{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412394":{"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":"2022-04-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1937-07-24","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412394\/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":" yaaamammmmw .. w i j it imimu WrSmmommrmmW' n'tf'.M'*\" .tmmm*ja*am*mi\u2122m*.\nTrail - Rossland Picnic Lakeside today -\nNew Gadgets to Please Visfr^\nUl  -A\n\u2022\u2022I'll        \u00bb\nIfiUI li\n; \u25a0\nEn-#\nPictures show happy bathers at Lakeside Park where\nBOOO C. M. b S. Co. employees will today hold,their annual\nplenic. A new steel chute and other equipment have been\nnstalled, (pictures show it in use), much of which the holi-\n-makers will enjoy for the first time.\n)KYO TO SEND\nUN TO NANKING\nOKYO, July 24   (Saturday)  -\n'-Havas). \u2014 A war office com-\nInlqut outlining  agreements\nHied with North China local au\nthorities, coupled with reports that\nTokyo would send a special emissary to negotiate a complete new\nsettlement with Nanking, were taken here today as evidence of substantial improvement in Sino-Japanese relations,\nhhvu i\nVOLUME 30\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-8ATURDAY MORNING, JULY 24, 1937.\nNUMBER '81\n8933 Week's Toll From Heat\nFOUR SPECIAL\nTRAINS BRING\nGIANT PICNIC\nTHRONG TODAY\nEverything Is Ready\nat Lakeside Park\n\u2022.j\"- for Event       ?\nMANY SAFETY\nPRECAUTIONS\n*:-Tre\u00bb,\" tf&nac* BoB-tod. . \u00bbM\nfjf-jittWe will pour into HeJson this\nfmorftih'g, picnickers by; the thousand, when the annual basket outing\nof the West Kootenay employees ot\nthe Consolidated Mining St Smelting\nCompany ot Canada, and their fam-\nilies, will be held at Lakeside park,\nwhile citizens of Nelson will cooperate benevolenty.\nBy three   special trains in . the\nmorning and one in the afternoon,\nand by countless motor vehicles, the\nvisitors will invade Nelson, to find\nwaiting for them green lawns, shady\ngrove, yellow beaches, and lake facilities of the park, with the efficient picnic organization of the smell-\nermeh's co-operative committee, and\nthe co-operating agencies in Nelson,\nready to spring into action with the\narrival of the first train.\nPark   Drenched\nWater pumped from the lake hat\nflooded the park again and again\nIn the last three or four days, In\nan   endeavor to   have the   loll\nproof against powdering where the\ngrass \"catch\" li only light, under\nthe Impact of many feet, so there\nwill   be no   dust.   This   problem\narises only where the grass Is thin,\nunder the trees; the thick lawns\ndrenched In sunshine have been\nestablished for years, and are as\nInviting as. ever.\nAs soon as the trains arrive at the\npark, the street cars will begin to\ntake on visitors, chiefly family\ngroups, for the free rides provided\nby the city of Nelson, and the guest\ncar service, arranged as usual by the\nNelson board of trade, will go into\naction, between the park and the\nbusines section.\nSafety Organizations\nA largely increased city police\nforce, asisted by the provincial po-*\nlice and the Trail and Tadanac forces, will benevolently keep order,\nand have a special eye to safety,\nwhile the Canadian Pacific will\nhave a divisional executive on each\ntrain. Traffic will be regulated, and\nparking carefully directed.\nDogs and bicycles are supposed to\nbe kept away from the park for the\nday.\nPatrolling of the water, as a precaution against water accidents, will\nbe carried out extensively, with\nPaul Brook, the life guard, heading\na largely augmented force.\nThe Trail committee will operate\nthe usual suppies of ice. and of all\ngoods to be dispensed, including the\nfood supplies for the dining tent,\nwill begin to arrive at the park, and\nthis transport will be in operation all\nday.\nFour visiting bands will arrive\nwith the morning trains, and will\nbe dispensing music most of the\ntime.\nThe trains are due to arrive at the\npark at 9:50, 10:10 and 10:40 a.m.,\nand 3:55 p.m.\nMarconi at Rest\nBOLOGNA, Italy, July 23 (AP).\nThe body of Gugllelmo Marconi,\nwho gave the world wireless telegraphy,  today  was  placed  in  thc\nfamily vault of the Marconis as Italy\nhonored him with a state funeral.\nProvincial Tax Sal*\nTo Ba Held This Year\nVICTORIA, July 23 (CP) - The\nfirst, provincial tax sale In six\nyears wil be held this autumn, lt\nwas announced today at the parliament buildings here.\nSales will be held at various points\nthroughout the province and it is\nexpected properties listed will be\nthose three or more years delinquent in payment.of taxes. This period, however, will, be determined by\nthe order-in-council authorizing the\nsales,\nUJ. COURT Bill\nBEATEN BUT IT\nSo States Roosevelt\nSpokesman to the\nNewsmen\nWASHINGTON, July 23 <AP)-\nThe Roosevelt administration contended today its defeated court bill\nwas a partial success in that it* induced the supreme court to interpret\nthe constitution more liberally.\nA spokesman for President Roosevelt told newspapermen that since\nthe bill was proposed, the court\nfeeling the influence of the ensuing controversy, had reversed itself\non vital points.\n. Besides the new court bill now being drafted by the senate judiciary\ncommittee, the list included the\nwage, hour and housing measures\nand a bill to plug holes in the tax\nlaws. Senator Barkley did not include thc farm bill, or the reorganization of the government asked by\nPresident Roosevelt.\nThe United States senate handed\nPresident Roosevelt's court reorganization bill over to its enemies In\nthe judiciary committee Thursday\nto strip of its provision for increasing membership of the supreme\ncourt.\nIn another rebuff to the new deal\npresident the upper chamber overrode his veto of continued low interest rates on farm loans by a top-\nheavy vote of 71 to 19. .The action\nmade law of the low interest extension, as the house of representatives voted previously to override\nthe veto.\nKeeps\nRosslanders\nMoving\nGeorge McKay of Rossland\nhas an important place in the\nConsolidated Employees' annual\npicnic. He has charge of transportation for thc Rosslanders.\nSULPHURIC ACID\nINJURY TO TREES\nTRACED TO TRAIL\nTRIBUNAL ISTOLD\n37 Soil, Plant Tests\nMade in Stevens\nCounty\nTWO WITNESSES\nARE RECALLED\n' -^ ' :< *-*',j-.- v*..*- -*: -\u25a0-*-\u2022*-\u25a0 -\n\" SPOiiAftl, July: M :<AP).-Dr.\nHorace G. Byeri, chief ef the division of toll chemistry of the U.S.\ndepartment of agriculture, told the\nInternational fume tribunal today\nthere was no doubt that sulphuric\nacid Injury to Columbia valley\nvegetation was traceable directly\nto fumes from the smelter at\nTrail, B.C.\nDr. Byers based hit conclusion\non a set of 37 soil and plant tests\nIn the contested area In Stevens\ncounty. He said he found sulphuric\nacid In the water and In the soil\nand sulphur In leaves of plants.\nThe amount, he testified, Increased\nIn direct proportion to the near-\nnest to the smelter.\nDr. M. C. Goldsworthy and Dr. G.\nG. Hcdgecock, both of the department of agriculture, were recalled\nto the stand to clear up points in\ntheir crop study evidence. They testified that in 1934 they drove from\nWenatchee to Stevens county and\nfound bumper crops in all northern\nHello Folks!\nHere's Your\nSPORTS\nPROGRAM\n\u25a0 Hat races\u2014Boys 3 and under; girls 3 and under; boys 4 and 5;\ngirls 4 and 5; boys 6 and 7; girls 6 and 7; boys 8 and 9; girls 8 ond 9;\nlioys 10 and II; girls 10 and 11; boys 12 and 13; girls 12 ond 13; boys. U\nand 15; girls Jt ind 15; boys 16 and 17; girls 16 and 17.'      ' \"* ' \"\nSinior races\u2014Single ladies over 18; married ladies under 3d;'J|Wr-\nried ladies 6vef 30; mothers' race, under 30; mothers,' race, over 301*\nNovelty events\u2014Egg and spoon race, spoon to be carri-id in mouth;\nthread and .needle race, men and women; peanut; race, four, in a team;\nladies' three-legged novelty race; ladies' consolation, open to ladies\nwho did not win a prize, excluding tug-of-war; wheelbarrow race\nfor men and boys, 8 to 15; tug-of-war for Joe Meagher cup.\nAdded attractions\u2014Chris Kenny's Punch ahd Judy show; Art\nFletcher's Tumbling Tumblers; two renowned clowns; monster dance\nin Legion hall under auspices of picnic committee.\nparts of the state until they came\nto the contested area of the Columbia valley where crops were all retarded and of mediocre quality.\nCourt attaches said testimony of\nStevens county land holders, whose\n$2,000,000 claims against th Consolidated Mining St Smelting company\nis responsible for the hearing, would\nprobibly start Monday.\nST. LAMBERT, Que., July 23-\n(CP)\u2014 Two persons were killed and\nthree seriously injured in an automobile colision on Taschereau highway near this Montreal suburb early today.\nSINO-JAPAN WAR UNLIKELY;\nCHINA ADVANCES FAST UNDER\n5-YEAR PLAN OF DEVELOPMENT\nBelligerent talk in the Japanese\ndiet about dispatching an army of\n400,000 men to North China is not\nlikely to result in hostilities between China and Japan.'There is\nno reason to e:rpect war in the Far\nEast or any serious interruption\nto the peaceful  development of\nChina's   five-year   plan,   which\nreaches its culmination in 1940.\nThis opinion was expressed by M.\nCheolin of Shanghai, who was in\nNelson Friday. He is a newspaperman,   representing   the   Shanghai\nChina   Press,   the  largest  English\ndaily in the Orient. Shanghai has\n4,000,000 people, of whom one million are English-speaking and one\nmillion Chinese who speak English.\nIt is an open secret that the Shanghai China Press is an organ of the\nChinese National government, which\nis devoting itself to the rehabilitation and modernization  of China.\nThe National government is interested   in   developing   international\ntrade, and Mr. Cheolin, who is a university graduate, Is touring Canada\nand the United States to report on\nmanufacturing and other conditions\nin North America. China wants to\nincrease its exports and imports, and\nalready is doing so, he said. He will\nspend next year In Europe, going\nby trans-Siberian railroad to Moscow and  thence to England and\nFrance.\n\"China is better off than ever before. Standard of living has been\nraised materially, compulsory education for young and for adults is\nin effect, unification of the currency\nand stabilization have been brought\nabout, sanitation and hospitalization\nhave been immeasureably improved,\nmeans of communication extend\nthroughout  the  country,  law  and\norder have  been  established,\"  he\nsaid.\nEighty per cent of the national\nrailway program has been completed. The 4500-mile railroad\nfrom Nanking to Peking, connecting the south and the north, the\nold and the new capitals, is in\noperation. All parts of the country\nare connected by airplane and all\nimportant points by telephone, he\nsaid.\nWhereas in the old days every\nprovince in China had its own currency today there is one unified national currency, and the rate of exchange is protected with the support\nof Great Britain and the United\nStates, with which China is working\nin \"close amity and cooperation\"\nsaid the Shanghai journalist. The\ngovernment controls all banks and\nall gold and silver. Speculation in\nexchange-is wiped out.\nIn over 3000 schools there is compulsory education for adults, while\neducation for children is now nation-wide. When the five-year plan\ncommenced only 20 per cent of\nChina's four hundred million were\neducated. By 1940, the end of the\nfive-year term, it is expected two\nhundred million will be educated to\n\"read and write 600 characters\" at\nleast.\nBanditry has been wiped out.\nThere are criminals, and footpads,\nbut no organized banditry \"such as\nthe organized crime of the old-time\nBarbary coast gangs in San Francisco,\" said Mr. Cheolin. Sectional\nwarfare, which was largely looting\nmasked as civil war between rival\nminor generals, has been put down,\n\"China has no fear of Japanese\naggression so long as our people\nstick together.\"\nGOING HOME!\nHere Are Your\nTrains\nFollowing isthe schedule of special\ntrains by which the residents of\nTrail, Rossland and Tadanac attending today's annual picnic of the\nConsolidated Mining Sc Smelting\ncompany's employees, will return to\ntheir homes this evening:\nThe return schedule is as follows:\nNo 1\u2014Leaves Lakeside park 6:00\np.m. and station 6:05 p.m.; arrives\nRossland 9:10 p.m.\nNo. 2\u2014Leaves Lakeside park 7:00\nAnother Worker\nHis worries are about over.\nWilliam Cuff, above, entertainment chairman for the Consolidated Employees' picnic, has\nhad most of his work lo do in\nadvance, lining up the entertainment. But he'll probably be a\nbusy man today also.\nOFFICIAL FIGURE\nFOR U.S. NATION;\nFAR WEST STILL\nIN HEAT'S GRIP\nEast of Rockies Is in\nLine for Cooler\nWeather\nTEMPERATURE AT\nPEAK ON PLAINS\n* CHICAGO, July .>.2S (AP)-Cool\nair began a rout of July's aecond\nheat wave today and* brought a promise of generally comfortable\nweather to the United States, east\nof the Rockies.     \u25a0'\u2022'\u2022\u2022\nHigh temperatures had reached\ntheir peaks during the last three\ndays on the plains. All the affected\nareas except the southern plains,\nsaid J. R. Lloyd, forecaster at the\nbureau, were .expected to cool off\nby tomorrow.\nThe far west continued In the\nfrip of above-normal temperatures,\nhe southwest and New England\ndid not get the force of the heat\nwave.\nThe federal census bureau reported a 16 per cent increase in deaths\nin 86 major cities for the week\nended July 17, which included the\nlatter phase of the month's first\nheat wave, arid attributed the rise\nto excessive temperatures. That\nweek saw deaths mount to 8933,\ncompared with 7668 the previous\nweek.\nTrail Beehive as\nPicnic Looms\nTRAIL, B.C., July 23\u2014Trail downtown section was a veritabie bee\nhive today os practically the whole\ntown made its final preparation prior\nto evacuating the city early Saturday morning for thc annual smelter\npicnic at Nelson.\nFew children were seen on the\nstreets, for the majority were tucked away early to get in a good\nsleep and be ready bright and early\nfor the morrow.\nTenders Opened for\nDistrict Road Work\nVICTORIA, July 23 (CP).\u2014Ten-\nders for construction of four miles\nof road in the interior were opened\nthis   morning   by   Arthur   Dixon,\ndeputy minister of public works.\nTenders for a mile and a half of\nreconstruction work at Shoreacres\nIn   the   Nelson-Castlegar  district\nwere: General Construction company $8490 Bennett 4 White $11,-\n453 and Arnett $9914.\nThe tenders will be let shortly.\nThanksgiving Day\nIs October 11\nOTTAWA, July 23 (CP) -Thanks*\ngiving day this year will be Monday.\nOct. 11, a proclamation published\ntonight in the Canada Gazette set\nthat date,\np.m. and station 7:05 p.m.; arrives\nTadanac only 9:00 p.m.\nNo. 3\u2014Leaves Lakeside park 7:35\np.m .and station 7:40 p.m.; arrives\nTadanac 9:35 p.m. and Rossland 10:40\np.m.\nNo. 4\u2014Leaves station only 11:00\np.m.; arrives Tadanac 1:00 a.m. and\nRossland 2:10 a.m.\nMMiM\nMM\n \t\nmm--\nmmmmmm>mFmmmmwm*mM\nPAQt TWO \u25a0\nHume Hotel.,Nelson, b.c.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME-Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Rutherford, Mr. and Mrs. J. Moscouich,\nC. F. Stewart, Mrs. Neal, Misi Hopkins, J. K. Hopkins, Vancouver; B.\nKinnaird, J. H. Lewis, P. M. Wards,\nMedicine Hat; H. J. Ludmin, A, N.\nGreen, Lethbridge; A. J. Ironside,\nCranbrook; E. S. Todd, S. Carmich\nael, Trail; C. H. Byron, Chicago; A.\nE. Walker, Toronto; S, Addison, Penticton; F. C. Dorey, Salmo; Mr. and\nMrs. H. J. O'Connor, San FrancUco;\nMr. and Mrs. C. L. Colburn, Denver, Colo.; Mr. and Mrs. T. Graham,\nLogmont, Colo.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE  ROOMS\nLicensed Premises\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nRKLSOn   DAILY   NEWS, NELSON.  B. C-r-SATURDAY   MORNING, JULY 24, 1917.\n[CHURCHES\nMjpran (Eljurrlj\nStanley and Silica Streets\nRev. V. L. Meyer, Pastor\n11 a.m.\u2014Sunday School and Service, \"The Work ' ot the\nChristian Ministry\".\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Service at Blewett.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"Can a Christian Be\nSure of His Salvation\"? \u2022\nVisitors Cordially Welcomed\nwill k. pels\nby the mfr.\nof LLOYD'S\nTHYMOU*\nOccidental Hotel\n105 Vernon 8t. Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled.\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART of the City\n\\\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nE.   NIEDERMAN,\nProprietor\nne \u2014\u2014\nComfortable Rooms\nGood Meals\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.\nLogical   Stopping\nPlace on the\nRoad to Vernon\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\u2022YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"   Newly Renovated Throughout\nDuff erin Hotel a. PArarTuTof\n900 Seymour 8t     Vancouver, B.C.   Coleman, Alta, Proprietor\n^TRANSPORTATION - Passenger ond Freight\nIf\nCRESTON Freight Truck\n2 ROUND TRIPS WEEKLY\nLIAVE NELSON 7:80 A.M. TUE8DAY AND FRIDAY\n\u25a0LEAVE CRE8TON 9:00 A.M. WEDNESDAY AND 8ATURDAY\nPhont 342 Nelson er 16 Creiton\nA8K THE RED TRUCK FOR SERVICE\nGLEN'S TRANSFER\nP. 0. Box 539\nNelson, B. C.\nSUNDAY - at\nip'' Boating \u2014 Bathing\nLAKESIDE PARK\nNELSON\nIULY 25\n'25 Reward\nTK1\u00bb ttlKIN SAI.VK for may corn or eti\nloiu THEY cannot remore with thU\nwonderful now aolontlflo preparation Tor\nCOHNH OR CALLOUSES. It da-Mnai-\ntlaaa and rellaraa patn with lira- application.\nSOC at ALL BETTER DRUG STORES.\nWelcome\nTo Trail and\nRossland\nPicnickers\nWe Wish You a\nHappy Holiday\nFAIRVIEW\nFUEL CO.\n$wt QUturrlj oi\nQHjrtet fcrfenttet\n209 BAKER STREET\nA Branch ot The Mother Church\nThe First Church ot Christ,\nScientist,   In   Boston,   Mass.\nSundfcy   School   9:45   a.m.\nSunday Service  11 a.m.\nSubject   Lesion-Sermon\n\"TRUTH\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 pan.\nFREE   READING   ROOM   IN\nCHURCH  BUIUDING\u2014\nAll Cordially Welcome\nflnifrfc (tl)nxtl)\nnf (Eanaia\nSt. Paul's\u2014Trinity\nJoint Service In Trinity Church,\nRev. J. A. Donnell in Charge.\nPublic Worship at 11 a.m. and 7:30\np.m. Sermon subjects: Morning,\n\"The Praise ot Men\"; Evening,\n\"Building up of Reserves\".\nChurch School at 10 a.m.\nTOMAHAWKS TAKE SCALPS AS\nROSSLAND REDMEN TURK BACK\nNELSON tt-14 BOXLA BATILE\nBy LAURIE HAMILTON\nROSSLAND, B.C., July 23-t-l-\ncrosse went back to the tomahawk\nstage when Rossland Redmen and\nNelson Maple Leafs crossed sticks in\nthe local reserve tonight. Redlnen\ncame out of a slashing melee with\ntheir head feathers somewhat dinted but they had a five-goal margin\nthat finally ended the two-game losing streak which threatened to catapult them back into the cellar spot\nof the West Kotoenay league. The\nfinal score was 19-14 with Redmen\nleading by a big margin in every\nquarter.\nRedmen lost little Geordle Anderson, termed by soma fans the\ncleanest player In the league, In\nI nthe second period when he\nhurdled head first Into the boards\nbehind Nelson's goal. He was taken\nto hospital but a late medical re\nport stated his Injuries probably\nwould not be lerioui.\nThere was nothing about the first\nthree-quarters to arouse much fire\nin the 600 fans watching the one-sld\ned contest but personal feuds broke\nout In the final session. They resulted in three game penalties and\nthree majors being handed out. Red-\nmen suffered heavily from \"dishing\nlt out\" and for the last half of the\nlast quarter played one and two men\nshort. It was & continuous scramble around Goalie MacNaughton's\nnet.\nLeafs tallied three times during\nthe siege but Redmen squeezed in\nthe odd goal to hold the winning\nlead.\nWalmsley and Horswill started the\nguerilla warfare shortly after the\nlast period opened. Egan and Forrest chose Nelson's goal for their\nfistic tangle later In the period. Tho\nlatter two were given game penalties.\nBut tha worst sample of scalp\nraising was Bob Scott's attack on\nKelly, which will  probably result In a season or mora suspension for ths Rossland player. Scott\nwant after tht Nelson player with\n\u2022 slashing stick In one of tha most\nsenseless  and  demented   attacks\nseen on a looal boxla floor.\nThe youngster Hooker of Nelson\nplayed a sparkling game for his\nfirst time out; and MacNaughton,\nRossland's new goalie was impressive.\n'   .  .   ,     .'.\n80N EXONERATED\nNANAIMO, B.C., July 23 (CP).-\nTwenty-eight-year-old Albert Kidd,\ncalled a man \"who never did any\nwrong\" by his dying father, today\nwas exonerated by a coroner's jury\nof responsibility for his rancher-\nfather's death. The six-man jury,\nafter deliberating 55 minutes, last\nnight returned a verdict that John\nKidd, middle-aged poultry rancher,\ndied from gunshot wounds \"accidentally\" inflicted by his son.\nTRY A WANT AD\n$1\nFishing \u2014 Picnicking\nTravel by Canadian Pacific to\nthis ideal spot for\nthe Sunday outing, situated one\nmile from Nelson\non the Kootenay Lake. Train.\nleaves Trail 10:00 a.m. Returning leaves 7:45 p.m.\nTrains will run to and from\nLakeside Park, Nelson, B. C.\nSee Your Local Ticket Agent\n(LdrfaQ^\nNELSON TO\nVANCOUVER\nONE WAY RETURN\n$ll.oo     $19.80\nTRAVEL THE CANADIAN ROUTE\nBY GREYHOUND\nCIRCLE TOURS RETURNING\nVIA SEATTLE\nNO EXTRA CHARGE\nInterior Greyhound Lines\nLimited\nPENTICTON, B.C.\nLICENSED PREMISES\nWELCOME\nTrail and Rossland\nPICNICKERS\nWe hope that your seventh annual outing will excel\nall previous picnics.\nWe Invite you to drop In and see us. You will find our\nparlors for ladies and men a cool place to visit with\nyour friends.\nFREE CARS FROM LAKESIDE PARK!\nNew Grand Hotel\nPETE AND MRS. KAPAK\nNews of the Day\nDay and night Service. Phone 93,\nB.B.   TAXI. (1453)\nSMOKE A \"CRAVEN A\". 20 for\n25c. AT VALENTINE'S.        (132*4)\nDance tonight to the Troubadors,\nEagles hall, 9-12. Usual prices. (1321)\nThe best malted mllkt In town\nare at GELINAS' Try them. (1248)\norange sherbert, 10c. AU flavors of\nice cream bricks, 25c a pint,   (1614)\nWelcome Trail Picnickers\nJACK BOYCE,  Men's Wear\n(1572)\nFresh Dairy Butter, 27c Pound\nVERNON   STREET GROCETERIA\n(1816)\nC.   C.   M.   BICYCLES   combine\nstrength and accuracy. Hipperson's.\n(1558)\nSN.   BAND   CONCERT   LAKESIDE PARK.    SUNDAY 2:30 p.m.\n(1632)\nNewspapers, Magazines and Smokes.\nBI8HOP'S NEWS STAND\n(1325)\nAluminum Canners, Boilers and\nRacks.   Fruit Presses.   Hipperson's.\n(1550)\nFor lock work and keys for cars,\netc., see H. R. KITTO, Phone 964.\n(1326)\nJust the drink for Hot Weather\u2014\nCHOCOLATE MILK.   IT'S GOOD!\n' (1317)\nGET YOUR \"KODAK\" FILMS\nAND DEVELOPING AT VALENTINE'S. (1324)\n8EE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOLSTERING AND DRAPERIES. 120\nHIGH STREET. (1307)\nOWING TO A TYPOGRAPHICAL\nERROR IN LOWERY'8 ADVER\nTISEMENT OF FRIDAY, LUSHUS\nJELLY POWDERS WERE ERRONEOUSLY QUOTED. THE CORRECT PRICE SHOULD HAVE\nREAD 3 FOR 21c. (1821)\nSILVERWARE IS BEING OFFERED AT A 26% DISCOUNT AT\nCOLLINSON'S JEWELLERY\nSTORE. NOW IS THE CHANCE TO\nBUY THAT WEDDING OR OTHER\nGIFT. THE BEST THERE IS AND\nBARGAIN PRICES. (1627)\nOwing to a large number attending the Trail picnic, more guest\ncars will be needed this year. All\npersons willing to assist kindly get\nin touch with D. L. Kerr as soon as\npossible or follow instructions to\nguest car owners given in today's\nadvertisement. (1630)\nC0LLIN8ON'8 JEWELLERY\nSTORE IS HAVING A REMOVAL\nSALE. YOU SAVE FROM 10 TO 60\nPER CENT IF YOU BUY NOWI\nTHIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO\nPURCHA8E ANYTHING YOU\nNEED AT A REAL BARGAIN.'\n, (1627)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBody of Lawrence Caronni rests at\nSomers Funeral Home until this\nmorning (Saturday), thence to Cathedral of Mary Immaculate, where\nmass will be said at 9:30, Rev. Father\nE. J. O'Brien officiating. (1633)\nMandeville Is\nChampion Young\nDiver al Trail\nTRAIL. B.C., July 23 \u2014 Jimmy\nMandeville, 14, won the C. M. tt S.\ncompany employees' picnic diving\ncontest for boys and girls 15 years\nand under, at the Jubilee swimming\npool today.\nJimmy garnered the W. A. Allan\ntrophy, donated this year and to be\ncompeted for annually, and a small\nindividual cup posted by E. L.\nHodge. He sec-red 50.3 points, Harold\nRing, Rossland, placed second with\n36.2 points, while Wesley Towner,\nRossland, was third after diving\noff a tie with Joyce Gordon, Trail.\nOther contestants and marks made\nfollow: Tom Ham, Rossland, 31; Roy\nSmith, Trail, 30.6; Ray McLeod,\nRossland, 24.2; Bob Watson, Trail,\n21.2; Don MacKinnon, Trail, 20;\nErnie Good, Trail, and Margaret\nMcKay, Rossland, under 20.\nThe trophy for first place and the\ncups for first second and third and\na number of other attractive prizes\nwere presented by R. R. Burns, M.\nL. A. for Rossland-Trail.     '\nJim Curtis, Carl Baillie and I. R.\nForgie-Thompson were  judges.\nButler park was the centre of attraction for nil the city tonight as\na fireworks display was set off\nfrom the grounds, as a forerunner\nto the picnic.\nA huge crowd packed the grounds\nand cars bordered the fence line\nwhile many persons took in the gorgeous sight from their homes when\nrockets of many kinds exploded\nhigh over the Columbia river, their\nmany colors being reflected from the\nwater.\nThe feature of the fireworks was\nthe Niagara Falls display the brilliant flares lighting up the entire\ncity.\nFor Better\nQuality\nFurniture\nand\nHome\nFurnishings\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBURGESS- James Cleaver, of\nSalmo, passed away Friday. Body\nrests at Somers Funeral Home un\ntil Sunday, thence to Salmo hall,\nwhere service will be held at 3 p.m.,\nRev. Charles Motte officiating.\n(1634)\nCET THI\nGOLD\nWHICH   18  NOW  GETTINO\nAWAY\nA demonstration of an entirely new method of recovering\nfine gold will be given at\u2014\n2 P.M.\nthis afternoon  In\nBENNETT'S\nMachine Shop\nVernon Street\nAsk for J. Broatch\nROCKGAS\nt\u00bbne-\nThe linury of hot water; the thrill\nof \u2022 modorn coot itovo; tha\nclean, cosy warmth of gal heat\n\u2014AH theia ara economically\nyoun with ROCKGAS, no matter\nwhere you livo.\nAll: your dealer today about th*\nlow coit and convenience of\nROCKGAS nrylea In yo\u00bbr home.\nAGENT IS Tel. 688\nKOOTENAY  PLUMBING   4\nHEATING  CO.  LTD.\n313 Baker St       Nelion, B.C.\nI will not be responsible for debts\nincurred by anyone other than myself.  Ernie Wake. (1619)\nTHE BEAUTIFUL OKANAGAN LAKE\nHOTEL inCOLfl\nPENTICTON, B.C.\n\u2022riding\n\u2022golf\n\u2022tennis\nLOW   COST\n\u2022I 100 feet elevation\n\u2022fresh water swimming\n\u2022 troll and fly fishing\nALL-INCLUSIVE  TRIPS\nfrom NELSON to\nPENTICTON    AND    RETURN\nFollowing are some examples of rates, including round\ntrip rail, room (with or without bath), and meals at Hotel\nIncola.\nRoom with Bath\n1 peraon,   Saturday to\nMonday \u2022 -J18.00\n2 p-arM-ni, Saturday to\nMonday \u2022   32.7)\nRoom with Bath\n1 penon,  en* week \u25a0 f}6.50\n2 persons.       \"       \u2022    66.90\nRoom with Bath\n1 peraon, one month $(101.50\n2 pen-ons, one month   IBO.50\nRoom without Bath\n1 peraon,   Saturday to\nMonday \u2022 (117.00\n2 person!, Saturday to\nMonday -    31.25\nRoom without Bath\nK    1 peraon,  one week \u2022 #34.00\n2 persona,       \"       -   63.00\nRoom without Bath\n1 peraon, one month $ 86.50\n2 penoni, one month   163.00\nParlor ter leel Mr be tecarti, It ietrrti, on ferment ej\nrrtulnr perlor-ctr test lore.\nFor full particulars \u2014 Hotel Reservations and\nadditional rales, see your local Canadian Pacific\nTicket Agent.\nQtAMdiM\u00ae^\nRELAX-KEEP COOL-AND ENJOY YOURSELF AT YOUR OWN\nCIVIC THEATRE. (1556)\nSWITCH TO A DODGE AND\nSAVE MONEYI ERIC'S MOTOR\nSERVICE, PHONE 76. (1289)\nFor Sale\u2014Indian Trim Motorcycle\nModel '29. Al condition. Apply\nWalt Erickson, Nelson. (1613)\nDANCE\u2014Silver Tone Seven,\nGelinas Hall, TONIGHT, July 24th\n75c Couple\u2014Extra lady 25c\n(1601)\nDANCE   AT\nHarrop Hall, Friday nlte, July 30.\nTrail Orchestra. Admission $1.00 a\ncouple. (1628)\nCORRECTION\nIn the Overwaitea advertisement\nof Friday, Corned Beef should read\n\"12 oz. tins, 2 for 23c\". (1622)\nJunior Board of Trade \"working\nbee\" leaves for Kokanee Scout camp\n9 a.m. Sunday. Visitors and friends\nwelcome. (1626)\nIntroducing a new low price line\nof     electrical     appliances \u2014   The\nHandy-Hot.   Ste window display at\nMCKAY A 8TRETTON\n(1555)\n8PEND   THE   WEEK-END   AT\nAINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS HO*\nTEL. SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNERS\nWEEKLY AND FAMILY RATE8.\n(1547)\nDON'T FAIL TO 8EE COLLINSON'S JEWELLERY STORE OFFERING OF LADIES' AND GENTS\nWRI8T WATCHE8 AT HALF\nPRICE. (1627)\nDANCE   TONIGHT\nIn the EAGLE HALL\nto mullc of THE RTOUBADOURS\nBest floor, popular prlcea\n(1635)\nNEL8ON10    d.W.     R.T.    W.E.