 ************
1
Moncton Hawks Run Wild to
Beat Detroit 13-3
—rPa&e Seven
W-l
SIHAB-S5 -C
'   PROVIWCIAL   IIBRAR
-    VICTOR I A   S   C
1*6
.Grains Come Up But Rest of
Markets Are Dull
—Pa&e Six
!.
NELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA—THURSDAY MORNINO, APRU lt, 1194
FIVE CENTS A COPY
NUMBER   30*4
OTTAWA SKEPTICAL ABOUT SPA IN B.C.
*        *        **        *        *        *        **        *'**        *        *        *.*       *..*■**        *        *        *        *
*        ■»****•»        *
NO USURPATION IS BENNETT WARNING
OTTAWA MUST
ACT PROTECT
ITS FUNCTION
Such  Is  Bennett's
Declaration in
Talking SPA
ANYTHING MIGHT
OCCUR HE SAYS
Hopes Provinces Will
Not Use Powers to
Hurt Constitution
OTTAWA, April 11 (CP).—Ttw
Dominion government mint be
placed ln A position to "protect the
function! of thU federal parliament from usurpation." Rt. Hon.
R. B. Bennett, prime minister. Informed the house of commons durlni debate on the unemployment
relief bill. The prime minister wan
dealing wtth the situation In British Columbia where sperlal powen
hare been granted to the provincial fovernment.
Attar outlining the danger which
might arise from the British Columbia government passing ordinances
whioh the Dominion government
could not disallow, the prime minister
naked Wilfred Hanbury (Ub-Vanoou-
ver-Burrard) lf he did not think the
federal government should make preparations.
HIS QUESTION
"Doee tbe honorable gentleman ndt
think tt la highly desirable to protect this parliament In the eierclae of
tts powers from usurpation by a delegates authority eepeclally ln the light
of the fact that It hu seen fit to disregard constitutional practices with
respect to veto and cutters of that
(Continued on Ptgt Eight)
Urge   Sterilization   if  Boy
Guilty   Powell  River Death
JUVENILE NOT   Daring Airmen Rescue 62 of THE BUTCHERY
Markets at
a Glance
BT   THE   CANADIAN   PRESS
Toronto and Montreal: industrial
stocks cloae higher.
Toronto mines: Cloeed lower.
Mew York: Stocks closed slightly
higher.
Winnipeg: Wheat cloeed higher.
Toronto: Bacon hogs off car unchsnged kt 7.90.
London: Bar sliver and copper unchanged;  tin, lead and sine higher.
New Tork: Bir silver, leed and
rinc unchanged; copper higher and
tin lower.
Hew York: Cotton lower; rubber,
coffee and sugar higher.
Hew York: Canadian dollar closed
unchanged at  1.00 5-20.
Lady Peel, better known ss Beatrice
LUUe, Toronto-born stsge actress,
whose huiband, Blr Robert Peel, passed away on the eve of his thirty-sixth
birthday.
NEW ALTITUDE
MARK IS SET
Italian Ace Reaches
Height of Over
Nine Miles
ROME, April 11 (AP)—Benato I)o-
nsil. war are, soared Into an mer*
east sky behind a four-bladed pro-
petlnr today to carve what apparently Is a new world aero altitude
record of slightly more than nine
miles out of a freezing, misty atmosphere.
The civilian pilot required bnt TS
mlnutei for  bU flight,  wMch  Ml
initrnmente eeirnl had Uken him
14.500   metre-   or   r./iiMiTM   feet
Into the heavens.
He   descended   so   rapidly   In   hla
especially   constructed   biplane   that
he suffered from shock on touching
the earth tgaW and had to be given
first aid treatment.
Tha doughty war pilot and breaker
of several records ueed every gadget
known to modern ,**.vlsMons on his
bop. He wsa enclosed ln a guttapercha
suit, oiled boots and a newly designed
mask In order to resist ths temperatures of the stratosphere. Bp*clsl
oxygen tanks allowed him to breathe
ln the super-rarlfled atmosphere.
Vancouvtr Dentist
Dies Suddenly
VICTOBIA, April 11 (CP)—Dr. B.
E. Davey, dentist of Vancouver, died
suddenly of a heart attack while
yachting with a friend near Alert
Bat, according to a report filed with
provincial  polloe   headquarters  here.
18,000 TOOL AND DIEMAKERS WILL
GO OUT ON STRIKE IN U.S. TODAY
62 Detroit Shops Refuse to
Listen to Wage Plans;
I     Strikes Continue
HEW TORX, April ll (API—Refusal of 6S Detroit shops today to
listen to wage snd hour demands
ot tha Mechanics Educational eoclety confronted the automotive Industry with anotber menacing walkout.
Union representatives announced
they would call 18,000 tool and
- dlemakera out on strike at midnight Thuraday.
Other Industries wris sharing
labor troubles as thetr workers presented petitions for return to tha
lWfl  wag*  levels.
Aviation manufacturer* employing
9000 workers st East Hartford, Conn.,
were   notified   that   tba   atrike   al
ready begun would be extended to
tbe Chance V o u g h t Corporation
works unless three affiliated companies granted 10 per cent wage
increases.
Pour hundred employees of tb e
Bingham Stamping Company struck
at Toledo and the union said the
entire plant wu shut down.
A 10 per oent wage advance wu
rejected by 3000 striking ship-yard
workers at Camden, N.J, and the
strike wlll go on until wages advance 25 per cent, they Announced.
Operations at the Camden plsnt
of Campbell Soup Company began
on limited scale with the return
of 400 of the 3800 striken, but
union leadsrs said the strike would
continue.
A strike pf oil field workers
scheduled to begin at Enid. Okla..
wu deferred to await a government
inquiry. ,   . ...
Mid-West Has Black Wednesday and Black
Snow in Minnesota-Wind Hits 175 m.p.h.
LINCOLN. Neb, April 11 (AP) —Dust whipped from dry pralrtea by a
northern gale msde today a black Wednesday ln a large mid-western area.
Clouds ot dirt and sand enveloped much of South Dakots. Nebraska,
Xansu, Minnesota and lows, threatening damage to winter wheat and ln one
locality driving highway travellen back to town,
Tbe sun wu blotted vout ln many districts.
A letup In the wind, which exceeded 40 mllei sn hour st the Lincoln
municipal airport, wss predicted soon by T. A. Blair, government weatherman.
Thera were simllsr storms earlier this year.
Black «now fell st Pipestone, Minn., clearing the air, but dust aoon rolled
In again.   A wtnd of 175 miles an hour wu estlmsted ln tha upper regions.
Note fo Given Signed by Fred Said
"I Can't Take It*; No Trace Wolfe
VANCOUVER. April 11 (CP).—A note reeding: "I csnt Uke It,** wu reported by Canadian pacific Coastal Stesmshlp officials todsy to hsvs been
found In the stateroom sbcard SB Princess Charlotte occupied by Frederick
B Wolfe Jr., 33. of Besttle, disappeared from the vessel en route from Vanoouver to SeatUe Sunday night.
Officials said the note wu addraaaad tn "Owen" snd wu signed "Fred."
It wss slso reported some occupant of the stateroom, probably Wolfe, had
attempted to burn a cheque book In thr vuh buln of tbe ststsroom.   No
baggsg* wu left In the room but ***A>tr%\ personal documents were reported
V*%kP-K ______■
MOVED ASM
CASEUNFOLDS
Had Confessed to the
Killing of Lad With
an Axe
GRINS AS AXE IS
SHOWN TO JURY
90 Russians Held Upon Ice
Sterilization Only at
Wish of Parents
Says B.C. Law
POWELL   HIVEH.   B.C.   April   11
(CP).—A coroner's Jury Investigating the slaying of io.rear-old John
MeFarlane today returned a verdlrt
stating that he, "came to his desth
from a blow on the head by some
blunt Instrument In the hsnds of
a person or persons unknown, hut
the evldenre points to Frank Mlllen, a Juvenile, who has confessed
to the crime." The verdict adds:
"We recommend that ln the event
of Frank Mlllen being found guilty
of the murder, and found to be mentally deficient, sterilization methods
be adopted."
IH RIM) IN OR mi,
John McParlaae's body wu found
Frldgy buried in a aheWow aaq^plt
grsreSJbtaraoO yaras from hi* home
His head bad been battered. He bad
been missing since Tuesday.
On Saturday 14-year-old Frank
Mlllen, a schoolmate, told polios be
(Contlnaed on Page Eight)
UPHILL GREETS
BESSBOROUGHS
MICHEL. April 11—Lord and Lady
Beaaborough paaaed through the
Heckles this morning on their way
eaat. Ther stopped at Fernie where
tha flrat 'penon to greet tbem wu
Thomu Uphill, M PP.
COAL OPERATORS
DEFY THE NRA
t _.
WASHINGTON, April 11 (CP)—
NRA's order establishing a sevea-
hour day and higher wages In the
bituminous coal Industry of the
I nlted Mates wu defied tonight by
I'nrdnrT Johnston, representing Alabama ooal operators, he said:
"Of civil war ln the Industry and
subjection of the Industry to three
proconsuls working through a military ringmagter, we prefer civ II war."
Vancouver Gets
Larger Hospital
Grant for 1934
Charge Thot Wirt
Was Pro-German Is
Denied in the House
WASHIHCPrON, April 11 (AP)—
The cvarge—followed- by an Immediate denial—that Dr. WUUam A.
Wtrt wu Jailed for "pro-German acuities" during tbe war, wu made
today in the United States house of
representatles after Mrs. Franklin D.
Roosevelt had replied to the Oary.
lnd.. educationalist's assertions that
the BaedsvlUe. W. Vs, homestead
subsistence project wu "communistic"
POT HOLE KILLS
MICHEL MINER
William'Jenkins Is
Crushed Death
in Colliery
HATAL. April 11—William Jenkins
wu killed at ths B.C. mine at the
atlrh ' colliery when a pot hole fell
and he wu crushed at 9.30 p.m.
Tuesday. Hb died at 11:15 p.m. ln tba
hMpltal.
Hs wae oorn October 18, 1W8 at
Wrexham, North Wales, and wu unmarried. He leavea a widowed mother,
Mrs. J. Jenkins, two brothers. Jack
and Jamea, all of Michel, and four
sisters. Mn. J. Joyce ot Coleman.
Alta., Mrs. A. Almond of Corbin, and
Mrs. Mark Ouksll and Mn. Sam
■tepbenson of Michel. Tbe funeral
w!" take place Friday.
Tokes Two Trips; to
Take Balance Off
the Floe Today
By STANLEY p. BICHABD80N
Associated Press Foreign Staff
MOSCOW, AprU 11 (AP)—A vivid
tale of the buardons rescue by
Soviet airmen of tt persona of a
group of M Russians marooned for
two months on a drifting ire floe
ln Uw Bering sea wu told today
ln official dispatches.
Three flyers—Sletneff, Kamanln
.and Molokov—took 33 ott the ice
la : night and returned to uve 19
more this afternoon, leaving 28 yet
t« be rescued, a government statement said.
The three daring pilots flew from
Cape Van Karem on the Siberian
shore over hitherto unexplored territory and mads landings on the difficult apace which the cutaways, members of the Chelluskln expedition to
Wraugel island, had cleared on tba
lea tloa.
LEADER ILL
Dr. Otto Schmidt, leader of tbe
party, IU with bronchial trouble, wu
taken aboard the lut plane today
despite his strenuous protest.
He had planped to remain In pereonal command unUl tbe lut man
left, but tbe airmen eald he wu too
IU to stay and they plan to take blm
to Alaska for treatment u aoon u
poaalble.
Tbe ti landed aafely on the mainland of Ruaala and the 16 remaining
on the Ice wert merobe* of an eetpt
ditlon to Wrangel laland which
Schmidt headed. En route home from
tbe laland, the ship of the party, the
Chelluskln. wu crushed by the floe
and aank. February 18.
Prior to tha exploits of the lut 34
houn, 10 women, two children and
seven men, two of whom were the
expedition pilot, DabuahUn and hla
mechanic, were aaved.
1,730,804 LBS. VEGETABLES,
FRUIT PROCESSED IN KOOTENAY
334,029 Pounds More in 1933 Than in 1932;
Strawberries Bring Largest Amount to
Growers; Most Apples Manufactured
o '	
A total of 334,030 mora pounds ot fruit and vegetables were manufactured
af tha McDonald Jam company, Limited, of Nelaon. and the plant of The
Chrlatlan Community of Universal Brotherhood, Limited, at Brilliant during
1&33 than ln 1932. according to figuru given out by E. C. Hunt, dlatrlct
agriculturist. In 1033 thera were 1.708,804 pounds of trult and vegetables
manufactured, this amount of produce netting tba growers 831.077.17,
Strawberries brought tha largest amount to the growers and 813.000 wu
paid for 830.000 pounds. Raspberrlu brought the next,largest amount, or
just a Uttle over 87000; Apples eaally led ln tha largest number of pounds
manufactured.
Following Is tha list of fruit and vegetables handled hy the two factorlu,
and tha value to the producer: ■"■■■■■
VICTORIA, April 11 <fP)—Vancouver Institutions wlll receive
$135,000 more this }ear from the
provincial government, $75,000 of I
which U In added teaching grants,
and $00,000 in restoration of the
higher per dlrm allowanre to hospitals, Hon. Dr. O, 11. Weir pointed j
oat today.
Additional assistance ls*now being   j
sought by educational circles on the
ll aland.
1500 Available
for Prospecting
VICTORIA. April ll (CP)-If the
policy of sending prospectors Into
the hills on a government grubstake
such as hu been intimated u ona
of ths possible moves In tba re.
cayery prognm, an army of something Uke 1500 potential prospector*
is In th* making on which the provinoe csn drsw in addition to those
who already follow the occupation.
400 Strikers Boo
16 Going to Work
VAMCOUVIB. April 11 (CP)—Near-
It ' 400 alrlklni loftera todir picketed the CanadUn Pacll'c forrj
Prlnctia filzabeth Ior Nanalmo but
thara waa no demonatratlon othar
than Jam and hooting aa 18 man
.ailed anrouta to central lake what*
Bloedel, Stewart and Welch plan to
reauma* logging operation..
11 fl Hit   MtHKKT**!   DOOMED
WASHINOTON. April 11 (AP) —
Swift dlaappe-aranre ol future, mar**
keU waa predicted today by the prealdent of the Chicago board of trade
If the admlnlatratlon-favored bill to
1 Me'iUta aradat aarhanaaa I, artonta**!
Applet   	
Blackberrlea   	
Black Currant,  	
Cherriee    	
Crabapplea   	
Oooaeberrlee    	
Paachaa (Okanagan)
Peare	
Plume   	
Raapberrlea   	
Red CurranU 	
Strawberrtu    	
Hurklfberrlf a    	
Tomatoaa   	
No. ot lta.
..    M-uoa
J.TM
37*81
19391
31473
1IMI
13,818
38
..     300.408
.     140.338
M7»
330,478
38.001
73.385
producer
Value to
» 3.248.58
64 55
1,508.45
1.100.41
107.99
400.31
130.18
50
3.070.03
7.435.61
30154
13.100.76
1,700.34
13805
Tot,!,  -■,',„■. ......*.......... 1.730.004       831.07717
PIRATES' GOLD FOUND
CACHE WORTH $45 MILLION
Located  on   Lonely  Isle   ot
South Seas; Franco Will
Claim Half of It
PAPEITE, Tahiti, April U (AP)
—An cnormoua cache of pirate
gold eatl-oated at being wortk
M5.000.O08 baa been reported lo-
cated an a lonely laland of the
eovth aeaa and tha rrench government la aald to placa auffl-
clent credence in the atory to
order tha pooting of a guard at
tha apot with t tie, to claiming half of any trraaure reentered.
Tiw ftnd waa reported by an
organlied group which haa been
hunting for tbe burled treasure
for lour yaara. Laat month tha
expedition called from here'and
returned only recently with a atory
that the gold had been found burled under aand and water on an
laUnd of tbe Tuamotu Arrhl-
JMlMa*, aaat  M  Iba *»mU   Paaurie
Prench colony.
wedte-ahaped gold Ingota dating
back to Inca tlmea In Peru and
aggregating IS toni In weight make
up tbe reputed treasure. The bad.
er of the espedltion, who more
Htwi men to •ecreey aa to eiart
namet and placea before dlauliing
his atory. aald tba treasure probably waa taken from rem by
Pirates In 'the dayi of tbe Con-
qulaudorei.
Whtat Conference
Hot a Holiday
ROUS, April 11 (CP Cable).--The
world wheat conference bad a "day
off" today but tomorrow wlU ftt
down to intensive work, hoping to
produce hy the weekend an agreement which .will result in raising
tha world prloe cf wheat, lf acted
on by tbe lft governments represent-
AT BREMERTON
YET UNSOLVED
Seek Federal Aid in
Unravelling Death
of Six People
EIGHT ARE HELD
FOR QUESTIONING
One of Held Men Has
Gun Wounds in
His Limbs
SEATTLE. April 11 (AP).—An appeal to the depsrtment of Justice for
aid ln solving the "Bremerton butchery" ot six persons, and questioning
ot five man and three women by King
county offloera were today's developments in the "mystery of Irland's
Point."
United States Attorney Anthony
Savage added his personal appeal to
thst of Prosecutor Warren Miller of
Kitsap county tn a wire to the attorney -general tbat federal authorities aid tba state, county and city police npw working on the case of the
sextet slaughter Msrch *■*■ In tbe horns
ol Prank FUeder, near Bremerton.
King County DetecUyes It. A. J. At*
Unghsm and W. R. 'Bears, arreatlng
eight persons Ln connection with a
series of robberies in western Washington, aald tbey found evidence Indicating a poaalble connection with
the murders.
Those questioned were Roy Duclaw,
John Murphy, his wife Qeraldlne,
Porter Fettljohn, XJnar Mortensen,
Mrs. Beatrice O'Malley, Oeorge Shepherd and Mrs. Babe Reld.
Offioers said Duclaw, who had two
bullet wounds ln the leg. had a pistol
of- tha calibre used ln tbe Bremerton
murders, and lt was submitted to
Chief of Seattle Detectives Luke S.
Msy, noted criminologist, for examination.
"We know all the prisoners have
been associated with each other,"
ssld Sheriff Claude O. Bannlck ot
King oounty, "and Murphy admits
having committed robberies both ln
Seattle and Everett, while othera hsve
told us of additional atlck-upa. This
will enable us to hold tbem until we
can find lf they know anything about
the Bremerton murders."
Blairmore People
Back Council in
Dimming the Town
M.AIRORE, Alta., April lt (CP).
—A mass nwetlng of ottlaens of this
Crow's Nest pass mining town tonight passed a vote of confidence
In the mayor and connell and approved the tatters' action In announcing electric light supply will
be cut off at midnight, Friday.
tbe 13th because .the town lost an
appeal against acquittal of a subscriber on a Miarge of stealing
elect rlctty. .
The meeting supported tne mayor
and oouncll In Its recommendation that the caaa be reopened.
Amendment to the
Sweepstake  Bill
J-ost in Senate
OTTAWA, April 11—By the ruling
vot- of the speaker, the senate today
defeated an amendment to tha hoapltal sweepstakes bill.
Senator C. P. Beaublen had moved
an amendment that tha bill provide
for eweepetakee not only for hospitals but alao for universities.
THE WEATHER
87
•4
M
IS
Catevan Point A.
.   38
Ml
ti
.    1
•9
Dt
IS
m
Tl
M
. M
TJ
74
■
M
M
5*1
M
. 30
tr
44
eg
N
Porecart for Nelaon and vlelnl.y—
-s-u*. .Intnl. with frost* <
a o'ebt.
Commits S
ulclde
___________■«»■
i
ai
Jiro Satoh, one of tbe world's finest
tennis players, and atar of tba Japanese Davla cup team, who committed
suicide by leaping overboard from
tha liner Hakone Maru, near Singapore, Satoh was captain of the Japanese team slated to meet Australia
In tbe aaoond round of the historic
trophy at Wimbledon. Ill health wu
ths reason given for tbe desperate act.
FEAR BRIDGE
IS A SUICIDE
Hunt for Invalid's
Body in Lake,
Ainsworth
Charlea Bridge of Alnsworth, for
many yeara an Invalid. Is thought to
have *aken hla life by drowning Wedneaday, hla clothing having been
found on tbe Ukealde near Alnsworth.
Under the supervision of Provincial
Constable R. C. Ollker, dragging operations were carried on through tba
afternoon but the equipment available waa ot Uttle um ln tba water
where hla body Is being sought. Tha
water la about 35 faet deep at the
particular point. Last night Constable
Ollker want Into Kaalo to .secure
further equipment Including grappling Irons, and will continue tbe
work today.
Bridge baa bean tn the hoapltal at
Kaalo tor two yeara and on Wednesday he left, heading for his cabin
near Alnaworth. He wu missing and
a search began. Articles of clothing
thought to have been his were found
on a rock near ths lake with another
rock on top of them to keep them
from blowing away.
Mr. Bridge wu about « or 43
yaara old and wu single. His only
known relative Uvea In London, Bngland. Ha bad bean ln the Kulo district for about 14 yeara and prior
to hla Illness wu a prospector.
BUT THEY GOT
B.C. POSITION
WRONG LIGHT
So Suggests Prime
Minister Pattullo
at Victoria
HE SAYS OTTAWA
UNDULY EXERCISED
Ottawa Has Power to
Disallow SPA if it
Oversteps
VICTORIA, April lt (CP)—Premier T. D. Pattullo expressed the
opinion today tbe special powera
act of British Columbia wu not
properly appreciated by tha house
of commons. The premier wu com*
mentlng *>» rep -ts of Prime Minister k. ii. Bennett's statement regarding the special powera, mada
ln the house.
"Prom reports I sea of discussion
In the house of commons regarding
British   Columbia's   position,'*   Mr.
Pattullo said, "I'm Inclined to believe   they   are   becoming   unduly
exercised and I do not think they
properly appreciate our poaition.
"I would draw attention  to  tha
fact that the special powera act la
only in force for ona year. Ii our
government were to promulgate any
ordlnancea that ware  dlstutaful  to
the   federal   authorities,    thty   atlU
(Contlnaed on Pag* Eight)
HOTONTRAIL
OF DILLINGER
BHREVEPORT, La., April 11 —
(AP).—flhrereport and Cs4do parish peare offloera an< offlcera
from Marshall, Texu, mobilised
short ly before m*e night tonight
on the highway oetween tha tw*
cities to await the approach of a
car believed to ba carrying John
Dllllnger. Tha tip eaau Irom the
Inlted States department of Justice,  officers  said.
150 MEN RETURN
TO THEIR WORK
DDWCAK, B. C, AprU 11 (CP)—
Camp 10 of tta Victoria lumber
and Uanulacturlnj Company. LUL.
locatao on Uke Cowlchan. haa beea
reopened to return IW men to work
alter a three-iaeek ahut-down.
FROST-BLHEN BYRD EXPLORERS LAY
ROAD IN HEAVY SNOW AND A 'QUAKE
Dogs Die on Trail; Month Is
Taken to Make Trail; Led
by Former Canadian
I.ITTI.B AMERICA, Antarctic,
March 11 (Delayed) (AP via MacKay Radio).—How they conquered
intense storms aod temperatures
SI degrees below seto In "banding" a road 100 miles to tha
aouth wu told today by the main
southern party of the second
Byrd   Antarctic   expedition.
Capt. Alan Innts Taylor, formerly of the Royal Canadian Mount-
ad police and tha royal flying
corpa, was In command of tha
party.
Tbey spent a month behind
three nlne-dog tesms on the rolling lee barrier, marking a trail
with orange flags and putting
down food depot i so that next
spring a trek can he made to the
Idael    Ford    and   Queen    Maude
****
a    had   ana   terrible    day,"
tha Canadian recounted.
MKN    ANO    DOOS    FREEZE
"Wa broke oamp early with the
hopa of making 75 miles by night.
The temperatures wu 4S below. A
31-mile   wind   mada   It   cruel.   The
anow wu like aand—tt waa tougb
going.
"Ronne frone his wrist harneealng
the dogs, and later both cheeks;
Paine suffered a froat bitten cheek.
My finger frosa. But It wu tougher
oa tba  dogs.
"Tha wind picked up drift from
tba surface, and tba dogs got tbm
full slash of it. Thay shut tbalr
ayaa and kept crawling, aometlmea
bally-deep ln the looae snow. Flrat
a dog of Bonne's taam died la
harness. Then one of my taam
foundered, and tha merciful thing
waa to shoot blm.
LONO   NIGHTMARES
"Tba nlgbta ware Ilka long night*
maru. Uany tlmea my sleeping bag
had 30 pounds of ice on It. Oa
tba Mth wa lost another dog.
"Nelge, a file dog ln my taam,
caved ln and I carried htm on tb*
sladga for a while, but Juat before
wa reached SO-mlle depot ba died."
Tha man told alao of a snow
quake on March 16 whan "tha
air ahook with a aound Ilka tha
roar of 1000 locomotives, and for
mllee the barrier surface trembled
and aettled three or four Inches."
Tet some of tha distance thay
were helped by a sledge and tractor  party.
13-Year-Old Lochs Baby Girl in an
Ice-House and Leaves Her to Die
CHICAOO. April 11 (AP)— Indifferent and unsorrowlng, 13-yaar-old
Oeorge Rogslskl calmly told a coroner's Jury todsy how he lured tiny,
blonde Dorette zietlow, a% yaara
old, to her death In an abandoned
ice  houaa.
Tba jury recommended ha <t*e held
for murder and prosecutors announosd as ha wu being led awny
to a aall that they would sak for
^ penalty of death In tha electric
hair.
Rogalskl said his conscience wu
jntroubled although he knew for
nearly thraa days ths mii> girl wu
starring  and freezing Ln tb* *J1»o.
tiUtAd    fcitlMln*
Asked why he' enticed the child
Into tha building and left ber to
die. oeorge replied: "I don't know.
I juat wanted to look st her with*
out any clothes on."
"I want to visit my aunt," be
aald, "but abe wunt home. I walked up an alley behind Oentral
avenue and saw tha girl and I told
har id give ber a nickel lf aha
would come with me. Bhe uld aha
would." After he had ltft her la
tha loa house, he want back to aai
her the next day but could not
taka sny food u his mother would
have   mlsaad   It.
Dorette died In hoapltal todaf.
oi-m  waa  fouod   vesterd^>.
 ^-^
	
-—— i	
for aala at drat ■
Uaalaad. Toronto, Out
Painful foils
Cause Muoh Misery
Anyone who hu auffered from boil,
knows how tick and mumble they
make you feel.
Boils are caused by bad blood, but
when the blood is purified, cleansed
ud vitalised by Burdock Blood
Bitters the boils will quickly disappear, your misery ia at u end,j*ou»
health ud strength oome back again,
and Ihe skin becomes clear, smooth
and free from eruptions,
and leaaca: -ten,: put up lor tba psst 65 yssn by Th. T. Mllburn Oa,
WEATHER IS FINE
FOR ROAD GRADING
" ■  ■""" t
Five Graders Busy; Shovels
Are Being Employed by
Relief Camps
Oradera an busy on ttie roads at
-present, declares W. Ramsay, provincial government road engineer, but
all tha ahovcla an be**hu used by the
relief campa under the tupervislon ol
tha department ot national defence.
On, shovel Is at Lonv'oesch. one at
Nelway and the a*>ther la at Rock
Creek. For the paat while thera has
Kidneys Bothered
Her for Years
But DoddV Kidney Pills Soon
Made Her WeU  Again
Alberta U«y Never Frit Better Than
Bhe Does Now.
Bad Heart, Alta.. April 13 (Special.
"X have taken twelve boxes of Dodd's
Kidney Pills and now feel fine," writes
Mrs. M. Nerstad. of this plaoe. "My
Kidneys bothered me for yesrs. After
X had taken one box I could toll the
difference and continued until I hsd
taken twelve boxes. X never felt better
than I do now."
Tha road to good health Ilea through
the Kidneys. If they are kept well snd
etronf. they do their duty of straining
all the Impurities put of the blood
lit ream. If they are weak and out of
order tha lmpuiittea stay in the blood
and sickness Is tha sure result.
Dodd's Kidney Pllla keep the Kidneys ln oondltlon to do their full work
of cleaning and purifying the blood.
Keep a box of Dodd's Kidney Pllla In
the house at all times.
beep one working near Ooatfell, but
for the time being lt Is held up for
repairs.
Two graders were working between
Nelaon and Ymlr Wednesday, and
there were also two power graders
working between Nelson and Trail.
Another la wosklng on the Balfour
road.
The continued fine weather ti assisting the road craws in tbelr grading and the work la proceeding rapidly.
