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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Hospital Day Is Observed by\nNelson People\n\u2014Pa&e Two\nthm ikilu\nCanadian\u2014American Davis Cup\nGames on Today\n\u2014PaHe Two\n*'\u00abXS0N   DAILY  NEWS,  NEUWN,  &   C  \u2014  THCR8DAY   MORNING,   MAY   _l.   I\u00bbS1 FIVE CENTS A COPY\nNUMBER M\nTHREE C^ DRENMURDERED\nFIVE GO OVER ,\nBANK AS CAR\nCROWDED OFF\nBen   Holvereon,   Driver,\nGets Broken Knee and\nAnkle; Serious\nOTHERS ESCAPE\nSERIOUS INJURY!\nMarried Between Countries\nAccident   Occurs   Above\nthe Lambert Planer;\nDriver Unknown\nCrowded off tbe highway at a\nnarrow point on the dtveralon\nabove the A. O. Lambert com-\nl>an>\"s planer at Taghum, by an\n\u2022 unidentified car that was heading down river at 7:30 Nelaon\ntime Wednesday morning, a\nroach driven by Ben Hotvemon\nand containing four of hi* fel-\n1< iw worker;, coming to Nelson\nirom their ntght shirt on the\nCom Linn power mnntructlon,\nwrnt over the bank, and rolled\ndown 90 feet, taming over half\na doaen times.\nBen Holverson. over whom the car\nrolled after he had pitched out,\nsustained a badly broken right\nknee and a broken right ankle, and\nmay prove to have internal injuries.\nHe waa brought to Kootenay Lake\nOeneral Hospital, where he now lies\nln a serious condition, and ls under\ntreatment   by   Dr.   R    B,  Shaw.\nOt the other four men ln the car,\nHans Peterson was aligutly hurt,\nwhile Ted Holverson, brother of the\nbadly Injured man, and Gilbert\nBerg and Carl o. Carlson escaped\nwithout otber Injury than bruises.\nThp car, which was brought to a\n(\u2022standstill more than halfway down\nirom the diversion to the original\nroad, was badly wrecked.\nOTHkK   CAR   BIZ\/LH   ON\nInvestigation by the provincial\npolice showed that tbe car went\nover the bunk slightly weat of the\nLambert planer's burner, while heading up the grade to the crest ot\ntbe diversion, the west-bound car,\nwhich was on tha inner side, allowing it insufficient room to pass\nsafely.\nThe west-bound driver did not\natop.\nEY BYLAWS\nPASS EASILY\nIN ROSSLAND\nROSSLAND, B. C._ May SO\u2014\nPour bylaws, authorising the\nexpenditure of $50,S00 were pasted with large majorities tn a\nmoney bylaw election here today.\nA etreet paving bylaw authorizing the expenditure of $2\u00ab,<hm>\nreceived 163 majority, 281 votes\nbeing  cast  for  and   78  against.\nThe high school bylaw which\ncalled for the expenditure $9500\nfor alterations received 343 r<4e\u00bb\nfor  and   62   against.\nThe ftre hall bylaw for the\nrepair to the fire hall and for\nthe purchase of a new fire\ntruck, amounting to $9000 received 208 votes for and m\nagalm-t.\n\u25a0un\nA KEAL WEDDING  ACBOSS THE LINK\nLLOYD GEORGE'S\nDAUGHTER GIVEN\nA MOCKSENTENCE\nSays in Mock Trial  Politics\nIr a Disease of the\nBlood\nLONDON, May 30 (AP)\u2014 Miss\nMegan Lloyd Oeorge, M. p.. daughter of the Liberal leader waa under\neenten.% today lo sit in the house\nof lords today for \"following ln her\nlatherlb   footsteps\"\nIn a mock trial at the London\nschool of economics last night a\nJury found tier guilty and decrees\nahe should be transferred from, the\nbouse of oommons so that she\noould not hear the speeches of her\nlatner, now leader of the Liberal\nparty.\nPhilip Ouedalla, historian and\nwriter, prosecuted the charge, accusing her of speaking Welsh to tha\ndanger of the public and of frequenting a building used by Lady\nAstor.\nPleading not guilty\u2014or extenuating circumstance-- lf guilty\u2014Miss\nLloyd Oeorg\u00ab a.id ahe had been\nsubjected to undue influence at an\nearly age and uat politics was a\ndisease of the blood transmitted\nfrom generation tp generation. As a\nchild she never waa asked whether\nane wanted a doll or teddy bear,\nahe said, but whether she was a\nprotectionist or  a tree  trader.\nCANADIAN WOMEN   '\nARE PRESENTED\nAT ROYAL COURT\nLONDON. May 20 (O P cable)\u2014\nHearts a-flutter with excitement.\n13 Canadian women were presented\nto the king and queen at the second of the royal courts held at\nBuckingham palace tonight. To make\ntha occasion even more exciting,\ntha Prince of Wales \u00bbnd Prlnc*\nOeorge were in attendance, standing behind the golden thrones of\ntha king and queen.\nThe' tw0 prlnoee ware unable to\nattend the first court, held laat\nnight, due to speaking engagements\nat public dinners. The prlnoe was\ndressed as a colonel ln the Welsh\nguards, while Prince Oeorge won a\nnaval uniform.\nI AI>\\s\\HTlf HUMH t.    WANTED\nVICTORIA. May 20.\u2014Provincial\npolice wlll conduce search for the\nfirebug who tried to burn down\niadysmith this week. By order-in -\ncouncll today the government took\nover the policing of Ladysmlth, at\ntha request of tha municipal authorities. Tills arangement la not an\notuc-orae of tho burning outrage.\nbut baa been undtr consideration\ntor  aame   Mme.\nBecause the bride could not enter the United States on account of the\nquota regulations and because Ontario would not grant the groom a marriage license and recognise his Mexican dlvoroe. this wedding took place\nat the international boundary on the Ambassador bridge, without the bride\nor groom leaving their respective countries. Reginald A. Crudge of Detroit\nand, Miss Emily Htmt of Windsor, Ont., are the happy couple, while the\none who tied the knot Is Judge John D. Watts.\nGOVERNMENT WILL\nASK VERIGIN TO\nCARRYJHJT OFFER\nMay   Hand   Over   Land at\nCrestova to Sons of\nFreedom at Once\nVICTORIA, Msy 90\u2014 In an effort\nto settle tha present Internet\ntroubles in British Columbia Douk\nhonors, the government will ask\nPeter Verigin, Doukhobor leader, to\nmake good his recent offer to band\nover the colony of Crestova to the\nSons   of   Freedom.\nIt will suggest that the Community Doukhobors led by Verigin vacate\nCrestova Immediately and give th*\nSons of Freedom sn opportunity to\nsettle on lt. Until th* colony\nvacated It is not believed that th*\nSons of Freedom wlll go there.\nIt Is believed thst if the Sons of\nFreedom bad a place of Its own\n. there would be less friction be-\n\u25a0 tween tt and the other Doukhobors\nand lees trouble for the authorities.\nYOUNG MAN ADMITS SHOOTING OF\nMOTHER AND TWO SMALL CHILDREN\nConfesses That He Was Asked by Mother to Do\nShooting\nMATT00N, 111.. May 20\u2014Merle\nJohnson, 25-year-old Arkansas mountaineer, today oonfes-ed to killing\nMre. Carrie Bowers, 38, and her\ntwo small sons on a side road near\nMattoon, after firing the house In\nWhich they lived. He wandered into\ntown early this morning, face and\nhands burned from the rifle, and\nsurrendered   to   a   policeman.\n\"I killed them,\" he satd. \"She\nasked me to. It was the moat cold\nblooded   thing   I   have   ever   done.\"\nHe said he fired the house shortly\nbefore midnight. He said he carried\nthe two children, two and five y\u00ab*rg\nold, from the biasing building, put\nthem in a car with Mrs. Bowen\nand  drove outside  town.\nThere he ahot Mrs. Bowers, than\nshot, strangled ami clubbed the two\nchildren. Under repeated questioning, Johnson varied his story frequently. He said, and then denied,\nthat a friend had conspired with\nhim to burn the house where he\nlived with Mrs. Bowers, He refused\nto amplify his statement that the\nwoman \"asked\" him to kilt her and\nthe children, and authorities doubted lt.\nHe had no other motive to give\n.or   the   slaytngs.\nDR. BANTING I_T\nPRESENTED WITH\nMEDAL OF HONOR\nTORONTO, Ont., May 20.\u2014(CP>-\nDr. F. Q. Ban.lng won new honors\ntonight when he was present* a\nwith the Flavelle medal at the\nannual meeting here of the Royal\nSociety of Canada. Dr. Banting\nIs celebrated aa Joint winner witu\nProf. J. J. MacLeod of the Nobel\nprice for work ln the development\nof Insulin. The Flavelle medal.\naccording to the constitution of tbe\nsociety. Is awarded 'or an outstanding contribution to science or\nliterature   In   Canada.\nThe Lorn* Fierce medal was ore-\nsented to Adjutor Rlvard. judge of\nthe court of appeal of Quebec, ln\nrecognition of his activity In critical  literature.\nSENDS KEEPSAKE\nBACK TO JUDGE   *\nAFTER ROBBERY\nVANCOUVER,* B. Oh May 30-<CP)\n\u2014The burglar who tooted the homa\nof Judge J. N. mis ot.the county\ncourt on Mar 17, had aome cun-\nalderatlon for hia victim. He returned one of the Judge's moat\ncherished poeaeaalona. a gold en-\ngrated cigarette caae, which had\nbeen preaented to blm by Sht\nother barriatm when be waa elevated to the bench.\nA mall carrier found the caae,\nwrapped ln paper, ln a letter not.\nThe Inscription on It made Identification immediately poaalble.\n!        DISARMAMENT   DATES   SET\nOENEVA. May SO\u2014(AF)\u2014The\nLeague of Natlona oouncil decided\ntoday that the general dlaarma-\nment conference next February wlll\nbe In Geneva, and then debated\nprovisions of a projected general\ndisarmament treaty.\nPUPILS SHOVE\nPLAYMATE INTO\nFURNACE MOUTH\nLONDON, Ont, May 3*1.\u2014\nShoved by pupils Into the furnace at Lobo village public\nschool, -I \\ ->\u2666*;, r -old Jimmy\nBrown had a ten-trying time today whll-- hi*-, tormentor*, ..truck\nmalc-hr* and threatened to set\nfire to the mass of psper which\nMurrounded him. Luckily the\npaper did not catch fire and\nJimmy   was   freed.\nSCIENTISTS ARE\nINVOLVED BY A\nSPEECHRELEASE\nDr.  Hill-Tout  of  Vancouver\nQuoted as Accusing Friend\nof Fundamentalism\nTORONTO, Msy 20\u2014Two outstanding scientists unwittingly became involved ln an international\nevolutionist controversy through the\nin dvertent release of*a speech attributed to Dr. Charles Hill-Tout.\nDf Vancouver. Britlah Columbia, before the Royal Society of Canada\nI ure tcday. Advance copies of Dr.\nHill-Tout's speech were given to\n.he press today although he will\nnet address the society until tomorrow.\nIn his address, Dr. Hill-Tout waa\nqiioted as accusing Professor Henry\nFairfield Osborn, president of the\nAmerican Museum of Natural History, of deserting the Darwinian\ntheory and espousing the cause of\n.undamentallsm.\nDr. Hill-Tout tonight explained\nthat when he presents his paper\nbefore the society tomorrow. It will\ncontain no reference to Professor\nOsborn   as   a   fundamentalist.\n\"I prepared an abstract of It\n(the speech) which may have Inadvertently been released,\" be explained. \"But my abstract made no\nreference to fundamentalism. Professor Osborn and I ere friends. It\nwould be ridiculous of me to refer\nto  him .as  a  fundamentalist.\"\nAs reports in the premature despatch, he stated. he would refer\nto the similarity,of blood testa*of\napes snd men to advance'his theory\nagainst   that   of , Professor   Osborn.\nWHISKEY EXPORTS.\nDOWN'IN MARCH\nOTTAWA. Ont., May 30.\u2014<CP)\u2014\nExport trade ln Canadian whiskey\nran Into a tremendous slump last\nmonth. Tlie bulletin Issued by tbe\nDominion bOreau of statistics today gives the total value of \"alcoholic beverages (chiefly whiskey)*'\nexported last month at 1160,000.\nwhereas for the same month In\n1P30   th\u00ab   value   was   $3,178,000.\nPor several months export of\nliquor to Bt. Pierre and Mlqu\u00bblon\nfiom -Canada ran over 91,000.000 a\nmonth but ln April none was shipped. Understanding hera ls that\nthe prices \"wera all shot\" and that\ndistillers decided to hold off shipments until tha Burptus at the Is-\nUnd* was  cleared   up.\nOBITUARY   HI?  S1R K0BEHT HBMOKSTRATES RADII\u00bb\nTALE OF LOVE\nTHAT WASTES\nRalph   Barton,   Famous\nCaricaturist, Shoots\n.Self\nI\t\nWRITES telTUARY\nBEFORE  SUICIDE\nPresent W\\% of Eugene\nO'Neill Only Woman\nHe Loved\nMr. Verigin wss not within reach\nof long dlstsnce telephone Wednesdsy night when this dispatch waa\nreceived by Tbe Nelson Daily Sews,\nbut J. P. Shukln, second vice-\npresident of the Christian Commur\nIty of Universal Brotherhood, was\nlocated at Brilliant and the dispatch\nread  to blm.\n\"Tbe people of British Columbia\nmay be aura thit Mr. verigin will\ncarry \u00a9ut ln full any promise be\nhas made,\" commented Mr. Bhukln.\n\"and lf you wlll recall what passed\nat the conference you wlll note that\nhe stated he waa willing to hand\nover the land at Crestova immediately with current taxes paid and free\nof debt, lf ttie Sons of Oreedom\nwould   agree   to  settle   on   It.\n\"If the Sons of Freedom accept\nMr. Verlgtn's proposition, and become the owners of the land at\ncrestova, they will of course be\nliable for the taxes accruing sfter\nthat   time.\"\nU. S. BRIGADIER'S\nBODY RECOVERED\nRuins of Age-Old Cavern in\nFrance Gives up Mangled\nBody of American\nTOURS, Prance, May 30\u2014 (AP) \u2014\nRutna Of the stone age cavern tn\nwhich he perished in a futile endeavor to save the life or a peasant\nwomsn today gave up the body of\nBrig, oeneral Robert H. Dunlnp.\nof tha United Slates marine corpe.\nAfter almost 34 hours of digging\nrescue workers headed by Prench\narmy engineers came upon tbe\nmangled form or the American ot-\nfloer where he was trapped yeeterday hy an avalanche which engulfed\nthe cave near Cinq Mars where the\nwoman and her husband made their\nhome. The body or Denis Brlant,\nhusband of the woman, who rushed\nwKh Brig. Oeneral Dunlsp to save\nher aa the fall or rock and stone\nstarted, wss recovered also. Mme.\nBrlant was rescued allve but badly\nInjured.\nMrs. Dunlap was not present when\nher husband's body was recovered,\nhaving retired to s nearby home\nto rest. She broke down whan she\nreceived the news or his death.\nThe widow left by the train for\nParis  thla  aUenioon.\nMrs, Dunlap came to Tours with\nthe general only seven weeka ago\nso that he might complete his\nstudies in the Prench  language.\nMme. Brlant tonight waa tn a\nTours hospital where It was necessary  to  amputate  her  left  leg.\nSENATOR DEFENDS\nHIS. POSITION IN\nBEAUHARNOIS CASE\nOTTAWA. Ont., May 30\u2014\\CP> \u2014\nAfter occupying almost tha whole\nday ln tha house of commons yesterday, tha Beauharnois power project became the subject of a statement In the senate today. Senator\nW. L. McDougald, whose conneolon\nwith the oompany was adversely\ncriticised by Robert Oardlner.\nU. P. A. leader in the house, out*\nlined  his  position.\nHa branded as \"ridiculous\" the\nclaim he bad made 130.000.000 out\nof the project, and contended ne\nwaa justified when in April, 1938,\nhe had stated he had no Interest\nIn the scheme. Senator McDougald\nsaid he waa aura that, the investigation by a oommittee of the house\nof cosjmons would clear up the\nmatter'to the satisfaction of parliament  and  the country,\nNKW YOKK, May 20 (API-\nRalph Barton, Irouh-ii. caricaturist, shot him-Mf to death In\nhis prnthonw apartment early\ntoday and Mft behind him a\n.wo-word obituary telling of melancholy and remor-e over rail -\nure to appreciate (arietta Monterey, his former wife.\nBarton   failed   Miss   Monterey,\nnow (he wife of Eugene O'Neill,\nthe   playwright   \"the   only   woman   I   ever   loved.\"\n\"Everyone   who   has   known    me\nand who hears of this wlll have a\ndifferent    hypothesis    to    offer    to\nexplain why X did It,\" wrote Barton.\n\"Practically  all  the   hypothesis  wlU\nbe  dramatic  and   completely  wrong\n\"Since early childhood I have\nsuffered from melancholy, whtch\nior the psst five years had begun\nto show definite symptoms of maniac\ndepressive insanity \u2022 \u2022 * \u2022 I have\nrun from house to house and from\noountry to country in a ridiculous\neffort to escape myself \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nTill.  ONLY   fOf-UW\n\/'I_\u00bb particular my remorse is bitter\nover my failure to appreciate my\nbeautiful lost angel, Carlotta, the\nonly woman 1 ever loved and whom\nI respect end admire above all the\nrefit of the human race. She is the\nono person who could have saved\nme bad I been eavable. She did\nner  beet.\"\nIn   conclusion   Barton   said:\n\"I present tbe remains with my\ncompliments to any medical school\nthat fancies them\u2014or soap can be\nmade of them. \u2022 * \u2022 I kiss my dear\nchildren and  Carlotta.\"\nThe document was unsigned but\nbore seven x's at the end.\nBarton called the manuscript an\n\"obit\", so describing it in four\nletters typewritten   ln   red.\nThe body, seated on a bed. was\nfound clothed in red and white\nstriped pajamas^ In the right huid\nwas  a   revolver.\nBarton was widely known for his\ndrawings pillorying America and\nAmericans. He Illustrated seversl\nbooks, including \"Gentlemen Prefer\nBlondes\", wrote a tow books himself,\nand sketched for puck, Life Liberty\nand recently the New  Yorker.\nMAN ATTEMPTS\nTO KILL SELF\nAFTER  CRIME\nWinnipeg: Home Shambles\nAfter Boarder Wields\nGun\nON  BOARD  POLAR  MBMUUM.   NUillh\nSir Hubert Wilklns, ln a demonstration aboard the submarine Nautilus,\nwhich ls to voyage to the North Pole, at the New York Engineering Co.\nshipyards. Yonkers, N.Y., used for thc first time tbe radio farliltles aboard\nthe undernea era It. The submarine is equipped with a 400-watt transmitter, licensed to uk 30 broadcasting channels between J75 and 17.780 kilocycles.\nBLISTERING HEAT\nCAUSED BY SNOW\nSAY WEATHERMEN\nHigh Temperatures  in California Indirectly Traced\nto Mountain Snows\nSAN PRANCISCO. May 20\u2014 (AP\u00bb\n\u2014The scourge of blistering best,\nbringing disastrous fires that have\ncaused alt northern California to\nswelter the paat three days hat.\nbeen due, partially, to atmospheric\nconditions caused by heavy snows\nand sub-freezing -temperatures that\nhave frosted peaks ln the Rocky\nMountain state*, weather bureau\nofficials here said  today.\nWith 14 inches of snow capping\nPipe's Peak In Colorado, residents\nof Denver shivering ln thp cold\nand snows sweeping Utah, N irth\nDakota end Minnesota, weather\nbureau authorities found a contributing cause, at leaat, for the\nsearing winds that have swept 'nt>\nthe state over the Slskiyous bringing the hottest daye of Uie year.\nAnd they found, too. some hope\nof respite. There was evidence\ntonight, they said, of the beat\nabating, and tbe low humidity\nthat has permitted serious fires ta\nsweep all sections\u2014cities and countryside alike\u2014Is expected  to rise.\nFIREARMS USE\nBY POLICE MAY\nBE CURTAILED\nOTTAWA, May 30 <CP>\u2014Senate\ntoday sent to a legal committee the\nbill of Senator Lynch Stauton which\nproposal to curtail the use of firearms by police offloers. Senator\nStauton said magistrates frequently\njustified killing by police officers\nof escaping persona when there was\nno Justification. His bill would prevent police from shooting an escaping person unless the offense were\na felony. In the caae of those merely suspected of misdemeanors no\nfirearms should be used.\nPollowlnf discussion on Senator\nStauton's bill, the senate continued\nconsideration of one results of the\nCsnadian trade mission to South\nA merle i.\nPRODUCE MOTION PICTURES IN ALL\nNATURAL COLORS BY NEW PROCESS\nLatest    Development   in   the;\nField      Comes      From\nEnglish Laboratory\nLONDON, May 10 (API\u2014The London Dally Mull say* that a process\nof producing motion pictures In\nnatural colors has been discovered\nhere and that sample picture* were\nshown today to members of the I\nRoval society, premier siientrfh-;\nbody  of Britain.\nThe paper \u00bb>ay_* the pictures ah own j\nttxtay realized perfect natural eolorK.!\nThe secret of thc invention, which I\nthe Mail's writer predicts will revo- [\nlutlonlze motion, picture photc-g- \u25a0\nrwi'ity. ta that the actual film base;\nis printed with h fuundai ion or\nm.itrlx consisting ot a half million j\nminute red. green and violet blue\nsquares to every square inch of film. I\nover this, foundation, it said, Ik \u25a0\ncoated   *   htRhly   sensitive  emulMnu.-\nThe new ttlm U satd to be ndn-1\nInflammable.\nFRENCH JURY IS\nFAST ACQUITTING\nWOMAN 9F MURDER\nAcquits Former Beauty Contest Winner After 10 Minutes Deliberation\nNICE. France, May 30 (AP)\u2014A\nFrench Jury requlrod only 10 minutes this evening to acquit Mrs.\nCharlotte N.ish Nlxon-Mrdllnger.\nbeauty rontcst winner, formerly of\nSt. Loula, of the slaying # of ber\nbugbaad\nThe jury upheld her contention\nthat she shot her husband, Fred Q.\nNlxon-Nirdlingcr, wealthy Philadelphia theater operator, in self defense after he had attacked her in\na   Jealous   frenzy   lut   March.\nHer trial opened this morning in\nastiiee court. The jury's speed tn\nreaching a verdict set a record for\nRiviera tribunal a of Justice. I m-\nmcdlately after it was returned Mrs.\nNtxon-Dlrdlinger. wan after thf\ntrial, was related from the stuffy\nJail where she had been confined\nsince   the  slaying.\nSo hopeless was the prosecuting\nattorney of obtaining a conviction\neven on a charge .,of manslaughter;\nwhich he asked, that he decided st\nu-.e last minute .not t0 call any\nwitnesses for the* atate.\n' Mm. Nixon-Nlrdllnger, who as\nCharlotte ,Nash. won prizes ln Atlantic City,- and St. Louts beauty\ncontests, proved ' to be her own\nchief witness, telling a crowded\ncourt room In halting ind sometimes tearful detail* the story of the\nfatal   encounter   with   her   husband.\nPolloe reserves hsd to be called to\nhandle the crowds of would-be\nspectators.\nA COLD THWARTS\nMAIN AMBITION\nOF YOUNG GIRL\nLOMK>N, Um '\" \" l* cab to j\nA heart broken girl sobbed In\nher room here tonight, for one\nor her greatest am)ill.rtiu. had\nl.nlr.l .i i.-jII\/,i1Io-i a| Mir final\nriii-inent. '.ii-s Helen A. Met unn,\nttl New \\<>rk. wus lo havc been\niires-enled to the king and queen\nil lhe mj_al mini held tonight.\nluit wat unable to appear be-\n<nii\u00ab-e of a. severe rold. \\IKs Mc-\n< .inn mn he presented st one\nof   the   later   Colin*..\nMAKES CONFESSION\nIN THE HOSPITAL\nShoots Boy in Bed and\nGirls When They Came\nFrom School\nFACTOR THINKS\nPRINCE IS NOT\nANY TOO SMART\nNEWSPAPERMAN  SHOT\nLOS ANOELE8, May 20\u2014(AP>\u2014\nFiring point-blank at his victims\nan unidentified gun man late todsy\nshot and killed Herbert Spencer,\nLos Angeles newspaperman and\nformer eltj editor of the Los\nAngeles Evening Express, and probably fatally wounded Charles Crawford, wealthy real estate executive\nand  lon_t a  Ilguri. ln city   politic.\nCHICAOO. Mfcy \"20.-lAP)\u2014John-\n\"Juko the Barber' Factor quietly\nstirn-ndercd o federal authorities\ntodsy to lace und tight the chaffe\nthat he -swindled Britons cf huge\nHSU ti money in a stock selling\nFactor appewred Hanked\nby four attorneyb, and won Immediate hearing. He denied all\ncharges of fraud laid to him by\nEnglish  officials.\nThe international promoter served\nnotice he would resist any Attempt\nto extradite him. His- attorneys\narpucd for hours, attempting to\nobtain hia freedom on bail, but\nthe upshot wsa a continuance) of\nthe   hearing   until   Monday.\n\"All I have read abou myself In\nthe past few days,\" he said, \"is\nabsolutely false. The statements\nabout me and the members of my\nfamily which bave been maliciously\ncirculated ar\u00ab utterly without foundation, I have appeared voluntarily\nbecause T know tbe charges made\nagainst mc are untrue.\"\nUAKHWrs     I^M I n\nIt wm disclosed that warrants\nfor hts arrest were issued in England last November. Godfrey Haggard, British vice-consul tn Chicago, obtained a federal warrant\nMay It, During this time. Factor*\nattorneys said he wat. ln Chicago.\nFactor told newspaper men of\nplaying chpmln de fer .with the\nPrince of Wales at Monte Oarlo\nAugust 10.\n\"I had wou le&o.ooo the *\u00ab*\nbefore * he .amino asked me to play\nv.itu the.prince,,\" he said, \"We'sat\nnext to each other In a.small game\nand played for some time. 1 .don't\nrecall tha other 10 persons ln the\ngame. It was, not a steep game\nand the prince did not lose heavily,\nnot more than \u00bb500. I broke about\neven. The prince Is a charming\nperson. He Isn't, so smart but I\nwouldn't  want  you   to print that.\"\nFactor denied reports that the\nprince withdrew when he learned\nFactor was the \"banker\" in tha\ngame. He aald each player waa\nhis own banker In cheraln de fer.\nWINNIPEG. May 20 (CPl\u2014Thret\nchildren were brutally murdered today in _. suburban Winnipeg home.\nOt larded by police In hospital la\nJohn atreib, 45-yesr-old boarder m\nthe houae where the children wera\nslaughtered. Expected io recover\nfrom aelf-lnfllcted throat nlaabea.\nStrelb ts stated by poilce to have\nconressed   to   the  murders.\nChildren of Mrs. Lillian Walters,\n88-year-old department store kitchen worker, tbe dead are: Georfo\nWalters, 18. Doris, 12; and Irene-\n9. Oeorge waa shot to death early\nin the d\u00aby and hia body lay In hie\nbed room until his mother returned\nhome from work at night. The glrla\nwere shot when they came homa\nfrom school at noon, but their\nthroats were later slashed to assure\ndeath.\nStrelb. wbo had roomed with tba\nWalters family for about two yeara.\nwaa found unconscious end bleeding\nfrom slashes In his throat whan\nneighbors rushed to the death houea\non hearing the screams of Mra,\nWalters. Strelb wae hurried to boa-\npttal where police- slated lie confessed t he killings. Mr.-. Waiters\nrimmed ehe had rerused continued\ndemartls by Strelb thai she marry\nhim.\nWAS   SEPARATED\nMrs. Walters, who had beep separated from her husband for several\nyears, first discovered the murders\nwhen she reached home tonight\nafter a day at work. She found\ntha two glrla dead In a bed, abound cut at tbe throat. Screaming,\nshe ran from the house and returned with neighbors to find her eon\nshot to death and etrelb lying unconscious in  a  pool of blood.\nOeorge, mho worked for an Iron\nmanufacturing concern, was killed\nby a revolver bullet at 0.20 a.m..\nStrelb ts stated to have admitted\nin his confession to police. The\nman is reported to have said tbat\nne waited un'il noon, ehootlng tha\ntwo little girls when they cam*\nhome from school for lunch, then\nwalking to the Red river nearby\nand throwing the gun into tha\nfttream.\nStreib i* stated *o hen confessed\nthat when he returned to tha housa\nhe found the girls wot not dead,\nso he cilt their throats with a rasor.\nThe bloodstained razor, with which\nStretb slashed his own throat Ute_-\nin the day, w*.-> found beneath a\nbed. Next door neighbors told police\nthey had heard no shots and had no\nidea anything untowhrd had Happened until Mrs. Walters ran yelling  from   her  house st night.\nCOAST AIRWAYS\nSERVICE WILL\nBE MAINTAINED\nVANCOUVER.   B.   C.   May   SO.\u2014A\nCanadl-vn con.iu-.iy bucked entirely\nby Canadian capital and Canadian\nbusiness nun is being incorporated\nto take over the British Columbia\ninterests of -he Alaska-Washington\nAirways, it ts announced. It will\nbe headed by Rlchaid J. Oosse,\nwho will -u-suair, duties or president\nand   managing   director.\nMr. oos-e states tbat the pretemt\ndally service between Vancouver.\nVictoria and Seattle wtll be maintained. In the immediate future\nit is hoped to extend aervlce to\nother   points.\nWhile the Canadian company will\nhave an entirely Canadian personnel, un affiliation interest will ba\nmaintained with the Alaska-Washington Airwajfs for transfer of passengers and mall ln United 8-atea\nterritory.\n?he Weather\nA    NEW    I-IVIHION\nLOUDON, ttsy 30 (AP)\u2014A South\nAmerican division of tbe American\nand Weat Indian squadron of tha\nBritish navy la to be formed, It wu\nannounced  today.\nThe  new  division  will  consist  of\ntwo cnllatra under the command of\nH   O   Une-Poole.\nF*orec_\u00abt:     Nelaon   snd   vtelntty-\nPur'ly cloudy and moderately wans\n'wltfe   ahoweri.\nMln. Max.\nNELSON     *\u00bb 88\nNiuialmo     *A fl\nVlotorha     \u00abA 80\nVancouver      48 68\nKamloopa      40 M\nPrlnoe   Oeorge     At tt\nEstevan   Point       84 84\nf*lnce   Rupert  40 M\nD\u00bbwton,  T. T -  94 04\nSeattle       44 88\nPortland  48 Ta\nSan   Francisco   68 m\nSpokane -  88 8_\nLoe  An|eles _ 84 80\nPentlcton                                 34 07\nVernon      31 08\nOrand  Porks    It oa\nKsslo     S3 tl\nt>             82 44\ntfdmoMro                           4ii 4\u00ab\nSwift   Current    80 M\nPrince    Albert                      38 M\nQu'Appelle                  ,,      18 w\nWinnipeg       ,  .                  \u25a0-* \u2022>\n pagi two\nKLEC-H-CAI. lNVENTO* DIES\nPH_LAt\u00abI_?_nA, May 20\u2014Ohsrles\nBrutus Vawter, widely known Inventor of more than 200 radio and\nelectric devices, died today of burns\nreceived m au explosion at hi, laboratory ln his hoU* ln the German-\ntown section of the city.\nTHISTLES   BEAT   WOOD\nBITCREBS  5-1\nTRAIL, B. c. May 20\u2014Thistles\nbeat the Wood Butchers 5-1 In a\ncity league football game here today.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson,B.C. Hotels\n\u2022^^(^^y^V^r-^V^Wr^\/w^^\/i^^\nNELSON, B. C.   \u2022\nNelson is now on Daylight\nSaving Time\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nBUMS\u2014A. Mulr, R. L. McLean, silverton; Mra. D. Payette; R. Dal\nR. Morrow, A. Brennen, J.' Hani-\nwood, O. C. Thompson, J. B. Peters,\nA.' 6. Lamb, H. Burna, 4. Roberteon, F. B. Rutter, w. C. Grieve. F.\nBroughton, Vanvouver; L. H. Cox,\nFernie; 1. Hagler, E. Robert. M.\nWitter, Calgarv; Mr. and Mra. S.\nDreaael, Metaline Faiu.  W. Wheeler.\nbourn, Wynndel; P. Marone, Creaton; J. O. 8t. Dennla, MIm M, B\nMlchardy, H. Somme, Klmberley; A.\nJ. Balmont, J. Tlrkup, A. J. Iver-\nslde, Cranbrook; c. \u00abJ. Qulnn. c\nD. MeCruny, Lethbrldge; T. Watt,\nToronto;   P.  Newell,  Montreal.\nuomt-wimrtViMmimwwM\nWhere {he Gue&Is King\nC(5he Savo\nKELSON'S NEWEST AND FINEST HOTEL\nMANY ROOMS WITH PRIVATE\nBATHS OR SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n^\u25a0\u25a0iWWWHWMaiai^iiiwwmiiiiwwww-w\nCITIZENS MUCH\nINTERESTED IN\nHOSPITAL WORK\nHundreds    Visit    Institution\non Hospital Day; See\nAll Phases\nMANY CHANGES\nFROM YEAR AGO\nProceeds of Tea to Be Used\nfor Purchase of Cots\nfor Babies\nftelaon'a splendid hospital plant,\nronaietlng of Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital, the nun.ee home, and\nthe isolation hospital, waa the\ncenter of attraction to the cltt-\nr.ena Wedneeday afternoon, when\nneveral hundred people observed\nHospital Day by paying a vlalt to\nthe modern institution that serves\nNeleon and a very large surrounding district.\nProm a to 6 o'clock were the\nofficial hours for the \"at home,\"\nin connection with which afternoon\ntea wae sawed on the lawn, but actually it was nearly 0 o'clock when\nthe last relays of visitors finished\ntheir exciting and Informing tour\nof the various buildings.\nNURSES   ACT   AH   GLIDES\nVisitors were met In the vestibule\nby Mtss Carrie M. Treffry, matron\nand Mlse Joyos Leslie, head nurse,\nwho reoelved on behalf of the\nstaff, and then student nurses were\n.detailed to groups of visitors as\nguides, and took them through tne\nthree buildings, In succession, and\nfrom floor to floor, pointing out\nthe different departmenta and their\nequipment, and explaining the\nroutine  of  the hospital's operation.