{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0414641":{"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":"2022-05-11","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1938-07-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414641\/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":" Leaders Regain at New York,\nToronto Prices Climb\nPage Eleven\nPlipippiHP? i!|!(!i!mwmmWmm**!\ntilS StUARZa\nmm\nCaldwell Ur&es-Socialization of\nEntire Financial System\nPage Eight\ns VOLUME 37\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA.\n,-FRlA\nAY MORNINQ. JULY 29. 1938.\nNUMBER M\nMONOXIDE\nAIDED YMIR BABE'S DEATH\nHuge Japan\nINFANTRY TRIES\nKEEP PACE WITH\nMARINES IN THE\nDRIVE UP RIVER\ni \u25a0\nInvading Planes Bomb\nNew Chinese Line\nof Defence\nALSO ASSAULT\nRAILWAY LINE\n8HANGHAI, July 29 (Friday)-\n(AP)\u2014Two columns of Japanese\nInfantrymen, struggling to keep\npace with Japanese marines In\ntheir drive up the Yangtze toward\nHankow, were engaged today In\na broad movement to flank the\nChinese line at the Tlenklaehen-\nWuiueh boom.\nMeanwhile, Japanese planet continued terrific bombardments of\nihe new line of defence, centred on\nthe submerged Yangtse barricade\nuprlver from fallen Kiuklang and\nabout 110 miles from Hankow.\nThe big bombers assaulted a\nrailroad running from Kiuklang,\n90 mllea aouth, to the principal\nChinese air bate, Nanchang. Part\nof the railway parallels the Chinese line. The airmen also attacked\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nIndustries to\nVote on Plan,\nVICTORIA, July It (CP)- Hon.\nK. C. MacDonald, British Columbia's minister ot agriculture, s_4d\ntoday all industries now operating\nunder the Natural Products Marketing act of British Columbia would\nbe given opportunity to \"vote on\nthe question of whether or not they\nshall continue under the various\nboards.\"\nDr. MacDonald was discussing yesterday's decision of the privy council's judicial committee that the\nprovincial marketing legislation was\nintra vires.\nDr. MacDonald added the public\nIn general need have no fear of increased retail milk prices as \"the\nretail price, the wholesale spread\nand the price to the producer all\nwere controllable under the act by\nthe Dairy Marketing board.\nThe privy council's decision would\nenable market regulations to be\ntightened, he added. The power of\ncontrol was placed in the hands of\nthe producers, themselves, while at\nthe same time there was protection\nlor the consumers.\n\u2022iiiii 11 \u25a0 1111111 \u25a0 1111111 \u25a0 < \u25a0 11 \u25a0 _ 1111 e 111 <\nGOES TO JAIL FOR\nENTERING NORTH\nIRELAND\nBELFAST, Northern Ireland,\nJuly 28 (AP) \u2014 Eamonn Donnelly former director o( elections\nfor Prime Minister De Valera's\nFianna Fail party in Eire, refused to pay a fine today and\nbegan a month in prison for disobeying an order excluding him\nfrom Northern Ireland.\nDonnelly, a former memher of\nthe Northern Ireland parliament,\nreturned across. the border t?\nvisit his home In.Newry, where\nhe was arrested. ',   . %   .\nHe was offered the choice of\npaying a fine of \u00a325 ($125) or\nserving a month '.ft prison. The\norder barring him from Northern Ireland was made 13 years\nago.\niiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiimiiiiini\nBRITISH HOUSES\nRECESS TODAY\nLONDON, July 28 (CP Cable) \u2014\nParliament recesses tomorrow for\nthree months with the government\nbelieving the foreign situation less\ntense than at any time this year.\nMajor problems remain, but peaceful solu.ions appear li!_ely.\nThe British government believes\nthe spirit of reconciliation at last Is\nentering the European situation.\nThere is an apparent tendency to\ntackle problems by conference, not\nby long-range provocative speeches. This is borne out by visits to\nLondon by Capt. Fritz Weldemann,\nChancellor Hitler's personal representative, and the selection of Viscount Runclman as mediator of the\ndispute between the Czechoslovak\ngovernment and the Sudeten Germans. .   \u25a0.\nWhile the house is In recess for\nthree months, authority has been\ngiven the speaker to reassemble the\nmembers on instigation of the government . .\nPATTULLO BOOKED\nAT BELLINGHAM\nJAIL\nSEATTLE, July 28 (AP) \u2014\nPremier T. D. Pattullo of British Columbia, arrived today to\nparticipate in Seattle's civic celebration, the \"Potlatch of Progress.\"\n\"I bring the felicitations of\nBritish Columbia and I am glad\nto join you on this occasion,\" he\ntold a gathering.\nMr. Pattuljo was welcomed at\nthe border by Mayor B. B. Han-\nning of Bellingham and Gerald\nW. Gannon, chamber of commerce president, and a Seattle\ndelegation. He was taken to Bellingham city jail, \"booked\" as a\njoke, and then Introduced to\ncity officials today.\nB.C Forest Fire Situation Takes\nTurn for Worse as Winds Increase\nFire fighters were tent out from\nGrand Forks Thursday night to\na fire on the north fork of the\nKettle river, apparently near the\nfork of Granby and Burrell creeks.\nExtent of the fire was not known,\nforeit branch official! at Nelion\nwere advised Thursday night, but\nIt wai not believed to be large.\nThli fire and a grass fire Thunday morning about three mllei\nwait of Nelion beside the Granite\nroad, apparently itarted by a\nI imoker, were the only new outbreak! lilted In the Kootenay-\nBoundary Thunday. Thli fire wai\nout loon after It wai reported.\nCrew on the Lamb creek fire In\nthe Lumberton area wai reduced\nThunday, but a lubitantlal patrol\ncrew wai maintained to prevent\nIt ipreading.\nj VANCOUVER, July 28 (CP) -\nfhe forest fire situation through\nBritish Columbia took a turn for\nIhe worse today as winds Increased\nInd humidity remained low.\nJ Attention of fire fighters at the\nVancouver island blaze near Camp-\nfcell River concentrated on green\nlimber at the edge of Forbidden pla-\nfeau as forecasts for strong westerly\nBinds were reported,\nJ Meanwhile an extra crew and\nlump were rushed to the coal mln-\npg town of Bevan in the island fire\nlone to battle a spot fire, within a\nJlile of the community. The new\nllaze covered two acres and forest\nIfficia-s said west winds would\nlihip it into the town.\nTin the Slmilkameen district of\nfcuthern British Columbia 500 men\nli scattered groups fought blazes\nfhlch officials said constituted the\nlost serious situation in recent\nlears,\nGranby Consolidated Mining A\n[Smelting  company   operation   at\nCopper mountain near Princeton,\nB, C, was Idle as Iti crew of 400\naided by foreit fire tighten, battled a hot blaze that licked through\n300 acrei of tinder dry Jack pine.\nThe flamei were  within  three\nmiles of the camp.\nAn emergency call said the CoquI-\nhalla fire was surging into the narrow Bear Creek valley, 120 miles\nnortheast of here. The road through\nthe valley was endangered,\nFIRES FLARE\nANEW, ALBERTA\nEDMONTON, July 28 (CP) -\nSmoky skies have returned again\nto northern Alberta, the result of\nfires in the Peace River district and\nin the area between the Peace River\nand Edmonton.-\nA fire was. burning in heavy tlm.\nber 50 mile's northwest of White-\ncourt, it was reported today by the\nAlberta forestry branch, while another blaze flared 100 miles northwest of Whitecourt. A third fire was\nreported south of Grande Prairie.\nWhitecourt is 100 miles northwest of\nEdmonton and Grande Prairie 250\nmiles northwest\nThe forestry branch said the fires\nwere under control.\nRE80RT TOWN\nMENACED\nTOLEDO, Ore., July 28 (AP) -\nThe fishing and resort town of Wald-\nport, 18 miles south of here on the\nmouth of the Alsea river, was menaced tonight by a fire which destroyed the Waldport lumber mill\nand burned a beer parlor.\nA brisk northwest wind threatened to carry the flames to other\nstructures in the town of 400 persons.\nConflicting reports said the town\nwas enveloped in a brush blaze and\nthat the sawmill's engines exploded.\n'WE WERE NEVER\nLOST', HEPBURN\nDECLARES, RILED\nAT ALL THE FUSS\nWeather Forces Party\nGive Up Flight in\nthe North\nFORCED BACK ON\nTRIP TO JUNEAU\nSKAGWAY, Alaska, July 28\n(AP) \u2014 Declaring himself \"fussed\nbecause of all this fuss,\" Premier\nHepburn of Ontario arrived late today from Carcross, Y. T., by train\nafter 24 hours in which anxiety was\nfelt for his safety,\n\"I do not care for any more publicity,\" he said at the depot.\n\"I will have nothing to do with\nan international hookup. We we're\nnever lost There was no cause for\nall this fuss.\"\n(A broadcast over thie NBC red\nnetwork at 8 p.m. P.S.T, from Skagway did not include the premier.)\nHepburn arrived with Bernard E.\nSmith, New York city broker.\nThere was a possibility the premier and Smith would fly to Juneau\nin a specially chartered plane piloted by Sheldon Simmons. Summons\nbroke through bad weather to fly\nbroadcasting apparatus here.\nHepburn's 8000-mile aerial Inspection trip was interrupted yesterday by stormy weather, and the\nplane Bat down at Carcross, Because the Hepburn party was not\nalarmed, no word was sent ot its\nwhereabouts.\nMr. Hepburn's pilot, Jimmy\nTowne, took oft tot Vancouver,;\nvia Hazleton, B. C\u201e but was forced\nback to Carcross tonight,\nFORCED BACK\nCARCROSS, Y. T, July 28 (CP)\n\u2014Jimmy Towne, pilot of Premier\nHepburn's aerial tour party, was\nforced back to Carcross when bad\nweather interrupted his flight to\nVancouver.\nMeanwhile Premier Hepburn and\nBernard E. Smith, New York broker\nand member of the party, boarded\nthe afternoon train of the White\nPass and Yukon route for the 80-\nmile rail trip to Skagway, Alaska.\nThere they will board the Canadian\nPacific coastal liner Princess Alice\nand proceed to Prince Rupert.\nJ. P. Bickell, Toronto financier\nand owner of the big twin-engined\nplane Towne is flying, remained\nwith his pilot and machine here.\nThey will stay here overnight, and\ntry to get through to Vancouver\ntomorrow.\nThe partys plans' include fishing\nat Campbell River, Vancouver Island, but it was not known today\nwhether they would adhere to that\nschedule.\nThe flying tourists left Dawson,\nY. T., yesterday, stopped briefly\nat Whitehorse 40 miles north of\nhere, and proceeded in the direction of Juneau, Alaska.\nBad flying conditions sent them\nback to Carcross where they spent\nthe night, and unsettled weather\nalong the coastal route today decided them to give up their plane\ntor the present.\nAll the party were well during\ntheir night and forenoon stay here.\nWith no communication between\nthis point and the \"outside\" during\nthe night, Carcross this morning relieved anxiety which had been felt\nlor the fliers when they were reported overdue at Juneau. Plans\nwere already under way at various points tor the start of an aerial search.\nAnscomb Visions\na Tory Victory;\nin Nelson Todoy\nTRAIL, B.C, July 28\u2014A Conservative victory at th* neat B.C. election was forecast today by Herbert\nAnscomb, M.L.A. for Victoria, visiting Trail.\nThe victory would come, Mr. Anscomb said, providing district organizations began active campaigns\nimmediately, added more names to\nthe voters lists and \u25a0 named their\ncandidates a year in advance.\nMr. Anscomb previous to his arrival here, visited Fraser Valley and\nOkanagan centres. He plans to go to\nNelson Friday.\nBritish Tories\nRetain Riding\nLONDON, July 28 (CP)-The East\nWilesden house of commons seat remained in the Conservative standing\ntoday when S. S. Haramersley defeated Maurice Orbaco, Labor, In\na straight party contest\nMr. Hammersley ppllcd 18,0119\nvotes against 12,278 for hli Labor opponent. In the 1935 general election\nD. G. Somerville, Conselyative, received 25,613' votes against 15,523\nfor Mr. Otbach, and 821?. for Miss\nN. S. Parnell, Liberal.\nHappy Scouts at Kokanee\n\u201e_____M\u00bbSaaB_s\nThis is a glimpse Into one of'the tents at the international camp-\norle at Camp Busk during the rest period.\nTABLES TURHED1000 YEARS AFTER\nGerman Police Seek Otto von Hapsburg for\nTreason 10 Centuries After Otto 1\njailed German Count on Charge\n24th. ANNIVERSARY OF AUSTRIAN WAR\nON SERBIA IS COMPLETELY IGNORED\nVIENNA, July 28 (AP)-The\n24th anniversary of the Austrian\ndeclaration of war agalnit Serbia, the first that divided Europe\nIn war In 1914, passed today completely Ignored.\n8lnce then, tha Hapiburgi lost\ntheir Imperial throne, monaWhy\nyielded to democracy and finally\nlittle Austria, all that wai left,\nof the Austro-Hungarlan empire\nafter the Versailles treaty, Hal\nbeen' absorbed In greater Germany,\nNow, almost a quarter of a century later, the tables seem Irrevocably turned agalnit the fallen house of Hapsburg.\nAll the wealth that Emperor\nOtto I began to accumulate 1000\nyears ago when he confiscated\nthe property of German Count\nGuntram now has been confiscated again from Otto, pretender\nto the same throne, by Relchs-\nfuehrer Hitler.\nA thousand years ago Emperor\nOtto sent Count Guntram to prison for high treason. Today Otto\nvon Hapsburg li wanted, by German police and a warrant Is out\nfor hli arrest, charging high. trea<\nion. \u25a0       ... .'-:\nClose Warfield\nRoad for a Day\nTRAIL, B.O, July 28-Wartield\nroad, according to an announcement\nby __. M. Stiles, Tadanac Reeve,\nwill be closed to traffic from 7:30\na.m. to 7:30 p.m. Friday.\nAuthor ol \"Tipperary\" Dies; War\nSong fo Which Embattled Empire\nMarched in Armor 24 Years Ago\nIT'S A LONG, LONG WAY TO TIPPERARY\nUp to mighty London came an Irishman one day,\nAs the streets are paved with gold, sure every one was gay;\nSinging songs of Piccadilly, Strand and Leicester Squarl, Till\nPaddy got excited, then he shouted to them there\u2014\nChorus:\n\"It's a long way to Tipperary, it's a long way\nTo go; It's a long way to Tipperary,\nTo the sweetest girl I know!\nGoodbye Piccadilly, Farewell Leicester Square,\nIt's a long, long way to Tipperary,\nBut my heart's right there!\"\nPaddy wrote a Utter to his Irish Molly O',\nSaying, \"Should you not receive it, write and let me knowl\"\n\"If I make mistakes in 'spelling', Molly dear,\" said he,\n\"Remember it's the pen that's bad, don't lay the blame on me.\"\nMolly wrote a neat reply to Irish Paddy 0',\nSaying, \"Mike Malmey wants to marry me, and so\nLeave the Strand and Piccadilly, or you'll, be to blame,\nFor love has fairly drove me silly\u2014hoping you're the same!\"\nRemember that song? It was\nwritten ln 1912, but lt was not\nuntil the bugles began to blow,\nthe drums to beat and the boys to\nmarch to war ln the beginning of\nAugust, 1914, that it became not\nso much the battle song of a nation as a vocal expression of the\nspirit of an Empire which sang\nit through the shocking rape of\nBelgium, the soul-killing retreat\nfrom Mons, the almost stupltylng\nblows ot the German army which\nwas not stopped until the battle of\nthe Marne.\nSinging of \"Tipperary\" was\nnot so much a Joyful expression ot\nlevity as a stern strapping on ot\narmor. \"We are in for a tough\njob\" said the boys \"but there is\nno good in pulling a long face over\nit\" So they sang \"Tipperary\"\u2014\nand, in due course\u2014by that time\nsinging \"Pack Up Your Troubles\n.. .'v\u2014won the war.\nLONDON,  July 28  (AP).\u2014The&of the 20th century he had spent\nman who wrote the famous British\nfar song\u2014\"It's a long Way to Tipperary\"\u2014died today in Birmingham,\nat the age of 60, It is the anniversary of the outbreak of war in 19U,\nwhich began between Austria and\nSerbia.\nHe was Jack.Judge, a fish salesman who became a British vaudeville headllner. He had been ln ill\nhealth for some time.\nHis publisherslretlred him on a\nlife pension, saying Judge had written \"a soldier's-anthem which actually helped to win the war.\"\nBefore he earned a fortune with\none of the most successful song hits\nmany years selling fish ln the Old\nBury market ln Stratfordshlre.\nHe wrote \"It's a Long Way to\nTipperary\" on a bet while playing\nIn vaudeville.\n\"It was New Year's day, 1912, that\nsomeone bet me I could not write a\nsong and produce it on the same\nday,\" he said recently,      _\n\"I took on the bet, sat down and\nwrote the words and music. That\nnight I sang lt at the Stalybrldge\nGrand theatre.\n\"It was a grand success. I had to\nsing it time and again. In fact, we\nhad great difficulty clearing the\ntheatre for the second house.\"\nWOMAN DIES AS\nFUMES RAZE A\nFULL BLOCK AT\nGRAND COULEE\n$100,000 Damage by\nFire  at   Site   of\nCoulee Dam\nBABY MAY HAVE\nALSO LOST LIFE\nGRAND COULEE, Wash., July\n28 (AP)\u2014One woman burned to\ndeath and businessmen estimated\ndamage at $100,000 In a fire which\ntoday razed a full block of the\nbusiness district in this original\n\"mushroom\" town at the Grand\nCoulee dam site.\nThe victim wu Identified as\nMrs. Marx Majsart, wife of Acting Mayer Larry Maasart Her\nbody was found In ruins of the\nMaasart Plumbing, and Heating\nahop, In whioh tha fire started\nfrom an unknown cause.\nUnconfirmed rumors circulated\nthat a baby also had been In a\nburned cabin while Its parents\nwere away, but there Was no\nverification.\nThe flames, leaping 100 feet In\nthe air and cracking windows across\nthe wide street with the heat, raced\nthrough the entire block within a\nhalf hour after the fire alarm was\nbroadcast\nThe fire reduced- to ashes the\nwooden frame buildings housing a\nhalf dozen.business establishments,\na sub-post office, two cabin groups\nand several individual cabins.\nBusiness men said little insurance\nwas carried on the buildings.\nThe fire struck while one ot the\ntown's two fire trucks was 90 miles\naway for repairs at Wenatchee.\nQUEBEC, July 28 ^-Transpacific service ol the Canadian-Australasian line will be continued, but\nto remove the threat ol foleign competition, Britain will have to change\nshipbuilding policy, Sir Edward\nBeatty, president of the Canadian\nPacilic Steamships, said today on\nhis arrival here on the liner Em-\npress of Britain.\nSir Edward, back from England\nafter discussing the building ot new\ntonnage, said current shipbuilding\ncosts \"are considerably higher and\nwe considered it unwise to build at\nthe present time.\"\nThere was no danger, he said, the\nCanadian-Australasian line, operating between Vancouver and the\nAntipodes and partly Canadian Pacific-owned, would be discontinued,\nbut he admitted British shipping\non the Pacilic was threatened by\nlorelgn competition.\nAir Agreements\nBetween U. S. and\nCanada Reached\nWASHINGTON, July 28 (AP) -\nThree aeronautical agreements between Canada and the United\nStates were reached today through\nan exchange ol notes between the\nCanadian minister. Sir Herbert\nMarler, ahd State Secretary Cordell\nHull,\nSuperseding an accord reached ln\n1929 between Canada and the United States the air navigation agreement provides for the recognition\nby each government __. - flights over\nits territory, or certificates or licences issued by the other government for its aircraft and, airmen;\nequality of treatment with regard\nto aircraft faculties; the right to\nprohibit flights over certain zones\nand compliance with local regulations, including those relating to\ncustoms and immigration.\nThe agreements come Into force\nAug. 1.\niiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiimiiiiiii\nHE  TALKS   FROM\nWINNIPEG   TO\nICELAND\nWINNIPEG, July 28 (CP) -\nLeader of the government party\nIn Iceland, Honas Jonsson, now\nin Winnipeg, today talked wlth\nGundmundur Hliddal ol Reykjavik, Iceland, over a 4500;\nmile chain ol wire and wireless communications.\nHe'discussed the weather and\nthe season's herring catch with\nHliddal, director ol telephones\nand telegraphs of Iceland. Later, Jonsonn sppke to his wife,\nalso ln Reykjavik, telling her\nof his first Impressions of Canada and of plans for a two-\nmonth's tour ot the Dominion.\nHliddal, who put through the\ncall by wireless to London, relayed to Montreal and then to\nWinnipeg, gave Jonsson an optimistic picture of the herring\ncatch.\nBlowing His Own\nHorn\nIt is his now. Commissioner J.\nM. Dronsfield, camp chief at the\ninternational Scout camp at Kokanee, tests out a water-buffalo horn\npresented to him by Dr. J. S. Cole,\nof Pullman, Wash., ot the Washington detachment.\nFIVE ENGINEERS\nKILLED AS MINE\nCAGE IN CRASH\nBORLAMAGUE, Que., July 28\n(CP) - Shattered bodies of five\nyoung mining engineers who plummeted to death ln a runaway hoist\ncage in the Lamaque Mining company's No. 7 shaft today rested in\na mortuary here tonight.\nThe hoist cage plunged TOO feet\ninto the depths of one of Quebec's\nlargest gold mines and dashed itself to pieces on a wood and concrete bulkhead, killing tour instantly and fatally injuring a fifth.\nA Jury under Coroner Joseph Ion\nheld an inquest and found a' verdict ol accidental death. Hoistman\nJ. W.. MacDonald testilied he was\nunable to control the mad descent\not. the cage which a short time before had safely lowered 11 loads of\nmln_rs to' their day's' w6fk deep\nunder the surface.\nKilled instantly were Peter Downey, 24, Glelchen, Alta.; James J.\nCrocker, 23, Toronto; Arthur M.\nHewat, 32, Halifax; and Harry Field,\n32, Bourlamaque. Lying in the shattered wreckage with the mangled\nbodies of his companions, was W.\nClarke Isbister, 23, Toronto, who\ndied in hospital a Short time later.\nHewat and Field were married,\nIsbister and Crocker betrothed.\nSuspect Held in\nMattson Kidnap\nTRUCKEE, Calif, July 28 (AP)-\nA men who gave his name as Herman DeVal, 28, of Omaha, Nebr,\nwas taken into custody here today and held for questioning in\nconnection with the kidnap-slaying\nof Charles Mattson, 10-year-old Tacoma boy.\nSheriff's Deputy N. F. Dolley said\nDeVal admitted but later denied\nhe abducted the Mattson boy. They\nsaid he told them he had been in\nand around Tacoma from December,\n1936, until March, 1937.\nCharles Mattson was kidnapped\nDecember 27, 1936, by a man who\nburst into the family home and\nseized the child from a group of\nother Juveniles, including his brother, William, then 16.\nState Police Sergeant C. E, Mc-\nKeen said DeVal resembled very\nclosely United States department\nof justice composite drawings of\nthe man who kidnapped Charles\nMattson.\nDenies Is One of\nHandcuffed Hikers\nLONDON, Ont, July 28 (CP)-A\nwoman who told London police last\nnight she was one of the \"handcuffed sisters,\" who had attempted\na Montreal-to-Vancouver trek handcuffed together, changed her story\ntoday. The woman and her husband, who said his name was Henry\nLeduc ot Montreal, were arrested\nlast night and charged with being\ndrunk.\nThe woman asserted the Montreal-\nto-Vancouver trip \"blew up\" at\nFlint, Mich., when her sister decided to return to Montreal.\nCAUSE OF DEATH\nA SEVERE BLOW\nBEHIND EAR, DR.\nAULD TELLS JURY\nLajeunesse Tot Dead\nBefore Body Was\nin Water\nJURY EXAMINES\nSCENE OF SEARCH\nCarbon-monoxide was a contributing, eauie In the death ef\nCarmen Lajeunesse, IB-months-\nold Ymlr baby whose body was\nfound In a creek near tha Ymlr\nYankee Girl mine a month after\nshe disappeared,\nDr. F. M. Auld, who conducted\nthe autopsy, told a coroner's Jury\nThursday that a severe blow behind the ear which caused a severe brain hemorrhage resulted In\nthe baby's death, but that carbon-monoxide was a minor contributing cause. She was dead before her body entered the water,\nhe explained, for the lungs Indicated she had not breathed In\nwater,\nThe adjourned Inquest resumed\nThursday with the coroner's Jury\nvisiting the camp at the old Dundee mine where Carmen disappeared June 6, and examining the\ncreek bed where her body waa\nfound a month later by four\nyouths picking huckleberries, Thla.\npoint, two witnesses stated, waa\ntwice Investigated In the course\nof the search for the missing tot,\nfirst on the evening of the day she\ndisappeared, and again on the third\nday when the Intensive __arch waa\nat its zenith.\nJOLT OVER ROAD\nTravelling in two car_ and a truck\nwith provincial police officers who\nhave conducted the investigation,.\nDr. H. H. Ma.Ke__-le, cotoer; hlsi I\nJury and officials agreed after being jolted over the old mining-logging road that Carmen could not\nhave covered by herself tha milai\nand a hall from tha plana where\nshe disappeared to th* point where\nher body was found.\nNine witnesses wei\u00bb _____nlned\nThursday afternoon at. the court\nhouse at Nelson by Dr. MacKenzie\nand E. P.' Dawson ol Brown tt Dawson\u2014Maurice Lajeunesse, father ot\nthe girl, who told ol taking her to\nthe camp for the day while he went\nto work at the mine; Mra. Edna\nLaRoche, who was hired by Mr,\nLajeunesse during part ol tho time\nhis wile-was in Kootenay Lake*\nGeneral hospital and' who initiated\nthe search lor Carmen when the girl\ndisappeared while sha was washing\n(Continued on Page Three)\nMin. Max.\nNELSON     ~. bl 88\nVictoria      ...~ - 52 \u2122\nNanaimo        50 70\nVancouver    56 78\nKamloops      68 92\nPrince George   52 70\nEstevan Point - 54 62\nPrince Rupert   - 50 58\nLangara       50 56\nAtlin  50 62 \u2022\nDawson, Y. T  52 66\nSeattle        56 72 ,\nPortland     -  64 84 :\nSan Francisco \u201e..  58 64 _\nSpokane      72 92 j\nLos Angeles     64 84\nKelowna      58 90\nVernon       \u2014- 60 \u2014\nGrand Forks     - 56 94\nKaslo  58 99\nCranbrook      52 84\nCalgary    .'- - 54 84\nEdmonton  - 56 82\nSwift Current  56 94\nMoose Jaw   52 92\nPrince Albert  62 86\nSaskatoon     52 92\nQu'Appelle    - 52 92\nWinnipeg      56 86\nForecasts \u2014Kootenay: Fresh south\nwest to west winds, partly cloudy\nand becoming somewhat cooler with\nscattered thunder showers.\nSPANISH GOV'T. FORCES CONTINUE\nADVANCE; REOCCUPY 200 SQ. MILES\nHENDAYE, France, July 28 (AP)\n\u2014The Spanish government's South\nCatalonia army, led by a former\nstonemason, was reported tonight\nto have pushed around and beyond\nGandesa and well along the road to\nAlcantz.\nThe day of war also brought an insurgent aerial bombardment of Valencia in which 18 persons, including a Danish non-intervention observer and a Chinese\" cook aboard\nthe British freighter Kellwyn, were\nkilled\nThe Kellwyn, Just arrived from\nMarseille, France, to discharge a\ncargo of sugar and coffee, was only\nslightly damaged. One hundred\nand fifteen bombs in all, were said\nto have been unloaded over the\npopulous Mediterranean port city.\nA similar attack on Tarragona\ncaused widespread damage but the\nnumber of casualties was not In. own.\nThe government did not claim actual occupation of Gandesa, General Francisco Franco's former regional headquarters and a link between the insurgent Catalonlan and\nMediterranean fronts but it lay within the 200 square miles of territory\nregained from the insurgents by thi\nfour-day Ebro river offensive.\n wmmmmW\nPAQE TWO \u25a0\nNEW 10-WHEEL FIRE       IS\nHERE; WIU BE TESTED I0DAY\nEmbraces Pump and Can Fight Fire From\nEither Hydrant or Lake; Equipment\n\u2022 Is the Latest Pattern  *..\n\u2022The  new  ten-wheel tire truck\n: Mihlch will be purchased by the city\nfir use in the tire department, pro-\nI vidcd it passes the required test today, was brought here by freight\nThursday noon from Toronto. Its\ntesting will start at 7:30 a.m.\nThis lire-lighting machine is  a\n! special truck featuring a dual-ac-\n; tion rear-end, which provides it with\nsix forward speeds and two reverse\nspeeds. The eight rear dual wheels\n' are not the tracer types, .but are divided into two units each receiving\nits power from the engine by means\nof a drive shaft, The ^unlt nearest\nI to the engine is connected to the\nengine directly while the rear set\nis connected to the first set and receives the power undiminished.\n. The driver may voluntarily disconnect the rear-most set of hind\nwheels by operating a lever from the\ndriver's seat.\nShipping weight of the truck was\n6800 pounds. It Is 22% feet long\nIrom the front bumper to the rear\nrunning board. The engine gener\nates 99.1 horse power.\n':  POWERFUL PUMP\nIts equipment consists of the most\nmodern articles. Th* pump, which is\noperated by the truck engine at two-\n:\nB. C. RESORTS\nDELIGHTFUL\nVacation\ntnd :\nWeek-Ends st the        S\nOUTLET HOTEL     =\nProeter \u00a7\ng Spend Vour Holidays\n9         --J  aUhe\nGood meals, friendly service. Excellent fishing, boating, hiking,\nswimming. Furnished cabins. Grocery store ln connection.\nW. A. WARD. Prop.\nthirds of its speed and power, ts used\nto build up pressure on low-pressure\nhydrants. Another department ot the\npump enables the firemen to shoot\na good stream of water taken from\na body of water such as a lake. It\ncreates a pressure in the water before the water is forced througn\nthe hose,\nBuilt in the body of the truck is\na water tank holding 100 gallons,\nattached to 200 feet of 'A inch hose.\nThis Is -for emergent cases when\nthe hydrant is out ot order or lro<\nten. In a large container on the rear\nrunning board Is a special chemical\npreparation calcd loamite, which\nis used for emergencies where the\ncommon extinguishing liquid would\ndo harm to fabrics or furniture.\nAnother container holds the regular\nextinguishing solution.\nQUARTER MILE OF HOSE\nThe regular hose box on the new\ntruck will hold 1300 feet ot 2V, inch\nhose. A reel located under the box\nIs used for the 200 feet ot Vs inch\nrubber hose.\nIt carries 40 feet of extension ladder made of aluminum alloy which\nis lighter and stronger than wood.\nAlong with the extension ladder is\nthe 18 foot roof ladder, made of the\nsame material. The ordinary fire\ntruck equipment, such as pick-axes,\ntin and wire cutters, are included,\nNelson's present fire truck has\nbeen in operation since April, 1914,\nIt carries 30 feet of extension ladder,\n16 feet of root ladder and 18 feet of\npopular ladder. Its 12-cylinder engine generates 182 horse-power. As\nwell as the fire extinguishers, the\nengine contains two 40-gallon tanks\nof water for emergent cases. It has\n1250 feet of 2 _ inch hose.'\nA similar truck is operated on the\nRossland fire brigade.\nRossland has a fire truck similar to the one being tested hers. It\npurchased the skeleton truck and\nconstructed the boxes and tanks Itself.\nTrail Defeats\nRedmen in Fast\nmmmrnmmmm^m\nN|L80N DAILY NIW*. NELSON, B. C.-FRIDAY MORNING, JULY M, f\nM\u00bbM_*W\u00abM\u00ab*W*W*I'I.I\nWESTERN   INTERNATIONAL\nBellingham 8, Vancouver 12.\nWenatchee'O, Ticoma 5.\nYakima 1, Spokane 1.\nPACIFIC COAST\nHollywood 1, Sin Diego 3.\nSeattle 8, Sacramento 3.\nPortland 1, Los Angeles 9.\nSan Francisco 1, Oakland 0.\nABOCIATION\nMilwaukee 7, Minneapolis 12.\nColumbia 6, Indianapolis 4.\n-\nCalgary Paralysis\nVkfimDietfowfli\nCase in Oil Valley\nCALGARY, July 28 (CP) - Victim of infantile paralysis who had\nfought for life in an \"iron lung\"\nsince last Friday, Billy Mallett, 19-\nyear-old Keoma, lta., youth, died in\nhospital here tonight.\nRider of Renown\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel. Nelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   .   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nMWMMMMM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nBLACK DIAMOND, Alta., July\n28 (CP) \u2014 Quarantine, established\nlast week in Turner Valley, Alberta's oil field centre, in ah effort to halt the spread of Infantile\nparalysis, has been extended to\nAugust 21.\nExtension of the ban against public meetings, theatres, churches and\nswimming pools, was made after\nthe fourth case since Monday was\nreported. t\nHUME\u2014F. C. Craig, Boise, Idaho;\nK. G. Robson, Calgary; W. Fraser,\nXootenay Bay; Mr. and Mrs. H. Anscomb, W. C. Sconce, Victoria; M. G.\nWallace,   Gordon  Wallace,   J.   A.\nBramham, P. G, McLean, W. J. S.\nCampbell, E. H. Drummond, Vancouver; A. H. Russell, Fort Vermilion; H. M. Petry, Spokane; D.\nMcLeod, Medicine Hat.\nTrail Legion Will\nHold Sports Meet\nTRAIL, B.fe, July 28\u2014Decision to\nstage the sports meek unauthorised\nby the Amateur Athletic association,\nin conjunction with their Labor\nDay celebrations was made by a1\nmeeting ot the Canadian Legion\nLabor Day committee ln the Memorial hall tonight Wider competition\nwould result from this move, it was\nfelt.\nAnnouncement will be made in\nthe programs,, that the meet is not\nunder the jurisdiction of the A.A.A.\nand thereby open to all In Trail and\ndistrict. Holders of A.A.A. cards, of\ncourse, would be unable to compete if they wished to avoid damage to their standings with the association.\nAppointment of four new commit'\ntee chairmen by James Melvin, general chairman, was another feature,\nThey were George Beniiee, dance;\nR. Forbes, parade; and P. Secco,\nLodge No. 123, and W. F. Truswell,\nLodge No. 11, dance.\nFour teams from Ymlr had signified their intentions of entering the\nproposed rock drilling contest, it\nwas announced.