{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412393":{"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":"1936-06-13","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412393\/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":" TWH\ntm-mm\n(&\nNew York Off; Golds Tumble;\nToronto Is Lower\n\u2014Page Eleven\n-1\nBritain Takes 2-1 Lead in the\nWightman Cup Tennis\n\u2014Page Nine \u2022\n\u2014\nVOLUME 38\nFIVI CINTS A COPY\n\u2014\u2014.     iji\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, JUNI 13, 1936\nNUMBER 46\nGRAZED MINER IN\nOOTS J\n-*-*-\nNANKING FORCE\nMOVES SOUTH TO\nMEET (ANTON'S\nLeaders of Both Sides\nFear Civil War\nIs Near\nNANKING RELIES\nON AIR FORCES\nPlanes Drop Warning\nto the Advancing\nSoutherners\nBy MORRIS HARRIS\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nSHANGHAI, June 12 (AP)-Big\ndetachments of the Nanking (central) government army marched\nsouthward today and were believed\ndangerously close to troops of the\nmilitant Canton (south China) gov-\ni ernment.\nConservative leaders both in Nanking and Canton reluctantly admitted they believed hostilities\nwere imminent.\n(Reuters and Havas agency dispatches reported a clash south of\nHengchow between Cantonese advance detachments and Nanking\ntroops. There were no details. Both\nHongkong and Canton dispatches\naald southern troops, which advanced into Hunan province\u2014of\nthe central government\u2014were withdrawing. Nanking fliers dropped\npamphlets warning against further\nidvances, the\u00bbe reports said.)\n(Continued on Page Two)\nFORKS MAYOR IN\nNELSON EN ROUTE\nTO JASPER PARK\nT, A. Love to Address Annual\n^Dinner of Investment\nMen\nMayor T. A. Love of Grand Forks\nwas in Nelson last evening en\nroute to Jasper Park to address\nthe annual dinner of the Investment Dealers association of Canada\non the invitation of the president,\nJ. Ernet Savard of Montreal. Mr.\nLove will be a guest of the financial\nmen during their three-day convention holiday at Jasper Park\nlodge.\nVAN ZEELAND TO\nTRY AGAIN\nBRUSSELS, June 12 (AP)-Eaul\nVan Zeeland agreed today to try\nagain to form a cabinet in the face\nof. a threatened general business\nstoppage because of strikes.\nMore than 11.000 miners at Liege\nand Mons struck in sympathy with\n'the walkout of 10,000 Antwerp dock\nworkers. Herstal arms workers declared a stay-in strike. Yesterday\n8000 Antwerp diamond cutters quit.\nBAD OUTBREAK OF\nSCARLET FEVER\nAT CALGARY\nCALGARY, June 12 (CP)-The\nWorst outbreak of scarlet fever\nsince 1824 was being battled by doctors and health authorities in Calgary today.\nSince April 216 cases have been\nreported with 98 during the first\n12 days of June. No deaths have\nbeen reported.\nThe city's isolation hospital, with\n70 cases, was filled lo capacity today; four nurses in training at the\nGeneral hospital were fever patients while many children were\nbeing treated at their homes under\nquarantine   restrictions.\nThousands Kneel in the\nStreet Before Cardinal\nVancouver Streets Abound in Yellow and\nWhite Flags of Papacy as Scarlet-\nRobed Prelates Lead Procession\nKNOX NAMED AS\nRUNNING MATE\nFOR A. LANDON\nVANCOUVER, June 12 (CP).\u2014Thousand, of Roman\nCatholics genuflected before Hit Eminence |ean Marie\nRodrigue Cardinal Villeneuve to receive hit blessing today\nas he was escorted in solemn procession through Vancouver's streets to the Holy Rosary cathedral where he\nopened Canada's first Archdiocesan Eucharistic congress.\nAs his eminence passed*'\ndown  the  streets, abounding\nin color from the yellow and\nwhite flags of the papacy, em-\nblaioned with the triple-tiered crown of His Holiness the\nPope, and the keys of St. Peter,\nhe turned from side to side to\nbestow his blessing on the\nkneeling throngs.\n(Continued on Pane Two)\n$15,000 IS PAID\nBY TASCHEREAU\nQUEBEC, June 12 (CP)\u2014Premier\nAdelard Godbout of Quebec tonight\nended 24 hours in silence with a\nplea to electors of the province to\ncollaborate with authorities in maintaining peace and order to assure the\nhappiness of the province and its\ncitizens.\nIt was his first statement since\ntaking over the premiership following the resignation yesterday of\nQuebec's veteran prime minister,\ndeBonaire Lqus AJ\u00abxap4r\u00ab Ta,ch'\n\u2022eau.\nMr. Godbout'a,plea .-allowed.\u00bblull\nin political activity after yesterday's\nswift developments that brought\ndissolution of the government. His\nchoice of cabinet ministers was still\nawaited, however.\nToo, it came on the heeli of a receipt of a check for $15,000 from\nAntione C. Taschereau, brother of\nthe former premier, who resigned\nlast Tuesday after appearing before\nthe public accounts committee of\nthe legislature.\nAntoine Taschereau turned the\ncheck over to the provincial treasurer. It covered, he said, the amount\nof the interest he drew personally\non government funds deposited in\nthe Banque Canadlenne Nationale\nunder his name. He gave testimony\nregarding this before the committee.\nBlindness From\nReducing \"Dope\"?\nLOS ANGELES, June 12 (API-\nHealth authorities were investigating today whether 60 cases of total\nand partial blindness among Los\nAngeles women were caused by\ndrugs in reducing preparations.\nDr. J. L. Pomeroy, city health\nofficer, ordered the investigation of\neach case after disclosing that the\nwomen have been stricken within\nthe past two weeks.\n\"Such an increase In blindness,\nand with women alone being stricken points definitely to an external cause of some sort,\" lie said.\nQUAKES RECORDED\nAT VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, June 12 (CP) - A\nslight tremor was recorded on the\nsensitive photographic seismograph\nof the Dominion metrolpgical observatory, here at 3:19 o'clock yesterday afternoon, W. A. Thorn,\ndictor, announced. Another quake,\nsomewhat stronger, took place at\n8:06 o'clock this morning, the photographic strip revealed.\nManitoba Legislature Dissolved\nin Sudden Move; Election July 27\nHon. John Bracken, Premier for Last 14 Years,\nMakes No Comment; Opposition Is\nCaught Unawares by Move\nWINNIPEG, June 12 (CP)-Mani-\ntoba voters, except in two northern\nconstituencies, will go to the polls\nJuly 27 to elect a government.\nLieutenant-Governor W. J. Tup-\nper, efter a surprise cabinet, meeting of tlie Liberal-Progressive administration elected four years ago,\ndissolved the legislature, set nomination day as July 17 and election\nday 10 days later.\nPremier John Bracken, head of\nthe Manitoba government since 1922,\nmade no comment ln announcing\nthe election which, until yesterday,\nwas not expected until next spring.\nRecurrent  rumors of an  election\nthis year always brought denials\nthat dissolution of the legislature\nwas impending.\nCAUGHT UNAWARE!\nErrick F. Willis, former member\nof parliament for Souris and elected leader of the Manitoba Conservative party at a convention here\nthis week, and S. J. Farmer, leader\nof the Independent Labor party\ngroup, were caught unawares.\nMr. Willis declined comment. Mr.\nFarmer remarked that sudden calling of an election \"is an old political trick. Obviously the short time\n(Continued on Paga Two)\nGOODENOUGH\nVEIN CUT ON\nNo. 4 LEVEL\nValues and Quantity\nof Ore Not Yet\nKnown \u25a0'-..\nFirst crosscut to the south on No.\n4 level of the Goodenough mine at\nYmir, 700 feet in from the portal,\nhas been extended 20 feet and hu\nstruck the vein, it waa announced\nFriday by J. B. Cowell of Ymir\nConsolidated mines. How the ore\nwill assay is not at present known;\nnor is it known whether it is present in commercial quantities.\nStarting Monday the Ymir Consolidated mill will be operating at\na rate of 96 tons per day, employing three shifts. The company la now\nmilling broken ore from the Ymir\nmine and will mill from the Good-\nenough when sufficient tonnage is\navailable. It is understood' that the\nttMJt jjgafejMg \u00bb yrttt,.\nSuspended  Sentence\nfor Horse theft\nFrank Romano Found Guilty\n'. .  ..     at Cranbrook.\nCRANBROOK, B.C., June 12-\nFrank Roman charged with theft of\nhorses from George Staples appeared before Judge Nesbit Friday, was\nlound guilty but waa released on\nsuspended sentence of one year.\nGeorge Staples testified he owned\nthe horse Romano wu riding at\nKitchener on June 3. Staples had\nfound his fence cut, and one horse\nmissing that morning.\nConstable Jeeves testified he\ntraced the horse's track from the\nfield to the highway west to Kitchener and found Romano riding the\nhorse.\nConstable R. It. Hassard, Creston,\ngave evidence to the effect he saw\nthe accused riding the horse near\nKitchener.\nPaul Staples testified he promised Romano a saddle horse for two\nweeks when Romano needed it. Romano stated he could not catch\nthe saddle horse the night of June\n2, so he took the work horse from\nthe same field, Intending to return it as soon as he got his job in\nCreston.\nJudge Nesbit told Romano it was\na very serious criminal offence to\nsteal cattle, but due to his youth,\nand the fact this was his first offence he would suspend sentence.\nIs Named Republican\nCandidate for the\nVice-Presidency\nNOT A SINGLE\nVOTE AGAINST\nRoosevelt Says That\nDemocracy Again\nRestored\nBy JOHN  F. CHESTER\n(Associated Press Staff Writer)\nCLEVELAND, June 12 (AP).\u2014A\nticket of Landon and Knox, nominated unanimously, today was cast\nby the Republican national convention against the reelection of Franklin D. Roosevelt.\nIn a mighty demonstration of surface rarmony, the twenty-first national gathering of the party this\nafternoon decided without a single\n\"nay\" upon the selection of Col.\nFrank Knox, 62-year-old New\nHampshire and Illinois publisher.\nTonight a thousand delegates scattered to the four corners of the nation to thfow themselves into the\ncampaign.\nTwo Interrogation marks were\nleft behind by the tumultuous convention. One stood after the name\nof Senator Borah of Idaho. Another,\n(Continued on Paga Two)\nSON OF FREEDOM\nFINED FOR LACK\nDRIVER LICENCE\nMex-Jarlkeff, *>n ef Fr\u00bbedo~\nDoukhobor, failed to spend $1\nfor a driver's licence. On Friday he\nWU hailed Into court on a charge\nof driving without having a licence, and pleading guilty before\nStipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel, contributed $8 and costs to\nthe government In tha form of a\nfine.\nSocial Credit Will\nContest Every Seat\nin Manitoba Poll\nWINNIPEG, June 12 (CP)-Social\nCredit candidates will contest every\nseat in Manitoba in the election July\n27, it was announced today by H.\nSanders, presidents of the Manitoba\nSocial Credit league.\n\"We are always ready,\" he remarked when the election date was\nannounced.\nWe will, have a complete quota\nof candidates ln Winnipeg and one\nIn every one of the 45 electoral divisions outside.\"\nVancouver Board Bids Kootenays Adieu\n&T1WP\nSLAV GOES ON A\nRAMPAGE; FOUR\nR.C.M.P. SEARCH\nShooting Occurs at\nCadomin in the\nRockies\nWOMAN AMONG\n,,,.  THE VICTIMS\nTo the gay tune of \"8lng a Song.\" the membe\nNelion C.P.R, station yesterday morning on their h\nabout an hour before this photo wai taken after Ie\ndelegation met the board members and wished the\nths observation car of their train. They arrived on\ntwo sections at Nelson. In the center of the plctu\nIn the foreground, with back to the camera and whit\nand facing tha camera Is H. E. Miller. J. Y. Mc\nfigure from the left on the side of the car.\n\u2014Photo by Staff Photographer.\nrs of the Vancouver board of trade pulled out from\nomeward Journey to Vancouver. They had arrived\navlng Fernie early in the morning. At Nelson a large\nm bon voyage. The board delegates are shown on\na 14-car train from the east and this was split Into\nre, hands clasped and singing lustily, Is H. R. Malkin.\ne hair showing, Is E. H. Grubbe. Waving his hand,\nCarter, president of the Vancouver board, Is the third\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto and Montreal: Industrial\nstocks lower.\nToronto mines: Golds lower; other\ngroups slightly higher.\nNew York: Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg: Wheat down tt to ft\nof cent \u25a0\nLondon:. Bar silver and popper\nhigher;- lead and line lower\/\nNew YortKBai' silver\", lead and\nzinc unchanged; export copper\nhigher.\nMontreal: Silver higher.\nNew York: Cotton, coffee and\nsugar unchanged; rubber higher.\nNew York: Canadian dollar down\n1-32 to 99 25-32.\nSTRANGER READS CHARCE\nTO DEAF MAN IN COURT\nWHEN AMPLIFIERS FAIL\nVANCOUVER, June 12 (CP)-The\nhuman voice scored a victory over\nelectrical amplifiers in Vancouver\npolice court today.\nJohn Stock appeared before Magistrate Mackenzie Matheson on a\ncharge of bootlegging but, being\ndeaf, could not hear the charge when\nread by the court.\nAmplifiers were obtained but still\nthe deaf man could not hear.\nA stranger in court offered his\nassistance. He picked up the charge\nand read it in' a normal voice to\nStock who promptly pleaded guilty\nand was remanded to June 19 for\nsentence.\nJames Black Dies\nat Vancouver\nVANCOUVER,   June   12   (CP)-\nFuneral services will be held here\ntomorrow   for   James   Black,   82-\ni year-old teacher and friend of the\n! late Sir Isaac Pitman, developer of\ni the Pitman system of shorthand.\nHe died yesterday.\nBlack was born in Motherwell,\nScotland, where lie taught shorthand for many years. He was one\nof the founders of the Glasgow\nWriters' association.\nIn 1920 he came to British Columbia and a year later, with the\nassistance to the late J. Francis\nBursill (Felix Penne), established\nthe first night school classes here.\nSENATE ADOPTS REPORT\nOF HARBOR COMMITTEE\nIS HEALTH OFFICER\nVICTORIA, June 12 (CP)-Dr. D.\nJ. Fitzosborne of Mint* City, has\nbeen appointed medical health officer for Minto City and surrounding\ndistrict including Bridge River valley and school health inspector for\nMinto and Goldbridge schools.\nTOXOID   HELPS  QUINTS\nCALLANDER, Ont., June 12 (CPV\n-Dr. A. R. Dafoe, physician to the\nDionne quintuplets, today referred\nto hla healthy charges as an example ot the benefits of preventive\nmedicine. Excellent results had been\nobtained from the administration of\ndiphtheria toxoid to the five little\nsisters, the doctor said.\nSome Cocktails and\na Rum Are Reduced\nin Price in B. C.\nVICTORIA, June 12 (CP)-Deductions in thc price of several\nbrands of cocktails from $2.25 to 32\na bottle and on one brand of rum\nfrom $3.40 to $3 on the shelves of\nthe British Columbia liquor stores\nwere announced today. The cuts,\nIt was oxplained, were made by\nthe distilleries and passed on by the\nboard to the public.\nFINAL PLURALITY\nFOR TOLMIE IS\n90 VOTES\nVICTORIA, June 12 (CP)-Thc\nofficial tally of votes cast in the\nVictoria federal by-election last\nMonday was completed this afternoon and left Hon. S. F. Tolmie,\nthe successful candidate with a\nplurality of 90 over Professor King\nGordon, C.C.F.,  who ran second.\nThe first count gave Dr. Tolmie\na 9f. plurality. The count was: Tolmie 5917, Professor Gordon 5887, C\nJ. \"McDowell 3725. The total number 'of votes cast was 17,693 and\n104 were rejected.\nCourt Verdict on\nReform Statutes\nto Be Out on Wed.\nOTTAWA, June 12 (CP)-Deci-\nsion of the supreme court on the\neight statutes passed by the last\nparliament as a part of the so-called\nreform program, will be rendered\nat 2:30 Wednesday afternoon, June\n17, it was announced today. The\nlegislation was referred to the\njudges for a test of their constitutional validity soon after the present government took office, and thc\nhearing was in January last.\nVancouver Cop Helps\nCatch Thieves in\nPortland\nOTTAWA, June 12 (CP)-The\nsenate today adopted the report of\nIts banking and commerce committee recommending amendments to\nthe government's national harbors\nboard mill and the measure will\nappear for third reading next Monday night.\nThe committee recommended nu-\nmeroua amendments, chief among\nwhich were insertion of clauses\nproviding that local advisory boards\n\"may\" be appointed at individual\nharbors, defining deputies of local\nport managers, placing harbor staffs\nunder jurisdiction of the civil service commission and providing that\ntenders must be opened publicly\nat Ottawa.\nCOAST OFFICIAL DIES AT DESK\nVANCOUVER, June 12 <CP)-\nCharles W. Snudden, assistant city\nlicence inspector and a veteran municipal employee, died suddenly at\nhis desk today. The medical health\nofficer, called Immediately to administer first aid, was unable to\nrevive the stricken man. He had\nbeen employed at the city hall for\n20 yean.\nPORTLAND, Ore., June 12 (AP)-\nDetective Al Hoare, visiting the\nrose festival as a member of the\nVancouver police pipe band of Vancouver, B. C, was hero of a chase\ntoday after two alleged robbers.\nWhile Hoarse and Deputy Sheriff\nTillman were standing on a corner, two men dashed down the street\nwitha third in hot pursuit shouting\n\"robber!\"\nThe Vancouver officer, his Kiltie\nskirt faciltating knee action, overtook one of the men while Deputy\nTillman and other officers who\njoined the chase cornered the\nother.\nOfficers recovered $10 in silver\nwhich George Hewitt said the alleged strong-armers took from him.\nThe pair, Thomas Grunden and\nJack Hull, were arrested on charges\nof assault and robbery and bound\nover to the grand jury.\nTwo More Nations\nto Default\nWASHINGTON, June 12 (API-\nTwo more nations\u2014Yugoslavia and\nLithuania\u2014notified this government\ntoday they would default anew on\ntheir semi-annual war debt payments to the United States.\nYugoslavia, which 'owes $350,000\nas its June 15 installment, thereby\nIncreased its total indebtedness in\narrears to $1,500,000.\nLithuania, from which $188,441 is\ndue Monday, ran its amount of unpaid balances up to $942,781.\nOf 13 debtor nations owing $1,160,-\n122.766 on June 15, only Finland has\nmet its installments promptly.\nTREASURY BILLS ALL SOLD\nOTTAWA, June 12 (CP5-Tenders\nhave been accepted for the full\namount of $20,000,000 Dominion of\nCanada treasury bills due Sept. 15.\nit was announced today on behalf\nof Finance Minister Dunning. The\naverage discount price of the ac\ncepted bids was $99.78912 and the\naverage yield was .838 per cent.\nMrs. Spencer Heads\nCouncil of Women\nHALIFAX, June 12 (CP)-Mrs.\nGeorge Spencer, Moncton. was\nelected president of the National\nCouncil of Women today, succeeding Miss Winnifred Kydd. Ottawa,\nwho held the office five years.\nSeven vice-presidents were chosen: Mrs. Frederick Etheringlon of\nKingston, Ont., Mrs. C. P. Bourne\nof Montreal; Hon. Cairtne Wilson\nof Ottawa, Miss Alice Haverstock\nof Halifax. Mrs. F. G. Grevett of\nCalgary. Mrs. W. T. Allison of Winnipeg, Mrs. W. A. Quidell of Toronto,\nConveners of standing committees included Judge Helen Gregory\nMcGill of Vancouver, laws concerning women and children; Mrs. J.\nR. Gilley of New Westminster, B.C.,\nmental hygiene.\nMin.\nNELSON 52\nVictoria   49\nNanaimo   53\nVancouver   52\nKamloops  48\nPrince George  48\nEstevan Point  48\nPrince Rupert   48\nAtlin    50\nDawson, Y.T  42\nSeattle   54\nPortland, Ore  58\nSan Francisco  58\nSpokane   62\nLos Angeles  62\nPenticton    50\nVernon  51\nGrand Forks   50\nKaslo   50\nCranbrook  51\nCalgary   54\nEdmonton     52\nSwift Current  54\nPrince Albert   52\nSaskatoon   52\nQu'Appelle 52\nWinnipeg   62\nMoose Jaw    56\nMax.\n75\n63\nnn\n72\n72\nfill\n64\n58\n58\n74\n72\n78\n70\n90\nPOTATO STOCK\nIS CLEANED UP\n*rfc\u00bb\nScarcity Washington\nOpportunity B. C.\nii,   \u00ab  Growers\nScarcity of potatoes in Washington due In part to heavy frosts\nlast October has enabled British\nColumbia and southern Alberta\nto clear up their stocks of old potatoes and clear the way for the\nnew crop. Within the last short\nwhile 50 carloads have been shipped from Vancouver across the\nboundary line, and the Boundary\nand southern Alberta have contributed several cars as well as a\nlarge number of truck loads.\nPrices of potatoes locally are\nsuch as to give growers a fair return, but they are not at record\nlevels as In Spokane, where prices\nof $4 a hundred for old potatoes\nand $6 for new potatoes, were reported this week. These were the\nhighest prices levels since the war.\nAll Are Brought to\na Hospital at\nEdmonton\nEDMONTON, June 12 (CP)\u2014\nThree wounded victims of a crated\nSlav miner were brought here by\ntrain tonight from Cademln, 200\nmiles west on tha Alberta Coal\nbranch while reports from Edso'n,\n125 miles west of here, said four\nroyal Canadian mounted police\nwere hurrying along the branch\nrailway line to join the search for\nGeorge Panek, alleged to have\nshot the trio.\nCadOmln is In the Rocky mountains foothills and In a coal producing area.\nVictims brought here are Mrs.\nJohn Jess, 30, Andrew Istvan, 39,\nand John Harka, 29, They are now\nin hospital.\nPanek, after shooting Mrs. Jess,\nwas alleged to have run to another\nhouse where Istvan and Harka\nwere shot.\nTwo New C. P. R.\nLiners to Come\nQUEBEC, June 12 (CP)-Sir Edward Beatty, president of the Canadian Pacific railway, said today\nthat two new liners for thc Canada,\nFiji Islands, New Zealand and Australian service will be built provided the governments of the dominions affected by the service and\nthe United Kingdom government\nagreed to support new construction.\nSir Edward sailed for England today aboard the Empress of Britain\nto take part in a final conference\non the subject of the new Empire\nroute to Australia.\n40-HOUR WEEK IN\nFRANCE APPROVED\nPARIS, June 12 (AP)\u2014The chamber of deputies sent,a bill giving\nthe workers of France, a 40-hour\nweek to the senate today, and Premier Leon Blum sought quick passage, of his labor measures by the\nupper house in order to speed a\nsettlement of the paralyzing strikes.\nA \"back-to-wotk\" movement\nthroughout the nation seemed to\nbe spreading faster than new strikes.\nSteals Train Ride,\nArrested, Jailed,\u00bb\nWithin Half Hoijf\nWhen James Fay. rode \"blind\nbaggage\" Into Nelson Friday\nmorning he knew he might encounter the law, but he never\nexpected the law to act as quickly\nas it did. Seeing a Royal Canadian Mounted officer on the platform, he jumped off on the other\nside and almost Into the arms of\nanother Mountie. He was escorted\nto the provincial jail, hailed before Stipendiary Magistrate John\nCartmel on a charge under the\nRailway act, and a few minutes\nlater entered on e month's Jail\nsentence In lieu of paying a fine\nof $15 and costs. The whole procedure required less than half an\nhour.\nHugh Sutherland Is\nDead at Mayo, Y. T.\nVANCOUVER. June 12 (CP)-\nWord was received here today of\nthe death at Mayo, Y.T, of Hugh\nSulherland, 48-year-old former\nmember of Capt. George Black's\nYukon battalion during the great\nwar.\nAfter serving in the Yukon battalion Sutherland was transferred\nto the 231st battalion and fought in\nFrance as a corporal in 72nd Sea-\nforth  Highlanders.\nRides Flaming Plane\nto Earth Uninjured\nDALLAS, Tex., June 12 (AP)\u2014.\nJesse Jones, chairman of the United States Reconstruction Finance\ncorporation, rode a flaming passenger airplane 7000 feet to earth today\nand helped pull two injured pilots\nfrom the biasing airship, but apparently was not hurt.\nJones was brought here to a hospital but insisted he was not injured. He held his hand to his breastbone, however, giving the appearance he may have suffered some\ninjury.\nThe pilots, whose names were not\nimmediately learned, were severely\nburned about the face and arms.\nJones, his shirt spattered with blood,\nIwlpc'. attendants rush them to an\nopei i''n<: room.\nNew Soviet Democracy lo Be \"Ihe\nOnly Real Democracy of the World\"\nCouncil of the Union Is to Be Elected by a\nSecret Ballot; Freedom of Speech, Press\nand Religion to Be Guaranteed\nForecast for Nelson and vicinity\u2014\nNorthwesterly winds; partly cloudy\nand somewhat cooler.\nBy JOHN LLOYD\nAuoclated Press Foreign staff\nMOSCOW, June 12 (AP)\u2014Official press, commenting on Russia's\nprojected new constitution, described Soviet, democracy today as the\n\"only real democracy in the world.\"\nBourgeois democracy, (he newspaper asserted, is a \"dictatorship of\ncapitalism.\"\nA new constitution, to be promulgated this autumn, will guarantee freedom of speech, press, employment and religion; establish\ntwo parliamentary bodies and give\nRussians the right to elect a pro\nportion of their officials by secret\nballot.\n\"The mortal danger of a new.\nwar hangs over the world as a mon- -\nstrous crime of the bourgeoisie,\nwhich Is sunk up to its ears in a\nswamp of bankrupt economy,\"\nPravda said.\nDeclaring real democracy was\nimpossible under capitalism, it demanded: \"Where is Germany's\nrelchstag? Where Is general suffrage in Italy? Where is equality\nand freedom in Poland?\"\n(Continued on Page Two)\n_____________\n ,\t\n________\n____________________\n \u25a0--\u2022'.\u00bb'-\u25a0\n\u25a0JijjRii|ia\u00aba\nB|OitV\u00bb0 \u2014\n\u00a9rititty\nluifpji aUiurrlj\nJosephine and Silica Streets\nHIV. J. A. DONNELL\nMinister\nMR, FRED UlltWaf\nChoirmaster\nPublic Worship st 11 a.m. and\n7:90 p.m.\nChurch School: Seniors at 10 a.m,\nJuniors at 10:15,\nMorning) ''ood'l Broken Prom-\niM?\"\nEvening, \"Qood Men ln Bad\nTimes.\"\nMiss Amelia Hanna will render\na solo in the morning.\nThe United-WltS. meets in\nTrinity Church Oh Tuesday\nat 3 pjn.\ni\u2014AH.\" \u00abIMM\u00ab ii\ntlljf &ahtattnu\nArmij\nCaptain and Mri. Ron\nSUNDAY SERVICES\n11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nTuesday, Thursday and\nSaturday at t p.m.\nTHURSDAY MEETING\nConducted by\nAdjutant Stratton ot Regina\nfirst\n'rMbgtwtan\n(E-?urri}\nMTV. JAMES M. RITCHIE, MA.\nMinister\n10:00 em\u2014Sabbath School\n11:00 un\u2014Public Worship.\nClever, But Cynical.\"\nSILL THI CLASSIFIED WAY\nJftart (Hjurrlitd\n(Elirtel fcttetttW\n300 BAKER STRUT\nA Branch of The Mother Church,\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, in Boston, Mass.\nSunday School 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service H a.m.\nSubjeet Leiwn-Sarmen\n\"OOO THI PRESERVER\nOf MAN\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE   READING   ROOM   IN\nCHURCH BUI-DINQ-\nAll Cordially Welcome\nSt. Paul's\nlimb (dl)urrlT\nREV. T. J, s, mctusoN\nMinister\n10 s_ti.~Sunday School.\n11 aa\u00bb, and 1:80 pjn. - Public\nWorship,\nMorning Theme \u2014 \"What's ths\nNewir\nEvening Theme - \"The Greet\nOpfortuity for Youth Today,\"\nMonday, J pjn.\u2014Itxcelslor Club\nmeets at home ot Mrl. M.\nBright, 710 Silica St,\nWedneiday, 6 p.m.-The Official\nBoard will meet.\nCommunion Service, June 28th.\nSaturday, June 20,3 to t pja.\u2014\nMission Band Tea and Bake\nCOAST THIEVES ISCAPI\nVANCOUVER, June 12 (CP)-Po-\nllce used a blast of gunfire today\nIn an unsuccesfeul attempt to halt\nthree men, suspected of stealing an\nautomobile loaded with camping\ngear.\nAnswering a call shortly after\nmidnight, constables found the three\nmen in a parked car, Ai the patrol\ncar approached the trio fled. Police\ncalled to the men to halt and followed the unanswered command\nwith a volley of six shots. The fugitives disappeared in the darkness.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nmmmmf_ i\n\"Finett in the Interior3'\nHUME HOTEL\nrree Bos Service Geo. Benwell, Prop,\n\u2022RIAKFAST 30o and UP\nLUNCHEON 40o to Ho DINNER Mo to 65c\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 7(7 NILSON. B.C. 422 VERNON ST.\n. HUME\u2014W. W. Murton, R. L. Dee-\neon, 8. C Bonnett, London, Eng.; F.\nH. Allwood, Revelstoke; T. Jenkens,\nK 6. Williams, A. E. Bibbs, H. B.\nLeuty, W. E. Trump, J. H. Constantino, H. 8. Carter, B. C. Lenegrove,\nJ. X. A. Lcssard, H. Vershlmi, A.\nStout, L. Frank, Vancouver; J. H.\n'Lewis, J. B. Whalen, Medicine Hat;\nMn. H. Alcxson, Russells Landing;\n0. D. Christie and family, Trail; J.\nB. White, J. A. Keenan, E. O. De-\nMers, Spokane; G. W. Hicks, Kamloops; Mr. and Mrs. A. P. AUsbrook\nand children, Kaslo; J. Wilson, Boswell; J. M. Firth, Hamilton; D. J.\nMcAlmon, Penticton.\n~ THE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Gueit Is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Biker St.      W. K. Clark, Prop.      Nelson. B. C.\nNtw Grand Hotel\nP. L KAPAK, Prop.\nHot and Cold Water\nMeiVlhly rstei S10JM up\nPH. 234      818 VERNON ST.\nBoost for th*\nKootenay District\nIT PAYS!\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St. Phone 687 L\nH. WA88ICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL   MONTHLY   RATES\nQood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAB. A. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and Cold Water\nIn the HEART ot the City\nPHONE 58      80S WARD 8T.\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\n(?\nARROW LAKES HOTEL ESSES\nNIEDERMAN,       Comfortable Rooms        Plaoe on the\nProprietor Giod Meals Road to Vernon\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\n410\nRiverside Ave.\nHotel Volney\nOpposite the-Paulsen Building\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\nng st the\nSpokane,\nWashington\nI QUESTS\n(TRANSPORTATION - Pats.nger and Freight\nI   \u25a0 -\u25a0 -    \u25a0 \u2014\u2014\t\nHOLIDAY IN THE OKANAGAN\nVIA GREYHOUND LINES\nSpecial Circle Tour\u2014Nelson, Nakusp, Vernon. Penticton. Oliver,\nGrand forks. Trail, and back to Nelaon. Start at any point,\ncompleting the circle for only $14.40, good for 60 days, or (10.00,\ngood for week-end.\nINTERIOR GREYHOUND LINES, LTD.\u2014Penticton\nSee Your Local Greyhound Agent\nmm life\nAS IT ISI\nTbe popular teachings of\nI schools and churches color\nyour viaioa. Tbe truth Is\nconcealed. Real possibilities for your advancement\ntn life are kept for tbe\nfew. A power treat enough\nto change your whole life\nta available if you find the\nkey.\nTHE\nROSICRUCIAN\nSECRET WRITINGS\nWill give you ths true picture of life sad the mysterious forces thst await\nyour command. You will\nfittd s dirt .rent key to your\npersonal problems and \u2022\nsimple way to more abundant realisations of your desires. For many\ncenturies the Itoslcmolan system\nhai crested \u00bb new life With new\npossibilities for multitudes who are\nnow happy sad contented.\nSealed Book Loaned\nIf you sre sincerely anxious to\nknow life ~ sad know your own\npowers \u2014 write s letter sad ask\nfor this aaw, private book, tt will\nbe gladly loaned to you If you are\nreally leeklng to change ths course\nof your life. Address:\nSCRIBE A.N.n.\nThe IXosicrucians\n-AMOftC-\nSAN JOSH, CALIFORNIA\n\"Tie aeslefaetisa.ere KOI a\nreligions oru.lutlei\"\n\u2014  -    NEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. i.C-SATURDAY MORNING,\nFour Nelsonites Enter Pacific\nNorthwest Golf Play on June 22\nCameron, Jim Allan,\nWilson, Stack Will\nBe in Field\nKimberley Told\nol School Ad\nNew Buildings Needed\nin Kimberley; Courses\nExplained\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-J. E. Brown\nwho was sent here upon request by\nthe Kimberley \u25a0 board of trade to\noutline some proposed changes in\nthe administration of Kimberley\nschools to a large audience in K. P.\nhall on Wednesday evening.\nMr. Brown explained that changes\nhad been made ln tho School act,\nwhereby it Ii possible for a school\ndistrict, upon a majority vote of\nthe people, to become part ot an administrative area, These areai have\nbeen created ln Feate River and\nAbbottiford. He outlined the economies that were effected at these\npoints. He went on to ihow how\nthe courses in use at the preient\ntime in many o{ our schools are 30\nyears behind the times and alio\noutlined the courses that should be\noffered. He also showed. how the.\"\npresent high school course is entirely inadequate and does not at\nall meet preient day needs,\nThis curriculum allows for manual training, home economics, commercial courses and vocational subjects by correspondence. These\ncourses are being used ln only a\nfew places under ths preient system.\nMr. Brown explained the difference between a general high school\ncourse and the preient university\nentrance course. In the general high\nschool course, engllsh, social studies\nand health are compulsory and\nthe balance of the 120 units may\nbe made up with optional subject!. At the end of four years\nthe pupil will receive a high school\ngraduation certificate proving a\ngood high school education.\nThe unlveriity entrance course\ncompels pupils to follow through a\ndefinite course with university the\nonly follow up.\nTlie very Inadequate accommodation ln the Kimberley schools was\nbrought to the attention of the meeting. Pupils are being housed ln the\nbasements at both public and high\nschools, a Condition that must be\nchanged shortly. Kimberley will be\nforced to build in the near future.\nBill to Establish\nBody to Help Vets\nJobs Is Passed\nin\nOTTAWA, June 12 (CP)\u2014It took\nthe house of commons 12 minutes\ntonight to pass a bill through all\nfinal stages to establish a commission to assist ln finding Jobs for returned soldiers.\nThe bill was one of the recommendations of a special committee\non veterans' problems. The commission will consist of three men\nand will have wide investigatory\npowers to work with the pension\nminister.\nAnother bill recommended by\nthe committee, recasting the Pension act, was pushed through committee stage and rushed through\nthird reading.\nVancouver Is to have an extremely busy summer this year and not\nths least ot Its many activities will\nbe the Pacific Northwest Golf association tournament to be staged\nthe letter part of ths month beginning Juns 21. And, si Ken Black\naid thli week, lt li going to be\nsome tournament. Of course sil the\nBritilh Columbia stars from the\ncoastal cities will play. Among these\nwlU be Ken Black himself, Stan\nLeonard, Dick Moore, Ted Charlton\nand other contenders for the big\ncrown from Vancouver. Amongst\nths Victoria contingent will be st\nleast two threats who cannot be\noverlooked, namely Ken Lawion\nahd Jimmy Todd.\nOns Of it)t most powerful groups\nwhich hu ever attended from across\nths line will be very much In evidence. Sharpshooters Sootty Campbell snd Harry alvin wlU represent Seattle and Xrnle Pelper regarded ss perhaps the longest driver in golfdom Will be Up from Frisco,\nfour at least, of Nelion dlvoters\nplan to be there to tee off st the\nbeautiful Point Grey courts, Ingy\nCameron, who is already at the coast\nIs Intending to turn out for the\nqualifying ton. T. R. Wilson, Denny\nStack, snd Jimmie Allan plan to\nenter and will likely set out (or the\ncoast next week. Jimmie hss s good\nknowledge of tho Point Grey course,\nhaving been a member there last\nsummer for a month.