{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412210":{"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":"2022-03-10","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1936-07-06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412210\/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":" v Richardson Sets New. ifecore? in\nHop, Step and Jump\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\n' \u25a0\u2022'\"\u00bb'\u25a0\"\u00ab\n-Hi\nl'_t     C'rMA64 7\nProfits Are Taken at Winnipeg\nVancouver List Higher\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nVOLUME 88.\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, JULY 8, 1838\nNUMBER 68\n900 IN PERIL AS STEAMER IS AGROUND\nDEATH'S FOURTH OF JULY TOLL Pat Haley Breab Canadian\nIN II. & WORST IN FIVE YEARS\n251 DIE AS THE\nNATION HONOR.\nITS BIRTHDAY\nTraffic Accidents Kill\n149; Fireworks Take\nFive Lives\nPLANES CRASH,\nBUILDINGS BURN\nTavern Brawls and\nBullets Take\nToll\nCHICAGO, July 5 (AP). - The\nJnited States celebration of its 180th\nrirthday ended tonight the worst\nIttly 4th tragedy in five years.\nDeaths were counted at 25_\u2014\nnore than one and a half for every\n'ear of United States independence.\nBanging firecrackers played a\n:omparatively innocent role ln the\nilaughter, taking but five lives in\nhree states, but motoring accidents\nind drownings rolled up a terrific\noil.\nNot since 1931, when 483 celebra-\nors died, wss the death list so long.\nAll but seven of the 48 states\u2014\nColorado, Delaware, Mississippi.\n\u25a0texada, New Mexico, Vermont and\nVyomlns\u2014reported fatalities.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nIVE ARRESTED FOR\nBOND THEFT\nWASHINGTON, July 5 <AP>-\ntecovery of an additional $200,000\nif the $1,456,000 in United States\njovernment treasury bonds stolen\nrom the Bank of Manhattan Company of New York in 1935 and\nirrest of five men were announced\noday by J. Edgar Hoover, director\nthe federal bureau of investi-\nation.\nHoover said that Morris Reisner,\n)ave Berman, Moe Sedway, Ben\nipsy and Jack Green, would be\nirraigned in New York tomorrow\nnorning on charges o( handling\nhe securities.\nCABINET MEETS\nON WEDNESDAY\nOTTAWA, July 5 (CP)-With two\n!anadian ministers already in the\n'nited Kingdom on trade missions,\nthird will sail next Saturday. Aim-\ntg to stimulate markets for Ca-\nadian farm products, Hon. James\nGardiner, minister of agriculture,\nill join Finance Minister Dunning\nnd Trade Minister Euler in Cana-\n'S drive for bigger and better\nrade with the United Kingdom and\nirtaln European countries.\nThree other cabinet ministers, Jus-\nice Minister Lapointe, Defence min-\n,ter Mackenzie and Pensions min-\niter Power, will also sail Saturday\nor Europe. They will represent\nlanada at the Vimy memorial un-\neiling July 26.\nCabinet has been called to meet\nfednesday.\nloy Drowns When\nDog Attacks Him\nBHOCKPORT, N.Y., July 5 (AP)\n-A mongrel dog was blamed today\nor the drowning o( a 14-year-old\nouth in the Berge canal Saturday.\nSwimming in thc muddy waters,\nlaxwell Breeze was attacked by a\nirge black mongrel.\nAn attempt rescue of the youth\ny Paul Hamlin, 16, of Brockport'\nailed when the maddened animal\nurned on both swimmers.\nLoad Bar Silver at\nCastlegar\nWhen the C.P.R. pauenger\ntrain pulled out of Caitlegar on\nSaturday morning It carried a\nspecial shipment of illver In ban\nfrom the Consolidated Mining i.\nSmelting company, Ltd., of Trail.\nThe ban were shipped express\nand were valued at about $45,000.\nThey were marked (or delivery at\nVictoria.\nALL SET TO SINK\nKING'S YACHT\nCOWES, Eng., July 5 (AP). -\nNavy officials awaited the right\nkind of conditions tonight for the\nscuttling of the Britannia, the late\nKing George's racing cutter.\nAway from prying eyes, the cratt\n\u2014one of the trat-known racing\nyachts in marine history\u2014will be\ninterred beneath the waters of the\nEnglish channel. Orders to this effect, it has been announced, have\nbeen given by King Edward and\ntransmitted to officials here by Sir\nPhilip Hunlike, King George's sailing master.\nBy terms of .King George's will\nthe gallant yacht, which has more\nthan 200 victories to her credit, was\nleft to King Edward with the proviso\nthat if he did not want her she was\nto be offered to the other sons. In\nthe event no one wanted the yacht,\nthe will expressly stipulated, she\nwas to be broken up or otherwise destroyed, but not sold.\nNURSES REELECT\nOFFICERS\nVANCOUVER, July 5 (CP)-Sessions of the Canadian Nurses' association biennial convention today\nwere ended and officers of the organization were reelected.\nReelection of Miss Ruby M. Simpson, Regina, to the presidency for\nanother two-year term was announced Tuesday. Othir officers\nare: Miss Grace Fairley, Vancouver,\nfirst vice-president; Miss Margaret\nMoag, Montreal, second vice-president; Miss Elsie Wilson, Winnipeg,\nhonorary secretary; and Miss Margaret Murdoch, St. John, N.B., honorary treasurer.\nGIRL PAT SKIPPER\nREMANDED WEEK\nGEORGETOWN, British Guiana,\nJuly 5 (CP Cable).\u2014Remanded another week in prison, Captain\nGeorge Osborne of the. runaway\nBritish trawler Girl Pat, and his\nbrother Jim, awaited tonight an\nanswer from England to their application for permission to waive\nall proceedings here and return to\nEngland for trial on charges of\nstealing the ship.\nHEAT WAVE HITS\nWHEAT BELT\nWINNIPEG, July 5 (CP)-Heat\nlook possession of the southern\nprairie wheat belt today to increase\nthe need of rainfall to save crops af.\ndieted by lack o( a general rain\nfor the past 10 days.\nTop temperatures ot 102 degrees\nwere reported from Broadview,\nSaSk., and Virden, Man,, both southern points close to the Manitoba-\nSaskatchewan boundarly line.\nAmerican Visitors\non July 4 Are Few\nNelson's anticipated influx of\nAmerican visitors over the weekend assumed none of the expected\nproportions. Cars bearing Washington or Idaho licence plates were\ncomparatively few as compared\nwith previous July 4 holidays. A\nnumber of civilian conservation\ncamp workers were among them.\nhvtxlg Official Gives Eden Nazi\nSalute; Thumbs Nose at Spectators\nassembly Thrown Into an Uproar; journalists' President Asks\nApology, But Eden Suggests Incident Be Ignored\nfc\nGENEVA, July 5 (CP-Havas)-A\nlazi salute and a nose-thumbing\nirew the meeting of the league\nssrmbly here yesterday into an\niproar.\nDr. Karl Grelser, president of the\nlazi-controlled senate of Danzig,\nlade both gestures. Upon conclp-\n,on of his address demanding a\new high commissioner for the free\nGrelser turned toward Anthony\nen, Joseph A. C. Avenol, secrc-\nof the league, and Stanley\nnice of Australia, clicked his heels\nid saluted with raised arm and\nopen palm. When an angry murmur\nrose from the spectators benches\nhe wheeled, placed his thumb to\nhis nose and stuck out his tongue.\nThe hall was thrown into an\nuproar. Robert Dell, president of\nthe Association of Journalists, leaped to his feet and demanded an\nimmediate apology.\nAs president of the council, Eden\nfinally restored order saying he had\nnot seen 'the gesture. In any case,\nhe said it would be preferable for\nthe dignity of the meeting to Ignore\nthe incident.\nMELROSE, NOTED\nAUSSIE AIR ACE,\nKILLED IN (RASH\nPlane Crashes Rocky\nField, Also Killing\nMine Engineer\nPLANE WRECKAGE\nWIDELY STREWN\nFlier Once Held the\nRecord, Australia\nto England\nMELBURNE, Australia, July 8\n(AP).\u2014A iplnning plane crashed\non a rocky field today, carrying\nthe noted Australian filer, C.\nJames Melrose, (nd a companion\nto Instant death,\nWith   Melrose  died   Lleut.-Col.\nAlexander Qeorge Campbell,\nwidely-known mining engineer.\nMelrose, who once set an Aus-\ntrallan-to-England record of 8 days\n8 hours, was killed eight months\nafter he had seen Captain Charles\nKingsford-Smith,  his  countryman,\nfly to his death in a monsoon over\nthe Bay of Bengal.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nMANY PLANES FOR\nCOAST RACE\nVANCOUVER; July 8 (CP). -\nThe Seattle-Vancouver air race for\na silver trophy and 8250 in cash\nprizes, a feature event of the Vancouver, junior board of trade air\nshow on August 1, will attract entries from all parts of the northwest,\naccording to Edlin T. Orr, secretary\nof the junior board.\nLieut-Commander Kendall will\nbe in charge of a flight of nine\nplanes from the 13th United States\nnaval division squadron's Sand\nPoint headquarters which will take\npart in the program. Three of these\nplanes will be the fast new Grumman fighters.\nNO RESULTS ON\nBALLOON RACE\nDENVER, July 5 (AP)\u2014Honor of\nrepresenting the United States in\nthe international balloon races as\nwinner of the national event was a\ntoss-up today between two Ohio\nentries after a contest marred by an\nexplosion and a wind-rip.\nUnofficially, Ihe winner appeared\nto be the Goodyear-Akron balloon\nwhich came down at Sterling, Colo.,\nyesterday 115 miles from the takeoff point at Denver's municipal airport. The Cleveland Great Lakes\nballoon landed at Akron, Colo., approximately 100 miles away and\nthe other three entries\u2014 one U. S.\nArmy and two U. S. Navy\u2014came\ndown still closer to the starting\npoint.\nRichard Aden to\nPlay in Vancouver\nGolf Tourney Soon\nREVELSTOKE, B.C., July 5 (CP).\n\u2014Richard Arlen, screen star who Is\nin Revelstoke for the production of\nBritish Gaumont's \"The Great Barrier,\" is preparing to take part in\nVancouver's $5000 golf tournament\nat Point Grey gol( course, July 23-25.\nArlen will play as a member ol\nthe Revelstoke Golf club whose\ncourse record o( 68 ne broke Friday,\ncarding 33-34 for a total of 67.\nArlen has received word that Bing\nCrosby, ace golfer of Hollywood, is\nto be an entrant and his secret ambition is to turn in a better card\nthan the crooner.\nEngineer Crashes\nto Death in Car\nHis\" Rail Line\non\nTILLAMOOK, Ore., July 5 (AP).\n\u2014Four pleasure-bound motorists\ndropped 100 feet to their death on a\nrailroad track when their can\nskidded from a country road near\nhere Saturday.\nThe dead were Mr. and Mrs. H. H.\nKelley and Mr. and Mrs. William A.\nMcDonald, all of Portland. Three\ndied at once and the other an hour\nlater.\nOddly, McDonald, a locomotive\nengineer for the Southern Pacific\ncompany, has taken trains many\ntimes over the very tracks on which\nhe crashed to his death. '\nRecord in High Jump, Wins\n100 Yards and Broad Jump\nTrail Boy Stars at B. C. Olympic Trials at\nVancouver; Murray Wheaton, Cranbrook,\nWins the One-mile Event\njack Mccracken of nelson easily\nwins the 440, with brooks second\nGeorge Anderson, Kimberley, Second in Shot\nPut, Third in Broad jump; McCracken Is\nSecond in 880, and Wheaton Third\nVANCOUVER, July 5 (CP)\u2014Led by young Pat Haley\nof Trail, a heat of junior athletes of the track and field\nfrom interior pointi today had a major portion of victories,\nincluding a new Canadian junior record for the high jump,\ntucked under their arms, following the British Columbia\n\u2022    junior Olympic championships here Saturday.\nHaley, promising 17-year-old\nsprinter, and brother of Joe Haley\nwho  made  the British   Columbia\nOlympic trial track team this year,\ncracked the Canadian junior high\njump record of five feet 10% inches\nwhen he won that event with a leap\nof five feet, 11 Inches. The former\nrecord was held by Alec Lucas of\nVancouver since 1934.\nQuebec Farmers\nPromised Bonus\nQUEBEC, July 5 (CP) .-Premier\nAdelard Godbout of Quebec in a\nspeech tonight outlined the government's program which included\nfarmers' bonuses and minimum\nwages for workmen not protected\nby a collective labor agreement.\nThe premier combined his outline\nof government policy with a plea for\nclean elections and added the promise that in future \"members of the\ngovernments will not be allowed to\nbe directors of companies which\nhave business with the government.\"\n\"Farmers established in old rural\ncenters will receive a bonus of $10\nan acre, up to five acres, each year,\nfor lands which need to be cleaned,\ndrained and otherwise placed in a\nstate for proper culture,\" he said.\nAnd to help the farmer meet foreign competition the government\nplanned a butter bonus of 3 'cents a\npound and a bonus ot IV, cents a\npound on cheese to run from October to May 1 to compensate for high\nwinter production costs.\nFrom November 1 to August 1, he\nsaid, the government proposed to\npay a bonus of $1.50 for each pig\nraised by Quebec farmers and classified as \"select\" and $1 for each pig\nclassified as \"bacon.\"\nFrom August 1 to November 1\nthese bonuses would be $1 and 75\ncents respectively. In addition the\npremier said the government\nplanned to pay 25 per cent of the\ncost of building modern piggeries\nwith a maximum of $100 a piggery.\n15,000 BATTLE\nFRENCH POLICE\nPARIS', July 5 (AP)-Police and\nmobile guards fought Rightists, estimated officially to number 15,000,\nalong the Champs Elysees tonight.\nMany civilians were reported injured. A police statement said 31\nofficers were hurt and that 16 persons were arrested.\nDemonstrators, fleeing after the\nencounter, took refuge in \u00abcafes\nwhere they hurled chairs, canes\nand bottles from terraces at the pursuing police.\nREV. R. CONNELL\nIS UPHELD\nVANCOUVER, July 5 (CP)-A\nvote of non-confidence in Rev.\nRobert Connell, censuring the leader of the opposition leader in the\nBritish Columbia' legislature and\ncalling for his resignation was overwhelmingly defeated by the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation provincial convention here on\nSaturday night. The motion was\nswamped under a 138 to 76 vote.\nVIENNA WORRIED\nVIENNA, July 6 (AP)-Reports\namong Austrian gendarmes and soldiers that Italy is throwing up an\nelaborate system of Brenner pass\nfortifications heightened the uneasiness over the well-watched border today.\nThe Tyrol was agitated by many\nrumors.\nFishermen Draw\nBlank at Pool\nUnder cold and stormy conditions\nSaturday, with many squalls of rain,\nthe South Slocan pool was a blank\nfor tlie fishermen who went out on\nit. (t is stated the grasshopper season is opening there.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nMAYOR LOVE OF\nGRAND FORKS IS\nGOING WINNIPEG\nGRAND FORKS, B.C., July 8.-\nMiryorT. A. 1\/sit ofJJrand Forks\nhas returned- from the*co.st where\nhe attended the Conservative convention. He expects to leave this\nweek for Winnipeg Where he will\nattend, a meeting of the Canadian\nWeekly Press association.\nBANNISTER CASE\nNEAR AN END\nDORCHESTER, N.B., July 5 -\n(CP).\u2014Daniel Bannister made ready\ntonight to place his life in a jury's\nhands for the second time after\ntestifying he had no hand in the\nmurder of Phillip Lake, though he\nwas outside Lake's cabin the night\nthe squatter was killed. He heard\n\"what sounded' like a woman's\nscream.\"\nThe young lumberjack was the\nonly witness in his defence as evidence concluded in supreme court\nSaturday.\nAt their first trial the brothers,\nconvicted of murder, were sentenced to hang. Daniel gained a\nnew trial, but Arthur's appeal failed. He was reprieved, however, so\nhe might be available to testify at\nDaniel's trial. He was not called.\n20-YEAR-OLD BACK\nWITH 10 BODIES\nARCHANGEL, U.S.S.R., July 5\n(AP)\u2014Twenty-year-old Ivan Kruk-\nhoff related today the story of a\ngrim voyage through the wild and\nicy waters of the White sea, with\na cargo of 10 dead men.\nKrukhoff was the rone survivor\nof a party of 12, all members of a\nscientific expedition. He reached\nsafety in a lifeboat loaded with the\nbodies of 10 of the others. The 11th\nbody was not recovered.\nThousands of persons attended a\nmass funeral yesterday for the victims.\nFirecrackers Start\nFire, Half Town Is\nAbout Wiped Out\nREMSEN, Iowa, July 5 (AP)-A\nfire started by firecrackers today\nhad wiped out most of the northern\nhalf of this town causing damage\nestimated by officials at $500,000.\nThe blaze, fanned by a strong wind,\ndestroyed half the business district,\n20 homes, the Illinois Central railroad station, and the grandstand in\nthe town's ball park.\nAdvance Party Going\nto Glacier's Foot\nVANCOUVER, July 5 (CP).-A\nsix-man advance party of the British Columbia Mountaineering club's\nMount Waddington expedition today was hiking through the bush\nalong the bank of Franklin river on\nan eight-mile trek from the head\nof Knight inlet to the foot of Franklin glacier.\nProvisions and equipment were\nlanded Thursday from the cruiser\nTranquilla and the party, headed by\nBill Taylor, Vancouver mountaineer,\nestablished temporary headquarters.\nDR. TELFORD IS\nB.C. PRESIDENT\n(.(.FEDERATION\nElected Unanimously\nat Sunday Session\nat Vancouver\nARTHUR TURNER\nVICE PRESIDENT\nncrease Delegates on\nProvincial Council\nto Forty\nVANCOUVER, July 5 (CP)-Dr.\nLyle Telford tonight was unanimously elected president of the\nBritish Columbia section of the\nCooperative Commonwealth Federation at the close of this afternoon's session ot the provincial\nconvention here.\nOther officers elected before adjournment were: Arthur Turner,\nvice-president; Herbert Gargrave,\nsecretary, and J. O. Cloutler, treasurer.\nA stir was caused prior to thc\nelection of officers when Herbert\nGargrave, executive member,\njumped to his feet and read out a\nproposed slate of officers which, he\ncharged, had been mimeographed\nand handed to some delegates.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nVernon Suicide\nLale Nelsonile\nArthur Wylie's Body\nround;-Had Farm\nat Lumby\nArthur Wylie, aged 59, whose lifeless body was found in a Vernon\nhotel room, took his own life by\ndrinking carbolic acid it was decided following an inquiry conducted by Dr. O. Morris, Vernon\ncoroner.\nWylie had been in Vernon and\nLumby since August, 1934, when he\nleft Nelson for the Okanagan. He\nleft no information as to earlier\nlife and while in the Okanagan apparently told little about himself\nto anyone. Search for further data\nis being made by C. W. Morrow,\nofficial administrator. Wylie left a\nsmall farm in the Lumby district. A\nbank deposit yielded no information.\nWhen his clothes were searched he\nhad only 90 cents in his pockets.\nGOLD RUSH IN\nONTARIO\nENGLEHART, Ont., July 5 (CP)\n\u2014Prospectors and mining men have\nreached this northern town on the\nheels of reports that a spectacular\ngold strike has been made in Bryce\ntownship, 20 miles southwest. Latest reports said all available property for miles in the area had been\nstaked.\nPainters in Church\nWin Demands\nMENTON, Prance, July 5 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014Striking painters set a record for church attendance last night\nwhen they finally evacuated the\nAnglican Church of St. John. It\nwas a matter of francs rather than\ndevotion, however. Their wage demands refused, the painters went to\nchurch 10 days ago and stayed.\nThe British consul and the English\ncolony protested at being unable\nto attend church services. The protest spurred an agreement.\nWeaker\nMin. Max.\nNELSON 48 74\nVictoria     52 65\nVancouver 56 66\nKamloops  50 78\nPrince George  40 70\nEstevan Point  50 62\nPrince Rupert   50 62\nDawson, Y.T 56 46\nSeattle  56 70\nPortland, Ore 68 74\nSan Francisco  : 54 66\nSpokane  58 78\nLos Angeles  68 86\nPenticton  54 \u2014\nVernon    54 \u2014\nCalgary  46 76\nEdmonton  44 70\nSwift Current  58 92\nPrince Albert   56 78\nSaskatoon    60 86\nQu'Appelle  56 92\nWinnipeg 62 96\nMoose Jaw 60 94\nFather of Nelson\nLady Buried, Coast\nVANCOUVER, July 5 (CP). -\nFuneral services were held here\nSaturday for William Bailey, 70-\nyear-old resident of British Columbia who died here Thursday.\nBailey came to Vancouver 47\nyears ago from Ontario and was engaged in the stationery business for\na number of years.\nHe is survived by his widow and\na daughter here. Mrs. Jessie Shaw of\nNelson is a sister.\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\n(By Canadian Press)\nToronto and Montreal \u2014 Stock\nmarkets closed.\nNew York - All United States\nmarkets closed. (Holiday.)\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat \\% to a cent\nlower.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver higher; other\nmetals unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Silver unchanged.\nRESCUE ATTEMPT\nIS PREVENTED BY\nHEAVY FOG BANK\nSoviet Craft Helpless\non Rocks North\nof Japan\nBOTTOM LEAKING\nMany Travelling\nal This Season\nBut Traffic Mainly\nto Coast Declare\nTravellers\nTraffic on railroads and on bus\nlines is reported particularly heavy\nto Vancouver according to travellers reaching Nelson. Hundreds of\nAlbertans went to the coast last\nweek for the opening of the jubilee\ncelebrations. They were taking advantage of cheap rail and bus rates\noffered.\nDistrict hotelmen have noticed a\nfalling off in the summer tourist\nbusiness and attribute it to the jubilee program at Vancouver.\nTOKYO, July 6 (Monday) (AP),\n\u2014A dispatch from Sapporo, Japan,\nto the newspaper Asahl today said\n900 livei were feared endangered\naboard tha Soviet steamer Slma,\ngrounded off Onnekitan Island,\nnorth of the Kurlle chain.*\nThe 4000-ton vessel was reported to have run aground July 2.\nThe Kurile Islands are north of\nJapan.\nWith Its engines helpless and\nIts bottom leaking, the Slma was\nsaid to be In a precarious position.\nThe Soviet steamer Clochon, the\ndispatch stated, was attempting to\neffect a rescue but had been prevented because of heavy fog.\nVENIOT (LINGS\nTO LIFE\nBATHURST, N.B, July 5 (CP).-\nHon. ?. J. Veniot still clung to life\ntonight, though physicians believed\ndeath was only hours away for the\nformer postmaster-general of Canada.\nStricken with an abdominal ailment, he has been sinking slowly for\ndays. Last week, he was accorded\nthe last rites of the Roman.Catholic\nchurch. Tonight, the condition of\nthe member of the commons for\nGloucester was reported as greatly\nweakened.\nCANADA AND U. S. \"PROUD\" OF THEIR\nRELATIONSHIP, ROOSEVELT DECLARES\nWASHINGTON, July 5 (AP). -\nPresident Roosevelt described the\nestablishment of an international\npark Saturday on the Montana\nboundary line as \"evidence to the\nworld\" that the p....\nUnited States and\nCanada were\n\"proud\" of their\nrelations toward\neach other.\nIn a message of\ngreeting sent to\nthe opening of thej\nGlacier - Waterton\nInternatio nal\nPeace park, Mr.\nRoosevelt said:\n\"The international relationsl\nexisting, and\nwhich have existed for so many years, between\nthe United States and Canada are\nan ever-present evidence ot thc\nharmony and goodwill that may be\nenjoyed when two peoples on different sides of a national boundary\nare both inclined toward friendship\nand understanding.   Therefore, the\nRoosevelt\noperation of a common playground\ncovering territory in both countries\nis something more thah a gesture\ntowards the ideal. It is an evidepce\nto the world that .each of us is proud\nof our relations toward the other;\nand' a pledge that it is the sincere\nwish of all the people of both countries that these pleasant relations\nshall continue:\"\nToday a cairn to John George\n(Kootenai) Brown, Sounder of Waterton Park, was unveiled and dedicated. A stirring open air good will\nservice wa#s held with Bishop Fox\nof the Montana diocese of the Episcopal church the principal speaker.\nSuperintendent Herbert Knight\nof Waterton Park received the en- -\u25a0\ngraved plaque after its dedication\nby Bishop L. Ralph Sherman of\nCalgary. Lieutenant-Governor W.\nL. Walsh of Alberta, Hon. J. W.\nHugill, Alberta attorney-general,\nSenator W. A. Buchanan and Bishop\nSherman represented Canada in the\nceremonies while O. S. Warden of\nGreat Falls, Mont., Roy H. Glover,\ncongressman Ayers and Bishop Fox\nrepresented United States.\nFEAR GERMANY TAKING FIRST STEP\nTO REGAIN FREE (ITY OF DANZIG\nVirtual Secession From League Control Is'\nDemand of President of Senate\nGENEVA, July 5 (CP-Havas).\u2014\nA Nazi demand for complete control\nof Danzig under a new high com-'\nmissioner was made before thc\nLeague of Nations last night.\nRising before statesmen gathered\nfor a league council meeting, Arthur\nGrelser, president of the free city's\nNazi-controlled senate, urged that\nSean Lester, league high commissioner for Danzig, be ousted and a\nnew commissioner appointed.\nBy J08EPH' 8HARKEY\nAuoclated Press Stall Writer\nGENEVA, July 5 (AP)-A Nazi's\ndemand for virtual Danzig secession from all League of Nations\ncontrol provoked concern today lest\nGermany was taking her first step\ntoward actual territorial revision of\nthe treaty of Versailles.\nThat was the reaction in some\nGeneva quarters in the speech before the league council yesterday\nby Dr. Arthur Krai Greiser, president of the Danzig senate\u2014a speech\nclimaxed by a brisk Nazi salute\nafter Greiser said he spoke for the\nGerman people.\nObservers, pointing to the league's\nsituation as disclosed by the Italo-\nEthiopian affair, said there wasja\npossibility the free territory might\neventually cut off all ties wit!, the\nleague, her sponsor, and proclaim\nannexation to Germany, her father-\nland.\nSome statesmen appeared openly\napprehensive of the Danzig problem.\nTomorrow the committee on coordination o( 52 nations will meet,\nto arrange for the lifting of sanctions from Italy.\nThe council itself decided not to\nclose its session, and may meet\nagain at any time simply upon the\ncall of Anthony Eden, British foreign secretary.\nLast night the council, in secret\nsession, decided the Danzig problem should be handled calmly but\nfirmly, and asked Great Britain,\nFrance and Portugal to follow the\nsituation closely.\nDanzig, strategic Baltic port, formerly a part of the German empire,\nwas established as a free city along\nwith its surrounding territory on\nNovember 9, 1920, by the treaty of\nVersailles.\nThe city, essentially German in\ncharacter, is the chief outlet for\npolish commerce. Poland exercises\njoint control with the free city over\nthe harbor administration. Danzig\nalso is within Polish customs administration.\nFREE CITY OF DANZIG, July 5\n(AP)\u2014Danzig's citizenry displayed\nhigh tension and uncertainty tonight over the future of the free\nterritory.\nThere were rumors of imminent\nNazi action, but. party officials denied them flatly.\n\t\n\t\n_____________\nm____________________\n---___.\nm\n STILL TALK OF\nKING MARRYING\nmm*\n$10.00 CASH\nA prize of $10.00 will be paid tor the Beit\nArticle ol not more than 1800 words describing the scenic beauty ot the tleein\nLike District and its resources and attractions. Contest eloses August 31st. Open\nto everyone.\nMall your entries te:\nA. D. TRICKETT\nSecretary, SJocan District Board of Trade\nNew Denver, B.C.\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Fines* in the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL \u2022\nFree Bus Servlco Geo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST SOo and UP\nLUNCHEON \u00abe to 60. DINNER 40e to J5c\nROTARY AND OYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 717 NELSON. B.C. 422 VERNON ET.\nHUME - William Kelru. H. J.\nSpiers, Creston; D. J. Rogerson and\neon, Toronto; A. Anderson, P. M.\nWards, R, Crawford, H. H. McBane,\nMedicine Hat; Mr. and Mrs. R.\nGurser, Los Angeles; Charles Bach-\nner, Priest River, Idaho; Mr. and\nMra, Fred Jordan, Gladys Brooks,\nJohn EMngstone and wife, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Meadows, Jack Meadows,\nMr. and Mrs. G. A. Farnsworth,\nMrs. L. B. Robinson, Mrs. F. Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. John J. Stanford,\nMildred Stanford, Loretta Stanford,\nSpokane, Wash; Mr. and Mrs. E. G.\nGueedtnger, Miss Gertrude Guae-\ndinger, Wallace, Idaho; X. L. Gray,\nPenticton; T. Dick, Douglsa Robertson, T. G. Stokes, J. E. McCorwaet,\nVancouver; Mr. and Mrs. L. G\nFlenin, Lewiston, Idaho; R J. Boyle,\nColbert, Wash.; Mr. and Mrs. S. B.\nNordqulst, Erie, B.C.; Mr. and Mrs.\nOtherson and daughters, Cranbrook,\nB.C.; Mr. and Mrs. HIU, Salmo; A.\nA. Allen, Nakusp; Mr. and Mrs. T.\nJ. Teahan, H. C. Crowe, J. H. Curtis,\nRowland C. Webb, Trail.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest Is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\n\u25a0 Fully Licenced\n124 Biker St.     W. K. Clark. Prop.     Nelson, B. C\nMew Grand Hotel\nP. L. KAPAK. Prop.\nHot and Cold Water\nMonthly rates 510.00 up\nPH, ttA      tit VERNON ST.\nBoost for tht\nKootenay District\nIT PAYS!