\nEx.\nVERNON  $8.00 $14.40 $10.00\nNAKUSP     3.00 5.40    3.75\nKASLO    1.85 3.00    2.10\nTRAIL      1.85 3.00    2.10\nGreyhound Lines\nNelson Depot \u2014 205 Baker St.\nPHONE 800\n(1264)\nFINEST\nSAND\nAND\nGRAVEL\nFOR\nBUILDING\nPURPOSES\nFairview Fuel\nSupply Ot Teaming Co.\nPHONE 701\nNelson'\nPopular\nRefreshment Parlor\nThe\nMaple Leaf\n(Licenced)\nHeartily Greets C. M. & S. Co. Employees, and\nExtends Best Wishes to Them for a Happy\nHoliday, Today.\nThe Maple Leaf, Nelson's popular legal refreshment parlor is entirely modern and some of ths\noutstanding features are the interior decorating,\nlocation, and ladies' parlor. You are all invited to\npay a call to the Maple Leaf today and en|oy the\ncomfort and pleasant surrounds of this popular\nrefreshment parlor.\nThe Maple Leaf\n(Legal Refreshment Parlor)\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\n705 Vernon St. '     Nelion, B. C.\nHIRAM WALKER .\u25a0.\nGUARANTEES ITS QUALITY\nTHE GOVERNMENT\nGUARANTEES ITS AGE\n16 ox. $1.50     \u2022   25 ox. $2.25\n1 *-.'\nTZT*\nTHE WILLIS miniature piano is\nan instrument of beauty and perfection.\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\n(1567)\nFISHERMEN-Try the bait and\nfly fishing along the rocks and the\nmouth of the creeks and get your\nlimit. Get a boat at SEAL'S BOAT\nLIVERY, Balfour, B. C.        (1605)\nHot days\u2014step into the Golden\nGate and cool off with our delicious\nhome-made Polar Igloo ice cream.\nTry our Sundaes, Parfaits or Frap-\npes. 25c; malted milk, 15c; special\norange sherbert, 10c. (1614)\nHIRAM\nLKEU'S\nUI1ISM\n.,\u201e\u201e,,\u201e HIRAM Wm I JOHS, LIMITED.   ESIAIUSHED 1151\nMtTIUElV AND HEAD OFFICE: WALKERVIUE, CAN.   MONTREAL. H4\u00bb PEEL ST.   LONDON,\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by tt\nGovernment of British Columbia\n, EN8LANI\n1\nmmmmmm^mmamtlsm\n.1...\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, JULY \u00bb   l\u00bbr\nPAQE  THRU\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Company\nEmployees and Families From Trail and Rossland\nOn this day, the occasion of their Seventh Annual Picnic, the following Nelson merchants and business people\nextend their best wishes ofr a successful and enjoyable holiday.\n\\% ^\nCHARLES MORRIS\nMen's and Boys' Wear\nLAMBERT LUMBER LTD.\nBuilding Materials\nERIC'S MOTOR SERVICE\nDodge\u2014DeSoto and Union 76 Gas\nMILADY'S BEAUTY PARLORS\nFor Permanent Waves\nSAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\nDistribution Without Waste\nTHE HAIGH TRU-ART BEAUTY SALON\nMrs. E. Haigh Miss A. Spencer\nTHELMA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE\nThelma Heddle\nSTAR GROCERY\nJ. H. M. Greenwood\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\nMusic and Electric\nKOOTENAY STEAM LAUNDRY\nand No-Odor Cleaners C. A. Larson, Mgr.\nR. W.DAWSON\nInsurance and Real Estate\nNATIONAL FRUIT CO. LTD.\nWholesale Distributors\nT. D. ROSLING\nReal Estate and Insurance\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nLargest Assaying Business in Canada\nE.L.Warburton\nGeneral Agent\nAVENUE SERVICE STATION\nJimmy Ringrose\nMacDONALD'S CONSOLIDATED LTD.\nWholesale Distributors\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\nMrs. H. Bishop\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE CO\nGeo. E. Fleming, Mgr.\nVIC GRAVES\nMaster Plumber\nSCHAEFERHITCHCOCK CO.\nCedar Poles\u2014G. V. Cady, Mgr.\nTHE WHITE SPOT LUNCH\nVic Foh\nTHE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nA. Baird, Manager\nPEEBLES MOTORS LTD.\nChrysler\u2014Plymouth Dealers\nGILKERS'\nMen's Clothing and Furnishings\nBEACON SERVICE STATION\nNelson's Busiest Service Station\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE CO., LTD.\nEverything in Hardware\nSHORTY'S AUTO REPAIR SHOP\nAmalie Oil and Union Ethyl Gas\nP. E. POULIN\nStocks and Bonds\nRAMP BODY 8 FENDER WORKS\nSkinner and Farenholtz\nNELSON & DISTRICT FARMERS SUPPLY CO.\nM. J. Varseveld, Mgr.\nTHE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE\nJ. R. McLennan, Mgr.\nSMYTHE'S PHARMACY\nPrescription Specialists\nWEBB'S MUSIC HOUSE\nMusical Instrument Makers and Repairers\nW.M. WALKER\nStocks and Bonds\nBURNS COAL & CARTAGE CO\nFuel and Haulage\nDR. RAY SHAW\nQuality Dentistry\nGARDNER-DENVER CO. OF CANADA LTD.\nMining Machinery\nVENETO GROCERY\nE. Stangherlin, Prop.\nJERMAN HUNT'S\nReady-to-Wear\u2014Dry Goods\nASSOCIATED GROWERS OF B.C. LTD.\nO.K. Brand Fruits and Vegetables\nNORTH AMERICAN LIFE ASSURANCE CO.\nR. E. Crerar, C.L.U.\nUNION OIL CO. OF CANADA LTD.\nT. A. Carew, Local Agent\nWILLIAMS TRANSFER\nIce, Coal, Wood\u2014Phone 106\nMcKAY AND STRETTON\nNelson's Leading Electrical Shop\nSTANDARD CAFE\nNelson's Most Popular Restaurant\nH.H. SUTHERLAND\nWatchmaker and Jeiveller\nNELSON AUTO WRECKING\nNew and Used Parts\nNELSON MOTORS\nJack McDowell and Howard Thurman\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE COMMISSION\nTHE BRACKMAN-KER MILLING CO., LTD.\nPurity Flour\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nCD. BLACKWOOD\nNELSON GROCERY\nL. Coletti, Prop.\nRAMSDEN'S\nExclusive Ready-to-Wear\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nE. E. L. Dewdney, Mgr.\nFAIRVIEW SERVICE STATION\nStewart N. Cragg\nLEDINGHAM'S BAKERY\nL. R. Hood\nROBERTSON REALTY CO. LTD.\nInsurance and Real Estate\nNELSON BOARD OF TRADE\nExecutive and Members\nCENTRAL CANADIAN GREYHOUND LINES Ltd.\nCoast to Coast\nW. W. POWELL CO. LTD.\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nA. H. GREEN CO. LIMITED\nGeneral Contractors\nFREDS. HAMER\nSigns, Banners, Show Cards\u2014Josephine St.\nF. W. WOOLWORTH CO., LTD.\nPARK GROCERY\nLight Lunches\u2014Mrs. C. Hookings\nSHARDELOWS MOTOR COURT\nTourist Headquarters\nH. E. STEVENSON\nAuto Parts and Machine Shop\nELK'S TAXI, TRANSFER & FREIGHT\nPhone 77, Bud Stevens\nKOOTENAY MOTORS (NELSON) LTD.\nNash\u2014Lafayette\u2014Hudson\u2014Terraplane\nFAIRWAY GROCERY AND MEAT STORE\nV. Crawford\u2014P. Halliwell\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nGeorgina L. Brown, Manageress\n  \t\nMttHmiiii\n ip. un ii mn. ,\u00abWpi..i.n,m*)^it\u00abNL\nCrust Forms on Eyelids...\nEyes Too Precious Ip Be Neglected\nor Treated by Unskilled Amateur\nBy GLADYS GLAD\n\"Almost every morning, when I\n\u25a0wake, I find that some sort ol a\ncrust has formed on my eyelids,\naround the lashes. Can you tell me\nwhat causes this unpleasant condition and the best method ot correcting  it? EILEEN.\"\nI should judge, from your description, that you are afflicted with\ntrachoma, which is commonly call-\nVITTUCCI\nOLIVE OIL\n(Pronounced Vee-two-chee)\nAbsolutely the best for table\nand home uses.\n(Accept No Substitutes)\ned \"granulated eyelids'.\" The cruati\nthat accumulate on the lids can\nbest be soaked off with a weak solution of blcarboante of soda. Use\na small pad of absorbent cotton\nand lave the solution gently over\nyour tightly closed eyes until the\ncrusts have been entirely removed.\nHowever, trachoma is an inflammation of the mucous membrane of the\neye, and you should not attempt to\ntreat the condition yourself. I would\nadvise you to consult a competent\neye specialist or physician about it\nas soon as possible. The eyes are\nfar too precious to be submitted to\nthe unskilled treatments of an amateur.\n\"My- face becomes unpleasapt\nly red of late, and several dark,\npurplish-red lumps have appeared\non the skin. There are also a number of blackheads and pimples present, and I am quite worried about\n'\nli\nRyvita slims without starving. All the nourishment\nvalue of whole grain rye goes into Ryvita Crispbread.\nIt aids digestion and its natural roughage keeps the\nwhole system regular, the blood clean and the complexion clear and lovely.\nLook for the honeycomb\n^   edge. Sure sign of the TRUE\nCrispbread\u2014RYVITA,\nON SALE EVERYWHERE\n; Arthur Nelson Ltd., Vancouver, B.C, Wholesale Distributer\n'*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 msm \u25a0\u25a0 ME 1M H \u25a0Hi \u25a0H\n\u25a0Hi msWm \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0HH I HHH BBBR MIH-M WBeWl\nthe condition. What would you advise me to do? '      EVELYN.\"\nPersonally, I would advise you to\nconsult a competent skin specialist\nor physician about your skin as\nsoon as possible. For the condition\nyou describe, according to the\nsymptoms, may be Acne Rosacea.\nAnd this skin disease should always\nbe treated as soon as it appears.\nIf this skin disease Is permitted\nto become chronic, the blood vessels usually become congested, and\nsometimes stand out prominently\non the nose and cheeks. Also, the\ntissues tend to grow in an exaggerated manner, and the nose and face\nswell. Through diet and local treatment, the condition can be cured.\nBut the assistance of an expert\nskilled in the treatment of the disease should be enlisted, for best results.\n\"I am a great deal overweight,\nand would, like very much to reduce, However, when I cut down\non my daily intake of food in an\neffort to lose weight, I meet with\nvery little success.\n\"A friend thinks, that my obesity\nmight be due to an abnormal thyroid condition, and suggests that\nI take thyroid tablets. Would you\nadvise me to do as she suggests?\n\"ELEANOR.\"\nI certainly would not advise you\nto take thyroid tablets to regulate\nyour weight. In the first place,\nyou do not know for a fact that\nyour obesity is due to a sub-functioning of the thyroid gland. And\nin the second place, the practice\nof taking thyroid tablets is full of\nrisk of impairment of various organs unless it is followed under-\nthe supervision of an experienced\nmedical man.\nConsult a competent physician\nfirst, and make sure that your\nobesity is really due to such a disturbance. If it is, take the thyroid\ntablets only if, and as, the physician directs you.\nVINEGAR RINSE\nLydia: The vinegar rinse is a\nsoftening rinse and helps to bring\nout the lovely highlights In your\nhair. This rinse should be composed of half a glass of vinegar\nand a pint of clear water.    .\nVaried Program . . .\n'Family at Home\nNightr Building\nHappy Home Life\n(By Dr, Garry 0. Myers, Ph. D.)\nRECENTLY I realized fulfillment\nof a long wish: I met Dr. Leland\nFoster Wood, secretary of the Committee on Marriage and the Home\nof the Federal Council of Churches\nof Christ In America. We had lunch\ntogether. He told me of a \"Family\nat Home Night\" program in a certain church. Seeing the Interest. I\nhad In it, he reached for his brief\ncase and handed me a pamphlet put\nout by his organization at cost (five\ncents), \"Building the Christian Family: A Program for the Churches.\" I\nturned the pages and read:\n\"An outstanding success rewarded\nthe efforts of one pastor in promoting a Family at Home Night in his\ncongregation.    This  was  planned\nOveremphasized ....\nBlood Pressure\nJust Part Aging\nProcess of Body\nBy LOGAN CLENDINNING, M. D.\nTODAY FROM London I drove\nout to a little suburb called Ted-\ndington. Here was a little parish\nchurch of which the Rev. Stephen\nHales was curate during the eighteenth century.\nThe Rev. Stephen Hales was a\ncurious kind of clergyman. He was\nmore interested in making scientific\nexperiments than in spiritual matters. In particular, his curiosity\nwas aroused by the movements of\nthe juices in the bodies of plants\nand animals. What made the sap\nrise in the spring and how much\npressure was it under? What about\nthe blood coursing through the body\n\u2014how much pressure is it under?\nHe made some experiments to determine this, and these are the\nfoundation for our present knowledge of the subject of blood pressure.\nThe little church of Teddington\nsits sedately in the center Qf a\nbusy district on the outskirts of\nLondon. In Hales' time it was far\naway in the countryside. Not far\naway was Twickenham, the home\nof Alexander Pope, the poet. From\nhis country seat at Twickenham he\nwrote those verses which satirized\nand stung his great contempora-\naries. Pope probably never heard\nof modest little Dr. Hales, but the\nwork of the latter itfas of more\nimportance than that of the misshapen little cynic.\nFALLS INTO DECAY\nFor many years the church of\nTeddington fell into a state of decay. Then a minister was appointed,\" who, with great energy, set\nabout restoring it. In the vestibule\nthey found an old neglected gravestone. With difficulty they deciphered the inscription. When\nthey did, it read:\n\"Here is inter'd the Body of\nStephen Hales, D.D., Clerk of the\nCloset to the Princess of Wales,\nwho was minister of this Parish 51\nyears. He died the 4th of January 1761 in the 84th year of his\nage.\"\nThe subject of blood pressure\nhas made notable strides since the\ndays of Stephen Hales. For a\nwhile the dangers of high blood\npressure were overemphasized.\nNow a more sensible view is held\nabout such things. High blood\npressure in itself is simply part\nof the aging process of the body\nand causes no symptoms. Many\nunpleasant fellings are ascribed to\nblood pressure which have nothing\nto do with it. Simply because one\nhas high blood pressure, it is not\nnecessarily the cause of unhappy\nbodily sensations, as Is illustrated\nby an anecdote told me the other\nday by a London specialist.\n\"I saw a countrywoman of yours\nthe other day,\" he said, \"she came\nto see how her blood pressure was.\nAnd to cry on my shoulder.   She\nt\u00abB\nThe perfect quality of Nabob Baking\nPowder makes failures Impossible... made\nfrom the finest Ingredients procurable, It\nis 100% pure and absolutely dependable.\nTry hot biscuits with Nabob Strawberry\nJam, made from specially selected B.C.\nstrawberries.\nAsk your grocer today for\nNABOB\nBAKING POWDER\nKELLY, DOUGLAS & CO. LTD.\nVancouver, B. C.\n4*\nWarm Weather..\nlPvJ   hints for\nhousewives\nMenu Hint\nCold Boiled Ham\nCreamed Potatoes Pickles\nTomato Loaf Salad\nBlueberry Roll Iced Tea\nThe tomato loaf salad is quite\nsubstantial enough to serve as s\nmain dish, but it may also be used\nas a salad in a cold meat menu, such\nas this. Blueberry recipes always\nare timely at this season of the\nyear. Any shortening that you prefer, of course, may be substituted\nfor the vegetable oil.\nToday's Recipes\nTOMATO LOAF SALAD- Two\ncups tomato soup, one-fourth cup\nchopped olives, one cup grated\ncheese, one-fourth cup chopped onions, one-half cup cold water, one*\nhalf cup chopped celery, one-fourth\ncup chopped green peppers, one cup\nmayonnaise, one teaspoon gelatin.\nDissolve gelatin in water. Heat\nsoup to boiling point, add cheese,\nand gelatin. Beat until smooth, set\naside to cool. Add other ingredients.\nPour into loaf tin or into tomato\nshells. When firm, slice and serve\non lettuce.\nBLUEBERRY ROLL - The pas\ntry: Two and one-fourth cups\npastry flour, four teaspoons baking powder, one teaspon salt, four\ntablespoons sugar, three-fourths\ncup mjlk, one-third cup vegetable\noil, butter, one pint blueberries.\nMix and sift dry ingredients and\nstir in oil quickly, with fork or\nknife. Stir in liquid quickly; remove to well-floured board and\nknead until dough is smooth (about\none-half minute:. Roll one-half\ninch thick. Filling: Spread dough\nwith one tablespoon butter, and\nplace berries over dough. Sprinkle\nwith one-fourth cup sugar. Roll\nlike jelly roll, cut into three-quar-\nweeks in advance for a certain Monday evening which families throughout the entire church were to guard\nsacredly for a time of family fellowship at home. The program varied according to the plan of each\nfamily, with games, reading, music,\ncandy-making or whatever they\nwanted. Whatever the entertainment the evening in each home was\nbrought to a high point just before\nthe good nights were said, with a\nworship service suited to the occasion, with Bible reading and perhaps some devotional poetry or favorite hymns and prayer. In some\nfamilies members were brought closer together than ever before, for parents got the young people's point of\nview, and children understood their\nparents better.\"\nGood to Read Aloud\nThe Rev. Sidney Waterbury Powell, First Baptist church, Elgin, 111.,\nis the pastor referred to. Doesn't\nthis account remind you of the\nbeautiful scene of the home-coming\nand family worship described in\n\"The Cotter's aSturday Night\" by\nBobby Burns? And that would be\na good selection to read on a Family  at Home Night.\nIn the same pamphlet are several\nparagraphs ' quoted from Bernard\nC. Clausen's article \"An Adventure\nin Defeating Divorce.\" A bit:\n\"Every year in June, I gave over\none of my Sunday morning services\nto what we called our 'Wedding\nBells Reunion.' To this I invited all\nmy brides and grooms. The sermon\nwould always deal with some of\nthe spiritual problems of married\nlife. ...\"\nTECUMSEH, Ont. (CP) \u2014 \"Let\nthere be light,\" says the town council\u2014along the laeshore road where\nspooners are wont to spoon. And so\ndecision was made to put up 10\nmore lights.\nI think I hears a lion under the\nbed, Baby! I likes 'em in cages, better)\nter Inch pieces. Place on cut ends\nclose together in oiled pan. Surround with three-fourths cup sugar\nand one cup hot water. Bake in\nhot oven (450 degrees Fahrenheit)\n20 to 30 minutes. Baste occasionally with the sauce in the pan.\nSwedish Steamed Fish\nUse a Kettle large enough to\nhold the fish without crowding.\nPlace in the bottom an onion cut\nIn half, a low cloves and a bay\nleaf, one-fourth cup vinegar and\none-half teaspoon salt. Add water\nbefore the fish is added for 10 min*\nutes. Place the fish in a piece of\nmuslin or gauze (to help in lifting\nit out) and lower into the hot\nliquid. Cook slowly for 10 to 15\nminutes, lift to a hot platter and\npour over a generous quantity of\nmelted butter with chopped parsley.\nAPRICOT AND PINEAPPLE\nJAM\nOne pound dried apricots, 3 pints\ncold water, large tin sliced pineapple\n4H pounds sugar. Method: Cut\napricots in small pieces, soak in water for 48 hours, then boil 1 hour.\nAdd sugar and pineapple, cut small,\nwith syrup. Boil until thick\u2014about\nIs hour.\n'     STEAMED SQUASH\nSplit a Hubbard squash in two,\nplace it in a steamer, skin-side up,\nand steam about half an hour. It can\nthen be spooned into a dish. It Is\nnice just seasoned with salt, pepper\nand butter, or with a milk sauce\npoured over it.\nCOOLNESS   FOR   TWO\nSOODtOW\nhad been told she had high blood\npressure and she was feeling very\nsad. She came over for the coronation and it had rained every\nday she had been in London and\nshe wanted to see her son in\nAmerica. I said to her, \"Madam,\nit isn't blood pressure that is your\ntrouble. It's homesickness. You\ntake the next boat home and that\nwill cure you.' I didn't even measure her blood pressure.\"\nAlpine\nMilk\nThe new evaporated milk;\neverybody is talking\nabout. Have you tried It?\nIf not ask your grocer to\ninclude a few tins with\nyour order today.\nIts Creamy\nFreshness\nis instantly noticed, and\nyou'll find Alpine especially good for growing\nbabies. It whips\u2014makes\ndelicious home made Ice\ncream' and other frozen\ndesserts. Excellent for all\ncooking needs too.\nA Western\nProduct\nfor Western\nPeople\nBuy with\nConfidence\nat your\nlocal\ngrocer.\ntf\u00abS-\u00bb\u00bb!\u00ab*W\u00ab*\u00ab$\u00a3?\nAlpine\nEVAPORATED\nMILK\n**\u00abW&\u00ab\u00ab*\u00bb*\u00ab*\u00ab$2\u00ab$S*$\u00ab\u00abW\u00ab\nDUNK and CONWAY\nBankrupt Stock\nFINAL CLEARANCE\nEvery Garment Must Go\nDresses Coats Hats Lingerie Hosiery\n\u2666 Slashed Prices  \u2666 For Quick Clearance\nBUY NOW - LAST CHANCE -\nDRESSES-\nAFTERNOON AND STREET\nDRESSES\u2014Pastels and high\ncolors. Short and long\nsleeves. Sizes 14 to 44. Regular to $10.95.\nSALE\t\n<P*j.t7J\nSUITS-\nLinen, Plain and Novelty\nLinens. Pastels and white.\nSizes 14 to Z0. Regular to\n$15.95.\nSALE\t\n$5.95'\nDRESSES-\nIncluding prints and plain\ncrepes. Plain wool crepes,\nsheers, long and short\nsleeves. 14 to 44\u201416Vi to\nl.Vi. Regular to\n$19.50. SALE ...\nHOSIERY-\nSemi-Service Pure Thread Silk, full-fashioned. Cood\nassortment colors. Sizes iVi to IOV'2. CQA\nSALE  OUC\nHOSIERY-\nCrepe. Pure fhrtad silk.  Full-fashioned.\nwanted colors. Sizes 8V2 to IOV2.\nSALE\t\nAll the\n69c\nLINGERIE-\nS i I k n i t. Lace trimmed.\nGowns, pyjamas, dance sets.\nAlso satin panties, lace trimmed. Sizes small, medium,\nlarge.\nSALE\t\n69c\n\u2014BET\/1 \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0 IHISIII Hll\nLINGERIE-\nSilk crepe. Imported lace\ntrim. Gowns, pyjamas, dance\nsets.White, flesh, etc. Sizes\n32 to 40. <M OQ\nSALE sdl.Lj\nHATS-\nEvery hat in stock included\nin this lot. Crepes, straws\nand felts. Whites, pastels,\nnavy, black, etc. Regular to\nfiff 95c\nCOATS-Untrimnted\nSummer and Spring Coates, tweeds and fleeces.\nWhite, maize, red, blue, green, etc. Sizes flJQ QC\n14 to 44. Regular to $22.95. SALE \u2022pV.Ud\nCOATS-Trimmed\nPlain and tweeds. Interlined. Many imported tweeds\nincluded in this lot. Brown, green, black, etc. Sizes\n14 to 44. Regular to $39.50. (j|1 A QC\nDunk and Conway\nBANKRUPT STOCK\n510 Ward Street\nSale\nEvery Sale to Be Final\nNo Exchanges\nNo Refunds\n-'\u25a0-\u25a0.'.., *.-   t...'.:.... '.-...* _ji. ..1\n\u25a0\u25a0'_\u25a0\u25a0 ii-i_L .v- *    .  , :*,.;-.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-, , ... \u2022;\n 1\n ^^jfs^R^-v' y'y'\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0     \u2022i\"^v*'--**0*- \u25a0*'.\u25a0 *.*\u25a0 ***\u2122..\nM.(|lHiii!pi!lippiip\n\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\nButcherteria News\nT. 8. SHORTHOUSE\nSaturday\u2014Monday\nBROILERS-Mllk Pad, ]M\nPer Ib  *W\nPOT ROA8T BEEF-\nUp from\t\nROLLED ROAST BEEF-\nUp from \t\n231\nPICNIC SHOULDERS-JO*}\nw\nROASTS-Oven Veal,\nLb\t\nRUMP VEAL ROASTS\u2014 JQ*|}\nCHOPS\u2014Loin Mutton, eaik*\nPer Ib tWT\nSHOULDERS LAMB\u2014Boned and\nrolled  on  request, Wit\nLEGS\u20141937 Lamb, JOjJ\nSTEAK\u2014Minced,\n2 Ibs.\t\nw\nROUND 8TEAK- A**\n8IRLOIN STEAK\u2014\nPer Ib\t\nHEADCHEESE\nLb. \t\nJELLIED  VEAL-\nLb\t\nDELICATESSEN\n40t\nSPICED HAM\u2014\nLb.*.\t\nCOTTAGE CHEESE\u2014       \u25a0%{.*\n8pokane, lb -Vt\nPHONES 527-528\nFREE DELIVERY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNING, JULY 24, ip-\nNELSON\nSOCIAL...\n(Continued In Column Six)\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. G. Spencer Godfrey, Vernon street, have as their\nguest for a fortnight their grandson\nDouglas Denny, of Summerland,\nwho arrived last night. Before returning he will visit his aunt, Miss\nIrene Denny at Willow Point.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. E. T. D. Frances\nof Crawford Bay, visited in Nelson\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Alex Woyna of Appledale,\nspent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. L. Harris of New Denver, was shopping in Nelson Thursday.\n\u2022 Miss Josephine Marapodi,' K\nW. C. block, is spending the weekend at Christina Lake.\n\u2022 R. G. McLeod of Seattle, was\na visitor in town last week-end.\n\u2022 Teddy Burns and W. Kapak\nhave returned from a fishing trip\nto Wheeler Lake near Ainsworth.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. J. Sullivan and son\nBilly, accompanied by Mrs. Prevost\nat Great\nSaving\nPrices\nWELCOME TRAIL VISITORS\nHere Are Some of Our Sale Values\nWomen's Ties and Pumps\nA great variety of patterns and colors.\nShoes in the regular way ranging in\nprice from $3.95 to $8.50, Now\u2014\n$1.95 $2.35 $2.95 $3,35\n$3.95 $4.35 $4.95 $5.35\nMen's Sport Oxfords\nWhite, Brown and White, Black\nand White.\n$3ol5 to $4.35\nScampers and Outing Shoes\nThe Best on the Market\n$1.65 $1.95 $2.35    .\nHUNDREDS OF OTHER VALUES FAR TOO\nNUMEROUS TO MENTION\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders  in Footfashion\nA SUCCESSFUL PICNIC\nWith *    *tetmsm*.\nKeep\nV&. % Co\u00b0'\nIce    JE-     $\u00ab* \/With\nCreamffll^P^' ke\n-** Lream\nCurlew\nGREETINGS!\nTrail and\nRossland\nPicnickers\nWe Welcome\nYou Again to\nNelson,   the\nHome of the\nFamous\nCURLEW\nICE CREAM\nThe popular products of Curlew\nCreamery will bs\non hand for your\nenjoyment today,\nas ever before.\nPure, delicious Curlew Ice Cream,\nin a variety of delightful flavors,\nin brick, bulk, or cone, will be\nobtainable in large or small quantities at leading dealers to help\nmake your big picnic a success.\nTHIS WEEK'S SPECIAL\nAT ALL CURLEW DEALERS\nTutti Fruitti\nIN BRICK OR BULK\nA choice mixture of popular fruits and nuts\nthat produce a smooth delicious Ice Cream.\n\"Made its Way by the Way It's Made\"\nHorner's Grocery\nPHONE 121\nFREE DELIVERY\nSPECIALS\nSaturday and Monday\nJuly 24th and 26th\nBUTTER: First grade, Numaid and Clendale; 3 Ibi. $1.05\nSALADA TEA: Brown Label Lb. 60*\nSALADA TEA: Yellow Label Lb. 53?\nMAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE Lb. 390\nHEINZ TOMATO CATSUP  2 bottles 45*\nPORK AND BEANS: Aylmer 16-oz 4 tint 35*\nOUR OWN  BAKING  POWDER: Quality guaranteed;\nIb. tin  23*\nROWNTREE'S COOKING CHOCOLATE: '\/i-lb. pkg. 17*\nOVALTINE: 8-ox. sixe  58*\nLEMON AND CEDAR OIL Large bottle 23*\nSHRIMP: Wet or dry pack Tin 22*\nFANCY RED SALMON: Vis 2 tins 35*\nAPRICOTS Crate $1.49\nFIEUD TOMATOES   2 Ibs. 25*\nWATERMELON: Whole 6 Ibs. 25*\nCANTELOUPES 2 for 29*\nBANANAS 3 Ibs. 25*\nPHONE 121 FREE DELIVERY\nGROCERY PRICES THE SAME AT SALMO\nBREAD IS NOT FATTENING\nNew Reducing Diet\nallows 2 Slices of Bread\nat Every Meal\nFOLLOW THIS\nBREAD DIET PUN\nThis Diet Plan ftlves about\n1600 Calories a day \u2014 the\nreducing allowance of the\naverage woman.\n\u2022 BREAKFAST\n1 filaw fruit julca\nSmall earing meat, fish or egge\n2 SLICES TOAST, 1 eq. butter\n1 cup coflea (clear) 1 tap. sugar\n\u2022 LUNCH OR SUPPER\nModerate serving meat, fish, or\nSmtS\nAverage serving 1 green vegetable\n2 SLICES BREAD, 1 eq. butter\nAverage serving fruit salad\n1 glass milk\n\u2022 DINNER\nH fllasa fruit or tomato Juice\nGenerous sertlna meat, fish, ot\nfowl\nAf-nafta    BMvlnfl    2    -regetablee,\n1 green\nSmall serving almpla dessert\n2 SLICES BREAD, 1 sq. butter\n1 cup coflea or tea (dear) 1 tsp.\n\u2022usat\nTHE new  BREAD\nDIET is based on\nthe  proved  fact  that\nbread itself is not fattening.\nBread is an energy food.\nExtreme reducing diets cut\ndown too much on energy\nfoods because starch is considered fattening. Bread is\nnot just a \"starchy\" food.\nIt is a combination of\nenergy - giving carbohydrates and a special form\nof protein that helps burn\nup fat while you are reducing.\nExtreme diets often break\ndown vital tissues, and\nshould never be taken without a doctor's advice.\nGo on the Bread Diet\u2014\nand be splendidly energetic,\nnot weak and irritable. This\ndiet gives you the main\npart of your energy food\nin bread.\nLet Your BAKER Bake for You\nHoliday Specials\nat Horswill's\nTUNA FISH FLAKES\u2014Halves Tin 150\nPICKLES\u2014Fraser Valley, large bottles .... Each 33d\nCORNED BEEF 2 tins 250\nSAUSAGE\u2014Burns' or Swift's Tin 250\nSHRIMPS\u2014Dry or wet Tin 220\nLOBSTER\u2014'As 23*; Vis  38*\nCHICKEN\u2014Aylmer boneless Tin 37*\nTOMATO JUICE\u2014Heinz, large tin 2 fer 23*\nCAKES Society 1-lb:  Each 29*\nSARDINES\u2014Brunswick 4 for 19*\nLIME JUICE\u2014Montserrat Pints . 47*; quarts . 83*\nJUST ORANGE\u2014Quart bottles  22*\nTASTY SPREAD\u2014McLaren's \"Real good\" .... 25*\nMAYONNAISE\u2014Best Foods; 8-ox. 23*; 16-ox. 42*\nLettuce, 2 for   15*\nCantaloupes 15* and 20*\nGreen Peas, 2 Ibs. ..  15*\nCauliflower, Ib   10*\nPeaches, bkt 35*\nApples, 3 Ibs 25*\nGrapefruit, 2 for ... 23*\nCabbage, lb 5*\nTomatoes, 2 Ibs. ... 25<\nBananas, 3 Ibs 25*\nBeans, Ib  10*\nGreen Peppers, Ib. .. 23*\nApricots, lug .... 91.4*1)\nCukes, 4 for  25*\nWatermelon, Ib 5*\nCelery, Ib   12*\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235\nFREE DELIVERY\nAGE   FIVl\nSPECIAL PRICES\nfor Saturday Shoppers\nLAST DAY OF OUR JULY SALE\nFurther Reductions\nTO WELCOME TRAIL VISITORS\nSummer Sport Sweaters\nIn Pullover styles. Colors are red, paddy green, turquoise, maize and Nile green and\nwhite. Regular $1.75.\nTO CLEAR\t\nSILK\nSUITS\n6 only, Silk Crepe Suits in good summer\nstyles, including white, peach and green.\nSizes 16 to 20. Regular to Q\u00a3 QO\n$19.75. TO CLEAR   *}D.VO\n*\nCotton Lace Knit\nTwo-Piece\nSUITS\nin colors of pale green, turquoise, yellow,\neggshell and white. Sizes 14 to 20.\nRegular $2.95.\nTO CLEAR\t\n$1.29\nNew styles in Cotton\nHouse Dresses made\nof fast color prints.\nA great assortment\nof patterns and\nstyles. Sizes AQ-,\n34to48 .... J\/OC\nSALE of SHORTS\nCotton drill shorts in\ncolors of reef and yellow.\nFast colors. Regular\n$1.00.\nTO CLEAR\n49c\nNavy, brown and white\nCotton Shorts. Ginger\nRogers styles. Regular to\n$1.59. GOTO CLEAR 03C\nGLOVES\nFurther Reduced\nSplendid summer styles in silk and lisle fabrics.\nColors are fawn, brown, grey, eggshell and white,\nincluding white knitted gloves. CQ\u00ab\nJULY SALE  d\\K\nHOLEPROOF\nCREPE\nHOSE\nand pure silk hose with\nlisle tops. A Holeproof\nquality that will give satisfactory wear.