\nMORE ABOUT\nKNOX\n(Continued From Page One)\nand lesser one, questioned whether\nany eradleable scars had been left\nby the proceedings here Which on\nthe formal record had been marked\nonly by unanimity.\nIn a final session curiously stilled\nas compared to'the riotous gathering that acclaimed Gov. Alt M.\nLandon of Kansas as its choice last\nnight, the convention pulled itself\ntogether at the last minute today\nto prevent open disorder over completion ot the ticket\nAfter a long night of negotiation,\no,l least part of the Landon legion\nopened full force a drive for the\nnomination of Sen. Arthur Vanden-\nberg of Michigan. But the drive mis-\ntired.\nThree \"old guard\" memberi of\nthe party\u2014former Senator Moiel\nof New Hampshire, Reed of Pennsylvania and Bingham of Connecticut\u2014launched a floor flank attack for Knox\u2014and won.\nDALLAS, Texas, June 12 (AP).r-\nPreildent Roosevelt climaxed his\nwhirlwind speaking tour of the\nTexas centennial today with an assault on monopoly and a recommendation that hli \"good neighbor\"\npolicy be extended to Mexico and\nother foreign lands.\nIn another speech\u2014an informal\nluncheon address \u2014 the president\nsaid that while the United States\nla \"world minded,\" Its help to foreign nations beiet with dangers\nwould be \"merely moral,\"\nFacing a colorful and cheering\ncrowd of about 90,000 in the Cotton\nBowl Centennial Itadium here, the\nohief executive declared \"chiielers\"\nand \"prophets of evil\" are \"still\nwith us\" and added that if \"labor\nis to be a commodity,\" tho nation\nwould find itself one of \"boarding\nhouses instead of a nation of homes.\"\nFreely discussing national questions, he said:\n\"Today we have restored democracy In government. We are in the\nprocess of restoring democracy in\nopportunity.\"\nThe great throng sitting in a broiling sun that sent the thermometer\nto 95 cheered this utterance and\napplauded,\nLondon \"Piles in\"\nTOPIKA, Kas., June 12 (API-\nVigorous .and outspoken, Governor\nAlt M. Landon topped his first day\nas the Republican presidential nominee by asserting tonight that \"I\nfavor an immediate move on the\nenemy.\"\nSwiftly he dispatched a message\nof confidence to the Cleveland convention; congratulated Col. Frank\nKnox, hli running mate; outlined\nby telephone his choice of John D.\nM. Hamilton to head the national\ncommittee and arranged to meet\nKnox and others here Monday for\na study of strategy.\nCasting aside the reticence which\ncharacterised his pre-convention attitude, he said he and Knox would\nmeet with a subcommittee ot the\nRepublican hatlonal committee to\n\"plan for tha campaign.\"\nI      Nl\n\u25a0 sssss-ssssass|\nCE      j\nNEW BUS SERVICE\nEFFECTIVE: JUNE 15th\nto Spokane-Seattle-Vancouver\nand All United States Pointi\nOnly SYi Hours\nNelson-Spokane via Nelway\nChoice of Two Convenient Trips\nvia Ymir, Salmo and Nelway\nor via Trail, Paterson and Northport\nFOR INFORMATION PHONE S00\nGreyhound Bus Depot-Nelson, B.C.\nBritain Out to Win\nToday In Polo\nLONDON, Juns li (AF)-Reln\u00ab\nforced by new ponies, Great Britain's hard-riding polo players take\nthe field tomorrow confident they\ncart square the International series\nwith the United Statei and force\nthe issue Into s third snd decisive\ncontest.\nAn \"SOS\" for speedy mounts,\nfor which British backeri literally\nhave been raking the empire, led\nto Offers of more than 100 ponies in\ncontrast to the 50 ths Americans\nbrought overseas in defence of the\nWestchester cup.\nKASLO MEN VISIT\nNELSON\nKASLO, 8.C.-E. M. Sandilands\nand S. A. Hunter were Wednesday\nvisitors in Nelson.\nEric Bacchus ot Birchdalc spent\nThursday in town.\nRev. Mr. Bllyerwood, Rev. J. M.\nRitchie snd Rev. J, A, Donnell of\nNelson were Kaslo visitors playing\na round of golt.\nMr. and Mrs. Wallach of Nelson\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. John\nStrachan.\nMr, and Mrs, F. 3. Chandler, Mrs.\nJ. J. Skillicorn and Mrs. E. H. Latham left Friday tor Trail where\nthe ladles will play ln the West\nKootenay Ladlei' Golf association\ntournament.\nGeorge Rasmuaen arrived In\ntown Thursday from Willow Point\nand will spend a few days at his\nShutty Bench ranch.\nThomai Barkley ot Erie arrived\nIn the city Wedneiday, returning to\nhli home Thursday accompanied by\nMrs. Barkley snd their young ion,\nwho had spent a tew days in town,\nall being the guests ot Mrs. Bar'\nkloy'i parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. S.\nChandler.\nMr. and Mrs. P. Gavrillk ot Trail\nare holidaying in (own.\nChief of Police A. L. MacPhee\nvisited Nelson Wednesday.\nFred Aydon, Philip Goodenough\nand Walter Tozer were among Kasloites visiting the Ainsworth hot\nsprings Wednesday.\nGordon Bowker of Mirror Lake\nwas a Wednesday visitor ln Nelson.\nMrs. Frank Wilson entertained at\none table ot bridge Wedneiday evening, her guests being Mrs Fred\nAydon and the Misses Bertha and\nTina Bourget, the latter winning\nthe prize for high score.\nW. F. MsoNicol and son, Jim, ot\nJohnson's Landing, were Wednesday visitors in the city.\nW. L. Billings spent Wednesday\nln Nelion.\nH. A. Newcomen of Invermere\nlt ipending a few dayi ln town.\nW. H. Dunn and R. A. Chester\nwere Wedneiday visitors in Nelson.\nMrs. Fred Aydon and Mrs. Frank\nWilson were the Wednesday guests\nof Mrs. Gordon Bowker of Mirror\nLake.\nJack Raper of Johnlon'l Landing\nwaa a Kaslo visitor Wednesday,\nMORE ABOUT\nHanking Troops\n(Continued From Page One)\nA Nanking spokesman said his\ngovernment still hoped to effect a\nsettlement of Issues leading to the\nhostile Canton gestures.\nHe added: \"But the national government is fully prepared for emergencies.\"\nCHANGSHA\nMOBILIZATION CENTER\nWhile Nanking !\u25a0 undoubtedly\nBtriving to avoid civil war, Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek is not\noverlooking preparedness.\nChangsha, capital of Hunan \u2014\nwhich adjoins the Canton province\not Kwangtung\u2014Is becoming a Nan\nking mobilisation center. Large\ntroop movements are going on in\nthe central Yangtze valley, all heading for Changsha. Still other detachments have left Changsha for\nthe south and are believed nearlng\nthe southerners.\nNanking apparently Is relying\nheavily upon Its air force to shatter\nthe southern threat if hostilities begin. The southerners also are credited with having a formidable air\nforce.\nAs the southern threat develops\nChinese sources said they were\ngrowing more convinced it was a\nJapanese-Inspired effort to embarrass and weaken Nanking, wit1 Canton playing the leading opposition\nrole under Japanese direction.\nThese sources said anti-Japanese\nslogans emanating from the south\nwere mere camouflage, obscuring\nthe real alms ot the insurgents.\nWOMEN TO MEET AT COAST\nHALIFAX, June 1. (CPI-The\n44th annual convention ot the national council ot women will be\nheld In Vancouver next year, the\ncouncil decided today at the olOsing\nsession ot IU IMS convention. Art Invitation for the 1087 convention wai\nextended by both Vancouver and\nHalifax but a standing vote ot the\ndelegates Chose the Pacific coast\n10 DAYS FOR WOUNDING\nVANCOUVER, June 1- (CP) -\nWalter Sami, convicted of wounding Arthur Wadiworth with a pair\nof scissors ln a scuffle in a soldier's\nhoitel May 29, today wu sentenced\nto ten dayi in Jail by Police Mag'\nlitrate H. S. Wood. Sentence will\ndate from the time ot Sums' arrest.\nA gate ot \u00a3 108 at a rugby game\nIn Belfast has been turned over\nby Queen's university students to\ncharity.\nINTERNATIONAL\nRochester 3-6; Syracuse 2-7.\nMontreal 4; Albany 10.\nBuffalo 10; Baltimore 0.\nToronto 10; Newark 4.\nASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis 5; Louisville t,\nSt, Paul 0; Indlinapolls 9.\nMilwaukee 0; Columbus S \u2014 10\ninnings.\nKansas City 12; Toledo 3.\nPACIFIC COAST\nMissions 4; Los Angelas 9.\nPortland 2; Sacramento 1.\nSan Diego 2; San Francisco lt.\nSTARSWALLOP\nACES 39 TO 9\nThree Aces Pitchers\nFail to Stem\nthe Tide\nSlamming the offerings ot three\npitchers all over the lot for a total\not 39 hits, the Toronto 8tar girls'\nsoftball nine chalked up their seventh consecutive Win ot the 1936\nseason when they handed the Standard Cafe Aces a 39-9 trimming at\nthe junior high school grounds Friday.\nWhile her teammates were boosting their, batting averages, Hazel\nSpiers, Star ipeedball artist, was\nholding tht Aces to seven scattered\nhits, while lending 15 back to the\nbench by the strike-out route. Every\nplayer of the winning team collected\nat least three hits, with Dot Postlethwaite leading the pack with six\nhits in eight timet at bat. Jean\nSpiers and Alice Dunn each came\nthrough with five hits, while all\nbut one ot the others collected four\nbingles.\nWilma Milne led the Aces at bat\nwith three hits in four official\ntimes at bat. The Aces had the misfortune to lose the services of their\nstar first baseman, Isabel Donovan\nln the third inning,\nAlmeda Graves, Dot Wheeler snd\nBetty McCormsck were all used on\nthe mound tor the Aces, with the\nlatter making the best showing.\nElvera Matheson waa the one bright\niter tor the losers, and she repeatedly pulled off sensational fielding\nplays to rob the Toronto Star players of likely hits.\nWilms Milne, second bale, and\nCarmclla del Puppo, catcher, also\nplayed well ln the field tor the\nlosers. Although having little work\nto do In the field, the winners'\nteam presented some nice fielding\nplays, with Deannie Wallace and\nMary Campbell playing outstanding\nroles.\nMillie Horrigan. Hazel Spiers and\nPauline Stangherlin, each poled out\na home run for the Toronto Star\nclub. The winners had 12 left on\nbales against five for the Acts.\nScore by Innings:      \"'\nAces  202 013 010- 9    7   12\nStars   348 796 23x-39   39    4\nBill Frcno and Alex Mclnnis umpired the game.\nToronto Stan \u2014 Hazel Spiers,\nPaulino Stangherlin, Jean Spiers,\nAlice Dunn, Deannie Wallace, Millie\nHorrigan, Sadie McCreight, Dot\nPostlethwaite and Mary Campbell.\nStandard Cafe Aces \u2014 Wilma\nMilne, Elvera Matheions Isabel\nDonovan, Clara Talberg, Peggy\nDonaldson, Almeda Graves, Car-\nmelle del Puppo, Betty McCormack,\nDot Wheeler, Hilda Talberg and\nMargaret Thompion.\nMORE ABOUT\nMANITOBA VOTES\n(Continued From Page One)\nbetween issue of the writs and the\nvoting is framed to catch the opponents ot the government unprepared.\"\nPresent standing of the 58-mem-\nber legislature, etected June 16,\n1932, is: Liberal-Progressive 34,\nConservatives 9, Liberals 3, Labor 8,\nFarmer-Labor 1, vacant 3, total 85.\nFOURTH FOR BRACKEN\nIt will be the fourth election campaign for Premier Bracken, who\nwas called to head the government\n14 years ago. The. premier was at\nthat time principal ot the Manitoba Agricultural college.\nVoting in The Pas and Rupert's\nLand constituencies will take place\nAugust 21. Both are far-ilung northern ridings and decision to defer\nvoting in them until after the general election followed a custom long\nestablished In the province.\nThe 53-year-old premier Is the\nmember for The Pas and his provincial treasurer, Hon. E. A. McPherson, Is the sitting member for\nRupert's land.\nKamloops Poloists\nMeet Seattle Today\nSPOKANE, June 12 (AP).-Two\nundefeated polo teams, Seattle's\nOlympic club and Kamloops, B.C.,\nwill clash ln the main event of the\nnorthwest tournament doubleheader here tomorrow.\nThe winner will meet Toppenlih,\nWash., the third first round winner,\nIn the only game icheduled fdr Bun-\nday.\nCOCHRANE MAY BE\nOPIRATEO  UPON\nDETROIT, June 12 (AP). - Dr.\nRoy D. McClure said today tests to\nbe completed tomorrow would determine whether Manager Mickey\nCochrane ot Detroit Tigers shall\nundergo an operation. When Cochrane collapsed laat week in the\nTiger dugout, hjs condition was\ndiagnosed as over-activity of the\nthyroid gland.\nDog Team Goes\nThrough Golden\nClif on Way East\nROSSLAND, B.C.-Mr. and Mrt.\nP. J, Carroll Oi Hasleton, B.C.,\npassed through Rossland yesterday\nafternoon, en route to Halifax, N.S.,\ntravelling via dog stage. When they\nleft HaaletOn, snow was deep and\ntheir vehicle was equipped with\nrunners. On reaching bare ground\nthese ware removed snd three rubber tired bicycle wheels substituted.\nThe doga are muscular creatures,\nthree of them huskies, and seem to\nbe enjoying the trip as much as\ntheir pssssngers. Mr. snd Mn. Carroll are making th* trip ln easy\nstages, averaging about 20 miles a\nday So far, but expecting to make\nbetter time on the prairie. They\nhave taken s number of picture! of\neach town psised through and will\nhsve s wonderful collection when\nthey reach Nova Scotia.\nFarmers Trim\nSalmonbellies\nVANCOUVER, (CP) .-Richmond\nFarmers Friday amaihed through\nthe New Westminster Salmonbelllei\ntor a 2.-13 victory to widen their\nmargin to six points at the head of\nthe Inter-city Box Lacrosse league.\nThe Farmers' bewildering attack\not th* tint two quartan netted\nthem 18 goals and gave them a six-\ngoal lead at halt time. They eas>l\nthe pace in tne laat two quarters\nbut Salmonbelllea were unable to\neffectively solve the Farmers' defence and were held off to a bare\ntwo goals in the final quarter,\nCample, the Farmers' sparkling\nforward, again led In the winner's\nicoring column with five goals while\nJohnny Vernon, Alt Davy, Tyler\nand Jack Woodi **ch netted two\ngoal! for the flshmen.\nMORE ABOUT\nCATHOLICS\n(Continued From Page One)\nIncense bearers, cross bearers,\nlurpllced acolytes, young seminarians and clergy of the archdiocese\nln black eossocks, reading from\ntheir brevlarys, and scarlet robed\nprelstes of the church precede' the\ncardinal from the archbishop's palace to the doon of Holy Rosary\ncathedral where they were met by\nRev. Father T. M. Nlcol, chancellor\nof the archdiocese of Vancouver.\nCARDINAL IN 8CARLET\nCardinal Villeneuve, ln scarlet\nrobes snd train, wss tallowed by\nuniformed page boys and official!\nand fourth degree members of the\nKnights ot Columbus wearing bald-\nrich and carrying unsheathed\niwordl.\nAi the cardinal entered the doon\not the cathedral and proceeded\ndown the nave to the throne on the\naltar tha organ played \"Ecce Sacre-\ndos Magnus\" (Behold a Great\nPriest), and the Holy Roiary bells\npealed forth.\nFollowing the official welcome\nby Archbishop W. M. Duke of Vancouver Cardinal Villeneuve spoke\ntn reply, then went to the high\naltar to Intone the opening prayer\nof the congress, \"Veni Creator spiri-\nlus\" (Come Holy Spirit).\nAfter tha ceremony the procession  escorted his eminence back\nto the archbishop's palace.\nCLERGY MEETS\nPrevious to the official opening\nceremoniei the clergy r :t to hear\naddresses by Molt Rev. Alfred A.\nSlnnott, archbishop of Winnipeg,\nand Most Rev. F. P. Carroll, .bishop\nof Calgary.\nMoit Rev. A. Bunoi, O.M.I., biih-\nop of Prince Rupert and vlce-apos-\ntoltc of the Yukon, presided over\nthis meeting.\nTonight the 20-odd prelates, attending the congress from all parts\nof Canada and Washington and\nOregon, gave serrnons at holy hour\nservices in all Catholic churches\nin the city.\nMost Rev. C. Shaughnessy, S.M..\nbishop ot Seattle, presided at the\nholy hour service ln the cathedral.\nLIEUT. GOV. WELCOMES\nLieutenant-Governor Eric Homer,\nwith governmental and civic representatives, ,elergy and laity, attended a civic reception later in the\nevening tor the cardinal and the\nvisiting prelates.\nAt midnight high masses were\nsung ln all churches ln the city\nwith the cardinal himself of 'at-\ning at solemn high mass al 'f cathedral, Most Rev. P. J. Monohan,\narchbishop of Regina, giving the\nsermon. ,\nRt. Rev. J. H. MacDonald, bishop\nof Victoria, will officiate a', a children'! pontifical high mass ln Stanley park tomorrow with Cardinal\nVilleneuve presiding on the throne.\nThe cardinal will leave for the\nelst again tomorrow night.\nThe closing ceremony of the congress wl|) be a pontifical high mass\nIn Stanley park on Sunday at which\nHis Excellency Molt Rev. Andres\nCassulo, apostolic delegate to Canada and Newfoundland, will preside. He will arrive tn the city tomorrow night\nVANCOUVER   ORIGINAL\nALDERMAN SURVIVES\nPORT CREDIT, Ont., June 12-\n(CP)\u2014L. A. Hamilton, only surviving member ot Vancouver's original city council, reclined in an\narmchair here ai he recalled the\nfire 80 yean ago today that destroyed the entire community of what li\nnow Vancouver. Former chief com-\nmlailoner of lands for the Canadian\nPacific railway, Mr. Hamilton is\nalso the only living Canadian who\nmisled In laying the Canadian-\nUnited States boundary along the\n49th parallel.\nSole Distributor! for\nBeach Refrigerators\nAs Low at $175\nFor Fine Furnlfurs\nEAGLE BLK. PHONI 8M\nTWO SOFTBALL\nTILTS SUNDAY\nMay Be Three Teams\nFrom Trail for\nGomes Here\nTwo first class inter-city softball\nattractions are lined up for the Nel-,\nson Recreation grounds Sunday afternoon, when the Trail Laurlente's\nGiants men'i club play th* Nelson\nB.C. Telephone aggregation, and the\nstrong Trail Jimmies play the uh-\ndefeated local Toronto Star club in\na ladles' game. While no word had\nbeen received up to early last evening It wai reported that the Trail\nIdeal Bakery men's club would also\nbe ln Nelson to play the local Buglo\nBand nine.\nThe Trail Giants have t tint\nclass bunch ot playen to choose\ntrom and according to latest reports\nthe team will be chosen from the\nfollowing players, all of whom will\nmake the trip: A. Eurby, S. Martin,\nJ. Wanleu, K. Pople, Hughes, T.\nKjorslck, J. Wolfe, A. Walker, C.\nBradbury, A. Cronle, N. Mahon, A.\nBrown, D. McDonald and S. HOgg.\nRalph Wright, coach of th* Trail\nJimmies, who incldently have lost\nonly one game this scason snd that\nto the Toronto Star club, will have\nall hli regulars on hand Including\nsuch well-known favorites as Isabel\nWright, Cora Miller, Josie Ross,\nLilly Ssprunoff, Annie Gavrillk,\nMary Gripich, Cara Ringwood and\nseveral others.\nLen Bicknell, and Bob Paterson,\none ot the strongest sottball batteries ever fielded in Nelson, will\ndo the heavy duty for the B.C. Telephone club and all the other regulars will be on hand.\nThe Toronto Star lineup will be\nchosen trom: Millie Horrigan, Mary\nCampbell, Hazel Splen, Aria Saare,\nElvera Matheson, Alics Dunn, Jean\nSpiers, Pauline Stangherlin, Deannie Wallace, Sadie McCreight, Dot\nPostlethwaite and Eva Hendrickson.\nMORE ABOUT\nSoviet Democracy\n(Continued From Page One)\nSoviet democracy, lt said, grants !\nthe widest rights to all working\npeople tor practically all ln the '\nSoviet Union ot the \"old, exploiting\nclasses\"   have  disappeared.\n\"The collective regime hai tin*\nally and fully conquered,\" ths newspaper declared.\nThe two legislative bodies will I\nbe the council of the union, elected\nby the people, and the council ot\nnationalitiea, selected by the present indirect system.\nThese two bodies will elect a ;\nboard ot 31 officials to run ths\ngovernment. The chairman of this\nboard would be equivalent to ths\npresident of s republic.\nThe  constitution,  drawn  under\nthe direction ot Joseph Stalin, will I\nbe acted upon finally November 25 |\nby the all-union congress of Soviets.\nThe Communist party will be retained as the only recognised po- :\nlltical organization.\nFords Defeat\nUnemployed 4-0\nFERNIE, B.C.-Ford V9| softball\nteam took another win Thunday,\ndefeating the Unemployed 4-0. With\nonly one more game to be played\nin the tlrst schedule the Fords ar*\nassured of first place at the h*'f-\nway mark. The final standing of\nthe other teami will depend on th*\noutcome of the next game.\nPlaying Thursday were:\nFords-Knight, Butala, J. Verkirk,\nRiley, W. Parsons, Peters, J. Ross, |\nR. Psnons, Shaw, Serek.\nUnemployed\u2014Rigets, White, C.\nMiscisco, H. Kasmar, Swlderskl, J.\nKasmar, Ihas, Lasslle, Servello, AW\nton.\nWOMAN ROBBED\nVANCOUVER, June 12 (CP)-\nClirence Dennli today wai held by\npolice en a charge of robbery with\nviolence after a woman reported\nbeing attacked and robbed ot her .\npurse containing $4.50.\nCOAL\nWOOD\nin All Lengths\nHAULAGE\nPhone 701\nFAIRVIEW\nFUEL CO.\n \u2014wm-\nwmmm\n\u2022\u2014t\u2014\u2014\u2014s\u2014m-\u2014-m-\u2014-\nNEUSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. JUNI 13. 19M\n\u2022 BAY\n\u25a0.3.inMMn,i_giw-i\nNELSON   B.C.\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nJUNE 13 and JUNE 15\nSale of Semi-Ready\nSUITS*****\nRegular $\nValues\n30 $32 s\u00b0 $35\nBe Down Early for the quantity is limited. A Manufacturer's\nClearance makes this Surprisingly Low Price possible. All New\nCloths and Styles.\nNO APPROVALS\u2014ON SALE TODAY AND MONDAY ONLY\nMEN'S PANAMA HATS\nKeep cool under one of these smart panamas. Specially treated with \"Cottaphane\" to withstand rainy weather and will retain shape-as no other hats will. ^1 AP\nEACH       t}l.JO\nOutstanding Value!\nMen's Broadcloth Shirts\nTooke, Arrow and Forsyth shirts. A complete range of sizes and a large se- _ ^ .._\nlection of patterns. Collar attached and separate collar styles. * \u25a0 *m9\nEACH    '* \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022.\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u00ab       0m\nMEN'S POLO SHIRTS\nNovelty knit cotton polo shirts. Ideal for  . ^    \u00ab _\n\u25a0 sport wear. Smart shades of yellow, blue $ \u25a0 \u00bb00\nand white. EACH\nMEN'S TRENCH COATS\nThe all weather coat that Is guaranteed\nrainproof. Light and dark fawn shades.\nEACH   \t\n$6-K\nMEN'S UNDERWEAR\nMen's summer weight combinations with\nlong legs and short sleeves.\nSUIT \t\nn\n.00\nBOYS' GOLF HOSE\nBoys' all wool golf hose In\nmedium weight yarn. Neat\nturn down cuffs. 90\/\nPAIR  LO\nMEN'S DRESS SOCKS\nMedium weight rayon reinforced at heels and toes. Serviceable for summer. QC\u00ab}\n3PAIRS 00\nLow Heel WHITE OXFORDS\nFOR WOMEN AND GROWING GIRLS\nA splendid white, shoe for walking yet very\ndressy. Sizes 3 to 8 in half sizes. A regular $2.95 $^P*29\nvalue. PAIR       Mt\nBOYS' SWIM\nTRUNKS\nAll wool swim trunks\ncomplete with belt,\nbuckle and support. Fancy\nsir. $1.00\nCUBAN HEEL WHITE MESH SHOES\n$135\ntmm,\nMesh ties and one-straps with knurled rubber sole and sanlsol insole.\nIdeally suited for hot weather. Sizes 3 to 7\nPAIR\t\nChildren's Canvas\nT-STRAPS and\nOXFORDS\n4tol0'\/j\n69c Pr.\n11 to 2\n79c Pr.\nWhite or beige T-strap sandals and\nbeige oxfords. Strong duck uppers\nend co'mposition soles. Sanisol insoles for protection.\nMen's Boots and\nOxfords\nBlack calf blucher cut oxfords and boots with\nGoodyear welted viscolized leather sole and rubber heels.\nPAIR \t\n$\nwuio    whip\n3-95\nBay Day Hosiery Specials\nPERFECT CHIFFON AND SEMI-SERVICE HOSE\nA good time to replenish your hosiery supply with these stockings. Of pure\nsilk from toe to garterwelt. Full fashioned and with cradle foot. Gunmetal,\nrifle, taupesan, dawnglo and Moondusk. PAIR\t\nDURABLE MATESCO HOSE\ngive unusual service as an every-day hose. Full-\n79\"\nA stocking that wi\nfashioned of servici\nlooking. Something new in a heavier hose. Sizes 8'A to 10'\/_. 2 PAIRS\nfashioned of service weight celanese. They ate neat fitting, and good 8 \u25a0 \u2022OO\nWOOL FOR EVERY PURPOSE\nA hard-wearing 3-ply fingering that will give endless wear in sweaters, cush- Af\nions, afghans, etc., in 1-oz. balls in copen. alice blue, black, white, brown, ffcC\nfawn, buttercup, orange, shrimp, red, paddy, nile, pink and rose. BALL  %_r\nDRESS COLLARS FOR EVERY FROCK\nA wide range of collars in every style and material. Organdy, crepe, satin\nand lace. Values to $1.49.\nBAY DAY SPECIAL\t\n69\nBOX CAMERAS\nSmall and compact. Suitable for ordinary exposures. Take\n16 pictures on the regular 8 exposure film. QC^\nRegular 69c. TO CLEAR AT 00\nClearance\u201421 Only Spring Coats\nTailored styles, some belted models. Each garment well tailored\nand fully lined. Brown, blue, grey and green. Broken assortment.\nRegular $7.95. TO CLEAR \u201e\t\nSmart Styles in Summer Dresses\nCelanese crepes in dainty pastels, and the ever popular candy stripes. Also\nin this group are eyelet batiste frocks. Sizes 14 to 44.\nEACH '.'\t\nDAINTY LINGERIE for Warm\nSummer Days\nIncluded in this assortment are crepe\nde chine lace trimmed panties, satin\npanties, crepe de chine briefs. Colors,\nnurose, pink and white. Regular $1.00\nvalues. Sizes small, medi- Atd^g^\num and large. fill'\nPAIR \t\n;eguiar :t>i.u\n69'\nLadies* Flannel Slacks\nAn outstanding value.\nily. f\nPAIR\nNavy and grey\ndily  Si\/.'S, waist,  ''\u25a0\u25a0 YW.\u00bby&\nSMART NEW STYLES IN\nHOME FROCKS\nIn printed ginghams of floral, checked ^ ^ .^\nand plaid designs. Wide variety ot styles. \\f \u25a0 \u2022-|7\nSizes 14 to 44. EACH       Jl\nDENIM SHORTS\nSpecial prices for Bay Days.\nPleated styles in white and\nnavy only. Broken assortment.\nSizes 8 to 14 and 16 to 20.\nRegular $1.00. 7(W-\nPAIR    IU\nRAYON PANTIES\nAND BRIEFS\nPanties with Jace trim. Colors\npeach and white. Sizes small,\nmedium and large. OA\u00a3\nPAIR  LO,\nVOILE FROCKS for the Junior Miss\nFigured voile frocks with organdy and lace trims, puff sleeves. A good as- a <|\nsortment of styles. 7 to 14 years. EACH ._..   \u00a5 Jl\n\u2022OO\nAnother Sensational Sale of\nFINE SHEETS\n120 pairs of Canada's finest quality sheets at a great saving. Some\nof these have slight \"weaver's errors\" but you will have to look\nclosely to discover them and they will not effect the wearing quality. Sheets for single, three-quarter and double bed. Plain or hemstitched. Come early for the first pick of these great money saving\nsheets.\n78 only, size 70x90 - _.___ Each 79e\n54 only, sixe 78x99.  Each $1.19\n108 only, sizes 80x99 and 90x108 Each $1.49\nLINEN CRASH CLOTHS\nColored border cloths in many shades. All\npure linen. Size 50x50. Regularly sold at\n95c. EACH  \t\n69\nPILLOW SLIPS\nA good quality for camp or household use.\nSize 40-inch. Made by Wabasso.\nPAIR \t\n35\nWHITE FLANNELETTE BARGAIN Oc\nThis comes in a 25-inch width and is splendid for children's wear. YARD     *\nFLANNELETTE SHEETS\nCome early for these 25 only extra large ^ ^ m.m.\nsheets. Twill or plain, whipped singly. $ \u25a0 \u00abUW\nSize 70x90. EACH       *\nUNBLEACHED COTTON SHEETS\nLarge size 80x90 in a feood serviceable qual- JM4fc\nity. Quantity limited. \u00a3 %M\nc\nEACH\nSALE OF MILLENDS\nThese represent a big mill's clean-up, and consist of prints, broadcloths, chambrays and ginghams. Most\nof them are 36 inches wide, with values up to 35c per yard. SPECIAL, YARD\t\n15\nCROCK BARGAIN\n50 only, 1 -gallon crocks. Limit of 2 to a customer.   1 Ctp\nEACH  \u00bb    1J\nTWO SPECIALS FROM THE CHINA\nDEPARTMENT\n23-piece tea sets in a very smart design in semi-porcelain.\n2 color combinations. ffO QC\nSET >fL.OO\n66-piece dinner sets. Service for 8 persons. In a tailored\neffect of Creek Keg in black or gold. ffl 1 AC\nCUPS AND SAUCERS\n5 designs in a nice quality china. 4 shapes to choose\nfrom. CUP AND SAUCER\t\nV\nINCORPORATED  2?? MAY 1670.\nHAND PAINTED JUGS\nThese make beautiful flower vases and come in three\nsizes. Regular $1.00, $1.10, $1.25.\nSpecial 59c, 69c, 79c Each\n\"IRIS\" WATER SETS\nThis lovely set of Belgina glassware consists of I 2-quart\njug and 6 matching tumblers. 3 shapes and 5 tf 1 A A\ncolors. SET \u00abP l.VV\nWINDOW BLIND BARGAIN\nStandard quality blinds with good spring rollers. Creen\nor cream. ,\nSize 36x60.              CM   Size 36x72. QM\nEACH    00      EACH   \t\n89*\n* '-.\n\t\n\t\n\t\n\t\n\u2022 -     Xt . ..-\u25a0'-,:...\n w_up\n~~1\nPAGE FOUR-\nWATER REVENUE FIVE MONTHS IS\nOVER HALF ESTIMATE FOR YEAR;\nUTILITIES RECEIPTS HOLDING UP\nGas Slightly Under Estimate; $53,287 Is\nSpent on Civic Centre; $41,498\non the City Schools\nReceipts tram Nelson's public utilities ara exceeding estimates, with\nwater receipts leading the way, It is revealed in the city's statement of\nreceipts and disbursements for tha first five months ot tha year.\nWater revenue for the five months Wat $-7,996.45, aa compared with\nan estlmata et $40,000 tor tha year, so that revenue from thli source ln\nfive months was mora than half the estimate for 12. Electric light receipts\nat $61,701.47 were in line with the estimate ef $190,000, and gas revenue\nwaa only slightly under the figure estimated.\nLargest item In the disbursements' during the period was $93,287.05\nfor the civic centre, with schools expenditure of 441.49a.87 nest in line.\nExpenditures tor the most part were shown to be well within the\nestimated figures.\nTha statement follows:\nRECEIPT*\nElectric light-Ratal    $ 61,526.47\nPrepays   379.00\nEstimates\n$150,000.00\nGas\u2014Rates\n5,921.60\n\"Supplies...       \u00bb\u25a0\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\nPrepays    w*>\n\u2022 Water rates\t\nScavenger rates\t\nLicenses \t\nReal estate taxea\t\nLocal improvemeht taxes\nSewer rental\t\nStreet railway _ _\t\nBetter housing-\nEmory, A. C\t\nFerguson, G. H. -\t\nMiller, C -\u2022\nWaters, J. F _.-_\u2022\u2022\u25a0\n96.50\n1U.70\n77.20\n77,20\nBank of Montreal Loan\t\nB. C. Government Unemployment Relief.\nCemetery    \u00bb\t\nCement walks \t\nCivic Centre\t\nDog tax  -._\t\nElectric Light Maintenance  _\t\nFire Department Maintenance\t\nForeshore rentals \t\n: Group insurance  \t\nIndustrial school _\nInsurance refund \t\nKootenay Lake General hospital\t\nLibrary fees \t\nLibrary rent \t\nMiscellaneous\t\nParks\u2014Gyro\t\nPoll tax \t\nPolice court fines\t\nPlumbing fees    _\t\nPlumbing By-law No. 766 \t\nPower plant maintenance .'.\t\nRelief\t\nRent\t\nRdadtax\t\nSewers \t\nSchools'\t\nStreets \t\nTax sale lots\t\nTax sale lots\u20141934\t\nTax sale lots\u20141939 (redemption)\t\nWater works maintenance _\t\nWeigh scales\t\nCivic Centre commission\t\nPublic works equipment\t\nCivic Centre By-law No. 911\t\nBuildings\u2014Maintenance \t\nTools and equipment\t\nStationery \t\n$ 61,701.47\n7,629.85\n27.IW6.45\n1,965.34\n2,078.10\n11,579.16\n467.36\n968.29\n6,40390\n364.60\nJ5.000.00\n8,919.93\n481.90\n52.23\n662.19\n47.00\n388.25\n6.72\n.    36.06.\n274.83\n24.00\n112.69\n933.50\n142.72\n.   260.00\n.90\n39.00\n15.00\n. 1,144.29\n42.90\n109.30\n450.00\n98.05\n190.00\n2.00\n8.30\n9,788.35\n81.06\n30.00\n82.48\n1,889.61\n1.40\n800.00\n6,754.68\n50.00\n16,539.94\n3.00\n149.80\n2.15\n19,500.00\n40,000.00\n4,000.00\n7,000.00\n8,000.00\n19,000.00\n18,000.00\n1,690.00\n979.00\n200.00\n1,000.00\n1,280.40\n1,000.00\n3,000.00\n1,500.00\n2,500.00\n1,000.00\n24,202.00\n1,000.00\n1,500.00\n$196,412.36\nC\u00bbSh on hand-Jan. 1,19J6        6,313.59\nOverdraft at bank       25,145.96\nDISBURSEMENTS\nPower plant\u2014Salaries\nMaintenance\t\nElectric light\u2014Construction\nSalaries\t\nMaintenance \t\nSub-station\u2014Salaries\nMaintenance \t\n$  4,798.00\n1,496.86\n883.71\n4.420.70\n2,540.41\n1,375.00\n68.57\nHighways\u2014Labor and gravel pit ,\nRepairs and grading\t\nQuarry\t\nCleaning \t\nGas \t\nTools and equipment _\t\nEngineering  \t\nForeman  -\t\nTeam and driver _\t\nSidewalks  _.\nCement walks \t\nCement walks repairs\t\n$227,871.91\n$   6,294.86\n7,844.88\n1,443.57\nEstimates\n12,000.00\n2,500.00\n2,000.00\n10,500.00\n5.000.0Q\n3,250.00\n500.00\n573.63\n80,000.00\n4,493.49\n1,023.16\n614.49\n2.000.00\n517.50\n2,000.00\n890.09\n4,000.00\n1,757.80\n4,900.00\n370.09\n1,500.00\n682.60\n1,700.00\n686.42\n2,900.00\n264.69\n500.00\n23.92\n900.00\nI\n99.20\nMaintenance \t\n1,999.34\nScavenger\u2014Salaries \t\n990.00\n1,900.00\nIncinerator\u2014Salaries   '. \t\n929.00\nGas\u2014Salaries ...\nMaintenance\n3,398.60\n2,761.77\nLibrary\u2014Maintenance\nRest room \t\n1.780.18\n400.00\nPolice\u2014Magistrate   373.00\nSalaries     2,229.00\nMaintenance   941.96\nTransportation and keep prisoners 76.69\n12,097.76\n63,287.70\n30.19\n2,555.05\n1,736.65\n2,050.00\n1,480.63\n6,249.03\n6,160.37\n2,180,18\n3.218.21\"\n700.00\n2,760.00\n2,000.00\n1,250.00\n1,320.00\n3,600.00\n1,300.00\n690.00\n18,500.00\n15,000.00\n4.007.00\n1,200.00\n900.00\n5,900.00\n1,500.00\nAll-Out-of-Sorts!\nNervous, Irritable, Peevish!\n%V\u00a3PlLl|\nThis may be due to lack ef proper rest, the worry\nover business, ths too free uee of tea, coffee or\ntobacco, the keeping of late hours, the never ending\ndrudgery of housework, but whatever the cause you\nhave bun putting too heavy strain on the nervous\nsystem.\nIf yon are tired, listless, irritable, distressed, you\nwill find in Milhurn's II. k N. Pills > remedy to\nmake the weak nerves strong, the shaky nerves linn,\na medicine that will help put you on your feet\n\u2022gain.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNINO, JUNI 11. HSS\nNight Scene of Entrance to the Auditorium\nSection of Nelson's Civic Centre\n0\nLighted by flat celling lamps attached to the\ncanopy is the main entrance to the auditorium scc-\n. \u2022                                        -^SUlf photo\ntion of the Nelion civic centra building. The doer at\nthe left Is an entrance to the skating rink section.\nUNEMPLOYED PARADE AT FERNIE\nWHEN VANCOUVER BOARD VISITS\nBut Men Orderly; A\nFine Program for\nthe Visitors\nFERNIE, B.C.\u2014The Vancouver\nboard of trade on ils good-will tour\nthrough southern British Columbia,\nreached \"Journey's End\" when their\ntrain pulled into the Fernie station\nshortly before noon on Thursday.\nThe rest of the day was spent very\nmuch as each member of the party\nwished, an informal meeting with\nthe business men of Fernie occupied\nthe evening, and by daylight Friday\nthe party was well started on Its\nway toward home.\nIn one respect, at leasi, the party\nhad a unique reception at Fernie.\nThe official reception was tendered\nby a committee of the local board\nof trade. An informal, more startling\nand probably more impressive, reception was occasioned by the unexpected appearance of over 300\nunemployed who took this method\nof demonstrating the fact that living\nconditions had not yet returned to\na satisfactory level. For a few moments hosts and guests alike were\napprehensive of unpleasant developments, but the men marched\nquietly past and made their way\nto the provincial building for a\nconference with the government\nagent.