\nat 357.5 miles an hour.\nMEGAN TAYLOR TRAINS\nFOR OLYMPICS\nSYDNEY, Australia, July 10 (CP-\nReuterB) \u2014 Migin Tiylor, world's\nfigure skating champion, has arrived\nhere trom South Africa accompanied by her father, Phil Taylor.\nShe will train tor tb* forthcoming\nOlympic games but following refusal ot th* authorities In England\nto allow bar to glva exhibitions, she\nwill not appear ln. public.\nIndoor skating en artificial ic* is\nnew far Australia.\nSoccer Player Bonded\nto Keep Peace, Year\nMONTREAL, JUly It (CP). -\nBert Gardner, Provincial League\nsoccer player, pleaded guilty in\ncourt today to a charge ot having\nassaulted a referee and was ordered\nby Judge Guitav* Perreault to\npost a 9100 bond of guarantee ho\nwill ke\u00abP tht peice duripi the\nnext year.\nOn* of the mott improved\nplayers this year oh the Nelson\nMaple Leafs' roster, Bill Towmend, husky defenceman, will team\nup with Pat Egan again tonight\non the rearguard ai the Lots\nSlay ln Rossland tonight against\nit tough Redmen.\nBill hu become on* of the\nsteadiest defencemen ln the league\nand is also doing his stuff' ln\nrushes up the floor. In his lut\nthree games he hu punched home\ntwo each time ana hu handed\none assist esch game on the average. For the season he has now\nchalked up IS points which is\npretty fair for a defenceman.\nYankees and Bobby Feller SparkQQ^]\nAmerican league lo 3-1 Victory;\nPower Loosened in 4th and 5th\nBy JUDSON BAILEY\nYANKEE STADIUM, Ntw York, July 11 (AP).-The Yankees and\nCleveland'* Bobby Feller, acting In .the name ot the America League.\ndefeated the National League All-Stars 3-1 todsy while 62,802 fans\nguped at th* eaae of it all.\nThe boys from the Bronx exploded their bombs under Chicago Cubs'\nunlucky Bill Lee in the fourth and fifth Innings, with George ijelkirk singling in one run, Joe Gordon precipitating another on a grounder which\nPittsburgh's Arky Vaughan man-handled, and Joe DiMaggio' slapping a\n300-foot nome run into the left field stands.\nThe game, played before th* tet-ts-\ncod largest audience in the seven-\nyear history of the All-Star Charity Carnival, measured up to Its\nbilling.\nThe National Leaguers slashed\nCharley (Red) Ruffing ot the\nYshkeet for three hits and a run\nin th* third Inning and knocked\nDetroit's Tommy Bridges out of\nthe box ln th* si' th.\nBut Feller paraded to the mound\nthere, and his fut ball settled the\nsenior circuit's fate.\nPITCHING IMPRESSIVE\nPitching on the whole wu impressive \u2014 the Nationals collecting\ntour hita off Ruffing, two off\nBridges and one otf Feller for a\ntotal of seven, and the Americans\ngetting two off Paul Derringer, Cincinnati's ace who itarted, three of\nLee and on* off Lou Fette of Boston Bees tor a total ot six.\nNot only did th* National\nleaguers, dominated by their league-\nleading Cincinnati Reds lose the\nball game, but the Redmen also\nlost the services of their No. 1\noutfield slugger, Ival Goodman. He\ntried to make a shoe string catch ot\nSelkirk's line-single to right during the Americans' fourth-inning\nrally, tumbled, and retired with a\ndislocated shoulder. He will be out\nof action for a week or 10 days.\nRuffing, although fanning four,\nslipped Into trouble In th* third\nwhtn Vaughan opened with a\nhit which tklddtd off Jo* Cron-\nIn'i glove, After Derringer fanned,\nMan Hack of Chloago lifted \u00ab\nlooper Juit out of reach back of\nthird, and Lonnle Fray cf Cincinnati doubled down th* right\nfield foul Una for th* run.\nBut the towering Yankee righthander, after giving Goodman an\nintentional walk to load the bases,\nstruck out Frank McCormlck cf\nthe Reds and forced Ernie Lombardl of the Red* to pop to Gordon.\nWith Derringer giving no walks\nand only a pur of singles to Doc\nCramer and 3oa Cronln of Boston\nRed Sox, th* first third of the\ngam* wu In favor ot th* National\/\nleague. But th* whole complexion\nchanged with the advent of new\n....pitchen ln the fourth.\nLEE SLOW STARTER\nLee, beaten by the Yankeei twice\nln the lut world series, walked\nBill Dickey and seemed slow getting up steam. Hank Greenberg\nsent a sharp single to lett with Joe\nMedwick holding Dickey to second. Then Selkirk shot a liner to\nright field. Goodman fell trying to\nmake the catch and Dickey icored\non th* play.\nGordon then spanked a slurp\npounder to Vaughan and the Pittsburgh shortstop, who > had contributed three faultiest fielding plays\npreviously, fumbled the ball clear\nover his shoulders for another run.\nBy this time Lee had wanned up\nand fanned Bridget but the cause.\nwu lost\nTwo were out In the fifth whtn\nDiMaggio, who hsd played ln three\nall-star games with only two hits,\nsmacked his homer. This blow snd\nFrey's double were the only extra-\nbase hits ot the day.\nseat*\/\n' ihS*.-\nUDL\nRYE\nThis advertisement la not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia\nCOM PA R e\ntinstone\nCHAMPION  TIRES\n'\u25a0\u00bb'         MM\n\u00ab*\u00bb\u00ab.\n8 fain\n\u00ab\u2022\u2022* riui\nMwlkt\nTnU\n\u2022lAK-Clir\nTRIAD\nWfkwsylitily\ntps^llKS\n\u2022**\nf\n^\nB^**^\\ -   ' \u25a0\nnsr\nWj*lB$$Q*m&GWcW\nPROTECT your lifs and til IItm of your\nfamily by equipping year eir with * ss*\nof n*w Fireitono Champion Tim.   Cem-\npar* tUi amaiing tire with \u00bbny other tire on\nthe mark*! la wifely, In value, In prlct!\nThen you'll know why tar mat \u00abv*ry-\nwhir* acclaim it the iiaiation ef 1939\u2014\neipsciilly-ffhen they do aet cod one cent\nmor* than ordinary tlrei.   Only is tk* n*w\nFireitono Champion Tire do yea get *H\ntheie excluilre conilrucllon feature*.\nSAFETY-LOCK   CORD   BODY   it  38%\ni Iron ger\u2014extra   itrength  m**as  extra\nufity,     A*  exclusive Flrtslout lately\nfeature.\nNEW GUM-DIPPING PROCESS counteract!\nInternal friction ud heit and guirdi\nagalnit   Howouti.       Attethtr  txelsslvt\nFlrnleat safety featun.\n1 EXTRA CORD PLIES undir tk. tread\ngive greater protection against punctures\nand mikei th* tire lata tt uy spud. Aa*\nother Firestone txclnstc-1 solely jetltrt.\nGEAR-GUP   TREAD   W thouiandi   tl\n\u25a0hirp-idge anglei (er quick, sift steps,\nAnlttt     exclusive    Flrtsltti    safety,\nfeature.\nPROVED ON THE SPEEDWAY\u2014for SO\nconiecutlr* yein Firwtoat Tlrei have\nbeen on th* winning can la th* uaatl\n\u25a000-iell*   ladiuapeUi   Rae*.    Another\nexclusive Flrestout safely featun.\nThen inert, new, itreamliaed Chimplca\nTire* will git* ytar car u entirely new\nappeeruce.   Have the ntirert Fireiton*\nDwlir put on a Mt today.\nkm\n\\ \\ \\ \\ \\\n\\\\\\N \\\n>\u2022 \\ \\ \\ \\ S\n\\ \\ \\ \\ >\nNew Champion\nLeakproof Tubes\nBeciun air M*p*|* ll eliminated by a ipecill\nlining lh\u00bbl at.lt th* inner inrface, thm\ntubei tr* alwayi ap te proper preuure, and\naa a retult, you (tt ap tt 25% mort tire\nmileage.\nSAME COST AS FOR\nORDINARY TUBES\nTHE ONLY TIRES MADE THAT ARE SAEETY-PROVED ON THE\nSPEEDWAY POR YOUR PROTECTION ON THE HIGHWAY\nFIRESTONE TIRES SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY\nThe Smedley Garage Company\n508 VERNON STREET\nTELEPHONE 71\nNELSON, B. C.\n____i _ti._iiAa--Ui_-j-\n.   t   . \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0   , , '        \u2022 . ,'\n\u25a0\n^^^^\n P*.C,t   EIGHT\n\u2022-NELSON DAILY NIWI. NELION  I. C-WEDNESDAY MORNINO, JULY It WI\u2014\nProof of the Profits Is in Answering These Advertisements\nCreston Hears Radio\nTalk of Community\nFrom Spokane\nCRESTON, B. C. - Mort of the\nradios In'the valley were tuned in\nMonday afternoon to KFPY, Spokane, for the usual weekly broadcast of the Chamber, of Commerce\nin  that city  which features some\ni    community, in the Inland Empire.\nMonday was Creston Day and the\n, 15-minute period was taken up by\na   series  of  quettions  relating   to\ncommunity life and development in\n' the Valley, asked by Lee S. Libby\no! Spokane, and answered by Reeve\nCol. E. Mallandaine,  who was at\nthe head of a Creston Board of Trade\ndelegation in Spokane for a Chamber of Commerce lunch and the\nradio feature.\nThe questions were timely, and\nhad to do with present day development and activities exclusively.\nCreston's farm land and orchard\nand general fruit production was\nemphasized, as well as the industrial\nlife. Professional and business establishments were recounted, and\npraise, bestowed upon the new Consolidated School and amusement\nfacilities, also the climate. Mr. Lib-\ntoy's questions gave scope for timely\nboosting and Col. Mallandaine rose\nto the occasion 100 per cent.\nIn the Board of Trade party, In\n\u2022ddition to President A. W. Dickin-\naon, who spoke at the lunch tend-\n; ered the delegates, were J. G. Connell, H. S. Adams, F. C. Rodgers,\nDon Archibald and Col. Mallandaine.\nThe reception was in return for\nthe one accorded Chamber of Commerce delegates who, were here\nfrom Spokane about three weeks\nago, and the hospitality dispensed\non that occasion was warmly praised\nin the introductory address by Mr.\nLlbby.\nCreston Substation\nHas Fine Showing\n1 CRESTON, B. C.-R. G. Netv-\nfcm, Superintendent of the Experimental Farm at Invermere, was a\nvisitor to Creston, and during his\n. atay made an inspection of the experimental work being carried on\nat'the sub-station at Creston, under\nthe direction of G. R. Thorpe.\nOn the two-acre tract on the Anderson place, East of town, almost\nevery one of the 270 trees set out\nlast Fall have survived and are\nlooking remarkably healthy. Much\nthe same success has been had with\nthe five different varieties of early\nmaturing grapes.\nFollowing the June showers the\n\u25a0 prevailing heat is bringing along the\n15 different varieties of wheat that\nhave\u201e.been planted, as well as the\nflaj(,*so\\vn on the 10-acre tract on\nthe Flats, where about 80 types of\nvegetables and 40 forage crops are\nreceiving attention.\nMt. Newton was on his return\nfrom a. trip into the Fort George\ncountry.in which section it is proposed to establish another Federal\nExnerimental Farm. This has been\nunder consideration for some years,\nbut the activity In evidence this\nyear wobld indicate that the Farm\nwill be established in 1939 or 1940.\neUSINESS ANO\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nAS8AYERS\nE W WIDDOWSON PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agent! for\nTrail Smelter. 301-305, Josephine\nstreet   Nelson,   B   C.\nGRENVILL1 a GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Aasayer and Chemist. 420\nFall Street P O Box 9. Nelson\nB. C Representing shippers'\nInterest, at Trail. B C.\nHAROLD S ELMES ROSSUND\nB C, Provincial Assayer, Chemist\nIndividual Representatives tor\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. r. McMillan, d c neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray McCullock Blk\nDR. WILBERT BROCK. PALMER\nGraduate X-ray 18 yeara experience. 