\n2 PAIR\t\n95c\nRUBBER SWIM SUITS\n. . . made of fine quality crepe rubber.\nMaize, peach and white. ffl OQ\nTO CLEAR \u201e*>*\u2022\u2022*\u00bb'\nPANTIE GIRDLES\n... of fine stretch elastic in peach and\nwhite with detachable crotch. Small, medium and large sizes. 7Ql\u00bb\nJULY SALE   *^C\nSUEDE TAFFETA SLIPS\n... in tailored and lace trimmed styles.\nNeatly embroidered. White and QQA\ntea rose. JULY SALE WC\nCOTTON PULLOVER\nBLOUSES\n... In a fine knitted quality. MalM,\npeach and white. An ideal garment for\nyour shorts or slacks. Cttea\nTO CLEAR OUC\n.\nPhone 200     Ready-to-Wear and Dry Goods       Baker St.\nSociety\n(Continued From Column Three)\nof Trail, spent Saturday in Nelson.\nThey were guests at Mr. and Mrs.\nP. E. Poulin's summer home on the\nnorth shore.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. R. Jarvis ot Cranbrook,\nis the guest of her mother, Mrs.\nRauket, Gore street, over the week\nend.\n\u2022 Mrs, G. Burger, who spent the\npast couple of weeks at the home of\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. S. C. Burnham, 615 Mill\nstreet, has returned to her home in\nKamloops.\n\u00bb J. F. Stevenson of Sunshine\nBay, was in town shopping yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Townsend, Mill street,\nand the Misses Lindsay, have returned from a visit to coast cities.\n\u2022 J. John and his nephew, David\nJohn, of Nelway, spent yesterday\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 Miss Nellie Kay, who has been\nvisiting in Nelson and district, left\nyesterday for her home in Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. P.' McLaren,\nStanley and Silica street, have as\ntheir guests, Mr. and Mrs. Hughie\nBrock of Cranbrook. They are accompanied by their daughters.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nVASSARS'\nPHONES\n831\n832\nCASH MEAT MARKE\nChoice Steer Beef\nPot Roast, Ib  120\nRump Roast, Ib  200\nBrisket Boil, Ib  Ids*\nBlade Roast, lb.  140\nJuicy  Round  Steak,\n2 Ibs  450\nRoll Roast Rib, Ib. .. 251\nVeal Oven Roast, Ib. . 121\nVeal Fillet Roast, Ib. . 22c'\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibi. .. 2!ty\nLegi Real Lamb, Ib. . 27<)\nLamb Shoulders, Ib. . 180\nLamb Breasts, Ib. ... 150\nPork Spare Ribs, 2 Ibs. 250\nPerk Oven Roast, Ib. 200\nSmoked Cottage Rolls,\nIb  290\nCreamery Butter, Thistle\nBrand, With Meat Order,\n2 Ibs  590\nEggs, Local A-large, fresh,\ndoz 400\nBreakfast Bacon, Fresh\nsliced, Ib 320\nBreakfast Sausage, Fresh\nmade 2 Ibs 250\nHamburger, Choice and\nFresh, 2 Ibs 250\nRoasting Chicken, Ib. 300\nBoiling Fowl, Ib 220\nBologna, Ib 200\nHead Cheese, Ib  180\nlellied Veal, Ib 300\nRoquefort Cheese, Ib. 000\nPure Lard, 2 Ibs 350\nRed Salmon, Ib  280\nHalibut, Ib 230\n___\n_ ,    ^^\n\u2014\nmmmtMnmmmmtmmmsatmumm\n Nelaim Saihj Ncma\nEstablished April 22. 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED.\n21\u00ab   Baker   Street,   Nelson.   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144 Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of   the   Audit   Bureau   ot   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian    Press   Leased    Wire    News   Service.\nSATURDAY, JULY 24, 1937.\nTHE HEALTH INSURANCE PROBLEM\nApproximately two out of three who voted in the last\nBritish Columbia election voted in favor of \"health insurance, progressively applied\". That is a mandate in favor\nof health insurance which the provincial government can-\nnpt neglect, yet it is obviously a mandate with reservations.\nIt is obvious that no one who voted for or against health\ninsurance knew what kind of health insurance, or how\nmuch of health insurance, he was voting for.\nIt did not take very much of an initial disturbance a\nfew months ago to develop into a gale of opposition, which\nblew galley-west the elaborate plans which Hon. Dr. Weir\nhad put into operation for the last health insurance scheme.\nThat particular scheme is very definitely out.\nIs the new scheme to go farther, is it to cover a wider\nrange of people, taking in, for example, the unemployed\nand the indigent? If so, how is to be paid for? Employees\nJn many cases thought their rates pretty high under the proposed original plan. If the rate to employers is too high\nthen British Columbia will lose business in competition\nwith the rest of the world and more people will go into\n;the ranks of the unemployed.\nShould there be wider scope for privately operated\nplans, such as that which is so successful with Consolidated\nCompany employees? It would seem that more latitude\nthan was permitted under the old act would be desirable.\nIn any such extension of permissive private plans assurance that employees would have coverage equal to that under the government scheme would be necessary. Health insurance which would not adequately protect wage-earners\nwould be a cruel joke. It is, however, evident from experience that private plans can in some cases be worked out\nwhich would be more economical than government operated plans.\nUnder the discarded scheme salaried persons over a\ncertain income were exempt unless special provision was\nmade for them. Should they be included? Many will answer\nin the affirmative. Not so much because they need the\nprotection as badly as those in lower wage brackets but\nbecause their contributions are needed to bring in enough\nincome to make the government plan feasible. Under the\nworkmen's compensation regulations assessments are collected on salaries up to $2000; if an employee gets more,\npen the rate on $2000 is still collected.\nSome plan of this sort might work with health insurance, in order to prevent the cost to employee and industry\nnd business becoming too heavy, while it would at the\nsame time bring in a lot of revenue which the former Weir\nscheme left out of the picture. Doctors would not necessarily be hurt. Many people in the higher income brackets\nprobably would prefer to control absolutely their own\nmedical, hospital, pharmacy arrangements. Anyway, as\ndoctors must inevitably base their charges to some extent\non income of patients, as otherwise they could not possibly\nexist with the number of bad debts they are forced to incur,\nthose in higher income brackets could be provided for in a\nvariable scale of fees under the state regulations.\nThere are scores of important points for the government to consider. There has been much investigation, but\nPremier Pattullo will be wise if he insists that we do not\nagain rush into some hastily conceived plan which either\nwill not give the public what is wanted, or will bankrupt\nthe province.\nWe must remember that our population is small, our\npublic debt enormous and about one of three people who\nwent to the polls last election voted against health insurance in any form, while those who voted for it supported\nonly the principle and could hardly be expected now to\nbe found combined in agreeing to any one definite scheme.\nIt is not improbable that any definite scheme, set out in\nall its details, would be beaten in a plebiscite.\names I Burgess,\nalmo Old Timer,\n'asses Suddenly\nDeath laid claim to one of Salmo's\nId timers when James Cleaver Bur-\nBSs died suddenly at his residence,\n.victim of a heart attack.\nMr. Burgess had spent over 30\nflrs as a carpenter and brick-layer\nSalmo. He had been in the prov-\n,ce over 50 years, He was born\n1 Halifax, N. S\u201e in 1865,\nSurviving are his wife and a son\n\u25a0 New Westminster; a son and a\nep-son in Salmo,\nFuneral services will be held Sat.\n'day,\nale Dick Poole\nWas in Ihe 54th\nRichard G. Poole, whose death in\n-Ctona was reported Thursday, was\nson of the late Walter Poole, for\niny years resident in Nelson. Rich-\nwent overseas with the 54th\nDOtenay hattaljon, and after the\n,r lived here with his parents for\nme years before moving to Trail.\n* father died only a few weeks\n', but his mother died many years\no.\nHe is survived by hi? two broth-\nWalter of Trail, and Joseph of\nJunior Board to\nLead Work Party\nKokanee Campsite\nITelson junior board of trade Sunday will lead a work party to Camp\nBusk. Kokanee. They will spend the\nday alternating between assisting\nthe Boy Scouts in developing the\ncamp site and consuming sumptuous lunches prepared by wives and\nfair friends.\nNEW DIVORCE LAW\nIN BRITAIN IS\nAPPROVED\nLONDON, July 23 (AP) \u2014 A 25-\nyear fight to liberalize England's\ndivorce law ended today with parliamentary enactment of a bill\nwhereby cruelty, desertion for three\nyear?, or insanity for five years,\nbecome grounds for divorce.\nAdultery hitherto has been the\nonly cause for divorce.\nThe house of commons gave final\napproval to the law, sponsored by\nA P Herbert, independent member for Oxford University, by accepting house of lords amendments\nRoyal assent, is the remaining formality for putting the law into effect.\nMONTREAL, July 23 (CPl-Gross\nrevenues of Canadian National railways for the week ending July 21.\n1937, were reported today as $3,704,*\n383, a $313,277 increase over the corresponding period last year\nManitoba; and by his two sisters,\nMrs. J. H. Tattrie ht Sandon and Mrs\nG  H  Hope of Vancouver\nBody Castlegar\nMan Lost June\nFound to South\nBuried at Washington\nCity 70 Miles West\nof Spokane\nBody believed to be that of Jack\nStainton. Castlegar man, employed\nby the Consolidated Mining St\nSmelting company, who was mysteriously lost on the Columbia river\nnear Castlegar June 10, was found\nin Ferry county, Washington, and\nwas buried at Wilbur, Wash., pro\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B.C., July 23\u2014Entertaining at a kitchen shower, Mrs. S. G\nHill, Bay avenue, was hostess honoring Miss Evelyn Temple at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Tempi\nHigh score at bridge, the featured\nentertainment, was held by Mrs\nArthur Coverdale. Miss Verna Partridge won the consolation. Pink\nand white tulle and paper were\nused to decorate the basket con\ntaining gifts for the bride-elect. A\nsurprise note of the evening was a\nhandkerchief shower. Assisting Mrs.\nHill in serving were Mrs. Temple\nand Mrs. William Lynes.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. H. Robertson, who has\nbeen holidaying with relatives i.c\nCalgary during the past three weeks\nhas returned to her home in Trail\n, \u2022 Howard Ransom left Friday\nfor Vancouver, where he will spend\na short holiday.\n\u2022 Mrs, Thomas Watson, accom\npanied by her daughter Mary and\nson Bob, left Thursday for Nanaimo.\nWhere they will spend a holiday\nwith relatives.\n\u2022 Mrs, G. McLeod and son havi\ngone to Nelson where they will\nvisit relatives for a few days.\n\u2022 Mrs, George Easterbrook left\nTrail Friday for Vancouver, where\nshe will spend a vacation, She expects to return in about a month\n\u2022 Percy Jones left Friday for\nVancouver where he will holiday\nfor about a week.\n\u2022 Charles Wilson left by car\nThursday for Vancouver and Victoria on a vacation which will be\nspent with relatives in both cities.\nHe will return about the middle of\nAugust.\n\u2022 Mr.   and   Mrs.   Harry  Whit!\nDewdney   avenue,   have   as   their\nguests, Mr. White's brother, Albert\nWhite and family of Helena, Mo.\n\u2022 Leonard   Benson   returned\nThursday  from   Seattle,  where he\nhas been vacationing for about\nmonth.\n\u2022 Frank Coates returns during\nthe week-end from a two-week va*\ncation spent  in California.\n\u2022 Mrs. S. Vanetti left Thursday\nfor Spokane, where she will visit for\na few days, returning Sunday to\nTrail.\n\u2022 Douglas McDonald, a visitor\nto coast cities during the past two\nweeks, returns Sunday to Trail.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. I, J, Trembath of\nRossland, accompanied by Mrs.\nTrembath's sister, Miss Dorothy\nCuyler, of Medicine Hat, Alta ,*\nited Trail friends Thursday.\n\u2022 Mrs. H. Singer and daughter\nleft on Thursday on a vacation\nwhich will be spent at Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. Walter Wheat, East Trail\naccompanied by her children, left\nthis week for England, where she\nwill spend an extended vacation\nwith relatives.\n\u2022 Miss Margaret. Mara returns to\nTrail this week from Crawford Bay,\nwhere she has been vacationing\nduring the past two weeks.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kobluk\nand children left Friday for Spokane\nwhere they will spend the week-end,\n\u2022 Lloyd Grey returns this week\nfrom a vacation spent at the coast.\n\u2022 Miss Amy Atherton, who has\nbeen visiting her parents at Vancouver for the past two weeks, re,\nturns to Trail during the week-end.\n\u2022 Mrs. Walter Veitch of Fruit\nvale, visaed in Trail Thursday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Scott left\nThursday for Vancouver, holiday-\nbound. They will return to Trail\nin two weeks accompanied by their\ndaughter. Miss Ruby Scott, who has\nbeen vacationing there during July.\n\u2022 Gordon Irving returns this\nweek-end from a vacation at Corbin\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thompson\nand two children have returned\nfrom a two-week vacation at Nelson.\nThey were accompanied by Mrs.\nThompson's sister Miss Elsie Fowler.\n\u2022 Mrs. Harold Chaddock and\ndaughter, Miss Margaret Chaddock\nleft Thursday for Kimberley, where\nthey will spend their holidays, re\nturning to Trail during the latter\npart of August,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George Roots,\nAnnable, are visiting at Vancouver.\nSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 24. 1937.\nmwwtwwevapstm\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0     .-i i    \u25a0     -\u00bbi\nV. Questions V.\nANSWERS\nThil column of questions and\ninswen is open to any reader ot\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\n:asc- will the name ot the person\nisking the question be published\nW. W. W,, Nelson\u2014On what day was\nthe Great War declared?\nGreat Britain declared a state of\nwar to exist August 4,1914. She had\npresented her ultimatum to Germany August 2. A state of war between France and Germany had\nexisted since July 30, 1914.\nP .S. R,, Trail\u2014When was the great\nfire in London?\nSeptember 2-6, 1666 the year following the great plague. Four hundred streets ahd lanes were devastated and 13,200 houses destroyed, as\nwell as many public buildings,\nchurches, etc.\nR. T.. Rossland\u2014When and where\ndid Boxla originate?\nBoxla is Lacrosse played indoors\nLacrosse originated with the American Indians and got its name from\nthe stick used which is shaped something like a cross.\nH. C. Fernie\u2014Is there any    bird\nthat can fly backward?\nThe humming bird, of which there\nare about 200 species in America, is\nthe only bird that can fly backward.\nIt can also fly sideways.\nWrecked Plane\nLooted Fernie\nCompass,   Tools   and\nClothing Are\nMissing\nFERNIE, B.C.. July S3.\u2014Articles\nvalued at over $50 including a compass, tools, grease guns, jackets, a\nsweater and a bathing suit, were\ntaken by looters from the monoplane that made a forced landing\nnear here Wednesday,\nThe plane had ben standing overnight in a field, and when the pilots.\nF. Hawkridge and M. Lothian, returned to dismantle the broken undercarriage and propellor, they\nfound the articles missing.\nThe compass, which was valued\nat about $25, was bolted in the plane,\nbut the four heavy bolts had been\nremoved by the looters.\nvincial police at Nelson have been\ninformed. Wilbur is about 70 miles\nwest of Spokane. The police are\nchecking further for more positive\nidentification. Keys, a boot and a\nbelt comprised the basis of identification so far.\nStainton on June 10 left his home\nabout 1 p.m. to repair a water wheel\non the bank of the Columbia. He\nwas not seen again. The raft carrying the waterwheel broke away from\nits mooring but how the Castlegar\nman was lost was not apparent.\nDoukhobors a few miles downstream removed a pump from the\nraft, but no one was on it.\nMrs. Stainton and two children reside at Castlegar.\nALLAN, McBRIDE\nALONE IN GOLF\nJUn Allan and Ken McBride will\nstage their own battle for the junior\nmembers' trophy at the Nelson Golf\nand Country club Sunday.\nFriday saw no increases in entry\ninto the junior members' tourney,\nand accordingly there will be only\nthe one mat,:h. McBride is the present holder cf the trophy.\nInquiry Opens,\nDrowning Young\nTaghum Cyclist\nLouis Caronni of Taghum on Friday morning identified the body of\nhis 10-year-old son. Lawrence, as\none of the first steps in the coroner's\ninquiry into the death of the lad\nThe boy drowned when he fell from\nTaghum bridge recently as he attempted to mount, his bicycle, and\nthe body was recovered Thursday\nin Slocan pool. Taghum bridge was\nunder repair and railings had not\nyet been replaced.\nThe inquest, with Dr. H. H. MacKenzie, coroner, in charge, opened\nFriday morning with the jury viewing the body. It was then adjourned\nto Tuesday at 9 a.m. The jury consists of Richard Rowe. J. J. Binns.\nFrank Simms. Con Cummins. Leonard Batley and W. A. Manson.\n(heck Passer Is\nSentenced Two\nCharges Nelson\nSentenced at Grand Forks to 25\nmonths for obtaining money and\ngoods by false pretences, using a\nforged Associated Growers' check,\nRalph Blackwood, alias Jack Dun-\nwoody, was sentenced to jail on two\nterms in Nelson Friday. Divisional\nheadquarters of the provincial police are awaiting reports on other\nconvictions.\nBlackwood pleaded guilty to\nbreaking and entering the Associated Growers' sub-central at Nelson,\nwhere the checks and stamp used\non them were obtained, and pleaded guilty also to obtaining money\nand goods by false pretences by cashing a forged check at the Brown &\nCo. store. Nelson. He received six\nmonths on each charge, to run con\ncurrently with other sentences.\nTORONTO  STAR'S  EDITOR-IN-\nCHIEF DEAD\nTORONTO. July 23-ICPW. T.\nClark, editor-in-chief of the Toronto\nDaily Star, died today at his summer residence at Go Home. Mus-\nkoka. Member of a family of distinguished newspaper writers, he\nwas 70.\nLooking Backward \u2666..\nTEN YEARS AGO\nJuly 24,   1927\nNelson  mercury  reached  95  degrees, the highest for the season to\ndate.\n* *>   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Carr, and\ntheir two small children, Audrey\nand George, of Saskatoon were all\nseriously injured when the brak s\nof their car failed to hold when\nthey were going down the Taghum\nhill and crashed through the railing\nat the foot of the bridge.\n\u00bb   *   \u00ab\nA. T. Coleman of Argenta is a\nguest at the Queen's.\n.   *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Pollard are visiting in South Slocan.\nMr. and Mrs. George Atkinson\nleft for a holiday in Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Hamson and\nEmily-Hamson left on a motor trip\nto Spokane.\n* *   t\nJudge J. A. Form returned to Nelson from a lengthy visit to the coast.\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs. M. Butler.\nFairview ,at the Kootenay Lake General hospital, July 23. a son.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nJuly 24, 1917\nAlexander F. Kerensky. the man\nof the hour in Russia\u2014the man who\nearly in July started the brilliant\noffensive against the Germans and\n\/ istro-Hunganans in Galicia\u2014has\nbeen made virtually a dictator in\nRussia. An almost unanimous vote\nof council of workmen's and soldiers\ndelegates and the peasants' congress gave  \"unlimited  powers\" to\nthe new dictator.\n\u2022 *   *\nF. H. Faldmg of Rossland is a\nguest at the Hume.\n* \u2022   *\nTo extend and improve the road\nbetween Paulson and Christina Lake\nthe government, has granted $2500\nThe road is of great importance to\nthe Burnt Basin mines,\nBruce White, manager of the\nNoonday mine at Sandon, is a guest\nat the Hume.\nGeorge Boag and James Henderson of Greenwood have taken a\nlease and bond on some siver properties owned by J. A. Rendell in\nthe Lightning Peak district.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\nJuly 24, 1907.\nC. W. Young will take the place\nof Sergeant Wightman on the municipal police force wtrle the latter is\naway on his holidays.\nF. Patterson of Rossland is a guest\nat the Strathcona.\nW. Irvine left on a visit to Spokane-\nMrs   J.  D.  McDonald of  Grand\nForks is visiting her daughter, Mrs.\nJ. P. Paxton of Silica street.\nTrad smelter ore receipts for the\npast week were 6917 tons, while\nthose of the Hall Mines smelter here\nwere 144 tons.\nThe shortage of cars** for shipping\npurposes kept the shipments of ore\nfrom Rossland mines down during\nthe past week. Some 6788 tons of\nore was shipped.\nRe^mti\nINTERNATIONAL\nBaltimore 7, Buffalo 5.\nTrailite Deprived\nDriver's Licence\nCastlegar Court\nCASTLEGAR. B. C\u201e July 22-An-\ntonio Sandrin ot Trail, was fined $50\nand costs, and had his driving license\nsuspended when he was brought before R. A. D. West, stipendiary magistrate, on a charge of driving to the\ncommon danger, arising from an accident near Castlegar. June 9. involving Sandrin's car and one driven by Louis Watson. The case was\nadjourned several times.\nParker Williams represented the\ndefendant. Evidence for Ihe prosecution was given by Constable J. L\nSmith, Louis Watson. William Davidson and Nils Hansen, while evidence for the defence was given by\nSandrin, George Swedberg, Albert\nSchulli, Albino Bertalussi and Nicholas Mason, who were occupants of\nSandrin's car.\nTELEGRAPHERS OF\nDISTRICT HONOR\nCLOUGH, SLOCAN\nC. P, R Telegraph employees of\nthe district recently honored Walter\nClough of Slocan City, who retired\nJune 30, after 37 years' of service,\nwith the presentation of a chime\nclock inscribed with the words \"Presented to Walter Clough by the District C. P. R. Telegraph employees\nJuly. 1937.\"\nGeorge Wady of Nelson, made the\npresentation on behalf of the telegraph employees. He also presented Mrs. Clough with a beautiful\nrose bowl.\nBOY CHARGED\nWITH MURDER\nMAILLARDVILLE, B.C., July\n23 (CP)\u2014A 16-year-old boy, charged with the murder July 19 of\nhis father, Samuel Lamont Metcalf, was held In Juvenile Detention Home In Vancouver tonight,\nunder remand to July 30 after his\nappearance In Juvenile court here\ntoday,\nThe murder charge was laid\nfour days after British Columbia\npolice officers found the bullet\npierced body of the Ontario-born\nwar veteran lying before the Isolated log cabin near Port Coqult*\nlam, B.C.. where he lived with his\nwife, 16-year-old son and daughter\nShirley  15.\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls\"\nFAMOUS\nFOR ITS \u25a0\u00ab\nMILK\nClimate, soil, water, salt sea\nbreezes\u2014perhaps all united\n\u2014make Pacific famous, Specialists have spoken of it.\nBritish Columbia of itself\ndoes something which gives\nPacific a richness and flavor all its own,\nOur part lies in care and\ncanning,  and  we   pack\nunder vacuum s?al\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Course.\nBowker Postmaster\nat Kaslo\nKASLO, B.C.-G, D. Bowker \u00bb\nMirror Lake has been appointee\nto succeed the late O, P. Kan*), ai.\npostmaster of the Kaslo post office\nWant Ads Get Results\nHome\nImprovement\nCover your floors with Cottonwood Panels, and finish in\nlinoleum effect by dapple-art\npainting You will have a sanitary, duiable floor.\nDistrict Distributors:\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nTrail\nPicnickers\nIt is our wish that you\nwill have a most enjoyable time while in Nelson.\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING tt HEATING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nPhone 666\nP.O. Box 64\u00ab      313 Baker St.\nWELCOME TRAIL VISITORS\nKOOTENAY\nNO-ODOR\nWILL HELP\nJoin the crowd that gets a kick out of the things that\nsummer offers! Go places! Enjoy yourself. Look smart\n. . . and be comfortable in clothes that are properly\ncleaned for summer comfort. Enjoy the confidence that\ncomes with knowing you're properly attired. Be comfortable ... and trim looking ... in light weight clothes that\nKootenay No-Odor service keeps colorful and summer-\nright!\nKootenay Mo'Odor Dry Cleaning Co.\nPHONE 128 FOR QUICK PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE\nBRINGINC UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManui\n\"i    in 11 *iliaaaiiiiliMMMiM\t\n ,\u2014_ ;\u2014 ...\u25a0\u25a0..\n\u25a0\na.\n \"\"\u2022\"*\u2014\u2122.\"\nWmmimmW^mW*\nNELSON DAILY NEW*. NEUSON, B. C.-3ATURDAY MORNINO, JULY 24, 1937.\npaoi mam\nSerial Story ...\nLove is for Tomorrow\nCHAPTER 34\nfor the next few weeks Marcia\nwa\u00bb plunged into work that engrossed every waking hour. True to\nhia word, Garrett had given her\nmore than a fair chance to prove her\n> ability with his publishing firm, and\nihe was finding a genuine thrill in\nher wprk. No longer concerned with\ntho old:axloms for advertising\u2014to\ncreate an overpowering demand for\n, some item through various subtle\nappeals to pride, hunger, love or\nother vital emotion\u2014she no* was\nconcerned with interpreting fictional characters. Her prime aim was\nto capture the spirit of the author's\nstory,  to create  illustrations  that\ntONDON (CP) \u2014The Maharanee\nof Darbhanga, India, whose husband\nbought the Marie Antoinette 29-\nItone diamond necklace at Sotheby's\ntor $75,000, will wear it unaltered\nas the tragic queen wore it 175 years\nago.\nWELCOME\nto Nelson\nC.M.&S.\nEmployees\nHave a Good Time\nand Relax at\nTHE QUEENS\nHOTEL.\nand the\nSHAMROCK\nPARLORS\nP. Borsato C. Lapointe\nBy VIRGINIA 8CALLON\nwould make the story live and\nbreathe for the reader, Somehow\nshe relished the Idea of trying to\nsatisfy pople, rather than to make\nthem yearn for something they\ncoulcuvt or shouldn't have.\nWisely Garrett led Marcia into\nher new work gradually. Once he\nwas convinced she had the ability,\nhe gave, her .some broadsides* to\ndesign, a'dvance notices that were\nto go to book dealers.' Then he\ngave her short stories to illustrate,\nstories never.destined to be printed\nbut which served the Important purpose of training. Finally, he entrusted to her care the illustrations\nfor the lead story in their deluxe\nmagazine, \"Golden Era\", Marcia's\nefforts were rewarded for the drawings of amusing sophistication were\ndestined to find their place readily\nin the hearts ot the readers.\nShe had been working with Garrett slightly over a month, when\nshe realized suddenly that she had\nseen or heard little of Sandy. True,\nhe had called several times, but\nonly once had he brought the. conversation around to anything personal. That was when he asked\nsomewhat pointedly if she had \"anything new tb tell me\"? The. telephone was no place to, confide'romantic secrets, and furthermore\nMarcia had not forgotten her resolve to wait for Sandy to make the\nfirst move.\nIronically enough, she realized\nthat the work she was doing now\nmight more logically be combined\nwith marriage. It did not drain\nall her energy and enthusiasm as\ndid the more pressing commercial\nwork. At first she missed the ever\ncrowding deadlines, the hustle and\nbustle of the'agency. But gradually\nshe came to appreciate the unhurried hours when she was left to her\nown devices. Sandy had said he\nwas pleased with her new work,\nbut it seemed to present to him no\nchange of their problem.\nMarcia had established her office\nat home, and one day while experimenting with some color work', the\nbell jangled viciously. She jumped\nup and her irritation at the interruption vanished as she saw Ellen In\nthe doorway,\n\"Why, you old fraud! Where've\nyou been keeping yourself?\" and\nMarcia gave her friend some appraising glances.\n\"At least not on the shelf at\nyou've been doing. Why don't you\ncome out and mingle with decent\nfolk once in a while? You're too\nyoung to he a hermit.'' Ellen aald,\nputting het arm across  Marcia'\nslim shoulders.\n\"And then I haven't any beard.\"].!\nThere's always that drawback to\nbeing a hermit,\" the artist replied,\npulling out a chair and offering\nher guest a cigaret. \"Heavens, but\nI'm glad to see you. What's new\nwith you?\" She almost dreaded\nthe answer, remembering the Impasse Ellen and Tony had met in\ntheir married lives. Were they, still\ntogether?\n\"Well, did you know I was working again? With toother i agency\u2014\nthis time the Walthers company,\"\nEllen admitted. Marcia was more\ndisappointed than she wanted to ad-,\nmit, remembering Ellen's ardent desire to have a husband and a home.\n\"But Tony? Does he approve?\"\nshe asked, hoping she wouldn't find\nthe two had seperated.\nEllen took a long breath, then\ntold her how she had worked their\nproblem out to this solution: \"I\nseem to be a born manager, Marcia\u2014and Tony just won't be managed! ' When I wasn't working I\nwas making him my business, trying to make him do the things I\nthought he should. And with nothing else to worry about, I found myself imagining things he was doing,\nwith the result, well\u2014you know.