 K. Wallace Heads Boswell
Fruit Growers
—-Pa$e Three
VOLUME M
	
l_______Wk__\
lt^t^^U__t_________\
**      °  3 lUAtt*
»'CT0»i.*i i'
w.
"Babe"Ruth Released by
Boston Braves
—Pa_eEi_ht
NELSON. BRITIIH COLUMBIA. CANADA-MONDAY MORNINO. JUNI J. 1M9
NUMBER 34
9 CANADIANS KNIGHTED; 97 HONORED
Nelson Provincial Police Keep
Lookout for Tacoma Kidnappers
Tacoma Lad Freed by Kidnappers A ter Ransom of $200,000 Is Paid fry
His Rich Uncle __M       ^^H
In the oenter Is nlni-year-eld Qeorge Weyerhauier of Tacoma,
Who wai kidnapped 10 dayi ago and who waa released unharmed
early Saturday morning near neoma. He was found by e farmer,
Oeorge Bonlfaoa, on hla place about 26 mllu North of Tacoma. The
lad walked to tha Boniface farm bome unharmed and cheerful at
V .'■' "   ■—m*~— : -*.	
about 4 a.m. Saturday morning. The ransom of $200,000 waa paid
to his abducton by F. Rodman Tldcomb, his uncle. Above Is also
shown Mr, and Mn. John P. Weyerhauier, parents of tha lad, and
on the left the school which he attended. The millionaire home le
ahown at the right ' "V
30,000 PEOPLE ARE BURIED IN THE DEBRIS
OF EARTHQUAKE; DISEASE IS SPREADING
26 CANADIANS
GETH0R.ES
But Names Are Again
Withheld in the
.  Derby Sweep
Twenty-six Canadian, hold tickets
on horses in the Irish Free State
hospital sweepstakes on the Derby,
the draw for which will be completed Tueiday.
Identity of the Canadians waa
I withheld by the authorities, aa on
the last occasion, with a view to
their protection under the Canadian
criminal code. Most of them drew
| non-starters.
(Continued on Pege Two)
1350 APPOINTED FOR
FORESTRY WORK
VICTORIA, June 2 (CP)—Selec-
I tlon of 250 youths for trail crew
I end 100 as forest rangers assistants
I has been completed by British Col-
1 umbia relief authorities and it is
now proposed to extend the profram to take ln another 100 boys,
Hon. George S. Pearson, minister of
' labor said yeiterday.
At the aame time Mr. Feanon expressed surprise that only SOO
youths had applied for the training
work which will give them $1.75
s day less an allowance for board.
Only half tho application, were from
actual relief cases.
BRANDY, LIQUEUR
f    PRICES CUT
IN B.C.
VICTORIA, June 2 (CP)-
Brandy and liqueur prices in
British Columbia will be re*
meed June 7, the liquor control
board announced today.
Brands battled by the board
are cut by one-fifth. The 29
ounce size Is reduced from $3.50
to $2.75, the 16-ounce size from
12.25 to $1.80 and thc 13-ounce
alze from $1.85 to $1.50.
Imported brand, are cut from
IS to $4.50 In the 26-ounce size
and $2.65 to $2.40 in the 13-
ounce size.
Benedictine ls cut from
$9.50 to $5 and the chartreuse
green from $4.25 to $4.
Creme de menthe will be cut
from $3.25 to $2.90. Similar reductions are effective ln the
ether brands.
fa a -if--ire *_*■•*-■**• ■*..-•*** *-.-.
McBrlen on list
Oen. J. H. McBrlen, commissioner for the Royal Canadian
Mounted pollce, who was honored
In the King's birthday list with the
title of Knight Commander of the
Order of the Bath.
JOHN GILBERT'S WIFE
IS GRANTED DIVORCE
LOS ANGELES, June 2 (API-
John Gilbert, film actor, for the
fourth thne was free of marital ties
today.
Virginia Bruce, acreen actress,
court records showed, has just ob*
tained her final decree of divorce.
She charged cruelty.
Earth Shocks Continue; Thousands oi
Burned Bodies; Martial Law Rules
w*»*>*»*w*wyp*> mwnsmw wvaw\
LAWRENCE LEFT
STORY OF
LIFE
LONDON, June r(AP).-The
late Lawrence of Arabia left a
manuscript recording his life In
the Royal Air force, lt wai disclosed tonight, with instructions
lt should not be published be
fore 1950.
The manuscript, entitled "the
mint," was described aa "of
forceful character" containing
comment on the Royal Air f of ce
which made Immediate publication impossible.
APRIL BIRTHS IN
B. C. SHOW JUMP
Nelson Has  12 Births,  10
Deaths and Five
Marriages
VICTORIA, June 2 (CP)-A total
of 831 births was registered in British Columbia during April, according to the m-nthly bulletin of thc
vital statistics branch here. This
compares with 794 in April last
year.
There were 937 deaths reported as
against 478 in the same month ot
1934. Marriages solemnized totalled
346 as compared with 387 ln April
last year.
A summary of births, deaths and
marriages in larger centers of the
province includes:
Vancouver 296 births, 220 deaths
and 149 marriages; Victoria 60, 45
and 20; New Westminster 46,27 and
10; Fernle 8,3 and 3; Cranbrook 0,0
and 3; Nelson 12, 10 and 5; Revelstoke 11, 2 and 1; Rossland 17. 2
and 2; Trail 11, 8 and 10; Grand
Forks 9,1 and 2; Kelowna 6 2 and 4;
Vernon 13, 4 aod 6; Kamloops
17, 9 and 5.
65 Years Married
KAMLOOPS, June 2 (CPl.-An
Ashcroft couple, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Webb celebrated their 65th winding anniversary Saturday. They
were married in Kngland on June 1,
1870. Th/couple settled ln Ashcroft
In 1896 and for some years Mr.
Webb was stipendiary magistrate
there.
Floods and Fires Add
to Horrors; Water
From Earth
QUETTA, India, June - (AP)**-
Shocks, some of which were fairly
seven, continued to shake thli
earthquake-stricken region today.
One itarted a big mountalnsllde
outside the city but no further
casualties ware nported.
An estimated 20,000 dead remained burled In the debris thai
wu Quetta it military authorities, fearing an outbreak of disease, halted work and threw e
guard anund the elty.
The total lou of llfi In Friday's
•hocks was placed at 30,000 with
two-thlrda of the number burled
In the ruins of Quetta.
ABANDON HOPE
Officials abandoned hope of rescuing eny more living end the
workers wire ordered from the
ruins after extricating thouunds
of buried er burned bodies.
Refugee trains, filled with native,, left the desolate city today.
(Continued on Page Ten)
FIVE EXECUTED IN
SOVIET
MOSCOW, June 2 (AP)-The
cashier of a railroad freight station
and four other persons, convicted of
banditry and, embezzlement, were
executed today here and ln Leningrad.
PROTEST $1 GUN
LICENCE FOR
PROSPECTORS
VANCOUVER, June 2 <CP)-
The Imposition ot a $1 tax on
prospectors for the right to carry a gun in the hills Is. being
protested strongly by the Omln-
ece branch of the British Columbia chamber of mines.
The Vancouver chamber of
mines hu also protested thli
additional tax having received
letters of complaint from many
miners ln the province.
A prospectors licence ot $9
previously gave the prospector
ihe right to carry a gun without
an additional levy by tbe game
department.
________a______fc____________a________asiee**aeri*_s_s_s_>'
U.S. OFFICIALS
ASK LOOKOUT IN
NELWAYSECTION
Gang Believed to Be
Heading for Nelway
on Saturday
MANHUNT UNDER
WAY IN OREGON
Lad Freed on Saturday
After Ransom of
$200,000 Paid
Advlud bv the Unltad Statei
border patrol te be on tha lookout
at Nelway for a ear containing
tha much-wanted kidnappers of
little George Weyerhaauser of
Tacema, Wash, child hilr ef a
gatat lumber family, the provincial police of the Nelson district
wen keeping In cloee touch with
border eventa Saturday night ar.d
Sunday, but without much anticipation of making the acquaintance ef the submachine gun fraternity presumably concerned.
Aooordlng ta word nnt to the
Nelson headquarten, the Amtrican polict believed the kldnappen
wen heading for Nelway Saturday.
While taking neceuary ttsps,
the provincial police did not seriously hopt to havt tht pltuurt
of mtttlng the kidnappers, being
of the opinion that the regard In
(Continued, on
i Tan)
$100,000 FIRE
HITS IN OTTAWA
Two Large Office and
Store Buildings
Burn; One Dead
OTTAWA, Junt 2 (CP)-Plre In
tht hurt of Ottawa'! buslneu and
shopping district early today gutted two lergt office and store
buildings with a lou of $200,000.
Ont man, a tenant In an office of
ont of tht gutted buildings, ttll
dtad ihortly after removing umt
valuablu fram hla premises. Two
firemen wtre ilightly Injured.
Starting    In   the    eight-storey
Hope building,between Elgin and
Metcalfe streets on the north Ilde
of Spirki itntt About flvt a.m,
tht flames speedily gained heed-
way and swept through tht Interior. Emergency calls concentrated ell available fire-fighting apparatus at tht tctnt.
The work of fighting the fire ln
the Hope building was proceeding
when another alarm wu sounded
from the Robinson chamben a ihort
distance down the street There wu
no ipparent connection between the
two flrea.
Markets at
a Glance
By thl Canadian Pren
Toronto end Montreal—Industrial
stocks slightly lower.
Toronto muiee—Lower.
New York—Stocka closed lower.
Winnipeg—Wheat  unchanged to
H lower.
London—Bar illver higher; other
metals unchanged.
- New   York—Bar  ailver lower,
other metals unchanged.
Montreal—Silver lower.
New York—Cotton  higher end
rubber lower.
New York—Canadian dollar unchanged at 1.00.
SHIP NORMANDIE
MAKES A RECORD
ABOARD S.S. NORMANDIE AT
SIA, June t (AP)—Fog which
cut the ipeed of France's glint
liner Normandie during the night
clurad todiy  and  offlctn  ex*
Ceded hir to reich Ambrost
Ightshlp on htr maiden New
York voyage 11:30 a.m. (E.D.T.)
tomorrow.
Tht vnul again smashed a record, making 748 mllu fram neon
Saturday until noon Sunday, aver-
eglni) 29.92 knots. Har averagi
from Southampton ll 29.5 knots.
Tht Normtndlt from noon Thunday until neon Prlday established
a short-lived record, covering 744
mllu at an average of 29.76 knots.
OOES TO PENTICTON
VICTORIA, June 2 (CP).-A. M.
Richmond, mines department engineer, left here today for Penticton
te take over his new post u resident mining engineer there. P. B.
Freeland, wno moves from Penticton to Victoria, arrived here Saturday.
Sir Edward
Id ware' Wentworth Beatty,
pruldent of tht Canadian Paclflo
railway, becomes Sir Edward with
hla tppolntmtnt In tht Klng'i
birthday honon lilt as a Knight
Orand Crou of the Ordtr cf the
Brltlth Empln.
NAZIS ARRESTED
IN FRANCE
Cyclists Claim They
Had Lost Way
METZ, France, June 2 CAP). —
Three Nazis bicycling lh French
territory near the defence worka
around Saarguimlnea were arrested
and tailed today by Trench mobile
guards.
In an effort to hilt Increasing
frontier incident, the government
has redoubled ita watch.
The Nazis, two of whom were
dressed in uniformi of -Wm troop-
en and were armed with the cus*
tomerv poniards, told military authorities they loat their way and
thought they were itlll ln the Saar.
They were jailed for further questioning.
A German civilian plane, piloted
landed at the Sdfi-egulmlnes airport
today. They uld they thou-fht it
war Saarbruecken.
They were permitted to return to
Germany. ^^^
B.C. FLIER IS
DEAD IN (RASH
SOUTHPORT, England, June I
(CP Cable)—John Hoosoh of Van*
-Oliver died ln hospital today from
lnjurlea he received when hla alr-
nlane craahed on the beach here
Friday.
Young Hooson, who arrived from
Vincouver only a month ago, wu
employed bv a comoanv which gave
flights to viliton to thii resort. At
the time, however, he wu accompanied only by a mechanic named
Bentley in a machine being teited
The engine stalled at ISO feet and
the plane nose-dived. Hooson died
In the Southoort infirmary.
Bentley ia ln a serious condition,
VANCOUVER. June J (CP) -
John Hoost. 2--ye»*-oW former
Vancouver filer who died in South
-tort England. Saturdav from lnjurlea suffered when his alrnlane
"rashed there Friday, Is s"*-v!ved by
hli parent". Mr. and Mn. John
Hooson of Vincouver.
Hooson trained u a pilot at the
See Island airoort here nnrl obtained h*s com*i-*e**T*lal pilot's Jl-
"ense ln Julv. 1033. He wai not oar-
Ocularly active ln aviation circles
''ere and hli flying h»i been con-
'ined to "snare tlmi hom" before
he left last fall for England.
World's Unluckicst?
CORK Irish Free State. June 2
(AP)—Josenh Crowlev, 84, lays
-ialms to beta' the world's moat un*
hickv man. He recently was ier*
lously injured In an automobile accident. In court he wu awarded $300
damages. As he rose to leave the
corutroom, he tripped, fell and broke
a leg.
•www iwww"«»eiwwpw>
DR. DAFOE AMONG
THOSE HONORED
BY THE KING
CALLANDER, Ont, June 2
(CP).—Juit bick from a vlilt to
the quintuplet!, whoie birth
and life rocketed him before the
world'i eye. Dr. Allan Roy
Dafoe learned tonight he had
been made an officer of the
Order ot tbe British Empire.
"I am very much gratified—
I am greatly honored," he uid
shyly. "I can't consider this ei
an award to me personally because I don't feel lt wai intended
u iuch.
"It li recognition. I think, ot the
value of the general practitioner in Canada."
The country phyilclin. acclaimed Internationally u the
successful attendant to the
famous Dionne babies, uld: "It
Is Indeed a great honor, but one
for all of ua—all the country docton."
•rare rare ra rMerae-*, r--•----•** n "in
HONORS CONFERRED BY THE KING
REACH PEOPLE IN ALL WALKS OF
LIFE; BEATTY OF CP.R. KNIGHTED
Sir Thomas White, Canada's Finance Head in
War-Time Promoted on Lists; Marler
Minister to Japan on the Roll
LONDON, June 2 (CP cable) .—Knighthoods for nine
Canadians, a promotion for one who had been knighted previously, and 97 other awards made on the recommendation of
Bt Hon. R. B, Bennett, Canadian prime minister, appeared
in the King's birthday honors list made public here today. The
Canadian section was the largest since titles were restored in
the Dominion on New Year's day, 1934.
Honors conferred upon Canadians will reach into homes
throughout the Dominion, from the cities to the isolated outposts, and in Tokio, Australia, England, Washington and
New York. People in every walk of-life, from the humblest
to the greatest share in the distinctions.
It waa known His Majesty on this occasion wished to
honor particularly those who had made notable contributions
to the arts, science, literature and music, and those who had
^^^^^^^^^^^    t performed long and faithful
--■■iMMi1  I £?£ stete!° ^ C°mmUn,ty
In making hla recommendation!
on thia, the fourth occulon titles
have been awarded Canadlena linco
restoration of the cuitom New Year'i
day, 1M4, Prime Minister R. B. Bennett adhered closely to the expreued
desires of the King.
LITERATURE GAINS AWARDS
Of the newly-created knlghthoodi,
three went to those who have contributed richly to the literature of
the Dominion, one to an outstanding
painter, one to a leading Canadian
scientist one to e musician, and one
in recognition of generoui pubUc
service.
(Continued on Pete Ten)
STRIKERS HOLD
TAGAT COAST
20 Arrested, But the
Sumo_f:$1100ls
Raised Anyway
VANCOUVER, June _ (CP) -
Britiih Columbia's itrlking relief
camp workers tonight prepared for
their "on to Ottawa" March, their
funds enhanced by some $1,100 collected ln a tag day yesterday which
was held despite refusal of Mayor
G. G. McGeer and sent 20 of the
itrlken to jail on charge! of obstructing police officers.*
The strikers, who last week voted
to continue their itrike ln protest
against relief camp conditions in
the province and nave been congregated In Vancouver since April
4, held the tag day ln an effort to get
funds for their march to Ottawa
where they plan to bring their
grievances before the Dominion
government. * * ■
Mayor McGeer refused permission to hold the tag day and instructed police to tell the taggers
to move along, arresting thoie who
refused to do so.
Twenty' were arrested but other*
took up their stations on downtown
street corners.
Those arrested will appear ln
police' court tomorrow morning.
The strikers plan on leaving nere
tomorrow and their tentative. Itinerary calls for one-day stops in
Kamloops and Revelstoke, two-day
stop in Calgary and ahort stays in
all the larger cities across the Dominion.
Rt Hea. llr Thomei White,
K.C.M3. of Toronto,-Who In the
Klng'i birthday honor Hit becomes
Knight Grand Cross of the Order
of 8t Michael and St George. It la
a promotion for Sir Thomas.
He Is Honored
Hon. Herbert Marler, Toklo,
Canadian mlnlitir to Jipan, who
In the Klng'i blrthdiy Hit become!
Knight Commander of St. Michael
and St George.
- KING GEORGE IS
MUCH BETTER
-LONDON, Juna - (AP) -Hli
majesty waa much better today
and It wai announced at Buckingham palace he Is throwing off
the effecU of a slight chill which
haa kept him Indoon ilnce Friday.
Ha attended services In the
chapel of the palace with Quean
Mary thli morning, but hai not
yet decided whither hi wlll attend the trooping of the colon at
the horteguardi parade tomorrow In celebration of his 70th
birthday.
Recommendations
on Mais Buying
Come This Week
OTTAWA, June 3 (CP).—Some of
the more important measures arising trom recommendations of the
royal commission on mau buying
are to make their appearance ln
the home ot commons this week
aa well aa a bill to let up a housing
commlaalon. The latter arises from
the report of a special committee of
the houie which Investigates housing and slum clearance problems.
Finance Minister E. N. Rhodes
achieved a record on Friday when
the budget resolutions were passed
at one sitting of the house, and bills
baaed upon the resolution! • ven
flrat reeding.
PORT COLBORNE, Ont., June 2
(CP). —Stanley Skeblckl, 28-ycir-
old Pole, wu killed today when
crushed between the hanging platform ot an overhead crane and the
tank over which the platform
moved. ^^™
MAJOR DOUGLAS
ON WAY ENGLAND
EDMONTON, June 3 (CP). -,
Major C. H. Douglai, of London,
Eng., Social Credft'i founder and
lately employed ai special economic
adviser to the Alberta government,
left for the east and England tonight, accompanied by Mrs. Douglas. He laid he did not know when
he would return to Edmonton. He
had been here three weeks, for
which he had received (3000 apart
from the general fee of $5000 covering his two-year contract
OFFICES, SCHOOLS
BANKS CLOSE
VICTORIA. June 3 (CP) .-Monday, the king's birthday, nelng a
statutory holiday, all British Columbia government offices, .chools,
and banks will be closed.
THE WEATHER
SUNDAY. WEATHER
Min. Max.
NELSON   37      SS
Victoria   48
Vancouver _  - 50
Kamloops _  4S
Prince George 43
Eitevan Point 48
Prince Rupert  43
Atlln     «
Dawson  _ 40
Seattle  _  M
Portland   43
San Francisco 80
Spokane   44
Loi Angelei 	
Calgary
.94
38
40
44
Edmonton 	
Swift Current	
Prince Albert ._ _ -._ 48
Saskatoon   _  40
Qu'Appelle  _ 60     St
Winnipeg  54     84
Moose Jaw   48  83
58
08
68
80
58
54
58
S3
83
88
88
88
74
88
80
83
53
63
 ™
PADS TWO-
SAILINGS TO
EUROPE
June 30 Empreu of Auatralla
To Cherbourg.Bouthimpton
June 31 Ducheu of York
To Oliigow-Belfut-Llverpool
June 26 Montrose
To Hivn-8outhampton
June 39 Ducheu of Atholl
Te Qlaagow-Belfut-Llverpool
June 3S Empreu of Britain
Te Cherbourg-Southampton
July 5       ..  .. Ducheu ot Bedford
To Olugow-Belfast-Llvirpool
July 7 Montcalm
To Hivre-Southimpton
l< M lilt J MAN
< I IW vtwnv
"Insulted" Hitler
June 39
Empreu ot Asta
V«   % II   VI I \
WlM /IAIWI
July IT  - Niagara
Tor full Information apply
nearest agent or
N. J. LOWU
City Ticket Agent, Nelion, B. C.
CANADIAN
PACIFIC
Robert Rohmi, Austrian-born
Englishman, wai reoently untenced to 18 monthi' Imprisonment
by e German court In Berlin for
"making grossly Insulting remarks
about Herr Hitler, the German nation and German women," Aooordlng to a letter to hli wife In London, however, Rohme Intimated
hi soon miy be reunited with hli
family.
A voluntary code itructure, under
a revived Blue Eagle, la being seriously considered by administration
leaders to replace the compulsory
provisions of the Recovery law invalidated by the Supreme Court of
the United Statea
PIMPLES DISAPPEAR-HEALTH IMPROVES
Thou aggravating and disgusting
pimples or blemishes on yonr skin are
probably caused by bad blood. Tke
remedy la almple—BURDOCK BLOOD
BITTERS. This Onat Blood Purifier
tones the blood itream, renlatu the
inner system and you iku becomu
clear aad snoot, again.
Guide for Travellers
•Tinas, in the Inttrior*
HUME HOTEL
free Btu Serrlee Oeo, Benwell. Prop.
BREAKFAST 25c te 60c
LUNCHEON 35c to 50c       DINNER 35c te 65c
Rotary and Gyro Headquarters
Telephone 787 Nalaon, B.C. 431 Vernen St
HUME: Mr. and Mre. P. Hardle,
Caatlegar; Edward Somen, E. Rote.
Montrul; Mr. and Mn. F. H. Salns-
bury, Lethbridge; A. Andenon, R.
Crawford, A. Martyn, Medicine Hat;
B. Roy, Mr. and Mra. A. T. McQuarrie, Mn. A. Wilson, L. Neilson,
Trail; J. W. Herman, A. Bremne. Mr.
and Mra. W. Webiter, B. Cunningham, Charlu H. Elmer, J. A. Turner, E. L. Pateraon, Mr. and Mrs.
3. C. Dufasne. A. Mowat, R. McDougall, Ken. Bulloch. A. Sadie. T.
R Mackenzie. Vancouver; W. Kirby,
R. A. Ballard, W. H. Hord. M. Din-
Sle, A. Rockkjar, W. R. McFarlane,
ilgary; Terry Grant, J. Lueger,
Mr. and Mrs. James Royce, 0. T.
Sweney, S. F. Shields, T. Groihlo,
J. H. Shields, Bob Shields, J. McKenna. W. Farrell, J. McNabe, Spokane; Mrs. MacPherson, A. Wells
Gray, Victoria; Mlss Bridges, Mr.
MacPheraon, Cranbrook; Mr. and
Mn. Wilton, Miu M. Wilton, Winnipeg; C. A. Yule, R. C. Fraaer, W. R.
Lawrence, Penticton; G. R. Frampton, Erie; D. McPhenon, Grand
Forki; £. J, Parsons, Seattle; Mr.
and Mra, Mara, Mr. and Mra. T. J
Supple. Ronland; H. A. Cager.
Kelowna; H. Harrli, Wlndior. Ont.;
E. J. Chamben, Vernon; E. Rom,
Montreal; Mr. Thrlng, New Denver; Mrs. Read, Mist Dorii Read,
Kulo.
flhe Savoy Hotel
"Where the Guest Is Kind "
Nelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.
Many Rooms With Private
Baths or Showers
J. A. KERR, Prop.
134 BAXEB ST. PHONE 19 NELSON, B.C
, SAVOY: Erie Brough, London,
Bag.; J. C. Clifford, Winnipeg; G. A.
Blihop, A. O'Reilly, Rowland; M.
Smith, H. Hendrickson, J. H. Nu-
bttt Carl Kast, J. Huber, Edge-
wood; G. Taylor, Salmo; L. A. Wood,
Calgary; C. 6. Cant, Cranbrook;
Walter Millar, Nakuap; R. A. Fowler.
F. E. Fowler. Trail; S. Muihard, V.
Buchie. G. Knowler. Seattle; L. D.
Walte, Mlss B. Carruthera, G. Hym
en, Mr. and Mn. J. Willoughby, J.
G. Kauter, L. B. Walte, Vancouver;
S. C. Walte, Kelowna; T. Malahoff.
Tye; 0. D. Frith, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Lundstrom, Ymir; Dr. C. F. Prentice, Palm Beach. Florida; Dr. and
Mra. Spece, Dr. 0. G. CarroU. Mn.
0. G. Carroll, Mlu V. Carroll. J.
Sommer, Spokane; W. E. Claridge,
Burton.
RED SOX TRIM
MAPLE LEAFS
TRAIL, B.C., June 3—Red Sox
trimmed the Maple Leafs 86-25 in a
fixture of the Trail Ladles Softball
league Sunday morning.
Teama were:
Maple Leafs — Lilly Honcher,
Mary Adamchuk, Edith Edwards,
Edna Edwarda, Fldra McLeod, Kate
Zuk, Helen Rommerdahl. Martha
Mailey, Phyllis Forbes, Isabel Ferguson, Hazel Weir.
Red Sox—Mabel Crelghton, Rose
Severn, Mary Laurie, Margaret Manduca, Mary Yunker, Mabel Ford,
Tlna Mandevllle, Liza Edwards and
Helen Mawdsley.
Vancouver Lady Is
English Mayoress
CHESTER, England, June 3 'CP
Cable).—Mn. MacDonald Bloke of
Vancouver arrived here Saturday to
take over the dutiu of mayoress
and assist her father, the mayor.
Her mother, Mrs. Laybourne, died
recently.
Mrs, Blake met her husband, who
has been here for some weeks on
leave. Within an hour ot her arrival
in Chuter, proceeded to the town
hall, where she wu soon hard at
work ln the mayor's office.
-THE NIUON  DAILY NIWS. NlftON. B.C-MONDAY  MORNINO. JUNI
Spokane Boxer
Wins, Kimberley
Freddie Wilson Beats
Duke Hyssop by
Decision
KIMBERLEY, B.C., June 3-Fred*
die WUson, colored 170 pounder,
from Spokane, proved too good for
the local boy, Duke Hyuop, taking
an unanimous decision after eight
rounds ln the miln go ot the May
24 fight card here. Wilion proved
a smart tighter and boxer and lhe
result was never ln doubt
Both boyi entered the ring at
170 poundi. and put up a good exhibition ot manly art Hyuop,
though outclassed was trying all the
time and broke even ln sevenl of
,tlie rounds. This was hli first fight
in over* a year while Wilson has
been contesting regularly for the
past six monthi.
The semi-final wu the but bout
on the card, featuring Roy McLelih,
promising high school boy ot 17,
who "K. O'eo" Clarence Skorhein,
Wear Toque for Rain
Now Grand Hotel
P. L. KAPAK. Prop.
Het end Cold Water
Single 90c up; double SOc up
Monthly rites $10.00 up
PH. 314       S1S VERNON ST
QUEEN'S HOTEL
PITI BORSATO, Prop.
Rooms from 50c to $1.50
Monthly 110 and up.
Steam heated and hot and cold
water In every room
SOS BAKER ST. PHONI 90
Occidental Hotel
70S Virnon St Phone SS7L
H. WA88ICK, Prop.
SPECIAL MONTHLY RATES
Good Comfortable Rooma
Miners' HtadQuertere
Madden Hotel
A Welcome /.waits You
JAS. A. MADOIN. Prop.
Completely Remodelled
Hot and Cold Water
In tha HEART ot thi City
PHONI SS      SOS WARD ST
BLAC-X STRAW T6QUE WITH HAIR VEIL.
Ne mittir how you revel In the return of the picture hat with
lti wide and flattering brim, think goodness thl tiny toqui li still
stylish for rainy days and traveling.
Thli smart llttle model worn by Valerie Hobion ll of black itriw
With no trimming except a wide hair veil.
Social and Personal
News of Trail
Thli column ls ln charge of Mn. Glenn Quayle of Trail. An
events of a social nature of interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear
in thii column. Mn. Quayle will be glad to have any iuch news
telephoned to her at her home In TraiL
TRANSPORTATION — Motor Freight Lines
FREIGHT TRUCRS
LEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY
5 a.m. tnd 10:30 i.m. Except Sundiy
Trail
Phon*
135
TRAIL LIVERY CO.
M. H. MclVOR, Prop.
Nelton
Phon*
35
TBAIL, B.C., June S-Mlu Edith
Vetere and Miss Delphlne Vetere
of Rossland were luncheon guests of
Mn. J. W. Young, Government road,
Friday.
• •   •
Mr. and Mn. C. P. Jonei, Government road, accompanied by their
family, are spending a few days at
Slocan Park where they are guests
ot Mrs. Crebbin.
• •   •
Mn. Burgeu of Kaslo Is visiting
in TraU with her ion William Burgeu.
• •   •
Ray Bell of Nelson hu been
spending a few days ln Trail.
• •   •
Miu Mattle Reld, who li to be
married this week, was honored
Friday evening when members of
the senior choir of Knox United
church met at the home ot Mr. and
Mrs. E. A. Temple, presentation to
the honored guest being made. Music and games provided the entertainment, refreshments being served.
• •   •
Mn. W. J. Rutledge left recently
for Toronto where she wUl spend a
holiday.
• •   •
Mn. Dave Magcc of Robson was a
visitor Saturday to Trail.
gee
Plans for a picnic at which members of the Canadian Legion. No.
132 and the Italian branch, No. 11,
along with their families, were completed at a meeting of the Legion
held ln the Memorial hall. The secretary was ordered to send a letter
to Bruce Ritchie, who left Friday
for Kimberley, expressing regret at
his departure but alio Including best
wishes to him in hli new appointment. At the cloie of tlie meeting,
W. F. Truswell, president, presented
to Comrade C. P. Jonu. the past
■■•resident's  jewel,    complimenting
lm on hii work and Interest ihown
luring the put few years. Mr. Jones
responded, thanking the members
for their loyal support during the
time he wu in the chair.
• .  .
Miu Vonnle Lee leavu today for
Saskatchewan where ihe will visit
her pirents.
• *   •
In the form of a loclal afternoon,
members of the Mlulon band of
Knox United church held their final
meeting for the season In the church
hall Friday. Miu Frances Moran
and Mlu Jean Clark had charge.
Members ln attendance were Helen
Leu, Connie Robertson, Merle Weir,
May Barr, Lillian Romas, Annie
Romas, Haul Hrooskln, Aileen McDonald, Anna Rodgers, Mildred
Young. Anne McLeod, Ade Hutchison, isobel Robertson, Florence
■Webb, Margaret Thompson, Mary
Ellen Bingham and Jennie Wataon.
• •   •
Thomaa Anderson has returned to
TraU from Spokane where he spent
a short holiday.
aee
Dr. T. H. Bourque ot Nelaon, accompanied by Mn. Bourque, who
took part in the golf tournament
here, were guesti while in Trail of
Mr. and Mri. William B. Hunter.
• *   *
Daughters of Colombo entertained
at a successful card party and dance
in the Colombo hall Friday evening.
High score priiu were awarded to
Mrs. A. Vannucchl, Mrs. A. Colonello, Ed Scott and Mr. Mandoli.
Conducting play were Mlu Mary
Martinelli and Miss Rena Tavaroll.
Refreshments were served prior to
dancing, those serving being Miu
Lena Ceremelll, Miss Rena Bagglo,
Miss Neva Batistella, Mlu Vera
Devito, Miss Louise Molina and
Miss V. Schulll.
• •   •
Mra. S. J. Meredith spent the
week-end    in    Nelson with  her
mother.
• •   • .
Mrs. W. A. Young wu a charming
hostess recently when she entertained a number of frlenda at her
home, whist being the feature entertainment. RefreshmenU were
served at the conclusion of cards
Prize for, high score was awarded
to Mn. Monteith, Mlss Peggy Royce
receiving the consolation. The invited guests were Mrs. W. Laurie,
Mn. J. Moon. Mrs. Roy Hayman,
Mrs. William Milne, Mn. W. Laurie
Jr., Mra. Monteith. Mrs. D. Jones,
Miss Bessie Hewlett, Mlu Peggy
Royce, Mlss Susan Aitken. Mis
Pauline Milne and Mia Mildred
Monteith. i
• •   •
Walter Sahl had as his guut during the week-end, A. Rokkjaer of
Calgiry.
• e i
Mn. John Moorhead, accompanied
by her daughter Jean, are ipending
a week'i holiday at Spokane.
.   .   .
Mrs. Charles Jackson is holidaying for a week with her mother at
Needles.
• •   •
Mn. Charlu E. Motte wu hosteu
to memben of the Ladlu aid ot
East Trail United church at their
weekly meeting held in the church
hall. In attendance were Mn. T. F.
Cullen, Mrs. I. J. Crispin, Mn. O.
Palmer. Mrs. Charles Jarrett. Mn.
J. McNeill, Mrs. J. Rou, Mn. C.
Howe, Mra. Samuel Lennox. Mn
A. M. Adle, Mn. S. T. Crowe, Mrs.
T. McGregor, Mn. F. E. NIchol. Mn.
J. P. Power and Miu E. Attree
of Vancouver.
• •  •
Miss Gladys Milu, daughter ot
Mr. ond Mrs. C. J. Mllu of Trail,
wu married to Hugh Clarke of
Kimberley at Colvllle, Waih., April
25. Mrs. Clarke Is leaving Trail ln
about a week for Vancouver where
with her husband she wiU make
her home.
.another good boy, ln the fourth
round attar e alam-beng affair,
which had tbe (ana on edge throughout With proper handling McLelih
ihould go tar In the amateur ranks.
In the tblrd preliminary, RuueU
Shaw itopped Eric Erlckion et the
•nd of the aecond round after having the advantage from the itart
They ere both Kimberley boya.
