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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":" \u2014\u2014\n-p\n\u2014\u2014\nBishop Adams Deplores the\nNumber of Divorces\n\u2022\u2014Pa&e Three\nI\n\u2022A-l -a*\nVOLUME 34\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nt'j IO 3 IHAB35\n\u00bb\u00bbCTORlA 1 c\n<w iPa\n, LIBRA.;\nVICTO^l\/lfc.c\n<^\u00a3\nDonovan Only Canadian\nLeft in Golf Play\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\nSON. BRITISH  COLUMBIA. CANADA-THURSDAY  MORNINO.  MAY 23.  IMS\nNUMBER 2S-\nITALY SAYS URITAIN MASSESS TROOPS\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022**\u2022       ****.******       **********        ********\nEthiopians Recuse to Yield to Violence of Italy\nHEAVY CONCENTRATION OF TROOPS\nPLANES,WARSUPPLIES ON SUDAN\nFRONTIER CHARGE THAT'S DENIED\nExpecting a uBlessed Event\"\nThe Duke and Duchttt of Ktnt ire ihown hire at thi Empln bill\nheld In Groavaner Houtt, London, on their flrtt pubilc appeirtnct at\nauch a function. It will probably bt their lut for tomi timt slnct It\nIt reported that tht Duchesi It toon to present King George tnd Quttn\nMiry with thtlr fifth grandchild.\nBRITAIN PUNS TO TRIPLE ITS\nHOME AIRFORCEINTWO YEARS\nHIGH WATER FOR\nINTERIOR IS\nFEARED\nVICTORIA, May 22 (CP)-\nBrltiih Columbia public worki\ndepartment engineer! are following temperature changes\nvery closely these dayi, fearful\not the flood effects from a sudden hot spell. Thc run-off in\n\u2022pring fresheta hai been retarded this yeir and a ihort hot\n\u25a0pell might create conditions\numilar to thoie of the 1894 flood\nln the Thompson Fraier and\nColumbia riven. So tar, in the\nInterior, however, hot dayi have\nbeen followed by cool nighti\nwhich hu allowed the water to\nescape gradually.\n____\n................\n1500 Planes Is Goal to\nBring Parity With\nGermany\nBy QEORGE HAMBLETON\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nLONDON, Mty 22 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Previously-announced plant to\nexpand the Roytl tlr Force win\nput In tht thade by the government's announcement to parliament today.\nTht domestic air force of flrtt*\nlint machines wlll bt trlpltd within two years, whereat tht flnt\nprogrim called or tomt increase!\nover five yetrt, Tht ntw pltn\ndoublu within two years tht\nnumbtr of machines at homt thit\nwould hivt bten furnished it tht\nof flvt years.\nFlrtt-llnt   fighting   ilrcrift  at\n(Contlnutd on Pigt Two)\nRepresentatives Pass Bonus Bill\nOver Veto ol President Roosevelt\nAND SO SHE JUST\nGAVE UP THE\nGOLF GAME\na\nSEATTLE, May 22 (CP).-\nThere may not be auch a thing\n\u2022s a world'i record golf icore,\nbut Horteme Htrley, foremott\nyachtiwoman of Seattle, claimi\none anyhow.\nIn her tint attempt at tha\ngame after a teries ot lessons,\nlhe confessed she took an hour\nand 113 strokes to pliy two\nholea.\n\"When I got to tha third tea\nand figured up thtt lt would\ntaka me DM more itrokei and\neight houn to finlih the 18, I\nJust limply quit right then and\nthera for good,\" the tald.\nPOSSE SEEKS KILLER\nOAKVILLE, Waah., Miy J2 (AP).\n\u2014Dtrkneu tonight htlted 50 posie-\nmen in their learch for Jick Hlg-\ngin!, 49, barber, accused of shooting\nto death Ml divorced wife. Stalls, 35,\ntoday, \u2022\u2022 ihe fled toward the ufety\nof a neighbor'! home.\nPIRI DESTROYS WAREHOUSE\nGRANDV1EW, Wuh., May 22\n(AP).\u2014Fire itarting tonight de-\nitroyed the Grandvlew Inland Fruit\ncompany warehoute here with i\nloaa utlmated at between (75,000 and\n8100,00ft,  ,_\u2022-\u2022\u2014\u25a0\t\nMcGEER WOULD MOBILIZE VANCOUVER CITIZENS\nTO DO WORK IF LONGSHOREMEN GO ON A STRIKE\nNow Up to the Senate;\nSilverites See Ray\npf Hope in Talk\nWASHINGTON, May 22 (API-\nAn Irrepressible house majority to-\nirry swiftly repused thc Patman\nbonus bill over President Roose*\nvelt'i veto warning! of \"disastrous\nconsequences,\" only to send the new\nmoney plan to in almost certain\ndeath in the senate.\nScarcely had Mr. Roosevelt's voice\nceased echoing in the crowded house\nrrhamber where he hamniered oh*\njertion after objection into the $2,-\n200,000,000 bill, than the representative! voted 322 tb 08 to override hii\nveto\u2014the first pcreonally delivered\nin hiitdry. It was many more than\nthe two-thirds majority needed.\nMore deliberately, the senate decided to wait until tomorrow to\nconsider the presidential message\nwhich, with thc house, it heird flay\n\"printing press money\" u an \u2022Invitation of \"an ultimate reckoning ln\nuncontrollable prlcei ind ln the\ndestruction of the vilue of sivings.\"\nSILVERITES HOPEFUL\nWASHINGTON. Miy 22 (AP)-\nWith silverites itill determined to\npress a free-coinage program, congressional advocates of conflicting\nmonetary schools tonight claimed to\nfind morsels of encouragement ln\nPresident Roosevelt'i bonua veto\nmessage.\nConservatlvu warmly applauded\nwhtt thev interpreted at an outright declaration agalpst \"printin**\npreu money\" while thoie favoring\n(Contlnutd en Put Tta)\nTHREATS WOULD\nHAMPER DRIVES\nTO SELL BONDS\nRelief Camp Strike\nand Waterfront Row\nDisastrous?\nRELIEF MEN VOTE\nTO STAY IN CITY\nPickets Halt Return\nof Men to Camps\nSays Victoria\nVANCOUVER, Miy 22 (CP) \u2014\nCitlient will bt moblllltd If necessary te ctrry on waterfront business In tht tvtnt of a longshore-\nmen't itrlkt, Miyor G. G. McGier\nIndicated todty in announcing\nthat threttt of Induitritl unrest\nwlll not Interfere with plant to\nlaunch tht uie of $1,500,000 worth\nof city of Vincouver \"baby bondi.\"\nThe cimpiign will itart June 10.\n\"Whether or not we oan meet\ntht relief oamp crltlt and tht\nitrlkt threat and put ever \u25a0 bond\nissue tt the umt timt ll prob*\nlemtticai,\" tht miyor laid.\n\"No ent oan estimate accurately\n(Contlnutd tn Pagt Two)\nTORONTO MAN TO\nADVISE B. C. UPON\nPENSION SCALES\nVICTORIA, Miy 22 (CP)-M. A.\nMacKenzie, head of the department\nof actuarial science of Toronto university, has been engaged by British Columbia to advise on superannuation scalea ln connection with\nmunicipal pensions. Hon. Dr. G. M.\nWeir, provinciil tecretary, announced today, on return from the\neast\nSafecrackers Get $75\nat Coast\nVANCOUVER, May 22 (CP)-\nSafecrackers blew open the office\nsafe of Ault k Wiborg Company of\nVancouver, Ltd., last night and\nescaped with $75.\nThey entered the building through\na basement window, broke the combination dial off the life and then\nblew ofl the door with a charge of\nnitro-glycerine.\nSoap Maker Is a\nKootenay Visitor\nTRAIL, B.C., May 22.\u2014Viicount\nLeverhulme, held of what il gen\nerally recognized to be the largest\nsoap manufacturing business in the\nworld, arrived in the city Wednesday night and will spend i day\nvisiting the plant! of the Consolidated Mining Sc Smelting Co, of\nCanada, Ltd. While ln Trail he will\nbe the guest of Mr. and Mra. R. 3. G.\nRichards, friends ot the Lever ftmlly. Viicount Leverhulme will motor to Nelion Thunday evening from\nwhence he will proceed eait tomorrow night.\nThe viicount la on a world buiineu tour of plinti and lubildlarlei\nof hli huge compiny and arrived\nin Vancouver recently on the Empreu of Russia from the orient He\nhas juit viiited India, Siam, Dutch\nEait Indlei, Batavii, China and Japan and a considerable portion of\nhit journey he hat mada by air.\nViscount Leverhulme makei his\nhome it Thornton Hough, Cheshire,\nEngland, but tha big Lever Broi.\nsoap Industry hai Itl center at Port\nSunlight, neir Liverpool.\nHe wu met at Cutlegar by Mr.\n\u2022nd Mra. Richiroi ind driven to\nTrail from that point\nNoble Five, Silver Mine\nat Sandon to Start Work\nTen Men on Shift and Crew to Be Enlarged\nFrom Time to Time; Paul Lincoln Says\nDrills Working; Prepare Mill\nOperation! htvt boon raiumed at tho Nobla Flva\nmlna near Sandon. Thia la data to tha improvement in\ntha prict of metali. Tht Noblt Fivt valuta art in silver,\nItad tnd (inc.\nPaul Lincoln, manager of tht company, which alao\noperate! tht Athabasca gold mint ntar Nelion, itated\nWedneaday that work had btan commenced at tht Noblt\nFive with t crtw of 10 mtn, which will bt tnlargtd from\ntimt to timt. Compressors tnd air drills trt it work tnd\ntht mill it btlng got into ahape for concentration operations.\nSupplies havt bttn taktn up to tht proptrty tnd\ncontinuous operationa trt contemplated.\nCRESTONSCHOOL\nBIDSARE HIGH\nAll Over Estimates of\nDepartment; Two\nThrown Out\nVICTORIA. May 22 (CP).-All\nbldi received by the B.C. department of public worki today for a\nfour-room stucco achool at Creiton\nvillige were over the departmental\nestimite of J15.8-8. The tenden were\nopened by Hon. P. M MacPhenon,\nand must finally be considered by\nCreston, whlcn il contemplating\nerection of the building with government help.\nSix tenden were -submitted, four\nbeing tound in order, and two discarded for failure to comply with\npublished requirements of the bldi.\nThe lowest tender tubmltted worked out at the rate ot $4498 per room\nand the highest at $5910 per room,\nincluding construction of the building.\nThe bids received in order were\nis follows: A. E. Jonei, of Cranbrook, $23,640; Thomu Carson, Vancouver, $19,650; A. S. Hendron,\nCreston, $18320; Moncrieff and Via*\ntaunet, Vancouver, $17,985. E. J.\nGoslin, of Trail, submitted a bid of\n$20,136, without a deposit; and A.\nH. Green of Nelson, one of $20973\nby wire, these two often being discarded as not within tha termi of\ntendering.\nThe bidi wlll be paued to the\ndepartment of education, to take\nup with Creiton authorities the\nmlnliter laid.\nMcGEER GOING TO\nVICTORIA\nVANCOUVER, Miy 22 (CP)-\nMiyor G. G. McGeer and Mn. McGeer will leave for Victoria Thundiy night to participate in the Victoria day celebrations there. Mn.\nMcGeer is a native of Victoria and\nthey were married in thit city.\nSeeks Record\nKittutira Ano, wtll known Jtp*\nantte pilot, ihown ttindlng In\nfront of hit powerful low-wing\nmonoplint, wti awaiting favor*\nablt weither condltloni, btfon\nleaving Hinworth tlrdrome nur\nLondon\u2014on a projected non-stop\nflight to Tekio.\nCOMMUNISTS JEER KING AND QUEEN\nAS THEY ATTEND CIVIC RECEPTION\nPolice Drlvt Jeering Mob\nBack ts Royal Family\nBreak Old Rult\nLONDON, Mty 22 (CP).-Tht\nKing ind Quttn tit \u2022 precedent\nby ittending \u2022 brilliant clvio Jubilee reception and ball In the\nhistoric ISth ctntury Ouldhill of\nthi elty of London.\nA clash between shouting, Jetr*\nIng Communists and mounted and\nfoot pollu occurred thortly btfon\nThtlr Mijtttlit trrlved. Tht Communists, singing the Intimation-\nale, shouted, \"Your tlni robes\nwould buy ui bread\" and \"Our\nfamilies art starving\" at regulsr\nconstables, nlnforced by scores\nof extra polict, puihed thtm btok.\nThiy retreited stubbornly and,\nremaining tomt dltttnce away,\nthouted at tht arriving gueiti.\nGiven by tha lord mtyor and\ntht Corporation of London, tht\ntnll eellpied In grandeur thi function! for whleh tht elty It fimoui.\nThtrt It no record In thi\ntrchlvei of thl Guildhall of a\nreigning tovirtlgn ind hit contort\nvisiting In peraon a bill given\nthirt In thtlr honor.\nAn Orphan Boy Becomes Son of Ontario's\nPromler Hepburn; Seeking Daughter Too\nST. THOMAS, Ont, May 22 (CP).\u2014A fair-haired, blue-eyed boy of\ntwo-and-t-half yeari, a few diyi ago an orphtn, trrlved at a Yarmouth\ntownihlp farm home, aa orphan no longer. He li now Peter Hepburn,\nion of Ontario'! premier and Mn. M. P. Hepburn.\n\"Yei ilr, he'i a real tanner already,\" declared the premier thli evening. \"He'i ill imilea. I've ihown him ibout the firm; taken him to lee\nthe honet. Apparently ha thinki they're all wonderful. He'i certainly\nhappy.  So li Mrs. Hepburn.  So am I.  In fact, everybody'! imlllng.\"\nSoon Peter ii to lhare hii new-found hipplnen wltb a girl-playmate,\na tiiter to be choaen for him from a ahelter ilmllir to the one which he\nhimielf left not miny houn ago.\n\"No, we haven't found her yet, but likely will before thit time next\nweek,\" he premier inerted.\nROOSEVELT AHD\n\"PROSTITUTED\"\nPRESSATTACKED\nThrow Out Capitalism\nif It Stands in Way\n\"Social Justice\"\n18,000 HEAR FR.\nCOUGHLIN IN N.Y.\nNot Only Soldiers But\nAmerican People Are\n\"Vetoed\" He Says\nBy B. L. LIVINGSTONE\nAstoclited Pren Stiff Writer\nNEW YORK, Mty 22 (AP)\u2014Before an enthusiastic crowd utlmated at more than 18,000 in Madison Square Garden, Rev. Charlu E.\nCoughlin called tonight for the\ndooming.of capitalism if it stood in\nthe way of \"social juitice\" ind condemned the veto of the aoldlera'\nbonus bill.\n\"If capitalism standi in tha way\nof rrecial Justice,\" he decltred, \"it\nihould ba voted out ot existence.\"\nThe priest of Royal Oik, Mich.,\namiled. newtpapen, banker! the\nUnited Statu govemment'i work\nrelief wige telle, the money >y>-\ntem tnd induitrlil chief taint.\nPropounding the dicta of his na-\n(Contliutd on Pigt Ttn)\nWINS FATHER'S\nSEAT IN HOUSE\nABERDEEN, Miy 22 (CP cable).\n\u2014The Nationil government retained\nthe traditionally Conaervatlve aeat\nof South Aberdeen in today'i by-\nelection with a reduced majority.\nSir Jamu Thomson, Nationil government, received 30.925 votu and\nJoieph r. Dundan, Labor, 10,7(0, a\ngovernment majority of 10,189.\nIn the last elections Sir Frederick\nThomson, fither of the new member, had a majority of 27,361 in a\nstraight fight with Labor. The by-\nelection wu necuiitated by Sir\nFrederick'! death.\nStart Surfacing\nof Roads Soon\nVICTORIA, May 22 (CP).-Wlth\nthe leason for road construction\nwell advanced, the British Columbia\ndepartment of public works has laid\nplans which will permit an immediate itart on the government'!\nhard-surfacing scheme if Hon. John\nHart, mlnlater of finance, lecuru\nthe neceiury loan from Ottawi.\nThe proposed $3,000,000 expenditure would be the itart of a continuous hard-surfacing program designed the link up all important\ncenten ot the province.\nMany Youths Seek\nPlacet in Forestry\nCorps in Province\nVICTORIA, May 22 (CP)-With\nmore than 300 application! already\nfiled, tha Britiih Columbia forestry\ntraining camp icheme wat considered well launched today. Some\n230 applications arrived by mail\nfrom Vancouver during the day,\nexcluiive of 80 from Victoria and\nothen eliewhere.\nTWO   MORE   NUNS   JAILED\nBERLIN, Mty 22 (AP) - Two\nmore Catholic num, tean itrearm-\ning down their faces, today were\nsentenced to penitentiary terms for\nadmitted violation of Nazi German'! itrlct foreign exchinge law.\nThe two were Marie Menke, Slater Neophytli, 86-yux-old prioress\ngeneral of the order of St. Augustine, ahd Gertrud Dowm, Slater\nEnglatla, 57-year-old treaiurer of\nthe order.\nMOVE NIOHT LIQUOR STORE\nVANCOUVER, May 22 (CP)-\nAnnouncement ll mtde here by the\nBrovincitl liquor control botrd that\nte all-night liquor store will be\nmoved from Its pruent site on Howe\nstreet to new premliu it -822-26\nHomby itreet\nEIGHT-HOUR    DAV    DEI-ATI\nTUESDAY\nOTTAWA, Miy 22 (CP)-Con-\ntroveniu on the eight-hour day\nbill wlll be Ironed out next Tuuday and Wednuday before the\nsenate banking and commerce committee.\nMARGARET NEE80N\nA London call owner btt in\nAmtrican ha could pick out it\nprettier Empire glrli thin Amtrican. A $900 wtgtr wu put up.\nHtrt It Mirgirtt Neeton, scantily\ndressed In fun, who wit representing Cinada In thl conteit.\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy Tha Cinidlin Prtu\nToronto and Montreal: Induitritl\nstocks closed higher.\nToronto mines: Irregularly lower.\nNew York: Stocks slightly higher.\nWinnipeg: Wheat up V, cent    \u2022\nToronto: Bacon hogs off car 13\ncents higher at 0.40.\nLondon: Bar lilver and other\nmetal! higher.\nNew York: Bar illver, export\ncopper, tin and lead higher; zinc\nunchanged.\nMontreal: Silver higher.\nNew York: Cotton, rubber and\n\u2022sugar higher; coffee lower.\nNew York: Canadian dollar up %\nto LOOK.\nDOGS MUST DIE\nTHE PAS, Man., May 22 (CD-\nRecommending the immediate destruction of the three dogs responsible for the death of 6-year-old Mike\nSeginovltch and more rigid enforcement of local bylaws respecting licencing of commercial dogs, a\ncoroner's jury returned a verdict\ntonight at the inquest into the fatal\nmauling of the little boy, praising\nMn. Kryschuk who at risk of her\nown safety tried to save the boy's\nlife.\nTEAR CAS USED ON\n12,000 COAL MINERS\nBRUSSELS, May 22 (AP)\u2014Police\nused tear gas tonight to drive hundreds of itrlken from shafts as\n12,000 coal miners struck for higher\npay, with 100,000 more likely to\njoin the walkout.\nA group of 15 mlnen ln a chatelet\nshaft evaded police, barricaded\nthemselvu in and threatened a\nhunger ttrike.\nSEES IND OF GOLD STANDARD\nLONDON, May 22 (CP-Havat\u2014\nAn international gold itandard will\ntoon be found no longer practical\nand a system of payment in goods\nmust take itl place, Sir Stephen\nDemetriadi, president of the London chamber of commerce, predicted today in a speech at the chamber's annual meeting.\nPAPER COMPANY HAS LOSS\nNEW YORK, May 22 (CP)\u2014International Paper Company and\n\u25a0ubsidiaries reported today a net\nlota for 1934 of $3,009.16, excluding\n\u25a0 profit of $595,849 on bonds redeemed during the year.\nItaly Says Britain Has\nBeen Busy for More\nThan a Year\n'PROPAGANDA\"\nLONDON REPLY\n\"No Increase in Force\nfor More Than Year'*\nSays Britain\nthorltatlvt Olorntlt d'ltalli today ,\ntald thtn wat a htavy Brltlth\nconcentration of troopi, plinti ind\nwar mattrltlt along the Sudan-\nEthiopian frontltr,\nTht ntwtptper, which generally\nreceive! Informttlon for tuch ir* I\nticlei from official sources uldt\n\"Englind hit bttn taking along\ntht borden of Itt potsesilom\nfronting on Ethiopia the mott\nnoteworthy military mtuuru ef\nthe time typt tt now Is taktn by\nItaly, although more silently.\n\"For more thin a yttr Impor*\n-   (Contlnutd From Pige Two)\nLAKE LEVEL UP\nHALF FOOT DAY\nAt 8.75 Above Low;\n15 Feet Above This\nTime in 1934\nMalting  mow  and   swelling\nstreams  ire  beginning  to  bout\ntht level of the Wut Arm at Nel- .\nton it tht rite of half a foot a\nday.\nWednttdty tfttrnoon, with tha\nlevel of the lake at 8.76 fttt ibova\nlowtr witer, tht. like wit lipping over the top of tht city whirf\nat the tower end.\n' binot Sunday tht level haa\nrlun 1.30 feet and ths levels fer\nthe put four days irt u followt:\nSundiy 7.45 fut ibove low water, Mondiy 7.75 feet above; Tuuday 8.20. feet above; and Wednuday 8.75 feet ibove,\n'With a backward iprlng tha\nrlu of tht like level hit bun\nexceptionally ilow. On Mty 22\nlltt yur tht levtl itood at 15\nfett\nOn the 20th It hid bttn at 15.10\nftet abovt but dropped back ta\n14.70 on tho 25th and thtn varltd\nfrom diy to diy ind the petk\ncame Jum 2 when a nadlng\npliced the level at 16.90 fut\nForest Fires in\nB.C. on Increase\nVICTORIA. May 22 (CP).-Al-\nthough damage hu not been widespread, fire occurrence in the flnt\nthree weeks of the 1935 forest flra*\nsetson in British Columbia has been\nconsiderably heavier than last year,\nespecially in the Vancouver foreti\ndiitrict, which includu Vancouver\nbland. The present warm spell ia\nheld responsible.\nForty-nine fires were reported laat\nweek, bringing the total for the tea*\nson up to 118, u compared with H\nat this time last year and 61 ln 1933.\nTne last two yean, however, hava\nbeen abnormally light tire yeart.\nThe Vancouver foreat district accounted for 64, or more than halt\nthe entire outbreaks, where thera\nwere only 12 last year. In all other\nareas of the province the occurrence\nwas less u compared with 1934.\nSenator Shaffner\nDead in Winnipeg\nWINNIPEO, May 22 (CP). -\nSenator Frederick Lturenoe\n8chaff ner of Boltttvaln, Min- dltd\nhert todty,\nSenitor Schaffner, who WU In\nhit 80th yttr, hid been In poor\nhetlth for tomt timt. A Conserve-\ntlvt In politlci, ht wn summoned\nto tht senate on October 23, 1917.\nHt wu i member of the houu of\ncommoni from 1904 to 1911.\nHitlsr Hopes to\nReopen Discussion\non Europe's Peace\nBERLIN, Miy 22 (AP)\u2014A primary purpou In Relchifuehnr\nAdolf Hltler'i speech btfort tha\nrelchstag lttt night, men who\nhelped ihipe hit irgumentt uld\ntoday wai to let Europein petca\ndiscussions going inew.\nPart five of the Versailles trttty,\nthtt limiting Germany's armaments, now hai been crossed definitely off the bookt, Hitler wll\ndeirrrlbrrd it believing, and tha\nleague of nttlont, which centurtd\nGermany for violating It In rt-\narming, adequately antwirtd,\n.____,_____..-___i........\t\n \t\nAQf TWO -\nTILLIE THI TOILER\n-THE DAILY HU^___________________B____W_____l\nBy Russ Weifover\nTHIS STYLE *HOP.S\n\u00abtt)W.Ne-Tt>U 6STTBR] 1\"IHE MAN|\ntSBTNOOaWaJPAMAl-\nAfififcJ\nil-VStSOT\nBUTHE'Sl\n\u20222,000 \\\nMILKS\nAWA.Y|\nOH.V* CANT VMAIT-\nIT V-JIU. TAKE B*tr*S\nTO <SET HIM HE?E\nI'LL SES\nWHAT!\nCAN DO\nTHIS IS THE1\nMAN I WftS\nTALKJNS\nABOOT\nSAY, TWO MINUTES\nA\u00abJO TOU V\u20acIcE 2,00d\nMlLBJl AtlAY-HOVtl'Dl\nTtJUtRT HERE?\nATEAIU\nTHOUSHT\n\u00bb GUESS\nMORE ABOUT\nMcGeer and Bonds\n,    (Contlnutd Prom Page Ont)\ntht Ion thit Vtnoouvtr buiinui\nmm hivt tufftrtd from tho activltlu  of  Communists  and   relief\n' eatnp itrlken to dtta.\nA SERIOUS STATI\n\"If Communists, now endeavoring In every way possible to disrupt\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE\u2014\nIITHOUT CALOMEL\nYooH Jump Oot of Bed in\nthe Morning Ruin' to Go\ntad tWwwU Ma\n\u00abrt_i\nafatl\nUd__'ttI*___t__*U\t\nmil \u00ab_1 Btkt rroe NttMly\nat iad fall ol\u00ab_-___.__\nIt sat at\ntt Ml Yet be* it auH d-n ne\nratal, ttt .man oU__l_t Mt urn\nm.t^.iametsim._.tttie.lis, tmt Attn-\nm* Ml'*\u00bb-i-t-lW-*-\u00bb.I.**<il--pon**r*-ii.\nKptTn c. aqoid bik um row b_\u00bb\u00a3 diiir.\n\u25a0 M .__- _\u00ab- . . '- - _     \u25a0 -      -\nIj.*\"**.'*\nII tat. bOtliiM.oiriatfnalj, row lwd\nit <Ut-r*. It lwt itt-Ta lo tba botMk.\n___ il_sts op toot stoi-soliYooblwt thick.\nStt taoto ni yoor bmtb io fool, mis ettm,\nEi_io*,tlr-,bl\u00ab____._\u00bb_ Yoor booduboo ud\nfcloil doea ta* out Tear vb-iuHflo\nIII Utao tbooi tr-* old C-JWntl\nHTTLS HVES TZUt to lot tbaoo tiro\n\u25a0ak of bOl _e*t-t fnolr. Thoo too (oil\nIn ood op.\" CartS. LIW. Umt f__ to*.\n!*___ tmadatm. k_mta_, ftr.Ua npublo\nStroeto, nordaa wboo It ooomi to Butttf\nKbilo Sow Ir-Jr.\nf\u00bb**lJ*\u00bb'l*Mkro*ll\u00bb\u00abP-l\u00ab.-_klo' C-rtor'l\n\u25a0Hla Utor PlUa. Look for tba ouoa Cartar'o\nlU-orPDIiei tba rod bM. UmaUnk*\nt. Ste at dnt Horn. 01M1 C M. C\nthe buiineu of the city of Vancouver by itriku and other means, are\nable to to and to disturb industrial\nend commercial activltlu of the\ncity, conditions might develop that\nwould remit In a decline of the\nclty'i revenuu thet would make the\ntltuttlon lmpottlble.\n\"There li every reaaon, however,\nfor now feeling that we can handle\nsuccessfully any altuation that might\ndevelop. If it is necentry to carry\non the buiineu of the waterfront\nand the city hy mobilizing the citizens ts wu done ln the old country\nduring the general strike and more\nrecently ln San Francisco, wt can\nmeet the iltuttion.\nWILL LAUNCH ISSUI\n\"Public opinion recognlzat the\nseriousness ot the tltuttlon and il\nno longer lympathetic toward any\nelement that li willing and anxious\nto disrupt buiineu.\n\"Believing thue facta to be true,\nwe are going to launch our baby\nbond Issue to raita fundi to build\na city hall and Inaugurate a works\nprogram on Juna 10,\"\nTba 10-year bondi will ba for $100\nand will bear S per cent Intereat.\nVANCOUVER,  May 22   (CP).-\nRelief camp worken ln Vancouver\nat a mtu meeting today voted\nagalnit Mayor 0. 0. McGeer't prop-Dealt that they return to tha campt\nand leave a delegation here to preu\nfor recognition of their demands for\nchanged camp condition! and ad-\nmlnlstritlon.\nThe men wera reported unanimous\nln their decision to remain in Vancouver. Approxlmitely 2000 workers\nhive been here ilnce they left ctmps\nthroughout British Columbia April\n4. They have lived on funds rafted\nsolely by prlvite subscription with\nthe exception of two dayi' relief\ngrtnted them by the city lut weekend.\nMeanwhile, the Brltlth Columbia\nOnly $34*\u00b0 toGhic(L(jo\nIN THE LATEST PULLMAN-BUILT,DELUXE,\n\u2022flit- Conditioned 60tick on\nthe \u00a3mpite BiLildet! lov pares to\n\/@fKOTHER POINTS. DINER MEALS AS LOW AS BOc\n^)      (jtetxt A\/otthetn Xy.\nGuide for Travellers\nNtlson, B.C., Hotels\n\"Finttt in the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bui Service Oeo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 25c fo 60e\nLUNCHEON 35c to 50c        DINNER 35e to 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nTelephone 78? Ntlton, B.C 422 Vtrnon SL\nTRAILITES MOVE\nTO PASSMORE\nPASSMORE, B.C., May 22-Mrs\nW. H. Saunders, Mrs. Kenneth\nChandler and baby Ronnie of Trail\nhave taken up ruldence on their\nranch for the rummer.\nThe Farm:':' Institute held a\nmeeting 9und_y afternoon. There\nwas a good attendance. The vet*\nrenarv tooli were revalued and are\nto'be taken special cire of to keep\nthem up to date. One new member\nwts enrolled.\nWilliam White was elected dele-\n-ato to the farmers convention at\nRobson in the near future.\nLetters regirdlng Carnegie adult\neducation fund were held over to\ncooperate with the Women's Institute. A dance ls to.be held later\nto provide working fundi to carry on.\ngovernment and tha city of Vancouver maintained their stand that\nresponsibility for tha men rests on\nthe Dominion government Prime\nMinister R. B. Bennett has disclaimed this responsibility.\nA deputation ot four striken\nwaited on thc mayor prior to the\nmeeting and asked that they be\ngranted relief while the men are\ndiscussing the lituitlon. They told\nthe mayor they thought it would\ntake at leut two dayt to decide on\nthe strikers' next move.\nMr. McGeer refused to grant them\nrelief.\nVICTORIA, May 22 (CP).-Be-\ntween 700 and 800 relief camp workers now in Vancouver are eager to\nreturn to the campi but tliey have\nbeen halted by ttrike plcketers.\nBrltlth Columbia relief authorities\nstated today.\nThue workera have mtde application to be returned to the campi,\nhiva been given routine medical\nexaminations and are nrepared to\nleave but cannot get put the picket\nposts, it was declared.\nRelief statistics showed approximately 2000 relief worken from\nBritiih Columbia camp; were out\non strike at the and of April while\n5610 men remained in the camps.\nThere ware 7641 men ln the campi it\nthe end of Much.\nThe recordi ihow thit tome 1390\nmen left the camps in military district No. 11, the coait area, while 683\nleft camps ln dlitrlct. 13, ln the interior.\nIndian Freed in\nCranbrook Case\nJury Finds Evidence Is\nNot Sufficient to\nConvict\nCRANBROOK, B. C, May 22-\nAfter an hour'i deliberation, the\n1ury at the iprlng aulzu hert returned a verdict of \"lack of tul-\nficient evidence to convict\", tnd Al-\nbin Mike, a St. Eugene Mission Indian, wu acquitted of a ch-rne of\nIndecent assault on Mn. Pauline\nCuimir. The cue, the only one\non the Hit, luted two dayt with\nMr. Juttlce Fither presiding.\nWitnesses Included Mn. Pauline\nCaslmir, her husbind, Phlllp Cuimir. Semour Willlami Inditn Chief\nEusti. tnd Isidore Big Cilf.\nJ. S. Spruell wai crown proie*\nir, the accused being undefended.\nHUMS  \u2014   R.   D.   Douglas,   H.\nIharluworth, A. Y. Myers, N. Pear-\non, M. Montgomery, S. R. Smith,\nR.  Whittal, Vancouver;  D. J.\nAUnon, O. W. Thorn, Penticton;\n, A. Bunu, R. Brough, Medicine\njat: R. R. Garrett, Kingigate; J. D.\nRHeee, J. Wilton, K. C. Macdon-\n, Kamloops; H. D. Morrow, Cal\ngary; L. G. Andenon, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. W. Powell, Spokane; T. Allison,\nEdmonton: H. D. Tudor, Boston,\nMass.; A. M. Thompton, Revelstoke;\nG. D. Scott, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs.\nB. C. Weld, Victoria; J. Vineberg.\nC. Hershorn, Montreal; Mr. and\nMn. C. B. Bowman.\nThe Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest IsKin_\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMiny Rooms With- Private\nBaths or Showers\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n124 BAKER ST. PHONE It NILSON. B.C.\n[tAVOY-G. Ruuall, W. J. Barr.\nA. Blackbourne, Beaverdell; R.\ndlson, Erie; L. Armstrong, A. S.\natfield, Penticton; D. W. Brookes,\n. C. Durant, MlM F. Hipwell. A.\n| Montcruff, H. S. Hipwell, Van\ncouver; P. Henke, Nakuip; 0.\nHtlnu, Frultvale: B. W. Dytsart,\nTrail; 0. Andenon, Spokane; H. F.\nWllmot, Grty Creek; Mr. and Mn.\nS. Gullett, Botwtll; A. H. Pigott,\nWynndel; M. Kubln, Grand Forka.\nlew Grand Hotel\nP L KAPAK. Prop.\nHot and Cold Water\nSingle tOo up; doublt 60c up\nMonthly rttu 810.00 ua\nPH 284       116 VERNON ST\nIQUFFK'S HOTEL\nB. BARSATO, Prop.\nRoomi from 60c to 11-50\nMonthly 110 ind up.\nm tinted tnd hot and cold\nwtter In every room\nBAKER ST. PHONE 90\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vtrnon It Phont 6I7L\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooma\nMlntn' Headquartera\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. A MADDEN Prop.\nComplettlv Remooelled\nHot tnd Cold Witer\nIn tht HEART ot thi City\nPHONE M      601 WAPO ST\nMush On This\nYear To Alaska\nTie land ol Ihe hutky doa colli\nyou this summer ... Travel again\ntht historic trail ol \"88 and tee\nAlaska at Itt but aboard a mod-\n\u2022m Canadian Pacific liner.\nCruise ior nine tnchcmUn*} day*\nto ptaoM you have nad about\nand always wanted to ue.\nRiursd tip \/art faeUai gQP\nmi-U arti iirth 'DD\n(eicept ll Skaf.es) ww\nRegular salllngi during thl tummer froa Vancouver cad Victoria.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nSocial and Personal\nNews of Trail\nThli column It in chirge of Mn. Glenn Quayle of Trail. All\neventi ot a socit! ntture of interest in Tnll and Tedanic wlll appetr\nln thli column. Mn. Quayle will be glad to have any tuch news\ntelephoned to her at her home tn Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., May 22\u2014Mn. A\nHanson of Ronland, who leavu\nshortly for the Okanagan where\nshe will make her home was guest\nof honor today at a delightful social\nevent, Mrs. Reginald Clark entertaining.\ne   a   e\nMeeting of the Teen Age glrla of\nSt. Andrew's church, under the dl*\nrection of Mn. H. C. H. Broadwood,\nwu attended by Audrey Doubleday,\nMary Broadwood, Betty Morrant,\ni_dith Woodburn, Eileen Manhall,\nChrissie Gillis. Kathleen Wilkinson.\nKathleen Glover, Susan Stainton\nand Lorraine Flynn.\naaa\nJack HoUand hat gone to Vancouver where he will ipend a month's\nvicition.\n\u00bb  .  .\nMexico, securing 118 flagi, won\nfirst prita over la other tablet at\nthe military whist drive in Elki\nhall given by the Ladlu ot the Royal\nPurple list night. Playing for Mexico were Mr. and Mn. 3. E. Mac*\nFarlen. C. Norris and George Webiter. Second prizes were awarded\nfor 115 flags, the players being Mn.\nG. Weir, Mrs. E. Matthews J. Scott\nand R. Sandlcomb. J. E. MacFarlen\nwu master of ceremonlu. Serving\nMORE ABOUT\nAIR PROGRAM\n(Continued Prem Page Ona)\nhome, Innttad of being Increased\nto 840 In flvt vtart, wlll ba In*\ncrimed to 1600 by Mtrch, 1837.\nFifteen hundred planet, abtolute\nparity with Otrmtny and Franca,\nIt tht gotl.\nThtt gotl tha Brltlth government\nii determined to reach and maintain, tha house ot commons and\nthe house ot lords were told thli\ntfternoon by Stanley Baldwin and\nLord Londonderry, respective government spokesmen in tha two\nhouses.\nLABOR  LOSES VOTI\nTha government rode roughshod\nover a labor party amendment to\nreduce the huge air expansion expendlturei, tonight, by a vote of\n340 to 52.\nMr. Baldwin found teveral polntt\nln tht tpetch of Chancellor Adolf\nHitler lttt night which ha thought\noffered promlte. In teveral dlrec-\ntioni Hitler had defined tha German attitude. Polnta of hii ipeeeh\n\"deterve the dotett and frankut\nstudy from all of ut,\" ha uid, 'Wt\nthtll not fall to <do our upmost to\nbring' about ln all directions HI\nthat li poulble by intemttlontl\nagreement.