{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0414742":{"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":"2022-06-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1939-08-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414742\/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":" ion\nNelson Trounces Rossland\n22-7 in Boxla\nPaga Two\nOIL COMPANIR* CONSIDER WITHDRAWAL\nChamberlain Warns Japan Fie\nHOOD BOILS AT\nONE OF THINGS\nMAT TAKE PLACE\nIs Ready\nbrliament   Adjourns\nI for   Summer   as\nWarning Given\nJEOPENS OCTOBER 3\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (CP).-Parlla-\naiant adjourned for tha Summer\ntodsy with Prime Minister Chamberlain bluntly warning Japan\nthat Great Britain might find It\nneceiiary \"In certain circumstances\" ta send a fleet to the Far\nfast\ni. He did not Indicate what these\nelroumitanees were, but said he\nhoped no oils, W-U'u think it \\V\"\n\"absolutely out of the question for\nsuch elrcumstanees to arise.\"\n\"I do not uy that as a thrsat,\"\nha declared, \"but only as a warn-\nIn..\"\n, With this pointed speech ht\nclosed the stormy session of Parliament, which began Nov,*, 1968s\nand which saw Mm discard his to-\nailed  'appeaiement\"  polley for\nHiding   up  tht   British-French\ni and a peace front In Eu-\nContlnutd on Pagt Stvtn)\nlughter Born\nto Juliana of\nJJTERDAM, Aug. 8 (Saturday)\n).\u2014Crown Princess Juliana of\nNetherlands   presented   the\nouse   of   Orange   with   another\n\u25a0 early today, ' .     \u2022'\"'\u2022\u25a0\nattorn it 1:01a.m.,\n, Friday) at Soestdyk\nPRESS CONVENTION\nSENDS WIRE TO QUEEN\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont, Au*. 4\n(CP).\u2014The convention of the Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association today sent a cablegram\nof birthday greetings to Queen\nElizabeth.\nS. J. Doran of Alameda, Suk.,\ntold delegates attending tne sessions that the history-making vis-\nIt of Their Majesties to the United\nStates accomplished more ln\nthree days than treaties, Ambassadors or commissions could\nachieve ln the stmt number of\nyeart.\nHighway Patrol's\nSafely Campaign\nLaunched Nelson\nCars Are Tested for\nFaul.ty Brakes and\nHeadlights\nSafety campaign ot tht Provincial Police\u2014testing cars and trucks\ntot brakes and safe headlights-\nopened in Nelson Friday, with\ntour officers ot the Highway Patrol participating ln the broke testing, and additional officers assisting ln light tests.\nPercentage of bad brakes discovered In Friday's tests waa unexpectedly high, officers stated.\nThe tests will continue today.\nPttrol officers stated the work\nwould be facilitated greatly, and\nIndividuals would be delayed much\nlets, if they had their driver's licence and motor vehicle registration slip handy when flagged down.\nPurpose of the campaign is to\ntest as many can as possible tor\ntwo ot the major causes of accidents\u2014Faulty brakes and' Improperly adjusted headlights.\nAt the same time the officers\nconducting the safety campaign are\nchecking windshields, windshield\nwlpen, horns, mufflers, registration slips, driver's licences, chauffeur, licences, tall lights, plates\nand so on,\nMembers ot the Highway Patrol,\nand H. A, Lees, Nelson.\nAssisting in the light tests were\nConstables C. W. House and G. S.\nBlaney of the Nelson District detachment; and Acting Chief Robert\nHarshaw of the Nelson City Police.\nBrake tests were carried out on\nGovernment Road, at the west entrance to the city in the 200 Block,\nBaker Street, and on Nelson Avenue. Light tests were made in the\n200 Block, Baker Street.\nNEW BOAT IDEAL\nFOR DEFENCE OF\nCANADA'S (OAST\nBy PAID N. BACKHOUSE\nSOUTHAMPTON, England, Aug.\n4 (CP)\u2014A new Brltlsh-bullt motor\ntorpedo boat hu been developed\nwhich Flight-Commander Claude\nGraham-White, the manufacturer,\nthinks should be ot the greatest\nInterest to the Canadian government ln considering the defence ot\nthe Dominion's extensive coastlines.\nthe torpedo boat can carry two\n21-inch torpedoes, one 37 mm. automatic cannon, one\t\nchine-gun\nYet when it was\nlittle kingdom in almost a\n. Princess Beatrix, the first child of\nhe 30-year-old* Juliana and 28-year-\nsld German Prince Bernhard, was\nI year old last January 31.\nThe hour was such that the genital public, long anticipating tho\nWent, was not aware of the birth\n[the baby.\n\u25a0. Iba announcement was made\n)riefly by ticker services to newspapers. At 7 a.m. the news was\nwoken to the public by a salute of\nSI guns\u2014signifying the birth of a\ndrl. A 101-gun salute would have\n>een fired tor a boy.\nDisappointment, because of the\n\"nee of a  male heir for the\none now held by.Queen Wil-\nwas expected to be offset\nloyal Netherlanders' joy over a\nyal birth when the event became\nnerally known.\nluto Agreement to\nBe voted on Today\nDETROIT, Aug. 4 (AP-.\u2014Executives of the United Automobile\n\u25a0 Workers (Congress of Industrial\nOrganisations) tonight ratified\nthe details of an agreement to\nsettle the month-old strike of\nskilled workers in 12 General\nMotors plants.\nTomorrow the strikers themselves will vote at their respective\nplants on accepting or rejecting\nIhe agreement.\nMILITARY MISSION\nARRIVES AT LONDON\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (CP) - The\niFrench military mission proceed-\nTfai  to Moscow for Anglo-Franco-\niovlet general staff talks srrived\nrre late today.  The  mission  is\nladed by General Joseph Dou-\nlenc. With members of the Brit-\nt mission they will leave Tilbury\nnarrow  aboard  the  S.S.   City\nExeter for Leningrad. \u25a0\nVANCQUVERMAN\nIS LEGION HEAD\nKAMLOOPS, B. C, Aug, 4 (CP)\n\u2014William McKinstry of TColling-\nwood Branch No. 16, Vancouver,\nwas reelected president of the\nBritish Columbia Provincial Command of the Canadian Legion, British Empire Service League today.\nHis reelection mirrored the conventions' demand that recommendations of the Veterans' Assistance\nCommission should be Implemented, for Mr. McKinstry has been\na vigorous advocate of this policy.\nAlthough there had been some\nsuggestion that there should be no\nprovincial convention in 1940 because of the scheduled Dominion\nmeeting, the delegates accepted the\ninvitation of New Westminster.\nElected first vice-president was\nCapt. R. B. Longridge of Duncan,\nformerly of Kamloops, who had\nbeen absent from office for a year,\nsecond vice-president Is R. J.\nLaurie of Cranbrook, and third\nvice-president is A. Baddely of\nSeattle, Wash., Branch.\n2 Die in Air Crash\nOXFORD, England, Aug. 4 (CP)\n\u2014Peter Phillips, son of the Vicir\nof Moulsford, was killed and Flying Officer Pettigrew gravely Injured when their plane crashed\nnear Goring today.\n60 calibre ma-\nand six depth bombs.\nmt through U-\nptces here lt looked no more deadly than a river Thames pleasure\nlaunch.\nAt a performance demonstration\nbefore the A^miralt* rnn-mT** and\nnewspapermen the vessel attained\na speed ot 46 knots, or more than\n63 m.p.h.\nCarrying a crew of six the craft\ncan be used for convoying mercantile shins: in coastal waters, chasing and destroying enemy submarines and ships and laying smoke\nscreens rapidly and efficiently,\nAnti-British F\nRiwtsHlghJnCh.ua\nJapanese-\nfismer Denies Report He Would\nArrange Compromise, Doukhobors\nDRIA,   Aug,   4\u2014'Attorney\nneral Gordon Wismer denied to-\nreport attributed him that\nat British Columbia Government\nould   eventually   arrange   some\nnpromlse enabling Doukhobors in\nbe Kootenay area to remain in\nheir homes and that the Govern-\nnent might put up cash to satisfy\nhe Sun Life Assurance Company\n\" at was seeking to foreclose a mort-\n(age on Doukhobor lands.\n; The Attorney General said he had\n0 no such intimation.\nfeel that it is of importance\nboth the Doukhobors snd the\n\u2022ompany should not get a false Im-\niresslon of the attitude of the Gov\nnment. The Government is natur-\ni anxious to coopera'c ln the settlement between the parties but has\nno assurance of financial as-\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP).-'l\nhave heard nothing of it\" A. C. Des\nBrlsay, solicitor tor the Sun Lite\nAssurance Co. ot Canada said today\nwhen told that Doukhobors have\nasked the company's loan Inspector,\nR. N. Wilson, to stay al proceedings\nuntil Aug. 16 to give him an opportunity to arrange for the repurchase\nof the foreclosed lands.'\nMr. Wllsdn was out of town today.\nMrs. DesBrisay said thtt Mr. Wilson's affidavit, which will be read\nto the court on Monday, when the\nSun Life applies to Mr. Justice\nMurphy for committal of Sheriff M.\nE. Harper, of Nelson, for alleged\nfailure to evict the Doukhobor occupants, indicated that large majority of the Doukhobors were prepared to enter into arrangements\nwith the Sun Life for the repurchase ot their holdings.\nThe Sun Life's solicitor doubted\nwhether the latest Doukhobor proposal would affect the application\npending against the Sheriff.  '    ' \u2022\nBrilish Offices\nTIENTSIN, Aug: 4 (AP). - A\nmob of Chinese,, tald by Britons to\nhave been Japanese-instigated, today attacked the Tientsin offices\not the British International Export\nCorporation, smashed all moveable\nequipment and tossed it into the\nHai River,\nBritish -and Chinese\" employees\noi the concern took refusge in ad.\nJoining property of tha Texas Oil\nCompany,.  .'. it-.,:'.\nUnconfirmed reports said anti-'\nAmerican demonstrations occurred\nIn Kaifeng, Honan Province. It was\nunderstood the United Stales Con-\nsul-General, Clarence J. Splket, ln\nHankow, protested to the Japanese\nConsulate - General against anti-\nAmericanism in Kaifeng.\nusTandthTssia\ncontinue trade\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (AP>-\nThe' United States and Soviet Rus-\n'sia agreed todty to continue In\neffect an agreement whereby Russia will buy a minimum ot $40,000,-\n000 in American goods In the next\n12 months and the United States\nwill accord Russia the same tariff\nreductions as countries with which\nlt has trade agreements.\nWith respect to Soviet coal shipments to the United States, Russia\nagreed to-restrict Its exports in\nthe next 12 months to 400,000 tons.\nThis was considered necessiry because of the coal-tax provisions\nof the Revenue Act ot 1632. During the 1637-36 agreement year,\nImports ot Soviet coal into the\nUnited States were 168,364 tons\nand in the first nine months of the\n1938-39 agreement year, 134,154 tons.\nAlthough the pact sets 640,000,000\nas the minimum Soviet purchases\nhere, officials forecast Soviet orders In excess ot this sum,\n\"Down with Britain; rebuild China,\"-read tome\nof the posters carried by Chinese residents of Tsingtao during the Japanese-Inspired anti-British parade recenUy. This feeling ran so high that many\nparaders ran amok, doing considerable damage to\nthe British property ln the city. Thla high feeling\namong tome of tha Chinese Is adding to Ihe Far\nEast problems of Britain, faced with blockades in\nother cities. Note the similarity of the csps worn\nby the Chinese members of the \"New People's\nSociety,\" at right, and the military caps of Japanese troops.\nDogs Trail Hen\nThought to Have\nStarted B.(. Fires\nBy The Csnsdlsn Press\nBritish Columbia Police\ntrained. dogs yesferdty (Friday)\nthey\" sought persona believed responsible for setting a serial of forest fires in the Southern Interior.\n. Meantime man employed by tht\nNational Parks Branch and tht\nBritish Columbia Forest Service\nfought a blue covering a large area\nin Mount Revelstoke National Park\narea, also believed to be ot incendiary origin. \u2022 i\nNo relief was ln sight from the\ndangerous' fire situation which has\ndeveloped Jn the interior this week\nas temperatures remained high and\nhumidity low.\nThe largest fires ln Kamloops District are near Tappen, seven miles\nWest of Salmon Arm, snd are being\nfought 'by a crew ot 166 men.\nPolice slid five of the series ot\nblazes were set Sunday on tha Eatt\nside of White Creek and 14 lit Tuesday on the Skimlkln Creek in Turtle\nValley,\nProvincial Police from Salmon\nArm, Chase md Slcamous ire working together, employing several\ntrained police dogs in the search.\nThe fire ln Mount Revelstoke arei\nIs about four miles North of Revel\nLEGION SUPPORTS\n\"WAR\" PRINCIPLE\nKAMLOOPS,1 B. C, Aug. 4 (CP)\n\u2014The British Columbia command\nof the Canadian Legion todsy went\non record as supporting the principle that when the British.Empire\nor any, part of It it nt, war, Canada\nIs automatically at war. ,\nEarlier the convention voted its\niprccatlon to the' Vancouver\nich of the Amputation Assocla-\n    \u2022    \"          ' '   the\na-SS^MTp1\nhaa allowance tor unemployed\nex-service men of Canida.\"\npro. 'red.v\nJAPANESE BID\nPARLEY, ITALY\nstoke along the Big Bend Highway.\nAnother fire is being combatted by\na large crew about 12 miles North | polltlcti and economic discussions\nof the Kooteniy city. on tho delegation's arrival.\nROME, Aug. 4 (AP). \u2014 The Japanese ambassadors to'. Rome and\nBerlin today ended a two-day con\nterence at Lake Como In which they\nwere stated to have considered\nJapanese adherence to the Italian'\nGerman military alliance.\nA Jipmese informant Slid they\ncabled \u2022 detailed report to Tokyo\nand would return to their posts to-\nSorrow to await Instructions from\nair home government.\nThe possibility ot increased Jipmese collaboration with the Rome-\nBerlin axis is to be explored with\nFascist and Nui leaders by i delegation from Jipan due Aug. 20 in\nNaples.\nThe conference of-the envoys\nfrom Rome and Berlin, Toshlo Shi-\nratori and Lleut.-Gcncral Hiroshl\nOshima, wis seen as laying the\ngroundwork for. extensive military,\nKelowna Hospital\nBylaw Is Endorsed\nKELOWNA, B. C; Aug. 4 (CP).-\nKelowna property owners todsy endorsed a new 6140,000 Hospital Aid\nBylaw by a majority of 466 to 42.\nWork will commence Immediately\non the building.\nFRENCH SEAPLANE INDS\nFLIGHT FROM U. S.\nBORDEAUX, Frince.,Aug. 4\n(AP)\u2014The French seaplane Ville\nde Saint Pierre arrived at Bit-\ncsrrose airport at 6:16 p.m.\n(6:16 a.m. PST) today, completing a survey flight from Port\nWashington. N. Y. The plmt\nflew nonstop from Botwood,\nNfld.\nFOREST INDUSTRY NEEDS\nECONOMIC CONSERVATION\nDUCHESNAY, Que., Aug. 4 (CP).\n\u2014The Canadian forestry Induitry\nneeds an \"Intelligent combination\"\nof conservation ind exploitation on\nan economic basis, R. A. Mclnnis\nof Quebec, President of the Canadlm Pulp & Paper Association, declared today it the Summer meeting\not the Association's Woodlands'\nsection.\nFIRST MASKED MARVEL DIES\nROCHESTER, N. Y, Aug, 4 (AP).\n-Mort Henderson, believed to have\nbeen professional wrestling's first\n\"masked marvel\" died today at the\nage'of 60.\nHenderson started his career In\nthe twilight days of the lite Frank\nGotch, wrestling opponents from\ncoast fd coast with i knitted hood\nover his heid md fice.       ft\nVICTORIA, Aug\nfires netr the Ha\nhere destroyed '\nand Mrs. James\nthreatened two otl\n(CP>.-*Bush\npy'Valiejt roed\n\u25a0\/Tiome of Mr.\nttld todayl and\nhouses.\nLightning Storm, Nakusp Area, Starts\nFour Fires; Five Others in District\nA lightning storm that iwept over\nan eight-mile front from Nakusp to\nNewiDenver md then North-East-\nwSrd, played havoc with the forest\nfire situation in those districts early\nFriday morning, starting four new\nfires that were accounted-for, md\npossibly others that may spring up\nat any time. About 384 distinct flashes of lightning were counted at Nakusp md little rain accompanied\nthe storm. One of the tires was in\nthe Nakusp area md three near\nNew Denver.\nBesides the new fires in thote\nareas, ode new one was reported on\nMarsh Creek in tho Nelaon district\nand four in the Invernlere country.\nGrind Forks md Cnnbrook dis\ntricts were free from fires, ud lt\nwas thought all flrei throughout the\nNelson forest dlitrict were under\ncontrol.\n. The one new blase near Nakuip\nwat ibout 7000 feet up near the\nOkanagan divide at the held ot\nLedge Creek, North of Margie Lake.\nIt li on the Weat ilde of the Arrow\nLikes opposite Hslcyon, md a little\nto the South. No men were tent to\nit. at lt wis so high up, but It wis\nbeing, kept under observation.\nThe three new firea ln the New\nDenver district were all in the Mill\nCreek area, opposite New Denver\non Slocan Lake, One small fire was\nsoon brought under control by three\nmen, while a crew of 41 had a tecond, fire surrounded at the top and\nwere working down both tides.\nOn the West fork of Wilson Creek,\nwhich flows into Slocin Lake at\nRosebery, a small patrol hid gone\nIn to a fire far back in the hills. A\nlookout reported the fire appeared\nto be under control.\nLARDEAU FIRE SPREADS\nA high wind early' Friday morning spread the Cascade Creek fire\nln the Lardeau across the creek to a\nspot hilf \u2022 mile from the main fire,\nPart ol the crew of 20 sent out from\nNelson Thurtday morning was assigned to the hew spot md it was\nexpected it would be under control\nby Friday night, -,.'\u2022    -.\nThe new fire on Marsh Creek,\nwhich flows into Beaver Creek from\nthe' North near Frultvile covered\nibout one acre md was brought under control by 24 men about 11\no'clock Fr(day morning.- The fire\nwas seven miles up the creek near\nthe headwaters.\nThree men were still patrolling\nthe Thrums fire,\nBURNING IN PEAT\nKitchener's fire, one mile-North\nef the airport, waa,beginning to\nburn into a peat bog. and reports\nstated if it wu not out by Friday\nnight, with the use of two pumps,\ntn Irrigation ditch would be turned\nInto It\nNtw fires ln the Invermere district were on Blaeberry Creek,\nBUSh River, No. 2 Creek of Horse\nThief Creek md Little Vermillion\nCreek.\nThe Blaeberry Creek blaze was\nonly small, according to meager reports. The Bush River fire, opposite\nSurprise Rapids on the West side of\nthe Columbia In the Big Bend country, waa thought to be under control. ,\nOn Hone Thief Creek, which\nflows into the Columbia from the\nWest, North of Invermere, 12 men\nwere believed to have.brought the\nfire under control.\nSeventeen men were sent fir In\nto battle the Uttle Vermillion Creek\nfire, and were believed to have lt\nunder control.\nStill fighting the old Marlon\nCreek blue, 60 men hid the bottom\nand both tides blocked oft, md were\nallowing the tire to burn Itself out\namong the rocks high on the mountainside. It was well controlled. No\nreport was .received from the Pilli-\nser River fire, indicsting it was also\nttfpswnUyamtroUed.\nPostman Hurt in\nHew Explosions\n.LONDON, Aug. 4 (CP)-Explot'\nIons officially attributed to Irish\nRepublican Army terrorists occur'\n.f*^to;ift.;.fmir!. -Yorkshire\nis\u2014Bradford, Blackburn, Pres-\nowntH\nton and Halifax\u2014injuring ii postman and destroying a quantity ot\nmall, \" TV '\nIn Blackburn, Frank Verity, a\npostal employee, was slightly burned on the wrists' while smothering\na fire in a rnailbsg. At the same\nmoment, on the same street, sn\nexplosion was heard and,,flames\nburst from a letter box. Fragments\nof a rubber balloon which apparently, contained incendiary sub-\nstances were found in the debris.\nAs a mail train was leaving Preston railway station, thick white\nsmoke- Issued from one car. The\nconductor, who said he first heard\n\u25a0n explosion, jerked the stop signal and the station. employees put\nout the fire.\nNIGHT BASEBALL\nWESTERN international:\nBellingham 7, Vancouver 3.\nYakima 8, Wenatchee 10.\nSpokane 1, Tacoma 9,\nPACIFIC COABT:\nPortland 3, Hollywood 6.\nLos Angeles 6, Sacramento 1,\nPONTOON BRIDGE FOR\nDANZIG FREE CITY AND\nGERMAN EAST PRUSSIA\nDANZIG, Aug. 4 (AP).-A new\npontoon bridge flouted at a Danzig\ndock tonight ready to be thrown\nacross the Vistula River and fill the\nmost serious gap In land communications between the Free City ot\nDanzig md German East Prussia.\nThe bridge, about 25 feet wide\nmd supported by 24 pontoons, will\nconnect the two Free State communities of Kaesmark and Rotebude,\nUie latter some 12 miles from the\nEast Prussian irontier.\nMin. Max.\nNELSON \u25a0    60 95\nVictoria    _    52 74\nNanaimo     55 77\nVmcouver     '55 74\nKamloops-    62 97\nPrince George  -  49 63\nEstevan Point    52 61\nPrince Rupert    50 60\nLangara    49 60\nAtlin.  -    39 54.\nDawson, Y. T   40 67\nSeattle    56 76\nPortland ....:    68 85\nSm Francisco    57 70\nSpokine    63 96\nPenticton      69 \u2014\nVernon     61 \u2014\nKelowna       58 94\nGrind Forks     58 99\nKatlo    59 \u2014\nCranbrook   61 94\n49 91\nn       49 90\nSwift Current ..   55 92\nMoose Jaw   65 67\nPrince Albert ....-._   57 94\nSaskatoon    52 94,\nQu'Appelle    82 95\nWinnipeg   :...  51 88\nForecasts: Kootenay\u2014Fresh westerly winds, mostly fair and slightly cooler.\nWater  level   at  Nelson   Friday\nnight, 4.32 feet above the low water\nCalgary\nEdmonton\n-SENATOR FARRIS\nWon! Sell Gallon\nof Gas in B. C. if\nReduction Ordered\nFarris Says Instructed Was \"Not to Say This\nPreviously Because It Would Have\nSounded Like a Threat\"\nVICTORIA, Aug. 4 (CP). \u2014 Senator |. W. deB Farrls\ntold Chief.Justice Archer Martin today British Columbia Oil\nCompanies have been \"compelled to the serious consideration\nof whether they can continue to sell a single gallon of gas In\nthis province.\"\nHis remark was made in Supreme Court during argument\non an application by a group of oil companies for contlnuitfon\nof an injunction restraining the Brilish Columbia Ccvsmmsnt\nfrom enforcing an ordered gasoline price reduction.\nDECISION TODAY AT NOON \"1\nThe Chief Justice said he will hand down hla deeltlort\nin the injunction application at noon Saturday. ,     '\u25a0:,\u2022\nSenator Farris said the chief factors preventing the companies from asking such a step was their $30,000,000 Investment in British Columbia and' -\nthe advice of their counsel that\nthey have a good chance of\nwinning an appeal now pend\ning before the Supreme Court\nof Canada on the validity of\nthe Rrovincial Coal'and Petroleum Products C o nt.r o I\nBoard Act under which the\nprice reduction was ordered.\nSenator Farrls slid he had been\nlnttructed \"not to say this previously because it would have sounded\nlike, a threat.\" The Chief Justice\nraised the point, however, when he,\nasked Semtor Firrls If the oil companies were under any compulsion\nto continue selling. gasoline \u25a0.in. the\nProvince. \\ l ,      ''\u25a0\"\n\"I have no doubt that If orden\nsuch as have been Issued by the\nFuel Boird are persisted in, not a\ngallon of gasoline will be sold In\nBritish Columbia,\" he said.\nThen he idded: \u25a0 \u25a0   \u2022\n\"The public are not worrying\nover the price ot gis. They ire\nworrying over newspaper reports\nthat the gas tax will be increased\nto create additional road funds.'\nPEOPLE CONCERNED\nAttorney-General Gordon S. Wismer, presenting the Crown's case\nagainst the injunction proceedings,\nInterrupted: \"You have no Justification for such a statement. A lot\nof poor people are deeply concerned over the price of gasoline.\"\nThe Chief Justice instructed Senator Farris to confine his srgu-\nments to the application.\nAfter Attorney-General Wismer\nhad conducted his arguments, the\nChief Justice asked if there were\nany way in which the three-cent\ngasoline decrease could be \"put Into\na fund\" until the case was considered by higher courts.\nMr. Wisemr said this would be Impossible, because the money could\nnot be refunded to Individual gasoline purchasers, many thousands of\nthem tourists.\nSenator Firrls argued in reply\nthat while Mr. Wismer claimed It\nIs too late to issue an order restraining the Fuel Board from enforcing its reduction, the situation\nwas the same as when Mr. Justice\nA. M. Manson granted an injunction against the board's first price-\nreducing order some months ago.\nThe loss to the oil companies\nwould be $1,500,000 per year, he\nsaid, while the public, composed\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nWoman\nStatus Topic ol\nKamloops Women\nKAMLOOPS, B. C, Aug. 4 (CP>\n\u2014The status of tha woman pan*\nsloner wu the chief topic ot discussion at sessions ot the British\nColumbia Women's Provincial Command ot the Canadian Legion, In\nannual convention it the Ormga\nHall here, \u201e   ..    \u25a0,\nFour resolutions wer* ddopte*\nand forwarded to the men'a convention, The women urged:\n1-Continuatlon ot the vetertn'a\nallowance to the widow.\n2\u2014Free medical assistance ta\nveterans of small incomes. (On*\nresolution urged tuch assistance\nto veterans and their families but\nthe convention thought thla waa .\nasking too much),\n3\u2014Amendment otthe wai veteran's allowance legislation to provide a widow's pension of not lata\nthin 620 per month for tuch time\nis she should remain a widow;\n4\u2014The same assistance to Imperial veterans In Canidi u It given\nto Canadian veterans resident ln\nGreat Britain.\nConveying an assurance that the\nWomen's Auxiliary to tha British ,\nColumbia Command hit the same\nimplicit confidence in Brljadler W.\nW. Foster's ability md integrity\nas the legion itself, a telegram waa\ndispatched to Mrs. Foster at Vancouver today,\nCarols Lombard\n\"Okay\" Sayi Gablt\nHOLLYWOOD, Aug. 4 (AP) \u2014\n\"She's okay,\" said Clark Gable\nto friends who telephoned today\nat a hospital to ask about hia wife,\nCarole Lombard, Miss Lombard.\n111 for two days, was taken to tha.\nhospital late last night for an -\nemergency appendectomy.\nDIES  IN   AIR CRASH\nURBANA, 111., Aug. 4 (AP) \u2014\nLeonard Field, Dakito City, Nebr,\nkilled ind his companion,\nHarry R. Ely, Fort Collins, Colo,\nwas criticslly injured tonight when\nan airplane, piloted by Field, crash-\ned here.\nCanadian Legion Urges Tightening\nof Naturalization laws ol Canada\nKAMLOOPS, B. C\u201e Au<. 4 (CP).-\nA resolution urging thit the Dominion's Naturalization Laws be\ntightened wis .adopted here today\nby the British Columbia command\nof the Canadian Legion, British Empire Service League.\nThe resolution \u2014 Presented by\nCaptain M. F. Macintosh, Conservative Member of the British Columbia Legislature for The Islands asked that each applicant should be\n\"carefully and personally\" questioned by Royal Canadian Mounted\nPolice to \"ascertain the degree of\nloyalty that can be expected of such\napplicant, such reported to be given\ncareful consideration in the acceptance or rejection of the applicant.\"\nPreamble to the resolution said It\nis considered thit the methods,\nform md procedure under which\nresident aliens are permitted to acquire Canadian citizenship are inadequate.\nThe resolution isked that the convention petition Parliament to enact\nlegislation embodying six principles designed to correct deficiencies in the naturalization procedure.\nThe six were:\nThat every applicant for naturalization produce evidence of character covering his adult life, such\nevidence to be examined and sub-\nmark, compired with 4.45 feet on ject to ipproval of an officer of the\nThursday night, md 4.55 feet Wed-[Royal Canadian Mounted Police;\nncsday night. Every applicant for naturalization\nmust be carefully and personally\nquestioned by an officer of the R. C.\nM. P. in order to ascertain ss nesrly\nas possible the degree of loyalty thit\ncould be expected ot such in applicant;\nABLE READ, WRITE\nIN  ENGLISH\nThat the applicant nave minimum\neducational qualifications\u2014able to\nread and write-in English\u2014and that\na hand book containing a simple history of the political md social usages ot Canadi be provided applicants;\nThat a date be set, within a reasonable length ot time, and that all\naliens now residing in Canadi, (excepting those who by reason of rice\nare ineligible for citizenship), md\nwho hive resided In Canada for five\nyears or more, be instructed to mike\napplication for naturalization betore\nthat date, all those neglecting to\ncomply md those filling to quality\nfor citizenship under the conditions\nset up to be deported forthwith;\nCitizenship be conferred upon\nsuccessful applicants in groups aa\nfir as practicable;\nAll aliens now resident In Canada\nor who shall at my future date en-1\nter Canada, be not employed in my\ncapacity in any public wiy, whether Dominion or Provincial, or in\nwork on my project to, or controlled by, the Dominion or my Provincial Government,\n mmm\n\u25a0\n.\nAGE  TWO \u25a0\nDave Gibbons Sets New Goaliending\nRecord as loafs Trounce Rossland\nRedmen 22-7 in Box lacrosse Here\nShuts Out the Visitors for 3 Vz Periods; George\nBishop Becomes League-Leading\nScorer\nwho ilngle-hinded made a game\nout of It the lut time here, banged\nin a goal thit mide the score 18-1\non t play on which Gibboni' vltw\nirtlilly blocked. Only half a\nland scond their\na lucky ihot from\nEitibllshment of new recordi ll\nbecoming \u2022 common occurrence on\nthe Nelion lacrosse floor md Dave\nGibbons, sparkling Lead' netmlnder, Fridiy night ut t mark at leut\nlor tht Weit Koottnay Ltigue whan\nhe thut out tht Roultnd Redmm\nJor two periodi and nearly aevan\nminutei of the third. Nelson finally\nwon a, weird gam* by a 22-7 ieore.\nLut week with the Redman igiln\nis opponents, Nelion iet a couple\not icoring recordi tnd seemed well\non the wiy to tome mort last night,\natter piling up an 18-0 lead, fell\nback into the claying wiys of the\nRedmen md the game wound up\nwith good licroiit almost a minus\nquantity,\nGibboni wai uslly th* ihlnlng\nlight u he performed spectacularly\nbetween the Nelson pipes to hold\nthe visitors scoreless for 36 2-3 minutes, to be exact. He didn't hive an\nexceptionally hird time ot It but\nwhit he had he htndled faultlessly.\nMost of the few shots Roulind\nptlted it him were difficult, however. Whit conceivibly might have\npttn the turning point in his brilliant pliy was a painful now Injury\nsuffered In th* eirly minutu of\ntht third. A bluing Rossland drive\nbanged him hard on the muk and\nbruised hli schnonle, dating him\njor a few minutei.\nShortly ifter, George Anderson,\nBOYS I GIRLS:\nWRITE TODAY FOR A\nFree Movie Camera\nCHARM STUDIO\nBOX 144 VICTORIA, B. C.\n?\n-NILION  DAILY NIWS. NILION, I. C.-8ATURDAY MORNINO. AUO. 5, 1MS-\niii\nmlnu'tt later Rouland icortd thtlr\nlecond counter on a lucky\t\nDugan that Laface difltctcd Into\nthe net, Laface getting credit tor\nthe goal. The crowd, again decidedly for the underdogl, five the Red-\nmtn a trcmendoui hmd for bruk-\nIng the goose egg,\nIn th* lut period although food\nplaying wu nearly alwayi ibttnt,\nvirious comedy acta kept the fans\nintereited, md Ace Bailey was ml*\ndt up In nearly all of It The graat\nAct, who nearly loat his pant* la\nthli teuton, finally took ott hit\nfeithen, weiring thtm ln rul In\ndian ityle on his head tor tha first\nthree periods, for the lut canto and\ntried to rally hli filtering forcei.\nHe himself, though, didn't do much\nln tha way ot attack but Rosilind\nfound the hemp to .'.core four goals\nto Nelson'i on* in the final.\nBISHOP THREE POINTS\nGeorge Biihop itepped Into the\nicorlng leadenhip of the Ltigue\nwith thrt* polnta, bruklng away\ntrom a first-place ti* with Booney\nSammartino of Trail. Gtorgt now\nhue 62 polnta.\nBut the night'i scoring honon\nwtr* carried otf by Albert Mix-\nwell. The lightweight forward itar,\nmining sevenl utup chancta u lt\nwai, ptlted in iivan goali put tha\nbewildered Dickie Burgess ln the\nRouland net Albert muit find tht\nCivic Arena especially to hii liking\nfor that mtdt 18 goals for him in\nthe lut three home games, in average ot ilx a gamt.\nNot tir behind ln point-getting\nwu Pit Egm who driUod homt\ntour goali, adding thru ueliti lor\nMvtn pointa.\nNelson took tar the wont ot lt\non tne penalty sheet with 36 mln-f-\nuum, ijtiim Roaatend'i 14, IU ol\nwhich went to Bailey. Tht Lean\nsuffered ID minutu in the htcllc\nthird union whtn th* mott tacit-\ning ictlon ot the contest took place.\nAt ont tlmt when Roisland wu al\nmil itrtngth and with Gibbon tuu\nin pollution at bu mut out Ntlion had iour man In th* hoosegow,\nbut still th* giMnihlrti staved otf\nth* viiiton.\nMIOTIC ACTION\nShoU wer* Hying around Gibbons' sanctum in rapid tin order\nbut halt Oi them were wty wide\ntl th* ovir-inxioui R\u00abdm*n uldoni\ntook lim. At on* tim* Olbboru,\nwtivtd nearly tha wheit length oi\nUve floor when be Couldn't fina *ny-\nont to pus lt to. Fimlly after several minutei of succeului rigging\nIn which the pity btctm* wlla inu\nwoolly, Maxwell broil* tway to\n..core tht IB goal whist hli team wu\ntwo mtn theft\nOoAtll OOOD\nAlthough on* ol tht big dlfftr\nences In tht two turns wu th* goal\ntending, don't think thit Dlckit\nBurgeu didn't pliy I grind girne.\nHaving no define* wnitivtr ter\nmeat el th* gama, ht ktpt out\n31 sholi, miny ett which WO* tick-\neted for goali. Stvtral ot hit itopi\nbordered on th* pltenomenil.\nMia DuBrUty aad Iu Dingwall,\nboth miking thtlr first apptiranct\nIn Nelton of tht uuon, didn't tik*\nlong la putting thalr mmti on\nthe scoruhutt. On th* flnt pliy\nafter thty tint cam* en tht floor.\nthey combined for Hilton'* ucond\ngoil, with Dingwall on the acorlng\nend. Ian pliyed wtll on th* attack\nand got a total of five polnti. Du-\nBrlsay WM tffectlv* 00 dttthct.\nBoth team* wan ihort *tv\u00abru ot\ntheir itan. Roulind wu mlnui iuch\natalwarta u Rou Saundry, Al Simm\nand Ernlt Cirkner, and their rt-\nplicemtnti, recruited from Junior\nrinks, f\u00bbll*d to fill th* bill Freddy\nGravei, Jock Wafmilty. P\u00abt* Bon-\n..\u00ab.'.\u00ab \u00abim AWL Hooker witched\nthe gime from th* ttdtlinti mt\nNelion.\nGuide for Travellers\ni\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nc=t\njHlime Hotel Nelson, B* C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS     EXCEUENT DINING ROOM '\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHOME*'-' Wi Humphrey, Winnipeg; W. Shiw, H. Tewkibury, Mr,\nand Mrs. H. S. Perklni, George W.\nHewett, Calgary; Mr. and Mn. E.\nM. Sime, D. J. McAlmon, G. M.\nThorn, % Baldock. Penticton; Constable ud Mri. John Henry, Castle-\ngar; Mr. and Mrs, W. II. Swain,\nDouglas and'Helen, MA >Ad Mn.\nP. L. Malcolm, Toronto; Mrs. Ralph\nIslip, Nakusp; p. M. O'Brien, Nelson; A. Andenon, Medicine Hat;\nMr. and Mn. J. P. Warner, John\nJ. Stanford, Spokane; F. J. McNaughton, Cranbrook; R. E. Iimon,\nC. Cleveland, W. H, Ness, Vmcouver.    .\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nADDITION OF NEW ROOMS WITH BATH\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietor! ,\nEuropean Plan f 1.00 and Up.\nFREE PARKING BLK. FROM CIVIC CENTRE PH 234\nKOKANEE LODGE\nROOMI      *    MEALS      \u2022    CABIN8\nExultant Culiln* \u2014 Deed Beach\nOn North Shore ot\nKooteniy  Like  IU\nmiles from\nNelson\nAINSWORTH AND KASLO RESORTS\nA DELIGHTFUL DRIVE FOR\nSUNDAY DINNER\nAt AINSWORTH HOT\nSPRINGS HOTEL\nTBI PER PLATE\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n(\"YOUR VANCOUVER  HOME\"\nDuff erin Hotel\n800 Seymour It,   Vineouvir, B, C.\nNewly renevittd throughout Phonei and tltvator.\nA. PATERSON. Ute ot\nColemm, Alta. Proprietor.\niPOKANE Hotels and Restaurants\nTrail-Rider Sees Grizzlies Above\nHim in Crossing Canada HorseMg\nBurrardi Drop\nNorth Short 18-12\nVANCOUVER. AIK 4 (CP) -\nVancouver Burrardi toppted North\nShore Indiini, 11-12. in in later-\nCity Box Lacrone Ltagut gtmt\nhere  tonight.\nThe victory give Burrirds t\nfour point lud ovtr tht second-\npltc* Ntw Westminster Adanacs\nwith Si points. Ntw Wtitmlnitir\nSilmonbtllles ire in third- spot\nwith i4 points, Richmond Farmers,\nfourth with 14 and Indian*\u2014who\nht** won only one genu thii year\n\u2014at* In th* cellar with two polnti.\nRoultnd:\nBurgeu, g....\nBilley, d\t\nJohniton, d.\nNell, d\t\nLynn, d\t\nDugan, r .\n\u25a0OX BOOM\nOAPtP.\n0  0  0  0\nForrut, r _..._._.  1\nOstrlkoff, c...-\t\nAndenon, c ........\nCouture, w .\nJorgenson, w\t\nLaface, w\t\nEzart, w\t\n0 10\n0   0\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nComplete Service Under One Root\ntil Riverside Av*. Spokane, Wilh.\nJOI\nPEDICORD\nManigtr\nWhin Iti SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at tha\n' Hotel VOLNEY Oppo,l,,\nAv*nu\u00bb       \u2022*M''**1*M\u2014m      W *m*MtA*Smm M.   pw|\u201eB B|dg,\nEVERY  COURTESY  SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS\nTotalt  T  I 11 14\nNelion:\nGibbons, g .. .... 0  0-00\nTownsend, d  . 0   110\nMorris, d  1   1  J  8\nDesBrisay, d   0   110\nCooper, d   10   12\nEgin, r  4  17   4\nCimpbell, r   0   112\nJ. Biihop, c  112  8\nMiller, c   1110\n0. Blihop, w  113  1\nW..*;z:i= U M\nDingwall, w   1  2  8  0\nTotali 21 IS 35 35\nScore by periods:\nRouland :.. 