\"\nMarcia nodded. She never could\nerase the horror of that night from\nher mind, when she and Tony had\nsat In the barren hospital halls\nwaiting to learn if Ellen would come\nback, to love and laugh again.\n\"I never did thank you for what\nyou did that night,\" Ellen said\nthen, realizing Marcia's thoughts.\n\"I don't think I could have taken\nthe trouble to fight back if you\nhadn't challenged me the way you\ndid.\"\n\"And so now you're decided to\ntake your managing out in ar\noffice, and just save Tony for loving?\" Marcia teased. In her heart\nshe thought it a good decision,\nthings .being as they were. .But\nshe resented the necessity that\nwould force El)fn back into an\noffice. \"It seems that we can't\nany of us do what we really want\nto do. You only wanted a home,\nyet you've found it best to go back\nto work. I wanted a home and\nsome outside interest, and \u2014 look\nat me!\"\nEllen inquired about Sandy and\nwas disappointed to learn that things\nwere no nearer a. settlement than\nbefore. \"You two kids need a good\nspanking,\" she said. And Marcia\nreminded her that it had taken her\n'[Maple Leaf Band\nin Trail Concert\nTRAIL, B. C., July 23-Maple I^eaf\nband directed by Tito Allega, at:\ntracteS a large audience at its concert program at the Memorial hall\nlast night.\nThe program follows:\n. March, \"Quadrato\"'\u2014 N.N.; overture, \"The' Italian in Algiers\" \u2014\nRossini; prelude, E. Terzeppo, \"L.\nLombardi\"\u2014Verdi; march, \"Oriental March\" \u2014 Orlando; grande\nselection, \"Marltana\" \u2014 Wallace;\nschott\u00bbche, \"Primo Laxiphonisp\"\u2014\nAllega; overture, \"Nabucco\"\u2014Verdi;\nmilitary march, \"The Kinsman\" \u2014\nAllega.\nAll Quiet on\nForest Front\nAll parts of the Kootenay-Boundary, in spite a{ the high fire hazard,\nhave been enjoying Immunity from\nthe forest fires of a serious nature,\nduring the past week. Some lightning fires were set by the last\nelectrical storm in this district, but\nthere are no fires of consequence\nreported to headquarters here.\nAbout the same conditions obtain\nin East Kootenay.\nPARIS. (CP) \u2014 Because the proprietress of the hairdressing shop\nwhere he was an apprentice failed to\nreturn his love, Charles Itonde, admitted in court he set fire.to the\nplace.\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., July,\n22, (CP)\u2014Six months imprisonment\nwas imposed on Frank Pavia by\nJudge F. W. Howay in county court\ntoday when he pleaded guilty to\nstealing a purse containing two dollars from a South Westminster summer home.\nWet Weather Ruins\nProcter Cherries\nPROCTER, B.C. - Picking and\npacking ot cherries In this district\nis now well underway. A great part\nof the crop hai been ruined by rain,'\ncausing splits.\nThe strawberry season hll prac-\nweather has spoiled the berries for\ntally come to an and aa tha wet-\ncrates.\nThroughout the season the crops\nwere reasonably good on all farms.\nJ. Dosenberger had the largest one\nday of picking which was eight\npounds short of ont ton.\nRaspberries are now ready for\ncrates and jam and by the close of\nthis week the picking should be at\nIts peak.\n\u25a0St Joseph's Academy\n' 628 Mill St., Nelson, B.C.\nBoarding and Day School\nfor Girls and Young Ladies\nPrimary. Elementary and High School Departments\n\"       rmal \" \"\"     \t\nPupils\nprepared tor Normal Entrance and Matriculation Examinations.\nAffiliated with the Catholic University of America.\nComplete courses in Music. Advantages in Athletics.\nAddress-SISTER SUPERIOR\nTerms Moderate\nFurther particulars given by tha SISTER SUPERIOR\nInquiries and Reservations Invited from out-of-town parents.*\nThe CITIZENS\nand the\nCORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF\nNELSON\nCordially Welcome\nToday's Visitors\ngrandmother and a regular comic I\nopera plot to bring them together in\nthe first place. \"But it looks as If it\nwould take grandma and all the\nking's horses and all the king's men\nthis time,\" she' etted.\n\"Well, what I came to fisk you\nprimarily Is to,have dinner with\nus tonight 'We're,'gohjg over; to\n\\he Ambassador to heefithe broad-;\ncast tryouts Mr a new national\naccount Walther is hapdling. It\nshould be a lot of fun,\" Ellen said,\nand wss relieved when Marcia\nagreed to come: Ellen felt the responsibility of Marcia doubly, since\nshe had been so Instrumental in\nsaving her from the consequences\nof her.own rash act With a sudden thought she said; \"Want to bring\nanyone to make a fourth?\"\nMarcia considered, then decided\nagainst asking Garrett. She'd been\nseeing too much of him lately, and\nshe feared things were rapidly\nreaching an unsought climax. Explaining the situation to Ellen, she\nexpressed a preference to come\nalone.\nThey went to dinner down in\nOlvera itreet the reconstructed \"Old\nMexico\" of Los Angeles. In the\nmidst of the towering buildings of\nthe city hall and the civic center,\nthese sprawling little buildings with\n.their authentic Mexican and Spanish faces were inviting. They\nbrowsed among the quaint shops,\nthen ate to the mellow music of an\nold guitar as a sombrero-clad troubadour sang soft songs,\nFrom the streets of Olvera to\nthe ultra-fashionable Grove was a\nfar cry, and the three friends felt\nthe difference in the atmosphere\nreflcted in themselves the minute\nthey entered the portals of the\nAmbassador hotel. Wending their\nway between stylishly gowned\nwomen arid hurrying men, they\nfound the special room reserved\nfor the audition. They were early,\nand Tony turned frankly to Marcia.\n\"Seems as if I hadn't really seen\nyou until now,\" ht said, and Marcia thought the same of him. In\nthe brilliant light of that room she\nsa**v new strength in his usually\ncarefree face, and a new respect for\nEllen in his reflective eyes'. Doubtless he had first been impressed by\nEllen's smart efficiency, and when\nshe settled into another role he lost\na certain esteem for.'her. Now that\nshe was once more back in her old\nworld, they seemed to h'ave'achieved\na new basis for understanding. Marcia thought gratefully that at least\nthey had their feet on solid ground.\n\"How is romance?\" he bantered.\n\"Hear you're working for a handsome and eligible young publisher\nthese days.   More power to you!\"\nDisregarding Ellen's warning\n. glance he went on to say, \"Well,\nI then you can't cry when the ex-\nboy friend steps out on hia own.\nIt's getting to be a pretty steady\ncombination, tha( P.aula-and-Sandy\naffair, See 'em everywhere I go.\nSuppose you gave him the go-by\nfor this other fellow?\"\nToo late Tony saw what he had\ndone, and though he tried to explain it most likely was \"purely\nbusiness\", Marcia felt he waa covering up. While she had been waiting around trying to find herself,\nthe ever watchful Paula must have\nmade good her threats. Paula, in-\n.stead of the rush of'business, probably had kept Sandy from Marcia's\nside these past weeks when she was\nso busily engrossed in her new\nwork.\nInstead of jealousy rising to claim\nher own as Sandy had hoped it\nwould do, Marcia felt a sense of\nfinal defeat. She couldn't. light\nSandy's intolerant attitude of her\nambitions, his jealousy, and Paula\nall at once. Thinking he might\nhave been fair enought to send her\nfinal \"evacuation notice\" if he was\ngoing to give Paula her place in\nhis . heart,, Marcia sat wide-eyed,\ntrying to keep the tears from\nsplashing down the front of her\nmost attractive blouse.\nJerking her head suddenly when\nshe heard her name called, she\nencouraged one traitorous tear to\nslip down her cheak. Smiling at\nthe newcomer she said with more\nwarmth than he'd* ever heard in\nher voice, \"Gary, \u25a0 I'm so glad to\nsee you!\"\n(To Be Continued)\nfrom\nTrail and Rossland\nOn behalf of the.Citizens of Nelson the desire\nis expressed that the 1936 Picnic of Employees\nof the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company will be more successful and enjoyable and\ngive even greater pleasure to the visitors than\nthe annual picnic last year.\nNelson welcomes its visitors not only because\nof the happy personal relationships which exist\nbetween people of Trail, Rossland and Nelson,\nbut because the employees of the Consolidated\nCompany represent the largest single industry\nin British Columbia and one whose successful\noperation means so much to Kootenay.\nJ. P. MORGAN\nMayor,\nROY SHARP\nAlderman, Chairman Finance\nCommittee\nH. B. LINDSAY\nAlderman,    Chairman     Fire,\nWater and Light Committee\nT. W. SLADER\nAlderman, Chairman  Public\nWorks  Committee\nA. C. RITCHIE\nAlderman, Chairman Street\nRailway Committee\nN. C. STIBBS\nAlderman,   Chairman   Parks,\nCemetery and Publio Health\nCommittee\nt. C. MOREY\nAlderman, Chairman Gas\nCommittee\nNOTICE\nto Drivers of Guest\nCars for Trail\nPicnic Today\nThis year, as in other years, drivers of guest cars\nwill confine themselves strictly to a definite route.\nIn the business district they will stop only at the\nBank of Montreal corner for the discharge and loading\nof guests for conveyance from and to Lakeside Park.\nIt is especially desired that they should not stop for\npassengers elsewhere.\nTravelling to the pajk the route will be eastward\nalong Baker Street and Edgewood Avenue. This will be\na ONE-WAY ROUTE from HENDRYX to VERNON.\nReturning from Park guest cars will travel by the\nsame route but westward until they reach VERNON.\nThey will then turn on to Vernon Street and travel the\nwhole length of the street until they reach RAILWAY\n' and BAKER. Thence to the Bank of Montreal to discharge guests and prepare to load again.\nCars will commence operations at 10 a.m. at the\nBank of Montreal, where they will be supplied with\n\"Guest Car\" placards by D. L. Kerr.\nJ. P. Morgan,\nMayor.\n\u2022 Reports Clyde Young, Emo, Ont!\n\"My Ford V-8 was purchased in December and Immediately driven 3000\nmiles through most trying conditions\n\u2014 snow-drifts three feet high In Northern Ontario. My gasoline consumption\n\u2014 most of which was at high speed \u2014\naveraged twenty-two miles to the gallon t\nOil consumption was not noticeable.\"\n\u2022 J. L. Stayers of Edmonton, Alberta,\nwrite* of his 1937 Ford V-8 Tndor\nSedan i   \"Pleated to say the ear ia\ngiving remarkable service ... am\ngetting an average of twenty-five\nmiles to the gallon of gasoline.\"\n\u2022 \"My gas mileage on a recent\ntrip on Vancouver Island, on\nwhich I covered approximately\nnine hundred miles, was greater\nthan twenty-five miles n gallon.\nThis covered all driving conditions \u2014 starting,  stopping\nand city driving,\" writes C.\nP. Ritchie, Vancouver, B. C.\n\u2022 Advises R. G. Rottlnff,\nMatsqul,B.C.,ofhi\u00ab1937\nScclhii! \"Cheeking the gas\nconsumption  at  four\nthousand miles, I have\naveraged twenty-five\nmiles to the gallon\nright through. Better\nthan I'd expected!\"\nmmtMeM^Zi'ixr\nmtiufttofMm^it*\n\u2022 The facts of Ford V-8\neconomy are confirmed by\nthe finding! of owners who\nhave mitten in from all over\nthe country.  Read the extracts from enthusiastic letters\nquoted here. Talk to people\nyon know who drive the thriftiest Ford in V-8 history. They\ntell us, and they will tell you, that\nthe Ford V-8 goes a long way on\nmighty little fuel.  Owner after\nowner reports 22 to 27 miles on one\ngallon of gas. Yon can't beat a car\nthat combines dependable V-8 performance with economy like this I\nThat's just another reason wliy tliil\nyear's Ford V-8 Is the quality car to\nthe low-price field. A demonstration\nwill convince you that it's your car.\nSee it at your nearest Ford dealer's.\nSeat your family in its roomy Interior.\nMake your own \"traffic test'.' of V-$\npick-up and Easy-Action Safety Brakes.\nEnjoy the Ford Centre-Poise Ride mak*\ning all roads smooth. Watch the fuel\ngauge. You'll find the Ford V-8 has\neverything you want in performance,\nsafety, comfort and economy I\nTUNE IN\nd Untvcr.1     ,  .\n._i.,E.D.9.T. Columbll Brcmrfcn.tlnl\nS-fitem, tttvrt Sunday.\nA MONTH, with reasonable down-pay\nment, buys any new Verd V-8 Car\nunder Traders Finance Nattaal Plan,\n*30\niV Cab ut tkej^^ntiee.\nQUEEN CITY MOTORS LTD\n\"SATISFACTION IS OUR AIM\"\n519 Josephine St.\n\"SATISFACTION 1\t\nNelson arid District Ford Dealers\nNelson, B.C.\nBroadway St.\nBUERGFS GARAGE\nNakusp and District Ford Dealers Nakusp, B.C.\nF. Nadon, Prop.\nUNIVERSAL MOTORS\nCreston and District Ford Deajers Creston, B.C.\nHANSON GARAGE CO., LTD.\nPhone 126      Cranbrook, Kimberley and District Ford Dealers     Cranbrook, B.C.\n216 Victoria St.\nFERNIE GARAGE\nFernie and District Ford Dealers Fernie, B.C.\n\u25a0.,.-.....J _,--\u2022.\u25a0,.-.'.\u25a0\". v.'\u25a0;,...,:.    ..:,.,;,......*':.,.,'    ,  :..   ..\u201e,_..,;.._  '.\u25a0'-*    *\nt.mtasBMsmmmaamaAmm\n tl EIGHT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. RO\u2014IATURDAY MORNINO. JULY M, 1\u00bbST.\n1     ,\nAT THE \"BAY\"\nTODAY-SATURDAY\nWomen's and Misses*\nSuits and Dresses\nGROUP 1\nFreshen your summer wardrobe with one of these smart\nwashable and. ironable frocks; are impeccably tailored\nwith pleats\u2014short sleeves\u2014self belts\u2014fahcy^buttons\nand novelty patch pockets. High or low *' '\nnecklines\u2014shirtwaist collars\u2014wide lapels and ties. Picnic Special\t\nfancy'buttons\nGR0UP2\nYou can be fashionably elegant and at the same time\nthrifty in these smart suits. Mannish styles\u2014single or\ndouble breasted types\u2014high buttoning jacket^ Semi\nfitted wih novelty pockets and belted\ntrims.\nPicnic Special \t\n|\"W\u2014\u25a0\u00bb\"\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb   \u00bb\u25a0\njackets. Semi\n$C.95\n's'eeontfTToor HBC\nWELCOME\nTRilL AND\nTKe 'LADY IN WHITE'\nIs a cool and refreshing picture under Nelson's summer,\nsun.* Imported polo jiggers\u2014the coat that goes smartly\nand gaily with frocks.in many colors. Little bow swig\ngers and full back styles; silk lined. Sizes 14-20.\nPicnic Special\t\nSecond Floor HBC\nMISSES'WAFFLE COATS\nSmart Jigger length styles that can be worn from morning\ntill night. Sizes 14-16 and-18. $1~49\nPicnkSpecial .., \u2022 \u2022\u00bb\t\nSecond Floor HBC\nMAY YOUR VISIT TO NtWON BE A\nPLEASANT OHiE\nThe management snd staff cordially Invite you to make\n\"Tha Bay\" your headquarters while in Nelson. ..\nMen's SUMMER SUITS\nGrey flannels, tweeds and worsteds in all the newest summer patterns.\nTailored in sport back, patch pockets,\nas well as the regular cuts.. Plain greys;\nbrowns, tawns and the* new summer\nchecks. Sizes 36 to 44. PICNIC SPECIAL\nMain Floor HBC\nne newest summer pattei\n$12.9\nMEN'S DRESS SHIRTS\nStyled by Forsyth. A large assortment of these smart, neat\nfitting shirts in checks, stripes\nand plains to select, from.\nChoke of fused, butto^oK\nor soft collars. Sizes\n14Vz to-17'\/2. EACH*?*\nQUALITY TIES\nA new'ail8?fment o? smart attractive ties for summer wear\nin wanted colors shown,\nelty checks and\nstripes. EACH ....\nMain Floor HBC\nINVESTIGATE OUR BUDGET PLAN\nPurchases of suits and accessories amounting to $15 or over: 25%\nat time of purchase; balance in 3 equal monthly payments.\n\u00a3very summerhat, It's,true! Just see them, that's all we\nask\u2014just see them! And we'll leave itto youffyou don't\nthink this is the finest array of^whife felts,, crepes ahd\nstraws you've ever seen. Hand blocked; new off.'t-bftfei\nbrims or open crowns. Head sizes 21 Vi to 23.\nPicnic Special\t\nSooond Floor HBC\nMEN'S\nUNDERWEAR\n79c\nBalbriggan combinations with short sleeves and\nankle .length ** legs%v..'..*...... .*..:.'..*.'.\u25a0.;..\nBalbriggan combinations with short sleeves and    Cft-\nknee length' legs ........... :.'..'....,*wtf*\nMen's silk combinations, buttontess styles. Colors QA-\nMain Floor HBC\nwhite and pirik ;.\nMfN'S qREY SLACKS\nFine all wool ffannffi panti, in Bi;orted iiades of frey.\nWide and medium width bottoms. An iJeal\nsummer pant, Sizes 30 to 42, PAIR\t\nMEN'S SWIM TRUNKS\nNeat fitting and good looking all wool swim trunks,\nassorted colors. Strong web belt and buckle. vi\"\nSizes 30 to 44. PICNIC SPECIAL r..........f1.\nMEN'S SPORT SHIRTS\nMen's summer weight polo shirts in a large range of colors and styles. Polo-laced and crew necks. Colors white,\nyellow, blue and fancy trims. Sizes 34 to 44\u201e        hQ\/\u00bb\nPICNIC SPECIAL         V?V\nMain Floor Hbd\n\"Lady Hudson\"\nCREPE and\nCHIFFON\nSheer, clear, permanently dull throughout, knit on\nringless machines of a fine high twist thread. Dainty\npanel heels..Colors include all the summer tones. Sizes\n8'A to lOVi'.' PAIR\t\n$1.00\n'FIRST QUALITY\n4 FULL FASHIONED\nCREPE SHORTEES\nFor cool knee-action and for longer wear. Sheer, clear with\npanel heel and reinforced heels and toes. Strong garter top.\nGood range of summer shades in sizes 8'A to-IOVi.\nPAIR\t\nGhiffon and Semi*Service\nYou can wel| afford to have more than one pair of these\nhose at such a low price. Substandards of a higher priced\nline but imperfections are very slight. AH summer shades.\nSi\u00abs 8'\/2 to,10'\/2. PAIR \u2022\u25a0 v\nWHITE LEATHER\nHANDBAGS\nYou certainly won't want to be\nany later getting your new\nwhite handbag. You will add so\nmuch smartness to your costume with one of these white\nleather bags. Nicely lined and\nfitted in a variety of smart\nstyles. Regular $1.95. JCVflfl\nPicnic Special \\\nMain Floor HBC\nSUMMER GLOVES\nAT A REDUCED PRICE\nRegular $1.00 and 79c\nGet your now! A marvellous opportunity to purchase\nsummer gloves at a saving. Fancy cuffs or plain slip-on\nstyles. Silk mesh, bengaline and chamoisette in\nof white, eggshell, beige, brown, navy. Sizes 6-8.\nPicnic Special\t\nMain Floor HBC\nBATHING CAPS\nWe have a wide variety of bathing caps for all.\nCrepe-Tex, plain pull-on\t\nCrepe-Tex, with chin strap\t\nRubber; helmet style .\"\t\nMen's diving caps\u2014Black only ..\nMain Floor\n19^\n391\n39*\n49*\nHBC\n BEACH BALLS \u2014\nTHEY COME IN CAY COLORS.\nHEAVY CUM RUBBER\u201412-inch.'\nEach\t\nCHILDREN'S\nANKLE SOCKS\nYou can well afford to\nhave one for each dress\nor sun-suit at this low\nprice. \"Lastex\" top or\nplain turn-down cuffs in\nplains, checks or stripes.\nRed, blue, green, yellow,\npink, sand, navy, brown\nand white. Sizes 6 to 8.\nRegular 25c and 29c\nPICNIC SPECIAL, 1 Cf\nPAIR  1<,L\nMain Floor HdC\nPICNIC SUPPLIES\nBe sure you are well supplied with alf your picnic\nneeds. You will find all\nrequirements in our notion department,\nPaper Plates, 12 for lOti\nOiled Paper Cups, 12\nfor 15<\nBakelite Drinking Cups\n(Large), each .. 15^\n2 Paper Tablecloths and\n12 Serviettes ... 15^\nPaper Serviettes\u2014\nPkg. Of 60 .....151\nWooden Picnic Spoons\u2014\nPkg. of 25 .... 15*\nPicnic Set\u20141 tablecloth,\n4 serviettes and 4\nplates\u2014\nAll for 15*\nMain Floor HBC\nSILK FLAT CREPE\n* To make way for the new fall stock, 500\nyards of pure silk c.wpe must go out. All\nthe dainty pastel shades for lingerie as\nwell as several dark shades. All 38 inches\nwide. Regular value 79c yard. AV) *,\nPICNIC SPECIAL, YARD ........ ***1'\nSecond Floor HBC\nINDIAN BLANKETS\nThe famous \"Nepahwin\" blankets in rich\nNavajo designs. Sateen bound, ideal for a\ncar seat cover; Sizes 60 by 80,\nPICNIC SPECIAL\t\nSecond Floor HBC\nCHINESE EMBROIDERED\nPILLOWCASES\nThese are the utmost in quality and value.\nEntirely hand made and embroidered in\nself-white. Cut work and madeira stitch\nstyles. Hand-worked scalloped ends. Size\n42 inches. PICNIC SPECIAL,    {lAA\nSecond Floor HBC\nPAIR\nSALE OF SHEETS\nWabasso Bleached Sheets in a size\n70x90. Regular value $1.39. <1 AA\n50 only to go at, EACH....... ipl-W\nSecond Floor HBC\nHEAVY CUM RUBBER\t\nEach\t\nHEAVY RUBBER\u20149-inch.\nEach\t\n10-inch.\n.00\n... ..79c\n 25c\nMain Floor HBC\nPRINTED SILK!\n300 yards printed petal and rough crepes\nat end of the season prices. Light and medium grounds with the season's smartest\ndesigns. All washable. Usually sold for\n79c 89c yard. PICNIC SPECIAL,    C(L\nYARD j;.., W?\nSooond* Floor H BC\n. GREY CAMP BLANKETS;\nSlightly substandard, these wfr*? bought\nat a heavy discount the* Benefit of which\nis passed on to'you. ideal blankets for\ncamp or home at a bargain price. Come\nearly for yours. PICNIC SPECIAL, EACH\n$1.49, \u201e m\nSecond Floor HBC\nINGUSH BEACH TOWELS\nday checks and novelty designs in good\nquality, absorbent terry. These come in\nseveral sizes and are real values at, Each\n15c 19c 25c 35c\nSecond Floor HBC\nA SPECIAL IN\nTERRY TOWELS\n600 high grade Pastel towels in a size\n20x40. A handy all round towel for the\nhome in 5 shades. 9^p\n8econd Floor HBC\nEACH\nBAGGAGE\n\"SPECIAL\"\n6 only Ladies' \"McBrine\"\nAeropacks. The finest value\never offered In this district.\nBlack or brown. Hangers and\nfolders for 5 dresses in a 20-\ninch size. CC (K\nPICNIC SPECIAL   ^.UO\nSecond Floor HBC\nSTRONG VACUUM BOTTLES\nWell finished in chromium and lacquer. Five shades.\nGuaranteed to keep liquids hot for 24 hours or       Of*\n\"\"\" \"Main Floor HBC\ncold for 72 hours. EACH\nWomen's\nWHITE SHOES\nShort lines taken from our regular $2^95 and $3.95 stock.\nTies, straps, sandals, pumps and oxfords\nare well represented in the group. Collectively all sizes from 3 to 8.\nPICNIC SPECIAL\t\nMain Floor HBC\n\u00ab1\u00bb\n^fciHft.%m (tmnmnji.\nINCORPORATED  2?? MAY 1670.\nNELSONITES AT\nBALFOUR\nI BALFOUR, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nS. S. Fraser, Mr. and Mrs. Tony\nBanks and Miss Leslie Fraser all\nof Nelson were Balfour visitors last\nfecck.\nf Mrs. A. Ling and daughters, Margaret, Mary and Dorren, are spending the summer here from Rossland.\ngtr. Ling expects lo join them here\n. ortly.\n' Mrs. Merz has recovered from tl>e\nblood poinsoning which aet In in her\narm. ,\nMrs. J. Heuston was a Nelson\nvisitor Wednesday and Thursday.\nV. Hoskin, Vivian and Vernon\nwere to Nelson Wednesday.\nRuth Conrad haa returned from\nspending a week at Ainsworth.\nMargaret Dodman, who spent a\nfew days at Boswell, returned Monday.\nRonald Seal has been having good\nluck fishing. The trout are rising\nwell.\nMiss Barbara Seal and Miss Mabel\nConrad are (pending a tew dayi it\nAinsworth.\nMorrl* Wellwood and Mn. Brenilson returned from Kamloops Wednesday accompanied by Miss June\nJones and Mrs. Maloney.\nCaptain and Mrs. Hartridge and\nNorah were Nelson Visitors Friday.\nMr. and Mra. Bright visited Mrs.\nE. J. Boyes Wednesday.\nE. J. Boyea arrived home Saturday.\nW. Blewer was a Nelson visitor.\nBalfour Ladies Church Guild met\nat the home of Mrs. H. Hudson. It\nwas the summer sale piecing meeting. Arrangements were made for\nthe sale In August. Those present\nwere Mrs. R. Seal, Mrs. W. Seal,\nMn, HaU, Mrs. Brenilson, Mrs.\nMaloney, Miss Jones, Mrs. Conrad,\nMrs. Cooper, Mrs. Shrieves, Miss Irwin and Mrs. Dodman.\nMr. and Mrs. Noakes went to Nelson Thursday.\nMr. Linden is a Balfour visitor.\nWant Ads Get Results\nReturn to Bonnington\nFrom Stampede\nBONNINGTON, B.C.-Mri. Gordon L. Thompson and Misa Elizabeth Thompson have returned from\na two weeks motoring trip to Calgary where they attended the stampede. They visited Banff and Windermere en route.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Noel Brown had\nas their guests at Corra Linn Sunday, Mrs. P. Gansner, Miss Elsie\nGansner and Leo Gansner of Gran\nite and Norman Beatty of Nelson,\nMiss Margaret Arthur of Nelson\nwas a guest of Mrs. Ronald Grcyson\nWednesday.\nMrs. E. Rennle of Vancouver was\na visitor here for a few week.;, a\nguest of her   brother-in-law   and\nsister, Mr. and   Mrs.   Collingwood\nGray-\nMrs. J. Duck was a Nelson visitor.\nMiss Molly Kirkpatrick of Willow\nPoint was a guest of Miss June\nBaddeley at Corra Linn.\nMrs. Maitland Harrison of Howser\nis visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Noel Brown at Corra Linn for.\nthe summer.* Mr. Harrison is expected to join her In a few days.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Riley made a\nstop over visit in Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. G. N. Brown, Mrs.\nM. Harrison and Miss June Baddeley were motorists to New Denver.\nColonel S. Goode was in Nelson to\nattend the mining convention.\nMiss Irene Denny and Miss Doris\nDenny of Willow Point have been\nguests of Mrs. G. Noel Brown for a\nfew days.\nMrs. Turner Lee was a Nelson\nvisitor Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Jerome vitta.\nNelson visitors Monday.\nMoyie Babe Dies\nMOYIE, B.C. '-**. Nirta KathleenJ\nSimmons, lOrfnonth-dld daughter Of,\nMr. and Mrs. Henry Simmons, died\nat St. Eugene hospital Cranbrook.\nJuly 4, following several weeks';\nillness. Funeral services were conducted by Rev. 0. Grondahl, Moyie,\nat Elko, July \u00bb.\n...   ^.^.:-..;: .:i'.*.        *,...*:*!.\n.^..-...*.,,.,. *\u2014, . ...... ......i.*^^,.*^.M^***j*^^^uitiiiiJ*mtii.,.. ...ajaiifti\n-\u2014\u20141*\"^ \u00bb\u2014\u25a0\u2014\n \u25a0lifP.l.pj-H.'J,\nN ELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, S. 6*-tATURBAY MORNINO, JULY H. TM7.\nPAQI NIN1\n07?SM# il&7^'\" ^\n. Kootenay's High School representative^ ot^\nCoronation, Sydney Horswillof Nelson,* travels in England and in Frahce-^-Sefci rhuch,\nlearns much\u2014Depicts tour with his camfera.\nKootenay-Boundary Industry Booster   Three \"Shorties at Fertilizer Plant\na\n.... \u25a0 .'*;*..*.\u25a0\niris \u25a0'\u2022 exhlb;\nbutldtng .\n\u25a0erman\nnd.\nDuring his tour, as representative of. the\nyouth of Kootenay, Horswill has won\nhonors. He has been called on to represent Western Canada at public functions,\nto make speeches,; to lay wreaths on soldiers' graves.* He l)as seen much of England, gained some understanding, too,\nof Europe at large.!\nTwo decks on this English bus, Cambridge\nA:*::*;*;;*: :\nParis exhibition from Eiffel tower\nBillHIHII i      -* * \u2022\u2022 f\" v,\u00ab.\u00ab*\n-\u00a3.*-   ttj   *   *   \u2022*.,*\u2022' >l*liJ*v.---i.1'-\nParis * \u00abxMbltl<m\u2014Freak design     |-'\n[      \u00abn root of building. |\n\u25a0ip**i.-;\nIn a Sidewalk of* In Paris\nButter market,'. Bliry St Ed'\n\" munds, Suffolk.\nHorace Simpson, official guide\nof C. M. It S. Co. holding beaker\nof liquid air at ammonia plant,\nwhere he demonstrates its magic\nqualities.\nridial and clock at Queens'\nCambridge\nGate  of  Porters  lodge,  Jesus\nCollege, Cambridge\nbilleted\nSquare, London\nIt's playtime for \"Pat\" when\nOuy Browpll, driver of Nelson-\nNokusp bus, arrives each day\nwith a parcel of Nelson Daily\nNews at Slocan Park. For years\n\"Pat\" has met the bus and carried the papers to the store.\nPhoto sent by H. L. Dickey, Slocan' Park.   \u2022\nHOW'S FISHING?\nHave you or your friends landed\nany big ones this season? If so,\nthe Daily News would be pleased\nto receive snapshots and publish\nphoto-engravings of them. Address\nto Picture Editor, Daily News, Nelson.\nNelson Daily 'News\nFirst With News and Pictures\nof Home and Abroad\ni. g.-*:.,.fc,* .;**J,.t*,fc;h*:u,.-;**a^  \t\n^\u25a0\u25a0^^\u2022^\nmm*\n'\u25a0\"\u25a0-l\"\"*\"'***^\nn^\n ^WipwwgpipiimuiiTii^-u.ixMi'^^1^1-^'1'^^\nLease Is Taken\nSeattle Claims\nat Grand Forks\nCalifornia Man Seeks\nHave His Property\nOpened Up\nRobert Clark of Kelsyville, Calif.,\nhas leased his mining property, the\nSeattle group, eight miles north of\nGrand Forks with a view to having\nthe property opened up so that engineers may inspect it more thoroughly, the Grand Forks Gaiette\nreports. The Gazette addai\n\"Mr. Clark was one of the early\nRHEUMATISM\nInn if yea ban M Stria m5 er.tr ink\nth. aloniiini, oripplioi pkioi t{ RUuDuttan.\ndon't d-Mpur. Thouj*ndi have found relief\nthtouih T-IW?.. Quick, lutim, ralMI\nT-tt*'. t\u00abt rid ol p\u00bbln \u00bbnd itMotM bv drivins\nMt th. mlstryMunnl teim. Quickly and.\nlumbago, Urn* b*wlt, uriatica, nwritii. ntural-\n|ia,tto. Mo*HidlUtdr-j*(-(i.tj,aTcrywhere. m\nT-R-C'ilTimpliton'l Rhiumatla C.piuln)\nsettlers ol Grand Forks and recalls\nwith interest his coming to the valley in 1890. He is a bricklayer by\ntrade and on his way here ha built\nthe Colville hotel at Colville, Wash.,\nwhich is still one of the substantial\nbuildings of that city. He claims\nto have cut the first trail up either\nside of the Granby river.,,,\n\"Producing agreements by which\nthe Seattle group was once sold for\n$1,000,000 and at anothei time for\n$100,000 Mr, Clark gives some Interesting early-day history of lawsuits\nin which the property was involved.\nHe also claims that the fine showings found by engineers on the Seattle had an important bearing on\nthe coming of the railway into the\nBoundary district.\n\"While here* he made a trip to his\nproperty on the North Fork and also\nlooked up oldtime friends in the\ncommunity. .\n\"Mr. Clark is now in his eightieth\nyear, but has the vigor and appearance of a man much younger, and\nrecently underwent a serious operation in a San Francisco hospital.\"\nNEW,YORK (CP) - Long-tailed\nbirds are coming on fall hats. One,\nfor instance, perched on a toque of\nmagenta velvet, is red, green and\nblack.\nCITIZENS OF\nTrail and Rossland\nWe Welcome You fo\nNELSON\nAnd trust that your picnic will be even\nmore successful than in previous years.