\nAfter dinner at the King Edward\nhotel, the parly broke up into\ngroups. Quite a number of the visitors took advantage of the opportunity to golf on the scenic Fernie\ncourse. Others, in automobiles, were\ntaken further up the Pass to get\nthe full beauty of the scenery. Some\nafter passing the lakes stopped at\nSentinel. Others continued on into\nAlberta and visited the scene of the\ntragic Frank slide.\nThe evening gathering was in\nthc Odd-Fellows hall. In place of\na formal banquet the local board\nhad planned a free-and-easy time\nin which the travellers, who had\nbeen on their trip for 10 days, might\nrelax.\nRefreshments were served at\nsmall tables while the program\nwas  in   progress.  The   talks  that\nwere given were all short, to the\npoint and marked with a strong\ndesire for closer co-operation among\nthe business men of the province.\nM.CARTER SPEAKS\nE. K. Stewart, president of the\nFernie board, presided and welcomed Ihe Vancouver members. J.\nY. McCarter, Vancouver president,\nresponded and, in reviewing the\nFernie situation, spoke hopefully\nof the future of Coal; He stated that\nthe large buildings erected in Vancouver, even though equipped for\nheating with other fuels than coal,\nwere so constructed that In the\nfuture they could be converted to\nthe efficient use of coal if such\nchange were deemed advisable. He\nalso stated that some buildings at\nthe present time were using coal\nmore cheaply than oil.\nW. E. Payne, executive secretary\nof the Vancouver board, noted\nchanges in Fernie as competed with\nconditions on his last visit. He also\nspoke confidently of thp future.\nIn discussing the tours, which the\nVancouver board of trade takes to\ndifferent parts of the province, he\nsuggested that the designation be\nchanged from good-will missions to\neducational missions, in view of the\nfact that of the party that went out\nin 1919 only T. S. Dixon and himself were members of the present\ngroup, hence all the new members\nhad to be introduced to the various\nplaces visited, their resources and\nso on. Mr. Payne stressed the fact\nthat this trip was not for mere\njollification but to develop new\nideas of responsibility as citizens\nof the province. He declared that\nthe boards of trade have a definite\nwork to do, and that business should\ntake a stronger stand and speak\nwith a more determined voice instead of passively accepting conditions and living in a sense of false\nsecurity. Mr. Payne, like other\nspeakers during the evening, appeal-\nled for a sense of common interest\namong the business men of all\nparts of British Columbia.\nThis, he said, was the eighteenth\nexcursion taken by members of the\nVancouver board of trade and they\nhad .now covered a total distance\nof 100.000 miles.\nBURD  HEARD\nF. J. Burd spoke briefly on the\nPrevious years' accounts\t\nMedical health maintenance\nSchools \t\nFire department\u2014Salaries ....\nMaintenance \t\n3,835.00\n432.31\nParks\u2014Gyro\t\nLakeside\u2014Salary \t\nMaintenance \t\nTourist\u2014Maintenance ...\nRecreation grounds \t\nBand stand  \t\nCouncil indemnities \t\nSalaries \t\nPrinting and advertising .\nPostage and stationery\t\nRevenue stamps \t\nLegal expenses\t\nJanitor and supplies \t\nFurniture and fixtures\t\nRepairs to city hall\t\n82.13\n195.00\n160.78\n3.45\nFuel .\nInsurance\u2014Group  ..\nMiscellaneous\t\nSuperannuation \t\nCemetery\u2014Salaries\nMaintenance \t\n525.00\n427.32\nWorkmen's Compensation board\n6,571.99\n110.25\n41,498.87\n4,267.31\n441.36\n166.09\n158.60\n900.00\n5,500.00\n202.24\n1,167.66\n126.00\n23.08\n293.33\n25.18\n7.50\n174.15\n486.36\n479.95\n2,218.62\n952.32\n1,242.50\n6,572.00\n250.00\n95,506.00\n9.740.00\n1,610.00\nCharity\u2014Home for Incurables\t\nHospital\t\nIndustrial school \t\nMental hospital\t\nMother's pensions\t\nRelief  \t\nTranquille \t\nRefunds\u2014Gas\t\nLight \t\nPoll tax \t\nRoad tax  \t\nWater  ......\nLight ratea *.....\nWeigh scales\t\nCollection of poll and road tax\t\nAuditorium maintenance\t\nTax sale costs \t\nInterest on loans and exchange\t\nInterest on debentures\nBetter housing interest and sinking fund\nElectric light interest and sinking fund\nHospital interest and sinking fund\t\nCivic Centre\t\n$173.\n732.42\n266.20\n.808.40\n74.40\n786.50\n497.50\n411.13\n605.00\n22.50\n281.74\n9.75\n4.00\n3002\n1.25\n390.00\n25.00\n182.84\n1.92\n210.69\n.ooo.oo\n364.60\n.762.50\n375.00\n,750.00\nOverdraft at bank Jan. 1, :\nCash Jin hand \t\n2,000.00\n1,000.00\n400.00\n2,000.00\n13,000.00\n500.Q0\n1,250.00\n250.00\n1,000.00\n650.00\n250.00\n100.00\n350.00\n1.800.00\nl.ooo.oo\n5,200.00\n3.000.00\n2,500.00\n850.00\n9,000.00\n300.00\n2.450.00\n1.500.00\nlfl.5OO.0O\n1,900.00\n1,000.00\n2,000.00\n97,466.79\n$227,871.91\nK.P. ELECT\nAT CRESTON\nHospitol Has Record\nMonth; More Births\nRecorded\nVeteran Robson\ninstl\npurpose of the Vancouver board in\nmaking these periodical tours. He\nmaintained that they were not actuated by wholly selfish motives.\n\"I have not found one member\" he\nsaid, \"but Is filled with enthusiasm\nfor doing what it possible to ameliorate conditions.''\nT. S. Dixon expressed himself\nas having been deeply Impressed\nwith the quiet, orderly demonstration of the unemployed at the time\nof their arrival, and was willing\nto see that the Fernie unemployed\nget additional consideration, ln view\nof the unique conditions that exist\nhere. He said that He was more\nsold on the province and its possibilities than ever before.\nArthur Blake had the very interesting\" experience while here, of\nseeing an old photograph taken in\nFernie in 1908 and recognising himself in tha front row.\nD. R. Nicholson, of Mission, paid\na very neat compliment to their\nhosts at the various points visited\non the trip, when ha said that the\nscenery they had enjoyed throughout was surpassed only by the spirit\nwith which the party had been received at each of its stops. The unity\nof spirit that was plainly evident,\nhe said, would ultimately solve\nthe problems facing British Columbia.\nIn regard to Fernie, he said that\nhe wished to congratulate the people here on the fact that, while\nthe existing economic conditions\nhad been frankly described, he\nhad not heard a single complaint\nfrom any person.\nCharles Anistle, representing the\noil industry, expressed the deepest\nsympathy for communities suffering\nfrom the present difficulties ot the\ncoal companies. He pointed out, on\nthe other hand, that every citizen\nof British Columbia Is tn the oil\nbusiness in view of the large revenue derived from oil by the provincial government.\nFernie speakers during the evening Included E. K. Stewart, T. Uphill M.P.P., and Sherwood Herchmer, all of whom expressed the\nkeenest pleasure at the visit of the\nVancouver delegation.\nThe program included community\nsinging led by Charles Edgar, T.\nBaker and the orchestra, string trio\nServello, Baddeley and Anselmo\ntap dancing by Marshall Anselmo,\nsoloji by Alex. Rlzzuto, Win. Riley\nand A. L. McPhee, yodelling song\nby Wm. Baddeley, piano-accordion\nby S. Fjetland.\nA. E. Jukes of Vancouver and D.\nMitchell of Fernie were each presented with a well-filled bottle for\ntheir golf scores turned in during\nthe afternoon. The presentation was\nmade by T. Uphill and responded\nto by Mr. Jukes.\nAs a final number J. G. Nickerson\nled the crowd in the singing of \"Has\nAnybody seen the Colonel\". Each\ndelegation gave three hearty cheers\nfor the other and the evening closed\nywith \"God Save the King.\" One\ndelegate summed up the Fernie\nvisit with the remark; \"It was a\ngrand finale to a wonderful trip.\"\nCRESTON, B. C. - Wild Rose\nLodge Knights of Pythias elected\nofficers for the last half of 1936\nat a meeting at Wild Rose hall\nThurseday.\nThe following were named:\nR. G. Penson, chancellor commander; W. Eddy, vice-chancellor; E.\nOstrensky, prelate; Ed. Jordan,\nmaster of works; J. Romano, keeper\nof records and seals; W. G. Hendy,\nmaster of finance; Vic Mawson,\nmaster of exchequer; A. Malone,\ninner guard; W. Upton, outer guard,\nW. J. C. Craig is the past chancellor\ncommander.\nJ. Romano, delegate to K.P. gran-\nlodge at Penticton, gave an interesting report of the grand lodge\noperations.\nThe K. P. is this year again sponsoring the Dominion day sports and\ncommittees were struck to look\nafter affairs. In the day's operations\nBlossom Temple Pythian Sisters\nWill also assist, and will conduct a\nrefreshment booth on the grounds\nand cater for the big dance to wind\nup the day's proceedings.\nMr. and Mrs. R. L. Skilllcorn, left\nMonday for Fish lake, in the Bridge\nriver country, where they will make\ntheir home. Mr. Skillicorn came\nhere last fall and was in the insurance business. Mrs. Skillicorn\nwas an ardent worker in the United\nchurch as well as Creston and District Women's institute and was tendered a reception by the latter organization at the home of Mrs. F. C.\nRodgers, at which she received a\ngift, and regret was expressed at her\ndeparture. Mr. Skillicorn has sold\nhis residential property at Vancouver street and Victoria avenue\nto A. W. Dickinson.\nBANK STAFF\nINCREASED\nCreston branch of the Bank of\nCommerce has been recruited up\nto pre-depression strength with the\narrival of Arthur Cheney from Vancouver to take on the work ot\njunior clerk. F. Hurford will have\ncharge of ledgers and A. Gi]roy remains as cashier. R. J. Forbes, manager, completes the staff.\nWith 582 hospital days In May\nCr.iton . hfsp|tal, establishes an\nall time record for hospital ser-,\nvice, Tha biggest previous month\nwas March with 488 days. In addition to more days, the hospital\nrecorded more major operations\nand more births than In any\nprevious month since the hospital\nopened In 1930.\nThe softball season opened at\nExhibition park Thursday when the\nTown team defeated Creston High\nSchool 19-10. Batteries were: Town\n\u2014 Dot Wightmann and Mrs, Art\nReed; High school\u2014Nell Payne and\nMargaret Bale. The local squad is\nbooked for games each Thursday\nnight for the balance of the season.\nThere was a small attendance at\nthe June meeting of Creston Valley\nPost Canadian Legion, which was\nin charge of Vice-president J. B.\nHolder in thc absence of President\nCol. Mallandaine. Secretary W. G.\nHendy was also absent and the minutes were taken by S. M. Watson.\nThe chief business was to decide on\nhaving a dance at Park pavillion on\nKing's birthday.\nFishermen have been asked to\nbear in mind that the season for\nfishing on Summit creek does not\nopen until July 1. All other streams\nhave been open since June 1.\nMrs. R. D. Clark of Vancouver\nhas opened a beauty parlor here,\nmaking the third of these places in'\nCreston.\nFrom Boswell comes word that\ncherries have set well, and unless\nthe June drop is excessive the crop\nshould be an average one.\nStanley Hepher and D. V. West,\nwell known residents of Boswell\nwere Creston visitors.\nRECORD HEAT\nAT CRESTON\n98 in May Tops All;\nApple Shipment Is\nAlso Record\n\u2014Photo by Staff Photographer\nJ. T. WEBSTER\nWas one cf Robson's delegates te\nWest Kootenay Central Farmers\nInstitute at Creston.\nCreston Wants\nShoot Pheasants\nFive-day Open Season\nAsked by Rod and\nGun Club\nCRESTON, B.C., - According te\nthe official weather records kept\nby Dr. Henderson, May established\nan all time record for beat, with a\nshowing of 98 ln tha shade on May\n30 and the heat wave seems to have\nbeen even worse than that. The\nmercury at the power house ot West;\nKootenay Power k Light company\nat Goat River canyon showed an\neven 100, in the shade the same afternoon. Fifty-one in the shade on I\nthe 20th was the coolest touch of |\nthe month. The total ratnlall was .91\ninch.\nFor the entire winter tht total\nsnowfall wu 99 inches.\nAnother all time record waa established last weak, when Creston\nCo-operative Fruit exchange on\nFriday shipped the last of th*\nvalley's 1999 apple crop. Never before hai a selling house loaded out\na car ot apples this late.\nIt wai made up ot Delicious,\nWinesap and Yellow Newtown, ana\nwent to a Lethbridge dealer tor\nwhom it had been held in slock\nsince quit* early last tall.\nFruitvale Lady\nGoes to England j\nCRESTON, B.C.,\u2014There waa a\nlight attendance at the monthly\nmeeting of Creston Rod and Gun\nclub Monday. Vice-President R. W.\nMaxwell was in the chair in the absence of President Charles Sutcliffe.\nBusiness was tight, having mostly\nto do with regulations governing\nthe seasons on upland game birds.\nIt was decided to ask for a five-.\nday open season on pheasants, October 14-16, both days Included,\nshooting hours to be from 8:30 a.m..\nto 4 p.m., town time, with the UBual\ndaily bag limit of two cock birds.\nA day on .Hungarian partridge will\nbe asked tor on the last day of the\npheasant season with a bag limit\nof two birds. No open season on\nBob White quail will asked, as these\nhave only recently been introduced\ninto the valley\t\n\u25a0A report on the get-together of\nEast Kootenay rod and gun clubs\nat Cranbrook early in May was\nmade by Secretary Sid Bell. President Sutcliffe, J. P. MacDonald and\nthe secretary were named to represent Creston on the central executive. The secretary was asked to\nwrite C. H. Robinson, fishery overseer, for a copy of the Dominion\nfishery regulations to be put up in\nthe post office here,\nThree new members were received bringing the roll up to 39\nwhich is about the biggest in the\nclub's history.\nA successful crow shoot was held\nthe Sunday previous.to the meeting\nin which 20 took part and accounted\nfor a kill of 90 crows. After the\nshoot there was a mulligan feed in\ncharge of R. W. Maxwell.\nSo far the bass fishing season has\nbeen the best for some years with\na number of over four-pounders\nbeing brought In. As yet the lake\nis too muddy and the streams are\nstill high for good results, although\nsome fair catches have been made\nat Kootenay lake..\nSouth Slocan\nProud of Girls'\nSoftball Club\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.,-The girls\nsoftball club is as fine an athletic\nteam as one could wish to see, after\nthe steady practising they are doing\nwith John Lees as their coach, they\nare expected to make a name for\nthemselves this season. A return\nmatch is to be played with Slocan\nCity very shortly. The team is composed of Edith Edwards, Ruby\nHarty, Thelma Bird Rita Jones,\nBetty McDonald, Edna Edwards,\nVivian Harty, Dorothy Johnson and\nLily Edwards.\nThey recently put on a dance in\nthe community hall which was a\nsplendid success. Mrs. W. T. Jones\nwas the hostess and chaperone,\nand helped with the supper arrangements.\n% A. Wheildon left on the coast\ntrain on Tuesday morning for a\nvisit In Victoria and Vancouver.\nWilliam Muir returned on Wednesday evening from an extended\nvisit to Vancouver.\nMrs. J. W. McDougall and son\nFrancis are spending a few weeks\nthe guest of Mr. and Mr*. Harry\nMcDougall.\nMrs. Elsie Long of Nelson was a\nvisitor here during the week the\nguest of her mother Mrs. R. G.\nElliott.\nProfessor R. G. Stapledon, director of the Welsh Plant Breeding\nstation complains I hen- are 16,000,-\n000 acres of land ln England and\nWales being put to no use.\nFive Candidates\nfor Confirmation\nBishop of Kootenay Is\nin Charge at South\nSlocan Ceremony\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C..-A service of confirmation was held in\nSt. Matthews church on Sunday\nafternoon, when a large congrcga-\ntion attended.\nThe Right Rev. Walter Adams,\nBishop of Kootenay, conducted the\nservice.\nThe candidates who were presented by the vicar, the Rev. W. J. Silverwood wele Winnifred Ridge,\nLily Edwards, Betty Russel, Sigrid\nAnderson and Douglas Elsdon.\nHymns suitable for the confirmation service were sung, followed\nby an inspiring yet deeply spiritual\naddress. His lordship pleaded with\nthe \"Grown-ups\" to help these\nyoung candidates to overcome the\ndifficulties in life which they themselves had so often fallen into.\nBy example, sent as church worship the congregation could be of\ntremendous help to the young people.\nLikening life' to a street car rail\nthe bishop pointed out the necessity of \"Power\" from above if people\nare to stay on the right track and\nreach their Journey's end safely.\nSelecting a text for the use of the\ncandidates his lordship suggested\n\"If God be for us\u2014Who can be\nagainst us\", from Romans 8:31.\nAfter the service the bishop was\nmotored back to Nelson, where he\npreached at the evening service at\nthe Church of The Redeemer.\nSell That Car With a Want Ad\nFRUITVALE, B.C,-Mrs. R. RuiV I\nton, who wai a visitor to Nelson, |\nhas returned.\nMisa Elsie Withers of Nelson, wm\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. Borrow.\nMr. and Mrs. Twells and family\nof Cascade, have taken up residenw\nat the \"Meadowl\" having taken ov\u00ab\nthe property of F. M. Barrett.\nMr. and Mil. B. Cole, were visitors I\nto Annable on Saturday, guests of|\nMr. and Mrs- A- K. Heighten.\nMiss E. Stalnthorpe, who has been]\nspending a short vacation.in Spo-|\nkane haa returned.\nMrs. O. Ross, left on Tuesdsyl\nto spend a vacation in Vancouver.r\nMrs. G. Wick who hu been visit-]\ning ln Nelson has returned.\nMrs. E. Cole, left on Monday for\n- three months holiday ln England,\ntravelling via C.P.B. to Quebec and\nthence by the \"Empress of Britain\"\nwhile there will visit with friend,\nand relatives at Brighton, Xent and\nCornwall.\nMrs. D. McLane la a patient in\nthe Trail-Tadanac hospital.       ,\nF. Cole ot the forestry department!\nSalmo was a visitor here on Sunda;\nthe guest ot bit parent* Mr- *\u25a0*\nMrs. E. Cole.\nMr.'and Mrs. H. Brtadhwat ofl\nTraU, are guests of Mr. and Mrt.|\nJ. Watson.\nMr. and Mrs. G. W. Gustafson|\nwere week-end visitori to- TraiL\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n:,, PILLS\n=\n53-\nCAMPING IS FUN\nCool breezes off the lake, rustling the branchei of the\ntrees\u2014that woody, good smell of the forest \u2014 the\nchirping birds and squirrels\u2014the mysterious sounds of\nthe night\u2014these are all part of the fun of camping.\nBut the fun is more complete when you can enjoy these pleasures along with a running account\nof events at home.\nHave your copy of the Nelson Daily News forwarded\nto you while on vacation.\nGive your order to your postmaster or agent, write\nor phone the\n8M\u00abm lattij Jfoim\n15c Per Week 60c Per Month\nIn U. S. 75c Per Month\nThese rates by mail outside Nelson, Trail and Rossland\n spwwwwmipi\nWWII.-   \u25a0\".\n10l\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING. JUNE 13. 1\u00b03\u00ab\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nIn the absence ot Mrs. M. 3. Vigneux, this column is conducted\nby Mrs. W. J. Sturgeon. All news of social nature, including receptions, private entertainments, personal items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone Mrs. Sturgeon at her home,\nTerrace apartments.\nThursday    the   ladies    ot   the\nNelson   Golf   and   Country   club\nThe Most! The Best!\nBLUE RIBBON\nMALT\nAlways the same\nuniform  quality.\nAssures satisfactory\nresults.\nAt Your ^CA\n'WEIGHT -PO\"\"\"5\nheld their monthly meeting and\nluncheon at their clubhouse in Rosemont. Members present were Mrs.\nR. L. McBride, Mrs. John Cartmel,\nMrs. S. J. Towgood of Sandon, Mrs.\nJ. Sturgeon, Mrs. C. V. Gagnon,\nMrs. E. Mclntyre, Mrs. J. McKay,\nMrs. William Cunliffe, Mrs. William Waldie, Mrs. George Johnstone, Mrs. H. Rosling, Mrs. G. Spencer Godfrey, Mrs. A. W. Ferguson,\nMrs. C. D. Blackwood, Mrs. James\nMcGregor, Miss eVra Eidt, Miss\nIrene Edmondson, Mrs. Gray Lawrence, Mrs. Robert Watson, Miss\nBetty Johnson, Mrs. W. Taylor,\nMrs. B. Townshend, Mrs. C. W. Appleyard.\n...\nThe apostolic delegate of Canada, and Newfoundland, Most Rev.\nAndrea Cassulo, D.D., of Ottawa,\nleft Nelson Thursday morning for\nTrail and Rossland and was accompanied there by Rt. Rev. Msgr.\nA. K. Mclntyre, V.G., of Rossland\nand Rev. Thomas P. Freney. of Trail\nand Very Rev, J. C. McKenzie, of\nNelson.\n...\nStuart Jameison of Rossland was\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. George\nBrown yesterday while on his way\nto spend a few days at Passmore.\nJ. Donaldson of Salmo was a Nelson visitor Friday.\n...\nC. N. Schweingers of Vancouver\nand his brother B. F. Schweingers\nof Victoria spent yesterday in the\ncity.\n*   .   *\nMiss Priscilla Gelinas motored to\nTrail and Rossland  Thursday.\n...\nJack Burns, M.E., who has com\npleted his mine engineering course'\nat the Colorado School ot Mines in\nGolden, returned Thursday to the\ncity. He was accompanied by his\nsister Miss Jean Burns, who is a\nnurse-in-training at St. Joseph's\nhospital, Denver, Colorado. She will\nvisit at the home of her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. John Burns, 824\nStanley street.\n...\nNo. three circle of Trinity United\nchurch met yesterday at the home\nof Mrs. F. L. Irwin, Carbonate\nstreet when Mrs. Harold Hinitt,\npresident of the circle and Mrs. Irwin were joint hostesses. Members\npresent were: Mrs. T. H. Willitts,\nMrs. G. H. Hunter, Mrs. 0. F. Beem-\ner, Mrs. E. M. Fleury, Mrs. J. C.\nGrummett, Mrs. Harold Hunt, Mrs.\nR. M. Manahan, Mrs. Rebcrger, Mrs.\nC. F. McHardy, Mrs. A. Vassar,\nMrs. James Woodall, Mrs. John Rid-\ndock, Mrs. A. Terrill, Mrs. H. Hinitt and Mrs. Fred L. Irwin.\n* *   *\nMrs. W. Rutherford was hostess\nyesterday at her home across the\nlake to circle No. one of the Trinity\nUnited church. After the meeting\nthe members spent the rest of the\nafternoon in the garden which was\nin full bloom. Members present\nwere: Mrs. D. D. Townsend, Mrs.\nWilfrid Allan, Mrs. Thomas Camm,\nMrs. W. Rutherford, Mrs. W. E.\nWasson, Mrs. J. H. Wallace, Mrs.\nJ. E. Annable, Mrs. A. T. Walley\nof Vancouver, Mrs. Cryderman, Mrs.\nN. Haggarty, Mrs. D. StDenis, .Mrs.\nJ. Donnell, and Miss Donna May\nWalley.\n* *   \u2022\nCircle No. two of Trinity church\nmet Thursday at the home of the\nMisses A. Smith and Ethel Smith,\n215 Silica street who were joint\nhostesses. Those present were Mrs.\nJames Robertson, the president,\nMrs. A. Pagdin, Mss Francs Rowe,\nMrs. B. Simms, Mrs. W. J. Coles,\nMss Anne Smth. Mss Ethel Smth.\nMrs. John Long, Mrs. Norman C.\nStibbs, Mrs. F. Jenson, Mrs. Barclay, Mrs. Derrick, and Mrs. Reginald German.\n...\nMrs. T. E. Higginbotham was hostess yesterday at her home across the\nlake to circle No. four of the Trin\nity United church with Mrs. E.\nRowling as president and Mrs. M.\nJ. Stallwood as secretary. Members\npresent were Mrs. T; Brown, Mrs.\nH. D. Dawson, Mrs. A. Hall, Mrs. L.\nHanna, Mrs. W. II. Jeffs, Mrs. E.\nRowling, Mrs. J. Spier, Mrs. M.\nJ. Stallwood, Mrs. J. B. Stallwood.\nMrs. B. B. Stallwood, Mrs. Wall,\nMrs. B. J. Lundie, Mrs. T. E. Hig-\nginbotbam. Visitors were Mrs. J.\n.Walters, Miss A. Haddy of Toronto\nand Mrs. M. S. Wanvig of Calgary,\n...\nBruno Bourgeois of Trail has been\na city visitor for the last two days.\n...\nWilfred Latta and Mrs. Latta who\nhave been holidaying in the East\nKootenay for two weeks have returned to their home on 1416 Vancouver street.\n...\nMrs. Frank Foster leaves this\nmorning for Vancouver, acom-\npanied by Mrs. R. Vyse. to attend\ngrand lodge sessions of the Daughters of England.\n...\nMrs. B. Townshend, Mrs. A. McKay, Mrs. J. Cartmel, Miss P. Gelinas, Mrs. C. D. Blackwood, Mrs.\nJ. O'Shea and Mrs. R. L. McBride\nleave by motor this morning for\nTrail, where they will compete in\nthe Kootenay ladies' golf tournament.\n...\nMrs. Dick Morgan and Miss Gertie\nCooper were among those assisting at the Rose Queen festival at\nMayor- J. P. Morgan's home Wednesday. Mrs. Frank Pennoyer was\nthe commentator when younger\nchildren gave a display of wearing\napparel.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. John Waldie of\nRobson were shoppers to Nelson\nFriday.\n...\nCharles Madden of Longbeach was\namong shoppers to Nelson yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. Leslie Trainor left\nby motor yesterday to spend a few\ndays in Spokane.\n(Continued on Page Nine)\n-PAGE FIVE\nMENUS\nRECIPES\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nBv\nMrs.\nMary\nMorton\nHousekeeping\nMenu Hint\nLamb Chops\nTomato and Cottage Cheese Salad\nBoiled Potatoes Greens\nStrawberry Cake Dessert\nTea, Coffee or Milk\nThis recipe for tomato and cottage\ncheese salad Is said to be a favorite\nwith Anne Shirley, motion picture\nactress. It is a pretty salad and very\ngood to eat.\nToday's Recipes\nTomato and Cottage Cheese Salad\n\u2014One package of plain gelatin is\ndissolved in one cup of hot tomato\nsoup. To this is added one chopped\ngreen pepper, one small onion grated, two cups of cottage cheese and\none cup of-mayonnaise. The mixture\nis then put into molds and chilled.\nIt serves eleven.\nStrawberry Cake Dessert.\u2014 One\nand one-third cups sugar, one quart\nstrawberries, mashed; two tablespoons lemon juice, two tablespoons\ngelatin, four tablespoons cold water,\none-half cup boiling water, one-half\npint whipping cream. Add the water\nto the berries. Soak the gelatin\nin the cold water and dissolve in\nthe boiling water. Cool and add the\nlemon juice. Pour over the berries\nand fold in thc whipped cream. Pour\ninto a springmold pan lined with\nsponge cake or lady fingers ond\nchill thoroughly in the refrigerator.\nSpread the top before serving with\nan additional one-half pint whipping cream. Serves ten to twelve.\n19\nPHONES\n865 - 866\nFree Delivery\nc 3 Days of 19c Values\nWE SAVE YOU FROM 5% TO 15% ON\nTHESE REMARKABLE VALUES!!\nBuy Now and Save\nSafeway Stores\n19\nPrices Effective\nSat, Mon., Tues.\nJune 13-15-16\nBROWN SUGAR 3 lbs. 19c\nICING SUGAR     3 lbs. 19c\nWHITE SUGAR  3 lbs. 19c\nMACARONI-Cur  3 lbs. 19c\nJELL-O-Assorted 3 pkgs. 19c\nSABLE TOILET TISSUE 3 rolls 19c\nMINT HUMBUGS   Lb. 19c\nCOFFEE j\u00bb.u-d Lb. 19<i\nWRAPPED KISSES. Lb. 19c\nCHOCOLATE* BARS. 10 for 19c\nKNOX GELATINE     Pkg. 19c\nBLACK PEPPER      8-oz. pkg. 19c\nPUFFED WHEAT    2 pkgs. 19c\nSHREDDED WHEAT 2 pkgs. 19c\nGREEN BEANS-2s _    2 tins 19c\nAMMONIA POWDER  2 pkgs. 19*\nSYRUP\u2014Rogers   2-lb. tin 190\nSODAS\u2014Rerf Arrow          Pkg   190\nLOBSTER PASTE-'\/,'*       2 tins 190\nDILL PICKLES\u2014ZVi't  ;. Tin 190\nRED RIVER CEREAL     Pkg. 190\nSANDWICH PASTE\u2014Hedlunds  2 tins 190\nTUNA FISH\u2014Flaked. 'A's 2 tins 190\nPORK AND BEANS\u2014Aylmer, 11 ox 3 tins  !!><\u25a0\nPICKLES\u2014Victory, 8V_-o. Bof. 190\nOLIVES\u2014Libby's Plain, 4-ox 2 bots. 190\nJAM\u2014Aylmer, 16-ox  Bot. 190\nMACAROON BISCUITS   Lb. 190\nMIRACLE WHIP\u20148V_-o_ Bot. 190\nSHRIMP\u2014Wet or Dry     Tin 190\nLOBSTER\u2014Eagle, '\/a's   Tin 190\nCHEESE\u2014Mild Canadian      Lb. 190\nSOUP\u2014Libby's Assorted     2 tins 190\nSALT\u2014Windsor   7-lb. sk. 190\nPEANUTS   2 lbs. 190\nMILK\u2014All Brands, Tall   2 tins 190\nMILK\u2014All Brands, Small    4 tins 190\nBAKINC SODA\u201416-ox. pkgs 2 pkgs. 19o\nBAKINC POWDER\u201416-ox    Pkg. 190\nMATCHES\u2014Eddy's Sesqui Pkg. 190\nKETCHUP\u2014Libby's,  12-ox    Bot. 190\nARTIFICIAL EXTRACTS\u2014Vanilla or\nLemon, 2-oi   2 bots. 190\nSNAP HAND CLEANER     Tin 190\nFLOOR WAX\u2014Castle, 16-ox Tin 190\nSOAP\u2014Carbolic      5 bars 190\nSOAP\u2014Pearl     6 -bars 190\nCHIPSO   Pkg. 190\nBAKINC CHOCOLATE\u2014Rowntree's   Bar 190\nLUX\u2014Small   2 pkgs. 190\nCREAMETTES 2 pkgs. 190\nSARDINES\u2014Brunswick   4 tins 190\nTOMATO JUICE\u2014Aylmer, 10'\/_-ox.  ...  3 tins 190\nMUSTARD\u2014Libby's, 6-ox 2 jars 190\nLUMP SUCAR   2-lb. pkt. 190\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Sliced, 2's   2 tins 190\nSPINACH-Excellent quality     4 lbs. 19c\nRHUBARB     4 lbs. 19c\nLETTUCE-Large    4 heads 19c\nTOMATOES\nLb. 190\nRADISHES   ... 6bunches 19c\nGREEN ONIONS  6 bunches 19c\nNEW POTATOES  2% lbs. 19c\nCUCUMBERS-Extra long ........ Each 19c\nBANANAS j|jg 2% Lbs. 190\nCANTALOUPE-Good size ...    Each 19c\nLEMONS  6 for 19c\nStrawberries, Celery, Carrots, Etc.\nI ORANGES - Large; I\nI 3 doz. ..    95c |\nQuality Meat Specials\nFREE DELIVERY\nPHONE 865\nFINEST MILD CURED PICNICS: While\nthey last         .Perlb. 19c\n19c SPECIALS\nFINEST BEEF SAUSAGE     2 lbs. for 19c\nFRESH MINCED BEEF     2 lbs. 19c\nBONELESS LEAN STEW BEEF: 2 lbs. 19c\nBRISKET AND PLATE BOILING BEEF:\n2 lbs. ._\u25a0\u25a0          19c\nFinest Grain-Fed Beef\nRump Roasts:      IRolled Prime RibsISirloin Tips:\nPer Ib    160|Per Ib.  ...  lOOIPer Ib   190\nROUND STEAK ROASTS     Per Ib. 19c\nButt Pork Roasts:I Leg Pork Roasts:\nPer Ib.  ...  210! Per Ib.  ... 220\nLoin Pork Roasts:\nPer Ib.  .   . 250\nFINEST PICKLED BEEF TONGUES:\nPer Ib  19c\nFINEST SIDE BACON: By the piece or\nsliced      Per Ib. 29c\nBUTTER    Highway First Grade ....   3 lbs. 79c\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities\nSAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\nFACTS AND  FANCIES\nPretty  Salad\nOne package ot lime gelatin and\none package ot Philadelphia cream\ncheese. Put the cheese in the hot\ngeletin and beat until the cheese\nmelts. Slice stuffed green olives into\nButcherteria\nPhone\n527\nNews\nPhone\n528\nSAT. - MON.\nCHOICE ROLLED\nVEAL ROASTS .\nCHOICE OVEN VEAL j g*\nROASTS   \t\nCOOD VEAL\nSTEAKS \t\nCOOD ROLLED\nBEEF ROASTS ...\nCOOD OVEN BEEF\nROASTS   \t\nTENDER ROUND\nSTEAKS\t\nLEAN BOIL BEEF:\nLb\t\nMINCED STEAK:\n2 lbs. . \t\nBABY BEEF LIVER:    QgO\n2 lbs\t\nCOOD POT 00 and\nROASTS: per lb. . . 0\nBONELESS STEW\nVEAL\t\nNo. 1 BACON;\nSliced    \t\nLEAN COTTAGE\nROLLS \t\nLARD: Cartons;\n2 lbs\t\nCREAMERY BUTTER:\nButtercup Brand; yjfo\n2 lbs 4 J\nCOOD LEAN CORNED 1 |V\nBEEF      IJ\nHEADCHEESE: IPO\nFree Delivery\n22'\n18'\n20\"\n20\"\n18'\n17'\n.6*\n18'\n25\nin\nUp\n15'\n35'\n25'\n35'\nthe molds and pour the gelatin mixture over them. As this serves only\nfour, It is generally best to double\nthe recipe.\nDried   Beef   in   Mushroom   Sauce\nOne-fourth of a pound dried beef,\nboiling water, two tablespoons butter or margarine, two\" tablespoons\nflour, one one-pound can mushroom\nsoup. Shred the dried beef, cover j\nwith boiling water, and let stand |\nfive minutes; then drain. Melt the i\nbutter in a skillet, add the drained\nbeef, and cook until slightly crisp.\nThen stir in the flour and add\nthe soup. Cook until smooth and I\nthicken while stirring. This recipe\nserves four. If desired a 10'A ounce\ncan condensed cream of mushroom\nsoup may be substituted for the\none-pound can cream of mushroom\nsoup by omitting the flour and adding one-half cup milk. Or canned I\ncelery soup half cup milk. Or can-\nned celery soup either the one-\npound \"cream style\" or the lOVi\nounce can 'condensed style\" may I\nbe substituted as directed for either j\ntype of cream of mushroom soup\nabove\u2014From Good Housekeeping\nInstitute.\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES   BETTER   BREAD\nHORNER'S\nGROCERY\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nCOFFEE: Malkin's\nBest; Ib\t\nAYLMER CORN:\nChoice; 2 tins ...\nPIE CRUST: Mrs.\nFleming's\t\n39'\n25'\n23'\nBACON: Sliced by   Oft*\nus; Ib -O\nHEDLUNDS BAKED   97O\nBEANS: 2 tins  -I\nJIFFY MEAT BALLS: 1A<\nVis; tin   IU\nWHEAT PUFFS AND    QO\nRICE PUFFS: pkg.  ...O\nCOOKED HAM:\nLb\t\n45*\nBANANAS: Firm        1Q0\nand ripe; 2 lbs   -O\nSTRAWBERRIES:       OCO\nFresh; 2 baskets ... 00\nLETTUCE: Large firm 1Q0\nheads; 2 for   -O\nRED ROSE TEA:\nLb\t\n49*\nFRESH LOCAL\nBEETS: 2 bunches\nHOT HOUSE\nTOMATOES: Ib.\nSpinach, Bunch Carrots,\nLeaf Lettuce, etc.\n19'\n23'\nPhone 121\nFree Delivery\nat-\nHORSWILLS\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nSOAP\u2014Fels Naptha 3 for 230\nLARD\u2014Pure, 3-lb. pails Each 590\nOLD DUTCH CLEANSER   Tin    90\nCOCOA\u2014Fry's Vis ....  220      1-lb. tin .... 420\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Sliced Barco Tin 110\nTOMATOES\u20142Vi-lb. tins 2 tins 230\nKETCHUP\u2014Heinz, Large Bottle 2 for 450\nCHIPSO\u2014Large package   190\nSOUP\u2014Heinz, All Kinds Tin 110\nQUAKER CHINA OATS Pkg. 270\nTEA\u2014Braid's Blue Label  Lb. 450\nCOFFEE\u2014Braid's Big 4 2 lbs. 650\nJELLY POWDERS\u2014Shirriff's   4 for 190\nCRAHAM WAFERS  1-lb. cello 220\nSTRAWBERRIES\u2014\nFresh local; 2 for ....\nLETTUCE-\n2 for \t\nTOMATOES-\nHothouse; 2 lbs.\nCELERY-\n2 lbs.\t\nRHUBARB-\nPer Lb\t\n350\nJ50\n45*\n50\nSPINACH\u2014Locsl;\n3 lbs\t\nBEETS\u2014Local;\n3 bunches \t\nNEW SPUDS\u2014\n3 lbs\t\nONIONS and\nRADISHES\u20143 for.\nGRAPEFRUIT\u2014\n3 for\t\nGRAPEFRUIT\u2014\n4 for \u201e.\t\n230\n250\n250\n100\n250\n270\nCountry Orders $10.00 or Mote Prepaid.\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235\nFREE DELIVERY\nNO NEED TO WATCH YOUR STEP-IF\nYOUR SUMMER HOURS ARE SPENT IN\nM. W. LCKKE SHOES\nAURORA! emphasizing the newest\nfashion trend developed for summer wear\n... a shoe that reflects the vogue in sin art\nstyling... a shoe that is a positive revelation in designed comfort-\nAvailable in a wide range\nof fittings.\nJhoV^kor:\n*OR   MIN   WOMIH   AND CHILDREN\nR. ANDREW & Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nSELL  ANCIENT  P8ALTER       j Psalter,   dating  back   to  the  13th\n  century, was sold In  London for\nLONDON,   (CP) \u2014The  Evesham I $12,000, to go to the British Museum.\nSATURDAY\nSPECIALS\nHOLEPROOF HOSE\nService weight. An ideal hose for hard\nwear. 8Vi to lOVi.\nSATURDAY SPECIAL\t\n45'\nPure Silk Crepe Hose\n69'\nFine quality. Fashioned, and all the new\nshades. 8'\/_ to 10'\/_.\nSATURDAY SPECIAL\nRAYON PANTIES\nMoodies fine knit. Smart little styles\nwith lace trim and plain.\nSATURDAY SPECIAL \t\n69'\nSLIPS\nSilk crepe de chine. Well cut styles\nwith lace trim. Tea rose and wh\nSizes 38 to 42. SATURDAY SPECIAL\n!e5$1.49\nAL      1\nJerman Hunt's\nDRY GOODS and READY-TO-WEAR\nPhone 200 Baker St.\nVASSARS'\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\n831\n832\nGood Buying for Saturday ond Monday\nChoice Steer Beef\nRump Roast, Ib    1.5*\nRound Steak Roast, Ib.   17<-\nPot Roast, Ib. . 8* and 1 (>0\nOven Roast, Ib    I lo\nRolled Pot Roatt, Ib. .   IV\nBoiling Beef, 4 lbs. .. 350\nLamb Chops, Ib  25tf\nLamb Stewing, Ib. ... 1 -r\u00bb0\nVaal Fillet Roast, Ib. . -520\nVeal Oven Roast, Ib. . Mo\nVaal Steak, 2 lbs. .29*\nPork Leg Roast, Ib. .. 