{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0405546":{"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":"2021-12-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1935-07-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0405546\/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":" ^^^^~\n\u25a0mm\n\u25a0\nNew York Prices Hit a New\nHigh Price for Year\n\u2014Page Nine\n\u25a0    - -\t\nPROvir\n\u00a35-\ni io aIMAH8S\nHOV IH\nVICTOR\nI0VIKCUU   U\nAmerican Leaguers Again in\nWin Over Nationals\n\u2014Page Eight\nVOLUME M  .Jftjfo.\nFIVE CENTS A COF\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-TUESDAY MORNINO. JULY t. 1938\nNUMBER' \u00ab\nITALY SEES CLEAR PATH ADDIS ABABA\nJohn D. 96 Years Old\nINVADERS NAY BE MUTILATED\nExpect the Commission on\nConciliation to Collapse\nin the Netherlands Today\nlMn D_yr.l\u00abx\u00bbl.'(l930)i\nJohn D\u201e Rc.cW.lltr |\nAnother mlleiton. In hli ambition to live until\n1989, whan h. will b. 100, wai reached by John D.\nRockefeller, multl-milllonalr. oil king, wh.n ha obwrved hli nlnety-ilxth birthday yeiterday. He hai\nbean retting quietly there ilnce hli return from\nOrlando, Fla. a few weeki ago. However, h. plam\nto ipend the remainder of the summer at Pocantlco\nMllli, hli estate In Weeetcheeter, N.Y. In th. background at top li ihown hli great homi at Lake-\nwood, NJ.\n\"STEVENS PARTY TO\nSWEEP THE COUNTRY\"\nSTRIKES SPREAD\nAS 510 HORE IN\nEAST QUIT WORK\nLeaders of Airport\nStrike Camp Are\nEjected\nMEN DEMAND-$1\nA DAY FOR WORK\nVacartier Camp Strike\nContinues Near\nQuebec\nCanada'i itrlki map ipraad out\nto Uke In new areai todiy ai condltloni In tha rlot-icarrad wait\nquieted.\nIn tha Rockcllffi airport relief\nproject naar Ottawa, authorltlu\n\u25a0tirnly nought to put down a\n\u25a0trlke of 600 worked who droppid\ntheir tooli early Monday In lym*\npathy with men at Valeartier,\nQui., project Leiden of the Rock-\ncliff,  atrlke  war. ejected from\n(Contlnutd on Page Tan)\nMUSSOLINI SEEKS TO AROUSE ARABS AGAINS1\nBRITISH; ABYSSINIAN CRISIS HALTED BY RAIN\nDuce Hopes Further Abyssinian\nCampaign With Moslems\nBy PIERRE VAN PAASSEN\nCentral Prtia Canadian Writer\nROME, July 8\u2014Baffled by Great Britain'i op*\npoaitlon to Iti expansionist plans in Abyssinia, the\nItalian government has begun tbe extra-dangeroUs\ngama of inciting the mightiest tribes of Arabia\nagalnit England's authority in the Near East\nA lecret letter hai just been made public ln\nJerusalem from the contents of which it become!\ndear tbat Mussolini Intends to sot himself up as\nlhe champion of Fan-Islam. The letter contained\na promise on the part ot the Italian government to\naupport Arabic claims for independence in the event\nof a conflict ln the Near Eait. The Arabs of Palestine\nand Transjordania are promised \"liberation from\nthe English yoke.\"\ni,     There ls no question today that Italy has won\nover Ibn Saud, the Lord of Arabia, King of thc\nHedjahs, to her side. Ibn Saud ia furnishing Mus-\nContinued on Page Two!\nPlerra Van Paaeien, noted European correipondent fer Central\nPreii Canadian and tha Nelion\nDally News, glvei, In tha accompanying two artlclee from\nRoma, an Iniide view of tha Ab*\nynlnlan trouble. Ha telli frankly\nwhat li common knowledge In\nEurope now, but whleh hai not,\nof coune, be.n officially admitted\u2014that Italy wanti Abyulnla\nand wlll brook no Interference\nfrom Britain or tha league of nation-*.\nHe alio revlewi what hai hippened io fir and foreoaiti that\nactual operation! will await the\nend of the rainy tenon In Abyi-\nslnia\u2014a rainy leuon that ll \"not\nlomethlng that can be compared\nwith a London drlule,\"\u2014but li\nrather one wet enough to Interfere with .van iuch an Important\nproject ii war.\nItaly Nor League Expected Act\nBefore About November\nBy PIERRE VAN PAASSEN\nCentral Preaa Canadian Writer\nROME, July 8. \u2014 June 3 it started to rain In\nAbyulnla. Rain on the equator ii not lomething that\ncan be compared with a London drlule, even a\npenlitent one. For the better part of four monthi,\ntill the end of September in fact, Abyulnla is imoUv*\nered under an antediluvian downpour, an uninterrupted mcceiiion of cloudbunta, jou might ay.\nBlllloni of tons of water come down. Travel of any\nkind ii out of the question, for even the railway\nlines become hazardous during the rainy aeaaon.\nNearly every year, whole aection of it are simply\nwashed away, rrom June till October with some\nrsre intervals of clear weather, the landscape is\nwrapped in a blanket of iteem iuch as prevailed\nover this whole earth before man made his\n& n *\u2014_ __Lr____.n cc\nBy hard bargaining and aome firm language\n(Continued on Pag. Two)\nGermany lo Build\na Warships\nBERLIN, July 8 (CP-Havai)-\nQarmany wlll build 48 warthipi\ntotalling 107,500 tont thit ytar, It\nwai officially announc.d today.\nShlpt planned Include two 28,*\n000-ton battlethlpi, carrying 28-\ncentimeter 11-Inch gunt; two 10-\n000-ton crulwn mounting eight-\nIneh gum; 18 deitroyert of 1828\ntont, tome of which already are\nlinder conitructlon, mounting 4.7-\nInch and 2.78-Inch gum; 20 tub-\nmirlnei of 250 torn, thi flrtt of\nwhich Joined tha fleet on Jun. 20,\nwhll. two otheri ara undargolng\ntheir final fitting out; ilx 500-ton\naubmarlnn and two 750-ton tub-\nmirlnet.\nDies of Injuries\nVICTORIA, July 8 \u2022 (CD-Herbert O'Brien, ot Grande Prairie, Alta.,\neuccumbed to injuries received In\nl_n automobile accident, according\nto radio advices received from the\nPeace River division of the Provincial Police today. Mr. O'Brien was\ntaken to the Pouce Coup hospital\n(following the accident, lufferlng\nirom serious wounds and internal\nInjurlei.\nROOSEVELT TALKS\nWITH LYONS\nWASHINGTON, July 8 (AP)-A\nstate dinner io imall as to be almost\nchummy, following ,a White House\ntea to which no guests were invited,\ntoday gave President Roosevelt and\nPrime Minister Joseph A. Lyom of\nAustralia a chance to talk trade.\nCurrent conversation in the United States capital indicated the subject might be one reason why Prime\nMinister Lyons and Mrs. Lyons\ndropped off in Washington on their\nway homc from the King's jubilee\ncelebration in London.\nBrotherly Ties\nBetween Canada\nand the British\nLONDON, July 8 (CP-Havas).-\nCanada's ties with Great Britain\ncan be measured only \"ln a brotherly and friendly spirit and not in\ndollars and cents, Hon. Raymond\nMorand of Windsor, OnL, deputy\nspeaker of the Canadian house of\ncommoni, declared at a luncheon\nfor delegates to the Empire Parliamentary association here today.\nEarlier in the day the delegates\nwere received in the white and\ngold throne room of Buckingham\npalace by King George.\nFEDERAL GOVERNMENT WORKING OUT A\nPLAN TO REORGANIZE RELIEF SYSTEM\n\/ OTTAWA, July 8 (CP)-No appointment! were made today to the\nnumerous senatorial and other vac-\nancles which the government has\nto fill, but it is anticipated several\nwill bo announced before the end\nof the week. In the case of those who\n'are now members of parliament and\nare to be appointed to the senate or\nother positions within the gift of\nthe government\u2014and there are said\nto be quite a few\u2014lt will be neceaaary to have the air cleared that\nconventions to ulect new candidate! ln their rldingi may be held.\na acore of other Important offices,\nrunning into the highest salaried\nclau, to be filled. Several deputy\nministers are to be appointed\nMeanwhile relief camp difficulties\novershadow other political activities, and It is understood a movement\nis on foot to reorganise the lystem\nof caring for tingle unemployed\nmen. Efforts may be made to obtain\nemployment for them on farming\nand other labor undertakings, with\nthe money thit would otherwiie be\nspent on their maintenance going\ntoward their wages.\nSome announcement Is expected\nj, There are 17 Senate vacanclei and I on government policy Tueiday,\n72 WITNESSES\nIN WALEY CASE\nTACOMA, Waih, July 8 (AP)-\nIt will be two witnesses agalnit 70\ntomorrow when plump, blonde Margaret Waley begins her fight againit\nconviction in the George Weyer-\nThat   became   apparent   tonight\nlr\"\nippi\nWaley\u2014husband of the 19-year-old\nwhen the defence indicated finally\nthat only  kidnapper Herman  F.\ndefendant\u2014will testify with her.\nThe government, on the other\nhand, marshalled at least 70 witnesses for the effort to prove Mrs.\nWaley guilty of conspiring to kidnap\nand kidnapping the 9-year-old Umber fortune heir.\nWaley will be brought here from\nnearby McNeil Island federal penitentiary, where he has started a 45-\nyear sentence on a plea ot guilty\nto the kidnap and conspiracy indictment.\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy The Canadian Pren\nToronto and Montreal: Induitrtal\nstocks cloied lower\nToronto mlnei: Higher\nNew York: Stocki cloied higher.\nWinnipeg: Wheat ilightly firmer\nToronto: Bacon hogi off car\ndown 50 centa to 9.50.\nLondon: Bar lilver and copper\nlower; tin and tine higher; lead\nunchanged.\nNew York: Bar illver lower; export copper, tin and lead higher;\nzinc unchanged.\nNew York: Bar illver lower; export copper, lln and lead higher;\nzinc unchanged.\nMontreal: Silver lower.\nNew York: Cotton, rubber and\nsugar lower; coffee htgher.\nNew York: Canadian dollar up\n1-32 to 99 29-32.\nRAY ROHN DIES\nPHILADELPHIA, July 8 (AP)-\nRay Rohn, artlit and lUuitr.wr,\nwho worked for many yeari ai a\ncartooniit on newipioers in Cleveland and Cincinnati, Ohio, died\nsuddenly today at hii home. He was\n47. He had worked ln New York\naa an lUuitrator for Harpers mag'\nazine, Life and Judge.\nSo Thinks Cook After\nCongratulations\nPour in\nTORONTO, July 8 (CD\u2014Organization plans of the new party led\nby Hon. H. H. Stevena are developing ao rapidly candidates will have\nbeen placed in every constituency\nin all nine provinces within a\nmonth, Warren K. Cook, member of\nthe party executive, said tontghL\n\"If today's reaulta both here and\nln Ottawa are any indication of\ntha true feeling of the people of\nCanada then I feel confident the\nnew party will sweep the country,\"\nhe said.\n\"All day long both Mr. Stevens\nand myielf have been Inundated\nwith telephone messages of congratulation and with telegrams\nsending financial contribution from\nall over Canada.\"\n\"NO DIFFERENCE\nTO CCF.\"\nMUSKOKA BEACH. Ont., July 8\n(CP)-\"I shouldn't think it would\nmake verv much difference to the\nCo-operative Commonwealth Federation,\" J. S. Woodsworth. vacationing here, aaid today in commenting on tha new party headed\nby Hon. H. H. Steveni.\nTbe dominion leader of the C.C.F..\nand member of the houie of commoni for Winnipeg North Center\ndeclared the new party would \"strip\nthe Conservative party still further and put it out of business completely.\"     .        .,___..\n\"The Stevens' point of view on economic questions is entirely different from that of the C.CF. He\nbelieves in modifying evili4n the\nexisting lyilem. whllo we believe\nmore radical changes ln the iyi*\ntern itself are neceuary,\" he aaid.\nOTTAWA, July I (CP)-Uon. H.\ntt Stevens toiajr stated.he had received during The night and thli\nmomlng a large volume of telegram! of aupport and congratulation! from citizens and organization,\nincluding a prominent Conservative\nonjiniutien. The messagei were\nfrom \"all over Canada.\"\nThe former trade mlnliter who\nlait night announced hii acceptance\nof the leadenhlp of a new political\nparty waa buiy with preliminary\npreparations of the manifesto setting out ita aiBJ.s and ambitions.\nTlie manifeato will be luued\nabout next week-end when the\nname of the new party alio Is to\nba announced.\t\nHope to Oust Head\nof Longshoremen\nNEW YORK. July 8 (AP)-Long-\nihoremen'i delegatei gathered today for the quadrennial convention\nof the International Longshoremen's\nassociation with President Joseph\nP. Ryan challenging Radical-Socialist representatives to a fight tor the\nleadership. .   . .-'\u25a0_.      ,\nThe sternest and virtually sole\nchallenge to the conservative administration of Ryan wu from Harry Bridges, delegate from San Francisco, avowedly out to oust Ryan\nfor hli course of action in Ust\nyear's bloody coast dock strikes.\nA serious crack in the Pacific\ncoast backing claimed by Bridgei\nappeared, however, when Robert\nHarding of Tacoma, Waih., Puget\nsound delegate, came out for a coniervative coune.\nRELIEF STRIKERS AT VANCOUVER VOTE\nTO APPLY FOR ADMITTANCE TO CAMPS\nVANCOUVER, July 8 (CP) -\nWhat wu Interpreted u a deciiion\nto go back to Brltlih Columbia relief campi providing certain matters capable of adjustment are\nIroned out, wu made today by some\n800 men who walked out ot the\ncamps more than three months ago.\nIn any event they will apply for\nreinstatement starting tomorrow.\nThe men wired Acting Premier\nJohn Hart of British Columbia asking him to receive a delegation. Mr.\nHart replied, lt ii understood, that\nhe would entertain the requeit lf\nthe men adviied him of whit propoul! they wished to lubmit, and\nlf tha proposals were reasonable\nthev would be met.\nThe principal propouli, lt Is\n\u25a0tated, is that there ihould be assurance that there will be no dla*\ncrimination agalnit any itrlker for\nitrike activities and no blacklisting.\nSpokesmen for the men did not re*\nveal any other proposals.\nJ. H. McVety, of the Dominion\nemployment bureau, stated that\nleveral dayi would be required for\n>Pf\nmake the necessa:\nreapplication by the men and to\nmake the neceisary arrangementi\nfor return to camp. Several hundred\nmen who made reapnlicatlon before\nthe trek eut will not hava to reapply. He didn't think any one\ncould be lent back to camp before\nWednesday.\nTOLL OF DEAD IN WESTERN STORM IS\nNOW FIVE; HOUSE CARRIED HALF MILE\nWINNIPEG, July 8 (CP)-West-\nern Canada, only just recovering\nfrom itormi that took three Uvu a\nweek ago, tonight counted two more\ndead and extensive crop and property damage from week-end twisters cloudbunts and hail.\nTwin cloudbunta turned Willow\ncreek, southeast ot Drumhelier,\nAlta, Into a racing wall of water,\ndrowning an unidentified man and\nmaking 20 families homelesi.\nThe other fatality wai tn north\ncentral Saskatchewan at Smiley. A\ntwister carried the farm home of 30-\nyear-old Ole Evenson half a mile\nSaturday evening Instantly killing\nSvenion and critically Injuring Gilbert Krogitadt.\nFarmen in Saskatchewan counted\ntheir losses from hail damage In\nthousand! ot doilan. Forty railroad\nwashouts were reported and In the\nViicount, Plunkett and Guernsey\ndiitrict, a itrlp of crop land 25 milei\nlong and four mllu wide, wu\nthruhed to a pulp by hailstonu u\nlarge u hen'a eggi.\nRail service wu disrupted ln the\nweitern section of Saskatchewan\nand at Ermine a freight train wu\nmarooned. The tracks being wuhad\naway in front and behind it. Elsewhere basements were flooded and\ntelephone poles blown down.\nThe cloudbunts struck two houn\napart Saturday evening.\nMIGHTY YAN6TSE\nMENACES HOMES\nOF 25 MILLIONS\n\"Dragon River\" Brings\nDeath, Destruction,\nHuge Area\nPROPERTY LOSS\nIS ENORMOUS\nAnother Few Feet and\n50,000 Square Miles\nin Flood\nNANKING, China, July9 (Tuuday) (AP)\u2014Chlm'i \"dragon river,\" tha mighty YingUt, ate a\npatch of deith and dutructlon today through a huge area, Inhabited by many mlllloni. Foreign mil*\nilonarlea wera among thou endangered at mud dyku crumbled\nIn many placu befor. tha rain*\niw.ll.n flood wattrt.\nSeveral large cltlea of c.ntnl\nChina and hundred! ef village,\nwire menaced. Proptrty lou wai\n\u2022normoui and cropi wire deitroyed. Oddly tnough, there wu comparatively Uttla lou of llfi, but\nIf the river contlnuu ta rlu official! fund thouund. would b.\niwtpt to their daatht.\nThru groupt af Unltad Itatn\nmlulonarlu ware nportad an*\ndang.rad whan tha dyku protecting Shall, part In louthtrn\nHopeh provlnpa, yara iwipt away.\n\u00bb MILUOrt MAY L08E HOMIt\nCopyright 1185, by Associated Prtu\nHANKOW. China. July 9 (Tueaday) \u2014 If tbe Yingtse river, al*\n(Continued on Paaa Tin)\nRECORDS HELP\nTHOMU STORY\nIndicate R.Thomas I\nSon of May Yohe,\nFamed Actress\nPORTLAND, Ore., July 8 (API-\nSupport of the contention of Mn. E.\nR. Thomu, of Ls Angelu that her\nfoster-ion, Robert Thomu, 28, motion picture actor, il a child of May\nYohe, once a famoui actress, wu\nadvanced by Multnomah county\ncourt records today.\nThe Multnomah county clerk revealed court recordu snow that May\n8. 1909, Judge Lionel Webater authorized the adoption of a baby boy\nby Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Thomas, with\nthe approval of the mother, Mrs.\nMary Augusta Strong.\nMay Yohe at that time wai the\nwidow ot Captain Bradlee Putnam\nStrong.\nThe boy wu renamed Robert Edward Thomu. He wu bom September 1, 1908, court recordi revealed.\nThe mothar'i authorization wu\nprepared by Henry Maurice Hills,\nbarrister of Victoria, B. C, and Mn\nStrong'i attorney in fact. The wltneu wu Ethel Gertrude Saunden,\nalio ot Victoria.\nMiu Yohe later married Captain\nJohn Smuts. For the put uveral\nweeks the famous actress of the \"gay\nnineties\" has been seriously ill in\nBoiton.\nGRANTED $2,300,000 LOAN\nCHICAGO (AP)-Appllcatlon to\nthe Reconatruction Finance Corp*\noration for a loan not to exceed\n$2,300,000 with which to settle the\nindebtedness of the Rosenbaum\nGrain Corporation, operator of the\nlargest grain elevator ln the United\nStates and now undergoing reorgan\nization, was authorised today by\nfederal Judge WlUlam H. Holly,\nTHE V\nVictoria\nKamloopa   \t\nPrince George\nEstevan Point..\nPrince Rupert\nAtlln   \t\nDawion, Y. T...\nSeattle \t\nPortland. Ore...\nSan Francisco\nSpokane  __.\nLos Angelu\t\nPenticton \t\nLEATHER\nMln. J\n_   61\n    52\n    83\n     44\n    52\n    _    80\n..   82\n\u2022*\"\u2022\u2022\n..   48\n.   42\n..   52\n..   82\n..   52\n58\n..   80\n47\n..   48\nGrand Forks ....\nNelson \t\nKulo\n\t\n44\n..  44\n..  45 '\nCranbrook \t\n41\n..   40\nEdmonton\t\nSwift Current..\n.L-l....\n..   52\n.   58\n..  62\nSaskatoon   \t\n ......\n..   52\nEmperor Haile Selassie Is Unable Pledge That\nCaptives Will Not Be Mutilated; British\nPosition to Be Known Thursday\nWounded Man Has\nMeningitis\nREGINA, July 8 (CP) .-Menln*\ngitii brought a urloui turn today\nin the condition of J. Rothecker,\nhospital orderly shot in the spine\nby a ricocheting bullet during lut\nweek's marching relief strikers'\nriot\nConstable Denzll Shaw, Royal Canadian Mounted police, wu reported to be making good recovery\nfrom head injuria. Two R. C. M. P..\nConstable Hugh Wakefield, whose\ncondition wu terioui it one itage\nand Conitable Francii, and four\nitrlken wera diichirged from hoipiUl today.\nWins Scholarship\nMONTREAL, July 8 (CP).\u2014Allan\nBlihop van Cleave, 25-year-old ion\nof Mn. J. H. Ferguson, ot --diary, Suk., and a graduate of McGill univenity here, hu baen\niwarded one of the iclence research\nKholanhipi offered by the royal\ncommisiionen of the exhibition of\n1851, London, It wu announced at\nthe univenity today. The award ts\nvalued at approximately $1250 per\nyear and is tenable tor two and\npoulbly three yean.\nMORE ITALIAN\nTROOPS LEAVE\nSCHEVEN1NGEN. Tha Netherlands, July 8 (AP)\u2014Prediction wu\nmade freely tonight that tha conciliation commission meeting hero\nin an effort to uttle the Italo-Ethl-\nopia dispute would collapaa tomorrow.\nIta end wu foreseen ln tha refund of the Italian memben to hear\nwitnesses for Ethiopia.\nAt today'i meeting an effort to\nbreak the deadlock begun yuterday ended in failure. It wu reported that an angry icene developed when Profeuor Jeie, legal\nadvisor to the Ethiopian government, declared that Aalual, where\nthe tint major frontier clash occurred, wu Ethiopian territory,\nItalian memben refuied to baar\nfurther evidence.\nNO RED CKOtl\nLONDON, July t (AP)-The\nmirelful mlnlitratleni of tha Rid\nCrou may ba withheld from Ethiopia In cau of war with Italy ba-\ncauu Imparor Halle Selanle haa\nao far baen unable to glv. hla\nword hi. loldltrt wlll not mutilate ciptlvu, awarding ta Field\n(Centlnuad on .Page Tan)       j\nMost Modern Mill in Canada\nThrown Into Motion on Ymir\nConsolidated, Near Nelson\ni\nCrusher Plant and Concentrator Turn Over,\nWhen Coast Officials Throw in Switches;\nLadies Throw Ore Into Crusher Jaws\nLARGE NUMBER OF VISITORS SEE THE\nTUNNEL AND VEIN OF THE YMIR MINE\nMcCorkell, President of Company, Officiates\nat Mill Opening; McCloskey Declares Unit\nMost Modern in Dominion of Canada\nHlitory in the mining Industry of were driven to the 10th level of\nthe Wut Kooteniy wu made Mon-? the Ymir mine. Route wu over ilx\nday when the wheel! of the new\ncrushing plant and the wheela of\nthe new concentrator were put into\nmotion at the property of the Ymlr\nConsolidated Gold- Minu, Ltd.,\nN.PJ., The company operates the\nYmlr and Goodenough propertiu\nand the new mill will treat the oru\nfrom thue two.\nStarting of the new machinery\nwu under auspicious circumstances\nu close to 100 visiton, including\nofficials of the company from the\ncout, were in attendance.\nFOWLER STARTS CRUSHER\nOfficiating at the opening of the\nnew crushing plsnt wu S. S. Fowler\nof the Bluebell at Riondel, pioneer\nmining operator of the Kootenayi,\nwho colncidently, worked the old\nYmlr property 38 yean ago. He\nthrew switches that itarted the giant cruaher, the conveyor belts and\nthe smaller crusher which deliven\nfinely crushed ore into the receiving\nbins. Aisistlng Mr. Fowler were\nMn. A. M. Manson and Mrs. R. C.\nMcCorkell of Victoria. They deposited the tint piece ot ore trom\nthe Ymlr property Into the giant\ncrusher jaws. The broken ore wu\nquickly taken it souvenir! by interested ipectaton. On behalf of the\nYmir Consolidated company, O. D.\nFrith, superintendent at the property presented etch with bouquets.\nMcCORKELL PRESIDES\nAT MILL\nTha ceremony at the mill, most\nmodem and up-to-date in the Dominion, were presided over by R.\nM. McCorkell, president of the company. He wu assisted by Dr. Thomas Mercer, vice-president of the\ncompany ot Victoria, and A. M.\nManson, secretary-treasurer, and\nNorman Jeulmon of Vancouver.\nMr. McCorkell threw the switch\nthat started the ball mill rolling\nand Dr. Mercer and Mr. Manion ana\nMr. Jeulmon threw switches that\nstarted other machinery. Prior to\nthii J. E. McCloskey, of the McCloskey Mining ts Milling Service\ncorporation, Ltd.. gave an enlightening talk on the oblect of the\nmodern plant Mr. McCloskey designed and Installed the new units.\nVISIT YMIR MINE\nOfficials of the Ymlr Consolidated\nwere hoata during the day, and\nafter the vlilton hid enjoyed \u2022\nlunch around the noon hour, all\nmilu of excellent roadway constructed by the company from the\ncompany campsite to the Ymlr\nproperty on Huckleberry creek.\nHere the compresur-houie, itorage\nrooms and the blacksmith shops\nwere Inspected. Keen Interut wu\ndisplayed in the ateel iharpener\nwhich wu demonstrated by A. B.\nBailey, blacksmith.\nGO UNDER GROUND\nTwo can and an electric locomotive awaited the vlslton who were\ntaken for a trip Into tha Ymir\nmine tunnel to the crosscut 2164\nfeet under ground. There wu shown\nthe 10-foot vein which widens to 40\nfeet in the higher levels, Al Harding, assistant mining engineer, wu\nln charge ot the two trips Into tba\nmine and he explained polnta and\neventa of Interut.\nAt present there are about 10\nmen employed on the Ymlr property and about 24 on the Goodenough\naround the hill.\nJ. Blaney. Fred Hemsworth and\nT. J. Smith, the mine foreman, helped entertain the vlilton it the mine.\nNext point of Interest wu the\nmodern crushing plant located\nabout a mile below the mine and\nconnected to lt by a mining railroad\nelectrically operated. Here the flnt\nopening ceremonlu were conducted.\nThe crusher plant, which ls not\nfully completed, stands on the brow\nof a high bluff and is connected to\nthe concentrator, about a quarter\nof a mile below, by an overhead\ntramway. Finely cruihed ore ii carried by buckets thst travel at a\nhigh rate of speed on the gravity\norinciple. The crushing plant can\nhandle un to 500 tons per day.\nMILL OPERATION\nEXPLAINED\nNext the vlslton entered the specious milling plant. Here, after photographs were taken, Mr. McCloskey explained the working of the\nplant The cruihing plant, he ex-\nolalned, wai the latest type In the\nDominion, If not ln the Empire. Ita\nconitructlon wu economic and\nsound and it wu designed to give\nmaximum service for tha amount\ninvuted. Bunken could handle 260\ntom. The mill wai made to ault the\nore on the property. There wu a\nvaried ore condition   on the Ymir\n(Continued on Page Tan)\n__f\n PAGE TWO -\u25a0      \u2014   '\u25a0\t\nMORE ABOUT\nNEITHER ITALY\nNOR LEAGUE\n(Continued From Page Ona)\nthe honor and preitlue of tha League\nof Natloni wai laved and li lata to\nlong at tba ralni coma down in\nAbyulnla. Aftar tha great teit may\neome. Muuolini hai refuted to accept a definite itatement that Italy\nwill uie no force ln the Abyulnian\ndiioute beyond the period aet aiida\nfor arbitration. Thli period expire!\na faw weeka before the rain itopi. In\nthe meantime heavy ihlpmenti of\ntroopi and war material continue to\nleave Italian porti. If the arbitration commiuion could ihow on Auguit 25 that an agreement hai bean\nreached in the Italo-Abyssinlan dii*\nQoJH\nI be glad\n\/<ypu bought\nThit advert.ten.tnt Is not publiihed\nor dliolayed by tha Liquor Control\nBoard or by tha Government ot\nBritiih Columbia\npule, the whole world will heave\na algh ot relief. But the arbitration\ncommiuion hai begun by waiting\nlta time in futile dliputei and bickering! in Milan and now hai adjourned with a plan to reaiiemble\nonce again thli month in Holland.\nITALY WANT! ABYSSINIA\nSo far nothing ii settled. Everything hu been poitponed till the\nend of the rainy aaaaon. In tha\nmeantime unofficial agencies ara\ntrying to learn what Italy really\nwind, with how much Muuolini\nwill be unified; for lt ii obvious by\nnow that Italy and Abyulnla are\nnot quarrelling over a frontier incident and that the whole matter cannot be rectified with the payment of\na monetary Indemnity by Abyulnla.\nTo tha outtide world Muuolini\nipeakt of tecurity ior the Italian\ncoloniei bordering en Abyulnla.\nTheie colonlu are in constant dan-\nf;er ef an Abyulnian attack accord-\nng to the duce. That'! diplomatic\nlanguage which deceive! nobody.\nItaly want! Abyulnla. That'a tha\ntimple truth stripped ot ail verbiage.\nWhether Abyulnla ii to become a\nmarket tor Italian induitry, or a\nElace of lettlement for mlllloni ot\nouth Italian farmen, or whether\nMuuolini merely wants to heighten\nhii preitige ln the world by taking\nunto himielf tha title oi conquering\nCaesar, doet not matter a great deal.\nItaly wantt Ahyuinia.  .\nWill he gat what he wants? Tha\nleague of nttloni rejected Abyi-\nilnla'i demand tor a hearing. Italy\nthreatened to leave the league lf\nAbyssinia's plea wai granted. The\nleague wai honor-bound to listen to\nAbyssinle'i plea and if it was a\nSueitlon oi Italy or honor leaving\nia league, Italy wai the one that\n\u25a0hould hava gone. But the league\ndid not uve Itself finally by tliis\nevailon. Tha question will come up\nagain and then the league muit take\na itand. The Manchester Guardian,\nforeieeing the deciiive moment for\nAuguit, uyi: \"On tha long view lt\nIs better that the league ihould keep\niti principles and lose its member!\nby betraying Ita principle!. ., . But\nIf it remaim unshakably unltad in\ndoing thi right thing it may yet\nkeep both of them.\"\nLEAGUE HANOI IN BALANCE\nIt may. But the league haa dona\nleas In the caia of Abyulnla than It\ndtd on the occulon of Japan and\nManchuria. It seemi that the policy\nof \"might li right\"\u2014the one we were\ncalled upon to wlp\u00ab away forever\nin tha lait war\u2014li about to prevail\nln thli worfd. Japan limply takes\nManchuria and at preaent is adding\nanother empire to her domalm in\nnorth China. There were a few\nspluttering! of proteat\u2014but \"might\nIs right,\" and Japan accepta no dictation or advice from anybody. Mussolini uya the same. Abyulnla ii\nnot even permitted to itate ita caie\nin public at Geneva. The duca\nkeeps on tending troopi and hts demand! for territorial concessions\nhave grown ln ona month'i time\nirom a narrow strip of a frontier\nprovince, to two whole provincei\nand from that to a protectorate over\nAbyulnla.\nIf Slgnor Muuolini It left to carry\nout hit design of conquering Abyi*\ntlnla\u2014and who wlll stop ElmT\u2014a\nnew era opani ln international relations. In lhat area the doctrine ot\n\"might ls right\" itepi into the fore-\npound. The statesmen oi small\nstatet on the borders oi empires\nCATARRH\nI but-hid mine completely. Raid\nNoises. Citarthal Deetneee, spitting,\nNow Stufflaiu, eta. I wUl gladly\nMl   luffirsra   how   to   ovaroomi\noulckly, permanently, r. ROBINSON.\n120    Suite,    Sallibury    Clumbers,\nOeorse   St,\nAuitralla.\nBrisbane,\" Queensland,\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finttt in iht Inttrior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bus Serrlee Geo. Benwell, Prep.\nBREAKFAST 25c to 60c\nLUNCHEON 35c to 50c        DINNER 35c to 65c\nRotary and Gyre Headquartera\nTelephone 717 Nelion, B.C. 48 Virnon ft\nHTJMB-S. T. Fowler, Rlondel;\nMn. W. T. McDowell. Oakland; F.\nI Greyllng, Ymir; Frand Putnam,\nFrank Staples. Creiton; W. R, Kirk*\nneu and children. R. Brough. A Anderion, Medicine Hit; Mr. and Mn.\nP. Heather. S. J. Headley,   H . J.\nPhelps, H. F. Olds, Vsncouver; H\nR. MacKeniie, Calgary; H. W.\nLynch, San Diego; N, 8. Beaton,\nHailayburg, Ont; D. H. Lougheed,\nSalmo; J. E. Nuh, Kelowna; Mr.\nand Mn. C. Onlay. Sheffield, Eng.\n(The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is King\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers\nJ. A. KERR. Prop.\n124 BAXER ST. PHONE lt\nNELSON, B.C\narmed to the teeth are watching tbe\nevolution of the Abyulnian question with feir and trepidation. Will\ntha league uve Abyssinia from falling victim to international highway\nrobbery? And lf not what guarantee\nof Independence and security it\nthere left for the imall statea if the\nleague leavei them ln the lurch?\nThe whole world ls waiting tor the\nend oi the rainy leaion. In October\nwo ihall know a good deal more\nthan the iate ot Abyulnla. We thall\nalso know what ii to become of\nMamel, Dontiig, Austria, Denmark\nand Europe. A great cause hangs in\nthe balance.\nSAVOY - Myrtle McKay, Ena\nHodgson, J. D. Vicken, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Crone. Vancouver; Dorothy Bel-\n\u2022her. Snokane: A. C. Hindi, Lethbridge; Mr. ind Mn. D. A. Shea,\nCutlegir; T. Fletcher, Fernle; H. F,\nWllmot J. T. Oliver, Gray Creek;\nW. H. Nicholaon. H. Nicholson\nYmlr; J. H. Trenwith, H. A. Eager,\nKelowna. ^^H\nNew Grand Hotel\nP. L KAPAK Prop.\nHot and Cold Witer\nSingle SOc up: double SOe up\nMonthly ratu S10.00 up\nPH. 294       S1S VERNON ST.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nPETE B0R8AT0, Prop.\nRoomi (rom SOc to IIM\nMonthly 111) and up.\nSteam heated and hot and cold\nwater In every room\n805 BAKIR ST. PHONI M\nOccidental Hotel\nKB Virnon St Phona H7L\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nMlnen'  Hudquirten\nMORE ABOUT\nDUCE HOPES\n(Continued Fram Page One)\nsollnl with a contingent of troops\nfor the conqueit of Abyulnla. Lait\nyear, in the war between Yemen\nand Ibn Saud, Italy supported the\nformer. But lince Yemen hat been\ndefeated, Muuolini has shifted his\nfriendship to the conqueror.\nSAUD WOULD\nHEAD MOSLEMS\nIbn Saud will fight on Italy's ilde\non the promise ot lupport for hit\nproject of uniting ail the Arabic\ntribes under hit -centre. Ibn Saud,\nwho never wai friendly to Great\nBritain, dreami of restoring the\nKalltate; that is to uy ha wanti to\nbecome the spiritual head of all\nthe Mohammedana in the world. In\nthe oast the tultan of Turkey wai\nKullf-ul-Iilam. He represented the\ntupreme authority in religious matters to all Mohammedans in the\nworld. When Kemal Pasha and the\nYoung Turkt deposed the sultan\nthey alto abolished the Kalifate.\nSince that Ume tha office of su-\npreme rellgioui head of the Mohammedans has remained vacant.\nIt can easily be imagined what tl\nwould mean to Great Britain with\nher hundreds of millions of Mohammedan subjects in India and Africa\nif these people came to stand under\nthe religious authority of Ibn Saud,\nthe moit fanatical Moslem to havc\nappeared in Arabia for centuries,\nwho ii hostile to Britain, and In\naddition thii Ibn Stud a tool ln the\nhandi of Slgnor Muuolini.\nThe Saudian tupport of Muuolini\nand the union of tha fighting forcea\nof the mightiest Arabic kingdom\nwith those of Italy li the graveit\niuue yet to come out of the Abyi-\ntlnian embroglio. We can see now\nthat Great Britain li directly in**\nvolvod md that the firm itand tiken\nby Mr. Anthony Eden agalnit Mut-\nlolini'i plant for conquering Abys-\nllnla wu not dictated In the tint\nplace by a regard for the sanctity\nof treaties or out of concern ior the\nauthority of the league of nations.\nARABS DREAM OF UNITY\nThe intrigues of Slgnor Muuolini\n\u2014there It alu no other word ior it\nbut intrigues\u2014ttrike directly it the\nheart of the British Empire. For the\nmiddle eut is the heart ot the empire, its mott vital nerve-center.\nWhen Britain opposes Mussolini today the is defending one ot the key-\npositions of her world power.\nMuuolini'i support of Ibn Saud\nmeani bringing back to life the\ndream oi an Arabic empire under\nthe Hedjah king. Thii ii stirring\nArabic natlonaliim everywhere\u2014\nand that Is Mussolini's aim. For the\nmore restlesi the Arabs become,\nthe turer It Greit Britain to be Involved in difficulties. We thould\nSt it definitely out oi our headi\nat Britain is merely proteiting\nagainst Muuolini'i flamboyant\ntpeechei. The ipeechei don't matter\nio much\u2014the world ii uied to them,\nand Britiih statesmen, with their\ntente of realism, have alwayi valued them at their proper worth.\nMuuolini ii plotting actively. He is\nSroceedlng from wordi to act\nECRET LETTER BARED\nIn Palestine, the publication ot\nthe secret letter referred to produced deep consternation. There is\nno quution of the letter't authenticity. The chief Arabic newspaper\nln Jerusalem hat published a photo-\natatlc copy, which reveals clearly\nthat the duce hu for a long time\nbeen working on Arabic national\nlentiment The Zionists teel that a\nnew latent threat to the existence\nand peaceful evolution of the Jewiih\nnitionil home ln Palestine has been\nIntroduced by Muuolini'i mixture\nin Arabic affairi. That threat fortunately itlll litent may become\nactive and potent any moment.\nBy posing u the champion of Mo*\nhimmedlim, Mussolini also expects\nto drive a wedge Into the unified\nsentiment of the Abyssinian people.