0  0  3  4\u2014 *l\nNelion    7  8  8   1-42\nStops by goalies:\nBurgeu  10  11    2  1-31\nGibboni    8    3  10  8-44\nOfficials wtre: Buddy Himmond\nind Rent Morin, referees', T. R. Wilton, Irwin Conroy and A, S. (Pat)\nAitken, timokceperi; Albert Fletz\ntnd Oscar Harris, goal judgu; Slim\nPorter, scorer.\nSocial...\nFRUITVALE\nrRurrvAUt, b.c-mt. \u00abnd mm.\nJ. Nolan and family art leaving to\ntake up ruidence In Trail.\nMr. and Mri. II. Wade and imall\nion of Nelion were weekend guests\not Mr. ind Mn. F. M. Bsrrett.\nMrs. H. Wtrt and family visited\nNelson Stturdiy.\nMr. ind Mn. T. Bond ar* vltltlng relatives at Robton,\nMaster Lloyd Crowe and Riymond Lldgren, who htve .bean\nspending t few diyi at Green City,\nhave returned. Raymond wu a\nweekend guest ot Mr, and Mn. T.\nCrowe, before returning to Trail.\nMiu E. Stalnthone ot Trail wu\na w\u00abek-end guut of htr iliter, Mn.\nW. I. Grieve.\nD. Crowe, who hu been visiting\nMr. tnd Mrs. Arthur Smith at Ntlson hu returned.\nMel Sadler ind Austin Olsen his\nleft to ipend a month ln Sukatohewan,\nMr. and Mrs. D. J. Jonei tnd\nfimlly ipent th* weekend at Nelson and Alniworth.\nMrs. W. Veltch wu hostess to the\nPhilathu club of Trail Tueiday eve'\nnlng, each member bringing lunch\nbasketi for a lawn patty. Mn. A. E.\nTaylor poured coffee. Those attending were Mn. A. Hirber, Mri. T.\nDavii, Mn. G. Redgrove, Mn. T.\nBadberg, Mri. R. Groom, Mrs. Idris\nHirper, Mri. M. Qowtn, Mn. J.\nGroom, Mn. R. Melrose ind Mrs.\nA. E. Tiylor of Frultvile.\nMn. A. Salter of Trail visited\nTwin Batting\nLeadership Is\naf Stake Sunday\nAn inUrutlng bit of by-actlon\nwhich will taki plic* In Sunday'i\nbiublll gam* In Ntlson between\nNtlion and TnU li tht duel for\nth* team bitting leadership. Coach\nJakt Allu ii heidlng th* Hit tt\nJrtunt with a mirk of .428 and\nMM Seaby, who bu Just been\ndlipliced at leider, followi with\n.411, only 11 polnti to th* reir.\nThird la th* itandingi Is Vie\nHowird wtth an avenge ot .391\nand Ernie Belind hu riien wiy\nup tnd ll now hitting it t .353\nSociaL t,.\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.-T. McNelah\nana too, Murray, vitlted Ntlion\nTuudty.\nR. L. Reynold* It igiln i patient\nIn Slocin Community Hoipital, New\nDenver.\nMln O. L, Reynolds of tht nurs-\nI itaff of Sloctn Community Hostel, Ntw Denver, is on her holi-\nMrs. 0. Cirlson and ion Walter\nare home after ipending a week\nwith Mr, Carlion in Nelion.\nMn. M. E. Shannon and daughter of tht Sheep Creek dlitrict are\nguests of Mrs, Shannon's father,\nT. J. Armitrong,\nMr. and Mrs. Allan Merry and\ntwo daughten of Annable were\ngueit* for a few dayi of Mr. and\nMn. Walter Clough and family,\nATLANTIC HOTELS!t0$?\nFIRST  and   MADISON-SPOKANE, WASH.       I Mm\nTHE\nSPA\nE52S Sprague\nDINE\n- SPOKANE\nDANCE\n\u2022 BREAKFAST\n\u2022 LUNCHEON\n\u2022 DINNER\nA warm welcome is extended to\nour Canadian frlendi.\nSPOKANE  HOTELS\nAND RESTAURANTS\nWelcome you\nW. 614\nFlnt\nHOTEL\nRIDPATH\nTha Hotel Canadians Like to\nCall Home.\nIN SPOKANE\n196 Outiide Roomi and\nApartments.\nALL Al  MOUF.RATI RATES\nSocial...\nMOYIE\nhert Wednudiy.\n\" in vet \u201e\nhav* been vacationing at Vancou\nMr. and\nthe* and Mtn Mad;\nYoung, MUf F|or.\nYbunI, Who\n\u25a0I\nSpokane's\nModerate Price\nHOTEL\nTHE GALAX\nRATES\u2014fl to 93 per day\nver returned Saturdiy.\nMr. and Mn. Ronald Heaney ot\nIgnace, Ont., ire guests ot Mr, and\nMrs. G. Ross.\nRobert Davis and Alfred Roberts\nleft Sundiy td vilit th* world1! fair,\nSan Francisco, and other points in\nCalifornia,\nT. Airy of Omlk, Wish., wat a\nSunday guut of Mr, ahd Mri, T.\nYoung\nMr. and Mn. T. Bond and F. M,\nBarrett vilited Trail Monday.\nMn. W. Telford ind Mlu' Olive\nYoung, who ipent a holiday it Vancouver, Oniak, With. and other\nedit polnti, returned Sunday.\nMn. C. M. McDonald' af Robton\nwu t vlaltor here.\nJ. McDicken, who hu been a\nholiday guut of Mr, and Mrs. T.\nMcDicken has returnid Jo Trtll.\nMn. R. Underwood ef Nelson was\nt week-end guut of Mr, and Mrs.\nF.M. Barrett. ~\nMr. and Mn. J. O. Grieve left\nMonday to viilt Vancouver and cout\npolnti. ,\nMr. and Mn. G. Muon tnd family, who havt bean visiting relatives\nher* toy. a Wttk, returned Sunday\nto Spokine.\nA. Vyie spent the weekend In\nNelson.\nMOYIE, B.C.\u2014Spending i weeks'\nD^bninX'ffi:'AJfta!\nind Mn.  Craig were the house\nKeiti of Mr. and Mn. Jack Fin-\nMotoring through from Arrowhead, Mr, and Mn. Omar Oeroux\nand two daughten, Joan and\nMerlle, wen guesti it Moyie renewing old tlmt friends. Mr. and\nMn. Geroux came here to attend\nthe funeral of Z. Geroux ot Kitchener.\nVlftor Stnden weekended at his\nhorn*.\nMr. and Mrt. John Ellis, Chapman Camp, were recent guests at\nth* horn* ot Mrt, H, Pearson.\nMn. Allan of Klmbirley, with\nMn. Rhodu and ion, Wilton, are\nSummer residents et Moyie,\nComing trom Calgary, Miss Doris\nGriffin ii th* guut oi\nand brother-in-law, Mr. and Mn.\nThomu Willi;\nMn. Thomu Leisk underwent\nin appendicitis operation and It\ndoing nicely, I\nAndy Weir of Trail and Stanley\nSmith spent Wednesdiy at Moyie.\nAfter* three-years' absence, Miss\nMary Cullum visited Moyie With\nhar titter, Mlu Kiy Cullum, ot\nVincouver. At ont time Miss Cullum taught ichool hire,\nMr. ind Mrs. Htbbertt of Yihk\ntrt now residing in Moyie, occupy\nInt the little church house,\nMrs. Pederson tnd ftmily were\nIn from Canal Flits for several\ndaya.\nJimmie Whlteheid is the guut\nof Geor-i Bonner ot Kimberley.\nErneit Danlelion is away at Hosmer. \u2022\u2022-\u25a0\nMn. James Whlteheid attended\nthe funeral of Zenon Geroux at\nCreston.\nMrs. Jimes Whitehead and Mrs.\n\"Scolty\" Frasor motored' te Kimberley.\nMn. Christina Erlckion and ion,\nEmil*, Mr. and Mrs. lien Osen,\nMrs, Oil* Erlckion ot Crinbrook\nwere the house gueiti ot Mn. H.\nPeanon, ..\u25ba,,'\nVisiting with her mother, Mn.\nH. Peanon, Mrs.,Harry Hogg, and\nfamily  are  here from Kingsgate.\nRecent visitors at Sunnyside\nRanch were Mr. and Mrs. Dobson\nof Lumberton, Mn. G. Carlion of\nGolden, and.hli nephew, Eugene\nRande of Field, Mr. and Mrs, Oscir\nPitrion, Kimberley, and Miu Mary\nJohnion ot Rosslind.\nMr, and Mri. Amby Smith and\ndaughter Patricia, were in by car\nfrom Chapman during the lait\nweekend. \u25a0 . .\nMOYIE. B. C\u2014The Curran listen ot Chapman Camp wtrt recent vlilton at the,, homt of Mrs.\nMuy Conrad, their grandmother.\nJack. Briidcn. has returned from\ntht hotpltel where he received\nrhcdical treitment for \u2022 sprained\nlimb.\nMr. tnd Mrs. Chris Foote and\nion, Christie of Kimberliy ipent\nthe weekend fishing In th* vicinity.\nMr. and Mn. Chubb with Mr. and\nMn. Haven of Winnipeg, are Moyie reildenti, occupying the Laird\nhome.'\nSpending Wednesday at Moyie,\n^tMl A. Horn* and\ndiughter-ln-Uw; Mrs. Dmglas\nHorn*, ot Kellogg, Idaho, wtrt\nguesti at the home of Mr. and Mra.\nP. Ni Conrad. They attended   '\nHopes He Will Ehft\nChristmas in\nEngland\nOn two occasions, both on the old\nDewdney Trtll out ot Hope, E. A.\nK. Sheppard, who ii now \"ridmg\ntrill\" acrois Cinada, uw a grizzly\na ttw hundred feet abov* him, pursuing its concerns. Another time n*\ntnd his mount cam* Into view ot\ntwo blick bun la the trail ahead.\ntht denizens of the wild Immediately\nmaking \u00aboff. Except that hia bay\nmarc, a reputed former racehone,\nflungid a bit and made riding dif-\nicult on thut occasions, thu* encounters with wild animals cauied\nhim no trouble, Mr. Sheppard ex-\npltlned Frldiy evening whtn be\nrodt Into Ntlson from tht Wut and\ntltd up hli horse ln front of The\nDtlly Ntwi building.\nMr, Sheppard, who It SI ytar* ef\ntgt, li gratifying tn ambition ol\nlong standing to \"it* Cinada from\na saddle.\" Finding a uddlehorie to\nhli liking, tht bichelor farmer disposed of his term tt White Rock,\non th* Cout, and itarted with due\nfanfir* from th* Vincouver Province building on Junt 1, for Halifax, In t heavy rain.\nHAS TO ABANDON\nSHORT CUT\nKit trip up tht Fraier Valley\nwu prevailingly rainy, and whtn\nhe took thi) old Dewdney Trtll up\ntrom Hope on Junt 6, hoping to\nmtkt t ihort cut tcrou ta the\nPrinceton dlitrict, the rain wu still\nwith him. Some ot th* brldgei on\nthli route wer* undtr two feet of\nwater from the malting mow, and\nat other tlmu the wtter wu kntt-\ndiep on th* road, while th* rains\nhrouaht down manv rock tilde* that\nhe arid hli hone had to crou, It wai\nIn that section that h* encountered\nthe bears mentioned, and alio deer\ntnd other gam*. Thirty miles up\nfrom Hop* he spent tha night with\ntwo trippers who hid a cabin on\nCougar Flits, but tht following\nmorning, after making an additional three miles, he wai forced to\nabandon the route when th* mare\nstarted to plunge in' attempting to\ncrou the flooded Skagit River while\nhe maintained hit precarious bal\nance with a pole.\nMONTH'S RIST FOR MARK\nAltogether, his attempted short\ncut set him back over a month, for\nafter a second night tt Cougar Flats,\nthe mtn went lam* as a consequence of th* tough going acrois\nthe rock slides, tnd he had to turn\nher loose, going on tor another two\nmiles to retch the Fourteen-Mile\nranch owned by A. B. Tritei. For\ntwo dayi he carried her hay rations\nup to her, ai there wu no herbage,\nand then he brought her down to\nthe ranch, where they were made\nat home until July 13, on which\ndate they made a new start from\nHope, this time by the conventional\nhlffltwayi, ... .- .#_._.\n'Coming Into'the Slmilkameen by\nSpences Bridge, the horseman paued a night at the S. X. ranch near\nMerrltt, and then made a day-and-\nnight trip through the Slmilkameen,\nreaching Princeton after daybreak.\nHe skirted South ot the Okanagan,\nby Osoyoos and Keremeos, tnd\nfound hospitable Indlani at varloui\npoints. In the Kettle VtUty ht htd\na three-day rut at th* Andresen\nranch at Brlduvllle, finding he wu\ndiitresied by the virloui uoenti,\nOther stops were tt the Miller\nranch at Kettle Valley and. the Collins ranch thli lide of Grand Forks.\nMonday he crossed Ute Oold\nRange by the Cascade Highway,\nand saw th* Wut Kootenay Power\nk Light Company'i truck go over\nthe bank not tar from the Velvet\nmine, outside Roisland. After beng\nentertained it the mine, he mtde\nRosslind ibout 12:30 Tuesdty. He\nran Into an Old friend at the C. M.\nk S. Company's dairy farm at War-\nfield,. Foreman Smith belngin old\nWhite Rock acquaintance. Tuesday\nand Wednesday he wu made 'it\nhome In Trill by persons ht met.\nand Thunday night he wu it\nShoreacres.\n\"Those who have not been over\nthese ranges would not realize the\nmagnificent scenery on the summits,\" commented Mr. Sheppard, as\nhe left Nelson Friday evening at\ndusk, for the Wut Arm.\nTO RETURN NEXT YEAR\nMr. Sheppard hopes to make Hall-\nfax by the end of October, and to be\nin England for Christmas, u he\nhails trom.Albion. When he returns\nnext year, he will probably make\nIt by the Panama Canal.\nIt was ln 1909 that Mr. Sheppard\ncame to Canida. u t yoting man,\nlanding at Quebec, tnd working\nWett by stages. He farmed ln Manitoba and at other prairie points;\nand in 1012 treated himielf to *\nsaddle trip from Edmonton to Athabasca Landing and back. Six yean\nago he located at White Rock.\nThii will bt his second viilt lo\nEnglmd line* h* cam* to Canada,\nthe earlier one having been In 1934,\nBrakf^gMqnd\nMfl^n* 2 Games\nlit town Bowling\nof Hn. E. Y\nitherland won t\nA. E. Smith ind\niHR. Y. Bnkt Trophy\ntitlon it the C. P. Ri gruas\nIdty evening. The winners broke\nawiy from * 4-4 tit at th* end ot\nth* third ind after th* lead hid\nchanged handi.\nThundiy night th* um* ttam\nwon by 1)4 from 0. Hirviy and\nE. Penwill.\nThunday night's score by ends\nfollows:\n aoan 04\u00aboi-u\n  0*001 10010- s\nnight'i   icort   by   end*\nWinners\nLosers\nFriday\nfollows:\nWinners\n.12111 01001-10\nLoien      00000 10120- 4\nApex-Ymir Road\nReconstruction\nAway Next Week\nEquipment tor th* Btnnett k\nWhit* Construction Co. roid building contract between Ymir and\nAptx on the Nelway Road Is due\nIn Nelion Tuuday, and work on\nstandardization of thii section ot\nroad will begin soon afterward.\nPatrick O'Brien, construction\nforeman In charge of Bennett &\nWhite roid construction in B. C. and\nAlberta, Haves thli morning tor the\nEast Kooteniy, the compiny haf lni\nanother contract near Wau, am\nwill return Tuesday to start the\nNelwiy Roid lob,\nA shovel, two bulldozers ind t\ncompressor are to be employed. The\ntwo 'dozers ire described u \"the\nbiggest made\", tht company's plin,\nbeing io push the work ihrougn m j Keller ordered\nrapidly u possible. September 5,\nCarpenters Urge\nWork Be Given\nRegistered Men\n75 Cents an Hour as\nMinimum Wage\nIs Set\nCarpenten of th* United Brotherhood of Carpaaten tad Jointn,\nLocal 1843, Nelson, recommended\nFridiy night that people hiving\ncarpentry work done mould glvt\nth* preference to registered contractors who wert paying llcimu.\nwhose employee! were all covered\nby compensation, md who hid\nlirge Investments In tqulpment tnd\nplinti. A reiolutlon te thtt effect\nwu passed, tt wu itated until\ncarpenten war* stepping ln and\ntaking work away trom the lirger,\nregistered   contractors.\nThe resolution wu paued atter\nreceipt ot word that t minimum\nwag* of 79 ctnti per hour tor carpenters had been pasied. Th* rat*\nis ut by the Board of Industrial\nRelations, under the Mai* Minimum Wage Act. Adam Bell, ot\nVictoria, Chairman of the Board,\ndiscussed wage problemi with th*\nTrail-Rossland and Nelson locals\nearly ln June.\nTo Try 25 for Murder\nin Insurance Probe\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 4 (AP).-\nA nine-month investigation of the\nfantastic insurance murders ended\ntonight with tb* Commonwealth\nready to try 25 penoni for murder\nin two months.\nDlitrict . Attorney   Charta*   t. ._\t\n'the triala io siaiij serving by the iviisscs F.unice\ntJfaAlmQAl^\nLady Nelson Silk Gap*\nALL THI NEW     #| Ms\nSMADCStr** ...tfl.UU\nLADIM WSAR  BURNI SLOCK\nHotpital Ladies'Aid\nReady for Kaslo Fete\nKASLO, B.C:-Th* Katlo Udlu\nHospital Aid mtt Tuuday afternoon at tht home of Mn. Ronald\nHewat. Th* president, Mn. t. S.\nChrndlir  prulded.  Reporti  Wtr*\nSlven by the Secretary, Mri, F, J.\n.outeeu, the Treasurer Mn. W. V.\nPapworth tnd representative! ot\nthe various local women's orginl-\nzallons were accepted. Bills totalling about MS wire ordered paid.\nMrs. Frank Helme and the itat*\nIdent reported that the kitchen\nhid been redecorated, the work being done satisfactorily md r\u00abtl-\nontbly.\nMrs. Helme, senior buyer, wn\ngiven tuthorlty to purchu* hoipital needs. The Sunshine Preiident, Mrs, George Morton reported\ngifts and cardi htd bun tent ta\nusual md reid letten ot appreciation.\nMn. J. N. Murphy's Invitation\nfor tht September meeting wu accepted. Mn. Helme will be co-hoi-\nteu.\nMn. Hewat was accorded t vote\nof thanks for th* uw ot her homt\nfor thli meeting and Mn. V. L.\nTrail and Mrs. Hewat were tendered appreciation for the dainty refreshments lerved after adlouitt\nment when they were assisted la\nenough and Diana Whellams.\nfuneral of the late\nhead of Moyie.\n_tVa,t*rm.t\nthe\nJames White-\n.. and lliter, Miss Ma\nmie Firrell and Mrs. Scotty Fraier\nspent Friday at th* Key City.\nMil. Scotty Friser li occupying the lummer cottage located at\nAldridge en lower Meyle Lake,  .\nMn. Solecki and sons an at Procter tor the holidays.\nMn. Wellander of Jaffray and\nUri. G. swanson of Cranbrook\nwere recent gueiti it Sunny Side\nRinCh. jLjMjZmmtmlH\nSociaL...\nSIRDAR\nPRIVATE SCHOOLS\nOFFER MANY\nADVANTAGES\nAl 1-round development educational, physical, md moral, with\njuit that added emphasis on Cultural\ntraining io desirous for the. student\nfrom tho better class home, is what\nyeu ctn expect your boy or your\ngirl to obtain .from a \u25a0semester or\nmore ln tny one of B. C'l modern\nmodern private schools.\nWith the Summer holiday season\nalready on the wane, mtny parents, conscious of the great forward\nmovement and stress being laid on\nscientific child training, art considering the more advantageous methods of training their children fer\nadult lite. And tho modem methods\net B. C.'s private, business and vocational schooli supply the aniwer.\nj Academic education is uiually the\nprime requirement sought In choosing a ichool, but highest standards\nare maintained at public institutions, io more often health promoting facilities, physical and cultural\ntraining, individually supervised,\nare tho attractions of th* modern\nSrivatc, school, and rightly so. For\niese No. 1 requisites of a top citizen, sportsmanship, healthy' habits,\nsocial graces, deportment and a cooperative spirit are th* results ot\ndevelopment through the lupenor\nfacilities tnd training; physical,\nntoral, cultural and religious, of\nthe private tehoolt. \" '?   '\nSport, phyilcal and htalth oduca,\nUon go hand in hand at-private\nschools, where becauie of smaller\nclasses more attention can be given\ntb the Individual and his ipecial\nrequirements. The handicapped student can be brought along gradually, the robust one set in planes\nof competition suited to himself.\nBut through the year the tame spirit\not competition, sportsmanship and\nclean habits are instilled in both.\nPrivate schools usually are located\nIn the most healthful of surroundings as well, therefore any student\nwill benefit materially from a year\nipent In private ichool itudy md\ndevelopment.\nPrivate ichool social and cultural\nactivities will -also develop- children\nfor later life, lending them an ease\not manner and graciousnes? of valuable aid tor adult careers.\nBut what are all thue without\nproper moral-and religious training? Psychologists and educational\nauthorlUea will tell you \"very lit-\nNORTH SHORE COLLEGE\nRESIDENTIAL AND DAY SCHOOL FOR BOYS\nALL COURSES te MATRICULATION\nREOPEN SEPTEMBER 7th, 1930\nFor prospectus apply\nP. T. DALI tnd L, C, STORR (Principals)\nQueen'i Rd, W, North  Vincouver\nTrail Business College\nUt\". Home tnd ichool education\nsupplemented by religious and ipir-\nItual training, experts will uy, ate\nthe requirements in developing of\nfuture parents of merit All these\nare supplied by the private school.\nIt does Its beit to supply advantages\nfo home Ilte, it li i school, and religion li given dally stress.\nAll In all, private schooli are the\nanswer to the moit Important of\nparental problems\u2014\"how shall we\ntriln our child tor a useful later\nlife?\"\nSIRDAR, B.C.-Mr, and Mn.\nWalter Slade and Mr. and Mn.\nFlynn were guesti of Mr. and Mn,\nJ. S. Wilson of Atbara.\nMr. and Mn. J. Passcuzzo and\nchildren htvt lift for Spoktne to\nspend t vacation. During Mr, Pass-\ncuzzo's absence the coal shute will\nbe operated by Tony Lombardo.\nMrs. Charles Ntlion, iccompinled\nby.her brother, Dr. Swartilander,\nwar* vlilton to Spoken* for a ttw\ndiys thli wetk,\nJoe Mannarlno wu a vlaltor to\nCruton, making the trip both wayi\nby bicycle.\nCharles Nelton, Dr. Swartilander\nand ion, Frank, wera viiiton to\nCrowford Biy,\nDr. and Mrs. Swttzltnd.tr with\nFrank ind Peggy irrlvtd here from\nCilgary at the end of the week'to\nspend a vacation with Dr. Bwirti-\nttndtr'i iliter and brother-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Charlei Ntlion,\nBill Thames, Vito Ctrnevtlll, Mr.\nand Mn. Doblnin war* among these\ntt Cruton Saturdiy night\nVito Cirnevilll Is havli\ngarage conitructed at Sti\nLavuello li in chirge ot the work.\nN. Doblnin wu it Creiton.\naUILPH, Ont. (CP)- Penonal\nwarmth wu in the vote of appreciation city council passed for Dr.\nThomas urton, retiring as medical\nhealth officer. He hai brought two\nEstablished .\n,1909\nis having a _\nat Sirdar, Carl\nrUnuVrsilu School\nResidential ahd, Day\nSchool for, Boys\nAll-round development, educational, physical, moral, cultural.\n.Hon\nrdei\nboarders.\n170\nBrick buildings. Heated iwimming tank. Gymnasium. Ten\nacu ot playing fields.\nHealthful climate. Year round\nopen air games.\nFer School Calendar,  write\nthe Rev, G. Herbert Starrett,\nB.A. (Queem) F.R.S.T, (Kng.),\nHeadmaster. -\n'   \u2022'    1   \u25a0\nUniversity School\nVtotaria. B. C. Canada\nnew ter:\nTUESDAY, September 5\nFRANCES I. COOK, B. A., Principal\n648 Wair Street Trail, 8. C.\nFOUNDED 1931\nProfessional individual instruction in all branches\nof Commercial, Applied\nand Fine Art...\nDAY, EVENING and SATURDAY\nMORNINC CLASSES    \u2022\nFOR PROSPBCTOS\nand INFORMATION\nHL Faulkner Smith\nSCHOOL of APPLIED ond FINE ART\nMARINE BUILDING VANCOUVER, B. C.\nH. Faulkner Smith, Principal\nSilver Medalist R. C. of Art, S. K, London, England\nTHE  VANCOUVER\nSCHOOL  OF  ART\nCanals and Dunimuir Straeri, VANCOUVER,  B.C.\nWestern Canada's Central Institution\nfor Art Training.\nDAY AND EVENING COURSES\nWhole and Part-time Instruction given in -Drawing,\nPainting, Deiign, Pictorial Composition, Commercial Art,.   >\nPottery, Interior Decoration, Modelling, Commercial\nDrawing.\nModern methodi taught by recognised artlit laftructori. '\nEXHIBITION OF STUDENT ART\nOn view in the school from August 28 to September 9.'\nPROSPICTUS FRIE ON APPLICATION\nDirector, Charlai H. Scott, G.8.A,\nAttentions-\nArt Students\nWe otter you the following highly specialized-\nand practical Couriei by Instructors who are\nthemselvei   luccesifully   engaged\"1n- thtmt-\nAPVERTISINfl LAYOUT, LETTERING, A COPY- 7\nWRITING, FASHION ILLUSTRATION, MAQAZINE\nILLUSTRATION, AIR BRUSH RENDERING, CAR-\nT00NIN8, LAND8CAP* PORTRAIT A MUftAL\nPAINTING, RADIO (MICROPHON|) TECHNIQUE,\nRADIO-SCRIPT, ARTICLE A SHORT-STORY WRIT.\nING, WOOD CARVING A ANIMAL PAINTING.    -\nNew Illustrated Fall Prospectus Sent Free Upon Application .\nCANADIAN INSTITUTE ol\nASSOCIATED ARTS\nitimglng Director: Rex C. Mills, B.\nB.nk    IM...   Us-.*-,    Im......\nA.\n \u2014\u25a0\n'\n\t\n%JMMMmM^g^^-*m^r*^tmfMmmm*w*'.il *m-''    \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 i \u00bb imam\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, I. C-SATUROAY  MORNINO. AU6. !, 1M\u00bb-\n\\\u00a3H%\naet thru\n***m\nClearance of Ladies'\nThere'i plenty of swimming\nyet, so buy that new bather\nwhile this bargain lasts] Well\ntailored styles in such popular\nmakes as Jantzen and Sklntlte.\nAn outstanding bargain. Values\nto $4.95. #4 AC\nSaturday Sale   .L.70\nCLEARANCE OF LADIES' DRESSES\n $1.00\nVoiles, Cottons and Silks.\nRegular to $3.98\t\nft i\nntotifr l>a$ vlUmjwttg.\nINCORPORATED   2?? MAV f\u00ab70.\nLADIES' SUCKS\nOf good quality drill. Colon of navy and brown.\nSize* 14 to 20.\nRegular $1.19 ..,\n50c\nKIDDIES' SUN AND\nPLAY SUITS\nOf printed  cottons  end\nsilks' *X(iit\nRegular $1.00 ... \u00abWv\nCHILDREN'S   COTTON\nCOMBS\nRegular 59c.\nPriced at ..,\n29c\nWHITE   PIQUE  SKIRTS\nAND PLAID BLOUSES\nJust the outfit tor the\nbeach. Reg. $1.00. CA-\nEach\nLADIES' PUY SUITS\nPrinted   and   plain   two\nand  three  piece  styles.\n\u2022Regular $1.95.\nPriced at\t\n$1.00\nLADIES' COTTON\nSWEATERS\nKnitted in plain or stripped patterns. Ofl_\nRegular 59c. Now \u00a3*7v\nNO APPROVALS OR EXCHANGES ON ABOVE\nCed-O-Matic Garment Bags\nExtra strong and extra large. iQ\nPriced at 4JC\nPORCH CHAIRS\nRecliner and Canopy   $2.49\nAdjustable Recliner $1.98\nExtra Canopies 59a*\nIr\nBEACH ROLLS\nGaily colored with attached cush- AQ.\nion, six only. To clear Tr\u00bb\/C\nSTRAW RUGS\n18x36   12*\n27x54   39<\n5'x8'  $1.29\n'lady\nHudson\"\nHOSE\n$1.00\n-Main Floor HBC\nfor daytime and evening wear. Sizes are 8Vi to 1014.\nFOR SHEERNESS\nAND BEAUTY\nThree-thread chiffon hote that\ngives you the combined features of service, sheerness and\nquality. All the newest shades\nBoxed Stationary\nTwo toned ' inlaid ' in\nshades of peach, blue\nand grey. Specially CQ.,\npriced. Per box .'. tJ\u00ab7C\nTravel Kits\nEnglish make of colorful\nsatins and crepes. Equipped with soap, face cloth\nand hand towel. Just the\nthing for your ffi CQ\nvacation. Each . \u00abpl\u00bbvi7\nBeach Balls\nColorfully made of sturdy\nrubber.  Will   stand   the\nroughest use.\nPrice, each .,\nSaturday Sale of\nMEN'S\nSHIRTS\nFor customers who want good quality and value ... We selected every\none of these shirts from two higher-\npriced lines. They're one of the best\nvalues we've offered in six months.\n.'.. Fine woven Broadcloths, printed\nBroadcloths, popular fused collars,\nplains, stripes, checks \u2014 expertly\ntailored. Coat style. All full cut in\nsizes 14 to 17 Vi.\n59c\nMEN'S AND BOYS' CAMPACS\nChocolate colored Elk uppers. Composition soles and\nheels. Cork inner soles. PRICED AT\nBOYS': sfOOC    MEN'S: M i\u00a3\nSizes 1 to 5 ...*.L*LO   Sires 6 to 11 ... .tt.'iO\n'\nElectric Refrigerators\nON SALE AT\n$14950\nAnother \"Bay\" success. A\nfour cubic foot refrigerator\nwith vapor-sealed cabinet,\nhigh bake enamel finish,\ntemperature control, automatic Interior light and two\nfreezing trays.\n-Second Floor HBC\nHOT OR COLD\nPACK CANNERS\nLarge, blue enamel canners equipped for hot or\ncold pack canning. Tinned\nrack holds 7 quart jars.\nUse it for boiling, roasting, and steaming too.\nPriced at frO CA\neach    *fL.Ov\nCollanders. Medium mesh\ntwo handles. 4ft..\ntach    4JJC\nRust-proof jar fillers and\nladles. 11t-\nEach  IjC\nPyrex measuring\ncups. Each\t\nStainless paring\nknives. Each  ...\nEnamel Spoons.\nEach\t\n20c\n10c\nISc\nSpecial Clearance Sale\nof Ladies'\nWHITE\nSHOES\n$1.60\n3\nThese include \"Lady Hudson\" and \"Margo\" deluxe lines.\nStraps, ties and gores. Cuban and high heels. Open ot\nclosed toes and heels. All sizes in the group.\nWomen's or Girls'\nCanvas Oxfords\nBeige color, and rubber\nheels. Fine for sports,\ngarden or beach wear.\nAll sizes. fll OC\nPriced at tJfl.LO\nRunning Boots or\nOxfords\nMen's and Boys' brown\ncanvas. Rubber soles.\nBOYS': OQ.\nSizes 11 to 5 .... 03C\nMEN'S:\nSizes 6 to 11\nCLEARANCE OF MEN'S STRAWS\nEnjoy hat comfort at this low price. Chip and waterproofed Palmroyals in greys, fawn and natural shades.\nSizes 6% to7Vi. t*1 OQ\nSpecial  J)l.LD\nMEN'S SUN HELMETS\nSaturday Only. 36 of these popular, cool, comfortable\nhelmets. Regular 39c. QP\nPriced at LtOC\nMEN'S DENIM PANTS\nA sturdy 6 oz. khaki or blue denim finished with cuff\nbottoms. Can be worn with belt or braces, tfl IQ\nSpecially priced at ij)l.l\"\nSTRIPED\nTEA TOWELS\nEach \u00abwC\nLAWN  MOWERS\nKeep your lawn neat and\nattractive with one of\nthese ball-bearing mowers. 5 blades, smooth\nrunning, and strongly\nmade. 14-inch and 16-\ninch. Priced at each\ntpiUWand   tplUttJt)\nExtra LARGE\nTOWELS\n39c\nImported Beach Towels In\nnovelty designs. They are\nlarge enough to lie on. Very\ncolorful and thick.\nNOVELTY RAYON CLOTHS\nIn size 52x52. C.A_\nEach DUC\nm\n-\nICHURCHES1\n\/TfirtTTT\n\u00a7>nmiMtuurimt\nQUjurrlj\nIht Uttlt Grey Church Wt Love\nEarl E. Lindgren, Pastor\nLORD'S DAY SERVICES\n10 a.m.\n11 a.m..\n. Sunday School\n. Morning Worthip\nf p.m Sacred Concert\n: At Lakeside Park.\nj;30 p.iji No Service\nTalented young people from Spo-\nkane will take part in til services. A picnic lunch at Lake-\ntide Park at noon. The lunch and\nsacred hour ot music will be at\nthe church in case of rain. All\nservices ln English. Everyone it\nwelcome!\n3Ftrat (Ulrurrt! of\n(iliriat %t\\e\\\\M\nI     209 BAKER STREET\nA Branch of The Mother Church.\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist in Boston, Mat.\nSunday School 0:45 ajn.\nSunday Service 11 ajn.\nSubject Lttton-8trmon\n\"8PIRIT\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE READING ROOM IN\nCHURCH  BUILDINQ-\nAll Cordially Welcome\nQJrimty Huitri\n(Eljurrlf\nSillct and Joiephlne Sis.\nHcv. J. A. Donnell. Minister.\nI  C. C. Halleren, Organist.\nct. W. C. Mawhinney ot Saskatoon will preach at 11 a.m.\nid 7:30 p.m.\ni Paul's congregation will wor-\nilp at Trinity during the month\nI August,\n~\nJVERPOOL N. S, Aug. 4 (CP)\nCho captain and four member!\nthe crew of the schooner Fan!\nded here today in a dory and\norted that their lumber-laden\nsel had burned about eight miles\nthis south shore port\naptaln    Sylvester Dunphy said\nFahl, registered at North Syd-\nN. S., was a total loss,\nJflrat\nIrfabgUrtan\n(dtfttrrij\nRev. Dr. J. W. Stevenson,\nMinister.\nSunday Service:\n11 a.m.: \"Sifting tor Service\"\nNo evening tervlce during\nAugust\nStrangers will be welcome.\nfirat\nSlautUsi (gburrtf\nRev. G. M. Ward, Minister\n8:45 ajn.\u2014Church School\n11:00 a.m.-\"Alming\", at What?\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"A Great Responsibility.\"\nMr. J. H. HadUnd ot Calgary\npreaching at both services.\nCome tnd Worthip\n100 TRAILER LICENCES\nOUT BEFORE SUSPENSION\nEDMONTON, Aug. .4 (CP). -\nAbout 100 trailer licence! had been\nissued throughout the province under the amendment to the Highways Traffic Act pasted at the latt\nsession of the Legislature betore\nthe regulations were suspended\nJuly 29, Hon. W. A. fallow, Minister of Public Works, stld today.\nThe licences applied to all trailers,\nwhether for transport truck or farm\ntruck.\nThe regulations were suspended\nIn view of negotiations pending between railways, oil companies and\nthe Dominion Board of Transport\nCommissioners, \"owing to the serious effect the negotiations may have\non the whole trucking Industry,\" the\nminister stld. The licence tees will\nbe refunded If it is decided not to\nput the regulations in effect.\nBRITISH-FRENCH  UNITY\nEXPRESSED TO JAPAN\nPARIS, Aug. 4 (AP). - France\nstepped into the British-Japanese\nnegotiations for settlement of China\nissues with a notice to Tokyo today that French Interests were\n\"linked\" with those of Britain.\nThe Foreign Ministry disclosed\nthat Charles Arsene Henry, French\nAmbassador to Tokyo, had visited\nthe Japanese Foreign Office to point\nout formally the unity of French\nand British interests in the Orient.\nBRITAIN'S EXPANDING MIGHT,\nUNITY, AND FRENCH SOLIDARITY\nMAY AVERT WAR-J. F.SANDERSON\nAug. 4 (CP)\u2014Twenty\ner the \"war to end all\nLONDON, A'\nfive years after\t\nwars\" plunged the world Into conflict which cost millions of lives,\nEurope today Is an armed camp.\nEvery factor necessary for war Is\npresent and very few of the real\nessentials for' peace.\nOn liie anniversary of that day,\nAug. 4, 1914, when \"the lights went\nout across Europe,\" the \u25a0 situation\nperhaps may be described best in\nthese words: war In Europe is inevitable unless Germany\u2014and that\nmeans Hitler\u2014exhibits some moder-\nating change In policy. It is almost\ninconceivable things can go along\nas they are without producing war.\nNEXT FEW MONTHS\nWILL TELL\nIt Is Impossible to support the\nview peace, real peace, exists today. The next few months, perhaps\nweeks, will tell the story and the\ndecision, as far as It rests on one\nman, will be made by Adolph Hitler, who 25 years ago was unknown\neven in his native Austria.\nThere are several factors whloh\nmonthly grow mort Important In\ntwinging Europe away from wtr\nand thtlr cumulative effect may\nbe decisive. Ont It Britain'! tx<\nptndlng might In tht air, on tha\nland tnd on tht tea. Another It\ntht determination ot European\nnatlona to club together. A third\nIt tha Internal solidarity ef\nFrance, i\nBy J. f. SANDERSON\n247,000 regulars In the army and\naround 500,000 reserves. Now, with\na regular army of 208,000 plut reserves currently engaging In huge\ntraining exercise and new conscripts, Britain has around 1,000,-\n000 men. The navy is about the\nsame now as then.\nThe biggest difference Is in the\nair force. In 1914 Britain had 822\nmen and 100 serviceable planei.\nNow she has 120,000 officers and\nmen In the Royal Air Force pdus\n75,000 reserves. Although exact\nfigures are not made public, the\nbest estimates are that she has 2330\nfirst-line planes out of a total of\n5000 and is adding to these at the\nrate of 600 monthly.\nAnother big difference Is the\ntremendous civil preparedness program now in effect with 2,000,000\nmen' and women enrolled tnd under constant training for police,\nfire and air raid precautions duty\nin the event of war.\nBritain now has a full reserve\nfleet manned for maneuvers. The\nR.A.F. with more than 1300 planes\ntaking part, will stage practices\nnext week and London will be Included ln a huge black-out test\nTypical of the British attitude today was the comment by the Dally\nMall that comparison of the 1914\nwith the 1939 state of preparedness\n\"givet us reason tot pride and for\nconfidence that this time war may\nbe averted.\"\nFinally, there Is evidence Hitler\nIs beginning to realize he cannot repeat his. Austrian, Czech and Memel\nbloodless conquests without precipitating a general war in which Germany would be forced to fight on\ntwo frontiers\u2014tactics which some\nmilitary leaden of Uw Reich tell\nbiro would be fatal.\nNEEOS UNIVERSAL PLAN\nEurope hu been operating for\nmonths on a purely negative policy, just drifting along. What Europe needs ln tht view of most observers it a long-range, comprehensive plan, positive in its nature and\nexplicit ln its terms, to bring about\na reversal of today'i condition-\ndisarmament, economic and financial collaboration, a division of\nraw materials ana markets and a\nsolution of boundary and racial\nproblemi.\nThat Ia impossible in today's atmosphere of mutual suspicion,\nhatred, mendacity and constant\nagitation ot racial passions.\nMost newspapers ln England\nnoted the annivenary ot Britain's\ndeclaration ot war on Germany in\n1914 following German refusal to\ncomply with a 24-hour ultimatum\nto respect Belgium's neutrality.\nThey alto emphasized Britain's\npreient ttate ot armament. During\nthe year before the war Britain\nspent \u00a377,000,000 (currently ($382,-\n000,000) on military and naval preparation!. Now she is spending that\nmuch ever\" six weeks, or \u00a3730,000,-\n000   ($3,510,400,000)   thli  year.\nTWEEDSMUIRS EN ROUTE\nTO CHURCHILL SEE SON\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 4 (CP)-Ctn-\nada'i Governor - General, Lord\nTweedsmuir, wai en route to\nChurchill. Manitoba's northern lea-\nport, 1000 milei from Winnipeg, today.\nAt the seaport he will meet Hon.\nJohn Buchan, hii son, who has been\nstationed In Baffin Land at the\nHudson's Bay Company aboard the\nnorthern supply imp Nascoplc August t.\nOn the northern trip the Governor-General Is accompanied by\nLady Tweedsmuir, Hon. Alstair\nBuchan, a Bon, Walter Buchan, hit\nbrother; Miss Anna Buchan, a sister and Lieut. Robin Scott, secretary to the vice-regal party.\nThe -ice-regal party spent two\nhours in Winnipeg today. During\nthe stop-over, Hon. W. J. Tupper,\nLieutenant-Governor of Manitoba,\nvisited the Governor-General,\nF.D.R. POSTPONES\nWORLD FAIR VISIT\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (AP). -\nPresident Rooievelt Intends to defer\nhis trip to the Sen Francisco fair\nuntil about October L\nHe told a press conference today\nhe would be shuttling back and\nforth between Washington and Hyde\nPark, N. Y., after Congress adjourns,\nwith a cruise ln northwestern waters\nof a week or 10 days mixed in be-\nIn the Summer ot 1914 she had Uvccn.\nNO JOINT ACTION BY\nU.S., BRITAIN IN EAST\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (EP)-\nSumner Welles, acting secretary of\nstate, said today the United States'\nwould map ltt own coune in the\nfar east.\nA few hours after Prime Minister\nChamberlain indicated Great Britain might find It necessary to send\na fleet to the far east, Welles declared there was no understanding\nbetween the United States and\nGreat Britain for joint action ln the\nOrient.\nHe added, however, that very\nfrequent information was being exchanged with other governments\non the far east situation.\nSO CASUALTIES\nIN EXPLOSION\nNEAR ST. PAUL'S\nAnother Explosion,\nFire Attributed\nSabotage\nLONDON, Aug, 4 (CP)-Scorti\nwere injured today, 12 seriously\nenough to be kept ln hospitals,\nwhen a gas explosion attributed\nto a short-circuited fire-alarm box\ntore through tht roof of a building\nnear St. Faul'i   Cathedral\nA number of plain windows on\nthe south ilde of the famoui cathedral were broken, but stained\nglass windows escaped damage.\nTbe explosion occurred in a building being demolished. One explanation was that a water mtln bunt,\ncrushing a gas main and undermining the building. The structure\ncollapsed, a fire alarm was short-\nnltedT   .   .\nWorkmen wen! flung 20 feet from\ngirden of the building and police\ncombed the ruins tor any possibly\ntripped.\nPassersby cut by flying gilts and\nother fragments were among the\ninjured. Some 50 casualties were\nadmitted to hospitals and 12 remtlned.\nShortly afterward an explosion\noccurred in a box of letten being\nunloaded from a mall truck at\nPreiton Railway station and a few\nminutes later a tire broke out in a\nletter box at Blankburn, ldlcating\na renewal of sabotage attributed\nto thi Irish Republican Army.\nThe terrorist campaign hu been\ndormant ilnce one man wu killed\nJuly 25 in an explosion at King's\nCrou itation. Both Preiton and\nBlackburn are in Northwestern\nEngland.