{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412284":{"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":"1936-06-11","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412284\/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":" British Poloists Lose; B.C. Team\nWins in Spokane Test\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\n\u25a0nin,ii,ampipii|gpu i\nfcfl\nE&&S, Cheese, Butter and Flout?\nPrices Advance in Nelson\n\u2014Pa&e Two\nVOLUME 35\nFIV. CENTS A COPY\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 11. 1936\nNUMBER 44\nCHINA CONSCRIPTS WOMEN FOR WA\nFRENCH STRIKE\nSPREADS; THREE\nDEAD IN SPAIN\nRestaurant, Hotel and\nCafe Employees Out\nj in Paris\nIadded to ranks\nof thousands\n[Syndicalist Leader Is\nKilled in Riot in\nMadrid\nPARIS, June 10 (AP)\u2014A general\nitrike of hotel, cafe and restaurant\nsmployees in the Paris region was\nrated tonight as a possible cleavage\nn the government's leftist majority\niver the 40-hour week bill was\nleen.\nThe new strikers joined the ranks\nI hundreds of thousands of others\nrtio are demanding more money\nind shorter hours, and all of whom\nII* waiting parliamentary decision\nm the labor bills of Premier Leon\nMum before returning to work.\nThe measures were introduced\nresterday and sent to a special\n\u2022rllamentary committee.\nRoger Salengro, minister of the\nnterior, tackled the strike in north-\nirn mines, where workers showed\nIttle disposition to end their walk-\nlut until new privileges are guar-\nmteed by parliament\nMADRID, June 10 (AP)-Com-\nnunisls and Syndicalists fought a\niltched machine gun battle in the\ntreets of Malaga late today while\nipain counted three more dead and\ninnumbered wounded in politlco-\ntrike disorders.\nBullets whineu through Malaga's\npain thoroughfares after two per-\nons hsd been slain and Socialists\nlid called s general strike.\n, THe Syndicalist leader, Mi*uel Or-\nit Aceveds, was cut down as he\nsrried a baby out of his house,\n[he baby was unhurt. The slaying\nWlowed by the street killing of a\nommunist lawyer.\n|. In Aznaloazar, Seville province,\n'ntonio  Ramirez,   Socialist  chief,\npras killed during a political quar-\n\u00bb. Badajoz saw numerous armed\n(lashes between, leftists and right-\nill.\nAnyox Fire Now Out of Control\nBoss Forester\nMINE BUILDINGS\nBURNED; HIDDEN\n(REEK IS GUTTED\nMachinery Owned by\nC. M. & S. Company\n\u25a0 Is There\nPURCHASED WHEN\nMINE SUSPENDED\nVessels Ready to Aid\nMany Residents to\nEvacuate\n\u2014Photo by Cherer, Victoria.\nE.  C.   MANNING\nChief .forester of British Columbia. Mr. Manning was last In Nelson at the recent rangsr conference for the Kootenay-Boundary.\nUnited Church and\nPresbyterians May\nConfer on Problem\nHAMILTON, Ont., June 10 (CP)\n\u2014Members of the Presbyterian general assembly today were invited\nby United church officials to confer\non the remaining problems existing\nbetween the two religious institutions, which followed church union\nin 1925. The invitation was referred\nto the board of administration for\naction.\nA letter from the United church,\nread to the assembly, said the United church moderator during a.recent meeting of the general council\nexecutive drew attention to the\nfact any matters disturbing harmonious relations should be capable\nof solution by friendly conference.\nThe executive, the letter added,\nauthorized appointment of a committee for such a conference.\nRepublican Platform Committee\nApproves Plank Against League\njlf Adopted by Convention Party Would Keep\nU. S. Out of League of Nations and the\nWorld Court, Reversing Old Stand\nVICTORIA, June 10 (CP^-A\nforest fire raged out of control\non the outskirts of Anyox, northern British Columbia mining\ntown, and several veuelt were\nreported standing by.In case of\nemergency to evacuate the population, according to wireless reports received by British Columbia police headquarters here tonight.\nAccording to abbreviated reports\nreceived here the property of the\nHidden Creek Mining cojnpany was\ngutted by the fire which flared out\nof control today after razing other\nmine bulidings and the schoulhouse\nbefore being brought under temporary control late yesterday.\nRegular communication lines with\nthe town were disrupted when telegraph poles were burned and crashed with several stretches of wire.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nBy RICHARD L.TURNER\nAuoclated Press Staff Writer\nCLEVELAND,  June   10   (API-\nYielding to the insistence of Sena-\nor Borah, the Republican convention's platform subcommittee was\nsported tonight to have approved\nplank on foreign relations rev'ers-\nfng previous party policy.\nIt adopted, a member of the subcommittee said, a pledge against\n[United States adherence to the\n\u25a0world court or League of Nations,\n(mentioning those organizations by\nfiame, as the Idahoan had demanded.\nOnly four years ago, the platform on which the then President\nHerbert Hoover ran for reelection\n.eclared for adherence to the court\ntnd, moreover, the last three Republican presidents had approved\nsuch a course.\nBorah  was - reportedly  opposed,\nhowever, to the subcommittee's\nplank, on the currency question\nand another row was brewing on\nthe problem 'of a declaration of\nmonopoly. Borah was not satisfied\nwith the one proposed to the subcommittee by Landon managers.\nThe text of the plank on foreign\naffairs submitted by the, senator\nwas, in part:\n\"We pledge ourselves lo promote\nand maintain peace by all honorable means not leading to foreign\nalliances or political commitments.\n\"Obedient to the traditional foreign policy of America and to the\nrepeatedly expressed will of the\nAmerican people, we pledge that\nthe United States shall not become\na member of the LeSgue of Nations\nnor of its creature, the world court,\nnor shall the United States take on\nan entangling alliance in foreign\naffairs.\"\n|Nof to Prosecute Thomas lor the\nBudget Leak; He Will Speak Today\n|Sir Alfred Butt Also to Make Statement in the\nHouse; Both Ready to Resign Seats\nLONDON, June 10 (AP).\u2014The government today officially closed\nIts books on the Investigation of the budget leakage scandal which\nbrought about the resignation of J, H. Thomas, colonial secretary,\nfrom the cabinet.\nIt was announced in the house of commons no criminal proceedings\n-.{.would be instituted against any of\nthe participants in the case.\nThe scandal, however, will be debated tomorrow in the house of\ncommons.\nQuestions   by   Clement   Richard\nAttlee, parliamentary leader uf thc\nLabor party, brought the government announcement from Sir Donald   Somerville,   attorney-general.\nHe   said   he   had   considered\nwhether charges should be brought\nunder  ths   Official   Secrets  set,\nbut added: \"I have decided not to\ninstitute criminal proceedings,\"\nNEW CANADIAN  MEMBERS,\nFISHERIES COMMISSION\nOTTAWA, June 10 (CP).-Hon.\n|l. E. Michaud, fisheries minister,\ntoday announced two changes in\nthe Canadian representation on the\ninternational fisheries commission\nlo be effective July 1. A. J. Wslt-\n^more, head of the western division\nof the fisheries department .at Ot-\nJtswa, and George Alexander, assistant to the British Columbia commissioner of fisheries, Victoria, will\nicceed W. A. Found, Ottawa, and\nP. Babcock, Victoria.\nCONVENTION HALL, Cleveland,\nJune 10 (AP)\u2014With a platform\ndrafted at last, the huge blocs of\ndelegate votes tumbling for Landon, the Republican national convention tonight devoted an h_mr\nto an old-time welcome to Herbert\nHoover.\nThe former president stirred the\nconclave into its first prolonged\ndemonstration tonight when he\nstepped before it to assail the new\ndeal as a \"muddle\" and demand\nlhat it be ousted by a \"holy crusade\nfor liberty.\"\nBehind the tumultuous scene that\nHoover faced the final course of\nthe convention itself rapidly was\nshaped. One after another, the lions'\nshare of the huge and pivotal New\nYork and Pennsylvania delegate\nblocs were thrown to Governor Lan\ndon. Kansas leaders loudly proclaimed that settled it.\nCahan Calls McQeer's Ideas\nAbout Finances \"Half Salted\"\nSenate Kills B.N.A. Bill\nMeighen Leads Attack; Straight Party Vote\nof 40-15 Deals Death-Blow to Any\nImmediate Changes in Act\nOTTAWA, June 10 (CP).\u2014Senate division bells rang the death-\nknell of Immediate constitutional reform today when the predominant\nConservative majority of ths red chamber united In a straight party\nvote to defeat, 40-15, the Joint petition to Westminster asking for ,\nspecific amendments to ths. British North America act.\nRt. Hon. Arthur Meighen, Conservative leader, refused to accept a\nproposed amendment from the government side which sought to satisfy\nobjections to the proposal to obtain<s>\nconstitutional power for the provinces to impose Indirect taxation. \"I\nam  against  the  amendment  and\nagainst the address,\" he declared.\nThe Conservative leader declared\nthe time had arrived when the government should come to grips with\nthe problem of provincial expenditures for social services \u2022 they\ncould not afford and relief of unemployed who refused to work.\nThe Joint address, which was\nadopted in the house of commons\nwithout division, was a petition to\nthe British parliament to amend the\nBritish North America act in two\nrespects. One clause sought power\nfor the provinces to impose sales\ntaxes on certain classes of commodities, the other to provide necessary\npower for the minister of finance\nto set up provincial loan councils.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nRT. HON. ARTHUR MEIGHEN\nHMVf R A$SAILSfMAW\u00bbf(iAT|\nTHE NEW DEAL\nA GLANCE\nLAWYER'S TRIAL\nSET FOR JUNE 19\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP). -\nJudge A. M. Harper in county court\ntoday set June 19 for the trial of\nW. J. Murdock, Vancouver barrister\nwho elected for speedy hearing on\na charge of attempting to defeat\nthe course of Justice.\nMurdock is alleged to have unlawfully counselled George Andrus\nto abstain from prosecuting A. C.\nArmour and James Miller on\ncharges of defraduing him of $5000.\nTaschereau Again\nDenies He'll Quit\nQUEBEC, June 10 (CP)-Pre-\nmier Taschereau today turned aside\nrumors he had tendered his resignation with the remark he was \"still\nin harness\" and agreed in the Quebec legislature to adopt without discussion the Old Age Pensions act\nand the act amending the Sunday\nObservance act.\nThe legislative assembly and the\nlegislative council quickly gave second and third readings to the two\nnon-contentious measures.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nRoosevelt Pledges\n\"March Forward'\"\nLITTLEROCK, Ark., June 10-\n(AP)\u2014President Roosevelt pledged\nhis administration tonight to a\n\"march forward\" under the \"broad\npurposes\" of the constitution in\nmeeting the economic and social\nneeds of the day.\nThe chief executive told the\nthrong an overwhelming majority\nof the American people believed\nthe constitution was intended to\n\"meet and fill the amazing physical,\neconomic and social requirements\nthat confront us in this generation.\"\nHe said that Jefferson \"had the\ncourage\" to drive a bargain for the\nLouisiana purchase, despite legal\ndoubts, and that the case was never\ncarried to the supreme court.'\nBy the Canadian Press\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks higher.\nToronto mines\u2014Higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks slightly higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat up % to Vt cent.\nToronto\u2014Bacon hogs off car up\n15 cents to 8.75.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver and zinc unchanged;   copper and lead lower.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver and other\nmetals unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Silver lower.\nNew York\u2014Cotton and rubber\nlower; coffee and sugar higher.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar up\n1-32 to 99 25-32.\nURGES NEW HIGHWAY\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, June\n10 (CP).\u2014Construction of a new\nhighway from Douglas, on the international boundary to the new\n$3,500,000 J'raser river bridge now\nbeing built here, today was advocated by Tom Reid, M.P. for New\nWestminster, in a letter to Hon. F.\nM. .MacPherson, British Columbia's\nminister of public works.\nC9&S WAFTED FOR\nDOMESTIC HELP\nHALITAX, June 10 (CP)-The\nNational Council of Women, in annual convention here, today adopted\nin principle a code for household\nworkers and employers which,\namong other things, would call for\na work week of not more than 69\nhours, overtime pay and a minimum\nwage schedule.\nMiss A. M. Ward of the Halifax\nYoung Women's Christian association presented the code and after\nconsiderable discussion the convention decided to send it to local\ncouncils throughout 'Canada.\nTrained Mace-Bearer\nfor the Lord Mayor\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP).-A\ntrained mace-bearer will be available when the lord mayor of London's gift of a mace to this city arrives, it was learned today by thc\ncivic finance committee. The committee received a letter from the\nDisabled Veterans' associstipn pointing out that one ot its' members,\nGeorge S..Asquith, a former ser-\ngeant-at-arms, was experienced in\nthe formal duties connected with a\nmace and would offer his services\nfor functions at which the lord\nmayor's gift might form a part.\nKASLO CHILDREN STAGE CIRCUS.\nGIVE $3.12 PROCEEDS TO HOSPITAL\n\"Webber and Strachan Mammoth Circus\" Put\nOver in Great Style With All the\nTrimmings, Even a Parade\nKASLO, B.C., June 10-Kasloites\nhad a treat Saturday afternoon and\nevening when a number of children,\nall under the 'teen age, displayed\namazing ingenuity and organizing\nability by staging a \"real\" circus.\nThe company had the title of \"The\nWebber and Strachan Mammoth\nCircus.\" the spacious lawn at the\nFred Webber home being the setting.\nSeventeen youngsters had been\nplanning and rehearsing for the\nevent for some time and Saturday\nbegan their entertainment with the\nusual \"monster parade\" taking in\nthe principal streets of the city. At\nthe circus grounds there were Ihe\ntraditional sideshows and performers going through their allotted\nstunts with remarkable ability, having received practically no assistance from their seniors.\nBert Webber presented the hairless dog and put him through various interesting tricks-\nJack  and   Gilbert  Hartin  were\nthe \"rough  riders\"  and  some of\nFormer Bennett Aide\nand Fiery Liberal\nin a Clash\nWARNS OF PERIL\nOF INFLATION\nMcGeer Accuses Him\nof Avoiding Facts\nof Issue\nOTTAWA, June 10 (CP)-Two\nmen a. far apart as the poles In\ntheir monetary beliefs, Charles\nHazlett Cahan, secretary of state\nIn the Bennett administration, and\nGerald Grattan McGeer, financial\nreformer from Vancouver, crossed\nswords In the house of commons\ntoday.\nThe buttons were olf tha foils\nfrom  the start  with the  Mont-\nrealsr accusing  the  British  Columbia Liberal of advancing half-\nbaked financial Ideas which eventually would lead to wildcat Inflation and ruin for the country.\nThe man from the far west, just\nas Celtic  as his  name Indicates,\ncame back in kind, accusing Mr.\nCahan of avoiding facts, entertain\ning false promises and continuing\nsupport to a system that has brought\nCanada to the brink of disaster.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nTWO HELD FOR\nTHEFT, FERNIE\n,  $\u00bbm\nPolice Bullets Halt\nOne Escaping in\nUnderwear\nFERNIE, B.C., June 10 <CP)-\nNick Servello and Johnny de George\ntoday were held by police here on\ncharges of breaking and entering\nthe wholesale store of MacDonald's\nConsolidated\/ Ltd., and of theft of\ngoods valued at several hundred\ndollars, part of which were recovered.\nPolice said Servello made an attempt to escape, clad only in his\nunderwear, as they approached his\nhome but stopped when they fired\nwarning shots.\nDe George was found by a party\nof police in a shack several miles\nwest of town.\nTWO ACQUITTED\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP). \u25a0\nJudge A. M. Harper in county court\ntoday acquitted A, R. Brisbane, alias\nReginald Burbank, and James Howard on charges of conspiring to defraud G. S. M. Larder, police operative.\nThe judge said there was no evidence that the accused men attempted to obtain money from\nLarder.\nBrisbane Is now serving a four\nyear sentence in New Westminster\npenitentiary, imposed on him \u00bbby\nJudge Harper when he pleaded\nguilty to a charge of defrauding a\nStratford, Ont., man of $7380.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nBETTY ALLAN, NAKUSP, PASSES WITH\nDISTI NOTION AT NORMAL SCHOOL AS\nSEVERAL FROM KOOTENAYS SUCCEED\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP).\u2014Diplomas were awarded to 175 out\nof the 191 students attending normal school here, It wss shown today\nwith ths announcement of results of examinations.\nInterior British Columbia students who received their diplomas\nIncluded:\nBETTY ALLAN, NAKUSP, psssed with distinction; Ivy Rose Apps,\nCouty Line; R. H. E. BAILEY, NAKUSP; CATHERINE BALL, MICHEL; Bertha Bryden, Blskeburn; Yvonne Patricia de Wlele, Vernon;\nPHYLLIS ETHEL MARGARET GRANT, ARROWHEAD; Evelyn\nMary Henderson, Kelowna; ANNA LORAINE HOLOBOFF, ROSSLAND; KATHERINE 8, A. MARTIN, NELSON; Msrgaret Creelman\nMcDonald. Princeton.\nVomer\nMin. Max.\nNELSON         44 79\nVictoria  54 64\nNanaimo     55 62\nVancouver  54 62\nKamloops  52 66\nPrince George  36 74\nEstevan Point  52 58\nPrince Rupert  44 74\nAtlin    44 -\nDawson 52 68\nSeattle    56 68\nPortland ..    60 78\nSan Francisco  5. 74\nSpokane       54 80\nLos Angeles 62 86\nPenticton 52 \u2014\nVernon     52 \u2014\nGrand Forks  46 68\nKaslo  43 -\nCranbrook  - 37 57\nCalgary      40 68\nEdmonton    42 76\nSwift   Current    46 74\nPrince Albert   38 76\nSaskatoon  38 74\nQu'Appelle    44 68\nWinnipeg     42 72\nMoose Jaw                  48 72\nForecast for Nelson and vicinity-\nModerate variable winds, cloudy,\nnot much change in temperature,\nscattered showers.\nCanton Determined to Halt\nJapan's Invasion of North;\nSchools Close, Pupils Serve\nNasookin Is in the\nWater Again; More\nRepairs to Be Done\nSteamship Nasookin Is In the\nwater again, repairs to the hull\nand other sections which had to\nbe done on the Canadian Pacific\nways In Fairview having been\ncompleted.\nAdditional painting and replacing of boiler tubes will be necessary before the Nasookin can be\nreturned to the main Iske ferry\nservice.\nOLD TIMER IS\nFOUND DEAD IN\nHILLS CRESTON\nDeath Due to Natural\nCauses; Driving\nin Cattle\nDavid Learmonth, old time prospector of the Creston district, was\nfound dead in the hills near Creston Monday about midnight.\nMr. Learmonth left his residence\nto drive in some cattle, and when\nhe failed to appear later apprehension for his safety led to a report\nto police. Assisted by a large number of volunteers, Constable R. H.\nHassard, H. Cartmel and R. Halli-\nday of the provincial police scoured\nthe hillsides, finding the body about\nmidn'\/it.\nDeath was due to natural causes,\nand an inquest was considered unnecessary.\nGranite Road Smoke\nFrom Slash Burning\nDense smoke arising from timber\nabove Granite road Wednesday\nproved to be from slash burning\nunder permit by A. Calbick, adjoining his cleared land, the long\nspell of rainy weather having produced favorable conditions for burning slash with a minimum of danger\nto timber.\nNews Censorship Is\nClamped Down\nin South\nCONFIRM TROOPS\nAT HENGCHOW\nCanton Food Prices\nContinue to Go\nHigher\nHONG KONG, |uno 10\u2014\n(AP).\u2014South China teemed with military movements\nbehind a thick screen of censorship tonight.\nNews restrictions were\nclamped on both provinces\nof the Canton government\n\u2014Kwangtung and Kwangsi.\nBut wot. reached here\nfrom Canton through surreptitious channels concerning military conscription of\ncoolies, including women;\nof the Kwangsi army's arrival of Hengchow, important road junction in Hunan \u25a0\nprovince to the north; of\ngovernment threats to ex-\n(Contlnued on Psgs Ten)\nfor Stuart\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP)-\nMilitary honors will be accorded\nBrig.-Gen. J. Duff Stuart at his\nfuneral services which will be held\nfrom ,St. Andrew's-Wesley church\nSaturday. Rev. Willard Brewing,\nRev. J. S. Henderson and Rev. C.\nC. Owen will officiate.\nBrigadier-General Duff Stuart,\nprominent Canadian militiaman\nand well known in British Columbia business circles, was fatally injured in an automobile accident\nnear Abbottsford, B.C., June 6,\nCoast Party Sees Sullivan\nCheers for the Kimberley Hockey Team at the\nBanquet; Allan Cup Displayed; Roberts\nand Fink Welcome at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C., June 10.\u2014The touring Vancouver board of\ntrade delegates heard more about road requirements and learned more\nabout mining in the Kootenay district today when they were guests\nof the Cranbrook and Kimberley boards for a day and a night.\nThe day was spent in a tour of inspection of the great Sullivan mine\nat Kimberley, and the huge concentrator, and a good part of the night\nwas spent at a banquet and con-<jy... \u00bb\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u25a0_\u2014\u25a0\u2014-\u2014 -__,\nsenial  evening in the Cranbrook\nhotel with local residents.\nTbe visitors were officially welcomed at the banquet by Mayor T,\nM. Roberts and J. P.,Fink, president\nof the Cranbrook' fioard of trade.\nMayor Roberts gave sage advise to\nIhe tourists when he suggested that\nthey look to the interior districts of\nthe province more as the mainstay,\nrather than the \"poor relations\" of\nthe city of Vancouver.\nALLAN CUP SHOWN\nMr. Fink gave a constructive address on the desire for cooperation\nbetween the interior residents and\ncitizens of the larger, coast centers. He gained considerable applause when he brought to the no-\nlice of the Vancouver men the ex\ncellent record of tlie Kimberley\nhockey players. He placed on the\nhead table the handsome Allan cup,\nwhich had been brought in from\nKimberley especially for the occasion.\nJ. Y. McCarter, president of the\nVancouver board of trade, spoke\non behalf of his party, expressing\nappreciation at the hospitality extended by all Kootenay residents\nand a desire for Vancouver citizens\nto live and work in harmony with\ntheir fellows in all parte of the\nprovince.\nSeveral other Vancouver visitors\nalso spoke briefly and they wers\nentertained by songs by the Cranbrook Men's choir, conducted by\nJ. S. Manson.\nRoman Catholic Clergy and Laily\nHosts lo Cardinal al Ihe (oast\nMore Than 20 High-Ranking Prelates Will\nAttend Archdiocesan Congress\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP)-Ro-\nman Catholic clergy and laity were\ntonight hosts to His Eminence Jean\nMarie Rodrique Cardinal Villen-\neuve, archbishop of Quebec and primate of Canada, the first Canadian\ncardinal to travel across the Dominion.\nCardinal Villeneuve arrived here\ntoday to officiate at the opening\nFriday of the first archdiocesan\ncongress to be held in western Canada.\nAfter saying mass at the cathedral Cardinal Villeneuve visited the\nvarious Catholic institutions. He will\nsay an early mass at St. Augustine's\nchurch tomorrow and later leave\nfor Victoria, ariving back in Vancouver early Friday.\nOriginal plans of the tour did not\ninclude Victoria, but on arival here\nhe decided that he could not return\nto the east without having visite'd\nthe most westerly see.\n(Continued on Page Two)\n _...\n,-..... ^_ ,.\u00bb:,* :..i^i..A,:,..jaiU^m^Mmm^m'\nO\t\n______^^____\n--    \u25a0\n I        7\"\nwfm\nWmW^s\nPA8I TWO \u25a0\nSEEK TO PROTECT\nNEWS RIGHTS\nDiscusses \"Lifhting\"\nEmpire Press Union\nof News\nLONDON, June 10 (CP cablel-\nThe question of property right in\nnews was presented to the conference of the Empire Press union today ln a speech by Sir Roderick\nJones, chairman of  Reuters, and\n9ft\n(oUowing a discussion, in which\nthe Canadian delegates spoke, a\ncommittee was set up to draft a\nresolution'on the subject.\nSpeaking on behalf of Canada\nwere W. Rupert Davies of the\nKingston Whig-Btandard and J. H.\nWoods of the Calgary Herald.\nSir Roderick Jones said a newspaper or agency was entitled to the\nfruits of its enterprise and this\ncould only be assured If they were\nprotected against those who, without expenditure of endeavor or\nmoney, \"lifted\" news.\nHe emphasized that property\nright resided in the story, not in\nthe event itself. He recalled the\ndangers encountered by correspondents in Ethiopia. Citing an example, he said that a Reuters correspondent during  the bombing of\nSUMMER EXCURSIONS\nOn Sale May 15 to Oct. 15\nVisit RitnjJ and Lake Louise en route\nFinal Return Unit, October 31\nBOUND TRIP FAKES\nWinnipeg   \u2022 \u25a0\nToronto -._---....\nOttawa\t\nMontreal \u25a0\nQuebec    \u2022\nSaint John \u25a0\nHalifax\t\nMtuneapolla .......\n. St. Pan!\t\nCMgtgo  .........\nDetroit, eU Chisago\nDetroit, vi- Toronto - - -\nNew York 135.15\nBoston - - 142.25\nCorrespondingly low fares to other destinations.\n(Inquire about Coach and Intermediate Fare*.\n' Housings may bet arranged via Canadian Pacific '\nGreat Lake, Steamship, June U ta Sept. 19. ,\nAsk the Ticket Agent\n(jOMMxIllm (mci\u00a7tc\nGuide for Travellers\nrV.\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nfe.\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bui Service Geo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30c and UP\nLUNCHEON 40c to 60c . DINNER Mc to 85c\nROTARV AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON, B.C. 422 VERNON ST.\nHUME\u2014H. Graham, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. H. Richmond, Vernon: A. J.\nBugin, S. W. Neill, G. W. Vennies,\nA. W. Neill, D. Campbell, C. L.\nFerrie, L. Lubett, K. B. Jones, C.\nS. Cahoon, C. N. Schwelngers, R.\n1_ Clothier, G. F. Message, Vancouver; A. Anderson, H. H. McBaln,\nMedicine Hat; Mr. and Mrs. H. M.\nMlUer, F. Miller, Kamloops; D. M.\nChallenger, P. Smith, A. Hawkins,\nJ. C. Skantze, Salmo; N. Johnson,\nSpokane;  W. J. Monahan, B. F,\nSchwelngers, Victoria; R. S. Lawrence, R. S. Fraser. W. R. Lawrence,\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Percival, Penticton; F. E. Kennedy, Winnipeg;\nC. E. Finley, Seattle; H. Sargent,\nNelson; Miss E. Innes, Miss I. Innes,\nSanta Ana, Calif.; W. H. Dunn, E.\nM. Sandilands, R. A. Christie, L.\nMacPhee, H. T. Hartin. W. L. Billings, S. A. Hunter, Kaslo; G. D.\nBowker, Mirror Lake; E. W. Farr,\nMontreal.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where tho Guest Is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.      W. K. Clark, Prop.      Nelson, B. C.\n_a___H_M__MB(<saM-a__a_\u00ab___u\nNtw Grand Hotel\nP. L KAPAK. Prop.\nHot and Cold Water\nMonthly ratst 510.00 up\nPH. 234      616 VERNON ST.\nBoost for tha\nKootenay District\nIT PAYS!\nOccidental Hotel\n?05 Vernon St.        Phone 587 L\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL   MONTHLY   RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. A. MADDEN. Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and Cold Water\nIn the HEART ot ths City\nPHONE M      905 WARD ST.\nEDGEWOOD, B.C., HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nI. NIEDERMAN,\nProprietor\nComfortable Rooms\nGood Meals\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.\nLogical Stopping\nPlace on ths\nRoad to Vernon\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\n\u25a0\nI Riverside Avs.\nL\nWhen In SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\nHotel Volney vjfcife\nOpposite the Paulsen Building\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUI8TS\nQuoram escaped death by a tniri1\ncle. His lorry and all his belongings\nwere burned.\n\"Should their news be spoiled\nfor anyone to pounce upon from\nthe cushioned safety of Rome, Loh\ndon or New York?\" asked Sir\nRoderick.\nHe emphasized that the adoption\nof the news property right principle in the United States had raised\nenormously the cash value of every\nnewspaper concern there.\nContinued wireless news broad'\ncasting rendered newspapers and\nnews agencies more vulnerable. It\nbehooved them to take measures\nwhile there was yet time to estab\nlish everywhere the news property\nright.\nWEATHER GETS\nLITTLE WARMER\nMercury rose to the highest point\nsince June 1 when it reached a maximum of 79 degrees at Nelson Wednesday. A promise of heat was felt\nin the morning when the sun came\nout warmly. The afternoon sky held\na threat of raih, however, verified\nby light showers in the late afternoon and evening which were\nscarcely noticed. '\nAverage temperature for the past\nweek was 56.6 which is 1.3 degrees\nbelow normal for the month of June\nin Nelson. The lowest point was\nreached when the mercury fell to\n39 degrees a week ago Wednesday.\nYesterday's average was 61.5 degrees with a low of 44. Only a trace\nof rain was recorded between 5\np.m. Tuesday and 5 Wednesday.\nCRAWFORD BAY\nFOLK HOME\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C.-A. Man-\nwill and son, CUve, have returned\nhome after spending a week in\nKaslo, guests of Mrs. Fox.\nH. Murray Is visiting friends at\nthe coasL\nRt. Rev. Walter Adams, Bishop\nof Kootenay and Rev. Clyde Harvey\nof Procter visited the Bay Monday\nlast and were guests of Mrs. Gooch.\nA special service was held in the\nMemorial church Monday evening,\nthe address being given by the\nbishop. Holy communion was held\nat 8 a.m. Tuesday at which the\nBishop officiated,\nSaturday the school children\nwere taken by cars to Boswell to\ncompete in the school sports. They\nscored thc highest points, winning\nthe silver cup for the school. Herbert Draper proved himself a young\nathletic star, especially in high\njumping. He scored the highest\nnumber of points in the boys and\nsecured for himself a silver cup.\nSaturday evening the following\nattended a dance at Boswell, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Brundrict, Miss J. McGregor, Miss M. King, Miss F. McLauchlan, D. Deverson, B. Van\nSteinberg, D. McLauchlan, G. Richardson, J. King, V. Jacobson, D.\nMeggy and M. Hagan.