\nThe Italian government boaits tnat\nit It auured ot the lupport of two\nAbyulnian princes, who are Mohammedans. Theie men, ruleri of\nTHI NELION DAILY NIWI. NILSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. JULY \u00ab. IMS\nOnly One in Three Escaped Death in Quetta Quake\n-^\nSocial and Personal\nNews of Trail .\nThis column Is In charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of TraU AH\neventa of a social niture of interest ln Trail and Tidinac will appear\nln this column. Mn. Quayle will be glad to have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her home In TralL\nWith whatever miserable Uttla pauaiiloni they\neould silvioe from thalr earthquake ruined homu,\ntha comparative handful of survivors who escioed\nfrom Quetta, the city of tha dud, are ihown (top)\nat tha race track naar the city. Of tha 60,000 who\nlived In Britain'* mountain doorway of India, only\n20,000 escaped death.   They are living In tha open\non the nsarby plains. To prevent cholera the de*\nmollihed city hus <- _,i s.ti-d Ilka a drum and only\na few icldlara durvlvon of the 200 In the barracks),\nare patrolling the grim rulni. Below, aa If-oome\nmighty giant had punched a hole In It thli railroad\nitatlon li a mau of tumbled brlcki. It wat not ipared\nany mora than the other structures.\nFling of Youth\nTends lo Looks\nDiscuss the Trend to\nBare Legs and\nBare Heads\nMANCHESTER, England (CP)-\nThe argument of appearance ii the\none that counts moit itrongly in\nthe campaign of the industries\nagalnit the itocklngleu girl and the\nhatless young man, iayt the Manchester Guardian.\n\"If lt could be ahown that a\nyoung man ln a hat looks more\nhandsome than a young men without one, or that the female 'eg in a\nstocking li a more appealir*; affair\nthan the limb which .relies on itt\nown unaided charm, then the Industries would have llttle to fear,\"\nthe Guardian thinks.\nThomu Levy, M.P. for the Elland\nriding of Yorkshire wrote recently;\n\"The habit of discarding stockings,\nregardless ot place or occaalon, deserves condemnation, not merely\nbecauie it hu no sanction among\nKING SEES MOVIES\nSTOCKHOLM (CP) - For the\nfint time ln hii life. King Guitaf of\nSweden attended a public cinema\nperformance when pictures ot the\nrecent royal wedding were thown,\nkingdoms which nominally owe allegiance to the emperor of Abyi-\nilnla, are uld to be ready to betray\ntheir liege-lord, the Emperor Haille\nSelassie, when hostilities itart, be*\ncause ha ll a Chrlitlan.\nIt ia rather strange on the whole\nto iee Muuolini in the role oi lord-\nprotector of Islam, after his government hai deitroyed Moilem rellgioui institution! in Cyrenaica and\nLybla with a ruthlessness and a\npouring out of Innocent blood too\nghastly to detcrlbe.\npeople of tute but ior the stronger\nreason that it strikes st the heart\nof a great Industry.\"\nWomen hold ln their hands the\ntate oi many thousand! of worken,\nMr. Levy declares, and he ieelt sure\nthat when they realise the facta\nthey will ihow a tenie of loyalty\nana responsibility to other members\nof their sex engaged in a trade\nwhich can be made or marred by\nthe fashioni of the moment.\nKindred lnduttrlei have In late\nyears flown similar flagi of distress. The once flourishing trade in\nlong lace curtains, for Instance, li\ngone, but a closer parallel to the\ncase of women and their stor'tlnga\nls found among the young men who\nhave discarded the wcari.i .. i _s,\na fashion which the hatters say\nspells ruin to an ancient and Important trade.\n\"Whether such protest! have much\neffect seems a matter of considerable doubt\" remark! the Guardian.\n\"Fashioni, except in the cue of\nthose who lerve them professionally,\nare seldom concerned with economic!; they are a matter of the\nlook of the thing and the mood oi\nthe hour. Will young men wear hats\nor will young women wear stockings merely In order to support the\ndeserving tradei which produce\nthoie artlclu? It aeema a little\ndoubtful.\"\nGUNNERS SIGN AMATEUR\nLONDON (CP)-B. Joy, Corinthian center halfback who played\nfor England against the Anglo-Scots\nin the Jubilee soccer match at Highbury, has signed amateur lormi for\ni the Arsenal football club.\nBaldwin Happy About First Speech as New Premier\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaitt You\nJM. A. MAOOEN. Pree.\nCompletely Remodillid\nHot and Ctld Water\nIn thi HEART ot thi City\nPHONI tl      MS WA\u00bbD ST\nVANCOUVER, B. C. HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HO^ME\"\nDufferin Hotel\n900 Seymour St.       Vincouvir, B.C.\nNiwly Rinovitid Throughout\nPhcnu    \u2022    Ilavator\nA. PATERSON, late of\nColeman. Alta.. Proprietor\nThli photo wu takin Juit after Rt. Hon. SUnley\nBildwln mide hli flrit ipeeeh ai premier it the\nhud of the Nitionil government. Recently sue-\nceedlng Ramiay McDonald, he paid tribute to the\nwork of hli predeceuor. The ipeeeh wai mide at\nHlmley Hall near Birmingham, and the premier\n(right) li ihown with Mn. Baldwin, the Earl of\nDudley and Earl dl la Warr In that order.\nShippers Must\nApply lo Board\nSend Forms for\nEstimates of\nProduce\nThe Brltlih Columbia Tree Fruit\nboard hu issued another circular\n\u2022tating in part that unlaw otherwiie determined later, no licenses\nwill be luued by thii board during\nthe 193J crop season. Any shipper\nwishing to market tree fruits ihould\napply to the board to be designated\nas an agency through which the\nproduct shall be marketed. A tee of\n$5 wlll be charged to cover the\ncost of circulars to be delivered\nduring the season and this sum\nthould accompany the application*\nfor designation.\nAfter July 18, the marketing of\nproduct! by an penon who hu not\nbeen designated by the board u an\nagency is prohibited. After the\nabove date coplei of the orden and\ndeterminations of thii board will\nonly be lent to ihlppen who have\nbeen designated u agencies and\nhave paid the fee required ln lection one thereof.\nThe delivery of a product by a\ngrower to a shipper for marketing\nIs prohibited after that date unleu\nsuch ihlpper hu been designated\nby the board u an agency.\nChargu are hereby Imposed for\nthe purposes of thit board and ihall\nbe payable by shipper's at tha following ratu: Apples and pean, per\nitandard box or crate 2c; all other\nproducti. per itandard box or crate,\nlc. Invoices covering chargu will\nbe mailed to ihlppen trom time\nto time by thli board. Payment ot\nthe amount! ihown on iuch invoices\nmust be made to thli board within\nthree dayi of receipt of involcei by\niuch ihippen. All producti grown\nIn 1935 and marketed are liable to\nthe charge! hereby impoied.\nWhen a ihlpper luppltes a product to another shipper for marketing by the latter, the chargu u-\nseised by thli board on iuch prod*\nuct shall be payable by the latter\nihlpper,\n\"The provlilom of lection 7 of circular No. 39-2 ihall only apply to\nihipment! in car load lota or by\nmotor truck.\n\" 'Cooker' apples\u2014No Wealthy apples or apples ot varieties later than\nwealthies shall be marketed as\n\"Cookers\". Minimum sites that may\nbe marketed are; Ducheu, 2H inch,\nother early varieties, 2M inch. All\npackages must be marked No. 3\n\"Cookers\" and not with tha variety\nname. Should market conditions require a larger quantity of \"Cookers\" than ls permitted under this\nregulation, a release of Wealthy applu for thii purpou will be made\nby thii bond at a later date.\n\"1934 pools\u2014The recordi of thli\nboard are open to any shipper who\nmay vant to utisfy himielf thst the\n1934 pool records were kept accurately.\n\"Each ihlpper li required to deliver to thli board before July 19,\nan estimate ot the volume ot each\nproduct to be marketed by him during the 1933 crop season. Thli estimate muit include all tree fruiti\nand ihould be entered on the formi\nencloied herewith.\n\"The marketing of producta for\nconiumptlon within the area under\nthe jurisdiction of thli board at\npolnti lying weit of 118 mln. 30 degress of weit longitude and aouth of\n50 mln. 59 degreei of north latitude\nis exempted from regulation.\n\"Orowen marketing their own\ncherries and having leu than 100\ncrates to market may do so without being designated aa marketing\nagencies. Copies of invoices covering\nshipments by such growen are required to be furnished to thli boird,\ntogether with the aueument of Ic\nper crate.\"\nTRAIL, B.C.. July \u2022\u2014Tom Coria\nhai returned to Trail from a ahort\nholiday tpent at the cout\ni  a s\nJack Baldrey hu been vtsltlng at\nSpokane ior a iew days.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMrs. George Bakar ls the guest oi\nfrlenda at Cranbrook.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMrs. 8. G. HUl lesvee ior Crsnbrook during the week where she\nwill visit her mother, Mrs. Beech,\neee\nH. Swedborg. a recent visitor to\nSpokane hu returned to TralL\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMra. I. E. Hopwood. Second avenue, has left tor Ballour where ahe\nwill ipend a holiday.\n. \u2022  *\nCharlee Taylor hu returned irom\nChrlttlna lake where he spent the\nweek-end.\n\u00ab  \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Tommy Meacbem\nleft recently by car tor the Okanagan where they will roend a holiday.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMn. F. E. Dockerill Is visiting et\nthe Oirl Guide cimp at Sunshine\nBay ior a iew days.\n.  .  i\nDon Berry, who viiited tor a couple oi weeki at cout cltlet. hu returned to Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMiu Verna Partridge who le a\nnurie-ln-tralnlng st Calgiry, Is\nspending a holldsy with her parenta\nIn TralL\n\u2022 \u2022 #\nO. Brawn hu returned to Tnll\nfrom Snokane where he spent e\nshort holiday.\nA. Deucet Is vacationing at Vernon.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nAmong thou tram Tnll vlaltlng at the Girl Oulde eamp at Sunihlne Bay Sunday were Mr. and\nMn. W. H. Baldrey, Miu Dorothy\nDockerill. Mn. H. C. H. Broadwood,\ntbe. D. Bluett Mr. and Mrs. A B.\nClark and Mlu Nina Kemp.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMn. 3. R. McLennan and family\nare ipending the tummer holldayi\nat Kulo.\neee\nMn. 3. T. Wilkimon and daugh*\nten were vltlton et Queen'i Bay\nyesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. F. Erskine oi Rou*\nlend were viilton to Trail Sunday.\n, .  . ^^**\u2122\nMra. McAdam oi Nelson, who has\nbeen the guut of her son-in-law and\ndaughter. Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Mere*\ndlth, leavea tomorrow for her heme.\nMrs. McAadam wu honored at a\nfarewell party at   har   daughter's\nhome thla evening.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Gerald McAuUffe re\nturned lait night from a week'i va\ncation at the coait\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mn. R. Varcoe have aa\ntheir gueit Mr. Varcoe'i titter who\nla visiting hen from the cout\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMlu Mabel Vater has returned\nhome from a week's vacation at\nNewman lake.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nMrs. A. Campbell and family have\ngone to Greenwood where they will\nmake their home.\naea\nOordon Spien, a recent arrival\nIn Tnil fram Kulo, will take up\nresidence here.\n.  t  .\nMlu Oladys Drew hu left for\nSpoksne where she will visit relatives.\neee\nMrs. C. Luccheul hu returned to\nher home tn Spokane after viiltlng\nior the put week with Tnll friends.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Frisby end\nson oi South Slocm have taken up\nreeldence in Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nA. Cecconl hu returned to TnU\nirom Anaconda where he hu been\nthe guut oi hli iliter.\n\u2022 a  \u2022\nH. W. Foster neentiy visited wtth\nirlendi st Kaslo,\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nM. Agostlnelll and son are visiting at Halcyon Hot Springa.\nFrancis Graham and Oeorge Nel*\nson hsve nturned to Trail tram,\nNelson.\n\u2022 \u2022  t\nT. Decembrini is spending a holiday at Halcyon Hot Springe.\nMINERAL PRODUCTION\nIN MARCH\nProduction oi sixteen oi Canada's\nleading mlnerala in March waa aa\nfollowi, wltb last yeir'i figuru In\nbrackets: Aibeitoi 11,818 (12,629)\ntons: cement 130,747 (107,425) bar-\nreli; day producti $117,000 ($130.-\n128); coal 1,030,783 (1,031,388) tom:\ncopper 37,_28,\u00ab08 (30.832,983) pounds;\nieldipar 771 (1579) tons: gold 249.-\n478 (249,310) ilne ouncu; gypsum\n44M (4S88) tons; lud 31,571,048 (22.-\n174.753) pounds; lime 33.811 (34^20)\ntons: nitural gu 2.426,943,000 tL*\n598,738,000) cubic leet; nickel 10,-\n618,462 (10,438,882) pounda; petroleum 120,837 (130,048) barrels; commerclsl wit 13.794 (14,626) tons; sUver 1,278,930 (1,049.961) fine ouncu;\nsine 26,9-3,011 (23,774,6*62) pounds.\nPUPIL DEFEATED TIACHIR\nDOUGLAS. Isle oi Man (CP..-\nP. O. Fairfield of South Africa, who\nwon the tint oi two recent round-\nthe-houiei motor car nces through\nDouglas, defeited hli teacher, Fred\nW. Dixon, theu two being the only\nconteetants left in the race at the\nfinish. It wu a case of the pupil\nmattering the muter by trlcka\nlearned in apprenUceehlp. Trie race\nwat over a course ot 200 mllet, Falr-\nfleld'i average speed being 87.29\nmilu ner hour end Dixon't Sill.\nOFFICIALS WALK OUT\nHAMILTON (CP)-When players on both tesmi objected to ons\not hit decisions, Joe Adams, city\nleague soccer referee, simply\nwalked away irom there\u2014right oul\noi the park. Ha appeared Before\nthe league council the next week\nand offered to donate e trophy to\nbe pruented annually to the dees-\neat player. Adams didn't Uke what\nthe playen called him.\nHelp Kidneys\n\u2022 If Kldnty TrttnbU or Bladdtr W**k\u00ab\nnw m\u00abkw y\u00abu'mff$r from 0-attlnf\nUp Nlghti, Morvouno* dimIm*\nIthevmttlam, StlffnoM, Burning.\nA Smarting. Itching or Ael4.tr try tho\nw Doctor*! pr$$crlptlon Cy\u00a7t\u00ab (Ilto*\ntox). Muit ond yoor troubloo la I wy*\nor money boot   Only Tla ftt drugfloU,\nHURRY! ONLY A FEW DAYS LEFT\nONE OF THESE ALL-WAVE\n(24 Sett Given Away)\nfn Addition\n48 Gillette\nARISTOCRAT\n%A   MI F1ICI RAZORS\n\u25a0* AWARDED\n'138.50\nRCA VICTOR\n\"Qlobe trotter\"\nRADIOS\nRCA VICTOR\n\"Ghbi Tretter\"\nVol~ 111 wllh aCATUW\nm uu* \u2022Va**-***** mfttrnt,\nmc ead fluwellii brad*\nearn,. pel Sr. MlU, IrilUW\nWuk Me.\nGive Max Baer's Dog a Name\nYOU still have a chance to win one oi theae\n1935 RCA Victor \"Globi Trollir\" radios\u2014\nan all-wave superheterodyne that brings worldwide entertainment into your home. 24 of thee*\n1188.60 seta (12 to consumers\u201412 to dealers)\nwill be awarded for tha best namea submitted\nfor Max Baer's dog-the frisky Uttle fallow\npictured above. Also 48 Gillette Aristocrat one\nplace rasors will be given as additional prises.\nNamea muat be received by Saturday, July 20th\n\u2014 ao hurryl Read the aur contest rules aad\nenter NOW!\nA CANADIAN CONTUT FOR CANADIANS\n\u2022 CONTEST RULES \u2022\n1. Sustut a aam* for Max Baar'a\ndoe. Each name muit be acoo mpanled\nby ru empty Gillette \"Blue Blade\"\npackage rud tbe same aad addrcw tt\nthe dealer wbo aold you Uu bladaa-\n>. Wrltan of tha ll but gamei will\neach receive an RCA Victor \"Cliht\nTntltr\" Radio wlUi Special b*\nAntenna-retail value compli\nIIM 50. Io addlUon, writen of Uit\naeat 48 namea selected wiU each receive a. 14.190 Gillette Ariitocrat On*\nPiece Raior.\nnoon of July SO, less. winners wfll\nbe notified aa aoon thereafter aa poaalble ud namea of wlnoon pub*\nLuxe\nplete\nWANT ADS BRING RESULTS\n8. NatfiM wlll be Judged for orletpal-\nIty. unlquaaws ui utj_.ee. Jddrai*\ndecision anal. No anuiia nturned.\nDuplicate priiei awarded la eaae\not tie.\n4.  All aatrtee must be melted by\ntx. Tbt conteit li open to everyone except imployiM oi lhe Olllette Safety\nRator Compuy ud their famlllaa.\n0.   Hurryl Submit u muy utrlaa\nai you wlah but -a iuri yiu endow\nan empty Gillette\n\"Blue Blade1' pa-_k-\nefi with each aam\natibnltted.    Hall\nyeur  sotrlM  to\nGillette   tafaty\nRaipr   Co    of\nCaaada. Ltd.,\nDept. B, Maa* _ _\ntraal, Canada. aW 0a\nGillette\nBlue Blade\u00a7\n  \u2014 \u25a0\t\n\u25a0^\u25a0Sty\nROSSLAND AND\nTRAIL PYTHIAN\nLODGES INSTMl\nKnights Hold a Joint\nAffair at the\nGolden City\nROSSLAND, B.C., July 8.-With\nAlex Page of thii city u installing\nofficer, Trail Lodge No. 21. and\nRouland Lodge No. 23, Knights of\nPythias held a joint installation ot\nofficen in the local K.P. hall, Friday evening. At the close of the ceremonies a ihort musical program was\ngiven, comprising a vocal duet by\nMiss Miriam Daily and Mlss Pearl\nHowe, a vocal solo and pianaforte\nselection by Miss Winnie Morris, a\nvocal solo and guitar accompaniment\nby L. Therrian, vocal solos by Miss\nRebekah Reed and \"Chick\" Rogers.\nShort talki were given by Mrs. William T. Trembath, past Supreme\nrepresentative; Mrs. D. Downie,\npait grand chief; J. A. McKinnon,\npast supreme representative; John\nBalfour, grand guard; and the retiring and newly installed officers.\nCednc Cox wu chairman. A couple\nof hours dancing was enjoyed and\nsupper was served by Maple Leaf\nTemple No. 4, Pythian Sisters.\nMr. Page, assisted by James Benson, G.V.C, Harold S. Taylor, G.P.;\nand Lealie E. Hadtield, G.M.A., installed the following officen:\nRowland Lodge No. 23 \u2014B. T.\nFried, CC; S. E. Wilson, V.C.; Dalton G. McArthur, prelate; George\nF. Beat. M. of W.; t. L. Walker, K.\nof R. -t S.; Cedric Cox M. of F.;\nJames Heaton, M. of E.; Joseph Jorgensen, M. at A.; L. H. Griswold,\nI.G.; E. J. Kull, O.G.\nTrail Lodge No. 21-H. L. Smith,\nCC; L. Hornett, V.C.; Eli Peterson,\nprelate; E Hardy. M. of W.; Horace\nSimpion, K. of R.S.; Gordon Hoi*\nlington, M. of F.; Thomai Alty. M. of\nF*.; W. H. Caller, M. at A.; G. Wood,\nI.G.; C. Haggerty, O.G.\nAmong the out-of-town vlslton\nwere Mrs. J. W. Hearn, Mrs. J.\nFraier. Mn. Bush and Miss Bush,\nSalmo; Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Downie, Mr. and Mn. R. H. White. Mr,\nand Mrs. Horace Simpson, Mr. and\nMn. P. Shields. Mr. and Mra. Hornett, Mr. and Mrs. John Balfour. Mr.\nand Mrs. Ernest Cook, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Wood, Mr. and Mn. Thomas\nEwlng, Mr. and Mn. Thomas Alty,\nMr. and Mn. 0. J. Wilson. Mrs. B.\nT. Simpson. Mn. C Benzles, Mrs.\nA. Beckett, Mn. Ashworth, Mrs.\nA. Saunden. Mr. and Mn. Charles\nMorrow, Mra. C Thorndale, Mrs.\nJ. Gibson, Mrs. Moore, Mra. J. C\nMurdock, Mrs. Harry Murdock. Mn.\nC. Henderson, A. C Clark, I. Tyson,\nJ. A. McKinnon, John Young, H. L.\nSmith, Ell Petenon. E. Hardy, W.\nH. Casler. G. Wood. C. Haggerty,\nT. Nixon, R. Shields. G. Organ.\nTO   PLAY   FOR   8AINT8\nSOUTHAMPTON, (CP)-Victor\nWatson, veteran international soccer player who wu given a free\ntransfer after 15 yean' service with\nWut Ham United hu signed for\nSouthampton. He played five times\nfor England.\nJust liiten to Kellogg'i Rice Krispici\ncrackle in milk or cream\nand you'll know how crisp\nand crunchy they are. And\ntheir flavor ii as inviting aa\ntheir aound.\nRice Krispies are nourishing and easy to digcit.\nAn ideal bedtime mack or\naupper for the children.\nThey invite restful aleep.\nSold by grocers everywhere in the Mother Goow\netory package. Made by\nKellogg in London, OnL\nQuality guaranteed.\nTHE NELSON DAI\nKENNETH WALLACE\nOf' Botwell, lecretary of the\nWut Koottniy Central Firm.n\ninititut. for many yean, addi to\nhli dutiu thli year th. work of\nadvliorv boird mimber.\nB.C. MEN TO GET\nHUMANE MEDALS\nTwo Get Awards for\nSaving Lives\nHAMILTON. Ont., July 8 (CP)-\nRichard L. Seeley of Wilson's Landing, B.C., and Thomas F. Townley\nof New Westrhinster, have been\nawarded tlie bronze medal of the\nRoyal Canadian Humane association for distinguished conduct in\nlife-saving. Seven other residents\nof western Canada receive parchment certificates for their presence\nof mind and quick action in times\not emergency with lives at stake.\nPassenger on a car ferry on Okanagan lake February 10 last. Seeley\njumped into the lake to the aid of\nfive persona trapped in a motor car\nwhich ran off the end of the wharf\ninto 12 feet of water. Three were\nrescued quite easily but Seeley\nwent down several tlmu after the\nother two, eventually bringing them\nout ln an unconscious condition.\nTownley's award was for swimming for help when he and two\nfriends were thrown out of a boat\nduring a tide-rip on English bay,\nAugust 20, 1933. Heavily encumbered with clothing and other gear\nthe others clung to the upturned\ncraft while Townley started toward\nWeit Vancouver, two milu away,\nfor assistance. Picked up by a passing boat he was able to warn other\ncraft to be on the lookout for his\nfriendi.\nRecipients of parchment certificates follow;\nVictor Munk and John Crosbie\nof Yale. B.C.. for an attempted rescue ln Taylor lake, May 13, 1934.\nW. L. Algate of Flin Flon, Man.,\nfor a rescue in Flin Flon lake.Aug.\n4, 1933.\nPhyllis Boyd of Gladstone. Man.\ntor a rescue in the White Mud\nriver, Nov. 30 1934.\nAlistalr D. MacAulay and Norman\nA. MacAulay of Burquitlam, B. C\nfor a rescue at Port Moody .July I\n1934.\nMrs. Martaret F. Master of Victoria. B. C. for a rescue in Langford\nThe Association's list totalled\nnine bronze medals, two bars and\n29 parchments, the remainder going to other parti of Canada.\nCARMI LADY IS\nRECOVERED\nListen!-\nget hungry\nCARMI, B.C., July 8-Mn. Leo\nFerroux, who haa been eonfined\nto her home for teveral weeka with\nrheumatism, is able to be up and\naround.\nMrs. Ham- Creach left for Vancouver Sunday. She expects to return at the end of the week.\nMeurs. Fritry, Engitrom and Le-\nguest shipped a car of ore to Trail\nfrom the Carml mine.\nJames Kerr spent several days In\nGrand Forks.\nMra. L. Marsh and grand-daughter,\nBillie Marsh, left Saturday for Penticton after visiting her son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mn. T.\nMarsh here.\nMn. George Munive hu returned\nhome from Grand Forki hospital\nwhere she wu under docton' care\nfor iome time.\nMr. and Mn. Franklyn Elliott and\nfamily of Wallace mountain were\nguests of Mr. and Mn. Leo Ferroux\nMiss Charlotte McCutcheon. who\nhas been visiting the Ferroux family returned to her home In West-\nbride Sunday.\nOB8ERVE ANNIVERSARY\nA dinner in honor of the 34th\nwedding anniveraary' of Mr. and\nMrs. James Kerr was given at their\nhome June 19 by F. P. Zuet and\nMrs. E. S. Tucker. Those present\nwere Mr. and Mn. Jamei Kerr, Mr\nand Mn. E. S. Tucker and ion But-\n[?' F\u201ep' Zeut' Ale<*-< BeU. Min\nMary Kerr and Dan Kerr.\nF. P. Zeut hai returned to his\nhome in Annacotes. Wuh., after an\nextended visit to his slsteri, Mn.\nJames Kerr and Mrs. E. S. Tucker\nAleck McDonald of Bridge River\nand Buster Falln were gueiti at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. E. S\nTucker for a few dayi.\nJames Kerr was a Grand Forki\nvintor the first of the week.\nH0CKEYIST8  FOLLOW   PONIES\nNEW YORK (CP)-Spced. apparently, ii \u2022 diet hockey playen muit\nbe fed continuouily. Unlike many\nother national hockey league playen who own their own itables, or\nat least one thorou\u00bbhbred, Murray\nMurdock and Chlng Johnson of New\nVork Rangers have none, but attend\nthe races here daily until they get\nired. then switch over to watch\n\u2022 lie polo ponlei. Both are greit\nten   for   Stewart   Iglehart,\nI ooloi't  and  amateur horkeyi.*t\n. roo\ncrack\nT. ABRIEl IS\nGUESTHONOR\nNakusp People Leave\nfor Holidays at\nthe Coast\nNAKUSP BC, July 8.-Mr. and\nMn. David Fulko entertained at\ndinner Wednesday honoring T. Ab-\nriel on hii birthday annivenary.\nMn. M. Vlpond of Trail U the\nrut of    her daughters, Mra. A.\nFowler and Mra. G. C Martin.\nMn. W. Carruthen left for Vancouver. ,\nMils J. Yurlck, matron of the Arrow Lakei hoipital, left for the\ncoast.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Hamilton of New\nDenver were vliitora here en route\nfor Vancouver.\nMlu N. Granger bas left to spend\nseveral days at Edgewood.\nMr. and Mn. Parkyn and family of\nBurton accompanied by Mn. Pai>\nkyn's mother, Mn. Leaman were\nvisiton here.\nMr. and Mrs. A. B Thompson and\ntwo children of Trail have arrived\nto spend the summer vacation in\nNakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. Percy Evana of\nBurton motored to town.\nDr. and Mn. G. D. Stlbbi left to\nipend a vacation at Longbeach,\nCalifornia.\nMiss M. Lelbscher of Sllverton ii\ntho guest of Mn. Hancock.\nMr. and Mn. J. Norris have as\ntheir guuts Mrs. Norris' niece, Mrs.\nG. Stibbs and, son of Kelowna.\nMr. and Mrs. George Keys have\nas their guests Miss Wlnnifred Keys\nand Mrs. Linhart of Riverside. Cal.\nMiss Molly Isllp who has been\nattending Nelson Business college\nreturned to her home here Sunday.\nDick Blyth arrived from Trail\nand spent several days In town.\nMisa Kathleen Fowler has arrived\nhome from Trail where she has been\nattending business college.\nDr. and Mn. Jacobson of New\nWestminster who have been visiting at the homes of Mr. and Mn.\nC S. Leary and Mr. and Mrs. W.\nG M. Hakeman have left for their\nhome.\nMiu Louise Cusick has arrived\nto spend the vacation at her home ln\nNakusp.\nThe Junior pupils of Nakusp public school enjoyed a picnic at Rothwell. Miu Mary Kirk had arrnaged\nan interesting program of games\nand later the picnic supper wu\nserved.\nRonald Wales of Calgary Is guest\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. W.\nBill.\nMr. and Mra. Cliffe. Mn. Kirkwood and Mra. Cropp of New Denver were visitors here.\nConstable R. Mcintosh of Nelson '\nIs relieving Constable J. Hatherill\nwho is on his holidays.\nMiss Lillias Kerr, who teaches\nat Inonoaklin valley has arrived to\nspend the summer vacation at her\nhome.\nY NEWS. NELSON. \u25a0.C.-TUE8DA].  MORNINO. JULY \u00bb. 1888   \u2014\u2014\nA Perennial       Frederick Niven,\nthe Writer, Goes\nto Invermere\nINVERMERE, BC. July 8,-Fred-\nerick Niven of Willow Point, the\nwell known author of many western tales, with Mrs. Niven, have\nagain come into the valley to spend\nth summer months, and are occupying the summer home of J. Murray\nGibbon, CP.R. general publicity\nagent on the Benches, Invermere.\nSchools are closed, the last examination papen done and scholars\nand teachers dispersed.\nThree of the teachera in the Con-\nsoldated ichool here have gone to\nVancouver to attend the summer\nschool clauei of the Univeraity of\nBritish Columbia. Mr. Leask the\nprincipal of the ichool. Mr. Elmes\nand Mr. McCormickall left for Vancouver.\nThese teachen are all returning\nhere after the summer and with\nthe addition of Miu Ferguson for\nthc juniors will comprise the teaching staff of the Consolidated school\nat Invermere, for the next school\nyear.\nThe Rev. Frederic Stanford with\nMrs. Stanford and Petrinai and Miss\nEdith McLean motored to Banff\nto stay at Commander Powles' summer cottage at Lake Minnawanka.\nfor a week, during the sessions of\nthe Theological summer school be-\nin* held In Banff.\nMrs. Hogarth accompanied by\nher sister Mrs. Forrest of Cranbrook motored through the valley\nfrom Cranbrook.\nSPORT RESULTS\nAT KIMBERLEY\n0. B. BALLARD\nOf Robion hu often mooted hli j\nretirement from the pruid.ncy of j\nthe Wut Kootenay Central Farm-\nin  Inititut.,  but the  delegate**.\nthough following hli advice on\nmany llnei, ilwayi turn It dowr.\non thli mitter and return him to\noffice.   For a itlll longer tlm. he\nhu been pretldent of tht Robion .\nFarmen lnitltute, ind hid led in\nmaklna Robion the iccepted convention center.\nModern Greeks make cheese\nchiefly from milk of sheep and\n*:oats.\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.. July 8-Re-\nsults of the children's sports here\nDominion Day were:\nGirls 14 and under, 78 yds\u2014Lilian\nJohmton, Kathleen McGinnli, Leona\nColvln.\nBoyi\u2014Charlie Lee, G. Brown. R.\nPagutta.\nGirls 18 and under, 100 yds\u2014Jean\nThompion, Lilian Johnston, Eunice\nHoward.\nBoys\u2014Alex Caldwell, E. Dougall,\nCharlie Lee.\nGirls open\u2014Ruby Andrews, Lilian Johnston, Jean Thompson.\nI    Boys\u2014Jack  Colvin,  Bill Colvln,\nCharles Marleau,\nGirls three legged race\u2014C Sparka\nand B. Nesbitt, M. Howe and L.\nJohnston.\nBoys\u2014C Marleau and H. Fiiher.\nR. Bidder and B. Colvln, P. Gallpen and R. Flagel.\nBicycle race\u2014P. Gallpen, R. Bid-1\nder. C. Marleau.\nJunior girli high Jump\u2014Jean I\nThompson,  Lilian  Johnston,  Dale\niyeit.\nSenior \u2014 Ruby Andrews, Jean I\nThompson, Lilian Johnston.\nJunior Boys\u2014G. Bonner, A. Caldwell, G. Brown.\n.   Senior\u2014G. Young, J. Orr, C Mc- \u2022\nKay.\nJunior girls broad Jump \u2014 Jean\nThompson, Dale West, Lilian John-1\n\u25a0tap,\nSenloi*\u2014R. Andrews, Jean Thompson, Dale West.\nJunior boys\u2014G. Bonner, A. Cald-1\nwell. G. Brown.\nSenior\u2014G. Young, Bonner, Orr.\nPole vault\u2014Bonner, G. Young.\nPrize winnen in parade:\nDecorated bicycle\u2014Tom McGovern, Bob Niven Lloyd Niven.\nPets \u2014 Donald Nesbitt, Blanche\nRaynor, Mary Blackwell.\nFancy dress\u2014Trinder. Helen Bonner, Margaret Anderion.\nSoftball tournament:\nMuraco's beat Lumberton 10-0;\nKimberley All Stan beat Cranbrook\n9-2; final, Muracos beat Kimberley\n13-0.\nBoxing:\nThe main event between Al Hayden and Duke Hyssop wai a good\nfight. Al wai downed twice in the\nsecond round and got a knock-out in\nthe third.\nAmateur:\nRoy McLelih leemed better than\nTlbby and Tlbby suffered an accident in the second round, putting\nhis shoulder out. Doctors forbade\nthe match proceeding.\n-\u2014 PAOI THREE\nNELSONITES AT\nROSS SPUR\nROSS SPUR, BC, July 8.-T. R.\nSwanson wu a visitor to Trail.\nMr. and Mra. R. N. Dorman and\ndaughter, Thelma havc returned to\nNelson after spending a few days\nhere, gueits of Mrs. John Doerksen.\nMrs. A. J. Shaw accompanied by\nher sister-in-law Mra. Mabel Shaw,\nWere visiton here.\nMiu Louise Swanson hu left for\nTrail, where she will be employed.\nJ. F. Doerksen and A. F. Doerkien\nspent the week-end with their famillu here.\nBill Decko end Billy Ferguson\nof Creston ot 144 Iba., put up i lively\nflgHt for three roundi. Ferguion\nsecured the decision.\nPhil McKlm and Ivan Ferguion\nfought a four round draw.\nCool and delicious!\n\u25a0SA1AM\n_________________      '*\u2022\n1C\u00a3J>T_CA\nBIRTHS, DEATHS\nUP; MARRIAGES\nLOWER THISMAY\nAll Show Increase for\nFirst Five Months\nof the Year\nWhist and Dance\nat Vallican\nVALLICAN, B.C., Julv 8.-A iuc-\nceuful whist drive and dance was\nheld In the hall here Friday evening\nunder auspices of the Vallican Im-1\n\u00a7rovement lociety, with Mn. F.\noucey, Mn. G. Ward and Miss R.\nMunch acting as hostesses.\nPrlzu for whist were awarded as\nfollows:\nLadies first, Mn. G. Ward; consolation, Miss R. Munch.\nMen's first. W. Talbot; consolation.\nH. Avis.\nVisiton were present from Slocan City, South Slocan, Trail and\nintermediate points. Music was sup-\nElied by the Innu1 assisted by B.\n[arrison, Miu E. Coleman. J. Wilkie, Miu I. Honeysett and Miu B.\nPerry.\nSummer frocki in plain or colored linen and in printed crepe are\nedged, piped or otherwise trimmed\nwith aontrasting velvet. Velvet ribbon\u2014baby aize and wider\u2014 Is employed extensively, for trimmings.\nBirths registered ln 70 cities and\ntowna of Canada having a popula-,\ntlon of 10,000 and over in May numbered 7104, deaths 4471 and marri-\nages 2408, as compared with 6681 I\nbirths, 4298 deaths and 2423 mar-,\nrlages ln May last year, showing increases of 6^ per cent in births and i\n4 per cent in deaths and a vcry\nslight decline  In  thc  number of\nmarriages.\nBirths registered during the five\nmonths January to May of this year\ntotalled 33,257, deaths 21,566 and\nmarriages 10,615 as against 33.20'.\nbirthi, 20,225 deathi and 10.399 marriages during the corresponding five\nmonths of last year. Thii comparison\nshows a negligible increase in the\nnumber of births, and Increases of\nIM and 2 per cent In the number of\ndeaths and marriages, respectively.\nROBERT MAIN IS\nIN THE HOSPITAL\nBONNINGTON FALLS. B.C.. July\n8\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Willey\nwere visiton at Cascade.\nMn. G. B. Ruuell has returned\nto Nelson after spending a couple\nof days the guest of Mra. A. Willey.\nRobert Main of Pop Inn is a\npatient in the Kootenay Lake General hospital, Nelson.\nTamarack is an Indian name for\nthe American larch tree.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n5:00 Rocky Mountain Melody\nTime. Mart Kenny's orch.. male\ntrio. Art Hallman. tenor. Lake Louise lex. B.C.); 5:30 Goldman Band\nConcert, dir. Edwin Frank Goldman. N.B.C-N.Y. (exc. B.C.); 6:00\nSay It With Music, director Russ\nGerow, London; 6:30 lcl Pans,\nthis is fcaris fi*. Montreal; 7:00 News\nand wuther Forecut; 7:15 Jesse\nCrawford, organist, N.B.C.-N.Y.;\n7:30 The Freshmen, male quar.,\nRegina (via CKMOi; 7:45 Across\nthe Border, dance orchestra, N.B.C.-\nN.Y.; 8:00 Melody Maids, dir. Ina\nMcCartney, Vancouver; 8:30 News\n(B.C. Net); Pianology, Al Smith, Regina (ex. B.C.); 8:45 Neapolitan Trio,\ndir. Cardo Smalley, Vancouver. West\nNet.); 9:00 Chic Rogers, Wandering\nCowboy,Trail (B.C.Net);9:13Cheri\nRod and Dick, Hawaiian Guitarists, Vancouver (B. C. Network);\n9:30 Maids and Middies, vocal harmony dir. Elizabeth Morrison, Saskatoon (Wut. Nework); 10:00 Vancouver's Theater of the Air, dlr. E\nV. Young (B.C. Network).\nN.B.C.-KPO NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\n680 620 840 880 920 970\n5:00 To Be Announced; 5:30 Eddie\nDuchln'i orch.. Talent Tournament;\n6:00 The Beauty Box Theater, John\nBarclay, baritone, acton, lingers Al-\nGoodman's orch.; 7:00 Amos 'n' Andy, blackface comedians; 7:15 Tony\nand Gus, Geo. Frame Brown: 7:30\nLeo Relsman's orch.; Phil Duey.\nbaritone; 8:00 To be Announced:\n8:30 Death Valley Days, dramatized\ntrue stories by the Old Ranger: 9:00\nFanfare orch.* 9:30 Henry King's\norch.; 10:00 News Fluhes. Sam\nHayes; 10:15 Paul Pendarvls' orch.;\n10:55 Presi-Radlo Newi Service;\n11:00 Curfew, organ concert (KPOl:\nFreddie Martin'i oreheitra; 11:30\nJimmie Grier'i orch.\nD.L.; 11:00 Don Bestor's Dance orch.,\nD.L.; 11:30 Lei Hite's orch., D.L.\n1050 k KNX 285.5 m\nHOLLYWOOD 60.000 w\n7:00 Homer Canfield, tenor; 7:15\nPlay Your Own Accompaniment*.\n7:30 The In-Laws, play: 7:45 King\nCowboy: 8:00 Emil Baffa's concert\norch.: 8:15 Watanabe and Hon. Archie; 8:30 Mona Lowe, blues; 8:45\nMusical program; 9:00 News Service: 9:15 Enchanted Seas; 9:301\nPlenty for All talk; 9:45 KNX Dude\nRanch; 10:45 Pete Pontrelli's orch.;\n11:45  KNX Trans-Pacific  News.\n800 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVANCOUVER 500 w\n5:15 Cariboo Cowboys; 5:46 Eb and\nZeb. E.T.; 6:00 SUr Dust, Reed\nChapman; 6:15 Newt Flashes; 6:30\nBritish Israel Lecture; 7:00 Waterfront Publicity Com. talk; 7:15 Voice\nof the Commonwealth; 7:30 Orch.:\n7:45 Douglas Soc. Cred.; 8:00 Studio;\n8:30 Sporti; 10:00 News Broadcast;\ni Other periods,  recordi.\nC.B.8-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n670 610 940 1180 1270\n8:00 Lud Gluikln Preienti; 8:30\nWaring'! Penmylvinlam with Col.