The remaining two prelimi were
furnlahed by membera of the McDougall hall boxing elawes. who
were loudly applauded by the tana
for their vigoroua efforts. Tbey
were ei followa, Fred Swan vs.
Alec Bell, 3 rounds; Clarence Littler vi. Alfred Turner, S rounds.
With the exception ot the boyi
in the miln event, all thoie on
the,card reeelved their tution (rom
Herb Stanton, physical Initructor at
McDougill hall, who hu turned out
some good boys from th hall boxing clauu. Challengu were received prior to the main event from Al
Hayden, local light-heavy, to,both
WlUon and Hyuop. Oeorge "Mick,
ey" Stuart alio threw out a challenge to meet any welterweight In
Wutern Cinada. George holds the
wutern light-weight title, but hu
outgrow* that dlviilon.
Murdo Morrlaon proved a capable
referee, taking care of both the main
and semi-final bouts.
Herb Stanton handled the preliminaries and the announcing and
promoted the fight on behalf ot
the Kimberley hockey executive
in conjunction wtth Lloyd Crowe.
There wai a large crowd of fans.
The gymn uuon hu now cloied
for the aummer monthi. Tennii,
lawn bowling, football, ara now in
full swing.
The attendaneu of lupervlied
claases for ilx monthi leuon for
the put ilx yeara were at followi:
1928-29 attendance 2S0S.
1929-30 attendance 2600.
1930-31 attendance 2796.
1931*32 attendance SS2S.
1932*33 ittendance 3S4S.
1933*34 attendance 4948.
1934*35 attendance 4731.
Mra, Norman Armour, wife of
the new U. 8. mlnlitir to Cinada, wai a Ruulan orlneiu before
hir marriage te the oarair dip*
lomat
TWO KILLED IN
CAR CRASH
PARIS, Ont., June 2 (CP).-Edna
Thompion, 17, and Edwin Dunei-i,
22, both ot Ingenoll, were killed In
en automobile near here today.
Scott Rutherford, 19, driver of the
car, wu injured but hli condition
wu not believed serious. The cir
apparently itruck e put at a bend
In e highway, going Into a ditch
and later itrlking a tree and telephone pole.
(ORE ABOUT
DERBY SWEEP
(peKfiued From Pege One)
Similarly United Kingdom winners were not revealed.
As a reault of a drop ln recelpta,
there were only 11 prlae unite, each
conilitlng of e tint prite of ebout
S14S.000, aecond ot 373,000 end third,
of S48.000. Eighty honu were the
base for the draw and 11 tlcketa on
40 ot theae had been lelected by
Kretty nunu trom the old drum
i toe Mansion House Saturday. The
giant new drum wu burned along
with the Plau aome weeks ago.
Canadian tlcketa drawn were u
follows:
Field Trial "Slim," Av 41,1189.
Chaise Nlege. "Irish Canada." Ct
10.132. and T. W. Wataon, Canada.
CV 48,566.
Desert Cloud, "Chic," Canada QS
46.419.
Revelation, "A Driver," Canada.
AT 94,446.
Aopenlne. "Rid Elephant," AA
60*07. and 'Howe 90-90." AS 47J88.
Meridian Boy, "E. Charbonneau
and anothar," AL 51,855.
Asignatlon, "Luck for Seventh ot
Seventh," AK 47.0U wd TheFlva
Sicken,'' BQ 23,491.
Koppernlck, Bobert McNaughton.
Ettn Blue, "Need the Dough, To*
ronto," AL 41,208.
St Andrews 11, "Dodle," MJ 63,108.
CeUbete, MP 61,611, 'Two Herd
Up."
Hairan, "Greenock Kid," JT 18,860.
Pearlweed, "Pleeae Notify Seller."
at 44,123 and "Hoping," AC 49,288.
Eddyitone, 'Kex." W 37,530.
Fairburn, QQ 47,595, "Gwen,"
Canada, and "Roee Marie," CX 47,»
Peeceful Walter. Tint Hone,"
HN 14.9.8.
Mahoonagh, "Ind the Depression."
AB 48,114.
Coniplrator, "Hop Along," NO
42.901.
Falrgead, "J.K.B." BV 35,821.
Gantry, "Honu," HN 14,848.
Vermeil 11, "Ormonde," AJ 93,90*
"Ult Ticket" X 42,668.
Piccadilly, "At Laat" NB 43,3*8.
Wait Highland, "Little Eva,7 AL
42.916.
Utrlllo, "Wauga," NH 43,681.
Dnwlng for tha day ended when
11 ticket! had been choaen an each
of the 40 honu out of the 80 ln the
draw.
"NERVES" ■*»«** *s
—ft ww rnlly /ier KIDNEYS
She tried to git through uch day u but ihi could, j
Nirar comfortable—elwaji dlitnued. Low ta vitality I
—lowu In ipirlti. Shi hadn't tbougbt ef bar kldneya,!
until a friend lugguted Dodd'i Kidniy Pills—for or er I
tone ginnatloai thi fi-orite kidniy tonic ud remedy, I
Swking nllef A* immediately took Dodd'i. Tbl" wuhsd'
oot" fultng wu loon replaced by clur beaded energy
and restful sleep. Headache, backacbi, ud other ilgni
of faulty Udniyi won diaappured.
Mew Feeling Well—Tfcaete te
Dodd's   Kidne
(^yhtcUrCOrL C^2ec2W^
In induttry, ths study ef ways and means of.
helping workers to improve their efficiency is
accepted by a forward looking mana_\tmttit at
a never-ending duly.
Realising that no worker ever does his
or her best when beset with worry, the
Imperial Tobacco Company sees to it that
the workers in its employ have little cause
for financial worry over what is going to
happen in the event of sickness or death.
Every employee male or female knows
that, if taken sick, he can count upon the
Company for help. He knows that, without
his having had to contribute anything to a
sick benefit fund, he will receive, when laid
up by sickness or some non-occupational
accident, at leut 50 per cent of his usual
weekly wage, for a period that increases from
year to year according to the1 length of
service.
Should he desire to take advantage of the
Company's plan of group insurance against
death and permanent disability, he may do
so any time after one year's employment.
One-half of the cost of such insurance ia
borne by the Company. Policies In amounts
from 1500 to $3,000 are written on the lives
of factory workers, at a cost to the worker
of only 50 cents per month per $1,000 of
insurance carried. Over 75 per cent of all
factory workers, male and female, are insured in this way.
As a matter of further protection, the
Company maintains a joint contributory
Pension Fund, applicable for the time being
to male salaried employees only, under which
the employee on reaching a stipulated age, or
prior thereto if incapacitated, or at any time
after fifteen years service, may retire and
receive for life a specified percentage of his
salary.
In addition to the foregoing, the Company
voluntarily makes subsistence allowances tb
those who leave its employ upon reaching
the age of retirement, but who have not
qualified under the pension plan. Every
case is individually considered in the light
of known facts, and dealt with accordingly.
The Company disburses many thousands of
dollars yearly in this way.
Tht concern the Imperial Tobacco Company
hat always shown fer the financial protection
ef Us employees has been more than reciprocated in ths splendid loyalty and efficiency with
which they have served the Company's interests.
IMPERIAL TOBACCO COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED
 ■	
-
<#£
K. WALLACE IS
HEAD BOSWELL
FRUITGROWERS
Seven Directors Are
~*\learned at Big
Meeting
BOSWELL, BC, June 2.-P.ac*
tically all memben were present
Tuesday at the annual meeting of
the Boswell Fruit Growers. President K. Wallace was in the chair.
Growera received a welcome rebate on the local charges on last
year's crops. They will again ship
through the Crujpn Growers Exchange. A large number of growers
hoped to attend the meeting at
Creston Saturday, to name a delegate to the Kelowna convention,
where membera of the Tree Fruit
•* Board will me nominated.
A motion to reduce the number
of directors to five, wu defeated,
and the executive will consist of
seven members, as In previous years.
Those elected to serve on the executive were: A. Mackie. A. H. Ascott,
C. Holden, B. H. Smith. K. Wallace J. Wilson and E. Balnbridge
Sr. K. Wallace was elected president. A. Hepher will again carry out
the duties of secretary and manager.
HAS BIRTHDAY
Monday, her sixth birthday, Joan
Balnbridge entertained some of her
young friends. Her guests were
Patsy Bainbridge, Margaret Kunst,
Muriel WaUace and Jack Smith. The
afternoon wu spent in outdoor
games and a tea was served by Mrs.
Balnbridge, assisted by Mra. J.
HaU.
B. H. Smith hu returned from
Penticton, where he attended the
synod of the Kootenav Diocese.
While on his trip he visited the Experimental station at Summerland.
A hedge of juniper trees, sent some
veara ago from Boswell, are now
the pride of the station.
Mr. and Mrs. S. Gullett were recent visitors to. Nelson.
IS HOSTESS ,    .
Mn. Eric Balnbridge entertained
Informally Monday afternoon, when
her guesW were: Mrs. M. Soyer, Mrs.
J. Hall, Mrs. F. Kunst, Mra. J. H.
Smith, Mrs. K. Wallace and Miss
Joyce Hall.
tte appointment of W. SUnley
Hepher as assistant ranger has given
general satisfaction in the neighborhood. The ntw fire warden, who is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Hepher
of BosweU, is a former Nelson high
school student. He obtained his
M.Sc. degree in forestry at University of Idaho.
The apple blossom is ln fuU glory
now, and the orchards this week
have been a wonderful sight. The
cherry blossom is over, and there is
every indication of a bumper crop.
THI BLACK PARADE
DETROIT, (CP)— Eddie Tolan,
who won both sprints at the last
Olympics, uys an American negro
will duplicate hii performance in
1938 at the Berlin gamu. At the
moment the four best iprlnten ln
the United States are negroes. Ralph
Metcalfe, Jesse Owens. Ben Johnson and Eulace Peacock. The black
parade movea on relentleisly. 	
NELSON
THUR. * j
JUNE IJ
2 Shows—2 p.m. b 8 p.m.
RECREATION GROUNDS
■um
'200 ACTS
^IMMENSE ZOO
112 ACRES TENTS
[\SUPERB HORSES
^INTERNATIONAL/
UREMIC STARS J
Reserved and  Admission
Tickets On Salt Circus Day at
Fleury's Pharmacy
MEDICAL ARTS BLK.
Mrs. Mahood Bock
ot Queen'i Bay
QUEENS BAY, B. CL May 31-
Mn, H. E. Mahood and aon Norman have returned from Fernie,
where they had been staying with
Mrs. Mahood's sister, Mrs. G. Elk-
ington.
Miu Kay Hughes took all the
school children for a hike and picnic
into the woods Emtpre Day.
P. H. Sheffield of 'Nelson wu ln
the Bay inspecting the school.
Jamu Hughes wu a candidate
for confirmation by the Bishop of
Kootenay at Procter Sunday, May
26. Several from Queens Bay attended the service and lunched at
the Outlet hotel, guesta of Rev.
Clyde Harvey,
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin of Merry
Island, B. C, are visiting Mr. and
Mrs. H. M. Thompson. Mrs. Franklin waa keeper of the lighthouse on
Merr Island for 30 years.
Adjutant and Mrs. Chapman of
the Salvation Army, Nelson, were
visitors to the Bay In connection
with aelf denial week.
MUs Margaret Davles of Shering-
ham England, has made and presented a beautiful altar cloth to
Queens Bay church. Mlu Davies
visited Queens Bay a few years ago,
thc guest of Hon. Kenneth and Mrs.
Aylmer.
CRESTON BALL
JOSSERS DANCE
Players Hosts to Large
Crowd; Funds Go for
Equipment
CRESTON, B.C., June 2.-Cres-
ton Intermediate baseball club
membera under direction of their
manager, R. M. Telford, were hosts
at a largely attended dance in Park
EavUion Empire Day evening,
unch was wrved by membera of
the team and after paying all expenses they will have a satisfactory
surplus for 1938 equipment and
running expenses.
Mrs. R. Foxall of Nelson, Mrs. B.
Crawford of West Cruton, and Tom
and Frank Crawford of Creston,
made up a motor party on Empire
day to Golden, where they were
guests of the former's sister, Mra.
Charles Perry.
Rev. F. V. Harrison'of Cranbrook
rural dean of Eut Kootenay, who
Participated ln the dedication of St.
atrick's church at Wynndel, Monday afternoon, was a guest of Mr.
and Mrs. C. B. Twigg during his
stay in Cruton.
Groweri of small fruits u well
u aU gardeners are much concerned over the prolonged dry spell that
prevails. The rainfaU for May has
oeen leu than an inch, and in
addition to no moisture there have
been several days of high wind!
which hu still further depleted the
scant lupply. The mornings are inclined to be chilly, close to tbe
frost line.
Mr. and Mn. C. B. Twigg, Mrs. J.
W. Hamilton, Miss Marjorie Hamilton, Mrs. M. Young and Miss M.
Miller were at Wynndel Tuesday
for the summer aale and tea of the
Woman's auxiliary.
Mn. Harry Reed and Miss Edith
Mather who were on a holiday at
Nelaon, have returned.
Mrs. F. Molander and children of
Kitchener were week-end guests of
Mrs. Molander's parents, Mr, and
Mn. C. Taplin.
During hii stay in Cruton, Rt.
Rev. Walter Adams, Bishop of
Kootenay was a guest of Rev. and
Mrs. C. T. Perclval at Christ church
rectory, Wuh. Archdeacon F. H.
Graham, of Nelion, who wu here
Monday for the church dedication
at Wynndel, wu also a guut of Mr.
and Mrs. Percival.
Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson got
back Sunday from Jaffray where
they spent the Empire diy weekend with their diughter, Mra. W.
Belanger.
Father Beuette, formerly ln
charge of Holy Crou church, who
hu been at Lumby, in the Okanagan, of late, has been transferred to
have charge of the Indian mission
at Kamloops.
Vice-Principel 0. Sostad of Creston high school spent the Empire
day week-end at Waterton lake.
Miss Helen Lacey of Lethbridge
wu here at the week-end with her
Earents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
acey.
Monday was the Ust day to pay
1938 dog taxes to escape appearance
in police court to effect enforced
coUection. and enquiry at the village hall brings th conformation that
already tags have been taken out
for 45 canines, which pretty well
accounts for the village dog population. There are, however, a few
who have failed to respond, and
action is to be taken against them
in a few days. The uiual fee for
license was raised at the first of
the year, the police dog license being raised to 210.
Mrs. James Cherrlngton and son.
Jim, are on a motor trip to Trail
and Rossland. At the former point
they were to be guuts of her son-
■- .'       THI NELSON  DAILY  NEWS. NELSON.  B.C-MONDAY  MORNINO. JUNI 1  WB-
The Class of 1935 at the Kootenay Lahe General Hospital
BURTON HAS
SPORTS DAY
BURTON, B.C., June 2.—A program of sports wu held here Miy
24. Gamu and racu were held for
the ichool children, including a
bueball game between the Carrol's
and Burton schools, the score being 17-5 ln favor of Carrols.
A baseball game wu played between Edgewood and Burton, the
score being 12 to 3 ln favor of Burton. Other eventa Included log sawing, nail driving, etc., a bueball
game between Nakusp and Burton,
the score being 13-2 in favor of
Nakusp.
High and broad jumping and relay races concluded the program.
A dance wu held ln the evening
when a good crowd attended from
all Arrow Laku polnta.
Mining leeturu Just concluded
by B. T. O'Grady, created great
interest, and a iplendid attendance
wu maintained throughout the
series.
-PAOE THREE
DISCUSS KASLO
WATER SUPPLY
To Circulate Petition
Asking Immediate
Action
Graduate! of the Kootenay Lake General hotpltal who received
thtlr diplomas on Tuttdiy list In t fitting ceremony at Trinity United
ohurch. The clan of 1935 la the lut graduating clau from the Nelton
hospital, the training tchool for nurses automatically cloiing with tht
graduation.   Mlu Vtra B, Eldt, acting superintendent of the hoipltil,
li etnter In the above photo. From left te right the other four, tht
diss of '36, are: Eleanor Audrey Richardson of Ntw Westminster;
Jetn Evtngtline Ryan of New Westminster; Jem Edna Roblnton of
Nelion, and Elizabeth Blanche Laidlaw of Plncher Creek, Alta.
in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Allan.
Mr. and Mrs. H. a McCreath and
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Dickinson returned Sunday from -Spokane, in
which city they had been holidaying since Thuraday.
W. McL. Cooper and Percy Boffey
returned Saturday from a business
trip to Penticton and other Okanagan points. They were making an
inspection of apple packing warehouse equipment at these points
in the interests of Cruton Co-Operative Fruit exchange, of which
they are manager and director
respectively. To handle the bumper
crop in prospect for this year the
Exchange contemplates the purchue of a' new and latest model
grader. The director! are due to
meet this week to make a decision
in the matter of style of machine
to be purchased.
Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Joyce and
chUdren and Mr. and Mn. C. F.
Hayes were at Spokane Empire
day, returning Saturday morning.
Charlu Cotterill of Nelson was
here attending the funeral of hla
aunt. Miss H. Cotterill, Monday
from Christ church. He was a guest
of his mother, Mra. C. Cotterill.
W. S. McAlpine, president, and
F H. Jackson, vice-president of
Creston Farmers' institute, left for
Robson to represent the local organization at the annual conference of Farmera' Institutes of Wut
Kootenay.
H. F. Robson passed through to
Wynndel from Cranbrook, where
he had been for a few days with
Mrs. Robson who Saturday underwent a serious operaton at St. Eugene hospital and who is making a
satisfactory recovery.
Miu A. Fleetwood, who hM been
with friends in Oregon for 18
months, has returned to Creston to
look after property interests in the
village.
Mrs. N. P. Molander, Mn. G. A.
Hunt. Mrs. C. Senesael and Mrs. E.
Drlffil of Kitchener were Saturday
visiton here, for a bridge given in
their honor by Mrs. C. Fransen.
Miss Curtis, E. Marriott, J. T.
Hunden and Charles Huscroft, who
were in charge of the half dozen
athletes from Creston valley
schools, got back Sunday from attending the Kootenay - Boundary
schools' track meet at Trail the day
previous, and report a meet that
provided exceptionally keen competition in almost every clus. While
the local talent failed to make an
outstanding showing it is satisfactory to note that total points scored
in 1935 was in excess of the showing
the year previous.
Each year Creston valley hu en
tered the Kootenay-Boundary track
meet it hu improved its showing.
Starting four years ago with but a
single point, it increased this successively to seven and 11, and this
year extended the total to 13 points.
INSTITUTE HEAD
AT GRAND FORKS
Rebekahs  Celebrate
2,5th Anniversary
of Branch
GRAND FORKS, B.C., June _.-
Mrs. U. S. McLachlan. nresident'of
the B.C. Women'i institutes made
an official visit to the local Women's institute Monday evening.
An interesting demonstration of
needle craft was given and Mrs.
McLachlan also told a wonderful
story of her visit to the Peace River
country. Following the address a
social time wu spent and dainty refreshments were served. *
Banner Rebekah lodre No. 25, held
a aocial evening Tussday, the occasion being the 25th anniversary of
thc institution of the order in Grand
Forka. Membera of Gateway lodge
No. 25. I.O.O.F. were also present.
An Interesting feature was the presentation of a 25-year jewel to Mrs.
Mary Spraggett, who was 'also a
charter member. The presentation
was made by Mayor T. A. Love,
who assisted in the institution of
the lodge a quarter of a century ago.
Mrs. W. Eureby on behalf of the
lodge presented Mrs. Spraggett with
a boquet of flowers.
Thc annual roU call of members
read by the secretary brought response from a large number and
many letters of greetings from members who were absent or moved
away.
Mayor Love gave ,an Interesting
address and told of the institution
of the order in which he took part.
He recalled an amusing incident in
connection with the event, when he
and a party of Odd Fellows drove
from Phoenix in a bus drawn by
six horses with D. McElroy handling
the reins. When they reached a point
which is now known as Spencer,
the lead team decided to return to
Phoenix. The driver was equaUy
determined they would go on to the
Forks. The result of this battle between human and equine determination was the occupants of the car
riage finding themselvu scattered
over the hillside. However, no one
was hurt and"tventually they reached their destination where a successful evening wu spent. It wu eight
o'clock the following morning when
they arrived in Phoenix.
After this address a banquet wu
served in the banquet hall, the table
being decorated with lilacs and other
spring flowers and centered with
o huge birthday cake decorated with
25 pink and green candles and which
wu cut by Mrs. 0. Stephenson, presiding noble grand.
Mrs. E. Bailey was hoiteu at a
miscellaneous shower in honor of
Miss Hazel Mason whoae marriage
is planned to take place next weekend. Prite wlnnen at bridge were:
I Mrs. Tod Hunter, first; and Miss
McPheraon, second. A lucky prize
wu won by Mrs. A. G. C. Mason.
After cards, to the strains of a
wedding march, Gladys Meakes. u
a bride, and Lloyd Bailey, representing a groom, pruented a large
basket of beautiful gifts to Miss
Mason. Mrs. Bailey was assisted by
Mrs. M. Meakes. and Mra. Tony
Peterson.
MANY VISITORS
AT AINSWORTH
YAHK MAN GOES
TO HOSPITAL
YAHK, B.C., June 2.-Ernut Al*
wu taken to St. Eugene hospital
Cranbrook. having injured his ankle while working at Camp 31.
Wilfred Lee of Bonnington and
friend Shirley Preston, spent the
week-end at the home of the former's brother-in-law and sister Mr.
and Mrs. F. A. Lazenby.
Oscar Frederlckson of Camp 27
has returned from the Cranbrook
hospital where he spent five days
with an injured foot.
Betty Cooper of Nelion, a former
resident of Yahk is spending a few
days, visiting friends in town.
Helen Mclnnis hu returned to
her home here after ipending four
months in Trail.
Mrs. Axel Naas spent Wednesday
and Thursday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. G. Williams, Kingsgate.
Dan McCartney a pupil of Cranbrook high school ipent the weekend visiting at the home ot his
parents, Mr. and Mra. S. J. McCartney.
Mrs. Alex Rattery left on Monday
for Spokane to visit her mother.
Mra. H. C. Larson, who ls a patient in Deaconess hospital.
Visitors frorn Kimberley for the
May 24 celebration included Vera
Sundquist, Victor Skalk and Canute Saline, all former residents of
yahk.
Mrs. Charles McFarlane returned
to her home Sunday after spending several weeks a patient in St.
Eugene hospital, Cranbrook.
Recently Mra. E. Tunfora entertained at a children's party, tht
occasion being the birthday of her
grand-daughter, Jean McEldowney.
Mr. and Mrs. F. Knott and their
daughter. Mra. M. Nygaard of Canyon motored in to attend May 24
celebrations.
Annie Pascuzzo of Sirdar spent
the hoUday a guest at the home
of Hazel McCartney.
Mrs. Hugh Mclnnes wu hostess at
a children^ party Thursday afternoon honoring her daughter Florence, who celebrated her 12th birthday. Those pruent were Florence
Mclnnis, Evelyn Brown, Margaret
Wardrope, Marripn Rlchter, Laura
Dickson. Jean Anderson, Florence
Degerstadt, Glen Erickion, Alfie
Anderson, and Herble Degerstadt.
G. Carlson and S. Degerstadt have
left for Lumberton where they
have secured employment.
Honoring Betty Cooper, who ls
a visitor in town, Marcelle Nedclee
wu a bridge hostess Monday evening.
Prize for high score was won by
Thelma Peterson and consolation
went to Vera Matson. Those playing were: Betty Cooper. Hope Mc-
Innls, Jean. Rattny, Vera Matson,
Kathleen Revans, Leila Birch. Marcelle Nedelec, and Thelma Peterson.
Tuesday evening the Office Staff
softball team motored to Kitchener
where they played the Creston
team. The score was 23-5 In favor
of the Yahk boys.
AINSWORTH, B.C., June -.-A
large number of visiton* were here
during the week-end. As usual the
swimming pool at the hot springs
was the main attraction. Many good
catchu of fish were reported. A
dance wu held Friday night.
Those who went from Alnaworth
to Kulo for the celebratiori were:
Alex Orant. George McPherson.
Miss A. Truscbtt, Mrs. W. E. Lane
and family Mavis and Doria Fletcher and Ruby and Hans Hansen.
Mr. and Mn. R. D. Hall and party
were week-end visitors here.
Mr. and Mra. Fred Spun and
daughter Lorna of Kaslo were in
town Sunday.
Miss E. Truscott ipent the weekend in Kulo.
Elvln Morney, M. Ballco, Austin
Moore end T. Bate were at the
hot iprlngi Sundiy.
Dr. Ray Shew and party of Nelwn were at the hot iprings Frldiy.
Mr. end Mn. Al. Dufour and Art
Wallace and family were here Sun-
Mr. and Mn. Himmer ind ftmlly
were at the hot wrings at the week-
H. Harrop had a party of friendi
at the hot springs Sunday.
Another party who enjoyed a
swim in the pool Sunday were, Mlssu Kay Gordon, Marjorle and
Georgina Brown of Nelson and
Irene MacAuley of Erie.
Mr. Herahorn, H. E. Cooper and
B. Vineberg were at the pool Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J- Young were here
trom NeUon Sunday.
Mr. and Mra. A. Browne were viil-
ftrt at the pool.
Mr. and Mri. G. W. Forster and
son accompanied by the Andrew'a
children were at the hot springs
Sunday.
From Kaslo, Mr. and Mrs. Chandler brought a party to the swimming
pool.
J. Argyle of Nelson wu at the
hot springs Sunday.
George Devorjbt of Nelson wu
ahother visitor Sunday, with him
were Miu Barrett and Miu Sheffield.
Jimmy and Albert Kinahan, Mra.
Griffin and Mrs. Wilkinson were
at the swimming pool Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson and fam
lly and T. MUburn were at the
hot springs.
Mr. end Mra. Art Sumark and
their baby son were here Sunday
trom Kulo.
Mr. and Mn. A. T. Stephenion
and party were visitor! here.
Mr. and Mra. Humphries were
here at the week-end.
Capt. and Mrs. Chapman and
family and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williams and family spent Friday here.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith were
here recently.
Mrs. P. Sheffield was here Inspecting the school Tuuday.
Mr. and Mra. Carl Olsen of Ron-
land end their two children spent
the week-end in town guests of Mr.
Olsen's mother. Mrs. A. Olsen.
Wuley Thompson of Kimberley
spent the week-end here, a guest of
his grandmother, Mra. A. McKlnnon who went back to Kimberley
with him for a month's visit.
Arnold Norberg, who works at
the Yankee Girl mine, Ymir, spent
the week-end here with his family.
Olive Lane of Nelion was a weekend visitor here. She wu a guut
of her uncle and aunt, Mr, and
Mrs. W. E. Lane.
Julius Reisterer of Nelson was
here for a day or so fixing pipes
tround the hot spring property.
Mr. and Mra. John Burns and Ted,
of Nelson, were in town Tuesday.
Bears ere quite plentiful around
here Juit now. Two were killed
during the week-end, one on the
Lane ranch nur the barn and the
other on Lane's upper ranch, back
of the Kras mine.
There have been teveral partlu
of men here during the put week
looking it mines. Frank Kennedy, a
farmer resident here, came ln with
some associates trom Rossland and
went up to the Silver Hoard mine.
KASLO. B.C., June 2.—A particularly well attended meeting of Ihe
Kulo board of trade was held Tuesday evening in the city hall with
president Walter Hendricks ln the
chair.
Kulo'i -water aupply wu the
main topic under discussion and
wu thoroughly gone into, from
every angle. It wu decided that
the city be petitioned to take the
matter up at once and arrangements
were made to have the petition circulated for signatures.
President Hendricks, H. Giegerich
and D. P. Kane were, appointed as
delegates to represent the Kulo
board of trade at the coming convention of Associated Board ot
Trade of Eastern B. C, to be held
in Nelson ln the nur future.
Felix Schroeder ot Nelion wu
a city vlaltor Wednuday.
George Abey of Mirror Lake was
a Nelson visitor Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Chuter Speln have
returned to Ymlr after spending a
few days ln town visiting relatives.
John McGarvy of Rlondel ia a
patient in Victorian hospital.
Howard Perkins has returned to
Trail efter visiting hit mother, Mrs.
Alice Perkins.
Miss L. Dale has left tor her home
ln Blggar, Sask., after spending
several months visiting friends at
Shutty Bench.
Mine Inspector H. E. Miard of
Fernie wu a Wednesday visitor in
Kulo.
Dr. T. R. Bourque of Nelson spent
Wednesday In the city.
Rev. and Mrs. T. W. Reed and the
latter'a mother, Mrs. Harrison, have
returned from Vancouver where
they attended the annual meeting
of the B. C. Presbytery.
Mrs. A. W. Anderson, who had
been a guut ot her mother, Mrs. J.
'W. Power, hu returned to her home
In Golden.
Mr. and Mn. Fred Webber and
children heve arrived in the city
where, for the pruent, they will
make their home. Mr. Webber la In
charge of the forutry department
fire ooat.
Mra. PhUip Kahle of Shutty
Bench hu had u her guests her
son ind daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mra. John Kahle and their daughter,
who have been making their home
BLOSSOM TEA
AT WYNNDEL
WYNNDEL, B.C., June 2,-The
Women'i inititute apple blossom tea
May 24 in the orchard of Mrs. P.
Hagen was a success, $15.50 being
the intake. The tea-tables were aet
under the .apple trees. Ice cream
and candies found'a ready stle. A
treasure hunt wu much enjoyed
by the children as was also the
peanut scramble.
Mn. T. Watson and son Kenneth
former residents of this district
but recently of Drumhelier. Alta.
were guests, for a few days at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Abbott and
left Monday for Nelson, where they
wUl be joined by Mr. Watson and
where tney expect to make their
future home.
May meeting of Wynndel Women's lnitltue wu held at the
church when 23 members were present.
Sick visiting committee report
wu adopted as presented. Secretary
reported a $10 donation—the balance left from the partv tendered
officials of Creston Dyking Company, Limited, by a group of Wynndel citizens, the money to be used
for hospital work.
There wu some discussion u to
what was required at the institute's
hospital room, and it was pointed
out a bedside table was next on the
list and $10 was set aside for this.
A vote of thanki was given those
responsible for the donation.
The purchase of an ice cream
freezer was discussed and Mrs. Davldge suggested something "social"
be done each meeting with proceeds
to go for this special purpose.
Report of donations for fall fair
was given and a rough list of entries
wu read and added to. The matter
of a picnic for children was taken
up but It was thought best to leave
this until lummer holidays.
Tea hostesses were Mra. Eakin,
Mrs. Hulme, Mrs. W. J. Cooper,
Mrs. Slingsby and Mrs. Rumsey.
in Regina, Sask. They are now
planning to take up land and make
their home near Nelson.
Mlu Gladys Underwood, registered nurse, has arrived from Vancouver and assumed her new duties
on the nursing staff of the Victorian
hospital.
Mr. and Mn. J. E. Lyons of -Spokane and Mn. John Maxwell of
New York city were visitors ln the
city early ln the week. The two
ladies were former Kaslo residents—
in fact were native daughters, their
parents, the late Mr. and Mrs. C.
Freeman making their home here
for several years.
Philip Goodenough hu left for
Howser where he will handle the
big truck at the logging camp ot
George Mclnnis.
Miss Marjorie Speirs has returned
from a visit to Nelson.
0. E. Austin has returned to Salmo after spending a tew days ln
town with his family.
During the week the tanks at
the spit light on Sugar loaf, a few
milu north of Kaslo, were renewed
by Douglu Male of Nelson.
In an appeal for preservation of
wages and hours established under
NRA, Harper Sibley, pruldent of
United Statu chamber of commerce, urged business men to uphold levels of the codes.
ASTHMA
'JM nuS' T»1m ffJSaSI
Iooummi   un   thtm   to   rati*
Daatdlop
(orfanftth. '
___ may ud stop ptrmWnt broaehiil
ooafhi OTtruifht Ztfr to Uk»— no tmokw. no
■onr*. do ■ml. Salt. Not bibit-lormiju.
Rutn—or moMT bwk. Mo ud II tt lUl
■to. Oood for tVoiile Brooehttfa. loo. tt
-mit-mm-m WU-MAH CmmiIm
Monday
SPECIALS
IMPORTED LINENS
Hand embroidered bridge sets.  36-inch
cloth and 4 napkins in a lovely cross stitch ft *f    mm
design. * ■ •73>
SET       *
ANGELSKIN BLOUSES
Smart little blousettes to we»r with your
suit or pastel skirt. Made with short sleeves,
tailored or frilly types. Sires 14 to 20.
EACH   	
89c
PASTEL CREPE DRESSES
Washable dresses of rough crepes, in attractive styles, for women and  misses.
Pastel shades. Sizes 14 to 20.
EACH   	
*J.9S
MEN'S SPORT SHOES
Men's black and white or brown and white
sport shoes with leather soles and rubber S^ .
'J
heels.
PAIR
50
BOYS' BROADCLOTH SHORTS
Boys like these good fitting shorts made of
English broadcloth.
PAIR	
19'
Special!
CRETONNE GARMENT BAGS
Large size figured cretonned bags that save
your garments from dust, etc. Regular $1.00.
SPECIAL, EACH 	
89
Madeira Unen Pillow Cases
Just a few of these real madeira hand
embroidered pillow cases. Size 42-inch. ft^S  4Q
These were orglnally priced $3.95 pair. ^ Mmf-YW
TO CLEAR, PAIR      —
INCORfO«ATgO   t**l MAY ItTO.
 ■
THE  NELSON  DAILY  NEWS. NELSON.  B.C-MONDAY  MORNINO. JUNE 8. IMS-
PAOE POUR     ■            ' ' "	
B. C MINERAL PRODUCTION TAKES JUMP
VALUE OF OUTPUT INCREASES BY
OVER NINE MILLION DOLLARS IN
W GOLD AND LEAD LEAD WAY
Gold Production Establishes on All-Time High;
Lead Makes New Volume Record; 12,958
Men Are Employed in Mining Industry
VICTORIA, June t-Thi vilue
of mineral production for thi yur
1934 li definitely pliced it |4fc*
306,297. an Increase of 89,702,625
over thet of 1933, according te th*
annual report ef Hon. Gorge 8.
