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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":" \u25a0MI.E   TIN\nNEW\nSPRING\nFICTION\nNow on display at\n2.00, $2.25and\nS2.50\nMann. Rutherford\nDrug Co.\n-   am_. L_fm_m    '-'\nM M    Dall;\nM        M    and  Ti\n\u25a0\"        \u2122       Tr.ll\neiks t  T. a r.\n431    BAKER   ST\nFreight     Schedule\nDall.   to   Rnssland\nand Trail. 10 am.\nrtion*\nITU\n135\nPARKINfON't\nRum and Butter Toffee\nrr.R i.b.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson'!   IHspensliut   Chemists\nCall and grt ynnr Correct Weight\n.   Free.\nused car owner\nmust be\nsatisfied\/\nSatisfaction just naturally follows\nwhen you buy a \"Good Will\" used car.\nThe \"Goodwill\" Guarantee and low\nprices assure outstanding; value, and\nwhat is still more important \u2014 Satisfaction with your purchase grows each day\nSee our fine stock of used cars. You'll\nsave and be satisfied.\nCHEVROLET\nCOACH\nLat\u00a9 1930 modfl, Original Un-\nlab like new. 1 ihoistery ls\nspotless. 6 Goodyear tires in\nexcel lonally good condition.\nThe motor Is A-l, and lt has\nonly   been    'riven   800o   miles.\n$545\n1927 DODGE Oof\nCOUPE  _  V*>\">\n1938 CHEVROLET C9QC\nCOUPE   \"\"\u2022\u2022\"JO\n1926 CHEVROLET CT>\u00a3\nSEDAN  _  a?**}\n1929 CHEV OLET TRUCK\u2014lutein, body and C^QCf\ncab     *>i85\n1927 CHEVROLET OCC\n6EDAN   a?*50\"*\n1928 CHEVROLET CjtC\nCOACH     ViO\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nPHONE   35\nit :\u00bb.. . *. socxm\nCONSIDER QUALITY\nWhen You Figure Costs\nLUMBER and BUILDING MATERIALS sold by us are selected. They\nwill give every last bit of satisfaction\nand, considering' Quality, they are the\nlowest priced.\nLUMBER \u2014 BRICK \u2014 CEMENT\nLIME \u2014 LATH \u2014 DOORS\nWINDOWS\u2014SHINGLES\nWALLBOARD PLASTER\nSTUCCO, etc.\nA. H. GREEN\nCo.\nLtd.\n(Successors to John Brims  *e Son)\nBUILDING CONTRACTORS, ENGINEERS ANIJ SURVEYORS\nNELSON and ROSSLAND\nPLANT and  SALES OFFICE\u20145(11  Front  St. Phone  178\nOFFICES\u2014316 Hard St. rhone M4\nStoneware Crocks\nAT GREATLY\nREDUCED PRICES\n2 TO 15 GALLONS\nIdeal for all foodstuffs and provisions.\nWrite or Phone for Prices\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWHOLESALE - NELSON B. C. - RETAIL\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDAT MORNINO, ATRIL IS, 1IM\nCOOPERATIVE FRUITGROWERS\nOF WYNNDEL HANDLE LESS\nTONNAGE DURING PAST YEAR\nRetiring Directors arc Returned Unopposed\nto Office\nCRESTON, B. C April la.\u2014There\nwa, a good turnout of members ol\nthe Cooperative Fruit Growers association of wynndel at the Community Hall, ynndel, on Thursday\nnight, with resident John wigeu\noccupying the chair, and A. T. Tow-\nion taking the minutes ln the absence of A. Spencer, .secretary and\ntreasurer, who was detained at his\nhome at Canycn due to illness.\nThe three retiring airectors, John\nWlgen. E!las Url and J. O. Abbott,\nwere returned upoppoged ard w'th\nW.   Grelg,   A.   S.   Joy   and    George\nHOSPITAL HAS! CARTMEL IS\nAUTHORS ENTER A PROPOSfTWN CUPID\nDISPUTE FROM LAUNDRY\nlllattL, Unite UAii\nEXTRA   SPECIAL   Haircuttlng   for\nboys and  girl,,   under  n  years  25c.\nDe Luxe Barber Shop, 604 Baker 8t.\n(1307)\nEagles meet tonight at 8 o'clock.\nImportant. (1633)\nSuits \u00bb24. Rex  tailoring Co., Ltd.\nBlock 1,  Vernon St., tI30J,\nWomen's Institute baby clinic at\nhospital   today   at   3:30. (1618)\nMarcel or finger waves,  75  cents.\nI Rose  Beauty  Tarlor.  piione  317.\n(1104)\nDancing classes by Miss Doreen\nHill for tiny tots and school Rlrla.\nPiione  565L. (1630)\nSATURDAY   MORNING   LAIUFS\nTrinity service Club bake sale at\nJ. A. Irvlng'8 store. (1C32)\nUnfurnished 3-rooro suite. Hardwood floors, Electric Krldg., also\none  furnished  suite,   Kerr  Apts.\n(1386)\nOddfellows and Rcbekahs, Court\nEllen, Court Royal and friends are\nInvited to a Social evening at Oddfellows halt tonight, 8 P. m.   (1623)\nSilver tea f,ct drawing at military\nwhist drive TONIGHT, 8 o'clock,\nK. P .Hall. Ladles' auxiliary to the\nB. of R. T. (1601)\nHuscroft will comprise the 1932 directorate.\nThe matter of payment of revolving fund, which Is now complete,\nwas fully discussed and lt wb\u00ab decided the fund should start revolving  this  season. .\nShare certificates were issued to I\nmembers whose stocks ln the asso- I\nelation ls fully paid up, and orders |\nwere taken lor crates and other\nsupplies. i\nI'l.l'HY   SHIPMENTS\nDue to less acreage In strawberries\nand   a   shorted   crop,   the   tonnage ,\nliandled in 1931  was somewhat less\nthan the previous year. The records ]\nHhow    16,258    crates    strawberrlles;\nshipped,   and   Just   over   four   tons\nof strawberries  shipped  to the Jam\nfactory.   Two   thousand   three   hundred and thirty crates of raspberries,\n116   crates   gooseberries,   221   cnites j\ncherles,   417   crates   black   currants,\n66   crates   blackberries,   250   crates\nplums, 45oO boxes apples, 90 boxes\ncrab apples,   380   crates   cucumbers,\n154 dos*.en corn, 1028 crates toma'oes,\nand   about   50  tons  of  spuds  were\namong the commodities bundled the\npast   season.\nWhilst climatic and moisture conditions the past winter and this\nspring have been ideal, the general\nopinion does not favor a resultant\nbumper crop, excepf on lands that\nhave been under lrr.g--.tlon, as the\nsummer and fall seasons were rither\ndry and the normal development of\n\"crowns\" was greatly retarded. Raspberries, currants, etc., look wonderfully we'll and ths prospect ls for\nan apple tonnage in excess of 1931.\nComplete plans for the irrlgatllon\nproject by Wynndel Improvement association have been filed with the\ndepartment at Victoria, and a date\nnbout the middle or the month has\nbpen set for the statutory hearing\nof any objections that may be filed\nagainst   the   proposed   development,\nCanadian   Legion   Military   Whlur, |\ndrive  and  dance  tonight,  8  o'cl ck\nsharp.   Excellent  prizes.  Don't miss\nit.   Admission   35    cents,    Including\nrelreshments. (1638) 1\nCONSOLIDATED\nFERTILIZER IS\nGIFT FOR PARK\nGeneral Manager Thanked by Council for\n\"Kind Act\"\nAn evening of music. Vocalist,\nAmelia M. Hnnna; 'cellist H- E.\nStratton; pianist, Gwendolyn M.\nLowcry. Wednesday, 8:15 p- m.,\nTrinity Church. (1642)\nTONIGHT,   8:13,   HONG   RECITAL\n\u2014Amelia M. Hanna, assisted by R,\nE. Stratton and Gwendolyn M.\nLowcry, Trinity church. Adults 50\ncents, and students 25 cent*.   (1G43)\nSpring Fale of plain and fancy\nsewing, table of home cooking and\nhome' made candy, elso table of\nspring plants, afternoon tea served,\nat the Presbyterian church parlors,\nVictoria street, Friday, April 15, 12\nto 6. <-6*.<->\nThe annual meeting of the shareholders of the Nelson rtinic Ltd. Will\nbe held ln the secretary's office,\nHlpperh-on block, Baker street, on\nFriday evening, AprU 15, at IM\no'clock. U631)\nChurch of Redeemer rural deanery\nmeeting. Holy communion Wednesday and Thursd-ty at a o'clock.\nEvemong and sermon 7:30 tonight.\nPreacher, the Rev. C. C. Raven,\nvicar of Kaslo. Clergy of the rural\ndeanery of Nelson will attend.\n(turn\nThe three lower courts of the\nNelson Golf and Country TENNIS\nCLUB nre NOW READY for play.\nPlease depo-lt application and fees\nwith N. German (at Watson's Shoe\nCo.) Fees: Me**\u00bb 810; Lidles $7.50;\nStudents $5; Man and wife \u00ab15. Th?\nfive upper courts will be ready In\none week. (1641)\n\u25a0 An offer by the Consolidated Minimi <k Smelting Company of Canada to furnish the chemical fertilizer required for the seeding or Lakeside   park,   conveyed   through   S.   G.\n| Blaylock,   vice-president   and   general\n1 manager, was gratefully accepted by\nthe city council Monday night, the\nthanks of the council being as\nmuch   for  the  \"kindly  thought\"  as\n. for   the   fertiliser.\nI Mr. Blaylock's letter, the mavor\nsaid, paid the city a warm compliment on Its program of betterment\nof the park, and asked for fiugres\nof the acreage to be seeded. It was\nwritten just before Mr. Blaylock\nleft for the  east.\nCity Clerk W. E. Wasson. it was\nstated, had already written, thank-\n'nt Mr. Blaylock, :>nd giving the\nItltTH required, m reply to which\n'lie company had shipped from its\nWarfleld plant 20 Opounds of each\nof the three types of fertilizer made\nthere, with directions for use, the\nthrpft kinds to be used on experimental plots, to determine which\nw as   best   for   the   park.\nMONTREAL CURB\nMINING ISSUES\nTOUCH NEW LOWS\nCARD   OF   THANKS\nMrs. , Hugh Wallace and family\ndesire to express their sincere appreciation of the sympathy and\nkindness shown to them ln their\nrecent fccrravement. (1637)\nCMlO    OF   THANKS\nT. J. Scanlan and family wish to\nthank their many friends for the\nkindness and sympatny shown them\nln their reesnt trouble. A'so for\nthe Spiritual and beautiful floral\noffering?. (1628)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nGASKELL \u2014 Richard of WH'ow\nPoint, sired 65 years, parsed away\nFriday. Body will mt at Howell Fu-\nner-'l Home where funeral service\nwill be held today, 3 p. m. Rav. W.\nC. Mswhhiney. (1617)\nSAFE - CLEAN - DRY\nStorage\n9000 Square Feet of\nStorage Space\nGeneral Distribution\nCOAL and WOOD\nPhone   53\nBURNS\nCoal  and  Cartage\nMONTREAL, AprU 12.\u2014The easier\ntoiv of previous sessions on the\nMontreal curb changed today to a\nmore decided weakness as eight is-\nsues ln the miscellaneous and mining sections dropped to new lows\nfor the year. Among these issues\nwere Associated Breweries, off \u00bb,'\u25a0\nat 5; British American Oil. down\nft at 8\\_\\ Foreign Securities, 3\npoints lower at 2; Imperial < .1, off\n3* at TH, after touching 7*\/B* Imperial ^obacco, down \\'4 at 714;\nInternational Petroleum, % lower at\n\"Hi and Page-Her: y off 8 points\nat 4H\u00ab. Gains included Cosgrave,\nup V_ at 3; Dodge \"B\", i; higher\nat 2; and Hiram* talker, wtth a net\nadyance of U at 3!-; on ttb last\nsnle of the stock, as it will be\nwithdrawn I   m  trading tomorrow.\nTURNER VALLEY OIL\nWOULD   LAST   LONG\nTIME IF CARED FOR\nOTTAWA, A 11 12 (CP).-If the\nwells of the Turner valley oil field,\nabout 45 miles from Calgary, were\nnroperly and efficiently operated,\ntheir output would be sufficient to\nserve the city of Calgary with illuminating and heating gas for\nabout   20 years.\nThis statement was, given the\nhouse of commons committee of\nbanking and commerce Investigating the alleged high price of gas-\notlAj In Canada by. Oliver Hopkins,\nhead of the geological department\nof the Imperial Oil company. He\nhad been called, at the suggestion\nof Dr. G. D. Stanley (Conservative,\nCalgary East) to describe the Turner valley situation and its relative\nposition to the gasoline Industry\nof Canada.\nThe cost of transportation is an\nImportant factor determining the\nprofitable source through which\nspecial crops can be distributed, according to a report Just received by\nthe department of agriculture at\nOttawa. Taking the early carrot\nan Instance, eastern Canada Import*.\nits supply very largely from Texas\nsituation is reversed with respect to\nand the British West Indies. The\nthe Pacific co.,st area where British\nColumbia grav era export consider*\nable quantities of this vegetab.e to\nthe paclfc sections of tre United\nStates.\nThree Witnesses Favor Distinct Form of Public\nOwnership\nOTTAWA. April 12 (CP) .\u2014Three\nwitnesses favoring a distinct form\nof public ownership, and two who\nwere not committed to either principle but bespoke action to pro-\ntec, authors and compojeri who\ncreate the matter used *n radio\nbroadcasts, furnished the evidence\nheard today by the parliamentary\ncommittee on radio. Professor B, K.\nSandwell, Montreal, and Louvlgny\nde Montigny, Ottawa, both representing the Canadian Authors' association, urged afrit authors and\ncomposers be assured remuneration\nfrom those who benefit from their\nwork.\nProfessor Cement Hambourg, Toronto, Dr. D. R. Clarke of the Mc-\nGlll conservatory of Music, and J.\nF. Garrett, radio editor of the Saskatoon newspaper \"Western producer,\" favored the principle of\npublic ownership as the means best\ncalculated to solve Canada's radio\nproblem.\nWhen radio entertainment 1* left\nto the Judgment -f sales promoters\nit will b< so arranged as to appeal\nmainly to tastes of a \"low order.\"\nw as the opl nion * Douglas R.\nClarke.\nR. K. Smith <C jnservatlve. Cumberland) asked the witness how he\nwould describe music of a \"low\norder\" In contradistinction to music\nof  a hir-her  order.\nDr. Clarke listed Jazs, and such'\npieces as \"The Stein Song\", as being of s low order. He excluded\nminstrel shows, describing them\nrather as entertainment of a light\norder,\nIfiipl\nNelson Ferry Shows the Only\nGain; Castlegar Returns\nAre Down\nDue to the heavy snowfall snd\nthe late spring, ferry transportation\nthroughout the district was greatly\ndecreased 'In the month of March,\nas compared with the same period\nln 1931. Perhaps the greatest drops\nIn transportation was on the Castlegar ferry where roads on both aides\nof the ferry were closed t^ heavy\ntraffic for some time. There was also\na four-day shutdown on the Castlegar ferry during March, both these\nfactors tending to reduce the figures.\nThe only ferry showing noticeable\ngains was the one at Nelson where\npassenger transportation gained over\n2000 ln March, 1932, as compared\nwith the same period ln 1931. Frelgr-t\ntonnage transportation on the Nelson ferry also showed a gain of a\nlittle  more than 10 tons.\nFerry returns for March  1932 and\n1931   are  as  follows;\nNELSON   FERRY\n1932        1931\nAutos         2802      20M\nTrucks, light  I    25J 355\nTrucks,   heavy   ...._      523       W4\n.Tutor   busses  \u00ab m       77 02\nMotorcycles  \u201e -      10 U\nRigs             05 79\nPassengers     15907    13638\nFreight,    tons   \u201e..-      314       303}i\nHorses  8 4\nCattle    \u201e 2 \u2014\nGraders    \u201e. 3 \u2014\nCaterpillars  2 \u2014\nCASTLEOAR   FERRV\nAutos  _...     351        1261\nTrucks,   light            114 380\nTrucks,  heavy        218       445\nMotor busses          28 80\nMotorcycles     4 2*8\nRigs          218 274\nPassengers     \u2122   29B-S       E85fl\nFreight,   tons  ~      252'i      420Vi\nHorses            14 17\nCattle             17 33\nHARROP-\nLON.il.EACH\nAutos        180 218\nTrucks,   light           19 46\nTrucks,   heavy          111 140\nMotorcycles    \u00ab       \u2014 4\nRlghs            14 38\nPassengers        1027       1183\nFreight,  tons   ~       84 91 Vi\nHorses     \u201e         7 fl\nCattle   _ _ \u00ab        2 3\nStock          2 \u2014\nKOOTENAY  FERRY\nAutos        30 12fl\nTrucks,   ltg.'t     fl 34\nTrucks,   heavy          \u2014 85\nRigs          205 135\nPassengers         685        1038\nHorses            r24 13\nCattle              18 25\nSaddle horses         82 68\nNEEDLES-FOUQIIER\nFERRY\nAutos -      102 3*3\nTrucks,   light           29 8\nTrucks,   heavy           58 46\nRigs     _....       41 37\nPassengers     _      408 395\nFreight,   tons   \u2014         19 37\nHorses             12   *       24\nCattle     ..._   7 \u2014\nStock    3 \u2014\nARROW    PARK    FERRY\nAutos  _ -        58 60\nTrucks,   light    \u2122 6 13\nTrucks,   heavy       32 24\nRJgs        3 16\nPassengers     -     673 66*5\nFreight,  tons           33 \u2014\nHorses      .       16 35\nCattle              4 6\nStock             \u2014 3\nBicycles    \u201e        \u2014 4\nTractors            \u2014 1\nACTIVE ISSUES\nARE FIRMER ON\nVANCOUVER LIST\nVANCOUVER. B. C, April 13 (CP)\n- '-\"ve i--ues Ailed to develop a\ntrend ln either direction in a day of\nextremely light and uninteresting\ntrading on the exchange herB today. With the exception of several\nof the leaders ln the precious metals\ngroup, activity was negltg.ble. premier was the only issue to show\nan Improvement, advancing 2c to\n44c. Bridge \"tiver Consolidated, after\na firm opening at lie, eased off to\n10c at the close, a loss of % from\nthe previous close, Reno dipped 8c\nto 45c ln fairly active trading.\n1\nCompany Will Handle the\nLaundry at $350 a\nMonth on Contract\nCOMMITTEES WILL\nLOOK INTO OFFER\nStanding Committees\nNamed by Vice-President Irving\nA proposition from the Kootenay\nSteam Laundry, to \"handle all the\nlaundry work of Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, at $350 a mis nth,\non a contract for three or more\nyears, was the most discussed \"topic\nat the monthly session of the hospital board ef directors Tuesday\nnight. The letter from Manager C.\nA. Larson was handed in Just before the meeting. It stated that the\nhospital would save $600 a year ln\nhandling of Its laundry, while tho\nlaundry company would be enabled\nto keep Its staff fully employed.\nFor some years past the hospital\nhas operated Its own laundry, on a\ncontract basis, the Chinese contractor, who employs two Chinese\nhands to assist him, receiving a*70\na month and providing his own supplies, with the hospital furnishing\nthe plant, power, light and water.\nThe laundry building and machinery\ncost about 82500 of which women's\norganizations put up part.\nRESPECTIVE   ARGUMENTS\nThe chief argument advanced on\nbehalf of the present system was\nthat It was more convenient, the\nlaundry being practically always ln\nservice, with everything cleaned up\nevery 24 hours.\nOn behalf of shutting down the\nplant and reverting to the Kootenay\nSteam Laundry it was argued that\nit would mean full time Instead of\nhalf time for' 10 girls.\nIt was contended that after the\nhospital supplied power, water, and\nother services for Its laundry, the\ncost of the two alternatives was\nprobably  about equal.\nThere was no information on haw\nManager Larson figured a saving for\nthe hospital of $600 by this proposition.\nSecretary J. C. Forbes reported a\nrequest from the Chinese contractor\nfor a revision of hla contract to\ncover Increased cost of supplies, the\nmonthly soap requirement having\ncome up to $40 from the original\n$25 as a consequence of the Increase\nln  work.\nManager Larson's monthly figures\nof $350 was MM to be the same that\nhe received before the hospital started Its own laundry, though the\nvolume of work has increased 50\nper cent.\nSPECIAL   COMMITTEE\nIt was decided to have a special\ncommittee g>o into the matter, and\nVice-president J. A. Irving, who was\nin the c;:&ir, appointed R. D. Barnes,\nH. M. Whlmster, and D. D. Townsend\naa  the committee.\nThe educational comrnlttee, t0 hold\noffice for one year, was appointed\nby Vice-president Irving to consist\nof Miss K. Ethel Gray, as superintendent, Mrs. L. M. Varner, president\nof the Women's auxiliary, and Alderman  S.  H.  Smythe.\nA recommendation made by President C. F. McHardy, who was out\nof town, with reference to the composition of the house committee, was\nfollowed by Vice-president Irving,\nwho appointed John Cartmel, Mrs.\nL. M. Varner, end D. D. Townsend,\nto hrald office  for six months.\nDr. W. O. Rose, medical superintendent for the quarter, expressed\nthe opinion that things were going\n\"very   nicely   and   very   efficiently.\"\nThe two new directors, D. D.\nTownsend and Joe Holland, vere\nwelcomed by Vice-president Irving\non behalf of the board.\nHis Affair Is Likened unto the\nRoads of the Kootenays,\nRough\nNo blarns attaches to Warren; you\nwould do the same If you had his\nchance. It al) happens in the Gyro\nshow, \"The Beauty Bhop,\" showing\nThursday, \"rlday and Baturday.\nJack Morris (strictly of course) as\nDr. Arbutus Budd has little use lor\nWarren, who Is Phil Faraday ln tbe\nplay, because he, Budd, has designs\non his dainty ward himself. Notwithstanding the hard sledding ln\nhis love affairs. Warren makes\nsrr-wth going ln his hesitation waltz,\ndanced with his pretty \"play\" fiancee, Lois Bheffleld. We predict\nthe Gyro show will Iron out all\nthe rough spots, and make smooth\ngolrg for everyone, the audience Included.\nWEE    TRADING    IS    RESTORED\nMONTREAL, April 12.\u2014Free trading was restored to the members of\nthe Montreal stock exchange today,\nalthough it Is not to be permitted\nactually on the floor ot the stock\nexchange    quarters.\n44\n-PV1NE\t\nTAXI  and\nTRANSFER\nDaly Freight Schedule to Trail\nand Rossland. Leaves Nelson at\n10 \u00ab-m. Trail epot, Dominion\nGarare;   Rossland   Depot,   L.   D.\nCafe.\nCON   -VM.MINS\nPHONE TAXI\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK, N. T- April 13.\u2014\nSterling exchange iregular at $3.77\nfor 60-day bills; and at $3.79'^\nfor   demand.\nl:.:.^.'.aii u;'l?,:s (H per cent discount.\nFrancs   3.64 11-16  cents.\n.   Lire   5.:14  cents.\nUruguay  47.50 cents.\nMarks 3.75 cents.\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\nForget It Not\nTHURSDAY\nFRIDAY\nSATURDAY\nCurtain 8=30\nNelson Gyro Club\nPresents\nThe Beauty\nShop\nJunior High\nAuditorium\nA High Stepping\nQuick Action\nSparkling\nMusical Comedy\nReserve seat plan at\nMann, Rutherford\nRush Seats 75\u00ab*\nTODAY\nStudents\nMatinee\n25c\nCurtain 3:30\n\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\nNew\nStyles\nSpring\nCAPS\nNow with the nice\ndays for motoring you\nwill want a new cap.\nThesmart patterns\nand new colors will\nappeal to your good\ntaste.\nPriced\n$1.951(> $2.50\nEmory's\nLimited\nNelson, B. C.\nWednesday\nSPECIALS\nAssorted Shortcakes\nPineapple\nBanana\nChocolate  Custard\nBuns, per dozen 10<*\u00bb\nQuality our Leading\nLine\nLedinghams'\nPhone 630\nSanitary Bakery\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nThe store where prescription!\nhave the right of way, and t\\\ndelivery boy ts constantly on\nhand,  who delivers promptly to\nall parts of the city,\nPHONE   1\nShop with as by mall.\nRead The Nelson Daily\nNews Classified Ads,\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, April 12.\u2014(Closing quo-\n| tations)\u2014Brazilian     Traction     $12*\ni Canadian Pacific llty; Int Hold &\nj iny   Co   $%;    International   Nickel\nI tT9t|   British  American  Tobacco \u00a33\n1  12s   fid;    Distillers    \u00a32   6a;    Dunlop\n, Rubber 0s 4*\u00a34] Electrical & m Ind\nOrd   15s;   Ford Ltd  \u00a3i  3d;   Hudson\nBay   16s   6d;   Imperial   Tobacco   \u00a33\n18s IHd; Shell T & T \u00a31 15n; Vlck-\ners   7a  4^d;   British   4ft   per  cent\nWar   Loan    1947   \u00a3102   15s;    British\n4V.  per cent wr loan \u00a3102; British\nfour per cent 1960-90 \u00a399 2s 6d.\n\"Instead of cutting out aUverUstn*-*\nseek to Improve its appeal. Above all,\ntime your advertising t;> nult the\nchanges in mode and fashion.'--Roger\nW. Babson.\nFor Modern Plumhing\nat Moderate Prices\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER   I'LCMmit\nOpp. Cltj  Uall pbone 815\nTAXI\nPhone\n.Smfl'av II\" Baal of Servlct\n__WJ __W Cartful, Courttoua\n*aW ttW Drl.trs\nKalian Iius'ii Co.. Ltd,\nCLASSES -\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN\n\u2022 UITI 203.M MKOICALA.T. BUILDIN*\nTHE PICTURE THAT HAS\nEVERYTHING\nMORE   MELODRAMA   THAN   A   GANG   PICTURE.\nMORE HEART   INTEREST  THAN  A   ROMANCE.\nMORE  LACGHS   THAN A  BARREL   OF  MONKEYS!\nA DOZEN COMEDIES ROLLED\nINTO ONE\nt \u2666 \u2666\nBUSTER\nKEATON\n,  SIDEWALKS\nof NEW YORK\nThe comedy everyone's raving about\nwith\nANITA PAGE       .:.       CLIFF EDWARDS\ni -4>\t\nBILLY HOUSE\nin\n\"THE DUNKER\"\nMusical Haig Trio\nin\n\"NO MORE HOOKEY\"\nCANADIANS IN CALIFORNIA\nNEXT ATTRACTION\nGloria Swanson in \"Tonight or Never\"\n \u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\nw\nCardinals Begin Season'by\nBeating Piiwtes 10-2\n. \u2014Page Seven\n0tXi\nBabe Ruth Slams Out Two.\nHome Runs First Game\n\u2014 Page Seven    ,\nVOLUME   St\nTUP. NELSON DAILY NEITS, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDAY MORNING, APBIl, 13, 1931\nFIVE  CENTS  A  COPY\nM'MHER   Hit\nLINDBERGH\nT\n>-u\n'\"Ol\/,' \u2022>! -r ,\nMill\nSEVERELY FOR\nHIS REMARKS\nCommittee Characterizes\nStatements,\" Untrue\nUnjustifiable!'\nSINGLE INSTANCE\nIS NOT GIVEN\nCharges Investigated Are\nFound Untrue; Number Are Cited\nVICTORIA, April 12\u2014In\nprobably the most scathing\nlanguage ever used in an official document in the history\nof B. C.'g legislature the committee on unemployment relief, charcterises the statements of Harold Brown, president of the Vancouver board\nof trade as \"untrue\" \"unjustifiable\" and \"unwarranted.\"\nMr. Brown in an address in\nVancouver a few days ago attacked the committee and alleged that if witnesses at\ntempted to tell the truth they\n\"would be crucified.\" On Monday he appeared before the\ncommittee to explain his allegations and failed to do so. He\nconfessed that he had never\nattended the .sittings of the\ncommittee but had \"listened\nIn\" such listening being \"in\nthe radio sense.\" He refused\nto particularize as to the possible crucifixion of truthful\nwitness or to substantiate his\ncharges by citing concrete\nfacts, but rather entered a\ngeneral condemnation of \"political commissions\" in general.\nlo th* report (lied ln the J*\u00bbl\u00bbI*\u00ab\ntur* tonigbt \u2022 considerable portion\nof Mi. Brown'* explanation 1* quoted\nlrom tli* transcript of evidence alter\nwhich the committee find*.\nREMARKS  INEXCUSABLE\n\"Your committee, alter listening\nto Mr. Brown'* evidence haa com* to\nthe conclusion that the atatements\nmade by him ln regard to the pro-\n(CONTINUED ON  PAGE TWO)\nT\nPrice of Commodities Fail to\nLower with Farmer's\nIncome Cut\nLONDON, April 12 (By Thomaa\nT. Champion, Canadian Preaa atari\nwriter)\u2014The farmer of western Canada, haa aeen his Income cut drastically by tha drop in price of wheat\nand other grains, but the prices of\ncommoditlea he has t0 buy have not\ndropped In proportion, notes the\nreport of the Hudson Bay company\nIssued   tonight.\nOn the oontrary, hla burden of\ntaxation has notably Increased due\nto tha Inability of Dominion, provincial and municipal authorities\ndespite atrenuoua effort* to reduce\nexpendIturea in proportion to the\nfall In the community income, the\n\u25a0report  noted.\nA trading loaa of \u00a3846,605 waa reported, thla figure Including E3O0.000\nprovision for depreciation on the\ncompany*a properties here and ln\nCanada, and \u00a3131,697 for losses incurred   In  subsidiary   companies.\nThe reorganisation of ths com-\npany'a administrative affairs by\nwhich tha Canadian comtmlttee has\nbeen given a wide measure of control over operations ln the Dominion\nla noted, along wltt, reorganization\nof  the  company's   land   department,\nTh Canadian comm 1 ttee accepted\nIt* beavy new responsibilities at a\ntime of unexampled economic stress,\nthe report said. Disposal ot tha\ncompany's real estate holdings In\nthe Dominion for obvious reasons\nwould be a difficult matter for some\nyears, the report intimated. Many\na-mrch-asers are unable to pay Instalments or aven taxes although \"there\nla a widespread disposition to meet\nobligations.