{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0403589":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-11-14","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1928-07-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0403589\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Workers Hear Tolmie\nSee Pace 6\nVOL. 27.\nNELSON, B. C MONDAY MORNING, JULY 9; 1928\nNo. 69\nf :'Z   \u201eIU\u00bbil2\u00bb\n\u00bbCUl   (.IDIUBIAM\nvit ro- if, t c\n7\nLOSE LIVES WHEN SHIP WRECKED\nlutos Burned,in Garage Fire, Trail\nE\nT\n5TIP FLAMES\nibia   Motors   Visited   Hy\njitbreak Early Sunday\nEvening\nTurns Over His Heritage of Million in Order t o Protect Shareholders\n|K FROM  WELDING\nMACHINE IS BLAMED\ni Cars and 28  Batteries\n(troyed, Six Autos Are\nScorched\n\t\n*AIL, tasG,, July 8.\u2014Three auto-\nW, 28 batteries and all tool**\ncompletely destroyed, and six\n\u2022 automobile*) ware badly\nhrd In a fire which totally de-\n*Ht the workshop of the Co-\nJU Motors limited here at,\n'\u25a0 1 o'clock tonight. Fire was\nfot to have started when a\nJ from an oxyacetylene torch\n'Into a gasoline tank. Prop-\ntind stock damage, not Include\n[he loan of private automobile*\n[ estimated at approximately\nh practically all of which was\nfed by Insurance.\ni\u00bb Wiley, mechanic, who was\nting the torcii, was so badly\ned in attempting' to subdue\nVh that he was taken to Trail-\nnac hospital. The fire caught\nFhln clothes and severely burn-\nis arm and le*. Ills condition\nH critical.\n1 111 KM 1>\n\\ credit is due to Mr. Wiley for\ntilled maneouvre when, with\n' afire, he released the valves\n;oxyacetylene tanks, which, tf the\n, had not been allowed to escape,\nhave blown up the entire bulld-\n1 blaze quickly spread over the\nfeed floor of tht shop and up the\nIt had a good start before the\narm waa turned ln, tht flames\njg about loo feet up Into tht air\n[arrival or the department. The\nm of the fireman and volunteers\nieverly   battled   through   choking\nfrom the batteriea, rubber tires\n\\e and  oil had  the blaze under\n, within half an hour.\n.TUNS   TO   HpREAD\niat heat  threatened  one or two\nnear   by.   The   Consolidated\nV'n garage and employment of-\n:ed to blaze once or twice on\nbut the flamea were extin-\nwithout much damage refers of the ruined cars were\nVlley. s. Decembrlnl and one old\nthe firm, while other cars which\ntorched were owned by J. Devltto,\nn's heartte, A. Romano, two new\nowned by the Columbia Motora\nI and another touring car.\nowners of the garage were both\nfa the city at tht time of the\nnd   on   returning   late   tonlgh t\nsome of the stock ln the access-\ndepartment  had  been  ruined  by\nand water.\nora Plays\nHavoc Across\nthe Prairies\nCornelius Vanderbilt Jr., scion of\none of the foremost families of the\nUnited States, shown with his wife,\nentered the tabloid newspaper field.\nHe failed. Vanderbilt has now turned\nover   his   heritage   of   $1,000,000   to   a\ntrust ln order that the shareholders\nln the enterprise may be paid In full.\nThe young newspapennan has already\ngiven up his private fortune of $990,000\nto the shareholders tn an endeavor\nto meet the losses caused when the\npapers in Miami, Los Angeles and Ban\nFrancisco failed. \"I am giving up my\nheritage as purely a moral obligation,\nto my stockholders.\" Mr. Vanderbilt\nsays. \"Legally I no longer have any\nobligation. But I wish to wipe the\nslate absolutely clean, no matter how\nmuch   I   have  to sacrifice.\"\nLEADER TOLMIE\nConservative Chieftain Outlines\nHis Aims for Development\nof Province\nCONSTRUCTIVE PLANS FOR\nMINING. FARMS, INDUSTRY\nHe Says Trail Example of Use\nof Raw Materials at Home;\nSchofleld Cheered\nJNIPEO. July 8.\u2014Electrical storms\nurora borealis played havoc with\niph circuits between Winnipeg\nOttawa   tonight.\n?ral times Winnipeg was cut off\netely from telegraphic communi-\nL with eastern Canada and when\nIres did work there were frequent\nfuptlons. Many times during the\n[ lightning bolts raced along the\nIts east of Port William, causing\nlist to the telegraphic activities,\n1 on other occasions the aurora\n(d connections with the east.\n9 tonight there was no sign of\n\u00abk ln the unfavorable conditions,\nall eastern circuits were almost\n-kable.\n\u25a0graph companies also experienced\niltles Saturday night when aurora\nswept  circuits,   both  ln  Canada\nhe  United   States  from   coast   to\nCOUVER, July 8.\u2014As a site for\narms and homes of Sweden's\ntht Pence River district and the\nitretches of the Canadian north\nt studied by a commission from\nIts members are investigating\nl's agricultural advantages and\nobltms that will affect the young\nh colonist, if a contemplated\n\u00bb of ex-tensive emigration ls un-\nor Chief of\nItalia Dies; His\nFriends Are HI\ntRIs. July 8.\u2014A dispatch to\nMatin from Virgo Bay. Spitz-\nen, says that Natale Ocrionr,\n>r chief or the Italia, has riled\nl Injuries received when the\nIble crashed oh the Ire north\npttxherien on May 25.\nfour  other  suvlvors   of   the\nwho are afloat on  an  Ire\nr Foyn Island, were stated\nt seriously 111.\nExperts On Way to Conduct an\nInvestigation Into Alleged Smoke\nMenace From Trail in Washington\nSPOKANE, Wash.. July 8\u2014Assuring Congressman Bam. B. Hill of\nthe Fifth district that there would be no delay in the government investigation of the extent and cause of damage to lands affected by the\nTrail (B. C.) smelter fumes, Mr. Hill Saturdsy received a communication from Henry O. Knight, chief of the bureau of chemistry and\nsolids, United States department of agriculture, that experts left for\nthis  region. >__.\n$-10,000  POR INQl'IRY\nCongressman Hill, who Is in Spokane, said that Dr. Skinner, assistant chief of the chemical and technical investigations of the bureau,\nwas coming with Soil Inspector Strahorn and that the investigation,\nfor which $40,000 was appropriated, wlll go ahead immediately, although\nat this time no agreement has been reached wtth Canada on the final\nscope of Questions to be submitted to an International Joint commission. It ls expected both men wlll arrive here Monday night or\nTuesday.\nMr. Hill said that he telegraphed the department of agriculture\nthat he was opposed to any delay In the Investigation after tht organization of Stevens county farmers told him they were under the impression that nothing could be done until the questions to be submitted\nto the commission hod been framed.\n1)11.1.   AMI  JONE8   AIDKI)\n\"The area Involved,\" said Mr. Hill, \"now covers nearly 25 milea ln\nthe Northport region, working down to Marcus and Into Colville. It ls\na most serious-situation and Senator Jones and Senator Dill have\nbeen working with me to get action for the last three years. The fact\nthat a foreign corporation ls Involved of course makes this matter\none of International scope. A few small claims have been settled, but\nthe damage ls so vast and of such permanent character that the residents of the region must be grai.ted fair and adequate compensation.\"\nMr. Hill was assured by Knight in his letter that the work Is being\norganized as rapidly as possible and the reconnaissance survey ln\npreparation for developing the Investigations ln the district would go\nahead regardless of the international question being determined before\nthe   commission.\nTORIES LEADING\nKOOTENAY FIELD\nTOIMASSERTS\nEvery Candidate Gefa Wonderful  Support,  Indicative  of\nProvince Race\n\"Prospects of every conservative\nrandldatp In thr Kootenays are\nsplendid\u2014thoroughly |\u201e line with\nlhe whole province,\" declared Hon.\nS. P, Tolmie. Conservative leader,\nalien hr returned lo Nelson yesterday from thr Nloran to board thr\nKrttlr Valley train tneontlnue westward  on lib election  tour.\n\u2022Trrnlr we expect to carry, and\nour candidate, M. II. McLean, has\na hard right on his hands. He's\na line upstanding man\u2014worked\nhis way ni> from pit hoy to a position of prominence In the coal area.\nHe'll   in.ikr   TU\u201e,   Iphlll   fight.\nCaptain J. Fitzsimmons Is mcet-\nIni with wonderful support In\nKuslo-Slocan. Trull-Rossland, Nelson, Cranbrook and Creston we re-\nsard as practically won, which Is\nthoroughly Indicative, aa I sold before, of the whole province.\"\nGerman Airmen Make N ew World's\nEndurance Flying Record; Stay in\nAir Over 65 Ho urs; Travel 5030 Miles\nDESSAU, Germany, July 8.\n\u00bb-Johann Histicz and Hans Zimmerman, German pilots, had established a new record for duration in the air when they landed at 9:30 o'clock on Saturday\nnight. When they came down\nthey had surpassed by six\nhours and 52 minutes the Italian record held by Del Prete\nand Ferrarin.\nThe new record stands at 65\nhours and 26 minutes.\nThe machine reeled off 5030\nmiles in its two and a half days\nin the air.\nRisticz and Zimmerman started their long flight early Thursday. For 36 hours weather conditions favored them. Then\nFriday they ran into a heavy\nelectrical storm and cloudburst\nwhich for three hours threatened serious interference if not\nthe end of their flight.\nMOTORIST KILLED\nON BANFF ROAD\nCALOARY. July 8\u2014Clerald Coulter.\nof Banff and Laka Louise, was Instantly\nkilled this evening when hla car overturned down a hillside and he was\npinned beneath. He was on the Banff-\nLake Louise road and was alone when\nthe accident occurred, passing motorists\nlater disentangling him from his car\nand summoning medical aid. His neck\nwas found to be broken. He was an\nemployee of the Brewster Transportation oompany and waa a native of New\nBrunswick. It ls assumed his car\nskidded at-a bend and turned over.\nF1LBS SC1T FOB HIVORCK\nNOOALES. Sonora, Mexico. July 8 \u2014\nSuit for divorce has been filed In the\nMexican courts hers by Sir Charles\nHenry Augustus Frederick Lockhart Rosa\nCanadian baronet, against Lady Patricia\nEllison Rosa.\nAmundsen Met\nWatery Grave?\nSaw Plane Drop\nKINO'S BAY, Spitsbergen, July 8 \u2014\nA clue to the possible fate of Roald\nAmundsen and his five companions,\nmissing since they started to the rescuo\nof the Noblle crew, wai seen ln ft\nreport reaching  here Saturday.\nA number of laborers, en route from\nNorway to Advent Bay. reported that\non June 18 when their vessel was off\nBear Island, they saw a dark object\ndropping from the sky Into the water.\nThe big plane uaed by Amundsen would\nhave been In the neighborhood of\nBear Island about the eighteenth.\nLethbridge Man\nHangs Self in\nWashington Jail\nDAVENPORT. Washington, July 8 \u2014\nPrank Bolfson, 24, of Lethbrldge. Alberta, hanged himself in the county\nJail here this morning. He was awaiting removal to the state penitentiary\nat Walla Walla to serve from one to\n25 years for second degree burglary\nfollowing his arrest at Wenatchee last\nweek for breaking Into a box oar near\nOdessa and stealing two pairs of shoes.\nRolfson tore up a blanket, formed\nrope, climbed on top of the tank\nIn the Jail, fastened one end of the\nrope to the cell bars with a noose\naround his neck and Jumped off. Rolf-\nson had been dead only a few minutes\nwhen found. He left a note adreesed\nto his mother in Raymond, Alberta.\nasking her not to mourn for him and\nstating he was going to kill himself.\nCaptain Courtney Makes\nStart For America but\nReturns Owing to Fog\nHORTA, Island of Fayal, Azores, July\n8\u2014Captain Prank T. Courtney, British\naviator, who hopped 6ff this morning\nln an effort to reach Halifax, returned\nat 4:30 p.m. Oreenwlch meridian time.\nHe was forced to put about by fog\nand strong winds.\nHopes ior P. G. E.\nNegotiation Fade;\nDunning Can't Come\n\u2022\nVICTORIA, B.C., July 8\u2014\nGovernment hopes of some definite announcement from Ottawa regarding P. G. E. negotiations have vanished with the\nannouncement that Hon. C. A.\nDunning who was to come west\nand make some statement, will\nnot reach the province before\nelection day and has in fact not\neven completed his plans,\nTRAIL, B.C., July 8.\u2014At one\nof the greatest political meetings in Trail's history last night,\nheld in K.P. hall, Hon. S. F.\nTolmie, Conservative leader, received an ovation when he entered the hall after coming down\nfrom Rossiand, again when he\nwas1 introduced to the audience\nas \"the next premier of British\nColumbia,\" and again, at the\nconclusion of his great address,\nin which he outlined the Conservative policy for securing the\ndevelopment of the province, by\nextension of its agriculture, en\ncouragement to mining, utilizing\no its raw materials, and its gen\neral industrial expansion. Dr\nTolmie paid only passing attention to Premier MacLean, this\nbeing incidental to the discus\nsion of the Conservative policy.\nBoth Dr. Tolmie and L. J,\nLadner, M.P. for South Van\ncouver, made reference to the\ngreat record for good work\nmade by J. H. Schofield, and\nthe latter, who spoke briefly,\nshared in the ovations.\nARE PEOPLE\nSATISFIED?\n\"We are now moving toward\nthe winning post on the 18th,\nstated Dr. Tolmie. \"Are we\nsatisfied, or do we desire a\nchange? Are we satisfied with\na debt quadrupled in 12 years,\nwith expansion of expenditure many\ntimes, with having the largest per\ncapita taxation In the Dominion? Are\nwe satisfied with the public works\nsystem, under which friends of the\ngovernment obtain the contracts, snd\nunder which the estimates are habitually exceeded?\"\nThe Sumas farmers were told the\ndrainage project would cost 11,500,000.\nAfter it was apparent the cost was\ngoing to exceed that, the government\nobtained their consent to a figure of\n\u2022 1,800.000. In the end the actual cost\nwas far In excess of S4.000.000. Then\nwhen the farmers objected, the govern-,\nment put an act through ths legislature debarring them from the right of\ngoing to law on the matter.\nLIVELIHOOD FIRST\nPROBLEM\n\"The government tells you that the\nP.O.E. problem is the great problem. I\nadmit lt la a great problem, but it is\nnot the greatest. The greatest problem\nln British Columbia ls how to keep the\nboys and girls that we raise and\neducate, at home after they grow up;\nto develop a prosperity here so that\nall our own people can make a living.\nCompared with this, the P.O.E. is an\nImportant incident.\" declared Dr. Tolmie. amid echoing applause.\nAs to the premier's statement that\nhe had every confidence that he would\nbe able to dispose of the P.G.E. st an\nearly date, Hon. C A. Dunning. Just\npreviously, answering Hon. H. H.Stevens'\nQuestion ln the Ottawa house, said no\nbargain had been made, and added ln\nreply to further questioning, that none\ncould be made without ratification by\nparliament. Parliament having now\nprorogued, lt was obvious that Premier\nMacLean was not in a position between\nnow and election day to make any\nbinding bargain.\nWHO AUITATED Kl Tl UN\nOF LANDS.'\nPremier MacLean was also making a\ngreat blow about negotiating for the\nreturn of the railway lands, put up by\nthe province to assist construction of\nthe C.P.R. Aa the railway developed\nInto a great national undertaking,\nbecame clear that every province ought\nto contribute proportionately, and that\nBritish Columbia ought not to be thf\nonly province to assume responsibility\nfor IU construction. Por this reason,\nthe Conservatives under Sir Richard\nMcBrlde pressed for the return of ths\nland grant made by the province to\nthe Dominion, and later. In parliament\nat Ottawa, General Clarke and Mr. Lad*\nner, Conservative members for this\nprovince, continued the fight.\nGranting of a royal commission for\nconsideration of the maritime province\nclaims made It clear, said Dr. Tolmie,\nthat the right of British Columbia to\nreturn of the lands could not longer\nbe disputed. He therefore placed on tha\norder paper a motion expressing the\nview of the house that the lands ought\nT\nIS SUNK AFTER POUNDING\nEighty of 300 Person* On Board Were Passengers and Only\nFew Saved; Lifeboats Launched but\nSmashed to Pieces by Waves i\n_  1\nCAPTAIN STAYS WITH VESSEL TO END;\nKILLS HIMSELF WITH REVOLVER\nAngry Sea Tosses Passengers and Crew .Onto Rocks;\nSurvivors Tell of Terrible Storm and Little\nChance for Life; No Rescue Available\nSANTIAGO, Chile, Jaly 8.\u2014Two hundred and ninety-\none lives were lost when the army transport Angamos sank\nSaturday in the bay of Arauco, according to information\ngiven out by the ministry of marine.\nSeventy-six of the victims were passengers. Only five\nmembers of the crew were saved, according to early reports\nof the accident. The captain committed suicide on the\nbridge of the vessel. Details of the disaster and the cause\nof the tragedy have not been received by marine or other\nofficials. \u2022\nThe Angamos was a single screw steamer of 5975 tons\nand a speed of 14 knots. She was built in Scotland in 1890\nand was refitted by the Chilean government two years ago.\nWireless dispatches tonight said that the cruiser Zenteno\nand the destroyer Williams arrived at the scene of the disaster, which is south of Lebu, off the southern coast of\nthe republic, but had found no wreckage of the vessel.\nOther ships are being sent to the locality.\nThe transport left Punta Arenas, southernmost city in\nthe'world in the Straits of Magellan, with 291 persons on\nboard.   Of these, 251 were crew\u00bb-\nand 76 passengers.   The latter\nincluded a number of  women\nand children.\nThe  ship  was  loaded   with\ncoal at Punta Arenas, the fuel\nbeing intended for use of Chilean  naval  vessels in  northern\nwaters and the passengers were\nmostly laborers and their families   en   route  to   the   nitrate\nfields in northern Chile.   They\nwere traveling at government\nexpense.\nSeveral stops were made en\nroute and while a few of the\noriginal passenger list may have\ndebarked,   it  is thought   here\nthat additions to the passenger\nquota brought the total number\naboard to more than 300.\nLATE IN DAY\nThe storm  was encountered\nlate in the day.    For  several\nhours the Anagamos struggled\nto make headway against the wind and\nwaves, but she wss badly battered.\nThen her rudder was smashed and she\nstarted to drift toward the breakers.\nAt 10 p m. she struck.\nWith no rescue ln sight, attempts\nwere made to launch lifebots, but they\ncapsized In the tremendous seas almost\nas rapidly ss they struck the water, and\ntheir human freight was tossed on the\nrocks by the breakers or drawn back\nInto the angry sea.\nThe vessel filled rapidly and three\nhours after she struck was virtually\nburled under the waves. Then she\nbroke In two and the few who remained aboard were thrown Into the\nsea. What they experienced is told by\na survivor. Andres Carrlllo. a sailor\nHe   could   not   explain   how   he   wai\nagainst a rock. I do not recall what\ntook place afterward. When 1 recovered\nconsciousness, I found myself, stark\nnaked, sprawled upon the beach. I recall that 1 could but barely see the\nlight of the ship.\n\"In that moment I heard a sound\nas of a revolver shot, which I think\nwas caused by my commander. Captain\nSuarez. shooting himself at his post\non the bridge of the Angamos \"\nBONDMVK     i\nGIVEN FOUR-\nYEAR TERMS\nsaved.\nHKI'I SKI)   All)\nAT FIRftT\nPerman and Mel). Grosart. Deposit Box  Looters, Sentenced at (oust\n\"After being cast upon the beach I\nlooked (or the ship, but could see\nnothing,\" he said. \"1 think It had\ngone down already. I made my way\nto the nearest house, but when I\nknocked at the door, the occupants\ndid not wish to admit me, thinking\nme a tramp. It took me an hour to\nconvince the housewife that I really\nneeded assistance.\n\"After I had rested a bit we set out\nln search of other survivors and we\nfound three, all naked as wu I.\"\nThe other survivors picked up by\nCaiTlUo are Jose Agulla, Humberto\nSepulveda and Humberto Diaz, all army\nconscripts.\nHere Is revealed the story of Jose\nAgulla. an army conscript, who was\ncast ashore on a piece of wreckage, as\ntold In the hospital at Beten:\n\"A terrific storm raged,\" he said, \"in\nthe midst of It the ship lost her rudder and she was dashed between two\ngreat rocks about 10 o'clock Friday\nnight. She was about 300 yards from\nthe shore.\n\"You must Imagine the scene aboard\nUntil 1 o'clock In the morning we were\nfighting between life and death while\nthe boat settled down ln the water\nrapidly. The continuous blasts of the\nship's whistle failed to bring help.\nhows HM \\sih-:i\u00bb\n\"When It became plain that there\nwas not the most remote chance of\nrescue, there was nothing left to do but\nlaunch the lifeboats This was done,\nbut they were tossed about with such\nviolence by the waves that they sank\nalmost Immediately.\n\"My companions and I were saved\nonly because Ood is great. The only\nthing I  remember Is that  after  being\nVANCOUVER, July 8.\u2014Four years\neach In the provincial penitentiary was\nthe sentence meted out by Magistrate\nShaw in police court Saturday morning\nto A. E. Perman and J. McD. Grosart,\ncharged with the theft of $20,000 In\nbonds from the safety deposit box of\nJ. McNelly\nPerman recently pleaded guilty to the\ncharge and Grosart was convicted after\nevidence had been given by Perman\nagainst him. Further charges against\nGrosart were adjourned ut request of\nthe crown prosecutor.\nThe bulk of the stolen bond.* has\nbeen  recovered.\nJanitor Stabbed to\nDeath; Roomer ls\nHeld Murder Charge\nTORONTO. Ont.. July 8\u2014Following a\nheated quarrel over disposal of garbage\nln the apartment of Angus D. McArthur at Kendal avenue. Alfred C.\nSalter. 32, Janitor of the apartment is\ndead, and McArthur Is under arrest\ncharged with murder. Salter was stabbed with a sharp-pointed knife above\nthe heart and died a few minutes\nlater. \u2022\n \u25a0 \u2014.      \u2014\nNKXT     LABOR   JMH     IN     LONDON,\nENO..   TWO   YEARS   HIM I\nLONDON. July 8-At the final meeting of the British commonwealth labor\nconference ln the house of common-,\nthe lace and date for the next conference were set for London In  19;j0.\nThe Weather\n\u25a0 the Dominion lleteorowtlcaJ,\nOffice.   Victoria.\nSATIRIUVS   WEATHER\nto  ba  returned,   but  on  Hon.   Charlea thrown   Into   the   water  I   clutched   a\nStewart Informing him that lt was the\n(OoaUBUM SB rage Eight.)\nNELSON    \t\nVictoria   M\nVancouver   \u00bbj>\nKamloops   8a\nBarkervllle   **\nEstevan   Point     60\nPrince   Rupert     *>*\nSeattle     - J*\nPortland       *>\nSan Francisco   Jj\nSpokane      *\u2022\nGrand   Forks     \"'\nCranbrook      *J\nCalgary     JJ\nEdmonton      *\nSwift   Current  ...--.. JJ\nPrince  Albert    JJ\nQu'Appelle     J]\nWinnipeg   \t\nMln.   Max.\n51       70\n76\n78\nOil\n04\n68\n73\n80\nes\n70\n*l*\nTO\n74\nM\nfloating   timber.    A   huge   wave   raised ,t'JSt\\2  \"\"'\"'*\nme 30 feet Into the air and daahed me\n\t\n BBBlBiaaaaaaassssaBs***,\n* Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 9,1928\nSummer Resorts\nWHERE THE FHHINO la OOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER, B.C.\nFishing,  Boating,  Bathing,  Oolf,\ntennis  Courts.  Tonrllt  Park.\nrtsiitnt   Tackle   Supplied.    Grocery\nStore ln Connection.\nW. A. WARB. Proprietor.\nOn   Kootenay   Lake,   la   Miles   From\nNelson,   as a Day. in and sis\na Week.\nPolice Probe\nto Cost Ratepayers Money\nVANCOUVER. July 8\u2014The police\nprobe, completed on Friday, after 40\n1 days of hearing evidence, nnd of arguments by the counsel wlU cost the ratepayers   slone   of   Vancouver   td   date,\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms with Running Water.   Private Baths en Suite\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists.\nSpecial Sunday dinner $1.00.        Rotarian Headquarters\nThe Most Comfortable Rotunda in the City.\nHUME HOTEL\u2014D. Hill. D. Anderson.\nMr. and Mrs. Ft. M. Davles. R. G.\nHearn. L. Rawder. Mrs. 1. Maclsaac, M.\nIrjfek. A. Ings, A. Waylls. D, J. Swords.\nC. Gilllsbie, T. D. Landon. C Hargrave.\nW. D. walker. Les Crane, Mr. and\nMr\u00bb. Jean Pomeroy. Lloyd Mansfield.\nVerne Walton, Edward Larden, Vancouver; H, L. Rawllngs. Nakusp; Mr.\n\u00bbnd Mrs. W. L. Zellger. C. Zellger.\nMr, and Mrs. W. P. Fields, Wallace;\nM. Suggltt. Calgury; Prank Putnam.\nP. Lister. Mists V. Lister. Creston; aft*.\nand Mrs. H. Hlntz, Miss M Htntz.\nAldereon; Mrs. P. Marflpodf Cruhbrobk;\nD    L.   Coons.   C.   V.   Campbell.   C.   H.\n'I hue. Mr. and Mrs. V. Monagiui, Sandpolnt; O. W. Humphry, w. Gemmell,\nJ. McDermott. P. McDermott. L. R.\nHood. O. Watklna. 8outh Slocan: J. O.\nMitchell. T. Purnley. A. V. Glands,\nE. W. White. Toronto; W. Sadler,\nSeattle; E. Senft. A. A. Land. W.\nShlnlnn and family. R. McGregor. Spokane; Mr. and Mrs. A. Duel. Miss L.\nDuer. M. Smith, New York; Mf. and\nMrs. W. H. Folding, w. McBean arm\noarty, D, Sarty and family, Trail: W\nH. North, Silverton; J. Rankin. Montreal; G. Clarence. Klmberley; J. No-\nwell, o, Renston. St. Paul; W. K\nEfllng,   Rossiand.\nTHE\nSAVOY\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel\nWhere the Guest Is King\nSteam Heat.    Hot and Cold Running Water in All Rooms,\nMANY ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS OB SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, PROP., NELSON, B.C.\nI\n\u202220,000. before Commissioner R. 8. Lennie tables his report with the city\ncouncil. It ts expected the total will\nreach *26,000'. Considerably more is\nInvolved  rn costs of  private counsel.\nRobert Ridleagh narrowly escaped\ndeath when his car was struck by a\nCNR. freight train at London crossing.\nHeavy   rains   have   latterly   hindered\nwork on the Welland ship  canal.\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nROYAL    CAFE\nClassic   RMtaurant\nRsllnsmsnt and' Dalloacy PrersU\nOPEN  DAY  AND  NIOHT\nLuncheon 11:30 to a ...._  86c\nSpecial Dinners 5:30 to 6  86c\nWe Specialise ln Chop Suey and\nNoodles.\nPHONE   182\nTHE  STANDARD CAFE\n820 Baker Street, Nelson, BC.\nOPEN DAY AND NIOHT\n11:80 to 3:30. Special Lunch .\n8:80 to 8:00 p.m. Supper .....\nPHONE   184\n35C\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nFinest Eqnippsd Restaurant ln ths City\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice  Cream.  Soda  Water\nand Hot Drinks. Nlcs clean furnished\nrooms, hot snd cold water.\nWs Cater to Private Parties.\nKOOTENAY-SLOCAN\nVALLEY RANCHERS\nAPPLAUD TOLMIE\nCheer Mis Policy for Agricultural Development at Picnic at thrums\nREFUSAL OP LIBERALS TO\nPROTECT FARM PRODUCTS\nConservative   Leader   Answers\nRemarks of Premier as Qualification to Hold Office\nTHRUMS. B.C., July 8\u2014Rancher*\nli om point* aU through the Slocan\nvalley and up and down the Kootenay\nYlver, attending the Conservative picnic at the R. W. Chalmers ranch here\nSaturday afternoon, apprectately heard\nHon. 8. F. Tolmie. Conservative leader, discuss hi* plans for the development ot the province's agriculture\nhlter he ls called on to administer the\naffairs of the province, and loudly applauded his assertion that there was\nno need for thla province to import\nthe bulk of Its food supply .Among\nthe audience were many  \"ex-Liberals.\nDr, Tolmie and ms party from Nelson\nTRAIL HOTELS\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. G\nA. r. LEVESQL'B, Prop.\nCOMPLETELY RENOVATED AND REFURNISHED\nHot and Cold Running Water\nSteam Heated\nRotary\nHeadquartera\nEuropean Plan\nCentrally Located\nSample Rooma in\nConnection\nSAVOY HOTEL\u2014D. Drummond, Hamilton; E. Joy, H. Putnam. R. MacLeod,\nL. Terry. Mr. and Mrs. Bt. Clair, Miss\nElls. Spokane: Mrs. w. A. Huity and\nFlorence. Brilliant; Mrs. O, Tralnor.\nttosebery: Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Cole,\nZincton: A. A, Pagdin. ReveUioke; N.\nGlass. Mr. and Mr*. R. Davles W. J.\nLloyd, T. 1, Leach. Mrs. Cole, Vancouver;    J.   