SWIM IN OPEN
TANK AT TRAIL
TRAIL, B.C. AprU 11.—Where
yesterday was erected the platform
on which the governor-general and
party were welcomed to Trail, was
Wednesdsy the scene of diving and
swimming activities. The Jubilee
Exlmming pool. After the vloe-regai
party had returned to Tadanac carpenters dlsmsntied the platform and
set back In pi see tha fence surrounding   the  pool.
The huge concrete tank waa filled
Tuesdsy night and many acquatlc
enthuslaSlsts splashed about ln the
pool   Wednesdsy.
Weather was most suited for the
opening of the pool although aome
showed a certain amount of hesitancy before entering, being dubious
about  the   wster's   temperature.
WALLTOHOES
ON NEAR TRAU
TRAIL. B.C. April 11.-Construe-
tlon of the riverfront wall la proceeding apace, a section of the
upper portion being completed and
forms are slmost finished aa far
south as where Trail creek pour*
Into the Columbia. Huge boulders
have been arranged ln aymetrical
fashion over the sanda on tha river
side of the well to prevent the
washing swsy of sand at the wall's
base when the rlrer reschea higher
levels.
Guide for Travellers
Nelson, B.C., Hotels
"Finest in the Interior"
Breakfast
ant loeoe
Luncheon
350 to 50*
Dinner
3se ?nd ese
Phone 787
a p.
1UME HOTEL
Ftea Bui Ssrrlca Nelson. BO. Oeorte Baswell, Prop.
Rotary and  Oyro Headquarter,
HUM*— Mra. Thomaa Scott. Orand
Forka; W Oueedolrlf, Kerameoa; T
H. Rudkln, Kaalo; C. A. Cotterlll, A.
T. LePage. H. /. Hovell. P. W. Ha-re.
. W. O. Orle.p, Mra. Jack Coahon and
Marlon,  Vancouver;  J.  Looney.  Pen*
tleton; W. Shaw, Caltary; J. H. t*wls.
P. C. White. Medicine Hat; Davla T
Orlfflth. Hamilton; H. Kims. Kellogu.
Idaho; A. 1. Wataon. Kootenay Bay,
J. W. Cope, Kelowna.
cThe Savoy Hotel
"Where the Guest Is Kin$'
Nelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.
Many Rooms With Private
Baths or Showers.
IM BAKTR ST.
J. A. KERR. Prop.
PHONI IK
NBLSON. BC
BAVOT—Mr. and Mra. Don Mowat. I cox. Salmon Arm; R. J. Johnson, 81o-
Winnipeg; W. Cleaver, New Denver, can City; T. J. Behan, Orand Pork,
Tummy Plecher, Pernle;  R. V. Wll-1
Mew Orand Hotel
T.   L.   KAPAK,   Prop.
Weekly and Monthly Ratea
Bot and   cold   water
Single Ue np     Double 11.90 up
Kg IBM f IO ■ Month and Op
Occidental Hotel
IN Vernon St. Phone MIL
H.   WASSICK
SPBCIAL MONTHLY   RATES
Oood   Comfortable   Rooma
Miner***-   Headquartera
FERTILIZER
SALE HEAVY
Spring Vegetables Are
Supplied Locally
Practically three times ths amount
of fertiliser used ln the district
last year wlll be 'used this season,
indicating that the • ranchers an
looking forward to Increased production thla year on the strsngth
of better conditions. The ssle of
fertilisers waa one of the big Items
handled by local wholesalers during the past week or so.
Spring vegetables are now beginning to appear on the markets,
radishes, onions and asparagus being supplied locally. Rhubarb from
Mission, B.C., hot -house tomatoes
from Vlctorls, asparagus from Wslla
Walla, Wash., and new potatoes from
Bermuda are for sale, Celery and
cauliflower have advanced elsewhere
but ao far prices are unchanged
at Nelson. The orange market is
strengthening. A car o; oranges, onu
of bsnanas snd one of mixed California vegetables arrived during the
week.
Rolled oata advanoed 10 cents per
90 pounds, otherwise there was no
chsnge on the feed rdarket, and
one car of flour and feed constituted the receipts of local wholesalers. Wholesale grocers reported a
slightly drop In the price of sugar.
Their recent srrlvais included fwo
of groceries and one of sugar.
Madden Hotel
A Welcome Awaiti You
3kl.  t.   MADDEN
Completely    Remodelled
Hot   and   Cold   Water
In  the  HEART of  ihe  City
QUEENS HOTEL
A.   LAPOINTE,   Itop.
Rooms from *,(*■ to 11.50 Monthly
•10 and vp.
Steam  heated  and  hot and  cold
watar   ln   avary   room
60S   Baker   M. phone  tKI
TRANSPORTATION -Freight & Passenger
LEARN HOW PLEASANT A BUS
TRIP CAN BE
You've heard a great deal about bus travel in the
past few years—both pro and con. Now try It your-
self! That's the only sure test.
All connect ions are  be in it  made,  and  roads  ar*  in
excellent condition.
Central Canadian Greyhound Lines Ltd.
Nelson Depot, 205 Baker St. Phone 800
NELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND
DAUY   TRUCK
MRViei
Phone
Nelson
7T
FREIGHT LINE
J. C  "tCOTTV MUIR. PROP
Pnimpl     p.fltr'eiti    Srrvlce
al   All   lime.
LIAVINO NSiiON
AT IO AM.
Phone
Trail
13 or mi
STUDEBAKER LOSS
FOUR MILLIONS
■ THE NEUON DAILY NIWS, NIUON, B.C-Tm._SDAY MOBNINO, ArWl lt, 19M —I*-
Flashes From the Wires
OTTAWA —. Rouse devotee
afternoon to relief bill without making progreaa. Conditions greatly Improved and rstlsl expenditure wlll
not be ao large believea Premier Bennett.
MONTBBAL — Formerly one at
Canada*, leading bankers A. p. Bralth-
valte, 78, died Here today. Mr. Bralth-
walta waa Ior many yeara connected
wltb the Bank.ol Montreal.
VICTORIA—By law ot averages B.C.
wlll have eevere forest fire seaaon.
Last yaar total of iota flrea loweat
In 11 yeara. Forest protection fund
of $400,000 restored for this year.
OTTAWA— Hon. W. A Oordon,
minister of labor, who carried tha
government safely over a snap vote
by continuing his speech Tuesday
night, la Ul with throat trouble.
OTTAWA — Canadian radio commission criticised before houae radio
committee. Oovernment urged to go
out of broadcasting business and
adopt measure of wide governmental
control of private stations operated
upon oommerclal basis.
VANCOOVBR — City formally petl-
tlons government to establish royal
commlulon to Investigate request for
statutory authority ts tax prlvately-
beld crown lands at their actual
valua.
MONTBBAL — Assumption eollege
of Windsor, Ont., senior hoop champs,
lose first game ln Dominion playdowns to National-** of Quebec 39-38.
Murray Patrick won the gsme on a
free throw,   i
LOB ANOBLE8—Al Relnke, auto
racer, killed ll practice aptn around
Ascot road racing courae. Car turned
over three tlmea.
OTTAWA—Premier Bennett fa-rote
early revision of the BN A act to
permit Dominion to take wider control ot aocial legislation. But he wlll
not seek that power until after a
general election, he tell, house.
EDMONTON— Alberta Natural producta Marketing act given third reading.
NORWICH, Ont—Rt. Hon. Mackenale King, speaking ln behalf
ol A. B. Rennle, Lib., candidal*
South oaford. says pop)* of Canada muat chooae between dictatorship or preservation of Britlah Institutions, charges provincial and
Dominion governmente arming under species' powere to battle each
other,
HUGO, Okla.—Slight earth trehor
felt her*./
OTTAWA—Two children. Boy ana
jack Ooldham burned to death in
early morning fire.
CaMary—Charles a* Ooaa. chief
juatloe of supreme oourt of Net-Tasks, declares he wu aware James
Fahey, sr Frank orlgware, wa*
resident ol Alberta. Had been tipped
off by friend who had met Fahey in
Vancouver. Juatloe aeea no reason to
bring Tthey back to anawer for jell
breaking charge.
VANCOUVER— Proposal to erect.a
ctty ball In the Thornton park alta
suffers a setback when It la learned
thr** eewer outfalls exist at th*
rear of the property and that It
would be costly to overcome this
obstacle.
VANOOUVBR—introduction at a
bualneee tax to replace the present
trades and business licensing' ayatem contemplated.
NOME. Alaska—One of Three Rua-
slsn rescue planes leaves Cape Van
Karem and makes 375 mile flight
to Nome, Alaska, bearing prof. Otto
Schmidt, Ul. who waa leader of
party  marooned on Ice flo*.
LOWER FRONT
STREET GRADE
To Be Changed From
.11 to 8 Per Cent
Grade
SOUTH BEND. Ind., April 11 (AP).'
—The Studebaker corporation suffer-
td a ntt low of 14.876,307 in 1933, the i
certified statement* forwarded to the I
Ne-r York atock exchange by the re-1
celven, R. 8. Vance, Paul O. Hoffman
and A. Q. Bean, dlacloaed today.
The receivers' report ahowed a lose
dt #4.030.036 for the period January
1 to March 18. 1933, before the receivership, and a 654.610 profit for
the remainder of tbe yaar. However,
tha report pointed out no deprecla-
tlnn had been charged*, against the
properties by the receivers nor had
there been sny Interest accrued on
obligstlons.
Total current assets were placed at
69.689.169 with liabilities of 63,831,•
969. Net salea for tha year were 636,-
994,373.
STATUS OF WOMEN
CHANGING IN CHINA
Girls Lead Freer Life;  Are
Being Educated Saya
Missionary
South Notes
SOUTH BLOCAN. April 11—Mrs. W.
J. Tlndale left Monday on a motoring
trip to spend a few daya ln Spokane.
She waa accompanied by Urs. John
Murray.
Mlse Myra Humphry of Neleon was
a week-end vlaltor st the home of
her parrots. Mr. and Mra. a W.
Humphrey, "Summerhlll". »
Maturity...
Maternity...
Middle Age
Ac these thrtt trying periods a
woman needs Lydia E. Pinkhim'i
Vegetable Compound. Gift it to
your daughter when sht comes to
womanhood. Take it for strength
before aod aftar childbirth. Taka
It to dda you ovar Change of Life.
Taka it whenever you art oervous,
weak and rundown.
A medicine which hu the written
endorsement  of nearly  900,000
women must be good.
Givt itschsnee to help
you, coo. Takt it regularly for best results.
LYDIA E.PINKHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
9* set ef lOO apeoten report b*w**U
MONTRIAL. (OP) — Changes In
conditions aa tbey affect woman In
China noted during her 41 yaara of
missionary work in the provinoe of
Hte-ohwen were described by Dr. Recta w Kllbora to tha Montreal pres-
byterlal of the Women* Missionary
society of tba United Cburch of Canada.
Forty years ago Chinees women
ware never seen on the streets except
in tha oaaa of an elderly servant aent
on an errand. Now they are fret to
corns and go aa they like. Olrls- feet
were bound then. nowj.h« practice is
going out of style. In oountry places
the cuatom atlll exists but will likely disappear there. Dr. Ktlborn believed, when it Is kn6wn to bt unfaah-
ionable.
education wsa not thought neoeeeery four decades ago but today it la
open to any girl wbo aan avail her-
belf of It although many gtrla art deprived of the chance to-go to aohool
because they must stay at homt to
help with tba work. Toung .«ople
mingling together now mske thetr
own cholos of life partners although
thera Is still much unhapplneae In
easea where a boy or girl may havt
been bethrothed In childhood by the
parenta. for ln China an engagement
Is slmost aa binding u marriage.
Dr. Kllborn said she had noted a
marked Improvement in the hgaith Of
Chinese gtrla btoause of their freer
life with participation ln open air
sporta and gamea.
Thera ware no newspapers 40 yeara
sgo but these, aooordlng to Dr. Kllborn. do not help mlasiooartc* for
they tell tha Chinese of conditions In
Christian countries which art hard
to explain.
he's a rum
CALOART. (CP). — Pipe smokers
todsy are bestowing their praise on
O. P. Jones, winner of a moat unique
contest. By keeping his lowly corn cob
slight for one hour and SI minutes
he defested ISS contestants In a raot
for a title of sorts, only ont match
waa uaed.
To simplify the hemming of filet
curtains, and to relieve the eyestrain.
beeto a colored thread through the
hemline to follow whlla stitching
FOR SOUND  INDUSTRY
Industry and trad* ort th* msone by whlth
a country moksa *ff*ctiv* us* of naturol
weolih. Th* Royal tank ha* always bttn
r*ady to •ncourag* sound Canadian
•nlarprls*. It has maintained this attitud*
through many yaar* of varying condition*.
THE
ROYAL    BANK
OF      CANADA
Social Events
of Trail City
TRAIL, April 11—Mrs Alei Baillle
and daughter ara spending a few days
at Slocan City with Mrs. Saline's
parenta.
• •    •
Mlaa BMt Uddlcoat haa returned
to Orand Porks aftar vacationing at
Trail and Boaaland.
• *   •
Mlat Ilslns McPharlon haa returned to Trail after spending a ftw days
with her parenu at Orand Porks.
• •    s
R. Powler, after spending a few
days ln Trail, has returned to hla
home ln Nakuap.
Mr. and Mra. w White of Boaaland
wert recent visitors to Bonnlngton.
.•   *   *
Mr. and Mra. A. B. Clark were the
gueata of honor laat night at a surprise party at thslr home on Tamarac
avenue, the occasion being their l&th
wedding anniversary. Many beautiful
gilts ware received, among tham be**
Ing a preeentation from tha Sunshine
group of tba CO IT. t* Mra. Clark,
who la their leader.
• •   •
Mr. and Mrs. W. Laurie have had
aa their gueeta Mrs. Ernest Bowkett
and children of South Slocan.
e i e   e
Bruce McAulay haa returned to
Roasland from •*. sexton, where he
apent a week visiting relstlves.
• •   •
Mrs. W. H. Campbell haa left for
the coast, where she will visit friends
for a short time.
• •   •
Nat Taylor of Orand Porks IS visiting Trail frlenda.
Believe Council and
Hospital Are Agreed
on Patient Charges
At a netting of a committee appointed ly the Nelson city oouncll
and a committee appointed by the
Kootenay Lake Oenerai hospltsl board.
tt waa believed that an amloable
agreement had been reached Wednesday night with regard to payment for
city patients. As two qf the oouncll
repiheentatises were not at the meeting. It waa decided, however, that no
statement would be mada until afttr
the council meeting Mondsy night.
Work Is advancing rapidly on the
Pront street project of reducing the
grade, and with the work there la
alao considerable vail building and
atreet widening being done. The plan
Is to reduce the grade from an 11 per
cent grade to an 8 per cent grade and
to build the street up on the north
aide of the city railway tracks so
that lt wtll take care of all the westbound traffic
About SOO feet of atreet la effected
under the work, and lt will mean
lowering of the city atreet car tracks
aleo. At one point the road wlU be
lowered five feet.
ROAD NORTH OF TRACKS
Formerly, north of the ctty railway
tracks, moat of the atreet tn that
region, sloped steeply toward the
lake. This has all been filled ln and
levelled, and will give about IS or IS
feet of driving space, oompared to
about IS feet on the touth aide of
the tracks. Tha sidewalk along tha
north aide haa alao been brought on
level with the street. It haa been
filled with stone where necessary and
makes almost a continuous wall from
Poplar street or the old city boudary,
to Cedar street. The walls, there realty
being three of them, are carefully
faced, and tn two or three places are
rather deep. All thla baa been done by
hand, the work extending over a period, off and on. of almoat a year.
The dirt excavated la being uaed to
make fills at other places, it la the
intention to widen the road on Pront
atreet, west of wbere they are working
now. to that the road north of the
tracks wlll ba continuous to Hall
atreet.
Wardner C.CF.
Hears Addresses
WARDNZR. April 11—At a meeting
of the C.C.P. club Thuraday evet ng.
Murray Sinclair delivered a ahort
address on "The financing of work
for the unemployed and the Special
Powera aet." This waa followed by
a brief addreae by John Nelson on
the "Pour Stages of Civilisation."
Mlas Maureen Holtom spent the
holldsys with frlende at Lumbertoh
Mrs. John Rahal of Fernie epent
Sunday here visiting frlende.
Mr. and Mra. Harry Nssh of Waldo
were the gueets of Mr. and Mrs. William  Holtom Sunday.
Ainsworth Notes
AINSWORTH. AprU 11—Rtt. Oeo.
Kinney of Procter came ln with tht
Brotdcieter Sundsy and brought
several youths with him.
Mr. and John Bums snd Ted of
Neleon. after seteral days at theu
summer bome here, left for Neleon.
Ret. B. Pitt Orlfflth of Kaalo waa a
tisltor here Thuraday.
A. L. MacPhee of Xeato wwa a vlaltor ln town Sunday afternoon. He
brought aomt young folks down to the
hot springs.
Miss B- Truseott returned Saturday
evening, after spending the Easter
holldsys In Neleon.
I. Short has returned to Creston,
after apendlng the Beater taoatlon
with hla parenta hare.
Mrs. J. B. Fletcher apent a few daya
in Neleon laat weak.
Appledale Notes
APPUDALf. AprU II—Mrs H. H
Cum* and son Ian of liaison ware
tbe (ueeU ot Mr. and Mra D. T.
Peters for the Easter week.
Lionel. Treaty ml Keith Stalnton
ol Trail spent their holldaya with
thalr irandvanau, Mr and Mra. W.
T. Wytmt.
Lent* OampbeU of TtaU la naiuni
hi* father A Tounf, for a few days.
Ml* L. Wild of Trail la vlaltlng
har aunt, Mr*. W, T. Wynne.
Trail Boll Players
Refuse to Pay Fee
TRAIL. B.C.. April 11.—Arrenge-
menta were made tonight by the executive of tbe TraU Baeebell club to
hold a danoe ln tbe early part ot
May, In an endeavor to ralee funds
to stay! organisation of the club. The
matter reoently propoeed by the executive that tbe executive and players
each pay 13 aa membership fee, waa
turned down by the players.
POLE COMPANY
BUSYSHIPPING
Business Is Brighter;
Building Spur
at Mill
The Schaefer-Hitchcock pole com
puny > busy loading 10 care of poles
for shipment, aooordlng to Information reoelved in Nelaon, eight can being loaded at Nelaon for New Brighton.
Minn., and two at Salmo for Sand
point, Idaho. Orders tor shipments are
on the Increaee and Judging from the
oondltlon of the market at preeent, it
ts stated that the Increaee la likely to
continue.
Work la proceeding at present on an
unloading spur at the mill In Nelaon
to enable loga to be brought ln by
rail from outside points. Loga will be
coming ln from the Slocan talley later
on.
Bight men are employed by tbe
company now, and when the mill commences operation, about tbe flrat of
May. there will be about 30 men on
the pay roll.
Trail L0.L. Lodge
TRAIL. B.C., April 11—In aid ot
the children's orphanage at New Westminster, the L.OX. sponsored a concert and danoe In tnt K.P. hall Wednesday night Mayor E L. Oroutage
opened tht concert with an address
and thanked the lodge for undertaking auch an effort to contribute to
such a worthy cause.
A number of selections ware given
by tbe Trail Veterane' oreheetra. Other artists were Mies R Buchan, Mra.
R. Cook, Miss D. Wright. Miss Mae
Kelly, R. Hawkee, A. Barrett. Sam
Powell, H. A. McLaren and J, PHtue.
The committee In charge waa oom-
posed ot John (loe) Young, Bam
Smythe, J. M. Doughty, James McKlnnon and W. Cooper.
Dr. Walley Speaks
at C.CF. Meeting
A paptr on "Money and lta relation
to production and distribution," given by Dr. O. A. O. Walley, waa tbe
main event at a well attended meeting ot -the C.CP, club at lta club
rooma ln the Strathcona hotel Wed*
nesday morning. The paper followed
the buslnesa meeting.
After Dr. Walleye talk, a social
time waa enjoyed and refreshments
were served.
BELG1UH HIGH
LEGION TABLE
Mr. snd Mrs. I. A. Melsnder, Mrs.
It. B. Shaw and Mn. Charlea Doctor
carried off whlat honors at th* Canadian Lesion whist drive Wednesday
night. The? occupied table Belgium
and held M flats. Both the whltt and
the dance that followed ware much
better attended than on previous occasions
I. T. Brake waa master of ceremonies and tha commit*-*** wu 9. A.
Aldersmlth. E. A. Woolls and W. A.
Jonee.
The '■popillation of Oermany 1* now
about te.S00.00 Inhabitants.
A SIMPLE QUICK
WAY TO RELIEVE
ACID STOMACH
HIRE ARE THE SIGNSi
Nervousness Frequent Headaches ;
Nsurslgta Peeling of WsakneM   :
Indigestion gteeplsssasss
Loss of Appetite   Mouth Acidity
Soar Stomach
Auto-lntoilcatlon
Bladder Weakness
Swiftly Relieved
If you are troubled with a burning sensation. Blsddsr weakness, frequent dally annoyance, getting-up
nights, dull pains ln bsck, lower abdomen and down through groins—
you should try the emailDg vtlue ol
Dr. South worth's "TjrsUbs" and see
what a wonderful dltterenoa they
make) If this grand old formula
Of a well known physician brings
you the swift comfort lt nss brought
to others, you surely will be thankful and tery well pleased, if tt
doea not satisfy, the druggist thst
supplied you Is authorised to return your money on tint box purchased.
WHAT TO DO FOR ITl
TAKI—2 trsspoonfuls of
Phillips' Milk of Mag-
Mats in s |fiai of wster
every momins when you
get up. Tike snother
Fesspoonful Jo minutes
aftsr est ing. And another
before you go to bed.
OH—Take the ntw
Phillips* MilkctfMsgrmu
Tablets — tm tttltt (or
each teespoonful ts directed above.
If you have Acid Stomach, don't
worry ftbout it. Follow the simple
directions given above. This smalt
dosage of Phillips' Milk of Magnesia
acts at oner to neutralize the arid*
that cause headache, stomach pains
and other distress. Try it. You'll
feel like s new person.
But—be careful you get genuine
Phillips' Milk of Magnesia, or
Phillips* Milk of Magnesia Tablets
when you buy—25c and 50c sizes.
ALSO IN TAtllT PORM
Eech tmy tablet Is ths
equivalent of s teespoonfal
of Genuine Phillips' Milk
of Magnesia.
5T«
MAD* IN CAMA DA
Phillip*' Milk of M_tne.U
CANT SLEEP
You mar fwl nervous, Irritable and de-
-pr-eeeed, you m*y suffer from indigestion and
headaches; but the moat marked symptom Is
sle*j>ieeafiess. The treatment indicated is Dr.
Cbmtt Nov* Pood beeauM it restores health
and vigo* tp th* nervous system.
Dr. CHASE'S
IXIIKVI   FOOD
FINK'S
LIMITED
Spring Coat
Clearance
3 DAYS—THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Surely t clearance like this In the middle of the season is truly an event yoa
can't afford to miss . . .
Coats, that are dressy or tailored. Pure wool <;lotb, two-season lining. Sizes
14 to 44.
$16.50
$13.50
to no
.95
$11.00
$10.00
to
$8
.95
Crsps Georgette Hots. All ths newer shades.   Sixes  to
10V_. Pair      $1
!_____<.
Spring Swagger Suits
$10*95
The fashionable garment of the season. They are correctly styled. In tweeds and wool crepes . . . The gayest
of colors. Sites 14 to 40.
Up from	
SPRING SHOES
You will want new shoes for this spring season ... We have the latest arrivals and moderately priced . . . TIES. PUMPS, AND STEP-INS. HIGH AND
CUBAN HEEIS ... GREY, BEIGE. TAUPE. BLUE. BLACK, BROWN
AND WHITE.
$2*95   $4*00   $5*00
Do not clip tha tips of your laebea.
It la dangerous practice, and doaa not
lb aay way promote eyelash growth.
Use a bit of plain vaseline or odorless
sng tasteless castor oil on your laahes
nightly.
I
Fink's Shoes are designed in accordance
with scientific principles.
 ------*
■""n™
*********••—
%b
RflXAL(;iTv
-THE NILSON DAILT NBWS NILSON, B.C.—THURSDAY MOBNINO. APRIL lt, IBM
VEGETABLE SOUP
FRESH VEGETABLES   fre*   WESTERN GARDENS
Invest South Slocan
Guides and Brownies
e
Two  Functions   on   Friday;
Certificates,  Flag
Presented
TOUTH SLOCAN, April ll—The enrolment of Brownies and Olrl guides
took plaoe ln the hall Prlday when
Mrs. T. *t. Dockerlll. district commissioner accompanied by Mrs. F. A,
Newell, representing the I.O.D.E.
came over from Trail for the ceremony.
The Brownie pack, who looked very-
trim In thalr new unlfo%ys, had
patiently studied ln anticipation of
their Investiture and were enrolled In
the afternoon. Mm. Newell presented
the certificate to Mlsa Ban Oansner.
"Brown Owl", and after the Inspection
by Mrs. Dockerlll apd pinning on the
badges, the Brownie Fairies, Monella
Bcott, Barbara Bird, Oeorgene Hunt,
and Dorothy James, and the mven.
Laura Myers, Thelma Nymsn and
Oraoe McDonald, received their certificates with vary hearty worda of
welcome and encouragement.
Mlas Oansner expressed her thanks
to Mrs. Dockerlll and Mra. Newell.
Tha Olrl Ouldes met ln the evening for their enrolment. Miss Mary
Bradshaw, captain, who had been con*
nected jrlth the guides ln England,
was preaented wltb her oertlflcate by
Mrs. P. O. Bird, representing tbe
Women's Institute which hu baen
sponsoring the movement.
The inspection b, Mrs. Dockerlll
followed, with the presentation of
bsdgea and oertlflcataa and a hearty
welcome to each Oulde.
Ura. P. A. Newell on behalf of the
I.ODE. of Trail presented re colors, handing the flag to Mlas Thelma
Bird, leader of the color party, which
Included Meg Bradshaw and Wlnnlfred Ridge. The Daffodil patrol, lead
er Thelma Bird, Included Dorothy
Johnson, Uly Edwards and Betty Russel; the Poppy patrol, leader Meg
Bradshaw, Included Wlnnlfred Ridge.
Mabel Baker, May Tomklna and Helen
Samson.
The flag wu unrolled to the singing
of "Ood Save tbe King."
The boards were Judged, tbe poppy
display taking first place.
Many of tho parenta and frlenda
attended and hearty votes of thanks
were extended to Mrs. Dockerlll, and
to Mrs. Newell.
Ross Spgr Notes
ROSS SPUR. April 11—Tony Swan
aon went to Trail to take his daughters, lsses Louisa and Enda, back to
high achool.
Mr. and Mrs. T. Barkley ware vial
tors to Erie recently.
Mrs. Armand Vlau waa visiting ln
Fruitvale reoently.       i
Thomas Tremblsy waa a vlaltor
to Trail Monday.
Miss Helen Tramblay returned to
ber home here from Trail.
Abe Doerksen went to Parka Sld
Ing Tuesday.
Slocan City Notes
SLOCAN CITY. April 11—Mr. and
Mrs. Warwick were visitors to Nelson
Saturday.
Mr. and Mra. T. R. Mosher and
little son Alan were business visitors
to Nelson Saturday.
Mlsa N. Watson, Junior teacher,
spent the holldsys wltb relatives ln
Spoksne.
Principal R, Hanna apent the boll
daya ln  Nelson  snd   Spoksne.
ORANGE PEKOE BLEND
"SALADA
TEA     "
"Frttli from Ac Gardens*
CHAPTER XXVIII
She surrendered to clrcumstanoas
learned to Uke a long siesta afternoons, learned to ration her quinine and to go to bed promptly at
tba first onset of anything approaching fever; learned, too, tbat ona
could exercise ln such a climate,
lf ona did It properly and In proportion, and persuaded Hayes to
let her use one of the company
ponies and so sometimes rode out
to meet BUl. ln the comparative
cool of the evening or went out
wltb him early In tbe morning. She
made friends among the Spanish
families nearby and founds a charming simplicity of social intercourse In
their scattered, oool patloa and haciendas. She went occasionally to
the Sports Club, dragging Bill with
her. She organised swimming parties and picnics, now and tben, and
kept open house for the grateful
bachelors. And found herself gradually becoming attached to life
as sha was living lt.
"Tbe trouble with me Is," she told
Bill, "I get In ft rut and it's hard
to get me out of lt. It takes dynamite—like the charge that shot me
—us—out of Westlynne. But when
I got down here I Just wouldn't
tet uaed to things; I woldn't give
ln. I thought tbat giving ln would
maka me like a lot of the women
I had seen down here. So I fought.