Peanon, mlnliter of mlnu, released today.
Gold production accounted for
by far the greatest Increue In
value for any one metal or mate-
rial In 1934, followed In ordtr by
Kid, illver, line, copper, coal and
mlieallaneoui metils, thi nport
•howt.
Highlights an summirlnd it
followi:
Oold production tstabllshtd at
all-time high, In both volume and
valui.
RECORD FOR LEAD
Liad output raaehid ncord figuru In volume ef production,
while alne fall Juit ihort of th*
record attained In 1830. Thi numbtr ef ihlpplng mitalllfiuroui
mlnu Inertaud from 109 In 1933
to 148 In 1934.
Thoie ihlpplng over 100 tons Increased from 41 to 89.
During the year 13,989 men were
employed in all branches of the Industry. Thii la an increase of 1816
over the number employed in 1983.
Dividends   declared   by   mining
companies ln 1934 aggregated 80,*
187.278. This compared with dividends for 1933 of 33.034,464.
PLACER GOLD UP
Placer gold production In 1834
totalled 38,181 ounces vilued it
3714.431 as compared with 33,928
valued at 8983,787 ln the preceding
year.
Lode gold production totalled
397,130 ouncu valued It 110,290,969
ns against 223,529 ouncu valued at
$6,39.,920 in 1933.
Silver production lnereued over
a million and a half ouncu, the
figures being 8,572,916 worth of 84,-
068,792 in 1934 ai compared with
7.006.406 ouncu valued at 32,659,720
in 1933. Enhanced value of the white
metal accounted for the greater
activity in silver mining.
COPPER HAS GAIN
A large increue in copper production also was quoted. 48.084.058
pounds valued at 83.987,401 being
mined last year aa against 42,608,002
valued at 83,176.341 in 1933.
Lead production totalled 347,366,-
TS7 pounds valuod at $8,481,859 last
jear as compared with 371.606.071
poundi worth 38,498,781 ln the previous yeer.
Zinc producUon jumped trom
195,963,7*31 pounds vilued it $6,281,-
416 In 1933 to 247,936,844 tom worth
37,346,893 In 1934.
There was Uttle change ln coal
output, the figuru (long tons) being 1.347,090 tons valued at $r,733.-
133 lut yur u compared with
1,286,746 worth 88,375,171 ln the preceding year.
The above values are bued on
Canadian funds.
COAL MINING
During 1984 there were 2893 persons employed ih and around coal
mines. Six fatal accident! occurred
as compared with three for 1933.
The ration ot fatal accidents per
1000 persons employed WU 2.07
against .97 in 1933.
Thero were 33 fatal accidents ta
and about metalliferous mines lut
yur, an Increue of 12 trom the
figuret tor 1933.
There were 4825 persons em-
ploved under and above ground ta
the metalliferous lode minu lut
year. The ratio of fatal accidents
wu 4.86 as against 3.20 in the preceding year. The raUo for the 10-
year period wu 2.95.
The tonnage mined per fatal accident wu 446.390 tona for the lut
10-year period.
EXPECT INCREASE IN 1938
The report states an appreciable
Increase in gold and sliver production is anticipated for 1933; laad and
zinc production are not expected to
ahow anv notable change whllt closing of the Granby plant at Anyox
will have an advene effect on production of copper, although latest
advices are to the effect that the
Anyox operaUon is likely to continue until the latter quarter of the
year at least
It Is reasonable to expect, tht report states, that the value ot mineral
production for 1933 will total approximately $47,000,000.
During the year 1934 lmporta of
crude oil for refining in British Co*
lumbia totalled 158.288,000 gallons
trom which 40,000,000 gallons of
gasoline and 93.000,000 gallons ot
fuel oil wert produced and sold ln
the province.
In addition to this 23,293,000 gallons of fuel oil wire imported In
bond for marine uie and 17  187.000
Jlallons of fuel oil were Imported
or use in the province.
Lady Godiva Is
Protect Agairjst
■ Tax in New York
NEW YORK, June 2 (CP) -
Thelma White partook of tht discomforts of Jail today beciuss
Ihe tssaysd tht roll of Lady Go-
diva en Tlmu square, wearing a
long nd wig, a thin ault of dancing tights and a very frightened
ixprtulon.
Mlu Whltt, 32, bearded a prancing white oharoer In front of an
hottl and had prooe*d*8 ilmoit
half a block befon a grinning pe-
llctmin itopped htr and bundled
her Into an ambulant*.
Durlnf har ahort ride th* shivering dancer clutched a banntr
nadlng "nduce taxes to thl minimum.
DELEGATES ON
THE WAY HERE
Associated Boards
Meet Opens in
24 Hours
With the iormil opening ot the
convention of the Assoclsted Boards
of Trade of Eutern British Columbia only 24 hours away, the more
distant westerly delegations will be
on their wey Monday, and wlll bc
arriving here Monday night. Both
PenUcton and Orand Forki ire expected to lend delegttu, and Princeton and the Tulameen-Ciwston
group are occasionally represented.
Eut Kootenay dtlegatu, If coming by train, will be here in time
for the opening senlon, Tuesday
forenoon. Delegatu of West Kootenay boards will no doubt drlvt in.
BINNS MAY MISS IT
Possibility that Noble Binns. president of the organlution tor many
years, may not be able to come over
from Trail on account of his Impaired health, loomed Sunday, If
that should prove to be the cue, the
convention would have to start by
electing a chairman, as C, O. Rodgers of Cruton, vice-president, is
still convileiclng from two opera-
tions, and according to latest advices cannot possibly be pruent.
The entertainment future of the
soulons, the binquet to be given to
the delegates and visitors by the
Nelson board of trade, will take
placc Tuesday evening at the Hume.
SEEK REPRIEVE
FORSTONER
TRAIL WINS
TEAHTROPHY
Schwenger-Wilkinson
Cup Taken by 12-
Point Margin
TRAIL, I. C Junt 2 — Thl
Sohwingtr-Wllklnion cup wtnt to
four Trail mm whou quillfylng
roundi aggragattd 317 to defut
tht ftur lowut Nslson qualify**-*
whoa* strokes totalled 329, a* tha
ruult of play at tha Rossland-Trall
Qolf and Country elub Saturday.
Th* Ntlun four and Individual
scores win: J. D. Ktrr, 84; T. R.
Wilion, 82; B. Towihtnd, 86; ind
D. Stick, 78. Por Tnll, P. P. Mclntyre, 09; L. S. Plptr, 80; R. Nesbltt, 82; R. C, Cnwi, 88.
Kulo did not enter a turn, thtn
btlng only thru pliyers thtn.
Gravis, Litham and Fruer ware
thl only players thtrt.
N.G.H. (UBS
BEATSALMO
Make. It Two Straight
in Fine Game at
Salmo 9-6
Blewett Defeats
Crescent Valley
Playing a return game with Crescent Valley et Krestova Sunday,
Blewett won 12-6 baseball game. S.
HUl hit a three-bagger for the Blewett Bearcata tor the but hit. Ed
Cherno for Crescent Valley played
a fine game on the mound and
struckout 14 batters.
Scoreri were: Blewett—N. Hucal.
3; F. Chemenkoff, 3; C. Nemrava,
j,3; S. HUl, 2; T. Soloveoff, 1.
Creacent Valley—Tlm Reianoff,
1; A. Sopou. 1; E. Cherno, 1; Joe
Cherno, 1; Jack Cherno, 1; S. Cherno, 1.
LAKE AT PEAK
ONE YEAR AGO
High Water Seems
Still Far Away
This Year
Godioai Ho!
Nelson Nelmen
Defeat Trail 1-3
Tulip Tea Is
Great Success
Crossing the plate for three rum
ta the tint of the eleventh Inning
and then blanking their opponents,
the New Grand Hotel Cuba made It
two itraight over the Salmo seniors
ln a snappy game ln Salmo on Sunday afternoon, the final icore reeding 9-6. Salmo fans stated it was
one of the best games ever played
there.
Both teams played a fast game
all the way, only one error being
chalked up against each team In the
first 10 Innings. But ln the eleventh
four costly errors by Salmo infield
paved the way for the winning runs.
Steve Smith, who started on the
mound retired the tlrst three betters in succession ln the opening inning but after two were out In the
second, and after walking two successive batters, he was relieved by
Bill Brlnley. Bill allowed six hits,
struckout 11 batters, and walked
three ta the remaining innings.
Ferguaon of Salmo hit the only
homer ot the day and he played a
fine game in center field, nabbing a
number of nice flies.
DANNY STACK AND R.C. CROWE IN
FINALS FOR KOOTENAY GOLF TITLE
Take Opening Games
in Nelson for West
Kootenay Play
A tulip tea and bake uie of a
highly successful character was held
Thursday by the Women's association   of   the   First   Prubyterlan
church, at the home oi Mrs. A. T.
Parks Richards street, whose wonderful tulip garden provided an at-
I tracUve environment.
!    Mrs. A. T. Park wu hostess, while
^^^^^^^^^^^^^_   Mrs. D. T. Heddle, pruldent of the
aJiociation, received the guests. Mlss
Nelson took a big lead on thl; j. Lanskail presided at the tu tabl*
Trail club In Uie opening gamu of | centered with a cut glut bowl of
the West Kooteniy lnter-clty tennis \ tulips, while thoie seprlng ln the tu
play here Sunday when the local
net artists took eight gamu to
three. Trail won two gamu ln the
men's singles and one ln the men'i
doubles, but did not get a look ta
ln the ladies' singles or the mixed
doubles. All matchu in thc men's
■ingles were three-let affairs.
Following are the matchu with
the Trail players menUoned flrit |
ln uch case:
E. Haley beat Lawrence Simpson.!
6-3. 4-6. 7-5; Ned Rhodes beat Bort
Clark, 1-8, 6-4. 6-4; John. Theed lost.
to Tommy Malahoff 6-3, 3-6, 4-6;
John Theed and Ned Rhodes beat
T.  Malahoff  and Teddy  Romano,
7-5. 8-8: B. Coon and E. Haley lost'
to F. Clark and O. Simpson. 1-8,1
3-8; H. Warden and M. Sandercock
lost to D. Dunnett and R. Ken.
2-6. 1-6; H. Werden and Jane Tyson .
lost to R. Kerr and ., Nl|bet, 3-*3.'
6-1. 5-7; E. Halliwell and W. Wil-
room were Mn. E. J. Mother, Mn.
W. T. Choate, Mn. A. N. Wlnlaw.
Mlss Harv Heddle. and Mlu jeanette Winlaw. Thc bake table was In
charge of Mrs. H. B. Morrison and
Mrs. M. Gibbs, and the flower table,
of Mrs. Hugh Ross. Mrs. C. R. Hanna
was cuhler.
LONDON. June 3 (CP cablel-
Immedlite itepi to organise a petition for a reprieve were taken by
couniel for George Percy Stoner,
18-year-old chauffeur aentenced to
deith for the murder ot Francis
Mawson Rattenbury.
Stoner was found guilty tn the
Old Bailey Friday anil sentenced to
the supreme penalty while his co-
defendant. Mn. Alme Rattenbur»,
was acquitted and treed u the
Bournemouth triangle cue came to
an end.
The question of an appeal against
the verdict for Stoner is also being
closely considered, lt wis statea.
The defence contention was that
although he admitted striking the
aged architect a blow which caused
his death, Stoner was insane at the
Ume through drugs and Jealousy of
the huaband of hli admitted mistress.
Gold Flow From
France Checked
PARIS, June 3 (CP-Havu).-Premier-designate   Fernand   Boulsson
will pruent his new cabinet to the
chamber of deputies Tuetday and
hopu to get. within an hour, the all-
important vote of confidence that
»-., .-., -. •——"— — ■■] ..- | wiil give him special powers to curb
liama lost to G. Simpson and Mrs.   speculation and save Uie franc—lack
Simpson. 2-8, 1-6; Jane Tyson and 10f which resulted In tae downfall of
The government will Insist on
fair wage clauses in all equipment
contracta signed by the Cinidiin
Nitional and Canadian Pacific railways under Dominion guarantees.
Minister of Railways R. J. Manion
announced in the house of commons.
Goole, a new player tor the Cuba,
showed up well at third and was
whaling them down to fint with
great gusto.
When the Cubs returned to Ncison
they were taken to the Golden Gate
for supper.
Summary RHE
Cuba .. 011 101 002 03 9 10 1
Salmo   030 020 010 00   6    6   5
Struckout by Smith, 2, Brlnley,
11, J. McLellan, 1. Ferguson. 5; bues
on ball oft Smith 2, Brlnley, 3, J,
McLellan, 2, Ferguson, 1; home runs,
Ferguson: two base hits, Pasacreta;
sacrifice hiti, Waterer.
Teams were:
New Grand Hotel cubs—Anderson. Waters. Hamann. Goble, Smith,
Brinley, Langill. DelPuppo, Kapak,
Pasacreta. Kraft, Bishop. Brennan.
Salmo Seniors: aFlr, Adams. Lindstrum. 3. McLellan, H, McLellan,
Hearn, Dorey, Ferguson. Donaldson.
King's Birthday
a School Holiday
Monday, the King's Birthday, celebrating King George's. attainment
of Uie age of 70, ia a school, civil
service, and bank holiday ln Nelson,
but the storu for thc moit part will
be open.
With high water apparently lUU
fir away, though ta 1934 it occurred Just a year ago, the lake at Nelson stood at 1331 feet above the
low water mark Sunday afternoon
at 6 o'clock, after a gain ot well over
half a foot for the 48-hour week-end
Interval. The exact gain wu .66
foot, Friday afternoon's reading having been 12.65 teet
Lut year the entire leason wu
early, following a mild winter ln
which much of the precipitation at
the lower levels wu in the form of
rain, to such a degree that the lake
was markedly above the usual winter level, and including a hot spring
which brought an unusually heavy
spring run-off. with the ruult that
the peak high water occurred
June 2.
FAL8E AND TRUE PEAK
Ai often happens, there were two
rises, 15 feet being retched on May
22, and a imall alump following, to
14.7 feet, which was the reading on
May 38, after which a freah bunt of
hot weather carried the level up
steadily for the next seven days, for
further rise of 21 Inches. On June
3 lt wai down to 16.85 teet, and
continued to drop thereafter.
At pruent there are itlll great
muses of snow ta the hills, and
possibilities of an excepUonal high
water it there should be a week
or more of sustained heat While
the pruent level is 3.69 feet below
last year's peak, normal summer
heat could quickly alter the disparity. On the other hand, a continuance of moderate wuther, with
nightly freezing in thc hills, would
let the water get away without anything exceptional In the way of extreme height.
Men's Softball
League Looms
Juat when lt appeared that there
would be no men! aoftball lugue
in Nelson this year, it was announced over the week-end that prospects
for a four or five-team lugue appear exctUent. Tht Woodcutters
are the only team officially entered, but Safewaya and Hume Hotel have stated they would be playing. The Millionaires and Fairview
Athletic club are other protpecUve
entriu.
Teams wishing to enter muit lig*
nlfy their intention! by Thunday
evening, June 6, and must notify
Gilbert Rowling, league secretary,
TRAIL SUPERB
IN BOXLA GAME
Defeats Pullman Lads
22 Goals to 8
Saturday
No Lady Qodlva, Mlsa Mabel
Fonyth, aald 16, It nevertheless
proud of her whltt hont. Mlu
Forsyth, astride hir favorite
mount, won "chimplon outdoor
girl" title in conteit it SanU Bar-
ban. Calif.
Flashes From the Wires
Royal Bride in Stately Gown
Ben Coon lost to K. Nlsbet and F.
Clark, 4-6. 4-6; W. Williams and
Mist Sandercock loet to Bert Clark
and Mrs. Simpson. XI. 2-6; Ethel
Halliwell loit to D. Dunnef., 6-4,
8-10, 3-6.
thc   mlnlittry   of   Plerre-EUenne
Flandin.
Jean-Louis  Milvy, chairman  of
* the chamber finance committee, said
\ the premier, by asking urgent procedure, might havc his bill considered Immediately by the finance
committee during an hour's recess
ot the chamber, with s vote on the
measure u soon as the deputies reconvene.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |    Franco breathed more easily with
the flight of gold abroad apparently
Tlie cellar-placed Toronto Stars; nlreedy   checked   and   thc   franc
meet the Red Sox tonight in a ladies ; ,tronger
aoftbrll  game at the Recreation'      ^•'^•'^•'^•'^•-^•'•-^•'•'•'•••■^•,™
Stars and Red Sox
Meet Tonight
grounds. Red Sox have won three
and have lost three, while the Stars
havc won two and have lost four.
A win for the Stan will placc these
two teams on an even standing
again.
The Stan have outhlt their op-
INJURV HITI STUART
LONDON. Ont. (CP)-If Herble
Stuart, veteran London International league goalie, had not been Injured late last seuon, he would get
ponrnls but hive been lus effective | a National hockey league trial next
\sx their (ielding than the tied Sox. fall. The N.H.L clubs wouldnt
The Red Sox can tie the Acu for i gamble on an injured player end
the lead should they win tonight.
Cubs and Savoys
Play Wednesday
Preunt pleni cill for the Sivoy
Hotel club ind the New Gnnd
Cubs to meet In the opening game
for the city baseball championship
Wednesday evening. As both clubi
have lined up strong teams a dole
lerlu Is expected. It will be a best*
out-of-eleven leries.
DOWN Ht WINT
LONDON. (CP»-Blgger thin Primo Camera. Constable Bob H,unter
of the London police force wasn't
good enough to win the BrIUsh
amateur heavyweight boxing tltlt.
In the final H. P. Floyd, the defending champion, knocked out tht
bin fellow In one round. Ht used
only three punches. And they uy
Englishmen can't hit.
get
Bill  Taugher of Buffalo will
the trial with St. Louis Eagles.
MORE THAN HURDLER
WINDSOR, Ont. ICP)- Johnny
Louring is not only Canada's best
schoolboy high hurdler, he's the
belt all-around track and field performer among Border Citlu students. He entered Ilx events In thl
dlitrlct secondary schools meet and
won them all. Loarlng is regsrded
u an Olympic games prospect.
IT DOII HIM NO OOOD
SYRACUSE, r. Y. (CPI-Prob-
ably Jack Markle. Syracuse Stan
right winger led International Hockey league scorers this seaaon, li
wondering what he haa to do to
get a nod trom a Nitionil league
club. He hai been nur the top for
five seasons, and is nted one nf the
most polished attacking wingmen
In the I. H. L. But he's never had an
N. H. L. tryout
FIREI IN ONTARIO
NORTH BAY, Ont.-Severel com-
munitiu ln northern Ontario were
reported menaced by bush tires
which broke out anew during the
week-end.
Reports reached here ot serious
outbreaks In the Matachewano district. Ontario department ot northern development lost buildings and
equipment at Martin river. A lumber
mill at Mulock was reported destroyed. Several barns were med.
A wood-cutting camp was believed
to have gone up In flames,
FLOOD IN FOOCHOW
FOOCHOW, China—The wont
flood In 38 ytan engulfed this
city, causing a heavy Ion of lit*.
Ralni In northwut Fuklin province unt the Mln river roaring
over It* banki. Boata wen btlng
uud on Foochow's submerged
struts.
SUICIDE* ON THE 8AHARA
ALGIERS, Algeria—A searching
party found the bodies of an Englishwoman and an Englishman on thc
scorching Sahara sands and rescued
twa Frenchmen near death from
thirst.
The woman. Mn. Knight, widow
of an English aviator who committed suicide recently at Agadcz,
French Wut Africa, had slashed her
wrist, apparently ln an attempt to
end her torture trom thirst and neat.
FRANCE READY TO TALK
STABILIZATION
REIMS, Franc*—Prealdsnt Albert
Lebrun, voicing for th* flnt tim*
th* new "golden franc" government'* policy, asserted Franc* Is
ready to talk stabilization.
NRA EMERGENCY
WASHINGTON—Organised labor
chieftains today were summoned to
a special war council to chart tactics
for battling "the emergensy created"
by NRA's death, and to consider thc
supreme court's power to invalidate
laws.
SOCIAL CREDIT PARTY IN B.C.?
CALOARY —Extension of the
Social Credit party Into British
Columbia, Saskatchewan and Manitoba was suggested by William
Abarhart, leader of the Alberta
Social Credit lugue in an address
htn at the Prophetic Bible Initl-
tut*.
harmed. This the revivalist attributed to his prayers.
FLOODS FATAL FOR.FAMILY
BENKELMAN, Nib—The bod-
dltt of Mr, tnd Mn. Robert Ptttit
and thtlr six children wtre recovered from th* attic of thtlr
wrecked homt on tht banki of
tht Republican rivtr ilx milei
wut of hire, a rescue crtwro-
ported.
Latest unofficial estimatei Indicated at lust 12 persons died
nur hare,
•AFE IN QUAKE ZONE
KINGSTON, Ont.-Word was received here Col. Ernut Dawson,
royal engineers, and his wife, in
the earthquake area at Quetta, India, were safe. Relatives herc had
feared for their safety.
NEW TELEVISION INVENTION
BRUSSELS—Report* of a television Invention by Leon Damas,
a radio amateur, enabling picture* to be projected In original
colon simultaneously with sound,
stirred B*lglum. ,
QUEBEC MEMBER DIES
QUEBEC — Joseph Power, 49,
Liberal member of the Quebec legislature since 1927 died at his home
here Saturday after a lengthy illness.
LIBS   WOULD    REWRITE
B. N. A. ACT
NEWMARKET, Ont. — Promise
th* Liberal party, If returned to
power, would rewrite th* British
North America act to bring about
legal toclai reform, was made by
Hon. lan MacKenzie, M.P., Vancouver, apaaklng here Saturday.
PRESS MAN HONORED
LONDON—Henry Turner, secretary of the Empire Press union, was
among those concerned with the
Empire's Press receiving awards in
the king's birthday honors Ust. Mr.
Turner was made a commander of
the Order of the British Empire,
(C.B.E.), which does not carry the
designation "sir".
40,000 QUAKE VICTIMS
SIMLA, India, (Monday).—The
toll of death throughout th* Indian area afflicted by earthquakes
rose today to an unofficial estimate of 40,000 victims.
The unofficial compilation of
otal deaths, made at the mountain town and summer capital
of India, Included 28,000 at Quetta,
where tha (hocks wtre continuing,
CONDOLENCE FROM
ROOSEVELT
WASHINGTON-President Roosevelt sent the following message of
sympathy to King George:
"I am distressed by reports of the
disaster in Baluchistan resulting in
so much suffering and in the lou of
so many lives. The American people
Join with mc in extending deepest
sympathy to your majesty and to
the people of India."
DOCKS FIRE VICTIMS
ERIE, Pa.—A raging flra possibly of Incendiary origin, destroyed two big Pennsylvania railroad docks and almost 90 loaded
box oars at a loss tttlmated by
railroad officials at between $760.-
000 and $1,000,000.
TRAIL, B. C, June 3—The lacrosse squad of Washington State
college, Pullman, Wuhlngton, evacuated Trail Sunday with the experience of their flnt box lacrosse
fixture ta which they were defeated
23 goals to 8 at the Trail rtak Sunday night.
It wu tht umt team that took
Trail Into camp in a field game at
Pullman lut seuon. although unaccustomed to tht tricks of the recreated game, drew a larger gate than
any of the recent, local encounters
and after halt Ume elapsed, had
realized some of the ldiosyncracles
of the sport which hu ao recently
taken the country by storm. Probably the next thne the college "yan-
nignns" contact Trail's experienced
squad the latter'! winning margin
may be cut down considerably.
Nasmyth, attenuated centre of the
visiton was beyond doubt the cynosure of the struggle, pelting in
three ot the Pullman squad's goala
in the third quarter in rapid succession.'
Candee, the only head Imbued
with experience, and who kept the
moral of thc youngsten at a high
standard ln a tilt in which defeat
was inevitable, thrust two of tha
countera to bulge the neL Parker,
scintillating forard who continued
a stiff fight all the while ta play
was credited with the other two.
The fact that shots on goal compared far more favorably than ac-
utla scoru tor the visiton wu obviously due to the Inexperience ln
using the wood floor. Time after
time, when the visiting forwards
shot they misjudged the bounce and
instead of the ball reflecting at an
acute angle into the net the reflect* i
Ing angle was very much obtuse '
and consequently the pill glanced
high over the goalie's head.
One of the highlights of the
struggle occurred in the last quarter
when Goalie LeRoy grabbed the
pill and sprinted to the other end of
he rink but tailed to score. Of course
"Stew" Murdoch ,hefty defenceman
hopped between the goal rods to
guard the sanctum sanctorum,
GOAL SUMMARY
Piper and Fraser Enter,
Finals of First
Flight
TRAIL, B.C., June 2.-A Trail
and e Nelson contestant naohld
tht final Of tht championship
flight of tht Koottnty optn golf
tournty htld it tht Rossland-Trall
Qolf end Country olub over the
wttk*tnd. D. Staok of Ntlion end
R.C. Crowe ef Trail, being the
two mm who wlll pliy off the.
flntl ntxt Sundiy.
Thret othir flight! wtrt oom*
plated to th* flnala, Fraatr and U
S. Plptr btlng tht finalists of the
flnt flight; Walters and Id Camp-
bill of tht noond; ind W. Qravu
and P. Turnbull of the third.
Danny Stack and R. C. Crowe
have played fine golf to get to the
finals. Stack did not do so well ln hli
qualifying rounds but he has twice
clipped two off par in the tournament play. J. Allen of Nelion wu
lecond in the qualifying round.
All flight final! wlll be played
thii morning, but the championship final between Stack and Crowe
will be played next Sunday.
CHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT
Flrat flight-P. P. Mclntyre but
T. R. Wilson; J. Atwell beat Percy
Halliwell; R. C. Crowe beat J.
Kerr; R. Nesbltt beat L. S. Piper;
D. Stack beat E. W. Haelwood; J.
Wright beat E. Jandrell; R. Anderson beat B. Townshend; J, Allen
beat Fraser.
Second bracket—J. Atwell beet P.
F. Mclntyre; R. C. Crowe beat R.
Nesbltt; D. Stack beat J. Wright; R.
Anderaon beat J. Allan.
Semi-final-R. C. Crowe beet J.
Atwell; D. Stack btat R. Anderion.
FIRST FLIGHT
First bracket—T. R. Wilson beet P.
Halliwell; L. S. Piper beat J. Kerr;
E. W. Hazlcwood but E. Jandrell;
Fraser beat B. Townshend.
Semi-finals— L. S. Piper beat T. R.
Wilson; Fraser beat E. W. Hazle*
wood.
SECOND FLIGHT
Fint bracket — J.  Cran  beet \
Schroeder; A. Moore beat Oravu;
E. Campbell beat McBean; McBride
beat Brown; H. Carruthers beat 0.
Wilson; Latham beat Turnbull.
The tint two of the aecond bracket
drew a bye in the tint bracket.
Second bracket—Bert Walters beat
Wetmore; A. Moore beat J. Cran; '
E. CampbeU beat McBride; H. Carruthers beat Latham.
Semi-finals - Walten but A.
Moore and E. Campbell beat H.
Carruthers.
THIRD FLIGHT
Flrat bncket—Brown beat McLean; Turnbull beat Wilson; Schroeder and Graves drew a bye.
Semi-finals—Oraves but Schroeder; Turnbull beat Brown.
Aces Lead Bul Are
Low in Ihe Scoring
Alice Dunn Heads the
Home Run Hitters;
Sox Lead in Runs
PRINCISI  INGRID
Prlnoeti Ingrld tf Iwtdtn, brldt of Crown Prlnct Frtdtrlk of
Denmark. Is pictured tbovt In t gtwn thtt wis worn by htr treat-
anndmothtr. Quun Jutphln*, a step-daughter of Naeolton. Prlncui
Inorld, th* most sought ef ill tureottn prlncusts, hts bttn linked
bv oourt goaslo with more thtn half • doun pottntltl royal bloodtd
husbands. But It took htr flnt wooer, Prlnc* Frtdtrlk, to win htr
lovt. Thty wtre mirried Miy 24.
First quarter:
Trail—Morrli :32, Daveyi 1:27,
Daveys 2:00, Morris 2:37, Daveys
3:00, Daveys 4:30, Morris 6:88,
Pullman—Parker 10:30.
Trail—Griplch 13:10, Cronle 14:82.
Penalties—Wilson 2, 8.
Second quarter:
Pullman—Candee 1:47.
Trail-Daveys (Wilson) 2:34, Wilson 6:00. Griplch 10:00, Merlo 12:01
Wilson 13:13.
Penalties—Davey 2, Morris 8, 2.
Third quarter:
Pullman—Nasmyth :6.
Trail—Griplch :32. Cronle 2:37.
Pullman—Nasmyth 3:01, Candee
4:17, Nasmyth 5:11.
Trail—Morris 8:57, Wilson (Morris) 9:06.
Penalties—Grlplch 4, Slademan 2.
Fourth quarter:
Pullman—Parker 3:14.
Trail-McQuarrie (Wilion) 4:16,
Morris 6:43.
Pullman—Slademan 12:20.
Trall-WUson 13:05, Wilson 13:59.
Penalties—Wilson 2, Murdoch 2,
j Parker 2.
I    Shots on goal:
Pullman-Klock   .... 22 16 17 18-73
I Trail-LeRoy 11 13 17 10-51
I    Score by quarters:
!    Flnt quarter—Pullman 1, Trail 9.
I Second quarter—Pullman 2, Trail 14.
Third quarter—Pullman 6, Trail 18.
Lut quarter—Pullman 8, Trail 32.
The teams were:
Pullman—Klock, goal; Hardin,
Olsen, defence; Jorgens, rover; Nasmyth. Parker, Candee, forwards;
substitutes, Slademan, Corbin, Tram
and Schlade.
Trail—LeRoy. goal; Archibald,
Bradbury and S. Murdoch, defence;
McQuarrie, rover; Morris, Haley,
Wilson, Baillie, Brennen. Grlplch,
Cronle and Merlo, forwards.
Referee—David Smart.
Judge of play—A. B. Thompson.
LADItl SOFTBALL LIAGUE
STANDING
Teams: W L  RF   RA Pet
Hume Acu 4  2    98    84   .667
Red Sox 3   3   121   119   .300
Toronto Stars  2  4   113   115   „
At pruent the Hume Acu are
leading the Ladles' Softball lugue
with four wins and two losses, and
it is also a notable fact that they
have scored ltss rum thtn the other
two teami ind hive had less scored
against them. Red Sox have had
the most scored against tbem, but
they have also scored the most runa.
To date 30 home runs have been
poled out. with the Toronto Stan being credited with 15 of them. The
Hume Acu have 10 and Uie Red Sox
four. Alice Dunn of the Stars leada
with seven and Berna Kline, a teammate, and Aria Saare ot the Hume
Aces, each have three. Alvlna Arlt
of the Red Sox has two.
In summing up the three-baggera,
the Stan again lead with alx of the
nine scored. Alice Dunn and Jean
Paterson each have two. Haul
Spiers of the Stan leads the two-
bagger artists with six, and with
Alice Dunn Is Ued for having scored
Ihe most runs, 17 being their mark.
Rou Stewart and Clara Talberg
have each scored 16.
	
Trail Team Unable
to Travel Sunday
When the East TraU team, captained by Jimmy Morrli, wu unable to travel to Nelson Sunday to
play the Hume Hotel men's softball
team, the Trail Jlmmlu played a
double header girli game Sunday
afternoon in Nelson. The men's game
will probably be arranged at a later
date.
REVIVALIST DARES SNAKE!
ST. CHARLES, Va.-Three big
rattlunaku refuied lo bite the Rev.
George Hensley, holiness revivalist
who uyi hli "faith cure" li healing a previously bitten arm, u an
excited throng shouted and prayed
at open-air servlcu.
Hensley and five other penons
handled the snaku at a revival at
Ramsay, near here, bul neither the
preacher   nor   his   followers   wu
MASEFIELD HONORED
LONDON - The Order of Merit, |
one of the most distinguished honors his majesty can confer, was
granted in the birthday honon list
J tonight to John Mascfleld, the poet
laureate..
Lord Bledisloc, formerly govern-,
or-general of New Zealand, was
elevated to a vlscountcy.
LADY JANE TUPPER DIES
VANCOUVIR-Lady Jana Tupper, 76, widow of tht lata Sir
Charlts Hibbert Tupptr, who waa
a ton of Sir Charlu Tupper, premier of Canada from 1884 to 1887,
It deid here ifter a ihort Illness.
West Transfer Co.
THE PIONEER FIRM—ESTABLISHED 1899
Prompt, Efficient
Hauling and Transfer
Work for All
Requirements
FOR SERVICE-PHONE S3
 —•—
SEED MEASURE
AND FERRY (UT
AMONG DEEDS
Nelson Board Aids Mr.
Noakes Reports to
Gathering
TWO RESOLUTIONS
IFOR SEMI-ANNUAL
Accomplishment!  of the West
( Kootenay Central Farmen' lnitltute,
the delegate body repreunUng the
1 Farmen institutes ot the West Kootenay and Boundary, during the
last year included legislative renewal of the Seed Protection act,
■wanted by the Grand Forks seed
growen, and obtaining of a special
Kootenay lake ferry rate for rul-
dents of the east side ot Kootenay
lake aerved by the ferry, the report
of Secretary K. Wallace to the Rob-
! ion convention Thunday Indicated.
NELSON COOPERATION
In connection with the ferry faru,
the Nelson board ot trade helped,
, A. H. Noakes of Balfour, the institute's delegate to the board, reported.
Mr. Noaku, ln a report on his
stewardship, itated that he had
made many representations to Nel-
Bon merchants on the matter of
cutting prices on district agricultural produce, and that the cooperation given was now much better.
C. B. Appleton of Procter, advisory board member the past year,
reported the ineffectual efforts
made to get the usual meeting ot
the advisory board -to lay the resolution! from the various centrals
before the legislature, the minister
of agriculture, Hon. K. C. MacDonald, taking the position that the
meeting ihould be omitted, u funds
THI NILSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B.C—MONDAY MORNINO. JUNI 8. 1IJS-
Tullps and Pansles Combine In a
Garden
Bon Ton Meat Mkt.