\nOn the administrative or ground\nfloor of the hospital ltaelf, the\ntour started with the X-Ray department, and included offices.\nstaff and nurses' dining roams, and\nthe kitchen with its many modem\nfacllltlea.   and   storeroom.     A   new\nTHE  NELSON  DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON,  B.  C.\nANCIENT PAPERS\nTHUBSDAY   MOBNINO,  MAT   21,   1991-\"\npatients' an.   performing   a**-gned\nduties.\nIn connection with thc main\nbuilding, vliltora uaually looked ap.\npredativcly Into the laundry, which\nla an annex, and soma viewed tha\nmodern haatini system ln the\nbasement, which alao aar.ee tha\nIsolation hoapltal. A concrete root\nhouae la an Important auxiliary to\nthe kitchen.\nMODI-EN  ISOLATION HOSPITAL\nThere being no patients ln tha\nIsolation h6_pltal at the present\ntime, visitors alao saw that Institution, moat of them paying\ntheir first visit to it since lt waa\nremodelled Irom tha former nurses\nhome and re-cciulpped for lta new\nuse.\nln contrast to the main building.\nthe Isolation hospital la severely\nplain ln lta furnishings, aa It ne.es.\naartly must be, bare and easily\ncleaned walls and furniture being\nthe standard for this type of In-\nittltufion. lta first and second\nfloors ara Independently operated.\neach being a complete unit ln Itself, and when necessary tha building can be divided into three Units,\neaoh treating one Infectious disease.\nElectric stoves are uaad In contrast\nto tha large and commodious gas\nranges of the main building\nThe nurses home, with which\nprobably most of the cltlaens have\nseme familiarity, was also Inspected\nln detail, the attractive rooms ot\nthe nurses, th, parlors, and the\nother features all being Interesting\nIn the extreme. It ls the homo\nof a nursing staff of now nearly 40.\nIt Is In the nurses hom\u00ab that the\ntraining school, except for the work\nIn dietetics and ln the wards, halts center, and the Institution now\nboests at last a well equipped lecture   room   or   class-room.\nTaking a prominent part ln the\nafternoons proceedings wera PMel\ndent C. F. McHardy and other\ndirectors; Mn. J. T. Andrews and\nMrs. H. H. Pitts, tho lady members\nor the board; wlvaa of the directors\nand of the physicians of the city;\nMayor J. P. Morgan and members\nof the city council and the mem,\nbcrs of the Graduate Nurses association, the latter centering their\nwork chiefly on the tea.\nMany of the ladles among the\nvisitors brought parcels of cotton\nand linen rags for the rag shower,\ntwo lsrge baskets at either side of\nthe vestibule being filled with\nthese   psrcels.\nAt the cloee of the function, the\ncollection box was opened, and was\nfound   to   contain   I39.3J   in  ellver\nfeature since last year Is 'lie train'\nlng school diet kitchen Just off %he\\\\n_____   d^itid\"bVpa'tron\"s\"of\nmain kitchen.    This has eight ___   th. \"silver tea\"   On being Informed\nof   the   total.   Mine   Treffry.   tho\nSAVOY\u2014D.   M.   Coleman,   W.   P. I Seattle:   H.  Wareure,  Spokane;   Mr.\n_orfn_an.   Grand   Forks;   B.   Brick-1 and   Mrs.   Ooodenough,   Kaalo;    W.\n\u25a0on,   A.  T.   Brlekson.   Silverton;   H. Wataon, Mirror City; T. Edgar, Edge-\n..  Dllla.  P.   McDonald.   W.  G.  Jef-1 wood.\n'rey,  Vancouver;   A.  L.   De  Walsaey,\nQuean's\nHotel\nA. Lapolnte, Prop.\nMot and eold water In every room\nHiram heated.\nQUSCNB--K. McAvoy. M Coleman, Ymir; F. Kenned), Ainsworth:\nMr. and Mrs. E. Landreth. Maple\nCreek. Sask,; A. S. Jones. Seattle:\nT. Davoust, I. Janzen, Procter; G.\nT. Smith. O, Doble, Pr.rr.rton;\nJ. Barraclough, Spokane: Gee Lun,\nSon  Pon.   Vancouver.\nMadden Hotel\nd. a. Mcdonald\nSteam Heated Rooms by th*\nDay, Week or Month.\nBvery  consideration shown\nto guesta.\nCor.\nBaker and Ward streett\nNelson\nNew Qrand\nHotel\nr.   I.   KAPAK.  Prop.\nWeekly or monthly ratea.\nHot and cold water In all rooms.\nPhone 503      P. O. BOX 1M1\nNEW OHAND-N. Mlehot, cranbrook: O. Phillips, c. Onla, J. McKay. Trail; Mr. and Mrs. F. A Hen-\nnlng. Calgary; Mrs. F. Ollvrsy, Bellevue.\nMADDEN\u2014A. J. Itiekctt. Spokane:\nW. D. Kent, Drumheller. F. E. Hom.\nMarcus; C. Harlow. Port Crawford,\np. Marone, Craston; 0. Hermlston,\nF.   Mow,   Valllcan.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n:oj Vernon St. phons\nH. W-jel.k\nllfty  Boom,  of  Solid  Comfort.\nHeadquarters   for   Logger,   and\nMiners.\nFrost again registered Wednesday but the weather wae a bit\nv-anner. the sun shining all day\nwith   a   cool   wind   prevailing.\nThe minimum temperature was\n83 degrees and the maximum was\n80   degrees.\nTrail,B.C. Hotels\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\ntrail, b. c.\nA. P. LEVI8QUK, Prop.\ndividual sets of gas burners and\ncooking equipment, where n class\nof elgh t studen t nurses can be\naccommodated for Instruction In\ndietetics at one lime. Oft thla\nfloor is the out-Datlent department.\niroNonra tabu for barh.*\nThe route followed In the toura\nnext ascended to the third or\nmaternity floor, by the automatic\nelevator, visiters finding o{ Interest there the caae room and hs\naccessories, and the nursery, as\nwell as the private, seml-prlvate,\nand publio wards, wtth the standard\nequipment of chart room, diet\nkitchen, linen room, bathrooms,\nand other facilities that each M\nthe nursing floors of the hospltsl\nh-oasta. In the nursery were nine\nlittle new arrivals, in cote and\nbaskets. Through the glass door of\nthe nursery visitors were ahown the\nnew sponging Utye. the gift rt\nthe Pythian sisters and Mn. E. L.\nReld.\nOn the second floor, formerly devoted to surgical cases, a ntw ar-\nmngemem was met with, this\nfloor, except for the surgical equipment, being now devoted exclusively to women patients, while the\nfirst floor, formerly known ss the\nmedical floor, now being devoted io\nthe men.\n0MUIM0   I.QUPMENT\nThe surgical plsnt includes major operating room, stertllrlng room\nwhere bandages and instruments are\nsterilized by ateam at a high temperature and under great pressure,\nnnd minor operating room\u2014this\nlatter having formerly been a claaa\nroom, and doctors room, the litter\nbeing used by the doctors before\nnnd utter conducting operations\nThla floor, now the women's floor,\nalso ha\u00ab the children's ward, and\nIn this was seen the new gift of\nthe Busy Bees, an organisation of\neight Httle gwls. the gift being a\nsmsll-siie ORtch-fratnea bed. whoae\nlittle occupant by an ingen-ous\nmechanism may rest comfortably\nlu   \u00bb   sitting   posture.\nOn the fira- or medical floor,\nnow devoted to the men, are the\ndispensary, and tlie soldiers ward,\nbesides the private and public\nwords for the men. corresponding\nto similar wards for the women on\nthe second floor. Off the first\nfloor a door leads into the M_Mt-\ncular ward.\nAll three floors have access to\nthe open air--the nia-'ernlty wsrd\nto the roof, end the others to\ncommodious level fire-escapes leading to the bank behind the main\nhulldlug\u2014these apaces being used\nhy convalescent*.\nUC-EM   DONATION.!\nOn aU the three iioors devoted to\npatients are private wards tin'\nhsve been furnished by organisations or by private individuals. Twc\nof theae wanK those bearing the\nname of the Masonic order and ot\nthe Standard Furniture company.\nhave recently been equipped by\nthe donors with Gatch-frame beds\nand  with new curtalna and ruga.\nVisitors found a commodious and\nspoUe-ss Institution, with attractive\nand well.furnished wards, and an\nattentive and apparently capable\nnursing    staff   ministering   to   the\nmatron,     announced     thla    money\nwould   be   uaed   for   the   purchase\nFOUND TELL OF\nCOLORFUL PAST\n\"Josh\" Marsden Finds Guclph\nPaper Published May,\n1867\nJ.J. BOYD FINDS\nEARLY   EDITION\nThirty   Years   Ago   Tweed\nSuits Sold at 14.95, Fur\nCoats $6.50\nTaken from their places of concealment, an old trunk and the\nback of a picture frame, where\nthey have probably reatttt for\nmany years undisturbed, two Canadian newspapers, one 64 years old\nand th* other 80 yeara old, give a\nvivid picture of tha condition* of\nthe oountry during the years In\nwhich they wers published.\nTh* older issue, Th* Evening Adviser, published May 83, 1867. at\nOueiph, Canada West, as Ontario\nwaa then known, waa found by\nJoshua Marsden, well-known old-\ntimer, and now In bualneas in Nelson, While cleaning out a trunk\nwhich he pin-chased from a second\nhand dealer. The aecond paper waa\na Toronto Svenlng Telegram published January 10, 1801. and waa\ndiscovered by J. J. Boyd whll* taking a picture out of Its frame. The\npaper had been uaed to hold tbe\npicture   secure.\nMr. Marsdeh's 64-year-old Issue\ngives a striking picture of the\ncountry's struggles In lte early days\nof development, while th* later\npaper shows the low cost of living\nof 1001.\nLOW   COST   LIVINO\nimagine the durable tweed suits,\nnow retailing at between 820 and\n\u202240, selling for the modest price\nof 84.95 ln 1001. Son's Sunday best,\nwhich father and mother guarded\nsa Jealously, then nold at 82.97.\nParents would not consider anything under 618 now, and 825\nwould not be an unusual prlo* paid.\nMen'n beaver coata were ad vert lata\nat 8fl.n0. Just Imagine how popular this price would he today to\nthe college student who thinks\nnothing    of    purchasing    of    8200\nGladys Hustwlck\nPasses Away, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, May 20\u2014Death\noccurred early this morning at the\nTrall-Tadanac hogpltal Of Oladys,\n11-year-old daughter of Mr. and\nMr*. A. Hustwlck of Trail. Funeral\nservices win be held thla week from\nthe Anglican ohurch.\nMr. and Mrs, Hustwlck and family\nhave only resided. In Trail about two\nnJtmths, coming here from Calgary\nOladys had noi attended school ln\nTrail.\nBRUHN DEFENDS\nEXPENDITURE OF\n' RELIEF MONIES\nTelia Victoria Women Con\nservatives Good Value Received in Work Done\nof   additional   individual   cots   tor fur coat.    Overalls and ooata ssld\nthe  babies, and that tha Order for at 49  cents and ladl*B* hosa at 19\nthese would ba placed at onoe. Five Mnt,.    it (uc), were the case now\nor six cots can  be provided  with jroung   ladles   would   no.   have   to\nthis,      n_n_.     mnnis* _ ... ..   t.   .\nthis new money.\n10NE BALL NINE\nTO PLAY NELSON,\nEXHIBITION GAME\nLocal Team Has New Second\nBust-man and Shortstop\non Lineup\nOn Sunday the lone BsU Nine,\nwhich III defeat at the hands\nof the N.Ihou team In lone lsst\nBunday. plays here this Bunday\nln  an exhtbtion gsme.\nNelson* lineup includes two new\nplayers who wlll hold down position., at second base and st short\nstop.\nwith the lone players seeking\nrevenge, and the Nelaon team\nstrengthened, a fast exhlbtlon Is to\nbe  expected.\nTO DISTRIBUTE\n1300 RAGS TO\nSCHOOL PUPILS\nUnion Jacks, Canadian  Ensigns Mak* Celebration\nFlag D\u00bby, Trail\nDOUGLAS\nHOTEL w\nRooms and Bath\nC. I   Md A. OBOUTAOI\nProps.\n.team ..rated\nThroughout\nUot and teld\nWater\n\u25a0ox Mt rhone 211\nTRAIL, B. C.\nThe House You\nWant\nTI\/HKTHSt   yod-rs   a   pm-\n\" perilve   buyer   or   owner\nof a  home,  you'll   find  tha\nClassified  Columns  worth\nwhUe.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nHILLCREST IS\nSOCCER VICTOR\nIN SNOW STORM\nDefeat Corbin Hooters by a\nScore of 3-2 In Sunday\nMatch\nCORBIN. B. C. Msy 20\u2014Undaunted by the weather, which at\ntimes more closely resembled January thsn Msy. a fair slied crowd\nturned out to watch Hillcrast take\ntte lone end ot a S-a soore over\nthe Corbln football team on Bunday\nlast.\nFrom the kick off HUloreet tesm\ntook the offensive snd gave the\nCorbln toalle several hard shots.\nJust hefore hair time corbln began\nto press and were rewarded with\nthe glrtst kosI of the game. Score\nat  half  time\u2014Corbln   1.  Hlllcrest 0.\nEarly ln the second half snow\nfell in great quantities and it waa\nhard for the playera to control the\nhall which found Its way Into\ntouch on many occasions. Early lu\nthe second half Hlllcrest drew even\nonly to again fall behind when\nCorbin scored their second g6a],\nTwo goals were then acored by Hlllcrest who held the play ln their\nopponents' territory for the remainder of the game.\nFinal score\u2014Hlllcrest 3. Corbln 2.\nGood Health Assurance\nA daah of ENO'S \"Fruit Salt\" in a glass of\nwater daily.     The results\u2014safe, gun,\nsatisfactory  relief from constipation, the prime cause of mott\nhuman ill*.    Refuse\nsubstitutes.\nKalaon, B. C. Cat ot\nTHE ROYAL CAFE\nCLASSIC    _U.MAIK.tM\ndatlaetaeut   and    Delicacy    Fre.ell\nOMEN t>AV AND NHiHT\na penal Mnner. II:SI to > p. m. nt\nSpecial  aun,i.i)   ' i,irk. n  Wane, Ate\ntpeitellzMg l-t\"\"'P Sa*y ane  Koodlse\nMo ~'~\nKOOTENAY CAFE\nVEIMIN   ITBItT\nIs   now   serving   regular\n3-< III R\u00abK    MEAL.   30(*\nrrom   11:30  to   g\nUCICB   SSBVICI\nEeMeaey   HetM\n\u2022-\\\u00ae_\u00a9_<iY\nV\nENOS\nFRUIT SAI I\nworry   about   getting   \"runs\"\nIn 1901 Toronto was welcoming\nhome hfr Bouth African war veterans and oelebratlona for the returned men were numerous. The\nSfth annual report of the blind\nInstitute waa also submitted that\nyear.\nD'ARCT   McGEB   rOPl 1.AR\nThe May 22. 1887. issue of the\nVvenlng Adviaer, found by Mr.\nMarsden, gives considerable apace\nto the political campaign of D'Arcv\nMcGee. member or parliament for\nMontreal West, Mr. McOee at that\nperiod waa speaking on the things\nthat wer* about to he Initiated\ntinder   Confederation,\nThe columns also contained the\nannouncement thst the Steamer\nCarlotta waa making her first official run in connection with the\nOrand Trunk railway, between Portland, Me., and Halifax. It tu\nscheduled to make a weekly run.\nThe Carlotta, queen of her day,\nwaa driven by two piddle wheels\non  either side of  the boat.\nCute showed pictures advertising\nmassive furniture and dainty carriages.\nSaloon brawls and shoottaf affrays werf. evidently looked upon\nas mere play, aa * shooting affray in Oregon, ln whloh nine\npersons were either shot or stabbed, waa headed \"Oregon Sports.\"\ncmtsmIed\nby married men,\ntrafalgar ball\nRunning circlet around the high\nschool cadets. In % Trafalgar league\nbaseball game at the Junior high\nschool grounds Wedneaday afternoon, to win 23-8, the Married men\nproved that they still had pep of\nthe   younger   nine.\nThe hoys' defeat waa not altogether to their discredit, considering they were matched against such\nveterans of the bat as E, L. Buchanan,   A.   Bosnian  and  Allison.\nThe game was featured hy homers\nknocked by H. Haines, A. Scanlan\nand K. L. Buchanan of the Married\nMen, and by P. Duffy of the Cadets.\nP. Dufry and L. Stewart hurled\nfor the Cadets and A. Scanlan for\nthe  Married  Men.\nTeams  were:\nCadets\u2014G. Stewart 3. L. Stewart 3, A. McLean 1, P. Duffy 1,\nC. MacDougall, T. Bird. B. Clark,\nN.  Rhodes,  T.  Chace, 6.  Jackson.\nMarried Men\u2014D. fit. Dennis 3,\nH. Haines 6, A. Scanlan 5, E. {__\nBuchanan 4, J. Brennan 2. Allison,\nC. Riley, K. Jarrett 1, Boyd C.\nAffleck  2\nREV. MCMURRAY\nBIDS FAREWELL\nTRAIL CHURCH\nTRAIL, B. C, May 20\u2014Rev. George\nMurray, reoently ordained, who\nleaves for the east tomorrow to\ntake chsrge of Scott's Town pariah,\nspoke to the congregation of First\nPresbyterian churoh laat night st a\nfarewell   service.\nThe service waa followed by a\nsocial hour arranged by the Hlgh-\nlandmen. Angue McDonald, on behalf at the group, presented Mr\nMurray  with  a  parting gilt.\nMlaa Bella Murray, slater of Mr.\nMurray, will accompany him to tbs\neaet\nVICTORIA, May 20\u2014Coupled with\na challenge to the membera ot the\nopposition to clt\u00ab one single instance where money pledged to the\nrelief of the unemployed had been\ndiverted, Hon. R. W, Bruhn, minister of public works, gave complete\nfigures of unemployment relief ftt a\nmeeting of tht Vlotorla Women's\nconservative association.\nA tabulation showed that tn\namount of 13,378,861 wtg the total\nvalue of work undertaken, of whloh\nthe municipalities paid ts their\nshare 11,182.120 tnd tht government\n$1,090,878. The approximate man\ndays' work avallablt for the total\nexpenditure was 750,000. Organised\nterritories claimed tht amount of\n\u20222.364,250 and unorganized treat\n81,014,631.\nThe following is a summary of\nthe distribution of the total works\nprovided for:\nVancouver Island tnd the islands\nand MacKenzie, 8518,063, 16,3 per\noent; Vanoouver, North Vancouver\nand lower mainland 61,914,200, 569\nper cent; Tale, Kamloops and Salmon Arm. 6165.500. 4.9 per cent;\nSlmllkameen, Okanagan, Grtnd\nForks, Greenwood, $215,906, 6.6 per\noent; Columbia, Cranbrok and\nFernie, $147,400, 4.1 per cent; Prince\nRupert, Queen Charlotte and Atlln.\n$85,500, 3.5 per oent; Omlneca, Fort\nOeorge and Peace River, 6113,100,\n3.4 per cent; Cariboo and Llllooet,\n675,467, 22 per cent.\nCOA8T MRii-TST\nSHAREHOLDER\nMtklng a total or $3,378,683, of\nwhich the largeat shareholder In\nthe distribution la the city of Vanoouver, North Vancouver apd the\nlower mainland, which reoelved\ntotal of $1.914500 or nearly 59 per\ncent of tha entire provincial award\nIn addition to the abovo figures,\nMr. Bruan showed that the pro\nvlncltl government had contributed,\nthrough direct relief for thoee for\nwhom suitable employment oould bo\nfound, the amount of $434,816\nwhich amount went to 14,103 Individuals and  5117  families.\nWith regard to criticism of the\nhandling of the fund, Mr. Bruhn\nttated \"thla committee, composed of\nthree members, thoroughly Inveetl-\ngtted every complaint and petition\nreceived, which were comparatively\nfew, and haa Impartially enquired\nInto all charges regarding alleged\ndiscrimination or Improper hindllng\nof funds, Reports reoelved are to\nthe effect that very good val vie haa\nbeen received for each dollar expended.\"\nTRAIL, B. C, Jfay 30\u2014Thirteen\nhundred Union Jacks and Canadian\nensigns wlll be presented to Trail\nschool children Friday, Flag day.\n\u00abe part of Oht Umpire Dty celebration arranged by the Canadian advisory committee of the Trail Rotary club.\nTht flagt tre to be distributed to\ntht children by teachers ln tht\nclass  rooma of  the  various  schools.\nAt 2:30 Central school pupils\nwtll marah with Principal K. B.\nWoodward tnd thtlr teachers to\nthe city hall, where they will be\nJoined by Tadanac pupils, the latter\narriving  by  oar.\nAt the city hall am Guides tnd\nBoy Scouts, who will be in uniform\nand 'carrying colon wll fall out of\ntut class columns and form scout\nand guide columns behind one\nof Ue city fire trucks, which will\nlead a parade to tht rink. East\nTrail achool wlll Join tbt gathering\nat the rink.\nWhen the schools haft been assembled the ceremony will open\nwltb the singing of \"O Canada\".\nR*v. N. D. B, Larmonth will speak\nbriefly on f.ie meaning of Empire\nDty and the flag. Tht singing of\n\"God Save the King\" will conclude\nthe  ceremony.\nProceedlngt In the rink should\nnot laat mart thtn 80 minutea and\nshould   commj.net   at  2:45.\nThe mayor tnd aldermen, achool\nchairman and trustees tnd members\nof tht Trail Rotary club have been\nInvited to take place on the platform.\nTRAIL, B. C. Mty 20\u2014 The University of British Columbia Players\npresented their play. \"The Young\nIdtt,\" to t ptcked house ln the\nKnights of Pythlaa haU here to-\nnight, under tht autplcet of the\nArthur Chapman chapter. Imperial\nOrder of the Daughters of the 8m\npire, The pity wm very refrethfng\ntnd the comedy of tbe pity kept\nthe tudlenot In conitant laughter,\nThe leading actors received considerable  spontaneous   applause.\nDAVIS CUP PLAY\n10 OPEN TODAY\nDr.    Jack    Wright    Thinks\nOpening of Draw a Good\nBreak for Canadians\nMANY SEE U. B. C.\nPLAYERS AT TRAIL\nEARLY DAY TRAU\nRESIDENT AMAZED\nMWTHOF CITY\nHarvey  Fraser  of  Oakland\nDeclares Would Not Have\nKnown the City\nMrs. T. K. Walker is\nGuest of Honor Mrs.\ntJnderhill at Forks\nMONTREAL Que.. M\u00aby SO.\u2014O-r.\ntdi'l represcntAtlvee In the Dftvla\ncup tetmls play whleh opens here\ntomorrow were optlmlrtlo ae they\nleft the practloe courte thie even,\ninf.\n\"I mink w\u00ab |ot u jood e, breek\nln the draw aa we could, and we\noutht to make a food ahowlng tomorrow. Wa are all In tbe pink\not condition,\" Jack Wrl\u00abht, \u2022 captain ol tha Canadian team, told\nthe  Oanadlan  Press.\nAfter the draw for tb* matches\nhad been oompleted. Marcel Ralnvllle, alert little Prench-C*nadlan\nplayer, left the city for a reat. Ita\nwlll return in time for tbe matches\ntomorrow afternoon.\nDr. Wright playa prank Shields\nof New fork, the United Btstee\nteam's Nn. 1 player, In the flret\nelnglee match tomorrow, and Ralnvllle ls 'pitted against Sydney B.\nWood in the second ma'.cb of the\ndsy.\nThe United states playera took\nthings easy today. The heat waa\nstifling, and tbe players worked out\nleisurely. Shields and wood played\na desultory doubles match against\nButter and Mangln, aervlng up every\nvariety of stroke for them to\nhandle.\nTRAIL, B. On May 30\u2014\"The changt\nis really astounding. If I Aad been\nsuddenly landed in the center ot\nyour city I would not have known*\nJust where I was. The landmarks\nfamiliar to me are gone. The trans- _\nformation of Trail hu been marvellous.\"\nThus spoke Harvey Praser of\nOakland, Cal., when asked for hta\nImpressions of Trail on his first\nvisit to the olty in 25 years, Mr.\nPraser ls a brother at Mrs. T. W.\nBlngay and spent yeeterday visiting\nwith bis slater  snd  brother-in-law.\nMr, praser, during his brief visit,\nrenewed acquaintances with a number of old  timers  Including P. W.\nWarren and L. P. Tyson.\nOLD TIMERS  ITNCHANGED\nHe Waa emphatic ln stating that\nwhile the changes ln the city Itself\nhad been many tt appeared tbat\nthoee old timers with whom he bad\noome in contact bad chanted but\nlittle.\nHe recalled that ln tbe old days\nwhen he bad worked at the smelter,\nthe flovea worn by moat of tbe men\nwere mad* by tlie Indians who resided ln East Trail, which wae then\nvirgin forest., Tbe Indian* would\npaddle aoross the rlvar and aetf\ntheir wares to tb* emeltermen,\nflovea retailed at that time tt 15\ncent* a pair.\nrOMHlA.ll.ATES   TRAIL\nHa congratulated citizen* on tb*\nbusy and businesslike atmosphere\nol their olty tad remarked that\nwith lti tremendous production lt\nWt* turprlsing to him that ao little\nwas known of Trail ln thoa* oenters\nsouth of th* Una where he now\nlived.\nMr. PTaaar atated that ha wu\ndally In contact with Pnnk W.\nBrown, former poatmutar ot Trail,\nMr. Brown wa* in excellent health\nand dolnt exceptionally well Ut\nbusiness. H* Is conducting a retsll\ncandy and tobsoeo buslneu ln addition  to  an apartment  house.\nTRACK MEET ONLY\nTWO DAYS HENCE;\nMEDALS DISPLAYED\nA large numer of medals and\ncupa now on display ln a local\nJewelry store window Is a reminder\nthat Nelson's Inter-clty school track\nmeet ls only two days away. All\nIs in readiness for tbe big event,\ntbe field lt ln tine trim, t.e contestants are In good shape after\na months stetdy practloe. and the\nofficials have all been named. The\nweather, the only remaining factor to determine the success ot\nthe meet,  has so  fsr been fair.\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, May 30\u2014\nO. O. Cumming* of Trail spent tho\nweek end In Orand Forka.\nMrs. H. Orlsdale. Mlu B. 011-\nbcrg snd Mr. and Mrs. T- Reynold*\nof Christina Lske were the guuts\nof  Miss  Dork* Kerman  on  Monday.\nMra. 8. Underhill of Kelowna\narrived in Orand Porks on Sunday\nand will spend a week at the home\nof her parents, Mr. and Mrs. fe.\nMoLeod.\nJ. Jerome of Bonnlngton spent\nthe week end In Orand Forka, aa\nt_e guest of hi* brother, T. Jercme.\nMr. snd Mrs. V. Blner of Christina Lake were visitors ln the city\non Monday.\nMr. and Mra. H. Maclnnls of\nTraU spent Uie week end at the\nhome of the former's mother, Mrs.\nN.   L.   Mclnnis.\nCarl Thornet of Midway motored\nto Orand Porks on Monday.\nMrs. Corcoran and Mlu Dorothy\nCorcoran of Cascade were visitora\nIn orand Forka on Monday.\nD. C. Maqly. grand chancellor\not the Knlg.it* of Pythlu for\nBritish Columbia, and Mrs. D. C.\nManly, grand manager for tha\nPythian s:ner\u00bb of British Columbia,\nleft Tueeday for Kamloops where\nthey will attend the grand lodge\nassembly Other delegates were Mri.\nP.  Hansen  snd   E.  Cagncn.\nMra. T. T. Walker entertained at\na delightful Ua on Monday. In\nhonor of Mra. 8 Undefhlll of\nKelowna. The gueats Included Mrs.\nunderhill, Mrs. R. MCLeod. Mrs. W.\nOowans, Mrs. E. Bailey, Mrs. J.\nMcKle Mrs. W. Huffman, Mlu F.\nSprafgett, Mrs. J. Willis. Mrs. R.\na_rdener. Mrs. Oeorge McCabe, Mrs.\nJ. C. Taylor, Mrs. R. Oow. Mrs.\nH. Matthews. Mra. spence ot Trail\nCovered With Boll*\nm Arms, Back and leek\nMiss Margaret Hlcgina, Dvment,,\nOnt., writes:\u2014\"I wu covered with\nbollt oa rnj arms, face and neck. T\nused plasters and other remedies with\nno results. My tttention wu drawn\nto Burdock Stood Bitters, so I derided to get a bottle. The retultt\nwere marvellous, aa in no time the\nboils had completely disappeared, and!\nmy akin wu clearer and fresher that\never.\"\nfur as!. U sll *ess, -st jraaersl iwa, -uasfirtand. Inr li. put 51 yean  eatr\n\\r Ths T   ' rls,   Ut.. Tllnwtn   Out. * \u2122J\nWEATHER IN THE\nWEST IS WARMER\n| wiNNIFlh, Wan., May 30\u2014(OP) \u2014\nI oool waathar in th* west wu ached-\n, uled tonight to give way to slightly\nhigher temperatures during th*\nnot 34 hour*, ending In a cold\nspell that froeted the prainu far\ntwo day* aad two nights. A few\nscattered showers In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan  also ar*  predicted.\nSTRAWBERRIES\nDUTY VALUE IS\nSET AT 12 CENTS\nOTTAWA, May 10  (CP)\u2014ValU* Of\nstrawberries for duty purposes wu\nfixed today at 13 centa a pound\nwren entered under tha Intermediate or general unit, tha weight of\nthe package to he included ln the\nweight for duty. Announcement to\nthis affect wu made today by Ron.\nC. H. Cahan, actlut minuter ot\nnstlonal revenue.\nThe above la to apply tt the\npoint of production, and where\nauch a product la exported directly\nto Canada from a diversion or Intermediate point, the value for duty\nshall ba JJ cent* a pound plus\nall charges thereon to such Intermediate point from th* point of\nproduction. Th* asm* rat* ah*U\napply on strtwberrlu snipped on\nconsignment. Tha naw valuation\n'will not apply On goods purchued\non or before May tl. and in trtnait\nto Canada on or before Mty 13,\nPiling of this value lo prevent\ndumping hu been awaited with\ngreat lntereat by growera ot strawberries in Canada whose good* will\npreejBtly ba on  tha  market.\nHave you enough\nLife Insurance?\nNo matter how large or how small your estate, it wilt suffer\nheavy deductions before it reaches your wife or family.\nDoctors, nurses, hospitals, undertakers, lawyers, etc., not\nto mention succession duties, if the estate be considerable, will reduce the net amount payable to your heirs\nby anything from 10% to 25%.\nTake your ptfncil and try a simple sum in arithmetic,\nusing an actual case as an example:\nTypiaal\nTotal face value ol all my lilt insurance\npollciee __\nMOOO\nEstimated value of my real estate,\nsecurities aad other aaaeta _.\nTotal\nLeu I J% u Indicated above\nTotal estate (oet)\t\nlaveeted in good securities at 5% this\nahould ytald my fatally an annual la-\ncome 0.......   mT.n\n18 IT ENOUGH?\n Fill sn end mail lha eUscktA ctmpn:\nMy Cat*\n>\t\nlu.\nSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY\nOF CANADA\nREAD   OFFICE MONTREAL\nPleau tend me yaur pamphlet, \"I* It Enough?\", advertised\nin\t\nName (Mr., Mrs. i\nDate of Birth\t\nAddreu (Street)\nOtaam et Thtrn) |\n\u2022 MW) _.\n -..(Modtli).-...\n(Cky).,\n..(Yaar).\nmm-mm\n [py\n>m   NIL\u00abOK  DAILY  NBWS,  NSLSON,  B.  C.  \u2014  THUMDAY  MOSNINO,   MAT   11.   Xttl\"\"**\nMM  ttlAAA\nEMPIRE UNITY IN THE MINERAL\nRESOURCES IS URGED BY DOCTOR\nEmpire as a Whole Is Strong ln Mineral Wealth bat\nEasy Interchange Essential for Progress\nTORONTO. Ont., Mar 30. (OP)\nThar* mutt be no obstructions to\neuy excbtnce of mlnarals sno. mineral products between Greet Britain\nand th* dominion* If the lndustrtsl\nand economic security of the Empire ie to be maintained. This was\nthe message of Dr. Charlee Camsell,\ndeputy minister of mines for Can-\nSwim\nCOLDS\nAlmort everybody knows how\nAapirin tablets break up a cold\u2014\nbut why not prevent it? Take a\ntablet or two when you first fee.\nthe cold coming on. Spare yourself\nthe discomfort of a summer cold.\nRead the proven directions in every\npackage for headaches, pain, etc.\nMade   In   Canada\n$ada. when he delivered his presidential addreea tonight befor* th*\nfellows of tb* Royal Society of\nCanada, now ln session at tbelr\nsoth annual meeting at tb* University ol  Toronto.\n\"The strenfth of th* British\nEmpire as a whole, tn mineral nip-\npile*,, 1* a condition not generally\nappreciated hy the people of the\nEmpire, and is not as well known\nas lt ahould be even to the men\nconcerned with the administration\nof Empire affairs and th* development of Empire policies,\" said Dr.\nCamsell. \"If this strenfth Is contrasted with the weakness of each\nunit of the Empire, were that unit\nto stand alone, there would . be a\ngreater appreciation of the value of\nEmpire cohesion and of the encouragement of Intra-Imperlal trade\nln minerals and mineral products.\nTo my mind the mineral situation\npresents one of the strongest arguments, other than a sentimental\non*, for the working out and adoption of auch policies as were proposed at the recent Imperial conference.\nVITAL   INFLUENCE\n\"Few persons ever stop to consider how vital an Influence minerals, and especially metals, have\nhad upon human history, how they\nhave affected the everyday life of\nthe individual, or how at different\ntlmee they. have influenced tha\nprogress of nations and determined\nthalr opurses. It Is only within\nreoent   yesrs   that   the   value   and\nALPINE INN\nCHRISTINA LAKE \u2022\nFOR MAY 24th\nFREE Picnic Grenada, Tablea and Rot Water.\nDANCE Saturday,   May   33.   alw   Monday,   May   _5.\nHAWAIIAN   BEACH   CONCERT   SUNDAY   3   P.   M.\nMusic   by   DUKE   HARVEY**   MILLION   DOLLAR   ORCHEATRA\nfrom Vancouver, B. C, specially for fhe occasion.\nSee Alpine Park and Inn\nWORLD-FAMED BEITISH AUTHOR\nTHE FIGHT OVER, THE GANG\nDECIDES TO FORGET TOAD\nMOUNTAIN AND ITS GLORY\nBoats  Race  on  Columbia;  J. Fred Hume   and   Kirlcup\nVisit Silver King Mine; Tom Ward Co-met\nDown the Columbia\nBy   I.   PICARD\nINSTALMENT  TWENTY-TWO        praapectora  and   l>u\u00bbln-ee  man;   the\n* one. looking   for   money   that   he\nHONORED   BY   PRINCETON   UNIVERSITY\nJohn Oalaworthy, extreme left, world-famed Britlah author, draraatlet,\nand eaaaylat, wearing tba academic cap and gown In which he reoelved\nthe honorary degree of Doctor of Letters from Princeton university, with\nhim are preeident John Orler Ribbon, oenter, of Princeton university,\nand Prof. Augustus Trowbridge, dean of the Princeton Graduate achool.