\nBurns & Co,, Ltd*\nTha Home of Shamrock Hams and Bacon\u2014Bakeasy Shortening\n\u2014Qoldenloaf Cheese\u2014and all Hormel Products\u2014\nBaker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nITEUJOn DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B, C -SATURDAY H0RNIN6, JULY 24, 1W7.\nIS HONOR GUEST\nAT GRAND FORKS\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.-Mlas Marjorie Kidd was guest ot honor at a\nmiscellaneous shower given by Mrs.\nW. Gowans Tuesday. Mrs. J. McKie\nwon honors for bridge and Mrs. E. t.\nKidd captured the consolation prize.\nThose present were Mrs. T. A. Love,\nMrs. R. D. Kerr, Mrs. P. Scott, Mrs.\nI. Matheson, Mrs. E. I*. Kidd, Mrs. J.\nMcKie, Mrs..T. Walker, Mrs. I.\nBrenizer, Mrs. Bickerton, Mrs. A. B.\nWinters, Mrs. H, V, Knowles and\nMiss Marjorie Kidd,\nMrs. S. McCabe and son, Murray,\nleft Tuesday for Sturdee, B.C, to\nvisit Mrs. McCabe's son, Raymond,\nwho is C.P.R. telegraph operator\nthere.\nMrs. J. Willis of Farron il visiting\nhere.\nMrs. W. Rowald and children have\nleft for Vancouver.\nMaster \"Sonny\" Donavon and Doreen Donavon of Nelson are visiting\ntheir mother, Mrs, P. Donaldson.\nMrs. H. V. Knowles and daughters\nwere visitors to Christina lake Tuesday.\nMrs. Vernon Forrester and daughter, Lois, left Tuesday for a holiday\nat Vancouver,\nKitchener Gowans of Trail, who\nwas visiting his parents here for a\nweek, returned to Trail Sunday.\nMrs. Farron Archibald of Trail\nwho was here following the death\nof here father, Chester Mills, has left\nfor Cascade.\nMr. and Mrs. Dugald McPherson\nand family who are holidaying at\nChristina lake, are spending a couple\nof days here.  .\nTommy Walker, Ezra Henniger,\n\"Bud\" Eureby and Bim Reynolds\nhave returned from Koolaree where\nthey attended Junior boys' camp..\nTony Santano, who was visiting\nhis home here, returned Sunday to\nTrail.\nMr. and Mrs, T. Hartinger are\nvisitors to Spokane,'\t\nCOAST IS LOWER\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP).-\nSmall lasses were general in all lections at the close of Vancouver stock\nexchange today. Trading was quiet\nand confined mostly to oil Issues aa\ntransfers totalled 124,475 shares.\nMonarch Royalties led trading\nwith a turnover of 49,000 shares but\nclosed fractionally lower at 49V4\nOkalta Oil was down t at 2.26, Calgary and Edmonton 9 at 3.05 and\nVulcan 4 at 1.92. Calmont dropped 3\nat 72, A.P, Consolidated 2 at 37 and\nRanchmen's 1% at 28. Other oils\nwere from fractions to 2 cent* lower.\nSociety\nContinued From Page Five\n\u2022 A. O. Larson, M.E., ot Vancouver, who has spent the past\ncouple of weeks In town, has left\ntor Idaho.\n\u2022 A, C. Roper ot Johnson's Landing visited In Nelson Saturday.\n\u00bb Fred Beck, a iormcr resident\nof Nelson, now residing In Birming-\nton Wash., is holidaying In Nelson.\ne Mr. and Mrs. John Burns,\nStanley street have had as their\nguest, their son, Jack W. Burns, M.E.\nof Kimberley who has returned\nhome.\ne Mrs. Bud Rose of New Denver\nvisited the city Thursday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon' L.\nThompson of Bonnington (pent yesterday in Nelson.\na Mr. and- Mra. B. F. Whiteside, Victoria street, have, returned\nfrom Creston Snd Sirdar. They visited Mrs. Whiteside's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs, W, T. Sinister, in Creston\nand Mrs. Whiteside's sister, Mrs.\nE. Martin and Mrs. R. Heap, in Sirdar,\ne T. D. Edgar of Vallican visited\nthe city yesterday.\ne T. W. Ledingham, Vernon\nstreet, has returned from a visit to\nVancouver.\ne Mr. and Mrs. William Clark of\nYmir, their daughter, Miss Bessie\nClark, superintendent of the Royal\nColumbia hospital in New Westminster and the former's grandson\nof Trail spent yesterday In Nelson.\ne William Wiiwtanley was in\ntown from Crescent Valley yesterday.\ne Ian Malcolm has left for Victoria where he has been transferred\ne Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Affleck,\nMill street, have had as their guest,\nMiss H. M. Affleck of Vancouver,\nwho leaves today for Fruitvale,\nwhere her brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Boyd Affleck, reside.\n\u2022 Mrs. H. H, Pitts, pedar street,\nleaves today tor Victoria.\ne Mrs. Harpld Dow, Victoria\nstreet, has returned from Nakusp,\nwhere she visited her parents, Mr.\nand Mra, H, Aalten.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fitzpatrick\nand family of Trail are guests at\nthe home of. the latter's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. W. A, Hulty, Silica\nstreet.\ne E. J. McGregor of South Slocan spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 Mrs. G. T. Ironside, who li a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Norris, Fairview, leaves Monday for\nher home in Silverton.\ne Mrs. Watson of Appledale visited town yesterday.\na Mrs. J. H. Wensley was in the\ncity yesterday from Crescent Bay.\ne Mrs. Cam was in Nelson yesterday from Sirdar, en route to\nher home in Trail.\ne   Mr. and Mrs. J. Simons, Vic-\nROBSON SCHOOL\nPASS LIST\nROBSON, B.C.-The past lilt of\nthe Robson Superior School:\nTo grade 8 \u2014 Frank Humphries,\nAlie Innis, Phyllis Webster.\nTo grade 9\u2014Rex Thorpt.\ntoria  street, leave today lor the\ncoast\nt Mrs. R. Hopwood of Creston is\nexpected in town today to visit her\nbrother-in-law and stater, Mr. and\nMrs. B. F. Whiteside, Victoria street.\n\u2022 Rev. H. W. Guscott united In\nmarriage Catherine, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Martin,\nto Paul Hunden, son of Mr. and\nMrs. P. Hunden, June 30. They have\ntaken up residence at 912 Observatory street\n\u2022 Rev. H. W. Guscott united In\nmarriage, Mrs. M. Hauffe and Kurt\nWestfel, at a quiet wedding ceremony at the home of the.bridegroom. View street, Wednesday. Mrs.\nOtto Thomas and Herman Brecatl\nwere witnesses. A large group of\nfriends attended the wedding break\nfast <\nReturns to Silverton\nFrom Nelson\nSIVERTON, B.C. - Miss Annie\nCooper has returned after visiting\ntn Nelson tor a week.\nMr. and Mri. Shantz of Wanachee\nWash., are visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nL. Shantz here.\nJ. Munroe of Nelson was a visitor\nto town Sunday.\nMrs. A. Metcalfe of Nelson was\na week-end visitor to town.\nMrs. Condor of Penticton il visiting in town, a guest of her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Waterman.\n' Mr. and Mrs. B' Gibbert of Burton\nTo grade 10\u2014Pete Shukin, John\nBloodom, Viola Quance, Lyman\nMorrison, Rex Ballard, Perry Romano, Tom Lampard, Fred Zebln,\nElsie Innis.\nTo grade 11\u2014Betty Humphries,\nMelen Magee, Walter Houston,\nGeorge Speakman, John Horkoff,\nTed Foxlee.\nTo grade 12\u2014Stanley Dams, Jean\nBallani, Phyllis Watson, Walter\nThorp, Laura Lampard.\nRossland Social..\nwere  guests ot Mr, and Mrs. J,\nScaia for a few days,\nMrs. F. Hufty and Fay and Betty\nAnne returned to their home at Nelson after visiting Mrs. Hufty's\nmother, Mrs. H, Dlmcock, here.\nMilt N. Kay of Spokane II ipend*\ning several dayi in town, a guest o:\nMn. 3. Ironside.\nBUI. Wetterhuui of Nelson 111\nspending a tew dayi in town visit-J\ning relatival.\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B.C. July 23-Mlss\nNaomi Aebley of Vancouver Is a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. L. Nyman.\n\u2022 Mlsi Viola Gauston, who spent\ntwo months with her grandparent!\nat Westbridge, hai returned to Rossland.\n\u2022 Mn, A. Stanlow apd daughter,\nAngela, who spent six month's at\nVancouver, have returned to Rossland.\n\u2022 Mn. O. P. Callaghan find\ndaughters Molly and Dorothy of\nKimberley are renewing old acquaintance! here. Prior to her marriage, Mra. Calaghan waa Mils Irene\nSharp.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. John Berf apd\ndaughters, Eileen,. Lorraine' and\nDonna, have returned from a motor\ntrip to Seattle and Portland.\na Dliio BaratelH hai been visiting Colville.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. D. Harris of Penticton are visiting Rossland,\ne Mrs. E. Hobson of Powell\nRiver ii a guest of her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr, ahd Mrs. King\nCommesottl.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mra. R. Norris ef Vancouver are' holidaying at the home\nof Mrs. Norris' parents, Mr, .and\nMrs. F. M. Erskine.\nConrtlpatlon <\ni nil kind! of misery.\nClear It up by eating K.llogg'a All-Bran\nregularly. It auppllai natural \"bulk.\"\nYou need It. Try It I\nKeep  regular  with  \/ftt\u00ab^\u00ab\nALL   tf tt ftM\nNelson's New Refreshment Parlor Is Open\n\u2014 !     ,,   ,    ,    . '\u25a0\u2014\u2014-.  A ^ i\nNew Establishment at the\nAnnouncing\u2014\nTHE OPENING TODAY OF\nThe Allen Parlors\nNELSON'S NEWEST AND MOST\nUP-TO-THE-MINUTE\nLegal Refreshment Parlor\nON THIS OUR OFFICIAL OPENING DAY WE TAKE\nPLEASURE IN WELCOMING ALL\nTRAIL and ROSSLAND\nPICNICKERS\nWE WANT YOU TO HAVE A REALLY ENJOYABLE\n.   VISIT TO NELSON\nWhile in our City we invite you to inspect our new attractive refreshment\nparlors. In making the alterations, in the purchasing of equipment, and in\nthe interior decorating, no expense has been spared in giving you a parlor\nthat will be most pleasant to enter.\nE. PISAPIO, Mgr. MRS. C. PISAPIO, Proprietor.\nTHE ALLEN PARLORS\nLOCATED IN THE\nALLEN HOTEL\n308 BAKER ST. NELSON, B.C.\nAllen Hotel Is Bright and\nCheery; Lights Are Effective\nEmilio  Pisapio, Trail\nHotelman,atHelm\nNew Parlor\nSTAINED GLASS\nFOR ENTRANCE\nNelson's newest 'legal refresljment\nparlor', the Allen hotel, is opened\ntoday by Emilio (Curly) Pisapio,\npopular and well known Trail resident, who operates the Kootenay hotel at Trail.\nThe new parlor is attractive\nthroughout, Coast fir panelling on\nthe walls has been finished with oil\nand varnish\" in natural color, in the\nmodern note. Above the panelling\ncream wallpaper provides a bright\nand cheery finish for wall and ceiling. Inlaid linoleum in gray and\nblack is used on the floor.\nDecorative effects are particularly\nattractive. At the entrance brick\nand glass have been used effectively,\nstained glass being employed in a\nvariety of colors with,amber predominating and green, blue, red and\ni brown and clear glass forming the\ndesigns. Wide window sills are provided for plants.\nSemi-indirect lighting fixtures are\nbeautiful and practical.   In bronie\n! with peach glass, they  cast a mei-\n' low light both from the centre chan-\n] delier fixtures and from the   wall\n;   lightS.\nHidden panel lights are featured\n' over an archway dividing the men1!\n'. from the ladies' parlor; and over\nIhe bar.\nOne of the highlights of the  establishment is the bar Itself,   described as one of the finest in  the\ncountry.   It has been built around\nne old-time bar formerly   in   the\nHiilding, cut down and modernized,\n\\ three-sink compartment is a feature.  It provides constantly   clean\ni water for rinsing glasses. Three beer\nJ taps and two   long copper drain-\nj boards will permit two men to draw\nbeer at the same time during  rush\n< periods.\nImmediately behind the bar is the\nglass-front cupboard for bottled\nbeer, cooled by the refrigeration\nunit housed In a concrete addition\nimmediately behind, Barrels ot\nbeer will be stored In a box within\nthis concrete addition, the box being \"half-metal lined.\"\nCOBALT, Ont. (CP)-Thla town's\nthree-year tax feud with Chief Justice F. R. Latchford waa ended by\nacceptance of a $500 offer by the\nJudge's solicitors. The town had a\n$1,150 verdict but the judge got permission to reopen the case.\n\u00bb\nHe's Much Belter\nKnown as'Curly'\nPopular Trailite Isa\nHockey, Baseball\nTeam Sponsor\nEmilio Pisapio, of Trail, manager\nof the new Allen hotel beer parlor,\nIn Nelson, will answer your question a whole lot quicker if you call\nhim \"Curly\", for it is as \"Curly\"\nhe is known all over the district.\nActive in many fields in Trail,\nhe is widely known. He is a member, among other organizations, ot\nthe Trail Gyro club, Trail Elks, So-\ncieta Crlstoforo Colombo, and Trail\nCurling Club.\n\"Curly\" is also well known for his\nsports sponsoring. His Cubs are\nprominent in men's softball, and\nteams of the came name are always\nin action in baseball, hockey or other\nsports, mostly in midget, bantam,\nor Juvenile.ranks.\nWant Ads Get Results\nOnce Again\nStandard\nElectric\n^ LOOKS AFTER THE\nElectrical\nInstallations\nWe take pleasure In congratulating \"Curley\" on\nhis fine new refreshment\npaclors. ,.\nWELCOME\nCMASa\nEMPLOYEES\nThat You Will Have a Happy Holiday\nond Successful Picnic Is the Wish of the\nGolden Gate Gafe\nTHIS YEAR WE HAVE  A  SPECIAL\nTREAT IN STORE FOR YOU WITH OUR\nPolaivlgloo\nIce Cream\nMADE RIGHT ON OUR OWN PREMISES WITH\nOUR WHIRLWIND ICE CREAM MACHINE\nOur many new and delicious flavors\nmake Polar Igloo a popular favorite\nwith everyone.\n\u25a0\nAll Plumbing\nInstallations, Fixtures\nAT THE ALLEN PARLORS\nWERE INSTALLED BY THE\nB.C. PLUMBING\n& HEATING Co.\nPhone A. S. Hunden & Sens Nelson,\n181 Authorized Agents for Ourney Ranges B.C.\nCongratulations\nTO THE NEW\nAllen Parlors\nON THEIR OPENING TODAY\nTHE KELVINATOR ELECTRICAL\nREFRIGERATION\nwas all supplied by\u2014\nKootenay Music House\nPhone 585 Nelson, B.C.\n1\nCongratulations\nTO THE  MANAGEMENT\n<\nOF THE\nAllen Parlors\nON THEIR OPENING\nTODAY\nAll Alterations Throughout This Attractive\nParlor Were Carried Out by\nInterior Construction\nCompany, Limited\nPhone 894 Nelson, B. C. Box 579\nI\n>, ,!l..j.i.*(**'-*,:.\n_'., ..*.'\u25a0;:,\u201e\u25a0 *;>\u201e'\u25a0 *..,\u25a0..* :,.*.,.\n. .\t\n\u25a0   \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\" - \u25a0\u25a0    \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0-\n\u25a0 ~ - - \u25a0 tm^IBmlm\n\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'---\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0-\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\n__-\nee^eemem\n-___\u2014\nHjgj^^jjg-yyjjglll\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 24, 1937.\nmmmm.\n\u25a0 PAGE ELEVEN\nHot   Weather   Brings   Joys\n453\nBeach Parties a Summer Delight\nHe Tried Out\nuVp There\"\nm\nPrairie Girl Here\nThe beaches on the West Arm ot Kootenay\nLake come into their own at this time oi the year.\nHere's a typical happy scene. Boy with dog, Warren Ferguson; rear, left to right. Miss Gaie Daw\nson, R. W. Dawson, Jimmie Dawson, Mrs. R. W.\nDawson. To right of picture reading from rear, Mrs,\nW. W. Ferguson, Mrs. E. A. Ferguson, Miss Joan\nFerguson, W. W. Ferguson.\nMiss Sybil McLean, charming daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. D.\nMcLean of Nelson, on her day to Lakeside Park Bathing beach,\nSend in Your\nSNAPSHOTS\nThousands of readers enjoy pictures in the Nelson\nDaily News.\nCasts Quizzical Eye\nSunshine, Bathing, Sport\nBoys Make Merry at Koolaree\nMiss Ann Woods of Saskatoon, Sask., Is a leader among holiday-makers at the Ainsworth pool.\nGrandparents In Nelson\nCarl MacPherson nil Saskatoon, Sask.. takes a look at the camera\nwhen it catches him bathing at Ainsworth, B.C.\nKnown as one of Alberta's best\npitchers, \"Lefty\" Mydansky, above,\nhad a big time tryout with Boston.\nA newcomer to Nelson, he has been\nout of recent games owing to arm\ntrouble, the bane of a pitcher's life.\nREAD THE\nDaily\nNews\nAt Nakusp\nA characteristic pose of John Llewellyn Cartmel, son of Mr. and\nMrs. Ed. Cartmel, now located at Atlin. This is John's first anniversary.\nHis grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John Cartmel and Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Horstead.\nPhotogravlng In Nelson\nKoolaree camp fraternity members at the record\naim at the mountain top back of the camp.\nBack row. left to right\u2014Bob Beatty, Nelson,\nBrick\" Edmunds, Trail; Bill Affleck, Fruitvale;\nfalter Thompson, Nelson; Angus MacDonald, Trail;\nJarlyle Ferguson, Nelson; Garry Bowell, Nelson;\njubby Gore, Nelson; -; Len Ferguson.\nFront row, left to right\u2014\"Butch\" Urquhart,\ntossland; Albert Nioolls, Rossland; Fred Robbins,\nYew Westminster, Bruce McKenzie, Rossland, Rus-\niel Jones, Trail;  ; Ralph Stinson,\nlossland; and Hugh McLeod. Trail.\nIn foreground\u2014on left, Gilbert Smillie, Nelson;\nm right, Lewis Jones.\nGroup at Camp Koolaree\t\nBack row, left to right\u2014Doug Gray, Trail;\nKen Jones, and Jim McLeod, Trail.\nSecond row. left to right\u2014Cyril Bird, Camp\nLister; James Ritchie, Nelson; Stewart Mcintosh,\nNelson; Bruce McKenzie, Rossland,\n' Front row \u2014 Albert Nicolls, Rossland; Mrs.\nJames Ritchie, Nelson; Hugh McLeod, Trail; George\nWilson, New Westminster.\u2014Pictures by Doug Gray\nof Trail.\nVS. Forester\nVisitor Here\n\"Hello Birdie\"\nM. LaRue and Joan Brown as\nJohn Bull and Britannia at Nakusp Coronation Day celebration.\nAnother modernly equipped department of the Nelson Dally News. It\nIs where plates are made for illustrations. From a photo is made a zinc etching from which after stereotyping, the printing is done. At work is William _\nRamsay.\nCHARLE8 H. FLORY\nsupervisor of Mount Baker\nnational forest with headquarters at Bellingham, Wash.,\nattended all the mining convention functions at Nelson\nand Trail.\nLittle Shirley Oxenham of\nNakusp. A daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Ernest Oxenham. She\nwaves at a bird in her parents'\ngarden.\nHome Moreofthe Men Who Were Kootenay Pioneers\nBalfour Pioneers\nSplash! Splash! ! at Trail\n\"*      ,     \"p-i\n' '-Html\nHflpHX -^^h\nWW '  \"HI\nV   ' 'Hi\n1   \u25a0'-'\u25a0\nmy isfl\n\\   XT    iH\n\u2022J? \u25a0% '\n''ft^v-^Ba&lHi\n\u25a0.:-\nVkJPIflir\n11 HI\nRemember Charlie Benedict, who used to run the grocery store at the corner ot\nSilica and Josephine streets. Nelson? He's In California now.\nHere's Pete Emerson, oldtime Nelson hotelman always ready with one on the\nhouse\u2014and did his glassware shine.\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. McKay of\nBalfour, B.C., in their apple orchard. Their Balfour home was\nsurrounded by woods when they\nmoved to it on July 1, 1905. The\n* only outlet was by logging trail\nIt may be hot, but you would hardly know it at the bathing pool\nat Trail Memorial hall. Its a busy spot from morning to dark and\nmakes you feel cooler even if you just look at the happy crowd.\nto the West Arm. Mrs. McKay is\nthe oldest pioneer woman resi\ndent of Balfour. \u2014 Photo supplied by Mrs. W. B. McKay.\ntO.SWoW--  K.Compkll- O.Tufnfr-C.F.lU'Wiyntoyor-Q.VXoriwill\" VfiUCwtViffg- LH.CHoqw%\"-\n. jmcAior \u00ab* Council \u2022\u00bb C.tu \u2022'\n.    \u25a0 *  -4\u00a7Sf-*\nAlderman L. H. Choquette, W. M. Cunliffe. A. D, Emory, Mayor      C. F. McHardy, Aldermen George Turner, John Bell, C. D. Shaw.\nAldermen C. D. Shaw, Kenneth Campbell, Ge\u00ab*3e Turner, Mayor   C. F. McHardy, Aldermen A. S. Horswill, W. M. Cunliffe, L. H. Choquette\u2014Photos by McGregor.\n mmmmmmwwwm.\nmffm^immirrWmimmmWw^\nmumwrnmim\nR*-*Hf^iWM>i\u00bbi^w\nPAGE TWELVE\t\nN. Denver School\nPromotions\nNEW DENVER, B.C.\u2014List ol promotion* at New Denver school:\nTo grade 5\u2014Jimmy Vandergrift,\nRobert Christopherson, Mary Caf-\nlelle, Marjorie Meers, David Crellin,\nCliMord Picard.\nTo grade 4\u2014Anne Brady, Walter\nMeers, Merle Tattrie, Eugene Nesmith, Dorothy Gunn, Joyce Thring,\nFrank   Broughton,  Joyce   Vander-\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 24, 1937.\ngrift.\nTo grade 3\u2014Dawn Shannon, Clifford Elser, Alice Powell, Colin\nChristie, Alan Francis.\nTo grade 2\u2014Frances Burkett, Irma\nMathieson, Frances Hawthorne, Ernest George, Sidney Tarron, Nancy\nHarris (not ranked), Jane Rose (not\nranked).\nPrizes were awarded to Alan\nFrancis and Ernest George for perfect attendance. Clifford Picard and\nWalter Meers won prizes for the\nbest Georgraphy projects in their\nclasses.\nEugene Nesmith and Joyce Vandergrift won the $2 and $1 prizes\noffered by the Women's Institute\nTrail and Rossland\nPicnickers\nWe Welcome You to Nelson\nWE HAVE A REAL TREAT FOR\nYOU IN OUR\nCHOCOLATE\nMILK\nThe Kiddies love it... no picnic party\nis complete without it.\nHOPING YOU WILL HAVE AN\nENJOYABLE OUTING\nKootenay Valley Dairy\nfor the pupil making the most progress during the term.\nDorothy Gunn, on behalf of the\nclasses, made a presentation to Miss\nOlsen.\nPassed on recommendation into\nhigh school \u2014 Hazel Flint, Lizzie\nMeers, Hilda Crellin, Florence Picard. Dagonar Olsen .Olive Tattrie,\nStanley Aylwin, Leslie Balbirnie.\nPromoted to grade 8\u2014Margaret\nBroughton, Barney Johnson, Marjorie Francis, Frank Tarron, Oliver\nJohnson.\nTo grade 7 \u2014 Cory Johnson,\nBlanche Meers, Sam Picard, Fred\nGreer, Peter Browne.\nTo grade fr\u2014Marguerite Campbell, Lesselk Balbirnie, Norma\nBroughton. On trial, Hazeldeane\nNelson, Charlotte Johnson.\nPerfect attendance\u2014Lessels Balbirnie, Margaret and Norma\nBroughton, Barney Johnson, Frank\nTarron.\nWinners of the Women's Institute\nprizes were Marguerite Campbell \u00ab2;\nDagmar Olsen, $1,\nHonorable mention for W.I. prize\n\u2014Sam Picard.\nWell Known\nResidents of\nSouth Slocan\nReturns to Arrow\nCreek Home\nARROW CREEK, B.C.-T. Feidler\nis home from picking strawberries\nat Wynndel.\nV. Ingram of Claydon Sask., is\nvisiting his father and sister of\nArrow Creek.\nMr. Smith and E. Merritt are\nworking on a post contract for L.\nOlsen.\nMrs. Ed Cardinal and baby\ndaughter are home from the Creston\nhospital.\nMr. Henke of Battle River, Sask.,\nis at E. Cardinal*.\nMrs. C. Jorde has left to Join her\nson at Greenwood.\nMr. Gans purchased a ranch in the\nvalley and moved his family last\nweek.\nDraper and Penwill\nRinks Bowls Victors\nBowling rinks skipped by Jack\nDraper and E. Penwill climbed another notch in the Argyle cup competition of the C.P.R. Bowling club\nlast night with respective wins\nof 13-9 and 15-12 over J. Armstrong\nand F. E. Wheeler squads.\nTeams in order of skip, third,\nsecond and lead, were: Draper, F.\nLang, F. Davis and E. Stangherlin; Armstrong, W. T. Calbick, C. I,\nArchibald and A. T. Richards; Pen-\nwill, H. Sutherland, W. Wood and\nLang; and Wheeler, E. L. Wright,\nC. F. McHardy and J. Graham.\nMiss Dunnett Returns\nFrom Windermere\nLAKE WINDERMERE, B.C. -\nMr. and Mrs. Dunnett of Nlson were\nrecent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray\nBall. Miss Peggy Dunnett, who has\nbeen visiting Miss Margaret Ball,\nreturned to Nelson with her parents.\nThe portion of road across Schoo-\ncumchuk prairie in this district is\nalmost completed.\nMrs. Doctor Coy, Filmer Coy,\nSandy Dobie and Herb Blakley at-\ntnded the Calgary stampede recept-\niy.\nP. C. Ferguson, who taught at\nWindermere school last year, has\nleft for the coast and summer\nschool.\nJ. G. Galloway, mining engineer\nand chief mineralogist for the province, has been in the district Inspecting the \"Mineral King\" mine\non Toby creek.\nH. L. Batten of Vancouver has\nbeen in the district prospecting different mining properties including\nthe Paradise mine.\nW. J, Galliford of Calgary was in\nInvermere recently.\nMiss Peggy Dunnett of Nelaon,\nMargaret Ball, Bud Lee, Warner\nNewton, Dorothy Tegart, N. Collin-\n,son, R. Tobiasen, and R. Bradshaw\nhiked to the top of Swansae mountain, one of the 'lookout' points, recently.\nVISIT EDGEWOOD\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.-W. G. Wtt\nkins, A. S. Hatfield, W. R. Long am\nA. F. Cumming, all from Pentictol\nrow Lakes hotel,\nwere visitors Saturday at the\nVisitor at the Whatshan lake to\nthe week-end and during the pai\nweek included Dr. and Mrs. Mul\nof Trail, Mr. and Mrs. Udal\nfamily from Pioneer, Arthur Gre\u00ab\nwood, Trail; Ferf Poole, Lumbal\nton, I. R. Poole, Vernon, and \"\nFyfe of Trail.\nMrs. R. A. Yeld is at her sumny\ncottage at the Whatshan lake.\nWhy Not a Want Ad\nROBERT  ELLIOTT\nenjoys the summer weather\nTrail and Rossland Visitors\nNelson's Pioneer Fuel and Transfer Business\nWelcomes YOU to Nelson\nEnjoy Yourselves and Be\nSure to Come Again\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE 33 ESTABLISHED 1899      NELSON, B. C.\nC.  G.  FENWICK\nis a pioneer of the settlement\nSlocan Park Folk\nLeave for U.S.\nSLOCAN PARK, B.C.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. 0. Storbo and sons, Theodore\nand Elmer, have left to visit relatives in Minnesota and later in\nSask.\nMrs. P. Hilarowich and Mr. and\nMrs. Pen Baskin of South Slocan\nwere visitors to Slocan Park Tuesday, guests of Mrs. Max Baskin.\nMiss Barbara Perry of Passmore\nwas a visitor to Slocan Park Tuesday.\nPat Verigin of Arrowood, Alta.,\nis visiting Slocan Park.\nMrs. Walter Dams of Castlegar\nand Lyrell and Dorothy are spending a couple of weeks with Mrs.\nDam's mother, Mrs. A. D. Crebblin.\nWELCOME\nTrail and Rossland\nVISITORS\nMay we take the opportunity of extending to you all a hearty welcome to our city,\nand we trust you will enjoy the attractions and recreations that Nelson offers.\nIf you are driving to Nelson, make our garage your headquarters, where you ara assured of first elan service and\ncourteous treatment. We can show you a very nice line of USED CARS and TRUCKS, and will be pleased to demonstrate them to you at your leisure. Look over these and note our LOW PRICES.\nPASSENGER CARS\n1931  DeLuxe DE SOTO SEDAN with trunk.\nLike new   $475\n1936 DeLuxe D0DCI TOURING SEDAN\u2014\nLike new    $975\n1934 CHRYSLER DE LUXE SEDAN  $800\n1935 PLYMOUTH DE LUXE COUPE  $775\n1928 WILLYS-KNIGHT SEDAN\u2014Like new .. $300\n1929 CHEVROLET SEDAN   $250\n1929 FORD COACH   $175\n1930 FORD SEDAN    $199\nSTAR TOURING: Like new. Guaranteed in\nfirst class condition\t\n$90\nCOMMERCIAL TRUCKS\n1933 INTERNATIONAL PANEL  $575\n1932 FORD PANEL  $425\n1931 \u00bb\/i-TON C.M.C. PANEL $250\n1932 CHEVROLET\u2014Vi-ton  $375\n1934 CHEVROLET\u2014'A-ton   $575\n1927 CHEVROLET\u20141-ton   $100\n1928 CHEVROLET\u20141-ton   $128\n1933 INTERNATIONAL\u2014Vz-ton    $600\nHUPMOBILE LIGHT DELIVERY\u2014In good\ncondition  \t\n$85\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nPHONE 119\nLIMITED\nChrysler \u2022 Plymouth  Distributors\nNELSON, B. C.\nTHE BOYS AND GIRLS PAGE\nfWith the\nmzzm\nEDITOR\nLots of boys and girls are going\ncamping these days, so our cross\nword puzzle takes shelter this week\nin a tent.\nUNDER  CANVAS\nDefinitions:\nHORIZONTAL\n2. Kadio distress signal\n4. Peg for fastening a tent\n6. Noise made by a pigeon\n7. Tavern\n9. Exclamation\n10. Young dog\n12. Upon\n14. Amount   (Abbr.)\n16. Gardening tool\n17. Blemish\n18. A canvas shelter\nVERTICAL\n1. South American serpent\n2. Cease\n3. Omit\n4. Therefore\n5. Half an em\n6. A community of tents\n8. The middle of th*! day\n!). Possesses\n11. We\n13. Snare\n15. Toward\n16. Pronoun\nlOSERS\nEach of the terms In the column\nto the left is commonly used fn one\nof the studies or branches of learning in the column to the right. Can\nyou conect each term with the study\nIn which it is used?\n1. Sine Physiology\n2. Divisor Geometry\n3. Dynasty Chemistry\n4. Parse Trigonometry\n5. Pitch History\n8.   Hypotenuse          Arithmetic\n7. Larynx Physics\n8. Molecule Grammar\n9. Isthmus Music\n10. Inertia Geography\nModern Mother Goose Cutouts\nPeter Pifer picked a peck\nOf pickled peppers, so I've read;\nBut say it fast, and you'll agree\nHe picked a lot of P's instead.\nRIDDLES\nThe five riddles below are tough\nones to guess. But you riddle fans\nhave had lots of practice, so let's\nsee what you can do with them.\n1. What kind of fruit does the\nelectric plant bear?\u2014Reyna Cooper.\n2. I've seen you where you never\nwere,\nand where you ne'er will be,\nAnd yet you in that very same\nplace, may still be seen by me.\n\u2014Robert D. Wayne Taft.\n3. Why does a chimney smoke?\u2014\nNitia Lou Leverette.\n4. What factories if closed would\nprevent many strikes?\u2014LeRoy Albright.\n5. What is the differerrce between\na carpenter and a pint of milk?\u2014\nJean Jackson.\nAnswers to\nWednesday's Puzzles\n1.   Inch, add A. form    Chain\nReap, add P, form Paper.\n2.   Crossword Puzzle Solution.\nmm m wm\nra mmwm \u00ae\nm mm mi\nmm\u00ae \\mm\nm    mm\u00ae\nmm\u00ae w\\mm\nwm mm am\na mmm \u00ae\n\"Why are you eating with your\nknife?\"\n\"My fork leaks.\"\nCaring for Your\nPets\nBy Horace Mitchell\nA Lesson for Becky\nRebecca, the Doberman-Pinscher,\nhas had a series of'pretty stiff lessons lately. They worked so well\nthat I'll tell you about them; then,\nperhaps you can use them on your\nown dog.\nThese Dobermans are mighty intelligent animals, but some of them,\nincluding Becky, are terribly headstrong. They want to do just what\nthey want to do, and nothing else.\nAnd you fellows and girls know  as\nv^v^f^T\n*i\u00bb wjy\njBBj\nV^SR^*^^\nJ\\   T ^Ss*^~^._.\nBeck wouldn't pay the slightest\nattention to repeated calls\nwell as I do that dogs can't act that\nway all the time.