I wouldn't accept any of the natural advantages of a place like this.
I compared everything, climate,
food, entertainment, clothes, waya of
living and general behavior wltb
tbe way things are at home. I waa
a fool. And I certainly defeated
myself because I waa beginning to
be a chronic Invalid, sloppy and faded
and enjoying poor health and not
making tb? lesst effort to find anything worth while tn our altuatlon.
Now", she said wistfully, "We're
having a pretty good time, aren't
We?"
'TU lay we sre!'*
He went over to ber and lifted her
out of her long wicker chair. She
waa wearing tba gay, thin, floppy
prismas which Delia bad aent out
to her. She looked oool and young
and her very ahort hair waa curled
aa tightly u a child's over her little
bead. She waa tanned; and because
by experimenting .she bad found the
lotions beat suited to hair akin, and
to the ravages of the climate, ber
skin was aa smooth and fraah aa a
child's. Bill said, sitting down wltb
ber ln his arma. "I don't aoe bow
you do It. You look marvelous and
you've so much energy."
"I bad it all along," aba told him.
"but I wouldnt put lt to work. I
waa to busy being sorry for myself.
I had lost Interest ln everything."
"In me——?"
"No. Never, ln you. But—BUI."
ahe said, turning In hla arms, and
closing ber eyes against the velvet
dsrkneas of the night, against the
biasing stars. "I waant aure of myself where you were concerned. Olive
Linda. Everything. And becauae I
wasn't aura—I Juat aort of crawled
Into a hole and pulled It tn after me."
"Sura now?"
She wu silent a moment.   Out on
FILL your prettiest cream pitcher with rich,
golden Carnation. Cream your steaming,
fragrant cup of coffee—and taste. The taste is a
bit different—as if your coffee had been made
some new, pleasing way. You'll be delighted with
its colour—its taste—and its consistency, too.
Carnation seems to blend better with coffee
than ordinary cream does. Thai's because it is
homogenized and sterilized. Try Carnation also
for fruit and cereals. We know the result will be
its regular use in your home, not only for cream*
ing, but for all recipes calling for milk. Write for
two valuable books—"100 Glorified Recipes"
and "Contented Babies". Address the Carnation
Co., Limited, 134 Abbott St., Vancouver.
A CANADIAN MQMICT-^FEOM CONTSNTED C.O.V
arnation Milk
OaiD'S LARgEST.SELLING BRAND OF EVAHMATElTMiLir
ths road beyond their screened ver*
anda someone went by on horseback.
The boots beat down upon the bard
white ground. Someone waa singing,
In tbe native quarter. An the palm
trees stirred ln their dreams to a
little wind blowing ln from tbe ses.
"Yes, I'm sure," she said. "Bill,
do you know, I love It here—wtth
you?"
He said, deeply moved:
"You—darned Uttle wonder! Come
on, I've got a new book on white
sugar m»klng. Borrowed it from
Hayes. I'll go ln and Uke a ahower
and put on pyjamaa—though not, I
regret, as giddy aa youra—and we'll
go ln and read.   Wbat aay?"
Summer came and went. A happy
summer, serene and atlll and terribly
hot. But Nevis lsughed at the best.
"Do your worst!" challenged Nevis.
armed with showers and the thinnest
of voile lingerie and great bottles of
eau-de-oologne and round, fat cans
of bath powder. She ordered rattan
curtains, she kept tbe shsdes down,
she had electric fana going, she was
spendthrift In the matter of Ice snd
there was alwaya coffee extract and
Ume Juice and rounds of freah pineapple for Bill when he came In, hot
and tired: alwaya clean linen laid
out and a couch made aoft with oool
pillows for him to rest on, while
Maria got supper.
Hayes said, coming often to dinner, while Linda waa away:
"You kids have certainly learned
a trick or two about being comfortable."
Nevla told him, laughing:
"Tbe sad part of tbat Is that I
might have lecrned lt before, but
didn't."
Bhe was looking weU, lf thtn. The
fever was letting go of her, discouraged perhsps by her constant vigilance or because she wu really becoming acclimated. She had found
out Just how much ahe could do
without overdoing and Just how far
her nerves would stretch without
snapping or frying. She discovered
an excellent Spanish doctor, In Ponce.
one of the handsomest men ahe had
ever seen and ona of tha best physicians. She went to him once a month,
and sent Bill to blm almost ss often
"An ounce of prevention," argued
Nevis gaily when BUl gloomed at her
her—"What, again? Do you think I'm
a hypochondriac?"—"la worth eight
weeks of malaria . . . hookworm or
what have you!"
In the autupvn Linda returned.
Hayes had gone up a few weeks previously to attend to soma business
and to bring her back and bad left
Bill In full charge, with a free band.
And on the boat, returning, were Walter Mseon and Margaret, who introduced themaelvea prompUy to tba
cordial Hayes.
"We havent tet tba kids know,"
Maaon aald, "wa wanted to surprise
them."
White Linda and Margaret talked
trivialities on tba deck. Maaon and
Hayes sst In the smoking room and
talked sugar Industry and Bill, mostly Bill.
"He's all right," Hayes said. "It
looks Is If I'll hava to apend six
months of the year ln New York. I'm
more than willing to recommend him
aa general manager, ln my absence.
And to carry on wltb lt, pn my return,
aa far aa that la oonoerned, aa my aa-
aifiunt. aae? He'a taken a real Interest, he's quick, nothing gets hy him.
He'a honest—a rare gift—and he's
popular. We can uaa blm bare. The
question is. will he want to stay? Of
course. Mr. Maaon, you understand
my outfit isn't aa larg* aa yours. Your
bunch down here haa ua all licked as
far ss slue Is concerned. We produce
only tha raw augar, we dont go Into
the refining end aa you do. There
was more opportunity for BUI In tbe
other company, only ba waant ex-
acUy happy there. I'll amend tbat.
I'U say there would bave baan mon
opportunity bad tha outfit been ao
organised that a newcomer could get
ahead. But It lent. You dont mind
my being comparatively frank at tbe
expense of a rival?"
"No." said Maaon, "I dont mind
You see. Nevis, when she was up, told
me aome things. BUl wrote othen. I
dldnt believe 'em. Slnoe then I've
seen a chemist who had been tired 1
Along about the time BUl came down.
He talked from tiw shoulder. I'm beginning to see things. Ot course. I
cant start In with the big stick.
Prsnkly, It's against my own Interest*
But I can use my Influence to get
Bill bark on the old Job with a freer
hsnd snd a different position. But
that would mean taking blm awaj
from you. And, moreover, I have another thing in mind for him"
"New York?" asked Hayes, shrewdly
"Yea. Not a lot of money to start,
but I'll give him some stock aa aort
of bonus, snd there's a lot of room
at tbe top. If he wanta lt."
Hayes said, tinkling tba Ice In his
glass:
"I hate Uke hell to loae him. But
I wouldn't siand In his way. Look
here, we'll put it up to him, shsll we
—and see what he aaya? And leave
' It to him?"
He sdded: "He'd be a fool not to go
>ack to New York. But I wont tell
Um tbat," Hayes concluded, grinning.
They wirelessed from the boat. Nevis
jvas st San Juan to meet them. Bill
wouldn't get off, abe said. "Grand-
..Und plsy," Hayes told her gaily, but
well pleased, nevertheless.
They motored back. "Lord, It's
grand to sea you," Nevis said, hold-
, Ing Msrgaret Mason's big competent
i hand ln both of her own.
"You look great," Msson told her.
"better than you did when you left
us. even. How come . . .?"
She said, smiling, quoting Hayes:
"I've lesrned a trick or two."
She was perfectly radiant. She
had learned more than a trtck or two
Bhe had learned aomething, on the
day the Mason's wireless had renchrd
her which would make all the difference ln her life and Bill's. But she
wouldn't tell him—not yet. Bhe wanted to watt, to poasees her secret solely
for a few days out of hslf fear, hslf
superstition. Besides she wasn't actually sure, waa she?
She ssked:
"Uncle Welter, whafa up your
sleeve?"
"A oouple of things.'1 he told her,
"but they're up to BUl. Por Instance.
Mr. Hayes wants htm to stick around
here: or I can give him a Job here
with his old outfit, or I can take him
back to New York. Which shall lt be?"
I Nsvls was pale under ber tan. Bhe
I said, after a pause:
"You'll have to aak BlU. As you
say, It's up to blm."
She had tbat to think about on the
trip home. And, arriving, Bill met
| tbem, very eplrk and span, waving a
I letter.    "Hey,   folks 1"   He   embraced
SUE OF METAL A FACTOR IN
IPROVHIGTHECO^IIDATED
POSITION DECLARES WARREN
The Company Also Disposed of Some of Its
Holdings of Amalgamated Metals
and of Ontario Refining
PROFIT ON YEAR'S OPERATIONS
NAMED AS THE THIRD FACTOR
spent on property account, and tW,-
6'\79 on plant account.
"The important itema in property
ace* un- were;
Buena Vista advanoe (operating Big Missouri mine)     W0.19fl.40
Aiken Lake property _,  10.235.77
Boulder creek placers  31,855.00
Slat   and Mansion creek
placers     84.328.37
Bridge River Conaolldated .. 23,638.70
■South Weat African concession     41.108.09
"In plant account, the main Item
was 144,444.63 spent on tha fertiliser
plant, tba remainder being made up
of comparatively amall Items.
STRONGER   POSITION
"Plnancea—The atatement ahows a
marked linprovemi t ln your financial condition, brought about partly
by tha proceeds of salea of metal
stocks on band at the beginning ot
the year,' partly by the sale of eome
nf your holdings In Amalgamated
Metal  corporation  and  Ontario Re-
, PAGE TlfREE
fining company, Ltd., and partly by
profits from the year's operations.
"Tha. policy of your board Is to
further strengthen your cash position
against poaalble eventualities.
"Employees and ataff—There was
the usual excellent performance, coupled wltb friendly relations and very
satisfactory cooperation.
"Foreign salea— Your representatives were successful In taking full
advantage of.using markets In disposing: of your stocks.
Your vice-president, W. L. Mstthews. passed away aoon after the
annual meeting. He waa much interested ln your operations. His loss
la much regretted by your board and
bla many friends. E. W, Bentty waa
elected vice-president In succession,
and R. S. McLaughlin was elected to
the board to fill the vacancy caused
by tbe death of Mr. Matthews."
More than a pound of pure vitamin
C ln the form of ascorbic acid has
been prepared trom paprika.
Policy of Board to further Strengthen Cash
Position;    Important   Capitol
Outlays on Mining Properties
NINE INCHES OFF HER WAIST
Eats What She Likes—Yet Reduces
Sates of accumulated metal stocks,
disposal of soms holdings In Amalgamated Metal corporation and Ontario
Refining, and profits from the year's
operations, which benefitted bj Improved metal prlcea. sll contributed
to the Improved financial position of
the Consolidsted Mining - Smelting
Company of Canada, President Jamea
J. Warren stated. In the annual report to ths shareholders, submitted
at Montreal Monday.
The general Improvement In oondltlon. and the maintenance of the
company's properties and operations,
were the features emphasised by Mr.
Warren.
His report set forth:
"After provldlni for current development, adding 117,731.71 to employees' pension fund {besides taking
core of the year's disbursements on
this account) and ptylng taxes (3176.-
17141), there was a surplus of 33.-
989.037 39.
"Deducting the write-offs for de-
pletlon  and depreciation. 9339.94087
various products Insures the market-.
fjg of your full share of tho world's
.leeds. .
"On account of low wheat prices
sales ln the prairie provinces did not
come up to expectations In 1933. This
year, however, there Is a much better
demand. Results from the use of fertiliser continue to be quite satisfactory. Any real Improvement ln wheat
prices would undoubtedly result ln
such a demand for your fertiliser
products as to tax your full capacity
to produce,
"Much useful missionary and demonstration work wss done by Dr.
Neldlg and his staff. Fanners are
showing Incressed Intereet, though
wheat prices continue discouraging.
"During the year the Installation
on Ooat river (described In Mr.
Campbell's report) was completed, It
supplies the electric needs of the
country of which Erlckaon and Creston are the important centers. As
usual It reflects credut on L. A. Camp-
and  83,393,822.97 respectively,  there  bell, vice-president and general msn
remained 31.058,273.32. compared with
a deficit of 33.903.10749 In 1933.
"No dividend on the common ahares
of the power company was declared
or paid ln 1933, while In 1932 9311,300
were received on that account.
"The firs lnsursncs reserve wsa not
Increased.   Losses   were   charged   to
operating account.
DIVIDENDS   KIM 'III'
"After providing for dividend No.
87, declared to shareholders of reoord
December 31. 1938, amounting to
9978,807. the remainder, 380,488 82,
was carried to profit and loea, which
stood at 91.498.233.18 at the year's
end.
"Ths year's results pepnltted tin I
payment of a dividend of 6 per cent, j
or 81 SO a ahare, without drawing on I
the profit and lou account.
"Stocks are carried at cost—whlcJV ]
Is somewhat bslow msrkst prloea at
the end of the year. They have been
reduced substantially, and are now of
comfortable proportions.
"increased earnings reeulted  from
better metal prices and appreciation
In sterling, ln addl.Ln to substantial
reductions In produouon -coats.
TRICE BETTERMENT
"Metal prices—During the year
there was a betterment but largely In
terma of dollars. This doss not bulk
so large It reduced to gold values.
The future Is uncertain because of ths
msny financial and other experiment*
being carried on by some nstlons.
notably the Dnlted SUtes. Perhaps
fortunately the Utter oountry—account itt tariff barriers—has not
been and Is not a market for your
mettle, so that srratle movements
there do not and will not affect your
company seriously. On the other hand,
the closer union of the mother country and the dominions following the
Ottawa conference has strenfthKHO
your marketing poaition greatly.
"With your low costs and largo or*
reserves, you should be able to supply your full sb»re of the worlds requirements,   and   at t   r*a*on*bl*
"Equipment, plsnt and buildings
have been kept up. Development of
the mines Is well shesd of Immediate
requirement*. A condition of preparedness prsvalls. In esse any audden or
extraordinary demand opens up for
Incressed production."    .__.__*■
After reporting tbe physical production ot mcttU for two years.
President Wsrren continued: ..    .
"The reports of ths vice-president
and general manager and the vice-
president ln chsrgs ol mines cover
the years operations. They Indicate
substantial progrsss ln many direc-
"""ukexpecttd physical ditflculUea
postponed the production stage of
your placer properties. Next season
should see considerable output there-
•Blg Missouri— further development of this property le under wsr
"Oreat Bear Uke-In the course of
development shipments of high grsde
ore were mads from your properties
and gave satlafactory returns Indications are so fsvorsble thst plans are
for  the  Installation   -
ager of the West Kootenay Power A
Light oompany, under whose efflc'snt
control the other plant* were operated successfully,
CAPITAL OUTLAYS
"Capital expenditures amountel to
9313.794.37, ot which 9248.204 48 was
IMPROVEMENT DUE TO
KRUSCHEN
Whet excess fat starts to overtake t
woman, her dressmaker, with the telltale tope measure wilt soon detect it.
If you are beset with the fear of losinj--
your girlish proportions—of flndins
yourself catalogued " Out-site "—read
the letter printed below. The writer
says " I waa astounded," and she tells
you Uie reason why :—
* I started taking Kruschen Salt* for
general acidity. In less than three
months t was astounded at my general
appearance; all excess of fat had
disappeared. In less than three month*
I ara* eight or nine inches leas round
my waist and stomach. As I waa
oot taking tha Salts for reducing
weight, I did not at lint realise it
was due to Kruschen Salts.
"I am now the admiration of aU my
friends arith my figure. It is marvellous
the difference. Also the dreadful
painful itching and sickneas have
stopped, as well a* the miserable
fullness and flatulency. I did no
dieting In anv way. I eat what, wben
and where I Uke. It wu aimply
wonderfully easy, no unpleasantness
la any way."—(Un.) A. U.
Kruschen doea not aim to reduce by
rushing food through the body; it*
tmnm is not confined to a single part '
of the system. Gently, but surelv, it
rids the system of aU fat-forming food
refuse, of all poisons and harmful
acids, which often give rise to rhet*.
matism. digestive disorders and many
other ills.
Kruarhru Salt* I* obtainable at all
Drug Stores at 49c. and 75c per bottle.
under   wsy
De-
lurther equipment this summer
velopment Is being continued.
"Sullivan mine—The vice-president
ln charge of mines report* very fsvor-
able developments In a lower level of
this property. Many.years of profitable
mining are assured.
BETTER FERTILIZER DEMAND
"Pertltlser operations— The whole
plant may now be said to be In completely successful oper .In] condition,
Eetlmsted costt hsve been reached In
practically all departmentt-as In the
cut ot metals snd high grade nf the
everyone, regardless of relationship
or *ex—"Oolty. It'* good to have you
hack . .!'• this was to Hsyes snd
Llnds .    . "Lord. HI swell *eelng you
1" this wss for the Maoons . .
"snd I've got s bsrrelful of news."
Nevis asked, her hand on his srm:
"Who's th* letter from''-'
"8sm Burton," Bill snswered snd
grinned st her.
Shs ssld quickly:
"Sam? We hsven't heard from htm
for ages. Are he snd Daisy engaged
. . .? setuBllj**"
"They sure are! But that Isn't ths
half of ttl Lord, what a Bost I
turned out to bst Lets go Into the
shack svaryone . . ." He turned to
the Hsyss . . . "Toull wsnt to gst
slong home. But I took the liberty
of hsvlng Marls and your Conchlta
fix tu tip s meal of sorts, here at ths
house. Why not oome ln snd wssh
up here snd est with us? Tou must
be dog tired."
"Suits me." sold Hayes, looking at
Unda.
Nsvls took the Masons to their room
and took Linda Into hers. Unda wss
full of exclamatory comments on a
summer In Southsmpton. "My dear, 11
you knew how I hsted getting back
here! But Tlm Is arranging to spend
six months of ths yesr North. Thst
won't be so bsd, wlll It?"
(To Bs Continued) *
Hf ^itfrtfnv'_ft*Q (Edmpan|.^
INOOMPORATgO   Itt MAY It Id.
FRIDAY BAY NEWS
The New
COUNTRY GENTLEMAN
A Man's Shirt by FORSYTH
the shirts ....
A triumph ln fm* shirt making by
F-orayth! Full-cut to give lot* of freedom! Collar-ituched style* or negli-
gee with two matching collars t A wonderful rsngs of brsnd-new shade* ln sll
size*!    Each	
*2
Sale of Inlaid
Linoleum
Ona day only at thata apaclal
prlcea. 2 yarda wide ln a good
range of patterna. Rag. $1.50 yd.
™,"n": $1.19
Wear Gingham Dresses to the
Gyro Hoe Down Friday Night
The Bay Features a (iood Asportment
at $1.95 to $2.95
CASH
GROCERY
SPECIALS
*
No Phone Orders
Free  Delivery
No Charge Accounts
Old Colony Maple Syrup
Qt. bottle; JQtf
Each      40
Libby's Happy Vale
Pickles—Sweet or *)\t*
Mitir; 31-oz. bottle
Kraft  Old   Fashioned
Salad Dressing-
12-oz. jar for .
Libby's Ketchup— 1 /V
12-oz. bottle ....   10
Tea-bisc  Makes  Perfect
Biscuits and One Measuring Spoon—      O0*f
The two for   LO
Grand Forks Potatoes
—Netted gems;tfl or
100 lbs.  ~*l.d\~
New Cabbage—        £0
Per lb       0
Service
Grocery
193—PHONE&-194
31
hione
IV
I I \l antra COFFER— Attmt
Freshly ground; per lb. *■#**>-•
in rtniM I    II \M i
HITTER—No.  I  Un	
COX'S   GELATINE--
Per  pkg,
NEW AWNING STRIPES
New California stripes in standard quality awnings. Colorful and sunproof,
inches wide.
Special, yard   ,...
55
ENGLISH JASPE BEDSPREADS
Printed summer spreads with embroidered outline in shades of rose, tango,
and blue. Size 70 to 90.
Special 	
t*\»
CHILDREN'S WASH SUITS
Made of broadcloth or chambray in two-
tone combinations, some with matching
hats. Sizes 2 to 6 years
Suit   	
95
CEDAR-FUMED WARDROBES
Now  that  spring  is  here   safeguard
your winter garments by procuring a.
cedar-fumed wardrobe. Strongly made,
Iron bar to hold 4 to 6 garments. Each
;•!•»
31*
19*
SWIFT'S sn 11 li  LE.tr  mm*
LARD—1-lb. cart.; t for *******
I Ml*HI *.*. MALT     .
viMi.iH   ot   bottle..
RED  RIVER  I1HHK-    \\Ot\_
m
f AST t EREtl—l-er pkg/1
MEN'S DRESS SHOES
In black or white or tan and smoked elk combination.
Also black or brown oxfords or boots built over combination fitting last with  medium,
round, or square toe styles. Suitable . __
for dress or business wear. All sized * ^L*95
in lot, 6 to 11. Pair      mkW
	
—
 PAGE POVK
Ists Wished   AprU   3*1,   1903
"interior of British Columbia's Family Newspaper"
ALL   TBI   NEWS   WHIU   IT   IS   NSWS
Published .very morning *xo*pt Sunday by
the NSWS PUBLISHING OOMPANY, LIMITED,
lit    Baker   Stmt,    Nalaon,    BrltUh    Columbia.
Msmbsr of Tb* Canadian Press Leased win News Bsrvics
Msmtur   of    th*   AUDIT   BUREAU    OP   CIRCULATIONS
THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1934.
LARRY PIPER!
This good old baseball' name has a reminiscent
sound, as it crops up in tbe notes from the Dominion
camps on the Longbeach road project. Larry, like
many another good man, is putting in time usefully
between better-paying jobs, and here's wishing him
good luck.
If memory serves aright, he used to ornament the
right side of the diamond, as he played for Winnipeg,
somewhere around the second sack, or perhaps further
afield. Winnipeg was usually in the Northern league,
though once or twice it was the Northern-Copper Country league, and once it was the Western Canada league.
At all events, when Mrs. Piper named her boy
Larry, she made it inevitable that some day, if he
became a swatter, he would be known as "Larruping
Larry," and that is just what he became.
He used to scoop up the grounders, pull down the
flies, spear the liners, but best of all, he was a good
man on the handle end of a bat. He used to swing
on 'em, and then light out on the paths for as many
bases as he could get.
Of course Larry is giving the boys a* little useful coaching.
Youth is always self-confident, but the wise lad
will pay earnest attention to any tips Larry lets fall.
They will be the real goods.
POLITICAL STUDY CLUBS
American political correspondents are reporting
that in the western agricultural states that may suffer
by the power that President Roosevelt is taking to
vary the tariff in bargaining with foreign countries,
farmers are forming evening study clubs for systematic reading of the Congressional Record.
The Congressional Reford is the Hansard of the
United States congress, and is the official record
of the debates.
Presumably the study movement has been evoked
by the latest extraordinary move of the Roosevelt administration, framing of the tariff having in the past
been done by the houses of congress, the president's
part in the enacting being confined to accepting or
rejecting the measure when passed. The farmers
want to inform themselves of the points brought out
in the debates, and of how their representatives—who
will be up this year for reelection—have voted.
Formation of political study clubs is always commendable, and a particularly good idea is that of
systematically reading the debates of the law-makers.
Then one wilf be informed on the chief points advanced
for and against any proposal before the law-making
body.
In the case of Canada, much profit, as well as
incidental entertainment, would accrue to any club
that systematically read the parliamentary speeches
of the political leaders, say, Premier Bennett, Hon.
R. J. Manion, Hon. H. H. Stevens, and Hon. Hugh
Guthrie, on the government side; Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, Hon. Ernest Lapointe, Hon. J. L. Ralston
on the Liberal side; and E. L. Gardiner for the Progressives and J. S. Woodsworth for labor.
Between
You and
eMe
by j. b. c
Csn you twirl a lariat? If not I refer you to pr. C. E. Bradshaw who
wu caught demonstrating befon soms
young fellows down the street the
other day. The Doo aeemed to know
his ropes, but he wu not so good on
the noose. Pred NlchoUs, who used to
be s sailor, had to Ua the right typ*
of knot.
a    •    *
I missed the cat fight on Ward
street the other night. But It seems
ths Hume cat objected to another
crossing the street and there wu considerable spitting and meaowlng before a crowd that bad congregated,
steered the kittens away. Guess '*••
crowd did not wish to see a catastro-
phe.
• •   •
Here and there—Spurgeon Langill
slopping to ask Pred Carmlchael how
his bolls wero progressing—Pred Deacon doing some heavy, landscaping—
Alex' Campbell having a smoke on
the corner—Oeorge Twist hiking home
from work ln company with other
C.P.R. men—Doc Ray Shaw and Elmer
Kline talking In an alley—and I'll
wager they were discussing speed
boats—Louis Moser waving a greeting
from his auto—And I heard thst
John A. and Harry Perguson have
soms Swede ln them— They were
csught eating Swede turnips yesterday—Die Barnes, they ssy. Is scratching his head the*, day*—Notice, I
ssld head—Por Dick hu little hair
left—He la wondering Just whst to
wesr whsn the lada and lassies start
those barn dances and quadrilles—
Dr. John Oananer hiking somewhere
In a hurry after 6 pjn.—Dr. R. J.
Bourque Is complelnlug of a stiff left
arm—But hell get over that eventually—The first born always brlnga
the moat congratulations—Nick Cai-
alos entrueUng one ol the Dally News
staff—with a check ot almost I100O—
And whst true Nick must hsve In
soms of our boya—And O. 8. Mcintosh, the CP.R. trainman, was putting ln his off-Ume wuhlng windows
for hie wife—He dldnt mind standing
on a high verandah roof u he applied
the window wuhlng substance—and
then applied the elbow grease—J. W.
Meegher wu out for his Wednesdsy
sfternoon In hi* golf toga—and he
wu playfully toying with eome golf
bells—And there wu Joe Hollsnd, ln
resl sergeant-major stylel putting the
Canadian Legion Bugle band boye
through their pacee-Jack Annable
wu csught hanging out a window In
the Annsble block—No—He wu only
painting—And thafe good enough—
aa I remarked to one of my undercover men u he departed for dinner—
You aee he did a lot of detective
work for me—and It help* so much.
A week or ao ago I ran a problem
given me by a local "millionaire" who
offered prlaee of »3, tl.80. II and 60
cenU lor th* flra. four comet an-
awers turned In by local garage m»n.
The quuUon wu:
Eight garagee decided on the Joint
purchase on equal shares of sn emery
wheel snd agreed that u when It got
worn down untu lt wu only eix
Inches ln dlsmeter It wu ot no more
uae each shop would relinquish one
qusrter of IU interest to covy this
loss. What would be ths dlametw ot
the original wheel?
• •   •
With so many gangs mechanics In
Nelson It Is an odd thing that only
one took up the offer. HU answer
being correct, and he being the only
entrant, my mend hu awarded Fred
Burnett of High strset tht »3 prlw.
I havs the cash. Pnd, If you'll come
up and aw me sometime.
Hen U th* winning answer:
Dear Sir—Hert U my *olutlon ot
vour grlndston* problsm which sn-
awer wu found by myaelf, unaided
by others.
Since tha wheel wu divided equally
when new? snd u eech garage relinquished one quert«r of their totsl
ahsras. therefore remainder of wheel,
alx Inchee. equals one-qusrter of origins! wheel Ana of remaining wheel
equaU slk-hslvu multiplied by six-
lialrss multiplied by twenty-two-ssv-
enths, equals 3I3SS714 square Inches.
Therefore sres of origins! wheel equsls
•HI2H51H multiplied by four. equsU
113.143850 squan Inches. Therefore
radius of origins! wheel equsls squsn
root of 113.U38M over twenty-two
sevenths. equaU six lnehw. Therefore
the dUmeter of th* origins! wheel
equsls six multiplied by two. equsla
-THS NELSON DAILT NEWS, NELSON, B.C.—THCRSDAT MOBNINO, APBIL 11, 19M-
Good	
Housekeeping,
By  Circle  No. 4 of
Su Paul's Ladies' Aid
None but tc«ted recipes
wtll be lnwrted.     .*   .
SALMON MOIXD
Mix 1 can aalmon with IVi tablespoons sugar, \% tablespoon flour, Vi
teupoon salt. Add yolks of two eggs,
\y, tableapooni melted butter. %
cup milk. V4 eup vinegar.
Cook over boiling water until thick
adding ** tablespoon gelatine soaked
ln a Uttle cold water, mould and
chill.
HI< I   AND  TOMATOF.8
l cup rice
1  nn  tomatoes
Boll in double boiler for one hour
or longer, then add 1 cup shredded
cabbage and a little onion if desired.