Tuccolo,   New   Denver;    C-\nKirk    nnd    family.    Sandon:    Mr.    and I Mrs.   E.   Reld.   D.   Reld\nMrs.   P.   Vlncett   and   daughter.   Gnlo- {Feld,   Medicine   Hat.\nhad; Mrs, R. Armstrong, A. J. Dodd.\nJ. McCallum. Grand Forks; Mr. and\nMrs. W. J. Sullivan, Mr. and Mn.\nMatheson, Trail; J. Greenwood, Slocan\nCity; J, Plnkestlen, Regina; Mrs. E.\nHerchmer. Kaslo; Mrs. White. Car-\nroengay; B. Doyle. Cranbrook; M. Duncan. Mr. and Mrs. Warren. Seattle;\nMr. and Mrs. J. Wood. Elm Creek; Mr.\nand Mrs. R. McQrath, Berkley; Mr. and\n-    _    _    _ .      M    R        c\nHOTEL MEAKIN\nBOOMS BT DAY OB WEEK\n$1 and up.   Nice clean, veil-lighted\nroomB.\nBox   69,   Phone   MM..    Trail,   B.C.\nsteam Heated\nThroughout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nS. L. AND A. OROUTAOE, Props.\nBoi OIK Phone 203 Trail, B.C.\n'Queen's Hotel\nJ   THE   CENTER  OP  CONVENIENCE\n. Sot end cold water In every room.\n4 Bteam   Heated.\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nA  Modern  Brick   Building.\n618 Vernon Street, Nelson, B.C.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephone\nln All Rooma.  Bteam Heated.\nThroughout.\nJ. BLOMBERO, Prop. European Plan.\nQUEEN'S    HOTEL\u2014A.    H.    Davles.    B NEW   GRAND   HOTEL\u2014Mlaa   R,   Hak-\nWlele. A. Johnson. A.^ Smith. &. Kenor, Its, P. Bonamo, Miss Rexlmer. Mr. and\nD. Johnson.   South   Slocan;   J.   Sims,\nE. Cane, Nelson; F. Fredlksen. E Fred-\niksen, Mr. ami Mrs. G. Fredlksen\nTrail; J. Breau, Ymlr; Mr. and Mrs S\nMavor and son. Vancouver.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n3H Blocks Kast ot Poet Office\nBteam Heated. Hot and Cold Water\nRooms by 'day or week.\nAlao Furnished Sultea.\nP.  H, BUSH,  Prop.\nj OCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nThe Home of Plenty\nA. O. TOWNER, Proprietor.\nFifty Rooms of Solid Comfert.\nHeadquarters for Loggers and Miners\nMrs. M. Dickens. C. Jones. Trail; A.\nG. Belcher, Lethbrldge; A. McPherson.\nNakusp; Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Swanson,\nMiss A. Swanson, Slocan City; J.\nBaxter. Winnipeg; J. Forrester. Reglna;\nC Campbell. South Slocan; J. H. Moss.\nPi. sad ena.\nKOOTENAY HOTE\nUNDER   THB   MANAGEMENT   OF\nWILLIAM  JONES\nMOD, CLEAN ROOMS.    SEASONABLE\nBATES.\n(\u2022HONE  IS. tit  VERNON  ST.\nCLASSIFIED\nBULTS.\nADS     BRINQ     RE-\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nBteam   Heated   Rooma  by   tha   Day,\nWeek   or   Month.\nEvery consideration shown to\nguests.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson\nMADDEN HOTEL\u2014C. Anderson. Nelson; N. Poohoff. Winlaw; A. J Rlcftett,\nSpokane; Jack Madden. Vancouver; G.\nGraham. J. Turnley, S. Carmtchacl,\nSouth Slocan; J. Wltcherley, p. Fin-\ndale, Edmonton.\nUNDERWEAR\nfe^    For Man\"or Boy\n\u25a0  MEN'S BOYS'\nBALBRIGGAN C0MB1NA- BALBRIGGAN COMBINATIONS\u2014Short sleeve and TIONS -r *Short sleeve\nknee or short \"| Off and *7t_i*\nsleeve and ankle L*_4*J       knee      I OL\nBALBRIGGAN SHIRTS BALBRIGGAN SHIRTS\nDRAWERS    75C       DRAWERS    50C\nNAINSOOK COMBINA- N ^NSOOK  C O M B IN A-\nTIONS-Not-a-Button   or TIONS-Not-a-     H?L(.\nB.V.D. -I   AA       Button   lfJ^\/\nstyle  I.UU NATURAL MERINO COM-\nNATURAL MERINO COM- B\u2122\u2122S ^ ^\nBINATIONS    or   Shirts      \u00aeleeves ana I   45\nand   Drawers,   n AA        Knee  *'w\nThesuit LtX3X3        BOYS' BLOUSES\nLIGHT  WEIGHT CREAM __ J   _.-\n3S&r\u00bbls7B   75c ,\u201e 1.35\nWe   have   not   seen   any\nDITTO       SHIRTS       OR    values to beat our offering.\nDRAWERS\u2014      -|   (]A    We should like to show them\nEach    laUU   to yoii.\nThese Are Only a Few Lines.   We Carry Others\nCharles Morris, Limited!\nBAKER STREET, NELSON\nJust Outside the High Rent District\nwere met here by Lleut.-CoL Pred\nLister, standing ln thla riding for reelection, and J. H. Schofleld. M. P. P-.\nMayor H. Clark, and Ueut.-Col. Graham\nCrulckshank. of Trail. A contingent\nof Conservative ladles from Nelson wae\nalso present.\nAl'DIKNTE IN  OROVE\nThe picturesque grove waa the setting for the picnic, the speakers standing under a central tree, while the\naudience of around 300 waa seated In\na semi-clrcle within the clearing. Another part of the ranch was parking\nground for a score or two of cars.\nAfter Dr. Tolmie, Dr. L. E. Borden,\nand L. J. Ladner. M P., had spoken,\na short time was devoted to a reception for the Conservative leader.\nFollowing departure of the visitors for\nTrail, Colonel Lister made his address,\nand the picnic wound up with a\nsocial time and the serving of refreshments. ,\nB. I. M. Power of Thrums was chairman of the meeting, and Mr. and Mrs.\nChalmers were busy  host  and  hostess.\nTIRED   OF  DECEPTION,\nSAYS  BORDEN\nDr. Borden, contrasted the large\ngathering to hear pr. Tolmie with the\nfizzle staged hy tie Liberals the previous evening at South Slocan. when\nThrums contributed only two persons\nto the audience. This illustrated, he\nsaid, the point that the people had\nreached their verdict, and were not\nInterested ln what \"tbe Liberals are\ndishing out to them\" thla time. The\nLiberal campaign in the province at\nlarge was one of deception from start\nto finish, he said, and they had come\nwith false utterances so long that the\npeople  \"had now got wise lo them.\"\nHe referred to the large number of\nworkers employed on the roads since\nthe government had decided the election date. The worst feature of the\ngovernment's road administration, he\nsaid, was the enormous waste of\nmoney. Another feature was that\nroads were held out as a reward for\nelecting .Liberals. Hon. A. M. Manson\ntold the people of Princeton that they\nwould probably get trie Hope-Princeton road before the next election, provided they elected Mr. C. H. Tupper.\nINSINCERITY ON\nSOCIAL   LEGISLATION\nAs insincere was their claim with\nregard to social legislation, for most\nof the benefits now enjoyed by the\nworkers and the people generally were\nto he traced to legislation initiated\nby tbe Conservatives.\nThe health Insurance that the Liberals talked of making an inquiry\nabout was taken up years ago by the\nLritish Columbia Medical association,\ncn the executive of which he had\nserved for several years, the association\nholding a survey and engaging acknowledged experts who made lengthy\nstudies and submitted reports. It had\nnow arrived at the stage where it was\nready for general dicussion, and the\nLiberals talked as if they were the\nauthors  of   lt.\nUnder Dr. Tolmie's policy there would,\nbe further social advance, while If\nthis riding sent back Colonel Lister,\nand otherB did the 6ame, the province\nwould develop a prosperity even greater than that of the McBrlde era.\n(Applause).\nDr. Tolmie declared he had never\nattended a political meeting in such\na picturesque setting as this one. He\nnoticed that the beauty was continued\nalong   the  base  line.      (Laughter).\nHIb tour to the present, he said,\nfcad been markedly successful, and\nfrom the Intense Interest the people\nhad shown, it was clear that they\nwere giving the issues deep consideration.\nOne of the Liberals' claims was that\nthey were entitled to all the credit for\nall the social legislation that had ever\nbeen adopted ln British Columbia or\nin Canada, This could be dismissed\n[jtwtfte light of the acore or so of.\n\u25a0ffiactments made by the Conservatives\nln their 14 years of office ln thla\nprovince.\n-MucLEAVS   8LAM\nAT   OTTAWA\n\"Premier MacLean's claim that he\nshould be elected because he stands\nln with the King government and will\nbe able to put through a sale of the\nP. G. \u00a3., and I won't be able to make\nH, ls an awful slam at both the\nDominion and the provincial government,\" said Dr. Tolmie.\n\"Prom what I know of Ottawa, 1 refuse to believe this charge against\nthe King government. Premier Mac-\nLean is judging lt by the system on\nwhich  he  himself  operates.\n\"What a thing to be told the world,\nthat the Canadian government will\nrefuse to pay attention to representations on behalf of the 600,000 people\nof this province lf they elect the\nConservatives!\n'The premier's argument amounts to\nclaim that If the people do not\nelect the Liberals, the Liberal government at Ottawa wlll turn a deaf ear\nto British Columbia. If that is true,\nthen our basis of government is gone,\nahd we should select only governments\napproved by Ottawa!\"\nINEXPERIENCED IN\nMALADMINISTRATION\nAs to his being Inexperienced in administration, as alleged by Premier\nMacLean, perhaps he was in certain\nlines, though having 12 years of\npublic service to hlB 'credit, against\nDr. MacLean's 13'^. True, he had\nbeen ln charge of a great department\nof state at Ottawa, but he was not\nexperienced in having commissions Investigate his department.\nHe was also inexperienced in the\nmatter of speadlhg more than his\nestimates and ln running hts deport'\nment into debt, In vhich respect the\npremier, in administering the province,\nshone.\nNor was he experienced in bungling\nfour out of five of the big projects\nundertaken In his department, as the\nLiberal government at Victoria had\ndone, Sumas and Mervllle being only\ntwo Instances. He had not tried to\ncultivate  the  bottom  of  a lake  while\nmillions of acres of good dry land were\nstill   available.\nHe had also never applied the patronage system, and never discharged an\nemployee on the ground of political\npartisanship.     (Applause).\nDr. MacLean's criticism that Dr.\nTolmie waa using federal members in\nthis campaign, while he himself was\nusing none, tickled the rlaables of the\naudience, when Dr. Tolmie pointed put\nthat there was an excellent reason\nwhy Dr. MacLean was not using tham\n\u2014there was only, one Liberal member\nfrom the province, and he was only\nnow limping toward British Columbia.\nMAN ON LAND\nMIST   BE   STABLE\nOutlining his development policy.\nDr. Tolmie declared he was keenly\ntllve to the necessity of putting the\nman on the land ln a stable position.\nHe described his own up-bringing on\na farm, where, among hia other ditties,\nre was lord high executioner, and how\nthe family ate mutton In all forms all\nsummer lpng till he was ashamed, tp\nlook a sheep in the face, and at other\ntimes specialized on corn beef, while\nif they failed to sell their farm produce in Victoria there was nothing\nelse they could do with lt but eat lt.\nAccordingly he, knew some of the difficulties of the man on the. land, who\nin fact was today still pioneering.\nHis proposal waa to * ascertain the\ncommodities for which a profitable\nmarket could be developed, and then\nto secure their production. In regard\nto cattle, for Instance, while the, four\nstates to the south employed 75 per\ncent of their range, and exported a'\ngreat surplus, this province used only\n6 per cent of Its range, and bought\nabroad. Surely both the raising of\nvarious meat animals, and dairying,\ncould be profitably developed to a\nmuch larger scale. Then there was\nthe example of Washington, that produced various specialties, such as asparagus, which even went to Ontario,\nto the detriment of the Ontario growers.\nPROTECTION AGAINST\nIH MPING\n\"We should have the assistance of\nour friends at Ottawa with a dumping\nclause,\" said Dr. Tolmie. who said\nhe told the people or Saanlch, at his\nnomination, that he was going to\nOttawa next day to work fQr the dumping clause. Tlie result was that next\nday Premier MacLean came out with\na statement that he was appointing\nMr. Pattullo to personally represent the\nprovince at the conference at Ottawa\nMr. Pattullo did not attend the conference, and Premier King put off Mb\ndecision from day to day, \"tp fool us,\nor perhaps I should say, to gratify\nhis prairie supporters,\" and let the\nsession end  without doing anything.\nYet, said Dr. Tolmie, when Ontario\nasparagus was selling at four bunches\nfor 35 cents, Carloads from. Washington\nTolmie said proof was presented to '\ncommission    that    Washington\nwere dumped in Canada at a prtce I\n40 cents, when the box itself costf\ncents.\n\"Let  us  wake  up in  Canada,\" _\nclaimed   the  Conservative   leader,  \"\u00ab\u25a0\nrun   our   country   for   tha   benefit |\nthe   people   who   live   ln   it\u2014for   I\npeople    who   have    to    dig   out\nstumps,   and   who   have   to   face\nyears, and every difficulty.\"\nMill.IONS   POR\nIOREION   GOODS\nThe   millions   of   dollars   spent\nCanadians   for   foreign   mai^UfactUJH\nwas next referred to by the leader, \u00abH\nadvocated a definite policy of utllizH\nraw   materials  at   home,  and   buildj\nup   industries   here,   which   themself\nfyrnlshed  large consuming  markets I\nother lines of production, chief amj\nthem  agriculture.\nTouching   on   the   patronage   ayi*>\nnew  ln  force,  Dr. Tolmie said lt v\nabominable    that    a    rancher    ahoT\nhave to go hat in hand to a forenf\nand make a pretence as to his polld\nfeelings before he could get a Job.!\nwhich he was justly entitled. If ariys|\nwas.     (Applause >. ^^\nSimilarly, the civil service should. I\nsecure.     Postmaster-General   Veniot l\nthe   King   government  admitted\n400    postmasters    and    postmistress\nsome of them a quarter of a centjH\nIn service, and some pf them, aged\/^\nalleged    political   partisanship.      \"T\ndisgraceful   conduct   will   not   be\npea ted    at   Victoria   when    the   C\nservatlves   take   office,\"    declared\nTolmie,  who referred  to his recordl\nnever  having dismissed  a federal cL\nservant on the ground of partlssnshfl\nIn   general,   the   law   would   be   .\nministered   honestly   and   fearlessly.\nDr.   Tolmie  said   Colonel   Lister\nmade  a  splendid  record   overseas,\nan equally good one at Victoria, wl\nhe   was  found   to  be  honest,  capaJgf]\nand  a  credit to the  riding.        \u25a0\nHe  declared everything pointed\ngreat   victory,   and   urged   his   hssr|\nto  do  their  part  to send   Col.  \t\nback with a bumper majority for fid\ngovernment. (Prolonged applause).]\nLIBERALS   WANTED ^^^^\nTOLMIE,  SAYS  LADNER _\nMr. Ladner, speaking briefly, declafl\nthat by every major test the MacL\ngovernment wag found wanting. Unl\nthe constitution, it was the right a\nthe duty of the electorate to Judge]\ngovernment on Its record\u2014by perfot\nance and not by promise.\nDealing    with    the    enormous\npendlture   of   the   government  ln\nlast   13   years\u2014with   borrowings,  aad\nGOO.OOO\u2014the   government's   excuse  tl\nIt  had  spent a lot  for  roa\u00a3s did L\nhold   water,  for  its  road   expendltuH\nln   the   13  years  Were  only  \u2666H.OOfM\nof that total.\nIf   Premier   MacLean   Jtad   to   __\ntend   that Dr,  Tolmie  shpuld not]\nwere dumped on the market and broke   \">\u00ab.\u00ab premier on account of Inexnesi\nthe price, imported No, 2 strawberries\nwere selling ln competition with No.\n1 Canadian and depressing the price\nof the latter, and various Imported\nfruits, of Inferior grades, sold heavily\nby advertising, left no market for\nthe Canadian article when lt later\narrived. Por instance, California apricots, arriving first, filled thc demand\nbefore the Okanagan came on. leaving\nno market for the latter.\nLIBERALS AGAINST\nl.OIAI,  DUTIES\nWhen Tom Coventry, Conservative,\nat the late provincial session. Introduced a resolution asking the Ottawa\ngovernment to place on agricultural\nproducts from the United States the\nEemc duties that the United states\nplaces on the Canadian agricultural\nproducts, every Conservative member\nvoted for it, but the Liberals, headed\nby Premier MacLean, and Hon. E. D.\nBarrow, voted en bloc against giving\nCnnadlan producers an equal deal.\nReferring  to  the  Dcmlnlon-wide tar\nence,   then   he   was   hard   up   for\nargument, commented Mr. Ladner,\nsaid he had himself heard Hon. W.I\nFielding say in the house of comrnojl\nthat of all  the Canadian ministers i\nagriculture   In   this   generation,   I\nequalled    Dr.   Tolmie,   and   put   m\nLiberals themselves would like to h*fl\nhad    him   occupy    that   position\nthem.     (Applause).\n\"Ladles  and  Gentlemen,  the  resptfl\nslblllty  Is yours, to return Dr, Tolifl\nfor  good  government,\"  concluded\nfederal   member. _\nChairman  Power  assured  Dr. TohfJ\nthat the riding would give Col. LU\nthe  biggest majority he  had ever\ncelved.\ni\ni\n\"Light    Horse\"    Harry    Wilson,   -\ntain  of   the  Army   football   team   .<\u25a0\nyear and one of the greatest all-aroul\nathletes ln the history of the Mllltsl\nAcademy  at  West Point,  N.  Y\u201e Is\nfirst  Army  man' ever  to  receive\nsabers.     He   was   honored   with    \u00ab\nEdgerton saber,  presented  annually\n,-_ i  _  i \" ui r\"w,\"\u2014\"\u2122\"'\"'uc \"\"\"j the   football   captain,   and   the   An\niff inquiry held shortly ufter the war,   Athletic    Association    saber    for    J\nwhen   Sir   Henry  Drayton   and   himself   around excellence.   The A. A. A. \u00ab\u201e1\nheld hearing all over  the country, Dr. i ls considered the highest award tfmoL\n\u2022*m*****~****\u00bb^-^mm99^\u2014%u^amm^\u20149m^ lh,ose_mad> bv the Athletic Asaoclatlt|\nBefore You Go\nPHONE 144\nYour vacation will be juat that\nmuch more enjoyable if your Daily\nNews accompanies you.\nPhone 144, give us the dates of your\ndeparture and return. We will do the\nrest.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nCirculation Department\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\nThey Mutt Make Good\n\" 'iimiraiEr aura\nSell That\nUsed Car\nBy telling about it in a|\nDaily News\nWANT\nAD\n(ash Rat,: I; WorA, (! Times\nfor \u00abl.\n___________________\n^^^^^1\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 9, 1928\nTOLMIE DENOUNCES\nPATRONAGE SYSTEM\nROSSLAND SPEECH\nWill Play No Favorites; Schofleld Ig Deservedly Popular, Says\nLADNER COMPARES TAXES\nWITH OTHER PROVINCES\nBorden Would Keep Insurance\nOut of Politics;  Campbell\nUrges Road\nROSSLAND. B.C., July 8\u2014\"There H\nno member ol the Victoria houae more\ndeecnradly popular than James H. Schofleld,\" declared Hon. Dr. S. F. Tolmie,\nln Knight* of Pythla* hall Saturday\nerentng. The speaker stated the Con-\nl**rv\u00bbtt?e candidate In Rossland-Trall\ntreated his colleagues ln a manly way,\n\"e\u2014 rstdy to meet them halfway, and\nwhen he wanted consideration was always accorded It.\nI The pedple of British Columbia had\n,come to * time of decision. On th*\neighteenth of July, they would hav*\nan opportunity to say lf they approved\nof the way ln whloh the Liberal government had mismanaged the affairs of\nthe province; of the way ln which contracts had been let to Its friends Instead of the lowest bidder; of the limited population of 600.000 people in this\nVast province: of the unbuslness like\nadministration of the P. O. E.; of the\nbroken promises of 191(1, 1920 and 1934:\nand of the ones being made in 1028.\nwhich would suffer a like fate. When\nthe time came, the speaker believed, the\n'people of the province would show that\nIt was Indeed time for a change.\nnumerous dispatches were appearing\nIn the papers to- the effect that Harry\nOale wa* taking to himself credit for\nAppropriations for wharfs, cooling plant*\nHind other federal grants for the West\nKootsnav district. Dr. Tolmie assured\nhjs audience that there was In the\n(house no more painstaking, hardworking member than ' W. K. Esling, to\nWho** unceasing efforts was due all\ncredit' for any favors obtained by the\ndistrict.\nDEBT  1NCHKASKS\nThe Liberals claimed that prosperity\nhad come to the province under their\nregime, but, said the Conservative\nleader, the provincial debt In the 12\nyear* of Liberal regime Increased from\n|IB,\u00ab77,000 to $85,435,000. though by\nsome clever manipulation of figures,\nthe minister of finance waa making lt\nlook considerably term. The per capita\npu Jumped from 114.40 to $40 10 In\nthe same length of time, and was now\nhigher than ln any other province ln\nill Canada.\nContracts undertaken exceeded the\namount of estimates by large sums.\nrhe Sumas scheme was a fair example\n;>f how the people had been mulcted, to\nsay nothing of the Cariboo road and\nHher *uch prelects, declared Dr. Tolmie.\nEXCEED  ESTIMATES\nThe first rule of a sane administration was to vote money with which to\ncarry on for the fiscal y\u00bbar. In th*\nfederal house any minister who exceeded the estimated cost of carrying on\ntils department would find himself ln\nserious trouble. It did not bother\nthem any ln Victoria.\nEveryone was familiar with the maladministration of the P. O. E, the re-\nlease of Foley, Welsh Is Stewart from\ntheir agreement and the futll* attempts\nto complete and operate lt. until now\nIta Indebtedness was $58,000,000.\nTh* return of the Peace River block\n\u201eas urged by Lieutenant-Governor\nDunsmuir, the late Sir Richard McBrlde, Leon J. Ladner and others,\nwhu* Dr. Tolmie had himself placed on\nthe order paper last year the question\nwhich had brought thinga to a head.\nThe Liberals had never Interested themselves ln this matter till within the\nlast two years. Dr. McLean promised\nto reduoe taxation by means of th* sale\nof the P. O. E. and the return of the\nraUway lands. Mr. Dunning, minister\nof railways, stated on the floor of the\nhouse that the sale of the road had not\nbeen consumated, and would have to be\nratified by the house of commons,\nwhich would not meet until next January. The Dominion records showed\nthst the cost ot administering the railways lands far exceeded the receipts\nJrom them.\nHOINO TO WIN\n\"Dr. McLean says the Liberals have\nno confidence ln me.. I didn't expect\nthey would have,\" said Dr. Tolmie.\nWhUe I am leader of the party It wlU\nb* run to our own satisfaction\u2014not\ntheir*. I am throwing my 226 pounds\nInto the fray and Intend to win!\nThe premier had remarked that ne\nwasn't going to worry about criticisms\nfrom \"Uttle fellows\" who had never\nhandled over $3000 ln their lives. This\nwas ln poor taste from a man In his\nposition, asserted the speaker. Laurier\nI and McDonald were both poor men.\nand the country had been built up by\npoor men.\nDEVELOP MARKETS\nThe government should always be\non the qui Vive to further the Interests of sll the people\u2014alway* on the\nlookout for a market for Its product*.\nZach part of the country was dependent on the other, dlrscUy or Indirectly.\nThere were two many leaks. The\nbest youth of the country was going\nsouth  of  the  line.\nSeventy-five per cent of the meats\nconsumed here were brought from\noutside the province. In eplte of the\nfact thst within the borders were\n180,000 acres or range land with\nthousands of acres going to waste.\nMining was one of the greatest industries ln the Dominion. One of\nthe alms of the Conservative party\nwhen It was returned would be to\ngive assistance to the man making a\nbeginning, Imposing taxation on the\nman who made good and oould afford\nto pay.\nCapital was needed In the province\nand must not be frightened away by\nhigh taxation. B. C. must offer equal\nInducements with Ontario and Quebec\nThe Trail smelter was doing wonderful\nwork a* a manufacturer of raw\nmaterials'.\nM.AV  NO  FAVORITES\nThe Liberals said lf the Conserve'\ntlves were elected all road work would\nr.top. It frequently did under Liberal\nregime\u2014the day after election said Dr.\nTolmie. The Conservative party was\nopposed to the patronage system and\nwould play no fauorltes. No civil\nservice employee would be discharged\nexcept for incompetence.\nProspect were good throughout the\nprovince' for, the Conservatives to be\nreturned with a good working majority\nL. A. Campbell, who acted as chairman of the meeting, thought that\nsince the one big industry of this\nsection, smelting and refining, paid\n! one-tenth the total revenue of the\nprovince, this district was certainly\nentitled to better roadw. Motor cars\nhad come to stay snd were increaslne\ndally. At a recent meeting of the\nI associated boards of trade, Lieut.-Oov\nJohnson' of Washington stated that\n$150,000 had been set aside to complete  th*  state   road   from   Marcus  to\n.\n...\u25a0\u2014II..HI       I.I II.M,    .1    ,111 p.l l|\t\nPatterson, and seemed anxious to know\nIf Britiah Columbia would build a\nsimilar road. This was one of the\nthings whleh the' Conservatives Would\ndo when they esme Into power. Another was fixing th* road between\nRossiand snd Trail. The company\nhad been given the assurance that\nthe road would be hard surfaced, but\nIs was now In worse shape than ever.\nWhen that wa* repaired, he wanted\nto see some work don* on the Ross-\nland'Nelson road.\nliORDEN  PRAISES  TOLMIE\nDr. L. E. Borden of Nelson paid\ntribute to the many stifling qualities\nof Dr. Tolmie, whom he characterised\naa an ideal leader, one who was worth\nfollowing, Such men as Hon. W. S.\nFielding had pronounced him tme of\nthe out-standing men of Canada.\nThe Liberals had posed as the friend\nof labor so long that they had almost\ncome to believe tt themselves. Dr.\nMacLean ln a recent speech had gone\nbo far as to say that ln no place ln\nCanada had the Conservatives enacted\nany legislation which was beneficial\nto labor. The doctor then went on\nto enumerate tbe various pieces of\nsocial legislation which had been enacted   under   Conservative   rule.\nThe speaker dealt at some length\non the proposed health Insurance,\nstating that ln his opinion lt should\nbe kept out of politics and worked\nout between the three most Interested\n\u2014labor, medicine and the state.\nVarloua items of alleged bribery were\ncited by Dr. Borden, who also took up\nsome cases of mal-admlnlstratlon of\nthe Mothers' Pensions set.\nIn   conclusion,   the   doctor   pledged\nhimself,   If   elected,   to   work   for   the\ngood   of   the   whole   district,   not  just\nmerely Nelson.\nVANCOUVER  READY\nL. J. Ladner, M. P.. on being introduced, said he had come from Vancouver to bring a message of good\nnews\u2014six Conservatives would be elected In Vancouver clty. With one-hall\nthe population of the entire province,\nVancouver had gone without cabinet\nrepresentation for six years, and was\nmore than ready for a change.\nUntil the electors rise to statesmanlike conception of the affairs of\nstate, we will not have statesmanlike\nlegislation,\" Mr. Ladner stated. \"The\npeople must learn to think for themselves. One unfailing test which may\nbe applied ls the record of the government. Apply Intelligent thought to\na review of what the 12 years of\nLiberal regime have meant. Responding to a bribe of roads or bridges ls\nputting approval on corruption.\"\nEXPENSES ENORMOI'S\n\"Compare the taxes of British Columbia with those in other provinces\nor with those In B. c. under Conservative rule\u2014three times what they\nwere ln 1918 or twice what they are\nin other provinces. Just for one example, the total ordinary expenses for\nthe year ln this province are $20,000-\n000. In Alberta they are $11,000; In\nSaskatchewan, with twice our population, lt ls only $12,000; and ln Manitoba, only $8,000.\n\"The government would try to sidestep the Issue If it could. Don't be\nbound by bUnd party prejudice. Listen\nto the candidates and their leaders\nMake them fasten their arguments on\nthe essential things,\" urged Mr Ladner.\n\"No Liberal with a high sense of\nhonor can support the MacLean government, and the people as a whole\n\u00bbre proclaiming 'Its tlm* for a\nchange I'\"\nCANADIAN IN\nTIE FOR CONAN\nDOYLE SHIELD\nWiU Shoot Off Monday Against\nTwo   King's   Prize\nWinners\nTRAIL, B.C., July 8\u2014Trail's new\n$35,00 city haU wlll be completed and\nready to occupy some time before the\nend of this month, says W. E B\nMoneypenny, city clerk. Although It\nwas first thought the building would\nbe completed bjf July 18, the contractors later announced they would\nbe unable to finish the work by that\ndate.