\nVICTORIA MILL BURNED\nVICTORIA, Aug. 4 (CP).-A apec-\ntacular fire early today ln the\nground wood m'll of the Sidney\nRoofing k Paper Company Limited,\nburned the structure to the ground.\nThe large building situated on the\nwater's edge, is several hundred\nfeet from the main plant, near the\ngasoline tanks of tne Union Oil\nCompany.\nWhile no estimate of the loss\ncould be obtained, lt mounted into\nthousands ot dollars.\nNEW TRANSATLANTIC AIRMAIL\nSERVICE INAUGURATED TODAY\nGiant Airboat, Caribou, to Leave Southarnpton\non First Flight Linking United Kingdom,\nEire, Newfoundland, Canada and U.S.\nSOUTHAMPTON, England, Aug.\n4 (CP).\u2014A new weekly airmail\nservice Unking the United Kingdom, Eire, Newfoundland, Canada\nand the United States will be\nlaunched tomorrow when Captain\nJ. C. Kelly Rogers lifts the giant\nflying boat Caribou from Southampton water and heads her westward.\nCaptain Rogers and his crew of\nfour will have charge of 25,00 let-\nten, half a ton of mail, on their 34-\nhour aerial voyage across the seas\nwhich John Cabot tailed 461 years\nago when he discovered Newfoundland and Nova Scotia.\nInauguration of the new service\nwhich will be operated for two\nmonths will give citizens of five\ncountries two weekly flights between the old and new world!. Imperial Airwayi flying boats will\nleave here Saturdays and Pan American Airways clippers will depart\nWednesdays during the North Atlantic seuon.\nThe Caribou will take of at 2 p.m.\nE.S.T. (8 a.m. M.S.T.) and reach\nFoynes near the mouth ot the River\nShannon, three hours later. At noon\nM.S.T. Sunday she will settle at Botwood, Nfld, She will reach Montreal\nat noon M.S.T. and New York at\n4 p.m. ' '\nREFUEL IN AIR\nCaribou will be almost tour tons\nheavier when she leaves Foynes\nthan when she arrives, as she will\ntake abroad almost 1000 gallons ot\ngasoline in the air.\nThe refueling will be accomplished through hose contact with a converted Harrow bomber. There are\n\"tanker\" planes at Shannon airport and Botwood to enable the\ntrans-ocean flying boats to take off\nwith higher payloads and fuel ln\nthe iky where the additional loads\ndoei not handicap them.\nSAND\nGRAVEL\nROCK\nFOR ALL\nBuilding Purposes\nPHONE 701\nFairview\nFuel Co.\nFlight refuelling will be carried\nout at both Foynes and Botwood,\nbut not at Montreal or New York,\nbecause the distance between those\ntwo points is not great enough to\nnecessitate it. Nor will flight refuelling be practiced at Foynes on\nthe homeward flight,\nSenate Tangles on\nFarm Section Bill\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (AP). -\nUnited States Congressional leaders\nswept uide everything except the\n$94,000,000 deficiency appropriation\nbill today, but an end-of-the-session\ntangle wu developing over a controversial farm section in that\nmeuure.\nAdjournment tomorrow appeared\nto depend on whether the Senate\nshould insert In the bill an Administration request for $118,000,000 to\ncontinue commodity credit loans.\nA powerful farm bloc was working feverishly on behalf of this\nfund.\nDEATHS\n(By The Canadian Preu)\nMANSFIELD. Mass.-Dr. G. A.\nAdelbart Emard, 56, prominent Ro-\ntarian.\nTORONTO-Dr. Ira De La Matter,\n56, prominent physician.\nOTTAWA-Henry Burd Vallierei\nde St. Real, 62, translator of debates in House of Commons.\nLONDON\u2014Joieph Edward Horn-\nerville Hague, 73, artist who painted\nmany members of the royal family.\nCOOLING\nEQUIPMENT\nFor hornet, office, store or ihop.\nB. C Plumbing fir Heating Co.\nICE\nCALL 106\nWilliams Transfer\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundstrand  Adding   Machine!\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fisher Ltd.\n536 Ward 8L Phont M\nSleep later\nmornings\n+\nHave you toy idea of all the .ways ao\nIron Fireman can make life easier for\nyou? This wonderful machine is one of\nthe great heating achievements of all\ntime. It first made coal an automatic\nfuel and has led the entire industry ever\nsince. See the Coal Flow and know why.\nIRON FIREMAN\nAUTOMATIC COAL FIRING\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating Co.\n357 Baker St.\nLimited\nPhone 666\nNelton, B.C.\n, Ijt   ............... ,.- | Mfii^Ml\"-\"         .. .- -.tmr-...\n PAOE FOUR\ns\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, I. C\u2014SATURDAY MORNINO, AUO. S, MS-\nLONDON WILL PREPARE TIMID CHILDREN FOR EVACUATION\nCOUNCIL IS SEEKING QUALIFIED\nPERSON TO ORGANIZE THE SCHEME\nBe Thrifty...\nSmall Income of\nYoung Couple Has\nlo Be Budgeted\nCAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDear Mln Chatlield;\nI hear so much on both sides ot\nthe queition ot working wlvei I've\ndecided to put my individual cue\nto you and uk your advice. My\nhusband earm $30.00 a week on\nwhich four of ut live two children.\nI manage the best I can but in spite\nof all my pains we have leu than\nall our friendl and both my husband and I are discouraged since\nthere is no prospect of hii getting\na raise in the near future. I find\nthat I can get a position at $10.00\na week which I would be glad to\ntake if it'i wise. Of course out of\nthis I would have to pay a maid\nto stay with the children and do\nthe cooking which would take at\nleast half of my earnings. Now\nWhat's the answer?\nOn the Fence,\nAnswer:  My dear young  wife,\n110 a Week would net you exactly\nnothing   when   you   consider   the\nmaid's wages, the waste that goes\non in a house where things are\nI left to hired help, and the cost of\nI feeding another mouth. Then why\ng leave little children who need you\nI and go off on a wild goose chase\nI to earn money which will be spent\nt Jbefore earned?\nWhat you need Is expert help'\nIn making a budget and you may\nI have lt if you will write to your\n. State Welfare Department Only\nI tn* other day 1 noted thai a iwcuL\n* aurvey had revealed the fact that\nI a family of five could live well\nI on $125 a month. Then you should\n,, be able to stretch your Income\ni .ta cover your necessities.\nNow why not make a game ot\nbudgeting your income? You'll be\nlurprlsed how much fun you can\nl. hive trying to outwit a dollar bill\ni' which has the most diabolical way\nof disappearing before your very\nayes, the harder you play at the\ngame, the more iklll you will ic-\nI quire until finally you will have\n,  reached the point that a farmer\nfriend of mine has reached: Says\nhe: \"I uied to let my money tell\nme where te go. Now I tell my\nmoney where to go.\"\nIt's perfectly natural for a young\npair to wish to keep up with their\nfriends, have automobiles, radios,\nelectrical conveniences and whatnots. But this is the trouble with us\nln America today. We aren't willing to undergo privation and hard-\nihip when the folks next door are\n-having it easy. We aren't willing\nto buckle down to the business\n(business it is too) of' living on\na small income when we can get\ncredit and put off the payday. We\naren't satisfied with primitive and\ninexpensive ways of doing thing*\nwhen our friends are doing them\nIn the modern and expensive way.\nSo my advice to a discouraged\nyoung pair, is, make a budget and\npare It until the spending pattern\nwill fit well inside the income\ncloth.\nOnion leaves have troughs to pour\n\u2022water straight down to the bulb.\nRESCUERS LAIOR FREE\nFLOOD-BOUND  KIDDIES\nREDLANDS, Callt, Aug. 4 (AP)\n\u2014Prison camp crews and civilian\nconservation corpi workeri labor,\ned today to liberate 900 Southern\nCalifornia children marooned ln\nth* San Bernardino Mountain\ncamp* by a torrential downpour.\nCut off from contact with anxious parenti, tb* children were\nreported ute by the United States\nforeit service in various camping\ngroundi ibove th* upper end of\nSanta Ana Rlvtr, which overflowed ita banki yeiterday after rain-\ntall that measured I.M lnchei In\ntwo and on* half houn.\nPeonies Must Be\nCarefully Planted\nWritten by DEAN HALLIDAY\nFor Central Preu Canadian\nDent Plant Pienlei Either Too\nDeep or Too  Near the  Surface.\nPeonies usually arc planted for\nminy years to come. They ihould\nbe planted, therefore, in good soil.\nThe two chief reasons why peoniei\noften fill to bloom li beciuie they\n\u2022re plinted too deeply, or from lack\nof food ln the soil\nWhen planting peonies set them\nASHES\nProper planting vital to\nIn the soil io the eyu, ii shown In\ntoday'i Garden-Graph, are two Inches below the soil level. If peonies are\nplanted too deep in the earth they\nwill not bloom, and it not planted\ndeep enough they are subject to\nWinter' injury.\nPeonies, when properly planted,\ndo not require Winter protection except during the first Winter after\nplanting. The chief purpoie of protection during the flnt Winter is\nlo keep the roots from heaving up\nout of the-ground. A.mulch ihould\nbe placed about the peoniei after\nthe ground has frozen and then removed the following April.\nDuring hot dry weather hoeing\nnot only \"reduces the weeds, but\nprevents the ground from baking\nand cricking and aids in holding the\nmoisture.\nQUEEN SENDS MESSAGE ON WORLD\nFRIENDSHIP ON 39TH BIRTHDAY\nBALLATER, Scotland, Aug. 4 -\n(CP).\u2014Queen Eliiabeth paused In\nopening her many birthday greetings today to send a roeuage to the\nLord Mayor of London on world\nfriendship.\nReplying to a telegram from\nthe Lord Mayor, Sir Frank Bo-\nwater, on behalf of the citizens\nof London, the Queen said:\n\"Their expressions of good will\nwill be a constant Inspiration to\nboth tha King and myself In our\nefforts to promote the true spirit\nof friendship throughout the\nworld.\"\nIt wu the Queen's 39th birthdiy.\nGovernment buildings broke out\nfligs and bunting throughout the\nUnited Kingdom but she restricted\nher own celebration to a quiet family party at Balmoral Castle.\nPrincesses Elizabeth and Margaret\nRose preiented gifts to their mother.\ntsHoumowAL\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nflam Yum-Yum Scalloped Potatoes\nFried Carrots\nSliced Tomatoes     Sliced Peachei\nBran Butterscotch Cookies\nIced Tea\nHAM YUM-YUM\nOne thick slice of ham; milk to\ncover it Bake in oven until milk\nil absorbed, which will take from\none-half to two hours, according to\nthickness ot ham.\nBRAN BUTTER8COTCH\nREFRIGERATOR  COOKIES\nOne cup butter, two cups brown\nlugar, one egg, -one eup bran, three\ncups flour, two teaspoons baking\npowder. Cream butter, add the sugar\ngradually and beat until light and\nfluffy. Add egg and beat well. Stir\nIn bran. Sift flour with baking\npowder and work into fint mixture a small amount at a time.\nKnead and shape into rolls about\none and one-halt inchei in diameter;\nwrap in waxed paper, covering ends\nso that dough will not dry out.\nStore in refrigerator until firm. Cut\ninto thin slices and bake on un-\ngreased cookie sheet in moderately\nhot oven (400 degrees F.) for about\nten minutes.\nFRIED CARROT8\nMelt some butter in hot frying\nnan, cut cold cooked carrots in\nlong thin strips, and when butter\nbubbles put carrots in, sprinkle\nwith ult pepper and sugir. Fry until edges of carrots are brown-and\ncrisp. A little finely chopped pan-\nley may be added if liked.\nSaturday lunch in the Summer\nhas to be a meal that can be expanded at short notice. The man of\nthe family is likely to be home\nand to have invited an office pal;\nthe same goes for the children.\nWeekend guests may be arriving,\nand holiday appetites in full swing.\nEveryone being in tha holiday spirit\nthe menu needi a touch of \"lomething special.\"\nSalad ii the best aniwer to the\nproblem presented. It's tempting in\nWinter or Summer, but it ii during\nthe dogdayi that it geti in iti beit\nwork. It can be as light or as flimsy\nas you please and lt can easily be\n\"stretched\" for the' unexpected\nguest.\nTo please varied tastes serve a\nbig bowl of crisp lettuce, a platter\nof sliced cucumbers and tomatoei,\nradishes and celery, another platter\nof deviled eggs or cold cuts, a bottle of French dressing and a bowl\nof mayonnaise. Then everyone can\nassemble a salad that suite hit own\ntaste. Bread and butter, hot biscuits, rolli or muffins, a bowl ot\nfruit and cheeie and cracken complete menu that is in itself essentially simple yet which has something of a gala quality.\nBISCUIT RECIPE\nFifteen biscuits can bo made with\ntwo cups flour, two teaspoons double-action baking powder, one-hall\nteaspoon salt, two tablespoons butter or other ihortening md three-\nfourth! cup milk. Sift flour once,\nmeuure, add baking powder and\nsalt. Sift again. Cut ln ihortening,\nadd milk gradually. Drop from lea-\nspoon on greased pan. Bake in 350\ndegree F. oven 12 to 1J minutei.\nCHOCOLATE DRINK\nA delicloui-drink can be made\nwith three cupi hot chocolate with\none cup double-itrengtb coffee md\nmix well Four over cracked Ice\nIn tall glasses. Top with sweetened\nwhipped cream, using one tablespoon for eaeh serving. Serves four.\nPINK PRINCESS DRESSING\nFor fruit salads: Requlrei two\ntablespoons whipped cream, two\ntablespoons pineapple juice, one-\nhalf cup stiff mayonnaise dressing\nand a teaspoon paprika. Fold whipped cream md then pineapple juice\nand tb* paprika Into mayonnaise,\nPrejudice...\nPath ol First\nWoman Doctor\nBy LOQAN  CLEHDENING, M. D.\nAmong all the doctor booki and\nmedical reminiscence!, iuch u the\nHone and Buggy Doctor, by Dr.\nArthur Hertiler, ond Consultation\nRoom, by Dr, Loomis, one recent\nuniqueness of the writer's. experi-\naddltlon stands out because of th*\nTh* title II Elizabeth Garrett Andenon, by L. G. Andenon. It ii\nthe fin: itory of 1 brave fight\nagainst prejudice md malice md\nhypocrliy. ,\nEllubeth Garrett wu an Englishwoman who decided 90 years\nago to bs a practicing physician.\nToday iuch a reiolutlon would\nnot be noticed. Then it was contldered not only i peculiarity;, but\na breach of good fait* and good\nmorals. I have hid ln my classes\nln medicil ichool it- lent two women a year for th* pait 13 years.\nNobody in the classes -considers\nwhether they are women-or- men,\nWe never think ot their sex. Questions and problemi thit are common to all human beings are discussed as ill luch problemi ihould\nbe discussed, frankly and factually,\nCRUEL OPPOSITIONS\nBut it wai not so in the days\nthat Elizabeth Anderion matriculated at the Unlvenity of Edinburgh\nMedical School. She suffered snubs,\nrudeness, silliness, bitter, opposition and downright insults. It doei\nnot seem possible, reading her record,,that humin beings could bear\nthinks of the pvgiuuu, aud Wloli'\nthat hive gone on in our time, one\ncruel ai they were. But when one\ncm realize that we have a long\nroad to go to rise completely above\nthe ape.\nElizabeth Garrett had a Strong\nsupporter in her father. And she\nhad an inspirational meeting with\nEmily, another rebel against man,\nwho wu the tint mistress of Glr-\nten, the flnt girli' ichool In Eng-.\nlind. They were both against the\ntyranny that ordained that a gentlewoman could get no paid job except that of a governess; needlework and Magnull's Questions did\nnot satisfy their souls.\nWhen Elizabeth Garrett applied\nfor matriculation at the University\nof Edinburgh, the senate voted to\nwithdraw her' request. When she\nwu up for her finals, the Society\nof Apothecaries tried to refuse her\nthe right ot eximinatton. When\nthey Were forced to give wiy, by\nthe thrreat of legal action, they\nat once passed resolutions to attempt to prevent any other woman\nto be qualified.\nThis was, ot course, only the beginning. After her entrance into\nthe medical .profession the found\nprejudice against her on all sides.\nSick people did not want to go to a\nWoman doctor. She slipped into the\nBritish Medical Association at the\nmeeting of 1875, and those so-called liberal men were so appalled\nthat they proposed md passed a\nresolution io keep women out of\ntheir assemblies and their debates.\nBut Elizabeth Garrett, resolution\nor no reiolutlon, went to every assembly and spoke at every meeting, year after year, until the rule\nwas at last expunged in 1802.\nSbe wai an Indomitable woman\nmd thii record, told largely from\nher letten,.li good reading and a\nmoit pointed reminder against such\nunsubstantial things is the hates\nmd prejudices that are rife today.\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nMn. G. W. W.: \"I have been iglv-\ning my daughter orange juice and\nbeaten raw egg every morning. Se\nhu refused them now, declaring io\nmany raw eggi are injurious. Also,\nshe is a great eater of tresh tomatoes. Some,tell her they cause\ncancer. I want her to continue bn\ntheie eatables, because she is a\nworking girl and eats very sparingly most of the time.\"\nAnswer: Flnt u to the beaten\nraw egga. When the Idea that a\nraw egg\u2014plain or Beaten\u2014li move\nnutritioui or digeitlble thm - a\ncooked egg itarted, I don't know.\nBut 1 know it lin't true, -any more\nthan cooked meat or nearly any\ncooked food, Is less nutritious. Researches hive ihown that raw egg\nwhite li very Indlgeitlble and no\nmore nutritioui than a cooked egg.\nAnd ot coune, it becomes monotonous and, ai ln the case of your\ndaughter, you turn againit tt Certainly give her eggi and orange\njuice, but cook the eggi, and in a\ndifferent atyle every day of the\nweek. Ai to raw tomatoei and the\ncomment! mide by thoie who tell\nher that they cause cancer: This\ntypo of advice is enough to make\nany dietitian angry. Fresh.tomatoes\nhave a most splendid nutritional\nvalu*. They replace orange juice\nas a iource of vitamin C. As to\nttw cancer theory, people had\ncancer by the drovei when everybody thought tomatoei were noo\npolionoui to eit.\nA. C: \"I would appreciate it if\nyou would advise me whether or\nnot to take x-ray treatments for\nsuperfluous hair. I have heard that\nit might be dangerous as it sometimes leaves a white scar,\"\nAniwer: X-ray removes only certain kindi of hairs, and is liable\nto leave a tear. The best permanent\ntreatment of superfluous hair il\nelectrolysis.   .\nROYAL SALUTE ON\nQUEEN'S BIRTHDAY\nOTTAWA, Aug. 4 (CP). - In\nhonor ot the 30th birthday of\nQueen Elizabeth, a royal salute\nwu fired from Parliament Hill\ntoday by gunners ot ihe 1st-Battery of the lit Field Brigade,\ncommanded by Major G; O.\nHutchison.\nSPOKANE DANCERS BURNT\n: SPOKArrE.W*alt,Aug;4.(AP).-\nFive glrli wer* seriously \u25a0 burned\ntonight when their thin gauze costumes caught fir* u they dmced\nln the closing icene of \"Columbia\nCavalcade,\" a pageant celebrating\nthe State's golden Jubilee.\nThe glrli were Sally Lacy, Addle\nFelker, Geraldine Smith, Patricia\nSella md Virginia Wiebel. All were\ntaken to hospital, where attendants\nMid they had iuffered second degree burni.\nCretton Daughter\nWeds Nanton Man\nCRESTON, B. C\u2014 Th* flnt ed\nCreston's Auguit weddings wu\nthat (t high noon Wedneidiy, at\nthe home ot Mr. md Mrs. J. S.\nBale, when their diughter, Mlu\nAnn*, wu united ln marriage with\nArthur Herbert Shier ot Nanton,\nAlt*. Rev. H. J. Armitage, putor\nof Trinity United Church officiited.\nThe vowi wore taken under an\narch decorated with streamers ind\nbelli md tall vases of glidloliui\nand snapdragon. Th* bride, given ln\nmarriage by har fither, fore a floor\nlength gown of white silk net ind\ncarried i bouquet of rout md fern.\nA buffet luncheon wu served,\nand liter In th* day Mr, md Mrs.\nShier lttt on a motor trip to Spokme and other point* before going\non to Nanton to take up residence.\nThe brlda wu well known in dramatic and musical circles, and i\npopular member of the younger iet\nModelled Short\nPARIS, Aug. 4 (CU).-Pirti fuhloni: narrowed down today. New\ntrendi sheared yards off yesterday'i\nmodeli. \"\nEven reborn 1880 ityle* ar* pruned and clipped to the point where\n\"bustle\" dwindle to mere bowi md\nhips ire tightened.\nPanler' draperies hugged the hips\nin Patou'i winter collection md\nfinished ln flat, falling sashes at\nthe aide-front or in knotted bustle\ndetail! behind. Day dreuei md\ncoati featured tightly swathed hips,\naccentuating a lowered waistline.\nThe silhouette narrowed down\nto tha minimum for fitted coati\nand  tailored  frocki  while  day\nskirts remained ihort, averaging\nIS inchei from the ground. Many\nevening dresses were hobbled at\nthe knee and silt up the ilde.\nCosmetics...\nUse of Makeup by\n'Teen-Age Girls\nAwakens Interest\nBy DONNA GRACE\nWhile mothen md beauty advisers may stress the Importance ot\ni|mpla md regular beauty alda, we\nknow lt li uiually th* reiult of tb*\ntint powder md lipstick thit iwik-\nens the interest of the 'teen age.\nThii young mlu takes u a nutter\nof coune the daily bathing, hair\nbrushing and general care ot teeth\nand handi, but it is the Uttle sophisticated touch ot makeup that makes\nher conscious ot her own beiuty.\nWe ire not urging the early uie of\nmakeup for all young glrli In their\n'teens, but feel In mott cuei It will\nhelp to stimulate pride and teach\nthem to understand the correct use\nof iuch thing*.\nTh* girl who hu been permitted\nto have her own cosmetics ii pretty\nsure to learn iuit what her needi\nmay be md through practice will\nknow more about the subtle uie of\nsuggestion than the crude method!\not the amateur.\nOne ahould know how to uie\nmikeup io u to look like the natural coloring, ind thli take* practice. The actress knowt thli method\nwell and there is no myitery ibout\nher sparkling beauty when you\nknow juit whit ihe docs. For Instance, if the lipstick or lip outline\nIs smeared md unbecoming lt\nshould be thoroughly removed,\neven though it memi doing the\nwhole mikeup bue over from the\nbeginning. It muit bt perfect\nLet the lipstick ud powder be\ndefinite md even generomly applied, but don't become so delighted with the artificial picture that\nSERIAL STORY\nWINGS OF YOUTH\nBy HELEN WELSHIMER\nCHAPTER THTRTY-TWO\nThe newspapers told the itory In\nits entirety. There were pictures of\nCorrlne, and one of Sarah Anne.\nThe church and iti minister, Lynn\ntnd his car and the lodge were included.\nOne tabloid showed a sketch of\nSarah Anne escaping down the\nchute into dark water, and the accompanying story suggested thit\nshe might have been jealous of her\nsister.\nWalking down the itreet in the\nearly evening, she saw the papen\non the' newsstand! and her heart\nturned over ilowly. Miw Anne came\nup to her.\n\"Sarah Anne, I bought every paper'on thU itand awhile ago\u2014one\nhundred and fifty-ieven of them\u2014\nbut I guess they've laid In a new\nlupply. I can't itop them\u2014\"\n\"Don't even try. People will get\nthe newi somewhero.\"\nSuch a few weeki ago she had\nopened the newipaper to the whirring of shining wings and had aeen\nJack's face smiling at her. Then sne\nhad wanted the press to fling a\nbanner aerou the land. But now\nahe winted fo creep iwiy and hide.\n. She found Bob RsinSom on the\nverandii when ahe returned, \"Corrinne won't lee me,\" he said sim-\n\u2022ily. \"I've been trying to get to her\never since I left. She thinks I ran\nout on her. I didn't, though.\"\n\"Sit down md I'll call her again.\"\nThe boy wu suffering. She would\nInsist that Corrlne break that frozen\nexterior.\nBut Bob delayed her: \"You muit\nthink I'm m awful heel. I went out\nto raise the bail\u2014but I couldn't get\nit. I'm glad Kennedy came through.\nI think I'd hive found a way, if he\nhadn't\"\nCorrinne waailttlng on a aofa In\nher room, staring into space, ner\nlounging pajamas were pink-sprigged muslin, old and faded, but comfortable. She wu aeeing no one.\nWhen ihe heard that Bob Rjmsom\nwas waiting, ahe shook her head,\nbut Sarah Anne detected a sparkle\nof interest In ber wide blue eyu.\n'Tell him to go find mother play-\ngirl,\" she instructed. \"I've grown\nup.\"\n\"He has, too.','\n\"He's being kind to me because\nI'm in trouble and he won't walk\nout juit now. But he doesn't cire.\nHow could he? Thit black-haired\nvixen .. . 1\"\n\"So that'i worrying yout\" Sarah\nAnne aiked quietly.\n\"No, only It she had stayed In St.\nLouli I never would have married\nLynn. But It'e done\u2014\" She crossed\nto the window, parted the ruffled\ndimity curtains. \"Is that a detective atatloned out there? And why\ndoein't he ever go away to eat or\nsomething?\"       ,y\nN'You wmt him to?\" Sarah Anne\nasked. \"Why, Corrinne?\"\n\"Becauie\u2014\" The loba that ihe\nhad choked down for the put two\ndayi came In a mighty avalanche,\nshaking her slender shoulders, tearing at her face, and Sarah Anne\npatted her ihoulder and let her cry,\nAt lut Corrinne raised a tear-stained'face. \"Well, that'i overl Doesn't\nthe wronged heroine always have\none good cry? But I have to get out\n\u2014juit for in hour or two. I muit!\"\nAt the moment Corrinne ipoke so\nvehemently thit Sarah Anne didn't\nanswer. Corrinne would have an\noutburst and calm down.\nBut initead she suddenly made a\nrequest\nThat la why, four houn liter,\njuit u the midsummer moon wu\nyellow and lop-heavy, Sarah Anne\nstarted down the road to a place\nwhich she had seen once md loathed forever.    .    .\nShe was bound for Lynn Rhodes'\nlodge. The plan -was .simple enough.\nCorrinne- had' written'three letters\nfo Lynn. They were concealed in a\nwall lite. The site wai fitted Into\na panel In the alcove ot the lodge,\nand Iti combination was engraved\nln minute letten on a small metal\nplaque, under the green felt pad on\nwhich the telephone reited,\n\"Not that they're Important, but\nthink of having them splashed\neverywhere!\" ihe walled. \"I couldn'J\nface ltl I didn't even mean them\nvery much when 1 wrote them.\"\nNow Sarah Anne went down the\nroad that spanned the river. Far to\nthe eaat she could see the smoke\nstacks of the mills, silhouetted\nagainit the hllli, md now and then\nthere wu a fan of red flame among\nthe grime which the chimniu belched Into the night\nEven now she smiled because it\nwu incongruous- for Sarah Anne\nMelton, who didn't do iuch thlngi,\nto make thii journey. She reflected\nto the lowi bird! skirting the water\nthm ihe never before had had a\nchance to do iuch thlngi, md the\nhoped adventure never would come\nln thli guise again.\nTwo things ihe hoped\u2014that no\none would be at the lodge and that\nCorrinne had been right about the\ndirections.\nBut ihe wu not afraid.\nAll slimmer long ihe had been\ndisturbed, and now luddenly there\nhad been a great crash of thunder,\nthe storm had come, md she had\nno fear u ehe rode Its billows. Long\nigo, is a little girl who believed\nthat God was a nice old man with\nwhiskers who sat on a golden chair\nln the sky, ihe had learned about\nthe pillars. There wai one of clouds\nwhich led the Children ot Israel by\nday, md another one, slender,\nbright, triumphant which wu a\nbeacon for their nights.\nIt wu that one whioh went with\nher, It would lead her to that alcove again, and this time ahe would\ncome down th* itelrway and drive\nhome calmly.\nOnce she heard a motor behind\nher, but when ihe turned around\nthe road wu empty. She thought\nof the police, but they did not\nfrighten her tonight. She wondered\nwhy ihe wu not fearful ot tome\nhenchmen of Lynn'i who might pick\nup her trail. Then ihe reminded\nhenelf that lt wu because the men\nwould stay far awiy from the huge\nlog cabin.\nOn, on, on. She wu almost to the\nroad which iwung through the gate.\nFireflies danced ahead of her md\na cricket chirped in the distance.\nShe flashed her spotlight over the\nside of tbe roid. Here wa* the gate.\nNow\u2014\nThe plm wu so euy to carry\nout that ihe wu nearly down tho\nstairs, letten in her hmd, when a\nman'i voice itopped her.\n\"Ah, io you're more deeply Involved than I thought my pretty\nmaiden!\"\nShe didn't answer. She waited,\nwhile the crickets became louder\nand louder, and the wind stirred\nleaves that grew on tall trees too\nneir the window. But the new\npeace wu with her. Life might not\nbe euy. It might take much, lut\nsomewhere, somehow, it would ceue\niti demands, and the harness ot\ntheie last daya would fade away.\nA lamp wai light by the man\nwho ihared her retreit Even before ihe saw hli lice, for he wu\nstooping, Sarah Anne saw that the\ncurtains were drawn at the windows.\nThe mm looked up. \"Why, Blng\nWells, what are you doing here?\"\n\u25a0he uked in amazement\nHe laughed eully. \"That'i the\nquestion I wu ibout to ask -you,\nbut I lee what ybu have in your\nhand. I mean, you have papers.\nBetter let me decide If they're youn\nby law.\"\nHe itarted toward her and ahe\n\u25a0aw that hli usual flacid manner\nhad vmiihed. He wu hard tonight\nnnd he looked like someone. Someone ... ahe could not hive mentioned that name. But at the moment she had no control over her\ntongue or her movementi. So ihe\nsaid: \"Why didn't I gueu that you\nand Lynn Rhodu are brothers?\"\nBlng took a step toward her.\n\"Because we aren't! I'm here tor\nthe same purpoie you are\u2014hunting\nfor something! Maybe the thing\nyou hive there. Better let me see,\nSarah Anne.\"\nHe reached her and held out a\nhand for th* papers. Sh* could not\nstruggle with him, but sh* might\nbeit him. If ihe took the lamp and\niet lire to the missives....\nBut. he wii too itrong. He began to bend her wrlit painfully,\ntorturlngly, but she did not cry\nout.\n. She wu clenching her fingen\ninto a fist, welcoming the tearing\nof the paper, when she became\naware of another presence in thit\nroom. <  .\n(To be continued).\n.. -..^\u2014.:.m.-m.t-.   .   ^.\nyou fill to rtmovt tb* too definite\neffect*.\nTh* powd*r bruih muit be usid\nto give tb* lurfac* i imooth, natural finiih md exceu lipstick should\nbe:\nbe toned down by placing a tissue\nbetween the lips until there It only\ni pink lmprcuion. (It'i uied u \u2022\nblotter, you know).\nTh* *y\u00ab makeup take* practice,\nas it is usually the heavy mascara\nand crudely pencilled brows that\naccent  the artificial effect Tak*\nour pencil, then, in a good light and\nefore a magnifying glus, practice\nthe strokes juit u the hairs grow,\nLit thtm b* delicate and never uie\nthe long continuous line u the amateur doei.\nFinish th* brows and luhej by\nbrushing to remove ill powder md\nsepinte th* Individual hairs. They\nmuit be a clean frame tor the eyu.\nRemember it is the natunl effect\nnther thm the cosmetic effect thit\naids your beauty.\nWin Confidence...\nDaughter's \"First\nDates\" Should Be\nGuided by Parent\nBy OARRY C. MYSIW, Ph.D.\nIt doei not often occur to the\n\u2022verige pirent thit puberty diwm\nin the daughter from one to two\nyean earlier than ln -the ion, md\nthit because of her earlier physiological development she, u a rule,\nihould be expected to be \"boy\ncrazy\" a year or-two earlier than\nher brother il \"girl crazy.\"\nThe girl'i earlier interest in the\nopposite lex, together with the\ntraditional protecliveness towird\nthe daughter by the parcEb. he:\ncaused them, it seems, to neglect\nguidance of their wn. They forever warn their diughter against\nthe barbarism-. of boyi, but are little concerned-'about taming' their\nown young \"barbarian1\" properly to\nrespect the girl. If we parenti did\nat much to make-our'sons fit-to\nbe with girls u we do our daughten to be life with boys, adolescent relationships would become\nmore wholesome.\nNone the less,' we know our\ndaughten do need protection, and\nneed lt moit right after lex-matur*\ning, Since a great mmy parenti\ndon't protect their daughters ade-\nSuately In the early teens, your\naughier or mine may think we are\nvery old-fashioned, even unreasonable, when we don't let her, at 12,\n13, or 14, go placet all alone with\na boy friend,\n\"All the other glrli hive thli\nprivilege,\" is th* almost universal\ncomplaint. But let u\u00bb not be frightened by thli cry;\nNOT ALL SAM\nNot all daughter! at so early lie\nan entirely ute with iuch privilege. I with parents, yean before\nthe daughter approaches puberty,\ncvon in the child's infancy, would\nprepare to meet the problemi of\nthii critical period. Then are two\nmajor essentials: one,' that parental authority be well established\nyein before; another, that the\nmother earn th* confidence and\ncompanionship of her daughter.\nWhether the daughter ihall properly be allowed to have \"dates\" at\n14, 15 or later will depend upon\nhow well thli mother-daughter\ncomradeship hai been cultivated,\nand upon the degree of responsibility md dependability the daughter hai icqulred.\nThe wise mother, carefully studying her daughter, will have m understanding wtth her u to when\n\u25a0he may expect to have \"dates\"\nIn the meanwhile, thli mother will\nSrovlde mmy opportunitlei for her\naughter to have, under adequate\nprotection, social contacts with\nmany boyi. Accordingly, wayi will\nbe deviled tor attracting numerous\nboyi u well aa glrli to the home.\nFirst Woman Is\nExpelled to Eire\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (CP)- The\nflnt woman expelled from Great\nBritain under the new authority of\nthe Home Office embarked \u25a0 at\nHolyhead for Eire during the, night.\nShe wos Ardlna Sullivan, a 24-year-\nold domestic servant. Expulsion\norden so fir total 41.\nA police guard wai established\naround the Essex municipal buildings following in-anonymous threat\nto bomb flie city hall.\nThree alleged terrorist!, John 0*\nRegan, Herbert Moore and Edward\nStapleton, wore arraigned on charges ot possessing explosives. O'Re-\ngan pleaded not guilty but the\nothen maintained a defiant silence\nduring tbe proceedings. All three\nwera remanded a week.\n$10 IS DONATED TO\nARROW LAKES HOSPITAL\nBY NAKUSP INSTITUTE\nNAKUSP, B. C-At the August\nmeeting of the Nakusp Women's\nInstitute at the beautiful lakeshore\nhome of Mr. and Mn. G. P, Horsley, two outstanding papen were\ngiven. Mn. W. Maxwell gave a well\ninformed review ot the subject\n\"Peace and International Relations'\nwhile Mn. Ralph Islip gave a talk\nan the early hiitory ot Nakuip, relating many amusing stories ol bygone dayi.\nDuring the buiineu meeting presided over by Mrs, F. Rushton, the\nium of 110 wu donated to Arrow\nLakes Hoipital, md the hospital\ncommittee reported new sheets md\npillow slips had been purchased\nfor the Inititute ward.\nA reiolutlon for the Hospital\nBoird on the Government pant\nwu endoned by th* meeting. The\nSecretary wu instructed to lend a\nletter to the Nakuip Hot Springs\ncommissioners uking them to cooperate with District Health Officer Dr. H. F. Tyreman In preventing\npossible infection.\nA vote ot thanks wai extended\nto th* Kelson Institute tor kindness\nin helping with the Nikusp chil,\ndren who wir* sent to Nelion for\neye examination.\nIn plice of a suggested.dmce u\na means of raiting fundi, lt wai\ndecided that each member ihould\nmike in effort to earn th* ium of\n$1 talent money to turn In at the\nnext meeting.\nAn Invitation to a lawn tea to be\nheld at New Denver by the Institute wu accepted.\nAfternoon tea wai served with\nMrs. Horsley, Mrs. P. Young and\nMn. R. blip at hOiMuti.\nBy DILYS THOMAS\nCinidlin Preii Staff Writer\nLONDON, (CP).-A nation-wide\ncampaign il being liunched by the\nChild Guidance Council to encourage provision of skilled treatment!\nfor children ihowlng behaviour dii-\nturbancei and early symptoms ot\nnervoui disorder.\nTbe Council Is seeking a qualified\npiychlatriit lociil worker or piy-\nchologist to tour the Provlncei md\norgmize the icheme. The poit ia\nopen to penoni ot either sex, but it\nil expected the successful applicant will be i woman.\nMlu I. G. Goddard, Secretary of\nth* Council, thinki the organizer\nwill be i women beciuse 99.9 per\ncent psychiatric social workeri and\n86 per cent ot psychologists ire\nwomen.\"\nDuties of the organizer will be to\nvisit homes for homeless children\nmd schooli. Sh* win lecture at\nParenti' and Wemth'i Institute*\nmeetings ind deal with problotf\nof evacuation of children ln wartime.\n- There ar* UMM homes tor children ln England. The orginlxur will\ndiscuss with th* staff! my problem*\narising out ot unuiuil behavior ol\nany children who might be in difficulty because of th* clrcumstanc**\nof their livet.\nFor the tint two or three month*\nthe organizer's work will be principally concerned with tbe problem of evacuation In war-time.\nIn this connection on* of th*\nduties will be to interest local authorltlei In areas where children\ncould be placed ln psychiatric need*\not children in a war emergency.\nA proportion of them might ba\nupset by being removed trom their\nhomes.\nMAY ARGUE NO\nBODILY HARM IN\nCALGARY CASE\nCALGARY, Aug. 4 (CP). - The\nargument thit no bodily harm wu\noccasioned Nurse Alice Knowles in\nthe assault, allegedly committed\nupon her on the evening of July 18\nby Mrs. Ethel Allen and Miss Betty\nAlien may be advanced by J. McKinley Cameron, K.C, counsel for\nthe defence, when hearing of the\nChirge reopens on Auguit 10.