\nOut in the field by the house,\nBecky would get to playing with\nSkippy, the mongrel, and wouldn't\npay the slightest attention to re\npeated calls and whistles. Something\nhad to be done about that. She was\nalmost two years old. I hadn't done\nmore than give her very simple\ntraining up to then because I think a\ngood many times dogs are trained\ntoo young, and are thus spoiled.\nDoei as She Pleases\nBeck would lead well on a leash\nShe would heel fairly nicey, too. Bui\nonce free, it was another matter; she\ndid what she peased.\nSo we hatched a plot to cure her\nAbout ten feet of clothesline was tied\ninto a slip knot at one end, which\nwas looped over her head. A bow\nHne w&s put in the other end. Then\nwe went out to the field.\nSkippy came along, too, barking\nand hunting for sticks to chase. I\nkept Beck close to maand let Skippy\nrun after a stick for a while. Then\nBecky was given more rope and told\nto go ahead and chase Skippy. When\nshe was six feet away I whistled,\nLittle Gem Fly Eradicator\nIs Latest Goofy Invention\nProfessor M. T. Noodle, whose\nbrain has more waves than the\nPacific Ocean, haa just come forward\nwith a new invention which will\nmake summer a pleasure and fly-\ntime a meaningless expression.   It\nin the Little Gem Fly Eradicator,\nwhich Is guaranteed to be a simple\nand fool-proof device for ridding\nyour home of warm weather's greatest nuisance.\nThis neat little machine can be In\nstalled in your living room in something like an hour and forty-five\nminutes, with no outside help except\nthree graduate engineers, a carpenter, six or seven husky laborers, and\nloud and sharp. She kept on running. Another whistle. When she\ndidn't stop, the rope was hauled\ntight,\nAnd then, right in the middle, it\nbroke! I went into a nice back\nsomersault and Beck went on running. But in fifteen minutes I had\na 35c hank of new clothesline from\nthe store. This was fixed up the\nsame way. There were fifty feet\nof it.\nFurther Experiments\nBeck started to run. She was going at full speed when I whistled.\nShe kept going. Another whistle. No\nresult. The end of the rope had\nreached my hand. I grabbed it and\nIhe jerk of her speed almost pulled\nmy arm off.\nSo we tried it again. And this\ntime it worked. At the second\nwhistle, which she did not mind,\nBeck was thrown backwards good\nand hard.   She came flying to me.\nA few more of the same dose that\nday, and again the next. And now,\nno matter where she is, when she\nhears that whistle she comes just as\nfast as she can.\nOf course, every time she was on\nthe rope and obeyed the call, she\nwas petted and given something she\nliked to eat. But the rope certainly\ntaught her to mind!\na taxidermist.   Once set up it works\nas follows (we hope):\nMamma (A) presses the lever (B)\nwhich pulls a string (C) and operates a pair of shears (D). The\nshear\" slice into the feather pillow\n(E) and as the feathers fall a pet\npenguin (F) flaps his wings with\nglee, thinking it is snowing.\nThe motion of the penguin's wings\noperates the saw (G) 'and the saw\ncuts off the end of the log (H) which\ndrops into the basket (I). The ad'\nded weight lowers the basket and\npulls the string (J) which fires the\npistol (K). The bullet from the\npistol breaks the string (L) releasing\nthe slingshot (M), which thereupon\nhurls a rock (N) at the fly (O)\nwhich has been persuaded to alight\non & lump of sugar (P).\nProfessor Noodle, having neatly\nsolved the fly problem is now plan\nnipg to do something about fleas,\nprovided he doesn't run out of letters.\nANSWER8 TO   POSERS\nSine with trigonometry, divisor\nwith arithmetic, dynasty with history, parse with grammar, pitch\nwith music, hypotenuse with geometry, larynx with physiology, molecule with chemistry, isthmus with\ngeography, inertia with physics.\nRIDDLE ANSWERS\n1. Currents. 2. Reflection in a mirror. 3. Because  it  can't  chew. 4.\nMatch factories. 5.  One weighs a\npound and the other pounds away.\nMeals on Time\nWhen you are called to lunch or dinner, (\ndo you go at once, or do you stop long\nenough to finish the chapter of the book\nyou are reading, or to have just a few\nmore catches?\nToo many of us do the latter. We'i got\ninto the bad habit of yelling \"All right, I'm\ncoming!\" and then waiting two or five or 10\nminutes before we actually go. But If we\nhad ever had the Job of cooking the family's\nmeals, as mother does, we would be a lot\nprompter. There is probably nothing more\ndiscouraging to a cook than to have a fine meal all ready to serve,\nand then to watch it grow cold while she waits for the family to\ncome and eat it.\nThe leaSt we can do to help our mothers during the hot weather\nIs to be on time for our meals, with hands and faces washed, all\nready to eat. If we do happen to be playing or working or reading when meal time arrives,, let's be very quick about answering\nmother's call.\nIf a few of us had to go without our meals for a while, I imagine\nwe'd be more careful to be on hand for them when they're ready!\n\u2014The Editor.\nKAY'S CORNER\nBy KATHERINE HOUISON\nPICNIC AND CAMPING SUGGESTIONS\nWhen you go camping, take along\nboric acid for an eye wash, witch\nhazel to rub on sprains and bruises,\nand mercurochrome for cuts and\nscratches.\nGrease your cooking utensils after\nusing them, and they won't rust.\nto keep your camera loaded and the\noutdoor activities, it's a wise idea\nIf you like to take pictures of your\nfilm turned ready for the snapshot\nof some unexpected happening,\nYou may, miss it if you have to wait\nto turn the film!\nStart your picnic fire with a \"tent\"\nof small twigs instead of paper; it\nmakes a much better fire. You can\nadd your larger sticks around it and\nbe ready in short order to cook a\nmeal for the huskiest of appetites.\nIf mosquitoes or gnats spoil,your\nsummer, get Dad to help you make\na smoke candle. Mix an equal quantity of dry leaves powdered and\nfresh pine sawdust, then soak in a\nRed Light Lures\nFishworms, Save!\nLabor of Digginc\nWhen you wish to zo fishing it\ngenerally quite a task to dig t)\nenough worms for bait. But if yo\nJust remember certain facts abot\nsuch worms, you will not have to i\nany digging at all.\nFishworms come out of the groun\nof their own accord at night, i\nthat's the time to get your suppl\nof bait without digging. But\nyou go out with Just any old Ugl\nto do your worm hunting, you at\nquit likely to return with an emj\nty can. You must know more fad\nabout these worms.\nThe color of your light makes th*\ndifference between capturing plent;\nof worms and none.\nFishworms have no eyes, yet if :\nwhite light is turned upon them a\nthey come out of their holes at nigh\nthey will quickly retreat into then\nA blue light has the same effee\nBut a red light brings an altogethe\ndifferent result. They pay no at\ntention to it, and you can proceed t\nfill your can.\nSo, before going out on your nigh\nworm hunt, put red paper over th\nglobe of your flashlight, and yoi\ncan get your supply for the mot\nrow's fishing without digging.\nstrong solution of saltpeter. Remov\nthe wet pulp, dry it, and pack i\ntightly into a half-inch paper tubi\nThis \"candle\" burns slowly, and ttj\nsmudge is guaranteed to keep theil\nunwelcome visitors at a distant\npreventing many bites.\nAnd above all, never go into th*\nwater when you're overheated oi\nimmediately after you've eater\nYou're inviting that painful art\noften fatal \"swimmer's cramp\" .;\nyou do.\n. \u2022' * * . *    ::'\u201e:i3,*.^JSi'J\n\u2014 -*- * \u25a0*-* \u2014  >  .\u25a0\u25a0*,.-.....-\nemaM\n r\n-wmmwmvmmmmmmmmmmmmsmmmmm\n\u25a0 \u25a0'-:. .   \u25a0 *       \u25a0    \u25a0\nU.S. AND BRITAIN\nCLASH TODAY IN\nDAVIS CUP PLAY\nWIMBLEDON, July 23 (CP)-\nGreat Britain's Davis cup team tonight was braced to battle against\nthe United States in tomorrow's\nmatch for the trophy the British\nhave had since 1933.\nWhile the United States, which defeated Germa'ny early this week in\nthe Interzone final, were heavy favorites to take the cup across the\nocean, British tennis fans prayed\nGreetings\nand the Best of\nGood\nWishes\nfor a Really\nEnjoyable Day\nin Nelson\nNelson Branch\nCanadian\nLegion\nfor a singles upset and miraculous\ndoubles victory.\nThe draw sent H. W. \"Bunny\"\nAustin against Frank Parker of the\nUnited States in the first singles\nmatch with Charles Hare, 22-year-\nold left-hander, ach.-duled to face\nDon Budge of the United States in\nthe second tilt,\nC. R. D. Tuckey and F. G. D.\nWilde will take on Budge and Gene\nMako in the doubles Mopday. For\nthe final, Tuesday, tomorrow's singles pairings will be reversed with\nHare meetiqg Parker and Austin\nplaying Budge, in that order. It is\nthe first appearance of Hare and\nWilde In cup tennis.\nOptimistic Over New\nB.C. Marketing Act\nCreston-Boswell Area\nCRESTON, B.C.-\"Air tight control of fruit marketing for the 1937\nseason ia made possible under provisions of the new B.C. Marketing\nact, and the tree fruit board will\ninsist on 100 per cent enforcement,\"\nsaid E. A. Haskins, chairman of the\ntree fruit board, who was here Wednesday, with G. A. Barrat, another\nmember of the board, who conferred\nwith the heads of valley fruit shipping houses, making arrangements\nfor control effort In the Creston-\nBoswell area.\nThe visitors were optimistic over\nthe new act, a provincial enactment, that replaces the federal Natural Products Marketing act, which\nwas declared unconstitutional about\na year ago, but which was effective\nin 1935. Last year's crop was moyed\nunder a voluntary control scheme\nwhich worked fairly well, partly\ndue the fact the crop last year was\nlight.\nThe outstanding feature of the\n1937 act is that lt gives the board\ncomplete control of transportation of\ncrop. Says the act: \"All tree fruits\nproduced within the area must, if\nthey leave the point ot production,\nhouse and only moved therefrom in\nhoua and oly rmovd therefrom in\naccordance with the regulations of\nthe board.\"\nAll of which means that tree fruits\ntravel from the orchard to the packing shed under board control, and\ncan not move from the warehouse\nexcept to travel In conveyances that\ncan not move from the warehouse\nexcpt to travl in conveyances that\ncan produce a certificate from a\nselling concern that has paid a\nlicense to the board to sell and ship\nfruit.\nUnder the federal act this control\nof transport was not any too explicit with the result the police\nwere none too keen on enforcing the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNINO. JULY M..WJ7.     \u2014'\t\nSPORTING NEWS\nDRAW MADE FOR\nCANADIAN GOLF\nTORONTO, July 23 (CP).-The\ndraw for the opening round of the\nCanadian amateur golf tournament\nat Ottawa Hunt club next Tuesday\nwas announced today by Secretary\nB. L. Anderson of the Royal Canadian Golf club and lists 69 starters.\nLater entries are expected to push\nthe field over 100.\nThe defending champion, Freddie\nHaas Jr. of New Orleans, has no\nassigned opponent for the starting\nround.\nC. Ross Somerville, London, Ont.,\nseeking hia sixth Canadian title, is\ndrawn against Jules Charticr, of\nLaval-Sur-le-Lac, Que.\nBobby Reith, of Winnipeg, who\nlost to Haas in the final last year at\nWinnipeg, will meet Aubrey Steeves\nof Moncton, N.B.\n13.3 Oz,     26.6 Oz.\n* ... Bottled in London, England,\nand brought to you with\nnone of its superior qualities\nimpaired,\nO Of greater strength\n\u2022 Extra measure in the full-size\nbottle., #\nrnrnm\nDistilled and Bottled In London, England for\n168 Vein by Tenqueny, Gordon & Co., Ltd.,\n I      tke Use* Gin Distillers In tkeWoHd.\nThis advertisement is not'published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia,\nI Helio, Trail Folks!\nt\n*\nCALL AND SEE US\nWHILE YOU'RE HERE\n*\n:**    Right in the heart of the city, our location is very\nJ       convenient and makes the ideal meeting place.\ni THE SHAMROCK\n\u2022 , KOPECKI & SHUTTY\nff Nelson's Popular Legal Refreshment Parlor\nSASKATOON RACE\nRESULTS\nSASKATOON, July 23 (CP) -\nFirst race: Purse $250. About five\nfurlongs:\nTillie Queen (Bailey) 18.10 4.45\n3.60.\nMiss Peg Mac (Cain) 3.35 2.00\nSport Smith (Russell) 435\nTime\u201411 3-5.\nAlso ran \u2014 Island Square, Lady\nReidmore, Florence Somers.\nSecond race: Purse $250. Claiming.\nAbout seven furlongs:\nLiva D (Bailey) 3.10 2.75 2.S5\nAnvie May (Bartlet) 7.40 2*90\nRoanoke Lad (McCray) .40.\nTime\u20141:42 1-5.\nAlso ran: Laura Clay, Dr. Hoey.\nThird Race. $250. Claiming. About I\nfive furlongs:\nRoyal Cup (Cain) 25.15 8.70 4.00\nSir Barb (McCray) 8.70 3.50\nPeglius   (Vautheir)   2.75\nTime\u20141:09 3-5.\nAlso ran\u2014 Tllenada, King Han,\nPiccadore.\nFourth race\u2014$250. Claiming. Five\nfurlongs:\nSable Ella (Dodiou) 3.10 2.60 2.45\nWeecarol (Bailey) 3.70 2.55\nPatricia Rose (Cain) 2.85\nTime-l:12 3-5. Also ran: WIff Han,\nPrince Somer.\nFifth race\u2014\"Rosetown Purse\" $250\nClaiming. About seven furlongs:\nMiss Bane (Russell) 7.70 4.65 2.70\nTabs Bid (Gautheir) 4.95 2.75\nMoonsaw (Qodiou) 2.40\nTime\u20141:39 3-5. Also ran\u2014Jungle\nShawl, Hainault Maid.\nSixth ra-fe. $250 claiming. About\none mile and one eighth.\nDes Lovely (Harris) 9.00 4.25 2.85\nPolly Flint (Bodiou) 4.80 3.95\nNonpariel Lad (Cain) 305\nTime\u20142:11 1-5. Also ran\u2014Carhan\nKing, Kaposia.\nSeventh race. $250, claiming. About\nseven furlongs:\nBuddys Choice (Bodiou) 8.70 4.00\n3.20\nSunnyfier (Russell) 4.15 3.50\nCraig Token (Cain) 4.05\nTime\u20141:42 1-5. Also ran\u2014Oliver\nP, Southland Toy, My Hero.\nlaw on the truckers. Likewise the\ntree fruit board was loath to launch\nprosecutions against growers who\ntransported their own orchard products. All this is cleared up in the\nB.C. aet and full support of the pro-\nshow a license from licensed selling\nconcern the police have very\ndefinite authority to refuse permission to move the load until such\na license is produced.\nSelling concerns will pay an annual license fee of $500 where they\nhandle 50,000 boxes or less, and the\nfee is $1000 where the concern will\nhandle over 50,000 boxes. Enforcement of the act will start July 25, but\nis not expected to be of much service\nin controlling the cherry crop.\nSatisfaction will be felt in the\nannouncment that J. W. Hamilton\nhas been named board representative and enforcement officers for\nCreston-Boswell. He was in charge\nin 1936, and is held in the highest\nregard by all growers in the district.\nThe cartel system will be enforced\nover the whole province, but a\npreference is conceded this district\nin that Creston's releases on the different verities will be 10 per cent\ngreater than points in the Okanagan.\nUnder the cartel there is little likli-\nhood of price cutting. There will be\nno advantage to slashing prices as\nonce a selling agency has sold Its\nAAA     A(2EGC\nA A ML     GUARAh\n3 STAR RYE\nA special quality old ry* of fine\nflavor, thoroughly  matured  In  oik.\nAGE GOVERNMENT\nGUARANTEED\nnoUe,*.... *r a oz.\n*100\n\"omr\n$180\n25 OZ.\nA    40 oz.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by\nThe Government oi British Columbia.\nSPARKS AND FLASHES:\n\"SHAMATEURS\"\nAa a commentary on \"amateur\"\nhockey in Calgary, take theae news\nparagraphs from the Calgary Alber-\ntan:\nEd. Roberts ... is now the owner\nof the Calgary Bronks of the Alberta\nAmateur Hockey league.\n... Mr. Roberta purchased the\nfranchise of the Bronks Hockey club\nfrom J. R. Hammill, who operated\nthe team last winter. Equipment and\ngoodwill go * with the franchise,\nwhich the new owner intends to retain in Alberta's lone senior group.\nOwning and operating a hockey\nclub is nothing new for Mr. Roberts, for he conducted the junior\nRangers for several years and operated the senior Rangers for five\nyears. . . .\nShortly after completing the deal\nfor the purchase of the club, Mr.\nRoberts Immediately started the\nground work for strengthening the\nBronks for the 1937-38 season.\n*   *   *\nTAKING BOXLA TOO,\nTOO SERIOUSLY\nAt Vancouver a boxla fan has been\nbarred from the Forum and Queens\nPark boxla arenas for life because\nshe threw a pop bottle on the floor\nduring a recent game. The next\noffender will be prosecuted.\nWhile in the interest* of law and\norder and the protection of players\nand officials we can't help but agree\nwith the action, it's a sad thing when\nfana take the game so seriously they\ntoss pop bottles around. We had supposed this was more or less confined\nto rabid American baseball fans, but\napparently boxla fans at the ci\/M\nare becoming somewhat \"Americanised\" in this respect.\nThrowing such articles aa bottles\nHubbell Trimmed\nNEW YORK, July 23 (AP) .-Chicago's ramiant Cubs punched Bill\nTerry's \"meal ticket,\" Carl Hubbell,\nfull of holes today as they routed the\npursuing Giants, 11 to 3, to draw\naway to a full two-game lead in the\nhot National league pennant,chase.\nAs a ladies' day throng of 25,559\nlooked on in astonishment, the Cubs\npounded Hubbell from the mound\nwith 13 hits, two of them homers\nby Ripper Collins and Frank Demaree and won as they pleased with\nthe veteran Charlie Root starring in\nthe relief role with a five-hit pitching job over eight innings.\nHubbell left after eight innings\nwith the score 7 to 3 against him and\nhis successor, Tom Baker, fared\nmuch worse.\nChicago   11   18  1\nNew York    3    7   3\nC. Davis, Root and Hartnett; Hubbell, Baker and Madjeski.\nCINCINNATI WIN8\nPHILADELPHIA, July 23 (AP).-\nCincinnati nosed out Philadelphia\ntoday in the opening game of the\nseries, 8 to 3.\nBaxter Jordan hit the second ball\npitched by Bucky Walters over the\nright field fence and from that point\nthe Redlegs never were headed.   *\nCincinnati    6   12   0\nPhiladelphia 3   10   1\nHallahan, Hollingsworth and Lombardi; Walters, Lamaster, Jorgens\nand Atwood.\nHAINES WINS, 4-1\nBROOKLYN, July 23 (AP)-Papa\nJesse Haines gave himself a birthday present a day late today, handcuffing the Dodgers with six hits as\nhe pitched the St. Louis Cardinals to\na 4 to 1 victory over Brooklyn.\nHaines, who was 44 yesterday,\nfanned seven and pitched a shutout\nuntil the ninth, and doubled to\ndrive in the final Cards' run in the\nlast frame.\nA fight between Babe Phelps and\nRookie Jimmy Brown, St. Louis infielder, delayed the game in the\nninth.\nSt. Louis   4   12   1\nBrooklyn 1    6   1\nHaines and Owen; Hamlin, Hoyt\nand Phelps, Chervinko.\nPittsburgh at Boston to be played\nat later date.\n$20,000 Community\nHall for Tadanac\nTRAIL, B. C, July 23\u2014Contract\nwas let Wednesday afternoon by the\nMunicipality of Tadanac to Mon-\ncrleff St Vistaunet for erection ot\nthe new community hall in Tadanac,\noverlooking Stoney Creek.\nThe main hall will be 75 feet\nsquare with a 30-foot ceiling. The\nbuilding will be of frame and stucco\nconstruction and will be used for\ncommunity assemblies, technical\nmeetings ot the C. M. St S. Co., and\nsports games.\ncartel quota it will not be able to\nsell any further supplies until other\nhouses have also disposed of their\nallotment.\nWith such effective control, assurance is given that there will be\nno bargain prices at the opening of\nthe Mcintosh Red season as was the\ncase last year, when a slash was\nmade, in order to \"punish\" a small\ngroup of shippers who refused to\ncome in under the voluntary control set up in 1936.\nThe visitors were optimistic that\nthe 193V crop will be sold at satisfactory prices. While conditions on\nthe prairie are far from bright,\nthis year's crop is little heavier\nthan a year ago, v,*hcn everything\nmoved to advanta...'\n|s rotten sportsmanship\u2014aa rotten\nas throwing programa, peanuts, or\nwhat-have-you?\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHOCKEY IMP0RT8\nIN B.C,\nSays Harry Scott int hia Albertan\nsports column:\n\"While summer aports are at their\nheight, amateur hockey moguls in\nBritish Columbia are already linij-m\nup their teams for next winter. Pioneer, B.C. intermediate hockey\nchampions have secured Geo;*^\noMrtimer and Gordon Tully of Vancouver Bruins, Chuck Dunn, former\nCalgarian who played pro in the\nCoast league, but now has his amateur card, and Art Schuman, formerly of New Westminster Cubs,\nwho played in England the past two\nseasons. Bralorne is also on the lookout for puckchasers of ability.\n* \u2022   \u00ab\nSPORTSHOT8:\nKimberley Rod and Gun club has\nopened a new skeet and trap shoot\nand rifle range near Marysville ...\n2000 rounds of ammunition were\nfired the opening day, with several\nTrail enthusiasts\u2014Dr. W. Leonard,\nDr. Ray Williamson and Alex Carrie\u2014contributing their share . . .it's\nabout time someone was thinking of\na Kootenay trap and skeet championship shoot....\nIt seems a fellow who plays boxla\nfairly well nowadays can get a\nfirst class education in travelling\n. . . look over the aporta .pages of\nKootenay and coaat papers for the\npast few weeks .. . must be money\nin the game for clubs to be able to\nbring players from here, there and\nroundabout ... as they have been\nthis last while.\nHave you ever seen \"Peacemaker\"\nEgan .play a typewriter?\n3attii\\A\n.jeaders\n \u00a9-, .\n(By The Asoclated Press)\nJoe DiMaggio of the Yankees, and\nCecil Travis of the Senators climbed\nfrom fourth and third place, respectively, into a tie for second place\nin the American league batting race\nyesterday, as Sam West of the St.\nLouis Browns, dropped out of baseball's hitting \"Big Six\" creating the\nonly change in the top half dozen,\nDiMaggio hit three-for-five to boost\nhis mark four points and Travis hit\ntwo-for-four to climb three points,\neach winding up with .362.\nStanding of the leaders (first three\nin each league):\nAB R H PO A E\nMedwick, Cards. 82 322 72 132 .410\nP. Waner, Pirates 81 326 61 123 377\nHartnett, Cubs .. 55 178 22 67 .376\nGehrig, Yanks .... 81 306 72 113 .369\nDiMaggio, Yanks 76 323 80 117 .362\nTravis, Senators .. 57 213 28   77 .362\nInspects Boswell\nCherry Warehouse\nCRESTON, B. C.-Miss Marcella\nSanford, whose marriage takes place\nearly next month, was honored at a\nshower at the home of Mrs. Frank\nPutnam, Wednesday. About thirty\nguests were entertained on the lawn\nand gifts for the new kitchen, which\nMiss Sanford suitably acknowledged, were presented on a wagon load\nof hay by Frank and Wayne Putnam, grandsons of the hostess.\nDr. F. W. Green of Cranbrook, visited Dr. Henderson Wednesday, returning from a two weeks' vacation\nat his home at Mirror Lake.\nMrs. G. M. Argue and son, Jim,\nwith Mr. and Mrs. Ed Cannell of\nSeattle, are guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nC. H. Hare at the Hare's summer cottage at Kuskanook.\nMr. and Mrs. C. F. Hayes and\ntheir guest, Miss M. Wilson of Ladner, and Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Joyce\nand children, visited at Sandpoint,\nIda., Thursday.\nW. McL. Cooper, manager of Creston Co-operative Fruit Exchange,\nwas at Boswell Saturday, inspecting\nthe cherry pack at the warehouse of\nBoswell Fruit Growers, who are\nselling their tonnage through the\nExchange. Boswell is putting up an\nexcellent pack, in the well cooled\nquarters in the warehouse basement\non the lakeshore at that point.\nMr. and Mrs. B. F. Whiteside, of\nNelson, who have been visiting the\nlatter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. T.\nSimister, have returned home.\nDuring the hot weather of July\nand August evening service at Trinity United Church is being held in\nthe church basement.\nThe Board of Grain Commissioners is announced to have a sitting\nhere Monday morning in Trinity\nchurch hall, at which the site of the\nC. P. R.'s new grain loading platform\nwill be considered. Objection is\ntaken to putting it on the present\nteam track, opposite the depot.\nSo numerous are the calls from\nprairie transients as well as local\nresidents, for the discarded cherries\nat the central pack at Creston Cooperative Fruit Exchange, that it\nhas been found necessary to placard\nthe door with the sign \"No Culls\" to\nabate the nuisance of callers. Due\nto the grocers carefully inspecting\nthe fruit before bringing it in, the\nsupply of \"imperfect\" fruit is limited.\nCHICAGO (CP) - Miss Elizabeth\nOhi, admitted to the bar in district\ncourt, claims to be the only Japanese\nlawyer in the United States.\nYANKEES AGAIN\nARE BEATEN\nCHICAGO July 23-(AP)- The\nWhite Sox were outclassed in the\nhomer-hitting department, but their\nsafe blowa were more timely today,\nand they whipped the New York\nYankees 9 to 6 in the opener of their\ncurrent series.\nDespite Joe DiMaggio's 26th home\nrun, and four bate blows by Red\nRolfe and Jake Pdwell, the Sox slugged Red Ruffing for six runs in the\nfirst three innings and coasted in\nwith the win, although a three-run\nYankee surge in the ninth caused\nseveral anxious momenta.\nThe defeat ended Stuffing's personal six-game winning streak. The\nNew Yorkers' American league lead\nwas cut to six games over the Sox.\nNew York      6     13     2\nChicago ...'    9     13     1\nRuffing, Makosky and Dickey;\nWhitehead, Brown and Sewell.\nTIGERS WIN AND LOSE\nDETROIT, July 23\u2014(AP)\u2014 The\nTigers took the second game In their\ndoubleheader with Philadelphia today, scoring in the eleventh inning\nto win 9 to 8. Walker's jingle with\nRogell on second provided the victory margin. The Athletics trounced\nDetroit, 16 to 4 in the first contest.\n1st Game:\nPhiladelphia       16     17     0\nDetroit      4       6     3\nKelley and Brucker; Aumer, Coffman, Rowe, Russell and Tebbetts,\nHayworth.\n2nd game\u201411 Innings:\nPhiladelphia      8     12     1\nDetroit     9     14     0\nFink, Nelson and Conroy; Law-\nson, Gill and Bolton.\nRED SOX WIN\nCLEVELAND, July 23-(AP)-\nThe fourth-place Boston Red Sox\nchased Willis Hudlin from the\nmound in the third inning today and\nwon the series opener from Cleveland, 6 to 2.\nThe invaders battered the dead\nof the tribe's slab corps for nine\nhits, including five doubles, to pile\nup a six-run advantage which\nCleveland's two-run ninth inning\noutburst could not overtake.\nScore:\nBoston     6     11     0\nCleveland       2      11   1\nMcKain, Wilson and Desautels;\nHudlin, Galehouse and Pytlak.\nBROWNS TRIM WASHINGTON\nST. LOUIS, July 23-(AP)-Chief\nHogsett hureld five-hii ball today,\nwhile his St. Louis Browns mates\ncollected 18 safeties off three Washington pitchers for an 8 to 0   vic-\nThe Browns' pitcher also hit his\nfirst home run of the season in the\n5-run second inning, driving in\nTom Carey.\nWashington     0     5     0\nSt. Louis       8    18     1\nWeaver, Jacobs, Cohen and R.\nFerrell; Hogsett and Hemsley.\nTwo Shifts at Work\non Kimberley School\nSuperintendent* of the Ryan Construction company of Vancouver arrived in Kimberley during the week\nand staking for the foundations of\nthe new school, the Kimberley Courier reports. Excavating is now well\nunder way and the old high school\nbuilding is being remodelled.\nA stipulation has been made that\nlocal labor be employed aa far as\npossible and local firms be given\npreference in the matter of subcontracts.\nIn order to have the building\nready by September two shifts will\nbe employed.\nNelson Girl Reps\nto Play Two Games\nin Trail Sunday\nNelson girls rep softball team\ntravels to Trail Sunday morning\nto meet the Trail rep squad in the\nthird and fourth game of the West\nKootenay title series. Last Sunday\nthe teams split a double-header\nin Nelson, the local girls taking the\nfirst 2-1 and Trail the second 12-11.\nRudy Pilous, has returned to Nelson and will assist Bill Freno in\ncoaching the team. The games are\nscheduled for 1:30 and 5:30 p.m.\nPlayers making the trip are Hazel\nSpiers, Jean Spiers, Alice Gillett,\nDeanie Wallace, Doreen Long, Iris\nJohansson. Mildred Horrigan, Rosa\nStewart, Agnes Stewart, Mary McDougall, Georgina Eberley, Elvera\nMatheson, Isabel Donovan and Gertie Whitehead.\nASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee 4; St. Paul 14.\nToledo  8;  Indianapolis  5   (first\ngame).\nKelson Baseball\nNine to Invade\nSalmo on Sunday\nNelson senior baseball squad Invades Salmo Sunday with the intentions of going all out to further\nclinch their hold on the second rung\nof the West Kootenay-International\nleague ladder.\nSalmo fields a strong aggregation,\nand will go on the field Intent to\nblock the Nelsonite's climb.\n\"Lefty\" Mydanski or Roy Robinson will take the mound for the Nelsonites. ,\nNelson's team will include Tommy\nMclnnes, Gordon Stewart, Al Euerby, Steve Smith, Roy Robinson,\n\"Lefty\" Mydanski, Gordon Riqhard-\nson, Ed Waterer, \"Lefty\" Schumaker\nand Roy Anderson.\nHORNSBY FIRED\nFOR BETTING\nON RACES\nST. LOUIS, July 23 (AP)-Rogers\nHornsby, discharged manager of St.\nLouis Browns, surrendered his contract, which did not expire until the\nend of the 1938 season, and settled\nhis claim against the American\nleague club tonight for a sum estimated from $7,500 to $10,000.\nIn a statement Hornsby said he\nwai dismissed because Donald L.\nBarnes, president of the Browns,\nand'Willlam 0. de Witt, vice-president, objected to his betting on horse\nraces.