\nWhUe the exterior of the two-storey\nbrick structure has been completed\nthe contractors have yet to do a little\nplastering and lay the floors. Th*\nelectrical and plumbing fixtures have\nalready   been   Installed.\nROSSLAND NOTES\nROSSLAND, B.C.. July 8\u2014W. A. Elletson and family, accompanied by\nGordon German and W. A. Darby,\nspent the week-end at Christina Lake.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. O. M. Wadds of Trail\nare the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nBrett.\n'\u2022' *   \u2022\nJames H. Schofleld of Trail spent\nFriday ln the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. W. Schorlemner spent\nthe week-end at Christina Lake.\n\u2022 ,   ,\nMr. and Mrs. Isaac Glover and Miss\nDora Mlllett spent Friday evening In\nTrail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs.   Ous   Hansen  was  a   week-end\nvisitor ln Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. J. Clegg and his son, C. H. Clegg,\nspent the day ln Trail.\n\u2022 *.   \u2022\nBig Conservative Rally and Smoker,\nln Velvet Hall. Rossiand. Wednesday\nevening, July 11. Cards, Music, Refreshments       (4714-3-71)\nMaple Leafs and\nUniteds to Mix\nin Trail Soccer\nTRAIL, B.C., July 8\u2014Unltedi and\nMaple Leafs are due to mix in tomorrow's ctty league soccer match whleh\nts to be played at 6 o'clock. Recent\nmatches showed that later kick-oft\ntimet Interfered with play,\nHI. tills AND\nRANGERS\nHearts and Rangers are expected to\nplay   In   Wednesday's   schedule   fixture.\nMonday's teams wlll be:\nUnlteds\u2014T. McVle. goal; Rutledge\nand Kitchen, bocks; Crelghton. A.\nLaurie, and Morrison, halves; Root,\nDavis. Bowkett, Thompson and Leckle\nor Prosch, forwards.\nMaple Ireafs\u2014BslUle, goal; 8am-\nmons and Leckle, backs; Kennedy, Balfour and Chandler, halves; Illott. Bond.\nBrennan.  Rothery nnd  Baldy. forwards.\nReferee\u2014W.  Llghtbcdy.\nRecent work on Z* Mary's roads\nhas resulted  In great Improvement.\nTOLMIE LEAVES\nFOR BOUNDARY\nON HOME LAP\nThree More Meetings for Today; Leader Motors to Slocan Lake Sunday\nHon. 8. F. Tolmie, Conservative leader, who addressed meetings Saturday\nat South Slocan construction camp.\nThrums, Rossiand, and Trail, returning afterward to Nelson, enjoyed a\nmotor Jaunt to Slocan lake points\nyesterday, ln company with party\nfriends.\nHe mode short visits at Slocan City,\nSilverton and New Denver. On the\nreturn trip the party were guests at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar\nJamieson, at Passmore. and the neighborhood assembling, Dr. Tolmie Rave\na short address on \"The Future of\nBritish   Columbia.\"\nThe leader,, and his son, w. Tolmie.\nleft last night by the Kettle Valley\ntrain, for Grand Porks, Dr. Tolmie\nhaving meetings today at Grand\nForks, Rock Creek, and Greenwood. A.\nB. McKelvle. of Vancouver Province,\nls In the party, having accompanied the\nConservative leader since the ttart of\nthe several weeks' tour.\nDr. L. t. Borden, tyeut.-Col. Fred\nLister, L. J. Ladner. M. P.. who Is to\nassist ln the campaign further ln this\ndistrict, and many local Conservatives\nactive ln the campaign, were at the\nstation last night to say farewell to\nDr. Tolmie, and to promise him wires\nof  congratulation  on election  night.\nAPPRECIATIVE CROWD\nATTENDS BAND CONCERT\nA  large  and  appreciative   crowd   attended  the Nelson City  band  concert\nat  the Lakeside Park yesterday afternoon.\nThe program Included: March \"Triumphal,\" by M. H. rubble, \"waltz.\n\"Impassioned Dream,\" by Rosar; cornet\nsolo with band, \"The Holy city,\" by\nStephens Adams; overture. \"Frolic of\nthe Palrle*.\" by Carl Blgge; \"Joy to\nthe World.\" c. l. Barnhouse; and\nmarch,   \"Kootenay  Rules,\"  Huff.\nBODY LETHBRIDGE\nBOY DROWNED AT\nKASLOGOES HOME\nInterment May Take  Place in\nTennessee of Tommie\nLanier\nKASLO. B.C., July \u00ab-Body of Tommie Lanier. 12-year-old son of Mr. and\nMrs. T. S. Lanier of Lethbrldge, who\nwas drowned while playlnu on a raft\nhero last Wednesday was taken away\non Friday by the family. It is understood that Interment wlll take place\nln Tennessee, the former home of the\nLanlcrs.\nThe boy and his mother and younger\nbrother were visiting in Kaslo.\nTommie was on a rafwnear the shore.\nBecoming frightened when lt rocked, he\nJumped Into the water. Victoria Berry-\nman, aged 0 years, swam to hla rescue\nbut had to give up when the drowning boy dragged her down. Victoria's\nolder sister and a number of men were\nalso  unsuccessful.\nSilverton Man Has\nRibs Broken When\nCar Goes Over Bank\nSILVERTON. B.C., July 8\u2014 H. Cooper\nls confined to the New Denver hospital\nwith three broken ribs, received ln an\naccident on Tuesday, when he went over\nthe bank wtth his car near the Bosun\nmine.\nTrail News of the Day!\nThis column ls conducted by Miss\nL. M. Anthony of Tadanac. All\nnews of a social nature, lnoludlug\nreceptions, entertainments, personal\nItems, marriages, etc., occurring ln\nTrail and Tadanac, wlU appear ln\nthis column. Just 'phons Miss\nAnthony at her residence. She\nwill also handle any advertisements\nappearing under TraU News of the\nDay.\nTRAIL. B.C.. July 8.~Mrs. R. Blols\nend Noble Binns motored to Vancouver Wednesday, where they wilt meet\nMrs. Binns. They wlll be away two\nweeks.\nMrs. W. B. Hunter, accompanied by\nher sister, Miss N. Blackwood, returned\nto her home on Ravine street Friday.\nMiss Blackwood wlll stay with her\nBister for a short visit.\nMrs, C. Brett and baby of Rossiand\nwere  visitors In  the city on Friday.\nMrs. K. Dewar and son Donald\nDewar of Rossiand were visitors in the\nctty Friday.\nMiss Doris Mitchell motored to her\nhome at Robson for the  week-end.\nS. S. McDiarmid motored to his home\nat Robson on Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. T, W. Blngay. the\nMioses Doris, Marjorie and Katherllne\nand Betty Bingay on Saturday motored\nto their camp at Christina Lake, where\nthey wlll spend the rest of the holiday.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. W. B. Wados left Saturday to spend the week-end in Ross-\nland   at   the   home  of   Mr.   and   Mrs\nC.   Brett.\nA. E. Winter, of Sydney, Australia,\nworld's record holder for the hop,\nstep and Jump, has a kangaroo as a\ncoach. Winter's mark ls 60 feet 11 3-16\nInches.\nToday's Specials\nNew stock of Dishes, Furniture,\nChairs, Clothes, and other things\ntoo numerous to mentlow.\nCome and get a bargain at the\nBUSY   BEE\nSrd Avenue, East Trail\nThere wlll be good fruit and grain\ncrop \u25a0 ln   Niagara   peninsula   this   fear.\nIn an auto accident John Sirone\nof Thorold had hla right ear partly\ntorn off.\nWHERE YOU CAN BUY\nThe Daily News\nOUTSIDE NELSON\nCALGARY\u2014National Newt Stand.\nCRANBROOK\u2014\nBeattle Noble Drug Oo.\nCranbrook Drug Co.\nJ. R. Macdonald.\nCRESTON\u2014Creston   Drug  Co.\nELKO\u2014Miss J.  Swop*.\nFERNIE\u2014w. A. Ingram.\nORAND PORKS\u2014R. P. Petri*.\nWoodland _ Co.\nKASLO\u2014H.   Pmklns.\nKIMBERLEY\u2014Klmberley   Drug Co.\nLUMBERTON\u2014Vincent Downey.\nMICHEL\u2014Russell Cosgrove.\nPROCTER\u2014W. A. Ward. Outlet\nHotel.\nROSSLAND\u2014I. J. Trembath.\nUrquhart's  Drug  Stors.\nSANDON\u2014W.   J.   McDonald.\nW. J. Parham.\nSLOCAN CITY\u2014W. Greenwood.\nSILVERTON-W.   E.  Marshall.\nSOUTH SLOCAN\u2014J. B. Bell.\nJ. D. Yeatman's Store.\nSPOKANE\u2014S. P. Jscoy.\nTRAIL\u2014Hunt  Bros.\nW. O. Kennedy.\nMargeson's Drug Store.\nTRAIL EAST\u2014Shlmmell's Store.\nTRAIL GULCH\u2014Kootenay Hotel.\nVANCOUVER\u2014P. O. News Stand.\nUniversal News Co.\nWARDNER\u2014Walter McKenzle.\nYAHK\u2014Ray   Buriingham\nYMIR\u2014John Daly.\nmmmmmmmmmTTi---^*-^^^\nSTAGE\nVEKNON-EDOEWOOn\nMeets sll Arm* L\u00bbks Boats.\nLeaves Edgewood\u2014Tuesdsys, Tnanwtei*\ntod  Saturdays.\nLeaves  Vernon\u2014Mondays,   Wednesday*.\nand Fridays.\nEipress and small freight hands**.\nNELS0N-SAND0N\nEXPRESS\nPhone 77, Nelson, or phone M\u00bb\nNew Denver. Leave Slocan Ottf\n7 a.m.; leave Nelson 1 p.m. Usual\nreasonable rates. We pride ourselves on giving good service.\nCLEVER & COULTER\nPIANO MOVING i\nIs a part of our transfer business to\nwhich we devote especial attention.\nWe give our personal supervision to\nevery order for piano removal and\nemploy only the most experienced met*\nIn this line to do the work, Ii yon\nwish your pianos transferred to some\nother location bettor have ua do tho\nwork. That will Insure the most ax-\npert and careful service.\nWEST TRANSFER CO, \\\nCHRYSLER\nPresents entirely new style creations\nin the fine car field\nFutures\u2014New Chrysler \"75\"\u2014 New\nCbrpUr-created slender profile radiator\n\u2014tbtrmostattcally controlled integral radiator stutters\u2014mm \"air-wing' full-crowned\nfinders \u2014 new longer, lower, roomier bodies\n\u2014upholstered optionally with fine mohair or\nbroadcloth\u2014new arched window silhouette\u2014new \"Silver-Dome\" high-compres-\nlion 75 b.p. engine, using any gasoline\u20147-\nbeartng counterwtighted crankshaft\u201475 and\nmere miles an hour\u2014new longer chassis with\nnew duplex-channel frame \u2014 new light-\naction internal expanding Chrysler hydraulic Jour-wheel brakes\u2014shock absorb-\nirs, front and nor\u2014spring ends anchored\nin lit* rubber.\nNew Chrysler \"75\"Prices\u2014 Royal Sedan,\n$1985; 2-passenger Coupe (with rumble | seat), $1985; Roadster (with\nrumble teat), $2010; Town Sedan,\n$2140 (wire wheels extra). All prices\nf. o. b. Windsor, Ontario, including\nstand-id'factory equipment (Jreightand\ntexts extra).\nTHESE two entirely new Chrysler Sixes\u2014thc \"75\" and the\n\"65\"\u2014arc deliberately designed and executed to inspire\npublic admiration to such a pitch that they will immediately\nsupersede all that has gone before and usher into existence an\nentirely new motoring vogue.\nStriking new standards of beauty have been created in these\nnew Chrysler Sixes, even when thc artistry of a great industry\nhas seemed to be at its height.\nThc wholly new Chrysler style creations, now shown for thc\nfirst time, represent unusual advances over even Chrysler power,\nspeed and efficiency.\nWc believe that, at their new low prices, they demonstrate that\nChrysler engineering, research and manufacturing again have\ngreatly increased thc buying power of thc dollar when invested\nin motor cars.\nWc arc confident that all who arc even remotely interested in\nthe progress of motor car artistry will find themselves amply\nrepaid by their immediate inspection of these two new Chrysler\nstyle achievements.\nFeatures \u2014 New Chrysler \"65 \" \u2014 New\nlarger engine \u2014 65 h.p. \u2014\"Silver-Dome\"\nhigh-compression head using any gasoline\n\u2014i' and mort milts per hour\u2014counter-\nweighted 7-bearing crankshaft, only car\nal or near this price with this cosily feature; new, slcnJtrprofile radiator\u2014nciiboul-\nshaped lamps\u2014beautiful cowl moulding and\ncou I lamps\u2014WU . linger chassis and longer_\nu ider, roomier bodies\u2014new arched window\nsilhouette\u2014new \"air-wing\" full-crownti\nlenders\u2014new internal expanding Chrysler hydraulic four-wheel brakes, unaffected hy weather conditions\u2014shock absorbers, front and rear\u2014spring ends anchored\nin Ine rubber, instead of metal shackles.\nNew Chrysler \"b_\\\\\" Prices-Business\nCoupe, $1325; Roadster, $1350; 2-\ndoor Sedan, $1360; Touring Car,\n$1370; 4-door Sedan, $1460; Coupe\n(with rumble seat), $1460. All prket\nf.o.b. Windsor, Ontario, including standard factory equipment (Jrtifbl and\nlaxtt txliai. \"**\nDominion Garage & Sales Company\nTRAIL, B.C.\nt_^J_M___i__\n_______________________\n__________\n I\t\n r*BJI rV-t\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 9,1928\nffiffK   DAILY  NEWSt\nM H*w\u00bb Publ\ndr. HnirWfi, and In no oa*. to ladl\nWaal \u00bb*mb*r* of th*. staff.\nMvattUot   rat*   oaM*   and   Ai.o.\nit*   ot   ctrculaUon   mailed   oh\nor mar b* awn at th* offio* of\nP*r*bl* In Adtanc*\nAaiK Mm \u00abf nnntaiw*.\nMONDAY,  JULY  t,   1928\nThe\nlighter Side\nWisdom:  An  aftermath  of blisters.\nDress simply. The more expensive\nthe saddle, the cheaper It makes a\nplug pony took.\nThe measure of a man ls the alae\nof  those whose  criticism  can  get  hla\ngoat.\nSome old folk are In the way and\ntame still have a little property to\ndivide.\nThe flrat thing a Job-hunting graduate learns ls that sheep-skin la lees\nImportant than sole leather.\nDumping Anywhere in Can-\nada Hurts Growers Everywhere in Dominion\n3. K. Grant, markets commlaaloner\n\u00bbt Calgary, la quoted aa stating that\nno American strawberries are being\ndumped  ln Calgary,\nVary likely, not, but whether Calgary\ntt being flooded with American berries\nor not has Uttle real bearing on the\nanti-dumping   question.\nBerries and other fruits, and vegetables, are being dumped at other\nplaces ln Canada and this dumping ls\ninjuring the Canadian producer. Directly s> shipment of American produce\nla dumped in Canada lt automatically\nMara down the price of that commodity, and of others akin to it, all\nover the Dominion.\nThe fact is that the anti-dumping\n\u2022ct has had the teeth taken out of\nlt by .the Liberal government at Ottawa, to please Its friends in the\nprairie provinces.\nAnd lt la also a fact beyond question\nthat effective anti-dumping measures\nare essential unless we are going to\nleave our Canadian producers at the\nmercy of the American dumpers. Right\nat this moment, the Canadian manufacturer of a non-perishable product,\nsuch, as canned goods, has under the\nact and on account of the nature of\n&ta product, the most effective antidumping protection. Yet this protection Is denied the fruitgrower and\nfarmer-\nIt Is perfectly true that the matter\nie a federal one, but Liberal cabinet\nministers and Liberal speakers In thla\nprovince show an astonishing disregard for the Interests of our own\npeople when they, tn effect, support\nOttawa's action by endeavoring to make\nlt appear that our industry Is not\ninjured.\nAh, Well; very few of the big\nJobh sre held by men whose clothes\nresembel those ln the magazine advertisement. \u2022\nIf he is rich enough to scorn a sec\nond-hand car, his wife probably has a\npassion for second-hand furniture.\nVACATION: A PERIOD DURINO\nWHICH YOU SPEND YOUR 8AVINOS\nTO IMPRESS PEOPLE WHO ARE\nSPENDING THEIRS TO IMPRESS YOU\nModernism: Peeling as well as you\nshould; buying a bottle of something\nthe ad. said would make you feel\nbetter.\nGiving an account at the Judgment\nfor every Idle word spoken won't be a\nnew experience for anybody who has\nbeen a candidate.\nOne reason why business ts alack ln\nsummer is because the boss doesn't en\ncourage anything that might Interfere\nwith golf.\nA collection of news photographs from\nChina contains one of Miss Sun. Apparently the Chinese beauty contests\ncover more territory thsn ours.\nBefore the snake strikes you his\ntall ls rattled. In the case of the\ndriver who strikes you, it's his head\nthat's rattled.\nThere are Just two classes: Those\nwho make more money than you think\nthey do, and those who make lees than\nyou think they do.\nDon't feel too superior to the allon\nOovernment thought him worthy tc\ncome in, and you were sneaked ln by\nthe stork.\nLots of times you can't tell whether\nthe boss Is thinking or Just practicing\nto win laurels as a flag-pole sitter\nCorrect this sentence: \"It Isn't the\nmemory of my own youth,\" said the\nman, \"that makes me uneasy when\ndaughter ls out with a boy.\"\nThe Loewenstein Mystery\nIt looks as tf the Loewenstein death\nwill become one of the world's unsolved  mysteries.\nSuicide, following a series of financial reverses. Is now becoming a fairly\ngenerally accepted theory, but as the\n\"world's richest man\" still has thirty\nof forty millions of dollars, his financial stringency hardly seems an acceptable explanation for any suicidal\nbrainstorm.\nBui queer things happen ln this\nold world of ours. Most of us still\nremember the Barney Barnato incident\nBarnato waa a long way from starvation and was still possessed much of\nthe physical and mental vigor which\nhad carried him to heights of huge\nfinancial  success.\n\u25a0\u00ab n hi   i \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 i    sjsfj    \u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\nAirplane and Radio in Kootenay Election\nKootenay ls getting all the thrills\nof modern election methods.\nHere ls our good friend. Sid Leary.\nswooping from place to place through\nhla riding ln an airplane, and In the\nColumbia riding we have Mrs. Gladys\nKispeth Cross, the Independent candidate, not only using an airplane, but\ndoing much of her speech-making to\nthe Columbians by standing In a tiny\nroom down at Vancouver and declaiming Into a radio receiver.\n'Incidentally, Mra. Cross seems to be\nputting a lot of zest Into the Columbia riding election. While Independents with their cheery Uttle personal\ncampaigns don't usually get very far\nthey do put spice Into what otherwise might be a very flat and tasteless\n\u2022taction dish\n(Prom The ' Daily News of July 9,19 IB 1\n*The'^onsoUdated Mining\"* Smelting\ncompany recently purchased the Pleur-\nspar property on the north side of the\nKettle  river.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRalph Forrester met with a slight\naccident yesterday when a horse he\nwas riding bolted and dragged him\nfor some distance.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nBorn, at Exter. England to Capt.\nand Mrs. B. T. O'Grady on July 6, a\ndaughter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nEdward Ferguson has been appointed\nto succeed B. 8. Jarvis as government\nagent.\nI THIRTY YEARS AGO\n\u00bb         ,\n(from   The   Weely Tribune of July 0. OB)\nEarly this weak the Hall mines mm-\nsgement  made  a  cut  of  30  per  cent\nte the wages of the men employed\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nBorn. In this city on July B. to Mr.\nAnd Mrs   H. C. Cummlngs. a daughter.\nget\nA . 6-foot ledge of ore valued at\n\u20229115 \u2022 ton haa been struck on the\nGranite   mine.\neee\nR.  F   Oreen  made  a flying trip to\nHelaon today.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nlfotlre of the Incorporation of the\nAthabasca Oold mine appeared In the\ncurrent Issue of the Official Oaeette,\nAt least 60 Welland See Cadets\nwill go to the camp at Nlagara-on-\nthe-lake this year.\nThat Body\nof Yours\n\u25a0V 4AMU W. BARTOH. SUa\nWhat Stomach Can and\nCan't Stand\nDid you ever stop to think that\nyou have two eyes, two nostrils, two\nears,  and only one mouth?\nPerhape Nature, the \"friendly force\nbehind us, had a motive ln this.\nHowever everywhere ln the body we\nsee that there ts always enough of\nmuscle, of nerve, of bone, of bloodvessels to do the work necessary Ior\nthat particular part of the body.\nThere are two lungs, two kidneys,\nand in so many ways we have the\nknowledge that Nature Is always Just\na little ahead of our needb. An editorial ln one of our health Journals\ncalls attention to other ways that\nNature  watches over us.\nFor Instance many substances we\ntake into our stomach would be poisonous if they were injected directly\ninto  the blood-\nBut by the time the digestive Juices\nof the stomach and intestines work on\nthem, and then as they go directly ln\nthe blood to the liver, the iiver separ\nates out anything that would be harm\nful to the body.\nSimilarly with little- organisms that\nget Into the body, the body processes\nare usually able to fight them off.\nHe pointed out further the wonderful way the alimentary or digestive\ntract took care of articles that were\nswallowed either by accident or intentionally, and yet this soft delicate\ntube carried them safely twenty-five to\nthirty feet and thence out of the\nbody.\nAn open safety pin swallowed by an\ninfant ia a typical example of what\ncan go safely through this alimentary\ntract.\nNeedles, tacks, glass, Iron, almost\nany and every kind of metal object\nhas been swallowed without Injury\nto the stomach.\nAt London, Ontarla a demented Individual who had heen swallowing\nvarious objects for years finally had\nher stomach opened up and 2500\nsparate objects were removed, thc\ntotal weight being six to seven pounds.\nThere was no evidences of bleeding,\nof ulceration or other damage to the\nstomach wall, and her stomach was\nup ln its normal position a short time\nafter  the  operation.\nAnd yet careless eating, irregularity\nof meals, worry .mental overwork can\nso upset the chemical processes of thc\nstomach that an ulcer forms tn this\nvery stomach lining. It has been well\nsaid that man's worst enemy ls man\nhimself.\nCareful chewing of food and a well\nbalanced diet, food not too cold' nor\ntoo hot, regularity of meals, five to\nsix hours apart lf possible, ls all\ntl'.at Nature asks of you ln return\nfor her wonderful care.\nI TWENTY YEARS AGO |\nAh \u2022>\nTEN YEARS AGO\nftWATHINU   8AVEH   WHEAT\nVULCAN, Alta., July B^Lytng out\nln swaths throughout the winter and\nthought by many to have been ruined,\n30,000 bushels of wheat have been\nthreshed by W. H. Fletcher and graded\nNO. 0.\n\"Swathing was the secret of It,\" Mr.\nFletcher stated. The grain was cut\ntn swaths and had to be 'left on the\nground because of early snows last\nNovember.\n~*\n| FIVE YEAR OLD LANDS\n|      THIRTY  POUND   FISH j\n$ 1 1\u2014^\nTHOMAS HOPK1NK\nfive year old aon of Eustace Hopkins\nof Vancouver, who created a sensation\nat Hopkln's Landing, B, C, a summer\nresort by honking a fish as long as.\nhimself. The youngster, when he saw\nthat he had caught something out of\nthe ordinary, ahouted for help, and he\nwas assisted in landing the trophy by\nJ. 8. Parker.\n(From   The   Daily   Newsof July 9, 19i\n.The mill at the Hewitt mine started\noperations last week.\nPreparations are being made for the\nrepair ot the macadam on Baker\nstreet.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nE. G. Smyth, formerly a telegraph\noperator here, who left for San Fran\nCisco four years ago to take to den\ntistry, has returned with the intention\nof locating here.\nRaspberries are beginning to ripen\nin a number of local gardens.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\n\u00a79  LAURA  A.  URKMAII\nNEW  DISHES  THIS  WEEK\nTOMORROW'S   MEM!\nBreakfast\nBerries\nCereal\nHash Bacon Garnish\nToast Coffee\nLuncheon\nJelly Omelet\nCoIp   Slaw   with   Cream   Dressing\nBiscuits Iced  Tea\nDinner\nPineapple -Banana Cocktails\nRoast of Beef\nBrown Gravy\nParsley  Potatoes Carrots\nCottage Pudding\nCoffee\nCream Dressing for Cole Slaw\u2014Mix\ntogether one-half tablespoon of dry\nmustard, one-fourth tablespoon of salt,\nthree-quarters of a tablespoon of sugar,\none beaten egg yolk, two tablespoons\nof melted butter and three-quarters of\na cup of rich sweet top milk or thin\nsweet cream. Cook over mild heat till\nthe boiling point Is reached, then gradually add one-fourth cup of vinegar,\nstrain, and cool before combining this\ndressing with thinly shaved raw cab\nbage which has previously been soaked\nln cold water till crisp, then dried between clean towels\nWhipped Cream \"Pie\"\u2014Break an egg\nInto a measuring cup, add two tablespoons of melted butter, then fill up\nthe cup with cold, sweet milk. Turn\nthis mixture Into a mixing bowl. Sift\ntogether one and one-half cups of bread\nor pastry flour, one-half teaspoon of\nsalt, one cup of sugar, one-half teaspoon of baking soda and one teaspoon\nof cream of tartar. Stir this dry mixture Into thc liquid mixture, add one-\nhalf teaspoon of lemon extract, beat\ntill the mass is creamy, then divide the\nbatter between two buttered layer cake\npans and bake 15 to 30 minutes in a\nhot oven\u2014400 degrees F. Use these as\na two-layer cake Is put together, having\nthe filling consist of one-half pint of\nheavy, stiffly whipped cream sweetened\nwith two tablespoons of sugar and\nflavored with a few drops of vanilla\nextract. Also add slices of ripe bananas\nbetween the two layers, and heap the\nremainder of the whipped cream and\nbanana slices on top of the cake, then\nsprinkle top with walnut meats. Serve\nfresh.\nOreen Corn Fritter*\u2014Score six to\neight ears of green corn, and, with the\nback of a knife, scrape pulp from hulls.\nYou should have two cups of this pulp\nTo it add two egg yolks silently beaten.\none tablespoon of butter, softened, one\nteaspoon of sugar, one nnd one-half\nteaspoon of salt, a pinch of pepper, one\ncup of flour sifted with one tenspoon\nof baking powder, and fold in the\nwhites of two eggs stiffly beaten. Drop\nfrom a tablespoon ln a well greased hot\nfrying pan and fry brown, then turn\nto brown other side.    Drain and serve\nTomorrow\u2014Answers to Inquiries.\nHE KILLS MAN WHO\n\/    MURDERED BROTHER\nMax Schmelling. light heavyweight\nchampion of Europe and the champion\nheavyweight of Oermany, is now in\nAmerica seeking a bout with the\nworld's champion. He has fought 43\nprofessional bouts and has won 30 of\nthem  by  knockouts.\nURBANA, Ohio. July 8.\u2014The murder\nof H. N. Tecran, early Saturday, was\ndramatically avenged by his brother,\nW. W. Teeran, who shot and killed\nFlva Oiler, the slayer. Oiler killed the\nman at whose home he lived and then\nhid ln a field. A posse which Included\nthe slain farmer's brother, cornered the\nslayer. '     ,.\nAs th\u00ab posse pressed close, Oiler open\ned fire on Teeran but was met with a\nbullet In 'the head from Teeran's rifle.\nLess Kitchen Work Now\nSHREDDED\nReadv to serve for breakfast\nlunch or supper. Serve with\nstrawberries and milk or cream\nTRISCUITEat it toasted and buttered\nMade try The Canadian Shredded Wheat Compuny, Ltd.\n^--^^\u25a0^-'J_w_t___ _mmsam\n*Y   -\"*>'**\u2022\u25a0- a\\^W^t~^Wnk-aa_t-V9-W-^.fwm \u25a0   vff.     57\" \"^^H\n\" -s\u00a3-~*sH.r \\iW_____   W^t *\"\"!\u2022\" \u25a0?   1\nWE HAVE A FULL STOCK OF\nFROST & WOOD\nMOWERS and RAKES\nPrices:\nMOWERS\u2014\n3V2 ft., 1-horse, each  $05.00\n*\\i\/t ft., 2-horse, each $108.00\n5 ft., 2-horse, each $110.00\nRAKES\u2014\n8 ft., steel wheels, each $67.00\n9 ft., steel wheels, each  $70.00\n10 ft., steel wheels, each $73.00\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON, B.C. BOX 1050\n'Sky High'\nBy   GERALD  8. REEK\n\u2666-\nOld Dobbin\u2014an affectionate nickname for the faithful nag which pulled\nthe one-time milk wagon. Old Dobbin passes to the discard, but young\nDobbin skims aloft 10 times faster\nthan the progeny of Pegasus. The\nDe Haviland moth plane circling our\nhills stimulates odd reflection on thia\npresent speedy medium of transport.\nBy normal process of organic evolution\nman Is bred an earthlan: has yet to\ndevelop the air sense. The sea sense\nhas taken centuries of time to mature. Newspapers dally record wondrous feats of sustained and hazardous\nflying, though flying Is still comparatively new adventure. The day will\ndawn, one supposes, when crowded\nroadways will be eased of tremendous\ntraffic pressure, and aerial com will\nride the blue.\nMillions   still   remember   their   first\nmotor car; to drive now ls as common\nas   riding   a   bicycle   was   ln   the   gay\nnineties.\nTHE SKY  THE LIMIT\nMan will doubtless fly more and\nmore. Some day the aerial blue will\nbe as crowded with aeroplanlc flivvers\nas are our highways today being worn\nto gravel dust by earthy petrol chariots. Our grandchildren wlll sktm aloft\nas an evening or holiday recreation.\n\"Ollding through the even'\n\"On  a  sunbeam,   swift as  a  shooting\nstar\nIn autumn thwarts the night.