\"\nChief of Hitler't polnti meeting\nwith approvtl ot the lord pretldtnt\not the council, wu hit willingness\nto conclude in Hr convention supplementing the Locarno treaty, with\nthe Indication it could ba accompanied by an agreement on limitation of planes.\nNext wu Hitler't indication that\nthe air pact might be bound up with\ntn effort to aafeguard the civilian\npopulation agalnit lnditcrlmintte\nattack from tha air.\nUoyd (rowe to\nMove Next Week\nKIMBERLEY. B.C., May 22 -\nLloyd Crowe, who suc-reeds L. H.\nJackton ti manager of the retail\nstore of the C. M. St S. company at\nTrail, expects to leave for the\nsmelter cfty next week.\nEver prominent ln tportini* and\nsoclil circlet, ha hai baen one of\nthe mott public-spirited men in\nKimberley. For the past 10 years\nhe hai been backing tportlng activities here. He hai been the mainstay of the Gyro club, and beside*!\nbeing a put president. Is ilso oa<\u00bb\nMeutenant governor of district VIII.\nHe hu been a busy member of the\nUnited church board and his Inter-\nest In politic! li keen.\nAt tha home ot Mrs. Ted James\nof McDougall townilte a prettily\narranged wedding ihower wu held\nin honor of Mln Floatie Elkerton.\nwhoie msrrlage it planned to take\nolice ln Juna About 80 auutt were\norestnt tnd whllt tnd bridge were\nnltved. The bride-elect wat the re*\n\"Intent ot many beautiful and uwful glfta.\nTOO MUCH DISQUISED\nSOUTHAMPTON. Eng. (CP) -\nPolice Sergeant Emery diseuise*'\nhimself to wall whan he mixed with\nmen suspected of itreet betting th\"\nhe wu roughly uted by his own\ncomradu who arretted him tor\nloitering.\"\nLIVINO LONOER COSTS MONEY\nLONDON, (CP)-Taachara Uvlnr\nlong aftar retirement hu cauted\nt deficiency of about 850,000,000 In\nthe teachen' penilon icheme It hu\nbeen revealed by government ac-\ntuariu. Higher contribution! will\nbe required.\nLONDON, (CP)-Tha Detection\n\u25a0lub, consisting of writen of detective storlu and having tor lti object \"the mtintentnee ot a itandard for detective itory writing\".\nheld ita annual dinner at Orotvenor\nhouse.\non the entertainment and refreshment committees were Mrs. W. J.\nHtrdlngton Mrs. Joe Kelly, Miss\nM Koehn, E. L. Rhodei, A. B. Cot*\ntrell and I. N. Allen.\n.  .  .\nMr. tnd Mn. W. A. Elletson of\nRossland are leaving tomorrow for\nSpokane where they will viiit for\nseveral dayt.\naaa\nLyman SL Denis it spending a\nthort holiday at Spokane.\nt  .  .\nDr. and Mrs. W. R. Williamson\nmd Dr. Williamson's mother, Mrs.\nJtmu Williamson, are ipending the\nweek-tnd at Spokane.\naaa\nMr. and Mn. D. Doran of Grett\nFalls. Mont are vlilton to Tnll\nthii week, Mr. Doran being here\non business.\naaa\nR. F. Blihop ot Nelton li visiting\nln Trail\naaa\nUnder tha leadenhlp of Mn.\nHamilton Currie, memben of the\nJunior auxiliary to East Trail mission met last night ln tha mission\nhall. Memben ln attendance were\nJoan Yates, Alice Whut, Joyce\nBishop, Audrey McLein, Grice Ep-\nerson, Lillian Dawson, Eleanor Eperson, Faith Huddluton, Doreen\nDownle, Joyce Cromble, Jaan WUson, Mary McKlnnon, Peggy McKlnnon. Mattia Clayton, Betty Clayton, Helen Flndley, Rosie Englund,\nIta McClure, Gloria Spain and Betty Spain.\n.  .  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. F. Truswell.\nVictoria itreet. have u their guest\nfor a few dayi, Mri. T. A. Clarke\nof Nelson.\naee\nDon Barrie is spending a month\nvacation at corst citlu.\naaa\nTeen Age girli of St. Andrew'i\nchurch, meeting thii evening ln\nthe Anglican parish hill, were id-\ndrtued by Mn. Solly of the dioceun board. Mn, Solly explained\nthe pledges ind work of ill auxiliaries, urging all memben to live\nup to the iaealt presented.\naee\nW. Ardeni hu gone to Spokane\nwhere he will spend a thort holiday.\n.  .  .\nMn. Harry Matthews', who hit\nbeen viiiting in Trtll for t week,\nreturned today to Grand Forki.\n.  .  .\nMn. M. L. Brothen left todty tor\nGrind Forki where ihe will visit\nher brother-in-law and lliter, Mr.\nand Mn. Joe Willis.\nMORE ABOUT\nETHIOPIA\n(Continued From Page One)\ntint concentration! of Brltlih\nforces hivt bttn revealed,\" tht\npiper uid, \"between tht zone of\nthe White Nile end tht Blue Nile,\nSobat tnd parts of Llkt Rudolf,\nThe Brltlih authorltlu htd gone\neven to fir u to seek native troopi\ntmong our Erltretn population.\nIn tht Anglo-Egyptian Sudan a\nquadrilateral of railroad orgtnl-\nxitlont with in evident military\ncharacter hai bttn constituted\nwith two tides facing our colonies\nand Ethiopia.''\nSALMO TEAMS\nWINMATCHES\nBeat Ymir in Baseball\nand Softball\nTilts\nSALMO, B.C., May 22.-Two ball\ngarmeikwere ttaged Sunday between\nVmir Ind Salmo players. The tint\na -qftrall game between Ymir and\nSalmo ladies' teams was played at\nYmir. A crowd of Salmo rooters motored up for the gime. Tne Salmo\ngirls showed marked superiority ln\npitching, hitting and fielding and\nwon 35-2.\nAfter tba finish of thli game the\nYmir Senior Men'i team motored\nto Salmo and engaged the Salmo\nteam in an lntereitlng contest which\nwu very clote it flnt The Salmo\nteam however forged ahead after\nthe fifth inning and flniihed at the\nlong end of a 10-5 score. D. Ferguson,\nportsider, pitched a tine game for\nSalmo but wai given, it timet, poor\nsupport Edwirdi for Ymlr ind Ad-\nami for Salmo made tha baat Uta\nof the day, each getting a three-\nbagger. Miller, pitching for Ymir,\nwat relieved by Fritz, after being\nInjured base running.\nThe lineups were:\nYmir: H. Moore c. J. Miller p, D.\nWhitehead lb, R. Edwarda se, C.\nBarron 2b, J. Fritz 8b, C. Green cf,\nG. Haines cf, G. Barron rf, C. Vallance, spare.\nSalmo: F. Lindstrom c, D. Ferguson p, J. Fair lb, E. Gibbon it, H.\nMcLellan 2b, R. Gibbon 3b, C. Hanna lf, H. Lelbscher cf, H. Adama rt,\nC. Dorey and B. Orth. spares,\nW. Keel ot Ymlr ctlled the belli\nand strikes and R. C. Bush waa bue\numpire.\nCHARGES DENIED\nLONOON, May 22 (AP)\u2014 A\nBritish wtr office spokesman today branded reports from Rome\nthtt Greit Britain hit concentrated troopi ilong tho Sudan-\nEthiopian frontier at \"Italian\npropaganda\" containing \"no truth\nwhatever.\"\nIt wat itated Brltiln maintains\na imall foroe of troopi In tht\nSudan \"but thtrt hu not betn\n\u2022ny increase for mort thin \u2022 yeir,\nor since the beginning of the\nIttlo-Ethloplan   difficulties.\"\nETHIOPIA ADAMANT\nGENEVA, May 22 (AP)\u2014Ethiopia\ntonisht warned the league of nations, now considering her dispute\nwith Italy, that she would yield\nneither \"to Italian intimidation nor\nItalian violence.\"\nEmperor Halle Selassie's latut\ncommunication   wrt  reid  to  the\ncouncil at tbe end ot the day'i session which saw Ethiopia formally\ncharged with maintaining slavery\nand the slave traffic. Baron Pom-\npeo Aloisl, tha Italian delegate,\nmade the charge.\nThe day alio served to emphulze\nthe difficulties confronting An*\nthony Eden, Brltlih lord privy seal,\nand Pierre Laval, French foreign\nminister, who are seeking wtyt to\nsettle tha frontier dispute outside\nthe league halls.\nIn contrut to Ethiopia'! Insistence thtt the letgue deal with the\nconflict, Eden and Laval faced\nItaly*! open unwillingness to tub-\nmi', lt to such procedure.\nIt wu uld reliably Aloisl sought\nto prevent reading before the council of the emperor'i appeal and only\ncontented with the undemanding\nthat the council memben would\nnot dlscusi it publicly.\nEVADED ARREST 15 YEARS\nVANPARDI. India (CP)-Convicted from fingerprlnti on i mirror\nthey had stolen, three middle tged\nmen were sentenced to Imprisonment ot from one to three yean.\nCROYDON BUILDS UP\nCROYDON. Eng. (CP)-Miin terminus tor Britain's International\ncommercial ikywtyt Croydon airdrome accommodation is being lnereued to handle more than 20.000\npassengen and 500 tom of freight\nand mall monthly.\nOLD\nSCOTCH WHISKY\n^OlDSCOTCHWHISKY\nNsw Low $<\nPrice\n\u00bb.00\n8 2\u00abHo\u00ab*\n\u25a0 :!::|!:: =\n: : = ::g   ::\nnm pi in ii\n^        \u2122l_!.\nIiii!'\" IliBII\nl#   win I 1 \u25a0aiaaiii\nfc.-.*       iiHii\nW'  ^  \u2022!?!\n~        OU) SCOTCH WHIOV    _\n-                                      tSKXZ-mt                      ******\"\nJoHNliao Lib\n-iM\n:'  m- -'-\n--   : = !=== =\n.iiii.IE\n\"D\/iTK__\u00a3D, MATURED AND BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Covernment of British Columbia\nThe\nCall of the\nMild!\nMany are called, but fow em\nchosen. Only mild leavea\n\u2022var gat the call (or Ogden'i\nFine Cut Cigarette Tobacco.\nAnd the moment you start to\nsmoke Ogden's you will know\nhow important it th* careful\n\u2022election of leaf, In producing\na cigarette tobacco smooth*\nand more satisfying. With a\npackege of Ogden'i Fins Cut\nand \"Chanlecler\" or \"Vogue-\npapers you've got fhe call fo\nleal enjoyment in rolling your\nown,\nSAVE THE POKER HANDS\nOGDEN'S\nFINE   CUT\nVW Pipe Knot* Otdtn't Cut Pkt\nScmct Kiq mmaift i\nMaximum\nMi-Skid\nTrip\/*\nTEMPEREI\nRUBBER\n\u2022.'\/\/jr''\nDOMINION ROYALS WON'T DISAPPOINT YOU\nBECAUSE of ito excluaivo Triple TEMPERED\nRUBBER tread, tho Dominion Royal delivers\nmileage that ia almoat unbelievable. Hat* ia\n\u2022 traad that eneurea real anti-ekicf aafaty for\nthouaanda of mllea after ordinary tiraa ar*\nworn smooth. Hara, too, is a atrong body ol\nSafety-Bonded Corda, bathed in pure liquid\nLate* rubber, and reinforced with two shock-\nresisting Breaker Stripe. Saa your Dominion\ndealer now and atart on tha \"Royal Way to\nMileage\". Every Royal is backed by a liberal\n12-month guarantee.\n0TJ8\nD\nRoyals\n\u2022II' 'fill\" W M1NIO R    DEALER      -      IB    WIIiL    SERVE    TOO     WELL\nSold in Nelaon by\nSTEVENSON'S AUTO SUPPLY   KOOTENAT MOTORS (Nelson} Ltd.\n708 VERNON ST. 205 BAKER STREIT\nSHORTrS REPAIR SHOP\n712 BAKER STRICT\nFAIRVIEW SERVICE STATION\nNILSON AVINUI\ni8- -a-**\n -^\u2014\u2014\n*_\u2014\n\u2014\n\t\nVfl\nCanadian turkeyt enter Oreat\nBritain free of duty. From May 2,\n193S, the duty on foreign turkeys\nentering the British Isles has been\nraised to six cents per pound In\nplace of the former duty ol two\ncenta per pound.\nFREE\nEYES\nModem demand! on our\neyea have fettered them\nbeyond endurance. At this\ndistance we see well, at\nthat distance we squint, at\ntome other range we cannot discern object!. If you\nknow thii to be true in\nyour cue, free yourself\nfrom these limitations. You\ncan! Have an examination\nat once.\nTo (lamp Down\non Rod Riders\nMove to Prevent More\nFatalities; Four Are\nFined at Nelson\n-THE NSLSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNING. MAY 2J. 1936-\nSteve and John Edgyed. Allan\nDunn and William Lees, taken off\nthe tender of a CP.R. engine at\nProcter Tuesday, were sentenced to\npay a fine of S-5 or in default to\naerve one month ln JaU for an Infraction of the Railway act. They\nwere arrested by R.CM.P. Constable\nG. H. Whiteman and appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate John\nCartmeL The four boarded the train\nat Russell's Landing.\nPolice are now bending every\neffort to stop the practice of \"rod\nriding\" in view of the number of\nfatalities that have occurred in the\nprovince. One fatality has occurred\nin the district and several bad accidents have been reported ln the past\ntwo weeks. Magistrates are also\nbacking this movement to prevent\nfurther accidents and henceforth\nmore severe penalties will be meted\nout.\nLORD ALLENBY'S AVIARY\nLONDON (CP)-Field Marshal\nLord Allenby, who celebrated his\n74th birthday on St. George's Day.\nApril 23, has an aviary stocked with\nmany varieties of foreign finches.\n_*____]_*_\nKUYPER\nGIN\nBishop of Kootenay Points\nto Increase in Divorces in\nB. C. While Others Decrease\nWith 1-16 of Canada's Population Province\nHas Quarter of Total Divorces; Church\nRefuses to Hallow Reunion\nHASTY MARRIAGES, SELFISHNESS AND\nIMPATIENCE UNDERMINING HOME-LIFE\nWidespread Instability, Extravagant Use of\nTime Deplored; Rev. A. H. Solly Named\nArchdeacon of the Okanagan\n(Extracts from the Charge of the Bishop of Kootenay delivered to the Synod of the Diocese of Kootenay at Penticton\non Wednesday, May 22,1935.)\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n... We meet at a time when the unprecedented depression of recent years has not wholly passed. There has\nbeen some recovery and the horizon is less dark and for\nthat we thank God and take courage. Though in the main\nthe causes of the world catastrophe may be sought in the\ngeneral world conditions of over-supply and over-production,\nof ill regulated and destructive competition, yet we need\nsquarely to face the fact that the continuance and severity\nof the lowering clouds are due largely to ourselves.\nIt is natural, it is necessary that a young country\nshould take risks, but when the venture is made far beyond\nthe limits of its resources then optimism becomes folly and\na gamble. For some years past the country has been too extravagant in almost every phase of our social life, political\nand departmental, communal and personal. We have come\nlate, but not too late, to realize that we have been living beyond our means. *\u2014\nThe obvious cure and solution, in\nwhich every one ii called to take\nhis part, is a return to a more simple\nway of living with full and absolute\ntrust in the benign purposes and\nplan of God, and the determination\nUNION (ML OOMPANY\nOT CANADA LIMITED\nLaboratory \"Engine Wear' Tests\" anl\ncylinder measurements of a stock ear driven\n60,185 miles In 60 daya wllh Triton Motor Oil\nahowed that Triton reduce* engine\nthat Triton forma lesa carbon, less sludge and\nhaa longer l\\js than Eastern or Western Oils.\nTry Triton-UOft PURE PARAFFIN-BASE\nT-\u00ab-!l\nto exercise a healthy and wise\nthrif tfulneas. The outstanding\nexample in history of the power to\nsurvive by calculated thrift is that\nof the Jewish race, God's old time\nchosen people, who though denationalized for many centuries are\nstill today a solid, united race.\nWIDESPREAD   INSTABILITY\nWith us there is a widespread ominous instability, a carefree recklessness shown in our daily methods.\nGambling on margins, purchases on\ncredit, sweepstakes and lotteries, extravagance in costly pleasures, are\nnot the marks of a stable progressive community, and need immediate curtailment. The Bishops at\nLambeth ln 1930 declared categorically \"that it is not the business of\nthe Christian church to suggest\ntechnical remedies\" for the most\nserious problem of unemployment\nbut \"It is our business to rouse dull\nconsciences and to turn the attention ot all Christian people to the\nmoral background behind the picture. It la our business then, as the\nbranch of the Anglican communion\nln the diocese of Kootenay, to commend, by example and counsel,\nsuch wholesome religion ai will influence others to a iteadier and\nmore controlled Ufe.\nNeither Induatry nor commerce\nnor finance is entirely outside the\nbordera of the Kingdom of God, for\nat every point they touch human\nvaluei and depend on human motives, and nothing human is alien to\nHim who came that men might have\nlife and might have It abundantly.\nThe Archbishop of Canterbury In\nhia New Year'i address this year\nspoke of the gradual recovery of\nworld conditions but added \"I aee\nthe need of another kind of recovery\u2014recovery of the soul. 'Faster\nand Faster' seems to be almost a\nmotto of existence, and hurry and\nhaste infect us with heedlessness ot\nsoul. The incessant pressure of distractions which hustle us from one\nsensation to another\u2014the cinema\nwith Its pictures exciting and confusing the imagination, the popular\npress with its arresting headlines,\nthe endless flood of books\u2014follow\neach other so fast that scarcely one\nof them stays. In iuch a Jostle of\nsensatom we have no time to itop\nand think. The soul is unheeded and\nGod il crowded out. We must restore the right balance. The urgent\nneed of modern life ia to recover\nthe soul\u2014time in a word to be still\nand know God.\"\nEXTRAVAGANT USE OF TIME\nVery closely akin to our extravagance with our meana and money\nil that extravagant use ot our time\nwhich disregards the proper observance of Sunday and other days like\nGood Friday, Christmas Dey and\nAscension Day. The church'a chief\nduty is to love ind worship God,\nand ln that love and wonhip it gives\nits chief witness to the world. In\nreaction against the old faahioned\nPuritanism and the kill-Joy spirit\nof \u2022 Sabbath-Sunday the pendulum\nhas swung too far the other way, and\nBritish Columbia is eight times more\nfrequent than in eastern Canada,\ntwice as great aa the average for\nthe west, and three and one-half\ntimes as frequent for the whole of\nCanada.\nAnd  again, alae, while every\nprovince (except B.C.) il ihowlng\na tendency to  decreaae   Brltlih\nColumbia alona In 1933 ahowed\nIncreue of 13 or t per cent; the\nfigures for 1933 wire 31 per cent\ngreater than thoie of 1927, British Columbia with only one-ilx-\ntnnth of the population provider.\nmora than one-quarter of tha total\nnumber for the whole of Cinidi.\nWhen Canada ia compared with\nother countries of the world, statistics show that as regards frequency per population Canada has\nquite a low place; in Auatralla, New\nZealand and among the whites of\nSouth Africa resort u had to divorce\nfour or five time! ai often as in\nCanada. Seemingly therefore with\nregard to other countries marriages\nare far more happy and stable in\nCanada; but that does not detract\nfrom the fact of the alarming and\nincreasing extent to which dissolution of the civil contract of marriage\nis sought in British Columbia. In\nmost countries divorce is decreasing,\nin Canada and chiefly in the west it\nhaa been  steadily  increasing  and\nhai now passed the frequency rate\nof England.   These facts are indisputable.\nTHE SIGNIFICANCE\nAt thl! moment I can only briefly\npoint out their significance. Haste\nin undertaking marriage, Impatience\nand selfishness afterwards, loose\ncontrol of both emotions and passions, are undermining homelife,\nthe very sheet anchor of naUonal\nwellbeing, sapping moral stability\nand character, ennervating the race\nand dulling the vision of high Ideals\nand thoughts for the future.\nMonogamy and fidelity to a alngle\nmarried partner has been as potent\na factor aa any in bringing mankind\nupwards from a brute exiatence to\nmoral responsibility. Now for a few\npaltry yean' novel excitement we\nare bartering our precious heritage\nand no effective proteat ii raised.\nIn loyalty to the Master the Christian church cannot tolerate divorce\n\u2014legal separation ls quite another\nmatter\u2014and as a consequence we\ncannot recognize nor bless as holy\nmatrimony the union of a married\nperson to another so long as the former partner is alive. Hitherto the\nUnited Church of Canada has readily officiated when our clergy have\nrefused to hallow such a union. A\nyear or two back at their general\nconvention at Hamilton they.pissed\na mild resolution against the practice. This seemingly is having effect\nfor lt is encouraging to note a steady\nand appreciative drop in the numbers of those who, having been\ndivorced, have afterwards contracted\ncivil marriage.\nDIOCESAN AFFAIRS\nFint the resignation of Dr. Doull,\nwho guided the fortunes of the diocese for 19 yean as first bishop. Remarkable work was done by him\nand the loyal band of priests who\nsupported him during the critical\nyean 1914-20. Looking over the records I have been greatly Impressed\nby the good foundations laid in those\nearly days, the reaulta of which are\napparent today. To Dr. Doull's wise\novenight, vigorous pleading the!\nneeds of a newly formed diocese,\nand stimulating counsel the diocese\nowes much; and we deeply regret\nhli breakdown In health and hope\nthat shortly and wholly he will be\nrestored to his old powen.\nWe are about to lose officially\nour moit faithful and beloved senior\narchdeacon, Archdeacon Greene; he\nwished to retire immediately on my\nappointment but kindly agreed to\nwait for a time. It was 42 yean ago\nUiat he came tint to the Okanagan,\nand for 19 years he has acted faithfully as archdeacon. It would be\nMICHEL PASTOR\nTELLS OF RIOT\nUnited Church Confab\nSuggests Cash for\nRelief Work\nVANCOUVER, May 22 <CP)-\nPayment for work done, in caih instead of by free board and clothing,\nas a means of remedying the present\nrelief camp system, has been suggested by the British Columbia conference of the United Church of\nCanada which closed its sessions\nhere last night with animated discussions on the social order and reaffirmation of its stand of a year\nago \"calling for a drastic revision of\nthe present system of production\nfor profit as opposed to production\nfor use.\"\nThe present camp lyitem, It was\nsaid, was an earnest attempt on the\npart of the government to settle a\ndifficult problem but had proved\ninadequate. It injured those who\nwent to the camps by cutting off\ntheir citizenship privileges and taking away their hope of getting back\ninto remunerative employment. Special attention was also called to the\ncase of homeless girls and women.\nRev. 3. H. Mathews, pastor at\nMichel, B.C.. scene of a recent strike\nin which a number of persons werc\ninjured when provincial pollce and\nstrikers clashed, was called to the\nplatform and told of the circumstance surrounding the strike, adding that the people were still smarting under a sense of injustice. The\nconference will urge for a judicial\nenquiry into the incident.\nAnother resolution was approved\nin the form of a warning against\nthe money chain letter craze, termed\nas \"merely another racket.\" This\nresolution also condemned stock\nmarket gambling, stressing its ruinous nature both economically and\nsocially.\nNorth and South Dakota lead the\nUnited States in having the lowest\ndeath rate.\nFruit bud formation is a phase\nof recent scientific study and its\nclose relation and inter-dependence\nwith fertilizer practice and pruning\nmake it necessary to treat theie\nthree problems \u2014 bud formation,\nfertilizer treatment, and pruning\u2014\nalmost as one. The person who\nwould undentand bud formation\nmust have a knowledge of pruning\nand fertilizers.\n PAGE THRU..\nVernon Street\nWork Progress*.\nCity public works employees ad*\nvanced work on Vernon street tc\nthc Ward street intersection MoO1\nday. Macadam is being plowed ui\nand trucked away and forms bulfl\nin preparation for concrete.\nActivity was Good\nfor Her Figure\nHelped by \"That\nKruschen Feeling\"\nYOU SEE I CAN WEAR STOCI^i\nSIZE NOW THAT U\nACTIVE\nHer huaband aaannd hat\nthat lt waa har age and that\nahe could not expect to wear\nstock alze now. He waa\nevidently a believer In the\nancient \"fat and forty\" legend.\nTo-day ahe dismiss\u2122 the idea\nwith a laugh. But let her tell\nthe atory herself:\u2014\n\"I muat tell you I had\ndeveloped beyond the 'stock\nairw.' My husband assured me\nthat it wu my age. One day\nI aaw an advertisement and\ndecided to try Kruachen Salte.\ni That waa laat July. Now once\nmore I wear a size 38. Besidea\nwhich, I feel ao much better,\nmore energetic, and can do my\nwork without that tired\nfeeling.\"\u2014(Mra.) J. M.\nYour figure will not develop\na \"middle-aged spread\" if you\nkeep younelf healthy and active\nwith a daily doea of Kruachen.\nWhen you have taken Kruschen\nBaits for a few dafs that old\nindolent arm-chair feeling begins to\ndeeert you\u2014it doesn't matter if\nyou an in the forties\u2014the urge for\nactivity haa got you\u2014and you're\n\"stepping lively\".\nAnd, nest of ail, yon like this\nactivity\u2014you  walk  a couple  of\nWHY YES,MADAM\nIT'S MARVELLOUS\nHOWEVER HAVE\nYOU DONE IT?\nmiles and enjoy lb\u2014you though1\nyou'd never dance again, but yol\nfind you're getting as spry aa ova\n\u2014and you can wear the modea\ndresses with as much grace am\ncomfort as the young folks.\nOet a 75c. bottle of Kruacha\n(it lasts four weeks) and atart righ\naway to take half-a-teaspoonful I\na tumbler of hot vater eiat,\nmorning.\nthe principle ai well aa the practice\n\u2022finingr^,C-u'rf.Ti; \"\u2022\u25a0\u00ab>> to <\u25a0\"* Wn. to continue longer,\n,\u2122Hnll^%n ?'* f,BS*\"i?i \u00abnd ,o I have accepted hi, resigns-\nTHERE'S SOMETHING ABOVT A\nGRAHAM\nTHAT YOU\nYOU TAKE,\nm THE \u00a7i\nTHE MINUTE\nWHEEL\nYET THE NEW SIX TOURING SEDAN COSTS ONLY\ni of a Gruhnr\n\u2022o  go.   Con\nTT\nRETAIL AT WINDSOR\nrA x, tnClGMT ANO\nMil USt    ONI V   TO   HT   APPf '<\nhmd   'I id   you\nwill    d < I 0 t h e f\ndiffer\nfrom     '' \u25a0\nCon.p in fo.iciy\n\u2022 Graham-Paige Moton (Canada) Limited, WaUnrrille, Canada .\nKOOTENAY GARAGE\nCRAHAM-PAICE DEALER FOR NELSON AND DISTRICT\nlji* jeUPHIN! ST.\nTHOS. SARCENT, Prep.\nNELSON, B.C.\nfundamental for life of any age.\nMan needs God and man needs rest.\nThat wai the purpose of the Sabbath: the change to the Christian\nSunday waa quite ln line with the\nchange of ideal which Jesus introduced\u2014the change from reatrictive\nlaw to the glorious liberty of the\nchildren of God. That liberty however ls not just self pleasing, but\nthe real freedom of spirit which\nallows the soul to share and enjoy\neternal values and eternal ideas,\ninitead of being wholly chained to\na material world order, now of work,\nnow of pleaiure, but alwayi limited,\nnon-satisfying, cramped.\nWhat shall be our Sunday occupations? I beg to suggest the following tests:\nOn Sunday\u2014\n(1) Only iuch occupation can be\npermissible as don not abiorb\nthe whol- day and leave ns time\nfor worship;\n(2) Only iuch occupation can\nbe appropriate ai dou not expel\nfrom the hurt of thoie who follow It all deilra for spiritual\nthings:\n(3) Only iuch occupation can ba\ndefandid \u2022\u2022 dou not rob other\nmm and woman of opportunity\nfor tha wonhip of thilr Qod,\nwhich ll the birthright of every\nChristian.\nWe hear much today about \"lafe-\nguarding our industries\": more ur-\n\u00a7ently,   becauie   more   vitally,   is\nleir need to safeguard our weekly\ntime with God; man cannot live by\nbresd alone.\nDIVORCE\nTo yet another phase of our social\nlite ln British Columbia I would\ndraw your attention\u2014the increase\nln the number of divorces. First\nof all to take the figures for the\nwhole of Canada. For the five-year\nperiod 1911 to 1917 the average annual number wai UO. Liiten to the\nfigures for each successive five-year\nperiod since\u2014402, 591, and 881. It ll\nmore accurate to take the average\nfor a five-year period than the\nactual figures of any one particular\nyear. In 20 yean the numbera have\nrisen from an average of 60 to an\naverage ot 881.\nThe diitrlbutlon of thue 881\n\u2022mong thi varloui province! ll \u2022\u2022\nfollowi: Brltlih Columbia 232, Alberta 151, Saskatchewan 67, Nova\nScotia 29, Ontario 227, Manitoba\n101, Quebec 30, New Brunswick 20.\nThe true preponderance or frequency hai to be gauged by taking\nInto consideration the totsl population and thus getting relative proportion. The returna ihow that for\nevery 10,000 of population the frequency ll Quebec 1, Nova Scotia\nand New Brunswick 5, Saskatchewan 12, Manitoba 14, Alberta 20\nand British Columbia 33.\nIn eastern Csnada there are 308\ndivorces annually for a population\nof 7V\u00ab millions; in the prairie provinces and British Columbia there\nare 541 for Just over 3 millions. That\nii 17 for every 10,000 ln the weit\nto 4 for every 10,000 ln the eut. In\nBritiih Columbli the numben are\n33 for every 10,000, Thua divorce in\ntlon but have asked him to consider\nhimself closely attached to use as\narchdeacon emeritus. I am exercising the prerogative vested in the\nbishop and am appointing the Rev.\nH. A. Solly, Incumbent of West\nSummerland, as archdeacon of the\nOkanagan. Mr. Solly has been a\nmost Indefatigable worker as rural\ndean and secretary of synod; he has\na knowledge of the needs and possibilities of the various parishes tecond to none.\nCONCLUSION\n(After mentioning the moit Important changes and developments\nin the general church and pleading\nfor fuller cooperation from all to extend the chances of lervice and\nsacraments to all isolated communities, he added:)\nIn this wonderful British Columbia of oun with all its exquisite\nnatural beauty and ita quiet country homes, what a glory It would be\nto have, every Sunday, groups from\nevery homestead wending their way\nto some central spot, a consecrated\nsanctuary wherever possible, to\nkneel humbly before God offering\ntheir tribute to Hii greatness and\nleaking Hii help. How much happier\nthe community would be if thii\nwere the caae, Initead of the dry,\ngodlen, becauie prayerleaa, atmosphere which prevails so widely today. Often I go back in memory to\nthat Sunday morning ln some quiet\ncountry spot in the old homeland,\nthe church bell sending its menage\nthrough the treei and over the fields;\nand I aee group! of people climbing the stiles, and following the\nfootpath to the old ivy-clad church\nwhich has been their spiritual home\nfor centuries. And I dream that\nsome day this will be true of our\nlife here. And it will be, if we are\nfaithful to our privilege and our\ntrust. And it will be, for the promise\nia lure \"the wilderneti and the\nsolitary place ihall be glad; the\nsolitary place shall be glad; the desert shall rejoice and blossom as the\nrose; the ransomed ot the Lord shall\nreturn and come to Zion, and everlasting Joy shall be upon their heads,\nand sorrow and sighing shall be\ndone away.\"\nEngland's new Museum of Practical Geology ia to be opened formally ln July.\nAra You Sluggish?\nTo Throw Ot \u00abaeriy-S\u00absslI\u00bbl\nlmp-rid-M, enjoy a glass oc two\nesch week of\nEnergizing, Effervescent\nANDREWS\nLIVER SALT\nkTINS-Ilaaaa'Ma\nEXTRA LARGE BOTTLE. Tla \u2022\nLET \"THE BAY\" HELP YOU IN\nYOUR CHOICE OF CORRECT\nHOLIDAY WEARING APPAREL\nMen!  Spruce Up for\nthe Holiday\nBetter Quality\nSUITS\nFor a Lower Price\nMen's new Spring suits in neat checks,\nand popular patterns. All neatly tailored,\nand strongly sewn.\n$13.95\nENGLISH FLANNEL\nTROUSERS\nMen's fine wool flannel trousers cut tailored and styled for men and young men.\n52910.44- $3.50\nPAIR\nWASHABLE HANDBAGS\nComplete that outfit with one of these\nwashable white bags. Fitted with mirror\nand change purses. tl AA\nEACH    \u00abP1.VU\nGoodrich Holiday\nFOOTWEAR\nFor Women\nMESH SANDALS\u2014One-strap style with\ncovered Cuban heel (PI CA\nMESH SANDALS \u2014 T-strap style with\nlowheel- $1.60\nPAIR \t\nLINEN 'T-STRAP SANDAL with cover- (1 TA\ned heel  \u00abpl.OU\nNatural linen or w h i t e\nmesh ties with covered\ncuban heel. Sizes V\/i\nto m.\nPAIR ...\nMISSES'\nTENNIS\nDRESSES\n<pwD and $_-.\u00bb\/\u00ab)\nSmart appearing frocks\nmade, of plain white\npique or stripe'd and\nplaid seersuckers,\nsleeveless and cap\nsleeves, clever neck*\nlines. Sizes 14 to 20.\nPERFECT CREPE\nHOSIERY\nNeed a new pair of hose for the holiday.\nThese full fashioned dull crepe hose are\nhard to excel tor wearing durability.\nSpring shades and sizes 8Vl OQC1\nto lOVi. PER PAIR OZ>\nWOMEN'S BATHING\nSUITS\n$1.95 to $5.95\nBuy your bather now while there is a\nlarge range to select from. We have some\nvery outstanding lines, including Ballan-\ntynes, Penman's and Jantzen. Staple or\nnovel styles, in a wide color range.\nPENMAN'S SILK SOCKS\nNew Summer patterns in men's fine\nsilk socks. PM\nPAIR  DU\n$1.75\nNEN'S\nSPORT\nSHOES\n*r\n\u00a3.9S\n\u2022 Black and White.\nLeather aolea.\n\u2022 Brown and Whlta.\nLeather aoloa.\n\u2022 Boigo and Brown.\nCompoaition tola.\nLet the Bay finish off\nyour holiday attire with\nsport shoes. Neat and\ncomfortable. The ideal\ni h o e s for dressy young\nmen.\nSTORE CLOSED ALL DAY TOMORROW.\nGET YOUR FOOD NEEDS AT\nTHE BAY TODAY!