Phones 2S2 end 84     P.O. Box 39
SETTLED HERE TO STAY
Meat prices will be no higher than
operating expenses.   The more
we sell the cheaper you luy it
Call or Phone. Wi Deliver.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
Maket tht
Finest Mayonnaise
VITTUCCI
VIRGIN
OLIVE OIL
I Good grocers j
.sell Itl
Him-*r you noticed that yonr
kippiest houn occur on dsys wbtn
you feel yeur best?
Hive more of theu hippy diys.
You ud ill your fsmily. Gnsrd
health while yon hare it. Knp en
the sunny side of life.
Tbe greateit enemy of health
li common constipation. It may
unse loss of appetite and energy.
Certainly it Villi enthuilaim! Yet
it cm he banished by eating a
delicious cereal.
Lebontery tests show Kellogg's
Ail-Bun supplies "hulk" and vitamin B to relieve common constipation. Also iron for the Hood.
The "bulk" In All-Bun is much
like thit in leafy vegetables. How
moth pleaunter to ut this deli*
eioui resdr-to-eit cereal than to
take patent medicine*. Two table*
spoonfuls daily aro usually sufficient, Chronlo
uses, with each
meal. If not relieved this way,
see your doctor.
Made by Kellogg
in London, Out.
Panslu and tulips are an effective
combination.
By  DIAN   HALLIDAY
Centre!   Preu  Oarden   Expert
Wherever we ihop theee dayi we
tlnd basketi of panilu tor nle. And
how beautiful they are, ln such
varied colon that we want to buy
them all!
At thia time ot year they ahould
appeal as a flnt flower for the win
dow boxej and porch boxu; later
the aummer flowen may be uied
ln the boxu and tbe panslu can
then be transplanted to vacant spots
in the garden.
Theae low growing flowen are
but when planted ln a cool, moiit
•oil ln a lunny poaitlon. They do
not mind a little shade during the
day, but lf they are planted in com
plete ahade, they usually become
straggly.*Pansles should not be allowed to grow long, weak branches,
but ihould be kept pinched back
to form compact plants. In the hot,
dry season they ahould be mulched
to keep their roota moist and cool
The one and only way to keep
your pansles producing good flowen li to never allow seeds to form,
rather pick the flowen Just as they
seem to be wilting. The more panslu you pick, the more you wlll
have. Pansles should be given complete fertilizer after their fint big
blooming period, to encourage further large sired flowers.
Sometime! the wire worms or
click-beetle attack the roota of pan
sies, especially lf they are growing
in a light toil. To control them, use
a soil Insecticide containing naptha
lene.
that would normally be available
fot it had gone for unanticipated
outlays ln getting the immensely
important marketing set-up in operation.
RESOLUTIONS COMING UP
Two resolutions were remitted to
the semi-annual central institute,
which meets in Nelson six monthi
hence, for action. The lint of thue,
from Robson, was as follows:
"Whereas the difference in the curriculum in British Columbia, Alberta, Saakatchewan, and Manitoba
causes expense to the parents and
hardship to the children who move
from one province to the other;
"Be It ruolved that thc Wut
Kootenay Central Farmen institute
requests the department ot education of British Columbia to take
active steps towards the standardization of text-books in tne far
western provinces."
Major 11. Turner Lee of Bonnington also sponsored a motion for
that meeting, on the subject of the
farmer being forced to pay minimum wagu for labor when not
himself able to get returns of equal
standard. This motion reads:
"Whereu it is admitted that the
goal of far nen is to earn by their
labor a dally wage sufficient to
maintain them; and
Whereas the law utabliihu a
minimum wage for other laborers
and proposes that farmen ahould
be compelled to pay that wage although they are not entitled to receive lt;
"Thli meeting protests against the
minimum wage law being applied
to farmen employing labor, and
particularly against such law being
enforced in packing houses which
are being used solely for the packing of fruit of the groweri owning
such packing houses."
VISITORS ENTERTAINED
As usual, delegates and viliton
were entertained at the homu of
the hospitable residents ot Robson
tor the noon luncheon, while the
ladlu served a luncheon in the hall
at the conclusion of the day's sessions.
At the latter function, a vote of
thanks to thc ladlu proposed by
Secretary K. Wallace wu canted
by a standing vote, and was replied
to by Mn. 0. B. Ballard, head of
the commlttu of arrangements, the
other memben of which were Mn.
H. Foxlee, Mn. C. Duplet, Mn. W.
Campbell. Mn. A. Mitchell, G. M.
Miller and C. E. Tutt
Delegates and vlslton to the convention were H. Rive, Mn. V. S.
MacLachlan, Victoria) R. H. Homersham. Kamloops; W. E. Haaklns, 0.
W. Hembling, G. A. Barrat, Kelowna; A. K- Loyd, Rutland; J. E.
Britton, Summerland; C. H. Hayden,
Vernon; C. V. Meggltt, 0. L. Landon,
Grand Forki; H. Kershaw, Edge-
wood, W. Boothby: Major H. Turner
Lee, Lieut.-Col. John Murray, M.
Downle, Kootenay River; P. W.
Green, E. Bailey, F. Carter, W.
Cutler, Winlaw;.!. C. Hunt, Lleut-
Col. M. V. Allan, W. M. Vence, P.
H. Sheffield, H. H. Currie, Mn. H.
H. PUU, Nelson; J. J. Campbell,
WlUow Point: A. H. Noakes, Balfour; 0. B. Appleton, Procter; K.
Wallace, Boswell; F. H. Jackson, W.
S. McAlplne, Cruton; 0. B. Ballard. W. Waldle, G. M. Miller. G.
Clyde, Dr. A, P. McDiarmld. C. S.
Squires, J. T. Webster, C. E. Tutt,
W. T. Wlckham, Robaon.
Mra. J. F. Doerksen
Still Hospital
Patient
Mn. John F. Doerksen, postmistress at Ron Spur on the Great
Northern railway, beyond Erie, who
wu rushed to Kootenay Lake General hospital here for an emergency
operaUon foUowlng a sudden serious attack ot appendicltle, hu not
been discharged from the IniUtu-
tlon, u wu erroneously reported
in Saturday'! Nelaon Dally Newi.
She wiU be a patient for aome time
yet
Mn. D. Doerksen of Nelaon, her
mother-in-law, who wu alio a patient, has been discharged from the
hospital.
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QSB 9610 kll. (3188 m) end Q8D
11,780 kll. (25.53 m)
PART 1
0:19 a.m. Big Ben. Newi. Dairy
Produce Notei; 9:30 "Trooping the
Colors." CelebraUon In London of
the birthday ot hia majesty the
King. Relayed from the Hone
Guards, Whitehall, London; 10:80
From the London thuter; 10:80
B.B.C. MlUUry band; 11:10 Talk:
"Music and thi Ordinary Listener."
Sir Wal/ord Davles; 10:30 Virlety;
12:30 p.m. Cloie down,
PART II
12:46 p.m. London Music Festlvil.
Fifth concert (part II). Relayed
from the Queen'i hall, London; 1:35
Serge Krlsh Septet; 2:00 News; 2:19
Dance muilc; 2:49 Close down.
Social Happenings
in Nelson City
Thii column ii conducted by Mn. M. J. Vigneux. All newt et a
aoclal nature, Including receptions, private entertainments, personal
Items, marrlagu, etc., will appear in this column. Telephone Mrs.
Vigneux at her home, 919 Silica atreet.
Lady Furness Poses Wtth Her Son
A pretty "at home" wai given
Saturday by Mn. George Hontead
et her home on Robion itreet In
honor of her daughter, Mlu Betty
Hontead, whose marriage to Edwin
Cartmel taku place this momlng
at 6 o'clock. The home wu beautifully arranged with quantltlu of
lilac*, vari-colored tulips, Uly of the
valley and iris. Presiding at the tea
urns, with the table centered with a
large low bowl of primroies -and
forget-me-nots were Mrs. Fred H.
Graham Mn. George Johnstone,
Mrs. L. E. Bordon, and Mn. Charles
F. Hunter. Assisting by serving
were Mn. Harold Lakes. Mn. S. G.
Price of Trail, Mn. Harry H. B.
Horton, Mn. J. Percy Coates, Miss
Elizabeth Vance, Miu Annabelle
Dunk, the Misiei Kay and Nancy
Nlsbet Mn. A. T. HonwUl, Mrs.
Clare M. Bennett, Mlss Loleta Horstead, Miu Mary Long and Miss
Gladness Horstead. Mn. Horstead's
invited guests included Mrs. A, G.
Cuthbert, Mrs. Benjamin McGregor
of Vancouver, Mn. Middleton, Mlss
Mildred Irvine, Mn. George Johnstone, Mn, C. Kelman, Mn. J. D.
Kerr of Longbeach, Mrs. Rene Kerr
ot Longbeach, Mlss Irene Edmondson, Mrs. W. S. King, Miu Rosemary King, Mn. T. A. Clarke, Mrs.
Harold Laku, Miu Jean Lambert,
Mn. Paul Lincoln, Mrs. Jack McDonald, Mn. J. A. McDonald, Miss
Grace McDonald, Mrs. H. H. MacKenzie, Mrs, J. M. Gordon, Mrs. F.
H. Graham, Mlss Dorothea Graham,
Mrs. A. H. Green, Miu Molly Green.
Mrs. W. R. Grubbe, Mrs. J. P. Gussin, Mrs. R. D. Hall, Mrs. C. H. Hamilton, Mrs. G. Hartin, Mn. A. T.
Horswill, Mlu Eileen Horswill, Mrs.
H. H. B. Horton. Mrs. R. E. Horton.
Miss Carmine Horton. Mrs. Reginald
Dill, Mn. O. Lee Warner, Mn. C. F.
Hunter, Mn. G. A. Hunter, Mrs.
Leslie Craufurd, Miss Ruth Craufurd, Mrs. Harry Dunk, Mlss Annabelle Dunk, Mrs. R. W. Dawson,
Dunnett Mn. Arthur Foster, Mrs.
Mn. E. E. L. Dewdney, Mlss Doreen
Dunnett, Mn. Arthur Foster, Mrs.
W. T. Fotheringham, Mn. C. W.
MacBey ot Tnll, Mn. C. V. Gagnon,
Mrs. J. Gansner, Mlu Olive Gibbon,
Mn. J. A. Gilker. Mln Jean Gllker,
Mrs. G. S. Godfrey, Mn. A. T.. Godfrey, Misses Georgina and Ada
Brown, Mn. Donald McLeod. the
Misses Margaret, Molra and Gladys
McLeod, Mtu Aileen Mansfield,
Mn. J. F. Meagher. Mn. W. W.
Ferguson, Mn. Austin Carter, Mn.
H. L. Landry, Miu Vivian Landry,
Mra. J. S. McGregor, Mrs. P. G.
Morey, Mn. G. F. Motion, Mrs. N.
Murphy, Miss Helen Murphy, Mrs.
L. McBride Mn. I. G. Nelson, Mrs.
W. A. Nlsbet. Mlues Nancy and
Kay Nisbet Mrs. J. D. Notman,
Mn. J. O'Shea, Mn. F. F. Payne,
Mrs. C. D. Pearson, Mlu Gladys
Pearaon. Mn. R. A. Peebles, Mrs.
Kirby Orenfell, Mrs. C. A. Larson,
Mn. Roy Pollard, Mn. H. W. Robertson, Mrs. W. 0. Rose, Mlss Jean
Robertson, Mlu H. Roiling, Mrs.
Normin McLeod, Mlu Phyllis Sheffield of Nakusp, Mn. S. G. Smyth,
Mrs. C. H. Stark, Mrs. L. Choquette.
Mri. W. Cameron, Mlu Dorothy
Sturgeu, Mn. D. D. Townsend, Mrs.
W. M. Vance, Mlues Helen and
Elizabeth Vance, Mn. Laverne
Vance, Mn. William Waldie, Miss
Jean Waldle, Mn. W. M. Walker,
Mn. A. H. Wallace, Miss Dorothy
Wallace, Mn. W. E. Wauon, Mrs.
H. S. Watson, Mn. F. A. Whitfield,
Mn. C. E. Wragge. Mrs. L. Hallett.
of Willow Point, Mrs. D. H. Proudfoot Mrs. Williim Taylor, Mrs. A.
Vigneux, Mn. J. Sturgeon, Mn. W.
J. Sturgeon, Miu Alia Johnstone.
Mre. Wilfred Allan, Mn. J. T. Andrews, Mrs. C. W. Appleyard, Mrs.
A. Balrd. Mn. F. C. Sharpe. Mrs.
Nelson Ball, Mn. C. M. Bennett,
Mrs. J. H. Bennett Mn. C. D. Blak-
wood, Mrs. J. A. Flngland of Kimberley, Mn. W. S. Heftteman, Miss
V. Heffernan, Mn. W. Hunter, of
Trail, Mn. L. L. Boomer, Mlu Lois
Boomer, Mn. T. H. Bourque. Mrs.
William Brown, Mrs. J. G. Bunyan,
Miss M. H. Cameron. Mrs. McKay,
Mrs. John Cartmel, Mn. A. J. Cor-   	
niih, Mn. L. V. Rogen. Mn. M.M. I of the honored guut at the table.
Watson of Kootenay Bay, Mn. Wii
Uam Fruer of Kootenay Bay, Mrs.
L. F. Johnstone of Salmo, Mrs. W.
E. Coles. Mlssu Jean and Dorothea
Coles, Mn. S. G. Price of TraU, Mrs.
A. L. McCulloch, Mn. Alex Lelth,
Mn. L. H. Choquette, Mn. W. M.
Cunllffe, Mn. A. E. Murphy, Mn.
R R Brown, Mn. Arthur Lakes of
Vancouver, Mn. Arthur Colllnson,
Mn. Roy Hood, Mn. D. Fiiher of
Kootenay Bay, Mn. R. D. Barnes,
Mn. C. H. Bean. Mn. M. Roberts,
Mn. L. M. Varner, Mn. J. M. Robertson, Mn. J. H. Argyle, Mn. H.
B. Oore, Mrs. M. Rocllffe. Mn. S.
Bostock. Mrs. E. Steele, Mrs. F. R.
Pritchard, Mn. H. W. Searhon, Mrs.
Duncan Smith, Mrs. Howard Bush,
Mn. A. T. Stephenson. Mn. H. E.
Dill, Min Eileen Dill. Mlss Marcla
Towgood of Sandon, Mrs. C. F. McHardy, Mrs. R. W. Jarvis of Procter,
Mn. Rex Jarvis, Mn. C. W. Tyler,
Mrs. H. R. Townsend. Miss V. Eidt,
Miu D. Wylle, Mrs. H. McArthur.
Mn. T. Ledingham, Miu J. Bins.
Mrs. J. E. Annable, Min Lottie Annable, Mn. N. Hagarty. Mln Mary
Long and Mn. J. B. Gray.
lie
Mr. and Mn. C. P. Yaegtr and
daughter of Spokane have arrived
to take up ruidence In their houseboat on the north shore.
.   .   .
Mr. Oscanon. mining man of Erie,
visited town Saturday.
• •   »
Among thoee from Nelson rttend-
ing the Trall-Rossland golf tournament li Jamu Grant Allan.
• •   •
Mire Roiemiry King, who teaches
at Paumore, wai ln the city over
the holiday, a guest of her pirents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. S. King, Kerr
apartments.
• «   •
J. M. Conroy of Rouland visited
Ncison during the week-end.
eel
Mr. and Mri. Clarence Herman
of Alniworth spent Saturday in
the city.
• •  *
Miu Eleanor Campbell, who
teaches at Balfour, visited over the
week-end holiday with friends in
Nelion.
I i*   o
A. W. Hollovt;' of the Reno mine
•pint Saturday in town.
.   .   .
Mn. Robert Thompaon. High
itreet, Ftlrvlew, hu ai her guests
her mn ind daughter-ln-law, Mr.
and Mri. Malcolm Thompion of
Trail.
• •   •
Mn. JotwMcLeod and children,
Peggy and Ian, of Procter vlalted
Nelion Saturday.
.  .  .
Shoppen In town Seturday Included Mrs. H. L. Butchard and ion
of New Denver.
• •   •
Mr. and Mn. W. G. Johnaton apent
yuterday in Trail, guuta at the
home of the latter's brother-in-law
and sister, Rev. Frederick and Mn.
StDenis.
• •   •
Mrs. W. R. Jarvii of Procter and
daughter Mary were ln the city
over the week-end guest, at the
home ot Mn. Jarvis' lon and daughter-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Jarvii,
Baker itreet
• •   •
Joseph Lancaster, mining man of
SUverton, wu in town during the
week-end.
• *   •
Mn. Frank Rushton ot Nakusp
visited Nelson during thc week-end.
B. Townshend of Willow Point
attended  the  Trall-Rossland   golf
tournament during the week-end.
.   i   .
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Muirhead of
Sunshine Bay were city shoppen
Saturday.
• *  •
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baird, Silica
itreet, have left for a vacation to be
spent motoring to California. They
expect to go as tar as San Diego.
• •   •
Mr. and Mn. Joseph Speakman
of CasUegar were in the city yuterday, Mr. Speakman betng present
at tha Knlghta ot Columbus initiation.
• •  •
Mr. and Mn. D. McKay of Slocan
City spent the week-end ln Nelion.
• •   »
Peter Hardle of CasUegar vlalted
town Saturday.
• ■•   •
Mn. J. Klrkpatrlck ot Boswell
spent Saturday ln the city.
• •  •
T. R. Wilson wu among thoee
from Nelson to attend the Trail*
Ronland golf tournament during
the week-end.
see
Mr. and Mrs. Dugald McPherson
and family of Grand Forks were in
the city during thc week-end.
J. H. Gaines of Nakuip vlalted
town Saturday.
• •  •
Mlu Irene McGlillvray of Kulo,
who teachu at Whitewater, ipent
Saturday ihopplng in Nelion,
Guy W. Davis hu returned from
Greenwood. He wu accompanied
by C. S. Cradock, who hu left for
hii home in Vancouver.
.   .   .
Shoppen In the city Saturday Included Mrs. Roy Graham of Bonnington and her daughter.
E. M. Allen of Kaslo wu In the
city Saturday.
• •   •
R. L. McBride attended the Trail
Ronland golf tournament over the
week-end.
eee
Roy Pollard has as his guest his
nephew, Larry Fielding.
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Devltt of
Trail visited the Ainsworth hot
iprlngi.
• •   •
Brian Horstead of Trail li ln the
city to attend the wedding of his
sister, Mlu Betty Horstead, of Ed-
sister, Miu Betty Horstead, and Ed-
• *  *
Mn.  Allen  Wallace,   Kootenay
street, wu a dainty hoiteu recently when she entertained at a
miscellaneous shower and tea in
honor of Mlu Dorothy Hall. Gore
street, whose marriage is planned to
take place June 11. The glfta were
presented to Mlss Hall by little Doreen Wallace in a dainty basket
decorated in pink and white crepe.
A miniature bride marked the place
Tulips and lilacs were used through
out the rooms. Guests included Miss
Hall, Mn. A. B. HaU Miu Helen
Schupe,  Mn.  John  Towler, Mn.
Thelmi, Viscountess Furness, American-born London socialite,
pom ibove with hir ton, Anthony. Tha boy li grandion of the
founder ef Furness ihlp llm. Hli mother ctme to thl United States
lut wlnttr to aid her sister, Mn, Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt, In the
vain fight to regain ouatody of young Gloria,
Muir. Mn. Hicks. Mn. Gerald Mu-
ilel, Miu Pauline Wade, Mln Beatrice Matthewi, Mrs. T. G. Cooper,
Mrs. W. Brown, Mln Marjorie CoffM. Mlu Ruth Slndle. Mlu Mary
Rauket and Miss Maude Irene Dolphin.
. •   *   *
In honor of Edwin Cartmel and
hit fiance, Mln Betty Hontead,
whole marriage taku place thli
morning it 6 o'clock it St Saviour'!
pro-cathedral, Mr. and Mn. John
Cartmel entertained Friday night
at a bridge at their home on Silica
street. Harry H. B. Horton won the
honors of the game and Invited
guests were the Mines Kay and
Nancy Nisbet, Mlu Annabelle Dunk,
Mlss Doreen Dunnett Miu Irene
Kerr of Longbeach, MiM Helen
Vance, Mra. Jack Fingland of Kimberley, Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. B.
Horton, Johnny McLeod, J. F. Bunyan, J. B. Stark and Dr. and Mrs.
Clare M. Bennett
• *   •
Mr. tnd Mn. T. D. Rolling, who
have been apendlng their honeymoon motoring through CaUfornia
and Salt Lake dlitrlct have returned and taken up residence at
their Willow Point home.
• •   •
D. Stack wai among thoie trom
Nelson attending the Trail-Ronland
golf tournament over the week-end.
• »   •
J.  Ragotte of Alnaworth    wu
among shoppers ln town Saturday.
I  e ,e
Mr. and Mn. T. S. Plews ot Rossland visited Nelson during the weekend.
• *   •
Mn. J. D. Kerr and daughter,
Mln Irene, were city vlslton Saturday,
• •   »
Henry and Leonard Davla of Rlondel   spent   Saturday   shopping  ln
Nelson.
• •  •
Ingrld Cameron of Vancouver has
arrived to make his home ln the city.
• •   •
Mn. Smith of Ainsworth wu ln
town Saturday.
• •   •
Mra. E. Ball left yuterday for
New Westminster where lhe will
vlalt her diughter.
.   .   .
Ctpt. A. E. Dalgas left yuterdty
by motor for a brief vlilt in Vancouver.
• •  •
Mra. Maitland Harrison wu ln
from Corra Linn Stturdiy.
• •   *
Mrs. J. E. Annable, Min Charlotte
rkGood
Housekeeping
By MRS. MARY MORTON
MENUS, .RECIPES and
HINTS
J. E. Britton Is
Nakusp Speaker
NAKUSP, B.C., June 2.-J. E.
Brltton of Summerland experimental farm addreued a meeting ln the
Small hall Tuesday. He ouUlned
the various departments and the
experiments tried at the farm. He
also gave some valuable Information with regard to the feeding and
pruning of trees.
H. E. Parkyn of Burton motored
to town Wednesday.
W. G. M. Hakeman wu a visitor ln Nelaon Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Miller of Graham's Landing were ihoppcrs In
Nakusp Wednuday.
Mrs. J. Cadden of Burton was a
visitor hire Wednuday. She wu
en route to Trail.
Miu Bartle of Halcyon who had
been e gueit of Mra. H. Clark left
Wednesday.
Mln Nellie Harvey returned
Tueiday after ipending a week,
a gueit of Mn. H. Waterfleld.
Young Mln Margaret Vinall was
•rnVO
•Mat FIVI
GRAND FORKS
MISS HONORED
GRAND FORKS, B.C., June >.-
Mln Hotel Muon, whose marriage
to Jamu Toogood of Rossland taku
place June 3 wu a guest of honor
at a lovely shower given by Mri.
E. Bailey who wu aulsted by Mrs.
Meakers. The evening wu spent
playing cards, Mn, Todhunter receiving high honon and Mlu Louise
McPherson, consolation. Mn. Mason
won a special prlu. Lunch was served ln the sitting room, where the
guut ot honor was seated under an
archway beautifully decorated with
white and mauve lilacs.
The bride-to-be wu the recipient of many lovely gifts, which
were drawn into the room on a
UtUe wagon pulled by Lloyd Bailey
and Gladys Meakes, who were
dreued aa diminutive bride and
groom, during which Mrs. D. M.
Perley played Mendelssohn's wedding march.
The guuts were: Mn. Blckerton,
Mn. Todhunter. Mn. Pope, Miss
Josephine Ruzicka, Mlss Wlnnifred
Savage, Mlss Ruby Savage, Mn.
Scott, Mrs. Kldd, Mlss Irene Blckerton, Mlss Ruby Savage, Mra. Gard-.
lner, Mrs. Prltchtrd, Mn. Herb
Henderson. Mn. Ken Henderson,
Mn. Perley. Mrs. Docksteader, Min
Alice Spraggett, Miss Alta Deporter,
Mln Madeline McDougall. Mln
Florence McDougall, Miss Berta McLeod, Miss Katherlne Henniger, Mn,
Tutt, Mn. Muon, Mn. Peterson,
Mn. Graham, Mn. Kitchener, Mrs.
Lewis and Mn. Norris.	
hosteu at a delightful chlldren'i
party Tuuday, tha occasion being
her birthday anniversary. Among
Sieets were Charlotte and Gladya
arrow, Beatrice Steenoff, Gladys
Olson, Evelyn Smith, Vivian Ber-
rard, Louise and Margaret Brodle,
June Oram, Ruth and OUve Johnion.
J. Menzlu of Glendevon wu ln
town Wedneiday.
Mr. Blehl of Burton wu a rtiltor here Tueaday.
I. Johnion wu a viiltor to WUson
Like.
Mr. and Mn. J. Jamu and Mra.
I. Johnion of Arrow Park Were
among ihopperi ln town Tuudiy.
Mrs. R. Isllp hu u her gueati Mn.
R. Stevena and Mn. Murrell ot
Cruton.
H. Kershaw left Wednuday for
Nelson.
R. Allan and C. Hadden ot Nelson are visitors In Nakusp.
Mra. J. Roblna of Arrow Park wu
a Nakusp vilitor Tuuday.
A. Robion of Edgewood la viiltlng in town thii week.
Mr. and Mn. Du Mont motored
to town from Hunter'i Siding, Tuuday.
Mr. and Mn. K. Kautzman and
children and Mr. and Mn. P. Hal-
arwlch motored to town from Burton Wednesday.
Mr. and Mn. C. Rollins are vlslton in town. Their son rectntly
underwent an operation in Arrow
Lakes hospital.
Annable, Mn. L. V. McLachlan of
Victoria and Mrs. H. H. Pitta motored to Procter Saturday.
* •   •
Felix Deprato of Ainsworth spent
Saturday shopping in Nelion.
Mr. and Mn. L. McLean of Spokane were in the city during the
week-end.
• •   •
J. D. Kerr of Longbeach motored
to Trail Saturday where he attended the week-end Trail and Rouland golt tournament.
GOWNS OR
PAJAMAS
Printed voile gowns in
very fine quality in gold,
blue or green; or cotton
crepe psjsmss. Sizes in
small, medium or large.
MONDAY SPECIAL—
Your Choice st , f 1.55
cMea&her's Ltd.
Menu Hint
Baked Egga    Molded Tomato Salad
Green Peas
Strawberries or Fruh Pineapple
Sugar Cookies or Little Ginger
Cakes
Coffee
This egg dish takes the place ot
meat ln today's menu. The chives
or onions may be omitted, and it
still ls a good dish. Season well.
Two cookie or cake recipes are
submitted tor your choice.
Today's Recipes
Baked Eggs — Two tablespoons
butter, one-half cup milk, three
cups mashed potatoes, salt, pepped
paprika, two tablespoons chopped
chlvu or onion, 9 eggs. Add the butter and milk to the hot mashed
potatoes and setson to tute. Bett
well, add the chives and spread in
a shallow greased baking dish. Make
five hollows, and in each pltce a
raw egg. Sprinkle with paprika
and bake In a moderate oven (375
degreu F.) unUl the eggi are firm.
Sugar Cookies—One cup thick
sour cream, one cup sugar, one-halt
teaspoon aoda, one-half teaspoon
baking powder, one teaapoon ult,
one teupoon vanilla extract one-
half teaapoon mace, one egg. Flour
to make soft dough. Stir the sugar
and cream together thoroughly. Add
the egg, wellbeaten. Mix the sodt,
biking powder, salt tnd mace with
one cup of sifted flour to mike a
toft dough. Turn out on t floured
board and roll lightly to one-fourth
Inch in thlckneu. Shape with cookie
cutter, dipped in flour; place on
oiled cookie sheet or on the back
of a flat pan. Bake In a moderately
hot oven, 279 degreea F., 12 to 19
minutes.
Little Ginger Cakei—One-fourth
cup shortening, one cup sugar, one
egg, one-half cup milk, one-eighth
teaspoon salt, two cups sifted flour,
three teaspoons baiting powder,
three-fourths teaspoon ginger. Cream
butter and sugar, add egg, well
beaten. Sift flour, ult, baking powder and ginger, and add alternately
with the muk to the flnt mixture.
Pour into imall buttered muffin tins.
Sprinkle with sugar and bake ln a
moderate oven 350 degreu F., from
20 to 29 minutes.
FACTS AND FANCIES
Beets With Lemon Stuce
One pint beets, cooked or canned;
one-half teupoon ult, one-half cup
lugtr, two teupooni cornitarch,
one-half cup water, one-fourth cup
lemon Juice. Cut the beeti into slic-
u. Mix the ult, lugar and cornitarch, one-half cup water, one-
fourth cup lemon Juloe. Cut the
beets into slices. Mix the ult sugar
and cornstarch, add to the water,
tdd lemon Juice and and heat Boll
five mlnutu, itlrrlng constantly.
Pour over the beets end let stand
half an hour. Add one tablespoon
butter, reheat and lerve at once.
Devise Food Hetter
"To hut my btby'i food," wrltu
t youhg mother, "I fill en old water
pitcher (which mod to grace a
withstand ln Uie late Victorian era)
with hot water and place the bottle in it. The food is warmed In Just
a few mlnutu. Any pitcher will
do If it Is tall enough to cover the
bottle and ls heat resilient"
NABOB .. first in
-Canada to Introduce
Vacuum Packing, now
presents THER MA 1.0
... a new roasting pro-
i that being! out mote
every   quality   that
coffee   delicious.
lioit cannot buy as ijuorf as \.\BOB for It
Change of
Delivery Schedule
Our summer Khedule ef esrly morning
milk delivery will stsrt tomorrow, Tuesdsy,
June 4th.
The Mondsy delivery todsy will be msde
ss uiusl end the Tuesdsy delivery will be
completed by 6 o'clock Tuesdsy morning.
For Safe Milk and Cream
Always Insist on Curlew
Milk
Cresm
Ice Cresm
Butter
CREAMERY
Pllm Dtlrlti
Limited
All
Perfectly
Paiteuriied
Products
 	
PAGE SIX-
Nriwm Bathj lima
Eatabllahed April 22, 1903,
"Britiih Columbia'! Most Inttrttting Newspaper^
ALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS
Published every  morning except Bunday  br
tbe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED.
311  Bakar  Street,  Nelaon, . BriUih  Columbia.
Pbone 144, Private Exchange Connecting ell Department!
Member of tbe Audit Bureau of Clrculatlona and
The Canadian Preu Leeaed Wire Newt Service.
MONDAY, JUNE 3,1935.
THE BOARD OF TRADE BANQUET
Nelson board of trade is making preparations lor
a banquet which will be held Tuesday evening in honor
of the delegates to the Associated Boards of Trade of
Eastern British Columbia convention.
It is expected that about 75 delegates from various
parts of the district will be in,attendance and the Nelson board hopes that a large crowd of Nelson residents
will attend the banquet in order to give a royal welcome
to the visitors.
The Associated Boards convention is one of the
most important of the gatherings which are heW in
Nelson and it is fitting that the people of this community
should give the fullest possible recognition to it.
PREVIOUS LONG REIGNS
There has been a tendency on account of King
George's Silver Jubilee to stress the great changes that
hav taken place in the world within the British Empire
during the quarter of a century of his reign. While it
has been, without question, a stirring 25 years* examination will probably disclose that in the reign of any
European monarch of equal or greater length, there have
been events which were equally momentous, viewed from
a historic standpoint.
The 25-year reign Of King George has not been long
when compared with that of numerous other sovereigns,
in England and on the continent. It is short when compared with the 64 years that the King's grandmother,
Queen Victoria, sat on the throne. Elizabeth reigned for
45 years. George III sat on the English throne for 60
years, while Louis XIV of France governed for 72 years.
There were other European monarchs, too, who reigned
a half century or more. And in each case, the period
of the reign, was a landmark of great changes in the history of their country, often of the world.
There were tremendous changes in England during
the long reign of Queen Victoria. A series of social revolutions had entirely altered not only the manner of life in
England, but the place of that country in the world. The
reign of Elizabeth was crowded with important events.
Protestantism was firmly established in England. There
were great voyages of discovery; the Huguenot wars on
the continent; the rise of an English literature which in
some respects has been unequalled since that day: the
defeat of the Spanish Armada, and the predominance of
England in European affairs. Surely these were events
of world significance.
The reign of King George V necessarily revolves
about the war and the economical and political disintegration which resulted. History is still in the making
as a result of the war and so the 25 years bas established
no definite episode in history, as have some of the reigns
of other British monarchs.
AMATEUR GOLF
The British amateur golf championship has been
won for the second year in succession by Mr. Lawson
Little, a Californian. It is a proud achievment for this,
golfer, who, however, on the latest occasion, met with
much more strenuous competition than last year. Except
in patches, his game does not seem to have been so
powerful as when he won the final in 1984 by an overwhelming margin. In this year's thirty-six hole match
he was held with remarkable tenacity by Dr. William
Tweddell, and only managed to win by one hole. In the
oourse of the tournament he had a couple of narrow escapes, and the experience shows that there is not much
to choose between amateur golfers in Great Britain and
the best in any other part of the world.
For the first time Canada had an official representation in the championship, composed of her best amateur
players. They made a very good showing and have no
alibis. Some of them were eliminated by only the narrowest of margins, and all played well up to the reputation that they enjoy in this oountry. The British amateur
championship is becoming more representative all the
time. There is a new fillip of interest given to it by the
fact that Canada should have participated to sucb an
extent. It may well be hoped that the experience will be
repeated in future years. As well as being an international event it should attract entries from all over the
Empire. British championships, more so than those of
any other nation, have the faculty of drawing worldwide competition, which is recognition of where the
heart of the sporting world lies.
A NEW NAME
Bessborough, British Columbia is a new post office
named after the governor-general. There is already
a "Buchan" in Manitoba, but if the new governor comes
suvLord Tweedsmuir the post office will have an opportunity to commemorate the name, for there are only a
Tweed and a Tweedie Brook, the former in Ontario
and the latter in New Brunswick.