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n-       * P. and L. KAPAK. Proprietors\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade1 Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 ANO UP .\nFrie Parking NELSON, B. C. Phone 284\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St        Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nWHEN IT'S NEWS\nYou Read About It In the\nNelson Dally News\nEDGEWOOD, B C. HOTELS\nI Arrow Lakes Hotel\nEDGEWOOD, B. C.\nE. N1EDERMAN, Proprietor\nComfortable Rooms\u2014Good Meals\nLogical stopping place on the\n.road to Vernon\nVANCOUVER, tf. C, HOTELS\nI \"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"          Newly Renovated Throughout\n_%a_Ce___-3_m    ___T-r_4--__,f       Phones       Elevator\nIfUtierlll    IllJltSl   A.   PATERSON.    late   ot\n900 Seymour SL, Vancouver, B.C.         Coleman, Alta, Proprietor\n*   \"\u25a0 '         i \"     .\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nl\nExpress,Speed Is Seen\nas Rossland Drives\nat Finish'\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e July S8 *\u25a0 It was\ndifficult to ascertain the cause, but\nabout the middle of th* third quarter both teams snapped out of the\ndoldrums, sparked each other to\nkeen enthusiasm and accelerated on\nto a scintilatlng finish in a game\nof the West Kootenay boxla league\nhere tonight ln which Trail Smoke-\nEaters downed tht Rossland Red-\nmen 13-10.\nPlay opened like a loaded freight\non a steep grads and the momentum\nremained practically the same ijn.\ntil half time, when Smoke Eaters\nled 14.\nIt wu Smoke Eaters who started\nthe pyrotechnic display in tbe third\ncanto as they set out to build up\na greater margin. After Trail had\ndrilled two more past Gidinski for\nthe period, Redman realised the\nlocals wer* speeding away. They\ndug in to keep abreast and tally\ngoal tor goal till th* end Of the\nframe.\nFacing i 10-5 deficit as they en\ntered tha last canto, Redmen re.\ntallated with great effect and play\nreached \"a lightning express\" speed.\nKirkwood opened the scoring of\nth* period on Templet assist to further irk th* Rossland craw,\nNEARLY TIED\nThey came back to almost tl* th*\ncount Taking a pan from Anderson, Carkner rifled one past Leroy\nto make the score 11-0. The visitors\nhammered the Trail net and McGuire, assisted by Murphy, tallied.\nThe score went up 11-7. Hall the\nstanza had gone and Schuman\ndrove in another to boost the count\nto 11-8. Th* crowd w*nt hysterical\nas Saundry bulged the hemp placing Redmen only two goals behind\nSmoke Eaters, and went berserk as\nMcGuire scored from Simcock-\nTrail was leading by a single goal.\nSmoke Eaters during Rosslands\ngreat recovery had been in on Gidinski a number ot tlm** but had\nfailed to click. The play switched\nto the Rossland end of the rink and\nin a melee near the Redman's net,\nCarkner clubbed the ball clear.\nKlrkwood, who had been a big gun\nall night, rushed in to scoop up\nthe ball and score, increasing\nSmoke Eaters' margin to 2. There\nwas lets than a minute to go when\nHarrison soared through for another\nTrail goal to complete tho 13-10\nscore.\n\u2022  Box score.\nTRAIL\nTwo Appointed Trail\nHigh School Staff\nTRAIL, B.C., July 20\u2014Two coast\nteachers, Miss Dorothy M. Elliott,\nVancouver, and H. B. Tyner, New\nWestminster, have been appointed\nto the high school teaching staff by\nthe Trail-Tadanac school board.\nResignation of Miss Lois Clugston\nfrom the East Trail school staff has\nbeen accepted with regret\nVMUflL\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., July 28\n(CP) - Liberal Candidate R. A.\nHall wat leading Conservative G.\nW. Smith after seven out ot 18 polls\nhad been heard from in Athabaska\nriding\"! provincial byelectlon tonight. Han had polled 361 votes and\nSmith 88.\nIn Gumberland constituency scene\not the second deterred election, W.\nJ. Windrum wat leading Jules A\nMarion by S4i\u00bb votes to 281 with\nfive out of 34 polls reported, Both\nar* Liberal*.\nNo Decision Yet\non Rebuilding of\nVancouver Pier D\nTHE BOOTERY\ncurrent turfdom In th? cast it Nick\nWall (above). Nick usually has the\nmount on Menow, leading three-\nyear-old. \t\nLeroy ..__._\nPreston _\nKendal t...\nKirby\nBradbury ....\nStiles \t\nDavy \u201e.__,___,\nHarrison ......\nSammartino .\nMerlo _\t\nTemple  \t\nGallicano  ....\nKirkwood ...\nO APtPe\n0   0   0   0\nNibble Hanover Wins\nthe American Stake\nAGAWAM, Mass,. July 28 (CP.-\nNibble Tanover today wo nthe American stake two-year-old trot, carrying a purse of $4.85,50, in the\nfeature race of the second day of\nGrand Circuit racing here.\nThe son of Calumet Chuck, with\nHarry Whitney driving, easily captured the event in straight heats.\nChief Counsel, driven by Hugh M.\nParshall, also took the American\nstake three-year-old pace in straight\nheats. Arletan furnished the main\ncontention.\nTotalt ,\n.13   7 20  I\nROSSLAND\nGidintki\t\nHartney .\u2014\nCarkner\t\nSimcock\t\nSchuman.   __\nSaundry \t\nMcGuire\t\nAnderson ...\nMurphy\t\nLaface \t\nSimms \t\nScott \t\nSitton \t\nTotals\n: . 10 8 15 11\n. OTTAWA, July 18 (CP) W. Arthur Perry, 52, one of the city's out.\nstanding organists and a former secretary-treasurer of the Journal Publishing company, died at hit home\nhere today. He had been in poor\nhealth for the last two years.\nSTEELE RETIRES\nTACOMA, Wash., July 28 <AP.-\nFrcddie Steele's retirement from\nthe ring was announced here late\ntoday by Eddie. Miller, manager ot\nthe dethroned middleweight boxing champion.\nArtillerymen\nOff to Shilo\nXmbarklng on tha through train\nlat* Thunday night the Illth Bat-\ntery, C. F. A., it now en rout* for\nShilo artillery camp tn Manitoba,\nin company with the ,lWth from\nTrail and Rossland, the East Kootenay batteries Joining at Cranbrook.\nFour \"A\" Rinks in\nToday's Doubles\nTour rinkt ot section \"A\" ot\nmen't double* lawn bowling club\ncompetition played-off their matches at the C. P. It- lawns Thursday\nnight.\nJ. W. Graham, and hit partner\nbowler William Woods tied H. H.\nSUtherlsnd and Albert Smith 9-9\nJohn Draper and S. Bate detested\nE. W. Penwill and C I Archibald\n9-5 |n 10-end matches.\nTrail Motorist\nPays Fine of $10\nTRAIL, B. C, July 28 ~ S. V.\nRoberts, chsrged with driving to\nthe common danger paid a tine of\n$10 and $2.50 costs in city police\ncourt yesterday. He pleaded guilty.\nThe charge arose from an accident at the Bay avenue-Portland\nstreet intersection, involving Roberts car and a car driven by C. G.\nLeonhart.\nDANCER   SHOWS\nIMPROVEMENT\nAT CHICAGO\nCHICAGO, July 28 (AP) -\nAda Leonard, strip-tease dancer who risked her lite to save\nher skin from being scarred\nby an appendectomy, continued today to improve in her\nfight agalnit peritonitis, Dr.\nDark Meyer tald,\nThe dancer was stricken with\nappendicitis 11 days ago, but\nprotested against an operation.\nHer appendix bunt and peritonitis set in.\nWhen ir SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\n\"X2T Hotel VOLNEYpaS\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\nI\nSTANFORD Hotel, spokane\n\u25a0t SPRACUt O MADISON    R J,0!? nFr?.\u00b00P.'rkin_\nj\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 e.m. end 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phono 35\n\"' M. H. MclVOR. \"ton,\nBargain Fares\nTO\nVancouver \u2014 Victoria \u2014 Nanaimo\nCOINC AUGUST 19 ONLY\nFrom the West Kootenay, Nakusp and South, Proeter\nto Midway, Trail to Castlegar.\nRETURN FARES\nFrom:              to Vancouver Victoria Nanaimo\nProeter  13.55 $15.55 $15.05\nNelson     13.05 15.05 14.55\nTrail      12.70 14.70 14.20\nCrand Forks     10.45 12.45 11.95\nNakusp  -14.55       '16.55      '16.05\n\u2022-Via Weit Robson August 18.\nCorrespondingly low fares from Intermediate points.\nFINAL RETURN LIMIT AUGUST 31\nARROW LAKE POINTS AUGUST 30\nTickets good in day coaches only.\nNO baggage checking privileges.\nNo . top-'over allowed, Children 9 years o( age and\nund\u00abr 12 b*U-tar*...'.\"'.\"\nRegular Train Servlca In Eaoh Direction\nFor further Information apply ta nearest agent er writ*\nN. J. LOWES, City Ticket Agent, 50! Baker SL, Nelson, B.C.\nMONTREAL, July M (CP) -\nPossibility ot repairing Or rebuilding Canadian Pacific Hallway Com-\npahy property, damaged by lira at\nVancouver' waterfront yesterday,\nWill not be discussed until after\nconferences with Sir Edward Beatty, who arrived at Quebec today on\nthe liner Empress of Britain, it waa\nlearned today.\nItwas disclosed that damage to?\ntailed \"approximately 91.20D.000.\"\nNo official announcement will be\nmad* until after all Information\n*nd details had been placed before\nSir Edward, chairman and president of the company, returning\nhom* from a trip to England.\nCanadian National Railways and\nVancouver harbor board had ottered use ot their facilities for\ndocking of Canadian Pacific boat*\nbut C. P. R, officials laid they\nthought the company would be able\nto continue its Vancouver operations by having coastal ships dock\nat Pier B-C, and Australasia boat*\n\u00bb. Mr A. .\nCHARGED WITH\nDROWNING HER\nYOUNG DAUGHTER\nOPODEBICK, Oat, July 18 (CP)\n-Mrs. William Rebemkah MaGee,\n37, today was remanded to jail tot\na weak lor preliminary hearing\nwhen sha appeared on a murder\ncharge ln connection with th* death\nol her 10-montlis-old daughter, an\nonly child.\nIt is charged that Mrs. MaGee\ndrowned her baby yesterday ln a\ngalvanized watering trough.\nFruitvale Ladies\nMeet at Home of\nMri. H. Dovey\nFRUITVALE, B.C. - Th* United\nChurch Ladles Aid met at the :.orne\not Mrs. H. Dooey Wednesday afternoon.\nEight members were present\nMrs. W. Duncan, as hostess, served\ntea.\nGulch Juniors\nBeat Rossland\nTRAIL, B.C., July 28\u2014The Gulch\nhanded Rossland a 0-5 defeat in a\ngame ot the Trail junior boxla league\nin a preliminary to th* senior go\nat the arena here tonight.':\nAnglican Retreat\nBeing Held, Kailo\nKASLO, B, C. \u2014 Th* Mutual retreat ot tha Anglican clergy ol th*\ndistrict 1* being held In Kailo thla\nweek.\nThose attending are Ven. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham and Rev.\nJ. G. Holmes ot Nelson, Rev. I.\nBrown* of New Denver, Rev. E. H.\nMaddocks of Gray Creek, Dev. D. S.\nCatchpole ot Rossland, Rev. T. Scott\nof Grand Forks, Rev. G. C. Gardner of Kaslo, M. S. Leversedge ol\nNelson and Rev. L. A, Morrant ol\nTrail.\n!\ni\n\u25a0\ni\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nECONOMY FOOTWEAR\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\n150 PAIRS\nWomen's White\n\u25baHOES\nSandals,  Ties,  Pumps,  Open Toei.\nBraid sandals. Cut out patterns. A\nlarge selection of broken lines.\nSizes 3 to 8.\n*1.99\n150 PAIRS      |\nMen's SHOES  I\nBy J. LECKIE SHOE CO.\nSolid leather footwear in black and\nbrown novelty stitch. Large perforations. Plain vamps. Narrow \u00a3 ^  A^\ntoe lasts. Styles galore.     $\u00a3\u00ab95\nShoes that fit Sizes 6 to 11.    tP\n(A Leckie guarantee with every pair)!\nTHE BOOTERY Footwear\n411 Baker St. Men's-Women's-Childrsn's\nHowe ot Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP) -\nHon. C. p. Howe, Canadian minister of transport, said her* today\nthere was a possibility of extending Trans-Canada Airline's service\nto Victoria When the Sidney field\nof the department of defence was\ncompleted.\nThe minister, who arrived here\nafter a flight across the country on\nT. A. A. planes, said he expected\nthe line's transcontinental service\nwould be operating within two or\nthree months.\nHILLCREST LOSES TO\nELK VALLEY SENATORS\nNATAL, B.C.,-The Elk Valley\nSenators, holding down last place in\nthe Crow's Nest Pass Baseball league\ncame through with an unexpected\nwin over the highly touted Hillcrest\nSeniors when they defeated them\nto the tune of It-10. The visitors had\npreviously defeated th* Blairmore\nCanucks, league leaders and were\ntaking things rather easy. The game\nwas interesting until the third inning\nwhen the Elk Valley scored eleven\nruns to cinch the game. The visitors\nused three ohuckers in this torrid\n(nning to quench the tide but to no\navail. The Senators used two pitchers as Brandies weakened ln file\nfourth Inning when he was relieved\nby Sadlish who finished the game.\nThe game was played at the Elk\nValley grounds and was umpired by\nLeo Foster and W. Wildman ot Natal.\nTh* only horn* run was hit by Ber-\nanek of Hillcrest.\nBatteries: Slick, Price, Bambor-\nough and Richards. Brandies, Sadlish\nand Little.\n__ 1 h\t\nSHEFFIELD, Eng. (CP)-As a\nthank-offering to the Sheffield Royal Infirmary .(or aavinf his lit* In\n1923, S. C. Goodwin has given \u00a310,-\n\"\"\"   iiaissiis'aa--*:|iisiis--i--f\u00b0r* \u00a3\nFIRE  TRUCK  GOES\nWITH HIS COAT\nAND HAT\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP)-\nElghting tit. wss expensive for P.\nHarbord, Winnipeg visitor, who hung\nhis coat and suitcase on a fire truck;\nwhile he aided Its crew control the\nPier D fire yesterday.\nAfter the- excitement was over,\nHarbord discovered th* truck had\ngone. The coat and bag ar* still\nmissing.\nHAIL  KILLS   NEAR\nWHOLE  FINE\nCROP\nPIPESTONE, Man, July J.-.CP.\n-\u2022Farmers expecting to reap tht best\ncrop ih years in this area 180 miles\nsouthwest of Winnipeg, faced almost\na total crop loss today following a\nhailstorm yesterday.\nCOURT  IS HALTED\nBY NOISE OF\nHAIL\nMIDLAND, Ont, July 28 (CP)-\nThe loud rattle ol nail stones against\nthe windows ot the Midland courtroom today during a violent electrical and hall storm caused suspension\nof activities for duration of the\nstorm, as the noise was too great\nto permit arguments to counsel to\nbe heard.\nTrail Legionnaires\nto Go Convention\nTRAIL, B.C., July 28\u2014Seven Legionnaires of Trail will leave Monday afternoon to attend the Canadian Legion provincial convention\nat Vancouver on August 4, 5 and 8.\nE. Strudwlck, zone representative,\nWilliam Rigby, and Robert Forbes,\nof branch No. 11, and W. F. Truswell,\nbranch No. 132, will be delegates.\nOthers attending are William Rae,\nBen Simpson and Al Young.\nDedicate Island Light\nCANTON ISLAND, July 28 CAP).\n\u2014Richard Black ot th* department\nof interior today dedicated Canton\nIsland light to the memory ol Capt,\nEdwin C. Musck end Ui crew ol\nsix who perished last January when\nthe Samoan dipper exploded making an emergency landing near\nPago Pago.\nBritish and American flags fly\ntogether ever Canton Island which\nIs claimed by both th* United\nStates and Great Britain and colonists of both nation* attended the\nsimple dedication ceremony,\nFewer on Relief\nVICTORIA, July 28 (CP)-Sub-\nJect to final recheck, British Columbia official relief lists were lower\nby 7422 names In June, provincial\nrelief officers reported today. The\nlists contained 60,608 names, compared with 58,030 names in the\ncorresponding month last year.\nThe list included 11,813 heads of\nfamilies and 4778 single men. Dependents numbered 33,918.\nTwilight Racing\nfor Longacres\nSEATTLE, Wash, July 28 (API-\nLongacres race track officials announced today \"Twilight Racing\"\nwould be offered each Thursday,\nstarting August 4. The first race\nwill start *t 4:18 p.m. with tbe day's\nmeet completed about .7:30.\nB. C. MAN DIES\nIN SCOTLAND j\nGLEN BRITTLE, Skye, Scotland,\nJuly 28 (CP Cable)\u2014John Dun.\ncanson Kay, retired British Columbia boiler inspector, collapsed and\ndied today while climbing Scurf\nAlasdlar, the highest peak ot the\nCoolin hills of this island.\nSmoke Eaters and\nRedmen Combine\nAgin' Lethbridge\nTRAIL, B.C., July 28\u2014Forces of\nRossland Redmen and Trail Smoke\nEaters will be combined to enter\nan exhibition boxla game at Lethbridge Saturday night with the In*\ndians of that city, who are coached\nby \"Rocky\" Davies, organizer and\nformer defenoeman ot the Rossland\ncrew. The boys, all of whom participated In a West Kootenay boxla fixture here tonight, left right after the\ngame to catch the east bound train\nout ot Nelson.\nThe players are Bradley, Preston.\nKendall, Merlo, Harrison, Marcus\nSmith ahd Stiles ol Trail; Anderson,\nSimms and Ezart ot Rossland.\nPIONEER DIES\nVICTORIA, July 28 (CP)-AjcW-\nbald MacAuley, 78, rancher ot the\nCbilcotin country ot northern Brit*\nlsh Columbia where he ha* lived tor\n51 years, died here today In St.\nJoseph's hospital. He waa boa ln\nIreland.\nF. L. Parks Laid at\nRest at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.O.-A widely attended funeral wu held her* Tuesday afternoon when friends of the\nlate Francis Leslie Parks assembled\ntor list rites, which were conducted\nby Rev. J. F. Bel) in the Presbyterian\nchurch. Prior to the service in the\nchurch a Masonic service r.'as held\nin the Temple at 2:30. Pall beepers\nwere Miyor T. M. Roberts, A. E.\nJones, E. S. Home, H. A. McKowan,\nM. McCrindle, Dr. F. B. Miles, W.\nE. Worden and _5f, W. 1. Green.\nThe late Mr. Parks, pioneer herd-\nware m>n Of th* district, was bom\nin St John N.B, coming to Cranbrook In 1888. Mr. Parks has been\nactive citizen during his 40 years\nin Cranbrook. He Is survived by\nbis wife at Cranbrook, one daugh-\n.fitt______ij_i_____i_i\nSays Varicose\nVeins Can Be\nReduce\nIf you or any relative or friend\nIs worried because of varicose veins\nor bunches, as good advice foi\nhome treatment as any friend car\ngive, Is to get a prescription knowr\nas Moone's Emerald Oil.\nSimply ask Mann, Rutherford Co.\nor your druggist for an origina:\nbottle ot Moone's Emerald Oil and\napply night and morning to thi\nswollen, enlarged veins. Soon yot\nshould notice that they are grow\ning smaller and the trcatmen\nshould be continued until the vein\nare no longer burdensome. So pen\netrating and efficient is Emeralt\nOil that it also helps simple swell\nIngs due to strain to disappear.\n(Advt-\nPrompt, Efficient Service\nWest Transfer Co.\nEstablished 1899 Nejhon, I. C. J\n723 Bakei\n '\u25a0\n.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\" \\    \u25a0 \u25a0        .     \u25a0 i' '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B. ..-FRIDAY MORNING. JULY \u00bb. 1888,      -        \u2022 -\n...\nPAGE THREE\nAugust Charge Account\nOpen Today.\nPayable September 10th.\nDOLLAR DAY SPECIAL IN\nHOME FROCKS\nThey're bright and gay, and so suitable for these\nwarm days. Guaranteed prints in excellent quality\ncotton. Ever so many styles including the.popular\nbutton down dress. Sizes 14-20; jl ft A\n38-52. Price    \u00bbP_.UU\nSummer  Blouses\nat a Saving\nSoft silks, crisp taffetas\nand organdies. Tailored or\nfussy styles with short\npuffed sleeves. Nicely\ntrimmed in braid, buttons and lace. White,\npastels and prints. Sizes\njr.*. $1.00\nCool Cotton'\n60WNS\nThe Ideal garment for\nthese hot nights. Cool,\ncrisp cotton gowns, that\nlaunder and wear so\nwell. Roomy and well-\ncut in pink and white..\nSizes    small,    medium,\n_t... $1.00\nDOLLAR DAY SALE OF FABRICS\n39c Printed Piques, 4 yards for  H.90\n39\" Printed Piques, 4 yards' for  __\n69c Dress Crepes, 2 yards  __\n27\" Rayons, all shades, 5 yards \u2022 JJ-JJ\"\n36\" Dress Linens, 6 shades, 2 yards for ........ *X.W\n\u2014Second  Floor  HBC\nLadies' Drill SLACKS\nMore than a bargain in sports slacks. Tailored from\nheavy quality drill, with pockets and zipper fastening. Navy only in sizes 14-20. fljl Aft\nRegular $1.49 tpl.UU.\nSale of MILLINERY\nThe hat you want is here at an exceptionally low\nprice. Straws, taffetas and felts in white and pastels.\nPriced for quick clearance.\nValues to $3.95. Price \u25a0\t\nRayon  Damask\nLUNCH  CLOTHS\n54x54. White grounds\nwith border in color. Just\n36 of these. <M AA\nDollar Day, each tpl.UU\nPlaid'\nLUNCH CLOTHS\nSmart and fast color.\nThese are in 52\" size and\nworth     much     more.\n_tr.Day:....$1.00\nWomen's Boudoir\nSLIPPERS\nSlippers, 30 pair only of\nred, blue, green and\nblack. Plain, with cuban\nheels. Sizes 4\nto 8\t\n-Main  Floor HBC\n$1.00\n\u2022  SALE PURE SILK HOSE\nSemi-service or chiffon hose\u2014all full fashioned. Every\npair with neat heel and toe reinforcements. Choose yours\nfrom the smart summer shades In sizes (1 AA\n8y_tol0y2.2pairsfor... \u00abPl.VU\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nWomen's\nLISLE HOSE\nHere's the sturdy stocking for the garden or\nbeach\u2014mercerized, lisle\n.hose that will give you\nsolid comfort in this\nwarm weather. Colors\nbrown, fawn and grey.\nSizes '8 Vz to\nlOVi.\n4 pairs.. $1.\"\"\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\nChildren's\nAnklets\nWith neat lastex tops in\nblue, red, fawn, yellow,\ngreen and white. Good\nwearing silk and lisle in\nsizes 6 to 8'\/2.\n4pairs for ...\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\nH B.C Grocery Specials\nON SALE TODAY, SATURDAY and MONDAY\nFREE CITY DELIVERY 193 PHONES 194\nICING 8U0AR- 2-lb.     -trjA\ncarton; each  *\/r\nPASTRY FL.OUR-B. A IM\nK. 7-lb cotton aacki; each _\u00bb_\u00bb.\nCOFFEE\u2014Country Club, 3Qft\nfreah; per Ib 3*r\nBUTTER-Hudionla flnt A'M\narade; 3 Ibi  'Jr\nSALAD  DRESSING-\nKraft; 32-01. Jar \t\nKETCHUP\u2014Clarki; %mA\n12-oz. bottlea  *\/1\u00bb\nVINEGAR\u2014Helm; _)A_*\n32-oz. bottle.  m*Y\nm\n8UGAR\u2014Granulat-  <Oi   _\nti; 20-lb, cotton tk. V***\u2122\nSALMON\u2014Sockeye, Fraier\nGold, i_s; J_|.\n2 tlm    \u00abMV\nTUNA FISH\u2014Solid Jtieat, mm*\nVet; 2 tim *lr\nSODAS\u2014Red Arrow;       \"_\u00a3.\nlarge carton        **.\nFLOUR-Maple        ft__fQ\nLeaf; 49-lb, lack .... mmtmf\nPUREX TISSUE-\n3 rolle \t\n221\nBLEACHED SHEETS\n136 only, Wabasso Sheets in a size 72x90. Do not miss I\nthis value. Come early. (P1 -AA I\nDollar Day, each  -Pl.UUI\nCLEARANCE SUMMER HANDBAGS\nIncluding paisleys, white or white with color trims in\nsmart styles. Values to $1.49. tfl AA\n80AP-Pearl White _p ___\nlaundry; \u00ab cakei  ..... *its*r\nSOAP-lvory largest f |jj\nlite; 2 cakes  **T\nGRAPEFRUIT-\n6 for \t\n25*\nCERTO\u2014\nper bottle\n291\nALL  BRAN-Kel-        _*\nloggi; large oartona .. \"\u25a0\"\"\nT0MATOE8\u2014Okanagan;   fatal\n2 Ib *\/r\n8ALT-lodlied or IM\nplain; 2 large cartom *\u25a0\u00bb.\u00bb\nCORNED BEEF\u2014 Here-   _\u00bbQ|.\nford; 2 tlm _. \"J*\n80UP\u2014Torpato  or _| __\u2666\nvegetable, Aylmer; 3 tlm *_\u00bbr\nTOMATO JUICE\u2014 Lib.   ,QA\nby\"t, 18-ez; 2 tlm  mrr\nPEANUT BUTTER- __Q|.\nMeColl't, 2s; per tin . **\u2022\u25bc>\nPINEAPPLE-8liced or _A\ncruihed, large tlm; 2 for \"*V\nCHICKEN\u2014Aylmer, _.A\n7-oz. tint; each   \"rT\nTEA-HBC Broken     AQA\npekoe; per Ib W\n32*\nCHEESE\u2014Chateau;\n1-lb. carton ......\t\nLIME JUICE\u2014Montier-   ijQA\nrat; 38-o_ bottle **\u00bb*\nMATCHES-Maple Leaf; <%\u00a3*\nper carton  .'.  *WT.\n1 large carton RINSO and 1\n\u25a0mall carton RINSO;   n9g\\\nthe two for m*T.\nORANGES\u2014Sweet and    JQ\u00abJ\nJuicy; 2 dot *'r\nLARD\u2014Swlft'a Silver- IstA\nleaf; 1-lb. carton ....... *\"*\nAPRICOTS-No. 1 qual- QOA\nIty; per crate  *   T\nBroadcloth SHIRTS\nand\nSaturday\nFine English broadcloth shirts, collar at- a. ^    AA\ntached styles, fused and soft collars, new $ \u25a0 \u00bbwU\n\"\u2014Main Floor HBC\npatterns. Sizes.HVi to 17.\nMen's\nPYJAMAS\n50 pairs only, new colors and patterns, in light\nweight flannelette, or\nfancy broadcloth pyjam-\n5\u00bb. $1.00\n\u2014Main   Floor HBC\nMen's\nDENIM PANTS\nMen's full cut blue denim\npants with full set of good\npockets. <C1 Ofl\nSizes 30 to 42. \u00abpl.UU\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\nPAINTERS'\nOVERALLS\nPainters' white bib overalls with a full set of\npockets and brush loops.\n.r.3..!\u00b0.H..$l.flfl\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\nMen's Brown\nCanvas\nBOOTS and\n. OXFORDS\nStrong and hard wearing.\nRubber soles. (PI AA\nSizes 6-11. ...-J.1.UU\nBoys' canvas oxfords.\nRubber sole, white, only.\nJ?.1; $1.00\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\nSOAP\u2014Lifebuoy <%+f\\\nhealth; 3 cakea . **\u00bbr\nJARS\u2014Wide   mouth   Maun  er\nEconomy, quarts; _I _(C\nper down  _ r*\u00ab*_\u00bb\nECONOMY CAPS- <yt\\A\nper doz. _, \"Sm.\nTo Clear, each\nT|tttofoi#$\u00ab! %\nINSORPOfWfTED. gWlM^lfiZft\nMen's\nWORK SHIRTS\nMen's chambray work\nshirts, coat style with\nbreast pocket. Colore\nkhaki, blue and assorted.\nSizes 141\/2 to 11 AA\n17. Price ._...\u00abP1.UU\n\u2014Main  Floor  HBC\nBoys'\nDENIM LONGS\nBlue, black and grey denims, neatly finished cuff\nbottoms and high waist\nSizes 6-18 years $1.UU\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\nMen's Pullover\nSWEATERS\nNew sleeveless pullovers,\nwhite and yellow. V-\nneck, snug fitting waist\n\u00a3n4d2.s!M.s.34.$1.00\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\nMEN'S SUMMER SOCKS\nMen's rayon socks, silk and wool, or sport socks with\nneat fitting elastic tops. (PI AA\nSizes 10 to 11 Vi.'3 pair ipl.UU\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nFelt Base Floor\nCovering\nRexoleum or Tayfelt In\n6' width. 20 designs to\nselect from. Bring -your\nroom measurements.\nDollar Day,\n3 square yards .\u00bb\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\n23-Piece\nTEA SETS\nFine china nicely decorated tea pots, cream and\nsugar, 6 tea plates, 6\ncups and sauc- (PI AA\ners. Dollar Day tpleUU\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\nBLACK STEEL\nROASTERS\nA $1.29 value In large\noval   roasters   that  will\ngive   years   of   service.\nDollar Days,\nEach \t\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\n-JV-I   V IV_.U.\n$100\nCAMP CHAIRS\nCanvas seat with backrest. Just 2 fl|1 AA\ndoz. to go. 2 for -Pl.UU\n\u2014Second  Floor HBC\nWINDOW\nBLINDS\nFibre blinds. Cream only.\nSizes 36x72. Washable.\n2D1orrD.a.y:..,.$1.00\n\u2014Second  Floor HBC\nWOMEN'S CELANESE HOSE\n'These are inexensive and have the appearance of silk\nhose! They'll save your better ones. Smart tfl AA\nsummer shades in 8Vi to lOVi. 4 pairs for ,,..\u00abpl.UU\npair with neat heel and toe reinforcements. Choose yours\n(\u00a3\"'____\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MR8. H\nTRAIL, B. C. July 28-LltUe Dolores Burger has arrived from Spokane to spend the summer with her\nUncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. William F. Truswell, Victoria street.\nMr. and Mrs. W. V. Dynes have\nas their house guest the latter's\nBister, Miss Frances Dockerill of\nVancouver.\nMrs. J. S. McLean and son, W. L.\nMcLean, of Toronto, are visiting, in\nthe city the guests ot Mr. and Mrs.\nAlex Williamson.\nMr. and Mrs. W. C. Mackenzie\nOt Tadanac left Friday afternoon to\nspend three months visiting at their\nformer home at Newcastle-on-Tyne,\nEngland,\nMrs. Walter Brown and son and\ndaughter have left for Slocan City,\n\u2022where they will be the guests of\nMrs. Brown's mother, Mrs. D. B.\nO'Neail.\nMr. and Mrs. A. L. Garrison and\nthree daughters are spending a holiday at their summer camp at Rob-\nSon.\nDonald Wallace has had aa his\nguests for the past week his mother\nand father, Mr. and Mrs. S. Wallace,\nwho have left for Vancouver, where\nthey will visit before returning to\ntheir home in Brandon.\nMiss Bessie Lilley has as her\nguest Miss Margaret Hotchkiss of\nKimberley.\nMr. and Mrs. M. R. Cumming,\nDewdney avenue, have as their\nguests the former's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Cumming of Mission City.\nMr, and Mrs. George Hicks, East\nTrail, have had as their guests for\nthe past few days Mrs. George\nBurrell and two sons, who left on\n\/Thursday for Kellogg, Ida., where\nKhey will visit for a short time be-\npore' proceeding to their home in\n__lgary.\n8. ALLEN\"\nMr. and Mrs. Clem McCormick of\nVancouver, accompanied by their\nson, Donald McCormick of Ymir,\nand Mrs. McCormick's mother, Mrs.\nJames Thompson, a former resident\nof Trail, now of Vancouver, are\nvisiting in the city.\nMr. and Mrs. Wesley Dwyer, Columbia avenue, have as their guest\nMiss Ethel Murray of Lethbridge.\nMiss Annabelle Forteath has left\nfor Sirdar, where she will spend a\nweek's holiday.\nMr. and Mrs. George McKay have\nreturned to the city after spending\na few days In Bonnington, the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Greyson.\nMr, and Mrs. Walter Harvey and\nbaby daughter are spending a holiday at their summer home at Robson.\nMr. and Mrs. T. V Lord left\nThursday for Kingston, Ont., where\nMr. Lord has been appointed professor of metallurgy at Queen's university. Prior to her departure Mrs.\nLord was complemented Tuesday\nevening when Mrs. W. D. Burgess,\nTadanac, entertained. Mrs. M. R. F.\nMcLennan and Mrs. C. B. Smith presided et the urns, and Mrs. B. 3.\nWalsh and Mrs. P. F. Mclntyre as.\nsisted the hostess in serving.\nMrs, Bert Davies has had ai her\nguests her sister, Mrs. O. Muirhead\nand son Lome, who have returned\nto their home at Procter.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Priestner and\ndaughters, Miss Irene and Miss Jean\nPriestner, have left for Christina\nLake, where they will holiday for\na month.\nJohn Lilley is visiting In Kimberley, the guest of his aunt, Mrs. J.\nMcLaren.\nAfter spending the past three\nweeks on a vacation trip to Vancouver, Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Marlatt\nhave returned to their home here.\nMiss Elizabeth Gardner and little\nniece, June Gardner, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. Hubert Gardner, both\not Rossland, are visiting Miss Gardner's brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. W. Dougan, Short street.\nMake Survey for\n\"Cascade\" Bridge\nTRAIL, B.C., July 28\u2014Surveys,\npreliminary to starting construction work, are being made for the\nnew Sheep Creek bridge, while construction of the Bear creek bridge Is\nalready under way. W. A. Talbot,\ndistrict engineer, and Thomas Lane,\nbridge foreman, are in charge of the\nwork, iiiii___iitlM_\" it\nMORE ABOUT\nYMIR BABY\n(Continued From Page One)\nclothes; C. D. N. Taylor, engineer at\ntha Yankee Girl, and Andrew Burgess, miner, active in the search; Gus\nFlagel and Wallace Barber, two of\nthe lads who found the body; Con\nstable C. W. House and Constable\nC. A. Cohoon, describihg their work;\nand Dr. Auld. Additional witnesses,\nrelatives of Carmen, will be heard\ntoday.\nThe Jury consisted of J. R. Hunter,\nforeman; H. A. Nicholson, J. A.\nMcDonald, Walter Davies, John\nTowler and G. W. Mortimer.\nLeaving Nelson at 9 a.m., the jury\nspent the forenoon at Ymir, first\nexamining the dump of the Dundee mine below the Yankee girl,\nthe William Johnson home whence\nshe disappeared; and the new home\nbeing built by Mr. and Mrs. Lajeunesse next door. Then the party\nproceeded over a long-unused road\nto the site where the Stobie-For-\nlong company operated a sawmill\nwhen active in the Ymir camp. It\nwas at this site, immediately below\nthe log trestle on which the mill\nstood, that the tiny body was found\nby the berry pickers.\n\"LARGE, BLUNT\nINSTRUMENT\"\nDr. F. M. Auld testified the area\nbehind the right ear showed evidence of bruises such as a \"large\nblunt instrument\" would make, and\nstated the color of the blood was\ncharacteristic of carbon-monoxide\npoisoning. He summed up his findings to give as the cause of death\n\"head injury attended by injury of\nthe brain\", with the monoxide a\nminor or contributing cause. He\nfound no evidence of criminal assault\nQuestioned as to whether a hand\nor fist oould cause the head Injury\ndescribed, Dr. Auld said:: \"Theoretically a very heavy blow ftom a\nfist might do it\" Tha skull need\nnot be fractured since a child's\nbones were resilient. It was impossible to say whether the child's\nlife could have been saved after\nsuch an Injury, had the received\nmedical attention immediately, \"but\nI am inclined to doubt it\". She did\nnot drown, he added.\nQIRL NOT CHASTIZED\nMrs. LaRoche told the jury that\nCarmen, though fretful during her\nmother's absence in hospital, was\nnot a worry, and that neither she nor\nthe members of the Johnson family\nhad found it necessary to chastize\nthe girl..\nDriven trom Ymir to the Johnson]\nhome at the Dundee camp she was\nto do Mrs. Lajeunesse's washing before the latter returned from hospital with her infant son. Mrs. La-\nRoche said Carmen was not eating\nwell and was \"cranky\", crying when\nher father left for his work. She\nplayed in the kitchen and on the\nverandah while Mrs. Johnson prepared breakfast, wearing a suit of\nher cousin Jackie's overalls and his\nsweater. Apparently tired, she had\nbeen put to bed by Mrs. Johnson and\nalso by Mrs. LaRoche, but did not\nstay there.\nCarmen and Jackie played together \"Just off the edge of the\nverandah\" while Mrs. LaRoche\nworked on the washing. Mrs. Johnson at the same time was at work\nin the kitchen, Mr. Johnson was\nmaking a screen door in the woodshed, and Mr. Tremblay, Carmen's\ngrandfather, was sitting outside in\na rocking chair. During her washing, Mrs, LaRoche said, she saw\nCarmen and Jackie playing together\nseveral times and once halted a\nquarrel between them over Jackie's\ntoy truck.