\nSo far, bumping the bumps In the\nclouds has no attraction for me. Like\nthe coon, I prefer terra flrma. The\nmore firmer, the less terror, A trench-\nbound Tommy, watching an aerial dogfight, remarked to Ole Bill, \"I'd hate\nto be up there in one of them things.\"\nBill sucked his walrus mustache, and\nsuccinctly replied: \"I'd bloomln' well\nhate to be up there without one!\"\nFlying leaves precious little margin\nfor accidents. There Is nothing up\nthere on which to hang your hatl As\nyet, we associate the plane principally\nas a means of destruction\u2014in terms\nof loaded tons of lethal containers.\nYet, but for the exigencies of war,\nwe would still be groping toward a\nsolution of many aeronautical problems.\nBut what a fearful price was paid.\n\"PER   Alt.HA.   AD   ASTRA\nHow one admired above all the tads,\nmany teen age, who soared aloft to\ngive battle to our one-time enemy.\nHow frightful the casualties* Men and\nmachines hurtling earthward crashing\nto pulp and splinters. How one\nloathed the Oothas London-bound with\ndeadly bombs; coastal mlchrophones\nwarned but could not prevent disaster.\nA Frenchman in the sixteenth \u00aben-\ntury, of extraordinary erudition, conceived' the ultimate practicality of the\nflying machine as known today.\nHis writings are on record in Paris.\nConsidered a charlatan, he was treated\naccordingly. Our classical studies may\nremind you that Icarus endeavored to\nsoar on elaborate wings fashioned from\nbird feathers. Icarus doubted, but\nDaedalus, hts dad, insisted the effort\nbe made. Poor Icarus found a watery\ngrave. The old man himself, according\nto mythology, actually flew from Crete\nto Italy, which only goes to show that\nsome people have all the luck. The\nlost continent of Atlantis ls credited\nwith remarkable aeronautical achievements. But whatever the lean results heretofore, some idealist ever\ncherished 'the hope of the conquest of\nthe air, hence the Moth, and its flying\nbrethren, large and small. One wonders \u25a0 \u2022*\u25a0\u2022\u2022 what next? Some day\nwe may learn to fly\u2014without wings.\nCommercial airplanes now operate on\nschedules equally as sure and safe as\nearth and waterborne craft. Perhaps\nthis, ln some cases, is not saying very\njnuch. The high standard of comfort\nand the meticulous care taken to ensure the safety of the traveling public\nhave brought the cross country and\nchannel traffic to a high pitch of perfection, and hazard of life and limb\nls hardly in excess of ordinary travel\nmediums. Nowadays, people, pressed\nfor time, or for love of adventure,\nwho have pockets a little deeper than\nthc average, taxi to aerodrome, and\npurchase a ticket for the Pullman air\nliner as nonchalantly as they formerly\nrequested the booking clerk for transportation to Paris, Rome or Berlin by\nrail and sea.\nLabor Denies\n2*   Allegations When\n%$ Delegation Quits\nLONDON. July 8.\u2014The withdrawal of\nthe Indian delegation from the Commonwealth Labor conference last Wednesday when the Indian leader, Chama-\nnlal, attacked the British Labor party,\nhaa drawn an official statement from\ntho latter. The statement denies the\nallegations of the Indian leader that\nthe conference decided that no resolutions should bo moved when the Indian\nment for Indian was submitted to the\ngathering. '\nThe  Indian reaoultlon was not read\n \u00abJ\nmotion urging immediate self-govern-\nby the conference delegates nor waar'lt\ncirculated, the Labor statement continues, adding that the conference had\ndecided to adopt the policy of not ,bf-\ning bound by resolutions becauae lt\nhad no formal constitution capable ,Qt\nbinding tba constituent elements Attending the conference. The conferences ara held for the purposes of odn-\nsultation and exchanging information,\nthe statement aaya.\nHelen Wills, the American tennla\nstar, who recently won tbe women's\nsingles championship In the tnterna-\ntton hard court tournament at Au-\nteull. Prance, outclassed every one of\nher <flve opponents. Including the\nchampions of Oermany and Holland, fj\n.*.\"..*.\u25a0 \u2022_..,   ..,    ..    .     .\u25a0\nCuticura Soap\nBest for Baby\nIn These Days\nACCIDENTS\nIf an accident occurred to YOU, or YOUR home\nburned, would the insurance you have be adequate to\nsave your family from any financial suffering?\nFor life, fire, accident, sickness, auto, etc., insurance\ni   consult any of the following:\ni\nFor Fire Insurance\nAutomobile\u2014Life\u2014Accident and Sickness\u2014Plate\nGlass and All Other Forms of Insurance\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nC. D. BLACKWOOD\nR. W. DAWSON\nG. A. HUNTER\nC. F. McHARDY\nH. E. DILL\nP. E. POULIN\nFor Life Insurance\nC. W. APPLEYARD, Sun Life Assurance Co.\nC.  D. BLACKWOOD, The  Great West  Life  Assurance Co.\nR. W. DAWSON, Imperial Life Assurance Co.\nft, E. CRERAR, North American Life Assurance Co.\nC. F. McHARDY, Monarch Life Assurance Co.\nC.  NAIRN.   Griffin   Block;   Manufacturers'  Life\nAssurance Co.\nP. E. POULIN, North American Life Assurance Co.\nBUILDING\nMATERIAL\nl.*t us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast\n\"Lumber a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS & SON\n\"Your advantage,\"\n\u2014says Plain Mr. York\nof York, York*.\n\"Ai a refresher after a hard set, or at any time you\nwant something really good,\" called the genial\numpire, \"it's your advantage when you choose\nRowntree's Motoring Chocolate. Two kinds, you\nknow,\u2014Plain or Milk -both with blanched Valencia\nalmonds and luscious Nectar raisins.\"\n\"Service, please!\" cried thc players, together.\nMade by the makers of thc famous\nPlain York Chocolate - - Motoring\nis simply wonderful.   Try it to-day.\nTwo S\/JCS\nROWNTREE'S ^5*\nMOT\u00a9 RING CHOCOLATE\nPlain or Milk Chocolate with Almond; & RaHW\n__\n THB NELSON DAILY NEWS,  MONDAY MORNING,* JULY 9,1928\nfate fref\nWork Shoes\nIn this store you will\nfind the best showing of\nWork Shoes in the city.\nSolid leather throughout,\nplain toes or toe capped.\n$4.50 AND JJP.,\nR. Andrew \u00a3 Co.\nLeaders in  Footfashion\nEnjoy Y<mr Smoke\u2014\nThere's nothing that will make\nyou enjoy your smoke as much aa\nout* Special Mixture.    Try It.\nBUSH'S\nv.\nT. H. Vt\u00ab^s 4 Co Lti\n\u25a0     Builders &x   .       '\nnor,. is8 ^ractori\nnelson, B.cV. n** SSI\nWINDOWS AND DOOitt\nMade to any pattern.\nTANKS\nMade to order.\n.     SHINGLES\nLeary Believes\nEdgewood to Be\nImportant Area\nEDGEWOOD, B.C., July 8.\u2014Speaking\nof the large expenditures on public\nhighways, C 8. Leary, Liberal candidate\nfor the Kaslo-Slocan riding addressed\na large meeting ln tbe hall here Wednesday. O. Brown of Nakusp, ln supporting Mr. Leary, praised the Old Age\nPension act.\nMr. Leary asserted the Liberal government had built up business and the\nopposition was working for a change\nln - the height of prosperity. He asserted that Hon. Dr. S. P. Tolmie knew\nnothing of provincial matters and was\nneglecting his seat ln Victoria.\nHe explained the Canadian Farm Loan\nact and declared his belief that Edge-\nwood, with the Lightning Peak mineralized area at the back of it, had\nprospects of Importance.\nA vote of confidence In the candidate was passed by the meeting.\nThis column is conducted by Ilea.\nM. Jf. Vigneux. AU news of a social\nnature. Including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc.. will appear In this column.\nTelephone Mrs. Vigneux at her home\nSilica street.\nNEW DENVER NOTES\nNEW DENVER. July 8.\u2014Mr. Hope,\nwho was the manager of ths Emily\nEdith mine In 1902, was ln town this\nweek renewing acquaintances.\nMrs. P. Campbell, accompanied by\nher two sons and her daughter, Frances\nhas arrived from Calgary to spend the\nsummer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs,\nWilliam Cropp.\nMr. and Mrs. W. K. Ounn and thetr\nsmall daughter, and Miss Ida Ounn of\nBurnaby, have returned from a holiday\ntrip to Spokane.\nMrs. Thomas Avlson returned on\nWednesday from Vancouver, where she\nspent the last two months with friends\nW. K. Esling, M.P., was ln the\ndistrict this week for election purposes.\nMr. and Mrs. 8. *3>. Fowler of Rlondel\nare the guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. J.\nCampbell for the weak-end.\nMlas Mabel Parker was ln town on\nWednesday from Slocan City.\nMiss Heather Harris of the Bosun\nranch was the guest of Mrs. Erwin\nWhite. Sandon on Wednesday and\nThursday of this week.\nMr. and Mrs. O. Halre and their\ndaughter Patricia, left on Wednesday\nfor a two weeks' holiday to be spent\nat Bowen Island. They were accompanied by Miss Louise and Miss Barbara McFadden, who will join their\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. McFadden\nat  Kamloops.\nJack Kirk has gone to the coast for\nthe summer months.\nfMluTHEMABK-\nGoes every VantAd\nBUYERS\nASWLLL A3\nSELLERS\nAm Constant\nAerial Explorers to\n\"Crack Open\" Canadian\nNorth; Leave Tuesday\nST.\nThe Church of the Redeemer, Fair-\nview, was the scene- of a very pretty\nwedding Saturday morning when the\nmarriage of Bertha Ethelyn, youngest\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge N.\nGilchrist to William Reld, youngest son\nof Mr. and Mrs. William Reld of Burnaby, Vanoouver, was solemnised by Ven.\nArchdeacon Fred H. Oraham. The\nchuroh was tastefully decorated with\npink and white roses surrounding a\nhuge wedding bell. The bride, who\nlooked charming ln a rose shaded satin\ncrepe celanese gown with mohair and\nlace hat to correspond, carried a gorgeous bouquet of ophella roses and\ncarnations. She entered the church\non the arm of her father, and was\nattended by her sister, Mrs. E. H. Smith\nof Toronto, as matron of honor. Mrs.\nSmith, attired ln a lovely Prench gown\nof rose crepe-de-chene and black picture hat trimmed with forget-me-nots,\ncarried a bouquet of fragrant roses\nand sweet peas. The groom was supported by X. H. Smith. The groom's\ngift to the bride was an amethyst\nbrooch and to the matron of honor\nan ivory perfume flacon. The best\nman received a pearl tie pin. The\nbride's gift to the groom was a handsome gold chain. A navy blue trlootlne\ncostume was worn by tbe bride's mother, with shoes and hosiery to correspond. After a well arranged breakfast\nst the home of the bride's parents,\n\"Roselawn\" Fairvtesv, at which were\npresent Immediate relatives and Archdeacon Oraham, Mr. and Mrs. Reid left\nby the Oreat Northern for Spokane,\nSeattle and Vancouver. After two\nmonths' honeymoon, they will be at\nhome at Greenwood, where Mr. Reld\nhas accepted a position as principal of\nthe Superior school there. Vancouver\nand New Westminster papers please\ncopy.\n* \u00bb   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. L. McBrlde have as\ntheir house guest the latter's sister,\nMrs. Colin A. Molr, nee Gladys Foote\nof Winnipeg, who will remain for the\nremainder of the summer.\n* *   *\nMrs.  W. Wood  of Bonnington spent\nSaturday  evening shopping  in town.\ne   *   e\nMr. and Mrs. John Burns, Stanley\nstreet, and their two sons, Bobby and\nJack, left Saturday by motor for Cal\ngary where they will attend the stampede, after which they wlll visit Edmonton.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and  Mrs.  A.  B.  Clark  and  Miss\nBessie Clark, R.N. of Vernon, F. Holz\nhelmer of Ymlr and R. Hay of Seattle\nmotored   in   from   Ymlr   Saturday   to\nspend a few hours shopping.\n\u2022pend a fortnight, ae the guests of Ml.\nand Mrs. W. J. Templeton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. L. McBrlde, Hoover street. leftSat-\nurday night for a business trip to Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   t\nHarry McDougail of South Slocan vu\na visitor to Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022. *   *   *\nL, Proohnow of Ymlr spent Saturday\nin town shopping.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss 0. Cain. Victoria street, left Saturday for the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Charles Brett of Rosaland and\nher Uttle son, Charles, were visitors to\nNelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charles. P. McHardy\nand family motored to Thrums Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrt, J. Sewell of Sunshine Bay apent\nSaturday shopping in Nelson,\ntil\nMiss Greta- Curwln of the Hume\nschool staff and her mother, Mn. Cur-\nwin, left Saturday for the\nf\"\nMB-tmM-mmmm.\nern AerifiN, N.B., July 8.\u2014The North-\ntion, Llmitedierals Exploration corpora-\nparty to Hudsotfwndlng an exploration\ncrack   open   the   CK.next Tuesday \"to\ncording to J. HairimaWan   north\"   ac-\nIdent   of   the   company, \"pronto, pres-\nwhich  comprises 30 prospectors   Partv\ncrew of 14 men, will Journey norftd  a\nthe   schooner   \"Patrick   and   MlchaeV\nand expect to reach Hudson Bay within\nthree or four weeks after leaving here.\nSearch for minerals will be made in\nas many districts of the north as pos\nslble.\nRoof  of Avonton  church  has lately\nreceived  new coat of shingles\n_mm,,mmm____[<Bw_m\nTHE VOGUE IN EUROPE\nNEW ITALIAN ROPE\nNECKWEAR\nFor Ladles\nSTONE   SET\n,    A. T. NOXON\nTOTJB   JEWEUCB\nBathroom Fixtures\n.   Solid Brass, Heavily Nickle Plated\nSOAP DISHES, 6 STYLES; TUMBLER HOLDERS\nCOMBINATION SOAP AND TUMBLER HOLDERS\nCOMBINATION SPONGE RACK AND SOAP HOLDERS\nTOOTH BRUSH RACKS, SHAVING BRUSH HOLDERS\nRAZOR STROP HOOKS, TOILET PAPER HOLDERS\nTOWEL BARS IN 18\", 24\", 30\"; TOWEL RACKS\nGLASS TOWEL BARS, 24\" AND 30\".\nGLASS SHELVES, 24\" AND 30\".\nSTORE CLOSES 5:30\nJ HIPPERSON.HARDWARE!\nCOMPANY, LTD. gaSSr*--\nLook foe tu* Bed Baldwin Stor*\nraONI 417\nMX 0*  I\nBillheads and Statements\nOur big volume of business and our\nfast modern equipment enables us to print\nbillheads and statements as cheaply as you\ncan buy them in the east. By buying from\nus you save freight or express.\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPT.\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nPRINTING\u2014RULING-BOOKBINDING\nL.  K.  Larsen  and  party   motored  to\nBalfour yesterday.\n* \u25a0    \u2022\nCaptain   Douglas  Brown   left   Saturday night  for  Pentlcton.\n\u2022 *   *\n\u2022 Leslie   Tralnor   of   Rossiand,   Oeorge\nTralnor ol Rosebery and Gerald Train-\n,or of Starr City, Sask., arrived In town\ntfnyjday night from Klnkora, PE.,\nseriou*they were called owing to the\nwere metMess \u00b0' their mother. They\nwith whom\" tJpw^r DV thelr wlves\nby  motor returned   to   Nelson\nBenjamin   Creasy\nSaturday ln town.\nof   h*.\nn   spent\nMr. and Mrs. Durham, formerly of\nNelson and now at Vancouver, are olty\nvisitors.\nt   \u2022   *\nS. J. Semmens, c. P. R. assistant Industrial agent, accompanied by his son,\nBernal, of Vancouver, spent Saturday ln\ntown and left yesterday for Cranbrook.\nN. Gagnon of Salmo was a visitor\nto Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRobert Stevenson of Sunshine Bay\nwas a city visitor Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. 8. A. Curwln of TTmlr spent\nBaturday shopping in Nelson.\nThe Misses Grace and Lillian McDonald arrived last night from Spokane\nto attend the wedding ot thetr sister,\nGertrude, whloh takes place Thursday.\nAnother sister. Miss Jessie McDonald,\nhas also arrived from Spokane Cor tha\nwedding*.\n\u2022 S-   \u2022\nHarry Dlmock of New Denver and hia\ndaughters were visitors to Nelson, over\nthe week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Elmer Tltsworth have\nas thetr guests their son-in-law and\ndaughter. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Manzer,\nand son, Bobby, of Vancouver.\nMias Jean McKinnon of Trail spent\nthe week-end In Nelson, th* guest of\nMr. and Mrs. D. McEachern, Carbonate\nstreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. R Cryer and their two\nsons, Bari and Lawrence, who have been\nthe house guests of Mr. and Mrs. George\nRenwick,    Chatham    street,    Fairview,\nleave this morning for their home in\nWilcox, Sask.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Francis Makouchuk of Trail,\nwho has been visiting in Nelson, returned to Trail  last night.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOn Baturday Mrs. R. L. McBrlde entertained at a decidedly smart bridge\nluncheon at hsr home on Hoover street,\nhonoring several out of town visitors.\nShell pink rose buds In a low glass\nbowl centered the table. The first\nand consolation prizes for bridge were\nwon by Mrs. Harry Bolton of San\nFrancisco and Miss Orace Patrick ot\nVancouver. Mrs. McBrlde's invited\nguests Included Mu. Colin A. Molr\nof Winnipeg, Mra. Iflohard Turner and\nMrs. Harry Bolton of San Francisco,\nMiss Grace Patrick of Vancouver, Miss\nNorma Irving. Mrs. G. C. Arneson, Mrs.\nJohn Gansner. Mrs. E. A. Murphy, Mrs.\nHarry Ferguson, Miss Ina Steed, Mra.\nWalter Brodie of Cranbrook, MIsb Lottie\nAnnable, Mrs. James H. Lawrence, Mrs.\nRoy Sharp. Mra. W,. B, Steed and Mrs\nJ. J. Foote.\n811 Baker Street, Phone 200\nJuly Clearance Sale\nThe second week of our July Sale brings forth greater values than ever.    Many\nlines have been cleared out, but these have been replaced by others at still'iiirther^\nreductions.   We aim to clear out every article of Summer Wearing Apparel, Yard\nGoods and Millinery, regardless of manufacturers' prices.   Come down early today.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Raider of Wardner\nwere   visitors here over  the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022    t\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Kerr of Longbeach,\nwere city visitors Saturday, accompanied by their daughter, Miss Irene,\nwho recently returned from St. Michael's   school  at  Vernon.\nFrank Labelle and his family of\nKaslo were shoppers in Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 ' \u00ab   *\nMrs. W. H. Oakes of Crescent Bay\nspent Saturday in town.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. W. R. Dunwoody and her daughters, the Misses Nancy and Sheila and\nMiss Eileen Rolson and A. C. MacLennan motored to Spokane over the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Maxwell K. Heap of\nVancouver have taken the Robertson\ncottage at Crescent Bay for the summer.\n\u2022 *   \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. L. Hanna and family\nmotored   to  Thrums   Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Marjorie Quin of Harrop was\nln town Friday en route to Vancouver\non a holiday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. John Kay at Beasley has as\nher guest her son and daughter-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Archie Kay, who motored\nup from Chicago.\n\u2022 *   *.\nOordon Molr of Trail was ln the\ncity Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. Clifford Irving spent the weekend on business in Orand Forks.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Dorothy Hipperson, whose marriage takes place on July 25, was the\nguest of honor at a delightful shower\nFriday evening given by Miss Mildred\nLutes and Miss Edith Lawson at the\nhome of the latter. The rooms were\ncharmingly decorated with pink and\ncream roses, this color scheme also\nbeing repeated in the refreshments.\nCards, contests and music served to\npass a pleasant evening. Miss Leda\nBoss and Miss Margaret Hipperson being\nprise winners. The guest of honor received as a consolation prize, ln a\ncleverly-arranged contest, an enormous\npink rose, the petals of which unfolded to disclose many lovely personal\ngifts. The Invited guests were: Mis*\nDorothy Hipperson, Miss Margaret Hipperson, Mrs. W. J. Hipperson, Mrs.\nJ. H. Boyes, Mrs. o. O. Boyes. Miss\nAlice McDougail Miss Myrtle McKeown,\nMiss Marjorie Stobo, Miss Ada Joy.\nMiss Helen Vance, Miss Henrietta May.\nMiss Jean Glendennlng, Mlsa Leona\nBoss, Miss Georgia McKeown, Miss\nBeatrice Campion, Miss Hazel HUlam.\nMiss Florence Jeffreys, Miss Mollis\nMosses, Miss May Lawson, Miss Florence\nOrant, Miss Ruth Robertson, Miss\nLeda Boss, Miss Edna Campion, Mrs.\nG. Simms, Miss Iris Robertson, Miss\nGladys Randell, Miss Bda Randell and\nMiss Muriel Stanley of Trail, Mtss Margaret Lutes, Miss Ileene Lawson. Mrs.\nW. B. Lutes and Mrs. J. B. Lawson.\nG. $. Stevenson and Gordon Boyce\nspent yesterday fishing at Procter.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMrs. S. A. Murphy hae left for Stave-\nley, Alta., to visit her sister and brother-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Allen,\nformerly  of  Nelson.\n\u25a0   s   \u2022\nMrs. Norris and children of South\nSlocan were visitors to town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. D. Q. Blssett of TraU\nspent Saturday ln the city.\nMrs. William MoCanllsh and her\nniece, Miss Hazel HUlam. left yesterday\nmorning for Oalgary, where thsy  will\nf>\"~*. and Mrs. John Gansner have left\nIor ^'<rary to attend  the  stampede.\nFrlaS mommi*\"\"1 daughter, Bale, left\n\\vH 1 ^,,i^ an extended trip to\nKansas  City   via  ^  p^^o.\nMr. and Mrs. Berttai T Bikpp -.\nWallace, Ida., who have '^ on \u2122\nhoneymoon motor trip to the *>>nder_\nmere, Banff and Lake Louise dlsCut\nare the guests of Mr. Biker's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. E. Biker, of the\nNorth Shore.\nArchie Donaghy returned Saturday\nnight from the Slocan district, where\nhe has been on an extensive tour with\n8. Leary. M.P.P., who proceeded to his\nhome at Nakusp.\nT. K. Lavasseur has left for a few\ndayB' visit tn Vancouver.\nSANDON NOTES\nSANDON, B.C., July 8.\u2014Among visitors to Nelson the past week were\nJames Wallace, J. Olson. Danny McKay, L. Cameron, Orant Cameron, O.\nLowgood. G. Lockhart, 8. Olson, Alex\nTowgood, O. Lockhart, 8. Olson, Alex\nCameron and C. Johnson.\nW. Rudkln returned Monday from\nVancouver.\nMr, and Mrs. Jean Leveque and\nbaby daughter left Wednesday for\nSlocan City.\nMiss Kathleen Strathearn of Vancouver, arrived here Wednesday. She\nwill be the guest of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. O. Strathearn, for the summer  months.\nMiss Kay Qitlls and Miss Rose Exter\nof Kaslo were guests of Mist, Isobel\nStrathearn on Wednesday.\nMiss Marjorie Black, who has been\nattend lng school ln Kaslo. returned\nWednesday   to  her  home   here.\nMrs. O. Strathearn entertained at\ntea Thursday afternoon honoring her\ndaughter, Miss Isobel Strathearn, whose\nmarriage takes place this month\nAmong the invited guests were Mrs\nColin Campbell, Mrs. W. Oomm, Mrs.\nRussel Thompson, Mrs. Oscar White,\nMrs. L. J. Fogle, Mrs. Geffory Irwin,\nMrs. Draper, Mrs. Clifford. Mrs. Kirk.\nMrs. Butchart, Mrs. Billy Ounn, Mrs.\nWallbaum, Mrs. Jeffrey, Mrs. A. L.\nLevy, Mrs. J. C. Harris. Mrs. \"Sandy\"\nHarris, Miss Nelly Aylwin. Miss Phyllis\nCampbell. Miss Georgle Oomm, Miss\nEmma Clever. Miss Ida, Ounn, Miss\nPhyllis Avlson. Miss Heather'Harris of\nNew Denver and Mrs. James Oreer.\nMre. Nell Tattrle, Mrs. Paul Lincoln,\nMre. J. M. Harris, Mrs. J. Hannah,\nMiss McMlln, Mrs. Patterson, Mrs.\nCharles McLanders, Miss Adeline Hannah, Miss Kathleen Strathearn of\nVancouver, and Miss Isobel Strathearn.\nD. C. McDonald was a Kaslo visitor\nthe  past  week.\nYMIR NOTES\nYMIR, B.C., July 8.\u2014Mr. and MrB.\n8. A. Curwen were Nelson visitors on\nThursday.\nTbe Ladles' Guild held its regular\nmeeting at the home of Mrs. W.\nClark on Thursday. Those present were\nMrs. 8. A. Curwen, Mrs. N. Peterson,\nMrs. L. M. Prochman, Mrs. J. H, Clarke,\nMrs. W. Clark and Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac.\nMrs. A. B. Clark has as her guest,\nMrs. Taylor of Trail.\nMrs. \u25a0\u25a0 Daly returned from Nelson\non Friday-\nD. Mattreson, manager of tha Hunter\nV nuns, wag a Nslson visitor on\nThursday.\nPRINTED\nCREPE DE\nCHINE\n$2.39 the\nYard\nThese come in\nall the new patterns in a *plen-\n^^^^^^^^^^^^ did fine weave.\nMostly dress lengths.   Regular $3.00 to\n$3.75.     SALE    PRICE   $2,39   THE\nYARD.\nFLAT CREPE\nAt $1.98 the Yard\n20 pieces Flat Crepe in splendid quality.\n38 inches wide. AU wanted colors.\nSALE PRICE $1.98 THE YARD.\nWOMEN'S DRESKS\nAt $9.95 Each\nFigured    Crepe,     Double-\nFugi    and    plain    CrepeB\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^        Dresses  in  all  the  smart! |\nLace trimmed Gowns in assorted styles   JJ*\"*   sty'es-     Lonfc'   or*\nMANNISH\nTAILORED\nSUITS\nAt $15.00 Each\nSmart Tweed and Kasha\nSuits.' Well tailored and\nperfect fitting. Sizes 15\nto 18. Values to $25.00.\nSALE PRICE 815.00\nEACH.\nWOMEN'S AND\nMISSES' COATS\nAt $18.75 Each\nMany of these are about\nhalf price. There is 50\nin the lot, consisting of Poiret Twills,\nTweeds and Kashas. All are well tailored and richly lined. Sizes 16, 18 and\n20. ALL ONE PRICE AT $18.75\nEACH.\nRAYON GOWNS\nAt S1.98 Each\n\u25a0\nand colors.   Made of fine Rayon.   SALE\nPRICE $1.98 EACH.\n.   VESTS AND BLOOMERS\nAt $1.95 the Suit\nshort sleeves and in al! colors, including White. Sizes\n14 to 40. SALE PRICE\n$9.95 EACH.\nSPUN SILK\nAt 55c the Yard\n_________________ Splendid quality Spun Silk I\nFine quality Rayon Vests with Bloomers in al, the wante(j coiors,    Fine bright\nto  match.    All  sizes.    SALE  PRICE finish and nice even weave.   29 inches\n$1.95 THE SUIT. wide.   SALE PRICE 55* THE YARD.\n.it.\nKASLO NOTES\nKASLO, B.C. July 8.\u2014Mrs. H. Calvert\nwss a Nelson visitor early ln the week.\nColonel and Mrs. Yuill have returned\nfrom a trip to the Paradise mine.\nC. C. Starr ls down from the Sliver\nBear for a few days.\nJ. Jordan of Nakusp was a Friday\nvisitor ln the city.\nsir. and Mrs. Frank W. Mitton of\nNelson and Miss M. Pooley of Dollarton,\nJLC., motored to Kaslo and return\n\u2122'***y.\n\u2022 Mr \u00bbnd Mrs. L. E. Eastman of Rlondel were t^he guests of Mrs. J. H.\nStubbs the  h*ttr part ^  tne ww>k.\nJack Raper px Johnson's Landing\nwas a  visitor ln%wn Thursday\nR. Thompson of^umworth was a\nThursday  visitor ln t%* ctty,\nMrs. John Nlckleby orWaHace, Ida.,\nspent Thursday in the cflSk, the guest\nof her daughter,  Mrs. ThomaV Horner.\nMrs. M. A. Bourn, M. Bourn. Miss\nE. \"E. Alverson and. Miss Alice Mb^y of\nSpokane,   and   Mr.' and  Mrs.   Dal\nof  Le  Grande,  Ore.,   motored  to to^\nFriday  and  made the trip to the St\nPatrick mine ln the Lardeau Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. Carlson of Nelson were\namong, the visitors In the city the latter part of the week.\nJ. A. Edwards of Retallack was u\nvisitor fo town Saturday..\nThe tea given st the golf club Saturday was quite successful ln spite of\nnumerous showers. A contest for approaching and putting was won by\nR. M. Graves. Mrs. J. H. Stubbs and\nMrs. J. J. Skillicorn were the hostesses.\nJ. J. Skillicorn left Saturday for\nKlmberley, where he wlll visit his sons,\nRoy, and Harry, who ts a Spokane visitor to Klmberley.\nFrank LaBelle was a Saturday visitor\nto Nelson,\nThe dance held under the auspices\nof the Canadian Legion Friday evening\nwas well  attended.\nrWred.\nMac?\nPROMOTIONS AT KASLO\nHIGH, PUBLIC SCHOOL\nKASLO, B.C., July 8.\u2014Promotions\nmade in the Kaslo schools are:\nFrom Orade I to II\u2014Joyce Brooks,\nKatie Riddel, Dorene Lind, Norman\nMcClellan, Ronald Matthews, Bessie\nMcGlbbon. Clara Horner and David\nHartin.\n, To Grade III\u2014Stanley Lockard, Ronald    Carter,      Eleanor    Horner,     Lorrts\nBlackwell,   Archie   Reutcr.   Arthur   Me-   'i\nCoubrey. Ralph Gardeuer, Frank Lap*:.,Q\non   trial\u2014Billy   Hendricks   and   Ronald\nYulll.\nTo Grade IV\u2014Mabel Beck. Olive Oaf i\nvenport. Lorna Spelrs, Margaret Burgess, '\nFrances   Lockard.   Helen   Wone,   WUfrt\nLaBelle, Lilly Wone and Murdock\nPhersom__\nOrade    IV\u2014Isabel    Dawson,    Douglas\nStrachan.     Dcward   McClellan,     Frank-;\nGardener.    