\nThe case wai remanded until that\ndate after the court heard two\nwitnesses this morning. The first\nwu Mel Smith, driver of the dry\ncleaning firm's car, who picked up\nseveral dresses and other garment*\nfrom the heme of Mr!. Allen on\nthe day after the offence allegedly\ntook place.\nThe second wai Jamei Young, as-\nilitant city chemlit who preiented\nm analyili of the material found\nIn stains on the clothing and compared it with the can ot rooting\npaint submitted to him by police\nfor examination,\nMrs. Spiller, Leaving\nNakusp, Is Honored\nNAKUSP, B. C- Mri. Waller\nSpiller Who leavei this week to\nmake her home in Kelowna was\nthe guest of honor when Mra. F.\nJohnson entertained at the tea\nhour Tuesday afternoon. Dahlias\nwere used to decorate the room\nwhere tea was served. Mrs. A. J.\nHarrison assisted the hostess. The\nguesti Included Mrs. Spiller, Mrs.\nF. Daglish, Mn, N. A. Cowan, Mrs,\nHarrison and Mrs.' Johnson.\nKimberley Couple\nWed at Vancouver\nKUMBERLEY. B. ti.- A quiet\nwedding was solemnized in the chapel of St. Phillips Anglican Church\nVancouver, Tuesday July 25, at 2\np. m., when Dorothy Evelyn, younger daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.\nA. I. Hild of Chapman Camp md\nRichard LeBreton Ross of Kimberley, ion of Mr, and Mn. W. L. B.\nRon of Vancouver, were united in\nmarriage. Rev. Lang officiated.\nThe bride, given in marriage by\nher brother, Victor Hild of Trail,\nwore a white tailored ensemble\nwith matching accessories, a small\nwhite hat ana a bouquet of roses\nand lily of the valley. Miss Irene\nMcGinnis of Kimberley, bridesmaid, wore a two piece tailored\nfrock of yellow with japonica accessories and a corsage of roses.\nR. Graham of Vancouver, formerly of Trail, supported the groom.\nA reception for relatives and intimate friends was held at the home\nof the' groom's parents.\nThe bride's travelling outfit was\na dress of turquols and grey coat.\nThe young couple left for a honeymoon at Sault Spring Island. On\ntheir return they will make their\nhome in Chapman Camp..\nMrs. Ross has been on the office\nstaff at the concentrator for the\npast 10 years. Mr. Ross came here\nless than two years ago from Trail\nand is a member of the technical\nitaff at the concentrator.\nMr. Ross Is a nephew of the Canadian poet Archibald Lampman.\nSocial\nCANYON\nCANYON, B. C. - George Prloe \u00ab\nEdgemere, Idaho, wu a visitor \u00bb\nthe home of Mr- and Mn. Jt Botj\namley. He wai accompanied by Mn\nBothamley's mother and iliter, Mri\nMcCaw and Mn. CaPauI. Mn. Me\nCaw will make an extended vialt\nMr. Tedtord who ii ln charge o\nthe Forestry Camp at Yahk, waa <\nvliitor at his home here,\nMn. F. Molander ud children\nLorraine and'Barry, nave left flj\ntheir home \u00bbt Kitchener aft*\nipending a week with Mn. Mo\nlander'! parenti, Mr, and Mr*. C\nTaplln.\nCharles Bostrum ot Canal\nis spending a holiday at bis hem\nhere.\nMn. Whit* of Henrlbeurg, Suk\nli viiiting her sister and brother-in\nlaw, Mr. and Mn. Glen Messingei\nJr.\nHani Anderson ot Yahk mnt !\nfew diys at the home ot Mr. an1\nMrs. Solhelm.\nElva Strong of Cruton Is \u2022 holl\nday viiitor at the horn* of btr grand\nparenti, Mr. md Mn. T. Hlek*y.\nMr. Nasadyk and his siiter, Ann\nof Vancouver, ar* viiiting their pat\ncuts, Mr. and Mn. W. Nasadyk.\nMn. David Clark and Victor am\nMr. and Mn. Sydney Craig of Ar\nrow Creek were motor vislton a\nMoyie.\nMisses Grace Bothamley, Eleano\nBlair, Muriel Thurston md SUM\nVan Ackeren have left for a w**\u00bb\nvacation at Coeur d'Alene and Conk\nUn Parke Lake rewrt, Idaho.\nHilton Young and Ax*l\nspent a few days on a fishing t\non Kootenay Lake.\nMT. and Mn, Boyce and Mr. i\nMra. Pepperdln*. who were vi\ning Mr. and Mn. Tapllri, have re\nturned to their homes tn Calgary,]\nMiss M. Mawson has arrived fron\nEngland to viilt her brother, \"\nT. Mawson.  \u2022\".'.'\u25a0:.   -. \u2022\u25a0\u25a0'\nJim md David Spencer of Wy\ndel are holidaying at the home\ntheir grandparents, Mr. and \"\nJohn Wood.\nMr. and Mn. J. E. Vm Ack.\nwere  viiiton   at  Coeur   d'Aleni\nduring tho week.\nPersecutions Drove\nMother Leap From\nHotel With Kiddies\nCHICAGO,1 Aug. 4 (AP).-Ten\u00bb\ncutlon\" by the ntw Germm Govern\nment ot Czechoslovakia wu blamet\nby a coroner'i jury today for tin\nplunge ot a 43-year-old retun\nmother and her two sons to thai\ndeaths from the 13th floor ot thi\nCongress Hotel.\nThe jury which heard the trad\ntestimony of the once wealthy hu*\nband and father, Karel Langer, 6C\ndecided his wife, Adelian, 43, \"Com\nmitted suicide while temporaril;\ninsane due to worry over belni\nforced to leave her home In Czech*\nSlovakia due to persecution.\"\nJan Mlshi, 4tt, md Karel Totting\n6, the ions, were vletlmi of \"mnt\nder committed while (the mothe\nwas) temporarily insane\/' the vet\ndiet r*ad. -\nMn. Langer hurled the childre\nand herself from a window, of he\nhotel room to the sidewalk of bug\nMichigan Boulevard Jut night\nKASLO Social***   \u2022\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014C. H. Hanson of\nRossland is a visitor in town.\nPert MacNicol is a patient in Victorian Hospital with \"flu\".\nMrs. G; E. L. McKinnon and children, George and Margaret, have returned to Cranbrook, after spending\na few days here visiting the former's father and sisters, H. Giegerich\nand the Misses Elizabeth and Laura\nGiegerich.\nE. A. Colbio of Saskatoon, was a\ncity visitor Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. Ltmbaugh ot\nOakland, Cal., are in town,\nMrs. E. M. Sandilands was a recent visitor in Nelson. '\nAtter being guests of Mn. Can-\nnlff's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nHamilton, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Can-\nnlff have left to visit the San Francisco Fair prior to returning to\nCorkyndahl.\nJ. Crann of Rossland, former accountant in the Bank of British\nNorth America when lt wu established here, was in town.\n. Mr. and Mrs. C. Castles of Lethbridge were city visitors.\nMr. and Mrs. Walter Johnstone of\nCranbrook were In town Tuesday.\nFlorence B. Brown of Saskatoon,\nwas a city visitor.\nMrs. A. J. Pratt of Wadena, Sask.,\nvisited Kaslo.\nMrs. W. H. Driver and infant son\nleft Victorian Hospital Sunday.\nJoe Streit of Salmo Is spending a\nshort holiday in town with-nil\nmother and sister, Mn. A. and Miss\nK. Streit\nRev. J. Fielding Shaw Is on a\ntwo-week holiday at the coait.\nMr. and Mri. Koralk of Sheep\nCreek visited th* city Sunday.\nArthur Jonei has returned to\nRossland after spending a short\nholiday with his grandmother, Mrs.\nT. Clarke,\nRev. E.' Pitt Griffiths, Mrs. Griffiths and their son of Revelstoke,\nare holidaying at Mirror Lake for\na few weeks.\nMr. and MTS: William Timms arid\nchildren of Wells aro visiting th\nformer'i parent!, Mr. md Mrs. E. 1\nTimms, for a.few days.\nWilliam Chirtre has returned j\nTrail after spending a few day* I\ntown.\nBabe MacPhenon and Davi\nHartin have returned from a vis\nto Poison, Mont\nMrs. E. J. Thornberg had ,l\nguests, Mn. A. W. Connor and Mi\nK. McKinnon of the Kootenay Lai\nGeneral Hospital, Nelson, iteH.. .'-\nMr. and -Mrs. J. B Twaddle lft\nchildren of Trail are ln the city f<\na two-week holiday.\nVerne Pattullo of Trail, who h\nbeen ill ilnce Coming to Kulo t\na holiday, Is now able to be arour\nagain. ...\nJohn Strachan Jr., has returni\nto Three Hills, Alt*., after a \u00abho\nvacation here with hli parents; M\nmd Mra. John strachan, Sr. '\nmar Mt ia hot witer. 1\nThto gently miljsgl J\ntoes. Vou will le imszed hew staid\nyoa get relief. Dm'; saferleet-tertm\n.aether Jay.\nGet Zim-Buk from your druggist i\nonce snd enjoy puna foot corafor\n.ZAM-BUKNkiht\n . ,r,*'-ll-tm**m*MM--WmMMmmmmmmmmmmmi\nI\nTher* Ar* Still a Lot ef\nSHOE\nBARGAINS\ni AWAITINCYOUAT\nR.Andrew\n\u00abCOMPANY\n\"Leadert in Foot\/aMon\"\nCHINESE MASS\nFOR ATTACKS\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 4 (AP).-Large\nforcei of Chineie regulars were reported today to be filtering into\nthe Shanghai-Nanking area ln preparation tor major fighting on\nground which Japaneie wreited\nfrom them in flnt monthi of the\nwar.\nChineie sources tald the troopi\nwere getting ready tor attacks on\nrailroad!, arsenals and other Important Japaneie holdings.\nThe troopi were eald to be mail-\n' Ing In the Shanghal-Nanklng-Hang-\nchow triangle, an area about the\nsize of the state of New Jeney,\nwhich Jipineie theoretlcilly had\noccupied by the beginning of 1938.\nSizeable guerilla forcei have been\noperating in the area.\nHOSPITALIZATION\nREDUCES ACCOUNT\nOVER  $60  TO  35c\nTo have a hoipital account of\n$60.85 and to be required to pay\nonly 35 centi ot that total wu the\nexperience ot Mr. and Mn. King-\niley Fleck, Nelson. Al subscribers\nto the hospitalization icheme ot\nKooteniy Lake General HospiUl,\nthe account wai fully taken care\nof except for one meal tor a ipecial\nnune, amounting to 35 centi,\nMn. Fleck wu in hoipital 18\ndayi for in operation, md the\nhospital ich*me took care of the\ncharges for 18 dayi, the operating\nroom fee, medication, dressings and\nio on.\nShe it now at home, and doing\nwea\nCIVIC CENTRE HAS\nNET REVENUE $729\nNelion Civic Centre net revenue\nfor. July waa $729.22.\nLargest item of revenue wu\n$850 rent on auditorium. Amusement hall produced $79.45 net\nRevenue from senior lacrone wai\n$127.35 net and from junior lacrosse $13.41 net. The Library paid\nthe usual rent, $100 per month.\nJunior lacrosse received as its\nahare of gate receipts $11.58 and\naenlor lacrosse received $239.07, thii\nrevenue coming from the three\ngamei played during the month,\nTill WEEK'S WIIRER\nMRS. M. C. SAWYER\nArmitrong, B. C,\nluttt\na****'\nae\nMAIL YOUR COUPONS\nEACHWEEK.CONTEST\nCLOSES AUGUST 5.\nHalf coupon! and clerk*'\ncertificate* ha\u00bba half\nvalua. Afl\u00bb year friend*\nto help you with their\ncoupon*. Winner* ara\nthoo \u25a0aadlnn 1\u00bb moat\nNabob c\nNRBOB\nXHU.Y DOUGLAS * Ca LTD.\nyustosim, B. C\nNILtON DAILY NlWt, NILtON, B, C-tATURDAY MORNINO, AUQ. J. \u00abM\u00bb\nAnderson Adtnlfs Shooting al Cherry\nPickers but Had \"Ho Intent lo Harm\"\nSeven Witnesses Are\nHeard in All-Day\nHearing\nCu* (or tht proMCUtion in tb*\nlummiry trial of Henry Lan Anderion, Tighum nncher charged with\nunlawfully wounding Erneit Defeo\not Nelion, July 8, wai concluded\nifter in ill diy hairing before\nJohn Cartmel, stlpendliry Migis-\ntrata, in Provincial Police Court\nrrlday.\nTh* case wu adjourned till next\nWednesdiy at the request of E.\nP. Dawion, counitl for Anderion,\naa be wished to call iome defence\nwitnusjei.\nAndenon is chirged with wounding Defeo with a shotgun while tht\nyouth tnd thrte companions picked\ncherrlei from t tre* ntnging above\na fence on Anderson's property on\nthe Tighum hill.\nSeven witnesses wert heard during the day. They were the four\nyouthi, Arthur Lanon, Leo McKinnon, Elmer Gelinai, and Defeo;\nDr. B. T. Dunham, who treated Defeo; Conitable C- W. Houie, who\ninvestigated the case; and Inipector\nJohn Macdonald, who arrested\nAndenon. Constable Houie prosecuted.\nDuring. Constable House's testimony, Mr. Diwion objected to con-\nventtion between the officer ind\nAndenon during the Investigation\nbeing entered as evidence. When\nInspector Macdonald took the stand\nana began to refer to verbal statements made to him by Anderson\nbefore hii arrest, Mr. Dawson again\nobjected, stating mat Anderion had\nnot been given a chance to make\na signed written itatement, and that\nthe verbal itatement wai not acceptable ai evidence. Even though\nthe Inipector hid warned Anderson\nthit what he uld might be uied ai\nevidence, and Andenon made hit\nitatement on thoie terms, Mr. Dtwion contended il aliould ,.ot be entered u evidence. Hit Worship\noverruled the objection, itating that\nas far as he wu concerned, the\nverbal itatement wai \"good\nenough.\"\nHIARD NO WARNING\nYoung Lanon told how th* lads\nwere out driving and went flnt to\nthe Ymlr Road, then the North\nShore, and finally to Taghum Hill,\nwhere one ot them had said there\nwere, some \"nice\" cherries. They\nitopped the cir, turned out the\nlighte md wilked down the road\ntoward the tre*. They were laughing and joking and waited until\naeveral can passed before they\nitirted to pick the cherrlei. One\not them lit a match to seo the cherries. They were standing on the\nbottom rail of the fence and had\neach picked a tew cherrlei when\nthere wu a ihot fired from tome-\nwhere in the field below them\nwith \"no warning whitioever.\"\nLarson heard Defeo moan and utter\ntome exclamation, and they all\nturned and ran for tbe car.\nArriving at Defeo'i reildence in\nNelson, the others helped Defeo out\not the car u he wu suffering intense pain. They helped him to\nundress tnd gat into a hot bath,\nwhen they saw a 'series ot abrasions,\nsome ot them bleeding freely, from\nhis kneei to hli chest.\nLanon uid he and Gelinas were\nboth hit by the charge, Larson\nreceiving 12 pellets in the left\narm ana lix or seven ln the head.\nHe wu weiring a luede leather\njacket over hli shirt. Gelinas received three pellets, two in hii\nlegs ind one In the abdomen. Larson took Gelinas and McKinnon\nup town and let them out, later\ngoing to a hotel where he summoned Dr. B. T. Dunham. On arriving at the Defeo residence, Dr.\nDunham had ordered young Defeo\nto Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nCrow-examined by Mr. Dawson,\nLanon said he knew it to be an\noffense to take the cherrlei, but\n\"not a serious one.\"\nThe diy ifter the occurrence,\nLanon, Gelinas and Defeo'i two\nbrothen had reported to the Provincial Police, and Conitable House\nhad accompanied them to Taghum.\nYoung McKinnon corroborated\nLarson's evidence, and itated that\nwhen he heard the shot, he thought\none ot the boya had \"dropped a\ngiant firecracker for a Joke.\nElmer Gelinas testified he thought\nthe ihot came from behind a stump\nor \"some blick object\" He could\nnot see a flash. Cross-examined, he\nuld he knew he wu \"doing a\nwrongful act, but it waa a very\nminor offense.\"\nErnest Defeo itated he had picked about four cherrlei when ho\nheard and \"felt\" a shot He thought\nhe saw a flash, \"but aomethlng sort\nof dazed me.\" Tbe youth aald it\nwai he who told hi* companions\nL\nI\nSPECIALS\nBUTTER: Nol Croamery, 3 Ib  89*>\nCOFFEE: Bluo Ribbon, tin  39*\nCATSUP: fains, 2 bottlt  -iA.\nBABY FOODS: Heinx, tin  IO*\nJELLY POWDERS: Idoal, 4 for  19*\nBAKING POWDER: Blue Ribbon, 16 ox. tin.  22<\nGRAHAM WAFERS: 1 Ib. cello pkg.  20.*\nTOMATO JUICE: lOVi ox. tin, 2 for  13*\nFIC BARS: 1 Ib. cello pkg  20*\nOVALTINE: 8 ox. tin .... 58*; 16 oi. tin .... 08*\nSCOTCH MINTS: Lb  27*\nPEANUT BUTTER: Novelty tumblen, eaeh  22*\nGREEN\nLb.\t\nPEAS:\nONIONS; Dry,\nt lta. -\nPEACHES:\nBiiket\t\nCABBAGE:\nLb, ,-\nMARROW;\nLb..\nCELERY:\nLb. 2\t\nCARROTS:\nS bunchei.\nLETTUCE:\nHead _.-....\n5*\nW\nm\nBIAN6: Green or Wtx,\n3 lbl -\t\nPEARS: Tiblt,\nBaiket  \t\nCANTALOUPE:\nLargt \t\ncukes:\n2 for  ,\t\nGREEN ONION8:\n2 for  \t\nRADISH: White,\nt for \u2014-\nTOMATOES: Cholet,\n4 lta. \u2014\t\nBANANAS:\n5 lta.\t\n25(5\n32*\nm\nm\n29*\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235\nFREE DELIVERY\nikt :_::\u25a0 \\Wm\\\u25a0______:.\u25a0__\u25a0__.\nabout the tre* being a \"nice one,\"\nu he had wen it that afternoon\nwhen returning from a fiihing trip\n\u2022t Tighum with Gellnis.\n(0 ABRASIONS\nDr. Dunham eitlmated there wert\n\u2022bout 60 abraiioni on Deleo's body,\nwith 30 of the pellets embedded in\nthe flesh, some of them about an\nInch below tbe skin surface. He\nbad to cut around tham to remove\nthem. A number were left in, u\n\"I thought I would be doing more\nharm than good to remov* them.'*\nThe youth suffered a great deal ot\npain, but appeared to be in comparatively good condition. There\nwu little sign of shock.\nConitable Houu testified to investigating and auestioning Anderson on the Sundiy afternoon.. He\nsaid Anderion it tint claimed no\nknowledge of the occurrence, and\nuld ht hid been out searching\nfor hii cow Saturday night. He\nsaid he had a shotgun but had\nused lt th* lut time in the Spring.\nThe officer uld the gun smelled\nis though it hid been fired recently.\nHe look Andenon to Nelion for\nfurther questioning.\nReturning to Tighum, he obtained itatementi from Mri, Pearl\nAnderson: md her daughter, Mri.\nMamie Slattery, both reildenti In\nAnderson's houu. Daniel dickering, Mrs. Anderson's fither, alto\nresided there but no statement wu\nobtained from him. Going bick\nto Nelion, Conitable House later\nreturned with Inipector Macdonild\n\u2022nd Conitable G. S. Blaney. With\nAnderson, they made another search\nof the property, and from a ipot\nwhere Andenon itopped, to the\ncherry tree In question, the distance measured lit feet. Anderson\npicked up a .12 guage shotgun shell\nin the bush near where he itopped.\nComtable House exhibited two\npellets he uid he htd extracted\nfrom a telephone pole betide the\ntree. They were buried about a\nquarter of in inch deep.\nINSPECTOR REPEATS,\nADMI88ION\nInipector Macdonald testified Anderson hid made The statement\nthat \"I have had lots, of annoyance\nby boyi stealing iny cherrlei. I\nhav* chased them away two or\nthru timei today. It'i not what\nthey take. but the damage they\ndo to the treei. Today my cow had\nstrayed away and I was searching\nfor her about three hours before\nI found,her. When I come hack I\nwu tired and angry and I noticed\nboyi stealing cherrlei from the\ntree. I got my gun and fired a thot\nin their direction. I had no Intention of doing them any injury;\nonly to Ecarc them, I was quite a\ndistance away when I fired the\nshot It you cite to com* down,\nI will ahow you the exact ipot,\"\nThe Inipector then uld he bad\n\u25a0ccompanied Anderion to the ranch\nwhere he wu ihown the ipot from\nwhich Anderion fired the ihot. On\nthe wiy to the ranch, Anderson had\ntold the Inspector ot the hard time\nhe had trying to make a living from\nhii fruit, ind the trouble he hid\nin protecting hla property.\nFruitvale Meeting\nLearns Beaver Falls\nSchool Not Allowed\nntTJITVALE, B. C. \u2014 The lecond\nmeeting of the School Board and\nRatepayers ot Fruitvale took place\nin the Public School Wedneiday.\nevening. Some 70 families were represented, with T. J. Carter, Inspector\nfor this dlitrict, being present.\nAt 3 previous meeting, a <Uie_\n\u25a0Ion took place between residents of\nBeaver Falls and Fruitvale residents u to the building of a amall\nschool at Beaver Falli and the matter wu brought up again. Mr.\nCarter uld that a ichool there could\nnot be allowed.\nUse of a bus to bring in pupili\nfrom the out-lying parts of the\nFruitvale District wu held over and\na delegation from Beaver Falls will\nmeet the Fruitvale School Trustees\nat an early date, to try to settle thii\nmatter.\nAnother teacher and more room\nbeing needed to cope with the in'\ncreue in pupils, it wu decided to\nrent the Lutheran ichool, for the\ncoming year, at a rental of $300.\nSalaries for the next term for\nprincipal and five teacheri wu\ndecided on, at $5750 inclusive.\nTrustees nominated were: Pat\nHeld. S. Lewis and E. Cole, to fill\nin for one year in place Of E. A.\nTaylor.\nROYAL LIFE SAVINC\nTROUPE   DEMONSTRATES\nIN SLOCAN DISTRICT\nNEW DENVER, B.C.\u2014Sponsored\nby Slocin District Boird of Trtde,\n24 memben of the Royal Life Saving Society of Vancouver, led by\nMiss Violet Mellish and F. Lugrin,\ndemonstrated methods of rescue in\nUnion Bay, between New Denver\nand Silverton.\nWith a delegation of the Board,\nthey uw the famoui view from\nLookout Point on their way to New\nDenver. At Union Bay they were\nwelcomed by A. M. Ham, president,\nand several hundred spectators\ntrom both villages.\nThe girls were billetted ln various homes.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014 One Toronto\npool lists Teh Commandments for\nbathers. Among the rules are: Do\nnot read booki in tho sunshine;\ndo hot mix alcohol and sunshine;\ndo not sprinkle the skin with perfume while sunbathing.\nFRESH CUT\nFlowers and Plants\nMac's Greenhouses\nOne Blk. From Hoipital\nCedar and Front Sti.    Phone 910\nRADIO SALE\nUSED RADIOS, Un from ...  $5.00\nNEW G. E. RADIOS, Up from $14.95\nNelson Electric Co.\n674 Baker St Phen* IN\naW8W\u00bb>WW9WM\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbtMsWisi99M9\u00bb\nDresses,  Coats,   Suits,   Hats.\nDrastically Reduced   '\nfcdiik tl Camik-M.\n4\u00bbS Baku SL Phon* 070\nMm\n\u2022f nvi\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M J. V1UNIUX\n\u2022 Mr. ind Mn. R. E. Potter and\nson will be guests li Kokinee\nLodge until tomorrow morning,\nwhen they luve to mike their home\nin New Weitmiaiter, where Mr.\nPotter hu iccepted t position.\ne W. H. Hoare, Silica StreeL\nhu u guesti hii ion ind daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mn. Charles Hoare\nof Oakland, Calif.\n\u2022 Mn. Jamei Buchanan ot Trail,\nwho with her family ii ipending\nthe Summer at her Willow Point\nhome, ipent yetterday in Nelson\nshopping.\n\u2022 Mr. ind Mn. Austin Carter\nand family of Vancouver, who\nhave spent a couple ot weeks at the\nSummer camp, No Eats\", of Mr.\nand Mn. H. M. Whimiter it Crescent Biy, lett yeiterday for th*\nCout.\n\u2022 Mrs. G. L. Thompton of Bonnington ipent yesterdiy in the City.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. A. Massey ind\nchildren ot Kimberley leive today\nifter a week u gueiti of Mn. F.\nJarrett, Latimer StreeL        .\n\u00bb Mr. and Mn. Howard Scott\nand family ot Nacmine, Alta., are\ngueiti ot Mr. Scott's lister, Mn.\nEliie Morgan, Second Street,\nFiirview.\ne Captain J. Russell of Silmo\nipent yesterdiy in town.\n\u2022 Jess Sanders ot Crescent Bty\nvliited Nelson yeiterdiy.\ne Mr. md Mrs. Robert Andrew\nare holidaying at their Summer\nplace at Frasers Landing.\ne Mn. Alex F. McDonild of\nSouth Slocin ipent yeiterdiy ln\ntown.\n\u2022 Miu Phyllis Gny of the staff\not Trail-Tadanac hoipital, spent yeiterday vUiting her parenti, Mr. and\nMn. J. B. Gray, Baker StreeL\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. Gui Mul and\ntheir three children of Kimberley\nleave today after a week'i visit\nwith Mrs. fr, Jarrett.\n\u2022 Dr. C. F. Prentice arrived in\nthe City trom Spokane Thursday\nto ipend a week with Nelson friends.\n\u2022 Mri. M. Ruihby and children,\nwho have spent several weeki visiting Mr. and Mn. F. Nichols, Nelion Avenue, Fiirview, leave tonight via C. P. B. for their home in\nEngland, sailing Auguit 9 on the\nDuchess of York.    ,\n\u2022 Mn. Elite Morgan, Fairview,\nhu u gueit, her sister, Miu Florence Scott of Cilgary.\n\u2022 Mn. Robert Quln of Harrop\nwu In from Harrop yeiterday.\ne Billy Jarvii of Trail irrived\nyesterdiy from Procter, where he\nvisited his grandparents, Mr. and\nMn. W. B. Jarvii. He will vialt\nfriendl in Nelson for a few days\nbefore returning home.\n\u2022 Misi Jean Robertion ii viiiting at the Gansner home on the\nGranite Road for a week.\n\u2022 Mn. George Conrad ef Balfour viilted the City yeiterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. C. F. Domoney\nof the North Shore hav* taken up\nresidence in the Fltury bom*. 410\nCottonwood Street ratrviaw.\n\u2022 Donald Grant, who hu ipent\nuveril weki viiiting hli lliter, Mrs.\nMarie Longworth, hu returned to\nWinnipeg.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. H. Brace of PenUcton is a guut ot her brother and\nsister-in-law, Alderman and Mn.\nT. H. Witen, North Shore.\ne Mr. ind Mn. Aylmer Coatei ot\nUpper Bonnington viilted tbe former's parenti, Mr, and Mrs. J. F.\nCoitei, Victoria StreeL yeltertay.\n\u2022 Colonel Good of Bonnington,\n\u2022pent yesterday in town,\n\u2022 Miu Betty Johniton ot tbe\nitaff of Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, left yesterday on a vacation to the Cout.     ,\ne Mln Kay McLeod ot Nelion,\nwho li Summering at Procter, la\nspending a few. dayi In Nelson.\nShe ii accompanied by Miu Jun\nCourtney, who hu been her gueit\nat Procter, and will be leaving the\nfint of the week for Vincouver.\n\u2022 Mr. ind Mn. E. Quill of Lethbridge ire ipending a few dayi in\nNelion and dlitrict.\n\u2022 M. Peten of Salmo vliited\ntown yeiterday, \u2022.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. Thompion hu u a\nguest, her daughter, Mlu Isabel\n(Bluebelle) of Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mri. A. J. Collinson\n\u25a0nd fimlly ind Miu Agnes Jerome\nlett by motor to visit the Worlds\nFair in San Fnntlico.\n\u2022 Mn. J.' Haffenden leavu tonight vii C. P. R. for her borne In\nEngland ifter in extended visit it\nthe home ot her brother-in-ltw and\nliiter, Mr. ind Mn. J. P. Morgan,\nOak StreeL Fairview. Mn. Haffenden will nil on the Ducheu ot\nYork from Montreil, Auguit 9.\n\u2022 M. Herman, mining man of\nHall, visited town yeiterday.\n\u2022 Mn. ProuL Edgewood Ave,\nnue, left yeiterday to ipend the\nweekend in Spokine.\na Douglu Reid of Erie was a\nCity ihopper yeiterdiy.\n\u2022 Mr. ahd Mn. H. Prlutner and\ndaughten Irene and Jun. who\nhave spent Uuee weals in Ncteri,\nleave tomorrow for their home in\nTrail.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Orphir Bow\ngeoii of Cranbrook arrive today and\nwill visit for a couple of weeks,\nrelatives in Nelson and Crescent\nVilley.\n\u2022 Mn. Aim Willey of Bonning\nton vilited town yeiterday.\ne Lloyd P. Jordan ot Passmore\nspent yesterday in the City.\n\u2022 Arthur Stewart wu in Nelion\nfrom Nakusp yesterday.\n\u2022 Mn. Odolln Dunn of Nakuip\nwu among City viiiton yuterday.\n\u2022 Olaf Bjorknei of Ymir apent\nyesterdiy in Nelson.\ne Mn. Fred Hirmston of Crei-\ncent Villey ii viiiting for a few\ndiys, Mn. W. Burbidge.\n(. P. ExpressIo\nExtend Area Free\nService in Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug: 4-Effec-\ntiv* Auguit 7, tht Cinidlin Piclfic\nExpreu Compiny will extend Iti\nfree pickup ind delivery lervice\nln TraU..\nThe extended ana include* all\nof Birch Avenue, all of Spokine\nStreet; Lookout Strut from Ntlion Avenue to Mountain Streit;\nCeccanti StreeL Railway Avenue,\nByers, Short tnd Diamond Streets.\n'Extensions jn jut Trill Include\nColumbli Avenue. Second Avenue\nto mm block beyond Tiylor Stmt;\nCircle, Norm ind Mlin Streets\nfrom Fifth Avenue to the city Um.\nIti; and Fifth Avenue from Billey\nStreet to Main Street'\nJ. T. Martindale\nPasses at Trail\nTRAIL,.B. C, Aug. Wouph\nThomu Martindale, 58. died suddenly thii - morning' it hii' homt,\n1188 Tamarac Avenue.\nMr. Martindale had been in ill\nhealth line* Mty, but htd recovered to tbe extent thit he plinned\nto leave thli morning lor a vacation at the Coast.\nMr. Martindale came to Trail 10\nyetn ago from England, where he\nwu born, and' hid been' employed by the.C: M. te 3. Company\nilnce hli arrival. During the put\n17 years ht wu an operator. Due\nto ill health Mr. Martindale had\nnot worked ilnce Mty.   .\nHe leivei hli wife ind on* daughter, Mrs. R. J. German, in Trail;\nmother diughter, Mrs. j. L. Ayre\nof Frultvile; \u2022 brother, Harry, and\na iliter. Mn. While, both in Australia; and a iliter, Mn. Shepherd\nin Englind,\nFuneral will be held Mondiy at\nKnox United Church.   \u25a0\nDunning Embarks\nCRANBROOK Social...\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-An arch\not cedar bought, banked with large\nvases of white, blue md yellow\ngarden flowen, formed the setting\nfor the wedding ceremony at the\nhome of Mr, md Mn. W. H. Sten-\nder, Cranbrook StreeL when their\nyoungeit daughter Florence Ida,\nwu united in marriage to Jamei\nBonner, eldest ion of Mr. md Mrs.\nJ. B. Bonner of Kimberley at four\no'clock Tuesday afternoon. Rev.\nR. W. Hardy officiated. The bride\nwore a ihort dresi of queen'i blue\ngeorgette, with a full skirt and\nshirred blouse and belted with\nmatching material. The sleeves\nwere short and puffed and the\nplain neck line was fattened with\na large white flower. She; wore a\nfull length coat of queen'i blue\ngeorgette, and a picture hat of\nwhite linen. Her shoes and glovus\nwere white md she carried cream\nroses Witnesses were Mr. and Mrs.\nJamei Kemp of Kimberley. Mrs.\nKemp chose a ihort frock of coral\ncrepe, trimmed with dark brown,\na white itraw hat, white shoes and\ngloves, md a corsage ot roses.\nThe wedding march was played\nby Miss Geraldine Haddad. Fol-\n\u25a0lowing the ceremony a wedding\nbuffet supper was served. Mrs,\nStender, receiving the guests, chose\nan afternoon frock of navy georgette reddingote worn over figured taffeta, white hat md shoes\nand a conage ot pink and white\nrotes. The buffet table was centred\nwith a tiered wedding cake with\nwhite streamers radiating from the\ncake. Mr. and Mn. Bonner left for\na wedding trip to Spokme. Mrs.\nBonner wore an afternoon dresi ot\ndusty pink crepe with a jacket in\npastel purple, md pink felt hat,\nihoei and gloves.\nMn. Bonner wu born In Cranbrook and attended the schools\nhere. After graduating from Garbutt Business College she was with\nthe General Construction Company\nhere, and with the Finney Tractor\nCompany at Vancouver recently.\nMr. Bonner wai born in Crmbrook\nand hai lived at Moyie and Kimberley. He la with the Cmadian\nImmigration at Kingsgate, where\nthey will reside on their return\nfrom Spokane.\n\u2022  \u2022  *\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-Honorlng\nMlu Annie BulkoL whose marriage\nto Gordon Lancaster is this week,\nMisi Laura, Miss Stattle md Miss\nMary Bulkot entertained at a miscellaneous shower at their home on\nFrench Avenue Tuesday evening.\nPrize winnen at whist were Mrs.\nH. Shapka, Mrs.- Ellison and Miu\nClan.Toole, The gilts were presented to the guest.of honor by little. Beverley Comes. The invited\nguesti were Misi BulkoL Mn. O. A.\nAtkinson, Mn. F. Garrett, Mrs. A.\nEliason, Mrs. N. Oakley, Mn. H.\nShapka, Mn. Petruk, Mn. BulkoL\nMrs, D. Danieli, Miss Mabel\nCharlesworth, Mln Clara Toole,\nMiss Irene Grey, Miss Alice Noyce,\nMiu Violet Noyce, Miss Ethel Gray\nmd Miu Cellna Folsey.\nHonoring Mn. Albert Griffiths,\nrecent bride, Mn. W. H. George entertained at a miscellaneous ihower\nwhen the evening wu spent in\ngamei. During the supper the gifts\nwere preiented in a decorated doll\ncarriage by Mil! Marion and Miu\nDorothy George. The guut* were\nMn. Griffith, Mrt. R, Banki, Mn.\nS. Ratclltfe, Mn. R. Chenuz, Mn.\nJ. Simpson, Mn, H. Sheedy, Mrs. J.\nHunt, Mn. R. Wleteel, Mri. . J.\nGeorge and Marlon and Dorothy\nGeorge.-.\nA wedding of much Interest in\nCranbrook and dlitrict took plice\nin Victoria recently when Miu Barbara Lloyd-Young of Victoria became the bride of Kenneth Dixon,\nion of Mr. and Mn, Arthur Dixon\nof Victoria, formerly of Cranbrook.\nMn. John Martin is ipending a\nfew months visiting her mother Mrs.\nMacDonald at Spring HIU, N. S.\n?mii^\u00a3^fi-^--*-*&ii&\nMrs. A. C. Blaine, who underwent a major operation at the Mayo\nClinic at Rochester recently, hai returned to her home here.\nConstable John Adams of Michel\nla the gueit ot hii parenti, Mr. and\nMrs. P, Adams.\nNeil Simpson, who wu camping at Camp Busk, Nelson, hu returned to the home of hli parenti,\nMr. and Mn. Robert Simpson.\nMiss Frances Rowse, who spent\nher hoUdays with her pare** here,\nhas returned' to Red Deer, where\nthe ii with the itaff ot the hospital.\nMiss Miry Huchcroft returned to\nMedicine Hat to reiume her dutlea\non the staff of the hospital there.\nMr. md Mn. D. Mller and family\nare spending a few days viiiting In\nKamloops.\nMr. md Mn, Henry Chester and\nson, Ian, of Nelson were recent\nCity visitors, the guests of Mr. and\nMrs. James Chester.\nMr. L. P. Matheson and two children of Montreal are the guests ot\nMn. Matheson'! parenti, Mr. and\nMn. A. S. Ward.\nCart and Allen GIU of Kimberley were Cranbrook vlilton thii\nweek, the guests of their grandmother, Mrs. T. S. Gill.   .\nMrs. Ernie Kinahan and two soni,\nPat and Mike, of Trail are the gueiti\nof Mr, and Mn. Robert Simpson.\nMr. and Mn. Herbert Fyles and\nson, Kenneth, of Lethbridge, have\nreturned to their home after a few\ndays' visit in Cranbrook.\nThe christening of Kenneth\nWayne, infant son of Mr. and Mrs.\nHerbert Fyles, md Elva, Ann, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fylea, took place at the United\nChurch Sunday afternoon with\nRev. R. W. Hardy offtciiting. Only\nrelatives were preient.\nDon Reevie has returned from\nNew York where he vilited the\nNew York Worlds Fair.\nCorporal and Mrs, A. E. Jarvii\nand family of Kimberley were recent city visitors, on their way to\nKamloops where they wtll reside,\nMiu Margaret Bridges, who was\nvisiting her grandmother, Mrs. S.\nBurnett at Trail, has returned to\nthe borne of her ptrents, Mr. and\nMrs. Frmk Brldgei.\nMrs. John Boyd ind daughten of\nVincouver have arrived in Cranbrook to spend a holiday here at\nGreen Bay. They were accompanied by Miss Jem McDonald and\nMiss Katherine , Jones, who were\ntheir guests in Vancouver for a\nmonth, and by Mlu Helen McDonald who wai visiting relative! In\nVancouver.\nA. Graham has left tor a trip to\nVancouver and Victoria.\nMrs. F. W. Green hu left to spend\na holiday at her summer home in\nMirror Like.\nMiss Harrison arrived from Vancouver to visit friendl In the city.\nMn. G. E. L. MacKinnon, Miss\nMargaret md George MacKinnon\nhave returned from Kaslo.where\nthey were holidaying.\nMiu Margaret Scott returned\nfrom Vmcouver where ahe tpent\na month visiting friends.\nMr. md Mn. J. B. Bonner of\nKimberley were city viiiton during the week.\nMlu Joyce Johnstone who was\nviiiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nWalter B. Johnstone, hu returned\nto New Denver.\ni Rev. and Mrs. K. W. Hardy,'Miu\nRuth md Misi Lois Hardy and Miu\nMary Patsiora hav* Ms lor Vancouver where they will spend a\ntwo-week vacation.\nMr. and Mrs. Jamei Samp of\nKimberley wert city visitors Tun.\nday. '    '    .    . ..-,\nLONDON (CP)-A great farewell to Arthur Foley Winnlngton-\nIngram Biihop of London, retiring\nthis Summer, ii to be held at Albert Hall. Hii Lordship hai completed SO yein of work in London,\n38 as Biihop,\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CP).-Fi-\nnance Minister Dunning uiled for\nEngland todiy aboard th* liner\nMontclar* seeking to recover trom\nill health which has forced him out\not active politics.\nHU wife, diughter, Kay, and ion,\nAvery, itood on the dock is the\nliner pulled out. The Finance Min\nliter ii travelling alone.\nHe walktd ilowly up the gangplank ihortly before the ship sailed:\nwithout hit usual black pipe and\ncirrying i cent.'\nOnce aboard ship he went directly\nto hli cabin.\nA large numbtr of family friends\n\u25a0nd Montreil citizens uw the Fl'\nnance Minister off. Hon. J. L. Ralston came aboard and talked for\nseveral minutei with Mr. Dunning.\nCol, Ralston is mentioned in some\nquarten u a possible successor to\nMr.' Dunning if the latter drop* his\nportfolio.\nAvery Dunning, a junior i at\nQueen'i Unlvenity, said hli fither\nhas no particular plana, \"He il\ngoing to wander iround England\nand try to gtt well juit loafing\nibout,\" he uid.\nNelson Swelters in\n95-Degree Weather\nFor the third day in succession,\n\u25a0nd for the eleventh day in the\npast 13, the mercury soared into\nthe 90'i in Nelion Friday. Citizens\nsweltered In sultry atmosphere. A\nUght cloud hue in the iky moit\nof the diy cleared away in the\nlate afternoon. The day'i minimum\nwas 59 degrees, second highest of\nthe year.\nSave on TOWELS\nBuy plenty of these fluffy\nBeth Towels for beach and\ngeneral use. They are extra\nabsorbent and of imported\nquality.' Large size. OQ.\nRegular 50c. Each .. ******\nROUGH TOWELS\nRough ptstel colors of blue, green and   CQ\u201e\ngold. Regular 79c each. Sale Price, ea. OjZ\nCROCHET\nGLOVES\nHand made Lace Cloves,\nin black, brown, ecru and\nwhite. Regular to   CQft\n$1.25. Sale Price . \u00abWC\nman\nPHONE 200\nBAKER ST.\nU.S. HOUSE MOVES TO\nHALT CAMBLINC SHIPS\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 4 <AP>-\nThe United Statei houu of representatives paued and lent to the\nunite today legislation intended\nto curtail operations ot gambling\nihip* off the west coast.\nThe bill, approved by the judiciary committe* md supported\nby both Republicans md Democrats, would provide stiff lines and\nImprisonments for the maintenance of gambling ships within the\nadmiralty md maritime jurisdiction\nof tho united States;\nTRAVEL RESUMES IN\nFLOODED U.S. AREA\nSAN \u25a0BERNARDINO, Callt., Aug.\n4 (AP).\u2014One-way travel returned\ntodiy trom Redlmds md Sin Bernardino to the Barton Flats area,\nwhere highwiy wuhouti caused by\nt near-cloudburst hid marooned 500\nSouthern California children. Road\ncrews were expected to have lide\nroads opened by tomorrow.\nYOUR DINNER\nIt wouldn't bo complete without\n1 dish ot our own made\n.    ICE CREAM\nFresh 'frbten daUy.