221\nPork Oven Roast, Ib. . I NO\nCottage Rolls, Swift's,\nIb  25*\nCreamery Butter, Thistle\nBrand, With Meat Order,\nIb 221\nEggs, Local Large A's,\ndox 30*\nSwift's Breakfast Bacon,\nFresh sliced, Ib 30*\nBoiling Fowl, Ib 23*\nRoasting Chicken, Ib. 301\nBreakfast Sausage, Fresh\nmade, Ib  12*\nPork Sausage, Small,\nIb.     20*\nHamburger, Choice, Fresh,\n2 lbs  19*\nJellied Veal, Ib 25*\nHead Cheese, Ib 18*\nReal Calf Liver, Ib. .. 30*\n\t\nLiM*jjffc imji '\"i*&gijfe\nguggle\n\u2022\nm\n__\u00a3*.\nm\n PAGE SIX.\nA NEW VISION\nOBTAINED BY\nVANCOUVER!.!!\nPresident McCarter\nPays Tribute as\nParty Passes\ndescribing the tour the Vancouver board of trade had had as marvellous, and the active development\nin progress everywhere through the\nsouthern interior as notable, even\nhard-nit Fernie \"having its tail up\"\n' and showing the spirit that wins,\n} J. Y. McCarter, president of the\nVancouver borad, stated, when the\nparty was passing through Nelaon\nFriday morning on the home trip,\nthat the members were taking back\nwith them a new picture of a developed and progressive interior.\nARGUMENT FOR COMMISSION\nHemarklng on the unanimity with\nwhich the boards of trade all\nthrough the territory traversed raised the question of roads, Mr. McCarter observed that there was such\ndiversity in thc requests made by\nthe different centers, and their proposals were so far apart, as ,o make\nlt clear that to develop a Highway\nprogram that would be in the public interest as a whole, a highway\ncommission was required.\nThe road question was dominant\nln every part, and every part had\na vital interest in the development\nof good roads, Mr. McCarter stated.\nHe said he pointed out at Fernie\nthat even Fernie, a coal town, was\nInterested In the oil business through\nthe government tax of over 20 per\ncent on gasoline, and that reinvestment of those taxes in roads\nwould bring increasing and cumulative returns.\nSINGING FAREWELL\nThrough the through train being\nsplit Into two sections here, to be\nreunited at Penticton, a British touring party being put in the first\nsection, the Vancouverites were here\nlor 40 minutes, a large delegation\nof the Nelson board being down\nto give a sendoff. Chairman H. A,\nPearson of the publicity committee\ndistributed copies of the \"Nelson\nand the Kootenay\" souvenior booklet, to all the Vancouver men, as\nmementoes of the visit.\nWhen the train was about to pull\nout, the coast men assembled in the\nopen-sir observation car an the end\nof their train, and sang several\naongs, for which A. E. Jukes beat\ntime, and they were heartily cheered as they drew out.\nKootenay Vol ley to\nPlay Doubleheader\non Sunday Morning\nThe Kootenay Valley Men's Softball club who have made a good\nshowing in all their games in the\nNelson men's softball loop this season will play a doubleheader at the\nRecreation grounds on \u25a0 Sunday\nmorning, playing the Safeway's\nteam at 9:45 and taking on the\nBankers at 11:19.\nELKS WIN IN\nTRAIL JUNIOR\nBOXLABY10-9\nLADY GOLFERS\nTO PLAY, TRAIL\nSizzling Pace Is Set in\nthe Opening Game\nof junior Loop\nFive Nelsonites Will\nCompete for West\nKootenay Title\nSeven lady members of the Nelson Golf and Country club, Mrs. B.\nTownshend, Mrs. A. MacKay, Mrs.\nJ. Cartmel. Miss P. Gelinas. Mrs.\nC. D. Blackwood, Mrs. J. O'Shea,\nand Mrs. R. L. McBride will motor\nto Trail this morning to play in\nthe West Kootenay Ladies' Golf\nchampionship. Having already qualified, they leave at 7:30 for the\nsmelter city where the draws will\nbe made and play start at 9 a.m.\nThis tourney promises to be one\nof thc best in recent years as a\ngreat deal of enthusiasm is being\nshown. It is understood that three\nentries from Kaslo will also be recorded.\nPlayers have been allowed to\nqualify on their own courses by notifying their secretary or captain\nbefore hand.\nPortable Compressor\nto Be Used Blackcock\nPortable compressor will be put\nin operation at the Blackcock mine\nat Ymlr next week, lt Is understood.\nThe Blackcock syndicate is operating this mine.\nMotorcycle Is\nDamaged by Fire\nMotorcycle owned by Walter\nErickson, Granite road, caught fire\nyesterday about noon on Josephine\nstreet. Nelson fire department responded and put out the fire in\nshort order.\nMain damage was done to the\nwiring of the cycle. The fire was\ncaused by a leaky gasoline tank.\nFlashes From the Wires\nTO STUDY ALBERTA\nBOND 8ITUAT10N\nEDMONTON \u2014 Conferences between a committee of representatives of holders of Alberta debentures end the provincial cabinet\nended here with an arrangement\nthat a study of the situation would\nbe made on behalf of the bondholders and a further conference would\nbe held between the government\nand the committee.\nFARMER TO DIE\nWINNIPEG\u2014Found guilty o[ thc\nmurder of his wife, John Pawluk,\ntionor district farmer, was sentenced\nto death by Mr. Justice T. Adam-\nson in assise court here. He was\nsentenced to hang August 21.\nELEVATOR CRASHES\nNEW YORK-A crowded elevator load of screaming women and\na few men plunged 12 stories lo\nthe basement of the Wurlitzer building near Times square, but only\nthree of the 20 passengers had to\nbe taken to a hospital.\nSTEAMER KLONDIKE SINK8\nJUNEAU, Alaska \u2014 Thc river\nsteamer Klondike, carrying 30 passengers and heavy cargo, strucK a\nrock and sank in the Teslin river\n80 quickly that the passengers barely escaped, said a wireless message\nfrom Skagway. When the wreck occurred, tne Klondike was on the\nway from Whitehorsc, Y.T., territory to Dawson, Y.T. the message\nsaid.\n<00 CANADIANS TO\nB.C, WOMAN ON  HEALTH\nCOUNCIL\ni OTTAWA, (C?>. \u2014 Mrs. Helen\nDouglas Smith, of Vancouver, has\nbeen appointed a member of the\nDominion council of health, pursuant to the pensions and National\nHealth Dedpartment act, it was announced here. She replaces Mrs. T.\nW. Sutherland, of Wells, B.C.\nENGLISH  GIRL   LIKES\nCANADA'S  MEN\nMONTREAL, (CP). - Margaret\nHall, daughter of the lord mayor cf\nLiverpool sailed with her father\nfor home aboard Hie liner Duchess\nof Richmond convinced a Canadian\nsalad is one of the finest of all\nfoods. Some of her other observations of Canada were: \"I don't think\nthe men are as smartly dressed as\nsome Englishmen \u2014 I like them\nthough\u2014thc girls have so much\nmore freedom here.''\nLEVIN WINS OVER ALI BABA\nNEWARK. N.J., (AP). - Dave\nLevin, 192, of Jamaica, N.Y., won\na claim on the world's heavyweight\nwrestling crown when Ali Baba,\n210, of Detroit, recognized in some'\nslates, was'disqualified by Referee\nFrank Sinbom of Paterson. The\nbout ended after 21 minutes when\nLevin was kicked In the groin by\nhis opponent. The Jamaica grappler\nwas taken to city hospital, where\nhis condition was announced as\n\"good\" tonight.\n24 FISHERMEN RESCUED\nHALIFAX, (CP). \u2014 Twenty-four\nNewfoundland fishermen were res\nTRAIL, B.C., June 12.\u2014Wooden\nfloor of the Trail rink received a\nsingeing Friday night when the\nopening fixture of the first Junior\nbox lacrosse league of the city was\nplayed. There are three squads ln\nthe loop, and it Is certain that two\nof them are practically at a par, for\nat the end of the tilt Elks were declared victors over Canada Billiards\nby virtue of a single goal. Thc score\nwas 10-9.\nFrom start to finish these youngsters, some of whom kept pace with\nsenior men when Trail defeated Nelson in a West Kootenay league fixture here Wednesday night, fought\nat a terrific pace and neither speed\nnor stamina dwindled once during\nthe game.\nMoro, Canada Billiards goalie,\nnever before had a stick in his hand.\nHe attended the game to boost his\npals but was passed a chest protector and a stick and told to go to it.\nCanada Billiards opened the\nscoring with Temple and Sammartino breaking through for a goal\neach in the first four minutes. But\nKennedy, Davis, Hughes, and Kennedy again retaliated with a vengeance to put Elks in the lead 4-2.\nIn the last minute and a half\nPaolinl allied to leave the Billiard\nboys only one behind at the end of\nthe first quarter.\nThe second quarter was an abso'\nlute deadlock, each squad doing no\nbetter than adding one to their\ncount. Paolini scored again for Bil\nHards and Sopko chalked up his\nfirst for Elks, making the score 5-4\nat half time.\nA different picture presented itself at the outset of the third quarter when Elks, holding a small margin, rifled in three goals, two ot\nwhich were scored by Mathews,\nlanky center man. Davis got the\nother. Battistella, after repeated\ntries, clicked about three minutes\nbefore three-quarter time for Billiards, leaving the count 8-5 for\nElks.\nFor the first half of the last quarter it was an even battle, Temple\nrifling in two for Billiards and Kennedy and Mathews adding the same\nnumber to the Elks' count. The\nscore at this point was 10-7. For the\nremaining one minute of terrific\nstrife Canada Billiards thrust in\ntwo more to come within one goal of\nticing the fixture. Paolini got both\nof them, one unassisted and the\nother on a pass from Coccia.\nTeams:\nCanada Billiards \u2014 Sammartino,\nPagnan, Battistella, Ludovici, Tognotti, Temple, Zinio, Agostinelli,\nTurik, Paolini, Coccia and More,\nElks\u2014Mathews, Kennedy, Weir,\nA. Wilson, Hughes, Groves, Richardson, Cusick. Sopko, Coupland, F,\nBarchard. Davis and Savage.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING. JUNK 13, 193.\nWhen the Church of the Redeemer Crowned\nthe Rose Queen\n\u2014Photo by Geo, A. Meeres.\nAbove Is the royal group on the dais on the lawn of Mayor and Mn. J. P. Morgan In Fairview, when\nMiss Muriel Smith was crowned queen of the Church of Redeemer rote festival. The queen Is seated on\nthe throne second from the left In the front row. Those In the picture are: Back row, left to right\u2014\nROsalec Triggs, Lois Whimster, Shirley Robinson, M uriel Whimster, Isabel Kay, Velma Mcintosh, Viola\nMusfelt, Muriel Dawson; front row, left to right\u2014Andrew Andrew, Rose Queen Muriel 8mlth, Beverley\nAnn Ure, Retiring Rose Queen Peggy Triggs and Allan Silverwood.\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nThis column is in charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of Trail. All\nevents of a social nature of interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad to have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her home in Trail.\nSTOP AT 8POKANEl\",M \",l'r ,*\u00ab ,Anchor \u201e\"ner Cal,_\nforma and thc 12-ton schooner, the\nSPOKANE \u2014 Spokane learned\nthat 800 motorisV from the province of Saskatchewan, travelling In\n200 cars, will be overnight guests\nhere July 8. C. P. Sisson of Regina,\nwho will be in charge, said thc\ncaravan would visit Grand Coulee\ndam July 9. The Canadians will be\nen route to the golden jubilee celebration at Vancouver, B.C.\nSHIPPING ACT BILL PASSES\nOTTAWA \u2014 A government bill\namending the Canada Shipping act\nli?s passed through the house of\ncommons. It made technical changes\np thc act which was passed in 1934\nr-.lthough never proclaimed.\nA clause In the bill limiting to\n$300 the civil liability o( pilots for\ndamages arising out of negligence\nwas ultra vires according to Conservative Leader Bennett and D. A.\nCamcrdn (Lib., Cape Breton-North\nVictoria). They said it was an attempt to legislate on property and\ncivil rights and would not be effective as only the provinces could\nlegislate to restrict civil liability,\nNO JAPANESE COMPETITION\nMONTREAL-Sale ' ot Japanese\ntextile products in large Canadian\ndepartmental slorcs had not competed with Canadian fabrics, witnesses told the Turgeon royal commission here.\nPiece goods buyers of the T.\nBaton company and the Robert\nSimpson company of Toronto told\nthe commissioner, Justice W. F. A.\nTurgeon nt Regina, Iheir firms\nbought little Japanese textiles and\nsale or these goods in no way interfered with Chilian purchases.\nBeatrice Vivian, collided in fog near\nthe Grand Banks. \"Wbole crew saved; no loss of life,\" the master of\nthe liner informed The Canadian\nPress after notifying the agents he\nwould land thc men here.\nALBERTA  SCRIP  AUTHORIZED\nEDMONTON, (CP). - Order-in-\ncouncil authorizing issue by Alberta\nof   stamp-tax   \"prosperity   certifi-\n\"Cub\" Burns Is a\nMining Engineer\nJohn W. Burns, son of Mr. and\nMrs. John Burns. 824 Stanley street,\narrived home Thursday morning\nby motor from Denver, Colorado,\nwhere he has been attending the\nColorado School of Mines. Standing\nin the upper third of a class ot 100\nstudents, he graduated May 29 with\nthe degree of mining engineer.\nDuring his four years attendance\nBurns was outstanding in the activities of his school. He played an\nactive part in football, basketball,\nsoftball, and track, and was captain\nof the hockey team for three years.\nHe was president of thc chapter\nof Kappa Sigma, a national social\nfraternity, and was also a member\nof Theta Tau, a national honorary\nengineering fraternity.\nSlocan City Miss\nVisits Nelson\ncates\" Wan signed here Friday by\nLieutenant-Governor W. L. Walsh.\nAuthorization for the ordcr-ln-coun-\ncil was given under thc Social Credit Measures act passed at the recent session of the Alberta legislature. Thc order empowers the government to issue \"Alberta prosperity certificates\" in denominations\nof Jl and $5 but the aggregate\namount of certificates issued must\nnot exceed $2,000,000.\nHUNGERFORO NOT HINDERED\nOTTAWA, (CP). -In running\nthe Canadian National railways as\noperating officer, S. J. Hungerford\nhas been unimpeded In any way,\nshape or form, C. P. Fullerton,\nchairman of the board of trusteea\nof the C.N.K., told the senate railway committee. The committee wa.\nstudying the government legislation\nto place thc C.N.R. under a board\nof directors. Thc departments Mr.\nFullerton took over were not of an\noperating character, he said, except\nthe steamships which had no connection with the railway; he took\nover the hotel system which had\nbeen in the red before last year.\nThe committee late Friday approved all but two of the clauses in the\nmeasure,\nSLOCAN CITY. B.C.-Mrs. R. L.\nReynolds was a Nelson visitor.\nMiss Mary Morrison of the nursing staff of the Arrow Lakes hospital, Nakusp is spending a month\nhere at the home of her mother,\nMrs. D. McKay.\nMr. and Mrs. Waller Clough and\nMrs. T. Cooper were \"Nelson visitors\nSaturday. \t\nR. Bruin who is employed at Ihe\nMamoth mine. Sllverloh' sp'eht the\nweek-end at his home here.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Jeffs of Nelson\nspent Sunday here, guests of Mrs.\nJeffs' brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. R. R. Hanna.\nE. J. Pinchbeck left Friday for\nTrail when he will be employed\nby the C. M. k S. Co.\nF. Broughton of New Denver was\na business visitor here Wednesday.\nMr. \u00bbnd Mrs. R. L. Reynolds, Mrs.\nA. Ewing, Miss L. Reynolds and E.\nClough motored to New Denver\nTuesday evening.\nTRAIL, B. C, June 12\u2014One of\nthe largest showers of the season\nwas held Thursday evening when\nMrs. D. Leschuitta, Mrs. G. Lenard-\non, Mrs. G. Ermacora, Mrs. A. Zan-\nier and Miss Rena Tavaroli, entertaining at tho home of Mrs. Leschuitta, honored Miss Elda Ermacora, a bride of thc near future. One\nof the interesting items of entertainment was a mock wedding staged by Miss Lena Molina as the\nbride, Albis Ermacora, as the groom,\nand Mrs. Ermacora and Miss Lena\nCeremelli as the bride's parents.\nPink and white was effectively used\ndecorating the rooms and at thc\nconclusion, of thc supper hour, the\nhostesses, on behalf of the assembled\nguests presented tho bride-to-be with\na basket filled with useful and\nbeautiful gifts. Assisting in serving\nwere Mrs. Merlino, Mrs. Batistella,\nMrs. Leschuita, Neva Batistella and\nGina 'Christante. The guests were\nMrs. G. Masolti, Mis. G. Manarin,\nMrs. G. Merlino, Mrs. D. Degan,\nMrs. Nick Fabbi, Miss Nellie Can-\ncian, Miss Louise Molina, Miss Lena\nMolina, Miss Elvlna Molina, Mrs.\nTony Lauriciite, Mrs. Mary Colombo, Mrs. V. Cavallin, Mrs. Pete\nBernava, Mrs. Pete Fcrro, Miss Vera\nDevito, Mrs. A. Matteucci, Mrs.\nThomas Lauricntc, Mrs. A. Maniago,\nMrs. Louis Zanier, Mrs. C. Toffolo,\nMiss Bessie Georgctti, Miss Adelia\nMerlo, Mrs. G. Babuin, Miss Celia\nSmith, Miss Sylvia Piscitelli, Mrs.\nL. Dozzi, Miss Mary Marlinclli,\nMrs. Louis Tognotti, Miss E. Bran-\ndolini, Mrs. N. Presinotti, Mrs. P.\nSecco, Miss Lena Ceremelli, Miss\nMargaret Salsiccioli, Mrs. E. Muzzin,\nMiss Lena Toti, Miss Mary Masci,\nMrs. G. Bcrtuzzi, Miss Gina Cris-\ntante, Mrs. Tony Bcrtuzzi. Mrs. A.\nMarchiori, Mrs. Primo Fantin, Mrs.\nM. Cavassin, Mrs. F. Tambellini,\nMrs. R. Decembrini, Miss Louise\nErmacora, Miss Myriam Ermacora,\nMiss Annie Munani, Mrs. A. Batistella, Mrs. A. Biagioni, Miss Neva\nBatistella, Mrs. Emilio Pisapio, Mrs.\nL. Tonelli, Miss Esther Destefano,\nMrs. A. Volpatti, Mrs. Arnold Lauricntc, Mrs. A.,DeGiusti, Mrs. P.\nForte, Mrs. R. Martin. Mrs. G. Bis-\narc Mrs. John Kennedy, Mrs. Oliver D'Andrea, Mrs. C. DcMattio, Mrs.\nR. Bcrno, Mrs. L. Grrcnazzi, Mrs.\nP. Redive, Mrs. O. Bulfone, Miss\nGloria Leschuitta, Mrs. A. Forrarl,\nMrs. P. Rinaldi, Mrs. I. Dolfo, Mrs.\nR. Lauriente, Mrs. Mario Benedet,\nMiss Annie Zinnio, Mrs. G. Defoe,\nMrs. P. Cristante, Miss Lydia Cnn-\ncian, Mrs. R. Zelli, Mrs. W. C.pulo,\nMiss Rena Baggio, Miss Gina Baggio. Miss Kate Agostinelli, Miss\nEmily Agostinelli, Mi's. Mary Pc-\nloso. Miss Angelo Merlo. MisS Livia\nDaloise, Mrs. Adelina Bernava, Mrs.\nA. Monaldi, Mis. A. DeRosa, Mrs.\nA. Dolfo, Mrs. A. Vannucchi, Mrs.\nM. H. Landucci, Mis. D. Leschuitta,\nMrs. A. Zanier, Mrs. G. Lcnardon,\nMrs. A. Sandrin and Miss Victoria\nColoncllo.\nbe partially used to take the troupe\nto Nelson next week. Those taking\npart in thc dancing numbers Included: Dorothy Crowe, Elaine\nMinto, Freda Hopkins, Maizie Campbell, nnd Daisy Jean Mathews,\nstarring Stanley Lee, in \"Nasty\nMan;\" Helen Blois, Claire Kinnis,\nMargaret Johnston, Evelyn Fann-\nini, June Hartmann, Joy Clapp,\nPamela Hartman, Yvonne Baril,\nNorma McMillan and and Clara\nWise, \"Honeymoon Hotel;\" Miss\nLorraine Flynn, Shirley Lou Gordon, June Hartmann, Evelyn Fann-\nini, Gloria Serres, Shirley Anderson mid Pamela Hartman, ballet\ndance; Edna Ellis. Eileen Powell,\nIona Langridge, Dina Couch, Cam-\nela Demeo, Connie'Robertson, Leah\nMatteucci and Miss Lorraine Flynn,\n\"Harlem Strut;\" Dorothy Crowe,\nElaine Minlo, Freda Hopkins, Maizie\nCampbell, Daisy Jean Mathews, star-\nrin Norma Wilson and Guilford\nBrett, \"Lady in Red;\" Ronnie Hop-\nLadies Honor Mrs.\nPickard Who Is to\nMake Vimy Journey\nPhotograph album with spaces for\nmemorandum which she will carry\nwith her on the Vimy Pilgrimage\nwas presented to Mrs. L. Pickard,\npresident of the Mother's auxiliary\nof thc boys' band at their meeting\nWednesday evening at the home ot\nMrs. Spencer Newell. Mrs. Pickard\nwill leave July 8.\nPresentation was made by Mrs,\nBert Blackwell, secretary of the\nauxiliary.\nSHARE BONUS\nHELPS WESKO\nMill FINANCE\nBorrow $40,000 From\nPrivate Interests to\nBuild Mill\nROSSLAND NET\nPLAYERS HERE\nPlay in Tournament on\nSunday; First Team\nGoes to Trail\nthe guest of honor, provided a pro-.\ngram of musical entertainment. The\nprettily appointed supper table was\ncentered with a decorated birthday\ncake, guest favors being colored\ncaps. Included among the guests\nwere Ida Crispin, Eileen McCanh,\nBilly Robertson, Douglas Robertson, Kenneth Woods, Jimmy Crispin, Keith Woods, George Webster,\nLeslie Kltchin and George Cose.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nMrs. Dava Smart, who leaves at\nthc end of June for Scotland, where\nshe will visit relatives during the\nsummer months, was honored guest\nThursday evening when a number\not friends paid her a surprise visit\nat her home. Cards were the featured entertainment, Mrs. Dave\nMilne winning high score award and\nMrs. D. McDonald the consolation.\nRefreshments were served at the\nconclusion of a pleasant evening in\nwhich many bon voyage messages\nwere given to the guest of honor.\nThose present were Mrs. D. McDonald, Mrs. Dave Milne, Mrs. J.\nThompson. Mrs. Ralph Cook, Mrs.\nJohn Ferguson, Miss Isabel Ferguson, Mrs. Alex Munroe, Mrs. J. McLeod,'Mrs. John Shaw, Miss Kate\nMcLeod, Miss McKinnon, Mrs. Dan\nMcLeod nnd Mrs. Sherman Melrose. Mrs. Smart Is paying her first\nvisit home after an absence of 23\nyears spent in Canada.\n\u2022     \u2022     0\nMrs. P. J. McAlpine, Bay avenue.\nWeek-end activities in local tennis\nwill be confined to play ln the West\nKootenay league. Nelson B class\nteam will journey to Trail Sunday,\nwhen they will play against the\nsmelter city's B class team.\nNelson A team will be active at\nhome when they encounter the\nRossland A team, also on Sunday.\nPlans are on foot for a B class\ntournament to be staged at Nelson\nSunday, June 28. An A class tournament will run off on Dominion day,\nJuly 1. Both these tourneys will\nconsist of all the usual events,\nmen's and ladies' singles and doubles, and mixed doubles play.\nSchools Have\nNature Study\nUsing Whale\nHarrop Kiddies Given\nTrip; Lectures to\nNelson Pupils\nIn return for a bonus of 66,668\nshares, Wesko Exploration and Development company has borrowed\nfrom private interests $40,000 at 3\nper cent Interest, principal repayable out of 60 per cent of net production after the 2 per cent government gold tax, to finance mill construction, the Vancouver Dally\nProvince reports. The Wesko la in\nthe Ymlr camp.\nAn option is outstanding on 150,-\n000 shares to net the treasury |30,-\n000 or 20 cents a share. This will\nresult in a treasury situation as\nfollows: 2,216,660 shares outstanding and 283,334 shares unissued;\n$70,000 (approx.) cash on hand and\n$30,000 receivable within the next\nthree months and $10,000 ot which\nshould be paid into the treasury\nbefore the end of the present week.\nkins,  Tommy  Young,   Ralph  Dia'\nmond, Jimmie O'Brien, Jack Burch, j McQuadc of Bayonne mine.\nDorothy O'Brien, Bunty Broadwood, \u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nSheila Downey, Helen Wise. Jean !   Rev. Father A. K. Mclntyre of\nMullelt,   starring   Patsy   Morgan, i Rossland was in Trp.il Thursday, at-\n\"Military tap number;\" thc program J lending religious observances at St.\nconcluded with a grand finale, the j Francis Xavier church.\nentire cast taking part. There were\nInterest of school children in Nelson and district was centered on\n\"Nature study\" Friday, by reason of\nthe presence here of \"Colossus,\" the\nfinback whale being exhibited by\nthe Pacific Whaling company.\nIn the case of tho Harrop school,\nthe school trustees, of whom W. S.\nAshby is chairman, arranged for\nthe school children to be brought\nto Nelson under their teacher, Miss\nRuby Whitfield;\"\nThree Nelson schools \u2014 junior\nhigh, Central, and Hume\u2014received\nvisits from Captain David Barnett,\nhas as her guest, her brother, Ernest white-haired whaling master har-\npooner of 'Colossus, who at each\nschool gave a half-hour lecture on\nMRS. ]. BURGESS\nHELPED AT ROSE\nFESTIVAL THURS.\nAmong helpers ot thc rose festival In Fairview Wednesday afternoon, was Mrs. J. Burgess, whose\nname was omitted from the list of\nworkers in Thursday's social column\nof the Nelson Dally News. -\nWith a background of silver and\nblack, scintillating costumes ond\nsnappy dance numbers, members\nof a dancing class gave one of the\nfinest programs offered by Ihis\ngroup of talented children, which\nhas yet been seen in Trail,\nRhythm and melody played a big\npart in the usccess of Ihe event\nnnd Ihe costumes created spontaneous enthusiasm from the large and\nappreciative audience which filled\nthe large K. of P. hall Friday evening. Costumes of cellophane and\nmetallic materials glistened and\nshone under the lights, most popular numbers including, \"Rhythm\nin Nursery Rhymes,\" \"Military\nDance\" and \"Thc Lady in Red.\" Assisting artists were Miss Sheila\nDowney, \"Scotch Song:\" Glno Gam-\nbin, accordion solo; Hartman sisters, vocal duet; Mrs. Emilio Pisapio, vocal selection: and an orchestra composed of Mrs. R. Watson,\nBill Munroe, Albert Hild and Jack\nCausey. Costumes, copied from designs sent from New York, were\nmade by Mrs. A. B. Marshall, who\nwas assisted by Miss Gwen Hop-\nkinF. Mrs. Robert Watson accompanied throuhout thc program. Pro-\n22 items on thc bill of entertainment.\nMrs. Roy Langlands. who before\nher marriage was Miss Sue Wilson,\nwas honored guest Thursday evening at a miscellaneous shower,\nheld at the home ot Mrs. William\nLanglands, Mrs. Thomas McVlc being the hostess.\nCards were played during Ihe\nearly part of the evening and at the\nconclusion of refreshments the honored guest was presented with a\nnumber of delightful, gifts which\nwere arranged in a container deco\nrated in pink and white and topped\nby a prettily dressed doll. Assisting\nin serving refreshments were Mrs.\nA. D. Fletcher, Mrs. Norman Ball,\nMrs. Langlands, Mrs. Pete Shields,\nand Mrs. J. Moorhead. The guests\nwere Mrs, R. Mulancy. Mrs. Arthur\nFletcher. Mrs. A. Murdoch. Mrs.\nNorman Ball, Mrs. C. Weir. Mrs. A.\nBaillie, Mrs. Wilbert Casler, Mrs.\nDuncan F. Downie. Mrs. R. H.\nWhile, Mrs. K. Anderson. Mrs. L.\nMathews. Mrs. Chris Eaton, Mrs.\nWilliam Simpson, Mrs. R. Weir, Mrs.\nWilliam Owens, Mrs. William Allardice. Mrs. J. Hardlngton, Mrs. A.\nA. McDonald, Mrs. Pete Flynn, Mrs.\nA. Weir. Mrs. Robert Milne. Mrs.\nHarry Goddard, Mrs. J. Moorhead,\nMrs. Charles Henderson. Mrs. Len\nDavis, Mrs. Lome Partridge, Mrs.\nThomas Evans, Mrs. Stanley Jones.\nMrs. Pete Shields, Miss Ruby Jewell,\nMiss Pauline Putman and Miss G.\nJackson.\nJack Ross and J. Robertson, who\nhive been business visitors to Trail,\nworking with the Consolidotcd Mining & Smelting company, for some\nweeks, left Friday for their home at\nthe coast, travelling via Spokane.\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Bert Taylor of Toronto, and\nMrs, Robert Stewart of Casper,\nWyo., ore visiting their mother. Mrs\nwhaling to the assembled pupils,\nThey were told of the different\nspecies of whale, of their respective\ncharacteristics, of the baleen through\nwhich all species but the sperm\nand orca strain their food, or the\noil and spermaceti, and of ambergris, a secretion in the stomach ot\na diseased sperm whale; and were\ngiven an account of whaling methods, ancient and modern.\nMorning, afternoon and evening\nexhibition, were given of \"Colossus''\nat the C.l'.R. Flat, and no doubt\nnearly every Nelson child improved\nTwo ladies, members of the Ladies\nof the Royal Purple were honored\nrecently when Mrs. William Morrlce.\nln her official capacity as supreme\ndeputy, visited the Trail lodge. During tho evening, Mrs. E. Matthcwr,\non behalf of thc lodge members,\nmade a suitable presentation to Mrs.\nMorrice. The other honored lady\nwas Mrs Dave Smart, who is leav-\nInr; shortly on an extended vacation. Mrs. Morrice, representing the\nassembled guests, presented Mrs.\nSmart with a lovely travelling case.\nThe event included a social hour of\ncards followed by the serving of\nrefreshments.\nMRS. PENWILL'S\nTEAM WINS\nE. Ross of Rossland, formerly of [ his natural history knowledge, this\nTrail. also applying to adults, while spe-\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022 cial trips were made to Nelson by\nAt Capilano United church, North res.dents all over the district.\nVancouver, Ihe wedding took place | \u2022 \u00bb\u2014 \t\nMonday evening, June B in which\nthe principals werjc Edith Alberta,\nonly daughter oi Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles Glove rn:! Ornond Pas-\nquill, eldest so.i of Mr. and Mrs. T.\nPasquill.\nRev. John Archibald officiated,\nMrs. L. Sumpter, thc groom's sister,\nplaying the wedding march, the\nbride attended by Miss Louise\nProulx nnd her cousin, Miss Kathleen McNeil while L. Sumpter supported his brother-in-law. The ushers were Gordon Glover, the bride's\nbrother, and Alfred Richardson,\ncousin of the groom.\nGiven in marriage by her father,\nthe bride was gowned in white satin\nwith orange blossoms and veil of\nsilk net. Her flowers were roses\nand Tarnations.\nThe bridal attendants were flocked in shrimp pink and pastel yellow net respectively, with white\ngardenias in their hair and sweet\npeas and carnations for their bouquets.\nMiss Mary Wallings was the soloist.\nA reception was held in the church\nhall, thc mothers of the bride and\ngroom receiving, thc minister, an\nold friend of the bride's family,\nproposing the toast.\nWhen leaving nn a wedding (rip\nthe bride donned a blue silk suit\nwith accessories en suite, Mr. and\nMrs. Pasquill will return to Vancouver briefly before leaving for\nTrail, B.C., to make their home.\u2014\nVancouver Sun.\nLadles of thc Nelson Lawn Bowling club played the first match of\ntheir opening tournament Friday\nevening when the rink skipped by\nMrs. E. W. Penwill defeated Mrs. P.\nS. Coulter's team by a score of 17-12.\nDue to the absence of Mrs. Coulter,\nher team forfeited four points at\nthc end of the game, the actual\nscore being 17-16.\nAn extremely hard-fought game\nwas played in thc men's tourney\nFriday evening when E. W. Pen-\nwill's rink nosed out that skipped\nby N. B. Bradley 15-12.\nRinks follow:\nMrs. E. W. Penwill, Mrs. A. Wlgg,\nMrs. R. A. Reid and Mrs. A. Lane.\nMrs. P. S. Coulter, Mrs. J. Ball,\nMrs. MacMillan and Miss G. Laughton.\nE. W. Penwill, F. Doodson, A.\nReid and D. Laughton.\nN. B. Bradley. N. J. Lowes, R.\nAldersmith and C. I. Archibald.\n10 Children\nShare Estate\nG. Brlggeman\nJudge Nisbet Makes\nVarious Winding\nUp Orders\nFour daughters and six sons Inherit the estate left by George\nBriggcman of Deer Park, in connection with which Judge W. A.\nNisbet, sitting In chambers, haa\nordered letters probate to issue to\nGus Briggeman ot Bow Island, Alta.,\na son, and Florence Brlggeman of\nDeer Park, wife of Fred Brlggeman, another son. The order was\nmade on application of C. H. Hamilton. The gross estate is $3500 and tho\n10 children sharing equally in tho\ndistribution are Mrs. Claude Edwards, Lincoln, Cal., Mrs. William\nMaker of Cabri, Sask., Norah Lind-\nquist and Gus Brlggeman of Bow\nIsland, Mrs. G. Worley and George,\nFred, John and Ralph Briggeman\nof Deer Park, and William Briggeman of Rossland.\nWilliam Douche of Nelson waa.\nmade sola executor ot the small\nestate of Dorothy Ann Fenton' ot\nNelson, Rev. N. D. B. Lamtonth,'\nalso named in her will, renouncing,\nhis  honor making  an order for j\nletters   probate  to  issue  to  Mr,  ,\nDouche, on application by C. H,\nHamilton.  Five   children  of  the\nname of Loamos of Newcastle-on-  ,\nTyne, England, are the named bene-!\nficlarles.\nRowland Alder Aldersmith of\nNelson is being issued letters probate respecting the estate ot his\nwife, Gertrude Aldersmith, amounting to $1300 gross, her will naming\nhim executor and sole beneficiary.\nThe application was made by E. P.\nDawson.\nOKANAQAN   ESTATE\nUnder an order made by his\nhonor for letters of administration\nto issue to Henry Arthur Teece ot\nEnderby, respecting the estate of\nhis mother, Sarah Ann Teece of\nEnderby, the husband of the late\nMrs. Teece, Samuel Tecre of Sierra\nMadre, Cal., will receive one-third\nof the proceeds, and her four adult'\nchildren will share two-thirds. They\nare Mrs. E. Gertrude Hill of Sierra\nMadre, Cal., Mrs. Edith S, Sparrow\nand Henry.Arthur Teece of Enderby, and John Herbert Teece ot\nHope Bay, Pender Island, B.C. Tha\ngross estate is $679. E. P. Dawson\nmade the application.\nKootenay Belle\nOre Is Tested\nTwo Tons Shipped to:\nTrail to Determine.\nType of Mill\nTrail Invites\nNelson Girls to\nSoftball Battle\nMr. and Mrs. Mnhlon Newman of\nTwin Falls, Ida., left Thunday tor\ntheir home after visiting in Trail,\nCVil?!?, t!T\u00a3 rT-f'     Local softball official, announced\n.,   \u25a0 \u00a3      S.    Trail  Mrs. Dunlop        -, jd      cvcnl\u201eg that \u201e,      \u201e.\u201e\n\u00ab,h mE, JirT\" h d \u201e\"?\u00a3 T   received a letter from Phil Smith,\neach other for 50 years and the trip i ._\u201e,.\u201e,\u201e,.\u201e \u201e, ,k. n-..,, -m_i-> c\u201e\u00abi\nwas made especially for that reason |'\"\"[mJ\u00b0' the .!_!\" *}!?, S\u201e\u00b0!\nMrs. Dunlop has also as her guests ! bal1 \"delation, asking for a Nel\nMr. and Mrs. J. M. Dunlop of Chicago, who will visit here two weeks\nJack Kitchln, celebrating his\neleventh birthday anniversary, was\nguest of honor Thursday afternoon\nat a delightful children's parly when\nhis mother. Mrs. J. L. Kitchln en\ntertained. Ida Crispin. Jimmy Crjs\nI son girls team to play In Trail\n: against the Trail Bronks on Sun-\n| day morning. As the letter was held\nup due to the Nelson official that\nthc letter was addressed to being\nout of town, it Is unlikely that any\nof the Nelson girls teams will be\nable to travel.\nceeds from the entertainment will pin and George Webster, as well as\nSELL THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nSKY CLEAR AFTER\nHEAVY RAIN\nAn extremely heavy downpour\nstarting about 2:45 p.m. and lasting\nabout half an hour was the main\nfeature of the weatherman's .performance Friday at Nelson. Skies\nwere cloudy all day until the big\nrain but after that the clouds began to clear away and the evening\nsky was clear with all the stars\nshowing.\nAverage temperature was up from\nThursday. Recordings were: maximum 75, minimum 52. Total rainfall\nfor the 24 hours ending at 5 p.m.\nwas .30 of an inch.\nACES TO PRACTICE\nCoaches Jim Cherrington and Max\nDesBrisay, of the Standard Cafe\nAces girls' softball club have called\nfor a full turnout of all players of\nthe team for 5? practice at the Rec-\nTwo tons of ore from the Kootenay Belle Gold Mines Limited property in the Sheep Creek camp have,\nbeen sent to Trail by engineers of\nthe Consolidated Mining 4: Smelting company for a mill test to determine the most suitable type of\nmill for handling the ore, according\nto a report by A. E. Jukes it Co.,:\nLimited.\nIt is understood that W. G. Norrie-,\nLowenthal has resigned his office:\nas consulting engineer owing to\npressure of other business.\nBankers Lose to\nBugle Band Team!\nThe Bugle Band men's softball\nclub strengthened the third place!\nposition in the local mens loop whew\nthey came from behind to defeat\nthe Bankers 15-10 In a tree hittlnaj\ngame played on a slippy field at tha\nJunior high school grounds on\nThursday evening. Red Carr, who\npitched a good game for the winners also came through with two\nhome runs. Hager Henwick ana\nBud Cooper, also poled out four\nbase Clouts.