Virginia    Hendricks.    Taylor\nPapworth and Jack MacPherson.\nGrade    V\u2014Alexander    Nord.      Bertha -\nSutherland.    John    McOillivray..   Mabel\nBennett.   Peter   Payworth,   Eve   LaBelle, \u25a0\nJack Hacking. Esme Penny. Edith Abey.\nGeorge    Hacking,    Dorothy    Davenport,\nHaveland  Butler and  Thelma Scott.     ><\nOrade VI\u2014Doris Read. Roderick But..,,\nler,   Ruth   Aim,   Jean   Carter,   Dorothy\nTinkess, Vera Coulter, Oeorge Lind ahd ^*\\\\\nCora  Gardener.\nGrade  VII\u2014Opal   LaBelle,  Alfred  Roberts, Elsie Rouleau, Charles Davenport;'. '\u25a0]\nand  Annie Coulter. ^^^\nHigh school promotions,  ln order of\nmerit,  were:  Orade  IX\u2014Irene  McOllU-.\"\n\u25a0ay.  Irene Nichols, Katherlne Hillman . J\nand Gilbert Erickson.\nOrade X\u2014Dean Whittaker. May Ofajrw\"\nling.   Clara   Johnson.   Erllng   Johnson.   *\nSam Gardener, Dora Keehle, Alice Ann\nand Qeorge Baker.\ntm\nChesterfield Suites_and\nOdd Chesterfields fde Luxe\nJust Arrived From Eastern Points\nCHESTERFIELD 3-PIECE SUITE\u2014Mohair reversible cushions $294.50\nTAPESTRY 3-PIECE  SUITES\u2014Reversible cushions         $222.50\nODD CHESTERFIELD TAPESTRY SUITE\u2014Reversible cushions f 112.50\nODD CHESTERFIELD CHAIRS $:i8.50, 843.50 AND UP\nEND TABLES         $6.00 TO $15.00\nEASY PAYMENT PLAN BY THE WEEK OR MONTH\nStandard Furniture Co,\nComplete House Furnishers NELSON, B. C.\nV\n |>e^v iop\\\nr-    \u25a0     \u25a0\nTHE NELSON BSILT NEWS. MONDAY MORNING, JULY 9,1928\nThe Gilded Rose\nBy MAY CHRISTIE\nCHAPTER   XX.\nLOVE'S  1NTUT10N\nWith an attempt at cheerfulness\nWhleh didn't In the least deceive her,\nire. suggested cards. A long country\ntamp? A game of dominoes?\n\"I think you'd he happier If you\ntried Chat fishing pool in the grounds.\nThe, trout may rise even on a day\nlike this.\" said Rosllyn heroically. The\nt^uugtt of being left alone, even for\na'\" few hours, in this gloomy barracks,\nWas t hateful one, when, oh! she\nyearned to have her new-made hus-\nUand near her, to listen ti the fascinating tones of that loved voice\n' But Landis' happiness\u2014and ahe had\nalready done enough to mar lt by the\nVery fact of marrying him I\u2014was of\nmore Importance than her own consuming feeling for  him.\n\"WUl you be alright If I push off\nMr aa. hour or two, and leave you?\"\nBehind the dubious intonation, there\nWas a- note of hopefulness, just like\n\u25a0 weary prisoner who gets news of\nunexpected  freedom.\n\"Of course, I'll be all right.\" she\nfarced a  laugh between  pale lip*.\nHe hesitated, giving her an odd\nlook.\n\"Rather an unconventional couple,\naren't we?\" Then: \"But maybe\u2014as\nyon pointed out last night\u2014it's better\n\u2022o.\"\nBer heart gave such an agonizing\ntwist of pain she could have cried\naloud at that.\nBut instead, ahe contrived a not of\nAnd   away   went   Landis   with    his\n.ea\n\/ for\ntwo\nand\ntwo for\ntea\nBlueRibbon\nsuits bothijou\nund me\nthe head, apparently quite naturally.\nfishing rod and gear, a dog at his\nheels.\nRosllyn moved restlessly about the\nhouse. She found the library, but\ncould not settle down to read. Always her thoughts wandered. In mists\nof  disappointment  and   of   pain.\nThe first morning of her honeymoon!    What a travesty lt was!\nOh I for brains and education, with\nwhich' to hold a man like Landis!\nShe must study to improve herself.\nShe must do everything to try and\nbe upsides with fascinating women\n'such   as  \u2014\n\"Lydia Harbrook!\" said the voice of\ntruth within her\u2014hateful, cruel truth!\nBut never, never would she emulate\nLydla's hardness and her selfishness.\nShe\u2014Rosllyn\u2014would devote herself to\nLandis* happiness. Didn't love beget\nlove,  in  Its turn?\nShe would win her husband's heart,\nlf human power could compass it.\nAnd\u2014to that end\u2014she must get\nknowledge of the world, of how to act,\nand dress, and talk. Her constant 'faux\npas,1 and her lack of 'savolr falre' Jarred on her bridegroom, and she knew\nit.\nOhi   for  a  kind  and  candid   friend!\nShe couldn't visualise Landis\u2014hsd\nshe wanted so to see him\u2014ln the role\nof cicerone. He was far too well-bred\never' to point her errors out to her.\nOnly his compressed Ups and a quizzical look about the eyes gave evidence\nof her social blunders.\nThere was no woman she could turn\nto. Her aristocratic mother-in-law\naroused a shyness ln her that at times\nwas almost overwhelming. A 'grand?\ndame' of the old achool, and In her\nown especial way almost as granite-\nhard as lovely Lydia. Mrs. Ridgeway\nWas a queen who condescended to her\nsubjects, rather than a kind and loving  guide. ,\nIn the gloomy library, Rosllyn dug\nout a dusty tome by . . . Aristotle.\nThe Greek philosopher might help her\nto a better art of living. Hadn't that\nbeen the goal of all the Greeks?\nBut she learned phrases were beyond\nher.\nIt was getting for lunch time, and\nthe idea struck her that, despite the\nrain, she would go out and look for\nLandis. The freah air would do her\nheadache good,  maybe.\nDonning a mackintosh, she set off\nacross the fields ln the direction of the\nwood where the trout pool was situated.\nAll the worls smelt sweet, and from\nthe pine trees rose a heady 'tang' that\nthe incessant rain brought put.\nRosllyn's spirit lifted. Mightn't the\nsun break through for her, both literally   and   metaphorically?\nIn the first sense it did\u2014before she\nreached the trout pool. Through a rift\nof sombre clouds lt glinted palely down\non Landis, in his shiny oil-skins, sitting on a fallen tree, with hla fishing\ntackle on the ground beside him.\nHe did not em her. and her footsteps on the mossy earth were soundless. \u2022\nHer   heart  leapt at  that glimpse  of\n'CONSTRUCTION'\nWORKERS HEAR\n'NEXT PREMIER'\nDr* Tolmie, From Steps of Hall\ngives Pungent Speech to Men\nat Noon Hour\nOUTLINES PLANS FOR\nMAKING MORE WORK\nVMill Abolish Patronage System;\nLeader and Party Luncheon\nGuests; See Power Plant\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C., July 8 \u2014\nSpeaking from the steps of the Recreation hall at the construction camp\nof No. 3 plant of the West Kootenay\nPower At Light company at the noon\nhour Saturday, Hon. S. F. Tolmie, Conservative leader, delivered a lS-mlnute\naddress on provincial Issues at stake\nln the election, to some 100 \"construction\" employees and staff, grouped\naround, reclining or standing, for the\noccasion. When the Conservative leader and his party arrived ln cars from\nNelson, the stage was already set and\nthe audience waiting, and, introduced\nby A. Defleux, Dr. Tolmie at once\nplunged In to make the most of the\nquarter hour available to him before\nthe whistle should summon the audience to its multifold tasks.\nFIRST POLITICAL\nVISIT\nit was the first occasion, as Chairman\nDefleux pointed out, of South Slocan\nconstruction force being honored by\na political visit, and on behalf of\nthe audience he thanked Dr. Tolmie\nfor giving his time and rearranging\nhis itinerary In order to discuss issues with them. Dr. Tolmie, he said,\nwas not worrying over the matter of\nbeing returned to take charge of the\ngovernment\u2014that was thoroughly assured now\u2014out it was his wish *\ngive them a little lineup of his constructive plans, before they cast their\nvotes.\nDr. Tolmie, declaring it was very good\nof hrs hearers to devote a portion of\ntheir noon-hour to hearing him set\nforth part of the Conservative view\nof the election issues, stated that ln\na tour that covered the northern and\neastern ridings, sometimes with several\nmeetings a day, the people had shown\nunmistakably their intense interest in\nthe election, and equally unmistakably,\ntheir desire for a change of government\nat Victoria. There was a feeling that,\nfor instance, the debt had increased\naltogether too rapidly, the per capita\ndebt had grown from 114 to 948.10\nunder  Liberal  rule,  and  the  net  debt\nher beloved, and then contracted with\na  sudden pain.\nFor\u2014chin cupped on his left hand,\nand splendid figure set in lines of\nutter weariness\u2014he waa gazing, with\nhis whole soul in his eyes, at the photo\nof a woman ln an evening frock.\nEven  before she  recognized  the pictured fa**-, love's intuition told her that\n1th* girl Was Lydia Harbrook)\n1 \u25a0 Tomorrow\u2014Lydia  Lays  Plans.\nof the province from under 119,000,000\nto  over  185,000,000.\nMacLEAN   HINTS   PEOPLE\nTO  BE  IGNORED\nPremier MacLean, as an argument\nto keep himself ln office, said at Pentlcton that no one but himself could\nsell the P- G. E. to- the Dominion\ngovernment\u2014the inference being that\nIn the 600,000 people -of the province,\nthere was no other who could do It.\nThis was a remarkable stand to take,\nbased on his political friendliness to\nthe King government ai Ottawa.\n\"I want to know,\" aaked Dr. Tolmie,\n\"if Ottawa ls going to ignore 000,000\npeople In favor of oaa, and that to\nobtain a deal with the Dominion government the province must indorse\ntbe Liberals.\n\"I feel that the' Dorrttnion government is not going to take that attitude, and wlll not Ignore the people\nbecause they express their real desires\nand convictions at tht polls. X say\nthat tn the light ot my experience at\nOttawa.\" (Applause,)\nA   HIOH   PLANE\nWhile Premier MacLean boasted of\nthe high plane of statesmanship on\nwhich he was going ^ to conduct his\ncampaign, and said th* Conservatives\nwere campaigning on a low plane, the\npremier was not very lofty when he\ncast a reflection on one of the Conservative candidates up north as being\nuneducated. How many of the pioneers\nhad university educations, asked Dr.\nTolmie. Many of the men who had\nlaid the foundations of the province <\nand of this district ware not \"educated\nmen\", to use Dr. MacLean's characterization, but they were sterling men\nnevertheless, and did a great and useful work,\nSimilarly the premier spoke sneerlngly\nof critics of his iinancial policy lor\nthe province, who had never handled\ntauoo of their own money at one time.\nIt was fair to aak how long the premier himself could boast oi that distinction. To handle the money of\nothers was nothing to blow about, but\nthere was a deep obligation in such\ncase to be honest In handling lt.\nDiscussing the conservative policy\nfor developing the province, the leader\nsaid one of hts first steps on attaining\noffice would be to hord a survey, with\nthe object of finding; out why, with\na. larger territory than the three Pacific stales, and enorsioua resources,\nincluding agricultural. \"British Columbia had only a tenth of their combined population; of finding out why\nBritish Columbia young people, on\ncompleting their schooling, left the\ncountry in search of livelihood; and\nwhy, among other things, this province, with 160,000,000 acres of land\nadapted for grazing,, went outside its\nborders for three-quarters of its meat\nsupply, and the same in dairying, ine\nConservatives believed lhat this province's agriculture was capable of great\ndevelopment, and proposed to make\nefiorts to correct thia uneven balance.\n1 >K HAW MATERIALS\nAT  HOME\nAnother Conservative plank was to\nmake every effort vto develop British\nColumbia industry generally, particularly Industries based on raw materials\nthat the province had ln abundance,\nand that it now exported, Hiving the\nbig profit to the foreigner buyer, who\nmade them the basis of his own manu-\ntures. Trail, wtth Its payroll of\n$8,000,000 a year, wai an example of\nwhat resulted when raw material.} were\nmade use of at home.\nEncouragement of mining in every\nway was another basic plank of the\nConservative platform* Recognising\nwhat mining owed to the prospectors,\nhe proposed to abollstj the fee for\nfree miners' ce*ttfiwas\u00abV \u2022\u00ab*> a step\ntoward   encouraging 'i^jjapecting,   and\nulsn provide' free lectures as In Ontario!\nxnd Quebec, and free standard samples.\nFurther, the Ontario system of mine\ntaxation, under which no propertv was\ntaxed until 1t hsd made * nroflt of\n$10,000. ths encouraglnar both small\nand larare Investment and particularly\naiding the low grade properties, would\nbe lnvesttaated. and if found applicable\nhere,   would  be a Drilled.\nMaintenance, extension and Improvement of the road system, tn accordance with modern requirements, would\nbe a concern of the Conservative government, to the extent that the provincial finances would permit. There\nwould also be an end to the patron\nage svstem In road work, for lt was\nnot fair for the man wanting a Job\non the road to have to humiliate himself and dissemble his political convictions to some foreman In order to\nobtain work. (Applause).\nVOTE FOR\nPROGRESS\nAt this point the whistle Intervened,\nand Dr. Tolmie thanked hla hearers\nfor their courteous attention, and expressed the hope that they would\n\"vote right\", and place ln power a\ngovernment that wlll do all In its power\nto bring about prosperity under which\nthere will be work for everybody\".\nAfter the meeting. Dr. Tolmie and bis\nparty, which Included L. J. Ladner,\nM.P.. Dr. L. B. Borden. C. D. Blaak-J\nwood. C. B. Garland, the leader's sow*}\nW, Tolmie. and newspapermen, en-\nJoyed luncheon with O. F. Chapman,\nsuperintendent of construction, and Mr.\nDefleux, and later were shown over\nthe \"works\", before embarking for\nThrums, the next point on the ltin\nerary. '\nTHREE CANUCK\nSWIM RECORDS\nARESHAHERED\nGarnet Ault and Mary Casson\nMake New Marks in Olympic Tests\ne-^.grm***jmrr-mr-e-m*i=S**=\nFriend Boswell lady\nAwarded Scholarship\nat Sorbonne, Paris\nBOSWELL, B.C., July 8.\u2014Mrs. A.\nKennedy, Boswell, received word that\nMiss Mary Oartslde, B.A., a teacher at\nthe Prince Arthur public school nt\nMoose Jaw, Sask., who was visiting Mra.\nKennedy last summer, has heen awarded a scholarship at the Sorboune, Paris,\nof the value of $1,200 per annum, and\nwill sail this fall to take up the study\nof French.\nSeveral such scholarships are awarded\nannually by the provincial government\nto persons In Saskatchewan engaged In\neducational  work.\nShe Is a daughter of the late Lieut.\nJ. A. Oartslde and Mrs. Oartslde of\nMoose Jaw. She graduated from the\nCentral Collegiate Institute, and ln 1020\ni successful tn winning the war\nMemorial scholarship offered by the Imperial Order of the Daughters of Empire, which entitled her to three years\nstudy at the University of Saskatchewan at Saskatoon. She graduated from\nthat  Institution with  honors.\nHer father, Llent. Oartslde made the\nsupreme sacrifice during the World war.\nPREMIER  KING  TO  BE  GIVEN  CABIN\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., July 8\u2014A\ncabin at Waakesu; lake, ln the new\nPrince Albert National park, wtll be\npresented to Premier W. L. Mackenzie\nKing, as the gift of his Prince Albert\nconstituents when he visits the district for the official opening of the\npark ln August. The cabin wlll be\nof rustic type, built on a specially\nselected site.\n *s> \u2014 *4f_\\\\\nThe University of PennsylvagJJalion\nlose 116 athletes through^^ number\nthis year. This ls the^^jl^ the hls.\nof athletes to be ejtg^   There  ls one\nTORONTO, July S.-VThrse Canadian\nrecords were washed away In the concluding events of the Olympic trials\nand Canadian championships held by\nthe Canadian amateur swimming association at Sunnyside pool Saturday.\nThe marks ln both the 440 yard\nevents for men and women, were\ntoppled overboard when Oarnet Ault,\nof Ottawa, and Mlas Mary Casson, of\nToronto, splashed through to new\nCanadian records. The third official\nmark was lowered by Miss Hilda\nHuestls of Toronto, ln the 100 yard\nback stroke for women.\nThe performance of Oarnet Ault,\ncarrying the colors of the St. Barnabas\nclub, Ottawa, was one of the outstanding exhibitions of the afternoon.\nThe blonde swimmer from the capital\nfallowed up his record-breaking feat\nln' the mile event of thc preceding\nnight by dipping 14 1-6 seconds from\nthe 440 yard, free style, Canadian\nrecord. In establishing his second\nrecord ln two successive days, Ault\ncompeted against such outstanding\nstars as Munro Bourne, of Montreal;\nMurray Orlffln and Jim Thompson of\nToronto; and Albert Ford, of Winnipeg.\nIN   TWO   HEATS\nThe event was run in two heats,\nwith the winner being declared from\nthe best time. Ault won his htat\nwtth eass, never belftg headed and\nfinished 30 yards ahead of Jim Thompson. Bourne won the other heat but\nhis ttme was 16 l-S seconds slower\nthan Ault's. The Ottawa swimmer's\nmark of five minutes 30 4-5 seconds\nfor the event compares with the old\nrecord of 6:36 established in 1922 by\nGeorge Vernon, Montreal in & 110\nyard tank. The Sunnyside pool is\n60 yards ln length.\nMiss Mary Casson of the Toronto\nGranite club, broke her own record\nof 6:46 In the 440 yard free style event\nfor women when she swam the distance  ln 6:3?  3-5.\nMiss Hilda Huestls, Toronto Parkdsle\nLadles A. O, bettered by 4 4-6 seconds\nthe record of the 100 yards back stroke\nevent for women, formerly held by\nMiss Irene O'Byrne, Ottawa, and\nestablished In 1928. Miss Huestls' new\nrecord  is  1:27.\nAlfred Phillips. Toronto, Central Y,\nplaced ahead of Gerard Monty, Montreal AAA in the plain and fancy diving event. They were the only co*-'\npetltors. ^-Park-\nMiss Grace MacKenzie, Topf contest\ndale,   won  the  women  d<  won   the\nThe   Toronto   Park<fcfr WOmen.\n400  yard relay evexti\u2014. \u2014.\n\"v-^lDO NOTES\n. kCDQ, B.C., July 8.\u2014-Dave Price of\nLdur-dough fame, ls enjoying an extended vacation with friends at Waldo\nand vicinity during the past fortnight,\nsince resigning his post at the Plumb\nBob Waters as cook.\nGeorge Hammond Is taking a trip\nacross the border on a visit to his\nsister   ln  Spokane.\nConsiderable rain has fallen here of\nlots wWoh cause* tome anx'Hv  \u00bb<\n\\*x continuance   h*es*us\u00bb o# thi* atmoA\nImnsTMble  condition  of   th*   mad* M\nthU Mm* for lo*gln\u00ab on*ratlAns\ni\u00bbck Hammond, who ha* b*\u00bbn e**\u00bb.\nfined et th- Ci^hrrjo* howMtsi ****\naorr*\" time wtth a lam**, leg. la *wv\u00bb-**h|\nen trnorovine. He will )**v* the hot.-\npt*\u00abl twv*n for >>l(i home here.\nHamotnn MrNab Is rer*ort\u00abd ** ha-**>\ninvaded the Fll^v Finn minimi -ftWiv *\u2022\u00ab\nmaVe sn investigation of tha ftU^-'rjt\nwith a view to loo*tin* a wbrth wh'V\nmineral property before returning to\nhi* home here.\nJames Muir. the lowing contractor of\nWaldo, ls makmr preilmlnsrr r*n**i\u00bb\u00abi-\ntions for a portable saw miH which he\nproposes to establish on Bear Mountain some 10 miles from Waldo. He\nexnects to saw ties and lumber.\nDominion Dav activities at WsMo\nwere of a peaceful and quiet turn owing to ths, copious rainfall.\nTAGHUM NOTES\nTAQUM B.C., July 8\u2014A sunwise Picnic was held here for Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Moon and family who are\nleaving shortly for the coast to reside.\nA good crowd was out. Supper was\nserved In the school house. Afterwards\na presentation was made to Mra. Moore,\na silver cake dish by E. Jennings od\nbehalf of the ladles of the community.\nRaces were held at Bownesse Park\nfor the children. Everyone had a good\ntime and a very enjoyable evening was\nspent.\nMiss Florence Wills, who has been\nvisiting her sister, Mrs. R. Bowyer, has\nleft for Allenby to visit her brother,\nWlUlam Wills.\nMrs. William Cartwrlght and aon were\nshoppers in Nelson on Friday.\nMrs. May went to Nelson on Friday.\nMrs. R. Bowyer and daughter, Betty,\nwere shoppers ln the city Friday.\nBISLEY CAMP, Eng., July 8.\u2014 Quartermaster Sergeant S.  J.  White of  ti*\nIrish regiment, Toronto, tied with See-\ngeant Major Jagger, of the South London  Rifle club  and  A.  O.  Fulton, of\nNorth London Rifle club in ths Coiinffi\nDoyle challenge statuette shoot at th\nNational   Rifle  association's  meet  Saturday.    The  three  will shoot  tor   first\nplace    on   Monday.   Fulton   has   won\nking's prize at Bisley twice ahd Jagger\nwaa  last year's army  champion.\n<\u25a0*\u2014*<        i .\nCharles  A.  Lampard   of  <Juelpb^# *t\ncompleted   42   years'   service   *\nploy of the C. P. R. ^%y\nTher^'\n. ypeumter\nTHE\n'REMINGTON'\nPreferred by the\nOPERATOR\nREMINGTON  TYPEWRITERS,\nLIMITED\n550 Seymour St., Vancouver, B.C.\nPhone Seymour 2408\nNelson Dealer\nCANADA DRl'O tt  BOOK CO.\nTrail Dealer\nK.  A.   MABOESON\nEXTe\u00bbpttT FROM\nCOUNTRY   LIFE\nIN   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nfien of the B. V. Honey Producers' Association, B. C. Fruit Growers' Association, B. r. Certified Seed Potato\nGrowers' Association, British Columbia Women's Institutes, etc.\n*>>Bl\u00bbli********************************K   I\nTIJ-JS Provincial Elections'this year creased prosperity, of its people as a\nare being held\u00abcntirely as a matter, whole, and may not always charge\nof form'''There is nothing to justify air lag care1 of the Liberal government.\nappeal to the country except the statu-   From a disheartened, almost bankrupt\ntory regulation that \"the electors must be industry in 1916, it has become pros-\nconsultied every so often and given \/in perous and sound in every phase. Be-\nopportunity of expressing their sorer-   fore the Liberals took over the reins of\neigu wilL\t\ni As the leader of the Conservatives\nstated in one of his speeches, the electors  in  a   Provincial   election  should\noffice literally hundreds of-farmers\nwere pulling up stakes and leaving their\nfanns. Today, after eleven years of pa-\nticnl co-operating endeavor, we find the\nfarming districts assuming their proper\n\\.tll~     ill     ti     i   i \",,,,,  ,,,,     , ,v\t\nchoose then- members in the same way ,m.(. m ^ gcheme of ^.^ economv\nthat the shareholders ot a large corpora- _nalnely the backbone of the province,\ntion would choose a board ot directors.  T]l(l lpgislation fost(.r,(1 ,)y the sovern.\nThat being the case it .would seem \"lent, during the past few years has\nalmost a foregone conclusion that the heen uniformly sound and progressive\ngovernment of Premier MacLean will and has resulted in stabilizing market-\nhe returned with an overwhelming ma- lng conditions for the fruit growers,\n.jority, for it has conducted the husiness |n ^ ((f ^ OI\u201eM)Hition of 0(m.\nol tlie province ,\u201e an eminently satis- sorv.ltiv(, nil.lubers 0f the Okanagan the\nfactory manner during the past eleven f.u,ni(,1,s g, the districts whi,h ,,.tnrned\ny('ars- the members have indorsed the govern-\nIt has its critics, of course\u2014what ment marketing legislation with en-\ngovei-fnncnt has not\u2014and there are thusiasm and they Will not lightly re-\nmany who would claim that its record gard the expressed determination of\nis one which should damn the Liberal Conservatives to scrap the most pro-\nparty forever in the province, but the gressive piece of legislation which lias\ncold figures of industry are handicaps been enacted for then,-\nm\\\\\\_ t,1u'.::,\u00bb,Il\"',.M,\"ts :>f 9*l0YernmeDt        Likewise the farmer in thc Fraser\nwill tmd il difficult to overcome. yaUcy who })|(.,l(1(.(, S() (,.mi(,st|v for hl.\nAgriculture, as an example, has elusion under the Marketing Control\nmade enormous strides underthcfoster-   Act at the last session will not forget\nthe efforts of the Minister of Agriculture on their behalf, nor will he look\nwith any degree of favor upon a party\nwhich has consistently opposed every\neffort made by the government to better the condition of the fanners.   Premier MacLean has supported the Hon.\nMr. Harrow in every detail of His work\non behalf of the agricultural industry.\nThe government has been severely criticised by the opposition members for\nthe expenditures it has made in the development of better methods of production and marketing.   As the result of\nthat work British Columbia's agricultural products are known the world\nover for their superior qualities and an\never-increasing demand for them is witness to the efficiency of the depart*\nincut's market extension activity.\nIrrigation and reclamation schemes\nhave been undertaken and brought to a\nhighly successful conclusion by the government. The Conservatives are berating the government for spending\nmoney on these projects and charge the\ngovernment with profligacy. Apparently the Conservative mind cannot\nconceive that a government must look\nfor return on invested capital in the in-\ncapital every expenditure directly\nagainst those people who use the works\nfor which the capital was expended.\nThey\u2014the Conservatives\u2014use the\narguments about the monies expended\nfor roads. Every mile of road, according\nto their arguments generally, should be\ncharged against the properties it runs\nthrough. If we are to take the Conservatives literally they do not propose\nto undertake any public works which\nthey cann6t collect from those who use\nthem; they will not build roads or\nbridges unless the farmer pays the cost\ndirectly. If good roads are not good\nbusiness for the whole province then\nwe would like to know what is and if\nthe Conservatives expect to appeal to\nthe farmer on a no road without direct\ntaxation policy we are afraid they will\nbe conspicuous by their absence when\nthe roll is called next session at Victoria.\nAll things considered, Country Life\ndoes not feel that the Conservatives\nhave any items on their program with\nwhich it can sympathise except their\nkeen desire to obtain office. They have\nheen \"out\" a long time and we are\nafraid that their present platform will\nkeep them otit for another session at\nleast. t*,:,1\nThe farmer knows his Jonathans\nand he will hesitate a long time before\nhe decides to exchange the positive performances of MacLean and Harrow for\nthe negative promises of Tolmie and\nlord knows who.\n THB NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 9,1928\nPtg\u00ab 9mj\u00bb-'\nEST KOOTENAY\n'TENNIS PLAYERS\nLOSE TO NELSON\nrson  Club Members Take 7\n12 Matches. Exhibition\nTourney\n\"tklng seven of 13 matches, Nelson\np. Tennis club .members defeated the\n'lng West Kootenay Power & Light\npany tennis players in an exhibl-\n,1 interclub tournament on the Neill club's courts yesterday afternoon,\nbison made a clean sweep of the\n* men's singles and won their only\nS'T  three  matches,  when they  took\n\u00ab of the four men's doubles.   The\n-lng players proved strongest tn the\nss*  and mixed  doubles.   They took\ni matches In each event,\nie score, with the Nelson members\nLtloned first, were:\nen's singles\u2014J. Benson beat R. Long\nJ 0-0, 6-1; L. Simpson beat C. John-\n6-2, 6-3;  R. Renwick beat George\njeque 6-2, 6-3;   Monty Turner beat\nHarris, 4-6, 6-5, 6-3.\n,en's   doubles\u2014R.   Renwick   and   A.\nbeat J. West and W.  Elsdon.\n6-2;  L. Simpson and J. Champion\nto George Helbeque and C. John-\n6-0, 5-6, 2-6;  J. Champion and E.\nphy beat R. Long and W. Elsdon,\n0-2;   E.   Murphy  and  L.  Simpson\nR. Harris and J. West, 6-0, 6-0l   \u25a0\nlied doubles\u2014Miss Marjorie Benson\nJimmy Benson lost to W. Elsdon\nMra  Elsdon,  6-1,  5-6,   12-14;   I.\n\u2022phy  and  Miss   M.   Sandercock   lost\nJohnson and Mrs. R. Long, 3-6,\n\u2022dies' doubles\u2014Miss Isabelle Benson\nMrs.  J.  E.  Sowerby   lost  to  Mrs*\nElsdon and Mrs. R. Long. 4-6, 2-6;\nJean   Waldle   and   Miss   Gladys\nleringham lost to Mrs. R. Long and\nW.  Risdon,   1-6,  2-6.\n\u2022CESSIONS ON\nTORONTO UST\nlater\nAMERICAN GIRL\nWINS IN FINALS\nAT WIMBLEDON\nBeats Spanish Senorita in Match\nBeset With  Excitement;\nRoyalty Present\nWIMBLEDON. EngflM, July 8\u2014In\na victory that developed dramatic\npossibilities unlocked for when Helen\nWills Is riding the courts, the queen\nof American tennis Saturday conquered\nSenorita Ella de Alvarez of Spain ln\nthe women's singles final of the Wimbledon championships to gain the\ncrown for the second straight year.