•THI NELION  DAILY  NIWI. NILION.  I.C-MONDAY  MORNINO.  JUNE 3.  1838-
♦ -
CONTRACT
BRIDGE
By E. V. SHEPARD
"Teacher of Teachers"
WHAT CAN SOUTH WIN AT
HEARTS
Here are a couple of future citizens of Nelson caught by the roving
camera as they were at play. They
are right: Pat Davis daughter of
Mr. and Mn. Guy Davis and left,
Jean Marie' Sexton, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. E. Sexton. Both tots
reside up the hill.
.   .   .
A GOVERNMENT JOB
I was discussing somewhere the
other day the work being done to
improve the highway from Nelway
north to Nelson. The gentleman said
that according lo estimates made
by engineers ln the Kootenay that,
at the rate of progress being made,
it would take 88 years for completion of this road and that did not
allow for gravelling and surfacing.
That reminds me of a story from the
good old U.S.A.
A visitor was looking into Uie
I Grand Canyon of Colorado. Said the
! guide: "Do you know, it took millions of years for this great abyss
* to be carved out?"
i    Visitor: "You don't tell me. Why
II didn't knpw this was a government job."
a  e _i
'< WHAT'S THE ANSWER?
Question is raised as to why so
few women engage in dentistry. Of
the 1800 dentists in Ontario, only
some 15 are ladles. A widely accepted explanaUon is that fully half
a dentist's work is mechanical, and
women shun machines. Even girls
who are quite ready to make eyes,
it seems, hesitate to manufacture
teeth.
Of course, it is well known that
few women object to having people
gaze  at  them  open-mouthed.  As
1 dentists, however, they would be
engaged in more or less strenuous
work, while the gazing was in progress. It Is very unlikely that they
Would look their best. •
Dental parlora are not attncUve
to women, furthermore, because
ladies dislike old magazines. The
interest of the sex ih periodicals is
in the display of fashions, and back
numbers furnish only pictures of
out-moded gowns. The very thought
of living and working daily in association with ancient styles is
enough to drive the average gin
to distraction.
But the primary factor In keeping
women out ot dentistry is probably a proper feminine reluctance
to inflict pain on heipless people.
Woman's instinct naturally directs
her towards nursing. Digging,
grinding, poking and drilling in
haphazard fashion around sore
gums is repugnant to her gentle
naturt.
•   *   •
START8 AT HOME
"John," said Mrs. Meek to her
husband, "wc are going to the hospital bazaar tonight. Now, don't be
mean. Remember it is for a charitable cause."
Among the most popular attractions wu a bewitching blonde
young lady, who wu selling kisses
at a shilling each.
Mr. Meek bought ten shillings'
worth, and was having his purchase
delivered when his better half
came on the scene.
"John," she almost screamed,
"what does this mean?"
"Well, you know, Marie," replied
her husband, "it's for charity, you
know."
"Yes," she replied acidly, "and
charity, I also know, begins at
home!'
It is more instrucUve, also more
.nteresting to most players, to study
ihe various possibilities of a differ-
cult hand than to casually read only
what happened u bidding and play
went No South player bid higher
than 4 hearta on the hand shown.
Most South playen played the
hand at 4 spades. An opening lead
of clubs defeated 4 spadu, in the
only case tried in one session of the
eastern tournament. See what can
be done at hearts, with an opening
lead of the ace ot clubs.
♦ AQ
VKlOt
♦ Q J io t
.31092
♦ J 752
VQ9
♦ A98
♦ AQ64 |1 &
♦ 6 4
lilt
♦ 5.8
tki.Ti
s   '■•
♦ K10 III
VAJ8S4
♦ K8 7
♦ None
South will ruff. Have dummy
win its two spade tricks. Do not
lead trumps. Lead the Q of
diamonds. If West wins the trick
let him lead what he pleases. If
that ls a diamond, win the trick in
dummy. Have dummy win a heart
trick with the K and declarer win
one with the ace, leaving the 10 in
dummy. Lead a low spade. Trump
with dummy's 10. Lead a diamond.
Win with South'a K. Pull the last
opposing trump. The remainder of
South's cards are good, yielding a
small slam.
Instead of leading back a diamond, when West gains entry with
the ace ot that suit, suppose he leads
a spade. Have dummy ruff with the
10. Lead the K of trumps, followed
by the 3. Win wtth South's ace.
Pull the last opposing trump. Spread
thc hand for a small slam. The same
sort Of play will win the small slam
In case West leads a trump, after
winning his first trick, with the Ace
of diamonds.
Having won with the ace of diamonds, the most troublesome return
lead by West will be the _ of clubs.
South must ruff with dummy's 10,
to shut out East. Win with the K
ot hearts and the ace of hearts.
10 YEARS AGO   |
I From Nelson Dally News Filet I
_ 1 a
Junt 3, 1828
Work on a new pavilion at Lakeside park is about completed. It is
two stories, with the pavilion above
and large dressing rooms below.
a. a   l
The boiler of the steamer Kuskanook has been put in place and it
is expected the steamer will be
launched in about two weeks.
,  .   .
Ben Bowles yesterday took charge
of the Nelson auto camp when it
was officially opened.
.   .   .
Tor the balance of the summer
months the Recreation grounds will
be under the charge of a caretaker.
H. H. Robinson has been appointed
by the executivea of the Nelson
Amateur Athletic association and
the Nelson BasebaU club.
|   20 YEARS AGO
I From Ntlion Dally Ntwi. Files I
» «
Juni 3, 1918
Lead prices took another jump, at
New York to 4.90, and at Montreal
to 6.10.
I-. e   I
Three members of the Nelson
Daily News staff. H. R. Evans, S, J.
McDonald and A. L. Stewart, who
enusted with the 54th Battalion.
were each presented with a wrist
watch engraved with his name and
the date, by the staff of the news.
Eight men from the paper have now
enlisted.
let
3. W. Holmes has given to the
local relief society five sacks of
clothes to be Used in the work being
carried out in the city.
■»-
SCOTTS SCRAPBOOK
by R. J. SCOTT
35 YEARS AGO
I From Nelson Dally Miner Files
June 3, 1900
The Canadian Pacific nilway has
announced that it will put a stop to
the practice of "hobos" stealing
rides on freight bargee between
Nelson and Kootenay Landing. The
Dominion Railway act provides a
severe penalty for oftenden of thts
class, it was pointed out.
•   *   •
Kid McCoy added another to his
long list of victories when he beat
Jack Bonner of Summit. Pa., on a
technical knockout in the 13th
round at New York.
.   .   .
A. H. Buchanan has been elected
president of the Nelson Boat club
IlNY OME-CVUNDER. qA$OLlNE EMCilKE
BUILT* By PA.UL BlOOKI oF-fflE NEW YORK MODH?
MAKERS' SOCiEly-, COMPARED To A PAPER,
1     OF*
MA1C.ME-;
l.*Jl--__L_^lXtf^
iii
Winded Lto.-. of akciemt*
SABt'.-oS ort 1910. ARMEHIAH
PofrlXciE. STAMP  '
WOMAN*
visrfo*
trrtUReH oF-f-ke.
Rock " *r PEHHA,
NEAR RlODE-JArtEIRp,
BRAZIL, WALKING ABOUT THE-.
«lURC« OM HER KME.E5 VVrfH A
WAfcErt HEAD .WHICH SHE HOPEV
WIU CURE -IHE trouble in HER (MM HEAD
Copjrlthl, INI, br Central Pil»
Lead declarer's J of hearts, to pick  w.ith Dr.!j,,B»Vnu ftrold ,Selou*
up East's last trump. Spread the
two good diamonds and two good
spades for a small slam.
Having tried the various possible
return leads which West can make,
after he has won his single defensive trick with the ace of diamonds,
try having West hold off winning
that trick, to see if he can thus gain
an advantage. If he holds off only
once tt will not change results.
Have West refuse to win either the
first or second lead of diamonds
from dummy. Stop leading the suit.
Take the K and ace of trumps. Have
Political correspondents who persistently attempt to link up St.
James street with the Bennett government ire shooting wide of the
mirk. In fact, it might be more accurate to say they are shooting at a
target that does not exist. St. James
street is not crying itself to sleep
at nights for love of tbe Bennett
dummy ruft a spade lead with the j government, unrequited or other*
10. Lead a club from dummy and ' wise. The Bennett government has
vice presidents. C. Matthews ii cip-
tain.
NO LINK WITH ST. JAMES
STREET
PROBLEMS
Religious and Social
Questions Answered
By DR. WYLIE CLARK
VENTILATION AND CIRCULATION
OFTEN MIXED
By LOGAN CLENDENINQ, M.D.
have South ruff. Pick up East's
last trump. Lead off the two good
spades and good trump. Give the
thirteenth trick to West's ace of
diamonds.
about the same popularity among
the moguls of high finance in Montreal as the traditional mephitis
mephiUca at a garden party—Winnipeg Tribune.
WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN
For Western and Central Canada,
embracing British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba
and Ontario.
June  3,   1939.—Cloudy
except in southwest and on Pacific
slope where some nin ls expected.
Week of June 3 to 9, 1938, ln central provinces begins with cool and
somewhat unsettled conditions.
clouds probably remaining nearly
light rains about_ Uiei,u week, though mosUy about
southwest sections and along southern borden. Temperatures slowly
rise near middle of week, when a
few unusually warm days may be
expected. Then around Uie 7th a
cold wave suddenly comes in from
the west and reaches the southeast
Monday,
and  some
southwest sections of central provinces, but in general clearing and
slightly cooler.
Tuesday, June 4—Nearly everywhere clearing and slightly cooler,
though may be somewhat cloudy
and unsettled about Uie southwest.
Wednesday, June 3 -Probably re- ?*_*.n\ G™**' -i**?-":"-8 *>** or n«»r ?th
mains cloudy and mildly unsettled.! ™s's *«5hort duration and a slow
with light rains, in southwest about ™c  n temperatures ihould imme-
southern borders of central regions;, d'eteiy foUow.
turning warmer. i, Around the tint part of June in
__. T       _,__,_.        _, * these regions this year there are
Th.u,[Say' IT _?~lTl0Uuy ,a.Kd "^ to be some slowly moving
unsettled condition dwells about the | rain cloud, covering     ^ of „»
southwestern and Paoflc slope sec-, counUx mi ,„ mt*y -^ about
southwest sections and Pacific slope
tions, but east clear; warmer everywhere.
rrlday, June 7.—Mildly unsettled
conditions, with light rains, -drift
Are wt "go-olvtr Christians"
or "go-getter Christians?"—R.C.
The "go-getters" are those who
use Christianity to get something
for themselves. They are after whatever may come to them— their
chance of Heaven, a dignified place
in society, a UtUe help in business,
a few votes in an election, Or anything which might turn up through
a church connection. The "go-given" give themselves, their money,
their time and their energies to
strengthen the church and to help
the need, of the community. Those
are the ones who count and it ls
upon their increase that the future
depends.
It tht ttudy of theology a men-.,
ttl sedative or a mental stimulant—M.T.8.
There is no doubt about it being
a mental stimulant. It Is the study
ot eU studies. It seeks finality and
aska tor the explanation of all
things. It can never be content
with part answers; and while it
professes faith yet it is always
striving to change faith to knowledge—there is no rest
There may be a sedative touch
to some in the study of theology,
because they reach a faith which
brings mental contentment and a
resting joy. Those become inclined
to stagnate in their outlook and
fall down on their pracUcal living.
What Is tht Apocrypha,—8. Q.
The Apocrypha was the name
given to a number of books which
for some reason or other were excluded from the lists chosen to
make up the canon of the Old and
New Testaments.
The following are a list of those
classed as the Old Testament Apocrypha: I and II Esdras, Toijjt,
Judith, the Rest of Esther, the Wisdom ot Solomon, Eccleslasticus.
Baruch. the Song of Three Holy
Children, History of Susannah, History of Bel and the Dragon, the
Prayer of Manasses, I and II Mac-
scattering showers but no very
heavy soaking rains of long duration. The temperature slowly rises' cabees.
across southern border section!, but unUl the weather seems quite warm, i Those of the New Testament: the
in northwest clear and suddenly' then suddenly a cold spell sweeps Gospel according to the Hebrews,
turning much cooler; east warmer. j in from the northwest, in places  the Gospel according to the Egyp*
Saturday, June 8.—Suddenly cold-1 carrying iome rain, but loon foi- "
er in weit northwest and central, lowed by clearer weather and in
sections, but in esst remains warm a few of the northern and plateau
and somewhat unsettled with scat
tering showen.
Sunday, June 9. — Sudden cold
sections the nights, near* last of this
week, might be much too cold tor
some of the field crops, but as tern-
spell reaches Grest Lakes region. perature* soon rise the damage ls
and temperatures everywhere be- not expected to be great except in
come unusually low; fairly clear » few expoied locaUUes.
HOME
A melancholy UtUe man was seated on the ground:
He showed supreme indlnerence to
everything around.
"Why do you not run home," I
cried, "and tumble into
bed?"
He looked at me expressively, end
preiently he said:
• "One   rubber   plant  can   never
make a home,
Not   even   when   combined   with
brush and comb,
And spoon, and fork, and knife,
And gramophone, and wife,
Noi Something more ls need for
a home."
I uld: "What does your dwelUng
lack? The pretty hearth-
side tone?
The note of domesUcity" he gave
a tearful groan.
Alu," he cried, while from hla
aeat he ilowly upward
bobbed
And seized hli hat, "a flat'i a
flat!" Together then we
lobbed:
"One  rubber  plant  can   neVer
make e home;
One day did not suffice for building Rome.
8ne gas-log and a cat
an't civilize a flat.
No! Something more is needed for
a home."
HARDY CYCLAMEN
FOR SHADY NOOK
By DEAN HALLYDAY
Central Press Garden Expert
A lovely plant for a shady nook
in the rock garden is the hardy cyclamen. Unfortunately, thli flower
is seldom seen.
For northern gardens, there are
two very hardy species which hail
from Switzerland. One of the easiest to grow is the Cyclamen Europ-
aeum which has small, crimson-
red flowen which are quite fragrant. This cyclamen blooms from
the end of July until September.
Its leaves are evergreen and slightly mottled. The other hardy variety
ls Cyclamen Neapolitans, a deep
pink wblch blooms In September
and the foliage is large and mottled
silvery. These cyclamen prefen a
lime soil, rich with decayed manure,
and it must be remembered they
grow in the shade.
Many garden species of cyclamen
are hardy only u far north as Washington. In this group are: Cyclamen
Coum, which comes in shadei of
magenta or white. It! leaves are
such a dark green that they appear
almost black. The cyclamen is perhaps the earliest to bloom, as We
find lt flqwering in the garden
as early as February and March.
and should be grown ln a very
shady spot.
Cyclamen Atkinsl is a little hardier
variety, of pink shade. Its leaves
are mottled with white. Cyclamen
Repandum and Cyclamen Iberlcum
both bloom about April, with red
flowen. These cyclamen miy be
raised from seed in the cold frame
or corms may be purchased from
nurseries.
AUNT HET
Bv ROBERT QUILLEN
"Emily ls always wlshln' we
had a nobility and swell society
lh thli country. The poor thing
don't realize she wouldn't be In
lt if we did have."
WAR  BABIES
It li almoit 31 yetn ilnce the
Great War broke out and almoit
17 yean ilnce it concluded. Yet It
comes as something of a shock to
rud the hews thtt France li now
celling lti "wtr babiei" to the colon. Then hu been time for a whole
new generation to come to manhood
and yet the world li still suffering
from the repercussions of the lite
war and Is living ln fear of another.
-The Sault Star.
tians, the Gospel according to Pet
er, the Protevangelism of James,
lhe Gospel of Thomas, Acts of Paul.
Thecla, Epistles of Paul to the
Loadiceans and Alexandrians, the
Apocalypse ot Peter.
In these daya Is not the church
blamed for too many of tht world's
troubles?—A.R.D.
The great trouble lies ln the fact
that like all other organizations the
church is Just a humber of men
and women. Wherever there is
failure ln the home, In business,
in politics, tn education, in the
church, lt is a failure ot human
beings. It is true that the influ
ence of the church ihould run
through ill the otheri and help
them to shape their policies and
control their methods. That is the
real purpose of the church to produce e generation which will have
no failures. As the church stands
at the head, her failures are more
serious and more coniplcuous than
those of other organizations.
What ipeclal testimony did
Jtmu glvt to tht remrrection of
Our Lordf-TEACHER.
In I Corinthians 15:7 It says:
"After that He wu seen of James."
That wu evidently an appearance
to James himself and was likely
the turning point in the attitude
of James to Jesus and His resur*
rectlon, for James becomes one ot
the chief men in the church and
Is named in Galatlans 1:19, one of
the apostles.
STATISTICS
The best statisticians are very
skeptical. They reipect their tolls,
but they never forget that they are
tools and not magic wands and divining rods. If we u laymen are going to use statistics as freely u we
now use them, we shall have to learn
from the statisticians how to b
thoroughly skeptical, particularly
when the statistics Indicate a conclusion that is contrary to common
sense and general knowledge.—New
York Herald-Tribune.
Air circulation and ventilation:
hese two phases are discussed together because they are commonly
contused, and their misunderstanding resulted in a great deal of resistance to air cooling. The confusion has arisen from the fact that
before refrigerated air cooling became practical, the attempts at air
cooling were confined to the introduction ot outside air. This, of
coune, Was also the method by
which ventilation was accomplished,
and because large quantities of ait
were used for cooling, the public
gained Uie impression that a great
deal of air was necessary to provide oxygen for breathing purposes
and to dilute the exhaled carbon
dioxide.
The human system, however, actually consumes such a small quantity
of oxygen, less than a cubic foot an
hdur, that no effort whatsoever
needs to be made to supply it As a
matter of fact, even with all doon
and windows shut, so much air
containing the necessary oxygen
would seep in through walls and
cracks of a room that enough people could not be packed In, standing,
to exhaust the oxygen. Too, carbon
dioxide, not only is not u deadly
as assumed, but actually causes the
lungs to function,
VENTILLATION .
REMOVES  SMELL
This being true, ventillatlon ls
only needed to prevent an offense
to our sense of smell, such as body
odon, tobacco smoke odon, food
odon, vitiated air and other offensive odors. Just how much freih air
is required regularly for thii purpose you may decide by eatimating
the amount of air you habitually introduce into a room during the
winter—possibly very UtUe. You
open a door or window for a minute or two and let it go at that.
Even the amount of fresh air required in winter exceeds that needed in a cooling system, because of
the effect of the air cooling coil on
odors. Most of our odors are carried by the moisture in the air and
the solid substances which it contains. This air, when striking the
cooling coil, condenses, tbe moisture
drops out together with the solids,
carrying the odor to the drain and
out of the building. This method
of deodorizing is so efficient that
moisture from a coil ln a homc occupied by only one or two people,
and witn cooking and smoking
odors reduced to a minimum, smells
quite strong.
Ventilation is accomplished by In-
filteration through walls, open windows or mechanical exhaust systems. The conclusion seems to be
that one complete air change per
hour is all that is needed in a
home, or from five to ten cubic
feet per person per minute in a
pubilc place or, If your nose tells
you the air is bad, more.
WHY OPEN WINDOWS?
Many people state that they are
uncomfortable ln a room, especially
at nlgbt, unless a Window is open
admitting fresh air. Their feelings
are correct but not the reuon, as
this condition is due to a lack of a
circulation in t|ie room—not to a
lack of ozygen. This tact hu been
proved time after time by simple
experiments.
The subects were placed in an airtight cabinet and allowed to remain
there until the air was many times
worse than that found in crowded
pubUc places, with no ventilation,
having a much lower oxygen and a
higher carbon dioxide content
At a time when the subjects experienced lassitude, headache and
nausea, they were permitted to
breathe fresh air from outside
through tubes, without otherwise
changing the condition of the air Inside, out showed no improvement ln
thtlr condition.
Subject! outtide the cabinet
breathing the air from inalde the
cabinet through tubes and using
head masks to exclude aU other
air, suffered no ill effects.
A small t>n then was started in
the cabinet, and without admitting
any outalde air, the condition of
the subject Immediately improved.
Reducing the temperature and lowering the humidity in the cabinet,
both ot which increase absorption
of the heat from the body, also immediately Unproved the subject!1
condition.
A .Thought
for 3b6ay
"In that sarpe hour said
Jesus to the multitudes,
Are ye come out as
against a thief with
swords and staves for to
take me? I sat daily
with you teaching in the
temple, and ye laid no
hold on me."
—St Matthew, 21:18.
Farm
Implements
WE ARE NOW OFFERING ALL KINDS OF
FARM IMPLEMENTS
Plows — Harrows — Cultivators —
Wagons — Forks — Hoes — Rakes
Planet Jr. Tools
Headquarters for Good Steeds
PRICES THE LOWEST
Nelson Hardware Co.
Wholesale snd Retail Quality Hardware
Nelson, l.C.
 mmmmmmmmmm
mui in j  -
m
-THE  NELION  DAILY NIWS. NILBON.  B.C-MONDAY  MORNINO. JUNS S. 19S5-
> PAGE SEVEN
& t% CUSSIflED SECf ION - HHERE BUYER «S$EIIER MEET
irtam BaUij Htm
\ Member of the Canadian Dally
Newspapers Auociation .
TELEPHON-S 144
I Private Ixchtngt oonnectlng to
all Dtptrtments
Subscription Rstes
Single copy _  4  -M
(By carrier, per week     JS
By carrier, per year 13.00
By mail in Canada, to tub-
icriben living outside regular
carrier areu per month, SOc;
three months, $1.80; six months,
$3.00; one year, $0.00,
United Statu and Great Britain, one month, 75c; six months,
KOO; one year, $7.50.
' Foreign countries, other than
V. S. ume u above plus any
extra postage.
WOMEN WANTED
WOMEN   WANTED   TO   START
8rivate Kindergarten School! In
telr own homu thli coming fall.
Free booklet on requut. Canadian Kindergarten Institute, Win-
nlpeg. Established 1927.       (1878)
TENDERS WANTIb
To Findera
If you find a cat or dog a poc-
ketbook, Jewelry or fur or anything else of value telephone
The Daily News. A "Found"
Ad will be inserted without
cost to you. We wUl coUeCt
from the owner.	
TRUTH IN AOVtRTISINQ
The Nelton Dally News endeav-
on to print only truthful clusl*
tied advertising and will appreciate having iti attention called
to any advertiiing not conforming to the highest standards of
honutj-%^^^^^^^^^^^
If you have room tor roomera in
your home—and room for their
rent in your pocket—remember
there ls room for your Ad ln the
"Booms for Rent" column.
wwtslMWltueeiiiswiea
LOV
^KBtllEBUmtUMHtS
HEAD THIS FIRST:
After bidding goodby in a huff to
his childhood sweetheart, Janice Edding, who is uiling for the United
States where her tether, Captain
■ Edding hu been assigned to Puget
\i Sound Navy Yard, carefree Lieutenant Valentine Preston, attached to a
gunboat in China, sees an attractive
girl in a pining ricksha on the
itreet! ot Shanghai. He recognizes
her aa the same girl who had delayed his visit to Janice's liner ln the
harbor by taking the last sampan in
light trom the pier. FoUowlng In
another ricksha, both alight at Uic
aame hotel. They become engaged
ln conversation, have a cocktail to-
tether and Val letrns ihe is from
outh Carolina. Later he excuses
himself and goes to the bar alone.
Finding the girl still in the cocktail
lounge alone, Val joins her again
and discovers her name is Lia
Garenne. She says she ia lonely tnd
they agree to take dinner together
later. As he dresses Val is irked by
the thought that Kent Townley, another naval lieutenant whom he dislikes, ii uiling on the same liner
with Janice. MeeUng Lia, dressed
for the evening in the lobby, he is
impressed with her loveliness. After
dinner and dancing at a night club
Val and Lia go for a drive in the
moonlight Then she telle him
tomething about henelf.
INOW GO ON WITH THE STORY)
DEPARTMENT OP LANDS
Forut Branch
TIMBER  SALI  X 14271
Sealed tenden will be received
by the Minister of Lands not later
than noon on the 10th day ot June,
1935, for the purchase ot license
X14271, to cut 2.280,000 feet of
White pine, Spruce, Fir, Cedar,
Larch, Hemlock and Balsam and
5000 fence posts on an area situated
north of Gander Creek near Crucent VaUey, Kootenay Land District
Two years will be allowed for removal of timber.
Further particulars of the Chief
Foruter. Victoria, B. C, or District Forester, Ncison, B. C. (1560)
PERSONAL
CHAPTER 11
"You told me about the unnleu-
ent old woman so thtt I'd feel lorry for you?" Vtl demtnded.
"Oh, but there ls in old woman,"
answered Lit. "Truly, there is.
Only ihe is my Aunt Julia Lee Garenne, my father's sister. You lee,
my mother died when I wu born
and I've always lived with Aunt
Julia Lee at the Garenne place on
the Ashley. My mother was Miu
Gatha Fiti-James. Her people were
of English descent—Oh, but just u
impo'tant u the Garennes. Aunt
Juua Lee and my father loved my
mother ve'y much." she shook her
round little head sadly, "but neither
of them cared for me. I suppose it
ls because she died on my account.
I've scarcely evah teen my father.
Isn't it ud thtt no one in my whole
life hu reilly loved me?"
The melancholy little ftce convinced him of her sincerity. His
anger tided to be replaced by t htlf-
tender tolerance. "You poor, tunny
little kid, what are you doing in
Shanghai alone?" he uked. ■
The gentle note ln his voice dewed
her era with teart. "You have been
awfully kind to me," ahe murmured.
"Ill tell you all ebout everything,
lf you like. You see when Aunt
Julia Lee heard,my father woujd be
in Shanghai this fall, we sailed
for China. My father is an anthro-
Silogist and he hu been In the
obi desert these last two yean on
a scientific expedition. He uaed to
be in the diplomatic service here in
China and In Europe, too; but anthropology wu always hli grett pullon."
"Gtrenne! I knew I'd heard that
name. So Gtrenne of the Gobi is
your dad, eh? But I still don't understand why you are et the Astor
alone."
"I'm coming to thit. You eee, we
arrived here ten dayi ago, and then
almost at Once Aunt Julia Lee heard
that a member of the expedlUon had
returned to Peiping with the news
that my father would not come out
unUl spring. It seemed to upset
Aunt Julia Lee teh'bly and she finally decided to go to Peiping to talk
to the man. We were all settled it
the Cathay and io she left me there
with Miss Clara Daubeny, who ls
kin of ours. She used to be my governess but now she la Aunt Julia
Lee's companion."
"And how did you get rid of her?"
"Why, it juat toht of hippened
thtt the day Aunt Julia Lee left,
Miu Clara took the flu. At flnt the
hotel doctor Mid sht could itty in
her room it the htd t nune, but
liter he thought she hid bettih go
to t hospital and he ve'y kindly offered to look after me. He wu awfully nice but rather old."
"A very thoughtful gent," Val
Commented dryly. "And then
what?"
"WeU, Mlu Clara wu really too
111 to worry about me ve'y much and
I soht of let her think I wu staying with the American consul's wife
10 as to eue her mind." She smiled
nervously. "And then yuterday I
Juit decided I wu going to all the
ovely French ihopa tnd buy the
kind ot clothu I've tlwtyi wanted.
Oh. It wai such fun. I chose the
prettiest things—underneith things
made of uUn with real lace and little rosei " her ftce ihone with •
childish delight that made Val want
to give her a paternal hug.
"I bought darling sandals and
French scent—evah so many thing,.''
lhe pittered on. "And I chose this
wrap ind t leopard coat and the
gold vanlfy case and three hats. 1
charged them to Aunt Julia Lee's
account at the Cathay and all I had
tO do was sign funny little papers
that the shop-keepers called chits.
Aunt Julia Lee's trunks are still ln
our rooms at the Cathay but today
I decided I didn't want that old
doctor snoopln' around any longer
end so I moved to the Astor where
T could do -Just n I pleased. I
* don't care what Aunt Julia Lee
uys when she finds out, I un going
to enjoy myielf until then."
Val smiled wryly. Besides a disappointed doctor, Aunt Julia Lee
was not the only one who had had
a few things put over on her. Look
how adroitly he himself had been
managed. Old Hot Shot taken for a
ride! Well, live and learn about women; the more you experimented,
the less you knew.
"Please don't laugh." There were
teen in the velvety eyes. "If you
only knew how desperately unhappy I have been. Aunt Julia Lee's
friends are all old—old and ve'y
proud that they are descended from
the Hugunots who settled along
the Ashley and the Santee. Aunt
Julia Lee belongs to a musical .society and once a month 1 am allowed to go to hur them alng spirituals. Can you imagine having
only that to look forward to? At
the meetings they wear the costume
of the '60s and only when they
put on theu* hoop-skirts and stocks
and ruffed skirts do they seem to
come alive for a litUe while." Her
face wu tragic. "They live in the
past those people: they do not belong to today. Oh, it you only knew
how sick I am of old things—old
doorways and porticoes and little
balconies! I Uve in a brick house
that smells of mold and decay; lt
has a wrought Iron gate that artists
come from all over the world to ad-
miah; but the gate closes me Inside
a garden, and until tonight that
Strdcn ll the only place I have ever
anced. Think of il! To dance alone
when one is young is so sad. I am
alive now, I want to be happy, to be
a part ot today."
Val's laughter had died. He took
one of the girl's delicate hands and
held it In his warm palms. "Look
here, I have two days ot my leave
lett and after that I'll be free evenings except when I have the duty.
Would you like to have me show
you Shanghai?" he offered Impulsively.
Her sadness vanished like magic,
her eyu were dancing. "Oh, wUl
you truly? Truly?"
"I shouldn't wonder. We'll dine
and dance and golf "
With the abandon of a child ahe
threw her arms suddenly around
hii neck and Ttiued him. "You are
t darling!" ihe cried.
"Liiten, lister," he broke ln hastily. 'That'i out!" Turning, he
whiiUed sharply for the driver who
appeared from the shadows ai lf
conjured up by a djin.
Only once on the way btck to
the city did Vtl speik md then it
wu to himself. "Think God." he
murmured, "none of my friends can
tee me at the present embarrassing
moment." For Miu Lia Garenne had
curled herself up agalnit his side
like a tired kitten and had fallen
soundly asleep.
He drew her close to settle her ln
e leu cramped position. Holding her
relaxed head against his shoulder he
experienced a welling tnderness
that startled him. 'There might be
more to this than I'm bargaining
for," he reflected. "She got to me
when she told me about that lonely
Sirden, I felt u if I wanted to take
er where she'd never be unhappy
or alone again. She's a sweet youngster, hut i'U watch my step." Gazing along the brightly lighted
streets they were traversing he
thought, "Shanghai Is no sheltered
garden. Some one must look after
this infant until the aunt returns. I
had better put Sue and Laura Mot*
rou on the job. They'll be crazy
about her." He stared down at the
sleeping girl. "Stephen Garennes
daughter, eh? I've heard of that eccentric old bird." His lip curled
with disapproval. "A fine parent to
go oft after prehistoric bonu In the
so-called cradle of the human race,
and neglect this child the way he
hu."
(To Be Contiued)
UP TO $50 EACH PAID FOR U. S.
Indian head cents. We buy all
dates, regardless of condition. Up
to $1.00 each paid tor Lincoln
Head cents. Up to $150 each tor
Canadian coins. We buy Stamp
Collections, Medals, Books, Old
Paper Money, Gold, etc. Send 25c
(coin) for large illustrated price
list and instructions. Satisfaction
guaranteed or 25c refunded. Hub
Coin Shop, 159-3 Front Street,
Sarnia, Ont       t (1392)
HIGHEST QUALITY SAJIjffARY
rubbergoods. 25 Latex ejjjjlliiMiil
$1.00. Order direct from'Snorter
and be lure ot but obtainable.
Wrapped plain. Free catalogue
National Importer!, -ia, 6th St.,
Wut, Calgary AlberU. (1479)
INDIAN AND Lrr-JCdlS "EfcAD
penniu wanted. Will pay up to
$2 each lf over 10 yean old. Certain penniu worth $53. Latut
listing 10c. American Coin Co.,
Box 219 Grand Rapids, Mich.
	
MEN! WORN OUT?'NO VTTAL-
ity? Regain youthful vigor with
"Menna, harmleu glana rutor-
ative, $2 box. T. Kerr, Box 353,
Vancouver, B. C. (1914)
¥
MAKE IT A DAILY
VlABIT—READING
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Read Them! Use Them!
IT PAYS!
For Service Phone
Jesn Robertson st
144
FOR KENT, HOUSES,
APARTMENTS.  ETC.
FURNISHED COTTAGE, TWO
rooma. Good uf) beach, $12 per
month. H. Falrbank, Harrop.
 (1864)
3 RM. HOUSE AND STOVE 2 GAR-
den lota with treu. $10 mon. Mn
HaU, Gordon Road near Park.
(1866)
MdbBfcM Sc/flkmt, wIll fur-
nlahed. Cloie in. Moderate rent
DaUy Newi Box 1870. (1870)
IN THE KERR A P A R T ME NTS-
Furnlihed and unfurnished suites
(13631
2-RM. HSEKPG. SUITES - VERY
reaaonable. Strathcona Hotel.
(1395)
PROPERTY FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Desirable Dwelling, cloie ln on
Car Line. 2 Bedrooms, Living
Room, open Fire Place, Furnace,
Cement Basement. Garage. 2
Loti. Price $2700. Termi.
Apply
R. W. DAWSON
HIPPERSON BLOCK
(tao
ATTRACTIVE 7 ROOM MODERN
house, furnace, fireplace, etc. Six
well-treed lota, large lawns, tennis court Would comider imall
neat home part payment Mn.
M. Sandercock. Cor. Stanley and
Richard. (1746)
AUTHORS' INSTITUTE OFFER A
simplified course ln ihort itory
writing. For particular! write Rm.
520, Belmont Bldg., Victoria. B. C.
(163»i
WUDJUBILEEVTT? RAt. LE-
snake Oil banishes every pain.
"Worth a million," but only 35c
at Van's. 4292 Main St, Vancouver, B. C. No mailing charge.
 (1690)
SPECIAL-DRUGGIST SUPPLIES
guaranteed 25 for $1.00 postpaid.