\nShamrocks to Meet\nPucksters Sunday\nWith the lenlor b-aseball club and\ngirls' softball team travelling Sunday, no inter-city sports were lined\nup for the recreation grounds Sunday afternoon up to a late hour Friday. At 6 pjn. the Shamrocks and\nPuckateri will play a men's softball\ngame, and Monday evening at the\nsame time the Hume club will play\nthe Puckstera.\nioieRiirs\n\u25a0 o-^\u2014\n(By Associated Press)\nYesterday's homers: Dimaggio,\nYankees; Rolfe, Yankees; Powell,\nYankees; Gehringer, Tigers; Moses,\nAthletics; Hogset, Browns; Demaree,\nCubs; Collins, Cubs; Moore, Giants;\nHafey, Reds; Jordan, Reds; Camilli,\nPhillies; one each.\nThe leaders: Dimaggio, Yankees,\n26; Foxx, Red Sox, 23; Trosky, Indians, 23; Greenberk, Tigers, 22;\nMedwick, Cardinals, 20; Ott, Giants,\n19.\nLeague totals: American 431; National 379; total 810.\n\u25a0PAOETHIRT\nBRITISHERS Wl\nMONTREAL, July 23 (CP).|\nArthur Godfrey Brown of GhL\nBritain tonight smashed a Canada\nquarter-mile record that had stoo\nfor 28 years as the combined Oxfort\nCambridge track and field swept t\neasy victory over a bolstered Queo*!\noutfit by 11 first places to two.    -\nBrown, touted as the British Era\npire's greatest present-day quartet\nmiler, had a good six-yard margi\nover Johnny Loaring of Wlndfl\nOnt., as he breasted the tape in 48\nseconds. The old mark of 48.6 set\nonds was set in 1909 by W. C. Rd|\nbins of New York.\nBELLEVILLE, Ont. (CP)-Mr\u00ab.|\nBradford dropped her purse whfl\ncrossing the Moira river tootbridgf\nFully clothed, she waded out\nmidstream and recovered it. Tfcl\npurse contained $65.\nWelcome\nTrail   j\nand\nRossland\nFolks   ]\nCall Around and\nSee Us!\nTHE    I\nHOME\nof the\nFORD\nV-8\nQueen City\nMotors Ltd I\n\"Satisfaction Is Our Aim\"\nPhone\n43\nNelson,\nB.C.\n519 Josephine Street\nInsist on Grant's Best Procurable\u2014The Original\nFor Sale at Vendors or Direct From \"Mall Order Dept.',\nLiquor Control Board, 847 Beatty St., Vancouver, B.C.\nCRANTj\nPRDCURABLE\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Li<i\n.Control Board or by the Government of British Columbil\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment oi British Columbia.\n\u25a0\n^*^*g*^\n 101 FOURTEEN-\nmmmm.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATUHDAY MORNING, JULY 24, 1997.\n\u25a0SppBPIifgipBBI*\u00bbww*wi**'^*^^ --^m\ni^OU CAN \"ECONOMIZE\" IF YOUR AD \"CLASSIFIES\"\nkimix Smhj Nettie\nMember of the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\n\u2022II Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy $   .05\nBy carrier per week     .25\nBy carrier per year 13.00\nBy mail In Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree mouths ,1.80; six months\n$3.00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S, same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising  Rates\nlie a Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)'\n2 lines, per Insertion \u2014 $ 22\n2 lines. 6 consecutive\ninsertions   88\n(6 tor the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion     33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions 1-32\n2 lines. 1 month 288\n3 lines. 1 month  _ 4.29\nFor   advertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculait on\nthe above basis\nBox  numbers  lie extra.  This\ncovers any number of insertion-*,.\nVhat to Do...\nVife Can't Get\nBlames Illness\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nJust hoping's problem is a deli-\nite one to discuss in a column such\nI this, and I'm puzzled as to how\ni help her.\nShe is a married woman, not very\nell, has a husband 10 years her\nmior\u2014which doesn't seem to have\nuch to do with the case. They get\nong together part of the time, but\nlost of the time they don't, she\nrites. Ever since she became ailing\n\u2022r husband has been \"sulky and\ntouchy,\" she writes, Recently he\nreused her of being with another\nian, then was sorry and tried to be\nffectionate but she repulsed him.\nlie is not the kind who can be\n.ven H\u2014one minute and made over\nie next, she says.\nShe \"can't stand it much longer,\"\nIS lost all love for her husband,\nat has two boys whom she can-\nOt separate, cannot support by\nerself. 'I have gotten almost to the\nid of my rope, so won't you please\nftlp me?\" she writes.\nI think the pain you complain of\n-\u2014\t\nhas worn on your nerves until you\nthink you don't love your husband\nand fell the whole situation is in*\nsupportable, my dear. I wish you\ncould get away from home, from\nhusband and boys and household\ncares for a while. Is it at all possible?\nA nagging pain will make any situation look black. I don't think the\n10 years' difference in your ages\nhas anything to do with the fact\nthat you seem to have lost your affection for your mate. Anyone is\nlikely to be angry with a dear one\nand say unkind things once in a\nwhile even be unjust\u2014a common\nenough fault when people are angry\nAnd it is a sweet trait when one\nhas been unkind to be sorry and to\nsay so. Personally I never could see\nthe type of person who scorned and\napology. That unforgiving attitude\nis indefensible, as far as I am concerned. There are few persons indeed who do not err once in a while,\nand if they are sorry afterwards\nand try to make amends as best\nthey can, what more can they do\nDon't you agree with me?\nI DO sympathize with you very\nmuch, but as you depend upon your\nhusband for your support and that\nof your boys. I think you will have\nto face facts. Putting it boldly, it\nis your place to make as happy a\nhome for your husband as you possibly can. to give him all the consideration you can. and strive as hard\nas possible to regain your health.\nI wonder if you could get some\nbooks from your library to help you\ngain poise.\nWEEK-END RADIO\nCANADIAN  BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\nSATURDAY\n5:00 Louisiana hayride. Los Angel-\n,; 5:30 Legende d'unPeuple, Mont.;\n00 Metropolitan Skyline orch, Tor.;\n:30 Our heritage of freedom, talk,\ntontreal, 6:45 News, weather, from\nbronto; 7:00 Xavier Cugat's orch..\nIBC; 7:30 Horace Lapp's orch., from\nanff; 8:00 La Hacienda. Vancouver;\n30 Sport week, Henry Viney. Leth-\nridge; 8:45 Good Evening, news,\n'ancouver; 9:00 Joe DeCourcey's\nrch., Jasper; 9:30 Stan Patton's\nrch., Lethbridge; 10:00 News, Van-\n6uver; 10:15 Charles Pawlett's or.;\n'ancouver; 10:45 Weather forecast,\n\u25a0ancouver.\nNBC jamboree; 7:00 Carlos Molina's\norch; 7:30 Circus, variety; 8:00 Jesse\nCrawford's orch.; 8:30 Orchestras-\nCharles Barnet; Don . Fernando;\nPaul Sabin; Will Hollander; Jimmy Grier; Archie Loveland; Bob\nYoung; Harry Lewis.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n5:00 Josef Hornik's orch.; 5:30\nMeakin's musical news; 7:00 National Barn Dance; 8:00 Orchestras-\nPaul Whiteman; George Olsen; Eddie Varzos; Carlos Molinas: Ellis\nKimball; George Breece; 9:30 On the\nMall, KGO; 11:00 Paul Carson, organist.\n; N.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\n8:30 Emery Deutsch's orch.: 6:00\nCOLUMBIA   NfTWORK\n5:00 Maurice's orch.; 5:30 Hollywood Show case; 6:00 Hit parade and\nsweepstakes; 7:00 Bunny Berigan\nand  orchestra;   7:30  Johnnie   pre-\nGermany Rushes Work on Newest\nDirigible\nTheir faith in Ughter-than-air craft unshaken by the tragic less of\nhe Hindenburg, Germany's dirigible experts are rushing to comple*\n(on work on the Zeppelin LZ-130 which was lo hive been a sister\nhip to the ill-fated Hindenburg but now will be its successor. This\nlew of the new craft in the hangar at Friednchshrfen reveals that a\nJeat deal nf the acres of fabric has already been slretched over the\ntee! framework Th? new dirigible will be 817 fc-et bug and 130\neet wide.\n\u25a0\nPERSONAL\nMENI GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster lnvigorators and other\nstimulants One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write,' Mann-Rutherford Co\n(1343)\nWOMEN WANTED TO START\nPrivate Kindergarten Schools In\ntheir own homes this coming fall\nFree booklet on request. Canadian Kindergarten Institute. Winnipeg. Established 1927.      (1312)\nHELP WANTED\nCARRIERS, CLERKS WANTED IN\nNelson by the Dominion Government. Appointment by examination. We have helped hundreds\nof others to obtain appointments.\nProof of this statement and full\ninformation regarding the examination, etc.. sent free on request.\nThe M. C. C. Civil Service School,\nWinnipeg, oldest and largest in\nthe Dominion. (1625)\nWE HAVE HELPED HUNDREDS\nobtain Civil service positions as\nPostmen, Clerks, etc. Free booklet,\n\"How to get a Government Job\"\nM. C. C. Civil Service Schools,\nWinnipeg. (\u00a3313)\nWANTED- YOUNG MAN FOR\nfarm work. Must be good milker\nand handy. Give experience and\nwage expected to Box No. 1602,\nDaily News. ,  (1602)\nA THOROUGHLY COMPETENT\nSteno. Capable of taking charge\nof office. Apply Box 1629, Daily\nNews. (1629)\nsents; 8:00 Professor Quiz and his\nbrainbusters; 8:30 Orchestras\u2014Benny Goodman; Mark Fisher; Al Lyons; Charles Engels; Jan Garber;\nGlenn Lee; George Hamilton; 10:00\nNews, KNX; 11:00 Pasadena Civic\nauditorium.\n8UNDAY\nCANADIAN  BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n2:00 Grenadier Guards. Mon., 2:30\nDr. H, L. Stewart, news review, Hali.\n2:45 Freda Cronowetter and Reginald Godden. from Toronto; 3:00\nHelen Traubel, soprano, N.B.C.; 3:30\nMelodic Strings from Toronto; 4:00\nPiano magic, from Montreal; 4:30\nRex Battles' orch., Toronto; 5:00 International Varieties, Montreal; 5:30\nMusic time, from Toronto: 6:00 Adventures in Melody, Toronto; 6:45\nNews and weather, Toronto; 7:00\nGolden Journeys from Toronto; 7:30\nTudor String Quartette, Winnipeg;\n8:00 Romance of Sacred Songs, dr.,\nfrom Vancouver; 8:30 Concert trio,\nfrom Calgary; 8:45 Good Evening,\nnews, Vancouver; 9:00 Interlude, Regina: 9:30 Glee Singers, Calgary\n(not CRCV); 10:00 News, Vancouver; 10:15 Sacred cameos, organist,\nVancouver; 10:45 Weather forecast.\nVancouver.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\n5:00 Manhattan Merry-Go-Round;\n5:30 Album of Familiar Music; 7:00\nMorin sisters, ranch boys, songs:\n7:15 Cliffe Engie, voice of expos!-\nlion; 7:30 Jane Froman, Don Ross.\nD'Artega and his orchestra; 8:00\nBarney Rapp's orchestra; Behind the\nmicrophone, Buddy Twiss. KPO;\n8:30 One Man's Family. Carlton\nMorse drama; 9:00 Passing Parade.\nJohn Nesbitt. narr.; 9:15 Night Editor, dramatic narrative. Hal Bur-\ndick; 9:30 Carlos Molina's orch,: Don\nAllen. Hollywood news, KPO; 10:00\nNews flashes; 10:15 Bridge to\nDreamland, organ; 11:00 Bob Young\nand orch.; 11:30 Beaux Arts trio.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n5:00 Rippling Rhythm revue; 5:30\nWalter Winchell, gossip; 6:00 National music camp program; 7:00\nJudy and the bunch, vocal; 7:10\nPress radio news; 7:15 Concert petit;\n7:30 Eddie Varzo's orch.; 8:00 Reader's Guide; 8:30 Harry Reser's orch.;\n9:00 Tales of California (KGO); Don\nFernando's orch.; 9:30 Concert Hall,\nE.T. KGO; Paul Sabin's orch.; 9:45\nWill Hollander's orch.; 10:00 Hal! of\nfame; 10:30 Reveries, instrumentalists; 11:00 Charles Runyan, organist.\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\n5:00 Universal rhythm, Rex\nChandler's orch.; 6:00 Lewisohn stadium concert. Philharmonic orch.:\n7:00 Community sings; 7:30 Gus Arn-\nheims' orch., 8:00 Jimmy Wallington,\nm.c. and company; 8:30 Jan Garber's\norch.; 9:00 Nocturne with Eddie\nHouse, baritone; 9:15 Al Lyons' orch,;\n9:45 George Hamilton's orch.; 10:15\nSunday Evening on Temple Square,\norgan, violin, tenor; lu:45 Benny\nGoodman's orch.; 11:00 Door to the\nMoon; 11:30 Jan Garber's orch.\nREGINA (CP) - Knox United\nchurch worshippers here who wisli\nto attend early Sunday services because they wish to have the day\nfree for other purposes will be accomodated in July. There will be\nan 8:30 a.m. service as well as 11\na.m. and 7 p.m.\nELECTRICAL, MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\nELECTRIC PLANT\nBARGAINS\n(Cash Sale for Unclaimed Machines,\nStorage and Repairs)\n32V.   850W. Delco   $95.00\n32V.  600W. Automatic  Delco $75.00\n32V.   800W. Delco > $69.00\n32V.   600W. Decil Electric .... $75.00\n32V. 1250W. Led-O-Lite  $89.00\n32V. 1250W. Lalley     $99.00\n32V.   600W. Combination\nMachine  $69.00\nIV.   Combination Johnson .... $50.00\nThree new 32-volt R.J. Batteries\nto match 32-volt machines,\neach   $49.00\nEvery machine guaranteed running\ngood. First come; first served.\nlEEDER'S LTD\n1375 Portage Ave.    Winnipeg, Man.\n(1522)\nELECTRIC ARC WELDINGUen\"-\nerator with reactor, helmet, electrode holder and stub cables\u2014Two\nonly at the special price of $145.00\nA, C. heavy   duty   electric   are\nwelder for   $145.00\nRepairs for all makes of electric\nplants, generators, engines, etc.\nWrite for prices,\nLEEDER'S LTD., 1375 Portage Ave.,\nWinnipeg,   Man.\n (1611)\nHOIST MpTORS\nWound  rotor  motors in  stock\nfrom 10 h.p to 250 h P* at various speeds.   Enquire\u2014\nCROSSMAN MACHINERY\nCOMPANY. LIMITED\n59 Alexander St.. Vancouver B C.\n(1311)\nFrank Woodrow\nGiven Send-Off\nat New Denver\nNEW DENVER. B.C. - Frank\nWoodrow, an old-timer of the district, was honored at a farewell surprise party at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. C. Issacson at Rosebery Wednesday.\nGames, contests, songs, recitations,\netc., were followed by a buffet supper.\nGuests adjourned to Mr. Wood-\nrow's home where dancing was participated in to music supplied by\nC. Isaacson, N. Thomlinson and D.\nShelling. At the \"break-up\" of the\nparty a circle was formed and a\n\"bon voyagle\" extended to Mr.\nWoodrow prior to his departure for\nAustralia where he expects to reside. Present, were F, Woodrow, thc\nhonored guest, Miss A. Kennett, Mis,s\nG. Sinclair, Miss M. Groom. Mrs\nJ. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. E. Teir, Mr\nand Mrs. C. R, Kennett, Mr. and\nMrs. T. Flint, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nDraper, Mr, and Mrs, Stonoski. Mr\nand Mrs. C, Isaacson, N. B. Thomlinson, F. L. Beggs, J. Huntley, P.\nShelling, B. Tates, H. Wooley, J,\nWright and C. Kennett.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Taylor have as\ntheir guests Miss Alice Whitehead\nof Kimberley, Miss Marjorie Cox.\nMrs. R T. Cox and Ernest Cox of\nCranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. P. Angrignon have\ntaken up residence in Mrs. Hill's\nhouse.\nMrs. K. McLeod is visiting Nelson\nfor a few days.\nDr. and Mrs. A. Francis and N.\nTattrie returned from Vancouver\nFriday. They were accompanied by\nMrs. Francis' niece. Miss Marian\nAlier-Cromlice who will spend a\nvacation here.\nA- Jeffrey was a visitor to Nelson,\nMiss J, Johnstone. Miss M. Croft.\nPOULTRY. SUPPLIES, ETC.\n0\nPULLETS\nRaised from the\n\"Chicks Which\nGive Results.\"\nLeghorns, 8 weeks $65 per 100\n10 weeks    75 per 100\nBarred Rocks ind\nLight Sussex, 8 weeks  75 per 100\n10 weeks    85 ier 100\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD!\nLANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C.\n(1384)\nFOR SALE, 800 R. I. R. PULLETS\nM. B. Williams, Fruitvale, B. C.\n(1557)\nMOVING\nFURNITURE\nLarge Covered Van With\nExperienced Men\nWILLIAMS\nTRANSFER\nPHONE 106\n(15461\nFOR SALE\nNEW AND USED GALVANIZED\nPipe and fittings, ail sizes -Extra\nheavy slate surface Roofing with\nNails & Cement, about 80 Ibs pet\nroll, $2.75 - Light ply Roofing\n(without Nails and Cement) 125\nfeet by 12 inches wide. 70c per\nroll.--2y.r Nails $3.50 per 100 Ibs\n-Wire Rope; Belt: Pulleys; Galvanized Iron Roofing; Grtin Sc\nPotato Sacks; Canvas; Doors &\nWindows; Hose\u2014Merchandise and\nequipment of all descriptions-\nHundreds of our customers with\nout exception testify to our $2.50\nper gailon guaranteed Paint for\nall purposes: Colours, Grey\nGreen, White, and Cream,\nB.C. JUNK CO.\n125 Powell 8t.        Vancouver. B.C\n(1308)\nHYPRO STOCK SPRAY IN QTS,\nhalf-gallon and gallon tins; Stock-\naid, same sizes: Hypro White Fluid\nDisinfectant in pints, quarts, half-\ngallons and gallons. Hand pumps.\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co.,\nLtd. (1624)\nPIPE  TUBES   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver. B.C.\n(1344)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN  JUNK Company  Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver. BC\n(1345)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (1346)\nWE SELL EVERYTHING AT BAR*\ngain prices. The Ark Store    (1350)\nGOOD USED GAS RANGETpITcI\n$3   Kerr Apartments. (1351)\nA. Young and H. Taylor were Saturday visitors to Nelson.\nA. B Stanley of Nakusp visited\ntown Saturday.\nMrs. A. Avison has returned to\nher home at Savana after being\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. T. Avison\nfor a few weeks.\nMrs. P. Angrignon was honored at\na miscellaneous shower at the home\nof Mrs. E. Angrignon Saturday evening. Gifts were carried to the young\nbride by Marjorie Francis and Hazel\nHilda Crellin in a large basket in\npink and white.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nIndian, from $3*42.00\nVilllers. from    $165.00\nFrancis Barnetts. from.... $185.00\nB.S.A, trom   $250.00\nHarley Davidsons, from.. $500.00\nWRITE FOR LITERATURE\nSend In your Motors for Repairs\nPALMER RUTLEDGE\nTRAIL, B.C.\n(1309)\nTRAILER, 2 WHEEL TYPE. BOX\n4' x 6'. Brand new. Apply Nelson\nAuto Wrecking, Vernon St. (157H\n\u202227   CHEV.     SEDAN.    RUNNING\nOrder.  Good tires, $50. Ph. 364Y2\n(1585)\n\\Vs  T.  CHEV.  TRUCK,  '36   RUN\n2000 .miles New tires. $750 Fink's.\n(1252)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC.. FOR SALE\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta snd\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources. CPR.. Calgary. Alia\n(1310)\nGOOD BEACH LOTS. 1 ACRE\neach, i miles from Nelson. J. T\nBealby, Nelson, B. C. (1592)\nSUMMER HOMES. RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nFOR A QUIET VACATION SPEND\nYour Holidays at the Outlel Hotel.\nProcter Furnished Cabins on the\nLake Front in the Shady Orchard. Grocery store in connection. W. A. Ward. (1340)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nMODERN BUNGALOW CORNER\nWard and Houston streets, living\nroom, dining room, three bedrooms, kitchen, bathroom, furnace.   Telephone 296. (1615)\nFOR RENT-FURNISHED HOUSE\nto reliable party. Apply 723 Lat-\nimer St. 11609)\nONE   LARGE     HOUSEKEEPING\nroom, 718 Silica. Ph. 728X evenings.\n(15931\nFURNISHED   HOUSE   TO   RELI-\nable party. Apply 723, Latimer St.\n(1609)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms tor rent    Annable Blo-k\n(1348)\nTERRACE APTS Bean'fu) modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites. (13471\nFURNISHED SUITES IN THE\nKerr apartments. U286)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANCE\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE-1\nAyrshire Stock Bull. 15 months\nServiceable. Price $40. 1 Sorrei\nfarm horse, 7 years old. Work\nharness, cheap for cash or will\nchange for good Ayrshire cow.\nWm, Thompson, Ymir^B.C. (1607)\nSMALL FARM. FRUIT. ALFALFA,\nirrigation, cow. chickens. Beach\u2014\nKootenay Lake. Highway.   Ideal\nhome site.  Box 1610, Daily News\n11610)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR   SALE,   ICE   CREAM   AND\ncandy shop. P.O Box 796. Nelson\n(1250)\nPHONE 144\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n6 YEAR OLD HORSE ABOUT 1,200\nlbs., is broken in and sound for\n$75. One fresh 2nd calf Ayrshire\ncow $65, and 100 white leghorn\nhens. Healthy. $85.00. Mrs. Rosa\n_Bourna, Salmo, B. C.__ (1623)\nIRON GREY-HORSeTTyeARS.\nWorks single or double. Price\n$100.   Graham, Perry Siding.\n(1620)\nONE MARE IN FOAL, 1300 LBS.\nOne colt, 2 years, \"Black\". T.\nTremblay. Ross Spur, B, C.  (1604)\nFOR EXCHANCE\nWILL TRADE MARE 1100 LBS.. 7\nyears old for good milk cow. J\nHanson, Erie. B. C. (1561)\nWANTED\nWANTED TO RENT 4 or 5 ROOM\nfurnished house.  Phone 940.\n(1618)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog. pocket-\nbook, lewelry or fur. or anything else of value, telephone\nthe Daily News A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted wifhout post to\nyou We will collect from the\nowner\nLOST-BLACK   BATHING   SUIT.\nApply to Dr. C. E. Bradshaw.\n(1570)\nFOUND-BUNCH OF KEYS , IN-\nquire at Daily News. (1631)\nBoost for the Kootenay District - It Pays!\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\n6 W WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter    301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B.C. (1353)\nG RENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker Street. Nelson. B.C PO\nBox No 726 Representing shipper's interest Trail, B.C.     (1354)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairi\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\"\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(1355)\nChiropractors\nJ R MCMILLAN. DC. NEURO\ncalouieter and X-ray 16 years\nexperience. McCulloch Blk  (1356)\nW  J   BROCK  DC  X ray  15 Years'\nExperience Gilker Blk.. Nelson\n(1357)\nCorsets\nSoencer corsets. Surgical Belts. M.\nW. Mitchell. K. W. C. Biock. Ph. 668\n(1509i\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH. D DAWSON \"   Nelson BC\nMine Surveys and Reports\n B C. Land Surveyor JJ358)\nBOYD C~ AFFLECK FruitvalTTc\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg   Professional Civil Engineer\n(1359)\n Funeral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert  Mortician       Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Servire\n(1360)\nDAVIS    FUNERAL    SERVICE\nEmbalming & Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Assisting\nPhone 95. Nelson, B.C.\n(1391)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nMutual Benefit Health & Arc   Assoc\nWorld's largest Al  W Foole Dist\nMgr..   Hume  Hotel.  Nelson   BC\n113611\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReal Estate, Insurance. Rentals\n311 Baker St. Phone_68._ (1362)\nR. W DAWSON. Real Estate Insurance Renlafs Next Hipper**on\nHardware  Baker St   Phone 197\n  (1363)\nC~D  BLACKWOOD    Insurance 0!\nevery description Real Est Ph 99\n(1364)\nHE DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN*\nsuranee. Real Estate. 508 Ward St\n(1365)\nJ E. ANNABLE REAL ESTATE\n.   Rentals   Insurance.  Annable  Blk\n(1366)\nSEE D. L~KERR7~AGENT FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(1319)\nCHAS F McHARDY INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.        (1367)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes ol Metal Work, Lathe\nWork Drilling. Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewinding. Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n (1368)\n~H E STEVENSON. Machinists.\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylene\nWelders Expert workmen Satisfaction guaranteed Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty Fully equipped shnp Ph.\n98. 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (1369)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON. REPRESENT-\native, C C. Snowdon. oils, greases,\npaints, etc Richardson road building machinery and equipment.\nAgent, mine machinery, rails, pipe,\nsteels, sheet iron. etc. Steam coals.\nOffice 518 Ward street. Phone 53.\nResidence phone 239. (1379)\nNotaries\nD   J    ROBERTSON.  NOTARY\nPublic, Nelson, Phone 157L. (1371)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor. list of wanted Inventions and\nfull information sent free The\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St.. Ottawa.\n(1372)\nPhotography\nOUR BUSINESS FOR 1936 AL-\nmost doubled that of 1935 There\nmusl be a reason A trial order\nwill convince YOU of the superior\nPhoto Finishing done in our plant.\nYour film developed and printed\n25c Renrints. eight for 25c KRYS-\nTAL PHOTOS W1LK1E. SASK.\n(1373)\nSPECIAL OFFER\nEIGHT EXPOSURE ROLL FILMS\nDEVELOPED and PRINTED, 25c\nper roll. 8x10 enlargement 35c. Mail\nOrder Photo Finish, P.O, Box 427,\nVancouver, B.C. (1606)\nSanitariums\nDR ALDRICH SPOKANE. WA\u00abH.\nHeart. Stomach. Kidney Bladder\nDiseases treated.   X-ray work\n(1374)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH    FACTORY\nHardwood merchant. 217 Baker St.\n(1375)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY,   SELL   Sc   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.   The Ark Store\n(1376)\nWatch Repairing\nTHE GUMPS\nFINE    WATCH   REPAIRING.    P.\nBoyle, Vernon St., Nelson. (1377)\nBy Cus Edson\nFETCH ME MV .\\APOLEON HAT \/\nAND MY STRAIT-JACKET, JEEVES-!\nI'M GOING FOR A LITTLE -\n,STROLL ON A MOONBEAM,'   e3T\nBAH.'.' THIS BUSINESS fR\n\"\" DRIVING ME  ***GZ2j\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\nHERE ARE\n~012 HELP-\nIMS ME\nSOME PRESENTS] I  THANKS A\nr *-*\u2014-:    I MILLION, RANoy\nAM ORCHID TO TtXJ,TILLIE-TD VUEAK AT THE?\nOPEMiMfi- OF Hy PL-S\/ TCMkSHT AT THE (2A1M&OW\nSUMMEfc THEATER 'oR,AUNB.V\nCOESAQE_\nVJt+sroiD\nVOUGfeT\nHac'\n\u25a0 . u^,*,....****i**aa^**i,.*\u201e.i.\nMBMBBM\njgfj\n \u2022WlUpPi*11\"! ly l\"J 'II,11 Hill.!LI\n\u25a0itHwrw?\nfPfllJilliW^\n.*\u2014*< %\nCar Ore from\nEast Kootenay\nBrings In $253\nUnwatering St. Eugene\nShaft Is Making\nProgress\nParagraphing Interesting mining\nnews In East Kootenay district, the\n\" Cranbrook Courier says*.\n\"Some time ago Messrs. Rollhetser\nand Anderson, who are operating a\nproperty between Sawmill creek\nand Perry creek, made a shipment\nof a carload of ore to the Trail smelter that netted them $253.\n\"Other good mining news In the\ndistrict reported is that the men\noperating the Moyie Gold Mines\nnear Aldridge, a short distance\nsouth of Moyie, are installing a compressor to replace the one removed\nfrom there some time ago. This\nproperty is better known as the Midway or John Leask property.\n\"Good progress is being made at\nMoyie by the St. Eugene Extension\ncompany in the work of unwatering\nthe St. Eugene shaft in preparation\nfor driving a tunnel under the lake.\nPreliminary Work was done by\nmeans of a syphon, but now it has\nreached a point where pumping by\npower must be employed. To facilitate this work a large transformer\nhas been'installed and electric power\nwill be used.\n\"A report also comes from Moyie\nto the effect that some work is being\ndone on the Society Girl property,\nwhich adjoins the St. Eugene mine\non the east. This it is understood is in\nthe way of preliminary work in\nclearing out some of the pld stopes\nand tunnels so that a thorough inspection may be made.\"\nMARKETS AT\nAGLANCE\n(By The Canadian Preit\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Stocks irregularly lower.\nNew York\u2014Stocks slightly higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat up 214 to 1%\ncents.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver, copper and\nzinc higher; lead lower.\nNew York\u2014Silver, lead and zinc\nunchanged; export copper higher.\nMontreal \u2014Rubber, coffee and\ncotton lower; sugar steady.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar up\n1-16 to 99 31-32.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG,   July   23 - (CD-\nGrain quotations:\nOpen  High Low\nWHEAT:\nJuly  .\nOct.\nDec.\nOATS:\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nDec\t\nBARLEY:\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nDec.   \t\nFLAX:\nJuly .\nOct. .\nDec. .\nRYE:\nJuly .\nOct.\nDec.   .\n143'A\n13DH\n132%\nSkVs\n84\n90-tt\n72%\n94K\n177V4\n178V4\n17714\nH5V4\n136'\/,\n133%\n0414\n54\n50V4\n-94%\nWs\n178\n18Q\n178%\n141 Vk\n133V\u00ab\n130\n\u00ab2tt\n52 Vi\n49%\n6SH\n62%\n178\n176%\n17614\nClose\n-m\n136%\n133%\n62%\nS3\n49%\n62%\n63%\n62%\n178\n178%\n177%\n181% 183 149% 193\n. 94% 99% 92%' 94%\n. 92 93% 91 92%\nCASH PRICES: Wheat: No. 1 hard\n145%; No. 1 nor. 143%; No. 2 nor.\n142; No. 3 nor. 139%; No. 4 nor. 133%;\nNo. 5*. 120%; No. 6,114%; feed 98%;\nNo. 1 Garnet 139%; No. 2 Garnet\n136%; No. 1 durum 127%; No. 4 special 122%; No. 9 special 116%; No. 6\nspecial 109%; track 141%.\nCORN (RASHES\nCHICAGO, July 23 (AP).-Corn\ncrashed downward approximately\n6 cents a bushel today for July contracts, and showed a collapse of\nabout 20 cents total so far this week.\nTrade reports of hidden stocks of\ncorn in federally licenced elevators,\ntogether with notices that larger deliveries than had been looked for\nwould be made tomorrow in settlement of July contracts, did much today to plunge corn prices lower.\nChicago com futures closed all\nthe way from 4% cents lower to 1%\nhigher compared with yesterday's\nfinish, July $1.08 to 1.08%; Sept.\n$1.02% to 1.02%, Dec. 77% to 77%;\nwheat 1% to 2% advanced, July\n$1.20%, Sept. $1.19% to 1.20, Dec.\n$1.22% to 1.22%; oats % off to %\nup, Sept. 33%, and rye at % to 1\ncent gain, Sept. 85%. Provisions results varied from 12 cents setback\nto a bulge of 2 cents.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, July 23-(CP)-But-\nler spot; Qie. fresh (92 score) 26%-%\nQue., June make 26%A.\nEggs spot\u2014Ont. A\u2014large 29s.\nSales spot\u20141,000 boxes Que. fresh\n(92 score) at 26%.