\nE. J. Woolgren, Mrs. Freeman and\nMrs. H. Richardson motored to\nSand Point, Idaho, Sunday to meet\nMrs. Woolgren and son, David, who\nhad been visiting Mrs. Woolgren.\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Nlckleby\nof Gem, Idaho. All returned here\nthe same day.\nMORE ABOUT\nCATHOLICS HOSTS\n(Continued From Page One)\nMore than 20 high-ranking prelates of the church are expected to\nattend the congress here, the first of\nthese to arrive being Most Rev.\nAlfred A, Slnnott, D.D., archbishop\nof Winnipeg and Most Rev. J. H.\nMacDonald, Bishop of Victoria.\nThey arrived yesterday with Most\nRev. W. M. Duke, Archbishop ot\nVancouver, from Saint John, N.B.,\nwhere they attended the consecration of Most Rev. P. A, Bray, Bishop\nof Saint John.\nMost Rev. J, A. Melanson, Bishop\nof Gravclbourg and successor to\nCardinal Villeneuve when the latter\nwas elevated to the archbishopric ot\nQuebec, and Most Rev. Severln\nGertken, D.D.. O.S.B., Abbott-Nul-\nllus of St. Peter's abbey, Muen-\nster, Sask., arrived today.\nHis Excellency Most Rev. Andrew\nCassulo, apostolic delegate to Canada and Newfoundland, will celebrate pontiflclal high mass in Stanley park on Sunday, tho final day\nof the congress.\nClassified Ads Bring Results!\nGREATJjpRTHERN\nCAgilwaif\nWEEK-END\nEXCURSION\nFARES\nto SPOKANE\nFrom South Nelion\n$\u00a3.00 round\n9 TRIP\nTickets on sale Fridays and Saturdays, now to July 25. Final return\nlimit following\nTuesday. Children half-fare.\n321   Bsksr St.\nPhone 67\nNtlton, B.C.\nTravel by Train\nSAFETY \u2022 COMFORT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NILBON, B.C-THURSDAY MOFtNINO. JUNI 11.1MS\nDAHCEISHELD\nAT BOSWELL\nBOSWELL. B.C-The hell committee held a dance Saturday evening.\nK. Wallace, secretary of the hall\ncommittee was master of ceremonies. Mr. Cell! of Creston was\nthe pianist.\nDuring the interval, refreshments\nwere served by Mrs. S. J. Cummings\nand Mrs. Shell.\nA good many visitors from outside points were present, including:\nMrs. Peters, Miss Evelyn Stoddart,\nMiss Gwen Burge, Miss Topsy Peters, Mr. Drew and Jim Burge of\nGray Creek, Miss Lytle, Miss Jean\nMcGregor, Victor Jacobson, J. King\nand C. Hagen of Crawford Bay, Mrt.\nMitchell, A. Rutledge, J. Hamilton\nand.C, Lombardo of Sirdar.\nMr, and Mrs. Proctor, Mr. and\nMrs. James Pascuzzo, Mrs. Mitchell,\nJ. Hamilton and C. Lombardo of\nSirdar, and Mrs. J. Karpowich, Mrs.\nMiller, Mrs. Eric Bainbridge and\nMiss Irene Karpowich of Sanca\nwere in Boswell Saturday to attend\nthe sports meet.\nAmong Crawford Bay residents\nwho motored to Boswell Saturday\nfor the sporls meet were: Mr. and\nMrs. A. Deverson, Mrs. Gooch, Mr.\nand Mrs. Walter jacobson, Mrs.\nGeorge McGregor, Mr. and Mrs. Roy\nMcGregor, W. Fraser and Mr.\nFisher.\nGray Creek was well represented\nat the sports meet on Saturday,\namong those who were present being: Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Clark,\nMr. and Mrs. Bentihen, Mr. and\nMrs. Tom Oliver, Mrs. Burge, Mrs.\nFred Simpson, Mrs. George Oliver,\nMrs. Peters, Mrs. Merrifield, Miss\nJoyce Smith, Miss Sully, J. Adams,\nJim Burge, D. Bacon, Charlie Jones,\nT. Kunst and F. Wilmot.\nDick Meggle of Kootenay Bay\nwas in Boswell Saturday for the\nlnter-school sports.\nMrs. Johnson and W. Bainbridge\nof Victoria, who were called to\nSanca last week by the death of\ntheir sister, Mrt. Harold Spence,\nhave left for their home. They\ntravelled by car and the poor condition ot their roads delayed their\narrival at Saitca until after their\nsister's funeral. They were accompanied by Mrs. Johnson's *son,\nFrank. Mrs. Geoffrey Spence, who\nhad been at Sanca during the Illness\nof her mother-in-law, Mrs. H.\nSpence, left with the party. She is\nreturning to her home at Edge-\nwood.\nMrs. Reid of Winnipeg is vlsittig\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. Richard Mulloy. Mrs. Reid\nhas been in Canada for over 40\nyears, but this is her first visit to\nB. C. She is charmed with the scenery of the Kootenay, and is delighted to find ln Boswell gardens,\nflowers she has not seen since she\nleft the old country.\nF. Cummings, B. H. Smith. J.\nHall, J. Johnstone and L. van Steinberg are working at the Gray Creek\nroad camp.\nJ, E. Brown, Inspector of schools\nfor this division, with headquarters\nat Cranbrook, was ln Boswell Saturday to open the first inter-school\nsports meet. He was a guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Hepher for the weekend.\nMiss .Eleanor Cameron, who\nteaches at Balfour spent the weekend in Boswell, a guest ot Mr. and\nMrs. A. Hepher.\nMORE ABOUT\nB.H.A.BILL\n(Continued From Page One)\nONLY DIRECT TAXES\nUnder tho constitution provinces\nmay Impose only direct taxes and\nthe Indirect taxation field is restricted to the Dominion. Certain\nforms of indirect taxation, such as\nthose on luxuries and entertainment\nare already being imposed but subject to challenge on constitutional\ngrounds.\nThere was little debate on the\nloan council phase of the address\nbut Hon. Raoul Dandurand, government leader, declared from the first\nthat no motion could be accepted\nthat would take anything away from\nthe address. Defeat ot the amendment by a recorded vote was followed by rejection of the address\nW\u00abit Arm Down\nto 12,53 Foot\nMaintaining it- slow rate of decline, the West Arm dropped .66\nfoot ln the 24 hours ending Wednesday afternoon at 6 o'clock, when\nthe old Launch club Euage recort-\ned lt at 12.53 feet above the low\nwater mark. Thli is lust 1.5 feet\nunder the peak of 14.03 feet attained the night of June 3.\nNAKUSP PLANS\nTRADE BOARD\nTRINITY TURNS\nBACK DAIRY\nNAKUSP, B.C.r_A public meet\nIng was held in the Nakusp de\nvelopment office Friday to discuss\nthe advisability of reviving tbe\nboard Of trade, to be done along\nlocal lines, as it was proven Impractical to consolidate as formerly.\nVarious speakers gave their views\non the subject. Some discussion\narose when the incorporation of\nthe town was suggested as an alternative.\nIt was thought that the organization would be more representative\nIf the fees were comparatively\nsmall and that members from the\noutlying districts should be encouraged.\nSome of the matters to be taken\nup by a board of trade were suggested, namipVy more adequate\nstreet lighting, boosting of the hot\nsprings, and the hard surfacing of\nthe main streets.\nA further meeting was called for\nJune 17 when the election of officers will take place.\nMrs. Waterman Is\nBack, Silverton\nSILVERTON, B.C-Mr. and Mrt.\nT. Marcus left Tuesday for Princeton.\nMrs. M E. Emerson returned\nhome Friday after visiting In Nelson for a few days.\nMr. and Mrs. McDiarmid and\nfamily left Tuesday for the Reno\nmine.\nLance Emerson of Trail has tpent\nthe past week in town visiting his\nmother, Mrs. M. Emerson.\nAubrey Penny of Rossland has\nbeen a visitor in town.\nMrs. G. Waterman has returned\nhome after spending the past month\nin Vancouver visiting relatives.\nMrs. T. Dinsdale was hostess to t\nnumber of her friends on Saturday\nnight Cards were enjoyed followed\nby dainty refreshments. Her guests\nwere Mrs. H. Chester, Miss D. Hunter, Mrs. P. Harding, Mrs. H. Lancaster and Mrs. T. Burley.\nMr. snd Mrs. J. Norris pf Nakusp\nwere tho guests of Mrs. J. Scla on\nSunday.\nP. Larson of Reno mine was a\nvisitor to his home here during the\nweek-end.\nMrs. H. Chester and son Ian, spent\nThursday in Nelson.\nMrs. W. K. Marshall spent a tew\ndays in Nelson.\nThose from Silverton attending\nthe dance and show on Saturday\nnight were, Miss G. Kirk, Miss I.\nKennedy, Miss H. Matheson, Miss\nJ. Johnstone, Miss E. Johnston, Mrs.\nR. Fairhurst, S. Dewls, R. Kirk, J.\nFairhurst, J. Kelly, R. Kennedy, R.\nFairhurst, T. Laron and K. Stanton.\nMrs. H. Chester, Mrs. W. Hunter\nand Miss Dorothy Hunter were the\nguests ot Mrs. H. Lancaster on Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Fairhurst were\nvisitors in Nelson.\non the same division.\nPreviously, after the address had\nbeen studied before the senate\nbanking and commerce committee,\na recommendation from that body,\noriginating with Senator Meighen,\nthat the taxation clause should be\ndeleted, was adopted in the senate\nby a vote of 50-10, with three Liberals supporting the Conservative\nmajority. These three, Senators A.\nC. Hardy (Brockviile), E. S. Little\n(London) and J. J. Hughes (Prince\nEdward Island) returned to the\nLiberal side ln the final vote.\nFilm studios around London are\nto have soundproof roofs to counter\nthe noise of airplane traffic.\nEGGS, COOKED MEATS, CHEESE\nBUTTER, FLOUR ADVANCES ARE\nFEATURE ON WHOLESALE MARKET\nA-\nEggs Up Five Cents in\nWeek; Others Are\nSeasonal\nPREPARING FOR\nBERRY SEASON\nFew Wynndel Berries\nMarket; Peak in\nTwo Weeks\nAdvances ln eggt, butter, cooked\nmeats, cheese and flour featured\nthe past week review on the wholesale market here, these price\nchanges taking the spotlight trom\npreparations for the berry season.\nEggt, scarce to the point that supplies are being brought ln from\nAlberta, arc 5 cents a doien higher\nthan a week ago. Cheese Is up a\ncent and a half, cooked meats two\ncents, and butter one cent. These\nare seasonal advances. Flour, advancing 10 cents a barrel, recovered\nhalf of Uie reduction of a fortnight\nago.\nA few crates of Wynndel strawberries are on the Nelson market,\nbut Creston district berries are not\nexpected to arrive ln quantity for\na matter of two weeks or so. Tha\nmarket has been supplied'by southern and Mission growers so far.\nCarlots of sugar' and Jars have\nbeen arriving tor some time, and\ncontinue to come ln. Two cars of\nJars are expected within a week.\nPrices art fractionally lower than\nlast year.\nBeverages started to move during\ntht recent warm spell, lime and\ngrape preparations being popular.\nThe movement of this line of goods\nis expected to be steady Irom now\nuntil well on ln the summer.\nConsiderable Interest has been\nshown in a new egg preservative,\nin old country preparation which'\npermits eggs to be stored dry Instead of ln a liquid, and this has\nbeen moving freely.\nCarlot arrivals ln tha put week\nwere three of groceries, two of\nsugar, one of canned goods, mostly\nvegetables, one of feed and flour,\none of oyster shell, one^f paper,:\ntwo of fresh and nirctl meats, one\nof bananas, one of green vegetables i\nand fruit and on^-of glfiler ale.\nTrinity men's softball club turned\nback Kootenay Valley Dairy team\nin a league game Wednesday at the\nJunior high school grounds by 10-7.\nWhen the game started, few fans\nwere on hand, but by the end of the\ngame a large crowd had collected\nto support the teams.\nPlay was close all the way, After\nleading for the first four innings,\nTrinity lost the margin in the fifth\nwhen the dairymen scored five\ntimes.\nComing into the last half of the\nseventh Trinity was still trailing by\ntwo. Morey, tint man at bat, led\nott with a nice three-base hit, Mc-\nSraeken singled, scoring Morey.\nave Allan wat retired, pitcher to\ntint Phillips got to first by an\nerror at short and reached third\nthrough a steal and a pass ball and\nwas (cored by a single off the bat ot\nJack Clements. The side was shortly, retired but that waa enough to\ngive Trinity the game for they were\nnever headed from then on.\nJack McCracken led the winners\nat bat with three singles In four\ntimes at bat, although he didn't get\ninto the game until the second\nframe, when he replaced Dennis\nWebster at third base. John Morey\nat center showed a big improvement over his first appearance a\nfew days ago. Stan Hill and Bill\nRiley each made two hits for the\nDairy' 000 150 100- 7    7   8\nTrinity  300 030 32x-10   10   5\nBatteries: Formanoff, Fierro and\nC. Nemrava; Clements and Allan.\nMORE ABOUT\nTHOMAS\n(Continued From Page One)\nA Judicial tribunal of Inquiry\nfound Thomas had been solely responsible for the revelation of secrets contained in the government's\n1035 budget prior to its publication. The budget Increased tea and\nIncome taxes, and speculators operated on the market ln advance\not these Increases,\nPrime Minister Baldwin announced Thomas and Sir Alfrsd\nButt, one ef those who wat shown\nto have profited by speculation on\ntht tax Increases, would make\nstatement. In the house tomorrow.\nBoth Thomas and Sir Alfred are\nreported ready to resign their\nseats.\nWilliam Oallacher, Communist\nmember, demanded the house decide whether those mentioned ln\nthe tribunal report were \"fit to be\nmembers of the house\" but he was\nruled out of order.\nCOAST MAN DIED\nFROM A FAIL\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP)-A\ncoroner's Jury late today found that\nAndrew Zeler, who died in a city\njail cell here Monday, came to his\ndeath as the result of Injuries apparently caused by a fall while\nunder the Influence of liquor.\nBen Welnborn, who found Zeler\nlying on a downtown street Sunday, testified the man had premonition of his death, saying \"Please\ndon't take me in, it will be the\nend of me.\".\nWeinborn said Zeler was ln a\nsemi-conscious condition with blood\nstreaming from a cut on his face.\nWitness laid he advised police officers to take the mtn to hospital Instead of the Jail.\nCity Autopslst Dr. A. W. Hunter\ntestified that Zeler's death was due\nto a brain hemorrhage and that he\nsuffered brulset about the head tfld\nface.\nGirls Trim Boys'\nSoftball Squad\nHigh School Team Is\nVictor by 3-1\nCount\nGirls' softball team chosen from\nthe high school took the measure of\nthe House B boys' team, slipping\nover a 3-1 victory tn a nine-Inning\nengagement.\nDespite a good lineup, the boys\nwere weak in fielding and made\nseveral glaring errors, nullifying\nthe good work of Pitcher \"Gubby\"\nGore. On the other hand the girls\nwere right on their toes, particularly in the Infield. The surer batsmen comprising the mere male\nsquad met their fate ln the sure\nhands of Isabel Donovan, Peggy\nDonaldson and Alvlna Arlt,\nD. McLean umpired.\nTeams:\nGirls\u2014Gertie Whitehead, pitcher;\nAria Saare, Alvlna Arlt, Wilma\nMilne, Peggy Donaldson, Isabel\nDonovan, Cannula del Puppo, Edna\nGormley and Betty McCormick.\nHouse B boys\u2014Brian (Gubby)\nGore, pitcher; Sandy Nord, Jack\nMcCracken, Sid Horswill, George\nBishop, Fred Graves, Stan Horswill,\nJimmy Allan and Matt Aylmer.\nButtercups Ara\nin Blossom Here\nButtercups, favorite flower of the\npoets, are in blossom along the Nelson waterfront.\nMole crickets are cannibals, and\na fight between two of these Insects\nends by the winner eating the leser.\nSole Distributors for\nBeach Refrigerators\nAs Low as $175\nCor Fine Furniture\nIAOLI BLK. PHONI 633\nKUHES OHIY ONEl\nTOBEATPAR\nFONTH1LL, Ont, June 10 <CW-\u00bb\nThe sub-par golf ot Gene Kunes,\nCanadian open champion, wu tht\nbig gun drawn up today by tha\nUnited States to win the Dawes\nInternational golf trophy over the\nLookout Poin courte. the event\npreceded the 72-hole General Brock\nopen tournament which starts. tor\nmorrow.\nThe sharp-shooting Pennsylvan-\nIan was the only man to get under\npar figures among the 24 players on\nthe four teams. His sparkling OS set\nthe pace all the way and at the end\nthe American team had an agregate\nof 438 against the designated Canadian team's 443 total\nTraining Crews\nStart Hexl Week!\nFour crews of young men allotted I\nto the Nelson district for summer I\ntraining in forestry work will be]\navailable next week, if they report |\non the date originally arranged,\nand District Forester R. I. Allen ll |\nnow arranging the organization.\nEach crew will comprise eight ot X\nthose to be trained, a foreman, and 1\na cook, and each will be a self-1\ncontained unit tor the summer.\nOne crew will work ln the Sheep\nCreek area, burning slash and tidying up and correcting as far as\npossible bad conditions in that section as regards forest tire hazard.\nAnother crew will work in the\nCreston section, and will be a trail\nto the forest lookout on tbe summit\not Thompson mountain.\nA third one will complete the j\ntrain to connect the Whatthan val- I\nley on the Arrow lakes with tht]\nWhatshan valley.\nReopening of the old connection\nbetween Waldo and Cranbrook by\nSL Joseph's creek will occuy the\nfourth, which will continue work\nstarted last year on read and tra'l\nconstruction up Cavsn and the\nGold creeks, 4n an Important Urn-\nNAME\nYOUR\nBRAND\nMillions and Millions of Gallons\nThe rich full aroma of White Horse, its lovely\nheather and peat flavour, its mellow taste, ara\nthe very essence of real old Scotch. Experts\npronounce it the equal of a fine liqueur and\nyou will agree with their verdict. WHITE\nHORSE Scotch is now older and better than\never and millions and millions of gallons are\n-constantly matured and maturing to ensure\nyour continual enjoyment of this Real Old\nScotch.\n'. \u25a0 ;^.\"\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0':'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\". . \u25a0... \u25a0\u25a0 7 .:\u25a0\u25a0.'71--.'- 7>.,- \u25a0\u2022\u25a0..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0,mm\nIII HORSE\nSCOTCH   WHISKY\nmsnim a torrm ity scotump\nySfe7._..; .17;-.;;J:..'.'  :\u25a0.. \u25a0 .7 \u25a0 ':\u25a0: -7 \u25a0.'.; 7:7 . 7. . \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0\nJ\u00a3S\nThis advertisement is net published or displ ayed by the Liquor Conti-oJ BGarcJ or by the\nGovernment of. British Columbia\n I .     \u25a0\n.llWlli^ II   p     LPIIIIK   9|li  II *   IJPIHJ Ill .  \u2014M\nb^3\nNFLSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 11, 1936\n-MSI THRU\nA Whole by the Tail\nBONNINGTON AND SOUTH SLOCAN\nINSTITUTE PUNNING FOR FAIRS\nServed Tea at\nBoswell Sports\nBOSWELL, B.C.\u2014Saturday afternoon, when the Kootenay Lake\ninter-school sports meet was held\nin Boswell, the Church guild served\ntea in the basement of the packing\nshed.\nMrs. S. J. Cummings was convener of the tea committee. She was\nassisted by Mrs. Shell and Mrs.\nLawson Hepher. Mrs. A. Kennedy\nwas at thc \"receipt of custom.\"\nThe soft drinks and ice cream\nstall kept S. J. Cummings and Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Cummings busy\nserving. Ten gallons of ice cream\nwere consumed in a very short time.\nMounting \"Colossus.\" the huge 68-ton whale to be exhibited In\nNelson Friday, proved to be an engineering feat requiring real ingenuity. Photo shows the start of the mounting Job. \"Colossus'' Is\nnow touring the continent In his own specially built bridge steel railroad car, and will stop for a one-day visit In Nelson tomorrow. The\nwhale will be exhibited at the C.P.R. depot from 11 a.m. till 10 p.m. *\u2022\u2022\nEAGLES INSTALL\nAT MICHEL\nto a well spread supper was prepared by the Ladies guild of the\nMichel Anglican church.\nThe only dissappoinlment ot the\nevening was lhat members of the\nKimberley Eagle lodge numbering\naround 30 were unable to make the\n  ] trip. Word came previous.\nMICHEL, B.C.-The annual in- After the banquet, at which Jew-\nstallutiuii of offic-rs for both (he : els were received by Sister Jarlna\nLadies auxiliary and thc Eagle lodge and Brother Thomas, an invitation\nof Ihe Michel, No. 1864, was held ! da\u00bbce was held at the Michel Leg-\nat the Michel Legion hall June 6. | ion hall, lasting until 3 a.m. Thc\nA banquet followed in thc Michel j program consisted of old time\nchurch hall at which over 100 sat j dances.\n        Offiecr.s   installed   in   llic   Eagle\nI lodge follow;\nWorthy   president,   I'.   Cimolini,\n; Michel;  worthy   vice-president,  R.\nMiles.   Michel;   worthy   secretary.\nj John Mitchell, Michel; worthy trea-\n| j surer, G. Mannioiv Michel; worthy\n1! conductor,   J.   Whittaker,   Michel;\n\u201e ,    , i worthy  chaplain,   D.   B.   Mitchell,\nIVaI'VAIK FAAVC ' i,|Mlk' i:il'\"li \u2022' Katrichak, Natal;\nnCIVWHS IC\u00aba outside guard, J. Grocutt. Michel;\nPear, \u00bborry, anxiety rob you of junior past worthy president. D.\nrest and sleep and health. Dr. , Thomas, Michel; worthy trustees,\nChase's Nerve Food will certainly W. Cavil!, T. Androllck, b. Thomas,\nhplp you to win back health, vigor; Michel.\nNATAL BRIDE IS\nGIVEN SHOWER\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014A miscellaneous\nshower was held at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. C. Koska of Natal,\nJune 5 in honor of Mrs. Paddy\nJoyce, the former Miss Helen Koska,\nwho was a bride of a month ago.\nGames were played. The guest of\nhonor was the recipient of many\ngifts. Guests were Mrs. J. Repka,\nMrs. T. Androlick, Mrs. G. Sofko,\nMrs. J. Chala, Mrs. P. White, Miss\nM. Androlick. Miss Vernon Travis,\nMiss Mary Musil, Miss Viola, and\nBessie Vlasak, Mrs. B. Travis, Mrs.\nJ, Jarolin, Mrs. J. Valenta, Mrs. M.\nLastutta, Miss Mary Terano, Mrs.\nJ. Kotek, Mrs. V. Brindak. Mrs. L.\nTryanek, Mrs. A. Podrasky, Miss\nMary Carusoe, Mrs. P. Karas and\nMiss Helen Podrasky.\nSprinkling Hours\nSet al Rossland\nand confidence. Use it to-day.\nDr. Chase's\nNERVE FOOD\nTRAIL\nCARRIER\nThe Ladies auxiliary officers installed were:\nPast madame president, Mrs. E, \\\nJarina. Natal; Madame president)\nMrs. A. Phillips, Michel; Madame\nvice-president, Mrs. E, Kozler,\nMichel; Madame chaplan, Mrs. A.\nThomas, Michel; Madame secretary,\nMrs. J. Walsh, Natal; Madame\ntreasurer, M. Cavil!, Michel: inside\nguard. Mrs. J. Mitchell, Michel:\noutside guard, Mis. J. Myles;\nmadame trustees, Mrs. A. Mannioti,\nMichel, Mrs. M. McGinnis, Michel;\nMrs. A. Reynolds, Michel.\nThc installing officers were J.\nMitchell for the men and A. Man-\nnion for the ladies auxiliary. Thc\nconductors were G. Mannion for the\nEagles and J. Firth for the ladies\nMcDonald Death\nIs a Shock\nRalph Temple\nRalph, age 17, Is the son of\nMr. and Mrs. E. A. Temple,\nOockeril! St., Trail, and has\nhad considerable experience\nwith the Dally News carrier\nsystem. At the present time\nhe Is delivering papers on\nMilligan Hill along Spokane\nand Ravine Streets. Ralph Is\na popular young athlete, playing tennis, lacrosse, soccer,\nand In the winter, hockey.\nGuaranteed Early Morning\nHome Delivery to Trail\nSubscribers,\nBEAVERDELL, B.C.\u2014H was with\ndeep regret the residents of Beaverdell and district learned of the death\nof Findlay McDonald in the Grand\nForks hospital June 4. after only a\nfew days illness. Findlay, as he was\nknown to everyone, was one of thc i\nreal old-timers, having first come\nup the river in 1894. He was a kindly\nold gentleman and a highly, respected citizen. A large number of\nfriends motored to Grand Forks\nSaturday to attend his funeral,\nwhich was conducted by the Odd\nFellows.\nA golf tournament Sunday, between Kettle Valley and the local\nclub was run off in spite of the\nrain. Those playing for the Kettle\nValley rlub were Mr. and Mrs. G.\nS. Walters, Mr. and Mrs. F. Bubar.\nMr. and Mrs. Croucher, Constable\nand Mrs. Pritchard, P. H. Donaldson. Alex Donaldson, Mr. Fenwick\nand Mr. Huddard.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Haley and son\nWeldon left Tuesday for Ihcir home\nin Cranbrook, after spending two\nweeks in camp, where Mr. Haley\nhas been relieving at the local station.\nMr. and Mrs. J. J. Kennedy were\nvisitors to the coast for a few days.\nMrs. Petrie of Merrill is a guest\nof  her mother.  Mrs.  F.  Lockhart.\nFrank Richter spent the weekend with his parents at Rock Creek\nR. H. Stewart and his daughter\nof Vancouver, who had been spending a few days in camp, left Saturday for their home.\nROSSLAND, B.C., June 10. \u2014\nSprinkling regulations occupied\nmuch of the attention of the city\nfathers at Ihe council meeting Monday, complaints being received from\nthose living on particularly high\nspots throughout the city that there\nwas little or no pressure in spite of\nan overflowing reservoir. After considerable discussion it was thought\nthat better results could be obtained\nby allowing those south of Columbia avenue and west of St. Paul\nstreet to sprinkle from 7 to 9 a.m.\nand from 6 to 8 p.m.; those north of\nColumbia avenue from 2 p.m. until\nmidnight, and those on the high\nspots from 8 a.m. till 2 p.m. A special meeting of the council will be\nheld next week to arrive at a final\ndecision.\nThe Rossland Gyro club was\ngranted the use of Esling park and\nthe Recreation park on July 1 for\ntheir spoils program, subject to arrangements with other organizations\nordinarily using these parks.\nLeo Nlmsick, David Tweed and\nWilliam   Pollocl    addressed   the\ncouncil, asking that the ball park\nbe enlarged and fixed up so that\nit could be used for such events\nas the Consolidated  picnic. The\ncouncil and the workmen's committee will meet.at a later date to\ngo into the matter.\nThe offer of A. L. Johnson of $20\napiece for lots 28 and 29. block 16,\nSecond avenue, was accepted. Mr.\nj Johnson plans to build a live-room\nmodern house on the property.\n|    Alexander Page asked permission\nI lo build a garage on lot 20, block\n; 311. This is a lot unsuitable for build;\ning   purposes,  and   Mr.  Page  was\n1 granted   permission   to   place   the\nI garage there subject to removal if\nlot is sold.\nThe council endorsed a resolution\nfrom the city of Kamloops, asking\nthe British Columbia government\nto pass enabling legislation permitting the refunding of municipal\ndebts at not more than 3 per cent.\n'The Arthur John Crowe tax sale\nby-law received its three readings.\nA. Lessieur requested permission\nto purchase for the sum of $12, lots\n15 and 16, block 6, on which he\nplans to erect a four-room modern\nhouse, building it one room at a\ntime. Mr. Lessieur was asked to submit floor plans for the house at the\nnext meeting of the council.\nThe Trail city council wrote asking how many of the Rossland city\nfathers plan attending the meeting\nof the Union of B.C. Municipalities\nat Trail on June 17.\nWill Stage Exhibits in\nNelson, Edgewood\nand Vancouver\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.-At the\nmonthly meeting of the Bonnington\nand South Slocan Women's institute held In the hall on Wednesday evening. Mrs. M. Downie, secretary-treasurer, was elected -a\ndelegate to represent the institute\nat the provincial conference to be\nheld in Vancouver. The president,\nMrs. P. O. Bird was in the chair.\nThe financial statement showed a\nbalance of $57 after the expenses\nof the Empire day sports had been\npaid. Free tickets for ice cream\nto the number of 225 were given\nout to the school children of the\ndistrict.\nThe appreciation of the meeting\nwas expressed to all who had so\ngenerously helped and contributed\nto the success of the institute booths\nat the Empire day sports.\nThe meeting voted the annual\ncontribution of $12 be spent for the\nNelson rest room with a note of\nkindly appreciation for its benefits;\nth'at the yearly rental of $12 be paid\nto the Public Hall association for\nthe use of the hall; that the secretary's salary of $12.50 be paid for\nthe half year.\nA motion was passed that the\nmatter of the Union Traveling library for this district be taken up\nwith the local secretary, M. Walker,\nas it was understood that only two\ndistrict libararies had been granted\nin the Kootenay and that a third\nwas available. The secretary was\ninstructed to write to this effect.\nMrs. Veldemar Hvidt attended the\nmeeting and kindly offered to give\na concert in the Bonnington hall\nfor the benefit of the institute. This\nvery gracious offer was accepted\nand arrangements made for it to\ntake place the latter part of the\nmonth.\nNEEDLEWORK\nCONVENOR8\nMrs. W. A. MacCabe and Mrs.\nKelsey were appointed convenors\nfor the needlework exhibits, to be\nsent to the Edgewood and Vancouver fairs respectively.\nMrs. J. D. Yeatman and Mrs. Andrew Willey were appointed as\ngeneral convenors for the Nelson\nfair with the right to appoint their\nown committees for the different\nscclions of exhibits. Amongst the\ncorrespondence were letters of\nthanks for gifts of flowers and delicacies to sick members.\nDonations of socks from Mrs. R.\nElliott were sold for the benefit of\nthe social fund which is used to\ncover all expenses In that line.\nThe meeting adjourned untill\nSeptember. Tea was served by Mrs.\nH. Strand and Mrs. Kelsey. Attending were Mrs. Bird, Mss. Downie,\nMrs. Yeatman, Mrs. Humphry, Mrs.\nPurdy, Mrs. R. Elliott, Mrs. B.\nBaker, Mrs. W. D. Ridge, Mrs. T. A.\nWheildon, Mrs. W. Whiteley, Mrs.\nW. C. Motley. Mrs. J. Jcwetl, Mrs.\nW. Walkley, Mrs. H. Strand, Mrs.\nN. Braun, Mrs. A. Deporter, Mrs.\nE. Anderson, Mrs. L. Cox, Mrs. D.\nDangler. Mrs. L. Hoffman. Mv,s. P.\nHorlick, Mrs. J. Murray, Mrs. W. P.\nRogers. Mrs. W. A. MacCabe, Mrs.\nA. Willev, Mrs. E. J. Bowkett and\nMrs. V. Hvidt.\nT^#m'#1^ (t<ntq\u00bb\u00bbtf\nINCORPORATED   2?? MAY 1670.\nHoliday Season Baggage\nOur stock of fine baggage is now complete and we can take care of your\nevery travelling need.\nLadies' \"Travel Twins\"\nSet consists of 20-inch Aeropack with three rod hanger\nand 16-inch Vanity case with mirror and five bottles.\nTan or grey striped tweed covers, a ^ g^ a\u00ab*\nRayon lining and leather binding V I AA*73\nSET   \t\n19\nSee\nOur Luggage Display\non   the   Main   Floor\nDRESSING CASES\nThese are shown in black or brown. Rich linings of\nrayon   Some are fitted with mirror and bottles. Size\n\" inch. EACH\u2014\n$2.95, $3.95, $4.95, $6.95\n18-ir\nTRUNKS\nA new shipment of special trunks in 36-inch size will\narrive in a few days. These will be specially priced. EACH\n$9.50, $12.95 and $14.95\nMcBrine's \"Aeropack\"\nThe 'most popular baggage made. Made in 20-inch size\nin many different colors and finishes. EACH\u2014\n$9.95, $12.95 and $14.95\nVanity Cases \"Special\"\n14-inch vanity case in black only. Fitted {L*_\\   Q\/t*\nmirror and 5 bottles. \u2122 ^L\u00ab~3\nSPECIALLY PRICED        *S\nClub Bags\nThe handy baggage for every occasion.\nBROWN SUEDE with zipper Each $4.50\nBLACK LEATHERETTE with zipper .... Each ?5.50\nBLACK OR BROWN COWHIDE $13.05 and $15.00\nMEN'S NEW GLADSTONE BAGS\nTop cowhide beautifully finished. Complete with hanger.\nBlack only in sixe 26-inch\nSplit Cowhide\t\nEach $22.50\n$11.95\nSplit Cowhide \"Special\"   $13.50\nSuit Cases $2.25 and $3.50\nWEEK-END BAGS\nRoomy bags of heavy\nsuedine or tapestry. Rubberized with zipper top.