\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Virnen St. Phono 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL   MONTHLY   RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Lleeneed\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJA8. A. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and Cold Water\nIn the HEART ot the City\nPHONE M      SOS WARD ST.\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL \"\u00b0EV\u00b0?D?C\nE. NIEDERMAN,\nProprietor\nComfortible Roomi\nQood Meili\nLogical Stopping\nPlace on the\nRoad to Vernon\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Wilt Enjoy Staying at the\nHotel Volney jag.\n410\nRiverside Ave.\nEVERY COUR\nOpposite the Piulsen Building\nITE8Y SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nHOLIDAY IN THE OKANAGAN\nVIA GREYHOUND LINES\nNelson to Penticton, Kelowna, and Vernon\n$8.00 one way, $14.40 return.\nWeek-end\u2014good from Friday until Monday,\n$10.00 return.\nINTERIOR CREYHOUND LINES, LTD., Penticton, B.C.\nSEE YOUR LOOAL QREYHOUND AQENT\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 i.m. Except Sundiy\n\u2122 TRAIL LIVERY CO. \"W\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\n135\n35\n_ .... ii i    ifti n        ,,|     i    \",,    |   ,,, p\t\nBoost for the Kootenay District - It Pays!\nBISLEY SHOOT\nSTARTS TODAY\nBISLEY CAMP, Surrey, July 5\n(CP Cable)\u2014All was in readiness\ntonight tor the opening tomorrow\not another two weeks ot competition lor prized individual and team\ntrophies in the annual empire shoot\nover the Bisley ranges.\nEighteen Canadians will seek to\ncapture some of the awards. Canada\nhas the second largest overseas\nentry this year, South Africa heading the list with 22 marksmen.\nIn last year's National Rifle association meet, the Canadians fared\nbadly. They lost both the MacKinnon cup and the Kolipore cup,\nwhich they (had won ln 1934. India\nwon the Kolapore cup last year,\nwith Canada only one point behind\nIn second place. Oreat Britain took\nthe MacKinnon cup.\nThis year the team, which spent\nall last week tn practice over the\nBisley ranges, Is hopeful of putting\ntha Dominion on top in some ot the\nbig events.\nMore than 100 competitors from\noverseas ara in camp tor the meet,\nwhich continues until July 16. General entries compare favorable with\nthose of last year.\nNASOOKIN BACK\nON FERRY RUN\nPROCTER, B.C.-The Nasookin,\nwhich has been under repairs for\nthe past two months, is now back\non the Frasen-Gray Creek run.\nMrs. \"Pat\" Jarvis and children\nBetty and Donald have returned to\ntheir home in Invermere, after\nspending a short holiday the guests\not Mr. and Mrs. W. It. Jarvls.\nMr. and Mrs. Bill Farmer, daughters Ethel and Beverly, T. Hawes\nand John Bonacci motored to Aim-\nworth on Dominion day.\nMiss Annie MacKinnon hai returned to the home of her parents,\nCapt. and Mrs. M. MacKinnon.\nAfter completing a three-year\ncourse' in nursing at the Vancouver\nGeneral hospital, Miss MacKinnon\nwas accompanied home by Billy\nMacKinnon of Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Louis Bonacci have\nreturned from Spokane and have\ntaken up residence in one of the\nOutlet hotel cottages.\nMrs, E. Miller, Miss Cherrle Sewell, Mrs. Clarence Sewell and\nJack Sewell motored to Nelson on\nWednesday night to attend the\ndance at the auditorium.\nAndy Kraft and party of Nelson\nspent Wednesday fishing at Procter.\nDr. Ray Shaw and friends were\namong those who visited Procter\nfrom Nelson on Wednesday.\nMiss Lily Helghton is visiting\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Helghton.\nMiss Agnew of Lethbridge, who is\nvisiting Mrs. G. Robinson, spent\nThursday in Nelson.\nCapt. J. A. McDonald of Nelson\nvisited Procter Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. G. F. Daniells visited Nelson.\nCapt. Malcolm McLeod of Penticton, who has been relieving on\nthe Moyie, left Thursday morning\nfor his home.\nFears Expressed for Safety of Sir Hubert Yfilhlns\nCet Your Job in the Want Ads\nKEEP\nin Touch With\nHOME\nTOWN\nEVENTS\nMight ii well admit it-\nhalf the ftin in being\niway it in reading ibout\nhow hot It ia back home!\nSatlg Sfaroa\nWill Follow You\nPHONE 144\nUi.v,, irjjj -ftptrfWn\nFears for the safoty oi ber explorer-husband were expressed In\nNew York by Lady Hubert Wllkins\nafter days bad passed without word\nfrom the Wyatt Earp, on its way to\nNorway. Sir Hubert hai with him\ni crew of 10, Including a radio operator, but no menage has been\nheard from them. The famous explorer was to deliver the boat to\nNorway. It is the boat uied by Ltnr\ncoin Ell-worth in hli recent Antarctic voyage. Sir Hubert and Lady\nWllkini and the Wyatt Earp are\nshown above.\nVOCATIONAL COURSES BY MAIL\nBEING OFFERED BY PROVINCE\nCourse in Forestry and\nCommercial Art\nLater on\nVICTORIA, July 5 (CP)-Voca-\ntlonal courses by correspondence,\nIn addition to the regular high\nschool courses, are being ottered by\nthe department of education this\nyear, J. W. Gibson, director of the\nhigh school section of the provincial\ncorrespondence school, said Saturday.\nIn these courses, he said, an attempt has been made to provide\nup-to-date instruction for young\nmen and women whose interests\nand occupation lie along certain definite lines and who may wish to\ndevelop themselves and increase\ntheir efficiency along those lines.\nBoys entering upon apprenticeship\ntraining, who may fin' it inconvenient to attend regular classes in\norganized centers such as in technical schools, will be able to avail\nthemselves of instruction by thc\ncorrespondence method.\nThe major courses, consisting of\n20 papers requiring approximately\n10 hours work each, include mechanical drawing, building construction, engineering drawing,\npractical electricity, automotive engineering and prospector's course\nln geology and mining.\nIn addition courses In forestry\nand commercial art will be offered\nlater in the year.\nThe minor courses, consisting ot\n10 papers, include diesel engineering, elementary principles of radio,\nlettering and display card writing\nand automotive engineering 11. Later in the year the department will\nalso otfer minor courses in steam\nengineering, aviation, building construction, electricity, painting and\ndecoration, and possibly some\nothers.\nHowTillesWenl\nal Wimbledon\nWIMBLEDON, England, July 5\n(CP)\u2014Thi 1931 all-England champions:\n'Men'i ilnglei \u2014 Fnd Perry,\nGreat   Britain.\nWomen'! singlet\u2014Helen Jacobs,\nUnited Statei.\nMen's doublet\u2014G. P. Hughes\nand Charles Tuckey, Great Britain.\nWomen's doubles\u2014Freda Jamil\nand Kay Stammers, Great Britain.\nMixed doubles -Perry and Dorothy Round, Great Britain.\nMay Lead Revolt\nEMIR ABDULLAH\nSlilekt of the fierce Bedouin\nwarrlon of Trans-Jordan hive\nlaid plans before Emir Abdullah,\nabove, to launch an attack against\nthe Jews In Palestine to drive\nthem from the Holy Land. \"Unlets the Arab demands In Palestine\nare met within 10 days, we shall\nrite In revolt\" ths chiefs declare.\nThe emir stated: \"We mutt go to\nthe aid of ths Arabs In Palestine.\"\nMORE ABOUT\nDEATH'S TOLL\n(Continued From Page Ons)\nPLANES CRASH,\nBUILDINGS BURN\nAirplane crashes, auto races, lightning, railroad trains, burning buildings, celebrators' wild bulleti and\ntavern brawls all made their contributions.\nTraffic accidents were responsible\nfor the most deaths, accounting for\n140 lives In 36 states. Seventy-five\npersons drowned in 36 states. Miscellaneous tragedies accounted tor\n22 more in 15 states.\nAlthough fireworks fatalities were\nlow, burns and injuries were legion\nacross the land.\nA six-year-old girl burned to\ndeath by a firecracker thrown inlo\nher lap, was Chicago's only fatality.\nA small dog maddened by exploding firecrackers bit three persons.\nA pelican does not use his beak\nto store up supplies\u2014despite the\nlimerick on that famous topic\u2014but\ninstead the pelican's beak is Just a\ndip-net for fishing.\nMISS M. TATLOW\nWEDS J. D. ROSS\nASHCROIT. B.C., July 5 (CP)\nThe wedding took place ln the\ngarden of Ashcroft manor Saturday\not Margaret Garnett, younger\ndaughter of Mrs. Tatlow of Van'\ncouver and Victoria, and the late\nHon. R. G. Tatlow, to John David\nBoss, only son of Major-Gen. J, M.\nRoss, C.M.G., D.S.O., and Mrs. Ross\nof London, Ont    \"\nThe bride was given ln marriage\nby her brother, Kenneth Tatlow,\nRev. E. It. Bartlett ot Ashcroft performed the marriage service of the\nAnglican church.\nAshcroft manor is the home of\nthe bride's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. FiU-Allan Corn\nwall.\nAfter their wedding trip Mr. and\nMrs. Ross will reside here for the\nsummer.\nMORE ABOUT\nMELROSE DEAD\n(Continued From Page One)\nKlngsford-Smlth and Tom Pethy\nbridge were lost on an attempted\nflight from England to Australia last\nNovember. It was Melorse who last\nsaw them, flying Into the storm. He\nabandoned his own England-Australia flight to hunt for the lost airmen,\nbut in vain.\nMelrose and Campbell were flying\nto Adelaide, in South Australia,\nwhen, experts said, their plane went\ninto an uncontrollable spin and collapsed.\nThe two were dashed to a rock-\nstudded field and died instantly.\nWreckage of the machine was\nstrewn over a considerable distance.\nBesides setting the Australia-England record in September of 1934,\nwhich was broken last year by H. L.\nBrook of Great Britain, Melrose\nwon third prlre ln the London to\nMelbourne air derby of October,\n1934.\nLast December he was injured in\na plane crash In New South Wales.\nPROCTER COUPLE\nWED IN NELSON\nPROCTER, B.C.-A wedding of\nwide-spread interest was quietly\nsolemniied in Nelson at the Church\nof Mary Immaculate on Saturday,\nJune 27, when Ethel, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. A. Ling of Balfour,\nbecame the bride ot Louis Joseph,\nyoungest son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam\nBonacci of Procter.\nRev. Father Cheevers officiated.\nThe bride wai becomingly attired\nIn a suit of white crepe with matching accessories ind carried a bouquet of roses and asparagus tern,\nShe was accompanied by her lister,\nMargaret, who chose a cream colored\nsuit with brown accessories to match\nand also carried a bouquet of roses\n\u2022nd fern.\nErnie Lesecutti of Trail supported\nthe groom.\nAfter the wedding the bridal\nparty Journeyed to Balfour, where\na reception was held.\nMr. and Mrs. Bonacci left by bus\nSunday for Spokane. Upon their\nreturn they will take up residence\nIn Procter.\nInsurance Odds Are\nDown to 5-1\nLONDON, July 5 (CP)-Publle\nInterest continues concerning tbe\npossibility the King may marry\nprior to hla coronation next May.\nTwo young European prlncesies,\nboth talented and beautiful and\nrelative! ot King Edward, have\nbeen mentioned directly In the Britlih press aa possible choices to wed\nthe sovereign.\nInsurance odds against the King's\nmarriage before his coronation recently dropped to 5 to 1 from 10 to 1.\nThe two princesses said to be\nmost eligible are:\nPrincess Frederlcka Louise Thyra\nVictoria Mergerita Sophia Olga\nCecilia Isabella Chriita, 21 years\nold, a granddaughter of former\nKaiser Wilhelro, only daughter of\nthe house of Brunswick and Lunen-\nbourg, and second cousin of King\nEdward;\nPrincess Alexandrine Louise, 19\nyean old, third daughter of Prince\nHarold of Denmark, niece of King\nChrlitian, and great granddaughter\not King Christian IX and Queen\nLouise of Denmark, who also were\nthe great grandparents of Edward.\nNew United Church\nPastor Kimberley\nRev. S, T. G. Galbraith, BA,\nB.D, new United church incumbent at Kimberley, was transferred\nto the East Kootenay town from\nArmstrong. For almost six years\nhe was.pastor of Zlon United church\nat Armstrong end the affiliated\ncharges ot Knob Hill, Larkin and\nMountain View.\nBEACH\nCoal and Electric\nRANGES\nFrom $40 Up\nFor Fine Furniture\nEAGLE BLK. PHONE 85S\nA quaint clock in Finland's national museum Is a grandmother\nclock wlfh a face topped by bonnetlike decorations, a long case like a\ndress, and carved arms.\nTOURISTS FLOCK\nTO REVELSTOKE\nSleep in Beer Parlor;\nMovie Filming Is\nDrawing Card\nREVELSTOKE, B.C, July S (CP)\n~A party of tourists, unable last\nnight to obtain rooms in any of the\nhotels, auto camp or private homes,\nwas compelled to sleep on a ihake-\ndown in the beer parlor of a local\nhotel.\nRevelstoke never before has experienced the heavy influx of tour- |\nists it is now receiving. This is\nlargely accounted foi by the fact\nthat a British motion picture group\nIb now here \"on location.\"\nAlmost 200 extras were signed\nup here yesterday from among local\nresidents to take part in a scene\nbeing shot here Monday.\nNIAGARA TALLS, Ont, July 5\n(CP)\u2014Eugene (GeneK Fraser, dean\nof hockey in Niagara Falls, died at\nhis home here tonight after a few\ndays' illness. Although In only his'\n45th year, he had spent about 30\nyears in fostering both amateur\nand professional hockey here. H*\ndied of liver trouble.\nYOUNG ATHLETES GIVE GREAT\nBOOST INTERIOR TRACK AND\nFIELD, (OAST PERFORMANCES\nInterest Being Shown\nAlready in Trail,\nNelson Meets\nBy ERIC RAMSDEN\nSuccess of Interior athletes at the\nJunior Olympics at Vancouver is\none of the finest boosts given ln\nyears to track and field sports in\nthli diitrlct, in the opinion of local\nenthusiasts and followers of the\nflashing spikes.\nWhile Trail has had a number of\nwinners ilnce the inauguration of\nthe Junior Olympics a few years ago\nKimberley, Cranbrook and Nelson\nhave not fared so well. Trail was\nexpected to register again this year,\nthough hopes hardly ran as high as\nthe achievements of young Pat\nHaley. But it was by no means anticipated the other southern Inbrior\nlads would cover themselves with\nglory aa they have.\nOne result of the outstanding results they achieved ylU be, it is\nfelt, to fasten attention much more\nclosely on (he Kootenay Boundary\nSchools Athletic association annual\nmeets. The association was near disintegration this spring, due to Nelson apparently having lost Interest,\nbut the unexpected appearance of\na Nelson team at the annual meet at\nFernie, and the added keenness\ngiven the meet, brought it back as\nstrong as it ever was. Incldently, the\n1937 meet was awarded Nelson and\nGeorge Wallach was named president of the governing association.\nINTERESTING COMPARISON\nThe coast results provided an interesting comparison with the results at Fernie. Pat Haley won the\nhigh Jump and broad Jump there,\nhis high Jump performance being\nmore or less ordinary but his broad\nJump of 20 feet six inches breaking\nthe record formerly held by Rankin\nof Nelson. He was third in the 100\nyards, an event that was much disputed. At the coast he won the 100,\nset a new Canadian Junior record\nat five feet 11 inches in the high\nJump, and won the broad Jump at\n20 feet, seven inches, an inch better than at Fernie.\nMaurice Haley of Cranbrook, who\nprovided the sensation of the Fernie meet by beatin'g the Trail Haleys\nPaul and Pat in the 100 and 220\nevents, they were figured to win\neasily, Is not mentioned In the coast\nreport and It is not known whether\nhe did not compete or failed to\nplace, probably the former.\nA duel between Murray Wheaton\nof Cranbrook, and Jack McCracken,\nNelson, starting at Fernie, continued\nSaturday at Vancouver with McCracken showing considerable improvement At Fernie Wheaton won\nthe 880 with McCracken second. At\nthe coast while neither won this\nevent, McCracken beat Wheaton to\nthe tape as they finished second and\nthird. Wheaton won the mile at\nFernie, an event in which McCracken did not place. McCracken waa J\nsecond ln the 440, In which WheatotiTl\ndid not enter. At the coast Wheatorr\\\nwon the mile and McCracken the\n440. So, as the season stands to\ndate, they're about even. Wheaton\nhaving a slight edge on a first over\nMcCracken's second at Fernie.\nPREVIOUSLY UNTRAINED\nThe performance of the Nelson\nboy is more remarkable when it la\nconsidered the Fernie meet was hla\nfirst appearance in organised sport\nHe had not, previous to coming to\nNelson, enjoyed experienced training. McCracken brought Nelson's\nsecond junior Olympic first place\nto this city, the only athlete from\/\nthe queen city to do this previously having been Rankin Hanna, who\nwon the broad jump at the first\njunior Olympics.\nPaul Brooks of Nelson, placing\nsecond in the 440, achieved heights\nnot expected of him. In fact, after\nqualifying he almost dropped out in\nfavor of George Bishop, 16-year-old\ndash man, In order that the younger\nlad might get the benefit of competition ln fast company and apply\nthat experience to future Kootenay\nmeets. Fortunately, it was possible\nfor all three to make the trip, though\nexpenses were forthcoming for two\nonly.\nGeorge Anderson, Kimberley, takr\nIng second in the 12-pound shot,\nput and third In the broad jump at\nVancouver, did not place ln either,\nof these events at fernie, though\nthere is an M. Anderson of Kimberley who took second in the\nbroad pump and who is probably\nthe same lad. A mistake In the first\nname or initial being possible.\nYOUNGER COMPETITORS\nNo mention is made ln the story\nreceived by the Nelson Daily News\nfroro, Vancouver of George Bishop,\nNelson, and Ed Groves, Trail, and\nlt is gathered they failed to place.\nBoth being young, it was hardly expected they would rank particularly\nhigh at this time. The chief valua\nof the meet for them was ln gaining experience.\nIncidentally at Fernie they ran one-\ntwo In both the 100 and 220 junior\nevents, Groves taking first in each\nand Bishop second. There is about\nsix months between them in age.\nBishop's mother Is Groves' godmother.\nThe next Interior track meet of\nInterest Is Caledonian day at Trail\nIn August, and most of the boyi who\nrepresented the louthern interior al\nVancouver Saturday will probably\ncompete there. Following the Trail\nmeet they are expected to congregate ln Nelson Labor Day for thl\nbig meet here. There ihould be lots\nfor the fins to watch at both meets,\n .'\u25a0\u2022.\"\nin mmwwjmmwwwmnw,\u00bb-'\u00bbj\u00bb'..i.\u00bbi|'iIm\\,ipjmi__ ,\n1^1\nSANGSTER PEN\nMAKESALEAP\nOF it POINTS\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNING. JULY 0, 1988\n- PAGE THRIft |\nSalmo's Queen and Princesses\nRecent Jump of 81.3 ppints by the\nA. W. Schofield pen, by virtue ol\n;i substitution of birds, isn't going\nto help it much if it is going to\ncontinue dropping back nearly 20\npoints a week. In the 33rd week,\nwhen it did the 81-point vault, it\ndropped 18.2 points on the week's\negg output as compared' with the\nW. J. Scheibler pen. Now in the 34th\nweek it drops 18.6 points with reference lo Scheibler, and 18 points\nwith reference to thc third-place\nM. H. Ruttledge pen.\nA fourth pen. thc Robert B. Sangster White Leghorns, lias suddenly\nbroken into thc leadership picture\nby vaulting 79 eggs and 88.2 points I\nabove thc value ol its \\,eek s re-1\ncorded output, presumably another\nCase of substitution. This fine pen,\nJia. been in fourth place tor a long\ntime, but is now only 75.8 points I\nbehind Ihe leader, with 18 weeks j\nof thc British Columbia laying con- j\ntest at Agassiz still to go.\nThc four leading pens now stand:\nScheibler,  1909.2; Schofield  1860.8;\nRuttledge,   1846;   Sangster,   18-3.4. j\nWo other pens arc within 200 points\nof Scheibler. The Ruttledge, Scho-1\nfield and  Sangster pens have  all\nbenefitted by around 80 points by\nSubstitutions, while Scheibler's des-;\nignated 10 birds are all in the ring. |\nFollowing are the figures for the'\nweek and the current standing of\nthe 45 pens ill the contest, except\nfor the day-by-day record and the\nweek's egg total:\nBarnevelders\nFitz-Herbcrt, H. G. 46.3 1291 1529.3\nWhite Wyandottei\nSidney Exp. Sta. ...   54.2 1427 1531.0\nBarred Plymouth Rocks\nCram, Jack   49.8 1511 1535.7\nDarbey, P. & Son .... 48.9 1326 1221.8\nLambie  James     32.6 1163 1218.2\nRoberts C. k Son . 50.4 1420 1435.5\nV. B. C ' 63.8 1595 1691.8\nS. C. Rhode Island Redi\nArnould, H. K. A. . 57.9 1536 1607.3\n-Sttit Photo.\nSalmo's Dominion day queen and princesses rode In state to the\nsports grounds for the coronation ceremony. Here they are pictured\non the float. Queen Winnie Bush It on the throne, with last year's\nqueen, Mlsi Kathleen Sapplet, Immediately behind her. To the left\nof Mlts Sapples it Mitt Mary Myhre of Sheep Creek and to her right\nMlts Peggy Stewart of Ymlr. Seated are, left to right, Miss Edith\nJohn, Mils Shirley Donaldson and Miss Agnei Leahy.\nKIDDIES PARADE\nHIT AT CRESTON\ni Brown, Jack       . . 54.6 1266 1351.7\nGame, George W     44.8 1378 1258.2\n1 Goodman, John      . 53.4   993 1079.7\n1 Maynard, W  48.3 1508 1818.6\ni McCurrach & Hall.. 19.5 1124 1054.3\nJ Fenzer's R. F  64.0 1382 1333.6\nRussell  D  46.0 1333 1299.3\nSwastika  P.  F.    ... 51.4 1259 1302.1\nS. C. White Leghorns\nAppleby P. F. '  47.7 1018 1590.3\nBolivar Hatcheries . 53.6 1373 1399.7\nChalmers  J 60.8 1472 1614.4 I Oliver, D. L\nDarbey. P. k Son    33.4 1231 1303.6 I Pollok, G. L\nCRESTON, B.C.-Favored with\nideal weather Creston's celebration\nof Dominion day. Under the direction of Wild Rose lodge Knights of\nPythias, scored another success, particularly ih thc children's costume\nparade, which attracted a larger\nentry than in any previous year,\nwith Creston Brass band, under\nthe leadership of W. G. Hendy, adding lo the day's satisfaction with a\nplentiful supply of first-class music.\nProceedings started at noon when\nthe parade moved off from the\nOrchard service station, headed by\nthe band, and wended its way to\nExhibition park, where the prizes\nwere awarded by a trio of judges,\nMrs. H. W. MacLaren, James Cook\nand George Lipsack of Nelson. The\nnumber in fancy dress was particularly large and thc judges had\nsome trouble in finally placing the\nwinners as follows:   .\nBest dressed girl\u2014Marilin Warren, Spanish lady, first; Phyllis\nWilks, Joe Louis, second.\nBest dressed boy\u2014Dakkcr Powell,\nEvans. F  C  67.0 1388 1616.5\nEvans, F. C 57.7 1385 1601.6\nFairweather, W. M. 57.8 1547 1652.3\n. Headey, C  65.5 1497 1674.6\nKennedy   Bros     51.9 1177 1232.0\nKennedy, J. H  33.3 1343 1447.5\nLawson, Mrs. M.   .. 53.3 1365 1441.8\nMetcalfe, C. P 55.5 1207 1321.4\nWilier, D. .'.\t\nMcCurrach k Hall\n  51.9 1476 1545.1\nH. .. . 58.5 1363 1511.7\nLands Op. Co 62.4 1611 1689.0\nRuttledge M. H  67.2 1748 1846.0\nSangster. Robt. B  58.8 1555 1823 4\nScheibler, W. J 67.8 1779 1909.2\nSmith, T. J-   56.9 1225 1379.1\nSwensson, P  56.8 1306 1411.0\nVerchere, F. G.    . 46.5 1268 1243.0\nWatson. A. G. .  .   . 57.0 1657 1539.2\n56.3 1470 1667 9 j Whiting  W  39.9 1641 1654.8\n45.0 1257 1382.1 Windermere Exp. S. 43 0 1345 1387.6\nI\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\nCKOV CJCJ  CJCA  CHWK  CFQC\n690\n730\nCFJC\n780\n840\nCJAT\n, 910\nCKCK\n10W\nCFAC   CJOC   CKY\n930       950       960\nCRCV\n1100\n8:00 The Fanfare orchestra,  St.\nJohn; 5:30 Tribute to a Song, Toronto;  6:00  With Banners  Flying,\ndir.   Guiseppc   Agostini,   the   Im-\n1 perial .Grenadiers,  Montreal;   6:31)\nI Wilderness   adventures,   talk,   aus-\ni pices Forestry association; 6:45 Canadian  Press News and  Weather,\nTor.; 7:30 News, Vancouver  (B.C.\n| Net); Lullaby Lagoon, Toronto (B.C.\n7:45); 8:00 Youngbloods of Beaver\nJ Bend,  dramatic  serial,   Winnipeg;\nI 8:30 Lakchead Meldoy, organ, vocal\nrecital,   Fort   William;   3:45   Book\n' Review, James Stuart Wood, Prince\n\\ Albert; 9:00 Old Time Frolic, Sas-\nI katoon; 9:30 Knights of Gladness,\nI direclion   John   Bowman,   Edmonton (not CRCV); 10:00 News, Van-\n' couver, (C.B. Net); 10:15 Jack Williamson's   orch.,   Vancouver   (B.C.\nNet).\nI urch.; 7:15 Renfrew of lhe Mounted,\nserial; 7:30 One Night Stands\nwith Pick and Pat; 8:00 Vincent\nLopez's orch.; 8:30 Hawaii Calls;\n9:00 Eddie House, organist; 9:15\nJoseph Chernavsky's orch.; 9:45\nNocturne with Franklin McCor-\nmack, KSL; 10:00 Benny Goodman's\norch.; 10:30 Little Jack Little; 11:00\nBenny Goodman's orch.; 11:30 Gay-\nlord Carter, organist.\n1 600 k CJO!t 499.7 m\nVancouver 500 v\u00bb\n5:15 Big Brother Bill; 6:15 News\n;. Flashes; 6:30 Frank and Archie, E.T.;\nj 7:00 Safety League; 7:30 Financial\nTalk; 7:45 Bernard Braden, songs:\n8:00 Hymns Old and New; 8:15\nScot Langley, songs; 8:30 Sports\nbroadcast; 10:30 Pete Cowan's old\ntimers; Rangers; 12:00 Slumber\nHour; 12:15 News Flashes; Other\nperiods: records.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\n> Calgary 10,080 w\n6:30 Red Head Family; 6:45 Hold\nthe Press; 7:00 Man ab\u201eut town; 7:15\nMaurice GUI. flute; 7:30 Modern Melodies; 7:45 Frank and Archie, E.T.;\n8:00 Club Continental; 8:30 Variety\nShow; 9:00 News Flashes; 9:15 Fred\nWhyte; 9:30 Serenade!'.\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI\n670\nKFRC  KOIN\n610       940\nKSL  KOL\n1130   1270\n5:00   Radio   Theater  with   guesl\nj alar; 0:00 Wayne King's orch.; 6:30\nMarch of Time? 7:00 Jack Denny's\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKPO\nKHQ   KGW  KFI\n590      620    640\nKOMO\n920\nIndian, first; Jack Wilks, Haile Selassie, second.\nGirl's comic\u2014Jean Bunt, Cree Indian.\nBoy's comic\u2014Raymond Cooper,\nCharlie Chaplin.\nBest decorated bicycle, girls \u2014\nCharlotte Wilks; boys, Jimmy Rodgers.\nAfter the judging of the parade\nhad been completed the Creston and\nWynndel teams clashed at softball,\nthe decision going to Creston by a\n29-24 margin, with S. G. Clark in\ncharge as umpire. In between the\nsoftball and baseball games the\nwater sports were pulled off under\nthe management of W. J, Truscott,\nwith a disappointingly small number of contestants. The winners in\nthe swim events were: Girls' swim,\nunder 12 years, Marion Staples.\nLong Dive, boys under 14, Ardrey\nWeir. Girls' long dive, Marion Staples.\nThe lug of war between squads\nof Boy Scouts from Canyon and\nCreston was won by Creston. Much\ninterest was taken in the sawing\ncompetition in which the entrants\nwent to work on a 16-inch log.\nFirst prize went to Bob Currie and\nJohn Chernoff of Erickson, who\ncompleted the cut in 34 seconds.\nSecond prize was awarded Hoglund\nbrothers of Canyon who required\n3714 seconds to do the job.\nThe baseball match was too onesided to be of real interest. Thc\nnine, from Copeland, Idaho, was\nbadly outclassed by Creston, with\na final score of 20-5. Ray Humbel\ndid a fine job of pitching, holding\nthe losers scoreless until the seventh\nframe, and was given excellent support behind the plate by Genest.\nM. R. Joyce umpired.\nPark Pavilion had a capacity\ncrowd for the dance that wound\nup the day's proeedings, with ex-\nchestra, and a fine supper provided\nby the Pythian Sisters, who were\nalso in charge of the refreshment\nbooths on the grounds throughout\nthe day. The drawing for the cash\nprizes took place at suppertimc.\nPrize of $5 was won by Mrs. Frank\nTompkins, $3 by Mrs. Dolf Weir,\nwhile A. Hoglund of Canyon won\nthe $2 prize.\n5:00 Visiting with Captain Dobbs;\n5:30 To be announced; 6:00 Lullaby\nLady, or., dir. Morgan L. Eastman;\n6:30 To be announced; 7:00 Amos\n'n' Andy; 7:15 Lum and Abner; 7:30\nOpera Star Soloists; 8:00 Fibber\nMcGee ,and Molly, comedy; 9:00\nDrama; 9:30 Keith Beecher's orch.;\n10:00 News Flashes, Hayes; 10:15\nPaul Martin, guitarist; 10:30 H.\nKing's orch.; 11:00 Eddie Duchin's\norch.; 11:30 Reveries, instrumentalists.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Beaux Arts trio, instrumental,\n5:30 Band concert; 7:00 Nano Rod-\nrigo's orchestra; 7:15 Stanford U.\nprogram; 7:30 Glen Gray's orchestra; 8:00 Ricardo and his violin;\n8:15 Frank Watanabe, sketch; 8:30\nRalina Zarva, soprano; 8:45 Xa-\nvier Cugat's orchestra; 9:00 Vest\nPocket Varieties, Williams Sisters;\n9:30 Douglas Beattie, bass-baritone;\n10:00 Ran Wilde's orchestra; 10:30\nJimmy Grier's orchestra; 11:00 Paul\nCarson, organist.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH  EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nThe following frequencies will be\nused:  GSD  11.75  Mcs.  (25.53  m.);\nGSC  9-58  Mcs.  (31.32  m.).\n6:00 Big Ben, Jack Hart and his\nBand and Tommy Handley, .comedian; 6:45 Talks Feature; 7:00 A\nrecital by Margaret Tann-Williams,\ncontralto, and Dorothy Hildreth,\npianoforte; 7:40 News and Announcements.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C.