Cooked leftover meat or bacon may
alao be added,
BEAN I.OAF
3 tablespoons butler
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup milk
4 eggs
2 cups green cut beans (canned)
or any vegetable can be used auch ae
asparagus.
Heat butter and add flour then
milk. Boll 5 minutes and add cooked
vegetables drained. Add beaten eggs
and cook till thick about 30 minutes.
CHKEBB   MH i s
Put o large tablespoon of butter
Into a aaucepan with 2 tablespoons
of flour. When mlied stir in 1 cup
milk. Ut lt cook, then aet aside
to cool.
Beat 8 efgs snd stir into first mixture with aalt, pepper and Vt oup
grated cheeee mixing well.
Una tart shells with pastry. Fin
with mixture and bake. Serve hot.
ON THE AIR TONIGHT
CANADIAN RADIO
*OMMl*HI<)N   NETWORK
6:00 Radio Theater Guild
0:30 Under Bridges of Paris
7:00 Pared* of Provinces,
1:30 News and Weather forecast
7T38 Charlie   Dornbergers   orch.
7:46 Prof. J. Fisher, on J. B. Priestley
8:00-6:30 Foothills Revue
0:00-9:80 Under the Stars
N R.C.-K(10 NETWORK
Kliq     KOW     KOO     HOMO     KJR
AM) tttO .ftO Mtl 870
6:00 Captain Henry's Show Boat
7:00 Paul Whlteman'a orch.
8:00 Amoa  __" Andy
8:15 Symphony Hour
8:16 Winning the West
8:46 WUUam  Scot Us  orch.
10:00 News flaahes
10:16 Mark Hopkins' orch.
10:66 Preaa-Radlo  Bureau
11:00 Tom Coakley's orch. , KOO
11:00 Ted Florlto't orch.
C.B.B.-DON  LEE  NETWORK
KVI .. KFRC      KOIN      KSL      KOL
tit        616        840        1110 1276
6:00 Presenting Mark Wamow
6;30 PennsyIranians  and   Lane  sisters
7:00 Connie Boswell. Col. Btoopnagle
and Budd. Orch.
7:30 "Conflict," by T. 8. Strlbllng
7:46 Myrt and Marge, fr. Chicago
8:00 Vera Van, contralto
8:16 Minute Melodies (Don Lee)
8:20 Isham Jones' orch.
'AS Harry Soanlck'e orch.
9:00 Charlee Barnett's orch.
8:00 Jamboree (Don Let)
10:30 Oua Arnhelm's orch.  (D.L.)
10:00 The Bowery orch.  (D.L.  )
11:00 BUI Pleck's Bowery orch. (D.L.)
11:30 Midnight Moods (Don Ue}
600 k — CJOR — 600 m
VANCOUVER — 600 w
6:00 Musical program
6:15 Ski program
6 45 News Varieties
7:00 Youth Federation pgr.
7:16 Voice of. progress
7:30 Insurance program
7:45 Blind Institute pgr.
8:00 Kluilano Boys' band
8:00 Bud  Reilly's Hawallana
B :30 Cariboo Cowboys
10:30 AU-Requeet dance pgr.
11:00 Dance orch.
12 Inches. PRED BURN-TIT.
1008 High street, Nelson. B.C.
I also received a correct answer
from my friend H. Perkins, principal
of Balmo achool, who wu not competing. Although taking a much longer
route his solution was the aame.
And to show both these ehapa that
they did a lot of unnecessary work,
the donor of the prlae works the
question like this:
As each shop relinquished W of Its
ahare all of them relinquished ■« ot
the original stone. As the area of
circles is In direct ratio to the square
of their diameters It will follow that
the square of the diameter of the
original stone Is four times the square
of 6 or 144, the square root of which
le 11, the diameter of the original
stone.
20 YEARS AGO
(From  The  Dallv  News ot  April  U,
1M4)
Walter Moberly. one of the oldeet
of Kootenay and Boundary old-timers,
la coming to attend the Chaliko Mlks.
Hs Is over 80.
ewt
Nelson's new auto fire truck la on
IU way to the city-
•   •   •
Mrs. B. E, Roberta has returned to
her ranch at Willow Point from the
old country.
Tou may use olive oil, lanolin, oold
cream or a hand lotion of one part
glycerine, three parts rowwattr, on
your hands before retiring at night,
to kert> them soft and smooth.
Auction and
Contract Bridge
By the Worlds  Leading  Authority,
HILTON C.  WORK
A   PROFITABLE   SACRIFICE
There has been considerable discussion concerning the value of a
partial score ln rubber Bridge. When
one side has a part score of 40 or more,
lt takes a great deal of self control
on tbe part of the opponents to pass
a major contract ol two, which WUI
net game. Consequently, a part aoore
la apt to result ln a large set for an
opposing side who try to overcall a
contract which will Just put the side
with a score over the goal line. The
reverse of this situation, however,
occurred recently with North and
South vulnerable. East and Weat not
vulnerable. North and Soutb had the
advantage ot having a aoore of 60 to
their credit. The hand follows:
eu-s-i
• Ml
♦Ml
♦IH-5
4)
VT-W-7
♦ •MH-4
♦W-J-2
0#w
♦ I
♦l-l
fl-H
♦Mil
♦ 147
♦H-WI-I
M
414-1
South was an optimist who with a
count of 18, trusted that he> had the
four suits stopped, sb he bid, two No
Trumps. Wast and North paaeed, but
East, Imagining that Souths bid wu
baaed on a long solid Diamond ault
and realizing that hla partner with
no guide far an original lead might
make one which would benefit the
Declarer, decided to venture a call ol
three Spadea, which wu not apt to
be severely penalized, u be held 100
honors. South doubled, feeling reasonably sure that East's bid of three
Spades wu Intended as a sacrifice or
a lead director,
Bouth led three rounds of .Diamonds
Eut ruffing the third. East then decided that .South, in view of his bid
of two No Trumps, and hla weak
holding ln Spades and HearU, muat
hold all the remaining high cards.
Consequently, he considered the Aoe
and Jack of Cluba and the Queen of
Spadea definitely located. East cubed
tbjt Ace and King of Spades and then
led the Queen of Hearu which South
covered. West won with the Aoe and
Eut took home his two remaining
Hearts. TO trick 0 Eut led the King
of Cluba which South refused to win
Declarer then led a small Spade which
put bouth ln with the Queen and
placed him In a hopeless position
Therefore Eut made hU contract of
three Spadea, doubled.
TOMORROW'S   HAND
*i*i*i
♦w
♦ Q-.HI
♦Q-M-W
•h-w rwiti-i-i
«l         L      d'H-HI-M-
♦ M-M-Ml — *\**U    (4
♦?.}       L_____H5
SUM
Z"
♦W#?
With South playlnt a contract ot
three No Trump*, wh*t la ths festurs
Dlsy»
AUNT HET
"llsrtw I'm old-tsshlooed, but
I csn hsr* a rossl on th* tabl*
whll* "Amy Is hookln* up hsr
lstjr.as-Hn' gadget* to gst
stsrted.*'
THE GUMPS:
DO YOUR DUTY
THATS  VJHACT I «AX-
ITS    ROaBEKY-
!*« MRS. De STROM AND HER
BLOND    DAUGHTER MILUft WIN
THAT LAWSUIT AND d ET
$10,000,000'* PROM UNCLE BIM
THE-fRE TAKWCr
,IT RKrHT ogf
OF* OUR
,ROCK«T-
•*■-■»
/Ht'S OUR UNO* ISN'T HE?
ANO rfS  UR TO TOU TO PROTECT
OUR RlfrHTS- AND AS TOUR
WIPE-ITS UP TO ME TO
SU "TWACT TOO DO IT-
TIL1.IE THE TOILER:
By Westover
WCtc*. <30lM6 tO
ffm-L TWI6 \
hat rv-r ao*r to be seen   I
•w«Aai3o rt; Don't It \-—y
.mmfmm.mKtmm
THAT BODY OF YOURS
By JAMES W. BARTON, MD.
EATING HABITS AND MENTAL
HEALTH
When tou visit a home and see
all the "fuat" that occurs at meal
time because of the "actions" of
the small child, you may wonder
which la to blame—the younfsUr
or  tht  pkrsnU.'
If the child Is sick, then apeclal
fooda and treatment are required,
but lf the child It weU, certain
rules or hablU must be mslnuined
lf the youngster is to grow atrong
physically, and "socially".
The Ontario Department of Health
In IU Mental Health Clinics makes
aome valuable suggestions under
the   beading   Eating   HablU.
They SUte that plain wholesome
foods are best and recommend porridge, eggs, plain custards, vegetables, meat Juices, fresh fruits,
bread and butter, and milk. Give
no putrles and very few aweeU.
Give plenty of milk and water to
drink. Give no liquids after supper.
Tea and coffee should not be given
at all. When the child's appetite
is not good, liquids should be given
after rather than before solids.
The foundation of good eating
hablU Is regularity. Serve meals at
regular hours. Milk and bread and
butur may be given when the
child  returns  from  school.
Give only 'email helpings of food.
Allow more when the first helping
la finished. Never serve another
course (such u dessert) until Jho
flrat hw been eaten.
If the child cries, becomes stubborn and refusea to eat, pay no
atUntlon. If the refusal persists
take the child away trom the
table. It wlll do him no harm to
mlu a meal, and lt la Important
that he learn to eat what la put
before blm without a fuse,
Any strong emotion prevenU the
proper digestion of food. A cljlld
•hould never be given food when
emotionally upset. This means that
the parenu should try to have
the meal u free as possible from
emotional atraln, violent argument,,
• trong excitements, punishments
and threaU of punishment. The
young child ahould learn that a
meal Is a quiet bualneat-Uke affair.
It la not tbe place to get exclUd
or angry, to cry or argue, or aulk
or  even  play.
X believe tht above sensible suggestions wltl appeal to every parent
and their uae ahould mean tht development of a healthy mittd in
a  parent  body.
Remember, lf the child Is tick,
he may need special fooda and special atUntlon. The above suggestions are for a normal, healthy
child.
30 YEARS AGO
(From The Dally News of April  12
fM4)
Several   large   gold   nuggeU   were
Uken from the Lucky Jack property
at Poplar cruk lut week,
•   •   •
The plans for the new offloe building of the C.N.P. Coal oompany have
arrived at Pernle. The building wlll
be of stone structure.
t   t -1
Lady patronesses for the Succew
club's dance this week are Mesdames
Form, Wright, Arthur. Sharpe, Hall,
Dawson, Praser, Black, McLaughlan,
Ollker, Kerr, Cummlna, Oore, Goepel,
Heathcou. ClemenU and Walker.
TEN YEARS AGO
(From Tho Dally News of April It,
A party conalatlng of A, T. Walley,
Hugh W. Robertaon. George Horstead.
and A. Hlgglnbotham lwve this
morning for Spokane to attend the
Rotary convention.
•   •   •
Home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Harmon burned to the ground at
Alnsworth early In the wwk.
SPENDS MONEY
ON STERILIZATION
CALOART, (CP).—Plrst Canadian
provinoe to institute legislation permitting -sterilization, Alberta hat
apent more than 125,000 ln three yeara
administration of the act. Operations
have bet* performed on 310 patlenu.
It la estimated that not more
than 2000 cities and towns have tht
helpful roof markings which enable
aviators to Identify tbe place* they
fly  over.
Alafestinc
21 Beautiful Tints
SNAP POWDER
CLEANS AND POLISHES
Bathtubs,
Waahbajini,
Windows, and
Mirrors.
Cannot unklL
FOR DOORS
B.C. Larch Panels art
of bwutlful grain.
They art hard and of
smooth flnlah.
Wood, Vallance
Hardware Cp.,  Lid.
District Distributors
wmmttm m m mmm
BRING  or  SHIP   Vour
RAW FURS
to J. H.M. GREENWOOD
Hlfhsst trices-Honest (nailing
420 Baktr Bt. Nslson. B.C.
-BUILD B.C. r.tYROLLS-
Because
It Is
Better
Milk
m
Thla »nnouncrment I* written
with th* oonrlctlon of tb* writer
thst Psciric 1* bettor milk and tor
thst resaon urging you to use It.
Vacuum packlnt mad* it so. though
w* thought It perfect belore. Tou
wlU notice *n Improved flavor snd,
mty -ara add, taste th* only mUk
vacuum sacked ln Canada.
Pacific Milk
"100*****, B.C. Owned and controlled1*
rLANT   IT  ABBOTSFORD.
j| The Coeur d'Alene
Hotel
In the Heart
of
SPOKANR
INVITES TOU
Canadian Headquarters
in Spokane
Situated at Trent and Howard Streets
Convenient to All Canadian Highways
Coffee Shop in Connection
Spokone, Wash
!
SPRINGTIME
SPRAY TIME
We have a fall line ot
Spray Pumps, Repair
Parts, Hose, Pruning
Shears and Implements
for the farm and garden.
.• See our line of New
Seeds and Onion Sets.
Nelson Hardware Co.
Wholnal* and Retail quality Hudasrs
Has   INS Nelson,   B.C.
 **************
*******
Ill
-THI NELSON DAILY NEWI. NSLSON, B.C.-THtIRSDAT MOBNINO, APRIL It, 1IS4-
II EFFICIENCIES ENABLE THE
JMED TO MAKE LEAD
.INC COSTS AN ALL-TIME LOW
llaylock's Operating Report Shows Costs
Lower All Along Line, With the
Efficiency Bonus Restored
FERTILIZER PLANT MAKES AN
OPERATING PROFIT FOR YEAR
Jvlickel Plating Plant Installed for Making
Own Hydrogen Cells; Plant Being
Built to Recover Sulphur
All-tlm* low reoords Ior ltad and
Moo reduction oott* at th* Tadanac
plant* of th* Consolidated Mining tt
Smelting Company of Canada were
Ht In IMS. 8. O. Blaylock. Tlce-presl-
dent and general mensger, dlsclosu In
hi* opentlng report to President J.
3. Warren, msds public in Uontresl
Monday to ths shareholders.
A* ususl. new efficiencies contributed heavily toward the coet reductions, at mlns, concentrator, smelter.
•THR MILK THAT RVIRVONR LIKIf
you know our
milk is safe
I
From dairy hard to oon-
•umtr lt lt protected ttep
by tttp. Vlalt our plant
and obeerre tta perfect
cleanliness and tht
equipment w» hart 'In-
■tailed for mUk bottling
In tht modern war.
For Row or   '
Pasteurized Milk
PHONE 116
Kootenay  Valley
Cooperative Milk  Assn.
and rtflntrltt, and tht beat ahowlni
waa made at the end of the year when
the wage low waa put. It waa disclosed
that for moat of tht year the alne
plant operated at only 45 per oent
capacity.
YEAR'S  DEVELOPMENTS
Among the year's developments
wert:
Building of t nlokel pitting plant.
which wlll enable the company to
make Hi own hydogen cells, for the
fertlllier plant, ln the future;
Putting up of a plant to recover
metallic sulphur and sulphur d|-
oxlit from gaaea of low sulphur
dioxide content;
Necessity ended for mtnnfacture
of ferttllaer drill attachments, the
Implement manufacturers having
now teen the light and begun the
prodnrtton of attachments for their
makes of teed drills In the farmers'
hands.
In tht staff rotter, O I Murray,
formerly aaslstant smelter superintendent, tt now listed aa metallurgist.
In reporting on operations, Mr.
Blavhtck ttld:
Tht latt quarter of 1032 yielded a
alight profit; thlt waa continued
through January and February. 1033;
March and April showed furthtr lm-
provement, which prevailed during
the remainder of tht yttr.
"Tht policy of not attempting to
reduce coata by mining higher grade
ort, by letting tht plants run down,
or tn aay way discounting the future,
has been strictly adhered to.
"All ot tht planta have bttn maintained In excellent oondltlon.
"All of tbt employees havt bttn
Ftr Yttr Bird't Heoltfc —PJumage — Song
!____
u
■aj
*-e_g^g_gg__^        ' '■' — — I gi*—*m*mmw*.   _ I ■ m
BIRD SEED&£$2*$£&
retained. Tht men are now getting a
minimum of five daya a week. Wages
had betn out S ptr cent ln 1032 tnd
tht Efficiency bonus had bttn cancelled.-Both of thttt wtrt restored
during tht year.
COST RECORDS
"The oott ot producing lead and
rlnc ln 1033 lh each cast madt an alt-
time low record.,Coeta for each metal
during tbe lut quarter of tbe year
averaged lower than any previous
month, and Dtotmbtr't costs ln each
metal wen the loweet ever obtained,
In spite of tht taot that tht tfflcltncy
bonuses were reestablished In the lut
half of November. Several factors have
contributed to make these low oottt.
Largt reductions In the oott of mining, concentration, smelting and refining over tht lut four ot flvt yttn
have all pltytd thtlr part. Increased
recoverlee In concentration and smelting havt contributed; while perhaps
tht greatest single fattor during tht
yetr undtr review hu been a alight
lncreau In the allver content of the
ort and the appreciation of the metal
Itself.
"Tbt prlot received for the illver
recovered from tbe Sullivan ort It
credited on tht cost of producing ltad
and alnc. Aa illver Is ttlll much below
tht average prlte. It ll not unreason-*
able to expect further reductions from
thlt aourct ln future. Cadmium and
bismuth ulu art not credited to the
ooat of lead and tine.
NI M.IVAN DERF ORE
"The Sullivan mine—Mining costs
ln 1833 have ut a new low record,
beating the previous reoord which
wu made tn 1033 by about 7 p«r cent
"SltlBfactory progress hu bun
madt In sinking a wlnu to develop
tbt ort below tht 8000 tunnel level
It la unlikely that then wlll bt any
need to mine ore from below the 3000
tunnel for a good many yun. It wu
however, oonaldered advluble te
spresd tht expense of the development of thlt t ptrt of the on body
over a considerable period of time,
and to Insure having the work completed befon lt It necttttry to uu lt.
"At mentioned ln the report ot the
vice-preeldent ln charge of mlnu, the
diamond drill holes from thla wlnee
through the on body have proved tht
continuance of rich on In large quantities.
"Kimbtrlty conotntrator—With tht
moderate Increase ln tht prlot of
metala. recoveries agtln became ttie
important Item In the oontrol of the
concentration. The low ooata reached
when costs wtn tbe predominating
factor have not only been maintained.
but lowered, making a new low record
of 16 ptr oent below the former record
which wu made In 1030. The 1033
recoverlee alao establish a new record.
The grade of the lead concentrates remained substantially the ume. while
tht grade of tht alnc concentrated
wu Increased.
"The lead smelting plant —Ntw
low records wen again established
both ptr ton of on smelted tnd per
ton.of letd produced. Tht letd recoveries wtn down by thnt-quarttn ut
1 ptr otnt, due mainly to smelting
Rouland on In tht lead furnaces, u
insufficient Roaaland on wu produotd to run t oopper furnact.
"Slag fuming plant— Cotte of the
slag fuming plant were higher at the
flrtt of the year, but much lower ln
tht latter part, making a alight nductlon for tht whole year. Tht laat thru
months wen ovtr 10 ptr cent lower
thtn 1032.
HIGHER GRAPE LEAD
"Ltad, allver and gold refineries—
Record ooste wtn madt ln thlt plant
ln 1033. Towards tht tnd of tht year
a change In the system wu madt.
which will result in making tht Tad-'
anac pig lead even higher gnde than
formerly. There an Indications thtt
thtrt wlll alto bt t furthtr reduction
In cotte whtn the full effect of theu
ehangee la obtained.
"Tbt ttnc plant—Ia tbt tarly part
of tbt yttr tbe production ln thla
plant was out to 45 par Otnt capacity,
and cotte wen advaruly afftcted,
During the lut quarter production
wu allghtly Increased and cpttt wtrt
reduced, making the year's average
ooat tht aame u tor 1032,
"Tbe cadmium plant—Thlt plant
wu run intermittently to tult the
market.
OPERATING PROFIT
AT  WARFIELD
"Fertiliser .group — These planta
operated at a profit during 1033 Including all ulu expenses, allowance
for bad debts, eto., but exclusive of
find charges. Tbt account shows a
lou on tht booki dut to tht writing
otf of all development chargu ln connection with tht fertlllMr attachments, and all costs for servicing theM
machlnu and rebuilding all tht flnt
models told.
"It would tppear that we would not
have to make any more drill attachments. Our demonstrating tht poul-
bllttles In tbU connection bu oon*
clnced all the Implement makers of
the advisability of making equipment
for tbtlr own machlnu.
"Sulphuric acid planta — Theae
planta havt worked very satisfactorily
throughout tht yttr both u to eott
of operation and capacity.
"Hydrogen plant—The troublu tx-
perlehced wltb tht electrical equipment havt been overcome. Theae rectifiers tM now giving satisfactory
urvloe. ^
"Continued urvloe indicates a vtry
heavy upkeep coat on hydrogen cell*;
consequently a reaerve Is being created
by charging a fixed amount per montb
for futun repairs.
NICKEL PLATING PLANT
"Tht nlcktl plating on tht tlto-
trodea of the cells made ln England,
and alao some made ln Canada, wu
not satisfactory ThU nickel plating
la one of the mott Important steps in
tbt cell construction, and tht mott
difficult to chtc^ It wu decided that
wt ihould prepare to do thlt work in
our own shops. A nickel plating expert wu retained, t nlcktl plating
plant built ln ont end of the eoppe*
nflnery, and a crew of our men wen
trained to do thlt work. Tht tntln
Knowles" plant wu repiated. Wt an
now tn a poaition to maka our own
cells for renewals or extensions.
"Ammonia plant—Tbla plant operated Mtlafactorlly throughout the
war.
"Photphorlc add and phosphate
plant*—These plants wtn completed
by our own tttff, and gin tvtry indication that they wlll bt tbit to make
the estimated production within tbt
utlmated coet.
"Ammonium Sulphate plant—Thlt
pltnt hat operated tucceufully
throughout the year. Tbt grade of the
product, the capacity of the plant,
and tht eott of operation havt til
bwn good.
"Mechanical department—Thla department hu opented on a repair and
renewal basis entirely.
"Ruearch department — Tbt research department had a buty yttr.
Tht cloalng of tbt cyclt of impurities
by passing tht tine pltnt rejects
through the fuming plant resulted ln
building up thut impurities ln tht
plantt to proportion! not experienced
befon. Ntw elements alao wtn introduced from tht lead smelter tnd
lud refinery, fluorine In particular
giving a great deal ot trouble. Theae
problem! have been successfully
handled.
"The lead nflnery elect-olyte, which
bad betn running for 80 yean with-
The food your family likes best
is the Easiest
to Prepare
OSQCrETY
THI* oolu-sw is conducts-! bl
Hit. M. J. VliMos. All miis ot a
social nature, Including receptions, print* entertainments, personal Itema, uaarrlMea, att., will
appear in this column. Teisphont
Mrs. Vtgntui at ber Home, Ul
■Uta street.
A pretty and Inpresslvs wedding
ceremony took place Sunday at 11
a.m. ln Calgary at Our Lady of Perpetual Help pariah with Rsv. John
Collin**-*, formerly of Vancouver, and
well-known In Nslson officiating,
whan Gaels, third daughter of Ur.
and Mrs. V. araasl, became the bride
of Carmine Antonio, eldeat aon of
Mr. and Mn. D. DeFerro, Robson
street. The bride who waa given ln
marrlsge by her father, who wore a
wedding dr*** of whit* satin trimmed with tulle and slight train carried a bouquet ot pink and ysllow
rose buds. Hsr brldssmalds were Miss
Helen Qrsssl, sister of the bride, and
Mia* Mary Bussis who wore becoming
orgsndle frocks of blus and green respectively. Their flowers were bouquets of pink carnations. John DeFerro of Nelson, brother of the groom
and A. Coine of Oalgary, cousin oath* bride, acted as best men. Miss
Oeneva. Qrsssl of Calgary and Miss
Louis* Ssntor of Nelaon mad* dainty
flower girls In thslr smart frocks of
blus and pink. Roy Parrer of Calgary
actad as ring bearer. After the ceremony a recaption was hsld at ths
home of the bride's parents. The Invited guests numbering well ovar 100.
Mr. and Mra. DeFerro. who ntumed
to NeUon yesterday morning, will
maks thslr home on Robaon street,
Nelson.
,   ,   ,
Very Rev. J. C. McKenzie received
word yuterday that Moat R*v. WUUam Mark Duke, D.D., of Vancouver
WUI be arriving ln Nelson «_ty « to
administer the sacrament of confirmation ln ths Church of Mary Immaculate.
• •   •
Mr. and Mrs. D. DeFerro, Robson
street, hava returned from Calgary
where they went to attend the Orassl-
DePerro wedding.
,   ,   ,
3. T. Andrews left yesterday for Statu* snd Vanoouver. In Seattle he
wlll »ttend the Northwest Floral association convention.
s   •   s
Queen City Rebekah lodge No. 14,
I.O.O.F., held a successful tea. Tueeday aftornoon under tha able con-
venorshlp ot Mrs. C. R. Hanna. whtn
tht tea arrangtmtnta w*re supervised by Miss Frances Rowe who wu
■assisted by Mrs. A. R. Peters, Mrs. M.
Omerod. Thou acting a* urvttours
wen Mn. WlUlam Oraham. D.D.P.,
Mn. Alfred Lane and Mrs. J. Wood.
Presiding at ths tea table alternately
were Mrs. W. Andenon, HO, Mr*. Bdwln Boyce, V.O., Mre. John Lundle
and Mn. D. Petty. The well patronised
bake table wsa ln charge of Mn.
Thomas Renwlck, Mn. D. H. McLtan
and Mra. John Lemmon. Mn. Frede-
rlt NlcholU, Mra. John Draper and
Un. 3. T. Brown ware ln charge ot
the sewing table.
• •   •
Mr. and Mrs. Archls Lenarduial
and small daughter of Trail art fueeu
at the home of Mre. Le*»ardutU's
parenu. Mr. ahd Mn. D. DeFerro,
Robson street.
.   .   .
J B. Oray. Baker street, left by
motcr yertwday for Vancouver. He
wu accompanied by hi* mother-in-
law, Mra. Robert McAllister, who hu
been a guast at hi* home for the
winter.        i
.   .   •
In oompUnunt to Mn. WUUam
Hanson, who will be leaving shortly
BREAKFAST ii rawly in ■ Jiffy,
-when it'i Kellogg's Corn
Flakes. Lift the top of the
easy-open package. Break the
■til of the Inner WAXTITE
bag. Ponr the erlsp, oven-
fresh flakes into bowls.
Thai's all. No cooking. No
fuming over a hot stove.
Kellogg's Corn Flakes are already eooked—thoroughly
•nd carefully. That's one
m*f
x.
reason they're so nourishing
and easy to digest.
Every member of the
family enjoys Kellogg's Com
Flakes. You're always safe in
serving the world's most
popular cereal.
Try Kellogg's at lunch-
time. Give them to the children for supper. They encourage restful sleep. Made by
Kellogg in London, Ontario.
Uj0or
-_'.Sm\\t.il90K.   JJ¥._
i^aCagmt ia ibi 'a ___5_^
CORN
FLAKES
CVtM-FMSH   J
fuwmwktI
out purification, suddenly showsd ssrlous •ccumuutlon* of Impurities
which needed special treatment* to be
worked out. Thla probltm 1* only
partly work out to dst*.
aBCOVEB StLFHfR
"Tht moat notablt work Is ths sdvance towards th* economic recovery
of sulphur dloalds from gs*u carry-
Ing low conotntrsuons ot th*t gu.
Pstents bsvs been granted ln Canada, and noUc* of aUowanoe of the
main clalma hu been received trom
the United flutes' patent office. A
thre*-ton-a-dsy unit is under construction snd should be opentlng before th* *nd ot March. 1934. This
plant will yield thre* tons of metallic
sulphur and six tons ot ammonium
a-ulphau per dijy from gsees contaln-
lng about eti-teniha of 1 per c«nt
of sulphur dloxld*.
**8afety work—Oreat strides were
made ln accident prevention. The
ahlft* lost psr thouund shifts worked
st Tsdanac were reduoed from 4.1 ln
ina to 3.3 In 1S33. the Sullivan mlns
trom 4.3 In 1133 to 13 In H33; st
ths Klmberley concentrator from il
In 1133 to 0 7 ln 1333.
"C0op*ntlv* commltt***—Tbs record cost* ln Marly sll dspsrtmenu
of th* oompany prov* that the entire
foros hu worked falthfuUy to main
tain efflclanty and to reduce costs.
"Th* cooperative commltteu are
largely reaponalble tor. the spirit ot
oonfldenos and friendship existing
between the msn and the management whleh, ln turn, hu brought
about tb* very utlafsctory opentlng
result* obtained this year.