\n8EARCH BEGIN8\nMrs. LaRoche described her efforts .to find Carmen from 10 o'clock\non. She looked about the vicinity\nof the camp and on the road to the\nTwo-Star mine, where Carmen had\ngone once before. From about 10:30\non, camp residents generally were\nlooking for her.\nThe witness said she looked after\nCarmen from May 25 to May 28, that\nthe girl spent the next week with\nthe Johnson family at the Dundee\ncamp, and that she had her again in\nYmir from June 3 to 6.\n\"She used to be a happy child,\"\naald the child's father ai he testified.\n\"Did she worry people?\"   .\n\"Not that I know of.\"\nThe coroner asked him:,\n\"Did anyone ever say to ,you\nthat they didn't like the child?'-\n\"No.\"\nNO ILL WILL\n\"Do you know of any III will\ntoward the child?\"\n\"No.\"\nFor him to drive to the Johnson\nhome with the weekly washing and\ntake Carmen along was not a novelty, for he and Mrs. Lajeunesse had\nbeen doing this since last fall, \"and\neery time we went up the hlll\u00abwe\ntook the child with us.\"\nHe did not know, Mr. Lajeunesse\nsaid, of a hole in the exhaust pipe of\nhis truck from which gas fumes\nend carbon monoxide might escape,\nthough he did know the muffler was\nloose.\nCarmen \"seemed to be all right\"\nwhen leaving her home at Ymir,|\nthough she had eaten but half an\negg and took half a bottle of milk.\nNotified during his afternoon's\nwork in the mine that his daughter\nwas missing, he joined In the general search which lasted until dark.\n\"Six or seven men\" with lanterns\ncarried on alter dark. Next day more\npeople Joined in the search, a few\ncarrying on at night, and on the\nthird day still more hunted for her,\nbut at nightfall the hunt was abandoned.\nCONTINUED SEARCH\nMr. Lajeunesse stated he contin\nued to search for the girl during the\nevenings for the remainder of the\nweek.\nMr, Taylor, In charge of the\nearly stages of the hunt, told of\nsearching In the creek where the\nbody was found a month later. He\nhad examined the site at nightfall with another searcher,\nThe1 witness asserted the body\n\"could not have been In the place\nwhere It was found or we would\nhave seen It.\"\nAnother search at the old Sto-\nble-Forlong millsite was described\nby Andrew Burgess. A party of\na dozen men selected by Mr. Johnson went to the old trestle, though\nMr. Johnson did not accompany\nthem all the way, and worked\ndown both banks of the creek,\nU8ED POLE8 TO PROBE\nHe did not think the body could\nhave been at that spot because\n\"we criss-crossed back and forth\nthere and poked with poles\" among the debris. Lower down the\nmen used pike poles to drag the\ncreek.\nGus Flagel and Wallace Barber,\nwho with Guy Tary and Ed Flagel\ncomprised the party which found\nthe body across a log below the\ntrestle, told how they found it while\non a berry-picking expedition and\nidentified pictures of the scene.\nTheir police work on the case\nwas described by Constable House\nand Constable Cohoon, the former\nidentifying pictures which were entered as exhibits, and the latter telling of the search ln which a dog\nowned by Constable C. A. Bellhouse\nof Canal Flat was used in an effort\nto trace Carmen. He told of the trails\nit followed, one of them leading\ntoward a bunkhouse.\nCOMMOIL LOWER\nCALGARY, July 28 (CP).-Trad-\ners shpwcd little interest in oil\nshares on the Calgary stock exchange today. Only 11,600 shares\nchanged hands during the morning.\nCommoil, despite a dividend announcement, dropped 2 to 63 today\nwhile Mercury was off V, at lOVi\nand Sunset down 1 at 37. There\nwaa little trading in-other stocks. -\nSchroeder and\nMonteith Hurt,\nCar Over Bank\nFelix Schroeder of Nelson and\nWilliam Monteith of Ymir suffered\npainful cuts, bruises and a bad\nshaking up Wednesday night when\ntheir car left the road and hurtled down the bank about 150 feet,\nabout one half mile this side of\nCorra Linn. Mr. Monteith also suffered two cracked ribs.\nMr. Schroeder, who was driving,\nsaid the lights of an approaching\ncar blinded him, and as ths car\nwent near the side of the road, it\nstruck a soft spot and went over\n\"before we knew it,\"\nThe men walked to the Corra\nLinn power plant and phoned to\nNelson for a taxi. The other car\ndid not stop.\nU.   S.   MAIL  HELD\nUP BY UNION\nMEN\nSEATTLE, Wash., July ,28\n(AP) \u2014 Captain J. M. Fox, Inland Boatmen's union business\nagent, said United States mail\ndestined for Victoria was delayed several hours today when\nunion niembers refused to carry\nit from Port Angeles.\nHe said the mail should have\nbeen carried by the mail boat\nTahoe, which is in drydock here\nfor repairs, but that the Tahoe's\nowner rushed the mail to Port\nAngeles by truck and attempted\nto have it carried across the\nstrait on the chartered tug,\nOlympia, as freight. The union\nforbade members to handle it.\nBrodell returned to Seattle\nand attempted to launch the To-\nhoe and make the trip himself,\nbut unionists picketed the boat\nand refused to allow it to leave\nthe drydock.\nFox said the picket line dispersed when Brodell agreed to\nmeet union officials for arbitration tomorrow. The union contends Brodell operates with a\nnon-union crew.\nRossland Miners\nMeet Cardinals\nin Trail Sunday\nTRAIL, B.C., July 28\u2014Rossland\nMiner baseball squad will invade\nTrail Sunday to face the leading\nTrail Cardinals in a West Kootenay\nBaseball league match. The Miner\nlineup will be sporting some new\nmen, and the strengthened team\nIs considered quite a threat lo the\nCards' record.\nRykerts Not to Get\nNew Customs House\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014For the \u2022present\nthere is little hope of securing more\npretentious quarters for the customs\noffice staff at Rykerts, for which\nthe board of trade has been working for some time past.\nHon. H. H. Stevens, M.P. for\nKootenay East, has been pressing\nthe matter with the authorities at\nOttawa and has recently had a letter\nfrom the minister of national revenue, a copy of which has been forwarded Col. Mallandaine. It reads,\nin part:\n\"Our inspector in charge of buildings has just returned trom the west\nand he reports that during the summer of 1937 the highest traffic report at Rykerts was in the month of\nJuly when 806 Canadian cars passed\nthrough the outport, and 506 United\nStates cars entered Canada at that\npoint. This is only an average of\napproximately 50 cars per day, and\nthe present quarters ere considered: \u2022\nadequate to accommodate such Urn- '\nited traffic.\"\nThe minister assures that \"thsv\nbuilding is neither ornamental nor\"\nelaborate\".... \"At some future date:\na larger and better office would ho'-\ndesirable, hut I do not feel that such\nan expenditure would be warrant-j, _\ned at the present time.\" I\nJUNIPER. N. B., (CP) \u2014 The.\nUnion church newly dedicated here\nis being used by United, Baptist\nand Anglican congregations, A loud\nspeaker system was necessary to\naccommodate large crowds at the\ndedication services.\nBETTER PLUMBING\nSERVICE\n\u2014PHONE 181\u2014\nB. C. PLUMBING 4\nand HEATING Co.\nWILLYS SEMSAT10NALLY\nREDUCES\nDDIPEC TO START\nrnlbca as low as\nQET SCORES OF EXTRA\nQUALITY FEATURES\nSOLID STEEL TOP AND BODY\nPOWERFUL FUEL-SAVER\nENGINE\nEXTRA-WIDE ROAD VISION\nHEAVY GAUGE \u00bbTEEL\nK-X FRAME\nFRONT IEAT WIDER THAN\n\"OTHER THREE\"\nOVERSIZED MAKE*\nBIG, AIRPLANE-TYPE\nHYbRAULIC SHOCK\nELIMINATORS\nMAD WHAT OWNIU SAT\nmill ITV \"... I could not tik fort\nUUHLI11 better ess tt sssi price.\nEverything wo deslro.\"\nCOMFORT 0j Vhtmlnt' rld-__\ncart I have ever riddell in.\"\nDA AU \"... I tm t heavy iota tod\nl-VUm certainly like the roomine-i\ntad comfort.\"\nCTVI e<',,.ltabetutylnthelnt-rl-\n911 !__\u25a0 or ta well te eiterlor li ill\none could ilk for.\"\n' tstaodard Coupe: F.O.B. Wt__or:\nsal\u00bb tax, freight and llcc_.c only to be wlflea      _\nFOR BETTER TIMES... DRIVE \u00ab WILLYS i\nWillyo low prices now im you more thin\never before. t\nWillys economy aa lira you neatly half\nJour gts. Owners report savings thtt average\n10.00 a month.\nTWO MILES FOR ORE ... two miles on\n\u00ab_me amount of gtt... two miles on t set of\ntires... for every mile with many other can.\nWillys btltnced engineering and Quality\nmaterial* mako It a cu that can \"take it.\"\nWillys stands up under the toughett going.\nDistinctive bod; design mtket full uh of\nevery inch of the chassis for room and comfort.\nProve Willys advantages to yourself ... a\nride will do It... you select tne route... we\nwill furnish the cu.\nKLINE'S CITY SERVICE\n206 BAKER ST. (McDowell & Thurman) NELSON, B. C.\nSAVt   HAIF   YOUR   GAS...BUY  A WltlYS\nI\nid\n w*m*mmqmmW(*1m\nwmmmiiWmW^mwm^mmmiF-\nPAGE FOUR :\u2014\t\nBlacks maintain their popularity\nas a uniform tor summer week-ends\nand vacations, and tor informal wear\nat home.\nthe Best Only for Less\nMoney\nVernon St.\n[Groceteria\n'\u25a0    CARL LYKEQARD, Prop.\nphone 122     Free Delivery\nSPECIAL   VALUES\nFriday-Saturday and\nMonday\nNELSON\n\u2666 \u2666\nFLOUR\u2014First grade bread\nand pastry; MsA\n10 Ibi \"r\nHarry\nCRI8CO-\n3 Ib\t\nTEA\u2014Malklns Best;\nIb.     ...;\t\nSALMON-PInk, J_s;\n3 tins\t\n8YRUP-Rogers; VtC\n2-lb. tin \u25a0\u2022\u2022.\u2022 m'r\n\u00bbALT\u2014Windsor)\n2 for\t\nCUT  MACARON1-\ne ibs. :\t\nTOILET 80AP\u2014Jergen's\nCastile; 10 bars \t\nCORN\u2014Golden  Bantam\ntin   _........:..:..:\nw\n25<\nm\n\u2022  Mrs.\t\ndaughters, Betty and Joy, plan to\nleave this morning via the C. P. R.\nfor Ingersoll, Ont., to reside.\ne Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Barrow\nof Nakusp visited town yesterday.\ne Mrs. 0. A. Corbie and daughter, Dorothy, have returned from\nseveral weeks at Vancouver.\ne Mr. and Mrs. William Adair,\n227, 7th street, New' Westtatuster,\nare guests at the home, 408 Mill\nstreet, of Mr. and Mrs. 0. A. Tapani-la.\ne Rev. J. Q. Holmes Is attending\nthe district deanery retreat ol the\nAnglican clergy at Kaslo. -\ne An enjoyable evening was\nspent Wednesday by the Catholic\nYoung People's club, when a beach\nparty was held at Lakeside, home\npf Mrs. R. A. Kirkpatrick, on tbe\nnorth shore. Those present were\nMiss Kathleen McDougall, Miss AI-\nleen Rahal, Miss May MacDonald,\n' By MRS. M J, VIGNEUX\nFerguson   and, Miss Naida Perrier, Miss Lillian Des\nBUTTER\u2014Curlew,\nfirst grade; Ib, _.\t\nM\nSave Time and Labor\nGeneral Electric\nWashers\n$79.50   and up\nNelson Electric Co.\n________ss__s_-__ps\u00ab_\u00bbi\u00abssi\u00bb_3__\nKIPPER 8NACK8-Paek-JJM\nad In Norway; 4 tins \"W\n251\nm\nw\n22<\n251\nHERRING-Plckled Nor-\nweBian; 12-os. Jar\t\nSOAP FLAKE8-\n5-lb. carton \t\nICING SUGAR\u2014\n2 Ibe -\t\nCERTO-\nbottle _\t\nPUREX  TI88UE-\nS for \t\nTOMATOES-Malkln's\nBest, large tins; 2 for .\nCHEESE\u2014Dutehedam,\nImported; Ib.\nFOR PROMPT, INDIVIDUAL\nDELIVERY SERVICE TRY\nWLLYARD'S\nFairway Grocery\nThe Coolest Store In Town\nPhone 264       Vlo Crawford. Mgr\njardins, Miss Louise Colletti, Miss\nTerry George, Miss Jane Venables,\nMiss Betty Kirkpatrick, Miss Jeannette Ledger, Miss Beth McKiney,\nMi_s Irene Brown, Miss Jean, Humber, Miss Mollis Kirkpatrick, Miss\nBetty Stangherlin, Miss Jane Venables, Armando Maglio, Andrew\nSelinger, John DeFerro, Pat Vec>\nchio, Bernard Kelly, Dan Barey,\nAlbeit Lindsay, Mario Maglo, Jake\nSelinger, Lawrence Selinger ahd\nRev. Father Morelli.\ne Basil Matthew, Mill street, has\nreturned trom spending a tort-\nnight'i vacation at Balfour.    .\ne S. A. Williams of Vsncouver,\nformer resident ot Kelson, arrived\nin town yesterday. v,\ne Ven. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham Is at Kaslo attending the retreat for the Anglican clergy ot the\ndeanery of West Kootenay being\nconducted by Rev. t. A. Morrant of\nTrail.\ne Mrs. M. Scally, Observatory\natreet, has had as her guests Mrs.\nBert McLean, Miss A. Bregolise, Miss\nV. Maddalane, Mrs. Hector Gallicano of Revelstoke, who were visit'\nIng Rossland, have lett to continue\ntheir motor trip to the western United States.\ne Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Fuller of\nDrumheller, Alta., are visiting Nelson and district.\ne Mrs. Mainfroid, Strathcona hotel, and her daughters, Florence\nand Ethel of Edmonton, also Mrs.\nLandry, are visiting Vancouver for\na few .days.\ne  H. D. Foreman of the Kootenay Ore Hill mine at Selmo spent\nyesterday In town,\ne H. Toreson, Great Northern\nNELSON DAILV NEWS. NILSON. B,\nmaster carpenter with headquarters\nat Spokane, visited town Wednet'-l\nday. '\n\u2022 S. D. Astey of Trail spent yesterday In Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. H. Webb, Baker\nstreet, had as their house guests Mr.\nand Mrs. W. H. Hadley thi Mr. and\nMrs. R. Ferguson all of Victoria,\nwho have relt-tated.\ne Mrs. W. H. Miller of Salmo\nvisited town Wednesday.\ne Miss Irene Denny was1 In the\nelty from Willow Point yesterday\n'.'\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Coates,\nVictoria street, had as their gurlts\nMrs. Joseph Pattlson of Kamloops,\nwho spent two months In town.\ne Rev, D. S. Catchpole of Ross-\nland is attending the Anglican retreat at Kaslo.\ne Mr. and Mrs. A. F. McDonald\not Vancouver have taken up rest'\ndonee in the Medical Alts apart,\nments, Baker street. \"\ne Edward Mosley of Blewitt vis\nited town yesterday.\ne Cecil Sage of Salmo spent yesterday ln the city.\nMiss Beth Matson, Kerr apart\n(..-FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 29. 1948.\nEffective Organization, Careful\nPlanning C.C.F. Need\u2014Woodsworth\nThe Canadian Press, Edmonton\nEDMONTON, July it (CP..-A\n\"widespread and rapidly growing\nsentiment\" in support of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation in Canada was claimed today\nby J. S. Woodaworth, MP, for\nWinnipeg North Centre, In his presidential address to the opejilng session ot the i national convention of\nthe federation.\n' Definite, comprehensive organization was required. \"We have staked our claims in almost every section of the country,\" said Mr, Woods-\nworth. \"Thess claims must now be\nDonald Matson, of Grandview, Wash.\n\u2022 Mrs. Jack Parker of Bonnington visited town yesterday,  .\n\u2022 B. H. Stewart, mining engineer,\n_   , _,_    of Vancouver, left Nelson yesterday\nments, had as her guest her brother,1 morning tor Trail.\ndeveloped.\" Careful planning ln\ncommittee and effective organization were required.\nReferring to activities of the federation throughout the Dominion,\nMr. Woodsworth aald the C. C. F.\nwu more and more being recognized as the alternative to Liberal and\nConservative governments. Both\nLiberals and Conservatives were\nlargely dominated by Quebec, he\nsaid. i\nSubmersion of sectional differences and personal ambitions to\nthe major objective of establishment In Canada ot a Co-operative\nCommonwealth was urged by Mr\nWoodsworth. A state devoted to the\ngeneral welfare could only be established on a co-operative basis;\nhe said,.\n\"This involves the substitution of\ninstitutions in which we can work\ntogether, for the present chaotic\ncondition based on competitive Individualism which has brought our\ncountry and the world at large to\nthe very brink of disaster,\" he said.\nJobless Leave a Good\nImoression, Penticton\nPtoiTICTON, B.C., July 28 (CP).\n\u2014 Vancouver single unemployed\nhave left a good Impression wit))\nthe residents of this Interior city,\nThe 160 men, who will leave here\ntoday in search ot further work\nthroughout the Okanagan, have kept\ntheir agreement with the British\nColumbia government to remain\norderly. The government gave them\nsome road work here.\nFeminine allure plus is contained -\nin tbe white organdie housecoat\ntrimmed In narrow rlckrack braid,\nmounted over a petticoat ruffled\nto the knees.\nBEATTY\nCOPPER\nTUB\nREBUILT\nNEW MACHINE GUARANTEE\nSPECIAL >49.so\nGrenfell's Cafe\nDON'T   FORGET\nIt's All Home Cooking\nWhiU Help Only\n\t\nWILSOI\nFLY [PADS\nREALLY\nOne pad kills Hies all day and evenH\nday for 2 or 5 weeks. 3 pads In cach|\npacket.   No spraying, no slickine.\nno bad odor.   Ask your Druggist^\nGrocery or General Store.\n10 CENTS PER PACKET\nWHY PAY MORE?   _\nTHE WILSON ittt PAD CO. HmUton. <^J\nSimA' WoditoL WiVifoL\nTELEPHONE 1009\nNELSON'S INDEPENDENT CASH FOOD STORE\nNEW FINK  BLOCK-WARD STREET ENTRANCE\nFREE DELIVERY\n3 DAYS OF QUALITY\nFOOD BARGAINS\nFRIDAY\u2014SATURDAY\u2014MONDAY\nShop Where It's Cool and Save\nBEST FOODS PRODUCTS\nMayonnaise, ox. jar . 21c\nSalad Dressing,\n16 ox. jar   38*\nMayonnaise,\n52 ox. jar  63*\nHorse Radish Mustard,\n9 ox  14*\nSandwich Spread,\n8 ox     21*\nJAM4lb.\u212243c\nClimax Mixed \u2014An Empress\nProduct \u20148trawberry   or\nRaspberry,\nBUTTER\nGOIDVALE \u2014 18T GRADE\n3 lbs 93c\nFresh Fruits\nand\nVegetables\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE: Tropic Gold, 2 tins  23*\nMAGIC BAKING POWDER: 12 ox. 23*   ?.'\/_ Ib. 65\u00ab.\nCHTEAU CHEESE: Cocktail glass  lit)\nHeinx Assorted Baby Foods: 2 tins  19*\nGEM JARS: Pints, dox. $1.13     Quarts, dox. $1.29\nCHATEAU CHEESE: Pimento or plain, Vi Ib. pkt. 17c.\nOXYDOL\nLARGE   PKT.\nPkt. 19c\nPICKLES\nDEVON  BRAND, 27-01.\nJar 23c\nChocolate Buds, Ib. 24*\nBordens Carmels,\nLb 22*\nMarshmallows, Ib.   221\nBakers Chocolate,\nPkt  18*\nCoffee: Bulk, Ib. . 19*\nTea: Salada, yellow,\n.Lb 55*\nPastry Flour, 7's,\nSack  38*\nCocoanut, medium,\nLb 17*\nRice: 3 Ibs 18*\nPork and Beans:\n21 ox 10*\nAsparagus Cuttings:\nTin 14*\nLibby's Spaghetti,\nTin     9*\nQuaker Oats: Plain 22*\nBerry Sugar,\n2 Ib. pkt 19c.\nPearl Soap: 6 bars   20*\nTO OUR COUNTRY CUSTOMERS\nOur prices will be effective for one\nweek. Freight will be paid on orders of $10.00 or ove*.\nSalmon: Sockeye,\nGold Seal, 1's, tin . 30*\nSalt: 7 Ib. sack ... 17*\nPlums: Royal City,\nTin   11*\nPeanut Butter: 4's,\nTin  47*\nSpices: Assorted,\n3 tins 22*\nVinegar:  Brown,\nGal  59*\nParowax: Lb 13*\nNarrow Mouth'Lids,\n2 dox 35*\nRIPE OLIVES\nEXTRA  LARGE\nLarge tin .. 20c\nStuff ed Olives\n8-01. Jar\nJar 24c\nLETTUCE\nHead 5c\nPEACHES\nFOR TABLI\nBasket 29c\nCANTALOUP\nLARGE\nEach IOc\nTOMATOES\nEXTRA GOOD\n2 lbs. 15c\nBANANAS\nEXCELLENT FRUIT\n2 lbs. 19C\nORANGES\nFAMILY SIZE\n3 doz 64c\nLEMONS\nEXTRA LARGE\nDoz. 34c\nAPRICOTS\nNo. 1s\u2014 Very nesrly over\u2014\nORDER YOUR'8 NOW\nWatermelon\nLb. ....... 4%c\nCARROTS\nLOCAL\n2 bunches .. 5c\n<-__\u25a0___________\u25a0___ HM_HH_\nMeat Specials\ny______________w\nPOT ROASTS\nLb.  14c\nSAUSAGE\nFRESH PORK\nLb 19c\nBOLOGNA\nLb 18c\nVEAL ROASTS\nROLLED\nLb 22c\nAll government stamped\nmeat. Quality Guaranteed.\nDistribution\nWithout\nWaste\nSAFEWAY\nSAFEWAY\nSTORES\nLIMITED\nCustomers are kindly requested to telephone grocery orders\nearly Friday to ensure prompt\ndelivery. No telephone grocery\norders delivered' on Saturday.\n-AUGUST-\nt. DAYS\u2014FRIDAY-SATURDAY \u2014 MONDAY - TUESDAY!\nJuly 29 and 30\u2014August 2 and 3\nCountry   orders   of\n$10.00 or over freight\nprepaid.\nNelson to Ymir, Salmo\nand Sheep Creek,\nTuesday and Friday\nPurex Tissue Roll 5c\nLIMIT THREE WITH ORDER\nTomatoe Juice Tin 5c\n..._\u2022-__\nLIMIT FOUR\nCOLD SEAL\nSOCKEYE SALMON\nWl, \u00abn ...\nSalmon, 1'a\n17*\n31*\nSwansdown Cake Flour,\nPkt _ 32c\nKnox Gelatin, pkt.   19c\nTooth Picks, pkt. ...  5c\nOlive Oil, 8 ox. tin   29c\nPitted Dates, fresh,\n2 Ibs. ____. 21 e\nKaro Syrup, 2's, tin. 18c\nORANGES\nJ\nSWEET AND JUICY\n- MEDIUM SIZE\n3 Doz. 59c\nHead Lettuce 5c\nCelery; 2 lbs. 19c\nCucumbers; 3 for . UK-\nBananas; 3 lbs. \u25a0 \u2022 27c\nGrapefruit; 7 for 25c\nWatermelon; lb. .. 5c\nHagic\n3AKING\nfOWDlB\nMagic Baking\nPowder\n12 ox. tin 231\n2'Vi, tin  65*\n5 Ib. tin .... ?1.25\nGreen Peas; 3 lbs. 19c\nGreen Beans;\n3 lbs.\t\nCooking Onions;\n3 lbs. .,-.\t\n19c\n19c\nTransparent Apples;\n51b*. 25c\nHuckleberries;\n3 lbs.       25c\nApricots; lug .... 88c\nCANTELOUPS\u2014EXTRA SPECIAL\nExtra large; 2 for 23c \u2014 Medium; 3 for 23c\nSAFEWAY COFFEE\nFresh, dependable\nAirway, Ib. . 27*\nExcello, Ib. .. 32*\nMaximum, Ib. 35*\nCider Vinegar, bulk,\nGal  75c\nRubber Jar Rings,\n3 dox.   14c\nKerr Wide Mouth,\nPints, dox    $1.19\nJelly Glasses, dox.... 60c\nWide Mouth, Lids,\nDox.   20c\nCerto, bottle ...24c\nSPRATTS BIRD\nSEED\u2014Pkt. 17*\nDOC   BISCUITS\n2'\/2 lb. sack 35*\nIODIZED SALT: Windsor,\n24 ox. tube\n6\n(\nROBIN HOOD FLOUR:\nFirst patent, 24 Ib. tack ..\n$1.05\nPINEAPPLE: Sliced or cubed,\nLarge sixe, 2 tins\t\n19\n(\nCHIPSO LARGE S|ZE With 0rder 2 !*\u00bb.\u2022 29<\nBUTTER\nHIGHWAY FIRST GRADE\n3 \"> 89<\nCorn Flakes\nKILXOOQ'S, WITH 4BC PURCHASE FRUIT ft VEO.\n3 pus 20c\nPure Vanilla, 2 ox. bottle 18*\n24 ox. bottle 32*\nCoffee, Ib. jar 39*\nMarmalade, 4 Ib. tin .. 45*\nHeinx Old Fashioned Pickles,\nJar  1 25c\nChow Sauce, bottle .. 12c\nHires Root Beer Extract ... 29c\nHelmet Corned Beef, 2 tins 27c\nLobster, 'A's, tin ______ 18c\nAlpine Milk, tails, 3 tins     26c\n***aw^\nm nne,rajiTwsiMtt__\u00ab wm1XSsm\nCMIEiT WM TO MAKE.HE HIT JAM) _M. JIUIII\nfacial   _\u00a3PA\u00abA8M\n25j,\n%______$\nSPECIAL\nLEGS SPRING LAMB: Lb 250\nUNION TENDERED PICNICS: Lb. 28*\nLEG FILLETS OF VEAL: Lb  25*\nRUMP ROASTS: Lb  18*\nSHOULDER VEAL STEAKS: Lb  15*\nBREASTS OF VEAL: Lb  10*\nPOT ROASTS Lb  14*\nHAMBURGER STEAK: Lb  10*\nLEAN STEAK and KIDNEY: 2 Ibs.  25*\nBOLOGNA: Lb 20*\nWEINERS: Lb.  25*\nPOLISH SAUSAGE: Lb 22*\nSPICED HAM: Vi lb  22*\nSPICED TONGUE: Vi Ib 23*\nUNION TENDERED COTTAGE ROLLS: Lb. ... 38*\nRED ARROW BISCUITS\nAssorted Sandwich, Ib.\t\nGraham Wafers, 11b. cello\t\nScotch Mints, lb.\t\n..20c\n_ 18c\n.. 19c\nAYLMER\nKetchup, 12 ox. bot. 15c\nPork & Beans, 16 ox.,\n2 tins '...... 15c\nPeas, 5's, 17 ox.,\n2 tins -- 21c\nSoup, tomato,\nvegetable, 3 tins.... 23c\nPears, Lynn Valley,\n2 t'ws       27c\nBaked Beans, 16 ox.,\n2 tins 27*\nLunch Loaf, Vi'*, tin .. 15*\nPork Sausage, tin  24*\nMeat Balls, 'A's, tin ... 13*\nMeat Pastes, 2 tins ... 15* <_$\nBest Foods Salad Dressing\n8 ox. jar 19c      16 ox. jar 32c\nHighway Brooms: Made by the\nblind, each  \u2014 39c\nSAFEWAY STORES LTD.\nWe reserve the right to limit quantities.\n|v.'  \u25a0_\".'\",\nSpecial\nSupply Limited\nBUY\nNOW!\n \u00b0cv\\\nPolitical Probe\nIn Senate Race;\nCondemn Taciics\nWASHINGTON, July it (AP) -\n[he aenate campaign expenditures\nlommittee dispatched Inveatlgatora\nto the nation's political hotbeds today alter condemning tactics tn Tennessee's democratic senatorial race.'\nEvidence in the five-man Tennessee eompalgn, the committee\nannounced, \"points sharply toward\nan election contest in the United\nStates senate regardless ol which\ntgroup's candidate wins.\"\nI It added in a formal statement\n\u00bbbout the primary battle, which\nWUl be decided next Tuesday:\n\"Apparently every scheme and\nquestionable device that can be used\nin a political contest to raise funds\nto influence votes and control the\nelection result is in lull swing.\"\nThe committee, let up at a guardian over the aenate'i political morals, also took a hand in the South\nDakota senatorial campaign. It asked Postmaster General Farley to investigate use by the iarm security\nadministration ol its tree mailing\nprivilege ts distribute a \"political\ncircular\" In that sta...\nThe F. S, A\u201e the committee charged, sent out a press release to boost\nthe political stock ol former Governor Tom Berry, Democrat, In hli\nsenate race against Chan Gurney,\nRepublican. Gurney asked the committee to investigate the matter.\nThe addition ot a few drops of\nglycerine to your starch will give\nyour linens an attractive gloss when\nIroned.\nNELSON PArtY NEW*. NFI \u00aboy. B. f! -FRIDAY M\u00abRr\u00ab!NC.. JULY 99. WS,\nii mttim niniMi\n-P\u00bbOf \u00bbIVE\ndibdJL fait\noHoiimi'wsjL\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\n'\nMenu Hint\nEgga a la Suisse or Asparagus\n. With Egga\nScalloped Potatoes\nSliced Tomatoes\nBerries or Sliced Peaches\nBran Refrigerator Rolls        Coflee\nI like eggs lor dinner at any time\nol the year, but especially in the\nsummertime. I am giving you two\nNOW IN FULL\nSWING\nBARGAINS\nFor Every Member\nof the  Family\nSave Money at\nOur Expense\nRe Andrew\n& Company\nLeaders In Footfashion\nBEATTY\nSTAND\nIRONER\nSpecial \u00ab99-S0\nNELSON FACTORY BRANCH\nPHONE 91. 321 BAKER ST.\n\"That's easy-it's Kellogg's RICE KRISPIES!\"\ne Children know that\ncrackling stand that means\nKellogg's Wee Krlsplei la\n\u25a0Ilk er eream - and wise\nparents keew that tkll\nrtady-fo-ierve cereal banishes coaxing it bri.k.-itl\nThese tasty, toasted rice babbles are\nMeal for breakfast, lunch, er the children's\nsapper. Sold ky alt grocers, served by r\u00ab.\nt_u.ai.ti. Made by Kellogg !\u2022 London, Oat.\n^S^i\n7\\\nV\nu\nFREE!\nLUXURIOUS BATH\nAND7EATOINELS\n\u25a0\u2022(* i\nmmWHtek\nFor Royal Crown Soap Wrapper!\nImagine! For only 30 wrappers from Royal\nCrown yellow laundry soap you ean get \u25a0\nbig bath towel, size 20\" by 40\", soft and\nfluffy, in smart colour patterns. Or for only\n25 wrappers you may have an all-linen tea\ntowel, nicely hemmed, good quality and\nlong-wearing. Both towels\u2014and aa many\nof them as you want\u2014are FREE for Royal\nCrown Soap wrappers.\nHew to Oot Yoiir Free Towoli\nJust take the required number 0. Royal Crown\nyellow laundry soip wrappers to:\nThe Towel Department t ,\nTha Royal Crown Soaps Limited\n101 Georgia Si. E., Vancouver\nII you taunt all n u>_ let your t.wtl, mill your 1\nwtipp-n by pirnl port, -oeloitol 1 ilip ol p<p\u00ab on\nwhlai you hava prion, <_\u2022__\/ yow \u00bbu\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb|( \u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\".\nsat which towal you ___*\u2022.  Your towll wUl bt aa.1 to\nyou lm_-*_lataly.\nOFFER CLOSIS SIPTI.MBER _0.h, If It\n\u00ab*\u00a3\nrecipes tor eggs that are a little\nchange trom the usual boiled, scrambled, tried, baked, etc, And the berries or sliced peaches with bran\nrolls are a little different too, and\nwill appeal to those who \"don't eat\ndesserts.'' I\nToday's Recipes\nEGGS A LA SUISSK-Spread two\ntablespoons butter on bottom ot\nbaking dish. Cover butter with grated cheese. Break eight eggs carefully upon cheese. Season with salt\nand paprika, and pour a little cream\nover them. Sprinkle about two ounces of grated cheese on top of all\nand set dish ln moderate oven to\nbake for about 19 minutes.\nASPARAGUS WITH KK\u00bb_V-On_\nbunch of asparagus, four eggs, salt\npepper, butter. Boll a bunch of asparagus 20 minutes, or use canned\nasparagus. Lay tender parts in deep\npie plate or shallow baking dish.\nSeason well with salt, pepper end\nbutter. Beat eggs just enough to\nbreak the yolks and add salt, pepper\nand butter. Pour them over the asparagus and bake for 10 minutes in\na hot oven. Serve at once.\nBRAN REFRIGERATOR ROLLS\n\u25a0One cup fat, three-fourths cup\nsugar, one cup bran, one and one-\nhalf teaspoons salt, one cup boiling\nwater, two eggs, two cakes compressed yeast, one cup lukewarm water,\nsix and one-halt cups flour, or more.\nPut fat, sugar, bran and salt ln large\nmixing bowl; add boiling water,\nstirring until fat is melted. Let\nstand until mixture is lukewarm.\nAdd well-beaten eggs and yeast\nsoftened ln lukewarm water. Add\none-half the flour and beat until batter is smooth. Add remainder of\nflour and beet well. Cover bowl\nand place ln refrigerator overnight\nor until ready to use. Form balls of\ndough to fill greased muffin pans\nabout half full. Let rise in a warm\nplace about two hours or until\ndouble in bulk. Bake In moderately\nhot oven (425 degrees F.) about 15\nminutes. This amount makes three\nand one-half doren rolls (two and\none-half inches ln diameter),\nCAME DEPARTMENT\nTO FEED THE BIRDS\nVICTORIA, July 28 <CP)\/-Attorney General Gordon Wlsmer today\nIssued Instructions to the British\nColumbia game department to supply grain to birds affected by the\nforest fire which swept 100,000\nacres of Vancouver tlmberlond last\nweek.\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nPhono 707     Free Delivery\nSPECIALS\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nBrown Sugtrt\n3 Ibs. for ....\n17c\nBakeasy Shortening:   14\nJewel Shortening:       14.\nPork & Boani: OC-\nLibby's, 16 oz. 3 for *WC\nWheat or Rica OC .\nPuffs, 3 for Ld\\t\nBUTTER: 1st\ngrade Alberta, 3 lbs.\n89c\nBig 5 Cleansers\n3 tins\t\n15c\nTuna Fish: Solid light OP\nmeat, 'A's, 3 for.., WC\nKraft Boiled Dressing: 01.\nBologna t\nLb\t\n18c\nWhole Wheat Flour: on\nQuaker, 7's \u00ab>OC\nCOFFEE: Mysore,   OC\nfresh ground *Wv\nTEA: Our Best      tt.\nBlend  JJC\nTEA: Popular,\nLb\t\n50c\nOur own imports.\nYou save.\nPeas: Choice\nquality, 2 for ..\nMarmalade:\n4 It}, tin\t\nOur Home  Process\nOxydol:\nLarge pkg \t\nMilk: Tall,\nSt. Charles, 2 tins\nlolly Powders:\n5 for \t\n25c\n55c\nSI\n19c\n18c\n27c\nLEMONS: Sunkist, OC\nDoc UOZ\nTTL:.... 23c\nFresh Fruits and Vegetables\nCantaloupe: or\u201e\n__for.f- 43C\nRaspberries:\nFresh, 4 boxes ,\nCabbage:\nLb\t\n25c\n3c\nAH orders strictly CO.D.\nFreeman & Leew Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115\n\"THE HOUSE OF FURNITURE STYLES\"\nEAGLE BLOCK\n*,-.,\u00a3\nAUGUST\nFURNITURE SALE\nSpecial Values Through the Store!\u2014Save at Our Big Semi-Annual Sale\nFURNISH YOUR LIVING ROOM-BEDROOM OR DIKING ROOM FOR\n4-Piece Walnut Bedroom Suite 6-Pieee Walnut Dinette Suite\n1.50\nAmerican   Walnut\nVanity, Chiffonier\nBed and Bench.\nSmart Modern Walnut Suite\u2014Large\nBuffet, Extension Table, 4 Upholstered\nChairs.\n3-PIECE CHESTERFIELD SUITE $59.50\nTERMS Comfortable and serviceable-Reversible \u25a0P'lng cushions-hardwood frames\n\u2014All steel spring construction\u2014Choice of smart modern covers\nChesterfield and Two Chairs.\nTRADE IN\nYOUR\nOLD\nFurniture\n9-Piece\nDINING SUITE\nLargo buffet, long linen\ndrawer, extension table,\nfive diners and one arm\nchair\u2014China closet with\nglass doors. Walnut finish. Price\n\u266679\n\u2022SO\n4-Piece\nBEDROOM SUITE\nSpecial August Value\nMatched   walnut   construction,   circle   mirror\non vanity, large chiffonier, bed and bench.\n4 Pieces\n\u2666139\n\u2022OO\nBED\nCHESTERFIELD\nSUITE\nSmart, comfortable,\nmakes a bed of real rest\nin a jiffy \u2014Tailored in\nmodern sand, and rust\nfabric sundown type\nchair and stool to match.\nReg. $99.00.\n3 Pieces\n$\u00ab7\u00a3.00\n'75\nEXTRA SPECIAL LOUNGE VALUE\nVelvet seats\nand backs.\nBedding\nCompartment\nAs shown\n32-50\nCHESTERFIELD\nSUITE\nModern design, tailored\nin durable wine mohair\nwith sand piping, chest-\nerfield and two real cosy\nchairs. Reg. $149.50\n$U9.o\nOCCASIONAL\nCHAIRS\nUpholstered seats and\nbacks\u2014Walnut finished\narms and legs.\n$4\n.95\nFELT MATTRESS\n3' 3\", 4, 4' 6\" sixes.\nAll felt, roll edge\nArt Ticking\n$$49\n\"Georgia\"\nMATTRESS\nLayer built white felt.\nRoll edge, attractive ticking. Regular $10.95\nmmmmmmmmt^mmmmmmmmmmmm\nWALNUT\nFERN STANDS\nSale   Price\n\u00bb5\u00ab\nBED OUTFITS\n2\" Walnut Round Post Bed.\nReinforced cable spring. All\nfelt roll edge Mattress.\nALL\nSIZES\npabkhill;\nEXTRA\nSPECIAL\nVALUE\nComplete\n\u00bb149S\nSpring Filled Mattress\n4'6\" Size Only. August Sale\nDon't be without a spring-filled mattress\u2014Here is a Mattress that will give many\nnights Of comfortable sleep.\u2014\nA price you can't afford to\nmiss I\n$10-95\nSALE SPECIALS\nIN STEEL BEDS\nBroken lines to clear at\nbig reductions.\nFULL PANEL  BED\nGrained   walnut.\nReg. $22.95 for\n$\n15.95\nFULL PANEL MODERNE\nWalnut Grained BED.\nReg. $18.95 for\n$\n13'5\nWALNUT   BED  with\nCHROME TRIM\nReg. $26.50 for\n$19\n.so\nMODERNE    BED\nWith 14\" Panel. Full sixe\nonly. For\n\u266616\u00bb5\n \u25a0m-\nmmmm*9\nWmW\nOAGE SIX\nJfoton lathj Jfatua\nEstablished April 22. 1902\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Nswsvnper\nPublished every morning except Sunday hy\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED\n268   Baker   Street  Nelson.   British  Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers ot tbe Audit Bureau ot Circulations and\nThe Canadian  Press Leased  Wire New* Service.\nFRIDAY, JULY 29,1938.\nOpen your purse and your mouth cautiously; and your\n... stock of wealth and reputation shall, at least in repute, be\n\".  great.\u2014Simmermmn.\nNEL80N OAILY NEWS, NELSON. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINQ, JULY 29. 1988.\n.\n'\n-.\nFROM BRILLIANCE TO DUMBNESS\nGiven sufficient time and the right combination of\ncircumstances, a child's \"intelligence quotient\" will change.\nThis discovery has been made through long-time-studies of\nthe same children, measured and remeasured from preschool age to college, by the child welfare research station\nof the University of Iowa.