\"\nCHICKEBINO YOUTH\nON    WAY    HOME\nWtLMTNGTON, Del., April 12\u2014\nCharles Chlckerlng, 16, whose disappearance last night gave rise to an\nerroneous report that a member of\ntha Dupont family had been kidnapped, waa on hla way home tonight from Norfolk, Va., his father\nexpressed the opinion his aon had\nrun away because of scholastic difficulties.\nCoifs on President Hoover\nJEAN HARLOW  TOURING  COUNTRY\nJean Harlow, motion picture actresa, photographed after calling on\nPresident Hoover at the White House. She ls shown here with her atep-\nfathar, Count Merino Bello, who accompanied  her.\nChiropractors Lose Fight\nfor Own Self Control Board\nPOISON IS FOUND\nBY CHEMISTS IN\nORGANS, PHAR LAP\nSAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Ap-\nprll 12\u2014Traces of poison wers\nfound by government chemlsta\non tha organs cf Phar Lap, the\nAustralian race horse that died\na week ago today at Menlo\nPark, Calif.\nW. W. Vincent chief food\nand drug administrator of the\nU. S. department of agriculture\nwho made the examination, announced today a poison commonly UBed aa a tree spray .as\npresent In the organs of the\ngiant gelding which won the\n$50,000 Agua Calient handicap\nafter being brought here from\n\"down under.\"\nBORDEN, LISTER\nMacPherson Moves the Only\nAmendment to Bill That\n* Passes\n(Special to the Nelson  Dally  News)\nVICTORIA, April 12\u2014 The only\namendment to the redistribution bill\naccepted by the government aa the\nbill went through committee atage\nIn the legislature tonight waa that\nmoved by Prank MacPherson, member for Cranbrook.\nThe bill described them merely as\nNelson and Revelstoke respectively.\nMr. MacPherson claimed the historic\nold name of Columbia ahould be\npreserved while it was proper that\ntr.e important new agricultural district at Creston should also be recognized In the name of tie combined constituency,\nMr. MacPherson aald he would have\npreferred to see Creston combined\nwith Cranbrook on account of the\ncommunity cf Interest of two centers on the same line of railway.\nDr. L. E. Borden and Col. Fred\nLister attacked tha redistribution\nbill as grossly unfair to the Kootenay while reducing the representation of tha whole province by only\none tha Kootenay had to lose two\nmembers, they protested. Dr. Borden\nvoted against the bill and Col. Utter stayed out of tha house.\nLost   After   Weathering\nClose Vote in Second Reading\nVICTORIA. April 12.\u2014Chiropractors lost their fight for wK-con-\ntrol  under a boa;d of their own\nmanagement when a  bill to give\nthese rights was defeated In committee of (he legislature this afternoon. The end came suddenly,\nafter the measure had wea hered\na   close   vote   on   second   readng\nearlier ln the week, an.i a second\nmove to kill tbe bill at the start\nof   proceedngs   today.   Two   dlv-\nslfH.s. one standing vole, and aev-\nerai   shows  of  hands  were  taken\nduring brief committee consideration of the measure with Thomas\nKing (Lib-Columbia) ln the c air.\nThe decisive vote which Instructed\nthe committee to rise without report, thereby killing the bill was\n'.JO-IS  In   favor  of this  course.\nIn favor of the defeat of the bill\nwere   Messrs   Fltesimmons,   Hanna,\nMacherson,   Dick,   Kingston,   Berry,\nBorden, Kirk, wrlncn, Kregln, Sutherland.    Pattullo,    A.    M.   Manson,\nAlwurd,  Spencer,  Walkem,  Mltciell,\nMacNaughton, Schofleld and Beatty.\n\u2022 Voting   against  the   abandonment\nln   committee   were   Messrs.  Loutet,\nCarson, R. MacKenzle, Rutledge,, Uphill,   Gray,   Hayward.   Twlgg   Malt-\nland,  Howe,   Jones,  Tolmie,  Pooley,\nCornett, shelly, Atkinson, Lougheed,\nand   W.   A.   MacKenzle.\nEARLIER  MOTION\nDEFEATED\nAn earlier vote bad been 21-16\nln defeat of the motion to rise\nwithout report on the same ltnea\nonly with j. R. Mitchell (Cons.\nKamloops) and J. Fltsaslmmons\n(Cons. Kaalo-Slocan) voting In support of this motion, Joined by\nMichael Manson ions. Mackenzie)\nwho was not ln the house on the\nUi\n*3Y PASSED IN ENGLAND\nblNER WOULD TAX SAVINGS\ntike Lost Child\nOF CANADA INTO CIRCULATION\nREPORT INVITES\nMUCH THOUGHT\nTO RELIEF CARE\nCommittee Makes Appeal\nin Final Unemployment Report\nVICTORIA,   AprU   12\u2014   Inviting\nthe most  serious attention of the\nlegislature on non-polltioal lines to\nthe  consideration  of the  rellrf of\nunemployment aa one of the gravest   Issues   facing   the   country   at\nthla   time   H.   D.   Twlgg,   (Cons..\nVictoria)  made an eloquent appeal\nto the house-tonight  In  Introduction   of   the   final   report   of   the\nselect committee of the legislature\nthat  has  Investigated  tha  subject.\nflerloua   thought   had   bean   given\nby  tha committee  in  Its report on\nplane   much   higher   than   party\npolitics. In an endeavor bo find aome\nsolution    which    woul d    assist    tha\ngovernment   ln   alleviating   the   distress   of   unemployment,   Mr.   Twlgg\nstated. It was admitted that British\nColumbia could not deal with unemployment relief on a magnified scale\nbut the nope was that action would\nbe  possible along (Constructive  lines\nto \"help baalc Industries ln absorbing\nback  into useful  service many  fine\ncitizens of the country.\nSITUATION OF YOUTH\nAll members of the committee, hi\nsaid, had felt keenly the position of\nthe youth today, wiillng and anxious\nto turn to some useful work, and\npumled by the frustration of natural ambitions ln that regard. Borne\nspecial measures should be designed\nto meet this condition ln the Interest of those who would be ths\ncltlrana of tomorrow.\nMr. Twlgg aald he made n0 excuse* for the fait* of the report, for\nlt had been a tremendous problem\nthat had been handed to the committee. Evidence had been heard\nfrom all clasaea of society, Including\nthe ewora testimony of government,\nofficials,   whose  evidence  could not\nMoves Sub-amendment to\nNationalize Finacial\nSystem\n(CONTINUED   ON  PAGE   TWO)\nHUSK MONEY IS\nOTTAWA, Ont., April 12.\n(CP)\u2014Conscription of personal incomes in excess of\n?20,000 or $25,000 was advocated in the house of commons\ntonight by Robert Gardiner,\nleader of the United Farmers.\nAs a prelude to the introduction of a nub-amendment to\nthe budget, he traversed a\nwide field in the realm of economics, suggesting limitation\nof the practice of usury and\ntaxation into circulation of the\nvast total of Canadian savings.\n\"As long as savings remain\nin banks, there can be no improvement in general conditions.\" said the farm bloc leader. He suggested to the ?ov-\nsrnment drastic measures concerning the taxation of wealthy persons. \"If I were minister of finance for a day, just\nlong enough to present a\nbudget to this house, I would\nsay to the rich men of this\ncountry: 'I will permit you to\nhave an income of $20,000 or\n$25,000 a year' but above that\nsum, I would take ninety-nine\nper cent.\"\nTJauery \u00ab\u25a0\u00bb, jwrflled to *\u2022 th*\ngreatest cur** of the capitalistic\n\u00bby\u00bbt\u00abm. Canadian*, in common with\nother people, had become bogge-l\nln a sea of debt. Internal end external, with Interest charge* proving almoat unbearable, NaUonaJ.l7.a-\ni tlon of th* financial aystena\u2014currency and credit\u2014w^a suggested aa\nthe remedy and Interest charge*\nlimited to th* actual ocst of the\nservice*. \"Bank*,\" h* add*d, \"consider profit*, not the best Interests of\nth* people or the country.\"\nOTTAWATbnt., April 12.\n(C,P)\u2014 Robert Gardiner, United Farmer leader, moved a\nsub-amendment to the budget\ntonight, advocating nationalization of the financial system.\nIt read as follows:\nWhereas, in Canada there\nAGREEMENT OF\nFREESTATEAND\nBRITAIN DENIED\nSearch Through Files for\nEvidence of Committment\nTJIRMN', Irish Free state, April\n12.\u2014(rp Cable)\u2014Official* of the\nIrish Free Simta** republican government tonight were said to be\na''a*elttng anxiously through fytes\nof the former nrtmlnlstra'ton for\na financial agreement tinted February, IMS, In which J. H. Thomas, B ltl9h secretary for the Dominions, yestTday taU the nous*\nthe Free State naa fommlttcd to\npay land annutles to the British\nhtmntj,\nYesterday* publication of the exchange of notea between Great Britain and the Free Sta'e revested\nPresident Eamon 1> valera had\nchallenged the British government\nto produce evidence thst the Free\nState had algned any Fuch commltt- ;\nm-*nt. a member of the former\nIrish government tonight assured\na Iteuter'a correspondent the document did exist and bore the ala;-\nnaturea of Ex-president William T.\nCrosgrave, finance minister at the\ntime tt waa drawn up. and a rep-\nrerentatlve of the British government.\nIt was understood a**freernert **aa\nbaaed on th\u00abr land set of 1923\nwhich act out how the annutlea\nwere to be collected and transferred to Great Brtt\u00abiln. It waa aald\nthe agreement also provided that\nonly \u00a33.000,000 of * total of M,000.-\n000 annually payable to the sinking fund for the redemption of\nland stock lfisUed by the British\nrrovernment and to Interest vas\nchargeable to the annutlea. Between\n\u00a3800.000 and ffloo.000 of the bfUanre\nwaa provided by thc British government and the Free State was said\nto have agreed to meet the remainder.\nWASN'T   LINiA   Jl'SaUn,\nBecauae William Field Curley Jr,\n17 months, looked \"somewhat like\"\nthe kidnapped Lindbergh baby, his\nparents had to show Los Angeles\npolice a Buffalo birth certificate\nwith the baby's footprint on lt to\nget out of custody. Here'a William\nJr.\nENGLISH FORCE\nDOING UTMOST\nTRACE SOURCE\n\"Jaf sie\" Tries to Re-establish Contacs with Negotiators\nIS PURSUING HIS\nEFFORTS SECRETLY\nContact Maintained Until\nRansom Paid in\nCemetery\nATTEMPT TO\nGET P| ROLL\nStolen   Automobile  Is  Later\nRecovered in Vancouver\n(CONTIM'ED  ON  PAGE  TWO)\n(COKTIMEI)   ON   PICE  TWO)\nHEADLESS BODY\nOF MAN FOUND\nON COAST TRACK\nWEST BURNABY, April IS\u2014The\nheadless body of Duncan Davison, 40,\nan unmarried nan residing at 1420\nMcKay avenue, waa found lying between the eaat and west bound\ntracka of the B. C. E. R- Central\nPark Interurban line at Weat Burnaby  atatlon   tonight.\nThe body waa discovered by Stephen McLean and Sam A. Young shortly after traina had passed going ln\nboth directions. It ls believed, however, that It waa an eaat bound train\nwhich decapitated the body, all\nsigns Indicating that tha head \"had\nlain on the northern rail of the\nsouthern track. The body waa comparatively free from Injury, the hesd\nalone having been crushed by tha\nwheela of tha train.\nWife of Slain Man Testifies\nat Court Case in\nWashington\nASOTIN, Wash., April 13.--Owen\nHammond, on trial accused of killing Charles Thomaa, demanded\n\"hush money\" of Thomas to atone\nfor Intimacies with Mra. Hammond,\nthe alasin man'a widow testified to\ndav.\nMrs. Thomas aald both families\nhad been aware of the relationship\nand had discussed it \"several times\"\nbefoie Thomas was killed by two\ncharges from a shotgun In Hammond's  house   February  3.\nShortly before Christmas, sh\u00ab continued, her husband made one payment of t5 on the 125 a month\ndemanded by Hammond, and a tew\nd*ys before the shooting Hammond\nrepeated his demand, threatening\nThomas with death unless he paid.\nfheriff Wayne Bewma said Hammond admitted the ehoot\/n-r, and\nthat Harnmond told them Thomas\ndrew a knife before he fired. Both\nahote took effect ln Thomas' chest.\nAfter her husband's arrest, Mrs.\nH\u00a3 mmond was quoted by authorities aa saying Thomaa had promised\nto ceare his attentions. On the day\nof the ahootln, sh\u00ab aald, .Iimmonrt\nhid In an outbuilding and waited\nfor Thomaa to visit her.\n1TMS HOI\nProsecution Reveals Circumstantial Evidence in\nMurder Case\nE\nRESIGNS SEAT\nSupplying Medical Goods  to\nIndian Given as\nCause\nFIRST READING GIVEN\nRAILWAY AMENDMENT\nACT AT OTTAWA\nOTTAWA, April 12\u2014First reading was given In the house of commons this afternoon to a bill introduced by Thomas Raid, Liberal,\nNew Weatmlnster, to amend the\nRailway act. Th*. object of tha bill\nwas designed to secure wider powers for the board of railway cora-\nmtisionem in tha making of loca.\nrates and to provide more equable\nfreight rates on the shipment; of\ngrain and flour from east to west\nin eentral and western. Canada. The\namendmenta proposed ware based\non \u00abcommendations contained in\nthe Duncan commission report of\n1020\nHONOLULU, April 12.:\u2014Bloodv\nlinks In tbe chain of circumstantial evidence, beginning with the\nfinding of Joheph Kahahawal's\nbody were trailed into the darkened home of Mrs. Granville Fort-\nesque by the prosecution today in\nthe tn-Jl of the society matron\nand three United States navy rr.en\nfor the slaying of the native.\nTwo bed sheets bearing stains\nwhich the prosecution contended\nras the blood of Kahahawal were\nunfolded before the radically mixed\nJury after a police officer had\ntestified similar linen VM missing\nfrom a bed tn the Fortescue home.\nA length of rope, bloodstains on\na bedroom floor, evidence the bathroom had been recently scrubbed,\ne> photograph of Kahahawal taken\nfrom the woman's purse, an automatic postol and n ateel jacketed\nbullet were mentioned by a succession of prosecution witnesses as\ntheir findings in the house.\nDr. Robert Faus, city and county\nphysician, testified Kahahawal apparently bled or strangled to death\nafter receiving a bullet wound\ntn tha left chest.\nOTTAWA, Ont, April 12.\u2014 <CP) \u2014\nGeorge B. Jones, farmer Conservative\nminister of Rbor and former member of the New Buns wick legislature, has resigned his seat lti.\nthe house of common* for the constituency of Royal, N. B, The resignation with an accompanying letter by Mr. Jonea was read in the\nhouse this afternoon by Mr. Speaker\nj Black.\ni'   The   action   was   taken   by   Mr. j\n[ Jones   on   learning   that  a   contravention   of   the  house   of   commons\nact    had    occurred   by    reason    of\n1 Jones   Bros,   Apoh-iqul, N.   B..   hav-\n;  Ing supplied medial goods for needy\nj Indiana   on   orders   of   tbe   Indian\nj medical   director.  The   firm   is   not\n] operated   by   Mr.   Jones   personally.\nIt  la   an  unincorporated   firm,  and\nI had   It   been  a corporate  one,  It   is\n| understood,   the   provision   of   thw\nvet  would   not  apply.  The  amount\nof goods supplied, it ls understood,\nI was ama'l,\nVANCOUVER. April 12\u2014An \u2022automobile stolen this ifternoon by three\nj bandits and \u00abaed by them in an attempt t> carry cfr th-\u00bb payroll o,' the\nKrplr,- ci*an-\"s. v*ai raeovafrd sfv-\nj eral hours alter the theft by the\npolice.\nShortly after 1 p.m.. Tuesj-ay Walter B. Robinson, Dcnman stree\ndriver of the taxlcib, was called to\nthe lane at the rear of the Strand\nhotel. West Hastlntrs street. There\nhe waa met by three jren. One of\nthpm promptly drew a revolver and\ncovered the driver. The thro\u00a9 men\ntlten entered the cab.\n\"Keep your eyes In front and do\nas you are told and y.m will not be\nMM* said  the man with  the  gun.\nRobinson was compelled to drive\nto the big tree In Stanley pirk\nwhere he was ordered to get out, i\nThe   bandits   drove   off   In   the   car.\nAt 1:50 p.m. the robbers appeared\nat the prnnl-es or the Er.plre Clean-!\nera R. P. Stevens, manager, drove\nInto the rear of the premises with j\na parcel containing $1500.\nJust as re left his car he heard ;\nsteps behind him and turned IfOC&dj\nto face a revolver In tlie hands of a\nman  who haa  followed  him.\nIns trad of obeying a command\nfron the gun:ren to stop and hand\nover the money he rushed to a doorway and threw the parcel Into the\nbuilding.\nThe bandit, Vbo was trembling,\naccording to Stevens, appeared nonplussed at the action of his lntcndej\nvictim and after hesitating a moment fled to the stolen car wh\u00b0re\nhis two companions a'-valted him\nand  was driven away.\nLONDON, April 13 (Wednesday) (AP) \u2014The Daily\nMail said today that some ol!\nthe banknotes of the $50,000\nransom which Colonel Charles\nA. Lindbergh paid in the hope\nof regaining his kidnapped baby had been found in London.\nScotland Yard was doini? its\nutmost to discover how they\nwere smuggled into England,\nenquiring at hotels, banks and\nother places where the bills\nwere likely to have been\nchanged, and has asked several persons who handled thc\nnote to explain how they were\nobtained, the newspaper said.\nIt added that the purpose\nof the recent visit of Major\nCharles Schoeffel, New Jersey\ntrooper, to England, was to\ntrace the bills. Major Schoef-\nfel's whereabouts were unknown here.\n\"JAPSre\"  TRIPS\nKfiKSTUU.l^H   CONTACT\nHOPEWELL, N. J.. April 13 \u2014Do.\nF. Condion's early activities aa aa\nIntermediary ln tiie Lindbergh kidnapping were recognized officially\ntuday aa the 70-ye;ir-old \"Jafsle'\ncut off his telephone and pursued\nsecretly his effort,*) to reestabltsn\ncontact  with   the  abductors.\nFrom police at the Lindbergh hewn-*\ncame word that \"no further negotiations nor resumed negotiations\nwtth the kidnappers have been reported to us, and nothing Is known\nof   any   anticipated   resumption.\"\nCol. undbergii Uniself was authority for the statement that \"by\nineans of newspaper advertLse.nants\nand notes received from the kld-\nnippers contact was maintained between the family and the kidnappers\nuntil final arrangement a were made\nfor the payment of the ransom by\nthe intermediary ln a Brox ia borough  of  New  York City)   cemetery:'\nThe retired educationist was not\nmentioned by name, but it was\nclear that It was his work. Including\nthe 'advertisements signed \"Jafsle\"\nwhich made possible t. e negotiations\nculminating In the futile $50,000\nransom payment.\nThose Not Naturalized\nto Be Dismissed from\nC. N. R. Railway Shops\nWINNIPEG. April 13 (CP)\u2014Tor-\nelgn-bjrn WOCfcari tn the Canadian\nNational railways shops at T*ort\nRange \u00abnd Tra-uscona today wera\nrequired to prove tuelr citlaenshlp.\nTheir naturalisation papers were Inspected by a committee headed by A.\nE. Moore, Dominion chairman of the\nCanadian legion, who said the Investigation is the result of a new\nbasis for the proposed lay-off of\nmen by which ali employees who\ncannot prove their Canadian citizenship win be dismissed regardlesa\nof   seniority.\nPREPARE TO GO\nLIMIT IN PROBE\nOF STOCK MARKET\nSASKATCHEWAN   TO   HAVE\nJU MEMBERS\nREOINA, Sask., AprU 13. \u2014 Saskatchewan will be represented by 65\nmembers of the legislature at the\nconclusion of the next general election, it was decided today When the\nredistribution bill waa given third\nreading.\nBILL   UBCLV   HAVE   PROVISIONS\nFOB COAL ANJ> OIL DUTIES\nWASHINGTON. D. C, April 12.\u2014\n(By Ken CI Vic. Canadian Press staff\nwriter).^A canvass of the United\n8ta,t\u00abM senate Indicated better than\nan even chance that the revenue\nbljl wlU emerge from the chamber\ncontaining; provisions for duties on\ncoal,   oil,   copper  and  wood-pulp.\nALLOWED    TO   CO   ON\nSUSPENDED   SENTENCE\nVANCOUVER, April 13.\u20140:nvicted\nin police court on a charge of at-\ntemptlngto obtain by false pretenses\na reward of 11000 offered ln a bombing case which occurred in January,\nDavid C, McKenzie was allowed to\ngo on suspended sentence, after\nplacing bonds of alOOO for hla future good, behavior.\nWASHINGTON. April 12\u2014 president \\\nHoover and United States banking!\ncommittee members prepared to g*>i\nthe limit tonight in detrrmilnln? j\nthe Influence of short selling or!\n,*bear-.raL'Ung\" on the stock market. \u25a0\nAfter the committee ^-ad failed j\n\u25a0fata to shake the defence of Rio |\nard Whitney, piestdent of the New \u25a0\nYork stock exchange. The president]\nsummoned Chairman Norbeck to the |\nWhite House. The latter announced\nlater th? c;mmlttee would \"go to\nthe bottom\", of the charge that bear\nraiders were knocking down stock\nprices.\nJapanese Soldiers\nKilled as Train of\nTroops Is Wrecked\nTOKYO, April 13 (Wednesday) \u2014\n(AP)\u2014Dispatches from Harbin, Manchuria, today said 11 Japanese soldiers were killed ani E0 cr, xore\nwere Injured when a troop train was\nwrecked on the Chinese Eastern railway, 17 kilometres east cf Harbin,\nlast  night.\nGet Two Years for Opposing;\nCustom Officers Executing; Duty\nVANCOUVER,    B.   C.   April    12.\u2014\nPound guilty this afternoon in\ncounty court of opposing custom*\nofficers in the execution of their\nduty, George Gorry, 39, fisherman,\nand his brother. Thomas Edward\nGorry. 24, marine engineer, were\ngiven t!v maximum term, of two\nvears\" Imprisonment by Judge Cay-\nley.\nT. E. Gorry was captain and\nGeorge Gorry was helmsman of\nthP 47-ton seiner Fisher I,nss:e,\nwhich ml overhauled In Welcome\npass on January 24 last by the government patrol boat Dcspatcher, 13\ntons,\nAlthough the Pisher Lassie's crew\nswore that sacks, which they threw\novprbonrd as, the Despatcher approached, contained only rubbish,\nthe trial Judgft commented, \"Who\ncould believe such evidence as that.\"\nThe natural assumption was, he\nsaid, that the sacks were thrown\nover   to   dC3troy   evidence.\nDRITONS   FAVOR\nSTEVENS' SUGGESTION\nLONDON, April 12 ,C P catole) \u2014\nThree BrrKn*. two of them ministers ln the for.r.er governxente and\none a veteran economist, tonight\ncajre out before the Royal Empire\nsociety strongly favoring the recent\nfauggcstlon of H. H. Stevena, Canadian minister of trade and commerce, for a British Empire currency.\nTHE WEATHER\nTRANSPORTATION    REPORT   IS\n\\ NIKEI.V   BEEOR   PROROGATION\nOTTAWA, April 12- <CP>.-\u2014Pracl-\ncally no likelihood exists, it Is understood, of the report of the transportation commission being tabled\nIn parliament this session. If by any\npossible chance a report Is completed\nbefore prorogation It would be an\nInterim   one   only,   and   very   brief.\nSTNOHII   OF\n\\aF..\\THEH   CONDITIONS\nT\u00a9:rj*ratiirw:\nMln.  Mar.\nNEISON     -..   35\n74\nVictoria        48\n(11\nVancoaiver    -  48\n84\nKamloops      44\n\u25a0\nEMevan   PotQt    -  38\nr.o\nPrino  Rupert  \u2014  63\n.\u00bb\nDaxson  \u2014   18\n48\nHeat-tle        50\nM\n70\nSan   FYancbco   , 80\nK8\n74\n83\n88\n78\nCranbrook       10\n73\nCalgary        3ii\n84\nEdmonton       -  34\n80\nSwift  c*urr*nt  ..., _  30\n88\nN\nQu'Ar.pclle    28\n58\nWinnipeg   JO\n38\nFORECAST\nNelson and  vicinity\u2014Partly dim-dy\nstationary   or  lowa-r  temperature\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDAY MORNING, ArKTL 13, 1915\nAppoint Three on Resolutions\nCommittee for Associated\nBoards Meet\nTRAIL. B. ... April U\u2014The Tr\u00bbll\nixj*M of trad* tonight appointed *\nrotmnitte* to draw up resolutions for\npresentation st the annual meeting j there were more marriages in Cftnda\nof the Associated Boards of Trade of | m 1631 than during any od* of the\nEastern  brltiah Columbia to be held yean of good times.\nin   Fernie   on   May   31   \u00bbnd   June   1\nT>ie ixmim.l'''\" will be made *-p nf T.\nW   B:.-gay, Donnei M'  >onald and Al-\ndcrm.-ji _;, L   Groutnge.\nTO PVHH  dIORWAY\n<\u2022*.<. *f...ling\nOn the romtng ret.urn of J. H.\nScnofeld M.P.P. from the sitting at\nthe lftri*fature at Victoria, the roads\nsnd bridges committee was ftsked to\nMite up th* . latter of atcurtnt additional trucks for the gravelling of\nthe Tr*U>C*BU\u00abfaU- highway woth Mr,\nflrhorirld. arrangement* will be made\nto procure a hall for an addr*** en\nBritish Bolumbla products during\nBritish Columbia product* week on\nApril IB to 23.\nThe election of a council for obtaining co-operation for publicity of\nthe southern traimprovincla: Klghway\nwa* endorsed. '\nGOLF CLUB HAS\nFAIR YEAR ITS\nREPORT SHOWS\nMembership at 132; Only\na Slight Decline in\nReceipts\nin spit, of the dapr*i\u00abd conditions j p . 1RW . Y   pniVTP A TT\n\u00abn were more mirruul ln  rsiait. I r \u00ab,>* \" '\u00bb *\u25a0    V\/V\/i' * Ivrta^ A\nWORK COMPLETED\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\n422 VERNON STREET\nPHONE 787\nA rumor that the missing Lindbergh baby and his\nwere  reported   \"V^t.ie j it^nappfrs were  aboard  a  boat  \"within  30   miles  of\nNorfolk,  Va\u201e\"  sent  searchers'  airplanes   winging  over\nth* desolate region of hidden lake* and streams known\nas  Dismal  swamp.   This  striking;  picture  shows  Lake\nHUME HOTEL\nNELSON, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHUMS\u2014R, Kennedy, J. Entwisle,\nJames Wood, H. L. Gray, J. B.\nBlack, E. W. Hutton, W. C. Orlev*.\nG. R. MacKenrie, J. H. Ha7eiwond,\nF. M. Rutter, Vancouver; A. Turner,\nkuep; Henry T*bor, Salmo; 8. O.\nClellsnd. Kelowna; R. D. Muxworthy,\nMedicine Hat; A. J. Balment, T. A.\nWallace, o. Rumsey, J. Klrkup,\nCranbrook;    K.   Eaton,    Longbeach;\nCalgary;    Hugh   L.   Skilltcorn,   Na- | T.   P.   Bowan,   Toronto.\n.\u00a3\u00a3:MZg$g2M&MM&l\ntWhere {he Gue&Is King\ncUhe Savoy\nJgBbSON'B NITWWT AND FINEST HOTEL\n'     MANY   ROOMS  WITH   PRIVATE\nBATHS OR SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.    .\n|M BAKER  BT. PHON*  19\nFinal Betterment Deferred; Tributes to Auxiliary and A. McLeod\nComp'etion of the contrac*. for.\nthe, extension of th* Nos. i and 6\n\u2666airways at a cost of $444.39 In :y32,\ntn contrr.iif.tion of the worn .started\non thfm in 1030, and installation\nof a resident groundsman on Jan*\nuary  I  laat,\nboard   of   directors   of   the   Nelson\nGolf   Aj   Country   Club,  Limited,   at\ntho *;irual meeting Tnesdav night,\ntn thc cltv council chamber,\nHFTER   Wl\nOF   PROGRAM\nIn view of general conditions, fur-\nthe.* improvement of the fatrwiy extension*, to make them playable,\nwill   be   deferred   to a  future  time.\nMembership in 193*1 stood at 13?.\nand the receipts from fe?3 declined\ncnlv M !0. which was C9*Uid* red\na srt'pfactory showing under the\nexceptions]  condition!.\nTh* directors ftv* tli* I.iid'ej,*\nauxil'ary credit for 'ts excellent\nwork, as a result of v\/hich W was\nablo to hand over 5250 to tne\nclub's funds.\nTiiev also mad* r?fe.*p;i\u00bb %\\. the\nj coming departure of A. D. McLeod,\n| who ls removing shortly to Kam-\n| loops, expressed regret at losing\n' him, and paid * tribute to his\nwork for the club.\nDIRECTORS   ELECTED\nDirectors elected for 1033 were\nJohn Fraser, A. K. Murphy, K M.\nWh I mster, R. L. McBrid * C. W.\nAppleyard, A. L. McCulloch. Paul\nLincoln, A. Lelth, J. M. Gordon, snd\nE. E. L. Dew'ney. Hugh W. Robertson   was   appointed   auditor.\nPresident J. G. Bunyan wa* ln\nthe   chair.