\nHRC Pure Food Bargains\n193\u2014PHONES\u2014194\nTil\u2014Fort Garry; Ati__\\    Biking Powder\u2014Fort     _.A\nper lb. .. _ \"\"V    Garry; 12-or. tin  -*->\nCHEESE\u2014Kraft Canadian;\n1 -lb. carton\t\n28'\nCorn Mill\u2014Quiker;       |]<l     Icing Sugir-\n22-ot pkg,   ***\u2022    2 Iba.   \t\n17*\n1 pkg. SILVER CLOSS STARCH\u2014\n1 RULED SCRIBBLER\u2014 Tho Two for\n12*\nBombiy Chutney\u2014Rich- 2Q|{     Pineika Flour\u2014\nardrwn'i; H-or.. bottle    \u2022-a****    Rosebud; 36-or*. pkg.\n19C\nPinciki \u00bbyrup-Kay      _At*    Kitchup\u2014C. & B.;\nbrmd; 23-0-. Jir  \u2022\"*\u2022\"\n14-oz. bottle\n)&tynh*ti.*$*ii \u20acompttttg.\niNCO\u00abro*ATir> S\" may i\u00ab70.\n  _\n~\n- mn, um\n01 POUR\u2022\n\u25a0THI NIIION DAILY NIWI. NILION. \u25a0.C-THURIOAY MORNINO. MAY 28. 1888-\nNational Vote on Conscription Wealth, Industry in\nEvent of War Asked by Diocesan Synod, Kootenay\nfcYMEN AND CLERGY DEBATE THE\nUTTER OF ARMAMENT CONTROL\nND THE ELIMINATION OF WARS\nesolution Calls for Government Control in\nArms Manufacturing; Would Vote on\nConscription at Federal Election\nESOLUTION PROTESTS CAMPAIGNING\nPOLITICAL PARTIES ON THE SABBATH\nIpinion Varies on War Question; \"When an\n[Enemy Attacks God Expects Us to Defend\nOur Own\" Declares Archdeacon Solly\n\u2022y H. H. CURRIE\nINtlton Dally Ntwt Staff Writtr)\nPENTICTON, B.C., Mty 22.\u2014A\ntional plebiscite at the con-tins\nminion election on the subject of\nlather the nation desires wealth\n1 industry to be conscripted along\nth manhood in the next war in\nlich Canada find, it necessary to\ngate, was asked today by the\nicetan synod of Kootenay, in teams that were featured by debates\narmament! control and on clim-\nItion of war. Starting in the fore-\non with a resolution from the Nel-\na rural deanery urging abolition\nprivate manufacture of artna-\nints and of private profits there-\nMn, the war debate also domin-\nid the major part ot the afternoon.\nIMAMENT MOVE\n(OPTED\nWhen all the smoke of btttle was\nared away, it wat found the reso-\nion on armaments, though ob-\nrted to by many delegates, both\nirical and lay, was adopted in the\nrm in which it was originally sub*\ntted, but that ltt companion motion, which practically proposed\nIt Canada thould never engage in\ntr without tpeclflc authorization\nthe people in a plebiscite, wu\nKiificd out of all resemblance to\nI original proposition, though\nking ute of iome of its ideal,\nn introducing the armaments\nOlutlon on behalf of thc Nelson\ntoery, Rev. A. P. Griffiths ot\nllo referred to the allegations\nit thc armament interests had\nght their financial control to dc\ndisarmament treaties, and to\n|p alive the war alarms, while\nts. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham\nNcison spoke of efforts and in-\nfxscs of these interests to foster\nr, tnd referred to the outlandish\nIfitr*. that the industry enjoyed in\nr time. Rev. W. J. Silverwood of\nIson, its originator, told ot mate-\n1 he had obtained from the Car-\nlie peace foundation respecting\nNye committee revelations in\nt United States congress, as to the\ntest armament shippers to China\nTjapan being three great powers,\nI as to the armament interests\nng represented on the confer-\n|as, whose failure was thus ac-\nnted for.\nEIO PEPS OP\nIE WHOLE SYSTEM\ntopic wbo tre half-well, half-sick\nt of the time only exist. To really\n[ you must be well. And to be well\n'; should take atept at once to rid\nkU of constipation, which causes\n; human ailments,\nprastic purgatives and harsh mineral\naggravate the condition. Eno's\nlit Salt\" regulates gently, effectively\nlormalty. It tastes good and forms\nIhabits.\nyou want to feel like a million,\nII duh of Eno's \"Fruit Salt\" in a\nI of water, morning and night, for\nr days. No griping, no nausea. Eno\nhes, sweetens the stomach. There\nft an atom of harshness or harm in a\niad. Handy size, 50 cents. Household\nI 65 cents. 'Phone the druggist now.\nIon t take\n'\u20225-9,\n'Sly J\n\"DAMNABLE TRADING\"\nIN LIFE\nTo the boint raited by C. J. Hurt\nof Vernon, that Canada s armament\nmanufacture was practically restricted to providing clothing for Its\ntroops, 0. St.P. Aitken ot Kelowna\nargued that the synod should assert\nthe principle of government control\nof this industry whether there wtt\ntt preient any Canadian manufac\nture or not. W. Hardy, hli fellow\ntownsman, supported him, declaring\nthat the people he met in town and\ncountry were looking to the church\nto do something to stop \"thit damnable trading in human life.\" Rev. M.\nE. West of Enderby declared thit\nwhole matter wu outtide the tcope\nof the synod, and that lt should address itself to Christ's work, the\nworld getting pretty much the wars\nand the parliaments lt deserved.\nMr. Hurt blamed much of the agitation for restricting armament manufacture to government*! to such\nbooks.es \"Cry Havoc\" which made\nthe pretence that armament firms\ntpent practically their whole time\non war orders, whereas their great\noccupation was in supplying the\nneeds of industry in peace. Actually,\nthe Vlckers-Maxim people in England, were under direct government\ncontrol now, he said, while Canada\nhad no armament industry.\nWHAT ARE CANDIDATES'\nVIEWS?\nH, Bawtree of Enderby said it wu\nto bc taken for granted that the\nchurch stood for abolition ol armaments, and hla suggestion wu that\nthe place to raise the question wai\nat the general election, when candidate! could be asked to itate their\nviews,\nJ. ft. Klnghorn of Sorrento proposed thtt some of the controversial\naspects be eliminated by dropping\ntho preamble regarding \"deliberate intrigues,\" and A. S. Horswill\nof Ncison proposed to limit the\nobjective to government control,\nwithout asking for abolishing of\nprivate manrr\/acturc, his position\nbeing that while it was Justifiable\ntor tne world to be concerned about\nthis question, it was necessary for\nthis country took to its defences, t\nmatter regarding which it should\nnot be negligent, and that tha government could havc effective control without having iti own plants.\nTHE RESOLUTION\nA motion offered by Mr. Hora-\nwill \"to reduce our objective to\ncontrol\" was not seconded, and at\ntbe afternoon session the synod by\na vote ot about two to one, no\ncount being announced, carried the\nresolution unamended, as follows:\n\"Whereas it seems apparent that\nmuch of the strife between nationt\nfostered by the deliberate Intrigues and machinations of armament firms both directly by stimulating minor causes ot war tnd\nindirectly by Inciting warlike passions and national jealousies through\nUie medium of a subsidized prcssr\n- \"Be it resolved that this synod\ndo request the Federal government\nto enact such legislation that the\nmanufacture of arms ln this Dominion be under direct government\ncontrol, and that the manufacture\nof arms by private firms be made\nillegal, with a view to abolishing\nthe monetary profits trom such\nprlvtte manufacture, which profits\nare a great inducement to the attempts made to promote war between nationt.\"\nRESOLUTION ON WAR\nAfter the tynod had dealt with\nthe report of Treasurer 0. St. P.\nAitken, it took up the Nelion deanery resolution on war, which at\npresented reid u followt:\n\"Whereat ill war it expressly\ncontrary to the will ot God and\nthc mind of Christ as a method of\nsettling international disputes; and\n\"Whereas all war hu been revealed to be utterly futile ln achieving petce; and\n\"Whereas all war taket the belt\nand youngeit of a nation't manhood: tnd\n\"Whereas the question of Just war\nis a matter which ihould not be\nthe iole responsibility of any government to decide:\n\"Be it therefore resolved, a petition of the nttlon be taken before\ncommitting iL. people to any armed conflict, and that this tynod of\nthe diosese of Kootenay petition\nthe Federal government in the\nevent of an armed conflict, to enact such legislation at will conscript not only the nation's manhood, but also ita wetlth md induttry u a meant ot eliminating\nthe profits of war.\"\nCOLLOSAL SIN\nRecalling that 300 yetn ago tha\nChristian world accepted war u a\nneceuary expedient, but that in\nmodern timet the Lambeth conference and the Brytn-Kellogg America., treaties had shown a better way,\nRev. Mr. Silverwood in moving the\nresolution asserted wtr to be the\nmoit colossal tin that afflicted mankind, that the whole war ayatem\nwu intolerable, that under modern\ncondition! wir wu suicidal for the\nworld, thut no mercy or juitice wu\nfound ln war, and that thli tyttem\nof international settlement wu at\nfutile as it wu barberout. Mr.\nCttchpole, In tecondlng it, while admitting that the people might not\nbe enbiasied in a plebltcite under\ntpprhemion of wtr, argued that it\nwas necessary to have thit written\nInto the statutes ln advance io thtt\nthere should be no military suppret-\ntion ot the people's opinion.\nTWO  OBJECTIONS\nJudge G. H. Thompion of Cranbrook, chancellor of the diocete,\nralaed the point of ordtr that the\nreiolution combined two different\nobjectives In one motion. It pro-\npoles a plebiscite on engaging ln\nwtr tnd tlso propoied the comcrip-\ntion ot wealth and induttry. He\nwu willing tor the plebitclte to be\nasked for if the enemy wu Uked at\nthe tame time not to invade the\ncountry while the plebiscite wu\nbeing taken, but pointed out that\nhe might be in favor of one objective and against the other.\nCANT WAIT POR ENEMY\nA protest wu offered against this\nresolution also by Rev. Mr. West,\nwho argued that lt would be absolutely hostile to tht teaching of\nJesus Christ to approach governments as to their duties. Agiinst\nthit view H. C. Cildlcott of Trail\nargued that all things of human\nwelfare were a proper field for the\nchurch to Interest itself in. He admired the portion of tha resolution\nthat propoied to conscript all agencies alike, for if the country wu tq\nsuffer from ghastllntlt ot war, thera\nshould be equality of tacrlflce. Mr-\nHardy supported tha reeolutlon\nmuch it he had done tha earlier\none, and asserted that if Chriit were\nhere He would be on the tide of\nthe resolution.\nAt this point some more demand\nwu raised that the resolution be\ndivided, and Mr. Aitken aaid he\nfavored Instructing the government\nthtt the synod detired a plebiscite\non whether wealth and induttry\nshould be conscripted If the country\nwent to wtr.\nMr. Silverwood, tgreelng that \"wa\ncan't wait when the enemy it on\nour trick,\" uked whtt the cdUntry's\ncommitmenti would be, and whtt\ndecision the government would be\nlikely to take.\nCHRIST AND WAR\nSome of the sentiment! expreftV\nbrought to hii teet Rev. H. A. Solly\not Summerland, late rural dean of\nOkanagan and newly mada Archdeacon of Okanagan, who, stating\nthat while thera WU no question\nbut that war wu horrible, reminded\nthe lynod thtt the Empire wu not\none that would fight for territory\nor for advancement On the other\nhand, we ara working against a\nnation that li seeking aggrandisement\" he contended.\n\"I can't agree that Christ la never\nfor war,\" he declared vlgorouily,\npointing out thtt while the Saviour\ncame to bring peace, He recognized\nthat it would coma about through\nconflict, and publicly ttated that He\ncame to bring not peace but a tword.\nDeclaring his belief that God had\ngiven the British people a special\nmission, and that the mantle ot Israel\nas the chosen people had fallen on\nthem, he pointed out that \"an enemy\nmay come uvn ui untwarei.\" Alliances to be of any effect muit be secret, and lt would be tulcidal for a\nnationt diplomatic movee to all be\ntaken In public, where tht enemy\nwould know of them.\n\"If war comet, we hava got to uk\nouraelves, ire we willing to see our\nEmpire laid wute, our hornet destroyed, our women outraged?\" he\nasserted. \"When an enemy attacks\nut, I think God expects us to defend our own,' 'he concluded.\nTURNER LEE\nBRINGS LAUGH\nMajor H. Turner Lee of Bonnlngton evoked laughter by decltrlng he\nhtd juit heird \"the tint really sensible ipeeeh thli afternoon,\" adding\nthat the othtr ideal put forward\nwere very good it ldeali. but were\nnot practical.\n\"They tell ut war it a folly, but\nhow about petce being un-Chris-\ntitn?\" ht uked. Only recently one\nof the boyi who hid been overset!\nwith him uked him, \"Why can't we\nKINSMEN EVEN\nSOFTBALL PUY\nA combination of leven hits and\ntour erron in the second and third\nInningi paved tha way for the\nKlnimen't 18*11 victory over the\nGyroi ln tht tecond gtme of the\nbett-out-of-flve serlet for the mythical toftball champlonihlp ot Nel*\nsqn and the famous Hie cup. The\ngame was piiyed Wedneidiy afternoon at the Recreation grounds.\nmd tiei the series up with one\ngtme each.\nTrail Has Several\nEvents forMaylt\nInterest High for Gyro\nQueen; Children to\nHave Fun\nTRAIL, B.C.. May Si-Activity\nin tha tale of Gyro queen conteit\ntlcketa hu htd a noticeable increue in the lut few dayt, each\ncontettant tnd har itaff making in\nuntiring effort to pile up the largest\nnumber ot votea, polli for Which\ndoit at 5 p.m. Friday. It it hoped to\nbe determined which queen Wlll\nreign a short time after this hour.\nFtnt activities of Victoria day\ncelebration ln Trail itart at 1 p.m.\nat Butler park when children'!\ntrack ud field iporta will itart. At\n4 p.m. a tenlor toccer match will\nensue. A lacrosse tilt will be started\nin the rink at 7:19 md at 9 o'clock\ncoronation of the queen will take\nplace. The big dance will follow in\nthe rlnk immediately afterward and\nthe drawing will take place shortly\nbefore midnight.\nPAYS COMMON\nDANGER FINE\nTRAIL, B.C, Mty 2_.--Medoro\nLlppo was aentenced to a fine of $10\nund costs of $2.00 or 10 dayt In the\nNelaon Jail when he wat arraigned\nbefore Deputy Police Magistrate\nDonald MacDonald Wedneaday on t\ncharge of driving to the common\ndanger. Llppo, who had been travelling at a ipeed of about 50 milu an\nhour on Roetlind tvenue, and following tentence paid the fine.\nNEW BOXING\nCHAMPS\nEDMONDON, Alta., May 22 (CP).\n\u2014New boxing champloni crowned\ntonight:\n112 poundi\u2014Jackie Armstrong,\nToronto.\n118 pounds\u2014Jackie Culture. Hamilton.\n126 poundt\u2014Bllly Mtrquart, Winnipeg.\n135   poundi\u2014Robin   Cirrlngton,\n147 poundi \u2014Maurice Cararye,\nWinnipeg.\n180 poundi\u2014Irving Peue. Toronto.\n175 poundi\u2014Gaston Elchel, Regina.\nHeavyweight \u2014 Murray Patrick,\nVictoria.\nhava tha old comradaahip of the\nwar?\" Hii reply wu that In tha\nwar all dropped their namu md\ntook numben, had their clothing\nissued to them, received food in\nlumps to be divided up ,and each one\nknew all ha had to do wu to do\nthe belt he could tor hit neighbor,\nwhile now lt wu the object to \"do\none't neighbor the beat ha could.\"\n\"Of coune I am ibioluttly in\nfavor of commtnderlng wealth as\nwell u manhood,\" admitted Major\nLee, who itated he honeitly thought\nthe youth ot 1814 ctme into t better\nworld thm the youth of 1(34 wu\ncoming Into today.\nA ITORY ON THI MAJOR\nQuoting Spinosa's phlloaophy thtt\npeace wu not the abience of war.\nbut tha unity of a toul with Itself.\nArchdeacon Graham told a atory\nof Major Lee, u related by one oi\nhli men, to the effect that during a\nheavy German barrage on a Sunday,\nMajor Lae iat On his leaky dugout\nroof nailing on strips ot tin, while\ntinging, in obedience to hit conception of hit duty on Sunday, \"Onward Chrlitlan Soldiers.\" While the\nsynod laughed, Major Lea Intimated\nthe itory wun't a fact\nAdvocacy of a plebitclte in time\nof petce on the wealth conscription\niuue, by Mr. Aitken led to the tynod\non motion of Mr. Klnghorn tnd Rav.\nW. S. Beimei ot Penticton, taking\nBlthop Adami to nune a committee\nto redraft the reiolution. He named\nMeurs. Silverwood and Aitken md\nArchdeacon Solly.\nTha reiolution wu redrafted during the tea lntervtl, md wu then\ncarried on a divided vote, u follows:\n\"Ba it resolved that thit tynod\not the diocete of Kootenay petition\nthe Federal government to hold a\nplebitclte it the time of the next\nFederal election on the queition ot\nwhether ln the event ot the nation\nbeing committed to war, that not\nonly ltt manhood, but alto ltt wetlth\nmd induttry thtll be conscripted,\nin order thtt the burden tnd tacri-\nfice involved by wtr may be equally\ndlttributad\".\nSUNDAY POLITICAL MEETINGS\nOne other reiolution of national\nImport wu adopted by the lynod,\narising from a letter received by\nBishop Adtmi from Dr. Huettii,\nnttlonal tecretary ot the Lord's Day\nalliance, quoting the anawen he\nhad received to letten written to\nPremier Bennett, Rr. Hon. W. L,\nMackenzie King, and 3. S. Woods-\nWorth, urging that Sunday ahould\nSENIORS BEAT\nJUNIORS 4 T01\nTRAIL, B.C., May 22.-A group\nof tenlor playen turned out to give\nTrail'i lone junior squid a practice\nsoccer match at Butler park Wednesday evening and defeated them 4-1,\nThe teami were:\nSeniors\u2014Heycock, Stepheni, Jarrett Pateraon, Bink, Reld, T. Smith,\nDowning, Hughet, T, Laurie and G.\nSwanson.\nJuniort-Rost, Kendall. Deans,\nDembicki. R. Groom, Balfour, W.\nGroom, Llghtbody, Adcock, Cook,\nand Bruce.\nJack Lllley refereed, J. Strachan\nand D. Kirkpatrick linesmen.\nAlan Mclnnis Is\nHurt ot Hedley\nWord wu received Wednesday by\nMrs. J. H. Argyle of Nelaon that her\nbrother, Alan Mclnnis, formerly ot\nNelton, had been lerlouily injured\nin an accident at Hedley. He was\nemployed in a mine there. Telephone corweriatlon established the\ntact that he had been removed to\nPrinceton hoipital with a ikull\nfracture\nFOUNDATION OF\nCHURCH IS SURE\nSYNOD IS TOLD\nPsalmist's Worry Is\nNot Applicable\nSays Graham\nSURE FAITH IN\nTIMES OF STRESS\nEvensong Opens the\nDiocesan Meet\nPenticton\nFlat hes From the Wires\nSTRIKE NEGOTIATOR!\nCONTINUE\nPORTLAND \u2014 The grim deed*\nlock thtt hu characterized the Pacific northweit lumber itrike by\nwhich 40.000 penoni were thrown\ninto idleness, appared to be breaking ai negotiaton continued their\npatient labor.\nFARMERS CREDITORI COSTS\nOTTAWA \u2014 Operatlent of tht\nFtrmira' Crtdltore Arrangement\ntct from Oetobtr 1,1134, te April 1\n1935, cost $289,142, according to a\nreport tabled ln tht houtt of commoni.\nRheumatic Pains\nara Dangerous!\nThose rheumatir, pains and\ntwinges in your joists indicate\nthe pretence of uric add in\nthe blood whloh may lead to\neariout illneet. Remove thl\ncause of theee paint\u2014drive the\npoisons from your tyttem ht\npurifying the blood aitu\nBurdorri Blood Bitten.\n(otik STOMACH,\nBLOOD AND SKIN\nMcLARNIN WINS\nVANCOUVER - Sammy McLarnin, brother of the famoui Jimmy,\nhit the comeback trail with a unanimous 10-round declalon over Red\nGregory ot Loa Angelea ln '.he main\nbout of a tight card.\nBRITAIN NAMEI AIR ADVISER\nLONDON \u2014 Lard Wtlr. great\nwar aeronautic! exptrt and an Inttrnitlontl tuthorlty en tvlttlon,\nwai namtd by tht aovtrnmtnt H\nIU special adviser In tht work of\ntxptndlng thl roytl tlr force.\nOERMANY CALLS CLAU OF 1SI4\nBERLIN \u2014 Orden providing thtt\nthe cltw ot 1914 will join the colon\nbefore November 1 next were luued\nover the lignature of Oen. Wilhelm\nvon Relchentu, department of chief\nof the relchswehr. In East Prussia\nIhe diss of 1910 tlto wlll be called\ninto service to give axtra ttrength.\nWANDERING  MAN IOUGHT\nLIVINGSTON, Mont - Park\ncounty tuthorltlei uld thty wtrt\nconducing t wldtipntd tearah '\nfor a man described is Wllllim\nMorrli of Lewlston, Idiho, t mtmbtr ef tht recent leglilttlve it-\ntembly of thtt state, believed to\nbt wandtrlng almlettly tbout\neouthern Montana, tht tpptrent\nvictim ef tmneilt.\nCUT MARATHON SWIM\nTORONTO \u2014 Director! Ot the Ctnadlan national exhibition announced that the annual men't martthon\nswim would be reduced from 15 to\nfive milaa.\nKILLED IN MINI\nGOLOBRIDGE. B.C. - W. W.\n(Bunx) Young, t>, wat killed today at Bradlan Gald mint, 10\nmllu wttt ef htrt, whin ha\nallppad tnd ftll Into tht thaft\nwhllt doing repair work on the\ncage.\nNo Danger Yet\nWith High Water\nAlthough it wai rumored ln Nelton Wedneidiy thtt tha Salmon\nriver bridgei were in dinger due to\nthe riling wtter, tha department of\npubilc workt it Nelton stated that\nthey had no word that any anxiety\nwas felt in this regard, nor, ai yet,\nany fear tor other bridgei in thli\ndUtrlct.\nThe hot weather during tha paat\ntwo or three dtyt htl brought down\na great detl of water from the hills\nand thould the weather continue\nhot, iome of the bridgei may ben endangered.\nThe lake at Ntlton hat risen ovtr\na foot during the put tour dayt end\ncreeki ara reported to be riling rip-\nidly.\nVANCOUVER, May 22 (CP) -\nThua Loo Bak, 67-year-old Vancouver Chlneie, died in hoipital\ntonight from lnjurlel received when\nhe wtt itruck by a truck while\ncrossing Pender itreet, near Chinatown, today,\nThue suffered a fractured ikull\nand other injuries.\nSECURITIES BUBBLE BURSTS\nBOSTON - The bursting of a\n$21,000,000 tecurltlei bubble apparently lett thouunds who invested\nwtth lett thin $100,000.\nAttorney-General Paul A. Daver\nuld t rough turvey of assets Indicated that scarcely $82,000 now ls\navailable of $16,000,000 Invested In\nutboard utllltlet tecurltlei. while\nonly tbout $6006 of $\u00bb,0O0,000 Invested in Railroad Sharei tecurltlei\nremained.\nBAR RELIEF DISCUSSION\nOTTAWA - Angus Mtolnnlt,\nVtnoouvtr South Ltborltt, felled\nIn tht houu of tomtnt to prwlpl-\ntatt In debate en thl itrlkt altuation af hla home elty. Hit motion\nte adjourn tht houu and dltcuw\ntht tltuttlon it ent of \"urgent\npubllo Importanct\" wat decltred\nout of ordtr.\nbe kept free from political campaigning. The answen from the\nConservative tnd Liberal leaders\nwere favorable, but Mr. Woods-\nworth wrote that the CCF. platform wat tn line with Christ's principle! and that lt advocacy on Sunday waa Justified.\nMr, Aitken and A. G. R. Prickard\not Woodtdale, lay secretary, fathered a reiolution deprecating the\nholding of Sunday political meetings\nby the C.C.F., but a number of\ndelegates objected to naming a political party, Judge Thompion ln\nparticular urging a timple declaration of principle on the matter.\nArchdeacon Graham aaked why thli\nform of Sabbtth desecration was\nto be mentioned, end not those thtt\nw:nt just u far, iuch as Sundty\niport.\nRESOLUTION SIMPLIFIED\nA simplifed reiolution, however,\nw>eh .named no political party, wai\npresented, and adopted overwhelmingly.\nGood progreu wai mtde with the\ndioceun buiineu, ln adoption ot\nmott of the reviied conititutlon and\ncanom, as submitted by Archdeacon\nGraham, for the special committee,\nand In adoption of the treasurer's\nreport. Treasurer Aitken being given a flattering vote ot appreciation\nand confidence.\nThe canons will ba finally disposed of Thursday, when a new one\nwill be submitted dealing with the\nS'nslon fund, on linea suggested by\nishop Adams, who asked that the\ndiocese in thli matter assist uniformity by adoptlnj tht pltn of\ntha genertl tynod. Generally speaking. Thit calli tor contribution!\nannually trom each diocete, and\nc ntributiont by the clergy of one\npar cent ot tht'- \u25a0Upends. In the\ncaae of Kootenay diocese, thit would\ndouble lti annual contribution to\nthe genenl penilon fund.\nAt nil grace'! tugge* on, the dlo*\nc e adopted a reiolution to tdviie\nthe pennon board that it would do\nit: bett to increase Ita contribute , but at the ume time itrongly\nurged thtt tha boardt tyitem ot\nadmin tration ba changea, by reverting to the o'l plan of having\ntha pensions handled by tht tree-\nsur v of ti e general tynod, Instead\not the board having a specially paid\nac:retary-treuurcr of ita own.\nBy H. H, CURRIE,\n(Staff Writer!.\nPENTICTON, B.C., May 22. -\nWord, of the rlien Christ, \"I am\nalpha and omega, the beginning and\nthe ending,\" reported by Saint John\nat heard in his celestial vision, were\nused by Ven. Archdeacon Fred H.\nGraham of Nelson, as the foundation on which he counselled memben of the diocesan synod of Kootenay to build their faith in challenging times, when In St. Saviour's\nchurch here Tuesday night he\npreached the sermon at the even*\nlong service that opened the synod\naesuona.\nFOUR TIMES PREACHER\nSuggesting that it might ba par*\ndonable while growing elderly to\nalio grow reminiscent, he recalled\nthat thit wu the fourth time he\nhad had the privilege of preaching\nto the assembled membera ot the\nsynod, and let his mtnd go back\nin this connection to the meeting\nin Montreal 40 yean ago of the\naynod of Canada before there waa\na general synod, when a great\nbishop famoui for learning and eloquence preached. It wu ln the\nearly tOt, yean when the Darwin*\nian theory wu rapidly gtlning adherent! and the church feared ita\neffect on belief, when the higher\ncriticism wu creating doubt in tbe\nminds of many, and when there wu\na financial depreulon, quite the\ngreateit that thia country had\nknown. To that assembly this great\nbishop preached from King David's\nexclamation in Ptalm Xl, \"If the\nfoundations be cut down, what can\nthe righteoua do?\"\n\"I well remember the hopeleis\nfeeling with which I listened to the\nadvice given to that great audience,\"\nrecalled Archdeacon Graham, wbo\ndescribed tha eagerness with which\nhe had looked forward to that ier*\nmon, to afford him a light in hit\nown mental darkneu and confusion aa a student, the bishop, after\ndwelling on the confusion ot the\ntimet, offering no other outlook\nand no other escape to perplexed\nChristian! that to do u Saint Paul\ndid when he waa wrecked on Malta\n\u2014ttrike out tor the thora it one\nhad tuificlent ftlth to tupport him;\nand lt he hadn't, make um of what\nhe had, u one might seize span,\nand commit himielf to tha waves,\nhoping to be swept to the land.\nThe depth ot hit disappointment\nleft a vivid memory.\nA TIME OF CHALLENGE\nPreient tlmu in many rupectt\ntufgested to him thtt etrly period\not untettlement end ot doubt. Only\ntoday one clergymen had admitted\nto him that what he feared wu the\nlowering of ethical ldeali. It muit\nbe admitted, Archdeacon Graham\npointed out that there wu a good\ndeal of political chicanery today,\nthe Idols tha people had tat up\nahowlng feet of clay; while commercial integrity wu no longer\ntaken for gr. ted. In the theological field each theologian propounded belief! differing from all othen,\nwhile in economics the profaulonai\neconomists all gave different advice. In the international realm the\ndifferent nations had iuch differ*\nIng and natlonallttlc hopes and dt*\nsigns that one i 4 not know trom\nday to day what to expect to tea\ntn the morning paper. And with all\ntheae condltloni obtaining, unemployment wu rife, and diiutlsfac-\nlion rampant\nWu thera any mswer to tuch\nconditions, tor tuch a gtthering as\nthe preient one, compoaed ot the\nordained of Christ? If the foundations were overthrown, what could\nthe righteous do? Archdeacon Graham aaid he could not take the\nplace of the mighty bishop hc spoke\n* f, but recalled that Chrittlana did\nknow, what tbe Psalmist did not\nknow, that they had a foundation\nthat coul*. not be destroyed, and\nthatNa living faith i Christ, the\nSon of God, wu such a foundation,\none that even the gates ot hell\ncould not prevail against.\nIn the scattered amall communities in the mountains, the faithful\nhad problems that might not ba\nfec.d in tha large clt'et, and the\nspirit could grow deeply detpond-\nent Yet to theae came the eternal\nwordi, \"On thit rock I will build\nmy church,\" Christ being tha sure\nfoundation. Dtvld'i wordi, about\nfoundatloni belgn cut down, did\nnot hava any application, the\npretcher pointed out, to thoie who\nhad the auurence of the Lord Jesui\nChriit.\nCHURCH CHRIST'S BODY\nRecalling Chrlit'i myrtle wordi\nto tha Jewi who marvelled at htl\naction ln ouitlng the money-chang-\nen from the temple, \"Dettroy thit\ntemple and in three dayt I will\nbuild it tgtln,\" the prucher declared Chriit h$d given hit follower* an answer to every tltu*\nation and every quwtlon, lf they\nwould wait for it and look for ll\nHit reference wai to the unctutry\not Hit body. Not long after that\nthe Chrlitlan idea developed, and\nthe church became the living body\not Chriit The difficulty, Archdeacon Graham uid, tVas for Christ's\nfollnwen to keep in pruent consciousness that He sala he wu the\nbeginning and the ending.\nThe welfare of Chrlit'i body, the\nchurch, wu to be ditcutied by the\ntynod, and thli wu an intenuly\nnecessity part of the functioning\nof that body. But, at wu otten\nthe cue with the aubtle temper.\nthe memben could be tempted to\nforget Whote body it wu. Tht fact\nwu, tald the archducon, etch one\nwu a aanctuary of Chriit. Whatever wu good in each wu ot\nChriit\nFAITHFUL SERVICE\nQuoting Paul'i contention that\nthe church's foundation ware indestructible, even though they might\non occation be catt down, the\npreacher aaid otten one wu immersed In great difficultlet. Telling\nthe itory of the aged aervant oi\nGod who after many yean labor\ncould discern no fruit of hit work,\nand who dreamed that the Savior\nltd him into the desert and bade\nhim unite the rock, and who wat\nlieirt-broken when his blows made\nno impretslon, until the Savior told\nhim He did not tell him to break\nthe rock but only to unite It and\nuid to him, \"Well done!\" Archdeacon Graham aaid thii itory had\nhelped him many tlmea when he\nwu downcast, and he paued it\nalong to othen ln limlftr titut*\ntion. Remembering Who their foun*\ndttlon wu, the Lamb ot God That\nhad been, and That always would\nbe, they would successfully defy\neven the gates ot hell.\nRev. W. S. Beamea. rector of St.\nSaviour'i, conducted tha evemong\nservice, which wu choral; Rural\nDeam Clyde Harvey of Procter and\nF. V. Harrlaon of Cranbrook read\nthe lessons; the rector read the\nprayers; and Rt. Rev. Walter Adama,\nD.D., bishop ot Kootenay, pronounced the benediction.\nNoxon and Wilson\nGoll Draws Made\nPlay Starts May 24; to\nConclude on\nSunday\nBeginning May 24 and continuing\nover the week-end, the Noxon and\nWilson cups will be competed for\nby memben ot the Nelion Golt\nclub, the former being competed tor\nbv the ladlei and the latter by tha\nmen.\nThe entry lists cloaed Wedneaday\nnight with 16 playan entered in the\nmen't play and eight in tha ladles'.\nBoth eventa ara handicap competition!.\nThe fint draw, D. Maclean and\nD. Stack, in the men't dlvlaion, will\ngtt tway at t a.m. Friday and tho\nremaining alght pain will follow\nat intervale of five mlnutea. J. D.\nKerr and W. Fotheringham will be\ntha lut pair of the man to tee oft.\nMn. H. Lakea and Mn. R. L. McBride itart tha ladlea' play at 10\no'clock.\nFollowlni ara tha drawt and tha\nUmtt:\nWILION CUP\nt a.m.\u2014D. Maclean vi D. Stack.\n8.06-L. S. Bradley vt J. S. W.\nClowu.\n\u00bb;10-L. McPhail vt F. O. Schroa-\ndw.\nIrlS-H. Laku vt W. Blane.\nt:X\u20143. Cartmel va Dr. T. H.\nBourque.\n\u00bb:$C\u2014T. R. Wilton vi A. R. Gllktr.\n\u00bb:JJ\u2014H, E. Wilten vt B. Town-\nabend.\n\u00bb:40\u2014J, D. Xerr va W. Fotheringham.\nNOXON CUP\n10*.00-Mri. H. Llket vt Mn. R.\nL. McBride.\n10:05-Mist C. Smith va Mn. J.\nCirtmel.\n10:10\u2014Mra. W. W. Ferguion vt\nMlu M. McLeod.\n10:15\u2014Mn. L. S. Bndley vt Mrs.\nH. G. McKay.\t\nTaktn to Court When\nFails ot Give tht Firt\nTruck Right of Way\nTRAIL, B.C, May 22,-Chirged\nwith falling te come to a ttop\nupon tha approach af a truck of\ntha Trail flra dtptrtmtnt, which\nwtt reiponding to a fire call to\nEut    Trail,    Tuttdty    tvtnlng,\nJtmu Davit, driver of a motor\nvehicle,   wat  convicted   but   re\nIttttd on tutptndtd unttnet by\nDtputy Polict Mtglttrata Donild\nMacDonald In alty pollce oourt\nWednttdty iftirnoon,\nDavla had been travelling along\nColumbia avenue trom the direction of Columbia Gardens and hli\nturning on to the bridge necessitated\nthe truck driver applying braku in\na hurry to avoid a collision, and\nconsequently delaying the apparatus\nin reaching the fire.