542 Baker St  Phone 869\nCORSETIERES\nSPENCER CORSETS. MRS. V   M\nCampbell, 370 Baker St Ph. 608\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Frtiltvale B C\nSurveyor and Engineer. 'Phone\n\"Beaver Falls.1\"\nH. D.\nDAWSON        Nelson, B. C.\nEngineer & Surveyor\t\nHOMES FOR THE AGED\nCONDUCTED BY THE SISTERS\nof the Love of Jesus for elderly\nladles: St Jude's House of' Rest\nSt Anthony's Guest Houae, Also\nready in September the Priory\nGuest House\u2014a real' home amid\nbeautiful surroundings. Comfort\nCare in sickness. Moderate rates.\nApply Mother Superior 949 W\n27th Avenue, Vancouver, B. C.\nINSURANCE AND REAL E8TATE\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\nA. R. Lynn Temporary\nAssistant at Rykerts\nCRESTON, B. C. - A. R. Lynn\nhas received the appointment of Assistant Customs Officer at Rykerts,\nand was sworn in by Inspector H.\nK. Legg of Calgary, at the end of\nthe week. The appointment will be\nfor three months it is expected. As\nyet there is no announcement as to\na successor to Charles Davis, who\nretired at the end of May. Robert\nCrawford is carrying on as Acting\nAgent.\nFor June figures from Rykerts indicate that tourist traffic was 15\nper cent lighter than June, 1938.\nThis is'accounted for by some as\ndue to the travel to the World's\n- Fairs at New York and San Francisco, and the trips to see the King\nand Queen in May.\nWhile tourist travel is lighter it is\natated the sale of fishing licences to\nU. S. citizens it the largest, on\nrecord. Customs Officer Crawford\neold 49 of them at Rykerts in June.\nReport has it that the sale of transient one-day fishing licences is\nalso heavier than last season.\nSEE  D.   L.   KERR,  AGENT   FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates.\nJ. E. ANNABLE, REAL ESTATE,\nRentals. Insurance. Annable Blk\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON. Real Estate, Insurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St Phone 197\nNelson Daily Nruis\nMember of tha Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association.\nTelephone 144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll  Departmenti.\nClqssified Advertising\nRates \u2014 lie Per Line\n'(Minimum 2 Llnu)\n3 lines, per insertion * &\n2 Una, g consecutive\nInsertions '    tt\n(t tot the price of 4)\n3 Unes, per Insertion     .33\n3 Unea, 6 consecutive\ninsertions ' 1.8J\n2 lines, 1 month 2.68\n3 lines, 1 month \u201e ,_ *X>\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\ntha above basis.\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of\ninsertions.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per line, first Insertion and\n14c each subsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\n8PECIAL LOW RATE\nSituations Wanted, 25e for any\nrequired  number of lines for\nsix  days,  payable  In  advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy \u201e. $   .03\nBy carrier, per week       .25\nBy carrier, per year ..._-_   13.00\nBy Mall:\nOne month    $ .75\nThree months     2.00\n\u25a0 Six months      400\nOne year      8.00\nAbove rates' apply in Canada,\nthe United States, and the\nUnited Kingdom, to subscribers\nliving outside regular carrier\nareas.\nElsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth 31.50, three months 34.00,\nsix months J800, one year 315.00.\nPERSONAL\n(Continued)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD.\n25 for SUM or jiffy prepared 18\nfor 51.00 (free catalogue) National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton.\nEUREKA BIJWCH-THE OLD RE-\nllable for household cleaning.\nWhitens, cleans and acta as a\ngermicide and- disinfectant\nLONELY FOLKS IN B. C! JOIN\nconfidential, reliable Club. Many\nmembers with meant. Particulars\nand descriptions for 3c. Box 121,\nDept N, Reglna, Saskatchewan,\nANY SIZE ROLL FILM PEVK\noped and printed 23c. The moat\nmodern Photo Finishing Plant in\ntbe, Wast Established over 30 years\nKrystal Photon Wilkie, Sask.\nBIRTHS\nKENNEDY - At Kootenay Uke\nGeneral Hospital, July 10, 1939, to\nMr. and Mrt. William Kennedy of\nSheep Creek, a ton,\t\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - A PLANES FEEDER\nlor number 91 Yates machine.\nMust be experienced man. Apply\nChu.  O.  _____ Ltd, Creston.\nBOYS - 8 T A M'P'S - G IRTS\nForeign and British Colony stamps\nat far lesa than catalogue prices.\nWrite, at once, tor approval sheets\nto O. F. Goodwin. 830 4th Avenue\nWeit Calgary.Alberta.\nANY SIZE ROLL FILM DEVELOP-\ned and printed, 25c. One trial will\nconvince you of the superior\nquality of our work. We use\nonly fresh Printing Paper. Krystal\nPhotos, Wilkie, Saskatchewan.\nPERSONAL\nMUCUS (BASIS OF DISEASE) CT-\ntarrh, Sinusitis, etc., new Waterless Diet. dissolves, removes mucus Quickly. Sworn testimonials.\nEducational literature FREE.\nDunning System, 63 Castlefieid\navenue, Toronto, Ontario.\nLADIES FOR DELAYED. OVER-\ndue or painful periods, use Duproe\nPills. Reliable, harmless, proven\nrelief. On market 45 years. Ordinary strength $2, double strength\n35. Western Distributors. P. O.\nBox 24, Regina, Saskatchewan.\nENROLL NOW FOR A BEAUTY\nCourse under Professor Nicholas.\nInternationally famous hair stylist\nand Beauty Culture Authority\nWrite -for particulars. Spokane\nSchool of Beauty Culture.\nSpokane. Washington\nHYG'ENE SANITARY \"SUPPLIES\nand drug sundries. For highest\nquality goods at lowest prices,\nwrite for late-' orico list, or send\n|1 'or Specia' Snmo!? nrirlmen'\nof 21 postpaid under oiv'n sailed\ncover. Western \"u*v'v Agency\nBox 667. Vancouver. B. C.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED    .\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding, motor rewinding, commercial refrigeration.\nPhone 593, 324 Vernon St.\nH.    E.    STEVENSON,   Machinists.\nBlacksmiths.   Electric,   Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine and Mill\nwork a specialty. Fully equipped\nshop. 708-12, Vernon St., Ph. 98.\nMEMORIALS\nPLACE A BRONZE .ONE ON THE\ngrave of your loved one. Get price\nlist from Bronze Memorials Ltd.,\nP. O. Box 726, Vancouver, B  C.\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. I. C.\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Canada and U. S. A. 70.3-2nd St. W.,\nCalgary. Advice free, confidential.\nMEN - YOU CAN GET YOUR\nsuit cleaned, pressed, rprd or altered. II. J. Wilton's, 534 Josopnine\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R. Depot.\nWANTED ALTERATION'S ANU\nplain sewing. Mrs. Ross. Room 39\nAnnable Block. Phone 259R.\nYOU WILL ENJOY RADIO Al\nits best if serviced by Bill\u2014Phone\n1046, 550 Stanley Street.\nWHAT BREAD IS YOUR FAVOR-\nite?-Mother's Bread   Phone 258.\n\u25a0 Choquette's, tor free_delivery\nA VACATION EVERY M~ONDA\"7=\nSend your Laundry to the Koote-\nnay  Steam  Laundry, Phone  128\nHERE'S YO0~R CHANCE TO\nmake extra cash! Sell your dis-\ncarded furniture. Phone 1032.\nAMERICAN HOTEL, 721 W TRENT\nSpolfnno. Modem. Heart shopping\ndist Large Canadian trade. $1 up\nSTAMP COLLECTORS - STAMP\npackets 5c to $1.00. Albums 25c up.\nCall write, Mann, Rutherford, Co.\nDO YOU KNOW THE STAR GliO\neery is the most modfern food store\nin the Kootenays. Visit it* today\nSASH FACTORIES\nNEW IDENTIFICATION\nSYSTEM USED BY R.C.M.P.\nHAMILTON,- Ont, July 11 (CP)\n\u2014 Corporal John Timmerman of\nthe Royal Canadian Mounted police\nannounced here today police identification methods throughout Canada have been changed materially\nthrough adoption of an elaborate\nnew system, the modus operandi\nsystem.\nWestern Canadian policemen\nhave benefitted by the R. ,C. M. P.'s\n\"crime school\" at Regina and a\nsimilar training centre will be established at Ottawa, Corp. Timmerman said.\nFOUR DROWN, THREE\nIN ONE FAMILY\nDISLEY, Sask., July 11 (CP) -\nFour children, three of them members of one family, were drowned\nin the Buffalo river near here yesterday. The victims were Peter\nMatlock, 14; Olga Matlock, 15, Irene\nMatlock, 18. and Zeno Onyshko, 9.\nThere were no witnesses to the\ndrowning and first clue was finding clothing of four. The bodies\nwere recovered.\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTOHY.\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St\n8ECOND HAND STORES\nWE   BUY,  SELL  &   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store  Ph 534\nHOME FURNITURE,  BUY. .SELL\nExch., Rpr\u201e Upholster. Phone 1032\nWATCH REPAIRING\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs youj\nwatch it is on time all Uie time\n345,   Baker   St,   Nelson,   ft.   C.\nU.S. Democracy Sure,\nPress Best\u2014Benes\nCHICAGO, July 11 (AP)- Dr.\nEduard Benes, former president of\nCzecho-Slovakia, said today as he\nwas leaving for Europe's \"dark,\ntrouble;! skies'1 certain democracy\nwas secure in one country\u2014 the\nUnited  States.\nThis, he said, was due largely to\nAmerica's pres6, ' which he described as \"the best in the world\u2014\nthe most free, most informed and\nvery objective.\"\nDr. Benes, accompanied by Mrs.\n\u00a7enes and his nephew, Bohus Benes, sails tomorrow for London after a five-month's visit in the United State; during which he lectured\nat the University, of Chicago and\nfulfilled numerous speaking engagements . throughout the nation.\nnazi Studies to stop\n. for harvest work\nBERLIN, July 11 (CP-Havas). \u2014\nThe German government today decreed that higher study courses be\nsuspended July 16 this year Instead\nof Aug. 1 to permit \"mobilization\"\nof students for harvest work. Tlie\ngovernment, faced with a shortage\nof agricultural labor, has taken\nsweeping measures to ensure a rapid\nharvest.\nB.C. Law Society Turns Down Plan\nlo Abolish Privy Council Appeals\nVANCOUVER, July 11 (CP) \u2014\nThe British Columbia Law Society\nhas turned down\u2014for this year at\nleast\u2014a proposal which would in\neffect demand abolition of appeals\n\u2022 to the Privy Couricil.\n\u25a0 The proposal was in the form of\na resolution submitted by H. R.\nBrSy and seconded by E. F. Find-\nland, Conservative Merhber of the\n\u25a0Provincial Legislature for Esquimau. It recommended the Supreme\nCourt of Canada be constituted an\nAppellate Court with neneral appellate jurisdiction In both civil\nand criminal matters.\nThe resolution was laid over until the next meeting.\nResolutions endorsed at the one-\ndav convention yeserday included:\nRevision of thee Income War Tax\nAct of Canada by insertion of provisions permitting bona fide family corporations to carry on business at a rate of tax similar to the\ntax that' would be payable if the\nmember! of the corporations were\ncarrying on a business in partnership.\nAmendments cancelling the retroactive effect of Succession Duty\nlegislation.\nDiscontinuance of the pi-ctjce of\nemploying police officers and other\ndepartmental officials in Police\nCourt prosecutions and on election\nfor speedy trial; counsel to be retained in such cases.