\nOfficers for the club for 1932 will\nb* 9}   ted by the directors shortly.\nSwamplands That May Hide Kidnappers of Famous\nFlyer's Infant Son\nMORE ABOUT\nREPORT\n(CONTIKLED    I'UUM    PAGE    ONEI\nDrummond, In the heart ol \"Ihe swampland, bordeved\nby gnarled eypreas root* ar.d treacherous marshes. Us\nan area that would seem to be an Ideal setting lor a\nmystery story.\nBAVOT\u2014JO*. UKl Mrs. T. Bel-\nUngtuim, Bpokan.; J. Sutherland,\nW. M. B*U, Vancouver; Mr. and\nMM.  }.  W.  Clark,   O.  Plnkney,   J. 'Brown, Trail.\nKay. Calgary; H. J. Mitchell, Mr\nand Mrs. C. Harrison, CrBnbrook:\nMiss   E.   Botterlll,   ReveUtoJse;    T.\ncNevv Grand Hotel\nP. L.  Kal'AK, ITcp.\nWeekly or Monthly Rates single, 00 cent* and up\nHot .nd Cold Water Doubla, $1.60 and up\nPIIONE B03     .     \u2022     \u2022     P. O. BOX 1001\n1st and 3rd Tot\nMrs.  Cissios      113 148 131 393:\nJ.  Allen      163 139 156 4156\nTotal                        376 281 287 \u00bb50\nlit 2nd 3rd Tot. j\nMrs. Levasseur ...   146 155 139 439 I\nJ. B. Qray   136 191 175 502\nTotal\n281 346 311 941\n1st 2n*l 3rd Tot.\nMrs. Bell   113 147 111 371\nQ. Dill   119 156 164 519\nMORE ABOUT\n(CONTINTED    FROM    PAGE    OVE-\nR~EW QRANr>-Pet*T Michiler, Nakusp,   Mr*.   8.   Greenwood,   Salmon\nArm;   S,   Brodle,   New  York;   R.   A.\nGuughan,   Orlllla,   Ont,\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nHot and 9m*   Mtfv in eiery room\nMeant   Healed\n9n$ Baker St. .'hone P0\nQUEEN'S\u2014W. McPherson, Kaslo;\npeter Mlchaler, Nakusp; Mrs. D. C.\nMcKentng,  salmo.\nOccidental\nHotel\nTOJ Vernon el.\nrhoni 587L\nH.   WASItCK\nnfly Booms of Solid Comfort\nHeadquarters   lot   Loggers\nand  Miners.\nMADDEN\nHOTEL\nA Welcome Awaits You\n3, '    t. MAPI'tN\nCompletely   nenioilrlled\nHot and  fold   Water\nIn tli* HEART of the City\nThe Royal Cafe\nCLASSIC RESTAURANT\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Preiall\nOPEN DAY AND NIUIIT\nSpecial  Dinner, 11:30 to S p.m. Mi\nSpecial  Sunday Chicken  Dinner Me\nSpecializing In Chop Suey and Noodle*\nPHONE ft*!\nMADDEN\u2014J. O. Johnston, Ym'r;\nB. Csmphell, fialmo; T. T. Lean.\nTrail; .1 C. Hodgetl*, Michel; M.\nMcDonald.   Yalik.\nSTANDARD CAFE\nNelson's   Popular   Restaurant\nSpecial   Dinner   11   a.m.   till   8  p.m.\nibr  ' y   Dinner   5   P.m.   tilt   8   p.m.\nSODA   FOtNTAIN\nTli*  Finest  of   Good   Sundaes\n\"What ls the difference between\nan old-fashioned (.'\u25a0*\u2022 and \u25a0 modem\ngirls?\"\n\"An old-fashioned girl blunites when\n*he Is whamed  and   a  modern  girl\n1* ashamed when she blushes.\"\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2   Blocks  Cast of Toil;  Office\nP.  H. BUBII, rrop.\nHot and Cold Mat.r\nSteam Heated        Modaiat* Batea\nA Quiet Family Hotel\nexists an ample supply of nat\nural resources to provide for\nall primary needs, and\nWhereas, we have developed\nan efficient industrial machine\ncapable of producing more\nthan sufficient of the requirements of our people, and .\nWhereas, notwithstanding\nthis our external and internal\ndebts are increasing: enormously \u2014 large numbers of our\ncitizens are in dire need and\nexist through governmental\nand charitable relief and a\nlarge proportion are faced\nwith declining purchasing\npower involving a lowered\n.standard of living, and\nWhereas, ln our opinion the**\nconditions are attributable to fundamental defects In the present economic system;  and\nWhereas, it 1* therefore necessary\nihftt parliament, the agency with\nthe widest letdslitlv* powers, should\ntdke the Initiative ]n th* taf-lc of\nreconstructing national production\nand consumption with ft view to\nthe widest possible MM of commodities on a basis of human needs;\nand\nUSANCE   IS   BASH\nWhereas, ths control of finance\nla a basic element In such reconduction, affecting ai It doe* Industrial plant establishment and\ndevelopment, the distribution of\ngoods snd the price level of goods,\nand services;\nTherefore, b* Hj resolved that, in\nOi opinion or thl* house, as a first\nstep toward general economic reconstruction, our financial sj-atem\nahould be nationalleed, and provision be msde to issue Immediately\nsufficient money to bring the value\nor the dollar as speedily *.\u00ab possible\nto tint point at which the major\nportion of our debte were Incurred\nduring th* war; stabilise th* dollar\nar this point Internally and thereafter manage credit and currency\nEMM to secure and maintain a\nstable  price  level  within  Canada.\nTO CHARTER TRAIN\nFOR MUSICAL MEET\nTotal\n312 303 275\n800\n1st 2nd 3rd Tot.\n'\na*   'M  13!)\n\u00abfi\n60 101 183\nIM\nTotal\n31* 343 332\n089\nCASSIOS-IARSON*\nCIP   COMPETITION*\nLegion:\n1st\n2nd\n3rd\nTtl.\nMrs.   A.   Kraft\n117\nI.'i2\n116\n385\nVlrs.  O. Mills  ..\n1411\n143\n160\n441\nMrs   J.  Worth-\n120\n120\n144\n384\nMrs. W. Oow ....\n131\n154\n110\n393\nMr*.   J.  Chftp-\n142\n142\n404\nTot.1.   \t\n6S8\n680\n602\n2009\nOellnas':\n1st\n2nd\n3rd\nTtl.\nMrs.  T.  E.  Le-\n17\u00ab\n130\n198\n471\nMrs. T. want*\n135\n148\n133\n416\nMrs.   C.   Larson\n113\n127\n142\n332\nM!s* P. Oellns*\n122\n104\n166\n392\nMrs. A. Gcllnas\n111\n164\n136\n411\nTotals    \t\n667\n682\n733\n2072\nHltfh  Individual   score,  Mrs.\nr, at\nLevRsseur, 176.\nHigh aggregat. score,  Mrs. T. E.\nlevasseur, 471.\nLEGION\nLADIES'  BOWLING\nMrs. A. Kraft\nvs. Mrs. H. Leslie:\nPlaa'ers:\n1st\n2nd\n;lrrl\nTtl.\nMrs. J. Frost ....\n06\n113\n86\n2(15\nUn. R. Riley ....\n137\n131\n159\n447\nMrs. A. Kraft ..\n171\n119\n149\n439\n424\n363\n390\n1177\nPlayers:\n1st\n2nd\n3rd\nTtl.\nMrs. J. Chap\nman   \t\n100\n100\n100\n300\nMrs. J. Hooker\n140\n112\n128\n378\nMrs. H. Leslie ..\n1S2\n141\n109\n402\nTotals\t\n392\na.-,:\n333\n1080\nHigh Individual score, Mrs. Krslt\n171.\nHigh  aggregate  score,   Mrs.\nUley\n447.\nMrs.    Chapman    a'S\nMrs.   Woflh-\nIngton;\nPlayers'.\n1st\n2nd\n3rd\nTU\nMrs. T. Player\n112\n06\n131\nant\nMrs. A. Oliver .\n123\n149\n91\n30!\nMrs. J. Chap-\n113\n10\u00bb\n102\n32!\nTotsl   \t\n1025\nPlayers:\n1st\n2nd\n3rd\nTtl\nMiss I. Leslie ...\n119\n131\n140\nnot\nMrs.   R.   Heddle\n110\n160\n130\n40!\nMrs. .1. Worth-\nrn\n126\n104\n34!\nTotal   \t\n1144\nSPELLING BE\nAid Asked for Kiddies' Train\nto Music Festival by\nTrail Committee\nTRAIL, B. C, April 12\u2014This wcelc'a\nRotary program took the form, of an\nold fashioned speiUnj bte which was\nsponsored by A. C. Caldicott who act-\nej at teacher. Rev. Bryce Wallace\nwaa the Judge, feams were captained\nby Mayor Brun6 Lerose and L. F.\nTyson.\nASKS   l-.NANTIAL AID\nB. A. Stlmmel, president of the\nTrail committee of the Kootenny Musical festival, addressed the meeting\nand af-kP-d for financial support toward a special train to take the competing children of Trail, Rossland\nand Frultvale to Nelson on Friday,\nMay 6. Ho pointed out that there\nwould be about 375 children competing In tho musical affair.\nAllan McLeod, J. 8. Carter of Nelson and Archie Mulr of Vancouver\nwere guests at the mcetlna*.\nMORE ABOUT\nLOSE FIGHT\n(CON'TIMEI)    FROM    PAGE    ONE)\nbe oonteswM or Impuirned. The committee hia * numiber of concrete\n\u2022 aigj-eslloiis to make, contained In\nthe recommendation* of the report,\nand wu sincere ln bringing forward\nthese proposals.\nDl TY  OV   BOTH   BIDES\nIt wa* the plsln duty of members\nof both sld\u00ab\u00bb of t..e house to con-\n\u2022ttM the whfOle question without\npolitical bias, with the honest aim\n.-if finding some solution of the\nproblem.\nDi^ciisslng the actual recommendations, Mr. Twiijg *ald that th* committee wa* very much of the view\nthat some further form of assistance\nwtfuld have to be devised for t-e\nmunicipalities-, *t\u00bbrho could not carry\nthe burden of their shar* of unemployment relief much imger. There\nwa* also the question of irflnslen\"..^,\nBritish Columbia having received\nover 11,000 of these In.the last 12\nmonth* *nd the care of whom waa\nat least a Dominion and lnter-pro-\nvlncial  matter.\nFurther effort should be made to\ncar* for wemen misplaced through\npresent depression In their normal\nworking occupation* and for whom\nlittle had been done In th* past.\nMr. Twlgg said the committee endorsed heartily the representations\nof the active .milltla units as to thc\ncare of their own unemployed. The^\nmen had fought and won fame lor\nCanada overseas ln t. e great war and\nwould be best taken care of now\nthrough their own regimental units.\nRESEARCH IN\nINIUSTBIAL   LINER     \u2022\nAlong the line of Industrial research, there was ths opportunity\nthat British Columbia Industry could\nbe seriously studied and made to\nyield some better solution thah at\npresent for the absorption of those\nwithout work. If some Industries\ncould be put back #n an export basis\nthe way would be opsned to a great\nadvantage along tlrls line, he said.\nIn presenting the report. Mr.\nTwlgg concluded, he had endeavored\nENTRY LIST\n]    MORE ABOUT\nBROWN SCORED\n(CONTINL'ED    HOM    PAGE    ONE)\nAUXILIARY WILL\nMAINTAIN WARD\nIN THE HOSPITAI\nL. D. CAFE\nThe Finest tn the City\nOPEN   AM,   IIOtRS\nFIKI   FOOl>-PHOM?T   SERVICE\nSODA   FOUNTAIN\nROOMS   TO   KENT\nUgh individual    score,    Mrs.   R.\nHedclle, Ut,\nHlffh Rttgregftt*    ncore,    .Mrs.    R,\nHeridle, 405.\ni eoion ALU\";*\nJ. Worthington vs. R. U   Malyr:\nPlayers: 1st   2nd   3rd    Ttl.\nH.   Barrett      120    138    144     430\nC. J. Currier .... 157    197    182     538\nJ.   Worihlngton   190   103\nTotal*      457 661\nPlayers:             1st and\n\u25a0T.   Anderson   .... '28 180\nE,   Jarrett    154 ir\u00bb2\nR.   H. Maber  .... 189 160\nResponsibility for maintaining the\nward In the hospital originally fur-\natattttl by the former Wox.-ena Hospital Aid sortc:y was formally uc-\ncepted by the Kootenay Lake General Hospital Women's auxiliary at\nlt* monthly  meeting,  Friday.\nIt was reported that the. Women's    auxiliary    of    St.    Saviour's\nsecond   division.\nAs soon as th* bill was called ln\ncommittee, William Dick (Cons. Vancouver) moved tho committee rltw t0 keep away from the discordant\nwithout report. T. D. Twlgg (Cona. note, and to pave the way for an\nVictoria., chief supporter cf the Impartial and fair consideration of\nchiropractors' bill kft year protest- ' th* subject as the most vital probed thla course and called for the lem affecting the fortune* of British\nfirst division which prolonged the -olumbla in these days.\nlife of tho bill.\nTom Uphill (Leb. pernle) moved\nto Insert a general clause which\nwould hav* allowed n-H draggles*\nhea-ler to practice by virtue of th*\nbill. This was defeated by a standing vote of 20-9 and the action\npassed. Tlie next section of tha\nbill carried 17-14 on another show\nof hands. James H. Beatty {Con*.\nVictoria) moved to amend, the wording of \u25a0 the following section, th* oeedlng* of th* committee ar* un-\nproposed change being defeated 20- warranted; elti**r by fact* or by any\n10 oir a show of hands and the explanation ma.ie by him; and that\nsection passing. The bill had been his criticism that 'if anyone told\nvirtually completed tn commtttt** the truth they would b* crucified'\nwhen A. M. Manson (Lib. O.ntneca) ! 1* scandalous and untrue, and so\nmoved thnt the committee rise far as It especially refers to civil\nwithout report. Mr. Twlgg called for servant* is unjustifiable and ex-\na division which showed 20-18 in -emcly regrettable in that these\nsupport of the Manson motion. cMclatt are unable to offer any da-\nThis wa* the official demise of the.*\"\"*- Furthermore, your committee\nL.it ' is of the opinion that  the  remarks\nmad* by Mr. Brown are Inexcusable,\nIn that t|.ey were made on the eve\nof your o;nvr.lt tee's report and\nwltnout any knowledge of It* contents. Your comxitiea also n.,.33\nlynvi' 4m rrn 4 fr t::ilt Mr- Brown refused to give I\nUKlVr- AI I KAIL single Instance of \"shnmeless evasion,\" distortion of the truth' or\nany specific evidence to substantiate\nhis charges.\"\nThe report cite* that '^nftny other\ncharges equally exravagant and baseless  were   lnve.3tlg.ttei\"  and   cites  a\nPYTHIAN SISTERS\nHAVE SUCCESSFUL\nTRAIL, B. C April 12.\u2014The Pythian Revere tonight staged a successful bridge and whist drive in the\nK. P. hall. Bridge winners were\nMario Matthew and Harry W.-.lte,\nWood,\nfirst,   i.ind   Mr.  snd   Mrs.\nconeolatkn.\nWinners   at   whist   were   Mrs,   E.\nKane and J. Olbson, first, and Mrs,\nW.  Howard  and  J. Harrod,  consolation.\nMrs. John Gibson acted as MSetad\nchurch  had donated knitted articles, c.vrner  of refreshments,  while Mrs.\nItt   a   total   value   of   \u00bb15   for   thejo.  Boait was convener of cntontatn-\ncablnet   of   baby   clothing   at    the;ment.\nhospital. yHleH have been made from\nt..e cabimt to  the *n*j3unt of 417.\nTUESDAY HOTTEST\nDAY THIS SPRING\nThe   mercury   climbed   to   74   de-\ntreee to e.tUblhii a new hieh mvK\nMEXICO WINNING\nTABLE AT TRAIL\nMILITARY WHIST\nTRAIL, B. C, April 12.-Mexlco\nwas the winning tabic at the thlW\nfor tin, during the 24-hour period of a eerie* of mllltnrv whlat drives\nended at 5 o'clock Tueeday after- a'pooewed by the Trail Elk* ln thc\nnoon, at KltVB, The low trmpen-1 Elks' hall Tuesday evening. Follow-\nture for the saxe period was 35. Ing the whist drive refreshments\ndegrees. were tervetl.\nBempsey Beaten by Klngflsh\nTotals      481    472    483    1438\nHigh individual  score,  J, Wortli-\nington,   198.\nHlRh   aggregate   score,   J.   W0rfh-\nIngton,  653.\nJ. Wortlilngton vs. F. Hartwlg:\nBlayers: 1st   Snd   3rd    Ttl.\nBarrett      121    132    155     408\nCurrier      186   150   146     471\n145    108     518\nTRAIL, B. C HOTELS\nTRAIL. B. C.. April 12\u2014At a mcet-\nof the Trail commute of tlie \"Kootenay Musical festival It was reported\nthat the drive for funds had been\nsuccessful and that a special train,\ntj convey competitors to Nelsc.1  on ] Worthiogtoa   ..- 173\nMey   fl,  would   be  char.ered.  \u201e i\t\n 1 Totals      400\nA depression 1* a low Bpot that collect* water.   The    witer   sometimes i Chapman     Ijj\ncomes from the clouds a\"..] sometimes   Llndermere    192\nfrom  stocks.\u2014Dunbari  Weekly. HartwlJ    a, 158\nf|OUGLA\n** HOTEL\nS\nRooms and Bath\ng. L. anil A. CROI.TAOK,\nProps.\n\u2022team  Healed            Hot and Coin\nThroaehout                  Hater\nBoa t35\u00ab                     -Mil\n261\nTRAIL, B. C.\nArlington\nCentrally\nLocated\nTRAIL, B. C.\n4   T. LtviawLE. Prop.\nUglypimples\nNtl^\u2122'swa\u00abTiir)*^eipriiturtcI\u00abaryoor\nttmpkiuon and paint rNrm^atnr'rarra^\nsallow rheektr.   Truly trnurlerfnl remits\n\u2014KATuD^*\\aM*Waf*-\"to renralate mntl\ntiiinsthaersaw-itiweiiiiTi \u2014irrr- TH\u00bbrt\n\u25a0rifrhthe^n-fijrTMnoB. TriH*fast\u00abd\nThe Ml-y^getabULaxative\nTONIGHT\nTotals      4B9    424   415    1338.\nHigh Individual  score,  J. Worth- I\nIngton,  198.\nHigh  aggregate   score,   J.  Worth\n'lngton,   516.\nMaU the uh tonight\nThs mother-of-pearl unlih now\ngiven t5 fountain pens and various\nother article* is made frjm ahinycrys-\ntal* ln the epidermis of fish.\nMotor vehicle* In t' < United States\nhave increased 40 per cent in the\npast five yeara while road building\nhas increased 13 per cent.\nA B..-U.1. menu fact\u2014ere, noting\nthat principle* of bird flight have\nbeen applied to airplane design, plans\nto make slow-motion pictures of a\ntint:, hoping to \u00abain new ideas for\nautomobile engines.\nfew. The;\u00ab Included statements ma-do\nin Uie Ottawa house by Tom-iieid,\nM. P., (for New Westminster) and\nA, W. Nelll, M. P. (for Albemi) as\nwell as other allegations such as\nradios being supplied at the public\nexpense to relief camps; t.~e buying*\nof pianos and similar charge* which\nwere exploded during the course of\nthe   committee's   inquiry.\nOne charge wa* that lumber had\nbeen pyrc-hased at a cost of 874 per\nthousand feet. It wa* proved that In\norder to make tables for use In one\nof thc camps $2.24 wa* spent for\nsuch lumber.\nDID .NOT RENT\nMACHINERY\nAnother charge wa* that a nephew\nof Hon. W. A. McKenzie i*,ad rented\nmachinery to the governjrxmt for\nunemployed relief work. It was\nfound th*t the man ln question was\nnot related to tlie minister and\nfurther that he had not rented any\nmachinery  to the  government.\nIL wa* found that tha cost of the\nAllco rented camp amounted to only\n6 cent* a day per mm ana that this\nincluded blanket*, showers, cooking\nUteoeUa and all t.ve equipment of a\nurst class camp.\nAnother charge that was dealt with\nwa* one that a firm had quoted on\n10,000 bUnket* that such a number\nhad later been purchased from an-\nithcr source at higher prices, inves-\n180 Entries Received to Date;\nOver 1000 Competitors\nExpected\nrntrlee to the Kootensy Musical\nFestival to be held here in May\nare coming In splendidly, teporti\nthe festival secretary, Mrs. Walter\nKettlewell. Up to C-.tt 1B0 entries\nhave been recleved, and the entry\nEat 1* open until April 21. Comparing the-entry figure* of previous festivals, this year's totsla will\nprobably show an increase. The first\nfestival, held in Nelson In 1930,\nbrought in 80 entrants, and the\nsecond, held in Trail the following\nyear, 206. An Increase this year\nmeans that over 1000 competitor*\nwill take part, many of them from\noutside pont**.\nMOVEMENT  (tROWfl\nThe increasing numbers of entries, continues the report, is an\nindie tlon of the growing interest\nin the festival movement throughout\nthe country. Tills ts confirmed by\nreport* from otheT festivals. Cranbrook shows an Increase of nearly\n50 per cent over last year's entries, . in prees report*, and Kamloops report* 03 entr.es with 400\ncompetitors   taking   part,\nThe festival - nmlttee Is making\nevery endeavor to so arrange the\nsession* as to suit tho convenience\nof th* contestants and to give tho\npublic the opportunity of hearing\nthe tests, and also \"the skilled and\nkindly adjudication of Dr. Colling-\nwood and Mrs, Jesn Campbell\" in\nthe musical and elocution classes,\nrespectively.\nThe cop--ilttee states that W the\nwholehearted support of the people\nof Nelson ls given for the festival,\nthey will not only assure th* Hnan-\nclrl success, but by attendance at\nthe various sessions, will give en-\nc ungement to tho*e taking part\na*- spur them to greater effort* in\nthe future.\nTOKIO, Japan, April 12.\u2014 (CP)\u2014\nJapanese bus.ness interests are be-\nj..a.ilug tj rcailiie that the Shanghai\ntrouble, regardless of the consequence* politically, Is almost certain to\ncost them meny yeara of reduced\ntrade with China. The bombardment of Shanghai Intensified the\nboycott 6f Japanese goods throughout the spheres cf c. lnese commercial influence not only in the Far\nEast but el-rewhere, and millions of\ndollars In business and prestige are\nbeing laet every week.\nJapanese spinning mil's, which a\nshort while ago seemed to have\nbright prospects tn China, have ,.11\nbeen suspended and probably will\nnot be rc-opensd for rr.iny month*.\nAccording to a large* trading concern,\nabout 700,000 bales of American\ncotton and 60,000 bales of Indian\ncotton were to be landed ln Shanghai for these Japanese mills, but\nunder present condition* unloading\nthe cargoes is impossible. TtM Japanese mills would have been fcrced\nto close down for lack of raw materials if for no 'other reason.\nNippon Yusen Kalsha, Japan'*\npremier shipping company, decided\nsome time pg0 not to acoept the\ntransportation of stay carco destined\nto Shanghai. Shlp.wnts of good*\nfrom Japan and Tslngtao for China\n\\iave dropped almost tg the vanishing  point.\nBoth the Nippon Yusen Kalsha\nand the Osaka Sooehen Kalsha\nmaintaining regular services between\nKobe, Yokahama, Nagasaki and\nShanghai are insuring, their ships on\nthe base of wartime Insurance rates.\nAll Japanese transportation companies have decided to reject freight for\nshipment to stations along the\nChinese eastern railway in view ot\nthe military opcratons in the Harbin area.\nTho antl-Japanese movement In\nChina ha* severely Mt the Japanese\nsugar export business. Most of the\nJapanese refined sugar is exported\ntc Shanghai in normal times, but\nthe movement ha* almost ceased.\nHOSPITAL OIMLRATION\nREMOVES   GLOOM\nA new and successful operation,\nfor the removal of gloom wa* recently performed at the Red crose\nChildren's hospital, Calgary. No anaesthetic was used. The patient, in\na sun-treatment loincloth, was placed in a circle of his fellows and received on his breast* the ink-stomped outline of a wolf cub's head\u2014the\nemblem o:' the Junior Boy Scouts.\nwhich he had Ju*t Joined. There\n, \u201e r.\u201e\u201e, , . was nothing io which to pin the\nligation disclosed  that 7700 pairs of \u201e hftnce tM ..tattooing..   6oout\nbunkers had been purcha-^ed llwm \u25a0 m are now ad]uilct8 oI moat ot\nthe West Coast Woo.en Mills V* -| chlWren., ho6pitai5, for the val-\nODuver. t.*t they Wei;e madejn Bilt- \u25a0\u25a0.coining atmos-\nlsh Columbia from British ColunbU\nwool, and that the cost was below\nth* figure quoted ln th\u00a9 complaint,\nAnother order for 450 pairs. Thla\nwti* a rush order, plaoed in Victoria and the price w.i* below that\nupon which complaint wa* based.\nThe   co.r.mlttee   finds  that  camps\nwero economically operated.\nA statement Just by the Dominion Live S.ock Branch with respe'et\nto testing and producLlon of dairy\ncows ls of apecial interest at this\ntime, it shows that there ls ln the\nwhole of Canada a total of 63,3;ifi\ncuws out of an aggregate of 3,683,\nor only 1.72 per oent, now under\nofficial teet. Cow testing in Ontario, Saskatchewan, and British\nColumbia Is new carried out under\nthe supervision of the provincial\nDepartments of Agriculture, wMle ln\nthe other sin provinces the felcrnl\nDepartment ls earring out tho work\nThere are at the present time a\ntotal oi 447 association* In the several provinces engaged in earring\nout this form of activity.\nphere.\"\nTORONTO'S MAYOR ON SCOUTING\n\u25a0 \"We would hay* fewer misfit* In\nthe world today lf all boys had tho\nadvantage of Scout life,\" declared\nMayor W. J. Stewart of Toronto recently, \"The boy who ha* been a\nScout become* a man with definite,\ndeveloped capabilities who doe* not\nwalk the streets looking for pick and\nshovel or routine office work.\" Th\u00a9\nmayor'* son Billy is a Scout.\nTORONTO SCOLTS BOOST\nONTARIO APPLES\nThat the Boy Scouts of Toronto\ncould do more in one day than the\nprovincial department of agriculture\ncould do in a month, to make Toronto \"Ontario apples conspicuous\" wa*\naffirmed by Hon. Thomas L. Kennedy,\nprovincial Minister of agriculture. He\nreferred to * Scout Apple Drive held\nApril 1 Incidental to a district Scout\nfinancial   campaign.\nEX-CHAMP'S   COMEBACK   RUDELY   HALTED\nBY  HARD-HITTING   YOUNG  CHICAGO  HEAVY\nYou might have known It was coming, for \"they never oome back\"\u2014\nvery far. Jack Dempsey, the Old Man Mauler with yeung ideas, found\nKing LevtiiBky's youth, punch and stam.na too much for an old guy to\nhandle. Levlnsky won an unofficial decision from the ex-champion in\ntheir four-round exhibition in Chicago before more than 23,000 pild admissions, a record indoor fight attendance. Th.s plctur* shows Levlnsky,\nleft, Jolting Dempsey with a left to the head. The third man is Referee\nEd   Furdy.\nPalpitation of the Heart\nCould Hardly Get Around\nMri. Charlei Storms, R.R. 8, Pitt0D) Ont,\nJTlU*;\u2014 _,*_* troubled with palpitation of the\nheart; couldn t sleep, day or night, and was so\nweak I oould hardly get around.\nA\/U* Uking Milbura'i Heart and Norm. Rlla\nI wa* greatly relieved of these attacks.\nMy mother also has' great faith in them and\nfinds no other medicine can help her so much (or\nheart trouble.\nI can assure you that Milhum'i Heart sad\nNerve Pills are a wonderful builder.\"\nSoM at all <Jn\u00ab and tenaial >tom, oi aisiled ilit.ot oa raoaipt ol pcit. by Th, T. alilbauai\nvs., Ltd., loToato, UuL. .\nMllBURHfc\n1    HEAR!\n1 Nervf piltf'\nPrice 50c a box\n \u2014\n\t\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\n443\nCOO\nIITE KELSOV DAfLT KEITH, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 13, 1933\t\nfAUE   THI.'M\nNCH.UYS\nTIME DECISION\nOVER A WHILE\nFive Clubs and One Business man write Urging Advanced Time\nPROPOSAL IS TO\nHOLD PLEBISCITE\n.Provincial List Hight Be\nUsed; Laid on Table\nfor Fortnight\nReeponse of the city council Monday night to representation* from\nalx aource* favoring establishment\nof daylight saving or advanced time\nthl* aea*on, along the earn* line* as\nlast, waa to lay th* matter on the\ntable for a fortnight, while Investigating public opinion.\nSPORT   CLUBS   WRITE\nLetter* from the directorate of\nthe Nelaon Golf and Country club,\nthe executive of the Nelaon Amateur\nAthletic aeeociatlon, were received by\nthe city, while Mayor J. P. Morgan\nannounced that he had personally\nreceived letters from the football\nand ba*aball organizations. It waa\n\u2022understood that these various organization* named favored having\nadvanced time for recreational reason*.\nA letter from P. C. Whitehouse.\nmanager of the Canadian Bank of\nCommerce here, urged daylight saving on business grounds, pointing\nout that th* cltlea of New York,\nMontreal and Toronto all went on\nadvanced time every spring, these\ncltlea having the three major market* with wuleh business waa done.\nIt waa difficult to execute orders\nreceived here In business hours the\nafternoon on tho** markets with\nthe normal three-hour time spread,\nwhile a four-hour spread, the writer\nsaid, made It evening when the\norder*  reached   the  east.\nThe concensus of opinion of the\nmembers of the council appeared to\nbe that lf the public desired a\nplebiscite on advancing the time, lt\nwa* up to the council to have such\na plebiscite held.\nCONSULT C. P. B.\nMayor Morgan agreed with thla\nview, but waa Inclined to regard the\nrepresentations as yet received not\nsufficiently representative. He favored interviewing J. Ivan MacKay,\nC. P. B. division superintendent, as\nto the view of the company and\nIt*  employees.\nAlderman J. B. Gray, while not\nobjecting to Inquiry in that quarter,\nsaid he could not see Why the rest\nof the community ahould have to\ndefer to the C. P. R,, and suggested\nthat the C. P. R. could more reasonably  defer to  the  community.\nIn answer to this, the mayor held\nthat some regard must be paid to\n\"Nelson'a largest payroll.\"\nIt was remarked that the business\nmen had not yet been heard from,\nand that the .board of trade had\nnot asked for a plebiscite. In answer\nto this lt waa urged that the Oolf\nclub consisted largely of business\nmen.\nA   8TRICTER   COCK\nThat any plebiscite held must be\nstrictly safeguarded, to see that voting was confined to those entitled\nto vote, and waa not practically\nopen, a* was the case last year, was\nagreed by. all members of the council  taking  any  part  In  the  debate.