\nDavit atated that he wu too far\ninto the approach to the bridge to\nturn back on to Columbia avenue\nwhen he tint mw the truck, and\nsaid he stepped on the gaa in an endeavor to get out ot ita way.\nHa testified he did not hear the\nfire tiren at the hall or on the fire\ntruck, yet the assistant fire chief, S.\nSmith, who wu driving, itated his\nsiren was going full blut, which\nstatement wat coroborated by J.\nBrennan, fireman.\nFire Chief A. A. McDonald, only\na thort distance behind tha appara*\ntin vehicle, itated hit siren wu tlto\nturned on.\nThe maglitrtte found Davit guilty,\nbut as it waa the flnt case of ltt\nkind before him, he itated ha would\nlet oft the charged on autpendad\ntentence. In hli deliberation, hit\nwonhip stated that he believed nag*\nligence wu thown on tha part ot\nDavit in not ttking better precaution! while driving, adding that it\nwu the duty ot every driver to be\nalert at all tlmu to expect tha unexpected.\nChief of Police John Laurie prosecuted.\nWHIST AIDS THE\nBOY SCOUT FUND\nBoy Scouti fundi wera materially boosted Wedneaday night\nthrough a whist drive in the Canadian Legion halt\nSeventeen tablea ware in play\nand tint prizes went to Miss G.\nHudson, Miu B. Rogen, Miu L.\nBow and Miu H. Douglas. Mn. D.\nRees, Mn. D. Kerr, Mlu M. Arthur\nand Mn. Nahl carried oft tecond\nprlzet.\nMiH Gloria Stone, Mlu Suun\nTawei and Mlu Annie Laakao gave\na 20-mlnute dance program.\nMemben of the ladies' committee were Mri. L. Pickard, chairman,\nMn. D. Reel, Mn. G. Hunter, Mn.\nT. Cookson, and Mn. F. L. Paddon.\nR. A. Aldenmith, J. Morrla, F. A.\nStewart and A. Browne formed the\nmen'i committee.\nLEGION TO HOLD\nDANCE ON MAY 24\nSecretary-manager R. H. Pretton\nand hit dance committee, M. S.\nHarper, Alex McDonald and R. A.\nAldenmlth hava completed plant\ntor the Canadian Legion Victoria\nday dance.\nH. C. Pitta hu baen chosen muter of ceremonlu and one ot the\nmuter ot ceremoet and ona ot the\n(eaturea ot the program will be a\nspecial dance number by Mlu\nGloria Stone.\nGamt Possible if\nPlaytd at 11 a.m.\nInformation received from Mlu\nRota Sevtrn, of Trail, Wedneidiy night waa to tht tfftet that\ntht Trail Rtd Sox would ba able\nto play the Humt Acu on Sundiy In Trill, providing tht gama\n\u25a0ttrttd at 11 a.m. Tht fltld mutt\nbt elttred by 1 p.m., making It\nnteetury to tttrt thl aoftball\ngama on time.\nRtv. W. McCltan\nGtts Appointment\nRev. Wallace McCIean, who recently resigned from the pastorate\nof Flnt Presbyterian church ln\nNelaon, hu been appointed mlnliter of Dunn Memorial Preaby\nttrlan church. Long Branch, Toronto, Ontario.\nMTS&GIRIS.\nHHE.ANftt.VAy\n10 CET OK OF THE\n7S0OSPA10IN6\nS0FTBAUS AND\nSASUMU I'M\ngivi ns away FREE\nIN CANADA.JUST\nUAD THE RULES.\n' lAsy\nRtv. W. C. Mowhinney\nGoing to Saskatoon\nRev. W. C. Mawhlnney, who\nhit bttn putor of thl Trinity\nUnlttd ohurch, Ntlton for ttvtr-\ntl ytara, wlll ge to the It Thomaa\nWeeley chureh of Sukatoon, according to Informttlon received\nfrom tha Ctnadlan Prtu. It It\nundtrttood thtt thl formtr putor of tht latkatoon church wlll\ncomt to Trinity church.\nMr. Mawhlnnty It u prutnt\nattending tha Brltlth Columbli\nconference ef tht Unlttd Chureh\nof Ctnada at Vanoouvar. l\n7500\nSpalding\nBASEBALLS &\nS0FTBALLS\nGiven away by BABE RUTH\nto CANADIAN Boysand Girls\n800 Btteballa and Softballe\nIvery Weak .. PRE!. Juit think\nof it. Every week for 1} weekt BABB\nRUTH il jittiag --**\u25a0) JOO genuine\nSpalding Baseball! aod Softbtlli to\nCanadian Boyi and Girli. 7,500 priiei\nin all. There are ao many of tntm it\nihould ba usy for you to gtt ont. Age\nwill ba considered in awarding priiei.\nINSTRUCTION! FOR WIRMIM\nJutt write JJ wordi or Itit telling\n\"Why Quaker Puffed Whut tnd\nQutktr Puffed Rica ara tha most\npopular tummer ceretli\".\nMad letter needier wllk me treea 1 Quaker\nPuBed Wheat ac Qualm Puied Rlee peekat*.\ntec lecetjillai) to BABB BUTH, e\/nflu\nQuebec Octi Compear, _e___toou. Seek. Be\n\u25a0ure eed mt whether rou wut e Sofrtbell ee \u2022\nThe JOObettletten received each\nweek win JOO Spalding Belli.\nOffer good only In Canada\nQUAKER\nPuffed Wheat-Puffed Rice\nMAIL COUPON No iv'\nBABB BUTH. c\/o.The Quaker Oeu Co..\ngieheitiou face\n.\"BfecWie,\u2014Hare'i mr litter telliui\n\u2022*\u25a0 \"bilker Pulfcd Whwt mac\nlet ere the tarxi popular\n'Wht ljhlnl\nQuaker\nummir cereal*.\" I am alw am\n*op\u00ab. If 1 win wnd ma a Sohl\nall U (Murk \"X\" eM\u00abiH btsl\naaclaetel a Bee\nt.,(ib.iirl \u00bb.-_.-\nepptmita btll _aa mmt)\n-Ae\u00bb\t\nAd-rut-\nlend ea man. entrlea each weak aa _~\nlik.. k> toil aa t topi from Quaker PurM\nRice or Quaker FuM Wheat pedtetce era\nIncluded with each entrr. (No mmm, ec\nretted after AtHwt 1\njjUOtkjl\n 1\n\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\t\n(b50\n> THI NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. l.C-THURSDAY MORNINO. MAY 28. IMS-\nTO MAKE TOUR\nOF INSTITUTES\nMrs. McLachlon Will\nFeature Wool in\nLectures\nOn Inttnictioni from the minister\nat agriculture, Mrs. V. 8. McLachlan, superintendent ot Women's in*\nititutes, It itirtlng on a tour of the\nlnitltutea ln the Kooteniy, Okanagan and Cariboo, during which ahe\nhopat to either viiit or meal membert fnm every lnitltute in the diitrict!, and give addreuu and talks\non IniUtutet matters.\nMrt. McLachlan will ipeak on\nwool-craft and tha progreu that It\nbeing made in tninnlng, weaving\naod tha making of wool comforters.\nNow tha Wool is becoming plentiful\nin many parte ot tha province the\nthrifty houtewife flndt that much\nmoney ii uved and very utiiftctory\nretultt obtained by ctrding tnd\n\u2022pinning tha wool at home, and the\ntuperintendent la able to give much\npractical advice on how to do thli.\nThera ire now ISO Women'i lnatltute* In tha province with a membership of about 4900 women. New\ninstltutu ara springing up aU over\nthe province, etpecitlly in the new\nand lau thickly populated diitrlctt,\nHOLIDAY\nSHOES\nGalore\nWhite KID\nCALF\nMESH\nFABRICS\nBUCKS\nTIES\nPUMPS\nSTRAPS\n$1.95 to $10.50\nR* Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfathion\nSPRING'S DISOBEDIENCE\nIt tayt \"Not Litter\" on the gate-\nBut tulips do not care.\nA duteous look they simulate\nUntil the keeper's passed the gate,\n'And thtn they simply oannot wait\nTo scatter in tht air\nTheir petals. No, nor hesitate\nTo strew them everywhere.\nIt tayt \"Not Litter\" on the gate-*\nBut tulips do not cart.\nFor tkt bride who wants\nto wear a hat instead of a\nveil, tht newest idea is white\nostrich feathers forming a\nfringy brim around a crown\n*tf tucked tulle. No other\ntrimming it uted.\nWhen tha May\nflies   ire   bulling\nI and tha \"big one's\"\nare taking tha fly,\nand Mother ii busy\na packing the picnic\nbaaket, what could\n* ba   nicer   than   a\nEruent to dear old\niad of a new winner or fith line. It\nwill make hla feel Uka a boy igalnl\nThe WOOD, VALLANCC HARDWARE COMPANY have aU the\nlateet and best in tha flihing tackle\nline, and will give you expert advice upon the proper tackle to buy.\nEverything that ought to go ln \u25a0\nfishing buket li there, to catch\nbig fith or Uttla flth, in thady\npooli or deep big laku. Drop In\nand tee them.\nWhite laet it tht mott\npopular wedding gown of\nthe moment. Tht fine, embroidered variety, with\nyardt and yards of plain\ntulle for train and wedding\nveil. Orange blossoms in a\nhalo if tht source of a\nfoamy veil.\n\u00ab*\n-_>\nOh! thou linen nilti and drestet!\nOf freth, 'uicruthablt linen, cool\nand comfortable. Smart! Ill aay\nand oh, to uleful for any tort of\n6arty! Thay ara nere, at\nLANCHI'I SPECIALTY\nSHOPPE, in the tnappiest atylu\nand the newest colon. And when\nlt comu to teenucken, you won't\nbe tblt to resist the juzy plalda\nand ttripes in chic fuhlont, cuta\nenough to take you to tea or to a\nbeach party. New printed silks\nara In, too. Buy your holiday\nclothu now! You can't go wrong\nat thit thop!\n\u00ab*\n\u25a0*>\n* English \"eruite wear\" it\nthe thing for boating and\ntummer retort wear,\n\"Among the garments are\nEnglish woolens in shorts\nand flannel jackets, slacks\nand sweaters, polo thirte\nand skirti. You can assemble your own outfit.\nSummertime ll htrt, to with\nbut wlthtt far a happy holldty,\nI'm liking a vacation myself until\ntht Fall.\nLilly CAnn*\nThe Mlnu Vera B. Eldt, Dorothy\nWylle and Irene Edmondion made\ncharming hoetesies Tundty afternoon when they entertained at the\ntea hour complimenting Mist Jean\nWaldle, popular June bride who\nwu pruented with a cortege bouquet of iprlng flowen. The tea\ntable presided over by Mn. WUUam\nWaldie and Mn. Jamea McGregor\nwu very attractive with a lace tea\ncloth, yellow tapen and centered\nwith a miniature bride and groom,\nminiiter and bridesmaid and surrounded by illver ran ot lily of\nthe valley and forget-me-nota. The\nroomi were adorned throughout\nwith apple blossoms, ntrcltsus and\ntulipa. Thoae assisting in serving\nwere Mr. Charlei H. Hamilton,\nMn. C. W. McBey, Mist Dorothea\nGraham. Miu Helen Murphy and\nMiu Mollle Green. The invited\nguuta Included Mlu Jean Waldie,\nMn. William Waldie, Mrs. Jamei\nMcGregor, Mrs. Jamu Johnstone,\nMln Alia Johnstone, Mn. John\nWaldle ot Robrson, Mrt. WlUlam\nWtldle Jr. of Robton, Mn. Harold\nLakea, Mn. Percy Coatu, Mn. C.\nW. McBey, Mn. Edna Gray of Wln-\nnipeg. Mn. Harry B. Horton. Mn.\n'Social Happenings\nin Nelson City\nThit column Ii conducted by Mn. H. Madden in tha abatnea of\nMn. M. J. Vigneux. AU newt of a tocltl nature, including receptions,\nprivate entertainments, penontl Items, mirrlagei, etc., will appear in\nthit column. Phone Mn. Midden at her home.\nwhere women find that a weU-or-\ngnntzed inttitute, even lf only consisting of nine or 10 memben, ctn\ndo much to improve their community and keep up the courage of\nthe people in thue difficult times.\nTha women have found the truth\not tha Prince of Walu' menage,\n\"Wa can do wonden lf we all puU\ntogathar.\" \t\nBon Ton Meat Mkt.\n411 Bakar lfc <\nPhenu tit and M     P.O. Box M\nfrtt delivery ta Ymlr and Salmo\nevery Tuuday and Prlday evt-\nnlng.   ltnd ui your ordtn.\nFor\nDicks Best\nHealth\nPlumage\nSong\nNicholson tt Brock,\nJCimiltssI        xi\nISS Oeotse St., Totoelo\nGeorge Lee Wtrner, Mn. Reginald\nDill, Mrs. Charlei H. Hamilton,\nMrs. Jack McDonald, Mn. T. H.\nBourque, Mn. C. M. Bennett, Mn.\nR. W. Dawson, Mrs. Frank Meagher,\nMrs. Arthur Godfrey, Mn. Thomu\nGibson, Mlu Agnes Cant, Mlss\nDorothea Graham, Mlsi Aileen\nMansfield, Miu Jean Lambert, Miss\nRuth Craufurd, Miu Helen Murphy,\nMiss Jem Gilker, Miss Betty Horstead, Miss Gaie Taylor ot Willow\nPoint, Mlsi Nancy Nisbet. Miss\nKathleen Nlsbet. Mlu Cora Barratt,\nMiss Margaret McLeod, Miu Dorothy WaUace, Miu Helen Vance,\nMiss Mildred Irvine, Miu Eileen\nDill. Miu Mollle Green of Willow\nPoint, Miu Carmen Horton, Miss\nMargot Blaylock of Trail, Miss\nHelen Blaylock of TraU.\n\u2022 e e\nO. G. Gallaher, anlstant district\nprovincial engineer, left yetterdty\n\u25a0by motor for Merritt to ipend the\nholiday with his ftmlly.\nA. B. Fleener wu a city viiltor\nyuterday from Kulo.\n...\nMr. and Mn. F. Archibald and\nchildren ot Trail are ipending a\nfew days in the city guetti. at the\nhome of Mr. Archibald'! parents,\nMr. and Mn. C. I. Archibald, SUnley street\n\u25a0 eee\nL. McLellan ot Alniworth, who\nhai been ipending a few days in the\ncity, left yuterday for hli home.\nW. A. Talbot, anlstant dlitrlct\nprovincial engineer, T. G. Cooper\nand J. P. Coatu returned recently\ntrom a buslneu trip to New Denver.\ne   e'e\nA. Wation wu a city visitor yuterdiy from Crawford Bay.\neee\nComplimenting Mn. Jack Lewli,\nnee Anna Wallach, a number of\nfrlenda surprised her it her home\non the Granite road Monday night.\nGamu and contetts were enjoyed,\nthe prir.es being won by Mrs. Ottlin\n\u2022nd Miu Margaret Stevemon. After\na tit-down lupper the guest of honor\nwu pruented with a shower of\ngifts lor her kitchen. The invited\nguuts Included Mrs. M. Willach,\nMrs. L. Pettlt, Mrt. J. Ostlin of Corra\nLynn, Mln Lena Limacher, the\nMlssu Elsie and Annie Hawu, MUs\nVera Harlow, Mlu Kay Massey\nMiu Margaret Jarvis, Miu Beatrice\nFrench, Mlw Rita LePage, Miss\nJeaale Cull, Mlu Elsie Life. Mn. M.\nSolbtkker, Mlu Jean Pitenon, Mrs.\nA. N. McLeod, Mrs. F. Carmichael,\nMlu Margaret Stevemon, Miu Bet-\ntrice Matthews, Mlu Ruby Bate,\nMlss Florence Jeffrey, Mlu Cela\nPavlis, Min Fern Kay and Miss\nMargrot Grottl.\neee\nMn. Jamea P. Coata entertained\ndelightfully yesterday afternoon at\nthe tea hour, honoring her sitter,\nMlsi Betty Hontead, whoie marriage taku place in June. The tea\ntable, centered with yellow popplu\ntnd primroin, wu presided over by\nMrs. J. Cartmel and the terviteun\nwtre Mn. T. H. Bourque, Mrs. Will-\nOil*\n1\nDmaLWU^\/MAYDNNAISE\n0 U. Vviedjfil DEEP FRYING\nmmiMat ECONOMICAL\n \"\"\"'Wii mn iniiri.ni \"\"\"\nRgYALClTl\nA National Dish!\n.OREAT aeraa ara planted each yaar Is an\n^ t-cluilve virlety of lead which yieldi an\ntl.ndtnee el imooth, whlla batni. Ihaaa form\n(ha foundation ol a dlah of world-wide popularity. Whan the Royal City thai has cooked\nthua lo a turn, a thick, red, ripe tomato uuce\nli blended Into them and selected pork cheeks\naddad Iw flavor. Ctrtful eoohlnf\u2014and than\nthty jo on thtlr way to flva you anothar\nRoyal City battl\n\u00ab\u00ab\n\u201en><f-\nIim Ttylor, Mlu Btbt Hontead, and\nMin Cora Barratt Tha Invited\nguuta included Mlta Betty rjrstead,\nMrs. George Hontead, Mn. J. Cirtmel, Mn. T. H. Bourque. Mn.\nArthur Godfrey, Miu Cora Barratt,\nMn. J. T. Andrewi, Mrs. Williim\nTtylor, Mn. R. W. Dawton, Mrt.\nC. H. Hamilton. Mn. A. J. Cornlih.\nMrs. J. McDontld, Mn. Harold\nLaku, Mn. L. M. Varner, Mn. F.\nMeagher, Mrs. Harry B. Horton, Mn.\nReginald Dill, Mn. Oeorge Lee Warner, Mn. T. A. Clarke, Mrs. C. W.\nMcBey, Mrt. Rex Jarvlt, Mln Vivian\nLandry, Mlu Virginia Heffernan,\nMln Molly Green, Mlu Dorothy\nWtlltce, Mln Mildred Irvine, Miu\nAileen Manifleid, Miu Eileen DUl.\nthe Misses Moira and Margaret McLeod, Miu Irene Edmondson, the\nMisses Elizabeth and Helen Vance,\nthe Mlnei K. and Nancy Nisbet,\nMln Jean Waldle, Mln Jean Gilker,\nMiss Helen Murphy, Miss Dorothea\nGraham, Miss Alia Johnstone, Miss\nAnnabeUa Dunk and Mln Gladys\nPearson.\neee\nF. Putnam, M.P.P., after ipending\na couple of dayi in Nelion and diitrict, leavu today for his home ln\nCreston.\neee\nMn. E. J. McGregor of Bonnlngton was a city visitor yesterday\nfrom Bonnlngton.\neee\nA. Masker of Midway li ipending\na few days visiting ln Nation.\nF. TWbot ot Vincouver ls a visitor\nIn tha city, the guut of his brother\nand eister*in-law, Mr. and Mn. W.\nA. Talbot, Fairview.\ne   *   e\nW. Johnstons was a recent visitor\nin the city from Sllverton.\neee\nGordon Bennett, Jack Lennie, Mn.\nMabel  RockUtte  and  Min  Sybil\nArchibald leave today by motor to\nspend the hoUday ln Spokane.\ne   \u2022   .\nFred Norcrou left thli momlng on\na trip to Winchester, Ont\n\u2022   e   e\nMn. Hugh Ross luvu today to\nspend the week-end at Gray Creek,\nthe guest of Mn. T. O'Nell.\nOn the Air Tonight\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NITWORK\n6:00 Melodic Stringi, fr. Toronto;\n6:30 Summer Follies, Montreal;\n7:00 News-Weather, Toronto; 7:15\nNocturne, lnstrum. ensemble, Montreal; 7:30 Joe de Courcy'i orch.,\nMontreal; 7:49 Eddie Duchln's orch.,\nNBC; 8:00 Pacific Nocturne, stlon\norch., dlr. Percy Harvey, Van.; 8:30\nBridget and Pat Win. (exc. B. C);\n8:30 Newi, B.C. Net; j}:45 Three\nGuitan, dlr, Jeff Oermnne, Prince\nAlbert; 0:00 Valley Echoea, vocal\ninttrum., ChllUwtck; 0:18 Wea Jlmmle Noble, Scotch comedian, Chllliwack; 9:30 Allan Caron, organist.\nWinnipeg; 10:00 Sparklets, vocal\nand instrumental, Van.\nN.B.C.-KPO NITWORK\nKHO KOW KPI KPO KOMO KJR\n590 820 640 \u00aba0 920 J70\n6:00 Paul Whlteman'l Music BaU,\nradio entertainers, Helen Jepton,\nloprtno; 7:00 Amos 'n' Andy; 7:15\nTony and Gus, Mario Chamlee; 7:30\nWinning the Wut drama; 8:00\nFloyd Gibbons, headline hunter;\n8:15 Symphony Hour, orch, dlr,\nGaetano Merola; Mary Garden, commentator; 0:15 Meredith Willion's or.;\n0:30 America Sings; Book Parade\n(KPO); 0:45 Jimmy Garrigan't or.;\n10:00 Newt Flashes, Sam Hayu;\n10:15 Paul Pendarvla' orehutn;\n10:55 Press-Radio Newa Service\n11:00 Henry Buna and Orchestra;\n11:00 Way Back When, organist\n(KPO); 11:30 Jimmy Grier's Orch.\nC.B.S.-DON LI! NITWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n690 610 940 1130 1270\n6:30 Horace Heldt's Brigadiers,\n7:00 Archie Bleyer's orch.; 7:30 Annette Hanshaw, Walter O'Keefe;\nTed Huslng Glen Gray'a Cau Lo*\nmans: 8:00 Bill Hogan't orch.; 8:30\nDennle Thompson's Orch.; 9:00 Mag'\nazine (DL); Louit Panlco'a orch.,\n10:00 Don Bestor's orehntra (Don\nLee); 10:30 Orville Knapp't orch.\n(DL); 10:45 Dick Jurgen'i ore. (DL);\n11:00 Orville Kntppi orch. (DL);\n11:15 Dick Jurgen'i orch. (DL); 11:30\nLu Hite'i orch. (DL).     '\n606 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVANCOUVIR 100 w\n6:16 Newi Flaihu; 6:30 Jean Moran; 6:45 Bud Steele, tongi: 7:00\nWomen'i Viewpoint; 7:30 Ronnie\nand Alice; 8:00 Voice of the Commonwealth; 8:30 Sports; 10:00 Newi.\nOther periods: Recordi.\n1030 k CFCN 291.3 m\nCALOARY 10,000 w\n6:00 Happy Landings; 6:15 Safety\nProgram; 6:30 Jack Betner, tenor;\n7:00 Mn. Dalton Jeffrey, soprano;\n7:13 N. F. PrieiUey, V.TJs. talk; 7:30\nKing Solomon and Serenader; 9:00\nNewt; 10:00 Si Hopkins' Old Time\nDance; 11:00 King Solomon and\nSerenader.\n070 k KQO 379.5 m\nOAKLAND 7500\n6:00 Dinner Concert. E.T.; 6:30\nFederal Buslneu Talk; 6:45 Jimmie\nAllen's Air Adventures; 7:00 Silver\nStrains; 7:30 Nat'l Radio Forum; 8:00\nSporti Headlinen; 8:13 Ttlk of Uie\nTown (E.T.); 8:30 Dancing in Twin\nCities; 8:45 Lum and Abner, E.T.;\n9:00 SUnley Myera' or.; 8:30 Pat\nO'Shu, tenor; 10:00 Williams-\nWalsh orcb.: 10:30 Al Morris'\nOrch.; 10:88 Preu-Radio Newt; 11:00\nHenry Butte tnd Orch.; 11:30 Jimmy Grier'i Orch.\n1080 k KNX 288.5 m\nHOLLYWOOD 60*00 w\n6:00 Jack Armitrong, tU Amtrican\nBoy; 6:18 Newt; 6:30 Lum and Abner; rural aklt: 6:48 Air Adventurei;\n7-00 Wttantbe and Archie; 7:15 Lawrence King, tenor; 7:30 The In-\nLaws, play; 7:45 King Cowboy; 8:00\nBeauty Talk; 8:15 Emil Baffa't Con.\norch.; 8:43 Shining Adventure: 9:00\nNewt Service; 9:16 Homer Canfield;\n9:30 KNX Dude Ranch; 10:30\nValesco's Ruulan Eagle quartet;\n10:45 Pete PontreUl'a oreheitra,\nKNX Trana-Peclfic News.\nBRITISH IMPIRI PROGRAMS\nShort Wave\u2014Ptclflc Standard Timt\nGSB 9510 k. (31.66 m) and QSD\n11,7M k. (28.53 m.)\nPART I\n9:16 tm. Big Btn; Newt; 0:30 Broad-\nhunt Septet; Oladyi Pin*, contralto;\n10:30 Three Valleyi Futlvtl, Flnt\nFeJtlval Concert, relayed from the\nPavilion. Mountain Ath; 11:00 Wireless MlUUry Band: 11:46 Soft LlghU\nand Sweet Muilc; 12:05 p.m. London Symphony orch.; 1:00 Clou\nDown.\nPART II\n1:15 pjn. Wilford Hyden tnd his\nMagyar orch.; 2:00 News; 2:13 Dance\nMuilc; 2:43 Close down.\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMENUS, RECIPES and\nHINTS\nMtnu Hint\nSptghettl and Tomatou\nSpinach or Young Beet Greeni\nLettuce and Watercren Salad\nBaking Powder Bltcuitt\nBtnanat and Ortngei SUced\nTea\nA friend uked ma tha other day\nwhy her baking powder biscuiU did\nnot rlie. I could only gueit what\nher* trouble wu, but this Is how I\nmake my biscuits, and I have no\ntrouble. Thli recipe may be used for\nshortctku u well u for the tea biscuits.\nTodty'i Rtetptt\nBaking Powder Biscuits\u2014Measure\nand lift two cupi flour, four teaspoons (level) baking powder, one-\nhalt teupoon salt and one teaspoon\nsugar. Add four tablespoons of\nlaid, butter or half ot each. Mix\nthoroughly with the dry ingredients,\nusinr\u00bb either your fingen or a fork.\nThen add iweet milk gradually\nuntil you have a toft dough, but\none that can be handled. Turn out\non floured board and knead gently\nfor two or three minutu. Then cui,\nplace on greeted tin and put Into\nnot oven\u2014375 to 400 degreu. Some\ncooks advocate melUng butter ln the\ndripping pan, putting the biscuits\nin, turning them over to both sides\nire coatea with butter, and then\nbaking. Thli gives them a crisp\ncrust, to do u you pleue, or u your\nUme or the quantity of butter you\nwith to use allows. If you wsnt to\nmtkt the bliculU pirtlculirly imili\nmd dtlnty, and hsve no small cutter, use a cream or milk bottle to\ncut them.\nSpaghetti and Tomato\u2014BoB the\nrequired amount of spaghetti in\nsalted water unUl tender. Run seven\npiecei of bacon through tha food\ngrinder, brown ln frying pan, add\none large onion which hu alto been\nput through the grinder, and one\ngreen pepper\u2014if you have It\u2014and\nbrown Ughtly in bacon fat Add one\nlarge cup tomatou, cook all together\nfor five minutu. Put spaghetU into\ncasserole, add tomato mixture, top\nwith buttered crumbs and bake for\n15 mlnutu or so in oven. Serves\nsix.\n \u25a0    \u25a0      paoi nvi\nFor a change uta criu-crou ttrlpt\not paatry tor top crust ot the usual\ntwo-crust pla.\nMix lemon Juice and salt together\ntnd rub on garment that hu been\n\u2022scorched with too hot an iron. Hold\nmaterial over iteim while the mixture ic on.\nCockroachu, unUke many intecti,\nire repeUed by Ught\nNEW PIQUE\nBLOUSES\nBlouses for your summer\noutfit. Made of good quality cotton pique In polka\ndots or stripes. Sizes 14\nto 20.\nPRICE, EACH ... $1.50\ncMea&her's Ltd.\nCertainly you'll\nfeel better after a\ngood cup of TEA.\nNABOB., anytime!\nVou cannot Imv as good ..-< NABOB lor less\nask for KtHtvyfi\nRECIPE\nFOR\nSLEEP\nA FEW minutes before bedtime, pour yourself a bowl of Kellogg's\nCorn Flakes and milk or cream. Eat slowly, enjoying that cool\ncrispness, that delicious flavor. Then climb into bed.\nTry it any night when you're restless. You'll sleep better, wake\nrefreshed in the morning! Science has proved it. Kellogg's Corn\nFlakes, easy to digest, eliminate hunger pains without overloading\nthe stomach.\nKellogg's are a grand food any time. Appetizing. Rich in\nenergy. Splendid for breakfast, lunch, or the children's supper.\nMatchlesa Flavor and Criipneii\nIn fairness to yourself and your family, don't accept substitutes\nfor Kellogg's Corn Flakes. Kellogg's are the standard of quality\neverywhere\u2014by far the world's largest-selling ready*to-cat cereal.\nTbeir flavor and crispness can't be duplicated. And their oven-\nfreshness is protected by the patented WAXITTE inner bag\u2014an\nexclusive Kellogg feature.\nThe famous red-and-green package gives you outstanding\nvalue. Many generous servings for a few cents. Quality and purity\nguaranteed. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario.\nCORN\nFLAKES\nOVEN-FRESH    FLAVOR-PERFECT\n -\nFAOE IIX-\nJMsmt Daily 5fr m\nEstablished April n. IMO.\n\"Britiih Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\"\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPubliihed every  morning except Sunday  by\ntha NEW8 PUBUSH1NG COMPANY, LIMITED.\nUl Bakar Strut, Nelaon, BriUih Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting all Department!\nMember ot tha Audit Bureau of CirculaUona and\nTha Canadian Preu Leaaad Wire Newa Service.\nTHURSDAY, MAY 23, 1935.\nNRA's APPROACHING COLLAPSE\nIt is less than two years ago since the NRA came\ninto effect. The great demonstrations of popular approval\nthat accompanied its introduction are well remembered.\nThose who questioned the soundness of the plan and\nheld that it could not realize the hopes it was arousing\nwere paid little heed. It has, however, had such disappointing results that the end of the experiment is imminent.\nThe act expires on June 16 and the president has\nso-tight to have it extended for another two years. But by\nan almost unanimous vote the senate passed a resolution\nwhich provides for a prolongation only till April next\nand for continuance in a much contracted form during\nthat period. Price-fixing would, if the upper house has\nits way, be eliminated except in the mining industries and\nbusiness wholly within a state would be exempted from\nthe operation of the codes. There is a possibility that the\nhouse of representatives will seek to hive the president's\nwishes carried out to a greater extent and that some compromise will be effected. But even correspondents who\nhave at all stages been strongly sympathetic towards\nthe NRA are agreed that it is in a bad way. When the\nsenate finance committee two weeks ago approved of the\nClark resolution which the chamber has now adopted,\nArthur Krock of the New York Times wrote:\nThose who recall the pulling, roaring, driving NRA of 1933\nand the first half of 1934 would not recognize ltt corridors and\noffices todty. It it It not u \"dud u dodo,\" ln General Johnson's\ndisputed phrase, lt is as alck u a pup. Administration senators\nwere u happy as their colleagues who hate NRA when Senator\nClark showed them a way out of their troubles with constituents\nwho htve been demanding that the neck ot the Blue Eagle be\nwrung.\nThe president has intimated that he will not attempt\nto veto the resolution if it gets through both houses. With\nan extension for only ten months and with such a curtailment as is proposed the NRA would, it is pointed out,\nbe bound to become nothing more than a paper organization. Codes could not be preserved, it has to be recognized, when industries doing inter-state business are\nplaced at a competitive disadvantage with similar concerns that restrict their operations to particular states.\nIn addition court decisions have been steadily adding to\nthe difficulties of administration.\nThat there is much that is good in the NRA has\nbeen freely admitted by its most severe critics. But\nits weaknesses have been of a fundamental character\nand were certain to be demonstrated as the work of enforcement proceeded. Apart from these, altogether too\nmuch was attempted in too short a time.\nBRUSSELS EXHIBITION\nBelgium is the scene of the latest world's fair. There\nls being held in Brussels the Universal and International\nExhibition. It is the most ambitious European affair of\nits kind since the Paris Exposition of 1900. Brussels has\nprepared for it with a thoroughness that has affected\nthe whole city. New roads have been made, bridges built\nto carry tramway services and an entire system of pipes\nlaid down to deal with drainage, gas, electricity and\nwater.\nThis year is the centenary of the first railroad laid\ndown on the continent\u201412Vi miles from Brussels to\nMalines. To recognize this event transportation is playing an important part. The chief sections are devoted\nto communications, transport and every form of electricity. The main hall is in the form of a huge railway station. There are over 140 individual palaces and pavilions\nin the 350 acres of the exhibition. They are grouped round\na central avenue rising in terraces of flowers and fountains. Some of them, like the Chicago fair buildings,\nare striking modernity; others have kept to old-fashioned\nnotions.\nWhen Belgium is able to support such an exposition\nit is evident she has fully recovered from the war. It is\nhard to believe that only 20 years ago Belgium was being\noverrun by hostile armies.\nSTREET NAMES IN PARIS\nParis claims to have more queerly-named streets\nthan any other city in the world says the Sherbrooke\nRecord. They include \"Ash Trays Street,\" \"The Street\nof the Bad Boys,\" \"Good Children Street,\" \"Fishing\nCat Street,\" \"Green Dog Street,\" and \"White Peacock\nStreet.\" Other streets are \"Son-in-Law,\" \"Hot Cat,\"\n\"Lovely Leaves,\" \"Windy Wood,\" \"Red Ball,\" \"Big\nBottle\" and \"Little Mugs.\"\nBesides there are \"English\" streets. They include\nthose bearing the names of King George V., Queen Victoria, Charles Dickens, Lord Byron, Isaac Newton and\nCaptain Scott.\nTHE NELION DAILY NEW3  NELION. I.C-THURSDAY MORNINO. MAY 21. 1988-\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Tucheri\"\nCAN NORTH MAKE\nIEVEN DIAMONDS?\nHere it a beautiful problem hand\nfrom Hamilton, Canada, wbere contract bridge wu Introduced into\nthe Hamilton club ln 1917, aa successor to auction. Play the carda\ndouble-dummy fashion, wtth aU\nhands exposed upon the table.\n\u2666II\n\u2666.A K Q J 10 94 I\n\u2666 A J 9\nBidding went: South, 1 spade;\nNorth 3 diamonds to indicate slam\nexpectations; South, 3 hearta; North\n6 diamonds; South, 7 diamonds, as\nNorth must hold solid trump and\nclub strength. West doubled. West\nbet hia partner that an opening lead\not trumps would defeat the call.\nLet's see if that is true. *\nHave Eut lead a diamond. Run\noff 8 trump tricks. The i cards\nstill held by dummy and declarer\nwill be as shown below. West must\nMORE THAN 100 PLANES TO FLY IN\nFORMATION\nThere have bean march-pasta\naplenty. It'a Juat an old army cut-\ntorn.\nThe navy, alto, hu ltt ceremonial\nfor review purposes, although It la\nmore customary, when a big fleet Is\nbeing reviewed, tor the reviewing\nofficer to do the \"steaming-put\"\nhimself, letting the bigger ships stay\nat anchor.\nNow there Is to be, for the tint\ntime, t \"fly-put,\" for the Royal Air\nForce hu decided that lt ihould\nhave Ita own ceremonial, even u its\nolder titter lervices.\nThe \"fW*puti\" will be a part of\nthe 18th Royal Air Force dliplay at\nHendon Airdrome on June 29. At\nthe conclusion of the pageant approximately one hundred aircraft\nwill parade in formation over the\nairdrome and Ita vicinity. Theie machines wiU be drawn from many\nsquadrons, and wiU provide a fine\nair fleet made up of many different\ntypei of machine. It will be the largut aerial formation ever to fly in\nthe London area. Another 100 machine! will take part in the earlier\nproceedings.\nWithin the airdrome accommodation will be provided for more than\n150,000 ipectatori.   There   will be\nparki for 13,000 automobiles.\nAIM TO DEMONSTRATE\nPROGRESS AND -QUANTITY      \u2022\nThe annual RAF. display was\nestablished in 1920. It hu two main\nobjects\u2014to demonstrate to the public the quality and progress of Brit\nish service avlaUon, and to provide\nfundi for Royal Air Force charities\nIn no aenae is the display a \"circus,\"\nwith picked star pilots dominating\neventi. The program it not planned\non aenutlon lines, though it In***\neludes teveral itemi which are spectacular and thrilling in the extreme\nIt thowt the Roytl Air Force to*\ning tbout ltt routine work; the flying done, astonishing in Ita brilliance\nand skili, is simply the culmination\nof the regular training season of the\nservice. Tlie squadrons are not pick\ned becauie of outstanding merit; lt\nia the proud and Justified bout of\nthe Air Force that every squadron\nand every pilot is trained to a pitch\nwhere participation in the display\nls deserved.\nFOREIGN CRITIC!\nKEENLY INTERESTED\nPerhaps the most keenly Interested of all the visitors to the display are the members ot the various\nforeign missions. These are expert\nspectators, competent to judge the\nstandard of pilotage skill reached\nby the display pilots, sensitive to the\ndelicacy and perfect timing needed\nto preserve those impeccable formations that appear simple to the\nuninstructed. On the evidence of\nthese critical witnesses is based the\ngeneral belief that the Royal Air\nForce display is the greatest pageant\not air mastery to be seen anywhere\nin the world. Incidentally, it ihows\nwhy so many pllota comt every year\nfrom foreign air forces for a spell of\ntraining with the R.A.F.