\nThe American youngster, not as accurate as usual and somewhat off form\ngenerally, beat the Spanish girl, 6-2.\n6-3, but not until Senorita Alvarez\nhad led 3-0 In the final session. Cracking then under the strain of the battle\nand possibly the illness that kept her\nfrom the courts for several days, Senorita Alvarez folded up under Helen's\npowerful drives.\nRegaining her speed and stroking\ncontrol, Miss Wills ran out the next\nsix games in fine style to clinch the\nmatch and .the unofficial title of world\nchampion for the second time ln succession.\nThere was no apparent trace of\nweakened stamina as Senorita Alvarez\nhopped, skipped and danced about the\ncenter court before a gallery of 16,000\nenthusiasts that included King George\nand Queen Mary, while hundreds of\nordinary fans stood ln line 12 hours\noutside the arena seeking admission.\nIf Alveraz was ill today we'd like\nto see her play when Bhe is well,\" was\nthe consensus of cynical tennis experts who watched the graceful girl\nexecute her daring backhand half volleys ln perfect form.\nNELSON SENIORS\nWIN BY ONE RUN\nOVER YMIR NINE\n'Lefty\"    Shoemaker's   Single,\nScoring Notman, Gives Nelson 7-6 Victory\nranda Off Five Dollars; radian Canners Much Stronger Issue\nORONTO. July B \u2014Active stock* on\nToronto exchange showed recess-\non Saturday.\nranda which rose spectacularly dur-\nthe  week,  dropped 15  to close at\nHudson   Bay   lost   30c   to   120.20;\n:h Sherrltt-Oordon. closed at 17.80.\nadvance of 40c. alter having touch-\nr. high of IS.40. On the listed*\n>n, Brazilian strengthened, closing\nH    to   601',;    while   International\n:el, on light trading, was 'A  up to\nuiadtan    Canners    securities    were\nih stronger, the first preferred going\nl\\k   to  oo3,,,  and  the second  pre-\nm one to 22.\nrail   was   considerably   ln   evidence\n(I a gain of 2^ to 70V Royal Bank\nIned 5 td 370; B. A. OU V. to 38%\nStandard Paving % to 18tt.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nYORK, July 8.\u2014Jess Petty mas\nChicago today and Brooklyn\nup the series at two victories\ni with a six to two verdict In the\nth game of the series at Chicago,\nerman's homer ln the fifth with\nidrlck on base, accounted for two\nf\u2014e runs.\ni \u00bb spectacular ninth Inning fln-\nClnclnnatl won a second game\nI, the series from Philadelphia at\nclnnatl today, 8-6. Cincinnati was\nling two runs when Callaghan hit\nsrd the score board for three bases,\ning three runners and winning the\nie.\n\u25a0king two games of a double header\nn the Boston Braves at St. Louis\nAy, tiie Cardinals pulled themselves\nto 31\/, games ahead of their near-\n' rivals, the Mew York Giants.\nTie first game was stopped several\n\u2022* by rain but th* Cardinal* with\n.our run lead in the fourth Inning,\n1 their ground and won 7-4.\n'he second game was of the slug\ni~ variety and between running for\n'Iter Irom passing showers, the Red-\nIs garnered 12 runs to eight by the\nves.\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE   .STANDING\nWon\n| Louis    49\nYork    43\nclnnatl      45\n,cago      44\noklyn     40\nsburgh      34\n'ton     34\nladelphia    .... 31\nLost\n39\n39\n34\n38\n35\n40\n41\n48\nPet\n.828\n.592\n.570\n.650\n.533\n.459\n.333\n.304\nUBBAY\noston 11, St. Louis 3.\nIttsburgh. 8;  New York 8.\nlttsburgh 6; New York 3.\nrooklyn  5;   Chicago 3.\nrcoklyn 3; Chicago 8.\nInclnnatl  6;   Philadelphia  8.\nMAT\nladelphia        ft\nunnatl        8\natterles\u2014Miller. McOraw and Lerlan.\nlilt*;   Rixey,  Lucas and  Piclnlch.\nR.   H.   I.\nton       4   13     1\nLouis      8    10     0\nAtterles   \u2014   Greenfield.     R.   Smith,\nney. -Clarkson  and   Taylor;   Cronln.\nlandsr  and   Wilson.\nOND GAME\nR.\nion       8\nLoul*   13\natterles   \u2014   Holllngsworth.     Barnes.\no*y   and   Taylor;   Sherdel,   Johnson\nWilson.\nR.\n*lyn    _    8\n'mo   3\nttterles\u2014Petty   and    Gooch;\nf*on. Root *nd Hartnett.\nther games not scheduled.\nT*ey City 8-5; Montreal 7-4,\nH\n17\n17\nH. X.\n9 1\n8 1\nBush,\n\u2022ACIFIC COAST\nLEAGUE GAMES\nScoring on \"Lefty\" Shoemaker's\nsingle when one man was out ln the\nlast half of the final inning. \"Scotty\"\nNotman tripped across the plate with\nthe run that gave Nelson senior ball\ntowers a 7-6 victory over the Ymlr\nnine In a closely contested exhibition\ngame et the Recreation grounds here\nyesterday afternoon. Nelson went to\nbat ln the final Inning on the short\nend Of a 6-S score., Three of four\nbatters up got hits and  two scored.\nHunt got up and struck out. Olllett\nwent to bat and knocked a high foul\nback of the home plate. \"Curly\" Euers\ngot under lt but was forced to bring\nthe ball against his protector to hold\nlt. Umpire Bill Freno declared Olllett\nnot out and Olllent went to bat again\nand slammed out a three-bagger to left\nfield. Notman got up and knocked out\na single scoring Olllett to tie the score.\nNotman got to second on an error and\nstole third. Shoemaker knocked down\na single scoring Notman and putting an\nend to the game.\nPreno's decision on Olllett's foul\ncaused considerable argument in which\nYmlr players as well as supporters took\npart. The players went on with the\ngame, however, with little loss of time.\nTHE RULE\nRule SI, section 3, of Spalding's Official Baseball guide says In part that\nthe batsman Is out lf a foul fly Is\ncaught \"provided it be not caught in\na fielder's cap, protector, pocket or\nother part of hla uniform, or strike\nsome object other than a fielder before\nbeing caught.\" It was upon this rule\nthat Freno based  his Judgment.\nThat Freno was a fair umpire and\nthat he had the right Idea but had\nwrongly Interpreted that rule, was a\nstatement made  by Jack StDenis sup-\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE   STANDING\nWon Lost Pet.\nNew   York     68 30 .737\nPhiladelphia     45 32 .584\nSt.   Louis   40 39 .508\nCleveland      38 41 .488\nWashington      34 43 .442\nChicago      34 43 .442\nBoston      30 43 .411\nDetroit     31 45 .408\nKATI'RDAY\nSt. Louis 6;  New York 6.\nSt. Louis 0; New York 1.\nWashington 9; Chicago 1.\nCleveland 2; Philadelphia 1.\nCleveland 3;   Philadelphia 8,\nDetroit 20;  Boston 8.\nDetroit 4; Boston 3.\nR.   H.   ..\nSt.   Louis     10    12      1\nNew   York        4     7     2\nBatteries\u2014Crowder and Mann; Campbell. Shealy. Thomas and Orabowskl,\nCollins.\nSECOND GAME\u2014\nR.   H.   E.\nSt.    Louis         5    13     1\nNew   York 3     8\nBatteries-' Blaeholder and Sctiang;\nJohnson. Moore, Thomas and Collins,\nGrabawskl.\nR.   H.   -.\nChicago      13   20     1\nWashington        7    10     3\nBatteries\u2014Lyons and Crouse; Hadley.\nMarberry, Zachary. Burke. Llsenbee and\nRuel.\nOTHER CLUBS NOT SCHEDULED.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nSATURDAY    '\nColumbus 2;  Minneapolis 3.\nToledo 1; St. Paul 0     (10 Innings).\nLouisville  6;   Milwaukee 0.\nSUNDAY\nColumbus  7-1;   Minneapolis  6-4.\nToledo 0-1;  St.  Paul  1-11.\nIndianapolis 3;   Kansas City 5.\n1NTERNATI0NAL~LEAGUE\nSATURDAY |     \u25a0\nNewark 13-1; Toronto 8-13.\nBaltimore 9; Buffalo 1.\nJeraey City 6; Montreal 13.\nReading 8;  Rochester 16.\nSUNDAY:\nToronto 4-6;  Newark   1-2,\nReading 8;  Rochester 3.\nBaltimore 3;  Buffalo 17.\nThN advertisement U not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Oovernment of British\nrolnruhln.\nporter of the Ymlr team. It was held\nthat the ball was not caught in the\nprotector but had merely been pressed\nagainst lt, and that the rule did not\napplv except when the ball was actually\ncaught ln the protector. Nelson supporters held that the rule applied\nwhether the ball was caught between\nthe protector and the body or between\nthe protector and the glove.\nINTERESTING   GAME\nThe Incident was the only one to\nspoil what waa otherwise an Interesting\nand closely contested game. The Ymir\nteam played the beet bail on the field,\nmaking a minimum of errors. The\nNelson team was occasionally sloppy on\nthe field but mad* up for lt in batting.\nThey missed three chances of double\nplays by errors.\nKraft chucked a good game for Nelson and with better support should\nhave held the Ymlr boyn down. He allowed only six scattered hits and gave\nout two passes to first base. He struck\nout three  batters.\nClark waa going good on the mound\nfor Ymlr. He retired in favor of Walman at the beginning of the eighth\nInning, after holding Nelson three Innings. Clark allowed nine scattered hits\nand gave four bases on balls. He\nstruck out six batters. Walman allowed three hits, and struck out two.\nOlllett and Notman Mich connected\nfor a three-base hit, Notman off Clark\nand Giliett off Walman. Kelly. McKinnon and Richardson connected for\ntwo-base hits.\nFAST  INNING\nNelson was retired without scoring in\nfour of the nine innings and the Ymlr\nboys went five Innings scoreless. In\nthe fifth Inning Clark pitched over\nthree strikes and three men were out.\nShoemaker got up and drove out a\ngrounder to McKinnon on the first ball\npitched. He waa thrown out at first.\nRichardson slammed the first ball over,\na grounder to Kelly and was thrown\nout at flrat.   Wallace did the aame.\nWhen Ymlr went to bat they were\nretired as quickly. Foes filed out to\nShoemaker who had to run from center\nfield to well over toward left, making\na sensational catch. Clark grounded to\nKraft and was thrown out at first.\nEuers did the aame.\nGOOD CATCH\nJohnny Wallace, Nelson's second baseman, made a sensational catch of what\nlooked like a sure hit. Clark drove out\na Texas leaguer ln the fourth inning,\nwell over Wallace's head and too short\nfor center fielder. Wallace raced after\nthe fly and caught It while on the go\nin tbe same direction it wu go.\u00bbg.\nIt was a pretty catch and well deserved\nthe loud applause.\nThe score by Innings was:\nYmlr          10 2 2 0 0 0 1 0\u20148\nNelson       0 12 10 0 10 2\u20147\nThe teams were:\nYmlr -Clark, p; Euers, c; Waiman,\nlb; Kelly, 2b; McKinnon, 3b; McLaughlin, aa; Daly, li; Foes, cf; Smith, rf.\nMclsaass replaced Smith ln the eighth\ninning.\nNelaon, Fraft, p; Richardson, c; Olllett, lb; Wallace, 2b; Notman, 3b;\nBamford, ss; Hunt, If; Shoemaker, cf;\nArcure, rf.\nUmpire\u2014Bill Freno.\nIDEAsTwEATHER FOR\nVANCOUVER RACES\nVANCOUVER, July 8.\u2014Ideal racing\nweather with a fast track, thrilling\nstretch drives and exciting finishes,\nfeatured the final day of the first\nmeet   at   Lansdowne   park  yesterday.\nJockey Moulter celebrated his return\nto local tracks by bringing in Princess\nIva in the first race to pay 128.90\nstraight.\nJockey Broadfoot was in  the money\neach  time he was up. recording  three |\nfirsts, two seconds and one third.    Hia I\nwinners were Singapore in the fourth,\nEgg  Nog  in  the  fifth,  the   Willingdon\nhandicap, and Kilauea ln the sixth.\nYANKEES BEAT\nBROWNS TWICE;\nRUTH GETS ONE\nCrashes   Thirty-second   Homer\nof Year; Chicago Pounds\nSenators\nWestminster Royals\nEarn Right Represent\nB. C. in Canuck Event\nVANCOUVER, B.C.. July 8.\u2014Westmln- \\\nster Royals earned the right to represent British Columbia in the inter-\nprovlnce series for the Dominion football championship on Saturday when\nthey defeated St. Paul's of Vancouver\nfive to two. The Royals will play\nCanadian Legion of Edmonton here on\nSaturday and Monday, July 14 and  16.\nThe score Saturday at half time was\none-all but Royals ran rough-shod\nover thetr opponents ln thc second\nhalf.\nTobacco and oean plantinf are general ln the Chatham district.\nNEW YORK. July B\u2014The Browns\ndefeated the Yankees in both ends of\n_ double header today y, 10-4. and 6-3,\nthereby reducing the lead of the champions over the Athletics to a mere\n11 Vi games. Babe Ruth hit his 32nd\nhomer tn the second clash In which\nall of the scores were due to homers.\nLou Blue and Schulte each hit for\nthe circuit with one on while round\ntrips by Blaeholder and Lazxeri found\ntbe   bases  empty.\nChicago pounded out 20 hits and\nscored 13 runs against the Senators\nst Washington today to take the third\ngame of the series. Seven walks helped the White Sox some, but were not.\nneeded. The locals used five pitchers,\nnone   proving   effective.\nGOLF CLOB TENNIS\nPLAYERS WIN OVER\nTADANACMEMBERS\nVisiting Players  Drop Five of\nEight Matches; All (;o to\nThree Sets\nTennis olayrrr or the Nelson Oolf\nj>nd Courtry club beat Ihe visiting\nTadflnac Tennis club players 5-3 ln a\nfrrnnlv Interclub- tournament at th*\nOolf club'*  courts  yesterday  afternoon\nAD eamss wen clo*\u00bbly tonUlHd tad\neach went t\u00bb three sets before the winners  were  decided.\nTh Nelson player* shone In th* meat*\ndoubles, taking four et the Are witch**\nIn that event. Th* Tadanac players\ntook two of the three ladles' double*.\nFAIRVIEW AND THE\nSCOUTS TO TANGLE\nSecond and Third Place Teams\nTo  Battle  In  Juvenile\nLeague Soccer\nFairview, holder of second place, ts\ndue to clash with the Scouts, holders\nof third place, ln a Juvenile soccer\nleague game at the Recreation grounds\nthis afternooa. The game is called\nlor 4:15 with Horace Ward handling\nthe  whistle.\nIf Fairview wins it will be Ued for\nleading place with the Callles. If the\nScouts win they will be tied for second\nplace  with  Fairview.\nWinnipeg Rowers\nBring Cup Back to\nDominion From U* 5.\nST. CATHARINES, July 8.\u2014Although\nWinnipeg Rowing club was unnvtunati\nenough to hswe been beaten by Toronto\nArgos ln the Olympic eights here on\nFriday the classy elght-oared crew from\nthe western city staged a mighty comeback yesterday and brought back to\nCanada the Hanlan Memorial trophy,\nwhich for three years has been held by\nUnltM States clubs. They won by a\nlength.\nThree years ago the trophy was carried off by the Penn. A. C. of Philadelphia, coached by Joe Wright Sr after\na gruelling race against a Toronto\nArgonaut crew stroked by Joe Wright\nJr, For the last two years tt wis\nHeld by Wyandotte. Michigan.\nBrantford Gas company will purify\nthe Tilbury gas supply to Brantford\nat  cost  of  200:000.\nNEW\nCHRYSLER\nPLYMOUTH\n850\n\u2014m\n\u25a0\nAND UPWARDS\ni\nCoupe    .\nRoadster\n.   \u00bb850\n850\nTouring   '   .\nt-Ooor Sedan\n.     870\n.     875\nDe Luxe Coupe .\n4-Door Sedan\n.     910\n.     915\nAll friccs f. o. K Window, Ontario,\nincluding itonaW factory equipment\nI\ni\nA New Car.. A New Car Style.. A New Zenith\nof Low Priced Car-Luxury and Performance\nNew slender profile chromium-plated radiator \u2014\nLong, low todies.\u2014Generous room for 2 to s passengers, according lo body mode\/.\u2014Luxurious deep up-\nholstety and appointment detail.-New \"Silrer-Dome\"\nhigh-compression engine, for use with any gasoline.\n\u2014Smooth speed up lo 60 and mote mi\/es an hour.\u2014\nChrysler light-action internal expanding hydraulic\nfour-wheel brakes\u2014no other car of this price\npossesses this feature.\nAU Chrysler research, engineering and\nmanufacturing have been inspired by thc\nfundamental motive of giving ever greater\nquality and value for each dollar of car\ncost.. Public recognition of this principle, in\nfour years advanced Chrysler from 17th to\njrd place in sales in the N. A. C. C.\nWith a new product-the Plymouth -\nChrysler is the first to give, at so low a\nprice, the advantages of performance, riding\nease, dependability and full adult size which\ncharacterize fine cars of higher price.\nThe new Chrysler-designed and Chrysler-\nbuilt Plymouth is so revolutionary an advance over other low-priced cars, it is such\nconclusive evidence that the past year's\nstrides in the science of manufacturing have\nmultiplied the purchasing power of the\nmotor car dollar, that you will surely want\nto see it and drive it\nAnd above all, you must see its beautiful\nlines and finish, and stretch at ease in its\ndeep-upholstered, full adult-size bodies, to\ncomprehend how completely the Plymouth\nsurpasses cars heretofore sold under $1500.\nThe Plymouth is today displayed by every\nChrysler dealer. He wants you to see it and\nto ride in it.\nPlease submit the Plymouth to this trial\nWe believe you will discover there has never\nbeen a car anywhere near its price that can\napproach the Plymouth for power, pick-up,\nsmoothness, easy handling, safety,quietness\nand roominess \u2014 nor that can equal it in\nbeauty and style.\n\u00bbn\nDominion Garage & Sales Company\nTRAIL, B.C.\n PagsfflgSl\nTHB NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 9, 1928\nLIVE WIRES CLASH\nWITH MARRIED MEN\nTrafalgar Baseball League Game\nTonight at Trafalgar\nGrounds\nMarried Men, holders of second place\nln tbe Trafalgar Independent Baseball\nleague en to claah with the Live Wires,\nholders of third place, In a league game\nat the Trafalgar grounds tonight. The\ngame is called for 6:IS with Julius\nRIesterer Sr. calling the halls and\nstrikes.\nUvea Wires hit a slump ln the second series and dropped the first three\ngames they played. They won their\nfourth game with the Cardinals. The\nfirst game they played ln the new\naeries they lost to the Married Men\nhy a 12-9 score.\nA win for the Married Men will put\nthem close on the heals of the league\nleading Senators, who so far have not\nlost a game ln the new series.\nThe Live Wires are well down on the\nlist hut a win tonight would be one\nmore step toward the top. They are\ndue to clash with the Senators on\nWednesday.\nTunney Rhymes\nWith Money\nand He Gets It\n^\\\nJohn L-Suluvan\nd.pnt aer a\nptME  WHCN HE 10ST\nM.3 CHAMPIONSHIP\n_ -focim CORDSx-rr\nBL   Mi   IH M \\lir.l\"\n(Former   Pitcher   New   York   (Hants)\nThe champions and near champions who were born late enough\ntc box ln theae days are certainly\nlucky.      John   L.   Sullivan   didn't   get\n\u2022 a smooth dime when he lost his title\ntc Jim Corbett at New Orleans, but\nbefore Oene Tunney steps ln the\nring with Tom Heeney every penny\nol the 1625.000 purse will be ln the\nhank for him. And if one bout goes\ntpe limit, that works out to 111,666.67\na minute.\nTom Heeney. the challenger, will\nmake as much in that one fight as\nHie great' old timers like Bob Fltz-\nalmmons. Torn Sharkey. Peter Maher.\nOus   Ruhlln.   Peter   Jackson   and   Kid\n. McCoy  made   In   a lifetime.\nIn the big money class of athletes, Babe Ruth is probably the\nmost underpaid of the lot. Herb\nPennock, Orover Alexander, and Dazzy\nVance, figuring salary, really receive\nmore money for the individual game\nthey pitch than Ruth does for the\nIndividual game ln which he takes\npart.\nGoes East Face\nCharge Robbing\nBank at Ottawa\nJOE WRIGHT IS\nWINNER OF THE\nSCULLS TITLE\nBeats Lee of Oxford By Length\nin Eight Minutes, 24 Seconds at Henley\nHENLEY, Eng., July 8\u2014 Joe Wright\nJr., Toronto, won the diamond sculls\nSaturday defeating R. T. Lee, Oxford,\nby a length, ln 8 minutes 34 seconds.\nIt was a reversal ot the 1937 distance in the premier singles event\nwhen the 31-year-old Canadian lost ln\nthe finals when his oar became entangled in a punt rope near the finish\nline.\nBoth Wright and Lee received a\ntremendous ovation as they sculled to\nthe starting post and the raoe Justified\nthe early cheers.\nJoe Wright, challenger, was presented\nto Prince Oeorge and members of the\nHenley committee.\nIt was the second Canadian victory\nin the event. Captain Lou Luscles,\nToronto, won In 1904.\nWright's time today was 14 seconds\nslower than the record held by P. B.\nKelley of the Leander Rowlng__club,\nLondon.\nTRAIL GREETS\nLEADER TOLMIE\nWITH OVATION\n(Continued from Page One)\nintention of the government to trans\nfer   the  lands   back,  he  withdrew   the\nmotion.\nA Judge was appointed to Inquire\ninto the matter, and reported .that\nwhile the province had no legal claim\nto the lands, lt undoubtedly had a\nmoral claim, and he recommended their\nreturn. This recommendation the gov\nernment said lt would honor.\nOnly for the last couple of years had\nthe Liberals at  Victoria  busied  themselves ln this matter, Dr. Tolmie pointed out. amid applause.\nTAX   REDUCTION\nHOPES\nLavish promises were made by Dr.\nMacLean, of future reduction in taxes.\nHe said he would save the ft3.000.000\ndeficit that the P.O.E. now made annually, by selling the P.O.E\u2014which Mr.\nDunning said hadn't been sold; and he\nwould have the revenue from the returned lands\u2014which examination of the\naccounts revealed cost thus far more to\nadminister than was taken ln. This\nIndicated the flimsy nature of these\ntax reduction proposals.\nDr. Tolmie said if he was \"inexperienced.\" as Dr. MacLean claimed, at\nleast he had administered a large Dominion department, whose interests had\ntaken him at times to distant fields,\nand had obtained a few good marks.\nWhile, as Dr. MacLean said, he did\nnot enjoy the confidence of the Liberals\u2014and had not expected lt. haying\ndevoted himself to the Interests of'the\ncountry as Been by the Conservatives\u2014\nthat did not prevent him from extending a hearty welcome to all Liberals\nready to cooperate with the Conservatives ln the securing of good government.\nHIS   LEADERSHIP\nThe Conservative leader said he had\nstrictly kept his bargain with the Conservative party, made at Kamloops.\nwhich was that he should return to the\nprovince as soon as the date of election\nwas announced. He had put aside his\nown plans ln order to accept the lead\nershlp. for a situation had developed at\nthe convention tnat made lt desirable\nfor some one to come forward. Having\naccepted,  he would  throw  himself Into\nthe fight with every ounce of his 125'\npounds. (Applause and laughter), As\nfor being an absentee Consfvvatlve lead-J\ner. would rather rest under that Imputa- j\ntlon than he responsible in any re-;\nspect for the absentee vote. (Applause).\nWhen the premier spoke In a derogatory manner of a certain Conservative\ncandidate as \"uneducated.\" he was\nhardly on the high plane he had said\nhe would follow. Also, In saying he did\nnot care for financial criticisms from\nmen who never handled more than\n\u20223000 of their own money at one time,\nhe was not very gracious. What about\nSir John A. Macdonald and Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier. greatest of Canadians, who\nwere poor men? It would have more\nbecome him to remember that \"a man's\na man for a' thatl\"    (Applause).\nThe sight of a man puffed up by a\nUttle temporary authority\u2014for ln Dr.\nMacLean's case lt was assuredly only\ntemporary\u2014always reminded Dr. Tolmie\nof the colored gentleman who was confronted for the first time by the sight\nof a zebra at the zoo. Answering the\ndemand of his wife as to what It was.\nhe replied with assurance: \"Mlrandy.\nthat am a sports model Jackass!\" (Roars\nof laughter).\nSHOIXD BE IN TOl'CH\nWITH  RESOURCES\n\"In my opinion,\" said the Conserva^\ntlve leader, \"a government should be ln\nclose touch with the natural resources\nof ths territory lt administers, and\nshould seek their full development.\nI do not meen that there should be\ncuddling, or pap-feeding. But It should\nbe possible for a government to greatly\nassist development without stooping to\nthat.\"\nThough Just as rich in area and re\nsources as the three Pacific Btates. or\nas large as France, Italy and Switzerland combined, this province had only\n600,000 people.\nBut before more people were asked to\ncome in, something must be provided\nfor them to do. and before that, something for those already here. The emigration must first be stopped, and then\nthe problem of taking care of immigration could be taken up. Millions were\nnow being spent to bring In Immigrants\nand at the end of the year the efflux\nwas greater than the influx.\nA OREAT LEAK\nDr. Tolmie spoke of the great leak In\nbuying abroad annually $5,750,000 worth\nof agricultural products, whtle the\nprovince had vast unoccupied spaces\nsuitable for agriculture, amounting, in\nthe case of the rive stock branches, to\n160,000.000 acres of good range, on\nwhich a vast industry could be built.\nThen there were mining resources that\nhad already yielded $900,000,000. with\nthe surface as yet only scratched.\nOver half the commercial timber of\nCanada was ln this province.\nHe said he was a great believer In the\nprinciple of helping the man who was\nin the early stages of an enterprise, and\nIn letting him get on his feet before\nhe was taxed. In this connection, he\nexplained his proposal for adoption. If\nfeasible, of the Ontario plan of only\ntaxing mines after they had become\nprofit-producing, and his policy to encourage prospecting by remission of\nfree miner's licence fees, mining lectures\nand free samples.\nAlso he believed in encouraging Industry, and In getting every possible\ndollar out of the province's raw materials, by converting them on British\nColumbia soil Into manufactured\nproducts.\nTRAU.  1LLV STHATES\nPRINCIPLE\n\"Trail.\" said Dr. Tolmie, \"ls a convincing illustration of the value of the\npolicy of working up our raw materials\nat home. Before Heinze came, and built\nthe original Trail smelter. Trail was\nJust at bend on the Columbia, at the\nfoot of Rossiand. Then came the\nCanadian Smelting company, foreshadow\nlng the Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting Company of Canada, with Its\ngreat development of plants to serve\nIts mines and others.\n\"Today Trail Is a nice, clean, thriving\ncity,  supported  on  the  industry   repre'\nVANCOUVER, B.C.. July 8\u2014William\nLoucks. arrested here, who ls charged\nalong with Gilbert W Bennett, cashier\nwith the theft of $37,000 from the\nOttawa branch of the Standard Bank\nof Canada, has left for Ottawa to stand\ntrial.\nPolice are investigating reports of the\nfinding of two dead men beside railway\ntracks ln Alberta wtth the view of\nascertaining whether either of them Is\nthe missing Bennett, whose trail was\nloat  at  Medicine  Hat,  Alberta,\nAccording to unconfirmed reports\nhere, one man, on' whose person wa*\n' found $9000. was discovered on the\ntrack between Calgary and Edmonton,\nwhile a second man, whose Identity is\nnot known, was picked on the right-of-\nway between Medicine Hat and Calgary.\nKootenay Lake\nLOCAL STEAMERS\nS. S. Moyie will take following\nlocal runs:\nTuesday, July 10, Nelson-Kaslo-\nLardo; Wednesday, July 11, Kaslo-\nNelson and return; Thursday,\nJuly 13, Kaslo to Nelson via Crawford Bay and return trip to Craw-\nford Bay only.\n8. S. Kuskanook will resume\nregular service for Kaslo 4:30\np.m., Thursday, July 13.\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A.\nVACATION TIME\nis here again, with its call to the Great\nOutdoors. In the course of the next few\nweeks, thousands of people will forsake\nthe cities to seek rest and recreation by\nlake and stream and in the depths of the\ncool, green Forests.\nREMEMBER!\nThis is the month of July when the Fire\nHazard is at its height. Be rigidly careful with Fire. Get your camp fire permit;\nhave it always with you and follow its\nsimDle instructions. The consciousness of\ndoing your part to Protect the Forests\nwill add materially to your enjoyment of\nthem.\nB. C. FOREST SERVICE\nsmtcd by those gnat plants at Tadanac,\nStructural steel, brick, lumber and other\nbuilding materials and machinery Have\nbeen fabricated fbr this industry, and\nlc meet, tho growth of Trail. Further,\nthe people of Trail afford a great coh-\nm.ming market, both for agricultural\nproducts and for all general lines of\nconsumption.      I\n\"This W.aoo.OOC payroll, of which you\nare Justly proad, would be south of the\nline today lf we had ehlpped the ores\nof this territory south Instead of treating them on the British Columbia side\nof the, line.