\nJoa turned loose and aald a lot\nof things that I could not tell you\nabout, but when things got back to\nto normal again, Ike aald that he\nwaa going back to the Dallea again.\nOeorge, looking at Joe with a\nsmile, aald, \"Joe, let's go back to\ntho Dallea and hit for Spokane falls\n\u2014that's Ood'a country; thla country was not made for white men.\"\nIn two minutea wa wer* on our\nway back to Little Dallea, Waah..\nand that waa tne nearest I ever\ngot to Nelson until tba aummer\nof 1015.\nOn getting back to the Dallea,\nwhen wo told Old Pete our hard-\nluck   story,   he   smiled   and   aald.\nOUAKER.\nFirst Choice ^^^^^^^^\nof those who want\nflavour supreme in corn flakes\nWHEN your grocer hands you a package of\nQuaker Corn Flakes, you've got the most\ndelicious corn flakes it is possible to buy.\nRead the (\u2022(tranter, above\u2014printed on every\npackage of Quaker Corn Flakes. It is backed by the\nintegrity of the world's largest cereal millers.\nThe supreme flavour is preserved by the triple-\nsealed, wax-wrapped package. They sell so fast\nyour grocer's stock is always fresh from tbe mill.\nQuaker Cera Flakes are fine for any meal. Every\nQuaker cereal package contains a coupon with\nwhich you can secure valuable articles for personal\nand household use. Write for free Quaker Premium\nBook. The Quaker OaU Company, Saakatoon, Sask.\n\u2022Quaker\nCorn Flake\u00a7\nQuaker Ott* Mualeal Broadcast over  Stations CFQC,\nCKY\u00bb CJGX, CJRM, CFCN and CKWX, every Wedneeday\nand Friday ef\u00abnlag_tf9.U to 9.46, mountain time.\ninfluence of minerals, and especially ths fuels and industrial metals, bave been fully appreciated.\nTo some concerned with tbe in*\ndustry there is a natural temptation to attach great weight to the\ncoming into use of oopper. Iron and\notber metals. These events were,\nhowever, not actually revolutionary,\nthough they ultimately bad profound effects. More minerals have\nbeen produced snd used lp the pact\nas years than in the preceding fjpoo\nyears. This Is Illustrative of the\nrate of progress of modern elvtlU-\ntlon and the place that mlnerala\noocupy ln our present-day Industrial\nUfe.\n\"Within recent years, due to the\n\u25a0mazing rate at which minerals\nhave come Into uae, there has developed s profound appreciation of\nthe value of mineral mourc** to\ntbe Industrial nations of the world,\nsnd a new sign lfl canoe has been\ngiven to thetr ownership and control ln both national and International affairs.\nMORE STUDY\nGIVEN\nThs result Is that more and more\nIntensive study ts being given to\ntbe subject by men on whose\nahoulders nets the responsibility\nof advising or directing the affairs\nof nations. We find this question\nof the control of mineral resources\nand the distribution of supplies\noccupying a place ln ths discussions of the League of Nations, or\ntbe subject of study of special\ncommittees.\"\nDr. camsell pointed out the handicap Imposed upon the great Industrial nations by lack of certain\nessential minerals or raw products\nhas had lte reactions, for lt has\nbeen one of tbe greatest Incentives\nto Industrial and scientific research\ndirected toward the development of\nsynthetic products. \"In the International field,\" he continued, \"the\nexperiences .of the war have led\ncertain nations to encourage their\ncitiens to secure financial control\nof foreign dsposite of essential minerals.\"\nconscious or ASSET\n\"We, In Canada, are becoming\nmore and more conscious of the\ngreat 'asset that we bave ln our\nmineral resources, of tbelr growing\nimportance ln our Industrial and\ncommercial life, and of their value\nas the chief reason for the open\nlng up and settlement of our northern  lands.\n\"The growth of Canada's mineral\nproducing Industry has been more\nrapid than that of any other portion of i the Empire. Owing to the\ngeographical relationship to that\ncountry, the greater part of our\nsurpluses of mineral products go\nto tbe United States, while most\nof our deficiencies are made up\nof Imports from or through that\ncountry. This has been the condition for some years past, but the\ngradual growth of barriers to Canadian minerals entering the United\nStates hss quite naturally stimulated the Idea of a greater measure\nof ln tre--Imperial trade ln mineral\nss well as other products\u2014a trade\nthat would provide for sn exchange\nof surpluses between different units\nof tbe Empire. This Idea wu presented and Improved In principle\nat tbe Imperial conference of 1990.\nINDUSTRY  GROWS\n\"Canada's mineral Industry bas\nshown extraordinary growth in the\nyear$ alnce tbe war, and lt ls certain that no portion of the British\nEmpire has contributed more than\npanada to increasing the strength\nof the Emplre's mineral situation\nOur deficiencies, however, Include\nsome very Important minerals, the\nmost serious of which are coal, iron\nore snd petroleum. Coal is Imported\nonto Canada, not because of any\nlack of resources, but because of\nthe unfortunate location of deposits\nrelative to the Important centers of\nconsumption, and the proximity of\nthese centers to foreign deposits\nOur Iron deposits are either far\nfrom transportation or prove to\ncontain ores of lower grade than\nthose obtainable from the United\nStates, and we import from that\ncountry because lt ls cheaper to\ndo so than to mine our own ores.\nPetroleum is imported because production from Canadian wells ls\nonly capable of meeting about 8\nper oent of our requirements. It Is\npossible that the time may come\nwhen wa will be able to produce\nenough Iron and petroleum to satiety our own needs, but tbat time\nIs  still  some   distance  off.\n\"The growing need for oil in industry and transportation, and tbe\nerratic distribution of the petroleum resources of the world wss the\nprlmsry reason for research car\nrted on ln both England and der\nmany directed toward the produc*\ntlon of oil from ooal.\" The speaker\nstated that after expenditures of\nlarge sums of money and years of\neffort, tbe hydrogenetlon process\nfor liquefying coal was developed.\n\"Tbe work bas not yet reached s\nstage of full commercial application,\nbut   the   prefectlng   of   these   pro-\nis looked upon as an insurance against shortage in time\nof  stress.\"\nConcluding his presidential address, Mr. C\u00bbm sell reminded bis\naudience that \"there are stUl large\nareas of tbe earth's surface that\nremain to be prospected, * and much\nof this ls under the British (lag.\nNot the least Important of these\nlies tn northern Canada, and I am\nconvinced that tbe potenttaUtlee\nof South Africa are also very great.\nNo nation has such vast areas of\npossible mineral bearing territory\naa lie within the Brltlch Empire,\nand consequently no nation has\nsuch prospects of expanding Its\nmineral industry ss we hsve. From\nthe Imperial point of view, Canada's mineral resmtrcee ere of Inestimable value and guarantee to\nthe Empire a position of aecuiity\nand Independence surpassed by no\nother country tn  the world.\"\nFOR YOUR HEALTH\nDR. PIERCE'S\nGolden Medical Discovery\noould get out of tbe ground, and\ntbe other looking for a location\nto set up a bar or counter where\nhe oould  handle that money.\nDunk McGlllivray, wbo owned part\nof the boat we had with Joe. came\ndown to-the Dalles to get this boat.\nThere would be work for It now,\nrunning from Far-well to the mouth\nof tbs Kootenay river, and as he\nhad to have someone to help him\ntake it up, I said goodbye to Pete\nfor tbe last time, and took my\nplace In tbe bow of the boat wltb\na 10-foot pole, and landed at tne\nKootenay river three days later.\nPIONEERS   AT   NELSON\nHere we found a group of\n\u2022Boys,  you  are welcome  to  every-' waiting to go up to Ftewali. Jaek\nON THE AIR!\nTONIGHT\nTHURSDAY, May 21\n(Time, FacMc Standard)\nNATIONAL BROADCAST\n6:00\u2014Dance orchestra-\u2014KGO, KHQ,\nKOMO. KGW, KFI, KFSD. KTAR\n0:30\u2014Red     Cross     program-aKGO,\nKHQ,   KOMO,   KGW,   KPO,   KFI.\nKFBD. KTAR.\n7:00\u2014Amns 'n' Andy\u2014KOO,    KHQ,\nKOMO. KOW.  KECA   KFSD.\n7:1ft\u2014Smiles -KOO,   KHQ.     KOMO,\nKOW,  KECA,  KFSD\n7:30\u2014Symphony  hour\u2014KOO,  KHQ,\nKOMO, KOW. KFL\n8:30\u2014Revue\u2014KOO.    KHQ.    KOMO.\nKGW,   KFI,   KFSD.    KTAR,   KSL.\nKOA.\n0:00\u2014flpsrklets\u2014KOO, KOW, KFSD,\n(KOA 0:15 to 0:30)\n8;30\u2014The Story Teller\u2014KGO, KOAx\n10:00\u2014News   Flashes\u2014KHQ.    KOMO.\nKGW, KPO. KFI. KFSD.\n10.30\u2014Forest   Protection    Program\u2014\nKGO. KFSD\n10.40\u2014Piano Capers\u2014KGO.\n11:00\u2014Dance orchestra\u2014KGO, KGW.\nKFI.\nthing   I   have,   lf  you  want   to   go\nback.\"\nThen Joe ssld. \"Pete, you ha*e\nbeen good to us, and I don't think\nlt would be right for us to take\na chance of losing what you have\nsaved, so for my part I am getting\nout to leave this new country to\nwhoever wants it. I have bad\nenough  of the Great West.\"\nThe next day he left with Oeorge\nfor Spokane  falls,  and   I have  not\nheard  a  word   from  them  since.\nFROM   RBVKLSTOKE\nTO  NELSON\nBy this time the Uttle town of\nParwell. that we had left the summer before, on the main line of\ntbe C. P. R. bad in some way\nheard of the Toad mountain discovery and boom. Although this\nwas an American discovery. Toad\nmountain wa\u00ab on Canadian territory, and \u00abs soon as the river\nopened that spring the British\nColumbia government \u00ab\u00abnt Big Jack\nKirkup down by rowboat to look\nthings   over.\nAs might be expected, every boat\nobtainable came down, loaded wltb\nKHQ\u2014 SPOKANr,\nJ10S.2 ni;  090 k:  1000 w.\n9:00\u2014Evening  Hlghlltes\n10:15\u2014Inland Empire Forum\n11:00\u2014 Best Steppers Dance\nKFRC\u2014SAN FRANCISCO\n401   m;  010  V;   1000  w.\n8:00\u2014 Lutheran Laymen League\n8:30\u2014Dixie Travels\n8:45\u2014Peter'a. Parade\n7:00\u2014Owls Nelson's  Dsnce orchestra\n7:16\u2014Arthur Pryor's Military Band\n7:80\u2014Soldiers, CDLBS\n8:00\u2014Adventures of Black and Blue\n8:16\u2014Dr. D. P. Burrow's \"Edits the\nNews\"\n8:30\u2014Sports     Shots\u2014Ernie     Smith,\nDick Rtckard\n8:46\u2014Nocturne, Ann Leaf and Ben\nAUey\n9:00\u2014Tom    Genius    Bal    Tabarln\norchestra\n0:30\u2014Band\n9:40\u2014Don Lee Symphony\n10:00\u2014Anson Week's orchestra\n11:00\u2014Val Valente's orcheetra\n13:00\u2014Vagabond of the Air\nKOMO\u2014SEATTLE\n320.0 m; 020 k; 1000 w,\n9:00\u2014Meditations\n10:15\u2014Doctors.  Elec. Trans.\n10:80\u2014Cecil and Sally\n10:40\u2014News Flaahea\n11:10\u2014Dance orchestra\n12:00\u2014Theater organ  recital\nCJC A\u2014EDMONTON\n322.4 m; 030 k;  moo \u00ab,\n0:00\u2014Captain   Jtmmle's Adventures\n0:16 \u2014 Tuneful     Tunes;      Helpful\nHousehold Hints\n0:60\u2014Alberta Wheat Pool\nKOLN\u2014PORTLAND\n823  m.  040  k;   1000  W.\n0.00\u2014Lutheran Layman's League\n8:30\u2014 Music As You Like It\n0:45\u2014Program\n7:00\u2014Andy snd Virginia, tbe Westerners.\n7:16\u2014Proyor's Military Band\n7:30\u2014The Soldiers\n0:00\u2014 Black and Blue\n8:15\u2014Bells of Harmony\n8:30\u2014Oold Seal Hawailans\n9:00\u2014The Bohemians\n0:30\u2014Journal Parade\n10:00\u2014DLBS Dance Music\n10:46\u2014McElrcy's  Greater  Oregonlans\n13:00\u2014 Merry   Oo   Round\nKJR\u2014 SEATTLi:\n300.1 m; 970 k; 5WW \u00ab\n0:16\u2014Uncle Jerry's Ssfety Club'\n0:30--\"Aspect\u00ab of Judaism\"\n0:35\u2014Esther Frsrc\u00bb\\ -aorrano\n0:46\u2014Melodies\n7 -SO\u2014Crossword   puazle\n7:16\u2014Look  and  Listen\n7:30\u2014Billy the Kid\n7:45\u2014The Red Tops\n8.00\u2014Cheremy  Nights\n8:30\u2014Melodies and Memories\n8.46\u2014Orand Slam Oolf club\n9:00\u2014Montavllle Flowers, lecture\n10:00\u2014Ken Stuart's   Sunshine    program: Ivan Dttmars, piano\n10:30\u2014Moonlight    Melodies;    Agstha\nTurleiit sopnno\n11:00\u2014Dance orchestra\n13:00\u2014Midnight Revellers\nCNRV\u2014VANCOUVER\n201.1 m; 1030 k; 800 w.\na .00- Dramatic Hour from Montresl\n7:30\u2014Piano recital\n8:00\u2014Feature program\nKNX\u2014LOS ANGELES\n285.8 m; 1050 k; 680 w.\n8:00\u2014Organ program\n0:10\u2014Adventufes of Tom and Wash\n8:30\u2014Maurice Ounsky and bis orchestra\n0:46\u2014Wesley Tourtelotte, organist\n7:00\u2014Frank     Wetanabe.     Japanese\nHbuseboy\n7:16\u2014Marjorle Healy, Soprano\n7:30\u2014Musical Barbers\nB :00\u2014Symphony\n0:30\u2014Calmon  Luboviski   violin   recital;  Claire Meilonlno. pianist\n9:00\u2014 KNX Dance Ensemble\n10:00\u2014The Gosslpers\n10:10\u2014Arlona Wranglers\n11:00\u2014New Paris Inn\n13:00\u2014Wesley   Tourtelotte,   organist\nKSL\u2014SALT LAKE CITT\n285.3 m; 1130 k; 6000 tr.\n0:16\u2014The Magic Paint Brush\n0:30\u2014Informal Studio Program\n10:00\u2014Local  R-K-O Frolic\n10:30\u2014Playhouse Players\nKEX\u2014PORTLAND\n145.1 m; lino k; 50oo w.\n6:00\u2014N.NL. Happy Time\n0:16\u2014Northwest Concert Trio\n0:30\u2014Walka thou\n0:46\u2014Baldy's Homespun Melodies\n0:00\u2014Great Golf Matches\n0:15\u2014Melodies and Memories\n8:30\u2014Land of Fulfilled Dreams\n0:00\u2014Montavllle flowers lecture\n9:30\u2014Chet Cathers, baritone\n9:46\u2014Elmore Vincent, tenor\n10:00\u2014Ken  Stuart's \"30 Minutes of\nSunshine\"\n10:30\u2014Walkathon from Lotus Island\n11:30\u2014Del MUne's danoe orchestra\n13:00\u2014Midnight   Revellers     Request\nProgram\nKGA\u2014SPOKANE\n.  204 m; 1470 k; 6000 w.\n0:00\u2014Sport* Review\n0:16\u2014Uncle Jerry's Safety Club\n6:30\u2014Esther Pearce. soprano\n6:46\u2014Baldy's Homespun Melodies\n7:00\u2014Marshall Sohl, tenor;  Genera\nBrown, soprano\n7:16\u2014Organ conoert\n7:30\u201418 Feet of Harmony\n7:4\u00bb\u2014Northwest Salon orchestra\n8:16\u2014Melodlea and Memories\n8:46\u2014Organ Conoert\n9:00\u2014Montavllle Flowers, lecture\n9:30\u2014Chet Cathers, baritone\n9:46\u2014Elmore Vincent, tenor\n10:00\u2014Ken Stuart'a \"30 Minutea of\nSunshine\"\n10:30\u2014Moonlight Melodies, soprano\n11:00\u2014Danoe orchestra\n13:00\u2014 Request program\nKirkup had been up, and saw\nwhat was afterwsrd tbe Silver King\nmine. He wanted to get back and\nreport. J, F. Hume, tbe original\nbuilder of the Hume hotel. Nelson,\nhsd come from Parwell. and ao had\nHarry   Sheran,   later   well-known  as\nmining man ln the Slocan. and\nhe had something to do with the\nLe  Roi  mine at Rossland.\nTom Ward, a man over alx feet\nwith a big, bony.frame, and a voloe\nlike a foghorn, and full of pep\nand humor, also became a well-\nknown figure with hia brother, w.\nWard, around Nelson in years that\nfollowed. Bob Ralnderson and his\npartner. Jack Evens, were here with\ntbelr rowboat ready to start on\nthat 160 miles of lake snd river to\nParwell, Bob Sanderson. J. F. Hums\nand W. Cowan of the Victoria hotel\nat Parwell formed a company that\nyear, and built a eteam*r called\nthe Despatch It was operated for\nsome time on this run by Bob\nSanderson,  as captain.\nHowever, as we talked around our\ncamp-fire that night. Tom Ward\nheard J. F. Hume tell Jack Kirkup\nthat tbey too would go with the\nSanderson boat, because the boat\nand tbe men were better than\nDuni; and the young fellow outfit.\nA   BOAT   RACE\nUF   COLUMBU\nTom got Dunk, Harry Sheran and\nI together, and told us what be\nhad beard, and, stretching himself\nto bl\u00bb full height of six feet, two\nor  three  lnrhe \u25a0   he said.  \"Boys,  If\nwe cant beat them fallows up there\nyou can dig a bole ln one of them\nIndian graveyards on the way up\nthere and drop me ln It; what do\nyou   say?\"\nWe agreed, and Tom took charge\nof the oooklng for tbat trip. Harry\nlooked after tbe wood to cook\nwltb. and tbe race was on\u2014180\nmiles from what Is now Robson to\nwhat la now Revelstoke with row-\nboats, four Ui each boat. Our boat\nwa# 90 feat long. T feet beam, and\nSanderson's boat was 38 feet, 0\nfeet beam. Zt was a smaller and\nlighter boat than our*.\nWhsn we got up at daylight next\nmorning, Sanderson's out-fit was\ngone, but we soon saw them poling\nmile up the liver, and Tom\nshook bis fist at them and shouted.\nYou won't be so fresh when we\nget through  with your\nWe passed them in the middle tst\nthat afternoon on ihe Low Arrow\nlakes, and did not camp that night\nuntil it was too dark to go alow\ntbe shore to ftnd a camping place.\n(Continued  Tomorrow)\nWho won the boat racer Read\ntemorrow*i Instalment, It wtll\ntell yew about the thrills aasi\nthe wl'diiR at Revelstoke. And\nyoull read about men lost la\nthe  Big  Bend   country,  tee.\nmm\nMake Home Beautiful\nROSE TRELLISES\nat\nLAWSON'S FACTORY\nBAKER   SI.\nUSE THE\nSAFEGUARDED\nMILK\nV**}*T tUk _- _^^^^^\nMilk ma-aa *~UJ dish richly <W-\nliciooa. And bow it cat* yonr creem\n\u2022nd batter bills I Uh thii par*,\ndependable milk lor AH cooking.\nCarnation Milk, through the constant activity of Carnation \"Said\n\u25a0aaa'', ia aafegnardad at tha aotttca,\nby dean housing of arary herd and\ndean handling ol all tba milk. And\nthis protection continues until\nCarnation Milk reaches you In its\nhermetically sealed containers.\nWelt, fer Cask Beekmasd Baby Seek\nCAKNATION CO. LIMITSD\nlUAManSuV-a \u25a0.ae.\n,\u00ab>__ I. Ce.e*. I*\nCm\u2014He. earn e.4 eent.\n(o\/\\iuition\n\\0^m\n\\__ ...\n*&\"\u25a0??*\u201e   -\u25a0'\n;iuB\nPRODUCED\nIN CANADA\nFROM CONTENTED COWS\nl.-i-i\niiii--\nFor the object of raising funds\nfor the assistance of lte necessitous\nwheat farmers, tbe New South\nWslei government, has put tnto\noperation the flour acquisition aet,\nwhich lg expected to yield about.\n*250,ooo a month. The new act\nwent into operation on March 90\nlast.\nMakes Life Misery!\nOallv   Ai.nn.anr*. Trnnltl. .nmr Mf his\nWrecking   Liven   of   ThoU-anda\nMales Writer Him Tell. What\nTo D\u00bb lor Quirk Belief\nBackaches. Headaches, Pains In\ntee, and less. Nervousness, Restless.\nnew. frequent but scanty Urination\nwith burnlni and pain, gettlng-up-\nnighte\u2014are some of the moro\ntroublesome eigne lhat should have\nprompt attention before they reach\na  more  eerloue   atagel\nNo matter how stubborn your\nrase may seem to bo or bow many\nmetljclnea you have tried without\nreeulta\u2014dbn't think your condition\nla bopelees or the natural ceuiae-\nquetice of advancing years until\nyou have tried the amaslng value\nof   Dr-   Bouthworth'a 7*UttATAM.\"\nOn s strict guarantee of money\nback on first box purchased 1' you\ndo not receive swift and satisfying\nrelief any good dnniiat will aupply\nyou with ''Dretabs\" In sealed peck-\naces containing a ten data* aupply.\nIf they bring great roller inside of\n48 hours and a wonderful Improvement inside of ten dsys. you wlU\nbe great**, pleased\u2014lf they do not\nhelp, they cost you nothing! Ask\nyour  druggist   today.\nDealers* l\u00bbl*M\nLbWna Ne. Ttn\ni.ewe at.ee Is\naeellatla ta nee\ntlltimtnt t.l.ttr\nBrighten busy kitchen hours\nwith a colourful Dominion\nInlaid   Linoleum   floor:\npractical floor that cannot\nwear out and one that light\nmopping keeps spotlessly dean.\nIn fact there isn't a room in the\nhouse in which Dominion Inlaid Linoleum cannot be laid to\nadvantage. Designs have been\ncreated expressly for each;\nsome gaily colourful, others\nrestfully mellow, but each an\nartistic masterpiece.\nChoose to your taste for every\nroom and give your decorative\nThis\nPractical\nBeautiful\nInexpensive\nKITCHEN\nFLOOR...\nWas\nSponsored by\nMiis Mary-Etta\nMacpherson\n. .  co-operating\nin the recently\ncompleted Pattern\nSelection Contest\nflair full scope. For, with Dominion Inlaid Linoleum as a\nbasis, you are following the\npractice of leading interior decorators who always start with\nthe floor.\nDominion Linoleum Rugs and\nDominion Printed Linoleum\nalso afford unusual decorative\nscope. Long-wearing, inexpensive. Designs for every room.\nDOMINION OILCLOTH Sr UNOUIM\nCOMPANY LIMITED MONTBEA1\nDOMINION^LINOLEUM\nMade m Ceeede by tbe tnektrs\nef tht famous Dominion\nBattleship Linottum.\nSte tht new designs sat Bouts\nFm-nishing end Deportment at\nStores, ererywhert.\nDon't fail to inspect our large stock of Dominion Inlaid Linoleum  in  Hundreds of Colors and Designs.\nstanc \\no FUSniTURE co.\nComplete Home Furnishers\nNELSON, B. C.\nWe Carry a Large Selection of Dominion Inlaid Linoleum\nD. J. ROBERTSON\nBaker St. Furniture Dealer\nw\nNelson\n Marria&e a la Mode\nBy VIDA HURST\n\u25a0\u25a0III   ii     1111    iiiiii    Hiii\u2014\n\"Thst win be better ot course.\"\n'\"ft)u uaaerstanu \u25a0-\u2022\u2022-it* t--*->e tests\nar\u00ab expensive, No studio can afford\nto take then, without being psld.\"\n\"How much?\" asked Corliss. \"I\ndon't hare much  money  with me.\"\n\"Tou are Independent, are you\nnot? Tou have sufficient funds to\nlive on while we are getting things\nstarted?\"\n\"Certainly I I receive an allowance\nfrom my father.\"\n\"I wished t0 make certain explained M\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-. \"because too often girls\nrefuse to be frank about their finances and almost starve to  death\n^trying to get Into motion pictures.\nCorliss assured him that he need\nnot worry about her. She had plenty\nof money.\n\"Pine. Now the regular price of\nthis test la MOO. but I thtnk I can\nget it for you for HSO.\"\nJus... then $150 seemed quite a\nsum but Corliss knew these movie\nbarons talked la terms of hundreds\nand  thousands.\nShe said, calmly, \"Very well. I\nwill write you a check.\"\nAnd did so with M's\u2014 own fountain pen.\n\"Make lt out to the studio,\" he\ndirected.\n\"All right.\" he said, when she had\nfinished.  \"Now we're  ready  to take\nChoicest of leaves\u2014\nand their freshness\nsealed in aluminum*\nTry our new Yellow Label\n'Fresh from the gardens9\nMaking Divorce Easier\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn  Authority  on  Problems  of Love  and  Marrlsge\n 1\t\nThe   other   day,   Professor   Jacobs,  the  hours  till  the  dissolution-deals\nof    Columbia    university,    declared;^g0   through,   Mexico   threatening   to\n\"Divorce made easier, and marriage more difficult win safeguard\nmarriage in this country-\" Th*\nplea for easier divorce was made\nIn Washington. D. c, before tbe\ngeneral concert of the national\nleague of women voters. It waa\naccepted in the usual Washington\nmanner.\nPerhaps there la never an hour\nof the day in Wuhlngton when\nsomeone la not advocating something. Discourses -are as muoh a\npart of the city aa the monument,\nthe White House or the- cherry\nblossoms tn the spring of the year.\nPeople do not ake dlasertattons\nvery seriously \"In the shadow of\nthe dome.\" They're fed up with \u2022\noratory, prophesy and propaganda,\nThey've learned that good old\nWashington trick of \"ringing off\"\ntheir ears.\nWith Nevada and Idaho cutting\neach other's throats for quick divorce trade, and the former state\nthrowing   ln   roulette   to  paea  away\nsnatch the great sundering Industry from the United States with\na 30-day decree, lt would seem to\nthe average ciyssen that divorce is\npretty   easy.\nWhat- do they want, these special pleaders for easier divorces?\nShall we take steps to recondition\nthe old penny-ln-the-slot machines\nand set them up again for the purpose of getting \"cheaper and easier divorces?'' We might even drop\nin pebbles instead of pennies, or\nwe might leap over broomsticks\nas   gypsies   did    when    they   were\nmarried.\nPeople with a girt for jumping\nfrom the matrimonial frying pan\nInto the ftre are increasing without any cheerlos from college professors. Our Judgment of these\n\"try, try again\" folks may be liberal and modern, but what of the\nchildren thla endless marrying\nleaves stranded?\nWhy adulta with an adolesoen t\ntaste for romance should be privileged to wreck the lives of children by bargain counter divorces\nIsn't clear to people with an eye\non the future ot the country.\nIn Washington, where Professor\nJacobs made his plea for the easier\ndivorce which la to bolster up marriage, we hear a good deal of talk\nabout the state, patriotism, zealous\nguarding 'of the countries future,\netc. But what concern with these\nsacred things have the young, near-\nyoung, and middle-aged thrill\nseekers wandering along, the primrose path with an eye out for the\npotential   \"next\"?\nChildren rather than the multi-\nmarried are .state's future hope.\nAnd youngsters drifting from parent to step-parent aud back again,\nlike seaweed a-wash an tbe tide,\nare a poor risk for the state. It's\nthe children from wrecked homes\nthat fill the Juvenile courts and\npile up child crime statistics.\nTwo of the most heinous murders committed in this country of\nlate yeara wera done by boys\u2014\nhardly more than children\u2014whose\nparents had been divorced. The\ndistracted mother of one pleaded\nthat ehe could only be a \"part\ntime\" mother aa she had to work\nout early and late since her husband left her. He'd secured a\nbargain counter divorce in another\nstate and married again. The\n\"part time\" plea didn't save the\nchild, but the father displayed a\nlatent parental lntereat by attending  the  boy's  hanging.\nProfessor Jacobs also suggested\nserious consideration of the subject of  a  wife  maintaining  a  sep\narate domicile from her hueband\nfor the purpose of voting, taxation and holding office. Altogether\nit Waa a merry morning, the title\nof which might have been: \"Bow\nto Be Single Though Married.\"\n8a\nBOVRIL\nmakes\nChildren\nStrong\nIOR   KtLUtrt   W4RPR01IC.\nHere's an ultra-smart sartorial oh\nleet for the curly spring season. It\nis of plaid in Mtbducd orango and\nbrown lone--. Xbg woven crepe\nmaterial ls given a jaunty touch by\nmean* of brass but tons, srtg-zag\nscallhprt (loan the fronr, nnd a gay\ntaut iM the Mmr material. Es-\npK-tkUy recommended tnr the ..mart\n\/\u25a0hopper\nthe tot.''\nIi tree Bfrotf-ttflj brief, for Oeaftt\nwas weak with excitement and hun-\nMT. -she h;irt eaten Utile at the\nMontmartre. ehe thought both cam\neraman and director were very\npatient with her. And they were\nunaielngly polite.\n\"Walk across the wt, Mlas Newman. Head up now. Just walk as\nj you would across your own drawing\nI room. Smile for us now. That's\niiiglii. A big amlle thst changes suddenly into fright. Vou are seeing\nsomething that makes you tremble\n-Mill fear. That's right. That '\nvery good.\"\n\"Do you mean that's nil there ia\nto it,\" gasped Corliss.\n\"That's all. If you'll come back\ntomorrow afternoon we'll have the\nstills ready for you.\"\nDo you know that more t-TU\nthan boys suffer from bowed legs\nand knocked knees? It la the tearful truth. Tha explanation seems\nto be that small boys get mere\nactive exercise thsn little girls, have\nhealthier appetites, lap up more\ngood grub and ao collect bone\nbuilding material. In the future\nthere won't be any bowed legs because more expectant mamas \"til\nh* educated to reslire the need of\neating foods that ward off rickets\nsnd which supply the new baby\nwith elements tbat make for strong\nbones.\nTHESE\nBETTER BRAN FLAKES\nALSO  COME  IN  A\nBETTER PACKAGE\nTHE famous kellogg's 1 .MUK bag guards the\nfre-hneta and flavor of Kellogg's I'l I' Bran Flakes.\nBring, these golden flakes oven-jreth to your table!\nJuat another reason why Kellogg's are truly Belter\nBran Flake*! You get the marvelous flavor of PEP.\nThc nourishment of Ihe wheat \u2014 plus just enough\nbran to be mildly laxative.\nA great treat for rhildrrn \u2014 and fine for thrm-\nHealthful and wholesome.\nEnjoy for breakfast with milk or cream. Serve\nfor lunch. Eat Kellogg's PEP Bran Flakes for a late\nsnack. Add fruits or honey for extra zest.\nOrder the red-and-grcen OVEN-FRESH package\nfrom your grocer. Made by Kellogg in London, Ont.\nBRAN FLAKES\nCHAPTER  9\nCorliss drove back to the apartment, slowly. Telling herself that\nalter sll having a \"test\" made\ncommitted her t0 nothing. It might\nnot be good. She wouldn't aay anything to Jerry until she knew. , . .\nlt appeared she was not to have\nan opportunity to say anything oi\nsny kind to him. Although ahe sat\nin the living room for tha remainder\nof the afternoon he did not telephone until 6 o'clock.\nHis voire sounded strained and\nhard.\n\"I won't  be   home  for  dinner.\"\n\"All right.\"\nThat was all. Not a word wasted\nby either of them. But Corliss returned to her refuge on the davenport wtth bitter tears in her eyes.\nlie knew how lonely she was, yst\nie fused to dine with her, Why had\nhe married her? If her company was\nsuch a bore?\nBhe sat for an hour, miserably\n.conscious of the fact that she was\ni.cginuing to grate upon Jerry's\nnerves, well, she was nervous, too\nI'he leaat little thing made her feel\nlike going all to pieces. She didn't\nwant Jerry to feel \"tied\" to her. But\nthe moment she pictured him with\nanother woman her blood ran cold.\nHhe longed for Jerry's faithfulness\nand devotion. But she knew true\ndevotion could not be forced. Whst\nwas she to do?\nHere is the formula for an excellent cream to be used on the\nhands to keep them soft and smooth\nto Insure them against freckles, to\nserve aa a general beauty helper\nmelt, together nine ounces of petrolatum, one and one-half ounces\nof white wax, one and one-half\nounces of spermaceti. Cool slightly\nadd three fluid ounces of witch\nhasel and fluff with an eggbester\nuntil the consistency of whipped\ncream.    Pour Into Jan.\nDirections for a home face pack\nto refine a coarse skin. Wash the\nface thoroughly and dry. Bub in\nsome of the top cream from the\nmilk. Apply towels wrung out of\nhot water, two or three. Rub in s\nyeast cake that has been thinned\nwith cream. The yeast and cream\nmixture la to remain on the akin\nsurface for twenty minutes. Lave\nawsy with tepid water. If the yesst\nsticks, add a little baking soda to\nthe  water.\nTaded beauties must apply makeup sparingly. Flamingo-colored\nUps, eye shadows and cheek smears\ncall attention to wrinkles. A little\ncoloring, laid on carefully, with powder atop the rouge to soften and\nblend it. will youthify the complexion. Reckless, lavish applications won't do. They make the\ncountenance look haggard snd tired\nOlrls with short, thin hair should\ntry the brush curl. Moisten the\nhair, brush little strands over the\nfinger, fasten with sn invisible heir\npin. Begin at the crown of the\nhesd. When the hair is dry there\nwill be a marcel pattern and ringlet ends. Tres chic (Copyright,\n1931. International Teature Service\nInc.)\n1HKMM.  MIXED MATERIALS\nWhen repairing a woolen material\nof many colors, if possible use a\n\u2022trend of each color In your needle.\nThen go ahead and darn and see\nhow Uttle it la noticed.\n\u2022  MADE    IN    BRITISH    COLUMBIA  \u2022\nTOMORRMVS    WHO\nBreakfast\n(.'