STAFF
"Ths following officers have been
ln chsrgs of ths varioua departments
"Osnsrsl offlo**—T. w. Bingey,
vloe-presldent In charge of Ilnsncee
R. C. Crow*, solicitor. A. L. Johann*
soo, ssslstsnt solicitor: W. R. Bu-
endsle, purchulng agent; R O. An-
dsrson, assistant purchulng agsnt;
H. B. Fuller, chief sccountsnt; O. A.
Wslllnger, assistant chief accountant.
N. W. Burdett. sccountsnt at Klmberley; W. C. Mackenzie, pey**pMter.
"Mln**—W. M. Archibald, vlce-
preeldent In chsrgs of mlnu snd staff
"Concentration department—R. W
Diamond. g*nenl superintendent; C
T. Oughtred. superintendent; /H. ft
Banks, superintendent Klmberley
concentrator; S. Orsy, H. W. Poole.
T. V. Lord
"Chemlcsl department— R, W. Diamond, general superintendent; A. L
McCsllum,  aulsunt  superintendent;
C. H. Wright, Q. H. McKsy. J. Atwsll,
t. A. O. coins, W. 8. Klrkpatrlck, W.
D. Burgess. A. M. Chesser.
"Smelt*!-—J.    Buchanan.   superln
ten-lent; W. B. Ntwton and R. R. Mc*
Nsughton, assistant superintendents
9. 9. Blols, superlnttnd*nt of smok*
tre* ten.
"Zinc plant—B. A. Stlmmel. superintendent; F. S. Willis, ssslstsnt superintendent; O. Crulckshsnk, K. Dt
McBesn. J. Bryden snd T. II. Weldon,
departmental  superintendents
"Lnd nflnery—J. J. Flnglsnd. superintendent; F. F. Mclntyre, assistant superintendent. A. D. Turnbull
■Metallurgist--o. B. Murray.
"Bnglnorhu—B. M. Stiles, ehlsf
engineer. O. F. Chapman, mechanical
superintendent; H. T. Tledje, construction engineer; A. O. Dickinson,
rlectricsl engineer.
"Bmploymsnt—C. W. Oulllaume,
employment manager; B. S. Shannon,
assistant smployment msnsger.
"R***»roh—F. B. Let. W. H. Hsnnsy.
R. Ltp-sot, B. P. Sutherland.
"Asuy offices—Kurt Rsht, chief
chemist."
PAOB nvi
cAtea^hers-^d
607 Baker St. Phone 200
*    STORE NEWS
D. &A. Foundation Garments
You, can at last be certain of your appearance at
all times in the daintiest of dresses. No more
embarrassing ridges at the back or unsightly
bulges at the hips. The SECRET is in the ingenious sliding back. IT MOVES WITH THE BODY.
Stoop, bend or sit down and your Nu-Back Girdle
or Corsette will automatically adjust itself to fit
the figure. You will not only be delighted but
surprised at the comfort,
NU-BACK GIRDLES-
Ea;h  f4.50, *5.00, $8.75 to f8.00
NU-BACK C0RSETTES-
Each   f4.50, *5.95 to ff.75
D. & A. TWO-WAY STRETCH "SOFTIE"   _,
GIRDLE— Each        fids
b. k A. TWO-WAY STRETCH "JUNIOR"   '
GIRDLE— Each     $4.50
D. & A. ONE-WAY STRETCH "TEEN AGE"
GIRDLE— Each   fl.OO
PRACTICAL FRONT CORSET FOR THE STOUT
FIGURE— Each   f 5.00
FRONT LACE CORSETS— Each
D. 4 A. BRASSIERES—
S4.75
Each
75*, $1.10 and $125
Special Note: Mrs. N. Resiner, demonstrator for the D.
& A. Corset Company will be at our store today,
(Thursday), April 12.
to Join Mr. Manson, recently appointed CP.R. superintendent at Calgary,
Mrs. Arthur Balrd entertained yesterday afternoon at her home on
Silica street at a smart tea when she
wu assisted by Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson who presided at the tea table
centered with a low bowl ot long
stemmed red tulips, u.ne.s ass.suug
were Mn. M. J. Vlgneux who showsd
the guests to tho tta room, Mn. P.
Brlckson, Mlu Helen Murphy and
Mn. O. A. C. Walley who servsd. Mrs.
Balrd's Invited guests were Mrs. Man-
son. Mrs. C. W. Appleyard, Mn. J. T.
Andrews, Mrs. J. H. Bsnnett, Mre. L. 8.
Bralsy, Mn. R. D. Barnes, Mre. Austin
Carter. Mn. Brio P. Daweon, Mn. W.
T Fotherlnghsm. Mn. John Oansner,
Mn. O. Spencer Oodfrey, Mrs. A.
Bruce Ondy, Mn. C. V. Oagnon.
Mn. W. H. Hoare, Mn. R. B. Horton.
MlM Carmen Horton. Mn. Charles
Kelman, Mrs. B. A. Mann,, Mn. A. J.
Cornish, Mn. R. W. Dawson, Mrs. P.
O. Mony. MIm Helen Murphy, Mrs.
R. L. McBride, Mn. H. H. MacKsnzle.
Mrs. P. P. .syne. Mn. Hugh W. Robertaon. Mn. W. O. Rose. Mrs. L. V.
Rogers, Mn. Joeeph Sturgeon. Mrs.
M. J. Vlgneui, Mn. O. A. C. Walley,
Mrs. W. B. Wssaon. Mrs. H. M. Whlmster, Mn. I. O. Smyth. Mrs. R. A.
Peeblu, Mrs. N. Murphy. Mre. W. R.
Orubbe and Mrs. w. tt. Walker.
• as
Mn. B. Blrce of Cranbrook hu returned aftar a vlalt to the home on
Silica street of Mr. and Mr*. W. H.
Hoare. a
.   .   •
Ur. and Mra. E. Y. Brake. Baker
•treet, have u their houu guest Mrs.
E. H. Bamber of Loa Angeles, Cal.,
formerly of Nelson.
• •   •
Mn. J. L. Purdy of South Slocan
paid a vlalt In town yesterday.
.   .   *
B. A. Stlmmel of TraU spent yttttr-
day ln tha dty.
• •   •
W. O Mstthews. planstr ot Howser.
hu returned tfttr a visit In Nelson.
• •   *
Mr. and Mn. James O'Shea, Silica
street, who have been holidaying ln
California and cout points, returnsd
lut night.
• •   •
Mn. P. Kellogg and son Roy Jr. of
Taghum apent yuterday shopping In
the city.
. •   .   .
A. H. Orun and W. M. Myere left
yesterdsy   by   motor   for   Crsnbrook.
a    •    a
P. O. Bird of South Blocan wu a
city visitor yesterdsy.
...
Barl Steven* of Howaer spent yeetarday In tow****.
Mn. Wheeler, Vernon strut, Isft
yMWrday via the Oreat Northern lor
Vancouver.
•  •  •   a
Very Rev. J. C. McKensle had u
hi* guut* yuterday Rt. Rev. A. K.
Mclntyre, V.O . of Rosalsnd and Rev
Leo Hobson of Trail.
Mrs. Mary Wallact, Stanley street,
left yesterdsy for Vancouver where
she will sail via the Panama canal
tor the old country
J. Kllby. Kerr apartment*, hu hsd
u his guut, J. Ward, gsneral chair
man of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, with headquarters ln
MouUeal.
• a    a
John  DeFerro  hu returned  from
Calgary where he acted u but man
st tht Oraul-DtFerro wedding.
.   »   .
Un. u. Scelly. Obwrratory street,
hu u her guut Mn. E. M. Hobson
of Trail.
• a    a
Mn. Louis Santor and daughter
Loulu hare returned from attending
the Grassl-DaFerro wedding In Cal-
isry.
a    a    a
Mrs. M. Hayu of* Nakusp paid a
visit Ui town yuterday.
Passmore Notes
PASSMORE. April 11—William
Whits wu a bualneu visitor to Nelson
Tuesdsy. returning Thursday.
Stewart Jamleaon of Rouland spsnt
some dsys here lut week visiting
relstlvu. ...
Fred Thoratlenaon of Rosslsnd 1*
visiting his parenu here, Mr. and
Mn. C. ThontMnaon.
Silverton Juniors
Beat Senior Scrubs
SILVERTON, April 11—The first
baseball gsms of ths season wu helt*
on Sundsy afternoon when the Junior
team, the Bowlen, plsyed s senior
scrub Uam, ths former winning by
18-13. There wu a good erowd.
AINSWORTH HAS
A LATE EASTER
Young  People  Arrange  a
Service; Mr. Kinney
Preaches
AINSWORTH. April U—Tb* young
people of Alnsworth held an Stater
service Id the church on Sunday.
AprU 8, Ulss lisle Truseott, who ar-
rented the eerrlce, playing the oritn
Isabel  Lene nnounced  tbe numbers.
After tbt opening hymn. "Jeeua
Christ le Risen Today". Rev. Oeorge
Kinney of Procter offered a prayer.
Mabel Len* fan a r citation "Ood'i
Garden." A two part aong, by four
glrla, "Thy Father'! Care", followed,
then a Bible reading by David Kennedy and Eileen Fletcher read an
Eaater aelectlon.
Mr. Kinney gate an Instructive
sermon, dealing with "The Reeeurtc-
tlon".
Another two-part hymn by the
girls. "Jesus. Tender Shepherd, Lead
Me", wu followed by a congregational
hymn. Lw JetfertM gave the cloalng prayer.
The girls taking part ln the hymns
were Misses Ileen and Marvls Fletcher,
laabel Lane and Ruby Hanaen. Frank
Sutcllffe of Riondel took the collection. The church wu bright with
spring flowers.
Ask ft
or
Nestle
STERILIZED
EVAPORATED
MILK
WORLD'S STANDARD OF QUALITY
LIQUID -or PASTE
STOVE POLIO.
ABOB
ONE QUALITY     ^^
KKAKLK   W*. le, Can J il- NIW N AiOi PREMIUM CATALOG
mrnmUmmi   «iau.y,K»X!i>»scoiro.   vw<oiMiCAi*5A«y**»MKO
___________________________________
 FAOE  SIX
-THI NILSON DAUY NIWS. NIUON. B-C—THURSDAY MOBNINO. APRIL U, UM
Market and Mining
B.C. PACKERS'
PROFTTSDOWN
TORONTO. April 11 (CP).—Operat-
*lng profit* of British Columhl* Packers Limited were reduced during the
year ended February it. ml. from
•181.043 to 1108.390. according to the
annual report released to shareholders
today. Net loss for the year was 894.-
817 oompared with 9W7419. r< d«-
crease wu du* mainly to smsller
amount* allowed for depreciation.
Current liabilities were ahown at
• 1.508.42B compared wltb 11,499.730
last year, with current asset* at 81,-
300 638 compared with 91.1U.798.
President R. R. MacMtllsn says the
"company hs* made progress tn Its
policy to reducing non-contrlbutlng
overhesd eipenses. partly through
abandonment of unused plants."
EASTERK SALES
TORONTO. Aprtl 11 (CP)—Sales
of more than loo shares on th* Industrial section of tbe Toronto stock
eschsnge todsy were: 380 Abltlbl;
787 Beeuhsrnols: 3770 Brew _ Dist; ■ j^-jj
a»iaansMaa«aaai>»>aV«
MONEY
By tha Canadian Press
Cloalng exchsnge rateat
At Montreal— Pound 8.14%,
US dollar .99 11-18, franc 8.88.
At New Tork—Pound 5.15H.
Oanadlan dollar 1.00 8-18. frano
6.80.
At Parte—Pound 78.18 francs.
Canadian dollar 18 17 francs, UB.
dollar 16.16 francs.'
In gold—Pound lis Sd, Canadian dollar 69.44 cants, U.S.
dollar 69.39 cents.
Vancouvtr Salts
888 Can Ind Ale; 1670 C P B: 6126
Int Nickel; UO Tramore; 804 Hiram
Walkers;  lOlf DUt C Seag.
MONTRSJL April 11 (CP)—Sales
Of more than 100 shsres on th*
Montreal stook exchange today were:
1484 Braslllan; 316 B C pack; 1188
Dom 8 * 0 B: 8688 tnt Nickel;
371 Msssey Harris; 416 Shawlnlgan.
VANCOUVER, April 11. — Mining
shares sold on the Vancourer stock
exchange todsy:
Listed-.Beaver Bllwr 1300; Braiorne
1130; B. R. Oon. 16.600; B. R- «x. 33,-
300; Cariboo 4810*. Georgia Rlv. 600;
Oold Belt llll; Orandvlew 11.638;
Pioneer 3110: Prem. B. 1000; Prem
O. 3460; Quatelno 3000; Reeves 4460;
Reno 13,976; Taylor B. 4300; Wayside
9060.
Unlisted—Alexsndrls 8600; Bradlan
l.C.   Nickel   4160:   Big   Miss.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
80 industrials    .-  105.16 up .11
20 rails       50.28 up .47
20 utilities       25.85 uchgd.
News WW MOP,
METALSDOWN
Metal Prices at Ntw York
NBW YORK, April 11 (AP)—Coppsr flrat; electrolytic spot and fu-
.ure 8-4.
Tin stesdy; spot and nearby 66.76;
future 8647.
Iron quiet, unchsnged.
Lead firm: spot New York 436;
East St. Louis 4.10.
Elne steady; But St. Louis spot
and future 4.40.
Antimony, spot 7.98.
Bar silver quiet, unchanged at
«M.
At London—Copper, atandard spot
133 TS 90;  futun ttl   lis 6d.
Electrolytic, spot £88 13* ed: futurs 138  17s td.
TU, spot 1339 la ed; futur*
333 16s.
Uad. spot til IDs; future ill 17*
6d.
Elne, *«ot C14 17* Sd; future CIS
3s ed.
Bar silver iteidy, unchanged at
*>V,a.
Calgary Livt Stock
OAXOART, April 11 (CP)—Receipts:
331 cattle, 30 calvee, 180 hogs and
308 lambe. The cattle market waa
active and prices steady for quality
offered. Stoeker trading was active.
Hogs were mostly on through billing,
looal sales steady wtth select* 87.10,
baoon* 98.80 and butchers 16.10 off
truck.
Cattle—Oood and choice butoher
steers 94 to 14.60, oommon to medium
•3.60 to 83.60. Oood to choice butcher
heifer* 13.60 to 84.16. good to choice
butcher cows S3 36 to 83. Oood fed
calvea 84 to 94.39. Oood veal calves
94 to 94 36. Oood bulls 13. Oood to
eholoe stoeker steen 99 to. 93 90.
Oommon to medium stoeker** 93 to
•3.60. Oood to choice atocker oowa
and heifer* 93 50 to 93.
3300; Bluebird 1600; Bute UC.L. 1700
Csnsdlsn Rand 8»00: Congress 6600
Cork Prov. 6000: Dalhouale 3000; Dentonia 13.460: Dunwell 600; Falrvlew
61.900; Federal 1300; Olacler Crk
30O0; Oolconda 3800; Oolconda EM.
1300; Oold Mtn. 1100; Orange 3800:
Orull Wlhksne 6900; Hslds 4600; Her.
cules 111.600; Hediey 6000; Home 89,-
034: Independence 4100; Koot. Belle
3000: M»k Slcc*r 300: Mid W*st 6;
Mlnto 38,000; Mogul 7000: Morning
Star 36.996; Natlvs Bon 600: Noble
Five 30,800; Norgold 4100; Pavilion
1300; Pend Orelll* «00; Porter Idsho
300; Reward 3600; Sllvercrest 64 000.
Salmon 97.080; Sllwrstnlt- SOOO:
Snowflake 3000; Taylor Wind 400;
United Imp. 1600; Vldette 330: Viking 38.700: Waterloo 6000; Wsverly
96.000; Whltt Eagls 300; Whitewater
6500.
VANCOUVER STOCK EXCHANGE  |
A P Oon  	
'ifrn.'l'W*	
rieaver   Bllver   	
Braiorne Oold ...
Bridge r Con, .
B R X Oold ...
Cariboo Oold q .
C & E Corp
Coatt Brawerlet .
Com Oil
Oeo  River  Oold
oold   Belt   	
Qrand view    „.
Uargal  OU  	
Home   QU
Int coat
Bid
.10
Art
fflft
Exchange Ratti
NIW TORK, April 11 (CP)—Ster-
llr exchange steady at 95.16K tar
60-day bills and at »6.16'., for demand.
Canadian dollars 5-16.
Francs  8.90.
Llr* 8.56',.
Uruguay 80.93.
BUY BONDS
•8,000—Dominion of Canada t\.%
•1.100—Province of British Colombia 4H<"r
•8,000—Province ot Brltlab Columbia S %
•5,000—Province of British Columbia ( %
•5.000—Province or Albert***, I   %
•3,000—Province of Alberta I   <f,
•8,(100—frounce of Alberta 1V ,
| Due
1958
1938
1943
1941
1984
1941
1981
"rflSJ
Mkt.
98-5
93.50
91.85
94.35
97 40
90.59
rra-n
4.10%
548C/C
8.00%
8.40%
5.17%
6-33%
5.15%
D. M. Duggan Investments, Ltd.
309 EIGHTH AVKNIK WIST
CALOARV, ALTA.
14.00
a
1.09
3.16
1.38
9.00
.08
01U
.58
■34
Mn
Itt
McDougal eegur       !ol%
McLsod Oil   	
Mercury   Oil	
Meridian   	
Model pit      .....
National   Silver   ...
Nicola Mine* 	
Okalts  Oils   	
Pioneer  Oold    .
Premier   oold   	
Premier Border 	
Quatalno
Reno Oold
Reeves   MacDonald
Sally  Mlnas
Sterling  Pacific
Vanalta  Oils  	
Tsylor Brldg* 	
Wsyslds    	
UNLISTED
Alexandria Oold -
Anaconda   .
Bsltsc   Oil
Bsyvlew ulnlng
B C* Nickel
Big Missouri
Bradlan Mines .
Brew _ Dist 	
Calmont  OU   	
Cork  Prov
Crows Nest Oils
Dslhousle   Mlnea
Dalhouale   Oils
Dentonia Mlnee
Derenlah   OIU
Dunwell
Aaktlt*
Pacalta   ...
Hlghwood  Sarcee
Sslrvisw
Orut  Wlhksn*
ITI
.11
.08
14.35
.39
110
lie
1.30
9.16
.59
.05
1.61
.11
.06
Isstcrest 011
.18
F»by*n   oil*      .00%
F.aehold  Oil  „... 10
Oolcondi       ....„._      .47
Oold   Mountain         31
Orange   Mines         31
Hslds   Oold       11
Hercules    Con*     06 a*
Home  Oold           33V,
Indian   Mlnea    03%
Independence    _      —
Jack   Walts         31V,
Koot Belle      31
Koot   Flo           .01
Koot   King           —
Lakevlew Mine*  .....     .01%
Low*ry   pit*     M
Lueky    Jim          —
Madison   OH         .03
Mar Jon OU ...
Merland OU 	
Mill   City     ......
Mlnto  aold  ....
Morton Wol 	
Morn  Star  	
Mogul 	
Nstive   Soo   	
Noble Fire 	
Nordon   OU   	
psvlllon	
Psnd  Oreille   ...
porter   Idaho
Reward  Mining
Royallte   OU
Rufua  Argents
Salmon oold      .34%
Sllrercreat         .03
.18%
•01%
-3
.48
.18
sn
.16
•01%
Xt
39
.10%
-35
84
31
.IS
M
.43
.10
.05
I
.11
JM
1.11
.13
.07
17.00
.01
SUveramlth
Snowflake
Standard   Oold
Taylor Wlndwall
Unltad   Empire
United  011 	
Waterloo
Wavsrley  Tang
Wellington
White   Esgls   	
Whitewater     ,
Hediey   BUT  	
Norgold	
Bute I X L  -
Mak    Slccar    	
Sunshln*     	
Vldette     _....._.
Viking        	
Olscler  Creek
Oolconda
sn* Rand
?*d    Hawk
anadla
800
310
.17
.07
.16
.18
<*>>%
.31
.00%
.11%
.49
.41
3i
.11
.07
.34
.03
.01
.41
38
.01%
-01%
.01%
.04%
¥
.30
f»
.44
.11
.06%
.14
133
.13
jOS
17.35
3*
*,*
.01
.48
.IS
39
sb
.40
.08
•15%
39
31
830
3.30
.16
•07%
.13
33
MONTREAL STOCK PRICES
f
BONDS
Dominion, Provincial and Municipal Bonds.
Enquiries Invited.
We Will
Purchc.se—
CITY OF NELSON
5% Bonds
Due 1948
P. G. E.
-Vi% Bonds
Due 1942
and Other Issues
We Offer—
CANADA ATLANTIC
RAILWAY COMPANY
4% bonds doe 1158
(guaranteed by Canadian
National RaUway)
at 981.4.1 and accrued Interest.
BRITISH COLUMBIA
4%% bonds due 1943
at »80.00
VICTOR W. ODLUM, BROWN & GO.
310 PENDER  ST.  BEST.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
IIM OOVERNMENT  ST.,
VICTOBIA, BX.
Alberta  pw    _____
Belt   Telephone     —
B O packing       .........
Braalllsn T _ L	
B c Pow*r A  ~—	
B C Pow*r B  	
Build  prod       —.	
Oanada   Brons*    	
Can   Csr  _   Foundry     ,
Csnada   Cement        	
Canada Cement Pfd  —
Can oan a»ec       —
Canada oypsum  	
Can  Ind  Al   A	
Can   lnd   Al   B      -
CPR  	
Can   Bteamers     ,
Csn Wire At Cabla A  _
Can Wire _ Cable B 	
Cockshutt  plow     	
Con M * S	
Dom   Brldg*     ,
Dom Ol***    	
Dom  Textile   .. 	
Oan   Bt   Wan*   	
Charles  Ourd   	
Hamilton   Br   	
Int    Nlcksl .    ...
Lake of th* Wood*
Masssy    Hsrrla
Montresl    Power     ..
Nstlonsl Bteel Car    14%
39
6%
111
M
8'.
•%
    48
  IW
      •%
    18%
 -   18
    17
 -     1%
     341,
     11
Z_T 167*0
    M
    97
    79*4
zz IW
zz lie
zz "A
.— r>%
STOCKS and BONDS
When you are buying or selling, we offer a fast,
I   efficient service with low commission rates. When
buying, you pay when we deliver stock. When sell
ing, we pay you Immediately.
Quotations—Information
Correspondent—A. E. Jukes fir Co., Ltd.
LP. E. POULIN
Licensed Stork Broker
P.O. BOX 181 PHONI 19 NELSON,  II c.     I
n
1
i
i
i
Ogllvle   Milling
Power   Corporation
Price   Bros'
Quebec Power 	
Shawlnlgan 	
Sherwln   WUUam*   ....
Steel  of  Can   	
Twin city 	
Winnipeg   Electric    ...
Cl'IBS
Asaoclsted BrewarM*
Brewera _ Distillers
B A  OH 	
193
9
31
11
17%
M
10%
1.40
14%
Br-_k
Canada
_    Bilk
Canada cslenaat
Canada    Dredg*
Canada   Malting
Canada   Vlckera
Can  Vinegars
Can   Wineries
Distiller*  Sessrsm
Dominion Tar
Dryden paper
East    Dairies
Home Oil
Imperlsl   OU
Imperlsl Tobacco Can ..
International   P»»ol   ...
McColl   prontensc   	
Mitchell   RObt	
Page    Hersey     	
Walker   Oood
Walker   oood   Ptd   	
UTILITIES
Commeroa    ....-_____
Imperlsl
Montresl
Nova   Bootla	
Roysl	
Toronto        	
MISCELLANEOUS
Csnada   Bread    	
Canada  Oypaum 	
Oan   canners      ..'	
Canada   Dredg*   	
Dominion  storea	
r*or*J   Can  A    __,_.
Ooodyear _
Kelrlnator	
Laura   Accord	
Loblaw  oroocrlaa 	
Msple   Leaf
Photo   Engrsvera	
Service    station    	
Standard   Paving  .....
West Can Flour    	
Walker   Breweries   	
Zimmerknit
Z    41.40
    71%
zz ttt
163
. ne
ttV-
\oT
i%
: J8
;f
: si*
: '5*
: «!»
• 5*
■   V*
: !*
TORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS
BONANZA CACHE
GOLD MINES LTD.
Arthur F. Noel, the original locator and ataker
of most of the claims comprising the Bonanza
Cache Oold Mines Ltd., Is directing the mining
operation on this great property.
Write ta onr office and let us UH you the
fscts and possibilities of Bonanza Cache.
NOEL &CL ANCE Y
MINING BROKERS
927 Vancouver Block Vancouver, B. C.
Alexandria '	
Algoma    	
Amity    	
Ashley    Oold     	
Barry   Holllng*r     	
Base  MeUU         	
Bear Exploritlon  	
Big   Missouri _.._.
Boblo    ._....
Braiorne         «...
Brett Tretheway    __...
Bridge rt Exploration 	
Brownie*  	
Buf Csn Molts 	
Bunker   HIU   Eat   	
Csn   Klrkland    „ .
Csn Malartlc 	
Cariboo   Oold   Quart*   	
Castle Tretheway , 	
Oentrsl    Msnltoba'    	
Central   Patricia    	
Chlbougsmou      -
Clertcy  	
Cosst Copper	
Cobelt Contact	
Columarlo .........
Consrlum        	
Con* M * S 	
Dome ' 	
Dom   Exploration _
Clorado  _	
Palconbrldg*       	
Ooda  Lake  Oold	
Orsnsds     ^.t....
Hollinger     	
Howey         	
Hudson   Bay  „,	
Internstlonsl   Nickel
Klrklsnd   L.k« 	
lat. Msron	
Uks Shore 	
Mclntyre  ,
MOVtttle  orshsmm*	
McWstters Oold  _..
Macssss     	
Halroblc  *.	
Majle  IMt  OOW  _  .._
Mining   Corp    _	
Moft*tt Hall 	
Nlplsslng  	
Noranda   _......_......
Parkhlll      	
P*ymiBt*T      	
M4 Orelll*     _,.	
Pioneer    Oold  	
Premier   Oold    .	
Reno  oold         	
-"en   Antonio       __	
iherrltt Oordon   „	
Sleoos -
South   Tlhlemont	
et*«y»n* 	
:z   3*
.08
.   1.01
18
176
.70
46
31
118
.11
109
-04
.11
.09
-II
.61
118
.70
•11
.70
.14*
.il*
2*
140
169 00
17.76
s_i*
■   360
1*6
1.56
11.30
114
14.00
3806
.61
.11
MOO
"ft
tt*
08 H
ti
1.18
■00*4
1.68
48 40
41
18
110
1176
140
VS
810
uo
l.U
II
4114
St Anthony
Sudbury Baaln
Sylvanlte
Teck    Hughes
Towsgsmao   	
Tresdwell   	
vsnturss
Walt* Amulet
Waysld*
White
(agle
Wright Hargreavea
OILS
Aom*   , _
AJSI 	
A P oon
Asso.i.ted	
B  A   OU _._.
Baltae      	
Calmont	
C   and   I   Oorp   ...
Chsmlcsl   Reasarch
Dslhousle
Rome  OU
flomeetead Q * a ...
tape-rial   oil
International   p*t*  .
Merland    . 	
Nordon
OU   Selection*   _ _
Olga  	
Royallt* __
Semi,
Btarl
irllng  Pacific   	
Walnwrlght
INUISTRIALS
Baatty  Bros  A  	
Besuhirnots       	
Bell Telephons	
Brazilian
Brewers   _   Distillers
Csn    Bread
Can   Cement
Csn   Csr   Bl  Foundry
Csn  Indus Alcohol  A
Can    Dredge
Csn  Psc  Rsllwsy
Cona  Bakerlea
Distillers Besgrem* 	
Dominion   storea
pord   of   canadt  A   ...
Ooodyaar Ttr*
Hiram   wslkej       	
Imperlsl    Tobaooo    	
loblaw orooerM* a 	
Msssey    Harrla
Photo  i*ngrav*ra  	
Pag*    H-rsev 	
Service   Stations 	
Stsndsrd   psvlng
Steel of canad* 	
44
1.77
148
7 30
.71
48
1.01
1.40
.40
9.70
31
131
'ii*
16.00
.07
US
Ul
390
40
180
.14
'4"a
1478
48
.11
•00*
40
17.00
SS*
.78
119
940
r
tv,
I
30
11*
ll
18-
71",
«-.
.a
Motors Drop; Bonds
Rather Strong at
New York
NEW TORK. April 11 (AF)—Stocks
found conflicting currents In th*
nsws today and settled Into Irregularity after a promising start. Bonds,
on tha other hand, were rather strong,
mo "Ing ahead to another new average
high.