\nThe British United Shoe Machinery Co., Leicester, which last\nyear increased the number ot its\nemployees by 300 to 3400 Is extending Its premises. A further Increase\nreatlon grounds op .Sunday morn-1 In the number- ot workpeople ii\ning at 9:30 o'clock.J-; ' likely.   '\u25a0\n ^T^^r^pm^1\n,HJ\u00ab^iLPIllllP^\ni\nc\u00a3\nTHE GUMPS\n\u2014i'\u2014a\u2014'\u2014.\u2014aim, -1 r\n.IL   .-J 1.1.-1\n. -NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE .13, 1936\nBy Cut Edson\nANDV STOKE\nOUT OF TURN\nTO THf WIDOW\nZANPER -\nSHE IS MORE\nAJMORYTHAN\n\u00a7VE* WITH\nIM-AND\nvows\nVENK5EAWCE\nt-.\u00ab\nFIVE FERRIES\nSHOW HEAVIER\nTRAFFIC, MAY\nNelson Continues the\nMost Heavily\nUsed\nThey're the Five Who Paved the Way fop\nTrail Workers' Picnic\nCASTLEGAR LEADS\nIN FREIGHT MOVED\nIncrease Is Over 360\nTons Compared\nYear Ago\nIncreased ferry traffic on five ferries serving this district is shown\nin reports for May as compared with\nthe same month a year ago.\nNelson ferry continues to be most\nheavily used, transporting in the\nmonth 8933 autos, 1842 trucks and\n36,843 passengers exclusive of drivers, Castlegar terry leads in transport of freight with 1131 tons reported in May. This,was an increase of 362% tons over the year\nprevious.\nThe figures reported for each\nferry for May follow:\nNelaon 1939\nAutos      1,797\nTrucks     7,991\nTrailers _      \t\nBuses       129\nMotorcycles          13\nRigs         62\nPassengers     34,797\nfreight      1,066\nHorses \u201e._        14\nCattle  3\nGraders ._  2\nCastlegar:\nTrips _     2,057\nAutos _     4,253\nTrucks     1,441\nBuses        219\nTrailers       \t\nMotorcycles  .'       68\nBigs        278\nPassengers     15,689\n1936\n1.811\n8,933\n17\n226\n3!)\n16\n36,843\n771\n10\n15\n2,274\n5,204\n1,752\n266\n107\n84\n\u2014Photo by Staff Photographer.\nFive officials of the Consolidated employee's picnic committee, snapped In Lakeside park when tiny\ncame to Nelaon to learn what they might expect of this city In assisting to stage the monster picnic this\nyear. Left to right they are: R. W. (Wally) Savage, sports; Bryn Smith, secretary of the picnic committee and also secretary of the Workmen's cooperative committee at Trail; T. O. (Tudor or Teddy)\nDavies, transportation; O. P. (Westy) Wes'.haver, s ecretary last year and this year In charge of music\n'and entertainment; and H. W. (Harry) Hankln, who like Bryn Smith holds \u00ab dual office, chairman of\nthe picnic and chairman of the workmen's committee. ,\nFreight, tons\nHorses \t\nCatUe\t\nKootenay Lake:\nTrips  \t\nAutos \t\nTrucks\t\nBuses \t\nTrailers \t\nMotorcycles \t\nBigs \t\nPassengers \t\nFreight, tons\t\nHorses \t\nCattle\t\nSheep, pigs, etc.\n52\n31\n76\n805\n58\n4\n4\n1,203\n33\n13\n2\n1\n19,179\n1,131\n40\n46\n1)1\n634\n73\n5\n5\n7\nS\n1,590\n14\".\n30\n3\nHarrop-Longbeach:\nTrips        764 893\nAutos        578 723\nTrucks        266 370\nTrailers      \u2014 42\nMotorcycles          53 39\nHlgs          16 8\nPassengers      2,493\nFreight, tons       127(4\nHorses       \t\nCattle      \t\nKootenay at Creslon:\nTrips       1,211\nAutoa        415\nTrucks       389\nBigs          280\nPassengers      1,222\nFreight, tons      \t\nHorses          27\nCatUe         146\nOther stock       146\nIn addition the Creston ferry carried a considerable number of agricultural implements including gang\nplows, tractors, trailers, scrapers\nand so on.\n2.535\n162\n2!)\n1.361\n476\n634\n173\n1,247\n3\n37\nsnIp\nCleans Dirty Hands\nTransfer\nFuel\nond\nTAXI\nSERVICE\nRENWICK'S\nPHONE 797\nChoirs Give a Fine\nProgram at Kaslo\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014The Junior and intermediate choirs of St. Andrew's\nUnited church gave a flrte program\nof vocal and instrumental music before an overflow audience the eve\nning of June 5.\nThe most interesting performance\nof the evening was that of the Junior choir in their \"Rythm Bank\"\nnumbers, when, with bells, cymbals,\ndrums, triangles, tambourines etc.,\nthese little folk, seriously intent on\nmusical scores before them, rendered in perfect time, two dcligtful\nselections, \"Car Ride\", and \"Daffodil Waltz\", with Ruth Aim at the\npiano.\nRev. T. W. Reed, chairman, expressed hope that the parents of\nthe juniors would rally to the support of this training for tho children, and encourage their loyalty\nand perseverance. He pointed out\nthat in a few short years, the juniors\ncould and should reach the high\nlevel of attainment to whicli the\nrecent festival entrants had aspired.\nAt the close of the concert little\nJoan Hild presented gifts of re-\nmemberance lo their founder and\nleader, Mrs. T. W. Reed. In reply\nMrs. Reed told of the keen pleasure\nwith which she had brought the\nJuniors along.\nT. H. Robson, on behalf of the\nsenior and intermediate choirs,\nspoke a few words of appreciation\nof Mrs. Reed's work with these two\nchoirs, after which Ruth Aim presented Mrs. Reed with a fitted overnight case from thc two choirs.\nThe program was:\nPiano duct, Mrs. Reed and Ruth\nAim.\nSolo, \"How do you like to go up\nIn a swing\", Edna Robson.\nDuet, \"May Morning\", Kate Riddell and Clara Horner.\nChoruses by Junior choir:\n\"In the Merry Month of May\".\n\"Drink to me only with thine\neyes\".\n\"There came a man to our town.\"\nSolo, \"Dear Harp of My Country\",\nClara Horner.\nChorus \"Sweet and Low\", Intermediate choir.\nSolos\u2014\"The Swallows\", \"Daffodil\nWaltz.\"\nSolo \"I went roaming in love's\ngarden\", Kate Rlddell.\nDuet, \"Fairy Bells\", Eleanor and\nClara Horner.\nSolos\u2014\"Love me if I live\", \"Near\nthe well sat Mary\", \"The second\nMinuet\", Ruth Aim.\nKitchen Symphony, Intermediate\nchoir.\nCYCLI8T8 MEET 10,000 STRONG\nBIRMINGHAM, England, (CP>-\nBlcycle riders from all over England\ntook part in their 15th annual war\nmemorial service at Merlden, Warwickshire, where thc cyclists' war\nmemorial stands at the end of the\ngreen. Hundreds of parties rode\nthrough the night from cities, as far\naway as London, Bath, Southampton, Norwich, York and Manchester lo this spot said to be the geographical centre of England. There\nwere 10,000 present.\nVera Breen has not missed one\nattendance at Cranny school In Ireland since MBy 9, 1927. She has to\nwalk four miles dsily to school.\n________-_-_-__\nFollows Harlem\n\"Messiah?\n\"I'm here as living proof thst a\nstrong faith In Father Divine can\nsurmount the greatest obstacles.\"\nAn ecstatic glow suffuses the face\nof \"glorious Illumination\" as she\nposes for the cameraman for the\nfirst time since she was shot by a\nnegro. She was seated on a divan\nIn the \"kingdom\" of Father Divine, Harlem's \"Messiah,\" and refused to admit her real Identity\ndespite the fact that an official\nadmitted that she Is Henrietta\nSnowden, a Boston debutante.\nOn the Air Tonight\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n5:00 Boston Symphony orch. Pop\nconcert, dir., Arthur Fielder, NJ3.C;\n5:30 Let's go to the Music hall, dir.,\nGeorge Young, Montreal; 6:00 Musical Merry - Go - Round, Toronto;\n6:30 Lloyd Huntley's orchestra,\nMontreal; 6:45 Canadian Press\nNews and Weather forecast, Toronto; 7:00 Time Signal, Ottawa;\n7:00 Across the Border, N.B.C;\n7:30 News, Vancouver, (B.C. Net.);\nHorace Lapp's orch., Toronto, (Not\nB.C.); 7:45 Louis Guerette's orch.;\nQuebec; 8:00 The Sport Week, Lethbridge; 8:15 Freshmen and Fresh-\nettes, Regina; 8:30 Mart Kenney and\nSeven Western Gentlemen, Vancouver; 9:00 Swing Along, Regina; 9:30\nRound-up time, Vancouver; 10:00\nNews Reporter, Vancouver (B.C.\nNet); 10:15 Stan Patton's orch., Vancouver.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C.-Aubrey Penney of Silverton has been visiting\nwith his parents.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nMiss Mildred McKay, who has\nbeen the guest of her aunt, Miss\nJennie Henderson, for several weeks\nhas returned to Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Samuel Irvin, Miss\nLouise Irvin, Mrt. Howard Ferguson and Dr. R. N. Anderson, were\nTrail visitors yesterday afternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe Women's auxiliary, lo Rossland bmich, Canadian Legion, B. E.\nS. L., met at the Armories, Wednesday evening and transacted routine\nbusiness. Mrs. Percy E. Taylor invited the members to hold a social\nevening at her home on June 24,\nwhich will be the last gathering of\nthe auxiliary until the fall.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nVital statistics ot Rossland as reported to Registrar W. H. Reid, Include 11 births, six boys and five\ngirls', three marriages and two\ndeaths.\n.   .   .\nDr. and Mrs. C. Henders. Miss\nMargaret Henders and Kenneth\nHenders of Toronto, are the guests\nof Mrs. Hender's sister, Mrs. B.\nStinson.\nThe Lancashire fishing port of\nFleetwood has been chosen as the\nbase for fishing operations to be\nconducted in the Arctic Circle by\na fleet of 15 trawlers which are being built for Unilever, Ltd., of Port\nSunlight. '\n\u2014\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KQW KFI KPO KOMO\n690      620    640    680      920\n5:00 To be announced; Eddie\nKay's orch.; 5:30 Chateau, Vic\nYoung's orch., Smith Ballcw, m.c;\n6:30 To be announced; 7:00 National\nbarn dance, variety; Ben Bernie's\norch.; 8:30 Abo Lyman's orch,; 9:00\nFletcher Henderson's orch.; 9:30\nCarl Schreiber's orch.; 10:00 Carl\nRavazza's orch.; 10:30 Tom Brown's\norch.; 11:00 To be announced; 11:30\nRan Wilde's orch.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO  KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790    970     1180     1430    1470\n6:30 Stringtlme, dir. Emil Polak;\n7:00 Dick Mansfield's orchestra; 7:30\nGlen Gray's orch.; 8:00 To be announced; 8:30 Henry King's ore; 9:00\nPhil Levant's orch.; 9:30 Duke Ellington's orch.; 10:00 Bobby Meeker's   orch.;   10:30   Jimmie   Grier's\norch.; 11:00 Charles Runyan, organist.\nCANADA AT WAR\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nWritten for the Canadian Press\nBy CAPT. W. W. MURRAY, M.C.\nCanadian Triumph\n% at Ypres Salient\nOn June 2,1916, a German attack\nwhich had been preceded by a bombardment of unusual intensity succeeding in overwhelming the Canadian positions in the Ypres Salient,\nfrom Mount Sorrel to the neighborhood of the Yprcs-Hookc road.\nNine days elapsed, during which\nthe Canadians in the Ypres Salient\nrushed forward their preparations\nfor an effecUve reply. Heavy and\nlight artillery was moved into posi-\nUon; battalions were re-arranged,\nany by June 12 all was ready.\nThe brunt of thc German attack\nof June 2 had fallen chiefly on the\n7th and 8th Canadian Infantry\nBrigades, with the 1st and 4th\nCanadian Mounted Rifles the principal sufferers. Severe losses had\nalso been suffered, however, by thc\nPrincess Patricia's Canadian Light\nInfantry, and the Royal Canadian\nRegiment, while in succeeding counter-attack delivered next morning\nthe 49th Edmonton 'Battalion of\nthe 7th Brigade had, w;th other\nunits of the 3rd Canadian Division,\nsuffered heavily.\nThis counter-attack of June 3\nwhich failed by a wide margin,\ndemonstrated that the positions now\nheld by the Germans could not be\nsuccessfully retaken unUI sufficient\nartillery support was available to\nreplace the guns and gunners destroyed June 2.\nAt 8:30 p.m. June 12 a terrific\nbombardment was opened on the\nGerman defences, one which was\ncomparable indeed with that to\nwhich it developed into drumfire\u2014\nthe barrage which immediately precedes the attack. From 12:45 on the\nmorning of June 13 to 1:30 o'clock\na barrage of earth-rocking intensity\nfell on the enemy, smashing his\ndefensive positions.\nAt 1:30 a.m. the Canadian infantry advanced. Already from thc\nGerman positions there had Issued\nbrilliant protechnics, in appeal for\nhelp. The enemy's artillery response\nwas powerful, and the Canadian\ncasualties large. But these did not\ndeter the assaulting battalions.\nThrough Armagh Wood, across\nMount Sorrel, over Observatory\nRidge and in Sanctuary Wood the\nCanadians charged, stumbling over\ntree-trunks, tripping among tangled\nmasses of wire, losing themselves ln\nthe darkness only to find their way\nforward again by the burst of fire\nfrom in front.\nWith bayonet and bomb the assaulting units went at it, bitter fighting every foot of the advance.\nDawn of June 13 broke with the\nCanadians triumphantly ensconced\non the ridges from which they had\nbeen blasted 11 days before. Save\nonly for a few yards of line the possession of which was unimportant,\nthe Canadians obtained all objectives; and thus the losses ot June 2\nwere avenged.\n(Copyright, 1936, by The Canadian\nPress)\nFarmers to Name\na New Secretary\nPASSMORE, B.C. - A special\nmeeting of the Lower Slocan Valley\nFarmers institute has been called to\nappoint a new secretary-treasurer,\nIn place of A. F. Thomerson, who\nhas resigned.\nA. 0. Green has returned from\nNelson, where he attended the funeral of Mrs. E. Bird.\nW. Young and A. J. McCormack\nwere visitors to Nelson on Wednesday.\nG. Hunter of Vallican has obtained employment here on the\nC. P. R. section.\nR. M. Burgess of Nelson was a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Perry\nen Sunday.\nMiss B. Perry was a business\nvisitor to South Slocan on Thursday.\n\u25a0MSI SEVEN\nLANDLUBBERS OF TRAIL SHOWN\nDENIZEN. OF THE SEVEN SEAS\nPenguin Takes a Nap\nWhether You Like\nIt Or Not\nTRAIL, B.C., June 12\u2014Phrases\nabout the weather that accompany\nsalutations were mentally shelved\nby Trail's populace Wednesday and\nThursday when \"Have you seen\nthc whale?\" or \"What did you\nthink of the whale?\" was the major\nphrase of passing conversation.\nThc whale \"Colossus\" feature of\nPacific Whaling company marine\nexhibition became the center of\nlocal interest immediately the special car bearing the huge mammal\nwas spotted in the. yards here. Work\nof building around the car a gen-\niously constructed portable walk,\noutside walls and tarpaulin roof\noverhead began and the regular\ntew who watch circus tents go up,\nexcavation being dug and tbe like,\nwere on hand to watch the crew\nof men go about their Job of setting up a structure they probably\ncould throw together blindfolded.\nSome saw glimpses of \"Colossus\"\nduring the building period before\nthe walls were erected but if they\ndid not enter via the box office\nlater they missed the interesting\ncommentary that accompanies the\nspectacle.\nAlthough the show is an offshoot\nof Barnum's original idea ot exhibiting freaks and monstrosities, it was\nbrought inland to disclose to the\nlandlubber some of the denizens of\nthe deep and presents an opportunity of witness \"with ones own\neyes\" in the flesh those InteresUng\nfreaks of nature that have intrigued\nus in writing.\nPerhaps if old \"Colossus\" were\nalive he would be able to cut up a \u25a0\nbit before hla audience but being\nin the arms of Morpheus has to\nremain still while close to him the\ninfinitesimal trained fleas go\nthrough their routine. Among them\nthere is a soccer player, a fan dancer, acrobat and juggler who perform with grace to the voice of the\nlady trainer.\nA sea-monster with vestigial legs\nprotruding from the same point as\nfins or flippers is also an interesting mystery. An octupus spreads\nits tentacles before you  and old\nman penguin takes 40 winks on hla\nstage whether he has an audience\nof 10 or 50. -\nTbe whole presentation is suggestive of the briny deep. You even\nwalk a gang plank with stanchions\nto support the rope rail that keeps\nyou from falling overboard. You\npromenade the deck and officers\nof the crew relate the weird tales\not the seven seas.\nOutlook\nThs New Scottish\nMonthly Magazine.\nWhat is happening in\nScotland? Could things be\nbetter, more prosperous?\nWhat does the future\nhold? Is Scotland getting\na fair deal? EVERY SCOT\nSHOULD READ \"OUTLOOK\"\u2014it gives vital information about Scotland,\nSEND $3.00\nFOR 12 ISSUES\nFree Offer\nWhat is your favorite\nScottish view? Is it in Tht\nHighlands or the Islands?\nClyde or Ayrshire Coasts?\nLoch Lomond and The\nTrossachs? Wherever it Is\nOUTLOOK will send you\na beautiful enlarged pho-\ntograph, FREE OF\nCHARGE, on receipt of\nannual subscription to\nOUTLOOK \u2014 the 120\npage magazine of Scottish\nStories and affairs.\nWrite, stating photograph\nrequired, to:\nOUTLOOK\nW ELM BANK ST.,\nGLASGOW, SCOTLAND\nA Torpid Liver\nBrings Many Us\nAll down through the history of\nmedical treatment there persists the\nidea thai b.v keeping the liver\nhealthy and active you escape many\nof the common ills of life aga some of\nthe most serious and most painful\ndiseases aa well.\nA healthy 1 iver filters poisons from\nthe blood and converts them into\nbile which as Nature's cathartic is\npoured into tha intestines or bowels\nto keep them regular and active.\nIt ia only by keeping the liver\nactive that you can really overcome constipation and relieve the\nmost,serious forms of indigestion.\nDr. Chase's Kidney-liver Pills\nare, above all else, regulators of the\nliver. They (juicily arouse the torpid, sluggish liver to healthful activity, ensure action of the bowels and\nproper working of the kidneys. Put\nthis time-proven medicine to the\ntest when you are feeling out-of-\naorts from constipation or indigestion, when you have headache, or\nbackache or the tired feelings which\ncome with sluggish action of the\nliver or kidneys. 35 eta. a box, at\nall druggists.\nTHE\nONLY\nCOMPLETE        LOW-PRICED\nCAR\nC.B.S.DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI   KFRC   KOIN   KSL  KOL\n570     \u00ab10      940      1130   1270\n5:00 Bruna Castagna. contralto; 5:30\nSalon Modernc; 6:00 Your Hit parade, Freddie Bich's orchestra; 7:00\nBob Crosby's orch.; 7:30 Don Bes-\ntor's   orch.;   8:00   George   Glvot's\nradio circus; 8:30 Heroic Kay's orch.;\n9:45 Musical Nocturne;  10:00 Cole\nMcElroy's  orch.;   10:30  Hal  Grayson's orch.; 11:00 Isham Jone's orch.;\n11:30 Emil Baffa's orch.\nOughtred Boys\nShine Again in\nMusic, Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-The following results are from recent theoretical examinations taken by pupils in the McGill Conservatory of\nMuWc:\nIntermediate grade\u2014Aulay Oughtred, 87, ttlstlnction; William Oughtred, 83, distinction; Eleanor Lindsay, 70, pass; Mary Lindsay, 68, pass.\nJunior grade\u2014Ethel Torrence, 84,\ndistinction; Leona Twells, 74, pass.\nThe post office will pay the Cun-\nard-White Star company \u00a3100,000\na year for two years to provide\na weekly mail service to the United\nStates.  \u25a0\"\nA Single Ride Proves\nIt's Wiser to Buy\na CHEVROLET\nONLY Chevrolet in the low price oldaa\noffers you all the good things oi motoring . . . proved by experience ... and\nrecognized by public preference.\nSworveloss, perfected Hydraulic Brakes!\nStreamlined Fisher Bodies with the protecting, solid steel Turret Top! Valvo-in-Head,\nhigh compression engine that saves you\nmoney on running costs every mile and\nminute!      Fisher  No-Draft  Ventilation  to\nguard your health!  Improved *Knee-Action\ngliding ridel And Safety glass of the finest\nquality in every window!\nBut\u2014far bettor than words\u2014step Ln behind\nthe wheel and let your own actual driving\ntest prove every claim we make.\nPayments to suit your purse on the General\nMotors Instalment Plan.\n'On Matttr Dt Litxt Hodtli        \u2022\t\nNMCID MOM\n'736\n(Standard Swiss 2-piss. Cwpi)\nMister Dsluis Modth\nIrom \u00bbM\nMwllttfllMT,0ltm.M.\ngmnmltiui.tnUMlri\nGIVES YOU ALL SIX...PERFECTED HYDRAULIC MAKES ; ;. TURRET TOP BODIES IT fISHER . . .VAIVE-IH-\nHEAD ENGINE... FISHER NO-DRAFT VENTILATION... KNEE-ACTION (ai Matter Ds Ume MtfcM..; SAFETY GLASS THROUGHOUT\ncm\nNELSON TRANSFER COMPANY, LIMITED\nGENERAL MOTORS DEALERS FOR NELSON AND DISTRICT\nPHONE 35\nNELSON, B.C.\n-\nmm\n-\n IIIIIIUHIimtllllH     IHIi.ll\nFA\u00abg EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.\u2014SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 13. 193*\nNfljsmt latlg Nero*\nEstablished April 22. 1902.\nBritish CoIitmWo's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember  ot tbe  Audit  Bureau   ot  Circulations  and\nTlie   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nBETWEEN\nSATURDAY. JUNE 13,1936.\nKOOTENAYS LEAD IN SILVER\nPRODUCTION\nIRC\nMembers of the Vancouver board of trade when in\nKimberley this week viewed the mighty Sullivan mine\noperated by the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company. The Sullivan lead and zinc property is the largest\nproducer of silver in the Dominion of Canada.\n:,      The value of the silver production of Canada increased\ni, 38 per cent during 1935. The greater part of this gain was\nI due to an appreciation in the value of silver but, mainly\ni owing to this influence, there was a moderate increase in\n,' quantity output. The leading province of the Dominion in\n; silver production is British Columbia with Ontario second.\n: Canada stands third, among the silver-producing countries\n, of the world, being exceeded only by Mexico and the United\nj States.\n, i     The value of the silver production of Canada in 1935\n' was $10,770,000 as compared with $7,790,000 in 1934. On\n, the same comparison the output increased from 16,415.282\nto 16,624,426 ounces. Of the Dominion production British\n' Columbia\/according to returns made to the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, supplied 9,167,751 ounces valued at\n! $5,039,000. The output from Ontario was, according to the\nsame authority, 5,159,307 ounces valued  at $3,342,000.\nManitoba came third with a production of 1,252,901 ounces\nhaving a value of $811,000, followed by Quebec with 668,-\n821 ounces, the Yukon and North West Territories 201,258\nounces, and Saskatchewan 174,000 ounces. There was also a\nsmall production in Nova Scotia and in Alberta.\nThe Sullivan silver-lead-zinc mine in British Columbia\nis the largest producer of silver in Canada. This Kootenay\nmine, together with the Monarch, Premier and other large\nproperties, gives British Columbia the leadership in silver\nproduction among the Canadian provinces. The Sullivan\nmine production of silver from its plants at Kimberley and\nTr&il in 1934 amounted to 7,316,231 ounces.\nThe silver mining industry in Ontario has been stimulated lately, according to the report of the Provincial Department of Mines, by the increased price of silver and by\na better market for the metal cobalt Which is-associated\nwith silver. Refining of nickel-copper mattes has also supplied important quantities of silver. During 1935 shipments\n\u25a0of silver from Ontario properties, according to the provincial report, amounted to 6,317,341 ounces valued at $4,069,-\n000. The apparent divergence from the Dominion figures\nfor. the provincial production department of sales figures\nwhich include shipments from metal produced in earlier\nyears. During 1935, states the provincial report, twenty-\neight properties shipped silver-cobalt and cobalt ore, of\nwhich eighteen were located at Cobalt, seven in South Lor-\nrain and three at Gowganda. In most cases these operations\nwere carried on by lessees and shipments ranged from one\nton, a carload lot, or several carloads to more than 4000\ntons in the case of the Nipissing mine. .\nThe latest figures for world silver production available\nare for 1934, when Mexico ranked first with 74,142,000\nounces. Second position was held by the United States at\n26(441,000 ounces with Canada third at 16,415,000 ounces.\nOther large producers included Peru 9,000,000 ounces New-\nSouth Wales 8,800,000, Japan 6,920,000 and India 6,850,000\nounces.\n\u25a0FICTION AND THE NEWS\nYearly from the presses of the publishing houses of\nthe English-speaking peoples pour an almost incredible\nnumber of books that might be called \"shockers.\" They are\nyarns of murder, adventure and international intrigue oh\nland, on sea and in the air. A \"thriller\" is admittedly light\nreading, but it passes a pleasant hour or two in which the\nreader, who usually lives a humdrum and sedentary life, is\ntransported into a world of the most amazing people and\nhappenings. When one reads in a book of an international\nspy, of piracy on the high seas, of secret murderous organizations and of adventuresome criminals, the natural reaction is to reflect \"it can't happen here.\"\nYet it does happen here, and the old saw that \"truth\nis stranger than fiction\" is just as true today as most trite\nremarks are. Consider the startling incidents in the daily\nnews of the world of recent months, factual stories that if\nthey appeared between the covers of a \"shocker\" instead\nof as proven happenings in a bizarre world, would not for\na moment be believed.\nWhat a marvelous basis for a novel's plot the Black\nLegion in.the United States would make, yet nobody would\nbelieve that such things could happen were they not proven\nby murder charges in the courts: Supposing a Crime Club\nfeook of the Month had appeared a few weeks ago based on\nthe Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde career of \"Red\" Ryan. It would\nhave been dismissed as the imaginative creation of a hard-\npressed hack writer with a bad hangover. And just yesterday the staid and reliable Associated Press related in a\nlehgthy cable an astonishing story of piracy on the high\nseas, of a ship stolen to look for Captain Kidd's loot, and of\nLloyd's agents combing the seven seas for these daring\nadventurers into crime.\nFrancis Beeding, a writer of British \"thrillers\" who\nhas a light and easy touch, has a recent novel \"Death in\nFour Letters\" about international armament intrigues that\n\"Roads, roads, roads!\"\n\"That is all we heard about on\nthis trip,\"\nSo declared J. Y. McCarter, president of the Vancouver board ot\ntrade, when passing through Nelson\nyesterday morning. \"Well,\" was the\nanswer to him, \"probably that is\nwhat the Kootenay people wanted\nVancouver to hear about.\" \"There\n| is one solution,\" replied Mr. McCarter, \"it is a highway commission.\"\n* *   *\nj    \"I  have enjoyed every moment\nI of this trip.\"\nSo declared Frank Burd of Vancouver, pleased that the Dai'y Province had got aboard the train first\nagain.\n\u2022 0      0\n\"I am not on this trip as a C.P.R.\nman but as a delegate of the Vancouver board,\"\nC. E. Cotterell of the C.P.R. who\nwas a busy man at the platform.\nI \"I was certainly glad to meet\n| you,\" said J. B. Gray as he bid\nadieu lo E. H. Grubbe, manager\nI of the Bank of Montreal in Van-\nj couver. \"And.' added J.B., \"when I\nI want to make a loan I'll certainly\nlook you up.\"\n\"I'm not the same man going\nhome, I was when I arrived,\" said\nA. P. Bennett, laughingly as lie\nshone forth under a wide-brimmed\nPanama hat.\n\"I'm in a hurry,\" said H. R. Malkin,\" as he left the crowd for a\nshort visit up town. And he didn't\ngo to the same place that some of\nthe Vancouver boys went to in their\nshort stay in Nelson.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nJUST AROUND THE TRAIN\nAround the station platform \u2014\nMajor Roy Manahan, Nelson postmaster, explaining the high cost of\nshipping gold bricks to the mint\nfrom the Kootenay country via\nmail\u2014At the rate of two cents per |\nounce\u2014you can figure for yourself I\nthc cost of a 125-pound gold brick\u2014 :\nAV. B. Bamford announcing the in- i\ncoming train was over half an hour ,\nlate\u2014Charles F. McHardy wearing\nout shoe leather as he walked up\nand down the platform\u2014H. A. Pearson loaded down with Nelson board\nof trade booklets for the visiting\nVancouver delegates\u2014A. J. Ironsides of Cranbrook evidently glad\nthe trip was over as far as lie was\nconcerned\u2014Mayor J. P. Morgan declaring they came and they saw-\nas he walked up from the station-\nTom Carew down to meet thc boss\n\u2014Jimmie Gordon going on to Grand\nForks with the party\u2014L. K. Larsen\nshaking hands with a visitor\u2014Bill\nClark wishing them a safe journey\nhome-And in conclusion I don't\nthink thc Vancouver board was\nsinging half as well on thc return\ntrip as they were on their trip into\ntlie Kootenay\u2014But you must remember folk?, they have undergone numerous changes of climate\nin the past 10 days\u2014and then the\ndrinking water varies\u2014all of which\ntakes thc pep out of a fellow.\nTODAY'S\nGARDEN-GRAPH\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCT\u00bbfrt\u00bb>il, JN|, Central met isiocloHoii, lee.\n..\u25a0\u25a0'..\u25a0 i n 111 i i in . im i i in inmj nut. ' i ill. \u25a0 ..''' l il.ll\niiiilllili\n\u25a0 ill'* it  i.li   \u2022 'a-i'-M  I _\u25a0'\u25a0_*.: l-tiulM 'nla-wa-^-Mil '       l' ' itmh-ii  mil\nFiQ,\u00a3\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nMOST UNEXPECTED RESULT\nOutside the ranks of the professional and semi-professional bridge\nplayers there will be found few\nplayers more able than Mr. Charles\nKing, Knickerbocker Whist club. He\nalso is one ot the most charming\npartners to be found anywhere. I\nhave yet to see him annoyed or\noutwardly disturbed at any happening at the table, which I assure you\nis rare indeed. The unexpected result of the following deal appealed\nso to Mr. King's sense of humor\nthat he gave me the hand, with the\ninteresting details of the result,\na) 10 S 7 4\nf J10 8\n\u2666 KJ87\n\u2666 84\nSTAMP CORNER\n\u25a0 ..   -\nBy JAMES\nMONTAGNES\n!'\nftvwp.MtMm?\nUlfe_!rY_M\n9_ni__fl       Wk\\\n1^r^_B\n)H_J_H        Hi\nrS*_9.\n[(On\n*?iH\n' rTl          i-   Hit               __^__K'     rl _\u25a0\n\u25a0jaJB        B\nijfflj\n*BLai_M\nMB\n+jm\nNew Issues\u2014two of Finland's three value Red Cross Issue; a German\nstamp celebrating the 250th anniversary of scientist Guericke, and. a\nstamp from New Zealand celebrating the 2lst anniversary of the landing\nof the Anzac troops at Galllpoli.\n\u2666 A\n\u00bbAQ86\n2\n\u2666 None\n+ KQ97\n653\n2  *\n_\u00a7_\n\u2666 366.\nVK9 74\n\u2666 9632\nPlanting plan tor window box.\nA window box when properly planned and planted, will not only\ndelight the eye with foliage and flowers during summer and fall months,\nbut will even contribute a certain amount of cut flowers for indoor use.\nAs shown in Fig. I of the above Garden-Graph, there are certain\nrules to follow when designing the planting of a window box. Such\nrules include placing tall plants at the rear and in the center to gain\nproper balance. Low growing types should be placed at each end ot the\nbox, and light foliage vines should be placed in the front center.\nFig. 2 diagrams the planting key to the above window box arrangement as follows: 111 Boston fern; (2) fuschia, pink or red; (3) Lantana\nhybrid; (4) Vlnca major; (5) trailing queen coleus; 6) vining geranium;\n(71 asparagus sprengeri; (8) wandering-jew.\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN  CLENDEN1NG,  M.D.\nAMERCAN SHORTS\nSHOCK ENGLISH\nShort shorts, but not too short\u2014\nthat's the warning to English girl\nathletes.\nA little shocked by thc \"shortest\nshorts ever seen   in  England,\"  as\ndisplayed by the American women's\nsquash racquets team on their recent visit here, the British Women's\nAmateur   Athletic   association   has\nbrought out its tape measure.\n\"We want English women athletes to look smart and businesslike without  looking  like revue\nchorus girls,\" says an official of\nthe association. \"They can   look\nchic without being too daring.\"\nThe new rule calls for shorts that\nreach at least half way to thc knee.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"1 reckon I'm a hypocrite ln\nsome ways, like everybody else,\nbut I never played a game I had\nlo hide when 1 saw the preacher\ncomln'.\"\nANY PERIL FROM\nTIN IN CANS?\nPeople are, even in this advanced\ntime, more suspicious of canned food\nthan they are ol fresh food. This\nis a throw-back to thc old days when\nall canned food was first thoroughly smelled and then daintily nibbled bclore it was taken in any\nquantity. There is no present justification lor these fears. Aside from\nptomaine poisoning, which I considered yesterday, the fears group\nthemselves under two heads.\nFirst, is the question of whether\ntin or iron will get into food from\ncontact with a container. It would\nbe useless to deny that such contact is possible. The modern sanitary\nstyle can is manufactured from tin\n! plate. This means that there is a\nplating of pure tin over thin steel\nj sheets. This tin coaling cannot be\nI absolutely continuous. Microscropic\nI areas can be seen ill which the steel\nj is exposed, and where the food\nI might come in contact with it.\nENAMELED\nCANS USED\nThere arc, however, enameled\ncans, which have inert laquers baked on to the tin plate at high temperature. In these cans the food\ndoes not come in contact with tin\nor steel-to such an extent. Here also,\nhowever, it is impossible to make a\nperfect surface, and small abrasions\nin the enamel coaling may expose\nfood also to tin and steel contact.\nThc chemical process by which\nthe foods take up these metals is\npartly an electrical phenomenon,\nand depends somewhat on the character of the food. The acid foods\ntake up more, especially when air\nis admitted after the can is opened.\nUnder any circumstances, however, the amounts of the metals\nwhich are so taken up are extremely minute, and are reported merely\nin \"parts per million\". So far as\niron is concerned, it cannot possibly do any harm, because we have to\nhave a certain amount of iron in\nour food daily. So far as tin is concerned, the Department of Agriculture states;\n\"Our own experimental work, involving the ingestion of far larger\namounts of tin than any previously\nreported, and supported by the experimental evidence of other investigators, leads us to the conclusion\nthat tin, in the amounts ordinarily\nfound in canned foods, and in the\nquantity that would be ingested in\nthc ordinary individual diet, is for\nall practical purposes, eliminated,\nand is not productive of harmful effects to the consumer of canned\nfoods.\"\nfeel a need for this, and would appreciate your advice. 12) Also please\nstate whether a pint of buttermilk\neach day helps the system, or whether il has a tendency to cause gases\nin the stomach.