\nMake a handy travelling\nbag. Black, brown and\nnavy. \u00abJO Cfl\nEACH  \u2022pL.OV\nNEW  SHOPPING\nBAGS\nOutstanding value in\nplaids and patterned tapestries, 'genuine leather\nand moire. Rubberized\nand fitted with zipper\nEACH  5)1\"J\nBEACH OR\nUTILITY\nBAGS\nRubberized colored suedine fitted with zipper fastener. 7Q\u00a3\nEACH      IJ\nFOLDING\nLEATHERETTE\nBAGS\nRoomy neat appearing\nbags of durable leatherette. Fold up very\\rorn-\npact when not in CjM\nin use. EACH .... 0.7\nSouth Slocan\nPeople Are in\nNelson Hospital\nSOUTH  SLOCAN, B.C. - Mrs.\nJohn Anderson was a week-end vis\nitor in Trail where her son \"Odd\"\nis in the hospital for an mastoid\noperation.\nMiss Josephine Varseveld ot Winlaw was the week-end guest of Mrs.\nH. Strand.\nJames Potosky was a Nelson\nvisitor.\nMrs. Alec Mitchell has been\nspending a few days in Nelson the\nguest of her mother, Mrs. E. Calbick,\nwhilst visiting her husband who is\nin the Kootenay Lake hospital undergoing an operation for appendi-\ncitus.\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. MacCabe were\nNelson visitors on Sunday,\nMiss Mary Edwards ot Trail was\na week-end visitor with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Edwards.\nMrs. Jack Corner and children\nIan and Joan, spent Sunday here\nvisiting Mrs. Corner's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. H. Russel. Miss Joan\nis staying over for a month's visit\nwith her grandparents.\n\/ttfit**? CONTEHTlf EHT\nIbi urn 04tfl Ifbuh*.\nARROW LAKE IS\nRECEDING\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014With the coming\nof cooler weather the Arrow lake\nhas receded considerably. On Wednesday, June 3, thc water reached\na height of 28 feet 9 inches, Ihe\nhighest in a number of years. The\nsteamer Minto was landing some\nyards to Ihe east of the wharf and\ntlie basement of the C.P.R. station\nwas   flooded.\nCar makers build cars as\nsafe as they know how.\nBut old tires form a \"weak\nlink\" which is your responsibility.\n, When you buy Goodyears\nyou buy proven tires. You\nsee the proof demonstrated\nto you be\/ore you buy. You\nbuy more than just tires\u2014\nyou buy motoring content'\nment.\nPROOF...\nThe Excruciating\nPains of Rheumatism\nBlood\nBn i ers\nWe recognise in rheumatic disorders a\ndiseased condition of the blood containing\nuric acid which is the cause of this irritating and painful trouble.\nRheumatism leaves in its train, distorted\njoint*, crooked limbs, crippled hands, and\nthe intenso pain and agony is almost unbearable.\nBurdork Blood BitterB purifies the blood\nby driving out the uric acid, G'*l rid of\nju-rr-eu-q.tic \\jiwi by,, usmg BJiJi.\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nReturn to Johnson's\nLanding\nJOHNSONS LANDING, B.C. -\nMrs. I. H. Thompson and Miss Florence McNicol returned to Johnson's Landing after spending a week\nin Kaslo.\nMr. and Mrs. McNicol, the Misses\nEileen Jones, Beth Dinney, C. Reyden, Cliff Anderson and Jack and\nBert McNicol, Jack Raper, were\namong those attending a dance at\nLardo Saturday.\nRaymond Raper made a surprise\nvisit to his home Wednesday.\nI. H. Thompson and Malcolm\nGreenlaw were visitors here.\nGrand Rapids, Michigan is to have\na furniture museum.\n_i_____\nSee PROOF of Goodyear Long\nMileage-BEFORE YOU BUY!\nYour Goodyear dealer will ahow you \"footprint.\"\nol actual tire, on car. owned near you, which itill\nretain tait, traction alter very long mileage.\nThese will mibetantiate for you the two extra\nGoodyear qualities which th\u00bb dealer will demonstrate to you\u20141. That Supertwi-t Cords retain\ntheir \"lile\" much longer than ordinary cords, thu_ \u25a0\nkeeping Goodyear lists out ol troubl. and vastly\nprolonging their lile ... and ... 2. That the All-\nWeather diamond bead itoutly resist, skidding\neven on smooth wet surfaces.\nAsk to boo those proofs BEFORE YOU BUY.\ngood\/vear\nNELSON TRANSFER CO., LTD.\nCOODYEAR DEALERS\nCORNER VERNON AND STANLEY STREETS\nPHONE 35\nNELSON, B.C\nv,\nMm. .i^A^J^emmA\n !',.-W   JiiijpfppVVIIMi.\n\"r\n'^PUJP^P^'\nPAQ_ HOUR -\nHOSPITAL GETS\nA GAS OXYGEN\nMACHINE GIFT\nAccepts Offer of the\nKinsmen Club;\nCost $350\n_\nA POST MORTEM\nROOM DISCUSSED\nTelephone  Employees]\nProposition Is\nRejected\nPurchase of a gas oxygen anes-\nthesia machine, to be paid for by\nthe Nelson Kinsmen club, at an approximate cost of $350, was authorized by the board of directors of\nKootenay Lake General hospital\nWednesday evening, confirming\nsteps already taken by the superintendent, Miss Vera Eidt, on authority given her by President C. F.\nMcHardy. The board's thanks were\nextended to the Kinsmen for the\nsplendid gift\nA letter from the Kinsmen stated\nthst the club had $160 In hand toward the machine, and undertook\nto provide thc balance In due time\nif the board would finance the purchase in the meantime, as it had\ndone in the case of the club's earlier\nsjUt, the oxygen tent. President\nMcHardy said this had seemed reasonable to the executive, and he\nhsd instructed Miss Eidt to make\nher selection and order the machine, and arrangements had been\nmsde accordingly.\n\" The new type of anesthesia will\n\u25a0 b* specially beneficial to patients\nwhose heart or lung conditions\nctuse the standard chloroform or\nether anethesia to be followed by a\nstvere reaction. It will cost considerably more than the ordinary\nanesthetic treatment.\nPOST MORTEM\nFACILITIES\nA recommendation of the house\ncommittee, headed by Harry Burns,\nfor equipping of a post mortem\nroom in connection with Ihe pathological laboratory, a move suggested by Dr. William Molfatt, new\ncity medical health officer and laboratory head, gave rise to an animated debate. Practically every member of the board agreed with arguments presented by Dr. F. M. Auld,\nof the desirability of having this\nstandard facility in association with\nthc pathological laboratory, as the\npractice of post mortems as a means\nof throwing light on obscure conditions   and   obtaining   knowledge\nNELSON DAILY NEW*. NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, JUNI tt. 19M\nKINGZETT RINK\nHIGH BOWLING\nFour Games Played in\nCountry Store\nContest\n\u2014Staff Photo.-\nThis Is a snap of A. Merlo, one\nof the famous Trail Mario family, \"taking five\" early one morning after having made a lot of\ndough through the night.\nH. H. Kingzett's rink piled up\nhigh total' in Wednesday night's\ngames of the Nelson Lawn Bowling\nclub in the country store competition, beating P. Coulter's four 23-4.\nIn the other games played G. A.\nMeeres beat N. J. Lowes 12-10; J.\nBall beat N. B. Bradley 21-U; and\nA. Lane and E. W. Penwill tied,\n18-16.\nI    Rinks were;\nH. H. Klngzett, Mrs. E. Penwill,\nMrs. W. T. Calbick, Mrs. McMillan.\nP. Coulter, Mrs. Ball, Mrs. Sam\nBrown, C. I. Archibald.\nG. A. Meeres, Mrs. P. Coulter, J.\nW. Graham.\nN. J. Lowes, W. T. Calbick, J.\nSimons.\nJ. Ball, J. S. Goulding, Sam\nBrown.\nN. B. Bradley, Miss G. Laughton,\nMrs. J. Slndell.\nA. Lane, Mrs. Lane, G. Read.\nE. W. Penwill, Mrs. A. Wigg, D.\nLaughton.\nwith which to save life, was spreading rapidly, but some questioned\nwhether thc money involved, about\n$150, chiefly for o tile floor, could\nnot be better spent in improving\nfacilities for the patients.\nIt was thc final view that the\nroom should be equipped, provided\nIhe cost was not excessive, and the\nrecommendation was referred to the\nexecutive and the finance committee with power lo art.\nCOOPERATIVE  INSURANCE\nDr. Auld raised the question of\nstudying plans for cooperative\nhealth insurance, and pointed out\nlhat the Health Insurance act empowered the commission now being\nset up to cooperate with hospitals\nin setting up community schemes.\nPresident McHardy named C. H.\nHamilton a committee to study\navailable schemes and report. H.\nM. Whimster, pointing out that Secretary J. C. Forbes had accumulated a lot of material on the question, suggested that after the board\nhad received Mr. Hamilton's report,\nit would be advisable to send Mr.\nForbes to Kamloops for a few days\nto study the Kamloops plan.\nTELEPHONE *\nMEN'S PROPOSAL\nRalph Humble, on behalf of the\nplant men of the B.C. Telephone\nFlashes From the Wires\nFIRE IN ALASKA\nJUNEAU, Alaska, (AP)-A forest fire, burning out of control,\nswept through an area seven miles\nwide on the east fork of the Skag-\nway river near Glacier station about\n14 miles from Skagway on the White\nPass Yukon railroad. Hurriedly\nmustered fire fighting crews strove\nunavailingly to check the flames\nWhich raged along both sides of\nthe valley.\nBRITISH QUNBOAT8\nORDERED TO CANTON\nLONDON.(AP)\u2014 Dispatches from\nHongkong by the Reuters (British)\nnews agency said that the British\ngunboats, Cicala and Tarantual had\nbeen ordered to Canton.\nCANADA NOT BUYING ARM8\nOTTAWA, (CP)-Any Canadian\narmament purchases from the United States last month were by private individuals and not by the government, defence department officials said here. The comment followed a Washington announcement\nby Secretary of State Hull that Canada bought United States-made arms\nand military materials to the amount of $57,203 during May.\nARRESTED AT TORONTO\nTORONTO, (CP)-Milton M. Connell, 28, Los Angeles, was arrested\n' on a charge of having a revolver.\nPolice arrested him after they allegedly discovered the revolver in\na door pocket in his car and also\nfound four bullets in a shoe under\nthe rear seat. There were no shells\nin the gun police said.\nRAISED CANADIAN BILLS\nOTTAWA, (CP)-The Bank of\nCanada has disclosed search Is being made for a man who had raised\nthree or four of the bank's bills by\nskilful art work, faking a $2 bill\ninto a $20 on one occasion. Governor Graham Towers said he believed\nthere were not more than four of\nthc bills in circulation and that\nthey had been traced in Ontario\nand Manitoba.\nBARNEY ROSS WINS\nMILWAUKEE. (AP) - Barney\nRoss, welterweight champion of the\nworld, knocked out Laddie Tonielli,\nChicago, in the fifth round of a\nscheduled 10-round non-title bout\nat State Fair park. The champion\nweighed 142H, Tonielli 1501,.\nGERMAN ARRESTED BY SWI88\nZURICH, Switzerland, (AP) -\nPolice announced they had arrested\nan alleged member of the Gestapo,\nthc German secret police, who had\nconfessed a plot to assassinate Heln-\nrich Bruening, former chancellor of\nGermany.\nBANDITS ESCAPE UNDER FIRE\nWINNIPEG, (CPI- Police have\nlaunched a widespread search for\nthe four bank bandits who held up\na branch of the Royal Bank of Canada here and escaped with approximately $100 In a hail of revolver bulets as the manager opened fire. Believing one of Ihe rob\nbers wounded by one of the five\nshots fired by the manager, officers\nwere busy checking doctors' offices in case the man may have\nsought medical attention.\nGLOUCESTER VISITS SELAS8IE\nLONDON, (CP)\u2014 The Duke of\nGloucester, the King's brother, paid\na \"strictly private\" visit to Emperor\nHaile Selassie Wednesday. Court\ncircles emphasized the duke did not\nvisit the negus as a representative\nof the King, but merely renewed\nthe acquaintanceship established\nseveral years ago.\nDOUCET WINS TOURNEY\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Babe Dou-\ncet, a Drummondvillc, Que., milkman, outlasted 20 boxers to win\nJack Dempsey's \"white hope\" tournament. His decision was a hollow\none however, as he won on a foul\nfrom Joseph Thibault, a liusxy looking farmer from Peace River, Alta.\nCHAMBERLAIN  WOULD\nLIFT 8ANCTIONS\nLONDON, (CP cablel-Lifting of\nsanctions from Italy and organization of a system of regional security pacts are urged by Neville Chamberlain, chancellor of the exchequer. Addressing the 1900 club, thc\nchancellor added that before these\nproposals can be \"translated in action, we must take counsel with\nothers, particularly those dominions\nwhose partnership ismi\" so much\nfor the influence of the British\nEmpire in the world.\"\nClouds Over City of Rossland\nppppr. ..   r'-\u00bb         -mm\nLi- \u25a0\u25a0\nj1\u2122*\",   ...\n.   \u2022                     '\u25a0''\u25a0liiM ill\u2014  '   '\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\u2014^\n1                 RfeffT :\n#MfNM\u00bb         *\nmmm\n\u2014By Staff Photographer.\nLooking wast over Rossjand business seotlon with rolling clouds\nplaying an Important part.\nFenders Hurt in\nBump Upon Baker\nAs Mrs. Carl Larson was turning\nher car out from the curb on Baker\nstreet, in the vicinity of the Golden\nGate cafe, shortly before 10 o'clock\nWednesday night, J. A. Irving came\nwest in h's car, and the two machines collided, both sustaining\ndamage, principally to fenders.\nNEW BISHOPRIC IS KEYNOTE AS\nAPOSTOLIC DELEGATE WELCOMED\nAT SERIES THREE RECEPTIONS\ncompany in this district, gave further details of a proposal previously received from the employees\nassociation, which proposed an\nagreement for a flat rate for hospitalization of members of the association or their families, by which\nthe association would pay a higher\nrale than Ihe public ward rate, in\nconsideration of waiving of the\nIncidentals, except specified items\nsuch as x-ray work. His proposition was for a $3 a day rate, as\ncompared with the $2.50 a day public ward rate, this being similar to\nwhat the association had from other\nhospitals in the province.\nIn a lengthy discussion it was\nagreed that the hospital would lose\non the short-tlmo cases but gain\non thc long ones, but the board took\nthe view that a special contract of\nthis nature would set a precedent\nthat many other groups would\nwish to follow, and decided it\ncould not grant the request.\nAuthority was given Miss Eidt\nto spend one week of her holidays\nin attending the nurses convention.\nLABORATORY 8URVEY\nMiss Eldt reported that Dr. C. E.\nDolman, sent on tour by Dr. H. E.\nYoung, provincial health officer, to\nmake a survey of the various branch\nlaboratories bf the provincial department of health, had visited Nelson May 26, and had interviewed\nDr. Moffatt and Dr. Auld at great\nlength, taking up such questions as\nthe facilities offered by the laboratory to assist medical practitioners\nand others in the district, the trend\nshown in thc examinations made by\nthe laboratory, the technique used\nwith reference to standardization of\npractice, costs, quality of thc assistance available, report forms, and\nthe local problems of this laboratory.\nHer report as superintendent\nshowed that a total of 241 patients\nwere treated during May, of whom\n64 were holdovers from April and\n177, new admissions. Of the 241,\nthe hospital discharged 184 during\nthe month, leaving 57 to go into\nJune. The daily average of patients was 63.5. There were two\ntubercular, five infectious and 13\nobstretical cases in May and six\ndeaths occurred. Meals served numbered 9217, and the cost of the raw\nfood amounted to DM: cents per\nmeal.\nOperations numbered 76, of which\n11 were major and 65 minor. The\nx-ray examinations also numbered\n76.\nAt the pathological laboratory 540\nexaminations were made.\nThe board passed a resolution\nthanking the Nelson Daily News\nfor the pictures and special display\nmade in ils columns in connection\nwith hospital day.\nA Comedy of Rod Tape Errors\nContractors had $1500 of their U.S. government public works\nallotment left after building this railway overpass near Afton, Okla.\nThey offered the cash to the government, which told them to spend\nIt on the project. Now 62 WPA men \u00bbrry rocks three miles In one-\ngallon buckets to help spend the rxtr'a $1900. All workers caught\ncarrying more than one bucket were fired.\nluminated Address\nPresented by\nParish\nVOICES LOYALTY,\nTHANKS TO POPE\nEugene Maglio Reads\nAddress Pupils\nSt. Joseph\nIlluminated address read by T.\nJ. Scanlan to Most Rev. Andrea Cas-\nsulo, D.D., apostolic delegate to Canada and Newfoundland, was the\nsecond such address read to an\napostolic delegate by Mr. Scanlan.\nWhen Most Rev. D. Falconio visited Nelson in 1901 Mr. Scanlan was\ncharged with the same duty.\nTho address he read Wednesday\nnight follows:\n\"We, your spiritual children of\nthe parish of Mary Immaculate of\nNelson, are deeply grateful for the\ngreat honor you do us in visiting our\nparish; and we sincerely hope that\nyour visit may be pleasing and enjoyable to you.\n\"We are deeply sensible of our\ngreat privilege in having the opportunity of offering hospitality to\nthe personal representative ot our\nholy father, Pope Pius the Eleventh,\nand we bid you welcome from the\nvery bottom of our hearts.\n\"Ours Is a young country, where\nthe proportion of Catholics is small,\nand our institutions few, but we\nwant you to know that our esteem\nand love for holy mother church are\ndeeply rooted in our lives.\n\"We appreciate most highly, and\nare deeply grateful for thc wonderful direction and assistance the holy\nfather has given us in his many\nletters and encyclicals in these trying times, and we are making our\ngreatest endeavors to direct our efforts in those lines of Catholic action so dear to his heart.\n\"We scarcely know in what language to express our appreciation\nof the great dignity that has been\nconferred on us by making Nelson\nan episcopal see, and we wish to\npledge our loyalty and support to\nthis clarion call to greater organization and effort in the cause of holy\nmother church.\n\"Once again, your excellency, we\nthank you for your visit and we ask\na remembrance in your prayers,\nand especially in your sacrifice at\nthe altar of God.\"\nThe address was signed on behalf\nof the parish of Mary Immaculate\nby J. O. Patenaude and Mr. Scanlan,\nPUPILS' ADDRESS\nIn the afternoon, at the reception\nby the pupils of St. Joseph's academy, Eugene Maglio read the following address, also presented in\nilluminated form:\n\"Singularly privileged and honored are we, the Catholic children\nof the parish of Mary Immaculate,\nNelson, British Columbia, Canada,\nto welcome among us the representative of our father Pope Pius XI.\n\"What a unique, preeminent and\nmajestic figure the supreme pontiff\npresents among the world's leaders\nmid rulers: none is like unto him.\nMis authority in Its source Is not of\nthis world. To him, our sovereign\npontiff, we pledge unswerving loyalty, obedience and devotion. His\nword is our law, his wish our command, his welfare our dearest interest. In him we recognize Christ's\nvicar on earth, the Infallible teacher of divine truth, the keeper of the\nkeys of the kingdom of Heaven.\n\"Thou art thc chief shepherd of\nhis flock, thou, prince of the apostles.\n\"As a small tribute of our affection we ask you to accept this spiritual and floral bouquet.\"\nThe spiritual bouquet was presented by Joe Perrier, and a beautiful floral bouquet by Tommy Madden.\nMATERNITY HOSPITALS\nPOPULAR\nLONDON, (CP)-Fewer London\nbabies are being born at home. Of\n65,300 confinements in 1834, 26,000,\nor about 40 per cent occurred at\nhome.\nARCHDRUID DIES\nBANGOR, Wales-(CP) - Dr. J.\nGwili Jenkins, 63, Archdruid of\nWales and Professor of New Testament Greek at .North Wales University College, died here.\nThree Languages Used\nAddressing Him,\nReception\nDELEGATE URGES\nHELP NEW BISHOP\nWill See Nelson Take\nPlace Dioceses\nof Canada\nMost. Rev. Andrea Cassulo, D.D.,\napostolic delegate to Canada and\nNewfoundland, was welcomed to\nNelson Wednesday at thru ceremonies' climaxing in a general reception by members of the parish\nof Mary Immaculate in the evening. Throughout the keynote was\nstruck by the rccont announcement\nfrom the Vatican City of the creation of the new bishopric of Nelson.\nMet at the train by Rt. Rev. Monsignor A. K. Mclntyre of Rossland,\nVery Rev, J. C. McKenzie of Nelson and Rev. Patrick Frecney of\nTrail, his excellency was conducted\nto the Church of Mary Immaculate,\nwhere a service of solemn religious\nreception was held. The delegate\ncelebrated low mass, at thc close\nof which he addressed to the people\na few words expressing thanks for\nthe reception accorded him.\nIn the afternoon the pupils of\nSt. Joseph's, wearing papal colors,\nheld a reception In the parish hall.\nFollowing tho singing of several\nchoruses Eugene Maglio presented\nto his excellency an illuminated\naddress, and Joe Perrier and Tommy Madden presented respectively\nspiritual and floral bouquets.\nAddressing the children, the delegate emphasized the value ot Catholic education both for this world\nand the hereafter.\nTHREE  LANGUAGES\nThe parish hall was crowded for\nthe evening recebtlon, which was\nfeatured by five addresses of welcome to the apdstolic delegate, three\nof them in English, one in Italian\nand one in French. His excellency\nanswered in each language.\nFather McKenzie welcomed the\napostolic delegate for his \"devotion\nto the advance of the church in our\ncountry\" and for what he had done\nfor this province, and welcomed\nhim also as the representative of\nPope Pius XI, \"to whom we owe\nduty, allegiance and obedience.\"\nA signal honor had been conferred upon Nelson in the creation\nof a new bishopric centered here,\nand \"we pledge our support.'\"\nSpeaking on behalf of the clergy,\nMonsignor Mclntyre welcomed the\ndelegate not only for himself, but\nfor his position, for the work he\nwas doing, and that through him\n\"we may express our love, obedience and loyally\" to the pope.\nThe high honor conferred on\nNelson would provide a new impetus for the clergy in this district.\nStephen Vingo addressed Ihe delegate in Italian, and P. E. Poulin\nspoke in French. T. J. Scanlan then\npresented an illuminated address.\nMayor J. P. Morgan, who with\nthe city council attended by special\ninvitation, asserted in his welcome\nto the delegate that \"Nelson is very\nfortunate and Is getting more fortunate all the time.\" The creation\nof the bishopric was a new honor\nfor the city.\nSPECIAL GIFT\nThe apostolic delegate asserted it\nwas impossible to find words to\nexpress the feelings ln his heart, and\ndeclared he would take with him\nwhen he left the memory of a\nbeautiful reception.\nHe was glad the parishioners ot\nMary Immaculate understood the\npaternal interest of the pope, and\nadded \"you have indeed received\na special gift.\" He hoped the new\nbishop would be here soon.\nThis was a young country but it\nhad great possibilities. Only religion could overcome the difficulties of the time, he declared.\nThe basic principle of reconstruction could be found only in Christ\n\"We will do our best for you,\"\nhis excellency promised, \"and you\nmust help the new bishop. Then\nyou will see, in a short time, the\ndiopese of Nelson taking its place\nwith thc other dioceses of Canada.\"\nAccompanying his excellency was\nhis secretary, Rev. H. Manzonl.\nMrs. W. J. Sturgeon gave a piano\nsolo and Mr. Sturgeon sang at the\nopening of the reception.\nCaptain G. S. McNeil, who commanded the famous \u25a0Mauretania,\ndied recently at Ashurst, in the New\nForest. ,     . >\u201e,>     \u00bb*,,  \u25a0\u2022-,\nTRAIL TAKES\nNELSON BOXLA\nSQUAD BY 20-18\nOutclass Lake City's\nTeam Until the\nFourth\nPULL UP WITH\nCOMBINATION\nRossland Win Gives\nSmelter Boys\nSteam\nTRAIL, B.C., June* 10. - There\nwas no doubt that the 9-6 victory\nthe Trail team chalked up against\nRoSsland Monday night had some\neffect on a 20-18 victory the locals\npounded in over the Nelson boxla\nsquad in the second ilxturc of the\nWest Kootenay league at Trail rink\nWednesday night.\nBenefitting from the experience\nof the Rossland victory the Trail\nlads tore Into the battle pnd for the\nmost part of the fixture showed up\nthe visitors.\nAt the end of the first quarter\nthe score was 9-2. At the outset of\nthe second Nelson boys opened up\nand rifled ln three goals before Trail\nhad addcu another. After that the\nvisitors added one more before Trail\nincreased its score to 12 to make\nthe count 12-6 at the end of the\nsecond.\nThe smener city Boys stepped out\nwith a vengeance at the outset of\nthe third quarter ln in endeavor\nto clinch a win, Wilson, Gavrllik,\nKennedy and Balfour tallying before the visitors bad a look-In. Then\ngoals were scored alternately, Paterson, preceding Griplch, who was\nfollowed by Melneczuk. Kendall\nwss followed by Gibbons to end the\nthird quarter with Trail In the\nlead 18-9.\nNIXSON GETS GOING\nIt was in the last quarter that\nthe visiting team, after repeated individual endeavors, clicked on combination plays and DeVoln, DesBrisay, Gibbons and Paterson thrust\nin four goals for Nelson before the\nfirst five minutes of play had elapsed. Clyde Kennedy, Trail Junior of\nlast season, rifled In a hot one after\nPaterson had countered on a pass\nfrom Desbrisay. Merlo scored on\nKennedy's pass after which Gibbons talUed, his goal being followed by a counter by DeVoln. Another\nby Gibbons on DeVoln's assist placed Uie visitors only two goals behind the local squad at full time.\nSUMMARY .\nFirst period\u2014Trail, Merlo, 1:50;\nTrail, Merlo, 4:15; Trail, Latham,\n4:30; Nelson, Gibbons, 4:43; Trail,\nKendall, 5:46; Trail, Kendall, 7:44;\nNelson, DeVoin, 8:33; Trail, Merlo,\n10:37; Trail, Wilson, 11:12; Trail,\nGripich, 12:55; Trail, Kendall, 14:50.\nPenaltles-Smillie 2; Gavrillk 5;\nFox 2; Wilson 2; Kendall 5.\nSecond period \u2014 Nelson, Bishop,\n0:45; Nelson, Desbrisay, 4:07; Nelson,\nDeVoln, 4:18; Trail, Merlo, 5:00;\nNelson, Gibbons, 8:45; Trail, Latham, 13:07; Trail, Stephenson, 13:20.\nPenalties \u2014 Latham'2; Merlo 2;\nCarr 2; Klrby 2; Carr 2; Desbrisay\n2; Kennedy 2.\nThird period-Trail, Wilson, 0:27;\nTrail, Qavriltk, 2:50; Trail, Kennedy, 3:08; Trail, Balfour from Gavrllik, 4:18; Nelson, Paterson, 8:12;\nTrail, Griplch from Bradbury, 9:05;\nNelson, Paterson, 8:22; Trail, Griplch from Bradbury, 9:05; Nelson,\nMelneczuk, 12:05; Trail, Kendall,\n12:41; Nelson, Gibbons, 14:40.\nPenalties\u2014Carr \u25a0 2; Desbrisay 2;\nDesbrisay 2; Sammartino 2.\nFourth period \u2014 Nelson, DeVoln,\n1:35; Nelson, Desbrisay, 8:08; Nelson, Gibbons, 3:18; Nelson, Paterson, 4:36; Trail, Kennedy, 5:09; Nelson, Desbrisay, 6:54; Trail, Merlo\nfrom Kennedy, 7:35; Nelson, Gibbons, 9:47; Nelson, DeVoln, 11:59;\nNelson, Gibbons from DeVoin, 14:_2.\nPenalties\u2014Bradbury 2; Murdoch\n5, Bishop 2, Desbrisay 2; Sammartino 5.\nTeams:\nNelson \u2014 Langill, goal; Smillle,\nMcLeod, Klrby, Melneczuk, Desbrisay, Gibbons, Page, Gallicano,\nPaterson, Bishop, DeVoln and Carr.\nTrail \u2014 LerOy, goal; Stephenson,\nBradbury, Gavrillk, Murdoch, La-\nTrail Aquarian\n-Staff Photo.\nWilliam Gopp, texagenerlan\naquarian who thrills Trail people\nby his high dlvei off the bridge\ncrossing the Columbia river Into\nIts turbulent waters. Mr. Gopp recently underwent an operation for\neye cataract at the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital and his sight has\nImproved marvelouily. That bag\nunder his arm does not contain\ngroceries but his bathing paraphernalia.\nKaslo Ladies\nPay Clinic Bill\nKASLO, B.C.-The Women's auxiliary to the Canadian Legion held\ntheir monthly meeting Thursday\nafternoon at the home of Mrs.\nGeorge Palmer. Owing to adverse\ncircumstances the attendance was\nnot up to the average but business\nproceeded as usual with the secretary, Mrs. J. G. Fox, giving a satisfactory monthly report. Thc only\ncorrespondence was a letter from\nDr. Young about thc additional\ngrant made to the dental clinic\nfund by the British Columbia department of health. Some lime ago\nthree Kaslo ladles loaned the auxiliary thc amount required to com\nplete the necessary funds to carry\non the clinic, this has now been\nrepaid, the total cost of the clinic,\n$478, has been handed to Dr. T. R,\nBourque of Nelson who carried on\nthe work here, and the ladies still\nhave funds in hand to carry on\ntheir routine work.\nSmall bills were presented and\nordered paid.\nThe picture show held the eve\nning of May 25 netted the ladies\n$13.30. Mrs. McGibbon, secretary of\nthe \"cheer-up\" committee presented\nher usual fine report. The president\nMrs. T. H. Horner, presided at the\nmeeting. After adjournment delicious refreshments were served by\nthe hostess, Mrs. Palmer, who was\nassisted by several of thc members.\nONE HOUSE BEING\nBUILT IN B.C.\nUNDCRACT\nOTTAWA (CP).-Somebody is\nbuilding a house in British Columbia under tho Dominion Housing\nact.\nA return tabled in the house of\ncommons said one lean of $2700 had\nbeen approved to date ln thc coast\nprovince.\nThe house is in an urban center.\nThe information was given to C.\nGrant MacNeil (C.C.F. Vancouver-\nNorth).\nMiss Jean Batten has been awarded the Britannia trophy for tho most\nmeritorious performance in the air\nin 1035.\nMURIEL SMITH\nISR0SEQUEEH\nArchdeacon Graham\nCrowns New Ruler\nat Festival\nMiss Muriel Smith was crowned\nQueen of the Rose Festival of the\nChurch of Redeemer at a beautiful\nceremony held on the lawn at the\nresidence of Mayor J. P. Morgan\nWednesday afternoon.\nThe new queen and last year's\nqueen, Miss P.eggy Triggs, led the\nprocession to thc dais at thc end of\nthe lawn. Behind them filed their\nattendants who grouped around the\ntwo thrones. Venerable Archdeacon\nF. H. Graham performed the ceremony by placing the crown on the\nhead of the queen-elect and removing that from the head of last year's\nqueen.\nArchdeacon Graham, asked to say\na few words, remarked on thc many\nsmiling faces,\nIn regard to the Rose Festival,\nhe stated that the event had almost\nbecome a tradition with the Church\nof the Redeemer, as it had been\nheld every year for some time.\nRev. W. J. Silverwood moved a\nvote of thanks to Archdeacon Graham for his cooperation in attending to perform the ceremony for\nthe Church of the Redeemer.\nTea was served on tables on the\nlawn. Ice cream was gold at a stand\nat thc front of the house, Wilfred\nLowery in charge. The coronation\ntook place at 4:30.\nProcession and coronation were\nrepeated in the evening for the\nbenefit of Ihe 300 guests who were\nassembled. The City band directed\nby Fred L. Irwin was present.\nAn outstanding feature of the evening's entertainment and one whicli\nwas not part of the afternoon's program was the dancing of two of\nNelson's young artists, Miss Susan\nTawse, and Miss Katherine Argyle.\nEagles Enjoy\na Social Time\nAlthough the Spokane lodge had\nbeen unable to attend as had been\nplanned, a successful evening was\nheld by the Nelson order of Eagles\nwhen officers for the coming year\nwere installed Wednesday night,\nland, worthy president; F. W. Johnson, worthy vice-president; G. Gen-\ncro, worthy chaplain; F. C, Davis,\nsecretary; H. Wassick, treasurer; A.