Labor difficulties caused considerable hesitancy among speculative
traders, and motor tssuee dropped.
Ralla parked up a bit but metals
weakened. Transactions 1,006,480
share*. .
Motor stocks yielded frsctlons to
around a point, U.S. Smelting eaaed 3
and Mclntyre 1. There were Intermittent flurries In a mlecellany of stocks
Including U.S. Oypsum, Armour of
Illinois Issue*, Nslsner Bro*., OB.
Pip*, Aviation Corp. and American
Radiator.
BAR GOLD GOES
UP A CENT
MONTREAL, April 11 (OP)—B«
gold tn London up one cent to 134-71
in ounce ln c»n»tli|p; 134« 10V_d
ln BrltUh fundi, fba fixed 135
WMhington price amounted to »34.bo
ln  Canadian.
Dominion Live Stock
wmmPlO. April. 11 (CP>—Dominion livestock quotation* an aa
foUows: Cattls 1000: calves 8761
hogs 1480.
• Staters, up to 1080 lbs. good and
cholo* 848. Steers, orer 1060 lb*,
good and cholos 440-845.
Helton, good snd cholos 3.76-4.50.
Fed calves, good and cholc* 4.60-
650.
Oowa, good 93.78 to 93 35.
Milken and *prlngers 910-840.
Veal calves, good and cholc* OS*
•6
Hog*, select bscon. 61-00 per h-sad
premium. Bacon 6744. Butcher* 61
per bead discount. Hsivy 88.75. Extra hesvy 9640. Sows No. 1 9840.
Lambs, good handywelght 97-97.35.
Oood hesvlea 96-9640. shesp, good
heavlea »140-81.78. Oood handywelght »3-»3.50.
Winnipeg Grain
WTNrrrplo.  April  ll   (CP)—Cloalng  future*  quotations;
Open    High
Low    Cloae
97S
68H
70H
14*
36
35*
19*
40*
tl
155H
158
103H
44*
IS
61*.
07'i
08*
70*
34'a
16
15*
39*
40*
41
189
166*
164*
48*
48*
•1*
%*, Si
70*      70*
35*      36*
8
19*
40*
41*
154
181*
151*
47*
43*
60*
168
158
151*
4»*
49*
81
Wheat
May
July
Oct	
Oata:
May   .
July   ..
Oct.
Barley
My   ...
July   ..
Oct	
Flex:
May
July
Oct	
Br«*
Msy
Julv
Oct
Cuh prlcss:
Wheat: No. 1 hsrd 70*: Ho. I
nor. 67: No. 3 nor. 84: No. • nor.
81*: No. 4 nor. 60*; No. 6. 67*:
No. 4 64*: feed 51*; trsck 6T,;
No. 1 (rum 68*.
Minneapolis Grain
MINNBAPOLIS, April ll (AP)--
taint. No. 1 northern 85*-88*: No.
red durum M*-N*: Msy 83*;
July 83*: Sept S3*. Corn, No. 1
yellow 43* -44*. Oat*, No. 1 whit*
30*-ll*    Flai. No.  1.  1.74*4.77.
Flour 16 higher Carload lot*.
family patent* 6 95-95 a barrel In
98 pound cotton sacks. Shipments
11,900.  Bran  19 00-50.
Exchanges
MONTREAL, April 11 (CP)—British snd foreign exchsnge In relation to th* Canadian dollar, a*
compiled by the Boyal Bank of Canada, clo**d today aa follows:
Argentina,   peso           4541
Australia,   pound        4 0900
Austria,    schilling ISM
Belgium,   belga     .UM
Braall,   mllrcla  0897
Chins,  Hong Kong dollan ..   4900
CMchoalovskla.   erown       .0415
Denmark,   kron*       4900
France,   franc   "            XJ650
Oermany.   relchsmsrk        4946
Oraat   Britain,   pound  8.1478
Holland,   florin    8749
Hungary,   pengo     4971
India,  rup**      .5808
It»ly.       HIT*        ,.      XmrnSt
Japan,   yen   .     4040
New   Zealand,   pound     4.1114
Norway,  krone      4599
Poland,   tlotl  1809
South   Afrlcs.  pound     5 1388
Spain,   peseta  lie*
Sweden.    Kron*            4059
Swltserland.   frano 4330
United States, dollsr, 5-le psr cent
discount.
Classified Advertising
LEGAL
Notlos ot intention to apply to Purchase Land
In Nslson land Recording Dlatrlct
of Kootenay District and slluste on
District Lot 803. West Kootenty District, on th* Northerly bsnk ot the
Slocan River, a few hundred yards
distant rrom the Shoreacrea P. o
Beginning st a post planted on the
said Northerly Bank of tbe Blocan
River, st a point In line with the
prolongation of the Eut Boundary
of Bublot 3 DL. 301, In a Northerly direction, 'and running thenoe
North 1400 teet; Thence Eut, 1.150
feet: Thenoe West 1300 feet to th*
uld River Bank snd thsnoe In Esst-
erly direction to the point of commencement. Taka notlos that I
Ousto Orlleek, of shoreacres, B C
Intend to spply for tb* above described lands
OUSTO OLHtK.
Dated  16th  February  19S4, Bhor*
acrea. B. C.
(1831)
(Section 99)
LAND ACT
Notice of Intention to apply to Purchsse Land
In Nelaon Land Recording District
Kootsnsy snd situate near Shore*
acres, 9. C Tske notice thst earn
A. Laaareff of shoreacres. occupation
farmer Intends to apply tor permission to purchaae ths following described lends:—Commencing at a
poet plsnted st NW. Cor., BU. 6.
Map 781. ln DL. 303A: thenoe Weet
30 chs: thenoe South 30 chs: thence
Eut 30 chs; thsnoe north 30 chs;
and containing 40 acrea, more or
lea*
BAM A. LAZARIFF
Dated  March   6th,   1934.       (1633)
Births
MARSHALL--To Mr. and Mrs. Jo-
soph Marshsll. at th* Trall-Tadanac hospltsl, March 30, a son. Mrs.
Msrshill snd baby returnsd to their
home Monday
HOKKSTRA—To Mr. and Mrs. Oer-
erd Hoekatra. Vernon street, at tha
Kootenay Lsks Ornersl hospltsl,
April 8 and 11. twin sons.	
Personal
MADAMS MARA WILL OIVE RE-
sult on health, buslneu and love.
also your horoscope; send dste
of birth, day snd month, three
Questions answered, 35o to 50c.
1974. W. 7th Am.. Vancouvar. B.O
,1006)
ELITE STUDIO now open, finest pro-
trslts Films Istt by 0 *_t  finished
by 6 pjn. same dsy. 604* Baker Bt.
il«83l
Ecasma neb. Pllss. Ulo*rs Try Oeo
Le*** Chin. Remedy   HutUon Bsy
 (1874)
Situations Wanted
EXPERIENCED OIRL DBSIP-8
housework. 66 per month. Box
3000,   Dally   Nawa. (1000)
For Rent
FUIXT FURNISHED HOUSS. APPLT
616   BUIc*  St..   Nslson. (16811
1  ROOMED SUTTI.  OVKRLOOKINO
lak*.    prtvst*    rersndah.    most
reasonable   strathoona. Also single
housekeeping   rooms, (1W7)
FURN     OR    UltFIJRN     «WT!
WMk or month   Medical Arts Bldg
 ■,1993)
PUR   ROOMS.   STEAM   HEATED
shower, .terms mod. Can   Legion
 (1894)
FURNISHED    HOUBSKIIPINO
room*   for   rent.   Annabl*   Block
(1897)
FURN18HED    AND    ONFURrTIBHID
Suit** for rent—K»rr Apt*. (1698)
fsSSAdl AFTtV-fcautlful  Modern
Frlgldslre  equipped   aultu.   (1896)
two-Vou >5i_n»H_D   Mttt
lor rent, Stirling hotal.
TWO-ROOM—D
FURNISHED
bTwC  Block
(1698)
BUTTE.
(Tom
FURNISHED    BUTTE    5c»     SILICA.
Phone  440X.      (10M)
For Sale
FOR   SALE - PHONB  701 — TWO
heavy  wagons,  apply Jamea Reld.
Falrvtew Fuel Oo. tl|S6)
FOR SALB—OOOD APPLES 91  PER
uck.   phon*   5S4L1. U993)
BABT    BUOOT   FOR    BALE.    UKS
new   Phone 788 R. (3036)
For Sale or Rent
6   ROOM   HOUSB   FOR   SALS   OR
rent   clou III   Phon* 673L.   (1689)
Live Stock for Sale
9 HOLSTE1N COWS MILKING— 1
yearling bull—1 Stockholm separator. Any ressonsbls offer accepted. A. Sean. R. R. I. Nelson.
 (1019)
TWO HORSES FOR MINE WORK
weighing  HOO to  1300  lbs. Quot*
6rloe. ue end genenl  conditions.
oi 1006, paUy News. (3006)
jERsrr cow for sals. mrs. n.
Luclak. RoMtnont.   13003)
Live Stock Wanted
ATRSHIRE COW, TOUNO. OENTLE.
T. B. Tested pull partlculan to
Bog 1061. Dally News. (9089)
QUOTATIONS ON WALL STREET j
Allegheny   	
Al   Chemical
Am  Can
Am   For   Pow
IS
153'.
106*
10'i
16*
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110
74
17*
70*
Htt
14*
30*
19*
Beth Steel      44*
Cansds Dry
Can   paclflo
Cerro d* Paaco
Clw*  a*   Ohio
Chrysler
Com  jt  Bouth
NT
Am Ma ii Fdv
Am Bm-lt _ ft*
Am   Telephone
Am   Tobacco
Anaconda    .     .
Atchison
Auburn Moton
Baldwin
Bait At Ohio .
Bendlx  at
-  (I
Con  ou  N
Oorn  Prod
O Wright Pfd
Dupont
tt U
Eut   Kodak
Elec Power
Erie
Ford  English
Pord   of   Can
Ftrst Na Stores
Freeport Tei
Oen  Else
Oen Foods 	
Oen  Motor*  _
Oold   Dust
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Orsnby
Ort North Pfd
Ort   WMt  Sugar
Howe pound
Hudson   Mo
Ins Conner
Int  Nickel
Int   TH   Ar   Tel
Jow*l  Tea  	
17*
IT*
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47*
85*
H
17*
77 ai
99
90*
2»
i*
161*
104*
10
as
119
73
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61
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30*
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30*
16*
37*
47*
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17*
71
98*
90
<■*•
11««
• *
131*
100 ii
10*
10*
«**«
17
70*
61*
14*
30*
21*
37*
17
37*
47*
54
1*
Zl.
if,   m%   33*
5ft
30*
55',
31',
8*
36*
16*
47
95
El
34*
•8*
31*
18
11*
19*
80
64
90*
18*
14*
•4H
M*
31*
18*
13*
10
10*
64
M*
m.
14*
n
Kenn   copper
Knag* S S
Kroegger _ Toll
Lehn _ pink
Meek   Truck
Mllwsukee Pfd
Mont  wsrd
Nuh   Moton
Nst Dairy rPod
N  Pow  _ Ll
N T Central
Psc Om „ Elec
Psck    Moton
P»nn R n
Fhllllps Pit*  .
un oil
Radio Corp
Radio Keith Or
Rem   Rand
Rock  ulsnd
Safeway stores
8 Louis I, 8 F
Shell   union
S   Cal   Sdlson
Bouth    pscifle
Stan oil of Cal
sun oil of Ind
SUn oil of N J
Stewart   Wsrner
Studebaker   .
Tei   corn
Tei   Oulf  Bui
Tlmken   Roller
Under Type
Un   Carbide
Un ail of c*l
United   Air
United  Bl*   	
Un   Paolflo   	
U S Pipe
U S Rubber 	
U 8 steel 	
Vana   StMl   	
WMt   Elec   .
Woolworth
YsUow  Tim-a
ll*
30*
11*
10*
13*
7
11
16',
91*
30*
33
30
,13*
.H
11*
31*
30*
33
30
85iJ
31*
34
16'.      16 16*
=..      -.        I***
37*
10
35*
30*
.1*
a
6
30*
19*
35*
10*
11
7*
1*
36*
19*
«'.
a
i*
13*
"1      "3 ■**
10*       9* 9*
- 11*
19* 39*
M* M*
Lost and Found
TO FINDERS
It you find a eat or a dog, a
pocketbook, Jewelry or fur, or
■anything else ol value, telephone
The DaUy New*. A "Found'' Ad.
wUI be Injerted without cost to
you. We wlU collect Irom th*
own*r.
Poultry and Eggs
BACK CHICKS
BABY PULLETS!
Vigorous etrelne of proven high-
production qutlltlM. Leghorn!,
10c and 13c; Reds and nocks
13c and 1-Kc; Buff Orpingtons
and Light Sussex 16c; baby pullet*, guaranteed oa per oent pul-
leti, double the above prices
plus 3c per bird. 100 psr oent
live delivery one of B. C.'s oldest breeder hatcheries.
RUMP & SENDALL
Boi N, Mllner, B. O.
(3009)
SEXED PULLETS
SEXaD DAY OLD PULLETS,
Leghorns Rocks, Reds, Sussex,
Wysndottu, Red-Wysndotte snd
Red Leghorn Croubredi. Ousr-
sntoed 95% correct. Also dsy
old chicks trom above breed*.
Our stock hu given utlafactlon
for twenty.yaar«. secure the but
from bloodtuted, trapnested and
nverly culled birds. Writ* tor
particulars snd May prloe*.
THE BURNSIDE POULTRY FARM
Port Hammond, B.C.
(1011)
HIRD'S BRONZE TURKEY FARM,
Queens Bay, offering unrelated
trloa Hatching eggs, now |3 per 9.
  (1018)
Rabbits
BEAUTIFUL CHINCHILLA FUrIUB*.
bits ready for breeding. Two Don
and one Buck 95.00. Also * tew
Istt Flemish Olanta and Siberian
Blsck. Box 115, Nelson. Phone 535.
(1051)
Pets
LIVER   COLOR SPANIEL PtTPS. BORN
hunters.   Males   »o.   Females   $5.
T,    Roynon,    Nelson^ (2040)
Plants, Bulbs, Seeds
VAN FAN STRAWBERRY PLANTS
-91 per 100: Viking Rupberry
c*nes     9140    per     100:     Niagara
Sapes,   bleeding   heart*,   peonies,
hy   breath   and   tills*   of   th*
vsllsy. Mn. C. Becker. Phon* 864R1.
(1999)
H. KITCHENER. MOUNTAIN BTA~-
tlon Oardena, Nelaon. 100 varieties
Carnations, roses, alsdtoll, pan
nursery   stock.   Llat   on   *ppltcs-
tion.         (Men
FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TKEEh
At Shrubs, Raspberry _ Blsck-
berry canM. T. Roynon, Agent.
LaSTlt*  Nunertea.  Nelaon.  BC
(11(8)
CUTHBERT RASPBERRY CANES SC
' each.   Lloyd   George   Raspberry   4c
esch.    Cory    thornleM   blackberry
6c  each.  Roynon,  Nelaon.   (1041)
ROYAL SOVEREIGN STRAWBERRY
plant* for ule. 100—75c. 600—»3.
1000—«6. F.O_. here. APP^ W
Salmon. Midway. B. C. (1959)
OLADIOLUB. DAHUAS. PEONIES.
peranlsls: beautiful varieties. CsU-
logue. Mra. Mobley, Tappen, B. C.
     (3008)
NETTED OEM SEED POTATOES
from oertlfied aeed 61.75 per 100
A- H. NoakM. BaUour, a, C
11984)
OLADIOU BULBS 350 DOZ.. Al_0
bulbleU 350 pint. C. Jeffs. Net-
son,  Phone  838R3 (3001)
Property for Sale
FOR SALE—THE STATIONERY AND
confectionery b'talneu known u
tb* churt-0 Shoppe In Orand
Forks. BC. ror Information, apply or write K. schMr, Trail. B.C..
or orand Fork*. (1711)
6 ROOM BUNOAiOW. EXCELI.5.N.
location, clos* in, 3 lot*, stons
founds tlon. a real buy at (3350
CW   APPUyard A: Co. Ltd   ,19791
FOR SALB—SMALL RANCH CLOSE
In going cheap, oood snsp. For
all partlculan write owner. P. O.
Boy 547. NeUon. B. C. (1905)
FOR SALE - ONE A"5fel. WITH
house in csstlegsr. prult treu.
berries Snap. Writ* Boi 1038.
Trsll,  B.  C. (3033)
TWO ACRE RANCH. WELL IM
proved, clou to city and schools.
Apply P   O. Boi 338. (1971)
HOUBy AND LOT FOR BALE. D.
Wick.  —-uttvale.   B.  C (3033)
Investments
INVESTORS SYNDICATE BOND IS
an esay InsUllment ssvtngs plsn
to provlds Irving protection—SUrt
to ssvs now For particulars spply
to-R W Dswson. Hlpperson Blk
Phon* 197. P   O   Boi 733. Nelson
__^____^______^ (1640)
RELIABLE PARTY WANTS THO ?-
snd dollsr losn 1*K'„ Interest.
Principal and Interest repsyinls
931.00 monthly for 44 months.
Sound MCurlty. boi 30S3, Dally
N*ws. (3003)
Automotive
ASK FOR AMALIE GUARANTEED
100 per oent ours pennsylvsnlsoll
Automobile Motor Repairs. Acetylene welding. Bodv snd Psndet
Works SHORTY'S tlSPAIB SHOP
713 Bsker Bt   Phon* 171 (1816)
WANTE) - RUMBLE SEAT COUPE
or roadster. Chesp for cuh E.
Scott Lauder. Queens Bsy.   (3034)
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
RATES
11c a line
1 lines,  once    $ 41
1 tines, oh*     41
4 Una* one*     At
1   lines,   8   limes        tS
I nam, I tliM*   141
4  lines. 1  time.     1.71
1 llnu. I  month   Ut
I ItnM. I month  4.N
4 llnss. 1 month   5.71
All *bov* leu 10 ',  lor prompt
peri-sent.
*M**MM*M*MN«M*NNNMNIM(
Ltinds for,Sale
At  AC.   NEAR  NSLSON,
frontage, undy beach, 15 sc. cull
tlvatea (00 bearing spple treM|
good garden, soms nay land. mT
produced    excellent   crops,   m_Z
{ilped for lrrlgstlon, bungslow hai
ivlng room, 1 bed rooms, klt4
chsn St bath room fully plumbsdl
hot Ae cold water, Fire Place, How
Air Furnscs, Electric light, teleJ
phone etc. One room houuj
•Ubl* etc. H. E. Dili, 609 Wsrd Btl
 - (3037)1
Farms and Ranches
RANCH    FOR   RENT,    ALSO   TWO
young   cows   far   ssle.   Boi   3010,1
Dally  News.         (1010) |
Miscellaneous
COAL
,We wlll be having raw,
damp  weather off  and
on for a while yet.
Why   suffer  from  cold
when our coal Is so
cheap?
Egg Size, ton .
Lump Size, ton
98.50
10.00
We Sell for Cash.
WILLIAMS*
TRANSFER
609 Ward St.
Nelson
______
Business, Professional
Directory
Accountants
CHAS.    F.    HUNTER   8.   P.    A.   B.
Municipal and oommerclal Audita.
P a Boi 1191. Nelson. 9. c.
       (1931)
Assayers
E  W   WIDDOWSON. MUbll*b*d 1900.
900 JoMPhlM St.. Ntlaoa. J.O.
 , >1M3)
bR-Nvfiltt h oMUwoob * &
BOI 411. Kaalo, B. C. (19311
Chiropodists
Dr. Mildred Slmonds. Foot SpsdalUt
405 Fernwell, Spoksns, Msln 1901.
 (1934)
Chiropractors
R 9 Oray, D.C.. Ph.C. Ollker Block.
(1916)
C.  HULTOREN. D.C, Ph.C. Pslmsr
Oraduate. MoCulloch Blk, Ph. 9 IB.
(19361
) r. Uc___iS»: chiiwpiucto*.
AbtrdMn BIB.. Phon* 111.  (1937)
Cleaning ^uid Pressing
BPRINO COATS CLBANZD OR RE-
lined at th* Wardrobe, 417 Hsll Bt.
 (1691)
Electrical
3. T.  Ooate* — Tbs  Electrlo  store.
Supplies  and InsUllstlons
phon* 704. PO. Boi 110
(1919>
FlorisU
-NSLSON   FLOWER   SHOPPB
line cut flowen at all
tl dsalgns  Phone 339.
ior-
(1909)
_ dMlgn
j6hn»ons oUtbttioiislU. Phoni
IU
and
Cut
focal
plant*
119391
Funeral Directors
NELSON      FUNEftAL     8ERV1C
•14   Victoria  Bt.  Phons  96   Da:
and Night Ki-vioe. F. C. D*vts.
11940
Hide Dealers
DEALER IN RIDES   J. P. MOROAf
Bt, Nslson. BC. (IMl
901 Baksr
Insurance and Real Estate
ROBERTSON REALTY CO, Ll
Real MUte, Insurance, rent*
Aberdeen   block.  Bsker  St.   (I04|
FIRS COMES WHEN LEAST
pected. Insure todsy. T. D.
ling. 3 Royal Bsnk Bldg.       (IS
9 w  ciiiwaori. rmi esuu, u
sursnee,   Renula   Neit   Hlppeno
Hardware. Bsker Btreet.        H_i
C.  D.   BLAlYw60U, naurano*   ._
every ducrlptlon. Real Sst.: Ph *
 (1944
H.   S.   DILL  AUTO  AND  FIRS ■
sursnoe. Rssl EsUt*. 508 ward B
 (19*
3.    t.    ANNABLE.    REAL   E8TA*f
nntala. lnsursncs. Annabl* btol
       19*
snee. r, 9 poulln. ph. 70. titf
CHAS   p. McHARDY   INSURANCE
Real ssUte—Phon* 138.        t\m
Machinists
BENNTTTs  LIMITED
POT all claaaM o» MsUI Work.  Utti
Work. Drilling. Boring snd Ortnd—>
Motor R*wlndlng  Acetylene weldls
Phone 591
814 Vernon Street.
 \  <M
Mining Engineers
F   8   PETERS
Mining Englimr
Eiamlnstlon  operation and msnsg
ment of  mlflga snd  mlnenl
prupertwa, Rowland. B.C.
(IN
 H'b."t)'AWMH-MIUK>N
ENGINEER  AND SURVEYOR
(198
Musical Tuition
VIOLIN     AND
Mary   Heddle
THEORY     PUPa
Ph.   8IIR3.    -191
Plumbing and Hsatlng
PLUMBINO
guaranteed
Ai    HEATINO     WOI
Rslsterer.   ph.   8601
Sash Factory
rs SASH FACTORY BAB
■srcbsnl. 117 Baker stre
(IH
Second Hand Stores
3   AUTO   TENTS.   1   CAMP   TSH
14X14.  Mspl* Lsaf store, BaU I
(I'M
Watch Repairing
REASONABLE-30   TEAM'   tXfk
imm. r. aoyl*. in v*ta_k am
 TON RUNS
ILL OVER THE
ETROIT STARS
icore a  13-3 Victory
Before 250 Fans in
the Final
THEY TAKE NORTH
AMERICAN TITLE
But Goalie Get
Share in Scoring
in Last Game
By T.l.nlt.B  DULMAOE
Canadian  rreu staff writer
U/tPVC LEAF OARDCNS, Toronto.
April 11 (CP)—Moncton Hawks
apread their tired wings for ths
first tlm* ln a couple of wwska
bsr* tonlfht and won tha North
Amerlcsn amateur hookey champlonahlp with a landslide Tlctory over
Detroit white 8tars, UnlUd states
tltleholders,  13-1.
Only 950 or so spectators ut In
n th* big killing u the Allan
Cup champlona went systematically
to work to au how msny goals
they could acor* against a team
they had previously outclassed twice
on tb* form shut* but beaten only
onu on the acore card.
HAWKS TEAK IN
■tare won th* tint at tba three
■ama urlu here lut saturdsy night
by 3-1 In overtime and the Hawks
•rened the count hy winning 4-1
on Uonday sight, with tb* Utl*
at stake, tb* fleet brigade from the
Msrltlmes went Into high gear at
th* •tart tonlgbt and wers seek.
tag goal No. 14 at th* flnlah u
-earnestly u they had eought No. 1
is th* first stssaa.
■wrybody on tb* Moncton lineup
«__1K2&
.•tm*,
K
\l\
i
Her* li "Protection" in
GENUINE Scots whlsWes
... McCiUnm't, distilled.
iged-in-lhe-wood, blended
•nd BOTTLED In Scotland tnd Imported only In
t*pod and sealed K\, oi.
and 40 oi. bottle*.
lOYtodluiris
eioept ooaler Jimmy Foster took
a hand ln the scoring and everybody scored at least one* with the
exception of foster and Nuoker Irvine, lean Isft winger who got his
name ln the scoring record with
an   assist.
M OKINu   rUNCH
Duke McDonald, BlU Miller. BUl
GUI. Sammy McManus and Aubrty
Webster scored two apiece and Bert
Connolly, Dud James and Len Bur-
rage kicked In with tha others.
It waa Just the sort of high powered
aoorlng Toronto fandom had expected of the Hawks In the flrtt game.
The luckless white atari scored
ths first goal of the contest on a
neat passing play, Al David shooting the puck past poster, Then the
Hawks tan In five without delay
and led 6-1 starting the secono
period. They banged In three more
In the middle sttnsa while the American champions were getting two.
It waa Moncton's 02nd game of
the season and perhape the easiest
of' them all.
The lineups;
Detroit; Goal, McMahon; defence,
Wright, Robson; centre. Blgham;
wings. Hunt, Sullivan. Subs: Dave,
Grossman. Reed. Kirwan.
Moncton: Goal, poster; defence,
GUI, Burrage; centre, Connolly;
wings. McDonald, Irvine, subs: Webster.  McManus,  jamee.  Miller.
Officials:   M.  J.  Hodden,  Toronto
tnd Jack Thompklns, Detroit.
' Summary.
First period.
1—Detroit, David (Crossman-Reed)
4:3a.
3—Moncton, 0111. 8:31.
a—Moncton, McDonald (OonnoUy)
lf:40.
4*—,Moncton, McManus (Miller)
14:34.
b—*Moncton. Miller, 18:20.
0—Moncton, Connolly (jsmes)
18.S8.
Penalties: Robson. Reed, David,
McManus,   Irvine,   Burrage.
Second  period.
7—Detroit, Blgham  (Hunt)   3-43.
ft—Moncton, Webster. (James) 8:10.
9*-Moncton.   Miller,   10:88.
10—Moncton, Webster (Miller)
14:46.
11— Detroit, Sullivan (Hunt) lft:08.
Penatlea:   Sullivan   a,   James.
Third period.
13—Moncton, Jamea (McManus)
1:40.
13—Moncton,  Burrage  (QUI)  73a.
14—Moncton. oill iMcDonald-lr-
vine)  10:84.
lft—Moncton, McDonald,   n:46
18—Moncton.  McManus,   13 ai
Penalties: Burrage, Wright, Irvine.
START SOFTBALL
NEXT WEDNESDAY
Flay will commence ln the local
ladlee' eoftball league neit Wedneaday evening, when the Bluebirds meet
the Black Hawks. Games will be
played on Wedneaday, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays.
"Racketeers" Is the name chosen by
the Junior high school taam. The
Senior High School team will comprise many of last year's title-holders, and wlll take over the title of
"Aces" With the exception of the
Red Box the rest of the teama are
new cluba that have been organised
for this season's activities.
No arrangements have been 'made
for a playoff aerlea, but It Is expected
tbat Um two or three top teems wlll
stage 4 playoff series for the dty
championship, at the conclusion of
the regular schedule.
Ths full schedule of games Is as
follows:
April lft—Bluebirds vs Blsck Hawks
April ao— Racketeers vs Greyhounds.
April 31—Aces vs Bluebirds.
April  33—Red  Sox  vs  Racketeers.
April 30—Greyhounds vs Aoes.
April 37—Black Hawks vs Red Box.
April 3ft—Racketeers vs Aces.
April W—Red Sox vs Greyhounds
May  3—Greyhounds  vs  Bluebirds.
Msy 4—Aces ts Black Hawka.
May 5—Bluebirds va Red Sox.
Msy ft—Blsck Hawks vs Racketeers.
Msy 9—Greyhounds vs Black Hswks
May 11—Red Box vs Acea.
May 13—Bluebirds vs Racketeers.
May 18—Aoes vs Greyhounds.
Msy lft—Black Hawks va Bluebirds.
May lft—Racketeers vs Red Box.