\nThe civic voters list, it was suggested, would restrict the vote too\nmuch, as a large number of women\nwho wera bone fide residents were\nnot on It. A suggestion that the provincial voters list, Which embraces\npractically all residents of voting age\nwho are, British, subjects, seemed to\nfind favor.\nIt waa pointed out by City Clerk\nW. E. Wasaon that the council would\nstill have ample time to' deal with\nt?ie matter If it deferred action until\nthe next regular session, thus giving\nitself time to make any inquiries\nthat lt desired, the vote last year\nhaving  been  held  on  May   11.\nThla tip wa* accepted, and the\nquestion was laid on the tabic for a\nfortnight.\nTest New Type-'Rolling''Custom\na               . ?   .^afjajj\n[\u00a3l*\n*\n\\.t\\\\W    ji\n1\n^^*****^\n9^r^d \\ JW                              HflHM\nmm    -\"**\u2022\nLaM      V\n1   -^aSWaW\ni   \u25a0**: *\u2122s\n*^:t \u2022\u25a0**. JHnfl\n11           bP-^'^'\u2022\u25a0-\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\"--\u2022 \u2022\n- '-_\u25a0' ~-\nL\"**\u2014.'\n^-Nftaa*aaaaaaaaV                     B^-\nSKIMS    OVER   SURFACE   OF   WATER\nM.  Eckerleln  (front)   la testing the  new  \"rolling\" j on these three barrels on the sides, to skim over the\nboat  which  he  has  invented   at  Paris,   France.    The     water  at  a  140-kllometers-an-hour clip.  Water resist-\nboat   has   a  9   h.p.   motor   working   a   propeller   that I  ance  la  minimized   by   the  new  arrangement.\nchurns the air and  allows the  boat,  which  ls raised |\nAID THE BOYS\nWHO STUMBLE\nROTARY TOPIC\nSuperintendent   Brankin\nof Industrial Schools\non \"His Boys\"\nKOKANEE CAMP\nREQUIRES ONLY'\nONE MORE TRIP\nSuch good work was done by the\ngroup of Rotarians, Boy Scouts, and\nwell-wisher* that went to Kotanee\nCamp Saturday t0 clean out the\nchannel of kokanee creek so that\nlt wiu not be a menace to the\ncamp at high water, that one more\ntrip will suffice to put the creek In\ngood order, H. H. Hlnltt and W. B.\nB.umford reported to the Rotary club\nMonday.\nIf next Saturday is a fine day,\nthe next foray will be made.\nThe discovery that thi earth seems\nto act aa a great mannei was made In\nthe seventeenth century\nINDIGFTION; WEAK\nLondon, Ont.\u2014\n\"I had Indigestion\nand my stomach\ntut weak and so\nlore I could not\n!% oear to touch lt.\n7\\ I got where I did\n\u25a0v, n o t have any\n| health at all . .\n| was not able to\nJ follow my usual\n: line of work,\" said\nFrancis Henry Cook of 471 Elizabeth\nSt. \"I saw where Dr. Plerca's Golden\nMedical Discovery was recommended\nlor stomach trouble so I decided to\ntry lt and it relieved me of my Indigestion and weak stomach, and\nbuilt me up ln health. I can highly\nrecommend the 'Golden Medical Discovery' to anyone who suffers a* I\ndid.\"\nFluid, or tablet*. All druggists.\nSend 10c to Dr. Pierce's Laboratory\nIn Bridgeburg, ont., for a (rial pkg.\nof tablets.\n\"Help the boys who stumble,\" Ro\ntartan David Brankin, superintendent\nof the boys' industrial achool at\nCoqultlam, urged t;.e members of\nthe Nelson Rotary club Monday, tn\na notable address on dealing with\nboys.\nSince 1898, when he first made\nup his mind to \"help the little fellow who was often misunderstood\nby hla friends and often misrepresented by those who didn't like\nhim,\" Mr. Brankin said, he had met\na great many boys who were ln\ntrouble, but had met only a few\nwho would be classed as \"good\"\nboy*. Tae average age of Inmates of\npenitentiaries and Jails in the United States wa* now 23 years, and\nthe Canadian average wa* only\nslightly higher, he said, the fact\nthat ao many youths were In tho\ncustody of tlie law showing t hat\nsomething wa* wrong somewhere.\nMr. Brankin said his chief aim\nhad been to find, not that a boy\nhad done wrong\u2014anybody could find\nthat out\u2014but why he had done\nwrong. There were many factors In\nthe case, and until people got down\nto dealing with causes and for tho\nmoment forgetting the effects, the*\nwould do lot* of work without much\nresult.\nBOY   HAS   ARGUMENT |\nThe speaker Illustrated his point*\nabout the boy's point of view, by\ngiving numerous examples. He said\nln his opinion the boy usually h.id\nan argument, and H was usually\nworth giving attention to. Boys did\nnot see eye to eye with adult*. The\nIdea of most people VM to punish\nthe culprit, thinking that was the\nend of the matter, where** lt was\nmore often only the beginning of a\nwhole series of troubles. He said he\nwa* often criticised for dealing wtth\nboys individually, but his reason for\nthis was that, of a crowd of ooys\nparticipating tn some wrong-doing,\nno two had the same reason for lt.\nand until the reason was ascertained,\njustice and the rights of the boy\ncould   not  be   properly  served.\nphysical defects\nSome boys, Mr. Brankin said, followed courses that almost always\ntended to their being given into\ncustodial care, and were persistently\nwrong-doers. But ln 90 per cent of\nall such caje* he had had, the boys\nsuffered from some physical or\nmental defect, mostly - unsuspected\nby the parents. He mentioned diseased tonsils, adenoids, defective\nvision as all tending to tpake a boy\nseem dull In .school, seem inattentive to the- te.icher, become backward tn schooling, fear punishment\nfor his backwardness, and begin\nplaying hookey. He also mentioned\nthings that undermined the heal'.h\nof some boys, and told how good\nhealth  might be  secured.\nMr. Brankin said one of his pleasures tn Ufa-; was to look up \"his\nboys\" in dlffernt parts of the province, on his' trips, and learn how\nwell they were doing. Ho said he\nwas happy to learn that there were\nno bad reports tn Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. McDermid\nAre Given a Wedding\nReception at Sandon\nSANDON, B. C-, April 12.\u2014One of\nthe prettiest and Jolllest wedd.ng receptions wa* held on Monday evening at the SUvc.-smlth mine when\nMr. and Mrs. A. K. Olsen entertained about 45 of their friends in\nhonor of their daughter and son-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall McDer-\nrid, who were married In Nelson on\nC od Friday morning. The large\ndinl-it room rhleh hr, been prettily, decorated with pink and green\nstreamers and evergreens by friends\nof tlie young couple and the host\nand hostess was in use for the\nevening. M . and Mrs. McDermid\nwho stood under a pink and white\nw ding bell received the guest* as\nthey entered the dining room and\nwere duly congratulated. Mrs. Mc-\nD '\u2022mid receive In her Wfd 'in*\ndress of white silk georgette and\nBilk lace mode In long lines with\ncoatee effect and looked charming.\nC were   ]n    -lay   untd   9:30   p.\nm., when a c.t-down supper was\nserved, Mrs, James '\"reen gave a\ncharming toast to th* bride and Mr.\nNell Trttrie a toast to the groom,\nwhich were suitably replied to by\nthe groom. After supper the floor\nwa* cleared and dancing enjoyed by\neverybody till 4:30 a. m.. lunch was\nserved at 1 o'clock and again at\n4:30 by Mrs. Olsen who was ably\nassk'. :d by her friend'*.\nMr. and }*n. McDermid received\na large number of >autlful and use-\nf * gifts and will be at home to\ntheir many friends at Three Forks\nwhore they will reside.\nMr. and Mrs. :i, THtrie held a\njolly home dar.co on Wee' esday in\nhonor or their daughter Miss Jean.\nJust the younger i . were Invited\nand refreshments were served at\nmidnight by Mis. Tatlrie assisted\nby her sister Mrs. J. Green,\nMRS. V. NT PALMER\nENTERTAINS AT\nBRIDGE\nYAHK, B. C. April 12 \u2014 Howard\nPerkins of Kttlo la at present, visiting at the home of his brothf.r-ln-\n]aw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. A. Lyth-\ngoe.\nThe regular men*' '\u25a0* meeting of\nthe Anglican church women's auxiliary was held alt the home of Miss\nHelen McGrath on Thursday of lust\nweek.\nMr.s Carl Anderson and children.\nwho have been visiting Mrs. Anderson's parents m Nelson returned home\nlast week.\nHoward Parker spent the week-end\nln   Cranbrook.\nMrs. V. N. Palmer was hostess at\nfive tables of bridge on Friday after-'\nnoon In honor of her mother Mrs.\nW. D- Nlcol of Vancouver. High score\nwas held by Mrs. Bert Rcvan-'. A.\nvery dainty lunch was served ut tea\ntime.\nTRAIL RANGERS ENTERTAIN\nAT APR*1- IOOL PARTY\nNAKUSP. B. C, April 12\u2014 The\nTrail Ranger croup en'r-rtalned the\nmembers of the explorers to a Jolly\nApril Fool party 1*3 the Leary hall\nrecently, after many amusing games\nrefreshment* were served by the entertaining group.\nThe snowfall of the past winter cott\nthe city of Toronto 925,000.\nSPECIAL on WOOD\nTo make room for alterations we are putting on a\nspecial on WOOD, for the next two weeks. *\n2 ricks of 12\" Fir and Tamarac  S6-00\n2 ricks of 16\" Fir and Tamarac  S6.75\n1 cord, 2 ft. Fir and Tamarac  f^.OO\n1 cord, 4 ft. Fir and Tamarac  f 7.00\nThis is your chance to stock up with the best wood\nfor Spring burning, at a saving.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE 31\nE\nShadow Will Fall on August.\n\u20221; to Last 100\nSeconds\nMONTREAL, Que.. April 12.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014Scientific circles here are going\nahead with preparation* for the\napproaching eclipse of the sun. On\nAugust 31 a dark shadow 100 miles\nwlda will fall over tho peaceful\nQuebec oourftryslde, touching Montreal briefly. Emlnlent scientists\nfrom the United States and England will Join Canadian physlcUta\nhere to study the phenomenon.\nTelescopes and cameras will be\npol.-erl on the roof of McGlll university physics building to catch the\nblack disc sliding in front of the\nsun. At Plerrevllle and Magog other\nparties of scientist* will lie in wait\nfor the eclipse in the center line\nof the black path. Like a dark\nghost, the shadow will creep over\nthe country at a speed of half a\nmile a second. The eclipse will last\nabout 100 second*.\nIt will be the enly chance (et\npresent day Quebec citizens to aee\na total eclipse. In fact it will be\nAugust 21. 3007, before another total eclipse of any scientific Importance Is observed on this continent.\nThe eclipse this year will eweep\ndown from the Arctic regions, cutting a narrow swathe through Quebec and swinging down Into the\nUnited   States.\nTHREE-ACT PLAY\nIS PRESENTED   -\nYAHK AUDIENCE\nYAHK, B, C, April 12\u2014On Saturday\nevening a play ln three acts entitled\n\u2022Aaron Slick from runkln' Crick\"\nwas held In the C. P. R. hall. Thc\nOnt two acts were filled with six\npeople holding the stage at Intervals.\nThe third a*tt which contained a\nwell arranged cabaret scene c-.insisted\nof four more persons. Those taking\npart in the cast wore as follows:\nGeorge Smith, Harry Erskin?, Joe\nBrogan. Helen Mclnnls, Sybil Wilk-\nle, Prances Baum and Helen McGrath.\nThe opening of the cabaret scene\nfound the guests at the hotel seated\nabout tables with Messrs. Brognn.\nSmith, Erskine and Nicol about to\ngive a small dance. To this dance\nthe guests and dance sang \"I Found\na Million Dollar Baby.\" Then Mr. Erskine entertained the audience by two\nsolos.\nThe proceeds taken In amounted to\n134.70 which will be UMd f olharl\n$34.20   which   will   be   urcd   lor   hall\nlunctlonlngs.\nE. Lythgoe acted ai chairman for\nthe concert.\nAfter thc conclusion of the play all\nthose taking part in the play were\nBursts at the home of Mrs. H. W.\nErskine where a lunch was served.\nDuring supper hour a toast was proposed by H. Ernl'.ne t C. H. Cooper\nwho so willingly and tirelessly gave\nhis time In preparing the players to\ntake their pa-te.\nThe party then returned to the\nhall, to enjoy an  hour's (taoetHf.\nSAURY   CUT,\nECONOMY PLAN\nTRAIL COUNCIL\nSalaried Staff Gets 10 Per\nCent Cut; Day Labor\nFive Per Cent\nTRAIL. B. C, Aprlll 12.\u2014Th\u00a9 tax\nlevy totaatr was lnlrodncoj at the\nrity council meeting last night snd\nthe t\u00abt rate was set at 27 mills,\nthe same rate as last yeir'fl. S'ress-\nlng the need for utmost ec-nomy\nand cooperation, Mayer Bruno L:rose\nand Alderman E. L. Groutage ad-\ndrewed   the   council.\nThe fcuJarle* cf all th\u00a9 cities\nsalaries staff, except the weign\nmaster, Janitor and auditor, were\nreduced io per cent, prior to the\nreductions the salaries of B. 8.\nThurnber and O. Jones were 'Increased 110. All the regular day\nlabor staff received five per cent\nrut. The idemnitles of the mayor\nand aldermen were also cut 10 per\ncent, it was decided to make a\ngrant to the Trill Memorial society of an amount equal to 6rj per\ncent of  It* taxes.\nMr. and Mrs. H- H- McCaJllan\nappeared before the council, aUiatlng\nthat they weie unabl* to get any\nwater   pressure   at   their   residence.\nThe matter waa referred to the\npower, water and light committee\nwith power to act.\nMike Pavlch appealed to the solicitor, Parker Williams, to apply for\na cigar store license. Afi-er considerable debate the licence was\ngranted and ordered. Mr'. Pavlch is\nprepared to furnish a bond cf #200.\nThe West Kootenay Power & Light\ncompany wrote stating that they\nhad recently obtained an easement\nfrom the city over certain city\nproperties with a rate of aio per\nncre. ou application to tlie district\nregistrar it was found that 401\nacres,-through which the power line\nran, was not city poperty and they\nrequested a refund of $41. The\namount of the request was granted.\nThe fire chiefs report for March\nrevealed that *_ total of 176 Inspections and 10 orders had been\nserved under the fire act. No appeals were made against the orders.\nOne alarm was rung In, the result of\na chimney fire. No damage waa\ndene.\nThe medical henjth officer, F. S.\nEaton, reported three casea of diphtheria, all quarantined at their\nhomes. Mayor Lerose asked Mr.\nEaton to see that quarantine was\natrlctly  enforced.\nTrail's new mountain view ccmet.\nery will open WedneBd-ay with a funeral to be held ln the Anglican\nplot. The mayor declared the cemetery open and stated there would be\nno more burials in the old Tadanac\ncemetery, exoept In case* where\nthere were spoceg left in private\nplota.\nSniper's View of Invaders\nWALTER TERRY\nWAS WELL KNOWN\nSANDON DISTRICT\nPhoto shows an unusual view of Japanese marines behind sand tag\nbarricade In streets of Shanghai, just about as a Chlneie sniper would\nnee them. Helmeted, well armed and vigilant. Japanc-e w;rc solidify,ng\nposition*   captured   in   Initial   drive.\nThree Days to Get\na Plumbing Permit\nor License Forfei:\nPossibility cf the validity or Nel- j\nion's new plumbing bylaw being i\nfurther tested lonns, with action\n\u00bb4a\u00bbffi by the city council Monday!\nnight giving a firm three days in\nwhich t0 take out a permit for a\nplumbing job done so.re time ago.\ndome week* ago both tlie manager\nand tl'.e working plumber were fined\nfor the Job being done without application being made |of a permit.\nbut, the Inspection required by the\nDyiaw 1* being held up because the\nprior requirement for a permit has\nnot   yet   been   complied   with.\nThe council ordered the firm\nnotified that lt would be given three\nJfiVS to make application for the\npermit, or suffer cancellation of iti\n.Icence   as   a   plumbing   tradesman.\nSANDON,   B.   C.   Ap.'l   13.\u2014Walter\nTerry wh.ise tragic death wa* announced lately resided in Sandon for\nsome years, tr-irking at th* dirre-fnt\nm'.nea   tn   operauon  at   that   Ume.\nHf wa* a nehcxw of Jim McKlO**\nno:i who now res den In Alb' ia. Mr.\nTerry wa* married at Reveltsoke. hi*\nwife, the former Mis* Sunderland of\nDewberry, Alberta, meeting her trier*\nthey returned to Sandon and resided here until two years ago wh*n\nthey returned to Dewberry. M:\"a.\nTerry's home.\nMr. and Mrs. Kflly\nHonored at Eiko\nELKO. B. C, April 12\u2014Mies Edith\n'.Vinsor who has been staying at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Grady.\nreturned to her sister. Mrs. Joseph\nSheridan,   Friday   evening.\nA aurprla* party took place at tha\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. W. Kelly. Friday evening, where a few friends\ndropped m to play bridge. Those pre*\u00ab\nmt wtc Mr. aud Mrs. Joseph Chrls-\ntiano and two children, Lavona. and\nCecil, Mrs. A. Kennedy nnd two children Violet and Allan Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. H. Angell, Walter Sheridan and Alfred ShcrldJin.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Angell motored\nto Fein:*\" Saturoay afternoon, taking\ntheir little daughter, Marion, to Dr.\nAjMlUn* to have an X-ray taken of\nher arm which was crncl.'d on Wednesday. Marion's arm was put ln a\nUHlnt Hj-ni],.\nTeddy Sw'inson. who la taking leav*\nnl ahaim*al as operator in the powerhouse here, due to Illness ia under\nthe doctor's carr.\nW, Barton and two daughters, Elsie and Mabel Barton, entertained at\nbridge and lunch Saturday evening.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Angell, at their\nhome in fernie.\nL. Davis, Bull River, is operating\nnt the power plant here during Teddy   Swanson's   ab-senc-.\nMr. nnd Mrs. J. A. Grady accompanied by the latter* brother, Teddy Swanson. left for Calvary early\nSunday morning. Both Mrs. Grady \u25a0\nand T. Iwanaon will be under tno\ndoctor's   care   while   there.\nH. M. Wilson, Calvary, Alta. was\nthe week-end guest, of Mr. and' Mrs.\nJ.   H.   Angell.\nSheriff Harper Not\nto Be Administrator\nIn Tuesday'* issue of The N-lson\nDally News a story told of the enlargement of the territory over which\nSheriff M. E. Harper of Nelson has\ncharge. While not stated ln the story\nitself the 'head gave the Impression\nthat he wa* to be administrator in\nthe Boundary country. This waa not\ncorrect. He ls to be sheriff of the\nBoundary district of Yale.\nYMIR LADIES' GUILD\nCELEBRATES 27th\nANNIVERSARY\nY flit, B. ':., April 12\u2014The Yinlr\nladles' guild entertained at a bridge\nparty In their hall on Saturday evening. This wa* to celebrate the 27th\nanniversary of the organization. The\nguests were Mr. and Mrs. W. Clark,\nMr. and wrs. Edward Daly. Mr. and\nMrs. S. Ball Mr. and 'irs, H. Stevens.\nMr. and Mrs. Athol Mclsaac, Mr. and\nMrs. J. M. Gllle. Mr. and Mrs. L.\nBond, Mrs. Mirgarct Peters, Mrs. Edward EmllM-m, aflat, Jennie Hankln,\nMiss Helen Verlg.in Miss Shirley Stc-\n'en**. Joe Dunn. Clnrenc? Anderson,\nClifford Anderson, Wend all Shrum,\nRaymond Gitle. William Jones. Chas.\nKrlbiskl, Richard Jones, Harry Stevens Jr., John Daly and Jack Daly.\nFirst prize was won \u00bby Mrs. H. Stevens and Richard Jones. Conpolattons\nby Mrs. M. Peters and L. Band.\nRefresh men's were served by members of the guild. Mrs. W. Clark made\na few remarks and mentioned 'hat\nMrs. Ball, Mrs. Peters and Mrs. J. M.\nGllle had been members of the guild\nfor the longest tune. Mrs. Ball and\nMrs. Gllle bothe being charter members, Mrs. Gllle was out for a few\nyears while she resided In Spokane,\nMrs. Ball being a member sine* 1,903.\nAlmost all Karakul lamb* nre black\nat birth, but after the Lr.-t year the\nwool nwy turn much lighter.\nHow Bombs Smashed Vfoosung Forts.\nHere 1* a remarkable picture taken from an airplane high over the Woosung forts, guarding Shanghai's\nriver approach, which shows a bomb dropped from a\nthe fortifications. Bombs from planes and shells from\njapaneae army plana juet aa It exploded on atrlklng\nnaval vessels at anchor off Shanghai were rained on\nthe fort, which wa* bravely defended by the Chinese\nthroughout the struggle and never surrendered. China\nla demanding heavy damagea ln the coure* of peace\nnegotiations.\nMiss Marjorie Black\nReturns to Sandon\nSANDON.    B.    C,    April    13.\u2014Mlsa\nJean T.ttrle who haa been spending\nher Easter v: -atlon at her home here\ni returned   to   Nelson   wher*  she   **\u25a0\u25a0\ntend*  high  school.\nMr. and Mra. j. Marshall McDirmid\nwho were marrl I in Nel\u00abon on Good\nFriday morning, r'turned to Sandon\nMnd.y *nd left the following\nThursday for Three Forks where\nthey  will  reside.\nM . Nelson - d children of Three\nForks were visitors In town recently\nguests of Mrs. W. P. Rudkln.\nMr. and Mrs. D. McDermid and\nM-. and Mrs. Mc Ask ni of Three Forki\nwere in town Monday evening, attending the wedding reception of\nMr. and Mrs. McDermtrt's son, Mac.\nMaster Freddy Fre0 and IflAi Olive\nTattrle spent part of their holidays\nat New Denver, visiting with their\ngrandparents Mr. and Mrs. 8. Bur-\ng Freddy   ret. rned    home   Mon\nday UTompanled by Mr. nnd lira,\nlBurgea* who spent the day visiting\nwith Mr. and Un, N. Tattrie.\nMlfis MarJorle Black who visit rd\nat Trail during the Raster week, lm\nreturned to her duties in tho post\noffice,\nMrs. Lees Honored\nat Deer Park\nInstruct City Clerk to Com-1Brig.-General Clark\nmunicate with Provincial\nSecretary\nROSSLAND. B. C, April 12\u2014City\nClerk J.  A. Mtfaiod  at a Mt-ttnf of\nthe council tonight was Instructed to\ncommunicate with' the provincial\nM-cretiry's depigment. Victoria, nnd\nask if a schedule of direct raUaf,\nsimilar to that of Trail, would be\napproved for Rossland. If the BObfd-\nt,I\u00a9 is approved a number of applicants for relief will be put U WOtfe\nWilliam McQueen, f >rmerly ci;y\nclerk, and now Fecretary of tiie\nRossland Old Timers* association of\nVmo^aivcr, wrote thanking the co\\m-\ncll for the greetings sent to the recent gathering of the association at\nthe enraat, In HI letter Mr. McQueen\nstated that there were 300 at The\nbanquet who broke Into wild cheering    when    tlie   wire   was   read.\nPurchase of new m.ittresses fur\nthe dormitory of the fire h-,,11 WW|\nauthorized.\nThe flooding of basements on Sec-j\nond   avenue   from   the   WashlQflon\nstreet,    f'un.e   waa   referred   to   the\nboard  of   works.\nA city employe\u00a9 will notify *\nnumber, of residents vcht are delinquent In the payment of water\nrates, that unless arrangements for\npayment ar\u00a9 made within 24 h nr<<,\nwater service to their homes will\nbo  cut off.\nBuried at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER,  April  13   (CP)\u2014With\nfull military l-onors and attended by\nrepresentatives of the department of\nnatl mal defence, .Sir Arthur Currt\",\nBritish Columbia military unite, and\nveteran* organisations, Brlc-General\ntl. p. Clark, C. M. C. D. S. O.,\nM C, V D, WW burrie-1 In the\nsoldi ?rs plot, at Mountain View\ncemetery   here   today\nFollowing weeks of falling health.\nGeneral Clark died in hospital hero\nFriday, ending a distinguished military  career.\nAustralian custom* revenue for\nMarch amounted to 1:2,480,000 an Increase  of   E37I5.O00 over  March,   19'J1.\nTotal curwcts revenue for th\u00a9 past\nnine month\u00a9, however, lt was announcer!. WM \u00a321,328.000 compared\nwrth E22.08A.000 In the corresponding pcflod of  1930-31\nDEER PARK. B. C. April 12-The\nlast few real rmld djfl have brought\na touch of vernal growth to the\nvalley, and early gardening Is now\nin   pnan****.\nMr.  Clark  has  recovered,  from hid\nrecent  serious   illness.\n.   Mrs.   M.   E.  Lees spent   th\u00a9   Faster\nholidays   with   Mr.   and   Mr*,   B.   G.\nI-ees,   of   Rowland.\nMis* Audrey Markcrith of Broadwater,   spent   Monday   here,\nPhillip Coleman of V.illican vkltrd\nMr. and Mre. 11. C. Coleman list\nweek.\nTh\u00ab Bire.i Bark bungalow Waa\nthe scene of a hnppy event when a\nsurprise t party waa tendered Mrs\nLaw In celebration of her birthday,\nCard-playing wa? the feature. Thoaa\npresent wer\u00a9 Mr. and Mrs. Stanley\nPearce. Mr. nnd Mrs. Leslie Flemln*;,\nMr. and Mrs. W. a. Clark. Mr?.\nKnabe, Mrs. G. BrlgKeman. Mrs. J,\nBrigs*\u00a9 man. Mrr.. F. Brlo'emaii.\nMrs. H. C. Coleman. Mrs. Bri^'g-.\nman, Sr., Mr. Angrignon, Pbyllla\nPearce,   Ljatttta  liliM\u00abiliani.   Barnard\nClark,   Hare Id   Briggeuun,   and   Hoy\nColeman,\nMr. and Mrs. Wm.\nMurchison Back\nin Kaslo irom Trail\nKASLO, B. C, April 13\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. William Mnrchlsrtn who spent\nthe winter In Trail have returned tv?\nspetvd the summer ot their hom>\u00bb\nhere.\nMrs. Charles Ltna, sr. who hns\nbeen a patient in the local hospital ls now convalescing nicely at\nher  home\nRalph Garland cf Trail was the\nweek-end guest of his parents, Mr.\nand   Mrs   A.   T.   Garland.\nNoel Bacchus of Blrchdale was a\nKaslo visitor Monday.\nRobert Hendricks jr.. of Tr\u00ab-ll ar-\nrived in th* city Saturday, being\ncalled here by the serlou* illness of\nhis fother who hue since passed\naway.\nJ. A- Fraser and F- B. Rouleau were\nthe tea hosts at the nadmtnton club\nSaturday evening a number ot\nmembers turning out 9a enjoy the\nrefreshment and few snappy\nmatches.\nCoyotes often hunt in packs, their\nmethod being to spread out over several miles and afi one c:iyote is exhausted the ne takes up the Oh***\nuntil the prey is caught,\nTHE\nSUFFERED\nPAIN!\n\u2014 from a long standing nicer. A thick poultice of\n\"MECCA\" OINTMENT,\nchanged every 12 hours by a\nnew dressing, will bring relief and many limes ultimate\nrecovery. Read circular in\npackage for treatment about\nthis  painful  malady.\nFLAVOR\nLASTS\nChew it\nevery\nmeal . . .\nSee how much better\nYou will feel \u2022.\ncw-n\nIt Is belleveu Unit t.;\u201e p ij ical\nhandicap of stuttering Is cause-j by\nlack of callcium balance in the blood\nserum.\nWRIGLEY5\nI\n PAfiB   For*\nM..   LNULANP TIMPKIN .'IE\nOne snd one-hnlf cups pumpMn.\n3-3 cup brown sugar, '.* teaspoon\nginger, 'i i?a*poon cinnamon, *4 tea-\nspoon flour (optional). Steam and\n\u2022trail pumpkin. Ml- the Ingredients aa Listed. Bake in on* crust for\nfirst 10 rainU'fle snd reduce the heat\n\u2022 nd batte 4f minutes Or until pie\nla  done.\nStop Itching\nSkin Troubles\nA  Real   Antiseptic   Gets  Results    |\nEcaema, chafed Rkin. rashes and'\nother skin troubles quickly yield to i\nD.DD.    This    clear,    cooling    liquid\nKnetrattec the skin, soothing and\nellng the irrltAted tlMue-v ITCH-\nINO STOPS INSTANTLY. D-O.D. is I\nclear and stainless. A 35c bottle\nproves Its merit or your druggiBt\ngtfvee yo*u vour meney back.\nMANN-RtTHERFOltD CO.. Druggists\nSecret ^Places\n(By Joan Sutherland\nSynopsis  ot  Proceeding  Instalments;\npeodor St*lre, attached to the\nBr:ti*ii E-nbAsey ln Paris, was 38\nand unmarried, and until he met\nTonl Wareham, daughter ot Lady\nAlice Wareham, he had been bored\nby tee modern hard-boiled young\ngirl. Anton is, or Toni, had first\nattracted his attention when he\naaw her rescue a panic-stricken\npet dog from beneath a limousine\nDon't Keep\nYour Dollars\nWhere They\nCan't See\nDaylight...\nTHE dollar down deep in\nthe sock; imprisoned in the boodle bag\nor locked up in the strong box is surely\nblinded to today's bargain opportunities.