-Misses Mary\nand Ruby Rogers left Friday morning for New Westminster, where\nMiss Mary Rogers will be a leader\nin Ocean Grove camp. Miss Ruby\nRogers will holiday with relatives\nin New Westminster.\nMiss Rachel Douglas and her\nbrother James left Friday morning\nfor the coast, where they will be\nguests of their uncle and aunt, Mr.\nand Mrs. P. Robson of White Rock,\n\u00bb   \u00bb   *\nJ. Willoughby left Friday morning for Vancouver to attend school.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. E. Harrison and\nfamily are holidaying at Ainsworth.\n\u2022 *   *\nNewton W. Emmens of Jardine,\nMont., consulting engineer, for the\nVelvet Mining company, is spending a week at the Velvet mine, and\nwill go on from there to Seattle.\n\u2666 \u00ab   \u2022\nMrs. Earl Mellett and son Ronnie\nand Mrs. Mellett's sister, Mrs. Ethel\nRowlings, accompanied by Charles\nTennant, left this morning for a\ntrip lo Spokane.\nMr, and Mrs. Douglas Davis and\nfamily have returned to Soulh Slocan after visiting Mr. and Mrs. J.\nCorner.\nIKE   SCOTCH   THAT   CIRCLES   THE   GLOBE\nI [This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nIf .. ' ...._mOm^immm , SmOO.mm-- .. .\n\u25a0 '    - - '\nGolf Course Near\nReady at Creston\nCRESTON. B.C.\u2014Development of\nthe nine-hole course of Creston\nGolf club got under way at the\nfirst of the week, and there are\nnow four holes laid out and work\nbeing pushed for an early completion. The club has secured 50 acres\nof Creston Reclamation company\ndyked land in a very enviable location and intend to lose no time in\nhaving the course ready for play.\nA start will be made immediately\nat clearing thc fairways.\nMr. and Mrs. Newmann and their\ndaughter Myrid pf Kimberley went\nthrough to Camp Lister, where they\nare guests of Mrs. Newmann's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Yerbury.\nMr. and Mrs. Ray O'Brien, also\nof Kimberley, are with the latter's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. T tdry.\nTuesday was the last day for payment of village taxes to escape the\n10 per cent penalty. Miss E. F.\nArrowsmith, village treasurer, re-\n'   -\u25a0'.i-;--ai,ijM*j^Miyg|^^' '\nINCORPORATED   2?? MAY 1670.\nMANUFACTURER'S CLEARANCE OF\nRAYON SATIN SUPS\nAn exceptional value in rayon satin slips that\nare bias cut with fagot trim. Nurose\nand white. Sizes 34 to 42. EACH\nSecond Floor\u2014H BC.\n-\u25a0\u25a0kj \" \u2014\u2022\n$1.19\nMEN'S SUN HELMETS\nTropical style helmets that afford good pro-\ntecjion against sun: Adjustable sweat     AM\nMain Floor\u2014HBC.\nWOMEN'S AND MISSES'\nSUMMER BLOUSES\nIn pique, voile, organdy and linen. Cood assortment of styles. Dress types as well as\nmodels suitable for sportswear.\nSizes 14 to 20. EACH\t\nSecond Floor\u2014H BC,\n.00\nband. EACH\nMEN'S BLACK AND WHITE, BROWN\nAND WHITE AND TWO-TONE\nSPORT SHOES\nAt clearance prices! Dressy lasts with plenty\nof wear. Regular $5.00. ff Q QC\nPAIR   $t).Jj\nMain Floor-H B C.\nBOYS'BATHING SUITS\nSmall sizes in all wool bathing suits.      7Q^\nWine color only. Regular $1.49. EACH .  I J\nMain Floor\u2014HBC.\nHALF PRICE SALE OF\nMEN'S FELT HATS\nGood quality felt hats in snap brim styles.\nLarge sizes only. Regular $1.95. QQC\nMain'Floor\u2014HBC.\nHALF PRICE\nOF FLOOR\nCOVERINGS\n44c s4uare Yapd\nImported English felt linos. These are\nheavy and hard wearing and will, give\nyears of service. All 2 yards wide, 10\ndesigns for choice.\nSecond Floor\u2014H B C.\nWOMEN'S\nBEACH SANDALS\nWhite fabric, printed with red and fljl (_\\\nblack-flesign. Regular $2.50. PAIR .. $1.03\nMain Floor\u2014HBC.\nBIC VALUES IN\nALUMINUM WARE\nA special purchase makes this value possible.\nThe group contains kettles, percolators, double\nboilers, tea pots, French fryers, roasters, 'JM\nlarge saucepans, potato pots. EACH ...   Is\/\nMain Floor\u2014HBC.\nSPECIAL CHINA VALUES\nFine Qualify Cupt and Saucers\u20143 designs.\nCup and saucer   7\u00ab?\nBeverage Tumblers\u20143 styles Each 9<\nBelgian Crystal Claas Water Sets .. Set S1.00\nCupa and Saucers\u2014Cream and gold line.\nSet     9\u00a3\nSecond Floor\u2014H B C.\nFINAL CLEARANCE OF\nCOTTON FABRICS\n1000 yards in this sale of fine ginghams, Wa-\nbasso and other prints, broadcloths and shirtings. All sunfast and the majority are 36\ninches wide. Regular value to 39c yard.   1 Ci?\nYARD       1J\n8econd Floor\u2014H B C.\nSTUDENTS PASS\nAT INVERMERE\nINVERMERE, B.C.-School closed\nfor the summer holidays on Friday\nand the following are the promotions. -     .-\u25a0'*\u25a0\nDivision IV from grade III to\ngrade IV\u2014Howard Armstrong, Marjorie Foyston, Corbin Mitchell, Dorothy Gucy, George Thornton, Pe-\ntrina Stanford, Iris Reed, Henry\nLim Man You, Joan Davies, Bobby\nClerihuc, Percy Slmms.\nFrom grade II to grade III\u2014Betty\nTaynton, Bavin Jones, Shirley Saunders, Bennie Mitchell, Dorothy Richardson, Jimmie Simms, Nesta Davies.\nTo grade Ha\u2014Raymond Grainger,\nJessie Pye.\n' To grade II\u2014Jimmie McKay, Betty Clerihue, Kenneth Horwood,\nJessie Guey, Beverley Leask, Dickie\nLim Man You, Joan Richardson,\nRene Hansen, Ann Richardson.\nTeacher, Miss M. Ferguson.\nPromotions in division III:\nFrom grade IV to grade V \u2014\nDorothy Blake (to grade VI), Inez\nKelly, Daisy Guey, Allison Cleland,\nJoe Fuller, Donald Armstrong,\nGeorge Simms, Marion Cartwright.\nGrade V to grade VI\u2014Jessie Lim\nMan You, Eileen Docking, Golbert\nCartwright, Alice Jones, Viola\nSimms.\nGrade VI to grade VII\u2014Ruth\nSaunders, Eileen Kelly, Florence\nMcGuiness, Delbert Mitchell, Lilian\nLim Man You, Frances Lim Man\nYou, Betty Mitchell, Evelyn Ash-\nworth, Kathleen Thornton, Herbert\nBeckley,\nRobert McCormick, teacher.\nPromotions from grade VII to\ngrade VIII\u2014Carlton Jones, Lillian\nBlake, Avril Dobbie, Violet Pie-\ntroszko.\nPromoted to grade IX on recommendation \u2014 Margaret Ashworth,\nArthur Fuller, Alexander Johnston,\nDoreen Johnston, Harry Jones,\nLeigh Nixon, David McGuiness,\nWilliam Pye.\nIn grade VII Carlton Jones won\nthe roll of honor for proficiency,\nGordon Ckland, roll of honor for\ndeportment, and Violet Pietroszko\nfor regularity and punctuality.\nIn grade VIII David McGuiness\nwon the roll of honor for proficiency, Stanley Frater won thc roll\nof honor for deportment. Doreen\nJohnston and Alexander Johnston\nwon rolls of honor for regularity\nand punctuality.\nW. H. Elmes, teacher.\nPublic Works Department Staff of Workers\nports payments much on a par with\nthe same date a year ago.\nRev. R. E. M. Yerburgh inaugurated Anglican church worship at\nWest Creston on Sunday morning.\nService was held in the school house\nat Corn Creek, and was well attended.\nLeslie Mclnnis, who is working\nwith George Mclnnis at Howser,\nspent a few days this week at his\nhome in Creston.\nA. E. Davies of Fernie was looking\nafter his property interests at Creston a few days at the end of the\nweek.\nJack Martin and Bert Sang of\nCranbrook were among many from\nout of town here for Dominion day.\nHugh Cameron of Kimberley is\na holidry visitor this week with\nMr. and Mrs. Or ' s R yinond.\nMany from town took advnn'\nof a jitney service provided' to attend thc annual garden party of\nErickson Christ church Ladles' guild\nheld on the spacious lawn of W. H.\nKemp Wcducsday afternoon, There\n\u00ab _\n\u2014Staff Photo\nGrouped In front of the new provincial government garage and machine shop Is a group of government mechanical employees at Nelson.   LEFT to RIGHT\u2014H. K, Gann, chief mechanic; John Armstrong\nof Victoria, mechanical superintendent; R, Bain Oliver,  clerk;   Elvin   Kraft,  mechanic;   William   Jeffs,\nmechanic; P. Cote, mechanic, and Stan Jeffreys, shovel operator and mechanic.\nTWO CRANBROOK\nATHLETES LEAVE\nFOR COAST TRIAL\nCRANBROOK, B.C. - Mr. and\nMrs. D. S. Corrie of Creston were\nrecent city visitors.\nMiss Austin of the training school\nhere, is spending her holidays in\nSpokane and Kaslo.\nMr. and Mrs. W. L. Flower of\nEnterprise, Ore., are visiting in the\ncity.\nMrs. Van Braam and Miss Margot\nvan Braam have returned from\nSpokane, where they were visiting.\nMiss Doris Eley, who has been\nattending a beauty culture school\nin Vancouver, has returned to the\ncity.\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Kennedy has\nreturned from California, where\nthey spent the past few months.\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. McDonald of\nSpokane arc visiting friends in the\ncity.\nMr. and Mrs. Joe Little have returned to the city after spending\nthc week in Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. F, Briggs have left\nfor Vancouver, where they will reside.\nMrs. H. Brown and Mrs. W. H.\nBrown and Miss Dorothy Brown are\nspending the month in Vancouver.\nMrs. O. Youngberg, Mr. Colinand,\nMiss Norma Youngberg, and Mer-\nvin Buckingham of Bengough, Sask..\nare city visitors, the guest of Mrs.\nF. J. Smyth.\nRev. and Mrs. R. W. Hardy and\ndaughters are spending a three\nweeks' vacation at Mirror Lake.\nMrs. J. Beech is spending a few\nweeks' holiday in Trail and Vancouver.\nMurray Wheaton and Maurice\nHaley left Wednesday for Vancouver where they took part in the\njunior Olympic trials on July 4.\nWheaton entered in the 880 yards\nand mile events, and Haley in the\n100 and 120-yard sprints.\nMiss Leeson of the training school\nhere, Is attending the nurses' con-\nvent'.pn in Vancouver.\nwas a line of outdoor sports such\nas tennis, croquet, clock golf and\nthe ladies served freshments. The\naffair was a great financial success.\nThc cash Intake wos about $60.\nMorning Wedding\nHeld, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C. - The St.\nMary's church was the scene of\na pretty morning wedding when\nEva, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Des-\ncoteau of Mankota, Sask., became\nthe bride of Ellsworth, only son of\nMr. and Mrs. Dan Ryan of Cranbrook. Rev. Father Burns officiated.\nWhite lilies adorned thc altar and\nmassive bouquets 'of pink and white\ngladiolus were placed on either side\nof th ealtar rail.\nThc bride, given in marriage by\nher brother-in-law, Victor Oakley,\nwore a boufant frock of pale pink\norgandie with a widely flared skirt,\nbound at the waist with a sash ot\nwhite and tied in a bow at the back.\nShe wore white accessories and carried a large bouquet of pink and\nwhite carnations.\nMiss Phyllis Ryan, her only attendant, chose a dress of white voile,\npatterned wilh blue, and accessories of white. She carried a bouquet\nof pastel sweet peas. Tlie groom was\nsupported by Clayton Wall?. Miss\nMary Fyfe played thc wedding\nmarch.\nFollowing the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the\ngroom's parents. Thc rooms were\nbeautifully decorated with whit'e\nwedding bells and pink and white\nstreamers, and the buffet table was\ncentered with a three-tiered wedding cake. Those assisting the serving were Miss Faith Ryan, Miss\nElizabeth Godderis, Miss Florence\nStender, Miss Alma Archambault,\nMiss Florence Johnston ond Miss\nCclina Foisey. Herbert Conroy and\nGeorge Harrison acted as ushers.\nThe toast to the bride was proposed by James Conroy, thc groom\nresponding. Father Burns proposed\na toast to the bride and groom.\n'Mr. and Mrs. Ryan left by motor\ntor Sinclair Hot Sprlnaa. Mrs. Hya:\nwore an ensemble e.t j.,.isto plni\nc.c.e, w.tlj mr.t H'\"B ti t snd whit,\nshoes and gloves.\nMr. Ryan was born ln Cranbrook\nand attended the schools here. For\nthc past few months he has been\nworking in Kimberley. Mrs. Ryan\nCRANBROOK HAS\nCAR THEFT CASE\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-After a six\nhour search on Wednesday morning thc provincial police of Cranbrook recovered the automobile of\nHarry Ratlcdge, which was stolen\nfrom in front of the Venczia hotel\nabout 10:45 Tuesday evening. Thc\near was found in the yard at thc\nByng hotel about 5 a.m. Wednesday\nand Boyd Shanks, of Cranbrook,\nwho lives at thc Byng hotel was detained on suspicion of the theft. He\nwas identified by a Cranbrook lady\nwho had seen him take thc car\nfrom thc hotel. Other evidence has\nbeen collected by lhe police.\nThe car was undamaged but had\nbeen driven many miles during the\nnight. Shanks will appear before\nMagistrate John Leask for trial.\nENGLISH FOLK\nAT CRESTON\ncame to Cranbrook from Mankota a\nfew years ago, and since that time'\nhas made many friends here.\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Mrs. Taylor and'\ndaughter, Mrs. Howard of Taunton,\nEngland, were week-end guests of\nthe former's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. E. Haskins. The\nvisitors are on a three months' tour\nof the United States and Canada, .\nhaving made the trip across in the ,\nnew Cunard liner, Queen Mary.\nThey visited al California points.'\nand arrived here via Seattle, In\ncompany wilh Mrs. Haskins they\nleft Monday for Calgary and Strath-\nmore, Alta.. where they will visit\nanother sister, before returning via \u2022\nthe great lakes, Toronto and Montreal.\nMiss Lorna Donaldson of Camp\nLister spent a few days with Mrs. '\nMcMillan.\nMrs. Sam Fraser was a visitor to,\nSpokane friends \"a few days this\nweek. , ,\nMr. and Mrs. Quade and A. Hathaway of Kalispel. Mont., ai'e visitors\nhere, guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. E.r-^\nHcric,\nMr. and Mrs. T. Wilson of Ncl:\nson were visitors during thc week\nto Mrs. Wilson's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. E. Healcy.\nJohn Alton is renewing acquain*.\ntance in Nelson.\nJohn Hall was a visitor at Spokane, accompanying W. McL. Cooper of thc Co,Op. Fruit Exchange.\nC. H. Mcssingcr was at Nelson.al\nthe  week-end.  Headway is being '\nmade by thc contractors ln putting  I\nIn  the cement cellar at the new I\nresidence he is erecting at the north,\nend of town.\nPostmaster John Bird, accompanied by Mrs. Bird, of Camp Lister.. '\nwent through on Wednesday en,\nroute to Ainsworth. where they will\nspend a few days at the hot springs. .\nTheir son. Cyril, is in camp with the\nsenior boys at Koolaree this week.\nThe heavy movement of straw- I\nberries from points in the Creston\nvalley will be protty well over by\ntheend of the week. The crop will I\nbe considerably under the estimated\n30,000 crates. Production In the territory immediately adjacent to Creston is the lightest ever known. . ,\nMild \"Cool-Smooth\n\u00ab ,*i\nSWEET\nCAPORALS\n1    Caf^wutji\nij_i_^_^_j_i_^_^_i\n.iA^^:,-.-\n II FOUR-\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Neiospuper\nAU THB NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n210  Baker  Street, Nelaon. British  Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private E.chanp Connecting All Departments,\nMember  of the Audit Bureau of Clrculationi end\nThe  Canadian   Press' I^ated   Wire   Newi   Service.\nMONDAY, JULY 6, 1936,\nA WORTHWHILE PLAN\nFinance Minister DUnning's proposal of a voluntary\n\u25a0 national committee' on finance, composed of Dominion\nand provincial representatives, commends itself as worthy\nof an earnest trial, and the sincere cooperation of every\nprovincial government. \u2022\u2022\nThere is a real need for closer association of the Dominion and the provinces on matters of finance and taxation. Economic conditions in recent years have brought\nmany problems which doubtless could be more effectively\ncoped with by cooperation between representatives of the.\nmajor governments of the Dominion.\nIn his announcement of the proposal, Mr. Dunning\nBet out rather fully what he believed might be accomplished under his plan. Among questions that might well\nbe considered by such a committee he set forth the following; \t\n(1) Methods of securing greater efficiency and\neconomy in tax collection and administration.\n(2) Methods of reducing evils of multiple taxation,\nincluding possibilities of cooperation in tax administration.\n(3) Merits and incidence of particular types of taxes\nand methods of achieving more equitable, better-balanced\nand more elastic tax systems.\n(4) Financial relations between the Dominion and\nthe provinces.\n(5) Problems involved in the raising of public funds\nby borrowing, including thc form and timing of public\nissues, the establishment and management of sinking funds,\nand the conditions in any investment market in which the\nDominion oivany province may have occasion to borrow.\n(6) Methods of securing greater cooperation and\ncoordination in the financial policies of the Dominion and\nthe provinces.\n(7) Methods of public accounting and presenting information concerning thc public debt, revenues and expenditures, etc., with a view to securing greater clarity and\nuniformity; methods of collecting and publishing statistical information.\nThese are all-important questions to governments at\nthe present time, and much might be accomplished by conference and investigation.\nPLAYING MATCH GAME REQUIRES\nSOME SKILL\nAny number of person, each the\n' possessor ot three matches, may\ngamble with much Interest and to\nsome purpose, under the rules of\nThc Match Game. These arc explained in Tlie New Yorker, as .follows:\n\"Each may hold in his playing\nhand one. two or three matches, or\nfc-nonc at all. The point ot the game\n. is to guess thc tolal number of\nmatches in the hands of all the\nplayers, the guess going clockwise\naround'the tabic; no two players\nmay guess thc same number; when\neverybody has guessed, thc players\nall open their hands, and if any\nplayer has guessed the correct total\nhe drops out. This goes on Until\nthere are only two players left; then\ncne of the two has to guess \"ight\ntwice before he can drop out. The\nloser in this final elimination buys\n* round of drinks for everybody.\"\nGAME 16 PLAYED\nIN MANY CLIMES\nThc game has been nlaycd in\nNew York since 1924, although il\ndidn't become popular until 1934.\nAs far as one scholarly devotee's re-\nsearches take him, it was played at\nthe Bristol Cafe in Marseilles In\n1919, Ihoviiig' from there to Harry's\nNew York Bar In, Paris. A German\nncouaintance said 'that when he was\na child In lhe Black Forest he play\ned thc match game, or something\nvery like it, and a man who travels\nin the Orient quite > bit said thit\n15 years ago thc Siamese sing-song\ngirls played it at all the bars in\nBangkok.\n\"There's no great amount of skill\nlo the match game until the number of players is narrowed down to\ntwo,\" continues the narrator. \"All\nyou have to do up to that point Is\nrely on the law of averages. If six\npersons are playing, tlie total num\nber of matches that can possibly be\nheld is 18, and the probable number\nis nine. (There's another school ot\nthought which holds that lhe prob\nable number is 12.)\nSKILL REQUIRED\nWHEN TWO PLAYING\n\"But witli two playing, there's a\ntrick. You guess three, because that\ngives no clue to the number you\narc holding, and hold, or try' to\nhold, a number of matches whlsb,\nbdded to what you think your opponent is holding, makes three. Any\nother guess is unorthodox; might\nwin, of course, but it would still be\nunorthodox. Seasoned players have\nall sorts of superstitions; some prefer paper matches, some the kitchen\nvariety; others get attached to a\ncertain trio of lucky matches, and\ncarry them around for weeks. One\nman had some made of silver; they\nliavwil brought him much luck.\"\n\u2014&-_:\nThey just won't parade\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON.\nBETWEEN\nmm\nIbc\nWHIN HE IAT UP\nTwo tramps were stretched out on\nthe green grass. Above them wu\nthe warm sun, betide them wat a\nbabbling brook. It was t quiet, ie\u00bbt-\nlul, peaceful scene.     .\n.\"Boy,\" mused Uie lirtt trimp contentedly, \"right now I wouldn't\nchengi' places with I guy who owns\na million bucks!\"\n\"How about five million?\" asked\nhis companion.\n\"Not even for five million,\" drowsed tho first tramp.\n\"Well,\" persisted his pal, \"how\nabout ten million bucks!\nThe firtt tramp sat up. \"That's\ndifferent,\" he admitted. \"Now you re\ntalking real dough!\"\n\u25a0   \u25a0 \u2022   \u2022 \u2022 \u00ab\nHOLIDAY HINTS\nI shall now give you a few valuable holiday hints to whicn I hope\nyou will ill devote #>.iie serious\nstudy says V. V, in tne Winnipeg\nTribune.\nHint No. 1\u2014Do not don fur overcoats, etr muffs or red flunnel underwear, unless you intend to picnic\nln an ice-house.\nHint No. 2\u2014If you find your motor trip is becoming dull and monotonous, the tedium can soon be\nrelieved by seeing how close you\ncan drive to the tide of the road\nPretty soon you ire almost sure to\nhit somo loose gravel, or a culvert,\nor maybe both.\nHint No. 2\u2014When diving Into\nstrange waters it it much more exciting if you make the plunge without first finding out how deep it Is\nLook at the young lady in the picture. Maybe she's going to hit a\nrock. Who knows? Who cares?\nHint No. 4\u2014How to distinguish\npoison ivy. Take a large handful of\nthe suspected plant in your hand\nand rub lt thoroughly over the face\nand neck. If you break out ln a mass\nof Itching lumps, it was poison ivy,\nall right.\nHint No. 5\u2014Lt you are out ln a\ncanoe with some friends be sure to\ntee how much you can rock it with'\nout tipping it over. You never know\njust how much this is, of course, until after it has tipped,\nHint No. 6\u2014When approaching a\nlevel crossing in your auto don't\npay any attention to the whittle ot\nan oncoming express. The engineer\njust blows it to scare you. Keep\ndriving and see how scared HE\nlooks when the engine just misses\nyou by inchee\u2014if it missel you.\nHint No. 7\u2014If you decide to swim\nacross a river with a swift current,\ndon't let anybody talk you out of it.\nShow them that you're brave, or\nsomething.\nHint No. 8\u2014If you wmt to get\nsunburned, go right ahead and gel\na good one. All thit talk about doing\nIt in moderation it Just for people\nwho cin't take it Supposing your\nskin DOES start to peel and come\noff In large pieces\u2014you've got lots\nmore tkin, haven't you?\nHint No. 9\u2014Don't pay any atlen\ntion to those \"Go Slow,\" or \"Dangerous Curve\" signs, They're Just\nput there to kid you along.\nHint No. 10\u2014Don't take any hints.\nVERSE\nA  DAISY\nA million buttercups I'd teen\nAbout tbe town where I had been.\nWhile for the daisy's pretty sheen\nLong had 1 sought,\nAnd wondered much what it could\nmean\nThat there was naught.\nFull many a time I weary sank\nDown on some open grassy bank,\nWhere dandelions, rank on rank,\nWere there arrayed.\nBut daisies! No, it was a prank\nThat Nature played.\nThen at an early hour one morn\nI was out mowing our front lawn,\nAnd as the grass was being shorn\n1 got a start.\nFor there a daisy did adorn\nThe middle part!\nAnd big and lonely in the swtrd,\nIt was for me a greet reward,\nAnd I felt that I could not afford\nTo take its life.\nSo carefully 1 did retard\nThe mower's knife.\nAnd as I spared the daisy's head,\nIn hopes then to myself I said,\n\"One day on this lawn I will treid\nAnd I will find\nThat It is gaily-hued and spread\nO'er wilh your klndl\"\nTHOS. E. BIDDLECOMBE.\n351 Powell street,\nVancouver, B. C.\nB.C-MONDAY MORNING, JULY t. 1936\nNELSON\n\"Queen City of the Kootenays\"\u2014\nJewel in B. C.'s crown,\nSet deep midst lofty mountains\nThat everywhere surround;\nCloaked now in greens so various\nThey'd tax the artist's colors,\nWhilst two or so, pearl-crowned\nwith snow,\nTower over all the others.\nThe lovely Koolensy lake serene\nLike silver necklace lies\nUpon thc breast of Koolemy's\nQueen,\nSI wlrtcd with turquoise skies.\nAnd emerald trees, her forest\nwealth, \u2022   '\nHeal gems of worth Uiey are\u2014\nWith rubles in the necklace vie\nGreat salmon, trout and char.\nNelton\u2014our city beautiful!\nFrom every aspect seen.\nOn hillside or in vele below,\nShe's wondrous fair, serene.\nWo happy Nelson citltens\nShould try to realise\nHow much we've to be thankful for\nWhen seen through strangers' eyes.\nH. LUNN.\nNelson. B; C.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nRUFFING  L08BRS BEFORE\nPULLING TRUMPS\nA lecond type oi hand prohibiting\nimmediate pulling et trumps is\nshown todiy. This requires dummy\nto ruff one or more o( declarer')\nlosers to obtain belt results.\n\u2666 41014\nlAItt\n4>T|\u00bb\n\u2666I*.\n\u2666\u25a0\n\u00a5 K Q 3 G\n4\n\u2666 KQ\n\u2666 J 10 7 4\nt\nN,\n\u2666 975\n*10\u00bb7 2\n\u2666 J1QS4\n*A\u00ab\n\u2666 AM\u00ab2\n\u2666 None\n\u2666Alls\n49858\nBidding went; South, 1-Spedc;\nWest, 2-Hearts; North, 2-Spades;\nSouth, 4-Spades.\nThe opening lead was the K of\nhearts. Dummy's ,\\ce won. Declarer\ndiscarded a club. South saw that he\nmult let the defenders in three times\n\u2014once with thc Ace of clubs and\ntwice with diamonds. He needed\ndummy to ruff one diamond and\none club, which lhat hand could\nnot do if trumps were drawn at\nonce, if spades happened to be distributed worse than i-2, and the\nodds were against finding that favorable division. So declarer did not\ntouch trumps. He led the K of\nclubs instead.\nWhen East entered with his Ace\not clubs his belt defence wis to\nlead a trump, and he led nil lowest\nspade, that declarer covered witli\nthe 6 and it won. The next trick\nwent to dummy's Q of clubs, leaving\nboth dummy and East void of that\nsuit. A diamond was led from dummy. The Ace won. Declarer led his\nlast club. He was careful to ruff\nwith dummy's 10 of spades. A low\ndiamond was led. West won with\nhis K. Hiving no more trumps, he\nled a top heart and ruffed declarer.\nThe list diamond wis pulled from\ndummy and East's 10 took thc trick,\nmaking three defensive tricks won\nto dite, but East, wu in a fix. Thc\nholdings about thc tabic were as\nshown below:\n\u2666 Q\u00ab\n985\n_*\"\n\u2666 97\nf 10\n\u2666 J\n\u2666 AKJ\n\u2666 \u00bb\nIn case East led a trump u-umy\nor declarer would be in lead, with\nthe result that dummy would ruff\na losing diamond md declarer\nwould ruff i heart, after which\nEast't last trump would be pulled.\nIt East led the top diamond dummy would ruff and declarer would\nbe left with only good spades. The\nonly remaining lead was a heart,\nwhich would force declarer to ruff.\nThen the one chance to defeat the\ncontract wis ln case declarer made\na mistake, but that was the only\nhope, so the heart was led. Declarer\nruffed. He led his last diamond and\ndummy rutted with the Q, avoiding\nthe error for which East hoped.\nOf course the last three tricks had\nto go to declarer's good trumps,\ngiving him game.\nTHE LADY AT THE WICKET\nShe's a friend without a doubt,\nAs she hands the mall out.\nEach day the same familiar faces\ncome\nWith their \"Any mail today?\"\nOr, \"Mr. M.,\" they'll say,\nAs she passes letters to the lucky\none.\nShe handles smiles and tears,\nLetters full ot hopes and fears,\nAnd a thousand bills that make thc\nowners frown;\nAnd the little god ot love\nGives her lots of work to prove\nShe's not the only worker in tho\ntown.\nAnd when certain dates recur,\nShe knows just who'll be there,\nBut to say so wouldn't be exactly\ncricket.\nBut I think you will agree\nThat we ottcn go to see\nThe gracious, smiling \"Lady at thc\nWicket\".\nR. LUNN.\nNelson, B. C.\n\"The bad boy and the woodihed\nDELVING INTO PROVERBS\nOnce upon a time people talked\nalmost entirely with the uie of proverbs. They helped them to explain\ntheir meaning and summed up, iq\nconcrete statements, a lot of wisdom\non which everybody agreed.\nProverbi are folk learning. A\ngreat many learned statements ot\ntoday that sound academic and remote can be summed up in proverbs.\nFor instance, an economist will talk\nabout \"the Inevitability of gradual-\nncss.\" But the folk proverb of the\n15th century stated it in this way-r\n\"Little by little the cat cateth up\nthe bacon flickle\" and \"Feather by\nfeather the goose li plucked.\"\nThis comes to mind, writes Harry\nHansen in the New York World-\nTelegram, in his discussion of proverbs that Janet E. Heseltine hat\nwritten [or \"The Oxford Dictionary\nof English Proverbs,\" compiled by\nWilliam George Smith. The object\nof the editor has been to give a familiar proverb and then to indicate\nwhore it wat first used in literature.\nThe man who, failing to receive\nword from his son, says \"no news is\ngood jewi.\" That goes back to 1685.\nHe hates unfair competition\u2014\"Live\nSO WHAT'S\nTHE USE?\nBy Rose Wright of Nakusp, with\napologies to James Montague\nWhenever I manage a suhtle finesse\nAnd I'm stirred by a strategist's\nthrill.\nMy    husband    observes,    \"You're\nplaying by guess;\nThis game is a contest of skill.