\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\nPEP UP \u2014 DRINK\nKOOTENAY VALLEY\nChocolate Milk\nPHONE 116\nNOW SHOWING\nA Very Fine Lin* of .\nLADIES* LEATHER BAGS\nIn calf, morocco, antelope, etc\nFrom 53.95   to S6.95-at\ndfwwsuA, Qtw&UeM,\n497 Biker SL Nelton, B.C.\n\"ThTTJiATTY MODEL A\nThe world'i Finest Inner gives\nyou every Ironing convenience.\nIron Electrically with a Beatty\nBEATTY BROS LTD.\nNelion  Fictory  Branch\n321 Baker Phont 91\nreSiJSttrWttiMsattMsWSrattattM\nCLEARANCE SALE\nCOATS rfe$14.50\nJa-JtM&J'MlSJwfL\n436 Baker St Nelson, B. C.\nCatalina Swim Suits\nStyled for the stars of Hollywood\nThe Gingham. Shoppe\n\u25a0 Phono 903\nOpp. Daily Ntwt.\n\u00bb\u00bb^s^^j^|pj^pBj|i>p\u00bb\u00bbai\nORES* specials\n$3.95\nMilady s Ruhion Shoppt\n449 Bakir St     '     Phon* 874\nwiMatiwtxMiKea^wdetwMMatat\nWE USE AND RECOMMEND\nVITASPRA\nINSECTICIDE\nKootenay Flower Shop\n344 Bikar St Phont 961.\nButcherteria\nPhone Nauri  Phone\n52)   I\",W*    528\nNELSON'S PREMIER MARKET\nSATURDAY AND\nMONDAY\nur;iChick,B,.!.$i.oo\nBaked Spareribi:        OC.\nPork Pie.: OC\n4 for  LOQ\nJellied Chicki:      .    1 C -\nMoulds, each IOC\nRump Beef Roaiti:     OA\nUp from L\\J*Z\nRump Veil Roaiti:    QO\nOven Veal Roaiti:      10.\nUp from, Ib IOC\nPot Rotth Beef: 10\nUp from, Ib IaC\nVoal Steak*: OCA\ni ib. WC\n^^b',:op,: 30c\nBreakfait Sau.age:     1 C\nCoed, Ib IOC\nGood HimMirier:      OC*\n21b*    Zt)C\nFREE DELIVERY\nOverwaitea\nLlmlttd\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAY and MONDAi\nPRUNES: Sun Sweat, 09 J\n21b. pkt iM\nROOT OR CINCER BEER:\nHir*, 00\nbottle  um\nENOS FRUIT SALTS: 7Qi\nLargo bottle **~\\\nPurex Tissue\nFor Cp\nRoll  OH)\n(Saturday Only. Limit 5)\nBLEACH: Eureka,\n2 for\t\nTOMATQ JUICE:\nDrinkmore I OVi ox\nPEACHES: Lynn\nValley, 2 tin. for ..\nTOOTH PASTE: 1\nTube    *\nDOC  BISCUITS:\nlandis\n2 lb., for .....\nPORK and BEANS:     OC.\nLibby'. 16 ox., 3 tin. LO\\\nDr.   Bal\n23i\nCHEESE: Mild,\nIb\t\nDOC BISCUITS:        OQ.\nSpratt. IVi lb. sack \u00a331\nCANTALOUP:\nUrge, 3 for ..\nCORN: Golden\nBantam, dox. .\nTOMATOES: Choice\nField, 4 Ibs. for\nONIONS: Okanagan\nDry, 6 Ibi. for .\n.25\n36\n23:\n.25.\nBUTTER\nFint Crade Over- OQ~\nwaitea brand, 3 Ibi. OJC\nSomething Different for tl\nSummer Monthi \u2014 Tomai\njuiee Cocktail made wil\nIrradiated Carnation Mil\nSample thii in our itore I\ndey Saturday. Carnati<\nMilk tpecial today only\nPhone 707      Free Dclive\nBRADLEY'S\nCASH MEAT MARKE\nOUR MEATS GOVERNMENT HEALTH APPROVED\nGOOD BUYING FOR SATURDAY\n\t\nCash,and Carry\nSpecials\nPot Ro\u00abt: lb. 12t*\nRound Sttik: Ib. ...19*J\n$\u00bbUM|o:2lb\u00bb,......26<\nHamburg: Freth, lb. . 10f\nVeal Stewing: 2 lb.. . 35\u00a3\nLamb Stewing: 2 lb.. . 25<>\nBologna: Ib. 1*9.\nJellied Veal: Ib 30t*\nDill Pickle.: 4 for ... Wty\nTender Picnic: Ib. ..23*\nLard: 2 Ibi. 21*\nSpecially Tender\n.    Beef\nPot Roast: Ib 19i\nRolled Rib: lb. 2&\nRump Roait: lb. ......\u00ab\nVeal Steaks: 2 Ibi: .. 35.\nVeal Oven Roait: Ib, . 20.\nLeg. Spring Lamb: Ib. 30<\nLamb Steaki: Ib.  ... 24\nYoung Fowl: Ib 27.\nFrying Chicken: Ib.  . 32.\nEggi: Pulleti, medium largt\nlocal freih 311 33t* 35,\n-'\u25a0- \u2014 \u2014 ^\n -\n \u2014 , \u2014\npip^inpppppp^ppni^majiuiiv iiiiiiw.iiiwiiMiwpn _ li\nIE SIX\n-NELION DAILY NIWI, NILION, I.\nC.-SATURDAY MORNINO, AUO. I, 1M-\nEiUbUthtd April S 1902\nBritiih Columbia's Mott Inttrttting Newspaper\nPublished tvtry morning except Sunday by\ntbt NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n266   Baker   Street   Ntlion    Britiih   Columbia\nPhone 144 Private, Eaehann Connecting All Oaoartmtnta.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN  PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCUI ATIONS\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 5, 1989.\nLLOYD GEORGE TALKING\nloyd George has been at it again. At a recent bye-\nection meeting he told his bearers that Hitler and Musso-\nni were waiting for the result, which would \"make an\nppreision on his (Hitler's) hard heart.\"\n. He said he had met Hitler, \"who had only one con-\n:ience, embodied in the phrase 'Deutschland uber Alles'.\"\nIe bad not met Mussolini, but the Duce, too, \"was a re-\nlarkable man.\" He .said he was bound to tell his audience\niat there was not in the British Government anyone \"who\nBuld stand for ten minutes against these tremendous men.\"\nHe didn't say that having met Hitler in 1936, he rented in Britain that the dictator was sincerely anxious\n^r peace. Would he, had he been Prime Minister then,\n$ve embarked the country on a great rearmament cam-\niign at that time? Or when did he see the light with regard\no this \"tremendous\" man? And are these tremendous men\n(ring to have their way? If not, who is preventing them?\nHe said the \"ablest and most experienced men in the\ntonservative party were outside the Government and\nKUeliing it.\" By that he can mean only Churchill for Eden\ns not among the most experienced. He said the \"best of\nhe Liberal party\" were outside the Government. By tluit\nie can only mean Lloyd George, for nobody could consider\nHr Archibald Sinclair the best in any party.\nHe wants Churchill and Lloyd George included in the\nfovernment, which he blames because \"the international\nBuation. has not been so bad since 1914.\" Churchill and\nbloyd George were of the Government involved in the sit-\njUrtlon of 1914 and it could find no way out but war. The\nformer has been accused by two Prime Ministers of intriguing behind their backs, and the latter has been disowned\nfr bis party. Are they fit choices for office.\n\u25a0 He told his hearers also about German and Italian\npine threatening Gibraltar, and said it was for the North\nCornwall electors to \"stop this and gave civilization.\" He\nbid .a lot of other things, all of which recall the suggestion\nBade by Ramsay MacDonald in an interview in Canada,\nthat there should be an amusement tax on Lloyd George's\nBeetings.\npoking Backward**.\n28 YEARS AQO\nFrom Daily News ot August 5, 1914\nGreat Britain declared war yesterday when the German Kaiser\nrefused Belgium neturality. England now will take immediate action to uphold her obligations to\nBelgium. Italy has refused to tight\nfor the AUIes.-r-The annual St.\nPaul's congregational and Sunday\nSchool basket picnic will be held\nat Procter today, the steamer Kuskanook having been chartered to\nmake two round trips.\u2014Sixty-\neight names were last night registered on the recruiting list at\nthe armory for enlistment in the\nservice to aid the Mother Country.\n\u2014J. M. Smith ol Ainsworth is\nvisiting in the City.\u2014G. A. Carlson of Spokane who is interested\nin the Payne Mine at Silverton\npassed  through Nelson yesterday.\nK.       TEN YEARS AGO\nfom Daily News of August 5, 1929\nfeobert Cunningham, merchant ot\nIjrescent  Valley,  spent  yesterday\nbopping in Nelson.\u2014George Wal-\nBj,   itar  high   school   miler   of\nKootenays, left yesterday for\nBicpuver  where  he  will,  with\nor  teammates   compete  in the\nBicouver Exhibition Track Meet\n1 Thursday  and Friday. Others\nJo, with their trainer, A: Wsl-\n% are Desmond Hewitt, Sandy\nIn, Hanna and Haddon:~Re-\ns of ore and concentrates at\n\u25a0 C. M.  k S.  Co.'s  reduction\nirkt from  the  Company mines\niounted  to   14,642   tons   in   the\nlit 10  days,  sending  the  total\nf .the year to date to 304,737 tons.\nlid You\n:ver Think,.\nfAWhat a difference a new\nr\u00bbink would make in your\nPhousework? The sink is\nPthe hub of a well planned\nIJkitehen, and will save\ngsteps and labor. We will\nFgladly help you plan your\n[\"kitchen and furnish esti-\n\u00bb. mates free of charge.\nCONSULT US FIRST\nPHONE 666\n(ootenay Plumbing\nHeating Co., Ltd.\n357  Btker Street\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\ni'ving been using Pacific Milk\nten years I have reasons for\nit. One is my girl who is\n'going.on. nine years. She wat\n. Wlien'born I tried to build\nup on'Iresh milk but she\nould- not- Uke it. I was told to\n' Pacific and did and she ahowi\nShe's got weight and looks\nj\u00bbod.\"\u2014From a letter.\n'acific Milk\nJilted and Vacuum Packed\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom Daily Miner of August 5,1899\nFollowing officers were elected\nat the first general meeting of the\nNelson Electric Tramway Company\nyesterday: F. W. Peters, President;\nCaptain T. J. Duncan, Vice-President; T. C. Duncan, Secretary.\u2014\nLieut. Col, MacDonald ot Guelph,\nOnt., a brother of-W. A. MacDonald, K.C, is staying in Nelson,\nArchie Johnston intends to introduce the Colonel .to some Kootenay\ntrout en the Main Lake tomorrow.\n\u2014A meeting of the Board of Kootenay Lake General Hospital was\nheld yesterday. Those present included Mrs. Roderick Robertson,\nMrs. Stocks, A. Shaw, Secretary\nF: W. Swindell, Mr; McArthur and\nMr. Crease.\n\u25a0\nSAUrS SALLIES\nADVANCE WEATHER BULLETIN\nFer Wtitirn tnd Central Cinidi, unbracing British Columbli,\nAlbert!, Stikitchewtn, Mtnltobt\ntnd Ontario.\nMonday, An*. T, 1938 \u2014 In South-\nin pirtt of Centril Province! \u00bbme\nIndlcitioni *W t few light, ihow-\ntry rains, but mott ot country It\ndttr; wins.\nTuetdiy, Aug. S \u2014 Tht cloudy\ntnd lomewhtt disturbed condition\non Southern border! drlftt off to\nthe Southeast leaving moit of country cletr; winner.\nWedneidiy, Au*. i \u2014 Nearly\ncletr ia mott ot the Wttt tad on\nPacific slope, but somewhat unsettled about the Manitoba regions\ntnd illghtly warmer.\nThunder, Aug. 10 \u2014 In tht Grttt\nregions of Mtnltobt probibly\ncloudy, with light raining, but nott\nof tht W\u00abtt Wd Pacific cout regions cltar.\nFriday, Aug. 11 \u2014 TJnututlly\ndttr, quiet weather on Picific slop*\nand nearly ill tht Central Province! with ttmpcriturti slightly lower In moit sections.\nSiturdiy, Aug. 11 \u2014 Nurly\neverywhere cleir and cool weather,\nthough ibout Mtnltobt tnd the\nSouthtttt wmt indlcitioni of light,\nihowery, ratal.\nSundiy, Aug. ID \u2014 Continue*\ncleir tnd rither cool ln moit ate\n'.Ions, but light raini m prob\n\u2022r4t In E*tt fcifcttehawin dlitrlctt\nud thi Mtnltobt country.\nWttk at Augu\u00bbt 7 to 11, UN, la\nCtntrtl Provinc* btgim with\nrather warm, wtr wtitfcer, or with\nonly \u2022 taw ihowtry rtins, mtlnly\ntbout tbt Southtrn ncttou. In\ngeneral thirt thould be much dear,\nwarm w\u00bbiwr. though liter la\nwttk turning conildenbly cooler.\nNetr \u00abme time I itw scattering\nshowtrt III expected in Eutern\nptrtt of tht Centril Provinces, but\non Ptcific slope not so much indication ot rain, except t tew local\nihowen oa the cout lines. For Uie\ncountry in gentril probibly leu\nthia normil moisture thit wuk.\nNeir middle ott thU month la\nthen reglom tht rains rather lud\ndenly decrtue both la volume tad\nfrtquiBcy. Tit I taw rtlm cot*\ntiatM, it qaltl widely leptnted\nplacts, bot tbt moisture la general\nIt vtry much lut thin ln July.\nIn Winnipeg vicinity the normil for\nJuly It dati to thru tad i hilt\nlnchei of rain, while tor September-It It ltd thin two inches, tor\nu toon u tbt cool autumail weath-\nre sets la nlnt become much less\nfrequent Thit change ii likely tt\nbe particularly noticeable ln tha\nlut taw days of August toll yeir,\nwhtn t ipell of cool weather ia\nindicited. Ia generil wt expect\nconsldtrtble cletr, rattier dry\nweither after thi middle ot thi\nmonth.\nThtn are liven munon bicydte\nIn thi United Statei.\nApplause il cheap\u2014you can get it for a song.\nBhMqsL\nShcpard Barclay\nTells How to Bid\nand Play\nTIMING DECIDES IT\nGETTING AN early lead ot the\ntult you ire trying to iet up li\nusually the mott Important factor\nla a difficult No Trump hand. It\nwill eometlmet piy you to pliy\nyour combination ot cardi ln that\niuit entirety counter to what ordl-\nnarlly Is considered tha correct\nway, especially tf by to doing you\nut able to gtt in extra lead of\nthe tult before the tide entrlei for\nilt art disturbed.\nAJTS\n\u00abAK\u00bb4\n\u00ab KID 6\n*A 10 9\n\u2666 1080   f-SJ\nVJ10 7B \u00ab    \\j|\nrK\n\u2022VQSl\nT_~_i\n\u2022Mt)\n\u2666J7532\n+ Q8 6\nrocattr: North. North-South\nvulnerable.)\nHen North Ud 1-Heart, South\n1-No Trump. North 2-No Trumpi\nand South 3-No Trumpa. Wett ltd\nthe club S to tht 9. Had this declarer immediately led for fall\nspado finesse la order to be in position to lead a diamond toward\nthe K, he would have been defeated through a thortage of en-\nCoovrlEht IMS. King\nWm. Initead, he led the diamond\nS toward hla long; noimn j, rewiring that en a later round hi\ncould ltad toward thi guarded K\nIf ht dealred.\nEitt crashed in wtth the Q and\nthen attacked thi declarer's entries by leading tht apada K, but\nit waa too late. Thi A won that\ntrick, thtn tht diamond K lost to\nthi A and tha second ipadt ltad\nfrom But went to tht J. Now tht\ndiamond tult wu iet up, with thi\nspade Q for an entry, ao that tht\ndeclarer got three trlcki tn dla\u00bb\nmonda, plui two In each other\ncolt.\n\u00bb\u25a0 * *\ntMammmfiTtaUtm\n\u2666QJ854\n\u00bbKQ7\n|AK\n*K<J\u00bb\nfor th<\nand\n\u25a0W I'l \u25a0 I    -\u25a0\u00bb   '\u25a0\u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0\nGIRL IN HIDING\nBy W. BOYCE MORGAN\n*96S\nVA10\u00ab*     *\u2022 ,    \u00bb8\n2 g      W    \u2666108 83\n487842'    **   '   *AJ86\n4.A10 7\n<JJ9S3\n\u2666 Q J 0 0 4\n(Dealer: North. Netther tide\nvulnerable.)\nWhat bidding would you *dvln\non thli deal?\nFeature! Syndicate, tne. '\nV* Questions 1J\nANSWERS\nThli column of queitlom and\nanswers Is open to any reader of\ncase will the name of the person\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\nasking the question be published.\nTOMB TURNING\nThat rugged-old rebel, General\nWashington, might have turned a\nsomersault in his tomb when His\nBritannic Majesty King George VI\nstepped thereon to deposit a wreath\nto hu memory. Far. away in England\nthe mortal remains of the King's\ngreat \u25a0 great - great - grandfather,\nGeorge III, doubtless rattled in helpless wrath. But, more happily, and\nmore intelligently, 650,000,000 souls\nliving under the monarchy and republic they once ruled accepted the\ngesture in the spirit that inspired it,\na feeling of eternal friendship, mutual understanding and common\nIdeals.\u2014Ottawa Journal\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"I -don't aee how any national\nleader stands it Think of giving a\nman Millions to boss when Tie can't\neven boss one household without\ngettin' a swell-head.\"\nL. S., Grand Forks Ii a galvanized iron roof considered\nlightning proof?\nYes, If properly grounded. However, it will he necessary to place\nair terminals on chimneyi and ice\nthat all separate parti of the roof,\nsuch as the porch roof and main\nroof are bonded together so that\nthey are in electrical contact\nB. R., Nelson \u2014 Where should a\nthermometer be hung to record\nthe most accurate outdoor temperature?\nIt should be hung on the North\nside of the house, in a sheltered\nplace, such as a porch. The hook\nshould be long enough to keep the\nthermometer an inch or two from\nthe wall.\nR. H., Boswell \u2014 If a salvage company raises a vessel can it claim\nownership or does the vessel itill\nbelong to the owner?\nIf the owner of the salvaged ship\nis known the ship belong! to the\noriginal owner and the salvage coni-\npany must make Its arrangements\nwith   the   owner   concerning   the\namount it may collect on the valui\nof the  salvaged property.  If the\nowner of the ship cannot be located the salvage company has title\nto the property.\nC. C. T, Thrums \u2014 Are there any\ntobacco fields in Canada?\nTobacco is grown in Quebec and\nOntario.\nO. Y., Willow Point - What doei\nthe   stock   market   expression,\n\"selling against the box,   rdean?\nIt means short selling by a person who has the securities he sells,\nbut does not make actual ddivery\nat the time of sale. The box refers\nto his safety deposit box or strorig\nbox.\nR. S., Rossland \u2014 Could you give\nme a good recipe for brilliantine\nhair oil?\nMix four parts olive oil, three\nparts glycerine, three parts alcohol,\nscent as desired. Shake before using.\nNOT 60 BAD\nComparison of the British and Canadian budgeti, presented the same\nday in London and Ottawa, ihould\nafford imall solace for the Canadian\ntaxpayers. Canada has a long way\nto go before her citizens' will pay\nan income tax rati of 27tt per cent,\ncr $1S0 a yetr for a car permit.^\nSydney Post-Record.\nSMALL CAR\nA new small car priced at $300, is\non the way. After parking the larger job, it should be ideal for driving\nthe rest of the way to the office.\u2014\nChictgo Dally Newi.\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb5S*\u00ab\u00ab*5\u00ab\u00ab5\u00ab5S\u00ab*\u00bb*S\u00ab\u00ab*\u00bb\u00ab\nJut youAm-dfr\nMake Sidewalk Shuffleboard Game\n\"Thtrt thty arei\" Louise orltd In terror. \"They're after mi igilpl\"\nINSTALLMENT IV\nstttts*\nONE-MINUTE  TEST\n1. What ii the lowest hereditary\ntitle in Great Britain?\n2. At which end of the canal ia\nthe city of Panama?\n3. Name the only two words ln\nthe English language ln which the\nvowels appear Jn order.\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nThe race of mankind would perish\ndid they cease to aid each other.\u2014\nWe cannot exist without mutual\nhelp. All therefore that need aid\nhave a right to ask it from their\nfellowmen, and no one who hai\nthe power of granting can refuse\nIt without gulll-Walter Scott\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nAn active and industrious year\nIs ahead for those who celebrate\ntheir birthday today. They will win\npromotion and gain accordingly.\nThey should, however, exercise\ncare as to documents and correspondence. Born on thli date a\nchild will be energetic and- possessed ot many valuable all-around\nqualities and abilities which should\nensure a good meuure of success.\nHINTS ON ETIQUETTE\nTact has been described as \"s\ncombination of intellectual quickness with lively sympathy.\" The\nway to overcome tactless blundering is to think tint, and so refrain\ntrom saying things that embarrass\npeople or make them feel uncomfortable.\nHOROSCOPE FOR SUNDAY\nIt your birthday it on this date,\nbeware of foolish or impetuoui\nconduct Also guard against decep;\ntion. Prefer the counsel - of your\nelders to that ot strangers. The\nchild born today will be active,\nIndustrious and ambitious, but inclined to be too overbearing, and\ncritical. There will be great goodness of heart, however, and much\nsuccess is promised.\nONE-MINUTE TEST ANSWERS\n1. That of baron.\n2. The Pacific end.\n3. Facetious and abstemious.\nKen and Harry stared tt tbt girl\nwho called herself Louise Jones.\n\"Oh, you've got to believe mei\"\nthe cried desperately. \"My name\nisn't nally Louise Jones, but I can't\ntell anybody who I really im\u2014tiot\nfor a few days. And I can't possibly go to the police. That's why I\nasked you to meet me. You're my\nonly hope.\"\n\"But what can we do?\" Ken\nasked in bewilderment\n\"You can itay at the lodge again\ntonight and tomorrow nighti\" Louise\nsaid earnestly. \"I'm sure I can fix it\nup with Miss Brooki, because she\nsaid you seemed like nice boys.\nThat way, you'll be sleeping right\nunder my window, and if those men\ncome back you can give the alarm.\"\nKen stared at Louise, then looked\nat Harry. He saw his friend swallow\nwith difficulty. What was this girl\nasking them to do? Who knew what\nmight happen to them If they got in\nthe way of a couple of men who\nwere trying to kidnap her? Certainly it would be dangerous.\nKen looked back at Loulie. He\ntaw the fear in her eyes, and the\ndesperate, pleading expression on\nher face. He reached a decision.\n\"We're game,\" he said grimly. \"If\nyou can fix It up with Miss Brooks,\nwe'll sleep oh the lodge porch as\nlong ai you want us. Won't we,\nHarry?\"\nHarry nodded. Tm willing,\" hi\nagreed.\n\"Oh, think you, thank youl\" thi\ngirl cried in reliet. \"I'll go right up\nto tht lodge now and speak to Mill\nBrooks.\"\n\"Maybe we'd better go part way\nwith you,\" Ken suggested. \"Iti\npretty lonely down hera by thi lake\nihore.\"\n\"Would you?\" Louise laid a\nerly. TU admit Tm frightened.\"\n\"Sura,' laid Ktn heartily. \"Let's\ngo.\"\nThey turned and itarted bick\nalong the beach. But they had taken\nonly a half-dozen steps when Bury\nsuddenly halted in his tracks, staring into tht woods beside thtm.\nLouise followed hit eyei with ben,\nand screamed.\nComing through the undergrowth\ntoward them on the run wera two\nmen.\n\"There they arei\" Loulie cried\nin terror. \"They're alter me agalnl\"\n\"Run for the lodge!\" Ken cried.\n\"Well be right behind you, and\nwe'll slow them up as much it wt\ncan. Hurry!\"\nLouise broke into a run, flying\n1 through the sand with fear lending\nwlngi to her leet Ken and Harry,\nthtir facts grim, ran atter htr,\ngoing mora ilowly, and glancing\nback at the two mtn who iflid just\nbroken through the undergrowth\nand were gaining fast.\n(To Be Oontinued)     -\ni'   i\nBy RAY J. MARRAM\nShuffleboard it a popular gKje\non board ocean steamships, tad it\ntin miy be played it noma for\nrati fun. Of count, a long narrow\nspace ii required for this gime,\nbut tn adaptation mty be played\nin iny space about 25 feet long.\nA ildewalk or concrete driveway\nmay be just the thing.\nDraw the court diagrams on tht\nsidewalk with chilk. The wooden\ndisks used for the gime are cut\nfrom lift wood with i keyhole\nuw. Make twelve of the disks,\nand paint tlx of them red and\nilx white.\nCut the thovlng paddle from\nUtt pipe. Whittle the handle trom\na 1 by 2, and nail short sections of\n1 by 2 on the bead to form the\npiddle blade. Cut the end of tha\nelide coAcave to fit thi shape of\nthe disks. Eich player ihould be\nfurnished with i stick aad six disks.\nTwo or four penoni may pliy\nthii type of shuffleboard. Playen\ntake turns shoving their disks at\nthe target diagrams. The disks muit\nstop iniide the section . lines to\nscore a count The player ihovtng\nhii disks Into court sections which\ntotal the highest icore at the end\nof five turni wins the game.\nPHOENIX  RISE8\nSeveral odd-looking seeds discovered recently In a more than 12-\ncentury-old tomb at Jujo,- Hlgashi-\nKodama Village, Kodama, have begun to sprout Into phoenix trees,\nwhich are found only in tht western\npart of Madagascar Island, They are\ngrowing at the Koishikawa Botanical Garden in Tokyo\u2014Japan Times\nWeekly, Tokyo.\nSTEPPING   UP\nWith airpline add motor bus bui-\niness cutting into train traffic, the\ntrains in Great Britain have been\ntrying to step up their punctuality.\nLast year an improvement of 4 per\ncent, was made in running express\ntrains on time, and 2 per cent, for\nlocal trains. During the year 91 trains\nout of every 100 ran \u00abn schedult.\n\u2014Windsor Daily Star.\nPointers on Pets\nBy Horace Mitchell\nFEED 'EM AS YOU DO\nCarl Watson and Harold \"Stub\"\nGrant are two fellows who always\nhave \"good luck\" with their pets.\nAnd they usually have quite a variety of pett on hand, too. The\nother day I asked them how It was\nthat they so seldom lost a pet from\ndisease, or so seldom had one sick.\nEach of them told me the tame\nthing, and I'll pass lt along to you,\ntaking a little from the opinions of\neaeh.\nStub said, \"Always give them water! And plenty of, it Don't wait until you are thirsty younelf to set a\npan of water out tor the dog. Keep\na pan of water where the dog and\ncat can reach it all the time.\n\"And good fresh water, too\u2014\ncltan water in a clean pan. Change\nit at least once every day. A great\nmany people do not think this is\nimportant. Dogs and cats can't tell\nyou they are thirsty. Sometimes\nthey try, but when you're busy you\ndon't notice their 'signals' and they\njust go along getting thirstier and\nthirstier. Then, perhaps, you lud-\ndenlyremember them and give them\nwater.\n\"Now if they have not had any\nall day,, or perhaps a day and a\nnight, they'll drink too much at\nonce. If it's cold water their entire\nsystem gets chilled, and that's where\ndisease germs get an opening.\"\nYes, water is a simple thing. We\nhave it so conveniently located in\nbur homes now that sometime! we\ndo not stop to think that moit pett\ncan't turn on a faucet\nCar| Is a great believer In food.\n\"I give my dogs and my ett just the\nsame sort of food I eat myself. They\nall get plenty of exercise, and nil\nthe good cleeri food they want\nkeeps them healthy. I don't approve\nat all of getting scraps of 'dog meat'\nat the butcher's. Most of it is\ntainted, and when it is that way it\nisn't lit fer a human berar, so, sr-\ncordlng to my reasoning, it Isn't fit\nfor a dog or cat.\n\"So many people will fill their\npets\u2014their cats and dogs, and sometimes their canaries and goldfish,\ntoo\u2014full ol Inferior food, that lt is\nno wonder the creatures don't live\nas long as they should, nor act as\nhapny as they might\"\n\"Plenty of clean, fresh water,\"\nsays Stub. And Carl says \"Lots of\ngood, clean food.\" Those are the\n\"lecrets\". .   ,\nHe: Ob, she's not as old as all\nthat!\nHa: Old! Why, that woman remembers the Big Dipper when it\nwai just a drinking cup!\n$ Money Makers $\nBy Irma Hegel\nWEEDS AND WILD FLOWERS\nBernidette'i fither rum i roid.\nside vegetable and trult stand ln\nthe country. One day Bernadittt,\nage twelve, niticcd a bouquet in\nthe fields. True, she had found\nnothing but wild flowen and weeds.\nBut knowing what weeds to pick\n\"Hire, waiter! This steak It positively burned black.\"\n\"Yes, sir. Mark of respect, ilr.\nOur head cook died yesterday,\"\nApple Pie Order\n\"AU in apple pie order,\" ii an expression that\nwe heir often, but do we know how tt originated?\nThe saying harks back to Htptbah Morton, a Puritan dime who made a practice of\nbaking, each Saturday, two or three dozen\n' apples plei which were to last her large family through the coming week. She placed\nthem on tbe shelves df her pantry, labeling\neach according to the day of the week on\n; which it was to be eaten. When her pantry\nwu thus arranged it waa uid to be ln \"apple pie order.\"\nThii would not be i bid plan for ui to follow today\u2014not with\napple plei perhapi, but with our own everyday problems. If\nJohnnie wtuld make a weekly program and carry it out and If\nMary would have a definite time set for her odd jobs, how much\neasier it would be for them and for Mother than the helter-\nskelter methods now uted in the average home.\nTry it and tee. \u2014The Editor.\nTWELVE-YEAR-OLD\nBOY EARNS PRIZE\nWITH COIN TRICK\nBy Frltlir Thimu\nFrom Robin Richardi comet our\nTrick o' the Week. Robin li twelve\nyears old, and describes hit trick\nso well thit I can quote almost\nword for word from hii letter.\nCongratulations, Robin! My autographed picture and book of Ori -\nental Magic have already been\nmailed to you. It la my ilncere\nhope that you are enjoying the\nclever Magic contained tn that book\nthUvenr minute.\n> BJTECT: A dime that hat previously been examined by the audience U caused to vanish btfore their\nvery eyei.\nEXPLANATION: This is i simple,\nmystifying coin trick. A dime is t\nvery good coin to use because of\nIts size. The intertaiher Is preferably seated at a table. He picks up\nthe examined coin with nit left\nhand. The right fingers then take\nthe coin. The left hand how goes\nand what combination ot colon is\npleasing ln wild flowers, ihe had\nmade a bouquet of startling beauty.\nThe flowers with their weed trimmings sold for ten cents to a woman who came driving to the\nstand in a big sedan.\nNext day Bernidette picked three\nmore bouqueta tnd sold them all.\nDark brown leeditalks \u2014 thilkr\nweed podi \u2014 full-blown thiitlet \u2014\nthese take on a new loveliness under Bernadette's skillful fingers.\nAnd she knows just how to arrange\nthem in a bowl or in a graceful\nvase.\nToday Bernadatta suppllei two\ndrawing teachers with specimens for\ntheir classes. She takes orders for\nChristmas bouquets. And for a girl\njuat turning thirteen tht it doing\nnicely.\nWeeds and wild flowen may be\na humble beginning but humble\nbeginnings lead to better things.\n!    DISCHARGED\nSchultze wai standing before tbt\njudge tor having Injured hli wife.\nJudgo-^-Yoi- maintain thit y\u00bbu\nthrew your wife out of tht itcond\nstory window through forgetfulrless.\nSchultze\u2014Yei, we used to live oh\nthe ground floor, tnd I'd forgotten\nwe'd moved!\nllWifcHiiiii \"~.i   n\niu^^^o^tiiMSmmmidiim.\nAND HERE'S THE REASON WHY\nMuiical   Wife\u2014It'i   strange;   but\nwhen I pity the piano I always\ntell extraordinarily melancholy.\nSUP COM UUDERYOUR\nCOUURVflimeFTHANO\nAPPAREWTLV VOU ARE\nRU68IN6 >OUR. UWT\nH.BOW VJtTH THE COW\nbehind the head near the collar.\nThe performer rubs the elbow of\nthe left forearm with the right\nfingertips faster apd faster. Finally\nhe removes his hand ahd the coin\nfell( to the Uble. Evidently the trick\nhat tailed.\nTha performer repeats the procedure, put this time be seems again\nto pass the coin from thi left to the\nright hmd, but actually retains it\nIn the lift hand; ahd carries lt to\nthe back of the neck. This part of\nthe trick hai to bt done quickly and\n61everly. The performer again rubt\ntht btck et the Itft forearm ai a bit\nbf misdirection, while he deposits\nthe cbln under his shirt collar. yYhen\nhe removes his right hand from his\nleft elbow, lo-and-behold! I I Thi\nRIDDLES\n1. Why  are  washwomen silly\npeople?\n2. What li the difference between\na gardener and a Chinaman?\nJ. Why doei \"B\" come before\n\"C\"?\n4. What doei a itork do whea\nlt itandt on one leg?\n5. What can a blind man see?\nThe Kitchenette\nBy AUNT PEGGY\nAfter sampling one of these rolls\nAunt Peggy decided that the rest\nof you cooks would like to try it\nPEANUT ROLL\n4 eggs beaten separately\n1 cup sugar\nIH cupi flour\n2 tablespoons baking powder\nVs cup hot water' '\n1  tablespoon vanilla\nMix yolks of eggs and sugar. Beat\nuntil smooth. Add baking powder\nto flour and sift three times. Add\nvanilla to water. Beat all together\nwell. Add beaten egg whites, and\nput in flat pan. Bake'in moderate\noven about 40 minutes. Let cool.\nCut in small pieces and dip In thin\npowdered sugar Icing (about 2-S\nas stiff as for cake). Roll in finely\nground peanuts.\nANSWERS TO LAST WEEK'S\nPUZZLES\n1. Crossword Puzzle Solution.  -\nmm mm\nm\u00ae mm*\u00ae\u00ae\nmm \u25a0m-mm\nmm-mm i@\nEES63     QHE3S\nMMWmwMKiim\nsbiobj   mm\n\u25a0   mmmm   \u25a0\ncoin hai disappeared!\nfW't the trick, bin and glrli.\nthanks to you,\n\u00ab'l the trich, boy\n14 once again.\nbtalUchlrU\n*m..-tamr*\n2. HEAT - held - held - hoM\n- COLD.  \u25a0 '   *_\"\nWALK - wall - wall - SAIL.\n8. The wordt in the diamond are\nS, lap, skirt, sailing, print, TNT, G.\n4. The words ln Ihe picture puzzle are Ice water, ihower bath, aad\nthorts. ..\n9. Stern, stern.\nANSWERS TO RIDDLE8\n1. They iet their tubs out for\nsoft water when It rains hard. 2.\nOne keeps the lawn wet, the\nothe. kelps the laundry. 3. Ws\nhave to be before we can see. 4.\nHolds UP the othir. 5. A joke.\n W\u00bbW   \"\"\nj. SPORT NEWS k\n-WILSON DAILY NIWS, NH.IOII. ft 8,-MTVmBAY WOrlimW, At*, t, \u2022*\u00bb\u25a0\n\\bd-0\n- vtAoi n\nw\nVancouver Forces\nFourth Battle In\nDominion Soccer\nI\nMontreal Blanked 2-0\nin Third of Best\nof Three\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 4 (CP)-Vmcouver Ridlili forced a fourth\nSme In the beit ot three Domin-\n> Football Auoclition loccer final tonight when they blinked Montreil Carsteel eleven 2-0 ln tht\nthird gimi. Tht flnt game Monday ended ln a 1-1 Ue with Montreil Uking tht third Wednesday\n1-2\nVincouver, u in tht other gtmti,\noutplayed the Montreil team almost throughout but ovtr-inxlout-\nntts In front of th* net and the brll-\nIltnt goil-tendlng by T|m Gordon,\nkept tht icore it 2-0. Seldom wer*\nCarsteel ln a icorlng position ind\nwut ihots they had were handled\neasily by Bill Watson.\nTh* championship will be decided tomorrow ifternoon when the\nteams cluh again. Overtime will\nbe played if necessary to decide\nthe winner in the polnti bull, two\nfor a win and one for a draw.\nThe aecond half wu only tour\nminutei old when Radials got a\nlorj2-27.'\u00a3ited Myritey. Tsr*n enswin\nneed\" down\" the left ilde md ihot\none across the goil mouth. Jackie\nJohnson, right winger, took the bill\non the run md beat Gordon with\na well-placid ihot ta tht corner.\nRag Liplrott completed the icorlng it tpe 34-mlnute mirk when\nhe githertd the bill on the lett\nwing, wheeled around two Montrealers ud fired a low ihot Into\nthe corner thit give Gordon no\nchance. Llptrott wu injured ifter\nbe fired the goal when ht collided with Mim Epstein md wu replaced by Norm Kerfoot,\nspWIsport\nBy ALAN RANDAL\nNEW YORK, Aug. 4 (CP). -\nThe word from Saratoga Springs is\nthat Bob Putor is th* guy to follow if you want to bet the right\nway . . . Thi horses are bringing\nhim mort monty thin he'i miking\nin idmlssions In hli nearby training cimp . . . Bob's training camp\nchef Introduces htm at hii workout tor a bout with Joe Louis u\ntht ntxt world'i heavyweight\ncham])\" ... the time old fight\nlamp stuff. , .\nBill Patterson of Newirk comes\nup with an offer of $20,000 for\nHenry Armstrong to put hit welter\nwreath on the line againit Freddy\nCochrane of Elizabeth, N. J., lite\nin October . . . Chicken feed, eh\nHenryT\nAlong Broadway the feeling Is\nthat New York Yankees, against\nfood pitching, an Juat mother club\ntrying to get along . . .\nFlying Lill ud Unerring, rated\nas among the top fillies ln the U.\nS. Midwest, will meet In a $9000\nmatch race, winner take all, at\nChicago, Aug. $1 ... Sixto Escobar,\nwho wears the bantamweight fight\ncrown, reporti tbat by Oct. 2 hell\nbe ready to meet my outstanding\nchallenger for a flit guarantee of\n\u266610,000.       \/\nVanderbilt Ringi\nUp Third Victory\nCOWBS, Enflud, Aug. 4 (CP)\u2014\nHarold Vanderbilt's Vim defeated\nT. a M. Sopwith's Tomahawk by\n52 seconds in a 12-metre class race\nat the Cowei regatta today. It wu\nVim's third itralght decision over\nthe English boat after losing the\nopening encounter on a foul.\nVim flnlihed the 27-milc race ln\ntwo hours, S3 minutei and 24 seconds. Tomahawk was clocked In\n1:34.18.\nEASTERN BOXU\nONTARIO SENIOR\nSt. Catherines 22, Fergus 9.\nHimllton 18, Brampton 11.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\n\u25a0y Tha Canidlin Prttt\nHarold S. Vanderbilt's Ranger\nwon Its fourth itralght victory over\nT. O. M. Sopwith's Endeavour II at\nNewport, R. I., two yean ago today. It wu Great Britain'! 18th bid\nfor the America's Cup which hu\nremained ln the United States since\n1891.\nRIGGS TO MEET\nWOOD IN FINALS\nSOUTHAMPTON, N. Y., Aug. 4\n(AP).\u2014Bobby Rlggi of Chicago todiy entered the finil round ot tht\n49th annual Meadow Club Invitation\nTennii tournament with a hollow\n4-8, 3-8, 8-2, 8-4, 8-1 victory over\nBob Kamrath of Austin.\nRlggs' opponent tomorrow, tor the\nlecon dsuccenlve yur, will be Sidney Wood, equally unimpressive In\ndefeating Ernest Sutter ot New Orleans, 8-2, 8-2, 7-8.\nU. S. Tennis Pair\nlo Meet, Victoria\nVICTORIA, Aug. 4 (CP)-Eddie\nMark of San Francisco and Tate\nCsulthard o! Berkeley, Calif. m**t\nIn the men's linglei finals ot the\nBritish Columbia lawn tennis\nchampionships here tomorrow,\nwhile May Hope Doeg ot Santa\nMonica, Calif., and Jim Milne\nof Vancouver matt ln the lut stage\nof women'i singles play.\nTo gain his place ln the final\nbracket Coulthard put on one ot\nthe gameit comebacks In the history of Victoria courti to defeat\nBill Hoogs, Honolulu, ln five sets,\n2-8, 8-2, 6-3, 3-8, 7-9. The match\nluted nearly three houn.\nAmark, heavy favorite to win\nthe final, breeied through Tom\nBrown, San Francisco, ln itralght\nlets 7-5, 6-4, 8-3.\nMeeting on the court for the tint\ntlmt in two yean Jean Milne put\nout her fellow towniwoman and\ndefending champion, Eleanor Young\n8-2, 8-4.\nDropping only four gamei top-\nseeded Miss Doeg had no trouble\ntaking her semi-final from Cecile\nMiner, Longbeach, in straight sets,\n8-1, 8-8.\nBAJXlfANDTNGS\nAMERICAN . \u25a0\nW \"L'lM,B'hd.\nNew York   88  18 ,708 -\nBoiton       88  89 .628 8\nChicigo        85   44 .556 14tt\nCleveland 49   40 .510 ISMs\nDetroit    80   47 .515 20tt\nWuhlngton   .....   43  57 .430 27\nPhiladelphia   ....   39  61 .368 33\nSL  Louil      27   08 .284 40',4\nNATIONAL\nClnclnnitl     61 32 .886 -\nSt.   Louii   52 42 .553    9Vi\nChicago      91 49 .931 Wti\nPittiburgh     48 44 .922 12',4\nNew York  46 47 .409 19\nBrooklyn     - 49 47 .489 19V4\nBoiton     42 52 .447 10V4\nPhiladelphia   .... 27 63 .300 33H\nCOONfTtRJCRET\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (CP Cable).