\nThe delegates adopted a resolution recommending the Attorney\nGeneral of the Province must be a\nmember of the British Columbia\nBar.\nPLEASANT MEMORIES OF THE\none dearest to you kept fresh in a\nPortrait by McGregor. Phone 221.\nLET THE^BEACON CHECK THESE\nfioints in your car. Brakes, bat-\nery, \u25a0 lights, etc. 701 Baiter Street\nIN SPOKANE MAKEVtfUR HOME\nThe Empire. 108 N' Division St\nthe friendly Jiotel tor Canadians\nSENSATIONAL VALUES! MUSI-\ncal instrument catalogue now\nready Mailed free. National Music\nCo.^138 W^ Hastings, Vancouver.\nANY SIZE ROLL FILM DEVEL-\noped and printed, 25c Every\nbatch of prints Hyp-o-Meter tested, ensuring non fading prints\nKrystal .Photos, Wilkie, Sask.\nMY CALLlNb CARDS COME\nfrom the Nelson Dally News Com-\nmerclal Printing Department\nThey do lovely social printing ,\nAN OFFER TO EVERY IN-\nventor, list of wanted Inventions\nand full information sent free. The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\nEDUCATION'-i.\nBE READY FOI1 EXAMINATIONS\n-We have helped hundreds to obtain positions as Lettej Cnrners.\nPostal Clerks. Customs Examin-\nerf, Clerl-.s and Stenographer*\netc Free Booklet of information.\nM. C C. Sehoo's Ltd , Winnipeg\nOld\"' i'l firiada\nSTRONG BOY FOR DAISY FARM\none who can milk preferred.\nG. Talbot Blewitt\nHELP WANTED ON FASM-ABU\nto milk Karl Jansen, Brouse, B. C.\nWANTED 2 EXPERIENCED CHER-\nry packers. L Park, MB Creek.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rata tor advertisements under thla classification\nto assist people seeking employment Only 25c foi one week\n(8 days! Covert any number\nof, required lines. Payable to\nadvance.\nYOUNG MAN SEEKS EMPLOY-\nment Honest and reliable. Prospect of steady employment of\nmore importance than top wages.\nApply Box 7688 Daily News,\nMARRIED COUPLE WANTS\"JOB\nin mining camp. Man has blasting\ncertificate and suite Is good cook.\nWrite Box 7784 Dally News or\nPh. 420-X, Trail after 3 p.m.\nYOUNG MAN, 23, WITH CLASS\n\"C\" Industrial First Aid Certificate, would like work of any\nkind. Experienced at trucking.\netc. Box 7700 DaUy News.\nRELIABLE WOMAN WANTS Responsible position, part time,\ncompanion, invalid, children, infants, care of apartments, suites,\nhousework. Phone 1053L.\nGARDENS-LET ME KEEP YOUR\ngardens in order while you're on\nyour holidays. Experienced. Good\nreferences. Hans Otting, 1822 Falls\n_Steet, Phone 1053L.\nEXPERIENCED\" GIRL \"DESIRES\npos'tlon at once as chambermaid\nor housekeeper. Excellent references. Room 44. Annable Block.\nGIRL WANTS WORK. CHAM-\nber ma'd or housework. Good\nworker. Age 20, References. Helen\nTremblay, Ross Spur, B. C.\nCAPABLE WOMAN WANTS Position as housekeeper or Seamstress.\nTteilv Box 7708 Daily News.\n\u2022'\u25a0 IPERIENCSfl' GIRL\" WANTS\nhousework. Immediately. Apply\nBix 7748 Daily News.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nAll persona having claims against\ntbe Estate of Winsor McCamon, late\not Nelson, in the Province of British Columbia, who died on or about\ntbe 18th day of June, 1939, are requested to forthwith forward particulan of tame, duly verified to\nthe undersigned Solicitor for tbe\nAdministratrix.\nDATED this 1Mb day of July\nNelton, B. C.\nH. C. IRVING,\n102 Medical Arts Building,\n Nelton, B. C\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FAR' 'S\nGOOD rARM LANDS FOR SALE\non eaiy termi in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full tn.\nformation to 908 Dept ot Natural\nResourcet, C. P. R., Calgary, Alta\nRED HOT SPECIAL! 7 ROOMED\nhoute for quick tale. Cash\nterms. Fine location. Phone\nFrank Stuart. Real Estate Broker,\n577 Baker St., Nelaon, B, C.\nFOR SALE AT PROCTER, CAPT.\nCogle's home, 5 lots, fruit trees\nana small fruit Snap for cash.\nApply W. R. Jarvis, Procter, B. C.\nLAND FOR SALE 15 MIN. FROM\nP. O. Lots\u2014 % acre or acres. Terms\narranged. W. Davies, View Street,\nFURN. HOUSE FOR SALE. CLOSE\nIn. Apply 71-1 Vernon Street.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nFOR SALE, 1933 FORD TUDOR,\nln Al condition. Will take older\ncar for down payment. Very easy\npayments. A real snap. Apply\nBox 7729 Dally News.\nWANTED, CAR OR LIGHT TRUCK\nsuitable for construction of caravan. Motor must be Al, body lra-\njnaterial._A._D. Pochin, Canyon.\n\/OR SALE - '30 FORD SEDAN,\ngood shape, good tires, Ucence (150\ncash. Apply 212 Latimer Street.\nLOST AND FOUND\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\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\nbe inserted without cost to you.\nWe will collect from the owner\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE, KOFFEE KABIN OPP.\nDally News. Good business. Write\nor call 265 Baker St., Nelson, B. C.\nUVBTOCK, POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES, ETC.\nEGG CASES, 30 DOZ. AND 12\ndoi.; FiUers and Flats; Naptha-\nlene Nett Eggs; Lime Nest Eggs;\nLice Powder; Nicotine Sulphate.\nThe Brackman-Ker Millg. Co. Ltd\nLEGHORN PULLETS, EATO\nhatched. A. S. H Deverson, R. O.\nP. Breeder, Crawford Bay, B. C.\nFARM, CARDEN & NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nFRUIT GROWERS!\nShip your berries and  cherries\nto an Independent Fruit Compiny.\nReturns are made every Saturday.\nROYAL FRUIT COMPANY\nREGINA, SASK.     '\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC,\nPETLAND - W. 241 RIVERSIDE,\nSpokane. Dogs, Birds, Goldfish,\netc. Full line supplies, accessories.\nPUREBRED LABRADOR PUPS\nfor sale. Mature dogs. Harrop,\nAbbotsford., B. C.\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nAT LONGBEACH. FURNISHED\nbeach cottage. (25 per month. Mrs.\nBurrard Smith, R.- R. 1, Nelson.\nFURN. SUMMER HOME. FINEST\nspot on Kootenay lake. Good\nbeach. Ph. 474 L, 905 Edgewood\nFURNISHED OR PARTLY FURN-\nlshed house, reliable tenant, no\nchildren, Box 7737 Daily News.\nWANTED SEPT 15 SMALL HOUSl!\nIn Fairview, preferably furnished.\nBox 7714 Dally News.\t\nST;\nFURN.   HSKPG.   ROOMS\nRooming House, 705 Victoria Alley\nFOR RENT APARTMENT, MEDI-\ncal Arts bldg Ap C F McHardy\nFURNISHED   3~ ROOM \" APART-\nment tor rent C. W. Appleyard.\nALSO   4\nFURNISHED   SUITES\nroom unfurnished. Kerr Apts.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annable Block.\nFOR   RENT,   BUSINESS   PLACE.\nApply D. Maglio, Phone 808L.\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\t\nROOM  AND  BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD VERY REA-\nsopable. Phone 772X.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nMELSON CASH te f}OOH QO.\nLIMITED\nDOORS, SASH, WINDOWS\nPulleys, sash cord and\nweights. Door and window hardware. Rock wool\nand insul board. Prices on\napplication.\n701 Front St    Phone 292    Nelson\npip:\nmTiNOs\nAND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\n Vancouver, B. C.\t\nFOR SALE-J.i J. TAYLOR SAFK\nDalton Cash Register, Longenet\nChronometer, WaU Clock, Show\nCases, Wall Cases tor tale cheap.\nNoxon's JeweUery Store, Nelson. -\nPIPE AND FITTING\nATLAS IRON Jc METALS LTD.\n250 Prior St.       Vancouver, B. jl\nPIPE     FITTINGS     TUBES\nSpecial Low Prlcet\nACTIVE TRADING CO.\n916 Powell St Vancouver, B. C.\nFOR   SALE-BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar tacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCompany, Ltd., Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE - 2000 FIRE BRICKS,\ncheap. C. W. Orth, P. O. Bo* 29,\nTrail, B. C.       \u25a0\n2 RECONDITIONED LAWN MOW*\ners. Apply H. R. Kitto, 678 Baker.\nMODERN WALNUT DININGROOM\nsuite, cheap. Phone ___\nWANTED  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron, any quantity. Top pricei\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nMACHINERY\nFARM MACHINERY, REBUILt\nMowers, Rakes, Binders and full\nline ol rebuilt farm machinery.\nSend ut your Inquiries. Calgary\nFarm Machinery te Supply Co.,\n607-517, 2nd St, East Calgary, Alia\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS CAN\nbring their Portable Arc Welder\nto you, anywhere. 431 Josephine it\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nROOM    AND\nPhone 810Y.\nBOARD    APPLY\nFOR SALE - BOAT AND BOAT\nhouse. Cheap. 22 ft launch in A-l\ncondition. Speed It m.p.h. Ph. 284L\n25C-FILMS. ANY SIZE ROLL DE-\nveloped and printed, and 5x7 en\nlargement. for 25c. Reprints I\nfor 25c. Exp, finishing (Cash with\norder)\" 129 7th Ave   E. Calgary\n(Continued In Next Column')\nHAVELOCK FIRST, THAT'S\nALL, SAYS C. B. SHAW\nLONDON, July 11 (AP) -\nGeorge Bernard S(iaw; who will\nbe 83 years old July 26, commented today with typical frankness\non the dc th of Henry Havelock\nEllis:\n\"Ellis lived his life and did his\nwork. He belonged to my generation and lt is time for us to go.\nHavelock has gone first, that is\nall.\"\nEllis, author pf voluminous\nworks on sex psychology, died\nSaturday night at the age of 80.\nU.S. MARITIME CANCELS\nORIENT LINE CONTRACT\nWASHINGTON, July 11 <AP>-\nThe United States Maritime Commission today cancelled Its contract\nwith Taclfic Northwest Orient\nLine, Inc., under which It had intended to operate a steamship service between Puget Sound ports,\nand the Far East.\nPROBE WOMAN'S DEATH\nD*AL, England, July. 11 (CP)-\nPolics today investigated the death\nof Mrs. Margaret Jackson, ot the\nvillage of Sholden.\nThe woman, known locally for\nher beauty, was found dead by her\nhusband in a bedroom ot their\nhome. She bote several wounds on\nher wrists and head and part of\nher clothing had been torn away.\nQueen to Launch\nNew Battleship\nLONDON, July 11 (CP)-The\nQueen will launch the new 35,-\n000-ton battleship Duke of York\nat Clydebank, Sept. 16, it was officially announced at Buckingham Palace today.\n-Advertisement\nmsn\/Mc\nHERESrWRttAPl*\nNffiMISTBHrlE\nPEOPLE WHO WIN   A\nthemstmiyiiu. ll\nBEWCKYl       J4\nP\nffi\n^*^\u2014_iy\u00a3\u2014\\\n(XtX\nMADE IN\nCANADA\nMnmKm*msfUHa\u00bb$wE\nis sarni Mojusnw tablespoouwis\n0F6we*miMrm\u00a3rWij(XCBEAiii\nMD FRUIT PROVIDES MORE VARIED\nMX\/RISHrStE\/ffTHAUrlW\/yABISMEk.\n6ErSOMErW'IOMORROWI\nGrape'Nuts\nIN THE BLUE AND YEUOW PACKAGE\n:Jt\n\u25a0BM^BSiW&j^jJOj\nMili#BiilMlftiiiiililtMlTiihi''iiii li\n\u25a0\u25a0\n '\n^ain in June Puts Damper on Travel\nand Ferry Traffic All Over District\nIqund   Trips,   Cars,\nPassengers Are\nFewer\nWith rain pelting down practl-\nally the whote month, traffic on\nlaarly every ferry In the dlitrict\nrai 1Mb In Junt thli yetr than t\nrear ago. Touriit travel wu less ill\nhrough the Kootenayi.\nThe Ntlion tarry made 49 fewer\n\u25a0nund trips, and carried 585 fewer\n>assengef cart, S797 fewer passen-\n(ers and 718 fewer trucks.\nThough the miln lake terry, Na-\niookln, mtde the ume number of\n\u25a0ound trips, 90, and carried 56 mort\npautnger cars, lt carried 302 fewer\npassengers.