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VOLUME 38
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—Pa&e Seven
NUMBER 1
,.    1ITI8H COLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 10, 1937
St. Joseph's Students Prepare for Coronation Event
Here are some of the students of St. J oseph's academy marching to the civic centre
for rehearsal of their parts in the coronation program to be staged on Wednesday next. Over
1000 children will take part in tiie afternoon events.
Khaki'Clad Canadian Soldiers
Mount Quard atRoyal Palaces
Fire Thwarted
by Worker in
TDominion's Troops Centre of  Interest
Coronation Fervor Grips England;
Crowds Block Sentry Boxes
Rink al Trail
TRAIL, B.C, May B-Fire, that
dreaded menace to all wooden structures, today was thwarted when it
touched the Trail rink building. Had
it not been that someone was in the
rink making preparation for the
Coronation service, it might have
seized a firm grip on the structure.
But it didn't and this city will
still have a place to hold its 1937
boxla fixtures.
About 12 o'clock noon, Jock Car-
ruthors was in the building arranging chairs for the service when he
noticed a small fire at the.base of
the wall on the street side and about
the middle of the building, He extinguished it with the. water tpriok-
lerwWTMWj^feasof sweeping.
It is bettered that algaret butt or
lighted match had carelessly been
discarded by some pedestrian and
fallen down acrack between the
sidewalk and the rink wall.
WINDSOR TALKS
WITH MONARCH
MOlWS, France, May 9 (AP)-It
was hairdressing day today at the
Chateau de Cande.
Mrs. Wallis Simpson's hairdresser
spent the morning dressing her hair
and giving trims to the Duke of
Windsor and Herman L. Rogers.
Besides getting a haircut, the
Duke spent his first Sunday morning at the chateau playing golf and
receiving two unidentified friends
who arrived by air from England.
With the coronation but three
days away, the Duke last night had
lengthy telephone conversations
with his brother, King George VI,
and their mother, Queen Mary. It
was not disclosed what was discussed.
ROY POLLARD GETS
FIRST HOLE IN ONE
ON NELSON COURSE
Roy Pollard, club captain, bagged the first "hole In one" of the
season at the Nelson Golf and
Country club links Saturday afternoon, choosing the short 119 yard
eighth hole on which to perform
the feat.
At the time he was In a foursome playing with Don Clark,
Gordon Roynon, and Blan Mar-
ley, Marley being the one to
find Roy Poller's "lost ball" In
the cup.
DAVIS CUP RESULTS
Munich—Germany beat Austria,
1-2. (Two defaulted by Germany).
Bologna—Italy beat Monaco, 3-0.
Paris—France beat Norway, 3-0.
(Germany, Italy and France advance to third round.)
By PAT U88HER
(Canadian Press Staff Writer)
LONDON, May 9 (CP cable).—Heedless of a day-long dripping
cold rain, tremendous crowds poured Into the coronation area of
London today to watch tha final rehearsal of Wednesday's coronation
procession.
It was a graphic foretaste of the throngs anticipated Wednesday.
From all the Empire and half tha world they came to see the procession route and Its colorful decorations at well as London's famous
sights.
Some 100,000 sat in the stands to watch the rehearsal of the carriage
procession from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Abbey.   Police
estimated 500,000 altogether watched^,
the rehearsal, thousands staying up
all night to make sure of vantage
points.
MANY CANADIANS
The entire West End and every
inch of the coronation route was
jammed with Canadians and other
visitors mingling with Londoners in
a good natured crowd. They milled
Overcast skies and the chill rain
were,disregarded. Most of the crowd
came on foot but many were in automobiles, jamming the streets and
snarling traffic. The absence ot London's big red buses did nothing to
relieve the congestion.
For the hundreds of Canadian
visitors there was a special thrill
in Joining the crowds who watched
Canadian troops mounting guard
outside  Buckingham Palace and
St. James's Palace, It was the first
time In history Dominion soldiers
carried out such a duty. Canadians were on duty from noon to
6 p.m. Tomorrow Australians will
mount guard followed  by  New
Zealand   soldiers   Tuesday   and
South Africans Thursday.
CENTRE OFINTERE8T
Khaki-clad, in sharp contrast to
the Guards from whom they took
over, and who wore long grey greatcoats with bearskins, the Canadians
were the centre ot interest.
Ian Mackenzie, Canadian' defence
minister, sat in an automobile watching the ceremony. Lieut-Col. G. P.
Vanier, accompanied by Mrs. Va-
nier, represented Canada House. An
interested spectator was Lady Margaret Boscawen, sister of the late
Lord Byng, former governor-general
of Canada. She confessed that as
children she and her soldier brother
made watching changing of the
guard their favorite pastime.
Hundreds of people hemmed In
the sentry boxes, staring at the
unusual  sight of the  khakl-clad
figures   with   the   brass   letters
"Canada" on the shoulders of their
great-coati.
Marching to and fro outside the
gates of Buckingham Palace the
soldiers had a difficult time In
maintaining the required straight
line amidst a forest of umbrellas
and a maze of Jostling, curious
people.
London enjoyed its gayest Saturday night since the 1939 jubilee
celebrations with night clubs packed
and dances everywhere.
The vicinity of Piccadilly Circus
was crowded from midnight on,
many occupying the stands for a
long wait to see the rehearsal. They
huddled   under   newspapers   and
Germany May Ban British Papers
Following Italy's Similar Action
ROME, May 9 (AP)-Fascist
Italy, angered by newspaper comment on the prowess of Italian
fighters in Spain, was virtually
without jress relations with Great
Britain today,
An official order banned from Italy and its possessions all but three
British newspapers and recalled all
Italian correspondents from London.
Premier Mussolini issued the order Saturday because of "the attitude of nearly all the British press
against Italy and .Italy1? armed
forces."
The order amounts to a semiofficial press boycott of the coron
ation Wednesday. Photographs of
the coronation are banned and Italian newspapers will print only terse
factual information distributed by
the semi-official Stefan! news
agency.
BERLIN, May 9 (CP-Havas).-
Chancellor Hitler may follow Pre
mier Mussolini's lead by recalling
all German correspondents from
Great Britain and banning British
newspapers in German territory,
Berlin newspapers said today.
wrapped themselves in rugs to ward
off the rain.
LUNCHEON AND CABARET
The Canadian military and K. C.
M. P. representatives, with men
from all the other dominions, Saturday attended a luncheon and cabaret
liven in their honor at the London
Casino. Wartime favorite songs
were sung with a gusto .
show "which included a movie de>'
picting the life, of the King. High
Commissioner Massey and Brig.-
General Alex Boss were among
notables attending.
A steady stream of visiting dignitaries continued to arrive in London
today, including the German delegation headed by Marshall Werner
von Blomberg, the papal envoys
Crown Prince Michael of Rumania
and Prince Paul of Yugoslavia.
This evening the King and Queen
gave an informal dinner attended
by visiting royalty and the King's
brothers, the Dukes of Gloucester
and Kent, and their wives.
Outside the palace gates about
30,000 persons gathered.
NO PROGRESS IN
LONDON STRIKE
LNDON, May 9 (CP cable)-The
bus srike tonight remained the fly
in the ointment of London's coronation celebrations and after a weekend devoted to negotiations the prospect was slim that buses will resume traffic for at least several
days.
The London Passenger Transport
board on Saturday offered to negotiate all matters in dispute excepting the men's claim for a TVs hour
day. Matters unsettled after the proposed negotiations would be submitted to a court of inquiry.
The busmen's delegates to the
Transport and General Workers
union considered the offer at meetings Saturday and today without
reaching a decision. It is expected
they will announce their attitude tomorrow.
SIGNING WITHOUT
READING COSTLY
FORJUDGE
MOSCOW, May 9 (API-District Judge A. M. Abramson,
who sentenced himself to prison,
was dismissed today by the Moscow district judicial committee
as "unfitted to hold such a responsible position."
The judge's downfall was ascribed to his.readiness to sign,
unread, anything laid before
him.
His employees drew up a sentence against Abramson, which
he signed.
Publication of the story led to
the dismissal of the employees
but today's punishment of the
judge was coupled with their
reinstatement.
NOMINATIONS
Victoria City—W. B. Calrd, James
J. Walker, Nigel Morgan, Mrs. K. A.
Bell, all C.C.F.
Columbia—Thomas King, M.L.A.,
Liberal.
Alberni-Nanaimo—A. M. Stephens, Vancouver, C.C.F.
ON
WAY TO LONDON BY AIR
TAKEOFF WITH
HEAVY LOAD OF
1200 Gallons Aboard
for Non-Stop
Flight
CARRIES PICTURES
DIRIGIBLE CRASH
Plan  to  Bring  Back
Photographs of
Coronation
NEWARK, N.J, May 10 (Men-*
day) (AP).—Eastern Airlines, receiving hourly reports from Dick
Merrill and Jack Lamble, announced early today that the
London-bound filers (12:1.5 o'clock
EOT) radio menage was undls-
tlnguljhable because of air disturbances and static
NEWARK, N.J, May 9 (AP).-
Dlok Merrill and Jaok . Lamble,
flying non-stop to London, radioed
to Eastern Airlines at 7:15 p.m.,
P.S.T., they were "Just leaving
land."     v
Twenty mills south of St. John's,
Nfld., thay hid flown 1156 miles
from Floyd Bennett field, Brooklyn.   ,
Merrill had radioed at 6:15 p.m.
P.S.T., that hit plane was passing
through a shower near St Pierre
Island, He was flying "on Instruments.''
Speeding toward London at an
average of 173 miles an hour, Merrill announced via radio at 5:15
p.m, P.S.T., he waa flying over, the
airport at Sydney, N.S. His altitude
was 4900 JeetV-,, jWslAl jfL/, .
IrVWI^fSr^rie'd pfeturei;
of the Hindenburg disaster and
were to  bring back coronation
news and fashion photographs.
The takeoff required only about
two-thirds of the 3200-foot runway,
and the plane headed straight out to
sea without circling the field.
"So long, I'll see you Thursday
night,' 'shouted Merrill, ace commercial pilot and transatlantic flier,
to friends as they left,
Lambie, his regular co-pilot on a
transport run from New York to
Florida, was to serve in the same
capacity on the trip over and back.
Airport Manager Ken Behr called
the takeoff "one of the cleanest I've
ever seen."
The ship was loaded with about
1200 gallons of gas.
A crowd'of about 5000 people
watched the departure, with ambulances, fire engines and emergency rescue squads standing by.
TO RELEASE JOBLESS
VICTORIA, May 9 (CP)-Fifty
British Columbia government relief
camps workers, arrested last weekend sentenced to one month in jail
for, obstructing police officers, were
Saturday ordered released from custody by the federal department ot
justice. Authorization for the men's
release was contained in a telegram
received at the legislative buildings
here.
Takes Assizes
'' Here
MR..JUSTICE MANSON
will preside over the supreme court
sessions opening here today. Ho
was attorney general in several Liberal administrations at Victoria preceding that of Premier Pattullo.
DR. LEONARD OF
TRAIL IS 16TH IN
SPOKANESHOOT
SPOKANE, Wash., May 9 (AP).-
Dr. W. Leonard of Trail, B.C., topped entries from the Canadian
smelter city at the'inland empire
trapghpot held here today, John
Schilke of Newport, Wash., made a
c)eansweer«vinnlnj*'arlevet>t»Vw.«;'
TJr. teohaM placed 16th in the
singles, scoring 94 points out of a
possible 100 for the .16-year target
shooting.
Jim Robertson and Robert Boyle,
both of Trail, scored t!9 and 60 respectively in the singles.
Dr. Leonard's 92 gave him 10th
place in the handicap event. Robertson had 80 points.
In the doubles Robertson was 13tH
with 34 out of a possible 50.
Zeppelin Inquiry
lo Start Today
LAKEHURST, N.J, May 9 (AP).
—A United States commerce department inquiry was given precedence today in moves to clear up the
case of the Hindenburg disaster £s
a naval board delayed its own investigation into the dirigible wreck
which cost 35 lives.
Hearings by both three-man
boards had been called to start tomorrow morning but Capt. Gordon
Haines, named head Of the naval
inquiry, announced his inquiry
Would be delayed until completion
of the commerce department investigation, directed by Secretary of
Commerce Roper.
RELIEF STRIKERS
AT FERNIE AGREE
fORESUMEWORK
Deducting of Checks
Results in Big
Meeting
SEVERAL HUNDRED
APPROACH NOLAN
Phone Call to Victoria
Gets Promise of
Adjustment
FERNIE, B. C, May 9 — A verbal agreement to return to work
was given Saturday by the Fernla
unemployed, who have been on
strike for the last month, on condition that checks for the full
amOunt of this month's relief be
Issued. '
The strike of unemployed cama
to a crisis Saturday morning when
It was found that the checks Issued
covered women and children only.
In the can) of checks for families
the sum of $3.85, the amount allowed for a second adult, had been
deducted where the required work
had not been done, and single
man who had not put In their time
received no checks at all.
The unemployed Immediately
called • meeting and returned,
•everal hundred strong, to the
provincial t building to protest.
Government Agent R. J. Nolan
phone Relief Administrator Griffiths at Victoria and presented the
protest to him. In reply Mr. Griffiths said that the members of tha
cabinet were out of the city and
.Jbrt to*"%d mx authority, la meet,
the demand for an Increased relief allowance.
He made the proposition, however, that if the men would give a
reasonable promise to return to
work checks for the shortages could
be made out immediately and that a
thorough investigation of the Fernie
situation would be instituted after
the election. The first reaction of
the men was to reject the proposal
as involving the abandonment of
their determination not to return
to work until they had been granted
an increase in the relief allowance
commensurate with the increase In
living costs. To
The main hall of the provincial
building was packed and they de-
t dared their intention of staying
where they were until their demands had been met. Discussions
among the men continued well into
the afternoon when a resolution was
finally passed giving the verbal
agreement to return to work providing the shortages in relief checks
were made good the same day. The
government agent accepted the resolution as meeting the relief administrator's conditions. The office staff,
which had left for the week-end was
recalled and arrangements were
made to get the checks ready for
issuance early Saturday evening.
A mass meeting of the unemployed was called for Monday to consider the situation fully.
Distinguished Conduct Medal Winners With the
Canadian Coronation Contingent
When Canada's contingent of 273 officers and
men sailed from Montreal recently to take part
in the Coronation ceremonies, among their ranks
were six men who had won the Distinguished Conduct Medal during the world war.   The group Is
shown above with Battery-Sergeant Major Lionel
Leask of Nelson shown on the extreme right. He
is a member of the 111th Battery, 24th (Kootenay)
Field brigade, R.C.A. The photo was taken at
Ottawa.
Cut Rotes Boost
Movement Trail
Friday's and Saturday's bargain
railway excursion to Trail took
numbers of Nelson and Grand Forks
citizens to Trail by the regular
trains. The increase in traffic, however, over the regular volume was
only slight as compared with the
extra passenger traffic to Nelson a
week earlier, when this city was
the objective of a similar two-day
bargain.
Woodsworth Has
Plea for Worker
ROSSLAND, B.C.-"The British
franchise was held first by the aristocracy, then by the "big manufacturer," states. J. S. Woodsworth, M.P.
federal leader of the Canadian Commonwealth Federation, speaking in
Odd Fellows' hall, Friday evening.
Later the men of the working class
were given the vote, but only since
the war had it been extended to
women, and to this day, the women
of Quebec were without a voice
in affairs ot state. The franchise was
of small use unless it was exercised
intelligently. Workers should vote
for someone who has the interest
of the workers at heart not that
of "big business." There are some
fine men in parliament on both
sides of the house, but most of the
laws are made by business men for
business interests, particularly the
"big interests". Business men look
at legislation from a business Viewpoint, lawyers from the standpoint
of the law, and most of them haven't
the haziest idea what the workers is
up against. Business gets help in
the shape of grants from governments, the workers is told to "get
but and rustle". Old age pensions
was the only big social measure
which had been passed at Ottawa,
and the speaker, thought that was
put through beeause that year the
Liberals and Conservatives were so
evenly balanced in the house, that
he and Mr. Heaps, "sitting in the
middle" carried more weight than
they would, had either of the old
parties, a working majority. Mr.
Woodsworth said there were now
six C.C.F. members out of the 245
sitting in the federal house, "send us
more, and we'll get more legislation for the people". In this battle
it was necessary to get a majority
for the C.C.F. in both the federal
and provincial houses, Under the
B.N.A. the province and the Dominion were able to "pass the buck"
to each other, and meanwhile, the
worker is permitted to starve.
URGES NIMSICK'8 ELECTION
Referring to his Bill No. 62, which
didn't pass, as the members were so
anxious to get over to England for
the Coronation, that no measure
was brought up to which objection
could be raised, the speaker said it
would be brought up again and
again until the inherent right of the
worker to organize was recognized.
It might not be safe for the worker
to do too much talking, but the ballot was secret, and he hoped to see
a substantial majority cast for Mr.
Nimsick, who had the best interests
of the worker at heart It was not
always the one with the best "gift
of gab" who did the best work in
parliament. A good speaker could
always be hired, the main thing was
to have a candidate who was honest
and sincere and willing to work.
Leo Nimsick said he held it an
honor to have been chosen as
standard bearer for the C.C.F. in
this riding, and if elected would do
all in his power to further the' interests of the working class, tp which
he, himself, belonged.
Alderman William Cunningham,
chairman for the meeting, urged
those present to take more interest
in public affairs, and put in a government which would legislate, in
the interests of the workers.
WOMEN DIG IN
WITH MEN
BUILD TRENCHI
"Finish Fight" in thi
Capital Appears I
to Be Near
MOLA'S TROOPS
12 MILES AWAJ
One More Mountait
Rrange to Take, i
Then Clear
(By Associated Press)      J
An insurgent ring of steel closeol
relentlessly about Bilbao last nighi
while Basque women helped then
menfolk dig new trenches for •■
finish fight at their capital
Basque troops savagely attack™
insurgents at Mount Sollube, soma
11 miles northeast of Bilbao, laylnj|
down a heavy artillery barrage. '■
Insurgent officers said they Itffl
only to capture one more mounted
range,   Biscargi,  before  march!
straight to Bilboa. General Em!
Mola's  troops were less than-;
miles from the city at several points!
Insurgents said at Hucsca, on thai
Aragon front, that the uprising J)#J
weakened government positions
there because ot withdrawal of meifl
for duty in Barcelona,
WOMEN DIG TRENCHES
BILBAO, Spain, May 9 (AP)i'-
Basque women joined their mint
folk today in digging new trencbtB
to strengthen the "iron ring" oil
which defenders of Bilbao are pre]
paring to fight to the finish to holcf
their capital.
More than a thousand non-com'
batants labored on Bilbao's fortifl
cations.. Women were plentifull]
scattered among those who wleldet
shovels and picks for long hours.
Under the protecting guns of th(
French navy 3000 more women
children and aged men from Bilbai
were crossing the Bay ef Biscay to
day to havens in France.
A GLANCE
By the Canadian Press
Toronto and Montreal — Stockf
closed lower.
New York—Stocks lower.
Winnipeg-Wheat' Hi to H centi
lower. I
London — Bar silver and othn|
metals unchanged.
New York—Silver, lead and zinc]
unchanged; copper higher,
Montreal—Silver steady.
New York — Cotton, rubber anfs]
coffee higher.
New York — Canadian dollar ud
1-84 to 1.00 15-04.
SUNDAY'S WEATHER
NELSON   38 59
Victoria   48 63
Vancouver   48 62
Kamloops  48 H
Prince George  44 88°
Estevan Point  48 50
Prince Rupert  42 58
Langara   44 52
Atlin   30 M,
Dawson  32 6f
Seattle  52 60
Portland ..." 54 63
San Francisco  60 68
Spokane  44 68
Los Angeles   58 64
Penticton    42 -j*
Calgary   40
Edmonton   38
Swift Current  38 74,
Moose Jaw  42 78
Prince Albert  34 70
Saskatoon   38
Qu'Appelle   38
Winnipeg    24
Former Hedley President Missing j
as Warrant Out; Mine Men Jailed
VICTORIA, May 9 (CP). — The
British Columbia government tonight prepared to make public a
complete report of Its investigations
into Hedley Amalgamated Gold
Mines. Ltd., while police held two
mine I'.'icials and sought the company's former president on charges
of conspiracy.
The report, to be released tomorrow, will cover government investigations into stock transactions of
the company on the Vancouver
stock exchange and "salting" of
mine samples from the property in
the southern -interior of the prov-'
ince, Premier Pattullo said.
Investigations were ordered after
the stock was suspended from trading on the Vancouver stock exchange last February following its
sudden collapse from a peak of $1.04
a share to 32 cents in two days.
Meanwhile police at Penticton, in
the Okanagan district, near the Hedley properties, held William COf,
mine superintendent, and Jack F*
ser, mine foreman, on charges ol
conspiracy to defraud. *%
Russel E. Barker, former president of Hedley, was sought on I
similar charge.
Detectives were unable to locatl
Barker and said they were inform*!
he left his Vancouver home mojl
than a month ago.
Premier Pattullo in a statement
yesterday said it was clear Hedley
had been "salted."
The premier in his statement commented: "Plain crookedness will oc*
cur from time to time and it is out
duty to endeavor to circumvent
these nefarious practices. For thil
purpose the Security act will b«
strengthened to more ^;-equatel}
meet requirements at the next session of the legislature."
__>_i
. , :        . ___
mmtmWmmmimmm
 WWMIPP^^
ifJETWO
SEA CHASE FOR DEER
JOUTHKND, England, (CP) —
(Iromin;; more than a mile out to
l after escaping from a zoo at the
trsaal here, a deer, none the
(r»e for his adventure, was cap-
red by watermen in rowboats.
CHICKEN A STOCKHOLDER
MILAN, Italy, (CP)-A housewife
found a valuable stock, certificate
in a chicken bought at the market
and put police on the trail of speculators shipping securities to Switzerland stuffed in poultry..
TIME RIPE SPRAYL HUNT DECLARES
SCAB CONTRQ FOR APPLE
FOR years and years, the superior whiskies
carefully chosen for White Horse mature
in the wood. Then they are skilfully blended
and married and again returned to age. No
wonder you marvel at the softness of White
Horse to your palate and its smoothness to
your throat. No wonder it "agrees."
"TOMORROW you'll be glad you said White
Horse TODAY" is not just a rash claim. It is
a proved fact! Here is an important reason to
name your brand — always call for White
Horse! Ai
DISTILLED   AND  BOTTLED   IN   SCOTLAND
lis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control
Board or by the Government of British Columbia.
fGuide for Travellers
NELSON, B.C., HOTELS
"Finest In the Interior"
HUME HOTEL
Geo, Benwell, Prop.
BREAKFAST 30o and UP
Lunches 40c to 50o Dinner 40c to 65o
ROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS
TELEPHONE 787 NELSON, B.C.        422 VERNON ST.
HUME—H.  W. Dawson,  G. Joy,
Jelowna; E. G. Perry, Fernie; B.
Franklin,   P., W.   Wallace,   P,
rlidge, It*G. Allen, Calgary; G. W
'ennels, 35.' Chambers, Mi', and Mrs
.'H. Robinson, G. Powell, J. Boyo,
R. Gurry, E. A. Helm. F. 0. Orr,
A'Schofield, L. W. Watson,  C.
panson, W. A. Dobson, Vancouver;
W. Haggen, Rossland; L. Nichol,
Nakusp; H. Hlnslow, Brilliant; S. N.
Drury, Trail; E. S. Jones, Cranbrook;
W. P. Bevan, Nanaimo; P. Williams,
Trail; D. McLeod, 0. Gill, Greenwood; A. H, Ascott, Boswell; W, C.
Hansen, Lethbridge; Mr. and Mrs,
A. J. Watson, Mrs. H. Fraser, D.
Walker, Kootenay Bay; P. Austin.
Victoria; W. Sanne Jr., Seattle; C
W. Lockard, Chicago; C, A. Campbell, Perth, Ont.; P. W. Smith, Ymir,
Four Sprays •Needed;"
Weather Favorable
Spread Disease
CODLING MOTH
IS SPREADING
Hunt Suggests Employ
Arsenate With the
Scab Sprays
That southern Interior orchardists
should now be ready to spray for
control ot apple fcab is advised by
E, C. Hunt,.district horticulturist.
"The control of apple scab in
Kootenay orchards is very important
if growers wish to have clean fruit
at harvest time," he explained. "Recent observation of the old leaves,
where the fungus passes the winter,
indicates the spores are now mature
and with favorable weather such as
has been the case for the past few
days there is considerable danger of
infection taking place.
"As most growers know, the secret
of success In the control of apple
scab is in having a protective spray
on the trees before any preliminary
infection takes place .1 possible, and
to keep the leaves and fruit cov-
ered until there is little if any
danger of infection. Under Kootenay weather conditions and in an
average year this will require four
sprays," stated Mr. Hunt.
THE SPRAY8
The "pink" is usually the first
spray and the one which should be
applied at the present time, although
some varieties have not reached the
full pink stage yet. But as the
weather is quite favorable for the
disease to take hold, it would be
advisable that spraying operations
get under way as soon as possible,
he said.
The second spray is known as the
'calyx," and Is applied just after
the petals have fallen. The next
two sprays are the "first cover" and
"second cover," the "first cover"
being applied two weeks after the
calyx spray and the "second cover"
two weeks after the first, .
Using recommended sprays, grow,
ers should obtain excellent control
of scab if thoroughness In spraying
is emphasized and the applications
made at the proper time, Mr. Hunt
stated. He recommends the following mixture;
LIME-SULPHUR
Lime-sulphur—One gallon to 40
gallons of water for all sprays.
Slightly weaker solutions may be
used with good results on some
varieties such as Cox's Orange and
Jonathan.
Many growers are now using the
iron sulphate mixture in sections of
the Kootenay where the disease is
bad and hard to corltroI.This mixture consists of six pounds of iron
sulphate, IVi gallons of lime-sulphur
and four pounds of calcium arsenate
to 100 gallons of water, placed in
the spray tank in the order given.
For the past two seasons experiments have been carried on in control of apple scab with lime-sulphur
used at the rate of one gallon to 60
of water plus four pounds of calcium
arsenate to 100 gallons. This has
given excellent control.
APHIS CONTROL
Nicotine sulphate for the control
of aphis can safely be.mixed with
any of these scab sprays, according
to Mr. Hunt, and if green apple
phis is bad and quite general it
should be added to the first scab
spray.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY MORNINO, MAY lo, 11)57
12-Year-Old Given
Two Year Sentence
Industrial Schod
Charged with breaking and entering the Sports Shop and stealing a
fishing rod, reel end lines the night
of May 4, one 12year-old Nelson floy
was sentenced to two years In indus.
trial school and a second 12-year-old
who participated was given a year's
suspended sentence by Police Magistrate William Brown Saturday.