May l»—Bluebirds vs Aces
May 30—Blsck Hawka vs Orey-
hounds.
May 33—Aces vs Racketeers
May aft—Rsd Box vs Black Hawks.
May  3»—Racksteers  vs  Bluebirds.
May 27—Greyhounds vs Red Sox.
May 80— Black Hawka vs Aoes.
June 1—Bluebirds vs Greyhounds.
June 3—Aoes vs Bed Sox.
Juns ft—Racketeers vs Black Hawks
June 8—Oreyhound* vs Racketeer*
Juns ft—Rsd Sox vs Bluebirds.
CANADA'S NET
PLAYERS WIN
Reach Quarter-Final
in the North and
South Play
PINEHUR8T. NO., April 11 (OP)—
Flashing a convincing brand of network. Walter Msrtln and Marcel Rain-
vllle of Canada's Davis cup foross,
advanced today ln tbs quarter-finals
of tiw north and south tennis tournament.
Martin, lanky speed-baller from Re-
Sna and Toronto, defeated Harvey
arris of tb* University of North
Uttle hsrded pressed by (. J. ITAOI
Carolina 6-3, 0-0. Ralnvllle. Montreal
veteran, wu a Uttle harder pressed
by E. 3. Puller, Salem, Mass., before
pulling over a t-t, IS win.
Ovcr-tennlssed from runs weeks of
competition. Lester stoefen dropped
out of singles play today, defaulting
ln the second round.
LEVINSKY SOLD
TOTHERANGERS
N»W YORK. April U (AP)—ll-sw
Tork Ranters of th* National Hockey league todsy announced tb*
purchase of Alsa Levinsky from
Toronto Mspls Lssfs.
Levinsky. formsrly Of Syracuse.
N. T.. ha* plsyed defence for ths
lsst four yesr* with tb* Lssfs. hs
Is 94 yesrs old.
Only Jewish defenoe plsyer la tbs
National lesgus. Lnlnaky learned
to play hockey In Toronto. He played for Toronto Marlboroe ln the
junior and senior sections ot the
Ontario hockey sssoclstlon before
joining the Lsafs In the fall of
1930.
CARDS BEAT
BROWNS 5-3
This advertisement is not
ublished or displayed by the
Iquor Control Board or by
ie  Government of  British
plurnbia.
Peden and Zoch
Win Bike Race
'CHUCK' GARDINER
IS TAKEN FOR
A RIDE
CHICAGO, April 11 (AP) .—
Charles (Chuck> Oardlner. goal
keeper of the world's hockey
champion Chicago Black Hawks,
was uken lor a rids today.
In a driving snow storm, Oardlner was pushed around a "loop"
block by Roger (Broadway) Jenkins, defence aos of ths Black
Hawks, In a wheelbarrow.
Jenkins was repaying a promise made two months ago when he
told Oardlner he would push
him around a block If the Hawks
won the Stanley oup.
B.C. HOOPERS
BEAT JACKS
Score Is 46-31 in the
First of 2-Game
Title Series
RAYMOND. Alt*. April 11 (CP).—
Vsncouver Province tonight defested
Raymond Union Jacks, 46*11, In the
first gams of a two-out-of-three series
ln tbe interprovinclsi senior men's
basketbsll playdowns The aw-ond
gsme wlU be played here ltldsy. the
winners of the eerie* to meet Sssk-
stchewsn.
Lineups:
Vsnoouver: Kennlngton (9), Mclntyre (11), Purees (li). MscDonell
(I), Armstrong (1), Bumatesd (3).
Smith, Chster. Helm, Wlll. Total ae.
Raymond: Klrkhsm (4). O'Brien
(11), ralrbank* (10), Rolfaon (3).
Nllsson. West 13). Nalder 13).Totsl al
TRADE TAPERS
ON TORONTO LIST
Cl_VB_l<U April 11 (Cf) —
"Torchy" Peden of Vlctorls. B C.
and Freddie Zech of SaMtasrlsnd
tonight won Clevelsnd's aecond alt-
dsy bicycle rsce sesson on a point
baala. Charlie Rltter and Bobby
Thomas hsvlng pressed them closely
snd hsld them even on taps during
th* flnsl furious bour of sprinting
SPECIAL TRAIN TO TRAIL
lor
Toronto Maple Leafs
and
Detroit Rod Wingi
EXHIBITION HOCKEY GAME
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11th
LEAVE NELSON ABOUT 5:15 P.M.
Returning after game to connect with
train 12 for the eut.
Return Railway Ware $140
WUI thoee who have rink accommodation reserved
please lift same together with rail tickets quickly.
Only few 11.50 rink tickets left. Out of town customers pleaae mail remittance to cover to
N. J. LOWES
|Canadian Pacific
WmrlO't Gnatmat Tra-ral -»tltti»
ST. LOOTS, AprU 11 (AP)—Bill
Hsllahan wu strong tn ths pinches
today and ths Cardinal* of the National Uague , defeated St. Louis
Broarns 5-3 In th* flrtt of a flee
gsrie city aertee.
Other exhibition games:
At Oklahoma City, Okie.—Chicago
(A) 0, Pittsburgh (N) IS.
At KnoKWUe. Twin —New Tort (A)
t, KnoltvlU*  (SA) 4.
At Charlotte—N*w Tork (N) S.
Clavelsnd (A) 7.
At Blrmlnghsm—Detroit (A) 11,
Birmingham  (SA)  4.
At Orlanda. fls -Buffslo (IL) S,
Montreal (a) t.
At Barnwell, SC—Toronto (IL) 7,
Albany (PL) 8.
SfflPSEVHT
CARSOFJAM
Shipment ot Jam* from th* McDonald Jsm company's factory at Nelson
have bean fairly stesdy. although, aooordlng to Mr. McDonald, hardly warranted considsrlng ths low prloe*.
During th* p«t month soms Sevan or
alght cars havs bean shipped.
Ards and Celtici
Tie Second Time
BREAST. April 11 (CP «*bl*).—
AM* snd Celtic Seconds, who tlsd la
their semi-final for ths Antrim soccer shield, were unabls to settle ths
l*au* in todar* replay, tying sgsln
1-1.
TORONTO. April 11 iCP)—Tr*d-
Ing setlvlty tapered off In th* tat*
*ftcrnoon a* Nsw York turnsd mod
srstely west, but tb* Industrial list
of the Toronto stock eichange
talned a majority or galna ovar loa*.
ee at tbe does,
Wslkers oommon finished H nigh
er at 43 S whll* Dlstlllsrs Sssgram
snd Brewers snd Distillers ssgged
slightly. Brewing Corporation pfd
registered a gain of 1% on good
volums.
Huntlet Leading
But Gome Called
LONDON. April 11 (CP cable). —
Hunslet waa leading Wakefield U-7
In a Rugby league game today when
tb* mateh wu abandoned seven mlnutee from the end on account of fading light.
Braves Buy
Marty McManus
BOSTON. April 11 (AP)—The pur-
chase of Marty McMsnus, former
msnsger of Boston Red Sot, from
Brooklyn Dodgers wt* announced
today by Boston Brave*.
ENGLISH SOCCER
Noranda Sags
60 at Toronto
TORONTO, April 11 (CP)—tnthusl
s*m on ths buying sld* appeared a
bit flat today In th* mining department or the Toronto stock exchsnge
snd prlcee drifted lower, volume
J.moiSoo shsres.
Mclntyre low 1.40, Horns 11. Hollinger SO cents. Lake Shore 99 cents.
Teck IS snd Pioneer snd Wright
Hargresves 33 oenta esrh
Recessions ot 10 to 16 oent* cams
out for SylTsBlte, Macs***, Ashley
snd Cariboo Oold Quart*.
Noranda sagged SO cent* snd Hud-
ton Bay dropped 43.
GRANBY PROFITS
$79,568
NTW TORK, AprU 11 <AP>-Oranby
Consolidated Mining cmnpany reports
net profit of $79,668 for IMS, Including o credit of 6117,667 repre-
ssntinf partial restoration of reserves
charted Safmtnst 1033 operations. This
compere* wtth net low of 61.Ma.B20 in
1993.
TIME FORSPRAYING FOR APPLE
SCAB IN KOOTENAY IS NEARING
First Spraying Likely
to Be Earlier
This Year
Apple scab Is the most Important
dlesase that growers In ths Koot-
enay and Arrow Lakes section* have
to deal with tn the control of orchard pest* and diseases, and It li
needless to esy that thts disease
has been kept ln mind when arranging for the years supply of sprsy
materials.
Recent work from tbe plant pathologist offloe at Vancouver is that
■pore* of th* dlaeas* sr* now mature. These mature spores wer*
from leaves Mnt ln from the Kootenay about three week* ago and
kept motet under laboritory conditions. Leave* wnt In from thl*
district in the last week or 10
day* did not ahow any spores near
maturity. Tbl* would indicate that
under natural orchard conditions
th* spores of the »pple scab are
not mature 'here yet, but with
favorable weather conditions they
will develop very fsst. Growth is
oomlng on fast tn all sections, and
ln many of tbe esrly sections and
locations, the uclntoah has almost
reached the "Cluster-Bud" stage, and
sufficient growth hu taken place
that with favorable weather new
infections oould Uke place, in 1833
tbe ftnt apray for scab control
along tbe West Arm section wa*
applied th* flrtt week In Uay. how.
ever, the eeaaon was late In 1936
and very early tn 1934, so indication* ar* that th* first scab spray
this year will be much earlier than
usual, and grower* would w*U be
advlaed to bav* thalr spray outfits
ln shape and apray materials on
hand, so there wlll b» *• Uttle de-
Isy a* possible wbea notice t* given
for Uie first spray to go on.
IRON  Bl l.PHATF.  M1X11 HI,
EXCELLENT
There appeared tn this paper aome
time ago an article dealing with tb*
iron sulphate mliture of sprsy for
tb* oontrol of apple scab. Tb* reault* of the teat* made with this
material in 1938 In the Kootenay
along with other spray mliture*.
were given tn detail. The Iron sulphate mixture gave excellent control
of apple aoab end In til cases a
higher percentage of cleaner fruit
thsn lime-sulphur alone or tbe
lime-sulphur -calcium sutphlde mixture. Tbe . main objection to the
Iron sulphate mliture wa* It* eott,
being about double that of the other
mstertaU. The standard strength of
th* iron *ulpb*t* mixture 1* a* follow: iron sulphite io lb*; lime-sulphur two and a half gallons, and
calcium arsenate four to five pounds
per too gallon* of water. This mix
Rye Drops Over
'  Two in Chicago
CHICAGO, April 11 (AP)— Wye
pitched downward 2% cents a bushel
today, toppled over by Washington
announcement no nntl-dumping duty
on rye would be enforced against
Poland.
Ry* closed nervous, IH to IH under yesterday's finish. Wheat ft to %
(lov n, oorn % off to % up, oat* at *%
to H decline, and provlalona unchanged to a setback of 10 cent*.
GRAIN PRICES
CLOSE HIGHER
Players Whimsical
About Their Bats
CJt-mcX*CKSOtrtTh*
oio Su/t.Gt~,eo<.mO_
CULT HIY WITH A
dutex Bctr-
BaaeftoT-,
MusrHerve t
KNOT9 W_
HIS-
WINNIPBO. April 11 1<ST)—Concentrated purrhsslng In th* closing
minutes of trsdlng hsld prioes stesdy
on the Winnipeg grtln tzchange today and quotations finished '* rent
higher to unchanged. Uay wheat
closed it 67% July it M'i and
Ootobar at 70s,  oanta.
Liverpool whest waa unchanged to
'art   higher.
Caah grsln offsrings wore restricted and only a limited business
ws*  trsnsscted.
MRS SOPWITH
IN THE RACE
Is Timekeeper for Her
Husband on the
British Boat
MAINTAIN SHADY
VENEER SHIPMENTS
Since the resumption of operations
the B.C. Veneer Worka Nelson plant
haa maintained a steady output and
thing* are now running along smoothly. Shipment*, of the finished product
to eaa ter u market* are also being
maintained on a steady baala.
POUND IS OFF
Ntw YORK. April 11 (CP).—nue-
tustions were narrow ln tb* foreign
exchange market* today. Tb* pound
opened slightly lower, then moved up
to 66,I6>4 It eased off again and
closed at |5.16** for a net loss of Ve.
The Ptench franc waa unchsnged
at 660 rent*. The Oanadlan dollar
cloeed st a premium ot S W oent
over the VA. dollsr.
Inter. Nickel It
Up Two in East
Bonds Go Up
NFW TORK. April II (AP).—The
demand for listed bonds wu broad
and active today and many tasu**
sgaln bettered thalr top prtos* for tbe
past two year* or more. Tbe average
for 60 domestic corporate loana advanced four-tenths of a point to 67,
another post-1961 peak.
Foreign obligations were a little
Irregular.
AmswORTH, April 11—The flret
baseball match to be played on the
new town playground occurred Sunday afternoon when tbe Alnaworth
team beat Riondel by a *cor* of 14-13.
R. Sherraden waa referee.
Swings, ring* and an acting bar
have been put up ln tbe achool
grounds and are proving very popular
with the children.
BI TTtK DBPKU6ID
ICORTRKAL. April 11 (OP)—Butter
prices w*rs depressed on the Montreal
produce exchange today.
Butter. No. 1 grade 21
Ontario 36V Recelpte
•ay. A
,-t-
7'i, ungrsdsd
1867 botes
LONDON. April 11 (CP etbl-v-
Soecer gsmes In th* old oountry todsy
resulted •* follows:
ENGLISH  Ll'CllT.
Tint nivlalon
Bundrslsnd 0:  Manchester City 0
Third nivi.lxn—touth-rrn
OlUlnfham I; Northampton t.
Third  Dltlslon—Northern
Wrezhsm A; Trantnsi* 1.
SCOTTISH LlArtlT.
ftrst DlTlskin
Otitic s: at Mlrren 0
MottteTW*!!  <;   Oowd*nbe»th   1
Bt. Johntton* I;  Aberdeen I.
LONDON    IIIOIIFIF.I.D    WIN*
LONDON. April 11 ICP cable) —
London Highfield defeated Leigh 31-1
In a Rughy league mateh under floodlights here tonight.
large 19. A medium
id c 18. Offering* MM
Arnrsls M bout.
Potatoes, Quabwes 11.10, HI. Mtnt.
•1 It. Nil  Mtnt tl «o.
Whett. No, I northern .7S.
Bsrlsy, No. 1 C.W. JO.
Ottt, No. I C.W. .47, No. I .44, No. 1
fttd At.
Plour. spring pstents first, B00.
Seconds 4 40, bakers 4 JO.
Brai, Mas. shorts 14 JS. middlings
mm,
Hsy. No I 16 00 (each p*r toe).
Boiled o*te JM per 00-pound bag
EXCHANGES IMOt'LAK
MONTMAL. April 11 (CTIm-Uaa-
Mtl lortiAn eschange* wtr* ttnfulsr
tod*y
Th* pound d*clln*d H to close st
M UH whlls th* frtnc oontlnuad st
IU osnts snd th* dollsr st l-ll of 1
par osnt.
Shsnghsl. China, haa 40.000 ooollee
who mats their Using pulling Jlnrlkl-
shsa.
MONTREAL. April II iCT)-
Strength sgaln m.c.e Itsslf fslt on
th* Montresl stock exchsnge. Tile
msrkst wss sgsln dull snd slmost
tur* wlU'b* tetud out at • wesksr I tot*lly devoid of feature*,
dilution thl* coming sesson. snd. | Internstlonsl Nickel rose 10 centa
If sstlsfsctory (which mult* In ; " "10 whll* Nstlonal Brewers pre-
th* eut Indicate) wlll reduce ti,j I frred firmed 3 at M.
oo*t to almost thst of the rtfulsr | 8t Lewrence Psper preferred de-
etrentth   of   lime-sulphur. dined H, points to 1714, Dominion
Reoent letters from A. Kelssll of IOo*1 P™f«red  lo*t s  at tl. sales
Nora  sootla, wbo is In charts of   "••*. Bondi IIOJOO.
insecticide    investigation    In    thtt —
provlnc*! and who wis on* of  thr   AiniWOrth   Omm
origin.tort   ot   th*   Iron   tulphate./*ln,WO"n   **-Pmn*
mistura* of wsaktr dilution na.e        Field With in Win
been ueed nry satlsftctory In recent yaara. oo tht taiumpUoo that
tha sprsy Is applisd thoroughly,
experiments! trlala sre suggtttod of
ths following formiiit. iron sulphite sli pounds, lime.sulphur ons
tnd a half gallons, calcium arstnste
three to four pounda per 100 fallow of waur. In thl* mixture at
outlined It wss suggested thst foul
pound* of Um calcium arsenste be
used on pre-blossom sprsys snd
three pounds ptr hundred gallons
on post-blossom sprsys. As a matter of ttot It waa stated that ex-
ctllent mult* had been obtained
from a formula composed of iron
sulphate four pounds, llms-sulphur
ons gsllon. calcium arsenate three
pound* per loo gallon*, but Mutated to recommend a* pat a mixture quit* a* dilute as thla as
It Is fund It mlfht not itand
up undar aom* condition**. This
wuk mlxturs gsvs spples *nywhera
from on* to three per otnt tfftcted
by tub undtr Nova Scotia conditions.
AT  WEAKCa DILUTION
Tom th* results obtained In Nov* ]
Scot!* with th* wesksr mixtures of I
th*   Iron  sulphate   sprsy   and   tba
excellent   ruult*   obtained   In   the I
Kootenay   lan   yur   with   standard I
strsnfth   of   tha   mliture.   It   would
seem advluble and Ufa to tut this
sprsy   mixture  *t  tomewhtt   weskcr j
dUuUon   this   yesr   in   th*   *pr»y
achedule*  for  tht  control  of  tpple '
tub In tht Kootenty dlitrlct. and
Um followln* schedule I* suggested
Ume-sulphur   on*   gallon   to  40  or
water   for   any   spray   be lure    the I
pink. Pink. Iron sulphate live pounda.
lime-sulphur   one   snd   a   half   to
two   gallons,  oalolum  sraenate  four
pounds psr 100 gallon* water. Calyx
lima eulphur one gallon to to gal-
lone of wster. or Um um* u the
Pink   except   uu   thn*   pounds   ol
calcium    arsenal*    Instead    of    ,„„
pounds.  Th*  first  spray after  ths
calyx   uma   u   Calyx,   th*   uoond
sprsy  sfter ths Cslyx  which  la  ua-
ually   th*  last  spray,  uu  Iron   an;
ph*te t to e pounds, llmt sulphur
on*   and   t   half   to   two   gallons
calcium   erunate   s   pound*   to   lot
gallon*   of   wtter.   whu*   grower.
b*ve bun utlng iime-*ulhpur with
food ruult* trm htvt not htd lou
of crop throuth foliage belnf burned by llmt-iulphur, it is sugg-aird *
thst   they   continue   It*  use  tt   the
recommended dilutions for sll sprays I
■O.  mCjtmW/emmmW	
All treat hitter* have the favorite
hat* and often go Into unacoountsble
slumps lf they hsppen to biesk one.
■■Shoeless** Joe Jackson, one of the
greatest hitters -who ever lived, never
could hit with tny other thin bltck.
shiny bsts, that he called "Buck
Betsys."
Babe Ruth will not uu any bat
that la not full of knots and the knots
ban to be tn particular spots on the
surlsce. Ha claims thst the knots glvt
tupcrlor driving powtr. In this respect he differ* from Chuck Klein,
th* Nation*! league slugger. Chuck
takes grest pride In th* even shiny
surfscs of his bsts and would resent
any knou marring the aurfaoa.   .
Rack Wllaon alao Uku a shiny bst
and apend* hour* rubbing It with •
combination of tohscco Juice »nd
ruin.
LONDON. April 11 (API—Mrt. T.
O. M. Sopwlth, who will aot to
timekeeper on htr husband's challenging yacht, the Knduvor, whsn
It attempts to wrest the A'nerlca'a
cup from the UnlUd States, thli
summer off Newport. R. I., 1* anticipating the thrill of her UI*.
ln every race of the series she will
sUnd clou beside Mr. sopwlth at
th* wheel, a »top-wstch grasped
ln »lther hsnd. advising him to
th* aeoond the time the Endeavor
hst msdt on esch leg of th* run,
th* tlm* of IU opponent, how thty
tUnd. it'i Important.
"I wouldn't mlu lt for mythlng
ln the world," th* told tb* Aasoclstsd Preu when lntarvlswed at
th* sopwlth'* htndsomt town rul-
denoe In Park Isns. "I always aot
ss timekeeper In our races, but thla,
of course, wlll be th* blttut of
all."
"Tou may be sure I won't wear
trousers." sh* uld. "Jutt t skirt and
bloun snd jscket. If there's a huvy
ua I have a waterproof."
Pacific Coast
Baseball
By the Associated Pres*
Lo* Angeles .. Jt   14   t
Hollywood _ —   7    11   I
McDougall, Oarland and O. Campbell; A. Campbell. Qtilnn, Hlle and
He:nh berger.
Seattle .....*     I   10   1
Oakland     6     7   %
Caater and Bottarlnl; Bremer and
iialmondl.
Portland    _ «..-.™-   0     •   *%
Sacramento _.- 10   16   1
Ragland and Cox; Salvo and Mayer.
Mlsslon-San Pranclaco nlgbt gam*.
HE CANT
KEEP A
JOB!
•Fred hat plenty of
ability... knows hitwork
from A to Z. But somehow he can't teem to
keep a job. Employers
tay he'a careleta about
hit appearance . . .
frequently comet to
work haH-ihty»n.
Why thould any man make thit mutake I The Gillette
Blue Blade is especially made to thave tender tkin without
irritation. Even two thavet a day, when ncceitary, are
entirely comfortable. Prove thit yourself. Try the Gillette
Blue Blade tomorrow.
Hltlmtt Omltty Pas/tiVaJy Outrtntrnml
Gillette Blue Blades
Now 5^25* '10'"'50*
Gardeners
Before Planting a Qarden—
Dig or work well into the  top six inches of soil
"Elephant Brand* COMPLETE 5-10-5 FERTILIZER
ot the rate of 2 or 3 ounces (heaped   tablespoons)   por
square yard. Use the lighter application if much
manure is ussd
Barn Manure it low in phoaphaU and it naeda thia high-phoaphata chemical
fertilizer to maka a balanced plant food.
For Lawns
Use: Complete 5-10-6
(Early Spring)
Ammonium Sulphate
(During Seaaon)
"Fertilized Graas
Crowd* Out Weads."
Other "Elephant Brand"
Complete Fertilizers
8-10-8
4-lOJlO
—For root crops.
6-10-10—Light soil.
4-12-4—Grain.
4-8-12—Peat Soil.
For heavier
soils, uae:
"ELEPHANT
BRAND-
AMMONIUM
PHOSPHATES
8-144
1S-20-0
The Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co. of Canada, Ltd.
Msnuftrlnrtr. of "ELMHAKT MUKIT rsrtlll..*** TBAIL.   BE1T18B   COIXMBI*
 PAOS  BIGHT
DEMOCRACY TO
SURVIVE TEST
Mrs. Jamieson Tells
Fernie Rotations
Liberty Sale
mUfH, April 11—"ft democracy
on • decline? Can lt sttnd tbt teste
of chanting condition* (bat confront
It?" Theee ware questions with whioh
lira. J. Stuart Jamleaon opened hf r
addreaa to the Rotary -lub Monday.
Mra. Jamleaon approached the answer to ber question* with another
question, "Wby was democracy auc-
reasful in the beginning?" In tbe
answer to thla question, she aald,
would be found a suggestion as to
wbat might be expected In the future.
DEMOCRACY   AND   INDUSTRY
Taking British democracy u tbe
form which gave the model to western
Europe, the speaker traced the rlae
of parliamentary democracy as linked with the rtae of Industrial prosperity. The two movements appeared
practically together, and developed
together, The tuoceaa of the movement waa due largely to tht fact that
the two great political parties, while
differing in minor matters, wtrt In
agreement In queatlon of broad
policy. There wu no conflict between
them, for lnstsnce, as to the type ol
social order tbey wished to achieve
Por many years Britain prospered snd
democracy ln England flourished because England bad a lesd over other
nations In Industry and shipped her
goods to world marketa with little
competition.
Tb* first check to British democracy, aald Ura. Jamleaon, came when
England began to feel tht pressure
of Industrial competition. To meet
competition wages had to be out
and living standards came down,
Then another political party, tht
Labor party, appeared and challenged
tbt two old parties with a demand
for a new social order. The old partita could not assent to tht demand,
but thty were willing to offer minor
concessions, tuch as old-age pensions,
health Insurance and unemployment
Insurance.
SOCIAL  SERVICE  STALE
Thus tht social service state evolved
ae a compromise. This social service
suite waa atlll existing and It worked
quite well until tht time of tht war.
Prom tbla point, lira. Jamleaon reviewed the remarkable wsy In which
Industry wu spteded up undtr wtr
preuure, so that after the war, Britain
found all the natlont of weattrn
Europe and even aome of Aala Industrialised to such an extent that ber
former markets were gone. Thla condition added power to tbe Labor
party, until It actually secured control
of tbt government.. But the Labor
party did not bring into btlng tbe
atate lt had advocated, tt claimed
that It wu not wlu to socialise the
atate too rapidly.
Then ln 1081 came a gran crisis ln
the demand that aootal aervloea bt
cut and unemployment mtt. At this
could only be accomplished through
tbe wealthy classu, tbe demand wu
made for reduced taxation. Following this crisis, tbt two old parties
united to combat tbt Incrtulug demands of Labor.
Today ln Great Britain, atated lira
Jamieson, tbtrt wu a working coalition government which presented a
united front to the Labor perty, whllt
the latter party had an extreme left
wing which was pressing strongly
for immediate social Itatlon. It this
party wtrt elected, lt would Improbably claim that lt had reoelved a mandate from the people to socialise Industry. Tbe question wu therefore,
would democracy stand for tuob a
oondltlon?
In Italy, Gtrmany. Auat.lt, Um.
Jamieson pointed out, the tarns general conditions existed, but In these
an entirely ntw idea of tbt ttatt
had appeared. Tht pretent oondl Ion
had tvolved from feudalism to Industrialisation, and wu approaching
socialisation. Fucism, however, wu
an attempt by certain parties to
maintain tht status quo, and to block
tbt trend toward socialization. The
speaker raised tbt quutlon u to
whether the ume movement wis
likely to appear In Britain u tbe
older forma broke down. She stated
that then wen mtn ln Britain today
whose considered opinion wu that
under tht ttrttt of tuch a devslop-
ment, democracy wu likely to bnak
down.
Tbe quutlon tben aroee, lf democracy wu ecllpeed would lt disappear altogether? Tht speaker though:
not. At preaent then wu political
democracy only not aocial and Industrial democracy. Democracy, u
known now, might decline. The
human spirit, however, demanded
liberty and equality, and ultimately
desired to come into a larger life, a
truer manhood, and a happier world.
I To this end true democracy mutt
strive.
SMYTHE'S
U^NEED-A  FOOT  BATH
For   sweaty,   schlni   and   tired
f*«t. oom*, callouae* snd bunion*.
phone i
Smythe's Pharmacy
GR9
J.A.C. Laughton, R.O.
OPTOMSTRIST—OPTICIAN
■alt* tuA. Medical Arts Bulldlnf
Mrs. Pittaway Is
Buried at Trail
TRAIL, B.C. April 11.—Funeral
of Rom Broom Pittaway, wife of
A. E. Plttawa* wu held yesterday
from St. Andrews church. Rev. L.
A. Morrant officiating. Interment
wu madt at Mountain View cam-
atttj.
Pallbearers wen O. H. Nslson.
David Longmulr. T. L. Bloomer of
Cutlegtr, Alderman J. R. Anderson,
W. E. B. Monypenny and Thomu
Jrnklns.
Masses of beautiful floral trl
butea were rtoelved.
Mrs. Pittaway, who wu born ln
tjlackheath, Greenwich. Kent. 6S
yttn ago, bed resided ln Canada
ovtr a quarter of a century—st
Calgary, Castlegar and Trail, coming hen In 1938. She died alter an
lllneas of two  montha  duration.
fi
Let's All Go
__ GYRO HOEDOWN
• Eagle Hall, Friday, April 13th
f The Fun Starts at 9 o'clock
J Dancing—Housie Housie
f etc., etc
%       G«t oot yonr ginghams and overalls .   .   .
0 You're fined if you wear a tux.
• Be There - Admission 50*
!
MORE ABOUT
POWaL RIVER
had tlaln McParlant by atriklng him
with an are, following a feud arising
out of dattructlon of Millen'e dog by
pollot afttr the animal had bitten the
McParlane  boy.