\u25a0raperruit\nCereal\nUrlddlecakes Sirup\nOoffee\nLuncheon\nOlives\nEgg   Salad\nPotato   chips Bran   Muffins\nJam Cocoa\nDinner\nPried   Fish l_emon   Slices\nRloe creamed   Celery\nSUceu   Tomatoes\nBerry Tarts r ..foe\n( not in.iiit  MB.   m hi i\nTo crochet a pretty infants' Jacket, use a three and one-half or\nfour else bone hook and whl'e\nsaony or fingering yarn. Cast on\n48 stitches, then knit two, purl\ntwo, for two sn one-half inches\ni this forma a cuff j. Now knit\n100 ro%s. Then start knitting\ntwo and purling two for two and\none-hal' Inches, and bind up (to\nform c-her cuff). 8er each end\nup about four inches for the sleeve.\nln the middle of the baok, turn\ndown about three-quarters of sn\nIneh, to form a smsll collar sbout\nnine inches Jong and run ribbon\nthrough, to tie In front. This\ntype of Jacket u Uke the Invalid-\nbed-Jackets used for grownups, but\nIs also fine for baby. A dainty\nshell df pink around collar and\ncurts may be added '\u25a0 >r decoration\nif desired\nCrocheted   Baby   Bonnet:     Using\nnumber 00 cotton and s number 11\nsteel hook, chain lo snd Join.\nRow one: Ch 3. Wi *. in ring. Row\ntwo: Ch 3. at in each t iM>. Row\nthree; Ch 3, t In t. Row four: Ch\nS. Bt Ch 2 Ai. repeat around and\njoin. Row five; Ch 5. \u2022 t in 3 d\nsi of Ch, Ch 2, aklp one t. 7 t on\n7 t, Ch 2; repeat from * eround\nJoin. Repeat row five, adding one\nspare and making one t leas In\neach row till * (design) ls complete   with   64   spaces.\nRow 12: Ch 3. 3 sp. 1 blk u In\nt, 2 t ln sp, t in t) \u2022 7 sp. 1 blk.\nrepeat from \u2022 around. Join. Row 13\nCh fi. 3 ap. ' l blk, l sp. l blk. A\n\u00abp. repeat from \u25a0 around. Join. Row\n14: Ch ft, 1 sp, \u2022 3 blks with <>ne\nsp between. 3 sp; repeat from \u2022\naround, Join. Row 15: Like Row\nIt, Roy lfl: Like Row 12. Row\n17: Ch tt, 64 sp with 3 Ch between, join. Row 18: Ch 3. s t over\n3 Ch. t In t, repeat around, Join.\nRow   19;    Ch  6,  71 sp,  turn.\nRow 20: Ch 6. 3 sp \u2022 1 blk, 7 sp\nrepeat from * across, turn. Row\n31: Ch fi, 2 sp, * l blk, 1 sp, 1 blk.\nft sp. repeat from * across, turn\nRow 22: Ch 5, 1 ap. \u2022 8 blks with I\nsp between, 3 sp, repeat from *\nacross, turn. Row 33: Like Row\n31. Row 34: like Row 30. Repeat\nlut six rows twice. Row 37: All\n\u2022paces continuing around entire\ncap, Row 88: All blocks continuing around entire cap. Row 89: AH\nspaces around entire cap. Edge:\n(Two d. 3 Ch. to form P, 3di In\neach   sp.    Contributed  by  H.   if.\nTomorrow\u2014Readers'   Canning   Re-\n4hi Wontan p\/ko\nKNOWS, is fit\nBLIND\nPure Mayonnaise wm originally \u2022 heme product\n. . . purt, rich tnd delicious, ll still is when it\nCtrritt tht BEST FOODS label, lor discriminating\nwomen htvt nude Beit Foodi famous throughout\nNorth America because thty insist on tht name.\n> MAYONNAI\/E\nis made in BMTISH COLlMBLi\nLJERE is another industry added to British Columbia's growing list\n*   ' tnothtr payroll to spaed British Columbia's progress. Here is tnothtc\noutlet lor certain British Columbia dairy products. Htrt is tnothtr purt\n(ood for British Columbia Homes.\nHere is Best Foods Mayonnaise ts well ts Thousand Island Dressing and\nRelish Spied . . . long accepted by all discriminating American women,\nnow produced in British Columbia by British Columbia labor.\nBest Foods Mayonnaise is t Purt Food product that Imitators cannot tqatl\nbecause they use fillers (corn starch, potato starch, gum arabic and gelatine).\nBest Foods Mayonnaise is and always can bt successfully compared with\nthc hightst quality Mayonntist produced by tht expert housewife hs\nthe home.\nNow you can have the best and it costs no more thtn inferior imitations.\nTo taste it, to sample it, is to KNOW it, tnd Tht Woman Who KNOWS\nIsn't Blind. Insist on tht namt whtn you ordtr . . . sty, \"Best Foods\".\nIt is your guarantee of purity.\nBest Foods\nRECIPE SERVICE\nfor\nB.C HOUSEWIVES\nAak rour grocer fer a copy\nof tke Boot Footle Recipe\nBook. It toitl tiUniia\nrim pi* tan mum g0 hose tm\nuee Beat rootto May on*\nnub*. Thouaand ItUnd\nDrm-ingaruiReUshSps-od\nto the boot tulventngo ...\nhate to prepare end far*\nm*h riaUrious amloda ...\n\u25a0W to make the moot\ntatty end mppetleing\neanateichee. Auk your\ngrocer or write direct for\na copy of thie unusual\nrecipe booh to the Groc*mrr\nDept., KeUy, Douglas ok\nCo. Ltd., Vancouver, B.C.\nr Best Foods\nf   MAVONNAI\/E\nI-*\"!\"-'-.*-.. ' .\u2022\"_.\nEXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS: KELLY, DOUGLAS ft CO.,  LTD., VANCOUVER, B.C\n\t\n_______________\n fc3)\nSANDALS\nIn smoked Elk on\nPatent-Leather. All\nsizes from 4 up to\nsize 2 misses size.\nPRICE\n$1.50 to $1.75\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nBOARD OF TRADE\nELKO HOLDS DANCE\nELKO, B. C. May 20\u2014On Saturday evening, in the local school,\nthe Elko board of trade staged Its\nfinal dance of the season. The affair\nwu s success, considering the bad\nweather and the. short time the\ndance waa advertised and quite a\ngood crowd of dancers from Waldo,\nBaynes, Dorr, Fernie, Orasmsre and\ntowns enjoyed dancing from 10:30\ntill 3 a.m. to good peppy music.\nSociety\nThis column Is conducted by\nMrs M. J. Vlgneux. Alt nsws\nof a social nature, including receptions, private entertainments,\npersona.   Hems,   marriages,   etc-,\nwill appear ln this column. Tela-\nfhone Mrs. Vlgneux at her home,\nId  Silica  street.\nThe lawn of the Kootsaay hsto\nOeneral hospital made a picturesque\nsetting for the tea yesterday, \"hospital day,'' which was under the\nable BUjwrvision of Mrs. J. T. Andrews and Mrs. H. H. Pitts. A\nlong boat effect oenter of gorgeous\npink roses, tulips and otbQ spring\nblooms was most effective. Doing\nthe honors at the tea table were\nMrs. F. M. Auld. Mrs. W. O. Rose,\nMrs. J. H- Bennett and Mrs. OUbert\nHartin. Acting as aerlteurs Vere\nMrs. M. J. Vlgneux, Mrs. E. L.\nReld, Mrs. W. Lalshly. Mrs. J. T.\nAndrews, Mrs. H. H. Pitts. Mrs. T.\nDolphin, Mrs. Ian C. Campbell.\nMrs. Percy Bates, Miss Mary Madden and Mlsa Alberta Cook.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nAlderman Harvey Fife of Slocan\nCity   spent   yesterday    in   town.\nMrs. c F. Marsh and daughter\nEleanor of Cranbrook will arrive\ntoday by motor to visit at the\nhome on Vernon street of Mr. ind\nMrs. L. M Varner. Mr. Marsh will\nfollow later and Bpend May 24 in\ntown.\nMiss Ellen Hobson of Bt. Joseph's\nresidential school will spend the\nweek-end at the home of her\nmother and brother. Mrs., m. Hod-\nson and Rev. Leo. Hobson, in Trail.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. 8. Reynolds left last night\nfcr Vancouver.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nW. K. Ounn, district grand mac-\nCured and Cooked MEATS\nSliced to Perfection\nfor Over the HOLIDAY\nat Cash and Carry PRICES\nNelson Neat and Fish Mkt.\n\"HARRY\" R. MAUNDRELL\nPHONE 84 4ir. BAKER ST.\nJUST RECEIVED\nFrom Eastern Factories\nKroehler.De Luxe\nand Classic\nLIVING ROOM\nSUITES\n3-PIECE CHESTERFIELD SUITES\u2014     tflO? fJO\nMohair Worsted Reversible Cushions ....  \u00ab'-\"\"'\"V\n3-PIECE TAPESTRY SUITES\n$148.50 * $297.50\nOCCASIONAL CHAIRS\n$15.00t0 $32.50\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nComplete House Furnishers Nelson, B.C.\n\"The Store of Service and Satisfaction\"\n=THB  NELSON  DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON,  B.  C. \u2014  TllliBSDAV   MORMMi,   MAY   31,   1.31*=\ni-.ii.i; tiva\nter, dlatrlct No. \u00ab, A. p. t_ A. M.,\nhu left to nuke ~l- officio vlsitn\nto New Dearer, Sandon and Nk-\nkursp. arriving June t In Xaalo.\n...\nMlaa Dorothy OUchrlat, Falrvlew.\nhaa had aa her guests Mr. and\nMra. Frank Pelkey ot Ruakln, who\nhave been visiting lu Calgary. They\nhave left for TYall, where they are\n-Halting frlenda.\n...\nMr.   and   Mra.   Thomas   McNelsh\nand aon Murray of Slocan City paid\na  vlalt  to  Nelaon  Tueeday.\n...\nAndrew Broadman of Lemon\nCreek wae a reoent vlaltor to the\nolty.\nFred Irvine and A. D. Allen, membera of St. Saviour's ohurch committee, were Joint hoate Tueedav\nevening at a benefit bridge given\nat the home on Vernon atreet of\nMre. Oilbert Hartin. kindly loaned\nfor the occasion. Thoee playing\nincluded Mra. w. Lalshly, Mra L\nM. Varner, Mra. J. H. Bennett, Mrs.\nJ. B. Oray. Mre. W. O. Rose. Mra.\nO. B. Matthew, Mra. Robert Thomp\neon. Mra. p. H Sheffield. Mr. and\nMra. J. Ivan MacKay, Mrs. M J\nMiller of Vancouver. Mra P.rc\nCoulter. Mra. W. M. Walker. Mr. and\nMra. A. \u00bb. Murphy. Mr. and Mra\nWilfred Allen. Mra. Jamea John-\natone. Mr. and Mra. Adolphe Browne\nMr. and Mra. A. O. Cuthbert. Mr!\nand Mra. Douglas Holman A D\nAllen. Mr. and Mra. R. __, McBride.\nVen. Archdeacon Fred H Oraham\nand Fre_ Irvine. Mra. Oeorge Horstead and Mlaa Louis Horstead aa-\nalated the hosts and Mra. Hartin ln\naervlng refreahments.\n...\nMr. and Mra. C. B. White of Now\nDenver epent yesterday  In the city.\nH. R. Board of Boewell Bpent\nyeaterday ln the citv.\nMrs. R. A. Aldersmlth, who haa\nbeen a patient ln the Kootenav\nLak, Oeneral hospital for the paat\ncouple of weeks, haa returned to\nher  home , on   Observatory  atreet.\nClaire Bennett, eon of Dr and\nMra. J. H Bennett. Baker atreet.\nhaa returned from Toronto, where\nhe haa completed hia fourth y-\u00bbr\nIn medicine at Toronto university\n...\nM\". Allen la In the city from\nBoswell.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nMr. and Mra C. A. Laraon anrt\nMr. and Mrs. A. Fleming motored\nto  Ainsworth  yeaterday.\nW.    B.    Johnatone    of    silverton\napent   vesterdav   irt   the   city. .\n...\nGilbert w. Johnston. HI] Mill\natreet, Is a patient In the Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital Buffering  with  quinsy.\nT.'a. Mllla of WUIow Point paid\na vlalt to  the  city  yeaterday.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nF.   Kunet.   merchant   at   Boawell.\napent yeaterday shopping In Nelaon.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. L. M   Varner, Terrace   apartments,    bsve   taken    up\nresidence  at  024   Vernon  etreet.\n...\nMlsa Mary Orl of St. Joseph's\nacademy la apendlng the week-end\nat   her  home   In   Trail.\nMlaa   Irla   Carlson,   a   atudent   of\n| St. Joaeph'a academy, leaves Ba+.ur-\nI day  to  remain   over  the  week-end\nand May 24 with Mr. and Mra. McAdam.-   In  Trail.\n...\nMrs. W. H. Walker has arrived\nfrom Vancouver and taken up residence In her home. .12 Vernon\natreet. Her daughter. Mlaa Marie\nWalker, la also here from Vancouver.\n...\nMra. tt, C. Arneson and babt\ndaughter   have   left   the   Kootenay\nUke   Oeneral    hospital   for   their\nhome on Stanley atreet.\n...\nJ.   Clark   of   Ymlr  waa  a   visitor\nto town  Tuesday.\nIHE YOUNG IDEA\"\nPRESENTED HERE\nTHIS      EVENING\nHumorous Play lo Be Given\nby the University\nPlayers\nPleaaant memories ol Playera' club\nproductions or previous yeara are\naroused in the minds of Nelson\nand district audiences at the announcement of this spring's play.\n\"The Young Idea\", by Noel Coward.\nLsst year this ambitious association made an outstanding piece oi\nwork of \"Friend Hannah\", thi\ndelicate and pathetic tragedy by\nPaul Kester. There could not be a\nmore marked contrast between two\nPlays \u00abs there Is between \"Friend\nHannah\" and this year's production. Htbltuees of Players' club\nperformances will be reminded of\nsuch uprightly pieces as \"Polly with\na Past\", and \"Mr. Plm Passes By!\"\n\"The Young Idea\" Is one of the\nrooet brill li nt of Noel Coward's\nbrisk, sparkling, and hilarious drama*\nSuch well known names as those\nof Ann Ferguson. Betty Buckland.\nand Alfred Evans appear In the cast,\nas well hs some clever newcomers.\nThe play will be presented at the\nJunior high auditorium this evening.\nELKO COUPLE GO\nTO BLAIRMORE AND\nARE QUIETLY WED\nPOMP6IANL\n~ GIRL\n. couldn't keep bit mind on the\ncardi \u2014 Kay beside him, looking charm'\ning\u2014exqeaite\u2014 radiant! Tobe with her\nalways \u2014 life partner!! It is your right to\nbt as happy u Kay \u2014another Pompeian\nGirt. A girl whose skin radiates charm at any\nhour of the day \u2014 men are attracted by t\nsoft, glowing complexion.\nThat is why fashionable women the world\nover use Pompeian products, they know that\nwhile it is possible to pay mare, it is impossible to buy better. The blending of\nmany tints makes Pompeian Bloom a rouge\nof rare consistency\u2014it dota not crumble,\nbut spreads evenly and lastingly, and comes\nin six lovely ahades. Another eiqunitr\ncreation by Pompeian is the new Indelible\nLipstick, which cooes in three shades.\nliK-HiNt 1 ti-Hfck Mr.\u2014Kifktt dm (Qam.ni Cold\nCrmm) \u00abc.\u2014Di? Omm (Vumka-i) 60_. -Mmwi-\nCtaa \u00abe\u2014Powder ConpKt 60c\u2014Tik Me.\u2014\ntmiisy Pwrdt* 60c.\u2014Kc-m 60c\nELKO, B. C, Msy 30\u2014J. Sikora\nand Miss Nina Wlnsor motored to\ntown from Fertile recently and Miss\nWlnsor paid a bhort visit, to relatives  here.\nRoy Wilkinson was ln on Saturday\nevening rrom Waldo to visit here\nwith  hl\u00bb mother. Mrs. fci. Wilkinson.\nW. It, Folsy returned to his home\nhere Saturday night after having\nbeen employed, on government bridge\nwork at Canal Flats for some months\nDr. ABselstlno cgf Fernie was called\nSaturday when little Tommy ln-\ngtiam. became- Ul and diagnosed the\ntrouble aa measles. Dr. D. Carson\nof Fernie alao attended and the\nr.mlly waa placed under a modified\nquarantine   for   several   weeks.\nMies Julia Wlnaor will be a guest\nat the home of Mr. snd Mri*. W. L.\nFolsy for a time as a result of the\npresence of a contagious disease\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. D.\nIngham, where Miss Wlnsor makes\nher  home.\nMra. S. Wilkinson Is -still quite\n111 at her home here as a result of\nthe flu and an ailment which has\ntroubled for some months.\nT. Conquergood, local power house\noperator, and Mlsa Anna Oallagher\nof Fernie sprang a surprise on their\nfriends here by motoring to Blairmore Thuraday. and quietly getting\nmarried. HaVj-h Liater and Miss\nBather Swa nson aim motored to\nBlairmore and attended the couple\nat the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs.\nConquergood are spending a few\ndays ln Lethbrldge and wlll shortly\nmotor to the Aberfeldle plant near\nBull River where Mr. Conquergood\nwlll relieve as operator after which\nlt Is reported the young couple\nwill make their home here la a\ncottage   on   Main   street.\nMrs. W. Wood and Mr, and Mrs. J.\nChristiano were visitors at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. T. Roberta on\nThursday   evening.\nMlaa olive Wood and Jeff Stokes\nwere bridge gueats of Mr. and Mrs\nH. H. Perklna on Friday evening\nat  their  home.\nR. Hubberstey went in to Fernie\non Wednesday last, and had his\ntonsils removed, returning to his\nhome    here    on    Sunday    morning.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Vernon and son\nof Fernie motored to town Sundav\nand vlatted at the home of Mr. and\nMra. J.  H. Angell.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Thompson and\ntwo children. Mrs. T. Duncan and\nMlas Isabel Duncan all of Fernie\nmotored to Elko on Sunday and\nvisited,   friends   here.\nMrs. A. Bernle was taken quite IU\non Sunday but is now Improved\nand   able   to be  around  again.\nMr. and Mts. W. Wlnsor Jr. were\nvisitora at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. H. H. Perkins on Monday evening.\nMrs. P. Pascuzzl ond three children\nof Fernie visited here with Mra.\nCaatanoo. Mrb. Paecuzzl's mother,\nlast week, returning to Fernie to\nconsult a doctor over the Illness of\nUttle   Orace   Pascuzzt.\nMra. T. Slrlnnl and two children\nof Femie are now vif*>ting here at\nthe home of Mrs. T. Ccstanzo, a\nsister of Mrs. Slrlnnl.\nknd 10c. fooin) to Dept. lft, Tbt Pcapriu Co., Ltd.,\nM luc-rood 8t. W T-roB-o. Out., for ntw Art\nP\u00bbwUie-we-rour_^kt'\\o\u00abtTrpi\u00bbfBauty''\u00bbi_d\naapU. of lW\u00abui Dit -W- Nlfkt Croat.\nP-OMP6IAN\nPRODUCTS    FOR    BIAUT1\n\"THESE HARD TIMES\"\nTba hard times aad scarcity ol\nmoney makes It mors Important\nthan ever to economize, ons way I\nsave on clothes Is by renswlm tbt\ncolor of tadsd or out-of-ityls\ndresses, coats, stockings, and underwear. For dyeing, or tinting. I always use Diamond Dyes. *Thsy ars\nths most economical ones by (ar\nbecause tbey never fill to produce\nresult* thst mske you proud, Why.\nthings look better thsn new wben\nrsdyed with Dtsmond Dyes. Tbey\nnever spot, streak or run. Tbey go\non arooothly and e.\u00abn)y. wben In\ntb* hands of sven a ten yaar old\nchild. Another thing, Diamond Dysa\nnever tak, ths lit, out of cloth or\nleava It Ump aa soms dyes do.\nThty dettrvt to bt called \"the\nworld'a finest dyei!*\"\n8. O. B, Quebec\nAinsworth Draws\nWeek-End Visitors\nAINSWORTH. B C. May 20\u2014Ft\nHtwat and A. Anderson of Ksslo.\ngovernment office, were In town on\nWednesday and conducted o sale of\neffects from the eslste of the late\nAmll Peterson.\nT. Abbey of Mirror Uke snd J.\nSutcllffe of Rlondel were ln town\non   Wednesday   to   sttend   the   sale.\nlira. C. Llnd of Ksslo waa th*\ngueat of her father, L. McLennan,\ntor a few days this week.\nAlthough the weather was not\nvery good at the week end a number of visitors were noticed at tbe\nswimming pool enjoying the hot\nwater. Among those In town on\nBungay were Mr. and Mrs. A. oarrett\nand rloyd Oarrett. Mr\u00ab. Sutherland,\nand Mr. Pope of Ki.lc, Robert\nThompaon and friends of Willow\nPoint\nTh* new manager of tlie Ainsworth Hot Springs hotel. W Hana-\nhan of Nelson, arrived In town on\nSaturday.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. C. May 20\u2014Ronald\nMagee, eldest aon of Mr. and Mra.\nD. Magee of Rotwou, and Mlsa Edith\nOlsen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H.\nOlsen of Castlegar, were united\nIn marriage at Colvllie. Wash.,\nMonday. Mr. and Mrs. Magee will\nmake their  home  ln Trail.\nMr. and Mra. J. 8. Page, Fourth\navenue, announce the engagement\nof their eldest - daughter, Eunice\nMay, to Harry Elvin. aon of Mr.\nand Mra. James Elvln. Riverside\navenue, the marriage to take place\nIn June.\nMrs. S. fi. McDlamld haa a\u00ab her\ngueat   Mice   Buckley   of   Vanoouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLeslie C. Hughes returned Monday\nevening from a holiday apent In\nVancouver.\nMrs. T. Hinton and three sons returned yesterday from Nelson, where\nthey  visited frlenda for a few days.\nMrs. J. Milieu, Oreen avenue, waa\nhostess Monday evening to membera\nof Knox United church Ladles' Service club, honoring two of their\nnumbers. Mrs. B. L. Oaten, who la\nleaving Trail, and Ml*s Louise Merry,\nwho-e marritige takes place shortly.\nContests and games were features.\nEach guest of honor was the recipient cr a Rift. The hostess, assisted by membera of the club,\nserved   refreshments.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. Wheat has returned from\n\u25a0   short   visit   to   Vanoouver.\nMrs. Stanley Jones and son Harry\nleft this morning to Join Mr. Jonea\nat Sudbury, Ont., where they will\nmake   their   home.\nMrs. Casey Jones and sons Billy\nand Jack. Mr. Hnd Mra. James Jones\nHnd William Evans motored to Nelson   nnd   Salmo   Monday.\nMrs. R. E. Simuelson and Infant\ndaughter. Gladys Irene, who have\nbeen guesta of Mr. and Mrs. C.\nJones, returned lo their home la\nRossland   Saturday.\nMembers or East. Trail mission\nWomen's auxiliary met in the church\nyesterday afternoon. Mrs. 0. Jones\nserved tes. Those present were Mrs.\nA. H. Williams. Mrs. H Johnson,,\nMr*. A. Yates, Mrs. H. Currle. Mra.\nJ. T. Wilkinson. Mrs. C. T. Conry,\nMrs. T. Dawson. Mrs. j. H. Owen,\nMrs. W. Wheat, Mrs. J. McLean.\nMrs. A. Allen and Rev. c. W. P.\nKlrksry.\nCasey Jones was accompanied on\nbis return Sunday evening from\nVancouver hy hia son Jack, who Is\nattending achool there.\nMrs. H. Currle and Mrs. J H.\nOwen will spend tomorrow In Rosa-\nland aa gueat of Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam    Wardale.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss F, Roberts*:_n was a visitor\nin   Nelson   yesterday.\nDr. E. J Robert* of New York\nand R 8 Hutchison of Salt Lake\nCity arrived In the city yesterday\nThey will make their home here for\na lew months.\n\u2022 #   \u2022\nMr.-.    D.    Forrest   and    daughters\nNettle and Viola, Riverside avenue,\nwill leave during thc week end to\nmake  thetr  homo  in  Vancouver.\nDelbert Stanley, who has been\nvisiting in Trail, has left to visit\nhi\u00bb   brother   in   Nakusp.\nMIm Elleen Webber and Mlsa\nBUUe Webber were visitora tn Nelson Sunday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT. W. Stejcy returned yesterday\nfrom Vancouver and coaat cities,\nwhere he has been spending thc past\ntwo   weeks.\nt   \u2022   \u2022\nMrv R. W Wataon and Miss\nClaud ine Hunt, who have been\nspending a few days in Spokane,\nreturned home  yesterday.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nMlaa Marion Kerby of Grand Forks\nhas returned to her home after a\nshort    visit   here\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W T Wyniif ol Appledale Is\nthe gue!\u00abi. of her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. nnd Mrs. Charles\nStalnton, Third  avenue.\nMr. and Mre. Robert Lawson and\nMrs. Arehio Lawson of Grand Forks\nmotored to the city Sunday.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAU. HOUSES AND LOTS 1N-\nsurance. Notary. J. D. Ander-\naon. Trail. (52__)\nU. B. C. ALUMNI\nELECT OFFICERS\nVANCOUVER.    B-    C,    May   20 \u2014\nWilliam Murphy was elected president of the University of British\nColumbia Alumni society at ltt\nannual general meeting In Falrlew\nBaptist church Tuesday nigh:. He\nsucceeds   Bert   Smith.\nOther officers elected: Honorary\npresident. Dr. L. 8. Klinck; ttttl\nvice-president, Mra. Jamea Lawrence; second vice-president, Murray Brink; corresponding secretary.\nMiss Helen Crawford, treasurer, Bert\nWaJesr recording secretary. Mlas\nBeth Abernethy; chairman of publication. Miss Isobel) Harvey; administrator or gymnasium fund,\nWilliam  Thompeon.\nA vot$ of appreciation was passed\nin favor of 'he publications board\nfor lta work In starting the \"Graduate Chronicle,\" an annual Journal\ncovering activities of V. B. C.\nalumni   throughout   Canada,\nr^m___________mma-a_a\nrm7-mnm_imr-t*_\nMmmmmM mmm\\m\nQ^dea^her Ve)\n607Baker St.\nPhone 200\nSTOKE, NEWS\nNEW SUMMER SUITS\n$19.75 Each\nThe smartest wc have shown for som\u00ab\ntime. Every dress has it's own Jacket\nThese come in splendid quality pure silk\ncrepe. Dresses have pleated or flared skirts\nand matching jacket. All the new pastel\nshadeB and white. Size 14 to 40.\nALL ONE PRICE ?19.75 EACH.\nKNITTED SPORTS\nSUITS\n$11.95 to $35.00 Each\nPerfect fitting, stylish and serviceable are\nthose sporls suits. Throe piece. styles of\nsilk and WOol Botany wool antf bramble\nknit. Jackets and skirts with sleeveless sweaters. All wanted colors and in sizes :.1 to 40.\n3111.05, *15.00, ?25.00 to 935.00 EACH.\nMerry May Time\nDance, South Slocan\nIs Decided Success\nSOUTH SLOCAN. B. C.. May 'JO\u2014\nThe haU wm redolent with aprlng\nflowers for the Merry May Time danoe\non Friday evening. Masses of lilac,\nred tulfcpe. white trls and columbines\nver\u00ab maiveri at the front of 1 he\naiage where the orcheatra played\nFlower panels decorated the walla,\n-md green and whit* crepe festoons\ngave th\u00ab finished effect. The committee composed of O. W. Humphry\nW. T. Jonea. A. F. McDonald, and\nQ. I.. Thompaon had the arrange\nment* well in hand. The supper\nconvener*, were Mrs. O. W. Hum\nphry, Mrs. A. Wllley, Mrs. W, T.\nJonea,   and   Mra.   A.   F.   McDonald\nMlaa Doreen Long and Mlaa lao-\nbell Graham of Nelson were the\nguests of Mra. It. C. Elliott for\nthe  week end.\nMlas Edna Watts bus returned to\nNelson after spending tbe week end\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mr-. Edward   Watt*.\nTha Rev. W. L. Crick motored\nout from Nelson on Sunday evening and officiated at service In\nSt. Matthews church. Mrs. G, K.\nAahby accompanied him - nd pre-\ns if im  at  the organ.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Scott. Mi<a Mo-\nnella Scott and Mlaa A. R. Mitchell\nmotored to Kaslo on Sunday and\nspent   the   day.\nMr. and Mre. F. B, Hardin were\nNelson   visitors   on   Saturday.\nMr. and Mr?, Duncan P*\"-**.*. and\nfamily have arrived (rom Trail le\nmake their home here, where Mr\nPeers Is employed on the conatruction   work   at   Corra  Unn.\nMiss M. Humphry and Miss C.\nDavidson of the Kerr apartment*.\nNelson, were the week end guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Humphry\ndt   Sommerhlll   ranch.\nD. 8. Grant and E. Armstrong of\nNelson   are  residing  here.\nGrant Tindaie. who Is attending\nhigh achool In Nelson, spent the\nweek end with hia parent t-, Mr\nand   Mrs.   W.   J.   Tindaie.\nHEAVY FROST DOES\nDAMAGE IN YMIR\nYMIR.  B.  C. May  'JO-Mi.,\nOrant  had   a\u00ab  her  tea  hour   guests\non Monday. Mrs. H. Steven.\"*, Mrs, E.\nEmllson   and   Mrs.   W-   B    Mclsaac.\nMrs. H. Stevens had aa her dinner\nguesta on Monday, Mlas Oram ltr:i-\ndall   and   Mrs.  W.  B   Mclsaac.\nWendell Shrum of Columbia Gardens #penf, the week end at hta\nhom*   here.\nMr. and Mri. Clarence fcfeftaM\nhad as their guests on Monday evening   Mlsa  M,   Orlever   and   .1    Lane\nMonday night Ymir h;.d a heavv\nfrost, which did considerable damage to the fruit treea and tofltfir\nplants.\nAndrew Burgess, Joe Dunn and\nJohnny Daly were Nelmu visitors\non Tuesday.\nNcwlyweds Return\nto  Homo,  Boswell\nBCXSWEU..     B.    Cm    May    30\u2014M;\nand Mrs. Kenneth Wallace armed\non Frldav by car from Falrlltr' 11.\nSask., where their marriage tock\nplac-    on    May    7\nCapt,    c     H     ITlggena    of    Yahk\n^'hr   i ne   goeel   ol   bin   parents,   M\nand    Mrs     J     R     Hlg^ns.    for    i ,.*\n\u2022\/Mft   end\nITCHING SKIN\nI ^(opirritaiion now. Soothe.promote\nI healini anJ rre\u00abcn' Infection wilh\nDodd's\nOINTMENT\nla o jar likt the ftntu latt cream*. Price 50t\nNovelty Dance Is\nHeld, Crawford Bay\nNew Denver Men\nGo Golfing, Kaslo\nNEW DENVKR. B. C, May 10\u2014\nTommy Campbell of Vancouver, who\nhaa graduated from the u. B. C,\nIs spending  hia holidays here.\nDr. Francis. J. J. Streit, and J.\nWood, motored to Kaslo. Sunday\nand spent the day golfing.\nMr* and Mrs. Colegrave, W. CoVe-\ngrave and Mr. Smith of Edgewood,\nend Mrs Dunn of Nakusp were\nrecent visitors ln town, the gueate\nof Mr.  and  Mrs.  A. L. Harris.\nMr. and Mra. C B. White have\nleft tai Vancouver, cn route to\nNome,  Alaska.\nThe tennis club gave a successful\ndance   ln   the   Bosun   hall   Friday\nevening. Music\u00bbwas supplied by the\nlocal   orchet*ra.  A large  crowd   mo-\n\u25a0 \\er   Irom   Nakllsp.\nAndrew Oraet, well-known St.\nThomas postmaster, la being superannuated. H. W. Mix ls likely to\nsucceed   him.\nCRAWFORD BAY. B. ('. May 20\nA dance was held at thp Crawford\nBay hotel on Saturday. May 10, bv\nthe Rug pong club to finish up\nthe season. It was a most enjoyable\ndance and was well attended by\nthe members of the club and friends\nfrom Gray Creek. Boswell, Deanshaven and Rlondel. 'Th*. damr\ncommittee, Miss Jacobson, Miss Fox,\nL. Dee and George Wilson hsd a\nsplendid program, arrayed snd everything went with a swing from stsr:\nto finish. There were several novelty\ndances. A balloon dance caused\nlots of fun. The prlw winners were\nMiss Betty Fox and Walter Jarobson\nA progressive dsnce wss quit* a\nchange from the ordinary. Each\ncouple had s number and at each\nchange of music, they changed\npartners, sa In whist, it raused lots\nof fun and noise. Lemonade was\nserved through the dsnce and supper at u o'clock. The dance broke\nup  at   1   a.m.\nMrs. Fox and Mr. Manvtu nippuafl\nthe   mualc,   piano  and  drums.\nHow Bright and Full of Energy\nThi* Bog Look$!\nBe Keeps Hie Face and Hand*\nChan and Healthy with\nCuticura Soap\nTeach children eerlj In life to dm Cntl-\neara Soap e-ery <Uy end Catlrara\nOintment for any ruhet or irriuiiont.\nSh-mpoo- with Cadeara Soap keep\nthe heir healthy and thick.\nMl .-ay-fee te.. IM. 0_\u2014l >*_:\u2014* ***\nT.l\u2014m>ir. C-aa-UaH-T*' J.T.W.II <:\u2022\u00bb-\u2022\u2022..\nMAIL ORDERS A SPECIALTY      *\nUNIFORMS of DISTINCTION\nBOWMANS\nAPRON SHOP\n810  GRANVILLE  ST.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nWrite for Illustrations and Samples\nThe essence of\nVine-fresh tomatoes\nHere, indeed, is GENUINE tomato\nketchup. No coloring. No preservatives ... simply the simmered-\ndown goodness of wholesome\ntomatoes plus tangy spices I\nAnd what a ketchup it is I Am\nA Canadian\nFirm\nLitabfiihed 19\/7\n1st tHn Clark Kittham help you   m.\nfor quicker and  better meals   _r\nCLARK'S\nTOMATO KETCHUP\nW. C L A. R K. liHlIiE.\nEtloblithmenH al Montreal, P.Q,,\n$t. Rami, P.Q., and Harrow, Ont-\n PAGE  SIX\nc% JMmm Satlg ifem*\nPubluhed every morning except Sunday by News Publishing Company,  Limited,  Nelaon,  B.  0.\nMember of Canadian  Press  leased  wire news service.\nAdvertising rata cards and A. B. 0. itatementi of circulation\nmailed on request, or may be eeen at tbe office of any advertising\nagency reeognlnafi by the Canadian DaUy Newspapers' Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy mall (oountry), per month  _\t\nPar yaar\nBy mall (city), per year \t\nOutelde Oanada, per month\nPar year _\t\nDelivered, per weak  _..\nPtr yaar   \t\nPayable ln advance. s\nMember Audit Bureau ot Circulation.\n....I    60\n  0.00\n.... 13.00\n._ .it\n  7.50\n.... 31\n  1'J.OO\nTHURSDAY, MAY 21, 1931.\nImmigration and Elasticity\nAbout a week ago the C M. & S. Glee club of Trail\nwa\u00bb on its way to Vancouver to compete in the musical\nfestival there. They travelled by motor via Spokane\nand the American route. At Spokane they gave a fine\nconcert over the air which was picked up by numerous\ndistrict fans who were interested. But at thc boundary line, on the way to Spokane, two members of the\nparty were stopped from crossing into the United States\nbecause of immigration rulings. The immigration officers were simply interpreting the law, and it was\nlucky that the two men were able to make the trip to\nthe coast on the Canadian side in time to enter with\ntheir mates in the coast festival.\nThe Baltimore Sun has made a particular study of\nimmigration imbecilities. Examples which this journal\nhas in the past published almost all cast ridicule upon\nthe United States department of immigration although\nsome have concerned the corresponding department in\nthe Canadian government The latest, and easily the\nmost remarkable case, however, involves both Canada\nand the United States.\nIt appears that last year a Canadian woman went to\nNew York. While in that city she gave birth to a baby.