\n\u2666 AJ9\n\u2666 KJ\n\u2666 KQ\nhere is J. H. Doy.e, well known\nin the Kootenays, figuring out his\navoirdupois after having deposited\na cent. I really do not know if bit\nweight is up or down but Mr. Doyle\nis certainly interested in what the\nindicator uys. Mr. Doyle has lived\nin Eut and West Kootenay and enjoys a wide acquaintance. He is a\nveteran of the Riel rebellion and\nwas a member ot the royal northwest mounted police in the early\ndays. He was educated in one of\nOntario's best known private schools\nfor boys near Toronto and came\nwest some years ago. For a period\nof about 12 years he was known as\nSheriff Doyle, being sheriff for\nSouth Kootenay. His duties carried\nhim all over the district. Upon his\nretirement from the sheriff's post\nhe lettled in Creston. Cranbrook,\nKimberley and Nelson have been\nhis places of residence in the Kootenays. He only recently returned\nfrom-a visit to California.\n,   .   t\nYesterday I had a fishing itory.\nWell here is another one from the\n\"Liars'\" club. It cornea from Victoria.\nOn a hot day I waa tithing, not very\nfar from here.\nAnd at I lay there iwelterlng by\nthe river brink,\nInto iti Icy watert I placed a pint\nof beer,\nThen I waited for a nice, long,\ncooling drink.\nI  law  a  good-sized   trout  come\nswimming up the river;\nHe swam over to my botUe for a\nlook,\nAnd u he read the label I could\nte. his body quiver;\nNo worm could tempt him then\nto grab a hook.\nTo reach the golden content! he\ntried hii level best;\nFrom every side a brave attack\nhe'd make,\nAnd then, at lut exhausted, he\npaused to take a rest\nWhen upon the scene there came\na garter snake.\nHe sized the situation up and quickly raised his head;\nDown the bottle-neck I uw it\ndisappear.\nThe trout wu flabbergasted; his\nlook It plainly said:\n\"I found the pint and this guy\ngeti the beer.\"\nBut the make had barely itarted\ntipping at the ale,\nWhen the trout closed ln and with\nhli vicious jaw\nHe bit a good-sized mouthful right\noff the reptile's tail,\nThen he used the poor snake'a\nbody tor a straw.\nHe calmly sucked the pint of beer,\nstayed with it to thc end;\nIn the bottle all he left there was\nthe foam,\nAnd just to prove my story when I\ntell it to a friend,\nI've got that empty bottle safe at\nhome.\n\u2666 AQ\n\u2666 AQ\n\u2666 T\ndiscard one of hit 6 cardi. What\nEast does ls of no importance. He\ncannot win a trick, in any suit.\nWhich card ahall West discard?\nWest will be hopelessly squeezed.\nregardless of what he discards. It\nhe lett go a heart the declarer will\nenter dummy with a spade, then\npick up West's lone K of hearts\nwith the Ace. The Q of hearts will\nforce another discard from West.\nNorth wlll let go his lut Spade, and\none of his clubs. If West lets go a\nspade the Q ln dummy becomes\ngood and declarer! ace of clubs will\nwin the last trick, he having let go\nhis J of clubs on thc good Q of\nspades. In case West lets go a club\nat any Ume, declarer's two spades\nwill be taken care of by the two\nmajor suit aces, and the three clubs\nin his own hand will become good\nfor 3 tricks. An opening trump\nlead insures a grand slam for North.\nTry an opening lead of clubt, u\nEast did when the hand wu originally played. Win with North's Ace,\nthen have dummy ruff a club.\nNorth will rulf a low heart. Run\noft trumpi unUl dummy holdi the\n4 cards shown below and Wut must\ndiscard one of his 5 cards. Again\nWest is squeezed and the grand slam\nwill be made. Were the opening\nlead a heart the-ume tactics would\nyield a grand alam.\n\u2666 Sl\n\u2666 I\n\u2666ll\nWHAT THE PRESS  IS SAYING\nr&3\n\u00bbKJ\n*K\nLsJ\n\u2666 AQ\n\u2022 AQ\nBefore to-morrow try an opening\nlead ot spades.\n\"GOLDEN SLUMBERS\nKISS YOUR EYES\"\nFrom \"Patient Orltttl\"\nGolden ilumbers klu your eyes,\nSmiles awake you when you rise.\nSleep, pretty wantons, do not cry,\nAnd I will sine a lullaby.\nRock them, rock them, lullaby.\nCare ls heavy, therefore sleep you,\nYou are care, and care must keep\nyou.\nSleep pretty wantons, do not cry,\nAnd I will sing a lullaby.\nRock them, rock them, lullaby.\n\u2014Thomas Dekker\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nI   10 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelson Dally Newt Filet\n*y\n(MAY 23, 1928)\nMr. and Mrt. J. G. Bunyan, Hall\nMines rotd, had as their guest their\nneice, Mill Thelma De Witt, ot\nSpokane.\neee\nBorn at Victorian hoipital. Kaslo,\nMay 21, to Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Salmon ot Nelton, a daughter.\nBorn at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital. May 18, to Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. S. Brake, a daughter.\n*    e    *\nMrs. Thomu Glbaon, Carbonate\nstreet has as her guest Mrs. John\nHamilton of Willow Point\nI   20 YEARS AGO   |\nI From Nelson Dally Newt Fllei\n\"She don't fool me. If a woman would rather have a swell\nused car than a UtUe new one,\nher big diamond! are glass.\"\n(MAY 23, 1918)\nEffective tomorrow, Italy hu declared war on Austria-Hungary.\nand, virtually, is alao at war with\nGermany, bringing to pass the long\nawaited alliance with Britain,\nFrance and their allies,\neee\nA father and ion are memben of\nNelson's detachment of the Mth\nbattalion. They are Alex Smith,\ntailor, who enlisted yesterday, and\nhis son, Dan Smith, who enlisted\nsome Ume ago.\neee\nEighth member of The Nelson\nDaily Newi itaff to enlist, Andrew\nL. Stuart, of the mechanical department, report! for duty tomorrow. Sid McDonald, a Nelton boy,\nwu the teventh.\n\u2022\u00bb-\n35 YEARS AGO\nI From Ntlion Dtlly Miner Fllei\n* \u2022\n(MAY 23, 1900)\nMn. R. W. Day, pruident of the\nLadies Hospital aid, and Mn. Hamilton Byen, secretary, received the\nguesti. assisted by Mrs. W. W. Beer\nand Mn. C. E. Miller, when the\nnew wing of the General hoipital\nhere was formally opened yesterday. Addresses were given by Jud\u00ab\nJ. A. Forin, W. W. Beer, F. W.\nSwannell and J. Lalng-Stockt.\neee\nRegistrar Harry Wright yeaterday\nissued a marriage licence to Charles\nHenry King and Viola Belle Palmer.\nDental decay became one of the\n\"fashionable\" diseases of Egypt\nwhen the luxuries ot the pyramid\nage appeared.\nWHO ARE THE TRUE\nECONOMISTS?\nIt la In striving for perfection that\nimperfection! are modified.\nFor that reason it li well not to bc\ntoo Intolerant of economic reformers.\nBut if those who have aome knowledge of the laws of cause and effect In business are to take a broad-\nminded view of the operaUons of\nreformers in seeking to impose upon\neveryone through poliUcal action\nthe consequences of certain experiments, then it is only fair that the\nexperimenters in government should\nbe willing to concede the point that\ntheir efforts are, alter all, experimental, and that it early triali Indicate error, then they, the experimented ihould be prepared to recede from their pet theoretical positions.\nExperimentation in Business law\nreform hM been going on for many\nyean now. The remits are open to\nanalysis and examination, and\nshould be studied earnestly by the\nreformers u well u by those who\nare frequently classed u \"Stand-\npatten\" and reactionaries.\nIn many cues reforms which have\nbeen adopted and put Into practice\nhave put rigidities into the processes\nof business which have had certain\ndefinite results. Are the zealous re-\nformen studying these thlngsT\nHave they convinced themselves\nby cold logic that the reforms were\ngood for business \u2014 and therefore\nfor the majority of people by pro-\nmoUhg more and better business\u2014\nor are they taking the unscientific\nattitude that all reforms are good\nmerely because they are reforms,\nand that if experiments fail the secret for success is a multiplication ot\nthese experiments so that they may\napply on a much wider acale?\nOne of the pet theories of a great\nmany builnesi reformen, including\neven the pruident ot the United\nSUtes, ls that some day, In some way\nthere will be accompUshed a complete cessation ot the swing of the\neconomic pendulum.\nMr. Roosevelt frankly states that\nhe is experimenting toward that\nend. If his experiments ihould lead\nto success, a new order of thing\u2014\nutterly new in the hiatory ot mankind ao far as it can be traced back\ninto antiquity\u2014would be ushered ln.\nMerely becauae the outcome\nwould be unprecedented is. of\ncoune. not good and sufficient reaaon for raying out ot hand that it\nwould be impossible of achievement.\nBut a meuure of scientific analysis should be brought to bear on every practical result of every itep\nttken In the seriu of experiments.\nOtherwise our progreu towtrd\nknowledge will be blundering and\nincalculably expeniive.\nIn the put and even today, despite\nthe intervenUoni ot government, the\npendulum in buiinui hu swung in-\ncessantly. For every action there has\nbeen a roughly compensating reaction, with the trend of production\nand Uving standards slowl*\" mounting.\nGreat activity hu brought about\n5reat supply, over-abundance has\nepressed pricu, low prices have\nforced curtailment of production,\ndecreased production hu brought\nabout inevitable shortage, shortage\nhas produced higher pricei. higher\nprlcu have promoted renewed activity.\nMan, rebel agalnit every force ln\nlife and nature tbat hu bound and\nrestricted him, logically fighti\nagainst thli natural law, for the\nhardships involved ln low prices as\nthe pendulum reaches the nadir of\nits swing promote intense dissatis-\nfacUon with the age-old force that\ncontrols him regardlet* of his will.\nA clever few co-operate with the\ncycle ot lean and fat yean, but the\ngreat majority disregard or defy It\nand suffer.\nIn Nature ltaelf there are cycles\nmaintaining a rough balance in the\nanimal and vegetable kingdom. Nature il u cruel u it Is kind. When\nwe recognize the existence of natural laws in business, we refer not\nto direct lawa of Nature but the logical and seemingly inevitable outcome of the operation of human nature on human buslneu attain as\nobserved over long period!.\nA scientist can tell you of thc laws\nof Nature by studying natural his*\ntory. His is a precise knowledge.\nThe scientist who studies the basic\nlaws of buslneu Is dealing with human nature. If we call him a scientist, lt must be with the reservation\nthat with hli cold science he blends\nUie winner attribute! of philosopher\nand historian. For convenience uke\nwe call him an economist.\nIt ls not reasonable to uy, ln distinguishing between true economists and pseudo economlata, that\nwhen a man who professes to ba\nan economist reveali himielf to be\nnther an apoitle of an Idealistic\nfuture, he cetses to be either useful\nor reliable u an economist, and become! merely t vltlonary propagandist or a tool for politician!.   .\nThii point, we believe, will bear\nemphasis, for lf the experiments proceeding apace throughout the world\nare to confer any immediate and\nlasting benefits upon mankind, it\nwill be becauie the reiulti have been\nstudied by true ecOQpmlita and In\nterpreted honestly to political leaden and to the pubilc.\nIf, on the other hand, thii interpretation it to be done by pseudo\neconomists who bring none of the\nscientist's Impartial logic to their\nresearch, who make recommendations which are impractical without\nSafety sammy says\nBy E Gao. Gtw,\nTO DRIVERS\/\nHelp to siift yourself rrom this AWful\nSredicftm-mt by developing tke htbit-oF\n\\angihft b SECOND GEAR Wher. crosig\nREMEMBER:\nThat evetuf the track is clear ahead motorists iiv\/ariably sloW doWh And & motor is\nless likely to stall in SEC0NDGEAR than ia\neiHver of the other tWb speeds.\nSB HOWEVER, it is SAFER to STOP.\n-v\nTEETH SHOW IF DIET IS NUTRITIOUS\n\u25a0y LOGAN CLENOENINO, M.D.\nThe most valuable contributions\nto medical progreu of late yean\n._ have been made in the field of in-\na ,C0mp^en 5??.\u2122?h tL^ nutrition. Most valuable be-\nnature, who disregard the lessons of practical and real, and not\nSifw'liirve^n^rXtufh'fn '\"eoret.c.1, -and because thev save\nvain.\nOnly true, unbiassed economists\nwill be quaUfied to uy, when this\nera ot experimentation on the business cycle has developed _ mass of\nevidence, whether or not a government can hope to seize hold ot the\nbusiness pendulum on an upward\nswing and hold it stationary so that\ngood Umes wiU be perpetual.\u2014Financial News.\nMOONSHINE IN AFRICA\nThere ls plenty of moonshine U-\nquor in South Africa.\nWhile there Is no prohibition for\nthe white man, the black and the\ncolored can only utlsfy their wants\nillicitly. In the towns this lt met\nfrom the resources of the wine and\nbrandy farmen of the Cape, but\nin the countryside of the Transvaal,\nwhich Is chiefly populated by the\nblack, the Boer hu turned to boot*\nleg liquor on a large scale.\nIn days gone by he hat always\ndistilled hli own brandy and liqueurs from his peaches tnd his\ntangtrinet and when the govern\nment, in the interests of the Tree*\nsury and the Bottle Stores, wanted\nto limit his activities, it fouiid itself\ncompelled to stipulate a definite\nallowance of alcohol *hich ihould\nnot be subject to excise. This wu\nfixed at thirty gallons a year, a fairly liberal ration all thlnga considered.\nNow to maintain the law Involved\na system ot continuous inspection\nfor there are more than tour thousand licenced stills in the Transvaal\nand lt ls not possession ot the tUU\nwhich is iUegal but the production\nof more than thirty gallona of aplrlt.\nThere is only one clue to the quantity of spirit distilled and that it\nthe residual muh and there ia nothing more easily disposed of where\npig abound.\nThe moonshine liquor, or mam-\npoer, as It it ctlled, it served to natives ot all ages and even to children\nand complaints are rife ot scholars\nattending school quite drunk.\nThe government professes Itself\nable to itamp out the evil, but with\nthis starting handicap of legalised\nstills and thirty gallon! free It dou\nnot seem feasible that the excisemen will make much headway. \u2014\nAfrican Preu.\nWATER LILIES\nBy DEAN HALUDAY\nWater lilies, a tew fish, and perhaps a few other aquaUc plants,\nform the whole of most garden\npoola.\nEither annual or hardy water\nlilies can be purchued for um ln\ngarden pools. The hardy varieties\nprove more satisfactory, since the\nannual types must be replaced each\nyear unless the pool ls indoors, or\nplants are placed in a greenhouie to\nwinter over.\nEach water lUy ahould be planted\nln a separate box of earth, 18 inches\nsquare, and one foot deep. The box\nshould have several holes in the\nbottom for drainage. A box or tub\nof cypress is bat, for it wlll endure the standing In the water.\nLily boxu should be fUled with\ntoll to within tlx inches of the top.\nThe lily crown should be' planted\neven with the top of the soil, then\nover thli a one-Inch layer of aand\nshould be placed.\nThe but soil for water lilies lt\nthree parti loam to one part well-\nrotted cow manure, with a bit ot\nchemical fertilizer added, dried\nblood being very good. When placing the lily box In the pool, put\nin only a few Inches below the\nsurface of the water, so the iun\ncan warm it. When the lily begins\nto grow, add a few more inehu\nof water!*, unUl you have eight\nInchet of water higher than the\nlily box. It your pool is quite deep,\ntt may be neceuary to put a few*\nbricks under the lily box to bring\nit to the dulred height.\nWater lilies do not Uke cold, running water; they do much better in\nwarm, sUll water. To produce flowen, they need plenty of sun. They\nwlll grow foliage ln the ahade but\nnot blossoms.\nThe htrdy water llllei come ln\nmany lovely shades, and many are\nquite fragrant, in pink, salmon, yellow, apricot, orange and vermillion.\nNot many hardy garden lilies originated in America, according to\nChirlu L. Tricker, writing ln\n\"Houie Beautiful'. Thc northeut*\nern statet, bordering on the Atlantic ocean, have a native known u\nNymphaea, which hu pure whlta\nflowen with golden centen which\nare very fragrant There ll alto\nRote Arey, cerise pink, Eugenlt de\nLand, extra large, in deep rote pink\nwi~n Iridescent hum. Fire creit ia\nanother American.\n. and becauae they save\nhumanity at the source.\nThe ways we have of determining whether nutriUon It Improved\nare various. One good index is the\nteeth. A few years ago, in a large\nchildren's hospital associated with\na state unlveralty. one of the physicians began to be impressed with\nthe fact that Uie teeth ot the children showed a hardening, whereas\nthey had previously been toft. It\nwu curioui thtt these children\nwere diabetic, and the reaeon for\nthe result wu apparently due to\nthe fact that their diet had been\nvery carefully selected in order to\nmake is \"complete\". Nutritionists\nnow use the words \"complete diet\"\nto indicate a diet which has aU the\nnecessary elements for growth and\nhealth in it.\nThere are a number of complete\ndiets which will arrest tooth decay,\nsome high and aome low ln fat, and\nothers high and low ln sugar. Arrested tooth decay has been observed with such regularity when the\ndiet has been well controlled, that\niome physician! are confident that\nhealthy teeth can be produced In all\ninstances by dietary means alone.\nMost of us, and certainly most dentists, however, are unwilling to uy\nthat cleanliness ls not also neceuary.\nThe tooth brush and tooth paste and\nthe tooth brush drill are still part\nof the health program.\nWhile various people have emphasized one or the other element ln\nthe diet at ttfectlng tooth health\nand decay, the conaentui it thtt\nthere ti no single food deficiency responsible for tooth decay, and the\nindividual nutriUonal factor should\nnot receive undue emphuli. In\nother wordi, a general well-balanced diet will make healthy teeth.\nVitamin D milk ls certainly ona ot\nthe substances which is responsible\nfor the prevention ot tooth decay.\nThere are many forma of Vitamin D\nmilk on the market, nearly any one\nof them u good u the other to long\nas they are approved by the Certified Milk Producera auociation of\nAmerica. The \u2022 so-called irradiated\nVitamin D mUk hu not been found,\naccording to a well-known pediatrician of my acquaintance, to be any\nbetter than the other certified Vitamin D milka.\nAnother portion of tiie body\nwhich is receiving attention from a\nnutritional standpoint, la the blood.\nExperimenti have been done to\nshow that animals living Klely on\nmilk diet develop nutritional anemia, which can be cured with a\ncombination ot copper and Iron.\nTheae findings teemed, at flrtt, to\nbe merely of experimental Intereit,\nand children's specialists, in general,\ndid not feel that they uw verry\nmuch of this nutritional anemia, but\ncareful check-ups of large chUdren'a\ncllnlca have thown thtt In a ltrge\nnumber of cuu the blood it deficient, and thli deficiency it rectified by the uie of copper and Iron\nsalts.\nSCOTS AND THE\nSOUTH\nThe Christian Science Monitor\nEnglishmen consider themselvu a\nconquered race, wrltu a columnist\nin the New York Times, and no\none needs to be told wh6 the victors\nare\u2014the tturdy folk whose picturesque country Uu north of Uie\nTweed. The writer seems surprised\ntherefore, that the actual number ot\nScott in England is so small, a proportion of about one in a hundred ot\nthe population.\nHe shouldn't be surprised. Bruce\nat Bannockbum had an army very\nmuch amaller tban that comprising\n\"proud Edward's power\" on that\nJune day in 1314 when by superior\nstrategy he led the English cavalry\ninto a trap, and gained independence for Scotland.\n'The Twelve-Found Look\", one of\nBarrie'! characters addresses another: \"A young Scotsman of your ability, let loose upon the world with\n\u00a3300, 11500 what could he not do?\nIt'i almoit appalling to think of;\nespecially lf he went among the\nEnglish. Sir Jamu ought to know;\nhe hasna done tae badly himsi*r\namang the folk in Lunnon, d'ya ken?\nAn anecdote is told of an Edinburgh merchant who went to London to extend his buiineu connections with firms of prominence.\nUpon his return hii friends gathered to congratulate him upon hii\nobvious grut success. \"How did\nyou get along with Englishmen?\"\nthey Inquired. \"I didna meet any,\"\nhe answered. \"I only dealt with the\nheads of concerns.\"\nSurgeons report that one of the\nmost pernicous form! of high blood\npressure, known as hypertension,\ncan ba reUeved or cured by a nerve\noperaUon.\nFOR PANELS\nKootenay Cottonwood\nis unexeaUad in tha\nbeauty of ita grain\naa it li unexcelled in\nutility and economy.\nRepeat orden prove\nltt popularity.\nDlttrlet Dlttrlbuton\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\naaa a aaa    \u25a0!\u25a0\n\"BuU B.C. Payrolls\"\nRICH\nAND\nPURE\nIt la when Pacific Milk\nls opened in your home tha\n, tut comu. Then you know\nitt worth. We hava hundred! of letten from pa*\nfront. We past thau on.\nThese letten talk. But\nnothing dtsclOKt tha rich-\nnew, purity and natural\nflavor of Pacific MUk ao\nclearly u trying lt.\nPacific Milk\nFarm\nImplements\nWE ARE NOW OFFERING ALL KINDS OF\nFARM IMPLEMENTS\nPlows \u2014 Harrows \u2014 Cultivators \u2014\nWagons \u2014 Forks \u2014 Hoas \u2014 Rakes\nPlanet Jr. Tools\nHeadquarters for Qood Seeds\nPRICES THE LOWEST\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholeiale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNtlton. I.C.\n (oS\\\n:\nBUD DONOVAN OF WINNIPEG SOLE\nCANADIAN LEFT IN THE AMATEUR\nI GOLF SERIES; SIX OTHERS LOSE\nGetting Ready for\nPlay on mh\nTop-notchers Are Yet\nin the Field at\nSt. Annes\n-Photo by Staff Photogrtpher.\nCharlie Stark, ent ef Ntlton't\nmott devoted golfers caught Juit\nafttr lighting up tfttr teeing oft\non tht Nelton golf count. Mr.\nStark pltyt tbout three gimet,\nbowling tnd curling In tht winter and golf In tht lummtr. A\ntourntmtnt It being staged en the\nlooal count itirtlng tomorrow\nand going through thl week-end.\nSCOTTISHSOttER\nTEAMISVKTOR\nBeat Toronto Eleven\n3-1 Before 10,000\nSpectators\n_ TORONTO, Mty 22 (CP).-Mtk\nIng a vigorous recovery ln the tec\nmd halt, the touring Scottish Foot-\ntall association team defeated a se-\nect Toronto eleven S-l before 10.-\n00 apectaton here tonight. Each\nride scored one goal ln the open-\nag 49 minutes.\nVictory ln their flrtt Cantdlan\nateh waa tha third of the Scota'\nur, the team already having won\nunci in Philadelphia and New\nbrk.\nW. MlUer, Partlck Thlttle pliyer,\nned the tcorlng after 10 mln*\nI play with a fine thot from clote\nJ. Aitken, Sterling Ulster United\nde   forwent,   equillzed   before\n'\u2022time, after W. Stevemon in\nvlslton' goal had misjudged a\nlot and wu well out of poaitlon.\nMiller obtained a aecond. follow*\na tmartpieee of work by Hugh\niacher. The grett Derby County\niter forward wu hlmaelf response for tbe third and final counter,\nivertlng a well-placed corner by\nin.\nTha lineups:\nScottish P. A.\u2014Ooal, W. Steven-\nm( Clyde): fullbacka-A. Ander-\nl (Heartt); R. McDonald (Rang-\n;); half-backi-P. Wilion (Hlbern-\ni); T. Smith (Kilmarnock): R.\nier (Aberdeen); forwardi \u2014 R.\nn  (Rangers); W. Miller   (Par-\nThistle); H. Callacher (Derby\nunty); W. Mills (Aberdeen); D.\nrein (Derby County).\nToronto\u2014Goal. L. Woollacott; full*\nkt, W. Divldton, C. Dtvls; half-\nt, 3. Clulow, K. Sanvlg, J.\nen; forwards, O. Sutton; J. Alk-\nG. Graham, N. Donald, L. N.\neldrum.\nHonve.Runs\nI -\u00a9-a\t\n(By tha Associated Pratt)\n(Home runs yesterday: Simmons,\nThlte Sox; Cronin, Red Sox; Pep*\nJar, Browns; Fox, Tigen; Voimik,\npdians: Watklni, Phillies\u2014one each.\nI The leaden: Foxx, Athletlca, 9;\nphnson, Athletics, t; Ott, Glanti, 8;\nonura, White Sox, 8; John Moore,\nbillies, 1; Joe Moore, Glanti, 7;\nlaughan, Plr\u00bbt\u00ab, 7; Greenbcrg,\nTiters, 7.\n[League totala: Nitionil IU, Am-\nMean 1.1, total 253.\nST. ANNIS ON SEA, Eng, May\n22 (CP eablt).\u2014Whtn dutk fill\novtr tht battlt-fltld todty only\nM.yetr-old Bud Donovin of Winnipeg wu lift to ctrry on Canada's attack agalnit thl tmtteur\ngolf champlonihlp, launched by\nno ftwtr thin 10 ihotmikin from\ntht Dominion.\nWinding up of the tecond tnd\nthird roundi that cut the big fltld\ndown to 32 pltytn out of 224,\nbrought tht greitest dltllttr of\ntht wuk tt thi Dominion golfers,\nwho on Mondiy launched Canada's greatest effort to taka br.ck\nthe title that ntvtr In ltt 40 yttn\nhu gont to thi Dominion,\nONUY CANADIAN LEFT\nThl Winnipeg youngster, a vet-\nertn of thl links despite hli tender yetn, wit tht only survivor\nout of teven  Ctnidlant ttlll  In\nthe fray at the day itarted.  Whlll\nhi wu winning hit third round\nmatch, by a 4 and 3 margin over\nJ,  B,  Baddard  of  Stiffordthlri,\nfour Cimdlint wire ouited In the\n\u2022ami round; and two mora wtnt\nout In lttl eecond-round mitchii\nto Join thi thru who mtt defeat\nIn thtlr flrtt foray,\nDonovan hu a good chance ot\ngetting put the fourth round too,\nmeeting tomorrow morning J. H.\nThompson of Hunstanton, who like\nDonovan, hu not yet been called on\nto face one of the big shots.\nFORMER CHAMPS LEFT\nLeft ln for the closing and most\ndesperate stages are four former\nchampions including Lawson Little\nJr. of San Francisco, who is attempting to win the title twice ln succession. The otheri are all homc-breds\n-Cyril Tolley, Dr. William Tweddell and Johnny dc Forest, Tony\nTorrance, Eustace Storey, Leslie\nGarnett and Eric Flddlan are Just a\nfew more domestic sharpshooten\nstanding at the moment in the way\not tha title.\nBolstering Little, the United States\nstill hu four othen ot varied brand\n\u2014Richard Chapman and Don Topping, both ot Greenwich, Conn.;\nRobert Sweeney, formerly of New\nYork and now living in London;\nand Captain A. Bullock-Webster,\nBriton who hu lived In California\nmany years. Two more U.S. entries\nwent to the galleries today.\nLITTLE SHOOTS WELL\nLawson Uttle continued to ahoot\neven foun for the second straight\nday to dispose of the six-foot-four\nLancashire man, J. P. Zachariu, by\n4 and 3 in the third round.\nDick Moore of Vancouver wu\nnot eliminated by J. L. Holden of\nBowden until they walked from the\ntwenty-first men. Phil Farley of\nToronto and Capt. Bullock-Webster\ndid not settle the issue before an\nextra hole wu played.\nAlso eliminated in tha third\nround were Edwin Innes of Mon\ntreat, who had the misfortune to\nencounter Dr. Tweddell and loit to\nhim by a 3 and 2 count; and Ken\nBlack of Vancouver, who had juit\nu tough an opponent ln Tony Torrance ot the Royal and Ancient,\nthe redoubtable Scot winning 6\nand 4.   .\nGordle Taylor of Montreal had\nthe mott troublesome opponent of\nall in Cyril Tolley, tecond choice\nto Little. Taylor battled hard before\nbeing ouited by a 3 and 2 count\nThe lut of today'a Canadians,\nJack Nash of London, went down\nbefore E. P. Kyle, English tlmon*\npure, 3 and 2.\n*,\n__>a.ttii\\_g\nLeaders\nBob Johnion continued hli hitting streak at full iteam yesterday\nand climbed to the top of the big\nlix bitting Hit with a gain of 17\npoints. He had a perfect day at the\nplate with three hlta while Arky\nVaughan. former leader, failed to\nconnect in four attempts and dropped 13 polnti to .304 Gerald Walker\nregained 10 polnti with two blowi\nout of three timet up and slipped\ninto third place ahead of Jlmmie\nFoxx. Pepper Martin also registered a gain, picking up alx polnta\nwith two hlta ln tour timet. The\nstanding:\nG AB R H Pet\nJohnaon, Athletlci 25 103 24 ti .417\nVaughan, Plntet.. 33 127 30 90 .394\nWalker, Tigen .... 20 82 13 32 .390\nFoxx. Athletics 25 90 17 35 .3(19\nMartin, Cardinals 23 99 23 37 .374\nTarry, Giants  30 124 18 43 .347\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\nj^*^S2oRI0i^\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimrrting - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nPAOE SEVEN\nTHS NELSON DAILY NEWS. NEtSON. *B.C\u2014THURSDAY MORNING. MAY 23. 1938-\n\u2022 PAOE SEVEN\nBATTAGLIA IS\nBADLYBEATEN\n\"Babe\" Risko Takes or\nGets a Draw in\nEvery Round\nPITTSBURGH, May 23 (API-\nLanding pile-driving rights and\nlefta throughout 12 fut rounds. Eddie (Babe) Rlsko tonight won a\nunanimous decision from Frankie\nBattaglia. Winnipeg'! gtme middleweight contender.\nRisko, who hails from Syracuse,\nN.Y., weighed 181 pounds, Battaglia 157.\nThe Canadian Italian, favored in\nthe betting, failed to win a single\nround although several were fought\nevenly. He never solved the awkward, lumbering style of Risko.\nMore than 4000 fans cheered themselves hoarie In Motor Squire Girden u the cluh turned into a alug-\nging match which uw both fighters working hard all the way. There\nwere no knockdown! although Battaglia took a one-count in the 10th\non a fall in the midst of ln-fighting.\nWES FERRELL IS\nAGAINAVICTOR\nYanks Pick on League\nLeading Chicago to\nMove Up Notch\nPie Traynor'j Favorite Story\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW   L\nChicago      18\nNew York  _    17\nCleveland\nBoston ...\nDetroit\nPet.\n.687\n.586\nWuhlngton\nPhiladelphia\nSt Loula \t\n9\n12\n15   11   .557\n,556\n.536\n14   14   JOO\n17\n15   12\n15   13\n.320\n19   .208\nNIW YORK, (CP)-Om Mulatto, New York Gitntt citcher,\nttolt a bui in a game thl othtr dty\nagalnit Philadelphia. It wat an\nevent bectuse Mancuso hasn't stole\na baaa for four yean. Gut jutt\nim't fut afoot.\nSin.'hi *i FRESH ^ *'\u2022\/\u25a0-\u25a0\u00ab\/'\u2022\nBRITISH\nCONSOLS\nCOUECT   THI   CAflD PICTUI.ES\nSENATORS WIN\nWASHINGTON, May 23 (AP>-\nThe Washington Senaton made lt\ntwo itraight over St. Louli today,\nwinning 5-2 behind Eirl Whitehill's efficient pitching to sweep the\nseriei. Whitehill allowed eight hits,\none of them a homer by Pepper ln\nthe seventh.\nSt Louis     2   8   0\nWaahlngton       S  t  I\nWeiland, Walkup, Andrewi.\nThomu and Health; WhltehlU and\nBolt\nTIGERS  BEAT A'l 4*1\nPHILADELPHIA, May 22 (API-\nGeorge Blaeholder made a losing\ndebut in a Philadelphia Athletic\nuniform today when the Detroit\nTigen turned in a 4-1 victory to\nsweep the two-game teriei.\nBlaeholder't tint pitch for the\nAthletlci wu clubbed Into the\nstands for a home run by Pete\nFox. Taking the lead with thii\nblow, Detroit icored another run\nin the fourth inning and clinched\nthe game with two more in tha\ntlxth.\nElden Auker held the Athletlci\nto eight hiti,\nDetroit          4   11   0\nPhiladelphia           1    8  3\nAuker and Cochrane; Blaeholder\nand Fox.\nPERRELL AND B08TON WIN\nBOSTON, May 22 (AP)-The determined Wes Ferrell, who revelt\nIn turning bick hli former Cleveland teammatei, ipotted the Indians\nfive runs today before the Red Sox\nput on two six-run rallies and gave\nhim his sixth victory of the season\nby a 12-5 margin.\nCleveland      5   10   1\nBoston               12   14   2\nPeanon, L. Brown, C. Brown and\nPytlak; W. FerreU and R. Ferrell.\nNEW YORK. May 22 (AP)-Tha\nYankees picked on the league-leading White Sox u the victims ot\none of their old faihioned slugging\nbees today and slammed their way\nright Into second place ln the American league standing with a 13-5\nvictory. The triumph put them a\nhalf game ahead of the defeated\nCleveland Indlani.\nChicago        5    7   3\nNew York     13   14  0\nJones, Vance end SeweU, Allen\nand Jorgens.\nFRENCH TENNIS\nPLAYERS WIN\nBy Al Dtmarie former pitcher Niw Yark Glanta\nTHE OLDSCOUT SAYS: \"Pie\" Traynor, manager of the Plratei,\nreceived hit nickntme for hit liking for lemon cream pie as a rookie.\nTHE OLD SCOUT ASKS: Fifty-three present major league playen\nhave lifetime average! of JOO or better, in hitting! Who ia the leader?\nAnswer tomorrow.\nPARMELEE GIVES\nGIANTS A WIN\nPop Haines Is in Rare\nForm to Beat the\nPhillies\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW  L Pet\nNew York  19  8 .704\nBrooklyn  _ 18 12 .800\nChicago _ 14 11 _560\nSt. Louis  16 18 .552\nPittiburgh - 18 17 .485\nCincinnati   lt 16 .407\nBoston    8 17 320\nPhiladelphia    8 17 .320\n(Boiton at Chlctgo, postponed,\nrain.)\nPARIS. May 32 (AP).-The left-\nhanded placement! of the brilliant\nFrench doubles team of Christian\nBoussus and Marcel Bernard proved\ntoo much for Wllmer Hlncs and\nHenry Culley today and the United\nStates pair was jolted out of the\nFrench hard court championships,\n6-2, 6-2, 8-8, 6-3 in the third round\nmatch.