-\nYorksiiire proved the only team to\ncapture full polnti ln the six-game\nEngliih County Cricket series concluded todiy. While the Yorkists defeated Glamorgan by 86 runi, other\nmatchei were curtailed through\nrtlu.\nThe scores:\nYorkihlre 134 md 186 for six, declared; Glamorgan 104 and 140.\nHampshire 901 and 94 tor one\nwicket; Surrey 240.\nDerbyshire 121 md 120 for two\nwickets; Gloucestershire 198.\nWarwickshire 138; Lancashire 98\nfor four wlcketa\nEssex 172; Kent 51 for one wicket\nSussex 838 for five wickets; vs.\nNottinghamshire.\nNelson Out lo End Softball Series\nal Five Games in Trail on Sunday\nHazel Spiers Will Go\nto Mound for\n1 st Game\nISOBEL DONOVAN\nLEADING HITTER\nMen's Softball\nSemis on Sunday\nK. P.(s Are One Up on\nCatholics in 3-\nGame Series\nA game that will draw lots ot\nattraction following the senior baseball game between Trail and Nelson at the Recreation Grounds Sunday afternoon Is a playoff softball\nclash between Knights of Pythias\nand Catholic Young People. The\ngame will likely start at about 4:30,\nor right after the bueball game.\nTbe series is a best-of-three affair\nmd the Knights are one up and\none to go at present. Catholics have\nto win tomorrow If they are to itay\nIn the running for the right to meet\nthe Pucksters ln the best-of-five\nfinal for the City title.\nDon Lazier will again hurl for the\nK. P.'s with Denis Ball behind the\nplate. The combination of the two\nis one of the best softball batteries\nto be seen in Nelson for a long time.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, Aug. 4 (AP)-Lou\nGehrig has picked up seven pounds.\n. . . Saratoga visitors are checking\nout in droves because of the anti-\ngambling edict ... Joe Medwlck's\nmail address these days is care of\nthe Doghouse, St. Louii, Mo.\nWorld Series note\u2014They are enlarging the upper lett and right\nfield standi in Cincinnati. ... Gene\nTunney has been elected to tht\nexecutive board of the Boy Scouts\nFederation of Greater New York.\n. . . John Gooch, the Pittsburgh\ncoach, who gave Johnny Vander\nMeer his start at Durham, N.C,\nwill be ln charge of developing\nJohn Gee, new Pirate southpaw\nfrom Syracuse. , . . The Red Sox\nare the only American League clubs\nwith, an edge on Bob Feller.\nYou have old Jack Blackburn's\nword for It\u2014Lou Nova is going to\nhave both hands full with Tony\nGalento. ... A picture of the first\nprofessional night ball game, played at Des Moines ln 1930, is going\nInto the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown. . . . Billy Conn will be\nfighting his fifth weight class\nagainst Gus Dorazlo at Phllly Aug.\n14.\nThe Dodgen offered to ilgn up\none Metro Soikl, a southpaw rookie\nfrom the Pennsylvania coal region.\n... Did he Jump at it? ... He did\nnot ... He said: \"I'll have to sleep\non that one, gents\". . . . Horton\nSmith thinks so. well of Tommy\nWright, young Knoxville (Tenn.)\npro. he Is angling Wright ln several\nof the big money golf tournaments.\nFlood, Petrunio Are\nRoss land's Battery\nfor Gome With Salmo\nROSSLAND, B. C. Aug. 4-Lineup\nof th* Rossland Baseball Club for\nthe game against Salmo at Roulind Sundiy is: Wilter Flood p,\nGeorge Petrunii c, \"Rusty\" Wynn,\nlb, John Ctmeron 2b, \"Duke\" Seo-\ndellaro 3b, Rico Martin u, Cbirlei\nSadao If, John Gidiniki cf, Bert\nGibson rf, Doug Norrli utility.\n5-Horse Dream\nRace Is Talked\nPimlico Track\nBALTIMORE, Aug. 4 (AP).-Ttlk\nwas in tht wind tonight of I Pimlico\nspeciil \"dream rice\" that might\nsettle not only tht Johnstown-Chal-\nledon feud but also tht Usui bt.\ntween the East's and the West's favorite horsei.\nThe Mirylind Jockey Club, which\nstaged the famoui Seabiscult-War\nAdmiral duel at Pimlico laat year,\nhai not yet arranged a ipeclal tor\nthis Fall's meeting, but turfmen\nhereabouts are discussing possibilities of i five-horse, invitation\nrace.\nlntereit wai whetted today when\nthe Club announced lt had received\nword from Charles S. Howard, California sportsman whose 'Biscuit\nwhipped the Admiral, thtt hli\nspeedy Argentine importation, Kiy-\nik II, would bt available If another\nspecial develops.\nOthers mentioned as likely to bt\nInvited to compete In the Pimlico\nSpecial are William Woodward's\nKentucky Derby winner, Johni-\ntown; W. L. Brmn's Preakness winner, Challedon; Mlllidale Stable'i\nSun Lover, which ran itcond to\nChalledon and ahead of Johnstown\nIn the Arlington classic; md T. B.\nMartin's Cravat, which ran next to\nKayak II ln the Hollywood Gold\nCup.\nAlice Marble In\nEasy Tennis Win\nEAST HAMPTON, N. Y\u201e Aug. 4\n(AP). \u2014 Miss Alice Marble, United\nStates and Wimbledon Champion,\nheading the seeded list of the annual Invitation Women's Tennis\nTournament, had an easy task today in defeating Mias Dorothy\nWorkman ot Los Angeles, seeded\nNo. 4, ln itralght sets, 6-3, 6-1, to\nenter the final round.\nMiu Marble will meet Helen\nJacobs tomorrow.\nMrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan of\n\u00ab3rookline, Mass., seeded No. 2, was\ni CUVELAND HOMERS HOT ENOUGH\nTO STOP YANKEES; MEDWICK SHINES\nBy Tht Canadian Press\nIt takes more than home runs to beat the World Champion Yankeei.\nThree Cleveland batters hit round-trippers at New York yesterday but\ntheir blows were no match for the assortment of 12 hits New York put\ntogether in a 8-4 triumph over the Tribe.\nOral Hildebrmd snd Marius Russo limited the Indians to five hits,\nother by Odell Hale ln the second and one by Jeff Heith In the seventh\nwhich included a home run by Hal Trosky with one on in the first, an-\nto account for all Cleveland's runs.\nLefty Al Milnar, who had beaten the champions once, itarted well\nand held them to one run and three hits for four Innings only to weaken\nIn the fifth md sixth, finally giving .way to a pinchhltter.\nUmpire Joe Rue chased Johnny Allen off the Clevelind bench in the\nseventh inning tor heckling after\nManager Oscar Vitt and the Indlani\nprotested a call ball on Keller.\nWashington at home, won its fifth\nBaseball Scores\n' n.i\nr\nAMERICAN\nCleveland\t\nNew York\t\nMilnar,   Dobson\n12\n\"thi series Is going to go only\nfive games,\" declared Roy Anderson, Coich of the Nelion representative ladies softball team Friday night ai he put bit teim\nthrough its final workout before\ntravelling to Trill Sundiy for a\ngame or games that may tnd tha\nseries. Should Ntlion drop two\ngamei Sunday, I seventh and dccld-\nyftsMv\nitrS-Vt-\nSILWER\nFIZZ\n\u201e GfAt\nJ_l-*eiic,.'i7'lV\nThli advertisement |l pot published\nor displayed by thi Liquor Control\nBoard or by tb* Government of\nBritiih Columbia\ning gama will be played here a\nweek later.\nLeading the lerles by \u25a0 3-1 edge\nln games won, Anderson Is overlooking no bets ln an attempt to\nwin the first game and thus take\nth* series. He will tend hit ace\nchucker, Hazel Spien, to the\nmound for that game with Margaret Rickard, playing her first tea-\nion in Nelion, supporting her behind the plate. So fir Hazel hu\nwon two gamei and wai charged\nwith one loss In three appearances\nIn the four games to date on the\nrubber.\nThe remainder of the Nelson lineup will be either Georgina Eberley\nor Rosa Stewart 'lb, Deanie Wallace 2b, Isobel Donovan 3b, Elvera\nMatheson ss, Louise Coletti If, Lillian Hickey cf, and either Roaa\nStewart, Grace Kilgren, Georgina\nEberley or Agnes Stewart, rf.\nDONOVAN LEAD8\nNelson's Rid Donovan Is the\nleading hitter In the series with an\naverage of .808 although . Millie\nHorrigan with 1.000, a hit In her\nonly appearance It the plate, md\nEliza Mawdiley of Trail wtth .636,\nwho hai appeared ia only two\ngimes, in technically heading the\nlilt. After Donovan cotnM Hazel\nSpiers ot Ntlion with .923 md\nDeiple Wallace with ,.500. Lillian\nOstwald of Trail follows w|th .478.\nThe Trail team will comprise\nEliza Mawdsley c, Peggy Ball c,\nHelen Mawdiley p, Cora Miller p,\nPit Bush lb, Isabel Morris 2b, Mar-\nSiret Manducca 3b, Hazel Mawd-\ncy ss, Dixie Edwards If, Lillian\nOstwald cf, Miry Cronie rf, Mabel\nFord, Hazel Weir and Lillian Saprunoff, ipirti.\nmd   Hemsley;\nHildebrmd, Ruico md Dickey.\nChicago    -  8   14 3\nWashington  _   6   12  3\nLee, Brown and Tresh, Schlueter;\nCarrasquel, Masterson, Haynes, Appleton and Ferrell.\nSt Louis ...-  _  8   10  0\nPhiladelphia    1    7  2\nTrotter  and  Glenn;  Joyce  md\nHayes.\nNATIONAL\nPhiladelphia.....\u2122   8   15  0\nSt. Louis   8   17  5\nBeck, Mulcahy and Millies; Sun-\nkel, McGee, Dean, Shoun, Bowman\nmd Owen,\nNew York   2   7   1\nPittsburgh \u201e    3   9   1\nGumbert, Belton, Lynn, and Danning; Baueri, Sewell and Berres,\nMueller.\nBoston    0   4  0\nChicago     18  1\nFette and Lopez; Passeau and\nMancuso.\nBrooklyn      3\n8 I\n11 !\nWai-\n12'2\n12   1\n5 1\n0 0\nand\nCincinnati    8\nCasey, Evans (6) md Todd:\nten and Lombardi.\n, INTERNATIONAL\nMontreal     3\nJersey City    9\nCrouch, Duke, Schott and Hartje;\nJoiner and Atwood.\nRochester       3\nNewark       8\nRyba   md   Beal;   Barley\nWagner.\nFirst game:\nBuffalo         3  8\nSyracuse      \u00bb 8 12\nZuber   and   Helf;   Meola   and\nWarren.\nSecond game:\nBuffalo       i 10\nSyracuse      0  6\n(12 innlngi).\nC. Smith, A. Smith and Savino;\nTiling md Warren.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nLouisville 2-0; Columbui 6-5.\nTorches or other artificial lights\nwere used ln Spanih poultry houies\nii tar back ai 1803, so that the birds\nwould eat more in winter.\nstraight game, beating the White\nSox 6-5 in 10 Innings on a fly ball\nthat Chicago's outfielders loit In the\nsun.\nAt Phlladelphli, Bill Trotter out-\npitched Bob Joyce as tho St. Louil\nBrowni ctme from behind to beat\nthe Athletics 3-1.\nMEDWICK IN QOOD ORACES\nEveryone In SL Louis takes back\neverything they've ever said about\nJoe Medwick.\nThe fighting gentleman from\nCarteret, N. J\u201e baok In good gnets\nifttr a temperamental run-In with\nManagtr Rty Blades, batted tha\nSt, Loull Cardinal! of the National League to a thrilling 9-8 at\nhome victory ovtr Philadelphia\nIn 13 Inning*.\nMedwick got four hlti In the\ndrawn-out battle, Including three\ndoublei, one of them tying the icore\nin the ninth and mother driving ln\nStuart Martin with the winning\nrun. Martin had tingled and gone\nto second on Enos Slaughter's sacrifice.\nThe Cardinals looked futllt, Instead of tht Phils, in the early part\nof the game. They spotted Doc\nProthro's last-place outfit to a 7-0\nlead and as late as the eighth Inning were trailing, 8-4. Tom Sun-\nkel'i wlldnesa and three of tb*\nCardinals' five erron were 'factors\nin building up tlie Phils' early margin. Sunkel wild-pitched two runi\nacross.\nSpasms of wildneai by two New\nYork Giants pitchen at Pittsburgh\nenabled the Piratei to capture\ntheir series opened, 3-2, ln 11 Innings.\nMel Ott gave the Glanti a two-\nrun lead in the tint inning! by hit\nting hii 20th homer of the season be.\nhind Hirry Dmnlng'i double.\nAt Chicago, Claude Passeau\nshaded Lou Fette ln i pitchen' battle, giving tht Cubi a 1-0 victory\nover tht Boston Bees in their series\nopener.\nPasseau yielded only four hita tnd\nglvt no walks in chalking up his\nninth mound decision.\nIn Cincinnati. Ducky Walten\nbroke the Reds two-game losing\nstreak ln a night game by subduing\nthe Brooklyn Dodgen, 9-3, for his\n19th victory of the season. Dolt\nCamilli hit hli 17th home run for\nthe Dodged.\nEsling Park at Rossland Is Now Beinj\nBrought Back to Former Qarden Beaut)!\nPARKS BOARD IS*\nSEEING RESULTS\nOF RESTORATION\nWealth Hidden Charm\nBeing Brought Out\nAgain\nBy MIU KAY LOWDON\nROWLAND, B. C.-Nt.tled In\nth* heirt of tht Goldin City ll \u25a0\nqultt rttt htvtn, gradually btlng\nrwtortd to Ita former beiuty\nthrough th* eirneit effort of a\nimtll group of Roultnd mtn who\nhtvt libored during tht put\nthree yean to ri-create what one*\nwaa one ef th* moit beautiful\npirki In thli district.\nFor many years put, Etllng Park\nhu been given but casual thought,\nand hu been regarded by mor* recent Rossland u a relic of dayi long\nput Diy by diy thet* Roislinden\nhivt wilked by I tangled corner\nthit bu held i wwlth of hlddtn\nchirm, both In tht history of Its\ncomtruction, Ind ln the possibilities\nof its future.\nThe early hiitory of the comtruction of thii recreation ground is\nbelt told In the actual words of Its\nfounder, W. K. Elling, MP. for Kooteniy Weit, ln whoie honor the\npirk wu named \u2014\n\"It wu about 1916 whtn I suggested thit i pirk be constructed\non tbe ilte of m old brewery which\nhid been built ln the early early\ndays,\" began Mr. Esling. \"At that\ntim* I undertook to build It, md\nborrowed money from the bank tor\nIU construction.\nBLOOMER FIRST\nCONTRIBUTOR\n'Fifteen hundred dollars wu owing before a single dollar wu con.\ntributed, tht flnt voluntary contribution coming trom T. L. Bloomer,\na retired engineer, now living at\nCastlegar, B. C.\n\"The creek wu lying against tht\nWest side of the bank, and we turned it into the Eut side. We built\ni plice for the children to paddle,\na rock girden with a fountain Jn the\ncentre and a iwimming pool with\na flood-gate md waterfall.\n\"Of count the water, which camt\nfrom the old mlnu, wu too cold ta\nswim In,\" Mr. Esling recalled, \"but\nlt wu i beautiful light!\"\n\"All the cottonwood treei lining\ntht creek md leidlng up the iteps\nwere planted, md we sodded hilf\nan acre ot turf in the park as well.\n\"We also built five rustic ihelten\ncontaining a range each, and tables\nand benchei. We even placed flower\nurns ln the shelters, but they were\nsoon destroyed.\nOLD BASEMENT FILLED\n\"Then was a willow grove tt the\nSouth end of the ptrk, between\nFlnt Avenue md the Ime behind\nColumbia Avenue which had grown\nover tht buement ot m old building. We cleared that out, and all\nthe cartage concerns in the city\ndumped ashes md reluse into the\nold baiement until lt wu filled. We\ncovered tt over, built a bandstand,\nmd put ln ilx children's swings it a\nEntrance to Esling Park In bygone yean ... th* vintage ot th* can Indicating th* yein that hav* i\npassed ilnce thii photo wu taken,\ncoat of $28 neb. <\nTh* two buildings at tha eptrmct\nwtre piped fbr ihower baths.\n'It wu oa tht Itrgeit flower terrace, between the' flnt and fifth\nshelters, thit I delivered th* ipeech\nof welcome to Lord md Lady\nByng on the occulon of their vialt\nto Rosilind, Mn, Grmt Fraser Mitchell, who now resides at Winnipeg, wu hoitess to the Governor\ngeneril and Lady Byng.\n\"Shortly after Lord Byng's visit\nto Rossland I cirnlvil wu staged\nto cover the expense of constructing th* park, and so . enthusiastic\nwen the people thit every cent of\nthe debt wu wiped out within i\nyur of lta construction!\" its founder nld triumphantly.\nPERFECT GARDEN\n'Thi pirk wu i perfect garden,\"\nsaid Mr. tiling, leaning back in hii\nchair, and letting hii thoughts drift\nback to the yein when the loveliness et Esling Pirw ittncted people from th* surrounding district\nInto ita shaded depths. \"Why, it\n\u2022bout 4 o'clock ln tht afternoon the\nmtn from the minet used to come\nInto the pirk md lit on tht liwn\nto drink their bottle ot beer. It wu\nthe coolest ipot In town.\"\n\"It wu not until ibout 1928 thit\nvandalism begin,\" Mr. Esling spoke\nregretfully. \"I don't know whether\nthe people juit didn't cure, or what\nIt wu, but the park wu ruined.\nEverything wu torn down, the\nswings were broken, md the place\nbecime so neglected thtt ibout\nthr*t yein ago I ordered my name\ntaken off the entrance of the park\n... lt wu a disgrace!\"\nTha talk of giving thli pretty\nplot btek to Roulind, u lovely\nit In tht diyt gone by, hn not\nbeen Miy. Unlike tht dayi of It*\n\u2022arly hiitory, there wu no large\ngroup of enthusiastic citizens who,\nspurred on by tht Idealism Of ltt\nfounder, found Joy In giving practical expression to thtlr artistry.\nPARKS BOARD\nWORKS QUIETLY\nInstead, backed by thi City Council, i parks boards of thrtt men originally instituted in 1438 during\ntlie lut term of Miyor WUUim Ar\niel! fortunate ln her quarter-final\nmatch which ahe extended to three\ngruelling sets before losing to Misi\nJacobs, 8-8, 5-7, 6-3.   '\nMartell Onlarii\nGolf Champion\nBURLINGTON, Ont, Aug. 4 -\n(CP).\u2014Henry Martell ot Edmonton,\nunknown to a good many In the\nEut betore the Canadian Amateur\nGolf champiomhip lut week, won\nthe Ontario open golf crown trom\na high-classed field ot professionals\ntodsy by putting a three-under-par\n69 to his tint-round 71\nMartell shared the spotlight ot the\nfinal round with Howird Jones,\nwho fired i holc-ln-one on the 16th\nBATTING LEADERS\nBy Thi Assoclited Prttt\nBitting (three leaden in each\nleague).\nO Ab R H Pta\nDIMaggio, Yanki 84 238 83 98 .399\nFoxx, Hod Sox .. 87 827 93 119 .364\nArnovich, Phlll .. 90 836 80 118 .381\nMire, Cirdi  93 348 67 120 .345\nBonura, Giants .. 91 842 84 118 .346\nMcQuinn, Browni 98 387 89 131 .331)\nHome runs:\nAmerican Letgue \u2014 Foxx, Red\nSox, 28; Greenberg, Tigers, 20; Selkirk, Yankee!, 18.\nNational League \u2014 Ott, Glanti,\n20; MiM. Cardinal!, 18; McCormick,\nRedt, 17.\nRum batted in:\nAmerican League\u2014Williams, Red\nSox, 87; Foxx, Red Sox, 84; Greenberg, Tigen, 79; Walker, White\nSox, 79.\nNational League \u2014 McCormlck,\nRed!, 81; Bonun, Giants, 88: Camilli.\nDodgtn. 88; Medwick, Cardinal!, 66.\nhole ot the Burlington Golf and\nCountry Club layout, hit bom*\ncourie.\nMartell'i total of 141 brought him\ntha title over Herb Samways ot\nLondon, Ont, and Reg Sansom of\nToronto, both professionals, who\ntied for second place with 143 each.\nMORE ABOUT\n(Contlnutd Prom Pigi Ont)\nParliament will not reassemble\nuntil OcL 3, unlesi an emergency\narlsea.\nMr. Chamberlain nld that iome\nof the things that were happening\nto Britiih subjecti In North Chlni\nmade his \"blood boll\" but that he\nwould try to show \"patience md to\nexercise reasonable moderation.\"\nCONSERVE PORCES\n\"Let ui not forget,\" the Prime\nMlnliter told the House of Commoni, \"that we hive grover ud\nnearer problem! to consider In the\ncoun* ot the next few months md\nwe muit conserve our forcei to meet\nmy emergency thit miy arise.\"\nHe nld Britain wu in i \"difficult'' iltuition both because of European tenilon and becauie any ute\not force against Japan would endanger Britiih subjects in China.\n\"At tbe present moment wt htvt\nnot got in the Fir Eut a fleet superior to that of the Japanese,\" he\nsaid. \"We have such a fleet here. In\ncertain circumstances we might find\nlt necessary to aend '* fleet out\nthen.\"\nBritain, ranked u the leading\nnaval power of the world while Ja-\nJm is third In itrength, normally\nmaintains only her China squadron\nin the Fir Eutern witen. Thit\nsquadron Is without battleships, but\nincludes three 10,000-ton cruisers,\none 9100-ton cruiser, one aircraft\nNelson and Trail (lash Here Sunday\nin West Kootenay Baseball Contest\nFollowing the spectacular lut\nInning victory over the Broadway\nColored Clowni Wedneidiy evening\nCoich Jake Allei md President T.\nCon Cummins are predicting great\nthings tor th* Nelion Senlon tor\nthe remainder of the Wut Koottnay Buebtll Lttgn* ichedule.\nA win on Sunday ova ttt Trail\nCardinils it the Recreation Grounds\nSundiy afternoon wtll step Ntlion\nup to second plica in th* letgue\nitanding! md commence i rise, the\nofficials ny, that will carry them\nto the lop of the leigue. The game\nwill itart it 2:30.\nIt wu the combination of brilliant  fielding  ud  heavy  hitting\n'^-^sjsrSi^M\nby Belmd, Alles, Seaby, Richard-\nton ud other big guns, the hits\ncinie when they wen needed, 17\nsifetles Jn ill' rolling off the Nelion bats. On top ot thit errorless\nbill wu reeled off by the winners\nto pull thtlr pitchers out ot numerous tough spots.\nVie Howard wfll not return to\ngrtlson In tlmt to pitch, u hoped\ny Nelion officials.\nThe Nelson lineup will be Beatty\nGuthrie p, Gordon Richardson c,\nDoc Chodorcoff lb, Tom Mclnnes\n2b, Walt Gelling 3b, Ernie Beland\nss, Jesse Seaby If, Jake Alles cf,\nDon Grice, rf. Others asked to turn\nout an Dick Harrii, Jack Brown,\nSttv* smith, Art Scribner an|d\nLefty Mydanski.\nA corner of Esling Park today, with lis popular children's swings.\nrowsmith, md organized again ln\n1937 by Major John Gordon, hu\nquietly md persistently given time\nmd libor to gradually transform\na tangle of overgrown md neglected\nbush into order; clearing md cleaning out a sluggish stream, which\nhad been hushed by the corrosion\nof the mineral waters from the mine.\nThe Junior section ot the Itossland Boird of Tnde took m active\npart in tht reconstruction of Esling\nPark during 1938, collecting plants\nmd making itself responsible for\nimprovement! at the East side of\nthe park from the upper bridge to\nthe site of the old swimming pool.\nDainty rock gardens have been\nset out along the walled in sldea of\nthe stream running through the cottonwood grove. Two bridges htve\nbeen built over the stream at the\nNorth end of the park, and new\nbenchei have been iet ln among the\ntreei, Inviting nit\nSHADED PLAYGROUND\nChildren are again finding In Esling Park a shady playground. Two\nlarge swings are constantly swaying back md forth to the impetus\not their active bodies, md two\nseeiawi ln the centre of the park\nbob Up and down while the youngsters carry on the ever-tempting\ngam* of trying to keep the other\naloft A box merry-go-round locate\ned at the weit ilde provides <\nthrill for the wee tota.\nThe shelters have been reconstructed into open-air dining pltce]\nfor picnickers.\nThis Summer th* Park! Board\nplans to extend the park back up\nthe ravine underneath the Second\nAvenue bridge, building a walk\nup one ilde md down th* othefl\nwilling in the stretm, md planting a rockery in among the treet.\nSix new benches with concrete\nsides will be placed in the grounds;-\nBOARD PERSONNEL\nAlderman William CunnlhghsL\none of the prime movers In the'\nnstoratlon of the park, has been\na member of the Parks Board slnej\nits inception. .The present boara\nalso includes A. L. Johnion, chairman, Fred Fletcher, and Thome*\nSommerville.\nJohn Forster, caretaker, has beta\nin charge ot the park for tha pifl\ntwo yean, by appointment of thi\nboard. j\nAnd thus ends and begins tht\nstory of Esling Park, a dainty com\nner of Rossland which, with tht\ninterest and cooperation of gar*\nden-lovers cm be again made into\n\"a thing ot beauty, md a Joy ton\never\".\nharol\ncarrier, eight deetroyen 13 submarines, md gunboats and other vessels.\nSome 20,000 British subjects live\nIn China, nearly all in Japanese-occupied territory, and there are\nabout the same number In Hong\nKong, Britiah crown colony off the\nSouth China coait\nWAS CHAMPION JUMPER\nST. HELEN'S, Englmd (CP). \u2014\nAlmost forgotten, 63-year-old Thomas Colquitt died hen in poor circumstances. A world'! champion\njumper, hii feats in the late eighties\nand early this century earned him\nworld fame.\nTh*   fastest   tanker   afloat   cu\ntravel 18 knots.\nCoil and Condenser\nTESTERS\nShorty's Repair Shop1\n714 Baker \u00abt\nNelion, B.C.\nCoyle BATTERIES\nMid* In B. C.\nALWAYS FRESH STOCK   j\nAcme Automotive]\n611 Biker Supply Phons 1040\n\\0tUtfei-\nLl Oil EUR\n$425\n2BM0Z.)\nn*T.\nDISTILLED AND BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND\nBY WILLIAM GRANT AND SONS UMITEI\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquet\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbls \\\nm\n PAGE   Hu.\n-NELSON DAILY NEW*. NELSON. B. C.-8ATURDAY MORNINO, AUO. 8, 1MS-\nIt Pays to Advertise on\n**\u2022\u2022 . i i i.i        I.,\nfjil__mmmtttttmm-ttltmt*S^^\nON THE AIR\n\u2014-\u2014\u2014\nWhen You Are Looking for a Job\nCKLN NELSON\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 5, 1939\n7:15\u2014Random Rhythm\n7:30\u2014Don Turner'i Orch.\n8:00\u2014Jimmy Gowler's Old Timers\n8:30-1 Cover the Waterfront\n8:45\u2014Artie Shiw ind his Orch.\n9:00\u2014To be announced\n8:30\u2014Joe D\u00ab Courcey's Orch.\n\u00ab:45-Tbe Newi\n10:00\u2014Lirry Kent'i Orch,\n10:30\u2014Len Hopkin'i Orch,\n11:00\u2014Giry No'tinghtm'i Orch.\nU:30-Phil Hirrli' Orch.\n11:45\u2014To be mnounced.\n,M.\u2014\nS:00\u2014O Canada\n8:03-Juit About Time\n8:15 -The N\u00abwi\n8:00\u2014It'a i Strmge World\n10:00 -Love Story Girl\n10:15\u2014K. L. 0. Program\n10:80-At Your Service\n11:00\u2014Morning Bulletin Board\n2;00-Music For Mealtime\nf. M.\u2014\n12:30-The Newi\n1:30\u2014Sign Oft\n6:30\u2014Children's Request Program\n8:00\u2014Police Headquirten\n6:30-The News\n8:45\u2014Hirmony Hill\n9:45\u2014Tin Pin Alley Goei to Town\n10:45\u2014At Cloie ot Piy\n8:00\u2014Sign Oft\nCBC PROGRAMMES\n1:00\u2014Lulgl Romanelli's Orcheitra\n8:30\u2014The Newi\n8:45-Al Gllotrt'i Trio\n9:00\u2014Jem Ellington\u2014vociliit\n9:15\u2014The Joyce Trio\n8:30\u2014Little Virlety Show\n10:00\u2014Ray Kinney's Orchestra\n10:SO-Cruy Quilt\n11:00\u2014Opening Night of the Promenide Concert*\n12:00\u2014The Newi\n<&- Cfflrffi\ni Fitzgerald and her orch.\nling Stock Quotations\n,-iry Clncone'i Orch.\n:i Ton Chtnte\nbt Little Review\n'oung Cinada\nllenn Miller's Orch.\n.'o be mnounced\n'twill Calls\n\/eon Zuckert and hii Gypsy\n_ Orch.\nv:00\u2014Symphonic Strlngi\n\u00ab:30-Music by Moonlight\n1:00\u2014The Newi\nCjAT \u2014 TRAIL\nA.M.\u2014\n7:00\u2014Requeit Program\n7:30-Newi\n7:45-Song Hits\n8:00\u2014Morning Bulletin Boird\n9:30\u2014Song Cycle\n9:45\u2014Morning Meditations\nU:00-On With the Dance\nP.M.\u2014\n11:50\u2014Popultr Vocil\n12:45-Newi\nl:00-Up-to-the-Mlnute     I\n1:15\u2014Virietlei\n1:30\u2014Daryl Harpa'i Orch.\n4:00\u2014Dmce Music\n4:30\u2014Theatre News\n4:45-News.\n8:00\u2014Headlines ln Sport\n6:15\u2014Dinner Music\nTHE NETS' BEST\n5:30\u2014NBC-Red \u2014 Arch   Oboler'i\nPlayi\n8:45\u2014Columbli \u2014 Siturday Night\nSerentde\n8:00\u2014NBC-Red  \u2014  Benny   Good-\nmin's Orch.\n6:30\u2014Mutual\u2014Music by Moonlight\n7:00-NBC-Red \u2014 Nitlonil Barn\nDance\n7:30\u2014NBC Blue\u2014Ranch Boys\n8:00\u2014Columbia\u2014Hit Parade: Lanny Ross\n8:30-NBC-Red-Ray Noble's Orch.\n9:00\u2014Columbia \u2014  Henry  King's\nOrch.\n9:30\u2014Don   Lee\u2014Piul   Pendarvls'\nOrch.\n10:00\u2014Columbia\u2014Ted Weem's Orch.\n10:30\u2014Columbia \u2014 Pasadena Dance\n11:00\u2014NBC-Blue \u2014 Organ Concert.\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 6, 1939\nCKLN NELSON\n10:30\u2014Music for Sundiy\n11:00\u2014Ferdinand  Strack's   Concert\nOrchestra\nI.M.\u2014\nj 1:00\u2014Spanish Strlngi\n, 2-.00\u2014In tht Bindrtand\nI 8:00\u2014Scheheraiade\nI 6:00\u2014Standard Male Chorui\nI 6:30\u2014Strange Adventure!\nI 6:45\u2014Pacific Paradiie\n7:00\u2014Popular Music of  the Day\n7:30 to 8:30\u2014Music Lovers' Hour\n8:00\u2014Organ Moodi\n10:00\u2014At Close ot Day\nJC PROGRAMMES\n\u2022 M.-\n-Walter Logan'i Muilctle\nSilt Lake  City Tabernacle\nChoir\n8:00\u2014Norman Cloutier'i Orch,\n8:30\u2014Sunday Symphonette\n~\" -Chamber Muilc  .\n-Devotional Service\n-Columbia Broadcasting Sym-\n\u00bb phony\nJ2HI0\u2014The Hour of Musical Fun\n. M.-\n-Tapestry Muiicale\n-Th* Church of the Air\n-Horace MacEwen, pianist\nCanadian Grenadier Guards\n\u2014...     Band\n180-The World Today\nI S:45\u2014Paul Laval'l Orch.\n3:00\u2014The CBC Stolen\nI 8:45\u2014Ten Musicil Maids\n-NBC Symhony Orch.\n-Appointment with Agostlni\n-Organ Recital\n-Music from Manuscript\n-By the Sea\n-Tne Newi\n-John Holden Playen\n-Reglna Concert Orchestra\n-Regina Concert Orcheitra\n9:00\u2014Paul Martin and his Music\n9:45-The News.\n10:00\u2014Sanctuary\n10:30\u2014Bridge to Dreimlind\nCJAT \u2014TRAIL\nP.M.\u2014\n6:00\u2014The Klng'l Men\n7:30\u2014Hawaiian Fantasies\n7:45-Trlnity Choir\n8:00\u2014Knox Church Service\n9:15-The Old Retrains\nTHE NETS' BEST\n11:00\u2014Columbia\u2014Columbia  Broadcasting Symhony\n12:30-NBC-Red - The   World   Ii\nYours\n3:30\u2014NBC-Red\u2014Bandwagon\n4:00-NBC-Red-Bergen &\nMcCarthy\n5:00\u2014Columbia \u2014 Ford   Summer\nHour\n5:30\u2014NBC-Red\u2014American  Album\not Familiar Music\n6:00-NBC-Red-Llght House Service Programme\n8:0O-NBC-Red\u2014Hollywood   Playhouse, drama\n10:00\u2014Columbia\u2014Tito Gulrar, Tnr.\n10:15\u2014NBC-Red\u2014Bridge to Dreamland.\n11:00\u2014NBC-Blue\u2014Chas. Runyan, organist.\nU. S. NETWORKS\nAND STATIONS\nNBC-Red-KFI, Los Angeles; KHQ,\nSpokane; KGW, Portland; KOA, Denver;\nKPO, San Franciico.\nNBC-Blue\u2014KGA, Sokane; KGO,\nSan Francisco; K J R,\nSeatUe.\nColumbia\u2014KNX, Hollywood; KSL,\nSalt Lake City; KFPY,\nSpokane; KOIN, Portland.\nFrench, German\nConsulates Blown\nCHUNGKING, Aug. 4 (AP) -\nThe French and German consulates\nwere damaged early todiy u Japanese wirelines raided th* city,\ndemolition bombs exploded n the\ncon poi' di of the two consulates\nshattering windows and splattering\nceilings with fragment!.\nTen Chinese wert killed In iht\nforeign area. They bad left tha\nstrictly Chinese quarter ot tbe city\nfor supposed ufetly under the\nswastika md tricolor.\nThe residence of F. Tlllmin Dur-\ndln, of Fort Worth, Texas, a correspondent ot th* New York Timei,\nwu ruined by bomb concussion.\nOther residential buildings In the\narea were destroyed by first itarted by the bombs. Th* flamei wert\nbrought under control after daybreak.\nCasualties throughout tbe city\nwer* not heavy probibly under\n30, ai tht raiders concentrated\ntbeir attention upon the tuburbs.\nOne Jipmese bomber wu ihot\ndown.\nDANZIG-PRUSSIA\nBRIDGE IS READY\nFOR INSTALLATION\nDANZIG, Aug. 4 (AP)-Dmilg\nauthorities announced today a\npontoon bridge which would provide the only bridge connection\novtr the Vistula River between the\nFree City ot Danilg and German\nEast Prussia wu completed ivA\nready for Installation. Announcement ot the new bridge follows a\nthreat on Tuesday by Danilg Nazi\nleaders to ignore the established\nfrontiers after a revival of the\n\"herring and margarine war\" between Poland and Danzig.\n> JTtiB x ujiini j.rc.ij .Gcr.y u.\u00a3cus-\nsed the possibility that Danzig Nazis were preparing forcibly to open\nthe frontier between th* Free City\nand East Prussia\u2014a step in the\ndirection of incorporation of Danzig in the Reich.)\nThe bridge hu not yet been put\nin place and authorities said they\nwere not certain when It would be\nanchored. It will be entirely on\nFree State territory.\nRetirement Thoughts\nDraw Large Crowds\nto Poultry Congress\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 4 (AP).-In\nthe back of moat men'i mindi li\nthat hankering to retire iome diy\nto an tcre or two of land, itick up\na fence and raise poultry.\nThat's how the men who direct\nthe seventh world's poultry congress explain the chicken show's\nunexpected'crowds. In the first six\ndays of the 11-day congresi, nearly\n500.000 penoni toured the 22-acre\nexhibition grounds to see whit the\npoultry Industry ii up to. Paid ad-\nmission on the best day totalled\n117,000.\nThat was on Canada day, when\nthe presence of a detachment of\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Police to\nperform a musical ride proved a big\ndrawing card.\nA Janitor employed In the city\ntook his whole family to the exposition\u2014because \"my mother used to\nraise chickens.\" Another man attended because he once spent a\nSummer on a frm.\nThe poultry breeders seriously\nattend lectures on new developments In poultry raising.\nDr. Arthur Hor, secretary of the\nNational Agricultural Society of\nHungary, hu an explanation for the\nattendance of breeders from all\nparts of the world in such large\nnumbers.\n\"The poultryman is something of\nan idealist,\" said Dr. Horn. \"He'll\ntravel almost anywhere to see poultry.\"\nJ. S. Sarsait of Victoria won the\nspecial award tor the best Polish\nfowl shown in the live bird exhibition.\nSales of birds for breeding purposes have been made by British\nColumbia breeders to Denmark,\nNew Zealand and several states.\nNrlaoii Bmly Nrwa\nMember of tht Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association.\n'   Telephone ;\u2022 144\nPrivate Exchinge Connecting to\nAll Dtptrtmtntt,\nClassified Advertising\nRates \u2014 lie \"Per Line\n(Minimum 2 Llntl)\n1 Una, ptr insertion 4 33\ni Una, 6 consecutive\nlniertloni\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per Insertion     33\n8 linei. 6 consecutivi\nlniertloni   1.33\n1 linei. 1 month 3.86\n3 linei, 1 month 438\nFor advertisements ot mora than\nthrtt Unci, calculate on\ntht above bull.\nBox numbers lie extra. Thli\ncovin my numbtr ot\ninsertions.\nLECAL NOTICES\n18c per llnei, fint lniertion and\n14c etch subsequent lniertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATE\nSituation* Winted. 2So for tny\nrequired  numbtr of llntl for\n\u2022Ix  diyi,  ptyablt  In  advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy\t\nBy carrier, per week .\nBy carrier, per year -\nBy Mill:\nOne month \t\nThree monthi \t\nSix monthi\t\nOne yeir .\n$  .05\nmi\n13.00\n,8.75\n.   1.00\n.   400\n3.00\nAbove ratei apply in Canada,\nthe United Statea. and tbt\nUnited Kingdom, to subscribers\nii..:.,..     ,-.,,i\u201e;j\u201e     ffitfftJSr    P*!\"\"'1**\ntreas.\nElsewhere md In Canada whtrt\nextra poitage Is required, on*\nmonth $1.50, three months 84.00,\nsix monthi $8.00, one year $15.00.\nFARM, CARDEN tt NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nFRUIT GROWERS!\nShip .your berrlei md cherries\nto an Independent Fruit Company.\nReturn) are made every Saturday.\nROYAL FRUIT COMPANY\nREGINA, SASK.\nHitler, Duce Have\nMilitary Aides\nReady,for Service?\nPARIS, Aug. 4 (CP-Havai).-\nGencvlevc Tabouis, foreign affairs\ncommentator for L'Oeuvre (Redl-\ncal-Soclalist) reported today that\nChancellor Hitler and Premier\nMussolini bad both ordered their\nkey military aides to stand by for\npermanent emergency service beginning Aug. 15,\nClaude Vivieres, writing in\nL'Ordre (Rightists), similarly\nmentioned the 14th as a probable\ncritical date.   '.\n1\nPERSONAL\nI\nLEA VINO FOR REGINA AUO. 10\nor 11. Room tor 2. Writ* to Box\n8048 Di'ly Newt.\nRADIO TROUBLES - SEE BltL\nfint estimate and tuba tested\ntree. 850 Stanley 8L Phona 1046.\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP A1\nAimer Hotel Opp, C P. R. D*pot\n-'\u25a0limt   ZST-mm... -ftujfg\nBi\" assured\" ofrRtsH riufTS\nmd vegetables it ill tlmu\u2014buy\nit Star Grocery. Spec. refrig\u00abr*tion\nTROUBLE AHEAD! CHECK YOUR\ntires. Se* th* Beicon Service Sta-\ntion, 701 Baker Strart.\nKEEP COOL WITH APRIL SHOW-\nen Toiletries. Call or writ* to\nMann, Rutherford Co, 488 Baker.\nMEN - SUITS CLEANED, PRESS-\n107, 584 _______\ned,   repaired   or  altered,   H.  J.\nWilton'^ Ph, \"\u2022   - *\nA VACATION EVERY MONDAY-\nSend your Laundry to th* Koot*.\nmy Steim Laundry, Phon* 118.\nWHAT BREAD IS YOUR FAVOR\"\nItet-Mother'i Bread. Phon* 158.\nChoquette'a tor tret dillvery\nvous    Exhaustion,    Melancholia.\nWrite Box 7895 Dally Newi.\nYOU CAN RUN A HOME KIN-\ndcrgarten with our blip. Th*\nCanadian Kindergarten Institute.\nWinnipeg, Manitoba.\nGENUINE'LATKX SPECIAL GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or Jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue) National\nImporters, Box 144, Edmonton.\nANY SIZE ROLL FILM DfcvUS\noped and printed. 25c. Every\nbatch of prints Hyp-o-Meter tested, ensuring non fading prints\nKryital Photoi, WUkle, Saik,\nLONELY PEOPLE IN CANADAI\nJoin Elite Club. Confidential, reliable. For particulan and descriptions send 10c, Box UI,\nReglna, Saikitchewan.\nPERSONAL RUBBER G55DS,\nmailed postpaid In plain, sealed\nenvelope wtth prlct list. 6 umpla 25c, 24 samples IliM. Adults\n' only. Atrr RtiMwr Co, D*pt H.\nBox 231. Hamilton, Ontario.\nANY SIZE ROU FILM DEVBL-\noped and printed 25c Th* moit\nmodern Photo Finiihing Plant In\ntne Weit Eitabllihed over 90 yein\nKrystal Photo*, Wilkie, Suk.\nAN OFFER TO EVERY IN-\nventor, Hit of winted Inventions\nmd full information sent free. The\nRamuy Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa\n25C-FILMS, ANY SIZE ROLL DE\nveloped apd printed, and 6x7 enlargement for 26c, Reprints, 8\nfor 25c. Exp finishing. (Cash with\norder). 129 7th Ave. E. Calgary\negion Didn't Know\nYhat Was Talking\nAbout Says Telford\nJrANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP). -\nyor Itfle Telford uld today dele-\nsates to the convention of the Britiih Columbia command of the Canadian Legion at Kamloops \"didn't\nknow what they were talking about\"\nHen they passed a resolution expressing \"intense resentment\" at the\n\u25a0\u25a0tion of the Mayor in connection\nBrtth charges he hu made against\n\u25a0rlndler W. W. Foster, Chief tut\n|ht Vincouver Police Department\nIf Tha reiolutlon, paued yuterday\nby the convention, expressed support for Brigadier Foster, Dominion\nPresident of the Legion.