\nSmith, conductor; G. Melles, inside\nguard; G. C. Williams, R. A. Howe,\nand H. Wassick, trustees.\nFollowing the business meeting a\nsocial evening was held and refreshments were served. Two visitors\nhelped with the entertainment. Selections on the guitars by a yodelling cowboy and songs by Mr.\nFisher were on the program. Piano\nselections were played by Harold\nBrown.\nLAW HAS ARM TOO\nNEWMARKET, Ont. (CP) -\nWarned repetition of the offenco\nwould mean cancellation of his\npermit, a young man paid $10 fine\nfor motor driving with his arm\naround his girl.\nKING GIVE8 PATRONAGE\nLONDON, (CP).-The King has\ngiven his patronage to the British\ncouncil, set up to promote closer\ncultural relations between the United Kingdom and foreign countries.\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nAnd You'll Jump Out of Bed In tha\nMorning Ruin' to Co\nTha liver should pour oat two pounds of\nliquid tills Into roar bowels daily. If thli bil\u00ab\nIs not flow, rig freely, yonr food doeen'tdlgtat.\nIt just decays fa the bowels, (its bloats up\nyoar stomach. You net constipated. Harmfal\npoisons fo Into tha body, and jon fad war.\nthan., Cronie, Sammartino, Balfour, Kennedy, Kendall, Gripich,\nMerlo and Wilson. j\nHelei-ees\u2014A.  B.   Thompson   and |\nStan Genest, j\neunk and tha world looks punk.\nA mere bowel movement doesn't always get\nat the rj.uso. You need \u25a0oraethLns that work a\non the liver as well. It takes those mod, old\nCarter's Little Liver Mia to get theae two\npounds of bile flowing freely and make you\nfeel \"up and up\". Harmless and gentle, they\nmake the Uie flow fmaty. They do the work:\nof calomel bat have no OWMH \u00ab mercury in\nthem. Ask for Carter's Little Lrrar Pills by\nw-mel Stubbornly rcfuaeanything else. 26c.\n\u25a00t.\nr^i^Ammn.\nCanadian manufacturers\nseeking to enter new markets in tbe West Indies,\nCentral and South America,\nfind \u00ab helpful ally in our\nForeign Trade Department.\nThrough this bank's Resident Managers, information\ncan be supplied on current\nmarket opportunities, and\ntrade connections arranged;\nif desired, credit information can also be furnished.\n^^jA^\nTHC ROYAL BANK\nOF CANADA\nNHSON SltANCH\ncV'A \u00bbAI\u00abR. *\u2022_\u00bb!\u00bb\u2022'\n ifWmmmm\nto?\nBELIS TOLl IN CHURCH IN THE\nOLD COUNTRY AS NAKUSP COUPLE\nCELEBRATE ON GOLDEN WEDDING\nMr. and Mrs. W. I. Moseley Honored on Their\n50th Anniversary in Nakusp; Formerly\nLived in Fernie and Carroll's\nNAKUSP. B.C-Two welt-known\nresident of Nakusp, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nI. Moseley, have celebrated their\ngolden wedding anniversary. With\ntheir immediate family and a host\nof friends present to offer congratulations the esteemed couple have\npassed the 50-year mark ot married\nlife.\nThey were married on May Jl,\n1886, in Ptlsall Parish church, Staffordshire, England. Mr. Moseley\nwas born March 12,186S at Wallsall,\nStaffordshire, and Mrs. Moseley was\nborn March 3,1864, at Cradley Heath\nWorcestershire.\nMr. and Mrs. Moseley have been\nresidents of Nakusp since 1924. They\ncame to the Arrow Lakes 28 years\nago, settling on a ranch at Carroll's\nLanding. Two years previous they\nresided at Fernie, B.C., and were\nin that city at the time of the Fernie\nfire.\nMr. Moseley was a coal miner by\ntrade but has always taken a keen\nVaseline\nHEADQUARTERS\nFOR QUALITY\nFOODS \u2014 FRUITS\nMEATS \u2014 VEGETABLES\nPHONES 865\u2014866\nSAFEWAY   STORES   LIMITED\nBeat the\nHere's a hot-weather lunch as\ncooling as a sea-breeze A big\nbowl of Kellogg's Corn Flakes\n\u2014 crisp and tempting. Plenty\ncf cool milk or cream and\nfruit Even on hot, muggy days,\nKellogg's are oven-fresh. At all\ngrocers. Served in restaurants,\nhotels, dining-cars everywhere.\nNothing talus thi plan of\nCORN FLAKES\nInterest in gardening and since coming to Nakusp has run a flower\nshop.\nMr. and Mrs. Moseley were members of tbe Salvation Army in the\nold country, but after moving to\nNakusp, Joined the Methodist\nchurch.\nOn Sunday in honor of their 60th\nanniversary the bells were tolled In\nthe little English church where they\nwere married and the minister\nspoke of the couple who were celebrating in Nakusp.\nS. H. Moseley of Calgary who\nhas served 20 yean in the Royal\nCanadian Mounted Police, and William Moseley of Nakusp were the\nsons present at the old home. Three\ndaughters, Mrs. Fearon of Nanaimo,\nMrs. Daisy Uri of Wynndel and\nMrs. Beatrice Walton of Carroll's\nLanding were also among the company. A third son, Alfred, was\nkilled in the great war.\nMr. and Mrs. Moseley have nine\ngrandchildren and one great grandchild.\nOn Sunday, May 31, the immediate family and a few friends were\nentertained at an anniversary dinner and on Monday afternoon and\nevening an open reception was held.\nThe elderly couple were the recipients of numerous gifts and the\nwell wishes of many friends. A\npicture, gold-framed, was the present from the Nakusp Women's\ninstitute and the members and adherents of the United church and\nfriends presented the couple with\na purse and standard lamp.\nAmong those calling to offer congratulations were Mrs. B. W. Bill,\nMrs. M. La Hue, Mrs. Moore, Wm.\nPratt, Mr. and Mrs. F. Rushton, Mrs.\nLea of Arrow Park, Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Lea, Mrs. B. Marsland, F.\nMarsland, J. Marsland, W. Roper\nArrow Park, A. J. Harrison, Mrs.\nHerrldge, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hamb-\nling, Mrs. C. Turner, Mrs. A. Turner,\nA. E. Jones, Mrs. M. Kerr, Mrs. C.\nHowarth, Mrs. R. H. Aalten, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. S. Leary, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Campe, Mr. and Mrs. T. Harvey,\nMiss A. Allen, Miss J. Fawcett, Miss\nJ. Yurick, Miss R. Horsley, Mrs. A.\nC. Pound, Mrs. M. Ion, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Carruthers, Mr. and Mrs. G.\nKeys, Mrs. E. Beale, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. H. Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. H. L.\nMiller, Miss N. Johnson, J. Wagstaff, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Fowler,\nH. W. Herridge. Mrs. 0. Salstrom,\nMiss Clara Salstrom, H. Gardner Jr.,\nIt. Islip. '\nPresent at the Sunday dinner,\nwere Mrs. Fearon of Nanaimo, S.\nMoseley and sons Jack and William,\nand Mr. Barker of Calgary, Mr. and\nMrs. Uri and Miss Ellen Uri of\nWynndel, Mr. and Mrs. G. Walton,\nClarence, Edward, and Grace of\nCarroll's Landing, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nH. Moseley, Mrs. J. Miller, Mrs. E.\nHall of Carroll's Landing, Mr. and\nMrs. Z. Witt of Carroll's Landing,\nMrs. Ashdown, Mr. and Mrs. C. L.\nHiltz, Mr. and Mrs. W. Maxwell,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Morgan, V. Morgan, Mrs. E. Brodie, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Motherwell, Rev. C. Addyman,\nA. B. Stanley.\nWED AT NAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C.-The marriage\ntook place Saturday at the United\nChurch manse of Miss Elizabeth\nJeffreys and Lester Edward Carpenter, both of Arrow Park, Rev.\nC. Addyman officiating. Witnesses\nwere Miss Sadie Carpenter and\nMr. Alexander Mauchline.\nMr. and Mrs. Carpenter will reside at Arrow Park.\nKILLED HI8 MOTHER\nDUBLIN, (CP)-Edward Preston\nBall, 20, son of a Dublin doctor,\nwas found guilty but insane, on a\ncharge of murdering his mother.\nTransactions between London and\nthe continent were held up for an\nhour when a telephone cable in the\nchannel broke.\n1.-.1111111111111 1111111 f i 111111111 1111111 f 111 iTT\nGOING TO\nAFRICA\nor\u2014\nJust Around the Corner\nLET THE DAILY NEWS FOLLOW YOU\nNo matter where you go this summer you'll want\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\nJMamt lath} Nma\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\ntt 111111 r r! i ri 1111111 t 111 t 11111 t 1111 n 111111 rr\nNfUON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 11, 1SM\nNahusp Couple and Family Celebrate the\nGolden Wedding Anniversary\nIn the foreground, seated on either side of the table bearing two wedding cakes, are Mr. and Mrs.\nW. I, Moseley ef Nakusp, who celebrated their golden wadding anniversary on May 31. Standing In the\nrear are the soni and daughters who attended the ceremony. They were William Moieley of Nakuip,\nMrs. Fearen of Nakusp, 8. H, Moseley of Calgary, M rs. D, Uri of Wynndel and Mrs. B. Walton of Carroll's Landing.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nIn the absence of Mrs. M. J. Vigneux, this column is conducted\nby Mrs. W. J. Sturgeon. All news ot social nature, Including receptions, private entertainments, personal items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone Mrs. Sturgeon at her home,\nTerrace apartments.\nMICHEL MAN IS\nLAID TO REST\nORGANIZATION\nOF FIRST AID\nCENTER IS AIM\nVictoria Man Outlines\nWork; Will Elect\nShortly\nOrganization of a local centre at\nNelson of the St. John Ambulance\nassociation is probable as the result\nof a meeting Tuesday night.\nH. W. Edwardson of Victoria, honorary secretary-treasurer of the\nBritish Columbia council of the association, outlined to a well attended meeting just what would\nbe entailed jn organizing a local\ncenter, and answered numerous\nquestions regarding It. Frank Pearce\nwas named temporary secretary\nand arrangements were made for\nanother meeting shortly to elect\nofficers and take steps to get established.\nFirst aid and home nursing as\ntaught under the St. John association, with examlnaUons by travelling representatives and the award\nof certificates, medallions and labels\naccording to the standing attained\nby candidates, will be possible under a local center. It will also be\npossible for Nelson teams, through\nthe center, to enter Dominion-wide\ncompetitions as has the Canadian\nPacific team in tbe past.\nA quiet wedding was solemnized\nMonday .evening at St. Paul's church\nwhen Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson united\nin marriage Mary Edna Louise,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. S.\nFraser, Innis street, to Bernard\nJames Irving, son of Mrs. J. Irving\nof Tarrys, and the late J. Irving.\nThe bride wore her travelling ensemble suit for her wedding which\nwas of navy chiffon crepe made\non tailored lines and trimmed with\nwhite embroidered collar and cuffs.\nA white hat with nose veil and\nwhite accessories completed the\nbride's outfit. Mrs. E. Boyes, the\nbride's sister, and John Irving, the\ngrooms brother were the witnesses.\nAfter the wedding service a buffet\nsupper was served at the home of\nthe bride's parents with just the\nimmediate relatives of the bride\nand groom present. Mr. and Mrs.\nBernard J. \u2022 Irving left Tuesday\nmorning for Kimberley where they\nare to reside.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Pennoyer of\nTrail are visitors at the home of\nMayor and Mrs. J. P. Morgan, 305\nOak street\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThe Excelsior club of St. Paul's\nchurch recently entertained Mrs.\nBernard J. Irving nee Edna Fraser,\nby surprising her with a miscellaneous shower, at the home of Mrs.\nArther Parker, Innis street. The\nbride was the recipient of many\nlovely presents presented to her in\na white hat box. The invited guests\nwere: Mrs. A. T. Richards, Mrs. J.\nWalgren, Mrs. Maurice Bright,\nMrs. W. Anderson, Mrs. Nettie Johnson, Mrs. William Talbot, Miss Minna\nKahle, Misses Grace and Irene\nLaughton, Miss Eileen and Bessie\nMcKenzie, Mrs. E. Boyes, Mrs. E.\nHedley, Miss Kate Darough, Miss\nM. Stcnson, Misses Nellie and Tina\nMcKenzie, Mrs. William Coleman,\nMiss Margaret Arthur, Mrs. W.\nHarkness, Mrs. John Hamson, Mrs.\nDOney and Mrs. Arthur Parker.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2666\nMr. and Mrs. E. Harrop and their\ndaughter Jessie of Harrop have left\nfor a trip to Windermere.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Charles W. Berry, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Towgood of\nSandon, left Wednesday morning\nfor San Francisco where she will\nmeet Mr. Berry. Mr. and Mrs. Berry\nexpect to leave San Francisco Friday for Bagulo, the Philippine\nIslands, where thy will reside.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. W. W. Ferguson left Wednesday for Spokane.\n\u00ab   *   *\nMrs. Jack Leslie has left on a\ntrip to Vancouver.\n0      .      *\nHarry B. Gore was among travellers to the coast Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJerry Towgood of the Queen mine\nreturns today after a few days holiday in the district.\n\u2022 *   *\nB. A. Pople of Trail Is a visitor\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dick-\nen, Fall street.\n0      .      .\nNelson visitors to the Wesko mine\nTuesday were Mayor Morgan, C.\nD. Blackwook, J. E. Annable, A.\nGodfrey, I. T. Nelson, R. M. Mana-\nhan, J. B. Gray, E. A. Mann, Chief\nM. H. Maloney, H. E. Stevenson, Joe\nKennedy, G. W. Davis, J. M. Gordon, Arthur Parker, and A. D.\nEmory.\n\u00ab   \u00bb   \u2022\nSister Bernard, the Rev. Mother\nSuperior of St. Joseph's academy\nhas returned from a visit to Bellingham.\nMembers present were Mrs. C. F.\nMcHardy, Mrs. John Cartmel, Mrs.\nW. S. King, Mrs. George Schupe,\nMrs. John Dolphin, Mrs. G. E.\nSparkes, Mrs. L. Hanna, Mrs. H. E.\nDill, Mrs. Reger, Mrs. G. F. Lynch,\nMrs. George Hunter, Mrs. George\nHorstead\", Mrs. Simpson, Mrs. F.\nW. Hewis, Mrs. T. H. Glover, Mrs.\nH. H. McKenzle, Mrs. A. L. McCullough, Mrs. W. O. Rose, Mrs.\nWilliam Waldie, Mrs. W. R. Grubbe,\nMrs. F. M. Auld, Mrs. John Towler,\nMiss Margaret Arthur, Mrs. H. D.\nDawson, Mrs. G. K. Ashby, Mrs.\nR. Taylor, Mrs. E. A. Mann, Mrs. W.\nA. Nisbet, Mrs. Purser, Miss Pat\nCampbell, Mrs. W. S. Wilson,\nThe Rev. J. A,\nKaslo Tuesday.\nDonnell drove to\nMrs. F. A. Newell of Trail is the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bennett at their home, 1215 Front street\n\u2022 \u2022      0\nMr. and Mrs. J. R. Riley were\nvisitors to Nelson Wednesday from\nBonnington Falls.\n\u2022 0      *\nNelson visitors to the Queen mine\nTuesday were G. Harry Ferguson,\nP. E. Poulin, H. Harrop, A. J. Dunnett, George Dvorjetz, C. F. McHardy, H. H. Currie, J. Gallo, F.\nA. Jewett, F. R. Pritchard, H. M.\nWhimster and J. B. Curran.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRev. J. M. Ritchie was a visitor to\nKaslo Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Roy Fraser and son Arthur\nhave taken up residence at Robson for the summer.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nP. I. Cameron has left for Van'\ncouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. F. Donaldson was a city visitor\nfrom Salmo Wednesday.\nMiss Catharine Atherton of. Victoria a guest with her uncles, William and Fred Irvine of thc North\nShore.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. F. Parnaby of Procter visited Nelson Wednesday.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nFred Irvine and W. Irvine have\nWalter Mosdal of Victoria as their\nguest on the North Shore.\n\u2022 0      0\nVisitors from Nelson to the Reno\nmill Tuesday were R. W. Hinton,\nA.  Browne,  Harry  Burns,  E.  L.\nMany at Funeral fo\nC. D. Reynolds\nMICHEL, B. C- The funeral of\nC. D. Reynolds of Michel, who died\nsuddenly at his home after a long\nillness, was held June 7 at 4 p.m.\nThe funeral procession headed\nby the members of the Grand Lodge\nof Buffaloes, Grand Order of Eagles\nand the B. C. Miner's association\nof Michel, of which Mr. Reynolds\nwas a member left the home and\nproceeded to Michel Anglican church\nwhere services were held by Rev.\nMr. Gibbs of Michel. From the\nchurch the procession proceeded as\nfar as the tipple, where the party\nwas picked up by autos and taken\nto Natal cemetery, where final services were held by Rev. Mr. Gibbs.\nOther graveside services were\nconducted by R. Ball, representing\nthe Grand Lodge of Buffaloes of\nMichel, by D. Thomas and D. Mitchell representing the Order of\nEagles of Michel, and by R. Po-\nkorny, representing the B. C. Miner's\nassociation.\nMr. Reynolds was 45 years old\nand is survived by a widow, son and\na daughter ln Michel, and a sister\nin Edmonton. He was born in 1891 in\nBlythe, England. He spent the last\nnumber of years in Michel.\nThe pallbearers, chosen from\naround his home town of Blythe,\nEngland, were three representing\nthe Grand Order of Buffaloes and\nthree representing the Michel Order\nof Eagles. They were James Firth,\nDick Wiseman, Oliver Robinson,\nRoy Tebor, Dave Thewlls and Alex\nBranch.\nExamine Twelve\nBobies at Clinic\nTwelve babies were examined ln\nthe nurses home Wednesday afternoon when thc baby clinic under\nthe auspices of the Women's Institute was held. Dr. J. H. Bennett\nconducted the examination and was\nassisted by Miss K. Gordon, school\nhealth nurse, and three members\nof the institute, Mrs. T. Tallyn, Mrs.\nR. Eunson and Mrs. W. Davies.\nPOLICE ESCORT\nFOR CARDINAL\n000 Greet Primate at\nVancouver\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C., June 10-In\nappreciation of her services as organist extending over a period of\nyears, Mrs. W. F. tane was guest\nof honor at a pleasing little affair\narranged by tht choir, and presented with a beautiful purse. The\npresentation was made by Mrs.\nGeorge Nixon; senior member of\nthe choir, Mrs. Nixon touching on\nthe many times Mrs. Lane had\nused her musical gilts for the benefit of the church, aside trom her\nordinary duties as organist. Mrs.\nLane responded. Those present\nwere Mrs. George Nixon, Mrs. J. F.\nCooper, Mrs. A. Woodward, Mrs.\nR. P. Mann, Miss Muriel Heap and\nMiss Marjorie Heap.\n\u2022 0     t\nMiss Addie Bodfish of Spokane\nwas a visitor in the city Monday.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Mark Storie and\nlittle son have been visiting in\nTrail.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMrs. E. L. Groutage and Mrs.\nWilliam Thomson ot Trail were in\nthe city Monday. Mrs. Groutage is\nleaving shortly for an extended\nvisit to England.\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP)-His\nEminence Jean Marie Rodrique,\nCardinal Villeneuve, O.M.I., Archbishop of Quebec and primate of\nCanada, arrived here today to open\nthe first archdiocesan Eucharistic\ncongress ever held in western Canada.\nHis eminence was greeted by more\nthan 1000 Roman Catholics, priests\nand laity, and was driven to Holy\nRosary cathedral with a mounted\nescort of Royal Canadian and British Columbia police preceding and\nfollowing the car.\nThe official opening ceremonies\nof the congress will be held in Holy\nRosary csthedral on Friday and his\neminence will officiate at a pontlfl-\ncial high mass at midnight Friday.\nHe will preside on the throne at\na children's pontiflcial high mass\non Saturday at Stanley park and\nwill leave again for the east that\nnight\nMost Rev. Andrew Caasulo, apos\nfolic delegate to Canada and New\nfoundland, will be the celebrant at\npontifical high mass at Stanley park\non Sunday. '\n\u2022 PAGE FIVE\nHEAVY TOLL IN\nFOREST FIRES]\nVICTORIA, June 10 (CP)-Llght-\nnlng storms and hot weather in the\ninterior of British Columbia took a\nheavy toll in forest fires last week\nwhile the coast area remained comparatively free due to rains and\ncool days, according to provincial\nforest branch reports.\nIn the Nelson district alone SS\nfires occurred during the week and\nin thc Kamloops section there were\n25 out of a total of 165 for the\nwhole of the province.\nThe big Vancouver forest district\nwhich includes Vancouver Island\nhad 22 fires, Prince Rupert five and\nFort George 14. This brougllt the\ntotal fires for the season so far to\n318, compared with 275 last year and\n210 in 1034. Up to last week the\nprovince's fire toll was below that\nof the last two years.\nRecreation Ground\nFence Is Going Up\nConstruction of the new fence at\nthe Recreation grounds is well under way, the boards being up along\nthc greater portion of the east end.\nKidney Acids\nRob Your Rott\nMany people nmrM-tif-smi\n\u00bbl|M'sr\u00bb!t'r_i,t\u00abm\u00bb_\u00ab!M\u00bb--ltaaw\"_l\nand count iheep. Often they fclama it M\n\u25a0  miy h. their ki-MJs.\n..\u201e when H i .\nHeilrii, liJoeji filter fabf.**\" the\nblood. lflh.-irefi_llr.n-t-'l,poi\u00bb\u00ab\nit.-inlheij\u00bblem.ndileepl..iMi.,h\u00aba*.\n.^.beck-th. often follow. Ifyoudont\nsleep well, try Dodd'i Kidney WlU-Jst\nhill a uaturr tho frr-rilo rea-dy. m\nDodd sKidney Pill*\nThe Royal College of Surgeons\nhas received \u00a325,000 from the Bernard Baron Trust for new research\nlaboratories.\nWarburton, D. L. Kerr, Ven. Archdeacon F. H. Graham, William Irvine, H. A. Pearson, E. Collinson,\nArthur Lambert, J. A. Irving and D.\nLaughton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. M. Brenilson visited Nelson\nrecently from Balfour,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFrank Frlsby Jr., has returned\nIrom a trip to the Bralorne.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. H. D. Foster, Kerr apartments\nhas left for Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLeslie Fielding of the Imperial\nBank of Canada at Banff is renewing acquaintance in the city.\nMENUS\nRECIPES\n\u2022nd\nHINTS\nBv\nMrs.\nMary\nMorton\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBath City council, for economy\nreasons, has decided to replace the\nmunicipal orchestra with a quintette.\nKnaolod .net hcM fcr KEUY, DOUGLAS \u00ab CO. LTD.. VANCOUVKK, dtCAM\nArthur Lakes, M. E., is i\nvisitor from Vancouver.\nNelson\nMrs. A. Merrifield of Procter was\namong shoppers to Nelson Wednesday,\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nThe Kokanee Chapter Imperial\nOrder Daughters of the Empire met\nTuesday afternoon for their monthly meeting at the nurses home. Tea\nwa3 served with Mrs. H. D. Dawson as convener. She was assisted\nby Mrs. G. E. Sparkes, Mrs. J. F.\nFowler, Mrs. G. F. Lynch, Mrs.\nGeorge Horetead, Mrs. F. W. Reger.\nMenu Hint\nBREAKFAST\nFresh Fruit       Cereal With Milk\nCoffee Ring     Tea or Coffee\nLUNCHEON\nStuffed Eggs in Gelatine\nStewed Fruit\nWhole or Cracked Wheat Bread\nButter Cookies\nDINNER\nTomato Juice\nBroiled Liver or Steak     Asparagus\nBaked   Potatoes      Green   Salad\nMaple Sugar Pie     Tea or Coffee\nThe stuffed eggs in gelatine Is\nsaid to be a favorite with Anne\nShirley, movie player. It may stem\na little bit elaborate for an ordinary\nluncheon, but many mothers who\nhave one or more children come\nhome to lunch or who have occasional guests, like to make some\npretty and appetising dish for them,\nand this is pretty, nourishing and\ntasty.\nToday's Recipes\nStuffed Eggs in Gelatine\u2014One envelope gelatine, one-half cup cold\nwater, three-fourths cup hot water,\none-eighth teaspoon-salt, one-f-urth\nteaspoon lemon juice, one-half cup\nmayonnaise, six hard cooked eggs,\nthree tablespoons ground cold ham,\ntwo tablespoons pickle relish, rings\nof stuffed olives. First pour cold\nwater in bowl and add gelatine on\ntop of water. Add hot water and\nstir  until  dissolved.  Add lemon\njuice and mix thoroughly. When\ncold add mayonnaise and allow to\ncongeal slightly. Cut eggs In halves\nlengthwise and remove the yolks.\nMash yolks, mix with ham, pickle\nand salt and with enough plain\nmayonnaise dressing to moisten. Fill\negg whites with this mixture. Place\na few rings of stuffed olives in bot-\ntbm of mold. Cover with ihe gelatine mixture. Chill thoroughly.\nPlace on bed of crisp lettuce leaves\nand serve with asparagus tips and\na little Thousand Island dressing.\nThis serves six.\nMaple Sugar Pie\u2014One cup maple\nsugar, four tablespoons flour, two\ncups milk, one egg, well beaten; one-\nfourth teaspoon salt, nutmeg. Line\npie pan with plain pastry. Heat a\ncup and a half of milk to boiling\npoint. Mix sugar, flour and salt and\nthe other half-cup of cold milk.\nMix smooth. Add hot milk and\nbeaten egg. Pour into pie shell,\nsprinkle with nutmeg. Have oven\nvery hot for first 15 minutes, then\nreduce to moderate and bake about\n45 minutes.\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES  BETTER   BREAD\nN A MODERN PACKAGE\nIRRADIATED\nCARNATION MILK\nCARNATION is milk in a modern package. A complete milk supply. You can use this double-rich\nmilk undiluted to cream coffee, fruits, cereals. Add an\nequal amount of water, and you have pure, whole milk\nto drink or to cook with. You can keep an dtnple supply\non hand without crowding the refrigerator. Try the\nImproved Carnation Milk\u2014fine in flavour, creamy light\nin colour, smooth in consistency, and irradiated \u2014\nenriched with \"sunshine\" vitamin D. You know,\nCarnation Milk has been fed to the Dionne Quintuplets'\nsince 'way back in November, 1934.\nJfiwi Published! A ...xii\/-.\nnew Carnation Cook Book. 16 glorious,\nfull-page, lull-colour photographs. %\npares of unusual recipes, menus, tarty\nsuggestions, cookery helps, etc. Yours\n\/or 15c, tumps tr (oin. Write to\nCarnation Co., Limited, 134 Abbott\nSt., Vancouver, B. C.\nCarnation Milk\nA CANADIAN PRODUCT -\"from Contented Com,\n,EST-SELLING    BRAND    OF    EVAPORATED    MILK\n\t\niettmi\n PAGE JIX \u25a0\nNFLSOW DA\".V r*E\"'8. NELSON,  \u00ab C\u2014THURSDAY  MORNING. JIJNf 11   1\u00b03\u00ab\t\nNriarm lailij Jfawa\nEstablished April '_.. 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting yewspam\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished   every   morning  except  Sunday   by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY  LIMITED.\n.16   Baker   Street,   Nelson.   British   Columbia\nPhone 1*1. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   o! tne   Audit   Bureau   ot   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased    Wire   News   Service.\nTHURSDAY. JUNE  11, 19,16,\nCOURAGE AND ENERGY\nHolland, comparatively speaking, is a small country\nwitn a large population. How to support the people ade-\n| quately lout' lias been a problem to the authorities who\nrealised that some project had to be evolved thai would\nprovide a solution. More land was the one answer which\nbrought hope and forward looking thoughts. More land\ncould be provided only if the land could be reclaimed from\nthe sea.\nLand from the sea' So a few years ago, on the advice\nj of a corp of engineers, the Dutch Government took up the\n' idea and already over 100,000 acres of arable land have\nbeen added to Holland, by a process of drainage.\nNow more land still is required and Holland again is\nundertaking to drain 600.000 acres.\nIt is estimated that the gigantic work will give employment to some 6000 men over a term of years.\nThe division now to be drained is known as the Northwestern Polder and makes a union of two islands, Urk\nand Scholand, to the mainland.\nAccording to report this second undertaking will not\nbe finished before 1951 and even when it is completed there\nwill be two additional sections on which the energies of a\nlarge corps of men will be needed, also over a term of years\nbefore the whole comprehensive scheme is accomplished.\nIt is a bold venture. Nevertheless, it is anticipated that\n'benefits be pre-visioned give promise of adequate returns.\nACCIDENTS NEED NOT HAPPEN\nAn old adage goes, \"Accidents will happen.\" Too piany\npersons seem, to think that this means, \"Accidents must\nhappen.\" The (ruth is,'of course, that accidents need not\nhappen.\nWhen ;he machine age came in, accidents in mines,\nfactories and workshops were appallingly high. They\nmaimed and killed thousands of workers. For a time, nobody\ndid much about it. But the great loss and suffering entailed\nled to a study of safety methods. Laws were passed for the\nprotection of workers, machinery was guarded and safety\ndevices made compulsory.\nBy this means, accidents in industry were enormously\nI curtailed. Today, they are at a minimum so far as machinery goes. The main cause of accidents today is the stepping\non or striking against objects, together with the handling\n!of materials.\nLaws of themselves cannot prevent accidents. Only\neducational effort, can lessen them. Employers generally\nare quick to recognize this, and co-operate to promote educational effort. It is, therefore, up to the individual worker\nto sec that he gets the full benefit of modern safety devices\nthrough the exercise of ordinary care. It is when the worker\nto see that he gets the full benefit of modern safety devices\nthrough the exercise of ordinary care. It is when the worker\nbecomes beguiled into a sense' of security that accidents\nmost frequently happen.\nBETWEEN\nJEC.\nfarther\nTHE TALKATIVE SEX\n,    A married man buttonholed an*\n! olhcr and told him a terrible sean-\n\u25a0dal.\n(    \"Don't  let this go any\nGeorge!\" he said,\n\"No, certainly nol!\" said the other.\n\"But how did you happen to hear\n. it?\"\n\"Oh, from thc wile, of course!\"\nwas the answer, \"She's just like all\ni women\u2014can't keep a secret!\"\n!CALL  OF THE SNAKES\nLoss of his left arm from a pois-\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\n.    I EXPECTED TOO   MUCH\nBridge players of long exper-1\nience have nights when they \/know I\ninstinctively what can be made and\nwhat cannot be done, I had such\nnight when the following hand\n\u25a0WITH THE     \u2022\nPSYCHOLOGIST\nCARRY C. MYER8. PH.D.\nHead   of   the   Department   of\nParent  Education. Cleveland\nCollege.   Western  Reserve\nUniyersity.\nProbably This Lad Is Learning to\nCount\nLEARNING   MISTAKES\nPER8ITENT\nYesterday I quoted from' a paper\nwas dealt. The contract could and*   ,   ._     --. . -,     \u201e,   _..,    .     .\nshould have been made, but m),! of mine read before the Ohio Acad-\npartner at the moment happened to I f\u00ab \u00b0< f\u2122\"\"' '\" w*,ch ' c\u00b0n\nr -  \u2122 \u2022 I (iemned stoD-watch teaching on twe\nwas inefficient and\ntner at the moment happened to l _\u2014\u2022 _ ~ ...\na dull player. What happened ' ^\"^ *t\u00b0p-watch teaching on two\n n\u201e i... \u00bb\u201e..\u00ab \u201e\u201ei\u201e I counts; that it\nbe\nwas really my fault only.\nI dealt and bid 1 Club on South's\nhand.   