\nTraffic flgurei on Uie Kootenay\n[iver ferry at Cretton can not be\niquitably compared, as list year\nthe craft was used to a limited talent becauie of flood condltioni\narhen the dykes broke. It made only\n184 round trips then as compired\nwith 1211 tills year.\nPisscngcr ctr traffic on the Hnr-\nrop-LongTj\u00bbech ferry wai at op\nposltes with other terries ln tne\nJlstrlct, for It transported 120 more\nIlitrlct, for It traniporwo iat mom\ncars thli yeir than last, although lt\nBade eight fewer round trips. In\nipite of the increase in cars, however, there were 562 tewer\npassengers.\nMlck'i Wind ferry it Creaton did\nnot operate in June last yetr becime of flood conditions.\nDlitrict ftrry returni for June,\n\"89, at compared with June, 1931),\nflow:\nI1L80N FERRY-\nnd Wm      >.]\u00bb\n\u00bbn\u00abef-t,r' Jgjg\nMM\n53\n379\n118\n38\nircycjei,  blkei\nIght (torn)   1,144\n>rset           |$\nittle.          \u00bb\nlen, etc.  \u2022\nMAIN k*xi (NaieeKIn)-\nBound trips \\ 90\nPassenger cars\\\" M\nPassenger! , \u00a3 ^Jto\nTrucks  jjj\nTrailers\nBuses\nMotorcycles,\nblkei\nfreight (toni)\nHorses\nCattle\nKOOTENAY RIVER (Creiton)\n19\n81\n\u25a0U\n120%\n1\u00ab\n14\n1938\n1,814\n10,9(5\n44.801\n1,882\n49\n243\n101\n86\n1.193%\n18\n4\n9\n90\n1,141\n2,884\n194\n16\n53\n14\n3\n,7\u00bb\nii'       1 -NiUtfN DAILY NIWI, HlUON, I. C^-WEDNI\u00bbOAY MORNINO, JULY 12. 1939\u2014\n.\n|Reund   trlpi       Ml}\nitenger cart        893\nPtssengert     2,052\n684\n3\n1,070\n45\n0\n0\n7\n47\n4\n4\n23\nWorld Exchanges\nNXW YORK, July 11 (CP). - A\nshort skid by the Netherlands\nguilder stood out In foreign exchange dealings today.\nThe spot guilder dipped .02 cents\nto 53.09 in termi of the United\nSuites dollar while the pound iterling slipped 1-18 to 4.68 3-18. The\nFrench franc held unchanged at\n2.85, the Canadian dollar moved up\n1-84 to 7-32 per cent dlicount while\nUie belga and Swiss franc held\nstationary.\nClosing rales follow, Great Britain\nin dollars, others in cents:\nGreat Britain 4.88 8-16.60-day bills\n4,67%; Canada, Montretl ln New\nYork 99.78%; Cinada, New York ln\nMontreal 100.21%: Belgium 16.99%:\nDenmark 20.90%; Finland 2.07;\nFrance 2.65; Germany 40.13, benevo.\nlent 1935. travel 22.88; Greece .85%;\nHungary 19.70: Italy 8.26%; Netherlands 53.09; Norway 23.53; Poland\n1885: Portugal 4.27; Rumania ,72;\nSweden 24.11%: Switzerland 22.55;\nArgentina (official) 81.21; Argentina\n(free) 23.23; Brasll (official) 6.05:\nBrazil (free) 5.10; Mexico 18.18N;\nJapan 27.30; Hong Kong 28.93;\nShanghai 11.00; Yugoslavia 2.30.\nRatea ln ipot cables unless\notherwise indicated. N\u2014Nominal.\nToronto Gains on\nHeavier Trading\nTORONTO, July 11 (CP). - The\nstock mirket perked up todiy and\nregistered sizeable gains on heavier\nvolume of trading, volume was 380,-\n000 shares.\nAunor and Coniaurum Golds were\nfirm. Naybob led the penny list with\nturnover ot about 80,000 shares with\nthe price narrowly higher.\nInternational Nickel posted a\ngain of a point and Hudson Bay\nNoranda and Smelten firmed % to\n4i. Prices were up modentely for\nPend Oreille ind Waite-Amulet.\nVentures and Sherrltt were off\nslightly. The close wu up narrowly\nfor Eldorado Silver.\nStrong spots among the lnterlltted\nleaden were Walken common, Brazilian, Fanny Farmer, Steel of Canada, Shawinigan and Canadian Car.\nMinor losses were boarded by\nAnglo-Canadian and Davies and\nHome Oil firmed about 2.\nMining Editor of\n)     Sun in Kootenay\ni'jek. Meek, Industrial, Financial\nind fining Editor of the Vincouver Suft wu |n Nelion yesterday\nand left f0r Trail. He Is making a\nstudy of condlUoni In thii pirt of\nWest Kootenay on behalf of his\nnewspiper.\nHARROP-LONGDEACH-\nound trips 899\nissengers carl .... 870\nissengers '  2,342\nrucki     ....:....._... \u00abTJ\nITrtUers    -.;  24\nMotorcyelei   128\n|gs          4\nfreight (tons)  , 141.\nHorsei               8\nCattle              6\nOraden, etc.   4\nMICK'S ISLAND (Creitop)-\nound trips       ... 144\nilenger ean   91\nisengeri     290\nuckt     -  101\n\u2022alien    - 32\ntigs               24\nVelght (toni) - 106\nJorses       6\nactors  2\n907\n7.50\n2,904\n281\n14\n102\n2\n184%\n5\n3\n2\nDividends\nCrown Cork &  Seil Company,\n|lld., 40 cents.\nMoney\nBy Th\u00bb Canadian\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal-Pound 4.69 7-82; U.\nS. dollar 1.00 7-32; franc 2.65%.\nAt New York-Pound 4.88 3-18;\nCanadian dollar .99 25-32; frtnc 2.63.\nAt Paris-Pound 176.72 fr.; U. S.\ndollar 37.7475 tr.; Canadian dollar\n3666 fr.\nIn Gold-Pound lis 5d; U. S.\ndollar 69.46 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.32 cents.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, July 11 (CP)-Brlt-\nIsh and foreign exchange closed\nsteady,today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nAustralia, pound, 3.7467.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .2894.\nFrance, franc, .026551.\nGermany, relchsmark, .4022.\nGrett Britain, pound, 4.6921.\nJapan, yen, .2738.\n(Compiled by The Royal, Bank of\nCanadi),\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nUdermae Copper\t\njimm Gold \t\nAnglo-Huronlan  \t\nKrntfield Gold \t\noria Rouyn Mlhel .....\n|unor \t\ngamac Rouyn \t\niankflcld Gold \t\nise-Metals Mining \t\nBeattie Gold Minea\t\ndgood Kirkland \t\n% Missouri  \t\nbio Mines ....\nCelt Trethewey  -\nWfalo Anktrlte \t\naiker HIU Extension\njiadlln Malartlc\t\nUrihoo Gold Quarti \u201e.\n' istle-Trethewey  \t\nEentnl Patricia \t\nTilbougamau\t\nnlum M te 8\t\n\u00abst Copper\t\ncnliurum  Minet  \t\ntolld&ied\t\nirkwtter    -\nne Mlnei \t\norval-Slicoe\t\n'ait Miltrtlc \t\ndorado Gold..\njjconbrlde Nickel \t\nfederal Kirkland \t\nranceeur Gold \t\nit'i Lake Oold \t\nold Belt \t\njrehada Gold Mines\t\ntfndoro Mines \t\nunnir Gold  ...........\nerd Rock Gold\t\nijrker Gold \t\nHollinger \t\nfOwey Gold  ...\t\nBudson Bay M tc S\t\nMernatibnkl  Nickel \t\n7.M. Consolidated \t\nI ack Waite  _ \n\u25a0cols Gold \t\narr-Addlion   \t\ntltkltnd Lake \t\n,ebel Oro Mines \t\n.Ittle Long Lac \t\nlicaisa Mines \t\n(CLtod Cockshutt  \ndun Red Lake Oold .\njntyrt-Porcupint  \nKehtle RM Like \nVittte-$rah4m .....\u2014\nwatters qa\\c\\ .\nint Cortbrallon\t\ntinto Goli\nhoncla  Porcupine\niorrii-Kirkland ...\nllpisslng Mining .\nloranda \t\nlortietal\t\n\u25a0TJriep Gold \t\nTBiega Gold \t\namour Porcupine\n[aulorc   \t\n.32%\n.10\n2.25\n.10\n,03\n2.82\n.08\n.21\n.14\n1.21\n.16\n.12\n.08%\n.01\n11.75\n.08\n.75\n2.05\n.75\n2.47\n.11\n.55\n1.55\n2.25\n40.25\n.04V\u00ab\n33.00\n.06%\n2.54\n1.15\n5.10\n.04%\n.20%\n.35\n.31\n.04\n.05%\n.46\n1.02\n.09\n15.40\n.MM\n32.60\n46.75\n.03%\n.17%\n.04%\n1.52\n39.90\nJ)3%\n2.85\n4.50\n2.01\n.35\n56.50\n127\n.16\n1.8\n.01%\n1.04\n.06%\n1.35\n79.00\n.35\n2.40\n.31%\n2.55\n.02%\nPaymaster Cons  40\nPend Oreille      1.41\nPerron Gold      1.82\nPickle Crow Gold     4.70\nPloneet Gold     2.40\nPremier Gold      1.80\nPowell Rouyn Gold       1.95\nPreston East Dome     1.52\nQuebec Gold  55\nReno Gold Mines  48\nRoche Long Lac  08\nSan Antonio Gold     1.69\nShawkey Gold  02\nSheep Creek Gold      1.18\nSherritt Gordon  \u201e     1.07\nSiscoe Gold      1.18\nSladen Malartlc 41\nStadacona Rouyn  44\nSt. Anthony  09%\nSudbury Basin      2.13\nSullivan Consolidated  76\nSylvanite      3.45\nTeck-Hughes Gold      4.20\nToburn Gold Mines     1.75\nTowagmac    20\nVenturci        5.00\nWaite Amulet      7.00\nWhitewater  01%\nWrighl Hargreaves      8.05\nYmlr Yankee Girl 03%\nOILS\nChemical Research 27\nTexas Canadian  66\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power A  50\nBell Telephone  174%\nBrazilian T L * P      8%\nBrewers tt Dist      4\nBrewing   Com        1\nB C Power B      2%\nBuilding Products     16%\nCan Bud Malting      4 .\nCan Car 81 Foundry      8%\nCan Cement      7%\nCan Dredge    15\nCan Malting     36\nCan Pacific      4\nCan Ind Alcohol A  1%\nCan Wineries      3%\nCons Bikerles    16%\nCosmos       16%\nDominion Bridge     27\nDominion Stores      6\nDistillers Seagrams     17%\nFinny Farmer    22H\nF6rd of Cinlda A  -   19%\nGen Steel Wlr*i     3\nGoodyeir Tire  .' 70%\nGypsum L te A ....,     4%\nHaniilton Bridge  85\nHiram Walker     42\nImperial Tobacco     16%\nMaple Leaf Milling       1.05\nMassey Harris      5\nMontreal Power     31%\nMoore Corn    39\nNat Steel Car     45%\nPage Hersey   101\nPower Corp       9%\nSteel of Can     74\nExport Demand\nFinns Wheal\nPrice, Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, July 11 (CP).-Im-\nproved export demand for Canadian\nwheit, together with a firmer tone\non outside markets and a let up In\nrecent selling preuure, held wheat\nfuturei prlcet iteady on Winnipeg\ngrain exchange today. Early gains\nof mon thin t cent were erated\nIn Uie finil minutei and at the\ncloie quotation! were % cent higher\nto unchanged, with July it 54\u00bbi,\nOctober 55-58^, November 57%\nand December 57% centi.\nExport saies were estimated at\nhigh as 1.000,000 bushels fbr the day.\nThe business included a full cargo\nof Durums sold to Germany 11\nwell 11 substantial quantitiei taken\nby United Kingdom buyeri.\nMost of the buying In the pit\nwis credited to seaboard interests\nalthough continental houses made\ngood purchases.\nLiverpool climbed %d on t modest inquiry for Canadian wheat and\na bearlth interpretation of the United Statei government report on\nspring wheat conditions ln that\ncountry. Chicago advanced nearly\na cent while Buenoi Alrei held unchmged.\nYeiterdty'i country marketings\ntotalled 321.000 butheli against\n193,000 bushels a year-ago.\nA good export demand for the\nlower gradei of Garnets md Durums came out In the cash wheat\nmarket. Pit-trading in coarse grains\nwas confined to a small export interest ln oats tnd barley.\nLondon Silver Price\nGains a Fraction\nLONDON, July 11 (AP). - The\nprice of illver advanced fractionally\ntoday over yesterday's eight-fear\nlow with the quotation for ipot delivery increised the equlvilent of\n.86 of a ctnt an ounce to about 34.5\ncents.\nTraderi were uncertain u to\nwhether yesterday's cut to 85 centi\nan ounce by the United States\ntreasury could be regarded as fairly\npermanent or merely a brief pauie\nIn a downward readjustment.\nU.S. Dollar Down\nLONDON, July 11 (AP).-Flnel\nquotations for the United State!\ndollar in the foreign exchange market today was oft 1-16 of a cent,\nthe rate being 4.68 3-16 to tile pound.\nCompared with $4.68% for tlerUng\nin New York late yeiterdiy.\nFrench francs held at 178.72 to\nthe pound.\nRails Up, New York\nNEW YORK, July 11 (AP).-Led\nhy utWtioft jurtrl rail*, bonds gainfld\nfractloni to a point or more todty.\nU. 5. treuury issues illpped\nslightly. Foreign government bonds\nwere discharged.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, July 11 (CP) .-Grain\nclote:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWHEAT:\nJuly  ......   54%    SStt    54%    Mtt\nOct    55%    56%    55       55\nNov.  ..._   57%    68%    57%    57%\nDae.     57%    58%     56%    57%\nOATS:\nJuly       26%    27%     26%    27%\nOct    26%    28       28%    26%\nDec    26%    26tt    26%    26%\nBARLEY:   .\nJuly  .....  34%    34%    34%    34%\nOct    33%    33%    34% ' 33%\nOct: new   33tt    32tt    33%    33%\nDec    34%    34%     34%     34%\nFLAX:\nJuly       -       -       -      140\nOct  133%   133%   133%   133%\nRYE:\nJuly       38%    39       38%    37%\nOct     39%     40%     38%     38%\nDec.     40%     41%     40%     40%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT-No. 1 hard 57%; No. 1\nNor. Mtt; No. 2 Nor. 52%; No. 3\nNor. 57%; No. 4 Nor. 45tt; No. 5,\n39tt; No. 6, 35tt; feed 35%; No. 1\nGamet 46%; No. 2 Garnet 43tt;\nNo. 1 Durum 47%; No. 4 apecial\n42tt; No. 5 special 40%; No. 0 special 37tt; mixed 38tt; track Mtt.\nOATS\u2014No. 2 C. W. 27%; No. 3\nC. W. 24%; 1 feed 24; No. 2 feed\n22: No. 3 feed J5; track 27%.'\nBARLEY-No. 3 C. W. 32%; No. 4\nC. W. 30%; No. 5 C. W. 29%; No. 6\nC. W. 28%; track 34%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 140; No. 2\nC. W. 136; No. 3 C. W. 121; No. 4\nC. W. 116; track 140.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 37%.\nProvincial Apiarist\nVisits at Creston\nCRESTON, B. C.-A. W. Flnlay,\nof Victoria, Provincial Apiarist,\nmade his customary Inspection of\nValley honey producers' operations\nlut week. There has been a considerable gain ln the number of\nhives operated. The total is now\nover 500, u compared with 400 a\nyear ago. The wet June has shortened up the make of honey, but\nmuch of this lighter production will\nbe made up now Summer weather\nhas aet ln.\nMr. Flnlay was accompanied by\nC. B. Twigg, District Agricultural,\non his tour of Eut Kootenay, most\nof which wai in the vicinity of\nFernie and Hoimer, where beekeep-\nen have developed quite a honey\ntale, particularly at Kimberley.\nHit. Finlay and Mr. Twigg were\nat Lethbridge for a conference of\nProvincial Apiarlita and Federal\nBeekeeping official!, at which mat-\nten of Importance to the Industry\nwere discussed. Both Alberta and\nManitoba are extensive honey pro-\nducen, and around Lethbridge beekeeping Is followed on a purely\ncommercial baili.\nPresent at the Lethbridge Conference wu Dr. Eclfarrtt, a U, S.\nFederal official, from California,\nwho ia making a survey ot the Alberta field with a view to perfecting a developing system for queen\nbees and foundation sjock purchased\nIn California.-At present the loss due\nInferior productive qualities of the\nqueens Is excessive on shipments to\nAlberta, running ai high aa 20 per\ncent iome seuoni.\nWall St. Reads\nfo'No War News'\nNEW YORK, July 1! (AP).-With\nspeculative eyes shifting from the\ncloudy foreign icene to encouraging bi)slness prospects at home, the\nstock market todsy put on a fair-\nsized recovery push.\nGains ran to more than a point\nfor leaders in the forenoon when\nvolume was about double that of\nthe preceding sluggish session.\nTransfers approximated 450,000\nshares for the full proceedings, or\nmore than 150,000 above yesterday's\nturnover.\nThe thought of \"no war In Europe.\" at least in the near future,\nseemed to have gained ground in\nt|ie financial district.\nThe list got off to a good start and.\nin the morning, a number of issues\nmanaged to step into new high territory for the year. Among these\nwere Commonwealth St Southern\npreferred Kroger Grocery, Bayuk\nCigar and J. C. Penney.\nOn the upiide the greater part\nof the day were U, S. Steel, Bethlehem, General Motors, Chrysler, American Telephone, Santa Fe, Great\nNorthern, Anaconda, Kennecott,\nWestinghouse, U. S. Gypsum, Owens-Illinois, U. S. Rubber, Douglas\nAircraft, Western Union, Cluett\nPeabody, Loew's, Zenith Radio,\nMontgomery Ward, Sears Roebuck\nand Air Reduction.\nHiram Walker, Dome and C. P. ft\nworked higher in the Canadian\ngroup while most others coasted\nalong quietly. Some pressure developed against Dominion 4s in\nbonds.\nLarge U.S. Tobacco and Corn Crops\nHay Cause New Surplus Problems\nWASHINGTON, July 11 (AP).-\nThe largest United Statei tobacco\ncrop on record and a corn crop far\nabove normal threatened today to\nshoulder Agriculture Secretary\nWallace with new surplm problems\nas he embarked on a $928,000,000\nprogram designed to help solve old\nones.\nA forecut by the federal crop\nreporting board yesterday railed\nthe possibility of unmirketable sup-\npiles ot corn and tobacco.\nA record surplus of 14,350,000\nbales of cotton hu been Wallaces\nbiggest wory for months. Also of\nconcern have been large supplies\nof wheat, rice, dairy products and\nfruits.\nCongress cited an unprecedented\nsum of $203,000,000 to finance the\ndisposal of a portion of these surpluses.\nOfficials said that if the August\nreport Indicates a corn crop of\naround 2,570,759,000 bushels \u2014 the\namount forecast yesterday \u2014 the\nsupply for the coming seuon might\nnecessitate special government action to prevent unduly depressed\nprices. There is an estimated sur-\nSlus of between 400,000,000 and 460,-\n00,000 bushels from previous years.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAm Can   95%\nAm For POw .... 2%\nAm Smelt le Re 41%\nAm Tel   164\nAm Tob   84%\nAnaconda   24%\nBaldwin    '.. 11\nBait It Ohio .... 4%\nBendlx Av   22%\nBeth Steel   53%\nBorden    20%\nCan Dry   17%\nCan Pac   4\nCerro de Pasco 38\nChrysler   71%\nCon Gas N Y .. 31%\nC Wright pfd .... 24%\nDupont    150%\nEast Kodak   1\u00ab4%\nGen Elec  35%\nGen Foods   44tt\nGen Motors :  43%\nGoodrich   16%\nGranby    5%\nGreat  Nor  pfd 21%\nHowe Sound .... 46\nHud Motors   4tt\nInter Nickel .... 46%\nLow\n94%\n2%\n41%\n162%\n84\n24%\n10%\n4%\n22%\n52%\n20%\n.17%\n4\n37%\n71\n30%\n24%\n149%\n163%\n34%\n45%\n42%\n16%\n5tt\n21\n45%\n4Vt\n46%\nClose\nMtt I\n2%\n41tt\n164\n84\n24tt\n11\n4%\n22%\n53%\n20%\n17%\n4\n38 .\n71%\n31%\n24%\n149%\n163tt\n35%\n45%\n43%\n16tt\n5tt\n21%\n46\n4%\n46%\nHigh\nInter Tel te Tel    5%\nKenn Cop  . 33%\nMont Ward ...... 51%\nNash Motors ...    5%\nN Y Central .... 14%\nPack Motors ....    3%\nPenn R R _ 17%\nPhillips Pete ... 33\nPullman    26%\nRadio Corp     5%\nRem Rand   11\nSafeway Stores 42%\nShell Un  10% .\nS Cal Edison .... 27%\nStan Oil of N J 42%\nTexts Corp  41%\nTexas Gulf Sul 27%\nTimken Roll ...\nUn Oil of Cal .\nUn Aircraft\nUn Pao \t\nU S Rub  95%\nU S Steel  41\nWarner Bros .... 46%\nWest Elec   98%\nWest Un   19%\nWoolworth  47%\nYellow Truck .. 14%\nLow Close\n. 5% 5%\n32tt 33%\n50% 51%\n5%\n13%\n3\n16tt\n33\n5%\n14\n3\n17 Vs\n33\n39%\n75%\n16%\n36\n25% 25%\n5% 5%\n10% 11\n42 42%\n10% 10%\n27 27%\n42% 42%\n41% 41%\n27% 27%\n39 39%\n74% 74%\n16% 16%\n35% 38\n94% 95\n40% 40%\n45tt 45tt\n97 97%\n18tt 19%\n47% 47%\n14% 14%\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Gtaln \t\nAssoc Brew of Can ...\nBathurst P & P A .......\nCanadian Bronie .......\nCan Bronze pfd \t\nCan Car tt Fdy pfd ...\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese pfd \t\nCan North Power ......\nCan Steamship \t\nCan Steamship pfd ...\nCockshutt Plow  \t\nCon Mln te Smelting .\nDominion Coal pfd \t\nDom Steel & Coil B .\nDominion Textile \t\nDryden Piper \t\nFotindaUon C of C\t\nGitlrteiu Powtr\t\nGttitie*u P6wer pfd .\nGurd Charlei ...-.\t\nHiSward Smith Paper .\nH Smith Paper pfd ...\nImperial Oil\t\nInter Petroleum \t\nInter Nickel of Can ...\nLake of the Woods\t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nNational Brew Ltd ...\nNat Brew pfd \t\nOgilvie Flour new ...\nPrice Bros \t\n- ,_i 111 nJi \u25a0^\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0'L^-'iAin\\a'iiitmilMi*n-*aMlMM\n.   ltt\n.   16%\n,   5y4\n,   32\n. 105%\n.   20%\n.   I6V4\n. 105\n.   15%\n.    1.60\n7%\n.     6%\n.   40%\n.   18%\n.   lOtt\n.   64\n.    3%\n.    7%\n.   13tt\n,   M\n.    5%\n.    9tt\n.   M\n.   15%\n.   22\n.   46tt\n.   17%\n.     6\n41\n44\n25%\n.   10%\nQuebec Power     18%\nShawinigan W tt P     19%\nSt Lawrence Corp      2%\nSt Law Corp pfd     8\nSteel of Can pfd    75\nBANKS\nCommerce  168%\nDominion 206\nImperial   213%\nNova Scotia  300\nRoyal   189\nToronto  252\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd     3%\nBathurst P tt P B      Hi\nBeauharnois Corp      3%\nBritiih Americin Oil    22%\nB C Packers \u201e  13\nCm Marconi  -   1.03\nCtn Vicken     3\nCons Paper Cbrp      3%\nFalrchild Alrcrifi      4\nFraser Co Ltd      9\nInter Utilities A \u201e -    7%\nInter Utilities B 30\nLake Sulphite 65\nMacLaren P lc P     9\nMcColl Frontenac pfd    88%\nMitchell Robt      8%\nRoyalite Oil     34\nUnited Dlst of Can  50\nWalker Good A W     43%\nWalker Good pfd     20%\nCreston Tax Income\nIncreased for 1939\nCRESTON, B. C\u2014Tax payments\nat Creston for the first six months\nof 1939, show a greater total than\n1938 but in proportion to the amount\ndue, this years showing is poorer\nthan in 1938.\nThe Intake up to June 30 is $4290,\nout of a total levy of $6312. In 1938\nthe total paid for the first six months\nwas $4020 out of a possible intake\nof $5348. The spread of almost\n$1000 as between the totals for the\ntwo years represents the increased\nrevenue from the new Assessment\nRoll effective this year.\n1939 payment of tax arrears Is\n$347. A year ago the intake from\narrears was $232,\nThe By-law for the purchase of\nthe waterworks system Is at Victoria for final approval, and if It\nis returned in time will be finally\ndealt with at the July meeting\nof the Council Tuesday evening.\nUnlesi something unforeseen transpire! the village ihould take over\nAugust 1.\nSome needed repaln are being\nmade at the iwlmmlng pool at Exhibition Park. It should be ln use\nbefore the week is ouW+- \u00bb**.*.\nHome Off, Calgary\nOALGARY, July 11 (CP). -\nMinor losses were recorded on Calgary stock exchange today with\nHome off two at 2.08, and Okalta\noff five at 95.\nTransfers totalled 11,245.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, July 11 (AP) .-Closing: Copper, standard spot \u00a342 17s\n6d, off 5s; future \u00a343 3s Bd. olf 5s:\nelectrolytic spyt, bid \u00a349 5s, up\n5s; asked \u00a349 15s, off 5s.\nTin future \u00a3224, ott 6s. Bids:\nLead spot \u00a314 14s 9d, off Is 3d;\nzinc spot \u00a314 Is 3d, off 2s 6d;\nfuture \u00a314 5s, off 2s 6d.\nBar gold 148s 6d, unchanged.\n(Equivalent $34.76).\nBar silver l8%d, up 5-16.\n(Equivalent 34.50 centi).\nMONTREAL\nBar gold in London wu unchanged at $34.84 an ounce in Canadian\nfunds; 148s 6d in British. The fixed\n$35 Washington price amounted to\n$35.07 in Canadian.\nSpot;   Copper   electrolytic   11.80;\ntin 52.25; lead 4.55; zinc 4.40; antimony 14.00.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot\n10.25; export 10.40.\nTin steady; spot and nearby 48.50;\nforward 48.30.\nLead steady; spot New York\n4.85\u201490;  East St. Louis 4.70.