\nStoopnagle and Budd; 6:30 Edwin\nC. Hill, Human Side of Newi; 6:45\nFay and Braggiottl, piano duo; 7:00\nMai Hallett'i orch., Atlantic City;\n7:30 Frank Master's orch.; 8:00 Portland Symphony orch., San Diego\nExooiitlon: 8:30 Ray Herbeck's or.;\n9:00 Bill Hogan's orch.; 9:30 Roy\nDietrich's orch.; Chicago; Univenity\nExplorer (DD: 10:00 Bill Fleck'i or..\nDl.:   10:30 Orville Knipp'i  orch.,\n1030 k CFCN 291.3 m\nCALGARY 10,000 w\n6:00 Happy Endings: 6:30 Andy\nHall and hii Banjo; 6:45 Singing\nVagabond: 7.00 Social Credit Lecture; 7:30 Indian Serenader and Ar-\nvella. the Dream Girl; 8:30 Continental itrlng quartet; 9:00 Newa.\n790 k KGO 379.8 m\nOAKLAND , 7800 w\n7:00 America Sings: 7:30 Cliff Naz-\narro. tenor; 7:45 Southern Harmony\nFour; 8:00 Calif. State Chamber of\nCommerce; 8:15 Talk of the Town\n(E.T.); 8:30 Arlle Slmmoni' or.. CR.\nC; 8:45 Lum and Abner. E.T.: 9:00\nBeaux Arti Trio; 9:30 Paul Christiansen's orch.; 10:00 Ricardo and\nhli violin; 10:15 Tom Gerun's orch.;\n10:55 Press-Radio News: 11:00 Freddie Mirtln'i orch.; 11:30 Jimmy\nGrier's orch.\nBRITISH EMPIRE PROGRAMS\nShort Wivi\u2014Picifle Stindird Tlmi\nTRANSMISSION 1\nGSD 11.750 ku. (25.53 m) and GSB\n9,510 ku, (31.55 ml\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Big Ben; The Gerahom\nPirklngton Quintet: 9:18 \"High\nSpoti\"; a bird'i-eye view over London In the early morning by C\nWhitiker-Wllion. ipeaklnr! from the\ntop of the tower of Big Ben; 9:30\nProgrim of Australian music by\ncomposer! now reiiding in England\nperformed by Australian artisti:\nLindi Parker, loprano, Victor Evam. bari, Miriam Hyde, pianoforte,\nand Esther Rofe, accompanist; 10:13\nNews: 10:30 Close down.\nHALF PRICE\nSALE\nQuantities Limited\u2014Shop Early\nOF ODDMENTS\nTUESDAY AND\nWEDNESDAT\nHALF PRICE SALE OF\nHARDWARE\nSaah Brushei, half prica, aach   13<* and 18\u00ab*\nVarnish Brushei. half prlca 10, 13, 15, 18 and 36\u00ab-\nKalaemina Brushes, half prica   30r* and $1.25\nBottla Cappars, half prica  50<-\nSoap Holden, half prlca    -0<_\nEnamel Roa.ten, half prica    $1.15\nSandpaper, half prica, 6 sheet!   10<*\nElectric Hotplates, ona burner, half prica, aach . f 1.85\nWindow Screeni, half price   23<\nCake Trayt, half prica, aach      St*\n5-ft. Step Ladder, half price   75<\n10-ft. Step Ladder, half prica  $2.00\nPocket Watchee, half prica   87\u00abf\nPruning Scision, half prica   $1.00\nCreosote Shingle Stain, gallon, half price  85^\nOil Shingle Stain, gallon, half prica f 1.15\nMan'a Straw hatt, half prica  50\u00ab-\nCow Boy Chaps, half prica  $1.40\nCow Boy Vesti, half prica   75\u00ab*\nPainter's Smocks, half prica   50-f\nMan's Mulaskin Gauntlets, half prica  37<*\nMan's Work Shirrs, half prica    lie\nSALE OF CAMERAS\n3 only, CORONET FOLDINC CAMERAS: M 7C\nRegular $7.50. Half prica $0.10\n1 only, CORONET FOLDINC CAMERA: tfO r A\nRegular $5.00. Half prica $L.d\\)\n1 only, FALCON FOLDINC CAMERA: (O JO\nRegular $4.95. Half prica $\u00a3.40\n1 only, BROWNIE No. 2a BOX CAMERA:      (1 rr\nRegular $3.25. Half prica  -P-.UJ\nWomen's Brown Shoei\nRegular $5.00 Pair\nBrown baby calf pumps, fancy stitched.\nCovered heels and brown ties with beige ^^m   m _\ntrim, and covered heels. Quantity Iim- 9^Va50\nited\u2014but value is outstanding. \u00a3g\nHALF PRICE\t\nWomen's and Misses' Crepe\nDresses and Knit Suits\nEarly shoppers will find a big range to choose from, In\nplain or figured crepes in styles suitable for street or\nbusiness wear. Also two and three piece knitted suits.\nGood collection of sixes.\nValues $5.95 to $14.95\nHALF\nPRICE\n$2-9* to $^.48\nMisses' Crepe Dresses\nWear a small size? Then you're lucky. These are In\nplain colored crepes or darker figured prints, long and\nshort sleeves. Sizes 14 fo 20.\nRagular $3 95 \u00bbgf $ | .98\nCIRLS ORGANDY AND CREPE DRESSES:        01  JO\nHalf prica     $1.45\nWOMEN'S COTTON VESTS AND BLOOMERS:      OA*?\nHalf prica  LV\nWOMEN'S FIGURED DIMITY GOWNS: fl AA\nHalf prica   tpl.UU\nINFANTS' PASTEL COATS: * 1  an\nHalf prica  Jl\/JO\nWOMEN'S MILLINERY: rn*\nHalf prica  OV\nCheck These Values\n180 ydi, printed linoleum. Half prlu      C__*\n\u2022q. yd. _       -T-*.\n18 yd. rubber pillage covering 35 QClt\nInchei. HALF PRICE, yd      ***>\n4 only Bronze bridge limpi. HALF        MAD\nPRICE aa. 9mt**w*\u00bb\n3 only metal floor lampi. HALF _A_0\nPRICE. Ei.             Srt\u00a7m_>m*\n10 yd. Wilton pamge carpet HALF     C*J> 2<*_\nPRICE, yd  <fmmm^\n9 only ornamental curtiln rodi. HALF      \u00a3Qf*\nPRICE, lit        Vm_e\n8 only ornamental curtain rodi. HALF Cf  1Q\nPRICE, let  \u2022?*\u2022*_\u00bb\n150 oringe bind dinner platu. HALF       JAft\nPRICE, ei.        \"F\n160 oringe band fruit nappiei. HALF OA\nPRICE, ea. \"*\n150 orange band  BAB platei gjt\n30 plecei illvir plated hollowara at Half Price.\nHall Price Sale of\nToiletries\nCUTEX  8ETS-Hllf price, 11. KQA\nDU BARRV SETS\u2014Half prfce, aa. ....      CC*\nST. OEMS BATH SETS-Half price, aa.   \u00abjj\nST. DENIS Bath Powder and Bath        (M\nSiltt\u2014Hilt prlci ***y\nFACE POWDER-Hilf prlca 2M\nRAZOR BLADIS-Half prlca JJ*}\nAFTER SHAVING LOTION-Half prlca   ^CA\nMany Mora at HALF PRICE\nHalf Price Sale of\nOddments\nBoudoir Pillows, half price 75<* and 50**\nNeedlepoint, half prica   25<*\nBridge Coven, half prica    50t>\nLeather Cigarette Cases, half price  tO<*\nLeather Cigarette Cases, half prica 50\u00ab*\nWooden Dogs and Buckles,\nhalf prica   25<*\nHalf Price Sale of Parker\nFountain Pens and\nPencils\n8 only, fountain pane\u2014Half prlci       $1.40\n1 only fountain pan\u2014Half prlci $2.75\n1 only, pmell-Half prloe $1*50\n2 only, panclla\u2014Half prlea       *\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\nClearance of China\nOddments\nA big anortment of eld placei of china and\ngift noveltlei. All to ao at\nHalf Price\nHBC\nPure Food\nBargains\n193\u2014PHONES\u2014194\nCOFFEE-H.B.C. \u2022__,<**\nfreih ground per Ib. **Jr\no'ceoar mops-\nno. 23, regular 81.50 CllJ\nTEA\u2014Braid', orange <\u00a3*\u00bb__**\npekoe, 1 Ib. tin  \"-FT\nChocolate Oraham _t_t\nBlKulta, I.B.C., Ib. \"*T\nGLO-COAT\u2014John- Cl AQ\n\u2022on'l large tlni, qt \u2022?*,w-'\nPINEAPPLE\u2014 Fault-\nlew, iliced or cruihed \u2022*!\u00bb<*\n2i, 2 for   *-*>\nPEAS-Royal   City\n\u2022live 4. No. 2 ton _t__\n2 for  **-_\nTUNA FISH-Fanoy\nwhlta. Nabob *\/,_ IJj*\nper tin  ***>\nYELLOW SUGAR- *A_*\n1 Iba,  M**T\nRICI  KRISPIES- Hit\nKilloggi', 2 pkga. \u2022***\nINCORPORATBD   2*if MAY 1670.\n \t\n^^^^^^^H\n^^\nPAGE FOUR '\nProsecution (alls\nGive Witnesses in\n(ar Accident Case\nProceedings Will\nContinue This\nMjprning\nWILLIAM McKAY\nSEEKS DAMAGES\nMcKim Defendant;\n'County\nin\nCourt\nF.D.R.  IS \"A LIAR\nAND FAKER\" SAYS\nHUEY LONG\nNEW ORLEANS, July \u00ab (API-\nUnited Stetes Senator Huey P. Long,\nin a speech here tonight celled\nPresident Roosevelt a \"Uar and a\nfaker\" and detled \"them\" to \"indict\nme for that.\"\nDiscussing a resolution adopted\nby the legislature calling on congress to replace the recently enacted old age pension btll with a\nmeasure drafted by Senator Long,\nthe Louisiana \"dictator\" said:\n\"Let me tell you about this Roosevelt pension plan. Under it there\nare 280,000 persons in Louisiana who\nwould qualify, and Louisiana would\nget about 11,000,000 which would\nmean that the state's old age pensioners would get $3.60 a year or a\nllttle less than one cent a day.\n\"That's whet Franklin Delano\nRoosevelt sends you down here.\n\"Franklin Roosevelt ia a Uar and\n* a faker. Now let them indict me\nfor that and I'll prove him a liar.\"\nFour witnesses had been heard,\nind tlw firth, the plaintiff in the\naction. WlUiam McKay of Ymir,\nwas on the stand when county\ncourt was adjourned Monday by\nJudge W. A. Nlsbet in the suit of\nMcKay vs. McKlm ln which the\nlurmcr seeks to obtain damages\nund depiocietioii on his car following on IC-idoi'.t in which the car\nho was driving figured in a crash\nwith a truck driven by W. J. McKim. The accident happened thc\nnight ot Oct. 31 on Baker street,\nboth cars being damaged by the\nimpact.\n(5. H. Hamilton of Wragge tt Hamilton, is appearing for the plaintiff\nand E. P. Dawson of Brown It\nDawson ls appearing for the defendant. Hearing will be continued\nthis morning at 10:30.\nAccording to evidence given. William McKay was proceeding east\nalong Baker atreet about 8, p.m.\non the night of Oct. 31, 1934, and\nW. J. McKim was proceeding west\nalong Baker street. The latter attempted to turn up on Stanley\nstreet just as the car driven by\nMcKay was crossing the Baker-\nStanley intersection. The McKlm\ntruck was damaged in the front\nbut thc McKay car was damaged\non thc left front side. The plaintiff\nii claiming that the defendant cut\nthe corner too sharply.\nPLAINTIFF ON STAND\nFour witnesses took the stand before Mr. Hamilton called the plaintiff, and the court session was adjourned for the day when his examination was completed. Mr. McKay has yet to be cross-examined,\nand the prosecution moy have one\nmore witness before it rests its case.\nA map of the street corner was produced and the witnesses have shown\non it the position of the cars on\ntho intersection after the crash and\nalso the position of the two cars In\napproaching the intersection. There\nis a variance ot opinion in these\nrespects.\nConstable H. E. G. fenny, of the\nNelson city police, called to the\nstand first for thc prosecution, stated that both cars were Inside the\nstreet em* tracks, that is between\nthc car tracks and the pavement\nnn the cast side of Stanley street.\nThe other witnesses stated that the\nfront wheels of thc McKay car were\nbetween the two tracks, and that\nit was facing toward tho entrance\nto the Hudson Bay store, thc McKlm csr facing almost directly up\nStanley itreet Constable Penny, although right at the corner when\nthe incident occurred, had his back\nturned and did not see thc actual\ncrash, Hc stated that it wis a wet\nnight, but considered that a person travelling along the street at\na rate between 15 and 20 miles\nan hour would be going at a safe\nspeed, ln his report that night he\nhad recommended that one of the\ntwo men figuring in thc accident\nbe charged with driving to thc common danger, but no charge was\nlaid. He had based his recommendation of a charge, on the position in\nwhich he found the two cars after\nthe accident, he atated.\nSAW THE CRASH |\nAlex Rolick testified to seeing!\nthe actual crash. Ho stated he had\nwatched the McKay car after It\nhad reached about the middle of\n' the block In its course eastward.\nMcKay was first Into the Intersec-\nBoxla Contest\nRossland to Play Trail\nReturn Game in the\nSmelter City\nTRAIL, B. C, July 8\u2014Rosslond's\nboxlicrosse boys will invade Trail\nWednesday night to play a return\nmatch with the smelter city lads. In\nthc game \"up yonder\" both squadi\nbattled to a 11-draw and the fana\nare wondering Just what the outcome of Wedneiday'i tilt will be.\nFor a number of Rossland lands,\nit was their first lacrosse game ol\nany sort, but after a month of religious training under Jack Davies,\nformer New Westminster Salmon-\nbelly, they showed fine tutorical results and gave the experienced\nTrail laddies a stiff battle.\n\"Shadow\" MUne, the Invincible\ngoalie of hockey, received a broken\nnose In the recent game, and if in\nfront of the net Wednesday, stales\ndefinitely that he will be wearing a\nmask.\nElks WinSoccer\nThompson Scores\nBoth Counters\nat Trail\nTRAIL. B.C.. July 8.-After a\nmuch-delayed start Elks and Thistles finally rounded up a number of\nmen filling the teama to play a\nscheduled Schofleld cup soccer\nmatch at Butjer park Monday evening, the outcome of which was a\nM win for the Elks.\n\"Spud\" Thompson tallied both\ncounters for the Elks and Jimmy\nReld for the Thistles.\nTeams were:\nElks\u2014Ernie McLaren. Jock Lllley,\nRussell, Andy Crlchton, Cruickshank, Jimmy Thompson, \"Spud\"\nThompson, Johnny Ferguson, Bill\nLaurie, Tom McVle. Archie MacKinnon.\nThistles\u2014R. Laurie. Albrechtson,\nRoss. Harry Porteous. Bendy. Win-\ndebank, Elliott. Paterson. Bob Livingstone. Dembickl. Jimmy Reid.\nJimmy Strachan refereed.\nSCHOOLBOY GETS TRIAL\nROCHESTER. N. Y. (CP)-Just\nout of Amherst. Mass. high school.\nJohn Ahem, a pitcher, is to bc given\na trial by Rochester Red Wings\nof the International league. He hid\na record of 104 strikeouts in school\ngames last season, an average of\n16 a game.\nPossibilities of\nProgress Is Topic\nRev. W. J. Silverwood\nSpeaker at\nRotary\nThe meaning of progress end the\npoisibllltlei ot achieving progress\nwas the topic chosen by Rev. W. J.\nSilverwood when he addressed the\nNelion Rotary club at the Mondiy\nluncheon in the Hume hotel illver\nroom.\nPreildint R. W. Dawion announoed that $25 had baen rl-\ncelved by a doifor for thi crippled\nchildren! fund, but thet he wll\nnet permitted to meke thi pir-\n\u25a0on'i name public. A litter ot appreciation, however, wlll be forwarded the donor.\nRotarian R. E. Potter itated that\nthe club had been challenged to \u25a0\ngame of softball by tho girls representative teanw-The challenge wai\naccepted and a team will be fielded\nin due course.\nIt was announced that Dr. Wace\nof the Solarium at Vancouver Island\nwould be in Nelson in the near\nfuture.\n\"Can we form an estimate of progress?\" questioned Mr. Silverwood,\nin opening his address. It was assumed that life was progressive and\nthat the people of today were living\nin a progressive age\u2014that the world\nwas getting better and better.\nHOW MEASURE PROGRESS\nHow could one measure progress?\nBy the site ot a bank roll, the\namount of Investment!, or possessions? Such e measure took into account only one sphere of life, and\nmaterial progress of that order\nrtrtght be accompanied by disasters\nalso. Further, one might gain\nwealth but be taking it away from\nsomeone else.\nIf one looked at the nations of the\nworld today, one would see there an\nexample of an attempt to improve\none's poaitlon at the expense of\nothers. Everywhere there was the\nattempt to meke one's own country\nself contained. Everywhere there\nwas sefl-exeulted. nationalism. The\nworld needed public spirited men\nwho would put nationalism In itl\nproper, natural subordinate place.\nTne growth of the British Empire,\nits colonization and administration\nmight be regarded as progress, but\nmolt of that gain meant a loss to\nsome other nation. It might be that\nthe British would think thit because of the great war their colonial\npossessions were bigger and might\nthink that it was progreu. But\nwould Germany think lt wai progress? It was egotistical to think\nthat what was to \"our\" advantage\nwas also to someone's else.\nSoviet Russia might be gaining\nnew district ln Asia Minor, It might\nbe confiscating property and nationalising industry, but could that\nbe considered progress. From a\nMarxian point of view, possibly, lt\ncould.\nRISE AND DECAY\nThe history of thc world was one\nof rise end decay. Though people\nmight think at certain times that\nall was progressing well, eventually\nthere came deterioration and decay.\nAthens, Sparta, Greece, Rome and\nSpain had their day, to be followed\nln each case by chaos, disaster and\nevery kind of human misery.\nWhat of the preient? Was there\neny reason to think that the civilization of today would not decline? Would the human rsce alwayi continue to go up, or was\nthere e culmination point to be\nreached, after which decay would\nset In. Some people did not believe in a gospel of progren. Many\ngreat writers, Including Bertrand\nRussell and Huxley, deelsred ene\nhad but to look at Europe and the\ntotalitarian itatei for evidence\nthat decay had already ut In.\nThere where education, religion\nand opinion was being controlled,\nwhare the prist, platform, pulpit\nand broadcast was being used for\na purpose, and where there wis an\nutter disregard for Indlvldusl\nfreedom, It boded III.\nTHI NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. B.C.-TUE8DAY MORNING. JULY I. 1MS\nWALL OF WATER 40 FEET WIDE, EIGHT\nFEET HIGH SWEEPS THROUGH A VILLAGE\nCreek Surges Through Businejs Section of Town of 1200\nin New York when House Fells Into Creek-Bed;\nNo Light or Gas; Wster Msln Broken\n(The following tene itory of the\nflood altuation at Trumaniburg,\ntypical of conditions ln the flood\n_ wai glv-,n to the Auoclated\nPreu today before communication\nwas ut o..' with this village of\n1200 persona in New York's famous\nFinger lakes re 'lon).\nBy MAYOR V. L. TIMPRSON\nTRUM.NSBURQ. N.Y., July 8\n(AP).\u2014It'a a terrible lituaUon. We\ne-. set *4 the creek (Trumansburg)\nthat runs through the center ot our\nvillage to overflow a little, because\nof the iteady rain, but never the\nv ay It dll.\nWhy, right thli minute it'i running down the miin business section, 40 feet wide and eight feet\nhigh, carrying a lot of debris with\ni Every few m1 utes you iee a\nlection of a house floating by,\nI think abovt five or six houses\nwere carried away when the creek\ncame rushlne dow   on us.\nThe reuon the watt.* mo ed Into\nthe miln itreet !i tha' lta coune\nwis blocked by a? house which fell\ninto t'   stream, r>   lodged there.\nMoit of \u2022 the people left their\nh-m-s an' went to higher ground.\nWhat we are going to do with them\nI don't know.\nle heve no i._hts, no gu, and\nthe water main Is broken.\nFortunat ly, this is an old-fashlon-\n<. village w. cisterns still ln uie.\nWe can borrow water tor our\nneeds.\n... - 'man (i_..l.in Glroui, 45)\ndrowned when the water came rushing down the main street, and an-\notl. telle ; i oeeph LL._*11) ii be*\nliev _ to have bee-. \u2022 -led down\nt ; stream too.\nWe t d to get sone of the C.C.C.\nboys to come over and help tu,\nbut It Seems they ill were bui;.\nFlashes From the Wires\n200 BACK AT WORK\nPINE FALLS. Man., (CP)- The\ngiant machinery in the plant of tlie\nManitoba Paper Co.. turning for\nthe flrit time since February. 1M2,\nbrought new llfc to this llttle pulp\ntown as 200 men returned to work.\nIt was a day of rejoicing. The shriek\nof whlitles sounded the welcome\ncall to labor and the town turned\nout in a body to see the plent that\nis bringing life to it again.\n200 FAMILIES FLEE\nFORT PECK. Mont. (AP)-Be-\ntween 150 and 200 families fled to\nsafety when Galpin coulee became\na reglng torrent that swept down\nupon the mushroom towns of Mlday.\nPark Grove. New Deal and Pard\nDale.\nWHEAT PAYMENTS\nWASHINGTON. Wn\u201e (AP) \u2014 A\nproclamation fixing the minimum\n1635 wheat benefit payments at 33\ncents a bushel wis signed by Henry\nWallace. United SUtes lecretary ot\nagriculture.\nWORK ON WATERFRONT\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A total of\nWM men are working on the Vancouver weterfront and 15 shins are\nbeing loaded or discharged. Six\nships sailed over the week-end after completing their outbound cargo\nand landing Inbound freight.\nPATTULLO SCOFFS AT 8TEVEN8\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Premier T.\nD. Pattullo, arriving hero from a\ntour ot northern British Columbia,\nexpressed the view that the new\nparty of Hon. H. H. Stevens \"Won't\naccomplish very much.\" \"These new\nparties always appear in times like\nthese. This ono will create of lot of\ndiscussion and it may affect the\nresults in a few constituencies but\nIt can not change the final result.\"\nTO BRING PRISONER BACK\nCALOARY (CP)-Constable William Harrison. Royal Canadian\nMounted Pollce. left here for San\nDiego. Ca!.. to escort back to Calgary. Lloyd M. Steeves, 32, wanted\nhere In connection with the $10,000\njewel robbery of the store of Henry\nBlrks tt Sons. June 5.\nPOEMI POPULAR!\nCHARLOTTETOWN - Poetry\nwould find a more Important place\nIn modern Journalism, Kenneth Leslie, Nova Scotia poet told a Char-\nlottetown service club. Well known\nnewspapers Uke the Cork Examiner\nwere publishing a full page of poems\nand finding it a popular feature, he\nsaid.\nSURVIVORS ARRIVE\nHAVANA \u2014 Navy headquarters\nannounced the gunboat Santa Clara\nhad arrived at Neuva Gerona. Isle\nof Pines, carrying the survivors of\nthe Canadian yacht Caicarco. The\nsurvivors are M. C. Rice, of Toronto,\nhis wife, who is seriously ill; their\ntwo children, and Albert Jones, an\nAmerican.\n\"QOOD CITIZEN\"\nVANCOUVER-Rev.' E. D. McLaren, D.D., pioneer Presbyterlen\nminister in Vancouver and wartime chaplain overseas, has been\nnamed Vancouver's Good Citizen\nfor 1935 It was announced by post\nNo. 2 of the Native Sons of British\nColumbia, which awards a Good\nCitizenship medal annually.\nC.C.F. NOT WITH STEVENS\nMONTREAL\u2014Though In sympathy with some of his aims and\navoiding \"needless criticism\" of his\naccomplishments, the Cooperative\nCommonwealth Federation will not\nalign Itself with Hon. H. H. Stevens\nin his new political party, Francis\nL. P. Anderson, president of the\nNotre Dame De Grace C. C. F. club,\ndeclared here.\nT.B. CLINICS DISCU8SED\nVANCOUVErV-Need for additional bed capacity and other facilities at stationary clinics and more\ntravelling clinic service were discussed at the conference on tuberculosis control in British Columbia,\nTRIAL ENDS\nCH!CAGC~-The ecclesiastical trial\nof Dr. J. Oliver Buswell on charges\nhe rebelled from the Presbyterian\nchurch ended abruptly tonight when\nthe Judicial commission of the Chicago Presbytery ruled the charges\nhad not been properly brought according to procedure of the church.\nsaid as he suffered a badly cut lip\na J was worrying about that.\nIT WAS SLOWING  DOWN\nHe would swear the car wai not\nSoing more than 25 miles an hour. | THEY WERE\ntc kn   \/ the car sowed down in  TYRANICAL TOO\nreaching  the _ intersection  because |    0ne didnol min(1 mMng ,\u201e w I\nNEUON (ITY\nCOUNCIL BRIEFS\nMembers of the city council ot a\nmeeting Monday night granted permission to the Ncison Boys' band to\nhold a tag day on August 3. A request made on behalf of the boys\n. by J. Draper, for July 27 when\n| Trail picnickers will be in the city\nwas turned down, the council members feeling it would be out of\nplace to allow tagging of visitors.\nGRANTED LICENCE\nJ. Harrington, vacuum cleaner\ntlon and It was at that moment that he s quite familiar with the feel-, gMtion, for conduct or rule, but I salesman, was granted a resident's\nhe had noticed the lights of thc Mc- ing experienced in a car when it when it came to telling people on a | licence In view of the fact that he\nKim truck, though in the cross ex-1 slowed down or picked up speed, j wide Kt]t, jt WM not a good thing, and a former partner had already\namination he detlarcd he had not    H. Harrop was called to give In-* \u2022-\u25a0---- \u2022  -      *\" \u2022*^**^**^**^**^**^**^**^**\u2122\nseen the light, but had noticed the formation on the value of thc Mc-\ntruck out of thc corner of lm eye. 1 Kav car before an.', after the acci-\nHe had noticed a slackening of the ] dent. Hc stated that the car would\nplaintiff's car as it reached the in-1 be Just as good from point of view\nierscctlon and he would placc tlie 'of *. \u2022 i after the affair ei before,\nspeed ot the car at about 20 miles; but having been in an accident, it\nan hour. He estimated' that when |\\vas not worth the same price from\nthe McKay car reached the Inter. | a  sale angle  as  before.  He  also\nWhere such practises 'held was 1 paid a non-resident's fee of $50\nwhere the most violent revolutions The residence licence is $15 lor six\nwould be found. It was also true ] months.\nthot those who  complained most I  \"\nebout the tyranny of others, were   ONE CALL BY\nthe ones who were first lo inflict It.! _*'-.. __,        __ __.\nHow had  the  idea of progress.    Fire Chief M. H. Maloney in Ws\nbeen impressed on the world? ques-1 report  to the council  stated that\n__   __  _     _  ______   _          _ . tioned Mr. Silverwood. What source  there had been one fire during the\nlection it had 20 feet to go to where | gave  information  on   what could j did true progress spring from?        | month, 501 Carbonate street^ Some\nFIRE DEPARTMENT\nthe accident occurred while the Mc-1 be expected of brakes.\nKim truck had 30 feet. He believed G :orge Haines, third member of\nMcKlm had tried to take the corner ! the McKay car, teit'.led to the\ntoo sharply, and that thc accident! speed of the vehicle being 20 miles\nhed happened because thc defend- per hour. Hc stated McKim started\nant had tried to beat McKay around I to turn Just as they got past the\nthe corner. It wai his belief that!corner, 'iiie eras, occ :*red on the\nMcKim could have gone around' car tracki he stated,\nbehind him. |    He admitted that although there\nJohn Slako, who was travelling, were no cars ahead of them u they\nin tlic McKay car at the time of I were proceeding along the block,\nthe accident, tought tliey had been i he did not notice the oncoming car\ngoing at a rate of 20 miles an hour. un*. I thc light began the ar at the\nbut he had not looked at the speed-1 corner. Hc did not unde: \u2666ind why\nometer, and was placing his esti- Mr. Mcivim took such a sharp\nmate on the rate at which they!corner and  l.i   >_\u25a0\u2022  estimation  he\nHe believed the germ of progreu \\ 132 inspections had been made and\n~ four orderB issued for better condi\ntions. Fire alarm boxes ind the system had been checked and found\nin order, and fire drills held at all\nschools.\nwerc passing thc pedestrians\nthe street. Hc had not seen the McKlm ear until Just before the crash.\nAfter the smash he had not paid\nmuch attention to what was being\nOn a Vacation\nCANOEING IS FUN...\nso is an Interesting hour\nof reading of events st\nhome from your copy of\nthe\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nbelieved the latter could have gone\nbi In d their car.\nHARD TO -AY WHERE\nHE TURNED\nWhen it was pointed out that the\np'.-ces at which he had marked the\ntwo ears on the map, as they ap-\nr-oached the intersection, that it\nfollowed that McKlm was in the\nintcrse-tlon before they were, he\nstated it was hard to say where\nthc defendant ned but he be-\nlieve-i he had turned at the point\nhe hid shown.\nThe plaintiff informed thc court\nthat he had picked up George\nHaines near J. P. Mor ^n's store\nand th n had made a \"U\" turn.\nHe ' d changed into second gear\non completing tho corner, and then\n.igal into high about ln front of\nthe PI-'.a Cafe. He would be going about _0 miles an hour. He\nstated he was ln the intersection\nwhen he first saw the defendant's\ntruck and that he did not pay particular attention to it as It did appear to bc goi.i\" to take the corner.\nIt waa lm -mible to have seen e\nsign from Mr. ?.cKim. When he\nsaw that he could not avoid an\naccident he had applied the brakes.\nHe sal. he had asked for the defends it's licence nun'ier but had\nnot blamed him, u he was more\nconccrmi about the dai -_ done\nto his Car. He had slowed down at\nthe Intersection u was his custom.\nHe believed McKim could have\npassed safelv bclu  '. hlm.\ni could be found In Christianity.\nChristianity had a universal aim\nand it sought to bring about justice,\n| righteousness. One should so live\nthat it could never be said that he\never  said  or  did  anything from\n| which there could be construed an\nulterior motive. The indlviduil had\nto strive for a continued moral excellence. Individual moral progress\nwas possible and each one should\nseek to conduct himself lust as he\nshould, concluded Mr. Silverwood.\nA. T. Horswill. who wss in charge\nof the program, thanked Mr. Silver-\nwood.\nC. A. S. Bamford. of Winnipeg,\nwas a visitor at the luncheon.\nCHARGED WITH\nMANSLAUGHTER\nPENTICTON, B.C., July 8 -\nCharged with manslaughter as a\nresult of the death of Herbert Andrist, Stan Adams. local yovng man.\nwas granted bell in the sum of\n$W00 by Magistrate McClelland this\nafternoon. A remand for eight days\nwas granted. The inquest on Andrist\nwill oe held tomorrow morning.\nMining Calgary\nGirl Being Sought\nTRAIL. B. C. July 8\u2014Mlss Annie\nKelly, stenographer, formerly of\nCalgary and believed to be in TraU\na month ago Is being sought. Father\nLeo A. Hobson of St. Francis Xavier\nchurch. Trail, having received a wire\nSunday from Father J. S. Smith of\nSt. Mary's rectory. Calgiry that\nher father has passed away.\nThe misting glrl'i address as last\nknown in Calgary was general delivery, Trail, but post office authorities know nothing of her.\nFather Hobson solicited aid of Ihe\nlocal police who are endeavoring to\nlocate Mlss Kelly.\nERICKSON MUST PAY $25\nThe council adopted the recommendations of the finance committee which bills C. Erickson $25 for\npower and light used during the\ntime hc tapped a line at his home\nbeyond the motor, and which calls\nfor the payment of $25 to the Salvation Army for meal costs, and a\ngrant of $50 to the Canadian Legion\nBugle band for the last Dominion\nday program.\nDOMINION BRIDGE\nGETS CONTRACT\nAfter examining several tenders\nfor structural steel for the new\nauditorium building, the council\niwarded the contract to the Dominion Bridge ts Steel company.\nThe company's bid for the structural and reinforcing steel required,\nwaa $22,487.\nTO ARRANGE\nCARE OF CHILDREN\nJames O'Shea wrote announcing\nthat a resident who wes caring for\ntwo children, whose mother at the\ntime ot writing was it the coast,\ncould no longer provide for them.\nThe mother It now In Nelsnn and\nwill meet wllh members of the relict committee, who were granted\npower to act on the matter, Tuesday.\nAIKI FOR RESOLUTION\nA letter from R. F. Seweil. secretary of the Union of British Columbia Municipalities, asking the council to forward resolutions for the\nnext ilttlng at soon as possible,\nwas ordered filed.\nblock on Gore street The matter\nwas referred to the public works\ncommittee.\nHUME DEFEATS\nSAFEWAYSU-7\nThird Straight Win\nin Softball\nLeague\nA six-run acorlng spree In the\nfourth Inning proved sufflcent to\ngive the Hume Hotel their third\nstraight victory in the local men's\nsoftball league with the Safeways\nMonday evening, the final score\nreading 14-7. Considering the condition of the groundi. both teams dished uo a number ot snappy fielding\nplays. Frank Kraft at third base for\nthe Hume aquad was credited with\neight assists and one putout.\nBesides pitching a good game, Art\nLatham, for the wlnnen, got five\nassists and one putout.\nDennis Ball, ln left field for the\nSafeways, had four putouts to his\ncredit, three of them of the lenia-\ntional variety. L. Sellnger at short\nstop and George Leplnskl at third,\nalso played well for thc Safeways.\nBoth teams were chalked up with\nfour errors, Renwlck making three\nof thc winners' total.\nScore by innings:\nRHE\nHume Hotel 102 610 220\u201414 12 4\nSafeways        003 121 000- 7 10   4\nStruckout by Latham, 3, Hendricks, 3; bases on balls, of Latham,\n2: Hendricks. 6: three-base hits,\nBird 2; two-baso hits, Latham,\nHendricks.\nTeams were:\nHume Hotel\u2014 Renwick, Tanny\nRomano, Frank Kraft. Speed Bell.\nTy Culley, Allan McLean, Teddy\nRomano, Tommy Bird, Art Latham.\nSafeways\u2014Meikle. Leplnskl. L.\nSelinger, Hendricks. D. Ball, Erickson, P. Selinger. Bill McKay, A.\nBush.\nAlex Mclnnis and Sam Pasacreta\numpired the game.\nGrant Confirmed\nDr. Auld Slates\nDr. Young's Visit of\nMuch Benefit; No\nNew Cases\nIn a report to the city council\nMonday night. Dr. F. M. Auld, acting medical officer of health, announced that Dr. H. E. Young, provincial officer of health, had confirmed a grant for the government\nlaboratory, and that the doctor and\nmedical men of the city had arrived\nat a better understanding through\nthe former'! recent viiit.\nIn the event of the establishment\nof a health unit outside of the city\nthe provincial government would be\nwilling to pay 50 per cent of the\ncosts. The extension of the lervice\nto take In communities adjacent to\nNelson would be only a matter of\ntime. Dr. Auld stated.\nNo new diphtheria\/cases had occurred since the fatality from this\ndisease some weeks ago and tho\nsituation appeared to have been\ncleaned up, he said. Dr. H. H. MacKeniie is now in charge of the\nCottonwood creek section south ot\nthe city limits.\nBLAME POLICE FOR\nRIOTING\nASKS FOR FREE\nSOLDIERS'GRAVE8\nInvested with powers for immediate action, the members ot the finance committee will look into a\nrequest from R. H. Preston, secretary-manager, to inspect the Legion\nbuilding with a view of reassessing\nthe Legion for Its rooming licence\nand for free grave service for ex-\nservice men. Mr. Preston pointi out\nthat the Legion is being assessed\nfor 3(1 rooms and that at present\nonly 16 are being used, two of them\nas store rooms. Mayor J. P. Morgan\nwas of the unanimous opinion that\nno charge whatsoever should be\nmade for soldiers' graves either for\ndigging or for thc rental of lower*\ning equipment.\nASKS FOR PAVED ALLEY\nP. E. Poulin awaited on the coun\ncil and asked that the alley at the\nrear of the Terrace apartments be\npaved, or at least a 50-foot section\nfrom the Kootenay street sidewalk\nto the rear entrance ot the building.\nConsiderable annoyance was being\ncaused to tennanti through mud\nand oil being tracked In trom the\nalley, and through water seeping\ninto the basement, he pointed out.\nAt the mayor's suggestion the matter was referred to the public\nworks committee to see It finances\nwill permit paving of the lane. Mr.\nPoulin also asked that the newly\ngraded section of Kootenay street,\nbetween Baker and Vernon streets,\nbe surfaced. He was told that this\nwas being taken care of.\nOFFERS $40 FOR  LOT\nA. Hyrniuk's offer of $40 for lot\n18, block 48 on Houston street, wlll\nbe considered by thc finance com\nmittee.\nCOAL INQUIRY SEPTEMBER >\nC. H. O'Halloran wrote the coun\ncil advising its members that an\ninquiry into coal and petroleum\ncosts in Nelson would be held in\nthe city September 8. The letter\nwas ordered filed.\nOFFERS $29 FOR  LOT\nC. W. Swan's offer of $25 a lot\ntor six lots on Beasley street, wss\nreferred to the finance committee.\nASK FOR IMPROVEMENTS\nFrank  Trozzo, G.  W.  Hall  and\nJessie Paterson wrote the council\nasklne that some attention be given\nthc sidewalk and road In the 200\nWIN SCHOLARSHIPS\nH. HcArthur, principal of the\nNelson junior high scnool, wrote\nthe council announcing that the $25\nMcDonald scholarships had been\nawarded to Barbara Wlnnifred Norris, daughter of F. J. Norris, and\nGerald Noel, son of W. Noel. City\nClerk W. E. Waison told the council\nthat through the generosity of former Juitice W. A. MacDonald, i\nbond had been placed ln the keep*\ning of the city to cover the scholarships. Authorization for the Issuing\nof the scholarships was given by\nthe members.\n, O. Sommtn li\nInjured by Horse\nJ. O. Sommers of Cemetery roed,\nwho wu splitting logs behind the\nCemetery Saturday, was severely\ninjured when hts hone, itruck in\nthe heels by a falling log, became\nfrightened and trampled him badly.\nHe received, head, hip and beck\nInjuries and was reported to be still\nsuffering from shock Monday night.\nDr. D. W. McKay attended him.