The tint boy had appeared in court
twice previously. In the;$»w'«i(f the
other it was his first appearance.
During his year's suspended sentence he Is to report to the police
on the first Saturday of each month.
appeared to be spreading to new
sections of the Kootenay district
and that It would become anothei
serious orchard pest to be dealt with
He suggested It would be advisable
therefor for all growers to use in
the two cover sprays for the control
of apple scab either arsenate of lead
in the proportion of three pounds to
80 gallons, or calcium arsenate, four
pounds to 100 gallons.
THE SAVOY HOTEL
"Where the Guest is King"
MODERN   SAMPLE  ROOMS'
Fully Licenced
124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.
NEW GRAND HOTEL
P. L. KAPAK, Proprietor
Commercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.
Free Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 234
SOCIAL AND PERSONAL
NEWS OF TRAIL CITY
This column is In charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of TraiL All
events of a social nature of interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear
In this column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad to have any such news
telephoned to he,r at her home In Trail
TRAIL, B.C., May 9—Eclipsing any
social even of it's kind, the cabaret
dance and fashion show presented
Friday evening In the K.P. hall, by
the Arthur Chapman chapter, Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire, drew a large audience which
responded vivaciously to each part
of the entire program. Both halls
were decorated in coronation colors,
large   emblems   ornamenting   the
ways and coronation cloths covering the tables. During.the evening
a floor show of variety was offered,
the bridal procession, which was
the major attraction of the fashion
show, inspiring admiration and giving (valuable hints as to correct costuming for spring and summer weddings. L. Levey announced the individual appearances. Although the
display of evening gowns, afternoon frocks and spectator costumes
were inspirational, the real climax
was the entrance of the bridal party.
Mrs. James S. Johnson, her maid of
honor, six bridesmaids and two train
bearers, to the strains of the wedding
march played by Ffennell LeFluffy,
walked gracefully down the steps
from the stage, to the centre ot the
hall, and at this point the bridesmaids separated, later joining the
party to once more march slowly
through the halls and to backstage.
Mrs. Johnson's bridal costume was
of white satin, princess lines molding the tight bodice to the figure.
Small breast Dockets were a new
feature as were the lovely stitched
circular cuffs of the long, tight-fitting sleeves. A high neckline was
closed at the throat with a cluster of
grapes made of small pearls. The
skirt, of extreme plainness, hugged
the body closeley, to slowly flare
at the back to a long, full train. Introducing something ultra smart, the
beautiful embroidered silk veil was
worn over the face, the folds almost
touching the shoulders. The head
folds were held In place by a coronet of orange blossoms and.pearls.
No bouquet was carried, the bride
selecting instead a plain white prayer book. Gordon Hartley and Bob
O'Brien, as train bearers, fulfilled
their duties with a marked seriousness, their suits being black velvet   straight   pants,   white   satin
blouses, black shoes and white sox.
Next in the procession was the maid
of  honor,   Miss   Margaret  Jestley,
who wore a bewitching gown of
fjoral chiffon, The bottom of the
long, full skirt, was piped in white,
and with this was worn s smart
white jacket. Miss Cleo Michaely
and Mrs. S, McCatty, two of the
bridesmaids, wore delicate dresses
of pink chiffon. Miss Marrian Sora-
erville wore a crisp white taffeta
yvith floral printed design in rose,
Fernie Liberal
Claims May Be
Attorney-Gen.
CoJgar> Declares If
- Wcfed He Would
Go After Post
Parade Lineup
Coronation Day
Now Organized
Tonight Is Zero Hour
New Entries for
Big Event
ROUND IHE WORLD
Occidental Hotel
Madden Hotel
TOB Vernon St.           Phone 897
■H. WASSICK, Prop.
SPECIAL  MONTHLY  RATES
:   ^ood Comfortable Rooms
A Welcome Awaits You
JAS. E. MADDEN, Prop.
Completely Remodelled.
Hot and Cold Water.
i  -          Fully Licenced
!      In the HEART'of the City
RANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight
FREIGHT TRUCKS
LEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY
5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday
Trail-Phone 135       Nelson-Phone 15
Trail Livery Co*
M. H. MclVOR, Prop.
AFTER MAY lit, 1937
H. & H. TRANSFER
Leave Nelson for Creston 6:30 a.m. Tuesday—Friday
Leave Creston for Nelson 12 noon. Wednesday—Saturday
I Through connection for Cranbrook, Kimberley and Fernie
ALL   FREIGHT   INSURED.
P. O. Box 677
Phone 77, Nelson, B. C.
Telephone 16
Creston, B. C.
...05 (f&U/H&06&
Everyone responds to the thrilling tales of Richard Hallburton,
M. V. Morton, mi H. A, Franckt. Here It a way to live these
nayei-te-bfloraotten experiences yourself. See the world's fabulous
placet and peoples ... not in • story book, but In reality. It'i
Impossible to Imagine the queer, Interesting customs of slranje
fascinating placet, tha scenery of new and different cllmetl
Embark on • World Tour (Japan, China, Philippine!, Slim, Bell,
Ceylon, India and hundreds of other byways of the world) . . .
take any of the 815 different itineraries , . . slop it long it you
with, wherever you want. .. tickets good for two years ,,. tilt
about inclusive cott lours.
Tor further parlicnlor$ apply to agonle cverywhtr*. or
J. J. Forelcr, S.O.F.A., C.P.R. Station, Vancouver, B.C
Ht
/
LmmiiaM. (raa$tc
a short Jacket with buttle adding
new note jn smartness. In blue
lace worn over blue taffeta and short
jacket, Miss Margaret Gibson created a distinct note of difference,
yet one which blended beautifully
into the rest of the picture. Miss
Jeanne Levesque was chic in her
dress of white mouslin which was
embroidered with flowers and Mrs.
Levey, the sixth bridesmaid, was
charming in white printed chiffon
and taffeta Jacket. All bridesmaids
wore head garlands of gardenias and
carried Colonial bouquets of pink
carnations and snap dragons, complementary accessories being in
white. Aiding as wardrobe mistresses
during the fashion demonstration
were Mrs. C. E. Jestley, Mrs. Eric
Jackson, Mrs. Will Harper, Mrs. F.
E. Dockerill and Mrs. M. Goldstein.
Another attraction, always popular,
was the fifteen-minute floor show
offered by Bill Corey. The opening
ensemble was a military number,
"Little Colonel", featuring Norma
Wilson who was ably supported by
Claire Klnnis, Helen Blois, Charlotte Dodimead, Margaret Johnston,
Jean Bowden, Mary Lou McLeod,
Alene McDonald and Anne McLeod.
In keeping with the spirit of the
evening the girls wore military costumes of red and white wilh gold
braid trim. Miss Edna Ellis, attired
in wide red slacks, with blue jacket
and silver ornamentation, delighted
with a fast tap selection. Vasey Fen-
ton, a very young, young man, wore
a tuxedo suit to do a dance number
with youthful. Leone Letcher who
in ultra-modern style selected white
satin pajamas. trimmed with red
ruffles, her head being topped by
a small crown. "When I Grow.Up,"
the number offered by this youthful duet, was enthusiastically applauded. Jimmy O'Brien and Ralph
Diamond, as sailors of some considerable experience, amused and entertained with a song and dance
duet. "Boo Hoo" the concluding
number; featured ■ Nornta,. Wilson,
dressed In green organdy and silver
lace, with Bill Corey as her partner.
Later numbers were offered by Mr.
Corey and his dancing partner, Miss
Lorraine Flynn. In the exhibition
waltz, Miss Flynn wore an evening
gown of black lace trimmed with
sequins, the fulness of the long skirt
billowing softly throughout, the
lovely turns of the dance. Refreshments were served during the ever
nir.g by members of the chapter,
who were assisted by members of
James H, Schofield chapter. Dancing among the spectators was also
enjoyed. Mrs. Stanley E. Angus won
Ihe coronation spoons, ticket sale
which had been conducted by Mrs.
George J. Kinnis, Mrs. R. R. Burns,
Claire Kinnis. Virginia Richards
and Nancy Willis. Others who were
responsible for the success of the
event were Mrs. R. J. G. Richards,
general convener; Mrs. Jame6 Cal-
der and Mrs. J. T. Newman, refreshments; Mrs. T. H. Oilis, kitchen arrangements; Mrs. W. M. Cameron
and Mrs Eric Jackson, conveners of
serving; Mrs. Herbert Clark, tables;
Mrs. J. T. Newman and Mrs. J.
Gerald Ringwood, candy booth; Mrs.
James S. Johnson, entertainment.
Decorations were under the supervision of the convener, Mrs. Richards. During the supper hour dance
selections were played by Miss Cynthia Docksteader.
• •   *
James D. (Scotty) Notman of Nelson, who Is leaving for the coast,
visited during the week-end at the
home of his brother-in-law and aster, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur McMillan,
and with his daughter, Linda Lee
Notman.
• *   *
Good attendance marked the annual spring sale and afternoon tea
in the hall.of First Presbyterian
church when Saturday pfternoon
members of the Ladies' Service club
entertained. Mrs. Dan McDonald,
general convener, received the
guests. Coronation motifs were vsed
to decorate the Kail, there being no
abundance of bunting and small
flags. The Individual tea tablet were
centred with vases of red carnations.
Serving on the committees were
Mrs. A. J. Edmonstonc and Mrs.
Frederic G. StDenis, sewing booth;
Mrs. J. T. Newman and Mrt. D. J.
Dutfus, homecooking booth; Mrs.
John C. Alexander and Miss Belle
Murray, tea tablet; Mrs. J. E. Carter
and Mrt. R. D. McDonald, kitchen
arrangements.
. *   •   •
Mrs. Albert DeBruyn, former resident of Trail and Fruitvale, but
who now makes her home at the
coast, is visiting at Fruitvale, the
guest of her son and daughter-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. Jack DeBruyn.
• *  *
David Graves, who left Saturday
for Esquimalt where he will enter
the Royal Canadian Navel academy,
was honored Friday evening at a
farewell party when his parents,
Mr. and Mrt. Peter Graves entertained. Dancing and music provided
the program of entertainment during
which time refreshment! were
served.
Miss Vera Devito, Gyro queen
contestant, was guest of honor Saturday evening when her committee
I entertained at a cabaret danoje in the
FERMI, B.C.-Jtarry W. Colgan
made a bid tor election as Liberal
representative from the Fernie dis
trlct In the forthcoming provincial
election on Friday, on two pointa;
first, that aa a member of the government party he would bo able to
obtain greater consideration for hit
conttituency than would a member
of the opposition, and secondly that
if elected he considered he had a
fair chance of being appointed attorney-general for the province.
In support of the first point he
read a telegram from Hon. F. M
MacPherson, minister of public
works, stating that a government
road program amounting to approx
imately $80,000 would get under
way in the next few dayt. This,
he said, was the largest road appropriation this district hat ever received. He also announced the ttart
of a government road project which,
he claimed, his opponent, the present member, had been unable to get
under way. He told the single unemployed that they could apply to
the government agent immediately
and that they would be given a
summer's work In the forest service
camps with transportation paid both
to the job and back home In the
fall. Single men over 25 could look
for three weeks' work during the
summer with transportation both
ways. Colgan was very definite in
his statements that with a member in opposition to the government
Fernie would not get any more of
the plums next term than in the
past.
His expectation of being the next
attorney-general of British Columbia was based on a process of elimination. He stated that at present
five lawyers are in the field for
election on June 1. Of these, three
are on Vancouver island, but as the
Island already hat two members on
the legislative council, it was no*
likely that a third would be appointed. In regard to Gordon Wls-
mer, who is the one most frequently
mentioned for appointment to the
vacant portfolio, he said that Wis-
mer is very unlikely to accept the
position at doing to would entail
the sacrifice of his law practice. In
that case Colgan himself would become the logical appointee.
PRAI8E8 GOVERNMENT
The candidate dealt at length with
the record of the late Pattullo government, which, he claimed, was
second to none the province had
ever had and had been equalled
only by the McBride government in
its administration of provincial af
'fairs. He maintained that the province had progrested remarkably in I
re-establishing its financial position
and in, its development of natural
resources, particularly in lumber
and metalliferous mines. The amalgamation of British Columbia and
Yukon he compared with the acquisition of Alaska by the United
States and foresaw great financial
returns to the province through a
greatly increased tourist trade providing the proposed union material-
Ires. The New Westminster bridge
he expects will be a free bridge
within three or four months of its
Nelson's coronation day parade as j
at present lined up consists of 34
units. Representatives of the various participating organizations,
drivers of floats, decorated cars and
to on, met members of the parade
committee under the chairmanship
of Major A. E, Dalgas, M.C, at the
arrnory Saturday night and completed their plans for the day. They
set 8 p.m. tonight as the zero hour
for entries—all must be in by that
time.
Each unit Is to be given a numbered place In the parade and when
it is being formed up on Victoria
street will take its position opposite
that number, it has been arranged,
All marching units are to ap
proach their assembly position on
Victoria from Stanley street. Floats
are to approach via Ward street. All
decorated cars, trucks and bicycles
will approach via Hall street. This
is planned to prevent congestion of
traffic and a mixup in getting the
various units into their places.
Floats and decorated cars, trucks
and bicycles going to the assembly
line on Victoria street via Hall and
Ward are to turn west when they
reach Victoria and proceed to their
numbered places.
For Better
Quality
Furniture
and
Home
Furnishings
Reopening of another cotton mill
at Bury will mean work for 200 persons.
KING TO RUN
IN COLUMBIA
GOLDEN, B.C., May 9 (CP).-
Thomas King, Liberal member of
the last British Columbia legislature for Columbia riding. Saturday
was chosen to again contest the seat
for his party. King was nominated
over John S. Blakeley of Radium
Hot Springs, whose name was also
put before the meeting.
Charles Reid of Vancouver, provincial Liberal organizer, addressed
the convention on the record of Premier T. D. Pattullo's government.
Officers of the Columbia Liberal
association elected Saturday were;
President, V. Kimpton, Windermere;
vice-president„C. E. Hamilton, Field;
secretary, A. McGrath, Canal Flats;
executive: W. H. Cleland. Invermere, E. A. Kallman, Golden; A.
Ritchie, Windermere; L. Currie,
Field, and P. McGrath, Canal Flats.
Monster Coronation Cake
opening.
The Health Insurance act, he said,
was a step in the rignt afrection,
but he thought that hospitalization
of the physically sick should be
handled through institutions In a
manner similar to that jn effect for
the care of mentally ill.
In regard to the city ot Fernie,
the speaker declared himself in
favor of having its affairs taken
Colombo hall. Gay decorations and
shaded lighlng added to the charm
of the evening, and the cabaret
tables were centred with vases of
daffodils and narcissus. The event
opened with a dance which was followed by a floor show, a cane dance
from "Pennies From Heaven," directed by Bill Corey and starring
Miss Lorraine Flynn, Miss Edna
Ellis. Mist Dina Couch and Miss
Florence Vannatter. The young
ladies wore short white pleated
skirts, coronation blue tops, veit
style, and red hats. Another program number was vocal selections
by Mrs Emillo Pisapio. Concluding
the floor show, a chicken supper was
served, those acting as waitresses
being Miss Bessie Georgetti, Miss
Celia Smith, Miss Margaret Salsic-
cioli. Miss Rena Tavaroli, Miss Neva
Batistella, Miss Jeanne iePage and
Miss Lena Gri.
• •   •
Mrs. L. Choquette of Nelson, who
visited in Trail, was among the
guests   attending   the   Coronation
cabaret dance Friday evening.
• •   •
Tom Brooks of Annable motored
to Nelson Saturday.
• *   *
R. W. Cook is spending a few days
at Greenwood.
• *   •
Coronation decorations were used
to effect when members of the
Senior Women's auxiliary to St Andrew's Anglican church held a sale
of work and afternoon tea In the
parish hall Saturday afternoon.
Guests were received by Mrs. Fran-
cis J. Glover and Mrs. Leonard A
Morrant. Others lending valuable
assistance during the afternoon
were: Mrs. John Gibson and Miss
S e 1 m a Reimann, home-cooking
booth; Mrs. Elliott Crowe and Mrs
W. H. Saunders, candy booth; Mrt.
William Hudson and Mrs. L. S
Doubleday, plain tewing booth; Mrs
Thomas Jenkin, Mrs. George J. Kinnis and Mrt. R. Donnan, kitchen;
Mrs. C. Evanson and Mrs. Charles
Beltner, tea tables.
• •   •
Tony Lauriente, accompanied by
Marian Wyatt, Tommy Lauriente
and Eleanore Quayle, motored to
Rossland Sunday where they visited
friends.
This is Fernle's coronation cake. It will pass into the possettldn of
some individual at the dance with which the coronation celebration will
close on the evening of May 12. Every supporter of one or other of the
candidates for May Queen has a chance of being that lucky person.
The cake was made and donated to the coronation committee by a local
bakery and the decorating was done by Mike Slavlnski. It contains
35 pounds of fruit cake and the total weight including the crown is
90 pounds. The cake is in four layers, the bottom one 15 inches square,
the second 11 inches square, the third, which is round is 11 inches in
diameter and the top nine inches in diameter.
The crown, which surmounts the whole, is nine inches in diameter
and 11 inches high, The crown and all other decorative features are
made wholly of sugar, even the arches of the crown are of sugar with no
other support, yet they are strong enough to serve in lifting the crown.
The cake stands on a base 28 inches square and the layers are separated
by short, gilded wooden pillars. With the cake are a plaque representing
Britannia with the British lion with ships afloat in the background, and
two trellis easels entwined with flowers. These also are of sugar. The
jewels, flags, flowers, etc., are in color. The cake which is on display
in a store window is attracting much attention.
WHEN HE LOOKS
IN YOUR EYES!
Do they flash and sparkle; or does
he find them dull and unattractive?
If your eyes are dull or have n yellow tlnfte,
It's probably because your liver Isn't f unc-
t lonintf properly. Your liver affects almost
every part of your body and II It fiets
out of kilter you can't look well, you
can't be well. So keep your liver healthy
by taking Prult-a-tlvee. This famous remedy contains extracts of fruits and herbs
and acts to stimulate the liver to normal
healthy action; activates the flow of bile,
cleanses the elimination tract, and helps
4 other vital organs of the body. Do not
let your liver affect your looks. Start
taking Frult-a-tlves today. Your druggist has them. Cost Is low, only 25c; 60c.
FRUIT-A-TIVEStaS,
over permanently by the provincial
government, its charter cancelled
and the area administered as an
unorganized district, He stated that.
if elected, he would work to that
end.
Mr. Colgan was given an attentive hearing by a large audience,
Interruptions were very few. At
the close a period of 15 minutes was
allotted for questions. The barrage
of questions was so intense that the
time was doubled and at tho end of
half an hour when the meeting was
finally closed there were still a
number on their feet anxious to put
their queries to the candidate.
Committee headquarters have
been opened in the city from which
the campaign will be directed for
the balance of the. month.
Our Business Is
MOVING
PACKING
SHIPPING
STORING
Wu have the complete organization to handle all details.
Workmen are well trained,
moving vans are swift and
safe. Our equipment includes
the largest and most modem
moving van in the interior.
Phone 33
WEST
TRANSFER
COMPANY
*->-- -        -    ■' ■ ii —Ll—
___«■.
yJaHHtfHMs—MM-MMiaMI
 ium iiuiuii i.i
||)|)|fW^BfPI*t^
r)^m*!^!mW*rWrtvriri*mm
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 10, 1937
•Sfc'
How delicious a cigarette tastes
to a fresh mouth. The flavors
of Wrlgley's gum plus chewing
exercise keep the mouth and
throat clean and moist. That's
why wise smokers say, "Chew
Wrigley's Gum between
smokes".
oiveeteui the. 6ieat/i/
SAVE WRIGLEY'S OUTSIDE H PACKAGE WRAPPERS FOR VALUABLE GIFTS
Wrappers from Spearmint, Double Mint .Juicy Fruit, Peptln.Swwt Laurel and P.K.(E«chP.K.wrapperworthon> Si1 Wrapper.)
Softball, children's regulation playground aire, with
well-sewn in-seaim	
 for 100 wrappers
Micro-lite pocket Hash-
light, 3 inch length, solid
brass nickel-plated
enamel-finish       .
 for 100 wrappers
Pocket Watch —"New
Haven" model nickel-
plated case, non-breakable crystal 	
 , .for 315 wrappers.
Pocket mirror, complete
with comb, In attractive
case, handy for boy or girl
 for 80 wrappers
SAVE THIS FOR REFERENCE,
NO CATALOGUE PRINTED
Single stick wrapper* not acceptable
Mall reoulred  wrappers for gift, along with your name and address to
Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co. Limited, Cm-law Avenue, Toronto, before July 31,1937.
Harrop Poultry
Club Members
Get (hicks
HARROP, B. C. — The eicht
members of Harrop Junior Poultry
club have received their 25 Rhode
Island Red baby chicks. These
chicks were purchased through the
club leader, T. Neale from Arnould
of Sardis, P. C.
At the annual meeting of Harrop
Cooperative Packers' union Thurs
day evening the directors for 1937
were relected en bloc from the
1936 list. B. S. Creasey presided and
J. Berry presented the reports.
The Harrop and District Cooperative association held its annual
meeting at the close of,the packers'
meeting. J. D. Kerr and B. S. Creasey were returned to the office as
trustees, and the meeting decided
to again rent the building to J,
Berry on the same terms as last
reason.
Attendance at Harrop school was
83 per cent in April. The following
pupils ranked first: Grade VII, Susan Berry; Grade VI Winifred Howard; Grade IV. Alan Serres; Grade
II, Tommy Sewell.
Commemorative of co r o n at i o n
year, an oak tree which was obtained by Harrop and pistrict Women's Institute through the B. C
department of agriculture, will be
planted in the school yard. These
trees were started in England and
are being distributed through Farmers' and Women's Institutes.
EFFECT   OF   MOTOR    BOOM
The boom in the mntor-car industry has resulted in the decision
of a Derbyshire firm of brake and
clutch lining manufacturers at Cha-
pel-en-le-Frith (about 15 miles from
Manchester) to build a new factory
adjoining the present works to cope
with extending business. The present works employ about 800 people
and the new factory, which will be
completed in September, will provide work for about 300 others.
.Buckingham
0L (LI- MdL-OLj:8^ L%<*JL
Norroy, King of Arms, proclaiming the. accession o/ George VI to the. throne of Britain.  This proclamation is read on the steps
oj the Royal Exchange, Temple Bar and at Charing Cross.
The Royal Herald, clad in robes of medieval
splendour, maintains an unbroken tradition in the formal
declaration of a new king.to the throne of Britain. ... In a
different way Buckingham cigarettes, created for extra
smoothness, extra satisfaction, maintain that reputation for
uniform superb quality which thousands of Buckingham
smokers have  acclaimed.    Enjoy  this  finer  cigarette.
m^Bjsjmjg&^wjMjmmMMMMefi]iirJis&
TM
Their Majesties Enjoy a Formal Evening Party
With the many demands upon his
time augmented at present by
last-minute preparations for the
May 12 pageant, there doubtless is
not in all his empire a harder working man than King George VI.
Public appearances of the royal
couple since their accession to the
throne have been few and far between, as the great press of work
that descended like an avalanche
upon them when they became the
King and Queen took their attention. Time for purely pleasure calls
there has been none.
Though as the Duke and Duchess
of York they earned the reputation
of a home-loving couple, to say that
this popular pair shun public appearances except on formal occasions, is far from the fact. Called
upon so often -with ever varying
demands for his presence.the Duke
long ago worked out a well defined
schedule that enabled him to discharge fittingly his royal duties and
still find time to enjoy his home
life and his family. His success in
this regard is envied by many a
busy executive who has not learned j
the secret.
The King has never been a lover i
of the "bright lights," but on the
other hand he is far from the retir- ]
ing and self-effacing personality j
that he once was pictured. In the
old days when 145 Piccadilly was
their address and not Buckingham
Palace, the Duke and Duchess were
often seen enjoying the theatre or
a concert or attending a dinner
party of some close friend. Today's
picture catches them in one of their
more recent pictures on such an
occasion.
Though not as well known on the
dance floor as his brothers, his
majesty enjoys dancing; he likes
music and prefers good but light
programs. He is interested in art
and science and his well-known
bent for mechanical study often
takes up an evening.
But if the after work hours are
free and no outside attraction draws
them, their majesties enjoy the
quiet of their own fireside with
good books or a radio program as
entertainment.    The King, accord-
Miss K. Scanland,
Waldo Bride-Elect,
Is Honored Guest
WALDO, B.C.—A pleasant evening was spent at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. J. E. Scanland of Waldo,
on Monday, April 26, when a number of Wardnerites motored to Waldo to surprise Miss Kathryn Scanland, bride-elect. During the early
part of the evemng'the guests were
occupied embroidering dish towels
and dish cloths, the prize for originality and neatness being won by
Mrs. Frank Thompson of Wardner.
Following this, games were played
until midnight when the guests were
seated at the attractively decorated
table. After partaking of a sumpti-
ous lunch the paper decorations
were lifted, leaving several pieces
of aluminum ware as a gift for the
bride.
Mr. C. Hamrin, as toast-master
gave a witty toast, to which the
bride-elect responded appropriately.
A beautiful tea-set was then presented, after which fortunes and
wishes to the bride were read.
The guests included, Mrs. J. Law-
son, Mrs. C. Rader. Mrs. F. Thompson, Mrs. Bert Richmond, Mrs. B.
Embree, Mrs. A. Jacobson, the
Misses J. Derochers, S. Moberg, H.
Johnson. K. Rosicky, R. Hamrin. C.
Coffay, F. Thompson, Mr. C. Hamrin, Mr. Van Ryan, all of Wardner,
also Mrs. R. H. Dilts and Miss Margaret Muir of Waldo.
ing to one report, fell a few years
ago under the crossword puzzle
spell and spent many an hour at
the pastime. His varied experience
in almost every conceivable branch
of his vast empire's- life, with the
opportunity he has had to meet
greatly varying people, must have
given him a healthy vocabulary
from which to draw.
Their appearances in public apart
from the formal engagements that
they cannot hope to evade, will of
course be even more limited in the
future, but without forfeiting any
of the esteem that they have won or
shirking the responsiblities thai
have been laid upon them, this
charming couple have long ago dispersed any possible feeling that
they are not good "mixers."
Next: Seeing England.
- P»0« tMRM
^T^titoimvT^ (lottqtttts^jt
wcoiipoxATiD tit neee met.