Bidding   then   went:   West,\n2 Hearts; North, 3 Diamonds; East,\n3 Spades; South, 4 Diamonds; West,\n4 Hearts; North, 5 Diamonds, which\nwas a strong call for so timid a bidder; South, 6 Diamonds; West doubled; I redoubled, still feeling con\nonous bite will not .keep Abdul j fident that the contract could be fulfilled, but ignoring the fact that\nskill to obtain thc last trick might\nbe, and probably was, lacking.\n\u2666 Q\u00bb\n\u2022J88\n\u2666 A 10 9 8 6 6 4\n*<\n, Saud, Egyptian snake chamer from\nj fondling repties again. After a month\n| in hospital, Saud says he has ord-\nI ercd a new lot of snakes and will\nI continue in thc business.\nI Mr. Saud says the new lot of\n! snakes includes adders. Wc sup-\nI post he has also sent for constrict-\n; ors, to say nothing of subtracters.\nI There is something very attrac-\n; tive about acting as chaperon to\n1 a flock of snakes. \"It's like a game\n; lo see them twist around,\" said a\nfriend of outs recently.\n\"'What game?'' we asked.\n\"Curling.\"\nWell, one-arm charmers are not\nalways successful in driving curs,\n; but, for all we know, they may be\nable to herd a pack of reptiles all\ni right.\n(SCOTTISH VERDICT\nI    \"Pardon mc,\" ^aid the stranger,\n\"are you a resident here':''\n1    \"Yes,\" was the answer. \"I've been\nj here goin1 on fifty year?. What kin\ns I do for you?''\nj \"I am looking for a criminal\ni lawyer.\" said thc stranger. \"Have\n\\ you any here?\"\ni \"Well,\" said the other, \"we're\n; pretty sure we have' but we can't\ni prove it.\"\n'GOOD EXCUSE\nA doctor was called to attend a\nj servant girl who had taken a dose\n1 of poison. He asked her why.\nShe replied: \"I was feeling rather\nseedy, so I opened the Misses' med-.\nicine chest. There was a bottle\nmarked \"Three drops for au infayt,\nsix for an adult and a teaspoonful\nfor an emetic.' I wasn't an infant\naud I wasn't sure about being an\nadult, so I though I must be an\nemetic. That's what made me take\na spoonful.\"\nPOPULAR SONG\nSuspect was arrested by a policeman while dressing a front window\nin a Hamilton store,\u2014News item.\n1 passed by your window with a\ntip-toeing sound,\nAnd   saw  you  there  pushing  thc\ndummies around,\n1 And so I went in, tapped you right\non the chest,\ni And said lo you, frankly, \"You're\nunder  arrest.\"\n| WORSE 'N' WORSE\n!    \"Fruit stains hard to remove from\nsummer clothing,\"  They  certainly\n; play thc juice with your clothes.\n*   *   \u2022\nI BAER   FACTS\n| Maxie Bacr, who. as you may remember, used to be regarded as a\n[ fighter, is now considered an orchestra leader, Let's hope we're not\n( going to be wrong twice about Mr.\n1 Baer.\n* K Q 1II\n6542\n\u2666 Kit\n*73\nA\/.\nty 10 a c &\n482\nVNono\n\u2666 -\n\u2666 KQJ\n10 9\nAAK\nVA73    -\n\u2666 QJ7\n*A8662\nThc opening lead was thc ft of\nclubs. The hand should be played as\nfollows: Win with dummy's Ace.\nLead the Q of diamonds. Let it run\nunless West covers. The second lead\nof diamonds brings down all opposing trumps. West should cover. In\nlhat case put dummy in for the second lead of diamonds with its J.\nLead a low club and ruff, lo make\ncertain that exit cards are removed\nfrom the West hand. Put dummy\nin with a spade. Lead a third round\nof clubs and vuff. Lead a third\nround of clubs and ruff. Lead a\nspade to put dummy in lead, leaving West nothing except hearts.\nAs East did not make ah opening\nlead of hearts you must expect to\nfind West with 7 hearts\u2014certainly\nwith the K-Q-10 of thc suit. Lead a\nand bad {or  the learner's mental\nhealth.\nAs you recall, I said there is no\nscientific evidence that a hurry atmosphere does promote good learning, and that on the contrary there\nare some published data available\nto indicate that emphasis on speed\nin learning is very inefficient, that\nit not only decreases accuracy but\ndecreases speed also.\nIn that paper I referred to a research of mine published in School\nand Society in 1918, the first on the\nsubject, and one by Sturt published\nthree years later in the British\njournal of Psychology, Both these\ninvestigations arrived at this conclusion; Emphasize speed lit the\nlearning process and you get neither\nspeed nor accuracy. Emphasize accuracy and you get both speed and\naccuracy.\nAlso I reviewed some data from\nanother published study of mine on\n\"Persistence of Errors in Arithmetic,\" in which it was found that\nwe can never be sure that an error\nonce made, as 8 and 7 arc 14, won't\nbe made over and over again, even\nin the same way.\nIn the discussion by thc psychologists assembled there seemed to be\nunanimous agreement with my conclusions. However, following the\nmeeting, Prof. Francis N. Maxfield,\nclinical psychologist of Ohio State\nuniversity, pointed out to me \u2014\nwhat I believe to be true\u2014that certain slow-moving and slow-responding individuals do seem to do better\nat mental work under pressure; but\nho added that for any average\ngroup of children in a classroom,\nfrequent timed exercises are doubtless bad.\nNEW SLANT GIVEN\nProfessor Horace B. English, also\nof Ohio State university, gave in the\ndiscussion a new slant \u2014 new,\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN   CLENDENING,   M.D.\n\u2014Photo by McGregor\nEdward Arthur, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mills of Nelson, It\napparently learning to count for he has got down to one finger, *nd\nhe seems so pleased about It all, too.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION  NETWORK\nwin \u201e,_ r.-v<-,u u, ,.,_ \u201eu... -.<.=\u201e \u00ab , the principle of \"persistence of er-\nlow heart from dummy toward de-1 rors.\" Said he: \"It is not only appl\nj andcr; 9:45 Ninety Days in Time,\n, News, KPO; Duke Ellington's orch.;\n10:00   News   Flashes,  Sam   Hayes;\n5:00   Georgian   Singers,   Toronto [ 10.15   Carl   Ravazza's  orch.;   10:30\n5:30 Twilight Echoes, Toronto. 6:00 | Henry   King's   orch.;   11:00   Tom\nDr. Chas. Courbaln, organist, MBS- i Brown's orch.; 11:30 Ran Wilde's or.\nN.Y.; 6:30 Gene Fogarty's ore. Otta- I\nwa; 6:45 CP. News. Weather bul- j\nletin Toronto; 7:00 Across the Bor- j\nat j der,  NY.;  7:30   News,  Vancouver, I\nleast, to me\u2014to the application of 1 (B.C. Net.); Lullaby Lagoon, Montreal, B.C. 7:45: 8:00 Au Claire de la I\nLune, salon ens., dir. Tom Gardner\nMaldistribution is one of Nature's weaknesses, too.\n' Floods have cause heavy damage in many places, and\nQueensland reports loss of three million sheep from\ndrought.\nGOES TO EAST INDIES\nj PORTSMOUTH, England, (CP>-\n; Vice-Admiral Sir .Alexander Ram-\n| sey, husband of Princess Patricia,\nhas been appointed Coinmander-in-\n;Chief, East Indies Station, succeeding Vice-Admiral Frank F. Rose.\nI      AUNT HET\nI       By ROBERT QUILLEN\nAnimal trainer was fined at Pittsburgh for cruelty\nto lions. Certain Americans never can resist a chance to\ntwist thc lion's tail.\nNew C.N.R. sleeping cars are being named after\nCanadian universities, which may arouse criticism. Colleges are surely not intended to induce sleep.\nWell-known millionaire says money does not make for\nhappiness. No, but you can always escape from your misery\nby giving it away.\nclarer. Unless West wins with a high\nhonor declarer's J will win. West\nmust win thc trick. Then West must\nlead from K-10 up to a tenace .1\nthe J in declaring hand and the\nAce in dummy, losing the last two\ntricks and giving declarer his 6\nDiamonds, doubled and redoubled.\nMy partner played tho hand as\nfollows: Thc first lead was won\nwith dummy's Ace of clubs. Two\nleads of trumps picked up all missing diamonds. Without bothering\nto lead a second round of clubs thc\nJ of hearts was led. It then made\nno difference what North did. Nothing could stop West from winning\ntwo heart tricks and defeating the\ncontract a trick.\nFailure to remove from West's\nhand his last spade would have allowed him two heart tricks, even\nhad North led a low heart from\ndummy, towards the J. as West\nwould have thrown dummy in lead\nwith a spade,\n|   10 YEARS AGO   j\nI From Nelson Dally News Filet I\nQm.; $>\nJUNE 11. 1.920.\nBrazil has resigned as a member\n.of the council of the League of Na-\nI tions, m which she holds a non-\npermanent seat, according to a dispatch from Geneva received here\nyesterday.\nMiss Doris Jerome, who is hi\ntraining at the Jubilee hospital in\nVictoria, arrived home June 9, to\nspend three weeks' vacation with\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. S.\nJerome, Victona street.\nMrs. Gordon Smith and her two\ndaughters on their way to Regina\nfrom Vancouver, are staying at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. David Kerr,\nVernon street.\n*   \u2022   *\nTom Homersham of Nelson made\na record catch the morning of June i\n9 when he hooked 65 pounds of I\nsalmon in three hours at Procter.\ncable to learning of number fads\nif    \u2014       ' \"\u00bb-\n[     Today's\nGarden-Graph\nBy DEAN HALL1DAY\nCopyright, \/M*.\nCentral Press Association, Inc.\nI Ruth Morgan, soprano. Edm'ton; 8:30\n| By the Sea, ensemble, dir. Percy\nI Harvey, Smile Sleuth, Vancouver;\n| 9:00 Rhythm Rebels, Winnipeg; 9:30\n] Ira Swartz, concert pianist. Van-\ni couver; 9:45 Remember, Fred Jarvis,\nI bass; Dorothy and Jack Norton, Cal-\n! gary; 10:00 News Reporter, Vancou-\n1 vcr. B.C.. Net.; 10:15 Jack William-\nj son's orch., Vancouver.\nNEW  ILL8 APPEAR AND\nDISAPPEAR\nDiseases appear, flourish and die.\nSome of the most devastating epidemics that tlie world has ever seen\nwere caused by diseases which most\nmodern physicians have never had\nau opportunity to become familiar\nwith, such as typhus or spotted\nfever, jail fever, the plague, the\nBlack Death. Few modern physicians have much acquaintance with\nsmallpox. And yet these diseases\nhave wiped out more populations\nthan all the wars from Alexander\nto Napoleon.\nModern civilization, however, has\nits own diseases. For instance, death\nand disability from automobile accidents. The introduction of the\nwholesale use of new drugs frequently uncovers new diseases, such\nas the curious blood disease called\n\u2022'agranulocytosis,'' in which the\nwhite cells of the blood disappeared,\nwhich was due to the use of the\ndrug, amidopyrinc, quite popular\na few years ago.\nFor one reason or another we\nhave also had entirely new infectious diseases in thc United States\u2014\nfor instance, undulant fever and\ntularemia.\nTlie greatest mystery, however, is\nthe disease which used to be very\ncommon, called \"chlorosis,'' I notice\nin the Annals of Medical History an\narticle which is called \"Chlorosis\u2014\nAn Obituary.\" and thc phrase represents the true fact, because chlorosis apparently no longer exists.\nCALLED \"GREEN\nI SICKNESS'\n} The disease occurred entirely in\nI young girls at about the onset of\nl womanhood, and was often called\n\"the green sickness.\" The name is\nsupposed to describe the color\nwhich the patients presented and\nwhich \u25a0 made diagnosis possible on\nsight, but those who are old enough\nto remember it will echo the words\nof an eminent physician who said.\n\"It takes the eye of faith to see any\njustification for the title of the\ndisease. If one exercises a great\ndeal of imagination, one may possibly see the slightest imaginable\ntint of olive green in the shadow\nbeneath the chin, but that is all. To\nthe ordinary eye. the color is a\nyellowish pallor in brunet.% and a\nwhitish,   although   extreme,  pallor\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK     j\nKGO  KJR   KEX  KECA  KGA     I\n790    970     1180     1430     1470\n5:00 Beaux Arts trio, instrum.; [\n7:00 Russ Morgan's orch.; 7:15 Sports\nHeadlines (KGO); 7:30 Charles\nDornberger's orch.; 8:00 Gold Rush ! jn blondes.\"\ndays, Louise Tabcr KGO; 8:08 Ruby ! it was a form of anemia which\nNewman's orch.; 8:15 Frank Watan- j was cured by iron. Why it should\nabe, sketch; 8:30 Gene Sullivan's! jiavc been so prevalent fifty years\nSportsman's Corner, KGO; Ben | ag0 and gone today, nobody knows,\nBernie's orch.; 9:00 Harbor Lights, j unless modern food habits, with the\ndrama; 9:30 Ricardo and his Cab-' use 0f green vegetables, include\nalleros; 10:00 Bobby Meeker's orch.; I more jron m the diet. I have a little\n10:30 Jimmy Grier's orch.; 11:00 j theory of my own thai it is not quite\nSongs   by   Candle   Light,  Tommy \\ g0 infrequent today as wc are led\nThe new bathing suits are so attractive that il seems\na shp.roo to think of wetting them.\n\"I reckon those younguns\nthought they had to keep their\nmarriage secret. Tlicy had to\nkeep spongin' on thc old folks\nor else go on relief.\"\n!   20 YEARS AGO   |\nI From Nelson Daily Newt Files I\n(Jun\u00ab 11, 1916)\nMr. and Mrs. A, B. Netherby and\nchildren   leave   this   morning for.\nRegina,   where Mr.  Netherby has\nbeen transferred as manager of the\nbranch of the Royal Bank of Canada.\n\u2022   \u2022   .\nA party consisting of George Fer-\nPrunlng of small-cluster roses\nMultiflora and Wichuraiana climbing roses of the small cluster flower\ntype should be pruned after they\nhave completed this year's bloom.\nAll the old canes should be cut back\nto the ground, unless somewhere\non one a healthy new shoot has developed, in which case only cut thc\nold cane back to the new shoot.\nYour next year's roses  will  be\nN.B.C.KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ  KGW   KFI   KPO   KOMO    I\n590      620     640     680   . 920\n5:0(1 Women in the Head Lines:\n5:15 Southern Harmony Four; 5:30\nCharlie Marshall's Mavericks; 6:011.\nBing Crosby, Jimmy Dorsey's orch.;\n7:00 Amos 'n' Andy, blackface\ncomedians; 7:15 Show Boat, Gus\nHaenschen's band; 8:15 Symphony\norch, dir. Alfred Hertz; 9:15 Hollywood Talent Parade, dir. Ben Alex-\nspelling and the like, but to conduct\nalso. We cannot afford to have the\nchild practice in definite modes of\nbehaviour which wc know to be\nanti-social behavior.\" tl am not sure\nI am quoting him correctly.)\nLater Dr. English explained to me.\nif I recall correctly, that he had in\nmind the prevalent notion of certain \"progressive\"' educators who\nassume that items of behavior\nclearly undesirable will eventually\ndrop out in thc child who is motivated \"by large impelling objectives.\"\n\"Why.\" he added, \"will some pro-\n, grcssive teachers allow children at\nj school to be positively discourteous\nto these teachers? When I asked a\ncertain teacher this question ahe\nreplied that she did not mind it and\nwas willing to endure tliesV little inconveniences rather titan repress\nthe child.\"\n\"But it is tlie child that I am concerned about,\" was the reply to\nthat teacher by Professor English.\nI wonder what my readers think\nof thc point brought out by Professor English. No doubt the editor of\nthis paper would like to print your\nopinions. Why not write him?\nHarris,\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI  KFRC   KOIN  KSL  KOL\n570     610       940      1130   1270\n5:00 To be announced; 5:30 Col.\nStoopnaglc and Budd; 6:00 Horace i vi\nto believe, but that it Is covered up\nl with cosmetics.\n|    When I was in Edinburgh a good\nmany years ago, there were several\n! wards of the Royal infirmary filled\nI with  these patients.   On  my  last\nsit I asked where they w\nere and\nHcidt's Brigadiers; 6:30 March of\nTime, drama news; 7:00 Don Bestor's\nore.; 7:15 Renfrew of the Mounted,\nserial 7:30 Caravan. Walter O'Keefc,\nDeane Janis and Glen Gray's orch.;\n8:00 George Givot's radio circus;\n8:30 Passing parade; 8:45 Bob Crosby's orch.; 9:00 Magazine, variety;\n9:30 Little Jack Little's orch.; 9:45\nNocturne with Franklin McCor-\nmack, KSL.: 10:00 Isham Jones'\norch.; 10:30 Sterling Young's orch.;\n11:00 Isham Jones' orch.; 11:30 Emil\nBaffa's orch.\nCJOR\n499.7 m\n500 w\nguson, Alex Campbell, Alex Stewart, Douglas Ritchie and Frank Mc-\nCrohan will leave this morning for\nTrail by automobile.\nooo\nMr. and Mrs. N. G. McCallum have\narrived from Yorkton, Sask, and\nare visiting their son-in-law and\ndaughter. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Dill,\nbefore taking up their residence\nat their home in Fairview.\nproduced on this year's new growth,\ntherefore, prune all the old canes\nseverely. In this w'ay you will cause\nthe plant to thrOw all its vitality into\ngrowing new shoots. Fig. 1 of the\nabove Garden-Graph shows how a\nhealthy climber will look after it\nhas finished blooming, while Fig. 2\nshows the same climber after it has\nbeen properly pruned and thinned\nout to encourage next year s growth\nond blooms.\nTHI GUMPS\nBy Gus Edson\nTHE\nINCKlMINATINfj\nCHECK HAS\nSfiMtOST-\nW\u00bbPOW\nZANPER\nTHINKS\nANDY\nTOOK IT\nWHY WIRE YOU\n, SO ANXIOUS TO\n<jTT THAT CHECK\nBACK? IT WAV   ,\n,A BUSINESS     \\\nTRANSACTION-j\nHA-HA- NOW THAT THE CHECK\nIS LOST I'LL TELL YOU-\nDIM HAP NO PROOF IT\nWAS A BUSINESS\nTRANSACTION-YOU\nCOULD HAVE MADE HIM\nPAY PLENTY BY THREATENING\nJO SHOW THE CHECK TO\n\u2022r-yr^ HIS.WIFE\nWHAT.'YOU\nINSULTING\nBEAST\/ PO YOU \\\nTHINK FOR A\nMINUTE I'P\nSTOOP THAT.\nu>wr\/'\n600 k\nVancouver\n5:15 Cariboo Cowboys; 5:45 Little\nOrphan Annie, E.T.; 6:15 News\nFlashes; 6:30 Frank and Archie, E.T.;\n6:45 Wrestling interview; 7:00 Financial talk; 7:30 Victor Ricci; 7:45\nLeague Against War; 8:00 Plenty for\nall; 8:15 Picton Davies, songs; 8:30\nSports broadcast; 11:00 Len Chamberlain's orch.; 11:30 Slumber Hour:\n11:45 News Flashes; Other periods:\nRecords.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n!    5:00 Cecil  and  Sally, E.T.;  5:15\nBlack and Blue; 5:30 Singing Silversmiths; 6:00 Adventure Bound; 6:15\nRangers;   6:30   Hi-Hilarities;    6:45 j\nSlices in Life; 7:15 Andy Hall, gui-\ntarist; 7:45 Watanobr and Archie. I\nE.T.;   8:00   Old   Time  Dance;   9:00:\nNews; 9:15 Old Time Dance.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH  EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nThe followin. frequencies will\nba used: GSD, 11.75 mc, 25.53\nm, and GSC, 9.58 mc, 31.32 m.\n6:00 p.m.\u2014Big Ben. thc B.B.C.\nEmpire orch.; 6:5p Short Story; 7:10\n\"Idle Tears,\" An' interlude of Victoria! sentimental songs, presented\nby John Pudncy and W. L. Han-\nchant.; 7:40 News and announcements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nHuizen, Netherlands\u20145:50 a.m.\u2014\nAmateurs from the eleven provinces. PHI, 16.88 m, 17.77 mc.\nMoscow~8:25 a.m.\u2014Russian opera\nwith comments in English. RNE.\n25 m, 12 mc.\n] Paris\u201411:45 p.m. \u2014 Relay from\nRadio-Paris: The National orch.\nTPA3,23.2 m, 11.88 mc.\nTokyo\u20141 p.m\u2014Outstanding personalities in the Japanese news.\nJVM, Nazaki, 27.9 m, 10.74 mc.\nLondon\u20143:55 p.m.\u2014A folk song\nrecital by David Brynley (tenor)\nand Norman Notley (baritone).\nGSP, 19.6 m., 15.31 mc, DSD, 25.5\nm\u201e 11.75 mc, GSC, 31.3 m, 9.58 mc.\nBerlin\u20145:45 p.m.\u2014Popular pieces\nfor violin, cello and piano. DJD,\n25.4 m\u201e 11.77 mc.\nCaracas\u20146:30 p.m.\u2014Venezuelan\nNational Quartet. YV2RC, 51.7 rt),\n5.8 mc.\nwas met by a shrug of the shoulders,\nso I suppose my cosmetic theory\nOnly covers a few of the cases, and\nthat there really is a great diminution. Let us hope it means that in\nour generation a better and richer\ndiet is furnished to all groups of the\npopulation.\nQUESTIONS FROM\nREADERS\nA.S.: \"A friend of mine takes 15\ndrops of soluble iodine in a glass of\nwater a day to reduce weight. She\nrefuses to go to a doctor to see\nwhether it is safe, saying that it is\nharmless. Do you think she is right\nI in continuing this practice?\n1 Answer: The dose is rather high.\nI would be inclined to believe that\nif this dosage were continued, in tho\ncourse of time an iodide eruption\nof thc skin would occur.\nWALL CRASHES  IN  8HOP\nLEICESTER, England, (CP). \u2014\nSeven people dashed from a shop\nhere a few seconds before 50 tons\not masonry crashed to the floor.\n'   \u25a0 \u25a0        \u25a0\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Court*    ,\n mm^a^ama^m^^^^um^tmm^wwtwtwwwwwwwwm\nF0R MINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall mining arid other\ncamp buildines. They\narc strong, waterproof, light and very\neasy to handle,\nDistrict Distributors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nChildren\nRaised On\nPacific\nMilk\nA mother writes us n letter\nwhicli makes us feel the work\nof packing milk is doing its\nshare of good. ' She is raising\nthree children .on Pacific Milk\nand all are growing strong and\nhealthy. They never have a\nsick day and romp about with\nall the abandon of childhood.\nWe are indeed grateful to Mrs.\nH. for this valued letter.\n Farmer teammates ef the AthletlcsTCoehrsns, manager (\nDykes, right, Whits Sox chief, meet again.\nigsrs I\n_\u00bb\nCRAWFORD BAY\nSCHOOL AT TOP\nIN TRACK MEET\nSchools on East Side\nLake Stage Their\nFirst Meet\nBOSWELL, B.C,\u2014There was a\nllg crowd in Boswell Saturday for\nhe first interschool sports meet\n'or schools on the east side ot\nCootenay lake.\nThe event passed off without a\niltch, due mainly to the hard work\nnit in, both previous to the day and\nm the day itself, by the committee\niepher, chairman; Miss Davies, A.\nS.' Ascott, Ray Cummings, Stanley\nHepher, A. Mackie and K. Wallace.\nThe children of the five schools\n\u00bbere in charge of their teachers,\nItiss Jacques of Crawford Bay, Miss\nStoddart of Gray Creek, Miss Davies\n>t Boswell, H. Dodds ot Sanca and\nE Rutledge of Sirdar.\nTlie visitors were welcomed by\nK. Hepher, chairman of the sports\ncommittee, who introduced J. E.\nBrown, Inspector of schools. Mr.\nBrown made a short speech stressing the importance of physical\neducation in the curriculum, and\nluoting to the competitors the\nivords of Lord Roberts: \"Win with-\n)ut boasting and lose without complaining.\" He then declared the\nneet open, and there followed a\n!ull program of events, in which,\nn many cases, a high standard ot\nathletic prowess was displayed.\nTHREE TROPHIES\nThere were no individual prizes\nfor the races. The only awards\nwere a large handsome silver challenge cup for the school gaining\nmost points, and two small silver\ncups for high aggregate. The school\ntrophy was won by Crawford Bay,\nWhich was a way ahead with 106%\npoints. Boswell came second with\n69% points and was closely followed\nby Sirdar, 65 points.\nThe star performer of the afternoon was Herbert Draper of Crawford Bay, who rolled up a total of\n38 points to win the boy's silver\ncup with a big margin over his\nnearest opponents. Kenneth Schsub\not Boswell was the runner up.\nThe girls' cup was won by Rosie\nPelle of Sirdar with 19% points. Her\nlister, Evelyn Pelle wss runner up\nThe following officials were on\nduty on the course:\nJudges\u2014W. Fraser of Crswford\nBay, A. Hepher snd K. Wsllace.\nClerk of the course\u2014A. H. Ascott.\nAnnouncer\u2014H. Trensmsn.   ;>V.\nStarter\u2014W. S. Hepher. m\nTRACK EVENT8 'iW-\n80 ysrd dashes-\nBoys seven and under\u2014David\nBroster, Crawford Bay, first; Fred\nSimpson, Gray Creek, second; Jsck\nSmith, Boswell and Veme Steinberg, Sanca, third.\nGirls seven and under\u2014M. Ward,\nSirdar, first; Doris Deverson, Crawford Bay, second; Evelyn Adams,\nGray Creek, third.\nBoys nine and under\u2014M. Van\nSteinberg, Sanca, first; Ian Fisher,\nCrawford Bay, second; Arnold Cummings, Boswell, third.\nGirls nine and under\u2014Dorothy\nNelson, Crawford Bay, first; Ruth\nBurge, Gray Creek, second; Mary\nTimmons, Sanca, third.\n75 yard dashes-\nBoys 11 and under\u2014John Kschuk,\nSirdar, first; Jimmy Broster, Crswford Bay, second; Don Van Steinberg, Sanca, third.\nGirls   11   and   under\u2014Margaret\nHolden, Boswell, first; Nora Fisher,\n] Crawford   Bay,   second;  Margaret\nI Timmons, Sanca, third.\nBoys 13 and under\u2014Herbert Dra-\nIper, Crawford Bay, first; Kenneth\nI Schaub, Boswell, second; Ray Van\nI Steinberg, Sanca, third.\nGirls 13 and under\u2014Evelyn Pelle,\nI Sirdar, first; Elsie Nelson, Craw-\nI ford Bay, second; Margaret Holden,\nBoswell, third.\nIj, 100 yard dashes-\nBoys 14 and over\u2014Herbert Drs-\nI per, Crswford Bay, first; Dan John-\nI stone, Boswell, second; John Oliver,\nI Gray Creek, third.\nGirls 14 and over\u2014Rose Pelle. Sir-\n' oar, first; Joan Burge, Gray Creek,\nsecond; Betty McGregor, Crswford\nBay, third.\nHalf mile, Boys 14 and over-\nRay Van Koughnett, Boswell, first;\nJohn Oliver, Gray Creek, second;\nJohriy Palmer, Crawford Bay, third.\nRelay races-\nBoys\u2014Boswell, first, Peter Hepher, David Ascott, Roy Vsn Koughnett, Dan Johnstone; Grsy Creek,\nsecond, Floyde Oliver, James Oliver,\nJohn Oliver, Billy Burge; Sirdar,\nthird, A. Ward, J. Katchuk, J.\nPelle, R. Proctor.\nGirls\u2014Sirdar, first, R. Pelle, S.\nProctor, E. Pelle, N. Pascuizo; Crawford Bay, second, N. Fisher, H. Johnson, E. Nelson, D. Harper; Boswell,\nthird, E. Van Koughnett, M. Van\nKoughnett, J. Hall, M. Holden.\nNovelty races-\nSack race, boys 10 and under\u2014\nJohn Johnstone, Crawford Bay,\nfirst; Jack Sheppard, Gray Creek,\nsecond; Allan Ward, Sirdar, third.\nSack race, girls 10 and under\u2014\nMarguerite Van Koughnett, Boswell, first; Dorothy Nelson, Crawford Bay, second; Beth Oliver,\nGray Creek, third.\nObstacle race, boys 13 and under\n\u2014Herbert Draper, Crawford Bay,\nfirst; Kenneth Schaub, Boswell,\nsecond; Lyle Oliver, Gray Creek,\nthird.\nThree-legged race, girls 13 and\nunder\u2014E. Pelle and E. Pascuzzo,\nSirdar, first; E. Van Koughnett and\nJ. Hall, Boswell, second; R. Burge,\nand V. Adams, Gray Creek, third.\nFIELD EVENTS\nHigh jumps-\nBoys 10 and under\u2014John Johnstone,   Crawford   Bay  and  Allen\nWard, Sirdar, tied for first; Harold\nOsborne, Sanca, third.\nGirls 10 and under\u2014Ruth Burge,\nGray Creek, Marguerite Van Koughnett, Boswell and Margaret Timmons, Sanca, tied.\nBoys 13 and under\u2014Herbert Draper, Crawford Bay, first, 3 feet 10\ninches; B. Burge, Gray Creek, second; K. Schaub, Boswell, third.\nGirls 13 and under\u2014Hazel Johnstone, Crawford Bay, first, 3 feet\n6 inches; Evelyn Pelle, Sirdar, second; Evelyn Van Koughnett, Boswell, third.\nBoys 14 *nd over\u2014Dsn Johnstone,\nBoswell, first, 4 feet 4 inches; Herbert Draper, Crawford Bay, second;\nFloyd Oliver, Gray Creek, third.\nGirls 14 and over\u2014Joan Burge,\nGray Creek, first, 3 feet 10 inches;\nRosie Pelle, Sirdar, second; Mae\nMiller, Sanca, and Betty McGregor,\nCrawford Bay, third.\nBoad jumps-\nBoys 10 and under\u2014Johnny Ward,\nSirdar, first, 10 feet 7 Inches', John\nJohnstone, Crawford Bay, second;\nTrafford Ascott, Boswell, third.\nGirls 10 and under\u2014Dorothy Nelson, Crawford Bay, first, 8 feet 11\ninches; Margaret Timmons, Sanca,\nsecond, Marguerite Van Koughnett,\nBoswell, third.\nBoys 13 and under\u2014Herbert Draper, Crawford Bay, first, 13 feet 8\ninches; Ray Van Sternberg, Sanca,\nsecond; Kenneth Schsub, Boswell,\nthird.\nGirls 13 and under\u2014Evelyn Pelle,\nSirdar, first, 12 feet 1 inch; Hazel\nJohnstone, Crawford Bay, second;\nEvelyn Vsn Koughnett, Boswell,\nthird.\nBoys 14 tnd over\u2014Herbert Draper, Crawford Bay, first, 13 feet 4\nInches; John Oliver, Gray Creek,\nsecond; Rsy Van Koughnett, Boswell, third.\nGirls 14 and over\u2014Rosie Pelle,\nSirdar, first, 11 feet 10 inches; Joan\nBurge, Gray Creek, second; Betty\nMcGregor, Crawford Bay, third.\nHop, step and jump, boys 14 and\nover\u2014Herbert Draper, Crawford\nBay, first, 29 feet 11 inches; Ray\nVan Koughnett, Boswell, second,\nFloyd Oliver, Gray Creek, third.\nPole vaults-\nBoys 12 and under \u2014 Kenneth\nSchaub, Boswell, first; John Ker-\nchuk, Sirdar, second; Lyle Oliver,\nGray Creek, third.\nBoys 13 and over\u2014Herbert Draper, Crawford Bay, first, 6 feet 6\nInches; Peter Hepher, Boswell, second; Floyd Oliver, Gray Creek,\nthird.\nSoftball throws-\nGirls 12 ahd under\u2014Margaret\nHolden, Boswell, first; Marjorie\nFraser, Crawford Bay, second; Margaret Timmons, Sanca, third.\nGirls 14 and over\u2014Rosie Pelle,\nSirdar, first; Evelyn Koughnett,\nBoswell, second; Betty McGregor,\nCrawford BSy, third.\nIn producing semi-transparent\nglass of neutrll tint, nickel plays\nan Important part '\nAMAZING  FACTS\nIn India-1665...the shah\"\nDIAMOND HUNG BY A SILVER THREAD\nBEFORE THE GREAT MOGUL'S THRONE\nSO THAT HE MIGHT\ni CONSTANTLYGAZE UPON IT..\nIn Canada...\nSQUARE-CUT DIAMONDS...\nSO TIMES HARDER THAN ANY OTHER\nKNOWN SUBSTANCE.. ARE USED TO\nTEST THE HARDNESS OP BIDE\ntjlLLETTE BLADE STEEL...\nSAMPLES from every coil of Gillette st\u00ab1 are submitted to a diamond-pointed instrument which\naccurately measures the hardness of the metal. Every\ncoil of Gillette steel must be uniformly hard. No wonder Blue Gillette blades give one perfect shave after\nanother. Buy a package from your dealer today!\nGILLETTE blahe-\nLacrosse - Golf -Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nPAGE SEVEN\"\nNEL80N\" DAILY NEWI. NELSON. B.C.-THUMOAY MORNING, JUNI 11, H36\n-PAGE SEVEN\n$15 PRIZES IN\nSOFTBALL PLAY\nMen and Girls to ,Be\non Dominion Day\nProgram\nThe sports committee of the Canadian Legion Bugle band Dominion day celebration met at the Legion hall Tuesday evening to drew\nup plans tor the two big softball\ntournaments they sre planning as\none feature of their big celebration\nJuly 1. All entries for both the\nmen's and girls' tournaments must\nbe in the hands of Art Oliver by\nJune 14.\nThe sports committee which comprises Art Oliver, S. Wade, H.\nPitts, V. Cox, S. Shannon, N. McLeod, C. Leggett, F. Leask, G. Scott\nand J. Bishop, decided at Tuesday\nnight's meeting that the first prize\nfor each the men's and girls' winners will be $15 cash. A second\nprize will also be given. As games\nwill also count in the Nelson\nleagues, teams will be confined to\ntheir own registered players.\nDODGERS' STAR\nHURLER QUITS\nMungo Leaves for N.Y.\nPITTSBURGH, June 10 (API-\nVan Lingle Mungo, star speedball\npitcher of the Brooklyn Dodgers,\nquit the team today and left for\nNew York.\nMungo gave no reason for his action, but it has been an open secret\nthat the big right-hander has been\ndissstisfied with the support of his\nteammates and disappointed at the\nfailure of recent negotiations to\ntrade him.\nJohn Gorman, business manager\not the club, said no action would be\ntaken against the pitcher, at least\nuntil the club gets to Cincinnati tomorrow. It seemed inevitable, however, that he will be fined or suspended or both.