\nRossland Council\nIs Behind Picnic\nDeclares July 27 a\nCivic Holiday\nROSSLAND. B.C.. July 8\u2014Little\nmore than routine business occupied\nthe attention of the city council this\nevening. Fireman Eldred Jewell was\ngranted permission to take two\nweeks holiday In August.\nCity Clerk J. A. McLeod reported\nthat he and Alderman Portman had\nmet about 15 of thc members of thc\nC. M. tt S. picnic committee and arrangements are under way to assist\nthose on relief to attend the annual\npicnic of the Consolidated employees. The council declared July 27,\nthe picnic date, a civic holiday in\nRossland.\nThe report of the health officer.\nDr. E. E. Topllff. concerning conditions of several properties around\nthe city, was referred to the city\nsolicitor and. the chief of police.\nA. E. Walter wished to purchase\nsome vacant land near the high\nschool but tho council feds it should\nbe required for school purposes and\nwill retain it. Mr. Walter's request\nfor water trough and a pasture\nowned by him and his complaint as\nto a ditch near his property was referred to the board of works and the\nboard of health.\nThe fire, water and light com\nmittee will post notices around thc\nreservoir forbidding trespassers.\nRepairs will be made to the sidewalk in front of the new Butorac\nbuilding on Columbia avenue.\nSeveral tax sale by-laws werc\ngiven the required threc readings.\nSavoys Play Cubs\nWednesday Night\nThe fifth game of the Charles\nMorris baseball playoff, which is\nfeaturing the Savoy Hotel and the\nNew Grand Cubs, will be played\nWednesday afternoon at 6 o'clock,\nSo far the series has been all for\nthe Cubi, and the Savoys have yet\nto enter the winning column.\nThe leries Is a bcst-out-of-eleven,\nand with four nest eggs in the hat.\nthc Cubs are ln a pretty position.\nTwice the Savoys have faltered\nwhen victory seemed theirs. They\ntook the first two games to extra\ninnings before submitting.\n\"Duffy\" Stewart may be in shape\nfor mound duty and in case \"Slim\"\nKraft needs some help, there may\nbe some from that source. Duffy\nwent strong for five innings against\nthe Cubs in an early game.\nCHALMERS JAILED\nFOR INFRACTION\nOF RAILWAY ACT\nWINNIPEO. July 8 (CP). - Responsibility for rioting at Regina\non Dominion day rested on the\nshoulders of the police, speakers\ndeclared at a mass meeting called\nby leaders eft Manitoba's contingent\nof unemployed relief camp workers\nhere tonight. Speakers were a delegation of five lent to the Saskatchewan city to investigate ihe situation.\nSEDAN UPSET IN\nEARLY MORNING\n(RASH IN (ITY\nCar and Truck Collide\non Baker Street;\/\nNone Hurt\nWOMAN DOCTOR\nPARDONED\nJACKSON, Miss.. July 8 <AP)-\nThe office of Governor Sennctt\nConner today announced the governor had signed a full and complete pardon for Dr. Sara Ruth\nDean. Greenwood physician convicted of the poison highball slaying of Dr. John Preston Kennedy\nof Greenwood. Dr. Dean was under\n< life sentence. *S|\nbetween Lardo and Gerrard will be\nconsidered.' Another application\nfrom Kootenay river resident! asks\nfor the reestablishment of a crossing near China creek.\nVOTE AQAINST ADVERTISING\nDeclaring that the city tourist\npark had passed its period of usefulness, and was now Just a stopping\noff place tor tourists who could not\nafford the facilities of a hotel, Mayor\nJ. P. Morgan led a vote against the\ncontinuance of advertising for the\npark ln a Vancouver road map\npamphlet.\nLONOER HOURS FOR\nPARK ATTENDANTS\nA recommendation for thc hiring\not the Gyro park caretaker at $75 a\nmonth, to be on duty from 11 a.m.\nto 8 p.m. Initead of from 7 a.m. until 3 p.m., for leven dayi a week,\nmet with the approval of the council. This schedule will be effective\nduring July and August.\nTO  PURCHASE  OARS\nThe council put its seal ot approval on a request for a new set of\noars for one of the Lakeside park\nboats.\nBurnett Chalmers, arrested near\nNcison for an infraction of the Railway act, was sentenced to pay a\nfine of $10 and costs or in default\nto serve two weeks in jail when\nhe appeared before Stipendiary\nMagistrate John Cartmel in provincial police court Monday. He was\narrested by R.CM.P. Constable S.\nF. Cunnington and took the Jail\nterm.\n-V\nswedishu. s:\nPACT IS MADE\nA delivery truck driven by G.\nBourgeois of Crescent Valley and\na sedan driven by Robert B. MacAulay of Sllverton figured In a collision at the intersection of Baker\nand Kootenay streets shortly after\nmidnight Monday. The latter vehicle\nwai turned over on Its aide by the\nimpact. None of the occupants were\nhurt, although those In MacAulay'!\ncar were slightly shaken up.\nThe truck was damaged little.\nThe sedan was badly smaihed up\non the side of the crash and practically ell glass was shattered.\nMilk from broken bottlea in the\ndairy truck mixed on the pavement with oil and gas from the\nsedan.\nThe crash, resounding ln the itill\nnight, drew a crowd.\nLegion lo Bid\nMclvor Adieu\n\u2014,    >\nHolding Function\non Wednesday\nNight\nActive and associate members of\nthe Canadian Legion, their wives\nand lady friends, are meeting at\nthe Canadian Legion Wednesday\nnight to bid au rcvolr to James\nMclvor, who is leaving shortly for\na year's holiday tn the old country,\nThc event is purely a Canadian Legion function and is not open to\nthe pubilc at large.\nMr. Mclvor has been a steady\nand willing helper at the Legion\nind he will be missed during the\ncoming year.\nA snort program, consisting of\nvocal solos by Mrs. W. J. Waters\nand Mrs. J. Bennett, and dances by _\nMiss Gloria Stone, will be given\nduring the evening. General dancing will follow after. President H.\nL. Howe and Mayor J, P. Morgan\nwill be present.\nSupper will be served about 10:30,\nMrs. Leslie Pickard and Mri, Cook-\nion being in charge.\n7000 lo Gel Work\non Hie Highway\nTORONTO, July 8 (CP)-Sevcn\ncontracts for transcanada highway\nconstruction at an estimated cost of\n$2,572,573 were let today by Hon.\nPeter Heenan, Ontario minister ot\nnorthern development, ln conjunction with officials ot the Dominion\ngovernment which will pay half\nthe price.\nThe contracts cover the 105-mile\nstretch from the White river to\nSchrelber and the 80-mlle stretch\nfrom Dyment to Vermilio Bay ln\nnorthwestern Ontario.\nWork, scheduled to itart Immediately, will be provided for 7000\nmen, the minister said. The labor\nwill be recruited by the provincial\ndepartment of labor and municipal\ncouncils.\nCamps to house the worken ire\nbeing built by the government and\nthey must be uniform and conform\nto high sanitary standards.\nNELSON RED SOX\nLOSE AT ROSSLAND\nWASHINGTON, July 8 (AP) -\nThe Swedish-American reciprocal\ntrade agreement\u2014fourth of such\npacts concluded under thc Roosevelt\nadministration's trade policy\u2014 today was proclaimed effective August 5 by President Roosevelt.\nThe chief concession granted Sweden is tbe pledge to maintain Swedish wood pulp on the free list. Wood\npulp constitutes two-third of American imports from that country.\nMAY OPEN TENDERS\nAlderman T. H. Waters and his\nauditorium committee were granted\nauthority to open sealed tenders for\nthe skating rlnk and curling rlnk\nice plant when they arrive, and to\naward a contract as they should\nsee fit. Mr. Waters pointed out that\nthe tenders would be In within thc\nnext day or so and an early decision\nwas necessary to speed up delivery.\nTO HAVE COKE SALE\nUpon recommendation of Ader-\nman A. C. Ritchie the council voted\non a coke sale during July and August to clean up a surplua at the\ngas plant.\nSEEK TO ABANDON\nLARDO LINK\nA. D. Cartwrlght. In a letter to\nthe council, announced e meeting\nof tlie board of railway commissioners of Canada would be held at\nNelson July 20. An application for\nthc abandonment of the Lardo link chairman\nALDERMAN   LINDSAY\nCHAIRMAN\nMayor J. P. Morgan, who attended the opening of the Ymir*\nConaolldated mill at Ymlr, was absent during the early part of the\nsession and during his absence Alderman   H.  B.  Lindsay  acted  as\nGirls' Softball\nGame Postponed\nMonday evening's scheduled\nleague softball same between thc\nToronto Stars and Red Sox ladles'\nteams was postponed for tho third\ntime due to muddy condition of the\ngrounds.\nMost of thc players on both teams\narrived at the grounds, but after an\ninspection of the grounds by Roy\nAnderson and Gilbert Rowling,\nmanagers of thc two teams, and\nRosa Stewart, president of the\nleague. It was decided to postpone\nthe game r.-*t'icr than risk injuries\nto the playerr. -m.tt\nCo Down by Lone Run in 22-21\nSoftball Came\nThe Nelson Red Sox ladlei' aoftball club travelled to Rossland on\nSunday afternoon to play the Rossland girls' club, but after nine innings of fast piny, the Nelson girls\nwere one run short of the home\nteam. Tho final count was 22*21.\nRosa Stewart went the route on the\nmound for thc Nelson team, Mildred Purceiio and Fanny Profill shared the pitching honors for Rossland.\nRosa Stewart hit two home runs\nfor the locals and Carmela Del\nPuono one.\nTWO MONTHS FOR\nSTEALING SOCKS\nJames Clark, transient pleaded\nguilty in city police court Monday\nmorning to stealing socks from a\nlocal store, and was sentenced to\ntwo months hard labor by Magistrate William Brown. He was arrested Saturday night by Sergeant\nRobert Harshaw.\nThe current in a flash ot lightning ranges from about WOO am\nperos to 220,000.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Colombia\n r\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\n^n\nTHE NELION DAILY NEWI. NELION. B.C.-TUEIDAY MORNINO. JULY I. IMI\n\u25a0PAOE FIVE\nSocial Happenings\nin Nelson City\nTbit column li conducted by Kit. M. J. Vigneua. All newa ot a\naoclal nature, including receptioni, private entertainments, peraonal\nItems, marrlagu. etc, wiU appeir in tbta column. Telephone Mn.\nVigneux at her home, 619 Silica street\nMln Dephne Sandercock made a\ndainty hosteu recently when she\nentertained at the tea hour at her\nhome on Robson itreet. She wes\nassisted by her slater. Miss Marguerite Sandercock, and Mlss Theodora Rhodei. The home was adorned\nwith a profusion ot roses, daisies and\npeonies. During the afternoon the\nguests were favored with vocal\nsolos beautifully rendered by Miss\nRhodw. Miss Sandercock'! Invited\nguesti were Misi Mary Walker,\nMlu Monica Brewer, Miu Isabelle\nDawson, Min Frances Lincoln, Miss\nBarbara Bearce ot Nanaimo, Miu\nDorothy Wheeler, Miss Mary Vance,\nMlss Violet Young, the Misses Peggy\nand Kathleen Manahan, Miss Meg\nGerrish Miss Ellis McLeod of Kamloops, Miu Joan Waters, Miss Elaine\nBeeston and the Misses Agnes and\nJean Gibson.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. H. E. Dill and Mlss\nEileen Dill spent the week-end at\ntheir Willow Point home.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMn. N. D. McKechnie ot the\nFern mine et Hall creek, where her\nhusband  ls  superintendent,  spent\nyesterday shopping in Nelson.\ni .  .\nMin Ada Brown, Hoover itreet,\nvisited friendi In Passmore yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. J. Bailess and his son-ln-liw.\nGordon B. Stephenson, spent Sunday fishing at Procter, returning\nwith a good catch.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. md Mra. T. E. Levasseur md\nthe latter's mother, Mrs, W. Richardson of Victoria, were visitor! at\nAinsworth Sunday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRev. and Mrs. Donncll md daughter have arrived from Saskatoon to\nmake their home in Nelson. Rev.\nMr. Donnell, efter holidaying until\nAugust, wlll take up his dutlw as\npastor of Trinity United church.\nThey are accompanied by Mrs. Donnelli lister, Mrs. Ross.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. md Mn. 0. Stewart, Silica\nstreet, visited Ainsworth Sunday.\n\u2022 a   \u2022 \"\nMIm Citherine O'Brien, who has\nbeen e house guest ot Mlu Sybil\nArchibald, Stanley street, for the\nIt's Coming!\nThe Big\nMoney\nSaving\nSHOE\nSALE\nof the Year\nWotch for our\nannouncement\nlater In the\nweek\nR. Andrew\n& Company\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\npast three weeks, left yeiterday tor\nSpokane where she will vlilt rela-\nUvw for the next tew weeki en\nroute to her home in Victoria.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nWeek-end visitors in town included Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Dockerill\nand daughter, MIm Dorothy, of\nTrail.\n\u2022 *   *  .\nMn. H. Fairbanks of Harrop ti a\npatient ln the Kootenay Lake General hospital.\ntee\nW. S. Kelly of the Kootenay Belle\nmine wai a city viiltor during the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMn. H. Rosling entertained at a\nimart bridge luncheon at her Willow Point home when her guests\nwere Mrs. J. J. Binns of Mirror Lake,\nMra. Kearns of San Diego, Cal,\nMn. J. Hamilton Stubbi of Kaslo,\nMiss N. Willan of Vancouver, Mlss\nKay Gann and Mlu Joan Hallett\nof Victoria, Mn. Terrence Rosling\nand Mra. A. C. Bell of Calgary. *\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. S. Trickett of Silverton vlalted\nNcison during the week-end.\n\u2022 *   *\nAmong shoppers in town yesterday was Mn. J. Seweil of Sunshine\nBay.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nMln Ella Desjardlns ls visiting\nthe Mines Forbes at Passmore.\n.   .   .\n-Frank Putnam of Creston was in\ntown yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMn. W. T. McDowell of Oakland,\nCal.. arrived in Nelson Sunday from\nLethbridge to visit her lliter. Mn.\nMcDoweil will be well remembered\nis Miss Chirlotte Nicholson, mitron\nof thc Ymir hoipltal. Mr. McDowell\nwho has been spending the pest\nfew diyi In Ymir where he ls interested in the Ymlr Yankee Girl,\nleft yesterday for Ymir. Mrs. McDowell Is a gunt of Mn. Joseph\nSturgeon, Silica street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCharles F. Caldwell Jr. of Kaslo\nwas a week-end visitor In town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. Ahler of Procter ii a city vii*\nIter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe Missel Mary md Jemnette\nWinliw left yesterdiy for Spokine\nwhere they will be guests at the\nhome of their cousins, Mr. and Mn.\nD. Fleming.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWord hai been received in the\ncity that MiM Shirley Herron hu\nsuccessfully paued her advanced\npreparatory examinations from the\nTrinity College of Music in England.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlu Mollie Irving of Tarrys viiited Nelson ywterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT. E. Grayling of Ymlr visited\nNelson during the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nI. L. Jarvii visited Procter Sun*\nday.\n.  .  \u00bb\nMlu Lorraine Wataon, daughter\nof Mr. md Mn. H. S. Watson, Oak\nstreet, is improving from her appendix operation at the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital\nMr. md Mrs. Hirold Hunt ipent\nSunday at Ainsft-orth.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nF. Brunton visited friends in Pass\nmore yesterdiy.\n\u2022 .  .\nGlenn Archibald, son of Mr. md\nMrs. Farran C. Archibald of Trail,\ncelebrated the occulon of his tec*\nond birthday Sunday at the home\nof his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. C.\nI. Archibald, Stanley street. The\nguests included Dennis Archibald\nof Trail, Frmcis Cully, Barney Qui-\nsin, Dawn Miller, JoJo Sturgeon,\nAllan Ball, Evelyn Breeae, Doretta\nDingwall, Catherine Anderson, Jean\nHooker, Margaret Dingwall, Joy\nGuscott, Jeanne Archibald, Miss\nCatherine O'Brien of Victoria, Mra.\nJ. P. Guuin, Mn. W. J. Sturgeon,\nMn. J. Miller Mr. and Mn. C. F.\nArchibald of Trail. Mr. and Mra. R.\nT. Bishop, Mrs. Nelson Ball, Miss\nSybil Archibald, Miss Phyllis Archibald,   Mlu   Mary   Madden,   Mln\nQUAUTY\nMEATS\nHOME CURED %.\nBACON: pir Ib LO\nPORK AND BEEF       OCC\nSAUSACE: 2 Ibi. .. LO\nSPECIAL BREAKFAST 1 Co\nSAUSACE: pir Ib. .. 10\nSMALL PORK OA<\nSAUSACE: pir Ib. .. LV\nHAMBURCER STEAK: 1Af\nPir Ib  IV\nMINCED STEAK:       1 C.\nPir Ib  lv\nCALF HEARTS: 1A\u00ab*\nPir Ib  IU\nOur Own Make\nBaked Him, Roil. Pork,\nJellied Vlll, Corned Beef\nind Potted Mtat\nBURNS\n& CO. LIMITED\nPHONE 50\nJennie Down, Mr. Alow of taiga\nmd Mr. and Mrs. C. I. Archlbali\nMr. md Mrs. Murdock Morriion\nof Medicine Hit and their daughteri\nMirion. Bessie and Norma arrived\nyesterday md are guests at, the\nhome on Delbruck street of Mrs.\nF. A. Martin. They are here to ettend the Humble-Martin wedding\ntomorrow.\nttt\nVisiton at the district Girl Guide\ncamp at Sunshine Bey Sunday included District Commiuloner Mn.\nF. E. Dockerill of Trail Miu Dorothy Dockerill, Miu McLennan of\nRouland, Col. md Mrs. John Mur*\nny. Mr. and Mn. William Rutherford, Mrs. Shortly, Mn. Burch of\nPeterborough, Ont., and Mn. Harold\nE. G. Penny.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Rex Jarvis and son\nBUly visited relative! ln Procter\nSunday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nD. 0. Rourke of Calgary viiited\nNelaon during the week-end.\nW. Jacobson of Crawford Bay\nvisited the city during the weekend.\nRev. and Mrs. W. J. Silverwood\nand sons, Bill and Alan, accompanied by Mra. Mary Wallace and\nFERNIE UDY\nIS HOSTESS\nFERNm B.C., July l.-Mn. J.\nS. Irvine entertained af tea rrlday\nafternoon in honor ot her iliter,\nMrs. S. R. McKay, and her nelce,\nElaine McKay, of Vancouver who\nero her tummer guwtt.\nMn. V. Keith Colton md aon.\nDonovan, left Friday morning to\n\u25a0pend e vacation ln Lethbridge,\nvisiting Mn. Colton'i lister, Mn.\nEarl Halstenson.\nMn. W. Malllnson returned Frl-\ndey to Lethbridge after ipending\nleveral dayi with Mn. J. Forster.\nNelson Wallace returned Saturday\nfrom the coait where he attended\nthe wedding of his brother Harvey.\nMn. Stanley James left Sunday\nmorning to spend two weeks holiday in Kimberley.\nMiss Doris Hudion, George Yeio-\nvlch and Jamw and Ruuel Burt*\nenicks left Friday for Lethbridge to\nattend the funeral of Mn. Annie\nBurtenlcks of Femle.\nMn. T. A. Firth of Dawson City,\nYukon is visiting her son, Howie\nFirth. Mn. Firth is a guwt of Mr.\nand Mn. Thomu Knight\nBritish Southpaw Halts Helen's Climb\nMiss Margaret Thompson leave today by motor for Spokane, Wuh..\nand Portland. Ore., where they wlli\nspend a vacation.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mn. A. G. Harvey of\nTrail spent Sunday in the city visiting friends.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJ. M. Gordon wai fiihing at Procter Sunday.\n.   .   .\nMn. A. P. Whitemm of Paumore\nipent ywterday in the city.\nlet\nMrs. B. A. Stlmmel md daughter\nKathleen, who are summering et\nWillow Point, were recent ihopperi\nin Nelion.\na  a. e\nMn. t. Stangherlin md daughters Pauline md Betty have returned from Trail. While there they\nattended the christening of the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrt. R.\nBertoia, Edna Patricia Sylvia, by\nRev. Leo Hobaon. The sponsor*!*!\nwere Min Piuline Stangherlin and\nErnwt DeRosa of Trail.\neat\nMr. md Mn. P. H. Buih. Vernon\nitreet, ipent Sundiy at Alniworth.\n\u2022 >   \u2022\nFloyd Garrett of Kulo viiited\nNelson ywterdiy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. Maitland K. Hirrlson of\nHowser md her daughter June\napent ywterdey in the elty.\nMn. Alex Carrie. Silica itreet,\nleft yeiterday to,visit at the home\nof her son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. Robert York, Nelwey.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. md Mn. R. W. Dewaon have\ntaken up reiidence at their summer\nplace at Willow Point.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMn. Arthur Baird. Silica atreet,\nentertained ywterday afternoon at\na delightful bridge. Multi-colored\npeonlei and roses were used about\nthe living md dining room. Mn.\nBaird's invited gueiti were Mn.\nJohn Cartmel, Mrs. L. V. Rogen,\nMn. F. F. Peyne, Mn. R. L. McBride, Mra. P. G. Morey, Mn. W.\nM. Walker, Mn. W. R. Grubbe,\nMn. N. Murphy, Mn. Hugh W.\nRobertson, Mn. Alex Leith. Mn.\nHarry Burns, Mn. E. C. Wraffe,\nMra Wilfrid Allan, Mn. Jamw\nO'Shea. Mrs. H. H. MacKenzle, Mrs.\nA. C. Bell of Calgary, Mn. J. G.\nBunyan. Mn. W. M Cunllffe. Mrs.\nA. D. McLeod. Mrs. C. D. Blackwood and Mrs. E. G. Smyth.\nt   \u2022   \u2022    \"\nMra. Gordon Hallett of Willow\nPoint has u her guwt her daughter.\nMlss Joan Hillett, also Miu Kay\nGann of Victoria.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. N. McLeod of Edgewood viiited thc city during the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nB. J. DeBroiky was in from Salmo\nyesterday. \\\nt  .  \u2022 .\nH- I- Middleton of Harrop ipent\nyesterday in Nelson.\nMr. and Mn. Norman A. Brown\nvisited relatives at Psssmore Saturday.\nJOCKEY IETI MARK\nWINNIPEG. (CP)-Ifi a long\ntime alnce any jockey dominated\na one-week racing meet as Ralph\nJackson did at Whlttler Park here\nthis summer. Jackson had 88 mounts\nduring the week and delivered 17\nwlnnen. He had eight second-, two\nthirds and wai unplaced nine times.\nHONOR GUEST\nAT KIMBERLEY\nSurprise Party Is Held\nfor Mrs. Hustwick\nof England\nHelen Wllli-Moody't drum ef e comeback to the tennii heights\nwu abruptly ihattared when iht met Kethleen Stammtrs, left-\nhanded Brltlih iter In tha wml-fInili for tha Ktnt County ehimplon-\nshlp. Htltn wu btaten 8-0 and 8-4, looking Ilka a tlrtd player Initead\nof e prosptctlvt chimpion. Mlu Stimmtri, tht aouthnaw who halted\nhtr litest climb, li ihown In eetlon above. Ihe It one of England'!\nranking women pliyers.\nContagious diseases are not eo\ncommon among mammals u among\nbirds.\nSALMOSCHOOL\nPR0M0TI0HS\nSALMO, B.C., July 8.\u2014To mark\nthe doling of another Khool year\nthe lenior room of the Salmo ichool\ntook part in a party Friday afternoon. Mmy gamw were enjoyed\nmd lunch wu served.\nDuring the afternoon the reporti\nmd honor rolls were given out by\nthe teacher H. H. Perkins.\nThe report follows:\nDIVISION l:\nPromotions in order ot merit\nGrade VII to Orade VIII-Ame\nHenrickson, Aim McLeod, Huel\nJmaiff, Ruasell MacDuffie, Raymond\nBush, Hazel Dorey.\nOn trial \u2014 Edward Heem md\nFrancii Kubak.\nGrade VI to Grade VII\u2014Joyce\nBremner, Neoml Lindstrom, Gladys\nMacDuffle, Mary Bartsoff, Percy\nWilde, Shirley Lindstrom, Carl Llndow, Lawrence McLeod, Mabel\nBradley.\nOn trial\u2014Merlin John.\nGrade V to Grade VI\u2014Maxine\nLindow David John, Francw Pic-\ntin and Ronald Needham (tied),\nMona Miller, Eva Maude Leahy,\nHarry Smith.\nHONOR ROLLS:\nDeportment\u2014Bill Bartioff.\nRegularity md punctuality \u2014\nGladys MicDuffie.\nProficiency\u2014Ene Henrlckion.\nDIVISION J:\nGride IV to Grade V-Molly Pic-\ntin, Keith McLeod, Alleen Boettger, Gerald Hansen.\nOn trial\u2014Nick Berukoff, William\nStewart.\nGrade III to Gride IV\u2014Dorothy\nHansen, Nellie Markin, Lois Browne,\nJacqueline Johnitone.\nOn trial\u2014Polly Rizansoff.\nGrade II to Grade III\u2014Miry His*\noff, Jick Trimble Doreen Gibbon,\nJune Fair, Jack Hanson. Lucy Elasoff Anita Perkins, Williim Gray,\nWilliam Bonderoff, Howird Hearn.\nOn trial\u2014Emma Shoustoff, Irene\nLinen.\nGrade I to Grade II\u2014Verna Needham. Bruce Llness. Bernirr Telford.\nOn triel-Wllllim Kubak, Helen\nGray.\nHONOR ROLLS:\nDeportment\u2014Aileen Boettger.\nRegularity and punctuality\u2014Donald Wilde.\nProficiency\u2014Mary Ilaioff.\nThe malaria epidemic In Ceylon\ntook 74.000 lives, from November to\nthe end of April\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMENUS, RECIPES ind\nHINTS\nRELIEVE\nPERIODIC   PAIN\nTF yoa suffer peri-\n* odlc piin ead\ndiscomfort, fry\niLydiiE. Pinkhim's\n|Tibleti. Io most\nesses they bring\nwelcome relief. As\nMri.Ciroline Newman says, \"They\n^^^^^^^    ewe the pain\".\nMn. Raymond Chaput, Route 4,\n, Tilbury.Ont. nn,\"I suffered some*\n' thing terrible. Hid such biduchw\n! tnd headaches I ww worn out\nj Your Tablets helptd me\". Let them\nhelp you, too. <*__t your -fmggu\/.\nMenu Hint\nFish Stlid Baked Potatoei\nButtered Beeti      Witercrew\nSour Milk Cakes, Frosted\nIced Tea\nFish silid Ii m excellent diih for\nwarm weether. The other day I\ngave you a recipe for tuna fish\nsalad u a young friend ot mine\nmakw it Today you have juit any\nold fish you prefer to use. You can\nmake this salad u \"fussy\" ai you\nwish, depending upon whether you\nfeel ilke doing fancy things or only\nthoie that entail little work. This\nrecipe for sour milk cup cakw I\ngive you often. It is so simple and\nso good that it should go into your\nregular files. Serve the witercrws\nplain with ult for a change u you\nheve enother wild on the menu.\nTodey'i Reclpta\nFiih Salad\u2014One-half cup mayonnaise, one-half cup chili uuce, ult.\npepper, naprike. one cm flaked\nfiih, one-fourth cup chopped celery,\none chopped hard-boiled egg, six\n|<*-*\u00bb\u00bbs\u00abs\u00bb\u00abs\u00ab\u00bb^tt\u00ab<*\u00bbi->\u00bb\u00ab|\nDURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\n\u25a0J\u00ab\u00ab:\u00bb*\u00bb5\u00ab\u00ab\u00abW*W\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb!**\u00bb*^\n\u25a0Heed ituffed olives, two tablespoons chopped pimento. Combine\nmiyonnolie. chill uuce and seasonings. Fold in all other Ingredients.\nChill and lerve on crisp lettuce, garnished with pimentos cut In fancy\nshapw, iliced ituffed olives and\nchopped egg.\nSour Milk Cuo Cakes\u2014One cup\nsugar, one-fourth cup shortening,\none egg. one-fourth cup molassw or\nsome leftover jam or jelly, one teaspoon cinnamon, a little nutmeg,\nallspice and cloves, not more than a\nteaspoon In all; one cup sour milk,\none-half teaspoon baking soda, one\nteupoon biking powder, one-half\nteupoon ult. two cups flour. Rals*\nIns miy be added or nuts. Bake In\nmuffin tins. This makw a dozen\ngood sized cup-cakes. You may frost\nthem with butter frosting, chocolate\nor any preferred icing, or serve with\npudding seuce.\nFACTS AND FANCIES\nIplotd Qoouberrlw\nThrw poundi suger (brown), one\ncup vinegar, one teupoon whole\nclovw, few sticks cinnamon, one\ntablespoon ult, one-eighth table\nipoon cayenne, one tablespoon lemon juice, one-half ounce ginger root,\nfour pints gooseberries. Cook the\nvinegar and the sugir five minutes.\nTie the splcw in \u2022 beg, edd with remaining ingredients, cook slowly\nOn hour. Pack md seal\nKoolaree News\nThe camp gow on under the capable lwdershlp of Lloyd Magar.\nwho hu lucceufully gained the\nrespect and confidence of even the\nyoungwt bravw. The ever-lncreas-\ning popularity of this camp ls shown\nby the much larger group ot bravw\nthat has pitched lta teepees on the\nbeautiful banki of Kootenay lake\nthli year.\nEveryone la happy except for m\nodd toothache or eomethlng along\nthat line, but after all thoie things\nhappen In the bwt of camps.\nThe lnterwt groups are ao numerous md appealing that lf wood\nand linoleum carving falls to rouse\nlnterwt in a boy, there is always\nbird-house making, under the lwdershlp of Chief MacKenzle, first aid\nunder Laurie Hamilton, kit-making\nunder Herb Swanson, or campcraft\nunder Alf Parker to choose from.\nThe excellent work that Is being\ndone ln ell these classes shows that\ninterest is not lacking in my way.\nAZTEC8 WIN 80FTBALL\nFriday uw a chmge in the aspect\nof things u fer u the majority of\ntribw were concerned. The lowly\nAztecs, heretofore believed to be\neuy prey, turned the tablw on the\nSiwuh tribe by decisively winning\ntheir softball game. At campfire we\nwltnewed a mock fight between\nJimmy Twaddle, u Jimmy Braddock. md Lome Doubleday, as Joe\nLouli. In this stupendous bittle\nBraddock got a illght edge md won\nthe decision.\nSaturday morning started off with\nthe usual flag-raising md then the\nKoolaree bravw went to the tablw\nto clean out the fleshpots that Jack\nGauthier, our new chef, had so\ncarefully prepared for them. The\noutcome ot lt all wu the ultimate\ndiscovery that Jack's pancakes, taken more thm 10 at a time, produced\nlevere pelm ln the iron constitution\not St. Clair \"Snooky\" Lewis md\nFoster Mills.\nAll through Saturday vlilton arrived end left. By their wordi we\nconclude they were imprwsed with\nthe appearance md morale of the\ncamp.\n8LEEP IN\nSaturday, by some frnk ot nature.\nwu allowed to sleep in until 7:45.\nLloyd Hagar promises that it won't\nhiDpen again though.\nIn the afternoon the big event\nwas the softbill game between the\nBig Chiefs md the Little Chiefs.\nThe rwults were so depressing that\nthe Big Chiefs were forced to don\nuck cloth and ashes md hie them\naway to a secluded spot. Too bad.\nBig Chiefs, but can't argue against\na score of 21-8, cm you?\nAt campfire the brawny musclw\nof the bravw were stretched considerably whm the contests thtt\nended ln the discovery of champloni In badger-pulling, leg-wrw-\ntling, cock-fighting and hand wrestling.\nAfter thia that enloyable voice of\nNorman Beattle wis hwrd in 'The\nRoid to Mandaliy\" ind \"Trade\nWinds.\" Both pieces were enjoyed\na gnat deal.\nSunday morning, we were allowed to sleep ln a while and after\nthat the bravw ageln stampeded\ntoward the dining tentj. It's funny\nbut this place seems to draw a\ngreat deal of whole-hearted interest from these boys.\nAfter breakfast we adjourned to\nclean up tents and fix the camp In\ngeneral. Later, a very Impressive\nservice wu held In the chapel end\nthe cimpers werc given a more ie-\nrious thought to meditate noon.\nVISITORS  BRING  \"EATS\"\nBy dinner time leveral vlilton\nhad arrived end more arrived later\nin the afternoon, bringing things\nthet are deer to the heart of a boy.\nOf course, candy cakes, and cookies\nwere enjoyed throughout the camp.\nThe sun came out for the afternoon\nand the boys braved the clear waters\nof the lake once egeln. but with\nmore enjoyment than before in the\nrain. After that they stood iround\nrubbing on oil to protect egalnsl\nmnbum or else they were obliged\nto hive their plcUirw taken by\nHarry Pirker's new camera. A reel\nprivilege, no doubtl\nRYALL  READY  FOR  TEST!\nVANCOUVER (CP.-Oiale Ryall,\nformer Brltlih Columbli md Vancouver city ilnglw chimpion, ii\nback home for the court letson. He\nlntendi entering the provinciil. the\nPacific Northwest ind the Cinadlan\ntennii chimpionships. Ryall Juit\nfinished his first yeer ot en engineering course it the Texei Agricultural md Mechanical college.\nKIMBERLEY. B.C_Ju]y l.-Tuw-\nday evening the All Salnti Women'i\nauoclitlon gave a surprise party\nat the home of Mn. Whltford with\na big crowd present. Whist md\ngames were piiyed ind all contributed to a conundrum menu. Refreshments were served end e fire-\nwell cike wis cut by Mn. Hustwick,\nguwt of honor, who has spent two\nyean visiting her daughter, Mn.\nFord of the Townslte, and is soon\nto leave for her home in Bngland.\nJust before leaving some of the\nladlw had a novel contwt tor a\nvaluable prize and the competition\nwu keen. Mn. Whltford won it.\nA double dance put on by the\nGyros Monday wu a huge success.\nTwo hills were crowded. Acrobitic\n\u2022nd tap dancing by Mlss Denlse\nSydal of Lethbridge wu much appreciated.\nGeorge F. Kent hu announced the\nengagement ot his only daughter.\nIda Francw, to Norman Stanwood\nBentley, younger aon of Mr. and\nMn. B. H. Bentley of Kimberley.\nThe marriage is plmned to take\nplate ln Auguit.\nMlu Isobel Bitw hu left to pend\nthe summer at Gleichen, Alta.\nMlu Mayme McLaren of McLeod,\nAlta. spent the week-end with Mr.\nand Mrs. L. McLaren.\nMiu Barbara Fink of Cranbrook\nipent the week-end with Mlu Helen\nSutherland.\nMlu Mary Niso ot Cranbrook\nis visiting her brother-in-lew. md\nsister Mr. md Mrs. T. Montemurro\nthis week.\nSpending the Dominion diy it the\nMcLaren home were Jick McLaren,\nMargaret and Eleanor McLaren of\nCranbrook, Mr. Lennox. Dorothy\nand Birbin Lennox ot California.\nJackie Morrison hai left for the\nboys camp at Koolaree, near Nelson\nto spend the holidays.\nMrl. Phelts and family of Mlulon\nCity have arrived at Marysvllle,\nwhere they will spend the holldiys\nwith Mrs. Phelps brother-ln-liw ind\nlister, Mr. and Mra. S. Blake.\nMr. md Mn. Moses and daughter\nof Great  Falls  and  Mlu Isobel\nDlcken of Fernie were guwts at the\nhome of Mr. md Mn. Robert Dick-\nI.\nMr. end Mn. J. DeCeccl end tim-\nily of Coleman spent the week-end\nwith their son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. ahd Mn. J. Rinaldi in Blarchmont\nSammy Rlva ls ipending the lummer with his grandparents at Coleman, Alta.\nMn. H. Weever end daughter,\nDorothy, left Wednwday for Victoria where they will be Joined liter\nby Mn. Weaver's mother, Mn.\nJamw Thorley. who Is visiting Mr.\nand Mn. Matheaon of Vancouver.\nMrs. Wwver expects to be gone\nfor a ywr.\nMr. md Mn. D. McGregor returned to town Monday after spending their vacation at Coeur d'AIene.\nMlu Dorothy Leonard ot Cranbrook Is spending a few week's holiday with Miss Gladys Miller.\nMiss Beatrice Hebert left Tuesday\nfor Trail where ahe wlll visit her\naunt before going to Ainsworth.\nMn. I. Garneau is a patient ln\nMcDougall hospital here.\nMn. Noble of Chapman  Camp\nhas left the hospital for her home.\nLloyd Crowe visited Kimberley\nfor the week-end. He and hli family\nleft for Trail Monday momlng.\nMlu Ida Kent of Rossland ts a\nguest of Mr. and Mn. B. H. Bentley.\nMlu Freda Bevls. from Regina. Is\nspending a month in town visiting\nfriends.\nMlu Beuie Bidder left Sunday for\na months' holiday in Vincouver and\nCalifornia.\nMr. and Mn. W. Hinu. parenta\nof Mn. M. Koper, Rev. Father Mat-\nhoui, F. Hints and P. Hanas of\nLeduc. Alta., are visiting Mr. and\nMn. Koper.\nMr. md Mrs. M. Mcintosh left\nSundiy for their holidays at Vancouver md coast points. They were\neccompanled by Mn. J. M. Wolverton.\nMr. end Mn. Sinclair, F. Dickenson of Vancouver are spending a\nfew dayi in town. Mr. Dickenson\nIs well known for his cllssw In\npublic ipeakinf held here iome\nweeki ago.\nArt Bryant of Trail ll visiting\nhere for a few days.\nA collector of eyeglauw ls rather\na rarity. Mn. Arthur Terry of Short\nHills. N.J, however, hu collected\nmore than 15,800 pain of glasses\nsince 1938. They are all kinds, igw,\nihipw ind colon.\nFormer Edgewood\nLady on Viiit\nEDGEWOOD, B.C., July 8-The\nWomen'i inititute held IU July\nmeeting it the home of Mn. Loughery. The Fermen' lnitltute held the\nJuly meeting In the hall Seturday.\nMr*. Halnw, i rwldent ot Edge-\nwood about 20 yeen ago, then\nknown u Miu Lena Collins, li on\na visit at the Cotswold ranch.\nMr. md Mn. WUUam Willlami\nhave returned trom a vlilt to Nakuip where they were guesti ot\nCapt. md Mn. Wright\nFrederick Job. who teachw ichool\nin the Columbia valley, it ipending hli vecetlon here. He will ipend\nthe tint part ot his vacation fiihing at the Watshan lakw.\nW. Webiter, Edgewood taacher,\nand Mrs. Webster are ipending part\nof the vecetlon at Kelowne.\nW.A. Calder and Ronald Jordan\nwere down from the Lightning Puk\nand left tor Vemon on buiineu.\nGeorge Clothier, manager of the\nDictator, hu left for Vemon.