\nHines later teamed up with Dorothy Andrus of Stamford, Conn.,\nto eliminate Helen Jacobs, America's women's champion, and her\nFrench partner. Roland Journu, 6*2,\n7-5 In the tecond round of tha\nmixed doublu.\nEARNSHAW LOSES\nCINCINNATI, Miy 33 (AP)-The\nRedi combed George Earnshaw,\nmaking hli tint National league\nstart, tor enough runa to stagger\nthrough a 5*4 victory over the\nBrooklyn Dodgers today.\nBrooklyn   4    I   I\nCincinnati  _   8   3  7\nEarnshaw, Babich, Munm, Freitas\nand Lopez; Johnson, Brennan and\nCampbeU.\n\"POP\" HAINES\nIN RARE FORM\nST. LOUIS, May 22 (AP)-Jeue\n(Pop) Haines pitched tine ball for\nthe St Louis Cardinals today and\nthe world champloni icored a 3-2\nvictory over the Phllllu.\nThe oldest man on the Cardinal\nteam in point of service tcittered\neight Philadelphia hiti and did not\nluue a pan.\nGeorge Watklni ttarred for the\nvisitors with three hits, ont a home\nrun ln the teventh.\nPhiladelphia ..._..-   2    8   3\nSt Loui!   3   10   1\nBivin, Pezzulo and Todd; Haines\n\u2022nd V. Divii.\ntmttttitutttuututi\nFIRST BIG TIME\nNIGHT GAME ON\nTAP TONIGHT\nCINCINNATI, Mar 22 (AP).\n\u2014President Roosevelt tomorrow\nnight in Wuhlngton will preu\na aey switching on llghta for\nthe tint night baseball game\nin major league history.\nKenetaw Mountain Landls,\ncur ot baseball, wiU throw out\nthe tint baU with all the fanfare ot a season's opening, and\nthe Philadelphia Nttionafr and\nCincinnati Redi game wiU be\noa\nTwelve thousand fini already\nhave made reiervatlont for the\nfloodlight Inaugural. Granted a\n\"break ln the weather, club\nofficial! laid they hope the park\nwould ba filled to lti 30,000\ncapacity.\n..................:._\u2014its\nPARMELEE IS VICTOR\nPITTSBURGH,  May 23   (AP)*-\nDtrrell (Cy) Blanton ran up agalnit\nthe New York Oianti for the -second\ntime thii season today and bounced\nback hit second defeat of the teaton\ntgalnst six victories, 6*2.\nThe young mound star wat beaten,\nltrgely because his rival, Roy Parmelee, pitched better ball but he\nwu by no means disgraced. He\nadded five strikeouts to his record\nto make lt 51, gave nine hits and\nwas accorded weak support.\nParmelee, who has specialized in\nlow-hit games all season, granted\nthe Bucs only five blows and likewise got in trouble on other counts.\nNew York     8    9   2\nPittsburgh    2    5  \\\nParmelee and Mancuso; Blanton\nand Grace.\nResults\n\u2014-=\u2014\u00a9\t\nINTERNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nSyracuie 4, Newark 1.\nAlbany 3, Baltimore 17.\nRochetter 6, Toronto 5.\nAMERICAN   ASOCIATION\nMinneapolis 10, Columbus 6.\nKansu City 3. Louisville 2.\nSL  Paul at Toledo,  postponed,\nrain.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nMissions 1, Hollywpod 12.\nSeattle 10, San Francisco 7.\nSO. SLOCAN WILL\nHONOR HOLIDAY\nChildren's and Adult\nSports Program to\nBe Best Yet\nSouth Slocan and the Slocan valley ls planning to celebrate Empire\nday In a big way thli year and ltt\nprogram to be held at South Slocan\nwill be on a par with those of other\ndistrict points.\nIt wlU ba a real hoUday both for\nthe school children and the adults.\nChildren'! iporti will be a big item\nand students from the Bonnlngton,\nSouth Slocan, Shoreacres and Crescent Valley schools will vie for\nathletic laurels. The Daily Nawa\nshield ii up for the school taking\nthe highest number ot points. Be-\nlldet the thield prlzei have been\ndonated by Nelion merchant! and\nara now on diiplty at South Sloctn.\nFree Ice creim conei wtU be another treat for the kiddies.\nIn tha afternoon a big aportt\nprogram hu been planned for.\nA junior football game wlll bring\ntogether Crescent VaUey and South\nSlocan teams. A Slocan'City team\nwill meet a South Slocan and district nine in a baseball game and\nTrail will play South Slocan in a\nlenior football game. Tug-O-waxi\nand hone-ihoe pitching wiU alio\nbe on the program.\nDuring the afternoon the Nelion\nBoyi' band will nuke iti firat out*\nside appearance. A dance wiU ba\nheld in the evening.\nBOY SCOUTS WILL\nHOLD TRACK MEET\nThe Nelaon Boy Scout uaoclition\n!\u25a0 holding a track meet ln th. city\nJuna 3, and neighboring Scout\ntroopt are being invited to ittend.\nIt il expected boys will be ln from\nSouth Slocan, WlUow Point and\nSalmo.\nThe venture ts the flnt of ltt kind\nln Nelson, and the Boy Scouta and\nCuba hope to become batter ac*\nqutlnted with their district brothen\nln this way.\nIn the evening following the meet\na gathering wiU ba held at tha\nScout hill, and entertainment en-\nJoyed, and poulbly refreshments.\nYESTERDAY'S RESULTS IN BRITISH\nAMATEUR GOLF PLAY\nItftt. bleiMM<and tx*fkd m \u2014 _7__4   QJr*VU2^ ^^     II\nUotland    .       .   Popular ^AfVft--M Clf ^T   ^_\u00b1______\\_W\nhe world over, becataet it If  ILI AR^ V       ^B        ^r\naWAYS reliable. * ~   amawamtm.a *-mmmW ~-mmW-\n*T\\m_t-nti,tmttt-ut\u00bbat,ptb\\'tht4 of-dnplaH brHw Uqooc-Co-aaaoi Board *or by tht\nGowaweat of British Coraofcta\nST. ANNES ON SEA, Englind,\nMty 22 (CP ctblt)\u2014Outstanding\nresults In today's play ln the amateur golt championship:\nSecond round*.\nCyril Tolley. England, defeated\nTaylor, Montreal, 3 and 2.\nE. P. Kyle, England, defeated Jack\nNash, London, Ont, 3 and 2.\nLeslie Garnett, England, defuted\nR. P. Ridgtwiy. Englind, 3 and 1.\nC. L. G. Henrlquea, Eugland, defeated Leonard Crawlty, England,\n3 and 2.\nDan R. Topping, Greenwich,\nConn., defeated Ernut Millard, England, ona up, 18th.\nHarvey W. Shaffer, New Yor)t.\ndefeated Earl Watton, England, one\nup, 18th.\nThird round:\nBud Donovan, Winnipeg, defeated\nJ. B. Baddard, England, 4 and 3.\nDr. WlUlam Tweddell, England,\ndefeated Edward Innet. Montreal,\n3 and 2.\nTony Torran*. Scotland, defeated\nKen Black, Vancouver, 5 and 4.\nJ. L. Holden, Bowdon, defeated\nDick Moore, Vancouver, 19th hole.\nCapt, A. B. Webster, Monterey,\nCal., defeated Phil Farley, Toronto,\n21st\nLawson Little, San Francisco, defwted J. P. Zachariu, England, 4\nand 3.\nRichard M. Chipmin, Greenwich.\nConn., defeated W. H. Bikini, England, 5 and 4.\nDan H. Toping, Freenwlch,\nConn., defeated T. A. Bourn, England, 4 and 3.\nCyril Tolley, England, defeated\nC. S. Buckley, ona up.\nEric Flddlan, England, defeated\nT. Suffern TaUar, Piping Rock,\nUI., 2 and 1.\nG. L. Henrique, Sngland, defeated\nHarvey Shaffer, Naw York, 3 and 1.\nLeslie Garnett, England, defeated\nC. J. Llewelyn. 4 and 3.\nRobert Sweeney, England, defeated John Oraham, 6 and 4.\nEdward Kyle, England, defeated\nStanley Noel, one up.\nPERCY WILLIAMS\nBROKE, ASKSFOR\nFUNDSIN TRUST\nTrustees Ask Right to\nGive Him $14,500\nSubscribed\nFAMILY NOW IN\nNEED OF HELP\nMoney Raised When\nHe Was the Hero\nof the Day\nVANCOUVER, May 33 (CP). -\nJudgment wu reeerved ln Britiah\nColumbia supreme court today by\nChief Justice Aulay Morriion an an\napplication to vary the termi of the\n$14,500 Percy Willlami truit funds\nw u to authorize the trulteet to\npey the money to WUllama or hit\nfamily.\nThe fund had been railed by pubUc subscription in Vancouver following Willitms' double triumph in\nthe 100-meter ind 200-meter iprlnts\n\u2022t the 1926 Olympic gamea ln Ant'\niterdam.\nSo u to permit Wllllama to retain hii amateur status, the truit\ndeed wu worded In auch a manner\nthat the trustees wera directed to\npay $780 a year from the fund to\nhit mother tor hit education and\ntraining ln a trade, occupation or\nprofession. A second provision em*\npowered the trustees in their discretion to make payment! to Britiih\nColumbia athletes ot Olympic itand*\ning.\nTha court wu Informed 387 af\nthe original 548 subscribers, or 81\nper (ent of thtm, hid contented to\nthe change ln tht truit in accordance\nwith Willlami' requut\nGhent Davii. couniel, itated tht\nftmlly wu now in neceultoui dr*\ncumitancea.\nPiymenti have not been made\nfrom the fund, which now tmounti\nto iome $11,000, ilnce WiUlami let\nup in buiineu at Brockton Point\nwith a refreshment itand teveral\nyean ago.\nTne trusted ara the pretldenti ot\nthe Vancouver board of trade, the\nCanadian club, Vancouver; and the\nB.C. branch of Uie Amateur Athletic Union ot Canada. Tha truit\ndeed wu entered into in January,\n1929.\n\"It might ba mora prudent to\nSva the money to the mother than\nthii improvident young man,\"\ncommented the chief juitice.\nMr. Dtvls pointed out that the\ntrustees, under the deed u lt wu\ndrawn, cannot give any further\nmoney to WlUlams or to hii mother,\nbecauie the purpose for which the\npayments were authorized, Willlami' education and training, hM\npined.\nSWIM RESULTS\nAT THE 'PEG\nWINNIPEG, May 23 (CP).-Sum-\nmtrlea of eventi ln the ucond night\nof tha Dominion twlmmlng championships here tonight under auspices of the Canadian Amateur\nSwimming aaaoclatlon foUow:\n100 yards junior boys' back itroke\n\u2014Canadian champlonihlp:\nFlnt head\u2014Edward Davit, Winnipeg; 2. Victor Curran, Vancouver;\n3, Bruce Dunfield, Toronto. Time\n1:21 1-5.\nSecond heat\u2014Pat Mllrwm, Toronto; 2, Paul McKenzle, Toronto; 3,\nArt Byen, Vincouver. Time 1:14.\nNew Canadian record.\n220 yardt man'a free ttylt;\u2014\nCanadian championship:\nFint head\u20141, Arthur Ostrander,\nMinneapolis; 2, Robert Namerton,\nWinnipeg; 3, Wally Bertrand, Winnipeg. Time 2:22 2-5.\nSecond hut\u2014Robert Plrle, Toronto; 2, Wesley Webb, Minnetota; 3,\nRobert Hooper, Vancouver. Time\n3:24 1*8.\n100 yard! women's back stroke\u2014\nCinaditn championship:\n1, Mary McConkey,  Edmonton;\nLMarion Moffatt Vancouver; 3,\nrgaret Hutton, Toronto. Time\n1:13 3*5. Naw Canadian record.\nFinal 100 yardi junior boyi' Canadian back stroke champlonihlp:\n1, Pat Milton, Toronto; 2, Piul\nMcKenzlt, Toronto; 3- Victor Curran, Vancouver. Time 1:10 1-8. New\nCanadian record.\n220 yardi junior glrlt' free atyle,\nCtntdlan ehamplonahlp:\n1, Ethel Gilbert, Winnipeg; 3, Edith Robertton. Winnipeg; 3. Roberta McDonald. Fort WlUlam.\nTlmo 3:06 4-5.\n3 metre iprlng board diving-\njunior girls, Canadian chimptonship:\n1, Fame Lount Winnipeg, 54:76;\n2, Betty Morton, Winnipeg, 81:51; 3,\nThelma Boughner, Toronto   50:86.\n100 ytrdi men'i tree ityle, Canadian champlonihlp:\nTint hut\u20141, Oeorgt Lawton,\nHamilton; 2, Ben Gazell, Toronto; 3.\nHarold E. Brown, Saakatchewan.\nTime 84 4*5.\nSeoond heat\u20141, Robert Pirie, Toronto; 2, Walter Gialhaug, Minnt-\n\u2022ota; 3, Edwtrd Cline, Vancouver.\nTime 56.\nThird hut\u20141, George Burleigh,\nToronto; 3, Alfred H. Mender, Montreal; 3, Drummond Taylor, Winnipeg. Time 8$ 1-3.\n100 yardt women'i breart itroke,\nCtntdlan chimplonihlp.\n1, Monica Trump, Victoria; 2.\nVera Tuitln, Winnipeg; 8, Clare\nMlllette, Montreal. Time 133 1-8.\nFlntl 100 yirdi men'i free style,\nCanadian ehamplonahlp: 1, George\nLaraon, Hamilton; 2, Robert Plrle,\nToronto; 3, George Burleigh, To-\nronto. Time 54 3-5. '\nIn Holiday Golf\nFloy\n\u2014Photo by Staff Photographer.\nMrt. L. S. Bradlty of Ntlion\nteldom mlttu a golf tturnamtnt\nana ttldom mlnu a wuk-tnd on\ntht eeunt. Sht hu won itvaral\nawardi In put compttltlont. Mn.\nBradlty It Mtn holding tht flag\non one ef tht grttni on tht Ntlion\ncount.\n'ARFAND'ARF\nIS ASPEEDER\nEnglish Entry Wins the\nTurtle Race at a\nFoot-a-Second\nBALTIMORE, May 22 (AP)_\nVleter In tha fifth annual \"Turtlt\"\nDtrby\" of tha Johni Hopkini\nhotpltal, 'Art and 'Arf, English\n\u2022ntry of Or. Edwtrd Lawrence of\nLondon puihed tcrou ahead of\ntht fltld todty tt smiih all records. Hit put wu t phtnomtnal\nfoot a ttoond for the 12-yird, two-\nfoot route laid out on tha hotpltal tennii oourte.\nYtt tht wlnntr had given hit\nbackira a horrible htlf tecond,\nA aunt two Inehu from tht finish, ht ttopptd dud, and for. a\nwhile It leaked llkt tht net wu\nall over so far u ht wu con*\nearned. Than, with ent dltdiln*\nful glare at hli nitrtit rival, 'Art\nand 'Art luptd to lift to finish\nIn Sl% ucondi\u20143-6 of a tteond\nbetter than tha mark ttt latt ytar\nby Maple Luf, Ctntdltn spaed,\nttor, who ftdtd In tht flrtt hett\ntoday,\nHowmt Do Ita btcktd by tha\nhotpltal administration ataff, and\nBad Tape, white hopt of tht dlt*\npenury, ambled ovtr nixt to tht\nwlnntr In tht ordir ntmed.\nBIG TRACK MEET\nAT KELOWNA\nKELOWNA, B.C., May 22 (CP)\u2014\nAthlete! from all parti of Britiih\nColumbia wlll meet here May 25 to\ncompete in the interior championship! at Kelowni't Empire day\ntrack meat\nArchie McKlnnon of Victoria it\nto bring a ilx-mtn squid tour athletea ara coming from New Westminster under tha guldince of Dan\nMcKenzle and Howie McPhee and\nMush Limon wlll hud Vancouver's\ndelcgaUon.\nStan Smith of Uie Vancouver Athletic club hu announced he will\nbring Mary Frizzel. Margaret Bell\nand Melon Reeves to compete in\nthe glrli' event\nREMEMBER WHEN?\n(By Thl Cinidiin Prut),\nFroth Blowtr, owned by R. W.\nR. Cowie, won the 72nd running\nof tbe Klng'i Pllte tt Woodbine\ntrack, Toronto, on Mty 23, 1931.\nFroth Blower went to the pott u\na warm favorite and tcored decisively. Bronze wu second and Sky-\ngazer third.\nEXPEH LEAN\nTOWARD ROSS\nTOBEATJIM\nSee Both in Workouts\nand Rate Ross as\nthe Best\nBARNEY BIGGER,\nHITTING HARDER\nMcLarnin Lacks Fire\nand Seems \"Puffed\"\nAbout Face\nBy EDWARD 3. NEIL\nAssociated Preu Sporti Writer\nFERNDALE, N.Y., May 22 (AP>-\nThe clan of the tight experts got a\nchance today to watch two major\nwarrlon the same afternoon In their\npreparations tor championship battle. The advantage teemed to be\nwith Btrney Rou, reiigned lightweight champion, who tacklei Jimmy McLtrnin for the welterweight\ncrown for tbe third time in the\nPolo grounds next Tuetdiy night.\nFint Rou turned in four brilliant\nroundi ot punching against hli\nsparring partnen here for the benefit of the visiton. Then, six miles\naway at Swan lake, McLarnin\nslugged his assistants for six rounds.\nBy dint ot grett scurrying, the visiton made Doth engagements.\nThe verdict of the great majority\nwu that the odds now lifting to 8\nto 5 on Ron are justified.\nBigger about the shoulden, but\nts tut u ever and hitting with\ngreater power, Rots, now fully matured at 25, gave a dazzling exhibition agalnit Sammy Meadows and\nPhil Rafferty, two New York welterweights, >for two roundi each.\nThrowing more right hand punches\nthan ever before, he nailed them\nconsistently, and only the big gloves\nand heavy padding on hla hands\nkept him from annihilating tha pair.\nMoLarnln, on tha other hud, hit\nwith nothing of the criapntu or\nfire of hit younger foe in three\nroundi with Frankle Willlami, two\nwith Harry Conley of Bennington,\nVt, and one with Jimmy Martin.\nHe seemed puffed about the face,\nthough hii weight is a fracUon\nunder 147 pounds, the clau limit. At\ntimes he boxed swiftly and surely.\nAt other tlmu his mates hit him\neully with rights, and with the\nmemory of the rlghta Rou wu\nthrowing only tn hour before there\nwu considerable shaking of heads.\nWINSYORKSHIRE\nYORK, England, May 22 (CP\nCable) \u2014 The Aga Khan's crack\nlong-distance horae Felicitation,\ncarrying top weight, today won the\nYorkih&e cup over the two-mile\nroute, finiihlng two lengths In front\nof Lady Fitzwllliim's Desmond\nDene Sir Alfred Butt't Luck Patch\nwu third in the field ot eight another two lengths back.\nI Felicitation itarted at oddi of 10\nto 3 and carried 113 poundi. Ju-\nmond Dene, 6 to 1, packed 110\npoundi and Lucky Patch, starting\nat 10 to 1, carried 112 pounds.\nCOUNTY CRICKET\nLONDON, May 22 (CP Cablel-\nCloie ot play scorn ln flnt clui\ncounty cricket mitchu itarted today foUow:\nSomerset 121 and 17 for on wlcketi; Middlesex 140 (J. Lea five\nwlcketi for 38 rum); at Lord't.\nSurrey 266 (Flahlock 113 not out\nHolmu 71); Wtrwlckihlre 90 (Fender five tor 72); it the Oval.\nGloucester 163 (Stephens 60 not\nout Booth leven for 859); Lancaah-\nire 138 for three (Waihbrook 65\nnot out); at Gloucester.\nGlamorgan 279 (Brierly 81); Wor-\nceiter 118 for one wicket; at Swan-\n\u2014 .\nSuuex 310 (J. Langrldge S3, Eut-\nman five for 78); Euex 112 for\neight; at Brentwood.\nOther matchea: South Africtni\n304 (Noune 75, Vlljoen 68, Dalton\n) Hampshire 27 for no wlcketi;\nat Southampton.\nOxford Unlvenlty 192 (Benn 52,\nSimiles five for 64); Yorkshire 197\nfor two wicketi (Leyland 82 not out\nBarber 56 not out); at Oxford.\nNottinghamshire 311 for eight\nwlcketi (A. Staples 15) va. Cambridge Univenlty; at Cambridge.\nHOLIDAY  APPAREL\nMsy 24th Is s gals dsy, snd demandi light, cool attira.\nClanca through our auggtstions below, and lelect\nyour naadi.\nGREY FLANNELS\nLight, medium or dark. Young man's, 22-inch cuff.\nPgir  \u00bb3.95\nMan's Natural Cut. Pair ......... |3.00 snd $3.25\nCREAM FLANNELS\nPsr pslr f 3.75 snd f 3.95\nSUCKS\nFOR ODD TIMES\nStriped Drill, Adjuitment Strapa    ?2.75\nTwssd Effects in varisd psttsrna  $4.59\nAIR-O-TEX SHIRTS\nIn whits. Vary cool for fsnnls or crickat. Esch ?1.25\nSPORT CAPS\nIn all wslghts snd s wlds sslsctlon of colors.\nIsch 351 to $1.39\nTWO-TONE OXFORDS\nIn brawn or blsck flnlah. Siiei 6 to IVi.\nPslr 92.95 snd f 4.50\nGodfreys' Limited\n318 BAKER PHONE 270\n \u2014\n\t\n~~\n\t\nPAQE EIGHT -\n THI NELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B.C\u2014THURSDAY MORNINO. MAV 2J. IMS'\nJTl CUSSIFIED SECTION - WHERE BlYER&SEUERMill\nl.timn Batlg Htm\nMember of the Cinadlan Pally\nNewsptpen Auociation\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchtngt conntctlng te\nall Dtptrtmentt\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy  $ fit\nBy carrier, per week _     Si\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\nBy mail ln Canada, to subscribers living outside regulir\ncarrier areu per month, 60c;\nthree months, $1.80; tlx months,\n$3.00; one year, $6.00.\nUnited Statu and Grut Britain, one month, 75c; six monthi,\n$4.00; one year, $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU. S., tame at above plut any\nextra postage.\t\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelaon Dally News endeavors to print only truthful clatsi*\nfied advertising and will appreciate having iti attention called\nto any advertiiing not conforming to the hlgheat itandardi of\nhonesty.\nTELEPHONE\n144\nFOR CLASS AD.\nRESULTS\nPERSONAL\nUP TO $50 EACH PAID FOR U. S.\nIndian bead centi. We buy all\ndates, regardleas of condition. Up\nto $1.00 each paid for Lincoln\nHead cents. Up to $150 each for\nCanadian coins. We buy Stamp\nCollections, Medals, Booki, Old\nPaper Money, Gold, etc. Send 25c\n(coin) for large illustrated price\nllit and Initructlom. Satisfaction\nguaranteed or 25c refunded. Hub\nCoin Shop, 159-3 Front Street,\nSarnia, Ont. '     (1392)\nHIGHEST QUALITY SANITARY\nrubber goods. 25 Latex assortment\n$1.00. Order direct from importer\nand he sure ot best obtainable.\nWrapped plain. Free catalogue.\nNationil Importers, 217 8th Ave.\nWest. Cilgiry, Alberta.        (1479)\nAUTHORS' INSTITUTE OFFER A\nsimplified course in thort story\nwriting. For particulan write Rm.\n520, Belmont Bldg., Victoria, B. C.\n(1639)\nWUbJUBlfjEViT? RATTLE-\nsnake OU banishes every pain.\n\"Worth a million,\" but only 35c\nat Van's. 4252 Main St, Vancouver, B. C. No mailing charge.\n(1690)\nMEN WORN OUT NO VITAL*\nity? Regain youthful vigor with\n\"Meruit, harmlus gland restorative, $2 box. T. Kerr, Box 353,\nVancouver, B. C. (1691)\nSPECIAL-DRUGGIST SUPPLIES\nguaranteed 25 for $1.00 postpaid.\nCanada Drug Co., 127-7th Ave.,\nEait, Calgary, Alta. (1686)\nEczema Itch Piles Ulcere Try Geo Lee\nChina Remedy at Hudson's Bay Co.\n(1391)\nClass Ads get results\nREAD THIS FIRST:\nCarefree Liuetenant Valentine\nPreaton, attached to a gunboat in\nChina, in rushing to the harbor at\nShanghai to bid goodby to hli\nchildhood iweetheart, Janice Edding, who ii sailing with her\nfamily to the United States, is\nfrustrated when an attractive girl\ntakes the last sampan to the liner\nanchored in the bay.\n(Now Go on With the Story)\nChapter 2\nEleven months ago in Manila, Val\nhad had hi! flnt introduction to\nJanice Edding as a grown-up!\nHis ship had lust returned from\nNorth China and, on the memorable\nevening when he sauntered into the\nArmy and Navy club with no hope\nthat the dinner dance in progress\nmight he anything but the usual\nstereotyped affair, he had been Jolted to a standstill by the glimpse of\nan arresting stranger. Slender,\ngolden-blonde, hazel-eyed, wearing\nn frock of filmy green, she had made\nliim think of a clean, fresh breeze, of\ncrystal streams In pine groves back\nin Ihe States. Not beautiful, -really\u2014\nand he was 6trong (for beauty\u2014but\neven before he had recognized in\nher his childhood playmate, he had\ngone stnight to her side.\nFrom that first moment when, delighted to renew their acquaintance,\nhe smiled possessively down it her,\nho sensed a challenge ln this new\npoised Jan; and hc knew that although much time had elapted, she\nhad not forgotten his lofty indifference at the Academy. He had always\nfound his line fairly efficacious but\nduring thtt evening she only laughed at him. And something deep\nwithin him had responded Joyously\nto her defiance so that he had resolved to conquer this adamant\nmow-maiden.\nNow he willed ruefully to acknowledge that both then and later\nJan had eluded a flirtation. He had\nresented this baffling quality in her\ntven while they had danced, played tennii, golfed and swam with the\nyoung navy let ln Manila and in the\nChina porta where their pithi crossed. But later, although they quarreled frequently and with youthful\ngusto, he grew to respect her aa an\nadversary; and finally he drifted\nInto regarding her merely u a playfellow and a darned square friend.\nThat ii, until this recent trip up-\nriver when in the deck-watchu of\nlonely star-lit nights Jan had been\nconstantly ln his thoughts. The day\nbe sailed, two months ago, something Inexplicable had happened\nbetween them. He had called to say\ngoodby, only to find a pale Jan, eyu\n\u2022softened by weariness, her pretty\nhair disarranged from a night and\nday vigil beside her ailing small\nlister, Mimi. It wu \u25a0 new experience\nto ice Jan like that! She wai wearing a clinging negligee of palest rose\nand never had she seemed so appealing nor aroused such tenderness in\nhim. She was endeavoring to persuade a protesting Miral to take her\nmedicine, and he had taken the\nspoon from Jin's tired little hand\nand' in no time at all, coazed the\nyoungster to swallow the bitter dose\nand then told her stories until she\ndrifted into a quiet sleep.\nJuat before he left to catch the lut\nlaunch to hit ihlp, he hid uked Jan\nto step out with him the night he\nthould return to Shanghai. Perhaps\nshe was so tired her defences werc\nSown, for* when he slipped a tenta-\nve arm about her because the\nteemed completely exhausted, the\nhad. to hli pleised amazement, relaxed against his shoulder for a\nmoment.\n\"What a darling you can be when\nyou like, Val,\" ihe had murmured.\n\"I shall min you terribly. Of course\nI'll lave the date for you. Goodby.\nAnd\u2014 come back very loon\u2014\"\nDazed ha had itood like a itone\nimage. Not because ot her words.\nThat wun't It. But her golden head\nwas tipped back so that she wu\nlooking up at him; the semed chtrged by a shining brightness\u2014 her\neyes were like stirs \u2014 something\nmade his hurt pound crazily and\nwould not release his gaze from\nhen. His easy, flirtatious manner\nhad deserted him; he experienced a\nnew sensation, something exciting\nhe wanted to Investigate tnd understand. But hia ihlp wu sailing.\nThere was not time. Yet he had\nlenscd that when he saw Jan again\nthey would find an answer to this\nstirring emotion. And now, to his\nbewilderment and self-disgust, he\nhad eome back to Shanghai only to\nget beautifully plastered and to\nbreak the date that had grown to\nmean something Important to him.\nHc was spared further stabbing of\nremorse when hii attention was\nsnatched to the passenger in a passing tampan, who had a familiar\ncut to hit Jib. Flinging up an eager\narm, Ya! cried, \"Hi, Brad! How's lt\nto give me a lift to the Taft?\"\nThe other man stared for an Instant and, as recognition dawned,\ncalled back, \"Sure will. I'm Just on\nmy way out there to say goodbye to\nthe Eddings.\"\nWhile fhe coolie raaneuvred his\ncraft in. to the float, Brad Norris'\ntanned young face \u2014 gray-eyed,\nsnub-nosed, teeth spaced a little In\nfront like a kid's\u2014beamed across\nat his friend. He, like Val, was of\nthe elasi of *2S and In his mid-\ntwentiu; the sight of his boyish\nsmile always swept Val back to\nNaval Academy dayi when they\ntwo were roommates waging the\ntotigh battle to win their commls-\nlions.\nNot that those first hellish months\nof plcbc year were a pleasant memory. The hazing, added to the stiff\nrequirements of the school, hid\ngalled Val until a morning came\nwhen he had stared out at a freighter laying-to in the Severn and suddenly had resolved to quit the Academy flat, ship on that tramp as a\ndeckhand, and seek adventure and\na high old time.\nHe might have carried out this\nplan had hc not come in that afternoon to find his roommate in the\ndepths of despair. Brad Norris was\na shy, awkward country boy whose\nburning desire for. a navy career\nfaced defeat because of his lack oi\nthe fundamental education necessary to meet thc formidable Academy course. Val had liked the other\nlad from their first meeting; and\nthat day the sick misery in hii\nfriend's eyes roused not only iris\nsympathy but also his fighting spirit.\nIt was laughable now to recall his\ntheatrical gesture in offering to see\nBrad through thc hard grind that\nlay ahead. It was funnier rjtill when\none considered that until that time\nhe, Val. had been a pretty sad academic flop himielf. However, he hid\nchosen to regard hit assunnce to\nBrad at a solemn and binding\npledge. And after a four-year itruggle, with himself as a panting pacemaker, they had won to their goal\nby the veritable skin of their teeth.\nBrad had later gone into aviation,\nbut though they ran across each\nother only occasionally, they had\nnot forgotten the bond of mutual\nluffering thit had sealed their\nfriendship, and that each had the\nother to thank for his commission in\nthe U.S.N.\nAs the sampan came to the float\nBrad called. \"HI stringer; I uw\nthe Panay drop anchor yesterday\nand looked forward to seeing you.\nHow are things up-river?\"\nVal returned hit friend's burning\nsmile and stepped down to settle\nhimself in the imall creft. \"Swell!\"\nhe replied. \"Ever ilnce I law you\ntwo monthi ago we've been tied up\nopposite one lousy pirate village\nafter the other, giving the anti-foreign -vopulace love treatments.\" His\ninfectious grin lifted the corners of\nhii mouth to disclose extremely\nwhite teeth. \"Old son, did you ever\nhave a low-down bum spit on you.\nand for diplomatic reasons not be\nable to give him a good sock ln the\nnose?' When the pirate mobs hurled\nrocks and filth at us, wc had to\ntake lt and Uke it. Boy! What a rotten Job!\"\nBrad wu laughing, \"About time\nyou had a sample of regular duty,\nMliter,\" he chuckled. 'Tfou've alwayi landed ln the loft ipota. Look\nat you! Six vein out of the Academy with only the first tw<\\ spent on\na battleship and the other four whll-\ned away enjoying yourself on a destroyer in the Mediterranean and\nout here on the South and North\nChina patrols. Pretty soft, I'd uy.\"\n\"Listen,\" Val countered, \"a sei-\nfrolng ullor works harder than any\nazy aviator ever hu or ever will,\nand don't you forget it! Honest toll,\nthat's what I've been doing. But\nspeaking ot jobs, I have the unofficial promise on one thit is tailored\njutt to my order. Wilt until you\nhur about thli one!\" His young eyei\nflashed with enthusiasm. \"The assistant naval attache In Paris is\nready to go to sea, and I'm about\ndue for ihore duty. Now, I uk you.\nwhat could be neater? Lord, but I\nwant that job, Brad.\" Hit face grew\nserious. \"Deering of the department\nhu assured me I have flnt chance\nat It. Paris! Can you imagine It after three yean of guarding missionaries and being a target for snipers\non the Yangtze and South China\npatrols?\"\nIN MEMORIAM\nMuiiel\u2014In loving memory of our\ndarling baby girl, who wai born\non May 21, 1934 and paued away\non May 23rd.\nInierted by her loving Mother\nand Daddy, (1750)\n-__\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMINERAL  ACT\n(Form F)\nCertificate of Improvement!\nNOTICE\nSkookum, Hidden Fraction and\nHidden No. 2 Fraction mineral\nclaimi, lituate in the Nelson Mining\nDlviilon of Kootenay Diitrict.\nLocited on slope wild Hone Creek\nnear Ymlr.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. H.\nGreen, acting as Agent for Oscar\nAndenon, F. M. C. No. 77231-D md\nHarry Steveni, Free Miner'! Certificate No. 77230-D, intend, lixty\ndays from the date hereof, to apply\nto the Mining Recorder for Certificate of Improvements for the purpose of obtaining Crown Granta of\nthe above claims.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 83, must be commenced before the issuance of iuch\nCertificate of Improvement!.\n\u25a0 Dated thii 28th day of March,\n1935,\nA.H. GREEN,\n(729)\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nTenden are Invited tor the construction of a one-room addition to\nthe Cutlegar School. Plans and\nSpecifications may be examined at\nthe Secretary's Ruldence at Cutlegar, or may be secured by depositing five dollars, which sum will be\nrefunded upon return of plani etc.,\nin good condition. Tenden are to\nbe submitted to thc under ligned by\nJune 17th in sealed envelopes clearly marked \"Tender for Cutlegar\nSchool.\"\nEach tender is to be accompanied\nby a certified cheque for ten per\ncent of the tender, payable to the\nCutlegar School Board, as a surety\nthat tenderer it prepared to enter\nupon construction within one week\nafter hii tender is accepted. The\nlowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nJOHN LAWSON,\nSecretary.\nCutlegar School Board.      (1736)\nBOAT SPACE FOR ROW BOAT\nor canoe. Box 1724, Daily Newi.\n(1724)\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\nNotice of Application for Coment to\nTranifer of Beer Lletnet\nNOTICE Is hereby given thit on\nthe 25th day of May next, the un-\ndereigned Intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for consent\nto transfer of Beer Licence Ndmber\n3095, issued in respect of premises\nbeing part of a building known\nas Cosmopolitan Hotel, situate on\nFront Street, Ymlr, British Columbia, upon the lands described as\nLot No. 2, Block No. 26. Map No.\n640, town of Ymlr, Nelson Land\nRegistration District, In the Province of British Columbia, from John\nBreau to Harry Olson, of Ncison,\nBritish Columbia, the Transferee.\nDATED at Nelson, B. C, this 26th\nday of April, 1935.\n' HARRY OLSON.\n(1239)\nTENDERS\nTenden wUl be received up to\nJune 6th, next for repairs to the\nHigh School, specifications can be\nhad from the Secretary, Fred L.\nIrwin, City Hall. Lowest or any\ntender not necessarily accepted.\n(1715)\nWANTED TO RENT\nTO RENT OR LOOK AFTER\nsmall ranch, by reliable people,\nwould do improvements, etc., Ior\nconsideration. Box 1680, Dally\nNews. (1690)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nSIX ROOMED HOUSE - ELEC-\ntrlc range and hot watei\u2014High\nStreet. Phone 662 or 568R. (1698)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\nFINE JERSEY HEIFER, CALVE\nSept $65 or trade on hone. T.\nRoynon, Nelton. (1699)\nBUY OR 8ELL WITH A WANT AD\nBRINGING UP FATHER\n______________\n<_--*Nti\u00ab_*. -*OR SAWYER -M-LL-\nwrlght. Smill circultr pltnt Yur\nround Job tor a ruttler. Also Pltn-\nerman. Good opportunity for family men. Box 344, PenUcton, B. C.\n(16371\nCapaBLI. -SiftL Wft -iouisE*\nwork able to do plain cooking.\nState wagu expected. Box 1749,\nDaily Newi.         (1746)\nGIRL WANTEb _\"0\u00ab GENERAL\nhomework. Phone 240X,     (1748)\nTEACHERS WANTED\nELEMlrlTARY TEACHERS\nwtnted for Nelion tchooli. Apply\ngiving full lntpector'i references\nup to June 7th next. Fred L.\nIrwln, lecretary. (1707)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXP. FARM HAND NEEDS IM-\nmediate work. Anything. Box\n1745, DaUy Newi. (1745)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS,  ETC.\nLARGE HOUSE, PARTLY FURN-\niihed. 4 bedrooms, hot water, bath,\netc. 1 minute from Boswell wharf.\nGnnd place for holidays. Apply\nWaUace, Boiwell. (1638)\nSmall house, 2 lots, good\nvariety of fruit treu. Box 1774\nDaUy Newi. (1744)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nroomi for rent. Anntble Block.\n(1361)\nINTHEKBRRAPARTMENTS-\nFurnlihed md unfurnished luitu.\n(1363)\n2-RM. HSI1-PG. SUITES - VERY\nretsonable. Strathcona Hotel.\n(1395)\nFURN.  6R UNFURN. APTS.  BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts. bldg.\n(1494)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nFrigidalrc equipped suites. (1362)\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED SUITE-\nStlrling Hotel. <U88>\nM6\u00a3>\u00a3RN   HOUSE,   404   SILICA.\n(1730)\nFOR SALE\nwe have Anything and ev-\nerythlng ln the small rubber lines.\nOrder by mall direct from manufacturer and save 75%. All orden are mailed postpaid by ui in\nfrliin wripper. Mail order catt-\nogue sent free on requut. Novelty Rubber Mfg. Company, Box\n353 Dept. K.5, Hamilton, Ontario.\n(1594)\nATTRA-CTIVE 7 ROOM MODERN\nhouse, furnace, fireplace, etc. Six\nwell-treed lots, large lawnt, ten-\nnil court. Would consider small\nneat home part payment. Mn. M.\nSandercock. Cor. Stanley aud\nRichard. (1746)\nFIREWOOD. WHITE PINE TRIM-\nmlngt. 10 to 15 inch lengthi. Price\ndelivered $3.50 pcr load. Phone\nyour orden to 163, Schaefer-\nHitchcock Co. (1706)\nONE CROSSLEY FOUR cifLIND-\ner Dluel Engine rated 120 H. P.\ncruiher.   Apply   Kootenay\nnu, Ltd, Stlmo.\n(1159)\none\nBelle Gold Mines,\nFOR SALE OR RENT FULLY\nturn, home, 1 block from Central\nSchool on Stanley St. Ph. S11L1\nor box 1737. Dally News. (1737)\nHARLEY-DAVTDSON,   45   TWIN\"\nperfect   condition,   ipeedomoter,\nback leat, etc. Box 114, Nelson.\n(1620)\n?\nMAKE IT A DAILY\nHABIT\u2014READING\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISEMENTS\nRead Them! Use Them!\nIT PAYS!\nFor Service Phone\nJean Robertson at\n,144\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nFOR SALE\nFully modern Stucco Home,\n3 Bedrooms, Fireplace. Furnace. Full basement. Garage\nIn basement. 2 lots. Must be\nsold before end of month.\nWhat Offers?\nAlso\n4-room Cottage, wired for\nelectric  range.   Cement\nfoundation. Lot 50 x 120.\nRange included in price\n$800\u2014Terms.\nC. W. Appleyard\nGeneral Insurance\nCity Property\n(1747)\nHOUSES FOR SALE\nRosemont 4 rooms (2 bedrooms)\nfull concrete basement, garage\nlarge lot in garden, fully modern $2100.00.\nMill St. 6 rooms, one story,\nmodern lawn and tlowers $1350.\nFairview 3 rooms on itory concrete basement, garage 4 comer\nlots $1800.00.\nH. E. DILL\nAuto It Fire Insurance\n(1709)\nMODERN STUCCO BUNGALOW. 2\nlota. Good location, corner Stanley\nand Innes. S rooms, hardwood\nfloors, fireplace, electric range.\nFull cement basement. Garden and\nfruit. Apply P. E. Poulln.    (1600)\nFOUR SAW EDGER, CAPACITY\ntwenty-five thousand feetper day\nWynndel Box 6c Lumber Co., Ltd.,\nWynndel, B.C. (1577)\nWe carry largut stock reconditioned\nPipe and fittings suitable for all\npurposes. Write Swarti Pipe Yard\n-20-lit E. Vancouver, B.C:. (1366)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Compiny Ltd.\n250 Prior St Vincouver, B.C.\n(1367)\nFOR SALE-BARRELS KEGS, SU-\ngar neks liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd, Nelaon, B. C.     (1368)\nNEW   BEATTY   WASHER,   BAR-\ngiin. Phone 487X or P.O. Box 578.\n(1670)\nGUITAR WITH ALL ACCESSOR-\niu, $10. Phone 50 or Box 154\nNelson, B. C. (1727)\nFOR SALE-SIX ROOMED HOUSE\nand four lota in Fairview. Apply\n520 Mill street. (1485)\nMINE PUMPS\nPORTABLE HUSKY PLACER\nmining pumping .units trom 25\nto 1000 gtllons per minute. Simple,\nreliable, and economical to run.\nGet our pricu. Pumps & Power\nLimited, Vancouver, B. C.   (1679)\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR\nList of wanted invenUons and full\ninformation sent free. The Ramsay\nCompany, World Patent Attorneys, 273 Bank St. Ottawa, Canada.\n(1364)\nIf you have room for roomen in\nyour home\u2014and room for their\nrent in your pocket\u2014remember\nthere ii room for your Ad ln the\n\"Roomi for Rent\" column.\n WANTED\nWANTED-TYPEWRITER. GOOD\ncondition, reuombly priced. P.O.\nBox 296. City. (1642)\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nFILMS DtvtLOPED-ANY SIZE,\n25c. With I print from each negative. Extra print! 8 for 25c. Su-\nkatchewan Photo Supply, Sukatoon.  (1390)\nFARM  UNDS\nGObti tARM LANDS FOR SALE\non euy termi In Alberta and Su-\nkatchewan. Write for full information to 908-Dept of Natural Re-\nlourcei, CPJt, Ctlgtry, Alberta.\n(1365)\nPOULTRY AND EGGS\nORDER NOW YOUR CHICKS AND\nPuUet Chlcki for May. Government\nApproved from PuUorum tailed\nstock A-A. Leghorn Chlcki $10 per\n100. $95.00 per 1000.\nAA. Leghorn Pulleta $23 per 100\nA. Leghorn Chicks $8.00 per 100\n$75.00 per 1000.\nA. Leghorn Pulleta $16.00 per 100\nReds  and Rocks. Chicks $10.00\nper 100. $95.00 per 1000.\nReds and Rooks, Pulleta $23.00\nper 100.\nPullet Chlcki guaranteed 97% accurate. *\u25a0*.' \u2014\nYou can only afford the BEST.\nWe have them.\nPrice lilt free.\nRUMP & SENDALL, LTD,\nMilner, B. C.\n(1112)\n6  WEEKS  LEGHORN PULL-7TS,\n60 cents. Liylng hem $1.00. Don-\nlid, R. R. I, Nela\n(1728)\nGARDENING AND\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nBEDDING PLANTS\nAsten (wilt resistant) mixed or\nseparate colon. Stocks, Red, Pink,\nBlue and white; double Cosmos;\nGodetia; Clarkia; Sweet Peu; African Dailies; African (tall) and\nFrench (dwarf) Marigolds; Calendulas; Ageratum, Scabious; Phlox\nDrummondi; Nemesla; tall, dwarf\nand Golden Gleam Nasturtiums 25c\nper dozen.\nTrailing and dwarf Lobelia,\nSnapdragons, Verbenas; Nicotlna;\nSalpiglossis, tall and dwarf Zinnias\n35c per doz.\nRosy Morn, California Giants,\nKelways giant single Fetuniu,.\nSalvia Harbinger, Swiss giant Pan-\nsies 50c per doz.\nGiant double Petunlu 75c per\ndoz.\nMarguerite Daisiu, Campanula,\nGazzina, Fuichlu, Heliotrope, Nep-\neta, Vinca, Dracenu, loc each.\n$1.50 per doz.\nGeraniums, red, pink and white,\n15c each, $1.50 doz. Large size 25c\neach, 2.50 doz. Tuberous rooted\nBegonias 25c each. English Daisiu,\nPolyanthus, Aubretla, Auricula,\nground Phlox, double and varlgated\nArabls; Saxllrags, Sedumi (5 var*\niettes) Yellow Allipsum; Thyme,\nhardy Mums, 15c each. 1.50 doz.\nEarly Jeney Wakefield, Golden\nAcre and Savoy cabbage, Brussel\nSprouts, 15c doz $1.00 per 100. Late\ncabbage, ready June 1st same price.\nSnowball cauliflower 20c doz.,\n$1.25 per 100. Early and late celery\n25c doz. Bonny But tomatou 35c\ndoz. out of 4 Inch pota $1.00 per doz.\nGRIZZELLE'S GREENHOUSES\nNELSON, B, C.\n(1703)\nPerennitl flowering planta that will\nflower thii year, itate what you\nwould like, I have a good selection,\nfifteen for leventy five centa. Rock\nGarden plant!, twelve all different\nand named, one dollar to three\ndollars all prepaid to you. H.\nComber, Becker Street Greenhouie!. Armstrong. B. C.       (1739)\nVAN SANT O.A.C. (ONTARIO AG-\nrlcultunl College) and Premier\nStrawberry planta, 75c per hundred, $5 per thousand. L. Gansner,\nBox 1023, Nelson, B. C. Ph. 189R1.\n(1647)\na KITCHENER, MOUNTAIN STA-\ntion Gardens. Buy something\nworth growing. Canadian Premier\nCarnation Grower. Gladioli, all\nexhibition varietiu.\n(1531)\nAUTOMOBILES\ni-Oft SALE-TWENTY-NINE De-\nSoto Sedan with ilx wire wheels\nand trunk rack, good tires and\nJuit overhauled. Newcombe Upright Piano in fumed oak cue\nand bench to match. Model sixteen Vlctrola, fumed oak cabinet with twenty record albums\nand number of recordi. Ph. 684Y\nor call 413 Carbonate.       (1677)\nChRl-SLfcR 1926 MODEL. CRACK-\ned cylinder. 5 tires, good as new.\nRim size 600X20. Size 32X8.00.\nOutfit $50 cash. T. Roynon, Nelson.\n(1700)\n3 TON DODGE TRUCK, LONG\nwheel bue, Thompson's Poultry\nFirm, Box 446, Nelion.      (1708)\nTRANSFER WORK\nMOVING\nWhen it comes to moving\nFurniture\u2014We Know\nHow!\nPRICES REASONABLE\nCOURTEOUS SERVICE\nPHONE 106\nWilliams Transfer\n609 Wird St.\nNelson\n(1736)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SAU\n4 GOOD SECOND' CALF FRESH\nAyrshire cows. W. Nlpkow, FruitJ\nvale, B. C. (1718)\nYOUNG COW. GOOD DAIRY. AP-\nSly Byres, Hall Mines Rd. Phone\n11L2. (1643)\nSIX WEEKS OLD PIGS $4-50 EACll\nF. G. Shield!, Needlu. B.C. (1641)\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST, SPRINGER SPANIEL,\nwhite with black markings. An-\niwen to the name of Klteh. Reward at 802-3rd St., Fairview\nPhone 746L. (1721)\nLOST, NEAR BRIDESVILLE-\nSultcue containing penonal effect!. Finder please notify Box\n111, Rossland, B. C. (1740)\nTo Finders\nIt you find a cat or dog a poe*\nketbook, Jewelry or fur or any\nthing else of value telephone\nThe Daily Newi. A \"Found\"\nAd will be Inierted without\ncost to you. We will collect\nfrom the owner.\nNEW AND USED MATERIAL!\nVANCOUVER WRECKING CO.\nLimited, 533 Wut Broadway\nVancouver, B. C. Largest dealer\nin new and used sash and doon\nln B. C. Importers ot glass. Glaa\nat unbeatable pricu. We operati\nour own sash and door factory\nWrite for iUustrated price list\n 06W\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, S.FA.E.\nInternational Accountant\nP.O. Box 1091     Nelson, B.C.\n(1423)\nAitayara\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Chemist. Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer;\nSampling Arenta at Trail and Tacoma Smelters. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson. B. C. (1424)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker Street, Nelson. B. C.  P. O.\nBox No. 726. Representing Shlp-\npera' Interest at Trail. B. C. (1425)\nKOOTENAY LABORATORIES\nAssayen and Chemists\nRepresenting Service at Smelter\nfor Ore Shippera\nBox 1342 TraU, B. C.\n(1426)\nChiropractors\nE.  M. WARREN,  D.C.    Box  872,\nGilker Block. Phones 115 or 755L.\n(1428)\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES\u2014The Electric Store.\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766 P. O. Box 1085\n(1429)\nEngineer* and Surveyors\nA. H. GREEN CO.. LTD. 516 WARD\nSt. Phone 264. Nelson, B.C. (1430)\nH. D. DAWSON. NELSON\nENGINEER and SURVEYOR\n(1431)\nBoyd C. Affleck. Frultvale, B. C,\nLands, Mineral Claims, Waterworks, etc, Surveys. Plans and\nEstimates. (1432)\nFlorists\nSprays, wreaths, symbolic designs,\ncarefully made at reasonable pricu.\nShipped anywhere. Cut flowers and\nSlants\u2014Phone 233\nN FLOWER SHOPPE\n(1433)\nHARDY PERENNIAL PLANTS &\nRock plants. Wholesale & Retail.\nW. MaWer, Nelson. (1327)\nHides and Fura\nBRIGGS TANNERY 4 FUR CO..\nLtd. Burnsland, Calgary, Alta. Leather tanning. Buffalo coata and\nrobes for sale. Hides bought. (1435)\nSTOP   AND   THINK   *   MOM-NT-\nAren't there some things you've\nbeen wanting tor a long time?\nThere's no need to do without\nthem. You'll find whtt rou want\nby using NeUon Dall; News cluii-\ntled ads.\nInsurance and Real Estata\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReil estate, insurance, rentala,\n217 Baker St.        (1430\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Eitate, In*\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker Street.     (1437)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery ducrlptlon. Real Eit. Ph. 99,\n(1438)\nH. E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate. 508 Ward. St,\n(1439)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE,\nrentals, insurance, Annable Block,\n  (1440)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulln, Ph. 70.    (1441)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.        (1442)\nMachinists\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all classu of Metal Work, Lathi\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grlndinl\nMotor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon Stree\n  (1443\nMaternity Homea\nELIZABETH PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Phytl\nclan In attendance. Ph. Broad. 3071\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wail\n  (1444\nMining and Mill Machinal*)\nEMPIRE MACHINES, LTD. NEL\naon. New and used machinery.\n(1448\nPhotographs\n\"PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEAS1\nGEO. A. MEERES. 715 Baker. Ph.'\n  (1441\nSash  Factory\nLAWSbN'S SASH FACTORY. Hin\nwood merchant. 217 Baker Strei\n .  (1441\nSecond Hand Storea\nCASH FOR OLD STOVES, BED\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.\n(1441\nUSED BRICK AND DRESSERS t\ntale. Mrs. Radcllffe, Vernon (\n(144\nTypewriter Service\nNELSON TYPEWRITER AGENtJ\nSales and lervice. Phone 197.\n  (14S\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE. Wol\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, 522 Vernal\nT\"\nBy Coo. MeManii\nFOR AN OFFICE B0V\nVWVB GOTTA LOT\nOF NERVE TALKING\nABOUT MV FRIEND.\nMONAHAN\nWELL. I WAS\nJUST GOING\nTOTELLVCU\nTHAT'S ENOUGH\/\nOONT TALK\nBACK    _\n-TV?\n(To Be Contlnuid)\nItH-Ola tt\nuimMOaeat.    _\n_________\u00bb\nmtmmmm\n ^mmmmm\nbZ>3\n4ARKET PRICES CONTINUE RIDE\nON NEUON MARKET; POTATOES\nARERAPIDLYBEING (LEANED UP\nJhelled Walnuts Are\nScarce; Abundance\n'. Local Vegetables\nContinuing in upward trend that\naa marked trading all iprlng, the\nrnolerwle market at Nelson ihowed\nirtber advance! in a number ot\nWunodltlu thli week.\nLambs ware up a cant to corre-\n\u2022ond with previous beef and pork\nIvances. The meat market is strong\nid the sales exceptionally heavy.\nEggi are steady alter a three-cent\naa a week ago and a few are being\nsported for local consumption.\nOn the grocery market a shortage\nI heavy camp lines has boosted\nla price of canned goods.\nShelled walnuts are exceedingly\narea and prlcei have hit the sky.\nloi hai also shown an advance.\nOne of the unusual market condi-\noni at present is tba big demand\nur old-crop potatoei. The old crop\ni fast cleaning up and the demand\n> brlik. Prlcei hive also shown a\n{(responding advance and further\nIvances are expected immediately\nfresh strawberries are on the re-\nllleri' shelves trom Kennewick,\nrath., and the quality ls good and\n)0 price about the same as last\nAvocados are In trom California\nad tomatoes and cucumbers from\nMaria.\nLocal green vegetables, green\nolons, asparagus and radishes are\ntirly abundant\nCANADIAN DOLLAR\nHIGHER\nMEW YORK, May 22 (CP).-The\nound iterllng advanced moderately\nD the foreign exchange market!\n\u25a0fiie' pound cloud at $4.92* for a\nat gain of IVi cents. The Catalan dollar wai quoted at a premium\nI Vi per cent agalnit par yeaterday\nrfaile the French franc, cloiing at\n48* cents, had a gain ot .OOVi of a\nset\t\nCHICAGO OFF\nCHICAOO, May 22 (AP).-Mod-\nlata losses In grain values today\naaulted from Increaied telling that\nIllowed President Roosevelt's bonus\n*___\nwheat closed nervoui, -Vi to Ih\nawer, July 89ft to 90; corn * to V,\nlawn, July 81 to 81H; oate % to H\nit-\nArgentina Refuses\n20 Per Cent Figure\nfor Export Trade\nLONDON, May 22 (AP)-An offer of 20 per cant of tha world'i\nwheat export trade hai been made\nto Argentina by other \"big four\"\ndelegate! and already hat been\nflatly rejected by the Buenos Alree\ngovernment It waa revealed today\nby a high authority as the world\nwheat conference opened.\nMINES LOWER\nTORONTO, May 22 (CP)-The\nToronto mining market did the hesitation waltz today and at the finish\n8rices averaged down slightly from\nie prevloui close.\nGolds appeared mildly disturbed\nby the unsettlement of exchange.\nVolume wu little above t'-.e half\nmillion mark.\nNoranda. market leader, dosed at\n42.75, up 65 cents. Sherritt advanced\nto 92 but held only part of the gain,\nSudbury Basin added 2 cents. Mining corporation 8, Falconbrid-e 2\nand Pend Oreille 1. Hudson Bay\ndropped 60 cents. In the silvers Eldorado cloied unchanged, C?stle\ndown a cent and Nipissing off 10\ncent-.\nFORD SHOWS A\nGREAT GAIN IN\nSURPLUS IN '34\nBOSTON, May 22 (AP)-A\ngiln In turplui In 1934 of $3,-\n759,311.18 over thit of 1933 wai\nrevuled here tonight by the Ford\nMotor Company In lti annual flninciil statement fyled with\nHenry P. Long, itate commit-\n\u2022'oner ol oorporatlom and taxation.\nThe oompany, oalled upon only\nIn Mauachuietti to reveal lti fl*\nnsnclrl ttatus, lilted a 193* total\nof ts_m. 3i.i\u00bb agalnit 3578,517,.\n079*51 for 1933.\nTWODAY HOLIDAY\nFOR WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, May 22 (CP).-The\nWinnipeg grain exchange will ba\nclosed Friday, May 24, and Saturday,\nMay 25, ln celebration of Victoria\nday.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHlgb\nI Chemical .... 148*4\n_m Can      128\nila For Pow      Stt\n*\u00bb Me _t Fdy    23*\nita Smelt & Re  48\n__x Telephone   120*\non Tobacco ...\niMconda \t\nRthison   \t\n* urn Mo _\ntwin\nOhio\niicnisor\nafeurn\nBra-\n88*\n17*\n41%\n21\n3\nU*\nidix Av   14*\nSteel   ...\n\" Dry ....\nPacific\nde Pasco\n- Ohio\nti Gu N Y\nWn Prod   \t\nWright Pfd\nupont\nat Kodak\nae Pow & Ll\nrle\nHd -English. ..\nHd ot Can\nllat Na Stores\nreeport Tex\nan Electric .\nan Foods ....\nen Foods\n27*\n10\nlltt\n59*\n44\n48*\nr*\n71*\n8*\n102\n143*\n2*\n8*\n47*\n27*\n\"*1\n35*\n35*\nan Motora   82*\naid Duit     15*\noodrich    9*\nranby 8*\nat North Pfd 14*\n6we Sound .. 52*\ntldion Mo 8*\nLow Close\n147 141\n128* 127\n- Stt\n23 IS*\n45* 45*\n119* 120\n87 87*\n17 17*\n40* 41*\n20* 20*\n2* 2*\n10* 10*\n14* 14*\n26* 27*\n8* 2*\n11 lltt\n57* 59*\n43* 44\n47 48*\n?'* V>.\n70* 71*\n8 _\\\n100* 101*\n142* 143*\n2* 2*\n8* 8*\n- (tt\n- Mtt\n- 47*\n28 25*\n25* 26*\n24* 34*\n34* 34*\nSI* 32\n13* 18*\nStt 9*\n14\n51\n8\n(tt.\n14\n52*\n8\nInt Nickel\nInt Tel It Tel\nJewd Tea\nKenn  Copper\nKresge S\n20\n(tt\n567*\n21\n22*\nKroegger & Toll 24*\n15\n23*\n27*\n13*\n16*\nLehn tt Fink\nHick Truck\nMont Wird\nNish Motors\nNa Dairy Prod\nN Pow It Ll\nN Y Central\nPac Gas It Elec\nPack Motors\nPenn R R\nPhllllpi Pete .\nPure Oil      \t\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand\nSafeway Storea\nShell Union\nS Cal Edison\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of N J\nStewart Warner\nStudebaker  ...\nTex Corp\nTex Gulf Sul\nTirmken Rollers\nUn Carbide\nUn Oil of Cal\nUnited Air \t\nUnited Bla \t\nUn Pacific \t\nUS Pipe         20*\nU S Rubber 13*\nWeit Electric 49*\nWoolworth 59*\nWrigley 81*\n16*\n20\n4*\n21*\n22*\n8*\nS\n2*\n8*\n40*\n11*\n18*\n17\n38\n550\n10\n2*\n23\n36*\n36*\n(0*\n20\nIStt\n21*\n96\n28* 29\n8* 8*\n- 87*\n20* 21\n22* 2U.\n23* 24*\n14* 14%\n22 22\n20* 27\n13* IStt\n15 15*\n- 8\n16* 16*\n19* 19tt\n4 4\n21 21\n21* 22*\n8* Stt\n8* Stt\n2* 2*\n  OU\n39* 40*\n10* 11*\n1 IS*\n16* 16*\n37* 38\n47* 50\n<* 10\n22* 22*\n35* 36\n35 36*\n59* 80*\n19* 20\n13* 13*\n21* 21*\n95 96*\n19* 20*\n13 13*\n*\u00ab* 48*\n69* 59*\n18* 18*\nTRADITIONAL STRENGTH\nForilxty-ilxyaonThe Royal tank hai\nbeen adding itrtngth lo itrength\u2014\nforging a aound and conn-votive\npolicy, and an eitobllihed poaitlon.\nTHI\nROYAL\nBANK\nOP    CANADA\nWUON IIANCH\nA SAJID, M_-\u00abg\u00ab\n' THI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C.-THUR8DAY MORNINO. MAY 23. IMS-\nMarket and Mining News\nWALL STREET\nTILTS HIGHER\nNEW YORK. May 22 (AP)-Dli-\ncretlon wu the keynote of itock\ntrading today. President Booaevdt'i\nveto message measured up so closely\nto Wall street's expectations that lt\nfurnished now powerful market\nstimulant\nThe genenl levd of lhare pricei\ntilted narrowly upward, activity\naggregated 1,147,140 iharea.\nMetal itocki tound a following\nu lead wu again advanced $3 a\nton. St Joe Lead. Magma and National Lead rose malor fractions to\na point or more. Cerro de Pisco\nlot up well over a point. Standard\nOil ot NJ. advanced more than 2\n\u25a0joints to a new peak at 50, while\nTains of 1 to 3 points appeared In\nAir Reduction at 134*. US. Industrial Alcohol at 44*. American\nTelephone at 120, American Tobacco\nB at 87*. Chrysler at 48* and\nUnion Carbide at SO* each advanced fractionally.\nSMELTEW UP (\nTORONTO. May 22 (CP)--OUs\nand the metals were again the mainstay of the Toronto industrial market today and they maintained the\nidvance with such vigor that other\nhesitating groups were brought Into\nline.\nImperial Oil at 21* showed a\nnet gain of tt. Internationil Pe*\ntro'eum added * at 38* and Super-\ntest ordinary *.\nReflecting the strong advance for\nthe ber illver quotation, Conioli*\ndated Smdters at 183 wu un four\n-.ointi. Nickel added *. C.PJt. *\n-nd Br-rilien *. Ford A took a lost\nof *. Liquors weakened.\nS'vre^TJUMP\nIN BAR GOLD\nMONTREAL. May 22 (CP)-Bar\n\"old ln London up S cents at $34.83\n\u2022\u2022 ounc In C-*nadian fundi; 141a\nllttd ln Britiih fundi. Tha fixed \u00abSS'\nWeshlnrrton price amounted to (35\nIn Cen-dlan.\nBONDS MIXED\nNEW YORK, May 22 (AP)-The\nbond market became confuted in\ntrying to establish a definite course\ntoday and final prices were a general mixture of small galna and\nlosses.\nGovernment bondi were 1*32 to\n4-32 higher. A 3-point advance ln\nRoyal Dutch 4i to 113 wu an outstanding feature ln the foreign department\nDominion   Livestock\nWINN-PEG, May 22 (CP)-Cattle\nB40\nSteera $745.\nHeifers 36.23.\nFed calvea $745.\nCowi 34.50.\nBulls $3.25.\nStocker md feeder steers $430,\nCowa and helfen $340.\nMilken and springen $40.\nCalvu 315.\nChoice veden $6.25.\nHogi 710.\nSdect biconi $1 per head premium, baconi $8.25, butchen $7.75.\nextra heavy $6.-5, lights and feed-\nen $8.50. sowi $6.25.\nSheep 30.\nSpring Iambi $10.\nHandywelght iheep (2.80.\nEastern Sales\nMONTRBAL, May 22 (CP)-Sdai\nof 100 or more sharu on the Montreal itock exchange, industrial lection, were: _, ,\n1872 Brulllan. 1405 Cdaneee, S20\nInd Al A, 581 CPR, 130 Cockshutt.\n1503 Smelters, 905 Hollinger. 26(9\nNick. 1142 MU Pow.\nTORONTO. May 22 (CP)\u2014Sdu\nof 100 or more shares on the to-\nronto itock exchange, induitrlil\nlection, were:\n1085 Brazlllan,1149 B A Oil, 140\nCan In Al. 478 CPR. 250 Cockihutt,\nMS Con Smelt. 746 Ford A. 1954\nNickel, 300 Man Hirr, 350 Unit\nSteel, 636 T Walken.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEO, May 23 (CP)-Grain\nfutures quotation!: _\nOpen   High Low Close\nWheat:\nMay  ...     (5*    (5*    85* 85*\nJuly 87*    87* 8Stt 87*\nOats:\nMay 42*    44* 42* 44*\nJuly  .      41*    43* 41* 43*\nOct. 38       39* 37* 38*\nBarley:\nMay 43*    44* 43* 44\nJuly  ...    44*    46*    44* 44*\nOct 44*    45* 44 44*\nFlax:\nMay  .     134      134* 134 134*\nJuly    135      1(6* 134* 135*\nOot     134*   136 134* 136\nMiy*'      44*    44*    44*    44*\nJuly  ...     46*    47*     43*    46*\nOct 48*    49*    47*    48*\n-Caah wheat No. 1 hard. No. 1\nnor. and track 85*; No. 2 nor. 82*;\nNo. 3 nor. 77*: No. 4 nor. 72*; No.\n. 66*; No. 6, 64*; feed 62**; No. 1\ndurum 84*; No. 1 A. R. W. 74*;\nirceenlngi $8.50 par ton.\nVancouver Salei\nVANCOUVER, May 22 (CP). -\nMining ihtrei aold on the Vanoouvar ttock exchinge today ware:\nLilted mine.: Big Vlt* 819$; .tt-\ndian 1375: Bralome 1S76; BRX\n1000, Cariboo 400: Dentonla 19,700;\nGoU Bdt 7800; Koot B 800; Mak\nSiccar 800; Meridian 2600; Premier\nG 780; Quitilno 2850; Reno 1600:\nReevea Mac WOO: Sally Mlnea 2300;\nShan Crk 3800; Taylor \u25a0 3*00;\nVanalta 2000; Wayalde 2000.\nCurb mlnu: B C Nickel 7900;\nBeevar Sll 1200: Canadian R 500;\nCongresi 1300; Fawn 7160; Fedenl\n2500; Oolconda 5600; Grandvlew\n9000; Hadley Amal SOOO: bland Mtn\n1500; Orange 1260; Orull Wlhk 500;\nHome Oold 6600; Mlnto 10,400; Noble\nve 1200- Nicola MOO: Pend O 4(00;\nlot 2000; Reward 1000: Silveremt\n-vJO; Silvenmlth 6200; United bin\n4000; Vldette 2000: Waterloo SM*\nWaverly 4000; Wellington 1000:\nWhitewater 3300; Ymlr Yankee Oirl\n2500.\nDow   Jones  Averages\n80 Industrials  .!. 116.28 up 0.67\n20 rails  \u201e _    81.17 off 0.06\n20 utilities  \u201e    19.30 off 0.08\nVancouver  Stock  Exchange\nAPCon\t\nAnal OU \t\nBig Mluourl \t\nBradlan   -     \t\nBralorne Gold\t\nBridge R Con\t\nB R X Gold      \t\nCariboo Gold Q .\nCil Corp\nCout Breweries .\nCom OU  _....\nDentonla  \t\nOold Bdt ....\t\nHargd OU\t\nHome OU \t\nInt Coal     \t\nKoot Belle \t\nMak  Siccar     \t\nMcDougal   Segur\nMcLeod OU    \t\nMeridian   \t\nModel OU      \t\nMorn'ng Star   \t\nNat SUver\nPioneer Gold\nPremier Oold\nPremier Border\nPuatalno\nReno Gold\nReevei MacDonald\nSdly Mlnea    ....\nSalmon GoM   \t\nSheep Creek   \t\nSpooner Oil    \t\nTaylor Bridge \t\nVandta\nWayiide Gold \t\nCURB\nAlexandria\t\nAtlln Pacific\t\nleaver SUver \t\nWrreblrd        \t\nB C Silver    \t\nB C Nickel .._..\nBunker H & S ..-..\ncan Rand\nCdmont OU    \t\nCongreu Oold \t\nCottonbelt       \t\nCrowi Neat    \t\nDa'heusle \t\nIilhouste Olla \t\nDictator Gold  \t\nOunweU        \t\nEastcrest\nBid\n.08\n.13\n.\u25a0a*\n635\nJl*\n1.18\nta\n13.50\nXI\n45\nsa\n.65\nB\n.49\n40\nV\n8*\n.06*\n.04*\n11.25\n1.78\n.00*\nm\n1.57\n.17\n.45\n.18*\n101\n.17\n.19\nJW*\n.16*\ni    .01*\n', -08\n.03\n100\n44\n5000\n.05*\n.05\n.40\n.14\n.    J\u00bb*\n49\nAik\n.10\n.15\n.71\n2.00\n6.95\n45\n.12\n1.20\n.64\n13.75\n.05\n.48\n.38\n.70\n22\n40\nsa\n\u25a0\u00b0t\n.48\n.09\n.24\n.07\n.05\n11.50\n1.70\n.00*\nsa\n1.59\nSO\n40\n.IS\n1.07\n.19*\n.08\n.17*\n.02\n03\nJW*\n.02*\n1.20\n47*\n07\n.42\n.05*\n.14*\n45\n.02\n.08\nat      -\nFairview Amal \t\nFawn Mining\t\nFedenl  Gold   \t\nFreehold OU \t\nGeo Copper     \t\nGlacier Creek \t\nGolconda     \t\nGold  Mountain\nGeo Enterprise ..\nGeo River \t\nGrandvlew \t\nGrange\nGrull Wlhksne \t\nHecla\n.Hedley Amal \t\nHlghwood Sarcee\nHome Gold   \t\nIndependence  \t\nTsland Mountain ...\nKoot Florence  -\nLakevlew     \t\nLucky Jim    _\nMadison OU\t\nMar Jon        \t\nMercury OU \t\nMerland OU      \t\nMcGlillvray Cod ....\nMIU City        \t\nMlnto Gold     \t\nMorton  Wolsey   ....\nNicola  ...\nNoble Flva  .._ _\nPacalta       \t\nPend OreUle\t\nPUot Gold   \t\nPorter Idaho ..__\t\nQuesneUe Q \t\nReward\nRanchmen's   \t\nRoyalite OU   \t\nRufus Argenta \t\nRuth Hope  \t\nSllvercrest  \t\nSUversmlth \t\nSnowflake .\t\nSunihlne      \t\nTavlor Wind _\t\nU D L\nUn'ted Bmplre \t\nUnited OU      \t\nVldette Oold\t\nViktor* GoM \t\nWiterloo\nWaverlev Tang .\nWdllngton\nWh'tewater\nYmir Yankee Girl\n.44\n.06*\n47\n.16*\n.03\n44\n03*\n.00*\nJM\nJM\n.07\n1200\nXt\n.10*\n.07*\nM\nJU*\nDO*\n.03*\n.00*\n.13\n.10\n42\n_\u00bb\n.15\n.01\n.05\n.10*\n.05\nJl\nJM*\n.12\n.13\n\u25a002*\n.68\n25.00\nOl*\n.04*\nJ)l*\n.06\n40*\n23.30\n.75\n45\nOS\n.22*\n.00*\nJM\n.00*\n.03\n.14*\n.45\n.06\n.07*\nJM\n08\nJM*\nJtt\n.10\n.07*\n12.25\n.25\n.12\nMVi\nJU\nXI\n.01\nJM*\n.13*\n.11\nJO\nJS\n.01*\nJM\n.11*\n.05*\nJU\n.05\n.1214\n.18\n03\n.69\n25.50\n.01*\n.05\n.02\n.06*\nJ)l\n.16\n06*\n.25\nOS\nOl*\nJ)S*\n.10\nJ)l\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexandria  J)l*\nAlgoma     ...___  .07\nAihley GoM  .10*\nBarry HoUingar   .04*\nBue Metali      ;  46\nBanklleld             .42\nBear Exploration  .60\nBig Mluourl    .71*\nBobjo         -12\nBredian      2.00\nBnlorne     _.._._.___ S.76\nBrett Trethewey  JM*\nBRX Oold   Jl*\nBrownlee      ...- \u25a0 -\u25a0 .Oltt\nBut Ankerlte  172\nBut Can GoM  J)l%\nBunker HUl     JM*\nCan Klrkland   J>2\nCan Malartlc       Xt\nCariboo Geld Quarta  1.20\nCuUe Trethewey     1.11\nCentral Manitoba   OS*\nCentral Patricia   1.48 '\nChibougamou   ........___..._ JO*\nClerlcy         OS\nCout Copper .  S.15\nCobdt Contact   JM*\nColumarlo         11\nCom M * S  183J5\nDome                    _ 4230\nDom Exploration _  JM\nEldorado       . ______ 2.26\nFilconbrldge    SIM\nGod'i  Lake  1.48\nGranada  45\nHardrock  .40\nHollinger     14.90\nHowey        i  J7\nHudion Bay   15.45\nInt Nickd       28.75\nKirk-end Lake  .40\nUke Maron       JM*\nLittle Long Lac  5.80\nLake Shore         54.00\nMcLeod Cockihutt  .04\nMdntyre                  42.2S\nMcVlttle Onhimme  17*\nMcWatten Gold   1.40\nMacaua         1J7\nMalroble        Ol*\nMiple Leaf    OS*\nMining Corp .._________.. 1J0\nNlplulng    2.SS\nNoranda   ..._ ________.. 42.75\nParkhUl        J2\nPaymaitar       , , ;,, ...... J6*\nPend OreUle   JO\nPickle Crow    2.48\nPioneer Oold    11.38\nPremier Oold _.  Ml\nReno Geld       _  148\nSakoose \t\nSan Antonio \t\nSheep Creak  \t\nSherritt Gordon ....\nSiicoe \t\nSmdtera Gold    .\u2014\nSouth Tiblemont ...\nStadacona     \t\nSt Anthony    \t\nSudbury Baaln \u2014\nSylvanlte     \t\nTeck Hughea \t\nToburn      \t\nTowagamae  .....__\nTreadweU  _____\nVenturei      \t\nWdte Amulet\t\nWayiide \t\nWhite Eagle\nWright Hargreavea\nOILS\nAcme _\nAJax    \t\nA P Con _ \t\nB A Oil \t\nCalmont    ..._\u2014_____\nC and E Corp      \t\nChemical Reeearch \t\nDalhousle    __\t\nHorae OU      _...\nImperial OU \t\nInt Pete \t\nMerland _____\nNordon   \t\nOlga     \t\nRoyaUte    \t\nSarnia    ,\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Broa A\t\nBeU Telephone  \t\nBniUlan\t\nBrewers It DiatUlen\t\nCan Bread    _____\nCan Cement       _...\nCan Car It Foundry ..._\t\nCan Indus Alcohol A __.\nCan Dredge  \t\nCan Pac RaUway\t\nCons Bakerlee      \t\nDiitillen Seagram \t\nDominion Storea  \t\nFord ot Canada  -.\nOoodyeer Tire \t\nHiram Walker      \t\nImoerlil Tobacco _______..\nLoblaw A        ._ ,_..\nMaaaey Harrla    -___.\t\nStandard Paving _...\nSteel ot Canada\t\nWalker Brew    \t\nOS*\n360\n104\nJS\n2.82\n.05*\n.10\n.23*\n.19*\n1.54\n2J2\n4.18\n1J2\nJS\n.15*\nJt\n.84*\n.17*\n03*\n8.50\nJ4*\nJ4\n.08\n16.87*\n.05*\n.60\n1.40\nJl\nJS\n31.87*\n38.50\nJS\n.05*\n.05\n25.75\n.13*\n10**\n125\n8*\n.70\nS\n7\n7*\n9*\n23*\n11*\n15*\n16*\n8*\n36*\nISS\n26*\nIS\n16*\n4*\nJO\n47\n3*\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBdl Telephone\t\nBradlan       \u2014\nB C Powar A\nBuilding Produati\nCan Car * Foundry\nCan Cenwnt\n\"\"an Cement Pfd \t\n'id Ind Al A    -\nCan Ind Al B\t\nCPR \t\nCan Staamara ._..___\nCockshutt   .____\nCon M Sit   .__\t\nDam Bridge ______\nDom Glau   _________\npom  Tortile    \u2014\nOen Steel Wane .___.\nCharlea Quid     \u2014_\nHamUton Bridge _____\nInt Nlekd        \t\nMaaaey Harrla   \t\nMontreal Power ....__,\nNat Stael Car _____\nNat Brewing . ...........\nOgUvig\nPower Corporation .._\nPrice Broa ...._ \t\nQuebec      .\t\nShawlnigan  ...\n124\nOtt\n24*\n30*\n7*\n6*\nSS\n9*\n7*\n11*\n>*\n7*\n182\nSO*\n116\n74\n4\nS\nii\nr.*\n34\n164\nS\n2*\n14*\n13*\nSherwin Williams\nSouth Can Power\nSteel ot Canada ..\nCURB\nBraw _ Dlit ..._.\nB A OU \t\nCan Celaneea\t\nCan Malting\nCan Wisertaa     ._.\nDisUUen Seagram\nDryden Peper\nImperial Oil\nImperld Tob Can\nint Petrol\nMcCou Frontenae\nMitchell Robt \t\nPage Heney\nBANKS\nCanada\nCanedlenne\nCommerce\nDominion\nMontreal\nNova Scotia\nRoyd\nToronto\nMIBCBLLANIOUS\nDom Stores\nFord Can A\nIS\n(tt\n-47\nMontreal Silver Prices\nMONTREAL, May 22 (CP).-Silvtr close*, firm, unchanged to 60 points up. Sales were 80 contracts, Msy 6,\nJuly 12, Sept 7, Dsc. 6.\nMay       76.76B\nJuly    76.66B\nSspt  _   78.00\nJJ6C.      ga- (f mtt mmm ia tttttttt       *Q. IvD\n76.66\n77.80\n78.00\n79.40\nLaw\n78.40\n77.00\n77.40\n78.80\n7f?.ISfe\n77.00B\n77.40B\n78.80B\nWAYSIDE WILL\nOPERATEAGAIN\nMen Will Go to Work\nUnder Protection\nof B. C. Police\nVICTORIA, May 22 (CP)-Ap-\nplication fer a conciliation board\nunder the Dominion Induitrlil\nDiiputu aet wu lugguted today\nby Hon. O. S. Pureen, Brltlih\nColumbia mlnlater of mlnu and\nlabor, to itrlking mlnen and operaton af non-dlvldend paying\npropertlu In tha Bridge River\nvalley,\nThli would enable the mlnu to\nruume opintloni pending Mt-\ntlament of the wage dliputi.