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis spot\nand forward 4.50. Quicksilver 90\u201493.\nBar silver 34tt. unchanged.\nU.S. Silver Price\nSteady at 35\nWASHINGTON, July 11 (AP).-\nThe United States treasury kept its\nforeign silver purchasing price today at 35 cents an ounce.\nThe 35-cent price was set first\nyesterday. It was the first price\nsince a series of cuts had brought\nthe level down from 43 cents that\nwas sufficiently higher than the\nLondon price to make it profitable\nto ship the metal across the Atlantic.\nThe London price yesterday was\n33.84 cents ap ounce, and yestir-\ndjy's treasury action, which wis\nbelieved Intended to stabilize the\nworld silver market, caused an overnight rise in the London price to\n34.50 cents an ounce.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, July 11 (AP).-Stock\nclosing: Brazilian $8%; C, P. R. $4;\nHydro Elec \u00a33%; Inter Nlckiel\n$46%; U. S. Steel $46%; Cent Mining\n\u00a314%; Consol Gold Fields 58s l%d;\nCrown \u00a313%; De Beers \u00a36%; East\nGeduld \u00a311; H. B. C. 19a 6d; Metal\nBox 68s (id; Mex Eagle 8s; Mining\nTrust 2s; Rand \u00a37%; Rhodesian\nAnglo Am 22s; Rhokana \u00a310%;\nSprings 26s 10%d.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent Consols \u00a368%; British 3% per cent war\nloan \u00a304: British funding 4s 1980-\n90 \u00a3106%.\n\u2014 PAGE NINI\nColumbia River Runoff af Trail in\nJune 80 Per Cent Long Term Average\nROYAL CITY SAWMILL\nWILL START MONDAY\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, July\n11 (CP)\u2014The Alaska Pine company\nwhich recenUy acquired the sawmill and box factory of International Wood Products, Ltd., on the\nNorth Arm of the Fraser river,\nstarted operations Monday.\nClose t olOO men are employed\nin the sawmill.\nCoast Unchanged\nVANCOUVER, July 11 (CP). -\nMost pricei were unchanged at Uie\nclose of Vancouver Stock Exchange\ntoday. lntereit wai divided between\nUie gold and oil sections aa transactions totalled 45.975 shares.\nKootenay Belle Gold dipped two\ncenti to 83 and Reno slipped 1 to\n48. Active itocks that finished unaltered were Hedley Mascot at 84,\nSheep Creek at 1.20, Cariboo Gold\nQuartz at 2.08, Privateer at 1.28 and\nPioneer at 2.45. Relief Arlington\nfirmed a traction at 13.\nHome Oil gained four cents at\n2.10 and Calmont ended at 31, one\ncent above Monday's closing bid.\nVanalta at 4% and Mar Jon at 4,\nwere up fractions while Calgary lc\nEdmonton at 1.90 and Anglo\nCtntditn it 95 were unchanged.\nChicago Wheal\nin Strong Rally\nCHICAGO, July 11 (AP).-Wheat\nstaged iti strongest recovery in leveral days with gains of as much as\n1% cents a buihei during the course\nof today'i mirket.\nThe government report forectst-\ning a spring wheat harvest of 178,-\n888,000 bushels, being about 17,000,-\n000 below the average of recent\nprivate estimate, centred attention\non the possibility of deterioration\nduring the next few weeks.\nHigh temperatures and a forecast\nof continued warm weather except\npossibly in Minnesota and North\nDakota aroused some concern.\nThe mld-seulon price topi were\nshaded lubsequently, due partly to\nhedging sales.\nWheat cloied %-% higher than\nyesterday, July 66%, September\n67\u201466%; corn unchmged to % higher, July 46%\u2014%, September 47%;\noats %\u2014% up.\nWHEAT:\nOpen   High   Low  Cloie\nJuly  .....   65%    66%    65%    66%\nSept    66%    67%    66%    67\nDec    68%     60%     68%    68%\nOther futurei cloie:\nCorn-July 48%-%; Sept. 47%;\nDec. 48.\nOatt-July 30; Sept. 29%; Dec.\n30%-%.\nCath wheat No. 2 red 70%, corn\nNo. 1 yellow 48%\u2014\u00ab\u2022 oats No. 2\nwhite 32%-%; barley Illinois malting 50\u201457 nom.; feed 34\u201435 nom.\nDominion Bonds\nDo-\nMontreal Leaders Up\nMONTREAL, July 11 (CP). -\nStocks put on a slow-motion rally\nlate today that pushed leaders up\nfractional amounts.\nNickel was 70% and Smelters Vs.\nAhead % to % were Asbestos,\nC.P.R., and Dosco. Building Products, Canadian Car common and\nCanada Steamship ruled steady.\nPound at $4.68 3-16\nNEW YORK, July 11 (CP).*-\nPound sterling continued at 4.68\n3-16 in terms of United States funds\nin mid afternoon foreign exchange\ndealings today, off 1-16 cent.\nThe franc was unchanged at 2.65\nwhile the Canadian dollar at a discount of 7-32 per cent showed an\nimprovement of 1-64 cent.\nHave you read the \"Claulfled\"?\nSix Major U.S. Oil Companies\nCharged With Monoply by Gov't.\nLOS ANGELES, July 11 (API-\nCharging monopoly, the Uhited\nStates Attorney General sued six\nmajor oil companies for $3,00,000 in\nfederal court today.\nThe government seeks to establish the right of the Secretary of\nthe Interior to fix minimum royalty price for oil and gas taken frorh\nthe federal lands and to collect\nroyalties claimed due in the Ket-\ntleman Hills North Dome Field.\nIf the defendants fail to comply\nwith any Judgment entered, the\ncomplaint lays, the government\nwill seek cancellation of the leases, valued at $500,000,000.\nDefendants are General Petroleum Corp., of California, Standard\nOil Company, Union Oil Company\nof Calif., and the Texas Company,\nnamed as the six major firms. Other\ndefendants include Continental Oil\nCompany, Kettleman North Dome\nAss'n., George F. Getty, Inc.. Carrie\nDoheney and Lucy Smith Battson,\nDow Jones Averages\nHigh    Low Close Change\n30 industrials    136.08   133.84 134.56 up    .77\n20 rails     27.13    26.83 27.00 up    .30\n15 utilities      24.36     23.95 24.32 up     .45\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nBid\nAsk\nWesko Mines\t\n.00%\nMINES:\nWhitewater  \t\n.02\nBig Missouri    \t\n.12\n.13\nYmir Yank Girl ...\n.05\nBralorne    \t\n11.30\n11.40\nOILS:\nBridge Riv Con\t\n.02%\n.03\nA P Con\t\n.14\nCariboo Gold\t\n2.10\n2.15\nAmalgamated    .....\n.00%\n.02%\n.02%\nmvt\n.03%\n.07'\/i\nFairview: Amal ...\nAnglo  Can  _\n.93\nFederal  Gold  \t\n.00%\n\u2014\nBaltac\n.01%\n.05\n.06\n.10%\nGold  Belt \t\n.30\n.35\nCalgary It Edm\t\n.90\nGrandview   \t\n04%\nCalmont\n.31\nGruil-Wihksne   ....\n.01%\n.02\nCommonwealth  ...\n.28%\n.00%\n.00%\n.01%\n.35\nIndian Mines   \t\nEast Crest \t\n.06\nInter Coal & Coke\n.27%\n.29%\nFirestone  Pete ....\n.07%\nL\u00abland Mount \t\n1.06\n1.12\nFour Star Pete ...\n.10\n.82\n\u2014\nFreehold Corp\t\nHargal     \t\n.02%\nLucky   Jim   \t\n.01\n.01%\n.19\n.19%\n\u2014\nHighwood Sarcee ..\n.14\n.01%\n.02%\n.02%\n2 09\n.02%\n.01%\n1.37\n.01%\n1.45\n.04\nPend Oreille   \t\nMcDoug Seg \t\n.11%\nJXPti\n2.45\n2.50\n.06\nPioneer Gold    \t\nMerland      \t\n.mi\nPorter Idaho   \t\n.01%\n\u2014\nMid-West Pete ....\n.02%\nFremier Border ....\n.00%\n\u2014\nMill City Pete ....\n.04\n.02%\n.03\nMonarch Roy \t\n\u2014\n1.26\n1.28\n.05\nReeves MacD \t\n.15\n\u2014\nOkalta Com   \t\n.95,\nRelief Arl     \t\n.13\n.13%\nPacalta    \t\n.04%\n.48\n.50\n\u2022   .21\n.01%\n.02\n33.50\n.00%\n.00%\nSouth End Pete ....\n\u2014\n\u2014\n.08%\nSouthwest Pete ....\n.36\nSalmon Gold \t\n.08\n.10\nSpooner \t\n.04\nSleep Creek   \t\n1.20\n1.22\nUnited      \t\n.08\nSilbak. Premier\t\n1.30\n1.33\nVanalta      \t\n.044\n.00%\n\u2014\nVulcan      \t\n.46\nTaylor B R   \t\n.Of,'\n.06%\nINDUSTRIALS:\nVidette Gold \t\n.01\n.06\nCapita]   Est   \t\n\u2014\nWaverly  T   \t\n\u2014\n.00%\nCoast   Brew   \t\n1.33\nWellington    \t\n.00%\n\u2014\nUnited   Dist   \t\n\u2014\n.01\n.02%\n.05%\n.15\n.01\n.03\n.07\n.03\n.16\n2.15\n.03\n.05\n.13\n.08%\n1.00\n.24\n.04\n.45\n.08%\n1.35\nm\nWINNIPEG, July U (CP).-\nminion bonds:\n5 per cent, Oct. 13,1943, 1U%-113.\n4, Oct. 15, 1945-43, 107%-108%.\n4, Oct. 15. l645-'43, 107%-108%.\n4%, Feb. 1, 1946, 112%-113%.\n3%, Oct. 15, 1949-44, 104%-105%.\n3%, Nov. 15, 1951-48, 103%-104%.\n4, Oct. 15, 1952-47, 108-109%.\n3, June 1, 1955-50, 99%-101%.\n4%, Nov. 1, 1958-48, 111%-113.\n3%, June 1, 1966-56. 101%-103.\n3, perpetual!, B8%-93.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, July 11 (CP) .-Receipts: Cattle 23; calves two; hogs\nseven.\nCattle market iteady. Good to\nchoice dry-fed iteers 6\u20144.75; medium to good heifers 4.75\u20146.50; good\nfed cilves 6.40; good cows 3.75\u20144;\nyearling stackers 4\u20145.\nBacons off trucks 8.75.\nGood spring lambs $8 yetterday.\n66 Per Cent 26-Year\nAverage Recorded\nat Wardner\nColumbia river runoff, as measured by the guage it Tnil, wu 80\nper cent normil for June, states a\nreport by C. E. Webb, of Vancouver, district chief engineer of the\nDominion water and power bureau,\ndepartment of mlnei and resources.\nFor the period from October 1 last\nthe runoff was 94 per cent of the\naverage for 26 yean. Height of the\nSage at Trail on June 30 wu 27.58\nit compared  with 35.72 feet od\nthe same date In 1938.\nAt Wardner the runoff In 'tht\nKootenay was 66 per cent of the\nlong term average.\nKootenay rainfall wu 50 per cent\nabove normil in June.\nMr. Webb's report follows:\n\"Climatic conditions throughout\nthe month of June were somewhat\nunusual, the temperaturei ringing\nfrom one degree below normal on\nthe North Coast to three degreei\nbelow in the Kootenays. With the\nexception of the North Pacific cout\nwhere precipitation wu 10 per cent \u2022\nbelow normal, the rainfall was considerably above throughout the rest\nof the province, ranging from an\nexcess of 50 per cent in the Okanagan to 150 per cent in the Kootenay district. The resulting runoff,\nhowever, vtis below normal In ali\nparts of the province, the Capllino\nriver at Vancouver being 67 per cent\nand the Kootenay at wardner 88\nper cent of the long term average.\n8NOW RETARDED\nDue to the dull cool weather,\nmelting of snow at higher altitude!\non the larger drainages was considerably retarded and the runoff\nof the two major streams (Fruer\nand Columbia rivers) was somewhat below average. Runoff of th*\nFraier at Hope wu 95 per cent of\nthe June average with a mean of\n233,000 second-feet; but for the period October 1 to the end of Juna\nwu only one per cent below th\u00bb\naverage for the previous 27 yean.\nOn June 30 the guage height at\nHope was 26.60. On the same date\nin 1938 it was 23.95 feet and in 1937\n24.50 feet.\nThe runoff In the Columbia aa\nindicated by the bureau's guaging\nstation at Trail was 80 per cent of\nnormal for the month. Runoff for\nthe period from October l lut wia\n94 per cent of the average for tho\nsame period for the previous 28\nyears. The mean monthly flow waa\n158,000 second-feet compared with\na June average of 198,000 tecond-\nfeet The guage height on June 30\nat Trail wu 27.58 compared with\n33.72 feet on the tame date ln 1938\nand 28.74 feet in 1937.\nThere still remains considerable\nsnow in storage on the higher levela\nabove 8000 feet It il improbable,\nhowever, that high water experienced to date this year on these\nmajor streams, will be exceeded\nduring the balance of the summer,\nunlesi an intense heat wave develops within the next fortnight\nLondon Stocks Gain\nLONDON, July 11 (AP).