\nMn. Hainw, who wu formerly\none of Edgewood'i bwt tennii playen, wu a guwt of the Tennii club\nyesterdiy and played a couple of\nsets.\nThe forestry auociation give a\nmovie picture ahow on Tueaday\nnight in the Edgewood hall. There\nwu a huge attendmce.\nREGINA FOLK ARE\nSALMOVISITORJ\nSALMO, B. C, July 8.-Mr. and\nMn. R. Goodwin and daughter of\nRegina are viiltlng here, guwts of\nMr. end Mra. Goodwin's brother-ln*\nliw and iliter, Mr. md Mn. F. Ste\nvenson, also of Mr. Goodwin's fa*\nther.\nMr. md Mn. H. Grutchfield, who\nwere married in Nelson lut week,\nreturned Saturday from a honeymoon ln Spokane md Colvllle,\nWuh.\nMr. md Mn. H. H. Perkim were\nshoppen to Nelson Seturdiy.\nMn. C. Cawley md family have\ntaken up rwldence here for the summer, from Nelion where the children hed been ettending Khool.\nMr. and Mn. Norman Allan of\nLKimberley were In town Monday\n|*visiting friends.\nThe home of Mn. F. Dorey was\nthe scene of e lovely miscellaneous\nshower Friday in hon6r of Mn.\nBobby Cox, nee Mln SteUa Dorey.\nwho wu married lut month. Nearly every womm in town wai invited\nand the guwt of honor wai the recipient of mmy useful artlclw.\nMlu Mary Feeney hu returned\nfrom Nelaon to ipend the vicaUon\nwith her parenti.\nMr. md Mn. L. Johnitone md\ndaughter. Jackie, have taken up\nreiidence it the Emerald mine for\nthe lummer. During thit time their\nhome li being occupied by Mr. and\nMn. T. Lemmon md family.\nMn. M. McCaslln of Nelaon wai a\nbuiineu viiltor here Monday md\nTuwday.\nMn. J. Fruer wu a vliitor to\nNelson Siturday.\nMn. A. Gibbons of Nelson wu the\nweek-end guwt of her aon md\ndaughter-ln-law, Mr. and Mn. D.\nGibbons.\nMiu Merle McCaslln of Nelson\nwas a guwt of Mlu Olive Fair Monday.\nMr. and Mn. A. Bremner and\ndaughter. Joyce, were ahoppen ln\nNelson Siturdiy.\nMr. md Mn. B. Cox, Mn. F.\nDorey. Mlss Huel Dorey, ind Clifford Dorey were viilton to Nelson\nSaturday evening.\nWendall Grutchfield of Colville\nls visiting relatlvw here for a\nwhile.\nMn. N. Morriion who hu been\nteiching in Trail hai arrived to\nmake her home here.\nMrs. F. Linditrom wu e vilitor\nto Nelson Saturday evening.\nThe Salmo Scout Troop held a\nmeeting Friday tn the Community\nhall. There were 18 icouti prwent.\nScoutmwter A. Ranger ww presented with the charter by C. Llndow.\nwith a ihort eddrew to the Scouts.\nThe Scoutmuter thinked Mr. Llndow. They held a weiner roast on\nthe river edge Saturday evening\nwith 18 Scouti end one viiltor from\nColvillt. Scoutmuter Kenneth Mif-\nfln. They played gimw until I\no'clock. Scoutmaater C. Ranger wai\nin charge of the party.\nThe Scouts formed e guard of\nhonor for the Salmon Valley Queen\nJuly 1.\t\nTHREE POITMIITRMIII\nThree po-stmiitrewee handle mail\nin Acton. Mlu Catherine Condon\nacta for Acton Center. Elizabeth\nPrendergut for Wwt Acton, end\nBenedetto DrlKoll hu chirge of\nthe ban of South Acton.\nBRIDE-TO-BE\nHOHORGUEST\nShower ot So. Slocan\nFishing Good in\nthe Pool\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.. July 8.-\nMra. Ivor Jonw entertained at\nbridge end a recipe shower at her\nhome in honor of Miu Doreen Hill\nwhoie marriage to Osrick R. Murrell of Trail takes place shortly. The\nSrixw in bridge were won by Miss\nMl and Mrs.T. B. Hardin.\nDaisiw comprised the motif ot\nflower decorations throughout the\nrooms md the tea table. The hand-\npainted tally cards carried out thc\nacheme.\nLitUe Bernice Jonw, daintily clad\nin a white petalled dreu, with a\ndaiiy wreath on her hair, presented\na basket ln the form of a daisy\ncontaining the gift recipes to the\nbride-elect Mra. W. A. McCabe, Mrs.\nW. 3. Tindale and Mrs. H. McDougall aulsted .the hosteu ln aerving.\nThe guests were Mlu Doreen Hill,\nMn. Roy Graham. Mra. W. Wade-\nson, Mra, G. F. Chapman, Mrs. P.\nO. Bird, Mra. H. McDougall, Mn.\nT. A. Whelldon, Mra. D. J. Davis,\nMn. A. F. McDonald. Mn. F. B.\nHardin. Mrs. W. A. McCabe, Mn. W.\nJ. Tlndale, Mn. George A. PUU of\nTrail md Mrs. John Murray.\nMr. and Mn. A. S. McDonald of\nTrail were the guuta of Mr. ani\nMn. E. J. Bowkett\nCrawford Young of Castlegar who\nhas been relieving agent at the\nC.P.R. depot has returned. H. Vlpond of Trail ls now relieving in\nhia atead.\nFiahlng at the Pool ta reported to\nhive been remarkably good during\nthe week, the local anglen have\nmade aome large citchw.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Humphreys md\nMlu Humphry ot Winnipeg were\nweek-end guests at the staff houie\nNo. 3 plmt of the Wwt Kootenay\nPower tt Light Co.\nWilliim Laurie of Trail wu the\nguwt of his son-in-law md daughter\nMr. md Mn. E. J. Bowkett\nAWAY FROM PAR\nCHICAOO. (CP)-WiUiam \"WUd\nBill\" Mehlhom. who won a lot of\ngolfing titlw ln his day, never tlrw\not telling the story about that\n\"plumb crazy\" nine hole 33 with\nonly one per he scored In a tournament at Detroit WiU BlU had one\neagle, four birdies, one par md\nthree bed holw on hla card and\nwas two under per. He finished 18\nhole round with 88.\nALLAN BEIT HURDLER\nNEW YORK. (CP)-Perhaps the\nbwt hurdler in the United Statei\nthii yeir is Sim Allen of Oklahoma\nBaptist college. Officially he wu\nclocked In 14.8 seconds for the 120-\nyard high hurdles et the Princeton\ninvitation mwt but three of the\nsix watchw on him ihowed 14.1.\nPercy Beard'i world mark is 14.2.\nWhether or not you Intend ta pursue a stage\neereer, the glowing\nhulth, lupplt, gnceful\np o I \u25a0e developed by\ndancing wlll make you\na popular soclil success.\nPatricio Studio of the\nDance\n704 BAKER STREET\nAT YOUR\n\u25a0GROCER'S\nAsh For\nMcDONALD'S\nNEW PACK\nStrawberry\nJAM\nA Nelion Midi Product\nMidi Fram Kooteniy\nIngredients.\n\"I like Muffets\"\nTKK05\nTBRKf\n\"Breakfait to me ii like a cloie\n\u25a0have. It's got to be imooth,\neuy to take and refreshing.\nThat'a why I like Muff trti.\"\n\"It'i a good thing that I do like\nMuffeti. My misti-ess buyi\nthem all the time and ahe\nought to know, her being a\ndietician before ihe wai\nmarried.\"\n\"They're the ticket! A one\nway passage to health and\nenjoyment on the smoothest\nroute I've ever travelled-get\naboard the Muffet special.\"\nSUNSHINE j\t\nand HEALTH\nMuffets nt the only Whole\nWheat Biscuits irradiated\nfot Sunshine Vitamin \"D\"\nto essential to health. ASK\nyour doctor.\nEverybody likes Muffets\nMuffets ire ribbons of ill-Cinadiin\nwhole wheit...wound round ind\nround ... then touted to a rich,\nflavoured crispness. A new process\nhis nude possible these new im\nproved wheat ribbons thtt crumble\neasily... break readily.\nMUFFETS\nMad* In Canada _# The Quiker Otts Comptny\n Mai six-\nNriam Sailg Nrroa\nEstablished April 22, 1802.\n\"Britiih Columbia'i Moit Mtrttting Ntwtpapir\"\nALL THE NIWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished  every  morning  except  Suiday  by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n218  Baker  Street,  Nelson,  Britiih  Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting all Departments\nMember ot tbe Audit Bureau of Circulation! and\nThe Canadian Praao Leased Wire Newa Service.\nTUESDAY, JULY 9, 1935.\nAFTER-EFFECTS OF WAR SERVICE\nCanadians have heard, sometimes from those in\nresponsible positions, that men who served in the great\nwar and returned to civilian life, are \"burned out.\" A\ncommon generalization is that ex-service men have shortened their normal life expectation by at least 10 years.\nSuch statements have not been confined to Canada.\nThey have been common in Australia also. In the Commonwealth, however, they are being resisted vigorously.\nOne medical authority there denounces the absurd statement that a returned soldier is not likely to live beyond\nfifty. He finds that such generalizations are often believed by the men themselves and by their families and\ndeclares: \"Only those who have been in close medical\ncontact with returned men know the deadly influence of\nthe fear complex induced by this pestilential propaganda.\"\nIn the opinion of Dr. C. A. Courtney, formerly principal medical officer of the Australian repatriation department, war service left no lasting effects on the health\nof those who were unwounded or who did not suffer serious illness during the war. He is urging soldier organisations to readjust their ideas of the physical aftereffects of those who fought. In addition, he is quoted as\nfollows:\nIt la wicked end untrue to say that poison gas hai increased\ntuberculosis among soldiers lince the war. or that soldiers are\ndying prematurely old because of their war aervlee. or that\ndiseases of old age are more prevalent among soldiers than civilians. Definitely, poison gas has not influenced tuberculosis, and\nthe after-effects of gassing have not been nearly as severe as was\nforetold 20 years ego. The death rate among Auatralian soldiers\nil lomewhat less than the actuarial tables of life insurance\naocietiea show for the normal expectancy of life. The worst\nenemies of returned soldiers are frequenUy those who profess\nto be their best friends.\nAs a matter of fact, if the records of old army pensioners in Great Britain is any criterion, war veterans\nare apt to live far beyond the Biblical span of \"three\nscore and ten.\" There is Sir Fitzroy Donald Maclean,\nchief of the Clan Maclean, who has just celebrated his\none hundredth birthday. And the second oldest officer in\nthe British army lists is Lt.-Col. C. E. Theobold, aged 99.\nCol. Theobold lives at the seaside resort of Bournemouth\nand is still a first-rate billiard player. He joined the\narmy in 1855, was in the Crimean war, fought in India,\ntook part in the Bhutan expedition of 1865 and retired\nin 1880.\nThe longevity of British army veterans as a class\nis extraordinary. Of eleven veterans of the Crimean war\nand Indian Mutiny who died recently the youngest was\n94 and the oldest 101.\nPerhaps, as time goes on, veterans of the Great War\nwill rival their predecessors in the count of their years.\nIn the light of such evidence as has come from Australia,\nCanadian ex-servicemen who are in apparent good health\nmay well take a deep breath and burst into that old army\nsong, \"Old soldiers never die; they only fade away.\"\nPOLAND STUDIES ENGLISH\nZEPPELINS FLY ON\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nHOW IT BEGAN .\nWhile nearby spot! were thronged\nwith tourists, the island waa practically deaerted. So a meeUng of prominent residents was called to see\nwhat could be done.\nThe chairman aroie, looking\ngrave.\n\"We must do something to put the\nIsland on the map,\" he said. \"Other\nplaces have done it. We can draw\nthe whole world's attention if we go\nabout the thing ln proper style.\"\nA itorm of applauie proved the\nchairman was right\n\"Mr. Chairman,\" said a well\nknown business man, \"I have had\naome experience in publicity campaigns. Our first need Is money.\"\nMore applause. A hat was produced. Into It, ai It passed around\nwent several roots of bills and a\nnumber of fat cheques.\nDecision was made to hire a pub\nUclty expert. When the next meet*\nIng was held, the livewire advertls\ning man was on the platform.\n\"Friends.\" he said, \"we are in\nluck. No aooner did I take this job\nof boosting the island than I ran\nacross a song-writer with a ballad\nthat will put you on the map.\"\nThe expert crooked his finger. A\nlong-haired youth approached the\npiano, aat down and preceded to\nsing a song.\nThe audience was hardly Impressed. Grumbling was heard on all\nsides.\n\"It bores me sick.\" yelled a critic.\nThe publicity expert rose again,\nholding up one hand.\n\"There you are. gents.\" he said.\n\"That song will make this island.\nIt's a romantic ballad, with enough\nsickening monotony in It to become\na popular hit.\"\nThe meeUng broke up. many still\nunconvinced. But next week, all\nthe world was ringing \"The Isle of\nCaori.\"\nToday the islind ii filled with\ntourists, and there is talk of nutting\nIn another golf course.\n\u2022\u25a0 \u2022   \u2022\n.MAKE IT BIQI\nI A colUaion of the British destroyers. Encounter and Escape, has been\nreported. Another, between the Irresistible and Immovable, would be\nmore interesting from a scientific\nviewpoint\n\u2022   M   '\nLOOK 'EM OVER\nScientist explains why Insects\ncannot imile.\u2014Headline.\nThe bedbug, having richly fed.\nSlti back, unsmiling, on the bed.\nThe moth, gorged on your flannel\npants.\nHetains a frozen countenance.\nMosquitoes flaunt a surly man.\nHowever rich the neck they tao,\nThe bee. an imp of art and wile,\nSUnga you and never cricks a smile.\nBlank faces of cockroaches haunt\nEnvirons of the restaurant.\nThe ant. though stuffed wiih pie-\nfoul knave-\nWill leave thc picnic looking grave.\n-\u2022*\nI\nI\ni\nA Warsaw report Indicates that the English language and English literature are growing enormously in\npopularity throughout Poland. English, it is stated, is\nrapidly catching up to French which has hitherto been\nPoland's traditional second language. There is said to\nbe a great demand for English teachers, especially among\nthe business community keen to make the most of the\ncommercial usefulness of the language.\nThis growing regard for English has naturally been\naccompanied by a lively market for English books. But\nthe popular choice of authors is a little surprising. It is\nunderstandable that the works of Joseph Conrad, himself\na Pole by birth, should be in demand. Also John Galsworthy who has made in his books and plays so thorough\nand intimate a search into twentieth century English life\nand character. But when it comes to Edgar Wallace and\nP. G. Wodehouse, who come next on the list, there is room\nfor puzzlement. Perhaps the expenditure of mental effort\nrequired to master the intricacies of the English language\nhas temporarily left the Polish student's mind at the\nEdgar Wallace level. Wodehouse, of course, is on a higher plane. He typifies modern English humor. But it\nwould be interesting to know what Poland makes of\nJeeves.\n10 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelson Dally Newi Fllei\n.      (July 9, 1229)\nNight Constable Ralph Hale reports that between 230 and 250 occupied business premises In Nelson\nare left unlocked at night in Uie\ncourse of a year.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nAnother Slocan strike at depth had\nbeen recorded, according to W. H.\nBurgess of Kaslo. This Ume it is in\nthe Ruth mine at Sandon. where the\nold Hope vein has been cut. showing\n10 inches of zinc, mixed with lead.\n...\nR. W. Blanchard of Nelion and\nMiss Mary Fay of Chicago, were\nmarried at Spokane Monday (July\nI.) They have left for the coast on\na honeymoon and will reside in\nNelion.\n20 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelion Dilly Naws Files I\n+ _<J\n(July 9, 1915)\nAccording to an official appeal\nissued by the French relief society\nthe total casualUes from the beginning of the war up to June 1, are\n8,770,810. Of this number 2,228,000\nare reported killed, 4,837,510 wounded and 1.750,000 taken prisoner!.\nThe figures cover French, British,\nRussian, German. Austrian, Belgian.\nSerbian. Turkish and Japanese losses. There are no figures for Italy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nj    Born. June I. to Mr. and Mrs. L.\nF. Quance in Nelson, a daughter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. G. Gordon Brown\nof Upper Bonnington are vlsiUng\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCharles W. Busk of Deer Park\narrived in Nelson yesterday after\nspending a few days with the boy\nscouts at their camp at Kokanee.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\u25a0\nTHI NILION DAILY NEW*. NELSON. B.e.-TUESOAY MORNINO. JULV t. t\u00bbJ8\n\t\n\"I told you to pick the flowera\u2014not puU 'em out by the roots!\"\nHumorist\nPhilosophic View of Insomnia Urged\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING. M.D.\nI have been reading a book on\ninsomia, with much of which I am\ncompelled to disagree. The author\nthinks it is more important than I\ndo, and thinks it is due more to organic disease than has been my experience.\nTrue, organic conditions will\ncause insomna\u2014pain, for instance.\nBut if a person has enough pain to\nkeep him awake, he complains of\nthe pain and hardly minds the insomia at all. Insomia due to pain Is\nalso easy to treat, and should demand treatment by pain-easing\ndrugs (of which there arc many)\nor by the treatmen of the underlying cause.\nInsomia, if due purely to mental\nor personal cause, is not deleterious\nto health\u2014though it often makes\nthe patient very unhappy. True, the\ndigestive and certain other functions rest during sleep and such rest\nis good for them, but they also rest\nif you rest your body quietly in bed,\neven if awake.\nPHILOSOPHY BEST CURE\nThe best treatment of insomnia is\nto take a philosophic view of it. If\nyou realize that resting the body\nquietly ln bed in the dark (even if\nyou do not go to sleep) will result\nui refreshment and re-invigoratlon\nalmost as much as sleep itself, you\nwill have gained half the battle.\nAnd even more valuable is the fact\nthat if you take this attitude awhile,\nsleep will come. Because it has been\nfound that sleep is accompanied, especially in its early stages, with a\nrelaxation of all thc muscle fibers.\nIt is difficult to judge the amount\nof damage insomnia is doing because\nthere ii no normal standard for the\namount of sleep a person needs.\nOne person needs this much, an\nother that much. And the amount\nchanges wlUi different ages and\ndifferent conditions of life. So a\ndefinite prescription of the amount\nof sleep required cannot be' laid\ndown. The, amount of sleep one\ngets into the habit of taking is probably a good Indication of the\namount one needs, and is adjusted\nby Nature to the demands made by\none's intellectual activities.\nA good example of this is shown\nby the attitude of most people on\nshipboard. For the first few days\nthe journey stretches ahead as a\nlong vista of inactivity. People\nsleep like logs, not only longer than\ntheir usual quota at night, but getting in a daytime nap also. Then as\nthe trip nears a close, and they\nbecome excited about landing and\ngetting about their acUvc affairs\nagain, they find their nights broken\nand restless, and no daytime relief\nis found. It is simply the adjustment\nof the body to their daily needs.\nMANY METHODS USED\nFor the treatment of insomnia\nthere are many methods. The use ot\nhypnotic medicine may be advisable. I have a medical friend who\nsays that the best nerve tonics are\nsuch things as veronal or barbital,\nbecause there Is nothing so good\nfor the nerves as sleep.\nSo far as dietetic measures are\nconcerned, it is advised not to eat\nin the evening a large meal full of\nstarches which will ferment and\nkeep the digestive organs active all\nnight.\nMassage helps many, recalling\nCharcot's remark that massage is\nlocal hypnotism.\nAnd, believe it or not, wrapping\nyourself in a sheet wrung out of\neold water ls one of the best sleep\ninducers in thc world.\nMEN LACK THE PATIENCE REQUIRED\nIN TELEPHONE OPERATORS\nA cable from Amsterdam announces that Zeppelins\nsoon may replace steamships as the principal means of\ncommunication between Holland and the Dutch East\nIndies.\nThe chief steamship line, it seems, has been running at a substantial loss. Dirigibles, the steamship\ndirectors contend, could cover the distance between\nAmsterdam and Java in far less time and could convert\nthis loss into profit.\nPlans are said to be under way for buying a fleet\nof them from the Zeppelin people to be placed in regular\nservice under Dutch control.\nAll this probably hu a strange sound to the people\nin the neighboring republic, disillusioned by the loss of\nthe Akron and the Macon. But the Dutch are reported\nto feel that the Germans know enough about the building\nof giant airships to make them safe and reliable.\n'They've got the new vacuum\ncleanera equipped with ever'-\nthing necessary except a homin'\ninstinct to bring 'em back from\nthe neighbors.\"\nThere li e shortage of good young\nhorses in the United States just now.\nand the prices will rise for the coming five years, predict! a Cornell agriculturist\n(Written for the Ottawa Journal by\nFred Williams)\nIn 18S8 the Bell Telephone company made an experiment which\nrevolutionized the life of girls in\nCanada. It decided to employ girls\nto tend to the telephones, then a\nnovelty. In the diary of C. F. Sise,\nfor this date there is an entry: \"Women to be used for night operators,\nexperimentally, to see if the service\nImprove!.\"\nThe idea was not his own. It had\nbeen tried in the United States and\nhad proved good, and so it was adopted in Canada. It is quite evident\nthat there had been trouble with the\nmen operators. Old-timers declare\nthat they lost their tempers too easily; that they werc prone to argue\nwith subscribers; that they werc given to \"wise-cracking\" on the line; In\nshort, that they just about wrecked\nthe service,\n\"Once tried, always used\" might\nbc the definition of the use of women at the telephone. The three or\nfour girls employed as night operators in the Montreal exchange soon\nproved their worth. They were\nquick; they were willing; they were\ncourteous, and\u2014they did not use profane language in return when some\nuser waxed wrathy at his telephone.\nIt was not long before these night\ngirls became day operators and the\npioneers of an army of girls who\nlearned a means of earning a livelihood and did a public service. Today\nwith all the complexities of switchboards and their associated apparatus the telephone operator's work\nstill demands the even - tempered\ncalmness that only the feminine psychology seems to offer.\nOne telephone executive said not\nlong ago: There isn't e man in the\nworld who could control his temper\ncompletely for two hours while\nworking on a present day operating\nshift In a modernly equipped exchange. Within a half hour he'd have\nhis sleeves rolled up and would be\nyelling his head off at the subscriber, challenging him to come up and\nfight it out like a man.\"\n\u2022 Just what telephone operating haa\nmeant in the life of women would\nbe difficult to estimate. It may suffice to remember that thousands of\npresent day mothers and grandmothers received their-first lessons\nin public contact at work in various\ntelephone exchanges and that their\ninfluence upon general business has\nbeen a weighty contribution too\nseldom recognised.\nMachinery has reduced the number of girl operators, but even the\nautomatic cannot function without\nthat wisdom which the girl telephone operator contributes as her\nshare of its efficiency.\nThere is a legend in Montreal that\nMarie Tempest, the great English ac*\ntress, was once a telephone operator\nat Montreal. If that be true she must\nhave been one of the very first.\nUNEASY DOUKHOBORS\n(From The New York Sun)\nAlthough their leaders. Peter Verigin. denies that the Doukhobors\nare to add another chapter to their\nmigratory history of the last half\ncentury by moving in a body from\nwestern Canada to the Chaco region of South America, he says he\nwill lead his followers from thc Dominion. Before they finally reached\nSaskatchewan in the latter part of\nthe nineteenth century the Doukhobors had made settlements In\nsouthern Germany, the black lands\nof Russia, along the Mediterranean\ncoast and on the Island of Cyprus.\nTolstoy had interested himself In\ntheir behalf after they were forced\nto leave Russia on account of their\nopposition to participation in war\nand succeeded in calling their nlight\nto the attention of England, and. later, of Canada. With its large area\nof uncultivated land in Saskatchewan, the Canadian government decided to offer homes to them, and\nthe first shiploads ot settlers arrived\nin 1890. Before the end of that year\nthere were about 7500 Doukhobors\nin western Canada.\nAt flnt the newcomers appeared\nwell satisfied with conditions as they\nfound them, and under the direction\nof their leader. Peter Verigin. the\nfather of the present Peter, they\nmade good progress in the development of the lands which had been\nallotted to them. They had few\nneighbor! and they were thui\nbrought little outside influences.\nTheir eerly difficulties came from\nthe inclination of the younger members of the colonies to accept other\nthan the Doukhobors' long accepted\ncustoms and practices. Then came\nthe question of attending the government schools. The younger mem\nbers ot the colonies took advantage\nof the opportunities to obtain an\neducation, and many insisted that\nthey were not to be controUed by\nthe older tenets of their people and\nwere at liberty to do as they pleased\nln building tnelr own future. Another source of riction was what\ncourse the Doukhobors should foi\nlow in the war. The result was two\nantagonistic factions, one declaring\nfor a new rule and the other adhering to the teaching of the elders.\nNew colonies were founded by the\nmalcontents ln other sections of\nwestern Canada. It was a struggle\namong these contentious bodies that\nbrought about most of the disturbances which marked their activities\nln the last two years.\nThe more rebellious refused to re*\nmain in their homes and started on\nmarches to the provincial capitals.\nWhen the authorities attempted to\nstop these marches or to compel the\nmarchers to return to their homes\nthey retaliated by disrobing and accepting without complaint and with\nan air of martyrdom the penalties\nthat were imposed. The authorities\nat last arrested the more aggressive\nof the Doukhobors and sent many\nof them to prisons on Pacific Coast\nIslands. The treatment was effective\nin ending the parades and keeping\nthe people on their own properties.\nEver since they have been threatening to leave Canada. One of their\nproposals was to go to Mexico; but\nthe government there refused to\naccede to their terms. The egltatlon\nfor removal to South America followed this refusal, and their plan li\nto move Into a Chaco region near\nthat where the Menonltes a few\nyears ago established their principal\nSouth American colony.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nCAN -EAST MAKE HII\n\u2022IX SPADES?\nMany contracta never would soar\nio high if the final bidder realized\nwhat might happen to opponents\nwho overbid to force up the declaring aide. With the holdings ihown\ntoday it ii hard to iee why West\nfailed to at least once rebid Hearts\nand how he dared bid a Spade small\nslam for partner with the opening\nlead going through his King-Jack\nof Diamonds, up to the bidder of\nthat suit. Perhaps he read that\nSouth's opening must mean that he\nheld the mining Ace of Diamonds.\n\u2666 Nom\nt10 915\n\u2666Q9S64BS\n\u2022II\n\u2666 J97S 4AKQ8\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?,\nAll lettera to the editor muit be signed with the name ot .the\nwriter.   A nom de plume may be used for publication it desired.\nLlnei ln typewritten copy should be double spiced.        _\nTHINK HEALTH INSURANCE CHARGES\n\"ALTOGETHER TOO HIGH\"\ntAQJI\n41\nOK J\nOA\nnn\nt   K\ni\n\u2666 None\n\u2666 71\n\u2666 9875\n41\n\u2666 10141\ntill\n\u2666 A 10\n\u2666 KQJ10\nBidding went: South, one Club;\nWest, one Heart; NorUi, two Diamonds; East two Spades; South,\nthree Diamonds; West, three Spades;\nNorth, five Diamonds, probably de*\ncelved by his partner's immediate\nsupport of Diamonds; East, five\nSpades; South, six Diamonds, apparenUy intent upon pushing East\ninto i Spade small slam which could\nbe doubled profitably; West six\nSpades, which South doubled. Neither side was vulnerable.\nThe opening lead was the Ace of\nDiamonds, followed by the Ten,\neach side winning a single trick.\nDummy's Trey of Spades was led.\nWhen North discarded a low Diamond, the Declarer found what he\nwaa up against winning trick with\nhis Queen. He led his lowest club\nand Dummy was again in the lead\nwith Its Ace.\nA single discard of a Club on\nDummy's Ace of Hearts would do\nDeclarer no good. He led Dummy's\nlowest Heart and ruffed with his\nKing. He had to save his low trumps\nfor another purpose. East led the\nFive of Spades. When South played\nthe Four Dummy's Seven won the\ntrick. The Four of Hearts was led\nfrom Dummy. Declarer ruffed with\nhis Aee of Spades. He led back his\nlast trump, the Six. Whether South\nplayed his Eight or Ten Dummy's\nJack and Nine must pick up the two\nlast trumps held by the defender.\nDummy's two trumps captured the\ntwo Spades held by South. Now\ncame the real test of East's strategy\nThe fact that South played the Ten\nof Clubs on Declarer's lead of that\nsuit instead of the Six. marked\nSouth with four Spades, three\nHearts, two Diamonds and four\nClubs. The whole thing hinged upon\nwhether North or South held the\nmissing King of Hearts. If South\nheld that key card the contract was\nassured. In caie North held the King\nof Hearts It would not drop and\nEast would be down three tricks,\nlosing a Heart, a Diamond and a\nClub. Dummy's Ace of Hearts picked up the missing King at the tenth\ntrick and the three remaining\nHearts won the last three tricks of\nthe small slam contract.\nComment upon the proposed\nstate health insurance draft plan\nfor British Columbia from Canadian\nAnti-Vivisection society, Victoria,\nB.C.\n\"L We are of the opinion that the\ncharges proposed, being 5 per cent\nof income, sre altogether too high.\nIt is practically a heavy income\ntax tor one single item of social\nservice.\n\"In companies operating in British Columbia it was formerly the\ncustom for. employees, If they desired, to pay II a month to the\ndoctor; this give employees and\nI their families free medical service.\nNo administration expenses were\nrequired.\n\"Though there must necessarily\nbe administration expenses under\nany scheme, the most as set out in\nthe proposed plan of $662,500 a year\nappears to be excessive, exceeding\nas it does the entire cost of service\nto 100,000 Indigent people at half\nprice.\n\"There seems to be no possible\nmeaning in thc statement 'page 6)\nlhat the cost of 'preventable mortality' each year in British Columbia is ai8.000.000.\n\"2. On page 11\u2014\"Every Insured\nperson is to have the right to choose\nthe doctor by whom he may be\ntreated,\" etc.\n\"We submit that the taxpayer has\nthe right to select also iny form of\ntreatment he shall desire and that\nchiropractors, osteopaths and drugless heelers should be included in\nthe eet.\n\"3.  On  page  19\u2014'Broad .powers\ngiven commission to organize \u25a0.. (\npreventive medicine.' ej\n\"We strongly feel that provision i\nshould be made that no compulsion,\neither direct or indirect may ba\napplied to any person, either by\nthe commission, by medical men or\nby employers, to induce taxpayers\nunder the act to be vaccinated or\ninoculated or to submit to any form\nof treatment to which that person\nmay have an objection.\n\"ISee also part VI, par. 2, page 47.)\n\"We consider that lt should be\nmade in offence for iny employer\nto bring iny pressure to bear upon\nany employee to undergo any treatment to which hc conscientiously\nobjects.\n\"4. We would suggest that the act\nprovide that no member of any\ncommission and no medical man\nshall be interested, directly or Indirectly, In any company or business\nwhich manufactures any drugs,\nserums, vaccines or appliances.\n\"5. We note that the advisory\nboard to be appointed under the act\nhas no authority. We consider that\nit would be desirable to have a\nrepresentative of employees on tho\ngeneral council or on the proposed\nappeal board.\n\"6. We wish to state most itrongly\nthat we deprecate the tendency in\npresent day legislation to establish\nboards which assume any powers\nof decision which should properly\nbelong to the courts and which\neliminate appeal to the courts.\"\nTwo Ex-Kings Await Invitations to Throne\nGARDENERS\nMUST KNOW\nTHEIR BUGS\nBy   DEAN   HALLIDAY\nCentral Presa Qerden Expert\nEvery gardener not only must\nknew how to grow flowers, but he\nalao must know how to apply poisons. Every gardener should own a\nsprayer or duster on both to apply\nthe poisons, and when using iifv ot\nthe insect controls, apply them on\nevery part of the plant.\nThe gardener has to know Just\nhow the various insects feed before\nhe can hope to control them. Many\nchew and bite, others pierce and\nsuck. The soft-bodied or sucking\ntype of Insect pierce the stems or\nleaves of the plant and suck the\nplant juices through their tubes.\nThis causes the plant to become very\nweak and often to die. These pests\nare best controlled by a contact\nspray which kills them as it touches\nthem. A nlcoUne or pyrethrum\nipray is very effective.\nThe other group of Insects which\nchew and bite the foliage are controlled by stomach poisons usually\ncontaining arsenate of lead. In this\ngroup are the cabbage and tomato\nworms, various caterpillars, beetles\nand grasshoppers.\nIf you are troubled with slugs or\nsnails, uae either lime or salt in a\ncircle around the plant or group of\nplants affected. As they crawl over\nthe lime or salt it is absorbed into\ntheir bodies md they die immediately.\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nSCRAP BOOK\nTHE VALUE OF SOLITUDE\n\"Learn to be heppy alone. If we\ndo not enjoy our own society, why\nInflict It upon others.\"\u2014Mary Stanhope.\n...\n\"Solitude is as needful to the\nImagination as society is wholesome\nfor the character.\"\u2014Lowell.\n* \u2022   \u2022\n\"Spirit God ls heard when thc\nsenses 'are silent\" \u2014 Mary Baker\nEddy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n\"Solitude Is the beet nurse of wisdom.\"\u2014Laurence Steme.\neel\n\"They are never alone who are\naccompinied with noble thoughts.\"\n-Sir Philip Sydney.\nMilton Bronner, noted London\ncorrespondent, writes: Anxious-\nbenchers George of Greece and\nWilliam of Wied. Reasons: Hopes\nof getUng back on Balkan thrones.\nChinees: Fifty-fifty for George,\nnot thit good for William.\nEx-King George is largely a Dane\nby blood, being sprig of that royal\nhouse of Denmark whose George\nFirst was chosen King of Greece\nin 1863. Ill luck hss msinly been the\nportion of this adopted royalty.\nThe first George was assassinated\nat Salonika in 1013. His son, Constantine. was dethroned during the\nWorld War. forced to live in exile,\nthen called back to the throne, then\nonce more compelled to abdicate.\nThe present and second George of\nGreece had to leave the country\nwhen the mercurial Greeks decided\nto have a republic, at thc same time\nofficially deposing ind banishing\nhim in 1924.\nSince then he has been one of that\nstrange little army of the unemployed, uneasy ghosts ot their former\nselves\u2014the rulers who no longer\nrule. George, still good-looking and\nvery much alive at 45, often spends\npert of his yeir in England, where\nsome of thc nice, well-behaved papers, which \"mind their manners\",\nalways refer to him as \"King\nGeorge\". They never, never put that\nodious \"ex\" before the title. They\nthus help George to dream of what\nmay be. For a long time his dreams\nseemed futile. But his fortunes are\nlooking   up   now.