\nVANCOUVER, May 22 <CP>-\nWayslde Consolidated Gold Mines,\nLtd., property ln the Bridge River\nvdley, doaed by tha mlnen' itrike,\nwUl be reopened tomorrow morning under British Columbia provincial police protection, Managing\nDirector Purvei Ritchie announced\ntoday.\nWayiide employeu have refused\nto accept the wage scale proposed\nby the company and have arranged\nto place pickets at Wayiide and\nCongreu mlnu lt an attempt ls\nmade to open them, it wu reported.\nWayside and Congreu companies have offered to pay a wage scale\nof 15 for miners, S4_60 for mucken\nand $3.75 tor surface men. The\nstriken demand the scale now paid\nat Pioneer Bnlorne and Bradlan,\nwhere mlnen receive 35.40, mucken, S4.50 and surf ice men $4 minimum.\nFACTORY OWNER\nVISITS NELSON\nW. W. PoweU of the W. W. PoweU\ncompany motored to Nelson Wednesday to make an lnipectlon ot the\ncompany'i match block plant and to\nviiit R. E. Horton. locd manager.\nThe vlilt wu made prior to Mr.\nHorton luving tor the eaat on a\nbuslneu trip.\nPRODUCE STEADY\nMONTREAL, Mav 22 (CP) -\nThera wu a generally iteady tone\non the Montreal dairy and produce\nmarkat today and pricu remained\nunchanged.\nButter. No. 1 21 centa, lolldi 22,\nprlnti 23.\nCheueOtt.\nNaw Bermuda potatoei In 50-\npound crates $1.75.\nWheat Exporti on\nIncrease\nOTTAWA, May 22 (CP)-_-tport\nclearances of whut during the\nweak ended May 17 amounted to\n2,941558 busheli, an Increue ot\n74,375 bushels compered with the\nprevious week, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported today. A\ndecreese of nearly 1,000.000 bushels\nwu shown In comparison with the\ncorresponding week lut year when\ndearlngi amounted to 4408,645 busheli.\nSilvers Stronger\nMONTREAL, May 22 (CP). -\nTrading picked up dlghtly on the\nCanadian commodity exchange today and prlcu wera slightly\natronger, unchanged to 60 polnti\nhigher. A total of 30 contracts\nchanged hands, 5 ln May, 12 ln July,\n7 ln September and 6 In December.\nMay cloied at 76.36 while July\nflniihed the day at 77 bid. September flniihed at 77.40 bid and December ended Uie day at 78.80 bid.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, May 22 (CP)-Ster-\nHng exchange firm at $4.91* for 60-\nday bills and at $4.92* for demand.\nCanadian dollars today * par\ncent premium, yuterdiy par, week\nago 1-32 per cent discount\nFranc MS* centi.\nLira 8.22 centi.\nMoney\n\u25a0y thl Camdian Preu\nCloiing exchange ratu:\nAt Montreal-Pound 441*. VS.\ndollar .99*. franc 6.58.\nAt Naw York-Pound 402*. Canadian dollar 1.00*. franc 6.58*.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 74.43 franei, Canadian dollar 15.18 franca, U_3. dollar 15.18* francs.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12s, Canadian dollar  59.3} centi, U.S.  dollir 59.34\ngans,\nTHE  CANADIAN\nJUBILII BEACON CHAIN\nTbe cout-to-coast chain ot bu*\ncom by which Canadian Boy Scouti\ncelebrated the Klng'i ailver JubUee\non the evening of May 6 proved the\ngreeted event of Its kind ln tbe\nDomlnlon'i hlitory. Flru stretched\nfrom Sydney on the Atlantic to\nPrince Rupert on the Pacific and\nburned trom Stgnd mountain, 7T0\nfeet up. In Juper nitionil park.\nTha great mid-Canada bonfire at\nWinnipeg was lighted by Lord\nBaden-Powell himielf. ln the rru-\nence of a crowd of many thouund\nipectaton. and at Edmonton, ln the\npretence of a similar crowd, a huge\nbeacon was lighted by Lieutenant-\nGovernor Walah. tha Canidyi\nScout chain carried acrou North\nAmerica the grut Scout chain In\nEngland, where soma 2000 beaconi\nburned between John o' Oroati and\nthe Guernsey islands.\nIn aome cuu Uie drying up of thi\nfrondi ot hardy feme lugguti that\ntha f ami are ln need of a rnt\u2014aU\nplanta require a rait for a period\nalmilar to that which they have\nunder natural oondiUoni ln tha\nwinter.\ntn iome treu in Canada, iuch u\nUie birch and the white ipruce. thl\natarch whlcb forme In lummer be*\naomu transformed Into fat during\nthe winter. The fat ln turn reverie to\nstarch again on the approach of\niprlng. nil formation of tat ap-\npaan ta ba durly an adaption for\nwithstanding the extreme cold ot\nnorthern latitudes. .\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK. May 22 (API-Copper quiet; electrolytic tpot and future, blue eagle, 9.00; export 840\nto 840.\nTin iteady; ipot and nearby 51.60;\nfuture 3040.\nIron quiet, unchanged.\nLead firm; ipot New York 445\nto 440; Eut St LouU 110.\nZinc quiet; Eatt St Louli tpot and\ntuture 445.\nAluminum 1940 to 2200.\nAntimony, ipot 1445.\nBar illver firm, 1* higher at\n76*.\nAt London\u2014Copper, atandard ipot\n\u00a384; future \u00a334 7i 6d; electrolytic\n\u25a0pot \u00a387; tuture \u00a317 lSe.\nTin, ipot \u00a3230 2i 6d; future \u00a3223\n7i6d.\nLead, tpot and future \u00a314 10a.\nZinc, ipot \u00a314 17i Sd; future \u00a313\n2a 6d.\nBir lilver itrong, 16-16 higher at\n34 ll*16d,\nSILVER EXPORTS\nSHOW BIG JUMP\nOTTAWA. May 22 (CP)-A big\nJump wu shown ln both volume\nand vilue of diver bullion exporti\nln April when they amounted to\n654,125 ouncu valued at $417407\ncompared with 379436 ouncu at\n$174,533 in the same month lut\nSear, Uie Dominion buruu ot sta*\nsties reported today. SUver In ore\nand concentrate! exported during\nthe month amounted to 16437\nouncu valued at $7395 against 43416\nouncei at $17494 in April. 1934.\nCopper exports during April to*\ntaUed 162,943 cwt valued at 31466,-\n000, a decrease compared with 274,-\n833 cwt at $2,139,000 latt yur.\nMontreal Firm\nMONTREAL, May 22 (CP)-A\nfirm price trend by moit of the\nleaden gave the lilt of Uie Mont-\nred itock exchange a conitructive\nappearance today with fair turnover.\nNational Breweries, an exception,\ntnt dumped heavily losing a point\nat 34.\nBrazilian, one of Uie active leaden, cloaed up * at 9*. Bdl Telephone fdl 3 points at 125 following\nannouncement of quarterly dividend of 1* per cent\nCanadian Celanue wu a itrong\nleader with a gain of 1* at 24. Con*\nnolldated Smelten Jumped 3* to\n183.\nPaper Firm Has\nReal Good Year\nMONTREAL. May 22 (CP)-Con*\nlolidated Paper aorpontlon. Ltd.,\ntoday nportad operating profit tor\nthe fiscal year ended March 31,1935.\nat $1044420 before depreciation,\ncompared with an operating lou of\n$235,141 ln the preceding year\t\nLiabUltlu were reduced by $723.-\n039 and currant assets lnereaaed by\niH3,m.\t\nPEW CANADIAN CATTLE\nCOINC TO U. KINGDOM\nOTTAWA. May 22 (CP)-WhUe\nCanada lut year filled an export\nauota of cattle Ot 53,000 head to\nie United Kingdom, this year the\nDominion hu shipped leu than\n5000 head and the movement since\nFebruery hu been negligible, official! of tbe department of trade\nand commerce and the livestock\nbranch report\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, May 22 (CPl-Brlt*\nlih  and foreign exchange doted\nAuitria, ichlUlng  1882\nBelgium, bdaa  1691\nBrazil, mllrels 4555\nChina, Hong Kong doilan .._   .6046\nFinland, finmark     .0218\nFrance, franc        4658\nOermany, reichimark 4020\nGreat Britain, 4.9138\nHolland, florin   _   4756\nHungary, pengo  _ 2968\nItaly, lire  -    4822\nJapan, yen    .-888\nNew Zealand, pound  34612\nPoland, xloti     1890\nSpain, pueta  1364\nUnited States, dollar, * par eent\ndiscount\n(CompUed by the Royal Bank of\nCanada.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, May 22 (AP)\u2014Closing:\nBrazilian Traction $9*. Canadian\nPacific $11*. Internationd Nickd\n$29*. Anglo Dutch 23s, Brltlih\nAmerican Tobacco \u00a36*. Brltlih\nCelanue Hi 4*d, Central Mining\n\u00a323*. Courtaulds 54s. De Been\n\u00a36*. Dliyilera 92a 3d, Dunlop\nRubber 42t 10*d. Hudion Bay 18s.\nImperid Chemlcel 34i 9d, Imperial\nTobaoco 18s l*d. Mining Truit Ltd\n4i 6d, Rand Mines \u00a38*. Rhodulan\nAnglo Am 131, Rhokana Corp \u00a36S.\nCrown Mlnu \u00a313*. Sprlngi 45s\n7*d, Eait Geduld \u00a310*. Rio Ttntos\n\u00a318, Royd Dutch \u00a325*. Vickers\n13a 3d.\nBonds\u2014Brltlih 2* per cent conioli \u00a389*. Britiih 3* per cent war\nloan \u00a3106*. Britiah funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a3118*.\n  PAflS MINI\nG0LDSSTR0N6\nATVANCOUVER\nBralorne, Bradian ond\nSheep Creek All\nAre Higher\nVANCOUVER,  May 23   (CP).-\nThe gold luuu continued itrong on\ntha Vancouver itock exchange today\nwhile tome of the base metals suffered loesu. Trading volume toteiled\n160,818 aharei.\nBralorne gdned 15 to 8.85, Bradian wu up 6 at 1.96, Fawn advanced 4 to 44 and Dentonla wu 2\npolnta higher at 47. Galm of a cent\nwere marked up by Gold Belt at 35,\nSheep Creek at 143 and Taylor\nBridge at 19. Pioneer Gold wu an\nexception and loit 25 at 1145. United\nEmpire wai unchanged at 5.\nB.C. Nickel lost 3 at 36, Big Mle-\nsouri was off 2 at 71*. Pend Oreille\ngained 4 at 81 and Golconda firmed\na cent at 34. Sally was off 1* at 45\nand Noble Five * at 10*.\nRoyalite featured the oils with a\nlou of 1.10 at 23.00. Other lssuu ln\nthis section were quiet and unchanged.\nWINNIPEG FIRM\nWINNIPEG. May 23 (CP)-Cuih-\nloned against weaknau at Chicago\nand continued lack of foreign demand by a itrong Liverpool market, whut prlcu were firm on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange today.\ncloelng * cent higher.\nPrlcu at Liverpool closed Id\nhigher. Thii aided local valuu ln\nwlthitandlna Chicago'! net decline\nof * cent. May here cloiing at 85*\nand July 87* centi. Only icatterea\nulu of Canadian whut ware reported aold for export\nShort covering in oati and barley\nlent thoie coarse-grain futuru up,\nrupectively, 2 and 1* cent! higher\nat ona time. Flax and rye pricu\nwere fractionally higher ln lympe-\nthy. Cuh gralni wera quiet\nU. S. DOLLAR OFF\nMONTREAL. May 23 (CP)-The\npound iterllng ihowed quiet\natrength on Montreal foreign ex-\nchangu today, riling 11-16 of a\ncant at $4.91*. The United Statu\ndollar eased 3-32 ot 1 per cent at *\nof 1 par cent dlicount Tha trana\nheld at 648 centa.\t\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, May 22 (API-\nWheat No. 1 northern 110* ta\nUS*, No. 1 red durum SL\nFlour unchanged. Shipment! le>\n643. Bran 26.00 tp 26.30.\nTo GST THE BEST\n(fcjMtei-mWf\n\\_m_\\_i_\n26Vi oi.\nbottla\nThis advertisement la not published\nor diiplayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government ot\nBritiih Columbia\nMURRIETALs\nMurrieta California Oill Limited, an especially\nattractlva proposition In a ntw field in Riverside County,\nCalifornia. It hat Ittttd 50 Mm ef land adjacent to\na wtll producing tt 1600 fttt crudt oil of 38 dtgrtta\nBaume and paraffin bate. Drilling it continuing.\nTht company htt t lew ctpittlisttien tnd consequently high taming powera. It will ipand ne money\non drilling, but will tell leases en a royalty baali.\nMty wt fhre you dttaila?\nTht ntxt boom will bt in OUt\nP. E. POULIN\nP.O. lox 752      STOCKS tnd IONDS       Phona 70\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\n PAOITSN-\nBATHING CAP\nSPECIALS\nRagular 25c Capi for 18<\nRagular 15c Caps for .    9^\nMann, Rutherford\nDrag Co.\nDORKING Eng. (CP)-The completion of the fund tor the purchue for the nation of the Burford\nlodge property at the toot of Box\nHill, near Dorking, ls announced.\nThe fund has reached 331,000.\nFERNIE PUY\nPROVES A HIT\nChrist Church Young\nPeople Give 3-act\nComedy\nFERNIE, B.C., May 22\u2014The young\npeople of Christ church (Anglican)\ngave their annual dramatic performance to an appreciative audience Monday ntght. The play was a\nthree-act comedy entitled \"The Hidden Guett\" The ttorv centered\nabout the experience ot a young\ncollege itudent trying to mike the\ngrade to membership Tn a fraternity.\nDuring one night he Induced an\nTrail Oyro Queen-Car\nContest\nCLOSES 5 P.M. FRIDAY, MAY 24\nDraw for Car 11:30 P.M., at Rlnk\nThursday ond Saturday\nPHONES 10 and 11\nNABOB TEA l-lb. pkt 49<\nNABOB COFFEE l-lb. tin 39.\n\u25a0a-t-aaftt-fimi \u25a0\u2014-t-t-t-t-t\u2014 \u25a0 \u00ab \u2014      una ia \u25a0    ft^-aeeaae\u2014\nBACON\u2014Swiffi Premium Mb. pkt. 35*\nPREMIUM DELICATESSEN COOKED HAM . Lb. 45*\nBOVRIL CORNED BEEF 2 tint 25*\nC. tr B. BONELESS CHICKEN\u2014Vis Tin 29*\nSWIFTS COTTAGE ROLL, Lb. 25<\nLIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE\u2014 IOV2-01. tin .. 4 for 25*\nLIBBY'S PINEAPPLE JUICE\u2014 l2-oi. tin .. 2 for 25*\nLIBBY'S PORK & BEANS\u2014Tall tins 3 for 25*\nPITTED DATES\u2014Fresh Stock Mb. pkt. 15*\ni i a\nSwansdown Cake Flour, Pkt 3-tt\nSALT\u2014Regal or lodiiad   Carton-10*\nMIRACLE WHIP SALAD DRESSINC . S'\/i-oi. jar 19*\nMONSERRAT LIME JUICE 13-oi. bottla 35*\nAPRICOTS\u2014Ensign 2a, Hosvy Syrup Tin 15*\nCampfire Marshmallows, 1 lb. 29<\nHEINZ SWEET OR MUSTARD PICKLES\u2014\n36-os. jar  48*\nBLUE MOUNTAIN SLICED PINEAPPLE\u20142t; tin 10*\nWOODBURY'S FACIAL SOAP  3 ban 25*\nPRUNES\u2014Malkin'a Boat 2-lb. pkt. 25*\nICING SUGAR 2-lb. pkt 17*\nFruits and Vegetables\nNEW POTATOES 3 Iba. 25*\nSPINACH\u2014Froah locsl 2 Iba. 19*\nNEW TURNIPS   4 Iba. 25*\nPOTATOES\u2014Grand Forks, No. 1 .. 50-lb. lack 69*\nFRESH TOMATOES  Lb. 25*\nRADISHES, CREEN ONIONS 3 bunchei 10*\nLETTUCE\u2014Large heads    15*\nGRAPEFRUIT\u2014Medium also 5 for 25*\nSTRAWBERRY RHUBARB 3 Iba. 25*\n* STAR GROCERY *\nPHONE YOUR ORDERS\nFret Delivery te All Parte of tht City\nFREIGHT PREPAID ON ALL ORDERS OVER $10.00\nABE TOU\nPLANNING A\nFISHING\nTRIP\nfor the\nHOUDAY?\nBe Sure and See Our\nNEW STOCK OF BAITS and LINES\nBefore Going!\nAll Quality Goods at\nAttractivt Prices!\nWood,\nVallance\nHARDWARE\nCompany, Limited\nescaped convict to return to prlton,\nbecame the lueceaeful rival ot hli\nown father for the hand of a charming young lady, waa pertly retponit-\nble for giving a htunted reputation\nto a perfectly reapectable houie\nand canted many palpitation! In\nthe breast of a luperstltioui lervant.\nThe cut Included Bert Judklni\n(a college boy) played by K. T.\nAlexander,' Tad Wilion (hit chum)\nJ. K. Heweri; Rulw Hayfield, Kathryn Gatea; Mary Meyfleld (Ruby't\ntunt). Helen Mitchell: Melanthurla\n(Melons) Mn. Harold White; Otto\nHubner (convict), Nelion Wallace;\nHelen Trotwood, Thelma McLeod:\nMn. Barrlngton, Peggy Glbton;\nJohn Judklni (father ot Bert).\nHarold Auitln;' Chester Briggi,\nCharlei Bruce; McCarty (policeman), Jamei Carnwath. Muilc wtt\nprovided by SL Paul'i orchettrt,\nMichel.\nAt the clote of the performance a\nbeautiful bouquet of tultpt wu presented to Mn. White in recognition\nof her tervlcei in directing the performance.\nSCHOOL ELECTIONS\nThe annual high Khool elections\ntook plice Monday. Margaret Irwin wat elected prealdent, Nadlne\nrtedman vice-president and Janet\n\u2022Valker reelected lecretary-treasur-\ner. Theie offlcen together with\nmemben from each of the classes\non the iporti. literary and aoclal\ncommittees will form the ttudents'\ncouncil tor the next tchool year. K.\nF. Alexander lt itaff representative\non tha council.\n---_B-_____J_W-mUKm__W_____.____l______W.___W_\\_-_____U_______W-m__W\nCRANBROOK TO\nSEND ATHLETES\nTO TRAIL MEET\nStudents in Training\non Track for\na Month\nCRANBROOK HAD\nRECORD BREAKERS\nWill Compete in Roces\nShot Put and\nJumps\nNelson Athletes\nGoing loKelowna\nFritz Farenholtz and\nJoe Wallach to Be\nin Meet\nFrit, Farenholtz will leave thli\nmorning for Kelowna by car where,\nwith Joe Wallach, he will participate\nin the field and track eventi there\non Frldiy. He wlll pick Joe Wallach\nup at Trail and they will continue\ntogether.\nBoth Nelion athletea hava tine\nrecords in the eventi in which they\nwill enter. Fritz will try the high\nJump, pole vault, and broad jump.\nJoe, who hu been training at\nTrail where he it working, will go\nin the half-mile and mile.\nMORE ABOUT\nBONUS BILL\n(Contlnuid From Page Ona)\ncurrency expansion, especially\nthrough the ailver route, contended\nthe chief executive's statements\nheld no menace to their programs.\nStudied too. and drtwlng a comment from 6enator R. M. La Toilette (Prog., Wis.) wu Mr. Roose-\nvelt't repudiation ot the \"ill-considered\" contention that ipending\n\"ii tha moit effective meim of hat-\ntenlng recovery.\"\nLafollette, one of those identified\nwith the \"pump-priming\" theory of\nfederal outlays, uld \"one ot the\nprimary ciutet of this economic\ncrisis and one of the principal rea*\naona It hu been protracted it that\nthe purchase power of the nation ii\nnot sufficient to buy the products\nof farm and factory.\nHebrew writings of Bible darn\nwera chiefly on leather, the books\nbeing in roll form.\nMcLeary lave a aong and tap dance,\ndroned tn a black and white cos-\ntnme. Mln Dorothy Hayden aang\n\"Polly WoUy DoocUe\" the reit of\nthe chorui dancing to the chorui\nof the tong. She alto tang \"I'm\nThrowing t-itaet Awty,\" the chorui\njoining and all throwing candy\nfclsut into the audience. Miss Eleanor McKowan and Mlu Frances\nCarver gave a tap dance dretted in\nblue and white rompen. Mln Margot Van Braam gave an acrobatic\ndance, drened in a black and white\ncoitume. Miu Nan McLeary and\nMin Francei Carver aang \"ble of\nCapri.\" all joining ln a dance for\nthe chorua of the long. Other (selections lung by the chorus were\n\"Happy   Dtyt  Are  Here  Again.''\nUow,\nCRANBROOK,  B.C.,   May  22-\nCranbrook high and public scholars have been In training for the\npast month at the athletic grounds\non the hill where they have one of\nthe best half-mile tracks In western\nCanada. Miu Gertrude Patmore']\nand M. McPhee of the public school\nstaff. Mln Grant and Mr. Barclay\nof the high ichool staff tre in charge\nof th- training.\nIt it expected that Cranbr-ok's\n1.3. delegation to Trail will uphold\nthc city's record at earlier track\nmeets, where competlton were tuc-\ncessful in establishing new records.\nMentlr \u2022 -A in a summary of records\nIn the Vancouver Province were\ntha names of Cranbrook athletes\nwho had tet recordi hard to beat-\nFred Large, 100 yarda in 10 seconds,\nand 220 yards in 23 seconds; Layton\nWarren half mile in 2:10 and the\nshot put 47 feet 2V. inches. The\nCranbrook tenlor relay established\na time ot 37 1-5 seconds.\nAmong the Crtnbrook glrlt nimes\nknown provincially and in the annual Canadian women'a gamea were\nthoae of Kate Martin, Evelyn Eley,\nCarrie Spence, Roblna MUler and\nBeatrice Irvine. Their tralnen were\nG. T. Molr and J. Clarke.\nCompetlton to go to Trail will be:\n100 yarda-Walter Reid. M. Haley.\nPeggy Reld, Bill Fergie a;.d H.\nParkin.\n220 yardt\u2014Dan Hamilton and\nTom Hamilton.\nHalf mile\u2014J. Haley,' M, Wheaton\nand R. McDowell. 1\nMile\u2014J. Haley and M. Wheaton.\nHigh jump \u2014 D. Graham, Bill\nFergie, C. Finlay, Myrtle Gummer.\nBroad jump\u2014D. Hamilton, D.\nEley, Margot Van Braam.\nShot put\u2014B. Hill, A. Proven_ano.\nPole vault\u2014 E. Wood and H.\nParkin.\nGirls, 75 yardt\u2014Myrtle Gummer\nand Margot Van Braam.\nBoys' relay\u2014Hamilton, Graham\nand Reid and Eley.\nJunior relay\u2014Hamilton, Parkin,\nMcDowell, Fergie and Finlay.\nGlrli \u2014 Gummer Perron, Van*\nBraam, Reid and Johns.\nMin Millie Bell with her juvenile\nminstrels drew ltrge crowds at the\ntheater Monday, Tuesday and Wedneaday evening.. The entertainment, all local talent, wu in the\nform of dancing, singing, music\n\u2022nd comedy. Thoie taking ptrt in\nthe choruses were Mlu Nan McLeary, Miu Frances Carver. Mils\nMargot Vm Brum, Mlu Eleanor\nMcKowan. Mln Lucille Hamilton.\nMin Eleyne Hayden, Mln Dorothy\nHayden, Mlu Joan Doree. George\nStevely and Kenneth Carver were\nend men. Joe and Rino Blggattlnl\nplayed two selections on accordions,\nreceiving hetrty applause. Miu Ntn\nPROCTER MAN\nJB0E|SWEDEN\nSwan Peterson Resided\nat Outlet for\n30 Years\n.m_tyj      _.-_,\u00ab,     ....     ...\nEvery Little Girl't Oot -\nand \"Shuffle Off to Buffalo.\nDr. Todd and Dr. Harry Warren\nof the University of British Columbia, will be in Cranbrook Wednesday to attend a meeting in connection with the adult education survey\nwhich it to be held ln the high\nschool auditorium.\nMn. Scarlet and her ion Gordon\narrived from Ontario to visit Mn.\nScarlet'a mother, Mn. Pelkey.\nMiu Marlon Burnett of Trail ls\nviiiting her sister, Mrs. Frtnk\nBridget.\nMn. A. Nelson has left tor Seattle and coast cities where she will\nvisit for the summer.\nMlu Marion GUI of Vancouver li\nspending her holidays with her parents here.\nA. C. Bowness hu lett tor Winnipeg on a buiineu trip.\nA. E. Hill, who had been attending a lodge session ln Victoria, hu\nreturned to Cranbrook.\nT. Hogarth is spending a short\nholldty at the coast.\nJudge and Mra. Thompson left for\nPenticton to attend the diocesan\nconference.\nMr. Morton ts spending his holidays visiting relatives in the eut.\nMrs. W. Selby ot Big Missouri\nhu arrived to spend the summer\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mn. J.'\nJackaon.\nMn. McBurney, who hu been\nviiiting her diughter in Calgary, returned to Cranbrook Sunday.\nAmong the Cranbrook people\nwho ipent Sunday at Fairmont hot\niprings were Dr. and Mrl. Fergie\nand family, Mlu Jean and Mln\nHelen MacDonald, Miss Delia Baxter, Mr. and Mrs. McKowan and\nfamily Mr. and Mn. Ray Hill and\nbaby daughter. Miss Glen Bowneu,\nMiu Frances Carver, T. Moore, F.\nBrown and P. N. Russell.\nClyde MacKinnon arrived Monday from Toronto to spend the\nsummer with his parents here.\nMin Olive Norgrove, who wu attending Unlvenlty of British Columbia, has returned to her homc\nfor the aummer.\nMn. J. T. Sarvis and Mn. W.\nShepherd have returned to their\nhomes here after spending a month\nwith relatives at Gait, Ont.\nMn. J. A. Young of Penticton arrived Monday to spend 10 days with\nher parents, Mr. ind Mn. J. T. Sarvlt.\nAt the recent meeting of the\nteachen, held ln Cranbrook', an Invitation was extended by Cranbrook\nteachen for the next Eut Kootehay\nconvenUon to be held In Cranbrook,\nDates have not yet been decided\nbut it will probably take place in\nOctober.\nMn. t. W. SJodln hu returned\ntor a month's visit it cout cities.\nRotarian Harry MlUer of Calgary\nwu a gueit at the Cranbrook Rotary\ndub Tuetday.\nThe Gyro twlmmlng pool li being\nfilled thli week, which ia three\nweeks later than lut year.\nMn. Stanley Htll of Trail ll vliit-\nln\u00ab friendi in Cranbrook.\nPROCTER, B.C., May 22\u2014Procter\nloit one of lti oldest retidents Monday, in tht person of Swan Peter-\nton, who left for hit ntUve country,\nSweden, to take up reiidence. Mr.\nPetenon came to British Columbia\nfrom Stockholm in 1002 and for\naome yean worked u an engineer\non the Arrow and Kootenay lake\nsteamboats. Since hit retirement\nfrom lervice on the lake boata. he\nhas been usociated with Capt Fred\nCogle, acUng as engineer on Captain Cogle's tugboats. Mr. Petenon\nhu been a Procter reildent for\nmore tbtn 90 yean.\nMr. and Mn. C. B. Bowman of\nLethbridge, who have been spending a holiday at the Outlet hotel,\nhave returned to their home.\nRev. Clyde Harvey left Monday\nfor Penticton to attend the tynod\nmeeting of the Anglican church ot\nthe diocese of Kootenay. He wu accompanied by B. Holiday Smith of\nBoswell.\nW. S. King ot Nelson spent a day\nfishing here.\nJ. Midwinter, who hu been a\nresident here for the past six yean,\nhas left Procter.\nMn. G. Robinson and Mr. and\nMn. C. B. Bowman of Lethbridge\nwere visitors to Gray Creek Tuesday.   ^^^^^^^^^^^^\"\nMn. W. Watkins, who was a guest\nof her parents, Mr. and Mn. w. R.\nJarvis, fett Tuesday to Join Mr. Wat\nkins at Oliver.\nWHITE\nSHIRTS\nMost men prefer white\nshirts to any other kind.\nSee the attractive rsnge\nof whites we are offering\nfor Summer Sports wear.\nTrump by Arrow\u2014Country Club, Pall Mall and\nBond Street by Forsyth.\n$2.00 to $3.50\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nthe priest cried at the dote of hit\nspeech:\n\"I aak you to pledge with me\nthe fight to return America to\nAmericans.\"\nTwenty-seven men and women\nwere arrested for distributing communistic literature among Uie\ncrowd. ^^H\nCHARLES MORRIS\nMEN'S AN BOYS' WEAR\nBlack\nand\nWhite Is\nRight\nAlways\nnee\nOnr\nWindow\nONE LOOK IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS\n511 Bakar     Agent: TIP TOP TAILORS     Phone 147\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW.W.Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Horn, tt Cood Lumber-\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nFOR A GLORIOUS MAT 24th.\nMORE ABOUT\nFR. COUGHLIN\n(Contlnuid From Ptgt Ont)\ntlonal union tor social Juitice, Father Coughlln'i remarki were interrupted frequently by cheers and\nhowls ot derision against those who\ncame under his fire.\nSPICY   UTTERING8\nThe priest't address was spiced\nwith such phrases at \"kept men of\nJounalism,\" the \"prostituted press,\"\n\"spoil-minded politicians.\" He repeated challenges to the press gallery to \"print that ln your newi*\n\u2022\u25a0era.\"\n.'he bonus question, he charged,\nwu one ot ruthless opposition by\nbankers coupled with tne lon by\ncongress ot the right to coin and\nregulate money. \"I am afraid it\nwu not the soldier alone who\nwu vetoed thii afternoon\u2014it wu\nthe American people\" he said.\n\"Much u 1 dislike making thli\nremark, May I remind the pretldent, with all due reipect, that not\none ot these soldiers or tailor\nboyi cut a ballot on that fateful\nGood Friday night in the iprlng of\n1917 to force a peace loving nation\nto take up arms for the profiteers\nand exploiters of mankind,\" ha\ntaid.\nSAVE BRITAIN'S CREDIT\n\"May I further remind him that\n11 the thought ot penilon ptymenta\ncomet to his mind at this late date\nit thould have been in the minds\nRed Sox and Stars\nMeet Again Tonight\nThe Red Sox: and the Toronto\nStare clash for the third time this\nseason at the Recreation grounds\ntonight at 3:40. So far the Red Sox\nhave proved a Jinx to the Stars but\nthe latter aggregation Is determined\nto take the league lead tonight\nEither Jean Spiers or Alice Dunn\nmay be started on the mound tonight for the Stan, leaving Hazel\nSpiers available tor Infield duty.\nBarbara Klngzett and Berna Kltnt\nwho were missing in the last gama\nwill start tonight. At leut one am\nface will be aeen in the outfield\nHelen (Janie) Wlgg, former Racke\nteer shortstop Has Deen signed ani\nwill be uaed In Die near future.\nThe Red \"Sox hope to have ou\ntheir strongest lineup u they cai\ngo Into the lead by winning.\nOne automobile plant finds thai\nit uses daily more water than tl\nused ln the cities of Detroit, Waih|\nington, and Cincinnati combined.\n3*\nSPECIAL\n2aanrsbage...WJ5\nR. H. Maber & Son\nTimmlthi and Rooftn\nPhont (SS        SIO Kooteniy St ]\nln\u00ab friendi in wanoroos. , of the United Statei lenatora who\nThe   Anglican  church   women i ^ened to the propaganda of the\nauxiliary entertained at tea Monday j.ept pruJ anlj wf,0 heeded the\n-  \" \"      ~ messages cabled from England by\nFn honor of\" Mri. K. Greene, who it _______________________\nleaving shortly for Vsncouver AmbaJ>sdor Pa.a \u201e he\" pleaded\nWn*nH* S?i!S'  *\u2022\"> \"\u00bb to \u00bbve Brltain'i cr-\/dit.\"\nm . rmr.>,-_v vrs.tor Tuetday.        ,n    volce c0_0Tti wlm Mrclu>m\nFr. Coughlin struck at President\nRoosevelt's statements against \"class\nlegislation.\"\n\"For years\" he shouted, \"he and\nhis predecessors in office have been\nupholding this very clui legislation\ntor the benefit ot the bankers, the\nmoney creators.\"\nThe crowd rose to lti feet when\nMrs. rs. ucikuiui .. ..........\nwaa a Cranbrook visitor Tuetday.\nMrs. Anderson\nLaidjo Resl\nM a n y Pay Tribute;\nLeaves Father,\nW. Calbick\nFuneral services were held Wed-\nnesdey from the Somen Funeral\nHome tor Mrs. F. Anderson ot Nelson, who died at the cout on May 17.\nlev. Carl C. Janzow officiated and\ni large number of frlenda and rela *\nivet were ln attendance and many\nloral tributes were received. Hymns\nung were \"My Faith Looks Up to\n.hee,\" and \"Jerusalem the Golden.\"\nPallbearers were Norman Norcrou, Harold Ronmark. Arthur Ron-\nmark, Bertyl Eperson, Harold Eperson and James Young.\nMrs. Anderson is survived by her\nfather, Wesley Calbick; three brothers. Wesley J. Calbick, Chester J.\nCalbick and Elmore A. Calbick; and\na lister, Mri. Samuel Brown.\nLight from the itar Arcturus takes\n41 years to reach the earth.\nCome\nto\u2014\nAinsworth Hot Springs\n\"The Spa 0\/ the Kootenays?\nNature't Health end Pleaiure Resort With a\nDiversification of Entertainment for Young and Old\nSWIHMINC AND BATHINC\nIn tht health-giving wattrt af tha\nPool and Cives.\nFISHING AND BOATINC\nOn tha famoui Koottnty Lake.\nSPECIAL MAY 24TH DANCE\nIn tha evening at 1:80 p.m.\nVISIT THE SILVER LEDGE INN\nFully Llctnctd\nDELICIOUSLY COOKED HEALS\nIn tht pteatant surroundings of our\nmodirn dining room. Moderate prlcta.\nPltMlng Menus \u2022 \u2022 Courteous Servloa.\nAN INVITATION\nTo thote who havt already tnjoytd\nAlniworth we nay \"Cill Again\" and ts\nthou Koottnty paoplt tnd tourittt who\nhivt ytt to vltlt thli ftmoui retort,\ntha mtmgement ef Alniworth Hot\nSprlngi Invlttt them to comt Mty 24th\nand promises an tnjoytblt tlmi for\ntvtryont.\nCOTTAGES AND CABINS FOR RENT\nCottagee fully furlihtd.   Moderttt rente ll by day, week ar longer periods.\nAINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS 8 HOTEL\nA. A. VASSAR, Mtnigtr\nAINSWORTH, B.C.\nNEWSOFTHEDAY\nCOM! TO  KASLO,  MAY 24th.\nDANCE AT NIGHT. (1SSS)\nOld Lawn Mowers bought 109\nHaU Mines Road. Ph. J09Y. (1741)\nBedding   plant!   at   Grizzelle's.\nOpen evenings. Phone 111.     (1709)\nBIG   DANCE Taghum,  May 24.\nAdm. 25c. Good Muilc (1742)\nTennla Rickets rettrung, repilr-\ntd.  HOLLAND, opp. Tilt, office.\n(1380)\nSUTTON8   SEEDS   ARE   THE\nBE8T. NELSON FLOWER SHOPPE.\nUM)\nYou can dance at Alniworth at\nany time now to the muilc of a\nSeeburg Audlophone. (1646)\nSee Advt. on Page 8 for Orli-\nzelle'i bedding plants. (1704)\nAINSWORTH   HOT  SPRINGS\nDance and lunch SOc per person.\n24th May. Good Music. (1680)\nNEW   ARRIVALS  In   waihtblt\ncrepes, putel thtdtt, for Mlteei\ntnd Women\u2014$3.25 tnd 13.95. GODFREYS' LIMITED, (1743)\nMty 24 round trip for ont way\nfart. Takt tht opportunity to vltlt\nyour frltndt vli GREYHOUND.\n(1629)\nSPENO tht 24th it SOUTH SLOCAN. Rtcee, eoftbill, footbill, but-\nball, tug-o-wir, horie-ihoe pitching. Nelion Boyi Bind In attendance. DANCE In tht tvinlng.\n(1669)\nLOBELIA, SNAPDRAGON, PETUNIAS, PANSIES, TOMATOES,\nAND ALL OTHER BEDDING\nSTOCK OF FINEST QUALITY\nNOW READY AT THE NELSON\nFLOWER SHOPPE. REASONABLY PRICED. (1725)\nTHE KOOTENAY NO ODOR DRY\nCLEANERS\nArt now cleaning wlnttr overcoati\nand delivering thtm In btgt rtady\nfor summer ttortge it 31.75.\nJUST  PHONE  128\n(1732)\nCARD OF THANKS\nMr. Wesley Calbick, Sr., and family with to thank all friends for ex-\npretaioni of kindnets and sympathy\nduring their sad bereavement in\nthe loss of a loving daughter and\naiiter. (1751)\nLUMBER\nDry. Well Seasoned Stock of\nFIR, PINE AND CEDAR LUMBER\nPlaning Mill and Yard st Taghum, I. C.\nFree City Delivery end Country Delivery\nai Reaaonable Ratea\nCarload Prices on Application\nHARRY BURNS\nPhone 53 Nelson, B. C. Sit Ward St.\nCanadian Legion\nNELSON BRANCH\nwill hold another\nBIG DANCE\non Victoria Day\nMAY 24T-H AT 9:30 P.M.\nDONT MISS SEEING\nGLORIA STONE\nthe charming and clever young teacher of dancing,\nwho haa kindly contented to give a specialty number\n\u2022til :30 p.m.\nCOOD FLOOR AND GOOD MUSIC\nby\nThe New Troubadours\nGents 50c Ladies 25e\nONUT A HUSBAND COULD     '.-mTHBU\nAn\nExtraordinary\nHoliday\nFour Star\nEvent!\nYou too will agree\nwith the\ncritics\u2014It's\nDELIGHTFUL\nCOMEDY\nfor the\nWhole Family!\nlast Times Today\nClark Constance\nGABLE BENNETT\nIN\n'Alter Office Hours'\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_1935_05_23","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\/1.0405070","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":"1935-05-23 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":"1935-05-23 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":""}]}