\nVery large increases in \"IQ\" are on record for children coming from good homes who have experienced\nespecially favorable educational influences. Children showing only \"average\" in pre-school and early grades, under\ngood environment reached the \"very superior\" and in\nsome cases verged on the \"genius\" rating by the time they\nentered college.\nOn tiie other hand, it is shown that children can be\nmade feeble-minded by unfavorable environment Whole\ngroups,, once average to \"dull-normal\" in ability, have\ntended in the direction of feeble-mindedness and many individuals have arrived at that state. Less than three years'\ntime was required in one group of children two to five\nyears of age, to bring them into the class of mental deficiency.\nThe Iowa environmentalists have performed a useful\nservice in this investigation! if only to remove from many\nquasi-Scientific educators' minds the notion that the\"IQ,\"\nonce determined, Is an unalterable quantity, a \"gift from\nthe gods\" which neither effort nor prayer could change\nby one iota. The results would have been more gratifying\nif instead of finding that persons of average intelligence\ncould with luck become near-geniuses by the time they\nwere freshmen, some way had been found to bring the\nfeeble-mindted up to the level of average mentality.\nNow that \"IQ\" variability is scientifically established,\nperhaps some energetic scientist will go further and admit\nthat intelligence in the individual fluctuates from day to\nday. Most people, if they are frank with themselves, find\nthemselves occasionally wondering how they could have\nbeen \"so dumb\" on such and such an occasion. Perhaps\nthe environment has something to do with it. Perhaps\ncertain occasions are lacking in \"the element of social\nchallenge\" which the University of Iowa finds necessary\nfor mental growth. It would help if science would give us\na list of handy excuses for the occasional lapses of that\nfeeble, flickering candle which is so commonly assumed to\nburn with a hard and constant flame.\n!'\nKings and their subjects, masters and slaves, find a\ncommon level in two places\u2014at the foot of the cross, and\nin the grave.\u2014Colton. '\nMORE RESUSCITATION\nThe attention Sir Frederick Banting and his staff are\ngiving to fhe question of resuscitating drowned persons\nleads to hope that the appalling toll of life in the water\nwill be greatly reduced, In a recent issue of Health, official\njouhial of. the Healtti Institute of Canada, it is asserted\nthat \"a large portion of the drownings are definitely preventable\" and are not prevented \"because necessary efforts are not made to revive them.\" This is confirmed by\nSir Frederick,- who observed that if an electro-cardiograph^\nwere applied to the heart after it could no longer be heard\nbeating it would be discovered that it cpntinued to beat\nfor many minutes.\nAccepted resuscitation methods have been used for\nyears by the too few people familiar with them. It has not\nbeen realized, however, that artificial respiration may be\nsuccessful after hours of treatment. This applies to cases\nof electric shock and monoxide-gas poisoning as well as\ndrowning.\nIn the cramped and inadequate quarters of the Banting institute, loaded down with research problems involving human life, experiments have been made to learn\nwhat happens to the organs in drowning accidents. The\nresults have led to the conviction that medical men, life-\nsaving crews and others called to attend drowned persons\nmay expect greater success than in the past by following\ncertain procedures.\nIf Sir Frederick Banting is able to use the facilities\nof the institute to reduce the terrible record of drownings,\nalmost as heavy as highway fatalities, he will have given\nanother great service to humanity. He has been careful to\npoint out that he has not proposed a serum or made a\nmedical discovery to restore life. Improved methods are\nsuggested in the light of scientific knowledge, through the\ncooperation of the department of medical research, a committee of physicians, professipnal life-savers and the police.\nSir Frederick has already earned the lasting gratitude of the world by his achievements through research.\nWhat he might be able to do with ample accommodation\nfor staff and equipment can only be surmised. Medical\nresearch apparently has no termination. Doubtless artificial respiration alone offers a field for extensive inquiry.\nThere should be facilities for the study of every important\nproblem arising. Assisting work of this kind is one government expenditure which could not be called wasteful.\nA man's diary is a record in youth of his sentiments,\nin middle age of his actions, in old age of his reflections.\u2014\nJ. Q. Adams.\nSerial Story ...\nTWO WORLDS\nBy MAUD McCURDY WELCH\nREAD THIS FIRST:.\nNoel Shayne, wealthy society girl,\nIs in love with Dr. Julian Paige, a\nserious-minded young physician who\ndeclares he will not permit himself\nto' fall in love with Noel because of\nthe contrasting worlds in which they\nlive.\nNOW GO ON WITH THE STORY;\nCHAPTER 2\nThe morning after Julian's call\nNoel started burning all her bridges.\nShe was the type of girl who never\ndid things by halves. When she\nfound that her uncle was in financial\ndifficulties she turned over to him\n$100,000 . in cash and negotiable\nsecurities. This represented a year's\nincome, and left her with a very\nsmall amount indeed. ,\nThen Noel went shopping. She\nbought a cheap tweed suit, a pair\nof low-heeled oxfords, and a small\nfelt hat Then a few blouses of\nlinen and near silk. Things In direct contrast to   ' at she wore.\nWhen she had finished shopping,\nshe realized with a little thrill that\nshe was close to the Medical Arts'\nbuilding where Julian's offices were\nlocated. So she went and waited\njust outside the big revolving doors,\nand It wasn't very long before \"she\nsaw Julian coming through them, a\nAUNT HET      I\n\u00bbly t-OBERT QUILLEN       |\n\"I wouldn't be surprised If lt was\nsuffcrin' that makes people wicked.\nI know some days I wake up feelin'\nso bad I don't care whether fm good\nor not.\"\npretty dark-haired girl beside him,\ntalking animatedly.\nHe would have walked past Noel\nwithout seeing her, but she put out\na hand and called his name. He\nstopped short and smiled. \"Why,\nNoel, what a pleasant surprise!\"\nThe dark girl stopped, waited a\nmoment, then went on. There was\nsomething about, the way she held\nher head that showed she wasn't\nany too pleased because Julian had\nstopped. \"She's in loVe with him,\"\nNoel told herself, conscious of a\nsudden jealous pain.\nTen she turned her eyes to Julian,\n\"Thought you might take me to\nlunch.\"\n\"Gladly, only well tave to io\nacross the Btreet, as I haven't much\ntime.\" .\u2022:\nThey walked across the street\nThe De Luxe Cafe was one of\nthose paper-napkin kind of places,\nJulian explained, but added that it\nwas quite sanitary and the food\nwas well prepared.\nNoel looked about the neat white-\ntiled place with Interest. This was\nsomething that belonged to Julian's\nworld. The place where most of\nhis meals were eaten, as she found\nout later. .\nAs. soon as they were seated, Noel\ntold him that she had changed her\nplans about going to California, and\nlater to Paris with her aunt.\nJulian looked q_estioningly Into\nthe sweet, ardent face under the\nsmart hat, which hadn't cost less\nthan $35, though of course he hadn't\nany idea of.its cost He only knew\nin his man's vague way that it was a\nvery fetching hat indeed and that it\nenhanced the delicate gold of Noel's\nhair and the dreamy blue of her\neyes.\n\"You see,\" Noel went on blithely,\n\"it just struck me that I know\nabsolutely nothing of this city where\nI was born, and which my grandfather helped to build. I haven't\nspent more than two weeks here\nsince I was a child.\"\nJulian did not meet her eyes.\nPerhaps he was afraid she could\nsee that her news brought him an\nundeniable happiness. The thought\nof an ocean between himself and\nthis slender girl, who meant a great\ndeal more to him than he would\nacknowledge, had been disturbing\nthough he knew for his own peace of\nmind, it would be far better for her\nto go.\n\"You'll find it very dull here.I'm\nafraid,\" he said at last\n\"Oh, no, I shan't,\" Noel said quickly.  But her underlip was trembling\nACTIVE IN . . .\nKOOTENAY LIFE\nJohn Thorn gives community\nservice through the Nelson Junior board of trade, of which he\nis an active member.\nSALLY'S SALLIES\ntoiirwifm?}\nIf you say something everybody believes, it's a platitude\u2014If\nyou say somethin g new, it's heresy.\nslightly. She was thinking again of\nthe pretty dark girl, who already\nhad such a start over herself when\nit came to winning Julian's interest\nPerhaps his love. Or at least they\nhad seemed to be quite old friends.\nPerhaps they went to lunch together\nevery day. So she began a little\ntimidly, \"That pretty girl who was\nwith you\u2014Is she\u2014I mean, are you\u2014\"\nhut she couldn't finish. After all It\nwas a silly question to ask. But\nshe wanted to. know so very much.\nJulian's eyes' met hers frankly.\n\"That's Ruth Chester, a nurse. She's\nstudying bacteriology ln the clinic\nnext to my office. We're naturally\ninterested along the same lines, and\n\u00bbo we're quite good friends.\"\nNoel's questioning gaze did not\nleave his face. And she received his\nwords with reservations. Love was\nso important and she knew it often\nintruded into places where it was\nthe least .expected.\n\"Of course, if we had any attraction for each other beyond that\nof friendship,\" Julian went on unexpectedly, \"it would be very suitable. But unfortunately, it looks as\nif te unsuitable people are always\nfalling in love with each other.\"\n\"Perhaps that's the way nature\nmeant for love to be,\" Noel said.\nJulian's frankness had made her feel\nbetter. But she was certain as long\nas Ruth Chester worked by Julian's\nside, she'd always be Jealous of\nher.\nJulian was looking at her now\nwith a smile that was both grave\nand tender. \"You're so lovely, Noel.\nYou could turn any man's thoughts\naway from his career, or any other\nwoman, If there should be another.\"\n\"But you're still determined not\nto fall in love with me?\" she asked\narchly, a wave of happiness suddenly flooding her heart.\nA smile flickered in his eyes, \"Yes,\nquite determined.\"\n\"I could give all the hateful money\naway, you know,\" Noel said thoughtfully. Of course in a way, she had\ndone that already.\n\"Don't be absurd\/; he said with\ntender reproach. Then looked at\nhis watch. \"I've only a few minutes\nleft. Perhaps-you'd better .tell me\nof your plans. I have a feeling that\nI'm going to disapprove.\"\n\"You probably will,\" she smiled.\n\"You see, you told me you should\nnever, belong to my world of extravagance and frivolity. And I'm\ntired of it myself. So I'm going to\nbelong to yours.\"\nHe loked at her, his dark brows\ndrawn up questioning.}.\n\"I'm going to get a Job,\" Noel went\non. \"I'm going to find out about the\nkind of world you live in. I'm going to learn things about life and\nliving, things I couldn't learn any\nother way.\"     \t\nHe shook his head. \"Even It It's\nonly a lark or a sudden whim, Noel,\nI think the idea is absurd.\"\nShe gave him .a sweet willful\nsmile. Then they rose and left the\ncafe. Out on the Sidewalk, Julian\nlooked at her, his face a little stern.\n\"You're too attractive, Noel, and too\nInexperienced. I'd much prefer that\nyou give up this rather reckless\nidea and\u2014go on with your aunt\"\nShe shook her head. \"Too late to\nchange now. I've burned my\nbridges.\" Just how late lt was\nfor her to give, up her plans, she\n(Continued on Rage Ten)\nV* Questions ?J\nANSWERS\nThli column ot quesUons end\nanswers is open to any reader ol\nthe Nelson Dally Newa, In no\ncase win the name of the person\nasking the question be published.\nT..H.S.,'Nelson-Could you inform\nme what the population of China\nW\nTha 1038 World Almanac give* it\naa follows: China Proper, 370,681,374,\nthis is exclusive of Manchuria and\nJehol, the population ot which is\ngiven as 27,996,044; Sinklang, estl'\nmated 2,500,000; Mongolia, est, 1,'\n800,000; Thibet est, 2,000,000.\nT. E., Rossland\u2014Can you tell me\nhow many Irishmen fought for\nEngland ln the World War?\nA total of 275,592 Irishmen from\nIreland served in the British army\nand navy, according to the Irish Na.\nUonal Bureau. This was 6.5 per\ncent of Ireland's total population.\nE. N. A., Costlegar-I wish to alter\nmy name. Can this be done at\nthe registry office In Nelson?\nThis has to be done by deed poll.\nAdvise you to consult a lawyer,\nJ. M. S., Trail-Where did the Punch\nand Judy sjiow originate?\nThe puppet show of Punch and\nJudy derive* its origin from the\nNeapolitan Punchinello, but many\nof its features are purely English.\nPuppet shows, however, were common among the Greeks, from whom\nthe Romans received them.\nK. M\u201e Nelson-Why Is the waiting\nroom for the use of actors and ac\nresses called the green room?\nStage-glare,caused by the artificial lighting of a theatre affects\nthe eyes of actors and actresses. The\nwalls of the waiting room used by\nthem during the intervals of a play\nwere colored green because this is\na good antidote to the affection of\nthe eyes, Hence the'name.\nIn Nelson\nBy-Paths\nIf no one object*, we'll rtart in\nthis morning with the calls o! our\nmutual and universal friend, the\nrobin, which still have the capacity to mystify me at times, the latest occasion being a few days ago,\nand possibly therefore may perhaps\non occasion contuse others. To the\nrobin, also, I have in the past erroneously attributed notes of at\nleast two other birds.\nSo, apart from the fact that everybody knows and likes our familiar friend ot the lawn and boulevard, he is a good starting point\nlor our voice study on account ol\nthe complicatlona he may unwittingly cause.\nROBIN CALLS\nNUMEROUS\nEveryone has heard the loud\nevening song of the mbin, trom the\ntree top, or the saddle-board ol\nyour house, or the chimney, or\nthe roof edge of a business block\u2014\na series of cheerful whistle* repeating a couple of notes many\ntimes, The same song is heard in\nthe morning as the gloom begins\nto dissipate\u2014and while lt is pretty\nloud, and a sleep dispeller, if conveys on the whole a cheerful as\nwell as a vigorous message.\nIf the robin launches himself on\nflight, he may utter a lew rapid\nsquawks In a higher key, and the\nsame will apply when he dashes at\nanother robin \u2014 or at Killy, the\nsparrow-hawk. In the spring the\nmale robins have many sharp battles, and voice their feelings In\nthese short, rapid notes.\nBut lor real shrill shrieks, be on\nhand when a robin's nest is being\nniolested, Or when the newly fledg-\nyoung ones are on the ground and\nthe parents have reason to lear\ncat or dog or other enemy. Their\nnotes reach a new peak, and everyone who ts not deaf will know the\nrobins are taking to the warpath\nagainst an intruder.\nWith these three robin calls we\nall of course are familiar, for they\nare heard every day more or less\nall the time. But other variations\nmay puzzle a litUe. For instance,\nthe other day I heard a hird, evidently on our house, repeating\nvigorously a single note\u2014\"Chee,\"\n\"chee,\" \"chee,\" \"chee,\" 'chee.' None\nof us recognized the song or call,\nand we all went out excitedly to\nspot the strange bird. It was merely a robin. Two or three days in\nsuccession he or his double, gave\nthis performance.\nA common sound ln the summer\nis a faint sigh.from the tree, or\nthe fence, or the wall. One would\nthink it made by a very small\nbird, if not by an insect. But it\ncomes from a robin, standing as\nstill as a statue, and barely breath-\nIng out this little call. Perhaps it\nis a sort of croon.\nFtlCKER'8 8TACCATO\nOne early morning some years\nago I heard a robin\u2014so I thought-\ngive from the roof of the Odd\nFellows block a call that I had\nalways assumed to be one of the\nrobin calls, thus; \"Cacacacacacaca,\"\nor perhaps, \"C'c'c'c'c'c'c',\" Incredibly\nfast, shrill, and penetrating. As I\nwalked along I kept an eye on the\nroof edge expecting to presently spot\nthe robin, and was dumbfounded to\nhear the sharp \"Rat-tat-tat-tat'of a\nred-shafted flicker. Wondering if I\nhad always been wrong on this\nbird call, I stood sufficiently far\nback to presently see the flicker In\nthe cup at the base of the short\nflagstaff, observe it give its \"Rat-\ntat-tat-tat\" and see as well as hear\nit give it* staccato \"C'c'c'c\"' endlessly.\nThen I knew that dozens of times\nwhen I had not known of a flicker being in the vicinity, I had been\nhearing the flicker call. It is claimed that the call resembles the word\n\"flicker\" rapidly repeated many\ntimes. At any rate, naturalists give\nthat as the origin ot Its name.\nNow, the flicker Is our second\nlargest woodpecker, If we leave out\nthe lvory-bllled woodpecker of\nwhom the lastpairs still survive\nin Louisiana. The only larger is\nthe pileated woodpecker, or \"cock\nof the woods,\" which we also have\nhere. Our British Columbia flicker\nIs the red-shafted species, with a\ngenerally brown body, and a black-\nspotted brown breast, and a black\ncrescent at the base of the neck.\nThe males also have a scarlet moustache mark, and a scarlet slash\nacross the back ot the head.\nIn flight our flicker shows red\nunder the wings, and white on the\nrump, while lt utters a single loud\ncall. This single note it also utters\nBhxdqsL\nShepard Barclay\nTells How to Bid\nand Play\nBE READY TO CHANGB\nDON'T EVER be too stuck on a\ngood plan. New evidence may reveal the fact that your plea haa\n\u2022light chance for success. If you\nsee that running your Own suit Is\nhopeless, you miy make out better\nby keeping the enemy from running his suit. & brief, be ever\nready to Changs your plan If that\nbecomes advisable.\n\u2666 J98\nf AM\n\u2666 J1086S\n\u266672\n\u2666 .\u25a08648\nM\n_\u00a3_.\n\u2666 A84\nVQ878\n\u2666 Q84\n*KJ5\n\u2666KQioa\nVK63\n\u2666 AKT\n\u2666 A108\n(Dealer: South. North-Sou... vulnerable.)\nWhen South opened the bidding\nhere with 1-No Trump, North responded with 2-No Trump and\nSouth went to 3-No Trump.\nThe club 4 wa* West'* lead\nagainst this contract Dummy\nplayed the 3 and East the K. South\nallowed this to hold and the J was\nreturned, followed by the 5 to\nSouth's A. The diamonds A and K\nwer* cashed and a diamond trick)\ngiven up. Bast then played th*\nspade A for the fourth trick, hop-!\nIng to get some encouraging alg.\nnol trom West When thla did nel\noccur, he switched to a heart am\nSouth took the remainder ol the\ntrick*.\nWhen Eaat returned the club J;\nafter winning the first trick, West\ncould have set the contract by\novertaking the 3 with the Q and\nswitching to the heart J. With nd\nentry tor hia club suit when set up,\nIt was far better to try for tricks\nIn aome other direction.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\n\u2666 0758\nV A10 9 7\n\u2666 10\n\u2666 6882\n\u2666 Q1084\n\u2666 KQJ86\n\u26664\n\u2666 AK9\n(Dealer: South. North-South vulnerable.)\nWhat is the best defense agalnit\nSouth's contract of _-Hearts after;\nthe lead of (he diamond 10 T\nLooking Backward.*.\nTEN YEAR8 AQO\nJuly 29, 1928.\nMr. and Mrs. E. C. Clark ol Vancouver have taken up residence in\nthe Kerr apartments.\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Gunn, former residents ot\nNelson, and now ot Vancouver, are\nspending a lew days in town.\u2014Mrs.\nWalter Brodie and son, who were\nvisiting Mrs. Brodie's parents. Mr.\nand Mrs. J. E. Annable, Hall Mines\nroad, lelt lor Cranbrook\u2014Mrs. Fred\nL. Irwin and (laughter, Mrs. H. H.\nHinitt returned trom Kelowna\nwhere they attended the wedding\nol Floyd L. Irwin and Miss Mary\nAberdeen.\u2014Mra, D. E. Clark, Gore\nstreet, has as her guest, Mrs. Rowes\nol Toronto.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nJuly 29, 1918.\nHerman 'A. Nicholson, district\nplant chief of the B.C. Telephone\ncompany here, and Miss Elizabeth\nBeatrice Wait of Vancouver, were\nmarried at Vancouver, July 22.\u2014\nFlight-Lieut Herbert Montagu Bird,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Bird\nof Nelson, died July 9 of wounds\nreceived In an air battle overseas.\n\u2014An estimate ot the strawberry,\nexport from Creston tor 1918 is\n8500 crates, about 300 less than in\n1817. About 6000 of the crates were\nfrom Wynndel.\u2014J. W. Jones, M.P.P.,\nfor Kelowna is a city visitor.\u2014Alfred George Lane and Miss Flora\nVictoria McLeod ot Ainsworth were\nmarried in Nelson, July 29.\n- THIRTY YEARS AGO\nJuly 29,1908\nThe city decided to lay cement\nsidewalks lor three blocks along\nBaker street\u2014Frederick James McGowan ol Slocan Junction has been\ngazetted a deputy game warden.\u2014\nO. Wigen ol Creston declares he has\nshipped 2006 crates of strawberries\nthis season off four acres of land.\u2014\nA mineral spring has been discovered on Dog Creek about five mile*\nup from Lower Arrow lake,\u2014The;\nMollie Gibson mine has shipped\nsix cars of ore to the Trail smelter.\u2014\nMiss Brandt returned to Trenton,\nN, J., after visiting her sister, Mrs.';\nFrank Risdon.\ntstmssmsmsemsosmsmti\nttttttflt KeVUXtf\nMcmorixo\nThese Figures\nDuring 1937 British Columbia\nmines turned out new mineral\nwealth at the rate of $1,420,000 a\nweek. Dividends were paid at the\nrate of more than $1,250,000 per\nmonth.\nSunipoti\nLatest reports from China indl\ncate the Japanese are not so much\ninterested in \"saving face\" as they\nare the entire hide.\n...\nWhat seems to interest most folk\nreading of Count Haugwitz-Rev-\nentlow-Countess Barbara marital\nrift is just who will get custody of\nthose 40 million dollars.\n...\nAlmost any husband will ap\nplaud those new \"baby hats\" for\nat times when at rest on some em\ninence, or even on the ground.\nOne more call at least, our flicker\nhas, a \"Piyoumi.\" The only time i\never, heard lt was when a pair of\nflickers started drilling operations\none morning several years ago on\na brand new telephone or power\npole in our lane. After one of the\npair, the female, if I recall, had\ndrilled for a few minutes, the male\nsuddenly arrived, uttering this call\nas, with a flurry of wings, he re-,\nplaced his mate on the side of\nthe pole and kept up the tapping.\nAs If happened, the birds abandoned the idea of nesting in the pole\nafter less than an hour. But this\ncall is mentioned by Taverner.\nRED-EYE THE VIREO\nOn another occasion, in our backyard. I listened to a robin, singing\nsoftly\u2014so it seemed\u2014in our Bing\ncherry tree a few feet away. Looking toward the tree I was surprised\nnot to immediately pick out the\nsongster, and while I was looking\na small bird, green or ashy above\nand white below, left the tree and\nflew away. There was no more song\nand I found my robin was a red-\neyed vireo. To make sure that I\nhad not been mistaken in the past\nall round, I hunted up a number\nof singing robins ln the next day or\ntwo, and found that they did deliver their song as I had known it.\nThere was a great difference,\nhowever, in vigor. Both the robin\nand the red-eyed vireo or preacher-\nbird sing in short phrases of a\ncouple of notes, with breaks between, but Ihe vlreo's notes are\nmore tuneful, once you have learned to distinguish them, and the\nsmall songster\u2014one ot our smallest\n\u2014will sing or warble continuously\nfor two or three minutes, unless interrupted. When his song comes to\nan end, watch the tree sharply, and\nyou will see a very small bird making a looping flight away to another\nsinging station. His song, also, may\ninclude perhaps one note more than\nthe robin's, but the difference will\nnot be noted by anyone who has\nnot reason lo doubt the songster's\nIdentity.\nThe red-eyed vlreo also has a\nlittle cheep or chirp, when moving\nabout a tree from limb to limb. It\nhas no objection to hanging upside\ndown when hunting. While one may\nnever be near enough to one to observe the red eye, the white eye-\nmiirk across the face feathering Is\neasily distinguished at a few yards\nrange. In fact, the red-eyed vireo is\nnot hard to identify if one can\ncontrive to see the bird\u2014the hard\npart being to ever catch a glimpse\not it\nTHE STROLLER.\nwomen\u2014if the bill lor them is cut\nfrom the same size pattern.\n*   .  \u2022\nWith a god doctor leading the\nConservative party, all those al-\nledged ills, with which it was he-\"'\nset, ought to be cured in no time.\nAnother Bright\nAdvertising Effort\nHEtPI I'M SCREWY\nConceited, opinionated and only\nstreetcar conductors can tell me\nwhere to get off. Waiting for job\nin reputable agency, Experience,\nbrief but exciting; poor copy writer but natural; advertising knowledge colossal; layouts lousy,\nBluffed my way through school.\nSalary, reasonable; I'll make the\nfuture! If you have reasonable offer and want white man, 22 year*\nold, full of crazy ideas, write.\nOthers save your postage. Hurryl\nI am impatient! Box 662, Printers'\nInk.\nHe Was Asked\nAbout World Politics\nFormer Premier Briand of France,\nIntercepted on one occasion by a\ngroup of journalists while on his\nway to Paris, said this;\n\"We are old friends, old neighbors, oldifighters, you and I, and\nwill be to the grave. Ybu have\nrepresented me, misrepresented\nme, been my loudspeaker, the\npainter of my character, the critics'\nof my words, the cog in my wheel,\nthe stone in my shoe, the body ol\nmen I cannot do without. You ore\nindissolubly knit with my fame,\nmy name and my public life. I\nwill never rebuke you. Get what\ncrumbs you can. You will make\nloaves from them. But let me pass\nnow, for I hav. my train to catch,\nand a Frenchman must never\nmiss his train to Paris.\"\niizE \u00ab_l_.*>C\nHave You a\nUsed\nTENT\nI\na\nWhy Not Turn It\nInto Cash?\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 6 times 80c net\nTwo  (2)  lines once 20c net\nNelson Daily News\nPHONE 144\nL\n '\n_\n *_______\u25a0\nPUP!\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. 8. C-FRIDAY MORNING. JULY ZS, 1938.\n\u25a0 PAORSEVEW\nCreston Trustees\nLet Contract For\n| WiringoiSchool\nI CRESTON, B. C. \u2014 At a ipeclal\nmeeting ot the trustees of Creston\n'Consolidated school district Monday\nnight, the contract for electrical\nwiring and equipment was let at\n85400.00 to West Kootenay Power tt\nlight company, limited, ot Creston,\nwho were the lowest ol several\nbids. The wiring, is 82800. The fixtures will be chosen by the trustees,\nand to facilitate this work the\nschool* at Vernon and Princeton\nhave been written lor full Information.\nThe meeting was ln charge of\nChairman S, A. Speers, with trustees E. E. Cartwright Guy Constable, F. H. Jackson and J. E. VanAckeren in attendance.\nThe chairman announced the appointment of the following one-man\ncommittees: supplies, F. H. Jackson;\nbuildings, Guy Constable; transportation, E. E. Cartwrlght; teachers\nand pupils, J. E. VanAckeren.\nThe proposal to rent the parish\nhall for physical education was allowed to stand over until the return of high school principal J. S.\nGraham, who is due back from his\nWedding trip early in August.\nMiss Burgess, who had charge of\nDivision S of Creston public school\nlast term, wrote asking for permission to exchange work for a year\nwith a coast teacher. If agreeable\nto Principal Marriott the exchange\nWill be allowed.\nIt was announced that two of the\nthree vacancies in tbe high school\n(taft have been filled'with the board\napproving of hiring H. A. C. Thlcke\nof Vancouver, as technical and manual training instructor, and James\nGoldie of North Vancouver as commercial teacher.\nCelebrates 88th\nBirthday\nTRAFFIC FATALITIES\nDECLINE IN THE U. S.\nCHICAGO, July 28 (API-United\nStates motorists are beglnlng to\nstep on the brakes in time to save\nJives.\nTraffic latalltle* for the first six\nmonths of 1838 were fewer by 22\nper cent than during the same period\nlast year.\nBy heeding the plea to drive more\ncarefully, American motorists saved\n3,670 lives during the first hall of\n1938, the council said.\nREFUSE TO ASK PROBE\n\"ELEG1BILITY\" OF BUCK\nCLEVELAND, July 28 (AP)-The\nAmerican bar association's resolutions committee refused today to\napprove a resolution which would\nhave the association ask the U.S.\nsupreme court for information on\n\"eligibility\" of Associate Justice\nHugo I_ Black.\nCOMPOSER PASSES\nNEW YORK, July 28 (AP). -\nJames Thornton, 76, composer of\n'My Sweetheart the Man in the\nMoon\"\u2014the first moon song\u2014died\nlest night in Astoria, Long Island.\nDaniel Carter Beard, National\nScout commissioner and chairman\nof the Bdy Scouts' U. S. court of\nhonor, returns the salute of more\nthan 3000 scouts who journeyed to\nSufferin, N. Y., to pay tribute to the\nelderly scout leader who celebrated his 88th birthday recently. He\nis known to boys all over the world\nas \"Uncle Dan.\"\nRaspberries,   Cherries\nAbout Over at Creston\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 The fortnightly crop report by C. B. Twlgg, district agriculturist, advises that the\nraspberry season is practically over\nand that, despite the intense heat\nthat prevailed for 10 days, the crop\nis bigger than first anticipated and\nshould reach 10.000 crates.\nCherries are also about at an end,\nLamberts were coming in limited\nquantity at the first of the week, but\nthe packing crews expected to be\nlaid off Wednesday. It has been a\ngreat year for sweet cherries. The\nsize was good, color excellent and\nthe loss from splitting was negligible.\nPlums and prunes are sizing nicely but the yield will be less than\naverage due to cool weather encountered at blossom time. The intense heat has brought along tomatoes and cucumbers and by the end\nof the week these will be available\nln some volume.\nPears and apples are sizing well\nApple thinning is still in progress\nIn many orchards. The heavy wind\nthat prevailed Saturday night did\nsome damage to the earlier varletle*\nbut the blowoff is not extensive.\nCut of the second crop of alfalfa\nwill be general next week. Due\ntti unfavorable early season weather\nthe second cut like the first is hardly up to average.\nSUICIDE TO BE BURIED\nNEW YORK, July 28 (AP).-John\nW. Warde. 26, who \u25a0_Ua_-\u00bb,Tu_sday\nnight in a spectacular suicide leap\nfrom a 17th floor hotel window\nledge here while thousands watched, will be buried tomorrow in the\nevergreen cemetery in Brooklyn.\nON THE AIR\nThe Davis Cup Tennis tournament\nwill be broadcast from Montreal,\n12 noon PST, today.\n819.8 m.\n1000 w,\nCJAT\n110 k.\nTrail\nKM.\n7:80\u2014All-request program\n8:15\u2014Morning \"Bulletin Board\n8:00\u2014The Happy Gang\n9:30-Concert Trio\n9:45\u2014Waltz time\n10:00-Big Sister\nI0:15-As You Like It\n10:30\u2014Good Morning Neighbor\n11:00\u2014Mary Marlin\n11:18-Ma Perkins\n11:30\u2014Pepper Young's Family\n11:45-The Guiding Light\nI2:00-On the Mall\n>.M.\n,2:15\u2014Musical Workshop\n.2:30-Vocal Varieties\n2:45\u2014Sport Page ot the Air\n1:00-Rhythm and Romance\n1:15\u2014Backwoods Breakdown\n1:30\u2014The Gloom Chasers\n1:45\u2014Closing stock quotation*\n2:0O\u2014Tune Twisters\n2:30\u2014London Calling\n3:00\u2014Luigi Romanellr* orch.\n3:15\u2014Turner and Marson\n3:30\u2014News\n3:45\u2014Lavender and Lace\n4:00\u2014Theatre New*\n4:30\u2014Times Present*\n5:00\u2014Melodic Strings\n5:30\u2014Minstrel Jamboree\n8:00-Melody\n8:15\u2014Serenade\n6:30\u2014Lloyd Huntley'* orch.\n.:00\u2014New*\n1:1b-\"Listen'\n7:30\u2014Jerry FuHer\"* oroh.\nB:00\u2014Music Never Die*\n|:30\u2014Bob Crosby's orch.\n5:00\u2014Police headquarters\n6:15\u2014Organ Recital\n|:30\u2014Easy to Remember\n6:45\u2014New*\n6:00\u2014Horace Lapp'* orch.\n6:30\u2014Swing Time\nT)',_5\u2014A Sweet Goodnight\n\u25a0 canadian broadcasting\ni corporation network\nIkov cjcj cjca chwk cfqc\n730\nCJAT   CKY\n910       910\nCKCK\n1010\nI k. CJOR\nncouver\nk. CFCN\n780\nCFAC\n930\nCBR\n1100\n840\nCJOC\n950\n4.99,7 m.\n600 w.\n293.1 m.\n10,000 W.\n100 P.M.\u2014\nntelsle Muiicale (CBC)\ni P.M.\u2014\niFusby* (CBC)\nklodic'strlngs (CEO\n1i_.de Echoe* (CFCN)\n115 P.M.\u2014\nlib lor kiddles (CJOR)\nj Tracy, drama (CFCN)\n30 P.M.\u2014\nnstrel Jamboree (CBC)\nr Allen'* adventures (CFCI)\n5:45 P.M.\u2014\nWilt Wylie, pianist (CJOR)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nLend Me Your Ear* CBC)\nConcert Hall (CJOR)\n6:30 P.M.\u2014\nLloyd Huntley** orch. (CBC)\nRed Head Family (CFCN)\nGeorge Hall's orch. (CJOR)\n6:45 P.M.