\nVenizelos\u2014greatest enemy of his\nhouse\u2014by supporting the recent re-1\nbellion of repulblicans agiinst thc *\nsemi-demi. Goverpment crowd of |\nroyslist sympathizers headed by I\nPremier Tsaldaris, has paved the |\nway for George. The republican re- j\nvolt wis crushed, some of its leiders !\nsent to prison snd still others, in-'\neluding Venizelos. went into exile\nThe only seeming birrler to George's\nreturn to thc throne is Genenl Kon-\ndylis, who was one of the main supports of the government in crushing\nthe rebellion. Kondylis happens to\nbc a sincere republican. But he\nmiy not resist if the country in a\nfree plebiscite decides it wants\nGeorge back in his one-time kingdom. George is more than willing.\nHe Is eager. He is counting the\ndays. And he may not have to wear\nhimself out counting.\nIt's different with William of\nWied. After the Balkan wars when\nSiberia, Greece, and Bulgaria had\nknocked the stuffing out of Turkey\nand taken away Albania. German\ninfluence plumped for Prince William of Wied as Albanian king, and\nWilliam it was.\nWilliam landed in his new domain\nearly in 1914. The World Wir broke\nout and the wild Albanians sent\nhim packing in September, 1914.\nBut William took the precaution not\nto abdicate. Instead, he promised his\nunloving subjects he would come\nback any time they wanted him to.\nUp to now they have not expressed\nany great yearning to that effect.\nWilliam is getting on in years. He\nis 59, but would like to get back\nthat misty throne so he could bequeath it to his son. Carol Victor,\nwho is a perfectly good German,\nstudying law at the University of\nTucbingen.\nAll of William's hopes ore founded on the present ruler of Albania-\nKing Zogu, who is in bad health\nand a bachelor. There is no son and\nno near male relative to succeed\nhim. When he passes, there may be\na wild scramble for the empty place.\nBut William would seem to be a\nhopeless optimist. The Albanians\nnever loved him to begin with. In\nthe next place, Italy, which haa a\nparamount interest in Albania and\nhas invested lots ot money there, Is\nsure to place a veto on any German\ntaking the throne. Mussolini and\nHitler no longer love each other.\nBenito would not tolerate any ruler\nwho would be pleasing to the eyes\n\u2022nd imbitions of Adolf thc Greet\n1  35 YEARS AGO   \\\n\u25a0 From Nelson Delly Tribune Files!\n* \u00ab\n(July I, 1900)\nS.  A. Fleming, amalgamater ot\nthe Granite mill has purchased Lots\n3 and 4, Block 47, Fairview, from\nAlex Stewart.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nLapointe and  Croft are shipping\nfive cars of brick to Cranbrook.\n\u2022 *   *\nPlans made by Ewart and Carrie\nfor the new Congregational church\nhave been accepted end work will\nbegin on the building this week.\nThe church Is to feee Stanley street\nand wiU accomodate 450 people\neasily.\nFOR PANELS\nKootenay Cottonwood\nil unexcelled in the\nbeauty of ita grain\nai it ii unexcelled in\nutility end economy.\nRepeat orders prove\nlta popularity.\nDlitrlct Distributors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\"Build B.C. Payroll.\"\nWhot\nGives It\nFirst\nPlace?\nA lady writes to tell us ahe prefers Pacific Milk and has preferred\nit a long time. She says she first\nheard of it in i wiy to mak* an\nimpression upon her when lhe\nfound that four of her friends were\nuiing it constantly.\nPacific Milk\nSh I omenta of Canadian beef to\nthe United States during the month\nof April. 1935. amounted to 955,900\npounds as against none a year ego.\nThe April beef exporti to Greit Britain amounted 3.300 pounds as\nagainst 100.799 In April. 1934. The\ntotal exports of Canadian beef for\nthe first four monthi of 1935 were\n6.988.700 pounds, as compared with\n2,831.600 poundi for the first four\nmonth! of 1934.\t\nUnleu protection ii soon given,\nthe bald eagle, national bird of the\nUnited States, is likely to follow the\ndodo to exUnctlon.\nFAYMOWE\nand\nRAKES\nNow it the tint* te purchase a mw mower er\nrake fer your hay making. We have them in ttock,\nMower Repalra for Moet of the\nPopular Makei of Machines\nQUICK SERVICE!\nNelson Hardware Co\nWholeiale and Retail Quality Hardware\nJ\n 1,1\n1 '\n\t\n\t\n\t\n\t\n~h$\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. JULY *. 1938\n_-_>\n\u25a0PAGE SEVEN\n\u25a0 Wann laily Urns\nMember of tha Canadian Dally\nI      Newspaper! Auociation\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connecting ta\nall Departmenti\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy   I  Dl\nBy carrier, per week     .25\nBy carrier, per year _... 13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to lub-\ntcriben living outside regular\ncarrier areu. per month, 80c;\nthree monthi, 81.80; ilx monthi,\n$3.00; one year, $6.00.\nUnited States and Grut Britain, one month, 75c; tlx monthi,\nHOO: ona yaar. 87.50.\nForeign countrlu, other than\nU. S., aame at above plua any\nextra poitagc.\n\u25a0mmr\nOOLIOHTLY-To Mr. and Mn.\nFrederick Golightly of Taghum at\nthe Kootenay Lake General hoipl-\ntal, July 8, a ion,\nHOOGERWERF-To Mr, and Mn.\nJohn Hoogerwerf, High itreet, at\nthe Kootenay Lake General hoipital,\nJuly 7, a ton,\nMATATALL-To Mr. and Mn. H.\nMatatall, at Trail-Tadanac hoipltal,\nSaturday, Jupe 29, a ion.\nFOR SALI OR IXCHANCE\n20 PAIRS HOMER AND CAR-\nneaux Plgeoni, tive pure-bred Angora rabblti, or trade for pulleta.\nlu, Klnnalrd, Cutlegar, (2440)\nCOW, T-6 FRESHEN IN OCTOBER,\nor will change for freth cow. J.\nTedeico, Box 173, City.      (2382)\nNIIION DAILY NIWS OlASSITOtD\naaa.   Thi\nbuyera f\ndirtrlot.\n__ie~TeV_I5\" Ml-mien 'and\ntn tor Mellon anl aurrousdlna\n....................................mm..........\nMb? -\u2122m,Wt\u2122*)&f\u2122\u2122\u2122\\_W [\nCHAPTER 42\nThe tun wai well up and hli wrilt\nwatch pointed to nine o'clock when\nVal aroie to build firu and put on\nthe coffee pot. Ua. he uw, itill\nilept Mundly. He pauied to gaie\ndown at the imall tinted-ivory face\non the piUow and breathed the hope\nthat she would awaken In a happier\nmood than ihe had lately ihown.\nAfter tha kettle boiled he went\ninto the waihroom to thave and\nthere wu itartled to a ihamed realization of the unwholetoma. blear-\neyed young man who faced him in\nlhe mirror. Too much to drink last\nnight Just u he was, m dusty, disheveled clothes, he had tumbled\ndown to ileep. Now he longed ior\na steaming ahower and ..uh linen.\nA hot bath waa. of coune. im*\n\u2022oouible. but it occurred to him that\nJ clip in the lake with a briik rub-\ndown to follow might not be a bid\nidea. When he had ihived he .sought\nIhe porch to imped the placid theet\not water, but felt hu courage quail\nat the proapert of that lint Icy\n\"'sSreiy. he muat be getting aoft to\nwelch at a cold dip on a blamy morning like this. He tilled hit lungs\nwith a grut breath of cur mountain air and thought that, alter all.\nthe Prestons had come to thla Place\nto conquer Juat tuch increasing flab*\nbhieis of will and body. Since he\nmuit, he reflected, diicipline him\n\u00ab1( test number one might u well\nbe .dto in that exhilir.tlng blue\nwater. And. perhapi. if \u2022*\u2022'wera in\ntlie mood. Lia might even Join him\nFired with enthusium he itnpped\nhii brown body to don his iult and\nflannel robe, then fetched Las\nbathing gear and placed it beside the\nbunk When he had armed hImieU\nwith a cup of Ploing hot coffee he\n.pnroached and touched her gent y.\n\"Time to rise and shine\/ he laid.\n\u2022'Wake un and drink this. .    ..\nShe sat erect and stared about her\nwith atartled eyu. When aha aaw\nVbI and reali-ed her lurroundings,\n,he peered eullenly from beneath\nher fashes but reached out a hand\nfor the coffee. While ihe upped it\nVal explained, \"I have bacon and\neggs ready to put in the pan. But\nthe sun is warm, it'i a gorgeoui day\nnnd I want you to come for a awlm\nwith me before wc have breakfait.\n\"I am going nowhere wl h you but\nback to Towner's.\" ihe uid icily. 1\nihall itay in this bed until you come\nto your sensu.\" ___t__.ii\n\"For your uke, be a iport, ua.\nhe pleaded. \"I'm not enjoying thii\nsituation any mora than you are.\nBut I am trying to uve our marriage and you muit help me. Admitted I'm not iuch a hot huiband;\nbut you've been to blame, too. Anyway. I won't tit by any longer\nand witch you drltt on in this n-\ndiculoui poie you've affected lately.\nI'm fed up with thit Chlneie stuff\nyou deck yourself in. I'm lick of\nyour play-acting\u2014your everlasting\npretending. Initead of the girl 1\nmarried, you've turned youraell\ninto the maik in Cordray i-play. Oh.\nso tar al you are concerned, Im not\nquuUoning hit good faith. But I\nvetant your wearing the clothu he\nsugguta. He chootei your perfume,\nvour hair-dreti, your Pertian cat,\nthoie damned clinking bracelet!.\nWell, I refute to permit my wife to\nmold henelf to that pattern. Iva\nbrought you to thli place to get back\nto normal. That is why I propose wa\nshall remain here.\"\n\"Oh, I reckon we won't itav to\nve'y long.\" Her alow voice held a\ntaunL He followed her gaie to the\nalmoit empty Scotch bottle that itlll\ngraced the table. \"You.can't get on\nwithout your liquor and you know\nit Her contemptuoui words whipped tha blood into hii face. \"Ai -soon\nai those other bottlei ara empty\nwa will head for home.\"\nHa itared at her with outraged\neyu. \"You are being unpleaianUor\nno good reason,\" he uld Indignantly.\n\"Pleue try to meet me halt way in\nthii. When you've had breikfait\nyou'll feel better about everything, I\nhope. Put on your iult now and\ncome for a iwlm.\"\n\"Here ln thli bed 1 He until you\npromise to take me home.\" ihe in-\nliitcd itubbornly.\nA dangeroui light flamed in Val'i\nblue eyu. Ha slipped out of hit\nflannel robe ahd threw lt acrou a\nchair. \"We hava come here for a\npurpose,\" he aald evenly. \"Right\nnow we are going to swim. Either\nput on your iult and do It properly\n\u2014or I ihall be forced to carry you\ndown and throw you ln.\"\n\"You wouldn't dare!\" the cried,\nher eyu black with anger.\n\"Wouldn't I, though!\" He leaned\nsuddenly to catch her up and bora\nher iwlftly out of the houie and\nalong the path, righting, icreamlng,\nthe itruggied furiouily so that her\nsheer gown wai ripped to shredi and\ntorn off. But though he tried not\nto hurt her hc grasped her naked\nUtile body the tighter ind kept dog-\nf;adlv on. Juit before he reached thc\nog float with hit struggling burden\n\u2022he sink pointed coral nalla in hli\ncheek ind clawed until the blood\noozed. White with anger, he lifted\nhar high and toned her into the\ndeep witer.\nAn imtant later he, too, plunged\nIn and forced her to itrike out toward the center of the lake. He wai\na powerful swimmer and he watched carefully to lee thit she did not\ntire. She swam well as she had frequently boasted she could, but when\nhe thought the had exerted henelt\nsufficiently he headed her ln toward\nshore again.\nHla blood raced through his veins\nnow and he felt intensely alive and\nstimulated. He emerged trom the\nwater, however, to realize that hli\nwife'i fury had not been cooled by\ntha icy bath. Obllvoui to her naked-\nneu, her featurei convulied with\nrage, the turned on him to cry hysterically:\n\"I'll nevah to'give you for thli, Val\nPruton. Nevah) I\u2014I'd kill you lf\nI could! Oh, I'd give my toul not\nto have married you. you drunken\nfool\u2014\" Her wet hair hung acrou\nher .taring eyu. Her face wai\ntwiited into an ugl\/muk of bitterness. \"You aren't even a good officer,\" aha itormed. \"And becauie the\nYard people duplte you they illght\nme, your wife. Not only that, you ve\nneglected me to Invent a device that\ncould make ut rich; but now you'll\nitand by and let your old navy take\nit without so much as a thank you.\nOh, lf you were a real man you\nwould claim what is rightly youn.\nYou would take proper care of your\nwife, make me happy. But Initead,\nyou bring me to this teh'ble place to\ntorture me. Oh, I hate you. I despise\nyou!\"\nShe lobbed with anger, then\n\u2022creamed ihrilly, \"But I don t have\nto itay with you. Only wait until I\nget away trom hare; I will divorce\nyou. Thank heaven, there ii lome-\none who wlll take care of me. I\nhave Intended for a long time to\nleave you lf you didn't mend your\nwayt. Now 111 ihow you I won't\nbe treated like this. I will put you\nand your navy In the headlines\nwhen I tell about your\u2014brutality.\nI wlll divorce you. I\u2014I'd even kill\nyou if I could\u2014\"\nHe watched her rage with hard,\ndiilllusioned eyu. Divorce eh? So\nthat wai what ihe'd been brooding\nabout. But if she thought her father would willingly undertake her\nsupport .gain, ihe wu crazy. Whatever hit rcuont for coming to\nBremerton, Garenne evidently had\nno intention of Incurring any freih\nresponsibility where the wai concerned.\nAt he itared at hit wife'i cxqul-\ntite. naked body Val was shaken\nwith an inner nautca that wu almoit overpowering. It amazed him\nthat ha had ever thrilled at her\nbeauty. Now with toul and body\nstripped before him, the wat loathe-\nsome. He leaned forward to match\nup the torn nightdreu and threw it\nabout her. Averting hii tick eyu\nhe tald. \"You had better go into the\nhouse and dreis.\"\nWhen he had donned breechu.\nclean shirt and high laced booti, he\nlet about the preparation! for breakfast. Perhapi when they had eaten\nthey might return to unity. Lia\ndressed and sat huddled in an arm\nchair. But after he placed food on\nthe table ihe would not partake of\n\"You had nothing to eat lait\nnight,\" he flnilly uld. \"I lmlit you\nitop playing the martya and come\nto your breikfait.\"\nShe iprang to her feet \"You in-\n\u2022lit! ihe cried. \"I luppoie I ihall\nbe beaten If I don't What else can\nI expect from a drunken bully who\ntorturu a woman! A drunken\nbeast\u2014\"\nThere wu a blue line about hli\nmouth. He strode to the cupboird\nand brought out the bottlei of\nwhiskey. Then he italked out to the\nporch and amaihed tham vlclouslv\none after the other, on a rock by\nthe dooratep. A while later, aihamed\nof hla melodramitic gesture he\ncame slowly back into the room. But\nwhen he had forced himielf to eat a\nlittle and had drunk a iecond cup of\ncoffee, he itood up abruptly .nd left\nthe houie.\n(To  Be Continued)\nVallican Sports Day\nVALLICAN, B.C.. July 8.-Duplte\ntho dull wuther the people of the\ncommunity enjoyed sports held under auipices of the Vallicin Improvement lociety Mondiy, Julv 1. Races\nand Jumping werc contested by\nall agei. Dinner and mpper were\nterved ln the hall by the ladlei\nAn Ice cream cone and orange and a\nchocolate bar were given to each\nkiddie on the grounds.\nA amall dance was held in thc\nevening.\nMr. and Mn. H. Home, are spending a few dayi in Nelson, guests\nof C. E. Clirk.\nMn. W. Young of Ptsimore tpent\nthe- weik-end here wllh Mr. and\nMn.  O. Ward and family.\nMlis Helen Tilbot of Trill tpent\nthe holiday with her pirents, Mr.\nand Mn. Wm. Talbot.\nMlu Eleanor Coleman wai a\nviiltor to Nelion Tuetdiy to lee\nher mother, Mn. E. T. Coleman, who\nil a patient In Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital at preient.\nMil* M. Lauriente who had been\nteaching here for a year returned to\nher home In Trill. Mondav.\nC. Dawdy of Trill ipent the weekend a gueit of Mr. and Mn. W.\nInnu.\nMn. F. Soucey was a visitor to\nMr. .nd Mn. S. Stewirt of Trail,\nTuesday.\nMr. and Mn. G. Strong and L Roy\nwere builness vltlton to Nelson\nTuesdiy. Mrs. Strong remitncd and\nIs a patient at Kootenay Lake General hospital.\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS,  ETC.\nWANTED - MARRIED COUPLE\nwith ateady work to rent furnlihed house. Exceptional opportunity. Apply Box 2488, Daily Newt.\n(24S8)\nFURN. OR UNhjfiN. APTS. BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts, bldg\n(2403)\nFURN1SED    HOUSEKEEPING\nroomi for rent Annable Block.\n(2404)\ntfuWr'siNdLE fto6M_3. .11\nCarbonate atreet or Phone 853L.\n(2077)\nTHREE R60M HOUSE WITH GAR*\nden. Phone D. Maglio, 808L. (2258)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nPrlgldalre equipped suites. (2405)\nFOR RENT -TWO ROOM SUITE\nin K.W.C. Block. (2370)\nFURNISHED SUITE. APPLY 507\nSilica or Phone 440X, (2310)\n5 ROOM MODERN HOUSE. tHONE\n488L or apply 220 Vernon. (2438)\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nFILMS DEVELOPED-ANY SIZE,\n25c With 1 print from each negative. Extrajorints 8 for 25c. Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon. (2374)\nPARM  LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non euy terms in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Write for full information to 908-Dept. ot Natural Reaourcu, CPJt., Calgary, Alberta.\n(2375)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\n1 LAUNCH, 1 BOATHOUSE FOR\nsale cheap. A. Ling, Balfour, B.C.\n (2456)\n16 Ft tkmt, 3 FT. BEAl-t. G005\nahape. $28. Phone 508R1,     (247jh\nHOUSES WANTED\n8 TO 6 ROOM UNFURN. SUITE OR\nbungalow. Centrally located. Mrs.\nB. Jamu, General Delivery, City.\n(2308)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nCLEAN COMFORTABLE HOTEL.\nFurnlihed cottagei on beach.\nReal camping. Fishing and iwimmlng, etc. Write to Outlet hotel\nW. A Ward, Procter, B. C. (2392)\nKOOTENAY BAY FOR HOLI*\ndays. Summer cottagu to rent\nGood Beach. Good bathing and\nfishing. Apply Storekuper.\n(2161)\nARROW LAKES HOTEL, EDGE\nwood. The logical place to itop on\nthe road to Vernon. Comfortable\nrooma and good meals. E. Nicder*\nman. proprietor. (2383)\nCAIRNSLEA, N. SHORE. 3 MLS.\nNelion. Beautiful beach. Paying\ngueits. Misi Heffernan, R.R. No. 1.\n (2402)\nALPINE INN, CHRISTINA LAKE,\n. via Caicade. Ideal holiday resort\nBeautiful surroundings. Sporti.\n(2378)\nBALFOUR BEACH FOR HOLI-\ndiyi. Modern furn. cottagei. Boats.\nG. H. Green, Balfour, B. C. (2490)\nWHEN PLANNING YOUR HOLIDAY\nCONSULT\nTHE\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED\nCOLUMN\nSUMMER HOMES,\nRESORTS AND CAMPS\nThere You Will Find a List of Up-to-Date\nVacation Spots.\nFor Servlc* Phone lean Robertson at\n144\nOut of Town Readers\u2014Prompt Attention Civen\nto Mail Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nUSED MORE    Largest In the Interior    READ MORE\nBEAUTY SCHOOLS\nMOLER BEAUTY SCHOOL, OUR\ngraduates are always in demand,\nnroll now at reduced rates. Write\nfor free catalog and information\nMoler Beauty School, 217 Waili\nSt., Spokane, Wash. (2479)\nUSED CARS\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERV INVENTOR\nLlit ot wanted invention! and full\ninformation iant tree. The Ramaay\nCompany World Patent Attorneys, 273 Bank St Ottawa, Canada\n(2373)\nFOR SALE\nAJ-A-X\nStandard Lump\nCOAL\n$9.50 per Ton\nStill Cold Enough for\na Fire\nWilliams Transfer\nPhone 106\n(2900)\nPERSONAL\nUP TO 830 EACH PAID FOR U. S.\nIndian head cents. We buy all\ndatei, regardleai of condition. Up\nto 81.00 each paid for Lincoln\nHead centa. Up to 8180 each tor\nCanadian coins. We buy Stamp\nCollections, Medals, Bookt, Old\nPaper Money, Gold, etc, Send 25c\n(coin) for large illustrated price\nlilt and instructions. Satisfaction\nguaranteed or 25c refunded. Hub\nCoin Shop, 158*3 Front Street.\nSarnia, Ont (2372)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods. 25 Latex assortment for $1.\nOrder direct and be sure ot beat\nPacked plain. Free catalogue. National Importers, 218-6th. St. West\nCalgary, Alta. (2478)\nEXPERT DRESSMAKER. FUR RE-\npaired. 511 Carbonate St. Ph. 853L.\n(2377)\nEczema Itch Pilot Ulceri Try Gw Lae\nChina Remedy at Hudson'! Bay Co.\n(2391)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nTWO EXPERIENCED WAITRESS\nea want tummer reiort or bote,\nwork. Box 2481, Dally Newi.\n(24811\nYOUNG WOMAN, FIRST CLASS-.\ncook, want! any work immediate-\nly. Box 2484, Dally News.     (2484)\nEXPERIENCED CHAMBERMAID\nwants work immediately. Box 2482\nDaily Newi. (3482)\nYOUNG MAN, 22, WANTS WORK\nof ony kind. Apply 722 Baker St.\n(2457)\nWE HAVE EVERYTHING AND\neverything in the amall rubber\nlines. Order by mail direct from\nmanufacturer and aave 75%. All\norders are mailed postpaid by us\nin plain wrapper. Mail order catalogue tent free on requeit Novelty Rubber Mfg. Company, Box\n353, Dept K.5, Hamilton, Ontario.\n (MOO)\nSUPERIOR BRASS BED, OSTER-\nmoor matt, new iprlngi. Large\nrug, dishes, tooli. Phone 598L1.\n (2507)\nWo cany largest stock reconditioned\nI Pipe and fittings suitable for all\npurposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yard\n220- 1st E Vancouver, B.C. (2492)\n.lENTED 4~ ROOMED COTTAGE,\nFairview. Plumbing. 3 lots. $750\ncaah or 3-00 rental terms. Apply\n1319 SUnley St (2452)\nOR SALE-BARRELS KEGSfSU1\ngar sacks liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (2493)\nHILCO RADIO FOR SALE. .\ntubes. Good condiUon. Phona 843L.\n (2503)\nL COMBINATION\ncondition. Cheap.\n(2504)\n,M TItUdK,' L05J3\nApply Renwlck'i\n(2510)\nBABYlED AND BUGGY. APPLY\n719 Victoria street (2407)\nHELP WANTED\nEXPERIENCED COOK FOR\nimall family. Phone 843L. (2502)\nWANTED FOR GENERAL HOUSE-\nwork. elderly woman. References\nrequired. Ph. 79R or P.O. Box 372.\n'   (2393)\nRLASSIFIID    ADB.    READ\nuh  them\u2014it  D-y.i\nJAS AND COA\nrange.   Good\nThone 843L.\n2H-TO GRAfi\nwheel bue.\nTranifer.\n6 HOLEMcCLARY RANGE CHEAP\nfor cath. Ph. 376R morningi. (2432)\nCANARIES\nFOR SALE, YELLOW CANARIES.\nGood singers. Ph. 892R3. P.O. Box 283\n(2431)\nROOM AND BOARD\nVACANCY FOR TWO MEN.\nLaundry done. Box 2454, Dally\nNews. (2454)\nFORD LIGHT DELIVERY 1929. IN\ngood condition. COO or exchange\nfor Coupe. Box .401 Daily News\n(2401)\n1928 CHEV. SEDAN. GOOD CON\"\ndition. 17,000 milei. Thorp, Robson.\n(2381)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\n8 ROOM HOtlSE. 2 LOTS. GOOD\ncorner. Clote ln. 81800. Apply Box\n2378 DaUy Newi (2378)\nLOST AND POUND\nTo Finders\nIt you find a cat or dog a pocketbook. Jewelry or fur or anything else of value telephone\nThe Daily Newi. A \"Found\"\nAd will be Inierted without\ncott to you. Wa will collect\nfrom the owner.\nFOUND  GOLD.WRIST   WATCH\nPhone 847L or call at Daily News.\n(2494)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants Insurance and Real Estate\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, S.FA.E.\nInternational Accountant\nP.O. Box 1091     Nelion, B.C.\n(2408)\nAssayera\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Allayer, Chemlit Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer:\nSampling A enti at Trail and Tacoma Smelters. 301-305 Josephine\nSt. Nelaon, B. C- (2407)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOQD\nProvincial Anayer and Chemiit 618\nBaker Street, N\u00bblion. B. C.   P. O.\nBox No. 728. Repreientlng Ship-\nperi' intereit it Trail. B.C. (2408)\nChiropractors\nJ. R. MCMILLAN, D.C.   PALMER\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelion.\n(2351)\nElectrical\nJ. T. COATES-The Electric Store.\nSuppliei and Installation!\nPhone 768 P. O. Box 1085\n(2409)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nE. L. WARBURTON It COMPANY\nNELSON, B.C.\nMine Surveys, Plant and Eitlmatei.\nAgenta: Oilt, Greaiei and Speci-\naltlei. Bltuminoui coals trom the\nCrOw'a Neit Past. Mine luppllei\nand machinery, 879)\nA. H GREEN CO, LTD 516 WARD\nSt. Phone -84, Nelion, B.C, (2410)\nH. D. DAWSON. NELSON\nENGINEER and SURVEYOR\n(2411)\nBoyd C. Affleck, Frultvale, B. C\nLand!,   Mineral  Claimi,   Waterworks, iurveyi, plant, eitlmatei.\n(2412)\nFlorists\nSprayi, wreaths, symbolic designs,\ncarefully made at reaaonabla prlcea.\nShipped anywhere. Cut flowen and\nSlants\u2014Phone 233\nN FLOWER SHOPPE\n(2413)\nHidis and Furs\nGUARANTEED    STORAGE-Expert remodelling and repairing:\nlow ratei; prompt lervice. Polar\nFurs Ltd.. S48 Granville, Vanc'r\n(2498)\nTypewriter Service\nNELSON TYPEWRITER AGENCY.\nSalea and lervice. Fhone 197.\n(2415)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReal eitate. iniurance, **entals.\n217 Baker St.        (2416)\nR. W. DAWSON, Rea) Eatate, iii**\nsurance, Rental!. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker Stree.      (24171\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(2418)\nH. E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nlurance. Real Estate. 508 Ward. St\n 42419)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE!\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block.\n(2420)\nLIFE, FIRE. AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulln, Ph. 70, (2421)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Eitate. Phone 135.      (2422)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes ot Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.\nMotor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding.\nPhone 593 324 Vemon Street\n(2423)\nMatornlty Homes\nELIZABETH PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Phyilclin ln attendance. Ph. Broad 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Waih.\n(2424)\nMining and Mill Machinery\nEMPIRE MACHINES LTD. NEL-\nlon. Mining and Mechanical En-\ngineeri. ~ (2360)\nPhotographs\n\"PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEASE\"\nGEO. A. MEERES. 713 Baker. Ph 46\n(2423)\nSash  Factory\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY Hardwood merchant 217 Baker Street.\n  (2426)\nSecond Hand Stores\nSEE ARK RECONDITIONED COOK\nitovei before buying new one.\n  12427)\nDRESSES AND SUITES AT\" MRS.\nRadcliffe'i. (2428)\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST, REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St.\n  (2429)\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED ADS.\nBRINCINC UP FATHER\nBy Ceo. McManus\nTILLII THE TOILER\nBy Rust Wtstovet\n,\\Al HERE'S YOUte\ntelNtS, TILUE?    \\Q\nGOOD\ngrief!\nIT'S GONE\nNan\u2122 tniuMt, he. Ohm Kuti. tgfcn -wt*t_\nSEE; IT'S s-.-JC.tiH\nVtW VMEREN'T\nVAlEAaiNe THE\nOtXlfflMAJU\n[PHOMV,    EHT HE^TAKE VT\nBACK- I ME BEEN OOUBUE-CROSSS)\nTHE CUMPS\nBy Sldnty Smith\nOM.BCJY-LOOK WAT* COWNCr-\nMAMA DEBTROB*-\nTHIB I* tSrOlNto TO BS CaOOD-\nVOILL I HANE PUN VJUEN\nI KID MER ABOUT \\NHO'\u00bb\nBOBB OF HER. HOUBE\nNOMVADAYE-\n,>NATCH MEfclV*.\nHER THE RAX* :\n1\noq.v-9.\nV-JELL-WEU.*-* AND HOW ARE YOU.\nMR*. OE VTR01B .' TEU. ME - l\u00ab IT <fRUE\/\nTHAT YOU'VE BECOME QUVrS AN\nACCOMPLISHED MUBICIAAI LATELY T\nTHEV BAY VOUR SONslH-LAV-J HK\u00bb\nBEEN DEVOTlNta\nA6RKAY DEAL OP\nTIME IN TE-MCHINfir  .\nYOU HOW TO   f~&Q\nPLAY SECOND rl (Wk\u00ab*5\n\u2022PIDDLE AROONP.\nTHE HOUM\n mmmmmmm\n\t\nTOMMY TUMBLES\nTrying to tag Moore, Glinti, at iecond, Thevenow, Piratei, takei tumble,   page EIQHT\nAmerican Leaguers Again Defeat\nNationals in the Ail-Star Game\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. JULY 8. 1938\n-PAOE EIQHT\nVp and Down\nScore Is 4-1 as Foxx\nand Gomez Put on\nthe Pressure\nBy PAUL  MICKELSON\nAuoclated Preu Sporti Writer\nCLEVELAND STADIUM. July 8\n(AP)\u2014 Baseball's dream aame ii still\nthe same haunting nightmare\u2014tor\nthe National league.\nFor the third tucceuive time the\n\u2022hooting -stars of the baseball firmament gathered to outshine each\nother before a huge assemblage of\ncloae to 70,000 ipectaton today and\nagain the brilliants of the American\nleague eclipied thoae of the National. The acore was 4-1.\nA towering man from the American league's iecond diviiion. Jimmv\nFoxx of Philadelphia Athletics, and\nVernon \"Lefty\" Gomez, of the New\nYork Yankee pitching corps, were\nthe two who aent the National! reeling and helpless into defeat.\nGomez, itarting the third mccei-\nilve all-itar game for, the Americans on the mound. lubdued the\nenemy with only three hits over lix\ninningi while Foxx. long diitance\nliege gun of Connie Mack'a force,\nfired a home run with hii teammate,\nLou Gehrig, on base in the first inning to give the Americana a lead\nthey never surrendered.\nThat wai all the itart required by\nthe army led by Mickey Cochrane\nof DetroiL Mel (\"Chief\") Harder,\npitching before the \"home folki\" of\nCleveland mostly, took care of the\nrest of it. muffling the National\nleague guni with one harmless hit\nand no rum In the finil three Inningi that he worked.\nGomez, Harder and Foxx received\na tremendoui ovation ai they itrode\noff the greeniward of the Cleveland\nstadium from one of the five largest crowdi In the history of baseball\n\u2014a crowd lhat didn't come up to Ila\nearly promise of a record breaker\nbut one that counted exactly 69.812\nand gave the largest gross receipts\nof the three inter-league all-star\ngames played thus far\u2014$93,692,80.\nThe triumph of the Americans\nwas a bitter one for the Nationals,\nmarshalled by Frankle Friich of\nthe world'i champlonihlp St. Loula\nCirdlnils. Although thev had a\nforce of 20 of the League'! flneit. the\nAmerican! uied only 10 men until\nthe final Inning when they sent ln\nthree substitutes\nThe Nationals used every man ex-\nccnt Manager Frisch and Carl Hubbell. Even the Great Dizzy Dean got\ninto action but not until the final\ninning when the National league\ndefeat appeared sealed.\nTwo doubles, by Arky Vaughan of\nPittiburgh Piratei and Manager\nJimmy Wilson of the Phillies, and\nsingles by Pepper Martin of the\nCardinals and Bill Terry of the\nGiants, who drove In the only National run. was the extent of the\nNational!1 attack along with two\nuseleii bases on balla.\nPiychologiits find thit paintings\nplaced near the entrance to a gallery\nln a museum attract more attention\nthan painting! hung near the exit.\n\u25a0 \u00bbw\u00bbw\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbp*\u00bbw\u00bb-n<-w\nLEARN TO\nDIVE!\nA series of articles, designed to teach you how\nto dive, will begin in the\nNelson Daily News sport\npages soon.\nThe series, are by Fred\nSpongberg, the famous\nOlympic coach, and are\nillustrated with photographs which clearly outline the fundamental\nphases of each dive.\nAll you iwimmers \u2014 be\nsure not to miss this fine\nseries, beginning Monday, July 15, in the Nelson Daily News.\nI\u00ab tais\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014**\u2014***i*****\nMONTREAL BUYS\nGRANGER\nMONTREAL, July 8 (CP). - To\nbolster a pitching itaff weakened\nby Injuries, Montreal Royals today\npurchased George Granger, 26,\nrighthander of Baltimore Orioles of\nthe International league. It was a\nstraight cash deal with the new\npitcher reporting immediately.\nHOW THE A.L.S\nDID IT\nThe box score of the  All-Star\ngame:\nNational!                  AB R H O A\nMartin  3b  4   0 10   0\nVaughan u   8   1 1   -   2\nOtt, rf  4  0 0   10\nMedwick. lf  S   0 0   0   0\nTerry, lb  3  0 18   1\nCollim, lb   10 0  2   0\nBerger, cf   2   0 0   10\nMoore, cf   2   0 0   10\nHerman, 2b _  3   0 0   14\nWilson, c   3   0 18   0\nHartnett c   0  0 0   3   0\nWalker, p  0   0 0   0   0\nMancuso. x   10 0   0   0\nSchumacher, o   10 0   0   1\nP. Waner. xx     10 0   0   0\nWhitehead, xxx   0  0 0   0   0\nDerringer, p   0   0 0   0   0\nJ. Dean, p   0   0 0   0   0\nToUl! 31   1   4 24   8\nx\u2014Batted for Walker in third.\nxx\u2014Batted for Schumacher in 7th.\nxxx\u2014Ran for Wilson in 7th.\nAmericana AB R H O A\nVosmik, rf    4   1119\nGehringer. 2b    3  0   2   13\nGehrig,  lb    8   1   1 12   0\nFoxx. 3b    3   12   0   0\nBluege. rb    0  0   0   0   0\nJohnson, lf    4   0  0   4   0\nChapman, If  _  0   0   0   0   0\nSimmons, cf    4  0  2   2   0\nCramer, cf    0   0   0   0   0\nHemiley. c    4   116  0\nCronin. u    4   0   0   14\nGomez, p    2   0   0   0   2\nHarder, p     10   0   0   1\nTotala  82  4  8 27 10\nNational    000 010 OOO\u20141\nAmericana     210 010 OOx\u20144\nErrors\u2014Martin. Rum batted hi\u2014\nFoxx 3. Cronln 1. Terry 1. Two baie\nhlta\u2014Vaughan, Wilson, Gehringer,\nSimmoni; Three baw hits\u2014Hemsley. Home run\u2014Foxx. Stolen base-\nMartin. Left on bases\u2014Nationals 5.\nAmericana 7. Basel on belli\u2014Walker 1. (Gehringer); Schumacher 1\n(Gehrig): J. Dean 1 (Foxx; Gomez\n2 (Medwick and Vaughan). Strike\nouta\u2014Gomez 4 (Medwick. Berger,\nMartin 2); Harder 1 (Ott); Walker 2\n(Simmoni, Gomez); Schumacher 5\n(Johnion 2. Foxx, Cronln, Simmoni); Derringer 1 (Harder); J.\nDean 1 (Johnion). Hits-Off Walker\n2 in 2 innings and Schumacher 4\nin 4 innings: Derringer 1 In 1 inning;\nJ. Dean 1 in 1 inning: Gomez 3 ln 6\ninning: Harder 1 in 3 Innlngi. Winning pitcher\u2014Gomez. Umpirei \u2014\nGeisel and Ormsby (A.L.): Sears\nand MacGerkurth. National!. Time\n-2:08.\nHOW THE ALL-STAR\nGAMES WENT\nCLEVELAND, July 8 (CP) \u2014\nHere'a the all-star itory ln a nut-\nshell:\nFint gime, 1933, at Chicago:\nNational!    2    8   0\nAmericana    4    9   1\nHallahan, Warneke, Hubbell and\nWilion, Hartnett; Gomez, Crowder,\nGrove and R. Ferrell.\nSecond game, 1934, at New York:\nAmericans     9   14   1\nNationali      7    8   0\nGomez, Ruffing, Harder and\nDickey. Cochrane; Hubbell. Warneke. Mungo, J. Dean, Frankhouie\nand Hartnett, Lopez.\nThird game, 1935, at Cleveland:\nNationals    1    4   1\nAmerican!     4    8   0\nWalker. Schumacher, Derringer.\nJ. Dean and Wilion, Hartnett; Gomez, Harder and Hemiley.\nLEADS NEWCASTLE UNITED\nNEWCASTLE, England <CP)-\nTom Mather, lecretary-manager of\nStoke City, hai been appointed manager of Newcaitle United, well-\nknown English loccer club, in succession to Andy Cunningham who\nreiigned recenUy. Mather had managed Stoke for 12 yean.\nCANADIANS FARE\nBADLYINGOLF\nGet Half-Point in\n12 Matches at\nPrestwick\nClearance\nSALE\nTennis Racquets\nWe Are Offering Our\nEntire Stock of High Grade\nEnglish ond Canadian Racquets\nSpaldlna\n\"Mercer Baailiy\"\nRig. 817.00\n$\".35\nat\n1-5\nSpalding\n\"Top-Fllte\"\nRig. 818.00\n$12.00\nOft KICULAR PRICES\nSPECIAL ON BALLS.        6 for $1.00\nHIPPERSON\nHARDWARE CO., LIMITED\nPHONI 497      The Friendly Store     ,B0X 414\nWALTER BROWN\nIn and out of thl big leiguetr-\nthat'i Walter Brown, who hai bain\nup with tha Yankeu uvenl tlmei\nonly to and up In thi minor leiguei\nagain. Thli year hi again want\nto tha Niw Yorkiri aftar winning\nthe pitching champlonihlo of tha\nInternational League with Newark lait yaar.\nTENNIS PLAY AT\nCOAST SOON\nVANCOUVER. Juiy 8 (CP). \u2014\nOpening Britiih Columbia'! major\ntennla tournament aeaaon, the weatern Canada grau courts champion-\niljpa get under way a week from\ntoday at the Vancouver Lawn Ten*\nn . club.\nWi:n the added attraction of the\nCanadian tournament at Victoria\nthe following week a hoit of United\nStatei Pacific cout atari have entered the weitern tourney.\nThe race horae ll the iwifteit of\ncommonly known mammals, the antelope iecond and the greyhound\nthird, according to Erneit Thompion Seton.\nPRESTWICK. July 8 (CP cable) -\nOne halved match out of 12 played\nwai the beit the Canadian! could\ndo ai the aenlor golfen' international tournament with Great Britain and the United Statei opened\ntoday.