\nYou had a chance for slam at the\nstart,\nBut you played out your spades\nlike a dub,\nIf you'd just led a diamond instead\nof a heart,\nYou'd have made every single last\nclub.\"\nSo what can I do when my nerves\narc all tense,\nAnd my husband won't look at\nthc score?\nI closely adhere to the system ot\n\"Ely\"\nWe'd mastered the evening before.\nMy partner remarks, with a sinister sneer,\n\"That stuff that you're trying is old;\nDon't let these professionals hand\nyou a steer-\nPlay the game with thc cards that\nyou hold!\"\nWhenever I make a two-forcing bid,\nMy darling suppresses a frown,\nAnd mutters, \"Of course you will\nbid like a chifmp;\nIt's a hundred to one we go down.\"\nAnd should 1 make game and a few\nextra tricks,\nHe siys, \"Well, you made 'cm all\nright,\nBut we'd certainly bo in a deuce of\na fix\nIf your luck wasn't with you tonight.\"\nSo  no   wonder  I'm  nervous;   It's\nseldom I'm cool;\nAnd no matter If luck's running\nstrong,\nAnd I carefully play by the most\nmodem rule,\nMy partner is sure I'm wrong.\nNo matter vhat method or system\nI use,\nOr whether I play wrong or right,\nOr whether we happen to win or\nto lose,\nWe always break up in'a fight.\nand let live is my motto,\" says he.\nThe Scots have been saying that\nsince 1641. This talk about war is\nmaking a mountain out of a molehill\u2014 Foxe, 1570. Some of these politicians would talk the hir 1 leg off a\nhorse (1884).\nPROVERBS DISGUISED\nLACK OF THOUGHT\n\"Proverbs had their day in literature in the Elizabethan age, and\nShakespeare makes the belt use ot\nthem,\" writes Mr. Hansen. \"Hli\ncharacters always have something\nexplicit to uy. But after him writers began to use proverbial phrases\nto disguise their lack of thinking.\nProverbi became idioms, md men\nwho didn't know whit words to use\nthrew in proverbs nnd acte like\nwise men. To use a lot of familiar\nidioms merely means that your expression la not fertile.\"\nIt is customary to say \"Don't cut\nyour own throat,\" but one no longer\nhears \"Cut not tbe bough that thou\nstindest upon.\" We often cill for\n\"deeds, not words,\" but no one sayi\n\"Deeds are males and words are\nfemales.\" Sometimes we hear \"eagles\nfly alone,\" but not \"eagles catch no\nfliea.\"\nHere are some picturesq' phrases\nthat do not seem to have survived\ngeneral use:\n\"If its md am were poti and pans\nthere'd be no trade for tinkers.\"\n\"II one. two, three tell you you\nare an ass, put on a bridle.\"\n\"If you would be a merchant fine,\nbeware of an old horse, herring and\nwine.\"\n\"It is best to sit near the fire\nwhen the chimney smokes.\"\n\"it is better to have one plow\ngoing than, two crsdlw.\"\n\"Let the church stand in tlie\nchurchyard.\"\n\"Patience is a plaster for all\nsores.\"\n\"If my aunt had been a man she\nwould have been my uncle.\"\n\"There is a devil in every berry\nof the grape,\"\nINGE GETS CREOIT\nFOR  AMERIflANISM\nMr. Hansen concludes: \"See that\n'Safety first' is credited to Dean\nInge, 1929. It was widely used in\nthe United States years before that\nand originated in railroad circles.\n'There you are, Raymond\u2014there's tlie trailer we left lait '\nlis quite safe and sound.\"\u2014London Opinion.\n_1_\n10 YEARS AGO   I\nI From Nelson Dally News Files I\n(July 6, 1926)\nA party consisting ot Mr. and\nMrs. A. D. McLeod, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. W. Appleyard, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nH. D. Benson, L. B. DeVeber and\nMr, and Mrs. L. S. Mackersy spent\nSunday at Procter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAn impromptu party was given at\nthe home ot Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Nelson July 3, when the, evening was\nspent in dancing and bridge. The\nguests were Mr. and Mrs. Harry McAllister of Wallace, Idaho, Mrs. Kidd\nof Alabama, Mr. and Mrs. A. G.\nLarson of Spokane, Mr. snd Mrs.\nW. J. E. Biker, J. M. Doyle of Spokane, David Owen of Detroit, J. P.\nMcGoldrick ot Spokane and L. K.\nLarsen.\n\u2022 o    0\nMiss Marlon Blackwood and Miss\nBabe Blackwood, Hall Mines road,\nleft last night for a vacation in Vancouver. They will be guests of their\nsister and brother-in-law, Dr. and\nMrs. H. C. L. Lindsay.\n20 YEARS AGO\ni From Nelson Dally News Files\n-\u00bb\n(July 6, 1918)\nJ. M. Gibson, former manager of\nthe local branch of the Hudson's\nBay company, Is in thc city on a\ntwo weeks' visit.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nDr. E. C. Arthur, who is attached\nto the 12th Canadian field ambulance corps, has arrived safely in\nLiverpool, according to \u2022 cable received yesterday by his wife, Dr.\nIsabel Arthur.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nDr. W. H, Wilion, Birney Crilley,\nH. Y. Andirson md Thomis Gough,\nthe lessees ot the Granite-Poorman\nmine, yesterday completed their\nclemup at the mill and the property Is now ready to be taken over,\nmill ind mine, by the Spokinc and\nButte capitalists who have bonded\nIt and already paid $10,000 down on\na six-figure deal. Tbe bonders of\nthe mine ire John McGlnness ot\nButte, W. E. Cullin md R. A. Car-\nnochan Of Spokane.\n|   30 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelson Dsllv Nlwa Fill!\n*- 1        \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\n(July 4, 1908)\nMrs. B. W. Chimney and daughter Elsie, of Fleetwood, Ltncishire,\nEngland, arrived In Nelson from\nMontreal, having sailed there from\nLiverpool on the SS. Virginian.\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN  CLENDENING,  M.D.\nHEAD SLOW MAY RUIN\nFIGHTER\nIn the world of fistiana, every\nboxer knows ot i tew old habitues\not the ring who are what is known\nat \"punch drunk,\" or \"slug nutty,\"\nor \"ilap happy.\" They are described\nat \"cutting paper dolls.\"\nPunch drunk it an occupational\ndisease. The victims have very\nmarked personality changes which\ndate trom a tough fight when they\ngot many blowa on the head apd\nJaw. Their fighting stamina tt gone;\nThey are no good on the defensive\nand are unable to land a telling\nblow. They collapse under mild\npunishment. Personality changes\nare extreme. They are likely to go\ninto a reverie, atk the same question over and over, develop glassy\neyes, and sometimes an Impediment\nin the speech.\nFormerly lt was generally supposed thit these symptoms were due\nto the development ol a streak of\nyellow, but that Idea haa been given\nup. The condition develops so regularly in those who stay in the ring\nindefinitely that it It considered\nthat shall hemorrhages occur in\nthe brain, affecting the cells.\nCHAMPION GIVES '\nDESCRIPTION\nGene Tunney hat given the most\ngraphic description ot hit own experience with \u25a0 mild case in a magazine article; \"I went into a clinch\nwith my head down, something I\nnever do. I plunged forward, md\nmy partner's head cime up ind\nbutted me over the left eye, cutting\nind dazing me badly, Then he stepped back md swung his right\nagainst my jiw with every bit ot\npower. It landed flush and stiffened\nme where I stood. Without going\ndown or staggering, I lost all consciousness ot what I was doing, and\ninstinctively proceeded to knock\nhim out. Another spa-ring partner,\nEddie Eagan, entered the ring; we\nboxed three rounds. I have no recollection ot anything that occurred\nuntil the next morning, when I\nawakened, wondering who I was\nand what I was doing there . . .\nFrom that incident was born my desire to quit the ring forever, the\nfirst opportunity that presented itself. But most of all, I wanted to\nleave the game that had threatened\nmy sanity before I met with an accident in I real fight with six-ounce\ngloves that would permanently hurt\nmy brain.\"\nThe condition is not confined to\nboxers, md may occur in football\nplayers or to anyone who receives a\nsevere blow on the head. The condition commonly called \"concussion\"\nis now presumed to have the same\nanatomical changes in the brain at a\nbasis.\nIt is likely that publication ot these\nproverbs may give many of them a\nnew lease of life (Scott, 1809). We\nneed not turn up a nose at them\n(Tomson, 1579) just because they\nare old. New thing! are fair (Chaucer, 1386), but old acquaintance will\nsoon be remembered (1550).\"\n- Toda\/s \"\\\nGardm-Graph\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCopurffM, mt.\nCentre! Pre,, Altodollo-, It*.\nTo Make Peeny Blossoms Latt\nLonger\nPeony blossoms should be cut\nwith a sharp knife, either early in\nthe morning or late in the evening. >\nFigure 1 ln the above Garden-\nGraph shows the best stage for cutting single or semi-double peonies,\nwhen the buds are just opening.\nFigure 2 shows the beet stage lor\ncutting double peonies, when tha\nbuds are half open. Cutting them at\nthis stage means that they will laat\nlonger and give more enjoyment.\nAtter cutting, atrip off all the low*\ner foliage and put the blooms in S\npail ot water, tilled to the top. Place\nthis in a dark cool spot, out of drafts.\nmd leave them there over night if\ncut in the evening, or until noon it\ncut In the morning. They may alto\nbe stored in this manner several (\ndays without harm, if desired.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"Bill and Anna are too stingy\nto buy anything, to the only\npleasure they have is in fcelin'\nsuperior to folks that waste\ntheir money on ears and radios\nand things.\"\nOUR\nSERVICE\n... It an suet science in\nwhich perfect equipment\nand experienced workman-hip join to your cwn-\nplete satisfaction. Yet\nth* east is reaionable..,\noften lesi than tht price\nof Inferior moving service.\nPHONE33\nWest Transfer Co.\nESTABLISHED 1899\nILS, Official Tests\nAdvertising Value\nA statement by Wroe Alderson, for more than eight\nyears connected with the bureau of foreign and\ndomestic commerce, praises advertising for retail\nsales. Mr. Alderson has beer) in charge of extensive\nsurveys to get at the most economical methods for\nconducting retail business, particularly in the grocery and drug trades.\n\"Advertising minimises the enormous cost of consumer indecision\" is the way Mr. Alderson phrases\nit. He concludes: \"The turnover is from three to\n10 times as great on an advertised product as it is\non a product presented to the consumer by other\nmeans.\"\nAnd mind you, this is not theoretical experimentation. It is borne out by practical experience.\nIncreased production, thrpugh advertising, brings\nimproved quality and lower prices. This is a fact.\nThe Use of Space in the\nMmxx latlg ifem*\nPays Merchants Handsomely\n .' \u2022\n^\n'        HI   !\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0,    HIP   Mt   \u2014\nDOUKHOBORS\nGET JAIL TERMS\nPRINCE ALBERT, July 5 (CP)-\nSentences totalling five years and\ntwo months and four years and\nthree months were meted out by\nPolice Magistrate K. G. Elder in\nroyal Canadian mounted police\ncourt here Saturday to Sam Markoff\nand John Antifaev, assailants of\nConstable J. R. Love at Blaine Lake,\nJune 29.\nBoth men pleaded guilty to breaking and entering John Bondaroft's\nhome, nine miles southeast ot Blaine\nLake; to assaulting and causing\nbodily harm to Constable Love and\nof theft of the policeman's revolver,\nwhen they appeared before Magistrate Elder later Friday night.\nEach received a sentence of four\nyears in the penitentiary on the\nbreaking and entering charge.\nOn the charge of assaulting Conttable Love, In hospital as a result\nef the beating, Sam Markoff, attacker, was sentenced to six months\nand fined $100.\nJohn Antifaev not charged with\ntaking an actual part In the attack,\nwas sentenced to 60 days. For theft\nof the policeman's revolver, Sam\n, Markoff was assessed 60 days and\nAntifaev 30 days.\nA third Doukhobor, Fred Markoff,\nlather of Sam Markoff, picked up\nWith the other two at Saskatoon,\nwaa remanded for. hearing.\n'   Prepare sticks for runner beans.\nDwarf plants may be had it thc\n; growing plants are pinched out.\nA Sidewalk on the Water\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING, JULY 6. 1 36\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\n'\u25a0 l.l.i i    in SI   . .   I li    ' \u00bb\nThis column la conducted by Mrs. M. A. Vigneux. AH newj of a.\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc., WiU appear in this column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home, 519 Sim, street.\nI     I \/\n\/'        I\n-Staff Photo.\nOne of the main floats on the Nelson waterfront used by motor\nand other boating enthusiasts.\n\u2022\u2014\u2022\nThrough Their Savings\nThey Shared in a\nBillion Dollars\nTVJRING the past six years,\nCanadian policyholders and\nbeneficiaries have received, from\ntheir Life Insurance savings, one\nbillion dollars.\nSo large is this amount\u2014so far-\nreaching are its benefits\u2014that it is\nnearly twice the total sum disbursed\nin direct relief by Canadian municipalities and the Dominion and\nProvincial governments.\nIf it had not been for these large\npayments of Life Insurance, addi\ntional thousands of Canadian families would undoubtedly have been\ndependent upon government and\nmunicipal relief.\nThrough their savings in Life Insurance, these families have been\nable to retain their financial independence and self-respect Widows\nand fatherless have been provided\nwith the necessities of life. Children have been educated. And\nmany men and women have been\nfreed from money worries in their\nold age.\nLife Insurance\nGuardian of\nCanadian Homes\nl-MX\nmm\n_-_-__\nMasses ot summer blooms In delphinium bluea and aplrea. with tall\nstandards of white daisies and feathery ferns banked the pulpit railing\nol First Presbyterian church early\nSaturday morning tor the wedding\not Esther Margaret only daughter\noj Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Oliver, Elwyn\nStreet, Fairview, to Clarence B,\nStallwood, of the north shore, Nelaon.\nPreceding the ceremony, which\ntook place at 8 \u00ab.m., the wedding\nmarch from Mendelssohn's overture in Midsummer Nights Dream,\nwas played by Miss Ellaabeth Carrie. Rev. James B. Ritchie, pastor\nOf the church, officiated.\nThe girlish bride, who waa given\nin marriage by her father, made a\npleasing picture aa she entered the\nchurch wearing her Colonial bridal\ndress of creamy silk lace, ankle\nlength and featuring a jacket of\nfinger-tip length of same material.\nA heavy silk cord knotted at the\nwaistline acted as a girdle. Her wide\nwhite hat of Maline straw with citron-shade chiffon flowers, high\nwhite sandals and lacy gloves and\npearl necklet completed the costume. She carried a lovely sheaf ot\ngolden emblem and white ensign\nroses with maiden hair fern.\nMiss Leslie Fraser school friend\nof the bride, was bridesmaid and\nwore a costume oi white silk crepe\nwith contrasting blue finger-length\ncoat and a smart white felt model\nhat and white accessories. Her bouquet was of radiance roses, delphiniums with fern. B, B. Stallwood ot\nNelaon, brother of the groom, was\nbeat man, and Bain Oliver, brother\nof the bride, and W. A. Bennett Jr,\nwere ushers.\nA reception for the guests, numbering about 40 who were relatives\nand intimate friends ot the con'\ntrading parties was held at the\nbride's home in Fairview following the ceremony, where Mrs. J. B.\nStallweod, the groom's mother, received with Mr*. Oliver and the\nbridal party. Mrs. Oliver wore, for\nthe occasion, a costume of tropical\ncrepe hculash in tones of midnight\nblue. Her hat was of white Baker\nstraw ornamented with pastel flow\ners of chiffon and her shoulder knot\nwas of golden emblem rosebuds, and\nblue violas. Mrs. Stallwood wore a\nsmart costume of silk crepe in tones\nof ashes of roses' with white roaline\nhat and white accessories. Her cor\nsage was of ophelia roses. The wed'\nding breakfast waj terved from two\noval tables drapped with beautiful\nItalian cut work cloths and dec\norated with radiance roses. A color\nscheme of pink and white was car\nrled out in the appointments, tall\npink tapers in silver candlesticks\npink roses and white and pink col\numbines providing a not* of charm.\nForming the centerpiece for one ot\nthe tables was the four-tiered wedding cake that wat set on a pedestal embedded in two shades of rose\nand flanked by silver vases of rad\niant roses. The rooms throughout\nwere redolent with the profusion ot\npink and white summer blooms.\nMrs. Palmer Ruttledge ot TraU invited the guests to the dining room\nwhere Mrs. Clarence Wilton, Miss\nLeslie Fraser and Mist Elizabeth\nCarrie attended.\nMrs. J. E. Allison ot Regina, aunt\nof the bride, and Mrs. Alex Carrie\ncousin ot the bride's father, presided at the coffee Urns.\nMr. and Mrs. Stallwood left later\non a motor trip east, going as far\nas Winnipeg, visiting In Banff, Calgary, Regina, Brandon and Portage\nla Prairie en route. They will be\nhome after July 22 on the north\nshore.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nH. Hayes ot Crescent Bay visited\ntown Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nS. Ball of Ymlr spent Saturday ln\nthe city.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nShoppers in Nelson Saturday included A. Ling of Frasers' Lending.\n\u2022 \u00ab  *\nMr. and Mrs. Hoyle of Vancouver\nare city visitors.\n. \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nHenry Davis and Misa Mary Sutcliffe of Riondel were visitors in\nNelton at the week-end. They were\naccompanied by Misa Mary Rains-\nford of Victoria, who is visiting relatives In Nelton, also by Miss Mary\nHomersham.\n.  .  .\nMrs. W. L. Affleck and her ton,\nTeddy, have left to visit Mr. and\nMrs. W. R. Rourke in Vernon..\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nGracien Bourgeois was in town\nover the week-end from Castlegar.\n\u2022 \u2666  *\nA pleasant surprise party wat\ngiven in honor of Court Royal, Nelson, by the Ladies ot Court Ellen.\nA.O.F., Friday evening in the\nKnights of Pythias hall, The evening wat spent in cards, Prises tor\ntop scores were awarded Mrs, J.\nTait, Mrs. Eli Sutcliffe, L. J. Dunk\nand J. E. Hamson. Among those\nattending were Mra. J. T. Brown,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Ball. A. Cuthbert,\nMrs. Thomas Cookson, Mr, and Mrs,\nI,. J. Dunk, Mrs. A. Elliott, Miss G.\nElliott Mrs. F. Foster, Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Heasell, Mrs, J. Joy, Mrt.\nE. Jarvis, Mist Kathleen Massey,\nMrs. Ell Sutcliffe, Mrs. H. SUrtaker,\nMrs. J. Tilt, Mrs. Robert Vyse, G.\nB. Abbott J. J. Ballets. S. Bale, T.\nSmith, Gordon Stephenson, J. E.\nHamson, Austin Moore and Thomas\nStenson.\n\u2022 \u00bb  \u2022\nMiss Lillian Bennett, Frnot street,\nleft yesterday tor the coast traveling via Spokane and Seattle.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMiss Alice Dunlop of Crescent\nBay visited the city Saturday.\ni    \u2022     .     .\nDon Edwards of the staff of the\nImperial Bank of Canada left tor\ni   \".i \"'\nBroadview, Sask., and, waa warrtM\nthere Saturday at 2 p.m.\nMr. and Mrs. Frederick Niven ol\nWillow Point leave this morning\nto spend several weeks in the Win'\ndenser* diitrlct\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00bb.\nMra. W. R. McDonald ot South\nSlocan visited Nelton Saturday,\n\u2022 . \u2022  *\nMn. A. J. Cornltb. who is holidaying at Queen's Bay for the next\ncouple of months, tpent Saturday\nshopping in town.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00bb\nC. D. Jarvls of Procter waa i\nweek-end visitor in Nejjwn.\n\u2022 \u00ab  \u00bb\nRoy Hunter, Nelson avenue, Fair\nview hat returned from Vancouver where he went to attend the\nfuneral of his father.   .\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nG. Tlnketa of New Denver visited\ntown Saturday.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nS. H. Davit of Slocan City visited\nNelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Clara Miller of Fauquier is\nin the city, a guest of Miss Ivy\nWalker, Baker street.\n\u00bb     *     4\nH. H. Currie and son, len, tpant\nSaturday fishing at the pool at\nSouth Slocan,\n.  ,   *\nMr. and Mra. I. G. Nelaon, Carbonate street have had at their\nguests Mr. Nelson's cousins, Mr. and\nMrs. A. C. Nelson and Mr. and Mrs.\nMerle Nelson all ot Portland, Of*\nThey left yesterday for Spokane en\nroute home.\n\u2022 \u00ab  \u2022\nLeonard Clark of Gray Creek visited Nelson Saturday,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. A. H. Smith and\nchildren, Billy and George, were recent visiton at the home of the lat-\ntera mother, Mrs. W. H. Walker.\n< \u00ab \u2022\nW. McConnell o{ H^jrop visited\ntown Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. Duncan Smith, Kerr\napartments, accompanied by their\nyowig daughter, Peggy, left Seta\nday morning for a couple est weeks\nat Penticton. They will also visit\nBanff, Lake Louise and Calgary.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. R. C. Crowe and\nfamily of Trail have arrived in Nelson to spend th* summer at the\nBenwell summer home on the north\nthere.\n\u00ab  *  \u2022\nMrs. Leslie Pickard, Vernon\nitreet, and her ion, Gordon, leave\ntoday on the Vimy pilgrimage,\nWhile in Scotland they will visit\nMn. Pickard'e father at Barrhead.\nThey will also vim England and\nother countries.\n\u00abl  \u2022   \u2022\nA quiet and pretty wedding took\nplace at St. Paul's United church\nFriday, July S, at 9:30 p.m. with Rev.\nT. J. S. Ferguson officiating, when\nMargaret Winnifred Atkins of Edmonton became the bride of John,\nsecond eon of Mr. and Mrs. Gale\nAshbaugh of Edmonton. Bridesmaid\nwat Miss Audrey Spencer and the\ngroom waa supported by B. W. Pad-\ndington ot Nelson. The bride looked\ncharming in an ensemble of powder\nblue crepe white accessories. She\ncarried a ahower of pink and white\nroses and carnations. Mlts Spencer\nalso chose white accessories with an\nensemble of nile green sheer crepe,\nFollowing the ceremony at the\nchurch, a reception wat held at the\nhome on Edgewood avenue of Mr,\nand Mrs. David Laughton. Among\nthose present were Mr. and Mn.\nJohn Ashbaugh, Mr. and Mrs. Gale\nAshbaugh, Fred Ashbaugh of Edmonton, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Pad-\ndlngton, Miss Mary Brenner, Leon\nHoorawt, Misa Audrey Spencer,\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson, Mr. and Mn.\nLaughton and th* Misses Irene and\nGrace Laughton. After a honeymoon in Spokaitc and the Crow district Mr. and Mrs. Ashbaugh will\nmake their home in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u00bb  \u2022\nMn. J. E. Allison, nee Miss Mary\nOliver, formerly of the stsff of the\ncentral school in Nelson, now residing In Regina, is spending the summer in Nelaon and district. Mrs. Allison came to th* city to attend the\nwedding of her niece, Miss Esther\nOliver to Mr. Stallwood which took\nplace in Nelson Saturday morning.\n9    ,    *\nMr. and Mrs. Percy F. Horton of\nSalmo were city shoppen Saturday.\n\u2022 t  \u2022\nLewis Rees returned Saturday to\nTrail after a week's visit at the\n\u25a0 page fiW i\nJULY CLEARANCE\nSALE\nSPECIALS FOR MONDAY AND THIS WEEK\nd\ns \u25a0\u25a0-,.'*    tm\nKNITTED\nSUITS\nHO-95\nA great selection of three-piece all-wool Knitted Suits in Ballantyne artd Avon-Knit makes.\nThe colors are brown, olives green, toast beige,\nbottle green, royal henna. Splendid new styles.\nBlouses and Sweaters\nString Sweaters in pastel colors, and Silk\nBlouses in sport styles, with long and short\nsleeves. White and colors. Q1 <7Q\nReduced to  f 1.1 s7\nAll   Ready-to-Wcar  Marked  it\nGREAT   CLEARANCE   PRICES.\nChoose your Dresses, Coats and\n- Suits now.\nJERMAN HUNT'S\n'hone 200 DRYCOODS AND READY-TO-WEAR Baker Si\nheme of hla parents, Mr. and Mrt.\nP. L. Reee, Fairview.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMrs. R. W. Diamond of Trail and\nher daughter, who are holidaying\nat Willow Point, were in town\nSaturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. L. McBride, Hoover street, returned Friday night from Vancou-\nC. A. Mainaford of Victoria and\nhis son Frank expect to leave today\nafter visiting Nelson.\n\u00bb  \u2022   \u2022\nW. K. Esling of Trail, who had\nbeen in Vancouver, has returned to\nhit home in Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nW. O. Muirhead of Sunshine Bay\nviiited Nelson at the week-end.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nRev. J. J. Cheeven united ln\nmarriage at the Church of Mary\nImmaculate June J8, Ethel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Ling of\nFraten Landing, to Louis, youngest\nion of Mr. and Mrs. F. Bonacci of\nProcter. They were attended by\nMiss Margaret Ling, sister of the\nbride, and E. Leschiutta of Trail.\nAfter a honeymoon in Spokane Mr.\nand Mrs. Bonacci will make their\nhome in Procter.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nJack Hum* of Chatcolet. Idaho,\nleft yesterday after visiting his\nmother, Mn. J. Fred Hume, at\n\"Killarney on the Lake.\"\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRussell Thompson of the Renb\nmine is visiting his family on Victoria street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Kitchenhem\nand son Alan of St Thomas, Ont,,\nhave tpent a week visiting Mrs.\nKitchenham's sister, Mrs. S. D.\nSmith, Pine and Union streets, Fair-\nview. They will return cast neitt\nweek.\n\u2022 * \u2022 *\nLittle  Julie Battenby of Bull\nRiver, who bad spent sevenl weeks\nVisiting her grandmother, Mrs. W.\nH. Walker, Baker street, .has returned.\n\u2022 \u00bb  \u2666\nMrs. A. J- Miller, Latimer street,\nhas as her guests, her son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ar-\nMINUS\nRECIPES\nand\nHINTS\nBv\nMrs,\nMary\nMarton\nGood\nHousekeeping\nMENU  HINT\nHamburg Steaks     Boiled Potatoes\nBe*t| a la King Radishes\nVanilla Ice Cream With\nButterscotch Sauce\nTe* or Coffe*     '    ,\nSeason your; hamburga well with\nonion, salt and pepper, make them\ninto flat cakes (you can uie an egg\nand bread crumbs to hold them together if you with), and broil slowly In a pan In the broiling oven.\nYou can use thli butterscotch eauce\nover plain calces as well as over ice\ncream. \u2022\nTODAY'S RECIPE8\nBeelt a la King\u2014Pour the following sauce over small whole beets or\nthinly-sliced larger ones: One tablespoon butter, one tablespoon flour,\none-half teaspoon salt, one cup cold\nwater, three tablespoons vinegar,\nthroe tablespoons cream, one-half\nteaspoon sugar, one-fourth teaspoon\npaprika. Melt the butter, add the\nflour and gradually add the water.\nStir till thickened, add vinegar and\nseasonings. Remove from the heat\nand stir in the cream. Serve at once.\nBe sure that the beets are hot before\nadding the .sauce.\nFavorite Butleracotch Sauce\u2014One\negg yolk, .four tablespoons water,\nfive tablespoons butter, two-thirds\ncup brown auger, one-third cup corn\nsyrup. Beat the egg and gradually\nadd the hot water. Add sugar, butter and corn syrup and cook over\nhot water, stirring frequently, till\nthick. Beat thoroughly before using.\nthur Miller of Victoria, and their\nton Dale. They will also visit Mrs.\nMiller's sister and brother, Mrs.\nE. L. Levaiseur, Silica street, and\nNorman Richardson, Fairview.\n. . .\nMrs. Wslter Wright of Nakusp,\nwho was a visitor in the city, has\nreturned home.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nFrankTI. Jackson of Creston visited town at the week-end.\n\u2022 *   \u00ab\nMn. H. Axelson of Russell's Landing visited Nelson Saturday.\n.   .   .\nMrs. R. D. Hall, Josephine street,\nreturned Saturday morning from\nspending three months In Rochester,\nBoston and Halifax, visiting relatives in the two latter places.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nWilliam Irvine left yesterday for\nSpokane and Chewelah where ho\nwill visit friends.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nCol. S. J. Goode of Bonnington\nvisited  Nelson   Saturday   evening.\n\u2022 \u00ab   *\nMr. and Mra. D. F. Petera, who\nwere guests at the home of Mr. and\nMn. H. H. Currie, Baker street,\ni iiiin* m .\"ii' \u2014\nhave returned\nAppledale.\nlo  their  home at\nDr. and Mrs. H. H. MacKenzie\nhave returned from a couple of\nweeks in Victoria and Vancouver.\nIn the former place thc doctor attended a medical convention.\n*   .   *\nMiss Margaret Williams and her\nbrother Jack left by motor yesterday morning for Vancouver to rc-\n(Contlnued on Page Ten)\n\"JlTCWAYSTOBE\nHEADQUARTERS\nFOR QUALITY\nFOODS \u2014 FRUITS\nMEATS \u2014 VEGETABLES\nPHONE 865\nSAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\nWO CAlftCWl\nMtAUTltt\n-SALAO **\u00bb*\u00ab-\nHOW, MUMMY I\n^__&^$M\ncre-mlne-s-*^ ^_    rjlvt.A\u00abd\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab       ^^\nk\u00bbdied goodness \u00bbna_ for extra creamy\u00bb\n^^.erfdreuiM\"0\njhttooordinsryo1\nr,W,l,eTB^.ood.i.-..n.\ntor extra'-\u2014. ,\nIt costs\nbul* tri** !*\"\nBEST FOODS\nREAL MAYONNAISE\n\u2022\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nMADE IN  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\n \u25a0\u2022\niERVATIVES\n(HOSE WISELY\n\u2022j\"*-   ' ',-   T>'7    '\"\"'\"\nDr ^att\u00ab;t4art Is the\n.   Outstanding Man;\nFine Platform\nEXPLAINS WHAT\nSAID ON FAIRS\nTemperatures Art\nDown at Week-end\nWeek-end weather held Uhe for\nthe various sports activities ii. Nel-\nI son and' district, nor 'was It too\n: warm. No rain fell Sunday, aa golf-\nJ ens, tennis players, softball players,\nj arid baseball players were in action,\n' although golfers, slogged their way\n' through a .drenching rain Saturday\n, afternoon. Total rainfall Saturday\nwas... of an inch. *   '\nLarge slow-drifting clouds kept\nthe mercury down to a maximum\n: of 74 degrees, while the low for\ni ih<' day was 48 degrees. Saturday's\nj recordings were maximum 71 de-\nI grees, minimum. 50 degrees.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. JULY (. 1936\nK. McBRIDE &ND\nMRS. L BRADLEY\nGOLF WINNERS\nFirst Wins CI.L Cup\nand Latter Blanche,\"\nPollard Memorial\nNelson Would Have\nAccommodated\nBetter\n\"It was a magnilicent convention, wonderfully successful in all\n. respects, and In choosing Dr. Frank i\nPatterson to be provincial Conscrv- '\native leader, tt made a wise as well\nas popular selection, of. an out-\nitandmg man, forceful and aggres-\nnve, with a reputation for honesty\nand fair play,\" said C. F. McHardy\nSunday night, of the big Conservative delegate gathering at Vancou-\n. ver the first of the week.\nWhile R. L. (Pal) Maitland, K.C\nand Herbert Anscomb, the other\ncandidates for the leadership, were\nwell received, and all three candidates made splendid addresses, Dr\nPatterson got the outstanding support of the delegates, Mr. McHardy\n\u2022aid, The younger members of the\nparly were strongly represented, and\nit was generally expected he said,\nthat there should be a strong prov-\n\u25a0 ince-wide organization shortly. Any\ndissensions were now past, and the'\nparty would go forward with a un:\nity it had not enjoyed for many\nyears, Mr. McHardy suggested.\nBeside the choice of a slrong leader, on whom all were united, Mr.\nMcHardy said the convention was\nalso outstanding in its action on\nthe platform, in thc way it grappled\nwith the unemployment problem,\nand in its determination to get the\nprovince in better shape financially,\nwith balancing of the budget and\nmaintenance ol the province's credit\nas objectives.\nMcHARDY CORRECTS\nREPORT\nRegarding the Canadian Press dispatch in The Daily News representing him as objecting \"lo the provision for increased grants to agricultural fairs on the ground that\ntuch institutions had little value to\ncommunities and had little educational value,'' Mr. McHardy said\nthis did nol correctly represent the\nview he expressed, He told the contention that while the principle of\ngovernment aid to fairs was sound,\ntne allocating ot this aid was and\nshould be a departmental matter,\na..d he was against putting it in the\np_ny's platform, lor later it might\nbe construed as pledging the party\nto give a grant to every small fair,\n, whereas lhe object of educational\nbenefit would be best attained by\nhaving thc small districts combine\nto have larger fairs, with wider\ncompetition. What he had in mind,\nMr. McHardy said, was the Fraser\nValley and the Delta, where every\nfive miles there was a fair that de-\nmanded government recognition,\nthough obviously there would be\nbetter fairs if they concentrated at\n& tew centers. .,\nProceedings at the big convention\n.wound up with an extremely able\n^address by Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett,\n\u2022 which, however, was only incidentally political, its main theme being\n' the responsibility. of Conservatives\nas Canadian citizens.\nACCOMMODATION POOR\nThe convention, Mr. McHardy\nsaid, suffered under thc handicap\noMnfcrior accommodation. The first\nday it met at Hotel Vancouver, and\nthe second day al Hotel Georgia, in\neach case with delegates packed in\nchambers that were too small, with\nb|d accoustlcs. Thc Nelson auditorium, he said, could have held\ntwice the gathering comfortably,\nwhile the opera chairs, as opposed\n. to the'wooden chairs provided, and\nthe superior accoustics, would have\nleft no comparison possible.\nBefore leaving Vancouver, Mr.\nMcHajdy, attended the Canadian\nclub luncheon, and heard the notable addresses by Mayor G. G.' Mc-\nGper, Mr. Bennett, and Premier\nWilliam Aberhart of Alberta.\n^Returning by way of Spokane,\nMr. McHardy found his train delayed at Blue Stem by a collision\nbetween an eastbound fish train and\na westbound freight train, so he\ngot a scat in an ambulance that)\ntook Ihe only injured man 40 miles\nto Spokane.\nSaturday he put in seeing the\nGrand Coulee dam project on thc\nColumbia, with ils Mason City,\nwhere lhe company engineers live,\nits government engineers community on llic other side 'of Ihe river.\nthe town of Grand Coulee itself\nwith 7000 population, and half a\ndozen other townsltes\u2014all typical\nwestern boom towns of thc early\ndays. The work at Ihis stage, Mr.\nMcHardy said, is confined to the\nfoundations on both sides of the i\nriver, but the project, started for\na low dam. has been altered to the\nultimate high dam basis.\nNELSON COUPLE\nWEDDED FOR 50\nYEARS HONORED\nMr. and Mrs. Thor Are\nGuests Over 100\nFriends\nOver 100 friends and neighbors\nthronged the lipme of Mr. and Mrs.\nPeter Thor Sunday, to congratulate\nthis popular Nelson couple on their\ngolden wedding anniversary. They\nwere married on July 5, 1886, at\nMinneapolis.\nTo the ola couple they brought\nmany gifts, among which were two\neasy Chan's presented by their\nfriends, one each.\nDuring the afternoon Rev. Earl\nE. Lindgrcn of the i Scandinavian\nchurch voiced congratulations to\nMr. and Mrs. Thor on behalf of 'heir\nfriends and neighbors, and Alderman T. W. Slader, Olaf Johnson,\nThomas Bishop, Mrs. Samuel Powell and Albert Fictz also spoke\nbriefly, and Mrs. Thor voiced the\nthanks of herself and her husband.\nMr. Lindgren made the presentation.\nMrs. Thor left immediately after\nthc festivities' concluded for, Spokane where her daughter-in-law,\nMrs. Tycko Thor. in seriously ill.\nSALMO JUNIORS\nWIN IN NELSON\nNelson midget baseball clubs divided a doubleheader with thc towns\nfrom the south, when Salmo juniors\nbeat the Nelson Leos 5-3 in the first\ngame, and Nelson Panthers beat the\nYmir Cubs in the nightcap 9-4 at the\nRecreation grounds Sunday afternoon.\nThe first game was a pitchers' battle, both pitchers holding the batters\nwell in check. L. Trainor, on the\nmound for the Leos. struck out 18\nbatters, while Murdoch, the Salmo\npitcher, fanned 13.\nGame between the Panthers and\nYmir proved more to thc fans' liking as with the home team winning,\nthere was more hitting and some\nspectacular fielding.\nAlex Ioanin and Russel French\numpired.\nScore by innings:\nFirst game:\nSalmo   300 020 0-5\nLeos    100 010 1-3\nMurdoch and Dembicki; Trainor\nand Marapodi.\nSecond game:\nYmir   100 201 0-4\nPanthers 110 043 *-9\nYmir Man Dies,\nNelson Hospital\nOle Martip Monsen Stromsnes\ndied at the Kootenay Lake General\nhospital Saturday morning at the\nage of 62 years.\nBorn at Askoen, Hurdaland, Norway, April 17, 1874, Mr. Stromsnes\nbecame a naturalized Canadian in\nOctober, 1931. He had lived at\nYmir for the past few years.\nMr. Stromsnes is survived by a\nbrothor, John Stromsnes, of Lutz,\nFlorida, and two daughters, Miss\nInga Stromsnes of Ellisboro, Sask..\nand Miss Ragnhlld Stromsnes of\nIndian Head, Sask.\nFuneral arrangemennts are in the\nhands of Davis Funeral Service.\nI In a thtlllng 20-hole match,.Ken\nMcBride emerged the victor over\nW. R. Grubbe Suhday afternoon in\n! the finals of the C.IlL. Cup club\ni tournament at thc Nelson Golf and\ni Country club. Mrs. L. S. Bradley\nj was winner ot lhe Blanche Pollard\n' Memorial trophy deieating Mrs.\n' Gray Lawrence in lhe final.\nMrs. A. Baird was winner of the\nladies consolation, winning over\nMrs. H. Lakes in thc final, while\nill the men's consolation, C. H,\nStark and L. A. McPhail advanced\nlo the final, their match to be\nplayed probably next week-end.'\nMcBride did nol win a hole until\nlhe ninth bul was only two down\nat thc turn. The iOlh was halved,\nMcBride took thc 11th, Grubbe look\nIhe 12th, McBride .took the 13th\nwilh a deuce, 14th and the 15th to\ngo one up. Grubbe took the 16th to\nsquare it again and the .next three\nwere halved. McBride's second shot\n\"was a beautiful approach dead to\nlhe pin to win lhe hole, thc match\nand the cup.\nMen's churnpiohship flight:\nFirst round\u2014A. Baird beat H,\nSeamon, G. W.,Davis beat W. Blane,\nV. Owen beat D. Stack, J. D. Ken-\nbeat L. A. McPhair, C. Lambert\nbeat W. J. Waters, .F. G. Schroeder\nbeat W. W. Ferguson, R. Pollard\nboat J. F. Weir, K. G. McBride beat\nW. M. Cunliffe, A^. A. Duckworth\nbeat G. Roynon, T. R. Wilson beat\nC. H. Hamilton, L. M. McBride beat\nDr. W. Moffat by default, W. R.\nDunwoody beat C. H. Stark, E. G.\nChapman beat B. Townshend, W.\nR. Grubbe beat John Fraser, R.\nWatson beat H. Lakes. O. G. Gallaher beat L. S. Bradley.\nSecond round\u2014Baird beat Davis,\nKerr beat Owen, Schroeder beat\nLambert, K. McBride beat Pollard,\nWilson beat Duckworth, L. McBride beat Dunwoody, Grubbe beat\nChapman, Watson beat Gallaher.\nThird round\u2014Kerr beat Baird, K.\nMcBride boat Schroeder, Wilson\nbeat L. McBride, Grubbe beat Watson.\nSemi-finals \u2014 K. McBride beat\nKerr, Grubbe beat Wilson.\nLadies' championship flight:.\nFirst round\u2014Miss C. Smith beat\nMrs. R. L. McBride, Mrs. L. S. Bradley beat Mrs. R. Watson, Miss A.\nJerome beat Mrs. J. F. Weir. Mrs.\nW. W. Ferguson beat Mrs. A. Baird,\nSecond round\u2014Mrs. Bradley beat\nMiss Smith, Mrs. Ferguson beat\nMiss Jerome, Mrs. B. Townshend\nbeat Miss D. Sturgess, Mrs. G. Lawrence beat Mrs. H. Lakes.\nSemi-finals\u2014Mrs. Bradley beat\nMrs. Ferguson, Mrs. Lawrence Beat\nMrs. Townshend.\nMen's consolation:\nFirst round\u2014W. Blane beat H.\nSeamon, L. A. McPhail beat D,\nStack, W. W. Ferguson beat W. J.\nWaters by default, W. M. Cunliffe\nbeat J. F. Weir, C. H. Hamilton\nbeat G. Roynon, C. H. Stark beat\nDr. W. Moffat by default, John\nFraser beat B. Townshend, H. Lakes\nbeat L. S. Bradley.\nSecond round \u2014 McPhail beat\nBlane, Ferguson beat Cunliffe by\ndefault, stark beat Hamilton, Lakes\nbeat Fraser.\nSemi-finals\u2014McPhail beat Ferguson, Stark beat Lakes.\nLadies' consolation:\nFirst round\u2014Mre. R. L. McBride\nbeat Miss D. Sturgess, Mrs. A. Baird\nbeat Mrs. R. Watson,\nSemi-finals\u2014Mrs. Baird beat Mrs.\nMcBride, Mrs. Lakes beat Mrs. Weir,\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL;\n'\u25a0' i\n.This column Is in charge ol Mrs. Glenn Quayle of TraiL All\nevents tit a social nature of interest ln Trail and Tadanac will appear\nlb this column, Mrs. Quayle will be glad tq have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her home ln Trail.\nTRAIL. B.C.', July 5-r-Mrs. Robert\nWhite, whose marriage Was recently\n\u25a0solemnized, was again honored at\na delightful social'event when Mrs.\nThomas Evans, entertaining at the\nhornc of her mother, Mrs. R. H.\nWhite, was hostess at a miscellaneous shower. Gifts for the bride were\narranged in a doll buggy which was\ndrawn into \u25a0 thc room by Jean\nDownie, the color scheme, used being blue \u25a0 and white. Sweet peas\nand roses in vases decorated the\nreception room and fhc serving\ntable from which delicious refreshments were served at the conclusion\nof the evening. Whist' was the featured entertainment. Mrs. J. Reid\nwinning high score prize, Mrs. Pat\nNorris, second and Mrs. John Gib- i\nson, consolation. Assisting the hostess  in  serving were Mrs.  R., H.!\nweek-end for Calgary, travelling\nvia Sand Point, Idaho, on a vacation which w^ll conclude in about\ntwp weeks.\n\u2022   * ' f\nMrs. B. E. Smith of Fruitvale was\na recent visitor to Trail.\nMrs. T. V. Lord, as, divisional\ncemp advisOr for the Girl Guide:;,\nleft Saturday for Sunshine Bay to\nprepare for camp opening next\nweek.\nMr. and Mis. Herb Swanson have\nleft for Calgary where they will\nspend a vacation. They expect to\nreturn in about two weeks.\nDEANS RUNS UP\nTOTAL 154 IN\nTRAIL CRICKET\nLeads Team to 204-54\n\u25a0 ' Victory Over\nRossland '\nSecretary of C.P.R.\nIs Visitor to Trail\nF. Bramley, secretary of the Canadian Pacific Railway company,\nspent .Saturday In Trail, going\nthrough Nelson Saturday night on\nhis return east. Mr. and Mrs. Bramley ' had visited the coast and on\ntheir return trip used C. A. Cot-\ntereU'i private car to Nelson. They\ncontinued east from here on the\ntrain leaving at 1:25 a.m. Sunday.\ndan Mcdonald\nanswers call\nattranquille\nTRAIL, B,C\u201e July 5. - Trail\nCricket club added its fifth Win to j\nIts credit by defeating Rossland 204\nto 54 runs Sunday, a remarkable\ndisplay of batting by W. Dean bringing, the local team's score to 204\nMitchell and Chambers bowled for\nTrail, disposing of the visitors.for\n54 runs, giving each bowler the low\naverage of less than 4.75 runs per\nwicket. .\nThc fielding on both, teams was\n... excellent but Rossland found diffi-\nHendrik Padberg, son of Mr. and I culXin <\u00b0PinS wlth Trall's batsm\u2122\nMrs. Theodore Padberg. has left for i an? howlers.\nWhite nnd Mrs. E. Montpellier. Tbe 1 Albert* \u00abh\u00abt '\" \u00abJ>\u00bb ^\"d \u00ab\u00bb'    \\\\^. ^ ^^\n* summer vacation with relatives.      i    Roiiland:\nSTARS WIN AND\nLOSE SOFTBALL\nGAMES IN TRAIL\nguests were Mrs. A. B. Marshall,\nMrs. Duncan F. DOwnie, Mrs. A.\nB. Clark. Mrs. Alfred Saunders,\nMrs, Pat Norris, Mrs. Dan Williamson, Mrs. D, Duffus, Mrs. Jack\nReardon. Mrs. James Leckie, Mrs.\nJ. Wood, Mrs. William Spooner,\nMrs. Phyllis Harris. Mrs, A. Hall,\nMrs. J. Reid, Mrs. M. Webber. Mrs.\nWilliam Cant. Mrs. Omcr J. Wilson,\nMrs. Jack Balfour, Mrs. John Gibson, Mrs. Cosgrove, Mrs. J. Cos-\ngrove, Mrs. M. Sanderson. Mrs. E.\nMontpellier, Miss Jean Downie, Miss\nTilly Koehn and Miss Rose Severn.\n*   *   *\nGuest of honor at a miscellaneous\nshower was an August bride- ct,\nMiss Peggy Laurie, Mrs. Roy Hayman entertaining. A large box,\ndecorated in mauve and white, containing numerous gifts, was presented to the' honored guest. An\nevening's program o( games and\nmusic was enjoyed, the event concluding with the serving of refreshments.\n\u00bb   \u2022   *\n|    Charles   King   left   during   the\n1 E. Bouchier, b Chambers\nEdged Out by Jimmies\nBut Trim Bronc\nClub\nMiner's Consumption'\nClaims Well Known\"\nNelsonite\nPRIZE DRILLER\n, IN EARLY DAYS j\nRan Madden House a |\nYear; Remained\nUnmarried\nMr   and   Mrs    Mercer   McLeod IL' A' Read' b Cnambers \u2022-\u25a0 9\nwh^r\/^ng^low P^t I & ^run' out\". HI    4\nhave returned to their summer\nresidence there after visiting in\nTrail.\nMrs. J. H. Young and Miss Laura\nYoung left Saturday\" for Syrlnga\nCreek where they will spend a\nvacation.\n* *   \u2022\nBill Corey left Saturday with\nMr. and Mrs. A. B. Marshall for\nDiamond Lake where for a few days\nhe will be a guest of Mr. and .Mrs.\nA. H. Hopkins of Trail. From there\nMr. Corey will travel to California\nwhere he will spend the summer.\nPrior to his departure he was the\nrecipient of a wrist watch from\nmembers of his dancing class. Mr.\nCorey will return early in September.\n* \u2022   *\nMrs. A. Fletcher left during the\nweek-end on a vacation which will\nbe spent at Calgary.\nP. Harris, c Halliwell, b Mitchell 3\nJ. Finney, b Chambers   0\nJ. Chambers, b Mitchell   0\nR. Ayres, c Halliwell, b Mitchell 0\nC. Ayres, hit wicket, b Mitchell 3\nW. Toogood, b Chambers  1\nA. G. Read, not out  2\nExtras    15\nTotal  54\nTrail:\nG. Eaton; b Harris  0\nE. Martin, b\u00bbHarris  6\nW. Deans, not out   154\nW. Taylor, b'Bell   4\nJ. Chambers, b Bell  7\nJ. Mitchell, c Ayres, b Harris 14\nR. Stiles, run out  4\n[' D. Benton, c Ayres, b Read  0\nS. Whitehead, b Harris   1\nT. Harper, c Ayres, b Read  6\nT. Horwell, b Bell   1\nExtras  :l\nTRAIL, B.C., July 5. \u2014 Toronto\nStars split the honors with Trail\nteams in two ladies' softball games\nhere Sunday,\nIn the first game thc Stars were\nbeaten 8-7 by the TraiL Jimmies,\nthrough they out-hit the Jimmies 12\nto 9, Seven errors against three\ncommitted by the Jimmies contributed to their downfall. Helen Ling,\npitching for Trail, struck out four\nand Hazel Spiers of Nelson eight.\nWith Hazel Spiers'doing thc iron-\nman stunt of pitching her second\nnine-inning game with less than\ntwo hours rest, thc Star club handed the Trail Broncs a 20-7 trimming; Hazel struck out nine batters\nand walked one while allowing the\nBroncs eight scattered hits. The\nwinners .collected 19 hits off the\ncombined offerings of Helen Mawdsley and Helen Ling.\nIn this game Broncs were on thc\nlong end in errors, seven against\nthree.\nTotal\n204\nMcLEAN BACK\nSoftball Title\nSeries in Air\nCease Operation of\nVelvet at Rossland\n. -;\u25a0   Until Re-Financed\n\u25a0Velvet Gold 'Mining company of\nSeattle has ceased opcratiou of the\nold Velvet mine, about nine miles\nwest from Rossland on thc Rossland-\nCascade highway, until the new program of refinancing is completed,\na report in.thc Vancouver Province\natttcs.\niThe oompany recently completed\nihstullntion  of a new mUl at tho\nproperty and it was stated to be\n^'working satisfactorily.\nTRAIL, B.C., July 5. \u2014 Steps toward initiating the 1936 West Kobtc-\nnay ladies' softball championship\nseries were discussed at a meeting\nhere at which Trail was represented\nby Mike Verzuh, president of the\nladies' association, and Stephen Ma-\ntovich. rep team coach: and Nelson\nby Pauline Stangherlin, Isabel Donovan. Rudy Pilous and Gilbert\nRowling. ,,\nNelson officials promised the Trail\nmen to give them the answer of\ntheir organization Monday evening.\nA best four-of-seven series was proposed, with July 19 as the suggested\nOpening date. <\nPleads Not Guilty\nof Intoxication\nWilliam Dunn, appearing in police court Saturday morning on a\ncharge of .being Intoxicated In a\npublic place, pleaded not guilty and\nasked for an adjournment until\nMonday morning. Magistrate William Brown complied with thc request.\nFireworks Boom When Rossland\nTakes W.K. Boxla League Lead    IROM (OAST\n| Crowd Wild as It Watches Trail Race Neck| Great GQthering for\nTrail Softball\nTeams Play Tie\nTRAIL.-B.C.. July 5-After playing 13 innings without altering a\nninth-Inning 5-5 tic, the first of a\ntwo-out-of-lhrec series to decide the\nchampionship of the first half of the\nTrail District Men's Softball league,\nLaurlentc's Giants and Curly's\nKootenay Cubs abandoned their\ngame at Butler park today.\nPople. hurling for Giants, allowed\neight Hits and struck out one. Merlo\nfor the Cubs allowed 11 hits and\nstruck out four. Neither gave away\nany passes to first. Both had excellent support in the field.\nNeither team made a hit after the\nlie was established.\nConsolidated Will\nWork Properties in\nBig Missouri Area\nConsolidated Mining k Smelting\ncompany is to carry on extensive\nwork during the summer on the\nSalmon Gold and Hercules properties near the Big Missouri, Portland\nCanal mining area, according to thc\nVancouver Province.\nA pack train will be used to transport supplies and material. A large\ncrew has already arrived at Salmon\nGold to start development, the report adds.\nPOSTPONED SOFTBALL\nCAM! SLATED TONICHT\nSafeway-Bankers men's softball\ngame, rained out Friday, is to be\n'Jlayed this evening at the Recreation grounds; and the twice-postponed Gelinas Red Sox-Trinity\nYoung People girls' game scheduled\nfor tonight has again been postponed.-'\nand Neck With Miners Only to Lose\nOut to the Tune of 10-9\nJubilee Opening;\nSees Pattullo\nLEAGUE STANDING\nN W L Pt.\nRossland \t\n....      5 4 18\nTrail   \t\n5 3 2 6\nNelson           \t\n4 0 4 0\nTrail, B. C. July 4\u2014Both Trail and\nRossland assimilated their feelings\nwith neighbors to the south of the\n49th parallel in celebrating the\nFourth of July fittingly when they\nzoomed, whined, nose-dived and\nskyrocketed in a display of fireworks to beat one another in the\ngreatest battle of the West Kootenay\nboxla league at Trail rink Saturday\nnight, to al least take a spasmodic\nhold on first place of thc loop standing.\nRossland won 10-9 when \"Dutch\"\nCouture zoomed in the winning goal\n34 second before full time. \"Dutch\"\nfought a terrific battle all night and\nbeing ineffective during the rest of\nthe struggle was disregarded when\nhe weaved his way in to the Trail\nnet in lightning fashion to beat LeRoy for the winning counter.\nUPHILL GRIND\nIt was an uphill grind for both\nteams from the outset.\nThe game over all required the\nlongest time of any fixture yet when\ntime was taken off for fist fights,\nfree-for-alls and attenuated arguments. Frank Sharp, who follows\nthe Trail team with a first-aid kit,\nand Harry Leckie, Rossland manager and first-aid man, were the busiest pair in the rink attending to\ncuts, bruises, bleeding noses and\nbleeding gums from which teeth\nhad been separate!\nCASUALTIES HEAVY\nPlayers crawled, hobbled reeled\nand were guided into their respective boxes as the battle raged, but\nafter a few patches, emerged from\n\"blighty\" to reenter the firing line.\nNo doubt that which urged the\nplayers on in the strenuous struggle was the tumultous cacophony\nwhich emanated from the largest\ngallery of supporters yet.\n. From now on referees of the West\nKootenay league will be scarce, for\nBob Gifford, at the end of the battle,\nsaid he was through with trying to\nreferee warfare.\nNeck and neck the battle raged.\nEzart pelted, in the first counter for\nRossland on Walmsley's assist but\nless than a minute later, Scott, a\nnew recruit, who showed up well in\nhis first game here evened the\nscore on Wilson's contribution.\nShortly after he had tallied, Ezart\nhobbled from the floor with back\nbowed after a check by the Trail\ndefence.\nCHEYNE FAST\nSix seconds before the end of the\nquarter, Cheyne, the fastest mah in\nI'the league whipped ln Rossland's\nsecond counter after he received the\nyellow ball on the. end of a three-\nway play in which Marshall and\nSpencer figured. Ai Cheyne went\ndown the floor he received a clout\non the head for which Kendall received 5 minutes penalty and as an\nargument went on between Coach\nRerlgrave and Judge of Play Mel\nStinson of Rossland, Cheyne. scored.\nLess than two minutes of the second period had elapsed when Trail\nagain tied the score, Wilson chalking up the marker on a aolo endeavour. Trail went Into thc lead\nfor thc first time when Scott wcnl\nthrough Walmsley and thc goalie\nsoon after.\nFREE-FOR-ALL\nDavies and Wilson, who had been\ntreating each other roughly up to\nthis point of the game tangled in\nthe middle of the floor and both\nteams grasped the opportunity to\npick fights with opposing players.\nReferees coaches and managers interjected to settle the arguments\nbut were roughly treated before the\ngame was resumed.\nBefore the half-time interval arrived Rossland tied up the game\nonce more, Simcock scoring,\nStarting the second half on an\nequal basis, both teams were boring in under a super-tension and\nwhen Kendall went in behind Ged-\nmskl's goal another fracas was away\nThese two bad boys were given 10\nminutes each in which to cool off\nand Ross Forrest went in goal.\nLEROY GOES OUT\nThere were only four men on each\nside and LeRoy running out to snag\na lose ball raced far up the,floor\nbut managed to return to his sanctum before his net was again menaced.\nMerlo drove the ball into the\nRossland net but the goal was disallowed as he had received a pass\nwhile in the crease. This caused\nmore argument and both teams\nhuddled in front of the net to talk\nit over.\nForrest, despite tlie absence of\nheavy armour, played a splendid\ngame in goal for those ten minutes\nGidinski was off. He was finally\nbeaten by Bradbury about half way\nthrough the period. _Trail again\nstepping into the lead.\"\nTEAMS STRENGTHENED\nFrom the penalty, box players\nwere gradually returning to the\ngame anil while Trail had five and\nRossland six men out, the miners\ndrove home two goals, Davies and\nCheyne scoring less than a minute\napart. Kendall and Gidinski returned soon after to give Rossland a full\nteam.\nOnce more an equalizer was thrust\ninto the net when Kendall scored\nsix seconds after the face-off of\nthe fourth quarter. That was just\nthe time it took him to retrieve the\nball from the face-off, dash to the\niiossland net and beat Gidinski.\nRossland stepped ahead less than\na minute after on Walmsley's counter, but Murdoch, assisted by Kendall, scored another equalizer. Again\nRossland jumped ahead' when\nWalmsley tallied and increased\ntheir margin by one on Cheync's\ngoal which was made on a pass\nfrom Simcock.\nONE DIDNT COUNT *\nTrail made up those two goals and\nlost another in the next five minutes. Marcus Smith, junior player\nwent through the whole Rossland\nteam to score, Wilson scored but\nthc referee's whistle blew seconds\nbefore when Ogden of Rossland was\npiled up in a corner and it was disallowed. Merlo went through to\nscore on Wilson's contribution to\ntie the game 9-9, 43 seconds before\nthe end of the geme. Nine seconds\nlater Couture scored the winning\ngoal for Rossland.\nGoal summary:\nFirst period\u20141-RossIand, Ezart\n\u2022Walmslcy),   2:52;   2   Trail,   Scott\nD. D. McLean of Nelson returned\nSunday, night from Vancouver and\nVictoria. At Vancouver he attended\nthe jubilee celebration in which\nHon. R. B. Bennett, Premier Aberhart of Alberta, and Mayor G. G.\nMcGeer of Vancouver played prominent parts.\nThe reception tendered these men\nby thousands of Vancouventes ahd\nvisitors was really marvelous stated\nMr. McLean. All three were quick\nwitted and in their speeches poked\ngood natured fun one at the other.\nWhile in Victoria Mr. McLean\nmet premier T. D. Pattullo who declared he would be visiting the Kootenays m August.\nThere was no hint in Victoria of\nthe calling of a fall session of the\nB.C. house. Naturally the cabinet\nwas busy on the Dominion-provincial road program with the idea of\ngetting it into action as speedily as\npossible.\nU.S.A. Visitors\nVisit Boundary\nBest Fourth of July\nYet Reported at\nChristina Lake\nGrand Forks, Cascade and other\nboundary points report the biggest\ninflux of United States autc\/ists over\nJuly 4 and 5 that has occurred in\nmany years, lhe doub.e holiday of\nSaturday and Sunday has probably\naccounted for this.\nAt Christina lake all available\nhotel room and cabin room at the\nKingsley hotel and at'Alpine mn\nwas taken by visitors from across\nthe line.\n(Wilson)  3:07; 3 Rossland, Cheyne\n(Marshall, Spenceri, 14:54.\nPenalties \u2014 Snowdon, Snowdon,\nWalmsley, Kendall (51.\nSecond' period\u20144 Trail, Wilson,\n1:16; 5 Trail, Scott, 5:33; 6 Rossland, Simcock, 10:02.\nPenalties\u2014Simcok, Smith, Davies\n(Itt), Wilson (10).\nThird period\u2014 7 Trail, Bradbury,\n7:24; 8 Rossland, Davies, 9:05; 9\nRossland, Cheyne, 10:18.\nPenalties\u2014Kendall   (5),   Didinski j\n(5)    Stephenson,    Walmsley    (5),\nCheyne, Merlo (10).\nFourth period-10 Trail. Kendall,\n:06; 11 Rossland, Walmslcy. 1:10; 12\nTrail, Murdock (Kendall) 2:25; 13\nRossland, Cheyne (Forrest), 4:21; 14\nTrail, Wilson (Merlo) 6:42; 15 Rossland, Spencer (Walmsley) 6:56; 18\nRossland, Cheyne (Simcock), 9:17;\n17 Trail, M. Smith, 12:21: 18 Trail,\nMerlo (Wilson), 14:17; 19 Rossland,\nCouture, 14:26.\nPenalties\u2014Latham, Wilson, Bradbury.\nThe teams were:\nRossland Gidinski, Davies, Simcock, Ross Forrest, Ez: rt, Wn'msley\nCheyne, Mr.-Vill, Og.'ei, Couture\n.ind Spencer.\nTrail-LeRoy, Murdoch, Snowdon.\nGavrillk, Bradbury, Latham, Stephenson. Sammartino. Kendall,\nScoll, Wilson and Merlo.\nCLARK WINNER\nIN TRAIL GOLF\nBeats Anderson, Final\nof Men's Handicap\nCompetition\nFalling a victim to \"miner'l con*\nsumption,\" Daniel McDonald, well*,\nknown Nelson resident, and prominent as a hard rock hand driller ii>|\nlhe early days, died July 1 at Tran-\nquille tubercular sanatorium, ngedl\n65 years, according to word received!