\nPIRATES ALONE\nON SECOND RUNG\nPITTSBURGH, June 10 (AP) -\nThe Pirates took so)e possession of\nsecond place in the National league\ntoday and pulled up to four games\nfrom the pace-setting Cardinals by\nwinning their fifth straight game,\na 6-3 triumph over the Brooklyn\nDodgers.\nThe win gave the Pirates a clean\nsweep of the four-game series and\nstretched the Brooklyn losing streak\nto seven.\nWith the New York Giants rained\nout in Cincinnati and the Cardinals\nstopped by wet grounds at home,\nthe win for the Bucs broke the second-place deadlock between Pittsburgh and New York, and tightened\nup the one-two standings in the\nleague.\nBrooklyn     3   10   3\nPittsburgh    0   11   1\nClark, Jeffcoat, Leonard and\nBerres, Phelps; Lucas,\u2014 Bush and\nTodd.\nSINGLE SCORES TWO\nT6 WIN\nCHICAGO, June 10 (AP) - A\nsingle by Ken O'Dea with the bases\nloaded and two out in the ninth\ndrove across the two runs that gave\nthe Cubs a 4-3 victory over Philadelphia today. The triumph gave\nthe champions a clean sweep of\nthe three-piece series and extended\ntheir victory streak to seven games.\nOnly -083 fans saw the game,\nwhich was played in an unseasonable chill.\nPhiladelphia     3  7   1\nChicago     4   9   1\nKowallk, Johnson and Grace;\nWameke and O'Dea.\nNew York at Cincinnati, Boston\nat St. Louis postponed, rain and\nwet grounds.\nBirthday Greetings\nBy Ths Canadian Press\nTo   Frsnk  Fredrickson,  one   Of\nthe  highest-scoring major league\nBudding Ball Stars In Trail's\nBantam League\n\"\"\" \u2014Photos by Staff Photographer.\nTop are the Giants, and below the Beavers, two Trsll baseball\nteams competing In the bantam league.\nBRITAIN BEATEN BY LONE GOAL\nIN FIRST OF POLO (UP SERIES\nGOLF\nby\nALEX MORRISON\ntfoom,\nSWING 8-TW-EM SHOULDER\nAMP  KNtes\ntueekty tntetisA *lo\n.\u2014 . sal\nEric Pedley Shoots\nin Nine for U. S.;\nScore 10-9\nARRANGEMENTS\nSALMO SPORTS\nMOVING AHEAD\nEight Candidates in\nField Dominion\nDay Queen\nHorses are bunched as they come thundering down the straightaway\nduring a race at Jamaica.\nBabe Didrickson Is\nEliminated\nTOPEKA, Kas., June 10 (API-\nMildred (Babe) Didrikson, the tournament's only professional, went out\nof the women's western open golf\ntourney today as the defending tit-\nlist led the parade to the quarter\nfinals. Miss Didrikson, far off her\nusual game, was eliminated by Miss\nAnna Sue Kennedy of Columbia,\nMc, 6 and 5.\nOne fault that all golfers have at\nat one time or another is that ot\nlifting the arms away from the\n'body. This fault cannot be corrected by swinging at a ball or at the\nground. Hence, today's exercise\nfinds the club being swung well\nabove the ground.\nAs far back at 1918 I made use\nof an exercise in which the club\nis swung like a baseball bat. Standing erect improves body action and\nbalance, and makes it comparatively\neasy to keep the arms close to the\nbody.\nIn addition to swing as though\nthe ball were about level with the\nknees, you should also make it a\npoint to keep the club and your\nhands below the level of the right\nshoulder in the backswing, and\nbelow the level of the left shoulder\nat the finish.\nStand erect, with your head and\neyes up. and swing the club back\nand forth at this level and you'll\nfeel increased smoothness, power\nand better timing in your swing.\nPractice this exercise daily at home\nand at every opportunity on the\ncourse.\nhockey players in his day. Born in\nWinnipeg 40 years ago today, he led\nFalcons to Allan Cup and Olympic\ntriumphs in 1920 and 1921, turned\npro with Victoria Cougars in thc\nold Pacific Coast League and later\nplayed with Delroit, Boston and\nPittsburgh. Now he lives in Vancouver.\nThis $dverti\u00bbement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Colurnbia.\nBy   ROGER   GREENE\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, June 10 (API-Fighting with unexpected effect against\nthe smashing power of the United\nStates attack, Great Britain's gallant four horsemen today came\nthrillingly close to springing a polo\nupset before yielding finally, 10\ngoals to 9, ln the opening match ot\nthe international cup series at Hur-\nlingham club.\nWith California's sharpshootlng\nEric Pedley scoring nine , goals,\nthereby equalling his own record\nfor cup competition, America's latest \"big four\" squeezed out their\none-point margin only after nipping\na furious British rally in the seventh\nand last period.\n10,000 WATCH\nA fashionable crowd ot 10,000\nwitnessed the triumph engineered\nby the dazzling Pedley, in combination with Michael Phlpps, Stewart\nIglehart and Winston Guest over\na patched-up British four. It was\nthe ninth straight victory for the\nAmericans in cup competition since\n1921 and the closest since 1914. One\nmore will clinch the current series,\nthe first held since 1930, but today's\noutcome forecast a real last-ditch\nfight by the home side Saturday in\nthe second match.\nLineups:\nAmerica\u2014Eric Pedley No. 1, Michael Phlpps No. 2. Stewart Iglehart No. 3, Winston Guest back.\nEngland\u2014H. Hesketh Hughes No\n1, Gerald Balding No. 2, Eric Tyrrell-Martin-No. 3, Capt. Humphrey\nGuinness back.\nScoring \u2014 America, Pedley, H;\nGuest; England-Hughes 7, Bsl'ling\nand Guinness.\nFree Shots\u2014Balding, none out of\nthree.\nCricket Scores\nLONDON, June 10 (CP Cable)\u2014\nClosing scores In English first-class\ncricket matches started today, follow:\nYorkshire 242 runs; Middlesex 18\nruns for one wicket; at Lord's.\nGlamorgan 403 for live (Duckfield\n190 not out, Brierley 94); vs. Surrey; at the Oval.\nGloucestershire 98 (Mitchell (even for 26) and one run for no wickets; Derbyshire 200 (Worthlngton\n90); at Derby.\nHampshire 161 for hint <\u00bboy\u00bbS 88\nnot out, Greene 76) vs. Lancashire;\nat Liverpool.\nWorcestershire 101 (H. Smith five\nfor 36); Leicestershire 14\u00ab for nine;\nst Leicester.\nSussex 166 (H. Perks 76; Wellard\nsix for 64); Somerset 121 (or nine;\nat Have.\nWarwickshire 137 for seven vs.\nNOrthsmptorishire; at Peterborough.\nMinor counties 281; Oxford University 107 tor five; at Oxford.\nCambride University 207 (Pscks\n69): vs. Essex; at Csmbridge.\nIndia 174; Durham 98 for seven;\nat Sunderland (two-day match).\nSell That Car With a Want Ad\nArrangements for one of the big-\nget Dominion day celebrations Salmo has yet aimed at are rapidly\nnearlng completion. The queen contest is away to a good start with\neight candidates in the running;\nsports are being lined up; and the\nvarious committees are organizing\ntheir work.\nThe program as tentatively lined\nup Calls for children's sports to\nbegin at 9 a.m., the morning concluding with a Ymir-Salmo junior\nbaseball game. The afternoon will\nopen with a parade of decorated\nCars, the crowning of the queen,\nand awarding the prize for the best\ncar, and will conclude with a senior\nball game between Salmo snd Ymlr,\na girls' softball game featuring\nteams from the same camps, and\nsenior sports.\nIn the evening festivities will be\ncentered around two big dances.\nTwo halls will be ready for the\ncrowd expected to attend.\nNelson Boys' band will be in attendance throughout the celebrations, the first out-of-town engagement for the 22 youngsters comprising It.\nFive Salmo lasses sre vieing with\nrepresentatives of other valley\npoints for the honor of wearing the\nqueen's Crown, the complete list of\ncandidates being: Peggy Stuart,\nYmir; Hazel Knowler, Fruitvale;\nMary Myhre, Sheep Creek; Shirley\nDonaldson, Agnes Leahy, Winnie\nBush, June King and Edith John,\nSalmo.\nSalmo Boy Scouts will comprise\nthe queen's guard of honor. Details\nas to the coronation ceremony are\nbeing worked out.\nR. C. Bush is general chairman\nof the Knights of Pythias committee\nin charge of the day.\nWIGHTMAN (UP\nPLAY FRIDAY\nREDSOXTAKE\nTIGERS. 4 TO 3\nBOSTON, June 10 (AP)-The Red\nSox used every one of their five\nhits today to beat the Detroit Tigers, 4-3, in a close pitching duel.\nWes Ferrell nosed out Rookie Clarence Phillips lor the hurling honors.\nAlthough outhit 8 to 5, the Sox\ncapitalized every safe blow. They\nscored three runs in thc second when\nBill Werber lifted a home run over\nthe left wall, scoring Jimmy Foxx,\nwho had singled, and Flit McNair,\nwho had hit a two-bagger.\nIn thc third, Dusty Cooke doubled\nand was promptly brought acroBs\nthe plate by Heinie Manush's two-\nbagger to right.\nExcept for those two innings,\nPhillips pitched hitless ball.\nThe victory stretched the Red\nSox' second place margain over\nthe Tigers to four full games, and\npulled Boston up to 2V, games back\nof the league-leading Yanks, who\nwere rained out.\nDetroit     3   8   0\nBoston .... ...        .451\nPhillips and Reiber; W. Ferrell\nand R. Ferrell.\nLONDON, June 10 (AP)-Battle\nUnes for the 14th Wightman cup\ninternational tennis series between\nBritish and United States women\nstars were drawn today and immediately experts decided Britain's\nchances of ending America's five-\nyear supremacy were unusually\nbright. *\u25a0\nThe best four-matches-out-of\nseven series will start Friday with\nHelen Jacobs, four-times United\nStates champion, opposing Kay\nStammers, left-handed British star;\nMrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan of\nBrookline, Mass., meeting Dorothy\nRound, former Wimbledon titllst,\nand Mrs. John Van Ryn of Philadelphia and Carolin Babcock Of LOS\nAngeles teaming up in the doubles\nagainst Nancy Lyle and Evelyn\nDearman.\nSaturday's concluding schedule:\nMrs. Fabyan vs. Miss Stammers,\nMiss Jacobs vs. Miss Round, Miss\nBabcock vs. Ruth Msry Hardwick,\nand Miss Jacobs and Mrs. Fabyan\nvs. Miss Stammers Snd Freda James.\nCLEVELAND WINS 10-2\nWASHINGTON, June 10 (AP)-\nThe Cleveland Indians, slugging\naway behind the effective pitching\nof George Blaeholder, repulsed the\nfourth-place bid of the Washington\nSenators today by winning the final\ngame of an abbreviated series, 10-2,\nBlaeholder held the Griffmen to\nsix hits and was on his way to his\nsecond straight shutout over the\nWashington team when Cecil Travis\nhit a home run in the ninth. Buddy\nLewis was on base at the time.\nCleveland  \u25a0   10   16  0\nWashington      2    6  3\nBlaeholder and Pytlak; Whitehill,\nMarberry and Bolton.\nChicago at Philadelphia, St. Louis\nat New York, postponed, rain and\nthreatening weather.\nB.C. P0L0ISTS\nBEATSPOKANE\nSPOKANE, Wash., June 10 (AP)\n\u2014 Sharp-shooting poloists of Kamloops, B. C, defeated the Spokane\nReds in the opening game of the\nnorthwest tournament here today,\n9 to 1.\nBoth teams were slow In getting\nup speed, but Spokane substitutes\nIn the third chukker picked up the\ntempo. The Reds' riding was faster\nand their ball-hawking more sg-\ngressive in the final chukkers but\ntheir accuracy in front of the goalposts failed to improve.\nWilmot, riding No. 2 for the Canadians, was the brilliant player of\nthe day as he booted in four of his\nteam's goals.\nThe Spokane Blues, northwest\nchampions, will meet the Olympic\nclub of Sesttle in the first game tomorrow, with the Calgsry-Toppen-\nish contest following.\n3attii\\A\nLeaders\n 6\t\nBy the Associated Press\nThe line-up of baseball's 'Big Six\"\nin batting remains the same through\nyesterday's curtailed league program, with only the average of Charlie Gehringer of the Tigers showing any change. Gehringer, second\nin tlie American league trio in tho\nleading half dozen, got only one hit\nin four times at bat, losing two\npoints to lower his mark to .363, but\nstill managed to stay one percentage point above third place Lou.\nGehrig, of the Yanks.\nThe standing (thre leading hitters in each league).\nG AB RH Pet.\nSullivan, Ind. 32 108 16 40 .407\nS. Martin, Cards .39 1-9 33 51 .395\nTerry, Glsnts  29  76 16 30 .394\nGehringer, Tigers 54 228 52 83 .363\nGehrig, Ys\u00abks 51 199 61 72 .362\nJ. Moore, Phillies  43 172 38 62 .360\nHoBxeJRjJiNS\n\u25a0y the Associated Press\nYesterday's homers:\nSuhr, Pirates; Fox. Tigers; Wer-\nber, Bed Sox; Trosky, Hale, Indians; Trsvls, Senstors, one each.\nThe leaders\u2014Foxx, Red Sox, 14;\nTrosky, Indians, 13; Ott, Giants,\n11; Gehrig, Yanks, 11; Goslin, Tigers, 9; Lazzeri, Yanks, 9: J. Moore,\nPhillies, 9; Dickey, Yanks, 9.\nLeague, totals: American 2427 National' -i8, total 460.\nEvery boy and baseball fan\nwill want this up-to-date\nbook, \"Baseball\u2014and How\nto Play lt\", by Prank J.\n(Shag) Shaughnessy, Manager of the pennant winning Montreal Royals.\nPitching, batting, basa\nrunning-all the fine pointi\nof the game are clearly\nexplained and Illustrated.\nHere's how to get lt. Simply send In to the address\nbelowa \"CROWNBRAND\"\nor \"LILY WHITE\" 4_orn\nSyrup label with your\nname and address and tha\nwords \"Baseball Book\"\nplainly written on the\nneck\u2014and your copy will\nbe mailed to you right\naway.\nFDWARDSBURG\nCROWN BRAND\nCORN SYRUP\nTHL FAMOUS ENERGY POOD\nTh.CANADAiSTARCH COMPANY MM\nP.O, Bo\u00ab 388, MONTREAL _.,\n\"The Champagne of Ginger Ales*\nin handy home packages\nM\/fl Cumula f<A OVeh IOO tfW\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the tftffcr\nCohtrol Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n_______\n______\n\u2014___-___-.____i\n PPMP'J'.'J1.      ..'\n-mmmm^mmmmi.\nPAGE EIGHT\nSfrtam laily Nrma\nMember ot the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connecting, to\nall Departments\nSubscription   Rates\nSingle copy  -...$   .05\nBy carrier, per week       25\nBy carrier, per year  13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month, 60c;\nthree months. $1.30; six mouths,\n$3.00. one year. $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months,\n$4.00; one year. $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\nMinimum 2 Lines\n2 lines, once  $ 22\n3 lines, once       .33\n4 lines, once             .44\n2 lines. 6 times      .88\n3 lines. 6 times _.  1.32\n4 iines. 6 times _  1.76\n2 lines. 1 month 2.88\n3 lines. 1 month 4.29\n4 lines. 1 month 5.72\nAll above less 10% for prompt\npayment\nCHAPTER  50\n\"I got in from\u2014Ossining\u2014Monday\nevening.\" Ward Van Every told\nme. \"The first man I met on thc\nstreet was Roy Barrimore. Old\nfriend of mine. I knew him long\nago. Surprised to see mc. I told\nhim, of course, about the prison, and\nhe sympathized. Asked me if he\nrould do anything, and we went up\nto his place. I told him he could call\nmy brother for me. I had money in\na safety deposit box, but Dow had\nthe key. Has had it for years, Keeping it for me. Barrimore called \u2014\nI'm telling you everything \u2014 and\nwas told Dow would not be in until\nmidnight.    \u2022\n\"You'll wonder why I didn't call\nmyself. I hadn't, used a telephone\nfor years. Never had used one with\nthe dial system. I was nervous, and\nBarrimore waa only too glad to do\nit for me.\n\"I left his place after that, although he urged me to slay. But 1\nwas nervous. My appearance bothered'me. The short hair. Everything. I imagined 1 screamed prison\nto ever; one. Supersensitive, I am\nyet. I can hardly bear to sec anyone\non the streets. I looked up Dow's\naddress, and determined io go there\nat midnight myself. Joyce - y\u00bbn\ndon't know that, su I won't tell\nyou \"\n\"I do. Van Ever) had to tell us\nfinally.*'        \u25a0\n\"I'm sorry!\" His concern was terrible. \"She doesn i know?\"\n\"No, and never will, if you wish\nit that way.\"\n\"Good! I knew Dow would always\nkeep my trust. I didn't want to run\ninto her. Dow said she had a picture\nof me. I was afraid she might \u2022\u25a0erog-\nnizc me. I walked over lo the house,\nand got there a little early. Eleven-\nthirty it was. I didn't know whether\nDow was home or not. And I couldn't be sure that Joyce wouldn't\nopen the door herself. I knew I\nwould show somehow my love for\nher if I saw her. Well. I decided to\nwait a while, so I slouched behind\nthe iron grill, under the steps. You\nknow where?\"\nI nodded, S-> Win! Van Every\nwas there Monday night!\n\"I waited a long time. Finally\nDow came, you with him, and also\nthis actress. 1 remember vondo.ing\nhow long they would stay, nnd whether 1 should cme back the next\nday, I decided to wait, because I\ndidn't want to conic in thc day-\nlight. Dow might, be embarrassed\nat his vi.ilor. Sensitive again. 1\nWish I had gone. Then I wouldn't\nhave all thi.- on my conscience\n\"1 finally sal down on the paving stone. I planned as soon as\nDov.'s guests were gone to go up\nend ring thc doorbell. 1 noticed a\ntpxi come up and draw up to the\nnext house. 1 paid little attention\nto it, except to crep farther back\nin the little rourt. A woman got out\nof it. I shrank farther hack, for I\nimagined it might be Joyce. And\nshe might see mc. I began to feel\nmore like a robber than ever. The\nwoman, I saw right after my first\nscare, could not he Joyce. A ma-\nlure woman. She was dressed in a\nfur wrap. As she went up the stairs\nshe glanced at the court. I thought\n1 was lost. but. she couldn't have\nseen mc because she went on. I\nknew that her errand must be some\nsecret one because she tiptoed. With\nhardly a sound she put a key in the\ndoor. I did not hear the door open,\nbut I heard it close, a Ibud click.\nWhen I looked again, the woman\nwas gone\u2014in the house.\n\"I wondered how long my brother's little midnight affair would\nlast, I had no doubt that this woman in the fur wrap was a guest.\nThat is at first\u2014until I read the\npapers later.\n\"Some time later \u2014 I can't be\nexact, because I couldn't see my\nwatch it was so dark, and I didn't\nwant to make any noise, I felt bad\nenough as it was\u2014two other people\ncame, a young man apd a girl. They\ntripped up the steps and whispered\na few seconds at the door. The girl\nseemed to be urging the man to do\nsomething he didn't want to do. I\ncouldn't hear their conversation.\nThe girl wore no hat, and her hair\nshone in the dark. Gold. I knew it\nmust be Joyce. Finally the girl unlocked the door and they went in,\nbut I did not hear the door close.\nNor did the lights of the first floor,\nthe parlor floor it was, go on. Even\nwhen the woman in the fur coat\nwent in, these lights were not\nturned on. They would have flooded\nthp little court, so you see I would\nhave had to go. That's why I stayed,\nprincipally because of the darkness,\n\"I looked up at the door. I thought\nIt was partly open. While I was debating whether or not I should go\nin\u2014conceal myself of course until\nDow was free\u2014the woman in the\nfur coat slipppd out, and down the\nItaki, She must have heard a noise,\nbecause before ] knew it she was\nnear me in the court, crouched\ndown beside the grill. 1 dare not\nbreathe. I sat motionless. She did\nnot look around, only leaned back\nagainst the grill, and turned the\ncollar of her coat against her face.\nI could not sec her. but 1 could\nhear her breathing. She seemed to\nbe excited. Once she put her hand\nnear mine on the grill door, to\nsteady herself. Il was shaking.\n\"I knew now she was no guest of\nDow's. Else she would not have\nhidden with me there by the grill,\n\"1 saw presently, rather heard,\nwhy she had hidden with mc, The\nfront door closed, softly, but loud\nenough for me to hear it, and footsteps came down Ihe stairs. A man\npassed before us. Evidently he noticed the woman's taxi which was\nstill waiting. I heard him ask the\ndriver if he hod a fare, heard the\ndriver say yes. Then the man\nwalked on rather fast down the\nstreet. As soon as he was out of\nsight. Ihe women flew to the taxi\nand it took her away. I'm sure she\ndid not see me. did not know 1 was\nthere.\" Ward Van Every stooped\nfor breath, He was panting, and the\nhand that clutched the arm of his\neasy-chair was quivering.\nEdith Bryce. The woman in the\nfur coal. It could be no one else.\nKeyes' case was complete. All this\ntime Ward had po':s\u00abscd the key to\nthe crime . . ,\n\"It was all v:ry queer standing\nthere, not knowing what to do. The\nman I decided was the same one\nwho had come with Joyce\u2014if the\ngirl was Joyce. I was sure it was.\nSo sure that I had a hard time,\nwhile the woman in the fur coat\nwas beside me, to keep from trembling. I recognized (he man by his\novercoat at? he talked to the taxi\ndriver.\n\"I was tempted to go then. Dow's\nparty was getting too mysterious for\nme. I didn't know whether to go in,\nand warn him about the woman-\nshe might be a robber or something.\nHowever, she had entered by a key\nthat fitted the door.\n\"I stayed\u2014what semed to me to\nbe hours went by. In reality, it was\nonly minutes\u2014long ones at that.\nPresently a dim light flashed on\nright beside me. Behind the grill.\nwith that. 1 scurried away, across the\nstreet and sauntered along there\nfor a while. Then a man carrying a\nbag went up the steps to Dow's\nhouse. There was a light in the hall\nnow, and I saw the door open for\nthc man. A Chinaman let him in.\nThen the door closed. More time\npassed, still I stayed, across the\nstreet, but when a car with a siren\ndashed up to the house and stopped\nand men began getting out and\nrunning up the steps I went away.\nThe police.\n\"I was sure the woman in the fur\ncoat had robbed the house. Yet\nwhy should a man, obviously a doctor, go into the house? That he was\na doctor seemed reasonable to me.\nHe was carrying a bag. A servant\nhad met him at the front door.\n\"I thought of Joyce. Worried that\nsomething had happened to her. I\nwas crazy for hours. Walked the\nstreets. Didn't know where I was.\nFinally I killed time in a coffee\nhouse. It was dawn when I came\nout. I walked some more. Already\npeople were hurrying to work. I\nlooked at the news stands, bought, a\npaper. The story I read, you know,\nI was sick with nervousness by\nthis time. Should I go to the police,\ntell them what I knew? Or should 1\ntrust that they would find out? An\nactress killed in Dow's house. I,\nalso a murderer, outside when it\nhappened. My agony was terrible.\nI thought of Dow. His anxiety if he\nknew I was near\u2014he hadn't even\nknown I was out of prison. I didn't\nwant him to know until I saw him.\nJoyce, lt would all come out, if i\nwent to the police, Who am I. Who\nJoyce is. I, her father, a murderer.\nI know how the police go about asking questions. I know only too well.\nTerrible.\n\"Finally I reached a decision. I\nwould go back to my hotel\u2014a small\none on Seventli avenue, get my bags\nand go away. I did. packed them in\na hurry, and took a taxi to Brooklyn, registering'there under another\nfalse name. The first I had given at\nthe Seventh avenue hotel was a\nfalse one, too. The hotel I chose\nin Brooklyn was a small one, a\ncheap one. T felt safe there. For\ndays I stayed ln my room, only\ncoming out at night for meals, and\nthe newspapers. I was anxious\nabout Joyce. 1 was sure the woman\nin the fur coat was the\u2014rrfurderer.\nWhy had she been so quiet entering the house? Why so secret coming out9 She must have heard a\nnoise coming out nf the door, and\nhidden then with me near the\ngrill. I was tortured by the thought\nBIRTHS\nJEROME \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nThomas C. Jerome, at the Trail-\nTadanac hospital. June 8, a daughter. Mrs. Jerome, before her marriage, was Miss Hattie Gaw of\nGrand Forks.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form FJ\nCertificate of Improvement!\nNOTICE\nSilver Bell mineral claim, situate\nin the Nelson Mining Division of\nKootenay District, located on Fawn\nCreek.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. H.\nGreen, acting as Agent for Neil Mc-\nColeman, Free Miner's Certificate\nNo. 25104-E, intend, sixty days from\nthe date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate\nof Improvements for the purpose of\nobtaining a Crown Grant of the\nabove claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85, must be commenced before the issuance of such\nCertificate of Improvements.\nDated this 11th day of June,\nA.   D.   1936.\nA. H. GREEN.\n(1322)\nof what I knew, yet I dared not\ntell.\n\"The other murder\u2014not in the\nhouse, but on Fifth avenue. I read\nit, and fought with myself again. If\nI did not tell there would be more\ndeaths. Perhaps Joyce. I must tell.\n\"Barrimore was the only touch I\nhad with the world, but he was\ndead. There was no one else I could\ntrust. I thought of Warden Lawn,\nbut if I telephoned him, communicated with him. my call might\ntraced, and I had no one to send\nfor him.\n\"Dow's house full of detectives, so\nthe papers said. You were a friend\nof his, you had been present at the\n\u2014murder. A friend of Miss\nYounger, too.\n\"Tonight I took the subway in,\nfrightened to death. I knew your\nhotel from the papers, I came upstairs as if 1 lived here. You were\na long time coming. First I hid near\nthe fire escape, watching your room\nevery minute\u2014that's all\u2014''\n(To Be Continued)\nGIRLS IN NAKUSP\nCHURCH SERVICE\nNAKUSP, B. C.-The girls choir\nunder the direction of Mrs. G. D,\nStibbs excelled themselves when\nthoy took part in the Sunday evening service at Nakusp United\nchurch.\nTwo anthems \"In the Morning\not Life\" and \"I Heard the Voice\nof Jesus Say\" were beautifully sung.\nIn the second solo parts were taken\nby Miss Mabel Alspen, Miss Huth\nBreely and Miss Frances Lidberg.\n\"I'm Sure I Shall not Pass This\nWay Again\" was sung as a solo by\nMiss Joyce Butlin.\nOther choir renditions were: \"Tell\nMe the Stories of Jesus.\" \"Dear\nLord and Father of Mankind,\" and\n\"The Lord is in His Holy Temple.\"\nMiss Monica Butlin was a honored guest when her aunt, Miss M. H.\nButlin entertained Saturday afternoon on the occasion of her birthday. Guests were: Misses Eileen\nLeary. Mary Rushton, Georgina\nMunn, Hazel Herridge, Irene\nBuerge, Beatrice Johnson, Nellie\nand Alice Huniphris, Joyce and Vera\nButlin.\nMr. and Mrs. James Draper of\nNew Denver were visitors in Nakusp Sunday, guests of Mr. and\nMrs. E. C. Johnson.\nJ. Thompson, purser on the steamer Minto, has returned from a holiday in Penticton.\nF. Angrignon of New Denver was\na week-end visitor in town.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Sanderson and\ndaughter, Mary Jo, of Trail arc\nvisiting at the home of Mrs. Sanderson's brother-in-law and sister.\nMr. and Mrs. H. L. Miller.\nMr. and Mrs. Harvard Hiltz and\nMrs. J. Parent, Jr., were visitors\nto Vernon.\nMiss Dora Pendy and Miss Gladys\nReynolds of New Denver were visitors in Nakusp Saturday.\nJ. McLeod of Arrow Park spent\nSaturday in Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. Knelson and son\nof Arrow Park were among shoppers in town Saturday.\nW. B. Johnstone of Silverton was\na visitors here Friday.\nC. Kennett of New Denver motored to town Saturday.\nAs a gesture of courtship in mating season, male fiddler crabs stand\non tiptoe before an approaching\nfemale of the species, with their\nsingle big claw held high.\nPERSONAL\nSOYOLK,\" THE FAMOUS BRIT-\nish vegetable flour. Contains no\nstarch. Rich in proteins, essential\nminerals and vitamins.\n\u2014Alkaline forming.\nSOYOLK\" KOFFY, A GENUINE\nhealth-giving drink. Wonderfully\nmellow. Rich in soluble phosphates. \u2014Alkaline forming.\n\u2022SOYOLK\" MACARONI, A COM-\npletely  balanced  food.  A  high-\n' grade cereal and vegetable combination. Starch reduced. Easily\ndigested. \u2014Alkaline, forming.\nEat and drink your way to better\nhealth with \"Soyolk\" foods. They\nall counteract acidity. Ask your\ngrocer.\nSoya Foods (Canada)  Ltd.\n228   Abbott   Street,   Vancouver.\n(12931\nWANTED TO BUY\nWANTED. SMALL STEAM BOIL-\ners, suitable for heating\u2014Eteam\ncontractor, Box 855, Nelson. (1270)\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM AT 924 EDGE-\nwood avenue. Reasonable. (1000)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nGIVE  YOUR  HAIR  A\nPERMANENT  WAVE  AT  HOME\nFOR $1.50.\nNo Electricity, Heat nor Machines,\nno Hair Pulling nor other Discomforts.\nEnjoy a permanent wave which\nwill he the envy of your friends, by\neasy self-application of PERMA\nWAVE in your own home, at exceptionally low cost. Will wave\nbleached or tinted hair, leaving It\nsoft and glossy. Will not discolor\nwhite or grey hair. For complete\noutfit and full instructions, simply\nwrite your name and address clearly\non a sheet of paper, enclose with\n$1.50, plus 18c to cover postage, and\nmail today to\nPERMA WAVE SALES CO.\nP. O. Box 1061      Vancouver. B. C.\n(1294)\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. (1111)\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED AT ONCE, EXPERIEN-\nced girl for housework. Must be\nfond of children. Apply 617 Carbonate St. (1299)\nCLEAN TIDY GIRL FOR GENER-\nal housework. Sleep out. Phone\n371Y or P. O. Box 1042, City. (1304)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED SAWYER AND\ntail sawyer wants work. Box 1300\nDaily News. (1300)\nPhohe\nJean Robertson\n144\nFor the NELSON DAILY\nNEWS CLASSIFIED\nSERVICE\nIN TRAIL-FURNISHED APART-\nment for July and August, centrally located, phone Trail, 529X\nor write Box 1111, Trail, B.C.\n(1236)\nAPARTMENTS, MEDICAL ARTS\nBlock. Two bedrooms. Chas. F.\nMcHardy. (1129)\nFURN. SUITES, KERR\nApis. $30 and up.        (1130)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block.\n (1131)\nFULLY FURNISHED HOUSE, 618\nSilica St. Phone 690R. (1221)\nSINGLE HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS.\nK. W. C. Block. (1313)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites. (1132)\nUGHT-HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS!\n918 Kootenay Street. (1292)\nUSED CARS\n1927   PONTIAC  COACH.  EXCEL-\nlcnt condition. Cheap. Phone 558X.\n(1323)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nFRUITVALE\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nApplications for the purchase of Block 176, D. L.\n1236, Plan 785-B, Fruitvale, B. C, property of\nthe Newby estate, may be\nmade to the undersigned.\nArthur G. Cameron\nP.O. Box 2121, Trail, B.C.\nSolicitor for the Estates of John\nNewby and Edith.Watts Newby.\n(1281)\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\nREAL BARGAIN FOR IMMED-\niate sale, 5 room house on two\nfine level Fairview lots one block\nfrom car. $1250. cash payment\n$550. bal. easy terms. H. E. Dill\nWard St. (1326)\n8 ACRES, 1 IN SMALL FRUITS,\n100 cherry trees, brick house.\nCheap for cash. John Campbell,\nTaghum. (1241)\nFULLY MODERN BUNGALOW.