.Woolen's Whitei
SHOES
For nea* refreshing appearance there's nothing more flat>'.|
tering than white—Especially this season when everyjj
model is the essence of smartness. See for yourself howj:
strikingly different the new styles are—white wifhj:
chic brown, white with classic^
navy and all white styles.-A'
complete selection at thajfj
prices.
BtoE
AtoC
PAIR   	
$3.9R
AAtoD
PAIR   	
—Main Floor H BC,;*
Social News
of Rossland
ROSSLAND, B. C, May 9 -The
Past Chief's club of Maple Leaf No.
4, Pythian Sisters, entertained
Thursday evening with a card party
in K. P. hall. First prize for bridge
went to Mrs. A. J. Hopper and consolation to Mrs. Golpin. Mrs. John
Cox won first prize for whist and
Mrs. R. Mason, consolation. Mrs.
Davidson of Cranbrook won the
tiuilt and Mrs. R.  McLennan  the
doll.
* *   *
Mr. and Mrs. W. Hawkins have
returned from a visit to Spokane.
...
Mrs. Anton Hubner entertained at
the tea hour Thursday, her guests
being Mrs. W. Evans of Trail, Mrs.
W. A. Turner and Miss Lorna Triggs.
The Catholic Women's league met
with its newly elected president,
Mrs. W. G. Mara, in the chair. Miss
Helen McDonell told of the life of
Father Damien, the leper priest.
Pictures of the life of Christ were
shown. Refreshments were served
by Mrs. W. G. Mara. Mrs. Herbert
Christian, Mrs. Jack Ryan and Miss
Helen McDonell.
Miss   Norma   Laface   is   visiting
Spokane.
* .   *
Instead of the usual business, the
Lyceum club presented a "Mother's
' tAH
day" program at its meeting ThltB
day evening. Prizes in cards waj
won as follows: Bridge, first, ,1b
Emil Leduc; second, Mrs. Jack Brj
an; whist, first, Miss Isabelle Bout
get; second, Miss Delphine VrtS
A special "Mother's day" prize '.vk
given Mrs. A. Bourget. Mrs. W. tab
was in charge of refreshments, •»
serviteurs were Miss Dorothylji
face and Miss Catherine McLia:
Speeches were made by lWBevti
K. Mclntyre, V.G., Mrs. W.'G. Mat
Mrs. A. Bourget sr., and Mrs. WH
iam Ling. A program includedia§
and tap dancing, the following
ing part: Mrs. Russel Jones,"
Eileen Mara, Miss Rita FcurV.Mt
Isabelle Bourget, Miss Patricia 1$
dy, Miss Florence Corrado, ;,'Jfl
Gertrude McLean, Miss Mary tin
Miss Helen Juba, Miss Sadie Ma
Aulay and Miss Len Wiley.', '■;'
•   #   •
Mrs. W. D. Wilson has retuf$i
from an extended visit to lieVloi
in California. ' .'»'
... ,,"-■",
Mrs. A. Fraser of Vancouye*,'1
in Rossland. '"'
DANCED AT 100 ••■•:
PARRY SOUND, Ont., (C?)}
Generally thought to be rn'bre'tKl
100, Richard King, Christian Islai
Indian, died recently. He wai
familiar figure to toursts forvwbt)
he performed Indian dances. ■"**
Although the Far East is: fiW)
for many floral beauties, a.jjardi
magazine started in India is s'flid;
be the first ever published mt!
Orient. ■   :   '.'.
Through seventy years under five sovereigns*
Eno's "Fruit Salt" has been the worlds
favorite and most
DI8BAND  OLD REGIMENT
BOMBAY, <CP>—Sam Browne's
Cavalry, the 12th Frontier force
founded by the officer who invented
the famous Sam Browne belt, is
being disbanded and will become
a training regiment for mounted
units.'
Mi
tmtm
m
 -       	
Pl^ifpWiPpiliWH
"UVIWii
m*jmw«y^w-wmi>i>>
PPpip^gMwuiifty^
■HPIPpf'
ge roim —
oronalion Is
Church Theme
Parades Held
tlides, Brownies, St.
Saviour's; Bugle
Band Trinity
[vents of the coronation of King
orge VI the coming Wednesday
re foreshadowed in most of the
lion churches Saturday, when
rtors generally directed their
imes to the coronation, to Mother's
f, or to both. Two parades marked
i day In the churches, Girl Guides
1 Brownies parading to St. Sa-
iur'8 pro-cathedral in the morning,
lile the Canadian Legion Bugle
nd. paraded to Trinity United
urchin the evening.
IILDREN ADDRESSED
M St. Saviour's morning service.
tere the whole service was attuned
the coronation, and carried out
order of service recommended
the archibishops of Canterbury
d York, the rector, Rev. J. G.
limes, addressed himself to the
Udren, several classes from the
nday school facing him, as well as
s Girl Guides and Brownies in
sir uniforms.
On picturing to the children the
ronatlon in Westminster i Abbey,
jere British sovereigns have been
jwned for 871 years, the rector
plained that the Anglo-Saxons
Lied the coronation the hallowing
rvice, and that the annotating
the King as set apart by God to
le was just as important as the
owning, the King taking his vows
allegiance to a Higher Sovereign,
lile the crown, the orb, and other
nblems. were marked with the
pis to aignify his rule would be
Meet to God.
JGLE BAND PARADE8
At Trinity United church the min-
!er, Rev. J. A. Donnell, made tho
ening service of a coronation
uracter, the Bugle band parading.
lie coronation service arranged
j the national authorities of the
alted Church of Canada was fol-
wed in St. Paul's United church
the morning, Rev. T. J. S. Fer-
Bon, the minister, preaching.
The Church of the Redeemer,
rat Rev. W. J. Silverwood as vicar,
e First Baptist church, where Rev.
. W. Guscott, the pastor, preached,
id St. John's Lutheran church,
here Rev. V. L. Meyer, the pastor,
lied.the pulpit, all foreshadowed
le coronation in at least one serv-
IBERAL DELECATES
CHOSEN CRANBROOK
CRANBROOK, B.C.—The Cran-
look City Liberal association held
meeting in the Masonic hall Thurs-
iy evening for the purpose of
ecting delegates to attend the dis-
Ict nominating convention.
J. H. Cameron presided. He com-
imented the Young Liberal associ-
lon on the splendid work they had
me, and offered, as president of
1 City Liberal association, the as-
Itance of the association, and ex-
ressed the hope that the Young
iberals will meet the executive and
ty association.
Mayor T. M. Roberts expressed
ipreciation for the work the young
Mrals are doing and offered any
aljtance he could give them.
J, Atchison, president of the Young
Iberal association, thanked Mr.
imeron and Mr. Roberts for their
Hers and help in organizing.
He mentioned that the Young
Iberal association was formed of
jople interested in politics from the
|e of 21 years up, that it is hard to
!t them to attend meetings, and
lis has to be done through the
icial angle. Once they are well or-
Ihiied they intend to study and infra themselves on matters of gov-
mment. They hope to be able to
mtinue their work and stay orga-
ied between elections.
The delegates for Cranbrook were:
is. McKowan, Mrs. Miles, Mrs. L.
Armstrong, Mrs. Moore, Miss
ency Miles, Mrs. C. J. Little, Mrs.
aldwell, A. McGrath, J. Atchison,
, Zilli, J. Barber, G. Atchison, W.
Santo, J. Logan, C. Collins, T.
toore, A. H. Dubois, J. H. Cameron,
Hogarth, J. Frazio, R. Lippitt,
"re. DeLuca. Alterntaes viae: 'C.
tchison, C. J. Little, W. Pritchard,
XS. J. Atchison, J. Gartside and
xl. E. Jones.
■ere to Preside
Over the Assizes
Mr. Justice Manson arrived in
elson Sunday night by Kettle Val-
y train, to preside over the Nelson
(ring assizes, which open here
Monday, and subsequently over the
ranbrook and the Fernie assizes.
Kootenay Beauty Framed
by an Ancient Stump
i::lsoh daily news, nelson, b.c—Monday morning, may 10, issz,
Henry Perry-Leake* Engineering
Pioneer, Passes; Illness Is Short
Sent Out to Interior by Mining Interests 45 or
46 Years Ago; With Dominion Here; Later a
Contractor; Headed Balfour Liberals
Scene of beauty at Six-mile on tho west arm of Kootenay lake.   An
ancient stump is used by the cameraman as a frame.
PLAN NOW FOR
YEAR ROUND
SALAD GARDEN
Green salads are a staple in every
well-planned menu. The consumption of lettuce in a generation has
increased beyond estimate, and the
same is true to a lesser extent with
tomatoes, cucumbers, endive, Chinese cabbage, celery and others.
A small home garden of limited
extent can be put to no more efficient use than to be converted into
a green salad garden. Of small dimensions, it is easily cared for and
fancy salad materials can be grown.
It might seem ridiculous to suggest growing dandelions in a garden, as they will probably overwhelm it anyway, but the dandelion is the first green salad of the
year available for gathering. It
isn't such a foolish idea to encourage a row of good healthy dandelion plants, seeing to it that they
don't go to seed. The best method
is to set a flower pot or a box over
the plant early in the spring. It then
blanches and produces creamy foliage which is tender and excellent
salad material. There are cultivated
varieties to be had with better leafage than the native.
Next in season is leaf lettuce, followed by head lettuce and then cos
lettuce, the best for the hotter parts
of the lettuce season. This will carry well into July. By that time the
earliest tomatoes will begin to ripen,
with the earliest cucumbers and a
little later the green peppers will
join the salad procession to go
through July and September.
Radishes for the spring salad,
summer and winter radishes for the
later season salads are useful.
The endive, both the broad leaved
known as escarolle, and the handsome curly varieties, will pick up
the green salad schedule for September and October and even into
November, and late planted corn
salad will take you into the cold
weather. Then, French endive
rounds out the year. This must be
planned in the spring. The radishlike roots are dug in the fall, stored
in the basement or cellar to sprout
and the white sprouts furnish the
delicious salad.
An all-year salad garden is easily
grown and maintained and is a most
valuable and enjoyable sort of
garden.
PASTEL  SAUCE
One-half cup grape or other jelly;
one egg white, unbeaten; pinch of
salt.
Melt jelly in bowl over hot water.
Add egg white and salt, and beat
with rotary beater until stiff. Cool.
"Cheer up—we've got good seats for tho Coronation ,.,"
"I'd feel a lol belter If we could get some Sweet Caps!"
SWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTES
*T«e purest form in which tobacco can be smoked."—fancct
Rain and Clouds
Mark Week-end
Short drenching downpours from
a cloud-dulled sky marred the first
day of Nelson's week-end, while
Sunday, although no rain fell until
nightfall, it was no less dull and
threatening. Saturday's intermittent
falls totalled ,J8 inch, while the
heavy rainfall Sunday evening did
not commence until after 5 p.m. and
therefore was not measured in the
day's recordings.
Both days the mercury dropped
into the thirties for the first time in
nearly a week, Sunday's low being
35 and Saturday's 39 degrees. Maximum temperature for Sunday was
60, one degree above that for Saturday.
Hay Crop Is an
Important Thing
The hay crop is a very important
factor in a well planned livestock
program. This is especially true of
the Lower Fraser valley, where the
dairy cow is so valuable an asset to
the farmer,
It is not feasible to make the statement that any one combination of
grasses and legumes Is definitely
the best and most suitable for all
conditions of soil and climate. Even
in the area mentioned, though climatic conditions may be similar or
even the same in many instances,
soil types vary to a very large
degree.
At the Dominion Experimental
farm, Agassiz, experiments have
been conducted for many years for
the purpose of obtaining reliable
information on hay mixtures. One
series of plots was laid down in 1928,
this particular experiment terminating in 1934. Another group was
seeded down in 1933, information
thereon still being gathered.
Touching briefly on our results
we find Timothy to be one of the
most important grasses on test,
While this grass suffers in some
years from rust, its abundant growth
under the conditions generally prevailing in the Lower Fraser valley
makes it one of the most highly
favoured grasses in the district.
A combination of Red Clover 6,
Alsike 2, Timothy 8, and Italian
Rye Grass 4, pounds per acre if
suggested from our results to be
well worthy, of consideration. A
mixture of Red Clover 6 and 9,
Alsike 2, Italian Rye Grass 2 to 3,
and Orchard Grass 2 to 3, has its
merits also, especially due to the
fact that it has proved to be a satisfactory combination for ensilage. A
combination of Red Clover 8, Aslikc
2 and Red Top (i is suggested for
low-lying, wet areas unsuitable for
other grasses. A very desirable hay
mixture from the standpoint of
quality is that of Early Red Clover
9, Alsike 2, Perennial Rye Grass 3
to 4 and Italian Rye Grass 3 to 4
pounds per acre.
Portulaca Resists Sun,
: Provides Summer Color
j The rock garden enthusiast should
. try the tiny portulacas. This dainty
i annual will resist any amount of
heat, and its small she makes it
excellent material in the rock gar-
■ den. It blooms in the summer when
! color in the garden is so scarce.
Drop a few seeds between the
rocks and thin plants rigorously
when they appear. It grows best in
cramped quarters, and can be sown
as late as July and will still furnish
its quota of bloom the first year.
Also good for window or porch
boxes.
Woodsworth Is
Off to Nakusp
J. S. Woodsworth, M.P. for Winnipeg North, leader of the O.C.F.
party in tho Dominion, left Nelson
Saturday morning for Nakusp with
H. W. Herridge, candidate for that
party in Kaslo-Slocan riding, by
the Greyhound bus.
r
Just one week after entering Kootenay Lake General hospital, Henry
Perry-Leakue of Balfour, veteran
er/jineer, Kootenay old-tjmer, and
pioneer of the British Columbia interior, died Saturday night, just a
month under 67 years of age. His
illness was very brief.
Born at Brecon, Wales, .Tune 10,
1870, and spending his early life in
his native county of Hereford, his
home being on the river Wye, young
Perry-Leake attended school at the
famous Harrow, where he captained
the cricket team, and put in most
of, his young manhood in school,
taking three years.in medicine, and
then seven years in engineering, to
get his engineer's degree. At that
time he used to ride and hunt, among
other recreations.
He was sent out to the western
states'by a large British engineering
concern as a mining engineer, to
take charge of a mining operation.
Returning later to England, he was
sent out next to British Columbia, at
Golden, 45 or 46 years ago, and this
province was the scene of his work
from then on.
PUBLIC WORKS
ACTIVITIES
In 1910, if not earlier, he was on
the staff of Hon. Fred W. Aylmer,
Dominion public works district engineer at Chase, and for the next
three years was frequently in the
Kootenay reporting on or in charge
of work. One of his outstanding
jobs was putting in the Columbia
river bank protection at Revelstoke,
which still stands today as a monument of his work, He surveyed the
sites for various of the wharves
built at that period by the Dominion
government, including that at Balfour.
After that, he took up contracting
many or most of his contracts being for Dominion government work.
In 1915 he built the first Boswell
wharf, in 1920 and 1921 he built the
Procter and Kuskanook wharves
with a partner, Capt. Fred Cogle,
and in 1929 he constructed the Ginol
wharf,
OKANAGAN CONTROL DAM
His largest undertaking was the
construction of the qpntrol dam on
Okanagan lake for the Dominion
government in the fall and winter of
1928-29, in partnership with L. H.
Rawlings. Beside doing the engineering, he handled the whole construction. This is the dam at Penticton
that regulates the outflow from
Okanagan lake, so as to keep that
body of water at a constant level
the year round.
For some years he was engineer
and foreman on Dominion work on
the Arrow and Kootenay lakes under P. E. Doncaster, district engineer
here, who later took charge of the
Port Arthur district.
His most recent engineering work
for the Dominion was last spring
when the relief camp administration was being closed out, and he
mapped the highway work that had
been done.
WED LORD AYLMER'S
DAUGHTER
Soon after coming to the Kootenay, Mr. Perry-i„eake made his
home at Balfour. In 1919 he married
the Hon. Amelia Aylmer. eldest
daughter of the late Sir Matthew
Lord Aylmer, former inspector-general of the Canadian forces. Altogether he resided at Balfour 28
years. He took pride in the home
he built at Balfour, and devoted
much of his leisure to his beautiful
flower garden. He was an ardent
fisherman.   He had a fine singing
low Water at Trail
Taking a peak through the stout railing which tops the Trail riverfront wall, from the foot of Farwell street. In the background may be
seen the bridge which crosses to East Trail. The river is still very low,
there being a group of rocks jutting out of the water in the foreground.
At high water the river comes to within a short distance of the top of the
wall, a portion of which may be seen at the right.
Discuss Community
Hall for Procter
PROCTER, B.C.-Many Procter-
ites gathered at the Outlet hotel
Wednesday to hear the report of the
community hall investigation committee and to discuss further plans.
Charles Foster, secretary, read a
number of letters from carpenters
and lumber dealers estimating the
cost of building.
The following committee was elected: Mrs. A. R. Johnston, Rev.
C. M. Lancaster, Angus MacKinnon,
Maurice Major and William Ahair,
to canvass the district for a general idea of what support will be
given.
It was decided that the British
oak tree, given to the district by
the Balfour Farmers institute
through the efforts of the minister
of agriculture wiil be planted in the
Anglican church yard on Coronation
day.
Rev. C. Harvey presided.
Mrs, E. Merrifield has left for
Kimberley to spend a few months
as a guest of her son-in-law and
daughter. Mr. and Mr?. Ralph Rufli.
.Toe Marchiedon of Nelson is
spending a few days at his home
here.
Mrs. F. Parnaby has returned
from Kitchener.
Harry Solecki of Drewrey was a
Thursday guest a't the home of Mr.
and Mrs. N. Schwarok,
Mrs. M. MacKinnon left Saturday
for Vancouver to attend the graduation of her daughter, Morag, from
the Vancouver General hospital.
According to word received here
Wednesday, Miss MacKinnon led
the nurses of the Vancouver General hospital in the recent registered
nurse exams and came second in
B. C.
Chester Bourne of St. John, N.B.,
who was visiting his cousin, Mrs.
J. P. Bourne, left Saturday for an
extended visit at Vancouver and
Victoria.
Trail Man Held
Driving Charge
TRAIL, B, C, May 9 — Edmund
Grendon is being held by Trail police on a charge of driving to the
common danger as a result of the
car which he was allegedly driving
breaking a fire hydrant on Lower
Riverside steert shortly after midnight Saturday.
The tremendous flow of water
from the hydrant cut a deep gash in
the dirt bank below it and knocked
out the underpinning of a car platform on the lower side of the road.
The water was shut off by city men.
Residents serviced by the main were
without water today.
CAPE TOWN (CP)-Engagcd in
whaling research, the 320-ton ship,
William Scorcsby, with a company
of 23, returned hero after 116 days
in the Antartic only once sighting
land on the 18,000-mile voyage. .
Young Trail Anglers Make an
Early Start
These young fellows, Arthur Allan and Donald Hammel of Trail,
lost no time in getting reel and rod in action when the Columbia river
opened for fishing.  Here they are casting off the rocks at Gyro park,
New Hotel to Replace Pioneer
Building in Trail
The Union hotel, Trail, historic survivor of the city's early mining
boom days, which Is giving way to a new two-storey brick building of
modern design. Located at the southwest corner of Cedar avenue and
Victoria street, the hotel was appropriately named Union for it comprised the Bayview and Pacific houses, moved from the Bowery in 1900
by John Fuhrer, brewery proprietor. One of the former Bowery hotels
is almost completely demolished at the right. The hotel was purchased
by the late Steve Butorac for $2500 in the spring of 1908 and operated
by Butorac interests until 1928 when it was sold to Jacobs and Todd for
$22,000. It again changed hands two years later, when purchased by its
present owners, Sam Biagioni and Fred Merlo. Among the 40-odd hotels
which studded the city around the turn of the century, the Bayview and
Pacific were built about 1898, at a time when Trail Creek was rapidly
gaining a reputation as one of the foremost "camps" in the rich Kootenay
mining district.
voice and in his days in Revelstoke
was leader of the Anglican churct,
choir. He was president of the
Procter-Balfour Liberal association
from its organization a few years
ago until last year, when he resigned on taking government work.
A powerful man in spite of his
years, Mr. Perry-Leake was apparently headed for many more years
of activity, joined the Nelson board
of trade the past winter and refused to take seriously the thought
of being sick.
He is survived by his wife, the
Hon. Mrs. Perry-Leake.
ON THE AIR
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Vancouver 600 w
5:10 News flashes; 5:15 Uncle
Mickey's Mystery club; 6:15 News
flashes; 6:30 Political broadcast; 7:00
Stock quotations; 7:45 Guilty or
Not Guilty, E.T.; 8:00 Political; 8:30
Sports; 10:00 Pete Cowan's Old Timers; 11:30 Rhythm wranglers; 11:45
Slumber hour.
910 k CJAT 319.6 m
Trail 1000 w
7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:15 Musical Clock; 8:00 Request program;
9:00 Organ Fantasy; 9:15 Barn
dance; 9:30 The Old Timer; 9:45
Keepsakes; 10:00 What's New?;
10:15 Memory Lane; 10:30 Radio
Chef; 10:45 Melodic Pipes; 11:00
Backstage Wife, E.T; 11:15 Kootenay Echoes; 11:30 Monitor views the
news; 11:45 House of Peter McGregor; 12:00 Hughesreel; 12:30
Laugh Parade; 1:30 The Concert
Hour; 2:30 Swing Time; 3:Mr Black'
Magic; 3:15 Hits and Encores; 4:45
Cecil and Sally; 5:00 Theatre news;
5:15 Eb and Zeb, E.T.; 5:45 Growin'
Up; 6:00 See C.B.C. network except;
10:45 Lullaby Land.
1030 k CFCN 293.1 m
Calgary 10,000 w
6:00 Honor the Law; 6:30 Red
Head family; 6:45 Harlem Minstrels:
7:30 Cub reporters; 8:00 Roy Watt's
Music Makers; 8:30 Concert orch
9:00 News flashes; 9:30 Rhythmic
Age; 10:05 Garden of Melody.
SHORT WAVE PROGRAMS
BRITISH EMPIRE
Transmission 6
GSF 16.14 mcs. (19.82 m.)
GSD 11:75 mcs. (25.53 m.)
GSC 9.58 mcs. (31.32 m.)
6:00   p.m.—Big  Ben.   Recital   by
Empire artists. 6:30—"The Gems of
Antrim." 7:00—Fred Hartley and his
Sextet.  7:40—News  tnd  tnnounce.
ments.
INTERNATIONAL
Tokyo 1 p.m.—Broadcast to eastern section of U.S.A. JVN, 28.14 m„
10:66 meg.; JZJ, 25.42 m., 11.8 meg.
Berlin 2—A conversation between
district leader Bohle and Director
Dr. von Boeckmann. DJD, 25.4 m.,
11.77 meg.
Rome 3—News in English, opera,
Jole Sequi, soprano; 2RO's Mail Bag.
2RO, 31.1 m., 9.63 meg.
Moscow 4—Anniversary of "sub
botnik"; Modern Soviet songs. RAN,
31.2 m., 9.6 meg.
Prague, Czechoslovakia 5:30—Fra
gue Teachers' chorus. OLR 4A, 25.34
m„ 11.84 meg.
Caracas 5:45—Amateur hour. YV'
5RC, 51.7 m„ 5.8 meg.
Prague, Czechoslovakia 6:40 —
Popular concert. OLR 4A, 25.34 m.,
11.84 meg.
(oronalion Radio
Broadcast Starts
1a.m. Wednesday
Canadian and United
States Networks
to Handle
On Wednesday, May 12, tha Coronation service of Their Majesties,
King Qeorgo VI and Queen Elizabeth will boz broadcast from
Westminster abbey. Beginning at
. 1 a.m., the Nelson radio publio
will be able to follow descriptions of the proceedings and separate programs until 11:00 a.m.,
when the new King will address
his subjects. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporatlong, Columbia
and National Broadcasting company networks will hook Up with
London at 1 a.m. The complete
program up until 6:00 p.m., when
programs regularly listed by the
Nelson Dally News begin, follows:
1:00 a.m. Carillon from Peace Tower,
Ottawa, preceedlng hook up with
London for Coronation broadcast.
1:30 Their Majesties leave Buckingham Palace, London.
2:00 Coronation Service In Westminster Abbey, London.
4:45 Their Majesties leave Westminster Abbey, London.
6:15 Procession arrives at Constitution Hill, London.
6:10  Their  Majesties  Return to
Buckingham Palace, London.
6:20 Bells of Christ Church Cat' a-
dral, Victoria.
6:30 Children's Chorus, Fort William.
7:00 Song of the Empire, Toronto.
8:00   Fairy   Coronation,   drama,
Vancouver.
9:00 Premier Pattullo, New Westminster, official welcome to first
Canadian cruiser to B. C. waters.
9:15 Ottawa Ladies' choir, Ottawa.
9:30 News Flashes, Toronto.
9:45 Peter Dawson, baritone, London, Eng.
10:00 Royal Salute, Winnipeg.
10:10 Message from Lord Tweeds-
muir, Ottawa.
10:19 Homage to His Majesty, England.
11:00 His Majesty, King George VI,
England.
11:10 Army and Navy Veterans
Band, Winipeg.
11:30 Rebroadcast of the Coronation Service, Ottawa.
1:45 Bruce Hutchinson comments
from England.
2:00  British  Radio  Party, New
York.
2:45  John Masefield, Poet Laureate, England.
3:00 Recital, Percy Grainger, Montreal.
3:30 Poems In Praise, Halifax.
4:45 Dr. S. Russel, Today's Coronation, Toronto.
4:00 Operetta, Countess Marltza,
Montreal.
Ladies Choir ol
Trail Entering
(oast Festival
TRAIL, B.C.. May 9.—The Trail
Ladles choir, Mrs. S. S. McDiarmid
conductor, which garnered the Butorac Jewelry store cup by taking
first place in the ladies' choir open
class of the 1937 Kootenay Musical
Festival held here last month, will
leave Trail Tuesday morning to seek
laurels farther afield—at the British Columbia musical festival now
being held at Vancouver.
The Trail choir of 32 voices will
compete in two classes, one for small
choirs, 20 to 29 voices, and for Intermediate choirs from 30 to 39 voices.
In the small choir class six contestants are competing for the Nomads' Avrudka cup and three choirs
will compete in the intermediate
class. The latter contest will be held
Friday and the small choir class
Saturday.
The test pieces for the Intermediate class are "Ask if Yon Damask
Grows" by Handel, and "Spring's
Awakening," by Rowley. For the
small choir class the test pieces are
"The Sky Is Full of Clouds" by
Walford Davis and "Hie Away" by
Dunhill.
POMPADOUR RICE
One and one-half cups cooked
rice; three tablespoons fruit sugar;
pinch of salt; one teaspoon vanilla;
one cup whipping cream.