\nFutures\u2014Butter steady, unchanged to % cent higher, July 26%-%,\nSales\u2014One northern contract at\n27%.\nWheat, northern, No. 1, 1.90%;\nbarley C. W. No. 3 .81; oats, C. W.,\nNo. 3, .71.\nToronto Stock\nMINES\nAfton Mines  04\nAldermac      1.12\nArgosy Gold , 40\nArntfield Gold  40\nAshley Gold 08\nAstoria        .08\nAztec  08\nBagamac 20\nBankfield  82\nBase Metals - 25%\nBeattie Gold     1.24\nBidgood Kirk \u00bb 46\nBig Missouri 48\nBobjo    15\nBralorne      7.50\nBuffalo Ankerite     9.20\nBunker Hill  17\nCan Malartic      1.20\nCent Man  06\nCent Pat      2.84\nChibougamau      1.00\nChromium M Sc S 80\nConiaurum       1.31\nCons M tt S    81.00\nDarkwater  47\nDome Mines    40.50\nDorval-Siscoe 46\nEast Malartic      1.01\nEldorado        2.75\nFederal Kirk  io%\nFrancoeur Gold 73\nGillies Lake 31\nGod's Lake 63\nGunnar Gold 75\nHard Rook     1.37\nHarker Gold , 13\nHollinger  v    11.35\nHowey Gold 35\nHudson Bay     32.00\nInter Nickel    64.50\nJacola       31\nKerr-Addison _     2.72\nKirkland Lake      1.29\nLake Shore     50.50\nLamaque C  05\nLeitch Gold 71\nLebel Oro 20%\nLittle Long Lac      5.60\nMacassa Mines     5.35\nMacLeod Cockshutt      1.99\nMadsen Red Lake  80\nMan & East  03\nMandy 25\nMclntyre-Porcupine      36.00\nMcKenzie Red Lake      1.18\nMcVittie-Graham  31\nMcWatters Gold 48\nMling Corp     3.55\nMinto Gold  12%\nMoneta Porcupine      1.70\nMorris-Kirkland    25\nNipissing      2.50\nNoranda     65.00\nNormetal        1.95\nO'Brien Gold      6.35\nOmega 50\nPamour Porcupine     2.34\nPaulore M  15\nPaymaster  61\nPend Oreille     3.65\nPickle Crow      5.70\nPioneer Gold      3.70\nPorcupine Crown  03%\nPowell R Gold     1.45\nPreston East     1.03\nRed Lake 35\nReeves Mac 72%\nReno Gold 90\nRoche L Lac 13\nSan Antonio       1.75\nShawkey Gold  53\nSherritt Gordon     2.83\nSiscoe Gold      3.65\nSladen Malartic      1.02\nStadacona        1.25\nSt. Anthony 15\nSudbury Basin      4.50\nSullivan       1.25\nSylvanite       3.10\nlashota -       .07\nQuotations\nTeck-Hughes     4.90\nToburn Gold      2.43\nTowagamac ._ \u201e \u201e\u201e    1,10\nVentures     7.75\nWaite Amulet     3.20\nWhitewater  \u00bb 14\nWright Hargreaves     6.38\nYmir Yankee Girl 24%\nOILS\nB A Oil    23.65\nBritish Dom  32\nBrown Oil  52\nCalmont  75\nC&E         8.10\nChem Research        .95\nDalhousie 95\nEastcrest 16\nFoundation  36%\nHighwood 22\nHome      2.15\nImperial     20.90\nInter Pete     34.90\nMcColl Front    11.65\nMerland  11%\nModel 56\nMonarch R 51\nNordon  17\nOkalta      1.27\nPacalta 23\nPantepec       8.65\nRoyalite            90.00\nSouthwest Pete      1.76\nTexas Can ...  29%\nVulcan    .       2.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power     6%\nBeatty Bros     17\nBell Telephone 168%\nBrazilian      7\nB A Oil    23%\nBrewing Corp     1%\nBrewing Corp pfd    21\nB.C Power A >    34\nB C Power B     .7%\nBuilding Prods ,    59\nBurt F N    41\nCan Bakeries A     4\nCanada Bread     6%\nCan Bud Malting     8%\nCan Car & Fdy        14%\nCan Cement    15%\nCan Cement pfd  108\nCan Dredge    40%\nCan Malting    37\nCan Pacific Rly    11%\nCan Ind Alco A     6%\nCan Ind Alco B      4%\nCan Wineries      1\nCarnation pfd  102\nCons Bakeries    20%\nCons Smelters    80\nCosmos    25%\nDom Bridge    49\nDom Stores \u201e     8%\nDist Seagrams    22%\nFanny Farmer     25\nFord of Canada' A    23%\nGen Steel Wares    13%\nGpysum L Sc A     13%\nHarding Carpet     5%\nHamilton Bridge    14%\nHinde Dauche    20%\nHiram Walker    90\nIntl Metals .     14\nIntl Milling pfd     98%\nImperial Oil     20%\nImperial Tob    14%\nInter Nickel    64%\nInter Petrol     34%\nLoblaw A     24%\nLoblaw B        23%\nKelvinator      29%\nM L Milling     5%\nMassey Harris _    10%\nMcColl Front -    11%\nMont Power    32%\nMoore Corp    43%\nNat Steel Car    47%\nPage Hersey 103%\nPower Corp        22\nPressed Metals    30\nStandard Paving      5\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 24, 1937,\nReady to Crush Any Uprising Against Palestine Split\nAn impressive array of British military might\nphotographed with an old fortress for a background\noutside Jerusalem. These are s'orne of the men commanded by Lieut-General John G. Dill, who is ready\nto clamp martial law upon.the Holy Land at the\nfirst stgn of an outbreak'of fighting between the\nJewish and Arab populations. Such an outbreak is\nfeared as the result of the resentment aroused by\nthe recommendations of the British Royal commis- .\nsion that Palestine be divided into separate Jewish\nand Arab sections, which would be divided by a\nBritish neutral zone. Neither Arabs nor Jews want\nsuch partition.\nFOREIGN LOANS HIGHER\nNEW YORK, July 23-(AP)\u2014\nUnited States government and foreign loans moved higher In the'bond\nmarket today, but the balahce of\nthe list was uneven with losses as\nfrequent aa gains.\nIn the foreign sector Japanese\nobligations worked forward briskly\non despatches reporting a fading of\nthe war scare with China. The\n6%s added 1% at 98% and the 5%s,\nat 82, were 1% higher.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, July 23, (CP) -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight  Tough\nNo. 1 hard    135 133\nNo. 1 nor    134%      132%\nNo. 2 nor.    132%      130%\nNo. 3 nor    128%      126\nNo. 4 nor    124 121%\nNo. 5 wheat    118 115%\nNo. 6 wheat     109%      106%\nFeed      89%       86%\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAlta Pac Grain  8%\nAssoc Brew of Can   \u201e.._  14%\nBathurst P -St P \"A\"  21%\nBell Telephone    - -  168\nBraz. T   L& P  _  25%\nB C Power \"A\"  34%\nBuilding Prods     61%\nCan Cement  15%\nCan Cement Pfd  107\nCan North Power     21\nCan Bronze     46%\nCan Car St Fdy   14%\nCan Car St Fdy Pfd     15%\nCan Celanese        24%\nCan Celanese Pfd   116\nCan Hydro-Elec     86\nCan Ind Ale \"A\"   6%\nCan Ind Ale \"B\"  4%\nCan Pac Rly  11%\nCockshutt Plow   14%\nDom Bridge     -  49%\nDom Coal Pfd  20%\nDom Steel'& Coal \"B'   22\nDom Textile     84\nDryden Paper     16%\nFound C of C   23%\nGen Steel Wares     13\nGurd Charles  11%\nGyp Lime Sc Alab    13%\nHamilton Bridge      14%\nHoward Smith Paoer    30%\nH. Smith Paper Pfd     105\nImp Tob of C         14%\nInter Nickel of Can  64%\nLake of the Woods     29\nMassey Harris        10%\nMcColl Frontenac     11%\nMont L H St P  32%\nNat Brew Ltd   40\nOgilvie Flour Mills   236\nPower Corp of Can ' \u201e  21%\nQuebec Power   18\nSt. Lawrence Corp     12%\nSt. Law Paper Pfd     90%\nSouth Can Power       1314\nShawnigan W St P    28\nSteel of Can Pfd      76\nWest Grocers        69%\nBANKS:\nCanadienne Nationale     160\nCommerce      184\nMontreal    225\nNova Scotia 330\nRoyal       199%\nTorontor    252\nCURB:\nAbitibi   Pit P Co      6%\nBeauharnois Corp        8%\nBathurst P St P\"B\"      8%\nBrew St Dist Van        7\nBrey Corp of Can     2%\nBrit Amer Oil       23%\nB C Packers    16%\nCan Vickers     8\nCan Wineries 150\nCons  Paper Corp    17\nDom Stores      8%\nDonnacona Paper \"A\"     15%\nDonnacona Paper 'B'     18%\nFord Motor \"A\"       23%\nFraser Co Ltd  43%\nImperial   Oil    26%\nIntre Petroleum         35\nInter Utilities \"A\"       17\nInter Utilities \"B\"  150\nMacLaren P St P    32\nMitchel Robt            21%\nPage Hersey Tubes  103\nRoyalite Oil   46.00\nUnited Dist of Can    95\nWalker-Good Sc W     50\nWalker-Good Pfd        19%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAl Chem  236%\nAm Can  107%\nAm For Pow .... 92%\nAm Mac St Fdy 20%\nAm Smelt St Re 94%\nAm Tel   171%\nAm Tob  82%\nAnaconda   58\nAtchison    85%\nAuburn  Motors 18%\nAv Corp   6%\nBaldwin   5%\nBait St Ohio  29V*\nBendix Av   20%\nBeth Steel   95\nBorden     24%\nCan Dry   26%\nCan Pac  11%\nCerro, de Pasco 76%\nChesStOhio  53%\nChrysler  114%\nCon Gas N Y .... 40%\nCorn Prods   61%\nC Wright pfd .... 8%\nDupont  162%\nEast Kodak  180%\nEl Pow St Light 22%\nErie   16%\nFord English .... 6%\nFord of Can  24\nFirst Nat Stores 40\nFreeport  Texas 30%\nGen Elec  58%\nGen Foods  38%\nGen Motors   56%\nGoodrich  38%\nGranby  9%\nGreat  Nor pfd 52%\nGreat West Sug\nHecker Prods ..'\nHowe Sound ....\nHudson   Motors\nInter Nickel  65%\nInter Tel St Tel 12%\n35%\n12\n81\n10%\n235\n106%\n92\n20%\n93%\n171%\n80%\n56%\n83%\n18%\n6%\n5%\n28%\n20%\n93%\n24%\n25%\n11%\n75\n52%\n112%\n39%\n61%\n6%\n161\n180\n21%\n15%\n6%\n24\n40\n30\nV58%\n38\n55%\n38\n9%\n51%\n35%\n12\n81\n15%\n64%\n11%\n236%\n107\n92%\n20%\n93%\n171%\n81%\n56%\n83%\n18%\n6%\n5%\n28%\n20%\n94%\n24%\n28%\n11%\n75%\nKenn Cop   60%\nKresge S S  23\nKroegger Si Toll 21%\nMack Truck  47%\nMilwaukee  pfd 2\nMont Ward  64\nNash Motors .... 19%\nNat Dairy Prods 21\nN Power St Lt\nN Y Central ....\nPacific Gas St El\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R   39%\nPhillips Pete .... 63%\nPure Oil   21%\nRadio Corp  9%\nRadio Keith Or 8%\nRem Rand  26\nSafeway Stores 34%\nShell Un   29%\n10%\n42%\n32%\n9%\n53 S Cal Edison ....   25%\n112% South Pacific ..   51\n3!)% Stan Oil of Cal   45%\n61% Stan Oil of Ind   47\n6% Stan Oi! ot N J   72\n182 Stew Warner ....   19%\n180 Studebaker    13%\n22% Texas Corp    64%\n15% Texas Gulf Sul   39%\n6% Timken Roll ....   65\n24 Under Type     91%\n40 Un Carbide  101%\n30 Un Oil of Cal _   25%\n58% Un Aircraft     30%\n38% Un Biscuit     24\n86% Un Pacific  132\nUS Pipe    53%\n9% U S Rubber    60\n51% U. S Steel   118%\n35% Van Steel     30%\n12 Warner Bros ....   15\n81 West Elec * 155%\n15%iUn Oil     50%\n64% Woolworth       46%\n11% I Yellow T?uck ....   25%\n59%\n22%\n21%\n46%\n1%\n53%\n19\n20%\n10%\n41%\n32%\n9\n39%\n62%\n21\n9%\n8%\n25%\n34%\n29%\n25%\n49%\n44%\n46%\n71%\n19%\n13\n64%\n38%\n65\n91\n100%\n25%\n29%\n23%\n132\n53\n58%\n115%\n29%\n14%\n153\n49%\n46%\n25%\n80\n23\n21%\n47\n2\n84\n19%\n20%\n10%\n41%\n32%\n9%\n39%\n63%\n21\n9%\n8%\n2r.:ti\n34 %\n29%\n25%\n49%\n45%\n46%\n71%\n19%\n13\n64%\nWINNIPEG SOARS\nWINNIPEG, July 23 - (CP) -\nWheat futures rose more than three\ncents in the several minutes on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange today in\nthe most spectacular selling and\nbuying flurry of five successive dull\nand nervous sessions.\nAfter fluctuations above yesterday's levels wheat broke 3% cents\nin sympathy with a six-cent drop\nin Chicago corn prices. But prices\njumped up again to close at 2%-l%\ncents higher, July at $1.44%, Oct-\ntber $1.36%-% and December $1.33%\n\u2022Vs.\nExport 7' 8, 3\" 9; 34, 8 and \u00a33\u2014\nDuring the session was placed at\n750,000 bushels of Canadian wheat.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, July 23 (CP).-Re-\nceipts: Thursday\u2014Cattle 79; calves\n18; hogs 394; sheep-262. Up to noon\nFriday\u2014Cattle 102; calves 42; hogs\n16; sheep 223.'\nNot sufficient cattle sold to establish market.\nNo hogs sold. Latest prices\u2014Selects 9.75; bacons 9,25; butchers 8.75;\nall of truck.\nTRY A WANT AD\nMONTREAL LIST\nIRREGULAR\nMONTREAL, July ,2J-(CP)-An\nirregular tone prevailed oh tha\nstock market today with gains and\nlosses scattered throughout the list.\nLoss of a point took Canadian\nhydro-electric preferred to 86%,\nwith Brazilian up % in active trade\nat 25%.. Bell Telephone dipped % to\n169 and Montreal power added % at\n32%. Winnipeg electric stock added % at 4%.\nNorahda sold off a point at 65 with\nnickel and Noranda down* % each\nat 64% and B1V4 respectively.\nDominion Steel and Coal declined\n% to 22 and Cember preferred gained a point at 105.\nBright Spots\nof the Week\nBy The Canadian Praia\nMONTRBAL-Productlon of newsprint by Canadian mills aet an all-\ntime record in first six months of\n1937 at 1,783,350 tons, a gain of 19.7\nper cent over first half of 1936.\nVANCOUVER-Current tax collections in the first half of this year\nreached $552,629 compared with\n$416,666, in the 1936 comparable period, a gain of 32.6 per cent.\nOTTAWA\u2014Federal Income tax\nlections In Toronto in three months\nended June 30 totalled $28,938,870, a\ngain ot $6,118,118 or 27 per cent over\nthe same period in the previous\nyear.\nWATERLOO, Ont\u2014Bauers, Ltd.,\nwill erect a $15,000 addition to their\nplant here,\nHAMILTON, Ont.-Relief figures\nare now the lowest In seven years\nwith about 10,055 individuals receiving aid compared with 43,890 at\nthe depth of the depression,\nDALHOUSIE, N.B.-New Brunswick International Paper company\nwill erect an 8000-ton capacity storage building at their Dalhousie\nplant.\nVANCOUVER \u2014 Plans completed\nfar establishing an $8,000,000 pulp\nmill at Prince Rupert, Frank L.\nBuckley announces.\nOTTAWA\u2014Canadian exports in\nthe quarter ended June 30 totalled\n$272,491,818, a gain of 23.9 per cent\nover the corresponding period of\n1936.\nGolds Are Lower\nTORONTO, July 23 (CP).-In a\ntypical holiday-period market gold\nand industrial shares registered\nminor losses today on the Toronto\nexchange.\nBrazilian and Fanny Farmer were\nagain the big traders and both\nfirmed % to %. Canada Cement\nstocks closed up.\nKerr-Addison, Kirkland Lake,\nPowell-Rouyn, San Antonio, Moneta and MacLeod-Cockshutt were\noff at the close, The close was up\nfor Pamour, Buffalo-Ankerite, God's\nLake and Little Long Lac.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh Low\n30 Industrials  184.73 182.70\n20  Rails    99.38        84.68\n20 Utilities ..: ,    30.08       29.55\n40 Bonds               \t\nClose   Change\n183.78-up   .81\n94.80\u2014Up   .09\n29.85\u2014up   .49\n101.66\u2014unchgd\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, July 23 (CP)\u2014Silver futures closed 10 points higher.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED:\nA P Con  87\nAmalgam Oil  06\nAztec Min Co  08 M\nBig Missouri    49\nBralorne        7.23\nBridge Riv Con \t\nC St E Corp    3.05\nCalmont  Oil\nCariboo Gold\n.72\n1.50\nCoast Brew    13.05\nCom'wlth Oil  37\nDentona     13%\nGold Belt Mines  24\nHargal   Oil  24\nHome Oil      2.15\nInter Coal      21%\nIsland Mount 65\nKootenay Belle     85\nMak Siccar    02%\nMcDoug Seg Ex        .31%\nMinto     11%\nModel Oil  \t\nPioneer Gold     65\nPremier Gold        2.50\nPremier Border 25\nQuatsino   04\nRel Arlington  22\nReno Gold     86\nReeves McDon  68\nSally    05\nSalmon Gold  08\nSheep Creek 75\nSilbak-Premier       2.07\nTaylor B River 04%\nVanaltaLtd      .08\nVidette 35\nWesko 18%\nYmir Yankee Girl 23\n91      CURB]\n101%   Anaconda     14\n25%   Baltac Oil  05\n29%   Bayview          .00%\n23%  Beaver Silver     01\n132     Bluebird        \t\n53      B. C. Nickle     17%\n59% Congress  03\n116%   Cork Province    01%\n29%   Crows Nest, New ....\n14%  Dalhouse Oils  95\n165     Davies Pete  34\n50     Devenish       06\n46% Dunwcll Mining 02%\n25% East Crest Oil  15\n.40\n.07\n.09\n.50 .\n7.60\n.04\n3.10\n.75\n1.55\n13.50\n.39\n.14%\n25\n.26\n220\n25\n.70\n.95\n.33\n11%\n.59\n3.75.\n2.55\n.22%\n.04%\n.25\n.89\n.75\n.07\n.08%\n.80\n2.30\n.05\n.10%\n.43\n.20\n.15\n.01%\n.03\n18%\n.04\n.01%\n.06\n.97\n.34%\n.03\n.17\nFairview Amal     .07\nFederal Gold    02%\nFound Pete    47\nFreehold Oil    11\nGeo. Enterprise \t\nGeo. River ......\nGolconda    06%\nGold Mount         .03%\nGrandview      18\nGrange Mines     01H\nGrull-Wihksne   \t\nHaida      00%\nHedley St   \t\nHighwd Sarcee      .23%\nHome Gold   02%\nIndian Mines    \u2014\nInter Gold   \t\nKoot Florence    01\nKoot King     00%\nLakeview Mine    - .01%\nLowery Pete    25\nLucky Jim     04%\nMadison Oil     09%\nMar Jon Oil      .16%\nMercury Oil   34\nMeridian, New    \t\nMcGillivray.     19%\nMill City Oil    \t\nMonarch R 49%\nNicola     .05%\nNoble Five    05%\nNordon Oil    \t\nOkalta, Com    2.26\nPacalta    \"...     .20\nPend Oreille       3.60\nPorter Idaho    04%\nPilot Gold     03%\nQuesnelle 'Q'      .09\nRanchmen's 27\nReliance     .02\nReward Min    08%\nRoyalite Oil      48.00\nRufui Argenta    02%\nRuth Hope    03%\nSilver Crest  .....\nSilversmith          .02%\nSouthwest Pete  80\nUnited Distils      1.00\nUnited Oil     291*4\nViking Gold   01\nVulcan Oil   \t\nWayerly T, New 00%\nWellington Mines   03%\nWhitewater     -    .13%\n.08\n.03\n.38\n.12\n.03%\n.02%\n.04\n.18%\n.01%\n.11\n.02%\n.24\n.03\n.03\n.04\n.02\n.01%\n.01%\n.30\n.04%\n.09%\n17%\n.35\n.02%\n.26\n.50%\n.07\n.05%\n.20\n2.28\n.22%\n3.75\n.05%\n.04%\n.10\n.20\n.02%\n.09\n50.00\n04\n.04\n.05\n.02%\n.00%\n.04\n.14\nqS5\n'\u25a0' '\u25a0:\u25a0   '\u25a0' .-     '     .' \/!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0     \"'    ' '     PAOS FIFTElp\nEast Koolenay Coal Production\nShows Decrease 3,922 Tons June\nProvincial Production. Gains 7781  Tons; 1\nMichel Produces 3033 Tons of\nCoke During Month\nWith Michel and Coal Creek figures both down, production of coal \u25a0\nIn East Kootenay was 3922 tons less In June compared with the same?\nmonth last year. Total production In the province increased 7781 tons.\nMichel produced 3033 tons of coke In the month, the report of the -\ninspector of mlnei states. Figures for the province follow: 1\nEA8T KOOTENAY DISTRICT\nCoal Creek Colliery \u201e \t\nMichel Colliery  \t\nTOTAL FO REAST KOOTENAY .\nVANCOUVER ISLAND DI8TRICT\nCanadian Collieries (D) Ltd,\nCompx Colliery \t\nNorthfleld mine  .\". \t\nWestern Fuel Corporation Ltd.\nNo. 1 mine,.'........,     \t\nReserve mine _.._._ \u201e\t\nOther Collieries:\nLantiville Colliery _ _\t\nIda Clara Colliery  \t\nChamber's mine ..,..,\t\nBeban's mine   \t\n36,100\n20.262\n11,114\n17,984\n14,600\n190\n403\n1936\n7,069\n32,957\n40,022 '\n20,534 ,,\n1,724\n:,047 '\n463\n96\n\u2122\nTOTAL JOR VANCOUVER ISLAND .\n70,913       80,940\nNICOLA PRINCETON DISTRICT\nCoalmont Collieries Ltd\t\nMiddlesboro Collieries Ltd,  . \t\nPleasant Valley Colliery \t\nBlue Flame Colliery    _..,..\nBromley Vale Colliery\nTulameen Valley Coal mine (Lind) ....\nTOTAL FOR NICOLA PRINCETON\nBulkley Valley Colliery .\nNORTHERN DI8TRICT\n6,854\n1,865\n11,089\n402\n6,138\n2,169\n259\n403\n3,962*\nExchanges\nMontreal! July 28\u2014 <cp)\u2014\nBritish and foreign exchange closed\neasier today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nAustralia, pound 3.9726.\nBelgium, belga .1683.    *\nBrazil, milrels, .0670.\nHolland, florin, .9923.\nIndia, rupee, .3764\nJapan, yen, .2902.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4,0046.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9307,\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, July 23 (AP)-Closing:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a356 13s 9d;\nup 3s 9d. Future \u00a396 10s, up 2s 8d;\nelectrolytic spot, bid \u00a363 10s; asked\n\u00a364 10s, both unchanged. Tin spot,\n\u00a3264 5s, off 13s; future \u00a326115s, off\n\u00a31 5s. Bid prices: Lead spot \u00a323\n61 3d, off Is 3d; future \u00a323, off Is\n3d. Zinc spot \u00a322 8s 9d, up Is 3d;\nfuture \u00a322 13s 9d, up 2s Od.\nMONTREAL, July 23 (CP).-Spot:\nCopper, electrolytic, 15.80; tin 62.00;\nlead 6.35; zinc 6.10; antimony 15.25;\nper 100 pounds f.o.b. Montreal, 5-ton\nlots.\nLONDON, July 23 (AP).-Bar\nsilver steady, 1-16 higher at 10'Ad.\nNEW YORK, July 23 (AP).-Bar\nsilver steady ahd unchanged at 44%.\nSARNIA, Ont (CP)-A 39-year-\nold claim for nursing services was\nrecently settled out of court when\nMiss Agnes Kerr, Alvinston, was\npaid from the estate of John Cummings who died recently. The claim\nwas for nursing Cummings' mother\nin her final illness.\nConcentrates an\nOre Total Tadanac\nPlant 309,822 Tons\nReceipts of ore and concentrate*'**,\nat the Tadanac plant of the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company.)\nfor the year to July 14 amounted to,\n309,822 tons, of which 298,792 ton**\nwas from company mines and ll,03B*j\ntons from custom properties.\nDuring the week ending July Ufi.\ntotal receipts at Tadanac were 10,\u00ab*i\n147 tons, of which 9611 were com-*\npany and 536 custom ore and con-;\ncentrates.\nThe custom total was made up of\n201 tons of ore and 335 tons of cOn\u00bb\u00ab\ncentrates. Shippers of ore werew\nBoulder City, Boulder Spur, 44; CI^\nof Paris, Grand Forks, 23; Gold Drip,\nRossland, 14; Highland Bell, Beaverdell, 46; I.X.L., Rossland,28; Rooted\nnay Ore Hill, Salmo, 37; Ottawa***;\nSlocan City, 9.\nThe concentrate shippers wereii\nO'Brien, Cobalt, Ont., 42; Weskd,-.;\nYmir, 51; Whitewater, Retallackji\n161; Yankee Girl, Ymir, 37; Ymltj\n(Goodenough), Ymir, 44.\nDividends\nThe Canadian Bank of Comjnerce,\ntwo per cent, payable September \u25a0\nto shareholders of record July SL;\nHollinger Consolidated Gol*))*\nMines Limited, one per cent pltig;\none per cent, payable August 12 to\nshareholders of record July 29.\nWhy Not a Want Acffl\nDELIVERED\nTO YOUR\nDOOR\nBEFORE BREAKFAST\nYou can enjoy reading your morning paper when the\ndays is* young and cool.\u2014START THE DAY RIGHT.\nRead your morning newspaper the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPhone to these numbers and have it delivered.\nNELSON 144\nTRAIL 716Y\nKfiitrii*,.*' it. .*,,:, ;.^**;., .,*\u25a0;; ^ ^^ \u25a0\n\u25a0..*..-:.j^\u00b1i**iU^u^t\nIL.-.L....1.:.. .       ..*.\n^^^i*^.,^..\n NELSON DAILY NEWI. NELSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, JULY M. 1W7.\nTRAIL VISITORS!\nMoke Our Store Your\nUp-Town Headquarters\nManri, Rutherford Drug\nCompany   r\nCorner Baker and Ward Streets\nROOFING\npaves Troughs, etc.\n% H. Maber\nhone eti     610 Kootenay St\nNelson Business\nCollege\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\nCommence Any Time\nPHONE 815\nfor better and promote Mrv-\nlet In plumbing repitrs and\njlterntloni.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nSEE PAGE TWO\nlour Mill Will Not\nBe Located, Creston\nCRESTON, B. a\u2014Hope has been\nibandoned by the lndustrlas com-\niilttee ot Creston board of trade for\nhe establishment of the 50-barrel\nJour mill which was a prospect ear-\nler in the year with the inspection\ntt the district by J. T. Johnson of\nJoose River Valley, N. Dak., who\nrat looking for a location for an\ndie plant the Goose River Develop-\n\u25a0ftent company had on its hands.\n' While here he took generous samples of the wheat grown on most of\nthe dyked tracts for tha purpose of\nanalysis and it has been found that\nthe content of the local wheat Is not\nquite right to mill by Itself and produce a high gride flour. It would,\ntherefore, be necessary to bring In\npossibly 40 per cent of prairie wheat\nfor a mix. Under prevailing freight\nrates this is impossible to meet competition of the big milling companies.\nIt has been learned Mr. Johnson\nalso investigated sections of the\nPeace River country on a similar\nmission, but has about decided to\nlocate at either High River or\nVulcan, Alta.\nGREETINGS\nTrail and Rossland\nFriends\nWe Wish You an Enjoyable\nPicnic, and Invite You to\nAvail Yourself of Our . . .\nComplete Automobile\nRepair Service at New\nLow Prices.. .....\nTION\nTIRES                 BATTERY\nRADIATOR\nOILING\nBRAKES\nCREASINC\nTRANSMISSION\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nPHONE 35 24-HOUR SERVICI\nTHE REX CAFE\nNELSON'S POPULAR AND\nMOST UP-TO-DATE\nRESTAURANT\nWelcomes All\nC. M. & S. Company\nEmployees\nTHE REAL PLACE TO DINE AND\nENJOY BETTER FOODS IN\nNELSON IS AT\nTHE REX CAFE\nSpecial Cool Lunches\nfor Hot Summer Day\nSpecial Sunday Dinners\nThat You Will Enjoy\n50c\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nExtends a Very\nHearty Welcome\nto the Employees of the\nConsolidated Mining fir Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\non the Occasion of\nTheir Seventh Annual Picnic in Nelson\nWelcome\nto Nelson\nWE HOPE YOU HAVE A REALLY ENJOYABLE\nHOLIDAY IN OUR CITY-\nKeep Cool\n' AND ENJOY THE FINEST OF WELL COOKED\nFOODS'IN NELSON'S ONLY\nAIR-CONDITIONED CAFE\nTHE STAR\nFor the Best\nResults\nFrom   your   vacation t\nsnapshots have them\ndeveloped and printed\nat\u2014\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nA Fresh Stock of Films Alwayi\non Hand\nA Greeting Card for\nEvery Occasion,\nCIVIC\nContinuous From 1:15\nWELCOME ALL\nPICNIC VISITORS\nK\u00abep Cool and Relax It\ntho Civic\u2014\nTWO GRAND FEATURES\nFOR YOUR HOLIDAY\nC. M. 8 S. Co. Picnickers\nThe Hume Hotel\n\u25a0\u201e and the\nLORD NELSON\nLEGAL REFRESHMENT PARLOR\nWISH YOU A SUCCESSFUL PICNIC\nAND AN ENJOYABLE OUTING\nWhen In Nelson, stay at the Hume Hotel,\ncentral location, ideal surroundings, comfortable rooms at moderate prices.\nA meal in our Dining Room will delight you.\nThe choicest foods, deliciously cooked. Good\nservice\u2014new low prices.\nLUNCH  35c and 50c\nDINNER ,35c and 65c\nTHE HUME HOTEL\nand the\nLORD NELSON\n(LEGAL REFRESHMENTS)\nGeorge Benwell, Prep. Nelsen, B. C.\n\u2022383\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nSPECIALS\nfor Saturday and Monday\nPEARS-Tall tint, iad\neach   fm.\nKellooa'i Pop or Rico Krltplei S\npktt ind 1 glut tumbler JA\u00abt\n8UQAR\u2014Granulated,    \u00a3f JC\n20 Ibi.  9**IW*\nCOFFEE\u2014Maxwell  House:\n1 pkt Huskies, Ate*\n1raa   WW?\nFANCY FREE-8hlrrltti-**a*l\u00bb\n3 pkta. tor .\u201e. *\u2022*>\nJAM\u2014Strawberry and     iM\nAppla, 4 Ibi.  W\nPORK AND BEAN8\u2014Campbelli\nlarge cans tKt>\n2 tor  .., ..... m-*T\nEGGS\u2014Fresh local largo Kfif-t\n2 dot. for V-*t\nBISCUIT8\u2014Atiorted,\nfroah: Per Ib,  \t\nFresh Ground'Coffee 1 Ib.\nGranulated Sugar S Ibi. gnA\nBoth for .: Vt\nTOMATOE8-Fresh,\na lbs. for \t\nHERRINGS-Freih, 1 Ib\ntlni, each\t\nSALMON-1 Ib. tlni\npink: Each \t\nPINEAPPLE-Sllced\n4 for\t\nSANDWICH MEAT\ntreat, 1 Ib. tlni,\nEaeh \t\nGHERKINS-Sweet,\nlargo Jar  \t\nORANGES-Sweet and\njuicy: 3 dox. for -.\nPUREX TI8SUE-\n\u00ab fblli for \t\nBANANAS-\n3 Ibi. for  ......\nPHONE 110\nFor  the   Choicest   Groceries \u2014\nFreih Fruits and Vegetable!\nlea Cream In Bricks,  Bulk or\n;  Conei\nfor Sport Wear\nFor sport wear nothing teas comfortable these hot\ndays as one of these Polo\nShirts. Made in plain\nshades or stripes with\nbutton or laced neck.\nf 1.00 \u2022 91.315 - 91.SO\nFMORY'jB\n*-*     Limited       W\n2St\n2#\nw\nCampari'\n w\nJO*\n95*\n45*\n25*\n* *; arm Sammm \\wmmmm\nHUGH HERBERT\nPATRICIA ELLIS\nWARREN  HULL\nHOBART CAVANAUOH\nSMYTHE'S SPECIAL\nSUNBURN BALM\nSo soothing for real sunburn\nAt Smythe's\nPrescription   Druggist\nPhone 1\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Bldg\nt.*;,\n.V.\"\nFEATURE NO 2\nYOU'1.1 IAUGHI YOim CRYI YOUU\nDREAM MUCH-AND ENJOY It AIOII\nPlus the 6th Instalment\nof Our Serial\n'REXANDRINTY\"\nCOLLINSON'S GREAT\nREMOVAL SALE\nYOU10to50PerCeiitifYouBuy\nSAVE\nNOW!\nThe\nL. D. CAFE\nNELSON'S FINE8T RESTAURANT\nWelcome, r\nTrail andjlosslc^\nFriendsl\nEverything in readiness\nfor your comfort and\npleasure. Be sure to try\nour Fountain Service.\n\"Better Food for Lest\"\nWelcome-Trail, Rossland\nLAST\nTO&AY\nOur entrie stock is on sole at tremendous discounts, we do hot want to pack our stock!\nand move it. So we are giving you this opportunity to purchase your\nrequirements at very great saving.\nWatches\nWrist   and   pocket\nstyles for men and\nwomen \u2014 we offer\nthem to you at\nHalf\nPrice\nOUR EXTREMELY URGE AND\nBEAUTIFULLY ASSORTED STOCK OF\nSilver Plated Ware\n25% DISCOUNT\nNow is your opportunity to buy silverware, cut glass, stemware, ladies\"\nand gent's wrist watches. Signet and emblem rings\/wedding rings.\nToilet sets, manicure sets. Electric razors, electric clocks, mantle\nclocks, fountain pens and pencils. All fancy china, silver deposit ware.\nAt These Great Savings\nBuy One of our \"Hidden Treasure\" boxes at $1.00. You will be pleased at the value\nyou receive. We guarantee values from $.125 to $15.00 in these boxes. Person who\ngets ticket Number 13 in a box will receive a three piece silver tea service\nabsolutely free.\nThis is a real discount sale. There has been no marking up of goods for this sale. Our\nregular price tags are on the goods and you get your discounts from regular prices.\nHURRY!\nHURRY! The sooner you shop\nthe better choice you will have\nCOLLINSON'S\nJEWELRY STORE\n316 Baker Street\nHURRY!\nDon't Miss This Grand Show!   j\nContinuous From 1:00 P.M.\nTwo Boys With a Single Thought... Cxa\n\u25a0\nFeature Starts at 1:40. 3:50, 6:00, 8:10. 10:20\nAdded        Comedy\u2014\"TRANSATLANTIC LOVE\"\nTreats Our Cang\u2014\"SPOOKY HOOKY\"\nWORLD EVENTS in PARAMOUNT NEWS\nBOYS and GIRLS\nFREE\nSHOW\nCHILDREN\nIHTURDAY\nFREE\nSHOW\njust faring 3 coupons of 1 pound package of Nabob Tea,\nCoffee or Baking Powder, and the Cashier wilt give you\na ticket.\n\u25a0\nSpecial Matinee for Children at 1:00\nSerial\u2014\"Burn 'Em Up Barnes\"\nMickey Mouse\u2014\"Alpine Climbers\"\nPop-Eye\u2014\"What. No Spinach\" ^_\nMonday\nTuesday\n\"MORE THAN A SECRETARY\" and\n\"DEVILS PLAYGROUND\"\niftM-MM*\nteVe**************-.\n&tX(iS***\u00a3*1\u00a3*-**$***iQi**iiV.\ni..^.*..ji,*i*iiiSi\n..**.*:.:      * ,-,U ...  ;    *\n , \u2022\na_^ifHiHittHi|i\nmd\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_1937_07_24","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0412394","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"}]}}