Mlllen appeared at the Inquest today, alternately staring vacantly about
whllt IS witnetset testified, and grinning when clothing of tht slain boy
and a hammer-headed hatchet, tht
alleged death weapon, wen shown.
HEARING FRIDAY
Formally charged wltb tht murder
Uonday whtn he appeared before
Magistrate W. U Parkin tn Juvenile
oourt, Mlllen will oome up for preliminary hearing here Friday. No decision hu been announced u to what
court he wtu appear ln. He It btlng
held under guard ln the provincial
pollot building hen.
MTST HAVS CONSENT
VICTORIA, April 11 (CP).—Under
the terms of tht sterilisation bill
paaaed ln 1033 by tht British Columbia leglalature, no peraon may be
compelled to undergo an operation
without his or her consent, and ln tht
cast of minors or feeble-minded persona tht consent of tbt parent or
guardian mutt tint be obtained.
Before an operation It performed
approval mutt be secured from a
board consisting of Mn. Justice H. B.
Robertson, of the British Columbia
supreme oourt; Dr. J. Q. MacKay,
psychiatrist of New Wutmtnsttr, and
Mlas Laura Holland. CB1, in charge
ot children's protective work lor the
government.
Several sterilization operations han
bun performed on feeble-minded ln-
matu of mental Institutions ln British Columbia alnoe the a:t went into
lotos.
HUME BALL TEAM
TOPLAYHARROP
The Hume No. 1 toftbtll tttm
playa lta flnt gamt of tht waton
away from bomt on Sunday, whtn
tbt players journey to Longbeach
to meet Harrop playen. The Hume
team hu practically the pick ot
lut year's playen and Harrop will
no doubt, have a hard tlmt beating them.
BATLEY BROS.
take pleasure  In announcing
the opening of the
Gas
*r
B
E
Tires
4
OU
A
Batteries
Greasing
C
Polishing
Washing
0
Accessorie
N
SERVICE STATION
ttllXY   KKMODKi.l.KD   ON   UP-TO-THE-
MINUTE LINES WITH ALL MODERN
EQUIPMENT.
Open Day
and Night
We Respectfully Solicit Your  Patronage
Prompt.,
Courteous Service
Gordon
Batley
Corner   Baker
and  Hall
Streets
Leonard
Batley
B.C. Will Hove a
Delegate at Alberta
Relief Meetings
VICTOIUA. AprU 11 (CPt—Rellel
Admlnletrator 9. W. ortKlth will
represent BrltUh Columbia at a
eonfu-sDo* of Isbor dspsrtmsnt officials snd r*U*f administrator* of
ths four western Canadian provinces
In idmonton ajarll 18 to discus*
mutual problems srlslog out of re*
llsf tssstlon.
Ths prslrle pro-tines* has* belt
similar meeting* at Intervals but
this I* ths first occasion British
Columba haa been invited to atten
 THC KELSON DAILT NIWS, NIUON, B.C.—TrTCMDAY MORNING. UH It, IIM
RIOTER KILLED
HSNIN. Lletard, rrancs. AprU ll
(API—Political bitterness smouldering slnoe th* dteordsrs of Fab.
9 fl*red Into a riot tonight In
whleh a miner ws* tilled and 14
wer* Injund.
Twenty shot* wer* fired wlwn
worker* Jammed their way into t
hsll where Leon Deudet. Royalist
leader, was scheduled to speak.
CONDEMNED NEGRO
AWAITS DECISION
OFPMVYCOUNCIL
Counsel  Declares  Bennudan
Found Guilty by Discharged Jury
Too Late to Classify
LOST-LADY'S  BBLT WTTH FANCT
*t*el buckl*. Flndsr pleas* ph. 389.
(3078)
NEWS OF THE DAY
Private sals of household furniture.  308  Terrace  ApU. iJO-tO)
Nelaon women's Institute Tsi Day.
April Uth. in aid of special Wei-
tars Fund. *-9iH
EVEBYTHIM1 ON SALS AT WATSON'S SPRING SHOE SALE. REAL
BARGAINS. (JM?)
Mrs.   Su*rt   Jsmleson   speaks   In
St.  Paul's  hsll  FTldsy, (  pjn.  Admission  tnt. (9014)
Regular monthly meeting, Nelaon
Board Of Trsde. Hums Hotel, Sllvet
Room,   13   o'clock   today. B088)
DANCI
Sat.    night,    B-13,    Melody   inkers
EAGLE HALL
(1403)
HAMILTON. Bsnnud* (CP)—Sentenced to b* hanged for th* murder
of hU wife'* two children.*of whom
ha declared he wa* not the father.
Warren Duane Smith lie* In prUon
bar* whll* an appeal launched on
the oontentlon he was convicted by
a dUcharged Jury awalU consideration of tbe privy oouncll.
Th* young children, a boy and a
girl, wer* drowned lsst fall tn a
water tank used by animals. Facing
the first murder charge heard ln
Bermuda since 1031. th* nonchalant
negro stoutly plesded lnnooence. although he admitted he had often
threatened to drown the children
whsn they became noisy.
TtM "harmless- thrsst ss hs quoted
lt, waa "Oct a bag and put her In
lt and take her and throw ber overboard."
At conclusion of the evidence, th*
Jury sst aU night without reaching
an agreement. The deadlock wu reported to Chief Justice Sir Sidney O.
Rowan-Hamilton, who addnMsed th*
Jurymen:
"Oentlemen: I am obliged to you.
I am sorry you bav* not agr**d on
your verdict but you wlll be dUcharged now and you will bo *I-
empt-ed from tervice on a Jury for
the next two years."
nan th* foremsn, H. H. Frith,
roes s* If to spssk.
"Do you wish to tar anything?'
aaked the chief Justice.
"I cannot very well now, sir." Mr.
Frith replied.
The foramen walked over to tb*
bench and conferred with the chut
juatloe, who then eald:
**Oentlsm*n of the Vry: All
witnesses that could havs b**n called
by th* proaccuttcn heve been called
by th* prosecution. If thsn ara any
wltneasea you wlah to hear for th*
defence you must corns to your own
conclusion* aa to why tbey were not
oalled. Having add that, u lt poulbl* for you to com* to a verdict, because If you think It Is Impossible 1
shall duoharg* you. 11 you think
that vou can oom* to a verdict realising that all tha wltneuu that
could be called by the prosecution
hav* been called by tbe attorney
general, you must draw your own
conclusions aa to the defence."
lAttorney-Cleneml T. M. Dill pr»*
vlously had Informed the eourt he
oould not bring ths accused's wife
to the stand becauu ah* could bt
called only  by th* defence.)
Mr. Frith—Oan you let us retire
for 18 mlnutw to discus* thst mr'
Chlsf Justice—Oertslnly.
Tb* Jury retired again, returning
half' an hour later wtth tbe verdict
of "guilty."
Bayard DU1. counsel for Smith-
May It lAau your honor. I rsapect-
lully submit that this court hu no
powar to receive any verdict from a
discharged jury. The jury hu bun
du:harg*d. *lr."
ChUf Juatlce— No. they were not
discharged. I wu going to dlsoharge
Uwm and then suddenly I uw the
foreman rlu. and 1 withdrew It.
Counsel tor the defenc* requested
that aentence be suspended pending
sn appeal In forma psuperls. but
th* chUf Justice declsred: "You can
appeal ln forma peuperta but aas*
unea must b* passed."
MISS MYERS ~
DOING WELL
Mlu Marjorle Myers, who wu op
erated on recently for sppendldus,
U   reported   doing   well.
MORE ABOUT
PATTULLO
would bs In a position to Invoke
powera ot dlullowance provided In
the British North America act."
CA!    DISALLOW ACT
"The final decision on the validity
ot any legislation rests ot oouru
with the htghsst tribunal of tbe
courts, the privy council. Up to th*t
point, It Is usually on* man a opUttou
Safest the other and we are firmly
tb* opinion now that the special
powers act U Intra vine of the provlnu.
"Thera hu been a suggestion tbat
becauu ordinances under th* act
would sot b* eubjsct to dlullowance
such u are the ordinary legislative
meuuraa passed by the provincial
leglslsturs that th* Dominion government bu disallowance powen for
two yean after a meuure U passed
and. since the SPA Is In effect for
one year only, It la quite within the
power of the federal government to
dlullow the act at any tlm* during
thU period lt It believed anything
done pursuant to tho legtsUtlon wen
contrary to the general welfare, or
tor any other reason."
HAWKS FLIES ON
MERCY ERRAND
Seeks Three Missing U.  S.
Aviators  Believed  Off
Chinese Coast
BASEDAl.L meeting at city hall
tonight, 7.30 p.m., for aU Interest****
la IntermedUte, Junior and jnvenlle
Ball. (1871)
EXTRA   SPECIAL
Bu the excellent display of horns
cooking  for  uU  at  St.  Paul's  Bs-
saar Tueeday, April lTtb. (3088)
Y*u can bay • nice apron, a
good cnp of tea and something to
take heme for UIS supper tomorrow, <rrlday) at Presbyterian cburch
parlors. I'm
TECHNOCRAC Y—Wlll Everett,
member Continental committee ana
(■'durational Director for Washington.
speaker at Canadian Legion, April
17, g p.m. (MM)
Th* City Power and Light ssr-
vlc* wUI be cut oft between tbe
houn of 4 am. and 8 am. on ths
following dsys, nimely: 13th to
18th  April  lnclualv*. (3048)
TONIOHT — TONIOHT
P. Y. P. A. mlllUry whut and
dancs, Falrvuw Pariah hall at 8
pm. Oood music, prlau snd re-
treahmenu.  Admission 35c.      (3071)
CANADIAN LEGION REGULAR
MONTHLY MEETING POSTPONED
TILL FRIDAY, APRIL 13 AT 8 P. M.
IMPORTANT CONVENTION REPORT
AND    REGIXAR    BUSINESS.    (1041)
Ernie's Markst opsn todsy for
buslneu, SUnley etnet, nett to
B. C. Plumbing Store, pull line ol
Meats. FUh and Poultry. Home-
cooking st lowut prtou. Phons 178.
I solicit your patronage—Ernest
Carter. (30*4)
Violin and pianoforte puplU ot
Mrs. Oladya Webb Foeter, L. R. A. M .
In recital sundsy afternoon, April
Uth, Capitol thestre at 380. Aa-
auted by Mln Ruth oraufurd and
the Nelaon suing quintette, invl-
ution ttcksU can be obtained from
puplU and the Nelson Flower shoppe.
(3070)
FUNERAL NOTICE
Chow—Chow Low of Nelson, B.C..
sged 71 yean, passed swsy Tuesday,
April nth. Body wm nst st the
Nelson Funersl Service parlon until
Thundsy st 3 p.m.. thsnoe to ths
Nelson Cemetery for burl.,1.      #,3007)
Vancouvtr Is
Seeking Aid in
School Finance
SHANGHAI, April 13 (Thursday)
(AP)--Prank Hawka, th* American
spud pUot, took oft at 10:58 am
today (1:65 p.m., wedneaday E.8.T.)
for Hangebow Bay to uarch {or
thru American fllen believed marooned ln fogbound waters otf ths
China oowt.
Jamu Finch ot Miami, Pla., and
Robert Ou ot LouUvlUe, Ky., haw
been unreported athu they hopped
off on the Shanghai-Canton mall
route  Tuesdsy   morning.
With tbem wu Ivan Carlson of
Donns, Texu, communications superintendent of tha Shanghai-Canton air line, on an Inspection trip,
and a Jspancu bualneu man as
paaungsr.
Rescued at Sm
LUNENBURG, N. S„ AprU lt (OP)
—Rescued from death attar drifting
thru day* at sea In an open dory.
Manuel Joseph, 31-year-old sssmsn
on the Gloucester fuhtng schoonel
Imperator, wu brought Into port* today aboard tha Lunenburg vessel
Delswana 11.
BUDDHIST ABBOT
ENTERS CANADA
But Must Leave by May the
Fifth;   Marches   His
Troop to. Hotel
MORE ABOUT
BENNETT
kind by delegating—It U so longer
delegation—by substituting for the
uumbly ltuif?" he aaked.
"When any UglsUturo confers theu
powen upon an executive thst desire* to take them, tbe federal suthl-
tUs should plsce themselves ln a position whsn they csn mut any difficulty that night aria*.'-
SET CONSTITUTION
AT NAUGHT
He hoped, uld Mr. Bennett, that
none of the provlncu would sttempt
to exercise power ln such a way u
"to Mt at naught the whole system
of th* constitution. But on* never
knows whst might bsppen tn view of
tb* statements that han been made,
especially by the attorney-general of
the provlnu. when Inviting tbe federal government to dluUow the sts-
tute." He had. uld Mr. Bennett, a
particular cau ln mind "that I shall
not mention."
The prim* minuter added: "I must
be able to protect the functions ot
this federal parliament from usurpation."
Th* necessity for the "peace, order
snd good government clsuse" wu
emphsslted by tbe B.C. situation, be
Insisted.
Further on Mr. Bennett uld: "I
han not suggeeted that legally the
executive hu greater powers thsn it
hu u a Ugislsture. In my poor Judgment, and for what It may bs worth,
a statute which confsrs thsu powers
U Illegal, and the exercise of pt—era
under an Illegal statute might anil be
Illegal. I must be sbU to protect the
functions of thU federal parliament
trom usurpation."
ALUMINIUM MIX
SPRAY M APPLES
But Care Must Be Taken In
Handling Thia NA
Farorlte
VANCOUVER. AprU 11 (CF)—Mvs-
tery figure of international affair*
for two decades, tbo Buddhist Abbot
Chao Kunk today foliowad tb* dlc-
UUi ot hta "guiding wish" and led
bla 10 dlaclplea, alx mini and four
monks, j afoot through Vancouver
street* to their quarters ln a downtown hotel.
Detained aboard the Canadian Pacific liner Emprpss of Russia alnoe lt
arrived here from the orient Monday
nlgbt, the abbot, formerly tbe no-
torlous Thebltch Unooln, was granted transit privilege* through Canada
today by Immigration authorities at
Ottawa with the sole proviso ht leave
th* country by May 8.
Twenty-Six Babies
* Examined at Clinic
Twenty-six bsbles, ons ot ths
largut number to dete. wen summed by Dr. J. H. Bennett st the
Women's Institute clinic held at
Kootenay Lak* Oentral hoapltal
Wsdusday.
Dr. Bennett wu auuted by Mrs
8. N. Msy, Mr. T. W. Binder snd
Mrs. K. Jack-nan of tb* Institute
snd MU* Kyan ot th* hoaplWl
staff.
Rtv. Mr. Dories to
Run Own Church
VANCOOVm, APTll 11 (CP)—A
conferenoe will be beld ln Victoria
on Friday morning betwun the
pattullo cabinet and npreuntatlves
of th* vanoouver city oouncll and
school board to dlseuu th* latter
bodies* requut for additional government aulatsnce toward 1834
school coata ln Vsncouver.
•tut board U MJ1.000 ihort ot
meeting lu budget; but it ts ststed
that It could avoid projected cloelng of achool ln December with a
grant of about (350.000. City repre-
nntitln* to Victoria wlll be Alderman O. O. Mlllsr. W. W. Bmlth and
W. J. Twlu. Thru trusteu an
lo bo appointed to the deUgatlon.
Forest Revenue
Off in Province
VICTORIA. April 11 I CP)—British
Columbia forest revenue fell off •324,-
000 lut year, according to a sutement
luued by Mon. A. w. Oray. Total,
revenue under this hssd wu •8.000.-
AM. Operating CUU of ths forest
branch were also leu. by »1*_,M0.
LETHBRIDGE  WELCOMES
THE VICE-REGAL PARTY
I_THBRTDOI. Alts. April 11 (CP)
—An enthuslutlo and hospitable
weloome wu extended tonight to
the governor-general end Lady Beu-
borough who ars homewsrd bound
sfter a tour that took them u
far u the Pacific cout.
15   MINL'TK   STRIKE*
HAMPER COMMI NHATION
PARIS. April ll (CP via Ravssl—
Telephone, Ulsgnph snd postal aer-
vlou continued to suffsr today u
employees stayed Intermittent 15-
mlnute  strikes.
VICTORIA. ADrll 11 (CPl-e-Re*.
Dr. clem Davles who, for ten years.
occupied the poet of putor of tbe
Vlctorls ctty temple. U to embark on s nsw ventun and will
conduct wukly services In one of
the locsl theatres, sccordlng to a
ststement given out by blm.
On April 1 Dr. Davles resigned his
putorsu In ths city temple, but
that the Institution will bs continued as an Independent church. In
his sutement Dr. Davlu uys bs
wlll attempt "to conduct a church
untrammelled by organlutlon which
shall function u a leader of thought
and forward action  ln Victoria."
No Scheme Laid
For a Transatlantic
Service  Via  Air
LONDON. April 11 (CP via Havul—
No concrete echeme for a transatlan-
tic air wrvlce to and from Canada
hu yst bun put forth, Blr Philip
Bassoon. under-s*cretary for air, declared todsy In ths houu of commons when questioned u regards toe
development of Kmplrs aviation.
Russia Tripled
Htr Whtat Acrss
MOSCOW. April 11 (CP via Hava*)
--Russia hss practically tripled her
wheat acreage undtr cultivation
this ve-r, figure* published today
reveal. This ywr 26.000.0O0 acres
hav* b«n seeded; laat yaar at thlt
tlm* 9.400.000.000 ««r* seeded.
BISHOP HONORED
VANCOUVER, April 11 tpP)— Bishop Murray of Victoria hid betn honored today it a farewell luncheon
tendered him by tbt Catholic clergy
of th* archdiocese of Vancouver
Hla eioellency Archbishop W. ll
Duka presided and very r*v. 'j, b
McDonald   acted   as   toastmsster.
Silverton Notes
SILVXRTON,   April   11—Mlaa   Mar-
Jorl* Oorrlnge returned Sunday from
Vancouver, where aha sptnt th* Baster
vacation with relatives.
John Morris wbo haa betn tht gutet
of Mr. and Mre, O. Ironside for ths
past weak, haa returned to hla horns
in Nelson.
J. Oray o' Carroll Landing v aa the
gueat of lira  A. Harding Saturday.
Dr O. Stibbs of Nakusp waa a
week-end visitor.
Bert Marshall was a vUltor to Na-
kusp Saturday.
Tha Misses B. and V. Oechalero and
K. Thompeon of New Dtnver, www
visitors her* Sunday.
Mlas Hani Marahall wae a visitor to
New Denver Sunday.
With regard to th* aluminium mil
or aluminium sulphate lime-sulphur
apray for apple trees, p. A. Herman,
Dominion division of chemistry, Ottawa, says that ln the preparation of
this spray ears muat bt uken not to
breathe the obnoxious gaa generated
When aluminium aulphatt and lime-
sulphur art mlied. % poisonous gas-
hydrogen sulphide — la formed. "To
some of us." be aaya, "who breathe
more or leas of this gas day after dsy.
a great quantity may bt required to
prove toxic. But to aome of you who
are not In the habit of sampling this
gaa, a amall quantity may prove fstal.
t would strongly advise thst before
any grower may prepare this spray
mixture he first get complete
advlee from the looal Dominion or
provincial entomologist. Tber* art
aomt orchsrdlsts In Nova Sootla who
would ut* no other apray, but the
uat of thla apray la gradually' btlng
superseded by tht Iron sulphate lime
sulphur spray from which no poisonous gas la tvolved on mixing tht Ingredients."
The lime-sulphur Iron sulphate mix
la a apray that has baen developed In
Nova Scotia to reduce leaf Injury and
tnt physiological effect* which may
reault from the use of straight lime-
sulphur. Tha apray whan first mixed
snd sprayed on tba foliage Is blsck.
dut to the formstlon of ferrous sulphide. Is mesn to hsndle. snd forms In
globules on tht leaf and fruit. After
a short time the spray reauu* turns
red dut to tbt oxidation of tht ferrous
Iron to th* red ferric state. This red
color may lesd growers to think thst
their orchard ts ruined, but the reveres is true, tba orchard Is really
benefitted to a great degree. The use
of a spreader will enhance tht coverage of the applied spray. This spray.
aa usually prepared, contains ten
pounda of ferrous sulphide wltb two
snd one half of atandard lime-sulphur
to a 100 gallon Unk. With this sprsy
tbe content of calcium arsenate msy
be Increased greatly without causing
any arsenical Injury to tb* foliage.
HOW TO MAKE ALUMINUM MIX
Tht ajumlnlum mix sprsy baa bten
uaed on wst foliage of tfpple trees and
on hot humid dayt without causing
any appreciable Injury, day* when
Bordeaux or itme-aulpbur. If applied,
would have resulted In sever* Injury
to foliage and fruit. Directions for
making the mix art as follows. On
commencing to fill Uit tank with
wattr, dlasolv* In tbe Unk with th*
aglUtor runulng 0 pounds of aluminium sulphaU to evry 106 galllons of
water to ba used. Then sdd 3 V*. gallons of concentrated lime-sulphur.
Follow thu with IH pound* of cal-
clum srsensts to each 100 gallons
used In spraying before full bloom
In tb* calyx snd later applications
us* tb* same proportions of aluminium sulphate and lime-sulphur but
cut down on the calcium srsenste to
2 pounds on tbe calyx apray and 1*4
pounds to tb* 100 gallons of lattr
aprtys.
"If any of you bav* never tried
thl* material and are dissatisfied
with your preaent spray results on
Mcintosh," says J. P. Hockey, plant
pathologist. Dominion laboratory.
Keatvtlle, ln tbe annual report of the
Pomologlcal and Prult Growing eoclety of Quebec. "I would auggest a
I trial on a amall area of your orchard.
Tbt uaa or ont tank fill on an arte at
each application ahould glv* you a
fair Idea of It* effect under your own
conditions. But If you do tut H,
please follow the dlrectlona of mixing lt very carefully and ua* th*
quantities of materials called for.
Some who hav* not followed th* dlr-
•ectiona bave encouteied trouble.
Above all, keep your note out of the
tank. Unless you do, lt may b* 1m-
poaslbl* for you to determine th*
results of your own spraying. Tbs gas
hu a very repellent odor snd la poisonous It heavily Inbaltd."
HOLE-
PROOF
HOSIERY
50'   75'
$1.00
All sizes—10 to 13..
Mail Orders
Prepaid
at 50c
We show a full Una of
new patterns In all
wool and also in silk
and lisle.
at 75c
We have the all-wool
and silk in both the ordinary length and tht
Auto-Gart.
at $1.00
You have the choice of
light and medium weight
in wool and the pure
silk in both Auto-Gart
and regular.
EMORY'S
Limited
Actor, Painter and
an Artist Pass
LONDON, AprU 11 (CP Cable) »-
Coincidental with tht death today
of Sir Otrald Du Maurier, famoua
Brltlab actor-manager, were tbe
deatha of Hon. John Collier, wall-
known painter, and Oeorge Spenoer
Wataon, another distinguished artist.
A coupl* of cloa* frlanda of Collier reoently painted Du Maurler'a
portrait and presented lt to the
Hampstead   library.
Charge Canadian
Cutlen Must Appear for His
Hearing in Chicago; lt
Concerns  Griin
Ry RTEFHEN *l. MCDONOUGH
(Associated Preea -Staff Writer)
WASHINGTON,    April    11    <AP).—
Arthur w. Cutttn, a nstive of
Ouelph, Ont.. waa charged today
by Henry Wallace, United SUtes
eecretary of agriculture, with failure
to file reporte of short salea and
making false reports to tbe gram
futures administration to manipulate grain pricet.
Tba secretary cited tht Chicago
grain trader to appear May 5 for
a bearing at Chicago. Setb Thomaa,
solicitor for the department of agri
culture, tald if toe charges ware
susUined an order would ba issued
directing all contract msrkeU to
refuse trading privileges to CutUn
Tbe clUtion aald Cutten "ton-
spited snd colluded" with firms and
persons on the Chlcego board of
trada "to conceal bl* trading and
poaltlbn la tha market" and to ao
mak* Inaccurate. Incorrect and faJee
rtport* of bis position hi th* market."
WEATHER WARM,
BRIGHT NELSON
Wedneaday was another warm,
clear day, although bordering on
froat during tbt tarlltr hours wben
tbt temperature dropped to S3
degrees. Th* high for th* day was
87  *-
Second Giant
Liner Planned
LONDON. April 11 (CP via Hava*)—
Vision* of a aeoond giant cunarder
wart vlaloned today by Blr Percy
Bete*, praaldent of the Cunard Steam
ahlp company at tha annual masting
hsld In Liverpool.
Blr Percy, In discussing the preaent
giant liner 634 undar construction,
declared the directors were anxious to
see a aecond liner started.
C.N.R. Lins It
Blocked by Rock
VANCOUVER. AprU 11 (CP).
Blocked by a rock slid* 14 mllaa north
of McBrldt. BC. tbt Jssptr-PrlBoe
Rupert line of the Canadian National
Railways was expected to ba cleared
tomorrow, company officials said here
tonight
Two trains, ont on each side of th*
allde, bad been htld up, officials said,
but no delay had been occasioned
Daasengers who were transferred from
one aid* of th* slide to th* other,
and tba train* reversed.
BELGIUM'S QUEEN
BACK TO NURSING
Left Bat Uttle Money by
King Albert But Is
Voted Annuity
BRCSSHA, April 11 (AP).—B«l-
glum'i Dawaro Queen Elisabeth
will play once again har rol* of
"queen of charities" and qu**n-
nurs* as aba tries to forget her
husband's tragi* death.
She wa* back today from Luxem-
burg, where she recovered her health
and spirit at th* orsnd Purhss*
Charlotte's Colour castle, and h*.
gan preparations for the birth, expected In Mar. of a third ohlld
to King Leopold nn and Quean
Astrld.
Th* Ut* King Albert Mtt «lla-
sbeth but llttl* money, her private
Income being **ttmat*d at abwj»
•M00, but th* Belgian parliament
hu voted her an annuity 10 tlmt*
ss gnat.
These sums, ths Belgians belle-re',
wlll allow har to devote the reec
of her life to comforting the *lck
•nd th* poor for. knowing bur u
thty do, It It ln ths** pursuit*
they believe th* wtll be moat eatls-
lled. •
Bhe hu lost something of tha
cheery smlls sh* had whan ahe appeared In public hut she -will re-
capturs It, her former wbject* ara
certain, when eh* again become*
engrossed In the work she hu favored slnos girlhood.
'  Silverton  Note*
savEBTOK. April 11—Th* Women'* Institute b*ld an enjoyable
bridge Saturday evening when prises
were swsrded to Mrs. A. Walton, J.
Mdnnas and Mn. 9 rurhunt. Al
th* ooneluslon, nfrssbaaents wan
•erved by the battwat* of th* evening,
Mra. w. Msrahall and Mn. R. Whltt.
N. Tettrle Jr., of Bandon, I* suiting
st ths horn* of Mn. 9. Stanton.
Prank MIU* wu a vlaltor to iba
Queen mine Monday.
Mn. A. Melntyn U spending a ftw
daya In Spokane.
SERVICE
LUMBER
A service here for thi
balkier or rebailder thai
strikes a new note of popo<
lar acclaim. For its apeed]
promptness you've newel
before enjoyed—efficient)
that removes erery con,
strnctlon difficulty.
W. W. POWELL
CO., LTD.
The Home of Good Lumbei
Phone 176
Foot of Stanley Street
-iiliniiitlMir l liiitiii iiintlitai itailtlliililllliiil li ill tl l ll 1111111M l ll III III Igg
f        JOE HOLLAND
is stringing
TENNIS RACQUETS
at WADE'S SHOE STORE
Genaine English Split Sheep Gat
S3.95      14.95—REAL VALUES!
| Tel. No. 387L1 P.O. Box Sll
riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiin
rowias or ksabch and
kf.ixi.be
LONDON. April 11 (OP Cable).—
Addition*! powsrs of search and
seizure srs oonferrad upon th* polio* In th* government's "Incitement
to dlssstlectlon" bill Issued today.
The object of th* meuure, appll*
cabls also to Sootland and northern
Inland, "Is to mske provlalon for
tbo pnv-sntlon and punUhment of
any endeavor to Mduoe th* memben of his maleatyle forces fnm
their duty or allegiance," the till
says*
STARTING
TOMORROW
Q_V__\\_Qi
TOO BIG FOR THE WORLI
trMi*,
»Mi DOLORES DEL RIO
Cftt tAYMONO-mO AflA_«
100   brtolhl.it   b.outi.i
h
So They Staged N
In the
Clouds!
ft mo
i
"The Conquering Sex"
LAST
iXlv! a« MYBNA I.OY       WAITER HISTON
TODAY        jack DEMPSIY    PS1MO (AR.SEBA    MAX BAB*
-__,	
	