Combine rice, sugar, salt and vanilla. Whip cream and fold Into rice.
Serve with maple syrup cooked
until thick. Sprinkle with chopped
nuts.
CONSERVATIVE PARTY BROADCAST
TONIGHT 8.8u.
HEAR
B. A. McKELVIE
Conservative Candidate in Victoria
Over the B.C. Radio Network
"The Truth About
The Pattullo QovW
TRAIL—CJAT
Victoria CFCT    Kamloops CFJC
Chilliwack .... CHWK    Vancouver C|OR
Kelowna  CKOV
 	
—
t^m»mmKPm«'  '■''   ■■'.w•wvwwmwmvaw'imw'^niimw^»l*»»'m>wmifm*m.v -Mywupwi'ihim«■■»» iiphw
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-MONDAY MORNING. MAY 10. 1937
DANCERS MAKE MERRY AT FIREMEN'S BALL
Some photos of part of the
huge crowd of merrymakers
at the first annual firemen's
ball held in Nelson on Friday
evening last.
Library Seeks
New Members
Nurses Get Caps at St.
Eugene Hospital,
Cranbrook
CRANBROOK, B.C.,-Cranbrook
Library association met and it was
Library association met Tuesday
and it was decided to hold a drive
for new members. A house to house
canvass will be made by B. Hill.
There are 225 library members,
an increase of 200 over the enrollment of September 1035.
A. Graham reported payment of
accounts amounting to $34 and 11
laore books to arrive this month.
The members of St. Eugene Training school who entered in January,
1937, received their caps at a ceremony at the nurses home Wednesday when the presentation of caps
and thermometers was made by Sister Therese Annable. Tea was solved. Those receiving their caps were
Miss Cathcryne Smith, Mss Dora
Manners and Miss Margaret Leonard.
The opening tea and house shower of the Cranbrook Lawn Tennis
club was held at the club house
Wednesday afternoon, with a fair
crowd in attendance. Tea was rerved
by Miss Amy Woodland, Miss Enid
Shankland, Mrs. Muriel Wallanger,
Miss Grace Flett and Miss Margaret
Henderson. Much work lias been
done on the grounds and club house
during the spring, the lawn having
been extended, the gardens and
several  new trees planted.
K. Wickens is visiting at his home
in Revelstoke.
Miss Esther Paulson is in Golden
on welfare business.
Miss Eleanor Green returned
Tuesday from Vancouver where she
has been attending university. She
returned by way of Calgary, where
she visited Mr. and Mrs. G, M. Bell.
G. Spreull and Miss Helen Spreull
are visiting Spokane, whore Mr,
Spreull is attending the Rotary convention.
Mrs. W. Green, Mrs. G. H. Thompson and Miss Eleanor Green are
spending the week  in Spokane.
Members of the Cranbiuok Liille
Theatre association who went to
Fernie Wednesday to present "Murray Hill,'1 a three-act play which
was presented in Cranbrook earlier
in the season, were Mrs. M. A. Beale,
Mrs. R. Harrison, Mrs. Mackinrot,
E. S. Jones, Miss May Mailman, A.
Graham, W. A. Morris and C. V.
Edwards.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Macpher-
son have been in Spokane where
Mr. Macphcrson a tended the Rotary
convention,
Cyril Robertson returned Tuesday from Edmonton university.
Miss Mary MacDonald of Vancouver is the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Sainsbury.
Dr. T. Saunders, who has bfen
visiting Mr. and Mrs, Walter Robertson   has  returned   to Vancouver.
Stanley Stewart of Creston is
visiting the city.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Little and Mrs.
F. Scott motored to Spokane to attend the Rotary convention.
Dr. F. Lefcbrc of Kingsgate is a
city visitor,
Mrs. J, A. Young, who lias been
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Sarvis,  has returned  to Penticton.
Mrs. F. G. Perry, who was visiting here, has returned to Fernie.
Dr. Wallace R. Gpnn, director of
live stork from Vancouver, and H.
E. Waby, district agriculturist for
East Kootenay and Salmon Arm
arc spending the week in the district.
Lome A, Campbell of Rossland is
spending a few days in Cranbrook.
Peter Dewdney of Nelson visited
in tho city on his return from the
University of Alberta,
Gelling Lakeside
Park Into Shape
Caretaker Bishop Is
Preparing for a
Summer Basis
While prevailing temperatures
Sunday did not invito the citizens to
make a rendezvous of Lakeside
park, and comparatively few of the
public took advantage of its facilities, Thomas Bishop, caretaker is
getting things in shape for a transfer to a summer basis on or before
May 24, tho usual date.
Several of the park facilities are
now in use, the water having been
turned on some time ago, but the
swings have not yet been hung for
the summer.
Rising of the West Arm has given
ample swimming and diving depth
all around the swimming float, but
while some weeks ago the water
temperature was recorded as high
as 47'/2 degrees, Sunday the figure
under the float was 42^ j degrees, owing to the water from the snow
fields. This is about tho extreme
low during the water's rise,
C.G.I.T. Conducts
Successful Sale
Fine business was enjoyed by tho
St. Paul's C.G.I.T. at their 'bake
sale bold in the Safeway store Saturday. The multitude of home baking offered sold rapidly,
Those in charge of the groups conducting the sale were Miss Edna
Nelson, Miss Edith Smylhe, Miss
Hazel Smith. Miss Joan Hooker,
Miss Lillian Fisher and Miss Lillian
Hickey.
A block of sale-rooms is to be
put up in Nottingham by the Cooperative Wholesale society who
have secured an island site in one
of Ihe principal .-!r<vi- vA a cost
of .L 00.000.
| Deer Comes Out of
Blue to Land Upon
Bumper Salmo Car
Travelling between his home in
Salmo and Sheep Creek, E. W.
Roach "saw a door drop, apparently
from out of the blue sky," and land
j on the front bumper of his car, reports tho .South Kootenay News.
I "Brakes were applied, but as the
car rolled to a stop four legs appeared above the radiator and then
disappeared beneath the car. Getting out to ascertain what damage
had been done to the timid animal
and the auto, he was surprised to
find the four-footed friend had vanished as if into th« air from which
he came. No sign of the animal
could he found except a few hairs
clinging to the bumper and radiator of the car and it is thought
it. escaped without injury."
SOCIAL HAPPENINGS
IN NELSON CITY
This column Is conducted by Mrs. M. J. Vigneux. All news of a
social nature, including receptions, private entertainment, personal
items, marriage^ etc.. will appear in this column. Telephone Mrs.
Vigneux at her home, 519 Silica street-
Mrs. Emma Irwin announces the
engagement of her (laughter, Margaret Beth, to Robert Laughton, son
of Mr. and Mrs. David Laughton.
Edgewood avenue, the marriage to
take place in June.
Douglas Fisher of Port Crawford
visited town Saturday.
• *   *
Jack Griffin was in town from
Ainsworth Saturday.
• •   •
Mrs. E. H. Latham of Kaslo visited Nelson at the week-end.
• *   *
Mrs. O. A. Gray, Third street,
entertained at a farewell luncheon
last week in compliment to Mrs. W.
F. Barclay, who leaves tonight for
Sudbury, Ont. A blue bowl filled
with yellow daffodils graced the
table, where covers were laid for 12.
Guests included Mrs. A. A. Pagdin.
Mrs. J. C. Grummett, Mrs. H. H
Sutherland, Mrs. James Robertson,
Mrs. J. Lundie, the Misses Annie
and Ethel Smith. Mrs. T. S. Jemson
Mrs. F. Mainfroid, Mrs. N. C. Stibbs,
Mrs. Barclay and Mrs. Gray.
J. McMillan of Trail visited Nelson at the week-end.
• *     a
Mr. and Mrs. Norberg of Ainsworth were in town Saturday en
route to Trail.
.   •   *
Mrs. J. F. Croll, Petty apartments,
is a patient at Kootenay Lake General hospital.
...
Mrs. W. Perry of Passmore spent
Saturday in Nelson.
• «   *
Circle No. 2 of Trinity United
church held a social gathering at
the home on Third street of Mrs.
O. A. Gray Friday afternoon honoring Mrs. W. F. Barclay, who is
leaving Nelson shortly for the east.
Mrs. A. A. Pagdin, on behalf of those
present, presented the honor guest
with a framed photo of Cottonwood
Falls. Those invited were Mrs. F.
Mainfroid, Mrs. B. Whitehead, Mrs.
Norman C. Stibbs, Mrs. John Lundie, Mrs. E. Woods, Mrs. T. S. Jem-
son, Mrs. Pagdin, Mrs. Bertha M.
Simms, Mrs. H. H. Sutherland. Mrs.
James Robertson, Mrs. E. Rowley,
the Misses Annie Smith and Ethel
Smith, Mrs. J. C. Grummet, Mrs.
Barclay, Mrs. Sinclair, Mrs. T. S.
Jerome, Mrs. D. D. Townsend. Mrs.
R. Eunson, Mrs. W. E. Wasson,
Mrs. J. Woodall, Mrs. W. H. Jeffs
and Mrs. Gray.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Parker of Bonnington spent Saturday in the city.
• *   •
Lewis Rees, who was a guest of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. L.
Rees, Water street, lias returned to.
Trail.
• •   *
Captain Sherman of Boswell visited Nelson Saturday.
• 4       *
Robert Kirkland of the C.P.R.
telegraphs leaves this morning for
Vancouver, where he will be relieving for some time. Mrs. Kirkland and babies will follow later.
Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Blaylock ot
Trail were in town Saturday en
route to their Willow Point home.
• *   •
Mr. and Mrs. R. Sherraden of
Ainsworth visited Nelson Saturday
• •   •
Shoppers in the city at the weekend included Mrs. McDonald of
Nelson.
• •   *
Mr. and Mrs. J. Cavil of Bonnington spent Saturday in town.
The Music Lovers' club held its
annual luncheon Friday at Grcn-
fell's Cafe, Vernon street.
Mrs. C. Olson of Ainsworth spent
Saturday shopping in Nelson.
• •   •
Miss E. Burgess ol south Slocan
visited the city Saturday.
Mrs. Leon A. Perry of South Slocan announces the engagement of
her eldest daughter. Gladys Mae, to
John George, eldest son of Mr and
Mrs. J. S. Ticknor of Darlingford.
Man., the wedding to take place in
the fall.
Most  Rev.  Martin   M.   Johnson,
D.D., Bishop of Nelson, motored to
Salmo yesterday and officiated at
the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
* «   •
Mrs. E. M. Sandilands of Kaslo
spent Saturday in town.
* •   •
Chief of Police Alex Stewart and
Mrs. Stewart have as their guest
their son, Lome (Duff), who has
returned from attending Dalhousie
college at Halifax.
* *   •
Miss Margaret Stewart is in the
city from Cranbrook.
* •   •
Mr. and Mrs. Henri Gagnon, Carbonate street, had as their guest Saturday Mrs. Gagnon's niece, Miss
Helen Bourgeois of Crescent Valley.
* ♦   • ■
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Ramsden were
week-end visitors to Trail.'
Mrs. McCallum of Ainsworth visited Nelson Saturday.
J. D. Notman of the C.P.R. freight
office leaves this morning for Vancouver, to where he has been transferred.
4      *      *
Miss Betty Kirkpatrick and Miss
Mollie Kirkpatrick have taken up
residence at Willow Point for the
summer months. Their mother,, Mrs.
A. B. Kirkpatrick of Trail, will join
them later.
«   *   •
Mrs S. S. Fowler and her daughter
Frances Fowler, who were holidaying in Southern California and on
the coast, were Nelson visitors at
the week-end en route to Riondcl.
* *   •
Carl Baillie of Trail was in the
city Friday to attend the firemen's
ball.
* •   •
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bell it Ainsworth visited Nelson Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Vere McDowell of
the Kootenay Belle mine were city
shoppers Friday.
■  »   •   *
Rev. Father Sullivan left Saturday for Burton City and district.
* »   *
Mrs. Robert Bell of Ainsworth is
spending a few days at the home of
her mother, Mrs. I. Lewis, Boswell.
...
Miss Mary Jarvis of Procter visited over the Week-end at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. George Horstead,
Robson street.
* •   •
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Steele,
Silica street, spent the week-end at
Trail. The were accompanied to
Trail by their daughter-in-law, Mrs
Fred Steele, and children, Pat and
Mike, who had visited them in Nel-
Mrs. R. Hughes of Ainsworth visited town Saturday.
• ■   *
Shoppers in the city Saturday included Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldie
of Robson,
• *   *
Mrs. J. Pinchbeck of Slocan City
spent Saturday in Nelson.
• *   »
Visitors in the city at the weekend included Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Ramsay and baby of the Reno rnine.
• •   •
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Harmon of
Ainsworth visited Nelson Saturday.
• *   *
Mrs. Thompson of the Kootenay
Belle mine spent Friday in the city
...
E. Ewing of Trail was a visitor in
town at the week-end.
• *   »
Mr. and Mrs. A. II. Noakes of Balfour spent Saturday in Nelson.
Ven. Archdeacon and Mrs. Fred
H. Graham have as their guests their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. J. H. S. Winter of Big Missouri.
Mr. Winter intends to be here a
week, but Mrs. Winter will remain
until August.
• •   •
Rev. Sister Mary Bernard of St.
Joesph's academy left Saturday
morning for Bellingham.
Mr. Green of Passmore visited
town   Saturday.
Shoppers in the city Saturday included Mr. and Mrs. Robert McFadden of Bonnington.
St. Paul's Choir
Entertain Procter
Crowd in Concert
A splendid musical entertainment,
in aid of the Procter United church
fund, was presented by members of
the Nelson St. Paul's United church
Boys' choir before a large audience
in the Procter United church Friday.
Mrs, T. J. S. Ferguson, conductor
of the boys was in charge of the
concert, while Miss Mae McFarland
added to the entertainment with a
pleasing recitation.
The boys taking part were; Paul
Hielscher, Cordon Pickard, Don
Brown, Bob Wilson, James Ritchie,
Raymond Thompson, John Beattie,
Bob Graham, Gary Bowell and Donald Beattie, the last two named being also of the Tuxis Boys' choir.
Refreshments were served the
boys by the ladies of the church following the concert.
YE8, MONOCLES IN CANADA
TORONTO, (CP) — "Very few
men, let alone women, can wear
a monocle without appearing ridiculous," said J. C. Williams, Toronto
optomotrist who sold half a dozen
last year, mostly to people with
one weak eye who wanted monocles
for reading.
Styles In ways of arranging flowers have changed considerably in a
few years, as prize competitions
show.
"Adam and Fallen
Man" Is a Subject
for Lesson-sermon
"Adam and Fallen Man" was the
subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all
Churches of Christ, Scientist, on
Sunday.
The Golden Text was: "As we
have borne the image of the earthly,
wc shall also bear the image of the
heavenly" (1 Cor. 15: 49).
Among the citations which comprised tiie Lesson-Sermon was tht
following from the Bible: "When I
consider thy heavens, the work of
thy fingers, the moon and the stars,
which thou hast ordained; What is
man, that thou art mindful of him?
Thou madest him to have dominion
over the works of thy hands; thou
hast put all things under his feet:"
(Psalms 8: 3, 4, and 6).
The Lesson-Sermon also included
the following passage from the
Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy:
"The great truth in the Science of
being, that tNo real man was, is, and
ever shall be perfect, is incontrovertible; for if man Is the image,
reflection, of God, he is neither inverted nor subverted, but upright
and Godlike."
Italy is building its first skyscraper apartment house in Genoa—a 21-
storey apartment of reinforced concrete.
C.C.F. WILL GO
INTO THIN AIR
—LEARY
Liberal Nominee Is
Heard at Renata
and Deer Park
NAKUSP, B.C. — Captain C. S.
Leary, M.L.A., returned Friday from
Deer Park and Renata where ne
held the first meetings of his campaign, following his nomination in
New Denver on Wednesday.
In both instances Mr. Leary addressed large audiences. He dealt
with the various government policies, going thoroughly into the ques*
of Minimum Hours of Work and
Minimup Wage acts. He discussed
the amendments to the workman's
compensation board legislation
which had been reenactedsince the
present government took over office.
He compared the distressing days of
1933 when relief and unemployment
were at their greatest height to the
present' time. Now that the picture
was more hopeful and better times
prevailing, Mr. Leary "is assured
that the C.C.F. party will gradually
evaporate into thin air."
AID TO FRUITGROWERS
In speaking of the fruit problem
which effects both Deer Park and
Renata, Mr. Leary said he felt that
the growers were, not receiving tlw
rewards of their labor. He realized
there was something wrong somewhere and expressed himself1 as being wholeheartedly behind any
movement toward the solution of
the problem.
At Deer Park he particularly
stressed the importance of an outlet
south which would mean a local and
ready market for their products and
allow accessibility into lhat delightful  section   of   the   lower  Arrow
■ f-AGE PIVI
lake by tourists and summer home
seekers from the smoke-laden atmosphere of Trail.
Mr. Leary was able to assure these
citizens, that monies had now been
allocated to continue on with the
Deer ParkiSyringa road and to repair bridges both at Renata and
Deer Park.
Captain Leary was accompanied
by J. Taylor, the new road superintendent who made an Inspection
of roads and bridges at both points
and acquainted himself with the
geography of the lower Arrow Lake
district.
Mr. Leary left on Saturday morning for the Upper Arrow Lakes. He
plans to visit Arrowhead, Beaton
and Ferguson.
SALMO TO CROWN
KING AND QUEEN
Salmo will crown a May queen as
part of its coronation day ceremonies. A parade is to inaugurate
the exercises and a flag-raising
ceremony will continue it. Prizes
have been posted for decorated bicycles in the parade.
Included in the program will be
planting of an oak tree from England, physical drill display by the
Sarmo sohopl, awarding of badge
to junior forest warden, display ot
clowns, folk dances, solos, pyramid
building and so on.
West Arm Level
Is 4.6 Feet Now
Slackening its rise as a consequence of the cool temperatures
prevailing through the Kootenay,
the West Arm stood at 4.6 feet above
the low water mark at G o'clock Sunday afternoon, a gain of .(11 foot in
the 48 hours since Friday's reading
of 3.99 feet.
MENUS
REOIPES
and
HINTS
Good
By
Mn.
Mary
Morton
Housekeeping
MENU HINT
Broiled Hamburgers Smothered
in Onions
Baked. Potatoes
Creamed Cauliflower
Cabbage and Carrot Salad
Pineapple Chiffon Pie
Tea or Coffee
The old bridge rule was "when
in  doubt play   trumps."    A  good
household  rule is when in doubt
serve hamburgs.   They always are
good,.and may be cooked in a variety of ways besides the ordinary
ones which we suggest today. Onions may be baked or cooked in a
pan in*the broiler, or fried to serve
with the hamburgs.
TOG*Yt»«REC1PES
PINEAPPLE CHIFFON PIE —
One baked nine-inch crust, one tablespoon   gelatin,   one-fourth   cup
cold water, four eggs, one-half cup
sugar, one and one-fourth cups
canned crushed pineapple, one tablespoon lemon juice, one-fourth
teaspoon salt. Soak gelatin in cold
water five minutes. Beat egg yolks,
add one-half the amount of sugar,
pineapple, lemon juice and salt.
Cook over hot water, stirring constantly until the mixture coats the
spoon. Remove immediately from
stove, add softened gelatin and stir
until it is dissolved. Cool until mixture starts to thicken. Beat the egg
whites with salt to a stiff froth. Add
remaining Sugar gradually, beating
it in. Whip pineapple mixture until
light and frothy. Fold in egg whites.
Turn into baked shell <it should be
cold). When serving coat over the
top with whipped cream and if you
wish sprinkle generously with toasted shredded almonds.
Park Aldermen
Inspect Need!
Lakeside Park
Aldermen N. C. Stibbs and. R07,
Sharp of the parks and cemetery 1
committee, checking over condition!
and looking into improvement measures considered necessary or desirable.  Alderman Stibbs, chairman ot I
the   committee,   stated   afterward:
no definite program has yet been
formulated.
Repairs to the ladders at the
swimming float will be made at an
early date as a matter of routine.
Iwo Weeks Jail
for Disturbance
Alfred Hawkins of Crawford Bay
was sentenced to two weektf ip jail
when he appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel" Saturday on a charge under the Vagrancy act of causing a disturbance
in public. ; ;    -
J. W. Smiley, relief investigator,
testified to Hawkins stopping his
car on the road at Gray Creek and
causing the disturbance. Hawkins
claimed he was not causing a disturbance, that he wanted more relief.   He was found guilty.
G.N. Pulling in
15,000 New Ties
Fifteen thousand new ties are be>
ing placed under the rails of the
Great Northern Railway company
line between Waneta and Jftoup
Junction by an extra gang of 2S men .
sent out last week.
The work outlined for the extra
gang includes general reconditioning of the track on a program
planned to last some time.
Scarborough is to widen its streets
and esplanade.
"NERVES"
SHE CALLED IT
Loinf interest—I
Using friends—ahel
ante went wit  anyl
more—always t»s)|
tired.   "Neroe," si* I
thought - but it «u|
her kidneys, tin Html
ol her blood, thill
needed attention.!
Delay meant dantar.f
She took Dodd'e Kid .
Tht motored action ol her kidmye helped
to dear away Howl impurinea and oleosa
acids.   Fatigue, headache, backache, lick '
oi emeu, disappeared, 117
Dodd's Kidney Pills
1/cru'tepayuq(ciU-
amjumj!
^^\ ham in Canada
GEIlERflL ELECTRIC #^ak
WITH THI KAUD-IN-ITKl UNIT . . . GUARANTEED FOR FIVE YUM
YOU'LL find that a General Electric
Refrigerator will more than |)ay its own
way. You save on food bills. You save on
operating costs. And you save on upkeep.
You're paying for it anyway ... so why not
pick out your General Electric Refrigerator
now and begin to save right away?
Most Thrifty—Most Modern
(,-K Sealed-insteel Thrift Unit topi them all /of
economy...and it is backed by the 5-rW Protection
Plan.
Modern features include.: Stainless Steel Treeter
. . . Sliding Shelves . . . Automatic Interior Light
. . . Temperature Control with Defrosting Switch
... smartly-styled All-Steel Cabinets... Positive Ice.
Tray Release ...and Vegetable Crisper.        *"c
518 BkerSr.
NELSON ELECTRIC COMPANY
McRORY & REDDEN
Nelson, B. C.
CANADIAN    GENERAL    ELECTRIC    CO.
Limited
»_■_
saaaaaiiiaaiB.aafBja
mmmm
 J.WjpiM
up
WlftlPWPaWWjimuiUPip.U iwwpj
SfoLum laihj JfattiB
Established April 22, 1902.
British Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper
ALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS
Published every morning except Sunday sy
the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
216   Baker   Street.   Nelson.   British   Columbia.
Phone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.
Member  ot   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and
The   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.
MONDAY, MAY 10, 1987.
THE CORONATION BROADCAST
The coronation ceremony will be unique in that for
the first time the whole world will listen in to the crowning of a British King. The climax will come at night in
an Empire broadcast entitled, "The Empire's Homage."
For this historic occasion the King will speak into a
special microphone at Buckingham Palace and as his father
talked to "my beloved people" on the memorable Christmas day broadcasts of the past, so will the new monarch
speak to the Empire.
But in addition to the King, the Viceroy of India,
the prime ministers of Great Britain and the dominions
will speak as well as representatives of other units of the
Empire. Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King will speak for Canada;
Hon. J. A. Lyons, premier of Australia, will represent that
dominion; Hon. M. J. Savage, premier of New Zealand,
and General Hertzog, of South Africa, will be on the
air for their countries. Southern Rhodesia will be represented by its prime minister, Dr. G. M. Huggins and Newfoundland by a representative of its commission. All of
these addresses will be from London. The Viceroy of
India will join in from India. With its impressive list of
names the roll of members of the Colonial Empire will be
called and this part of the Empire will also have its direct
representation in a message to be broadcast from Bermuda
by Lieutenant-Governor Sir Reginald Hillyard, governor
of the Colony. The program will embody some of the features of the Christmas day broadcasts as representative
citizens will be heard speaking from Canada, New Zealand, Australia and South Africa as well as spokesmen
for the United Kingdom.
As a culmination of this remarkable program Rt.
Hon. Stanley Baldwin will speak, to be followed by the
King. How the world has changed since the Christmas
day of 1066 when William the Conqueror was crowned
in Westminster Abbey!
WARDERS, NOT BEEFEATERS
England's "Beefeaters," the King's Bodyguard of
the Yeomen of the Guard, to give them their correct and
official title, are famous the world over, but few of their
admirers know that the duties of this famous corps once
included those of chambermaid.
At least, to the Yeomen of the Guard, in the days of
the Tudors, was entrusted the "making" of the monarch's
bed, and no sovereign of those times would have thought
of retiring to rest until the Yeomen reported that this job
had been completed with all due ceremony and observance.
* *   #
This task, presumably, no longer devolves upon the
manly Beefeaters, though some of them still are classed
as Yeomen, Bed-Hangers and Yeomen Bed-Goers. It has
passed out of their hands like many of the tougher jobs
imposed on them by their founder, Henry VII, and the
Yeomen have become almost entirely ornamental.
British rulers no longer lead their troops into war,
and the King's Bodyguard, therefore is no longer called
on to protect his royal person in battle.
On the other hand, it still continues to search the
cellars of the Houses of Parliament at the opening of
each session, on the chance of discovering another Guy
Fawkes and another Gunpowder Plot.
# *   *
But the purpose of these brief notes is to warn against
mistaking the Warders of the Tower (of London) for
genuine Beefeaters.
More than 400 years ago King Henry VIII decider'
that the Tower was no longer a "desirable residence" ant.
moved to other quarters. But he left behind him 12 of
his Yeomen, just to show that the ancient fortress was
still a royal palace.
Eventually the Tower ceased altogether to be a residence for royalty, and the abandoned Yeomen became
warders and lost their uniform.
However, in the time of the boy King Edward VI,
who died when he was 16 years old, this was restored to
them at the request of Lord Seymour, who retained pleasant memories of the kindness of the warders while he
was a prisoner.
So the Tower Warders now dress like the Yeomen of
the Guard and usually are mistaken for members of that
body, even by old Londoners. They are a separate organization, take no part in state affairs, and are under the
control of the Constable of the Tower.
A north country boy, accidentally wounded by gunshot,
bled to death because no one knew how to apply a tourniquet. The average Boy Scout knows all about such first
aid, and one on the scene probably could have saved this
boy's life. Which indicates the desirability of having all
lads enrolled in an organization that provides this necessary
training.
A little French boy was stoned to death by his playmates because he wore his hair long. There were some
narrow escapes much nearer home when mothers dressed
their boys in the Little Lord Fauntleroy style.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 10, 1937
*■ r
■,*&,.