\nGet them out; get them working; give them\nthe chance to sec the light of today's bargain opportunities.\nGive them the * freedom to\nwork economy marvels... they'll find their\nchances at every hand for the dollar has\ngood sense... thc dollar has ever been bred\nto practice thrift... active, energetic thrift.\nAt today's prices...the lowest\nin 15 years that dollar can work for you as\nit never has before ... in clothing, furniture, food furs, almost all things it can deliver from 40 per cent to double what it\npurchased in years when you spent it freely.\nNow is the time to store commodities, not\ndollars.\nThe purchasing power of the\ndollar is today at its fullest... .hold on to\nit and will shrivel up as surely as today's\nbargains will fade and disappear with the\nreturn of higher prices. That return is\nvery near at hand ... .so near that the pro-\ncrastinator is sure to be caught napping.\nTHE\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nIn London, and later when he saw\nher riding in tbe park. On her\nreturn to Parts he arranged to\nmeet her through Ronald Halkett\nan old friend, who a few months\nbefore had married Toni's beautiful sister, oret*. They met at a\nparty given In a Paris restaurant,\ndanced together, Stalre mad* sn\nengagement for luncheon nert day\nin the country, and when they\nmotored back they were engaged.\nCrete, had much time on her\nhands as Ronald's work on Gerald Astley's newspaper, L'Ftolle.\nkept him early and late, and she\nwas worrying her mother and sister by being so much ln the company of tee Comte Henri D'Arblaye, a wealthy South American\nwho claimed to be a Frenchman,\nand whose reputation was not of\n.he best. Oreta was Jealous of\nTonl as Staire's wealth and social*\nposition would give her young sister many ad vantages, and when\nshe met Peodor for the first time\nafter his engagement, she determined to Interest him in herself.\nINSTALMENT   SIX\n(CONTINUED)\nPatntly amus\/d. Oreta looked at\nhim,\n\"Do you mean to asy you really\nbelieve all that, D'Arblaye?\" she\nsaid. \"I thought you were a man o:\nthe world.\"\nHis handsome, sullen face flushed\nat the faint sneer ln h*r tone.\n\"Yes; I do happen to believe it.\"\nhe said, rather defiantly. \"Why not?\nBesides, what harm can there be\nln taking what chance there ls? One\ncan't have too much good luck in\nthis world. You can wear that\u2014you\ncan wear it under your dress. No\none need know where It came from.\nIf your husband see* it-\u2014well, surely\nyou can explain? Say you won lt\nat  bridge.\nOreta sighed elaborately.\n\"My dear D'Arb' ye, how Idiotic\nmen are! Won It at bridge, indeed!\nWould anybody-would my husband\nor any friend believe that nonsense!\nWhy,  look!\"\nPut It round your neck a moment\/' he said quietly, and half in\naimisement, half ln curiosity, Greta\nlifted the Jewel by Its little platinum chain, put lt around her neck\nand looked at him,\n\"Therel\" she said.\nOn her white sk ln the emerald\ngleamed with startling Intensity. It\nseemed ln some way to give Its\ntint to her eye*, touching their deep\nblue with Its own baleful light.\nBut there was no denying that its\nstrange and almost barbaric carving made of her an amazing picture. There was always\nthe past In Greta's eyes. Despite her\nclothes and her general air, hhe\nwaa not modern. It was the age-old\nlure of the cold woman seeking experience that lay in her eyes, the _\nage-old  evil   that  can   linger  about   to her.   The once zestful t  ings b\nthe exploitation of great beauty, and \" \u2014\nnow, with that Jewel gleaming\nagainst h$r Ivory throat, the evil\nln Oreta seemed suddenly to spring\nher eyes. D'Arblaye'* superstition, his defiance of everything in\nthe world except his own desires,\nraised Its head, and his eyes glinted\nsavagedly.   Quite    suddenly,   sitting\n\u2014- TnE mi SON D.ILY NEW*, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDAY MORNrNO, APKIL IS, IM* \u25a0     I I\nWOMAN'S PAGE\nSir Joslah Stamp's Son Wed\nGENERAL   DAWES   WAS   THEIR   CITIU\nWhen MJ\u00bbs Frances Boaworth became trie bride ot Dr. Trevor Claarlea\nStamp of London the ceremony climaxed a romance that atarted when the\nbridegroom* lather visited Gen. Gate* Daa-ea Ui Evanston, 111. Mlas Boa-\nworth la a daughter of a socially prominent family of Evanaton, while Dr.\nStamp la a son of Sir Joslah Stamp, renowned economist of London. Sir\nJoalah and Gen. Dawes worked together on Dawe*' reparatlona plan. Mlas\nBoaworth met Dr. stamp In 19.11 when ahe was ln England and returned\nthe call   Photo showa the couple In the bride's home ln Evanston.\nLearn the Technique\nof Real Happiness\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority on Problems of I*ovo and Marriage\nMargaret's young man persists in,, made that way\nmisunderstanding. According to her\naccount, the more she explains, the\nworse things get. Bhe was not on\ntf . phone when \"he\" called her\napartment and a young man answered Instead.\nAt first she was high hat about\nIt\u2014rather enjoyed the scene. Now\nshe wants to .explain that the fet-\nlo- who answered the phone was\nhint\" of i her sister's friend. \"He\" simply\nwon't listen and returns letters un-\nc ened.\nPoor Margaret now cries as  from\nf e   depths   of   despair   that    this\nyoung mnn me ns the whole world\n - 'he\nHe\" seems to be\nthnt kind now. And don't forget\nt\"..ls. Perhaps he ls aa sorry as you\nfor the break. Ike as not he doesn't\nknow   he way out.\nAnyway ,if this boy friend of yours\nIs worth while he will find a way\nto work out of the Pit ln which his\no' \"tlnacy has sun' Urn. If he does,\nshow that you are glad to aee him,\nir case that Is so.\nBy that time, however you may\nhave chair your mind about believing him to be nil the world to\nyou, as you Impulsively s*y he **\u2022\nYou strike mo as a mery. light-\nhearted girl, lnc'rt.'i.,? In emotional\ndiscipline, perhaps. Bo are many\nreiHy companionable people. Life\nItself will teach you the technique\nenjoyed so much, are \"w-ary, stale,\nflat and unprofitable.\" She is ready\nto   do   anyt   *ig.   This   unhappiness   of happiness.\nmust come  to an  end  Immediately. I           \u2014\u2014 '\t\nAnything, rather than  the \"terrible MUD PUDDING\n.uncertainty.\" [    rour cupa bread  (broken ln small\nMy dear Margaret, you  are  going w d    ^lk   1\nthrough one of the unhappy phases  piec,M' * \u2122J . \u2022,,   \u2666,_.\nof   lo s.   -ou've   had   a   good   time  sugar, \\.  cxp raisins, 1 eg.,  \\3  tea-\nhere   In   the   lounge   of   the   R-o*t'V]th  y0ur friend.   You'll  have  that  spoon salt. 1 teaspoon cinnamon,  \\.\nmodern hotel In Paris, surounded ^ remember. I'll put this up to teaspoon cloves, 'j teaspoon nutmeg,\nyou: Isn't \u25a0'he'd imposed to HaJoy'ieiU milV- and-pour over bread. Let\nthe sltuatl ? Here's the girl lie 6tand ten mmutC8> agg eggi HUgar\nonce   danced  iWiW   on  eeudliuj d      d t       u,       d breftd\nhim   letters   which,  like   a    spoiled '\u2022\"\nYou can't\nnm,j. him read your letters or listen\n\u2122   an   explanation.   Don't   try   any   bake ln a moderate oven until firm\nmore. and brown.\nIf he'won't be a sp^rc, set him an | For chocolate bread pudding use >4\nexample. Show him by all means cnp cocoa In place of the raisins and\nthat   there   are   other   young   men   .p[Qe^ gm,e   wt]1   nard   flriuce    0f\nplain.\nAnswers by\nBeatrice\nNeglected Her at the\nParty\nDEAR MI88 FAIRFAX:\nI am a girl of 17. still going to\nhigh school. Not long ago X met a\nboy .whom I learned to Care a great\ndeal for an he Invited me out *\nnumber of times. I also invited him\nto my home. Last week I went to\na party with him and he didn't pay\nany attention to me. but rushed\nanother girl tha whole evening. I\nhaven't seen htm since, and I would\nlike to ask your advice a* to\nwhether I should take steps to aee\nhim again, or Just forget him. I\nreally like him so much lt would\nbe difficult to forget him. This\nother girl ls my chum, and only\nlikes him as an acquaintance. The\nonly reason I can think of for his\nlosing interest In me ls that I am\nfirmly opposed to petting and wild\nparties, and he likes both.\nRuth\nI hope you are not going to take\nany steps about seeing this boy who\ntreated you so rudely at the party.\nHe evidently thought you were too\nnice a girl to go with him to wild\nparties. Don't tell your girl chum\nanything about how much you miss\nhim, but start out right now to forget him and have a good time with\nyour other friends. If he comes back\nand Is ready to treat you politely and\nshow you some attention when he\ntakes you out, of course, you may\ngive him another chance If you wish\nbut don't humiliate yourself by calling hi-1 up.\nRegards Him as a Boy\nDEAR MIS6 FAIRFAX:        *\nI love a young widow more than\nanything In the world, ; it she does\nno*,    em to cars for me\u2014thinks I\nam too young.   I am sure that she\ndoes not love anyone else,   she ls\nvery  ..eautlful and h-j\u00bb many ad-\nmlrers.    Many of them are older\nmen and have a great advantage\nover me.   I *m not bad looking,\ndress well, can carry on a good conversation and could easily support\na who. Bhe never refuses to go out\nwith me, but seems bored and Indifferent.   Ho\\\u00bb can I find a way\nto make her love me.      Uncertain.\nTry    treatln-*:    this    sophjsticated\nyoung wld-T with a little of her own\nindifference.   Perhaps you hav   been\ntoo devc a and have si wn you love\ntoo boyishly.   Now you must prove\nyourself to be a man o; the world.\nThrow yourself without reserve  Into your work.   Take out other girls\nDccasionally.   You ..now, these levely\nwidows who are surrounded by admirers always hate to ' se eve-i one\nof them.    If she  really likes you,\nshe will be more considerate If she\nthinks you won't stand for complete\nIndifference.    However,  with  a  girl\nof thla ti. j, you would always have\nthese other men to compete with\u2014\nperhaps   even   after     innnlng   her\npromise to marry you.   Why not try\nto find a girl not quite so sought\nafter?\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy LAURA A.  KIRK MA*\nTOMORtowrV'S   MENU\nQrlddlecak**\nOrange Juice\nOertal\nRolls\nMacaroons\nLuncheon\nPotato*  Salad\nOooot,\nWnip\nJam\nFrunea\nDinner\nChicken  Soup\ns'eat   oaf\nCreamed Noodles Few\nLettuot   Salad\nPineapple Tart* Coffee\nThe foLnrinf recipes have been\naaked for by readers:\nOarrot Preserve*. Scrape, diet, and\nmeasure tender new carrot*. To one\nquart add two orange* and two lemons, put through the food chopper\n(rinds. Juice\u2014In fact, use everything\nbut seeds and tough membranes).\nThen add four cups of granulated\nsugar, and one one-half cups of water; boll this mixture slowly for two\nhours, or tiU thick. Seal white hot,\nln hot sterilized Jars o * new rubbers.    Label   and  store.\nStrawberry Preserve*: Measure out\none level pint of granulated sugar;\nadd Just enough cold water t**\u00bb dissolve his sugar, then also stir ln\none heaping pint of - fresh hulled\nstrawberries and over these berriss,\nspread another pint of granulated\nsugar. Stir very little, and llght'y,\nso as not to break the berries. Let\ncome to a boll then all still another\npint of -strawberries anQ when the\nmixture reaches the boll  again, let\nhard. Then pour out into open 4\nand let stand till next day, when *M\nberne* will be -plumped up.\" 8pM\nthem carefully into cold, eterllln\njars, adding their \u25a0' 'P. also*, at\nseal airtight, over new rubber*. (1\nproceeding   necessary).\nOrapefrult *W maiadei \u2014 Cut t\nfinely one grapefruit, .ne orange, ar\none lemon. Measure the mixture ar\nadd three time* tht amount of '\ner. Let stand overnight, and nt:\nday oook genuy for three hours. Tur\nInto Jelly glasne* and when cold an\nfirm,  cover  with  melted  wax.\nTomorrow\u2014For the Boy's Bedroon\nCHOCOLATE   CRUMB   COOKIES\n1 oup toasted bread crumbs, 1 eu\nsweetened condensed milk, 8 aqua\nunsweetened chocolate, I cup w**ni\nor   pecan  nut  meats,  chopped,  ft\ngrain*   aalt,   90   walnut   o\nhalves.  Toast bread until  crisp\nput   through   food   chopper   us!\ncoarse knife. Thoroughly blend *w*\nened   oondensed   milk   with   m*H\nchocolate. Add bread crumbe, ch<\nped nut meat* and salt. Blend th<\noughly. Drop by spoonful* onto bu\ntered   baking  \u00bbheet.  Pre**  half\nmeat Into **\u00a9h cookie. Bake 12 mli\nutee, or until delicately browned\n*   moderate   oven   (350  degree*  F\nMake* 2>4  down,\nDATE   DELIGHT\n2 eggs, \\. cup *we\u00abUn*d eondent\n*d milk, H cup bread crumb*, l '\nspoon b*kli-ig powder, y% pound V\ndate*   (1   cup),   ft   oup   nut  u\nBlend   together   well   beaten\nsweetened    condensed    milk,    tore*\ncrumbs,   baking  powder,  finally\ndate* and chopped nut meet*. PI*\nin   top part of doubl* boiler.  Ooc\nover boiling wwter so minutes. Chi\nServ*    cold   with   whipped   crew\nServe* six.\nTwo aquare* uiiswtetensd chocolate, 0 tablespoon* flour, IV*. cups\nmilk, 1 cup *ug\u00bbr, 2 t*bl**poonB\nbutter, 1 teeepoon vanilla.\nAdd chocolate to milk in double\nboiler. When chocolate it melted\nstir until blended. Sift flour with,\nsugar and add gradually to chocolate mlxtur*. Cook until thickened.\nAdd vanilla and butter, Oool nnd\nboll ten minutes by the clock, quite sperad on cake.\n\u25a0 tlf I riMTM If I Tl I If I If IIII1ITI Hill n Mil MM 11M1M llimill ITIII IMIIMTlff HIMMfMMII I\nSpring Drapery Week\nThis morning and until Wednesday, 30th April. Only\none* a year do you have tb* opportunity\nto buy at the** price*.\nENTIRE MAIN FLOOR\nl,   *tc\n\u2022m\n996\ndisplayed  with  draperies,   curtains,  bed  llnaai,  *tc\nB-PIECI RUFFLl CURTAWS,\n\u2022et   _  .\nA  BETTBH,  QUALITY   GROW,\n\u2022t, aet   \t\nRtJTTLE   CURTAINING\u2014 All   col.\non.   It  In.  wide.\nYard   \u201e \t\nREVBTR8IBIJI    CRaTTONNl}\u2014\nalao printed. Yard\n190\nROTTUB   CURTAINING\u2014Last   jrt*r\n\u00a3\/^.\u201e.. \u201e.MlAt\n71-INCH   BHEETINO\u2014Bleached\nunbleached.\nYard  \u201e ;\n.390\navailable.   The sort of thing he expects   puts  you   In   too   narrow   a\nworld.\nIn  a wsy you ought to be  gb<l\nby all the worldllness and the\nwealth of the century, he felt trans-\nporta?d to some far-off past, and\nknew that he must have this woman for his own; that at any SOSt' ^^ ^ -.ttirt-i uatS-4.\nhe  would  have her,\nA strange elation filled him. lf\nshe took that jewel she would oe\nhla; if she did not . . . Checking\nhis thoughts sharply, he leaned a\nlittle across the table.\n\"Oreta\" he aald. \"that Jewel Is\nwmderrul. Look in the mirror of\nyour  bag.\"\nShe looked, started, looked again,\nand met hta h^rt eyea.\n\"Yes, it Is wonderful,\" she said\nln a strange voice. \"It's a marvellous\nJewel, D'Arblaye, but\u2014I cannot take\nIt, It's far too valuable. Besides, 1\nnever take pre\/tents.\"\n\"This Isn't a present,\" he said;\n\"this is a part of your life. You\nmiwt take lt. I've had it In my collection now for a year, but ever\nsince I've known you I've longed to\nsee it on your throat. Take lt. We'll\nmake up a tale to account for its\npresence. I'll find out something\nmore about tt: lH find out It* history. Wear lt today, and I think you\nwill   always  wear   lt.\"\nShe said n0 more for the moment.\nHow enormously wealthy he must\nbe to buy \u25a0 Jewel like this! For she\nwas under no misapprehension .n\nto Its value. It was a treasure In\nwhich only a millionaire could possibly indulge. And he had bought\nlt merely as a whim. He was ?n-\nnoying; at times he angered her; be\nwas too Insistent and selfish, yet\nhe had power, and as such ahe\ncould not do without him, though\nshe had no Intension of running\nany risk. It must be sufficient that\nhe had her society, her wllllngne:?\nto let him take her about. It\npleased him to give her thii; very\nwell, she would accept H, but there\nmust be n0 conditions attached, and\nas theee thoughts flashed through\nher mind she was too much o:cu-\n| pled to aee a tall, dark man who\nwore a little Imperial and moustache\nstanding at a table not far aw.iy.\nShe would have known him for Taul\nRave'., the famous artist, for he ma\na friend of her mother's, bu; -he\ndid nut *ee him and Ravel tok\ncare she should not, for he had seen '\nthe Jewel pas**, from D'Arblay**\nhand to hers, and he knew D'Arblaye,\nSo Halkett's wife . . . well she\nshould show better taste in her\nchoice . . . but it was none of his\nI business ... In this he was strnnge-\n! ly wrong,- for that short episode\n\u25a0 was to recur to him at a moment\niwhen little though he guessed :t\nlt W3uld tip the scales between life\nand death\n(To Be Continued)\nMix well and add raisins and spices.\nTurn Into buttered baking dish and\nOne cup sugar (whl*\u00ab granulated),\nthat this tempest has arlnen in the 1 cup dark molasses, U cup cold wa-\ncourse of your . ve affair. You've ter. When boiling, add a small piece\nfound out that it would have been ' of butter. Cook until it form* a very\nbetter to tell him straight that the h bftU whpn mUe ,g droppet. int0\nman   who  angered th* phone  was i ' __,. _. ,.\nyour .later', trine? a cup 0l ct>ld vvatfr' Th<m atW 0nf\nYou can't ealely  la  playful   with |na\" \u00ab\u00bb\u00bbpoon of soda. Brat nnd set ln\nsome   people,   '.\"hey   are   Just   vnx pan to cool.\nBeauty and the Beast\nThe Beauty Box\nBy HELEN FOLLETT\nttrOM-t-E CAKE\nPut Into a dish 1 *;_ cups sifted cake\nflour, and into It mix and sift two\nteaspoons baking powder, 1 cup ,ugari\n' Break intc a cup 3 egg* and Into It\nput I level \u2666   spoons^melted ..utter ^ %n ^ ^^ ^ ^.^ MUe_ N,na Bvend   But of M ^\nnd fill up thj cup with sweet mil-. hundreda of canine ptts, her favorite Is her English terrier. Darky, with\nJeat all together, adding a few drops wnom sns poses here. Besides being a beauty noted throughout Europe.\nI either lemon or vanilla extract. Bake, Mile, Bvend operates the largest canine-breeding establishment In Scan-\nin moderate oven. ' dinavia,\ni \u2022\nBy sticking to bending and twist.\nIr. exercises a *f wonan ln normal\nhealth can grow corsets of firm,\nsolid muscles. She * on't need a\nfoundation garmr * to make her\nappear trim an nicely harnessed.\nCorrect post\u2014e ls necessary in\ntreatment of dletendet tummy or\nhips that have taken on adipose\nupholstery.\nDo you walk, or do you trundle?\nDo you sit pretty or do you slump?\nDo you huddLj when you read, or\ndo you hold your body erect, according to the rules of beauty culture? Be mindful, womnn, every\nminute, of correct posture, an in-\nsura- *\u2022 against the feather bed\nship* and humpy shoulders that\nsometimes trail along after the 50th\nbirthday. The brisk -teP and graceful movement belont, to youth, but\ncan be retained for y'ars and y'ars\nIf a woman Interests herself in\nmuscular activities and physical education.\nThe Prerch swirl, which means\ntr.at the hair is waved *> and down\nat the back Instead of across ls a\nhelp to the little dearheart who\nthinks she la tired of short hair and\nwants to grow a mane of shoulder\nlength. The swirl catches short\nends, avoids the appearance of the\nragged fringe at the rear hair line,\na beauty blemish which is difficult\nto bear during the process of transition from short bob to long.\nWomen who live strenuous lives,\nwho feel that existence ls kicking\nthem around, will find health benefit in relaxation exercises. Night and\nmorning then let them li> on back,\nstretch arms jov* th* head, stretch\ntoes down as far as they will go,\nan' flop. Be limp. Take three or\nfour deep breaths; repeat the stretching.\nTo reduce a too plump neck, bath\u20ac\nwith soap, hot water and a brush,\nthe skin surpace with a-heavy cream,\npick up the fla-h between thumb\nand first finger and rool firmly; the\npurpose Is to dissolve the fat cells.\nFinish with an Ironing with an ice\ncube. Apply boric talcum powder\nand give the surface of th* skin a\nbrisk patting with the hands,\ntissues and muscles won't go saggy.\nPerspiring hands are dii* to lowered vitality or nervousness. Friction\nwith rubbing alcohol is helpful. The\nInner surface of glove* should be\nsprinkled with talcum. Use a bland\nsoap and dry the hand* thoroughly\nafter washing them.\nWhen roast i* left over out it in\nvery 'thin slice* and fry quickly on\nboth sides in a pan ln which there\nls no fat. It should Just brown well\non both sides. Serve with *\nhorseradish sauce made by adding\nfour tablespoons of horseradish to\non* cup of cream sadct.\nHTJNDREDfl   OF   GROUPS   OOVERIKO   llrTTTRJD   FLOOR,   At\nTHE MOST ASTOUrTDINO  PRICE8.\nLADIES SPRING COATS\nThis Morning Only\nAbout 35 to select from. All sites to 44. Fine Broad. *>f _\\ 0<\ncloths, Tweed*, Vlcunai, \u00abto. Value* to \u00bb40. Out they foV*'*a,\u00bb0\n' Cash only\nRamnsdee Bros.\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiitii\n\u2014the salesmen\nwho fall just short\nof being 'STAR' men.\nYou   know   the   type.    Affable,   wulln*r   to\nplease, but Just lacking the degree, of punch,  '\nor personality to put over really BIO Job*. \u2022\nThe wise business man doesn't keep one\non hi* pay roll for long,    ...,,,\nIt's mor* costly to employ mediocre prtn*\u00bb\nIng than mediocre salesmen.    For th* sales- \u25a0\nman  ls paid on commission  , . by result*\n\u2022 attained  ,  .  but a  poor   printing  Job cost*\nJust a* much as one that's a \"star,\"    ,   ,\nEvery Nelson Dally New* Job Is a seJeemsn\nIn type that hankers for a BIO Job. Like\nother good salesmen, Nelson Dally New*\nprinting ha* th* neoe\u00ab*ary punch and personality . . and it's expressed with pleasing\nlayouts, better stock, clearer prlntlrif and\nmore distinctive type face*.\nCall Us Today\nPHONE 144\nNetomt lath} :N?tti0 HIoli l?jit*\nCreators of Fine Printing\nBaker Street Nelson, B. C.\n1\n '\nWf\nA New Model\nGeorgina\nIn Almora, Betxy Calf,\nReptile Trim.\nR. Andrew\n& Co.\nLeaiert in Footfashion\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nThe following column of aoclal\nnews and happening* In Roasland\nla conducted by Mra. Beeele B. Ferguson. Phone Mra. Terr ton at her\nhome In Roasland and giver her details of event* of ln reet to tula\ncolumn.\nROSSLAND, B. 0. April 13\u2014Mambera\nof tha Highway Traveler*, C. O. I. T.\ngroup and tho Sunday achool cla-a\ntaught by fisa Mar Rogera tendered\na aurprlae and farewell party to Mlaa\nLois Glbbard at the home of Miss\nElsie Brown, Kootenay ava. Mlas 01b-\nbard had been invited to apend the\nevening \u25a0 th Mlsa *wn. and bupt\nposed heraei to be the only gueat,\nuntil a audder comm-tlon outr'de revealed the plot. Tha evenlig paaaed\nvary pleasantly with mualc, gamea\nand dancing, a dainty aupper being\naerved before the guati we-t !iome.\nOn behalf of those present, Miei Amy\nPorter presented Miss Glbbard with a\nbook, erp- atng tho hope th rle\nwould be happy and prosperoua In\nher Okanagan home, but would still\nkee a kindly thought for the friends\nahe had made ln 1 aalard. Thoee\npreaent wr* Miss Mary \u25bagers. Miss\nAmy UoTter, Mlaa Nellie Purcello,\nMlsa Effle . ooka. Mlaa MUdre,* Bos-\nworth, Miss Marjorle Robertson Mlsa\nLorna Jonea, Mlaa Mildred Hale', Mlas\nLois Glbbard and Mln Hale Brown.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. William Glbbard and family,\n\u2022Who have be'i residing ln Roasland\nfor *he laat eight months, have returned to their rap-**1 near Balmon\nArm.\n\u2022 \u2022   t\nMra. Warren Crowe of Nelaon la\nthe gueat c' her mother, Mra. J.\nColeman.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. R. E.  Samuelson  and   baby\ndaughter have returned from vialttng\nwith Mra. Samuel m'a parents,  Mr.\nand Mra. Casey Jonea, East Trail,\na* a   a\nMra. Uighton E. Mile* and baby\ndaughter of Nelaon, -re -laitlrg with\nMrs. Miles' parents, Mr. and Mra.\nSamuel Irvin.\n\u2022 *      * a\nPhilip Olovar, who haa been a patient at the Mater Mlaercordiae hospital, hu efficiently recoverc 1, to\nbe able to resume hla dutlea at the\nTrail emelter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlaa Eileen Freney left the laat *f\nthe week to resume her dutlea aa\nteacher at Princess Creek.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHerbert Thompson o*. Trail waa the\nweek-end meat of Mr. and Mra. W.\nJ.   EV(       a\n\u2022 \u2022 a\nJoaeph Mil of Bheep Creek waa ln\nthe city Saturday. Mr. Gill reporta\nab-ut three nd a half feet of anow\non the road.\nBAND CONCERT\nIS A SUCCESS\nFollowing the opening number,\n*'0 Canada\" by the City band at\nSunday evening's musical oonoert at\nthe Capitol theater, a minute's al\nlenca ln honor of Hugh Wallace,\nhonorary president of the band, who\ndied  laat week,  was observed.\nOther numbers played by the\nband were \"March of the Quarter\nDeck,\" Tw0 Little Bull Flnchea\" by\nKllng, a waltaa, \"Southern Roses,\"\nby Straua; and an overture, \"Poet\nand  Peasant\" by  Suppe.\nJack Toulson played a pianoforte\naolo, followed by two vocal aoloa by\nA. A. Pagdln. Mra. Oladya, Webb\nFooter, Mm, Rose Fleming, Mrs. G.\nK. Ashby and Mlas Maud Dolphin\nrendered a string quartet.\nThe band played \"H. M. fl. Ulna-\nfore\" by Sullivan aa a closing number, before \"God Save tha King.'\nThe band played under the direction\nof Bandmaster S. J. Newell. R. J.\nHewitt  waa  chairman.\nEvery number waa loudly applauded by  the  large  audience.\nTHEY ARE STILL\nDOING GREAT WORK\nFOR WOMEN\nSaskatchewan Lady Tells Of\nBenefits Derived From Dodtf\nKidney Pills\nMis     N.   V.   Harper    Recommends\nDotJeVa Kidney  Pills  to. All\nKidney  Sufferers\nWTNTON, Bflsk-i April 13 (Stwcial)\n\u2014\"I waa bothe 1 with a severe\npair, in my left kidney for about a\nyear,'' writea Mlaa \". V. Harper, who\nUvea l.are. \"Alter taking six boxes\nof Dodd'a Kidney pill* I found tha\npain had left me completely. I rec-\nom **d them to 'nyon* *uXf\u00abrlng\nwith Kidney trouble.\"\nBackache, bearing-down palna, dla-\nBlress, -\u25a0 loss of appetite, headachea\nand depression are early eymptoma\nerf Kidney weaknese, too often mls-\nv -leretood. There la alwaya danger\nof rheumatism, aciatlca and bladder\ntrouble*. The moment you auspect\nyour Kld-veys use Dodd'a Kidney\nPill* .,> atrengthen and reator* them.\nDocM'e Kidney pills have built up\ntheir reputation aa a Kidney remedy by th relief they give. Insist\nupon having Dodd'a, th* Kidney\nF.Ula your nelghboj* uae,\nSociety\nThis column li conducted t>\u00bb\nMr,. M- I. Vlfntui. All new, ol a\nsocial nature, Including, receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear In thl, column. Telephone\nMrs. VKnriif at her Dome, 519\n8111c* street.\nMra. C. Habegard ha* returned\nfrom Pasadena, Calif., where she\nha* *p*nt to* put six months, and\n1* now the Juest ol r*r eon-ln-'iw\nand daughter, Mr. and Mra. Robert\nSmith, Third atr**t, Palrvlew.