\"\nAnswer: (1) Thc only substance\nknown which will increase the secretion of bile is bile salts. They are\nmarketed in many forms. The notion that the liver needs toning up\noccasionally is probably more likely\ndue to constipation than liver sluggishness. That is why calomel seems\nto be so beneficial. (2) Buttermilk\nhas a good. effect on elimination\nand does not dispose towards gases.\nCANADA\nA Fact a Day\nCURRENT TRENDS IN\nWHOLESALE TRADE\nIn continuation of the. upward\nmovement in wholesale business\nover last year, the value of whole\nsale trade increased 7.2 per cent in\nApril 1936, over April 1935, according to reports submitted by approximately 200 wholesale houses operating in nine different lines of\nbusiness. March sales showed an increase of 5 per cent over the same\nmonth last year. February sales\nwere up 3.7 per cent and those\nof January up 4.4 per cent as compared with the same months of 1935.\nWhile increases were recorded in\nall economic divisions of the country, British Columbia again reports\nthe greatest improvement in April\nsales with all increase of 15.6 per\ncent over last year. Ontario showed\nan increase of 2,6 per cent, Quebec\n7.1, Prairie Provinces 8, and Maritime Provinces 11.7 per cent.\n\u2666 KQJI\nf 5\n\u2666 A Q 10 \u00ab 4\n4.A10 2\nMr. King sat South and dealt. Bidding went: South, 1 Diamond; West.\n1 Heart; South, 1 Spade; West, 3\nClubs, to show his great strength;\nN.'rth, 3 Diamonds; West, 3 Hearts;\nNorth, 4 Spades; West, 5 Hearts;\ntrusting partner to shift to the minor\nmake, if he preferred; North, 5\nSpades; West, 6 Hearts, which South\ndoubled. With three and one-half\nquick tricks, and partner supporting, while East persistently had declined to assist, the double appeared\nto be a very promising investment.\nThe 4 of spades was led. Declarer's lone Ace won. The 5 of clubs\nwas led back and dummy's singleton J went to doubler's Ace. The\nopening lead showed declarer void\nof spades, but it could do no harm\nto ruff him. so the K of spades was\nled by South. West ruffed with the\n2.\nThc next three tricks were taken\nwith declarer's Ace of hearts, dummy's K and declarer's Q of that\nsame suit, cleaning up opposing\ntrumps and leaving a single heart\nin dummy and one in declarer's\nhand. Somehow the double did not\nappear so good as when it was made.\nDeclarer had won five of the first\nsix tricks taken, but probably a\nminor suit trick or so might still\nbe won by defenders. That may\nhave been the last hope of the\ndoubler and his partner. But that\nwas not to be.\nTwo rounds of winning clubs took\nout the last card of that] suit held\nby the doubler, leaving the rest of\ndeclarer's clubs long, wilh no losers\nin other suits. Mr. King had a veal\nsurprise on the outcome of that\ndeal.\nWell as Mr. King plays, with four\nspades and four diamonds in East's\nhand, the Ace of spades held by\nWest, and ability to force two ruffs\nfrom the South hand, had either\nmember of the doubling side elected\nto play a small slam at diamonds or\nspades, the path wpuld have been\nboth difficult and expensive.\nVERSE\nQUESTIONS   FROM   READERS\nH. G. W.: \"(1) Will you please\nadvise what can be taken to tone up\nthe liver? Every once in a while I\nia not a bit more incredible than sworn evidence brought out\nbefore the United States Senate in Washington and a royal\ncommission in Great Britain. And speaking of spies, what\nwriter of fiction could improve upon the villainous Capt.\nLopez, that elusive British subject who has been causing\nCapt. Anthony Eden and the British Foreign Office so\nmuch annoyance of late ?\nThe people and situations who create the news have,\nin fact, been very kind of late to hard-working writers of\nadventure fiction. All they have to do is assemble in plot\nform the daily happenings, change the names, add an occasional heroine for the inevitable \"love interest,\" and presto!\n\u2014there is a best-seller of the month. The lads and lassies\nin the fiction field have a lot easier time and make a lot more\nmoney than the journalists of the daily press whose stories\nthey popy. Maybe there ought to be a law about it.\nTO KEEP IN  MEMORY\nT'was in the year Nineteen hundred\nfive, I came\nAcross this great Dominion wide,\nLike many others left my friends\nand home,\nWhen here at Nelson, I became a\nbride.\nFor thirty years the time rolled on,\nI travelled far, have always liked\nto roam.\nThen once again my pathway led\nto Nelson,\nTo visit with my son,  his bride,\ntheir home.\nThe 'Moyie' lay aside the wharf,\nHer proudest days like mine, have\npassed.\nShe seemed a friend of limes far\noff,\n'May I be useful just as she, at last\nTo be quite near the Kootenay Lake,\nWhen  skies above  are dear and\nblue,\nAnd shadows green, by mountains\ncast, do make\nA picture to remember, grand and\ntrue.\nI could in fancy hear Dan play the\ntune,\n\"God Bless the Prince of Wales\",\nwhen he\nOur King, then Prince, years past,\nn Voyager\nRode on the lake, time flies, \"Ah,\nme\".\nAlong the road this diy in early\nspring,\nWhere flakes of mica glisten In the\nsun,\nWe see a partridge rise, take flight,\nAnd there are hoof prints, where\na deer had run.\nFarewell, Oh! lovely WllloV Point,\nin memory's store,\nI'll keep you ever, with all the Joys\nyou gave,\nThe gift of charming, friendly people;  what more\nCould one desire; or better, gift of\nnature save.\nB. M. SPEARING.\nVancouver, B. C, 1938!\n10 YEARS AGO   f\nFrom Nelton Dally New, Files I\n(JUNE 13, 1924)\nAn 18 per cent gain in auto tr-ffic\nover the Castlegar ferry for the\npast May, over May, 1925, is shown\nin returns to the public works department here. Passengers increased\nfrom 8000 to 8532, and all classes of\ntraffic Increased except horses.\n...\nStars and stripes waved triumphantly over the Union Jack on\nthe hills of Hertfordshire yesterday\nafternoon after the international\nfour-ball exhibition golf match, in\nwhich the American amateur, Bobby Jones, and professional Walter\nHagen laid low Cyril Tolley, the\nformer British amateur champion,\nand Abe Mitchell, Britain's leading\nprofessional, 4 up and 2 to play.\nMiss B. Miller and Mrs. E. O.\nHammer thc morning of June 12\nsaw an antlered deer emerge from\nthe auto camp and stand for two\nor three minutes in the middle of\nFront street. Boys coming along\nfrightened the animal and it bounded back into thc park and up the\nhill.\n|   20 YEARS AGO   I\nI From Nelion Dally News Files I\n$\u2014\u2014\u2014  v\n(JUNE 13, 1914)\nPte Earl Wesley Kain of the 121st\nbattalion, Bonnington Falls, and formerly of St. Bernardino, Cal., and\nMiss Maybclle Roger of Bonnington Falls were married yesterday\nafternoon at St.' Saviour's church,\nNelson. The ceremony was performed by the rector, Rev. Fred H.\nGraham. Miss Beatrice Lyon of\nSouth Slocan was bridesmaid and\nSergt, James Bates of the 121st battalion was groomsman.\n* *   \u2022\nDuncan McKay, well known in\nhockey circles as \"Mickie,\" passed\nthrough the city last night with his\nbride, who was Miss Amy Raybuin\nof Grand Forks, on their way to\nCranbrook where they will visit\nMrs. McKay's brother. Mr. and Mrs.\nMcKay were married yesterday\nmorning at Grand Forks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. G. Larson, two children\nand two nieces will reach Nelson\ntonight from Spokane to take up\ntheir residence for the summer at\nthe Bourke home at Nine-mile.\nProbably the most popular animal\nstamps are those of Liberia. This\nindependent African republic started for the freed slaves of America\nand now mainly valuable as a\nsource of rubber for a large Ameri\nso low, it Is evident that they ara\nprinted largely for the use of collectors in special hand cancelled j\ncondition. It is of interest that while\nneighboring colonial empires hav\u00bb\nissued many stamps in recent yearej\ncan rubber concern,   has    issued | Liberia has issued no stamps sincd\nmany pictorial sets since the first j 1928.\nstamp, a pictorial, in 1860. No set\nhas been complete without its complement of animal stamps, and the\ncollector of Liberia has a veritable\nzoo on stamp paper.\nWhile Italy has announced the\nannexation of Ethiopia and newa\ncomes that a new Ethiopian government has been set up some dis-\nThe Liberian stamps contain in  tance from the Italian line of con-\nevery issue some new views of the I quests,  from    Switzerland    cornea\ncountry, some different types of\nnatives, various animals, and some\nof the presidents who have ruled\nover this all-black republic. The\nlatest Issue, that of 1928, contained\na map of Africa, showing the location of the republic.\nMost of the Liberian stamps are\nof extra size, and since there is not\na great deal of correspondence with\nthe country, the various issues are\navailable in good hand cancelled\ncondition. They are also not expensive, which makes them doubly\npopular with the junior collector.\nOdd stamps included are'several\ntriangles, issues of 1894, 1909, 1918,\nand a \"book stamp\" of the 1909\nissue, a 75 cent value which resembles a book with a cover picture.\nValues in some ot the sets run up\nto 33, and while these are high in\nprice in mint condition, used they\nare not expensive. Since stamps of\nsuch high value are not used frequently enough to make their price\nword that a new Red Cross Issue la\nbeing printed there for Ethiopia.\nThere will be five values, to be sold\nat double face, and the designs were\nmade from pencil sketches sent\nfrom Addis Ababa prior to Italian\nconquest, Sweden issued a 50 ore\nairmail stamp to commemorate tho\nopening of a new airport near\nStockholm. Hungary has a new ten\nvalue airmail set.\n.   *   \u00ab\nLily Pons, opera star, has a post-\noffice named after her, Lilypons,\nMaryland. From this post-office the\nopera star each Christmas sends out\nabout 1000 greeting cards, a novelty\nfor the collector who receives such\na card. Occasionally she sends announcement of her concerts through\nthis post-office, which makes it possible for collectors of town cancellation to pick up some from this\nsmall post-office, which does so little business that all letters mailed1\nthrough there are hand stamped.\nEighteen years old, R. H. W.\nBundle,, pupil pilot, crashed his\nplane in East Yorkshire. He crawled\nout of the flaming wreckage slightly hurt.\nWITH THE\nPSYCHOLOGIST\nGARRY C. MYERS, PH.D.   ,\nHead   of   the   Department   of\nParent  Education, Cleveland\nCollege,  Western  Reserve\nUniversity.\nMATCHE8 MADE\nON CAMPUS\nRecently 1 was invited to speak\non marriage before Ihe student assembly of Findley College. Findlay,\nO., This is a small college with men\nand wome\/i students (co-education-\nal). Here are some things 1 said:\n\"I believe in the small co-educational college. I found my wife in\none. Some day a college like this\nwill consider as among its greatest\nachievements the number of successful marriages it inspires.\n\"While one marriage out of 6even\non the average, goes on the rocks\nin this country, only one out of 75\nmade from 'matches' on the campus\nof co-educational colleges is wrecked, according to Hamilton. The\nchances are that thc small church-\nsupported college ranks at the very\ntop in furthering successful marriage. Students there come from\nfamilies very similar in home background\u2014an item very favorable to\nhappy marriage. The church homes,\nmoreover, represented by a majority\nof the students, rank high in conserving wholesome family ideals.\nHere is a strong argument for the\nsmall church-suported college.\"\n,If I were president of one of those\ncolleges\u2014I'm not looking for a job\n\u2014I would, after making sure the\nscholastic standards were adequate,\nemphasize two items; First, I would\nencourage intelligent matchmaking\non, the campus and afford abundant\nwholesome opportunities for the two\nsexes to mingle socially. I would\nput on a good marriage course that\nwould be elective, which course\nwould include, or be supplemented\nby. family relationship and child\nguidance. (On the previous day I\nlectured in a course on marriage in\nanother small co-educational institution, Bluffton College, Bluffton,\nO.)\nSTUDENT-TEACHER\nRELATION CLOSE\nSecondly, I would encourage a\nclose student-teacher relationship.\nIn a college of from two to five hundred students with most living on\nthe campus, the opportunity for\nwholesome human contacts by stu\ndents with their professors is very\ngreat. Yet how incompletely is this\nopportunity realized? All too many\nteachers in the small college arc no\ncloser to their students than thc\nprofessors in the big universities.\nA few of these church colleges,\nalas, are selling their souls in their\nefforts to ape some larger colleges\nand universities by purchasing athletes.\nI once heard the celebrated scientist, Dr. James McKeen Cattell, at\nwhose feet I used to sit as a student,\nsay that the small college, in its\nscholastic endeavors, should aim to\nhave one outstanding department to\ngive it distinction in the academic\nworld.\nUnless small church-colleges can\nexcel In some of these directions,\nthey are doomed to die and deserve\nto die. Yet I believe some of them\nwill live on, and ought to live, because of the peculiar contribution\nthey can make, especially to family\nlife, Whet do you think?\nDANCING TO KEEP YOUNG\nSONG\nFrom  \"Maud\"\nO, let the solid ground,\nNot fail beneath my_feet\nBefore my life has found\nWhat some have found so sweet;\nThen let come what come may,\nWhat matter If I go mad,\nI shall have had my day.\nLet the sweet heavens endure,1\nNot close and darken above ma\nBefore I am quite, quite sure  .....\nThat there is one to love mel\nThen let come what come may\nTo a life that has been so sad,\nI shall have had my day.\n\u2014Alfred Tennyson.\nHandy Material\nSov Handy Men\nUse Cottonwood Panels\nfor Improving your\nhome. Nelson Panels\ncan be stained, painted\nor kalsomined.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nDistrict Distributors\nRICHMOND, Va. (CP)-Tom Mc-\nEnany, 87, and hopes to be 125, advocates and practices tap-dancing\nfor perpetual youth.\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nHealth\nRestored\nNearly all the letters we\nhave, and there are several\nhundred, tell of the health\ngained by using Pacific\nMilk. Mothers have written\nof what it has done for\ntheir children, thc physical\ntroubles relieved, the health\nrestored and doctors recommend it!\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Course\nUnfailing\nPerformance\nNo matter what kind of\na job we do, large or\nsmall, it receives our utmost attention.\nAll workmanship and materials are first quality products.\nPhone us and become one of\nour many satisfied customers.\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING & HEATING\nCOMPANY.  LIMITED\nPhone 666\nP.O. Box SW    313 Baker it\n _\t\n-?cJp\nPROPOSE BRING ALL-AMERICAN\nBOXLA TEAM INTERIOR AFTER\nLALLY CUP SERIES AT COAST\nfee.Riins\n(By Auoclated Press)\nYesterday's homers: Cavarretta,\nCarleton, Cubs; Medwlck, Collins,\nCardinals; Stone, Senators; Simmons, Rogell, Tigers; Rolfe, Yanks\n\u2014one each.\nThe leaders: Foxx, Red Sox, 14;\nTrosky, Indians, 13; Gehrig, Yanks,\n12; Ott, Giants, 11; Goslin, Tigers,\n10; Lazzeri, Yanks, 9; J. Moore,\nPhillies, 9; Dickey, Yanks, \u00bb.\nLeague totals: American 253; National 224, total 477.\n-*    '\nMRS. HILL GOES\nINTO FINAL\nNelson ond Trail Seek\nArrange Games on\nReturn Trip\nNEARLY 200 STICKS\nDISTRIBUTED  HERE\nPreparations in Hand\nGala Opening on\nTuesday\nNELION DAILY NEWS. NELION, B.C^IATURDAY MORNING, JUNI 11. 1938\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wfestling\nNntia\nLacrosse-Golf-Track-Swimming- Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nSHEETS CLUB\nIS PROPOSED\nTOPEKA, Kas., June 12 (API-\nEncountering the sternest opposi\ntion she has met in her rocketing\nflight toward another women's western golf championship of the United States, Mrs. Opal S. Hill of Kan-\naas City won today on the 18th green\nin her semi-final match with Edna\nSaenger ot Sbreveport, La.\nMrs. Hill, the medalist, and Mrs.\nCharles Dennehy of Lake Forest,\nJll., will meet in a 38-hole final\nmatch tomorrow. Mrs. Dennehy\nturned in a one-up victory over\nthe favored Dorothy Traung of San\nFrancisco.\nMRI.   MULQUEEN  WINI\nThornhill, Ont., June 12 (CP)-\nIJfrj. F. J. Mulqueen of Toronto today captured the Ontario women's\ngolf crown by a 2 and 1 victory\nover Mrs. J. A. McDougald, Toronto.\nBURGESS ORY CELLS L'\u00bb\nWINNIPEG\n^Sandwiches\nWhether you like your sandwich plain or garnished, simple\nor complex, white or brown or\ntoasted bread, you'll ;ind our\nsandwiches are always Just a\nlittle bit  better.\nG\nOLDEN\nATE CAFE\nSeeking to give sports fans ef\nthe district a real treat, Trail and\nNelson box lacrosse officials ara\nendeavoring to have the All-Am-\nerlcan team which Is playing at\ntha uast for the Lally cup at\nthe end ef this month make the\nreturn trip through the Kootenays and play games In Nalson\nand Trail.\nProposal Is also on foot to arrange with some of the coast teams\nto make trips to the interior for\nsxhlblton games. Whether this can\nbo arranged, In view of the heavy\nschedule played at the coast, remains to be seen, but If It is at all\npossible the ooast boyi will be\nbrought to Trail and Nelion later\nIn tha leaion.\nNearly 200 lacrosse sticks have\nbeen brought to Nelson and distributed at cost among bantam, midget, juvenile and intermediate players in an effort to meet the demand\nof young Nelsonites for action in\nboxla. The Nelson Lacrosse association has brought in 10 doten\nsticks for the younger hopefuls, and\nabout five dozen for older lads.\nOn the basis ot the number ot\nsticks, there'll be quite a crowd of\nyoung players obtain free admission to Nelson's gala boxla opening\nTuesday night Part of the opening\nceremony will be a parade, led by\nthe Canadian Legion Bugle band,\nand every young player who turns\nout to carry his stick in the parade\nwill be admitted to the rink to see\nNelson and Trail play their first\ngame of the season on the new skating rink floor. Following the game\na monster dance, with games on the\nside, will be featured as added entertainment.\nAt the present time Nelson has\nnine teams as well as the senior\nclub. There are three bantam, three\nmidget, two juvenile and two intermediate teams all looking for\naction, and every effort will be\nmade to give it to them. It is possible the juvenile and intermediate\nranks may be swelled by tha addition of another team in each.\nCricket Scores\nLONDON, June 12 (CP Cable)-\nPositlons were unchanged at the top\nof the English county cricket championship as the result of the series\nof matches concluded today. Kent\nretains leadership by virtue of its\nclose victory over Somerset earlier\nln the week and Derbyshire is close\non the eastern county's heels. Yesterday Derbyshire won by 10 wickets from Gloucestershire.\nThe scores:\nSussex 166 and 292 for nine; Somerset 124 and 76 (J. Cornford five\nwickets for 38 runs); at Hove.\nYorkshire 242 and 165 (Allen four\nfor 48); Middlesex 162 and 77 for six\nwickets; at Lord's.\nHampshire 293 and 200; Lancashire 262 and 66 for two wickets; at\nLiverpool.\nWorcestershire 101 and 265 for\neight; Leticstershirc 153; at Leicester.\nGlamorgan 550 for six wickets,\ndeclared, and 168 for four; Surrey\n20 (Sandham 104, Fishlock 81); at\nthe  Oval.\nWarwickshire 228 and 179 for six.\ndeclared; Northamptonshire 179 and\n159 for seven; at Peterborough.\nCambridge University 207 and 220\n(Tlndall 88); Essex 175 and 256 for\nfive wickels (Pearce 110 not out);\nat Cambridge.\nMinor counties 251 and 294 (Poole\n91 not out); Oxford University 288\nand 23 for no wickets; at Oxford.\nA large farm house in County\nCavan, property of James Gray of\nVirginia, has been destroyed by fire.\nEnthusiasts May Also\nPromote Range,\nArchery\nOrganization of a skects club is\nthe objective of a number of Nelsonites interested in shooting. They\nseek also to enliven interest in trap\nshooting, to build a miniature range\nfor .22 target shooting, and possibly\nto start an archery club.\nSkeet shooting, it is explained, Is\ns sport in which gun enthusiasts of\nthis district would become quickly\nInterested if they were to get Into\nthe sport. It is more complicated,\nand much more sporting than\nstraight trap shooting, according to\nthose Interested.\nIn skeets there are eight stations\nfrom which \"birds\" are propelled toward and away from the guns, offering n variety of shots on split second judgment. A good trap shot on\nhis first attempts at skeets will find\nhimself missing more often than\nnot, It Is claimed,\nIt has been suggested that the\ncurling sheets in the new rink\nmight be used to advantage for .22\ntarget shooting and for archery.\nThe latter is a sport in which increasing interest is being taken\nthroughout the country, one which\nmight easily be developed, according to enthusiasts, since there is\nnot the heavy expense often encountered in such sports.\nGOLF\nby\nALEX MORRISON\n\u25a0\nKeep .\/\nELBOWS (\nTO-    A\n&ETHER   1\nM\n&\t\n1 lilfS        i\nAt soma time all players have trouble with their elbows.,Like the\nknees, they become unruly and you\nhave difficulty in getting them into\na comfortable position, and even\nwhen you get them there they misbehave before the ball hu been hit.\nTh* common fault is to let the\nelbows work apart. Indications of\nthis occur during the waggle just\nbefore the swing starts. In a sort ot\ndancing motion, such as you'd perform rubbing clothes on a washboard, your elbows work apart.\nThis in turn pulls the hands apart.\nIt doesn't matter where this separation takes place, the damage is\ndone.\nOf course the best time to effect\na cure is before you get into your\nswing. Some player designed a\nstrap to keep the elbows together.\nI've used an ordinary belt to keep\nthe arms rather close to one another\nand I'm sure that a little practice\nin this way will demonstrate the\nvalue of so controlling the arms,\nBirthday Greetings\nBy Ths Canadian Preu\nTo Seymour Wilson, outside wing\nof Hamilton Tigers, 1935 Inter-provincial football champions. He was\nnamed by critics on The Canadian\nPress All-Eastern 1933 and 1934\nAll-Stars. Born 25 years ago today\nand a football product of Hamilton\nCentral collegiate, he joined the\nTigers In 1930.\nHIRAM WALKER...\nGUARANTEES ITS QUALITY\nTHE GOVERNMENT\nGUARANTEES ITS AGE\n16 ox. $1.50 25 ox. $2.25\nHIRAM\nWALKERS\n\u00ab ^\nTST*\nM A R K\nWHISK1!\nI \u201e.\u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e HIRAM WALKED I S0Nt, LIMITED.   ESU.lliHtfl 1.5.\nI DISTILLERY AND HEAD OFFICE: WALKERVILLE, CAN.   MONTREAL, 1441 PEEL ST.   LONDON, ENGLAND\nnl\u00bb advertlsemersT* is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\nCRICKET STANDINGS\nlONDON.'jiina irtCPeiMe).-\nStandings in tha English county\ncricket competition. Including games\nfinished today, follow:\nW L wfl lfl NR Pta. Pet.\nKent. 5 1 1 1 0 83 69.16\nDerby ,1 1 0 J 0 HI 67.90\nMldsex 4 2 1 1 0 68 56.80\nSurrey. 4 1 9 9 0 14 50.91\nHamps. 3 0 4 9 0 74 49.33\nNotta.... 2     1    2    1    0   43   47.77\nLecster 2    0\nYorks... 2    1\nEssex.... 2 . 3\nLanes .. 1     1\nSussex.. 2   4   2\nWnttr. 11    1\nGliter 2    t    1\nWrwk,. 1   3    1\nSmrset. 1   4   l\nGlmrgn 0    4    2\nNthants 0    5    0\n1    1\n4    2\n2\n4\n2\n0\n1\n1\n2\n1 50 47.62\n2 49 45.71\n0 38 38.19\n1 45 33.33\n0 46 30.66\n1 36 30.00\n0 41 27.33\n2 28 26.66\n0 23 21.90\n0 13 12.38\n1 10 8.33\nYANKS WIN 9-6\nHEW YORK, June 1J (AP)-In\ntheir aecond straight battle of extra\nbase blows, the Yankees clubbed\nthe Petrolt Tigers, 9-6, today, te\nstretch their American league lead\nto three games over the Idle Boston\nRed Sox.\nCharley Ruffing chalked up his\nseventh win against five losses for\nthe Yanks and gave out only six\nhits, but half of them were for\nextra bases, including homers by\nAl Simmons and Bill Rogell.\nThe Yanks, meantime, had 16\nsafe blows off the aging Alvin\nCrowder and Chad Kimsey. Red\nRolfe got a home run.\nDetroit     6    \u00ab   1\nNew York     9   16   2\nCrowder, Kimsey and Reiber;\nRuffing and Jorgens.\n6-0 FOR WASHINGTON\nWASHINGTON, June 12 (API-\nBuck Newsom fava the Chicago\nWhite Sax only five hits today and\nshut them out, 6-0, to score his\nseventh pitching triumph of the\nseason for Washington.\nThe victory sent tne Senators into\na virtual three-way tla with Cleveland and Dttrolt for third place ih\nthe American league standings.\nWhile Newsom was holding the\nWhite Sox at bay, Washington\npounded Ted Lyons for 12 hits, Including a home run by Johnny\nStone. Stone's homer, coming ln\ntha first inning, scored Travis whose\ndouble previously had scored Buddy\nLewis.\nChicago       0    5   1\nWashington     6  12  0\nLyons and Sewell; Newsome and\nBolton,\nSt. Louis at Boston  postponed,\nrain.\nOnly three scheduled.\nCasey Again to Be\nSecond for Mox\nNAPANOCH, N, Y\u201e June 12 (AP)\n\u2014 William \"Doc\" Casey of Detroit,\nwho has been In Max Schmellng's\ncorner in all except two of his\nUnited States engagements, again\nwill sacond the German heavyweight ln his 15-round bout with\nJoe Louis at the Yankee stadium\nnext Thursday night, Manager Joe\nJacobs announced tonight.\nCasey was the chief second for\nJack Delaney before and after the\nCanadian-born \"Rapier of the\nNorth\" won the light heavyweight\ntitle.\nBritain leads Min First Day\nPlay for the Wightman Tennis (up\nKay Stammers Beats Helen Jacobs and Miss\nRound Takes Mrs. Fabyan as British\nDoubles Team Loses to U. S.\nWIMBLEDON, England, June 12\n(CP)\u2014Greet Britain's women ten-\nnil stars began brilliantly today\ntheir task of wresting from the\nUnited States tha Wightman cup\nheld by that country tor the past\nfive yean,\nKay Stammers. and Dorothy\nRound won tht two opening singles\nmatches but their teammates dropped the doubles match to leave the\ncount 2-1 In matches in Britain's\nfavor at tht end of the first day'i\nplay.\nTo prevent the 14-year-old International trophy from returning to\nBritain after five years the American quartet of Helen Jacobs, Mrs.\nSarah Palfrey Fabyan, Mrs. John\nVan Ryn and Carolin Babcock faced the necessity of winning three\nof tht remaining four matches tomorrow.\nExperts who watched left-handed\nKay  Stammers beat Miss Jacobs\ntoday and Miss Round follow up\nwith a win over Mrs. Fabyan did\nnot belitvt the invader, could come\nthrough with three victories tomorrow. Thty felt the end of the United\nStates reign in the annual competition neartd.\nMiss Stammers and Miss Jacobs\nplayed tha longest set in history of\nthe competition before the English\ngirl won, 12-10, 6-1. Mils Round,\nformer all-England champion, defeated Mrs. Fabyan, 6-3, 6-4.\nThe United States doubles team\nwas almost beaten. Trailing 3-0 in\ngames in the final set, Miss Babcock\nand Mrs. Van Ryn rallied to beat\nNancy Lyle and Evelyn Dearman,\nGreat Britain, 6-2,1-6, 6-3.\nTomorrow, Miss Jacobs will oppose Miss Round, followed by Mrs.\nFabyan vs. Miss Stammers; Miss\nBabcock vs. Ruth Mary Hardwick,\nand Mrs. Fsbyan and Miss Jacobs\nvs. Miss Stammers and Freda\nJames.\nSociety\n(Continued From Page Five)\nG. D. Christie and his son of\nTrail visited Nelson Triday.\n\u2022 \u25a0   \u2022\nMrs. H. E. Ritchie of Procter and\ndaughter was a shopper to Nelson\nyesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Margaret Madden and family motored to Longbeach on Thursday.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nR. A. Grimes has returned from a\ntrip to Sadon lo his home at 417 Carbonate street.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nW. W. Powell who spent a ftw\ndays in tht city returned to Spokane yestorday by car.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMri. R. Smith was a shopper to\nthe city Friday from Creacent Bay.\n\u2022  \u2022  \u2022\nAmong Trail visitors to Nelson\nFriday was E. Stiles.\n' \u2022   \u2022' \u2022\nJohn Tawse of Harrop was a\ncity visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 O      0\nGeorge Forbes spent yesterday\nin Nelson from Passmore.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. F. L. Irwin, Carbonate street, leave today for Seattle by car to visit Mr. Irwin's\nbrother, E. Irwin in Seattle and on\ntheir return they will visit their\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Floyd Irwin of Rutland where\nMr. Irwin teaches. Mr. and Mrs. Irwin will be gone two weeks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nJ. W. Hearn of Salmr) spent yeiterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nEric P. Dawion leaves today via\nSpokane on his way to Victoria\nwhere he *III vlalt with his family who spent the winter in Victoria.\n\u2022 .  *\nMrs, J. Grey was a shopper to\nNelson from Salmo Friday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nArndng shopptrs to Nelion yes\nterday was Mrs. E. H. Applewsite\nof Willow Point.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. R. Smith was in the city yesterday from Crescent Bay.\nto*\nMr. and Mrs. Noel Brown snd\ntheir daughter Mrs. V. Hvidt of\nBonnington were cily visitors recently.\n.   o   .\nAmong visiton to Nelson Friday\nwai Mrs. H. Nixon of Perry Siding.\nCollingwood Gray and his son of\nBonnington visited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nDr. and Mri, W. O. Green who\nwere recently married In Montreal\nare visiting at the summer home of\nDr. Green's parents, Dr. and Mrs.\nT. W. Green at Mirror Lake.\ntoo\nJohn Bremner waa in the city\nyesterday from Ymlr.\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022 \u2022\nAmong visitors to Nelson Friday\nwere Mr. and Mrs. C. Ramsay from\nthe Reno mine.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nH. Clark of Trail was > Nelson visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. S. E. Shiells of Vancouver are spending a few dayi in\nthe city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. F. Jewett of South Slocan\nvisited htr daughter Mrs. N. Richardson on Friday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Ruby Whitfield of Harrop\nspent yeiterday in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss M. Hincks leaves for Seattle today by motor where ihe will\nspend her holidays.\n.   t   * w\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Pennoyer\nwho have been vlaiting Mrs. Pen-\nnoyer's parents, Mayor J. P. Morgan\nand Mrs. Morgan, Oak street, have\nreturned to their home In Trail.\nt   .   .\nF. Keel who is travelling with the\nwhale exhibition visited Thursday\nhis relatives. Mr. and Mrs. S. A.\nCurwen of Ymlr.'and Mr. and Mis.\nWalter KM of Salmo. \"\nCARDS WIN; (UBS\n0NT0PBY17T01\nST. LOUIS, June 12 (AP).-The\nleague-leading Cardinals today\ngained back the game they lopped\noff to the Phillies yesterday by\nwinning 3-2 when Ripper Collins\ndrove out his seventh home run of\nthe season to break up a pitching\nduel in the eleventh Inning.\nLeroy Parmelee, who was knocked out by thc Giants on his last\ntrip to the hill, held the upper hand\nover Bucky Walter. He struck out\nsix Philadelphia batters to Walter's two. Each gave four walks.\nCollins, who had hit safely on two\nprevious trips to the plate, slammed\nWalter's first eleventh-Inning offering onto the pavilion roof.\nPhiladelphia     2   7   1\nSt. Louis     3  9  0\nWalter and Grace; Parmelee and\nDavis.\nNINTH STRAIGHT\nFOR CUBS\nCHICAGO, June 12 (AP), - The\nCubi, in the midst of a winning\nstreak reminiscent of their pennant-bound rush of last September,\nposted their ninth straight victory\ntoday, running up their biggest score\nof the season in a 17-1 slaughter of\nthe Boston Bees.\nEvery man ln the lineup except\nRight-fielder George Stainback collected at least one hit In the slugging spree. Tex Carleton limited\nthe Beei to eight hits for his seventh\nvictory against two defeats this season.\nKen O'Dea, who has been relieving Gabby Hartnett for the laat\nfew days, was the batting hero with\na double, a triple and two singles,\ndriving in five runs.\nBoston     1    8  3\nChicago 17   17  0\nMacFayden, Rels, Smith and Lopez, Lewis; Carleton and O'Dea.\nPIRATES TAKE\nSIXTH STRAIGHT\nPITTSBURGH, June 12 (AP>.-\nThe Pirates chalked up their sixth\nstraight victory today, nosing out\nthe New York Giants 3-2 in the\nlast half of the ninth inning.\nThe loss for the Giants was the\nfourth straight and snapped Carl\nHubbell. winning streak of five.\nThe win kept the Pirates within a\nfew percentage points of thc second-\nplace Chicago Cubs, who defeated\nthe Boston Bees.\nNew York     2    9 0\nPittsburgh     3   12   1\nHubbell and Mancuso; Swift and\nTodd.\nOnly three scheduled.\n3aitinA\njeaders\n O !\t\nBy The Associated Press\nThe return of Rookie Joe Dl Maggio of New York Yankees to the\nAmerican league's leading batting\ntrio, and the removal of Bill Terry\nof the Giants from the pace-setting\nNational league regulars caused a\nshakeup in baseball's \"big six\" In\nhitting yesterday. Di Maggio had two\nhits in as many times at bat to advance to third place in the American league with an average of .363,\nreplacing Charley Gehringer. The\nelimination of Terry, because he\ncan no longer be considered a regular with only 76 times at bat this\nseason, moved Johnny Moore of the\nPhillies and Baxter Jordan of the\nBeese to second and third in the national league, with respective averages of .360 and .354.\nThe standings\n(Three  leading  hitters  in  each\nleague):\nG Ab R H Pet.\nSullivan, Ind. . 33 113 16 46 .411\nS. Martin. Card. ... 41 138 35 54 .391\nGehrig, Yanks   53 205 64 75 ,366\nDi Maggio, Lanks 36 171 37 62 .363\nJ. Moore, Phillies 43 172 36 62 .360\nJordan, Bees  55 226 34 90 .354\nrt\nMANERO LEADS,\nYANKS TO FORE\nWood and Eaton Even\nin 2 Days in the. _\nGeneral Brock\n\u25a0y W. R. WHEATUY\nCanadian Preu Staff Wrlttr\nFONTHT-i, Ont, Junt 12 (CP)-\nA galloping trio of Invading Americans raced Into the lead in the\nGeneral Brock open golf tournament today to hold a slim lead at\nthe half-way mark.\nThe three-point charge was led\nby. Tony Manero, United States\nopen champion from Greensboro,\nN.C., who emerged with the only\npar 70 score for the second round\nof 18 holes,\nTony's smashing assault after a\nmediocre 75 yesterday brought him\n145, but Craig Wood, the New\nYork sharpshooter, and Zell Eaton,\nOklahoma City youngster, finished\non even terms with the smiling\nsoutherner.