\n\"Let me express my compliments to\nthose men who discovered these processes on Which the prosperity of\nTraU and of tbe Kootenay ls very largely\nfounded,\" added Dr. Tolmie; \"\u2014to the\nAmerican who first discovered the principle of oil flotation, and to the able\n\"lab\" here evolved the commercial\nInvestigators who tn the Consolidated\nprocess for the extraction of zinc from\nKootenay ores, a process that had made\nthe great mine at Klmberley worth untold millions.\" (Applause)\nRESEARCH TO\nAll)   IN.H'.HTRY\nThis research reminded Dr. Tolmie\nof the development of Marquis wheat\nby the Dominion experimental farms\nduring hts tenure of office as minister\nof agriculture, the production of this\nnew variety, 10 days earlier than any\nother Fife, and wtth stronger straw,\nbeing worth hundreds of millions to\nthe country, and many times the\nmoney that has been spent on the\nexperimental farms from the time of\ntheir   inception.\n\"We wlll assist research in every way,\nto build up new Industries for the\nprovince,\" he said.\nAnother way to open up the province\nwas by providing roads and trails, for\ntourists, but first for \"our own people\"\nWith autoes, one could have, better\nroads, with fewer high spots and kinks.\nWork on the roads should firat go\nto nearby residents. Dr. Tolmie expressed hismelf as Inflexibly against\ncompelling any man to He to a foreman as to his politics ln order to get\na Job, The poor man was entitled to\na square deal. The rich fellow was\nable   to  take;  care   of   himself.\nThe rumor that he was going to fire\nall Liberals in the civil service was\nall humbug. He was an old civil\nservant himself, he knew the honest\nand faithful work done by the great\nbody of civil servants, and when ln\neffice at Ottawa had never fired one\nfor partisanship, but only asked respecting him. if he was giving service.\nThat would be the condition at Victoria after his assumption of office.\nSOCIAL RECORD\nOn social legislation, the Conservative\nparty's record, in connection with the\nFactory act. Workmen's compensation,\nand nearly a score other measures,\nwas such that those interested in this\nclass of legislation could be assured\nof continued efforts to promote the\nwelfare of the workmen of the women\nand children, and of the helpless and\nthe aged. In old age pensions, which\nthe Conservatives helped to bring in,\nthey had a fundamental interest, and\nwould always be prepared to receive\nrepresentations leading to the improvement of this and other social measures.\nTo make education received in the\nschools more applicable to conditions,\nand to turn out more young people\nequipped to supply efficient service in\nthe Industries of the province, was one\nof his alms. A greater pride ln\nprovince, country and Empire should\nalso be Inculcated, the foundation of\nlt being thorough knowledge of the\nprovince's and country's potentialities.\n(Applause).\ntake police\nfrom politics\nDr. Tolmie declared lf he was entrusted with the administration of the\nprovince, he would try to maintain the\ndignity and sanctity of the courts of\nthe land, and would remove the provincial pollce as far from politics as\npossible. Hc expressed the belief that\nthat splendid force would gain ln efficiency if cut loose entirely from political  control.\n\"Your candidate,\" said Dr. Tolmie,\n\"Is highly respected In the house and\n(Continued   on   Face  Nine.)\nWant and Clnwlf le* advertising \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per Insertion. If Paid In advance. 6c per word\nper week, or 32*c per word per month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a cash-\nln-adyance basis. Each initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc.. counts ar one word.\nMinimum 25c, if charged 60c.      \t\nLoral Rending Notices\u2014Three cents\nper word each insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals 10c per word.\nBlackface capitals 5c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent discount if run dally without change of copy for one month or\nmore. Where advertisement ls set out\nIn short lines the charge is 16c a line\nfor Roman tvpe. 20c for blackface and\n25o for blackface capitals. Minimum\nSSc. If charged 90c.\nBirth Notices\u2014Free.\nCards\u2014Three centa per word; ROo\nminimum.\nClassified Advertising Rates\nBirth*\nROWLEY\u2014Born to Mr. and Mrs. A. V.\nRowley. 1113 Water street, July 6th,\na son. \t\nHelp Wanted\nWANTED\u2014To know names ex-army\nair pilots. Nelson district. Confidential.     P. O. Box 066.    (4694-2-69)\nWANTED\u2014Drug   apprentice.      Rutherford Drug Oo. (46TT-3-70)\nWANTED\u2014Salesman to sell the Surge\nMilkers and Stockholm cream separators In the Yale and Kootenay\ncountry. Fine opoortunlty for a\nhigh class man. Write to Babson\nBros.. 1110 Hamilton St., Vancouver.\nB.  C. <4673>\nWANTED\u2014Woman for dining room\nand kitchen work. Balfour Beach\nInn,   Balfour. (4660)\nWANTED\u2014Good girl for a country\nboarding house. Foreign*, preferred.\nApply, stating wages wanted. Box\n4645,   Daily   News. (4648)\nProperty for Sale\nFOR SALE\u2014-Fifteen acres at Passmore,\nSlocan     Valley.       2    acres    stashed,\n\u25a0  cabin. 3 minutes to depot and school.\nMOO cash.    C. Wftddup, Salmon Arm.\n- - (4608-3-71.\nFOR SALE\u2014Former Cranbrook Herald\nbuilding, suitable for printing office,\nreal estate office, retail store or\nother purposes. Nine rooms over\nbuilding suitable for rooming houae.\nOn Cranbrook main street. Reasonable price and terms. Write Mrs.\nC. Howard, Cranbrook. B. C.\n(4609-6-79)\nFOR SALE\u2014Corner of Hall and  Baker\nthree dwellings.   Price $5000.00.   Part\ncash,   balance   on   terms   lf   desired.\nApply Mrs. 8. E. Colwell, Nelson, B.C.\n\u00ab* (4434-26-76)\nHOUSE FOR SALE\u2014Small house, two\nlots. Garden with fruit frees. Apply\nowner,   418  Houston  street.\n(4831-6-6Q)\nFRUIT AND POULTRY RANCH\u2014Apple Grove near Sherwood, opposite\nEdgewood. B. C. Apply R. W. Daw-\nson.   NelBon.  (4665)\nFor Rent\nFOUR-ROOMED HOUSE\u2014Modern, High\nstreet, splendid view. Large veranda,\nfruit, free water, twenty dollars. Ed.\nFerguson. (4700-6-74)\nNEW HOUSE\u2014modern, three bedrooms.\nCorner Cedar and Robson Street for\nrent by August 1st.    O. H. Fraser.\n(4703-6-72)\nFOR RENT\u20144 furnlflhed housekeeping\nrooms and bath. Also house. D.\nMagllo,   Phone   483R.       (4454-26-78)\nFOR RENT\u2014Unfurnished houso for 10\nweeks overlooking Queens Bay on the\nmain lake.    Box 4616, Dally News.\n  (4616-6-68)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nTENDERS TO SINK A SHAFT 5x7\nfeet in the clear. Ftfty feet deep,\nby sections of ten feet In depth, and\ncross-cut to walls both ways. In\nCreston district. Apply to F. W.\nMerrill, A3'A Church street, Toronto,\nOnt. (4545-6-65)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced   Waitress.   Outlet   Hotel,   Procter. (4626)\nNOTICE  TO  LEASERS\nSINGLE JACK MINERS WANTED at\nthe Canadian Brandon Oroup near\nSandon, good lease to dependable\nminers, easy ground to drill, high\ngrade Silver-lead ore ln sight, average smelter assays 120 oz. \u25a0 silver\nWfp lead. See me at mine. Look lt\nover. 2% miles from Sandon. B. c.\nYou can motor within a mile of\nproperty.     Joseph  Brandon.\n(4817)\nBARRELS. KEOS AND RMPTY SACKS\u2014\nMcDonald Jam Company, Nelson.\n(4589-tf)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced   assayer.    Apply\nWiddowson's Assay Office, Nelson.\nI (4632-6-69)\nBOY WANTED\u2014For ranch. Apply\n523 Innes Btreet. between 12 and 1.\nA.  Jeffreys. (4664)\nSituations Wanted\nCARPENTER\u2014lst class wants employment ln or out of town, contract or\nday work. Address to Box 4708.\nDally News. (4708-2-70)\nEXPERIENCED     FARM-HAND     desires\nposition.     Box   4668.  Dally  News.\nt* ' (4688-2-68)\nWANTED\u2014Public   itenograpbr     Typewriter  at, home.  Phone  390R.\n  (4588-tf)\nLive Stock for Sale\nTHOROUGHBRED Chinchilla Rabbits\nfor sale. Prices reasonable. Apply\nP. E. Poulin,  Stanley street.\n(4468-tf)\nSurmrier\nVacation 'Trips\nON SALE DAILY,  MAT S3  TO  SEPT.  SO\u2014RETURN  LIMIT   OCT. 81\nPort WlUlam \t\nNiagara Palls.  N.Y.\nOttawa  \t\nMontreal  \t\nMoncton \t\nHalifax   \t\nChicago \t\nNew Tork - \t\nBoston    ...\n 134.9a\n  132.38\n  137.06\n 163.20\n  157.78\n     90.30\n   161.70\n  167.76\nToronto  \t\nHamilton    \t\n  <18.0S\n8t. John  \t\nSt. Paul \t\nMinneapolis  \t\nDuluth \t\n   162.30\n    76.60\n    76.60\n    76.60\nMany Additional Destinations\nASK FOR RATES FROM AND TO ANY POINT\nRoute via Main Line or via Soo Line, through Winnipeg or Portal\nto St. Paul, thence via Chicago or Sault Ste. Marie, via Oreat Lakea;\nor via California at additional fare; or good to go via one of the\nabove routes, return another.\nJ. S. CARTER, DISTRICT PASSENGER AGENT, NELSON, RC.\nWOOD PIPE\u2014All sires and at reduced\nprices.      F.  Qalney,  Harrop.\n(4707-3-70)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Household   furniture,   also\nelectric   range   and   electric   washing\nmachine.    A. R. Defleux, Bonnlngton.\n(4699-3-71)\nLAUNCH AN6 BOATHOUSE FOR SALE\n\u2014cheap, thoroughly reliable engine\n8-10 HP., equipped with K. w. Magneto, seats upholstered. speed 10\nmiles an hour. Carl Ramsden, at\nRamsden   Bros. (4652-3-68)\nBARBER'S   OUTFIT   FOR   SALE\u2014Apply\n515 HaU street or Box 328. Nelson.\n(4697)\nA GUIDE to matrimonial happiness.\nMargaret Langor's book on \"Sexual\nHygiene and Family Limitations,\"\nconveys much helpful Information of\nuniversal interest, Price $1.00. N.\nWinston, 2871 Euclid Avenue, Vancouver,   B.   C. (4819-12-74)\nFOR SALE\u2014Male Police dog pup, purebred.     Apply Nelson Club.       (4657)\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITURE FOR SALE\u2014\ngas range and refrigerator, almost\nnew.    712 Carbonate. (4861)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nnd  economically.    \\\\.c a word.\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nHOUSEKEEPING    ROOMS\u2014Piano.     624\nLatimer atreet. (4647)\nFURNISHED  BEDROOM\u2014Eml  of  Baker\natreet.      Phone   493X. (4678)\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Cottage on Lakeside for a\nmonth or two. Apply Room 48\nStrathcona   Hotel. (4638)\nWANTED\nSmall    Furnished    House,    close    In.\nPhone 454 before 6 p.m.\nE. M. GILLOTT\n(4689-3-70)\nAutomobiles\nFOR 8ALE\u20141924 Star touring ln good\nshape, easy terms. Dally News. Box\n4658. (4668)\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED\u2014 Oood gentle cow. newly\nfreshened. State age. price and\nquantity of milk given at each milking.    Postmaster, Alnsworth. B. C.\n\u25a0  (4681-6-73)\nAgents Wanted\n\"PORTRAIT AOENT8\"\u2014Write fbr Catalogue and Prices. United Art, Limited.\n4   Brunswick.   Toronto. (4587)\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014Near Kootenay Bay. white and\nblack smooth haired Fox Terrier\nanswers to the name of Jock, has\nEdmonton tag on collar. Reward.\nRobertson. Kootenay Bay. (4655-3-69)\nc*fi\nMiscellaneous\nWANTED \u2014 Clean cotton rags.\nDally News. (ft\nHAVE YOUR SCISSORS OHOUWD. L\nKootenay Barber Shop. *U| Josl\nphlnt street. \u25a0    (4tfrJ\nPoultry and Bgffi\nFOR SALE\u201460 fourteen weeks old 1\nhorn pullets from \"Famous\" ley:\nstrain-     \u20221-25  each.     Irwin, Ba.\n(4686-6*'\nYOUNO     LEGHORN      PULLETS\nready.    One   Dollar   tea  each.    Af\npleton   Bros.,   Procter.       (4461-31-1\nPOR SALE\u2014Cockerels. 8 weks\n26c f.o.b. WlUow Point, B, C.\nWhitehead. R. R. No. t.      (4613-6-1\nFor Sale or Rent\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u2014The\nLakes Hotel. Situated oa the\nwood-Vernon highway. Partly fu.\nlshed with equipment. Apply O.\nB. Jordan Williams, Edgewood, B.\n  (44HJ-Sh31\nTeachers Wanted\nf*H\nTEACHER WANTED for heavy ungri\ned school. Five miles from NeU\nB. C. Taghum  School Board.\n(4701-12-1\nEXPERIENCED TEACHER WANTKD 1\nAppledale    school    (male   pref en\nApply   to  M.   A.   Woyna,  beo'y..\npledale,   B.   C. < 4693-3-'*\nTEACHER   WANTED\u2014Rosebery   assls\nschool.      Salary   one   hundred    ad\ntwo dollars per month.    Apply Seel\nschool  board,   Rosebery,  B.   C.\n(4882-6-71\nEXPERIENCED  TEACHER   WANTKDffl\nCarroll's    Landing    school.\ntl02  per  month.     Apply  to  Samu\nOreen, Sec, Burton, R. R. 1, B. O.l\n(4631\nTELL your wants  through  The  Dail\nNews classified columns.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nShoe Repairs\nFor Service and Satisfaction\nIDEAL  SHOE  REPAIR  SHOP\nC. Romano, Opt B.C. Tel. Co., Stanley d_\n(45<K)-t|\nOur Shoe Repairing Is practically 8b\nRemaking.   Mall shoes to us for best al\ntentlon. A.  MAZZA. Boi  173 Nelson. I\n        (4591-t|\nCabinetmaker\nJ.   H.   CHAPMAN\u2014Baker   St.     Caolnl\nMaker & Upholsterer.   Phone 830.    I\n  <4soa-t|\nAccounting\nCHARLES F. HUNTER\u2014\nAuditor.    McDtfnald    4am    nntldlnl\nBox  1191. Nelson, B. C. (4593-1\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. Bot A1I08. Kelso!\nB.  C.   Standard   western  charges.    I\n(4504-tl\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'  TRANSFER\u2014Bag****,\nand Wood.   Phone 106. (45\nnfit!\nWood Working Factor*\nLAWSON  \u2014  Baker St.   Carpenter  ac\nJoiner,     Ccreens and Hardware.\n(4597-tl\nInsurance and Real Estat\nR. W. Dawson\u2014Real Estate, lnsuraiw\nRrnlals. Next Hipperson llarrtwsj\nBaker street. (481MI-*\nH. E. DILL\u2014 INSURANCE\nFARM AND CITY PROPERTY\n     608 Ward  Street       (4699-t\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY, OILKEB BLR, NELSON.\n(480r-t(\nFlorists\nORIZZF1.I.ES   greenhouses.   Neurol\nCut flowers and floral designs.\n(4fl02-tl\nWM. S. JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone 949.  Cut Flowera, Fott~i Plan*\nand  Floral Emblems. (4803-tl\nWholesale\nL MACDONALD A CO.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers and Prorlslon MH\nchanti. Importers of Ten, Coffee\nSpices, Dried Fruits. Staph) and \"Ihe\nGroceries.  Nelson.  B.  C. (4804-tl\nEngineers\nCHAS. MOORE. B.C.I..S, A.I.B.C.\nJ. P. COATES. CE. AMH1C. MJUL\nR. W. HINTON. Mech. Eng.. M.P.E.\nCivil,   Mining;,  Mechanical  Englneerlxu\nB.C. Land Surveying, Architecture,\nDrafting  and   Blue   Printing;\nP. O. Box 671, Phone 386. Nelson. B. (\n(4605-tf\nA. H. OREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS\nFormerly Green Bros., Burden, Nelaon\nCivil and Mining Engineer*\nB.C., Albert* and Dominion Land\nSurreyon (4808-1\nB. D. DAWSON\u2014Land Surveyor,\nMinim and Civil Enjineev\nKaslo, B. C. (41\n\u25a0*M\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 9,1928\nFtgeNIne\n.. \u25a0 .\nMarkets and Mining\nSTRONG UNDERTONE\nMONTREAL MARKET\nBrtzilian Traction Active Lead-\n\u2022f; Pehriian's Scores Good\nGain\nMONTREAL, July 7.\u2014Trading waa\nen the dull aide on Saturday's brief\neraslnn of tile Montreal market but\nthe  list had a strong  undertone.\nBrazilian Traction was the active\nlender selling up to 61 ftc and closing\nat 61 for a net gain of a point. International Nickel closed with a. net\nadvance of IM. to 97. Lyall gained\n8\"2 points at 74Mi, alter selling as\nhigh  as 75Mi.\nPenmans scored the greatest gain,\nbeing up five points at 105 on a single\nboafrd lot transaction. Bank of Montreal was the soft spot selling off 3\nto 345 Of the general list, Shawinigan   was   the   weak   spot,   being* down\na io 95.\n'Total    sales    111,116    shires,    bonds\n\u20223700.\nCLOSING  QUOTATIONS, MONTREAL\nDominion Bank    260\nImperial Bank 254\nStandard Bank   251\n| Bank of Toronto  i  300\n.Abltlbl Power & Paper     6<m\nI Atlantic Sugar          18\nI British Columbia Fishing     17\nBraslllan T. L. & Power     60%\nBrompton   Paper   ..          ..   40Mi\nCanada Cor & Foundry     49\nCaniuiiun Industrial Alcohol     44\nCons   Mining St Smelting   201\nDominion Bridge     87%\nDominion Textile   110\nA. f. Grain     32M*\n(Lakf of the Woods           68M,\nI Massey HarrU     42\nMontreal  Power  109 ft\nMontreal Tramways    .....   190\nNational   Breweries 132ft\nPrilje Brothers    80\nI Quebec Power     91\nIShJtwinigan    95ft\nSo. ..Canada Power   145\n8tt*el uf Canada   200\nWajagamaek    96ft\nWinnipeg Railway   118ft\nNORANDA CLOSES\nD0WNATT0R0NT0\nSan Antonio Most 'Active Feature of the Mining Exchange\nTORONTO, July 8.\u2014Trading activity\ncontinued to Increase on the mining\nexchange Saturday with Noranda and\nSan Antonio the active features. Noranda opened at 67.50, advanced to\n958. reacted to |51.75 and cloeed at\n\u266654.40, a net decline of 13.60. Abana\nwas strong the shares scoring an advance   of  25c   to   I3.25.\nSan Antonio was the most active\nfeature on the market, 182,700 Bharea\nchanging hands.    The peaks price was\nSTREET IS TIMID\nBUT ADVANCE ON\nBulls  Get   Going   Anew.   But\nBuying Is of Highly Selective Nature\nNEW YORK, July 8\u2014Speculation for\nthe advance was resumed in Saturday's\nbrief session of the market, but buying was of a highly selective character.\nEarly gains, which ran from 1 to 3\npoints in the popular Industrials- ahd\nrails, and from 5 to 18 points in a few\nspecialties, were down hy a late wave\nof profit-taking. There were several\nsoft spots, but no points of acute\nweakness.\nSome  uneasiness  was   still   apparent\n57ftc,   a   net  high   for   ail   time   and | over  the  credit   situation  despite   the\nCalgary Oils\nOpen Close\nJAdvgnce   9   .60 I    61\nBA. P.  Con.  53 .53\nfDalhousie        2.63ft 2.62ft\n\u25a0 Ills.  Alta 63 .63\nk Met). Segur Ex     2.42ft 2.42ft\n&McD   Segur  N     1.41 1.41\n[McLeod       4.60 4.60\nLSpodner OU                       1.50 1.50\nPVulcan     2.07ft 2.07ft\njCalmont    80 .80\n'Devenish  57ft .57ft\n(Ranchmen*   .x 65 .65\nBig.   Hill    _ 12ft .12ft\nBRITISH COM 'MM A EGOS\nFreBh  extras  35c;\n181c.\nfirsts   33c;   pullets\nfinal sales were at 55ftc, a gain of\n8ftc. Hudson's Bay ranged from\n(10.95 to 120.40, and finished at $20.,\noff 20c.\nSherrltt-Gordon Jumped to $8.40, and\nfinished at $7.60, up 30c. Central\nManitoba moved up to $1.44, but yielded to $1.30, a net loss of 40c. Several\nof the lower priced shares, KIrkland\nLake, etc., were strong. Bldgood scored an advanoe of 6c to 73c. Barry\nHoilinger was 3c easier at 60c and Hill\nTop 2ftc weaker at lOftc. Howey\nGold was 2c stronger. Pend Oreille\nfailed to rii>y from Its slump of Friday and declined SOc further to $15.20.\nPremier was off 6c to $2.26 and Kootenay Florence up 1 ftc to 29c.\nWinnipeg Grain\nOpen\u2014\nJuly   .\nOct.\nDec.\nOats-\nJuly\nOct.\nDec.\nBarley-\nJuly\nOct.\nDec.\nFlax-\nJuly\nOct.\nDec.\nRye-\nJuly\nOct.\nDec.\nOpen   High\n136 \u201e    136%\n136%\n130Vi\n63'\/,\n64\n60 V4\n88%\n7\u00bb\nWJ4\n188\".\n193\n191%\nlMVi\n111%\n110%\n131%\n130 V,\n03%\n64%\n50%\n89%\n76%\nT3%\n190\n194%\n193%\nlit\n113\n110%\nLow\n136\n136 14\n136\nea%\n64\n60%\n87%\n76%\n73%\n188%\n193%\n191%\n114%\n110%\n109%\nClose\n136\n136%\n136%\n64\n60%\n87%\n76%\n73%\n193%\n193 V,\n114%\n110%\n109%\nCash Prices\u2014Wheat. No. 1 northern,\n139. No. 3 northern, 138; No. 6, 113;\nfeed, 93.\nWHEAT CLOSE IS\nUNSETTLED, CHICAGO\nCHICAGO, July 8.\u2014Record breaking\nloadings of newly harvested wheat ln\nthe southwest provided finally more\nthan a counter-balance to black rust\ndevelopments  in  the   north  west.\nClosing quotations on wheat were\nunsettled at the same as yesterday's\nfinish to ft lower. With corn 1 to\n17b off, oats 1% to ft down and provisions unchanged to a rise of 22c.\nfavorable terms of the new treasury\nfinancing and the decline ln call money\nrates. Absence of many traders on\nweek-end trips tended to restrict trading.\nThere was little in the overnight\nnews to Influence the price movement.\nWeekly commission house reviews\nstressed the favorable character of\nmost of the current trade reports and\nlaid emphasis on the preferred position\nof refining companies in the oil industry. Hopes were held for more\nfavorable freight traffic returns In the\nlast half of  1928.\nIndian refining Issues showed outstanding strength. Houston Oil fell\n2ft points and Oeneral Asphalt yielded\nfractionally, but moat of the other oils\nmoved upward.\nMidland Steel Products \"preferred\nsoared 13ft points to 237ft and closed\nwithin a fraction of the top. Substantial gains also were recorded by\nAmerican Express, American Radiator.\nDavison Chemical, Hudson Motors, Johns\nManvllle, Kelly Springfield Issues,\nKresge, Lehan & Fink, National Team,\nU. 8. Cast Iron Pipe and Woolworth,\nSean-Roebuck ran up more than 3\npoints to a new high at 116%. Emerson Brantlhgham issues responded td\nthe sale of that company's farm Implement division to the Case Threshing  Machine company.\nSouthwestern Issues made the best\nshowing in tbe rail group, with Texas\n& Pacific, Wabash and Chicago &\nGreat Western preferred ln the van.\nNEW  YORK   STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nHigh     Low     Close\nGOOSEBERRIES\nARE ON STALLS\nNELSON MARKET\nSell for iO Cents Basket; ityme\nCooked Goods Stall  Is\nFeature\nFirst appearance this season of gooseberries selling for 10 cents a box, and\na stall with a variety of home cooked\ncommodities were features of the local\nmarket on Saturday morning.\nBlack Tartarian cherries sold for 50\ncents a basket.\nNo changes ln prices of meats were\nreported. Spring chicken was ln good\ndemand and sold out early.\nPrices quoted are as follows:\nButter, pound  45\nBeef, pound  18c to    .80\nVeal, pound 16c to     .35\nPork, pound  200 to     .28\nfowl, pound _....     jo\nCheese, pound         .36\nCream cheese, pound       .36\nCurd, dish  _       .30\nPotatoes, sack  \u201e..   2.00\n\"ntatoes, 10 pounds        .25\nHeadcheese, pound        .20\nTurnips, 7 pounds      .25\nLettuce, head in\nParsley, bunch   ns\nGreen onions, 3 bunches 10\nEggs, doz. .40, 2 doz.   75, 3 doc.    1.10\nStrawberries,    bucket      1.60\nfleets,    bunch         .10\nBeets, bunch    05\nStrawberries, basket  10\nNew carrots, bunch    05\nCelery, bunch io\nOreen peas, pound        16\nCherries, basket      .50\nGooseberries,  box   io\nToronto Mines\n\u2014\nWe think money is to be made in the good Canadian\nstocks, namely: Hudson Bay, Sherritt-Gordon, Sudbury\nBasin, Lakeside, Teck Hughes, Mclntyre, Hoilinger, Amulet, Brazilian, Abitibi, International Nickel, Massey-Harris,\nImperial Oil, International Petroleum.\nR. P. Clark & Co., Ltd.\nNELSON BRANCH, PHONE 100 -\nReno Gold Mines, Ltd.\nAUTHORISED   CAPITAL   JI.000,000.    PAR   VALUE   fl.M\nOn* of Britiah Columbia's Most Promising Oold Mlnlru PropertlM\nTh* first block of stocX Is now on the market at 36c per share.   The\nproceeds will be used to equip the mine with a modern mill and other\nmachinery.   Price 35c per share.\nThe report of B. T. O'Orady, government mining engineer, can be seen\nat my office. I also have reports from o O. Thompson and E. P. Crawford which show Jhat the mine has large quantity of high-grade ore.\nJ. E. ANNABLE, Sale* Agent, Nelson.\nAllied  Chemical\n173\n173(4\n172 V,\nAmerican Can \t\n88%\n88%\n88%\nAmerican Loco\t\n98\n98\n98%\nAmerican Steel\n111\n110%\n111)',\nAm. Smelt., Refln.\n194\n194\n193\nAmerican Tele\t\n178H\n177%\n178\nAmerican Tobacco\n60 V,\n60%\n60\nAnaconda   \t\n89\n88%\n68%\nAtchison  \t\n189'\/,\n188%\n188%\nBethlehem Steel\n88 '\u2022;\n55%\n58%\nCanadian Pacific  .\n207%\n207\n306 Vi\nCerro de Pasco\n78%\n78\n78%\nChile Copper \t\n48%\n45%\n45%\nChrysler   \t\n74%\n74%\n74%\nCorn Products \t\n73 %\n73\n72%\nDodge \t\n14M,\n14',i\n14%\nDupont   \t\n384\n382\n380\nFlelschman Co.\n71\n70%\n70%\nPrceport-Texas\n73 Vi\n71%\n71%\nOeneral Motcrs\n194'.,\n192%\n192%\nOeneral Electric\n.  184%\n152%\n162 Vi\nOranby\t\n.    84 Vi\n64%\n64%\nO. N. Preferred\n98V4\n98\n98',,\nHowe Sound\n.    59\n59\n59\nHudson Motors\n.    87 V,\n83%\n80\nInt. Nickel \t\n96 V,\n95\n96 \u00bb.\nMack Truck\n.    04 V,\n03',\n93\nMarland OU\n.    36%\n38\n36%\nMiami Copper \t\n.    30 V,\n30%\n20%\nKennecott Copper\n91%\n91%\n91%\nKresge S. S\t\n.    23%\n31\n23\nNat. Power, Light\n34%\n34\",\n34 V,\nNash  Motors\n87\n85\n86\nN. Y. Central\n172 Vi\n172',\n172\nNorthern Pacific\n.    95%\n95%\n95\nPackard  Motors\n78%\n77%\n77%\nPhillips Pete.\nRadio Corp.\t\n.    38%\n38%\n38 V,\n187\n18V.\n185 Vi\nSinclair Con\t\n24%\n34%\n24%\nSouthern Pacific\n122%\n122%\n122 V,\nStand. Oil. C(l.\n59 V,\n68%\n58%\nStand. Oil, N. J.\n44%\n44%\n44', j\nStewart Warner\n91',,\n91%\n11%\nStudebaker  \t\n.    73\n73\n73\nTexas Corp\t\n.    61%\n61%\nlil' .\nTexas Oulf Sul.\n71%\n70\n70',\nUnion Oil, Cal\n63%\n53\n63 Vi\nUnion Pacific \t\n196\n195%\n195\nU. S. Rubber   ..\u201e\n29 V,\n39%\n29%\nU. S. Steel \t\n140%\n138%\n139 Vs\nWillys Overland\n.    22Vi\n32%\n22%\nYellow Truck \t\n.    34%\n34%\n34%\nAconda\nAmulet\nArgo\t\nAtlas\t\nBeaver   \t\nBarry  Holly  \t\nBldgood   \t\nCastle   \t\nCan. Lorraine \t\nCent.  Man.  Mlneo\nCcnagas   \t\nCrown  Reserve   .\nCapital   \t\nDuprat   \t\nQold Dale \t\nOold Hill \t\nGranada    \t\nOrover Daly  \t\nHolly\nt .10\n130\n.06\n.02\nM\n50'i\n.09\n.50\n.14\n1.31\n450\n47\n10\n06%\n.30V,\n10\n.22\nAskeri\n*    .10'-\n4.25\n.00\n.03%\n.61\n.70\nTRAIL GREETS\nLEADER TOLMIE\nWITH OVATIONS\n.a\n.07\n. ...  ls.eo\nHudson Bay      20.26\nIndian           .06%\nJackson Manlon   75\nKirklake          1.32\nKirk  Hunum    .10%\nKeely    \t\nKecra    .02%\nKootenay rlorence -29\nLake Shore     23.50\nBig Missouri  40\nLaval     15%\nMcDougail 42\nMclntyre    . 23.88\nMcKlnley        '.. .10\nMining Corp. . 3.67\nNewbec    .41\nNlplsslng     3.76\nNoranda      56.00\nPend Oreille      15.60\n.12\n13.65\n20.40\nVancouver Stocks\nBUY BONDS\nt\nRoyal Financial Corporation* Limited\nSAFETY.\nVANCOUVER\nINCOME.\nMARKETABILITY.\nWe deal in GOVERNMENT, MUNICIPAL and CORPORATION Securities of the HIGHEST CLASS ONLY.\nAll investments gold by us are recommended for their\nSecurity, Certainty of Regular Income and Ready Market-^\nability.\nr. I.\nTUapnoM rat\nHEWITT,  DISTRICT  REPRESENTATIVE\nNELSON\nrest Boi 611\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited       '\nOfflo* \"melting and Refining lirpartmut *\nTRAIL. BRITISH  COLUMBIA .',\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Oretk\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc J\nTADANAC,   TRAIL ,\nBid Asked\nBig  Missouri   .1   .51      \u00bb    52\nCoast  Copper     45.00        \t\nCork Province. 33 .33'\nOeorge   Copper       4.60 4.75\nOlasalr     16 .21\nGlacier 01% .03\nGladstone   03Vi     \t\nGolconda     77 .80\nGrandview    37 .38\nIndependence     14 .15\nIndian  Mines    05% .06\nInternational   Coal    30 .33\nKootenay  Florence           .28% .28%\nLucky  Jim   31 .32\nL. Is L .'. 09(4 .10\nMarmot Metals ' 09% .ton\nNat. Sll. O.  8         .16% .17\nPend   Oreille    15.10 15.50\nPremier       2.26 2.28\nTorter Idaho  72 .   .75\nRichmond     05 .06\nRuth   Hope ' .55 .50%\nRufus  Argenta   35% .36%\nSilver Crest  10        \t\nSilversmith      .14\nSlocan  King    07 .07%\nSunloch        3.00 3.76\nWhitewater        2.36 2.42\nWellingdon          .16 .19\n .*_\t\nExchange Rates\nPorcupine Crown\nPremier   \t\nPotter  Dool   .\nPreston    \t\nRibago    -\t\nSan Antonio ....\nSherrltt-Oordon\nStadacona   \t\nSudbury   Basin\naylvanlM         3.55\nTough Oaltee          M\nTowagamac      3.00\nVlpond        -40\nWright Hargreaves            398\nWest Dome Lake 09'\n.04\n2.20\n.16\n.03\n.10\n.55\n7.75\n.16\n9.85\n3.70\n3.90\n50.00\n15.60\n\u202204 ft\n2 27\n(Continued from Page Eight)\nIn the entire capital, where he han\nserved you tor many years with great\nability. He ls willing to serve you\nagain, and I am convinced you wlll\ngive him a bumper majority.