Canada Drug Co, 127-7th Ave,
East, Calgary, Alta. (1686)
Eczema Itch Piles Ulcen Try Geo Lee
China Remedy at Hudson's Bay Co.
(1881)
FURN. OR UNFURN. APTS. BY
week or month. Medical Arts, bldg
 (14941
FURN. ROOMS $15 MONTH. ALSO
unfurnlahed. 918 Kootenay St.
        (1867)
TERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern
Frigidalre equipped suites. (1362)
FOR SALE
WE HAVE EVERYTHING AND
everything in the small rubber
llnu. Order by mail direct from
manufacturer and save 75%. AU
orden are mailed postpaid by us
In plain wrapper. Mail order catalogue lent free on requut Novelty Rubber Mfg. Company, Box
353, Dept. K.9, Hamilton, Ontario.
(1864)
NO. 5 DE-LAVAL POWER HAND
chum. 16 gal. capacity. $10. Waters
improved Butter Worker on stand
$10. Babcock Teiter 4 Tut with
glau ware $10. Slater, Waneta.
^^^^^^^^"^    (1891)
ONE dROSSLEY FOUR CYLIND-
er Dieael Engine rated 120 H. P.
one   crusher.   Apply   Kootenay
BeUe Gold Mlnu, Ltd., Salmo.
(1915)
TWO ROOM FURNISHED SUITE-
BoteL (14881
HOUSE FOR RENT, CLOSE IN
Phone 628X. (1819)
MODERN   HOUSE,   404
SILICA.
(1847)
We carry largest itock reconditioned
Pipe and fitting* suitable tor al!
purposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yarii
220-lat E. Vancouver, BC. (1366i
PIPE AND FITTINGS
CANADIAN JUNK Company Ltd.
250 Prior St Vancouver, B.C.
 (1367i
FOR SALE-BARRELS KEGS, SU
gar ncka liners. McDonald Jan-
Co., Ltd., Nelson. B. C.     (1S68*
PATENTS
AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR
Lltt of wanted lnventloni and full
Information unt tree. The Ramaay
Company, World Patent Attorney!, 273 Bank St Ottawa, Canada
(1879)
USED CARS
1932 FORD LIGHT DELIVERY.
Driven 8000 mllu. ExceUent condition. Bargain for cuh. Com'
munlcate with G. MarcoUI. Burton, B. C. (1884)
Clauiflad Ada bring quick ruulti.
rry one.	
RANCHES POR RENT
ONE 20 ACRE RANCH IMPROV-
ed, one 13 acre tract not Improved.
Apply S. Brewiter, Frultvale, B.C.
aim
PHOTOGRAPHY
FILMS DEVELOPED-ANY SIZE,
25c. With 1 print trom eech negative. Extra print! S for JSe. Su-
katchewan Photo Supply, Saakatoon. (1880)
DOCS
WANTUD-PURE SPANIEL PUP.
Hlrd, Slocan City. (1868)
Business and Professional Directory
Accountant!
CHAS. F. HUNTER. S.F_A.E.
InternaUonal Accountant
P.O. Box 1091     Nelion, B.C.
(1423)
Aswyets
HELP WANTED
CRESTON DISTRICT NOW
available tor e rul live man to
take over the rale and distribution of Watkins Products, serving
many latiafied customers. Must
htve ear. For further information
apply 1350 Hornby St, Vancouver, B. C. (1890)
CARONA ADDING MACHINE, EX-
cellent condition. Apply Box 1909
Daily Newi. (1909)
2ND- HAND SINGER MACHINES.
$15 up. Singer Sewing Machine Co.
" (1891)
EXPERIENCED COOK-GENER-
al in modern home. Give age and
wagu expected. Box 36 Cruton.
(1865)
YOtfNG MAN FOR DAIRY, MUST
be able to milk and handle honu.
Phone 460L. (1794)
MODERN STUCCO BUNGALOW. 2
lots. Good location, corner Stanley
and InnU. S roomi. hardwood
floors, fireplace, electric range.
Full cement buement Garden and
fruit Apply P. E. Poulln.    (1600)
Otrt *W_fc A<_*-5 RANI.I. IM*
proved, one thirteen acre tract
not Improved. Apply S. Brewuter,
Frultvale, B. C. (1852)
FULLY MODERN BUNGAL6w ON
100 ft lot In garden and fruit
Furnace, fireplace, electric itove.
Phone 635L. (1807)
FOR SALE-SIX ROOMED HOUSE
and four lota ln Fairview. Apply
620 Mill Itreet (1485)
SITUATIONS WANTED
MAN WITH IVi TON TRUCK HY-
draulic dump wants work. Apply
1885, Dally Newi. (1885)
MAN WITH HEAVY DUTY TRUCK
wanta work. Box 1818, Daily News.
(1818)
FOR SALE OR EXCHANCE
WANTED TO TRADE, GOOD
building lot Want $325 or launch
and iome cash. Box 1899 Daily
News. (1899)
CLEVELAND FORD iti. Ali, WILL
trade for_delivery_or_ieU cheap.
SOPRANO   ->-ANO  ACCORDIAN
Quick tale. Apply 314 Cedar St
(1811)
ROW BOAT FOR SAL* (SH*AP_
Phone 20.
(1921)
POULTRY AND EGGS
PULLETS!   PULLETS!!
A iplendid selection of Barred Rock
and Rhode Island Red Pullets for
immediate delivery.
8 weeka old    78c
10 weeks old _ .      85c
12 weeks old 95c
Leghorn Pullets for delivery ln
June and July.
8 weeks old    ,    65c
10 weeki old    75c
RUMP & SENDALL LTD.
Milner, B. C   .
(1882)
E. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL
Anilyst, Assayer, Chemist Chemical tnd Metallurgical Engineer:
Sampling A ents at Trail and Tacoma Smelten. 301*305 Joeephlne
^^^^^"^ (141
St., Nelson, B. C.
(1424)
GRENVliil H. GRIMWOOD
Provincial Assayer and Chemist 618
Baker Street Nelson. B. C P. O.
Box No. 726. Representing Ship-
pen' Interest at Trail. B. C. (14251
Chiropractors
E   M.  WARREN, D.C.    Box 872.
Gllker Block. Phonu 119 or 755L
(1428)
Electrical
J. F. COATES—The Electric Store.
Supplies and Installations
Phone 766 P. O. Box 1065
(1419)
Insurance and Real Eitate
ROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD.
Real estate, insurance, rentals.
 217 Baker St.        (1436)
R. W. DAWSON, Rul Estate. In-
surance, Rentals. Next Hlpperson
Hardware, Baker Street     (1437)
C. D. BLACKWOOD. lniuranee of
every deicrlptlon. Real Est Ph. 99.
 (1438)
H. E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN*
lurance. Real Eitate. 508 Ward. SL
(1439)
J. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE,
rental!, insurance, Annable Block.
(1440)
LIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-
ance. P. E. Poulln, Ph. 70.    (1441)
CHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE.
Real Estate. Phone 135.       (1442)
Mschinllts
BENNETTS LIMITED
For all clasue of Metal Work, Lathe
Work, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.
Motor Rewinding, Acetylene
Welding.
Pbone SSS 324 Vernon Street
(1443)
Engineers snd Surveyors
A H. GREEN CO., LTD, 916 WARD
St. Phone 264. Nelaon, B.C. (1430)
H. D. DAWSON. NELSON
ENGINEER and SURVEYOR
(1431)
J. Vere, Blewett B. C.
(1916)
FARM  LANDS
PROPERTY WANTED
FEW ACRES, JUST OUTSIDE.
City, with or without hou6e. Box
678, City.   <1910)
BUYERS AKB READING IKESE
columns—and selecting what the!
reouire each day—WIU they find
YOOR Claulftea Ad hert? Telephone your ad—Wt'U do tbe rut.
HOUSES WANTED
MODERN BUNGALOW, THREE
bedrooms. Mrs. W. W. King, Arm-
strqng, B. C. (1911)
WANTED TO RENT
WANTED A MODERN FURNISH-
ed home. Bungalow preferred.
Good tenanta with steady work.
Phone 231R1. (1901)
GOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE
on euy terms ln Alberta and Saskatchewan. Write for full information to 908-Dept. ot Natural Resources, CP.R, Calgary, Alberta.
(1905)
GOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE
on euy terms in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Write tor full information to 908-Dept. of Natural Resources, CPJt., Calgary, Alberta.
(13651
LIVESTOCK FOR SALE
FRESH MILK COWS, GRADE
Ayrshire also three yetr old heifera fruh. R.D. Kennedy, Perry
Siding^B^C;      (1838)
8 FRESH JERSEY HEIFERS,
good stock. K. Popoff, Slocan.
^^^^^"^■"^        (1798)
YORKSHIRE BOAR,
PURE BRED _ _^^^^^^
3 yean old. J. A. Knauf, Htrrop.
or P. O. R. R. 1, Nelaon.     (1825)
SHROPSHIRE EWES, AND LAMBS
and quantity ot wool. A. Mackor-
elh, Broadwater, B.C.        <188j)
YOUNG FRESH COWS, F. FbRlfH.
Erie, B. C.
(1856)
READ THE CLASSIFIED ADS.
NElaON DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED
ads. The leadinn salesmen and
buyers lor Nelson and surrounding
district.
Boyd C. Affleck, Frultvale, B. C
Lands,   Mineral  Claims,  Waterworks, lurveyt, plans, estlmatu.
(1432)
Florists
Sprays, wreaths, .symbolic designs,
carefully made at reuonable prlcu.
Shipped anywhere. Cut flowen and
Slant*—Phone 233
iN FLOWER SHOPPE
 (1433)
HARDY PERENNIAL PLANTS it
Rock plants. Wholesale It Retail
W. Mawer. Nelaon. (13271
Hides snd Furs
BRIGGS TANNERY It FUR CO,
Ltd. Bumsland, Calgary, Alta. Leather tanning. Buffalo coats and
robes tor uie. Hldu bought. (1433'
Maternity Hemes
ELIZABETH PEEL
MATERNITY HOME
Strictly Private. Confidential Physician In attendance. Ph. Broad. 3078.
W-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wuh.
(1444)
Mining snd Mill Machinery
EMPIRE MACHINES, LTD. NEL-
aon. Mining and Mechanical Englneen; (1445)
Photographs
"PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEASE"
GEO. A. MEERES. 715 Baker. Ph. 46
(1446)
 Ssih  Fscfory	
LAWSON'S SASH FACTORY Hard-
wood merchant 217 Baker Street.
11447)
Typewriter Service
NELSON TYPEWRITER AGENCY.
Salu and lervice. Phoni 197.
(1450)
Second Hsnd Storei
CASH FOR OLD STOVES, BEDS,
furniture, etc. The Ark Store.
11448)
WANTED AT MRS. RADCLIFFE'S,
120 ft. 2nd hand fence wire. Good.
(1448)
Watch Repairing	
SPECIALIST. REASONABLE. Work
guaranteed. P. Boyle, 522 Vernon.
BRINGING UP FATHER
By Geo. McManus
MOTHER.-I
WOULDN'T
FUSS WITH
HIM ALL
THE TIME.
I CANT HELP IT. HB
GOES WITH NOBODY
OF ANY IMPORTANCE
I'M GOING TO GrVt
him a Piece OF
MY MIND
THERE YOU ARE.'I'M
TELLING VOU FOR
THE LAST TIME I
OONT WANT VOU TO
GO WITH OINTY MOORE.
HE'S A VULGAR PERSON.'
TILLIE THE TOILER
Russ Wsitover
[W&tOUHEA* OH/MB CUSHMANj
ABOUT THE    1 TELL MB ALU-
_\G PAEfrY»|\COMElMMYN©(0J
Necromancy It
Denounced in
Lesson-Sermon
i ■ n ——__.       .
F»WETTY SVMEU.-V
OH,T*S,lT*S TD
BE AB« COSTUME)
DANCE
tr errs
MO» THRILL-
IN« £VEEY
\ MINUTE
YBA8, B^EWrrONE VMOtTTH VMHILE
IN HOUYVUOCD VMILfc. BE THERE
-ANR VNHO'SV  SlVtNe THE tiMTYJl
"ANCIENT AND MODERN NECROMANCY. ALIAS MESMERISM
AND HYPNOTISM, DENOUNCED"
wu the tublect of the Lesson-
Sermon In all Churchu of Chriit,
Scientist, on Sunday.
The Golden Text wu: "When the
wicked iprlng u the grau, and
when all the workera of inlaulty
do flourish: it is that they shall he
destroyed for ever" iPnlmi 92: 7).
Among the citations which comprised the Leuon-Sermon wu the
following from the Bible: "Seek ye
the Lord while he miy be found,
cell ye upon him while he is near.
Let the wicked forsake his way,
and the unrighteous man hli
thoughti" (Isaiah 58: 6. 7).
The Leuon-Sermon alio Included
the following passage from the
Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy:
"If mortals would keep proper ward
over mortal mind, the brood of
evili which infut It would be cleared out"
Newfoundland branchu of Canadian banks operating ln St. John's
innounced t reduction from two to
one per eent In their Interest retes
on commercial funds in deposit, effective June 1.
THE CUMPS
By Sidney Smith
min - it w**** simply pathetic, 1
i tell you- bw. |» nothikior
but a shadow ot mis
former self- i hardly
recognized him, wmem i
saw mim- he'e eo thin-
you wouldn't think
he was the same man-
'__.
,'^
HIE EYES ARE HOLLOW ANb SUNKEN
HIS CHEEKS ARE THIN AND PALE-
HE'S SIMPLY WASTIN6 A.WAY-
PROMTHE OAY ME WAE TURNED
OCWN ON HIS INSURANCE .HE'S
OUST EEEN EIMKIN& LOWER
AND LONNER-
ICAWTHELP
FEELIN6 ITS
MOSTLY
MENTAL-
IP HETD 43NLY
USE HIS WILL
POWER A LITTLE
BIT-
mmry-mltm-
wiUa-. romtR ? ■	
YOU KNOW WHO MAS THE
WILL POWER ARouNO THAT HOUSE-
%»»*T YDU ? M»LU« ANO OLD LABY,
E STROSV AND >NMEH THEY GET
THROU6H EXERTIMrU THEIR POWER
o** ►!_* £!!=---theTS^ontBI
anytOInS EIFf m rr por us
BUT A COUPLE PMRASES
.OFK5NDREMEAI
rjSA
■ggsyagssa
 —
—
	
/
>
SAFI AT HOME
Jackson of thi Glanta ufe at homi In game betwun Glanti and Cubi.
PATRICK BOYS
MAKING GOOD
IN OWN RIGHT
Murray Wins Amateur
Heavyweight Title
of Canada
<aaa. .aaamaaaa.aaaaaaaaaa
CALGARY WINS IN
POLO GAME AT
KAMLOOPS
LYNN THE BEST
ROOKIE IN N.H.L
Expect "Muzz" to Be
on Rangers in
Future
By ELMER DULMAGE
Canadian Preu Staff Writer
TTiose lurpriatag sons of Letter
Patrick, working under the usual
handicap that aom of celebrated
fithen muit work, have advanced
to a point where they itand ai probably the moit unique brother eet ln
Canadian iport If they are not
super-all-round athletes, then that
breed must be extinct.
Lut winter stories came out of
New York to the effect that Murray
Patrick, younger son of the "Old
Fox," had box-fight aspiration!. It
wu in the middle of the hockey
season and the whole Patrick tribe
was waist-deep in the sport. But
Murray — or "Muzz"—was telling
Gotham iporte writer! how he could
box.
Just the other day the husky. 31-
year old youth won the Canadian
amateur heavyweight title at Edmonton by knocking out Tommy Osborne of Montreal ln the final. Osborne, the best heavy in the east,
had been flattening many of the
best amateurs in eutern united
States during the winter season.
Twice in the first round he
brought Murray to his kneea. Once
he nearly knocked Lester's son out
of the ring. Old Leiter wu at the
ringside, too. grimacing as he does
when his New York Rangers are
taking a thumping in the National
League hockey wars.
In the second round Muzz waded
Into Osborne and smashed him into
defeat with a two-fisted attack. He
dropped him with a mighty right
and when Tommy staggered to his
feet this Patrick clansman meuured
the Montrealer and put him away
for keeps.
So the Patrick made good again.
It will sur/ise no one If, within a
few years, Lester Is managing a
Ranger team on which his two sons,
Lynn and Mutz, are players. Hockey is the Patrick business and favorite sport and Lynn hai alreedy
made the grade.
Railed In the temperate climate
of Victoria, where the only skating
ice is artificial and the only hockey
players are imporetd, there seemed
little chance that Lynn and Muzz
would ever follow the hockey trail
blared by Lester and his brother
Frank, now manager of Boston
Bruins.
SHINE IN MANY FIELDS
They promptly earned national
reputations as basketball players.
In the spring of 1933 they led Victoria Blue Ribbons to the senior
national championship. In 1934 they
moved closer to natural ice and in
Montreal played both hockey and
buketball. The Montreal Nationale
basketball team won the eutern
title, with the Patrlcka showing
the way, and made a brave stand
before succumbing to Vancouver
Province in the Canadian final.
Lynn played football that fall. too.
making a place on the Wheeler
team of the Interprovinclal Union.
Then he decided he wanted to play
professional hockey. He went to
the Ranger training camp at Winnipeg ln the fall of 1934 to put his
father definitely on the spot
Luter had a host of fine amateurs
to chooee from and he finally lelect-
ed Bert Connally ot Moncton
Hewki and Lynn. The' othen were
not yet ready for the big league, he
decided and theie two were. By
choosing hia own ion the crafty
Ranger bou put himself on the spot.
Lynn shoved him off.
They booed him when he played
his first game ln Madison Square
Garden. When he found himself
there was nothing to it. He established himself u one ot the best
rookies of th\ season and wound up
New York's h!^ scorer ln the playoffs, playing regularly beside Mur-
rav Murdoch nnd Butch Keeling.
Murray spent the winter playing
defence on the Brooklyn Hamilton-
Crescent team, rated the strongesl
amateur outfit ln the United States.
In view of what theae utonishlng
brothers have already accomplished,
lt Is a foregone conclusion that Muzz
will wear Ranger livery pretty soon,
too.
KAMLOOPS, B.C., June 1
(CP)—A Calgary polo team defected Kamloops 8-2 In the fint
game of a week-end tournament. Crou and Gardiner eech
icored two goala tor the Al*
bertans, Francis scored one and
one went into the goal after
itrlking an opponent'! pony.
Hett and Lodwick accounted
for Kamloopa goals.
Okanagan Black Cats whitewashed the B.C. Huuan 10-0.
in another game, Talbot and
Wllmot scoring five goala each.
-"--•*"»-*■_*■ a*,-*,-•■-'■••••••e-'a* _»_**i
SWEEP PRIZES
LOWESTSO FAR
$5,636,000 Available
in Hospital
Draw
DUBLIN, June 3 (CP Cable).—
Another Irish Free State sweepstakes began Saturday — on next
Wednesday's derby—with grow receipts at 1,935,627 pounds (about
88,MO,000) and 1,160,900 pounds (33,-
636,000) available for prizes.
This ls the lowest prize fund for
the derby since the Free State hospital sweepstake began operations
five yean ago. The high mark was
reached with the derby of 1933 when
about 114,00,000 wu available for
prizes.
The new British anil-lottery bill
wu seen responsible for the big
drop.
Tne fund was divided into 11 units of 100,000 pounds eech ($486,000).
In each unit the drawer of e
ticket on on the winning hone receives a fint prize ot 3108,000; second $75,000 and third $150,000. Seventy-seven other horses are included in the drew, thne being itlll in
the race at iecond acceptance, although actually there are only 17
hones left in the big race.
Tickets on a hone were worth
approximately $2250. Of the balance, there will be 100 consolation
prizes of $486 and residual priiee.'
The draw will be confined to
three days, today, Monday and Tuesday.
Rowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling
Lacrosse - Golf - Trqpk - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball
PAOE EIGHT -
-THE NELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON.  B.C—MONDAY  MORNING. JUNI 3. 1838-
■ PAOE EIGHT
Ellsworth Vlnu. left and Frank Shields, right In Hollywood,
PERRYTAKES
FRENCH TITLE
PARIS, June 3 (AP)—Fred Perry,
England's dominating tennis player,
captured the French hard courts
singles championship today by beating the defending tltleholder, Baron
Gottfried von Cramm of Germany.
6-3, 3*6, 6*1. 6-3.
Madame Hilda Krahwinkel Sperling of Germany took the women's
single! title with ease by defeating
Mme. Rene Mathleu of France by
6-2, 6-1.
Mme Sperling received little opposition from Mme. Mathleu ln her
straight set victory, but Peny found
a stalwart antagoniat ln von Cramm.
Perry won by virtue of e aeeming
divination u to where the German
nobleman would place hii shoti.
BULLDOGS WIN
FOOTBALL TITLE
CRICKET SCORES
LONDON, June 2 (CP cable).-
Cloie of play scores in first clau
cricket matchei itarted Saturday
follow:
Middleaex 143; Gloucestenhire 74
runs for three wickets,
Surrey 175; Essex 169 for eight
wlcketi.
Kent 183; Yorkshire 181.
Worceatenhlre 111; Lelcutenhlre
137.
Northamptonshire 137; Glamorgan
158 runi for four wlcketi.
Nottinghamshire 334; Warwlckahlre 148 for three wickets.
Sussex 331 for nine wlcketi vs.
Somerset.
Himpihlre 140; Derbyihlre 301 for
two wlcksts
South Africim 368 (Mitchel 88,
Booth ilx for 79); Lancashire 33 for
three wickets.
Cambridge University 284 (Covington 70. Hotchkln 60); the Army
48 tor three wickets.
TRAIL, B. C, June 2.—Eut Trail
football squad, which made iti debut thli season, went right to the
top ln the aecond dlvlaion Trail
School's Soccer league aggregating
six polnta with Thistles and Bulldogs tied tor second piece with three
points each.
Teams; P. D. L. D. Pta.
Eut Trail  4  3   10  6
Thlstlei _ 4  1  J   1   8
Bulldogi  _ .41113
In Seturday'i iecond division
game East Trail took on a representative squad of Central school and
beat the latter by a lone goal which
wu scored by Reg Smart when D.
Price crossed the goal.
Rgsulfs
8ATURDAY
NATIONAL
St. Louis 4-4, Chicago 8*1.
Philadelphia 4-3, Brooklyn 8-0.
New York-Boston rata.
No othen scheduled.
AMERICAN
Boston 6-2. New York 0-4.
Chicago 8, Detroit 4.
Wuhlngton 0-3. Philadelphia 8-7.
Cleveland 3-4, St. Louii 7-2.
PACIFIC COAST
Oakland 2, Los Angela 6.
Sacramento 4, San Francisco 14,
Missions 2, Portland 4.
SUNDAY
INTERNATIONAL   LEAGUE
Baltimore 2-4, Albany 0-8.
Toronto 2*3, Montreal 16-4.
Buffalo 14-0, Rochuter 4-5.
Newark 4-7, Syracuie 10-8.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Louliville 7-3; Toledo 8 3.
Minneapolis 3-4; Milwaukee 0-13.
Indianapolis 11; Columbus 3
(called ta 8th, rain—second poatponed).
St Paul 1; Kanua 3 (iecond game
postponed, rain).
NEW YORK (CP)-It didn't get
much notice in the papen, but the
fact that not a single bottle of pop
was aold at the opening beuball
game of the season here on April 16
was regarded as unique. It was so
cold the customers stuck rigidly to
a diet of hot dogs and coffee.
YANKS HOLD ON
TO LEAGUE LEAD
Homers Give Them a
7-2 Win Over the
Red Sox
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pet.
New York 38   15 .634
Chicago   J- 23   15 .595
Cleveland   23  16 .579
Detroit 31   18 .538
Boston ,— 20   19 .513
Wuhlngton _ 17  33 .425
Philadelphia _ _ 15 22 .405
St Loula 10   26 .278
NEW YORK, June 3 (AP). -
Yankeu popped home runs out
among the tam today to gain a 7-2
victory over the Red Sox in the
series final ahd retain their hold of
the American league lud.
Bill Dickey led the clouting spree
with two of the boundary belts,
bringing his season's total to eight.
The othen came from the bata of
Frank Crosetti, Ben Chapman,
George Selkirk and Red Rolfe.
Boston  000 000 020— 2   8   1
New York  02100121x-l 10  0
Pipgrei, Rhodei, Walberg and
Berg; Ruffing and Dickey.
FOUR PITCHERS
DETROIT, June 2 (AP)-Detroit
Tigen belted four Chicago White
Sox pltchera for 14 hiti today to
win 10-5.
Manager Mickey Cochrane led the
attack on the Sox, getting three hlte
ta three official times at bat two
of them doubles.
The Tigen had their big inning
ta the third, scoring seven runs.
Chicago  022001000—6 10   1
Detroit  _ 107000Ilx—10 14  3
Wyatt Tletje, Vance, Phelps and
SeweU; Crowder and Cochrane.
LOWER STILL
ST. LOUIS, June 2 (AP).—The
climbing Cleveland Indians pushed
St. Louis deeper In the American
league cellar today by drubbing the
Browns 6-2 before a Sunday crowd
kept to 2000 by lowering skies.
Cleveland  010 000410-6 11   1
St. Louis  00020000—2   9   0
Harder and Pytlak; Vanatta, Wei-
lend and Hemsley,
ATHLETICS WIN
PHILADELPHIA, June 2 (AP).—
Iita game marked by rousing finishes on both sides, the Athletics
noted out Waahlngton Senaton to
day by 8-7.
The Senaton, ln their lait time at
bat, tied the acore at uven all, but
the A'a came back in their turn to
push over the one run needed to
win.
Wuhlngton  102000013-7 11   1
Philadelphia  ...310030101-6 11   0
Bean, Llnke, Pettlt and Redmond:
Benton, Dietrich and Richards.
TRAIL SENIORS
TAKEINDIANS
Hold Them Down to 2
Runs While They
Make Seven
TRAIL, B.C. June ..-Stepping
on to the mound in the fourth Inning, Louis Demore, of hurling fame
a few yean ago, showed some of
hli old stuff when he held the Indians to two hits, itruck out eight
and walked one in a baseball fixture at Butler park Sunday afternoon which -resulted in a 7-3 win
for the Trail senlon.
Bogstie, who hurled for the seniors ta the fint three frames struck-
out six, allowed three hits and walked none. Bogstie was ln hla usual
good form but it appeared that Manager Hank Lauriente wu giving Demore a trial which certainly produced the goods. Loree, who started out well for the Indians lut
Sunday, only to be hit all over the
lot about the fourth, waa no more
successful in this week's fixture, for
after allowing four hits ta the fifth,
with two men away, he voluntarily
gave way to Broadhurst, who came
in to strike out the fint man he faced and retire the side.
Broadhunt struck out three end
walked one in the three innings he
chucked but splendid support allowed only two hits. Loree struck
out two, allowed nine hlta and
walked none.
LACK HITTING POWER
Thc Indians played well ln the
field but lacked power ln hitting.
Four of their five hits being singles,
the other a two-bagger poled out by
West In the third.
On the senior squad Declmbrinl's
average was .750 for the day, the
hefty slugger making three two-
baggcrs for four times at bat and
reaching fint on the other occuion
on an error.
It wu Declmbrinl's double in the
fifth, followed by another by Falr-
bairn when bases were full, that did
Babe Ruth Quits Baseball
When President Refuses
Him a Day Off to See Boat
Is Given Unconditional Release After Makes
Application to Be Placed on the
"Voluntary Retired" List
the damage. Four runi betas tallied
in thet inning.
SUMMARY
Trail Senlon .. 020140 00x-7 11  3
Indiana  001000001-2  S  4
The teami were:
Tadanac Inndlans—Wert, Cameron, Blundun, Kulai. Purmal, Mllburn, Mainland, Burrowi, Broadhurst and Loree.
Tnll Senlon — Demore, Hall,
Rothery, Fisher, Honwlll, McTeer,
Jenkins, Decimbrlnl, Falrbalrn, Morris,, Harrison, Bogstie.
Umpiree-BLUy Moliikl and Mike
Buckna.
GRADS RETAIN
TIGER POWER.'
Ll
1 CHARLEY. GEHRINGERk
[HENRY CRKENBBMl
'COCHRANE]
IJOYNER WHITEl
Lait yur thli group of Detroit
Tigers were ill JOO hitters or
bitter—the main reuon Detroit
grabbed thi American league pennant, thiy wire playing over thilr
head! uld thi experts—and opining gamn seemed to bur thit out
However Mickey Cochrane Is •
fighter and ifter the disastrous
start his Tigtrs began to regain
their old-time form. All theu lids,
Including Schoolboy Rowl, ware
memberi of thl 1934 champlonihlp
aquad. Rowe Kd thi team's pitchers In effectlvinni lait yur.
wswmo
HOOP TITLE
EDMONTON, June 2 (CP)-Tum-
lng back the hardest challenge ilnce
winning the Utle fint ta 1922, Edmonton Commercial Grads retained
their women'i international baaketball champlonjhlp by defeating Tul-
sa, Okla., Stenoi, three games to
one, ta e scheduled five-game series.
Grade came through with a last-
minute rally Saturday night to defeat Tulia 43-40 for their '.hlrd victory of the lerlu. They won the
opening game 83-49, lost the second
by the same score, and came back
to wta the next game 37-30.
Over 8000 wildly excited fana uw
the Saturday night tuisle. Tulu lead
13-9 at the end of the tint quarter
and Grads were on the long end of
a 21-20 score at half time. Tulu led
at the three-quarter mark when the
score wu 31-29 but Grads last period drive brought victory by three
points.
UNKNOWN WINS
THE MARATHON
WASHINGTON. June t (API-
Pat Dengii of Baltimore, a comparative novice at long dlitance
running, received a ihower of congratulation! today following hii
spectacular victory ta the United
Statu A.A.U. marathon Saturday.
Racing the laat 10 milu with a
darting pain in hii side, the 32-year-
old tooimaker, crossed the finish
line 200 yards ahead of hia nearest
competitor ln two houn 83 minutes and S3 seconds.
Trailing the Welshman were such
international stan u Dave Komonen ot Sudbury, Ont, former Canadian national champion and winner of the United Statu crown ta
1933-34; wee Percy Wyer of Toronto,
and James Bartlett of Oshawa, Ont
The winner grabbed the lud
•ome 11 milu from the itarting
point and held it all the wey.
Hugo Kauppinen, 42-year-old
German carpenter who haa been
running the 26 milei, 383 yarda dlatance for more than a decade, wai
iecond, pulling up from the ruck
in the lut eight mllu. Hli time wu
2:35*27.
Porter crowed the Une four mta*
utes after Kauppinen and wu tol*
lowed closely by Komonen who
drew from hli weary legs a brief
spurt in the lut few yards to note
out Bartlett
SAYS WON'T PLAY
FOR EMIL FUCHS
"I Hate to Tell You
Boys This," He
Admits
■y SILL KINO
(Aueelated Preu Staff Writer)
BOSTON, June 2 (AP).-Babe
Ruth wu given hli unconditional
releeie tonight by Emil Fuchs. president of Boiton Bnvu, a few noun
after he had announced hla Intention of going on the voluntary re*
Und lilt
The alow burning bomb that hu
had the baaeball world going around
with Ita fingen ta iti em since the
season started let go this afternoon
when Ruth told hla teamrnitu and
then the bueball writen be wu
through.
Tonight Fuchs, after aeveral houn
of seclusion, came out with the announcement that removed baseballs'
aged and ailing Idol from the club's
roster.
3attii\A
jeeders
 , o	
■y The Auoclitid Preu
Bill Terry broke hia lut-place
Ue with Joe Medwlck in the bte six
yuterday although both played important parta in the day'i huvy
hitting. Terry gained five pointi
with two hlta ta four tlmu up while
Medwlck made another trip to the
plate for a lesser gain and lost his
place in the sextet. Joe Vosmik
wu again ousted from fifth place
as Charley Gehrlnger of Detroit,
hitting two out of four for e three-
point gain, moved ahead of the
Clevelander who failed to hit Pepper Martin made the biggest gain,
10 points, with three mui out ot
four times while Bob Johnion hit
two out of three to pick up six
points. The itandlng:
G  Ab   R  H   Pet.
Johnson.
Athletlca 37   191   38   82   .411
Vaughan,
Firatu   43   181   39   88   .403
Martin.
Cardlnall ... 33 148 39 67 .390
Foxx,
Athletlci . . 37 127 36 46 .362
Gehrlnger,
Tigen   38   189   30   88   .381
Terry.
Giant! 39   137   22   93   .338
CANUCK GOLFERS
LEAVE SCOTLAND
LONDON, June 2 (CP cable)-
The touring Canadian golf turn
uiled Saturday from Greenock,
Scotland, after ■ month's campaign-
tag ln Britain. -    ■
BOSTON. June 2 (AP) .-After
watching hit Eoston Bravu team-
matu hand the New York Glanti
their flnt ihut-out of the seuon,
3-0, Bebe Ruth announced he Intended to go on the voluntary retired llat
During the ninth Inning ot the
game the ailing hotnerun slugger
called the baseball writen Into the
Bravu dressing room a. d told them
he wu displeased with th trutment accorded him by !>-" Fuchs,
Bravu pruldent and decided to ask
Kenesaw M. Landls. bueball commissioner, to place him on the voluntary retired list
"I hate to tell you bo- thle." Ruth
uld, "but I bave decided to go on
the voluntary retired lilt I like the
Bravu and have nothing but the
hlgheat regard for Manager Bill
McKechnie, but I will not play
another game for the team aa long
u Fuchs remains u ita heed.
"I called Fuchs lut nigh, and told
him I wanted to go to New York
to take pert ln the reception that
will Le held ta honor of the T-i h
liner Normandie when lt docks
there Tueiday. Fuchs ordered me
to report at Bravu field on that day.