\nWood, low scorer yesterday with\n70, matched by Rod Munday of\nSanta Rosa, Cal., had to be content\nwith a 75 today after messing up\nhis chances on the home nine. Munday waa never in the leadership\npicture today, taking a 42 going out\nand finishing with a 79 for a 36-\nhole total of 148.\nEaton, a newcomer to Canadian\nmoney tournaments, refused to curl\nup. Ht was only three strokes behind hia 71 of yesterday and mada\nthe bttter-knowns reckon on him\nfor a big slice ot the $4100 prlza\nmoney.\nSixty were left In the field to\ntake up the 36-hole grind tomorrow.\nThose with aggregates of worse\nthan 162 had to drop out.\nDETROIT DERBY\nON TODAY\nDETROIT, June 12 (API-Eight\nfast thoroughbreds, headed by tha\nWinnipeg-owned \"iron horse\" Rush-\naway, were entered today for the\nthird running of the $25,000 Detroit\nDerby tomorrow at the fair grounds.\nA. G. Tarn's black gelding, winner\nof the Louisiana, Illinois and Laton-\nla Derbies\u2014the latter two on consecutive dayi\u2014wai tht favoritt\namong the three-year-olds In the\nfeature race of tht spring meeting.\nPA\u00abI NINI\nGUTTA PERCHA\nWholesale Distributor!\nWOOD,\nVALLANCE\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nNelson, B.C.\nSELL THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the l_iqucr\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nIncUt\nHt Ml \"ORAMTt KIT PROCURABLE\u00bb-The Original\n\/   BEST  PROCURABLE f|\nSCOTCH WHISK!\n-AGED\nOF RARE     l\n-  MELLOWNESS;\nBottled sad rstruiteS by WlllUra\nSrint 4 8oni fimiwd, olf nlMdleh \u00abnd\n\u25a0IvuifrGlwllvit   DUtllMo, Duff-\n\"EST PROCURABLE\n\u25a0\u2022-\"        0\ntown A Glujow, Scotland,\n1     NEW\n*   LOW PRICE\n#385\n4sM&\u00bbV\nThis advertisement la not published or displayed by tbe Liquor Control\nBoard or the Government of British Columbia.\nA A A     AGEGC\nmM\n3 STRR RVE\nA ipecial quality old rye ol One\nflivor, thoroughly  matured In  oik,\nAGE GOVERNMENT\nGUARANTEED\n100\n25 CZ.\nA    40 oz.\nThis ao!vertisement\u00bbli not published or displayed by tlie Liquor Control Board or by;\nThe Government ot British Columbia.\n\t\n____________\n-\n PAGE TEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, JUNI 13. 1936\nNf laon Sailg JJproa\nMember ot the Canadian Dally\nNewspaper! Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connection to\nall Departments\nSubscription   Rate*\nSinRle eopy  $   .05\nBy carrier, per week 23\nB_ carrier, per year 13.00\nBy mail ln Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per mouth. 60c;\nthree months. 61.80. six months,\n63.00; one year. $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months,\n54.00; one vear. $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUS., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nHave the Nelson Dally News delivered dally Read the news first\nthing in the morning Phone 143.\u2014\nCirculation Department\nTRUtH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelson Daily News endeavors to print only truthful classified advertising and will appreciate having its attention called\nto any advertising not conforming to the highest standards of\nhonesty.\nBIRTHS\nSTEELE \u2014 To Constable Fred\nSteele and Mrs. Steele, at the Trail-\nTadanac hospital, June 11, a daughter.\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nNEAR   KASLO.   IDEAL   HOME,\ncomfortable   house, ' two   acres.\nmodern plumbing, electric light.\nPhone V. L. Trail, Mirror Lake.\n(1270)\nTO RENT FOR SUMMER MONTHS:\nSemi-furnished three-roomed cottage, Crescent Bay, nine miles\nfrom Nelson ferry. Box 1261 Daily\n_News. (1261)\nSUMMER COTTAGE ON KOOT-\nenay Lake. P. Longueval, Sirdar.\n(1308)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUTH. 17, DESIRES WORK ON\nfruit farm near Kaslo. Can drive\nhorse, and milk. Wage $20 and\nboard. Box 1343 Daily News.\n(1343)\nEXPERIENCED SAWYER AND\ntail sawyer wants work. Box 1300\nDaily News. (1300)\nEXPERIENCED CLERK AND TYP-\nist desires postlion immediately.\nMiss Kilgren, Creston, B. C. (1329)\nCHAPTER  62 '\n'Tve kept this to myself until\nI'm almost crazy. All I have is\nDow,'' Edilh Bryce went on. \"Joyce\ncomes first with him, then me. Nobody will ever take Joyce's place.\nThat's what is so terrible. I've tried,\ntried, but it's no use. He's my whole\nlife, yet for him someone comes before I do\u2014\"\n\"Mrs. Bryce, if you'll sit down we I\ncan talk. Taking her none too gently\nby the arm, 1 put her into a chair.\n\"Sometimes I hate her so\u2014that I\ncould kill her!\"\n\"Who?\" I waited somewhat shakily for her answer.\n\"Joyce, of course. If she weren't\nhere\u2014I would be everything\u2014\"\nVan Every had said this very day\nthat Edith Bryce was a difficult\nwoman to handle. He was right.\nMy own collar began to get warm.\n\"How did you find Joyce at Gribbel's?\" I asked.\n\"I went through thc library. Ot\ncourse I couldn't find her. I wanted\nto see her, get her in conversation.\nI never even talked with her before.\nPlanning things for her, always for\nher, all her life, yet I have never\ntalked to her. If course I had seen\nher, often. Made a point to. Dow\u2014\nI know he thought I wasn't good\nenough for her. That's what hurt.\nNot good enough for her. I wanted\nto talk with her just once. Well. I\nknew she was lying to Dow. She\nwasn't at the library, as Dow said\nshe was. I\u2014hired a detective to follow her when she went to work\nthat second day. He came back and\ntold me where she was. I paid him.\nThen I went down. I was talking\nto her about 10 minutes when you\ncame. She was\u2014\"\n\"What did you have in your\npurse?\"\n\"How did you know I had anything in my purse?\" Her taut hands\ndropped helplessly in her lap.\n\"A gun?\"\n\"No\u2014\"\n\"What then? You were going to\n\u2014kill her!\" I leaned forward, and\nshot the words at her slowly.\n\"No\u2014I was only going to disfigure\u2014some vitriol. I hated her that\nday more than I ever had\u2014yes, I\nhate her. I can't help it. I love Dow\n\"I frightened you away?\"\n\"I was glad. 1 might have done it\n\u2014when I think of it now!\"\nI begged her to get the vial of\npoison she had carried, and without\na word she went into her bedroom.\nI was not afraid of her now. She\nhad not killed Margalo, nor Laura\nRandall. She was a woman, using\na woman's weapons. A passionate,\nlonely, jealous woman. Pity surged\nin me for her. When she came to\nme with the metal vial, I looked at\nit carefully, then put it in my pocket.\nShe fell on the sofa, and started\nto weep hysterically. Tears were\ngood for her, so I let her cry. When\nhalf an hour later, she looked up\nat me, her green eyes were softer,\nher face, although furrowed with\ntears, seemed more gentle.\n\"I haven't cried in years\u2014\" she\nsaid  simply.\nI didn't think she had.\n\"Why not call Dow and tell him\nnot to come?\" I suggested.\n\"He won't come now. He probably said he would just to comfort\nme. I feet better now.\"\n\"Dow knows nothing of your visit\nMonday night?\"\n\"No, I dared not tell him. And\nafter what happened \u2014 I was\nafraid \"\n\"Nothing of your visit to Joyce?\"\nShe shook her head. \"He thinks\nI love Joyce. I've pretended-\u2014\"\nI left her then, after I had her\npromise to go immediately and get\nsome sleep.\nAs I went out into the gray, cold,\nmisty dawn, I damned myself for\nbeing the fool I was. Sympathy had\nblinded my eyes, swayed my sentiments. The murderer of Margalo\nYounger and Laura Randall I knew.\nI laughed at myself for suspecting\nEdith Bryce\u2014frightened even when\nshe attempted to disfigure Joyce\nVan Every . . .\nBut I had no time to lose. Ward\nVan Every was on the same floor\nwith Joyie Van Every at the Warrington hotel. If I did not get there\naoon . . .\nThree o'clock came along before\nI realized it. I had had nearly time\nenough to do all I wanted ;nd I\nmust be at Keyes' office as soon\nPERSONAL\n'SOYOLK,\" THE FAMOUS BRIT-\nish vegetable flour. Contains no\nstarch. Rich In 'proteins, essential\nminerals and vitamins.\n\u2014Alkaline forming.\nSOYOLK\" KOFTY, A GENUINE\nhealth-giving drink. Wonderfully\nmellow. Rich in soluble phosphates. \u2014Alkaline forming.\nSOYOLK\" MACARONI, A. COM-\npletely balanced food. A high-\ngrade 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(1293)\nas possible.\nHe had been mystified when I\nhad called him ln the morning and\narranged for the meeting, but over\nthe phone I could explain no more.\nMinutes were precious, more precious than I had ever known them\nto be before.\nOne more thing to do, and I\ndashed back to my hotel to do it.\nWard was still wailing, as I had told\nhim to wait. He seemed surprised to\nsee mc hurry in, undress, and run\nunder the shower. My clothes had\nbeen on so long that I felt as if 1\nhad lived in them forever. He said\nnothing, however, only very kindly\nasked me if he could lay out a shirt\nfor me. I thanked him for his aid.\nand my bathrobe clutched around\nme, called Keyes again, who was beginning to be impatient, and said I\ncouldn't make it at 3\u2014in fact it was\nafter 3:30 now\u2014but that I would\nmake it by four. Grumbling, he\nhung up the receiver.\nI thought when I threw on an\novercoat, of all I had done that day.\nThere had been more I planned oui,\nbut which was still unfinished. Well,\nit would have to remain so. I had\nenough\u2014for what I wanted.\nNot a wink of sleep. No rest,\nNormally I would ave been dog\ntired, but I really wasn't. My eyes\nfelt heavy, burned me, that was all.\nMy brain seemed to be working extraordinarily  well.\nWhen I was ready, I asked Ward\nto accompany me. A look of fear\nflashed in his eyes, as he silently\npicked up his hat. Poor devil!\nOn the way out, I looked in a moment at Joyce. She was all right,\nwanted to talk, but I didn't have\ntime now. Afterwards . . .\nKeyes was walking up and down\nimpatiently, watch in hand when\nwe arrived. I introduced him to\nWard at once, but shut off any questions he might have had to ask by\nasking him if Mrs. Bryce had arrived. I barely had the words out\nof my mouth when Edith Bryce and\nDow Van Every were announced\nby telephone.\nThe brothers greeted each other\nwith emotion. Tears came to both\ntheir eyes. Of Ihe two of them Dow\nseemed to be the more affected. I\nwatched him take Ward's hand,\npress it tenderly, follow him with\nhis eyes as Keyes dragged in more\nchairs from the outside office.\n\"You shouldn't have come,\" Dow\ninsisted, shaking his white head.\n\"He's been with me all night, Van\nEvery,\" I said, \"and I wanted him\nto come here today and see Keyes.\nI thought it would be better if you\nwere present.\"\nFinally we were all seated, Keyes\nalmost rubbing his hands in delight, as he saw Ward and Mrs.\nBryce before him.\nI leaned over and whispered to\nVan Every. Obligingly he drew his\nflask from his pocket, and I took\nit over to the water cooler where I\npoured a drink for myself. My back\nwas to the little company, but I felt\nperfectly safe. If I could have just\na minute more . . .\n\"I looked in on Joyce,\" I announced as \"nonchalantly as I could,\nnot turning around. \"She was all\nright, and I told her she might dance\ntonight with Allan \"\n\"I'd rather she didn't go out \"\nVan Every protested.\n\"I had to tell her something. She'6\nbeginning to fret at being a prisoner.\"\nWard started, paled a little I\nthought, for I had looked around.\nSauntering slowly back to the desk.\nI drew my chair nearer Ward's.\nKeyes was in his usual seat, Van\nEvery beside him, Mrs. Bryce on\nthe chair I disliked so much. The\ntorture chair. She was beginning\nto squirm already. To her left sat\nWard Van Every, then myself, although not too near-the captain.\n\"You might pass us all a drink,\"\nDow Van Every suggested. \"Edith\nwon't mind \"\n\"I'm sure she won't* and gravely\nI went back to the water cooler,\nand secured some paper cups. \"I\nwant you to hear Ward Van Every's\nstory, Keyes; that's why I brought\nhim here. Will you let me tell it?\"\nBefore he could assent I started.\nAs I spoke 1 slowly drained the\n.flask into the glasses, making no\nmove to pass them around, or to return the flask.\n(To Be Continued)\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 be 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 11\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 10c to cover postage, and\nmail today to\nPERMA WAVE SALES CO.\nP. O. Box 1061      Vancouver, B. C.\n(1294)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nIN TRAIL-FURNISHED APART-\nment for July and August, centrally located, phone Trail, 529X\nor write Box 1111, Trail, B.C.\n(1236)\nFURNISHED HOME FOR SUM-\nmer months. Close in. Harding.\n617 Latimer. Phone 110.      (1334)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nFURNISHED BUNGALOW WILL !\nre^t any length of time. J. R.!\nRamsden. (1348) |\nAPARTMENTS, MEDICAL ARTS\nBlock. Two bedrooms. Chas. F\nMcHardy.  (11291\nFURN. SUITES, KERR\nApts. $30 and up.        (1130)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING,\nlooms for rent Annable Block\n0131)\nFURNISHED HOUSE, JULY AND\nAugust. 424 Latimer. Phone 637Y.\n(1335)\nFULLY FURNISHED HOUSE, 618\nSilica St. Phone 690R. (1221)\nSINGLE HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS.\nK. W. C. Block. (1313)\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigldaire equipped suites. (1132)\nLIGHT-H0USEKEEPINCTTt50MS,\n918 Kootenay Street. (1292)\nWANTED TO BUY\nWANTED. SMALL STEAM BOIL-\ners, suitable for heating\u2014Steam\ncontractor, Box 855, Nelson. (1276)\nFARM   LANDS\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)\nRELIEVE DELAYED AND STUB\"-\nborn menstruation use. \"Kotab\".\nSafe, reliable. No pills. Taken in\nwarm bath. Full treatment and\ninstructions, $3.00. National importers. 812 Centre St. W. Calgary.\n(1185)\nMANUFACTURERS -DISTRIBUTE\nors Super Quality Latex. 25 for\n$1.00. Seeing is believing. Feminine Hygiene information included. Diez Sales Co., 3028-2St S.W.\nCalgary. (992)\nLONELY HEARTS MESSENGER,\n150 descriptions ladies, gents,\n(many wealthy). Send 10c and\nstamp. Wm. Furness. 6405 Fraser,\n(rear), Vancouver, B. C.      (1237)\nraiVATE~TlOME~!UNDERGAR~f-\nens pay. We start you The Cai:a-\ndian Kindergarten Institute. Winnipeg. (1252)\nHELP WANTED\nA LESSON FROM THE DEPRES-\nsion-Be a civil servant\u2014Postman Customs Examiner. Clerk,\nStenographer, etc. Free Booklet\n\"How to get a Government iob\"\nM C C. Civil Service School\nWinnipeg. (1251)\nWANTED. EXPERIENCED Bookkeeper for manufacturing and retail lumber yard. State age, nationality, experience and references and salary expected. Apply\nBox 1388 Daily News. (1338)\nWANTED A~T~bNCE, EXPERIEN:\nced girl for housework. Must be\nfond of children. Apply 617 Carbonate St. (1299)\nSNAP FOR $500, WITH ONLY $300\ncash and bal. $200 within one\nyear to close the C. A. McCurdy\nEstate 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 AJmlnis-\ntrator, Grand Forks, B. C.     (849)\nFOR SALE\nCLOSE IN\n214.VICTORIA\n3 Bedrooms, etc.      d\u00bb\u00ab)1 AA\n(Terms)   \u00abP__1UU\nLAKESIDE HOME (This side).\nAll  modern, conveniences.    A\nh0omey..W,k  SHOO'\nA FINE HOME on Robson St.\nNewly decorated. 3 lots on a\nbeautiful corner. 3 (POQAA\nbedrooms. (Terms) <D__Ol\/U\n5 Garden Lots for Sale dfOEA\n(Easy Terms) for \u00ab9__t)v\nC.W.Appleyard\n& Co,, Ltd.\n410 Baker St.\nPhone 269\n(1250)\nFor Sale\nLocated on West Arm 4 miles\nfrom Nelson. Consists of 9\nacres\u20144 cleared and planted\nwith bearing cherry trees.\nPiped Irrigation. Good dwelling\nhouse, garage and work shop.\nAll ln first-clnss condition. A\nsplendid buy  at $2500.00.\nApply\nP.O. Box 733      Hipperson Blk\nPhone 197\n(1311)\nPROPERTY FOR  SALE\n(Continued)\t\n2 ACRES ADJACENT TO CITY.\nWell improved. Apply Box 1324\nDally Newi (1324)\nSEVERAL BLOCKS OF LAND, 10\nto 20 acres each. Chietly timbered.\nW. G. Barclay, Fruitvale. (1309)\n2 CHOICE BUILDING LOTS ON\ncar line. Ideal location. D. W. Guy.\n(1289)\nFOR SALE\nPIPE 4 FITTING8 ETC. -\n30,000 ft. 1\" used Pipe 5c per ft.;\n7000 ft. 1V\u00ab\" Pipe, 7c per ft. Full\nline new and used Galv. k Black\nPipe k Fittings, all sizes at reasonable prices\u2014Extra heavy slate\nsurface Roofing with nails k Cement (about 80 lbs. per roll) $2.50-\nGuaranteed Paint of good quality\nfor all purposes, white, cream,\ngrey k green, $2,25 per gallon-\nNew and used Belting\u2014Plumbing Supplles.-Stcel k C. I. Pulleys\u2014Wire Rope\u2014Poultry Netting.\n\u2014Galv. Iron \u2014 Barbed Wire-\nGrain k Potato Sacks-^Canvas\u2014\nDoors k Windows\u2014Hose\u2014Merchandise k Equipment of all descriptions\u2014Enquiries solicited.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n135 Powell St    Vancouver, B. C.\n  (1263)\nFOR SALE. 30 H.P. ATlVCOOLED\naircraft motor, in good shape. Ideal\nfor Flying Flea. Apply Harry\nNixon, Perry Siding, B. C. (1279)\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nA LIMITED  NUMBER OF MAY\nhatched Leghorn pullets: 8 weeks\n65c, 10 weeks 75c, 16 weeks $1.90.\nReady to lay $1.25.\nRUMP k SENDALL, LTD.\nMilner, B. C.\n1 (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)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANCE\n3 YR. OLD OXFORD RAM. ALSO\nwant to buy few young ewes or\ntake small bunch on shares. Ed.\nL. Varney, Vallican, B. C, (1346)\nWILL TRADE MY EQUITY IN\n1929 Ford coupe for down payment on house or for rent. Box\n1340 Daily News. (1340)\nSILK FINISH ENLARGEMENT |\nWith each roll or dozen reprints..\nAny 6 or 8 exposure roll developed I\nand printed 35c, reprints 40c per I\ndozen. Art Film Service. 402 Commercial Block, Calgary, Alta. (1246)\nROOM AND BOARD\nREASONABLE. 3 MINUTES WALK j\nfrom auditorium. 924 Edgewood\nAve., upper side. (1333)\nSTORACE\nFURNITURE.\nSTORAGE' .\nIn a Fireproof\nBuilding\nWilliams Transfer\nWard St. Phone 106\nCOAL\nWOOD\nICE\n(1349)1\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd\n250 Prior St      Vancouver, B  C\n(1134)\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)\nMOTORCYCLES\nFrancis Barnet, 1935, run\naround 1000 miles  $200\n1 Indian Scout  $150\n1 Indian Scout  $170\n1 Indian Scout  $185\n1 Indian Chief Perfect....    $200\n1 B.S.A. Twin Perfect      $225\n1  H.D. Twin     $140\n1 H.D. Twin  $200\n1-3 DOWN\nWrite for Particulars\nPALMER RUTLEDGE\nTRAIL, B.C.\n(1248)\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.\n11281)\n5 ROOMED COTTAGE, CLOSE IN.\nPlumbing, electric light, city water. Exceptionally cheap. Cash. Box\n_ '341 Daily News. 0341)\nFULLY MODERN BUNGALOW.\nFull basement, furnace, garden\nand fruit trees. Clear title. 1320\nFalls StHione 035L. (1239)\n3~ ROOM'HbUSErrLoT~~NEAR\nLakeside  park,   $500,  $100  cash,\nbal. as rcn. A. Hall, Gordon Road.\n(1336)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS-\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B.C.      |<1133>\n1~CHILD'S   CRIB.   1   WINDOW\nawning and 1 bed couch. Ph. 558X.\n       _ (13421\nFIREWOOD FOR SALE - MILL\nends, $3.50 per load\u2014Phone 163.\n(1272)\nSAFE FOR SALE. APPLY WIL-\nliams Transfer. (1350)\nV GOLF\"CLUBS, RIGHT HANI?\ned, and bag. Phone 829R.     (1270\nFRUIT AGENTS\nFRUIT GROWERS\nShip your strawberries and Cherries direct and receive thc benefit\nof the Highest Prairie Market Prices\nfor. yourself. No profiteering between the shipper and ourselves,\nno connections whatever with any\nfruit combine. We handle mixed\ncarloads of fruit. Returns are made\nevery Saturday for all shipments\nreceived during the week.\nROYAL FRUIT COMPANY\nRegina, Sask. 1202\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAccountants\nInvestments\nCHAS   F   HUNTER. S. F A E.\n213  Medical  Arts  Building.\nP. O. Box 1091,       Nelson, B  C.\n(1142)\nAsiayert\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)\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)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c. palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelson\n(1145)\ne. m. warren, d. c. box 872\nGilker Block. Phone 115 or 755L.\n(1146)\nDecorators\nLAUNCH FOR SALE CHEAP. AP-\nply W. Mack, City. (1207)\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD.\nWANTED, MIDDLE AGED\" WOM-\nen to care for elderly sick woman. Apply 1307 Kootenay St.\n(1345)\nGIRL   FOR-HOUSEWORK.   NO\nchildren. P. O. Box 484, Nelson.\n(1332)\nWANTED-GIRL FOR GENERAL\nhousework. Phone 839Y.      (1351)\nACENTS WANTED\nAGENTS WANTED TO SELL SILK\nand leather neckties. We sell you\nat a price that allows you to make\n100% commission. Write today foi\nfree samples and particulars. Ontario Neckwear Company, Dept\n574, Toronto 8, Ont. (1254)\nUSED CARS\n1928 PONTIAC COUPE. APPLY MR.\nA. Read, c-o Burns k Co, Ltd.\n(1344)\n1927  PONTIAC  COACH,^EXCEL-\nlent condition. Cheap. Ph. 558X.\n(1323)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n3 GOOD JERSEY COWS, $50 EACH.\nGeneral purpose colts, 3 and 4\nyears. Your choice, $110. J. Gra-\nhamJPerry_ Siding.  _    (1319)\nPUREBRED FREISAnTIOLSTEIN\ncow, good milker. Apply Mrs. F.\nE. Haines, Fruitvale. (1318)\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!\"\nPAINTING,    INSIDE,    OUTSIDE.\nSatisfactory   work.   Moderate\ncharges. F. J. Norris, 711 Silica St.\n(875)\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES. The Electric Store.\nSupplies and Installations.\nPhone 766. P. O. Box 1083\n(1147)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nE. L WARBURTON. NELSON, B.C\nOffice 518 Ward St Phone 53, PO\nBox 668, Res. phone 239, Agent: Oils,\ngreases, etc. Mine equipment and\nsupplies. Electric power equipment.\nSteam coals. Paints. (1148)\nHOW TO BE PROSPEROUS\nMONEY MANAGEMENT\nF. A. Stuart, P.O. Box 389, NelsonJ\n(U60>|\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work. Lathe |\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grinding.  Motor  Rewinding,  Acetylen-I\nWelding. f\nTelephone 593.     324 Vernon Street.1\n(1161)|\nMaternity Homes\nELIZABETH   PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician in attendance. Ph. Broad. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wash.\n(1162)\nNotaries\nD. J ROBERTSON, NOTARY PUB-1\nlit Office 305 Victoria St NelsonJ\n(1183)|\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTH\nor, list of wanted inventions and!\nfull Information sent free, Thel\nRamsay Company, World Patentl\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St. Ottawa.\n(1164)|\nPhotography\nPREMIUM CERTIFICATES ONj\nvaluable merchandise given with!\nfilms developed, including one!\nprint from each negative, 25c|\nExtia prints, eight for 25c. SaskatT\nchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon!\n(1185)|\nSanitariums\nH. D. DAWSON.        Nelson, B. C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(1143)\nAVENUE SERVICE STATION\nPhone 857. Nelson  Ave.\nWashing, Greasing, Gas, Etc.\n(868)\nas You Like It\nBEACON SERVICE STATION\nPhone 578.\n701 Baker  St.\n(86\")\nALL USED CAR PARTS AT\nCITY    AUTO    WRECKERS.\nJosephine St.\n(868)\nDODGE-DeSOTO\nExpert Service\nERIC'S MOTOR SERVICE\nPhone 75.     223 Baker St.\nUNION 76 and TRITON OIL at\nSHARDELOW AUTO CAMP\nNelson Ave.\n(873)\nFAIRVIEW SERVICE STATION\nGas,   Oil,   Batteries,   Tires,   Etc.\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)\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, BC\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(1150)\nA. H GREEN CO, LTD 516 WARD\nSt Phone 264, Nelson, B. C. (1151)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER! SHOP.\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays k etc Phone 215\nMrs. Hagarty, Box 29, (1152)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal estate, insurance, rentals. 217\nBaker St (1153)\nR. W DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware,  Baker Street.  (1154)\nC  D   BLACKWOOD  Insurance ol\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\n (1155)\ni H. E DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\ni    surance Real Estate, 508 Ward St.\n(1156)\nJ   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)\nDR. ALDRICH SANITORIUM INC\nTreats all chronic diseases tnclud'\ning T.B, cancer, dlabetis, liquot\nhabit and the mind. 30 years practice. E-4504 Fredrick, Spokane\n(1166)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTOR Vl\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker StI\n(11674\nSecond Hand Stores\n24 MAGAZINES, ASSORTED, $1.00]\nprepaid. The Ark Store.  (1168)|\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE Wort\nguaranteed, p. Boyle, Vernon St\n(116a\nWigs and Toupees\nLADIES AND GENTLEMENS\nwigs and toupees, etc. Free illus1\ntrated Catalogue. Over 20 yean\nin B. C. We buy cut hair. Hansor,\nHair Goods Co. P. O. Box 601,\nVancouver, B. C. (1170)\nTELEPHONE\n1\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nfor Classified Ad\nRESULTS\nBy Geo. McManus\nEVERY TIME I SUGGEST THAT\nMY SON GOTO WORK HE DE- .\nODES HE WANTS TO GO BACK\nTO SCHOOL.-AN' WHEN I SAY,\nHE HAS TO GO BACK TO HIS S\nSCHOOL HE WA' <TS TO WORK-\nWELL.-DAD-\nAFTER THINKING IT CWER\nIVE DECIDED\nTO GOTO\nWORK-,\nDD IT TAKE SOU\nFROM NINE THIS\n\u25baAORNING'TIL NOW\nTO DECDE\nTH\u00abT?\nOH-NO-NOT\nMAKING UP\nMY MINO-tTS\nTHE THINKING THAT\nTOOK UP\nTHE TIME-\nV\n3J\nAND NOW THAT YOUVE\nOECOED TO WORK- DO\nNOU THINK I WOULD\nHWE ANYTHING DRESS-\nED UP IN A HUMPTY-\nDUMPTY OUTFIT LIKE\n.YOU'VE GOT ON ?-\nVERY WELL-I'LL TAKE\nTHE REST OF THE\nDAN1 OFF- I'LL SHOW\nUP IN THE MORNING-\n_______\n-\n \u2022-\n__________\n S|WHW|\n-i01\n71\nBright Spots\nof the Week\nBy Tht Canadian Praia\n'Toronto: Victory building, caught\nI tbe 1929 slump and left unflnlsli-\nd at 19th storey, has been sold tor\n115,000 and will be carried up to\nI storey and finished at additional\nOtt of $900,000.\nCault Ste. Maria, On..: Traffic\nhrough the Soo canals ln May was\naaviest since May 1930. For the\neason to May 30, traffic showed\nacresBc of 27 pet cent.\nMontreal: For 11 months running,\nIbntreal Light, Heat & Power corn-\nany reported increased eledtric out-\nUt\nSt. Catharines, Ont.: An Addition\ni cost $550,000 will be added Mc-\nInnon industries plant here, It Is\n'ficitiliy announced.\nChatham, Ont.: Decline In tht\njmber of judgments againtt debt-\nrt in indication of economic im-\nWvtment, Judge Uriah McFadden\nlit Kent grand jury.\nWinnipeg: Heal estate dealers re-\n)rt house saltt itt Winnipeg thlt\nfar ln greater volume than ln any\nKir since 1930.\nToronto: Direct unemployment rt-\nrf costs In Toronto in May was\nKnit halt that Of May, 1939.\nSaint John: Cargo tonnage through\n)rt of Saint John in May exceed-\nI that of May last year by 12 ptr\nint.\nVancouver Salet\nVANCOUVWt, June 12 (CP) -\ninlng shares told on the Vancou-\nIT stock exchange today:\nLilted: Bralorne 3835, B R X 200,\nnrlboo 100, Dentonia 8300. Oold\nlit 2900, Wand Mount WOO, Int\nk C 1000, Koot Bella 1900, Minto\n00, Morning Star 15,000, National\nI M0, Plonttr 115, Premier Bord\n00, Premier Gold 2200, Reno 2000,\nicep Creek noo, Vidette 3450.\nCurb: B C Nickel 3400, B R Mount\n00, Csn Rand 700, Congress 6100.\nunwell 1000, Fairview 9900, Pedal 3900, Fawn 000. Oold Mount\n00, Ceo Rlv 300, Hedley Amal 2304,\name 2040, Nicola 800, Pend Oeeil-\n500, Pilot 6000, Porter Idaho 1000.\nillance 42.000, Relief Arlington\nJO, Reward 5500. Ruth Hone 500.\n''ted Emp 2000, Viking 500, Ymir\nGirl 900.\nEastern Sales\nI MONTREAL, June li (CPl-Salet\n1100 or more shares on Montreal\noak exchange today follow:\n170 Brazil, 520 B C Pow, 715 Ale\n, 100 Ale B, 201 CPR, 195 Smellers,\niO Dlst Seag, 525 HoUinger, 1410\nlip Tob, 6114 Nickel, 105 Int Pow,\n|0 McColI, 2490 Mtl POW, 980 N\nB.C. LUMBER FOR -XHIBITION\nVICTORIA, June 13 (CD-British Columbia lumber will be used\nItt the construction of the empire\nexhibition In Johannesburg, South\nAfrica, this year, the bureau Of\nprovincial information had been advised. The show, which will bt\nstrictly an empire display, will\nopen September 19. Buildings will\ncover 100 acres. A total of 872,000\nbotrd feet of British Columbia lumber hat been ordered for the pro*\njtot.\nGOLDS TUMBLE\nTORONTO, June 12 (CP)-Tht\nforward march ot the gold itockt\nwat checked by a run of telling today and at tha close the group wat\noff about two pointi ln the Toronto\nexchange, index to 143.45. Volume\nWat 2,576,000 shares.\nSiscoe swung up to 4.0.1 but tumbled to 3.80 for a net loss of 5 cent*.\nCentral Manitoba held only 2 centt\njit 35, Hardrock dipped 10 centt at\n2.35, O'Brien 15 at 2.90 and Preston\n0 to 1.70.\nBralorne turned heavy, losing 30\ncenta. Recessions of 5 to 8 cents came\nout for Cariboo, Ounnar, Red Lake\nand Sylvanite. Dome dropped %\n\u2022'**><. \u25a0'\u25a0       NILSON DAILY NIWI, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, JUNI 13, 1938\nMarket and Mining News\nTORONTO LOWER\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPBO, June 13 (CP)-Oraln\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWheat:\nJuly  .      TT\/t    71       77       77\nOcL   ..     78V4    78*i    77K    774\nDec.   ..      78%    78'A    77%    77%\nOats;\nJuly  ..     31%    33      31%    31%\nOCL 29%    29%    29%     29%\nDec. 28%    29%    28%     28 Vi\nBarley:\nJuly 36%    37%    30%    36%\nOcL 30       30y<    84%    35\nFlax:\nJuly  .    140%   140V4   145%   149\nOcL 140      143%   140      141!'.\nRye:\nJuly  .      42%    43%    41%    41%\nOct.   .      44%    44%    43%     43V,\nDec. 45%    46%    44%    44%\nCath wheat: No. 1 hard 79; No.\n1 nor. 77%; No. 3 nor. 74%; No. 8\nnor. 71%; No. 4 nor. 07; No. 5, 90%;\nNo, 0, 03; feed 43; No. 1 garnet 73%;\nNo. 2 garnet 71; No. 1 durum 70;\nNo. 1 A. R. W. 87; No. 4 special 58W;\nNo. 0 special 32%; No. 8 special 43;\ntrack 70%; screenings 25 centt per\nton. ,\n[TORONTO, June 1J (CP)-Sales\n100 or more shares on the ln-\n\u25a0lltri-1 lection Of thc Toronto'stock\n\u25a0change today follows:\nT185 Brew Corp, 603 Brazil, 3659\nte Dlst, 715 B A OU, 203 Brew\nptd, 550 C Ind Al, 929 CPR, 140\ni-ckshult, 370 Con Smelt, 930 Dist\n1 Seag, 205 Ford A, 3088 In' Nickel,\n' Matt Harris ptd, 300 H Walk.\nBONDS HIGHER\n(TEW YORK, June 12 (AP)-Busi-\n\u25a0ss on the telling side of the bond\narket was stimulated a bit today\n' a further advance in values in\nrly trading. Unitad'Statea govern-\nents went Into slock tide after\nrly firmness but the list as a\ntola finished fairly steady. French\njt, stamped, pushed up 3% pointi.\nmime totalled $9,140,000.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, June 12 (API-Closing quotations: Brazilian 312%, Brit\nAmerican Tobacco 117i td, Acrrertt\nOrd A \u00a39, Courtauldl 50s 3d Distillers 10s 3d, Imperial Chemical\n38s l0%d, Imperial Tobacco lBfla\n10l4d. Mining Trust Ltd 3s 3d, Rand\nMines \u00a39%, Rbodetian Anglo Am\n12a i0%d, Rhokana Corp \u00a35%,\nCrown Mines \u00a310%, Springs 43s\nHid, Kelt Geduld \u00a39%.\nBonds-British 2% per cent consols \u00a385V*r Brltlth 3% per cent\nwar loan \u00a3100%, British funding\n4s 1900190  \u00a3116%.\nCANADIAN  DOLLAR  OFF\nNEW YORK, June 13 (CP) -\nFounds sterling made another moderate advance today ln relation to\nthe United States dollar, closing at\n35.02 13-16 foa a gain ot 7-18 Cent.\nThe Canadian dollar eased 1-16 to\n98 26-32 while French money was\nunchanged at 0.56% centt for the\nfranc.\nThe century-old Theatre Royal at\nKing's Lynn has been destroyed by\nfire.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, June 12 (CP).\u2014Silver futurei closed steady today, 5 to\nI pointi up.  Sales: 1 June contract.\nOpen      High      Low      Close\n|ne..     44.73B       44.80       44.80       44.75B\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nSTED Bid\n_> Con .....     \u2014\nnal Oil 11\ng Missouri  _    .61\nalorne Mines   8.00\nidge R Con 07%\nftX Gold     13\njrtbOOQoldQ    1-73\nand I Corp     _>8\niatt Brewtrlet..... 13.00\n\u00abtt Brew Rt\u00ab   5.25\nintohla Mines     .19\nild Belt 44\nirgal on     \u2014\nimc Oil    103\nt Coat       S3\nand Mount _   1.72\n*t Belle 00\nik Siccar             \u2014\n_:Leod Oil New _    .37\n\u25a0into Oold  68\nJdel Oil    18\n\u25a0orning Star  02%\nit Silver     03%\nonecr Oold  _   9.10\ntenler Gold    2.41\nlemler Border 01\n\u25a0tttelno     01\nto Gold  _    120\nly Mlnet  12\nion Gold 09\nCreek     .77\n..nerOll   ._ 21\nrlor Bridge 12\nlta ., -    -\nIttt     1.85\nlite -   .11%\nIB\ninda Oil    Mi\nIttobt...... _    \u00bb-\n,.ltw  00%\n,xittx Silver     .02%\nueblrd Mlnet ...    .00%\nC Nickel     .35%\nC Silver  3.35\nI Mount -    .18\n... Rind      M\\,\nijmont Oil     08\ningress Gold \t\n,.. Province  00%\n.Jtdttbelt   ...     .03\n[Mrs Nest    11%\n..lousie, Mines ...    .01\nIhousie Oils  38\nrenlsh Oils       J-'\/i\nitatorGold 04\n.well     .02\nAik\n.13\n.11%\n.63\n8.25\n.08\n.13%\n1.78\n1.00\n1350\n5.75\n.19%\n.45\n.06\n1.08\nM%\n1.78\n.83\n.05 Vi\n.30\n.03\n.03%\n9.30\n2.44\n.01%\n.02\n1.30\n.13\n.10\n.78\n.14\ntVVi\n1.88\n.12\n.08\n.01\n.03\n.18\n.11\n-       .19\n\u202202V,\n.12\n.02\n.40\n.08 V,\n.04%\n.04\nBid\nFairview Amal      .06Vi\nFawn Mlnlpg       .55\nFederal Gold  07\nFreehold OU     .05\nGeo Copper     \u2014\nOolconda      12%\nGlacier Creek     .01\nGold Mount     11\nGeo Enterprise _    \u2014\nGeo River  0JH\nGrandview      .02%\nOrange     .02%\nHedley Amal         33\nHlghwood Sarcee...   .13%\nHome Gold     04%\nIndian Minea _     132\nIndependence     .00%\nKoot Florence      .00%\nKoot King .. .    .00%\nLakeview Mines ...    .00%\nLucky Jim     .01\nMadison Oil     .01\nMar Jon Oil  16%\nMercury Oil  11%\nMerland OU  14\nMill City        09\nMorton Wolsey  00%\nNicola Mines 09%\nNbble Five      .02%\nNordon Oil    .15\nOktlta Oils     .06\nPicalta    .05\nPend Oreille     .78\nPilot Oeld      .06%\nPorter Idaho    .04 Vi\nQuesnelle Q     .0*%\nRanchmen'!  \u2014    .43\nReliance Oold    .07%\nRelief Arlington ....    .29\nReward      .07%\nROyallU   20.25\nRutin Argenta .....   .00%\nRuth Hope     X>1%\nSilvefcreet    j00%\nSilvenmith    .01%\nSnowflake     j00%\nTaylor Wind     .15\nU D L      -\nUnited Umpire     -\nUnited Oil         .05%\nViking Gold  04\nWaterloo  04%\nWaverley Tang      .00%\nWhite Eagle 00%\nWhitewater      .03\nYmlr Yankee Girl _    .53\nAtk\n.06>i\n.59\n.07%\n.14\n.01%\n.13\n.04\n.01%\n.03\n.02%\n.24%\n.15\n.04%\n.02%\n.01\n.01\n.01%\n.18\n.12\n.00%\n.09%\n.03\n.16\n.06\n.06%\n.82\n.o\u00ab%\n.04%\n.08\n.60\n.07%\n.33\n.07%\n87.00\nJ\u00bb%\nj00%\n.01%\n.80\n.02\n.06\n.04%\n.05\n.00!',\n.04\nTORONTO, Junt 12 (CD-Imperial Oil, International Nickel, Dlt-\ntltlers-Seagramt and Brewers-Distillers, created a little stir today on\nthe Toronto exchange while the rest\nhad little to tay.