\u2014\nOther Days, talk (CBC)\nLate Sports review (CJOR)\nSalon orch. (CFCN)\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews, weather (CBC)\n7:15 P.M.\u2014\nParisian Rhythm* (CBC)\nMusic of the Immortal* (CJOR)\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nJerry Fuller1* orch. (CBC)\nClub Cabana (CFCN)\n7:45 P.M.\u2014\nRtdlo Rascals (CJOR)\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nMusic Never Die* (CBC)\nNews flashes (CJOR)\nHarmony Hall (CFCN)\n8:15 P.M.\u2014\nKnox church choir (CFCN)\n8:30 P.M.\u2014\nBob Crosby'* orch. (CBC)\nLacrosse Broadcast (CJOR)\n8:45 P.M.\u2014\nHouse ot Peter McGregor (CFCN)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nRhythm Ride (CBC)\nNews flashes (CFCN)\n9:15 P.M.\u2014\nDance program (CFCN)\n9:30 P.M.\u2014\nI Cover the Waterfront (CBC)\n9:45 P.M.\u2014\nWeather end new* (CBO\nGarden ot Melody (CFCN)\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\nHorace Lapp'* orch. (CBC)\n10:30 P.M.\u2014\nNew* (CJOR)\n10:45 P.M.\u2014\nDevotional program (CJOR)\n11:00 P.M.\u2014\nThe Old Refrain* (CJOR)\n11:30 P.M.\u2014\nMusical Interlude (CJOR)\n11:45 P.M.\u2014\nSlumber Tune (CJOR)\nv%0\nCTLY CASH\nCOMMENCES FRIDAY\nJULY 29\nGENUINE REDUCTIONS IN NEW SEASONARLE STOCK\nBATHING BARGAINS\nKllngtlte\nTRUNKS\nRegular $1.95\nPair $1.69\n$2.95 Catallna\nThe season's hit\nPair\n$249\n$2.95 Jantzen\nHalf hitch or\nWisp-o-Wool\nPair. $249\n$3.95 Jantzen\n' Zip hitch or Streamliner\nPair...... $3.39\nSUMMER HATS\nBy Biltmore\u2014Our entire $3.50 itoek on sal*.\nEach , $2.79\nSUMMER HATS\nBy BILTMORE\nAll sizes in light hats with narrow bands. Regular $2.45\n_E_acn \u00ab\u2022\u00ab..        * wye*\nSUMNER\nCAPS\nReg. 50c      Reg. $1.00\n35c       79c\nPEANUT\nSTRAWS\nand FABRIC HELMETS\nEach  19c\nSTRAW HATS\nShower proof, washable. Regular $2.25. Broken sites.\nEach \u2022 v*.8_r\nGrey Flannels and Zephyr Slacks\nA good selection of colors and all sixes. Regular $3.95.\nEach      $2.99\nMEN'S BREECHES\nGood selection of light weight breeches in values up to\n$2.50 and In all sins.\nTo clear ..................... $1.29\nBATHING\nSUITS\nSmall sixes only.\nValues $1.95.\nEach 49c\nWORK SHIRTS\nBroken sizes, but values\nto $1.75k\nEach....... 89c\nPOLO SHIRTS\nSussex and B.V.D. Sportswear. Reg. $1.00 and $1.25\nCiaCII \u2022\t\n79c Each   $1.19\nWASH SLACKS\nWabasso Cotton. All pre-shrunk. Regular $2.25.\nAlso includes some grey flannels.\nPair  $l.<9\nSPORT OXFORDS\nBROKEN SIZES\nTwo Tone\nBrown\nRegular $4.75\nPair...... $3.89\nWHITE SHOES\nRegular $3.95. ,\nPair $2.89\nODDMENTS\nBoater straws, golf hats,\nHelmets.\nEach....... 49c\nBlack and\nWhite\nRegular $4.75\nPair $3.89\n\u00abKEDS\"\nCorksole, canvas upper.\nRegular $2.50\nPair $1.89\nAUTO RUGS\nRegular   $1.89\nTo dear. $1.49\nDRESS SHIRTS\nOur entire $1.50 range. Soft or fused cellar.\nDRESS SHIRTS\nSeparate collar or collar attached. Broken sizes but\nvalues to $2.00.\nEach  ......r....79c\nYOUTHS* COLLEGIATE LONGS\nSide straps or pleats in pure wool tweeds.\nRegular $4.25 and $4.95\nPair.. .,...~..~,.$349\nUNDERWEAR\nODDS\nHatchway, Nainsook,\nSilk. Mostly small sizes.\nSuit ...49c\nANKLE SOX\nLastex tops. Regular 50c.\nPair ....... 39c\nDrape Slacks and Grey Flannels I SPORT JACKETS ISummer BELTS, BRACES and TIES\nRegular $8.50      Regular $5.95      Regular $4.75    |Two tones, worsted and corduroy fronts. Regular $4.95.1 By Hickok or Currie. All regular $1.00.\nPair $6.99  Pair $349 Pair $349 lEach   $3.89|Each ......  ...\/.... 79c\nBOYS1 WEAR   I LADIES' WEAR\n-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------\nPOLO SHIRTS\nA real cleanup of our regular 75c stock In all sizes\nand many colors,\nEach ,.-.... 59c\nSWIMMING TRUNKS\nBlues, blacks, reds, browns and greys.\nRegular $1.00 Jantzen.. Regular $1.95\nPair.. 79c Pair,. $1.69\nStrong DENIM PANTS\nSome with zipper. Some with elastic. Reg. $1.50. Black and gray.\nPair $1.29\nANKLE SOCKS\nFor children. Regular 25c\n3pairs.....59c\nCOTTON GOLF\nHOSE\nRegular 35c\nPair 29c\nCrepe Sandals\nSizes 11 to 2. Reg. $1.35\nPair ....... 89c\nCelanese Slips\nRegular $1.00\nEach....... 69c\nPanties, Vests\nand Bloomers\nTo dear... 39c\nBRASSIERE and PANTIE\nor VEST and PANTIE\nSETS\nReg. $1.00.\nSet 79cj\nWH'lTE SHOES and\nSANDALS\nCOTTON SUCKS and\nSPORT SHIRTS\nEntire $2.95 Stock     tj Regular $1.25\nPair ...... $2.191 Each...,,.. 79c\nBATHING SUITS\nPure wool, many shades.     Reg. $3.95\nReg. $1.50    Reg. $2.25  Reg. $2.95     and  $4.95\n99c       $149    $2.19       $349\nSUMMER DRESSES\nPastels or flowered crepes and printed crepes. Broken\nsizes.   Regular $3.95 and $4.95.\nEach $2.89\nBLUE PANTS\nLight weight. Lastex\nback. Regular $1.00.\nPair ........ 79C\nDENIM PANTS\n8 oz. black\u2014high waist.\nRegular $1.65    \u2022\nPair. $1.39\nBOYS*\nTRAMPERS\nSizes 1 and 2 only.\nPair...     $1.19\nBEACH HATS\nRag. 50c\nTo Clear ...39f!\nDresses\nDresses\nPeaient Crash, Crepee end\nVoile.,   Regular $2.70.\nLaces and Linenet.\nBroken sizes.\nEach $149 I Each......, 99c\nBOYS' FLANNEL LONGS I     RUNNING\nPure wool.   Medium ihades. | SHOES\nRegular $2.25 Regular $2.75 g Sizes 2 to 4.\nPair....$1.89 Pair ....$2.29 | To clear ... 49c\nWASH SLACKS\nSanforized cotton.\nRegular $1.95.\nPair\n$149\nDrape Slacks\nVery dressy\nRegular $3.75.\nPair $2.79\nSet\nVest and\nBloomer\n$1.50 sets\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022tot\nSilk\nNightgowns\nValues to $1.75\n99c I Each ..... $1.29\nPrint Dresses\nRegular $1.00 and $1.25\nEach,:,.;.:,. 79c\nPlay Suits and\nCoveralls\nThese are real buys.\nPair ...... 79c\nSilk Pyjamas\n,   Values to $2.25\nPair..,,.. $149\nTropical and\nFlannel Slacks\nValues to $3.95\nEach...    $2491 Pa**\nMARLENE, FLANNEL\nAND BROADSPUN\nSLACKS\nValues to $3.25\n.$1.99\nCAMDRIDGE CLOTHES - PHONE 270\n378 BAKER ST. - NELSON\ni.\n-_..;,___-______._iMft^ ,A'^^tiiM_i__M'iiiiihiiii^iiniirtr'iivii\n\u25a0 ;\u25a0    \u25a0    -    :.-,:.\n\t\n PAQE EIQHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNING. JULY 29, 1938.\nSun-Bathing at lakeside Park\n71' Ship Ores Only,\n10  Concentrates,\nThree Both   -\ni With tonnages corrected to dry\nweight, total receipts of ore and\nconcentrates at the Tadanac plant\nof the Consolidated Mining _. Smelting company for the first sue months\nof 1938 are shown at 290,679 tons.\nA statement issued by the company shows that ot this aggregate,\n269,859 tons were from company\nproperties, and 20,820 tons from\ncustom shippers. The custom total\nwas made up of 15,270 tons of ores\nand 5550 tons of concentrates.\nThe list of custom shippers to\nJune 30 consisted of 71 properties\nshipping ore only, 10 shipping concentrates only, and three shipping\nboth ore and concentrates, a total\nof 84.\nCustom shippers up to June 30,\nwith their tonnages corrected to dry\nweight, follow:\nMonitor, Three Forks         16\nMountain Lion, Republic,\nWash     2,000\nMcAllister, Three Forks ....      637\nNoon Day, Silverton  5\nNorth Star, Greenwood         24\nNumber Seven, Boundary '\nFalls     1,349\n0. K. Leasing Co., Rossland        39\nA familiar sight at Lakeside park, Nelson. Old Dr. Sol has many\ndevotees these days. ...\nColdwell Pleads For Liberty and\nWarns Against Fascism in Canada\n_\u201e,   i\nRosemont, Beaverdell          33\nRoyal Canadian, Nelson -\u2014       10\nRuth Hope, Sandon         48\nSally, Beaverdell       214\nSilver Coin, Ainsworth \u2014        5\nSovereign, Sandon        26\nSpokane, Tye \u2014\u2014       79\nF. Stewardson, Fort\nWilliam, Ont  2\nSt. Patrick, Argenta        13\nSuperior, Grand Forks        27\n\u2022Surprise, Republic, Wash. .      769\nTiger, Beaverdell ___       35\nTom Thumb, Republic,\nWash        289\n171\n2\n221\n180\nBy SAM G. ROSS\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer).\nEDMONTON, July 28 (CP) .-Socialization gf the entire financial\nSystem and establishment of a national investment board to direct\n\u2022unused surplusses into productive\nTcnannels for the public good were\nadvocated by M. J. Coldwell, national chairman, in his opening address to the national convention of\nt h e Cooperative Commonwealth\ntederation here today.\nMember of parliament for Rose-\ntown-Biggar, Mr. Coldwell warned\nagainst the threat of Fascism in\nCanada and pleaded for civil, religious and economic liberty. Referring to controversy on federal and\nprovincial rights, he declared problems of Dpminion concern Must be\nmet on a national basis.\nCALLS F0R.WORK8\nPROGRAM\nMr. Coldwell called for housing\nand public works programs and\nshortening hours of labor with minimum wages and adequate minimum prices' for farm products as\nImmediate ameliorative measures.\nHe included among .the policies\n\"which would seem to need parti\ncular emphasis ln this preelection\nyear.\"\nThe C. C. F. had kept up a constant fight against the padlock law\nin Quebec, he said, and had urged\nits reference to the supreme court\nfor judgment\nLEAD FIGHT FOR\nLIBERTY\nThe C. C. F. would continue to\nlead the fight for civil, religious\nand economic liberty as the three\nbasic principles of democracy.\nThere wa6 only a partial democracy\nin Canada because economic liberty\nis enjoyed by only a few, Mr. Cold-\nwell contended.\n\"Nor must we forget that eternal\nVigilance is the price of liberty,\"\nhe added. \"Fascism has as yet an\nuncertain foothold in this Dominion\nbut ominous reports of secret drillings should place us on our guard.\nTariffs were designed to protect\nexotic industries operated by underpaid workers to fleece consumers, said Mr. Coldwell in terming\ntariff disputes between Liberals\nand Conservatives as \"sh___\u00bb battles.\" Only in the direction of a\nsocialized world could the ideal of\nfree trade, free exchange and free\ncommerce be fully realized, he said.\nBerry Season is\nOver al Creston\n. Apples on Move\n\u2022 CRESTON, B.C.-With the straw-\njfcerry and cherry season over, and\n\u25a0raspberries due to come to an end\n.early next' week, Creston shipping\n|houses are entering the in-between'\n^season, with \u00ab slowing down. Until\nthe apple movement commences.\nI The 1938 cherry deal has been a\ngood one except for the return.to\nthe grower. Cherry prices opened\n.below 1937, but some of this was regained\" with a twenty-five cent advance effective July 20, which was\n^naintalned until.the season closed.\n; Creston's 1938 sweet cherries were\n\u25a0jest exceptionally fine quality and It\nis expected the total yield will be\nconsiderably over the estimated\n;6000 crates.'\n* There was a heavy truck movement this year, to points as far as\ngRegina, Saskatoon and Moose Jaw,\n'with the fruit 'arriving in excellent\n;shapc. Movement' of trucks across\nfAlberta on Sundays was prohibited\nthis year and some planning had to\nbe done to make sure fruit would\nbe across the Saskatchewan line before midnight Saturday, as careful\ncheck Was kept on carriers, with\nother than Alberta license plates. .\nRaspberries will be coming until\nearly in the\" week. Like cherries,\n\"rasps.\" have been available in both\nquality and quantity but the price is\nnot quite so encouragii g. Due the\nmovement having to be confined to\n!_,e.l distribution has been limited,\n(with Swift Current, Sask., the furthest east point reached. As with\nstrawberries, the coast had a big\nraspberry crop, and competition was\nkeen throughout the season. The\nLatham and Viking varieties have\nmet with a splendid reception and\nare likely to largely replace the\nCuthbert, particularly ln this district.\nThere are still some currants coming, chiefly from Camp Lister. Cooking apples have been on the move\nsince the end of the week. These are\nconfined to Transparent and Duchess, with the minimum 2% inch.\nThe first of the 1938 tomato crop\nwas on the move Tuesday\u2014four\ncrates from the J. B. Holder ranch\nat Erickson. The ten days of hot\nweather at the middle of July has\nproduced these unusually early.\nalmost a week, along with peppers.\nBeans are now available, and with\npeas and early potatoes in limited\nquantities, complete the vegetable\nshipping list.\nCarpenters are making headway\nwith the framework of the 50 x 100-\nfoot addition Long, Allan __ Long.\nLimited, are putting to their warehouse at Erickson. Plans are maturing for the firm's cold storage plant\nwhich may be. built this. fall. Recently representatives of a Vancouver company have been here, and\nare preparing to submit a bid tor\nthe supplying and installing of the\nneeded equipment\nNew Highway at\nCoast Is Started\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., July\n28 (CP)\u2014Construction of the new\ninternational highway between the\nPattullo bridge and the boundary\nline was under way today.\nTwo contracting companies In the\n$300,000 highway project were at\nwork clearing right-of-way before\nthe actual road-building operations\ncommence.        '.-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nFined $10, Foiling\nStop at Stop Sign\n. For failing to stop at the intersection of Stanley and Baker streets\nTuesday, night, Norman Slader was\nfined $10 in city police court by William Brown, police magistrate,\nThursday morning. Slader pleaded\nguilty to a charge of falling to stop\nat a stop sign at an intersection.\nNORTHWEST LUMBER\nSHIPMENTS DECLINE\nPORTLAND, July 28 (AP) -Lumber shipments from the Columbia\nriver for the first six months of 1938\nwere 40 per cent more than Puget\nSound but 30 per cent less than\nBritish Columbia.\nThe entire northwest district suffered a 20 per cent decline trom last\nyear, although the British Columbia figures were up 8 per cent. The\nOregon decrease was about 8 per\ncent against 42 per cent for Washington.\nSET DATE HEARING\nON MURDER CHARGE\nEDMONTON, July 28 (CP)-Pre-\nliminary hearing of the murder\ncharge against Harry Shire, 33-year-\nold farmer accused of clubbing his\nseven-month-old son, Raymond, to\ndeath, will begin in Vepeville, Alta.,\nSIX MONTHS ORE TOTAL TADANAC\nPLANT2VM0NS CORRECTED DRY\nWEIGHT; 14 CUSTOM HIKES LISTED\nOttawa, Slocan City . ,.._\nPayne, Sandon .\nVenus Juno, Nelson\t\nVirginia, Tye _..._.\nWellington, Beaverdell\t\nYankee Boy, Grand Forks ..\nCONCENTRATES\nDurango, Ymir \t\nGold Standard, Penticton .\nGranite, Taghum \t\nKootenay Ore Hill, Salmo _\nLakeview, Slocan City\t\nNew True Fissure,\nFerguson\t\nOBrien, Cobalt, Ont.\n15,270\nOttawa, Slocan City ..... _.\nS. J. Towgood, Sandon -\t\nWesko, Ymir  \t\nWestern Exploration,\nSilverton \t\nYankee GirH Ymir \t\nYmir  (Goodenough), Ymlr\nORE\nArlington, Erie  _,\nAthabasca, Nelson  __.\nBeaver, Beaverdell\t\nBeaver Silver, Beaverdell .\nBell Mineral Claim,\nSlocan City .'.\t\nBen Hur, Republic, Wash. ..\nBlack Cock, Ymir\t\nBlack Tail, Republic, Wash.\nBosun, Bosun Landing .\nBuckingham,  Greenwood -\nCaledonia,  Blaylock\t\nCalifornia, Nelson  ....\nCarmi, Carmi __.\nChicago No. ?, Sandon\t\nCity of Paris, Grand Forks\nClubine Comstock,\n2,096\n9\n33\n101\n1\n298\n200\n8\n1\n672\n79\n1,468\n582\n5,350\n501\n53\n25\n91\n11\n281\n62\n7\n5\n29\n61\n3\n138\nComplete Plans\nAir Conference\nOTTAWA, July 28 (CP)- Hon.\nIan Mackenzie, national defence minister, was today completing preparations for conferences with the two\nBritish air missions which will arrive In Ottawa tomorrow.\nThe group headed by Sir Hard-\nman Lever will consult with him In\nmatters relating to _t,e aircraft, construction industry in Canada, while\nCommander J, M. Robb will discuss the feasibility of training Royal\nAir Force pilots under Canadian\nauspices.\nMrs. Maclnnis Heads\nC.C.F. Youth Council\nEDMONTON, July 28 (CP). -\nMrs. Grace Maclnnis, wife of the\nCooperative Commonwealth federation member of parliament for Vancouver East, last night was elected\npresident of the national council of\nt h e Cooperative Commonwealth\nyouth movement, succeeding Kev.\nT. C. Douglas, M.p, <or Weyburn,\nSask.\nSAYS SALVATION FRENCH\nCANADA IS IN THE SOIL\nihER'REVILLE, Que., July 28 (CP)\n\u2014Salvation of French Canada, Premier Duplessis believes, Is In the toil\nits people till and to ensure their\nprosperity they should remain on\nthe land.\nHe said the province suffered from\ncentralization of wealth and of power and the government was pleased\nto note evidence ot development of\nlocal initiative,\nTWO KILLED WHEN HAY\nTRUCK HIT BY TRAIN\nELLENSBURG, Wash., July 21\n(AP)-Wade Morris, 37, of Redmon'd\nand Lester R. Whalen, Jr., 21, of\nSeattle were killed today when their\nhay truck was struck by the Milwaukee Olympian passenger train\non the Woldale crossing six miles\nwest of Ellensburg.\nSALMON PACK SHOWS\nDECLINE IN B. C.\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP)-Bri-\ntish Columbia's canned salmon pack\ntotals 204,862 cases this year. This\nwas a decrease of 36,060 cases over\nthe corresponding period ih' the\nfour\/ year cycle when 241,822 cases\n444\nCrasient, Greenwood __.___.\n11\nDentonia, Greenwood\t\n342\nDynamo, Greenwood \t\n14\nEureka, Republic, Wash,\t\n1,648\n47\nGet There Eli, Slocan City\n10\nGolconda, Wauconda, Wash.\n158\nGold Drop, Greenwood \t\n37\nGrandora, Penticton  ..\n21\n56\nGreen Mountain, Penticton\n3\nGrey Eagle, Cheaaw, Wash,\nt  35\nG. tt S\u201e Woodbury Creek _\n36\nHarriet Group, Erie \t\nHewitt, Silverton ........\n\u2022    20\n38\nHighland Bell, Beaverdell _\n2,288\nI. X. L, Rossland _\t\n37\nJumbo, Rossland  _ .-\n48\nKalamalka, Lavington \t\n918\n85\n84\nKootenay Ore Hill, Salmo .\n269\n3\nLittle Bertha, Grand Forks\n125\nLone Pine, Republic, Wash.\n555\n17\nLyons Advance, Beaverdell\n3\nMetallic, Silverton  \t\n14\nMidnight, Rossland\t\n159\nMidway, Moyie  \t\n116\nMolly Gibson, Paulson .\u201e_..\n15\nTotal ores  \t\n15,270\n5,550\n20,820\nTotal company _\t\n289,859\nGrand total _\t\n290,679\n'Come Out' They Said,\n'This   Is  the Police'\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP).-\nTwo policemen, revolvers drawn,\ncrept through underbrush toward\na suspicious rustling.\n\"Come out quietly. This is the\npolice,\"\nNo sound was heard so they\nmoved forward and found the\nculprit\nIt wu a horse.\nU.S. to Develop\nFriendship latin\nAmerican Nations\nBy ANDRUE BERDINC, '\n(Associated Press Staff Writer)\nWASHINGTON, July 28 (AP). -\nThe United States set out in earnest\ntoday to Improve relations with the\nnations on the south aide ot the\ncontinent.\nInaugurating a division ot cultural relations, the United States department began to execute its many\nproposals to make firmer friends\nOf the Latin American republics.\nThe new division, headed by,_) r.\nBen. M. Cherrington of the Oni-\nversify ot Denver, was designed\nprimarily to increase cultural exchanges and Improve contactsebe-\ntween the other republics of the\nwestern hemisphere and the United\nStates.\nThe Roosevelt administration's\nprogram ranges from better shipping lines to South America, and\ntrade assistance from the export-\nimport bank to exchanges of stu-\nPotential Party\nChief, Anscombe\nVisits Kootenay\nHebert Anscombe, M.P.P, tor Victoria, who ts a candidate for the\nleadership of the Conservative party In British Columbia, wu lo Nelson yesterday. He will spend today\nin the Slocan.\nThis fall provincial Conservatives\nwill choose a new leader to succeed the late Dr. F. P. Patterson.\nOn returning from the Slocan,\nMr. Anscombe will .visit Creston,\nYahk, Cranbrook, Fernie and Michel.' He will return to the coast by\nway.of the Columbia Valley; Revelstoke and Kamloops.\nMr. Anscombe practices in Victoria as a chartered accountant. He\nis also managing director of Growers' Wine Co., Ltd,, which is the\nmainstay of tbe grape Industry In\nthe Okanagan and of the loganberry industry on Vancouver Island\nand in the Fraser valley,   \"\nFor three years, 1925 to 19327, he\nwu reeve of. Oak Bay. Then for'\nthree years be was mayor ot Victoria, 1928. to 1931.\nHe wu elected to the provincial\nlegislature in 1933 and after four\nyears iu tbe house wu reeelected\nin 1937.\ndents, professors and books with\nLatin American nations.\nNext month a flight of six United\nStates army bombers will be made\nto Bogota, Colombia, to participate\nin the inaugural ceremonies ot the\nnew president\niiiliiimiliiliilllimiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiu\nMAY PROBE FUNDS\nOF DRUMHELLER\nHOSPITAL\nDRUMHELLER, Alta., July 28\n(CP) \u2014 Reported shortage of\nfunds of Drumheller Municipal\nhospital Will be investigated by\ngovernment auditors if a request trom the hospital board is\ngranted by Hon. W. W. Cross,\nprovincial minister of health.\nAt a special meeting, it wu\ndecided to uk tbe minister ot\nhealth to authorize an Investigation of the shortage and also\nprobe contracts with mine\nworkers ot the Drumheller valley. Under the contract hospitalization was provided for\nmine workers and dependent\nfamilies at a rate oliO i year.\nThe contracts will be terminated September 30.\niiiiiiiiHimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiim\nBLAZE DESTROYS\nKAMLOOPS MILL\nKAMLOOPS, B. C. July 28 (CP)\n\u2014A spectacular midnight blaze partially destroyed a small sawmill\nand lumber yard, owned by Senator\nBenjamin F. Smith, of East Florence-\nville, N. B., across the Thompson\nriver from here.\nJAPANESE PRINCE\nRETURNS TO HOME\nTOKYO, July 28 (AP).-Prince\nFumltaka Konoye, son of tbe Japanese premier, returned today from\nthe United States, asserting \"I intended to remain in America for\nfurther study but in view of my\nmilitary obligations I have returned,\"\nFavors Alimony\nfor Husbands Too\nNEW YORK, July 28 (CP).-Mrs.\nCarrie Chapman Catt, pioneer fern- .1\ninlst, is in favor of alimony for f\nhusbands as well as wives.\nShe told a luncheon of women's I\norganizations to In urging the need]\nof adopting a new program to obtain   better   rights   for   women |\nthroughout the world.\nFive Die in Head-on\n, Collision Two Cart\nPERDUE, Sask., July 28 (CP)- !\nFive persons were killed Instantly\nand tour others were hurt seriously\nIn a head-on collision of two automobiles on a rise of highway 14 miles\nwest of here early today.\nTHE DEAD!\nWilliam (Nick) Bayzor, 18, Wilkie,\nSask.; Miss Bettey Hants, 22, nurse,\nWilkie; Miss Jean Fischer, 24, nurse,\nWilkie; Edward Headman, Lacadena,'\nSask.; Mrs. K. A. McRItchie, Lacadena,\nSERIOUSLY INJURED!\nK. A. McRitchlo, Lacadena; C.\nChrlstianson, 28, Wilkio; James Barbour, 21, Wilkie, and Ernest Thomas,\n21, Wilkie.\nAn yoa to-nwited with the teto'tattr-Tc.\n\u2022kin affliction.? For quick' __dh\u00bbM>y relltf,\nue. cooling, antiseptic, II .old 6. D. D.\nPwwlfllon. Its settle oils nolle Uk Int.\nttted ekin. Clear, iraKlna __. ratals*)\u2014\ndrin (ait. Stota tht non InttM. Itchlnj\nInstantly.   A 35c trill bottle, it .till -tore...\nsroveilt-or money tack; r W\n(Advt)\nEsso and 3-Star contain\nexclusive solvent that\ndissolves gum... fights carbon\ngives extra power and mileage\nWhen the Government gives a patent, it indicates that the product has new,\nuseful and improved characteristics. The new formula, for Esso and 3-Star has\nbeen granted a patent by the Canadian Government. These gasolines now contain\nan exclusive solvent which dissolves turn and checks the formation of carbon.\nThis is a definite contribution to the efficient operation of your engine.\nThis solvent should not be confused with lubricating oils sometimes added to\ngasolines. Ample lubrication is provided by imperial lubricants. The sole\npurpose of thii solvent is to dissolve gum and prevent sticky deposits from\naccumulating in your engine and robbing it of power.\nIf you use these new gasolines exclusively in a hew car, it will retain its new,\nsurging power indefinitely. In an old car you Will notice 4 gradual but\nunmistakable improvement in performance. Esso and 3-Star with this new\nsolvent are sold everywhere in Canada at no increase in price.\nIMPERIAL OIL LIMITED\nEVERYWHERE    IN    CANADA\nIMPERIAL\nYOU HAVE\nTWO CHOICES OF\nPERFORMANCE\nm The finest motor fuel Imperial OH.\ntSSQ nM ever marketed at any mice. It\n\"\u25a0VUV contains sufficient tetraetMuead for\nmaximum power and economy ana smooth,\ncool running without \"knock\" of \"ping\". Now\nIt \u00ab\/\u00bb contains the exclusive solvent which\ndissolves gum and causes it to be blown out\nthrough the exhaust The finest motor fuel\nmade still more efficient.\n3CTAD This famous regular-priced\n\"\u00abl MI*.gasoline has long been\nnoted for its exceptional power and mileage. |\nNow it contains the exclusive new solvent that\nabsorbs gum and checks the formation of\nengine deposits. \u2022\u2022\":'\"-l\nNext time you need gasoline,\nfill up at the Imperial Sign\n\u25a0-.-.'\u25a0\nDEALER\n NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINQ. JULY \u00bb. 1988.\nWESTERNERS TO FORE AS THE\nCANADIAN HENUY UNDER WAY\n\/>ORT DALHOUSIE, Ont., July\n28 (CP)\u2014Even a brilliant sprint\nperforman-e by Frank Silvio of\nNew York today failed to take\nopening honors at the 58th annual\nRoyal Canadian Henley regatta\nfrom western oarsmen. Not for\nyears has the west been so prominent on Welland Canal waters.\nSilvio won the featured open\nquarter mile dash for scullers, final\nevent of the days program, maintaining his unquestioned supremacy at the distance, but a great deal\nof Henley excitement was created\nby huskies from Regina, Winnipeg\nand Tort William.\nWestern crews were entered ln\ntwo finals\u2014and won both. Fort\nWilliam's navy blues won the junior fours in the remarkable time\nof six miniutes, 59 seconds, second\nfastest time made here since 1903 by\ncrews  of  the  same classification.\nRegina Bowing club, represented\nat Henley for the first time, captured the junior 160-pound fours.\nThe   rangy'  Saskatchewan   crew,\nrowing smoothly and with great\npower, pulled way early from Buffalo West Sides and finished far\nahead in 7:15.\nALL QUALIFY\nThat wasn't all the west accamp-\nlished aB the first of the three-day\nregatta was spent largely in running off heats. No western crew or\nsculler failed to qualify.\nFort William's junior eight, competing ln one of the most hotly\ncontested events of any Henley,\nqualified for tomorrow's final behind Buffalo West Sides. The difference was just a matter of length\nwith Lachlne third.\nBug Gladwell of Regina came\ndown in front in h's heat in the\njunior 140-pound single sculls and\nJack Chambers of Fort William\nqualified for the final by placing\nsecond in the next heat to Frank\nvan Derkar of Detroit.\nThe other western sculler, Theo\nDubois of Winnipeg, placed second\nin his heat in the junior singles.\nHASTINGS PARK RACE RESULTS\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP) -\nRace results at Hastings park today:\n\u25a0 First race, claiming. Pure $400.\nFor three-year-olds and up, foaled\nin western Canada. Exhibition\ncourse (five furlongs).\nEaster Kid (Bennett) $4.20, $3.30,\n$3.00.\nSaxon King (Cox) $3.65, $3.40.\nEthel Star (Wilbourne) $5.70.\nTime 1:01 3-5. Also ran: Martee,\nMiss Goldstream, Jungle Chick,\nMayaro, Shawnier.\nSecond race, claiming. Purse $400.\nFor three-year-olds and up, non-\nwinners since June 30. Six and one-\nhalf furlongs.\nGenevieve M (Sporri) $8.95, $5.20,\n$3.85.\nSwepen (Baxter) $8.35, $4.25.\nNight Parties (Robinson) $8.40.\nTime 1:23! Also ran: Elk Trap,\nTime Enough, Bad Boy, Lovely\nMiss, Sets Mortgage.'\nThird race, claiming. Purse $500.\nFor three-year-olds and up, non-\n. winners of two races in 1938. Seven furlongs.\nLove Us (Cox) $9.85, $4.05, $3.30.\nVanbank (Kelly) $3.95, $3.10.\nKeaton  (Sporri) $4.40.\nTime 1:29 3-5. Also ran: Bournemouth, Miss Noyes, Viola K, Play-\nnot, Pico Blanco. The daily double\npaid $79.75.\nFourth race, claiming. Purse $400.\nFor maiden two-year-olds. Exhibition course (five furlongs).\nPepper Pot (Haller) $4.45, $3.40,\n$2.65.\nEagle Crest (Simpson) $10.70,\n$4.40.\nBeauty Warm (Wilbourne) $3.15.\nTime 1:02 2-5. Also ran: Van Ele,\nFirst Dividend, Rag Carpet.\nFifth race, the Burnaby Handicap.\nPurse $600. For three-year-olds and\nup. Seven furlongs.\nJessie Cloud (Gruber) $3.15, $2.65,\n$2 25\nMr. Spence (Kelly) $4.40, $2.60.\nGoldstreak II (Sporri) $2.40.\nTime 1:27 2-5. Also ran: Good\nHan, Pass Up.\nSixth race, claiming. Purse $500.\nFor three-year-olds and up. One\nmile and one-sixteenth.\nExllda (McClintock) $11.15, $5.65,\n$5.00.\nMiss Ogden (Haller) $8.00, $4.00.\nJust Mrs. (Young) $5.00.\nTime 1:49 2-5. Also ran: Sky Fish,\nBowery Su, Red Casino, Sand Boot,\nRow High. The one-two bet paid\n$45.35.\nSeventh race, claiming. Purse\n$500. For three-year-olds and up,\nfoaled in western Canada. One mile\nand one-sixteenth.\nSunny Dolas (Cox) $11.00, $5.35,\n$2.80.\nDr. Pills (Young) $3.80, $2.35.\nPrincess Han (Dye) $2.30.\nTime 1:48 1-5. Also ran: Billy\nEaster, Memory Square, Golden\nToken.\nBIG LEAGUE BASEBALL SCORES\nJAPANESE TOO CLASSY FOR CANUCK\nNET MEN, TAKE FIRST TWO SINGLES\nDoubles Match Today\nMay Decide Davis\nGup Play\nBy DOUGLAS AMARON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL, July 28 (CP) -\nCanada's hopes for victory ln her\nfirst Davis cup challenge in three\nyears all but vanished today after a\ndouble setback at the hands of two\nIrresistible Japanese tennis aces,\nFumiteru Nakano and Jtro Yamagishi blasted aside the Dominion's\nfinest singles players, Ross Wilson\nand Bobby Murray, in straight set\nmatches to give Japan a 2-0 lead at\nthe end of the first day's play in\nthe North American zone trial semifinals.\nNakano, coupling speed and steadiness, whipped Wilson 6-2, 6-3, 6-2\nin the first match. Yamagishi, playing faultless tennis, marched past\nMurray 6-1, 6-3, 8-3 in the second,\nVictory In the doubles tomorrow when Wilson and Laird Watt\nof  Montreal   meet. Nakano  and\nYamagishi, would glva Japan the\nround and move them Into the\nzone final against Mexico or Aus-\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York     3   7  0\nSt Louis      4  9   1\nHadley and Dickey; Hildebrand\nand Sullivan.\nFirst game\u201410 innings-\nBoston   13 17  0\nChicago    8 13  0\nWilson, Midkiff, Dickman, Bagby\nand Desautels, Peacock; Knott, Rigney, Gabler and Sewell, Rensa,\nSecond game-\nBoston     8  9   1\nChicago    5  9  2\nMcKain, Midkiff and Desautels;\nWhitehead, Rigney and Rensa,\nWashington    4 11  3\nDetroit   12 10  0\nDeshong, Leonard, Krakauskas,\nand R. Ferrell, Giuliilni; Gill and\nTebbetts.\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nPittsburgh    9  9   1\nPhiladelphia     2   7  0\nTobin and Todd; Holllngsworth,\nSmith, Johnson and V. Davis, Clark.\nSt Louis    1   7  0\nNew York    2  8 0\nHenshaw, Macon and Bremer, Owen; Hubbell and Mancuso.\nCincinnati       4 10  0\nBoston    2  9  2\nR. Davis and. Lombardi; Reis and\nLopez.\nFIGHTS\nBy the Associated Press\nCORPUS   CHRIST!,  Texas-Bill\nDeeg, 140, San Antonio, outpointed\nTed Garcia, 135, Sioux Falls, S. D.\n(10).\nHOUSTON. Texas \u2014 Jo Jo Pas-\nsante 130, Houston, outpointed Don\nEddy, 134, Syracuse (10).\nST. LOUIS\u2014Joey Parks, 164, St.\nLous, outpointed George Brunette,\n159%, Detroit (10).\nOAKLAND, Calif\u2014Dale Sparr,\n158, Olathe, Colo., outpointed Larry\nDerrick, 156V4, Sacramento (10).\nNEW YORK\u2014Joey Ferrando, 138,\nJersey City, N. J., outpointed Pete\nMascia, 146, Brooklyn, (8).\nBuy or sell with a Classified Ad.\nfind SafjQ  iVtitrina\nGUTTA PERCHA\nTIRES\ntrail*. The series ends Saturday\nwith two more singles matches.\nEXPECT TO WIN\nBut E. Henri Laframbolse, genial\nlittle French-Canadian captain of\nthe Dominion team, and his players would not admit defeat.\n\"We were up against perfect tennis today,\" Laframbolse said as he\nsat in the dressing room after the\nmatches. 'Tomorrow is another day\nand I expect Larry (Watt) and Ross\nto win.\"\nFew observers, however, among\nthe 2500 spectators who sat two hours\nand a half in the blazing sun to\nwatch the one-sided matches, conceded the Canadians much chance\nof getting past the Japanese pair in\nSaturday's closing singles matches\neven if Watt and Wilson win the\ndoubles.\n, Nakano, whom Wilson was favored to beat, surprised even team\ncaptain Tamio Abe with his fine\nplay. The 24-year-old college student is the youngest member of the\nteam,\nYamagishi blasted Murray right\noff the court. The sturdy ace rated\namong the world's first 10, had 47\nplacements in his assortment of\nshorts.\nYankees'Homers Fall to Win;\nHubbell Breaks Giants'Defeats\nBy The Associated Pren\nYankees did most of the homer-\nhitting, but the Browns won the\nball game yesterday, handing the\nNew Yorkers a 4-3 defeat at St.\nLouis behind Oral Hlldebrand's\nseven-hit pitching.\nThe defeat \u2014 only game the\nYanks lost In four-game series\u2014\nshaved the New Yorkers' American league lead to one game over\nCleveland Indians, who were rained out.