\nShe returned to Canada, but the baby was not permitted entry, and was sent to a foundling hospital in New\nYork. She applied for permission to re-enter tho United States, and was refused. The result of her blunder\nin giving birth to thc baby in an alien city is that\nshe is in Montreal, thc child is in a foundling hospital\nin New York, and they cannot meet.\nIt would be hard to find a better example of the\nconsummate idiocy of rod tape than this, and the most\ndeplorable aspect of the affair is that such is the outcome of two systems of immigration control.\nOther cases of immigration weakness have recently\nbeen brought to the attention of Canadians. Miss Tolstoy was refused admittance to Canada because she\npossessed a Russian passport, no longer recognized by\nthe Soviets. It is possible that a delegation of Doukhobors, who plan visiting Russia to assist members of\ntheir sect believed in distress there, may find themselves exiled from the land of their adoption due to immigration technicalities.\nIn every system which has to deal with such a complex problem as iinmi-jration there are certain to be\noccasional inequalities, but something should l>c done to\nmake the regulations more elastic. Apart from humanitarian considerations, \u00ab e do not want to be the laughing stock of other countires.\nThe Modest Tulip and Its History\nNow spring is here and Kootenuy gardens are donning their daily colored dresses, it is timely to recall\nsome of the exciting history of the modest tulip which\nbecame the storm centre of u financial crisis of\nEurope. Tulip beds are common all over the district\nand the flowers are particularly beautiful nt this time.\nIt is recorded that the tulip was first brought into\nEurope latc in the sixteenth century from Constantinople by Counsellor llerwart of Ausburg, Bavaria.\nThese beautiful specimens quickly caught the fancy of\nthe gardeners of Amsterdam, and from there interest\nspread to all the surrounding countries. This was\nabout the year 180(1. As thc demand increased prices\nrose. Every person of wraith wished to have some\nrare tulips to display; it became a banjjo of good form\nPeople of modest means aspired to a tulip bed, and\nfinally the very poor. B.V 168- What ll known in history as the \"tulip craze\" was in full swing, and for\nthree years it raged across Europe The best known\nvarieties were listed at large sums; a single bulb of\nthe Admiral Liepkin sold for 1100 florins, the Admiral\nVan der Eyck sold for 1260 florins, \u201e Childer for 16ir>\nflorins, a Viceroy sold for 4100 florins, the Admiral\ncious of all, the Semper Augustus easily brought 6600\nflorins.\nAs competition amangst collectors and traders increased sneculators joined in. Soon tulip prices were\nlisted on the stock exchange and the public rushed in.\nAs one writer put it \"nobles, citizens, farmers, mechanics, seamen, servants of both sexes, even the poorest\ndabbled in tulips.\" Homes where mortgaged, valuable\nproperty was exchanged for a handful of bulbs. One\ntrader in the Netherlands is known to have given\nhalf of his fortune for a single bulb, while another\nman paid 100,000 florins for 40 bulbs.\nSome idea of the extremes to which the obsession\nwaa carried may be gained by the following transactions:\u2014\"one bulb of the Viceroy tulip was taken by\na certain merchant in 1G3\"i in exchange for the following commodities: *_ lasts of wheat (a last is about\n4000 pounds), 4 lasts of rye, 1 fat oxen. 8 fat swine,\n12 fat sheep, 2 hogsheads of wine, 4 tons of beer, 2\ntons of butter, 1000 pounds of chcesC, 1 complete bed,\n1 suit of clothes, 1 silver drinking cup.\"\nFor three years this flower held undisputed sway:\nthe prosperity of nations depended upon its continued\npopularity. This was especially|ruc of Holland which\nentered into the cultivation of tlbps on a large scale,\nand became very prosperous, living conditions over\na large part of Europe were changed, necessities of life\nincreased in value, lucrative businesses were neglected,\nwealth was being computed in terms of bulbs. Then\n\u2022s suddenly as it had started, thc bulb bubble burst.\nThe market for tulip bulbs vanished almost overnight.\nThousands of people who had sacrificed their homes,\ntheir lands, their livelihood, awoke to tthe realization\nthat all they possessed was a few worthless flowers.\nFinancial clioas resulted, and general bankruptcy appeared inevitable. Public meetings were held, and the\npeople appealed to the government to save the situation. Little, however, could be done. Widespread destitution followed, and another chapter was closed on\nthe age-old subject of speculation, \u25a0  .\n \u25a0\n\u2014; \u00bbIHE  NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON.  B.   C.  \u2014  IIILB8DAT   MOBN1NO,   MAV   11,   IWl'\nSeen and Heard in\nNELSON\n(By  J.   B.   C.)\nHwrd about three ladles traro\nthe country who came to Nelson to\ndo aomt shopping Tuesday afternoon.\nThey decided llrst to iro to the\nshow. Looking around they could\nnot find the ticket teller at the\nbox office. Inquiries resulted ln\nthe ladles being told that the ahow\nhad been going an hour. Why.'\nTheir watches read 2 o'clock, the\ntheater clock, daylight saving time,\nread 3 o'clock.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThete same ladle* did aome shop-\nplug and stopped at a butcher shop\nor some meats. The door wss locked, It was 6-35 o'clock advanced\ntime. They were confused thinking\nit was but 4:35 o'clock. But they\nwent home without their meat. The\nbutcher shops now close at 6:30\nAdvanced time or 4:30 standard\ntime. I mav be fired fur advertising that. But after e week, we\nwill  likely  get  acclimatized.  Maybe?\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBut  Nelson  is  not  the  only  city\nhaving Its time fun and mlxups.\nTbey ha.e a worse situation in\nWoodstock,   Illinois.\nYou can take your own time in\nWoodstock.\n\u2022 \u2022     e\nPart of tho town is operating on\ndaylight saving time and part on\nstandard time. The county clerk,\nfor Instance, uses dayligst saving\ntime, but the circuit court c.erk\ndoesn't.\n\u2022 \u2022     e\nStores catering to the farmer\ntrade are sticking by standard time,\nwhich is one hour behind daylight\nsaving, Tbe others aren't.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nIn other words, today ta liable to\nbe tomorrow and tomorrow may be\ntoday, depending on whose clock\nyou   happen   to   consult.\nFor convenience of local people\nwho wish to be right I would\nrecommend that they interview\nOeorge l->rguaon. In his office he\nbaa the same old clock. It runs at\nthe old standard time. But attached\nto t.e clock and one hour ahead\nIs a red hand. It slgmflew daylight\nsaving time In that office you can\npick your own time.\ne     \u2022     \u2022\nWhere do you carry your mopey?\nIt you vrere a newspaperman you\ncould answer that question easily.\nPtr the simple answer ls that s\nnewspaperman never hts any money,\nonly tor ft few minutes on payday\nBut I have ween money pulled from\nvarious localities. The ladles carry it\nsometimes In t^ieir stockings, but\nnot to murh since short skirt*\nrame ln. .Sonic men carry a wad in\ntheir right hand trouser pocket.\nSome carry it ln a wallet ln thetr\nback pockets. Some carry lt in\ntheir Inside coat pocket and many,\nmsny more use their watch Pocket.\npf course .t businessman never carries money. He leaves n in the store\nin  i *  safe.\nA visitor to Los Angeles the other\nday carried hi* money In what he\nthought was a safe place. But the\nshort period of five minutes found\nMm a destitute man. His money,\nautomobile nnd other belongings\nbad   complete)y   dImppeared.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFive    minutes    after    his    arrival\nIn Los Angeles from Stockton,  Rob*-dealt    with    they    are    underwater\nert   Villencourt   lost   his   automobile [chasers, subaqueous chasers of their\nprey,   their   mode   or   progre-vlon   is\ndifferent.     Instead   of   using   thetr\nfeet alone as a means of propulsion,\nthey use their wings.\nlt   lias   been   described   as   flying\n_^_^_^__^_^_^ under water  hut   it   is  hardly  that,\nThe   theft   occurred   in   front   of for  ln   my  rxprrlence   (snd   I  have\nSouth Hope street, villencourt stated ' i-_______________________m\nhe drove immediately to this address\nand left his car parked in front\nwhile he entered \u00bb_> make arrangement* for lodging. Five minutes\nlater he returned to the sidewalk to\ndiscover   his   car   gone.\n^  COSTcF\nMuN^.\u00ab.weRNhEKr\n^mmUZy\nPolitician: \"The hoys down at the hall wouldn't be interested\nin that graph. But just tag a T on it and \"\nBirds of thc Kootenay\nand Arrow Lakes\nBy   J.   E.   H.   KELSO,   MD,   M.B.O.U.\nBUU  in  the order of diving  birribs>tcrns  bringing   tn  fish  to  their   al-\nafter t he Loons we come to the\nfamily Alcidae. including Auks,\nMures or Guillemots snd Puffins, all\nstrictly marine species scarcely ever\nseen on fresh wster.\nIncidentally   they   are   of   Interest\nfor  though  like  the  species  already\ncontaining six suit cases, a large\nwalking doll, and I90O in cash to\nthieves, he reported to police. The\nmoney was concealed in a that in\none of the suit esse.-..\nMoral\u2014Keep your money in a\nbank or at least carry it in your\npocket is*, it will give the holdup\nman f-ome trouble and yourself a\nthrill for your money.\n\u2022 \u2022\nChicago the htockyard city, gets\nabout twice *h many headlines and\nmore advertising than any other\ncity on the North American omtm-\nent '\u2022: it wasn't Big Bill Thompson,\nrecently defeated mayor, who had\nthe 1 imel igh t 11 was Al Capone,\ngangland leader, or some of hia\nleaser light.*. But Chicago has been\ntalked or louder *nd longer than\nany ofr.er city. Now Chicago has\noome out to gam additional publicity. For down hi the city of tlie\nctockyards the new baby may be\npaid for lu instalments, along with\nthe furniture, radio and automobile.\nThe Presbyterian hospital announced It has placed on _>ale for prospective mothers oupon books esling for payments as low as $6\nmonth. The total payments Include\nprenat \u00ab1 and poM-natal care and\nnospltal   confinement.\nThere b reason today to believe\nthat David ls still a better man Hum\nOoilath. even in Chicago.\nThe Ooilath _n this case Is William\nGarrett, 34 years of age. owner ot\n\u25a0 rooming house in Chicago. William, if the police report ls accurate,\nweighs Bomethlng Uke 220 pounds,\nHI. star boarder, David Harper, tlpa\nthe sciles at HO. Both are interested\nin   fighting.\n\"A good big man.\"' cud Mr. Oar\nrttt, \"can knock off a good Uttle\nman any time, f know, because I\nused to be n good big preliminary\nfighter. I was a man-eating tiger\nIn those days. In fact, tbey called\nine  Ooilath\"\n\u2022   **    \u2022\n\"I With.\" replied David, \"that I\nhad me a good big heavy man to\nsock. In fact, I wouldn't care if\nhU   name   was   Ooilath.'\nThat's how the fight started. They\nwent t.round and around, without\ntaking time out between rounds.\nWomen at Mr. Garrett., home\n(\u25a0creamed, loudly enough. It seems,\nfor the neighbors to hear, and the\npolice were called\nWhen they arrived Ooilath had\ntaken the count. David, slightly\ngr.ggy.   was  atUl   on  his  feet.\ntort it ho\nA traveller atopped to change tires\nin a desolate region in the far\nwest.\n\"I suppose,\" he remarked to a\nnative onlooker, \"that even in these\nparte of the country the bare necessities of life have rlaen tremendously ln price\"\n\"You're right stringer,\" replied\nthe native, gloomily, \"and lt ain't\nworth   drinking   when   you  ret   lt.\"\nDoctor-\"If anything comes to\nworry you, cast it aside.\"\nPatient\u2014'AU right, doctor. Ill\nremember that edlvec when your\nbill  tomes.'*\ntern scores of them diving In clear\nwater i they raise and shut the wing\nfrom the side but do not exiend It\nas In true flight, that is. in swimming the primaries 'flight feathersi\nare bent backward?, st the carpal\njoint as with thc wing folded aud\nat rest.\nOrder Longtpennen, long-wln\u00a3*d\nswimmer..; family Stcrcorldse. Skuas\nand Jaegers:\nThese are j-ea birds snd one msy\nh*k why they should be deslt with\nin a description of birds seen about\nthM lakes, but I um convinced one\nr,pccle* of Jaeger at least Is not\nus rare as represented on ths above\ndurtng lis journey.-- north and houth\nto and from Us breeding grounds.\nTho Jaeger most likely to be seen\non these likes is the long-la;lrd\n(.tercoranua longlcaudus vleiliot. The.\ncentral leathers are elongated to \u25a0\nconsiderable length but are shorter\nin immature.-, and of course in thr\nautumnal moult of matures. Thc\nJaegers and Skua,, are very gull-like\nin -appearance, tu fact amongst thr\nUsher folk in thc Old Country they\nare termed skua.-, gulls. In these\nj-peciea the beak la hooked as in\ngulls but thr upper mandible is\nnot I ii one piece ms in t he above,\ntbe nostrils opening at thn base of\nthe hook on the upper mandible,\nthe toes are webbed, trrmlnatlng ln\nahort,  sharp  curved   cluws.\nSkuas snd Jaegers ' \u00bbrr of wide\ndistributions throughout the seas of\nthe northern liemii.phere They are\ndark, sinister looking birds with a\ncharacteristic flight resembling both\nthat of a hawk and gull. Anyone\nconversant w-ith them on the coast\nwill have no difficulty In distinguishing them on the lakes.\nThough the dlferent species are\nsometlmse difficult to distinguish\nfrom one another, the family within\nany reasonable dlbtance can be Identified with ease from their flight\nand general appearance. They do\nnot belle their sinister appearance.\nThey ere apparent pirates forcing\nother aeablrds t o drop their food\nor if already swallowed to disgorge\nor vomit it up for their benefit.\nOne may be on ._ cruise or on\nshore watching gulls and terns, a\ndark swift flying bird heaves in\nsight, a gull or tern, the chosen\nvictim of this jaeger recognises Its\nenemy in the distance snd puts gn\ntop speed io escape but is very\nshortly overhauled by the pirate\nwhich then makea sundry threatening stoops aud dashes forcing the\nunfortunate bird to drop any food\ncarried In the beak, or lf its dinner\nhas been comfortably stowed below\nto disgorge lt, when this happens the\nJaeger swoops down to secure it.\nWhen food has been dropped or\ndisgorged hostilities at onco cease\nIt has been said that Jaeger only\nthreatens, never actually drives home\nthe attack, but on two occasions at\nleast out of several hundred 1 have\nseen both from shore and far out at\nsn. an actual attack was made. One.\nnear Olbraltar. wben cloae to our\nvessel, a Kitten wake flying not -far\nabove the surface was struck down\nby a Jaeger whtch settled on the\nsea bealda the unfortunate gull quite\npeaceably, for the latter had complied with the pirate's wishes and\ngiven him his dinner.\nOn aummer when tn Find horn in\nthe north of Scotland I often watched the old birds forming a colony of\nmost fully fledged young on on u-lrt.\nAfter some days a couple of the\npirates appeared and persistently\npersecuted the gentle terns when returning from sea with fish ln thrlr\nbills for their young, but when the\nJaegers were occupied with one pair\nof terns, other terns slipped past\nthe marauders and fed their respective young ones. On the other\noccasion wheu far distant from land\nbetween the Canary Island and the\nEnglish channel our vessel had the\nnot unusual following of kitten-\nwake... (lulls belonging to this\nspecies arc great ocean rovers. One\nday a couple of skuas Joined the\ncrowd and one, not content with\nthreatening, actually stooped struck\na kltte on tbe wing displacing two\nor three secondary feathers, of course\nthe gull promptly delivered what the\nskua demanded.\nWhen st their northern breeding\nground,, these birds do not hesitate\nto strike a human intruder when\nnear their nest which is placed on\nthe ground. Tbe late Mr. Richard\nKearton had several interestina photographs of one of these rohbers\nknocking off the cap of his brother,\nand eo quickly was this done tbat\ntht i ip was distinctly shown In the\nair. i-.is brother b..re headed, but\nonly the tip of one wing or the\nattarkrr appeared at the very top\nof the photograph. The blow was\ndelivered by the feet. Another picture of this cap stunt showed the\nbrot her expecting the attack, the\nrather pruned expression on the\nnunc man's face was mort amusing.\nIn bird photography it must be\noccasionally useful to have a docile,\nobliging younger brother.\nWhen cruising with the Scotch\nfishermen one often Bees these predatory birds stooping at gulls, etc.,\nand t hus gain one of the names\napplied to them by these fishermen\nTla, Dirty Davy, owing to tlieir un-\ncleanly  method   ln  obtaining   fowl.\nWhen not robbing seabirds the\njaegers and skuas pick up carrion,\netc.. and on land in the breeding\nseason eat berries, Insects, eggs, small\nan>mals and  birds.\nOne of the Jaegers I observed on\nthc t-ower Arrow lake was harassing\nan unfortunate rlngbllled gull.\nI have no record of Jaegers on the\nKootenay lake but doubt not that\nthey may on rare occasions be recorded on that water as well as\non thc Arrow lakes.\nEconomic status: As these birds\nare widely spread und not very\nnumerous they do Utile barm.\nAUNT HET\nTtiat BoJy of Yours\nBy ik.Hto  w. uakio.s\nHOW NATURE MENDS    *>*<*-*   to- law' time,\nBROKEN BONES\nInvestlgatora hare been trying to\ndiscover why ln aome Individuals\na bone that had been broken it-\nwell healed In two or three weeks,\nwhUe ln others lt takes almost twlc.\nas long, before- there is firm bony\nunlou.\nThey are now able to show that\nIt Is the parathyroid glands in thc\nneek, immediately below the thyroid\nthat have much to do with\namount of Ume (calcium) that Is\navailable lu the blood to help heal\nthe  broken  bone\nWhere there is a deficiency of \/tbe\nJuice at this gland there ia some\nbone formation ih two or three\nweeks whereas it Is six weeeks be\nfore  there  is  firm   bony   union.\nThese investigators have beea\nable to show that by ad minlater lng\nthe Juice, or \"hormone\" as it It\ncalled, there is an increase ln the\nUme  salts about   the   break  and   1\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(Irom   The   Nelson   Dally   News   ot\nMay 21, 1021.\nMtss Irene Pitts is spending the\nweek-end in the city, lhe guest of\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. H.\nPitts.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nArchie Oray leaves today to spend\na few days lu Salmo visiting his\nparents.\nL. P. Tyson, J. S. Deschamps, A. T,\nRobley, motored over from Trail last\nnight to confer with Hon. J. H. King\nregarding the desired road to the\nVelvet mine.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nC. H. Robinson, fisheries overseer\nof this district and Oeorge Oartrell\nof Summerland left yesterday afternoon for Gerrard to take a course\nln spawning at the Dominion hatchery.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE. W. Widdowhon. secretary of the\nNelaon and District Automobile club,\nmet Hon. J. H. King, minister of\npublic works last night and arranged\nfor a conference with the club executive this afternoon.\nLiberty!     Eternal    spirit\nchalnless mind.\u2014Byron.\nof   the\n'\"Bailie says them folks is poor\nbut you never see poor folks thai\nIndependent an' aaasy about a\ngrocery  bill   alx  montha  old.''\nLighter Side\nTHE   KOMBN   MUD\nHe:   \"Do   you  smoke?\"\nShe;   \"No   I   don't   smoke.\"\nHe:   \"Do   you  drlnk7\"\nShe:    \"No   I   dont   drink.\"\nHe:  \"Der you neck?\"\nShe:   \"No   I   don't   neck.\"\nHe:   \"Well   what do  you  do?\"\nShe;  \"I tell lies.\"\nNot one of these reviews of a\nvery complete exhibition of office\nequipment has mentioned the pretty   stenographers.\nLeaving    the    theatre   the    other\nnight  In  a  storm  It  waa  quite  refreshing   to  step  out  of  unnatural\ninto natural slush.\n\u2014o\u2014\n1st   Man:   linn   Jour.\n2nd Man: V. hat ever does that\nmean.'\n1st Man. \"(.nod day\" In Frame.\ndun:  Nell, hut cross bun\nto you.\n...an: viiai doe-, that mean?\n\u2022ni Mim: c.ood Friday In England.\nJones\u2014\"The wonders of electricity   have   set   me   thinking.\"\nJenkins -- \"isn't it wonderful\nwhat  electricity   can   dot**\nPHCNE 181\nWe specialise In plumbing and\nheating jobs of all sixes anil\nitt-MTtpitnns, by trained experts, and are equipped to\nfulfil all requirements for\nplumbing and heating fixture*\nand supplies.\nB. C. Plu:_ib5r_3\n*& Heating Co.\nNelson,   B.   C. Phono   lti\nNow tbta Juice doesn't maaufac-l\nture the lime from the materials I\nlt contains, but the Juice stimulates other tissues to give up eomel\nof their Ume to tho blood, t.\nblood carries lt to the break, andl\nby surrounding the break with thtsl\nlima, and phoephorua alao, the!\nends of the broken bone are sgaln|\nJoined   together.\nNow Just where the blood gather.]\ned thla time when driven by thlsl\nparathyroid Juloe haa been a rroat|\nsource  of   interest   to   Investigate\nProm   what   part   of   the   body!\nfrom what tissue would  you   thlnkf\nthey   found   that   the   blood\ngetting the nec-eaoary lime and phoe-J\nphorus to mend the body?\nStrange to say it la from thtfl\nbouea of the body that this extrtf\nUme   le   secured?\nAa you and I think of the solid]\nbones wblch form the frameworJ\nof tho body It ls hard to bellevel\nthat the blood can carry away anyl\nmaterial\u2014Ume or other sub-stance*\nVet. these Investigators have been\nabln to prove that the bones areT\nreally a storehouse for, lime, phos-1\nphorus, and other mineral salts*\nand readily give these materials upl\nwhen they are needed elsewhere in|\nthe body. ^^^~\nIt ls satisfactory to know that wsl\nhave these glands that stimulate I\nthe bones to give up these materials!\nIt ls satisfactory to know also tbatl\nextract of these glands can be glvenl\nwhere tbe repair of the break ls|\nlikely to be slow. ^^^_\nCod   liver   oil,   used  so   much   to|\nbuild  up youngsters,  contains  vita-\nhiin    D,    a    necessary   element    lnl\nbuilding  strong  bones,  or a  strong J\nbody foundation.\n::::::::::::::: .rmxnnnl\n' nt II1) ll. C. PAYROLLS\"\nA Request\nWe Can't\nMeet\nTuesday we mentioned the\nfudge Mrs. L. P. makes, using\nPacific Milk and tihe importance she placed upon Paclflo\nMUk ln making fudge. Yesterday we received a letter asking\ntor the recipe. We are unable\nto supply It. It's a good recipe.\nwe have been told and Mrs. P.\nJustly :s proud or tt-\nPacific Milkl\nFactory  at   ..blurt, fnrcl,   B.   f*.\n\"100     B. C. Owned and Controlled*-\n::::\n.::! nral\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nTHIRTY YEARg AGO\n(Irom   The   Nelson   Oally   Miner   ot\nMay 21,  i-mi)\nHon. J.  H. Turner, ex-minister of\nfinance,    is   in    the    city    and    is\nstaying at the Phalr.\nWork has already been resumed on\nthe Mavbe mine, near Ferguson,\nwhere they are driving n 200-loot\ntunnel.\nSandon mines last week sent out\n167 tons of ore from the Last\nChance, American Boy, Reco and\nIvanhoe mines. The sunset (-.hipped\n30 tons from Whitewater.\n\u25a0   e   s\nBorn on Sunday. May 19. to Mr.\nand Mrs. Oeorge B. McDonald, or\nSandon. a son. Mr. McDonald Is\nmanager of the Noble Five mine.\nThe Kaslo Athletic club has made\narrangements for a ao-round bout\nfor a ISM purse, between Oeorge\nLayler of Roaaland snd John Madden\nof Oreat Palls, Mont\nMrs. Haultain left ofr Ban Francisco this morning. She Is accompanied by her niece. Mrs. Terrick Q.\nHauiuin.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nThc Knights of Pythias ore making great preparations for the excursion to Kokanee creek on Victoria\nday.\n(From  The Daily Neni, May 21,1911)\nThc publicity fund has now reached a total ol over $1000 and by\nMonday night the committee, of\nwhom W, P. Roberts, W. J. Meagher,\nM. R. McQuarrie, J. A. Irving and\nE. W. Wlddowson are members, expect to have this sum raised at least\nby \u00bb500, while by the end of next\nweek they are confident the sum\ncollected will be In the neighborhood\nof 13300.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nLleut.-Col. ft. J. Holmes, commanding the 102nd regiment, before\nleaving yesterday for his home in\nKaslo. caused the regimental orders\nreipectlng the camp at Kamloops to\nbe issued by Capt. A. Carrie, acting\nadjutant.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA mild sensation was crested yesterday afternoon when Mrs. R. P.\nOerrllls attired in the first harem\nskirt which has been seen ln public\nln Nelson, psraded up snd down\nBaker atreet, followed by an admiring snd wondering crowd of small\nchildren.\nA new strike or high grade ore\nin the present long drift of the\nEureka gold mine of Sheep Creek ls\nreported by H. O. NeedUnds who returned to Nelson last night from\nSalmo\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nD. O Thomu. while In a boat at\nOranlte yesterday morning, saw a\nbeaver swimming  in the river.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJames Flnlandson who ls to take\nthe position of Jam-maker at tbe\nJ. A. McDonald's new factory which\nii now in the course of erection, has\narrlvrd  m   the city  from Toronto.\nSuwmer\nExcursion\nBates\ns      ON SALE MAY 15 TO SEPT. 30\nVICTORIA   SEATTLE   VANCOUVER\n$37.30     $41.75        $32.90\nVIA   KETTLE   VALLEY   ROUTE   IN   EACH   DIRECTION.\nLimit,  October  31   for  return.\nCircular Tours, Pacific Coats Points:\nVancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Portland\n^39.45 via Arrow Lakes, Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle,\nSpokane.\nS37.85 via Kpttle Valley, Vancouver, Victoria, Seat lie, Spokane.\n$44,65 via Kettle Valley, Penticton, Okanagan Lake,\nVernon, Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Spokane.\nTbt shove circular tours can be routed via Portland\nbetween Seattle Bnd Spokane at about 17.00 additional.\nTheae circular toura can be routed going; Journey via\nVancouver, returning through Spokane, or ln reverse\ndirection.\nCircular Tours available from any point on the\nCircle. Sold daily. May 15 to September 30. Return\ntill October 81. Good for stop-over at pleasure within\nlimit. Fares quoted through Arrow, Okanagan or\nWindermere Lakes, Calgary, Banff, Lake Louise. Ask\nany agent for details, or write:\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson, B.C.\nCanadian Pacific\nWorld's Create* Travel System\nFarm Implements\nNow is the time to buy your\nPLOWS, HARROWS, CULTIVATORS, TISCS\nHARROWS, SPRAYERS and\nPLANET JR. TOOLS\nPRICES RIGHT\nPROMPT SHIPMENT\nNelscn Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON, B. C. BAKER ST.\n 8<=m copy\nfo\u00a3\nBATTLE BETWEEN\nLACROSSE BODY\nA. A.JLJS OVER\nLacrosse    Officials    Modify\nViews on Mixing Pro and\nAmateur Players\nHERE ON SATURDAY\nVANCOUVER. May 30 (CP) \u25a0\u2014\nThreatened war between the British\nColumbia Amateur Lacrosse assoclstlon and the Amateur Athletic\nUnion of Canada apparently haa\nblown 'over. Reoently the provincial\nlacrosse body issued an edict thst.\nsanction or no sanction, they were\ngoing to allow amateurs and professionals to mingle In sn effort to\nbuild up a game that wss rapidly\ndying out tn theee parts.\nAlter discussing ths question with\nA- A. u. officials, however, the lacrosse men have modified their\nnews somewhat, and lt now looks\nas lf lacrosse in British Columbia Is\nstill m the amateur fold.\nThe lacrosse men wanted to mix\namateurs and professionals ou the\naame teams, but they now agree to\nabide by the A. A. U. rule, passed\nat the last annual meeting, that\nprofessionals, playing as a team.\nmay compete in exhibition games\nonly, against teams entirely composed of  amateuia.\nIt la possible that tihe professionals will organize two teams to\ncompete In exhibition tilts against\nVancouver snd New Westminster\namateur entries. They also form\ntwo teams of \"box lacrosse' later\nin the season and challenge the\nwinner of the new professional\n\"box lacrosse' league ln the east.\nST. LOUIS DROPS\nGAME TO ROBINS\nSQUARING SERIES\nPhillies Beat Pirates,  11-7;\nGiants Beat Cellar Position Reds\nOUT AFTER ENDURANCE RECORD\nHOME RUNS\nHam*  run\u00bb   yesl\u00abr<l-.y:\nArlett,  PbUUei.  J.\nPick-Sing. Red Sox. 3.\nHartnett.   Cub\u00bb,   1.\nSpencer,   Sen-ton-.    1.\nRegan,   Pirates.   X.\nTerry, Giants. 1.\npoxx.   A thi (tlce.   1.\nMiller.   Athletics,   1.\nTh. leaders:\nArlett, Phillies, 0.\nKlein.   Plillllcs.   8.\nSimmons.  Athletics,  7.\nOehrlg,   Yanks,   T.\nHornsby,   Cube,   t.\nBluege.   Senators,   6.\nCHARLIE  HANSON\nSwedish wrestling champion who\nwlll meet Carl Rumberg ot Salt\nLake City ln an eight round wreatling bout at the Opera House Saturday night. Hanson reoently defeated Billie Root ln a local ring\nand ls quite popular with the local\nfans. An exoellent wrestling and\nboxing card haa been lined up for\nthe  pre-hollday  cant  In  Nelson.\nNATIONAL   LKAOIU\nW   L\nBt.   Louis     18   7\nNew   York   _  IB   8\nBoston  17 10\nChloago  18 19\nPhiladelphia  13 15\nPittsburgh      13 18-\nBrooklyn     12 17\nClnclnnatf     < 31\nr.t.\nAM\nn_2\n.830\n__(J\n.._\u00bb\n.143\n41-\n.'_'-\u2022_\nST. l.Ol IS I, BROOKLYN 8\nBROOKLYN. N. Y\u201e May 30 \u2014\nBabe Herman's single tn the last\nof the ninth scored Thompaon with\nthe winning run today as the\nBrooklyn Robins squared their\nseries with the St. Loula Cardinals,\nfive  to  four.\nSt.   Louis       4 10   2\nBrooklyn    '     5   8   3\nJohnson, Stout, Llndsey, Halla-\nhan and Wilson;  Luque and Lopes.\nARLETT PROVES\nBATTING KNACK\nBaseball's select betting circle was\nwelcoming a newcomer today. Buzz\nArlett, the Phillies big rooki\u00a9 outfielder from the roast, climbed Into\nsecond place tn the National league\nyeiterday when he hit two home\nruns ln aa many official trips to\nthe plate and boosted hia average\nto 3&3. He ls leading bom. leagues\nIn home runs, with nine. Although\nhe hit only once in four attempts,\nAl Simmons of th\u00ab Athletics remained far In front in the batting\nrace.\nThe    leaders. BABRH Pet.\nSimmons. .Atmlettcs 38 105 28 46 .438\nFothergil,\nWhite Sox . - 16 63 8 25 .m\nRuth,   Yankees   ... 20   67 23 26 .386\nRoettger. Reds   24 100   0 38 .360\nArlett. Phillies ... 20 107 21 38 -365\nHornsby, Cubs   24   92 19 32 .348\nPHILLIES   11,  PIBATKS  7\nPHILADELPHIA. May 20.\u2014The\nPhiladelphia Nationals took their\nsecond victory from the Pittsburgh\nPirates today, ll to 7, The Phillies msde 16 hits off four Pirate\nhurlers. Arlett of the Phils hit\ntwo boms runs snd Regan had one\nfor  Pittsburgh.\nPittsburgh       7 16   o\nPhiladelphia     11 lfl   1\nKremer. Wllloughby, Orant and\nPhillips; Bolcn. Fallens tein, Shields\nand Davis.