\nThe Britom did not drop a point\nand the United State: teniori gained\nall their at the expenie of the Canadian:. The itandlng tonight, at\nthe halfway mark of the tourney,\nwat: Great Britain 12, United State!\n5',.. Canada M.\nCanada'! half-point wai gained\nwhen George Robinson of Toronto\nholed a putt trom the edge ot the\ngreen on the 18th hole, halving the\nmatch between himielf, R. M. Gray\nof Toronto, and G. Lee and Findlay\nDouglai of the United Statei.\nRobinson, captain of thc Canadian\nteam, remarked afterward it wai\nthe Canadians' first experience In\nfoursome play as distinct from the\nfour-ball variety.\nThe reiulti:\nBritain-Canada.\nJ. Peaie and H. Dezoete def. R.\nM. Gray and George Robinson, Toronto, 5 and 4.\nH. Taylor and A. Aitken def.\nGeorge S. Lyon, Toronto, and Dr.\nR. J. Parry, Hamilton, 4 and 2.\nB. Darwin and R. Blair def. John\nRankin. Montreal, and E. M. Kennedy. Edmonton, 3 and 2.\nS. Chesterton and G. Hemsley def.\nW. G. Thomson and J. H. Maher,\nMontreal. 4 and 3.\nR. Nell!on and Dr. Holt def. J. A.\nOgilvie. Brantford, and J. A. Lewli,\nNew Weitminiter, 6 and 5.\nP. Slater and J. Crum def. A. W.\nRldout, Montreal, and Lelghton McCarthy. Toronto, 8 and 8.\nUnited States-Canada;\nR. Lee and Finlay Douglai halved\nwith Gray and Robirtion.\nR. Smith and C. Jennlngi def.\nLyon and Pirry. 4 and 3.\nG. Curtis and M. Fearey def Rankin and Kennedy one up.\nF. Snare and H. Mahon def.\nThomson and Maher 2 and 1.\nS. Boyllng and G. Folk def. Ogilvie and Lewis 6 and 3.\nG. Klbler and W. Conroy def\nRidqut and McCarthy 4 and 3.\nJOCKEY'S LARGE ESTATI\nLONDON. <CP)-\"Bllly\" Speck,\nsteeplechase Jockey who died in\nApril from a fractured spine suffered in a fall at Cheltenham, left\nan eitate of nearly $100,000 including $83,500 net personalty.\nHit Uppercut,\nPrimo\nPart of Primo Carnira'i recreation wai golf whlll training for hli\nbout Juni 26 with Joa Louli. Da\nPreim li pictured at Auburn\nCountry club, Auburn, N.Y- about\nto throw a itraight right at tha\ntiny pellet.\nO'Mohoney Wins\nNEW YORK, July 8 (AP)-Dan\nO'Mahoney, the Iriih heavyweight\nsensation, who stripped Jim Lonaoi\nof hii wrestling championship clalma\n10 dayi ago, chalked up an eaiy\nvictory over Chief Little Wolf at\nTrinidad, Colo., in hii firat defence\not hli \"Utle\" in the Yankee stadium\ntonight. O'Mahoney uied \u25a0 body\nicissors to pin tha Indian in 28:23.\nThe weighti were 234 for O'Mahoney and 210 for Little Wolf.\nAl ln former yeari, flour ranki\nas the principal commodity Imported ltno Hong Kong from Canada,\nand in keeping with other Canadian\nproducta in 1834. ihowed an lncreaae\nin trade over the prevloua year.\n-ROOKIE WONDERS-NO. 1\u2014\nBlanton, Cards' Chain Gang Fugitive\nDarrel Elijah Blinton .\nCall Him \"Cy\"\nEditor, note: Thli li the (Int of\na uriu of five itorln on pitchen\nstirring In thl mijor leiguei thli\nyaar.\nBy BILL BRAUCHER\nCentril Prm Cinidlin Sporti\nWrltir\nA fugitive from the St. Louii\nCardinals' chain gang who toiled in\nthe minora iix yeari before being\ngranted a big leegue chance ii the\nyear'i National League surprise.\nHe is Darrcll Elijah Blanton (call\nhim Cy). winner of 10 games for\nthe Piratei igainst three defeats as\nthe campaign nears mid-season. By\nthe time this gets to you other\ngames will be credited or debited\nto Blanton. but he'i still good. The\nstory of Blanton'! coming to the\nPiratei and hit success rivals that\nof Jimmy Braddock, new world\nheavyweight champion. For Blanton\nalso the sun was behind a cloud for\nseveral years u he drifted ln the\nminora from team to teim, a brilliant pitcher at tlmei but erratic\nand cursed by wlldneis.\nTRAYNOR GIVES HIM\nCHANCE\nIt wai when thingi leemed dark-\neat for Cy that tha Piratei picked\nhlm up. Manager Pie Traynor gave\nhim hii chance, and the veteran\nGuy Buih helped him to make th?\ngrade.\nBlanton, who li now 28 years old\nand a native of Wourlka, Okla., waa\npitching for a semi-pro team at Fort\nWorth, Tex., in 1920. He twirled\nfour no-hlt gamei. fanning 23 men\nIn one of them, but wai wilder than\na March hare. The Cardinal! added\nhim as a link to their baseball\nchain and fanned him to Shawnee.\nOkla.. in 1930. Hc won a dozen\ngames, but wildness cost him 10 defeat!.\nIn the following season he was\nshipped from Shawnee to Greensboro, N.C. thence to Springfield. 111.,\nand finally to Independence, Kas.,\nand he was wild wherever he went.\nThough he struck out mony batters,\nhe walked so many that managers\nhad no confidence in his ability to\nthrow a strike in a pinch. In many\ngames he was beaten alone by bases\non balls.\nFinally he was given hii release\nby the Cardinals, and Bill Ben-\nswanger, general manager of the\nPiratei. a man who studies minor\nleague averagei earnestly, acquired\nhim in a deal with Tulsa.\nLait year he wai promoted to International league company at Albany and continued his great record\nof strikeouts, though he still Issued\nmany bases on balls   and   heaved\nmany balls out of the lot\nBUSH, PROFESSOR\nTraynor brought him uo late lut\nyear and itarted him agalnit the\nCubi. Blanton loit the game. 3 to\n2. but allowed only five hiti In\neight Innlngi. The Buci' manager\nwat Impressed, and in iprlng training thli year assigned Cy to room\nwith Ouy Buih, cagey veteran acquired In a trade with the Cubi.\nBlanton learned a great deal about\ncontrol from Buih. who gave him\nhouri of pitient drill. Cy hu a fine\nfast ball. \u25a0 shirp curve and a icrew\nbill, or linker. Buih taught him\nhow to find the plate, and give him\nthe confidence he had lacked in the\nminora.\nIn hli first start this yur. againit\nthe Cardinal!. Cy allowed one\nscratch hit. winning 3 to 0. Then he\nbeat the Redi. the Carda again, the\nDodgen (three hlta) and uved a\ngame that Boiton teemed about to\nwin. He hai become one of the hardest pitchen In the league to hit lately, and Guy Buih, hli \"uncle by\nadoption\", predict! he will win 20\nbefore the curtain falls In September ind Cy goei back to the\nwife and klddlet in Shawnee. ,\nRIDLEY HELD\nTO A DRAW\nWINNIPEG, July 8 (CP). - A\ntreacheroui weatherman matched\nthe first victory of their tour of\nwutern Canada out of the handi\nof Ridley college'! young cricket\neleven here today, and the easterners had to be content with a drawn\nmatch. Batting flrit, Ridley compiled 108 runt all out, and a select\nWinnipeg teim icored 81 tor iix\nwicked.\nFine weather greeted the crieketen when play opened, and after\nRidley'i tint three batsmen had\nbeen dismissed for 24 rum, W. E.\nN. Bell and W. Scrandrett became\nauoclated in a fine itand that remained unbroken up to the luncheon interval.\nA ateady rain iat In before play\n*wu resumed and after Bell and\nScandrett loit their wicketi when\nwhen they had hit up 28 runa uch,\na rot aet ln u the wicket became\naoggy and the remaining batters\nwera dismissed rather cheaply.\nRYDER (UP TEAM\nI. NAMED\nLONDON. July 8 (AP)-A turn\ncomparatively Inexperienced ln international competition but captained by the veteran. Charley Whltcombe. was lelected today to represent Grut Britain agalnit the United Statu in the professional Ryder\nCup golf matchei at Rldgewood,\nNX, Sept. 28 and 29. Britain holdi\nthe trophy at pruent.\nBuldei Whitcombe, who hu\npiiyed on all British teams lince the\nbienniil series wu officially instituted In 1927, only three other memberi of tho tea mhave experienced\nprevloui cup competition.\nThey are Alfred Perry, the record-equalling winner of the 1935\nopen champlonihlp, nigged Alt\nPadgham, tha runner up. and Percy\nAlliu. Perry and Padgham were\non the 1933 team u wu Alliu, who\nalio played in 1929.\nThe newcomers are Richard Burton. 24-yur-old Jack Billion, Btll\nCox and Edward W. Jarmin. Cox\nii an aniitant profeulonal.      t..\nLawn Bowling\nTies Scheduled\nTRAIL, B.C., July 8.\u2014Weather\npermitting first round tlu of the\nTrall-Tadanac Lawn Bowling club\ncompetition will be played off at\ntha club greeni Thunday evening\naccording to the lecretary. Bob Liv-\ningstone. It will be the final night\nof the fint round play, and participant! who fail to appear will\nautomatically concede the match\nto their opponenta. The weekly\numbrella competition will be staged\nWedneiday.\nThunday, iecond round of the\nclub ilnglu, for which the Buchanan trophy li poited, will get under\nway. Second round draws follow:\nE. McCallum vs. A. Laurie.\nJ. Balfour vs. George Crawford.\nSam Biagonl vi. B. A. Stlmmel.\nL. Hiycock vs. W. Rie.\nW. McCrudy vi. M. J. Oicarr.\nDave Forreit vi. Frank Pennoyer.\nJamu Buchanan va. A. Fergui.\nI. J. Provoit vi. Dava Long-\nmulr.\nJimmy Thompion vt. H. Johntton.\nAnother Little\nMILLER AGAIN\nWINS\nTORONTO, July S (CP)-BIU\nMiller. Philadelphia, United Statu\n\u2022culling champion, defeated Bob\nPearce. Hamilton, world'i champion\nin a half-mile event at a regatta\nhere tonight. Pearce defeated Miller\nIn the turn about mile event. A\ncrowd of 28,000 uw the eventi.\nIt wu Pearce's tecond defeat In\na life-time of racing. Miller defeated him In the half-mile event at\na ipeclal match race at Fort William\na week ago.\nIn the mile event today Pearce got\naway to a fut itart with a lengthening itroke but only a lut-mlnute\nspurt gave him the victory over\nthe United Statu champion.\nVETERAN ALL-BLACK TEAM\nWELLINGTON. N.Z. (CP)-The\nNew Zuland All-Blacks nigger\nteam that will tour England thii\nyear hu few newcomen to international rugby. W. E. Hadley and J.\nBeit, both forwards, are the only\ntwo who haven't represented New\nZealand before. Dominion author!-\ntiu expect the British opposition\nto be of the toughest.\nCRICKETERS ON CALL\nMANCHESTER. England (CP)\u2014\nWhn the Kent-Lancashire county\ncricket match wai held up recently\non account of rain the Kent players\ndecided to go to the racu. While at\nthe track this notice wai posted:\n\"The Kent county cricket team is\nwsnted it Old Trafford Immediately.\" The match itarted ihortly after 8 o'clock.\nLEAVES NEWCASTLE UNITED\nNEWCASTLE. England (CP). -\nAndy Cunningham, famoui Scottish\nsoccer International, has resigned\nis manager of Newcastle United.\nAndy, who repreeented hli country\non 12 occaiiom. managed the Tyne-\nlide club for five yean.\nOPPOSED SUNDAY QOLF\nBOLTON. England (CP)-Revera-\ning a prevloua deciiion on the\nground it wu a \"match vote\" the\ntown council hai finally granted\nthe petition! of Ita citizen! and haa\ndeclined to allow Sunday golf on\nthe municipal coune.\nCOL. W. LAWSON LITTLE\nColonel William Lawion Little,\nfather of Lawion Little of San\nFranclKO, who won tha coveted\nBrltlih Amateur champlonihlp for\nthe iecond lucceu I ve year, demon-\n\u2022tratu thit he too cm iwlng a golf\nclub. He ihowi a long drive, ona\nof thl itrong polnti in hli lon't\nchamplonihlp game.\nSUSSEX ADDS\nA VICTORY\nLONDON, July 8 (CP cable)-\nAided by superb bowling Suuex\noverwhelmed Gloucutenhire by an\ninnings and 98 runs today to Improve its standing! in the English\ncounty cricket competition,\nScoru:\nGloucutenhire 39 and 277, Sus-\n\u2022ex 412 rum for three wicketa declared, at Hove.\nNorthamptonshire 159 and 145,\nEuex 80 and 112 for three, at Col-\ncheater.\nHampshire 321 and 61 for three;\nKent 246. at Tonbridge.\nWarwickshire 308 and 17 for three,\nMiddlesex 232, at Birmingham.\nDerbyshire 237 and 191 for nine\ndeclared, Lancashire 86 and 18 for\nno wickets, at Buxton.\nWorcutershlre 225 and 158 for\nfour, Someraet 197, at Dudley.\nYorkshire 582 for seven declared,\nSurrey 206 and 109 for three, at\nSheffield.\nGlamorgan 246 and 277 for iix\n(Turnbull 140), Leicestershire 130,\nat Newport.\nNottinghamshire 312. South African! 496 for leven (Wade 150 not\nout), at Nottingham.\nA bulletin describing farming ln\nSouth Africa has been issued by the\nU. S. Department of Agriculture, to\naid farmers in meeting foreign competition in. world markets.\nMOORE (OPS\nBIGEVENTS\nTakes Day's Major (\"\nEvents at Bisley\nShoot\nBISLEY CAMP. England, July S\n(CP cable)\u2014Sergt.-Ma]or T. Moore\nof the small armi ichool, captured\nmajor honon at the big Empire\nmeeting of the National Rifle association opened today.\nMoore won both principal matchea\nIn the opening day's program. H*\nwon the Queen Mary's prize, fired\nunder service conditions In four\npractices with a creditable 180 out\nof a possible 200 and captured the\nSouthern railway, seven ihota at\n200 yardi, with a poulble 35.\nOnly a few of the Canadian! ihot\ntoday, Sergt. C. Iddioli of Calgary\nplacing beit with a 33 in the Southern railway, which gave him 14th\nplace and 18. Six other Canadians\ntrailed in the Southern, and only\nthree Canadians finished tha Queen\nMary's out of four.\nLieut. Jamei Boa of Montreal was\nbut Canadian in the Queen Mary'a\nmatch, with 154, 26 lower than the\nwinner.\nThe Canadian icoring:\nLieut. Jamei Boa, Montreal, 45-\n41-29-41-154.\nLieut. Neal Dow, Saint John, 45-\n40-17-23-125.\nSergt. C. Iddolli. Calgary, 42-38-\n33-36-144.\nSergt.-Major J. Trainor, Toronto,\n37 (retired).\nFAMOUS  SCULLER   DIES\nLEEDS, England, July 8 (CP\ncable)\u2014Guy Nickels, famous amateur sculler from Oxford died at\nLeedi hoipital today of injuriu received in a motorcar collliion Sunday.\nResults,\nINTERNATIONAL\nMontreal 13. Syracuie 1.\nBaltimore 9. Rochester 1.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAlbany 3, Toronto 2.\nNewark 9, Buffalo 0.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nSt. Paul 10, Louiaville 4.\nMinneapolis 4, Indianapolis 0.\nMELBOURNE, (CP)- Durin* a\nhurdle event In tie Auatralian\nspeed coursing racu the har* leading the dogs vaulted a high fence\nand escaped leaving the canine competlton to follow their own noses\nover the Jumps.\nSmtr-ke.\nWHITE\n0WI\nCIGARS\nuSay Seagram's and Be Sure\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the LiquorJ\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n\t\n .^]\nMINES HIGHER\n' TORONTO, July I (CP)-SmalJ\nadvances in the Index for both gold\nand miscellaneous shares were reg*\n* istered by the mining department of\nthe Toronto exchange today.\nTeck Hughes wu again the only\ntrader in volume among the golds\nSid closed two cent! lower at 4.13.\nroken lot salei mainly In the other\nlssuea resulted In a loss of 17 eents\nfor Pioneer Rand 60 cents for Dome\nwhile Leke Shore added 20 cents.\nThe medium-price group closing\npricei were slightly higher for San\nAntonio, Siscoe. Macassa. Central\nPatricia and Canadian Malartlc.\nNEW DIRECTORS\nIN MINING CORP.\nTORONTO. July 8 (CP)-New Interest! bave acquired substantial\nholdings In Mining Corporation of\nCanada, limited. J. P. Watson, president of the company announced\ntoday with Uie additional information that aa a result Charles McCrea.\nformer minister of minei for Ontario and C. C. McCulIagh have\nJoined the boerd of director!. Mr.\nMcCulIagh ii a pirtner in brokerage firm oi R. P. Barrett and company.\nW. R. P. Parker, K.V, has alio\nbeen elected to the board in place\nof hli later partner, G. M. Clark.\nSTERLING SPURTS\nAHEAD\nWW YORK, July 8 (CP)-Ster*\nling acored a amart advance ln the\nforeign exchange markets today,\ncloiing at $4.87 tor a gain of IH\ncenta.\nThe French franc closed at 6.63'A\nsent! for e gain of .OOVi of a cent.\nThe Canadian dollar reduced its\ndiscount trom M to 3*31 per cent\nU. S. Dollar Eases\nMONTREAL. July t (CP)-An\nIrregular tone prevailed among leading currencies on Montreel foreign\nexchanges today. The pound aterllng advanced 15-16 of a cent to\n4.97 7-16 while the United Statei\ndollar eased 1-32 of 1 per cent to\n1.00 3-32. The French franc held\nunchanged at 6.64 cents,\nWinnipeg Steady\nWINNIPEG, July 8 (CP) - A\nchange in sentiment ln outside markets gave wheat pricei a fractional\nhoist on the Winnipeg greln exchange today but failed to enliven\ntrading. The August future closed Vt\ncent higher et 80V1. but July was\nunchanged at Its pegged price, 80\ncent!.\nA K-cent gsin st Chicago and a\nIHd advance at Liverpool, partial\nrecovery ln both marketi from three\ndays of declining prices, encouraged\nmodest buying In the August option.\nJuly, however, was left alone.\nCanadian export sales of wheat\ncontinued amall. Cash grains were\nslow, barley and rye gained a cent\nearly while flax wu up three centa.\nNew Uoydminster\nWell \"Blows in\"\nLLOYDMINSTER. Alta.. July 8\n(CP)\u2014Colony Oil 4 Gas Company's\nNo. 1 well blew into production\nMonday with a gas flow estimated\nit 20,000 cubic feet. Officials stated\nthat the gai was itruck ln the Viking sands and thli well established\nthe Uoydminster field.\nThe well is three miles from No.\n1 well of the Lloydminster Gas\nCompany, which produces the supply piped to the town for domestic\npurposes by the latter company\nwhich owns the franchise.\nTHI NILION DAILY NIWS. NILION. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. JULY I. 1IIS\n-RAOE NINI\nMarket and Mining News\nN.Y. PRICES AT\nNEW TOP MARK\nBy PRANK MaoMILLEN\nNEW YORK, July 8 (AP).-Stock\nmarket traden were choosy todey\nbut iome groups were very well\ntaken at rising prices including\nsteels, mall order, farm equipment\nIssues and industrial specialties.\nNew tops cropped up in many\nindividual issues and the Associated\nPress average of 60 itocki stalked. Amal'oil\ninto new hi^h territory with a lltt \\ _\\^g Mluourl\nDow Jones Averages\nHleh Lew\n80 Industrials     122,88 120.69\n20 Ralls :      82.76 32.28\n20 Utilities     22,68 22.08\n40 Bonds                \t\nClose     Chmae\n122.55\u2014Up L53\n32.68\u2014Up 0.20\n22.86\u2014Up 0.05\n97.75\u2014Off 0.12\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLIITID\nAP Con\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAI Chemlcel .... 16\u00bb\u00bb\nAm Can  141*\nAm For Pow . 4H\nAm Ma tt Fdy UM\nAm Smelt \u00ab. Re 41%\nAm Telephone WM\nAm Tobacco ....  WM\nAnaconda  - 14*\nAtchiion   48-H\nAuburn Mo  UM\nBaldwin     .\u2014   IM\nBait & Ohio ..  10%\nBendlx Av .\u2014 11\nBeth Steel \u2014  XM\nCanada Dry .._  KM\nCan Pacific   10\nCerro de Paico   87\nChei It Ohio ....   44\nChryiler         BJ\nCon Gil NY... 264\nCorn Prod _ 77%\nC Wright Pfd     7%\nDupont   09%\nXut Kodak . 190%\nElec Pow & Li     J%\nErie    \u00bbV\u00ab\nFord Engllih ....  \u2014\nFord of cen    \u25a0  \u2022**>\nFirst Na Storea    94%\nFreeport Tex      26%\nGen Electric  ...  -7\nGen Fooda    S7%\nGen Motora   J'%\nGold Duit\nGoodrich  ....\nGranby\nGrt North Pfd\nGrt Weit Sugar\n17%\n1%\n7%\n31%\n\u00bb%\nHowe Sound   48%\nHudaon Mo\nInt Nickel\nInt Tel ft Tel\nKenn CoD-oer\nKresgeSS\n8%\n.6%\n10\n18%\n24%\nKroegger It Toll\nLehn Si Fink\nMack Truck\nMilwaukee Pfd\nMont Ward\nNash Motors\nNa Dairy Prod\nN Pow tt Light\nN Y Central\nPac Gas & Elec\nPack Moton\nPenn R R\nPhllllpi Pete . .\nPure Oil\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand\nRock  Island\nSaeway Storei\nShell Union\nS Cil Edison .\nSouth Pacific\nStan OU of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStewirt Wimer\nStudebaker\nTex Corp\nTex Gulf Sul\nTlmken Roller!\nUnder Type\nUn Carbide\nUn Oil of Cal\nUnited Air\nUnited Bla ...\nU-* Pacific  \t\nU S Pipe     \t\nU S Rubber\t\nU S Steel    \t\nVan Steel\nWest Electric\nWoolworth \t\nWrigley     \t\nYellow Truck\n28%\n28%\n28',\n14%\n\u2014\n14%\n20\n19%\n19%\n1%\n1%\n1%\n30\n28%\n29%\n14%\n13%\n16%\n14%\n18%\n16%\nt%\n>%\n9%\n17%\n16%\n17%\n29\n24%\n29\n4%\n4\n4%\n23\n22%\n23\n21%\n21%\n21%\n\u00bbM\n8%\nt\n6%\n6%\nStt\nitt\n2\na\n8%\n8%\n8%\n%\nM\n30%\n39\n39\n10%\n_\n10%\n20\n19%\n19%\n18\n17%\n17%\n39\n84%\n39\n29%\n23%\n25%\n48\n47\n48\n12%\n12%\n12%\n2%\n2%\n2%\n20\n19%\n20\n84%\n34>,'\u00ab\n34%\n42%\n42\n4*5%\n69\n\u2014\n69\n69\n63%\n65\n18\n17%\n17%\n19\n14%\n15\n24%\n24%\n24%\n103%\n102\n103%'\n20%\n19%\n20%\n13%\n12%\n13%\n37\n39%\n36%\n14%\n14%\n14%\n.19%\n56%\n69%\n62\n81%\n62\n81\n80%\nSI\n2%\n\u2014\n2%\nEverything In\nPUMPS\nand Pump Supplies\nFOR MINING COMPANIES\nAny stylt, sin snd ihipe, stsndsrd from ttock\/ or\nmado ipecial to order.\nLARGEST STOCK ON COAST\nNow or Uied\u2014Sale or Ront\nolio\nENGINES AND ELECTRIC MOTORS\nof ill types md iim.\n'\u00ab-*!\nof half a point at 45.8. The prevloui\nhigh was 49.2, made June 22.\nThe new peak in the combined\neverage received its chief stimulus\ntrom a high ot 62.9 ln the 30 industrials, up 4-9 of a point on the\nday, although the small advance\not 1-5 of a point in the 19 utilities\nto 33.3 likewise brought that dlvlaion to the best level for the year\nto date. Ralls were a shade firmer\non the everage.\nThe steel institute estimated operations in the industry in the current week would be 35.3 per cent\nof capacity in the post-holiday rebound, compered with 32.8 per cent\nlist week. General Moton reported\ntotal unit sales for June at 181.168\ncars and trucks, the best June figure since 1929. In May sales were\n134.59V and a year ago 148,881.\nAdvances of major fractions to\naround 2 points were registered,\namong others, by U. S. Steel at 36%,\nBethlehem at 30%, International\nHarvester at 48%.\nTransfers totalled 1,309,990 sharei.\nCIGAR WORKERS TO\nEND STRIKE\nMONTREAL, July 8 (CPl-Strlke\not 180 cigar worker!, whoa walked\nout ot the factory of Benson and\nHedges (Canada) Limited here e\nweek ago, will come to en end tomorrow when the men and women\nreturn to their Jobs. Officials ot\nthe company announced today an\namicable settlement had been reached in the dispute.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK. July 8 (API-Copper oulet. Electrolytic, spot and future 8.00; export 7.49.\nTin firm: spot and nearby 92.29:\nfutures 91.90.\nIron dull: No. 2. F.O.B. Eastern\nPennsylvania 19.90; Buffalo 18.50;\nAlabama 14.90.\nLeid firmer; soot. New York 4.10*\n19; Eait St. Louis 3.95.\nZinc quiet; Eut St. Louli ipot and\nfuture X.\nAluminum 19.00*22.00.\nAntimony loot 12.73.\nQuicksilver 71.50*73.90.\nBar silver weak. % lower et 68%.\nLONDON\u2014Closing, copper, stand-\nerd spot <29 17i 6d; future U0 9s;\nelectrolytic, ipot 133; future \u00a334.\nTin. ipot $230 17i 6d; tuture -214\n15a.\nLead. spot \u00a313 19s; future \u00a313 17s\n6d.\nZtnc. ipot (IS 19s: futuri \u00a313\n17s 6d.\nBar illver eaiy. % lower at\n30 7*18d.\nEastern Sale*\nTORONTO. July 8 (CP).-Salei\nof 100 or more iharei on Toronto\nstock exchange today; Brazilian 973;\nB. A. Oil 289; C.P.R. 216; Dom.\nStores 300: Ford A 186; Goody. Pfd.\n329; Int Nickle 603; Moore Corp.\n22, Ptd. 210; Walkera 417.\nMONTREAL July 8 (CP).-Salei\nof 100 or more shares on Montreal\n-tock market today: Brailllan 448;\n'.elanese Rts. 300: Ind. Ale. A 245;\n'.P.R. 255; Smelter 105; Dom. S.\nit C. B. 380; Imp. Tob 1013; Int\nNickel 447; McCoil Fr. 304; MU.\nPower 659; Nat. Brew 700.\n\u25a0Id\n.09%\n.12\nM\nBradlan    1\nBralorne   4.70\nBridge R Con     .03\nBRX Gold      .08\nCariboo Oold   1.00\nC It E Corp     JO\nCoast Brew .\nDentonia  -.\nGold Belt\t\nHargal OU \t\nHome Oil\t\nInt Coel \t\nKoot Belle \t\nMak   Siccar  \t\nMcDougal Segur\nMcLeod Oil..\n13.23\n21\n.32\n_!0\n.32\n.11\n.03\n.39\nAik\n.11\nii\n4.75\n.04\n.09\n1.02\n.52\n13.90\n.27\n.30\n.03\n.32\n31\n.14\n.03%\nMeridian \t\n....    .03\n.05%\nModel Oil\t\n 20\n.21%\nMorning Star\t\n 04%\n.05\nNet Silver \t\n....     .03%\n.04\nPioneer Gold\t\n...   0.90\n10.00\nPremier Gold ....\n....   1.4S\n1.48\nPremier Border\n\u2014\n.00%\nReno Gold    \t\n....   1.34\n1.33\nSelly Mines   \t\n     20\n.29\nSalmon Gold\t\n 11\n.12%\nSheep Creek \t\n....    .80\n.88\nSpooner Oil  \t\n...    .18\n\u2014\nTaylor Bridge\t\n...    .IS\n.20\nVinalte \t\n\u2014\n.07\nWeyilde  \t\nWellington \t\n...   i.oy\u00ab\n.10%\n...    .04\n\u2014\nCURB\n...    .05%\n.06\nBluebird\n     .01\n.01%\nB C Silver    \t\n    1.10\n1.20\nB C Nickel \t\n 37%\n.29\nBunker HIU   \t\n  41.00\nM.00\nCongreu Gold\t\n     .24%\n.2\u00ab\nCottonbelt\n.....    .02\n\u2014\nCrows Nest\n 11\n.14\nDalhousle Mlnei\n\u2014\n.01\nDalhousle OUi ...\n     J4\n\u2014\nDictator\n\u2014*\n.01\nEaitcreit\n     JJ7\n.00\nFiirview  -     .07\nFawn      \u2014\nFederal Gold      \u2014\nGeo Copper    18%\nGlecler Creek     -01\nGolconda    19%\nGeo Enterprlie     .05\nGeo River  00%\nGrandvlew -     \u2014\nOrange     .09%\nGrull Wihkme ... .    .09\nHecla       10.60\nHedley Amal ...        Jl\nHtghwood Sarcee      .09\nHome Gold      .04\nIndependence         \u2014\nIsland Mountain ....    .IS\nLucky Jim     .02%\nMar Jon 11\nMercury       .11\nMerland  18\nMinto Gold        .07\nMorton Wolsey      \u2014\nNicola    10%\nNoble Five     .OS\nPacolta    02%\nPend Orellle     .48\nPilot Oold      .03\nPorter Ideho _    .07%\nQuesnelle Q     .10\nRanchmen'i      \u2014\nRelief Arlington ....    21\nRoyalite 22.75\nRufui Argenta _     .01\nRuth Hope         \u2014\nSilvercreit      .00%\nSllveredo        .02\nSilversmith     -03%\nSnowflake   ....    \u2014\u2022\nSunshine 81-80\nStandard' SUver     .70\nUnited Empire     .OS\nUnited Oil          .04%\nVldette Oold 13%\nViking Oold      Al\nWeterloo       ,    \u2014\nWaverley Tang.....    00%\nWhitewater       .06%\nYmlr Yankee Olrl      \u2014\n.01\nJJ\n.01%\n.20%\n.09%\n.00%\n.03\nJH\n.OS\n10.79\n.23\n.10\n.OS\n.01\n.70\n.08%\n.12\n.12\n20\n.07%\n.00%\n.12\n.06%\n.03\n.48\n.09\n.49\n21\n.01%\n.03%\n.01\n.03\n.04\n.00%\n32.50\n.75\n.01\n.14\n.01%\n.03\n.00%\n.07\n.38\nIndustrials Dull\nTORONTO. July 8 (CP)-Interest\nwu et low ebb on the industrial\nshare market of the Toronto exchange todiy. Only 12,900 shires\nchanged hands. Fourteen Issues closed higher and 28 lower but the loss\nln the Index wai only .09 due to\ngeneral firmness among plvotable\nIssues.\nFord A, at 27% had a net gain of\n%. CP.R. held a gain of a small fraction. Nickel closed unchanged and\nBrulllan was offered in iome volume at a loss of % to 8%.\nLois for Distillers-Seagrams was\nlimited to % in offerings up to 2000\nshares. Walkers Common wai alow\nand % higher and Industrial alcohol\nA unchanged at 8%.\nBUTTER FIRMER\nBAR GOLD DOWN\nFOUR CENTS\nLONDON, July 8 (AP). - Bar\ngold declined 3 pence to 140s Od.\n(U. a equivalent $34.89).\nMONTREAL, July 8 (CP).-Bar\ngold tn London down four cents\nat 134.94 an Ounce In Canadian\nfunds; 140s 9d, ln British. The fixed\n$35 Waihington price amounted to\n$35.04 In Canadian. ?\nCHICAGO GAINS\nCHICAGO, July S (AP)-Increai-\nIngly pessimistic reports about\nblack rust northwest and west, together with disappointing thresher\nreturns from domestic wheat areas\nsouthwest, had stimulating grain\nmarket efforts today.\nWheat rose about 2 cent! a bushel,\nand closed firm near the day's top,\n1% to 1% above Soturdiy's finish,\nSeptember 80*% to 80%, corn % off\nto 1% up, September 74% to 75,\noats M lo M advanced.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexandria \t\nAlgoma    ~\nAshley Gold  _\t\nBarry Hollinger -\t\nBase Metals \t\nBankfleld _\nBear Exploration _.\nBig Missouri\t\nBobjo    -\nBradian   \t\nBralorne\t\nBrett Trethewey -\t\nBRX Gold -\t\nBrownlee  -\nBut Ankerlte\n-T^^^*^1^\nUMPS&IOWI^Kr\n.01%\n.03%\n.14\n.03\n.58\n.14%\nr\n,*_\u00bb\n4.75\n.02\n.01\n.01\n2.70\nReno Gold     194\nSakoose   __\t\nSan Antonio\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSherritt Gordon\nSiscoe \t\nSmelten Gold ...\nSouth Tlblemont.\nBuf Can\" Gold ....._-_...._....._      .01%\nMoney\n7-16,\nBy the Cenedlen Preii\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt   Montreal\u2014Pound   4J)7\nfranc 6.64 centi, U.S. dollar 1.00 3-32.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.97. franc\n6.63% cents, Canadian dollar .99\n29-32.\nAt Pirls\u2014Pound 74.89 francs, U.S.\ndollar 15.09% francs, Canadian dollar 15.09 francs.\nIn gold-Pound 12s Id. U.S. dollar\n59.24 cents, Csnadlan dollar 59.16\ncents.\nVancouver Sales\n40 I. Cordova St. Vincouver, I. C.\nWhite for Price Llit ind Particulars.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL - BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nELEPHANT Brand\nChemlcil Fertlllien\nAmmonium Phoephitei\u2014Sulphate of Ammortli\nSuperphoiphatea\u2014Complete Fertilisers\nProducers md Refiners ot\nTadanac Brand Metali\nCOLD\nSILVER\nELECTROLYTIC\nLIAD \u2014 ZINC \u2014 CADMIUM \u2014 BISMUTH\nVANCOUVER, July 8 (CP) -\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nListed\u2014Big Mlss 3000, Bradlm\n'000, Brslorne 200. BRX 1000. Ciri-\nhoo 1680, Dentonla 1450. Gold B\n'000, Koot B 300. Meridian 3700.\nMornln! S 7000. Nit S 4000, Plo-\nI neer 250. Prem G 12,825, Reno 2750.\n' Silly 1050. Sheep Creek 500, Tiylor\n2750, Sallv 1050.\nCurb-Beaver S 4500. B C Nickel\n6300. B C Silver 100, Congress 7150.\nFairview A 1000. Golconda 3500.\nGrange 6000, Isl Mtn 1000. Hedley A\n9000, Gold Mtn 900, Mlnto 1200,\nNicola 800, Noble Five 8000. Porter\nI 100. Relief Arl 2000. Reward 1000.\nStandard Silver 1000, Sllvercrest\nISOO, Silversmith 18.000, Waterloo\n2000, Whitewater 2000.\nDominion Livestock\n.06%\n.01%\n.63\n1.07\n1.00\n.03%\n1.68\n.18%\n.03%\n1.90\n.02\n1.45\n158.00\n _^^^^^^^    88.00\nDom Exploration  - 08%\nEldorado       1.75\nBunker Hill\nCan Kirkland  \u2014\nCan Malartlc     __\nCariboo Gold Quart- \u2014\nCastle Trethewey \t\nCentral Manitoba \t\nCentral Patricia\t\nChibougamou    .....\nClerlcy  \u2014\nCoast Copper \t\nCobalt Contact  \t\nConarium    __.....\nCons M It S \t\nDome\n.03%\n.15\n.83\n.82\n2.62\n.05%\nM\nStadicona         ,28%\nSt Anthony\nSudbury Basin\t\nSylvanlte  \u2014\nTeck Hughes ___\u2014.\nToburn  \u2014\t\nTowagamae  \t\nVenturei\nWalte Amulet\t\nWeyilde \t\nWhite Eagle   \t\nWright Hargreavei.\nOILB\nAcme   _\t\nAJax    \t\nB A OU\t\nCalmont\t\nC and E Corp\nFalconbrldge\nGod'i Lake\nGranada \t\nHardrock \t\nHollinger \t\nHowey\nHudson Bey\t\nInt Nickel    \t\nKirkland Lake\t\nLake Maron    -\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLake Shore      ... .....\nMcLeod Cockshutt ...\nMclntyre \t\nMcVittle Grahsmme\nMcWitten Gold \t\nMacassa  \t\nMalroblc      \t\nMaple Leof   \t\nMining Corp  _\t\nMoffat. Half\t\nNipissing\t\nNoranda  _.\nParkhitl  _...\u25a0\nPaymaster \t\nPend Oreille\t\nPickle Crow\t\n3.80\n1.57\n.18\n.48\n14.10\n.73\n18.00\n26.78\n.35%\n.03\n4.6S\n50.95\n.04%\n40.60\n.18%\n1.20\n1.60\n. .00%\n.03\n1.45\n.01%\n2.20\n36.60\n.18\n.28%\n.50\nJ.JO\n9.65\nPioneer Gold  ....\nPermier Gold        i-*t\n.18\n138\nJ.1S\n4.18\n1,18\n.14\n.82%\n.60\n.10%\n.03%\n7.15\n.18%\n.81\n15 KM\n.04\n.50\n1.20\n.24\nOTTAWA, July 8 (CP)-Butter\nwas firmer and cheeie quiet on\nUnited Kingdom markets, cable advices to tbe department ot agriculture here tonight said.\nQuotations\u2014Butter. New Zealand\n88 to 89 shillings per cwt (19.47 to\n19.69 cents per pound); Australian\n85 to 87 shilling! per cwt (18.81 to\n19.26 cents per pound).\nCheeie, Canadian new 50 to 52\nshillings per cwt (11.06 to 11.60\ncents per pound); New Zealind 44\nshillings six pence to 45 shillings\nper cwt (9.85 to 9.95 centt per\npound).\nHeavy Demand for\nFarm Implements\nCHICAGO. July 8 (AP)-Whlle\none army harvested the crops, another estimated at 80,000 strong by\ntrade authorities today worked at\ntop speed to supply the heaviest demind for firm Implements ln the\nUnited Statu in five yeen.\nContinuing the big gaini it regiitered last yeer. the farm equipment Industry wm termed by its\nInstitute to have epproached currently within five to 10 per cent of\nnormal employment\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG,\nquotations:\nOpen\nWheat:\nJuly  \t\nAug ...\nOata:\nJuly  \t\nOct\t\nBsrley:\nJuly \t\nOct  \t\nFlex:\nJuly  \t\nOet .\nRye:\nJuly\nOct\nJuly 8 <CP.~C.riln\nHigh   Low   Clou\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, July 8 (CP)-Ster-\nling exchange strong at $4.98 for 60-\nday bills and at $4.97 tor demand.\nCanadian dollars today 3-32 discount, Saturday % discount, week\nago 3-16 discount.\nFrance 6.63% cents.\nItaly 8.26% cents.\nMONTREAL OFF\nMONTREAL, July 8 (CP)-Prlcee\non the Montreal stock exchange to**\nday slipped lower in dull trading.\nAbout the only highlight of the\nmarket was a sudden jump of % of\na point by Canadian Car to close\nat.74.\nPower Isiu-a alio tinned somewhat near the close. Montreal Power\nidvmced % point to 30% while Canadian Hydro-Electric preferred at\n53% wai % higher.\nConiolidited Mining tt Smelting\nslipped a point to 1.8 while Dominion Coal preferred eased %\npoirit to 137. Nickel wai down %\npoint at 28-H and National Breweries\nwas off % point to 38.\nMINING STOCK\nPRICES DOWN\nOTTAWA, July 8 (CP)-A decrease of one and \u2022 halt polnti wu\nshown In the Index of 23 mining\nstocks for the week ended July 4\nwhich stood it 118.8 agalnit 120.3\nthe previous week, the Dominion\nbureau of statistics today reported.\nFor the corresponding week lut\nyear the index stood at 139.9.\nThe gold group moved down to\n112.1 from 114.3 for the preceding\nweek while for the ume week lut\nyear the Index wu 135.1.\nThe index for bate metals group\nwas at 149 against 147.9 tor the preceding week, and 162.8 for the corresponding week of 1934.\n80\n80\n42\n80%\n14\n..   88%\n... HT\n118\n38\n37%\n80%\n80\n80\n80%\n42%\n80%\n41%\n80%\n42%\n80%\n34%\n84%\n83%\n33%\n34%\n84\n118%\n118%\n117\n117%\n118%\n117%\n35%\n37%\n34%\n33%\n84%\n37%\nChemical Research\t\nDalhouiie  ___\nHome Oil             .82\nHomestead O and G       .06\nImperial OU  _    19.87M\ntnt Pete   88.75\nMerlipd    -      .18\nNordon  \u2014       .07\nOil Selection      .04%\nOlga            .04%\nRoyalite     UM\nINOUITRIALI\nBeetty Broi A    10\nBell  Telephone 127\nBra.llim        8%\nBrew tt Dlit       il\nCan Breed        2\nCan Cement _ _     IV,\nCen Car it Foundry ...\u00bb     7%\nCan Ind Ale A     8%\nCan Dredge        22%\nCan Pac Railway _     9%\nCons Bakerlei  _    14%\nDist Seigram    19%\nDom Stores  _.     6%\nFord of Camda    27\u00abi\nGoodyear Tire   143\nCuh wheet: No. 1 herd end No. I\nnor. 77: No, 8 nor, 72; No. 4 nor.\n64%; No. 8 wheet 88; No. 6 wheat\n57%; feed 64; durum 70; track 80.\nNEW ISSUE\nCity of Nelson, B. C.\nDATID |ULY 2,1935 DUE JULY 2,1955\nLegal opinion\u2014E. G. Long, K.C, Toronto.\nDenominationt-mi-00... andif 1,000.00\nSTATISTICS\nAsseiied vilue for taxation: Lands.  81,898^88.00\nImprovement! $3,924,190.00\nDebt Total Debenture Debt  I 987,812.44\nSinking Fund on hand  I 397,008.87\n(There ii a substantial surplus in the\nSinking Fund)\nRevenue producing debt amounts to  I 800,000.00\n(Thli Issue of 1150,000.00 not included ln above)\nWaterworki net profit efter deducting all\nchargu   2   29,017.70\nHydro-Net profit after deducting all\ncharge!   $   78,700.28\nGai Plant\u2014Net profit after deducting all\n\u2022\u00ab        charge!   I     1,850.48\nWe consider theie bondi one ot the beit Wutern Municipal bondi\non the market today.\nn\\Ct: $100.00, to YIELD 4VSt%.\nNILION AND DIITRICT IUIICRIPTIONI INVITED\nMcDermid, MUler 8 McDermid\nLimited\nInvntmant Dealera\n840 HOWS'STREET VANCOUVER, l.C.\nFiguru are not guaranteed but are derived from lource we eoniider\nreliable.\nNICKEL\neee\nHiram Walker\nImperial Tobacco\t\nLoblaw A _\t\nMassey Harrli \t\nStandird Piving\t\nSteel of Cinada .\n26%\nm\n19\nh\n48'!