\nby James Madden, manager of thai\nMadden house.\nA native of Antigonish. N.S., 'Dan'\nMcDonald, as he was universally\nknown here, showed up in Nelson\nsoon after thc turn of the century-!\nas a hard rock miner, and for some\nyears he was prominent in hand\ndrilling contests at the big district\ncelebrations, one of his wins being\nat Ymir. He was an active miner foJ\na quarter of a century or so, was at\nFerguson in thc Trout Lake district\nin the early days, and worked with\nW. B. Pool on the Reno when that\nproperty was just a prospect. Ha\nwas a familiar figure in most of theT\nmining camps of this district am\nvarious times, though coming bnciif\nto Nelson whenever fool-loose,\nAN OLD-TIMER\nHe operated the Maaaen house foe\na year, in 1930-31, and latterly har}\nan apartment,in the Amiable block,\nHe was a member uf the Nelson\nDistrict Old-Timers association, and\nof the Nelson council of Knights o(\nColumbus. He entered Tranquillsj\nsanatorium September 19 last.\nMr. McDonald never married. Ho]\nleaves a sister, who lives in the mari4\ntimes, and has a cousin, Archie Mc^\nGillivray, in this district.\nTRAIL, B.C.. July 5,-Bert Clark,\nformerly of Nelson, won the Warren\ncup, men's handicap competition of\nthe Rossland-Trail Golf and Country club. In play over lhe week-end,\ndefeating R. G. Anderson in the\nfinal.\nIn the semi-finals Anderson beat\nJ. R. Cran and Clark beat A. Latham.\nGRAND FORKS IS\nIN NEED RAINSI\nHay Crops in; Electric|\nand Phone Lines\nBeing Built\nTADANAC NET\nTEAM VICTOR\nTake Nine Matches to\nTwo for Nelson in\nSunday Tilts\nTadanac tennis team was the victor over Nelson B team in a West\nKootenay Tennis league encounter\nat Nelson Golf & Country club\ncourts Sunday afternoon. The final\nscore was nine matches to two. Nelson winning a men's singles and a\nmen's doubles. All were two-set\nmatches, several, however, going to\nextra games.\nResults:\nMen's singles\u2014G. Murray Jr., Tadanac, beat F. Clark 8-1, 7-5; R. Hannay, Tadanac, beat F. Wells, 6-1, 6-2;\nDr. L. J. M-vrer beat S. Angus, Tad-\nmac, 6-1, 6-3.\nLadies singles\u2014Miss D. Hannay.\nTadanac, beat Mrs. F. Wells 6-1, 6-2.\nMen's doubles\u2014L. Simpson and\nJ. Stewart beat G. Murray Jr. and\nT. Stanley, Tadanac, 6-4, 6-4; S.\nAngus and J. Salter, Tadanac, beat\nDr. Maurer and F. Clark. 7-5, 6-0.\nLadies' doubles\u2014Miss D. Hannay\nand Mrs. T. Weldon, Tadanac, beat\nMrs, L. J. Maurer and Mrs. C. A.\nLarsen. 6-1, 6-2; Mrs. H. Hargraves\nnnd Miss E. Guillaume, Tadanac,\nbeat Mrs. C. A. Larsen and Mrs, J.\nFoggo, 7-5, 6-0. .    ,\nMixed doubles\u2014Mrs. H. Hargraves\nand J. Salter, Tadanac, beat Mr. and\nMrs. F. Wells, 6-3, 6-4; Mrs. T.\nWeldon and R. Hannay. Tadanac,\nbeat Mrs. L J. Maurer and J. Stewart, 6-2, 7-5; Miss E. Guillaume and\nT. Stanley, Tadanac, beat Mrs. J.\nFoggo and L. Simpson, 9-7. 6-4.\nCrop conditions in the district\/!\naround Grand Forks arc good butl\niat'mers report the need of addi-r\ntional moisture to round them out.1\nWhile rain has been experienced!\nfrequently ln the past few weeks inl\nthe Nelson section and even as far!\nas Farron on Saturday last Grand]\n\/orks people report little rata.\nWith the West Kootenay Power\nk Light company running a new\npower line through the boundary\nterritory and the B.C. Telephone\ncompany carrying out a similar project activity around Grand Fork!\nnas picked up considerably.\nKoad conditions arc excellent and\"\njrops, especially grains, are showing well. A great deal'of haying\nhas been completed.\nMrs. Pisacreta\nHears Last CalH\nResident of Nelson 25|\nYears; Funeral\nTuesday\nAssunda Pisacreta, aged 51, wife\nof Vito Pisacreta, Granite road, died\nSaturday at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital. Her funeral will tako\nplace Tuesday morning.\nMrs. Pisacreta was born in ItalyJ\nShe came to Nelson 25 years ago ahd]\nhad resided here since.\nBesides her husband she leaves!\ntwo daughters, Josephine and MeJ\nlinda; one Son, Silvio,'and a sisterj\nMrs. DeBlass of Revelstoke.\nMILKMEN NOSE\nOUT BANDSMEN\nKootenay Valley Dairy men's\nsoftball team nosed out the Bugle\nBand by a score of 9-8 in a league\ngame at the Recreation grounds\nSunday morning. A scoring rampage\nin the sixth inning netted the Dairymen eight runs and thc game. Trailing by five runs going into the\neighth inning, the Band made a desperate attempt to regain the lead\nand started a rally which scored\nfour runs but thc Dairy cut it short\njust in time.\nStan Hill was the leading batter\nfor the winning team, getting two\nhits in four times at bat, while Glen\nVickers led the Buglers' attack with\nthree hits In five trips to the plate.\nArt Hill, first rrrn up fir the Drry-\nmen ln the r'v.'fi, hit a home run for\n'he winners.\nScore by innings;\nBand  102 001 040\u20148  6  5\nDairy  000 108 00'-9   8   6\nBatteries\u2014Carr and Reid; W. CMi-\n^ k in and C. Nemrava.\nWoodcutters Are\nBeaten at Trail!\nTRAIL, B.C., July 5.-Lauriente\"S|\nGiants nosed out (he Nelson Woodcutters 4-2 in an exhibition softball|\ngame here Sunday,\nArt Bryant, Trail hurler, struck)\nout five and walked one while al\nlowing eight hits.  Art Ross for thai\nNelson   team   struck   out   14   and\nwalked four, allowing five hits.\nCronic of Trail hit for three and1\nMartin a two-bagger. Harold Elliott\nand Nick Lutkiwich each obtained!\ntwo hits for Nelson and Pilous Hit\nfor three.\niS\nWater Level Now\nUnder Seven Feet!\nAcceleration of the West Arm's,\nrate of decline did not last mora\nthan two or three days, and the 48\n''ours ending Sunday afternoon, at\n1 o'clc:k saw a drop ot only .28 foot,'\nlitis brought the level, howeverj\nunder the eight-foot mark, and thai\nreading at 6 o'clock Sunday afteH\nnoon was 7.92 feet above the lot]\nI wnlcr mark. I\n\u25a0 \u25a0   '\n UP AND AT 'EM!\n\"\"--\non An Away to a good start this season. No wenderl See how\n\u201e warlike they arel\nI.0FWASH.T0\nGO OLYMPICS\n>ew Wins in Eights\nat Princeton\nPRINCETON, N.J., July 5 (AP).\nEight bronzed and brawny oars-\nen from the University of Wash-\ngton sped through Lake Carnegie's\nleld waters today to a smashing\nluntph in the final tryouts and won\nI right to defend the United States\nlw>times won honors against the\nghts of the world in the Olympic\nunes at Berlin next month.\nvStst J-foot 3-inch giants from the\nf' west spiked a desperate bid by\nnnsylvanla's Red and Blues in\nie last 400 meters of the 2000-meter\nJympic distance pull, and rowing\nI strokes e minute, led Penn across\n)t finish line by 1V\u00ab lengths.\nIn the fourth and last place for\nte first 1000 meters, trailing Cali-\nfcnia's Golden Bears, the New York\nIthletic club and Penn in that or\n\u00bb, Al Ulbrickson's sweep-swingers\nused their rivals after 1800 meters\nfid on the might of a back-break-\nitg drive the rest of the way fin\ntried in 8:04 4-5\u2014the fastest time\nI the two-day trials.\n[Penn was clocked at 6:08 3-5, good\npr a three-quarter length margin\nwar the Berkeley Bears.\nHe Eyes the\nCamera\n1RDSBACKIN\nFIRST PLACE\nCINCINNATI, July 5 (AP)-St.\nl,ouis Cardinals shot back into first\ndace in the National league today\nly taking a doubleheader from the\nCincinnati Reds, 8-6 and 17-7. An\niverflow crowd of 30,130 persons\nittended.\nFirst game:\nit Louis    8  18   1\nCincinnati     6  14  1\nHaines,   Heusser,   Winford   and\nmavis;    Derringer,  Brennan  and\n[Lombardi.\nI  Second game:\nSt. Louis 17   18  1\nCincinnati      7   14-3\nRhem, Heusser and Ogrodowski;\nStlne, Hallahan, Hilcher and Campbell.\nPIRATE8 WIN  4-2\nPITTSBURGH, July 5 (AP)-The\nPirates jumped on Lon Warneke for\nall their runs in the first three\ninnings today to defeat the Chicago\nCubs, 4-2, behind the steady hurling Of Bill Swift.\nChicago     2   12   2\nPittsburgh    4   13   1\nWarneke, Root, Carleton and\nHartnett; Swift and Todd.\nGIANTS BEATEN\nNEW YORK, July 5 (AP) -\nBrooklyn Dodgers landed on Hal\nSchumacher for five hits and all\ntheir runs in the sixth today to\ndefeat the Giants 3-1 and snap their\nfour-game losing streak.\nMel Ott's 15th homer of the sea-\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\n'\u2022'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nPAOE SEVEN -\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. JULY 6, 1938\n\u2022PAGE SEVEN\nSAM RICHARDSON MAKES BROAD\nJUMP OF 25<\/2 FEET, BUT RULED OUT\nLongest Ever Made in Canada, but His Foot\nOver Board on Takeoff; Sets Record\nfor the Hop, Step and Jump\n-Staff Photo.\nJack Davies, playing coach of\nthe Trail lacrosse team and defenceman of the Rossland Miners\nhockey team reveals a greatly different physiognomical expression\nai he gats Junior Belanger, son of\nMr. and Mrs. Garfield Belanger,\nto look at the camera than when\nhe Is engaged In battle of either\nsport The photo was taken one\nbright sunny day at the Rossland\nswimming pool.\nson was the only extra base blow\nfor the New Yorkers.\nBrooklyn      3   8   1\nNew York    1   7   3\nFrankhouse, Mungo and Berres;\nSchumacher, Gumbert and Mancuso.\n7-6 FOR PHILLIES\nPHILADELPHIA, July 5 (AP)-\nThe Phillies knocked Ray Benge\nout of the box in the second inning\nto score five runs and go on to a\n7-6 triumph over the Boston Bees\ntoday.\nBoston     6   10   2\n.Philadelphia      7   11   1\nBenge, Murray, Reis, Kywalik,\nPassau and Lewis; Jorgens, Johnson and AtwoodT\n\u2014-! O    >   .  \u2022\u00bb:\n(By Associated Press)\nHome runa yesterday:\nGelbert, Cardinals; Ott, Giants;\nWerber and Kroner, Red Sox;\nGehringer, Walker, Rogell and\nSimmons, Tigers\u2014one each.\nThe leaders; Foxx, Red Sox, 22;\nTrosky, Indians, 20; Gehrig, Yanks,\n20; Ott, Giants, 15; Dickey, Yanks,\n15; Berger, Bees, 13.\nLeague totals: American, 385; Na'\ntional, 313; total 698.\nBy ELMER DULMAGE\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer)\nHAMILTON, Ont,, July 5 ICP).-\nSammy Richardson, who will be\nthe lazy bones of Canada's Olympic\ntrack and field team unless he\nbreaks a lag, has completed his\nformal warming up for the official\ntrials by setting a new Canadian\nrecord for the hop, step and lump\nand making a foul Jump that measured 25 feet, 6. inches in the broad\njump.\nA great natural athlete who can't\nbother to train, the 17-year-old colored boy from Toronto featured\nthe Ontario trials here yesterday\nwith his Jumping after arriving too\nlate to take part in the 100-year\ndash.\nRichardson won the broad Jump\nat 23 feet, 9'\/2 Inchei and then\ncut loose with a 48-foot, 7-Inch\neffort In the running hop, step\nand Jump to displace the record\nestablished   In  the   1930   British\nEmpire  games  here  by  Gordon\nSmallscombe of Toronto. Small-\nacombe's mark was 48-5.\nEven more impressive to the critics was the ease with which 21-year-\nold Jack Brown of Toronto West\nEnd Y won the 100-yard dash in\n10.1 seconds. Running against a brisk\nwind Brown pulled up for the last\n40 yards after opening up a three-\nyard margin in the final, lt appeared he could have turned 9.7 seconds\nhad he wished.\nJohnny Loaring of University ot\nWestern Ontario placed second in\nthe century and came back later to\nwin the 440-yard dash with a smashing drive down the stretch, overhauling Bill Fritz and Ray Lewis\nwith his last few strides Loaring's\ntune in the quarter was 49.9.\nSammy's foul filer In the broad\nJump made the crowd gasp. On\nhis first attempt,, the long-legged\nyouth soared high and far from\nthe take-off board and almost\nlanded on solid earth at the end\nof tha Jump pit. Hli foot was over\nthe board on the take-off, however, and officials made the measurement merely to confirm that\nthe Jump wai the longest ever\nmade In Canada.\nRichardson won the event on his\nsecond jump despite a misstep near\nthe board and his third jump was\na few inches shorter. His own Canadian outdoor record is 24 feet, 11\ninches. Had his 25-6 jump been legal\nit would have been one of the best\nmade this year In any country.\nRECORDS SMASHED AS U.S. TRACK\nAND FIELD STARS CAPTURE TITLES\n*\n20,000 See Jesse Owens, Forrest Towns, Glenn\nHardin and Don Lash in Brilliant Show;\nGeorge Varoff New Star in Vaulting\n,    plain on\n-    *\"^T>...V     COKKTIP\nSmutu a ^\\ty\\ciuauih'\nBritish Consols\nCOSTLIER\nMILDER\nTOBACCOS\n^- U\u2014I ,  .il   .  i\n0t-mm\nHAVE YOU\nREAD THE\nCLASSIFIED PAGE?\nBy ALLAN GOULD\n(Auoclated Press Sports Editor).\nPRINCETON, N.J., July 5 (AP).\n\u2014A burst of record-smashing exploits still reverberated like firecrackers today after foremost track\nand field athletes ot the United\nStates wound up their national\nA.AJJ. senior championships and\ngirded themselves for the coming\nOlympic team battle.\nTwenty thousand holiday enthusiasts saw such performers as Jesse\nOwens, Forrest \"Spec\" Twons, Glenn\nHardin and Don Lash pace an onslaught upon time and distance\nthat produced record-making performances. Spectators witnessed thc\n'downfall of eight champions in individual competition, and hoisted\na new satellite to the athletic skies\nin George Varoff, blond pole-vault-\ner of San Francisco's Olympic club.\nVaroff, 22-year-old Janitor, soared\nto a new world record of 14 feett 3V,\ninches. Never before a contender in\nnational title competition, he beat\nthe highly favored southern California pair, Earlc Meadows and Bill\nSefton.\nVaroff topped the listed world\nmark of 14 feet, 4% inches, set four\nyears ago in the Olympic tryouts at\nPalo Alto by southern California's\nBill Graber. He also displaced the\nAmerican mark of 14 feet, 5Vs\ninches, made by Yale's Keith Brown\nand on file for world approval.\nVaroff will make his bid for the\nOlympic team in the final tryouts\nnext week-end at New York, along\nwith other stars who made Saturday's athletic show one of the best\nin A.A.U. history.\nOWENS BEATS JUMP RECORD\nAfter outrunning his Marquette\nrival, Ralph Metcalfe, by a yard\nto capture the 100 metre dash in\n10:4 seconds, equalling the meet\nrecord, Owens returned to the broad\nJump pit and cleared 26 feet, three\ninches to annex his second championship. This leap bettered the\nlisted world mark of 28 feet, _',.\ninches, held by Japan's Chuhei\nNambu, but fell short of the Ohio\nstate star's own best mark of 26\nfeet, nv* inches, made last year\npending acceptance as a world\nrecord.\nLash, following his record-smashing victory in the 10,000 metre run\nFriday, captured his second United\nStates title by scoring another\nrecord-breaking triumph in the 5000\nmetres. The iron-legged Indiana boy\nbroke the tape for the distance,\nslightly more than three miles, in\n15 minutes, 4.8 seconds, considerably\nbehind the world record of 14:17.\nThe south's twin hurdling aces,\nTowns and Hardin, showed their\nheels in record fashion. Towns\nskimmed over the 110 metre high\nhurdles in 142 seconds to equal\nthe listed world record, held by\nPercy Beard, artd came within 1-10\nof a second of equalling his own\nbest time of the year, already on\nfile for record acceptance.\nHardin flashed home eight yards\nin front of Dale Schofield of Brig-\nham Young University in 51.6 seconds, In the 400-metre hurdles. This\nset a new United States record as\nwell as a new meet mark, displacing the mark of 51.8 that Hardin\nset in 1934.\nSTAND PAT WINS\nAT ARLINGTON\nCHICAGO, July 5 (CP).-Stand\nPat, owned by Edward F. Seagram\nof Toronto, added a major victory\nto his string Saturday by beating\nthe heavily-handicapped wonder\nhorse, Discovery, in the $10,000\nadded Stars and Stripes handicap\nbefore 45,000 spectators at Arlington\npark.\nDiscovery carried the crushing\nburden of 138 pounds on his back\nand ran ninth. Stand Pat, carrying 116 pounds and ridden by\nJockey C. McTague. ran the mile\nand a furlong in 1:49 3-5, lacking a\nfifth of a second of the track record.\nThe winner paid $53.40 to win,\n$21.60 to place and $10.60 to show\nas he won, $9520 for Seagram of the\nlace's gross valu; of $13,020. Place\nprice on Corinto was $72 wilh $31\nto show.\nCanadians Win in\nHockey in N.Y,\nLAKE PLACID, N.Y., July 5 (CP)\n\u2014The annual mid-summer hockey\nexhibitions were off to a good start\ntoday wilh St, Gerards of Ottawa\nwinning the opening game Saturday\nnight 7-5 from Cornwall Canadiens.\nA device to measure the amount\nof glare a person's eyes can stand\nhas been patented.\nPerry Will Head\nDavis Cup Team\nLONDON, July 5 (AP).-Fred\nPerry, who won thc all-England\nsingles championship Friday and\nyesterday helped capture the mixed\ndoubles crown at Wimbledon, was\nnamed leader of thc English Davis\ncup team which will defend the\ntrophy in the challenge round, July\n26. 27 and 28.\nWith Perry, Henry W. (Bunny)\nAustin, George Patrick (Pat)\nHughes and Charles R. D. Tuckey\nwill compose thc English team.\nIn the challenge round England\nwill meet the winner of the inter-\nzone final between Australia and\nthe European zone winner, either\nGermany and Yugoslavia.\nPRESTON BEATEN\nWINNIPEG, July 5 (CP) .-Saint\nJohns defeated Weston 2-1 here last\nnight and forced a third game In the\nseries for a right to enter the Dominion soccer championship play-\ndowns as Manitoba's representatives. Weston won the first game\n3-1 and the third game will be\nplayed Tuesday night.\nThe Hawaiian Islands arc the\nmost Isolated in the world\u20142040\nmiles from North America and 1880\nmiles from the Marquesas, the nearest high islands in the Pacific.\nStake and tie all tall growing\nplants in thS border and beds. Keep\nthc sticks out of sight as much as\n' '   '' '   \u25a0    i___^__\nCricket Scores\nLONDON, July 5 (CP Cable).-\nCloslng scores in first-class English\ncricket games, started Saturday, follow:\nWarwickshlrell7; Derbyshire 235\nruns tor four wickets.\nNottinghamshire 204; Middlesex\n100 for seven.\nEssex 175; Gloucestershire 38 for\nfour.\nSussex 245 vs. Hampshire.\nWorcestershire 161; Northamptonshire five runs for no wickets.\nYorkshire 413 for two vs. Surrey.\nSomerset 82. Glamorgan 13 runs\nfor one wicket.\nLancashire 435 for eight vs India.\nGOLF\nby\nALEX MORRISON\nIt Is not hard to get down in two\nshots from just off the green if\nyou play your approach shot properly. Most players take three or\nfour shots from within a few yards\nof the green mainly because they\ntry too hard to get the ball close to\nthe hole.\nOf course, the ball cannot come\nto rest too close to the cup, but\nyour attempt to hole out' or lay an\napproach dead is your downfall. It\nmakes you worry about where the\nball will come to rest on the green\nwhile you are swinging the club.\nYou should figure the' antount of\nroll you will get and then concentrate on the spot where your ball\nshould land. By thinking of this\nlanding spot you make it easier to\nhit the ball properly and thereby\nkeep it on line.\nIf your judgment ot a landing\nplace is even fair tho ball will stop\npretty close to the pin, at least\ncloser than it has been when you\nworry about the end of the shot.\nIt's a good idea to pick out a leaf\nor some mark.just short of the putting surface, or oft the green if you\nare that close, and shoot tor this\nmark.\nDESHONG UPSETS\nYANKS BY, TO 3\nWASHINGTON, July 8 (AP1--\nJlmmte Deshong, the youthful right\nhander Joe McCarthy tabbed solely\nas a relief hurler and traded to\nWashington, faced the Yankees tor\nthe first time this aeason today and\nwhipped the American league leaders 9-3 with a well pitched game.\nIn winning his 11th game of the\nyear, Deshong held the New Yorkers to eight hits, snapped a winning\nstreak at seven straight and brought\na halt to Gehrig's 14-game consecutive hitting string.\nNew York  3   8   1\nWashington     9 11   1\nHuffing, Klelnhans, W. Brown and\nDickey; Deshong and Bolton,\nTIGER8 ON RAMPAGE\nST. LOUIS, July 5 (AP).-Detroit\nTigers gained Immediate revenge\ntoday for the defeat yesterday that\nended their eight-game winning\nstreak by romping through five\nBrownie pitchers for 28 hits that Included tour homers and produced\nan 18-9 victory.\nCharley Gehringer started the\ntour-bagger barrage In the first\nwith-two on base. Simmons, Rogell\nand Walker added the others.\nEight runs in the Detroit aecond\nIced the game for Tommy Bridges\nalthough the righthander retired after the fifth.\nDetroit  ;  18 28  0\nSt. Louis    9 13  3\nBridges, Kimsey and Hayworth;\nCaldwell, Tietje, Uebhardt, Thomas\nand Hemsley, Giuliani,\n16-2 AND 8-2 FOR BOSTON\nBOSTON, July 5 (AP).-An It-\nrun inning and some heavy slugging\nby the Red Sox delighted a crowd\nof 19,000 as Boston trounced Philadelphia today ln a double bill for\nthe second time in two days. The\nscores were 16-2 and 8-2.\nThe li-run uprising came in the\nsecond frame ot the opening game.\nJohnny Kroner drove In five runs\nwith a homer and two singles while\nBill Werber accounted tor three\nruns with a homer ahd two men on\nbase. The runs were scored ott\nPitcher Pete Naktents and Relieving\nHurler Randall Gumpert.   -\nFirst:\nPhiladelphia      2  7  1\nBoston   18 1\u00bb  J\nNaktenls, Gumpert and Hayes; W.\nFerrell and R- Ferrell.\nSecond:\nPhiladelphia     Ill\nBoston    8 9 1\nRoss, Jelley and Moss; Henry and\nBerg.\nJ\u00bb In Sun\nStaff Photo.\nMrs. Garfield Belanger ef Rossland basking en the bleachers of\nRossland swimming peel.\nSWISS (LEAN\nUP AT HENLEY\nRufli Wins Sculls;\nLeanders Lose in\nTwo Finals\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL\nSt. Louis 2-9; Cincinnati 3-10.\nBrooklyn 5-0; Philadelphia 9-4.\nBoston 6-11: New York 7-3.\nChicago 3-4; Pittsburgh 2-7.\nAMERICAN\nNew York 4-5; Washington 3-0,\nPhiladelphia 0-4, Boston 1-5.\nCleveland 2-4, Chicago 9-8.\nDetroit 8-10; St. Louis 3-13.\nPACIFIC COAST\nPortland 8-15; Seattle 9-3.\nSacramento 2-3; Oakland 4-0.\nMissions 0-10; San Francisco 8-4.\nSan Diego 3-3; Los Angeles 4-4.\nASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis 5-12; St. Paul 12-17.\nIndianapolis 6-12; Louisville 2-10\nKansas City 2-6; Milwaukee 4-9.\nToledo 5-6; Columbus 14-2.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMontreal 6-11; Buffalo 7-5.\nToronto 7-3; Rochester 9-2.\nNewark 5-3; Baltimore 6-0.\nSyracuse 1-1; Albany 6-4.\nSUNDAY\nINTERNATIONAL\nToronto 5-6; Buffalo 6-1.\nSyracuse 4-8; Albany 8-8.\nNewark 9-2; Baltimore 3-5.\nMontreal 8-4; Rochester 7-0.\nASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 8-11; Louiiville 9-3.\nKansas City 2-8; Milwaukee 7-3.\nToledo 5-3; Columbus 6-2.\nSt. Paul 8; Minneapolis 7.\nPACIFIC COAST\nPortland 6, 10; Seattle 1, 3.\nSan Diego 1, 3, os ALngelcs 3, 4.\nSacramento 3, 0; Oakland 4, 1.\nMissions 8, 5; San Francisco 5, 1.\nBirthday Greetings\nBy the Canadian Press\nTo \"Panama Al\" Brown, born in\nPanama 34 years ago today. Widely\nrecognized until recently as bantamweight champion of thc world\non this side ot the Atlantic, Brown\ndid much of his fighting in Europe.\nA gangling fellow, he stands five\nfeel, 11 inches.\nROYALS IN FINAL\nVANCOUVER. July 5 (CP)-New\nWestminster Royals today had put\nJohnston's out of the British Columbia section of the Dominion soccer\ncup playoffs by defeating them 2-1)\nin a semi-final game here yesterday. Royals will meet North Shore\nUnited uf tho final game next Saturday, >\nCLEVELAND, CHICAGO SPLIT\nCHICAGO, July 8 (AP) .-Cleveland and Chicago split their double-\nheader before 18,000 fans today, the\nIndians taking the opener 11-4 and\nthe Sox winning the nightcap-4-2.\nThe Tribe's win saved one game\nout of the five-game series fo\u00bb\nCleveland,\nFirst;\nCleveland   11 15   2\nChicago  4  9  4\nHarder, Evans and Sulluvan; C-\nBrown and Sewell,\nSecond:\nCleveland  .70\nChicago  *\u25a0\u25a0 4  8   1\nL. Brown and Pytlak; Whitehead\nand Sewell,\n3oLttirvA\n Q m.\n(By Associated Press)\nBill Dickey of; the Yankees, Ducky\nMedwick ot the Cardinals and P.ul\nWaner of the Pirates climbed back\ninto baseball's \"big six\" in hitting\nyesterday, the first named getting\nthree hits ln as many times at bat\nto take first place in the American\nleague with a mark of .389. Medwick\nand Waner pulled up to a tie for\nthird place in the National league\nwith .344. Dolph Camilli of thc\nPhillies went hitless in four times\nat bat, and had to share the National\nleague lead with Baxter Jordan of\nthe Boston Bees, who collected one\nsafety opt of four tries to deadlock\nwith the Philadelphia first baseman\nat .348.\nThe standings (first three places\nin each league):\nG AB\nR    H Pet.\njehrig, Yanks..\n74 288\n92 112 .389\nAppling, W Sox\n58 213\n36   81 .377\nDickey,. Yanks\n57 222\n87   82 .388\nJordan,  Bees...\n77 313\n81 109 .348\n:amilli,   Phils..\n73 270\n84  94 .348\nMedwlck, Crds\n74 302\nDO 104 .344\nP. Waner, Pirts\n68 273\n48   94 .344\nCanada Second tn\nFriendly Shoot\nBISLEY CAMP, Surrey, July 5\n(CP cable)\u2014Canada's Bisley team\nwas second today In a triangular\nfriendly shooting match with North\nLondon and South Africa, a curtain-\nraiser to the annual empire shoot\nopening here tomorrow. The Londoners carried the day by eight\npoints with a score of 1784. Canada\nscored 1778, and South Africa was\ntivc points behind the Canadians\nwith 1771.\nHENLEY-ON-THAMES, England,\nJuly S (CP cable).\u2014Most ot the\nhonors in the Royal Henley regatta\nrested today with the Zurich Row\nIng club ot Switzerland,\nThree of the major awards went\nto that club in the finals of the regatta held Saturday before a throng\not 18,000 people.\nE. Rufli, a club member, retained\nthe Diamond Sculls trophy he won\nlast year without difficulty. He defeated T. H. Tyler of the Thames\nRowing elub tn the final by a margin ot three lengths. Ruth's time\nover the Henley course ot 1 mile\n550 yards was t minutes 22 seconds.\nThe grand challenge trophy, tor\neights wu taken by Zurich as they\ndefeated Leander Rowing club In\n7:25. Leanders trailed by l'A lengths\nat the finish.'\nThe same clubs reached the finals\nof the Stewards cup. In this event\nthe Zurich tour sped to a victory by\ntwo lengths In 7:80.\nU.S. BOYS IMPRESS\nA strong entry of United States\nschool boy eights made an impressive showing in the Thames challenge trophy event. It was won by\nTabor academy ot Marlon, Mass.\nTabor had attempted to capture the\naward unsuccessfully ln two previous trips across the Atlantic.\nThe final was an all-American affair. Tabor downed Kent (Conn.)\nschool, winners three years ago by a\nmargin of four lengths in 7:44. In\none semi-final the lone English surviving entry, Kingston Rowing club,\nhad been eliminated by the strong\nTabor eight in 7:42. Kent defeated\nBrowne and Nichols of Cambridge,\nMass., in 7:49 in the other.\nKent appeared wearied by their\nhard race against Browne and Nichols when they came out tor the final.\nThe Tabor eight, stronger and more\nrugged, overcame their more stylist\nopponents by sheer strength.\nOxford failed to win a single\nevent, while Cambridge registered\nvictories In the ladles plate and\nthe visitors cup-\nFirst Trinity took tha former, defeating Clare college, also ot Cambridge. The latter went to Jesus\ncollege, Cambridge, who defeated\nOriel college, Oxford.\nLondon Rowing club won the\nWyfold cup.\nU.S. Stars Win in\nField Lacrosse\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., July\ni (CP).\u2014American rules gave the\neastern United States collegiate lacrosse stars the edge they needed\nto defeat a British Columbia all-\nstar aggregation 11-10 in an exhibition field lacrosse match here on\nSaturday. '\nPlaying under box-lacrosse rules\nthe Americana lost to the Canadian\nsquad previously, dropping three\nstraight games in a series for the\nLally cup, emblematic of International lacrosse supremacy.\nHELEN JACOBSIS\nATLAST CHAMP\nBeats Frau Sperling;\nPerry and Dorothy\nRound Win\nWIMBLEDON, England, July t\n(CP).-Helen Hull Jacobs realized\ntoday her oft-frustrated dream ot\nwinning the all-England women'l\ntennis  championship.\nThe United States star fought her\nway to a three-set victory in the\nfinal Saturday over Frau Hilda\nKrahwlnkel Sperling of Germany\nand Denmark, 6-2, 4-6, 7-8.\nMiss Jacobs success cama as (\nclimax after four unsuccessful en*\ndeavors. Last year she wat defeated\nin the final by Mrs. Helen Wills\nMoody of the United States. Mri,\nMoody announced some time ago\nshe would not defend her Wimbledon title this year.\nBRITAIN SWEEPS REST\nWhile this title went overseas\nagain, Great Britain swept all the\nother eventa.