My leg wont let n.e play until Thunday and I aee no niton why I wu
denied permission I've r ' enov h
money to live on and I am not going
to accept auch treatment"
HoTne.Rons
. ' Q   >      -
•y The Associated Preu
Home runa yuterday: Dickey,
Yankeea, 3: Croietti, Yankeu;
Chapman, Yankeu; Selkirk, Yankeu; Rolfe, Yankeu; Almada, Red
Sox; Trosky, Indians; Averlll, Indlani; Gehrlnger, Tlgen; J. Colllna,
Cardinals; Urbanikl, Bravu; Taylor, Dodgen; Bucher, Dodgen, one
eech.
The luders: Johnion, AthleUci,
12; Greenberg, Tigen, 11; Foxx,
Athletlci, 10; Ott, Gianti, 9; Bonura,
White Sox, 9.
League totals: American 178, National 188, total 343.
BRAVES TRIM
GIANTS 2 TOO
St. Louis Turns Back
Chicago Cubs
by 6-5
NATIONAL LIAOUI
W. L. Pet.
New York 38 10 .722
St Loula 24 15 .618
Pittsburgh _ 24 13 .598
Chicago __ -IB 17 0114
Brooklyn   20 19 .513
Cincinnati 18 21 .432
Philadelphia  13 23 .361
Boston 10 37 210
JIMMIES WIN A
DOUBLEHEAPER
Take Hume Aces 14 to
10 in Convincing
Style    \y
AGNES STEWART
GETS 2 HOMERS
Red Sox Go Down to
Tune of 34-7; Make
,17 Errors
BOSTON. June 3 (AP). - Babe
Ruth's announcement he wu going
on the voluntary retired lilt so enraged his Boston Bravu tumrhates
today they subjected New York
Gianti to their tint shut-out of the
seeson, 2-0. The defeat snapped the
viaiton' victory string at leven
gamu.
Bobby Smith, veteran Boston
righthander, gave the Giants eight
hits, but the tight defensive play of
his mates prevented scoring.
New York     0   8  0
Boston  2   6   1
Castleman, Stout and Mancuso;
Smith and Hogan.
COLLINS SLAMS HOMER
CHICAGO, June 2 (AP).—A five-
run ninth Inning rally, climaxed by
Jimmy Collins' homer with the basu
loaded, and some effective relief
pitching by Dtiiy Dean gave St.
Louis Cardinals a third straight victory over the Cubs 6-5 today before
8896.
The elder Dean, fourth St Louis
pitcher, waved the victory for the
Cardinals.
St. Loula _.._. 8   10  3
Chicago   8    7  0
Walker, Harrell. Hallahan, J. Dun
and Davis; Carleton, French and
Hartnett
SCORE AT WILL
CINCINNATI. June * (AP). -
Scoring almost at will off the offerings of Paul Derringer and Tony
Freitas. Pittsburgh Firatu shut out
Cincinnati Reds 8-0 today.
The Reds failed to silve the mound
work of big Jim Wuver, while the
Plratu, getting away to a one-run
lud In the fint, bunched three more
ln the fifth and uventh Innlngi to
ult the game away.
Pittsburgh S  IS  0
Cincinnati 0    8  7
Weaver and Orace; Derringer,
Freitas and Lombardl.
GOLF
BY <k
MORRISON /-)■
Every error you make in your
swing can be traced to fautly leg
action. And faulty leg acUon ls
caused mainly by tight muscles
and joints at the start of the swing.
The wont thing you cm do is
to itand over the ball with your
legs rigid. Tension In your lower
limbs forces you into the wrong
body action. It makes you away
back and forth, bob up and down
with the upper part of your body.
It keeps your body from co-ordinating with your hands during the
swing.
You can overcome most of this
leg tension limply by standing
with your weight on your left leg
and your right foot rolled over
toward the inside. Try this the
next time you play.   .
PHILLIES WIN
BROOKLYN, June 3 (AP).-Th?
Phllllu made lt two out of three
over Brooklyn Dodgen by winning
the final game ot the aeries today
7*3. Erron contributed to the defeat
of Tom Zachary, veteran left-hander,
who struck out nine, going the route
for the Dodgers. Jim Bucher and
Danny Taylor hit home rum for
the victims.
Philadelphia  T  10 0
Brooklyn  8   11   8
Bivta. Jorgens. Prim, Johnaon and
Wilson; Zachary and Phelpi, Lopez.
SNAILS TAKE
SOCCER TITLE
TRAIL, B.C., June 2 - Snails
romped off with the fint division
title of the schools' socccer league
for the second successive season
when they chalked up their third
win Saturday morning at BuUer
park out of four starts.
The final standing follows:
Teams P W L D PU
Snaili    4   3   10   6
Arctlci 4   2   115
Roven  4  0  3   13
In the tint tilt Snails shut out
the Roven three goals to nothing,
Andy Bilesky getUng all three
counters, the second a penalty shot.
Roven and Arctlci later ln the
day Ued with one goal apiece, Sapronoff scoring for the former and
Kendall for the latter.
MEMORIAL  CUP  HOUND
WINWPEG (CP)-Harry Neil has
e real Memorial cup record. Hc
?layed with Winnipeg Falcone in
921 when . the Icelandic team
brought the Canadian Junior title
emblem wut tor the tint time.
This spring he coached Winnipeg
Monarchs and got an even greater
thrill when hla kids defeated Sudbury Wolves and lifted the Memorial cup again.
Nelion'i glrli toa s. the Hume
Acu and the Red Sox put up a weak
display of softball Sundiv afternoon
and wer* taken into cimp by the
Trail Jimmies, 14-10 and 34-7 respectively at the Recreation ground!.
Nelion glrli were weak in every
department, whereu the Jlmmlu
battled well and there wu little
wrong with their fielding. Jlmmlu
only had ilx erron chalked up
agalnit them ln two gamu, and the j
Acu had eight and the Red Sox 17.
Both games were leven-innlng
matchu. In the opener the Jlmmlu
had a 9-2 lud by the fourth Inning
and they kept a comfortable dlitance
ahead throughout to win 14-10. They
itarted strongly wltb Anne Sapronoff making a hoi**— ta the flnt
inning, and although they got the
basu full, Kay McDouga'.l caurht
Josle Rou' foul Up to retire the
side. The Acu did not get a player
on bue until the third inning and
their first run came ln the fourth.
GETS HOMER
Anne Sapronoff wu the big batter
tor Trail In this game, coming
through with two healthy wallois,
one being a home run and the other
was stretched Into a home run on a
fielden' erron. She also got a single.
Cara Rlngwood and Hazel Mawdsley
uch got two hits, and for the Aces,
W. Milne and Clara Talberg uch
got two ilnglu. Of the tint nine
Aces thit came to bat, four went out
on foul Upa to Josie Rou, who played
a fine game in her position u
catcher. Cora Miller pitched a 'xi
game for Trail.
As ta the second **ame, the Jimmies ran wild on the buu, assisted
by errors and poor judgment on the
part of the Nelaon girls.
The sixth and seventh were big Innings for the Hume and they made
four ta uch. The sixth wu ilso a
big Inning for the Jlmmlu, five runa
being brought over home beie.
TV Culley and L. Hawklni refereed.
SUMMARY
Trail  132 808 0-14   11  4 i
Hume Acu 000 304 4-10   8  8
Lineupi:
Trail Jlmmlu - fcabel Wright
Anne Sapronoff, Miry Grlplch Cara
Ringwood, Lilly Sapronoff, Hazel
Mawdsley, Josie Rou, Francii
Thorndale. Cora Miller.
Hume Acei—Peggy Gibbon, El*
vera Mathuon, Peggy Donaldson,
Aria Saare. Edna McKenzle, Babe
McGovern, W. MUne, Clara Talbcig.
JIMMIES TROUNCE
RED SOX
Jimmies left no doubt u to what
they Intended doing in the second
game against the Red Sox. Making
six hits ta the opening inning and
coupling them with five errora on
the part of the Red Sox, they made
nine runs. They duplicated this feat
in the second inning, the Red Sox
being only able to make one run ln
the second inning after being
blanked ta Ute first
The locals were blinked In two
Innlngi and wire hlld to one In
two other*. Thiy wire moit Impressive In thl third when they
garnered five. Agnu Stewart wae
the outitindlng batter In thle
garni ind In her four tripe up,
•lammed out two homen and connected for two slnglu—e perfiot
day at bat Junle King got twe
•Ingles.
GETS FIVE HITS
Isabel Wright besides doing aome
brilliant fielding for the Jlmmlu,
got five ufe hiti ta seven tlmu at
bat Cara Ringwood, Josle Rou and
Francu Thorndale uch got four out
of uven. Huel Mawdsley hit a
homer ln the tblrd.
Red Sox offered little opposition
and contributed 17 erron to the welfare of their visiton. The Jimmlu
connected for 28 bite. Lilly Sapronoff pitched a good game and wu
given good support by her teem-
matu. She struckout five batten.
Btll Freno and Walt Gillett refereed.
SUMMARY
Jimmies      DOS 164 x-34  38    1
Red Sox 01! 103 0- 7   10   17
Red Sox lineup: Mary McDougall,
Agnu Stewart Alvina Arlt, Rou
Stewart, Carmella DelPuppo, Kay
McDougall, Beth McKlnney, Junle
King, Dot Jarbeau.
Jimmlu lineup wu the ume ei
In the flnt gime, with the exception
of Lilly Grlplch Uklng Cora Miller's
place.
BIRTHDAY CRHTINCS
(By Th Canadian Preu)
To Ott Heller, speedy New York
Ranger defenceman, who wu born
23 yean ago yuterday. The fleet
Ott was born in Kitchener and that'i
where he itill livu. He starred u a
Junior hockey player, turned profusions! with Springfield In the Canadian-American league and was
taken up by Luter Patrick in 1931.
PLAIN
CORK TIP
British Consols
COIUCT THI CARD PR
 HMM^HHN
HHPHHH^^^^IHl^H
(M
MARCH RAILWAY EARNINGS DOWM
BUT 3-MONTH FIGURES HIGHER
t N. R; Revenues Show 2.3 Per Cent Drop;
C. P. R. Decrease Is 4.9 Per Cent
-THS NSLSON DAILY NSWS. NSLSON. B.C—MONDAY MORNINO. JUNS S. IMS-
OTTAWA, June J (CP)-The Do-
tlnlon bureau of itatlitlci Saturday
•ported e illght drop in Canadian
lllway eirnlngs for March cornered with the tame month lait
Mr but an Increase In gross earn*
III for the first quarter of 1939.
The railways earned t2S.Me.SM
I March as against t24.896_S30 Ust
ear, e decreaae of $809,842. or 34
er cent. There were five Sundays
I the month this year and four last
ear and on a week day buls, earn-
10 were $917,181 per day ln 1938
■ againit $913,205 per day last year,
ii increase of SH per cent
Operating expense! Increased
rom 320,830,1.19 to 820.__UM.75-t. re-
ucing the net operating revenue
rem 14,026,377 to 62.-61.938. Freight
raffle ihowed a decrease of 8.1 per
ent but passenger traffic as meas-
red in passenger miles increased
.1 per cent The total payroll
mounted to 812.928,224 ai againit
12.793,919 in 1934 and the number
I employees Increased from 113492
) 118,744.
For the three months, grow earn-
lgi were $68.3794*44 tn 1934 and
(6493,728 in 1934 nnd the oDeratlng
leomei were $2,631,095 ln 1938 and
8,132.523 in 19M.
'..NM. DOWN 24 PER CENT
Gross earnings of the Canadian
•rational railways tor March defined from $11,742,920 in 1934 to
ill.476.__82 or 34 per cent, lew than
night be expected from the extra
Sunday. Operating expenses in*
ireased from $10,731,847 to $10,828,-
110 end the net operating revenue
wu reduced by from $1,021,072 to
$848,451.
Freight traffic declined 7.1 per
cent and paaaenger traffic increaied
9 per cent although passenger revenue! were lighter by 3.7 per cent
The number of employeei waa reduced by 673, or 1 pet cent and the
payroll wai reduced from $7,028,885
to $7,021,746, or .1 per eent
United Statei Unw ihowed a de-
create ln net operating revenuet
from $577,886 to $447469. reducing
the lyitem net operating revenue to
$1498,421, ai againit $1,598,958 laat
year.
For the flnt quirter the iron
revenues of the system lnereaaed
from $37,366,442 last yetr to $38,-
376,400 and the operating income
debit wai reduced from $1,769,690
to $1.199482, an improvement of
$570478.
C.N.R. OFF 4.9 PER CENT
Oross operating revenue! of the
Canadian Pacific railway for Msrch
were reduced by $489,867, or 44 per
cent. $9,932,804 In 1934 and $9,462,736
in 1938. Operating expeniea were
increased from $8,077,319 to $8,118,-
673 and the oeerating income wai
reduced by M71.693, from $1418,929
ln 1934 to $1,047,235.
Freight traffic declined 6.3 per
cent but passenger traffic increased
1.6 per cent. The number of employees wu increaied 1150 or 2.7
per cent, and the total payroll by
$97,965, or 3 per cent.
For the first quarter revenues
declined from $27,551,205 to $26,346,-
287 and the operating Income from
$3,226,439 to $2,101,694 or by $1.-
124,745.
Weekly Review of the
Mines
By SIONEY NORMAN
Mining Editor. Vancouver Sun
VANCOUVER, B.C., June 2.-At
lhe annual meeting ot Pioneer Gold
klnei held Friday, Thomu Fortune Ryan, the third, and General
p. M. Hogarth of Toronto, were
sleeted  dlreeton  succeeding  Mn.
[elen Wallbridge  and  Doctor
Ihompson who resigned in tbeir
ivor. President Victor Spencer enounced that since 40 or 50 per cent
1 the company's capital itock was
eld ln eastern Canada and United
Itates the dlreeton felt that these
hareholders should be represented
n tbe board. Most optimistic state-
tenti were made by Managing Dl*
actor David Sloan In answer to
uestions of shareholder!. He de*
tared that reserves were, aU things
onsidered, equal to any shown by
ny gold mine in Canada, that more
Ire had been developed above num*
ier fourteen level lut yeer than
iad been milled, and that large
lonage would yet be developed
■heck number fourteen level or in
lhe footbaU vein, now being developed and which already showed
Important reserves. No. 2 shaft has
leached the 23 level, which ls 2829
Beet below collar of shaft It will
continued  to  the  26th  level,
|rhlch wiU be 3200 feet below col*
of shaft and later continued te
3900 toot level. No lateral work
►ill be done until the 26th level
l been reached.
At tha annual matting of White-
■water mines. Slooan dlitrlct on
phuraday, capital waa Increaied
Mr-em 2400400 to 3,000,000 tharei
land additional stock turned over
In full utlsfactlon of loans aggregating aproximattly $180,000. Thli
titan tht compsny entlnly of
debt tnd It li believed operations
en company account It one of
bait of producers In tht district
and hu betn operated almoit
eontlnueuily for 40 yun with
production reoord of $9499,000.
Major J. W. Stewart la pruldent
At a ipeclal meeting of ihare-
olders Taylor (Bridge River) mines
Tiursdiy, shareholders ratified a
eal by which company taku over
control of Kamloopi Homutake
mine in Kamloops aru. Company
wUl also advance $20,000 to increase
capacity of 30-ton mUl now on 'he
property, the sum to be returned
out of fint production. The property is high glade silver lead showing appreciably valuei In gold.
Operations at Meridian mine,
tardeau district, wera Interrupted
for a few days early In the week
owing to trouble with tramway
cable. Rtptln have been made,
however, and operations returned
at capacity Wednesday.
Another Important ttrike It re*
ported from Center Itar mlnei of
Weiko Exploration end Development oompany at Ymlr, Nalion
district The vein hat bun picked
up put the ucond fault with
hudlngt prooeedlng In drift width
of ort. Croat 'cut to tht aouth at
five hai picked up enother body
of sulphide on believed to be
tht touth vein with surfaoe showing 300 feet south of mtin vein
with trend towtrd tht lttttr. More
definite Informttlon will be reoelved thli wuk from Arthur
Lakes, consulting engineer, who ll
now on the ground.
At the annual meeting of Cariboo
Gold Quartz mlnei, cariboo district Thursday, Pretident W. B.
Burnett announced that he mw no
reuon why dividends ihould not
be itarted next October. Superintendent R. Randal Rose explained
the mining situation and announced
that increue of mlU capacity trom
100 toni to 190 toni dally wai now
under way with probability it would
be further Increased to 200 tona before end of year. A telegram from
the mine Juit before the meeting
announced that the 1900-foot leve)
had entered the Weill Shear. Thli
vein is the largest quartz showing
on BarkerviUe mountain and offers
important possibilities. Details aa to
values and widths wiU be available
ihortly. Present dlreeton were reelected.
Montreal Stock Prices
feell Telephone.
ISJi1**" ::=:::::
I C Power A  	
iuildlng Producta	
Cen Car and Foundry „	
can Cement      _....
_fcan Cement Pfd	
Han Ind Al A 	
Kan Ind Al B  	
Km*M la s'IZZZZZZZ
Bom Glau  _ 	
)om Textile  ___
Jen Steel Waree 	
;harl«a Gurd      ....
tamllton Bridge  ....
nt Nickel       	
Maasey Harrli  	
•ontreel Power _	
•let Steel Car 	
■Iat Brew  	
■Vice Broe
" lebee
 134
fcenvin" WltUaroi
ISeuth Can Power
8-4
M
29 Vi
7
6Vi
55%
SV,
6%
10%
.    7%
172
28
.110
68
2V,
.    t
2%
.   27%
.     41*
28
IS
33%
2
.   14*
.   19H
.  13%
•    «H
Steel of Canada
CURB
Au'd Brew	
Brew St Dist	
B A OU      _.
Can Celanue	
Can Dredge ....
Can Malting .
Can Wineriu
Dist Seagram
Dryden Paper
Imperial Oil
Imperial Tob Can
Int Pete
McCoil Frontenac
Mitchell Robt	
Page Heney 	
BANKS
Canada    __.,,-.
Commerce _.__	
Domln ton^^^H
Imperial   	
Montreal     _....
Nova Scotia	
Royal 	
MISCELLANEOUS
Dam Stores ,	
Ford Cen A,    	
47%
7%
28%
Montreal Silver Prices
I MONTREAL, June 2 (CP). — Silver futures closed
ptesdy on the Canadian commodity exchsnge Saturday, 80
io 60 lower, s totsl of 10 contracts were traded, June 1; Sept.
i;Dec.8. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
[Tune
Bept
Dec.
Open
74.60
76.76
76.40
74l0
76.76
74.40
Low
74.60
76.10
76.40
Cleae
74.60
7546-76.26
76.90-76.40A
Market and Mining News
VANCOUVER TO
COMMN FALL
Coast Boord Sets the
Excursion Back
Three Months
Notlee wu received by tbe Nelion
board of trade Sunday, of tha postponement until tall, of the excursion planned by the Vancouver
board of trade for eutern Britiih
Columbia. ,
Ai icheduled, the eaeurslonlsts
would hav been in thia district the
week beginning June 16, In which
they would have visited TraU and
Tadanac, Nelson and the gold camps
•outh ef it, Creston, Cranbrook.
Kimberley and Fernle, u well u
the Windermere.
In a letter received by Secretary
W. G. C. LanikaU, W. E. Payne,
executive secretary of the Vancouver board, in announcing the postponement, and sending his board's
regrets for any inconvenience
caused, uked the receiver of the
letter ts "kindly advise the press to
state that on account of so many of
our men desiring September instead of June, the change has been
made for that reason."
So tar u the Nelson board of
trade wu concerned, the plans
called for transporting the visitors
from Nelson to the gold .camps,
where the mining operators,would
act u their hosts, and returning
them to Nelion, and entertaining
them there.
WtUflMET
REGAINS
NIW YORK, June 2 (AP).-After
selling rather feverishly during the
early part of the itoek market lei-
slon saturd**y, trader! turned
abruptly and lumped aboard tbe
equities band-wagon again, concentrating in mining sharei.
In itl ludden improvement th"
mirket recovered moit of the
ground loit earlier.
The sharp gain! Ul the mining
itocki, broken said, resulted from
buying ln speculative quartera
where it wu believed the administration might once more hoiit the
price of lilver in an effort to offset deflationary forcea set in motion by the supreme court's decision on NRA. Sales totalled 676,490
aharw.
Buying of ailver itocki carried
U. S. Smelting up SH points to 112,
Cerro de Pasco up 2% to 99, and
American Smelting up 2 to 42%.
SMELTERS GAINS
TORONTO, June 2 (CP)—The
Toronto industrial share market
displayed little pep in the first session of the month, trading appearing in small volume and prlcei
undergoing a mild lethick. Consolidated Smelten wu lifted 3%
to 171% and Nickel boarded a fractional gain but the rest of the board
hesitated.
Oils were active. Imperial and International Petroleum records!
losses of % to %. Selling of Westons
featured the foods. The price backed
up 2 pointi to cloie at 32.
Canadian Dollai
Still at Par
NEW YORK, June 2 (CP)-A
sharp rally ln the French franc,
balanced by a corresponding de*
dine in the iterllng rate, wu recorded in Saturday'! foreign exchsnge marketi.
Final quotation! were et 6.60%
cents, .01% of a cent ebove Fridayl
rate.
The pound dropned 1% cents to a
closing rate of 34.91%. Canadian
dollar wu unchanged at par.
Exchonges-
NEW YORK, June 3 (CPI.—Sterling exchange euy et R90H for
80-day bllla and at 34.81% for demand.
Canadian dollara—Saturday par,
Friday par, week ago % premium.
Franc 6.80% centa.
Lire 823 centa.
Metal Markets
NEW YORK, June 3 (API-Bar
illver weaker, % lower at 74.
At London—Bar illver firmer,
3-16 higher tt 33%d.
Winnioeq Grain
Exchange Rates
MONTREAL, June 3 (CP)-Brlt-
'   and foreign exchange cloaed
uafalia, poundi -—
■lustrii, schilling ..._ -
Belgium, belga 	
Brazil, mllrels    	
Khlna, Hong Kong doilan
. 3.0241
.1888
.170.
. .0860
. .6039
.   .0861
Germany, relchautark
Greet Britain, pound
Hungary, pengo 	
India, rupee	
Japan, yen
.4046
4.BS15
MM
.3730
.2909
4.8904
.1370
South Africa, poind	
Spain, peeeta 	
United Statee, dollar 1*32 per eent
discount.
(CompUed by Uie Royal Bank of
Canada).
WINNIPEG, June 2 (CP)-Grain
futures quotations:
Open   High   Low   Cloie
Dow  Jones  Averages
30 Industrials  I 109.74 off 0.90
20 rails  „  ....   80.48 off 0.20
20 utilities „   20.08 off 0.21
Vancouver  Stock   Exchange
Bid
A P Con     X)7%
Amal OU U   '
Bif Mluourl      .84
Bradlan          220
Bralorne Gold    629
Bridie R Con     MV,
BRX Gold -11%
Cariboo Gold Q .      1.13
C dt E Corp M
Cout Breweries .   13.00
Dentonla          .42
Gold Belt     _     -»
Hargal Oil      .02%
Home OU  38
Int Coal           _»
Koot Belle      .43
Mak Siccar          _W
McDougal Segur ....    .03%
McLeod Oil      40
Meridian             -07
Model OU            .22
Morning Star      -08%
Nat Sliver           M
Pioneer Gold 10.80
Premier Gold ' 168
Premier Border .00%
Ouatslno —
Reno Gold 1.81
Reeves MacDonald     .18
Sally Mlnei      41
Salmon Oold 12
Sheep Creek  02
Soooner OU    _    -21%
Taylor Bridge      .17
Vanalta  .*..    .06%
Ways'de Gold 16
CURB
Alexandria Gold ....    .01%
Anaeondi Oil        .01%
Benver Silver      M
B C Silver     —
B C Nickel           -84%
Bunker HAS 44.00
Cen Rend            .06
Calmont OU     -    .03
f"on«reu Gold  _    J4
Cottonbelt     JM
Crows Nut             J3%
nalhousie Mlnea 00%
Dalhousle Oils      X
Dictator Gold .......    .01
Dunwell   -    .06
"astcreit .......    .06
Fairview Anal .....    .11
Aak
.00
.19%
M
329
6.38
.09
.12
1.17
.60
13.25
.49
.30
20%
.48
.24
.49
.07%
23
.06
.03
utio
1.70
.00%
.02%
1.94
.49
29
.18%
.17
.01%
.02%
.08%
1.09
.36
49.00
J3
.14
JU
.02
.06%
Fawn Mining     .40
Freehold OU    \06
Geo  Copper    15H
Glacier Creek       —
Golconda Lead      .27
Gold Mountain  08
Geo Enterpriae     —
Geo River        J»%
Grandvlew  03*4
Grange      .08%
Grull Wihksne      .03%
Hecla        10.00
Hedley Amal 21
Herculei Con   10
Home Gold          —
'ndependence    —
Island Mountain ....    .83
Koot Florence .01
Lakevlew Mlnea *.0O%
Lucky Jim             .03
Mar Jon Oil           MVt
Mercury Oil          .09%
Merland Oil .21
McGillivray Coal       20
MiU City       -
Minto Oold        13%
Morton Wolsey       —
Nicola     .09
Noble Five      .09
Pacalta      —
Pend Oreille  89
PUot Gold         .09%
Porter Idaho     .08%
Quesnelle I    12
Ranchmen'!      88
Relief Arlington      —
Royalite Oil       22.00
Rufui Argenta     .01
Ruth Hope       .03
Sllvercrwt _._._ .     —
Silverado       SIS
SISCOe  mm...    2.80
Sllvercrut   J06
Snowflake —  #1%
Sunihlne      20.00
United D L      .73
United Empire   J05
United OU         .08%
Vldette Gold   16
Viktor Gold    -03
Waterloo   .03%
Wnverley Tang   .00%
Whitewater •... .07
Wrleht Hargreavu 8.40
Ymlr Yankee Oirl .40
.42
.07%
.04
29
.11
.06
.00%
SH
.09
.06%
10.90
.11
.07%
.01
.84
.01%
.01
.04
.14
.22
.10
.14%
.01
.09%
.09 Vs
.09%
.67
M
.10%
.14
.78
M
Sli
.01%
.09
.09%
til
21.00
.20
.03
.01
.08
Quotations on Wall Street
High
Al Chwlcal 1<T
Am Can Ul*
Am For Pow       4
Am Ma 4. Fdy 20%
Am Smelt 4 Re 42%
Am Telephone! 120%
Am Tobacco       64%
Anaconda     14%
Atchiion         40%
Auburn Mo t     18%
Baldwin           1%
Bait & Ohio    10%
Bendlx Av    18%
Beth Steel   24%
Canada Dry        10
Can Pacific.   ...   10%
Cerro de Pasco    64%
Ches Ss Ohio
Chrysler
Con Gas N Y
Corn Prod
C Wright Pfd
Dupont
East Kodak
Erie
Ford English
Ford of Cen
Flnt Na Storei
Frerportt Tex
Gen Elee    ...
Oen Food!
Gen Moton
Gold Duit 	
Goodrich
Grt North Wd
Howe Sound
Hudson Mo
Int Nickel
Int Tel tt Tel
Jewel Tea
Kenn Conner
Kretge S S
Low
143%
120
• "ft
j8
64
13%
40
1%
10%
13%
24%
42%
43%
23%
68%
96
139%
8
81
29
24V.
84%
30%
19
6
13%
49%
7%
27%
7%
93%
17%
22%
92%
42%
41%
23 V4
67%
99%
138
7%
90%
24%
23%
34%
29%
14%
46
7
27%
T%
17%
22
Close
143%
121%
4
20%
40 V4
120
84%
14%
40%
18%
2V,
10%
13%
24%
10
ft
42%
42%
23%
68%
6%
96
138%
8
8%
29%
81
24%
34
34%
SO
19
6
19%
49 Vs
7
27%
7%
83%
17%
22
Kroegger 6c Toll
LehnTt Fink
Mack Track
Milwaukee Pfd
Mont Wert .
Nuh Moton
Na Dairy Prod
N Pow Jt Li ...
N Y Central
Pac Gu St Elec
Pack Moton
Penn R R   	
Phillips Pete ....
Pure Oil 	
Radio Corp
Radio Keith Or
Rem Rand
Rock Island .   .
Safeway Storei
Shell Union   ...
S Cal Edison ....
South Pacific
Sttn OU of Cal
Stan Oil of Ind
Stan Oil of N J
Stewart Warner
Studebaker  ...
Tex Corp    ......
Tex Gulf Sul
Timken Roller!
Under Type	
Un Carbide  	
Un Oil of Cel. .
United Air	
United Bla ..
Un Pacific	
US Pipe	
U S Rubber ...
US Steel
West Electric
Woolworth
Wrigley
Yelow Truck
24%
19%
1
24%
12%
19
8%
18
21%
3%
20%
19%
7%
6%
y
i%
39%
9%
16
16%
33%
29%
49%
8%
2%
S)%
33%
32%
62%
. 64%
17%
11%
21%
94V»
18
11%
31%
44%
67%
79%
2%
8%
21%
3%
24%    24%
- 14%
18%    19%
24%    24%
12       12
13
8%
16
21
3H
20%    20%
19%    19%
- 7%
8         8%
- 1%
7         7%
1%
39% 3*r%
9%      9%
- 16
18% 16
32%    32%
29% 29%
48% 49%
8% 8%
- 2%
20% 20%
32% 33%
37% 32%
62% 62%
84 64%
17 17%
11% 11%
21 21%
93% 94
17% 17%
11% 11%
80% 31%
43% 44%
67 87
- 79%
- 2%
Toronto Stock Quotations
Alexandria ••■•—
Algoma   	
Aihley Geld 	
Barry Hollinger
Bau Metali
Bankfield
Wheat;
July
Oats:
July .
Oct
Barley:
July
Oct.     ...
Flax:
July  ....
Oct    ....
Rye:
July 	
Oct
82
39
34%
41%
86%
131
120
43%
62%    61%    62%
30%
29
S3
121%
120
41%
44
39%
34%
41
»6%
39%
24%
36%
117     117
116%   116%
40%
43
43%
Caah wheat: Ne. 1 head 81%: Ne.
1 nor. 61%; No. 2 nor. 78%; Ne. I
nor. 73%; No. 4 ner. 67: No. 6
wheat 69; No. 6 whut 87%; fted
99t>; durum 79%; track 81%.
To Reopen Northern
Oil Field
CALGARY, June 3 (CP) .-Plena
for tha re*opening of the farthut
north oU field in the world, neer
Fort Norman, ln the North Wut
Territorial, ware completed here
today.
Repreientlng the Intpertel Oil
company, ownera ot the two producing well! and refinery, R. w.
MacKinnon of Calgary, accompanied by Fnnk Willork and Lan
Kvindegaarde, will leave Calgary
tor the north, flying ln from Edmonton. Jamu Rowan of Calgary
made an advance flight to Fort
Norman early thli week.
Bear Exploration	
Big Missouri  _..
Bobio    _
Bradlan  -	
Bnlorne   	
Brett Trethewey	
BRX Gold     _.
Brownlee       	
Buf Ankerite  —
Buf Can Gold	
Bunker HUl     _.
Can Klrkland
Cariboo Gold Quartz
Cutle Trethewey
Central Manitoba	
lentral Patricia ..—
Ihlbougamou —
Jleriey 	
Cout Copper 	
Cobalt Contact	
Celumario  	
Conarlum      -
Cons M It S   	
Dome  —
Dom Explontlon ......
Eldondo       —
Falconbrldge 	
Ood'l Lak? --
Granada    —- ~*
Hariroek  	
Hudaon Bay 	
Int Nickel       	
Klrkland Uke   	
Leko Maren     —
LltUe Long Ue ■-*-—
Leke Shore 	
McLeod Cockihutt	
Mtlntm 	
McVlttle Grahamme ...__..
MeWatten Gold 	
Macaua       ..„_.,.
Melroblc     	
Maple Leet  ..- 	
Mining Corp ...	
Moffatt Half	
Nlpllllng   ,_..
Neranda  ..._ -.-
"trkhlll      	
•ay-muter     ____...-.
Pend OreUle 	
*».oyallU      ~	
Sr-rnia  -	
fickle Crow    -	
Pioneer Gold 	
J01%
.06%
.13
JD3%
.73
.23
~2
J67
20%
3.12
6.00
.04
.12
.01%
3.78
,      .01%
.05
.01%
1.13
1.09
,      .03%
.    1.50
.      .18%
.05%
1.90
.02%
.09
IM
. 17200
.   41.75
M
. 163
. 3.73
.    1.43
29
22
.   14.88
63
, 14.50
. 27.87%
. .41
. .04%
. 8.16
.   8J.M
.04
. 42.15
, .15%
. 1.32
. 166
.      -01
JM
.    l.tt
j0*%
.    SAO
.  36.10
20%
24%
.       .61
.   23.78
.'0
. 3.55
.   10.75
Premier Gold  1.66
Reno     _ _.-.  1.94
Sakooae   -    .06%
San Antonio     3.57
Sheep Creek    _ _  M
Sherritt Gordon  _  .71
Slacoe               2.80
Smelters Gold    .._  .08
South Tlblemont  _0»
Stadacona       32
St Anthony       22
Sudbury Buln .....  1.40
Sylvanlte  2.22
Teck Hughu _.....  4.12
Toburn        _.   .17%
Towagamac   .17%
TreadweU   _ 13%
Venture*          .89
Walte Amulet  .69
Wavslde  16
White Eagle          .03
Wright Harireevu _  6.40
OILS
Acme      ..... .   i .mi Al
AJax     _  „.... .76
A P Con _ _  .07%
B A Oil  _   19.79
Calmont         .05%
C end I Corp     _  M
Chemical Research _  1.30
Dilhousle -_  23
Home OU       , .. M
Imperial OU   1373
Int Pete  -  J4.79
Merland      _  21
Nordon  Jl
O'l Selectioni   SAU
Olgi  ->4%
INDUSTRIALS
Bettty Broi A _  8%
BeU Telephone 124
BnaUlan     6%
Brew at Dlat      -66
Can Breed       2
Can Cemeet      _  6%
Can Car and Foundry  7%
Can Ind Al A      8
Can Dredge      22%
Can Pacific       10%
Coni Bakerlei   16%
DUt Seagram  18
Dominion Storei       7%
Ferd of Caneda     -  29%
Ooodyur Tire      181%
Hiram WMker    -  24%
'moerlal Tobaeco  IS
f-oblaw A  „  18%
Maisev Harrli          4%
stand-rd pBvlng __ 80
'te-l of Canada  T**'*
Walker Brew _     8%
COUNCIL VIEWS
FOAMING CREEK
City Fathers Make
Inspection of
Intake
Five-mile creek, which provides
the clty'i water lupply, was roaring
in flood when the city fathers,
headed by Mayor J. P. Morgan,
madt an Inspection of the Intake
Sunday forenoon under the guidance of City Engineer R. E. Potter.