\nATHLETICS BEAT\nTHE TIGERS, 3-0;\nST. LOUIS WINS\nTailenders  Loosen  Hold  on\nBottom of Ladder by Beating Boston, 84\nWILL TRY TO BETTER  W HOURS AND 23 MINUTEK\nWalter Lees and Frederic Brossy, both of Detroit, standing in front of\nthe monoplane ln whtch they are attempting to set a non-refueling endurance flight record, lo beat the present record of 75 houra, 23 minutes,\nheld by Prench fliers.\nINTER-HIGH SCHOOL\nTRACK AND FIELD MEET\n(K.B.S.A.A.)\nSATURDAY, MAY 23rd.\nRecreation Grounds\nNELSON, B. C.\nAdmission - - - \u2022 25o\nGET OUT AND BOOST YOUR SCHOOL ATHLETES\nNEW YORK 4, CINCINNATI 0\nNEW YORK. Usy So\u2014Aided by\nBill Terry's home ruu, Uie New\nYork Olsnts concentrated their attack ln the sixth Inning today to\ndefeat the Cincinnati Reds four\nto nothing. John Brrly held the\nReds   to   fire   scattered   hlta.\nCincinnati       0   5   3\nSee   York      4   7   1\nJohnson,   Eekert.   and   Sukeforth;\nBerly and orarrell.\nWRESTLERS WILL\nARRIVE IN CITY\nDUWNGFR1DAY\nExcellent Card for Saturday\nNight Here; Edwards\nto Box\nChicago 7. BOSTON .1\nBOSTON, Ma; 30\u2014The cubs made\n14 hits for a total of 34 baaea to\ndefeat the Braves today, seven to\nfive, and even the curent series at\none-all. Hartnett hit. a home run\nior   Chicago.\nChicago    7 14   1\nBoaton      5   13   :l\nSmith and Hartnett; -Ftankhouse.\nCunningham and Pohrer. McAfee,\nCronin.\nC0ASO0WLERS\nTO VISIT TRAIL\nINTERIOR TOUR\nLawn Bowlers Will Be tiucsts\not Trail-Tadanac Association Shortly\nCORBIN SENDS 10\nATHLETES TO THE\nCOAL CREEK MEET\nJack Routledge of Spokane will\nsrrlvo in kelson tomorrow and with\nWm will com\u00a9 Charlie ftaimon. Leo\nNuma and one other wrestler who\nwlll appear on a card a- the local\nopera houae ou Saturday night. It\nis expected that the wrestlers wlll\ngive a workout on Friday evening\nSaturday's card will bo an exceptional on\u00ab and r-hould please the\nmost exacting of wrestling fans\nIn addition to two major bouts of\neight rounds each, and a Rood\npreliminary, iherr will bP a three-\nround    boxing   preliminary.\nCharlie Hanson, who made such\na hit In thc local ring against BUllc\nRoot of Cranbrook ttome weeka ago,\nwilt again bo *oen In action, this\ntime against Carl fcumberg of Salt\nLake City. Root will also bo in\naction again, but, this time he wlll\noppose Leo Numa of Beat! le. a\nprotege of Hanson who hae won\nU straight battles, and whom Hanson Ik grooming for t. chsmplon -\nahlp title. These two bouts wlll\nbe   over   the  eight-round   route,\nJack Routledge. yesterday by\nlong distance telephone, eruumnced\nthat he would bring vill. him n\n145-pounder to oppose nonlak, a\nJocnl wrestler, In a preliminary\nbout.\nJack Edwards, South Slocan mit\nf linger, well known tn local and\ndistrict tarth, will feature in a pre--\n  llminary boxing bout *snlnst a sult-\nTRAIL. B. C. May 30\u2014CoeaB j \u00bbble opponent to be named today.\nlawn bowlers, who will tour the in- It **s iMQUnetd lust night that\nterlor toward the end ot Jure, Hanson and Roo-, *ho battled H\nwill vlalt ln Trail and will bf guests'] hard bout here recently, have been\nof the Trall-Tadanac Uwn Bowling; matched in a return bout nt Cran-\nassociation brook  to  be  staged  there  on  Mon-\nPropr-sal  for  the  fur, which  has ' d**T in  connection   vlth the May  23\nbeen   endorsed   by   the   TraU   assn-[\u00abPorts  there.\nelation,  was  con'aine-d   In   the   fol- '        \u2014\nlowing letter from the se-rsury <\u2022!\nthe Interior Lawn  Bowling  assocls- {\ntlon to William Campbell, nresid.-iit\not ths Trall-Tadanac organisation.\nTO   CRFATE   BMTHUSIASM\n\"In order to crest*, more enthusiasm among the lawn bowling clubs\nof the Interior, and t\u00b0 footer the\nspin or the game through inter-\nclub visits and games, I have taken\nup the matter of an interior lour\nwith t he British Columbia Lawn\nBowlers association and they an\nheartily   In   favor   ot   same.\n\"Under the prorx-\u00abert plan the\nVancouver and district men would\ntravel by can and play gam as on\nthe different interior club green \u25a0\n(the only expense that it would\nentail in the local clubs being the\nentertainment to a dinner or supper, and possibly the furnishing\nof light refreshments on the green\nduring the games).\nHFI.P   LOCAL    C'LIBS\n\"You can readily understand how\nsuch a visit would help the local\nclubs end also do a lot toward\nmaking real friendships, and develop  lnterclub sportsmanship.\n\"If your elub ls Interested nnrl\nwould be willing to entertain guen\na visit please let m\u00ab know aa aoon\nae possible how many rinks yon\ncould accommodate, how msny\ngtNM you have, and whether your\ngreens sre equipped with lights for\nnight   playing.\"\nCORBIN. B. C, M\u00bby 30\u2014A large\ncrowd of Corbln people Journeyed\nout to Coal creek on Saturday last\nto watoli the school iports, Thc 10\nchildren who entered fTom Corbln\nin the different events showed to\nfair advantage, and ln spite of the\nheavy rain fall during the day\nwhich finally put an end to the\n\u25a0ports, those who attended thoroughly enjoyed themselves. The following\nla the Hit or Corbln entries: I.\nMcOruthers. M Almond. R. Hoffman.\nM. Kolinsky. H, Slemko, M. Elliot,\n1 Emmerscn, r. Coatee, J. Doman,\nN,  Taylor.\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nW   L Pot.\nPhiladelphia   19   7 .731\nNew   York    _  17 10 .630\nWashington      ll 13 .600\nDetroit  16 13 .465\nChicago      13 16 .448\nCleveland       - 13 17 .414\nBoaton   ..-  11 IS -3W\nSt. Loula     \u2022 17 .330\nEyes Pierce\nFighters Armour\n8T. l_Onn  R. BOSTON 4\nST. LOUIS, May 30\u2014(AP)\u2014Tha\nSt. Loula Browns slightly looetned\ntheir hold on bottom plaoe In the\nleague standing today when they\ndefeated the Boston Red Sox eight\nto four. Pickering, Boston mflelder,\nknocked  two  home  nine.\nr h a\nBoston         4 10    1\nSt.   Louis        8 15    1\nGaston. Moore and Berry; Stewart,   Klein   and   Perrell,\nWASHINGTON  I,  CHICAOO 0\nCHICAOO. May 20.-Pat Caraway\nheld Washington to three hlta tcday, but the Senators made pood\nuse   of   them   to   soore   a   t wo   to\nnothing victory over the White Sox.\nSad   Sam  Jones   gave   the   Sox   six\nscattered blows.\nWsshlngton    _.    2   a   o\nChlcsgo        0   6   1\nJones and Spencer; Caraway and\nTate.\nPHILADELPHIA   S,   DETROIT   0\nDETROIT. Mich.. May 20.\u2014Lefty\nOrove held the Tigers to three\nscattered hits i-odsy and the Athletics won. three to nothing. Oeorge\nUhle. veteran right hander. pitched\nfor Detroit \t\nPhiladelphia          3   8   0\nDetroit . 0   3   0\n$HAMeY-Fkuio &mem\nfame OF 7fr\u00a3 &\/\u00a3\u00a3*?&\nNEW STYLE OF\nTENNIS SKIRT\nMAKES DEBUT\nSenorita  de  Alvarez's  Spilt\nSkirt Defies Classification\nAUTEOIL, Prance, May 30.\u2014 (AP)\n\u2014Oeorge Lott and Johnny van Ryn,\nUnited Statea doubles team who\nwlll meet G. Collins and John 8.\nCliff, British pair, tomorrow, ran\nInto unforeseen trouble today ln\nihe Prench hard court tennis chim-\nplonshlps before advancing to qusr..\ner finals. They barely defeated\nGeorges Glasser and Antoine Oen-\ntlen, two younger Frenchmen, 6-!.\n6-3,   11-13,   6-3.\nSenorlta de Alvares of Sain, with\na new style split skirt\u2014which experts hesitate to call \"shorts\"\u2014\ndrew the largest crowd of the session. With Madame Rene Mathieu.\nshe advanced to the semi-final\nround of the women's doubles, defeating Madame Contoelavos Nlco-\nlopoulos and Madame Vlasto Ser-\nplerl,   6-1.   3-6.   6-4.\nTomorrow in the mixed doubles\nHelen Jacobs, California girl, and\nOeorge Lott will meet Madame\nRene Mathieu and M. Leaueur. The\nwinner goes Into the semifinals\nagainst tomorow's victor tn the\nmatch between Elisabeth Ryan -i-d\nJean Borotra. Anglo-French pair.\nand Mlas Betty Nu'hall and P. D.\nB.  Spence,  British  team.\nFIRST HALF OF\nTRAFALGAR BALL\nSCHEDULE DRAWN\nFIRST PLAYOFF\nGAME ANNEXED\nBY FOURTH YEAR\nOrove   and   Cochrane;\nHayworth\n(New   York-Cleveland,\nrain).\n(By    AL   DEMAREE)\ndormer Pitcher, New  York  Giants)\nThe battle between Jack Sharkey\nand Prlmo Camera scheduled for\nnext month may settle definitely\nJust who is the champion all-round\nsneerer of the world, if nothing else.\nSharkey has few peers and no\nsuperiors In the gentle art of sneer\nIng and Prlmo his the Latin temperament and a perfect type of\nface for leering ln a big way.\nThis look of contempt for an op-\nDO YOU KNOW\n\u2014   easfesaascEzziw-'*\nROPER KNOCKS\nVOIGT OUT OF\nENGLISH GOLF\nBeat Second Year Team 16-8\nin High School Inter-Class\nSoftball Ties\nSteady ball-handling and effective hitting gave the seniors a 16-3\nvictory over second year on Wednesday afternoon, in the first playoff game ol the hlah school inter-\ncla*s softball league The win for\nfourth year gives them the rtg.-t\nto meet, i hp third J ter squad on\nFriday   for   the   Tinal   decision.\nAfter a slugging match In i lie\nfirst two Innings, from which the\nseniors emerged on 'lie long end of\nu 10-r> coun', tho boys settled down\nto plsy a light game which was\nworth seeing. The upperclnssmen\ndisplayed a hesd icr type of bsll,\nhour it r, ths infield work of Ted\nChace In the box and Ned Rhodes\non tint being particularly outstanding second year became obviously\nnetted,    fumi. led    nay   grounders,\ntr>f-hed UM h,t]\\ DUI of tbC infield\nOO wild throw;*, and tried for\nhomers instead  nf place  hits.  Doug\nUhle   and | ponent used to be called a \"change\nof   face\"   ln   baaeball.   If   a   pitcher\npostponed. | oouldn't fool a hitter with a\nchange ot pace\" he tried to fascinate the batter with grotesque\nleers or stared him out ot countenance, so that the hitter forgot\nall about the main objective of\nhitting   the   ball.\nMany fighters aa ball players have\nbeen talkfd out of a -fight, or a\ngame but It is apparently possible\nto \"look him out of  it\" also.\nOm custom ot offering\na cigarette originated-\nwith the indians who\npresented the perce pipe)\nm asian of friendship?)\nBritish Amateur Golf Trophy\nIs Assured One of Eight\nBritish Players\nWESTWARD HO. Devonhhlre. May\nMl\u2014.C. P. cable)\u2014Three musketeers   or   amateur   go'fdom    fell    by\nthc wayside as the British amateur\ngolf ''hampionshlp progressed to\nthe quarter-finals today, and m\nthe most startling upsets of the\ntournament Crrll Tolley, nocer\nWethered and George Volgt, the\nlatter th'.- la*t. American left, in\nthe contest, were eliminated.\nTho trophy, won lsst year bv\nBobby .Tones, this year must return to Oreat Britain, far everv\none of the eight remaining players\nI* a Briton Strangely enough,\nnot one of the remaining quarterfinal Isls is regarded s\u00ab a \"great\"\ngolfer. Perhaps the beat known is\na shv young Nottingham lad. 8yd\nRoper, who last | esr gave Bobby\nJones a great, argument, in the\nsame  tournament, only loelnR  when\nLarge Number of\nFish Taken, Procter\ncomes  -n-\u2122.\"    *\u25a0\"\u25a0   \u00bb\u2022 \u25a0*  \"\u00a33   Bro by   uncorked   one   of   his   great\nReid   and   Dew ltt   McCuaig   turned ...       \u201ehlhl    *\nTwenty (.antes to He Played\non Junior High School\n(.rounds\nENTRIES CLOSE\nTOMORROW FOR\nGOLHMESTS\nWilson  and Noxon Cups at\nStake in Week-end Tourney\non Local Course\nSaturday. Sunday and Monday\nwill see great activity on the\ncourse of the Nelson Golf anil\nCountry club when the first tourna.\nment of tbe aeaaon will be played.\nThere playera will battle for poe-\naaaeion of the Wilson and the\nNoxon trophies It waa announced\nlut night by the match committee\nthat entries for lhe event, which\nis> match play on handicap, wilt\ncloee at 6 o'clock Friday afternoon.\nEntries may be made et the elub\nhouse or to A. D MoLeod. captain\nDraws wlll be made and announced\nFriday night.\nThe WlltOQ cup is at present held\nby Oeorge Shaw and Miss Marian\nBlackwood Is the holder of ths\nNoxon cup.\nA schedule COmptlaJng 30 games\nhaa been drawn lo- in iho Trafal-\nC\u00bbr Baseball league, three of the\ngames having already been played.\nThe lln-t half of the nhcdule is\nti be completed h- .hine 23 .md\nany postponed games will be played  between June 23 and JWM 30\nThe games ar\u00bb being played at\nthe Junior high school grounds\nevery   evening  at  6   o'clock.\nFollowing Is ihe \"r\u00bbt bait of the\nschedule.\nMay   Sl\u2014Uve  Wires  vs.  Senators.\nMay 2&-Nel60n Transfer vs. Married   Men.\nMay 37\u2014Cadets vs Senators.\nMay 28\u2014Live Wirca ft. Nelson\nTransfer.\nJune I\u2014Married Men vs. Senators\nJune 2\u2014Nelson Trsn^fer vs, cadets.\nJune 3\u2014Married Men vs. Live\nWires.\nJune 4\u2014Live Wires \\s   Cadets,\nJune 8\u2014Nelson Transfer vs. Cadets.       I\nJuno   9\u2014Cadets   vs.   Married   Men\nJune  10\u2014Senators vt. Live Wtres.\nJune 11\u2014Married Men vs. Nelson\nTranafer.\nJune   15\u2014Senators  va,   Cadets\nJune 18-Nelson Trmisfer vs. L've\nWires.\nJune 17\u2014Senators vs Married\nMen.\nJune 1*\u2014Cadets vs. Nelson Transfer,\nJune 23\u2014Live wires vs. Married\nMen.\nperformance for th*ir\nteam both  in the  field and at bat.\nFourth year- K Qoeteteoo, R.\nChace, N, RtMwee, B. Clark. L.\nTruscott. n. MeArthur, L, Phillips,\nJ.   Vingo,   L.   Emerson.   1,.   Ritchie\nSecond \\ear 0 BU retf t> Reld,\nn.McCUaic. B, Waldle. K. Croshle,\nT. Bird. L, Wheeler, I). McKay. J.\nBuchanan.   V.   Ritchie,   8.   Russell.\nTURNESA HEADS\nQUALIFIERS IN\nest golfing exhibitions,\nRoper went into the filth round\nagainst Volgt todav conceded little\nrhance nf defeating the, United\nStates player, who until then hwl\nhsd little trouble George took an\n.\u2022arlv lead, and was two up at \"Mr-\nninth hole, seemingly heading for\nf urt her progress Roper, however.\nplaying a phlegmatic and sturdy\ngame, conceding nothing and asking nothing, wore down the lea.l\nand chipped hia way to victory.\nA mere man never ceases to won-\nw*_rv    _rs_rkw -r. ^fr *l * woman  who  looka  pretty\nLKKDS     PRO    GOLFtwhen    he    knows    quite    well    she\nian't.\nB.    C.     May    20\u2014F\na   15   pound   salmon\nPROCTER.\nSea] caught\nlast  week. \t\nMr. Brown left Procter taking\nwith him three salmon ranging\nIrom  nine  to  I6li   no-_iids.\nQ. O. Bergh and .? O. Hara of\nBlairmore, Alta., spent a abort time\nin  Procter.\nMrs. H. F. Lumb of Procter spent\nthe  week end  in  Nelaon.\nMr and Mrs. J Patrick were in\nProcter and returned to their home\nIn   Nelson.\nt. B. Dickinson w*t> a Nelson\nvintor   last 'week.\nMr MacLean visited his family\nln   Procter   on   Sunday.\nM. Major and Mrs. Major and\nHelen Qulnn motored to Trail last\nweek \u00abnd.\nMl***. A. Blewett of Neh-ou was the\nguest ot  Mrs. J. Bichan.\nSend in ten cents in stamps and -*\u25a0\u25a0 will\nmail you a complete set of \"Do Vn\nKnow\" cards\u2014sixty cards of fclDVJad e\nand curious facts printed in color (fix\n\u00abH*xlN*)* Or twenty centa willhn-K\nyou the sixty cards ac-compenied hv .n\nalbum io which tbe cards can be pint\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0-, i -u\na permanent collection. Address Uept-V ,\nTuckett Tobacco Co..  Ltd, Hamilton.\nBuckingham Cigarettes\u2014a smooth\nrefreshing blend of choice tobaccos, sun-\ntreated by powerful ultra violet rays-\nThere is do more mellowing influence tb&n\ntbe son. Buckinghams- treated wilh\ngiant sun lamps, are remarkably cool and\nmellow\u2014an all-pleasure cigarette, never\nvarying in quality, peeked for \"\nin the patented sealed package.\nft Is generally agreed that the nujorlly \u00ab\u00bb( brand-*, on .-ul* today\nhate \u25a0 nurked naHHH \"f quality and ure lucking tu (h.iructer.\nIf  tnu   would   know   timv   good  a  reallv   gooil   Ml-ky   can   be\u2014Buy\nFINDLATER'S 12 Years Old\nLIQUEUR WHISKY usouBottk\nf\nThis advertisement U  not  inserted  by  the Uquor  Control  Boany or\nthe  Oovernment  of   the   Province  of   Britlah   Columbia.\nLEEDS, Eng. May 30\u2014 <AP.\u2014 Bv\nequalling the rrrord round of 69 he\nshot over the Band Moor links yes.\nterday, Joe Turnesa, United States\nprofessional, headed the Urt of Wi\nqualifiers today for the Thousand\nGuineas professional golf tournament. R. E. Ballanttne, British pro\nwho also shot a 09 today, finished\nsecond to Turnesa*-* 130 with a 33-\nhole  total of 141.\nAmong the surprising British failures were the British Ryder cup\nmen, George Duncan and Ilerbrri\nJolly. Pred Robson. Charles Whltcombe, Aubrey Boomer and he\nveteran Ted Ray were among the\nBritish qualifiers.\nMarco Churlo of the Argentine\nand Joe Klrkwood, trick ahot star,\nwero third and fourth respectively\namong the qualifiers with totals at\n142  and   143.\nTony Manero. United States pro,\nshot a 72 todsy to bring his total\nto 14B while Joe Jurado, Argentine,\ngot under the wire with a 76 and\ntotal   of   149.\nHorton Smith, tall sharpshooter\nfrom Missouri, Just failed to qualify, turning In 152, two above the\nlimit.\nAmerican Association\nLouisville   2   ao\nIndlanapolla   5,\nInnings).\nMllwaukee-St.   Paul\ncold.\nKansas     Cilv-Mlnnespolis,\nponed\u2014Cold,   wet   grounds.\nNo   others  scheduled.\npost poned -\npost-\nTlils   advertisement   i\u00bb   not   pv4tal>r-.   *w   displayed   by   the   Liquor\n'Awtrol Board or bj  lbe -'\"'emmtu et the Province of British Columbls.\nThere is little unemployment in\nthat Urge etsss IhM is working for\ntbe wages of sin.\nITALY    BEAT*    BCOTI \\M\u00bb\nROM* May JO.\u2014(O. P. cabls vis\nReuters)\u2014 British aocrer suffered snother reverse todsy when Italy defeated Scotland three to notbtrfg\nbefore a crowd of a&.QOo spectators\nincluding Premier Benito Mussolini,\nThis set-back to the louring Britishers follows Austria's detent of\n\u25a0*cotiSnd veMor,i.-\\ \u00bbrtd England's\nloaa   to   Prance  last  week.\nCOAST TRACKMEN\nTO COMPETE IN\nINTERIOR MEET\nVANCOUVER. May 20\u2014rive members of the Vancouver A. C. track\nand iield tesa) are visiting tihe Interior on Monday to compete In the\nKelowna Umpire Dsy sports, while\none of them will go on to pentlcton\nto run In the sports there on May\n2T. Joe Crooks wilt run in tha 100\nand 200 yard events at both places,\nand at Penticton he will meet Ralph\nThomss. l-irmer XJ. B. C- trick star\nOther ati'.-iletes going to Kelowna\nare Carney TitsII, who will run ln\nthe 440. Hal Odium, in ths 880:\nKyle McDonsld in the mils and\nHadden Agnew in the weight events,\nTlM    fulled    States    hss    87,000\ndenUste, one for every  1700 persons.\nWrestling\nOPERA HOUSE-NELSON,B.C.\nSaturday, May 2}\n9:30 P.M.\nTWO MAIN EVENTS\nCHARLIE HANSON\nof Seattle\nvs.\nCARL RUMBERG '\nof Spokane\nBILLY ROOT\nCranbrook\nvs.\nLEO NUMA\nof Seattle\nA M , \u201e   ,\nONE GOOD LOCAL PRELIMINARY\nBILLY  ROOT  Of CRANBROOK\nADMISSION\nRfSfrved   Seals   - - - $1.05\nRush  Seats fl.10\nLadies With  Escorts\nFREE\nSeating Plan at\nBush's OgW Store\n fe M\"\nmm non\n\"' THi;   NELSON  DAILY   NEWS,  NELSON,  at.\u2014   THURSDAY   MORNING,   MAY   il.\nmn\n'T&l&aWant Ad Pa_&.lfcllSfe\nFERRY TRIP FOR\nBOSWELL CHILDREN\nPLANNED FOR 25th,\nBOSWBLU B. C May -.0\u2014This\nyear la to tee a \u00bbl_j_.t change la tbe\npicnic uaually held on May 34. Tbe\nParmers' Institute la to give tbe\nchildren a tree trip on the\nterry on May 25. On their return\nthere will be games in the Lewis\nBay recreation ground, followed by\na danoe in the evening ln the\nMemorial hall.\nB. C. EGG LAYING\nfollowing Is the weekly report, No.\n28, of the Brltlbh ColumbU egg laying contest at the experimental [arm\nTotal\nTotal\nOwner             IV.\nHs. Boa\nIVllil.\nRHODE  ISLAND   Kills\u2014\nMaynard. w. ... 49\n55.4   638\n57S.8\nPenxer's tied\nFarm 66\n65.3 1013\n1201.5\nI-Usscll   D.   _.     6.1\n59.5  1.44\n1337.5\nKwee-lka P. Fir, 52\n55.4 1331\n1326 _\nWHITE WYANDnnh:\u2014\nt'Ut.   A       46\n48.3  1374\n1370.3\nMoaton.    John   47\n43.6  13.3\n1198 8\nExp. Station\nSidney .1\n31.8    Ml\n830.7\nHARKED _tOCKS\u2014\nEx. F.  Brandon 48\n468 1034\n976.-\n1 amble    Jaa.   .. 53\n68.1  1381\n1383.5\nPennington,   A. 46\n484  14\u00ab\n15007\n'Irafton   0.  B... 53\n68.2 1173\n1222.5\nWilliams,   Mn.   55\n35.7  1336\n1188 3\nItLAI'K   MINOR!  1-\nMartin.   S.   S.     27\n30.2     752\n813.7\n11 HIT.   LEGHORNS\u2014\nAppleby.   F.  W. 64\n62 3  1426\n15SS5\nH>litar Poultry\nPanru, Ltd. 57\n59 9   1333\n1351 -\nB,ye\u00bb Broe_..     :\u00ab\n38 4  1133\nii.se s\n( uM. r.  C.  D.  . 4:i\n55.7  1334\n1414 1\nChalmers,  J...    54\n63 2  1334\n1414 1\ns palmers,   R.W. 68\n58.2  1168\n11127\nDarbey  t, Sons tt\n48 4  1131\n13114\nlllederlrhs,   J.C. 47\n52 7    986\n1073 3\nDowd tt Moran 45\n61 2 1006\n1080 5\nrvsns.   F.  C.      68\n63 9   1463\nJ16578\nI arweatber   *W. 63\n51.7 1317\n1146 3\nForsyth.  W. ..   S3\n376  1138\n12663\norten,   J.   _  87\n34 1  1081\n8675\nHeady.   C.   ...55\n533 1374\n1277-\nHodgson at\nAisatshi  it\n60.- 1363\n1S8C.7\nHolland *\nSon.- 34\n37.4 1066\n1087.6\nHoman. M. L. .   48\n483 1317\n1231 5\nKennedy   Broa.   41\n41 -  1062\n1036-\n1 \u00bbw-on.   C.W.     58\n64 -  1346\n18*141\nLucille   p.   Fm. 41\n44.3 1118\n1158 1\nMetcalfe.   C.   P   54\n50.3   1228\n11881\nnobertaon, A.      45\n443  1031\n888.9\nrutlledge. MH. 55\n64 5  1387\n1680 2\nCt holleld.   A.W. 47\n53 6  1274\n1378 7\n:','horieid   M. 8. 39\n42.7 1088\n1124 J)\nKisnwm   Broa. 80\nI68.S 1234\n1S88.2\nfc'inltli   Bros  88\n593 1188\n1181.6\n: Tfi.it  J. W.     80\n60S 1038\n1044 3\nA efilwe, F. O. 87\n598 1268\n13881\nV anl.   lleo.   ...     40\n64- 1148\n1177 3\nWhiting.  W.  .     61\n515 1630\n1678 6\nV Urns Broe. ..   SO\n30.2  1070\n1036 1\nM IINDAS\u2014\nfulled.   F.  B.  .   68\n643  1031\n1009 4\nitlt tttt.- 63818 55688 9\niMiss Kathleen Cole\nof Fruitvale Is to\nBe Married Soon\nINDEX    IO    CLASSIFIED    AM\nAGENTS  WANTED\nAUTOMOBILES IOR HIRE\nAUTOMOBILE-.   WANTED\nAITOMOB1LLS  FOK HALE\nBEE..\nBIB THS\n-.UAH), LAUNCHES  FOB RENT\nHOA IS LAI N( Ills   FOK   KALE\nBOATS,  LAUNCHES  WANTED\n111 SINKS*    (li'l'OKH MITLS\ni   -NtKIEN   FOR   SALE\nCATS AND DOtiS FOK BALE\ns ATS   AND   DOOS   WANTED\nDEATHS\n\u2022 III ssMAKlM.\nFARM  AND  DAJKY  rRODUCH\nFARM  PROPERTY   FOR SALE\nFOK   SALE   OR   EXCHANGE\nFOK   SALE   OR   RENT\nfirnimied  ROOMS lor rent\nI I KMSIIEH   ROOMS  WANTED\nII RNI'll RE  FOR  KALE\nHELP   WANTED\nll\"l sis   FOK   RENT\nHOUSES  WANTED\nIN    MEMOKIAM\nINSIKANC'E\n\u25a0 Ntl.siMENTS\nLITERARY\nLIVESTOCK   FOR   SALE\nLIVESTOCK   WANTED\nLOST    AND    FOUND\nMARRIAGES\nMINIMI.   TIMBER.   LUMBER\nMISI M.I.ANEOl S\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR   SALI\nMIsCM I.ANEOI S    WANTED\n>ll sic Al.    INSTRUMENTS\nNOTICES\nNURSERY    PRODUCTS\nNIRS1NG\nI'l.KsllNAL\nPLANTS\nl-OI LTRY   AND   EGGS\nii.lll-r.KTY    FOR   SALE\nPROPERTY    WANTED\nRABBITS   FOR   SALE\nHANI HES   FOR   RENT\nROOM   AND   BOARD\nROOMS   TO   BENT\nROOMS  WANTED\nSCHOOLS\n^,11   \\ I IONS    H \\N 11.11\nSTORES   TO   RENT\nTKACHERS   WANTED\n(121\n(411\n(421\n(IU)\n(55)\n(Il\n(4.,\n(44\n(451\n(S0i\n(1)1\n(5.1\n(401\n(2)\n(7)\n(Hi\n(Ml\nIII\n{Hi\n(i.,i\n(IS.\n(481\n(101\n111,\n(-\u2022ll>\n<4I\n(331\ni.si\n(61\nrili\nin,\ncn i\n(3)\ncm i\n(29.\n121,\n(28,\nIU,\n(\u00bb)\n(41)\n(141\nMl\n(531\n(Ml\n(Hi\n(S3)\n(25,\n14*1\n(17)\nlis:\nud\n(13)\nWANT   ANU   CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne  insertion   10  cents s line\nmi inaerlons M> rent* a line\nOne   month   \u2022ISO   a   Hue\nMinimum  two lines\nNo  extra   charge   If   charged.\nBirth   notices   tree   of   charge\nDeuba,    marriage*    and    cards    of\nthanks.   30   oents   per   line\nFuneral   flowers   15   oents   per   line\nNews   cf   tbs   Day   Items   30   cents\nper   line.\nNO  EXTRA  COST  ll' CHARGED\nLEGAL NOTICES\nl'tmaoNAi.\n(i>\n\"LUNG   BALSAM\"\nFOB CATARRHAL BRONCHITIS,\nChronic Pulmonary Disorder*, Tuo-\nerculosla. Spitting ot Blood, also\nnutritious for weak heart and\nother infections, weaknesses and\ndiseases of the lungs. Price 11.61)\nper bottle prepaid. Also remedies\nlor every sicknesa and dlaeaw\nUrs. Anna l'enner, 75 Hallett St.,\nWinnipeg.  (52M>\nESCAPE FROM YOUR LONELY CIR-\ncumsiances. Love-hungry ladies\nand gentlemen everywhere are\nseeking tnelr \"Ideal mates,\" longing Ior fitting, congenial co.nL.ai_.\nlousblp. 'Distinctive Individualised service.\" (Scaled) Information free. Please write today. Box\n1J8-ND, Tiffin. Ohio, U. S. A.\n(MM\nMADAME    OEKiltlDE.    It 1.M.S.\nPALMIST. CLAIRVOYANT. PSYCHIC\nReader, t*6.. Jasper East. Edmonton, Alta. Twenty yeara' ex-\nficrlence, Blackpool, aouthport.\nlie of Man, Eng. (Four questions\nanswered for gl by mail).    .5266-\nTHE    MASTER    KEY    WILL    HELP\nsolve   every   problem.     Mailed   to\nany home on receipt of 2$c to\nhelp pa* postage. Address the\nMaster   Key    Exchange,   P.O.   Box\nNo,   377,   Lethbrldge.   Alia.,   (anada. (51D7)\nL. ROSSELLE. PALMIST. CLAIR-\nvoyant. Questions. Horoscope by\nmall, |l. send name, birth date\nyear. 3243 Quebec St., Vancouver\n\/ (6284)\nFEUALE DISORDERS AND OBSTET-\nrical Specialist. write to Dr.\nFromm, S. P.. 5152 Arcade Bldg.,\nSeattle.     Treatment   by   mall.\nMil\nIF YOU WANT A \"RICH WIFE!\"\nor \"Wealthy Husband!\" write Box\n100-EA.   Detroit,   Mich. (5246)\nHELP    WANTED\n(10)\nWANTED AT ONCE- DAI RYM AN\nMust be experienced milker\nWages 940 a month and board.\nAll year Job fox right man. Apply R. J. Boernma, Box 108. Trail,\nB. C \u00abR5\u00bb8)\nRELIABLE HELP FOR GENERAL\nhousework, woman preferred. Mrs.\nR. C. Crowe, C M. & S. Co.. Tadanac,   B.   C (5023)\nWANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED, RELI.\nable waitress at The Grill. Call\nbetween  10 and   11  a.m.      iSSnji\nWATER  NOTICE\nUSE   AND   STORAGE\nMTfATIONS   WANTED\n-ill*\nDRESSMAKING\n.Hi\nHlilllllll.l.llllillllllllllllMIIIMIIIIIIIIli\ni    ATTENTION     |\nPATTERN   DRAFTING\n\u2022nd DRESSMAKING\n5 M\u00bby be token up in \u25a0 short 5\nr        time   ot   our   school. S\nQ R A SP\n_; this   excellent   opportunity   to S\n=   earn  a   living   in   tea   dil-    \u25a0\nferent ways\n__     DAY end NIOHT CLASSES      5\n=      APPLICATIONS MUST BE       =\nIN* BV  MAY  31st. S\nINQUIRE   NOW\ng      at  the  ORIPP1N BLOCK,       g\nor PHONE 363L3.\ng <se_o) g\n\u25a0 illHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIimillll\nJM-.\nI ANAKIES   FOR   SALE\n(\u00bb)\n(jREEl.ALL'S .\"OR BEST CANAHlIi-,\nMads,    lovebirds,    breading    pairs.\ntut  Richards  at  Cordova,   Vancr.\n1511-4 >\n, AIHKRS    WANTED\n(1.1)\n.EACHERS WANTED\u2014JUNIOR ANu\nReceiving Teachers wan.ed (o.\nNelson Elementary Schools. Apply with coplea or Inspector's imports to Fred L. Irwin. Secretary.\n(_693i\nHK.M.HKU BOOMS, Ior rent    (13,\nFURNISHED    SUITE\u2014MBS.    COVE.\n507   Carb.     Phone  390R.       (561.,\nFURNISHED   SUITE,   807   SILICA.\n15666)\n.POMS\u2014To   Bent\n.OR RENT THREE ROOM APAR.-\nment furnished or not. 210 Fal,\nSt., Petty  Apartments. (553(1)\nURNISHED 'FRONT BEDROOM \u2014\nlor rent, gentleman preferred. 41.\nSilica St. (S5SD\nIOK   KENT\nJJI)\nSIX ROOM BUNOALOW FULLY\nfurnished. Terms reasonable to\ndependable tenant. For summer\nmonths. Box 084 Nelson, Phone\n346R1. (5567)\nCOTTAOE    WILLOW    POINT    FOR\nrent\u2014Mrs. I. c. Campbell. R. it\n1.     Phona   462L2. (51931\n.IVESTO. K    FOR   WALE\n__i_U\nFRUITVAU. B. (.'.. May 20-Mr.\n;\u25a0 id Mrs. W. Jonea arm family were\nMatters here en Smuday. the guesis\nof  Mr   aod  Mra.  J.  W.  Jones.\nMlsa Pearl Orieve and Mlse Dcro-,\nMy V\\\u00abe were visitors to Trail on\nS-turday.\nMrs. f. BUrtup. Mlaa Laura Startup, and O. Johneteo. .ere vlaltors\ni i Willow Feint on Sunday, st the!\nhome    of    Mrs     It.    Heedley.\nMrs. J. Clark and aon Reggie\nvno have been visiting here lor\na lew days, hare returned in their\n:iome in TraU.\nMl as Kathleen cole sf Trail, la\non a holiday here prior to her\nnarrtage. which takea place about\n'.he middle of June. She is the guest\n- her parents. Mr snd Mrs. E. B. I\nMi\nA Lepage of Park Siding was a\nvisitor   to  Frultvale  on  Monday.\nA Nelaon and W Barrlay are\nbusy loading out a car of ties for]\nhhlpment.\nMr. and Mrs. W M. bmlth and!\ndaughter Rober-a .^pent Sunday ln\nTrail, the gueat of Mr. and Mrs.\nj. M.  McLennan\nMra. M. Bmaley. Mr<- *\u25a0'\u25a0' H Smith\nend W. Bnaley of Trail were vuutora\n.ere on Sunday, the _ue-ts of Mr.'\nand  Mre.   A.   DeBruyn.\nKathleen Smith apent the week.\nend   ln   Trail.\nNolle, Is hereby given that the\nWeat Kootenay Power and Light\nCompany Limited, of Rosslsnd. BC.\nwlll app.y for a license to take and\nuse 6000 cubic feet per second anu\nio store 10.000 acre fee- of water out\ncr Kootenay River, which Hots\nwesterly and dratns Into the Columbia   River   about   Brilliant.   B.C\nT;ye storage dam will ba locale,\nabout 2000 feet from the N.E. cor.\nSi. 21 of Lot 4\u00bb9\u00ab. Kootenay District. The capacity of the resevolr\nto be created Is about 10.000 acre\nleet and lt will flood about loo\nacrea of land. The water wlll be\ndiverted from the a ream at a point\nabout 2000 feet downstream fr-rn\nNK. corner SI,. _8 or Lot 4508\nKootenav District, and will be uaed\nfor power purposes upon the lands\ndescribed aa appurtenant to tbe undertaking of the company, and\nthroughout the territory as grsn'ed\nby the charter and amendments\nthereto   of   the   Applicant.\nThis notice waa posted on the\nground on the 30th day of April\n1031.\nA copy of this Notice and an application pursuant thereto and lo\nthe \"Water Act\" will be filed In\nthe office of the Water Recorder\nat   Nelson,   B.C.\nObjection to the application may\nbe fl.ed with the said Water Recorder or with the Comptroller or\nWarer Rights. Parliament Buildings\nVictoria. B.C. wlthll. thirty daya\nafter the flrat appearance of thla\nnotice  In   a  locsl   newspaper.\nThe petition for Approval of the\nUndertaking as per Section 28 or\nthe Act. will be heard In the office\nof the Board at a date to be fixed\nhy the Comptroller and an; Interested person may rile an objection\nthereto In the office of -he Comptroller or of the Water Recorder\nof   tha   Dlatrlct\nWEST   KOOTBNAY POWER ft LIOHT\nCOMPANY   LIMITED\nc.  B   Smith\nAgent\nThe date of the first pub icatlon\nol   this  notice  Is  April  SO,  1931.\n(8230)\nIt HUMS\nWANTED \u2014 CARPENTRY WORK\nBuilding repairs, fencing, etc.\nShlng Ing a specialty. Satisfaction guaranteed. Prices reasonable. A. J. crack, cemetery Road,\nPhone 32SL1. (51871\nWANTED-WORK   BY   EXPERIENC-\ned carpenter.    Alterstlona and re-\npalra.     Rock   and   cement   paths\nApply G. Kitchener.    Phone 2181.\n(50871\nFOR   SALE    VERY   REASONABLE\u2014\nOood gentle work horse.   Good on\nranch or road. Also set of single\nharness.     F.   McCailley,   Taghum.\nB.   C. (8594,\n,*OR 8ALB-A OOOD HEAVY TEAM\nof horaee, nine years old. App.v\nMcDonald Cartage and Fuel Co..