\nIn men's doubles George Patrick\nHughes and Charles Tuckey disposed of the Britons Charles Hare\nand Fred Wilde in a prolonged\nstruggle, 6-4,3-6,7-9, (-1,6-4. Hughes\nand Tuckey will get the doubles assignment when Britain defends the\nDavis cup In the challenge round.\nFred James and Kay Stammers\nteamed up to eliminate Miss Jacobs\nand Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan ef\nthe United States, in straight sets,\n6-2, 6-1. The final followed Miss Jacobs' singles match and she waa obviously tired.\nFred Perry, who blasted Injured\nBaren Gottfried Van Cramm of\nGermany off the court te win the\nmen's slnglee title In straight itti\non Friday, paired with Dorothy\nRound to win the mixed doubles\ntitle, defeating Donald Budge and\nMrs. Fabyan, 7-9, 7-8, 6-4.\nPANTHERS WIN\nBANTAM BALL\nFirst Victory; Midget\nGame Postponed\nby Rain\nIn Nelaon Bantam Baseball league\ngames Saturday morning, Panthers\nbeat the F. A. L. Bearcats by a score\nof 18-6. Thlt win, their lint in tht\nleague schedule, brings the Pantheri\ninto *tie with the BearcaU for third\nplace with an average ot JOO. Batteries for the teams were: Bearcats,\nHelghton and Castle; Panthers,\nScott, Lang and Guscott.\nMidget game between Leet and'\nFairview Athletic elub, scheduled\nfor 9 p.m. was postponed because\nof wet grounds.\nGames Scheduled up to and including Wednesday are:\nBantam:\nMonday, t a.m.\u2014F.A.C. Wranglenj\nvs. Cougars.\nTuesday a.m.\u2014Cougars vs. Panthers; F.A.C. Bearcats vs. F.A.C.\nWranglers.\nWednesday a.m.- F.A.C. Bearcat*\nvt. Cougars; IT-AC. Wranglers v\u00bb.\nPanthers.\nMidget:\nWednesday, 8 p.m \u2014 Panthers vs.\nFA.C\nHELEN STEPHENS\nBREAKSRECORD\nPROVIDBNCI, R.J., July S (AP),\n\u2014A one-woman track team from\nFulton, Mo., Helen Stephens, broke\nthe 100-meter dash world record and\nwon two other events with ridiculous ease Saturday in the final tryouts for the United States women'l\nOlympic track team.\nRunning effortlessly, the 10-year-\noM Missouri girl clipped 1-10 second eft Stella Faith's 100-miter\nworld record ot 11.8 set on September 17, 1933.\nShe won by about five yards from\nAnnette Rogers, Of the Illinois Women's Catholic club, of Chicago.\nHer other victories came in tht\ndiscus throw, another Olympic trial,\nand in the shot put, the latter only\na national championship.       \t\ni\u2014mm ui.,.mi ,iii\u2014\u2014i\u2014s\u2014\u2014\u2014\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Ijlquol!\nControl Botlrd or by the Government of British Columbia,\n____\n\u25a0\u25a0e:^S*S..t^mM.mm\u00bbm_\n .1] il.i. UHIPWi'lllii.\nmm~mm.\nSI\nM8I BIOHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO, JULY 6. 1938\n-\u25a0lk\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u00abrWIT''-*~'\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbTt'-  W s^,,,lms\\ia,momm,.'om.',l.,imoewowih.iemnm , \u25a0      \u25a0   ; ui      '        >ii*\u00bbi w!n^i\u00abS|i\nt_t__\u2014mm,'-[ i|  \u2014\u2014\nBl\nMember of the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\n>\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connecting to\nall Departments\n\u2014\u2014TTT-   I i ' \"\nSubscription   Rate*\nSingle copy I   .05\nBy carrier per week 33\nBv carrier, per year 1300\nBy mall m Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, pet month. 60c;\nthree months $180. six months.\n$300. one vear. 50.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, cne month 75c; six months,\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUS. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie i Um\nMinimum. Lines\n2 lines, once  $ 32\n3 Ilnes. once     33\n4 lines, once    \u2014    .44\n2 lines. 6 time.      .88\n3 lines. 8 times    132\n4 ilnes. 8 tunes   1.78\n2 Unes. 1 month  2.88\n3 lines. 1 month ;....,.. 4.29\n4 lines. 1 month   8.72\nAll above leu .10% for prompt\npayment\n\\Jjacfi\/, $e Qaf\/ant\\\nBy MARIE BUZARD\nS\u00ab\u00ab*S\u00abSK\u00ab\u00ab\u00abSM\u00abS*\u00abS\u00abMS*Sa\u00bb;\nCHAPTER  17\nFor one awful inument Joan had\nthought that Jnlian was telling her\nil was all over. She could have a\nvacation! Bul, Ihunk heaven, It was\nonly because he was going to Europe.\n\"But what about thc book?\" she\nasked.\n\"we'll forgcl about that for a\nwhile. 1 always proceed slowly on\nbooks, anyway. Thc Guild has en-\nGrandmother\nCharged\n.\n-    .-\u25a0  ,      ~\"\n'\u25a0\u2022UiV_B_i_c!.;\nm\n'^^^^^\u25a0Kr-'\n.',-!>^B;.:\n\u25a0       mm\nH\n!W   jt*:'   \u00ab_s^.*\n1\nt j M\n\u2022 \u2022Srj\nnwtm^     \u25a0\nV \"^f'   _fl\nW  A\\   _H     !\nEARL LEFFLER\nA year ago last October, Earl\nLeffler, 19, above, was tried and\nacquitted on a charge of murdering hli grandfather, Philip Stroll,\nof Walkerton, Ont. Provincial police ,who have been working on\nthe case ever lince, have now arrested Mrs, Stroh, widow of the\nmurdered man. She Is charged\nwith the murder of her husband\non April 1, 1934.\nNOVICE SKATER'S DEATH\nSYDNEY (CP)-R. Cooper, chemist's apprentice who was learning\nto ice skate, collapsed after falling\nseveral times and died. Accidental\ndeath was the coroner's verdict.\nLondon uses more than 295 million gallons of water a day.\ngaged Gilbert Haggerty to do a play\nfor the coming season but he prefers\nto make it a collaboration and has\nasked me to come in on It He can't\nget away so I've got to run over to\nEngland lo work with him.\"\n\"Does that mean that 'Mortal on\nOlympus' won't be finished for this\nyear?\" Julian had sketched that\nplay for her one day, the play he\nsaid he wanted to write, direct and\nproduce. Joan gathered that it was\nthe thing he wanted to do more\nthan anything else.\n\" 'Mortal on Olympus,' Joan, will\ncost a lot to produce and this may\nnot be the right year for it. 1511 have\nto put that aside until this is over.\nIn any event you must have a good\nrest because there will be lots of\nwork for you to do when I get\nback.\"\n\"Still threatening me?\" Jorn per-\nThird Party\nCandidate\nri\nm\" ^m\n'*m*2r''_n\n%w\\ m\n'\u25a0mk mm\nWhen It comes to tossing cha-\npeaux into the political ring, William Lemke, North Dakota solon,\nwho Is the tentative choice of the\nUnion (third) party for president,\nwill be there. Mr. Lemke has the\nbacking, it is reported, of both\nFather Coughlin and Townsend.\nIndja has about 40 studios making\nmoving pictures in various Indian\nlanguages.\nCAMPING IS FUN\nCool breezes off the lake, rustling the branches of the\ntrees\u2014that woody, good smell of the forest \u2014 the\nchirping birds and squirrels\u2014the mysterious sounds of\nthe night\u2014these are all past of the fun of camping.\nBut the fun is more complete when you can enjoy these pleasures along with a running account\nof events at home.\nHave your copy of the Nelson Daily News forwarded\nto you while on vacation.\nGive your order to your postmaster or agent, write\nor phone the\nJWamt Saflg SVmm\n15c Pet Week '60c Per Month\nIn U. S. 75c Per Month\nThese rates by mail outside Nelson, Trail and Rossland\nmitted herself.that small bit of raillery.\n\"You've no Idea what a 'demon 1\ncan be when I'm working seriously.\nYou are always ready, always at\nhand to encourage me to wprk. I\nhope it won't be a boomerang and I\nhope you won't regret the bargain\nyou made when\" you came here.\"\n\"I'm sure I won't ever do that,\"\nJoan answered readily, having not\nthe slightest-idea of what was ahead\nof her. It was enough for her that\nshe had escaped the deadly monotony that had seemed her destiny.\n' Joan came downstairs, with every\nbeat of her heart rocking her still\naching head, a few days later, and\nfound Julian ready to leave for New\nYork to catch 8 boat at midnight for\nLondon.\n\"Take good care of yourself. You\nhave had a bad blow, my child. Get\nlots of sleep. Don't fall In love with\nany of the Blakeville boys, because\nI need you \"\nJulian wanted to tell her not to\nfall in love with Alex Garrity and\nshe wanted to tell him that she was\nthrough falling in love. She wanted\nto tell him that if he didn't go that\nve,ry minute, she was quite sure to\nmake a fool of herself and give way\nto the lump that was rising in her\nthroat. She was afraid that she'd\ntell him that the next six weeks\nwould be the longest she'd ever had\nto face.\nBut he didn't and she didn't. -\nShe smiled at him gaily and promised to get lots of sleep, said she\nwould probably be so fat and lazy\nwhen he got back that he would not\nrecognize her, and held out her\nhand  to  him.\n\"I'll bring you something from\nLondon,\" he said. \"What would you\nlike?\"\n\"A duke,\" she answered solemnly.\n\"If you have any ideas about\nwhat you think would be nice for\nSheila, let me know. I'll send you\nmy address. Sheila always expects\nme to spend half my time shopping\nfor something 'different'. Well, good-\nby, Joan. You might drop me a\nline.\"\nHe was gone, and Joan, her toes\npointed in, chin in hand, and meditative as to brow, looked down's\nroad that appeared to be very empty. She kicked a few pebbles around\nand wondered if she were still\nadept at playing jacks. She might\nas well think about that as to try to\nanalyze why she felt badly lust because Julian had said that he was\ngoing to buy a gift for Sheila.\nShe entertained herself thinking\nabout a few suggestions for gifts for\nSheila. A very small, very sweet,\nand unexpectedly snappish baby alligator would be a nice idea.\n\"You're a cat! Joanic Spencer is a\ncat! Joanie Spencer ought to have\nher mouth and mind washed with\nsoapl\" she sang to herself until she\nhad recovered her naturally trappy\ndisposition.\n\"Sure there isn't anything I can\ndo to help?\" she asked for tho tenth\ntime that day as she sat posed at\nthe wheel of the Rattlebrain. Her\nbags were in the back of the dilapidated car.\nMrs. Henderson removed her hand\nfrom the car door. \"Not a thing,\nJoan, but thank you for offering.\nKobe and I will close this place in\nthree weeks. It's never completely\nclosed, you know. Many's the time\nMr. Sloane comes up here Ir. the\nautumn and winter. But we'll be\ngoing back to the city in that time\nbecause there's plenty to do to get\nthe town house in order.\"\n\"I'll write you\/when 1 am coming\ninto town then.\n\"Indeed you will. I want you to\nselect your own rooms but I'm sure\nyou'll like the ones on the third\nfloor. And you won't have to be going over the stairs. There's an elevator.\"\n\"What swank! Well, I'm off, and\nthank you again for being so very\ngood to,me and going to all that extra trouble. I promise I won't ever\nget bumped on the head again.\"\nThen Joan proceeded to Blakeville and her sister, Dorothy.\nBIRTHS\nOWEN-To Mr. and Mrs. Victor\nOwen, at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, July 3, a daughter. Mrs.\nOwen was formerly Miss Jean\nWaldie.\nPERSONAL\nNEARLY 800 HAVE JOINED OUR\ngroup forming to provide each\n\u25a0 member with $1000 protection for\nloss of life from any cause, up to\n60 years of age accepted without\nmedical exam estimated cost $10\nto $12 per year, write for our\n\"Over the Top\" drive offer and\nparticulars. Western Mutual Benefit Ass'n;, Vancouver, B.C. (15771\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment for $1.\nOrder direct and be sure of best.\nPacked plain. Free*catalogue National Importer, 812-Centre St..\nCalgary, Alta. (1608)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nNOTICE\nPOUND DISTRICT ACT\nPursuant to the provisions of section 11 of the \"Pound District Act,\"\nChapter 197, R.S.B.C, 1924, notice\nIs hereby given of the appointment of Percy A. Young of Longbeach, B. C, as poundkeeper of the\npound established in the Longbeach\nSchool District, in the Nelson-Creston Electoral District\nThe location of the pound premises is Parcel No. 1 of Block \"B\"\nSubdivision of D.L. 4161, Kootenay\nDistrict, Registered Map 761A.\nGORDON McG. SLOAN,   .\nActing Minister of Agriculture.\nDepartment of Agriculture,\nVictoria, B. C\nJune 10, 1936. (1364)\nDorothy was delighted to have\nJoan back, and Joan was glad to be\nback in Blakeville. For a little while.\nThe familiar oottage, the broad tree-\nshaded avenues were restful. The\nfields turning yellow, tho bush beginning to flame with red, a)l thc\nhaunting beauty of Indian summer\nand early autumn filled her with a\nsense of beauty and excitement to\ncome.\nBetween her and her bridge, hand\n\u2014on one of those endless parties arranged by the devoted Louise\u2014there\nfloated exciting Imaginary visions\nof what Julian's winter home would\nbe like. She pictured the two of\nthem working before an open fire.\nShe'd have to' get some evening\ndresses, and she supposed that her\ncamel's hair coat would hardly be\nurban enough for her requirements.\nShe'd have to get,. \u25a0\n\"Your bid, Joan.\"\nJoan came back from her pleasant\ncontemplation.\n\"Well, Joan, I'll sure miss you this\nyear. That new teacher is a little\nsnip. And by the way, speaking of\nsnips, Beatrice Winsloe takes the\ncake.\" Louise was trying to give\nJoan all the news.\n\"Do you know her?\" Louise asked,\nsurprised.\n\"I've met her. She was up for a\nweek-end and just try and not meet\nfolks when you come back here for\na week-end. Beautiful clothes, and\nhas she a figure, but I don't like\nthe way she treats Win.\"\n\"How does she treat him?\" Joan\nasked, instantly up in arms.\n\"Oh, I don't know. She twst- him\naround her little finger, but I do\nthink she's mad about him.\"\nJoan nodded, That was exactly\nwhat she had expected and hoped.\nShe knew that Beatrice had twisted\nhim around her little finger to the\nextent of getting him away from\nJoan and she had hoped that the\ngirl was mad about him. She wanted\nWin to have the best. Nevertheless\nthe knowledge dir) not make her exactly happy.\nTENDERS WANTED\nTENDERS WANTED\nNotice to Plumbing Contractors\nSealed tenders are invited up to\nJuly 14th, 1936, for a Heating and\nSanitation System for the Fruitvale\nSchool and Installation of same.\nFlans and specifications may be\nseen at the office of the Government\nAgent, Court House. Nelson, B.C,\nAt Geo. Castle, Architect, Fruitvale,\nB.C., or at the Secretary of the\nSchool Board.\nThe 18west or any lender nol necessarily accepted.\nFruitvale School Board,\n, \u25a0'       W. M. SMITH, '\nSecretary.\n., tlftS)\nTENDERS WANTED\nNotice te Contractors\nSealed tenders are invited up to\nJuly 14th, 1936, for the construction\nof a two room addition to the Fruitvale School. Plans and specifications\nmay be seen at the office of Government Agent, Court House, Nelson, B.C.\nAt Geo. Castle, Architect, Fruitvale, B.C., or Secretary of Ihe\nSchool board.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nFruitvale School Board,\nW. M. SMITH,\nSecretary.\n(1676)\nHELP WANTED\nTWO MEN, CLEAN CUT AND HE-\nliable. Steady work and good pay\nto persistent workers. Apply Coleman, City Auto Park after 7 p.m.\n(1647)\nLADY COOK FOR PASTRY AND\nshort orders, Box 1609 Dally News.\n(1609)\nGIRL WANTED FOR HOTEL\nwork. Apply Allsn Hotel. Box 460\nRossland. or Phone 32.        (1641)\nLAD FOR FARM WORK. $10 PER\nmo. Apply McColm, Ross Spur.\n(1648)\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANT BUY V, ACRE LAND OUT-\nside city, with or without shack.\nApply Box 1650 Daily News.\n(1650)\nMOTORCYCLES\nH.D. TWIN MOTORCYCLE WITH\nsidecar. Good ' condition; good\ntires; license. $150. J. Innes, Vallican, (1593)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nCANOE   LAUNCH    FOR    SALE.\nPhone 719R evenings. (1668)\n\"Haven't you met any exciting\nmen?\" Louise asked with the avidity of her kind.\n\"One,\" Joan answered, and told\nher about Alex Garrity.\n\"He sounds grand, but you don't\ncare for him the way you do for Mr.\nSloane. do you?\"\n\"1 don't 'care' for any of litem\nthat way, Louise, Joan answered\nwith dignity,\n\"Oh, yes, you do. I can tell. You\nare simply crazy about Sloane and\nif you don't watch your step, you\nare going to get hurt, I mean really\nhurt.\"\n\"Joan, you're the kind of a girl\nwho ought to be married, to a man\nyou love, have a home and some\nkids, and I don't want you to fall In\nlove with a man who doesn't want\nto get mraried.\"\nJoan thought that over a good\nmany times between that day and\nthe day that Mrs. Henderson wrote\nand asked her if she could come to\nNew York.\" Julian was expected\nback at the end pf the week.\nAnd thinking it over, she decided\nto design a plan for living that included Alex Garrity In a leading\nrole.\n(TO BE CONTINUED)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nUNFURNISHED BUNGALOW IN\none of best locations ln city. 2 bed.\n. rooms, furnice, and fireplace. P\nO. Box 146, Nelson. B.C. or Phone\n838L1 mornings only. (1567)\nSUMMER   COTTAGE   CRESCENT\nBay. Liv. room. Fireplace. 3 bedrooms, kitchen, bath, Priv. beach,\nMrs. J. F. Meagher. Gen: Del. City.\n(1562)\nPART FURNISHED CABIN NEXT\nto Harrop's ferry. Apply E. Harrop; Harrop, B.C. (1580)\nAPARTMENTS. MEDICAL ARTS\nBlock. Two bedrooms. Chas' F.\nMeHardy.       -' (1602)\nQUICK RENT,  8 ROOM  HOUSE\n4th k Benson. Balding. Blewitt.\n> (1651)\nFURN. SUITES^KERR\nApts. $30 and up\n(1603)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block.\n(1604)\nTWO ROOM' FURNISHED SUITE\nfor rent. Stirling Hotel.      (1451)\nFURNISHED SUITE. PHONE~628X\n' (1589)\nTWO FURNISHED ROOMS APPLY\n718 Silica Street.     \u2022 (836)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrlgidaire equipped suites.  (1605)\nLIGHT-HOUSEKEEPING  ROOMS,\n918 Kootenay Street. (1292)\nFULLY FURNISHED HOUSE, Apply W. W. Ferguson. (1221)\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. C.P.R. Calgary, Alta.\n(1601)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nFOR SALE-COMBINED SMALL\nstore and dwelling\u2014garage\u2014two\ncorner lots\u2014next City Tourist\npark\u2014$550\u2014cash $250, balance\nyour own terms monthly\u2014Act\nquickly if you vant it. Phone 662\nor 569R. P. O. Drawer 9.     (1410)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\n6 ROOM HOUSE. 3 BEDROOMS.\nFurnace. Apply 702 Latimer St.\n(1561)\nFOR SALE\n2 ICE CREAM DISHERS, GLASS\n' dishes, spoons, tables k chairs Toledo Confectionary scale, for Ice\nCream Parlour. Box  1590 Daily\nNews. (1590)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior SL      Vancouver, B. C.\n(1606)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGST\nsugar sacks, liners, McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd.. Nelson, B.C. (1607)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nAYRSHIRE COW, JUST FRESH-\nened. Also pigs and implements,\nE. McCaskie, Longhead).     (1642)\nJERSEY AYRSHIRE COW. FRESH-\nen July 9. Apply W. Riley, Blewitt, B.C. (1654)\nCOW, GOOD M1LKER..FRESHENS\nmiddle July. Box 662, Nelson.\n(1646)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nWANTED GOOD MILKING JER-\nsey cow. Box 1679, Daily News.\n(1679)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED CORSETIERE DE-\nsires position. Box 167% Daily\nNews. (1672)\nCHEF. PASTRY COOK, BAKER,\nwishes situation, hotel, restaurant\nor camp. Sober, steady, reliable.\nBox 1678 Daily News.        (1678)\nUSED CARS\nSNAP 1929 DODGE SEDAN. FIRST\nclass condition.. $275. Ford Light\nDelivery with license. $40. Apply\nKraft's Wreckage. (1669)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESOR1\nAND CAMPS\nYOUR HOLIDAY IS COMPLB\nonly when you have your Nel\nDally News coming to you\nyour vacation home. Order It\nday frdm \u25a0 your carrier, postm\nter or direct.\nROOM AND BOARD\nOLD LADY PENSIONER WISH\na place to stay In a private ho\nin Nelson. Box 1677 Dally Net\n(16\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAccountants\n\u2022 CHAS.  F   HUNTER. S FA.\n213  Medical  Arts   Building.\nP. O. Box 1091,       Nelson, B  C\n(1611)\nAasayeri\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Chemist, Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer.\nSampling agents at Trail and Ta-\ncoma smelters 301-305 Josephine\nSt. Nelson. B. C. (1612)\nGRENV1LLE   H.  GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 618\nBaker street, \u2022 Nelson, B.C.  P.O.\nBox No. 276, Representing Shippers' Interest at Trail, B.C. (1613)\nChiropractors\nJ. R. MCMILLAN, D. C. PALMER\ngraduate. McCulIoch Blk, Nelson.\n\/ (16)4)\nE-M.~WARREN, D.C. OFFICE\nclosed until.Aug. 17. At Chicago\nfor Post Graduate work.     (1615)\nElectrical\nJ. V. COATES. The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installations.\nPhone 768.    , P. O. Box 1065\n(16161\nEngineers and Surveyors\nPhone 53,-Res. 239     P. O. Box 668\nE. L. WARBURTON\nNelson, B. C.\nAgent\nOils, Etc. Mine Machinery and\nEquipment.     Steam coals\n(1617)\nHTb. DAWSOR        Nelson, R~C\nMine Surveys and- Reports\n(1618)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(1619)\nA. H. GREEN CO., LTD. S16 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelson, B.C. (1620)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP.\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays ff etc. Phone 215.\nMrs. Hagarty. Box 29 (1621)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal estate, Insurance, rentals, 217\nBaker St. (1822)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker Street ..(1623)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance, of\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\n(1624)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE JN-\nsurance. Real Estate, 508 Ward St\n(1625)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE.\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block\n(1626)\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nM&L\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE 1NSUR-\nancc. P, E. Poulin, Ph. 70 (1627)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Phone 135.       (1628)\n\u25a0 Om J\nInvestments\nLIVING PROTECTION .\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE!\nF. A. STUART. BOX 389.\n(im\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work, Lat\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grit\ning.   Motor   Rewinding,  Acetyle\nWelding.\nTelephone 593.     324 Vernon Stre\n<1\u00ab\nMaternity Homes\nELIZABETH  PEEL'\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Phy\nclan in attendance. Ph. Broad. 30\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wa\n- (16\nNotaries\nD. J. ROBERTSON. NOTARY PU\nlie. Office 305 Victoria St Nelst\n(169\nPaten ti\nAN OFFER TO EVERY IN VEN;\nor. list of wanted inventions ai\nlull Information sent free.\nRamsay Company, World Pata\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St Ottawa\n(163!\nPhotography\nPREMIUM . CERTIFICATES O\nvaluable merchandise given wit\nfilms developed, including on\nprint from each negative, 25<\nExtia prints, eight for 25c. Saska\nchewan Photo Supply, Saskatooi\n(1534\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT\ned, any size, 23c. Reprints, cigli\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints. Val\nliable coupon. \"Better prints\nlower cost\". KRYSTAL PHOTOS\nWilkie, Sask. (163!\nSanitariums\nCHRONIC DISEASES MIND ANI\nbody.  Dr.  Aldrich, Spokane,\n4504 Frederick (1636\nSaih Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker St\n(1637)\nSecond Hand Storei\nTHE   ARK   STORE  SELLS   FOR\nless. Cor. of Vernon and Josephine,\n(1638)\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St.\n(1639)\nWigi and Toupees\nLADIES AND GENTLEMENS\nwigs and toupees, etc. Free Illustrated Catalogue. Over 20 yeara\nin B. C We buy cut hair. Hanson\nHair Goods Co. P. 0. Box 601.\nVancouver, B. C. (1840)\nBy Russ  Weatover\nLET'S   <SO CXJT OM THE OBSERVATION\nPLATFORM-1 W-J4T TO BB 'SURE Sfcu\nFOLKS   EN43Cry  VOUPSBIA\/ES rwc-\nYSST\nYes, OF COURSE,BUT\n\\ DIDM'T KNOVvj VOU\nV4EEE   GOIMQ ALOMS\n^> LAC Ce FLAMBPAU\nV<JU SEE, VOU AMD >OUR MOTHER;\nARE iSOlNe 'WITH. ME AS M\/ &OGSTS\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nw\u2014emooommefs\nBy Gee. McManui\nNOWTHATWE  ABE ON BQARD-\nI WONDER WHERE WE ARE\nCOIN1- I'VE A FEW SUGGESTIONS\nSO I'LL PUT ON ME COW AN'\n__ SO IN TO THE sAEEHN'\nI GUE&S I'LL KEEPOUTOF\nIT AN' KEEP MB ADVICE\nTO MESELF-THEREfe NO\nHOSPITAL ON BOARO-\n:.'.;.;.:\n.\".\n.'-:.,-_ -..Avr ! 1 .\n _________^_^t_mm\n \"W\nmmmmmm\nRRIES NOW\nICAL MARKET\nAT IS BASKET\n\t\nal Annes and Sour\nCherries Appear\non Stalls\nV VEGETABLE\nPRICES LOWER\nibage Sold by Head\nrurnip Tops Off\nStands\n!TTle\u00ab appeared on Saturday's\n>n itreet market, Royal Annes\n(our cherriet at 25 cents a\nit\niong the vegetable!, carrots and\nwere cheaper at six bunches\n5 cents. Cabbage was sold by\ntead at 5, 10 and 15 centi each.\nIp tops were oft the itands.\nter product! had heavy sale!\neady price!,\nicei were:\nITS\nrlei, baiket   - .25\nivberrlei, baiket   .10\nleberrics, 3 baskets  25\n.El APlES\nlips, bunch    ,05\nint, 3 bunchet _\u2122~ .10\nots, 6 bunchea  33\nshes. 3 bunchet ..........  ,10\nuce, bunch      08\n' cabbage, lb.   .07\nliflower, each   .05 and .10\nlley, bunch  ,05\ndoes. 12 Ibi.   .25\nibarb, 7 lb!. .._  33\nlach, lb.      _ 05\nIs, 6 bunches - ,2'\nl, bunch       ,05\nMint, bunch ...\nAsparagus, lb\nMJATS\nCael, lb.\t\nPork. lb. \t\nVeal, Ib. \t\nLamb, lb.\nBaco    lb.\njM\nA3\n, jMto JO\n.15 to \u00ab\n.08 to .SO\n.12 to 30\n.\/ S3 and 33\nRabbltt. Ib. \u2014    3*\nSpring chicken, lb. JO\nliver, lb.  . -mm-  \u2022\"\nDrippings, lb. i\u2014   \u25a0\u00ab\u00bb\nSausage, lb. .        ..,,      .10 md .20\nBologna, lb, \u2014   M\nEGGS\nCrade A large, 1 doz.    .65\nGrade A medium, doi   33\nDAIRY PRODUCTS\nButter, lb.     .30\nCream, pint     .30\nCurds, lb, 10\nCottage cheese, lb. - -   .10\nPrime cheese, lb     .35\nGoat cheese, lb \u2014   .25\nMew cheese, lb    33\nAPPLES\nOntarioi, box .75 to 1.00\nDellcloui. box  1-00\nWagener, box  .75 to 1.00\nDRIED FRUITS AND\nVEGETABLES\nDried apples, lb.\nDried prunes, 3 lbs.\t\nDried pein, ib. \u2014~~\u2014_\nDried beam, lb. -_~\u2014-\nl-:OME COOKING\nBread, 3 loavei \u2014\t\nPies, each ~~ -\t\nBuns, doz ~\nCookies, various, do..\n.10\n.25\n.10\n.10\n 33\n 33\n     .15\n._ .15 to .25\nSalads, each          .20\nCakes, each  *> to -35\nNut bread  \"> *\u00b0 \u25a0\u00bb\nBanana shortcake     -25\nPotato salad. 2 Iba.  25\nThe greatest advantage of welding\nin tnduitrlal building li the tavlng,\nwhich amount! to ai much as 25\nper cent, of the steel required in\nfabrication of trustee and girders.\nA new type of flre-reslttant glass\nwill itand heat up to 650 degrees\nFahrenheit for an indefinite time\nwithout breaking, and greater heat\ntor shorter period!.\nIt is found that the bacteria thit\ncauie planta to develop crown gall\ndisease\u2014plant cancer-are able to\nwithstand heat of 122 degrees Fih-\nrenheit for only 10 mtnutes.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, J\"1? 5 (CP).\u2014Silver futurei cloied steady and un-\naged Saturday. No sales. Closing bids: July 44.47; Sept. UXt; Dec.\ni; March 44.90.\n%\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nj Misa -\t\nilornc    \t\nit Dom     \t\ndge H Con \t\nk X Gold    \t\nHboo  Gold  .....\n& I Corp\t\nnt Srew\nkit rBew RU ....\nptonla\t\nid Belt  -\nrgal Dil\t\nme Oil\t\nar Coal \t\nMount\t\not Belle\t\nk Siccar ..\nDougal Seg Ex\nLeod Oil new\nnto   \u201e\t\ndel Oil\t\nrnlng Star  \t\ntlonal Silver \u201e.\nmeer  Gold   \t\nHnler Gold  \t\n\u2014i Bord _\t\natslno\nno Gold\neves McRonald\nIly Mines    \t\ntoon Gold\t\neep Creek -\t\nooner    ..\t\nylor Bridge .....\nBaits \t\ndette\t\nlyslde\t\n1RB8\nexandrla \u2014 -\nteconda ...\t\niltac'   \t\nijrvlew    \t\n\u2022ver Silver\t\nC Nickel\t\nR Mtn     \t\ninadlan Rand ....\nllmont Oil   \t\n\u00bbngre!s Gold \t\nark Prov \t\nOtton Belt \t\n(taws Nest- \t\nalhousie  Mines\n\u2022lhousle Oils ..'..\nDvenish\n.15\n.11',.\n.62\n7.80\n.28\n.00'.\n.14\n1.62\n1.36\n13.00\nb.n\n,17H\n.31\n.08\n1.07\n.20\n1.61\n.03\n.03\n.09\n.35\n.04\n.22\n.02\"i\nMV>\n8.50\n2.44\n.01\n.01\nl.'.l\n.06\n.10\n.70\n.30\n.10\nMVi\n1.30\n.02*4\n.00\n.03\n.01\n.02\n.33\n.12\n.14'4\n.17\n.00V4\n,11 v\u00ab\n.01 y<\n.57\n.03',4\n.Wtt\n.12\n.04\n7.85\n.30\n.07\n.14%\n1.70\n1.39\n13.50\nS.'S\n.18\n.35\n.09\n1.09\n.21\n1.04\n.67\n.03%\n.10\n.40\n.6414\n.27\n.02%\n.03\n8.00\n2,45\nMi\n1.22\n.11\n.11\n72\n.06%\n1.35\n.10%\n.06t4\n.01%\n.03\n.35\n.16\n.16\n.18\n.02%\n.13%\n.02\n.60\n.05\nDictator Gold .....\nDunwell  -\t\nFairview \t\nFawn  -\nFederal Gold  -\nFreehold  :.-.