This is Fred Hamer, who has resided in Nelson for some years.
Fred is a violinist. He can be seen
working about town at almost any
time.
• *   «
DATES WHEN SLANQ
EXPRESSIONS STARTED
Fly off the handle ... 1825, Neal.
Follow one's nose ... 1620, Percy.
One foot in the grave . . . 1825,
Neal.
Fried in his own fat . . . 1383,
Chaucer.
Gag (a Joke) ... 1823.
Gift of gab ... 1650, Boyd.
Green (gullible) ... 1596, Shakespeare.
Hold one's nose to the grindstone
. . . 1578.
To hate like poison ... 1530, Palsgrave.
Make hay while the sun shines
... 1509.
Take to one's heels . . # 1593,
Shakespeare.
Hell broke loose... 1628.
Henpecked ... IMO.....
Hit the nail on th? head ... J719,
Durfey.
By hook or by crook ... 1300.
Many irons in the fire . . . 1593,
Harvey.
In a jiffy ... 1793, T. Scott.
Kick the bucket . . . 1785, Grose.
Out of kilter . . . 1640, Bradford.
Knock off (to quit) ... 1662.
Laiybones . .. 1593, Harvey.
Licked into shape ... 1663, Butler.
Keep a stiff upper lip . . . 1833,
Neal.
Against the grain ... 1673, Dryden.
Apple-pie order.. . 1813, Scott.
Bamboozle ... 1703.
Beat about the bush . . . 1546,
Heywood.
Better half . ., 1580, Sydney.
Between you, me and the bedpost
. . . 1831.
To be in the same boat... c. 1550.
A bone to pick ... 1565.
Brass (Impudence) . . . 1594,
Shakespeare.
To know on which side one's
bread is buttered ... 1546, Heywood.
New broom sweeps clean ... 1546,
Heywood.
Butter-fingered . . . 1615, Mark-
ham.
Button up one's lip or mouth .. .
1747. I
Carry coals to Newcastle .,. 1662.'
Put the cart before the horse ...
1690.
Let the cat out of the bag . .
1760.
Chatterbox ... 1785, Grose.
Chisel (to cheat) . . . 1808, Ja-
mieson.
Count one's chickens before
they're hatched ... 1579, Gosson.
Dead as a doornail... 1593, Harvey.
Dry as a bone . .. 1833, Marryat.
Eat one's head off... 1703.
Elbow grease . . . 1785, Grose.
Feather one's nest . . . 1590,
Greene.
To have one's fling... 1624, Beaumont.
-r-J. Louis Kuethe in American
Speck, Columbia University Press.
* *   *
BRAIN TWI8TER
It seems there was a man and he
had to work late at the office.  It
"Well, that's another milestone in my career.
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
All letters to the editor must be signed with the name of the
writer. A nom da plume may be used tor publication if desired.
Lines in typewritten copy should be double spaced.
Henniger Liberal
Not Independent
Secretary States
To the Editor:
Sir—We wish to correct an error
appearing in your columns May 3.
In the item in question you stated
that E. C. Henniger was standing as
Independent Liberal candidate for
the Grand Forks-Greenwood riding.
This is not correct, Mr. Henniger
received the nomination at a convention held In Greenwood on April
28 of the Grand Forks-Greenwood
District Liberal assoclaUon, as the
Liberal candidate for this riding, and
Is standing for election as a Liberal.
Mr. Henniger has been a resident of Grand Forks for 30 years, he
has twice been mayor of the city,
and was Liberal member for this
riding in the Oliver government.
Thanking you in anticipation that
you will correct this misunderstanding.
Grand Forks-Greenwood District
Liberal association,
J. T. SIMMONS
Secretary.
Grand Forks, B.C., May 9, 1937.
No Party Can Cure
Monetary Ailments
To the Editor:
Sir.—I see from your paper that
our province is going to have a
new crop of political quacks and
sorcerers, all of whom aim to cure
the subject's economic and criminal
ailments.
May I inform you, Mr. Editor,
that there is no political party in
the field able to do whit they claim.
I have been looking into the medical chests of them all and find that
none contain any new remedy, only
the old dope: "Satan's monetary
system."
One party has shown a tendency
to lose faith In this old dope, so 1
wrote to two of the leaders and
proposed that the party substitute
an "Energy Medium of Exchange"
based on nations' unspent energy,
in exchange for the old dope. To
which 1 received the following answer:
"Dear Mr. Wigen.—For the past
45 years I have been spending a
good part of my time trying to
understand this complicated system
of ours, and, after considerable
thought, adopted a line of action,
which seemed to me best suited to
solve our problem. Now you send
me a couple ot clippings snd a
manuscript and suggest that on the
basis of these, I adopt an altogether
new system of philosophy.
"I am afraid that this is too much
to expect."
I can assure the writer that I
appreciate the frankness of his
answer by adding that I have spent
55 years in finding a substitute for
"Satan's Monetary System" and it
is only during the last 10 years that
I found it. "An Energy Medium of
Exchange" based on nations' unspent energy is the only solution.
This system will unite all the po-
lltical parties into one and all religious dogmas into one faith of a
Q-eator and not a personal God.
This letter also brought forcibly
to my mind the proverb which
says: "When you live amongst
wolves, you must do as the wolves
do." Can it be that our house of
commons is a political pack of
wolves? It so, I can assure the
reader that the house of commons
is unaware of its breed and the
responsible party for having chang'
ed it into that breed is none other
than "Satan's Monetary System."
Wynndel, B.C. O. J. WIGEN.
May 5.
Reasserts Henniger
Was Nominated as an
Independent Liberal
To the Editor:
Sir—On the front page of your issue of May 6, 1937, it is to be noted
that A. J. Campbell, president of a
Liberal association, goes to the trouble and expense of a long distance
call to your newspaper, stating that
E. C. Henniger was not chosen as
an Independent Liberal at the recent
nominating convention.
Would Mr. Campbell care to publish the minutes of the meeting covering the proceedings re nomination
of Mr. Henniger as the Liberal candidate which he refused, and the re-
nomination of the same genUeman
as an Independent Liberal.
The publication of Mr. Campbell's
telephone call must he very embarrassing to Mr. Henniger who stated
very plainly to the meeting his reasons for desiring nomination as an
Independent Liberal, and which
same reasons were sound and sensible.
A Liberal Who Was Present.
Greenwood, B.C., May 9, 1937.
seems also that the electric lights
went out, so he asked a clerk to
bring him some candles. The clerk
obliged with two, each of the same
length; but, he explained as he
lighted them, one would burn for
four hours and the other for five
hours. Our late-working man finished his Job and started home; but
as he blew out the candles he noticed
that one was exactly four times as
long as the other. Now, he had to
charge the office for overtime, and
he had forgotten to look at his
watch; but from the length remaining of the candles he was able to
figure out exactly how long he had
been working. How long a time was
it?.
• *  *
ANSWER TO BRAIN-TWISTER
Those candles must have burned
for three and three-quarter hours.
At the end of that time the four-
hour candle had one-sixteenth of its
length left, and the five-hour candle
four-sixteenths.
• *   *
IN DIVERS TONGUES
Visitor: So you have a baby
brother. What's his name?
Tommy: We don't know. We ean't
understand one word he says.
• •   ♦
DID HE GET THE JOB?
Business Man: Yes, I advertised
for a boy about your size. Do you
smoke?
Applicant: No, thanks, but you can
blow me to an ice cream soda, it
you want to.
• •   •
HE "FA' DOWN"
Teacher:   But   how   could  skin
trouble give you a broken arm?
Willie: It was a banana skin, miss.
»  •  *
GETTING IT STRAIGHT
Officer: Judge, this man leads a
double life. He's a lawyer in the
daytime and a murglar at night.
judge: Which was he arrested for?
WHAT THE PRESS
IS SAYING
ROYAL MEWS ALM08T EMPTY
A recent news despatch announces the Royal Mews at Windsor
Castle are to be reduced to a mere
shadow of their former glory. Most
of the regal Dobbins have already
been moved and have been lost in
the oblivion of teeming London.
"The number of horses in regular
use in the royal service has gradually become less and less since the
advent of the motor car," says the
despatch, "and the King has decided to keep only those necessary
for state occasions." That is half-
a-dozen- In the days of Queen Victoria there were one hundred horses
at Windsor. Then a horse was a
horse, and a groom was somebody.
But all is changed. Now when the
King wants to be somewhere he
calls for his chauffeur—or his pilot.
King George has Just added a new
car to the royal fleet. It.Is a rather
melancholy breaking with the past,
the closing of the Royal Mews.
—Winnipeg Tribune
Seven children were among those
found-In by police raiding a Mill-
wall betting establishment.
CONTRACT
BRIDGE
By SHEPARD BARCLAY
"The Authority of Authorities"
STARTING   THE  SIDE  SUIT
Play of a two-suiter ordinarily
calls for the ropping of the
trumps first, followed by the running ot the aide. suit. But it that
suit is not certain to be readily es'
tablishcd, it is sometimes better to
work on it first, especially if there
is the possibility that the decalare
would have to run all of his trumps
to get the opponents out of theirs.
♦ QJ64
»K086
♦ »«
*A07
♦ Kins TL-_
tAtJJloT  ».
♦ 97
f None
♦ AKJ68.
+ KQJ102
(Pealer: South. Neither side vulnerable:)
After an opening bid of 1-Pia-
mond by South, most of the East-
West pairs in a duplicate went aa
high as 4-Hearts on this deal, but
the South players in each instance
went to 5-Clubs, which East dou
bled.
The heart Ace was the opening
lead, which South ruffed with the
club 2. Tho club K was cashed
and a second club led to dummy's
Ace. The heart K furnished a discard for one of South's spades.
When it was disclosed that East
held as many trumps as South, it
was Imperative that the diamond
suit be set up before the last two
trumps were cashed. A diamond
lead indicated that East held only
one diamond. A second diamond
was led and ruffed by East, who
cashed the apade Ace and ltd another spade, which declarer ruffed.
Attar drawing East's last trump,
the diamond J was played, but that
was the last trick the declarer
could win.
The South who made the con
tract, Mrs. Kay Coffin of Indiana-
polls, tried out the diamonds after
ruffing the heart Ace. When the diamond <J fell, she entered dummy
with the club Ace, discarded a spade
on the heart K and led dummy's
last diamond. East did not trump,
so declarer won the trick, ruffed a
diamond with dummy's club 9 and
then led dummy's last trump. Had
East ruffed the second diamond, he
would have had only two trumps,
and if he underled the spade Ace
for another diamond ruff, he could
not have overruffed the club 9 in
dummy.
Tomorrow's Problem
♦ Nona
985*2
♦ AKIOo
*Q7683
(pealer: North. North-South vulnerable.)
After Seuth wins the third club
and leads a heart, how should West
try to defeat South's 3-No Trumps
contract and what counterplay by
South will enable him to make it?
If a tree trunk leans, cells on the
lower side may become deformed
and compressed, and boards cut
from the tree may warp and twist
due to this "compression wood."
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QU1LLEN
"I knew what her closets
would look like when I caught
her makln' up a bed one mornin'
without takin' the covers off."
Sonnysayings
On account we haa t' aneaV. out
and help Sara Lou escape tt midnight, we put tha 'larm-clock under
the bedclothes so nobody else would
get woke up, an' It sounded like *
rattle-snake!
10 YEARS AGO
From Nelson Dally News Files
9> 4
(May 10,1»J7)
Mr. and Mrs. H. Essie left Cranbrook for Vancouver, where Mrs.
Essie will reside. Mr. Essie, former
city engineer for Cranbrook, will
Journey to northoui China to Join
a British gold mining company.
* *  «
No trace of the French fliers,
Captain' Nungesser and F, Coll, has
been found in an extensive search
of the Newfoundland wastelands.
No ship on the ocean has reported
having sighted the ocean fliers. The
filers left nearly three days ago on
their Paris to New York non-stop
flight
* •  •
C. B. Cambell of Trail is a guest
at the Hume.
* *  *
Mrs. A. Le(th was appointed delegate for the Kokanee chapter ot
the I.O.P.P.E. for Pominlon chapter
meeting in Winnipeg in June.
a    *    a
Mrs. E. M. Fleury ot Fairview entertained members of No. 3 circle
of Ttrlnity church.
* •   *
Miss M. Thompson, Miss W. T.
Keyt and Miss Greta Curwen will
be in charge of the Guide rally at
the park May 21, it was decided.
* *   «
Architect A. Carrie has been in
structed to call for tenders for the
construction of a Nurses' Home here.
* *   *
"Intlmaeits of Old Booka" was an
article written by Miss Isobel Forln
of Nelson published in the current
Issue of the "Canadian Bookman."
* *   »
Capt. F. P. Courtney, famous British filer, has announced his intentions of making a dash across the
Atlantic from England by air.
20 YEARS AGO
From Nelson Dally News Files
(May 10, 1917)
In the great British offensive
throughout April 19, 843 German
prisoners were captured, it was announced by officials in London.
Besides the great gains in land and
trenches about 260 heavy guns were
captured while many were destroyed.
• *  *
Mrs. L. A. Campbell and daughter, Louise, of Rossland have left
for Spokane.
• Si      *
Sam Morrish of Rossland left for
Saskatchewan where he expects to
reside for some time.
• •   •
Hugh W. King, rcrmer constable
at Nelson, has b«n in a hospital
in France recovering from arm
wounds. He has now returned to
the fighting lines, according to a
letter received here by Chief J. T.
Black ot the p-cv:-<-!al force.
• »   •
Miss Florence Norris ot Vancouver and John N. Schmieg of Silver
ton were married by Rev. C. M.
Wright in Nelson.
• •   •
Mrs. F. A. Hanna left for Vancouver.
• •   *
Thirty-eight British vessels were
sunk by German craft during April.
THE DOCTOR
SAYS...
LOGAN  CLENDENING,  M.D.
DIET THAT WILL FATT1N IX-
TRIMELY THIN FOLK
After having stated in the article
yesterday that the record for human weight was 739 pounds, I find
this morning a newspaper clipping
which records the death of "Happy
Jack" Eckert, who weighed 789
pounds and who lived to be 63 years
old, and died ot injuries when his
specially built motor car collided
with a freight truck near Flomaton,
Alabama.
This controvert* the usual Idea
that all tat people die young.
The thinnest adult ot average
height and development that I
find recorded is that if Calvin
Edson, who was five feet four
Inches tall and weighed 60 pounds.
In 1813 he served in the American
army at the Battle of Plattsburg.
At this time he weighed 125 pounds
and was 29 years oil He lay all
night on the cold ground and became numb, and immediately began
to lose weight.
Mora extreme examples ot thinness have occured, but always in
association with deformity. These ,
are cases in which there is a disease
of the muscles all over the body,
causing atrophy, and the muscles
become so weak that they are useless. Some living skeletons have a
certain amount of muscular atrophy. Probably the onset ot muscular atrophy from changes in the
central nervous system is what
happened to Calvin Edson when he
lay on the cold ground all night.
The other less conspicioui examples of abnormal leaness are
active and able to do good work.
They are always trying, however,
to gain weight, and my mall contains many appeals from them.
DONT CARE TO EAT
Nutritional experts say these
men and women simply do not like
to eat, and that their leaness is
due to diroished Intake ot nutrition. That If they will deliberately
force themselves to eat extra
nourishing food, they can gain
weight.
A diet somewhat ai follows
persisted in for two or three
months is guaranteed by all nutritional experts to add weight:
BREAKFAST: Orange Juice or
other fruit; double omelette; two
slices of whole wheat tout; oatmeal or farina with cream; glass
or two of whole milk. Or shredded
wheat with prunes and cream,
poached egg on whole wheat toast,
two glasses milk.
LUNCH: Cream soup; fruit
salad with dressing; whole wheat
bread with cream cheese; pudding
with whipped cream; nulk and
coffee. Or whole wheat macaroni
and cheese, salad ot asparagus,,
beets and hard-boiled egg on lettuce, gingerbread with whipped
cream, two glasses milk.
PINNER: Oyster stew; steak or
other meat with tat; creamed
potatoes; carrots in butter sauce;
custard, coffee and milk. Or baked
bread and butter, banana cream
pudding, two glasses milk.
It is estimated that 219,428,000
dozens of eggs were laid by 28,790,-
000 hens on Canadian farms during
1936. This represents a decrease of
4,112,000 dozens of eggs and a reduction of 804,000 in the number of
hens compared with 1935. Prince
Edward Island, Nova Scotia, Quebec
and Ontario individually recorded
increases in egg production, while
New Brunswick, Alberta and British
Columbia reported declines. In Manitoba and Saskatchewan there was
no change from 1935.
In the reign ot Ivan the Terrible,
sixteenth century, hundreds of Russians worked on a history of the
world beginning with the creation,
hut of 16 volumes supposed to have
been written, only one is in existence today.
I   30 YEARS AGO   I
I From Nelson Dally News Files |
<* e
(May 10, 1907)
A. H. Gracey, manager of the
Eva mine at Camborne, stated that
the new compressor Is completely
installedat the mine and aperatlons
have been speeded up to make up
for the lull during the winter.
• •  •
W. F. Pubois, manager of the Arlington mine, has taken an option
on the Neepawa properties,
• *  •
John Foley of Slocan and a former employee of the Ottawa mine,
has left for Vancouver where he
will be employed in the real estate
business.
• • »
An unusually serious bush fire
and the first of the year started a
mile out the Granite road. A considerable area ot bush was burnt
before the fire was brought under
control,
• •  •
H. Calder and J. A. Miller of Nelson left for the Slocan on a fishing
trip.
• •  t
C. Gardiner Johnson, former resident of Nelson and now 6f Vancouver, is a guest at the Strathcona.
• • •
YMIR—An epidemic ot measles
has hit the town and the majority
ot the school children are sick and
away from school.
BRINGING UP FATHER
By Ceo. McManus
Business Rise Through U.S. Said General—Headline.
Partly due to the fact that so many sit-downers have risen
also.
f
THIS HAS BEEN A
MOST DELK5HTFUL
AFFAIE.DONTMDU
THINK f EVERYONE LOOKS JUST
SWANKY-
YBS,INOEED-OU'
TOPPER-HOW
ABOUT A NIP
OF TEA-?,
-
 "	
mwmmtm
till J   Uiir^punmnisi.,,,.,    LIJ<||)IIWI|jlllWH.IVIU|W
liWf^yffl'^jgWW^^^^
NELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 10, inr
-PAGE SEVEN
liUBBELL EQUALS RECORD WITH 20 STRAIGHT WINS
ECOND IN BALL
1IST0RY TO RUN
UP LONG STRING
sets Chicago's Cubs
Down 4-1 While
36,529 Watch
NATIONAL  LEAGUE
tsburgh 	
Louis 	
w York 	
Icago	
Iton 	
roklyn 	
Iladelphia 	
icinnali  	
11 3 .786
10 5 .667
9 7 .563
7 !) .438
7 9 .438
7 10 .412
6 10 .373
5 9 .337
ffiW YORK, May 9 (AP).—Carl
ibbell today became the second
in in all baseball history to pitch
consecutive victories. Before the
■gest crowd of the season at the
do Grounds — 36,529—the lean
uthpaw screwballcr hurled the
iants to a 4-1 triumph over Chi-
go Cubs.
Begun last July 17, his 20-vvin run
luois that of a Giant great of an-
her era, Rube Marquard, who
rned the trick with one victory
1911 and 19 in 1912. Hubbell had
straight last year, and achieved
s fourth of 1937 today.
He had a lough time for seven
nings, hooking up with Bill Lee
a tight duel. In the seventh.
iwever, the Giants gave him a
Ki-run margin and in the eighth
Ick Bartell put the game on ice
r clouting his fifth homer of the
ason with a mate on base.
nicago    000 000 001— 1   7   0
ew York . 000 000 22x— 4 8 1
Lee, Root and Bottarini; Hubbell
id Mancuso.
RANDT ALLOWS EIGHT HITS
BOSTON, May 9 (AP). — Ed
randt, Pittsburgu Pirate southpaw
:e, kept eight Boston Bees' hits
lattered as his mates pounced on
iree Bees' hurlers for seven hits
id a 6-3 National baseball league
ictory.
'The league-leading Pirates took a
b lead in the fifth inning when
11 Weir, Boston rookie, lost his
ntrol and walked three men, and
Todd, Pirate backstop, rapped
t a,two-run single.
ttsburgh .. 002 020 200— 6 7 1
Ston .... 021 000 000— 3 8 2
3randt and Todd; Weir, Bush,
lith and Lopez.
ZZY WINS FIFTH
BROOKLYN, N.Y., May 9 AP>-
zzy Dean kept right on top today
Winning his fifth' straight Na-
nal baseball league victory, a 7-1
Cision over Brooklyn Dodgers.
Diz handcuffed the Brooklyns
th nine hits, fanned seven, and,
allowing but one earned run, kep<
season average at .400, far an-.'
ray the outstanding record of the
| leagues.
Dizzy has now pitched 46 innings
year, with a record showing
ese figures; Three runs (one un-
rned); 38 hits; 40 strikeouts; five
ses on balls.
Louis   000 001 123- 7 10   1
•ooklyn   000 000 001— 1   9   4
J. Dean and Ogrodowski; Butcher,
-AND LETS STOCK UP
WITH   OAWEJ-
THE LARGEST 5ELLIN&
, BOTTLED ALE IN CANADA-
OOitRNMsW
utyoairats
Softball Heralds Spring . . . Small
Boys En joy Game at Central School
The batters whiff the softba]
How Carl Hubbell Won 20 in a Row
NEW YORK, May 9 (AP).—Here is how Carl Hubbell achieved his
20 straight victories, to equal the 1911-12 performance of Rube Marquard:
LP.
July '17,1936, at Pittsburgh    9
July 19 at Cincinnati    2%
July 21 ot St. Louis  10
July 30 at Chicago     9
August 2 at Pittsburgh    9
August 8 at Philadelphia    9
August 15 at Philadelphia     9
August 19 at Brooklyn    9
August 26 at Cincinnati     9
August 30 at Chicago .'    9
September 3 at St. Louis    9
September 7 at Philadelphia     9
September 11 at Chicago    9
September '14 at St. Louis    5
September 19 at Brooklyn    9
September 23 at Philadelphia    9
April 23. 1937. at Boston    9
April 30 at Brooklyn    9
May 4 at Cincinnati     6 2-3
May 9 at Chicago     9
Legend: LP., innings pitched; S., score; H„ hits; S.O.
s.
H.
S.O.
6-0
5
2
4-3
0
0
2-1
9
;i
6-1
7
3
3-2
4
2
3-2
7
4-1
9
;i
3-2
5
5
6-5
11
2
6-1
7
.'!
2-1
4
5
6-2
7
3
5-1
4
2
7-5
6
4
9-1
4
5
5-4
II
•1
3-0
3
5
11-2
7
II
7-6
9
10
4-1
7
6
strikeouts.
Birkofer,   Clark   and   Spencer,   R.
Moore.
24 HITS AS CINCINNATI
BEATS PHILLIES
PHILADELPHIA, May 9 (AP).—
Cincinnati slapped four pitchers for
24 hits, including four home runs,
to score a 21-10 victory over the
Phillies before 7000 National baseball league fans today.
Ernie Lombardi and Alex Kam-
pouris led the assault. The big
catcher went to bat six times and
made six hits. Kampouris made
three home runs and a single to
drive in eight runs. His homer in
the seventh off Syl Johnson was
made with the bases full. It was
Kampouris' sixth home run in four
games and put him at the top of the
home run hitters.
Cincinnati        102 803 511-21 24   3
Philadelphia .  100 120 303-10 15   1
R. Davis and Lombardi; Mulcahy,
Jorgens, Kelleher, Johnson and
Grace.
UNABLE TO FIND SITE
LONDON, (CP)-Plans to erect
the equestrian statue of Earl Haig
before the Coronation have been
abandoned owing to lack of a suitable site. Sites for memorials to
Earl Beatty and Earl Jellicoe are
being sought.
WAR ADMIRAL
WINS IN NEAR
RECORD TIME
Son of Man o' War Is
Never Headed in Big
Kentucky Derby
CHURCHILL DOWNS, Louisville,
Ky., May 9 (AP)-War Admiral,
a chip off the old thoroughbred
block, ran one of the biggest of all
Kentucky Derby fields dizzy under
balmy skies Saturday afternoon
with the second fastest triumph in
the 63-year histo y of Amrica's
most colorful horse racing spectacle.
The little brown son of Man o'
War came home in front a-gallop-
ing, just the way his daddy used to
do, after leading from start to finish.
There never was much, if any,
doubt about the outcome as War
Admiral b«.at Pompoon by two
lengths and Reaping Reward by 10
lengths before a near-record crowd
of 63,000 spectators who acclaimed
a new 3-year-old equine king with
an ear-splitting ovation.
LOUISVILLc  BOY ABROAD
War Admiral, the favorite at approximately 5 to 2, stepped the
mile and a quarter under the guidance of Louisville's own Charley
Kurtsinger in the remarkably fast
time of 2:03 1-5. Only Twenty
Grand's record-smashing 2;01 4-5
made in '931 surpasses War Admiral's performance in all derby history, da'ing away back to 1875.
Kurtsinger also rode Twenty Grand
so that the "Flying Dutchman" of
the turf carried off a full share of
the plaudits as he achieved his second derby victory.
HANGS UP CTART
Despite such bad behavior at the
post that he was largely responsible
for a delay of more than eight minutes in the getaway, War Admiral
broke on top, soon took command,
and made every post a winning one,
The colt showed his flying heels to
the sprinters, Fairy Hill and Heelfly
and had plenty of finishing power
to stand off the surprising stretch
challenge of pompoon and the ace of
Mrs. Ethel V- Mars' stable, Reaping
Reward, and the "ugly duckling''
of the big field of 20 starters, Melodist.
BIRD FLIES 5000 MILES
BLOEMFONTE1N, South Africa,
(CP)—Ringed in Hungary, a swallow which had flown 5000 miles
from the mid-European country,
has been found in the interior of
Basutoland,
Tn-nri is., fn i~sTTi .■] b±ttt
So we're gonna have some boxla
prety soon. Tonight the league executive will meet at Castlegar to appoint a schedule committee and get
things to moving. It is expected the
opening date of the Kootenay 1837
circuit will be announced following
the meeting.
Boxla fans throughout the district
will be more than glad to see that
date announced and the schedule
drawn. Major sports have been in
the doldrums for the last little while,
and John Q. Phan is looking for-ac-
tion.
It is to be hoped the West Kootenay league will do something about
promoting the gams in East Kotenay
this season. President Frank Coates
of Rossland suggested last fall that
a couple of the West Kootenay
teams might make a tour of Cranbrook, Kimberley and Fernie to exhibit their wares and get those
towns interested. There's a real
setup possible in those towns, given the support of the populace, and
the best way to get that support is
to put on a couple of ding-dong
battles. No punch-puiling exhibitions, but the sort of boxla we expect and get at home.