\nAll the Yankee runs came on\nhomers.  In the fourth, Joe  DiMaggio  walloped . his  18th  and\nTwlnkletoes George Selkirk clout-\nad hie fourth. In the sixth, Lou\nGehrig bounced his 17th off tbe\ntop of the right field pavilion.\nIn Chicago Boston's Red Sox slugged out two victories over the White\nSox, winning the first game 13-8,\nand the second 8-5, to lift them to\nwithin  two games of' the second\nplace Indians. Jimmy Foxx hit his\n28th homer of the season in the\nfirst game as Boston got 17 hits.\nTIGERS WIN\nDetroit Tigers, at home, won their\nfifth straight game, hammering three\nWashington pitchers for a 12-4 vic\ntory and a clean sweep of the series.\nIn the National league, after holding the league-leading Pirates to one\nhit for six innings, Al Holllngsworth\nblew up and Pittsburgh scored seven runs to beat the Phillies, 8-2.\nWith the Phils ahead, 2-1, through\nSpud Davis' single in the second\nand. Chuck Klein's double in the\nfourth, Paul Waner started the Pirates' big seventh by getting a base\non balls.\nAt New York, old reliable Carl\nHubbell put a atop to the Giants'\nlosing landslide. He gave up seven hits, pitched shutout ball for\neight Innings and defeated St, Lou-\nIs Cardinals 2-1 to end the New\nYorkers' five-game losing streak.\nHubbell, who has been the only\nGiant pitcher to go the route since\nJuly 10, turned in his 12th victory\nof the year. The win left the Giants\nfive games behind the Pirates.'\nLinus, Frey's two-bass smash\nwith the bases full in the fourth\ninning at Boston gave the Cincinnati Reds a 4-2 victory over Boston Bees and an even break in the\ncurrent four game series. Frey's hit\nscOred three mates and spoiled Bobby Reis' first start on the mound\nfor Boston. . '\n'_.'I-'M'_i_>_\u00abM..'M>M'M'_tW\nNATIONAL' LEAGUE\nW L Pet\nPittsburgh 85 31 .840\nNew York 52 38 .578\nChicago  80 38 .588\nCincinnati 49 40 .551\nBrooklyn 41 47 .466\nBoston  38 48 .452\nSL Louis _ 37 49 .430\nPhiladelphia .._  28 89 .306\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York 53 30 .639\nCleveland 51 30 .630\nBolton  50 33 .602\nWashington 46 45 .505\nDetroit 43 46 .483\nChicago 35 41 .461\nPhiladelphia  29 50 .367\nSt. Louis 26 58 .310\nJESSIE CLOUD IN\nNelson, Kelowna\nRegatta Put Offr\nParalysis Scare\nAll high flown plans for a\nNelson vs Kelowna water show\ntnd regatta here Sunday afternoon, have gone west\u2014at least\ntemporarily.\nE. J. Preston of the Nelson-Rowing club received a wire Wednesday afternoon from R. C. Scrim\nof the Kelowna Rowing club, saying, \"Medical health officers forbid participation of Kelowna crews\nin your regatta owing to infantile\nparalysis in your district. Wire us\nimmediately as to your decision regarding our regatta August 3 and\n4.\nWednesday night, Bud Greenwood of the Nelson Rowing club,\nreceived another wire from .Mr.\nScrim reading, \"Dr. W. J. Knox,\nlocal medical health officer, despite\nwire from Nelson health officer,\nstrongly advises us not to make\nthe trip. Threaten entire crew with\nthree weeks quarantine, any new\ncases. Under this advice we are\nforced to withdraw for present.\nSuggest later date. Please wire.\nRush.. PS\u2014What a mess.\"\nSo the whole regatta is \"up in\nthe air\" for a while.\nThe first case of Infantile paralysis reported in the Nelson district was the illness and death of\nStephen Schesnuk of Hall Siding\nlast week.\nRowing club members stated\nThursday that the regatta would\nbe held at a later date, mOre suitable to Kelowna.     i\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe veteran George Patrick\nHughes and young C. R. D. Tuckey,\npaired for the first time, upset all\nCalculations in winning Britain's\nthird successive victory in Davis\ncup doubles three years ago today.\nThey defeated the United States\nteam of Wilmer Allison and Johnny\nVan Ryn in five sets.\nBatting Leaders\nBy The Associated Press\nBatting, first three in each league.\nG AB R H Pet\nAverill, .Indians 81 294 68 107 .364\nTravis, Senators 88 337 54 120 .356\nFoxx, Red Sox 83 312 78 111 .356\nLombardi, Reds 74 275 34 98 .358\nMedwick, Cards 82 329 55 114 .347\nBerger, Reds .... 60 219   $5   74 .338\nHome runs:\nAmerican league; Greenberg, Tigers, 33; Foxx, Red Sox, 28; York,\nTigers, 18; Dickey, Yankees, 18; DiMaggio, Yankees, 18; Johnson, Athletics, 18. \u2022\nNatiqnal league: Goodman, Reds,\n26; Ott, Giants, 22; Mize, Cardinals,\n14; Medwick, Cardinals, 13.\nRuns batted in:\nAmerican league: Foxx, Red Sox,\n101; Dickey, Yankees, 74; York, Tigers, 74; Averill, Indians, 71; Greenberg, Tigers, 69.\nNational league: Ott, Giants, 78;\nMedwick, Cardinals, 73, Goodman,\nReds, 68; McCormick, Reds, 66; Rizzo, Pirates, 62.\nBuy or sell with a Classified Ad.\nWins Goodwood Cup\nGOODWOOD, England, July 28\n(CP Cable)\u2014James V. Rank's Epigram, son-in-law out of Flying Sally, today won the Goodwood' cup,\ndefeating W. Barnett's Senior by\nhalf a length. Vaisscau Fan tome,\nowned by Baron Edouard de Rothschild, was third in the field of 11,\nfive lengths behind Senior.\nThe race is over a distance of\nabout two miles and five furlongs.\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP) -\nPacking top weight, H. Nutter's Jessie Cloud showed her heels to a\nclassy field in the feature $600 Burnaby handicap at Hastings park today to win by two and one-half\nlengths for her third straight victory of the season,        .v\nThe Nutter mare made every post\na winner as she covered the seven\nfurlongs in 1:27 2-5, ahead of Mr.\nSpence and Goldstreak II. The winner, post-time favorite, returned\n$3.15, $2.85 and $2.23 to her backers.\nThe little Rosle stable's mare Exllda, set all the pace in the one mile\nand one-sixteenth-sixth race to score\na two-length victory over Miss Ogden with Just Mrs. taking the show.\nExllda paid off at $11.15, $5.85 and\n$5.00. Coupled with Miss Ogden in\nthe one-two betting, the combination\nwas worth $45.35.\nGenevieve M scored a victory in\nthe second race and Love Us held\nVanbank in the stretch to take the\nthird race for a daily double combination that was worth $79,75.\nDouble Headers\nto Be Many in\nthe Next Month\nCHICAGO, HI,, July 28 (AP)\nAn unprecedented number of postponed games may mean a treat for\nthe baseball fans who like their\ngames In daily double doses, but\nIt's a headache to William Harridge,\nAmerican league president.\nTo date the league is 39 games\nbehind schedule.\n\"I can't remember when we've\nhad as many consecutively postponed contests,\" Harridge said tonight. \"For the first time in the history of the league the week of\nAugust 22-28 will see five straight\ndouble headers in New York and\nfive more in Philadelphia\/Chicago\nWhite Sox games have been transferred to Boston and the Athletics\nare moving one game with the\nTigers from Philadelphia to Detroit,-\nDranga Favored\nin (oast Tennis\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP) \u2014\nMel Dranga, Seattle's hard-hitting\nveteran of the nets, today moved\ninto a favored position to lift the\nmen's singles crown of the western\nCanadian tennis championships as\nhe disposed of one of the main\nCalifornia threats, Ronald Edwards\nof San Jose, in the quarter-finals:\nDranga ousted the Californian,\n8-6, 7-5, in the two hard-fought\nsets. Edwards had trouble with his\ndrop shots as the fast-stepping Seattle star played rapidly from base\nline to net.\nH|rold Wagner of San Francisco\nwho took a severe beating from\nRobert Stanford of Los Angeles in\nthe quarter-finals for boys under\n18, came back in the men's singles\nto beat F. Schroeder of Glendale,\n3-6, 6-2, 6-3.\nArthur Marx, son of screen comedian Groucho Marx from Los Angeles, beat J. Sissons, Los Angeles,\n6-2, 2-6, 8-3, and Robert Carrothers of Coronado, Calif., defeated\nBob Lloyd of Portland, 6-2, 4-1, in\nthe other two quarter final matches.\nLloyd was forced to quit playing\nduring the second set when he\nsuffered a severe cramp in his\nthigh. Dr. T. M. Jones ordered the\nPortland youth to bed.\nHOSTAK IS AND\nISN'T THE NEW\nMIDDLE CHAMP\nNew York Says No but\nNational    Board\nSays Yes\nPROVIDENCE, R.I., July 28 (AP)\n\u2014The United States national boxing\nassociation will recognize Al Hostak of Seattle as world middleweight\nchampion despite the action of the\nNew York commission in declaring\nthe throne vacant, Edward C. Foster, executive secretary of the N.B.A.,\nsaid today.\nNeither will the N.B.A. pay any\nattention to the New York board's\naction in taking from John Henry\nLewis the light heavyweight cham-\nplohship, Mr. Foster said.\n\"JUST AIN'T 80\"\nNEW YORK, July 28' (AP)-Two\nfellows who thought they were\nworld champions, John Henry Lewis,\nthe light heavyweight, and Al Hostak, the middleweight who knocked\nout Freddie Steele Tuesday night,\nfind it \"Just ain't so\" as far as New\nYork State is concerned.\nThe state's athletic commission\nmet and declared Lewis' title vacant\nin the state and declined to accept\nHostak as the middleweight champion of the world.\nThe Lewis declaration was based\nori his refusal to meet Tiger Jack\nFox, the elderly Spokane negro, in\na title bout The Commission won't\nrecognize Hostak because Steele,\nwho held the title before Tuesdays\nfight, ignored a challenge by Fred\nApostoli of San Francisco.\nKllnger Shelved\nWith Sore Arm\nPHILADELPHIA, July 28 (AP)-\nBoqming Bob Klinger, the Missouri\nrookie whose pitching performances\nhave helped'make National league\npacemakers out of the Pittsburgh\nPirates, was shelved temporarily tonight with a sore arm,\nManager Pie Traynor disclosed\nthe big righthander, who has won\neight and lost two, would not be\nable to take his regular turn tomorrow when the Buccaneers Invade Brooklyn on the second stop\nof their eastern swing.\nThe Pirates, who have won 23 of\ntheir last 29 games and haven't lost\ntwo in succession since June 5 and\n6, regard their eastern road trip as\na critical stage in their pennant\nchase.\n-PAOE NINI\nSOMERVILLE AND THREE U.S. MEN\nBATTLE FOR CANADIAN GOLF TITLE\nBy W. ft. WHEATLEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer'\nLONDON, Ont, July 28 (CP)-=-\nFate of Canada's 1938 amateur golf\nchampionship rested tonight In the\nhands of Ross Somerville and three\nchallengers from the United States.\nTwo 18-hole rounds brought a\nheavy toll among the Canadian challengers 'and left only the champion\nin the fight against a strong trio\nwho seek to carry the title across\nthe border.\nAn all-Americah semi-final tomorrow finds Ted Adams, 21-year-old\nplayer from Columbia, Mo., against\nEd Kingsley 23-year-old shotmaker\nfrom Salt Lake City, Utah.\nFrom Salt Lave City also comes\nSandy Somerville's opponent, Ven\nSavage, who, at 28, is five years\nyounger than Somerville.\nThough the opposition was 3 to 1\nin cold numbers, the golfing faithful who have roamed the Hunt club\ncourse all week, players and galleries alike, said \"Sandy is still the man\nto beat\".\nNEVER EXTENDEP\nIn his two rounds today Sandy\nwas never extended but played his\nusual sound game. He eliminated\nyoung Jimmy Hogan of Jasper, Alta, in the morning 5 and 4, and\ncame  through   in   the  afternoon\nwith ai 7 and 9 win over Larry Bis-\nsell of London Thames Valley club.\nBisscll, public links champion of\nwestern Ontario and playing in his\nfirst Canadian championship tournament pulled off the big upset of\nthe day defeating Gordon Baxter\nTaylor of Montreal 2 and 1,\nSavage moved out of the morning\nround by turning back Gordon Taylor, Jr., of Toronto 4 and 3. In th* I\nafternoon it was Johnny Richardson of Calgary who became tha\nvictim of the American's s'.eady\nplay. Savage won by 6 and 5, playing a sub par 34 on the out nine.\nBEAT PETE KELLY\nRichardson who won trom Pete\nKelly, Maritime pro hockey player\n8 and 3 in the morning, was tha\nsecond Albertan to reach the charter finals. Bobby Procter, winner of\nDick Lutz ot Ashland, Ohio, in tha\nmorning, met Kingsley in the afternoon. The Utah boy, one down\nat the turn, caught Procter when ha\nfaltered and went on to win 3 and 2.\n. On the back nine Bobby was wild\nand was over par at five of thai\nseven holes before the match ended.\nTed Adams won his morning round\n2 and 1 over Allan Boes of Wlnnl-\npeg. Adams had to wipe out a hole\nlead ln order to get through to tie\nquarter finals. .\nSIDELINE SLANTS ON CUP TENNIS\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nCUTTA PERCHA WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nBaker St.\nCompany, Ltd.\nNelion, B. C.\nCUTTA PERCHA TIRES SOLD BY     .\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 Baker St.        SHORTY PERASSO Nelion, B. C.\nBy.EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, July 28 (AP)-Don't\nlaugh this off, but Jimmy Braddock may try that long reported\ncomeback. .. . Business over at the\n\"store\" isn't what it ought to be\nand besides Mike Jacobs needs\nheavies like nobody's business.\nBilly Terry (with his Jints hitting\nthe skids like everything) is feuding\nwith the newspaper guys again\t\nRay Gabiani, the fiddling wrestling\npromoter, has slapped a 825,000 suit\non the 20th Century Sporting club\nbecause he says Promoter Make\nJacobs wouldn't Install a cooling\nsystem.\n. Terry has retired from the Giant's\nthird base coaching line probably\nbecause it Just didn't do much good.\n. .. What we want to know is how\nold is Fred Johnson, the pitcher the\nBrowns imported from th. American association? ,., Record books\nsay he's 38, but some of his pals insist you can add three years to that\nand still be right In which event\nFred probably is the oldest regular\nln with major.\nBest line of the week in this book\nwas Prof. Paul (AP) Mi-kelson's\n\"Those Terryble Giants\". . , . Old\nJackie (Kid) Berg says be doesn't\nhave to nuke a ring comeback.,\n\"I have a nice home in England and\na profitable business.... I just like\nto fight\". ... And more power to\nhim.\nLots ot guys here are shifting\nfrom Armstrong to Ambers. . . .\nLong Key, the trotter, is the favorite to win the historic Hambletonian,\nbut don't go too strong on him....\nIs Gabby flartnett going to keep\non the Cubs those other guys who\nwanted the manager's Job? . , . In\nother worc'| look for a brisk winter\nmarket  ,\nCRICKET SCORES\nLONDON, July 28 (CP Cable)-\nClose of play scores in English first-\nclass cricket matches started yesterday, follow: '\nWorcestershire 408 runs for nine\nwickets declared; Surrey 114 and\n160 for six; at the oval.\nWarwickshire 238 for nine declared and 16 runs for-four wickets;\nHampshire 423 for seven declared at\nBournemouth.\nEssex 300 and 85 for five; Lancashire 178 at Manchester.\nSussex 384; Leicestershire 354 for\nfive at Leicester.\nNottinghamshire 332 and 97 for\nBy JOHNLEBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL, July 28 (CP)-Side-\nline slants on the Canada-Japan Davis cup warfare; *\nThe little brown men of Japan\nbelied their countrymen's reputation as \"patball\" artists today. Jiro\nYamagishi's drives carried too much\nsteam for Bobby Murray. '\n\"The  perfect match\" Is what\nCanada's non-playing captain, E,\nHenri Laframbolse, called the Mur-\nray-Yamaglshl   battle.  Tne  two\nstylish artists put on a dazzling\ndisplay, though the young Canadian was outclassed.\nCool as a chunk of ice was Yamagishi. Once ,on a high lob, he turned his back completely to the ball\nand ran for the baseline, pivoting\nat the right instant, he found the\npellet just in front of him and smash\ned it back.\nWilson handled Nakano'a service\nnonchalantly, almost dlsdamrui-\nly, But the little fellow, covering\nground like a rabbit, Just kept\ndumping them back over the net\nuntil hli bespectacled opponent\neither walloped them Into the net\nor out of the court\nA squad of uniformed and plainclothes police, watching for a rumored anti-Japanese demonstration\ncouldn't find any work to do. A lit*\ntie knot of Japanese spectators wera\non hand, watching impassively from\na corner of the west stands.\nThe traditional staid decorum of\nIn the last Murray-Yamagishi set.\nThe referee was booed right lustily when he failed to hear tha\nlinesman yell \"out\" on a shot by\nYamagishi and called It \"In.\" Ha\n' refused to change his decision.\nSPORT SIMMERING. FROM WIRE\nBy ALAN RANDAL\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nNEW YORK, July 28 (CP)-LIt-\ntle Eddie Litzenberger, tough luck\njockey from Calgary who fractured\nhis leg three times in the past year\nis hobbling about with a cane at\nSaratoga springs . . . Eddie holds\nhigh hopes of a saddle comeback-\noptimistic words from friend Diz\nDean, once more the pop off guy\nnow that his salary wing seems\nO.K. ... \"The Cubs will be on top\nof the National league in a month\n. . . Those Pirates ain't so tough\ntwo; Gloucestershire 227 at Nottingham.\nNorthamptonshire 283 and 28 runs\nfor one wicket; Yorkshire 311 at\nScarborough.\nSomerset 110 and 119 for six;\nAustralians 464 for six declared at\nTaunton.\nSir Julien Cahn's eleven 210 at\nNewport.\nBRANTFORD, Ont (CP)\u2014Despite the fact goat meat is preferred\nto lamb by some people, loca.1 butchers are up In arms and demand _an\ninvestigation of a charge goat meat\nwas sold for lamb in some shops.\n... I'll stop them with my assortment\npf Dizzy stuff ...\"\nThe Black Hawks' march to tha-\nStanley cup last winter already is\nreflected in Chicago with heavy\nsummer bookings of season ticket*\nfor the next hockey campaign .\nTaking over the manager's spot for\nChicago Cubs means something like\n5000 iron men extra this year for\nGabby Hartnett ... His player'i\ncontract called for something between 818,000 and $20,000.\nPromoter Mu_e JacoDs; latest idea\nis a heavyweight tourney for next\nwinter in Madison Square Garden\n. .. plans include Bob Pastor, Gun-\nnar Garland, Max Baer, Maurica\nStrickland, John Henry Lewis andi\nTommy Farr . . . looks as though\nthat's-what Farr was talking of last\nSunday when he renounced his British title \"to concentrate on an\nelimination tournament, the winner\nto meet Joe Louis.\"\nBenny Leonard, the old lightweight ruler, takes Lou Ambers over.\nHenry Armstrong... Leonard, who\nfound the restaurant business in\nNew York no better than did Jim\nBraddock, has 30 refereeing dates\nlined up *for after Aug. 10.\nMexicans, Aussies\nStart Play Today\nKANSAS CITY, July 28 (API-\nMexican and Australian tennis players hammered the last,of their 24\ndozen practice balls today as a prelude to the Davis cup matches tomorrow, i\nThe Mexicans, definite underdogs,\nconcentrated on singles pley, hoping\nto gain their necessary three victories in that category.\nThey are conceded little chance of\ndefeating Australia's Adrian Quist\nand John Bromwich in Saturday's\ndoubles.\nTEST PILOT KILLED\nBELGRADE, Yugoslavia, July 28\n(AP).\u2014Gordon Mounce 38, American test pilot and airplane salesman, crashed to his death today\nattar 24 successful demonstrations In\nlooping his baby \"Fleet\" plane at\nBelgrade's airport at Zemun.\nTHE SHIP'S company oi H.M.S. Rodney\nlines up for Sunday morning Inspection\nbefore going ashore for church parade.\nRigorous inspection marks every step In the\nmanufacture of Player's \"Mild\" cigarettes.\nThat is why the name Player's has always\nstood for mildnoco, quality and purity, \"It's\nthe tobacco that counts\".\nThe new, all-weather cigarette paper on\nPlayer's \"Mild\" (plain ends) counts too. It's\n\"wetproof\", and does not slick to the lips.\n25 for 25*\nPocket Tins\nofFifiy-50f\nheUfl\n'4\/16 'voir\nNAVY CUT CIGARETTES\n sec TEN-\nNEL.80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINQ. JULY 29, 1191.\nWaste No Time in Answering the Classified Ads Which Interest You\nHere Are Some Hints ...\nProper Make-Up Assures Would-Be\nPhotographers of Better Pictures\nBy JULIET SHELBY\n. You'll be watchln\" the birdie lots\not times this summer, and more\nthan likely your photographer will\nbt an amateur. Taking pictures is\na holiday _stime that is lots of\n.lun. The finished products will be\n\u25a0 perpetual reminders of \u25a0 the grand\ntimes you had and the friends you\ni made.\nThis    department    has    often\nthought how simply swell it would\n\u25a0 be if these photographic mementos\nwouldn't be quite so devastatingly\ntruthful about all our most glaring defects.\nAlan Colby, the movie make-up\nexpert, says that a little deft use\nOt your makeup can help you put\nyour best face forward without\nmaking the camera lie.\nISABELLA  ALLEN\nKnows how  to  make  up for\nphoto\nHe has given lis some make-up\nhints that we are passing along\nto you for your moments under the\ncamera's eye.\nIt is possible to work to a certain extent with the ordinary drugstore cosmetics, but secure tome\nprofessional materials If you possibly can. The simplest sort of makeup kit should include two shades\nof foundation cream to hold .the\npowder, one light and one dark,\neye shadow, mascara, lip and cheek\nroughe. eyebrow pencil, cold cream\nfor cleansing face powder, and a\nlarge soft brush5 for brushing off\nand smoothing down your powder.\nTor any but very close-up pictures, color is applied with a neavy\nhand to bring ur the features and\nhighlights for contrast. But lor extreme close-up and amateur portraiture, ,a- softer effect is frequently .desired. You can obtain this by\nuslnt slightly less color and by using panchromatic co' \u2022\nUSE FOUNDATION CREAM\nFoundation cream serves to cover and smooth your natural skin\ntexture, and must be applied ri-mt\nup to the hairline and below the\nneckline. A darker shade than you\ngenerally use for atreet wear is\npreferable. Then you apply your\ncolors on top of this; moist rouge\nto the cheek-bones, rubbed out in\nwidening circles; eyeshadow on\nyour eyelids; lip rouge, remod-\ndeling your lip fines if necessary.\nThe powder ' is applied liberally\nwith a powder puff, and the excess\nis carefully brushed off with the\nbrush. Do any retouching that you\nthink necessary, and put your\nmascara on last\nNow for correcting face faults.\nToo high cheekbones should have\ntheir highlights lowered by darker make-up on their points, and\nlighter lust below. Bulging eyes can\nbe made less noticeable by using\ntwo shades of eyeshadow, a darker one close to the lashes, and a\nlighter near the brows and toward\nthe temple. Shadow close to the\neyes heightens the effect of largeness. The color Should be heavier\nin the center, blendinn toward the\nbrow. If your eyes are too close\ntogether, put no shadow near the\ninner corner of the eye, but make\n(t heavier toward the temple. Apply mascara to the underside ot the\nlashes at the outer edge, and the\nupper side of the lashes at the inner edge. Avoid too thin eyebrows,\ntoo fancy lip lines of wet lip makeup which will catch the light and\nglisten. Remember the general rule\nthat prominent features are made\nto appear less prominent if they\nare darker in tone.\nCut Flowers Last Longer With Care\nDont waste time and energy dally\nUtting  and   arranging new bouquets around the house. Cut flow-\n' ers will last a long time it simple\npreliminary care is given them.\nAs shown in the Garden-Graph\nonly the stems should be in the\nfoliage. Decayed foliage promotes\nBacterial growth. These bacteria are\ndetrimental because they obstruct\nthe water absorbing cells of the\n(fern.\nI \u25a0 Flowers which wilt easily should\nbe cut only in the morning or eve-\ntang. The early morning hours are\nparticularly favorable, since the\nplant tissues hold more fluid at\n%at time.\nVn small yuaStities of c\u00abpperas_\njp arenate of lead in the-aoll, and\n;Sollow with light cultivation aa a\nSreventative of the common rose\nsafer. On heavy soils a continuous\nmulch may be used for the same\npurpose.\nThicks clumps of daffodils, squills,\ngrape hyacinths or snowdrops may\nbe dug up at this season and replanted. Tulip bulbs may also be\ntfug now and stored in a dry place\nuntil October, thus insuring that\nonly sound bulbs are ln the ground\nnext fall.\nMoody Girl . . s.\nfolding a Grudge\nI ha Fault That\nNeeds Correction\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nSusie's problem Isn't one of love,\nbut it is bothering her, nevertheless,\nIt involves a man. but a man she\nwants only for a friend.\nTo digress a bit from Susie, I al-\n.ways have considered our lives are\n\"too short to harbor grudges. To\n.grow angry, have a quarrel and then\n_\"atay mad\" always has seemed to\n. me to be small and mean. Of course,\nthere are some things that \"stick\" in\n-one's mind and leave a permanently\nj disagreeable impression whenever\none thinks of the person with whom\nthey are connected, but one can \"forgive and forget\" as far as the human\nmind is capable of doing same.\nI was reading the other day ln a\nbook about a man who always lost\nhis temper completely over any untoward happening, and would rush\nout and punish all the wrong people\nbecause he was too impatient to\nfind out first who was to blame.\nThen he never would admit his mistake. He was too stubborn, the author said, ever to let anyone know he\nthought he had been wrong.\nHARD TO LIVE WITH\nOf course, such persons are impossible in real life. They would be\n:_n jams all the time, and it would\nbe pretty hectic to live with them.\nSo, to return to Susie, she had\nan argument with this man she\nlikes as a friend. She hasn't forgiven him for disagreeing with her,\nand recently snubbed him. She Is\n\"quite moody\", she says, \"and if\nI feel like talking I do, and if not,\nI don't pretend to say much\".\nYou cannot start any younger,\nSusie, to correct this fault It will\nbe a big help all the rest of your\nlife. I think it is silly to remember the arguments you have with\npeople and to go around with a\nchip on your shoulder because you\ncan't forget them. That Is the whole\ntrouble with arguments \u2014 people\nloste their tempers over them. And\na# i\u00bb -uUiHnn St. ___tnfl aruzrv when\nyou argue, you hold a grudge forever after for the on* with whom\nyou argued\u2014why, that is too, too\nmuch! Torget HI \u25a0 Speak cordially\nwhen next you see the man.\nAnd the sooner you correct the\nmoodiness the better for you, too.\nForce yourself to talk if lt teems\nto be up to you to cany the conversation for the good of all. Don't\nbaby yourself Just because you\nthink you are \"made like that\" or\n\"inherited\" a nasty disposition. It\nis never too lite to start correcting\none's faults.\nSerial Story . . .\nTWO WORLDS\n(Continued from Page Sue)\ndid not Intend for Mm to know.\nBut when ihe had turned over all\nher money to her uncle, th* die had\nbeen cast, She couldn't turn back,\nif ahe wanted to, It Would be a\nyear before ahe'd have money again.\n\"You're very stubborn, Noel,\"\nJulian began. 'I'm afraid the 'rouble is that you were not spanked\nenough when you were young,\" he\nfinished with a tender, unwilling\nsmile.\n\"Perhaps not,\" she agreed with\na little flush.\nJulian was ready to cross the\nstreet now. He turned back for\na minute. \"If you do insist on\ncarrying out this whim, you must\npromise to keep ln close touch with\nme. So I'll know your impetuosity\nis not getting you into trouble.\"\n\"I'll promise that,\" Noel smiled.\nWasn't that one of the objectives she\nhad formed in her hurried campaign? To be closer to Julian\u2014to\nlearn to live ln his world and take\ncare ot herself?\nJulian said goodby then and left\nher. After which Noel walked\nthoughtfully up to Main and Madison streets. As soon as ahe managed to get her aunt, Frankie. off\nalone, she knew the real adventure\nwould begin.\n(To Be Continued)\nPARIS (CP) - Fred Perry, Big\nBill Tilden and Ellsworth Vines are\nexpected to enter th* French professional lawn tennis championships\ntentatively fixed for the end of July\nor beginning of August.\nNelaitn Saily Sfrtua\nMember ot th* Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exalting* Connecting to \u25a0\nAll Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy            %   Ob\nBy carrier, per week a     _J5\nBy carrier, per year ......... 13.00\nBy matt ln Canada to subscribers Uvtng outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\n' three months $1.80; six months\n(3.00; on* year $6.00.\nUnited State* and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; pne year $7.50.\nForeign countries, othc. than\nUnited States, earn* as above\nplus any extra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlies Um\n(Minimum _ Lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion ______$ 22\ni line*. S consecutive\nInsertions\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines per insertion __,\n3 Hoes. 6 consecutive\ninsertions __\u2014\n3 lines 1 month _____\n3 lines. 1 month \t\n.  .33\n. 1.32\n2.86\n.4.29\nFor advertisements ot more than\nthree lines, calculate on\ntbe above basis.\nBox numbers ,1. extra. Thli\ncoven any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOP PROMPT PAYMENT\nBate for advertisements under\nSituations Wanted, 25c tor required number of linea tor six\ndays, payable In advance.\nHELP WANTED\nAN EXPERIENCED FARM HAND,\ngood dry milker. Abey'i Ranch,\nMirror Lake, B. C. (2517)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nJOB REQUIRED BY ENGLISH-\nman, aged 31. Educated. Travelled.\nVersatile. Well dressed. Much\npractical experience with the stage\nmusic and opera, mechanics and\nelectricity, etc. Can do, haa done,\nand willing to do anything and\neverything. Box 2521 Dally News.\n(2521)\nNURSE GRADUATE DESIRES THE\ncare of patient In private home.\nWill go on reasonable monthly\nsalary. Apply M. C. K., care ot T.\nRowley, Crescent Bay, B. C.\n(2422)\nMIDDLE AGED WIDOW DESIRES\nhousekeeping Job ln around Nelson, Mrs. R. Brooks, Rossland.\n(2508)\nTWO NEAT CAPABLE GIRLS DE-\nsire work by the hour. Willing to\ndo house work or mind children.\nPhone 158 X. (2534)\n(Continued in Next Column)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n'    (Continued)\nBOOKKEEPER, EXPERIENCEP\nin banking, automobile company\naccounting, machine company ac\ncounting. Underground mining ex.\nperience. W. G. Roddick, General\nDelivery, Nelson.\nTWO B. C. ENGINEERS. 2nd. AND\n3rd. class, want positions. Experienced, trustworthy and beat references. Box 2224 Daily News.\n(2224)\nFULLY QUALIFIED STENOGRA\npher desires full or part time employment Box 2490 Daily News.\n(2490)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE MODERN EQUIPPED\nbeauty shoppe in good location.\nDue to ill health,will sell cheap.\nCash or terms can be arranged.\nWrite Box 2488 Dally News. (2466)\nWANTED\nWE WILL BUY 28 OZ. BOTTLES\nat 15c per doz. Kootenay Industries\n907 Front St (2473)\nUgly Names ...\nMother Asks How\nTo Correct Small\nChild's Language\nBy GARRY C. MYER8, PH. D.\nMany mothers write me concerning the child who uses unconventional words, or call! hia parents\nor other persons by ugly names.\nA certain mother expecting soon\nanother baby, * woman with considerable education, and formerly\nan executive ln a hospital, writes,\n\"I admit this business ot being a\nparent is the greatest, and yet the\nhardest of all.   How often I have\nread like statements from ex-teach-\ners and ex-nursesl\nThen ahe.tells of her anxiety over\nsome of the expressions used by\nher five-year-old son, and makes\na very keen analysis of the problems Involved.\nMUST NOT BE\nREPEATED\nTo the child who uses obscene, or\nSrofane, or .near-profane words, it\ni well to explain at a quiet moment that his family and other cultivated nersons do not use them.\nIn case they are mere exclamations\nthey will probably disappear; even\nif they should linger they would\nShock . . .\nDrugs Now Used\nTo Cure Mental\nIlls Successful\nBy LOGAN CLENDENINQ, M. D,\nAt the convention of the American Medical association at San Francisco recently many advance* In\nmedical science were demonstrated.\nIn the articles ln the next .few\ndays I shall describe the subjects\nthat attracted my own attention.\nThe treatment of certain forms\nof insanity by shock therapy was\nthe subject of Dr. Ernest Gellhorn's\npaper. This is quite new, and except\nthat its value has been demonstrated\nover and over by actual tests, it is\nso surprising as hardly to be believable.\nThe cases ln which the treatment\nworks best are those of split personality, particularly ln young people. The drugs used are insulin and\nmctraol. The patient is given enough\nof these so that a condition of tiro-\nfound shock is induced.\nRESTORED TO\nNORMAL\nThen restoration to normal Is produced. The idea Is that the shock to\nthe brain is sufficient, so that it is\nthrown completely off balance and it\nmay suddenly come back Into gear.