\nCommenting on the action, Mayor\nTelford laid: '\nf 1 think it would have been highly\nidvisablc for the Legion to with-\nnld Its resolution until the investigation is over. The Legion is talk-\nAg through Its hat\u2014they don't\n[now anything about this. They are\nick Ins their necks out and will\n:1 up by becoming thoroughly\ntbroiled.\"\n[De Geer Is Asked to\nForm Dutch Cabinet\nTHE HAGUE, Th* Netherlandi,\nAug, 4 (AP).-Queen Wllhtlmlm\ntoday uked D, J. Dt Ger, leider\nof tht Christian Traditionalist\nparty, to form a cabinet to succeed that of Dr. Handrlkut Colljn\nwho reilgntd July 27.\n|BANK BANDITS CET $1600\n[STONEY POINT, Ont, Aug. 4\n'CP).\u2014Four bandits eicaped with\n11800 from a branch of th* Provin-\nlal Bank of Cinada today alter\nxking Manager Jamei Griffin in\ni washroom.\nB.C. PIONEER DIES\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 4 (CP).-F.\nR. McD. Russell, former Chairman\nof the Vancouver Harbor Board,\ndied in hospital here early today.\nMr. Russell, one of British Columbia's pioneer barristers, had been\nill for aome time.\nSAVIOR OF IL\nDUCE DIES, COMO\nCOMO, Italy, Aug. 4 (CP).\u2014Don\nFrancesco Redaelll, 54, parish priest\nof Carneno, who saved Benito Mussolini's life when he wu wounded\non the Carso front in the Great\nWar, died today.\nFather Redaelll helped carry Mussolini from a battlefield when he\nwu wounded by a grenade that\nexploded as it wu being put in a\ntrench mortar.\nWith 42 wounds, the future Duce\nof Fucism was in serious condition.\nVictoria to Strive\nAccident Free Week\nVICTORIA, Aug. 4 (CP).\u2014\"100\nDeathless Days\" - traffic campaign\nil \"too euy\" for Victoria so the\nCity hu decided to launch an \"ao\ncldent free\" week.\nThe objective of the drive, sponsored by the City Police Department Is to have a week free of accidents in which persons are lent to\nhospital. It will begin Monday.\nChief J. A. McLellan, who claims\nthe 100 deathless daya campaign\nwould be a \"comparatively easy objective\" said the department did not\nintend to make it an intensive campaign to prosecute pedestrians and\nmotorists.\nU.S. Abrogation of\nTreaty Forcing Axis\nAlliance bv japan\nTOKYO, Aug, 4 (APWapan Is\nbeing forced toward a military alliance with Germany and Italy because of United States abrogation\nof her Japanese trade treaty with\nBritish raistance on the North\nChina currency question, a big government official said today.\nConclusion ot a military pact may\ncome at any moment, he said, but\nmeeting of the Japanese ambassadors to Italy and_ Germany, in pro-\nVICTORIA PIONEER DIE8\nVICTORIA, Aug, 4 (CP)-Mrs.\nMary Ann Brooks, Saanich pioneer\ndied yesterday at her home at Stel-\nIv's Crossroad. She had lived in\nthe district lince 1831.\n:   .^i,.^*-,t\nher   proposed   ignorance   of   the\nJa]\no Italy am\t\ngross at Villa d'Este, Italy.\nMaharajah Stops\nTraffic, Toronto\nTORONTO, Aug. 4 (CP)-Traf-\nfic was stopped on Front Street\ntoday by His Hlshness. Maharajah\nManikya, Sir Bin Bokram Kishope\ndeb Barman Bahaden, a young rider ot the State of Tripura, India,\nwho is investing some of his $1,000.-\n000-a-year income on a Canadian\nvisit\nHe stalked majestically across\nthe street from the Union Station\nto his hotel.\nHis sister followed him, a respectful distance behind. The Yu-\nhurani of Baria wore flowered silk\nrobes. The party will visit Niagara\nFalli tomorrow, but the remainder\nof their Canadlm program Is indefinite.  .\nTrijura is i imall state in the\neutem provlncei of India and hu\nbeen under tht ume line of rulers\nsince 590 A.D.\nCHINESE WRECK BRITISH\nOFFICES AND EQUIPMENT\nTIENTSIN, Aug. 4 (AP)-Anti-\nBritish violence broke anew today\nwhen a mob of Chinese attacked\noffices of the British International\nExport Corporation, smuhed furniture md other equipment and\nthrew it into the Hai River. Britons\nsold the attack was Instigated by\nJapan.\nBritish and Chinese employees\nof the Corporation took refuge on\nth adjoining property of an American concern, the Tecu Oil Company.\n200 Ducklings Being\nSaved From Drought\nEDMONTON, Aug. 4 (CP).-Sal-\nvaging ot 200 ducklings in the Willingdon district was reported today\nby Edmonton officials of Ducks\nUnlimited. \u2022 >\nDying because of lack of water\nand Whitford Lake drying up, the\nducklings were transported seven\nmiles to Lake Matie with volunteers trom the Willingdon district\nhelping.\nBOYS - STAMPS - GIRTS\nForeign and British Colony itampi\nat far leaa than catalogue prices.\nWrite, at once, tor Approval sheets\nto G. F. Goodwin, 830 4th Avenue\nWest Calgary, Alberta.\nANY SIZE ROLL FILMDEVBLOP-\ned and printed, 25c. On* trial will\nconvince you of tb* superior\nquality of our work. We use\nonly fresh Printing Piper Kryital\nPhotoi, WUkle, Saskatchewan,\nMUCUS (BASIS OF DISEASETCX-\ntarrh, Sinuiitli, etc., new Witer-\nless Diet dissolves, removes mucus quickly. Sworn, testimonials.\nEducational literature FREE.\nDunning Syitem, 63 Castlcficld\navenue, Toronto, Ontario,\nBIRTHS\nDEVLIN - At the Nikusp Hospl.\ntil, July 34, 1838, to Mr. ind Mrs.\nW. L. Devlin of Ftuquter, a ion.\nHELP WANTID\nSTENOGRAPHERS AND TYPISTS\nEximlnitlom tar Dominion Civil\nSarvic* to be held to NeUon Applications to nach Ottawi by\n,Augutt 31. Wt havt helped hundreds get positions u Stenographers, Typnts, Postmen, Customs\nClerks, etc.. and can help you.\nProof ot thli itatement md full\nInformation about axaminitloni.\na\\c. free. The M. C. C. Schooli\nLtd., Winnipeg, Manitoba.\nGOOD RELIABLE GIRL FOR GW-\neral housework. Phone 263.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rate tor advertisements undtr thli classification\nto assist people seeking employment. Only 25c foi one wetk\n(6 dayt) Coven any number\not required tine*. Payable In\nadvance.\nHOUSEKEEPER, OUT OF TOWN\nCanadian, cultured tnd refined\nwidow (52 yrs.), would like to\nbur from refined gentlemen ot\nmum or widower (no objections\nto family). Attractive Al cook.\nNon-drinker tnd non-smoker, capable of full charge. Vary clean,\nneat, reliable. Free to go anywhere, anytime. Box 8003 Nelion\nDtlly Ntwi.\nFOR SALI MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPES, TUBES. FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nlit Avenue ind Main St\nVancouver, B. C.\t\nWHISKY BARRELS FOR WINE,\nAll lizu; also barrels for other\npurposw. Active Trtding, 916\nPowell Street, Vincouver, B. C.\nNEW    ELECTRIC   RANGE   AND\nfireplice. Desk. Radio. Couch Doll\nbuggy and dolls. Cedar chest, etc.\nApply 609_ Nelion Avenue.\npipe and nrriNG\nATLAS IRON k METALS LTD\n250 Prior St        Vmcouver, B. C.\nFOR SALE-BARRELS\" KEGS,\n\u2022ugar sacks, linen. McDonild Jim\nCompiny, Ltd., Nelion, B. C.\n4 HOLE COOK STOVE. NEARLY\nnew. Box 8083 Daily News.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nPally 1\nFIRST\n_ CLASS HOUSE KEEPER\nwants work at once. Will go anywhere. Good cook ud clean.\nWould like housework or hotel\n,vork. Box 8032 Daily Newi. __\nYOUNG MAN, AGE 27, WANTS\nwork. Experienced on firm. Good\nall around man, can milk and handi* horses. Apply Willard Tanson,\nBox 86, RossUnd, B. C.\nAMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN27TDT-\ntlru work In grocery or meat\nmarket 12 yean experience.\nQualification! and referenca. Box\n8081 Dally Newi.\nDally !\nMDPC\nWANTED POSITION AS HOUSE-\nkeener, Capable and fully experienced. Would like work 1m-\nmedlately. Box 8037 Dally Newi,\nEXPERIENCED GIRL WOULD\nlike pert tim* or work by tha\nhour. Ph. 486R between 9-12 a.m.\nRELIABLE GIRL WILL CARE FOR\n. children afternoons and evenings\nPhone 988L.   ,\nTEACHERS WANTED\nWANTED EXPERIENCED TEACH\n\u00abr u Principtl Procter Superior\nSchool. Salary $1150. Gradei 7 to\n10. Ap, Sec, Sch, Bd., Procter, B. C,\n10. Ap. W\n\\NTED1\nHYGIENE SANITARY SUPPLIES\nand drug sundries. For highest\n.quality goods at lowest pricei,\nwrite for latest price list or tend\n$1 for Special Sample assortment\not 21, postpaid under plain scaled\ncover. Western Supply Agency.\nBox 667, Vancouver, B. C.\nENROLL NOW FOR A BEAUTY\nCoune under Professor Nicholas,\nInternationally famous hair stylist\nand Beauty Culture Authority.\nWrite for particulan, Spokane\nSchool of Beauty Culture,\nSpokane, Washington,     '\t\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM, 704 BAKER\nStreet, Phone 392R.\nWANTED EXPERIENCED TEACH--\n\u2022r for rural Khool. Male preferred\nApply Sirdar School Board.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finderi\nIt you find a cat or dog, pocket-\nbook, iewclry or fur, or anything else ot value telephone the\nDaUy News. A \"Found\" Ad will\nbe Inserted without edit to you.\nW* will collect from th* owner\nFOR SALE 1835 FORD TUDOR,\nin Al condition. Will take older\ncar for down payment Very easy\npayments. A real snap. Apply\nBox 7729 Dally Newi.\nWANTED. CAR ORTJGWtRUCK\nsuitable for construction of caravan. Motor must be Al. body Immaterial. A. D. Pochln, Canyon.\nBUSINESS ANO\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nA88AYER8\nE W WIDDOWSON PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Aiuyw. Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents tot\nTrail Smelter  301-5(15   Jouptilm\nitr**t   Nelion.   8 C\n\"GREriVfLLE & ORIMWOOD\"\"\n.\"rovlr.Hil Assayer md Chemlit, 410\nFill Street P O Box 9. NeW\nB C Repret* n i i n t shippen1\nlntereit it TralL B C\nHAROLD S ELMES ROSSI.AND,\nB C- Provinciil Aiuyer. Chemlit\nIndividual Represeotitlva to*\nshippers it Trail 8m*ltet\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. r McMillan, d c, neuro-\ncalometcr, X-ray  McCullock Bile\nDR.  W11.BERT BROCK. PALMER\nGraduate X-ray  16 yean experience. 542 Baker St  Phone 969.\nCORSETIERES\nSPENCER CORSETS,  MRS. V   M.\nCampbell, 370 Baker St Ph. 648.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B C.\nSurveyor  and   Engineer   'Phon*\n\"Beaver Falli.''\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron, iny quantity. Top pricu\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nSMALL DELCO ELECTRIC LIGHT\nplant. Box 8038 Dally Newi,\nH D  DAWSON        Nelaon, a C\n Engineer k Surveyor\nHOMES FOR THE AGED\nMACHINERY\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS CAN\nbring their Portable Arc Welder\nto you, anywhere. 431 Josephine st\n.'OR AND WANTED TO RENT\nWANTED - LARGE HOUSE OR\nrooming house by Aug. 27. Write\nElsie M. Reberger, Langley\nPrairie, B. C.\nFOR RENT - SERVICE STATTOR\nand garage, on good highway,\nfully equipd. Box 8039 Dally News\nWANTED BY AUG, 15, THREE OR\n4 rm. house, Ph, Kitto, Savoy^hotel\nTO RENT CHEAP, SUMMER COT-\ntage. Write Box 8057 Dally Newa.\nFOR\" RENT OR LEASE 6 ROOM\nhouse, Stanley St, Furnace, Ph. 67.\nFURN. AND UNFURN. 3 iiTRM\".\nsuites, reduced rata, Kerr Apts.\nFOR RENT APARTMENT, MEDl\ncal Arte bldg. Ap C. F. McHardy\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nroomi for rant Anhabl* Bloclt\nLOST-JULY 21 BETWEEN BLUE-\nberry tt Caitlegar, 32 x 8 Dunlop\ntire on rim. Finder pleue return\nto Ramp Garage, Trail. Reward.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE, PURE BRED REGIS-\ntered Wire Haired Terrier Pup-\nles. H, Harding. Nelion, Ph. UP\nplu\nPURE\nPUREBRED LABRADOR PUPS\nfor rale. Mature dogs. Harrop,\nAbbotsford. EC\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES, ETC.\n7 WEEKS PIGS $5. GOOD THRIV-\ntn. Rlvenlde Ranch, Trail, B. C.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nSINGLE OR TWO-ROOM SUITES\nfpr rent. Strathcona Hotel.\t\nFURNISHED    HOUSE    KEEPING\nrooms. 711 Vernon Jitreet\nFOR RENT, 3 ROOM FURBISHED\nsuite. Phone 369R1.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE - CHEAP, HOUSE\nStone foundation. Furnace. Two\ncar garage. Five iota. Hawthorn\nhedge. Fruit trees. Finest home-\nsite md view in Nelson. On view\nafternoons, 524 Robson Street.\nPhone 9 or 513R\nCONDUCTED  BY  THE  SISTERS,\nof the Love ot Jesus. St Jude's\nHome of Rut for elderly couples.\nSt.  Anthony't Guut Houie tnd\nthe Priory Guut House for lidie*\nover sixty. Privtte rooms withi\t\nbath, Beautiful location. A real\/BJ\nHome with every comfort. NursinglB\ncare when needed. Apply tSM\nMother Superior, 948 Weit 27th _\\\nAvenue, Vancouver, B, C.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATI\nC D  BLACKWOOD, Insurance ot\nevery description. Rul Elt. Ph. 99.\nSEE D   L  KERR,  AGENT FOR\"\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rata.\nJ K ANNABLE, REAL ESTATE,\nRentals   Insurance. Annible Blk.\nCHAS F MrHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phon* 135.\nR. W DAWSON, Real Estate. In-\nlurance. Rentals. Next Hipperaon\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and clectrlo\nwelding, motor rewinding, commercial refrigeration.\nPhone 593, 324 Vernon St.\nMEMORIALS\nPLACE A BRONZE ONE ON THS\ngrave of your loved one. Oat pries\nlist from Bronie Memorials Ltd,\nP. O. Box 726, Vancouver, B. C.\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms ln Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources, C. P R\u201e Calgary. Alta\nSACRIFICE SALE - 5 RM. HOUSE\n214 Vernon St Terms. What offers?\nApply Mn. M. Croll, 220 Silica St.\nFOR SALE, 4 RM. HOUSE, 3 LOTS\n1328 Fall Street, Nelson. Apply\nPaul Drozda, Vernon Rmi., No. 18.\nRead  md tise the Nelson  Dally\nNews  ''Classifled\"-the  largutlu\nthe Interior.\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. I. C.\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Canada and U. S. A. 703-2nd St W,\nCalgary. Advice free, confidential.\nSASH FACTORIES j\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE BUY, SELL & EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 88*.\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY, SELL\n____ Rpr\u201e Upholster Phone 1081\nWATCH REPAIRING\nWhen SUTHERLAND repaln your\nwatch tt ts on Ume all the time.\n345.   Baker   St..   Nelson.   B.   C.\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\ntrom out-of-town reildenti given\nprompt  attention\nCV\nc\nM\nI\niff The doesn't\n1 THE FOC5S-\n*0>s\n~%t_\\\nfl\n_>c_\n\u25a0 u\nwm\nA \/\nI\n*.\n>'\u2022\u25a0\nz\nc\nM\n *KM_________________mW-*m-'m\n[OM\nW Cars of Grain\nDoors lo Be Made\nCranbrook Mills\nPrairie   Crop   Speeds\nDemand; 35,000\nfor Creston\nCRANBROOK. B. C. Aug. 4-AI-\nready reaction from itrong probabilities of a good crop ia the Prtirit\nProvinces ii having lit effect on\nthli district, with i decided pick-up\nIn lumbering, largely accounted for\nby C. P. R, orders (or grain doon.\nTn* doors, mtde of tongue and\ngroove lumber, mwtly dry iprvce,\nlarch tnd Mr, in uied in box-cars\nfor ihipping grain, as an Inner door\nto let as an extra support for tht\nout* r door.\nThe Crinbrook Stth & Door Compiny Ltd. and tht B. C. Spruce Compiny Ltd. are lupplylng between\nthem iround BO carloads of theae\ndoors with approximately 720 doors\nto I car, making 90,000 doon in\nall. These will require 2,800,000 (eet\ncf dry lumber.\n1 The demand thli year li about\nthe wmt ai for 1938, with both\nyears well above average. Thii\nyear'i supply trom Bait Kootenay\nwill be a little In excess ot last\nyear, with an order for 35,000 doors\ntor Creston to ship their wheat\ncrop. The Cretton order wis not\nin last year because ot the dyke\nbreakage which flooded out their\ncrop In June.\nThe Sash te Door hav* already\nshipped six carloads and the B. C.\nSpruce, shipping at about a car a\nhave tent off around 20 car-\nJj. All this work must be corned and shipped by early September. There is a pwlbtlity of\nmore orders in ihe masuitUns.\nThis seasonal work is requiring\naround 24 men it full-time work\nfor the two Arms.\nWhta the doon are completed\n<My measure S feet by 2V\u00ab Inches by\n4 teet._\t\nGolds Up Slightly,\nOils ond Base Metals\nDown ot Vancouver\n. VANCOUVER, Aug. 4 (CP) -\nPrices wavered narrowly both ways\nIn ill sections on t quiet session\nOf tht Vancouver Stock Market\ntoday. Ooldi were up a fraction\nwhile oils and bait metali used\ndown illghtly. Transections totalled\n12.910 ihares.\nIn the gold stocks Premier\nkipped 3 to 1.37 whil* Kootenay\nUe. struck an irregular coune in\nmorning session dosing tt 80,\nit. Hedley MiScot wu down 1\n.75 and Bhaep Creek illpped 2\nI to 1.22. Cariboo It 2.20 wu unchanged.\nI Tht oili were extremely quiet,\n! Royil Canadian at .lBVt, and Calmont at .32 wer* both up a cent\nwhile Madison firmed * to 3. Home\ntumbled 5 to 2.15. Anglo-Canadian\nWU up 3 to .95.\nNoble Five traded 7000 iharei at\nIVk in th* bast metali while Wav\nI irly Tangier firmed U to\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (AP).-Close:\nBrazil $8V\u00ab; C. P. R. tfK; Inter\nNickel.$\u2022\u00bb%', U.^ Steal 8IH; Bab-\nceck k Wilcox 40s Bd; Boot! Drug\n43s Hid; Celanese Corp ot Am \u00a36;\nCent Mining \u00a315>\/4; Consol Gold\nFields 58s lHd; Courttuldi 30s 9(1;\nCrown \u00a319; Stat Oeduld \u00a311;\nH.B.C. Its td; London Midland\n\u00a313M>, Metal Box 73s Od; Mtx Eagle\nTi Qd; Mining Trult 2s; Rind \u00a38tt;\nSprings ST* M.\nBonds\u2014Britiih 2tt ptr ctnt Con-\ntoll \u00a366%; British 3',i ptr ctnt\nwir loin \u00a302; British funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a3105.\n.. it\n\u25a0\nam    *,       . 1 \u25a0\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPld* Aug- 4 (CP).-Grlln\ndose: I\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWHEAT:\nOct    534    54H    UK     Mtt\nNov   Mtt    M       Mtt    Mtt\nDec   Mtt    M       Mtt    Mtt\nMiy     Mtt    5\u00bb*    \u00bb7tt     M\nOATS:\nOct. .......   Mtt    28.%    21       21\nDec    27*    27tt     27tt     27tt\nMiy ......   2ttt    29tt     Mtt     \u00bbtt\nBARLEY:\nOct. .......  Utt    Mtt    Mtt    Mtt\nOct. ntw   Utt    Mtt    M       M\nDec   Mtt    Mtt    \u00ab**.    Mtt\nFLAX:\nMay   Mtt    \u00bbH    Mtt    Mtt\nOct  131      IM      13U4   132tt\nOct  lMtt    -       -      11M4\nRYE-\nOct ...'..    Mtt    Mtt    37tt    Mtt\nDec    Mtt    Mtt    3t*    Mtt\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT-No. 1 hard Mtt; No. 1\nNor. Mtt; No, t Nor. Mtt; No. t\nNor. Mtt; No, 4 Nor. 43tt; No. 9\nwheat 39tt: No. t wheat Mtt: tied\nMtt; No. 1 Garnet \u00ab3tt; No. 2 Garnet\n40%; No. 1 Durum 47%; No. 4 special 41tt; No. t special 40tt; No. I\nipeclal 37tt; No. i mixed wheat\n37%; track Mtt.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. Mtt; No. 2\nEx. 3 C. W. Mtt; No. i C. W. 25;\nNo. 1 feed 24U; No. 2 feed 23; No. 3\nfeed 21: track 37.\nBARLSY-No, 1 C. W. 9- row\nM.; No. 2 C. W 6-row 35; No. 1\nC. W. 2 row M; No. a C. W, 2 row\nM; No. 3 C. W. t row M; No. 1\nfeed M: No. 2 feed 31; No, 3 feed\n30; track 91\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 111%; No, 2\nC. W. I27tt; No. 3 C. W. 113%; No, 4\nC. W. 1MH; tnck 111*.\nRYE-No. I C. W, 87*.\nBridge, Sleel and\nC.P.R. Go Mead\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CP). -\nSupport wu sadly licking on the\nstock market latt Friday, Light\nselling depressed Canada Cement\nand Asbestos while Dominion Bridgt\nand Steel of Canada stepped up a\nbit. C, P, R. firmed tt point. Canadian Car pfd. and National Steel\nCar steadied,\nMetals on the losing end Included\nNickel and Smelters. On th* upside\nwtre Hudson Bay Mining and Noranda. Near close International Pete\nfell tt and Imperial Oil tt.\nB.C. Company Gets\nAlberta Oil Leases\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 4 (CP).-fl.\nE, Nord, vice president and general manager of the Standard OU\nCompany of British Columbia, announced here today that Alberta\noil leases recently acquired by the\nCalifornia Company, subsidiary ot\nStandard Oil Compiny ot California, are being transferred to the\nBritish Columbit company,\nMr. Nord said ln a statement that\na total of 100,000 acrei hu been\nacquired in the Steveville lector\nof Alberta half from thi Canadian\nPacific Railway and halt trom tha\nAlberta Government.\n\t\n-NILION DAILY NIWS, MUON. \u2022., .V-aATUAOAY MOKN1NO, AUtt. 8, IMS-\nMarket and Mining News\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Aug, 4 (CP).^-Spot;\nButter, Que. (92 score) 2ltt traded.\nEggs, A-large M. Sales: Butter, 400\nQue. (92 score) 21tt.\nButter futures: Aug. 21 Vi \u2014 tt;\nSept, Mtt-*! Oct 21tt-22tt; Nov.\n22tt\u2014tt. Siies; Foui Nov. contracts\nat 221\/4.\nU.S. DOUAR UNCHANGED\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (CP). - Tht\nUnited States dollar Igtin ended\nunchanged tt $4.CB',4 to the pound\nin the fortlgn exchange marktt todty, corresponding to 1 similar rat*\nfor iterling in N*w York iat* yei-\nttrday.\nFrench fnncs also were unaltered\nat 176.82 to the found.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAldermae Copper _\t\nAmm Oold ......\nAnglo-Huronlan \t\nAmtfield Oold\t\nAitoria Rouyn Mines\t\nAunor Gold ,\t\nBagamac Rouyn \u201e ...\nlTanktield Gold\t\nIJase Metals Mining  \nSeattle Gold Mints ...\nBidgood Kirkland _ \nBig Missouri \nBobio MlnM \nBralorne Mines\n..-eirTrethewey ...\nluffalo Ankerite ,...:\n,nker HIU Extension ...\n..nadian Malartlc\t\nlariboo Oold Quarti \t\n. Jutle-Trethewey \t\nI Central Patricia \t\nI ChlbougamaU\nI Chromium M 4s S \nCoait Copper \nConiaurum Mlnei  \nConsolidated   \t\nDarkwattr   ~\t\nDome Mines \t\nDorval-Slscoe   \t\nEast Milartic \t\nEldorado Gold ..;........\t\nFalconbridge  Nickel \t\nFederal Kirkland \t\n\u00bb\u00b0\u00b0Mr:::\n'God's Lake Gold..,\t\nGranada Gold MlnM\t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHard Rock Gold ...:....:\t\nBarker Gold\t\nHollinger  -\t\nHudson BiyMeiS\t\nfcternational Nickel  .\nJ.-M. Consolidated \t\nJack Waite  ~\t\ntfacola Gold \t\nKerr-Addison\t\nKirkland Lake .-. ....\ntake Shore Mints...\t\nLeitch Gold\t\ntebel Oro Mines\t\nlittle LonK Lac \t\nMacassa Mines\t\nMacLeod Cockshutt .........\nMadsen Red Uke Gold .\nJftnHy.... \u25a0\t\nafotiltyre-PorcupIni\t\nMcKenila Red Lake\t\nMcVittle-Graham \t\nKWitten Gold .....\t\nJinlng Corporation \nlta flow r \nOneta Porcupine \t\nMorris-Kirklind \t\nNipissing Mining\t\nNoranda \t\nNormetal  \t\n3'Brlen Oold .'.\t\njmega Gold \t\nPamour Porcupine\t\nPaulore   \t\nlymaster Com ...\nw  -   SW.S11* I A ..\n,...     .34\n....     OTtt\n    2.M\n 13\n.....     .Mtt\n....   I.M\n 08tt\n....    .18\n..    .18\n,.:.. ns\n....    .\"\n  .lltt\n lltt\n  11,75\n Oltt\n  10.10\n 06tt\n 73\n    220\n 75\n    2.48\n....    .'ltt\n....     .61\n    1.79\n....    1.M\n.... 44.M\n     .05\n 82.80\n 09tt\n    2.70\n...   1.14\n...   6.79 \u25a0\n 04tt\n....     .63tt\n....    .07\n 42\n     .02*\n...    .50\n    1.10\n      .08tt\n..... 16.10\n.... 34.90\n. 49.50\n Wt\n 17tt\n     .05\n....   199\n....   1.47\n 41.75\n 84\n....     .03\n.....   2.M<\n    4.85\n    1.95\n...    .38-\n 12\n  MAO\n.....   1.27\"\n 14\n 61\n....   1.18\n     .Oltt\n    1.03\n     .09\n....   1.39 -\n 12.50\n 63\n    2.20\n..:..    .31\n....   2.20\n....    ,02tt\nL    .47\n1.45,\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold\t\nPoWell Rouyn Gold ....\nPreiton Eait Dome ....\nQuebec Gold \t\nReeves MacDonald ......\nReno Gold Mines\t\nRoche Long Lac\t\nSan Antonio Gold ......\nShawkey Gold \t\nSheep Creek Gold \t\nSherritt Gordon ...;\t\nSiscoe Gold   ....\nSladen Malartic \t\nStadacona Rouyn \t\nSt. Anthony \t\nSudbury Basin \t\nSullivan Consolidated .\nSylvanite \t\nTeck-Hu\u00abhes Gold\t\nToburn Gold Mlnei\t\nTowagmac \t\nVentures   \t\nWaite Amulet\t\nWhitewater \t\nWright Hargreavti \t\nYmlr Yankee Oirl\t\nOILS\nBritish American \t\nChemical Research\t\nImperial \t\nInter Petroleum \t\nTexas Canadian \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power A ~\t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian T L k P\t\nBrewers k Distillers ..\nBrewing Corp\t\nB C Power A \t\nB C Power B\t\nBuilding Producti \t\nCintda Bread ....\nCan Bud Malting \t\nCan Car it Foundry ...\nCtn Cemtnt  -\t\nCtn Milting\t\nCtn Pacific \t\nCtn Ind Alcohol A ....\nCan Wineries \t\nCons Bakeries \t\nCotmos \u2022\t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDominion Stores \t\nDom Ttr k Chem \t\nDistillers Seigrims\t\nFinny Farmer .\u201e\t\nFord of Ctnida. A \t\nG*n Steel Wtr*!\t\nGoodyear Tire\t\nGypsum Lt A\t\nHtmlllon Bridge\t\nHinm Wtlktr...\t\nImperii] Tobtcco \t\nL6blaw A \t\nLobliw B ...-.\t\nKelvlnitor\t\nMaple Leaf Milling\t\nMassey Hirris \t\nMontreal Power\t\nMoore Corn \t\nNit Steel Car\t\nPage Heney \t\nPower Corn\n2.41\n. I.M\n. 1.90\n. I.M\n. .32\n. .11\n. .47\n,    .07tt\n. 1.99\n.    .02%\n. 1.24\n, 1.03\n1.22\n.    .44\n.    .56tt\n.    .00\n, 2.M\n,    .80\n, 3.33\n. 4.30\n, 1.83\n,    .31 tt\n. 4.90\n, 7.00\n.    .02\n. 8.10\n.    .05\n. 22.50\n. .20\n, 15.10\n. 22.25\n.    .67\n.... .90\n... 173tt\n...    8tt\n....    4\n....     1\n.... 27\n....    2tt\n.... 18tt\nmm-    4tt\n..-     4tt\n....     9\n....     7tt\n....   36tt\n...    4\n.... 1.90\n....    3tt\n....   16tt\n.... ntt\n.... 28tt\n...    6\n.... 47tt\n.... 18tt\n.... 23*\n... 19tt\n.... -5\n.... 73tt\n.... 6tt\n._    1\n 44*\n.... 16*\n... M\n.... 24*\n.... 10\n.... 2\n....    4*\n... Mtt\n.... 40*\n,.., 49\n.... 101*\nOtt\nMinor Irritants\nCause N.Y. Losses\nNEW YORK. Aug. 4 (AP). -It\nwun't th* beat ner th* humidity,\nbut leading stocks wilted om to\niround thrt* points in todty'i mar,\nktt\nTbt Ibt wm ott minor fraction!\nit the itart, with volume about ont-\nhill that of yesltrdiy. A flurry of\nofferlngi hit tb* ticker tip* tfter\nnoon, Th*rt wtre iub**qu*nt ilow-\ndownt ind illght recoveri*. With\nthe pie* lining In the finil dealings, modeit rtcoveriw war* In\nevidence hire tnd there at the\ncloie. Trinstm tor the fin houn\napproximated 100,000 iharei.\nSteels, moton rubbers, mail orden ind specialties wert ln front\nol the fade-away. Rails, utilities\nand coppers held declinta ta relatively small amounts.\nBroken, it usual, had a number\nof explanations tor thi retreat. For\none thing, those who follow the\ncharts exhibited * imittcring ot\npessimism MoaUM th* industrial\naverage hu been unable on t numbtr of Decisions to penetrate convincingly th* July peak. It got\nthrough ons* or twice, but almott\nimmediately fell btck.\nFortlgn affairs again bobbed up\naa a minor irritant. Kuropean markets, though, w*r* qultt and trend-\nlaat. Tht fact th* London i*curltl*s\nexchinge will be cloud tomorrow\nthrough Monday for tht bank holiday alio wit believed to hav* ctustd\ntome traders to Itand Mid*.\nPrinciptl share losers Included\nU. S. Steel, Bethlehem, General\nMotors Ch*y*I*r rftrtHftWJf!\nJohnt-ManvUl*,' Du Pont, \"U. S.\nRubber, Start Roebuck, Douglas\nAircraft, American Smelting and\nPhilip Morrii,        ....,',        .\nLake Short ilinted lower in tb*\nCanadian group whilt Dom* Inched\nihead. Othin, Including Dominion\n4s in tha bond market; wtre neglected. \u25a0\nMarkets to Close\non Civic Holidays\nTORONTO, AUI. 4 (CP). - A\ncivic holiday will be observed\nthroughout Ontario Monday. All\nmarkets In Toronto, including tht\nstock exchinge ind livestock markets, will bl closed far thi day.\nCivic holiday also will bl observed In Winnipeg md Edmonton.\nIn Winnipeg, thi grain exchange\nWlU not operate, nor will the Winnipeg stock exchange ind liveitock\nmarket .\nBusiness 11 usutl will prevail In\nother Important mirket centres iuch\nii Montrttl ind Vineouvir whin\ncivic holidiyi are not observed,\nIndustrials Ahead on\nSliding Bond Market\nNEW YORK. Aug. 4 (^.-Selected Industrials Inched ahead in\nan otherwise slightly slipping bond\nmarket today.\nUnited States Governments, in\nwittered trades, were 10-S2ndt ot 1\npoint lowtr to 3-32nds higher.\nAmong torelgns, Italian loans ware\ndown a shade.\nFARM LOAN BILL\nCITS SENATE O. K.\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (AP)-\nA gr9,9M,lM appropriation to continue government loans for bolstering farm pricei wai approved\nquickly by the United States Senate today ai It sped coniideration\nof the. session's last major piece\not legislation ln hopei ot a weekend adjournment.    .   \u25a0'..--\nTail ium wis the principal item\nIn approximately 3135,000,000 of Increases recommended by. th* Senate Appropriations committe* for\nInclusion In tht 354,000,000 third\ndeficiency bill pused by tht Houie\not Representatives yeiterday. The\nvote approving tha appropriation\nwu CO to 7.\nMttol Markets\nLONDON, Aug. I (AP).-CIm-\ning; Coppat, luodird tpot \u00a344 lh\nM. up Is Id; future IU 17s M, up\nlt 3d; electrolytic toot, bid CW tt,\nup St; ulnd \u00a391 te, up 94. Tin\n\u25a0pot \u00a3\u00bb 17i Ud. unchmged; future \u00a3229 10s, unchmged. Bids:\nLead spot \u00a311 Is 3d; up 2s td;\nfuture CM, up ta td. Zinc spot\n\u00a314 10a, oft 11 U; future C14 ltt,\nunchanged.\nBar gold lit* Ittd, unchmged.\n(Equivalent $34,77).\nBar sllvtr lt ll-ltd, up 1-16.\nNIW YORK\nCopptr Iteady; electrolytic ipot\n10.90; export 10.71. Tin steady; ipot\nind nearby 48.85; forward 41.70.\nU*d ittady; ipot, New York 5.05\u2014\n10; Rut St. LouU 4.00. Zinc ittidy;\nlut SL Louii ipot ind forward\n4.60. Pig iron, aluminum, antimony,\nquicksilver, platinum ind Chintte\nwolfrtmlte unchanged.\nBtr illver Mtt, unchanged.\nMONTREAL\nBit nld in London wu unchanged tM.1T in ounce In Cinidlan\nfund*; 146s <ttd In British. Tht\nfixed |39 Washington price amounted to-$35 in Cmadian, with the\nUnited Statu dollar it par.\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 11.05;\ntin 52.60; Itld (.19: line (.90; antimony 1100; ptr 100 poundi f.o.b.\nMontreal, tlv\u00bb-ton lout.\nSllvtr futuru closed iteidy today, 15 polnti up. No sales. Bid:\nAug. MIS.       ]j_*\nT0R0NT0D0WN\nTORONTO, Aug. 4 (CP) .-Toronto itock marktt contlnutd IU\ndownwird Adrift_ Fridty. Turnover\nwas about 375,000 niuiI\u00ab\u00bb,\nPamour wm on* ot th* weakest\nof the golds. It sold back to 2.10, a\nnew low tor mor* thm a year, and\ntht dot* around 2,15 wu Oft 10\ncents net.\nThe list wu spotted with losses\nof 3 to 9 cents it tht finish. Mclntyre held to th* up ltd*. Other\nsenior golds wire 1 bit lowtr,\nLoss*! ot tt to tt chalked up\nfor th* lenior bu* metals, Including Nickel, Smelten ind Noranda\nwhilt Hudson Bay hild to 1 small\ngtln. Silvers wtrt dull ind iteady.\nAction wu slow in th* Wttttrn\noils with minor louei ihowlng finally tor Home OU, Davies ind\nOktlti,\t\nLowest Turnover of\nYeor at Calgary\nCALGARY, Autj. 4 (CP).-Only\n2000 shares were, transferred, the\nlowest turnover thli yur, on Cilgiry llock exchange todty.\nPrices remained steidy, however,\nAnglo-Canadian idded 1 point it\n93 and extension picked up tt it\n21 tt. Anaconda trided it 8, up tt\nand British Dominion tt 13, wti tt\nUp. Home lott on* it 2.18.\nChicago Wheat Slips\nCHICAGO, Aug. 4 (AP).-Wheat\npricei eased ln lltt trading hire\ntodty, dipping about tt cent below\nyesterday's close after having advanced about a cent a bushel,\nTnde wu light and (tally affected by moderate buying or tilling Alio ifteotlng tht mtrktt wu\nuncertainly concerning the Government'! crop loin program.\nWhut cloud unchanged to tt\nlower, September 64\u2014\u00ab4tt, December Mtt-tt; corn tt-tt higher,\nSeptember (Jtt\u2014tt. December 42\u2014\n42tti oats unchmged to tt higher.\nMoney\nClosing exchange rites:\nAt Montreal; Pound (.Mtt; U. S.\ndollar 1,00; franc 2.68,\nAt Ntw York: Pound 4.t8tt; Canadian dollar 1.00; franc 2.M 15-10.\nAt Peril; Pound 176.12 fr; U. S.\ndollar 07.73 2-9 fr; Cmadian dollar\n37.74 fr.\nIn gold: Pound lll 9d; U. S, dollar 59.41 cents; Cmadim dollar 50.44\ncants.\nQuotations\nHigh Low\nAm C*h  102 101\nAm For Pow ...    2tt     ltt\nAm Smelt & Ro   47 49tt\nAm Tel 161 l\u00ab6tt\nAm'Tob  79tt~ M\nAnaconda .....-.,  21tt Mtt\nBaldwin    :   12 lltt\nBait & Onto .J    9 4tt\nBendlx Av   Mtt Mtt\nBeth Steel     \u00ab2tt 59tt\nBorden     lltt lltt\nCan Dry   lttt IRVk\nCan Pac     4tt     4tt\nCerro de Pasco  M 39tt\nChrysler    Mtt 7\u00bbtt\nConGMNY...   Mtt Mtt\nC Wright ptd .   Mtt M\nDupont    ItStt ltOtt\nEtst Kodak  17ttt 171\nGen Elec     Mtt M\nGen Foodi    47 tt 47\nGtn Motori ....  Mtt 47tt\nGoodrich    I8tt lltt\nGnnby      7tt     1*'\nGreat Nor pfd ..   Mtt 24tt\nHowe Sound ....   52 51\nHud Motors ....    5tt      5tt\nInt Nickel    90 49tt\nion Wall Street'\nClose\n102\n-ltt\nittt\nltltt\n85\nMtt\nlltt\n4tt\n25\n60\nlltt\nlttt\nJtt\n36\nMtt\nM\n25\nmtt\n112\n37tt\n47tt\n47tt\n17%\n714\n25\n51\nttt\n491,4\ntot Ttl k Ttl....\nKenn Copper...\nMont Wird \t\nNash Moton ....\nN Y Central ...\nPack Mo \u201e\nPenn R R\t\nPhillips Peto ....\nPullman .....-.._\nRadio Corp _...\nRem Rand\u2014\nSafeway Stores\nShell Union .....\nS Cal Edison ....\nStan Oil otN J\nTex Corp \t\nTex Gulf Sul ....\nTimkcn Roller\nUn Carbide\t\nUn OU of Cal....\nUnited Air\t\nUn Pacific\t\nU S Rubber ....\nU S Steel \t\nWarner Broth ..\nWest Electric ....\nWest Unlan \t\nWoolworth :\t\nYellow Truck ..\n75 Mtt Wtt\n37*4 Mtt HU\nMtt Wtt 51%\nttt ttt. ttt\n15tt 14% 14%\n3% 3tt '  3%\n18tt 17% 18\n34% 83% 34\n21 M% 27\nttt t 6\nlltt U% 11%\n47% 49% 41%\n, 10% 10% 10%\n29 28tt Mtt\n41% 40% 40%\n43 42% 42%\nMtt 28% 28%\n47 46 46\nM    \u25a0 lltt 81%\nlttt Utt 16%\nM 81% 37%\nM M% Mtt\n49% Mtt Mtt\n91% 49% Mtt\n9\nlMtt\nttt'     4'\n110%   108     \t\n21       Mtt    Mtt\n49%.   Mtt - 48%\n17%     lttt     16%\nMontreal\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain ....:\t\nAssoc Brew of Can  .....\nBathurst P & P A\t\nCanadian .Bronie  \u2014-~.\nCan Bronze pfd -....\nCan Car k Fdy pfd\t\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese pfd\t\nCan North Power\t\nCan Steamship\t\nCan Steamship pfd\t\nCockshutt Plow\t\nCon Min k Smelting \u201e..._._..\nDominion Coal pfd\t\nDom Steel k Coal B .-.\t\nDominion Textile\t\nDryden Paper .-. \u2122...'\u2014\nFoundation C of C\t\nGatlneau Powir  \u2014\u2014..-\nGatlneau Pbw*r pfd \u2014\nOuifd Charlii _,.....\u00ab.\nHoward Smith Ptptr...\t\nH Smith Ptptr pfd\t\nInter Petroleum _...,..\nInter Nickel of Can\t\nLike of the Woodi. \u00a3 ~\nMcColl Frontenic\t\nNitlonil Brew Ltd\t\nNat Brew pfd \t\nOgilvie Flour new \t\nStock Exchange\n2%\n16%\n6%\n34.\n104%\n20%\n19\n109%\n15%\n1.60\n8%\n6\n49 .\nlt\n10%\n70\n4%\nt\nlttt\nM  '\n9%\n13\nlttt\n22V,\n49%\n18%\n5%\n40%\n44\nMtt\nSt Lawrence Corp ......\nSt Law Corp pfd .......\nSouth Can Power\t\nSteel of Can pfd ...:\t\nWestern Grocen \t\nBANKS\nCommerce -\t\nDominion \t\nImperial ~ I\u2122.\nMontreal'  .....1.\nNova Scotia \t\nRoyal \t\nToronto \t\nCURB\nAbitibi t pfd\t\nBathurst P k P B\t\nBeauharnois. Corp-\t\nBritish American Oil ....\nB C Packers\t\nCm Marconi :\t\nCm Vickeri \t\nCons Paper Corp\t\nFlilrehjWAIrcraft\t\nEraser Co Ltd ~\t\nInttr Utllltlei A\t\nliiter Utilities B .......\nLake Sulphite .'..,.._....;\t\nMcColl Frontenic pfd ..\nMitchell Robt \t\nRoyalite Oat \t\n\"\u25a0J*\u00ab*p\" thflin    1\n,   2%\n:f\n, 12%\n. 49%\n. IM\n,207\n.217%\n114\n300\n. 190\n. 2M\n8%\n2\n4%\n22.90\n18%\n1.19\n2%\n4%\n4%\n10%\nMtt\n9%\n34%\n.50\nKaslo's Cherry\nCrop Is Record\nKASLO, B. C, Aug, 4-Kaslo's\nU*M cherry crop is breaking all\nrecordi M to tonnage and perhaps\nquality. There art practically no\nculli, ihippers uy, all iplendld fruit,\ntb* flnut checriu in the world.\nMondiy night th* Kulo-Nelion\nMotor freight ftrvice hid to tend\nout thrt* trucki ind when they\nlinded at Ntlson bed on board UW)\nUMM, within It crttu of the entire\ncrop shipment ol 1109 crates sent\nout by independent ihippers in .1937.\nThe total shipments list yeir by\nIndependent growers wu 2322 craws\ntor the seison. Thli yeir, up to lut\nJuly 31, shipment! by Independent\ngrowers hid already totalled 2809\ncrates. The Associated packing\nhouie was 10 busy thty had not time\nto total whit number they had\naent out, but the tonnage was\nImprtailv*.    .\nSome concern wu felt that the\nbig crop might glut th* market on\nthe Prairies, where moat of the\nKaslo cherries go,\nFirst of Creston\nWheat Harvested\nCRBSTON, B, C. - The first of\nthe 1939 wheat crop reached the\nelevator during tha week. It is\nfrom th* Dr. Bruner tract on Nick's\nIsland, and graded No, i Northern.\nIt ii Thatcher, a Spring virlety,\nFill sown and is an excellent sample torn the Island. Othen who tried\nit as a \"Winter\" wheat. In iome\ncases, plowed It in thii Spring, and\nreplanted.\nThe district Is enjoying grand\nripening weather and combining\nshould b* general on ill Fell whttt\nnot liter thtn th* middle of the\nweek. On the three projects there\nIt about 1300 acres of it to be\nharvetted.\nAlong with about SO combines,\ntht occasional self binder is miking\nIts appearance, tnd tomt pirt ot th*\n1939 crop will be out old ityle ind\nseparator threshed.\nBritish Markets\non Bank Holiday\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (AP).-Fintn-\nciil ind commodity markets In England begin tht August Bank Holiday at the close of busineu todiy.\nUntil Tuuday morning trading wilt\nba suspended in the Stock Exchinge, met*! ind rubber markets\nIn London, md futures markets for\nwheit md cotton ln Liverpool.\nNarrow Movement at\nLondon, Rails Weak\nLONDON, Aug. 4 (AP).