*   *   *
MAYHAP8 AN
INDIAN TEAM
Perhaps, if the thing was promoted the right way, we might get
a team representing the originators
of the game—the Indians of the
reserve near Cranbrook—in the interior picture. Art Wallace tells me
that he had an Indian lacrosse team
at Cranbrook "way back when",
and it should be possible to repeat.
Kimberley has swarms of athletic
material, notably among the legions
of hockey players in that town, Fernie should find it possible to field
a boxla team where a hockey team
is impossible. It's possible too that
should Fernie not be able to get
in on boxla, there might be a team
from the Indian reserve near Cranbrook, and another team from Cran-
HIGH. LIVING   AND   PLAIN
THINKING
During the past year there was
a decrease in the number of books
issued from the Birmingham public libraries amounting to over 360,-
000. This is attributed to the shortage of labour in many branches of
skilled industry and to the consequent lessening of leisure.
brook city to provide a three-team
league.
As a matter of fact a fellow could
go on possibling all over the place
on this boxla stuff. But it doesn't
take much imagination to see what
could be done with a three-team
loop in each of the Two Kootenays, with an interlocking schedule to add spice and variety, and
district and interior playoffs after a
while.
Cliff McKinnon a few nights back
suggested to me the names of three
gentlemen, one in each of the three
East Kootenay towns, who might
be urged to do something about
boxla. I've filed the names away
so well lhat they have disappeared
completely, and will have to get
them' again.
AND HE SAYS
HE'S A PAL
Mr. Sportlines Kelly, Trail sport-
itorial thunderer, is a pal of mine
. . . perhaps. He also has some funny idea about giving me "the works"
. . . is that any way for a pal to behave?
They do say that Kelly is losing
weight as he contemplates all the
sports current and impending in
Trail! You see, there are so many interested in so many lines of sport
that he's getting caught up all the
time by stories large and small,
and hasn't time to collect bets on
Tony Canzoneri and War Admiral,
the Kentucky  Derby  horse.
But we're going to ease his load.
In my desk at this moment are two
invitations to attend the Kentucky
Derby; and what's more, io be a
guest at the pre-derby buffet luncheons given by a famous distillery at
Louisville and to partake of the product of that firm's cellars. The only
reason that I didn't accept was that
the invitations were a day or two
late and there wasn't an airplane
handy to get to Louisville.
So I'm going to forward one of the
invitations to Kelly, and he can join
me in contemplation of
"What might have been,"
Middlesex hospital has been left
£500,000 to be spent on its nurses.
Kgsjilts
SATURDAY
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston 5, Chicago 6.
New York 0. Cleveland 4.
Washington 8. Detroit 3.
Philadelphia 5, St. Louis 1.
NATIONAL   LEAGUE
St. Louis 12, New York 5.
Chicago 5, Brooklyn 6.
Pittsburgh - Philadelphia,   post-
poned, rain.
Cincinnati-Boston,  postponed
cold.
INTERNATIONAL
Syracuse 6-1. Buffalo 0-3.
Baltimore 8, Toronto 6.
Newark 1, Montreal 4.
Jersey City 5, Rochester 16.
PACIFIC COAST
San Diego 7. San Francisco 0.
Missions 4. Los Angeles 7.
Sacramento 5, Oakland 3.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Indianapolis 1, Milwaukee 5.
Toledo 8, St. Paul 4.
Louisville 5, Kansas City 4.
Columbus 12, Minneapolis 0.
SUNDAY
INTERNATIONAL
Newark 3, Rochester 5.
Toronto 5-2, Syracuse 3-1.
Jersey City 0, Buffalo 4.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Indianapolis 1-5, Minneapolis 16-5.
Columbus 1-2, Kansas City 5-7.
Toledo 5-0. Milwaukee 14-3.
Louisville 7-7, St. Paul 9-3.
PACIFIC COA8T
Sacramento 2-3, Oakland 7-2.
San Diego 6-2, San Francisco 12-8
Seattle 1-4, Portland 4-5.
Missions 1-4, Los Angeles Zl-2.
Fill, advertitement ii not published or
illf-layed by the Liquor Control Board or
iv tht Government ol British Columbia.
Two new steamers are being added this summer to the service operating between Liverpool and the
Isle of Man.
Derby Yfinner
National Hockey League Takes
Over Franchise of N.Y. Americans
Past Season Proved Most Profitable for the
League Since 1930; Calder Again to Be
President; Governors Appointed
DETROIT, May 9 (CP). — The
New York American Hockey club's
franchise has been taken over by
the National league, President Frank
Calder announced after the annual
meeting last night. The Americans
will be operated by the N.H.L. next
season unless a buyer takes the club
from league hands.
The league operated the club during the season just passed but William B. Dwyer. who was forced to
relinquish control because of financial difficulties, had until this meeting to exercise,his option to reclaim
the club from 'the league.
"We gave the Dwyer interests until April 15 to take up their option
to repurchase and they failed to do
so," Calder said. "We extended the
time until today's meeting and there
was still no offer."
Red Dutton, manager and vice-
president of the Americans, was
named a member of the board of
governors of the N.H.L. indicating
he will again be at the Amerk's helm
next season.
Calder said major league hockey
enjoyed its most popular ana profitable season since 1930 in the winter just closed, which saw Detroit
Red Wings repeat as National league
and Stanley cup champions.
The eight teams of the N.H.L.
played to 1,628,785 spectators, 125,000
more than saw games the previous
season. Receipts were correspondingly higher. In the 17 playoff games
this season, 314,000 saw the six teams
which qualified. Calder said it was
the largest attendance of any playoff
series since the present league has
been in operation.
Calder, finishing his 20th year as
league president, was elected for
another two-year term. The same
board of governors was reappointed.
Members are: James Norris. Detroit;
Major Fred McLaughlin, Chicago;
Thomas Arnold, Montreal Maroons:
Conny Smythe, Toronto; J. E. Sav-
ard, Montreal Canadiens; Col J. R,
Kilpatrick, New York Rangers, and
Mervyn Dutton, New York Americans.
ATHLETICS GO
INTO TIE FOR
LEAGUE LEAD
Six Runs in Seventh
Prove Big Help
to Mack Men
AMERICAN
LEAGUE
W.   L.
Pet.
  8    5
6^
Cleveland   	
 E    5
.615
Detroit   	
  9     6
.601)
Boston 	
  7     5
.583
 8     7
533
Washington 	
 6     9
.400
Chicago   	
     5   9
.357
St. Louis 	
  4     9
.HUB
IN TIE AT TOP
DETROIT, May 9 (AP).-Phila-
delphia Athletics overcame a six-
run lead today, defeated Detroit
Tigers 9-8, and jumped into a tie
witli Cleveland for the American
Baseball league leadership.'
A big seventh Inning in which the
Athletics scored six runs and drove
Elden Auker from the mound set
the stage for their victory.
Philadelphia     9   15   1
Detroit   8    8   0
Williams, Nelson and Hayes;
Auker, Gill and Cochrane.
RED SOX BEATEN
CLEVELAND, May 9 (AP). —
Willis Hudlin, veteran right hand
pitcher of Cleveland Indians, today
hurled a four-hit triumph over Boston Red Sox with a score of 3-1.
Boston    1   6   2
Cleveland  3   9   0
Walberg, Ostermueller and R.
Ferrell; Hudlin and Pytlak.
7-1 FOR SENATORS
ST. LOUIS, May 9 (AP).-Jimmy
Deshong held St. Louis Browns to
four hits today while Washington
Senators were blasting the offerings
of Chief Hogsett and Sheriff Blake
to win 7-1. The loss skidded the
Browns in the cellar.
Washington   7   10   0
St. Louis  14   0
Deshong and Millies; Hogsett,
Blake and Hemsley.
YANKEES LOSE
TO WHITE SOX
CHICAGO, May 9 (AP).-Zeke
Bonura's big bat and Thornton Lee's
smart southpaw pitching gave Chicago White Sox a 2-1 decision over
New York Yankees before 25,000
chilled spectators today, accounting
for the world champion's fourth
straight defeat.
New York  1   4   2
Chicago  2   5   2
Chandler and Dickey; Lee and
Sewell.
REMEMBER WHEN?
(By Canadian Press)
Walter Hagen, the old strategist
who refuses to be counted out, won
his fourth British golf open championship eight years ago today at
Muirfield, Scotland. "The Haig"
duplicated his previous year's score
of 292—made when he clinched his
third title—to lead runner-up Johnny Farrell by six strokes. He
placed 15th in the Canadian open
last year.
GENUINE
SCOTCH
JOHN
DISTILLED, MATURED AND
BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND
This advertisement Is not pubilsned
or displayed by the Liquor ContrcV
Board or by the  Government of
British Columbia.
QUICK-RELEASE MAGNET
A quick-release hand magnet to be
used for separating ferrous parts,
checking separators, testing ferrous
inclusions in foodstuffs, and collecting small articles, such as pins,
tacks, etc., from workshop and
warehouse floors, is a new product
of a Sheffield firm. Operation is
by means of a control lever fitted
to the body, and after the work has
been picked up, a single movemen
of this lever de-energizes the mag
netic limbs which release the load.
War Admiral, above, ran away
with the Kentucky Derby Saturday
in the near record time of 2:03 1-5
for the mile and a quarter. (Story
in another column.)
_s—,t„ reflected io
Better time. **%£%&
the demand fot better^. Q^
iiAeaWLSi Plily Gotta
choose J^rCf^tires yoo cao
Percha Tires. These are"     »      ith
fws,...«iresthat|fe«yrtread5.
stronger plies; w«letv»        wH>er
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SEE YOUR
Gp DEALER
GUTTA PERCHA WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
Wood, Vallance Hardware CoM Ltd.
Nelson, B.C.
tmt^^^^^tmmLmmmmmMmm
trntrnttmrn
 	
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J 1 Hs]WllPJIIIjpiaau||||u>jWi)jlj,i,ia¥ww
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Pipt!WWlyWHWllff?»w^
PAGE EIGHT -
NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 10, 1937
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CHAPTER 25
As his office was flooded with
light Charles took in the scene at
a glance — the open safe, the open
drawer of his desk, the figure in
oilskins and sou'wester standing
with a hand on the handle of the
safe door. He saw the figure start
and spin around.
"Lutman!" he exclaimed. "What
the devil!"
Lutman gave him a genial smile.
"Good evening, Charles."
The lawyer strode quickly across
the room and paused beside the
desk.
"What the devil are you doing
here,   Lutman?"
The Colonel waved a hand toward the open safe.
"Trying a little high-class burglary, Charles. Fairly successfully.
as you will observe.''
Charles stepped quickly to the
safe, glanced inside, and faced Lutman again.
"Signed in the wront? place, was
it, Charles? That would have been
quite an ingenious idea if it hadn't
been so obvious that you were
lying, That has always been your
weakness, Charles: you never ran
lie without looking like a conscience-stricken schoolgirl."
"Give me back that- deed, Lutman."
Lutman ignored the demand.
"I've never trusted that conscience of yours," he went on. "ind
since you met Jacqueline Smith it
has been less reliable than ever
I've been watching you pretty
closely, and your game all alons
has been dreadfully transparent.
You've been playing for time, trying every scheme your fertile brain
could event to hang things up and
postpone the marriage, hoping, no
doubt, that before that swine Lutman could work his foul designs.
Jacqueline rmg*ht hear of the legacy. Someone, perhaps, might
send her a copy of the New York
Press with the whole story
splashed across the front page.''
Charles made a gesture of impatience.
"I'm not arguing, Lutman. I
want the deed."
"First the draft agreement at
Cobenzil," continued Lutman. "and
the yarn that it had to be registered in London. That wasn't so
bad, Charles, because you were the
lawyer and nobody was in a position to contradict you. And then
this deed was signed in the wrong
place—that wasn't so good, because if a deed isn't signed in the
right place the mistake is quite.
obvious   when   on?   examines   the
deed"—he tapped his breast pocket
—"is all in apple pie order. And
you can take it from me that when
Jim and Jacqueline are safely
married it will be produced and
put into effect,"
"What concerns me at the moment, Lutman, is that you've stolen
a document from my safe, Either
you give it to me. . . ."
"So that you may destroy it?"
That's the great idea, isn't it?''
He shook his head. "Safer in my
pocket, Charles—much safer."
"Either you hand it over Lutman, or I telephqne the police and
have you arrested for breaking
into my 'office."
"Oh, cut that out!" interrupted
Lutman with sudden impatience
"You can't bluff me with that sort
of talk. Call the police, will you?
All right—call them!" He picked
up the telephone received and held
it out. "Call the police, Charles.
They can take us both to the station together."
Charles made no move, end Lutman slammed, the received back
onto the hook.
"You should have known me better than to try to pull that sort of
stuff. Calling the police isn't going to help you. I know it, and
you know that I know it. You
might have the satisfaction of
charging me with safe-breaking,
although, as a matter of fact, I
haven't broken anything, I just
opened the drawer of your desk,
where I knew the safe key way
kept."
"Is there anything you don't
know, Lutman^"
The Colons] smiled.
"It's not, a good place to keep
a safe key." he added. "I'm not an
expert cracksman, out it took me
rather less than a minute to pick
the lock of that drawer. 'Anyone
could do it with a hairpin. But
let's keep to the point."
"The point is. Lutman, that
you're not leaving this office with
that deed in your possession."
Lutman shook his head.
"The point is," he said, "that
calling the police wouldn't help you
to what you want, Charles. What
i you want is Jacqueline Smith"
He shrugged his shoulders, "I gave
you your chance, and you wouldn't
take it. I offered to let you take
Jim Asson's place, but you
wouldn't listen' io the suggestion
But if you won't take the girl on
those terms, you won't have her at
all."
"I can stop Asson from marrying her. And I can' stop her from
being swindled out of her fortune."
LEGAL NOTICES
LAND REGISTRY ACT
(Section 160)
IN THE MATTER OF SUBLOT 2
OF BLOCK "A" OF LOT 4399.
KOOTENAY   DISTRICT,   PLAN
834.
Proof having been filed in my
office of the loss of Cert fieate of
Title No. 11525-A to the above mentioned lands in the name of ADAM
CRUICKSHANK and bearing date
the 27th November, 1909. I HEREBY
GIVE NOTICE of my intention at
the expiration of one calendar
month from the first publication
hereof to issue a Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of such lost
Certificate. Any person having any
information with reference to such
lost Certificate of Title is requested
to communicate with the undersigned.
DATED AT NELSON, B.C., this
7th day of May, 1937.
A. W. IDIENS.
Registrar.
DATE of first publication May
10, 1937. 14391
FOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.
ETC.
SUMMER SEASON, COTTAGE
furnished. Running water Electric light. Fireplace. Good beach
North shore, West Arm Kootenay
Lake. Seven miles from Nelson
Apply L. R. Dulf, 1231 Fifth Ave.
N.W." Moose Jaw. Sask^       (429)
FURNISHED ~HOUSE. SUMMER
months 811 Josephine St. Apply
A. A. Perrier. Phone 669L.     1363)
FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING
rooms for rent.   Annable Biork
(2901
IT" RO^M~HOUSErCENtRALLY
located. 224 Vernon St. Ph. 488L
(436)
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frigidaire equipped suites.__l291J
FO'iTRENT-FURNISHED, SUITES
in the Kerr Apartments.      (307)
lightTjousekeeping rooms
918 Kootenay Street. _ (88)
FOFrENT^FURNISHED HOUSE
618 Silica St. (281)
FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT
Phone 628X. (387)
GARDENING AND NURSERY
PRODUCTS
ROCK PLANTS k PERENNIALS
Chrysanthemums. Hardy acclimatized plants. Send for catalogue.
McDiarmid k Squires. Robson
(2761
BARNYARD FERTILIZER $3 PER
load. Ph. 188L2. Dominion Dairy
(271)
ELECTRICAL,  MACHINERY
FOR SALE
AUTOMOTIVE
•1931  FORD I Vl Ton Truck. Dual
Wheels. New tires. Priced at .
Model M-2 DURANT Sedan. A-1 condition. Cheap at	
$350.00
$275.00
AGENT FOR HAYS DIAMOND-T AND
MACK TRUCKS. $1025.00 UP.
Phone 171
712 Baker St.
(43CJ
PERSONAL
HIGHEST CLASS RUBBER
goods. Our quality and service
will amaze you 27 latex for $1 00
Goods shipped same day as ordered Packed plain. Free catalogue for men or women on request. Imperial Distributors. 15'/
Burrows Ave.. Winnipeg. Mar.
(15i
MEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW
Ostrex Tonic Tablets contain raw
oyster invigorators and other
stimulants. One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted
maker refunds few cents Daid
Call write. Mann-Rutherford Co
(296>
WOMEN" WANTED- TO"-ST ART
Private Kindergarten Schools in
their own homes this coming fall
Free booklet on request. Canadian Kindergarten Institute. Winnipeg. Established 1927. (171 >
POULTRY, EGGS, ETC.
HOIST MOTORS
Wound rotor motors in stock
from 10 h.p. to 2^ h.p. at various speeds.   Enquire—
CROSSMAN MACHINERY
COMPANY, LIMITED
59 Alexander St., Vancouver, B.C.
(295.
ONE DIESEL ENGINE. 25 H.P. IN j
first class condition. $700. Can h* ]
seen at Bennetts Limited, Nelson
 t!94> ;
'But. at what a price!" smiled I
Luunan. "I can hardly iraagiiv. j
Jacqueline regarding you as tht
ideal husband, Charles, if she I
knows the truth about you. Hi; \
smile disappeared. "And if anything goes wrong with the scheme
througn your interference, she wil.
know the truth. She il know jus.
what s6rt of a blackguard you are
—that it. was you who firsi heard
of the legacy, that it was you who
drew up the deed and advised her
to sign it, that you were willing lo
let her marry Jim Asson and to
take your cut of the loot. If you
Ihink you can persuade her that it
was all done because you loved her.
you're over-estimating your powers
of persuasion, Charles, and underestimating Jacqueline's intelligence.
And she will know—because I shall
tell her."
Charles shook his head.
"All that cuts no ice, Lutman,"
he said, ''because in any case I'm
going to tell her myself."
Lutman glanced at him quickly.
"I think not, Charles. You're not
the herioc soat."
"I'm going to tell her everything
— that I agreed to the plan to
swindle her, that. I conspired with
you and Jim Asson. . . ."
"That's grand. Charles. And
then she'll fall into your arms, eh?
I dare say she'll come to see you in
ihe pen and fix the wedding day."
"She won't marry Jim Asson, anyway."
"Oh, yes, she will."
"Not when she knows."
(To Be Qonti
itlnued)
Miss  Sophia  Greaves,  of  Bride
Sate, Hebden Bridges, is 100 years
"CHICKS
WHICH
GIVE
RESULTS"
May Prices
LEGHORNS
Unsexed Pullet Chicks
$ 10 per   100 $ 22 per 100
$ 90 per 1000 $105 per 500
ROCKS AND REDS
$ 12 per   100 $ 25 per 100
$110 per 1000 $115 per 500
LIGHT SUSSEX
$ 13 per   100 $ 25 per 100
Government approved. Blood-tested
stock. It will pay you to see our
illustrated booklet. Write now. It's
tree.
RUMP & SENDALL LTD.
Langley Prairie, B.C.
(298)
WRITE NOW Fb!~AN"lIXUS-
trated Catalogue and Price List ol
Chicks. This describes heavy lay-
in? strains of White Legnorus
Rhode Island Reds. White Wvan-
dottes and 1st Cross, besides jiv-
ing information on feeding poultry L. F. Solly. Lakeview PcuKrv
Farm. Westholme, B.C. (227)
RHODE ISLAND RED CHICKS 17
years under government supervision. $12 per 100. Express paid
Dan Russell. 1806 Gray Ave.. New
Westminster, BC.  (1391
LEGHORN CHICKS $10" NEW
Hampshires $12 per 100 Satisfaction guaranteed. T. A. Robinson
B.C. Lands Co.. Grand Forks. BC
(79)
FOR SALE
DO NOT BE FOOLED'
Others mav be good but — THF
BEATTY STORM CLEANER IS
THE VERY BEST.
When vou buv a cleaner, CON-
S'DF.R THE COMPANY BEHIND
IT. Think of the facilities that com
oany has for rendering service.
No other Cleaner Company that.
Beattv Bros. Ltd.. maintains" a factory branch in Nelson.
ONLY THE BEATTY STORM
;LEANER is ALWAYS backed by
this factory service right here ir.
your own city.
BE  WISE  -  SEE THE
BEATTY FIRST!
DO  IT TODAY!
PHONE 91
(412)
BABY CHICK FOODS; PRATT'S
Starter in 35c packages. Thrivo
Chick Starting Mash. Pioneer
Chick Scratch. Cracked Wheat
Granulated Cor.., Poultry Groats,
etc. The Brackman-Ker Millg Co
JLtd. (437)
PIPE. TUBES,  FITTINGS
NEW  AND USED
Large stock for immediate shipment
SWARTZ PIPE YARD
1st Avenue and Main St
Vancouver. B. C.
(292)
HELP WANTED
SECRETARY MANAGER WArlT-
ed for Gentral Store. Must be
experienced bookkeeper and truck
driver. Unfurnished house rent
free. Apply immediately, stating
salary expected, to Crawford Bay
and District Co-operative Ass'n
(368)
WOMEN WANTED TO WEAVE
and hani stitch light leather table
runners at home. Good pay. Experience unnecessary. Write Dept
390. Leather Crafts, 414 Bay St.
Toronto, Ontario. (250)
AMBITIOUS SALESMEN WANTED
to sell famous Stetson shirts
Made-to-Measure. Easy to earn $5
daily. Wonderful opporunity
Write Department Eighteen, Box
2110. Montreal. _ (428)
ELDERLY COUPLE CAN HAVE
use of small farm for acting as
caretakers and making some improvements, Gooi place for man
with small pension. Box 440, News.
(440)
EXPERIENCED WOMAN PASTRY
cook, able to handle some short
orders. Box 441. Daily News.
(441)
WOMAN COOKTSTATE EXPERI-
ence. Apply George Sinclair. Creston Bakery. Creston. BC.      (336)
GIRL WANTED FOR LIGHT H'SE-
work and compamonsh'p Box
418. Daily News. _  <418>
WOMAN GEN. H'KEEPER. CARE
small babv. Sleep in. Phone 502
(380)
YOUNG-MAN ~~t 'OR    KITCHEN
help. Apply L.D. Hotel, Salmo.
(360)
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
ETC., FOR SALE
GOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE
on easy* terms in Alberta and
Saskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept. of Natural
Resources C.P.R., Calgary, Alta
(289)
DOCS, PETS, FOR SALE
SCOTCH COLLIE PUPS. PUKE
bred. Tri-color. Price $3 each
H. E. Parkyn, Burton, B.C.   (398'
LIVESTOCK FOR SALE
JERSEY BULL FOR SALE GOOD
stock 2 yrs. old. Quiet. Cheap. Or
will trade for hay. Hampshire
Dairy, Fairview, Nelson, B.C.
 (279)
PUREBRED   TAMWORTH—PIGS.
Bacon type. $5. Mackereth, Broadwater, Lower Arrow Lakes. B.C
(277)
FLEMISH GIANT RABBITS. BRED
does $2. Young stock 50c up. Tom
Taylor, Kaslo, B.C.  (384)
7 YEAR OLD GELDING. AROUND
1400 lbs. Under $100. Apply J. P.
Popow. Shoreacres. (435)
2 FRESH AYRSHIRE COWS. AP-
ply J. P. Bell, Park Siding. BC
(251)
SITUATIONS WANTED
EXPER'D PROSPECTOR HAVfl
spent 2 years in Ainsworth IL
open for engagement or suita|
grubstake. Box 350, Daily N*
(i
EXPERIENCED WOMAN WAS
work of any kind. Good col
Apply Box 376, Daily News. (1
CAMP COOK WANTS WORK. I
anywhere. Minimum wage. An
Room 8. Madden Hotel.        (<e\
EXPERIENCED COOK WIS
position with mining crew. Al
Box 369. Daily News. (1
PLAIN  SEWING  AND  ALTffl
tions. Mrs. Ross. Rm. 6, Strathcd
d
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
FOR   SALE,   GENERAL   STQ
business in mining town. Ch|
for cash. Mrs. J. A. Black,
don, B.C. (|
business and Professional Directoi
Assayers
E. W, WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL
Analyst. Assayer. Metallurgical
Engineer. Sampling Agents at
Trail Smelter    301-305 Josephine
St.. Nelson. B.C. '324)
GRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD
Provincial Assayer and Chemist, 618
Baker Street. Nelson. B.C. PO
Box No. 726. Representing ship-
per's interest at Trail. B.C    (325)
Automobile Radiator Repairs
NELSON RADIATOR WORKS
Expert Repairs
New Cores Installed
Capitol Motors Building
(326)
FOR SALE OR RENT
FIRST CLASS WELL EQUIPPED
hotel in Sandon. B.C. Interior and
exterior of building are in excellent condition. For further particulars write V. Celant, Sandon.
FOR     SALE - WESTINGHOUSE
motor,  10  h.p.   PH. 220—440  V
1200 r.p.m. Rewound, newbearings.
Apply Box 2352, Trail,   _     (421)
GERHARD  HEINTZMAN  PIANO
including bench and cabinet. $150.
Mrs. J. A. Black. Sandon, EC
J 426)
i~'      PIPE AND" FITTINGS
CANADIAN JUNK Company. Lid
250 Prior St. Vancouver. B C
(2931
1 PAIR HORSES. 7 YRS., 3300 LBS..
;    1 mare. 7 yrs.. 1425 lbs., 4 mules.
j    G.O, Guise, Mi."way, B.C_   (4381
FOR_SALE - BARRELSrkEGS.
sugar sacks, liners McDonald lam
Co., Ltd.. Nelson, BC. (2971
PACKAGE BEES. FULL COLON-
ies and equipment (A. T. Park's)
A. S. Homcrsham. city.   (217)
4"3! 2. 11,4"IN."WOOD PIPE"FOR IB"
rigation. W. W. Oteroff, Castlegar.
_ (237)
PRAM.  1ST  CLASS "CONDITION.
205 Nelson Ave.    P.O. Box 829.
  __ (3811
PIANO FOR SALE! REASONABLE".
Apply The Ark Store, Nelson.