\nFull basement, furnace, garden\nand fruit trees. Clear title. 1320\nFalls'St. Phone 635L. (1239)\n2 ACRES ADJACENT TO CITY.\nWell improved. Apply Box 1324\nDaily News. (1324)\nFARM   LANDS\nSNAP FOR $500, WITH ONLY $300\ncasli and bal. $200 within one\nyear lo close the C. A. McCurdy\nEslate assessed at $2000, house and\n15 ac. cultivated land, irrigated by\nGrand Forks Irrigation Dist.\nConcrete pipe system free of all\nencumbrance, water ready tc\nserve, rates reasonable. Apply\nGeorge C Egg, Official AJminis-\ntrator, Grand Forks, B. C.     (849)\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(1135)\nTRANSFER WORK\nMOVING\nand\nHAULING\nOF ALL\nDESCRIPTIONS\nCourteous Service\nWilliams Transfer\nPhone 106\ni1297)\nSEVERAL BLOCKS OF LAND, 10\nto 20 acres each. Chiefly limbered.\nW. G. Barclay, Fruitvale.  (1309)\n2 CHOICE BUILDING LOTS ON\ncar line. Ideal location. D. W. Guy.\n(1289)\n9 ROOM HOUSE. CLOSE IN. MOD-\nern. Box 1227 Daily News. (1227)\nFOR SALE\nOSTICO TREE-BANDING MATE-\nrial. Nicotine Sulphate, Paris\nGreen, Arsenate of Lead, Calcium Arsenate, Sulphate of Iron,\nLime-Sulphur Solution, Hand\nPumps. The Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd. (1321)\nFOR SALE, 30 H.P. AIR-COOLED\naircraft motor, in good shape. Ideal\nfor Flying Flea. Apply Harry\nNixon, Perry Siding, B. C. (1279)\nr6UTBOARD-MOTri2 h.p. ONLY\nrun around 20 hrs. $175. Cost $275.\nPalmer Rutledge, Trail.      (1223)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St      Vancouver, B. C.\n(1134)\n1 DELCO LIGHT PLANT, COM\nplete with batteries. $250. Koote\nnay Motors. (1226)\nFOR SALE, SOME GOOD RECON\nditioned machines at snap prices.\nSinger Sewing Machine Co. (1222)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEG&\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C.        (1133)\nSOLD OUT OF. CHICKS FOR\nseason. A limited number of May\nhatched Leghorn pullets: 8 weeks\n65c, 10 weeks 75c, 16 weeks $1.00.\nReady to lay $1.25.\nRUMP k SENDALL, LTD.\nMilner, B. C.\n (1295)\nLEGHORN CHICKS FOR SALE,\nlast hatch June 17th, $9.00 per 100.\nSatisfaction guaranteed. T. A. Robinson, B. C. Lands Op. Co. Ltd.,\nGrand Forks, B. C. (959)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nNEAR KASLO. IDEAL HOM!\ncomfortable house, two acres,\nmodern plumbing, electric light)\nPhone V. L. Trail, Mirror Lake!\n____^ (127011\nTO RENT FOR SUMMER MONTHS]\nSemi-furnished three-roomed cottage, Crescent Bay, nine mile)\nfrom Nelson ferry. Box 1281 Dally\nNews. (1.61)\nSUMMER COTTAGE ON KOOT-\ncnay Lake. P. Longueval, Sirdar,\n(1308)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nSUMMER   COTTAGE,   LAKE\nFront. B. Dunlop, Crescent Bay.\n(1298)\nLOST AND FOUND\nLAUNCH FOR SALE CHEAP. AP-1\nply W. Mack, City. (1207) '\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n3 GOOD JERSEY COWS, $50 EACH.\nGeneral purpose colts. 3 and 4\nyears. Your choice, $110. J. Graham, Perry Siding. (1319)\nPUREBRED FREISAN HOLSTEIN\ncow, good milker. Apply Mrs. F.\nE. Haines, Fruitvale. (1318)\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog, t po\u00ab-\nketbook, Jewelry or fur or iny\nthing else of value telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\".\nAd will be Inserted without coit\nto you. We will collect from the\nowner.\nLOST-PAIR READING GLASSES\nnear Ward nnd Baker Sts. Reward\nFinder leave at Dally News. (1308!\nFOliNDTSMALI. SUM MONEY OJ\nBaker St. Apply Daily News.\n(1325)\nBusiness and Professional\nFIREWOOD FOR SALE - MILL\nends, $3.50 per load\u2014Phone 163.\n(1272)\n4 GOLF CLUBS. RIGHT HAND-\ned, and bag. Phone 829R.     (1274)\nMOTORISTS! CUT THIS OUT!\nBelow you will find a list of Garages and Service Stations who are always ready to \"Serve you, with a smile!\"\nAVENUE SERVICE STATION\nPhone 857. Nelson Ave.\nWashing, Greasing, Gas, Etc.\n(868)\nService as You Like It\nBEACON SERVICE STATION\nPhone 578. 701 Baker St.\n(86\")\nALL USED CAR PARTS AT\nCITY    AUTO    WRECKERS.\nJosephine St.\nDODGE-DeSOTO\nExpert Service\nERIC'S MOTOR SERVICE\nPhone 75.     223 Baker St.\n(869l\nUNION 76 and TRITON OIL at\nSHARDELOW AUTO CAMP\nNelson Ave.\n(873)\nFAIRVIEW SERVICE STATION !\nGas, Oil. Batteries, Tires, Etc. I\nPhone 605 Nelson Ave.\n(870)\nSHORTY'S REPAIR SHOP\nComplete Automotive Repairs\nPhone 171. 712 Baker St.\n(871)\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nGuaranteed cleaning and repairing. New cores installed.\n(872)\nAUTO GLASS replaced at\nT. H. WATERS CO., LTD.\nPhone 156.      Foot of Hall St.\n(874)\nAccountant.\nInvestments\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, S.F.A.E.\n213 Medical Arts Building.\nP. O. Box 1091,       Nelson, B  C.\n(1142)\nHOW TO BE PROSPEROUS\nMONEY MANAGEMENT\nF, A. Stuart, P.O. Box 389, Nelson\n(1160)\nAjsaycrs\nMachinists\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.             (1143)\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work, Lathi\nWork. Drilling, Boring and Grind\ning.  Motor  Rewinding,  Acetyleni\nWelding.\nTelephone 593.     321 Vernon Street\n(1161\nGRENVILLE  H.  GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 618\nBaker street, Nelson, B.C. P.O.\nBox No. 276, Representing Shippers' Interest at Trail, B. C. (1144)\nMaternity Homes         1\nELIZABETH  PEEL           \\\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician in attendance. Ph. Broad. 3078\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wash\n\u00bb                        (1152)\nChiropractors\nJ. R. McMIL,LAN, D. C. PALMER\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk., Nelson.\n(1145)\nNotaries\nK M. WARREN. D. C.,' BOX 872.\nFor Canaries. Phone 115 or 755L.\n\u2022   (1146)\nD. 3. ROBERTSON, NOTARY PUB'\nlie Office 305 Victoria St Nelson\n(11831\nDecorator.\nPatents\nPAINTING,    INSIDE,    OUTSIDE.\nSatisfactory  work.  Moderate\ncharges. F. J. Norris, 711 Silica St.\n(875)\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT\nor, list of wanted inventions an.\nfull information sent tree, Thi\nRamsay Company, World Patenl\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St Ottawa.\n(1164)\nElectrical\nJ. P. COATES. The Electric Store.\nSupplies and Installations.\nPhone 768.              P. O. Box 1085.\nPhotography\n(1147)\nPREMIUM    CEEmFICATES   ON\nvaluable merchandise given with\nfilms  developed, including  one\nprint  from  each negative,  26c,\nExtra prints, eight for 25c Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon\n(1165)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nE. L WARB\u00abRTON, NELSON. B.C\nOffice 518 Ward St Phone 53, P.O.\nBox 668. Agent: Oils, Greases, Paints\nSpecialties:   mining   machinery,\nCrow's   Nest   Pass   Steam   Coals,\nStructural steel piping, sheet iron.\nSanitariums\n(1148)\nDR. ALDRICH SANITORIUM INC\nTreats all chronic diseases including T.B., cancer, diabetis, llquot\nhabit and the mind. 30 years prac\u00ab\ntice.  E-4504  Fredrick,  Spokane,\n(1168)\nH. D. DAWSON.        Nelson, B. C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(1149)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B.C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(1150)\nSash Factory\nA. H. GREEN CO, LTD. 516 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelson, B. C. (1151)\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker St\n(1167)\nFlorists\nSecond Hand Stem\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP.\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays k etc. Phone 215.\nMrs. Hagarty, Box 29.          (1152)\n24 MAGAZINES. ASSORTED, $1.00\nprepaid. The Ark Store.  (1188)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St\n(1180)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal estate, Insurance, rentals, 217\nBaker St                           (1153)\nIt. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, In-\nWigs and Toupee*\nHardware,   Baker  Street.   (1154)\nLADIES AND GENTLEMEN8\nwigs and toupees, etc. Free illustrated Catalogue. Over 20 years\nin R C. We buy cut hair. Hanson\nHair Goods Co. P. O. Box 601,\nVancouver, B. C.                (IrtO)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99\n(1155)\nH. E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate, 508 Ward St\n(1156)\nI   E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE.\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block\n(1157)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70. (1158)\nCHAS F. McHARDY, INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Phone 135.        (1159)\nTELEPHONE\n144\nfor Classified Ad\nRESULTS\nTILUE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westovar\nHKLLO,BOLTOM-\nTHIS, IS MAC -\n[>0U<5ALL OF\nSlMPKINS _VND<-0,\nCAM YOU COMF\nOVEE7\nVeS.ME. MAC-\nDOOGALL-IUBE\nRISHT OVEfc\nTILLIE, \\Al\\l_L\nYOU COME IM-\nTO MV OFFICE'\nSUEH-y, MAC\nI'LL COME 1ZI6H1\nALOM6J\nNOVaJ, TILUE, i WANT\nyou to coMPArae My\nMUSTACHE TO QOLTOM'S\nMAC, IT'S\nAPEr-FECT\ncopy TO\nV A HAlg\n__\n \u25a0mm\nI\"\"' ^ m^mr-smfmmwm'itimisjfm\u00ab< i m\nIcQ^\niORONTO MINES\nCONTINUE HIGH\nTORONTO, Juna 10 (CP)\u2014The\nbronto mining market plodded\nlong on the upward trail today,\nId by the golds and the close for\nIt yellow metal group was at the\nighest price average boarded in\nKant years. The miscellaneous\ntines Index advanced Vi of a point\nI  129.24.\nMcKenzle Red Lake closed 5\ntnti up at 1.90. Heavy buying put\nan Antonio up 10 cents to 2.30.\nlckle Crow added 15 cents, Anglo-\nluronlan 15 and gains of 3 to 5\nsnts were boarded for Sylvanite,\n'entures, Wright Hargreaves, Min-\n){ corporation, Gunner and Buf-\nilo-Ankerite. Pioneer lost 15, Teck\nlughes 10 and Mclntyre Vi.\nPROFITS TAKEN\nHEW YORK, June 10 (AP)-\n\u2022roflt-taklng Jumbled stock mar-\nart prices today despite buying ln\ncattered rail, utility, merchandise\nnd specialty issues.\nA dip ln yesterday's strong Ameri-\nien Telephone hesitancy of the\nteels and a heavy tone displayed\niy the alcohol group helped to\nether thi list.\nTha rel-tively heavy turnover ln\now-priced utility stocks brought\nhe day's volume up to 1,036,665\nihares, largest since May 27, last,\nfhe Associated Press average of 60\nslues ended with a net gain of .1\n)f s point at 322.\nTashota Suspended\nFrom Exchange and\nThen Is Reinstated\nTORONTO, June 10 (CP) \u2014\nShares of Tashota Goldfields, Ltd.,\nwere suspended from trading by\nthe management of the Toronto exchange today when it waa learned\nthat 15,000 shares had been sold to\nofficers of the comp:vy In March-\nat 5 cents a share without notice of\nthe transaction being forwarded to\nthe exchange. At the time the sale-\nmade Tashota shares were selling\nabove 40 cents on the Toronto\nmarket.\nInformed of the suspension, Tashota officials decided to put the\nstock back in the treasury and the\nexchange officials Immediately lifted the ban on trading.\nCHICAGO RALLIES\nN.L.ON DAILY NEW., NILSON, B.C-THUH5DAY MORNING, JUNI 11. IM\nMarket and Mining News\nCOAST IS HIGHER\nCHICAGO, June 10 (AP)\u2014Wheat\nprices rallied late today, responsive\nto strength of Minneapolis and Winnipeg markets, and to reports of\nfurther need of rain in spring crop\nareas.\nThe close was firm, unchanged to\nVi cent higher, July 84% to 84%,\nSeptember 85% to 85%, December\n87% to 87%, corn % off to % up,\nJuly 61% to 61%, September 58%\nto 58%, December 52%, oats % to %\nadvanced, July 24%, and rye showing % to % bulge, July 54% to 54%.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, June 10 (CP)-Brit\nIsh and foreign exchange closed\nsasler today,\nI Australia, pound, 4.0040.\nChina, Hongkong dollars,  .3245.\nFrance, franc, .0660.\nOreet Britain, pound, 5.0265.\nIndia, rupee, .3084.\nJapan, yen, .2952.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0554.\nSouth Africa, pound, 5.0023.\nSwitierland, franc, .3244.\nUnited States, dollar, 7-32\nalum.\npre'\nMoney\nBy Tha Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal: Pound 5.02 21-32;\n1. S. dollar 1.00 7-32. Franc 6.60.\nAt New York: Pound 5.01%; Ca-\nladian dollar .99 25-32; franc 6.58%.\nAt Paris: Pound 7623 francs; U. S.\n.ollar 15.19 francs; Canadian dollar\n15.16 francs.\nln Gold: Pound 12s 2d; U. S. dollar 3323 cents; Canadian dollar 59.23\neent..\nCANADIAN DOLLAR GAINS\nNEW YORK, June 10 (CP)-\nLeading currencies were firm in\n\u25a0elation to United States funds during fairly active trading today on\nthe foreign exchange market. Canadian dollars were up 1-32 per\ntent at 99 25-32 cents, pounds sterling gained % cent at $5.01% while\nFrench gold francs improved %\npoint to 6.58% cents.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, June 10 (AP)~\nCopper quiet; electrolytic spot and\nfuture 9.80, export 9.05 to 9.07%.\nTin barely steady; spot and nearby 21.12% to 21.25, future 41.75 to\n41.87%.\nIron quiet, unchanged.\nLead steady; spot Ntw York 4.60\nto 4.65, East St. Louis 4.45.\nZinc dull; East St. Louis spot and\nfuture 4.90.\nAluminum 19.00 to 22.00.\nAntimony, spot 13.50.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nAt London\u2014Copper, standard spot\n\u00a336 is 3d, future \u00a336 7s 6d; electrolytic, spot, bid \u00a340 7s 6d, asked\n\u00a340 10s.\nTin, spot \u00a3183 10s, future \u00a3181\n15s.\nLead, spot \u00a315 6s 3d, future \u00a315\n8s lid.\nZinc unchanged.\nBar silver unchanged at 19%d.\nVANCOUVER, June 10 <CP)-\nActlve Issues moved to higher\nground under increased buying support on the Vancouver stock exchange today. Transactions totalled\n255,640 shares.\nVidette Gold advanced 28 at 1.75\nsifter selling ss high as 1.85. Cariboo\nGold Quartz closed up 7 \u25a0 at 1.75,\nwhile Island Mountain at 1.79 and\nKootenay Belle st 60 each added\nfour. Premier gained 2 at 2.48, Congress 2% at 21% and Relief Arlington 2 at 28. Dentonia was up 1 st\n19 and Gold Mountain a fraction\nat 11%. Bralorne lost 15 st 8.25, and\nPior\\r 5 at 9.05. Federal at 7%,\nWayside at 12 and Nicola at 9 were\noft fractions. Remaining golds\nclosed unchanged to mixed.\nU.S. DOLLAR LOSES\nMONTREAL, June 10 (CP) -\nLeading currencies declined on the\nMontreal foreign exchange today.\nThe pound sterling dropped 1-32 to\n5.02 21-32 while the United States\ndollar was off 1-32 at a premium of\n7-32, The French franc remained\nunchanged at 6.60.\nC.P.R. EARNINGS UP\nMONTREAL, June 10 (CP)-In-\ncrease of $99,000 was shown today\nin earnings of $2,387,000 by Canadian Pacific Railway company\nfor week ended June 7 compared\nwith $2,288,000 for the corresponding period last year.\nBelfast is considering a loan for\n\u00a3155,000 to extend Its electrical services.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, June 10 (CP)-Graln\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High\nLow   Close\nWheat:\nJuly   ..      77       77%\n78%    77%\nOct.   ..      77%     78\n77%    77%\nDec.   ..     77%    78%\n77%     78\nOats:\nJuly  .      Sl%    31%\n31%    81%\nOct.   ..      29%    29%\n29% - 29%\nDec.   _     28%    28%\n28%    28%\nBarley:\nJuly   .      36%    86%\n36%    36%\nOct.   .      34%     35\n34%    34%\nFlax:\nJuly   .    142%    -\n-      142%\nOct    138%    \u2014\n-      138%\nRye:\nJuly  ...     41%    42%\n41%    41%\nOct   _.     42%    43%\n42%    43\nDec.   ..     43%    43%\n43%     43%\nDominion Bonds\nWINNIPEG, June JO (CP)-Do-\nminion of Canada bond quotations:\nWar loan, S per cent, 1937, 103.10-\n104.00.\nVictory loan, 5%, 19J7, 106.50-\n107.40.\nRefunding loan, 9, 1943, 115.00-\n114.85.\nConversion loan, 4%, 19S6, 110.50-\n111.50.\nNational service loan, 5, 1936,\n101.00-102.25.\n1932 loan, 4, 1952, 107.50-108.40.\n1933 refunding loan, 4,1939,106.75\n108.25.\n1934 refunding loin, 3,1942,105.00\n105.25.\n1934 loan, 2%, 1943, 102.25-103.50.\nLIQUORS HEAVY\nRAIL   LIENI   HIGHER\nNEW YORK, June 10 (AP)-RsII\nHens continued to stand forth as\nthe favorite group in today's bond\nmarket Volume totalled $10,952,000,\npar value, against $10,537,000 Tuesday. Some of tht forclgns, notably\nthe obligations ot France snd Poland, moved up sharply.\nMONTREALOFF\nWINNIPEG FIRM\nCash wheat: No. 1 hard 79%; No.\n1 nor. 77%; No. 2 nor. 74%; No. 3\nnor. 71%; No. 4 nor. 67%; No. 8,\n60; No. 6, 53%; feed 43%; No. 1\ngarnet 72%; No. 2 garnet 71%; No. 1\ndurum 70; No. 1 A. R. W. 87%; No.\n4 special 58%; No. 5 special 53;\nNo. 6 special 49%; track 77; screenings 25 cents per ton.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, June 10 (API-Sterling exchange steady at $8.00% for\n60-day bills and at $5.01% tor demand. '\nCanadian dollars 99 25-32.\nFrance 6.58%  cents,\nItaly 7.87 cents.\nUruguay 80.00 cents.\nSTEEL SHIPMENTS INCREASE\nNEW YORK, June 10 (AP)-The\nUnited States Steel corporation reported today an Increase of 4190\ntons in shipments of finished steel\nproducts ln May. Last month's total\nwss 984,097 tons compared with\n979,907 ln April and 598,915 in May,\n1935.\nTORONTO, June 10 (CP)-The\nIndustrial market of the Toronto\nexchange took itt gains in small\ndoses today and was inclined to\ntaper oft further ln the final phase.\nThe liquor stocks turned heavy ln\nthe last few minutes.\nTrade In Ford A was the day's\nfeature. Announcement yesterday\nof a 75-cent dividend brought ln\ngood buying orders. The close st\n22% left a net advance of a point.\nImperial, International Petroleum,\nPantepec and McCoU common closed down % to Vi each.\nDistillers-Seagrams sold down 1%\nand Walkers common % point.\nC.P.R. lost %. Smelters Was off %.\nSteels, foods, utilities and prices\nwere fairly steady. Crow's Nest\nsold at 55, a new high for the year\nand up 7 points.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, June 10 (CP)-But-\nter spot close \u2014Que. June 22%.\nCheese spot\u2014Ont. white and colored 13-13%.\nEggs spot, ln carlots\u2014Ont A-\nlarge 24-24%; A-medium 22%-23; C,\n20%-21.\nButter futures\u2014June 22-22%; July\n21%-23%; Nov. 23%-%.\nWheat, No. 2 nor. 85; barley, No.\n3 C. W. 46; oats, No. 1 feed 35%;\nflour, spring wheat patents, firsts\n5.30; seconds 4.90; white corn 4.40-\n50; bran, ton, 1323; shorts, ton,\n19.26; middlings, ton, 24.25; rolled\noats, bag 90 lbs., 2.75.\nTO  DIVIDE 8HARE CAPITAL\nOTTAWA, June 10 (CP)-A bill\nunder which the Trust k Loan\nCompany ot Canada will be authorized to divide its shart capital\nInto ordinary and preference stock\npassed the house committee on banking and commerce today.\nAmong the animals of Palestine\nthat have vanished with the progress of civilization are the lion, leopard, and fallow deer.\nMONTREAL, June 10 (CP)-In\ndull trading, listings on Montreal\nstock exchange turned lower today\nafter two sessions of fractionally-\nhigher levels.\nAway from the general trend ln\ntho utility list were B.C. Power B,\nCanada Northern Power and International Power which gained from\n% to %. Among the losers wert\nB.C. Power A snd Brazilian.\nNoranda potted an advance of %\nto 68% but Holllnger and Consolidated Smelting were lower and\nInternational Nickel steady. Papers\neased.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, June 10 (API-\nFlour unchanged. Carload lots family patents (.40 to 6.60 s barrel ln\n98-pound cotton sacks. Shipments\n20,354. Brsn 15.50 to 16.00.\nWheat cash: No. 1 heavy dark\nnorthern spring, 60 lbs, 108% to\n123%. No. 1 red durum 74%.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, June 10 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 shares or more on the Toronto stoak exchange today ware;\n867 Brazilian; 540 Br & Dist; 775\nB A OU; 1858 Can Ind Al; 800 C P R;\n105 Cockshutt; 580 Dist Seag; 6589\nFord A; 600 Gyp & Ala; 1172 Nickel;\n353 Massey Har.\nMONTREAL, June 10 (CP) -\nSales of 100 shares or more on Montreal stock exchange today: 1150\nBrazilian; 1970 Alcohol A; 370 Alco\nB; 251 C P R; 465 Smelters; 375\nDlst Seag; 685 Holllnger; 865 H\nSmith; 1275 Imp Tob; 515 Nickel;\n100 Int Power P; 100 Massey; 148\nMcColI; 562 Mtl Power; 1331 Noranda; 185 Power Corp.\nWINNIPEG, June 10 (CP)-Wheet\nprices were quietly firm on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange today.\nNet gains of % to % cent were\nregistered,\nVslues held st levels above the\nprevious close for most of a dull\nsession. The July future finished\nat 77%, October 77% snd December\n78 centt. Export tales were estimated to total 400,000 bushels.\nChlcsgo closed little unchanged\nfrom Its previous finish, while Liverpool, rallying from early losses,\nwat unchanged to %d higher.\nBuenos Aires wss up fractionally.\nDealings in cash tnd coarse grains\nwere uninteresting. Prices generally were firm with wheat.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP) -\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nListed: Big 400, Bralorne 701, B\nR Con 100, B R X 1000, Cariboo\n2250, Dentonia 6300, Gold Belt 1200.\nIsland Mount 2100, Inter CSC\n500, Koot Belle 5450, Minto 6300,\nMorning Star 14,000, Pioneer 200,\nPremier Bord 3400, Vidette 11,300,\nWayside 500.\nCurb: B C Nickel 2600, B R Mount\n500, Can Rand 3600, Congress 21,-\n650, Dictator 1400, Fawn 1000, Fair-\nview 29,550, Federal 8900, Gold\nMount 10,500, Grull Wihk 900,\nGrange 2000, Grandview 3000, Hedley Amal 2250, Home 17,500, Meridian 400, Nicola 2500, Noble Five\n1000, Pilot 29,700, Reward 5500, Reliance 4000, Relief Arl 4500, Viking\n5500, Waterloo 1500, Whitewater\n500, Waverley 10,000.\nROYAL DUTCH INCOMI HIGHER\nNEW YORK, June 10 (API-\nRoyal Dutch company, a holding\ncompany with refineries and distribution facilities in most countries of the world, In its annual\nreport issued today showed 1935\nnet Income of 54,278,180 florins,\nabout $36,856,000 after taxes snd\nother charges, equal to 10.76 per\ncent on the ordinary stock. This\ncompared with 38,131,875 florins,\nabout $25,908,000 or 7.50'per cent\non the ordinary stock ln 1934.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh         Low Clot* Change\n30 lndustrlsls  153.87         152.44 153.02-up   .12\n20 rails      46.90          46.37 46.60-up   .44\n20 utilities ~ -   32.58          32.11 32.26\u2014up   .05\n40 bonds                 102.52\u2014up   .05\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nToronto Stock Quotations\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAllied Chem .... 198%\nAmerican Can 129%\nAmer For Pow    7%\nAm Ma ft Fdy 24\nAm Smelt k R 77%\nAm Telephone 170%\nAmer Tobacco 95%\nAnaconda   33%\nAtchison  74\nAuburn Motors 29%\nAviation Corp     5%\nBaldwin       3%\nBait & Ohio    .. 18%\nBendix Aviat _ 27%\nBeth Steel  53%\nCanada Dry  15\nCan Pacific .... 12%\nCerro de Pasco 55%\nChes k Ohio .... 58%\nChrysler  96\nCon Gas NY.... 34%\nCorn Products 78%\nC Wright Pfd _    5%,\nDupont   145%\nEast Kodak .... 162%\nEl Pow & Light 16%\nErie  13\nFord English ....    7%\nFord of Canada 22%\nFirst Nat Stores 46%\nFreeport Texat 30\nGen Electric .... 39%\nGen Foods  40%\nGen Motors  63%\nGoldDutt  16%\nGoodrich  20\nGranby _   _    3%\nGreat Nor Pfd 41%\n.Great W Sugar 36T4\nHows Sound ... 53%\nHudson Motors 15\nInternat Nickel 47%\nInter Tel & Tel 14\nJewel Tea  75\nLow\nClose\nKenn Copper _\n39\n197\n197\nKieskc S S \t\n22%\n129%\n129%\nKroegger G \t\n22%\n'IV,\n7%\nMaclt Truck\t\n32\n23 Mi\n24\nMilwaukee Pfd\n1%\n77%\n77%\nMont Ward \t\n45%\n168%\n168%\nNash Motors ....\n16%\n95\n95%\nNat Dairy Prod\n24%\n83%\n33%\nN Power k Lig\n10%\n72%\n72%\nN Y Central ....\n36%\n27%\n28%\nPsclfic G k E ..\n37\n8%\n5%\nPackard Motors\n10%\n3%\n3%\nPenn R R\t\n.11%\n18%\n18%\nPhillips Pete . .\n41%\n27=1\n27%\nPure Oil \t\n17\",\n52%\n52%\nRadio Corp \t\n12%\n14%\n14%\nRadio Keith 0\n5%\n12%\n12%\nRem Rand \t\n20%\nJ4%\n54%\nSafeway Stores\n3.1\n58%\n58%\nShell Union\t\n17%\n94!,\n95%\nS Cal Edison ....\n27\n34%\n34%\nSouth Pacific ....\n3.1%\n77 3j\n78%\nStan Oil of Cal\n36%\n5%\n5%\nStan Oil of Ind\n34%\n145%\n145%\nStan Oil of N J\n58%\n102\n162\nStewart    Warn\n18\n16%\n16%\nStudebaker  \t\n11%\n12%\n12%\nTexas Corp \t\n31%\n7%\n7%\nTexas Gulf Sul\n.16\n22%\n22%\n46%\nTimken  Roller\n61%\n46%\nUnderwood   Ty\n8.1\n30\n30\nUnion Carbide\n87%\n38%\n38%\nUnion Oil Cal..\n21%\n40%\n40%\nUnited Aircraft\n17%\n62\n63%\nUnited Biscuit\n27%\n16\",\n16%\nUnion Pacific ..\n128\n19%\n19%\nU S Pipe \t\n39%\n8%\n3%\nU S Rubber .....\n23V,\n40\",\n40%\nU S Steel\t\n62%\n36%\n36%\nWarner Bros .._\n10%\n53\n53\nWest Electric ....\n114%\n14%\n15\nWett Union\t\n82%\n46%\n47\nWoolworth ........\n50%\n13%\n13%\nWrlgley  \t\n67%\n75\n75\nYellow Truck ..\n18%\n38%\n38%\n22%\n22%\n22%\n22%\n31%\n32\n1%\n1%\n44%\n44%\n16%\n16%\n24\n24%\n10%\n10%\n35%\n85%\n36%\n37\n10%\n10%\n30%\n31\n30%\n41\n10%\n17%\n11%\n12\n5%\n5%\n19%\n20%\n32%\n32%\n17\n17\n28%\n26%\n33%\n33%\n35%\n36\n34\n34%\n58%\n58%\n18\n18\n11%\n11%\n31%\n31%\n35%\n35%\n60%\n60%\n83\n83\n88%\n87%\n21%\n21%\n17\n17\n27%\n27%\n128\n128\n38%\n38%\n28%\n28%\n61%\n61%\n10\n10\n112%\n112%\n81%\n81%\n50%\n60%\n66%\n67%\n17%\n18%\nBankfleU-   _       .65\nBarry Holllnger      .07\nBase Metals       .17\nBear Explora _ \u201e 48\nBig Missourie 62\nBobjo  18\nBralorne - ....     8.40\nBRX ...... 13%\nBuf Ankerite      7.50\nCan Malartle     1.15\nCariboo Gold\n...    1.75\nCastle Treth     1.55\nCentral Man .\nCentral Pat .\n.31\n3.93\n1.85\n2.25\n3.50\nChibougsmou . \t\nCoast Copper\t\nConiagas\t\nConarium      2.20\nCons MJiS    85.75\nDome    59.00\nDominion Explora       .06\nEldorado      91\nFalconbridge      7.90\nGod's Lake      1.05\nGold Belt       .49\nGranada       48\nHardrock     2.50\nHolllnger    16,00\nHowey  . 80\nHudson Bay    25.00\nInter Nickel    47.00\nJ M Con      AS\nKirkland L 77\nLake Maron  _ 13%\nLake Shore ...    59.50\nLittle Long Lac     6.90\nMacassa     4.60\nMaple Leaf 19\nMalroblc          .04\nMcLeod Cockshutt      3.8S\nMclntyre     45.75\nMcKenzie Red Lake     1.90\nMcVitUe Gr    26\nMcWatter Gold  \u00bb.     1.45\nMining Corp     1.25\nNipissing        2.40\nNoranda    58.00\nParkhUl  19\nPaymaster     1.05\nPend Oreille 75\nPickle Crow     5.50\nPioneer      9.05\nPremier Gold  :,     2.48\nReno        1.34\nSan Antonio     2.35\nSheep Creek      .77\nSherr Gordon     1.01\nSiscoe      3.65\nSmelter G  11\nStadacona  _      .48%\nSt Anthony      .25\nSud Basin      3.70\nSylvanite    _     2.80\nTeck Hughes      5.55\nToburn     1.45\nTowagamac. 42\nVentures     1.95\nWaite Amulet      1.06\nWayside  12\nWhite Eagle  : 04%\nWright Hsrgresves \u201e    8.10\nOILS\nAJax    \u2022 _      .41\nB A Oil    23.25\nC 8c E Corp 96\nChem Research      1.05\nDalhousie   38\nHome     1.04\nImperial  21.00\nInter Pete    36.75\nMerland  14\nNordon    16%\nRoyalite     27.62\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros     9%\nBell Telephone 149%\nBrazilian       12%\nBrew k Dlst     .95\nCanada  Bread        4%\nCan Car k Fdy     5%\nCanada Cement     6%\nCanada Dredge   47\nCanada Malting    32%\nCan Pac Rail .    12%\nCons Smelters    55%\nDominion Bridge    37\nDominion Stores     9\nDist  Seagrams      21\nFord Canada A    22%\nGoodyear Tire      69%\nHiram Walker     27%\nLoblaw   A       20%\nMassey Harris       5\nSteel of Canada    62\nWalker Brew _    2%\nLISTED Bid\nA P Con .._ 13\nAmal  OU   12\nBig Missouri     .60%\nBralorne       8.25\nBridge R Con     .07%\nBRXGold    13%\nCariboo Oold Q .....   1.75\nC and E Corp    1.00\nCoast Breweries 13.00\nCoast Brew Hts     5.15\nDentonia  19\nGold Belt -     .45\nHome Oil    1.06\nInt Coal      20\nIsland Mount    1.79\nKoot Belle  60\nMak Siccar     .05\nMcDougal Segur ....   .05%\nMinto      .72\nModel Oil      20\nMorning Star  03%\nNat Silver      .03\nPioneer Gold    9.05\nPremier Gold    2.48\nPremier Border 01\nReno Gold   -.    1.31\nReeves MacDonald .    .05\nSally Mines 12\nSalmon Gold ...-, 10\nSheep Creek      .77\nSpooner Oil  21\nTaylor Bridge  11%\nVanalta  06\nVidette       1.75\nWayside Gold 12\nWellington  -    .07\nCURB\nAnaconda Oil  03%\nBsltac Oil       -\nBeaver Silver       \u2014\nBluebird      .00%\nB C Nickel  35%\nB C Silver     2.25\nB R Mount 16\nCan Rand ...\" 09%\nCalmont OU 08\nCongress Gold     .21%\nCottonbelt   02\nCrows Nest  13\nDalhousie Mines ....     \u2014\nDalhousie  Oils   40\nDevenish Oils      .02%\nDictator Gold  04%\nDunwell     .03\nEsstcrest  08%\nFairview Amal 07\nAsk\n.15\n.62\n8.40\n.08\n.14\n1.76\n\u2022U5\n13.25\n(.85\n.19%\n.48\n1.08\n.21\n1.80\n.62\n.05%\n.73%\n.0.1%\n.03%\n9.20\n2.50\n.01%\n1.33\n.13\n.11\n.78\n.23\n.14\n.07%\nJ.80\n.12%\n.09\n.04\n.03%\n.03\n.37\n2.60\n.10%\n.09%\n.23\n.02%\n.13%\n.02\n.45\n.03%\n.05\n.04\n,07\nBid\nFawn Mining .     \u2014\nFederal Oold      .07%\nFreehold OU    AS\nGolconda   .-  .12ft\nGlade* Creek      XII\nGold Mount _    ,ll>i\nGeo Enterprise  02%\nGeo River      .01%\nGrandview   _    J>2%\nGrange     .02%\nGrull Wlhksne ....    .10\nHaida Gold    .03%\nHedley Amal      .23\nHlghwood Sarcee ..    .13%\nHome Gold     MV.\nIndian Mines      .02\nIndependence _.     \u2014\nKoot Florence      40%\nKoot King     MVi\nLakevlew Mines ....    .00%\nLucky Jim     .01\nMadison Oil      .01\nMar Jon OU 18%\nMercury .011 \u2014 11%\nMeridian  -    .07\nMerland OU     .14\nMill City     .09\nMorton Wolsey      .00%\nNicola     .09\nNoble  Five    02%\nNordon Oil  16\nPacalta      .06\nPend Oreille  75\nPilot Gold     .07\nPorter Idaho      .04%\nQuesnelle Q     .06\nRanchmen's        .51\nReward Mining .....    .07%\nReliance       .07\nRelief Arlington _    .28\nRoyallte 28.00\nRufus Argenta     40%\nRuth Hope     .01 %\nSilvercrest      .00%\nSilversmith       .01%\nSnowflake        .01,\nStandard S k L     .46\nTaylor Wind 16\nU D L         -\nUnited Empire .....    J)l%\nUnited Oil      .05%\nViking Gold  04%\nWaterloo      .04%\nWaverley Tang     .00%\nWellington  00%\nAsk\nM\n.07%\n.08\n.13\n41%\n.12\n.04\n.02\n.03\n.03\n.11\n.04\n.24\n.14\n44%\n.02%\n41\n.01\n.02\n.01%\n.20\n.13\n.09\n.09%\n.00%\n.09%\n.03\n.18\n.07\n.80\n47%\n.04%\n.08%\n.5.1\n.07%\n.07%\n28.50\n.01\n.01%\n.02\n.46\n.80\n.02\nCANADA EXPORTS\nTO U. S. WELL\nUNDER QUOTA\n\" -   i\nWASHINGTON, June 10 (AP)-\nPrclimlnary statistics released by\nthe treasury today showed imports\ntrom Canada well under quota provisions of the Canadian trade agreement during the first five months\nof the present calendar year.\nImports of lumber through May\n30 amounted to 55,927,011 board\nfeet, which was 22.4 per cent of the\nyear's quota.