-Prlcts\niwerved nirrowly both ways in\natock market dealings todiy. Trans-\nAtlantlcs moved llstleisly and mostly a shade lower. Japaneie bonds\nwere under moderate pressure. Domestic rails weakened. Industrials\nmoved nirrowly both ways.\nWorld Exchanges\nNXW YORK, AU*. 4 (AP)-NtW!\nthat the'fint step load been taken\ntoward forming a ntw Netherlands\ncabinet advanced the guilder 1-10\not 1 cent in foreign exchange\ndealings today.\nTh* French franc dropped 1-16\nto 2.M 15-10. The Canadian dollar\nremained at par, and the pound\nsterling wu unchanged it KM.\nClosing rites, Great Britain ln\ndollars, others in cents:\nGreat Britain 4.68%; 00-day bills\n4.67%; Canada, Montreil in New\nYork lOp.OOj.Cinidi, New York in\nimrv   iWsW,   waiiaun,  nun    avia.  m\nMontrill 100.00; Belgium 16.99;\nDenmark 20.90; Finland 2.07;\nFrince 2.64 18-lt; Germiny 40,13,\nbenevolent 19.25, travel 22.13;\nGreece .89%; Hungiry 19.70; Italy,\n5.26%; Netherlands 53.31; Norway\n23.52; Poland 18.85; Portugal 4.22;\nRumania ,71; Sweden 24.12; Switzerland 22.68; Argentina (official)\n31.20; Argentina (tree) 23.15;.Brazil (official) 6.05; Brazil (free) 5.10;\nMexico 11.00, nominal; Japan 21.31;\nHong Kong 28,69; Shanghai 8.65;\nYugoilaila 2J1\nRatti in spot cables unless otherwise Indicated.\nEconomic Indey Ott\nOTTAWA, Aug. 4 (CP)-Tbe Dominion Bureau ef Statistics reported todiy Its economic Index, indicating business conditions in Canada, dropped to 108 in the week\nended July 21 from 108.3 the previous week. It wis higher thm the\ncorreiponding week lut year, however, when the itanding wu 108.6.\nReaction Erase!\nWheal Mn,'Peg\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 4 (CP).-Utt\nweakness In Chicago ind 1 let-up\nIn lupport caused whttt futures\nprices to slip back In tht lilt trading on Winnipeg grain exchange\ntoday.,Valuei at one time wer* nearly a -cent higher but the lut-halt\nreaction erased most of these gains\nsnd the close Was S->A cent higher, with October at 53>\u00bb, November\n55i,4, December 59U md May\ncents.\nA itrong display at Liverpool md\nreports of further high temperature damage to western Canada's\nspring whett crop Induced good\nbuying In the first half ot the session. Export sales of Canadian wheat\nwere estimated at 300,000 bushels\ntor the day.\nLiverpool jumped H\u2014'Ad under\nthe influence ot stronger Canadian\noffers, 1\nYesterday's country marketings\nreached 298,000 buiheli against 83,-\n000 bushela for the tarn* day a year\nago.\nShippers and txporteri again gave\ngood support to nearly all grades\nof cash wheat. Apart trom minor\nbarley ptirchft?** -*? \u2022wnort Intermit. Coarse grains operations were\nuninteresting.\nPLACER GROUND\nIN DEMAND FORT\nSTEELE DISTRICT\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Aug. 4-Th*\ndemand for placer ground in th*\nFort Steele mining division Is the\nheaviest in yetri, with ippllcitlons\nfiled for iome 18>,i milts ot round.\nThe application! are for ground on\nSawmill Creek, Moyie River, Perry\nCreek, Valley Creek, Fish Lake\nCreek and Pari! Creek.\nThe mining committee of the\nCnnbrook Boird of Trade have a\nnumber of Inquiries on hind for\nmore acreage which is Mini\nchecked locally betore the arrival\nof at least five other outfits, mostly\nAmerican, who are anxious to come\nInto the district.\nIn addition to tbe lntereit in\nplacer, lode It In demand with aome\n23 mineral claims recorded, mostly\nby Eastern interests, who have an\neye on th* mineral resources of East\nKootenay.\nCARLOADINGS  OFF\nOTTAWA, Aug. 4 (CP) - Car-\nloadings In Cantda for. the week\nended July 29 totalled 49,988 cars\nagainst 47,657 the previoui wetk\nand 43.741 in the' corresponding\nweak lait year, the Dominion\nBureau ot Statistics reported today.\nLoadings in the wutern division\ntotalled 15,560 agalnit 16,020 the\nprevious wcclt, and 14,399 the same\nweek last year. ,\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 4 (CP).-Brlt-\nish and foreign exchange closed\nsteady today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts,\nFranci, franc, .0205.\nGermany\/ reichimark, .4014,\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.8812.\nJapan, yen, .2731.\nNiw Zealand, pound, 9,7686.\nUnited States, dollar, pir.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank ot\nCanada).\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Aug, 4 (CP). - Rf\nctlpts tt noon; Cattle 54; calves\n24; hogi 84; sheep 11,\nCattle market slew. A few light\ndry-fed steers iold it 5.79; medium to good htlfers 4\u20144.90; common\nto medium cows 2.90\u20143; good to\nchoice veal calves 9,90\u20149; common\nto medium 4\u20146; stocker md feeder\nsteen 3.50\u20144,75; spring lamba sold\nyesterday at 6\u20140.25.\nNO hogs sales. Last price, bacons\n7,t0 off trucks; selected 50 cents\npremium; batchers $1 discount.\nDow Jones Averc\n30 Industrials .....\n20 relli '...-\t\n19 utilltlu \t\n40 bonds ........\n144.06\n29.96\n27.18\nLow   Close Change\n141.29   141.73 otf   2.51\n18.97 \u201eft    .67\n2t.50 off    ,57\n00.13 off    .40\n28.82\n28.39\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nBid\nAsk\nMINU:\nBig Missouri    ......\n.12\n.13%\nBralorn* \u201e. .^.,.-..\nBridge Rlv Con\t\nCariboo Gold    ...\n11.60\n11.80\n.02,.\n.02\n2.10\n2.23\nDentonia ....\n.02%\n.03%\nFlirvltw Amtl ......\n.03\n,04\nFederal Gold .......\n.OOtt\n.04VS\n-\u2014 '\nGolconda .   ..........\n.08%\n.25\n.30\n.0444\n.05%\nGnill-Wihksne    ...\nMVt\n.02\nHedley Mucot \t\n.74\n.\u2014\nHome Gold ,^-L-\n.00H\n\u2014\nm\n.01%\nInter Coal & Coka\nst\n\u2014\n1.07\n\u2014-\nKoot Bell*\t\n.15.\n.80\n.01%\n,01%\nMak Sic Gold \t\n.00%\n'\u2014\nMcGillivray .\nMinto Gold \t\n.20\n' \u2014\n.01%\n.  .02%\nNicola M tt M......\n.01%\n.03%\nNobl* Five , ......\n.01%.\n.02\nPend Orelllt \u2022,... .\n1.42\n1.50\/\nPilot oold . , ,;.\u25a0;\n\u202222*\n\u2014' \u2022\n241\n2.50\nPorter Idaho  \t\n.01%\n\u2014,\nPremier Border ....\n.00%\n.01\nPremier Oo)*.\t\n1.89\n1.90\nPrivateer   ': _?.\t\n.02%\n1.15\n.03 .\n1.16\nReeves-MacD ._..-..\n,20\n.25\nRlUef Arl     Z .\n.11%\n.13%\n.46\n.48\nReward   ..\t\n,.01%\n.02%\nRufui Argmtl _,\n.00%\n.08%.\n.: .01\nSally  Mines    ,\n\u2014\nSalmon Gold\t\n.03\n,04\nSheep Creek\n1.23\n1.25\nSilbak Premier ....\n\u2014\n1.29\n;-   Bid\nWivirly T       .00%\nWellington   ..'       .00%\nWesko Mines .-    .00%\nWhitewater ____.      .02%\nYmir Yank Girl 04%\nOILS:\nA P Con'. 'mm.     .14\nAmalgamated         .00%\nAntcondi      .07%\nBaltac     ..:      .01%\nBrit  Dom  12\nBrown Corp  20%\nCalgary Jifijm     1.00\nCalmont 31\nCommonwealth    26\nDalhousie      33\nFirestone Pete  ....      .07%\nFour Star Pete      .13\nFreehold Corp       .03%\nHargal  ,  19'\nHighwood Sarcee ..      .15%\nHome          !    2.1B\nMadison,\u00ab , .03\nMar Jon-       .04%\nMcDoug Seg        .11%\nMercury    ..\u201e-. 06\nMerland          .03%\nMid-West Pete ...     .02%\nMill City Pete       .09\nModel      JJ%\nMonarch Hoy      .07%\nOkilta Com   99\nPacalU \u201e.      .04%\nPrilrie Rey ~.     .11\nRoyalite          34.00\nSouth End Pete ...      .02%\nUnited       .08\nVanalta        03\nINDUSTRIAL!)\nCapital   Est           -\nCoast Brew    f\u25a0\u00bb--\u25a0\nAlk\n.00%\n.01\n.03%\n.16\n.00%\n.13%\n.23%\n2.00\n.33\n.15\n.03%\n.21\n.2.20\n.03%\n.04%\n.12%\n1.05\n.24%\n37.00\n.09\n.08\n,1.35\n1.30\n\u2014\u25a0\t\n\u2014\n\u2014 Mill NINI\nWheat Crops Kootenayi\nDyked Lands Valued at\n$9,000,000 in 15 Yrs.\nTwigg Expresses Probability of Establishing,\nTomato Cannery if Variety Adapted to\nValleyTound, at Creston Field Day\nCRESTON, B.C, - Nine million\ndollar! waa th* value of the wheat\ncropi harvested on the dyked lands\nIn th* Kootenay valley in Idaho\nmd British Columbia, 1923 to 1914,\naccording to Guy Conslabre, authority on reclamation affairs generally, md one st the speakers il the\nfield day Wednesday afternoon at\nthe 10-acre ftdtrtl experimental\nitation In Creston Dyking District.\nThe day attracted a representative\nItteadane* ot wheit farmers,\namong whom were speakers R. G.\nNewton, In charge of tht experimental farm at Windermere; A.\nA. McMtani ot Cranbrook, in\ncharge of potato bug control work\nln' Kootenay Eait: C. B. Twigg,\ndistrict agriculturist, and G, R.\nThorpe, who ii In charge ot Creston experimental itation.\nThe tddrmes wire given ln 1\nshaded spot on tht experimental\ntract, with Mr. Thorp* Introducing\nthe speakers md in his opening\nremarks outlining th* effort which\nhad primarily to do with assembling practical Information on grain,\nfeed, root! md vegetables grown\nIn the valley, for the guidance of\nthote on th* land and to gtt desired information, not obtainable\nit Creston,\nThe talks Were brief. Mr, Newton\nwtlcomtd th* visitors and sketched\nth* purposes ot field days, Ha believed Uie tsttbiuhment 01 tnt\nwork on tht dyked landi wu most\nesstntitl. It wii qulti tvldtnt tht\nworld ihould grow leu wheat;\ntheae dyked landi lent themselves\nadmirably to providing feed for\nmilch cowi tor the propoied\ncreamery; grain for poultry, md\nfeeds for I beef cattle Industry,\nwhich the speaker believed had a\ngreat future in view of Creston's\nniirntu to th* U.S. market md tht\nfavorable trade treaty on livestock.\nExperimental work litre would determine the feeds the overflowed\nlandi would grow to tht best advantage.\nNEED FLOOD SECURITY\nFollowing his opening remarks\nns to tho total value of tha wheat\nharvested to ditl ott tht valley\ndyked acreige, Mr. Constable\nconcurred In th* remarks of the\nprevioui speikers *i to th* help\nthe experimental work would render, md urged everyone to glvt\nSupt Thorpe wholehearted support.\nMr. Constable glvt figures on the\nanticipated wheat carryover and\nthe effort ot other countries to become mora ttlt supporting, Spaclal\ncrop* would havt to be substituted\nfor whett tnd thli experimental\ntract wu tbe place to demonstrate\nwhat likely crops could be grown\nto best advantage, both is to quantity and market demand. If the\ndyked acreige wu to be developed, more particularly for liveitock, there was need for security\nagainst floods\u2014both locally a*\nwill ai by progressive action by\nthe US. md Cmadian federal\nauthorities.\nMr. McMems mide 1 plea for\nunited   effort   In   supresslng   the\npotato   bug.   This   wis   hU   third;\nytar  in  charge  of  the   work   la I\nKootenay East, and th* pest wai; J\nnever so  bid as  in  IMS, It wat-.\nnow  1   menace  between   Hosmer-\nmd Kooteniy Like and from thi.\nMontana boundary  North  to rrt\u00bb*'\nml*r Like. Poison dust to ellmkiitij \u2022\nthe bugs was to be had frtt ind'\nhe asked  thit it be uied where-\never necessary,\nMr.   Twigg    imphtilud    th*  j\nnetd of th* experimental work   1\nIn various directions, but partial-\nlarly In connection with tomatoei.\nIf a variety adapted to thli valley could bt found, Ind lind- J\nownen would produce It, \u2022 cin* \\\nnery would probibly be eitabllihed here without delay. \u2022\nMr. Thorpe outlined tht \u00bbxp\u00abrl\u00ab\u00bb\nmental effort on the two-acre bench\ntract which was largely given over 4\nto   fruit   trees,  especially   ipplei,\nwith  a  view  to establishing  tha\npick ot the winted varieties hirdf\nenough to stand the extreme win*\nter    conditions    occasionally    encountered in the villey. Tests wtrof\nbeing mide with irrigation ot thit\nditch variety. Root rot, that hidr\ngained   a   foothold   in   Wynndel\nstrawberries,   was   being  IvU^IQH\nSixteen different ktndt ot\ner on 54 imall tracts wa\ntried out to. find 1 remedy\nblank   heads   iuuuti   in   <\nsome tncti on the dyked\nVISIT EXPERIMENTAL\nAfter the talks th* visit,\nshown over the experlmen\nwhich were heavy to v<\nIt wu explained th* Imd\ning used thii year in th*\nhad had no fertilizer and\nminimum ot cultivation.\nTh* gritn crept ill tool..\nparticularly the new variety\nitegent, which WU OUtlt\nOats and barley war* good,\neen had been achieved with alfalfa, and a mixture ot timothy\nand clover. In tact all theie varieties ot teed seem to b* adapted\nto the overflowed area.    __\nVegetables wtre not in the hm*\ndiss. Tomttoei hid not don* wtll\nand th* ihowlng of fruit app*ued-\nlight. Potatoes looked th* best ott\nthe lot. Vine products, such as cu-i\ncumbers, melons, etc., wet* disip-\npointlng. Cabbages hid thrived but\nthe headi were small. Sugar beeti\nand loya beans had not mide th*\ngrowth that might be expected.\nRadio Corp., Canada\nProfits Are $700,00(1]\nNEW YORK, Aug. 4 (AP).-Th*\nRadio Corp. ot Canada reported to*\ndiy for the three months ended;\nJune 30 net profits ot 1724,091, which)\nfell a little short pf dividend re*\nqulfements on the prtfirred ittefc\"!\nFor six monthi ended Juni\nprofit totalled 12,172,201, equal \u201e\nfour cents a shire on the common,\ntgtlnst $2,524,759 or six centi\ni common share, ln the flnt\nhalt of 1988.\nH\nNorth, South, East\nor West...\n\u25a0Your Home papier\nis always the best!\nOnly your hometown nlwipaper can\nprovide you with ths most interesting\nand most desired news of all \u2014 homo\nnewi. For only your home paper can\nkeep you informed about local events\n... about the doings back home! Tike\nthe Daily Newt along with you as a\nfriendly companion when you go on\nthat well-earned vacation this summer!\nPHONI 144-OR MAIL THIS COUPON NOW\nr--m-m--r---m.--^-mm,_--m.ml\nI   PLEASE   SEND   ME   THE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS   I;\n1   EVIRY DAY I\n*%\nTo          1\nFrom \t\n(DATE)\nName   ........\nPresent Address\n(ADDRESS)\n  To\n(DATE)\n \u2014\n\u2014\u2014\n\t\n*m**mm\u2014\u2014\u2014r-aaw\"\n*-y \u2022\n{Mai TIN .\nI f*%i\u00bb>y_<ta)o>>*t_*w><**aotri\nI-I \u2022 I J L M ll* Today\nCONTINUOUS SHOW FROM IrOO P.M.\n\"The Bost Ever,\" soys Edgar Rice\nBurroughs, author of Tarxan thrills.\nAT 2:24, 5:04, 7:36, 9:50.\nR\nOJULUYAH\nplat tit.-nnd.r-hoj\nTARZAN, Jr.\nNITEl5*35#\nEXTRA\nALL IN TECHNICOLOR\n20 Minutei With OUR KING AND QUEEN\nRoyal Banners Over Ottawa'\nPLUS \u2014 A Scenie, a Cartoon and News\nSPECIAL MATINEE FOR CHILDREN AT 1:00\nSerial \u2014 \"DICK TRACY RETURNS\"\nand TWO DELICHTFUL CARTOONS\nSTARTS \"GRACIE\nMONDAY Plui\nALLEN MURDER CASE\"\n\u2014 \"BOY TROUBLE\"\n' Government chemists have pro-\niduced fresh strawberry syrup that\nlean be kept indefinitely\u2014thus also\n.providing a use for berries too ripe\nIfor shipping.\n\u25a0\u00bb\u00ab$$*\u00abS$S*5*\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb$\u00ab*\u00bbSS\u00bb\u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab\njfLV.sr\\uj\nSPORT SHIRTS AND\nBATHINC TRUNKS\nJack Boyce\n\"'mi Baker   Style Shop   Phone 160\n:*\u00ab\u00abs\u00bbj\u00abs$s*w*\u00abs\u00ab*\u00bbsss\u00ab**\u00bb*\nFinancial Security\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nlox 81      Hlpperson Blk.     Ph. 197\nBO PARTYING LOOKING YOUR\nBE8TI A new coiffure itjrle-\n. smart, flattering.\n-.   BEAUTY\n4   PARLOR\nIdiWij.\n, 877 Baker St\nPhone 244\nmmmmmmm_mm^m\nThe\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nCorner Mill St. and Josephlm\nQuality  Groceriei  at  Low\nPricei for the 5th and 7th\nof Auguit\nIf you are contemplating changing your itore, try us, wi will\nplena you.\nSUGAR: Granulated,    Ol <a\u00a3\n\u00bb Ibi, for   **\u2022 \u2022*\u25a0*\nEGGS: Fresh local,      '   (TC*\nlarge, 2 doz, for ....- ******\nBUTTER: Glendale, the    oQsr.\nfinest, No. 1, 3 Ib ******\nCANNED SAUSAGE: __\\A\nPer tin *\"***\nFLOUR: Five Roses,     \u00a3\u2022) aja\n88 lbs -  9**7**\nCOFFEE: Chase & iJOj*\nBmborn'i, 2 Ibs. for i**T\nPUREX TIS8UE; Mf*J,\n8 rolls for *<*r\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE:       mm*\nMIRACLE WHIP: 4QA\n32 oz. jar, eich  -\u00a5-*Y\nBOLOGNA: Freth sliced,  -ynA\nPer Ib ..-. *a*>\nBACON: Fresh sliced,       *mA\nPremium, per Ib 3****\nCATSUP: <amJk\nTins, 2 for *****\nGELATINE:  Bulk, MltA\nPer Vs lb. ..: -. V*f\nCANNED MILK: AM\nTills, 12 for 7-9T\nFIG DI0CUITS: Just -trnj,\nirrived, 2 Ibs. for -*3*t\nPHONE 110\nFresh Ice cream in bricks, cream-\nsides, milk and cream, freih\ncakes, Jutt arrived. \u2014 We deliver\nyour goodi when you wmt them.\nnkMttaVMHM\nFarewell Party It\nGiven Nakuip Lad\nNAKUSP, B. C.-Milter Aldan\nSpiller wai the gueit ol honor\nat a farewell party given by Mrs.\nF. \u2022Johr.'on. A proirsm of children';\ngamei was followed by a supper.\nThe invited guests liicluded Aiden\nSpiller, Feme Davidson, Bernard\nand Shirley Oxenham, Allan and\nKenneth Stanley, Pat Davidson md\nMichael Young.\nThe Pacific Ocean covin more\narea than all the earth's Imd put\ntogether.\n1934 Plymouth\nDELUXE SEDAN\nA-1 8HAPE\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker St      Limited      Phone 119\nFRIED CHICKEN\nSaturday and Sunday .. BO*>\nQrenfell's Cafe\nFUR STORAGE\nREPAIRS AND REMODELS\nMalcolm's Furs\n859 Baker St Phon* 880\nMEN'S WEAR I\nOt*\n,\\\u00ab\u00bb0,m\nI BOYS' WEAR\nLambert's\nFOR\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nI\n24 HOUR SERVICE\nDodge\u2014DeSoto-Teitaco Producti\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpposite the\nPostofflce and Hum* Hottl\nJUST ARRIVED\nAnother shipment of the famous\n\"ROSEVILLE\"\nPOTTERY\nIn the new Cosmos design.\nBeautifully colored. See it at\nHeadquarters for gifts that ara\ndifferent\ncWmL cM.SJwpfitL\nA Greeting Card for Every\nOccasion      ,\nSTA-WAY\nInsect Repellent\nPREVENTS INSECT BITES\nEffective against-Mosquitoes, Black Flies, House Flies,\nBeach Flies, Sand Flies, Gnats and similar insects,\nPLEASANT ODOR HARMLESS TO THE SKIN\nPrice 39c Per BOTTLE\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\n65 New Fires in\nWeek Bring Total\nfo 302 In Season\nNelion foreit district flr\u00abji reich-\ned 802 for the season, with 88 new\nfires reported during the week, including Thundiy according to the\nweek'i tabulation at the Nelson\noffice of the Forest Branch, Friday\nafternoon.\nTwenty of tht fires were, still\nburning Friday, six of them in\nEast Kooteniy, 14 in Weit Koote-\nnay ind none In the Boundary. Of\ntfa* 88 flrei reported during the\nweek, 23 were in East Kootenay,\n41 In West Kootenav and only two\nln the Boundary. Totals for the\nseaion reached 101 in East Kootenay, 178 in West Kootenay and 28\nIn th* Boundary District.\nOn* of tha biggest Soviet factories is also a college, turning out\nsteam and water turbines and also\ngraduate engineers.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nRESPECTABLE COUPLE TO MAN\nage small auto camp. Man to assist on ranch. Box 8087 Dally Newi\nSS\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab$\u00ab\u00abS\u00abSJS\u00abS5$\u00ab\u00abS5\u00abS5JS5\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abS\u00ab\u00ab^988S\u00bbS'\u00bbi3SBaSg>\nNewspapers, Magulnti A Smokei it\nBISHOP'S\nChoice  routing  ipring  chicken\n4-5 lbl 27V>c lb. T.Roynon, Ph. 484L3\nWanted huckleberries. McDONALD\nJAM   COMPANY   LTD.\nTravelling through Okanagan.\nRoom tor 2 or 3. Phono 235.\nFor ELECTRICAL Wiring, phont\n844,  MCKAY A 8TRETTON.\nTrade in your Old Tlrei tor New\nTlrei. Nelion Auto Wrecking.\nDANCE, Nelion Golf Club\nSATURDAY, TONIGHT\nWinted To Buy \u2014 A Pair ot Oars.\nTo rent a Boat Home. Phon* 118.\nCHINESE CHECKERS 76c COMPLETE AT VALENTINE'S.\nDanes tonight, Eagle halL Trou-\nbadon orchestra. Ladles and cents\ndoor prizes. >\nPROCTER DANCE-TONIGHT\n8:30 to 12. Margaret Craham'i Orchestra. Free Ferry.\nSEE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOL8-\nTERINO AND DRAPERIES. 120\nHIGH STREET.\nGLASS - PAINT - PUTTY\nSEE US FIRST. Ntlion Sash A Door\nCo,, Ltd., 701 Front St., Phont 282.\nQET YOUR FILMS & DEVELOPING DONE AT VALENTINE'S\nHot Plates, single burner $1.89,\ndoublt with one throe-heat switch\n$5.00. Still I few FANS at S2.6D and\n$e.50-HIPPER8ON'S.\nMEETING \u2014. EXECUTIVE OLD\nTIMERS' ASSN., with program\niporti committee, G. Honttid'i\nofflct, Mondiy, Aug, 7, 3 p.m.\nDANCE\nSoftball  Club it Alntworth  TONIGHT, Admlulon 38c. Swim pool\noptn till 1 o'clook,\nKttp Cool Ovtr Th* '\u2022'\u2022 i\nWeekend \u2014 Drink Kootenay Valley\nCHOCOLATE   MILK\nPhon* 116     Or Aik Your Dttltr\nv  .     ROYAL HOTEL\nMaximum  Comfort at  Minimum\nCoit by Diy, Wetk or Month-\nNaw Low Monthly Ratei\nLet the name-plate FRi'gIDAIRE\nguldt you ta thi finest In electrical\nrefrigeration. Ste the new models at\nHIPPERSON'S.\nTODAY Only at BETTY ANN 8H0P\nOpp. Capltol Theatre, a Rang* of\nBETTER DRESSES. VALUES to\n$9.95 at $8.00. Any COTTON DRESS\n$1.50. Ali sizes. Mrs, Hawkins, Mgr.\nOffers\" for the purchase of two\nautomobiles, . one 1938 Lincoln\nZephyr Sedan and one 1938 Ford\nCoupe, belonging to the Estate of\nthe late Dr. Donald Walter McKay\nwill be received at. the olfice of\nBrown k Dawion, Solicitors for th*\nExecutori. The two automobiles In\nquestion can be inspected upon\nthe premises of Leo Desireau at\nDill's Service Station.\n-HUME HOTEL\u2014 \u25a0',\nTRY THOSE DELICIOUS SUNDAY DINNERS served between 6\np.m. and 8 p.m. at THE HUME HOTEL. Six course FRIED CHICKEN\nDINNER for .65. Four course\nROA8T TURKEY or PRIME RIBS\nOf BEEF .40.\nEXPERTLY COOKED and\nTASTEFULL SERVED In the\nNICEST and COOLEST DINING\nROOM IN THE CITY.\nLEGAL NOTICE\nGOVERNMENT OF THE\nPROVINCE  OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nDEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC\nWORKS\nDevelopment of'Tourist Highways\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nSeparate Sealed Tenden, marked\n'Tender for Project No. I\u2014\" will\nbe received by the Minister of Pub-\nlie Worki, Parliament Buildings,\nVictoril, up to 12 o'clock noon,\nMondiy August 14th, 1838, and\nopened in public at that time and\ndite, for the following works:\u2014\nProject No. Location and\n- * Decryption ot Work\n1. Trans-Canada  Highway.\nReconstruction between\nmil* 4 and mile 5, west\nof Revelstoke.   ,\nSouthern Trani-Provin\nciil Highway.\nRevision between Eddy's\nBridge and Michel\nBridge, about one mile\neait o{ Michel\nNorthern Trani-Provln-\nclal Highway between\nUsk and Cedarvale,\nSECTION A \u2014 coiutruc-\ntion from mile 3.31 to\nmile 6.73, east ot Uik.\nNorthern Trani-Provln'\nclal Highway between\nUsk and Cedarvale.\nSECTION B \u2014 construe\ntion from mile 6,73 to\nmile '10.73, east of Usk.\nLougheed Highway,\nConstruction of Central\nArterial Highway 17R In\nBurnaby Electoral District, from Boundary\nRoid to Underhill Avenue, 4.58 mllei. \u25a0\u2022\u2022   \t\nTrail-Pend   d'Oreille\nSalmo Road,\nReconstruction,   about\nthree mllei south  of\nFruitvale.\nPlans, Specifications, Form of\nTender and Tender Envelope may\nbe obtained on deposit ot tne turn\nof Ten Dollars ($10) for each set\nat the otflee of the undersigned or\nfrom E. H. Verner, District Engineer,\nCourt House, Vancouver. Also from\nS. A, CUnlllfe, Assistant Dlitrict\nEngineer, Smltheri,.for Project No.\n4 only; ind from 0. O. Gallaher,\nAssistant District Engineer, Court\nHouse, Nelson, for Projects Numbers\n3 and 13 only.\nThis deposit will be refunded on\nreturn of the Plans, Specifications,\netc, ingood condition.\nEach tender must be accompanied\nby an accepted cheque made payable  to   the-Minister   of   Public\nWorks as follows:\u2014\nFor Project No.   1, Three Thousand\nDollars ($3,000).\nFor Project No.  3, Four Thousand\nFive Hundred Dollars ($4,500).\nFor Project No.   4, S E C TIO N A,\nTen Thousand Dollars ($10,000)\nFor Project No.   4, SECTION B,\n, Six Thouiand Dollars ($6,000).\nFor Project No., 9,. Five   Thousand\nDollars ($5,000).\nFor Project No. 13, Two  Thousand\nDollars ($2,000).\nIn addition, the successful tenderer\nwill be required to furnish an accepted cheque, or collateral accept-\nable to the Minister of Public\nWorks, for such an amount which,\nwhen added to the abovementioned\nsum, will make the toUL security\nthui held equal to 25% of the\namount of the contract   '\nOr, alternatively to the total st\ncurlty deposit as abdve, but only\nwith the consent of th* Minuter, the\nsuccessful tenderer may furnish a\nbond for a jum equal to 100% of\nthe amount of the contract in an\napproved corporate guarantee company and in a form prescribed by\nthe Department.\nContracts will be let only to rest\ndents of Canada, Including Cam\ndian firms and corporations estab\nlished and'operating in Canada prior\nto April 1st, 1939, buf excluding all\nCanadian firms and corporations\nestablished subsequent to the said\ndate, and to ho others.\nTenderers must submit with their\ntenders a list stating the type and\ncapacity of the equipment in their\npossession which they propose to\nuse for carrying out; the work and\nwhere the equipment is located so\nthat it may be Inspected, if\nnecessary.\nThe lowest or any tender will not\nnecessarily be accepted.\n. A. DIXON,\n.    .     ' Chief Engineer,\nDepartment of Public Worki,\nParliament Buildings,\nVictoril, B. C.\nAugust 1st, 1939.\nYOUNGSTER   WINS  TITLE\nMELBOURNE (CP). - Fifteen-\nyear-old Eileen O'Brien won the\nVictorlal Ladles' Golf Union junior\nchampionship, She wai the second\nyoungest player in a field limited\nto girls under 10.\nI      Buy or nil with a want ad.'\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, I. C.-8ATURDAY  MORNINO, AUG. 8,\nS****fa(...\nLUMBERTON\nLUMBERTON, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. G. George ud MiM Sybil\nNorgrive ot Crinbrook wire visiting it th* home ot Mr, ind Mn.\nJ. Kossen,\nA number of relative! and friendl\nmotored into Cranbrook Sundiy iftemoon to ittend the wedding ol\nAb Griffiths, formerly of this town,\nind Miu Violet George of Cranbrook at the home of the bride'i\nparents. Misi Lily Griffiths was the\nbridesmaid while Joe Downey supported the groom. After the ceremony tasty refreshments were\nlerved.\nMr, tnd Mn. C. Olson and family\nmotored to Waldo to vilit relativei\nand friendl. Miss Muriel Olson did\nnot return with her parents but left\nfor Golden where she will ipend\npirt of the holiday viiiting Miss\nMay Sime, formerly of this town..\nMlsa Nancy Revans left tor Kings-\ngate to ipend iome time viiiting\nwith relatives and friendl in the\nbordering towns.\nW. Slean received newi Saturday\nevening that hii mother had passed\naway following a major operation\nin Kingston. -\nMr. and Mn. F. Conroy of Kimberley were viiiting with Mr. and\nMrs. John-Downey.\nK Thompion and R. Mitchell motored to Eureka Sunday to play\nbaseball for Cranbrook. The American team lott heavily to the tune\nof 19-8 tn a rather poor exhibition\nof ball.\nMr. and Mn. W. Slean tnd ions,\nBilly and Ormond motored to Kitchener to iptnd a holiday with Mr.\nand Mn. P. Molander.\nMisses S. E. Kreick, O. M. Biddlecombe and L. C. Inglis of the Women's Evangelistic Band of Vancouver are conducting a Summer ichool\nIn town with iome 20 children\nattending.\nMORE ABOUT\n(HL COMPANIES\n(Continued From Pagt Ont)\nof many thousands of Individuals,\nwould only suffer an immaterial\nloss,\n\"CONFISCATION\"\nThe concentrated loss on the oil\ncompanies would resemble \"confiscation,\" Semtor Farrli irgued.\nMr. Wismer: \"What do you mean\nby confiscation?\"\nSenator Farrls: \"The oil companies already are operating at a\nloss. Add $1,500,000 and it would\nbe confiscation,\"\nThen Mr. Winner referred to the\nreport of Hon. M. A. Macdonald,\nCommissioner appointed in 1934 by\nthe Provincial Government to investigate the coal and petroleum industries in the Province. The' last\nsection of thli three-volume report\nwu tabled In the Legislature last\nyear.\n\"The Macdonald report says there\nare extravagant operating costs in\nthe marketing of gasoline\/' he said.\n' Senator Farrii: There'i your\nopinion, in spite of the best authorltlei that the companlei are losing\nmoney, Are theie companlei refuting to save money out ot spite?\nIf the learned commissioner was\nright he shouldn't be on the bench.\nHt could command a salary of\n$200,000 a year. Why despoil the\ncompanies of $1,500,000 a year until\nfinal determination of the question?\n\"The companies' constitutional\nrights are being despoiled. Granting of the Injunction until final decision would mean only a few\nmonthi' delay. Oil companlei can\nnot ihow a dollar of profit ln British Columbia. On the other hand,\nthey are losing. Any additional loss\nmust be made up by other sections\nof the country.\"\nChief Justice .Martin then said:\n\"There is nothing to compel you\nto sell gasoline at a loss.\"\nSenator Farrls: Oil companies\nln British Columbia have millions\n. ot dollan overhead expenses.\nChief Justice Martin: But suppose the companies would not sell\nany more gasoline at a lost?\nIt waa at this point that the\noil companies' counsel made his\ncomment, suggesting that gasoline companies might withdraw\nfrom Britiih Columbia.\n\"I know no way whereby you\ncan literally preserve equities of\nboth sides pending final decision of\nhigher courts. I ask protection for\nthe oil companies tor two months\nuntil the Supreme Court of Canada gives Its decision. My grounds\nare the same as when Mr, Justice\nMinion granted the tint injunction,\nstaying the execution of the order\nfor tive months. The same situation\nexists. -.\n\"I take the position that this second order is an absolute nullity, inasmuch as the companies were not\nbound. Before thii order goes into\neftect   the   companlei   muit   be\nS anted another hearing. If Your\nirdship refuses the injunction the\nCourt of Appeal could not do a\nthing.\"\nLONDON (CP)-The September\ncrisis induced an architectural crisis, Architect Sergius Chermayeff\nclaimed when filing, a bankruptcy\nplea here. Large contracts were\npostponed in September, producing\nhis financial embarrassment.\nEsling Honorary\nHead Rossiand's\nNew Junior Band\nROSSLAND, B-C, Aug. 4\u2014W. K.\nElling, M. P. tor Kooteniy West,\nwu nimed Hohonry Preiident of\nthe Rossland Junior Band at an organization meeting in the Rossland\nTransportation Society garage Friday night.\nArthur Jonei wu elected Preiident, ahd the executive wai completed u follows: George Hoyte,\nVice-President; Fred Mason, Librarian; William Polonikoff, Secre-\ntary-Treaiurer; Winston Churchill,\nNelalne Lesergent and Harold Una,\ncommittee. I \u2022\nRaising funds for the band wai\nleft to the executive.\nEdward Gibney, the Bandmuter,\nspoke of the need for more mem.\nben, md tnnounced thit he WM\nplanning a membenhlp drive in\nSeptember.\nMr. Polonikoff wu appointed Publicity Manager with power to\nappoint hli own committee.\nSocial ...\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C. - Mils\nH. May spent the weekend with\nfriends at Mirror Lake.\nJohn Tinline motored in from\nTrail Saturday, returning Sunday.\nHe was accompanied by Ms wife,\nwho wu visiting her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Heywood,\nSam Bradley ol California, has\nbeen visiting his sister-in-law Mrs.\nD. Waddo for a few days.\nMn. Henry Hencko has returned\nfrom the Coast.       ,\nMr. and Mrs. Heal have u their\nguests, their ion William Harrii, ind\na friend, Mrs. Wilson, both of\nPenticton.\nKathleen and Henry Hincks who\nwere visiting their grandmother at\nMirror Lakeriave returned iiuisio.\nRev. Percival of Kaslo and his\nwife were Sunday guests of Mr.\nand Mn. A. J. Watson,\nMr. and Mra. Charlei King of\nTrail spent a few dayi here the\nguesta of the former'i mother, Mn.\nC. H. King.\t\nExtinguish Grass\nFire Near Brewery\nA grass fire ot unknown origin,\nin the alley behind the Kootenay\nBreweries, brought out the Nelson\nFire Department, shortly before\nnoon Friday, It wai extinguished\nwith the aid of a booster pump.\n\u2014\nLAKEFRONT PROPERTY\nFOR SALE\nDesirable North Shore location,\none  mile from  Nelion  ferry.\nPlenty of water, will divide to\nsuit purchaser. Easy Terms.\n. T. D.ROSLINC\n3 Royal Bank Bldg.       Phone 717\n****^^^^-^-^^^***-***-*m\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205. MEDICAL ARTS i3LDG\n\u2014\nOrder SUMMER WOOD Now\nMill Endvload\t\n3 loads for\t\nSlabwood, 3 cords\nSaw Dust, Unit.\nS3.50\n10.00\n10.00\n4.00\nPhona 163 or 434R1\nMADE IH B, C,\n'..'...' Caribou   . .\nWORK CLOTHES\nGODFREYS'Ltd.\nPlymouth Sedan\nNew tires, ntw paint, first CISC\nclass shape     WJ\nAutomobile Brokers\nJack MoDowtll    Howird Thurman\nNext Savoy Hotel\n\u2014\nKootenay No-Odor\nCLEANERS AND DYERS\nExpert Repalrs-'Alteratloni\nPHONE 128\nPRESENTS\nHer Special\nTREASURETTE\nRegular $5.00 value.\nWe have a limited number ot\nthese sets to offer.\nSold only it your Rexall itore.\nEAST TRAIL LOTS\nSend for mip md prlct list. Make\na start on having your own Home\n\u2014with our monthly eaiy payment\ni   plan.\nRobertton Retlty Co, Ltd.\nMelton,  B.C.\n\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb>*\u2666\u2666\u25a0*\u00bb\u2666\nCream-0 Milk\nTry a pint for your\nSUNDAY DESSERTS!\nPALM DAIRIES LIMITED\nSport Coats\nand Slacks\nBe comfortable this* hot\ndays in a sport coat and a\npair of slacks.\nSPORT COATS\n?13.50   fl5   fl6.50\nSUCKS\n?3.25 TO 19.50\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nTht Han't Stort\nHavt yeu read th* \"Claulfled\"?\nCLEANING \u2014 1042\nPRESSING\n1042 \u2014 REPAIRING\n^onsdla. (btvuAL\nTWO NEW MODEL A\nFord Generators\nAT HALT PRICE\nKootenay Motors\n(Nation) Ltd. Phont 117\nDoughnuts\nAT YOUR\n,     GROCER'S\nThe PERCOLATOR\nPONTIAC AND BUICK\nSALES AND SERVICE\nGAS \u2014OIL\nSKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE\nPhont 122 Opp. Savoy\nYour mirror will ihow the difference in your appearance before and after you've been to the\nHaifch Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327 -Johnstone Blk.\nAUTO ACCIDENT POLICY\nInsuring applicant, memben of hii\nfamily- and his guests. Yearly premium\u2014S5.00. See us at once.\u2014\nWhy take chance;?\nH. E. DILL .\nOpp. Madden Hottl    632 Wird St\n9\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR.H. Maber\nPhont ISS     510 Koottnay St\nIHIslHIIHII..llllllllll..lllsllll.ll.MM.Ill\nFUMIGATE WITH\nSMYTHE'S\nBLACK DEATH TO BUCS\n10,000 found dead In one homo. ,\nSMYTHE'S PHARMACY\nPHONE 1\nitlllillllillllllllliiillllilllllllllllllllllllli\nPHONE 815\nfor better tnd prompter service In plumbing repaln ind\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nListed with us for sale\nLIKE NEW\u2014EXCEPTIONAL BUY\nThe Home you have visualised as\nyours. Modern Insulation, hot\nwater heating. Iflre-place, electric\nrange, maple floors. All that could\nbe. desired even to price.\nFRANK A. STUART  <  .\n577 Baker St. ..Nelson, B. C. .Ph. 9B0\nFOR YOUR INFORMATION WE ARE\nand\nIN THE ImOWlHS PRODUCTS\n. LUMBER\n.   Wt operate our own Sfrmlll\nand manufacture all gradei Fir, .\nLarch,.Pine Spruce and Cedar,\nCoait Fire .Timbers and Planks,\nFir'and Cedar Mouldings  tnd\nFinish.\nFLOORING\nCoast   Fir,  Maple,   Oak   and\nBirch. Asphalt Floor Tiles.\nHARDWOODS\nBirch, Gum, Mahogany, Red\nOak, White Oak, Walnut   ,\nSHINGLES\nLocal and Coait Cedar,'\nAsphalt Shingles.\nBUILDING MATERIAL\nCement, Lime, Brick, Lath, Sand and Gravel.\nWALLBOARDS\n\"Sylvaply\" Fire and Cedar Plywood, Acetex Iniulating\nLumber, Green Tinted Wallboird, Welterweight, Cellu-\npord, Flexboard, Colotlle, Hardbord, Gyproc,\nINSULATION '_.\nSpun Rock Wool, Montex, Gyproc Wool\nROOFING AND BUILDING PAPERS\nSlate Surfaced and Asphalt Rooftjig, Carpet and Will\nFelti,  Blue Plaster Board, Black Seal, Plain, and\nTarred Papers. -...'\nPAINT*.'.-.\nMonamel, Pure Paints, Shingle Stains, etc.\n;\u2022\u25a0 V NJIL\nGilt Wildfire, Greenhlll and\nBellevue Coils.\nCordwood\u2014Millends.\nMillwork, Sash, Doon, Trim-\nPlaning Facilities\nHAULING\nLocal ind Long Distance Hauling.\u2014Three Storage Wirehoui-\net on trackage.\nWe hope you will us an opportunity of lerving you when'\never you require anything ln our\nline.'   ,\nBURNS LUMBER & COAL COMPANY\nfey^aJi^as^as^ik^^^,^\nPHONE 53\n_\\jL.\nEVERYTHING POR THE BUILDER\"\nNELSON, B. C.\nT. H. Waters & Co.\nLimited\nBuilden tnd Contractor!\nFigured  Glass \u2014  Murinete,\nArctic and Moh pattern!.\nAlwayi In stock.\n,     WINDOWS REGLAZED\nPHONI 2$\nPrascriptioni\nCompounded\nAccurately\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMEDICAL ARTS BLOCK\nCAH PATRICK-EDWARD ELUS\n-PLUS-\nJACK HOLT In\n\"Trapped by C-Min\"\nTODAY     MONDAY\nJLUlml     TUESDAY\nMATINEE AT 2 P.M.\nComplete at 2:00-7:00-8:35\nPRICES\nMat. 25c-10c Evt. 30c-15o\n\"CIVIC\n1937 Chevrolet\nDeLuxe Coach\nWITH 1939 CHASSIS\n\u2022 NEW RUBBER\n\u2022 LOW MILEAGE\nWe Offer This Car at a Very Special Price\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n35-PHONES-35\n\u25a0 \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_1939_08_05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0414742","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"}]}}