(382)
ENGLISH PRAM. GOOD CONDI:
tion. 415 Cedar St. (378)
LIGHT WAGON. $20. W. H.MER-
rifield, Procter, B.C. (275)
SMALL 4 ROOM BUNGALOW IN
good condition. 2 lots, fruit trees
Cash payment and terms. 617 4th
St. Phone 354R._ J384)
1 HAVFTaN ABSOLUTELY NEW
listing—a lovely bunea'ow home
stone foundation. C. W. Appleyard
  (417)
(TlEVEL LOTS BESIDE S.-T. TEN-
nis courts, $50 a lot or $225 cash
_for all.   Phone on._ (395)
2 GOOD BUILDING LOTS ON
Innes. What offers? Ph. 374L3 or
P.O. Box 678. _ (311)
COMPLETE FURNISHED APA«f;
■mem house. Box 687. Nelson B.C
(288)
Froom houseTTlotsTfair-
view. D. W. Guy, P.O. Box 678
(310)
WANTED
HOUSE. FURNISHED OR UN-
furnished, with 2 bedrooms and
good verandah, in Fairview or on
the lake — within one mile of
ferry. Slate whether gas or coal
range. Wanted June-Sept. Box
226.J3aily News. _(??6)
PINT BOTTLES  15c A DOZ. W~L
Manufacturing Co., 907 Water St
(294)
LAUNCHES AND BOATS
FOR SALE-INBOARD 3 H.P. Motor complete with batteries, etc.
550. H. R. Kitto, Cycle Dealer.
(362)
j MOTOR BOAT 18 FT.. GOOD CON-
dition. Apply Capt. Orr, Nelson
(424)
AUTOMOTIVE
I FOR   SALE - 1930   CHEVROLET
light   delivery.   Al   shape.    BC
Plumbing Co. (314)
DUUANT SEDAN '29 FOR" SALE
Fhone 374L3 or P.O. Box 678
(312)
Chiropractors
j. r. McMillan, d.c.   neuro-
calometer and  X-ray.    16 years
experience. McCulloch Blk   (3271
W J  BROCK. DC X-ray 15 Years'
Experience Gilker Blk.. Nelson
(328)
Engineers and Surveyors
H. D DAWSON Nelson. B.C
Mine Surveys and Reports
(329)
BOYD C AFFLECK. Fruitvale. BC
British Columbia Land Surveyor
Reg. Professional Civil Engineer
(330)
Florists
ARTISTIC FLORAL MAKE-UP A
specialty.   Mrs. Hagarty.   Ph 215
(3311
Funeral Directors
SOMERS' FUNERAL HOME
702 Baker St. Phone 252
Cert  Mort'cian        Lady Attendant
Modern  Ambulance Service
(332)
Insurance and Real Estate
Mutual Benefit Health k Ace.  Assoc
World's largest. Al. W. Foote. Dist
Mgr.,  Hume Hotel, Nelson.  BC
(333)
ROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD
Real Estate,   Insurance,   Rentals
 311 Baker St.  Phone 68.       (3341
R. W. DAWSON." Real Estate." Insurance, Rentals. Next Hipperon
Hardware, Baker St.   Phone 197
 (335)
C"Td BLACKWOOD "" Insurance o!
every description. Real Est Ph 9P
(336)
H. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-
suranee. Real Estate. 508 Ward St
(337)
j~e~"annab'le"~real~est'a ft
Rentals.  Insurance. Annable  Blk
(338)
CHAS F McHARDY INSURANCE
Real Estate. Phone 135. (339)
Machinists
BENNETT'S LIMITED
For all Classes of Metal Work, Lad
Work Drilling. Boring and Grinq
ing. Motor Rewinding, AcetyletH
Welding
Telephone 593     324 Vernon Strc
 (M
H. E." STEVENSON. Machini
Blacksmith. Electric and Acetyle
Welder. Expert workmen. Satisfa
lion guaranteed. Mine k Mill work
specialty. Fully equipped shop. I
98, 708-12 Vernon St.. Nelson.   (23
Mine & Equipment Machine
E. L. WARBURTON. AGENT: C.
Snowdon Oils. Greases, etc. Ric
ardson Road Machinery Co.
verts, Graders, Scrapers, Plov
Screens, Gravel Equipment, e
Mine Machinery. Steam Coa
Office 518 Ward. Ph. 53; Res. 2!
(34
Notaries
D   J.  ROBERTSON.  NOTAR
Public.   305 Victoria St., Nelso
(34
Patents
AN OFFER TO EVERY INVEN
or. list of wanted inventions a
full information sent free. 1
Ramsay Company. World Pat<
Attorneys. 273 Bank St., Otta?
(3'
Photography
OUR BUSINESS FOR 1936 A
most doubled that of 1935. Thi
must be a reason. A trial on
will convince YOU of the super
Photo Finishing done in our pla
Your film developed and print
25c. Reprints, eight for 25c KRV
TAL PHOTOS. WILKIE. SAS
(J
Sanitariums
DR  ALDRICH. SPOKANE. WAS
Heart. Stomach. Kidney. Blad<
Diseases treated.   X-ray work
(34
Sash Factory
LAWSON'S   SASH    FACTOR
Hardwood merchant, 217 Baker!
(34
Second Hand Stores
WE   BUY.   SELL   k   EXCHANG
furniture, etc.   The Ark Store.
(341
Watch Repairing
WALK  A  BLOCK AND SAVE I
Dollar. Boyle the Jeweller.   (349
THECUMPS
By Cus Edson
TILLIE THE TOILER
VIEME SOTTA
SETTLE THIS,
TILLIE, EVEN IF
IME SOT TO DO IT
OVEfc THE TELEPHONE
BUT, MAC_"THIS
IS MO TIME TO
AVKSUE-^rOU HAME
VUdtiK-TO DO AND
SO H/&JJE 1
\A)\l_L.yOU TAKE
TV-US   CAU., M^
AMD VOU NEEDN'T
THINK. W CAN EJUN
OUT ON ME EITHEK
-
 IPP^l
uitj!!ii(|jj|jm .tmwiwwmv.imvAm^w^mmum'
wmvwm9m9wwwumm
IJMVUNjp,piii
ujtpiitpwwtppfpsr*
5'
NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C—MONDAY MORNING, MAY 10. 1937
WINNIPEG AND CHICAGO LOWER
HEAT PRICES IN
UMP; RYE IS UP
yerpool and Buenos
^ires Markets Both
Close Lower
kNNIPEG, May 9 (CP)-Ab-
,e of foreign demand-for the
fi day, and light liquidation
Ipted on reports of rain in the
td States winter wheat area,
td Wheat prices Hi to % cent
>,on the Winnipeg grain ex-
ge Saturday.
okers completely ignored wheat
I few minutes to centre their
Ition on rye when export de-
I forced May up the full 5-cent
I Turning toward wheat at the
moment, short covering pur-
es brought prices from 2-cent
i with May finishing at $1.29ft,
$1.27% and October $1.17% to
Iverpool closed l%d to 7%d
er. Buenos Aires closed % to %
; down.
HICAGO, May 9 (AP) .-Wheat
e declines associated with rain-
in the United States southwest
ire grain is growing gave wa>
irday to partial rallies reflect-
asaertlons that moisture the last
days has been "trifling" and
:h more is needed.
rheat lost almost 2 cents at some
;es but recovered just before th>
* although the market never ex
hibited real buying strength add was
not at any time above yesterday s
finishing level..
Wheat closed unchanged to 114
cents lower, May 1.25% to 1.26ft,
July 1.17 to 1.17ft, Sept. 1.15ft to
1.15%; corn was unchanged to Is
off, May 1.33ft to 1.33ft, July 1.19%
to 1.19%, Sept. l.OBft, and oats was
ft higher to ft lower, May 47 ft le
47%. Rye gained ft to 1ft, May
1.14ft, and provisions lost 5 to 15
cents.
Exchanges
MONTREAL, May 9 (CP).-Brit-
ish and foreign exchange closed
higher today. Nominal rates for
large amounts:
Argentina, peso, .3027
Australia, pound, 3.9330
Brazil, milrels, .0636
Denmark, krone. ,2199
India, rupee, .3724
New Zealand, pound, 3.9646
Norway, krone, .2476
South Africa, pound. 4.9014
Sweden, krone, .2540
(Compiled by the Royal Bank of
Canada).
BAR GOLD DOWN
MONTREAL, May 9 (CP).-Bar
gold in London down 1 cent at $34.65
an ounce in Canadian funds; 140c
8%d in British. The fixed J35 Washington price amounted to $34.92 in
Canadian.
Toronto
Stoc
1.12
30
ikfield 	
.90
.35
1.30
.70
)jO 	
.46
.14
tie Treth 	
6.80
1.25
1.10
steal Manitoba 	
Itral Pat  -	
,07 ft
3,10
110
■ M k S   ...
88
79 40
105
orado 	
Kirk	
2.60
8.25
.14ft
543/4
:'» Lake 	
.48
.09ft
80
155
k Gold 	
toger 	
.16
11.40
36
18 75
ila 	
61.40
37
1 'Waite 	
.90
E Lake 	
1.40
59
e Shore 	
el Oro 	
53.50
.19
5 60
lassa	
1 East	
ntyre  	
5.25
.03
33.50
190
120
(Tatters 	
1 Corp 	
.59
3.20
23
130
2 50
62 50
■metal	
1.60
8 70
57
2 25
wmaster	
Sid Oreille	
.59
2.85
1 15
Bkle C 	
6.20
4.30
•ftmier G	
2.84
04
107
Authier 	
LGold -	
3.90
.43
.90
.06
.19
1.59
wwkey 	
leep Creek	
.67
.77
2.40
3.90
as
1.22
1.52
.21
MONTREAL, May 9 (CP)-Brew-
Ing Corporation of Canada has notified the Montreal curb market thai
by an order-ln-council dated April
21, the company's name is changed
to Canadian Breweries. Limited.
k Quotations
Sud B 	
4 00
Sullivan  	
1.37
Sylvanite 	
3.00
.10ft
Teck H 	
5.15
190
Wright Hargreaves 	
6.45
Ymir Y Girl 	
28
1 12
Ast Rouyn 	
.12
OIL8
Ajax 	
44
British American Oil  	
23.00
C & E Corporation 	
2.30
Chemical Research 	
.90
Royalite   	
38.00
Dalhousie 	
.85
Home Oil 	
1.75
Imperial Oil 	
21.90
International Petroleum	
3610
McColl Frontenac 	
9.60
Merland 	
.13
Nordon 	
.19
Pantepec   	
7.50
Texas Canadian 	
1.98
Pacalta  	
.15ft
Calmont   	
.60
East Crest	
.15ft
Foundation 	
32 ft
Okalta 	
1.37
Highwood   	
.20
A P Consolidated	
.36
Commonwealth 	
.30
United 	
.23
1.10
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi Power 	
...     9ft
Beattv Bros  '
16ft
Bell Telephone  	
157
...   23
British American Oil
...   22ft
Brewing Corporattion 	
...     3ft
B C Power A   	
...   36ft
B C Power B	
...     8
Burt FN 	
...   40
Canada Bakeries A  	
..    6ft
Canada Bakeries Pfd 	
.    58
Canada Bud Malt	
..    8ft
Canada Car & Foundry
...   16ft
Canada Cement Pfd 	
. 103ft
Canada  Malting
...   37
Canadian Pacific Railway
..   13ft
Can Ind Alco 	
5
2
Carnation Pfd 	
102 ft
Cosmos	
...   23
Dominion Stores
..   10 ft
Dominion Tar k Chem
...   15ft
Distillers Seagrams
...   22ft
POSITION DESIRED
By  Assayer  holding  certificate.
Two years' experience,
A. ANGUS
8440 W. 21tt Ave.
VANCOUVER,  B.C.
Ford A           24ft
Gypsum L k A  15
Harding Carpet   5
Goodyear Tire   84
International Milling Pfd   100
Imperial Oil      21ft
Imperial Tobacco   14ft
International Nickel        61ft
International Petroleum     .. 14ft
Loblaw A   23ft
Loblaw B   21
Kelvinator  27ft
Maple Leaf Mfg   8
Massey Harris           .. 12ft
McColl Frontenac       9ft
McColl Frontenac Pfd   90%
Montreal Power       29ft
Moore  Corporation    42ft
National Steel Car  45ft
Power Corporation   23ft
Pressed Metals  30
Steel ot Canada  78
Shawinigan  28
Standard Paving   5%
Hiram Walker  44
The
Consolidated Mining & Smelting
Company ot Canada, Limited
TRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA
Manufacturers of
ELEPHANT Brand
CHEMICAL FERTILIZERS
Ammonium Phosphates — Sulphate of Ammonia
Superphosphates — Complete Fertilizer*
Producers and Refiners of
Tadanac Brand Metals
COLD SILVER
LEAD
ZINC
ELECTROLYTIC     .
CADMIUM
BISMUTH
LITTLE CHANGE
AT MONTREAL
MONTREAL, May 9 (CP)-Stocks
moved within a larrow range in
light trading Saturday. Most changes
were fractional. '
Dominion Steel k Coal posted a
recession of 1ft points at 10%. Loss
of ft each showed for Dominion Tar
at 15 .Steel of Canada at 81 and
United Steel at 7%.
Imperial Oil poked ahead ft to
22 In sharply expanded trading.
International Pete got up ft to 36
while St. Lawrence Paper pfd. was
off 2 points at 81. Bathurst eased
ft to 19ft.
Shawinigan picked up ft at 28ft
with Brazilian up that much at 23ft.
Hollinger declined ft to lift, Canadian Car ft to 17, C.P.R. ft at 13T'a
and a gain of 2 points was boarded
for Bank of Montreal at 232.
New York Lower
NEW YORK, May 9 (AP).-In the
slowest session in about a year,
stock market leaders Saturday
edged downward fractions to a point
or more.
News, on the whole, was to the
liking of speculative forces but there
was little of a particularly stimulating nature and the side lines appeared to be more attractive than
ever.
Transfers totalled 285,rOO shares,
compared with 551,450 last Saturday.
The aggregate was the smallest foi
any day since June 6, last year, The
Associated Press average of 60
stocks was off .2 of a point at 68.9.
Only 557 Issues changed hands.
Of these, 281 declined, 113 advanced
and 163 were unchanged.
U.S. DOLLAR UP
MONTREAL, May 9 (CP)-Pound
signing advanced 3-16 cent on Montreal foreign exchanges Saturday to
4.92 19-32. The French franc remained unchanged at 4.46 cents
while the United States dollar advanced 1-32 at 7-32 discount.
A royal sturgeon, weighing 48
stone, was Bold for £30 at Lowestoft.
Dow-Jones Averages
Low
Close   Change
175.22
175.54—off   .3b
60.03
60.14—off   .49
29.13
29.23-off   .05
	
101.72—olf   .07
High
30 industrials  176.05
20 rails     60.33
20 utilities     29.34
40 bonds    	
Montreal Silver Quotations
MONTREAL, May 9 (CP).—Silver futures closed steady Saturday.
5 points higher.  No sales: May 44.85; July 44.75; Sept. M.65; Dec. 44.55.
Winnipeg Grain
WINNIPEG, May 9 (CP\ - Grain
futures quotations:
Open   High   Low   Close
WHEAT-
May
130
130ft
128%
129 ft
July   ....
128
128ft
127ft
127%
Oct	
117
118ft
116%
118
OATS-
May
54ft
55 ft
54%
55 ft
July
51%
52%
51%
52%
Oct.
44%
46ft
44%
46
BARLEY
—
May   	
73 ft
73 ft
73
72 ft
July   ....
67ft
68ft
67 ft
67%
Oct	
54 ft
55 ft
54ft
54%
FLAX-
May
—
—
—
173 ft
July   	
174ft
174%
174ft
174%
Oct.
—
—
—
173%
RYE—
May   ....
113ft
118%
113 ft
117%
July   ....
108ft
111ft
108%
111
Oct	
87%
89%
87%
89 ft
Cash  wheat-
No.  1
hard
129ft;
No. 1 no
-. i2oy
; No.
2 nor.
126ft,
No. 3 nor. 123; No. 4 nor. 120ft; No.
5 wheat 115ft; No. 6 wheat 108ft;
feed wheat 81ft; Durum 131ft; No. 1
white spring 122%; No. 1 A.R.W.
116ft; No. 4 special 113ft; No. 5
special 104ft; No. 6 special 98ft;
track, basis No. 1 nor. 129ft.
Vancouver Wheat
VANCOUVER, May 9 (CP)-Van-
couver wheat cash prices:
Straight Tough
No. 1 hard   124ft 122ft
No. 1 nor 124ft 122ft
No. 2 nor 121% 119%
No: 3 nor  115ft .112%
No: 4 nor.   113ft 110ft
No. 5 wheat   107% 105
No. 6 wheat     97% 95
Feed     79ft 78ft
Skylights are being made in Italy
of two layers of glass with a layer
of glass wool between to keep out
heat from the sun.
Quotations on Wall Street
High
Amer Can  101ft
Am For Power   ''8%
Am Ma k Fdy   22ft
Am Smelt k Re   86%
Am Telephone . 167ft '
Am Tobacco ....   81ft
Anaconda     53ft
Atchison       93
Aviation Corp ...    7
Baldwin   , 7ft
Bait & Ohio        34 ft
Bendix Aviation 21ft
Beth Steel    87
Borden       25%
C-3n Pacific    14
Cerro de Pasco   66
Ches k Ohio .    58%
Chrysler     116
Con Gas N Y       38%
Corn Prod
C Wright pfd
Dupont
57
6
156ft
Eastman Kodak 158%
El Pow k Li
Erie	
Ford English
Ford of Canada
First Nat Stores
General Electric
General Foods .
General  Motors
Goodrich 	
Granby  	
Grt Nor pfd .. .
Grt Wst Sugar
Hecker Prods
Howe Sound
Hudson Motors
Inter Nickel .
Inter Tel k Tel
19%
20
7
24 ft
45
53%
40%
59%
44ft
9
54%
36ft
13ft
76 ft
18%
61%
lift
Low
101ft
8%
22ft
86%
166%
81ft
52%
91%
6%
7ft
34 ft
21
86ft
25%
13%
66
58ft
114%
38 ft
56%
5%
156ft
158ft
19%
20
7
24 ft
45
53%
40%
5!fft
44
9
53%
36 ft
13%
76
17%
61ft
10%
Close
101ft
8%
22%
86%
166%
81ft
53 '/a
92%
6%
7ft
34ft
21
86 ft
25%
13%
66,
58 ft
115ft
38ft
57
5%
156ft
158%
19%
20
7
24 ft
45
53%
40%
59 ft
44
8
54 ft
36 ft
13ft
76%
17%
61ft
10%
Kenn Copper
Kresge S S	
Mont Ward 	
Nash Motors
Nat Dairy Prod
N Pow k Li .
N Y Central ....
Pac Gas k El .
Pacward Motors
Penn R R	
Phillips Pete
Pure Oil 	
Radio Corp
Radio Keith Or
Rem Rand
Shell Union
S Cal Edison
South Pacific
Stan Oil of Cal
Stan Oil of Ind
Stan Oil of N J
Stewart  Warner
Studebaker
Texas Corp
Texas Gulf Sul
Timken Roller
Under Type
Union Carbide
Union Oil of Cal
Union   Aircraft
United   Biscuit
Union Pacific
U S Rubber .
U S Steel
Vanadium Steel
Warner Bros .
West Electric
Western Union
Woolworth 	
Yellow Truck
High
55%
24 ft
53%
20%
23
10ft
48%
30%
9%
44%
55ft
19%
9%
8ft
25%
30 ft
24%
59 ft
44%
44%
67%
19%
15%
61ft
37
62%
24%
26%
25 ft
143ft
59%
104
29
13%
138%
62
49%
23%
Low
55%
24ft
53%
20
22%
19%
47%
30 ft
9%
44 ft
55%
19%
9ft
8ft
25ft
30
24%
59
43%
44 ft
67
19
15%
60ft
37
62
78
99
24%
25%
25%
143%
59 ft
103
28%
12%
138
61ft
49 ft
22ft
Close
55%
24%
53%
20ft
23
10 ft
48
30ft
9%
44ft
55 ft
19%
9%
8ft
25%
30
24%
59
43%
44 ft
67 ft
19%
15%
60%
37
(!,!%
78
99
24%
26%
25%
143ft
59%
103%
29
12%
138%
62
49ft
22%
Vancouver Stock Exchange
Listed
A P Con	
Amal Oil	
Aztec	
Big Missouri 	
Brit Dom Oil   	
Bralorne 	
Bridge Rlv Con
C k ECorp  	
Cariboo Gold
Coast Breweries
Commonwealth
Calmont	
Dentonia
Gold Belt Mines
Hargal Oil   	
Home Oil	
Inter Coal	
Island Mount
Koot Belle 	
Mak Siccar	
McDougal Seg Ex
Minto 	
Model Oil  	
Pioneer Gold . .
Premier Gold
Premier Border	
Quatsino   	
Relief Arlington
Reno Gold 	
Reeves Mc
Sally
Salmon Gold 	
Sheep Creek 	
Silbak  	
Vanalta   	
Vidette 	
Wesko 	
Yankee Girl	
CURB
Anaconda 	
Associated Oil	
Baltac Oil	
Bayvlew
Beaver Silver
Bluebird
B C Nickel	
Capital Estate    .
Congress
Crows Nest new
Dalhousie Oils .
Dunwell Mining
East Crest Oil
Fawn Mining
Fairview Amal
Bid
.30
,08 ft
.08
.46
6.60
.04
2.28
1.53
12.75
.27
.551.4
.14
.31
.18
1.71
.21
.77
.20
,21ft
,45
4.25
2.52
.02%
,04 ft
.20
.85
.87
.05
.08
.75
255
.16
.08
.05 ft
.01ft
.01ft
.03%
.18
7.50
.06 ft
.07
.83
,03 ft
.11%
09
Ask
.32
.09
.09
49
.30
6.75
2.35
1.55
13.25
.30
.58
IS
.33
1.75
.25
.84
.85
.04
.21
.22%
.51
4.50
2.55
.02%
,05ft
,23
,90
,95
.10
.78
2.80
.35
.19
.30
.01%
.02
800
.06%
.87
.04
18
.38
Federal Gold 04
Foundation  27%
Freehold Oil  09
Geo Enter 04
Geo River  02%
Golconda 07ft
Gold Mountain 07ft
Grandview    13%
Grange Mines   02%
Grull Wihksne 08
Haida 01
Hedley St .03
Highwood Sarcee ,19
Home Gold .02
Indian Mines        -02ft
Inter Gold ...        -05
Koot Flo 02ft
Koot King 01ft
Lakeview Mines ...     .01%
Lowery Pete  25
Lucky Jim  09ft
Madison Oil  09ft
'Mar Jon Oil 19
Mercury 27ft
Meridian new        —
McGillivray  19
Mid West Pete 10
Mill City Oil       18
Monarch   24
Morton Woolsey .01ft
Marmot Metals   ...      .01
Nicola  05%
Noble Five 97
Nordon Oil    18
Okalta Com      138
Pend Oreille      2.75
Porter Idaho  05
Pilot Gold  04
Quesnelle Q 08ft
Ranchmen's 28
Reliance    03
Reward Mining .09%
Koyalite Oil 38.00
Rufus Argents .03%
Ruth Hope        .03
Silver Crest       —
Silversmith  02%
Standard S L 45
DDL      88
United Oil 20
Viking Gold       .02
Vulcan Oil 1.20
Waverley Tang new     .00%
Wellington Mines 04ft
Whitewater      • 12
.04%
.29%
■09 ft
.04%
.03
.08 ft
.07%
.14
.02%
.10
04
.21
.02%
.03
.05%
.02%
.01%
.02
.27
.09%
.09%
,20
.28%
,02 ft
,01%
,01ft
.06
.07%
.19
1.40
2.80
.05 ft
.04%
.29 ft
.03%
.10ft
40.00
.03%
.04
.07
.03
.50
.90
,02 ft
1.22
.01
.05
.13
GIVE SEEDS AN
EARLY CHANCE
OUT OF DOORS
Soil in which garden seeds are
sown does not need to be very rich
but the soil to which the plants are
transplanted should be somewhat
richer. One part garden loam, one
part sand, and one part leaf mold
makes a good mixture for the seed
bed. Two parts good garden loam,
one part old rotted manure, and one
part of either sand or leaf mold is
about right for transplanting. The
soil for both the seed bed and for
transplanting should be screened
to remove all lumps.
Watch the seed bed moisture and
don't let the soil either dry out or
become too wet. For the first day
or two after the seeds are sown a
wet cloth can be spread over the
surface of the soil to keep it from
drying but just the minute that the
first seedlings begin to peep through
the cloth must be removed.
Heavy watering of the seed bed
usually results in the loss of the
plants from "damping off", a disease that causes decay at the surface of the soil. The fungus that
causes this damping off disease can
be destroyed by baking the soil for
an hour or so in an oven before
It is used for sowing seed. Careful
watering and plenty of sunlight and
ventilation are the antidotes for the
"damping off" disease.
A small sash-covered coldframe
located on the south side of the
house or the garage makes a fine
place tor taking care of the plants
after they are started in the house
and after the weather warms up a
•trifle.
Cabbage plants and celery plants
should never under any circumstances be subjected to serious chilling in the coldframe, because it is
this chilling that causes them to
shoot to seed prematurely. A temperature of 60 or 65 degrees is about
right for all plants belonging to the
cabbage tribe and also for celery.
Tomato plants will stand considerable hardening in the coldframe but
be careful and do not let the temperature run too low with either
peppers or eggplant.
Hills of summer squashes, cucumbers and muskmelons may all be
started in the hotbed or coldframe
by using quart berry boxes to hold
the soil, then later when the weather
is sufficiently warm they can be
planted in the garden by carefully
cutting away the berry boxes and
leaving the roots undisturbed in the
block of soil. Ten days to two weeks
may often be gained by starling
these crops indoors. Sweet corn,
snap beans and lima beans can also
be started in the same mariner.
POUND GAINS
NEW YORK, May 9 (CP)-Foreign currencies fluctuated slightly
Saturday. Pound sterling added %
of a cent at $4.93%, French francs
eased .00ft of a cent to 4.49. Holland
guilders improved .00% of a cent
and Swiss francs lost .00% of a cent.
TOMATO PLANTS
SELL AT MARKET
Marigold and Pepper
Plants Sell for
Transplanting
Spring gardeners preparing for the
gardening season crowded the Vernon street market Saturday bargaining for seeds, shrubs and transplants for their early beds.
Tomato plants, pepper plants,
marigold and snapdragon plants
were added to the market lists-
Fresh cabbage at eight cents a pound
made its first appearance, along
with rhubarb which sold at four
pounds for a quarter.