-\nGolconda   \t\nGold Mtn  \u2014\nGeo Enter\t\nGeor River Gold -\nGrandview  -\t\nGrange   \u2014\nGroweri Wine -._\nGrull Wlhikne -._\nHedley Amal \t\nHedley Sterl  -\nHighwood Sarcee\nHome Gold \t\nIndian Mines \t\nIndependence ..\t\nInter Oold \t\nKoot Flor  -\nKoot King\t\nLucky Jim\t\nMadison    -\nMar Jon  \u2014u.\nMercury -.\nMeridian \t\nMerland    _;\u2014\nMill City  ,\nNicola    -  _\nNoble Five \t\nNordon\nOkalta Oils\nPacalta\nPilot Gold .......\nQuesnelle Q ....\nReliance Gold\nRell*t Arl\nRanchmen's\nReward  .\nROyalite\t\nRufus Argenta ....\nRuth Mope\t\nSilvercrest\nSnowflike \t\nSouthwest Pet \t\nUnited Empire ....\nUnited Oil\nViking Gold.\nVulcin    _,\nWaterloo \t\nWaverley Tang ...\nWesko\t\nWhitewater \t\nYmlr Vank Girl\nSUV,\n.03%\n.04\n.06%\n.10\n.01\n.02%\n.02%\n15.50\n.04\n.04%\n.65\n.07\n.08\n.13\n.12%\n.04\n.01%\n.03\n.10\n.16%       -\n- .03\n29\n.04\n.02%\n.28\n.03%\n.02\n.00%\n.10\n.00%\n.00%\n.01%\n31\n.12%\n.07\n.15%\n.10%\n.01\n.02\n.02\n.24\n.13\n.08\n.17\n.12\n.15\n.02%\n.17\nNELSON DAIUV NIW8, NEISON. B.O--MONDAY MORNINO. JUUY \u00ab. IMS\n<607\nMarket and Mining News\nSTANDARD BOX\nFOR APPLES IS\nGROWERS'PUN\nOkanagan Shippers\nOpposed to Quebec\nStyle Grate\nThe 1936 apple deal will be a\nstraight standard lidded box affair,\nit the recommendation of the Okanagan Shippers' federation to the\ngrades committee of the B.C.F.G.V\ntakes effect and the Fruit act is\namended accordingly, states the\nPenticton Herald.\nLast year the jumbo crate was\neliminated, while the shippers\nagreed not to accept the Quebec\ncrate. The federation on the whole\nil again strongly in favor of adopting the same attitude as last year.\nIt was explained, however, that\nit some extraordinary circumstances\narose, the use ot tlie Quebec crate\ncould be taken up later hi the\nseason.\nThe general opinion of the federation meeting here was that it would\nbe unwise to adopt an open and a\nclosed container for apples, in the\nface ot possible upset conditions\ndue to lack ot marketing control.\nIt wai decided that this year, in\ndealing with export prices, the general method would be reversed and\nInstead of holding a meeting and\nthen appointing a committee, that\nlast yeir's committee of D. McNair,\nJ. E, Montague, A. C. Lander, Paul\nHayes and Dick Jennens, should\n\u2022gain serve and bring in recommendations later in the month.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, July 5 (CP)-Grain\nquotations:\nOpen High Low Close\nWHEAT:\nJuly   .      86% 88% 86% 87%\nOct    86% 87% 86 86%\nDec.      .   86% 88 86% 87%\nOATS:\nJuly  .....   33 83% 32% 32%\nOct.   ...     32% 33 32% 32%\nDec.   ..      82% 32% 31% 31%\nBARLEY:\nJuly      43% 44% 43% 43%\nOct.       40% 41% 40% 41%\nDec.      .   41% 42% 41% 41%\nFLAX:\nJuly   -     -     -    \u00bb1%\nOct   ..    151%   151%   150%   151\nDec    -       -       -      149%\nRYE:\nJuly     -      -      -      52%\nOct     52%     54%     52%     53%\nDec.   .      54       55       53%    54%\nCASH PRICES:\nWheat: No. 1 hard 89%; No. 1\nNor. 87%; No. 2 Nor. 86%; No. 3\nNor. 81%; No. 4 Nor. 76%; No. 5\nwheat 70%; No. 6 wheat 69%; feed\n53%; No. 1 Garnet 82%; No. 2 Garnet 82%; Durum 86%; No. 4 special\n69%; No. 5 special 63%; No. 6 special 60%; track 87%.\nVancouver Soles\nVANCOUVER. July 8 <CP)-Mln-\ning iharei sold on the Vancouver\nstock exchange yeiterday:\nListed; Bralorne 350, B R Con\n1500, Dentonia 500, Gold Belt 1600,\nKoot Belle 500, Minto 54,300, Morning Star 1800, Pioneer 240, Reno\n1900, Salmon 3500, Sheep Creek 2900,\nTaylor Br 2000, Viddette 700, Wayside, SOOO, B R X 3500.\nCurb: Bayview 16,000, B C Nickel\n1500, Can Rand 1000, Congress 1000,\nFawn 1000, Federal 13,000, Gold\nMount 6500, Orange 1500, GruU\nWlhk 300, Inter Gold 13.000, Koot\nFlor 2000, Nicola 9800, Pilot 7500,\nReliance 48,300, Reward 1000, United Empire 71.000, Viking 3000, Wav-\nerly Tang 150, Ymir Y Girl 1500.\nPROFITS TAKEN\nAT WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, July 5 (CPi-The incentive to take profits shaved fractions from the high points of a\nweek's advance in quiet Saturday\ntrade on the Winnipeg grain exchange. Independence day holiday\nin th* United States halted inter-\nmarket operations and the light\nweek-end business made the session\nuneventful.\nFutures prices at the close were\nunchanged to % cent lower, July\nat 87%, October 86%; and December 87% centi. Profit taking depressed values one cent a bushel in\nopening trading, but the market\npicked up on light offering to rule\nat a % cent advance at mid-session,\neasing once more by the close.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, July 5 (CP)\u2014British and' foreign exchange closed\nsteady Saturday,\nGreat Britain, pound 5.0287.\n,  New Zealand, pound, 4.0552.\nSouth Africa, pound 5.0033.\nUnited States, dollar, % premium-\nU.S, DOLLAR OFF\nMONTREAL, July 6 (API-Leading currencies exhibited yielding\ntendencies on Montreal foreign exchange today. Pound sterling declined 5-32 cent to $5.02 29-32 and\nthe United States dollar eased 1-32\ncent to % premium. The French\nfranc was unchanged to 6.64 cents.\nBIDGOOD TO  BE  ON  MARKET\nTORONTO, July 5 (CP)-AppU-\ncation of Bidgood Kirkland Gold\nMines Limited for listing on the\nToronto exchange has been approved and the stock will be called for\ntrading on the mining section, Tuesday, July 7.\nBAR GOLD UP\nMONTREAL, July 5 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London up 2 cents at (34.98\nan ounce in Canadian funds; 139s\nl%d in BriUsh. The fixed |35 Wlih-\nlngton price amounted to (35.05 ln\nCanadian.\nELDORADO PROFIT IS $138,573\nToronto, July 5 (CP)-Net profit\not $138,573 for the year ended December 31, 1935 Is reported by Eldorado Gold Mines Limited in tbe\nninth annual statement made pub-.\nlie Saturday. Tbe income therefore\nwas between four and five cents a\nshare.\nALTON GENERAL\nAGENT OF S.P.\nCecil G. Alton, Southern Pacific\nrepresentative, in Vancouver for the\npast two years, has been appointed\ngeneral agent for that company, covering all ot western Canada, with\nheadquarters in Vancouver, eftec-\ntlve July 1, according to an an\nnouncement received here.\nAlton, who has been a frequent\nvisitor to this city, will have charge\not both freight and passenger activities in British Columbia. Alberta\nand Saskatchewan with offices at\n474 Granville street, Vancouver.\nBorn and raised in Canada, Alton\nhas been in the service ot the South,\nem Pacific for nine years, all in\nCanada with tht exception of short\nperiods spent in the Seattle and\nPortland offices.\nCreation of a general agency and\nAlton's appointment was found necessary to care for the increasing\nbusiness of the Southern Pacific in\nwestern Canada, the announcement\nsaid.\nCelery Slow lo\nMove, Okanagan\nPrairie Well Stocked'\nAmerican Supplies\nIs Report\nThough the dump duty of 4 1-5\ncents per pound went Into effect on\ncelery on Tuesday, reports from the\nprairies are to the effect that the\ntrade there hat been able to itock\nup very well tn advance on California produce, and not much de'\nmaud is expected from the Oka\nnagan for'at least 10 days, the Ver.\nnon News reports. There is also the\nfactor ot locally produced crops on\nthe prairies, which increase in extent year by. year.   .\nThe result, according to Col. E\nPoole, manager of the Interior Vegetable Marketing agency, is that the\ncelery movement from the valley at\npresent Is the wont ln hli memory',\nconsidering the period ot the year.\nThe general tariff on celery that\nhas prevailed hai been 15 per cent,\nonly halt of the protection afforded\nin past seasons.\nCelery started moving from the\nvalley Saturday, according to regu\nlations of the Interior Vegetable\nagency. Prices are 5% and 5% cents\nper pound on washed, and 4% centi\nin California crates.\nGEORGIAN HONE WINS PRIZE\nnintmiiintttntiintiiimiiiiiiiiltttini\nGOING TO\nAFRICA\n.   or\u2014\nJust Around the Corner\nLET THE DAILY NEWS FOLLOW YOU\nNo matter where you go this summer you'll w\u00abnt\nto keep in touch with events at home\u2014Marriages,\nEngagements, Births, Deaths, Athletic Activities of\nthe Home Town Teams, Meetings of Clubs, Societies\nand Civic bodies\u2014all the news from back home.\nGive your order to your postmaster or agent, or\nmail it direct to the\nNttam.flatty JfatuB\n' British Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nmi 11111111111 n ft 111 q m m it 11 'ii 111 m 111 r 1 \u25a0\n\u2022 neon it ie\u00bb v\u00bbt\u00bb * '\nABOVE, GEORGIAN TYPE HOU8E AND DETAIL OP DOORWAY! BELOW, INTERIOR PLANS\nThis plan Is one of two houses that won second\nprlre in a contest held by the Canadian government\nIn connection with the Dominion Housing act, for\nplant of houses that may be built for from $2(00\nto $5000.\nThe house It In Georgian style of architecture,,\n\u2022nd Is the work of Harold Greenildei, M.R.A.I.C.,\nof Toronto. It contains 16,804 cubic feet.\nThe actual cost of the house can be determined\nby multiplying the cubic contents by 30 cents, as In\nall cases the estimate of costs of building In this contest was set at SO cents par cublo foot.\nThe large living room, 14 by 18 feet, opens on to\na terrace. There Is a dining alcove, 10 feet six Inchei\nby seven feet six Inchei, entered by an arch from\nthe living room and a door from (hu Idtchnn.\nSHIPPERS Will\nHELP GROWERS\nIN MARKETING\nPlan Voluntary Cartel\nWith Bpard Doing\nClerical Work\nThat tht Okanagan Federated\nShippers association would cooperate with groweri ln efforts to control marketing wai decided at a\nmeeting of shippers in Kelowna, it\nIs reported by the Vernon News.\nThe report continuei:\nA committee consisting ot E. J\nChsmbers, J. E. Montague, and A.\nC. Lander was named to have a\nshare ln the preparation of any\nplan tor controlled marketing which\nmay be devised by the B.C.F.G.A.\nand the Tree Fruit Board.\nIt was explained that the growers' committee and the board plan\nto establish a voluntary cartel, with\nthe Tree Fruit Board doing the\nclerical work.\nThat everything was not just ai\ncomplacant at it might seem wai\nindlcited by a question by 3. T.\nI\/ong, ot Greata ranch, who wanted to know why the Tree Fruit\nBoard should cost $40,000 while\nthe Ontario Marketing Board last\nyear, he nid, cost only 56000.\nDOUBT* REGARDING\nPROVINCIAL POWERS\nDoubt was expressed that any\ncontrol of tnterprovinclil marketing can be evolved through the\nB. C. legislation, despite statement!\nin coait newspaper!. Statement*\nmade therein to thli effect had\nbeen denied by tbe Hon, Dr. MacDonald, minltter of agriculture.\nThomai Wilkinson, chairman ot\nthe vegetable board, hu left (or\nthe coait to take up with Dr. MacDonald questions ot the operations\nof the vegetable board. At the preient time only shippers are abiding by the rulings ot the board and\na number ot shippers, not memben\not thi shippers' association, are following tha prices suggested by that\nbody.\nSUGGESTS SHIPPER!\nREPRESENTATION\nJ. E. Montague asked (or representation by tha shippers on tha\nbody which will prepare the new\nplan for control. He said, \"Let* have\nshipper representation on thli committee (or a change.\" F. E. R. Wol-\nlaston asked why the B.C.F.G.A.\nand the shippers could not cany\non. He thought tha Tree Fruit Board\nunnecessary.\nFollowing a thorough discussion\nIt wai decided that the shippers\ncan carry on tor a time as at present\nand If no definite action la taken\nby the groweri, then they can step\nIn.\nPRODUCE STEADY\nMONTREAL, July S (CP)-Prlcei\nruled steady In an inactive session\not Canadian commodity exchange\nproduce section Saturday.\nButter 3H4; cheese ipot- Tnt\nwhite 13; eggs ipot-A-large 24;\nA-medlum 22V).\nChange Imposts on\nImported Produce\nOTTAWA, July B tCP)-Wlth Ca-\nnadlap-grown fruits and vegetables\ncoming on tbe market the department ot national revenue hai announced a number of change! in the\nimpoiti on imported fruits and vegetables.\nThe fixed value of two centi per\npound on green beam came into\noperation on imports into Manitoba,\nSaskatchewan, Alberta and British\nColumbia also on July 3 by tho lifting of the tuipension hitherto effecUve.\nProvision is made that the values\nwill not apply to goods purchased\nand in transit to Canada on or before July 2.\n-MM MINI\n(OAST IS HIGHER\nVANCOUVER, July g (CP)-De-\nmaud for Minto and United Empire\ngold boosted trading on tha ihort\nSaturday session of the Vancouver\nstock exchange. Tbe former cloied\nup t at 64 and the later 2 at 6. Sales\ntotalled 304,950 shares.\nBralorne gold wai up 10 at 7.80,\nSalmon IH at 10 and Reno 1 at 1,21.\nOne cent gains were marked up in\nGold Belt at 81, Cariboo Gold-\nquartz at 1.02, Premier -2.44 and\nCongress 17. Other gold issues were\nunchanged to fractionally higher.\nADVERTISE THAT PRODUCT\nAttention to Investment\nProblems by Mail-\nLetters from clienti asking for information on investment subjects or desiring ta buy or sell securities receive\nprompt and careful attention. Transactions by mail with many of our out-of-\ntown client! have been carried on for\nyein with satisfaction.\nA complete investment service is available\not any of our branches.\nA. E. AMES & CO.\nLIMITED\nBusiness Established 1889\n80Z Royal Truit Building, VANCOUVER, B.C.\nOFFICES\nfor Rent\nOur former antlneering offices,- centrally\nlocated on Ward street. Can be remodelled\nto lulflenant.\nPHONE 178\nA. H. GREEN\nCompany, Limited\nENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS\nFactory and Offices: 701 Front St.\nAe He GREEN CO,\nLIMITED\nENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS\nWish to Announce That They Have Moved Th'efr\nEngineering Department to Their New Offices at\n701 Front Street\nTELEPHONE\n178\nBLUEPRINTING AND DRAFTING\nOur Factory and Engineering Dept. Now\nConsolidated Under One Roof.\n\t\n_\n\t\niMimiii'\"''-\"\n\t\n\t\n PAQf TEN-\nLymocide\nDestroys Moths and\nLarva*I\n500 and 750\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.'\nA research center on ancient man,\nto learn more about origins of the\nhuman race, Is to be formed by the\nPhiladelphia Academy of Natural\nSciences.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. JULY I. 1M6\nSociety\n(Continued From Paoi Five)\nside. They were accompanied as\nfar as Edgewood by young Mabel\nWilson, who will spend the summer\nvacation at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Wil-\nM. McLeod of Procter visited\ntown Saturday.\n.   .   .\nRobert Hall of Tra\" was a weekend guest of his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. R. D. Hall, Josephine street.\n.   *   \u00bb\nE. M. Warren, 911 Edgewood avenue, left Saturday for Woodland,\nCal., where he will visit his parents,\nI WATCH\n\"SUPINA\"\nI\nON THIS PAGE DAILY\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nRIALTO THEATRE\nTmiiI   R   r WEDNESDAY \u2022 THUR8DAY\ni ran, d. w. juiy g ,-d g\nPREVIEW TUESDAY NICHT AT 12 O'CLOCK\nA MIDSUMMER\nMIGHT'S DRUM\nTWICE DAILY\u20142:30 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.    '\nSpecial Children's Show Thursday 9:30 i.m.-A_ml\u00ablon 25c\nMatineei and Preview\u2014Adulti 75c. Children 35c.\nEvening! $1.00, 75c and 50c\nrfOTE:-Th!s picture will not be road shown in Nelson or Rossland.\nReserved Seati for Evening Show on Sale at\nHazlewood Drug Store, Trail, B.C.\nIT'S\nScanning\nTIME\nSee our window for many\nitems that will save you\ntime and money during this\nimportant aeaaon.\nROLLMAN CHERRY\nSTONERS\n$2.00 each\nHAND CHERRY STONERS\n15<* each\nCOLD PACK\nCANNERS,   7-qt.\n$2.95 each\nWIRE RACKS\nTo Fit Wash\nBoiler\n80jt* each\nPreserving Kettles\nSpoons    Strainers\nMeasures    Scales\netc.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nHe will alio go to Chicago and take\na six-week post-graduate course.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Rourke have\nreturned to Vernon after visiting\na few dayi at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. W. L. Affleck.\nS. A. Williams, 609 Silica street,\nhai taken up residence it 619 Josephine street.\nf I   \u2022     \u2022 \u25a0 *'A   '\nMix. N. Dosenberger ot Sunshine\nBay w.'s a week-end guest of her\nmother, Mrs, W. R. MacLean, Edge-\nwood avenue.\n\u2022' \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. James B. Curran\nand family were week-end visitors\nin Grand Forks, where Mrs. Cur-\nran's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon\nreside.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. W. Dickenson and Miss\nJean McCreath of Creston, who\nhave been guests at the home ln\nFairview of Mr. and Mrs. S. S.\nSimpson, have left for home. Mrs.\nDickenson's daughter Dorothy who\naccompanied them is remaining for\na time.\n\u2022 \u2022 '\u00bb\n\u25a0 Mrs. D. D. Dodding, Latimer\nstreet, has left for Vancouver to\nvisit her mother and sister.\ni    .    o\nMr. and Mrs. E. Creed Johnston\nof Bonnington visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 *   *\nR. J. Boyle of Spokane, formerly\nof Trail, spent Saturday in the city.\n\u2022 \u00bb   0\nJudge W. A. Nisbet returned Saturday morning from a trip to Fernie.\n4      \u00bb      \u2022\nBruno Bourgeois of Trail, who\nspent a week in Nelson, left yesterday for Trail.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. McL. Campbell\nof Vancouver, who were city visitors the latter part of the week, have\nleft by motor for Vernon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Ormsby of Vancouver has\narrived to spend a few weeks with\nher husband, who is replacing H. A.\nParker, who has left on an extended\nvisit to England.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. McArthur, Silica street, left\nSaturday morning for coast cities.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. M. Whimster,\nFairview, will have as their guests\nat their summer place \"No Eats,\"\nCrescent Bay, Mr. and Mrs. Austin\nCarter of Kamloops and their children, George, Helen and Jackie,\n0      *      .\nMr. and Mrs. Wallace Schad of\nFernie, who were visiting friends\nin Trail and district, have returned.\n\u00ab   *   \u2022\nMiss Stella Jorgenson, Strathcona\nhotel, left yesterday for Rosaland\nto spend a week, as guest of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. George Jorgenson. She will be accompanied by\nMiss Marion Mclnnes.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. H. Klngzett have\nreturned from a few days' visit In\nKimberley and Creston. In the latter\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nPIANO IN GOOD CONDITION FOR\nsale. Apply Box 1881 Dally News.\n(1881)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nElectrical supplies   ind  repairs.\nF. H. Smith, 313 Baker St. Ph. 668\n(1575)\nYour bid may be the lucky one\non a New Norge Refrigerator at\nMcKay k Stretton's. (1576)\nCar going to Calgary July 10,\nroom for two or three passengers.\nWrite Box 1682 Daily News. (1682)\n\u2014BALFOUR BEACH-\nModern Cottages. Write er\nPhone, G, Green, Balfour, B.C.\n(1652)\nJust arrived. Another shipment of\nElectrolux Refrigerators at Peebles\nMotors. (1671)\nLatest selection In English handmade plaid socks.\nJACK BOYCE\n(1583)\nOnly Philco has the built-in aerial-tuning system which doubles the\nforeign stations you can enjoy. Kootenay Music House. (1574)\nMrs. Vito Pisacreta, Granite Road,\npassed away Saturday. The body\nrests at Somers Funeral Home until\nTuesday, thence to the Church of\nMary Immaculate, where mass will\nbe said at 9:30 a.m., Rev. Father\nJ. C. McKenzle officiating.     (1680)\nI    FIVE Reasons WHY you should\nj drink MCDONALD'S CARBONAT-\nI ED BEVERAGES. 1. Our drinks are\nnationally  advertised   which   is  a\nguarantee of purity. 2. All our bottles are thoroughly sterilized. 3. Our\nnachinery Is the latest and most\nj up-to-date In the Interior.   4. We\n'iave nothing but skilled workmen.\n5. We do not employ cheap labor or\nminors. (1585)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral service for Ole Martin\nStromsnes will be in the Davis\nFuneral Parlors, Tuesday, 7th. Inst.,\nat 2 p.m., Rev. James M. Ritchie officiating. (1683)\nNelion to Calgary, return, for the\nCpl7i.r\" StlmDede, fare and one-\nthird-H4.00. Ticket! on sale 4th\nto 11th.  Return ltmlte July 14th.\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhono 800\nNelson   Depot   205   Baker  St\n(1581)\nMORE ABOUT\nINTERIOR BOYS\nWIN IN TRIALS\n(Continued Prom Page One)\nDespite \u25a0 drenching rain which\npoured down sporadically and forced officials of the meet to cancel\nseveral eventa on the program,'two\nother Canadian records were shattered and fast times recorded ln\nother events.\nGIRL 8ETS RECORD\nGeorge Andrews of the Victoria\nY.M.C.A., bettered the junior record\nof 17.3 for the 120-yard hurdles\nwhich had been held by Milton\nParioni of Vancouver since 1933\nand Nancie Martin, promising young\nVancouver jumper, bettered the Canadian intermediate women'i broad\njump record when competing in\nthe senior event. Her mark was 17\nfeet, one and Vi inches as compared\nwith the former record- of 17 feet,\nplace Mrs. Klngzett visited her son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nHarry Compton.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. F. Murrell of\nCreston were week-end visitors In\ntown.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThomas McDonald has returned\nfrom Appledale where he visited at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. D. F.\nPeters.    \u2022\n\u00ab   *   *\nFred Blakeman left yesterday\nmorning for Calgary.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nKenneth Wallace of Boswell paid\na visit ln town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Oliver and\ntheir family of Shoreacres were ln\ntown Saturday attending the Stall-\nwood-Oliver wedding that morning.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMr. and Mrs. Gale Ashbaugh and\ntheir son Fred, who were here to\nattend the Ashbaugh-Atkins wedding Friday evening, left Saturday\nby motor for Portland, Ore., Yellowstone park and other points en\nroute to their Edmonton home.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Norman Brown,\nRobson street, had as their weekend guests, Mr. and Mrs. Lome J.\nWhitney, Ora, Marie and Doris\nWhitney, Miss Mary Pratt, Clark\nDalrymple and Malcolm Fries, all\nof Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMist Florence Rutledge of Trail\nis a visitor at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. R. L. McBride, Hoover street.\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arte Bldg.\n_m_mm_mm\nHATS\nLadies' Felt and Fabric\nMen's Felt and Caps\nThoroughly\nCleaned\nH.K.FOOT\nHigh Clara Dyer and Cleaner\nFAIRVIEW,   NELSON,   B.C.\nV\u00ab inches, held by Doris Chillew of\nToronto and set in 1832,\nOfficials, however, raid the Vancouver gill's mark would have to\nbe considered before being given\nofficial recognition because lhe waa\na junior competing In a senior\nevent md had broken an intermediate record and because there were\nno women officials at the meet.\nHALEY 10.5 In 100\nBesides cracking the record In\nthe high jump event, young Haley\nshewed his heels to Vancouver\nand liland contestant In tha 100\nyards, and the Junior broad Jump.\nHli time (or the 100 wai 10.5 and\nhe scored hli victory In the broid\nJump with a leap of 20 feet, seven\nInchei.\nTwo   Nelion   boys.   Jack   McCracken ind Paul Brooks, helped\nthe Interior contingent by taking\ncare of placet In other events. McCracken took the 440-yard event\nbreezing, followed  closely  by\nBrooks.  Hli  time   was  54.8.   Ha\nalio placed lecond to Vance Mc-\nComber In the 880, an event where\nMurray  Wheaton   of   Cranbrook\ngrabbed off the third spot.\nOther interior victories were: Murray Wheaton,  Cranbrook, first in\nthe mile, and George Anderson of\nKimberley, second in the 12-pound\nshot put and third In the broad\njump.\nHerbert Le Roy of Penticton\ngrabbed off first position in the\npole vault event, beating out Aneas\nMcDonald of Vancouver and Bob\nJohnson of Enderby who finished\nIn lhat order. Le Roy's winning\nvault was 10 feet, six inches.\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask, Julj 5\n(CP)\u2014Appeals against senten es\nImposed on Sam Markoff and John\nAntlfaev on charges arising from\nan attempt to burn a house were\nannounced tonight.\nJ. G. Difenbaker, K.C, has been\nretained to conduct the appeals on\nthe grounds the sentences were\nexcessive.\nFred Markoff, father of Sam\nMarkoff, was released from custody.\nMORE ABOUT\nC.C.F. ELECTS\n(Continued From Page One)\n\"This is 'downright, damnable\nlobbying,\" he exclaimed. \"It la, In\ntact, the most blatant attempt to influence delegates I have ever seen\nIn a so-called democratic convention. In my opinion whoever is re\"\nsponsible for this proposed slate\nshould be expelled from the movement.\"\nA ipecial committee, headed by\nMr. Gargrave, struck off to Investigate the charge, brought In a\nreport naming Jack Price, M.L.A.,\nVictor Mldgtey, secretary to the\nC.C.F. group if Victoria, and Robert Skinner, C.C.F. candidate In\nVancouver South it the lilt federal election.\nAfter considerable discussion the\nconvention decided to take no action and adopted a motion to erase\nthe matter from the minutes.\nAs a result of a motion passed, the\nnumber of delegates on the provin\ncial council will be increased from\n16 to 40 to allow for representation\nby provincial instead of federal rid\nings. Delegates will also be subject\nto recall.\nGet Your Job in the Want Ads\nSmythe'i Moaquito Lotion\nAs a real preventative against\nMosquito  Bites.\nAt Smythe's\nPrescription Druggist\nPhone 1\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter service in plumbing repairs and\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nVACATION\nDAYS\nWhat a plethora of places the East and\nWest Kootenay offers to those bent on \u2022\nvacation. Glorious scenery, abundant\nfishing, wonderful lakes, hiking and\nswimming. The Kootenays offer all that\nthe vacationist wants.\nCompliments of\nHILLCREST COAL\nand the\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nBABY CARRIAGES\nAND GO-CARTS\nLLOYD LOOM BABY\nCARRIAGES\nWood wheels\n$29.75 to $38.50\nCOUCHES AND NEW\nENGLISH PRAMS\nBaked enamel in colqrs blue grey,\nmaroon and tan, with attractive\nstripes.\nPrices $25.00 to $34.50\nSULKIES\n2-Wheel 96.00 to ?9.50\n4-Wheel    $6.00 to $12.50\n4-Wheel, with hood  $21.50\nBaby Jumper Swings and Spring   $1.25\nChild Bassinets  $5.00 to $8.50\nBaby Walken      $4.50\nHigh Chain, enameled   $2.05 to $6.50\nComode Chain, with tray $1.50 to $2.95\nStandard Furniture Co.\nCOMPLETE HOUSE FURNISHERS     \"Tho Store of Service and Satisfaction\"\nPHONE 85 BAKER ST. NELSON, B. C.\nFor slugs, mix thoroughly ten\nparti lime with one part copper\nsulphate. Place ln a dust gun or bag\nmade of a double thickness of\ncheesecloth and blow or shake on\nthe infested plants any time after\ndark.\nWANTED\nClean Cotton\nRAGS\nApply\nMm lattg\nPolo\nSport Shirts\nNEW ARRIVALS\nSee these new Polo Sport\nShirts. In stripes, plain'\ncolors and black and\nwhite checks. A practical\nsummer garment,\n$1.00 \"$1.50\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nClassified Ads Bring Result\nPHONE\n128\nfor\nQUICK\nSUMMER\nCLEANING!\n.Summer weather requires a lot\nof clothes. . .but warm days are\nno problem to even a limited\nwardrobe, when Kootenay No-\nOdor Dry Cleaning company plays\nits part! One day service on request . . . you simply call in the\nmorning, and we'll deliver your\nsuit or dress, carefully cleaned\nand pressed and ready to wear the\nfollowing morning! It's a boon to\nthe man or woman who MUST be\nwell dressed in spite of heat and\nit costs no more than ordinary\ncleaning!\n\u2022\nWE CALL AND DELIVER FREE\n\u2022\nKootenay No'Odor\nDry Cleaning Co.\nk\nSilk  Drosses\nPlain silks, crepes\nor flat finishes.\ncleaned    and\npressed.\n$1.25 Up\nFlannels\nMe n's flannel\ntrousers, gray or\nwhite, cleaned\nand pressed.\n75e\nOther  Garments\nEqually\nReasonable\njjjjjSS*\n\\*H\nShowing it\n2:00-7:00\u20149:40\nOUR SECOND FEATURE\u2014Showing at 3:20\u20148:30\nANNE SHIRLEY PH1LLIP?hH0LMEs\nin the heart storming story of.\na stage-struck red head who\ntalked a blue streak.\n'Chatterbox'\ni-ij_.\u00a3v_*- _k;^-i-ii\u00bb-fcfr^^ -   \t\n\t\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_1936_07_06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0412210","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"}]}}