\nNickel reflected the New York\neasiness by dropping %.\nGoodyear added a point and North\nStar 60 cents. Fractional declines\nappeared in Brewing Corporation,\nMassey Harris, Canadian Car k\nFoundry, Ford A, C. P. R. and International Petroleum. Llquori\ntightened.\nNEW YORK LOSES\nNEW YORK, June 12 (AP)-The\nstock market wort blinkers today\nso far as constructive industrial\nnews was concerned and leading\nIssues tell back fractions to a point\nor more.\nWeek-end trade, reviews found\nretail sales throughout the country\nholding their own, although it wai\nstated that tht percentage ot gains\nover the tame period last year wat\nlets than in the preceding weeks.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks was off .6 of a point at\n055. This compared with yester-\nday't upturn of .9. Transfers totalled\n097,580 shares as against 1,080,920\nthe day before.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, June 12 (CP)-Re-\ncelpte Thunday, cattle 442, calves\n38, bogs 1158, theep 30. Friday, to\nnoon, cattle 40, calves 4, hogi 25,\nsheep 0. .\nCattle moderately active; good\nbutcher steers $4 to $4.25; common\nto medium $3.25 to |3.75; good to\nchoice heifers $3.50 to 34; common\nto medium $3.50 to 33.35; good Veal\ncalve; 34.50.\nHogs steady; selects $8.50, bacons\nS3, butchers $7.50.\nVANOOUVER SEEKS REFUNDING\nVANCOUVER, June 12 (CP)-A\ndelegation ot the Vancouver city\ncouncil wUl meet Jules Fortin of\nthe Dominion Mortgage k Investment company, Toronto, In Winnipeg next week to discuss proposals\nfor refunding Vancouver'i $74,000,-\n000 debenture debt, It wai announced here today.\nNew and Retired\nC.P.R. Land Agents\nC. W. McBaln     Newton J. Ktr\nNewton J, Ker, land tgent of tht\nCanadian Pacific Railway ln Vancouver for the past 23 yean and a\ncivil engineer of note in civic and\nrailway circlet trom Montreal to\ntht Pacific Coast, li retiring June 1\nand will be succeeded in the position of land agent by Clark W. McBaln, industrial right of way and\nlease agent of the C.P.R. in Vancouver.\nThe land department and the\nright ot way department are being\namalgamated into ont department\nunder the management of Mr, McBaln who will be known by the title\nof land agent.\nMr. Ker, however, it not completely severing his connection\nwith the Canadian Pacific, and will\nremain a member of the B.C. advisory committee of the C.P.R.'. department of natural resources, and\nhis wide experience will be available to tht company In an advisory\ncapacity.\nCOPPER  CONSUMPTION  UP\nNEW YORK, June 13 (AP) -\nUnited Stttea consumption of copper for May totalled 59,906 tonl\nagaintt 99,704 ln April, according to\nstatistics reported to the trade today.\nApparent world consumption ln\nMay was 130,703 tons against 142,-\n297 in April.\nBAR QOLD GAINS ONE\nMONTREAL, June 12 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London up 1 cent at $34.00\nan ounce ln Canadian funds; 138s\n6%d ln British. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $35.05 in\nCanadian.\nRoyal Ulster Society's Agricultural show hat itt a new record for\nentries. The total for thlt year It\n1959.\nDow-Jones Averages\n30 lnduttriali  _\n20  rans  \t\n20 utiUties _\t\n40 bondt \t\nHigh\n. 159.91\n47.28\n32.83\nLow\n153.55\n46.61\n32.06\nClose Change\n163.71\u2014off 1.45\n46.84\u2014off .43\n32.13-off 3,1\n102.58-up    .05\nToronto Stock Quotations\nBankfield,       .87\nBarry Holllnger  -     .06%\nBast Mttalt         18\nBear Exploration 51\nBig Missouri 62\nBobio        21\nBralorne    8.25\nBRX  12%\nBuf Ankerite     7.50\nCan Malartlc     1.19\nCariboo Oold     1.72\nCastle Treth     1.52\nCentral Man       .85%\nCentral Pat      3.99\nChibougambu        1.88\nConlagas       8.75\nConarium           2.20\nCom M k S   35.50\nDome   59.12\nDominion Explora 05%\nEldorado       .91\nFalconbridge      8.10\nGod's Lake      1.20\nGold Belt       .41\nGranada 31\nHardrock 2.33\nHolllnger  _   10.37\nHowey 80\nHudson Bay    33.25\nInt Nickel     47.75\nJ M Con        - 58\nKlrkland Lake       .68\nLake Maron        15Vi\nLake Shore           59.75\nLittle Long Lake     6.89\nMacassa     4.80\nManleLeat    19\nMalrobic  _       .04\nMcLeod Cockshutt     3.75\nMclntyre     45.50\nMcKen-'e Red Lake     1.93\nMcVlttie Grahsmme        XI\nMcWatter Gold      1.44\nMining Corp      1.33\nNipissing     2.45\nNoranda     58.25\nParkhill 19%\nPaymaster     1.04\nPend Oreille  80\nPickle Crow      6.40\nPioneer Gold      9.10\nPremier Gold     2.42\nRtno Gold _     1.31\nSan Antonio      5.20\nSheep Creek    -      .80\nSherritt Gordon      1.05\nSiscoe       -    3*1\nSmelter Oold  10\nStadacona    _     .46\nSt Anthony         .38\nSudbury Basin     3.90\nSylvanite         2.80\nTeck Hughes      5.55\nToburn           1.50\nTowagtmac  -      .40\nTretdwell   -       SO\nVentures       1.98\nWaite Amulet      1.11\nWayside  -     .13%\nWhite Eagle .       .04%\nWrlsht Hargreavet     8.10\nOILS\nAJax       -       .48\nB A Oil         28.28\nC and E Corp       -       8\u00bb\nChemical Research     1.07\nDalhousie Oils      .40\nHome OU     1.02\n'mperlal OU    20.87\nInt Pete          36.50\nMerland Oil  13%\nNordon Oil  15\nRoyallte     47.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros     9%\nBell Telephone 149\nBrtiilian           I'M\nBrew -t Dlst     1.10\nCan Bread          23\"'\nCan Car tt Foundry     8%\nCan Cement     8%\nCan Dredge     46%\nCan Malting    32\nCPR     1    12%\nCons Smelters     55%\nDom Bridge     37\nDom Stores      9%\nDist Seagrams    .'.   21%\nFord Canada A    22%\nGoodyear Tire _    69\nHiram Walker     27%\nLoblaw A          20%\nMasiey Harris  _     6\nSteel of Canada -    62\nWalker Brew     2%\nTILUE THE TOILER\nBIG SAVING FOR\nB.C. UNDER NEW\nINTEREST RATES\nVICTORIA, June 12 (CP)-Inter-\nest ntes, aa they affect the Britilh\nColumbia treasury took another\ndownward slide today as the federal\ngovernment announced a reduction\nfrom 4 to 3 per cent in the charge\non loans to provinces. It was calculated Brltlth Columbia would\nlave about 333,000 a month or $376,-\n000 a year by thlt reduction.\nA short time ago the province secured a cut from 4% to 3% per cent\nin the rate it pays its bankers on\ntreasury bills.\nThese two reductions brought to\nan all-time low the Interest paid\nby the province on its current borrowings. Two years ago Britilh\nColumbia was paying 5 per cent\nfor lit bank and Dominion government loam.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, June 12 (CP)-Ster-\nling exchange firm at $5.0113-16 for\n80-day bills and at 35.02 13-16 tor\ndemand.\nCanadian dollars 93 26-32.\nFrance 0.58% centi.\nItaly 7.87 cents.\nUruguay 00 cents.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Junt 12 (CP)-But-\nler ipot: Que. June 33 to 23%.\nCheese ipot: Ont. white 12% to\n13; Ont. colored 12%B.\nEggs spot in carlots: Ont. A large\n24 to 34%; A medium 32% to 33,\nC 30 to 20%.\nButter futurei close: Nov. 23%\nto 33ft. Sales one Nov. contract,\nWheat, No. 3 northern, 86, barley,\nNo. 3 C.W., 40%; oats. No. 1 teed,\n35%, flour, spring wheat patents,\nflntt, 630, white corn, 4,40 to 4.90,\nbran, ton, 18.25, shorts, ton, 19.25.\nCHICAGO SLUMPS\nCHICAGO, June 12 (AP)-Lowtr\nprices for wheat resulted late today\nfrom good taint ln parte of Alberta\ntogether with prospective showers\nboth ln Manitoba and Saskatchewan.\nUpturns that wheat values scored\nearUer were more than wiped out,\ndespite newt of a dust storm ln\nNorth Dakota.\nWheat closed unsteady, % to %\nlower, July 84% to 34%, September\n88% to 89%, December 87%, corn\n% to % down, July 61% to 81%,\nSeptember 50%, December 92%;\noats extctly unchanged, July 29;\nrye % to % off, July 69%.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, June 12 (CP)-Brlt-\nIsh and foreign exchange closed\nhigher today.\nAustralia, pound  4.0231.\nFrance, franc, .0860.\nGreat Britain, pound, 0.0397..\nIndia, rupee, -.8810.\nJapan, yen, 3990.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0837.\nSouth Africa, pound, 8.0138.\nSwitzerland,  franc,  .324r.\nUnited 6tates, dollar, 7-32 prem.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Preu\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 5.03 31-32,\nU S dollar 1.00 7-33, franc 6.80.\nAt Ntw York-Pound \u00bbf)2 13-16,\nCanadian dollar .09 29-32,' franc\n6.38%.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 76.40 francs, U S\ndollar 15.18 francs, Canadian dollar\n16.16 francs.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12s 3d, V S dollar\n59.39 centt. Canadian dollar 5933\ncentt.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBell Telephone    147%\nB C Packing    9\nBrazil   12%\nB C Powtr A   29%\nBuilders Products .. 34%\nCtnada Brome     38%\nCanada Ctr Fdy _...*_\u2014 0%\nCanada Cement \u2014,  tJVis\nCanada Cement Pfd -  67%\nCanada Ind Al A _  7%\nCan Ind Al B  0%\nCan Pacific Railway   12%\nCanadian Steamers   1%\nCockshutt    6%\nCon Min k Smelt  55%\nDominion Bridgt   37\nDominion Glass   111%\nDominion Textile _  63\nFord Canada A   21%\n(Jen St Wares  3\nChai Gurd - 0%\nHamilton Bridge  -\u2014 3\nInternational Nickel  47%.\nMasiey Harrlt _   5\nMontreal Power - __- 30%\nNational Steel Car  13%\nNational Brewing  44\nOgllvie   \u2014 315\nPower Corporation  15\nPrice Brothers  \"3\nQuebec  10\nShawinlgan \u2014 \u2014\nSherwin Wllllami\t\nSouth Canadian Power .\nSteel of Canada\t\n19\n16%\n11%\n62%\nCURBS\nAssociated  Brewerlet    10%\nBrewers k Distillers      1.05\nBritish American Oil 23\nBruck Silk \u2014    9\nCanadian Celanese    27%\nCanada Dredge    46%\nCanada Malting\t\nCanada Wlneriei\nDominion Stores\nDryden Paper \u2014\nImperial Oil\nImperial Tobacco Canadian _.\nInternaUonal Petrol \t\nMcCoU  Frontenac  \t\nMitchell Robert\t\nPage Heney ,  \u2014\nBANKS\nCanada  \t\nCanadlen \t\nCommerce   \u2014\u2014\nImperial  \t\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotia \t\nRoyal   \u2014\nToronto  -\n31%\n2%\nVA\n4%\n20%\n13%\n36%\n14%\n5%\n57\n135\n153\n208%\n190%\n283\n. 230\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh  Low  Close\nAllied Chemical 199\n131%\n7%\n24\n79%\n168%\n97\n34%\nAmer Can\nAm For Pow\nAm Ma k Fdy\nAm Smelt k Re\nAm Telephone\nAmer Tobacco\nAnaconda \u2014\nAtchison  - 74%\nAuburn Mo .... 31%\nAvllUon Corp 5%\nBaldwin  _ 3%\nBait it Ohio  19\nBendix Aviat . 28%\nBeth Steel   53%\nCanada Dry  14%\nCan Pacific-  12%\nCerro de Pasco 55%\nChes & Ohio  59%\nChrysler  - 98\nCon Gas NY.... 30%\nCom Producta 80%\nC Wright Pfd . 5%\nDupont  147%\nEast Kodak   164\nEl Pow k Light 16%\nErie \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 13\nFord English - 7%\nFord of Can  22%\nFirst Nat Stores 47%\nFreeport Texas 30%\nGen Electric ... 39%\nQCn Foods ..... 41%\nGen Motors   65%\nGold Dust  16%\nGoodrich  19%\nGranby X D .... 1%\nGreat Nor Pfd 41%\nGreat W Sugar\nHowe Sound ....\nHudson Motor!\nInternat Nick ..\nInt Tel 8t Tel ..\n36%\n53%\n16\n48\n14%\n197% 197%\n129% 139%\n7% 7%\n23% 23%\n78% 78%\n167% 167%\n90% 90%\n38% 33%\n75 78\n30 30%\n6% 8%\n3% 3%\n10% 18%\n27% 27%\n52% 62%\n14% 14%\n12% 12%\n54% 54%\n58% 58%\n90 96\n34% 34%\n79% 79%\n3% 6%\n140% 146%\n164 164\n15% 15%\n12% 13\n7% 7%\n22% 22%\n47 47\n30 30%\n38% 38%\n41% 41%\n64 .64\n16% 16%\n19% 19%\n1% 1%\n40% 40'\/,\n36% 36%\n53% 53\n15% 15%\n47% 47%\n13% 13%\nJewel Tea.  77%\nKenn Copper _ 39\nKresge S S ..... 24\nKroegger   Groc 22%\nMack Truck ..... 32%\nMilwaukee Pfd    1%\nMont Ward ..... 45%\nNash Motors  17\nNat Dairy Prod 24%\nN Power & Lig 10%\nNY Central  36%\nPacific 0 & E - 37\nPackard Motors 10%\nPenn BR - 31%\nPhillips Pete .... 41%\nPure Oil..  \"%\nRadio Corp   12%\nRadio Keith Or    5%\nRem Rand - 20%\nSafeway Stores 32%\nShell Union ..... 17%\nS Cal Edison .... 27%\nSouth Pacific.... 34%\nStan Oil ot Cal 38%\nStan Oil of Ind 34%\nStan Oil of N J 58%\nStewart Warn . 18%\nStudebaker   11%\nTexas Corporat 31%\nTexas Gulf Sul 36\nTimken Roller . 62%\nUnderwood Ty 80%\nUnion Carbide 89%\nUnion Oil Cal. 22%\nUnited Air  24%\nUnited Blicult. 27%\nUnion Pacific . 126\nN S Pipe  39%\nU S Rubber  28\nU S Steel  03%\nVanad Steel  19%\nWarner Brol   .. 10%\nWest Electric .. 110%\nWest Union   84%\nYellow Truck 18%\n77 77%\n88% 38%\n23% 23%\n22% 22%\n32% 32%\n1%      1%\n44% 44%\n16% 16%\n24% 24%\n10% 10%\n35% 36\n86% 36%\n10% 10%\n31 31\n40% 40%\n16% 16%\n12%\n5%\n20\nZ3Vi\n5%\n20\n32% 32%\n16% 17\n27 27%\n32% 32%\n35% 35%\n83% 34\n57% 57%\n18% 18%\n11% 11%\n31% 31%\n35% 35%\n61% 61%\n79% 79%\n87% 87%\n32 22\n23% 23%\n27% 27%\n128 128\n39 39%\n27% 27%\n61% 61%\n19% 19%\n10 10\n114% 115\n82% 82%\n17% 18\nQ.E. DIVIDEND 18 25 CENTS\nNIW YORK7iuflel8 (Art-General Electric company directors today declared a dividend of 25 cents\nOn the common, the same amount\npaid on April 30. Dividend is payable July 23 to stock of record\nJune 20. Tht 29 cent dividend paid\nlast April compared With 20 cents\na share paid in preceding quarters\nsince October, 1935, prior to which\n15 cents had been paid quarterly\nfrom April, 1934,\nWINNIPEG LOSES\nWINNIPEG, June 12 (CP) -\nWheat prices drifted lowe. on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange today,\nlargely In sympathy with a late\nsession decline at Chicago. Net\nlosses of % to % cent were registered, July closing at 77, October\n77% and December 77%.\nSole teaturt to a listless session\nwas the sale for export of 500,000\nbushelt of Canadian wheat.\nTrade news was scanty and operations as t result Were at a minimum. Net fractional recessions\nwere boarded at Chicago, while\nLiverpool moved sharply higher.\nInteresting to trader! Wit advice\nfrom ArgenUna that of 930,000 bushels ot wheat cleared this week,\n672,000 buthelt went to non-European countries. Australia's wheat\nshipments this Week declined 274,000\nbushels to 1,252,000.\nCtlh tnd coarse grains prices\nshowed little change.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, June 12 (API-\nCopper quiet; electrolytic spot and\nfuture 9.90, export 9.05 to 9.10,\nTin barely steady; spot and nearby 42,50, future 42.00.\nIron quiet unchanged.\nLead steady; spot New York 4.00\nto 4.65, last St. Louli 4.49.\nZinc dull; Ittt St. Louis ipot and\nfuture 4.90.\nAluminum 19.00 to 22.00.\nAntimony, ipot 18.50.\nBar silver tttady and unchanged\nat 44%,\nAt London-Copper, ttandtrd spot\n\u00a330 Ss, future \u00a330 10); electrolytic\nspot; bid, \u00a340 Ss, asked \u00a340 13s Od.\nTin, ipot \u00a3189, future \u00a3182 15s.\nLead, ipot \u00a319 2s 6d, future \u00a319\n61 3d.\nZinc, ipot \u00a314, future \u00a314 St.\nBar silver tteady, 1-16 higher at\n19%d.\nU.S. DOLLAR UP\nMONTREAL, June 13 (CP)-The\npound sterling and United States\ndollar moved higher on Montreal\nforeign exchange today. The pound\nadvanced 23-32 to 0.03 31-33 while\nthe dollar gained 1-32 at 7-32 premium. The French franc wat unchanged at 6.00.\nHarry David Oakley, of South\nOckenden, Essex, wounded ln 1916,\nhaa succumbed to hit war Injuries.\n- PAGJ ELEVEN\nMONTREAL LIST\nIS IRREGULAR\nMONTRIAL, June 12 (CP)-In\nthe heaviest volume ot the week,\nMontreal stock exchange listings\ntraded irregularly today. Gains and\nlosses were about even.\nMild profit taking appeared In the\npower issues although a latt recovery wiped out many losses.\nShawinlgan closed a point lower at\n19 and Power CorporaUon was down\nto 10.\nAmong the metals, Nickel, Smelters and Holllnger eased % to %\nwhile Noranda steadied. Distillers\nSeagram was up % at 23%, while\nCanadian Industrial Alcohol \"B\"\nmoved back to 0%.\nPaper and oils firmed.\nCOAST IS LOWER\nVANCOUVER, June 12 (CP)-\nWith the exception of a few active\nstocks, leading Issues closed unchanged to lower In quiet trading\non the Vancouvtr stock exchange\ntoday. Transactions totalled 198,150\nshares.\nBralorne Gold was off 20 at 8.00,\nIsland Mountain 6 at 1.72 and Gold\nMountain 2% at 11. Two cent losses\nincluded Premier at 2.41, Reno tt\n138, Cariboo Gold Quartz at 1.72\nand Minto at 08. Kootenay Belle\ndropped 1 at 60. Congress a point\nat 19 and Fairview a fraction to 6%.\nVidette marked up a gain of 12 at\n1.85, Gold Belt 1 at 44 and Reliance\na fraction at 7%. Pioneer firmed 5\nat 9.10 while Nicola at 9% and Wayside at 11% doted unchanged.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, June 12 (API-\nWheat cash: No. 1 heavy dark\nnorthern spring, 60 lbs, 109% to\n124%, No. 1 red durum 76%.\nFlour 15 lower. Carload lots family patents 6.26 to 8.40 a barrel in\n98-pound cotton tacks. Shipments\n21,877. Bran 10.00 to 1040.\nDividends\nCanadian WettlnghouM Company,\nLimited, SO centa, payable July 1 to\nshareholder! of record Junt 19.\nPage-Hersey Tubes, Limited, common 75 centi, payable July 1 to\nshareholders Of record June 19.\nJOIN\nTHE SPECULATORS CLUB\n(A Gamble in Mining.)\nUnite now $10 Each.\nSend for Free Copy Mining Investor\nand the Inflation Review.\nINTER-MOUNTAIN SHARES, INC.\nColorado Building      Dtnvtr, Colo.\nr\t\nBONDS\nWo Still Advlto Buying\u2014\n.   Dominion Gas fr Electric\nTo Secure\n6Vi of 1945\nFuture\nPeace and\nContentment\nSAVE\nand\nINVEST\nWe have Information, and recommend pur-\nohalt of\u2014\nA PUBLIC UTILITY BOND\nTHREE PREFERRED STOCKS\nA RAILWAY BOND\nCome In and Talk These Over\nWisely\nWe Can\nHelp You\nSEE US\nWa Will Buy-\n$3000 BRITISH COLUMBIA 4 Vi of '53\nBurleigh & Partners Ltd.\n802 Hattlngi Bt W., Vancouver, B.C.\nMINTON MANSELL, Mgr. Bond Dept.\n\u2014The\u2014\nConsolidated Mining ii Smelling\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL-BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phoiphatet \u2014 Sulphite of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertillieri\nPRODUCERS AND REFINERS OF\nTadanac Brand Metals\nCOLD SILVER\nELECTROLYTIC\nLEAD ZINC CADMIUM BISMUTH\nBy Rust Wettove.\n\"AW_ ^\ni-THia mustachef\nIS THE telNCt\n^00 SAl&VOU\nLIKEO ONJ.\nBOLTON   AMD\nNOW HE SHAMPD\nHIS OFF-TrtAT\nMAKES MB \"TOPS\nThat should\ndive vwutheI\nEDSE-l*\u2014\n-BUT IT HAPPENS, LIKE BOB\nBOLTON BETTEfe VAJ\\THGUT\nHIS MUSTACHE T\nfT^rofrTlMUg^\n l.llfr-.iiJ,|IU\u00ab.jUW,,l\nKODAK\nFILMS\nAll Sizes\nMann, Rutherford\n.;   Drug Co.\nADVERTISE THAT PRODUCT\nAUCTION SALE\nPASSMORE, B. C.\nMONDAY, JUNE 15\nStarting at 1 o'Clock Sharp .\non the Jameson Estate\nActing under instruction from\nthe owners, Messrs. W. White and\nEdgar Jameson, I will offer the\nfollowing: Ranch Tools of every\ndescription, Chicken Wire, Cross\nPlow, Hay Rack, Apple Grinder.\nGrain Crusher, Wheelbarrow,\nDrag Saw complete. Heavy\nSleighs, Light Bob Sleigh, Grindstone, Cultivators. Incubator,\nDemocrat, Shrapnel Cream Separator, Cream Cans, Scales, Ladders, Sleigh Wagons. Spray\nPump, Cord Wood Saw. Disc\nHarrows, Stump Puller, Household Furniture, etc., etc.\nFor large purchases, Terms\nmay be arranged,\nG.  HORSTEAD,\nTerms: CA8H Auctioneer.\nGoods on view at any time\nThe Champagne\nof Beers\nWeek's 10 Fires\nlightning Hade\nFive Fires Existing\nThursday; Season\nTotal 150\nTen fires originating from lightning were all the new fires reported in the Nelson forest district\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 209 Medical Arts Bldg.\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 655     BIO Kootenay St.\n_._- J\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES\nLTD.\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed bv the Liquor Control\nBoard or. by  the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nJ. A. Irving\n&Co.\nGROCERIES\nPHONE 161 ,\nMUFFETS-large\npkg.; each\t\nTOMATO JUICE\u2014\nAylmer 10l_-oz. tina; 4 for\nPEAS\u2014Fraser   Gold,\n5s; 2 for \t\nPORK i. BEANS\u2014\nAylmer Med.; 3 tins \t\nGRAPE JUICE-\nWeleh's, pints; each \t\nHEALTH BRAN-\nLarge green pkg\t\nlie\n27c\n25c\n22c\n31c\n19c\n95c 8PECIAL\n5 lbs. Sugar, 1 Ib. good Coffee,\n3 tall Milk and\n2 Tomato Juice for\n95c\nCOOKING CHOCOLATE 1Q\n\u2014'\/,,; each   IJt\nTOMATOES\u2014 OQ\u00ab\n2<\/.a;-2 Una  4&OC\nMACARONI\u2014Ready cut; in.\n3-lb. pkg  LVL\nCOCONUT\u2014Baker's, r\n1\/4S (rag. 2 for 25c) pkg      DC\nCOFFEE\u2014Maxwell\nHouse; per Ib\t\n37c\nVEGETABLES\nSTRAWBERRIES\u2014\nWynndel; 2 for\t\nCUCUMBERS\u2014Large\nLocal; each \t\nLETTUCE\u2014Large heads;\neach  \t\nLEAF LETTUCE\u2014\nVs lb\t\nRHUBARB\u2014\n< lbs\t\nSPINACH\u2014\n3 lbs\t\nNEW SPUDS\u2014\n3 Ib\t\nCANTALOUPES-\nLarge; 2 for \t\n35c\n10c\n9c\n7c\n25c\n17c\n25c\n39c\nGood Things to Eat\nSUNDAY DINNER\nOur chef promises a really good\nTurkey Dinner this Sunday.\nWhy not give Mother and the\nchildren a treat. They will enjoy it.\n\u2666 L. D. CAFE \u2666\nNEL80N'S FINE8T RE8TAURANT\nALABASTINE\nNO DELAY, NO 000(1\nUNEQUALLED\nHIDING OUAUiy\nFOR BEAUTIFULLY\nTINTED WALLS\nJUST oni*coat of ALABASTINE will give\nyour walls a rich, beautiful tint. Tint them to\nharmonize with your furnishings and rugsi\nwe will help you select the most suitable\nshades. Alabastine is the quickest working\nand best wall finish. It mixes in cool water,\ngoes on smoothly and leaves no brush marks\nAlabastine is sanitary, economical and cou>\nonly one-fifth as much as paint, one-thiro as\nmuch as paper Let us show you thc lovely\nshades.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nfor the seven days ending Thursday. Four were in the West Kootenay-Boundary, and six in East Kootenay. ... '.;.\"\nFive fires were reported burning\nat the time the-rangers made out\ntheir reporta Thunday tot the Friday compilation at Nelson, four of\nthem In West Kootenay-Boundary,\nand one in East Kootenay. One of\nthe West Kootenay ones was the old\nfire near Ferguson, which'Vas still\nemitting smoke.\nThe season's fires now total 190,'\nof which 104 were in-the West Kootenay-Boundary and 46 in the East\nKootenay. ,\u00ab\u25a0\"\nWith the drenching the entire\ncountry has had, there Is no fire\nhazard, and under present conditions a lightning fire, which is\nabout the only kind .to be expected,\nwould make little progress.\nHA\nUSED\nCAR\nValues\nThat You Should\nNot Miss\nYou will be most agreeably surprised when you see the value\nyou can get for your money In\nour Used Car Department. BE\nWI8E ... buy safely! Buy a\nNelton Transfer Used  Car,\n1926 Chevrolet Man\n$75\n1926 Buick Coach\n$100\n1928 Chevrolet Coach\n$150\n1929 Chrysler 65 Sedan\n$225\n1928 Nash Sedan\n$250\n1929 Oldsmobilc Sedan\n$250\n1931 Buick Sedan\n$450\n1932 Chevrolet Sedan\n $500\n1932 Pontiac Sedan\n$600\n1933 Chevrolet\nDe Luxe Sedan\n$650\n1934 Chevrolet Matter\nSedan\n$725\nCOMMERCIAL\n1930 Chevrolet Panel\nDelivery\n$100\n1931 Ford 157-Inch Truck\n$375\n1933 Ford Delivery\n$450\n1934 Maple Leaf 2-Ton\n(Duals)\n$8S0\nNelson\nTransfer\nCo., Ltd.\nPhone 35\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 18. 19M\n(HERRY FRUIT\nFLY APPEARS\n.(.ORCHARDS\nAdults Out; Control\nSpray Should Be\nApplied\nMUST ATTACK\nADULT FLIES\nEgg-laying Starts Ten\nDays After They\nAppear\nAdults of the cherry fruit-fly are\nnow out and their presence In Kootenay orchards is the signal for\ngrowers to start control sprays at\nonce. All known infected areas\nshould start spraying immediately.\nAlthough the insect is not present in all sections of the district it\nmay appear at any time, according\nto E. C. Hunt, district agriculturist.\nHe advises that all growers would\nbe well advised to use the sprays\nand so aid in keeping the fly in\ncheck.\nThe control attack must be on\nthe adult flies and before they commence laying eggs. This is done by\nthe application of a sweetened poison-bait spray treatment to the\nfoliage during the feeding period.\n8PRAY  FORMULA\nThe spray formula recommended\nis: Lead arsenate, V, pound, molasses\nor syrup tnever honey) 2 quarts,\nand water 10 gallons. This amount\nis sufficient for spraying about 50\ngood-sired trees.\nThree sprays should be applied,\nthe first spray when the adult flies\nfirst appear. The. second spray\nshould be applied approximately\n10 days after the first, and the third\nspray about one week after the\nsecond. The solution should be applied ln fairly fine droplets to the\nupper surface of the outer leaves\nand on the sunny sides. It is also\nPHONE  815\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nTrices for Saturday\nand monday\nSpratt's Dog Foods, nCtS\n.-lb. sack Biscuits   J~*r\nSprait's Dog Charcoal       tCt.\n\u2022   Biscuits, per pkt OV\n8pratt's Canary 8ong Restorer,\nSing  Song,  Cuttle   -one,  etc.\nEach lO0ad150\nSpratt's Bird Seed, e_\\-\npkt 20*\nPeaches, 2-lb. tins, A\\r*-\n3 for 05l\u00bb\nGood Morning Marmalade, jtCei\n4-lb. tin Wjfi\nSalmon, Red Sockeye,       \u2022tnA\n1-lb. tin JVV\nPilchards, 1-lb. tins, ajj_\u00ab\n3 tins for JJV\nSardines,  Brunswick, 2A\neach          3V\nSugar, Ct tnom\n20 lbs. for 9*\u00ab0\nPurex Tissue, ACt.\n3 rolls for   WV\nCorned Beef, \"\u00bbE_t\n2 tins for... OV\nMilk (tails), mm*\n3 tins for 93)>\nMelnz Baby Foods, In A\nper tin :  \"V\nFresh Baked Ham, |Jn\u00abt\nper Ib Vfy\nFresh Sandwich Biscuits,   APA\n2 lbs. for 4)V\nIce Cream In Bulk or      _JC(t\nBricks, per quart .\"r*\nFresh Vegetables, Lettuce,\nTomatoes, etc.\nPhone 110\nFree Deliveries\nWest Arm Free Once a Week\nCity Drug Saturday Specials\nBAYER'S\nASPIRIN\nm\nPALMOLIVE\nSOAP\nCake\n50\nKRUSCHEN\n8 ALTS\n69*\nNorwegian\nCOD   LIVER\n16 oz.\n790\nOIL\nLI8TERINE\nLarge\n890\nRUS8IAN  OIL\n16-oz. bottle\n500\nFISHERMEN: SPECIAL VALUE \u2014 Rod, Reel, Line,\nLeader and Fly. \u00bb1 CA\nAlitor ....\"..\u25a0. d)UV\nLET US DEVELOP AND PRINT YOUR FILM.\nWe guarantee you the best results.\nFILM - KODAK \u25a0 TOYS - BOOKS - STATIONERY\nCITY DRUG CO.\nPHONE 34\nYOUR REXALL STORE\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nBOX 4M\nadvisable to spray the foliage in\nadjacent trees and shrubs as well.\nNo expensive spray equipment is\nessential.\nRain will largely discount the\neffect of previous applications and\nmay necessitate a repetition of the\nspray. In applying the spray about\n1 pint to 1 quart of the solution to\nthe tree is sufficient. There is no\nobject in spraying the fruit.\nThe \"worm\" in the cherry fruit\nis the maggot of this fly. It is of\nthe typical maggot form, white or\nyellowish ln color and slightly more\nthan y, inch in length when full\ngrown. The adult is a two-wing fly\nabout two-thirds the size of the\nordinary house fly, blackish, with\nthe head and legs yellow. The most\ndistinguishing mark is the conspicuous dark cross-bands on the wings.\nThe winter is passed in the soil.\nSome time during early June, or\nabout the time the Royal Anne\ncherry is beginning to show some\ncolor, the adult fruit flies will appear in the orchards and on the\ntrees. They are present in the orchards for about three weeks, and\nfor about the first 10 days of this\nperiod they \"sport\" about in the\nsunshine on the upper surface of\nthe outer leaves, lapping up greed\nily the droplets of moisture and\nhoney-dew deposited on the foliage.\nAfter this 10-day period egg-laying\nbegins. The flies sting the c'.erry\nand place the eggs under the surface\nof Ihe skin of the fruit where the\nmaggots hatch out in about five\ndays.\nPHYLLIS DEWAR\nNOTTO BE PRO\nVANCOUVER, June 12 (CP)-\nPhyllis Dewar, Vancouver swimmer and member of the Canadian\nteam that will travel to Berlin for\nthe Olympic games this summer, has\nyet to reach her peak in tho swimming world and will continue In\nthe amateur ranks, Percy Norman,\nOlympic coach, said here today.\nNorman's statement was made\nfollowing reports from Toronto that\nMiss Dewar might turn professional\nto enter the Canadian National exhibition swim in that city this summer.\nNewtonwards, Ireland, gave s\nsplendid welcome when it was visited by the Old Contemptibles association.\nNews of the Day\nThe Little Cafe, Hall street. Breakfast, lunch, or supper 25c.      (1353)\nSunday News and Sunday Mirrors\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\n'    (1189)\nTHIRSTY? McDonald's Dry Ginger Ale Is Just what you want. (1058)\nPlease buy a tag to help I. 0. D. E.\nchild welfare work. (1352)\nTRY  \"EXPORT\"  CIGTS.\n25c at VALENTINE'S,\n25  for\n(1190)\nSelect your vacation sports wear\nensemble\u2014Polo shirts and slacks.\nJACK  BOYCE. (1298)\nHave your home wired by a licenced electrician. McKay St Stret-\nton. (1331)\nMILLWOOD, 12 INCH, $3.00 A\nLOAD. BURNS COAL & CARTAGE\nCO.  PHONE 53. (1278)\nFOR AWNING, UPHOLSTERY,\nDRAPERIES AND SLIP COVERS\n8EE A. TERRILL, 120 HIGH 8T.\n(1247)\nIntercity softball doubleheader;\nTrail men's and girls' teams vs. Nelson Toronto Star and B. C. Telephone clubs. Sunday, 2:30 p.m.\n(1336)\nStyled for smartness\u2014and Tailored for comfort\u2014Made-to-measure\nsuits at\u2014\nJACK   BOYCE'S.\n(1298)\nDo you know that the Kootenay\nMusic House are the exclusive dealers for the famous Easy Washing\nMachines? (1330)\nSATURDAY'S DRE8S SPECIAL.\n$1.95\u2014Plain and printed crepes, values to $5.95.\nGODFREYS' LTD,\n(1339)\nSpecial prices on children's wear,\np.nkle sox 2 pairs for 25c. Dresses\n59c. Sat. and Mon. Ramsden's. (1347)\nRUPTURED? We guarantee to\nfit you with a suitable truss. MANN-\nRUTHERFORD CO. (1209)\nI The annual meeting of the Nelson\nMusical Festival association will be\nheld in the council chamber, city\nhall on Tuesday evening, June 16th.\nat 8 p.m. (1178)\nIdeal Holiday spot. Reasonable\nrates. Write Mrs. St. Denis, Da?r\nPark. (1337)\nCommencing June 15th., coach\nfor Creston, Cranbrook, Calgary.\nWinnipeg, leaves Nelson 10:40\na.m. instead of 7:40 a.m. Through\nservice. No overnight stop.\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nNelson   Depot  205  Baker  St.\n(1127)\nQUALITY ALWAYS PAYS\nHotpoint ranges and General Electric refrigerators have proved to\nbe the most economical and enduring. Buy for the future. FLEMING'S ELECTRIC authorized dealer.\n.   (1357)\nTHE NEXT BIG EVENT. Arrange to vlilt the marvellous General Electric Kitchen Coach and\nattend the Vancouver Daily Province cooking school In Nelson on\nJune 22 and 23. FLEMING ELECTRIC. General Electric authorized dealer. (1355)\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nHOUSE FOR RENT. HALF MILE\ncast of ferry. Fully furnished including light, radio, washer, wood,\nand garden. Apply P. Iwanik.\n(1354)\nHALF-PRICE SALE\nCash Only\nDRESSES\nQueen and Coif lex Spring Dresses.\nRegular $22.50 to $49.00.\nNow\n$11.25 to $24.50\nNo Approvals\nDRESSES\nA medium priced line. Regular\n$6.95 to $15.00.\nNow\n$3.50 to $7.50\nSPRING COATS AND SUITS\nDelmonte Hickey, Langburne and Shagmoor in Light Tweeds.\nVz Price\nPhone 151\nWard Street\nSuit Special\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nSPORT SUITS\n$19.75\nAll our sport back models madefy Fashion-Craft.\nTweeds and gabardines in shirred backs, pleated\nbacks and bi-swings grouped at one price for\nFriday and Saturday only. Sizes 35 to 40.\nEMORY'S LIMITED\nQUALITY, SERVICE and SATISFACTION\nOLD COUNTRY\nALDERMAN IS\nVISITOR (ITY\nLansdell Member of\nBritish Tour\nParty\n\"You have a beautiful country.\"\nW. J. Lansdell, councillor of the\nancient city of Winchester, England,\na former mayor of that city, could\nhardly find words Friday morning\nto describe the Kootenays through\nwhich he was pasaing with a party\nof 12 from Great Britain comprising\none of the Canadian Pacific all-\nexpense tours. The party is going\nthrough to Vancouver and Victoria,\nwith a short stopejver in the Okanagan on the westerly end of a trip\nacross Canada.   *\nWinchester, the English city\nwhose aldermanic board Mr. Lansdell serves, is a city of British history preserved in the famed Winchester cathedral. The Saxon kings\nmade it their headquarters, and it\nwas, as such, the \"capital\" of England for a long time. The remains\nof several of the Saxon kings are\namong cathedral historical treasurers of today. The fact that London had its own waterway in the\nThames, while Winchester wai 12\nmiles from water, resulted in Winchester giving way to London.     \/\nMr. Lansdell carried \"with him\ngreetings from the mayor of Lansdell to the mayor of Vancouver.\nHe is visiting nephews in Montreal\nand a niece in Moose Jaw during\nthe trip.\nExpressing keen interest in the\nKootenays, he saw in them much\nthat reminded him of his own\nhdrne. He noticed particularly at\nthe Canadian Pacific, station that\nflowers then in blossom were much\nlike old country blooma.\nDIA-BISMA\nANTACID\nPOWDER\nFor relief of discomfort due to\nAcidity, 8our\nStomach, Heartburn and Indigestion.\nBOc Per Lge. Pkg.\nFor Sale Only at\nFleury's\nPharmacy\nWATER BELOW\n12 FEET NOW\nPassing the 12-foot mark on th\nway down, the West Arm stood a\n11.95 feet above the low water marl\nat 8 o'clock Friday, afternoon, a drOl\nof .26 foot for the 24 hours, and:\ntotal decline of slightly more thai\ntwo feet from the peak of 14.03 feet\nGet Your Job in the Want Ad\nDon't Suffer With Foot\nAilments\u2014Try\nU.-NEED-A-FOOT-BATH\nat\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nThe Prescription Druggist\nPHONE 1\nA Brownie\nC\namera\nis an ideal outfit for j\nthe beginner in Photography. We have them :\npriced from $1.25 to g\n$3.50.\nAllen's Art Shoppi\n\"A Greeting Card for Ever,\nOccasion\"\nSALE OF\nSUITS\n$16.95\nThese are all $22.50\nvalues, but the sizes are\nbroken and we intend to\nclear them. Sport suits\nand dark worsteds included in the lot.\nGODFREYS*\n LIMITED  ,\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\n318 BAKER      PHONE 270\nLast Times Today\nContinuous Performance\n1:00 P.M. to 11:00 P.M.\nTHE CENTURY'S M08T HILARI0U8 BATTLE\nOF LOVE AND LAUGHTER!\nADDED FEATURES:     OUR GANG In \"ARBOR DAY\"\nDIONNE QUINTUPLETS Featured In PARAMOUNT NEWS\nAnd Our\nNEW SERIAL\ni\nSHOWING\nat 1:00 P.M,\nmk\nComing\nMonday ,nd Tuesday\nmore beautiful...\nmore inspiring ...\nThan Ever Before!\nNorma shearer\nSmi\/ih' 1I1W\/1\/\/I1\nFREDRIC MARCH\nLESLIE HOWARD\nJEM.il\nALSO\nEdward Everett Horton\nin\n'Her Master's Voice'\n\u2014_ .\t\n_______\n\u2014.\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_13","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0412393","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"}]}}