\nImports of cattle under 175\npounds amounted to 20,908 head\nduring the five-month period which\nwas equal to 40.3 per cent of the\nquota provisions. Income shipments\nof cattle weighing 700 pour's or\nmore amounted to 108,203 head, or\n69.5 per cent of the quota provisions which went into effect last\nJanuary 1.\n> \u00bb*ei NINS\nMuch B. C. Livestock\nGoing to the U. S.\nBELLINGHAM, Wash., June 10\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Attributed to the new reciprocal trade agreement between the\nUnited States and Canada, a pronounced increase ln livestock imports from British Columbia is noticeable, customs officers at Blaine\nand Sumas report.\nApproximately 20 carloads a week\nare being cleared at these two ports\nof entry. The bulk of the shipments\ngo to Seattle and Portland, but Spokane also is making heavy Importations, local customs officers were\ninformed.\nThe duty on catUe was reduced\na cent a pound.\nIn addition to the livestock entered for butchering, many truckloads\nof pure bred cattle also are being\nbrought ln.\nBAR GOLD QAIN8 ONE\nMONTREAL, June 10 (CP)-Bar\ngold ln London up 1 cent at $34.90\nan 'ounce in Canadian funds, 138s\n8%d In British. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $35.08 in\nCanadian.\nMINE COMPANY\nFINED FAILING\nREPORT DEATH\nFor failing to notify the chief and\ndistrict Inspectors ot mines ot the\ndeath of an employee from injuries\nsuffered while in the employ of\nthe company, Velvet Gold Mining\nCompany Incorporated was fined\n$100 by Stipendiary Magistrate H.\nE. Plewman of Rossland Tuesdsy.\nE. W. Rusnell died in Rossland\nMay 12, the cause being injuries\nsustained six days previously while\nhe was employed at the company's \u25a0\nconcentrator. The prosecution, was\nInstituted by the department of\nmines for an Infraction of Section\n14, sub-section 2, of the Metalliferous Mines Regulation act\nLewis Frederick, Velvet manager,\nentered a plea of guilty and the\nminimum fine, $100, was imposed.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, June 10 (CP)-Closlng\nquotations: BrazUian $12%, British\nAmerican Tobacco 116s 10%d, British Celanese lis 3d, Central Mining\n\u00a324%, Courtaulds 49s 6d, De Beers\n\u00a38%, Distillers 10s 6d, Imperial\nTobacco 156s 3d, Mining Trust Ltd\n3s 9d, Rand Mines \u00a39%, Rhodesian\nAnglo Am 12s 10%d, Crown Mines\n\u00a315%, Springs 42s (id, East Geduld\n\u00a39%.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent consols \u00a384%, British 3% per cent war\nloan \u00a3105%, British funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a3116%.\nDividends\nToronto General Trust corporation, 1 per cent payable July 2 to\nshareholders of record June 20.\nEastern Steel Products, Ltd., preferred, $1.75, payable July 1 to\nshareholders of record June 15.\nSupersllk Hosiery mills, Ltd.,\npreferred, $1.75 payable July 1 to\nshareholders of record June 12.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, June 10 (CP).\u2014Silver futures closed steady today, unchanged to 30 points off. Closing bids: June 44.75; July 44.80; Sept. 44.90;\nDec. 45.00; March 45.00.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBell Telephone  _.  149%\nB C Packing __  9\nBrazil \u2014  12%\nB C Power A     29%\nBuilders Products ,  34\nCanada Bronte   38%\nCanada Car Fdy   5%\nCanada Cement     6%\nCanada Cement Pfd   68%\nCanada Ind Al A   _ 7%\nCan Ind Al B   \u00ab%\nCan Pacific Rail \u201e _ 12%\nCanada Steamers  _. _ 1.65\nCockshutt  6%\nCon Min & Smelt  _ 55%\nDominion Bridge  37\nDominion Glass  111%\nDominion Textile _  60\nFord Can A  22%\nGen St Wares \u201e  3\nChas Gurd \u2014  6\nHamilton Br _ 4%\nInternational Nickel  47\nMassey Harris   4%\nMontreal Power  31%\nNational Steel Car  13%\nNational Brewing  44\nOgilvie . ..     215\nPower Corporation  15%\nPrice Bros  3\nQuebec   \t\nShawinlgan  -\t\nSherwin Williams\t\nSouth Csnada Power _\t\nSteel of Canada\t\nCURBS\nAssociated Breweries \t\nBrewers k Distillers\t\nBritish American Oil _.\nBruck Silk \t\nCanada Celanese -\t\nCanada Dredge  __\t\nCanada Malting  \t\nCanada Wineries\t\nDominion Stores \t\nDryden Paper \t\nImperial Oil\t\nImperial Tobacco' Canadian.\nInternational Petroleum \t\nMcColI Frontenac _\t\nMitchell Robt\t\nPage Hersey \t\nBANK8\nCanada _ \t\nCanadien  \t\nCommerce ~  _\nImperial  _ \t\nNova Scotia   _ \t\nRoyal  \t\n16%\n19%\n16\nli%\n62\n. 10\n.95\n. 23%\n. 9%\n. 27%\n. 48\n. 32%\n. 2%\n, 8%\n. 4%\n. 21\n. 13%\n. 26%\n. 15\n. 5%\n. 8\n.   57\n. 135\n. 152%\n. 208%\n.287\n.184%\n\u2014The\u2014\nConsolidated Mining & Smelling\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAII BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nMANUFACTURERS OP\nELEPHANT Brand\nInvestments\nWe offer, subject to*confirmation:\nDominion of Canada 3%% 1956-66 100.00 8.26%\nC. N. R 3   % 1848-53 99.25 3.05%\nNova Scotia   3%% 1966 99.50 3.26%\nNew Brunswick...: 3%% 1056 100.00 3.50%\nCan. Pacific Rly 3%% 1951 96.50 3.80%\nGatineau Power Co. _ 5   % 1956 98.50 5.11%\nInt. P. k P. of Nfld 4%% 1968 100.25 4.45%\nWestminster Paper Co 6%% 1950 104.50 6.00%\nShawnigan W. k P 4   % 1961 99.00 4.07%\nSaguenay Power \"B\" Series 4%% 1966 101.50 4.15%\nSsguenay Power  5%% Pfd. 100.00 5.50%\nPrices are quoted plus accrued Interest.\nA. E. AMES & CO.\nLIMITED\nBusiness Established 1889\n802 Royal Trust Building, VANCOUVER, B.C.\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphates \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertilizeri\nPRODUCERS AND REFINERS OF\nTadanac Brand Metals\nELECTROLYTIC\nZINC CADMIUM\nSILVER\nBISMUTH\n  r-\n~~*f\nPAGE TIN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 11. 193-\nVEST POCKET\nKODAK\nSpecial f. 6.3 lent. Regular\nprice $35.00. Te clear at\n$18.50\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nRgsults\nINTERNATIONAL\n, Toronto 1, Newark 5.\nMontreal 8, Albany 2.\nBuffalo 6, Baltimore 13.\nRochester 8-0, Syracuse 2-3.\nASSOCIATION\nKansas City 5, Louisville 1,\nMinneapolis 2, Columbus 8.\nSt Paul 3, Toledo 8.\nMilwaukee 4, Indianapolis 0.\nPACIFIC COAST\nSan Diego 8, San Francisco 3.\nSeattle 0, Oakland 9.\nPortland 6, Sacramento 3.\nTHIRD READING FOR TAX BILL\nOTTAWA, June 10 (CP)- The\nsenate today gave third reading to\nthe bill amending the special war\nrevenue act, based on the budget.\nOne of the main features is an increase in sales tax from six to eight\nper cent. Two other government\nmeasures were advanced when the\nupper house gave first reading to\nlegislation to establish the department, of mines and resources. These\nbills involve a re-shuffle of six government departments.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST-A PAIR OF HORN-RIM-\nmed glasses. Finder return to\nDally News. (1314)\nNEWS OFTHE DAY\nTHIRSTY? McDonald's Dry Ginger Al. Is Just what you want. (1058)\nIndian motorcycle for sale. Good\nrunning condition. Cheap for cash.\nKitto's Repair Shop. (1317)\nRayon  Ankle  Sox  are Just the\nthing  for smartness  and  comfort.\nJACK  BOYCE\n(1298)\nFor tested \"A\", \"B\" and \"C\" batteries, send to McKay k Stretton,\nWard Itreet, Nelson. (1112)\nRUPTURED? We guarantee to\nfit you with a suitable truss. MANN-\nRUTHERFORD CO. (1209)\nWanted \u2014 Experienced Planer\nman. J. B. Winlaw Lumber Co.,\nWynndel. (1328)\nMILLWOOD, 12 INCH, $3.00 A\nLOAD. BURNS COAL -. CARTAGE CO. PHONE 53. (1278)\nDEMPSEY RATES\nLOUIS TO WIN\nMONTREAL, June 10 (CP). -\nJack Dempsey, the old Manassa\nMauler, came out with the prediction today the heavyweight fight\nbetween Joe Louis and Max Schmeling is \"not going to be a contest.\"\nIn a luncheon address Dempsey\nsaid Louis should be able to name\nthe round in which he will drop thc\nBlack Uhlan.\nDempsey also said he thought\nTommy Loughran and Al McCoy\nwere the greatest of the present day\nwhite heavyweights outside of\nChampion Jimmy Braddock.\nMORE ABOUT\nCAHAN-MiGEER\n(Continued From Page One)\nThe former cabinet minister\nsounded a rally call for men to\nstand together against inflation\nwhich he believed was moving fast\ntnto the center of the political stage\nin Canada.\nBack came Mr. McGeer, accusing\nhim of casting sneers and jeers because he could not meet his arguments in favor of a managed currency and a central bank that\nwould issue currency and credit in\nterms of public needs, not for private gain.\nInflation was not his remedy, said\nMr. McGeer. \"What I do say is that\nwithin the limits of our gold reserves, our gold production, our\nlegal tender currency and our practice of creating an effective bank\ncredit transferable by check, there\nis more money available than is\nnecessary to finance the government without a disastrous imposition of taxation.\".\nOnce, when Mr. McGeer said he\nwould continue to oppose men who\nstood for a financial system based\non private gain and not en public\nservice, a man in the galleries applauded him.\nMORE ABOUT\nKASLO \"CIRCUS\"\n(Continued From Page One)\nOwing to visit of Vancouver\nBoard of Trade, regular monthly\nmeeting of Nelson board is postponed to June 18th. (1320)\nNelson Whist and Old Time Dance\nClub's   annual   free   dinner    for\nmembers tonight at 7 p.m. All members are requested to be present.\n(1327)\nThe New Jubilee Westinghouse\nRefrigerators have Dual-Automatic\nProtection which safeguards both\nmechanism and food. On display at\nKootenay Music House.        (1256)\nLeaving Nelson 8:00 a.m. Tuesdays and Fridays, you make connections at Nakusp for Halcyon\nHot Springs and Revelstoke.\nGREYHOUND UNES\nPhone 800\nNelson Depot  209 Baker St.\n(1127)\ntheir stunts were \"rough\" enough\nto cause the spectators to hold their\nbreath. Both boys are perfectly at\nhome on a horse and apparently\nknow no fear.\nEdna Robson and Pauline Riley\ninterpreted various dances, very\nprettily.\nRita Robson was the \"thin woman\", Orvilie Riley and Victor\nWebber made side-splitting clowns.\n\"The wild man of the Kootenays.\nthe only living specimen of his kind\nwas captured in the wilds of the\nKootenay forests.\" by Jimmie Strachan, Harold Robson being the\nvery realistic, bearded \"wild man.\"\nSonny Timms, Agnes Webber\nand Jessie McLanders, all \"wee\"\ntots, were the charming \"midgets.\"\nThe part of the \"coon\" entertainer was well taken by Bobby Cherry\nand small Joan Hild was the \"fat\nlady.\"\nThe children had great difficulty\nin securing this popular attraction\nbut were equal to the occasion.\nArthur McLanders and Bill Chandler made very efficient policemen\nand kept order without undue\nforce.\n\"Captain\" Jimmie Strachan, who\nhad been in the \"war line\" was\nring master for the evening and\nalso the \"barker.\" This part was\nhandled expertly by Winnie Chandler in the afternoon, the same\nyoung lady being in charge of the\nvarious \"concessions.\"\nDr. D. J. Barclay made his appearance as city health officer but\nthe circus proprietors were undaunted and the doctor's inspection\nas to sanitary conditions was satisfactory.\nThe \"animal parade\" included\nlions, tigers and other rare and\n\"ferocious\" beasts, the cal, dog and\nother pets from various homes being made to take their part in the\nentertainment.\nAt the close of the early evening   performance    the     entire\ntroupe paraded  to the Victorian\nhospital where they presented\nto the stiff, Ihe net proceeds of\ntheir venture, $3.12.\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nCORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF TRAIL\nNOTICE\nApplications will be received for position of police\nconstable for the City of Trail Police Force, preferably\nwith previous municipal police experience and stenographic qualifications.\nApplication forms will be furnished on request and\nmust be completed in applicant's own handwriting and\nreturned to the unders;gned on cr before June 26.\nJOHN LAURIE,\nChief Constable, City of Trail.\nWhen Columbia River at Trail\nStarted Fast Rise\nLooking down Columbia river from foot of Spokane street with\nesplanade wall in foreground.\nLooking up the river with esplanade wall holding back main\nforce of Columbia's terrific pursuit for level.\nlilt\n\u00ab\u25a0\n\u25a0sist\"^?'\u21221*-''   '\u2014~\n'\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022:.      7 \"77   \u2022\u25a0 .' 7  .-.'\u2022'\u25a0   \u25a0\nBuildings on river front with Columbia's water seeping into basements.\nMore buildings on banks of Columbia.-\nPhotographcr.\n\u2022Photographs by Staff\nPensions Report\nIs Tabled\nOTTAWA, June 10 (CP)-Incorporating a number ot changes from\nthe original measures amending thc\nPensions and War Veterans Allowance acts, the report ot the commons\ncommittee on servicemen's problems was tabled tonight by Hon.\nC. G. Power, minister of pensions.\nThe bills will be redrafted for presentation shortly to the house.\nWith regard to the War Veterans\nAllowance act, the.name of the administering body is changed to \"war\nveterans allowance board\" and more\nelasticity is given in the interpretation of the act. Medical opinion will\nnot be relied on exclusively in interpreting the words \"permanently\nunemployable by reason or physical\nand mental disability.\"\nThe age-limit is reduced to 53,\nand provision made for \"borderline\" cases below the age of 55.\nMORE ABOUT\nANYOX\n(Continued From Page One)\nSENATOR WARNS\nPROVINCES MAY\nJOINJTHE U. S.\nOTTAWA, June 10 (CD-Warning that any steps to give the Dominion parliament the right to amend the Canadian constitution might\ncause a union of some of the provinces with the United States todny\nwes sounded in senate by Hon. O.\nTurgeon   (Lib.  Gloucester).\nThere was a growing desire in\nthe republic to bring Canada into\nthe autonomy of the United States,\nthe veteran parliamentarian declared. \"But,\" he stated, \"Canada's material links with Great Britain must\nbe maintained.\"\nA provincial policfe wireless-\nequipped launch prepared to leave\nPrince Rupert, 90 miles distant, for\nthe scene but departure was delayed when it was learned several\nother vessels in the vicinity were\nstanding by.\nAnyox is a mining town at the\nhead of Observatory inlet in the\nPortland Canal district, north of\nPrince Rupert in the British Columbia mid-coast region. It originally had a population of 1500 but\nthis has dwindled to a few hundreds\nsince the Granby Consolidated Mining, Smelting & Power company\nceased operations there,\nCONSOLIDATED PROPERTY\nAll the holdings of the Granby\ncompany at Anyox, including mine\nand smelter, were purchased by\nthe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada when the\nGranby operation came to an end,\nthe object of the Consolidated, according to announcement made at\nthe time, being to acquire the\nmachinery, much of which could be\nused in its various development\noperations at the' coast and elsewhere, Including Tadanac and Kimberley.\nThere is no suggestion that the\nConsolidated will ever operate the\nAnyox property unless new ore\nbodies of which there is now no indication should be discovered.\nSome of the machinery has been\nremoved, but most of it is still on\nthe property.\nFatal Bullet Was\nFrom Ryan's Gun\nSARNIA, Ont., June 10 (CP)-A\nbullet from Norman \"Red\" Ryan'i\ngun took the life of Constable John\nLewis in the liquor store hold-up\nMay 23, Chief Constable W. M. Lan-\nnin definitely stated today after he\nand Dr. E. R. Frankish, medicolegal expert from the attorney-general's department, had examined the\nscene of the shooting May 23.\nLast week Dr. Frankish announced it was a bullet from a gun tagged as being taken from Harry\nCheckley, Ryan's companion in the\nSarnia liquor store holdup, that killed Lewis.\nAt the Inquest June 1 into the\nconstable's death, Ryan was named\nas  Lewis'  slayer.\nBlack Legion Burned\nHomes of \"Reds\"\nDETROIT, June 10 (AP)-A roving Black Legion \"torch squad\"\nwhich was directed by code mes*\nsages from high officers of the terrorist society to hunt out and burn\nhomes of suspected Communists was\ndisclosed today, Prosecutor Duncan\nC. McCrea announced, by statements of four men.\nThe four are Frank Rice, an investigator for an automobile company; Clarence Frye, a foreman of\na motor company; Albert Swanson, Detroit meter reader, and Roy\nHepner, a painter and decorator.\nMcCrea said the men confessed\nto setting fire to the home of Wil*\nliam F. Mollenhauer in 1934, and\nthat they admitted they were of'\nficers in the Black Legion.\nTRAIL JUNIOR BOXLA LEAGUE WILL\nGET AWAY AT RINK FRIDAY NIGHT\nThree Speedy Teams\nAre Entered in\nLoop\nTRAIL, B.C., June 10\u2014Inaugural\ngame of the Trail city junior lacrosse league will get away on\nFriday, June 12, at the rink building. Canada Billiards will play Trail\nElks.\nLast year there were two junior\nteams but all they managed to engage in were a couple of exhibition\ngames.\nBut this season, three full teams\nhave been lined up. \"For the most\npart the juniors started in the Trail\nschools league and are now embarking on their third season of participation in the sport.\nA. B. Thompson of the high\nschool teaching staff, who is man- j\nager of the junior league and who\nhas been in charge of junior lacrosse since organized here three\nyears ago, believes that as a spectacle the youngsters are superior,\ntheir speed superb.\nLEAGUE   SIGNED   UP\nThe junior league will affiliate\nwith the British Columbia body\nand expects to play off with Nelson\nand possibly Rossland for the Kootenay championship and to enter\nthe British Columbia title series if\nany are arranged.\nBesides Friday's game, five others\nof the league- have been arranged\nfor definitely, as follows:\nFriday, June 19\u2014Elks vs. East\nTrail.\nFriday, June 26\u2014Canada Billiards vs. East Trail.\nMonday, June 29\u2014Canada Bil-\nlinrris vs. Elks.\nMonday, Jnly 0\u2014East Trail vs.\nTrail East.\nI\nTuesday, July 14\u2014East Trail vs,\nCanada  Billiards.\nThe  teams follow:\nEast Trail\u2014 M. Smith captain,\nHood, Haley. P. Barchard. P. Smith,\nA. Cutler, Graham, S. Smith, Taylor, Hrooshkin, Dembicki and D.\nMurdoch.\nTrail Elks \u2014 Mathews captain,\nKennedy, Weir, Wilson, Hughes,\nGroves, Richardson, Cusick, Sopko,\nCoupland, Savage, F. Barchard and\nDavis.\nCanada Billiards \u2014 Sammartino\ncaptain, Pagnan, Battistella, Ludo-\nvici, Tognotti, Temple, Zinio, Agostinelli, Turik, Paolini and Coccia,\nFOUR HEALTH  OFFICIALS\nTO  BE  HONORED\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP). -\nHonorary life memberships in the\nCanadirn Public Health association\nwill be awarded to four prominent\npublic health officials during the\ninternational health convention\nwhich opens here June 22. The officials who will b2 honored are:\nDr. W, H. Brown of California,\npresident of the American Public\nHealth association; Dr. A. J. Cries-\nley, state health official of Minneapolis; Dt. J. W. McCullough, chief\ninspector of the provincial department of health, Toronto, and Dr. E.\nS. McPhail of the bureau of statistics at Ottawa,\nB.C.  SPEAKER   IMPROVING\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP).\u2014\nHon. Harry G. Perry, speaker of\nthe British Columbia legislature,\nwho underwent an operation in hospital here recently, today was reported to bo improving rapidly. It\nis believed he will be able to return home in a few weeks.\nCan't Open Coast\nC.N.R. Hotel Soon\nVANCOUVER, June 10 (CP) -\nOpening of the Canadian National\nhotel here cannot be promised in\nthe near future, it was stated in a\nletter received by the civic finance\ncommittee today from l^on. C, D.\nHowe, minister of railways and canals.\nIn answer to the city's application\nthat a least a portion of the hotel\nbe made available for accommod-.-\ntion of Jubilee visitors, the minister's letter stated his department had\nnot had time to fully consider the\nsuggestion.\nFORMER   MANITOBA\nPREMIER STRICKEN\nOTTAWA, June 10 (CP).\u2014Hon.\nT. C. Norris, former premier of\nManitoba, was disclosed today to\nhave suffered a stroke last week'\nend and to have been taken to hos\npital. He was reported to be \"resting comfortably.'' Mr. Norris is a\nmember of the board of railway\ncommissioners.\nRotarlans in convention at Blackpool to the number of 4500 lost\nheavily from pickpockets.\nB.C. Flood Toll Is\nAbout $1,000,000\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., June 10\n(CP).\u2014Arrangements tonight were\nbeing made here to take food supplies into Terrace and other towns\nand settlements along the Skeena\ner which were cut off from outside communication by last week's\nflood.\nThe river level is dropping rapidly and temporary train service\nhas been established between Prince\nRupert and Kwinitsa, 47 miles up\nthe river on the Canadian National\nrailway line.\nIn southwestern British Columbia the Fraser was back billow the\ndanger .mark again, dropping 15\ninches in 24 hours to 19 feet 3 inches\nat Mission.\nNo official estimate of the total\ndamage caused by the floods\nthroughout the province are available at present but tentative estimates place the loss at approximately $1,000,000.\nPresbyterians to\nForm Trust Fund\nHAMILTON, Ont, June 10 (CP)\n\u2014Formation of a trust and loan\ncompany with a capital of at least\n$300,000 to advance money to Presbyterian miss.on congregations for\nthe erection of churches and Sunday schools, was proposed to the\nPresbyterian general assembly today.\nIt was suggested such a company\ncould make loans to mission Sunday schools already organized and\nto needy Presbyterians so they\ncould take over farms.\nFormation of the trust company\nwas suggested by Judge John McKay, Port Arthur. Plans for the\ncompany and an outline of its purposes were contained in a lengthy\nresolution.\nThe resolution was seconded by\nRev. Dr. S. Banks Nelson, Hamilton, Ont. It was passed on to the\nadministration board by vote of\nthe assembly.\n$2.50\nWash Slacks the Ideal\nSummer Pant. You can\nwear 'em with an odd\njacket in the afternoon or\nevening, play golf or tennis, or do nothing very\ncomfortably in them.\nThey won't fade1 in the\nwash, and they're pre-\nshrunk. In stripes and\ncheck patterns. A special\npurchase makes them a\nvery attractive buy at\n$2.50\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nThis column is in charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of Trail. AU\nevents of a social nature of interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad lo have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her home in Trail.\nPOLICE   ARREST\nFOUR\nPICKETERS\nSYRACUSE, N.J., June 10 (AP),\n\u2014Police swung night sticks tonight,\narrested four men and broke up an\nattack on seven workers who left\nthe strike-closed Remington Rand\nfactory to meet a barrage of hoots\nand jeers of several hundred persons. Many in the crowd wore\nbadges bearing -the word \"picket.\"\nWATCH   BURIED   EIGHT\nYEARS,   STILL   RUNS\nDAYSLAND, Alta.. June 10 (CP) j\n\u2014John Mavor today was telling the\ntime from a watch ho lost eight!\nyears ago. While plowing a field'\non his farm near hero, he turned\nup the watch and except for rusty\nhands, the timepiece was in perfect running order,\nTRAIL. B.C., June 10\u2014Mrs. Charles J. Thorndale entertained members of the Past Chiefs' club, Pythian Sisters at bridge at her home\non Tuesday evening. Mrs. Dan Williamson secured prize for high score,\nMrs. D. J. Duffus being awarded the\nconsolation. Mrs. Charles Morrow\nassisted the hostes in serving at the\nconclusion of play. Those present\nwere Mrs. Duncan F. Downie, Mrs.\nJack Balfour, Mrs. R. H. White, Mis.\nOmer J. Wilson, Mrs. D. J. Duffus,\nMrs. Dan Williamson, Mrs. Charles\nMorrow, Mrs. A. B. Clark, Mrs. Hugh\nBeckett, Mrs. J. Thompson, Mrs.\nThomas Alty, Mrs. Gordon Holling-\nton and Mrs. Pete Shields.\n*   *   .\nMiss Lorraine Waters, celebrating her birthday anniversary Tuesday, was hostess to a number of\nfriends at a supper and theater party\nat her home. Assisting Mrs. Laura\nWaters were Mrs. W. F. Truswell\nand Mrs. A. W. McDonald. Games\nprovided before the supper entertainment, the theater party following the serving of refreshments.\nDainty place cards added charm to\nthe supper table which was centered by an ornamented birthday cake.\nThe guests were Miss Ethel Dwyer,\nMiss Evelyn Dwyer, Miss Margaret\nMoore. Miss Kathleen Glover and\nMiss Mary Broadwocd.\nTed Brothers, who celebrated his\n11th birthday anniversary Tuesday\nentertained a number of friends\nat a happy party at the home of\n! his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. L.\nBrothers, Bay avenue. Table ornamentation included a decorated\ncake, guest favors being given following supper. Games provided the\nentertainment. The guests were Jean\nCoghlin, Bernice Coghlin, Charlotte\nDcdimead, Peggy Dodimead, Shirley\nHill. Bobby Baldrey, Jim Millar,\nGordon Coghlin, Gilbert Meredith,\nJohn Allen Mathews, John Walton\nand Don Brothers.\nR. Mayne and Eddie Murdoch mo*\ntoiTd to Colville and Kettle Falls\nSunday.\nMrs. R. G. Anderson, Tadanac,\nwas hostess Tuesday afternoon to\n-].embers of Tadanac circle of the\nWomen's association of Knox United church at' the final meeting ol\nthe senson, held at her home Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. E. Whittemore\nroured, the hopto?\u00ab hein\u00ab assisted in\n,'vrving by Mr*1 r TT Kilburn.\nFisher's address was doubly interesting to a great number of the\naudience who remembered* the\nspeaker when she lived in Trail a\nnumber of years ago.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. G. G. Cumming and\ndaughter Doreen have returned to\nTrail from a trip to Spokane.\n* \u2022   *\nMiss Susan Aitken was convener\nof a delightful tea held Tuesday\nafternoon in the hall of First Presbyterian church, members of the\nteaching staff of the Sunday school\nentertaining to raise funds for the\nannual summer picnic. The serving\ntable was artistically appointed, the\ncenterpiece being a silver basket of\ncarnations flanked by mauve tapers. Presiding at the tea urn* was\nMrs. Duncan F. Downie. Assisting\nin serving were Mrs. M. Sherwood,\nMiss Amy Strachan and Miss Gladys\nMcHardy., Mrs. D, J. Duffus and\nMrs. George Stewart had charge of\nkitchen arrangements.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. William Crawford\nhave taken up residence on TWird\navenue, East Trail.\n* \u2022   *\nMrs. A. J. Edmonstone delivered\nan interesting talk on work of Presbyterian missionaries at Formosa\nwhen she spoke to members of the\nWomen's Missionary club of First\nPresbyterian church at a meeting\nin the church hall. Mrs. Irene Condy\npresided,\nFrancis   J.   Glover   motored\nSalmo Wednesday afternoon.\nto\nMrs. Otto Shcllenburg left Monday for Cardston where during the\nsummer she will visit with her parents.\n.   \u00ab   *\nMrs. F. Martin returned Tuesday\nevening from Calgary where she\nhas been visiting relatives.\nMiss Peggy Barclay and Miss\nPauline Hrooshkin were visitors\n.Sunday to Colville.\nMORE ABOUT\nChina Conscripts\n(Continued From P\u00abge One)\nccutc speculators in falling\nKwangsi bank notes.\nThe soldiers were sent north with j\nSouth China's warning it would!\nnot stand for increasing Japanese J\nmilitary control.\nCantonese militarists confirmed\nreports the Kwangsi army had\nreached Hengchow, and said th\u00bb\nKwangtung forces were expected to\njoin it there by mid-month.\nIn addition to the Impressment\nof coolies. Kwangsi schools were\nclosed without waiting for examinations, seniors were conscripted for war, and juniors were used\nas propagandists and lecturer,.\nCanton food prices continued toj\nmount.\nTrinity Battles\nTelephones Today\nTrinity men's softball club, which j\nseems to improve with each game\/, i\nwill be out in full strength Thursday evening to 'play the league-\nleading B.C. Telephone team at the\nRecreation grounds. As yet the\nPhones have not lost a game in the\nleague. , t,\nSELL THE CLASSIFIED WAY |\nJ.A.C. Laughton]\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Bldg. |\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 659      610 Kootenay St,\nAthletic\nUnderwear\nfor Real Comfort\nJOCKEY SHORTS and\nSHIRTS\nGarment 50<:\nBROADCLOTH \"GRADS\"\n501\u2122A 75l\nAttractive Sots of\nSHIRTS and SHORTS\nSet $1.95\nGODFREYS'\nmt9    LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\n318 BAKER      PHONE 270\n(\u25a0M_J__'H-LM\n7- fl    111    I   4-3       Thc winner of the\nNEW ART DIRECTOR\nLIVERPOOL, England, (CP). -\nGeorge Loraine Conran, 24, has\nbeen apoolnted deputy director ot\nthe Wa***er Art Gallery, Liverpool.\nAN AUDACIOUS THIEF\nHEILBRON. South Africa, (CP).\n\u2014A daring thief entered a police\nsergeant's room in his absence, removing all his clothing including a\ntunic,\nTO INSTAL  BIG TELESCOPE\nFORT DAVIS, Tex.\u2014(CP).\u2014Putting the \"finishing touches'1 on the\nMcDonald observatory on Mount\nLocke will require all summer. The\n82-inch mirror is yet to be installed\nin the telescope.\n| Mr*. Norman H-\"rv wps again\nhonored when Mr?. J. M^Nfrlin en-\nI terfained Tuesdav evening at her\nhome, the event takinp tlie form of\na kitchen shower. Austins the\nhostes* in s-rving refreshments\nwere Mr?, .T. Hardy, Mrs. .T. Henderson, Mrs, Pri^e nnd Mrs. A. Miller,\n* *   *\nMrs. A. Dywer returns Thursday\nto her home from ihe Trail-Tadanac\nhospital.\nMrs. Charles J. Miles. Pine avenue, accompanied bv her granddaughter, Denny Miles, left Tuesday for the coast, where at Vancouver she will attend a meet(ng\nof the grand chapter of the Order\nof Eastern Star.\n# *   *\nWilliam Kemp motored to Salmo\nWednesday afternoon.\nMrs. H. E. Fisher delivered an\ninteresting address on Inland Missions of China when she spoke to a\ngood audience in First Presbyterian\nchurch Wednesday evening.   Mrs.\ntho Academy\naward for tha best performance of 1935 ... In tha plctura\nthat won her the honor!\nShowing at 2:00-7:10-9:50\nBETTE DAVIS\n\"(Dt\njj\n'anqerous.\nco-starred with\nFRANCH0T TONE\nMAMAREUINDSAY\nA Riotous Regatta of Rowing,\nRhythm and Roars\n\"FRESHMAN LOVE\"\nWith Frank McHugh, Patricia Ellis, Warren Hull\nSHOWING AT \u2666\n3.30 and 8:30\nCOMING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nCLARK\nGABLE\nMYRNA\nLOY\nJEAN\nHARLOW\n\"WIFE vs. SECRETARY\"\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_06_11","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0412284","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"}]}}