The memben of the party droi*
up to the old Svoboda ranch, which
is approximately half way, and
walked the remainder of the distance, the foot trail in the bush,
which Is thick up near the creek,
itlll hiving some snow.
Screens were found to be operating well, keeping foreign matter
from the intake. A huge volume of
water was pouring over the ipill-
wav.
Those on the trip were Mayor J.
P. Morgan, Aldermen H. B. Lindsav,
T H. Waters, Roy Sharp, T. W.
Slader, J. E. McKenzle. and A. G.
Ritchie, and Engineer R. E. Potter.
SILVERS STEADY
MONTREAL. Juno 2 (CPl-Prices
in silver futures held iteady on the
Canadian commodity exchange Saturday as 10 contracts changed hands.
Prices were 30 to 50 points lower.
June closed at 74.50, September
75.15 bid, December 75.90 bid.
Minneapolis Grain
MINNEAPOLIS, June 1 (AP).-
Flour 10 lower. Carload lots, family
patenta 6.80—7.00 brrrel in 98-nound
cotton sacks. Bran 23—23.50. Wheat,
No. 1 Northern 99-1.03; No. 1 Red
Durum July 96.
Postpone Boy
Scout Meet
Owing to unforeseen circumstances, the local Scout officials
have deemed lt advisable to post*
pone the Boy Scout meet in Nel*
ion for about two weeks. Origin*
ally it had been intended to hold
it Monday, June 3.
— *»AOS NINI
BONDS LOWER
NEW YORK, June 2 (AP)-Do-
meittc corporation bonda. allpped
itUl lower Saturday under imall
offerlnga that wert enough ln the
aggregate to depress leaders a point
or so.
Numerous concessions of e point
or more were recorded. In the foreign division French government
7%s raced up 12 pointi to 177% and
the 7! advanced 3% to 174. .
CHICAGO SLUMPS
CHICAGO, June 2 (AP)-Shaken
by nervousness over President
Roosevelt's suggestion wheat might
possibly fall to36 cents a bushel, all
grains reeled downward Saturdav,
wheat 3% centa to low price records
for the season. Rallies took place ln
the late dealings, however, largely
u a ruult of buying on the part of
precious sellers who were in a position to collect profits.
Wheat closed unsettled, 1 to 1%
centa under Friday's finish, July
02% to 83, corn unchanged to 1 cent
higher, July 78% to 78%, oats %
to % up, and provisions unchanged
to 25 cents lower.
WINNIPEGOFF
WINNIPEG, June 2 (CP)-July
wheat, the lone future on the Winnipeg board, slipped to lower levels
Saturday, in sympathy with foreign
markets and at the close was down
'a cent at 82%. Signs of recovery
appeared in the last hour and a fair
rally was made from the bottom
level.
Continental and seaboard houses
were fair buyers and probably took
500,000 bushels out of the pit, but e
good part ot this wu covering of
old safes.
TORONTO CLOSED
MONDAY
TORONTO, June 2 (CP)—Toronto stock exchange will take Monday
oft to celebrate the King's birthday
nd trading will be resumed oh
'uesday.
PRODUCE STEADY
MONTREAL, June 2 (CP) -
Prices of butter, cheese, eggs and
Dtitatoes were generaUy steady to
higher during Tut week's tridlng
on Montreal dairy and produce
marktt.
Butter 21%.
Cheeie 10%.
Eggs, A large 19%, A medium
17%.
Potatoes unchanged.
Mining Activities At the Ymlr
Consolidated Property
Above are four views of mining
touth of Nelton In thl Ymlr gold
camp. In thl top li thown thl
old eyanlda plant at the Ymlr Coniolidited proptrty whloh hai bttn
dismantled and a naw mill btlng
erected on the eite. The erection of
tht new mill It will ahtad of timt
according to O. D. Frith, superintendent, who wis In Nelson ovtr
the wttk-tnd, Btlow Is an electric
locomotive hauling ore from the
tunnel at the proptrty. Btlow It
Ihown mother view of ona of tha
powerful electric locomotives. To
the left Is seen powtr maohlniry
building a road In tha Ymlr Coniolidited camp.
READY SALE IN
BEDDINGPLANTS
Large Number of Bed
Plants on Local
Market .
A great display ot bedding plants
were presented by vendon at the
Vernon street market on Saturday,
and ules were reported to be better
than usual Prlcu, houlever, both
in the bedding planta, and other
produce, were unchanged. Meat sold
readily.
Sheep (reek and
Reeves Higher
VANCOUVER, June 2 (CP).-The
price recovery that began on the
Vancouver stock exchange Friday
continued ln Saturday's short session. A few of the major golds registered substantial gains and the tone
of the rest of the list wu steady to
allghtly stronger. Sales totalled 114,-
970 sharei.
Bralorne advanced 20 to 6.29,
Pioneer was up 10 at 10.80 and
Bradlan gained 8 at 2.20. Reeves
MacDonald was up 3 at 15 and Carl-
boo and Sheep Creek gained 2
points each at 1.13 and 92 respectively. Premier Gold at 1.68, Vldette
at 16 and Ymir Yankee Girl at
40 all eued a cent. United Empire
wu unchanged at 8.
SMELTERS UP
. ATMONTREAL
MONTREAL, June 2 (CP)-The
Initial session of June on the Montreal stock exchange Saturday wai
slow and draggy with traders hesitant.
Conaolldated Mining & Smelting
wu a feature with a gain of a point
at 172. B.C. Power moved up %
to 24% and Canada Cement % it
6%. Dominion Glau was a fairly
heavy loser, dropping 5 points to
110 while Hollinger took a 20-cent
drop at 14.80. Losses up to % were
chalked up by Canadian Industrial
Alcohol A, Nickel, Massey-Harria
and National Steel Car.
HINES ARE DULL
TORONTO. June 2 (CP)—Tnd-
Ing dwindled to 200,000 sharei ln
Saturday'i ihort session of the Toronto mining market
Only a few senior gold! appeared
and the cloie was mainly unchanged.
Volume wat concentrated ln a
few of the secondary gold lssuea.
MeWatten and Central Patricia
were up 5 to 6 centa and Slscoe off
a point. San Antonio gained 2 and
God's Lake and Howey 1 each. A
few of the penny golds moved up
on good volume.
In the lilver group Eldorado advanced 8 cents. Cutle 7 centa and
Bear 2. Noranda flniihed iteady
at $39.  (
20-CENT DROP IN J
BAR GOLD
MONTREAL, June 1 (CP)-Bar
gold off 20 cents at $34.95 an ounce
ln Canadian funds; 142s In British
funds. The fixed $35 Washington
price amounted to $35 ln Canadian
with the United Statu dollar at par.
"U. S. DOLLAR OFF
ii        \    m
MONTREAL. June 2 (CP)-The
French franc moved up slightly on
the Montreal foreign exchange market Saturday while pound sterling
and United States dollar declined.
Sterling drooped 1% cents to $4.91%
and the dollar was down 1-32 per
cent at .99 31-32. At 6.61 the franc
was up approximately 1-64 of a
cent
Excelsior Club
Salea Success1
The Exctlslor club reported proceeds amounting to tbout $13 from
the bake sale held Saturday ln the
Star Grocery, tlie members of the
club considering the sum quite commendable. Those in charge of the
sale included Miss Margaret Arthur.
Miss Eileen Mackenzie. Mrs. Richards and Miss Bessie Mackenzie.
Vancouver Sales
VANCOUVER, June 2  (CP). — j
Mining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange Saturday;
Big Mlss. 400: Bradian 690; Bnlorne 500; B R X 21X10; Cariboo 220;
Dentonla 1400; Oold B 1000; Koot. B.
200; Meridian 2500; Prem. G. 600;
Reeves Mac 900; Reno 600; Sally
1500; Salmon 1500; Sheep Creek 100;
Wayside 1600.
CURB—B.C. Nickel 2200; Congreu
800; Dictator 2000; Dunwell 1700;
Fairview A 500; Fawn 1000; Federal
500: George Ent 1700; Grange 8000:
Grull W 150; Home 2000; Island
Mtn 800; Minto 1800; Nicola 1000;
Noble Five 2500; Pend O. 500; Pilot
2200; Sllvercrest 10.200; Silversmith
10,000; United E. 1000; Vldette 600;
Waverly 3000.
LONDON. (CP)—Five profetalon-
il baseball leagues will operate In
England this lummer. Liverpool
alone has 2000 registered ball ploy-
en and 27 clubs. Many pro football
playen have signed to play In the
diamond sport, perhaps because the
ball people want "namu" to attract
crowds. Soccer referees are studying baseball rules with the Idea of
getting Jobs as officials.
RUIT   GROWERS
Ship your Strawberries, Raspberries and Cherries direct and receive
the benefit of the Highest Prairie Market Prices for yourself. No
profiteering between the shipper and ourwlvu, no connections
whatever with any fruit combine. We handle mixed carloads of
truit. Returns are made every Saturday for aU shlpmenta received
during the week.
THE ROYAL FRUIT COMPANY
The Independent Fruit Houae
1703 BROAD ST. REGINA, SASK.
 	
PAOB TIN*
Bathing Caps
15c to 75c
Mann, Rutherford
Drug Co.
MORE ABOUT
KIDNAPPERS
(Continued Prem Page Onl)
which mut American crlmlntli
held tha Canadian criminal courts
would tend to make tht supposed
fugltlvu prefer thilr own ildt of
tne boundary.
George Weyerhaeuser, 9-year-
old, wu found at 4 t.m. Stturdty
en a farm 25 miln north of Tacoma. Hi wtt unhtrmtd tnd In
good spirits whtn ht walktd into
a farm houie. A ramom of $200,000
htd bun paid by hli uncle.
KIDNAPPED BOY'S STORY
"Did they hurt you, George!" a
newspaperman uked the boy.
"No, they didn't hurt me—because they all kept saying, 'he'i too
valuable to hurt.'" The boy replied.
"They told me once we were ln
Oregon, and I remember once we
were in Aberdeen," the boy continued his narrative.
The boy said his abductori put
him in a trunk while traveling, but
uid ne wu not uncomfortable became there were air holes.
George uld he had been kept ln
a houae three nights tnd four dayi
tnd wu allowed to read newspaper
accounts of the search for him ajd
his kidnappers.
George laid he believed the houie
ho wu confined ln wu about a
mile and a half north ot Issaquah.
"Your pt will pici: you up,"
George aaid he wu told u he wu
let out on the road about four miles
from Issaquah. For hours George
walked in the darkness, he told
the paperman until his shoes were
sodden tnd 'squishy." George uid
he thought he wilked tbout tlx
miles before he law a farm houie.
Plodding up to ita door he knocked
and the farmer, Boniface, opened it.
"I'm the little boy wno wai
kidnapped," George said he told
the farmer. Fed and clothed and hla
teet encued ln the shoes of the
farmer's daughter, George wu
bundled up and started for home ln
the farmer's automobile.
•Tl-jl NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. I.C-MONDAY MORNINO. JUNI I. 1988-
MANHUNT IN  OREGON
By WENDELL WEBB
Awoelated Prtu Staff Writtr
PENDLETON Ore., June 2 JxP)
—A motor-car load of hard-riding
suspect! in the George Weyerhteu-
ler kidnapping apparently slipped
through the guard lines of a formidable police army in Oregon's
bad lands today but the great manhunt continued with an ever-widening scope.
Flying squads of state police and
deputy sheriffs raked the area all
day but returned to Pendleton tonight, reporting the sedan that
thundered acrou the border from
Washington last night apparently
htd eluded them.
This morning a mysterious ctr
raced through Holdman, in the bed
lands tret north of here, tnd wu
followed about 20 minutu later by
tlx automobile losds of heavlly-
armed officers, while a mysterious
airplane droned overhud.
The Holdman car turned out to
be one on duty in the hunt The airplane wu not Identified but it bectme known that naval planet from
the Sand Point itatlon in Washing-
to.. had been cruising over the area
on a aeptrate mission.
Previously it wu reported the
kidnapping gang might seek to escape by air with their $200,000 ran*
aom money.
HUNT BY AIRPLANE
CHICAGO, June 2 (AP)-Seven
men believed to be federal agents
tonight bundled another man Into
an airplane at the Chicago municipal airport and the ship immediately took oft tor an unannounced
destination. The men brusquely declined comment on reports their
prisoner was Volney Davis, hunted
in the Edward G. Bremer and
George Weyerhaeuser kidnappings.
SIR H. BOLTON
DIES IN LONDON
LONDON, June 2 (CP Cable) .—
Sir Harold Boulton, widely known
in musical clrclu, died today, aged 75.
He wii a knight ot justice of the
Order ot St. John ot Jerusalem in
England. From 1909 until 1914 he
wts honorary commiuloner for
Ctntdt of the St. John Ambulance
auociation.
NEW ZEALAND TRADE
COMMISSIONER HONORED
ERNEST CARTER
D1ES1NNELS0N
Leaves Wife and Two
Children; Born in
England
Ernut Carter, who died Sunday
at hla ruidenee on upper Granite
road, wu born ln England but
came to Canada about 27 yean
ago. He lived for a time In Ontario, and then travelled wut to
ruide at Michel. It wu about 15
yeara ago that he moved to Nelion.
He wai tint employed ln Nelion
by P. Burnt and comptny but tfter
he levered connections with them
he aet up ln bualneu tor himielf.
He married Mlu Gertrude Alice
Wheatcroft in Coleman, Alta., ln
1915. He waa a member of the Michel Odd Fellowa lodge.
Surviving Mr. Carter are hit wife,
a daughter, Lucille, a eon, Richard;
three brothers in Englind, Htrry,
Williim tnd Frank; and five sisters
there, Jane, Annie, May, Maude
and Margaret
MORE .ABOUT
HONOR LIST
(Continued From Ptgt One)
An added honor wu conferred
upon Sir Thomas White, K.C.M.G..
Canada's war-time finance mlnliter,
who is made a knight grand cross
ot the same order with no change
in his formal title. E. W. Beatty.
K.C, president of the Canadian Pacific railway, wu made a knight
grand cross of the Order of the
British Empire, ln recognition of
his public services, educational activities and philanthropy.
MARLER HONORED
His Majesty's tribute to the foreign
service of Canada wu expressed in
the creation ot Hon. Herbert M.
Marler, Ctnadlan envoy and mlnltter plenipotentiary to Jtptn, ai
knight commander of the Order of
St. Michael and SL George.
Literature and science were recognized in Dr. Arthur George
Doughty, Dominion archivist, and
Dr. J. C. McLennan, professor emeritus ot Toronto university, who were
mide knlghti of the Order ot the
British Empire. Mush, trt and
literature won the award of knights
bachelor for Senator Thomas Cha-
pais, Quebec, E. Wyly Grier, Toronto artist, Ernut Campbell MacMlllan, dean of music, Toronto university, and principal of the Toronto
Conservatory of Muilc, and Dr.
Charles G. D. Roberts, Toronto, one
of Canada's best known writen of
prose and poetry.
Major General J. H. MacBrlen.
hud of the Royal Canadian Mounted
police and holder of an enviable
military record, wu made a knight
commander of the Order of the
Bath.
Women figure largely in the list
with 30 honon of various degrees
won mainly by long and generous
service in social tnd welftre worki.
or by contribution! to Canadian
literature.
THE CANADIAN LIST
Following it the llit of Canadians
to whom honon were given by the
King in his birthday lilt:
Knight grand crou of the Order of
St Michael and St. George: Rt Hon.
Sir William Thomu White, K.C.M.G.,
Toronto (promotion).
Knight grand crou of the Order of
the British Empire: Edwtrd Wentworth Butty, Montreal.
Knight commander of the Order
of the Bath: Major General Jamu
Howden MacBrlen, Ottawa.
Knight commander of the Order
of St. Michael and St George: Hon.
Herbert Meredith Marler, Toklo, Ca'
nadlan minister to Japan,
Knight commander of the order
of the Britiah Empire: Arthur
George Doughty, Ottawa, and John
Cunningham McLennan, Toronto,
Knights bachelor: Senator Joeeph
Amable Thomas Chapais, Quebec;
Edmond Wyly Grier, Toronto; Ernest Campbell MacMlllan, Toronto;
Charlei George Douglu Roberts,
T/oronto.
(All the foregoing are entitled to
the prefix "air").
Companion of the Order of the
Bath (military): Major-General Ernest Charles Ashton, Eaqulmalt B.C.
Companion of the Order of St
Mlchtel and St George: George
Samuel Horace Barton, Ottawa:
Cyrllle Fraser Delage, Quebec; William tSewart Edwards, Ottawa: Rev.
Charlu William Gordon, (Ralph
Connor) Winnipeg; Hon. George
Herbert Sedgewick, Ottawa; Harry
Stevenson Southam, Ottawa; Jamu
Hossack Woods, Calgary; Simon
Jamu McLean, Ottawa.
Commander of the Order of the
British Empire (civil division): Edward Johnson, New York; Merchtnt
Mahoney. Wuhlngton; Williim Ezra
Matthews, Ottawa; Robert Edward
McKechnie, Vincouver; Mlu Helen
Richmond Young Reid, Montreal;
Mrs. Sarah Trumbull Warren. Toronto; Col. Henry Campbell Osborne,
Ottawa.
Commander ot the Order of the
Britiih Empire (military division):
Lt. Col. Henry Willis O'Connor,
Ottawa. .
Candid Camera Reveals Facial Moods of Dynamic Radio Priest
Candid camera portrait! by Arthur Saue, irtlit-photognpher,
reveal iwlftly changing moodi of Rtv. Father C. E. Coughlin of Detroit ai he faced barrage of New York newipaper questioners before
addraulng monster gttherlng In Mtdlion Square Girden on purposes
of hit National Union for Soclil Juitice, In opening hli campaign In
tht eutern U.8. Fither Coughlin uttered • withlng denunciation of
President Rooievelt't iction in vetoing the Bonui Dill.
HUME ACES
TAKE LEAD
Beat Red Sox 24-14 in
Girls' Softball
Game
Taking advantage ot numerous
fielding lapses on the part of their
opponents, the Hume Acu went to
top place position In the ladles' soft-
ball league by taking a 24-14 victory
over the Red Sox Saturday night.
The fielding of both clubs was below standard, but the erron ot the
Red Sox proved the more costly,
especially in the urly Innings.
When the Aces took the lead, Lillian
Wardale. Elvera Matheson and Wilms Milne of the Aces and Beth McKlnney of the Red Sox poled out
home runs. Mary McDougall of thc
Red Sox hit a triple, while Aria
Saare, Wllma Milne, of the Aces,
and Dot Jarbeau of the Red Sox hit
two-baggers.
Peggy McGovern on the mound
for the Acu, allowed 11 hits, struck
out three, and walked one. Rosa
Stewart, who did mound duty for
the losers, allowed 18 hits, fanned
five and did not walk a batter.
With the score standing 20-8
againit them. Red Sox went to bat
In the last of the eighth and came
to life. They got five runs.
With one down and Alvlna Arlt
on third base. Rosa Stewart hit to
Peggy McGovern, who threw her
out at first, and then Clara Talberg
made a fut throw to Aria Saare at
home to cut off the runner for a
double play.
Score by inningi: RHE
Hume Acu 073 022 424—24 18 10
Red Sox .... 123 101 051—14   11   13
Teemi were:
Hume Acei—Peggy Gibbon, Lil-
lian Wardale. Peggy Donaldson, Elvera Matheson, Aria Saare, Edna
McKenzle, Babs McDonald, Wllma
Milne, Peggy McGovern and Clara
Talberg.
Red Box—Mary McDougall. Agnu
Stewart Alvlna Arlt, Rosa Stewart,
Carmella DelPuppo, Kay McDougall, Rou Kapak, June King, Dot
Jarbeau and Beth McKlnney.
Walt Gillett and Alex Ritchie
refereed.
URUGUAYAN PRESIDENT
TARGET FOR BULLETS
LONDON, June 2 (CP Cable).-
John William Collins, New Zealand
trade and tourist commissioner in
Ctntdt tnd the United Statu, wu
appointed an officer of the Order
of the British Empire ln the king's
honon list, made public tonight
LADY ESTHER
with a full  lint pf Cosmetics,
Critmi end Powdin it
Smythe's Pharmacy
Prescription   Spultlllt
PHONE 1
Bank Employee Not
Missing
TORONTO, June 2 (CP)-Dlxon
Wigner, Toronto btnk employee
wu injured in t fracas at Gibraltar leveral monthi tgo, hu not
"disappeared" but Is on his way
home, local bank officials said today.
Private Joseph Rte of the Gordon
Highlanders was committed tor trial
in Gibraltar Saturday on a charge
of wounding Wagner, and at the
hearing it wu said the Toronto man
had disappeared.
Bank official! here uld he hid
tabled he wu on his wty to Canada.
Retail Lumber
LATH-SHINGLES
MOULDINGS
W. W. Powell Co., Ltd.
"Tht Home of Good Lumber"
Telephone 176 Foot ef Stanley St
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, June 2
(AP)—President Gabriel Terra wu
fired upon while attending the Mar*
onu race coune today and wu
wounded ilightly.
Authorltlu raid a former Nationalist deputy. Bernardo Garcia, fired
the shot. They, uid Garcit, under
arrest, tried suicide but failed.
65 DEATHS FROM
CANCER IN B.C.
INAPRIL
VICTORIA, June 2 (CP)-
Deaths from notifiable diseases
in British Columbia during April
were reported by the department of health herc as follows:
Cancer 65; diphtheria 3; Influenza (epidemic) 12;. pneumonia
(all types) 24; septic sore throat
2; tuberculosis 33; motor accidents 3 and children under one
year of age 27.
MORE ABOUT
INDIA QUAKES
(Continued From Page One)
Most Europeans stayed to aid ln
relief operations. The excavation
was to continue as long as no epidemic breaks out
Arrival of speclfl relief trains
from Delhi today saw thousands of
refugees swarming around the ruins
of the railroad station in a frantic
endeavor to escape from thc stricken town.
CRY FOR FOOD
Men, women and children, many
of them without food for 48 hours,
at first hampered relief workers by
their clamors but the military machine soon began an organized distribution of relief.
Martial law wu declared yuterday and natives from, the hills
caught looting were summarily
dealt with. Six refugee trains were
to leave today and five left yesterday.
Flru flaring In the ruim burned
themselvei out today, but authorities feared an outbreak of cholera.
Doctors, nurses and medical equipment were being rushed here by
airplanes.
FLOODS AND FIRES
Floods accompanied the fires
which raced through the devastated
area lut night threatening to swell
still further the roll of dead and
injured.
According to an official communique the Indian survivors numbered
10,000 including 4000 Injured.
Water gushed from great fissures
ln the earth opened by the three
great shocks that struck about three
a.m.. Friday, laying waste Quetta
and its vicinity, and some placu in
the outskirts of the city were flooded leveral feet deep. •
With the danger of an epidemic
before them, soldiers and relief
workers were burning or burying
bodiu u fut as they were found,
many of them not even Identified.
Control Available
for Woolly Aphis
In the report of the Central Farmers institute convention hold at Robson, in reference to the Creston
resolution urging a drive against
the orchard pests of woolly aphis,
mealy bug, and fire blight, remarks
of E. C. Hunt, district horticulturist, regarding a satisfactory control
for the insects not having yet been
found, should have been given u
referring to the mealy bug only.
A complete control for the woolly
aphis has long been known, and
orchardists having occasion tor it
may get particulars either from the
district horticulturist, or from W. J.
Twigg, field inspector, Cruton.
Nelson K.C. Lodge
Hosts lo Visitors
Large Banquet Brings
Event to a
Close
WHITE
Is Right for
SHIRTS
It Is smsrt, sensible, splc,
spsn. For pleasure or business. Made of broadcloth
in attached or detached
collars. Featuring Country Club, Pall Mall and
Bond Street by Forsyth.
$2.00. ?2.50. ?3.00
EMORY'S
Limited
Nelion Knights of Columbus were
hosti to lodge members from Spo-
kaned, Grand Forks and other pointi
over the week-end when activities
pertaining to the lodge wero completed and a banquet Sunday night
brought tho visit to a close. The
wivu and friends of thc visitors.
and also the local lodge members,
were present at the banquet.
K. J. Witchell, G.K., was toast
master at the banquet. Blessings
for the spiritual and temporal rulers
were uked by Very Rev. J. C. MacKenzle, following which T. Supple,
district deputy gave the address
of welcome. Miu Lilly Kelly favored with a dance and Miss Theodora Rhodu wu heard in a vocal
solo. "Our order" waa the subject
of a toast given by L. H. Choquette.
J. E. Royce, of Spokone, and T. T.
Grant put state deputy of Washington, both spoke briefly, after
which Dugald McPherson, M.LA-,
for Grand Forks, was heard.
The tout to the ladies wai pro-
Sised by T. J. Seaman. Miss Ella
esjardim wu pianist for thc occasion.
U DIE IN U.S.
SIORMJLOODS
Property Damage Is
Estimated $12
, Million
McCOOK, Neb., June 2 (API-
Receding waters in the Republican
valley today disclosed a scene of
widespread desolation as the valley
county counted its loss in known
dead from flood and tornadoes at 42.
Property damage was unofficially
estimated at upward of $12,000,000
and the fate of several hundreds of
missing residents of the stricken
towns and villages was still ln doubt.
Relief workers began with dawn
today their effort! to count the dead,
aid the suffering and mitigate possibility of disease.
Late reports indicated tlie main
force of the tornado which tore
through this vicinity ts the flood
waters arrived, had struck at Perry,
a village four miles from McCook.
But McCook, with more than a
$1,000,000 estimated property loss,
was heaviest loser in dead and missing, with a total at 23. An army
flyer who flew over the territory
yesterday ratimated its fatalities
alone would roach 50.
TWO "SIR'S" IN
CANADA SENATE
NOTHING "MINUS"
ABOUT HIS NAME
BLACKPOOL, Eng., June 2 (AP)
—Death lias removed an oddity from
the local telephone directory.
Dr. Francis Stanhope Pitt-Taylor
was a rigid purist in English. He objected to the hyphen on the ground
it wm a sign for "minus." He insisted his own compound name be
printed with an "equals" lign instead. 	
He also used such words as nil-
gcntlemanly," for ungentlemanly,
and "nilcapable" for uncapable.
MANITOBA HIT
BY A CYCLONE
Troops extricated 3000 bodiu Saturday.
Survivors told of whole families
buried under collapsing buildings
and parents standing helplessly by
while their children were crukhed
to death. Dazed survivors—children
orphaned and women widowed at
one itroke—wandered through thc
ruins seeking missing relatives.
While the wrecking of comrounl-
cttions to prevent any accurate
check of the dead, the estimate of
30,000 was believed to be not too
high. Injured numbered thousands.
PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man.,
June 2 (CP).—Wrecked farm buildings lay herc today and at Strath-
cloir, 100 miles west of here, In the
wake of a cyclonic wind that dipped
into the two districts Saturday to
accompaniment of hail, rain, thunder and lightning.
Heavy rains fell In the majority of
Manitoba points and in Saskatchewan. Regina reported an all-night
rain, bringing over an inch of precipitation to points that werc
drought-ridden for the past four and
five years. Light showers occurred
in northern Soskotchewan.
OTTAWA, June 2 (GP)—Elevation of Hon. Thomas Chapais to
Knighthood in the king's birthday
honors list means that there will be
two "sir's" in the Canadian senate m now constituted. Sir Allen
Aylesworth of Toronto, who was
appointed to the senate in 1923, was
created A.K.C.M.G. in 1911. He wm
appointed by a Liberal government
and sits on the oppoiiUon tide ol
the chamber.
Senator Chapais was appointed in
1911 and sits on the government
side. He represents the senatorial
district of Grandville and Senator
Aylesworth represents North York,
Dealers to Handle
New "Baby" Bonds
Without a Charge
VANCOUVER, June 2CP) -Vancouver's investment dealers have
offered their facilities for receipt of
subscriptions for the city's "baby
bond" issue without remuneration
or commission. They have made it
clear they consider the proposed
$1,500,000 issue out of line on an investment basis and their consideration of it can be based only on tlie
grounds of community service.
Yvonne Gets an Extra Cake to Pose for Photographers
NEWS OF THE DAY
Dr. Qimner'i office wlll be cloud
during thli week. (1906)
Som of England meet tonight, 8
o'clock, Memorial hall. (1917)
Ramsden's arc selling silk dresses
and hata, extra one 10c. (1920)
Electrical  Supplies and repairs,
F. H. Smith, 313 Baker St. Phone 666.
(1913)
Eagles' attention, all members going to Spokane be at Eagle hall
Tue. morning at 6.45. (1922)
REGULAR MONTHLY MEETING OF CANADIAN LEGION
WILL BE HELD ON JUNE 4TH AT
S P.M. (1907)
Pythian Sisters Military Whist
Drive tonight in K.P. hall at 8
o'clock. Admission 25c. Refresh-
menta, (1912)
McDonald Jam Co. are in the market for your strawberries, black currants,   red. currants,   gooseberries,
cherries and raspberries. Phone 280.
(1843)
H. E. Stevenson extends an Invitation to all connected with garage
trade to listen to Mr. Parsons discussing ignition matters tonight at
Women's Institute rooms, 8 o'clock.
Remember the banquet to Associated Boards of Trade, Hume Hotel,
Tuesday 4th, 6.30 p.m. Auspices Nelson Board of Trade. Large number
outside visitors will be here. Tickets
$2.00. (1908)
Laat year It wai tha Chicago World
Falrl Thla year It's the 8an Diego
Exposition. GREYHOUND LINES
•gtln lttd the way with low fares
tnd frequent convenient service.
(1897)
Can. Legion Smoking concert
tonight at 8 p.m. ahirp in aid ot
Nelion city Boys Band uniforms-
Splendid program. Veterans and
citizens welcome—Admjision 35c.
(1859)
FUNERAL NOTICE
Bachynskl—Victor P., aged 14
years, passed away Friday. Body
will rest at Somers Funeral Home
until Tuesday, thence to Church of
Mary Immaculate, where mass will
be said at 9 a.m. Father J. C. MacKenzie officiating. (1919)
FUNERAL NOTICE
Carter—Ernest, aged 51 years,
pMsed away Sunday. Body will
rest at Somers Funeral Home until
Wednesday, when service will be
held at 2 p.m., Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson
officiating. (1918)
TO "BLACKLIST"
LINES JUNE.
VANCOUVER, June 2 (CP)-Thd
Longshoremen and Water Transport
Workers' association of Canada hai
set June 8 as the date for blackllit*
ing "unfair" ihipping Una, I. Emory, association official, itated Saturday.
Thc association hu already releued two ships from the embargo
at Powell River because the shipi
paid the difference between regular
longshore scale of wages and the
scale paid at Powell River, Mr. Emory stated.
He declared the association ia
ready to provide longshoremen for
Powell River at union rotes of pay.
Powell River company hM refused
to pay this scale but it allows the
shipping companies to do io, he
said.
RELIEF STRIKERS
HOLD AUG DAY
VANCOUVER, June 2 (CP).-In
defiance of Mayor G. G. McUe-pr's
refusal to grant them permission,
striking relief camp workers held a
tag day Saturday ln an effort to
raise funds to support them on their
proposed march to Ottawa.
Matt Shaw, chairman of the strike
committee, stated the majority of
the strikers will probably leave tne
city Monday. He said a number of
sympathizers are expected to arriva
in the city from Victoria over the
week-end to participate in the movement eut
The tentative Itinerary for the
march calls for a one-day stop in
Kamloops and Revelstoke, a '.\vo-
day stop in Calgary and short stayg
in all the larger centers across (he
Dominion.
The marchen do not expect to
go to Edmonton. If the strikers
there decide to join the march, they
are expected to meet the main body
at Calgary.
NO HONORS FOR
THE PREMIER
OTTAWA, June 2 (CP) .-Expectation in some quarters on Parliament
Hill that Prime Minister R. B. Bennett would personally figure in the
King's birthday awards proved to be
unfounded when the honors list waa
made public today.
It is understood since he conducted
ths Imperial economic conference at
Ottawa In 1932 Mr. Bennett has been
marked out for signal honor at the
hand of the sovereign and that on hii
recent visit to London he wos urged
by a member of the royal family to
accept a high honon	
WYATT INVITED
TO CAPTAIN THE
ENGLISH ELEVEN
LONDON, June 2 (CP Cubic).—
R. E. S. Wyatt, Warwickshire's captain and England's cricket general
against Australia lut year, has been
invited to captain England in the
first test match against South Africe
at Nottingham on June 15, it was
announced tonight
Wyatt is completely recovered
from an injury suffered during a
tour of the West Indies early this
year.
AWARDED KELVIN MEDAL
LONDON, (CP.) — Sir Ambroie
Fleming, 85-year-old inventor of
the wireless valve, one of the pioneers who put the science of radio
in the forefront of the exact sciences hu been given the Kelvin
Medal.
PHONE  815
for better end prompter lerv*
ice In plumbing repilri and
alterations.
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
At last! Ws Here Today!
^_*vAm////////A
GRAND MUSICAL FUN  SHOW!!
Tht evolution of a birthday cake. Even befon thtlr flnt birthday
ennlventry on May 28, tht "qulntt" wtn glvtn blrthdiy cikei to thiy
oould pose for the photographer. Thi plcturtmtn caught Yvonne,
liveliest of tht flvt ftmoui listen, ti sht plunged Into tht ctkt tnd ll
she imtcktd her Hot In genuine pleuure—Photoi copyright by tht
Central Preii Canadian.)
^fe