\n509    Ward    St. |6898|\nLIVESTOCK   WANTED\n_(8ll\nANTED\u2014CHUNKY FARM HORSE,\naround 1400 lba, P. A. 8chl_<.\nFarquler. (5590,\nREFINED WOMAN DESIRES Position, companion help, care invalid or children. Box 5597 N\u00bb'\u00ab>-\nDally Newa. (56971\n\"MltW?-Sh VKl\"   D\u00abtV   NEWJ   UANT\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0   M,\u00bb\nart.   Kaslo. (6591)   flllTK.   RESII.T8\u2014TR\\   ONE.\nBABY CHICKS. QUEEN QUALITY\nWhite Leghorns. Barred Rocks,\nRhode Island Reds of high egg\nproducers.     Write   foe   catalogue\n9ueen   Hatchery,  38   W.   Oord-ve,\nancouver. B. C. (3163)\nHIOH  PRODUCING   LARGE   WlttTE\nLeghorn Breeders from stock   un-\ngorted directly from Tom Barron,\nngland,    81.25    each.     Appleton\nBros. (6519)\nFOR SALE-100 COCKERELS. McDonald's Poultry Farm. Box 950\nNelaon. (6814)\nMISCELLANEOUS  FOR  SALE       (37)\nIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\ng Contractors' Equipment\ng Mine Machinery, Wood-\ng    Working Machinery\n_* New and Used Equipment\ng BOILERS,   ENGINES.\n=      PORTABLE    and   RADIAL\ng        DRILLS\u2014SAW  TABLES\nE       PUNCHES  AND   SHEARS\ng CONCRETE  MIXERS\n- MOTORS, BLOWERS. CABLE.\n= PUMPS. HOISTS. BELTING,\ng PULLEYS,   SHAFTINO,\nHANGERS,\ng   LATHES,    GRINDERS,     COMPRESSORS,\u2014  PIPE  AND\ng FITTINGS\u2014    TORCHES    AND\nTRE8TLES,\n=   DE   WALT   WOODWORKING\ng     MACHINERY-STEAM     AND\n= GAS    SHOVELS.   DRAGLINES.\nTUBING   ALL   SIZES\ng OliverMachinery  _\nCOMPANY\nZ Cor. 9th Ave. and 4th St. W. ;\nCALGARY, ALTA.\nS AGENTS   C.   P.   R.   SURPLUS  _\nEQUIPMENT\n(5616)   S\nliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiumiiiiiiiiiiiii\nEASTHOPE  ENOINES Z_\nMANUFACTURED IN VAN- -\nCOUVER.  A  model   suitable g\nfor Any  type  of   boat,   both C\nwork  and pleaeure.\nEASTHOPE  BROS.\n1747  West  Oeorgle  St.        g\nVANCOUVER\n(5618) g\nLOCKS AND KEYS OF ALL KINDS\nIf you have lost your keya don't\nworry. Write to us. or send us your\ndamaged lock, we will repair it, lit\nkeya   or   replace   another   lock   at\nverv   modeat   fee\nSafe expert and  locksmith  at your\naervlce  day  or  night\nHASKINS  _i ELLIOTT\n1027 w. Pender BE, Vancouver, b. c\n(8395)\nINDIAN MOTORCYCLES\nTo whom It may concern: Palmer\nRutledge of Trail, B. C. and Patmore Bros, of cranbrook. B. C are\nthe only authorlxed dealers to sell\nINDIAN MOTORCYCLES ln the\nKootenay District. If contemplating buying WRITE only to theae\ntwo dealera for literature.        (6618)\nMISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE\u2014 (Con )\nSECOND HAND PIPES AND FIT-\nttnga for aale. When you are In\nneed of used Pipes and Fittings\nany alee, Black or Galvanized,\nwrite to Swart. Pipe Yard. 320\nFlrat Ave. East. Vancouver. B. C.\nTbe largeat exclusive dealers ln\nreconditioned Plpea and Fittings.\n(52841\nSEND 181.00 AND RECEIVE Postpaid one pound our apeclal Fine\nor Coarse Cut Smoking Tobacco.\nCalgary Tobacco Co., Calgary. Alta.\n(We trade Poker Hands, Mac-\ndonald's and Tuckett'a Cards. Free.\none  for  one). (53691\nWRITE FOR CATALOGUE OF THE\nWorld famoua B.S.A. Cyclea or\nMotorcycles. Cycles from 656.00.\nMotorcyclea from 8275.00. Fred\nDee ey Ltd.. 424 Cordova St., Van.\ncouver,   B.   p. (6337)\nONE PLATE OLASS STORE FRONT.\none McLean double oven range\nand aale. All cheap. F. C. Archer,\nKaslo.   B.   C. (6612)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS. KEGS. BUR-\nlap sacks, white sugar sscks. MoDonald Jam Co. (4731)\nBABY   CARRIAGE.   OOOD   CONDI-\ntlon.   615.     Harrison.   60S   Mill.\n(5593)\nFOR   SALE   \u2014   HAMMOCK   COUCH\nand frame.    Phone 495L.      (6503\n. .lSCKLlANEOUS\n(19)\nIF YOUR CAR DOES NOT PULL\naee Shorty Peraaso. Open Saturday nlghta. Phone 10\u00ab or\n346R3. (M16,\nLOST   AM)   FOUND\n1311\nLOST\u2014ONE     PARKER     DUOFOLD\nevershup    pencil     at    mountain\natatlon   Tueeday   night.     Fitting\nreward.    Leave at 77 Taxi office.\n(6821!)\nP-^S?N 5*\u2122 TAKINO BASEBALL\nmitts from Hunden residence\nplease return. |5634>\ni-BOPEBTY   FOK  SAIJt\n__JU\n-IMIIMIIHMIMIMIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nDESIRABLE\nDWELLING\nCentral   location   500   block. =\n\u2122  Reduced    price    $2500.00.\nTerma   may   be   arranged. '\u2022\nThla    price    for    Immediate 5\nS aale\u2014 8 rooma, two Iota, lawn. \u2014\nS etc.    Thla  la   an   exceptional- s\n\\Z ly \u00abood  buy.\nH. E. DILL\nFire   and   Automobile        E\nInsurance\n506 Ward St. Phone 160 g\n(5619) g\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nNEW BUNOALOW JUST COMPLEr-\ned four roome and bath. Full\nconcrete foundation, garage ln\nbasement. First class location ln\nFalrvlew. Will nil cheap to re-\naponalbla party, on reaeonable\nt'\"!m. ^\"R1' lerser Harry Houston. P. O. Box 26, Nelson.    (6541)\nAUTOMOBILES  FOR  SALE\nUSED AUTO PARTS\nFor    Maxwell,    Chev.,    Ford,\nBulck,   Overland,   Oldamoblle.\nstudebaker,   Reo   trucks   and\ncars.    Second-hand   tires,   all\nsites.   Write   to\u2014\nWINNIPEO   SCRAP   AUTO\nWRECKING   CO.\n1409   portage   Ave.,   Winnipeg\n(6874)\nSAVE OVER 6700 ON THIS 1930\nBulck car. In flrat claaa condition. Six wire wheela, two new\nextra heavy cord tlrea never used.\nCaah talks, or terma can be arranged. Robert Lawson, Grand\nFolks. (66821\nCHRISTIE TRUCK AND CAR PARTS\n1630 West 1st Ave., Vancouver.\nB. C. Largest reliable wrecking\ncompany. Power planta. trailers\nand  parte. (5271)\n1920 NASH STANDARD SIX RE-\ngal sedan. Phone 302R or Box\n87,   TraU. (5817)\nNEW   1930   PONTIAC.   61000.     ROB-\nert Lawson. Grand Forks.    (5501)\nUOAT8,   LAUNCIIEB\u2014rjir_Bale\u2014(44)_\n\u25a0*OR SALE\u201428 IT. LAUNCH HULL,\nfour wicker chalra, galvanized Iron\nboat houae, two boat-house sites,\none gasoline drum. Apply Bex\n537 City. \"v  (5600)\nFOR  SALE\u2014SNAPPY  LAUNCH.  Apply Ken Cuthbert. Gen. Del   City.\n(5871)\n-OR  SALE\u2014CHEAP.   12  FOOT  ROW\nboat.   E. Harrop, Harrop.     (5533)\nINVESTMENT,.\nJW\n\u25a0J-i' in 111111111111111 f i r i \u2022 11111111\ng I have aome clients wishing S\nS to buy homes. If you wish to 5\ng sell\u2014kindly list your property  S\nMORTGAGES\nAlmost dally I have en- g\n5 qulrlea for mortgage loana\u2014 S\ng running trom 6100 and up- g\ng  wards\u2014interest  8  per  cent,    !\nOet your money safely in- g\n\u2014 vested before lntereat ratea =\nS   drop.\n| Chas. F. McHardy I\nNELSON,   B.   C. i\n(5263) g\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii\n(ATS    AND    UOHS    WANTED\nNTF.D     (50)\nWANTED\u2014PUPPY. ROUOH-HAIR-\ned terrier. Irlah terrier or Scotch\nt\"T*e\u00a3_.r.re't!\u2122-     Bo*   o\u00abl0   Nel\"\naon Dally News. i5610i\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS (M_\nFOR SALE\u2014BRUNSWICK PANA\ntrope, almos, nsw. with records\ncost 6195. walnut case cl,..\ntone. Wlll .,11 for 650*' P&'\n\u2122L- (6601)\nPRACTICE PIANO. WALNUT ftm\nish. 6110.00 caah or termi Ao\"\nply Maaon tt Rlsch. (5\u00ab7P|\nMISCELLANEOUS  WANTED (28)\nWANTED-BRITISH ARMY OF-\nfleers Flea Bag, In. good condition.\nBox  6811   Nelaon TSally  Newa.\nBUTCHER'S BLOCK, SCALES,\nkniw. Write P. O. Box 1017.\nTraU.   B.  O. (6616)\nWANTED\u2014ONI HORSE LOW WHUO.\nwagon.    Daniel. Procter.      (6668'\n.business and Professional\n Directory\t\nAccounting\nCHAS. F.\n[bllo Act\nPublio Accountant'\nMunicipal   and   Commr\nAsaayers\nE. W. Wlddowson, Bog Allot. Malm\nB.  C.    Standard   weatern  obanse!\nChiropractors\nDR GRAY. GILKER BLK..\nNELSON.\n(8M4)\nDR. MITTUN. X-RAY,\nCRANBROOK.\nDentists\nDR.  O    A   C.   WALLEY\u2014306  Medical Arta Building.    X-Ray. Nslson\n  ttttti\nDressmaking and  Designing\nDRESSMAKING    AND    DESIONINO\ntaught\u2014 Academy   of   Useful  Ana\nNo. 4.   Write to Mary E. Rodgar\"\n-Hfi\nBox  362,   Roaaland.\nEngineers\nS. MOORE AND B. D. DAWSON\nSrl15\u00bb\u00abu and    Land    Surve^S\nK.W.C.  Blk.,  Phone  286.  Nelson\n  16403)\nFlorists\nOrlizelle'a Grenhouses, Neleon.    Cui\nflowers and floral designs.    (6347,\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. \u2022*,.\nline cut flowers at all tlmis\nfloral designs,   phone 283.   (5j4t\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSE. Phon.\n343. cut flowers. Potted kS.\nand   Floral   Deslgna. 163491\nlnsmance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON. Real Estate, In-\naurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware.   Baker   St. (JSai,\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe   Ark,   dealers   in   second  hsnd\ngoods.     Phone    634 (5jjo,\n Transfer\nWILLIAMS'    TRANSFER\nBAOGAGE.  COAL AND  WOOD\n rhotss Ha      ^fiin\nATKINSON    TRANSFER.    Ooal  ana\nWood.   Long distance hau-fng\n-\"111\nRERTOLOezI\u2014To Mr. and Mrs\na B-TtolOttl at. Trail-Tadanac hospital.   May   10.   a  aon.\nFRANCO\u2014To   Mr.   aod    Mra    0\nFranco,    at.   Trall-Tadanac   hospital\nMav   12.   a   daughter.\nAll lhe world's a staye. and It's\nlargely up to us v;:.. ;'..t the per-\nr ..mancc Is cornedv or trsgedy.\nANADIAN  PACIFII\n,.  CANADAS\n'. GREATEST\nL STEAMSHIP\nFROM   MONTREAL-  UIEBEC\nMay  30      Meltta\nTb Belfaat-Glaagow\nMay 30     Empress or Austrslla\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\njuos   4 Montcalm\nTo    Havre-London-Hamburg\nJune 5   Duchess ot Bed.ord\nTo   Olaegow-Belfast-Llverpool\nJUNE 6     EMPRESS OF BRITAIN\nTo CHERBOURG-SOUTHAMPTON\nJune 10 \u2014 Duchess of York\n7b Cherbourg-Southampton-Antwerp\nJune   12    Montclare\nTo  Olaegow-Belfeet-Uverpool\nJune 13   Empresa of France\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton\nJune 17   Minnedoaa\nTo Glasgow\nJune 16 , Mentreee\nIts   Chertourg-Southft-npton-\nHemburg\nJune 19 Duchess or Richmond\nTo  ola-to\/w-Belleet-Llverpool\nJune  30 Empresa  of  Australia\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton\nASK     ABOUT     CONDUCTED    AI.L-\ntSfENSB     TOCBS     TO     ECROP1\nFROM VANCOUVER TO\n\u25a0UWAII-JAPAN-CHINA-MANILA\nJune I   \"~.~.'.Z~\"   Empresa  of Russia\nJulie 20          Empress of Japan |\nJuly   6       Empraaa  of  Asia\nASH run aAlUAue ,u uOAULlLU\nPull -alalia wltb  raua tad Peas-\npert Information from any agent or\nI. I. CARTER\nSALE OF WORK IS\nSUCCESS,  PROCTER\nPROCTER. B C . Msy 20\u2014A aue-\nrrv>ful aale of work was held at tbe\nhome rt Mn .1. Bichan laat week.\nA flower contest was won by Mrs.\nJ. sewell. After which Mn. J.\nHurst presented Mrs. M McLeod.\nwho reoently left Procter, with a\n.:?-.'\u00ab- dish on behalf of tee united\nchureh Sunday achool Mrs. Oeorge\nKinney also made a speech thanking Mrs. McLeod for her splendid\nwork in the Ladlea aid. Thoee\nprc.-er.t were Mrs. Donaldson. Mrs.\nII Cllft. Mrs. J. Hurst. Mn. J\nSewell. Mra H McCarthy. Mrs.\nW. Muirhcsd. Mra. T Malr, Mrs.\nCarlson. Mrs. George Kinney. Mrs\nJ. MacKinnon. Mrs. N. McLeod. Mrs.\nM. MacKinnon. Mrs M MacLeod,\nMra. H, Johnaon. Mra. W. A. Ward\nMra. E. W. Breach. Mrs. P. Bennett.\nMrs. R. Walton, Mrs. Swope, Mra.\nE. Merrifield. Mrs. Conrad, Mm.\nNoakes Mrs Crosby, Mrs. Hudson\nMrs Brenllaon. Mrs. Tanton, Mrs\nLewis. Mlas J. MacLean. Mlas Lena\nlanyer. Mlaa Olive Mulrhead, and\nMlaa Stella  Crosby.\nMorning Train\nNelson\u2014Trail\nLv. Nelson 10 A. M.\nArr. Trail 12:25 Noon\nDaily Except Sunday\n.. 6. CARTER, D.P.A.\nNelson, B. C.\n fc|3\n\u25a0*r\nmmllll NEUON DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON,  B.  C.  \u2014  THTBSDAT  MOBNtNO, MAT  It,  1*81*\nMarket and Mining News\nSANK STOCKS GO\nFOR A SLIDE ON\nMONTREAL LIST\nStocks Follow  Lower Trend\n\u2022f the New York Market;\nBrazilian R-illles\nMONTRBAL, \u2022 May 30\u2014Pollowlng\n_e lower trend ln New Tork prloes\nn the Montreal stock exchange to-\n\u00bby after showing early strength,\nurncd downward with 14 Issues\nit-Wishing new low levels for the\near or longer, ot whlaa four were\nank stocks.\nBrazilian Traction led the rally\nHth a 1^ point gain at 18 while\nlontreal Power, lntarnatl.nal Nlokel,\nSanaditn PeoKlo and Dominion\nIrldge wen fractionally higher. Bell\nPelephonc featured the late trading\nNth a _'\/. point hreak to 134, a\nWW low, while Consolidated Smeit-\n\u00ab\u2022 also touched a new low at 84,\ntown 8 pointa.\nAmong t.e closing prloes were:\ntbltlbl preferred, up IH st 10tt;\nCanadian Car, up 4 at 19Vfc; Can-\nIda Steamship preferred, ott ty, at\n\u2022H; Oanadlan Pacific, up V_ st\n6H; Dominion Textile, up 1 at\n7H; D. minion Bridge, H higher\n4 87*4; Quebec Power, up 1 at\n6; Steel of Canada, % up at 38;\nIteel preferred, up V, at 80*4;\nHtawa Power, 3 higher at 93;\nnd Southern Canad- Power, up 1\nX 381,.\nTotal aales 34.333 shares; bonds\n87,880.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS. May 30\u2014 Plour\nnehanged. Shipments 28,880. Bran\n4.00 to 1440.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 nor., 76\u00bbi to 81',;\nre. l red durum 84*4; May it',;\nuly 68H  Sept. 83',.\nOorn\u2014No. 3 yellow S3 to M.\nOata\u2014No.  3  white  36V.   to 38%.\nFlax\u2014No.  1,  1.49-4   to  1.68H.\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, May 30\u2014Canadlsn Pa-\nIflo 37V,; Bralllan Traction 118*4;\nA. Tob. C3 13a 8d: Die. \u00a33 14a Od:\n>un!op Rubber 6s: Gramophone\n_ 10a; Hudson Bay \u00a31; Jlydro Elec-\nno 619%; Imp. Chen.. 19s Od;\ntnperlal Tobscco \u00a34 18s 3d; Int,\nI. 8c I. 81%: International Nickel\nIt..; Shell T. As T. \u00a33 8s; Vlck-\nrs es Sd.\nT.H.WATERSecCO.,LT_>\n\"k. cry thing in liuikuiig\nMaterials\"\nBuilders and Contractors\nNELSCN, R C.^\t\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW TOEK, May 80\u2014 Copper\nquiet; electrolytlo spot and future t.\nIron   quiet,   unchanged.\nTin easy; spot and learby 33.10;\nfuture 98.80.\nLead study; spot New Tork 978;\nEast St. Louts 8.80.\nzinc quiet; Bast St. Louis spot\nand future 8,88.\nAntimony 8.60.\nForeign bar silver 17V4 oents.\nAt London:\nst.ndard oopper, spot \u00a388 19s ed;\nfuture (80 Ss; electrolytic, spot \u00a341\nIts;  futures  \u00a343   16s.\nTin, spot (104; future (109 7s Sd\nLead, -pot (11 10s; future \u00a311 19s.\nzinc, spot (10 74 Sd: future\n\u00a310  lit.\nTORONTO MINES\nTRAMFIRMER\nMost Stocks Are Represented\nin the Loss Column; Oil\nLeaders Down\nTORONTO. May 30 (OP)\u2014Somewhat firmer price trend developed\ntoday on the stand rd Mining exchange, although most stocks were\nrepresented ln the loss column.\nT,:e gold list wu mixed. Bales volume fell to 310,676 shares. Noranda\nclosed up 36c to |31 and International 35c to 613. Coast Copper and\nSherritt oordon each made new lows\nMclntyre wae off 39c to 831.79:\nLake Shore down 30c to 83775.\nMining Corporation moved up lata 8831.\nLeaders ln the oil group were\nprominent ln the loss column and\nfour in the' list made new lows\nfcr the day. Imperial fell _So to a\nlow of 910.78 and British American\ndown 50c, closed at Its low of 9890.\nWHEAT MARKET\nIN A NERVOUS\nMOOD, CHICAGO\nCHTOAOO.   May   20   (By   John   P.\nBoughan, Associated Prets marltet\neditor)\u2014Active buying with sellers\nso roe, accompanied ijptunu In\nwheat prices totjty. The msrket wss\nnervous over unconfirmed rumors\nof ft revolution in Ruislft ana be\ncause of predicted frost tonight ln\nKansas and Nebraska. Crop damage\nfrom freezing temperatures in Canada was also % bullish fsetor. nd\nthere wtrt advices of crop deterlora\ntion In southwestern Kansas owing\nto lack of moisture.\nWheat closed lrregulsr, % cent\noff to 71 up, corn at >; decline to\n\\_ advance, oats s \u00abhade to H higher, snd provisions varying from 2\ncents setback to 7 osnts gain.\nDAYS\nSAVED\nWhatever the need of speed is\u2014 ripening\nCrops \u2014 the building of a road \u2014 ground\ncondtions \u2014 \"Caterpillar\" gives that added speed, with satisfaction.\ntt\nte\nCATERPILLAR\nHaa issued some interesting booklets on\nSummer Work \u2014 Ask for them.\nMORRISON TRACTOR & EQUIPMENT CO.. LIMITED\nSIAIK1N     Sf       V A Nt OU VI H\nPRECIOUS METALS\nAT FOREFRONT ON\nVANCOUVER BOARD\nModest   Recovery   of   Other\nStocks During the Morning Is Not Sustained\nVANCOUVER, B. C, May 20.\u2014A\nmodest recovery during the morning\ntrading on the Vancouver stock\nmarket, Wednesdsy, wu not continued through to ths final session bell, and slight losses appeared ln tbe majority of Issues In the\nclosing analysis. An exception to\nths esster tendency was ths precious metal group, which, under\nthe leadership of Pioneer, advanced\nmoderately.\n. A temporary upsurge in early\ntrading on eastern exchanges stiffened prices on tbs market hero at\nthe outset Premier, Pioneer and\nLorne wers strong features snd sll\nreached highs for the day prtir\nto the noon gong. Aside from\nC and E., quotations were weaker\nIn the oils division, but offerings\nwere  light  and  losses small.\nDuring the afternoon session the\nmarket dragged and transactions\nconsisted mainly of odd-lots. Lome\nand A. P. Consolidated accounted\nfor most of the afternoon activity,\nwith A. p. Cbnsolldated under\nliquidation pressure, while Lorne\nhardened from a fractional setback.\nPIONKKR    FIRM\nPioneer opened firm at 2 20 *nd\nadvanced sharply to 2.28, to clcse\nst the opening price, & net gain of\nfour cents. Premier sold up to\n73 cents, jut eased to 71 cents on\nthe closing bid. up one cent above\nTuesday's end prloe. Oregon Copper rallied one cent to 1\\_ cents.\nwhile Btg Missouri tumbled a like\nsmount to a new low at 27 cents\nbid. Lorne closed unchanged At\n9H   cents.\nProspects of royalties from Merland attracted continued support,\nto C. and E.. and tbe atock closed\none wnt higher *t 38 cents, after\nreschlng a high for this movement\nat 41 cents. East Crest fell three\ncen'e to 27 cents, while A. P. Consolidated at IS cents and Maylnncl\nat 34 cente dropped one cent each.\nA brief buying flurry during the\nopening advanced Amalgamated\nnearly ene cent to OH cents. Crow's\nNest closed  steady at 0  cente.\nTORONTO, May 20 (CP)\u2014Prloe\nrecessions were carried further today on the Toronto stock exohnnge.\nSome resistance, however, appeared\nand leaders msde good gains. Aggregate sales amounted to 29.043 shares.\nBell Telephone broke to a new\nlow of 133. off 6*4 pointa. BraeUlan\nTraction was up 1*H to dose at 10-\nC. P. RH gained V. to 28H. Page\nMersey closed at another new low of\n7m with a net loaa of 'i- Steel\nof Canada gained !\u00ab\u2022 Abltlbl wss\nof. Is, to a new low of ltfc. Cockshutt Plow found a new low at 5,\nand closed   %  higher.\nInternational Nickel wu up '\u00bb\nto 13**. Smelters cloeed at a new\nlow of 84. off 3-V British Amerlcsn\nOil wu off H to close st a new low\nof 9%. Service Btstlons closed at a\nnew low of 13-\nTORONTO STOCKS\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAllegheny   \t\nr>'.\ni*\nIH\nAllied    Chemical\nii\u00ab',\n114',\nH7\u00abi\nAndes   \t\nit1*\nii'.\nAmerlc    Cen\n101\n15 H\n96 ii\nAmer For Power\n30 >i\n28 H\n2\u00bbii\nAm Smelt tt Re\n31H\nlltt\n\u25a0iv.\nAmer  Telephone 173*.\nIM'.\n168\nAmerlc    Tobacco in1.\n112',\n111\nAnaconda    .\nM'i\n35N\n36\nAtchison   \t\nIS\n148',\n149\nBaldwin   ..\nIS\n'  14',\nIM.\nBait    __    Ohio\n56',\n54',\n581,\nBendlx   Aviation\n'\u00bb*.\nI6H\n17\nBetb   Bteel\n.5\n43\",\n\u00ab**',\nCanadian    Paclf\n\u25a0-_',\n36'a\nits,\nrerro   de   Peaco\nIt\n16\nChen  Ji  OHIO  ..\n37\n35 >,\n35'.\n-luyaler  ...    .\nix>\n16-\u00ab\nIt;\nCon   Oaa   N   Y\nIt Pi,\n\u00ab',\n69',\nCorn  Products ..\n.-'\u2022\n59'i\n60\nC   Wright   pfd..\n* 4H\nDupont\n85\n771,\n77 a,\nEaatmnn    Kodak 143\n137\n1:18',\nErie        \t\nl\u00ab\\\nJl'i\nI6\u00bb,\n.ord   Inillah  . .\n13\np-ord  of Canada\nll'i\n\u2022int Nat Storca\nMU\n47',\n41 ti\nereeport   Texaa.\n26>,\n35\nam\n3\u00abneral   Motor,\nVV,\n36\n3IU\nGeneral   Kectrio\n41'.\n39 H\n30 '\u00bb\nSeneral Fooda ..\n40\n46',\n46',\nDold   Dual   \t\n30 H\n_8\u00bb,\n39\nJrenhj\n11\\\n13'.\nI-!l\nOreat North pfd\n\u25a0I!*\" .\n46'i\n49'j\nJreat   W   Sugar\n\u00ab',\n8',\n6',\nBowo   Sound\n17H\n171,\n17',\nfludaon   Motora..\n15',\n15',\n!5'i\nIna    Copper\n11\n6'.\n61.\nInter   Rap   Tran\n3Hi\nInternet   Nickel\n13\n12\nUH\nInt  el  _ Tel  ..\n3\u00ab>i\n94 *i\n25%\nKelly   Spring   .\n1\n1%\ni   |\nKenn Copper ...\n111\n19i.\nIS',\nKreege S 8 \t\n-\u00ab%\n26',\n20',\nKroegg   tt  Toll-\nan,\n31\n31 *i\nMack   Truck   ...\nas\n36\nMilwaukee   pfd.\n7H\n7'i\n7H\nf.aah   Motora\n38',\n38\n38\nMat   Dairy   Prod\n41\n40\n40\nK   Power   it   Lt\nas\ndew Tork oentr\nits.\n63\n84'.\nPaclf  Oaa *  El\n45%\n44'.\n45\nPackard > Motora.\n71,\n6%\n\u2022 74\n.enn  H rt  \t\n4B\n4Si,\n45>,\nPhlllipe  Pete\n6'i\n6\n6H\nRadio corpora\nIii,\n15',\n16',\nRadio   Keith  Or\n161,\n16\n16\nRem Rand  ..._.,\nT\u00ab\n7'i\nRock   Island\n31\nH \u25a0\n35',4\nSafeway   Stores.\n60\n41.\n48\n3 Loula tt S  F\n.    II\n16',.\n16 H\nShell Union oil\nS\n4H\n-.'.\nSinclair  Con\n8>,\n111\n\u2022 '.\nSouth   Calif   Ed\n44\nIJ'l\n48'a\nSouth    Pacific.\n78'i\n75\n77 ti\nitan Oil or Cal\n35*,\n35',\n35i,\nStan Oil of Ind\n24>i\nStan Oil of N J\n39\n34\",\n34',\nStewart   Warner\n11\n10',\n10',\nStudebaker  \t\n19\n17*\n16'.\nTexaa Corpora\nJ1H\n30'\u00ab\n20',\nTexaa   Oulf   Sul\n40\n371,\n38\nUnion Carbide ..\n4IH\n46 S\n47',\nUnion   Oil   Calif\nin.\n16',\nllnlon Pacific\nWl%\n153'.\n1531,\nUnited   Aircraft.\nam,\n27 'i\nJl',_\nU S Pipe k Fdy\nm.\n23 U\n33',\nU  S  Rubber  .\n131,\n12',\n13.,\nU s Steel  \t\n101 \"i\n07';\n\u2022IH\nWest Electric\n63i,\n51\".\n60<i\nWillys   Overland\n\u00abH\n4\n41,\nYellow Truck .\n0\n8'.\nIH\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. of Canada, Ltd.\nTKAIL\u2014BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nManufacturer. o\u00ab Ammonium   Phosphate\nELEPHANT\nBrand\nCHEMICAL   FERTILIZERS\nSulphate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\nHOLD BY NATIONAL FRUIT CO.. NELSON\nProducer*   and   Reflnera   of\nTADANAC\nBrand\nEIACTBjOLXTIC\nLead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\nEn route for Europe, Dr. R. C,\nWallace, president of the University\nof Alberta, paaaed through flul'.a\ntoon Bunday night ln s private car.\nAttached U the ume train wes B\nT. Chappel), ffneral superintencl^nt\nof C. N. B. for Britlah Columbia,\nand formerly of SasTtatchewan.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nGRAIN,\nSTOCKS.   BOND!,   COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nNew   York,   Montreal   anl   Vancouver   Sleek   I irli.ru.,.  rhlcio\nBoard of Trade, Wlnnlp.i Oraln\n.Arhanie,  and  ether  Iraflai\netrhanj-ea.\nrRIVITE   llllll\norricii:\nVancouver,  npokane.   Seattle\nSIX ISSUES HIT\nNEW LOW ON THE\nMONTREAL CURB\nMONTREAL, Mar 30\u2014With alx\nlaauea declining to naw low levela\nfor tba currant year, prices on the\ncurb meket continued lower today.\nNew Iowa included Beau har noia off\nl'-i at 6, Britlah American Oil down\n44 at 144, Dominion Btorea 14 lower\nat 1114, Dominion Tar preferred\noff si at 8144, Imperial OU down\n1 at 1044, and Paia Hereey H\nlower at 71H,\nOther loaeea included Commercial\nAlcohol.. Commonwealth Petroleum\nand International Uttlltlee \"A\" while\nfractional advance, were made by\nDlettllere 8ea|_am, International Petroleum and International UU11-\ntlea   \"B\".\nDomo Mine, cloeed at 110.75, off\nII.IS, while Noranda advanoed 85\noenta at 621.35. Abana and Slscoe\ncloaed fractionally hieber.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nLEADERS GAIN\nBell Telephone Breaks to a\nNew Low; CP.R. Gains\nOne  Half\nAbana    -\nAmo     -\t\nAJax    \u2014\t\nAmulet \t\nA P Conaolldated \t\nAaaoclated   \t\nArea -\t\nBaldwin\t\nBaltlo   Oil   -\t\nB A Oil\nBaa. Mttali  \t\nBldgood     \t\nBarry  Holllnger  \t\nBig MIMOurl   .\u2014\t\nCalmont   \t\nC and B Und.\nCcniral  Manitoba \t\nChemical   Research ir\"\n.09\n04'.\n1.-9\n-6'i\n16\n.16\n.01'4\n.01\n04\n9.50\n105\n.0514\n.13\nXI\n.10\n.85\nm\nNEW YORK LIST\nIS SPOTTED BY\nUNEASY ISSUES\nShares Open With Rally But\nWeary Towards End of\nSession\nNEW TO\u00abC. May 20 <AP>\u2014The\nstock market was spotted with weak\nlaauee today, but flrmneaa of the\nrail and ateel aharea put aome lew\nsombre   touches   Into   tbe   picture.\nSharea opened with a rally that\ngave promiae of tmpreaalve technical\nrecovery, but wearied when \u00bblfr_* of\napeclal weakness bevan to appear.\nRaila marched up 1 to 4 pojnu ln\nthe morning advance and although\nthe; sagged later the group closed\nhigher, in contrast to the utilities\nand Industrials. The markets average\nloes, according to the composite,\nwas less than a point ln a 2.300,000\nshare  turnover.\nHeavy selling In American Telephone proved unsettling during the\nlater hours, especially slnoe that\nissue had rallied a couple of points\nearlier ln the day. On the break lt\ndropped OH to 164Vi. the lowest\nslnoe 1037, closing 2'^ above the\nbottom, for a net loss of 3.\u00ab.\n4.KNKKAI,  MOTORS  HEAVY\nOther epongy issues included Oon\ntlnental and American Can, Coca\nCola, Ameif.'an Waterworks, Fox\nFilm, Herahey Chocolate, Westing\nhouse, fastman Kodak and American Ice.\nOeneral   Motors   wu   heavy.\nNet gains in the rails were email\nbut the group rallied from lta lows\nof the day when Southern Pacific's\ndirectors voted the regular dividend.\nThat  issue  was up  IVt  net.\nPennsylvania, which opened at 48,\nclosed  45,4,  a fractional  gain.\nForeign currencies were about\nateady. Sterling cables sagged nominal; from yesterday's 19S1 high.\nShanghai was firm with tho narrow\nrecovery   In   sliver.\nAlthough cross currents continued\nin the bond market there were indications that the strength which\nhas been concentrated recently ultra\ngilt-edge issues waa Inclined to\nfbread.\nUnited States treasury and Liberty\nloans again Hhowed the most consistent strength closing generally\nhigher   after   moderate   sales.\nDr. Irvin Balrd and Mlas Jill\nCrossley Batt. Canadian ethnologlit,\nleft Darjeellng. Bengal, for Blkkhlm\nTibet, where they will seek further\nInformation on a lost raoe of chal-\ndeana, discovered In 1921 by Miss\nBatt.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nMt-tim\nBid   i Ask\nBig   Mlaaoun    ,... 27       .29\nDuthle  .06\nOeorge Copper  50\nOeorgla  River       .da1\/*    .03 >i\nOolconda        .29\nIndependence      .01\nInt. C & o      .10\nMorton Wollesy   \u201e   .01\nNoble   Plve    04\nOregon Copper      .07ft\nPremier    71      .73\nPend   Oreille    _.   .75\nporter Idaho __. _...   .04      .08\nReno Oold  \u201e    Jl      .SS\nRuth Hope    .08\nBllvercree?  \u201e m   .02\nSnowflake       ,02ft    .03%\nOILS\nA P Conaolldated  -..      .IS\nAssociated    \u201e   _.       .10\nO and B Lends        J8\nCommonwealth    _,....-      .13\nDalhousle           .28\nEastcrest              .30\nFreehold      06\nHargal    _ _         .08\nHome Oil   \u2022.       .80\nIllinois Alta \u201e       .01ft\nMcDougall Segur Ex         .04\nMcDougall Segur New  04\nMercury    \u201e 17ft\nMill  City    10\nMayland    _. 40\nOkalta   New \u201e       .06\nSterling Paclflo  _ 10\nVulcan    *     .10\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA.  May  20\u2014Canadian  egg\nmfarkets dontlnue to display a\nsteady tendency today although there\nIs some Indication of demand drop\nping off.\nToronto: Brokere are making sales\nof graded Ontario shipments at\nextras 20 to 21; firsts 18; seconds 15.\nMontreal: Bales of prairie egga\n___ reported at extra* 21; flrate 13;\nseconds 16. Carlot shippers are now\nasking as high as 23 cents for extras\nChicago: Spot 17ft; May fresh\n19ft;   November   refrigerators   23ft.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Que,. May 20\u2014 Butter,   eggs   and   cheese   ateady.\nCheese, Ontario 9\\ to 10; Quebec 9ft.\nButter, No. l finest fresh 20*>4\nto  31.\nEggc fresh specials in cartons\n27, fresh extra* In cartons 25, fresh\nfirsts   in   cartons   22.\nBritish Columbia freah extras nnd\nflrata, in carlot*, were unchanged\nat aa to 33 cents and 19 to 20\ncents   a   doen   respectively.\nSelfishness   Is  the  thunder  atorm\nthat   curdles   ths   milk   of   human\nGASOLINE TODAY MAKES A STRm\nCLAIM TO BE CHEAPEST COMWOPITY\nOF THE GENERAL AND EXTENDED W\ni-\n;i Worth Gasoline Today Ig\nWorth $1.42 in Other\nCommodities\nOaapllne vaa one of the lut products to advanoe ln prloe and ona\nof the tint to ahow the effect of\nreceding prlcee. At the end of 191b.\nwhen the Oreet War had been w\nlng for more than a year, gaeoltne\nwu eelllni at ltt polnte below\n1913 prlcee, while the average price\not other commodities had nun 10\npointa, and, when the buatneaa de-\npreulon began ln 1939, guollna\nthroughout Canada waa already idling well below the 1913 level,\nwhile at that time the average\nwholesale price of 336 commodities\nwu nearly DO per cent higher\nthan ln 1913.\nOaaollne today, despite the fact\nthat lta consumption hu multiplied many timet alnce 1913, makes\na strong claim to be, by companion\nwtth the general prloe level, our\ncheapest commodity of general and\nextended use. It Is now, and hu\nbeen for four years, selling at prlcee\nbelow those which prevailed during\n1913, while tbe averse, pries of\n236 major commodltlea Is still well\nabove th*  1913 level.\nTaking 100 u the 1913 Index figure foe the average wholesale commodity price, the 1930 Index lor\nthe 336 principle products was 135.7.\naccording to the Dominion bureau\nof statistics, or an average advance of 35.7 points. The sverage\nwholesale price index ln 1930 for\ngasoline, on the other hand, was\n88.9. a decrease of 11.4 polnte from\nthe 1913 price. In other words, et\nthe end of 1930 the average wholesale price of commodities wm iiicli\nthat It coat slightly more than\n91.36 for what coat II ln 1913.\nwhile 88 cents in 1930 purchased as\nmuch guollne at 91 ln 1913.\nThe average price of the 339\ncommodities rose shsrply from 1014\nuntil, ln 1930. the peak year: It\nreached 3414 or nearly two and a\nhalf times the pre-war price. Gasoline m th* seme period dipped\ndown to 83.6 ln 1915. or 1S.4 points\nbelow the 1013 price, and never\nrose higher than 171, Its peak In\n1930. In other words, general commodity prlcee In 1930 Increased\nmore than twice aa much u eas-\nollne, and were atlll 47.1 pointa\nhigher at the end of 1930.\nCommodity groups havs been\nvsrlously affected ln the price flue\ntuatlona.     While    the    average   of\nthe 388 commodltlea rose to 343.3\nln 1930. sugar and Its products, tor\nlnatanoe, reached In the aame year\n403.4, or mors than four times tha\npre-war price. Furnltuie tn 1920\nwu 333.5, cotton fabrics were 330.1.\nNo. i Manitoba wheat wu 3947.\nflour and milled products wert\n385.3 and hardware wu 384.1, compared with gasoline at 171. Petrol-\nsum refiners never operated on the\nexaggerated cum* of general com.\nmodlty prloss, but wer* alwayt operating well Below th* general levels.