\n...\nJ, t. Hwln, New Denver, paid a\nvisit to town yesterday.\n...\nMr*. Chart** Holt and her flaujh-\nter  ot  Balfour   alas   jueet*  ot   Mlaa\nK. Htlul orar.\n...\nMr and Mrs. J. Vallano* of Orescent ' V*llej paid \u00bb visit t\u201e town\nyesterday.\nO Wrier of Wynndel *pent yesterday'ln th* city ahopplna.\n...\n1. V. Buckley, mining man of\nAlma Oenter, Wl*., H spending *\nooupla ot daya in NeUon and vicinity.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nMr*, L. V. Rogers, Kerr apartments, entertained th* member, ot\nSt. Saviour's Church Helpers st\nbridge recently when these playing\nIncluded Mrs, E. E. L. Dowdnev. Mrs.\nJame* O'Shea, Mrs. X. O. Smyth,\nMra. John Cartm*]. Mrs. E. C.\nWragge. Mr*. C. W. Appleyard, Mra.\nH. Roiling and Mrs. Bogtrs.\n...\nMr and Mrs. C. A. Walley ot\nSalmo paid a visit to town yesterday\n.     a     *\nAmong onopper* to Nelson yesterday wa* Mr*, M. R. McLennan ot\nTrail.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nJoseph Kosanclc of Creacent Valley\nspent yesterday ln th* city.\n...\nMlas Orao*  Oaskeli  of  Vancouver\n1* her* to attend the funeral of her\nfather.   RIch*rd   Oaskeli.  of   willow\nPoint. whlcU take* place, here today.\n.   \u2022   *\nMr*. J. D. Anderson of Trail paid \u00bb\nvlelt to town today.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong\" shoppers to th* city yester-\ndsy wa* Mr*. J. F. Stevenson Of\n,5un*hln* Bay.\n...\nMr*. C. McEwIng of Salmo spent\nywterdty In Nelaon.\n...\nMr*. J. Orelgjton of Glacier Park\nha* arrived to attend th* funeral\not Mr father, Richard Oaakell, which\ntakes plaoe today.\n...\nR. A. Heighten of Procter paid a\nvuit to town yejterday.\n...\nMr* H. Severn, who ha* been\n\u2022pending the put f\u00abw week* In th*\ncity at the home of her aon-tn-law\n\u2022nd daughter, Mr. and Mr*. Earl\nMan-din, Fairview, haa returned to\nher home ln Trail.\n...\nColin Major ot Procter \u25a0pent ?\u2022\u2022\u2022\nlerday In the city.\n.   \u2022   \u2022     *\nRev. W. J. Sllverwood of Grand\nPork* ha* returned Irom Spokane\nwhere he ha* been attending the\nfuneral of Mra. Trone, mother ot\nRev. Norman Larmonth, formerly of\nNelson and Trail.\n...\nMra. D. A. McFarland** circle of\nSt. Saviour's Church Helper* met\nrecently at the Homo on Baker\nstreet of Mrs. A. A. G. William*\nwhen thoae preaent were Mrs. J. E.\nBcdlord, Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson,\nMrs. Harold Penny, Mrs. A. T. Stephenson, Mrs. R. A. Aldersmlth, and\nMrs.  Williams,\n...\nMr*. W. \u00bb. Woodhousa KM Monday\nevening for h*r horn* In Vancouver\nafter a couple of weeks' visit ln\nNelaon at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Simons, Silica atreet. Mrs. Wood-\nhouse, who formerly resided In\nNelson, nl returning home from a\nvisit to friends ln Calgary.\n.   *   *\nRobert McDonald of Harrop spent\nyesterday shopping In town.\nMr*.   T.   A.   Whelldon   of   South\nSlocan spent yesterday  ln town.\n.- .   \u2022\nAmong shoppers to the city recently wo* R. W. Chalmers of\nThrum*.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr*. William Gray of Salmo paid\n% vlalt to Nelson yesterday.\nOordon Luscl-.er was ln from Rota-\n\u2022on yesterday to visit his wife who\nla \u00bb*rlou*ly 111 ln the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral   hospital.\n...\nHarvey Fife of Slocan City spent\nyesterday   ahopplng   ln   town.\n...\nMis* Mary Scanlan. who haa been\nhi the city to attend the funeral of\nher niece, Mlas Frances Scanlan, left\ntor her home In Vancouver laat\nnight.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. G-eorge Abey of\nKaslo paid \u2022 visit to town yesterday.\nMrs. David Magee of Robson paid\na  visit to town  yesterday.\nAmong shopper* to Nelson yesterday vm Mrs. Frank Abey of Mirror\nLax* and her son.\n.   \u2022   ,\nMr. and Mra. H. Leggatt of Long-\nbeach spent yesterday ln town.\n\u2022 *\u25a0, *\nMr*. E. Olover and daughters, who\nhave been visiting at the home ol\nMra. Glover's parent*. Mr. and Mrs.\nHugh Roe*, Slue* atreet, have returned to their home in Rossland\n...\nMrs,   T.   Dolphin,    Ward    street\nleave* today for  Harrop where  she\nwill visit until Friday at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. w. J. McConnell.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. P. O. Morey, Hoover street,\nentertained tlie members of Mrs\nFred H. Graham's circle- of St.\nSaviour1* Church when those present\nwor* Mrs. Graham, Mrs. F. C. Smith,\nMrs. T. E. Maddock. Mrs. Harry Gore,\nMrs.   Mabel   RocllIIe   and   Mrs.   W\nL.  Affleck.\n...\nMrs. William Wlnstanley ol Cres-\noent Valley la ln the city the guest\nof Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon, Silica\nstreet.\n...\nThe home on Ward street of Mrs.\nT Dolphin was the meeting place ol\ntlie membera of the Graduate Nurses\nassociation. Th* president, Mlas Agnes Oant. VM ln th* chair, Mrs.\nDolphin entertained the guests with\nan amusing clipping of a cr.lnese\npatient'* Impression of the Canadian\nnurse entitled \"Th* Odd Angle\"\nThose present were Mlas K. Ethel\ngray. Mrs. T. E. Homersham, Mrs.\nWilliam J. Sturgeon. Mrs. Gordon\nBurns, Mrs, W. K, ScaWhard, Mrs.\nTHE NELSON DULY .NEWS, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 1J, IDS*! I\nraoi mi\nAids Anti-British Boycott In India\nSocial Events\nSternly \"on guard\" before a store in Bombay, youthful-appearing Mra\nJamat flingh urges the cameraman not to buy British good\/-,, she's typical\nof the women pickets who are taking a leading part in th* antl-BUtlsh\nboycott* throughout India.\nGeorge Leater, Mis* Lulu McVIcar,\nMlsa Paula Gansner, Miss Christina\nAllan; Miss Agnes Cant, Mrs, Kitchener   end   Mrs,   Dolphin.\nOn Sunday afternoon Rev. W. J.\nCrick ot the Church of the Redeemer\ntook the choir boys to South Slocan\ntg slug the afternoon. service. The\nboya were transported In a truck\nowing to the courtesy of A. Browne.\nT. Bishop hanaicd the transportation of the human freight, the\nJourney Itself- being one of the Joys\nof the day. The boys rendered the\nservice very beautifully ln the presence of a goodly congregation. The\nservice waa in the nature of an\nEaster day service and many of the\nold favorite Easter hymns were aung.\nBefore 'hia sermon the vicar told\nthe congregation of the shock 9M\nhad rooeived on learning of thc\ntragic death of Edward Watts. He\nobserved that the community had\nlost a good and valuable member\nand paaeed a word of sympathy\nfrom the church to the relatives and\nfrlenda of the deceased. Tre congregation stood In a moment* reverent\nsilence In hla memory.\nTaking M his text \"Tliey went\nforth, and entered into a tshlp Immediately; and that night caught\nnothing. But when morning was\nnow come, Jeaus stood on the share.\"\nThe vloar advanced the well known\nawry of tha ressurrectlon quoting\nfrom tho Canadian C.vurehman of\nMarch   17:\n\"la not thla resurrection scene tho\nmoat suitable to our present world\nsituation? Canada la indeed fortunate among the nation*. As a cltlaen\nof the United States remarked thc\nother day, 'Canada docs not know\nwhat depression ls. But in spite of\nthat compliment we feci that we\ndo know. And tolling all the night\nand taking nothing describes thc\nsituation fairly well. The long nlgnt\nof depression lingers and what is\nneeded is thst the world turn to\nChrist Who lightens our darkness\nand brings the morning.\"\nThe vicar strongly appealed for\nmore of the spirit of Christ in all\ndealings and relationships, bo they\nof the fmali and personal circle \"or\nthose cf the larger unit embracing\nthe w.-.ole world.\n\"Let the church,\" he concluded.\n\"lead the way for our people in\nwhole-hearted return to the Christ\nwaiting to welcome us on thc shore,\nand so will dawn a new day of\nbrighter things for our beloved Dominion, and we shall realize that\n\"morning la now come, and Jcsui\nstanding   on   the   *:.cre.\"\nAfter the service the boys were\nthe guest* of the Women's auxiliary\nat a most appetising tea served in\nthe Community hall. At the conclusion of the tea Albert Langlll ono\nol the choirlatera returned thanks\nto Mrs. Murray and member* of the\nWomen'* auxiliary for their delightful   hJepltallty.\nNoted Golfer\nCame Here 35 Years Ago;\nWorked on Crows Nest\nPass Railway\nHlchard  Oaskeli, better Known a*\n\"Dick\"' throughout the Kcotenays,\nwho died at Willow Paint Friday,\nApril 8, was a tamlllir tlfure ln\nNelson. It was 35 years ago, this\nmonth, that he came to Nelson and\n11 years laelore that he lett England\nlor   Canada.\nSince 1887, and until 1003 When\nhe took up ranching at willow point,\nDick G.askcll was engaged in mining\nhere, working ln such Nelson mines\nas tho Po;r.ai.an. Silver King, Athabasca, and Molly Glbean and in the\nAlii'w\\arth and Phoenix camps.\nHis activities on this continent\ntook hl:n first to Colorado mines\nand later to construction ol the\nCrow's Nest pass section cf the Ca\nnadlan Pacific railway. In 1887 he\nmoved to Victoria and was occupied\nin water works and post oftlce construction.\nHis fourth year of residence ln\nVictoria sew .im united ln man-Inge\nwith Mies E.rma Mace ol Bedford\nEnglani. Six years Inter he left with\nhis wife  for Nelson.\nIlls he.lith began t0 fall tn 1934\nwhen on a visit to the coast, and\nhe returned to his willow Point\nranch. Hta health seemed to Improve until the fall of 1031. when\nhe took a turn for the worse.\nSurviving elm are nl, wife, two\nsons, J. R. O.iakrll of Stewart, British\nColumbia, E. GMkell ot Nelsan. and\nfive daughters, Mrs. J. CrurhUm,\nVancouver, Mrs. H. Llnmore, Mrs. A.\nWright, Miss Grace Ga\u00abkell, Victoria;\nMrs. J. Costaln, Klmberley. and Mrs.\nJ. R. Oa-akcll of Stuart. Another\ndaughter died when four years old\nhi 1003. He leaves tne brother ln\nLiverpool, and two sisters. Mrs. A.\nWhitehead of Willow Point, and Mrs,\nr. H.allv.ell cl Trail. He also leaves\n12 grandchildren.\nTRAIL. B. C. April 1J\u2014A pretty\naprlng wedding wa* celebrated at St.\nFrancis Xavier church yesterday\nmorning when Llda, youngest daugh-\nH ter of -It. and Mrs. A. Mandoll, wa.\nunited ln marriage to Ouifseppe Pe\ntronl of this city. Rev. Leo A. Hob\nsen  performed  the ceremony.\nTlie bride wa* charming ln a drei\not bridal whir* flat crepe, modelle\non long llared llnM and havlnf i\n\u2022hort jarjuette. She wore a long vel.\not heavily embroidered allk net. held\nln place tvlth oraug* blossom*. She\ncarried \u2022 bouquet of roses.\nMlsa flora Castlgllonl attended a*\nbridesmaid. 8h* chraaa a gown ol yellow flat crep* ol ankle length with\ncoat*c. Her hat ol ye.low embroidered straw wa* trimmed wtth green.\nShe carried a bouduet ol \u00bbprlng flow-\nera.\nTh* groom wa* ,upport*d bj nl*\nbrother. Armando Petronl.\nA reception wa* held alter the\nwedding at the home ol th* brlde'a\nparent,, Rossland avenue.\nFor travelling the b d* wore a\nspring ,ult ol green flat crepe trimmed w'lth georgette Her hat and accessories  were   to  match.\nMr. and Mrs. Petronl will take up\nresidence ln Trail\na     \u2022     *\nMiss Elisabeth Nelson wal ganst ot\nhonor at a surprise miscellaneous\nshower Saturday ovenlng at the horn*\nof her aunt, Mrs. A. 1. Lundc, Oak\nstreet. Mrs. Lunde and Mrs. Harry\nLundbcrgh wero Jalnt hostesses. The\nrooms were prettily decorated in pink\nand white, thc gifts being brought ln\non a small wagon decorated villi\nstreamers carrying out the color\nscheme of the decorations. Miss Dorothy Lund* presented the wagon of\ngift* to the bride eletl. Mrs. Charlea\nPerkins, Mrs. George Isaac Mrs. A.\nAlmqulst and Mrs. John Backman\nserved dainty refreshments. Other\nguests present were Mrs. O. P. Nelson.\nMrs. Frank lundqulst, Mrs. W. H.\neasier, Mrs. K. Anderson, Mrs. D.\nSetso and Mrs. Arvld Johnson; Mrs.\nVictor Fors and Mrs. C. Johnson, both\not Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlaa Ruby Harvey of Pentlcton ll\nvisiting at her home her* lor a month.\nJame* May ol Nelson Is the guest\not his son-ln-lnw and davghter. R'v.\n\u00bbnd Mrs. Frederic ti. Denis, Bay avenue.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs.  C.   W.  Tyler   of  Nelson   l\nspending a few daya vislt.-g Mr. f\nMrs. A. R. Buchan.\nMIS* M. Dohl* of f.i* Trail-Tad.\nac hospital stall ls the guest of J.\nand Mra. P. S. Peters of Kossla;\nbefora leaving lor her horn* at t.\ncoast.\n^^\u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0laBM\u00abM**Jai*mj\ntfTraiiGty        cMea&her's^\nTRAIL.  B.  C.  April   1J\u2014A pretty    5 f^f\n5,1S.\nENGAGEMENT BROKEN   OFT\nJoyce Wethered, noted British\ngolfer, whose engagement to another golfer. 30 yeara her senior, haa\nb:cn. broken off.\nWhitehouse   Outlines  School\nDental Clinic Scheme at\n1. 0. D. E. Meet\nMrs. W. S. Klrg gav* a lengthy\nreport on welfare activity at the\nrecular meeting of the Kokariee\nChapter I.OT-.E.. which wa* held at\nthe home of Mrs. W. Wsldie, Stanley street, Tuesday afternoon. 6he\nreported that the chapter had continued to provide 21 children with\nmilk, and o er nourishment during\ntrie past month, nnd that eeveral\nemergency cat-ea had been looked\naftec\nIt wea decided t* aend n letter\nof condolence to Mrs. Hugh Wallace.\nTALK!   ON\nDUCTAL  fU*IC\nF. C. Whitehouse gave a detailed\noutline of a proposed dental clinic\ntor Nelson schools.\nThe cup donated by the chapter\nfor   the   forthcoming   musical   festival was  on display at the meeting,\nTO   TAKE        HT\nIN   YPRE9   M1RV1CE\nAn invitation from th* Canadian\nLegion aaking that the chapter attend th* com me morn tlon icrices at\nthe cemetery on Ypreo day was\nread and  r   rpted.\nThere wa* on* new member accepted and one proposed. Refreshments were aerved. and a hearty\nv.to of thanks accorded the hostess.\nThere  wer*   33   membera  present.\nATTEND   WATTS   FLNERAL\nSOUTH 9JUOOAX, B. C. April 12.\n\u2014Mr.   and   Mrs.   J.   L.   Purdy   were\nnmong thewe who attended the watt*\nfuneral'.\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Rees# Tifth av4\nnue, left last evening for* Vancouve\nwhere they will reside ln future. Ku\nmerous friends gathered at tha depo\n*o wlah them a pleasant journey ar\nUf.pplne*a ln their new home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. Anna Domeaky of New York\narrived ln Trail Saturday to visit her\nson, who la a patient In Truil-Tadan-\nao hospital.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Bond and\ndaughters, who have been in Trail\nduring tlie winter months, left yesterday for their home in FrultvaJe.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. M. Allen. Mlsa Alice Houston\nand Mis* Hilda Barnes spent Sunday\nIn Robeon.\n\u2022 \u2022   a\nInvitations  have  been   lasued   for\nthe wedding of Mlsa Helen Fowler\nof Victoria to Kenneth Wilson Brown,\nApril 20, at which Mrs. Norman Randall of Trail, sister ot the bride elect,\nwill be matron of honor.\nFred Edmonatone, Columbia avenue, who is a patient in Trail-Tad-\nanac hospital, la reported to be making progress. <\n\u2022 \u2022   a\nJohn McGregor left yesterday morning for Winnipeg to Join his brother whom he has not seen for the\npast 12 years. For the past three\nyears Mr. McGregor ha* resided in\nTrail with his Cousin Mrs. A. Mc-\nKlnnon.\nMr. and Mrs. 8. E. Wakerill left\nlast evening to make their home in\nVancouver.\nSTORE NEWS\nMoney Saving Specials for Wednesday\nMorning\nBleached Sheets\nHemmed   Sheets  ready  for  uie.\nLarge  file.  Made of  good  quality\n. bleached cotton. These come direct\nfrom the mill.\nSPECIALLY FRICED\nAT EACH  fl.00\nPillow Slips\nBleached cotton pillow slips in good\nweight. Full sines.\nEXTRA VALUE TODAY\nAT 5 FOR  S1.00\nLinen Towels 36 Inch Prints\nTea towels of good weight pure lin- Wabasao prints in a range of pat-\nen. Colored borders. terns. Fast colors. 36 inches wide.\nSPECIAL 4 FOR $1.00       SPECIAL 4 YARD FOR ... 81.00\nFilet Nets Beach Cloth\nFilet curtain nets in cream or white Fast color beach cloth. 86 inches\nSPECIAL TIIE YARD   39p       wide. Wabasao make. All colors.\nSPECIAL TODAY THE YARD 39\u00ab*\nDuchess Satin\n36 inches Satin in black only. Good\nquality.\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nAT THE YARD -.-.-.-... \u00bb1.1\u00bb\nSilk Prints\nAll new designs on various colored\ngrounds. 26 inches wide.\nSPECIAL THE YARD 69*\nPrinted Voiles\nExtra special in voiles. 86 inchea\nwide. Good quality and all new designs.\nTODAY THE YARD 89a*\n,5*SS^5SS!i^**3BWS\nJKS-i'iMf**^^\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS _ TN-\naura nee. Notary, J. D. Anderaon,\nTrail. i98U)\nMrs. Henry John Is\nTaken to Hospital\nMrs. Henry Jc n, wife of Henry\nJohn, Nelwny Canadian customs collector, was rushed to the hospital\nIn Howell\"* ambulant* on the arrival here of the Great Northern\nfrom Salmo Tuesday night. It la\nunderstood that her condition Is\nnot acrloua.\nScouting\u2014Here\nThere and\nEverywhere\nTo Tour Britain\npP,-aVpH;\nV3f \u00a3>*\u25a0]\nM              . *%*'|\ng_C                   .   ..   ,^Lm\nPRETTY DEBATER\nMis* Rob* Cox Russell of Pensa-\no \"a, fla., a aentor at Randolph-\nMason Woma-j college, Lynchburg,\nV , who la a member of. the international debating t\u00abam which will\ntour Great Britain in April and\nMay,\nBV E. R. H.\nAmong the varlo\\is departments of\nscouting little ia known in the\nDominions of thc flcouta Friendly\nSociety. Thla society conduct*, what\n1* known in England aa \"mutual Insurance\" and In recent year* its buai-\nni\"nB haa grown remarkably. To be a\nmember one must be * scout and tha\nsociety whew head office ia ln London, has all its affairs conducted by\nscoutcrs and nuts, In the la\u00bbt Annual general meeting the chairman\npresented the account* \"with a feeling of elation and satlEfactlon\". A\nnistcm of development in the Dominions will probably b* considered aoon.\niHoapltallty year 1933.)\nMr. Martin, International commissioner, haa expreawd his pleasure at\nthe proRrcBs being made in invitations to foreign rcouta to visit thc\nmother country this summer. This\nshould be a great opportunity for\nnew -scout friendship* which will no\ndoubt be etlmulatcd nfresh at the\nworld Jamboree ln  1833.\nOne of the happy experiences of\nscout Jamborees and other such\ngatherings is to see a scout searching for another scout whose acquaintance he made at tome prc-lous\nrally.\nRover scout*\u2014.lover scouts In all\nparts of the world will be interested\nin a pow-wow which was held in\nJanuary at Gilwell. There Was very\ngood representation from distant\npart* and the results v***re certainly\ngratifying.\nThe programme consisted ot discussion* on: unemployment, age\nlimit*, Causes of leakage between\ntroop and crew.\nProvision of more leaden, organization etc.\nTlie gathering ended with an open\nspRslon and the subject of blood\ntransfualon wsa raised.\nAfter a general summing up it VM\nagreed that the pow-wow had been\na success and hope* of this becoming\nan annual event were expressed.\nWatchers of the trees\u2014The prl7e\nfor th* best report f'} a troop activity ln England during February\nwaa won by the 'Irst Blackfoot troop\nWhen and arterial road was put tn\naome time ago the troop volunteered\nto keep an eye on the trees. They\nregularly tend to th* tree* and report damage or give suggestions to\nthe Council.\nAnother inttretttng point about\nthis troop ls that alt' ough, they are\nfew In number they have nearly 100\nper cent, reading \"The Bcouf regularly. By the way, the Nelson commissioner haa a few back number*\nof \"The ScO'.t\" for any acout who\nasks.\nScout Firefighter*\u2014 While Assistant Scoutmaater Spall and four other\nscouts from Sydney, Australia were\nboating on Georges river, about two\nmiles down-stream from East Hills\n' Park, they observed volume* of amok*\nIn the dlatance, and found an extensive bush fire raging. Several poultry farms and orchards were in danger and the scout* set to work to\nstop the flames from spreading.\nThe fire being too extensive for\nthem to cope with, a message for\nhelp waa sent to another troop In\ncamp about a mile away. \"*' ry were\nquickly on tha scene and after an\nhour's atruggle tha outbreak wa*\nsubdued.\nFor Wolf Cub* \u2014\n(OLI.VS CttttCI\nWhen   Colin  joined  '-be   Wolf  Cubs,\nA rather grinning lad,\nHis father wa* not over-keen,\nHe thought it Just a fad.\nBut Colin, who was only nine,\nThought Wolf Cub* looked so Jolly\nfine.\nTheir gamea,  he  ealfj  were  topping.\nHe learned   the   howl.\nAnd found out, a- *.ongst other things.\nCubs grin, they  never ecowl.\nAnd ao he washed    his    fsc*    quite\nclean.\nHe felt hi* grin waa better seen.\nAnd now he is * Sixf,\nThe 8mart**t of the cub*..\nHis face and teeth are ahinlng bright,\nMy. how he r^-ubs and scrnhel\nHe's happy as the day la long,\nAnd Dad's dieoverrd he was wrong\nSay* he, \"If* more than juat a fad.\"\nBetty McLviilc Smith\nAS EMFRHENCY  QUASH\nOK HONOR\nAn Interesting inside story of the\nrole played by a bey acout guard at\nhonor Is told by President D. P.\nOruikshanka of the Minto IMta|\nclub of Ottawa. The occasion was\nthe last visit of Viscount and Lady\nWillingdon   to   the   annual   skit ing\ncarnival, tho \"Minto Folliee,\" accompanied by dlstlngnlahed mambera\nof the diplomatic corps and aereial\nprovincial   lleutenant-govarnora.\nTo facilitate the approach of tre\nparty to the vice-regal box a atrip\nof carpet had been placed upon the\nice, A few minutea before the arrival of th* guest the director on\na final tour of inspection, ateppeci\nupon the carpet. It allppecl under\nhim.\nImmedi, ^ely earn* vUIoa of a\ncatastrophe,\u2014Hi* Excellency or Her\nExcellency, or the Jaf nese Consul\nGeneral, or the U. S. Minister\u2014possibly even the whole dlattngulahed\nparty to a heap on tha,feel And\neven   broken   bones!\nTiie director thought rapidly.\nSnartly uniformed \u2022cout* were\nscattered about the auditorium on\nvarious duties.\nHastily he called them together.\nQuickly he explained, and placed\nthem at intervals along the carpet,\neach boy's toe* firmly clamping the\ncarpet-edge to  tbe  1c*.\nTheir Excellencies and guests\nPMMd thomrh the erect, line of\nBcout*. smiling appreciative of tho\nyoutbful guard of honor\u2014-and reached their  box  ln safety.\nOld country rovers of several years'\nscout experience are belna; sought by\ni tbe Hud ton's Bay compnny for ap-\nprcntlership poFt* ln Cimada. Ten\nor more have been In toucn with\ndominion scout headquarters. A recent typical letter from a Scottish\nrover Wal of two months alone as\ncook with hi*, factor on an Ungava\nlslmd, swatting the freeze-up, then\nvisit* of Eskimos, the making of\nj igloo*, hunting aeals and trapping\nfoxes. Ail theee young scout adventurers write cheerily, lajflteUng\nthe true scout spirit under conditions that at times must be lc*;*-\nsomely   trying\n\"CRITERION\"\nBLOOD PrRlFIER\"\nChir-^e Herb Medicine. Guamntred\nt.a give relief in tli* molt eerlcna\nCBjae.a of PILES. If '.alien In time Will\nrelieve CO! 1>S and prevent TONSTt,.\nfflS antl FLU. 13.00 per large bottle.\n(MiTRlOV MANITA! TTRINO CO.\nIM   Ihlnl   Ave.   Ratt,   (aliary,   Alia.\nPASTEURIZED\n\"just as milr^is\nPasteurized\nCHEESE\n\t\n rial six\nPublished every morning eicept Sunday by News Publishing Company.  Limited.  Nelson, B   C.\nMember of Canadian Pre** leased wire news service.\nAdvertising rate card* and A. B. C. statement* of circulation\nmailed on request, or may b\u00ab seen at th* office of any advertising\nagency recognized by th* Canadian Dally Newspapers' Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy mall   (country), per month\nPar year\nBy  raaU   (city), per  year .\nOutside Canada, per month\nPer year\nDelivered,  per week\nP*t  \u00bbear\t\nPayable In advance.\nMember Audit Bureau of Circulation.\n_\u2022 40\n_   e.oo\n_ 13.00\n_ .7!\n_ 1.50\n_ 3i\n_ 13.00\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1932\nRadio Telephone\nA Genoa press dispatch says that Guglielmo Marconi,\nInventor of wireless, has developed a completely successful radiophone capable of both receiving and sending. It has been tested over a distance of eight miles\nwith a fifty-two centimeter wave. Should this latest\nradio marvel be made serviceable in a general way for\nlong and short distances it may supersede the telephone, in use for more than 50 years. But as it is said\nthat the old telephone system can be utilized in connection with the new radio and that a person using it can\nconverse with anyone on a wire circuit, the old device\nmay be retained to work in connection with that of\nMarconi.\nImagine the possibilities of this unique system of\ncommunication! It may open up a new radio world in\nwhich voice will answer over miles along which no wires\nare strung on pole after pole. It may be more of an\nimprovement than the present loud-speaking radio was\nover that in which the headpiece was employed.\nOne thing that must have struck every radio listener\nwhen he read the Genoa dispatch in his morning newspaper was the thought of the opportunity which may be\nafforded him to talk back to broadcasters and tell them\nwhat he thinks of their speech, song or instrumental performance. All that the listeners can do now as he sits\nin front of his radio is to dial out an offensive broadcaster. Perhaps after a while he may be able to throw\na verbal egg at him. In this respect, as in many others\nthe new Marconi device, if generally acceptable, may\nfill a long-felt want.\nMake British Columbia Different\nAnother tourist season .will soon be upon us. What\npreparations are being made to make it a success? Like\nevery other business these days one has to go after it.\nOur immediate problem at home is how to entertain\nand give them a good time so that first of all they will\nstay longer and secondly when they go away, they will\nreturn and bring their friends. These points are emphasized in a statement by Herbert Auscomb, president\nVictoria publicity bureau.\nOne of the essentials we have to watch is the making\nof our hotels and stopping places attractive in appearance, clean and comfortable, serving good plain meals\nof fresh poultry, fish, fruit and vegetables, in all of\nwhich Kootenay excels. Visitors want a change, and\nthey can buy every lien of canned stuff at home, so\nwhy not give them locally produced food, nicely cooked,\nas by so doing you will please them and also help our\nlocal producers.\n\"Make British Columbia different\" is a fast catching\nslogan. Our friends who come from the south expect\nto see something different; that is why they come. Let\nthem see the Union Jack flying, to start with, then\nEnglish inns in appearance would enhance the plea-\nure of their trio as well as giving them something to talk\nabout. .Making our places look as English as possible\nis the greatest selling point we can develop in order to\nincrease our tourist trade.