\nWalker Brew       8\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBeU Telephone _ 127\nB C Packing ...       .10\nBnziliin     8%\nB C Power A     22%\nBuilding Producta i_   30\nCan Brome\nCan Car tt Foundry\nCan Cement \t\nCan Cement Pfd\t\nCan Ind Al A\t\nCan Ind Al B\t\nCPR       \t\nCan Steamer! _\u25a0..\nCockshutt    \t\nCon M li S\t\nDom Bridge _\t\nDom Glass \t\nDom Textile\nWINNIPEG, July 8 (CP)-Cittle\n1070.\nSteers $6.50.\nHeifers $5.75.\nFed calves $6.30.\nCows $4.\nBulls $2.50.\nStocker ind feeder steers $4.\nStock cows and heifers $3.23.\nCalves 1360.\nVealers $5. '\nHogs 1560.\nSelect baconi $1 per head premium, bacon $8.25, butchers $1 per\nheid discount heavy $7.78, lights\nand feeders $8.50, sows $8.\nSheep 410.\nHindywelght iheep $7.\nHandywelght lambs $3.\nFrom every itate in the union\nhive been mailed to her mallbags\nfull of steel-rlmmed, gold-rlmmed.\nsilver and horn-rimmed spectacles,\nlorgnettes, gogglu. pince-nez and\nsun glasses. Many have come trom\nforeign lands. With these glasses\nMrs. Terrry is providing new eyw\nfor many needy perions.\n28 \"i\n7%\n6\n53\n8%\nT\n9%\n1\n7\n157%\n29\n110\n68\n3\n8\n1%\nGen Steel Wiru\nCharlei Gurd\nHamilton Bridge ..__\t\nInt Nickel    26%\nMassey Hirrli      3%\nMontreil Power    30%\nNet Steel Cir    14\nNit Brewing    38\nOgllvle      150\nPower Corporation      8%\nPrice Broi  _ 160\nOuebee :..,__-_    14\nSherwin Willlami   12%\nSouth Cm Power   11\nSteel of Canada   48%\nCURB\nAud Breweriw  ,._  12V\nBrew _ Diit  5'\nBAOI1  15'\nCan Celanew \u2014  23'\nCan Dredge  22r\nCm Malting      88\nCan Wineriw _.  4'\nDli Seegram  _  19V\nDryden Piper  3\nImperial Oil  \u00bb\u2022\u00bb\nImperial Tob Can  13% ,\nInt Petrol  83%\nMcCoU  Frontenac \u201e  12%\nMitchell Robert  3%\nSome 1,900 yun ago t white\nmetal, which vu called Pikong\nby the Chlnew. wis uwd br\ntmm to fuhlon caakits, oral*\nmints and thl like.\nNickel, derived ita nama from\nthi fact thit the superstitious\nminers of Saxony called It \"Old\nNick\" tor tbey believed it ww\nsent from the devil with ill Its\nmlschlsvousniw. for thi miner*\ncould do nothing with this ore\ntrom their silver and copper\nmines which had been worked\nfrom time Immemorial. Whst thiw\nsuperstitious miners threw away\nln dlsiust. tha scientists took up\nand lit 1761 Conitutt Isolated i\nwhlta metal which ht named\nnickel. Twcntv-flve years elipeed\nbefore thla dlacovery wu confirmed by Bergman. And, iiiln.\nthirty years went by before Richer produoed the first pure nickel\nand gave a remarkably accurate\ndwcrlptlon of lu propertlw.\nAt ona time the whole world\nwu combed for supplies, ind\noris containing u Uttla as one\nptr cent of nickel wert profitably\nworked. Today, Canada produces\n3.'p ot the world'a supply ot\nnickel within in area of ltw thsn\n1.000 square mill in tbi lud-\n-ury dlatrlct of Ontario, in thi\nrear 1666 a governmint lurvayor\neported tha presence of ore* ln\nhli dlitrlct, but It wu not until\nwenty.wven years liter thst\n:h* deposit wu actually found\nly thi workmen puttlnt throuth\ntht line for tht Cinadlan Pacific\nRailway.   Hire   hlitory   rtpwttd\nltatlf. u more thin a eentury\nearlier. In Saxony, copptr wu\nthe magnet which attracted i\nrush to stake claims. Som\" of\nthe names of those who went ln\nthere at that time still survlvt\nIn the famoui mines.\nDuring thi ywr 1914 the total\ntn off in tht tmtltlne operations wtrt wuted until Cana*\ndian Induatrlea Limited buUt an\n\u25a0eld plmt at thli point In 1929.\nThli plant la located aome 1.000\nteet distant from tbt Niokel\nCompany's imiltar. Ita chief\nfunction Is to retrieve sulphur\ndioxide from thi amoke.\n-tt.\n1\nm\n1\nSr\n\u2022m$L|tj~sJ\nPW;\n\u25a0^H\ni\nPioneer Proiptetorc.  The men In the beekground li Thomu Freed\nnickel output of thi Dominion,\namount*-; to iome 130.sed.400\npounds\u2014tn lncriwi of 66% over\ntht prevloua ytu. Tills output\nconsist! of nlekil in matte, In\nrefined nlcktl, nlekil ln oxldlw\nind wlto.\nIn tbe operaton of tht Copper\nCliff Bmilttr of tht International Nlekil Compiny of Cinidi.\nLimited, tbe aulphur guw drlv*\n\u2022SANK!\neraey\nm\nCanada\nCanadienne\nCommeret   ...\nDominion \t\nMontreel   \t\nNova Scotia\nRoyal   \t\nToronto\n82\n81\n128\n144\n163\n182\n170\n148\n204\nMI8CELLANIOUI\n-,_,___\u2014.      _.     Dom Storw      6*%\nShiwlnigin         11% Ford Cm A    17\nMontreal Silver Prices\nMONTREAL, July (CP)\u2014Silver futuru cloud euler\non the Cmidlm commodity exchmge today, 65 to 70 polnti\noff. A total of 15 contracts wu traded, 5 July; 6 Sept.; 4\nDec.; 1 Jin.\nOpen Hleh Lew Clow\nJuly  68.00B 68.40 68.20 67.90B\nSept  68.40B 68.40 68.85 68.10B\nDec  69.30B 69.20 69.15 69.10B\nJan  69.60 69.60 69.60 69.40N\nI\nCHEMICALS FOR THI\nMINES\nCaawl Brand lodlum Cyanide\n97.M%-duPont Frothing Oili\u2014\nC.P. Add! and Ammonium Hy-\ndroilde\u2014Copper Sulphate\u2014Crwy-\nllc Add\u2014Lwd Awtate\u2014Lwd Nl-\ntritt\u2014Llthirn (for Away)\u2014Termor r Btwm-DtitlUtd Pine online Oust\u2014Commercial Adda and\nAmmonia \u2014 Thlocarbtnllldt \u2014\nOrtho-Toluldlnt \u2014 Soda Aib\u2014\nZlne Sulphite\u2014Zlno Cblorldi.\nThen li a particular C-I-L\nIxploilva available for every type\nof mining operation. C-I-L mag*\nulnei sre maintained acroes the\nDominion to render the fastwt\npoaalble service ln tht delivery of\nC-I-L -.\"'-*\u00ab\"\n \" \u2022 \u25a0 ; '-\u25a0\"\"\nPAGE TEN -\nTHI NILION DAILY NIWS. NILION. I.C-TUIIOAY MORNINO. JULY t. 1*88\nFine China\nat Wholesaler's\nPrices\nMann, Rutherf ord\nDrug Go.\n\"Sea Serpent\" Ls\nBasking Shark\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C, July 8\n(CP)\u2014Prince Rupert's \"sea serpent\"\nhas turned out to be nothing more\nthan a basking shark.\nPhotographs oi the monster taken\nby Joe Gay of the fisheries patrol\nservice were examined by staff\nmembers of the Prince Rupert fisheries experimental station. The\nshark wss 28 feet in length, five\nfeet in circumference around the\nmiddle and its tail was six teet, {our\ninches in breadth.\nGay located the creature last Friday afternoon at Jap Inlet It beached there after it became entangled\nIn nets oi Skeena river fishermen.\nThe carcass weighs about 10 tons\nand no attempt will be made to remove it from the beach.\nR. H. MABER\nTINSMITH\nROOF REPAIRS\nPhono 655        610 Kootenay St.\nELECTRICAL  CONTRACTING\nWe Repair and Overhaul\nAnything Electrical\nGeneral Electric Appliances\nStandard Electric\nJack Hoogerwerf\nPhone 838 615 Baker St.\nKOOTENAYS LOSE\nPIONEER COUPLE\nCranbrook Folk, .Mr.\nMrs.   Mackinnon.\nGo to Coast\nYour Eyesight\nOur modern training and modem equipment will reveal Uie\ntrue condition of your eyes\u2014and\nby a proper lens prescription, wc\nwill make possible, improved\nvision for you now, and in the\nfuture.\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nOptometrist\nSuite 206 - Medical Arts Bldg.\nCRANBROOK, B. C, July 8\u2014The\nKootenays lost oon nt their pioneer\ncitizens with the departure ot A. A\nMacKinnon for Victoria, where he\nand Mrs. MacKinnon will reside.\nMr. MacKinnon was born ln Cape\nBreton in 1870. He spent his childhood there and came west ln 1801\nto Revelstoke, where he worked\nwith a sawmill company at Greeley\nCreek.\nThe following year he went to\nNelson partly, by steamboat on the\nColumbia river, since the Kettle valley railroad did not extend to the\nKootenays. The trip took seven days\nin the little steamer, the Marion,\nwhich covered the route irom Revelstoke to Robson. From there to\nNelson he came by rail.\nDuring the next 10 years he remained in West Kootenay at Pilot\nBay where he worked with the\nDavis-Sayward Sawmill Co, and\nlater at Kaslo. where he was with\nthe Kootenay Lake Sawmills.\nIn 1902 he married Miss Mary McQuarrie, also ot Cape Breton, and\nthey moved to Creston, where he\nconstructed the first saw-mill for the\nCreston Kootenay Sawmill company.\nThe following year he and Mrs.\nMacKinnon moved to Cranbrook\nwhere they resided since. In 1905 in\npartnership with R. Johnson, he\nstarted an iron foundry which he\nran with success for 30 years.\nMr. MacKinnon served the city as\nalderman and police commissioner.\nHe was one of Knox Presbyterian\nchurch's most loyal workers, and\nactive in the Masonic lodge. He wss\nalso a charter member ot the Cranbrook Golf ond Country club.\nThe move to Victoria is the result\nof ill health suffered during the\npast year.\nMr. and Mrs. MacKinnon have\n| two sons, Eric, ot Calgary, and\nClyde, student oi medicine at Toronto university, and one daughter, Mrs C. E. White of Kimberley.\nThere is also a granddaughter, Allison Clair White of Kimberley.\nMr. and Mra. Harry Kemball have\nreturned from their wedding trip,\nand have taken up residence on\nFenwick avenue.\nThe marriage of Miss Antoinette\nGodin to H. Sheedy, both of this\ncity, took placc in Lethbridge last\nSwcck. They will reside in Cran-\nj brook.\n1 The pass list of Garbutt Business\n! College here shows the following\nl successful candidates: Honors, Flor-\nj ence Stender, Hessic Fairburn, Mur*\n! riel Miller, Agnes Lindberg; pass,\n'Esther Leonard, Jolanda Magro,\nSheila Hennessey.\n!    Passed in certain subjects: Donald\n, Clarke, bookkeeping, business English, shorthand and typing.\nI   Betty Senior, shorthand, theory,\nj Elizabeth Miller, bookkeeping.\nThe engagement has been an-\n1 pounced of Doris Lilian, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. R J. Edwards to\nFURS\nMr. R. Heather of\nC. G. Heather tft Co., Ltd.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nis now at the Hume Hotel\u2014Room 67\u2014with a simple\nline of Fur Coats. Take advantage of tho low summer\nprices now in affect. A deposit will hold any coat. Bring\nyour old coat for repairs and remakes.\nPhone 787 for Appointments\nMORE ABOUT\nNEW YMIR MILL\n(Continued From Paaa Ona)\nConsolidated property. Actually\nthere was ore from two mines ln\naddition to a waste dump which\nwould be worked. Tlie mill represented seven distinct tvpes ot plant\nand was so constructed that lt could\nbe changed to suit changing conditions.\nHe traced the course of the ore\nthrough the various processes until\nlt was dried and dumped into bins\nready for shipment to the smelter.\nThe mill ls capable of producing\nlead and zinc concentrates.\nThe plant, ha emphasized, was\nfully automatic which would result\nIn use ot little hand labor. He expected that from 40 to 55 per cent\nof the values of ore will be produced as bullion. He explained the\ngravity system which waa used\nwhere possible, the modern warning devices, such as colored lights\nand bells which were designed to\nwarn the operator and thus eliminate losses which occur when circuits\nore broken. The plant, ln every\nrespect, but one, was electrically\ncontrolled.\nCAN HANDLE 150 TONS\nThe mill, he pointed out was designed to handle 125 tons a day but\nactually lt would handle 150 tons by\nreason of the fine grind that was\npossible through the crushing plant\nand ball mill. To allow for expansion, space was available for an additional unit, or a larger unit, which\nwould bring the plant up to 500 tons\nper day. He predicted the new unit\nwould last a life-time and would\nbring prosperity, not only to the\ndistrict, but to the operators.\nCOAST VISITORS\nATTEND\nA considerable party of coast men\nwere in attendance at the opening\nceremony, including R. C. McCorkell, Vancouver, president; Dr.\nThomas Mercer, Victoria, vice-president: Norman Jessiman, Vancouver; Gordon R. Mason, Victoria,\ndirectors, and Alex M. Mason, Vancouver, secretary-treasurer; F. M.\nMcGregpr. Mutual Life, Victoria: R.\nDcspecker, Norris-Patterson, Vancouver; James Cullan of the Vancouver Province; Gordon Crossley,\ninsurance, Vanrouver; R. W. I.\nBurleigh of Burleigh and Parkinson; Thomas Johnstone, Continental\nSecurities, Vancouver; Arthur\nDawe. Victoria and Sydney Norman,\nmining editor of the Vancouver Sun.\nLadies included Mrs. A. M. Man-\nson. Mrs. R.> C. McCorkell.\nA banquet in tbe evening, a ball\ngame between Ymir and the mining camp team and a dance in the\nspacious dining room at the bunk-\nhouse concluded the opening festivities. Culinary arrangements\nwere-in charge of \"Happy\" Robin-\nForces For and Against Mr.\nRoosevelt Are Lining Up\nAn Analysis of What Each Seeks and a New\nView of Elements That Seem to Govern\nRooseveltian Post-NRA Policy\nEdward Davles, the marriage to take\nplace at Vancouver this week. Mr.\nDavies is on the staff ot the Cranbrook high school, and Miss Edwards has a large music class here.\nF. Parks has returned to Cranbrook alter a motor trip to Vernon,\nwhere he wu joined by his daughter, Misa Frances Parks, who was\nattending St Michael's achool.\nMr. and Mrs. L. 11. Acheson have\nreturned to Cranbrook following\ntheir wedding trip to the coast. They\nwill reside at Aberfeldie Falls.\nMiss Mary Hutchcroft is spending ber holidays In Cranbrook and\nat the coast, whero she waa accompanied by Miss May Murray, matron\nof the Medicine Hat hospital, where\nMiss Hutchcroft is also employed.\nM. Frost and daughters, Miss Mary\nMiss Alice and Miss Florence Frost\nhave left for a holiday in New York\ncity.\nJ. H. Cameron, who attended a\nconvention oj tlie B. of R T. at\nCleveland, has returned to his home\nhere. He returned by way of New\nYork, Montreal, Toronto and Kingston.\nMrs. G. S. Baker of Fruitvale has\nbeen visiting her son-in-law and\ndaughter. Mr. and Mrs. B. Murgatroyd at their home here.\nMrs. Herbert Chester and young\ndaughter Elspeth of Lethbridge are\nvisiting in Cranbrook.\nCALLS ROOSEVELT\n\"MEGALOMANIAC\nPRESIDENT\"\nWASHINGTON July I (AP)\n\u2014A reference by Senator Scliall\n\u00ab(R., Minn.) to President Roosevelt as \"this, megalomaniac\npresident\" was stricken from the\nUnited States congressional record today by senate leaders.\nDemocratic leaders angrily\nprotested to Senator McNary,\nRepublican leader, and threatened to have the speech expunged from the record in its\nentirety. McNary finally agreed\nto change the language so that\nit would read \"the president\"\ninstead of \"this megalomaniac\npresident\"\nGLOBETROTTER\nDIES\nLINDSAY, Ont., July 8 <CP)-\nDr. George Walker Davidson, noted\nphysician, globe trotter and adventurer, died today at the home of his\nbrother, Thomu Davidson, of Mariposa, where he had resided for the\nlast two years. He was 66 years\not age.\nJust think of It... genuine\nGoodyear Tlrea at real low\nprlcea. These Speedway Tlrea\nhava been tried and proven\n... they're good through and\nthrough. Guaranteed. Drive\nIn to see ua... drive away on\nGoodyears.\n\\\nSlxe\n4.40121\nSlse\n4.50 x 21\nSiie\n4.75 X 1.\nKlze\n5.00 x 19\n$J.25\n$3.00\n$g.7S\n$9.50\nOther alica equally low-priced\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\nPhone 35 Nelson, B.C.\nHUGE PLEDGE FOR\nSTABILIZATION?\nLONDON, July > (Tuesday)\n(AP)\u2014The Dally Herald aays today that Montagu Norman, governor of tha Bank of England, has\npledged \u00a3375,000.000 (ibout SV\n852,500,000) to bring about world\nstabilisation of currency without\ngovernment agreements.\nThe money is the publicly-\nowned British exchangs equalization fund, to be used, Norman\nsaid, \"for the support of slmost\neny International currency which\nshows weakness.\"\nLyons at Washington\nWASHINGTON, July 8 (AP)-A\nforecast of the welcome awaiting\nhim in Canada waa given Prime\nMinister Joseph A. Lyons of Australia and Mrs. Lyons today by the\nstaff of the Canadian legation.\nHon. W. D. Herridge. Canadian\nminister to the United States with\nHume Wrong, counselor, and Merchant Mahoney, first secretary,\njoined Secretary of State Cordell\nHull and British Ambassador Sir\nRonald Lindsay In the official welcome at Union station here.\nPRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT\nWhich Direction Will Tide Take Him?\nBy LESLIE EICHEL\n(Central Press Canadian Writer)\nWASHINGTON-There are two\nfactions fighting President Roosevelt The conservatives of both parties (termed u \"reactionaries\" by\ntheir opponents) are hailing with\ndelight the supreme court decision\noutlawing the NRA. It the government cannot restrict corporations or\nindividual employers, cannot uy\nhow many hours a man may be\nworked or what he should be paid,\nthen there once more is \"Ireedom of\naction.\" No employer can be iorced,\nunder present statutes, to bargain\ncollectively or to bar child labor\u2014\nunless a labor union, through its individual power, forces such action.\nAt thc same time, the decision is\nhailed by some progressive (power-\nlul ones, too) as ending monopoly,\nwhereby \"small businesses have\nbeen crushed.\"\nSEE A SEVERE SETBACK\nOn the other hand, the decision ls\ndenounced by other progressives and\nby New Dealers as throwing the nation back into an industrialism of\n\"free-booting such u civilization no\nlonger can tolerate.\" Furthermore\nwith restriction gone by the boards,\nthey see prices declining until standards of living reach a level of centuries back.\nNow, the basic issues as here\nstated would be simple it they were\nas simple as each side tries to make\nthem out to be.\nThe conservatives are not so\npleased as tliey pretend to be. ior\nthey tear that voluntary restriction\n(which, by the way, is illegal under\nthe anti-trust laws) cannot be observed, and thus unrestricted competition will result in severe deflation.\nFurthermore, a labor movement undisciplined by federal government\nregulation can become a revolutionary force. And a severe drop in\ncommodity prices might wipe out\nthe purchasing power of the nation.\nINCREASING POWER FEARED\nNor are the progressives who seek\na constitutional convention entirely\ndismayed by the supreme court decision. They had become increasingly\nfearful that, In the name of progress,\nthe administrative branch of the\ngovernment had been concentrating\npowers within Itself that might\nprove unhealthful In the future to\nprogressive movements, no matter\nhow much they have aided during\nthe present. It would be wiser, these\nprogressives believe, to battle now\nto incorporate reforms in the constitution, rather than to permit them\nto be stepping stones to broader\npowers of an executive.\nSuch progressives are at the opposite pole from the states' rightists, who defy any constitutional\nchange, yet. for different reasons,\nthey have the same objection to the\nconcentration of powers within the\nexecutive.\nThc executive, thus, is the focus\not attacks. He is identified as the\nInspiration of a movement of which,\nin reality, he is merely a pilot ln a\ntide. He may guide the vessel on\nthe rocks, or he may guide It deftly\nwith the currents\u2014or hc may breast\nthe currents.\nPresident Roosevelt Is one to\nguide with the currents, but with a\nbackward, twisting movement, as\nif he were undecided at times what\nis at the end.\nCOUNTS ON FAVORABLE\nTIDE\nIn the present Instance, having\nbeen hung up dangerously on a\nrapids, he Is waiting ior the tide to\npile up and sweep him on once more.\nThe tide, from all evidences at\nhand, is likely to be with him more\nthan with the men who attack him\nas trying to wreck the ship of state\nby means of constitutional changes.\nFor. on the shin there are more\nfarmers, more workers, more unemployed than there are industrialists\nand states' rightists.\nThere still is one more important\nfactor\u2014among the thousands of factors not touched on here\u2014and that\nIs: Ii the federal government Is\nslopped from regimenting production*^ Industry and crops ln order\nto peg prices, then the United States\nmust seek world markets, must in\nterchange trade, must reduce tariff\nbarriers, must stabilize currency, in\norder to increase prices through\nsupply and demand. m\nWOULD FOIL \\     *\nINFLATIONISTS\nThat, after all. Is the natural way.\nBut lt would put an end to \"money\nprinting\" plans, to inflation, to the\ncheapening of money. Thus the men\nwho are likely to arise to power\nare men with an international turn\nof mind\u2014and the United States\nwould cease to be an isolationist nation. The collateral issues to that\nare tremendous. The New Deal, iu\nita new form, thus would spread to\nthe entire world.\nAnd it is on that issue, rather than\non the cry that the constitution must\nbe defended, thc 1836 campaign is\nlikely to be fought out. If so. the\nconservative coalition against President Roosevelt might sufier the\nloss of its moat necessary element,\nthe large financial Interests.\nThev cannot exist without trade.\nNeither can the masses, nor can any\nreform.\t\nBATTAGLIA IS\nWINNER\nCLEVELAND, July 8 <AP)-\nFrank Battaglia oi Winnipeg, lormer Canadian middleweight representative at the Olympic games,\nscored a technical knockout over\nLou Halpcr oi Newark in the semi-\nfinal bout oi a boxing card here\ntonight.\nThe knockout came ln the fifth\nround as the referee stopped the\nfight after Battaglia floored Halper\nwith a short right cross.\nLOAD PROVISIONS\nFOR THE NORTH\nMONTREAL July 8 (CP)-Tons\nof provisions for men ln far-flung\nnorthern posts of the Dominion\ngovernment were stowed away in\nthe holds of the Nascople today as\nthe ship began loading for the annual trip into the arctic regions.\nThe ship will start.its long Journey\nfrom here July 13.\nTho provisions are bound lor\nWhale River, Cape Hopes Advance,\nCraig Harbor, Port Harrison, Southampton Island, Port Burwell and\nother government posts in Canada's\nnorthland.\nCalgary Stampede\nIs Opened\nCALGARY, Alta., July .-Cumulative panorama covering two hundred and fifty years of history on\nthe western plains moved through\nthe packed streets of the loot hills\ncity this morning. In celebration oi\nthe fiftieth anniversary of Calgary's\nfamous stampede and exhibition,\nall attendance records were broken\nwhen the mile or more of parade\npainted the wide pavements with\nanimated pictures of western life\nsince the advent of the white man.\nFARRIS ATTACKS\nBUREAUCRACY\nVICTORIA, July 8 <CP)-\"The\ngrowth of bureaucracy ln Canada is\nsomething that should be watched,\"\nsaid J. W. deB. Farrls K.C, ln delivering the inaugural address at\nthe opening of the annual convention of the Law Society of British\nColumbia today.\nHe defined this danger as resulting from the tendency of governments to delegate to officials rights\nwhich men have taken away from\nthem.\n\"Both political parties are identified with the same aort of thing,\"\nMr. Farris said.\nThe fertilizer Industry is believed\nto have originated In Baltimore\nabout the middle of the nineteenth\ncentury.\nMORE ABOUT\nSTRIKES SPREAD\n(Continued From Pege One)\nthe 'eamp Monday night by officials.\nFrom es far east as Valcartler to\nthe Paclflo seaboard more than\n5000 man ware Idle, striking for\nsettlement of lebor disputes or\nJirotestlng against conditions In\nadaral relief oamps.\nDEVELOPMENTS\nLatest developments in seven Canadian cities were:\nRockcllffe (Ottawa)\u2014Leaders of\n500 relief camp workera were ejected by authorities after the men\nhad gone on strike demanding 81 a\nday wages snd Improved working\nconditions.\nQuebec\u2014A delegation representing the 1900 men on strike at Valcartler camp near here conferred\nwith a representative ol the Dominion government concerning demands for SI a day and better working conditions.\nWinnipeg\u2014Ranks of 600 camp deserters ln Winnipeg were depleted\nslightly when about 65 men either\nreturned to their homes or camps\nor found employment on Manitoba\nfarms. Representatives of the remaining strikers pressed the provincial government for three meals a\nday and permission to continue\ntheir trek \"on to Ottawa.\" Their\nrequests were turned down.\nCalgary\u2014Seventy-six camp strikers\u2014part of the contingent which\nwas dispersed' at Regina\u2014refused\nto register for camp work after the\nAlberta relief commission provided\nthem with sleeping accommodation\nand food on that condition.\nPort Arthur\u2014Timber operators In\nthe Lakeshead district notified 1000\nstriking pulp camp workers. If they\ndid not return to work by the end\nof the week, the camps would be\nclosed. The men demanded higher\nwages.\nVancouvei*--Ships were loaded In\nVancouver's docks by longshore\ncrews despite the fact 900 longshoremen are on strike demanding recognition ot their organization. Eight\nhundred camp strikers, meeting in\nVancouver, communicated to the\ngovernment demands that strikers\nwould not be blacklisted lf they returned to the camps. It was expected\nthe demands would be met.\nOttawa\u2014Reports were heard In\nthe capital that the Dominion government might adopt a new practice in caring for unemployed single\nmen, finding employment for them\npn farms or in labor undertakings\ninstesd of concentrating thtm in\nrelief camps,\nLEADERS REMOVED\nOTTAWA, July 8 (CP) \u2014 While\ntwo detachments of Royal Canadian\nMounted Police and the full strength\nof airmen at Ottawa air station\nstood by, leaders of the Rockcliffe\nrelief camp workers strike were tonight ejected from the camp. The\nRockcllffe project ls a part of the\nair station.\nVirtual termination of the strike\nwu expected as the leaders were\nloaded on a truck and brought to\nOttawa, five miles from the camp.\n\"The atrlke will probably end\nnow,\" J. S. Downturn, spokesman\nfor the group said Sa they left the\ncemp.\nIn Ottawa the men unloeded from\nthe truck under the watchful eye ot\na single Mounted Policeman and one\nairman and dispersed quietly.\nThe Rockcliffe strike started this\nmorning when 115 of the 608 men\nregistered at Uie camp held a mass\nmeeting and presented \"demands\"\nof $1 per day wages, changea ln the\nhospital staff and tranafer of the\ncamps from department of national\ndefence to department of labor.\nTne strike was sympathetic with\na strike at Valcartler, Que., camp,\nstrike leaders said. Similar demands\nwere presented.\nReport to national defence headquarters wu made by Wing Commander A. E. Godfrey, officer commanding of Ottawa air station and\nln charge of the relief project who\nsaid the men struck without presentation of any complaint.\n3000 GOING TO OTTAWA?\nNORTH BAY, OnL. July 8 (CP)-\nPredicting that within two weeks\n3000 unemployed from northern and\nwestern Ontario would arrive here\nen route to Ottawa. Robert Stewart.\nBritish Columbia \"hunger marcher.\"\ntoday urged unemployed here to\nform a contingent in the trek.\nStewart, who said he would remain here until the marchers arrived, announced he would try to\nestablish an office here where unemployed wishing to join the march\ncould be registered. On a show of\nhands at the meeting he addressed,\na number voted support.\nNEAR RECORD IN\nSTEER EVENT\nCALGARY, July 8 (CP) - The\nnear record shattering performance\nof a husky youngster from Raymond, Alta., in the wild steer\ndecorating contest overshadowed\nother thrills from tumbling cowboys and snorting steers u preliminary events of the Calgary stampede got underway today.\nBill Zemp was on his steer, slipped the ring over the horn and had\nthe ribbon flying in the breeze ln\n4 4-5 seconds, 4-5 of a second away\nfrom the world's record.\nMORE MILLS ARE\nOPENED\nSEATTLE, July 8 (AP)-Mills\nclosed for two months in the violence-marked northwest lumber\nstrike reopened today under the\nprotection of national guardsmen\nand Police.\nGovernor Clarence Martin sent\nthe second battalion of the 161st infantry into the cities of Aberdeen\nand Hoquiam last night Troops already were at Tacoma.\nSix mills in Aberdeen and Ho-\nauiam augmented their crews after\nthe soldiers arrived. At Tacoma the\nfirst battalion guarded the mill district while two more mills resumed\nactivity, following other openings\nduring the last few days.\nCOMMITTEE PLAN\nINSURE HEALTH\nANNOUNCED\nVICTORIA. July 8 (CP) \u2014 The\nstructure of the Investigating committee on state health Insurance was\nannounced today by Hon. G. M.\nWeir, provincial secretary. Appointments will be made during the\ncourse of the next 10 days, thc minister said.\nRepresentatives of agriculture,\nlabor, municipalities, various professions, doctors, nurses and manufacturers will be chosen.\nSHIRT\nSALE\n$1.65\n1.\n3 for $4.25\nDon't pass up this chine*\nto stock up in shirts!\nForsyth, Tooke, Arrow\nand Cun Club shirts from\nour regular stock. Values\nto $2.50. Whites, plain\ncolors and patterns.\nEMORY'S\n*\"*   Limited     W\nMORE ABOUT\nETHIOPIA-ITALY\n(Continued Prom Peoe One)\nDirector T. A, Lamble of the Ilhl*\noplan mission servlea,\nDr. Lamble explained the emperor could not \"sincerely\" pledge\nhis word In this regard because of\ntha almost uncontrollable ferocity of soma Ethiopian frontier\ntribes. Tha mission director Is trying to orgenlie In London an ambulance corps for Ethiopia.\nITALY FEELS SAFE\nBy ANDRUE BERDINQ\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nHOME, July 8  (AP)\u2014Italy believed tonight a path from Rome to\nAddis Ababa was clear.\nOfficial circles said there was\nscarcely a possibility of British intervention; there ls no doubt of\nFrance's friendly neutrality.\nGermany is now friendly, they\nsaid, and Russia will be friendly because of France. Japan has growing\ncommercial interests in Ethiopia,\nbut Japan apparently has her hands\nfull with the Chinese and Manchoukuoan situations.\nThere remained only the league\nof nations, of which Benito Mussolini has no fear. Before that assembly Italy will take the offensive\nwith charges that Ethiopia violated\nthe conditions under which she\nwaa permitted to enter and should\nbe reduced to the rank oi a mandate.\nIf the league should attempt to\ncondemn Italy, official circles disclosed, il duce would not have the\nslightest hesitation about leaving\nGeneva. \u201e\nThe departure of troops for the\nItalian colonies bordering upon Ethiopia, Eritrea and Italian Somaliland, was speeded up. Some 2000\nlongshoremen were sent to Massaua,\nEritrea, to hasten the unloading of\ntroop transports.\nRoad building In Eritrea ls proceeding under tremendous preasure.\nTwo trunk lines down to the Ethiopian border will be ready by September.\nBRITISH POSITION\nLOK-JON, July 8 (CP)-A reas-\naertlon the responsibility for preventing an Italo-Ethiopian war is\ncollective and not an individual one\nwas made to the house of commons\ntoday by Sir Samuel Hoare, foreign\nsecretary.\nFrankly conceding he was unable\nto say under what conditions Italy\nis prepared to conclude a settlement\nwith Ethiopia, Sir Samuel also admitted he was unable to make a\nstatement on the government a position until Thursday.       \t\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST: ONE PAIR OE HORN RIM-\nmed spectacles ln or about Standard Cafe Sat 11.30 pjn. Reward-\nPhone 824. (2511)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nIn a class by itself\u2014a malted milk\nat Gelinas\\      <*\u2022\u25a0\nBoxlacrosse tonight Fairview vs.\nNelson seniors, 8 p-m., at the rink.\n(Z_13)\nFOR RENT. Furnished suite, electrical refrigeration. Kerr AWflL..\nExtra pair of trousers free with\nevery suit ordered during July at\nstt-M atv.r_3.-a (2447)\nI will not be reaponaible for eny\ndebts unless ordered by myself.\nHorace Morgan. (2449)\nPhone 321, Cranbrook, B. C. The\nPioneer Paint Shop dt Wallpaper\nstore for Eaat Kootenay.       (2485)\nKinsmen Dance, Willow Point\nSaturday night, July 13th. Adm. 1121\na couple. Refreshments.       (2486)\nTonight, Eagle whist and dance,\nEagle hall. Cards 8 p.m., dancing\n10.30. Reireshments, Adm. 25c.\t\n(2512)\nHear Gen. Burnham speak tomorrow night at Lakeside Park, 8 p.m.\nSubject \"Problems of the Hour.\"\n(2495)\nNew direct connection and low\nfares to Regina, Saskatoon and\nWinnipeg by Greyhound. Cross the\nCanadian prairies by bus.      (2505)\nTO SAVE TIME ANO FOR A\nQUICK LUNCH EAT AT\nWRIGHT'S CIGAR 8TORE LUNCH\nCOUNTER. (2369)\nC. C. F. public meeting tonight.\n8 p.m. Eagle hall. Speaker H. A.\nBryan. Subject, \"What the C.C.F.\nplans to do.'1 (2489)\nThe annual school meeting, Willow Point Rate Payers, at School\nHouse, Wednesday, July 17th at\nJ.30 p.m. (2509)\nGold Fern Mines. Ltd., will not be\nresponsible for any accounts contracted on and after June 15th without a signed order. (2501)\nTlie Canadlsn Legion Executive\ncordially invite all active and associate members with their wives\nand lady friends to a social and\ndance on Wednesday next. July 10th\nat 8.30 p.m. to bid farewell to Comrade J. Mclvor. No charge will be\nmade. A large attendance is requested. Only Legion members can attend. (2475)\nMORE ABOUT\nMighty Yanglse\n(Continued From Paaa One)\nready overflowing ln many localities, rises another few feet there\nwill be a flood inundating an estimated 50,000 square miles of the\nnation's richest land and making\n25,000,000 persons homeless.\nAs the strean flowed like a virtual\ninland ocean today many Inhabitants sought safety within dyked\ncities. Their homes, built of mud\nand straw, have been washed away,\ntheir crops destroyed.\nCollapse of a mud dyke between\nHankow and Yanyang wrecked\nhundreds of such homes. When their\nhomes were wiped away the people\nran for the dyke Itself and clambered above the fragments still visible\nabove the flood.\nWhile major cities along the Yang-\ntae are entrenched behind strong\nembankments people occupying\nareas protected by lesser bulwarks\nwatched the great river rise ominously.\nThree thousand ot theae on a strip\nbelow Hankow are protected momentarily by a mud dyke reaching\nbut 18 inches above the flood. The\nmen take turns trying to heighten\nthis seemingly pitifully weak bulwark. They hope it will hold but\ndespite their peril there is no panic.\nNANCHANG, Kianksl Province,\nChina, July 9, (Tuesday) (AP)-A\nmuddy torrent from the Yangtae\nriver, spuming through broken\ndykes today, took at least 300 lives\nand did Incalculable damage at the\nvillage of Tuchiapu, 30 miles north\nof here, according to meagre reports brought in by refugees.\nFive miles oi the Kuklang-Nan-\nchang railway was washed out virtually isolating this provincial capital. The city itself, however, la aa\nyet untouched by the rising w'er.\nSPECIAL VALUE!\nCampsite's\nItalian Balm\nfor Sunburn at\nSmythe's\nThe Prescription  Druggist\nPHONE t\nEYE SIGHT\nTESTINC\nBy long experience and\nModern Methoda we teet\nyour eyea.\nReasonable Prices\nEfficient Service\nJ. B. GRAY\nOPTOMCTRIST\n407 BAKER ST. PH. 313\nTODAY\nHelen Hayes\nRobert\nMontgomery\nFrom the Novel by\nHugh Wempole\n\"VANESSA*\nHER LOVE STORY\nwith\nOnO KRUGER\nHAY ROBSON\nLEWIS STONE\nExtra\nWARNER OUND\nMARY BRIAN\nIn\nIARL DER BIGGERS'\nTHRILLER\n\"Charlie Chan\nin Paris\"\nTomorrow\nTHE MERRIEST JOY\nRIDE OF THEM ALL!\nCharlie Rugglei\nUna Merkel\nIn\n\"MURDER IN THE\nPRIVATE CAR\"\nand\nClorie Stuart\nIn the Laugh  Romance\n\"Maybe It's Love\"\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_1935_07_09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0405546","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"}]}}