\nIt is a dangerous treatment and\ndeaths have occurred, but moit of\nthe relative! of these people are\nwilling to take the risks\u2014are willing\nto do anything which holds out any\nhope.\nThe injection treatment of hernia is another new subject discussed by Drs. Franklin I. Harris and\nA. S. White of San Francisco. Here\nagain is something that few sur-\n?:eons would have looked on with\navor a matter of 10 years ago.\nBut experience has proved that\nwith proper care this Injection\ntreatment gives good results and\nsaves the necessity for an operation with the attendant discomforts.\nSUNDERLAND, England, (CP)-\nAddressing the North of England\nconference on tuberculosis aftercare committees, Dr. R. H. Crowler,\nformer senior medical officer to\nthe board of education, eays \"75\nper cent of our schooli are unhealthy.\"\nnot be i> serious. Should such\nwords be used by the child over\nfive or six, a quiet statement that\nwe wish he would not use them\nwill generally bring desired results.\nBut it the child of three or ten\ncalls a playmate or any adult a\nname designed to be uncomplimentary, let us clearly tell the child\nit must not be repeated. In Case it\nis, let ui punish htm effectively.\nIsolation or assignment to lit in\na certain place doing nothing for 30\nminutes may be good form of punishment If the child Is old enough\nto write, lt might be well to make\nhim write the condemned word or\nphrase a goodl- number ot times;\nperhaps no better way to attach\ndispleasure to the expression. Just\nto have him repeat lt aloud a hundred times should bring like results.\nThe habit of calling personi by\nugly names should Be attacked\nearly. Allowed to grow, lt can become very annoying to all concerned, and is sure to bring social embarrassment upon the family. And\nthe child engaging ln it is cultivating an unwolesome social attitude;\nit is obverse to good citizenship: It\nis astonishing how many parents\nallow their children to call them\nby ugly names. Not the name, of\ncourse that is significant, but the\nattitude lt implies. If my lad should\ncall me a dumbbell, clearly meant\nto be In fun, though the truth, I\nshould want to accept lt in comradeship. But If he were to call me\nan angel in contempt, I should\ncount his attitude a serious offense.\nPERSONAL\nDAISY LIGHTSTEP WILL BB AT\nthe dance on Friday night after\nall. She eays NU-FEET INSOLES\n(medicated with (even alkaline,\nantiseptic salts) worked wonders\non those tender, aching, burning\nfeet that have crippled her lately.\nPRICE 25c A PAUL If your druggist cannot supply you, order direct The Stulven Manufacturing\nCo., 559 College Street Toronto.\n \" (1584)\nNEW PEP AT 40 FORtbaTOTB\nWomen. New OSTRBX Tonic\nTablets contain 2 stimulants from\nraw oysteri plus 4 genera] tonlca\nto pep up whole body. Try package today. If not delighted, maker\nrefund! its low price. Call write\nMann Rutherford Co.       (2187)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD.\n25 tor $1.00 er Jiffy prepared 18\ntor $1.00 (tree catalogue). National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton.\n (214)\n5___N'_ Stl-TOWE QUALTI.\nsanitary rubber Send $1.00 tor IB\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co, IS Hastings St.\nW. Vancouver. (2131\nSave OTPS08S __ CArpetS\nthoroughly cleaned the Schrader\nWay Satisfaction Grtd. Ph 564 or\nwrite for estimate! and list of sat\ntitled cstmrs. Home Rug Cleaners.\n\u25a0         (18281\nANY, SIZE ROLL DEVELOPED\nand printed 28e. Reprints eight for\n25c. Mail to Interior Photo Supply,\nBox 2133, Trail, B. C. (2526)\nMETROPOLE HOTEL VANCOU-\nver, $1.00 per day up. Private bath\n$1.50. Best value In Vancouver,\n320 Abbott St. (2307)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nIN PROBATE\nIN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE\nOF   JOHN   THOMAS   PIERRE,\nDECEASED.\nTAKE NOTICE thit Utters Pro\nbate have been Issued on July 9th,\n1938 to Frederick Irvine, Executor\nof John Thomai Pierre, Deceased,\nwho died \u00abt Victoria, British Columbia, on April 8th, 1938, pursuant\nto the Order bf Hia Honour W. A.\nNisbet, Local Judge, dated July 7th,\n1938, and all persona claiming to be\ncreditors of the eald Deceaaed or to\nbe entitled to the said Estate are at\nor before August 15th, 1938 to send\npost pre-paid or to deliver to the\naald Executor or to his solicltoii,\nMessrs, Brown & Dawson, their\nchristian and surnames, addresses\nand descriptions and the full particulars of their accounts or claims ahd\nthe nature ot the securities, If any,\nheld by them, and thereafter the\nsaid Estate will be distributed\namongst the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the account! and clalmi of which said\nExecutor then hai notice.       ,,\nDATED at Nelson, B. ft, this 27th\nday Of July, A. D. 1938.\nBROWN tt DAWSON,\n\\ Solicitor! tor the Executor,\nApproved:\nW. J. STURGEON,\nRegistrar.\n(2529)\nLIVESTOCK\nFOR SALE TEAM OF HORSES, 8\nand 7 years old, 3100. Quiet Cheap\ntor quick rale. Apply Box 2519\nDally Newi.  (2519)\nSADtiLE fflSW\nFOR RENT. HOUSES. ROOMS\nAND   APARTMENTS\nFOR RENT - AUG. & SEPT. FUL-\nly equipped' suite, 8 rooms and\nbath, Frigidaire. $30 per month\nIncluding phone. Apply Mrs. C. G.\nSimpson, 415 Falls St Ph, 687-L.\n'   (2512)\ngTttflc6HOtfS_VG-*AAGE, CHICf-\nken house, 4 lots. Apply A. Hall,\n818 Gordon Road, Nelion.  (2532)\nCOMPLETELY TURN. HOUSE FOR\nrent August 1. Phone 278-L. Preferably no children, (2501)\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING HBBHB.\nGentlemen preferred. Apply at\nThe Ark.  (2388)\nfu'RNlSH_to ttOUSHKEEP.!...\nrooms tor rent Annable Block.\n . (219)\n5 RM UNFURN SUITE. ALSO\nturn, suites. Ken Apartments.\n(220)\nTioUsS\n4   ROOM   FURNISHED\nfor rent. D. Maglio, Ph. 808L..\n. (2313)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modem\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (221)\nfor Rftra; TOOTHS J..USB.\n324 Robson. Ph. 808-R.       (2483)\nfront room Aim msBim,\n642 Wasson atreet\n(2530)\nFOR SALE\nPIPES, TUBES, FITTINGS'\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE VARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\nVancouver, B. C.\n(218)\nSTOCK SPRAY IN QUAUTS, HF.-\nGaL, and Gallon tins; Midget\nSprayers; Glass Jar Sprayers;\nContinuous Sprayers and Bucket\nSprayers.    The    Brackman-Ker\nMillg. Co., Ltd. (2533)\nFRENCH HAND MADE VIOLlfi.\nValued $100. Will sell for $75.\nTerms to reliable party. F. Lan-\nthier, 419 Silica St or Ph. 228Y\n(2489)\nPIPE AND FITTING\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd.\n250 Prior St        Vancouver, B. C.\n(215).\nSACKS, BAGS ALL KINDS. ALSO\nPipe & Fittings all sizes - Active\nTrading Co\u201e 916 Powell Street,\nVancouver. (1499)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar lacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd. Nelion, B. C. (217)\nBLACK\nIED   AND\npick   yourself.\nPhone J82-L3.\n3c\nClMAOTS,\nper   pound.\n(2472)\nMILL  ENDS  BIG  LOADS  $3.75.\nSaw Dust $4 unit. Ph. 4341.1 or 163.\n(2515)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nH. D. MOTORCYCLE, A-1 SHAPE\nnew tires. Bargain tor cash Box\n2478 DaUy News. (2478)\nNEW _T. 1938 LIGHT DEL. FORD\ntor quick sale. Cheap. Box 2522\nDally Newi.        (2522)\n\u202287 PLYMOUTH COUPE, GOOD\ncondition.  Reasonable. Box 207,\nTrail, B. C.\n(2479)\nFOR SALE '31 HUDSON SEDAN.\nCash-terms. J, H. Kublskl, Ymlr.\n(2493)\nTEACHERS WANTED\nWELL BRED\nwork horses, cheap,\nMilling Co. barn.\nat Ellison\n(2518)\n-An Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nWANTED, MALE TEACHER ON\nprobation for Rural School Salary $850. Apply J. L. Syddall, Sec,\nShutty Bench School Board,\nKaslo, B. C, (2527)\nWANTED TEACHER. MALE PRE-\nf erred. Small rural school. Salary\n$780. E. Hardy, Sec.. Carrolls\nSchool Board, Burton, B. C.\n(2520)\nMACHINERY\nElectric Arc Welding Machines:\nComplete:\n100-200 amp. __   -.$149.00\n200-300 amp,\n$249.00\n$05.00\nElectric Arc Welding Generator  .\t\n110-volt Generator\t\n32-volt Generator .........\u201e...__.\n600-watt Electric Plant _____\n850-watt Electric Plant ..........\n600-watt Automatic Delco\nPlant \t\nLEEDER'S LIMITED\n1175 Portage Ave, Winnipeg, Man.\n$29.50\n$99.00\n$95.00\n$89.00\nFOR SALE REBUILT\nHarris Binder; cut down for team.\nA-1 condition at $125. Erindale\nRanch. Harrop. (2504)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nLAUNCH - $100. W. MACK, 75\nHigh street. Ph. 835Y.       (2470)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\noo easy terms la Albert* and\nSaskatchewan Write for tull information to 908 Dept ot Natural\nResources. C. P. R.. Calgary Alta.\n(228)\nYOti <_a*.t LiMt. om m& twr.\nview property. Rent ot house carries and pays good Interest Site\nfor lis homei or wonderful home\nand garden property. About 1 acre\nland, magnificent view. Electric\nlight. City water, concrete cellar.\nAccessible Sacrificing at $750 (or\nfriend. D, Louis Kerr, Nelson.\n (2409)\nMUST BE SOLD THIS WEEK. 3\nlots on Anderson St. 2 lots on Innis\nSt What offers? Phone 374L3.\n(2496)\nFOR SALE BLOCK 3 OF DISTRICT\nLot 276, at Salmo, 60 acres. Apply\n2027 5th Ave., Trail, B. C.   (2477)\nWANTED TO BUY FOR CASH, 6\nroom house, good condition, close\nin. Box 2531 Daily News.   (2531)\nBusiness ond Professional Directory\nAiMytrt\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt, Nelson, B. ft    (182)\nGRENVILLEH ORIMWOOlT\"\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 420\nFall Street, Nelson, B. C. P. O\nBox No. 9. Representing ship-\nper'i Interest Trail, B. C.   (183)\nHAROLD S. ELMES. ROSSI-AND\nB C Provincial Assayer. Chemist\nIndividual Representative tor\nshippers \u00bbt Trail Smelter.   (184)\nChiropractors\nJ. R. MCMILLAN, D. C., NEURO-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk.\n (183)\nW J BROCK, D C. 18 years' Ex-\nprnc Ph. 969 Gilker Blk., Nelson.\n(188)\nFuneral Dlreetori\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phono 252\nCert Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(190)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\n347 Baker St, Phone 68.      (191)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance ot\nevery description. Real Est. Ph 00.\n(192)\na E DILL, -AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St\n.  (193)\nSEE  D   L   KERR.  AGENT  foS\nWaivanesa Fire Ins For better rates\n(1941\n3 E ANNABLE.   REAL ESTATE\nRentals, Insurance.  Annable Blk\n       (195)\nCHAS. F McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.       (196)\nR. W  DAWSON, Real Estate. In-\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St Phone 197\n(197)\nSecond Hand Storet\nWE  BUY,  SELL It  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.\n(207)\nCorseti\nSpencer Corsets, Surgical Belts M.\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St, Ph 668.\n(187)\nEnglneeri and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale. B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n\u2022  (188)\nE D.  DAWSON, Helsoh.\nEngineer _. Surveyor\n(1922)\nMachinists\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork Drilling. Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewiring,'Acetylene\nWelding.\nTelephone 593 *  824 Vernon Street\n (199)\nH. __ STEVENSON. Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped -hop. Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St, Nelson.  (201)\nMine fir Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, eta Agt Mine Mchnry It\nequlpt, etc Steam coals Office\nChamber ot Mines, Ph. 991 Box\n28, Nelson. 203)\nPhotography\nVACATION TIME IS SNAPSHOT\ntime. Add to your holidays pleasures by making sure your films\nare properly developed and printed, thus keeping an everlasting\nmemory Films developed and\nprinted 29c Krystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask. (205)\nSaih Factory\nLAWSON'S    SASH 'FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker St\n(206)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch it Is on time all the time.\n345 Baker St., Nelson. <M\nHOME FURNITURE\nbuy, sell It Exchange, also repair\nand upholster. 413 Hall St  (1575) I\nWant to Sell Something?\nPhone\n144\n Gold Shares Active on Toronto\nExchange; Prices al New Highs\nTORONTO, July 28 (CP).-Trad-\ners flocked to the buying side in the\ngold share market Thursday and\nprices broke through to new highs\ntor the year in several places.\nMclntyre wai up about IVi to\n46, a new high. Preston wai again\nthe market leader, trading about\n200,000 shares on an advance of 20\ncents to $1,46.\nBase metals and industrials also\nheld to the up side by a narrow\nmargin and the wester noils continued a bit soft Volume was close\nto 1,200,000 shares.\nLast hour brought a burst of\nheavy trading In the medium-price\ngolds. Kerr-Addison firmed about\n20 cents and Pamour 40 cents. Dome;\nLake Shore, Pickle Crow, Sylvanite\nand Macassa, were other gold gainers,\nWaite-Amulet run up to a new\nhigh at 8.50 and it help about halt\nthe day's advance. Ventures added\n35 cents ahd the dost was up tor\nNickel and Smelters.\nSenior oils, utilities, papers, foods\nand steels boarded more gains than\nlosses. National Steel Car, Canada\nWire B, Abitibi pfd., Great Lakes\nPaper pfd. and Eastern Steel pfd,\nadvanced 1 to 2 point! each.\nWestern oils Improved as the session advanced and recessions at\nthe close were limited to a cent or\ntwo in most cases. Horqe and Okalta\nwere down $ to 4 cents and Brown\nweakened about IH cents. Texas-\nCanadian and Homestead, closed\nwith gains.\nB.C. SAW LOG\nSCALE LOWER\nVICTORIA, July 28 (CP)-Brtt-\nish Columbia's saw log scale dropped about 100,000,000 board feet for\nthe first half of the current year,\nremaining fairly steady otherwise,\naccording to reports of the British Columbia forest service today.\nThe log scale for six months was\n1,167,690,661 board feet, compared\nwith 1,276,057,509 board feet in the\nfirst halt of last year.\nIn addition, 5,294,605 lineal feet\nof poles and piling; 78.145 cords of\nfirewood, and 618,966 pieces of hewn\nties were handled. Poles and piling\nwere 750,000 feet less than in the\ncorresponding period, but ties substantially more.\nThe log scale for the month of\nJune was 309,107,705 board feet *\u25a0\nagainst 362,268,902 board feet in that\nmonth last year.\nCanada's Imports\nDown\nOTTAWA, July 28 (CP).-Can-\nada's June Imports dropped $16,-\n721,986 compared with June last\nyear, the figures being $58,046,698\n. against $75,668,684. Imports from the\nUnited States fell to $37,088,050 from\n$45,621,215 and from the United\nKingdom to $9,235,191 trom $13,392,-\n233.\n.World   Exchanges\nNEW YORK, July 28 (API-Closing rates follow: Great Britain in\ndollars, others In cents:\nGreat Britain 4.91%, 60-day bills\n4.91%; Canada, Montreal ln New\nYork 99.71.., New York in Montreal 100.28%; Belgium 16.91%;\nCzechoslovakia 3.45%; Denmark 21.-\n95; Finland 2.18; France 2.76%; Germany 40.19, benevolent 20.25, travel\n22.75; Greece .90%; Hungary 19.85;\nItaly 5.26.4; Jugoslavia 2.34; Netherlands 54.9; Norway 24.71; Poland\n18.88; Portugal 4.47%; Rumania .71%;\nSweden 25.36; Switzerland 22,90%;\nArgentine J2.82N; Brazil (free) 5.90\nN; Mexico City 20.00N; Japan 28.70;\nHong Kong 30.83; Shanghai 18:65.\nRates in spot cables unless otherwise indlcatcd.-(N)\u2014Nominal.\nGov't Deposits in\nBank of Canada in\nWeek Are Increased\nOTTAWA, July 28 (CP) - An\nincrease of $2,818,000 In Dominion\ngovernment deposits over the pre\nvlous week was reported today in\nthe Bank of Canada's statement for\nthe week ended July 27. Chartered\nbank deposits decreased $214,000,\nRatio of net reserve to notes and\ndeposit liabilities was 56.40 per cent\nthis week, 56.51 last year.\nDividends\nLoblaw Groceterias Companl Ltd..\nclan A and B, 25 cents.\nI\nDow-jones Averages\n30 industrials\n20 rails\t\nIS utilities .....\n40 bonds . _.\nHigh\n.142,50\n, 28.73\n,   21.02\nLow\n139.51\n27.90\n20.65\nClose Change\n142.20\u2014up 1.98\n28.54\u2014up .26\n20.88\u2014up .16\n90.36\u2014up    .22\nI\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES:\nAfton Minei \t\nAldermac Copper\nAmm Gold.\n\u00ab_      .03\n__   ..56\n  ..      .22\nAnglo-Huronlan     3.15\nArntfield Gold \u201e\nAstoria Rouyn Minea\nAztec Mining\t\nBagamac Rouyn\t\nBankfleld Gold \t\nBase Metals Mining......\nBeattie Gold Mines\t\nBidgood Kirkland ...-.\nBig Missouri\nBobjo Minei\nBralorne Mines -\nBrett Trethewey\nBuffalo Ankerite \t\nBunker H1U Extension\nOmf^1\"1 Malartic ..\nCariboo'Gold Quarts\nC_Jstle-Trethewey   _\nCentral Patricia   _-.\nChibougamau    \t\nChromium M 4 S ...\nCoast Copper _\nConiaurum Mlnet ..\nConsolidated M & S.,\nDarkwater   ..\nDame Mines \u201e ....\nDorval-SLscoe __..-\nEast Malartic _\u2014\nEldorado Gold\nFalconbrldge Nickel\t\nFederal Kirkland \u201e.-_____\nFrancoeur Gold __.\nGillies Lake \t\nGod's Lake Gold \u2014\nGold Belt .._ \u2014\nGranada Gold Mines _______\nGrandoro Mines \u2014..........\nGunner Gold \u2014...............\nHard Rock Gold .......-.-..\u2014\nHarker Gold\t\nHollinger      \u2014.........\u2014\nHowey Gold..\nHudson Bay M tt S\nInternational Nickel\nJ-M Consolidated ....\nJack Waite\t\nJacola Gold\t\nKerr-Addison    \t\nKirkland Lake \t\nLake Shore Mines   52.50\nJO\n.03\n.06\n.23\n.73\n.40\n1.25\n21\n33\nO0\n9.50\n.03\n16.50\n.12\"\n.95\n2.40\n1.08\n2.68\n.25%\n.80\n3.35\n1.30\n80.50\n.09%\n2.75\n.im\n2.12\n2.39\n6.10\n.07\n.44\n.15\n.55\n.45\n.10\n.06%\n.73\n1.75\n.11%\n15.15\n.28.\n30.00\n81.00\n.11\n.56%\n.19\n2.05\n1.31\nLamaque Contact .\nLapa Cadillac ....\nLeitch Gold \t\nLebel Oro Mines..\nLittle Long Lac .,\nMacassa Mines .\n.03%\n.60\n.92\n.06\n3.65\n4.95\nMacLeod Cockshutt        4.25\nMadsen Red Lake Gold 43\nManitoba tt Eastern      .02\nMandy    17\nMclntyre-Porcupine    _   45.75\nMcKenzie Red Lake     1.22\nMcVittie-Graham    16\nMcWatters Gold  _ 73\nMining  Corporation        2.30\nj Minto Gold       .03%\nMoneta Porcupine         1.97\nMorris-Kirkland  15\nNiplsslng Mining     1.71\nNoranda         72.50\nNormetal  97\nO'Brien Gold     3.95\nOmega Gold 52\nPamour Porcupine      4.65\nPaulore   M      .09%\nPaymaster Cons 57%\nPend Oreille      2.25\nPerron Gold     1.60\nPickle Crow Gold -    4.90\nPioneer Gold       2.95\nPremier Gold     2.30\nPowell Rouyn Gold     2.49\nPreston  East Dome  .........    1.45\nQuebec Gold  50\nRead-Authler      2.80\nRed Lake Gold Shore*      .12\nBeeves MacDorujld      .33\nTlmnn  f_rtl_   Min\u00bb_ Al\nRitchie Gold Mines ..........\nRoche Long Lac  .\nSan Antonio Gold.......___\u2122.\nShawkey Gold ___,_-,.\nSheep Creek Gold -..-.-\u2014\nSherritt Gordon __\u201e.____-\nSiscoe Gold ____,._......\nSmelter* Gold ...____-_\u2014\nSladen Malartic .....................\nStadacona Rouyn .................\nSt Anthony \t\nSudbury Basin \u2014_.~~\nSullivan Consolidated \u2014\nSylvanite    \u2014\u2014\nTeck-Hughes  Gold  \t\nToburn Gold Mines \u2014._.\nTowagmae _______\nVeiytutee\nWaite Amulet \t\nWhitewater   \t\nWright Hargreaves\nYmir Yankee Girl \u2122\nOILS:\nAjax\nBritish American .\nChemical Research\nImperial      __\u00bb\nInter Petroleum \u2014\nMcColl Frontenac .\nPantepeo\nTexas Canadian .........\nINDUSTRIAL*!\nAbitibi Power\t\nBeatty Bros \u2014.\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian T L J. P ......\nBrewers tt Distillers .\nBrewing Corporation .\nBrewing Corp Pfd\t\nBC Power A -\nB C Power B\t\nBuilding Products \u2014\nBurt F N ~-\nCan Bakeries A \u2014\nCan Bakeries Pfd\t\nCanada Bread\t\nCan Bud Malting\t\nCan Car tt Foundry ...\nCan Cement\t\nCan-Cement Pfd ...\nCan Dredge \t\nCan  Malting   \t\nCan Pacific Railway .\nCan Ind Alcohol A\t\nCan Ind Alcohol B\t\nCan Wineries\t\nCarnation Pfd -\nCons Bakeries \t\nCosmos        \t\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Stores\t\nDom Tar tt Chem\t\nD Tar tt Chem Pfd\t\nDistillers Seagrams ...\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord of Canada A\t\nGen Steel Wares\t\nGoodyear Tire _\t\nGypsum L It A \t\nHarding Carpet \t\nHamilton Bridge \t\nHamilton Bridge Pfd .\nHinde Dauche \t\nHiram   Walker   \t\nIntl Metals  \t\nIntl Milling Pfd \t\nImperial Tobacco \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw  B\t\nKelvinator     \t\nMaple Leaf Milling ...\nMassey Harris _\t\nMontreal Power\t\nMoore Corp \t\nNat Steel Car\t\nOnt Steel Prods\t\nOnt Silk Net\t\nPage Hersey \t\nPower Corp \u201e\t\nPressed Metals \t\nsteel of Cen ,\nI Ktanflarrf   -_vln_>\n.02%\n.14\n1.26\n.11\n.96\n1.49\n2.20\n.05%\n1.22\n.60\n.13\n2.90\n1.05\n3.31\n4.55\n2.05\n.50\n..\u00ab\n8.30\n.04\n7.95\n.14\nJO\n11.78\n.48\n17.00\n26.00\n11.50\n4.65\n1.80\n3%\n10\n162%\n13%\n5%\n1.85\n20\n30\n3\n55\n20%\n2\n28\nbVs\nt\n17\n11\n95\n22\n33%\n7\n3%\n2%\n3%\n101%\n15%\n21%\n37\n9*4\n8\n81\n16%\n19%\n19%\n0%\n64\n7%\n3%\n9\n45\n16%\n43%\n8%\n100%\n15%\n23\n20%\n13\n3%\n9%\n21%\n37\n62\n10\n5\n92%\n15%\nI 18\n70\n__!_.\n\u25a0 ,     NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINQ. JULY 29. 1938,\nPAQE ELEVEN\nMarket anrl  A\/finino TV^a^\/q lcadersRc,r,eveSomeWcdne$dayf$\nlViarKet ana  IVlining  IMeWS    Usses in Quiet Rally in New York\nEquipment Shares\nLead Advance on\nMontreal Market\nMONTREAL, July 28 (CP). -\nSlightly more active buying during\nthe latter part ot the session on\nthe stock exchange Thursday helped complete the recovery from yesterday's drop.\nEquipment shares led with National Steel Car up 1% points and\nCanadian Car common, General\nSteel Wares and Dominion Steel\nand Coal B a half point higher. Canadian Car pfd. drifted fractionally\nlower.\nMetals were In demand, Nickel\nfirming 1%, Smelters a point and\nNoranda half. .Price and St Lawrence Paper pfd. Improved a point\neach with the others adding small\nfractions.\nThe utility section took a united\nstand and gains of- a half or less\nwere marked up for Shawinlgan,\nMontreal Power and Brazil.\n(Mist Hall\nEarnings Lower\nMONTREAL, July 28 (CP)-De-\nerease of $5,879,125 was shown in\nCanadian Pacific Railway company\nnet earnings of $2,881,028 for the\nfirst half of 1938 compared with $8.-\n280,153 for the first six months ot\n1937.\nThe statement, Issued today, listed 1938 gross earnings at $61,287,328\nwith working expenses st $58,606,-\n499, compared with 1937 gross earnings ot $68,790,261 and working expenses of $58,530,107.\nNet earnings ot $511,408, for the\nmonth of June showed a decrease of\n$683,702 compared with $1,295,111\nfor the corresponding month a year\nago.\nMARKETS AT A\nGLANCE\nToronto \u2014 Industrials and mining\nstocks higher; western oils lower.\n'Montreal snd New York\u2014 Stocki\nclosed higher.\nWinnipeg *\u2022 Wheat % cent higher to % cent lower.\nToronto \u2014 Bacon hogs ott truck\ndown 50 cents to $11.   ,\n. London \u2014 Bar silver and other\nmetals lower.\nNew York \u2014 Silver and other\nmetals unchanged.\nMontreal \u2014 Silver slightly lower.\nNew York \u2014 Cotton and sugar\nlower; rubber unchanged; coffee\nhigher.\nNew York \u2014 Canadian dollar unchanged at 99 23-32.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP). \u2022\u00bb-\nVancouver wheat cash prices;\nStrt.    Tough\nNo. 1 hard . 82%       80%\nNo. 1 Nor.  \u201e 82%       80%\nNo. 2 Nor.  78%       76%\nNo. 3 Nor   73%       70%\nNo. 4 Nor - 70%       61%\nNo. 5 wheat   64%       61%\nNo. 6 wheat ....;... 58%       83%\nFeed 51%       48%\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, July 28 (AP)-Closlng;\nCopper, standard spot \u00a340 17s 6d,\nfuture \u00a341 2s 6d, both oft Us 3d;\nelectrolytic spot, bid \u00a346 10s, unchanged; asked \u00a346 15s off 15s.\nTin spot \u00a3193, i-ff \u00a31 5s; future\n194 5s, off \u00a31.\nBids: Lead spot \u00a3 14 16s 3d, future\n\u00a314 17s 6d, both off 8s 3d.\nZinc spot \u00a313 181 Od, future \u00a314\n2s 6d, off 5s.\nBar gold 141s 5d, up 1 penny.\n(Equivalent $34.83.)\nBar silver 19 5-16d, off %. (Equivalent 42.77 cents.)\nNEW YORK-Copper steady; electrolytic spot 1.00; export 10.27.\nTin barely steady; ipot and nearby 43.50; forward 43.58.\nLead steady; spot, New York 4.90-\n95; East St. Louis 4.75.\nZinc steady; East SL Louts spot\nand forward 4.73.\nPit iron, aluminum, antimony,\nquicksilver, platinum, wolframite\nunchanged.\nBar silver 42%, unchanged.\nMONTREAL\u2014Spot: Copper, electrolytic, 11.75; tin 46%; lead 4.55;\nzinc 4.45; antimony 15; per 100\npounds f.o.b. Montreal, five ton\nlots.\nBar gold ln London iteady at\n$34.90 an ounce in Canadian funds;\n141s 5d in British. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $35.08\nin Canadian.\nSilver closed steady, unchanged\nto 15 points lower today. No sales.\nJuly futures closed off at noon at\n42.50, unchanged from the opening\nbid. Aug. 42.40, Sept. 41.85 and Dec.\n41.50.\nYankee Girl Goes\nWork at New Low\nWork Ii \"getting under way on a\nnew low level,'the 1623 toot level\",\nof the Ymir Yankee Girl Mines\nlimited property at Ymir, states a\nnews bulletin from a coast broker's\noffice. The bulletin adds;\n\"In another three month! the management expects to have sufficient\nInformation on which to base a decision regarding extension of the\nWild Horse tunnel held under option.\nThis tunnel driven some years ago to\n2950 feet from the portal would if\nextended another 1050 feet give 400\nto 500 feet of additional depth on the\ndip ot the Ymir Yankee Girl ore\nbodies.\"\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal - Pound 4.93 13-32;\nU. S. dollar 1.00 1-16; franc 2.86-\n29-32\nAt'New York - Pound 4.91%;\nCanadian dollar .99 23-32; tranc 2.76-\n%.\nAt Paris - Pound 178.14 fr.; U.\nS. dollar 36.18% fr.; Canadian dollar 36.10 fr.\nIn Gold - Pound 12s Id; U. S.\ndollar 59.34 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.23 cents.\nPROFITS INCREASE\nTORONTO, July 28 (CP)-Annual\nreport ot Canada (Bread company\nlimited today showed a net profit of\n$261,924 tor the year ended June\n30, as compared with $188,891 In\nthe year ended June 30,1937.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain  \u25a0 4%\nAssoc Brew of Can \u2014.\u2014 14%\nBathurst P4PA  10%\nCanadian Bronze   40%\nCan Bronze pfd   101\nCan Car & Fdy pfd   29\nCan Celanese  .. .'. 13\nCan Celanese pfd \u2014 93\nCan North Power  17%\nCan Steamship       4%\nCan Steamship pfd \u2014  15%\nCockshutt Plow   12\nCon Min It Smelting  60%\nDominion Coal pfd  18%\nDom Steel __ Coal B  18%\nDominion Textile   65\nDryden Paper      8\nFoundation C of C   14\nGatineau Power  11%\nGatineau Power pfd \u201e _  83\nGurd Charles       7%\nHolt Renfrew  14\nHoward Smith Paper  17\nH Smith Paper pfd  97\nImperial Oil  17\nInter Petroleum  25%\nInter Nickel of Can  51\nLake of the Woods      5%\nMcColl Frontenac  11%.\nNational Brew Ltd  42%\nNat Brew pfd  40\nOgilvie Flour new \u201e  28%\nPrice Bros \t\nQuebec Power\t\nShawinlgan W __ P .\nSt Lawrence Corp\t\nSt Law Corp pfd\n\u2122   18%\n..   18\n....   21%\n....    5%\n...   19%\nSouth Can Power    12%\nSteel of Can pfd    65\nWestern Grocers    60\nBANKS\nCommerce 172\n 202\n.... 204\n 210\n.... 300\n... 185\n.... 235\nDominion \t\nImperial\t\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotia \t\nRoyal  \u2014\t\nToronto _\t\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd   28%\nBathurst P __ P B -  4%\nBeauharnois Corp  4%\nBritish American   21%\nCan Marconi  __\u00bb 1%\nCan Vickers     10\nCons Paper Corp  \u2014 8%\nFairchlld Aircraft  8%\nInter Utilities A  7%\nInter Utilities B   .75\nLake Sulphite  4%\nMacLaren P & P  13%\nMcColl Frontenac pfd  97\nMitchell Robt   17%\nRoyalite Oil  46\nWalker Good tt W _  43%\nWalker Good pfd  19\nPreston East Dome\nReduces Treasury\nStock Holdings\nTORONTO, July 28 (CP)-Preston\nEast Dome mines have reduced their\ntreasury stock holdings by 115,000\nshares, having Issued 100,000 shares\nfor a 40-acre claim adjoining their\nproperty and $10,000 cash and sold\n15,000 shares at 85 cents a share. Issued capital now stands at 2,875.000\nout of an authorized 3,000,000 shares.\nJuly Wheal Closes\nUp al Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, July 28 (CP).-July\nwheat provided most oi the interest on a quiet Winnipeg market today. The cash month option fluctuated fractionally higher and lower\nthan yesterday's level and at one\ntime showed a cent advantage.\nThe close placed July %' higher\nat 93%. Quotations on futures prices\nwere % higher to % lower, October\nat 76%, November 75% and December 74%.\nFeatureless trading was the order\nof the day. Export business was\nestimated at 200,000 bushels and\nincluded old crop and Durums.\nChiefly responsible for the higher\ntendencies today where reports of\nslim rainfall In the west and\nstrength at Liverpool. Interest wis\nat low ebb during mldsesslon and\npricea fell somewhat There were\nrallies ln the closing exchanges.\nLiverpool closed 3d higher to y.d\nlower. Buenos Aire* wai Vs\u2014%\nlower at noon.\nCash wheat showed slightly better with Durumi up about a half-\ncent Other spreads were unchanged.\nPit trading in coarse grains wu\ndull with some support'showing for\nbarley.\nBeauharnois Shares\nListed at Montreal\nMONTREAL, July 28 (CP)-Curb\nmarket has approved the listing of\nthe additional 669,559 shares of Beauharnois Power corporation resulting from the recent reorganization\nplan. The shares will be called tor\ntrading July 29.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, July 28 (CP)-Brit.\nish and foreign exchange closed\neasier today. Nominal rates for large\namounts:\nArgentina, peso, .2613.\nAustralia, pound, 3.9394.\nCzechoslovakia, crown, ,0347.\nFrance, franc, .027692.\nGermany, reichsmark, ,4032.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9341.\nJapan, yen, .2882.\nNew Zealand, pound, 3.9712.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9098.\nSweden, krone, .2545.\nUnited States, dollar, 5-16 per\ncent prem.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAm Can \t\nAm For Pow ..\nAm Smt tt Ret\nAm Tel  \t\nAm Tob \t\nAnaconda   \t\nBaldwin\t\nBait tt Ohio ....\nBendlx Avl ....\nBeth Steel\t\nBorden    \t\nCan  Dry \t\nC|n  Pac   \t\nCerro de Pasco\nChrysler\nCon Gas N Y....\nC Wright Pfd..\nDupont   \t\nEast K6d \t\nF6rd  Eng  \t\nFord of Can.....\nFrpt Texas ....\nGen Elec\t\nGen Foods \t\nGen Mot\t\nGoodrich   \t\nGranby    \t\nGrt Nor Pfd ....\nHowe Sound ..\nH<_.  l-tnt\nHigh\n88%\n6\n50%\n142\n86%\n36%\n10%\n9%\n20%\n60%\n17%\n20\n8%\n46%\n81%\n28%\n5%\n128%\n178%\n4%\n18%\n28%\n42%\n34%\n43%\n22%\n7%\n22%\n47\n_____\nLow\n97\n5%\n48%\n140%\n85%\n35\n10%\n8%\nioy.\n88%\n17%\n19%\n8%\n45%\n69\n28\n5%\n125%\n177%\n4%\n18%\n28%\n41\n34\n41%\n20%\n6%\n21%\n46%\n___\nClose\n50%\n'141%\n86%\n36%\n10%\n8%\n20%\n59\n17%\n20\n7%\n46%\n71%\n28%\n5%\n128\n178%\n4%\n18%\n28%\n42%\n34%\n41%\n22%\n7%\n22%\n47\n-Uk\nInter Nick ....\nInter Tel _ Tel\nKenn Cop ....\nMack Truck ..\nMont Ward ....\nNash Mot\t\nN Y Central ....\nPack Mot\t\nPenn R R\t\nPhillips Pete ..\nRad Corp \t\nRem Rand\t\nSfwy  Strs  ....\nShell  Un \t\nS Cal Edison ..\nStan Oil of N J\nTex Core \t\nTex Gulf Sul..\nTlm Roller ....\nUnder Type ....\nUn Carbide ...\nUn Oil of Cal..\nUnited Air\t\nUn  Pac\t\nU S Rubber ....\nU S Steel \t\nWarner Bros....\nWest  Ele|\t\nWest Un  \t\nWoolworth   ....\nir.-i    m 1.\n31%\n9%\n42%\n28%\n47%\n10%\n20\n5%\n21%\n42\n7%\nM8%\n21\n17%\n23%\n56%\n47%\n84%\n4$\n64\n85\n21%\n29\n83%\n45%\n60%\n6%\n103%\n31%\n47%\n49% 51%\n9% 9%\n40% 43%\n26% 28%\n45% 47\n10% 10%\n18% 20\n3% 5%\n20% 21%\n40% 42\n6% 7%\n16   ' 16%\n19% 21\n16% 17%\n23% 28%\n55% 56%\n. 45% 47%\n84% 34%\n46% 47%\n64 64\n83 85\n21% 21%\n28% 28%\n82 82%\n43 45\n58% 60%\n6% 6%\n100% 103%\n30% 31%\n47 47%\n\u25a0\"\"'-\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, July 28 (CP)-The\nproduce section of Canadian com\nmodlty exchange closed quietly to\nday with prices unchanged except\nfor a slight easiness in cheese and\nhigh-grade eggs.\nButter spot \u2014 Quebec fresh (9?\nscore) 24%-%..\nEggs spot \u2014 Ontario A large 28%A\nA medium 27A.\n, Butter futures \u2014 Steady, unchanged to % cent lower; August 24%B\nand November 25%-%.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, July 28 (CP) .-Grain\nfutures quotations'.\nOpen  High  Low   Close\nWHEAT:\nJuly\"     93%    95%    97%    93%\nOct    76%    76%    75%    76%\nNov.      -       -       -       75%\nDec    75%    75%    74%    74%\nOATS:\nJuly       36%    36%    36%    36%\nOct    32%    33%    32%    33%\nDec    32%    31%    30%     30%\nBARLEY:\nJuly      44%    45       44%     44%\nOct ........ .44%    44%    44%     44%\nDpc    -       -       -        43%\nFLAX:\nJuly     -       -       -      143%\nOct   -       -       -      144%\nRYE:\nJuly     -     \u2014       -       45%\nOct    47%    47%    47%     47%\nDec    48%    48%    48%    48%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT-No. 1 Nor. 83%; No. 2\nNor. 90%; No. 3 Nor. 85%; No. 4\nNor. 75%; No. 5, 64%; No. 6, 58%;\nfeed 56%; No. 1 Garnet 88%; No. 2\nGarnet 85%; No. 1 Durum 71%;\nNo. 4 special 74%; No. 5 special\n61%; No. 8 special 57%; track 86%;\nscreenings 25 cents per ton.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 36%; No. 3\nC. W. and Ex. 1 feed 33%; No. 1\nfeed 31%; No. 2 teed 29%; No. 3\nfeed 28%; track 35%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6- and\n2-row Ex. 3 C. W. 44%; Others:\nNo. 3 C. W. 43%; No. 4 C. W. 41%;\nNo. 5 C. W. 40%; No. 6 C. W. 39%;\ntrack 44%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 143%; No. 2\nC. W. 139%; No. 3 C. W. 128%; No. 4\nC. W. 113%; track 142%.\nRYE-No, 2 C. W, 45%,\nChicago Wheal\nGains Are Lost\nCHICAGO, July 28 (AP). - In-\ncreased selling that was associated\nwith domestic new crop movement\ngave a late downward trend to Chicago wheat values today, more than\ncancelling earlier gains.\nSouthwest receipts today totalled\n987 cars, against 857 a week ago.\nThe primary movement aggregated\n2,902,000 bushels versus 2,499,000 at\nthis time list week.\nChicago wheat futures closed\nunchanged to % cent lower compared with yesterday's finish, Sept\n67%\u201468, Dec. 69%\u201470, corn %-%\ndown. Sept 57-67%, Dec. 64%-%,\nand oats %\u2014% off.\nNEW VORK, July 28 (AP). -\nClimbing motor shares imparted\nquiet rallying power to the stock\nmarket today and leaden retrieved\nfractions to more than 2 points of\nWednesdays reversal.\nIt waa one of the slowest sessions\nof the past several weeks, however,\nwith the ticker tape barely moving\nat times. Transfers approximated\nless than 1,-065,360 shares.\n'The market found buying fuel ln\nthe better than anticipated earnings statements of General Motors\nand Chrysler, released after yesterday's close, ln addition to other\nbusiness Indicators that, generally\npointed in the direction ot recovery,\nThe concensus in boardrooms was\nthe shake-down put the list ln a\nmuch healthier position.\nA Jump ln steel mill operations\nfrom the figure estimated offi-ially\nMonday was an inspiring Influence.\nIn the Birmingham diitrict new\nblast furnaces were to be opened\nand some 3,000 iron ore miners were\nrecalled to their.jobs.\nRails did fairly well as M. J.\nGormley, executive assistant of the\nAssociation of American Railroads,\npredicted freight loadings probably\nwould hit  a top of 700,000 can '.\nweekly in October. Carrier. bonds\ntilted upward in the loans depart- ''\nment after a hesitant getaway.\nMclntyre Porcupine was a late-'\nperformer among the gold mines,)\ngetting up about 2 points' following\nword the airplane  aboard which ,\nwere J. P. Bickell, Toronto flnan\u00abJ\ncier and, president of the Mcnltyre\nconcern,'and  Bernard  E.  Smith,:\nWall Street operator and vice-president of the company, had been lo- i\ncated after being long overdue at\nJuneau, Alaska. 3\nLively buying of rails, aided by\npredictions of further increase in\ncarloadlngs, brought a substantial.\nrally tor the group in the bond\nmarket today.\nU.S. government obligations also\nwere firm, showing Increases ranging up to 5-32.\nThe rail  movement  Influenced\nother groups and toward the last\nhour Industrials and foreigns gen- \u25a0\norally pointed up, although utilities\nlagged.\nRadio Keith Orpheum 6s jumped\nmore than 3 points after announce- -\nment ot the filing ot the reorganization plan in federal court\nDominion Bonds\nWINNIPEG, July 28 (CP)-Dom-\ninion  of Canada bonds, bid and\nasked*\n4%,'Sept 1,1940,105,106%\n5, Nov. 15,1941,108%, 110\n5, Oct. 15, 1943, 112, 113%\n4, Oct 15, 1945-43, 107, 108%\n4%, Feb. 1,1948,' 110%, 112.\n3%, Oct 15,1949-44,103,104%\n3%, Nov. 18,1951-48,101%, 102%\n4, Oct 15, 1932-47, 107, 108%\n3, June 1,1955-50, 98, 99%\n4%, Nov. 1,1958-48, 111, 112%\n4%, Nov. 1,1969-49,111%, 113\nWi, June 1,1966-56, 99%, 101\nBONDS RECOVER\nNEW YORK, July 28 (AP)- De.\nmand for railroad Issues gave the\nbond market a recovery tinge told*.'\"\nForeign loans were narrow. The\nAssociated Press average of 10 Issues at 62.2 was .1 higher. On the\nfirst sale since the German seizure\not Austria, lower Austria province\n7%s were down 74% points at 24%,\non one transaction.\nU. S. treasury loans were slightly\nhigher.\nOil Stock Prices   I\nOff at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, July 28 (CP) -\nOil stock prices dropped on Van- ;\ncouver stock exchange today and\nmetals were unchanged to mixed\nwith changes confined to small amounts. Transactions totalled 56,830\nshares.\nRoyalite Oil declined 50 centa at\n(48.00 while Dalhousie at 50, Vulcan at 85 and Anglo Canadian at,\n1.40 each last 6. Calgary & Edmonton was down 7 at 2.53, Okalta 4 at\n1.43 and Home 3 at 1.27. Other li- \u25a0\nsuae were quiet ' I\nKootenay Belle headed trading In\nthe gold lection.and, gained 4 at\n1.36. Bralorne was up 15 at 9.45 and\nSheep Creek firmed 1 at 94. Island\nMountain at 1.24 snd Reno st 45 eaeh\neased 1 while Big Missouri' at 31\nand Premier at 2.30 were down 2.\nOther senior golds held steady.\nBase metal stocks were quiet and\nUnchanged, Pend Oreille was offered\nat 2.30 and Nicola was unchanged\nat 3%. \u25a0\u25a0< .\u00ab**.**#*. *. '\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, July 28 (CP). - Re-\nceipta to noon today: Cattle 61;\ncalves 20; hogs 417; sheep 13.\nThe cattle market was moderately\nactive. Calves were slightly lower\nwith tops at 5.00-6.50.'\nGood butcher steers 5.50; common\nto medium 3.00\u20144.75; good cows\n3.00\u20143.25; good to choice veal calves\n4.50\u20145.50; good stocker steen 3.50\u2014\n4.50.\nNo hogi sold to noon, Previous\nclose: Selects 12.25; bacons 11.85;\nbutchen 11.35.\nGood handywelght lambs 7.00.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, July 28 (AP) .-Closing: Brazil $13%; C. P. R. (7; Inter.\nNickel $50%; U. S. Steel $60%; Brit\nAm- Tob 104s 4%d; Cent Mining\n\u00a322%; Consol Gold Fields 77s Od;\nCourtaulds 28s l%d; East Geduld\n\u00a311%; H. B. C. 23s 6d; Mining\nTrust 2s 9d; Springs 28s l%d.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent Consols \u00a375%; 3% per cent war loan\n\u00a3102%; funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3114%.\nWANT AD8 GET RESULTS\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nmines:\nAstec     \t\nBC Nickel\t\nBig Missouri\t\nBluebird   \t\nBralorne     ,\nBridge Riv Con ....\nB R Mount \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nDentonia   \t\nDunwell   -\nFairview Amal ....\nFederal  Gold  .....\nGeorge Copper\t\nGolconda    -\t\nGold Belt  \t\nGold Mount \t\nGrandview   \t\nGrull-Wihksne   ....\nHalda  Gold  \t\nHedley Mascot \t\nHedley Sterling ....\nHome Gold   -\nIndian Vines\t\nInter Coal tt Coke\nIsland Mount\t\nKoot Belle   .'.\t\nLucky  Jim  \t\nMak Sic Gold\t\nMcGilllvray\t\nMetaline M tt L ....\nMinto Gold  \t\nNicola M tt M\t\nNoble  Five   .._,\t\nPend Oreille \t\nPilot Gold  :\t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPorter Idaho\t\nPremier Border\t\nPremier Gold\t\nQuatslno \t\nQuesnelle Q\t\nRed Hawk Gold ....\nReevej MacD\t\nRelief  Arling  \t\nReno Gold \t\nReward     \t\nSally Mines \t\nSalmon Gold\t\nSheep Creek   \t\nSilbak Premier ....\nSilver  Crest   \t\nSunloch Minei \t\nSurf Inlet\t\nTaylor B R\t\n__________\nBid\n.07\n.09\n.31\n.01%\n9.45\nAsk\n.10\n.10\n.35\n2.45\n.04%\n.02\n.08%\n.01\n.25\n.48\n.01%      -\n- .10\n.05%\n.03%\n1.10\n.02%\n.04\n2.50\n.05\n.03\n.08%\n.02\n.30\n.08\n.47\n.01%\n.26\n1.24\n1.36\n.02%\n.01\n.20\n.65\n.04\n.03%\n.02%\n.01\n2.95.\n.03\n.01\n2.30\n.11\n.35\n.15\n.45\n.03%\n.03\n,12\n.94\n1.95\n.01%\n,15\n.13%\n.03\ni.ii\n.02\n.01%\n.02\n1.27\n1.40\n.02%\n.04%\n.04\n.03%\n2.30\n.01%\n3.00\n.04\n.01%\n2.30\n.04%\n.11%\n.05\n.45\n.16\n.48\n.04\n.05\n.14\n.98\n2.00\n.15\n.04\nBid\nAsk\nWaverly T \t\n.      .00%\n.00%\nWellington \t\n.      .01%\n.02\n.      .02\n.02%\nWhite Eagle\t\n.      .01\n.02\nWhitewater    \t\n.      .03%\n.06\nYmir Yank Girl...\n.      .16\n\u2014\nOILS:\nA P Con \t\n.      .19\n.20\nAmalgamated   \t\n.      .01\n.01%\n.      .07%\n.09\nAnglo  CaB  \t\n.    1.40\n1.45\n.03\n.      .34\n.04\nBrown  Corp  \t\n.36\nCalgary tt Edm\t\n.    2.53\n2.54\nCalmont  \t\n.      .33\n.35\nCommonwealth ...\n.      .27\n\u2014\nCrows Nbst \t\n.      .01%\n\u2014\n.      .50\n\u2014\nDavies  Pete\t\n.      .30\n\u2014\n.      .07%\n.09\nFirestone Pete \t\n.     .13\n.16\nFoundation Pete ...\n.      .15\n.17\nFour Star Pete\t\n.      .14\n.17\nFreehold Corp\t\n.      .06%\n.06%\n.16\n.18\nHighwood Sarcee .\n.      .11%\n1.27\n.04%\n1.34\n.05\n'Mar  Jon  \t\n.      .06%\nMcDoug Seg \t\n.      .15%\n.16%\nMcLeod new\t\n.      .15\n\u2014\n.      .11\n.11%\n.      .05\n\u2014\nMid-West Pete \t\n.      .03\n\u2014\nMill City Pete ...\n.     \".07%\n.08\nModel    \t\n.      .23%\n\u2014\n.      .11%\n\u2014\nNordon Corp\t\n.      .10\n\u2014\n,    1.43\n\u2014  ,\nOkalta Hd \t\n.   25.00\n\u2014\nPacalta\t\n.      .07%\n\u2014\n.      .29\n.31\nRoyalite    \t\n.   46.00\n47.00\nSouthwest Pete\t\n.      .40\n\u2014\nSpooner\t\n.      .10\n-r-\nUnited     \t\n.13\n.      .05%\n.14\n.07\n.85\n.09\n\t\nWest  Flank  \t\n.11\nINDUSTRIALS:\nB C Elec \t\n. 109.50\n\u2014\nCan Pac \t\n.    7.00\n7.50\nCapital Est \t\n.     1.90\n2.00\nCoast Brew  \t\n.    1.25    1\n: 1.30\nPac   Coyl*    \t\n.15          -\nINVEST WISELY\nWl SUGGEST\nBRALORNE \u2014 SHEEP CREEK\nKOOTENAY BELLE \u2014 RENO and\nGOLD BELT\nAre good buys at the present market prices.\nNow is the right time to get in; as we look for an upward\nmarket In the near future.\nP. E. POULIN\nSTOCKS \u2014 BONDS \u2014 INSURANCE\n582 Ward Street\nPhone 70\nEVERY DAY\nWHILE\nYOU'RE AWAY\nGET THE\nDAILY NEWS\nNo need to miss a single issue while you're on vacation this summer. All the news and happenings from\nback home will reach you promptly, wherever you\nare, and just at the time when you really enjoy\nreading every item.\nPHONE   144\nOr give your order to any Carrier, Agent or direct\nto the\nMzmx latly Nwua\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\n ^\u2022rnm\nmmm\nmm^mmmmmm\nagi rweuvi ..\u2014; \u2014\nr\u00bbEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C-FRIDAY MORNING. JULY 89. 198.,\nTODAY\nAND\nSATURDAY\nI     COMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7 :Q0 AND 8:54\nA new triumph\nin big-picture\nentertainment!\nKfanappel\nw\/__ a rest 0\/5,000\/eoiurinsr\nWARNER BAXTER\nIr, th. ___kl_\u00ab color\/-\/ klnJolrol. At made \/.moult\nFREDDIE\nBARTHOLOMEW\n_.__i__-J(>*l--_\u00bb_-\u00ab \"C-pfc\/M Owrajsow\";\nARLEEN WHELAN\nHe year', . moliono\/ \u00ab..\u00ab._ llnd Irt her _e\u201eKll\/ono\/ a. toll\nC. AUBREY SMITH\nREGINALD OWEN\nJOHN CARRAD1NE-H1GELBRUCE-M1LES MAHDER\n,v    Rlttrf TOE-R-. WARNER -\nDirected by Allred W.il.i\n.\/r.c(oro\/\"r_\u00ab7\/o_Ho\/Rol\/ncA\u00bbo-\nA. 2:34, 7:24, 9:28\nBathing Caps\nFreih Stock. Lew Prices\n15c to $1.00\nMann.Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nAdded COLORED CARTOON\nShorts \"ISLE OF PINCO PONCO\"\nCOLORED SCENIC\u2014\"AUSTRALIA\"\nand PARAMOUNT NEWS\nMORE ABOUT\nJAPANESE\n(Continued From Page One)\nthe Canton-Hankow railway, a defence lifeline\" for the clutter of\nWuhan cities, Mankow, Wuchang\nand Hanyang.\n(The United States consulate general at Hankow, was informed th_f.\nmission property ot the reformed\nchurch in the United States-, was\nslightly damaged Wednesday in an\naerial bombardment ol Yochow,\nHunan province. The Hankow report\nsaid American missionaries at Yochow escaped injury but many Chinese were killed when a railway station and many houses were struck.\nYochow is about 100 miles southeast of Hankow.)\nThe Japanese reported capture\nof Talhu, about 60 miles north of\nKiuklang, In one phase of the\noverland drive to flank the Chinese line at Wuiueh and Tlenkla-\nchen. The Chinese declared they\nwere counter attacking at Talhu.\nFATHER JACQUI.NOT\nFOUND\nTOKYO, July .29 (Friday). (CP-\nHavas)\u2014Father Robert Jacqulnot,\nthe French priest whose disappearance creaWd a mystery here, was\nfound near Kobe today.      ,\nFirst reports merely said he was\nalive, without Indicating what had\nhappened to him since he dropped\nfrom sight at Yokohama on July 20,\nwhen he arrived there aboard the\nCanadian Pacific liner Empress of\nAsia en route back to China.\nTrail Court Orders\nKelowna Man Pay\na Month to Wife\nWORK\nPANTS\nKhaki Denims, pair $1.75\nKhaki Drills, pair . 92.00\nKhaki Ducks, pair . 12.50\nBlue Denimi, red back or\nwhite back, 7 oz., and 9 oz.\nPair ... $1.75 and $1.95\nC.W.C. \"Iron man\",\nPair  $2.75\nLIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\nhone ere' \u00ab7\u00ab Baker St\nnoker Features\nDeparture 109th\nHOSSLAND, B.C., July 28\u2014 A\n|larewell smoker, featured by two\npour-round boxing bouts, was held\ntin the Rossland Armory Wednesday\nf night for the 109th battery members,\nWho left today lor Shilo Camp, Man.\n|; Both bouts, the Walter Jones-Norman Morrison go, and the Murdo\nbrrlson-David   Hughes   feature,\nire adjudged draws Songs and\njcitations completed the entertain-\nI ment. Pat Haszard waa master of\nf ceremonies.\nTRITON\nMOTOR OIL\n.^a. ERICS   PTE\nSocial...\nMOYIE\nMOYIE, B. C.-Mr. and Mrs. D.\nHome and sons Douglas and Donald of Kellogg, Idaho were recent\nguests ot Mr. and Mrs. Phil Conrad.\nMisses Alice Whitehead and Isobel Reinhardt of Kimberley are\nguests at the Whitehead home.\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh Clark, Cranbrook, were Sunday guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. Charles Adams.\nMisses Ena Wik and Dot Hild,\nKlmberWy were week end guests\nat the Oughtred summer home.\nMf. and Mrs. Babe Leask and\nfamily are leaving Moyie. Mrs;\nLeask and children will reside at\nKimberley for the time being.\nGertrude Lundquist, Cranbrook, Is\nvisiting her sister and her brother-\nin-law,\" Mr. and Mrs. Charles Adams.\nMrs. R. A. Smith, with Mrs. Nelson Smith and sons and Mrs. Whitehead, spent Thursday at Kimberley\nand Chapman Camp.\nThe benefit social evening in aid\nof the St. Eugene hospital, July 16,\nwas a success, both socially and\nfinancially.\nThe tidy sum of $87,68 was real-\nied. The conveners were, Mrs. K. A.\nSmith and Mrs. James Whitehead.\nThe door prizes were won by\n(Jordon Anglands and Mrs. Cliff\nSt Eloi.\nRonnie Ramshaw is, here from\nFernie visiting his brothers, Dennis and Ted.\nRube Scott of Vancouver visited\nhere Tuesday. Mr. Scott was a Moyie resident some thirty years ago.\nU.8. DOLLAR GAINS\nLONDON, July 28 (AP). - The\nUnited States dollar gained .. cent\nIn terms of sterling today in foreign currency dealings. The unit\nfinished at $4.82 to the pound. The\nrate compared with sterling in New\nYork overnight at $4.62%.\nThe French franc closed at 178.13\nto the pound against 178.06 yesterday.\nCORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF NELSON\nNOTICE\nTaxes Due\nCity Taxes are now due and payable at\nthe City Hall.\nTo avoid penalty  payments  must be\nmade  on  or  before \u00bb\nAUGUST 1st.\nTHE CITY OF NELSON\n$15\nTRAIL, B. C., July 28 - Facing\ncharges under the Deserted Wives\nMaintenance act, David Francis\nWright of Kelowna was ordered to\npay $15 a month for the support\nof his wife, by Donald MacDonald,\npolice magistrate, in city police\ncourt yesterday.\n_,_,_\u25a0-,_,_,_,_)\u25a0 SntrSSttrSSrtSrW pttSfSsttSrSt.\n(|  HOT WEATHER  |\n| MEALS AT THE\njStar Cafej\nKASLO Social.. \u2666\nKASLO, B, C. - R. J. AUen was a\nrecent visitor In Nelson.\nRev. L. A.1 Morrant ot Trail Is\nspending a few days tn town attending the Anglican retreat\nF. Easons of Trail was a city visitor Tuesday,\nHarvey Barge has returned to\nTrail after spending a few days in\ntown.        \u25a0\nRoss Workman of New Denver\nwas a city visitor Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. F. S. Rouleau were\nrecent visitors in.Nelson.\nMiss Abbott, R. N., of Nelson is\nin the city to relieve Miss B. Brown,\nR. N\u201e of the Victorian hospital nursing staff while the latter la on her\nholidays.  \u25a0, -   -   .\nH. Exter was a visitor in Nelson\nTuesday.\nT. M. Stretton and daughter Lorna of Nelson were Sunday visitors\nin the city.\nRev. and Mrs. D. S. Catchpole and\nchildren.ot Rossland are spending\na few days in Kaslo.\nMrs: L. N. Garland and Miss Irene\nGarrett are spending a tew days in\nNelson. W- '\u25a0'\u25a0       ,. \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. L. S, McKinnon and\nson of Kelowna are holidaying ln\ntown, the guests of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mfs. Peter McGregor.\nMexlih I. Liversldge of Nelson Is\nspending a few days ln Kaslo.\nMrs. E. M. Sandilands was a visitor in Nelson Tuesday.\nMiss N. Munn, R. N., spent Tuesday in Nelson.\nErling Johnson of Trail Is spending a few days ln town with his mother, Mra. C. Johnson.\nMrs. W. F. MacNicol of Johnson's\nLanding was a city visitor Monday.\nJames A. Dunn and family ot Edmonton are the guests of Mrs. Dunn's\nbrother, W. H. Dunn.\nMr and Mrs. John Ashbaugh of\nNelson were guests of Wl H. Dunn\nover the week-end.\nDonald Calvert of Niagara Falls,\nOnt., is spending a few weeks in\ntown visiting his 'father, H. Calvert\nand his sister, Mrs. B. F. Palmer.\nMrs, E. R. Ringheim of Trail, who\nis spending the summer ln Kaslo,\nhas as her guest ber sister, Miss Rose\nSevern of Trail.\nMr. Heuson has returned to Nelson\nafter spending the past few weeks\nin town relieving Bank Manager\nWalter Wright, who was enjoying\nholidays.\nMr. and Mrs. J. B, Reuter of Pontiac, Mich., arrived in the city on\nTuesday to visit the former's brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. S.\nJ. Reuter, and his sister, Mrs. Mary\nWhite.\nVen. Archdeacon F. H. Graham of\nNelson is the guest of Rev. and Mrs.\nC. G. Gardner while attending the\nAnglican retreat.\nMr. and Mrs. Gilbert Mason and\nchildren returned to Fruitvale after\nvisiting Mrs. Mason's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. George S. Baker.\nWalter Wright, manager of the\nBank ot Montreal here, Mrs. Wright\nand their daughter, Sylvia, have returned from a holiday at coast points.\nMiss Phyllis Wright who accompanied her parents to tbe coast, will\nremain in Vancouver for some\nweeks.\nMrs. D. Bruce had as her weekend guests, Mr. and Mrs. George\nHunter ot Nelson.\nMiss Beatrice Brown, R. N, of tbe\nVictorian hospital nursing staff is\non her holidays and is the guest of\nMrs. Smith and Miss N. Munn for a\nfew days prior to going to the coast.\nMiss Iris Clarke was recently the\nhostess of a bridal shower complimenting Mrs. A. W.'Bavington (nee\nMiss Elsie Rouleau).\nA large box, prettily decorated\nwith pink and white, and filled to\noverflowing with many gifts was\npresented to the guest of honor.\nMrs. Frank Peter and Miss Dyllls\nJones assisted the hostess ln serving\nrefreshments. Miss Clarke's invited\nguests were Wtfs. John Paterson,\nMrs. T. Clarke, Mrs. Carl Hild. Mrs.\nF. S. Rouleau, Mrs. Frank Peter,\nMiss Clara Johnson, Miss Sophie\nMarleau, ' Miss Daphne Chandler,\nMiss Alice Augustine, Miss Dyllls\nJones and Mrs. Bavington.\nFruitvale Garage\nfor Syndicate Is\nWeir Under Way\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\u2014The foundation and walls of the new Fruitvale\nTransportation syndicategar_\u00a3e\nhave been laid, and the building Is\nwell away.   .\nThe new garage will be of cement\nstructure, with a floor spa_e\" of 84\nfeet by 48 feet, to cover the large\nnumber of cars, owned by the syndicate for transporting C. M. & S. company, workers, to and from their\nwork at Trail.\nA modernly equipped repair shop\nwill also be installed..\nB. C. INCORPORATIONS\nVICTORIA, July 28 (CF)-Incor.\nporatlons under the companies act\nlisted the past week included Okanagan Meat Packers' Ltd., $30,000,\nVernon,\nSocieties \u2014 Bird's Landing Community club, Arrow Park.  .\nBuy or sell with a Classified Ad.\nBODY OF VANCOUVER MAN\nFLOWN FROM FAR NORTH\nEDMONTON, July 28 (CP)-Body\not Robert Sampson, 58-year-old\nshipwright employed by the Mackenzie river transport ot the Hudson's Bay Co., was flown to Edmonton today from Fort Smith,\nN. W. T. Former resident of Vancouver, Mr, Samson succumbed to a\nheart attack Tuesday. His body is\nbeing shipped to the coast.\nDiscuss Public\nPosting Prices\nof B. C. Gasoline\nVICTORIA, July 28 (CP)-Pub-\n11c posting of gasoline prices and\nelimination of what the board considers \"special privileges\" were discussed by Dr. W. A. Carrothers,\nBritish Columbia fuel control board,\nchairman, with representative members of the fuel oil industry at a\nmeeting here today.\nNo decisions were reached, but\n'^progress\" was made in the discussions,. Dr. Carrothers said.\nI56J Checks al\nLakeside Park\nThis Season\nWednesday's total ot 280 checks\nbrought the number of checks issued at the elty parcel checking\nbooth at Lakeside park, to 7563\nsince the tooth was opened June\n22 with Mis? Marjorie Teague and\nMiss Zdythe Smythe in charge. Tha\nstand opened on June 22 and by\nthe end of the month had doner 922\nchecks worth of business,\nHighest daily figures were reached during the late torrid spell starting in mid-July.'\nIn spite of this free service given\nby the city,' many swimmers and\nbathers leave their belongings in\nthe dressing rooms and while the\ndally figures may Indicate whether\npark patronage Is large or small,\nthey do not at all indicate the\nnumbers of persons who have been\nin the water, or take any account\nof the : ultltudea present as spectators.\nFollowing  are tha check-room\nfigures up to Wednesday night,\nDAILY FIGURES      .\nJUNE\n22-50;    23-49;   24-1;    2S-.9;\n28-132;   27-21;   28\u2014126;   29-224;\n30-270.      '\nJULY\n1-4; 2-81; 8-104; 4-41;\n5\u2014206; 6-172; 7-242; 8\u201472; 9-172;\n10-227; 11-2-8; 12-278; 13-409;\n1*\u2014399; 15\u2014338; 16-382; 17-484;\n18-353; 19-408; 20-417; 21-390;\n22-398; 23\u2014205; 24-60; 25\u201495;\n26\u2014260; 27\u2014280.\nWomen Traverse\nMount Cattelcuard\nCOLUMBIA ICE FIELD CAMP,\nJasper National Park, Alta., July\n28 (CP)\u2014Women climbers added to\ntheir laurels the first traverse ot\nMount Caste-guard, 10,095 feet high,\nyesterday from the Alpine club\ncamp at the foot of Saskatchewan\nglacier, it was announced today.\nThose making the trip were Miss\nEileen Des Brisay and Miss N.\nFraser ot Vancouver; Elizabeth Cal-\nlan, Halifax; Miss Brenda Stoneham\nand Mn. Edith Maurice of Victoria,\nThe peak was reached ln nine hours.\nBISMA REX\n\"Tht Antacid Powder\"\nQuickly relieves sour stomach, arid dyspepsia, heartburn, etc. Per Package\n751  \u00abrf  fl'BO\nera\nWTiW\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED - SMALL MODERN UN.\nturn, house to Mnt Immediately.\nBox 2537 Dally News.       (2837)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nBing and Lambert cherries for jam\nor wine, 3c op the tree. T. Roynon,\nView Street (2489)\nROWING CLUB DANCE SAT.\nNITE, EAGLE HALL, TROUBA-\nDOR ORCHESTRA. (2685)\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS, F. H.\n8M1TH. 381 Baker 8t  PHONE 8M.\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\n\u25a0\nNotice: All orders taken Friday and Saturday will be charged on your August Account.\nKETCHUP- Clarke Tomato,\nlarge bottles; _____*\n2 for  _ **T\nLAMB STEW or BOILED\nDINNER- tall 16.01. At*\ntins, Clark's; 2 for Wr\nCORNED BEEF\u2014Swifts\nfancy quality, Aust-     Jg|.\nrallan; 2 fo.  **T\nPORK AND BEANS-Royal\nCity, 17-oz. tins; \u2022\u00bb\u00a3*.\n3 for  *3r\nTUNA FISH-Fancy quality,\nsolid meat, <\/e,i;\n2 for\t\n8ALMON-Nabob fancy\nquality Sockeye, >\/_\u2022;    \"\u00bbft_l\n2 tins Xfy\nSPAGHETTI-and tomato\nsauce, tall tins;      ,      !_)_.\n2 for  *Wt\nm\nPEANUT BUTTER-\nSqulrrel, packed In Snow\nWhite and  Seven  Dwarf\nglatiei; *\u00a3_*\n2 for :. **r\nMU8TARD\u2014French's prepar-\n_d.,.-0__..J'__ ; 2#\nJELLY POWDER8-8hlrr.fr\nLuihui, all flavors;\n4 for\t\nm\nSOUP-Campbcll'-        <ycA\ntomato; 3 tins  *3V\nRAISINS-Australlan    _A\nleedleu; 2 Ibs m*T\nMARSHMALLOWS-McCormick's snow white, f jft\nfresh; Mb. cello  **r\n8ERVIETTES\u2014Plain    2_t_\nor colored; 2 pkgs *4<T\nPINEAPPLE JUICE-Del-\nmontc, tall tins; <ysA\n2 for Or\nPEACHE8 OR PEARS-\nLynn Valley; tit*\n2 tins  J**\n8YRUP\u2014Roger's Gold- \\t.m\\\nen; 2-lb. tin *_f>\nCARROT8 and  PEAS-Roy-\nal  City; <%_\n2 tins  W.\nCHOCOLATE ECLAIRS-\nWeston, fresh stock;     \"tfL*\nCOFFEE-Chase A      3Q|i\nSanborn; Mb. tin  AVfr\nFRUIT SALTS-Eno's rnrsA\nlarge bottle  i*r\nBLUE-Reckltt'a _\npacket  ; *r\n8ANI FLU8H-\ntln  ,\t\n25*\nRINSO \u20141 large package\nand 1 regular else; +%*\nall for\t\n80AP-Woodbury-\nfecial; 3 bars \t\nIVORY SOAP-New\nlarge bar; 2 for ...,\u2014\nTOILET 80AP-\nCalay; 4 for \t\n8TOVE POLISH\u2014\nZebra, liquid; bottle .,\nFLOOR WAX-Jonn-\nson's, all kinds; tin ....\nFLOOR WAX-Star\nsoeelal; Mb tin \t\n25*\n25*\nm\nmi\n39*\nFruits and\nVegetables\nPEACHES\u2014Okanagan   _(.\u00bb.\nbasket   3Jr\n19*\n25*\nAPRICOTS-\nbasket\t\nRASPBERRIES-\n4 baskets\t\nHUCKLEBERRIES-    <%stm\\\n3-lb. basket _. Or\nLOGANBERRIES-       tm_\n2 baskets OV\nWATERMELON-\nIb. _\t\n5*\nGRAPES\u2014Red Malagas or\nMack Rlblers; mtCt*\nBANANAS-FIrm      v  )U\nfruit; 3 lbs. Or\n29*\nCANTELOUPS-\nLarge size; 2 for _,\nCANTELOUPS-      <*\u00a3<.\nMedium size; 2 for Or\nAPPLE8-Wealthy;     <%_\n8 ib : mm\nTOMATOES-Fleld;\n3 lbs. \t\n25*\nLETTUCE-Large |M\nsolid heads; 2 for **r\nCORN\u2014 Fresh local\nGolden Bantam;      ag#*\nCARROTS and\nBEETS\u20144 bunches\nPOTATOES-New\n10 Ibs\t\n15*\n25*\nPHONES\n10   and    11\nFREE   DELIVERY\nUPHILL DELIVERY\n9-11 a.m.   2-4 p.m.\nFAIRVIEW\n10 a.m. 3 p.m.\n* At The *\n* Grocery \u00a3\nDANCE AT AINSWORTH SAT.\nNITE. ERNIE LA88CHUTTA Orch.\n(2909)\nSocial. i'-. \u25a0 .\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B.C. - Mrs. 3.\nZambon and ber infa.it son have\nreturned to their home from the\nlocal hospital\nMiss Frances Jackson, ot Milner,\nIs a guest of her uncle and aunt, Mr.\nand Mrs: H. H. Pendry.\nJack Mclnnis Is a patient In the\nlocal hospital.\nMr. and Mrs, D. Powell and family\naccompanied by Mr. and Mrs. W.\nSmeale of Drumhellor, Alta., motored to Nakusp Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. R. Kennett, Miss\nLouise Kennett, and Miss Basel\nFlint motored to Nelson Monday.\nMrs. W. Wildes of Farron, is a\nguest of her uncle and aunt, Mr.\nand Mrs, A. Schnaeble,\nMrs. J. Mcgulre of Slocan City Is\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. S. A.\nChristopherson.\nMrs. J. Greenwood and family of\nSlocan City are guests ot Mr. and\nMrs. S. A. Christopherson.\nBuster Christie of Creston Is vis\niting Mr. and Mrs. J. Draper.\nNew Denver Altar society of St\nAnthony's, church met recently at\nthe home of Miss Rose Zadra, utio\npresided. Miss Zadrn was appointed\nto the committee as a representative\nfoi the hospital garden party, to be\nheld at the home of Dr. and Mrs. A.\nFrancis July 27. Refreshments were\nserved by the hostess.\nKimberley Wins 5-0\nMICHEL, B.C.\u2014The Michel eleven\nsuffered a 8-0 shutout at the hands\nof the .Kimberley Dynamiters at\nNatal ball park in a scheduled\ngame of the Crow's Nest Pass Football league Saturday, July 23, The\nWltr,.for Kimberley practically\ncinched the league championship\nfor them for the third straight year.\nKimberley scored the only goal of\nthe first half when J. McFarlane\nscored.\nMichel lost the services ot the\ninside-left, Cole, when he lett the\nfield early in the second half forcing Michel to finish the game a\nman short With this advantage the\nvisitors scored three goals. The\ngame was refereed by Robert Martin of Michel. The Kimberley goals\nwere scored by Ure with two and\nbrown, J. McFarlane and Forrester\nwith one each.\nThe line-ups:\nMichel\u2014Goal, Beswlck; full backs,\nJenkins and Travis; half backs, J.\nGaskell, Radley, Keeling; forwards,\nMcKenzie, F. Gaskell, Walker, Cole,\nParker.\nKimberley \u2014 Goal, Dicks; full\nbacks, Jones and Gold; half backs,\nG. McFarlane, Greenland, J. McFarlane; forwards! Ness, Forrester,\nBrown, Ure, Smith.\nWanted early Apples and Plums.\nMcDONALD JAM COMPANY.\n(2365)\nSPECIAL - DOUBLE HEADER\nICE CREAM CONES, 6c, GOLDEN\nGATE CAFE. (24\u00ab7)\ni    i\nRemember, only; FRIGIDAIRE\nlaves all four ways, see FRIGIDAIRE first and save. A General Motors Product See them en our floor.\nHlpperson's. (781)\nROWING REGATTA POSTPONED to later date. Tickets sold will\nbe good on that date. (2838)\nCOME TO WOMEN'S INSTITUTE\nDANCE, SALMO COMMUNITY\nHALL TONIGHT, JULY 29. (2818)\nWest Kootenay girls softball play-\noffs, Nelson vs. Trail. Double header Sunday at Civic park. Games\nstarting at 2 and 9:30 p.m.       (2529)\nYou ean now get your used REFRIGERATOR at THE KOOTENAY\nMUSIC HOUSE from $70.00 with\nEasy Terms and a Guarantee.   (708)\nW. I. DANCE, PASSMORE, TONITE. Raspberry supper. INNES\nORCHESTRA. ADM. 88c        (2502)\nCold Pack Canners, \"seven quart\ncapacity, with rack, $2.25. Galvanised Washboller and Rack 8__u_,\nFruit .Presses, Scales, Preserving\nPans, etc at Hlpperson's. (751)\nKeep In touch with events at\nhome and enjoy your vacation all\nthe more. Have the Dally News sent\nto your vacation address.     (19881\nCONNOR gives greater efficiency,\nsaves time, money end clothes. See\nthe CONNOR washers at\nMcKAY A STRETTON\n(706)\nBorn to wealth with Its comforts\nand prominence; sworn to abandon\nthis security and make her own\ncareer to win the man she loves.\nThis, Is the frame-work around\nwhich La built the story \"Two\nWorlds\" now running in the Nelson\nDally News. (2908)\nVERNON\n$14.40\nRETURN\n\u2022 Choice of two routes\n\u00bb   Circle tour at no extra cost\n\u2022 Stopovers allowed\n\u2022 180-day return limit\nGreyhound Lines\nRAINBOW\nHerb I\nPASTELS\n|l something refreshingly different Forsyth hu'\nrobbed the rainbow for these\nall-over pastel tones . \u2022 \u2022 given\nyoa twdve distinctive shades\n.,. Moselle, Capt), Java, Snow\nWhite, Send Bar and many\nothers. And to make your\npleasure complete, Rainbow\nPastels come in \u00abn absolutely\nnew, lustrous and long-wearing fabric... with a tailoring\nthit says custom-made in every\nlioe;\nSee these exclusive shirts now\n,.,. tts display at our store.\nRainbow Pastel SUtts .$2.00\nCravats to harmonize . 1.00\nRainbow Pastel Pajamas 2.90\nRainbow Pastel Shorts .    79C\n\"Ne Oae Eur hfrattaf Barbs Oitttllty\"\nPMGRY^S\n-LIMITED\nSt. Rita's Hall\not Fruitvale Is\nOpened at Dance\nFRU-TVALE, B.C. \u2014 The new\nCatholic hall, St Ritas, was opened\non Wednesday evening, with a\ndance, which was well attended.\nRefreshments were served.\nCommittee in charge of refreshments, consisted of Mrs. D. Murray,\nMrs. E. McHale, Mrs. G. Gustafson\nand Mrs. Ei Gallagher.\nFRANK A. STUART\nLIFE-FIRE \u2014AUTO\nINSURANCE\nPhone 980    577 Baker St.\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 665    610 Kootenay St\n\u00abt_\u00ab-\u00abStt-S$SSStt-\u00ab$i\u00abtt-\u00ab\u00bb$&33-4\n44 TAXI\nCON. CUMMINS\n50c up to 5 passengers\nAny place in the city\n___g$\u00bbtt\u00abtt\u00ab$$tt&&&-S&g\u00ab-&$S<\n\u25a0 \u25a0_\u25a0 \u25a0\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Arts Block\nHot Weekend Specials et\nLEDINGHAIVTS\nHand-made glazed DOUGH- Jfl\/t\nNUTS\u2014per dozen  \"\"\"\nApplesauce and Lemon and 2 _(}\nLime Cakes, each \u25a0\u25a0 ____*\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needs In plumbing repairs, alterations, and\nInstallations.\nPh. 818       801 VICTORIA St\nYOUTH IS DROWNED\nVICTORIA, July 28 (CP).-Ray-\nmund Albert Emmens, 18, was\ndrowned at James Island yesterdtry.\nIt is believed he dived off a wharf,\nhit his head on rocks, was stunned\nand drowned.\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 208 Medical Arts Bldg.\nSEE JACK HOOGERWERF\nStandard Electric\nElectrical\nPHONE 838\nfor\nContracting\n811 WARD 8T.\n'31 Chrysler Sedan\n$375.00\nAt KLINE'S CITY SERVICE\nJack McDowell    Howard Thurman\nTAKE HOME A DOZEN!\nDOUG H N U T S\n. 25<* e doxen\nAT THE\nPERCOLATOR\nE. W. KOPECKI-509 Baker.\nCIVIC\nTODAY\nthe MOST HU\u00bbA\"-(\n\u00a3_^r-'\nONE\nfrom\nand\nEdward C.  Robinson\n. in\n\"The Whole\nTown's Talking\"\nADDED ATTRACTIONS\nAdded\u2014PLANE DEVILS\nComplete at 7:00-8:30\n^\nGENERAL\nMOTORS\nPRODUCTS\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCor. Vernon end Stanley St*. \u25a0 35 PHONES 36\n_\u00ab__\u00bb__-__-___. -\u25a0 \u25a0    \u25a0 Ai--.. .\u25a0\u201e. _.\u25a0____>__\u00ab__\u25a0.\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_1938_07_29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0414641","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"}]}}