\nBowling greens, tennis lawns, quoit and archery\ngrounds, would all add much to the attraction of our\nroudhouscs and stopping places, and could be easily\nfixed up with a little work and energy. Flowers and\nshrubbery would greatly enhance many of our resorts,\nand a little intelligent industry in the gardening line\nshould bring about handsome results for the summer\ntrade, Mr. Anscomb points out.\nThis rear our American friends can get more for\ntheir dollars here than they can at home, which is certain to bo a factor for an increase in tourist business.\nTHE JJEtSON DULY NEWS, NELSON. B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDAY MORMNO, APRIL U, 193*1\n^Between You\nand Me\"\nBy -JB.C.\"\nDeveloping Barite in British Columbia\n\"Barite in British Columbia,\" a bulletin made available 1'or general distribution by the Hon. W. A. McKenzie, minister of mines, is the first of a scries of this\nkind on the non-metallic minerals of this province.\nWritten by A. H. Richmond of the technical staff of\nthc department of mine?, it is the forerunner of a num-\nber of similar publications designed, as J. D. Galloway,\nprovincial mineralogist explains in his foreword, to\nplace in the Junds of those interested \"information\nWhich mav WSUlt in the greater use of local deposits of\nlion-metal'lics, or the opening up of certain deposits\nnow lying idle.\"\nStructural materials, together with other non-metall-\nlic minerals, it is pointed out, represent 8.2 per cent\nof the gross value of the mineral production of British\nColumbia. These include days, limestone, sand, gravel\nand building-stone, which it will be readily recognized,\nare to quite an extent the basis of building and construction work. Many other non-metallic minerals are\nused in industry and manufacture. The total value of\nthe non-metallic output of British Columbia up to the\nend of 1930 is recorded as $62,538,833. In recent years\nthese minerals account for about 26 per cent of the\ntotal gross value of the Canadian mining industry.\nThat motor company which hired 70 orchestras to play\nat its .spring showing of cars evidently was working on\nthe theory that customers as well as motors now need\ntuning.\nGreat Britain appears to be rapidly re;:a'nin;T its position among the rations. It is reMSOring to s:e that John\nBull still knows how to ta!;e the bull by the horns.\nSome days *4jo I ran a -problem\nin the** columns given to me by a\nbig hearted Nelson cltlwa who offered prizes to Junior liinh school\natiident* solving tb* puzzle. But\nnow I believe there must have been\n.wave-thing wrong with the question\nitself for I did not receive an answer from Nelson st all. I am\ngoing to refer the question back to\nmy friend Just to see if he can\nwatt it out hlmwif. Maybe he waa\nApril   Fooling   us.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nA Creston lady evidently spent\nsome time on Bu leaner and arrived at the following ablution. I'll\nprint It, but in ihe meantime I -am\ngoing to find out If the question\nwa* bona fide. But here's the way\none lady answered the question. First\nI'll   repeat   the   problem.\nMrs. Blark, Mrs. Oreen and Mrs\nW~ite each accompanied by her\ndaughter went Into a shop to buy\nribbon. Each person knight a* many\nyard* of ribbon as their selection\ncoat In cent* per yard and each\nmother spent 63 cent* more than\nher daughter. Mrs. White bought 11\nyard* more than Mary, Mra. Brown\nbought 23 yardi more than Mawe.\nThe third girl'* nam* waa Maude.\nWio   wa*   her   mother?\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nFrom  Creeton:\nI   wa*   interested   In   the   problem\nin your column last Friday and\nspent some time over It that eve\nnlng, finally arriving at the solu\ntlon, or at least my solution, that\nls, going on tho supposition that\nth* Mrs. 'Brown' mentioned toward\nth* end wa* meant to be tlie same\nlady who wa* called Mrs. \"Black\"\nearlier\u2014probably    just    a    ml>prlnt.\nI did riot send my solution in a*\nI only worked it out for my own\namusement, but as you do not s-oem\nto have had many replies I thought\nI would   forward It.\nMrs. Black la Maude's mother.\nThe other girls, Mary and Maggie,\nar* tt* daughter* of Mrs. Green and\nMrs.    White   respectively.\nI hope you will get replies from\nth* Junior high school before Friday.\nPlease let us have ft^me more\nproble-n\u00ab, they are rather fun to\nworry oik.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHere'* \u00bbom* bowlers from school\nexamination  papers;\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCaesar wa* killed by th* Idea of\nMarch, who were led by Brutus,\nCasstu* and th* Ides following.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nInterlude* wer* plays given before people knew how to read. A\nman cam* out on the stage and told\nwh*t would rappen during the play.\nHe  wa* the Interlude.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAccording to Victor Hugo, love\nexists In all clause* of society.\n\u2022 \u2022   i\nWhat waa Pasteur's great achievement?\nHe  Invented  milk bottles.\nTh* spoils system was the system\nwhereby the government had to take\ncar*  of  lt* garbage.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nCharles    Dlcken*      is      numbered\n*mong  the  unemployed   In  Toronto.\nHe ls not a novelist, this Toronto\nDickens, nor can he to his regret,\nclaim any relationship to the great\nmaster of humor.\nMr, Dickens, Wr-o 1* a core-maker,\nhas been out of a Job for many\nmonth*. He reads the books of his\ngreat namesake, but doe* not belong\nts the Dickens Fellowship, of which\nToronto has so flourishing a branch\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nHe 1* in a Dickens of a position.\nDick Barnes, ex-mayor of this\ncity, who formerly sold oats and\ncereal foods, but who now caters to\nthe thirst of man instead of his\nfood rations, Hill a good story about\nHis   own   Chinese   gardener.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nIt appears that Dick cannot \"fire'\nhi* gardener. Every year ho Hppenrs\nto dig Dick's garden. Every ye.ir\nDick ha* told him he didn't want\nhim to dig the garden. Every year\nhe  has dug the garden.\nHe arrived at Dick's home the\nother day. \"Me dlggum glarden,'' he\nsmilingly announced. \"No, no,\" said\nDick. \"You no dlggum garden tbll\nyear.\" \"Al light,\" said his celestinl\nfriend. \"I dlggum tomollo.\" \"No\nyou can't dlggum my garden,'* argued   Dick.   \"I   diggum   this   year.\"\n\"Al light.\" mid the Chinese. I\ndiprgum  good.\"\nAnd so the argument continued.\nFinally Dick sold bluntly. \"No, no\nJohn, you go away. I dig my own\ngarden this year. Too much?e depression. You iftVaafl I diggum. You\nno dlggum.\"\n\"AI Ugh tee, Mister,\" replied the\ngardener. \"1 i-avey. You (fl iggum\njours**!!.   Al   llf-htee.\"\nAnd the next day Dick arrived\nbom* to dinner to find his garden\npartly spaded and the C&aMM happily   engaged   In   \"digging   'urn \u25a0 up.\"\n\"It's no VM, say8 Dick. I jiu-t\ncan't se^m to get into that Chinaman's he.id that, he is fired. Ahd 1\nhave   done   it   :.car   after   year.\nSpring Matt u9 here. .Jjck Lunelle\nremove,! hla atom windows yesterday and 5am Grldley baa his garden\nabout   ro.idy   to  grow   up.\nOut In Fairview the boys are\npitching horse shoes. George Maffpita\nM.ems to be cbaatpton.\nThere sroui.l ha\\e been some\nstraw hats around yesterday but lf\nthey   wcre  out   I   missed   them.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nBetween you and me\u2014Tennis season ls opening thla weekend. The\nmode for the ladies this year Is to\nwear short*. Tennis galleries will be\noverslived if that la the case. But\ndon't  tell   a  soul.\nThat Body of Yours\nBy   JAMES   IV.   IURTO.N\nTIIE COMMON COLD MAY\nMEAN QUARANTINE\nSOME DAY\nI believe the day will come when\nan Individual with the ordinary\n\"common cold\" will be required to\nremain at home; that he will not be\nallowed to mingle with other people\nuntil hla cold is better.\nI know this doesn't seem fair to\nthe Individual and his fmily, or to\nhis work or business, but some way\nmay be found to repay him for the\ntime lost by remaining at home.\nAs you know the common cold la\nInfectious and contagious and get*\npassed from one person to the other\nvery easily and very rapidly. The\nlittle organism thought to be the\ncause of cold ts very small. It Is\nfound ln the secretions of the nose\nof the victims, who have acquired It\ndirectly or indirectly from some one\nelse. The cold Is transferred by sneezing, and from thc articles handled,\nso that it ls almost impossible to\nprevent colda attacking people.\nA few years ago the common cold\nwas Just const -ed a nuisance or Inconvenience but when the time that\ni* lost from work by those suffering\nwith H, is counted up, it would show\n,thnt a great oeal of time 1* lo*t. and\nmuch work left undone.\nFurther, aa you know, *ome ailments never occur a second time ln\nthe same individual but wit' the\ncold, one attack only seems to break\ndown resistance and other attacks\nfollow every few weeks or months.\nAnd the unfortunate point Is that\nthese colds are often the forerunner\nof more serious ailments\u2014 brorchitis,\nbroncho\u2014 pneumonia, pneumonia,\nand tuberculosis.\nThe best rethod of protection,\naccording to the U. S. Public Health\nService, for both the sick and the\nwell. Is for the patient with a cold\nto go home to bed lf necessary\u2014and\nto stay there until he ha* recovered\nthe patient needs quiet; rest, and\nproper care, and he cannot obtain\nthese in office, shop, -or factory.\nWhile thus doing the beat thing f -\nhimself, he ls likewise adopting one\nof the best method* of protecting\nthe general public.\nUntil the time comes when everybody with a cold will stay home, and\nthat time hasn't arrived yet, the victim should cover every cough ftnd\nsneeze and wash hla hands many\ntimes a day.\nRemember, constipation and overeating, beside* cold damp weather,\ncan ma'--* it easier for * cold to overcome your natural resistance.\nAuction and\nContract Brldqe\nBy   thl   World',   Leafllnr   Authority,\nMILTON C. VtORK\nTHE VALUE OF DISCARDS\nThe abov, r vt waa played with\nneither side vunerabl* ln one of the\nseveral American town* which bear\nthe classic nam* of Troy\u2014thl* one\nIn Ohio. South bid on* Spade, and\nWest, wl.j seven Hearts fieaded by\nQueen-Jack ahd a strong Club suit,\nnaUrally bid two \"art*. It would\nhavi been * simple thing for North\nto bid for gam* ln Spade*, but that\nwould not have shown his unsuspected Heart strength; so he made\nthe interestlnE bid of three Hearts\nto announce no losing Heart tricks\nand a probable slam ln South Spades\nAfter East'* oass. South bid four\nDiamonds to show the two-suited\ncharacter of ''\u00bb ha- '. West put ,n\na dangerous bid of five Clubs, and\nNorth showed hi* preference for\nSpades over Dla onda by bidding\nfive Spades. Then South accepted\nNorth'* earlier slam Invitation and\nbid six Spades.\nWest opened with the King ol\nClubs whlc ron'h's Ac* won and\nthen, not reasonl;.* bey-t.d the necessity of *-Ulng out the adverse\ntrumps.. Declarer led a trump. East\nwon, returned his partner's lead,\nan Deciar * small slam venture\nwa set two tricks. South was censured for hla slam bid, but nobody\ncriticised him for not making the\nsla*n which waa In th* hand If\npr'pe-v played.\nTHE CORRECT PLAY\nAfter using hi* Club Ace to win\ntrick 1, Declarer should have appreciated that the adversaries would\n1*   \" Club* the moment \u25a0 Ace of\ntrumps won and that h* would lose\ntwo Club trick* unless he discarded\nSouth'* Ten and Nine In time.\nSouth should lead aDUmond, not a\nSpade, tc t':k 2. North, winning\nwith the King, then should lead the\nAce and King of Heart* on which\nSouth woul-* discard his two losing\nClubs. After that North would lead\na Spade which East would take with\nth* Ac*. Probably East then would\nlead a Spade to draw two trumps\nfor one. Declarer ahe 1 lead a\n| third Spade to exhaust th* adver-\n| sarles, but at or _ lead the Ace and\na small Diamond so a* to get In\nthree Diamond ruf's with th* North\nhand and tr*o Club ruffs with the\nSouth *\"-nd. East's last trump could\nbe drawn at th* last   hlrteenth trick.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From Tne Dally  News of April  13,\n1912)\nThree fire*, one of which gutted\nthe Old Curioblty *hop while another damaged th* Thompson building* on Baker atreet, wa* atartei\nby tha firebug. ;\n.   .   \u2666\nE. H. Small, the pioneer .hotel\nman of Cranbrook, who recently sold\nthe Cosmopolitan hotel to Mr. Cam-;\neron of Spokane, will leave this\nweek with his family to reside In;\nVancouver.\n* *   * !\nJohn W, Orowe and Mary Caroline.'\nwest of  Cranbrook.   were  united  lnl\nmarriage last Tuesday. |\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAbout   110,000   will   be   spent   on\ntha  Coleman   streets   thla   summer.\na. \u2022' *\nThe high achool and th* C. P, R.\nwill meet In a baseball game at tiie\nRecreation grounds this afternoon.\nPitt* and Clarke are the battery for\nthe high echool and for C. P. It.\nJohnson   and   Turner,\nENJOY\nMODERN\nPLUMBING\nFirst class heating and\nplumbing work done by\nexperienced workmen, on\nthc time payment plan,\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING &\nHEATING CO,\nLtd.\n1.  A.   SMITH\n313  Bakrr lit.\n\u00bb.   JEMSON\nrhone 66S\nValue of Musical Festival\nTo many who live in the country it seems that when\nbusiness came back down to earth it landed on the\nfarmer. <\nIn tiie Cranbro-'k Courier appears\nan ess.\u00bby by Cyril M. Robertson,\nwhich secured first prise of $25\noffered the high school pupils for\nbest article on \"The Value of a\nMusical Festival.\" tMs in connection\nwith that annual gathering there.\nThe essay follows:\nIn a small city a musical festival\ncome* as a much needed diversion\nfrom the oft repeated amisement-i\nof everyday life. The people should\nthus consider it part of their duty\nas citizens to make the festival a\nsuccess, and should put forth their\nutmost efforts ln the furtherance of\nthis duty. They not only benefit bv\nlt themselves, but they aid 'Others\nto' mfel a step up the ladder towards success in their musical un-\ndert,:ikingrt.\nA festival such as this requires\nmuch preparation if It is to be at\nell a sticcoss. The gathering of\nmaterial to ensure this atMON, and\nthe details connected therewith arc\nusually l'-oked after by the sponsors\nof U*t* fcslval. The people of the\ncommunity, rowever, hold thc main\nsuccens of such an occiston in their\nown hands It ls up to them to\nproduce the material and act as a\ngeneral basis en which the festival\nis built up riayu.g i\\Wh an Important, part in tiie LruUdlUI up of\nthe festival, it only fallow* that the\npeople should benefit by it. The.se\nMtwfita 6ho**' in various mytl firs*.,\nin ItfMd to music; accOQlt, ln regard to the hliaUiaaa llg..t ulthou.::,\nMils  point:  need   not  be  stressed   too\natronglj aa it docs not bear directly\non thc subject) and the. third may\nbe applied to the community a* a\nwho!e--that of publicity.\nDealing with UN Biualca] side of\nit. there are iv..,my ettlBRU in a city\nat town who a*e lover* of music or\nwho are strongly inclined in It*\nfavor. These people have at their\ndisposal tho radio and phonograph,\nbut do you thin: that they would\nand could enjoy listening to the music of their fellow -citizens and visiting musicians? But how can they\ndo this? By gathering these musicians into a bjdy and competing one\nagainst the other, *and thus form the\nmusical festival. Music, lt ls said, Is\nthe sou] of things, and t e best possible way of giving this statement\nfair trial is to encourage and listen\nto the music of your fellows. Although the appreciation felt by most\npeople on hearing go'-d music does\nnot show outwardly, It must be felt\nInwardly, so why not exhibit this\n1 appreciation and help further to\nmake the festival a success.\nIt is not only the people who appreciate the festival, but a great\nnumber of the musicians also, as\nthey have been provided with a\nmentis of seeing how and where they\nstand among their fellow musicians,\nThen when these visitors return to\ntheir home towns they carry with\nthem a feeling of cjnfld^nce ln\nthemselves that miy materially aid\nthem In preparing for their future\ncareer.\nIn summarizing the values of the\nfestival then, we may snv that it has\nafforded pleasure to the people of\nths district; lt ha* quickened Interest In music; it ha* given many an\namateur an oppnlnj,' by which ho\nmay attain |Mt*r height*; and lt\nhas given publicity to the city In\nwhich it was held. For these reasons alone I should say that a music festival merit* al] possible, sup-\npert of the people and should be en-\nc-;uriired sol only in the present but\nIn  future times.\nAVNT HET\n\"1 try to be kind o' modern, but\nI couldn't feel dressed If I'd Just\nhold   some thin\"   above  my   head  an'\nwiggle.\"\nMIMNC.  ENGINEERS     '\nTlie resolution of the cranbrook\nboard of ifaattaj asl;lng for k-bOllUOtD\nof district mining engine-?!* in the\nprovince of BriU.'>n C'liunb;.! is\nmeeting with some oppoalltoa, particularly the Prospectors' Protective\naaaodaVtton  of  British  colu&bla of\nNelson. The Cratibrook boa\u00ab4 of\ntnda did not bring in this resolution without giving the matter the\nmost earnest consideration. As far\nnH this district has been concerned\nthe government engineers scheme\nhaa MM as near a fatlm** as can\nhe conceived. The whole idea behind\nthc scheme was to assist the pros-\nppctor in opening up his property,\nby the proper direction and guidance under a capable 'enclneer. This\ndistrict of lat* years Maj b*m a\nr.ompnratlve stranger to government\nmining engineers, nnd prospectors\nnre none to\u00a9 friendly towards them\nanyhow, nt least that is the Impression that is general. The Nelson district, it ls true, haa the\nmining engineer permanently locat-\nrd there. where unquestionably\nmore pro*pertlf8 are being developed than ln East Kootenay, nevertheless an occasional visit of the\nengineer here, in public would at\nleast ahow an Interest In the mining\nof this district. Tlie resolution of\nthe Cranbrook board of trade is\nproper an**' In order as far as this\nd'^trlct la concerned. Whether\nthrrugh prejudice or carelessness, or\nbo^h, thl* d'strlct hag been given\nthe \"go by\" by the mining engineers, whose report*, prospectors\nconsider, are detrimental to th*\ndistrict, sufficient time not being\ndevoted to making a complete examination.\nTher*   -nre   fewer   prospector*   in\n25 Years 490\n(From The Dally News of March 13,\n1007)\nfl. F. Tolmile, vetrtnary surgeon,\nVictoria, has been ln Canary consulting with his chief. J. O. Rutherford, V. 9., chief vebrinary officer\nfor the Dominion. Mr. Tolmie was\nIn Nelson yesterday on Ills way to\nthe Okanagan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAt the weekly shoot of the Nelson\nGun club yesterday Mawdsley broke\n37 out of 60 birds; Ink 33, Bishop\n3a and Wells 32.\na  a  a\nCapt. Lome Stewart, No. 3 Co.\nR. M. R., ha* received word from\nOttawa *that the new Cottonwood\nrifle   range   has   been   approved.\n\u2022 *\u2022    \u2022\nYesterday W. J. Astley launched a\nnew 20-foot motor boat, the \"Calypso.\"\nFRUIT   TRICES   ACROSS   THE   LINE\nthla district today thaft before the\nadvent of the milling engineer. Mr.\nGrady, the mining engineer of\nNe'son, as far a* we know, is an\nrstemuble gentleman. The Cranbrook\nboard of trade 1* in no way op-\npMUif him. They simply deal with\nconditions as they exist in the Fort\nfiteele mining division and having\nthc backing of every prospector In\nthe district..\nThe Cranbrook be-a rd of trade\ncould carry Its resolution a step\nfarther and ask that a government\nsampling plant be located \u25a0 in this\ndistrict. This would serve the West\nI Kootenay a* well aa the Fernie and\nI Columbia dstricets, where many\nj promising properties are being open-\nj rd up and where advice from a\nI mining engineer would be of value.\n\u2014Crnnbrook Courier\nTen Years Ago\n(From  The  paliv  News of  AprU  13,\n1322)\nAt a reorganization meeting of the\nCreston Baseball club yeiterday A. R.\nSwansou  was elected  president.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nO. H. Marlett of Trail is visiting\nhis elster, Mrs. H. M. Whloister.\nC, B. Twlgg. provincial horticulturist of Cre>ton and district, and\nMrs.   Twlgg   are   visitors   In   Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThirty Japanese were killed In a\nskirmish with Russian soldiers last\nweek.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMis*    Annie    Mulr'   and    Harold\nPorter   were   united   In   marriage   at\nBull River Wednesday after noon,\nj\nHere Is something in the nature\nof an antidote to possible local pessimism over late fruit price*. It is\nsimply that things could be a lot\nworse here, Judging from the condition in American frult-producttng\ncenters,\nOkanagan apple grower* who have\nbeen accustomed to receiving a net\nof one dollar to one dollar and a\nquarter per box average of late varieties may view the price prospects this spring, covering the 1931\ncrop, with a degree of pessimism\nBut let them tum their eyes to the\nsouth of the Jlne If they actually\nwant to see  red  ink.\nWe do not know what the final\nreturn* for the late winters here\nwill actually be. At one time it\nwa* suggested Blast delicious would\naverage the Co-op grower one dollar\na box, but this figure appears to\nbe 0 ptlmlstlc. Perhaps eighty-five\ncents would be somewhere near the\nfinal average for the man shipping\nthrough associated channels. It\nmight vary a little according to\nlocals, but the valley co-op average\nwill be about that figure*. Yellow\nnewtowns and winesaps may run\nabout 70 cents average to the valley\nassociated grower, with Spitz and\nstayman at 60 cent* and Rome\nbeauties at 45 cents, Mcintosh win\nhardly average over 40 cents.\nNot so very rosy figures, are they,\nwhen we remember MM the average production cost la about 75\ncent* a box? Probably the good\ngrower can produce at 60 cents a\nbox  or  even  lower.\nBut look at some of the figures\nfrom the other side. The total coh\nof packing, storing and selling there\nwould be about 05 cents per box.\nToday extra fancy Wlnesap* are offered f,o,b, at 60 to 75 cents, leaving practically nothing at all from\nthe grower. Fancies go at 60 cents,\nand Cee grade at 35 centa leaving\nplenty of red Ink.\nFancy Romans are quoted at 60\ncent* and Cee grade at 45 cent*,\nboth   meaning red   ink surcharges.\nExtra fancy delicious are quoted\nat \u26661.50, with fancy at \u00bb1.25 and\ncee grade at 65 cents. This 1* the\nbest paying variety for the Americans at present but Its average return (x> the grower will not be\nmore  than 50 cent*.\nNearly all of the other winters are\nactually producing red ink. In the\nface of this, our co-op r\u00bb*turna of\n40 to 85 cent* net to the grower\nand aa a valley average ln each\nvariety are not so bad.\u2014Pentlcton\nHerald.\nWife: \"John, what la the difference between direct . and indirect\ntaxation?\"\nHusband: \"Why, tha difference\nbetween your asking me for money\nand going through my trousers\npocket* wliil\u00ab I'm asleep.\"\nSeeds - Seeds - Seeds\nNow l* the time to place your order for Spring planting. All\nour seeds this year ar0 of unusual high quality, and lower in\nprice.\nWe specialize In Alberta-grown seed. Get our pricea on th*\nfollowing: Alberta-grown Grimm Alfalfa, Whit* and Yellow Sweet\nClover, Brome. Western Rye Grass, Timothy, Alberta-grown corn,\nPeaa, Beans,- Potatoes, all kinds of Grains and Garden Seeds,\nPrice list now ready for ma.Uug.\nThe Southern Alberta Co-operative Association, Ltd.\n1351   SECOND AVE. S.\nl.ETliniliniiE, AIBERTA\nONE CENT\nSALE\nFOR THE ENTIRE MONTH OF APRIL WE ARE\nHOLDING A PAINT SPECIAL ON\nJap-A-Lac\n4-Hour Quick Drjinir Enamel for all woodwork, Iron\nor furniture\u2014with every purchase of Quart, Pint,\n1-2 pint or 1-4 pint at regular price we will give you\nan Extra pint, 1-2 pint or 1-4 pint for If.\nQuarts, each $1.70   Extra Pint for  l\u00a3\nPints, each 00   Extra Pint for \u201e... 1<\n1-2 pints  60 Extra 1-2 pint for .... If\n1-4 pints  35 Extra 1-4 Pint for .... It*\nRemember, JAP-A-LAC Enamel is a fully guaranteed\nProduct of the highest quality and sold only on a\nmoney back guarantee.\n$1500 given away in Prizes. Come in and get your\nContest Sheet.\nPAINT NOW!I\nNelson Hardware\nCompany\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelson, B. C.          Phone 21\n.\u2666\u2666\u2666above ALL\nwe must gain your\nATTENTION\nYour booklet or mailing piece may tell\nthe most interesting story in the world,\nbut it can't tell that story from the waste\nbasket. Too much advertising literature\nis tossed aside unread because it simply\nlacks attention value. And the man who\nsaves a few pennies on cheap printing is\ncosting his firm Uiousands in wasted expenditure.   .   . '\t\nNelson Dally News Job DeD\u00abrtm\u00abit\nprinting \"get, tliroujh\" with ycrux\nmewagp because It lia* attention yaltw.\nInteresting layout*, attractive cut*, extinctive typography ana better *toclt\ncost but little more . . but th** dll-\nlercncc epells more eales.\nCall Us Today\n'    PHONE 144\nISMhou SatUj Nans 3oii \u00a3fcpi.\nBaker Street\nCreators of Fine Printing\nNelson, B. C\n lW!\nTHT NTl\u00bbf>l\u00bb DAII.T NTWia, NFLHON, \u00bb. C. \u2014 KTUKEKUAT  MORMNO, APRIL 13. itm   u\nr*oi mtin\nYANKEES GRE\nATHLETICS BY\n12-6 VICTORY\nEight Home Runs Pounded Out; Babe Ruth\nGets Two\nPHILADELPHIA, Pa., April 12\u2014Greeting Big George\nEarnshaw like a long-lost\n\"cousin,\" Babe Euth and the\nNew York Yankees fell upon\nthe right-handed ace of the\nPhiladelphia Athletics this afternoon, blasted him off the\nfield in four innings and out-\nslugged the American league\nchampions, 12 to 6, in their\nfirst battle of the season.\nAs if in protest the implication of a $5000 salary cut\nthat reduces his stipend to a\nmere $75,000 for the year, the\ncelebrated Mr. Ruth led the\nrough assault upon Earnshaw\nby clubbing out a pair of towering home runs.\nRuth ha* contributed many a\nremain*- blow to baaeoall'i opening\nceremonle* bait, that wa* the tint\ntin In hla bib- league career .thai\nhe atartecl lite defense of hla ahtg*\nKing crown with a pair of home run*.\nThe beet th.it ihe co-cliamplon, Lou\nGehrig, could do waa to pound cne\nhome run lnt0 the left Held atanrt-\nand rattle a triple off the outfield\nwall, but Sammy Byrd dem-anatrated\nhie right, to a regular Job ln center*\nfield by blaetlng out two honae run*\nand   a  alngle.