\" (Applause\nThe Conservative leader said there\nwas every Indication that the Conservatives would' be returned with an\nexcellent majority ln the province at\nlarge.\nIn the event cf being successful, he\nwould be glad to communicate with\n\"your progressive city of Trail\" at any\ntime, and ln the meantime he wished\nit continued and Increasing prosperity.\n(Ovation).\nlAdneb mhows\nextravagance\nMr. Ladner, who preceded Dr. Tolmie,\nand later spoke at Rossiand, devoted\nhimself to a muaterly exposure of the\ngovernment's claims to have given business administration, analyzing the Increased debt, Increased taxation, money\nwasted in various projects, and in an\nunsound system cf favoritism ln road\nbuilding, where estimates were usually\nexceeded.\nThere was little to show for the\n1260,000.000 the government had spent\nin its 12 years.\nAll through the departments, the costs\nwere far above those of the other provinces, from the civil government down.\nThis was in spite of the Liberal\npledges cf economy and reduction of\nexpenditure, mode at every successive\nelection.\nThe speaker paid a great tribute to\nDr. Tolmie, and predicted that under\nhis Bound administration the province\nwould enjoy an eta of great development and prosperity.\nSCHOF1EED ASKS\nit El 11:< tion\n\"You all know me,\" said Mr, Schofleld. In addressing, as first speaker,\nhla constituents, some of them continuous since 1907. \"I have lived\namong yen for the past 30 yeara, have\nbeen your reprewntntlve for 22, and\nI can truthfully say that ln that\nj.pace of time I have sought to represent you faithfully and honestly. 1\nhave no regrets to offer for my actions\nin Ml legislature, nor have I any\niipcicgles to make I have given you\nny best\u2014and come before you now,\nconfident lhat you will once more rc-\nt!ect,   me   to   represent    you.\"\nThe condition at Victoria he declared\nroquUed a speedy and drastic remedy,\nwhich the people hod It In their\n;jowcr to apply by returning Dr. Tolmie\no  be  premier.\nAlex. Ewing, president of Trail Conservative association, acted as chairman.\nCANDIDATE'S\nKl lORII\nIn Introducing Mr. Schofleld, he\npointed out that the future member\ncame to British Columbia-in 1886. und\nto Trail In 1899, then as C P. R. agent.\nHe was elected a school trustee for\nthree years, served as alderman one\nyear, and then mayor five years, the\nlast four times by acclamation. Elected\nto the legislature in 1907, he had been\nreelected ever since, though every time\nhaving a contest. He was again facing a contest, though in many respects\nlt was almost an acclamation, and\n\"we feel In our hearts he will go.\nbuck with thc largest majorley he has\never   had\".   (Great   applause).\nPremier MacLean Is\nCertain of Victory\nHe Says at Coast\nProjected Nonstop\nFlight to Rome From\nNew York Delayed\nVANCOUVER. B.C.. July 8\npatgn workers and other Liberals welcomed Premier MacLean at Hastings\nstreet headquarters at noon Saturday.\nThe premier who spoke at Agassiz on\nFriday night motored Into the city for\na consultation with his newly appointed  cabinet ministers.\nThe premier predicted victory aU\nalong the line, declaring that every seat\nnow In possession of the Liberals wculd\nbe retained on July 18 and that certain Conservative strongholds would be\ncaptured. Not since 1918, he said, hod\nhe found-the party mere in harmony\ncr so determined to win. The new\ncandidates were of excellent calibre, he\ntaid. In Nroth Okanagan. the Liberal\nstandard bearer was the \"find\" of the\ncampaign,  he declared.\n\"In Yale the enemy have stopped\nfighting,\"  said  the  premier.\nCURTISS FIELD, N.Y., Jul* 8.-\nre Sabeli's projected non-stop flight to\nRome was delayed for perhaps two day*\ntoday when the Sesqul plane, Rom*,\nln which the trip la to be mode damaged ln collision with another machine.\nBEETS, CABBAGE,\nCARROTS REDUCED\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, July 8.\u2014Toronto\u2014 Thfc*\nmarket is firm and unchanged; dealers\nbuying from country shippers at extras\n34c; firsts 31c to 32c; -cconds Mo\nto 26c.\nWinnipeg\u2014Steady   und   unchanged.\nHalifax\u2014Firm with receipts light.\nLarge shipments of Prince Edward Ib- .\nla nd stock were Imported to supply\nthe local trading. Dealers are paying\ncountry shippers extras 34c; firsts SOc;\nseconds 29c.\nCut of $:> Per Ton  Declared;!\nMarketing Ungraded, Split\nthenies Limited\nEffective today, reductions of *5 per\nton have been declared In the prices\ncf beets, cabbage and carrots by the\ninterior tree fruit and vegetable committee  of  direction.\nThe committee also orders thot no\nsplit or ungraded cherries are to be\nmarketed cast of Creston or. west of\nLytton.\nNew prices are:\nJobbers   Retailers\nBeets, ton      $35.00       rio.OO\nCabbage, ton     35.t\u00bb        40.00\nCarrc-te. ten     45.00        50.00\nfor Appledale  to :;ucnU a ho.'ldny with\nfiH'lM,\nMrs. P. Young and daughter;;, Florrie\nrnd |f\u00bb1n. sod Mrs. H. Davis and\nEons Jim und Uub. orient Monday In\nTrull.\nMr. Addyman was a Fruitvale virltor\nWMneaUy.\nR. Kfdd and W. Nipkov were busl-\ni.e-s   visitors   In   Trail   Friday.\nWhy We Consider\nAmalgamated Oil\nShares a Good Buy\nAmalgamated Oil Is a\nHolding company owning and controlling oil\nrights over 11,000 acres\nof well defined structure in the iSage Creek,\nFlathead Oil Ares.\nOne well tn this area\nhas heen ci edited as\nH. Cs first producing\nwell.\nAnother  is Bridged, but\nthe drillers report they\nure   now   alongside  the\ntoolF  and  cleaning out.\nFurther    dilllln?   contracts   are   pending,\nFor every  well  brought\nIn  on  Company  Property   Amalgamated   Oil\nreceive    on e-eighth\nRoyalty.\nWrite  or  Phone  for Prospectus  which  will  be sent\nfree on request.\n5.\nFiscal ..rents\nRead the Advertisements\nKNOW WHAT IS BEST\nSUITE flt  STOCK EXCHANGE   HID\n553 GRANVILLE ST\n iCOUVER.BC\nSEY 4849     _\n7.80\n.17\n0.90\n26\n3.30\n.4t>\n4 00\n.10\nB.C ELECTIONS\nARE BUT TEN\nDAYS OFF NOW\nCampaign   Is  On   in\nBoth Leaders Tour\nProvince\nEarnest;\nWhole\nNEW YORK, JUI? >\u25a0\u2014Sterling exchange mixed at 14.83 7-16 for sixty\nday bills and at I4 86 11-16 Ior demand.\nForeign  bar silver 693fc.\nCanadian dollar*  '\/,  discount.\nFrancs  3.03.\nLire 5.34%.\n: _- u\nLogan & Bryan\nPrivate  Wire*\nBTOCES,    BONDS,    COTTON.\nGRAIN\nMEMBERS\nNew York, Montreal and Vancouver Stock Exchanges, Chicago\nBoard of Trade, Winnipeg drain\nExchange and other leading exchanges,\nOFFICES:\nVanconver.   Spokane  and   .Seattle\nVANCOUVER. July 8\u2014 The British\nColumbia provincial elections are but\n10 days away. The major political parlies are keenly engaged all over the\nprovince seeking the support of the\nelectorate on July 18 Premier J. D.\nMacLean was in Vancouver ibis weekend following an extensive tour of\nthe interior constituencies, while the\nconservative leader, Hon- Dr. 3. F. Tolmie ls still inland, but will come to the\ncoast this week. Both leaders are\ntaking the campaign personally Into\npractically  every   riding.\nThe Liberal party la asking for re-,\nturn to power largely on their financial record, thetr plans for disposal\nof the Pncific Great Eaatern and their\nrecord on labor legislation. Premier\nMacLean has expressed every confidence\nthat an arrangement wlll be made\nwith the Canadian National railways\nconcerning the Pacific Oreat Eastern.\nlong a bone of cententlon ln the\nprovince's politics. Falling that, the\ngovernment ls pledged to complete the\nline to Prince Qeorge and North Vancouver. The premier points to the\nprice commanded by British Columbia\nbonds as evidence of the soundness\nol the financial policy cf the Liberal\ngovernment. He points to the old age\npensions act and other statues as evidence of the government's advance ln\nsocial legislation. The Liberal party\nclaims credit for giving women a place\non their ticket In the persons of Mrs.\nPaul Smith in Vancouver City and\nMrs. Mary Ellen Smith in Esquimau.\nTOI,MIES   STAND\nDr. Tolmie and the Conservative party\nhave attacked the financial record of\nthe government alleging that the public debt ls excesaive. Thc? warn that\nthe Liberal party have previously made\npromises concerning the Pacific Oreat\nEastern which were unfulfilled. They\nclaim credit for much of the social\nlegislation as Conservative policies. The\nConservatives promise a survey of the\nPacific Oreat Eastern problem with a\nview to a satisfactory disposal of the\nquestion and also Agricultural and Industrial surveys of the province in\norder to determine what steps ahould\nbe taken lo advance their prosperity.\nHon. H H. Stevens, MP, Leon J.\nLadner and VV. Q. McQuarrie, M.P., are\nfederal membera who are aiding tho\nConservative cause.\nForty Oerman women are undergoing\na special training course at Frankfort-\non-Maln for the women's entries at\nthe Olympic Qamea. Of these 20 wtll\nbe selected to go to Holland and compete in th.- sprints, high jump, discus\nthrow, 800-me.tr run and relay rice.\nFRUITVALE NOTES\nFRUITVALE. B.C.. July 8\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. E. Jarrett and Mr. and Mrs. W.\nSmith   motored   to   Appledale   Sunday.\nMiss Cathie Barclay, who has been\nDttendlng school In Calgary, arrived on\nTuesday to spend the holidays with\nher parents, Mr   and  Mrs. W. Barclay.\nMiss   Margaret    Smith   left    Tuesday\nIt Pays to Investigate\nQuality, Service and Economy in their full measure go\ninto the Make-up of our products.\nMOTORS\u2014Auto Start As- I   GENERATORS-Turbines,\nbestos   Protected.   Ball Hydro, Diesel, Gasoline,\nBearing. Pulleys. |.    Switches.\nGeneral Accessories\nVANCOUVER ELECTRICAL WORKS. LTD.\nNelson> B<\"- Rep.: L. Morrisette\nL\nother Branches at Winnipeg, Yorkton, Suskatoon, Edmonton, Calgary, Lethbrldge,\nVancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria,\nJuly Clearance Sale\nLadies' Wear\nts MILLINERY SPECIALS\nCOLORED FELT AND STRAW HATS\u2014Assorted colors and trimmings.   Head\nsizes assorted.   Regular prices $3.95, $5.95.   July Sale Special     $1.95, $2.95\nWHITE FELT HATS in all shapes and sizes, small and wide brims, soft quality,\nFelt trimmed.   All White or colored.   Regular $5.95, $6.95.\nJuly Sale Special    $3.95\nCHILDREN'S STRAW HATS\u2014Trimmed assorted shades ribbon or all White. Regular prices $.'(.95, $4.50.   July Sale prices  $2.95, $3.25\n\u2014Second Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nMen's Socks\nGENUINE REDUCTIONS IN MEN'S SOCKS\nALL-WOOL CASHMERE\u2014Our \"Beaver Brand.\"   Regular 60c; Sale 49<\nALL-WOOL CASHMERE\u2014Our \"Otter Brand.\"   Regular 85c; Sale 75\u00ab*\nALL-WOOL CASHMERE\u2014Fancy patterns.   Regular $1.00; Sale    79**\nFINK LISLE SOCKS\u2014Regular 36c pair.   A pairs $1.00\nFINE SILK LISLE SOCKS\u2014 Regular Mc,     :i pairs $1.00\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nDry Goods\nSTAMPED GOODS\u2014Buffet Runners, Centers, Ladies' Aprons, Ladies' and Children's Dre.--ses, Carriage Covers, Pillow Cases, Duster Holders, Laundry Bags, Iron\nBoard Covers. All at less than cost price. We call your attention to the lovely qualities of these stamped goods.   Bargains can be picked up at little cost.\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nShoe Department\nSPECIAL PRICES ON MEN'S WORK BOOTS\nMEN'S OIL TAN BOOTS\u2014Plain to and toecap.   Made by Leckie Co.\nSpecial Sale price   $6.45\nMEN'S HEAVY GRAIN  BOOTS\u2014Plain toe and with caps.\nSpecial Sale price $4.85\nMEN'S HEAVY WORK BOOT-I'lain toe and with caps.   A well made shoe.\nSpecial Sale price  $3.85\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nh\nI\n____________________________________________________________________________________\n Twf\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. MONDAY MoRNTNG.-'JTJLY fl, .028\n)UT1CS WARM UP\nIN KASLO-SLOCAN\ntzsimmons and Leary Active;\nLadner Speaks Behalf of\nFitzsimmons\nfcNAKUSP. B.C.. July I.\u2014tba poUtlcal\n\u2022Willi ln the Kaslo-Slocan riding\n\u25a0 on In earnest, with both parties\n\u25a0orklng hard and each forecasting\n\u25a0ecess at the forthcoming election. In\n*~ early etenlng of Dominion Day the\nt_\nLiberals had a capacltv crowd at the\nopera house, with C. S. Leary, candidate on the platform and Hon. J. W.\nDeB Funis speaking on his behalf.\nNext day thev visited several points\nalong the south lake with meetings at\nseveral.\nOn Wednesday evening the opera\nhouse was again filled for the maiden\nspeech of Capt. J. Fitzsimmons. the\nConservative candidate, and Col. Nelaon\nSpencer, one of the six Conservative\ncandidate ln Vancouver. Capt Fiteslm-\nmons had a grand reception.\n<'ll\\Ki-i|-\u00bb   EXTRAVAGANCE\nHe attacked the Liberal government\nfor its extravagance In the public\nworks department and compared the\nmileage of roads with the cost to the\nwork performed by the Conservatives\nprior to 1916. He advocated good and\nbetter   roada   and   more   of   them,   and\nliberal Rally\nTonight at 8 p. m.\nIN\nEAGLE HALL\nProgram Will Include\nSHORT ADDRESSES\nORCHESTRAL SELECTIONS\nVOCAL SELECTIONS\nDANCING\nA HEARTY INVITATION EXTENDED  TO  ALL\nI VOTERS AND A SPECIAL INVITATION TO LADIES\nBY\nCandidate D.D. McLean\nespecially roads that would aid in development of the mining Industry in\nthe Slocan.\nHe explained that ln presenting himself to the electorate* he had no apologies to make of his 3* years of close\nconnections with the people resident\nalong the shores of Trout Lake. Kootenay Lake. Slocan Lake and the Arrow\nLakes. He was convinced the Conservatives would be returned to power\nat Victoria by an overwhelming majority on July 18, under the most able\nleadership of Hon. Dr. 8. F. Tolmie,\nwhose ability was such that even the\nLiberal Dominion premier offered him\nthe portfolio of agriculture..\nColonel Spencer was confident that\nthe six Conservatives would be elected\nIn Vancouver at the coming contest.\nIt was significant that not a single\nmember of the last slate offered hmself\nfor re-election, indicating that they\nwere either disgusted with their leaders\nor had gone to seek election in other\nridings. One had gone north, another\nsouth, while Mrs. M. E. Smith had\nproceeded further west to try her luck.\nThey had not been moved about at the\nrequest of the electorate but at the\nrequest of the cabinet, and bribed with\nportfolios. It was an insult to the people to have the uninvited forced upon\nthem. Another Valuable member of the\nlate government had quit the party ln\ndisgust, he said, referring to Mr. Woodward of Vancouver.\nHUG*.   DEBT\nHe compared the 118,000,000 public\ndebt lef\u00a3 by the Conservatives In 1916\nto the $86,000,000 now saddled on the\npeople, who numbered less than a\nthird of a million, showing how reckless the Liberals have been during their\ntenure of office.\nCaptain Fitzsimmons and Colonel\nSpencer held a fine meeting at Arrow\nPark on Thursday afternoon, which was\nsplendidly attended, and at Burton In\nthe evening, when the hall waa crowded.   This  was followed  by  a dance.\n-\nAURORA BOREALIS\nDOMKOVER CITY\nWonderful Display Seems Like\nHawing Tent; Storm Climaxes Week-end\nAutomobile Club\nWill Take Up the\nMatter of Licences\nTO'GLENN LAID\nAT FINAL REST IN\nNELSONCEMETERY\nDisplay of aurora borealU with all the\nlighter tints of tbe rainbow were vlstbl*\nover Nelson late Saturday night. The\naurora covered the whole sky before It\ndisappeared, seeming to center directly\nabove  the  city.\nFollowing a day ot sunshine and a\nclear sky at night, the lights started\ncoming up from the' southwest and\ngradually spread over the whole sky,\nforming a gigantic dome. As the two\nhalf sections came together, waves of\ncolored light were seemingly forced\ndownward, to spread back again ln an\narray of colon. Thi* was repeated\nseveral times before they gradually\nwaned. The aurora affected telegraph\nto some extent.\nELECTRIC MTOKM\nThe two bright day* over the weekend were climaxed with an electric\nstorm about dusk last night, which\nlasted for some tlm*. with a heavy\nshower.\nThe temperatures were normal both\ndays, Saturday's maximum being 70 and\nthe minimum 61. Th* mercury ranged\nbetween 49 and 75 yesterday.\nOn both days the hsgnldlty registered\nat 80 ln the morning and through the\nday gradually sank to a few degrees\nabove 80.\nThe readings were:\nSaturday, 8 a.m., 60; 2 p.m., 70; fi\npm. 66. Sunday, 8 a.m., 80; 2 pjn.,\n85;  5 p.m., 64.\nFollowing the discussion at the recent meeting of tbe Automobile club\nof British Columbia regarding a refund\nfor all automobile license plates turned\nin by car owners ln tbe Interior before\nthe end of each year. Manager Fred\nJ. Elkins haa announced that tbe\nmatter will be taken up by tbe head\noffloe of the club with the Provincial\nCommittee which handles such affair*.\nThe advice of Boyd Affleck, city engineer of Nelaon. Is being aaked by tbe\nclub executive ln regard to feasibility\nof the matter.\nPioneer Engineer's Funeral Under Auspices Odd Fellows;\nMany  Attend\n| j\nJ An Electric Range |\nMeans Hot Weather Comfort\nYou know how the ordinary kitchen feels\non a hot summer day. The heat outside is\nbad enough, but when this is increased by\nthe host exuded from a range, the housewife's burden becomes almost unbearable.\nWith an electric range your kitchen is\nkept cool and crnfortabre, because the heat\nis just where you need it, under a cooking\nUtensil or in the oven. It does not flood the\nwhole kitchen. Electricity is economical,\ntoo.   And bo delightfully clean.\nFuneral of Normfcn (Hub) Glenn, who\ndied In the Kootenay Lake Oeneral\nhospital Tuesday. wa3 held from the\nStandard undertaking parlors yesterday\nafternoon under the auspices of tho\nI.O.O.F. lodge. Rev. James Youngson of\nthe First Presbyterian church conducted\nservices, with P. C. Goggln and W. T.\nChoate of the Odd Fellows conducting\nthe I.O.O.F. service at the graveside\nThe pallbearers were: W. Harrltt and\nL W Humphrey of the Brotherhood ol\nEngineers; H. Brlndle and J. Henderson\nof the Eagles; and Thomas Bloomer and\nJohn Simons of the Odd Fellows.\nThe funeral services were largely attended and numerous autos Joined the\ncortege.\nThe floral tributes were: Brother Bill\nand wife of Beaton; link emblem, Koote-\nnaV Lodge No. 18 I.O.O.F.; wreaths. Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Simons. FOE. lodge, Nelson; Order of Railway Conductors;\nBrotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and\nEnglnetfi,; Order of Railroad Telegrapher!; Brotherhood of Railroad\nTrainmen; Brotherhood of Locomotive\nEngineers Dlv. 578: srays. Mr. and Mrs.\nHarrltt. Mlsa Maud Simons; Mr. and\nMrs. D. D. McLean; Mr. and Mrs. R. A\nPeebles: Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Allen;\nMr and Mrs. O. L. Kemmerllng; James\nMcCandlish: John and Wllf Marquis;\nLadles' auxiliary to Brotherhood ol\nLocomotive Engineers; Swan Peterson of\nProcter; Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ward of\nProcter; Mr. and Mra. Alex. Dow of\nVancouver.\nTRAIL I. 0. D. E. RAISES\nGOOD SUM SOLARIUM COT\nHe Who Stoops\nto Conquer,\nLoses the Hole\nTRAIL. B.C.. July 8\u2014 Reports ot recent tag day In the city showed 1317.65\nraised for I O D. E. permanent bed\nIn Queen Alexandra solarium on Vancouver Island by Arthur Chapman chapter. Tbe ladles were ably assisted In\ntagging operations Uy \u00bb bevy of high\nschool girls\nRonald\n^SATS He\nSaw Two Mew\nIN AN INEBRKTcpl\nFouRSOMe, Forget\nTo puive off,\nAW Trie* B\/rWtfO,\nOut Trteif?\nCAPPies for\nFaiuNo) To\nFl\u00abP THglR\nBeUl.3 \t\nft\nThat FooRSOMe Won't Trust\nEAOh crtntR in Tme fTouSH-\nTHeYVe MADE A f?UL6 THAT\nIF A  MAN SroOfS IN Trlfe-\nSouSh,he loses.the Hoie.'.'\ndji******!\nf\u2014-wm\nTHE CITY OF NELSON\nJ\n'COLEMAN'Gasolene\nCamp Stoves and Ranges\nAlso'NEW PERFECTION'\nOil Cook Stoves\nJust the thing for warm weather.\nTry one for your city home\nor summer camp on the lake.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE NELSON, B.C. RETAIL\nf\nWhen the\nCarrier Calls\nto Collect\nPlease pay him promptly.\nHe has many subscribers\nto collect from. He is in\nbusiness for himself, paying in advance for the\npapers, just as do subscribers.\nHelp him all you can.\nHe will appreciate it\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPHONE 144\n1\nBY   AL   DKMAKEE\n(Former   Pitcher   New   York   (Hants)\nOolf. like baeeball. Is, a mixture of\nthe humorous and unusual.\nOeoge Sargent told me several years\nago of a foursome In Columbus, that\ngave him a lot of laughs.\nThe members were well-known sporting men\u2014fellows you see at all the\nboxing matches, horse races and baseball games. Each of them carried a fat\npocketbook and each would bet his\nhead off at any time on anything.\nYou can Imagine what happened when\nthey were playing golf.\nAll summer long reports of this foursome's doings brought joy to the golfing world, but the climax came when\nIts members ln solemn conclave at the\nfirst tee, passed an Iron-bound rule.\nIt was to the effect that any man\nseen stooping while in tbe rough immediately loat the hole And the way\nthat gang played, they had to keep\ntheir eyes on each other constantly\nThey were always in tha- rough.\nJumping from the ridiculous to thc\nsublime, Jim Kelley, Indianapolis sport\n3lst ANNIVERSARY SALE\nITou may boast ol anniversaries of silver and of gold.\nOf wedding anniversaries, with their tale* of life untold.\nBut a business anniversary, oh, do give It to me.\nWhen so many thousand customers I have pleased beyond degree.\n8 The lst of August in the 31st anniversary of my busi\nness in Nelson and the golden anniversary of my ap-\n9prenticeship, and to show my customers my appreciation\nof their trade through these 31 years, I am striking a flat\nreduction of $5.00 on each and every suit for 30 days.\n__ SELECT YOURS NOW!\n7        John T. Pierre\n60S BAKU KTKKIT\n1\n9\n2\n8\nNelson News of the Daj\nThere will be a meeting of the Nelson Conservative executive committee\ntomorrow, Tuesday night, at 8 o'clock\nln  the  committee  rooms-     (4713-1-69)\nYOUREYES\nBy J. A. C. Laughton. R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST\nOrlffln Block    ,     - Nelson\nCROSS-EYEI>\u2014PART   \u00bb.\nWhen an eye la crossed, lt results ln a child seeing two Images,\nor double. To avoid this confusion the child quickly learns not\nto look with the eye that Is\ncrossed. In other words, only one\n\u2022ye ls used. As ls always the case\nwith the body, the crossed eye\nbecomes useless through nonuae.\nThe sight grows fainter and fainter until the child will be nearly\nblind In that ere.\nIt la Important that correction\nto the defective sight be made at\nan early age, before too much\nsight is lost. Much more success\ncan be attained if the child has\nthe necessary attention before\neight  years of  age.\n*  How arc 1\nyour bratai\nWE RELINE  WITH\nJohns-Manvillc Asbestos\nBrake Lining\nWhich costs no more than Inferior material.    Estimates and flat rate charges.\nSMEDLEY GARAGE CO.\nvothlni   Is   Too   Oood   for   tne   Sick\nSmy the's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION SPECIALIST\nIn business tor your health.   Let ue fill\nvour prescriptions.  Mall orders promptly executed.   Call and wait for your ear.\n\"hone 1.\nSunday hours:   1 to 4 and 7 bt 9 p.m\nSUITE FOR RENT\nKerr Apartments\nFILMS\nDEVELOPED\nPRINTED\nENLARGED   AND\nFRAMED\nJ. H. ALLEN\nPicture Framing\nAmateur  Finishing\nQUALITY\nNOT\nPRICE\nA cheap suit of inferior make\nand material has a short life and\nmust soon be replaced.\nEmory suits are guaranteed\nand your expectations will be ful\"\nfilled as regards material, fit and\nstyle.\n$30, $35, $40\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nFruit Wanted\nRASPBERRIES\nGOOSEBERRIES\nBLACK CURRANTS\nRED CURRANTS\nWe are now in the market for your crop\nof raspberries, gooseberries, black* currants\nand red currants.   Send your fruit here.\nMcdonald jam\nNELSON BRAND\nNELSON, B. C.\n44 Taxi and Transfer\nANNOUNCES\nTh*    acquisition   of   *\nt-TON   COMMERCIAL   TRUCK\nFor  Express,   Baggage,  Furniture.\nLong and Short Hauling.\n(HT DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemist*\nFilms,   Kodaks,   Draff,   Stationery\nMall   orders   promptly   despatched.\nBOX   10SS   NELSON,   B.C.       PHONI   U\nCome ln and Oet Yonr Weight free\nCAHD   OF    1 HANKS\nMr. and Mrs. William Glenn wish to\nexpress their heartfelt thanks for sympathy  and   kindness extended  to them\nIn thalr bereavement. (4712-1-89.\nPublic meeting at South Slocan Hall\ntonight, Monday, July 9. 8 p.m. Speakers. L. J. Ladner. M. P Lteut.-Col. Fred\nLister,   M.   P.   P. (471 lt\nFuneral of Lillian Longden will take\nplace from Robertson's Undertaking\nparlors  at 2  o'clock. <47l0-l-60j\nThe funeral of James Smith Bachelor, of Winnipeg, wlll take place on\nTuesday afternoon at 2 p.m. from the\nparlors of the Standard Furniture Co.\nInterment will be nimle ln Winnipeg.\n(4709)\nDaughter* of England  wlll  meet tonight ln Memorial Hall at 0 o'clock.\n(4703-1-69)\nReserve July 27 for the Harrop Dance.\nEverybody come and have a good time.\n(4704-2-70)\nNo more strawberries accepted, rlier-\nrlcs accepted wily alien ordered. Mo\nlKinnld'-   Jam. (4705)\nQueen City Rebekah Lodge will hold\na special meeting today at 3 o'clock ln\nthe I. O. SL F hall. Members please\nattend.       ^ (4700)\nTROUBLED\nFOR READING  AND\nCLOU WORK?\nWe will quickly relieve you by\nfitting and designing glasses for\nyour particular need.\nExpert Service\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST   AND   OPTICIAN\nElks Taxi-Transfer\nBaggage,   Express   and   Storage.\nLong Distance Hauling.\nB. C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.\nAgents for\nAI.HEVTA  CLAY PRODUCTS,\nHEWER PIPE - DRAIN TILE\nSOU llaker street        Nelson, B.C.\nBalfour Beach  Inn now open.     Also DACC  TDCC  CDPAVC\nfurnished   Cottages   ready.      Phone   or IWOEi   IrtEX OllvA IJ\nwrite   Jess   Sanders.   Balfour,   B.   c.\nph0M \u00bb\u2022                                     <4oll-tf> po, White fly and aphis.   Also small\nShoes repaired; handmade, eliminating arch troubles. Underwood is\nHall.   Baker Street, next P. Burns.\n<4\u00aba\u00bb-tf>\nTellow Tail Co. HUle lent* Williams\nTransfer every mornlnr at 8 o'clock for\nTmlr, Moimo and Boundary Line.\n4633\nWOMEN'S LIBERAL ROOMS NEXT\nDOOR TO IDEAL lillillEKT STORE.\nBAKER STRELT. OPEN AFTERNOON\nl-\u00bb, 7-0 EVENING*. ANTON! WISHING INFORMATION. (ALL OB PHONE\nM\u00bb. (4IJ0J)\nRead th* AdrertUemenM\nvr wns mocntss\nspray  pumps.\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\nHUNTER ELECTRIC\nOpera   House   Block\nNELBON\nINSTALLATIONS-REPAIRS\nAPPLIANCES\nYour Applause Will Resound\nLike the Thunder in the Hills!\nWhy did this city stranger\nsacrifice everything he had\nin the world lo shepherd\nthe hill-people\u2014to teach\nthem love and forglvenem?\nYou'll find the surprising\nanswer dramatically told in\nthis great First National\nSpecial. H took months\nand months and tremendous\ncosts to bring this beautiful\nstory to the screen an thrlll-\nIngly as Ifiintld Hell Wright\ndesert bed UI\nRead tht Adwtlsementj\nTHEY SAVE YOUR TJME\n- '\nLixiriicviivnicn!^\nUAPOLD\nBELL\nWPIGI4T\nHdlyODay\nALEC FRANCIS\nJOHN BOLES\nMATTHEW BETZ\nCOMEDY\n'THE FAMILY GROUP'\npa'the news\nWheeler'*\n\\\\W CapitolianS\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1928_07_09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0403589","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}