Quotations follow:
FRUIT8:
Dried pears, 3 lbs. 25
Prunes, 8  lbs 2b
Dried apples, 3 lb.       .25
Dried  plums. 3 lb 25
King apples, 7 lbs 25
Wagener apples, 7 lbs 25
VEGETABLES
Turnips. 8 lbs     .!5
Carrots, 8 lbs 25
Garlic, lb _    .211
Parsley, bunch  —    05
Potatoes, 9 lbs 25
Potatoes, sack   2.50
Beets.  1  lbs     .25
Dried onions, 6 lbs    .25
Sage,   bunch 	
Parsnips. 7 lbs. 	
Green onions, 3 bunches 	
Cabbage, lb 	
Celery, lb.  	
Celery. 2 lbs	
Horseradish, lb   	
Seeds, pkg.. each  10 and
Leeks, bunch  05
Lettuce, head, ea. .15, 2 for  25
Spinach, 1  lb.  15
Green onions, bunch 05
Leaf lettuce, bunch  10
Artichokes, 4 lbs 25
Pickling cabbage, lb 03
Sauerkraut, 2 lbs. 15
Dried beans, lb 10
Wax beans, lb     10
Peas, lb  10
Hot peppers, 3 for    .05
Dandelion tips, bunch       .05
Water cress, bunch  10
Radishes, bunch  05
Rhubarb, 4 lbs 25
New cabbage, lb 08
PLANT8, 8HRUB8, ETC.
Pansy plants, doz    .35
Gladiolii bulbs, doz     .35
Geraniums 20 and up
Begonias, ea. .. 50
Raspberry canes, doz 35
Currant bushes, ea 25
Fruit trees 65
Shrubs    35
Violets, .3 bunches  25
Celery plants, doz 30
Stalks, doz 20
Asters, doz 20
Petunias, doz    .20
Geraniums.'each 20 and .25
Tomato plants, doz  25
Pepper plants, each  15
Marigolds, doz.''.- or: 20
Snapdragons, doz 20
SEEDS
Corn seeds, lb.  20
Onion seeds, multipliers, lb 3a
Peas, seeds, lb 23
Seeds, assorted, pkg. 05 and .10
MISCELLANEOUS
Cushions  50 to 1.00
Crochet rugs  50 to 1.00
Preserved  fruit, quart  _   .40
Jam.  pint   30
Marmalade,  pint   25
Dill pickles, each  05
Preserved fruits, quart  ...   .40
DAIRY   PRODUCTS
Butter, lb 35 and .25
Cream,   pint       .30
Cottage cheese, lb 10
Prime cheese, lb 35
Goat cheese, lb  .25 and .35
New cheese, lb 20
Whipping cream, ft pint  20
Cream cheese, lb.       25
Curds,   lb 2.)
MEATS
Veal, lb. -„ 08 to .20
Beet, lb _   .06 to   2l<
Veal  lb     .06 to Hi
Lamb, lb,    ,10 to 2o
Bacon, lb   .24 to >
Rabbit,  lb.        J5
Liver, lb _ _    .12
Dripping,   lb.     .0*
Sausage, lb 10 and .it
Rolnena.  lb 1'
Chicken, lb.
Fowl. lb.
Sausage meat  .10 to lf
Head cheese, lb.   	
EGG8
Grade A-large, doz 	
2 doz.
Grade A-medium, doz. ,
.10
Green Company Again
Working Salmo Road
Work has been resumed by A. H
Green Co. Ltd. on road construction
from Salmo to Four' Mile, south ol
Salmo, the South Kootenay News
reports.
'The Salmo end of the road Is
being graded and surfaced, while
there is still some construction work
to be done on the Four Mile end o(
the project. The gravelling program will be completed in about
10 days."
Metal Markets
NETY YORK, May 9 (AP).-Tin
steady; spot and nearby 55.50; future 55.12%.
Antimony 15.37%.
Other metals nominally unchanged.
LONDON—Bar silver unchanged
at 20%d.
Montreal Produce
MONTREAL, May 9 (CP) .-Butter spot—Que. buyers-Inspection 21
to 21%; eggs spot—Ont. A-large 21A,
wheat, No. 1 nor. 1.39ft; barlej, No. 3
C.W. ,81ft; oats, No. 2 C.W. .64; bran,
ton, 35.25.
PLANTING FOR P08TERITY
DORCHESTER, Ont., (CP) -
Middlesex County will plant 25,000
spruce trees in a reforestation drive
each pupil in the counlry's primary
schools planting five trees.
.PAGE NINE
MINES LOWER
TORONTO, May 9 (CP)-Min-
ing share listing on the Toronto exchange rounded out a gloomy week
with losses of a couple ol points in
10th index groupings, with the golds
:eadlng the retreat Industrials made
a better showing, dropping only
mout a point.
Hollinger and Wrlght-Hargreavea
were sold in considerable volume,
the former at a loss of % and the
latter at a loss of 15 cents, Losses
ot 5 to 15 cents hit Anglo-Huronlan,
Canadian Malartic, Central Patricia,
East Malartic, Kerr-Addison, Kirkland Lake, Little Long Lac, Mac-
Leod-Cockshutt, O'Brien, Prickle
Crow and Siscoe. Macessa declined
30 cents to 5.20.
Base metals eased off with golds to
show fractional losses for Consolidated Smelters and Noranda and a
point decline for Hudson Bay. Falconbridge and Sudbury Basin dropped 25 cents each.
Refinancing of the
Kootenay-Florence Is
Said to Be Under Way
"Preliminary arrangements looking toward re-financlng and resumption of operations" at the
property of the Kootenay-Florence
Mining company, Ainsworth, "are
definitely under way In Toronto
with good prospects of successful
completion," says the Globe & Mail,
Toronto. "The mine has1 recently
been examined by a western, engineer acting for local parties," the
paper adds.
CALGARY LOWER
CALGARY, May 9 (CP).—For the
third consecutive day, losses, predominated on the Calgary stock exchange Saturday, Trading centred
around Weymarn which, after a
mid-session loss of 9 cents recovered
to close down 3 at 15. A.P. Con was
down 1 at 32; Calmbnt 3 at 57, Mercury 2 at 27 and Okalta 3 at 1.39.
C. k E. closed 1 lower at 2.34. Vanalta clsoed up 3 at 11 and Ranchmen's 1 at 30.
Montreal Stock Exchange
Alta Pac Grain A ....  5
Assoc Brew of Can  13%
Bathurst P k P A  19ft
Bell Telephone  157%
Brazilian T L k P  23%
Brit Col Power A  36
Brit Col Power B  8
Build Prod A  61ft
Can Cement   16ft
Can Cement pfd     103
Can North Power  21
Can Steamship   3
CanSteapipfd  7ft
Can-Bronze    47ft
Can Car & Fdy          17
Can Car Fdy pfd   27
Can Celanese        26ft
Can Hydro Elec pfd   76
Can Ind Alco   5%
Can Ind Alco B   4ft
Can Pac Rly . 13%
Cockshutt Plow     18%
Con Min& Smelt  79%
Distillers Seag   22
Dom Bridge      52
Dom Coal Pfd  . 20%
Dom Steel k Coal B
Dom Textile
Dryden Paper
19%
80
15%
Foundation Co of Can    25
14
10%
15
14%
14
27%
14%
61ft
3 Hi
12%
•J3 a
30',
39%
Nat Steel Car Corp  _«%
Ogilvie Flour
General Steel Wares
Gurd Charles 	
Gyp L k A
Ham Bridge 	
Holt Renfrew    	
How Smith Paper
Imp Tobacco of Can
Int Nickel of Can ...
Lake of the Woods	
Massey Harris 	
McColl Front	
Mont L H k P	
Nat Brew
Beef. lb.
.07 to .22 Ont Steel Prods
260
15
Power Corp of Can  23
Quebec Power  , 19
St Law Corp A pfd  30%
Shawinigan W k P  28ft
South Can Power  14
Steel of Can  79ft
Steel of Can pfd  75
Western Grocers  70
BANK8
Bank of Canada  58
Canadienne    159
Montreal   ,  232
Nova Scotia   320
Roval   ;  206
CURB
Abiubi P k P  9V,
Bathurst P k P B   9%
Beauharnois P C  7
Brew Corp of Can  3ft
Brew Corp of Can pfd  19%
Brit-Am Oil  22%
B C Packers  2
Can Dredge Dock  39ft
Can- Vickers   9
Can Wineries   1%
Cons Paper Corp  16%
Dom'Stores  ...:  10ft
Donnacona Paper A  15ft
Donn Paper B   14%
Ford Motor A  24%
Fraser Co   41
Imperial Oil  22
Int Pete  35%
Int Utilities A  I7
Int Utilities B   . 1.80
McLaren Pow k P  29'.
Mitchell Robt  23,
Page Hersey Tubes  99
Price Bros1 new  41ft
Price Bros pfd   67'
Royalite Oil .  37ft
United Dist of Can      .90
Walker Gooder & Worts   44
Walker Good & Worts pfd  19
Placer Developments          .... 17
Dominion of Canada Conversion Loan
The Bank of Canada is authorized by the acting Minister of Finance to receive
applications to cvnvert Dominion of Canada BV2% Victory Loan Bonds
maturing December 1..1937, into:
Twelve-year 3V4 per cent. Bonds, due June 1,1949
(Callable on or otter June 1,1946.)
Issue Price: 99.00%
yielding approximately 3.35% to maturity.
Victory Loan Bonds accepted for conversion into the 31/i% Bonds of the
new loan must have attached the final coupons due December 1, 1937, and will
be valued at a price of 102.25% (the coupons due June 1, 1937, detached).
Bonds accepted for conversion will be exchanged for interim certificates
of the new loan on June 1,1937, when the resultant cash adjustments in fav.r
of the applicants will be made.
3'4% Bonds will be dated June 1, 1937. Principal and interest will be
payable in lawful moneys of Canada. Interest will be payable, without charge,
semi-annually June 1 and December 1, at any branch in Canada of any
chartered bank.
Denominations:   IV.% Bondi, $100, $500 and $1,000
No pyrt of this loan will be offered for cash subscriptions.
Applications may be made to the head office of the Bank of Canada
through any branch in Canada of any chartered bank or through any recognized dealer, from whom copies of the official prospectus containing complete details of the loan may be obtained.
The application lists were opened on May 6, 1937, and will close, with
or without notice, at the discretion of the acting Minister of Finance. The acting
Minister of Finance reserves the right to limit the amount to be converted.
OTTAWA, MAY 10, 1937,
L.
-
MtetM.^^^^
■n^s^s^
mt^aJkm
 . ■■ ..    v /", ■■.. ■■ i.., -i-:..-'.' ■.-■;■■ ..*-» . ■,.:??i.?.^
■ ■■.
Bunting
Red, White and Blut
20c Yard
Also a complete line of
Coronation Decorations
Mann, Rutherford
Drug Co.
A Czechoslovakian Invention Is a
chemical to develop and fix a picture in one operation:
OUR
SAL]
NO
FOOLING!
Today is the last day of our 10c
Sale.  All prices marked in plain
figures.   Our prices compete with
any store in Canada, including our
Silk Dresses, and
ON TOP OF THAT
we will give you another Silk
Dress or other article for 10c,
Here are a few extra specials for
today:—
Service weight, dull finish Silk
Hose, mock fashioned, 1st If)/*
quality; pr. 59c, extra .... *'lr
Assorted Yard Goods, Linens,
Voiles, Woolens, etc., was to
$1.50 yd.; now 49c, InA
extra yard  *V»»
Curtains, frilled, 2Vi yds.; In A
sets 89c, extra *Vj»
Misses' Silk Hose, ?i, also long
sizes 414 lo W; -tnA
35c, extra pair *vf»
Satin Blouses, Lace, Sheer and
pure Silk Crepes; 1ftA
$1.95, extra one  *«»>
Silk Collars, Cuffs, etc.; In.A
49c, extra set **V
Stamped articles, all pure linen;
one at regular price, \ nA
another for  _ *"r»
New Hats, any in store; in A
extra one „  *v*»
RAMSDEN'S
322 BAKER AT STANLEY
MASONS GATHER
AT NAKUSP
NAKUSP, B. C-Most Worshipful
Grand Master S. McClure of Victoria, W. It. Brother A. B. Stemmel
of Trail and W. R. Brother W. Hake-
man of Nakusp made an official
visit to Star of the West lodge No.
61 and other lodges of District No.
6 in Nakusp Wednesday.
Some 65 Masons were present,
New Denver, Sandon, Nelson, Trail,
Kaslo and Nakusp being represented.
Following the special meeting In
the Masonic hall, a banquet honoring the visitors was held in the
Small hall. Quantities of daffodils
were used in the decoration of the
tables. The Masonic ladies of the
district were in charge of arrangements.
Mr. McClure addressed the gathering and many prominent speakers
from the various towns represented
were included on the toast list.
W. I. MEETING
Mrs. H. C. Waterfield loaned her
Crescent Bay home for the May
meeting of the Nakusp Women's in
stitute meeting Tuesday.
A feature of the afternoon was a
demonstartion of carding and spin
ning of woll by Mrs. A. Lidberg and
Mrs. C. Campe. Miss Jean Water
field displayed a beautiful collection
of handmade lace and showed how
pillow lace was made.
During the business session over
which Mrs. F. Rushton presided,
a letter wai read from Premier
T. D. Pattullo of B. C. assuring the
Institute   of   hia   cooperation   In
alleviating the Doukhobor situation.
A report was heard from the
Bathing Beach committee and it was
moved that a vote of thanks be
sent to the department of public
works for its aid in the project. A
committee was appointed to make
a house to house collection of
monies to finance the scheme.
The institute plans to enter a
float for the Coronation day parade.
The committee appointed to take
charge of this consisted of Mrs. A
E. Fowler, Mrs. A. Turner, Mrs. A.
J. Harrison, Mrs. F. Johnson and
Mrs. P. Jupp.
A committee was also appointed
to take charge of the June entertainment when members from the
neighboring institutes will be asked
to attend, consisted of Mrs. H. Clark,
Mrs. J. Motherwell, Mrs. J. Dolman
and Mrs. A. J. Harrison.
Mrs. C. S. Leary expressed the
appreciation of all present when
she thanked Mrs. Waterfield for her
Nelson Merchants-
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Store Closing Hours
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2 For 50c
PHONE 143
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WHOLESALE       —       —       RETAIL
Phone 26—Nelson, B. C.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B-C^-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 10, 1837
B. C. Men With Coronation Contingent
Above, in a group at Ottawa, before leaving
for Montreal to board the vessel Montcalm for
London and the Coronation ceremonies, are members of the British Columbia contingent. Of 273
(Officers and men chosen for the Coronation jaunt
15 were from British Columbia. Battery-Sergeant
Major Lionel Leask, D.C.M., of the 111th Battery,
24th (Kootenay) Field Brigade, Royal Canadian
Artillery, Nelson, who is representing this district,
is shown at the extreme right of the back row.
Fernie Pee Wee Champs
Tills photo shows the Holy Family school midget
hockey team, the Elks, winners of the Rotary Pee
Wee Hockey shield for 1037. The team had the
splendid record of winning seven games- out of
eight.   Back row: J. Sweeney, coach; Rev. Father
DeLestre, manager; L. Rushcall, president ot the
Pee Wee league. Middle row; M. Corrigan, J.
O'Neil, D. McNaughton, H. Brown. Front row: J.
Riley, A. Civitaresse, J. Bella, T. Hughes.
hospitality, Miss Waterfield, Mrs.
Lidberg and Mrs. Campe for their
demonstrations.
Mrs. Waterfield was assisted in
servin tea by her daughter, Miss
Jean Waterfield.
C. E. Jestley of Trail was a Nakusp visitor Wednesday.
Mrs. A. Watson has returned from
Penticton.
R. B. McKay of New Denver was
a Nakusp visitor Wednesday.
Mrs. St. Denis of Deer Park is a
guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
C. S. Leary.
E. Duckworth, W. Marshall, A.
James and A. Miller of Arrow Park
were visitors here Monday.
J. Menzies of Glendevon was a
Nakusp visitor Monday.
B. Robertson was a visitor in town
from Burton Monday en route to
New Denver.
Mrs. Seaward of Arrow Park was
Nakusp visitor Monday.
Mrs. J. Dolman and daughter,
Sonja, are guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. A. B. Thompson at Trail.
Wilfred Williams of Vancouver is
a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
H. L. Miller.
The devotional topic chosen by
Miss Ivis Ferguson was from the
scripture text "He that saves his
life shall lose it." A resume of the
Study Book chapter was interestingly given by Miss Irene Blunt.
Members of the Young Women's
Mission circle were entertained
Monday evening at the home of
Mrs. D. Rcilly.
F. Broughton was in town from
New Denver Monday.
A contest arranged by Mrs. J.
Motherwell was won by Miss I.
Blunt and Miss S. Stevenson.
The hostess was assisted in serving
refreshments by Mrs. A. Burling.
Those present were Miss A. Allen,
Mrs. R. Brodie, Mrs. J. Motherwell,
Mrs. J. Olson, Mrs. Cann, Mrs, E.
Brodie, Miss H. Rollins, Miss M.
Kershaw, Miss Ivis Ferguson, Miss
I. Blunt, Mrs. E. Oxenham, Miss
N. Johnson and Mrs. G. Johnson.
J. Naylor of Edgewood was a
visitor to Nakusp Thursday.
W. Carruthers, R. McWhirter,
E. C. Johnson and B. Gibert have
left for Rosebery where they will
make repairs on the C.P.R. steamer
Rosebery.
W. J. D. Rogers and J. Robins of
Arrow Park were visitors here Wednesday.
Packaged poultry, ready for the
oven, is now being sold.
Kimberley Man
Flies to Trail
KIMBERLEY, B. C.-C. Gilbert
and C. Greenland travelled to Fernie Sunday, representing the Sullivan Mine Football team, to attend
the annual general meeting of the
Crow's Nest Pass association.
Dr. F. P. Patterson, leader of the
B. C. Conservative party, was a
visitor in town Tuesday. He was
accompanied by Mr. Attridge of
Cranbrook.
R. B. McLeod and D. McGregor
returned home Wednesday from
Calgary.
Mr. and Mrs. J. McGowan motored to Spokane for the week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Keer and son,
Jack, are visiting in Kellogg, Ida.,
and Spokane.
Ralph Knickerbocker, who has
been visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. D. Knickerbocker, returned to
Calgary Wednesday.
Miss B. Wolverton of Vancouver
is visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. Wolverton.
N. W, Burdett returned Friday
from a trip to Trail. He travelled
both ways by airplane.
Nelson DaUy News Star Carriers Service Award Banquet
Trail, Rossland and Nelson carrier boys of the Nelson Daily News are pictured here
at a service award banquet in Nelson Saturday, celebrating the presenting of special award
medals to Ed Bourne and Doug Gray of Trail, R. Smith of Rossland, and Robert Proudfoot
of Nelson. All boys at the banquet had proved thmselves to be star carriers and had played
an important part in bringing the Nelson Daily News circulation up to an all-time high. Besides the four boys who received medals there were present: Robert Beattie, Henry Fourt,
Ken McLean, Hugh McLeod, Garth Beley, Mike Hrooshkin, Harold Coverdale, Clark Graham, Robert Fleming, Donald Fleming, Ken Smith, Norman Emmott, Hugh Peters, Douglas Wait, Ed Catalano, Ed Coulter, Howard Paterson, Robin Clayton, Bob Wilson and Mike
Kootnikoff as guests. The presentations were made by C. W. Ramsden, circulation manaeer.
NEWS OF THE DAY
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LADIES' GOLF CLUB LUNCHEON. 1 P.M. THURSDAY.      (434)
Eagles meet tonight at 8 p.m.
Election ot officers. Initiation. (450)
Chrysanthemum shoots for sell.
R. C. Johnson, 5th and Fell. (379).
Coronation Tea and Sale, First
Presbyterian Church, Friday.   (446)
Recent teats prove FRIGIDAIRE
coats  less to  operate. Hlpperaon'a.
(425)
VENUS BEAUTY SALON
PHONE 389 OILKER BLOCK
(228)
Spalding's Tennis Supplies. Dun-
lop Tennis Balls.  Hipperson Hdw.
(425)
St Paul's Boys' Choir Mothers'
Club Bake Sale. Safeway, Sat.,
May 22. (443)
For a GOLDEN CRISP WAFFLE
with pure maple syrup, go to the
WHITE SPOT LUNCH. (215)
FINEST WOOLEN8 OF THE
WORLD'8 FOREM08T MILLS.
ROBT. NOLTE, MASTER TAILOR.
(431)
Leaders
By The Associated Pren
Ducky Medwick, the Cardinals'
clouting outfielder, regained the National league batting lead yesterday as five members of baseball's
"big six" in hitting cl anged places.
Medwick collected three hits in four
chances to boost his average 22
points to .429, shoving Gil Brack,
Brooklyn rookie, Into second place.
Standings (tint three In each
league):
G Ab R H Pet.
Walker Tigers .. 15 62 18 29 .468
Cronin, R.S.  •• 12   51   10  23  .451
Lary, Ind 13  56   14  24  .429
Medwick, Card. 15 63 14 27 .429
Brack, Dodgers 16 66 16 27 .409
Goodman, Beds 14  49   12  20  .408
KOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY
Change of schedule to early morning delivery Tueaday, May 11, regular Monday delivery. (442)
Spend the Eve of the Coronation
in the Eagle Hall dancing to the
music of the Troubadours. 9 to 1111
Gentlemen 50c. Ladies 25c.      (449)
GRAND CORONATION DANCE,
CIVIC AUDITORIUM, MAY 12,
SPONSORED BY KINSMEN CLUB.
ADMISSION 50C EACH. (448)
A meeting of the Nelson Conservative Executive will be held in the
Canadian Legion this evening at 8
o'clock to be followed by a meeting
of the Nelson-Creston Conservative
Executive. All Executive members
are requested to attend. (432)
FUNERAL NOTICE
PERRY-LEAKE -H., of Balfour,
passed away Saturday. Body rests
at Somers' Funeral Home until
Tuesday, thence to St Saviour's
Pro-cathedral where service will be
held at 2 p.m., Rev. J. G. Holmes
officiating. (447)
Coach leaves Nelson dally for
Procter. Balfour, Ainsworth and
Kaslo, 4:40 p.m;, where fishing is
good and Hot Springs open.
Greyhound Lines
Nelson Depot — 205 Baker St
PHONE 800
(262)
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
SACRIFICE FOR CASH - FULLY
furnished 6 room modern home
overlooking Kootenay Lake at
Kaslo. 71 full-bearing trees in
cherry orchard. 7 lots. Address
Mrs. Nell Exter, Kaslo,        (444)
OWNER MUST SACRIFICE
charming Nelson home. 7 rooms.
Bath. Spacious grounds on attractive corner. Convenient to street
car. Apply Box 205, Daily News.
(445)
PHONE 815
for better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and
alterations.
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
YOUR OWN
CIVIC
NOW TILL WEDNESDAY
THEY'K SCREEN LOVERS ACAIH!
W.rn.r Irak1
•rw| ywtM It*"
kntitery of *•
Complete
Shows 7 and 9:05
PLUS
MYSTERfl ROMANCE!
CRICKET SCORES
LONDON, May 9 (CP Cable)-
Close of play scores in first-class
English cricket matches started Saturday follow:
Northamptonshire 260 (Tlmms 92,
Davis 65); vs Middlesex; at Lord's.
Gloucestershire 329 for eight wickets (Hammond 121, Barnett 115) vs
Glamorgan, at Bristol,
Somerset 223 (Eastman four wickets for 63), Essex, 119 for five wickets, at Taunton.
Sussex 232 (James Langride 73,
Larwood four for 74), Nottinghamshire 16 for no wickets, at Nottingham.
Derbyshire 242 (A. Pope 58, Martin
five for 89). Worcestershire 56 for
seven wickets, at Worcester,
Leicestershire 378 (Prentice 163,
Berry 56, Geary 54), vs Hampshire,
at Leicester.
Surrey 149 (Galllchan four for 44),
New Zealanders 161 for five (Carson 60 not out), at the Oval.
Lancashire 149 (Paynter 66, Ma-
cindoe four for 43), Oxford University 115 for no wickets (Barton 73
not out), at Oxford.
ROBERTSON SOLD
DETROIT, May 9 (CP)-Earl Robertson, the rookie who became a
hero of the 1937 Stanley cup hockey
finals when he replaced the Injured Normie Smith in goal for Detroit Red Wings, has been sold to
New York Americans for $7500 and
John (Red) Doran, Manager Jack
Adams of the Wings announced last
night.
IRISH  CHARITY CUP
BELFAST, May 9 (CP Cable)-In
Irish charity cup soccer semi-finals
Saturday Celtic defeated Clifton-
ville 3-1 and Distillery made it 4-1
over Glentoran.
Summer
Underweai
Be comfortable this su
mer   in   underwear
signed to give you
maximum of comfort, •
Jockey Shirts and Sho
50tU-7SfV
Broadcloth Short*
50«V-75*
Silk Union Suits
$1.00—91.50
Hatchway—No-Button j
$1.00, f 1.25 to 92.(
EMORY'
*"'     Limited.
4-
A. J. CRACK
8 SONS
Builders and Contractor*
Remodel your kitchen under j
Home Improvement Plan. I
full particulars write or call u
THANK YOU!
Members of Nelson Fire Depar
ment take this opportunity <
thanking all who assisted, thoi
who attended and helped to mal
their first annual ball a succes
J.A.C. Laughto
Optometrist
Suite 205 Medical Aril Bl
SUPREME
Cedar'lzed  Moth Proof
GARMENT BAGS
At SMYTHE's*
Prescription Druggist
PHONE 1
-
Retail Lumber
LATH-SHINGLES
MOULDINGS
W. W. Powell Co., Ltd.
"The Home of Good Lumber"
Telephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.
TODAY
and
Tuesday
Complete Shows et 2:00, 7:00 end 8:15
NOTE: We have pleasure in announcing that, in addition to our regular program, the members of the Players i
Club of the NELSON HIGH SCHOOL will present in this
theatre on various nights this week, a number of Playlets
—One each night—offered in competition for the
Capitol Theatre Trophy
A cup donated by this theatre to encourage High School
Students in the Histrionic Art,
—Management
«$S«!»»«*»»«*««««$S«S»SK
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judith barrstt . au|n hais
ralph morgan . andt mv1ki
moksoiowslit .rouo llotd
Tiu-.t.s hi Aitw Ubla
* vmraau rami
I
ON OUR STAGE TONIGHT
AT 9:20
At
2:04
7:04
9:64
HIGH SCHOOL
STUDENTS
Present
"All For
Fun for All.
Laughs for
Everybody
"KELLY THE
SECOND"
with
Patsy Kelly—Charlie Chase
43$»SsiM$$sW»»»ait)MS»>>»8i
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_^_____