-Most\nstock prices today closed at the best\nfor the day. British funds edged\nhigher and European loans Improved. Transatlantic* held steady.\nHeavy Industrials shifted ahead following satisfactory June tteel output figures. Kaffirs, coppers and\noils marked up small gains whil*\nrubbers were neglected. Gaina\namong domestic rails ranged to >A\npoint.\nWherever You Go\nYou'll Enjoy Your\nVacation More\nIf you take your copy of\nthe Daily News with you,\nso you can be sure of having the most interesting\nand most desired news of\nall \u2014 Home News.\nPlace your order for your vacation subscription to-\n'day, with any agent or carrier or direct to the\nNe laott Sailg Nnua\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\n PAM TIN -\n-NILSON DAILY NIWS, NILSON, \u25a0. C^WIDNMOAY MORNINO, JULY It KM\nAttttttttttttttMttttH ftttutttnttujiiiiiiiiiimnmii^inwiiii!.\nGRPIYOL\nun\nTIMES\nToday\nCOMPUTI SHOWS AT 2:00, TtOO AND 8:39\ntoSAW\nVOR K1LDARE\nUW AYRfS       BARRYMORE\na\\p__\\QttQ\u00bb\\f\/t\/or*mm^\u201e\nAT 2:14, 7:14, 9:50.\nNITI 15* 35*.\nPLUS \u2014 THRILLS \u2022 MYSTERY \u2022 ROMANCE\n\"King of Chinatown\"\nOUR KING AND QUEEN\nVisit Washington ond New York\nTHURSDAY \u2014 \"Only Angeli Hivt Wlnji.\"\nFinancial Security\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox tl     Hlpperson Blk. -  Ph. 1(7\n1933 FORD\nPANEL DELIVERY\nFIRST CLASS SHAPE\nAutomobile Brokers\nJack McDowell    Howird Thurman\nNext Savoy Hotel\nBEACH LOTS\nWt htve tcre lots with sand bitch\ntt Crescent Bay and Balfour. Secure your own lake frontage on\nour monthly payment plan.\nRobertson Realty\nCompany Limited\nPhont 6(1 347 Baker Street\nInsulate Your HOME\nAgainst    HEAT-COLD-NOISE\nwith\nSPUN  ROCK WOOL\nREG'IX\nHere ts INSULATION that\nwill outlast the house itself\u2014\nlaving its cost in fuel bills each\nyear!\nRock spun into long, resilient fibres. Supplied in bulk,\nbatts, rolls, pipe covering and\nblankets for industrial use.\nDiscuss it with your architect\nor builder.\nDistributors for British Columbia\nBURNS LUMBER\n& COAL CO.\nNELSON, B, C.\nKootenay No-Odor\nCLEANERS AND DYERS\nExpert Repairs-Alterations\nPHONE 128\nHamburgers\nand Coffee\nBRCOLATOR\nCLOSING OUT\nOUR BOYS'DEPARTMENT\nat Bargain Prices\nGodfreys' Limited\nKEEP COOL\nIn Clean Clothes\njjonalieL (JlwuiM.\nPHONE 1042\n1928 CHRYSLER\nCOACH ...$75-00\nKootenay Motors\n(Ntlion) Ltd, Phont 117\nAUCTION\nTODAY, JULY 12\n2 P.M.\nAt residence of T. E. Hi\u00ab-\nginbotham, North Shore, on Balfour Road, Vt mile east of Nelson Ferry, favored with Instruction from Mr. Higginbotham I\nwill offer the following: Sealers,\nstep ladder verandah furniture,\ncamp furniture, drop leaf table,\noccasional chairs, rockers, Mc-\nClary 3-way heater, McClary \u00ab-\nhole range, Singer sewing machine, utensils, mijsion oak dining room suite, carpets, rugs,\nchesterfield and chair, cane\nchairs, mahogany settee and 2\nchairs, 3 floor lamps, centre\ntables, brass bed, mattresses, vanity dresser, mahogany bedroom\nsuite, etc., etc.,\nGoods on view morning of ule,\nTerms;   Cash\nC. HORSTEAD.\nAuctioneer.\nuAs Is\" Extra Spedal Buy\n1935 Hupmobile Airflow Six\n.35\n>m\nNo Trade. Licensed, Cood Running Condition. Vancouver Blue\nBook Price $750.....\t\nSowerby-Cuthbert Limited\nOPPOSITE THE HUME HOTEL\nDon't Let Your\nGarden Burn Up\nWe have the newest safeguard\nagainst this.\nThe Soil Soaker\nMade of Porous Canvas: Water\nSeeps through pores.      M A A\nNo Spray, 18 feet long *.LMV\nAlso HOSE: 50'        -VtlC\nlength, from  . \u00abpDtlu\nHOSE NOZZLES CA\nSPRINKLERS CA.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nSUN GLASSES\n25c to $1.25\nSUN VISORS\n15c to 40c\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPHONE II HELSON, B.C.\nTrail Taxi Bylaw\nTabled Indefinite\nPeriod, Council\nTRAIL, B.C., July 11-The Passenger Motor Vehicle Bylaw proposed to regulate fares and operation ol taxis In the city was shelved\nIndefinitely by the city council at\na special meeting Monday after,\nnoon.\nAlderman William Thomson cast\nthe only negative vote. Stating that\nhe was not ignorant of the taxi\n\"set-up\", Alderman Thomson said\nhe was not impressed with the\narguments put forth by the taxi\noperators to have the bylaw suspended.\n\"The people who made representation don't own their own equipment,\" Alderman Thomson said,\n\"and they are indebted to others.\nI don't think the taxi business\nshould be controlled by one concern.\"\n\"We'd better leave it alone\", offered Alderman J. A. Wadsworth.\n\"We have more important things\nto do. I now make the motion to\nlay It on the table Indefinitely.\"\n\"Once again we find a change\nof front, protested Alderman\nThomson. There is a reason for it\nall. I'd like to know why.\"\n\"Why should be bother with people who don't know their own\nmind,\" said Mayor E. L. Groutage.\n\"But one operator did know his\nmind,\" continued Alderman Thomson.\nWhen Mr. Thomson stated that\none operator purchased meters ln\ngood faith, Mayor Groutage suggested he should have waited until the bylaw passed.\n\"I take it that this Council has\nmore Important things to do\", said\nAlderman Thomson. \"Lacking support there is nothing much else\nwe can do but to see that this\nbusiness is attended to.\"\nThe motion was carried, Alderman Thomson voicing opposition.\nTRAIL CITY TO\nBORROW $56,900\nAGAINST TAXES\nTHAIL, B.C., July 11\u2014At a special meeting Monday afternoon the\nCity Council gave three readings\nto (he Additional Anticipation Revenue Loan Bylaw, 1939, a bylaw\nto borrow an additional $58,900. The\namount Is the total of unpaid taxes at July 1, this year.\nHAIL REDUCES CROP\nDRUMHELLER, Alta., July 11-\n(CP).\u2014A survey of Drumheller\nDistrict today indicated the district's\n1938 crop yield has been reduced\n20 per cent by hail earlier this\nmonth.\nInternational\nPresident Gyros\nIs Nelson Guest\nSpencer of  Moncton\nUrges Young Blood\nin Clubs\nNelson Gyros, at a specially arranged luncheon at the Hume Hotel\nTuesday afternoon, greeted their\nnewly elected President of Gyro International, Reginald Spencer, of\nMoncton, N. B; He was elected at\nthe recent convention at Jasper\nNational Park.\nBringing greetings of the International Executive Council, he atated\nthat Gyro in ita International acope\nmust do one of two things: It must\ndrift off into an older man's Club\nas the years went by; or it must remain a younger man's Club by\nbringing in new young men constantly. The convention had decided to do the latter, and to keep\n\"young blood stirring\" in the Clubs.\nTwo months ago he was at an organization meeting of a new CluD\nat Dalhousie, N. S., and among messages of good wishes received wai\none from the Nelson Club. It was\nwonderful to see the thrill those\nmen got from receiving messages\nfrom their new found friends ln the\nWest, Mr. Spencer said.\nThe strength of Gyro International lay, in a great measure in\nthe strength of the' individual Club,\nMr. Spencer said. One thought he\nwished to leave with the Nelson\nGyros was, \"when you think of\nGyro, think In terms of the next 25\nyears, and not in the past 27.\"\nKOOTENAY8 BEAUTIFUL\nJasper Park was beautiful, he\nsaid, and he had seen many lovely\nsights across the country, but Kootenay scenery \"got\" him. The farther he came, he said, the more beautiful the scenery became. He was\nkeenly anticipating the drive up\nthe West Arm to Fraser's Landing\nin the afternoon, as he had heard\nso much of the beauty of it:\n\"Perhaps you who live here don't\nrealize the beauty of your scenery,\"\nhe declared. ; ,\nLeslie A. Read of Trail Gyro Club,\nwho drove the International President to Nelson, said he was glad to\nbe a guest of the Nelson Club, and\nwelcomed Nelson Gyros to any Trail\nmeeting.\nR. E. Crerar, who with Herbert\nHarrop was an official Nelson delegate to the Gyro International convention, reported a wonderful time\nand a highly successful convention.\nThe general feeling was that the\nwork of extending Gyro was being\ncarried out more in Canada than in\nthe United Slates, and Mr. Crerar\nbelieved this work had been well\ndone in District 8, which Included\nNelson.\nR. B. (Jack) Morrla, with V. C.\nOwen at the piano, led the Club In\ngroup singing, featuring \"J. B.\nGray's Elegy,\" a song with words by\nthe Club President.\nFollowing the meeting, Mr. Spencer was driven to Fraser's Landing\nby Mr. Gray, Mr. Crerar and Daniel\nMcNaughton, Secretary of the\nClub, where the International President caught the last ferry to Gray\nCreek. He waa met there by a delegation from ;the Cranbrook Gyro\nClub, who escorted him to the East\nKootenay centre.\nSTEWART IN LEAD\nIN AMATEUR GOLF*\nOKLAHOMA CTTY, July It (AP)\n\u2014Veme \"Spte\" Strwirt of Albuquerque, N. M., unlimbered his long\nnan artillery and fired a two-un-\nder-p\u00bbr 68 to lead tlwpaclc at the\nend of 18 boles today In the M-\nhole qualifying teats oi tbe Western\nAmateur Golf Tournament\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\n6 HEAD HORSES, YOUNG WELL\nbroken, weigh 1200 to 1400. Can\nbe seen South side Taghum bridge.\nNEWS OF IHE DAY\nA\u00a3\u00ab**M\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abA*\u00ab\u00ab\u00a3M*M\u00ab\u00a34!\u00ab*\nOIL PRORATION\nTHEME GIBSON,\nTRAIL ROTARY\nTRAIL. B. C, July 11 - Market\ning of oil in the Turner Valley by\n\"proration\" was explained by Murray Gibson at a luncheon-meeting\nof the Hotary Club in the Masonic\nTemple today.\nAlthough certain dictlonarlei ignored the word, Mr. Gibson said,\nothers defined it as meaning \"to\ndivide or distribute proportionately.'\n\"It is an equitable method at\nsharing whatever market is available,\" he said.\nExplaining how a proration\nschedule was worked out, Mr. Gibson gave the following:\n\"We'll take as an example an\nImaginary oil field ln which there\"\nare four separately-owned producing well* and assume that each\nwell has a potential daily production as follows: A \u2014 810 barrels,\nB \u2014, 330 barrels, C \u2014 420 barrels,\nand D \u2014 540 barrels, a total of\n2100  barrels,\nSHARE  MARKET\n\"Now assume that the available\nmarket for the oil produced in this\nfield is 700 barrels dally.- Seven\nhundred is one-third of the potential production. Consequently\nthe fair way to give each well\nowner his share of the market is to\ntake one-third of the potential production from each. This means that\nthe wells will share the market as\nfollows: A - 270; B - 110; C -\n140; D \u2014 180, a total of 700 barrels.\n\"That Is how proration works in\nthe Turner Valley. The Alberta government establishes the potential\noutput of each well by having its\nown engineers make the testa at the\nwells. The capacity of the market\nto consume oil is known and so by\na simple bit of arithmetic the allowable production from each well\nis arrived at.