\n\u25a0van wheat, which hu been very\nmuch In tb* publio eye, bad sn\naverage price during 1930 of more\nthan six points above tbt 1913\nprice '\"el. Ooal ww 97.7 points\nhigher    than    In    1918.    furniture\n94.4 points higher, meets and poultry    58.5    higher,    cotton    tabrlca\n58.5 higher, hardware 53.3 higher.\npaints wer* higher by 49.1, and\nateel wu up 39.1 points. Tbe average Increase for the 14 commodities waa 46.7, while guollne for\n1030 ahowed a decrease of 114,\npoints from th* 1913 price.\nBlnce 1930 there hav, been further\nreductions ln commodity prices,\nwheat particularly taking a big\ndrop; but wltb tbt rtoent cut ln\ngasoline prices the poeltlon of guollne In relstlon to the otber oro-\nducts ls substantially the same aa\nIt wu In December, 1030. At -.bat\ntime the Index for the 938 products\nwu 47.1 polnte higher than that for\ngasoline. At the end of arch, 1081.\nIt wu 43.3 polnte higher.\nIn other worda, the value a motorist recelvea when ht buys 11\nworth of guollne today would cost\nhim 8143 lf he were buying the\nother   commodltlee.\nFROST REPORTS\nGIVE WINNIPEG\nWHEAT A GAIN\nWINNIPEO. May 30 iCP)\u2014\u00bbd-\nvahces of H to on* cent wer*\nmarked up on the whest msrket today on the strength ot frost reports\nIn  the weat. __      \"\nMay wheat climbed over the 60-\ncent mark again after dropping to\n59'i Monday. It closed at OOVfc\ncents per bushel today. July finished\nat   60'4   to   >\u00bb   and   October   93(i\n\u00b0C_th Wheat and coarse grain prlcea\nwere practically unchanged Irom\nyesterday.\nClerlcy\nDome  .   \u2014\nDalhousle   . ..\nPalconbridge\nHome  Oil  .\nKarker  Gold\nHowey  \t\nHolllnger   .\nHudson   Bay\no;t\n1100\n.35\n136\n.45\n.03\n3t\n710\n4 00\ninternational   Nickel        13.00\nKlrkland   Lake .\u2014       -7-\nLake   Shore    27.75\nMacassa \t\nManitoba Basin\t\nMalartlc     \u2014\nMclntyre\nMining   Corporation\nMurphy   \t\nNewbec   \t\nNew   Imperial   Oil\nNipisslng\t\nNoranda    ~\t\nOid  Colony\n.33\n.03!,\n.06\n33 00\n320\n.03\n.03 'j\n11.00\n110\n30.90\n.01\n.01\n.60\n.70\n.16\nPeterson Cobalt \t\nPend   Oreille   \t\nPremier  Oold  \t\nSan   Antonio   \t\nHherrlt   Gordon   \t\nSudbury  Bum   \t\n3lscoe\t\n3t. Anthony \t\nTech   Hughes 7.05\nThompson   Cadallac   _.\nVipond   \t\nVentures   \t\nWngbt Hargruvet \t\nWalte  Ackerman\n60\n.44\n.07\n.90\n.46\n3.80\n1.05\nWINNII'r:.. (iRAIN\nWINNIPEO, Man, Msy io\u2014Oraln\nquotations:\nOpen High Ix>w Clou\nWheal;\nMsy    ..       .   50\", 60-, 50'\u00ab   60'i\nJuly          60'!, 91*, 60'.    OPi\nOct     63*. 63', U3>s    63!,\nOaU:\nMay      28', 28', _T, 2S's\nJuly      3ej, 28*-, 28 36H\nOcl  'it's 30 29', 30\nBarley:\nMay      30\\ 31 30-, 30'i\nJuly       31      UM   II      31H\nOct    33i,i    aas    33',    ill.\nFlax:\nMay      106V. __,.,_ 1M     107.4\nJuly      107i\u00ab 109     107'n 109\nOct  Ill',* 113     111      113\nRye:\nMay        34'i   35      .14',   _.'_\nJuly    36      30'.   HU    :i5*.\nOct ;iU'i   3b',   m_   it'.\nCash  Prices;\nWheat: No. 1 Hani, 61; No. 1 Nor,,\n60(i; No. 2 Nor., 57V_; No. :l Nor.,\n83.,; No. 4. 49',; No. 5. 45i,; No.\n6, 40',,; feed. .4. track, 60',, No. 1\nDurum. 7_v ,,!.enlngn per lon,\n60 cents.\nDOMINION I,I\\.;ST0CK\nWINNIPEG. May '.'0- Receipts:\nCattle 780; calves 190; hogs 1430;\nsheep   5.\nSteers, up to 1050 Uss. Good und\nchoice 96.00 to 95.60.\nSteers, over 1060 llw Good and\nchoice   15.00   to  96.73.\nHelfera\u2014Oood and Oholog 94.50\nto  15,50.\nFed calvea\u2014Good and choice 85.60\nto  86.00.\nCowa-Oood.   93.75   to  14.35.\nBulla\u2014Good   92.36   to   93.50.\nstocktr and feeder steera\u2014Oood\n94.00   to   84.35.\nStock cows and heifers\u2014Good\n93.00   to   94.00.\nVeal calves\u2014Good and choloe 17.00\nto  9850.\nHoga\u2014Select bacon 9100 per head\nprem.; bacon 97.60; butchers 6100\nper  head  discount;   sows  95.00.\nLambs\u2014Oood handyweight 98.00\nto  99.60;   good   heavies  97:60.\nSheep\u2014Oood heavlea 93.80 good\nhandywflch.l    \u00bb4 00    to    94 60.\nWhere Could You Find\nA Finer and More Complete\nAUTOMOBILE SERVICE\nAT LOW COST\nTHAN\nTHAT\nOFFERED\nBY\nKootenay Motors\nEvery kind ul Repair Job to all makes of cam.\nby certified graduate mechanics, at lower cost\nto you.\nTOWING SERVICE as offered by the Kootenay Motora is excellent. A phone call to 117 will\nbring Kootenay Motors' Powerful Wrecker to\nyom' assistance.\nOur Gas Pump and Motor Oil Service is pleasing thousands of motorists. Shell Gasoline and\nGolden Shell Motor Oil is available here at all\ntimes. Your trial of this service will make you\na regular customer.\nGUARANTEED\nm-WS\nSold by Kootenay Motora. are low in price.\nTheir prices are set very low, and advertised\ncontinent-wide by the Ford Motor Company.\nTIRE SERVICE\nOur Speedy and Efficient Tire Repair Service\nto all makes of tires has become the talk of thc\nDistrict. And if you need New Tires, ask us about\nthc Long-Wearing Qualities, and Popular Prices of\nthe World Famous SEIBERLING TIRES. Wc\nspecialize in these tires.\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\nBAKER ST.\nH. HARROP\nNELSON, B. C.\nPHONE 117\n FAOE   TEN\nSARGON\nf 1.35 per Bottle\nSole Agents for Nelson\nMann-Rutherford\nCompany\nPHONE TAXI\n77\nFreight Schedule\nDally to Roealand\nand Trail, lt am.\nBCD   STEVENS\nProp.\nTraU Phone Ul\nTAXI\nTbe Best of Service\nCareful, Courteous\nDrivers\nNelaon Irsniler Co., Lt*.\nPhone\n35\nSCHOOL\nPUNISHMENT\nIt's a strain to study,\nwhen it's a strain\nto see.\nOptometry ls the remedy.\nJ. 0. Patenaude, R. 0.\nOptometrist   and   Optician\nExpert Optical  Service\nThe clairvoyant extraordinary\nAt the PLAZA\nin the person of\nMADAME  ZARA      3 -6 Today\nHer psychic interpretations have amazed thousands.\nYon should not miss the opportunity of services such\nas her's which come but seldom.\nYOU\nWILL\nGET\nTHE MAXIMUM RESULTS\nWITH\nTHE MINIMUM\nEXPENSE\nIF YOU SELECT YOUR LUMBER AT\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nPhone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\n\"THE  NELSON  DAILY  NEWS.  KELSON, B.  \u00ab_ \u2014  XHCBSDAY  MORNING.  MAT  M,  -NT\"\nGROWING SEASON AT PRESENT IS\nABOUT A WEEK AHEAD OF 1930;\nRASPBERRY ACREAGE INCREASES\nCherries      Show      Healthy\nBloom; Damaged in Crcs\nton District\nVICTORIA. May 30\u2014Thtt the\ngrowing eeaeon in the* Kootenay\nand Arrow Lakes sections of the\ndistrict la about a week ahead of\nthe 1930 aeaaon, is the atatement\nln tbe horticultural newa letter\nfrom the department of agriculture. The report sent ln by dlatrlct\nhorticulturists and covering the\nKootensy district is as follows:\nKOOTE.N.IY ANU\nARROW   LAKH\nFlue, bright, warm weather haa\nprevailed, for the paat three weeks.\nwith showers on May 3 and a heavy\nwind and rainstorm on May ti.\nApril was a poor growing month\nuntil the 21st when the weather\nturned warm, and at which time\nthe geaaon was about a week later\nthan last year. However, of late\ngrowth has oome on very fast and\nat this,time the aeaaon la actually\na week ahead of the 1930 seaaon.\nSoil moisture conditions ln moat\nparts of tbe district are fair to\ngood In both orchard and small\nfruit plantatlona but moat crops\nwould be greatly benefitted by rain.\nStrawberry plantations at this\ntime appear to be in a healthy condition. The plants are larger than\nlaat year and prospects generally\nare for a heavier production. The\npeak of bloom will be around the\n15th of May for most sections. Some\na the first blossoms were injured\nby frost on May 7 and S, but\nthe damage la light and In only\nsome of the low-lying patches.\nFirst berries should be ripe by\nJune 1, but not much movement\nbefore the 10th of June.\nRASPBERRY ACREAGE\nlM'RKA_U.a\nRaspberry canes are making fair\nto good growth in moat parta. Some\npatches of Cuthbert* are showing\nbud Injury, and this wlll effect\nthe yield. There has been quite an\nIncreased acreage planted to raspberries thla spring. Viking and Cuthbert being the two varieties planted\nby most of  the  growers.\nCherry trees showed a very heavy\nand healthy bloom ln all sections of\nthe Kootenay and Arrow lakes. Excellent weather prevailed during\nthe blossom period and the set\nshould be good. Frost Injured the\ncherry crop in soms orchards In a\nfew sections of the Kootenay on\nApril 17, IS and 19. The low lying\nareas ln the Lower Arrow lakee\nwere tbe worst affected   Ths extent\nr\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\t\n| NELSON TRANSFER CO. |\nLIMITED\n\"Service Right Now\"\nPHONE IS\nb \u2014 - \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 - \u2014 \u2014 - __- \u2014 a.\n-LOOK- |\n*\nThe Latest in\nRADIATOR I\nORNAMENTS I\nONLY $6.50 |\nAT THE |\nOXY-ACETELYNE\nWELDING\nMachine Work       |\nBennetts Ltd.\n44 Taxi and 44\nTRANSFER\nTRAIL   end    ROSSLAND\nFREIGHT   end   EXPRESS\nSchedule\nDall.   to   Trail,   Ireret   10   a. oa,\nTAXIS   DAV    AND   NIUHT\nGLASSES\nJ.A.C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST   and   OPTICIAN\n>_!-._ _03-20\u00ab. Medical Art. Bld[.\nFREEDOM\nFrom Fatiguing\nLabor\nB You Cook With a\nGas Range\nNo   fuel   to   Miry   . . .\nNo ashes to remove . . .\nNo \u00bboot covered walk and\noettbigs to keep dean... No\nlarge fuel bills to worry about\n... No   over   heated   kitchen\nto work In . . . Meab cooked to\nperfection at all times in the \u00abiin\nmum of time.\nHieae are juat a few of the many\nadvantages  being  enjoyed   by  housewives who cook  with  gas  ranges.\nLearn how easily vou can have a gas range installed by phoirint S7\u2014the CITY GAS WORKS.\n\u2014The City of Nelson\nIDEAL TAILORS\nand DRY CLEANER;;\nWard St Next to CP.R.\nTelefraph    littler,\nSalt!   Made  lo  Measure.\nDr.-cleanlnf   and   FrrMlni.\nAlterations   und   Repairing.\nat the injury U herd to estimate\nand may not enact the total production trom tbe Kootenay a great\ndeal. In faot. wth favorable weather lor tfoe reat ot Uw aeason, indications are the Kootenay wlll pro-\nauoe lte largeat cherry crop thla\nyear, the production on the young\ntreea wlll mot* than make up Ior\nthe  damage done by  froet.\nPea* showed a fairly heavy bloom\n\u25a0a alao pluma and prunes. The crop\nshould b\u00ab an average one for the\ndistrict. Apples are coming Into lull\nbloom In most sections and for\nmost varieties.\nWAR   ON   APPLE   MAK\nThe weather haa been favorable\nfor tbe control of apple scab, tnd\nIndications are that this disease\nwill be much leas prevalent thla\nyear than for the paat two or three\nseasons. Some growers to date have\nput on three sprays for the control\nof scab, while others have put on\ntwo.\nThe acreage planted to potatoes\nls not expected to be quite as\nheavy ae last year. The early plant-\nlngs are well up and the local new\ncrop ahould be on the market by\nJuly first. The planting of the late\ncrop has* been about oompleted\nThe tomato acreage wlll be about\nthe aame as last year as well aa\nmany other varieties of vegetables.\nThe warm weather haa been beneficial to all vegetable crops, but a\ngood rain is needed\nCRESTON   VALLEY\nThe weather of late has been dry.\nhot ln the afternoons with oool\nnights ln  Creston valley.\nApple trees axe ln full bloom,\nvery well divided among the various\nvarieties. Alfalfa meadows are growing rapidly. Oarden seeds have\ngerminated and early potatoes have\nmade their appearance.\nSeeding on the Reclamation farm\nls well advanoed between five and\nsix thousand acres ls expected to be\nplanted to Marquis wheat. This\ning year for the first time onion\ngrowing on a commercial scale Is\nbeing tried out In the valley, lour\nor five scree being planted out. As\na whole spring growth Is not much\nadvanced over last season, ss the\ncold nights of lste offset ths esrly\nstart.\nSTRAWBERRY\nACREAGE   NAME\nStrawberries sre Just coming Into\nbloom, but lt wlll be weeks before\ncrates wlll be ready to ship. The\nacreage wlll be about the same as\nlatt yesr, but the yield wlll be\nlight from non-Irrigated sections.\nRaspberries are coming Into bloom.\nCanes are short snd In low lying\ni ucres there hss been slight frost j\nI Injury. On tbs whole sbout \\ of a\ncrop csn be expected. Growers sre\n1 trying Latham and Viking varieties.\nand would like to obtain a few\nNewman  K  possible.\nSweet cherries were damaged by,\n; the lste treat in April quite severely;\nI in the low lying situations. Only\nI about 10 per cent of a crag csn |\nbe expected. Pears sre looking well.\n; the blooming period is sbout over.'\n'Tbey were subjected to a slight\n1 frost tbe morning of tm tth. Ho\nserious damsgs is expected as there\nis sn excess of bloom. Plrm-fh\nBesuty  la  very heavy.     '\nAppl 11 present a splendid appear-.\ni snee, especially the Delicious snd\nRome Besuty, snd conditions hsve,\nI been very favorable tor bees to I\ni work among tbe blossoms. A good'\n! set   ls expected.\nSoil   conditions   sre   getting   dry.\npasture   wlll   be   short   lived   unless\nsummer    rains   srs   prolonged,    as j\nthe subsoil is very dry,\nORANP   EORKS   DISTRICT\nOrchards came through the winter\nin good condition In Orand porks\ndistrict, snd the blossom lndlcs-\ntlons sre for s besvy crop ot prsc-\ntlcsUy sll fruits this yesr. Apples\nsnd peers sre showing up exceptionally well this year. Froet Injury\nduring the lsst week Ut April wss\nnot extensive slthough sweet cherries snd yesfs were affected. It la\ndifficult to estimate the extent of\nthe damage at this time, slthough\nIndlvldusl trees show 30 to 70 per\ncent loss.\nSpraying for codling moth wlll\nbe starting shortly. Most growers\nln this district do not uss tbe\ncslyx spray but depend upon the\nlater   sPrsys  for control.\nSmall fruits are ln good condition\nand   the \"\"strawberry   and   raspberry\ncrops should be considerably heavier\nthnn   l*st  year.\nE-Ay   potatoes  have  been   largely\nplanted snd growth should be good\nThe potato scresgs will likely bs\nleas thsn last yesr but onions\nshould show sn Increase. Irrlgstlon\nwster is being spoiled la sll parts\nat ths valley for alfalfa, orchards, etc.\nANY GOOD RICH\nGARDEN SOIL WlU\nGROW GOOD CELERY\nWE ARE DISTRICT AGENTS FOR\n\"CANADA\"BRAND\nPORTLAND CEMENT\nAnd can supply any quantity from a\nSack to a Carjoad\nLET IS SUPPLY YOUR WANTS\nWood-Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale - NELSON, B.C. - IggL\nThe Whole Family\nLikes the\nKITCHEN......\nWHAT youth and cheer and modernity have heen brought into\nthe old kitchen! And at what an\nunbelievably low cost! The walls\nand floor have been brightened\nwith color. A labor-sat ing cabinet\nand a delightful breakfast nook\nhave been built in.\nIt is equally inexpensive to paint\nold-fashioned dark woodwork a\nrich ivory, or to sash in an open\nporch. May we give you plans\nand figures?\nA. H. GREEN co\nLTD.\nISucosasors to John Burns tt Son)\nPLANT SJoSHS \"\u2022    OFFICES {\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\"\u2022\nand SALES OFFICE\nAny good rloh garden toll will\ngrow good celery. It la a groeafeeder\n\u2022nd muat have an abundance of\nfertility to draw upon li tender,\nwell developed atalka are to be\nobtained, n the eoU becomes dried\nout, even with an abundance of\nplant food present, succulent atalka\nare not likely to develop. These*\ntwo things are essential m order\nthat growth may go on uninterruptedly. Celery grows best in fall\nand early aprlng because the soil\nIs damper and cooler tt theee\ntimes. Consequently, ln growing lt\nthe aim ahould be to furnish\nthese conditions as far as possible.\nHot dry soils can be made oool\nand moist by watering. Jt 18 not\na very great task to keep a small\narea of celery watered during the\ndry   periods.\nWhen preparing for your vegetable garden eet aside some good,\nwell-rotted stable manure for a\nrow of celery. Dig or plough out a\nspace about 18 inches wide and\nsix inchea deep. On this place good\nsurface garden soil and mix thoroughly with the manure. Manure\nln a measure cuts off the flow of\nsoil water from below, hence the\nImportance of mixing manure and\nsoli in order that a fair capillary\nmovement of subsoil water to the\ngrowing plant may take plaoe, and\nthe plants not suffer -for want of\nwater should watering by hand be\nneglected. A high grade 5-8-10\ncommercial fertilizer applied at the\nrate of five ounces per square\nyard (1500 pounds per acre) may\nbe thoroughly dug into the soil.\nTo tbls should be added ground\nlimestone at the rate of one to\ntwo pounds per square yard, or!\ntwo to four tone per acre. On\nmany soils It is difficult to growl\ncelery without adding lime in aome.\nform. The plants should be aet In j\nrow\u00bb three and one-half feet apart j\nand alx Inches apart lu the rowe. \u25a0\nWe have found it satisfactory at J\nthe experimental station, Kentrtlie\nto set two row\u00ab together, spacing \u25a0\nthe rows nine inches apart and the\nplant* eight inches apart in the \u2022\nrows, the plants In one row alter-'\nnating with thoee In tbe other1\nrow. Beween these double row*.\nfour to five feet la allowed, tn\norder to give plenty of soil for,\neamng up the plants for blanching.\nDq not set the plants on ndges\nIt la not necessary to stt tn a\ntrench, but tc facilitate* watering\nif tbe ground along the row le\naJghtly below the toil level After\nplanting see th4t o\u00a3e ground between the rows a kept loos* wtth\nthe cultivator er hot, aad tbe\nsurface soU around the plaale kep\u00ab\nstirred so that lees w%t*rtaf wtt,\nbe necessary- Watering tends te\ni Hasps 11 tb* imfsse eotX srsMM-t\nthe plants; tha upper eat. aa ma\nss   it   is   dry   \u2014\u25a0eJ_^^^^^^^\nbroken    by    very    .hallow      \t\nDeep hoeing dot* to tbe puat\nshould be avoided ea the roota are\nshallow feeders and should art\nbe   dlaturbed.\nCelery mat, which sometime* la\ntroubleeome. Is overcome by using\nBordeaux mixture, the plant* Ming\nkept covered with the mixture by\nspraying about every 10 days. In\nsoma caae* thla la flrat used right\nafter the plants are established in\nflate. I\nBUILDING IN\nCANADA IS ON\nTHE INCREASE\nW. R. CAMPION\nGROCERIES\nOUR PHONE NO. IS 121\nt lbs. Tiptop Creamery\nButter     Mo\nS   lbs.   Splnacb    ...._\u2014 IM\nGreen Onions, 8 bunches _ 10c\nRhubarb, 4 lbs.   Me\nGrapefruit, I fer ._..__.__ He\nBaked Beans, per tin ,_\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 lie\nCut Oreen Beans, per ttn _ Ue\nHome Made Cookies,\nI! lbs. lor   45o\nDELIVERIES   TWICE   DAILY\nI'PHILL snd  PAIBVIEW\nWHOLESALERS PUT\nPRICE OF BUTTER\nONE CENT LOWER\nThird Drop in Three Weeks;\nSeasonal Goods Move\nWell\nButter dropped one oent on the\nwholesale market this week, making\nthe third one-cent drop ln three\nweeka. Bacon and lard prices each\ndropped one cent, while the price\nof  lamb  advanoed a osnt.\nWholesalers report a steady business, meat lines moving well for\nthe aeason. The egg movement is\nnow   easing   off   slightly.\nTh* season's supply of grape\nJuloe, lemon snd other soft drink\npowders ls arriving in steady shipments.\nCereals are In great demand and\nthe movement of thla oommodlty ts\nbrisk. A car of milk, a car of\nsugar and a car of flour arrived yeeterday. Two cars of flour and feed\nincluding shipments of shorts, flour\nand oats, and a oar of fertiliser\ntried  during the week.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBank of Commerce .   \t\nSOI\n313\nImperial Bsnk \t\ntot\nBsnk of Montresl  _..._.__.\nM0\nBsnk  of  Nots  Scotia  .__\t\n919\nRorsl Bsnk  _\n-55\nBank of Toronto  \t\nMS\nAbltlbl Power ft Paper\t\ns*\nAsbestos   Corporstlon    \t\n-i\nAtlantic   Stwar    _\nJS\nBell Telephone\nits\nBrailian T L \u00bb Power\nIt's.\nBritlah   Amerlcsn   OU   _\t\n9 50\nCanada    Brans*    ...\nas*,\nCsn. Car a. Foundry\n1-4\nCanadian Cement     ....       _\nlot.\nCsnsdisn Cement pfd \t\nMV.\nCanadian Con.erters   ...\nM\nCan. Industrie. Alcohol\t\n\u00bb..\nCanadian  cottons .\n90\nCast Oeaeral iisetrte \t\n_J0\nComfort as Well as Style\nin Our New Shirts\nHere's interesting variety for you - - - Six\nshades in* new pastel colors - - - choose one eseh\nof these new shades\neither plain or striped. Select a tie for each one-\nadd a white for dress up\noccasions. .Then every\ntime you change you'll\nhave something different.\nBLUE\u2014TA_\u00bbCgRAY-\nGREEN\u2014HELIO\u2014PEACH\nf 1.85 to fS.OO\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nTONGUE OF WAGON\nRAMS CAR WINDOW\nMax Baskin and Apex Ranch\ner Collide on Baker and\nWard Streets Corner\nA collision between a team driven\nby a rancher ot Apex and a oar\ndriven by Max Baskin, occurred\nWedneeday at 2:30 p.m. on the\ncorner of Baiter and Ward streets.\nThe driver of the wrgon coining up\nWard street stopped at the Intersection as required and then proceeded, falling to observe the oar\nwhich wu coming along Baker\nstreet from the eaat.\nAs the vehicles were heading for\nthe same point both drivers hesitated, resulting tn a collision. The\ntongue on the w.igon smashed the\nwindows on the side of the car but\nwithout  injuring  the  occupants.\nRolling Log Hits\nTimber Worker and\nFractures HU Hip\nKick Donshon, employee of P. R-\nRotter, timber operator at Rotter's\nSpur, between Ymir and Salmo, was\nstruck by a rolling log about 6\np.m. Tueeday, the pieoe of timber\nrolling on him and crushing his\nleft hip,  which was fractured.\nTbe Injured man wae brought to\nNelaon late Tuesday night, and\nt.ken to Kootenay Lake Oeneral\nhospital, where Dr. H. H MacKenzie\nsuccessfully   aet   the   fracture.\nOTTAWA, May 30 tCP>\u2014Contlnu ,\ned increase In building activity lsj\ns-own in April figures for building'\npermits. Returns to the Dominion\n\u25a0 Vet-u. of statistics from 01 cities\n_..e an aggregate of 913,786.000 for\nApril, or 93,870.000 higher than\nMarch. Aa oompared with April,\n1930. however, there was a decrease\nOf   13,181.000.\nManitoba, Saskatchewan snd British Columbia .recorded increases as\ncompared   with   March,   1931.\nREBEKAHS STAGE\nTEA, SALE, CORBIN\nCORBIN, B. C, May 30\u2014A tea\nand aale of home cooking ww held\nby the Rebekah lodge on Wednesday afternoon. A cak\u00ab raffled by\ntne lodge members was won by\nMrs.   J.   Stevenson.\nThe Troubadora of Michel put on\na dance ln the club hall last Wednesday. A big crowd gathered to\nenjoy the enappy music provided\nby   tbe   above   orchestra.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Huluchak are\nbeing congratulated upon the birth\nor a daughter.\nChurch Choir Holds\nSuccessful Bridge\nin   Rossland   Hall\nllb-inf 4k B-Klilnc .... 84\nMet   BrkiCC         - 3.4\nDotnin-on Ola-s        M\nDom.  Steel A Coal  \"A~  IK\nDominion   TVrtJle    _ 66\nA F Drain        .         - Sti\nHiD-rest Colliers   80\nLake of tbe Wood* ....  10\nMassey    Harris      4.4\nMontr.,] Power       SO\nMontreal  Telegraph  49\nMontreal   Tramway,  16ft\nNational   Brewerlea  2th.\nNational Steel Car   _.\nOntario Steel  Producta   _ 11\nOttawa L H tt Power ....  n\nPenman*    Ltd   40\nPower   Corporation       47\nPrice  Broa _   31%\nQuebec  Power    38%\nShawlnlgan    \u201e_   tO\nSherwln Wllliama    38\nSo Canada Power    36%\nSteel of Canada  38\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mllla _  lfl1.\nWabasso Cotton  . 10\nWestern   orocera  10\nWinnipeg Railway  _ 14\nWinnipeg Railway pfd   60\nCANADA BONDS\nWINNIPEG.    May\n30\u2014Quotations\non  victory  bonds  foi\n\u2022 1000\nare  ta\nfollowa:\nBond*\u2014War loan:\n1031,   8   per   cent,\n101.38.\n1837.   8   per   oent,\n107.78.\nVictory loan:'\n1033, ti_  per cent,\n104.78.\n1034, b\\_  per cent,\n104.7S.\n1037. Id  per cent.\n113.00.\nWar  loan  renewal:\n1083.   6*4   Per Cent.\n103 JO.\nRefunding  loan:\n1048,   8   per   cent,\n108.86.\n1940,  4'i   per cent.\n103.00.\n1944.  ,i_  per oent.\n103.10.\n1946, *.,\/,   per cent.\n103.00.\nConversion   loan:\n1966, 4(4   per cent,\n101.60,\n103.60.\n1967,  4*4   per cent.\n103.36,\n108.00.\n1988,  4*4   per cent,\n104.38,\n106.00.\nI960, VA  per cent.\n104.38,\n108.00.\nEXCHANGE RATES\nRO&SLAND. B. C, May 20\u2014Tlie\nchoir of the gacred Heart church\nheld a successful bridge In the\nPuns!, hall Monday evening. Flrat\nprizes were won by Mm. B. Andrews,\nana Mrs. E. Vlpond, while Miss\nMar-% Mulligan and Mr. Toogocd\nc.ptured the second prlae. Tbe hall\nwas   prettily   decorated   with   lilacs,\nThe evening branch of the Woman's auxiliary held a bridge at the\nhome of Mre. l*ea. Tuesday evening.\nMrs. M. M- Butorac entertained\nreoently with several tables of\nbridge.\nManager Tucker was host to the\nteaching ataff of the MacLean\nschool Tuesday afternoon at the\nlocal theater.\nMlsa Isabel Leeson is a patient at\nthe hospital having undergone a\nmajor operation.\nMlas Muriel Wilson u a patient\nat  the  hospital.\nSunday evening the Capitol theater waa taxed to capacity, when the\ncontestants In the reoent Kootenay\nMusical festival, gj.ve a conoert to\nhelp defray expenses connected with\ntransportation of the school children\nThe T. P. S. of at. Andrews\nUnited church held an Interesting\nXrnplre Day program Tuesday evening. Mr. D MacNaughton gave an\ninteresting discourse on \"The Umpire and Its Possessions,\" Others\ntaking part wer\u00ab Miss Tkelma Pitt,\nMlse M. 8. Love, Miss B .letters,\nMlse E. Raaoorla and Jack Page.\nNEW TORK. May 20\u2014Sterling ex-\nI change irregular at M 84 7-33 for 60\n<Jny bills and at \u00bb4.86*'i for demand,\nMarks   28.81   cente.\nKronen  28.80  cents.\nOanadlan dollars 5-84 of 1 per\ncent   discount.\nFrancs 3&l~_  cente.\nLire   3,23   3-16   cents. ^^^\nNelson approximate sterling exchange  rates  M-BS-ffc.\nBOWLERS FEATURE\nENGLISH CRICKET\nLONDON. May 20\u2014<C. P. eable>\n\u2014Fine battle between international\nbowlerb was seen ln the cricket\nmatch between Nottinghamshire\nand Somerset at Bath today. First\nNotte collapsed \u25a0 and were despatched\nIn their first Innings for 168. J.\nC White taking aeyen wickets or\n77 runs. Then Somerset faded out\nbefore Harold Larwood, Sam Staples\nand W. Voce. Larwood's scythe\nmowed down tlxe Somerset batsmen for 30 runs. Staples had an\naverage of three wickets for 16\nruns, while Voce 4Jpmleeed a couple\nfor seven runs. Somerset's first\nInnings total  only  reached 03 rune.\nCenturiane ln T|igllsh crlrfcet\nmatches today w^rc- d Smith, 181.\nand O. M- Lee, 147. for Derbyshire\nagainst Essex; Gibbons, lie, for\nWorcestershire against New Zealand: Slnfleld, 161. not out, for\nGloucestershire against Oxford university; J. Hobbs, in, for Surrey\nagainst Sussex. Hobbs chalked up\nhis 177th century in flret oleas\ncrick* t.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nLADIES. Non run Rayon Pyjamas.\nA steady seller with us at 11.95.\nVesta or Bloomers, non run Rayon.\ntwo garments for 61.00. Balcony\nCharles Morris Ltd. (5600)\nKOOTENAY   Ml SICAI.   FESTIVAL\nWatch  for program  In  tomorrow'1*\nIssue  for  gra.id  concert   of  festival\nwinners  In  Junior  high  auditorium.\n(6627)\nA. O. F. Court Star Kootenay\nmeets tonight at 7:13. Court Royal\nNelson   at   8   o'clook. (6031)\nOelebratlon   at   Tmlr   May   35th.\nSports and  Baseball.    Danoe In   -he\nevening.   Music Knight* o' Rhy'hm.\n'  (5603)\nSCANDINAVIAN DANCE at Oe'ln-\naa' hall Friday, May 32. 3-plece orchestra. Admission, gents $1, ladles\nfree.    Everybody welcome.        (6103!\nSee the nrlres for the Koitenay-\nBoundary Schools' Athletic association track and field meet ln Col-\nUnaou's   Jewelry   Store   window\n(5638)\nTULIP   TEA l\nFriday. May 33nd, Presbyterian\nLadies Association at ihe home of\nMrs.   Park.  411   Richard  St.    Home\ncooking   specialties. ({-51)6.\nOet    received    seats    at    Mann-\nRutherforde today for D. B. C.\nplay. Rush seaU may be procured\na door of Junior high auditorium\nfor  play   tonight. (5625)\nI, Leo. Connor. 811 Vernon s reet.\nNelson. B. C. on and after thla\ndate. Monday. May 18th. 1031. will\nnot be responsible for any debts\nincurred in my name.\nL.   Connor.\ni66771\nLADIES. fHu Fashioned Silk\nHose. 6100 and 81 50. A new shipment Celanese Dreases. Delightful\nModels $5.00. Balcony Charles Morris Ltd. i560S>\nKOOTENAY   MUSICAL   FESTIVAL\nHear this yrex't, winners In a\ngrand roncert in (he Junior high\nauditorium this Friday at 7:30\no'cloek. Adults 6uc, ntudmts %&*?.\nDoors  open   7:00  o'clock. (5626)\nDON'T   FORGET\nTONIGHT\nEverybody Is going to see \"TKE\nYO0NO IDEA.\" a merry comedy in\nthree acta by Noel Coward to be\npresented by The Players' Club of\nthe University of British Columbia\nat the Junior High School Auditorium. May 31, at 8 p.m. Be vure\nto attend. Reserved seats $ l .00.\nRush seats 50c. Get tickets from\nHigh   School   Pupils. {5578)\nLight or\nHeavy Haulage\nWhatever it May be, we\nare equipped to take care\nof your needs.\nPHONE 797\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\nUme. Ba_-ol.il N\u00bbWu will fo ts\nLondon with Gandhi ln tlw faU a\nearlier to demand equal rights to\nIndia', women at the round tahll\nconterenoe.\nNOTICE of\nDissolution\nThe partnership heretofore existing between Or.\nR C. Shaw and Dr. G.\nLedlngham, practising as\ndentists ln Nelson under\nthe firm name of Drs.\nShaw & Ledingham, waa\ndissolved on May 8, 1931,\nDr. Ledingham withdrawing from the bnsiness,\nwhich will be carried on|\nby Dr. fihaw. Dr. Ledingham will return to the dis.\ntrict at an early date and\nresume the practice of hia\nrofession.\nDr. G. Ledingham   ,\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER\nJEWELER,\nand Graduate Optician\n413   HALL   STBEET\n, n\u201e  r.cK,*  mw\nAND   riLM\nCHOrOI.ATES  AND  TANDIES\nA   large   itock   of  each.\nCI Y DR JO CO.\nNr'9on'_  Dhpeoilni Cbemlsta\n N.:1sON,  B.  C.\nFot   ron-ttpatloK,   BlIMnineae.\nlorpld Liter. Sick Headache, try\nSMITHES   LIVER  SALTS\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION    SPECIALIST\nPHONE   1\nShop  with  ai b;  mall.\nSHARES BARGAIN\nSOOO Shares Silver Leal Mlnlnjj\nCompanj. Must sell, IH centa al\nshare.      p.   O.   Boi  MS,   NelsoaJ\nTWO    SHOWS    MOHTLV\n7  AND t  P.M.\nMATINEE  t   O'CLOCK\nTODAY\nJ_\nA TALE OF LOVE ANB|\nVENGEANCE IN THE\nSAHARA\nWARNER\nBAXTER\ntt\n\"Renegades\nWHIRLWIND    DRAMA    Or    IIIJ\nWILDS OP MOROCCO\nWITH\nMYRNA LOY\nNOAH BEERY\nCOMEDY\nBILLY   HOUSE\nIn\n\"THE HEADACHE\"\nso\\(i NOVELTY\n\"BY   THE    Dl .ll Til I l.   SEA\nI'RIDAY\u2014SATl'RDAY\nLAWRENCE   TIBBETT\nIN\n\"THE PRODIGAL\"\nWITH ,\nESTHER   RALSTON\nROLAND    YOL'NO\nCLIFF EDWARDS\nA   ftparkllnn   Comedy   of\nKnlfht_   of  the  Rom\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1931_05_21","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0404180","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1931-05-21 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1931-05-21 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}