\n\"There Is nothing sinister, mys.\nterlous or novel about it. It is the\nsame principle that would.apply\nIn the event of famine. The available food would be prorated to the\npeople In need of il; only in that\ncase we would be dealing with a\nproblem arising out of scarcity,\nwhile in the oil business, proration\nIs forced to solve a problem arising\nout of surplus.\"\nQuests included F. W. Foster of\nTrail; J. C. Nepler of Paris, France:\nWilliam Henry of Winnipeg; and\nR. G. Rutherford oi Kelowna.\nG. Cruickshankr\nFormer Smeller\nOfficial. Dies\nRetired   Four   Years\nAgo; Served In\nthe 54th\nTHE NEW\nShlcfc Injector\nRAZOR\nAnd Tubt Palmolive Crum\nAll for 49c\nmz\nTRAIL, B.C., July 11\u2014Graham\nCruikahank, former superintendent\nof the line tank room of the Con-\nsolidated Mining lc Smelting Co.,\ndied ln Vancouver Monday night\nMr. Cruickshank had been in ill\nhealth for some years, having retired about four years ago to make\nhis home in Vancouver.\nHe had lengthy service with the\nConsolidated and was employed in\nlta Rossland mining operations before coming to Trail. He was identified with the sine department\nslnoe its inauguration, except for a\nperiod of overseas service.\nHe was commissioned to the 54th\nKootenay   Battalion   In   1915   and\nWhile overseas attained the rank 1\nof colonel.    \u2022 . |\n' He is survived by his wife in\nVancouver. James Buchanan, general manager of the Consolidated\nCompany left this morning for\nVancouver to attend the funeral.\nMERCURY SOARS\nTO 89 DEGREES;\nSEASON'S HIGH\nThe mercury rose to 89 degrees\nIn Nelson Tuesday for the highest\ntemperature recorded here so far\nthis year. The sky .was overcast\nmost of the day and the weather\nwas sultry. Clouds cleared away\nas evening approached.\n. Minimum ior the day was 55 degrees.\nA Chonet to SoYt\nWalker Is Head\nRossland (.CF.\nROSSLAND, B. C, July 11 - E.\nL.' Walker was elected president\nof the Rossland Cooperative Commonwealth Federation at a reorganization meeting held at the\nhome of Mrs. Ceiric Cox Friday\nevening.\nOther executive members were\nelected as follows: H. W- Lefevre.\nvice-president; and Mrs. Cedrlc Cox\nsecretary-treasurer.    .\nMrs. Cox wu chosen representative to the C.C.F. nominating convention to be held at Nelson on\nJuly 15.\nRent your house with a want ad.\nGO PARTYING LOOKING YOUR\nBE8TI A new coiffure style-\n.smart, flattering.\nmiadtji BSE\n577 Baker St\nll\nPhone 244\nGLASS\nWE SPECIALIZE IN .\nFor   Buildings,\nAutos,  Boats\nand   Furniture\nWINDOWS  REGLAZED\nT. H. WATERS & CO.. LTD\nBuilders and Contractors\nPhone 166 Nelson, B, C.\nVasa Lodge meets tonight, Canadian Legion HaU at 8 p.m.\nPhone KITCHENER for roses and\nartistic floral designs.\nBaby Clinic TODAY at Nurses'\nHome at 2:30 p.m.\nElectrical    Contracting,    F.    H.\nSMITH, 351 Baker SL PHONE 606.\nBritish Newspapers and Magazines\nBIOHOP'S NEW8 STAND\nLawn Mowers sharpened and rpd.\nJ. Eccles, 524 Gore St. Ph. 649R.\nWanted, Blng and Lambert Cherries.\nMcDONALD JAM CO.\nEAGLES MEET TONIGHT AT\n8 P. M.\nDANCE SLOCAN CITY, JULY 14,\nStrawberry Supper. Innes Orch.\nFor ELECTRICAL Contracting\nPH. 644-McKAY & 8TRETTON\nFOREST AND 8TREAM PIPE TOB\nIA LB. TIN 00c at VALENTINE'S.\n 1\t\nNOMAD Drill  Team  DANCE at\nSALMO, K. P. Hall, Friday JULY 15.\nThe latest In Baleros, smart brushed\nwool,  pastel  colors $4.95.\n, THE GINGHAM  SHOPPE\nVery Cheap\u20144 rm. cottage for\nsale at Pilot Bay. Partly furnished.\nJess Sanders, Procter.\nAnnable-Warfield\nWaterworks, Sewer\nBylaw Is Approved\nTRAIL, B. C, July 11 \u2014 The\n$40,000 loan of the Annable-Warfield\nWaterworks and Sewerage district,\nthe authorization bylaw for which\nwas passed recently, has been approved by order in council, according to a telegram received today\nby R. R. Burns, M.L.A., Rossland-\nTrail.\nThe money Will be expended to\ninstall a waterworks system in\nAnnable and the Beaver Bend extension.\nKabatoff Hearing on\nFalse Pretence Count\nAdjourned, Rossland\nROSSLAND, B. C, July 11 \u2014\nCharge against Alec Kabatoff of\nCastlegar, charged with obtaining\ngoods and money under false pretences from McNeill's Clothing store\non Thursday last, was adjourned\ntoday until Thursday morning. Constable W. J. Lumsden is prosecuting,\nand L. O. Baker of Trail is appearing for the accused. Kabatoff was\nreleased on a bond of $200 personal\nsecurity and $200 additional security.\nPolice Take Action\nto Stop Defacement\nof Signs in District\nDefacement of road and other\nsigns in the district has come to\nsuch a state that police are going\nto take action, Sergt. J. W. Hooker\nof the Provincial Police said Tuesday. Signs, particularly in the Trail\nand Rossland areas, have been battered so that they are hardly readable.\nBUILDING  LOTS  FOR SALE\nDifferent parts of the city. Build\nunder the Dominion Loan Plan\nrepresented by our office.\nH.E.D1LL\nGeneral Insurance    682 Ward St\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITB 208, MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nOrder SUMMER WOOD Now\nMill Ends, load .... $3.50\n3 loads for - f 10-00\nSlabwood, 3 cords  $10.00\nSaw Dust, unit t *\u25a0<*>\nPhono 163 or 434R1\nFUR STORAGE\nREPAIRS AND REMODELS\nMalcolm's Furs\n059 Baker SL\nPhone 800\nHave You Tried HOOD'S\nSupreme Milk Bread?\nMore nourishing\u2014higher ln proteins\nAsk for It at Your Grocers\nHOOD BAKING CO., LTD.\nFAC1AL8\nSHAMPOOS\nMANICURES\nPERMANENTS\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone S27        Johnstone Blk.\nSTEAKS\nTENDER AND JUICY\nQrenf ell'sCafe\nROOFING\nCoves Troughs, etc.\nR.H. Maber\nPhona OSS      S10 Kdottnay St\n i\t\nProtect Your Car\nAgainst summer sun and parking\nhazards.\nRENT a monthly private parking\nstall at\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpposite the\nPostofflce and Hume Hotel\nMEN'S WEAR 1\nCW\nA* l*ortB\nI BOYS' WEAR\nDrink It at\nEvery Meal\nOLDSMOBILE\nBUSINESS COUPE\nHeavy   Duty  Tires,   Bargain\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker St.     Limited     Phone 119\nt\nt\nFISHING\nTENNIS\nGOLF\nDon't forget dance Thursday nlte.\nMusic by Alberta Ranch Boys.\nLadles 25 cents, Gents 60 cents,\nHAYING TOOLS Sickle Grinders,\nHay Forks, Hay Rakes, Austrian\nScythes and fittings, Carborundum\nScythe Stones, etc.\u2014HIPPER80N'8\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE Bankrupt Sale\u2014 Everything HALF price\nand less. Gramophone recordi 20c ea.\nAt the Public Market Fresh, Just\narrived today. Tomatoes, Cabbage,\nTurnips, Beets, Carrots. Potatoes,\nCherries, Peaches, Apples, Cauliflower, Cucumbers, Green Beans.\nRemember only FRIGIDAIRE has\nthe METER-MI8ER that cuts cost\nto the bone. See the new FRIGID-\nAIRES at HIPPERSON'S.\nCARD OF THANK8\nMr. and Mrs. J. Will and family\ndesire to thank all friends for their\nkind expressions of sympathy in\ntheir recent sad bereavement.\nKayak II May Go\non East Campaign\nLOS ANGELES, July 11 CAP).-\nIf Kayak II is successful in his quest\nfor the Hollywood Gold Cup and its\n$50,000 July 22, Owner C. S. Howard will head him East for a whirlwind campaign designed to test\nTrainer Tom Smith's belief that the\nArgentine star is the greatest horse\nof all time.\nKayak's current earnings are\n$117,000. Victory in the Gold Cup,\na not unthinkable repeat win in the\n$100,000 Santa Anita Handicap next\nWinter, coupled with Eastern victories this Summer, and Kayak\nwould be right up there to challenge\nSun Beau's all-time money earning\nmark.\nTrainer and Horse.\nSuspended at Track\nFORT ERIE, Ont., July 11 (CP).-\nStewards John P. Mclnerney and\nW. A. Hewitt today suspended\nTrainer John MacKay and the horee\nCosweep. winner of the second race\nhere Saturday which paid $50.70\nfor $2. The order followed word of a\ntest of saliva made by Dr. George A.\nLucas, Incorporated Canadian Racing Association analyst.\nSEE\nFrank A. Stuart\nAnd provide adequate ptotection\nagainst  loss  of  income,  due  to\naccident and sickness.\nPhone 980   S77 Baker  Nelson, B.C.\niiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nfumigate: WITH\nSMYTHE'S\nBLACK DEATH TO BUCS\n10,000 found dead in one home.\nSMYTHE'S PHARMACY\nPHONE 1\nimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiimiiitimiiiiiiii\nPHONE 25\nProscriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMEDICAL ARTS BLOfK\n$18.75\nVALUES TO $27.50\n$24.75\nVALUES TO $37.50.\nHere's your chance to\npick up a smart summer\nsuit or a darker suit\nLeishman, Fashion-Cratt,\nand Cook suits. Our entire\nstock on sale, all sizes, al!\nmodels.\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nThe Man't Stort\nRent your house with a want ad.\nLAKEi-' \"}*-,   PROPERTY\nFOR 8ALE\nDesirable North Shore location,\none  mile  from  Nelson. ferry.\nPlenty of water, will divide to\nsuit purchaser. Easy Terms.\nT. D. ROSLINC\n3 Royal Bank Bldg.       Phone\n-L41 IK\"\n7\u00ab\n**\nDEVELOPING\nPRIMTJNG\nENLARGING\nPICTURE   FRAMII\nPhotographic Supplies\nNo matter what your hobby may\nbe its nice to enjoy a cool bottle of\nKOOTENAY\nRAINBOW\nBEER\nWhen You\nRelax\nCdknk (bit\nA Greeting Card for Every Ocet\nCIVIC\nTONIGHT\nThursday, Friday, Saturday\nRapturous-Daring-Terrifying\nThe full shattering force of Emily Bronte's world famoua book\nis here ln the masterful picture that critics everywhere are   '\npraising as the year's finest screen entertainmenL\nI am Heaihcliff. * .\nI married a woman I loathe . . .\nto spite the one woman I love !\nSAMUEL G0LDWYN \u201e.\u201e.,.\nWutheringHeights\n\u2014^, MERLE OBERON - LAURENCE OLIVIER \u2022 DAVID NIVEN\nRobert Benchley \"An Hour for Lunih\", Plus Dlvlna Rhythm.\nI Lambert's\nFOR\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nSUMMER TOGS\nFOR ALL OCCASIONS\nJACK BOYCE\n514 Baker   Style Shop   Phone ICQ\nSEE\nVIC  GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nFor all your needs In plumb-\n. Ing repairs, alterations, and\nInstallations.\nPh. 816       301 VICTORIA 8T.\nKootenay\nBreweries\nLimited\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquqr Control\nBoard or by the  Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nMid-Season Clearance\nOf AU Our Guaranteed\nUsed Cars! Save Plenty!\nWe are clearing out our Used Car stock. Only a\nfew left at special prices. If you want a good Used\n'  Car, see us before buying.\nTHIS MEANS YOU\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n35 -PHONES -35\ni-j-mm-lmm\n.\u25a0 \\-jm.2**.--:. '<_,*-*_*.\u2022\nUttHHiiiMfiHttiMil^tf^afc\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1939_07_12","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0414909","@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":"1939-07-12 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1939-07-12 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\/1.0414909"}