\nA crowd or 18.000 fan* a!i*rna-\ntively ahiv-erocl, oheered and Jeered *a\niheir champion* tool, a eucceasbn\not heavy wallop* to the chin.\nAll told, aeven home runs, only\nthree ahoit of the major league\nrecord, were produced. Jimmy Poxx.\n1)1,; flrat Backer of the A'a. and Al\nSimmon* were th* other horn* run\nclouter*.\nNew York    U   ID   1\nPhiladelphia    8   11   1\nGomes, Ruffing and Dickey: Earn-\nahaw, Doahong and Cochrane, Hevlog.\nSOI KIN FIRST\nCo-ordination of\nLegal Systems\nIs Writer's Urge\nCHICAGO. April 13.\u2014Two newcomers, the veteran \"Sad Sam\"\nJones and Carey Selph, started the\nChicago Whlt\u00ab Sox off to a good\nstart In the American league race\ntoday by pitching and batting out\na 9-2 victory over the St, Louis\nBrowns before a frown crowd ol\nJ8.000  spectators.\nJones held tha Browns to eight\nscattered hit*, while Selph, considered the draft prize of the year,\nblasted out three double* off the\ndelivery of Stewart and Blaeholder.\n'\u2022Goose\" Goslln paced the Brown\nhitting attack with two doubles\nand   a   single. B.     H.     E.\nSt.  Louia   - 3      8a\nChicago     fl     13     1\nBatteries-\u2014Stewart, Bl&eholder and\nFen-ell;   Jones and Grube,\nrrsn \u25a0\u00bb 'VllBI tort\n\u2022\"he palace fortress of the shep-\nh* 1 kings haa been discovered by\nSir Flinders \" trie, the archaeologist, at Tell el 'A J Jul, In Palestine,\nlie stated in ft letter received today\nt; Sir Charles Mareton.\n\"Next to the. fortress,\" Sir Charles\nsaid, \"is another building, which\nprobably was their temple. The site\nh . been compan j that of Pom-\npell from the fact that the city waa\nonly partially destroyed. We know\nthat many houses re three- stories\nhigh, and therft ls sufficient evidence now available that the city\nwas flourish tnj whe the Egyptians.\narter the death of Joseph, were op-\np    sing t.ho Israelites.\"\nNBIW YORK, April 13\u2014The New\nTork Giants celebrated the start of\ntheir 40th yenr aa membera of the\nNational league and John Me-Gritw'e\n30th season aa manager today but lt\nwaa the Philadellles who celebrated\nthe opening day victory before 30,000\nfana.\nThe Phii* Piled up 17 hits, bunching most of them off Bill Killer\nsnd Hy Bell In the early Innings, to\nwin  13 to 5-\nPhil Collins pitched an effective\ngame, scattering the hits except ln\nthe fourth inning, and led his\nteam's attack with four hits. Johnny\nVorgez set the batttng pace for the\nGiants, collecting a home run, two\nsingles and a walk in lour trips to\nthe plate.\nPhiladelphia      13    17   0\nNew   York       5   11   5\nCollins and D. Davis; Walker. B\u00b0ll,\nMitchell,  Par melee and  OTarrell.\nPOSTPONEMENTS\nIN BASEBALL\nNATIONAL   I,EAO(E\nNone.\nAMERICAN   UAOUI\nWashington  at  Boston,  rain,\nCleveland   at   Detroit,   snow.\n..TRAVELLING    FARM    SCHOOLS\nSince their inception tn 1923\nspecially equipped agricultural trains\nwhich are virtually travelling agricultural schools, have had a recorded attendance of 134.000 farmers,\nIn the operation of these trains\nthe Canadian National Railways,\nthe various provincial governments\nand the Experiment! Farms Branch\nof the federal Department of Agriculture have oo-oiK-rated. Tliey have\nproven to be of considerable- assistance to farmers In respect to Increasing the productivity of the soil,\nbetter breeding, greater efficiency in\nthe feeding and management of\nlive atock in extending the apprs\nelation of the use of clean seed,\nand deficiency ln the management\nof field crops and other far.n activities.\n1,   stnatfaons,   Athletics    1,\nGiants   1.  Collins,  Cardinals   1.\nTHE  LEADERS\nRuth,   Yanfcee*.   3.\nBvrd,   Yankees.   3.\nLEAGIE   TOTALS\nAmerican,   7.\nNational   3\nGrand  total 9.\nCINCINNATI, Otto, April 13 \u2014\nSlamming over four runs tn a wild\nninth Inning, the Cincinnati Reds\ntoday defeated the Chicago Cubs, 5\nto 4, ln the opening game of the\n\u25a0NMp   here.\nAfter holding the Red* almost\nhelpless throughout eight Innings,\nCharley Root weakened hi the ninth\nwith the aco.'c, 4 to 1, to permit\nGrantham to single and Heath to\nwalk and then went out of the\ngame aa a hot drlvo from Lombardi's\nbat Injured hla hand. Bush took hi*\nplace, but the damage was begun.\nLucas, batting for Morrlsaey. melted\nout a double, Roettger was walked\nxnd the base* again were loaded.\nDouthlt aingled, scoring Durocher\nand Bleuge, substitute runners, and\nthe   game   waa   over.\nApproximately  35.000  attended.\nChicago      4     B   C\nCincinnati  5   10   3\nRoot, Bush, Hartnet; Jo'hnson,\nBenton and Lombard 1.\nPACIFIC COAST\nBASEBALL\nLos  Angeles 3.   Hollywood  8.\nSeattle   11,   Oakland   6.\nPortland   11,   Sacramento   fl.\nCompletion of the survey of the\nboundary between Ontario and Quebec to James Bay, accomplished during 1931, removes doubt concerning\njurisdiction as between tha two provinces ln the case of mineral discoveries.\nMORE   FRIENDS   EVERY   DAY!\nA few men tried it - - told their friends\nand they told others - - that1* how the\nfame of Ogden's cut ping has spread - -\nand only a quality smoking tobacco could\nmake new friends every day and still keep\nthe old ones.\nOGDEN'S\nCUT PLUG\nIf jam \"^eM yejsv cmt,'' sim Crifikrt'f fine e^\nINTERNATIONAL\nBALL LEAGUE\nTO MAKE START\nRedwings and Bears Are\nFavored in Pennant\nRace This Year\nJust on the basis of past performances the Baltimore Orioles cannot\nbe counted out of the race.\nThe Montreal R:yais. wh0 finished\nfourth last year, are it**.Tiding jwt on\ntheir lineup ahd hepe to challenge\nseriously laat year's first three finishers.\nBuffalo Bisons, completely rebuilt\nby their new Manager. Ray Schalk.\nare considered the \"<lark horse\" entry of the league. Jcr.sey City and\nToronto also rave new rmnagcrs,\nHans Lobert taking Bjb Sliawkc\\'j\nplace at the helm of the gkecters\nand Torn Daly supplanting Steve\nO'Neill ac Toronto.\nTUB OPENING\nflC'llEM LB    FOLLOWS\nMontreal   at   Heading.\nBuffalo   at   Baltimore.\nRochester at Jersey City.\nToronto  at  Newark.\nHornsby Dead Sure\nHe Didn't Know Him\nSTRANDED HOCKEY\nPLAYERS RECEIVE\nPART OF MONEY\n8T, LOUIS, Mr. April ,3-\u2014Fourteen\nmembers cf the t.\u00ab. Louis Flyers\nhockey team, stranded here without\nfunds since UM American league\neeison closed, Mtfch M, received\nmoney today to pay their hotel bills\nsnd fairs to their home* in Canada.\nPresident Harry Tuber of the St\nLouis   club   returnel   fro.n   Cbloafo\nith thc money whin he said he\nraised with the c.opn-ation of Jomef.\nNorrls, owner of the Chicago Sham-\nrecks.\nThe money received by the players\nrepresents only a part of their back\nsalaries. Taber said the remainder\ndue them would be paid as quickly\naa possible. He tOIMaM a reoriantu-\ntlon of the team and a league ownership before next season.\nI'm  beginning to    thlnjt    McOraw't\nol-i   philosophy was rij^lit.\n\u25a0:Tom twenty to thirty five, they\ngo safe for you, but after thirty-five\neven if you hit nothing but line\ndrives, they seem to go right r somebody.'\nBeat Adanacs by Total score\nof 90-19; Uncork Drive\nand SiK>cd\nBy At, DEMAREF.\nRoger Kortttby, the ma'-ujer of the\nChit-ago Cubs, is as pleasant and affable a fellow as you would ever\nmpet, if he known ond likes you.\nbut with stranger* he is usually cold\nand reserved.\nPogcra was recently cornered by a\nstrnngor ln tlie hotel lobby at a\nbaseball m'ftlng.\n\"I brg your pardon.'1 the stranger\nsaid, as he walked \u00bbP to Hornaby'ft\nttmm, \"you're not passing mo up, arc\nyou*1\"\n\"Who are you?\" asked  Hornsrty.\n\"Don't you know me? M cried,\n\"Ma-'J\u2014didn't you read about me in\ntoday'.** paper?\"\n\"Verv sorry.\" flapped Rogers, \"I\nnever read the death notices.\"\nEnnehody recently aeked Hornsby\nif he wns hitting a* well as ever.\n\"It's  funny,\"  answered   P*og,   \"but\nLPTHBRIDGE. Alta , April  13   (CP)\n\u2014Raymond Union Jacks. Alberta senior baiketball champions, tonight\nilowned New Wes'mtns'er Adanacs,\nBritish Columbia champions, for the\nsecond time and qualified tn advance\nin  the  Dominion  playdowns.\nAgain uncorking speed that carried\nthem through the Adar.ac quintette,\nthe Jacks tonight, took victory by a\n40 to 25 score to win t.-.e total-poin!\ntwo-game round i)t) to 49. The first\ngame  saw the   Jacks   win   M   to  24.\nFighting spirit ol the coast chnm-\npl-ms was higher tonight, and they\nassaulted the Raymond defence with\n\u25a0more effectiveness but vere still unable to put over a victory. Right\nfrom the start the Brl'ish Colnmhia\nsharpshooters started tbe action, but\nthe Jacks fought back and carried\ntn? onslaught aa the visitors hesitated at times.\nIf, la a welj remgnla-M principle of\nretail mTchmltslng tha* the discriminating housewife prefers quality In everything she buys. This\nthat is again borne cut by the in-\nI oreued de.rand for branded beef,\n| which, is qnlie gencr:i* thfOUffltout\nj tho Dominion. A report Just Issued\nby the Cattle Division of the D:-\n| minion Live Stock Branch shows\nthat Mitt In February totally l.Mfi,-\nSM lbs. of bref graded in WOOTdinoe\nwth government standards and bearing tlie official brand in red and\nblue.\nIt is also Interesting to note that\npractically all the better clasa\n.butcher  shops   and   retail   stores   arc\n! featuring   branded   beer    in    their\n[meat departments an a  quality  tea*\n'tart in attracting trade to thc store.\nCARDINALS WIN\nOPENING GAME\nFROM PIRATES\nWallop Decisive Score 10-\n2; Pepper Martin\nSteals Base\nST. LOUS, Mo., April 12\u2014\nChampionship strides were\ntaken today by the St. Louis\nCardinals as thev decisively\nout played the Pittsburgh Pirates, 10 to 2, at Sportsman's\npar!*, here in the opcninR game\nof the season. The 1981 National league pennant won by\nthe Cards wag raised with ceremony just before the game\nwhich attracted 5937 paying\ncustomers. Cold weather cut\nattendance considerably.\nFlint Rhcn. who had pitched the\nCnrrilnnls to victory in the opening\nnames of pennant winning years in\nIBM, 1328. 1030, and 1931, Justified\nhis selection as opening pitcher f *r\nat, Louis, soaring his fifth triumph\nan hurler for tlie 'season's fir.it\nlime. He allowed se*.-en hits, but\nonly ln U.e seventh *nnin*j wart the\nPirates able to turn hits into runr,\nand the two ln th\u00ab* frame camo after\nSt, Louts aireidy had sent eight\nm\u00bbn   across  the  home   platf.\n.Tajr.c\u00ab Ripper Collins, who replace,!\nthe ihitfflnf Chick Hsfi-y in .eft\nfield for the Cards, proved nvre\nthan just a subs tl tut* by knc^klng\nthe ball over the right field pavilion\nin the Mventu for the only .iome\nrun  of the  gamp.\nPepper iNT-irttn, hero of last sea-\nsou's world aerie-., remind*--! the f.-ma\nthat h* is up to old tricks, by etee'.-\nIna*  n base.\nPltta&urfh        3     7   I\nSt. Louis ,         10   13   0\nFrench, swift and One*; Riuni\nnnd  WOMB,\nA   ntl&c  club  for  newsp^pnr  men\njnly haa been formed In England.\nBROOKTjTN. N. Y.. April 12\u2014Ed\nBrandt, Boston's star southpaw, proved a bit too much for the revamped\nBrooklyn Dodgers today and the\nBrave* won the first game of the\nnew season at  Ebbets Field, 8 to S\nBrandt pitched the full nine Innings, giving five hits, and had only\none bad inning- In the seventh Inning the Dodgers scored all their\nruns, Val Piclnlch'a pinch double\nbrlnstlng two home.\nWaite Hoyt, who started for Brooklyn, got ln trouble over wlldnees\nand was batted out ln the fifth\nInning after yielding eta runs, Despite four double plays, tht Brooklyn  field   was  spotty.\nAbout 30,000 fans turned out to\nsee the Dodgers play their first;\nleague game under the management\nof   Max   Carey.\nBoston    v  8   13   1\nBrooklyn       8     6   2\nBrajidt and Spohrer; Hoyt, Thurston,  Heimaoh and Lopez.\nSilverton Wing in\nBaseball Game\nat New Denver\nSILVERTON. B. C, April 13\u2014-J.\nJohnson of the Euphrates mine was\na viiitor to his home here during the\nweek.\nL. Carter of Sandon was the guest\nof D. Fairhurat over the week-end.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Johnstone were\nvisitors to Nakusp on Friday.\nThe first baseball game of the season was played on Saturday ln New\nDenver between the Btiverton and\nNew Denver Junior teams, Sllverton\nwlnhlng by a score of 13-11.\nA large number of friends nave a\nsurprise party on Piiduy evening at\nthe home of Mis. R. White ln honor\nof Miss D. White and K. McKiunon.\nBridfte was enjoyed during the early\nevening, the honors of the game being awarded to Mlsa M- Emerson and\nJ. Fleury consolations to Miss H.\nCooper and E. Erlckson. A dainty\nlunch was served at inidni'h*. and\nsinging and danelng concluded a very\npleasant evening.\nThose present Included Mrs. R.\nWhite. Mrs. M. Emerson. Mr, anj Mrs\nH. ELsmore. Mr. and Mra. W, Qord-jn,\nMr. and Mrs. R. Fairhurst, Mtss Ethel\nMarshall, Miss Marjorle Imers >n. Miss\nDM Cooper. Miss Ruth Hancock.\nMlas Dorothy White. Mtss Gladys\nPraehty, Vic. \u25a0\u00bb\u2022 ns, Miss Rira Reeder, Miss Ella Johnson of Trail, Miss\nMary McAulay, Jack Fleury Harry\nLeihecher, James Wallace. Albln Erlrk.\nson. Fred Peaehey, Frank Leibseher,\nKarl MrKinnon, Evart Erlckson. Clarence Richardson and Bert Marshall.\nPHAR LAP JOCKEY\nWINS FEATURE RUN\nBAN BRTNO, Calif. April 13\u2014Ltt-\ntle BUI Elliott, Australian Jockey\nwh\u00ab, rade Phar I-ap to notary in\nthe Agn-% Caliente hflndlc-ip, got up\non hla first mount today eince the\ngreat gelding died and turned out t\nwinner.\nElliott boo*.sil home IloleJe to win\ntoday's feature race at Tanfnran\u2014\nthe Richmond handicap, Elliott- rode\na hwady rae*\u00bb over the club house\ncourse, 330 feet law than a mile\nThe ttma was l*H.\nThree dollar preferred option* on\nthe winner ww redeemed for $13.80\nand  92 secondaries  for I4.BO.\nThe world's crop >f winter wheat\nis only two per cent smaller than la*'\nyear, Ju^gint hy report* from U\nI countries.\n1\ns \u00abK|ff'aVV\nBa\"5     .. afi                        1\nm\\\\\\\\\\mMm^-M\n1            m\u00a5\n' A\"'         * ~H\n_f^\u00a7,___[\n^^^^^^^^^\u25a0\u25a0^^^^^^^^Bi^Hh\n1   . .\nw *\n'.MfS\n_________\n\u2022BMUfflN       ; V             .\ni\n\\\nM&r%P\/${iS     1\"\",\nb||\"..-j\nWar f\n\\\\\\w*-      Wk                                        1\nB,*CT*S^Ti^2?flB\n\u2014 -   \"   -                          -mMMMT                      .^-.v.oejX:.itSt^isesi\n;,Afil_'  ****' ...\"\u25a0-\u25a0''^rtf*\nFred M Zeder, Vice-President tn charge of Etrrineermt, explains f Floyd Grhhara DeSato't newfirrnseJfde ef Floating P.wer\nFIOYD GIBBONS ... FAMOUS HEADLINE HUNTER SAYS \"THERE'S BIG\nNEWS   IN   THIS   MOTOR  CAR\"\n* \"Hello Everybody! Tbe big news is\nout. Waller 1*. Chrysler has juat an-\nDounced his new De Soto So.\n\"What does it look like? I'll tell you.\nParis on \u2022 Sunday afternoon. London\nduring Ascot Week.\n\"And wait till you drive it. What a\nthrill! Novibration ... and 1 mean rtoire.\nFloating Power completely eliminates it\nfrom the frame and body. Wait! That's\nnot half the story. There's an Artomaric\nClutch. Yoa never touch it. No btrttonj.\nNo pedals. Start, shift, back and stop.\nCom pletely automatic at sbghtextf acost \u2022\n\"You've seen Free Wheeling before?\nNot this kind. DcSoto has perfected rt.\n\"MygoesswasS 1500. Holdyour breath.\nIt's leas than $1000. That's no bargain,\nfolks. It's a miracle. Take it from an\nold Hoadbne Hunter . . . DeSo*o baa\nIPH\"'f H the iodo-stry;1\"\nNEW i>fWC>ES, Bmm Ctn^e . . . tm,\nTwc-Hoc-r Swhl. . . , $*>\"'*% Conpe (wH raun.\nhie sett!... ilOM; +-door S*d\u2122 ... \u00bblfr,\u00bb\u00ab\nRoidarex ' a ill rumhl: \u00bb it) ... $lofa*l. Cajf\ntorn 4-<loor Sedan $11*5. All pews f.a.h. VrnaU\n\"*r, OHtartn, mcluJi.efnn in*, ubetls and eland.\nard facsery eavrpmcrt (Jiri\u00a3''st ami tssats extra).\n\"ca**t>i*.N.BUttT row eumnn-\n438\nCanada's.Smartest low-priced Car jjf \u00a3 SOTO SlX *!p75\nPEEBLES MOTORS LTD.\n113 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.      -*-      Phone 119\n PAGE  BIGHT\nTOT KELSON DAILT NEWS, NELSON, EC \u2014 TtlDNISDAT MOKMNO, APBIL 1\u00bb, WW   SEE\n1\n1 d*\u00ab\/iK\\tD\n1      V0\n[b\u00a3J\nm^m\nmvSSSu\nTO\n| aster 1\nLi i          .1\n\u25a0 wTaftSi\nM*0\nB\u00bb\u00abt*jwi'|\nIMIEX   TO  CLASSIFIED  ADS\nII.IM!   WANTED (11)\n.11 ICIMUHILFS   IOB   HIKE (41)\nAI  I o.aiOHli.I.k   I OR   SALE (40)\nBUS (55)\nBIRTHS (1)\nBOATS, LAI MI1IS. FOB  RtNT (13)\nBOATS,  LAIMIIFS  IOB   SALE (44)\nBOATS. I.ACM His     WAMLU (451\nBI \u00ab1M>S   OI'FOIitLMIILS (301\nCA.SAK1I.S   FOB   SALE (8)\nCA1S  AND   DOI.R  FOB Ml E (521\nCATS   AND   DOGS   IIA-NILD (501\nDKIhS.M ,M>(, (\")\n?(KV1   AND    D4IRV   l-BODt'CE (33)\nAKM   FHOPIKIV    FOB   SALE (3fil\nI OH   SALE   OK   EXCHANGE (31)\nTOB    SALE    OB    Kt.NI (Ji)\nF( KNISU1.0 BOOMS FOB BF>T (15)\nFl KMSHF.D   BOOMS   WAMLD (16)\nriBMTLKE   FOB   SALE (4*)\nHELP   HA.NTED (10)\nHOI MS   FOB   RENT 121)\nBOl'M.S   WANTED (20(\nIN   MEMOBIAM (J)\nLNSLBANfF. <\u00bb3)\nINMSIMt.NTS 148)\nUTFRARY <\u00ab)\nUll-lol K   FOB   Ml.i '2J)\nL1U.STOCK   HINTED (24)\nLOST   AND   FOUND (31)\nMACHIM.RT Hfi\nst^N^T^IBFR, LLMBEB (>!l\nMlslFLLANFOLS (\")\nMIsLILLANFOLS   FOR   SALE (2.)\nMISCFLLANEOIS    WANTEI) (23)\nMI.SK'Al    INSTBLMEMS (511\nNOI1CF.S (?)\nMI1MI1V   PRODUCTS (J.)\nMRSINO lljj\nPKKRONAL _U\nKll'l.TBT   AND   EGGS ('\u00ab)\nPHOPFBry   FOB   MIL (j*)\nPKOPFBTV   WANTFD IM\nHaHHIIS   FOB   SALE_ J-J)\nR INCHES    FOB    REM (}\u00bb)\nROOM   AND   BOARD <j'\nROOMS   FOR   RENT }'\u00bb>\nROOMS   WANTED HB\nm\u2122aT.ONS   WANTED JJ\nSTORES TO  RENT <J\u00bb{\nTEACHERS   WANTED <\"\u00bb\nLBADINO    NOTICES\nILNDLRS FOR (OAL\nSealed tenders addressed to the\nrurehaelnj Agent. Department of\nPublic Work*. Ottawa, will be e-\ncc ved at his office until 12 o'clock\nnoon, (daylight savin* > Friday May\n8 1032. lor the supply ol coal for\nV . Dominion Buildings and Experimental Fanna and Stations, throaigh-\nout th* Provinces ol Manitoba, feaa-\nkatchewan.  Alberta  and  British  Co-\n'\"\u2122 ol tender with specifications\nand conditions attac' 'd can be obtained from H. F. Dawson, Acting\nChief Purchasing Agent. Tenartr.ient\no( Public Works, Ottawa; H. a.\nMatthews. District Resident Architect.\nWinnipeg. Msn.; O. J. Stephenson,\nL let r. Ident. Architect. Reglna\nBask.; Cha*. Bellena District Resident\nArchitect. Calgary. Alts.- and C. r.\nDawson. District Resident Architect.\nVictoria, B. C. J\nTenders will not b* considered un-\nlew made on the above mentioned\nforma.\nThe right to demand from .he successful tenderer a deposit, not exceeding 10 per cent cf the amount\nol the tender, to secure the proper\nfulfillment of the contract. Is reserved.\nBy order,\nN. DESJARDINS.\nSecretary.\nDepartment of Public Works.\nOttawa. April \u00bb, 1032. (1805)\nRossland Route to\nSouth Is Now Open\nDetour to thc Forks\nThrough road connection la now\nopen lrom Roasland to Paterson, on\nthe International boundary line, and\nby state highways to Northport,\nWash., and  to Orand  Forks,\nAt the highest part ot the Ross-\nland-Pate-reon section some snow\nhad to be removed by snowplow.\nwant and classified\nadvebtlsi.no\nOne Insertion io centa . Una\nSix insertion* 40 cents a lln*\nOne  month  .130  .  lln*\nMinimum two line*\nBirth  notices  free  of  charge\nDeaths,    marriages    and    cards    ol\nthank*   20 centa per line\nFuneral flowers  is cant* per lln*\nNews   ot   th*   Day   items   20   cent*\nper lln*.\nNO EXTRA COST IF CHARGED\nBIRTHS\n(1)\nAPPLEGREN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nM. Appleureu. at wtUmar. Minn.,\nApril 10, a *on. Mrs. Applegren Is\na daughter of J. E. McFarlen of\nTroll.\nPERSONAL\n(3)\nALEXANDER KAY. NATIVE OF DAR-\nwen, Lancashire, England, aged 47\nBelieved to have property at Mack-\nlln. Saak., and an account with the\nRoyal Bank of Canada there. Lived\nthere till 1822. At Nelson, British\nColumbia In February. 18J3. Afterwards at Ocean Falls and Vancouver.\nWill hear something to his advantage 11 he will comma Icate with\nthe undersigned. Any person who\ncan give any Information aa to hi*\npresent whereabout* or death 1* requested tx> communicate with\nHindi* Bon 4 Cooper, Solicitors\nDarwen, Lancaahlre. England.\n(1594.\nM_l 11111111111PIM11111111M11111T111 f 1111111111\ni ZEM0L I\nS' THE MYSTERY OINTMENT =\n\u25a0** Death to eczema and unalght- *\"\u25a0\nz ly. disfiguring, irritating skin z\n= eruption*. 11 per Jar. postage \"*\nr free. Money refunded If dls- z\nZ satisfied. Harvey Drug Co., 128 Z\n*r Eighth avenue east, Calgary, \"\"\n=  Alta. (11661  =\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIklll\n||11IE  four   line  ad  reproduced\n\u2022   aliote  turned   I lie  trfcll  for\nft,  Plelers.\n.vs:\n\/'\/case kill my want-ad. I got\na phone call first thing this\nwonting which resulted in the\nquickest sale I have ever made.\nOn thc first day of insertion,\ntoo!    Many Thanks.\nTOO   (AN   SELL   ANYTH1NO\nWITH  A   WANT   Al).\nIn the\nDAILY NEWS\nWANT-AD PAGES\nMISCELL*>*\u00a3UL<a   ft'Oft   8AI.B      (27)\n~       LONDON  SHOE WORKS\n= 317 Logan Ave., winnlpe*-, M\u00bbn. :\nii Buy second hand shoes from :\nj~ the Hhoemaker; satisfaction\n\\\\\\ ifimranfed or money returned.\n_Z Men's shoes and Oxfords per\nZZ pair 11.25. Ladie* shoe* aim ,\n= oxfords per pair (,&5. Boys\"\nS Bhoea and oxforda per pair $1.\nS Postage   paid.       (1316)\nTTSIT UQOTD BOLDER\nJust the thing for repairing radiators, aluminum, anywimg mad*\nof metal. Price 60C per bottle.\nAgent* wanted all over the world.\nNIKKELS    SCIENTIFIC\nLABORATORY\nRoom   3,   Versa.Ho   Block\nWinnipeg.   Man. (1370)\nBEST QUALITY WOOD PIPE, TWO\ninches to eight Inches for heads\nto 2h0 feet at lowest ever price*.\nWrit* for particulars. The A. P.\nHarms Wood pipe Co., Deer Park,\nB.   C (584'\nPAINTS - CLEARANCE SALE OK\nhigh grade lead and zinc pulnts,\nregular M per gallon. no*v only\n$2.63 while tbei last. Also \u2022nAmelk,\ni.iiti v.frnisli at apeciut prices.\nWrite Crov.n Paint Co., Ltd. New\n-lridrehs, 33 W. Hastings St., Vancouver,    B.    C. (13t>3'\nPHOPKKTY  TOR   8ALE\u2014Coo.\n.SECOND HAND PIPES, FirnNOftS.\nValves, etc. We carry a lull stoclc\nuf reoondtioned pipes suitable for\nall puipnwu. write to Swarta Pipe\nYard, ano-lst Ave., East, Vancouver,   B.   C- (1383)\nCHRI8TT1 WRECKING CO., 1630\nWest lat, Ave, Vancouver\u2014Savt\n60 lo 75 prr Cir.t on all radlator.-t.\ncy Under head* and blocks.   (1380)\nAUTOMATIC       ELECTRIC      LIGHT\nplant,    suitable     for    Community\nhall   or   prlvat*   horn*.   Box   777.\n_T     Nelton. (1637)\nLADIEB \u2014 \"DR. COOK'S COM-\npound\" I* a sure and sat* remedy\nfor delaj ed an painful monthly\nperlodd. tl per package, post,\npaid. West Remedy Co., Box 2263.\nWinnipeg. (1387)\nWE CAN ARRANGE A FRIENDLY\ncorrespondence for you. M\u00abn and\nwomen of nil ages. Particul-iTB free\nWrite FTiendly Corresponden<-.ti\nClub, Box 225, Station D.. Toronto.\n9. i1620j\nROOMS   FOR    M\\*\nMflf CONTAINED FURNIBH1TD\nsuite 3 room* and bathroom, some J\ngarden.   Phone   103L. (1611)\nHELP   WANTID\n(10)\nWANTED WOMAN AGE 80 to 80,\nassist In house, return for comfortable home. Two ln famlls*.\nBox  1640. Daily  New*. (1648)\nMTL'AXJON*    WANTElv\nMl)\nPRACTICAL   NURSE   HOUSEKEEPER\ndesires position. Ph-i\u00ab 294.  (1606>\nHOUSEWOKK BY EXPERIENCED\n[irt, Sleep In or out. P. O. Box\n'00,   Nelson. (1588)\nEXPERT     RADIO     REPAIRS   . AND\nservice. 623 Vernon. (1377)\nHOUSEWORK.. AFTERNOONS AND\nevenings by gin ass. 12. Box 1583.\nDally    News. (1683)\nSTEAM HEATED S.nTE, J- O. .PAT-\nenaude. Phone 2t'3. (142j)\nfiLTTtlS AND ROOMS \u2014 K- W. C\nblock, (1540)\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS FOR RfNT\n\u2014no children. Mrs. McLean, Nelson.   Opposite   Gas   Works.   (1345)\nll()l>ES   WANTED W)\n1 ESS isSi SSLJHSI 122'\nFOR SALE OR RENT 11 ACRES ;\nOverhead Irrigation. Addretw O. .1\nwtgen, wynndel, b. C <1347i\nINHtRANCi\n(SSJ\nIIIIIIMIflMMlllllMIIIIMIMIMIIIIHIIIIMH\n1 NEW STUCCO I\n|       HOME        |\n2 Three   bedrooms,   large   living z\nS room,   kitchen,   bathroom,   all -\nS whit*   plumbdnu-     Full   bs*e- 5\n*z ment, garage In basement. All S\nK newly   tfecorated,   lnsidij   and 3\nS out. Lot 60x120. Price\u2014 T\nI $2650 |\n~ Terms.   Owner  will   sell   com-  S\nS pletely   furnished    lf   desired,  s\nI Whitfield & I\nI   Storgcoe\n~   Hrsl   Eslat*   and   Insuranca*    3\n~   414 Ward St. Phon* 167    \u00a3\n= 11B\u00ab.   =\ni\"i:i::;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii!lllilillli!;mi!!'ii!i\nillllll 111 I III 111 MI1IIITIIII Mil lllllllllllllt I\nSalAU,    FUKN1SHED    HOUSE.\nclose  In, lor rent. 116.00 per\nmonth   In advsnee.\n0-KOOM   HOUSE   FOB   BENT.\nMill street   (20.00 per month.\n.aoBEKTSON   REALTY   QO.   J_TD.\nI Business EsUbllshed  1308\nI    421 Baiter St. Nelson, B.C.\ni (10301\nIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nFIBNITIRE  FOR   \u00abA!E\n(41)\nPRITJATa BAU! OF HOUBEHOLD\nlurnltur.. Also Naah s\u00abdan. Apply 816. Third street. Fairview.\nU6S0)\nMKljtRV   PKODCfTS\n(411\nMl'SICAL I>'\u00abTKl Mv.NTg\nCLAfSinEO ADS SEBV| COHTW.\nouously\u2014Why not *tart on. wr\u00bb-\nlr.g vou today!1\nPRIMING\noat\nRELIABLE NUKSERV STOCK-FRUIT\n\u2014raspberry canes tmd ornamental.. Rnse*. hedge plants, .tc., T.\nRoynon, a^ent Launtz Nursertea,\nNelaon. (1422)\nFOR SALE \u2014 ROSES IN 48 VARB-\ntie*,  carnations.  Gladioli.  100 top\nsiie   |2.   List   on   application.   H.\nKitchener, Nelaon. phone 318R.\n(1197)\nMimiiiiiiiihimiimiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiii\nLoose  Leaf  Kquipment\nBINDERS  FOR ANY SHEETS\nLOOSE LEAP SHEETS\nrOR ANY  BWDEB\nNelson Daily News\nJOB DEPARTMENT\nPhone 144\nIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIMIIIIIIII\nCATS   AND   DOGS   FOR   SALE   <S2>\nPOR SALE \u2014 THOROnOHBRED\nBcotoh Collies. D. Cameron, Gran-\nIt* Road. (1513)\n| I PI.AXTI\n(S3)\n: .\", SALE \u2014 ENGLISH VIOLETS,\nfl Isrge clumps. 60 cents, golden\ni lain, labiu-numa, 50 ocnt*, pink\nI iicacta, 50 cents. All acclimated. Dug\nj    -vhen ordered. Phone 6U2L2.  (1697a\n1 STRAWBERRIES     \u2014     VAN     8 ANT.\nMagoon.   Parson's  Beau*y,   14   pfc*\n100O,   60c   per   100.  nines,  Koosan.\n(1519)\nDAHLIAS 6 ASSORT D~FOR |S\nHalley gladioli 12 lor 40 cents.\nMrs. W. W. Brltton, Harrop.  (1604)\nW NTED IMMEDIATELY FIVE OR\nhix room house unfurnished. Apply\nA. Balrd. Royal   Bank. (1607)\nHOUSE*    IOR    RENT\nFIVE ROOM HOUSE PARTLY FUR-\nnlshed. S20 per month, 311 Vernon\nstreet. Phone  851L. (1827)\nSIX ROOM HOUSE. UNFURNISHED,\nlor rent. Apply  406  Silica.   .1517)\n5-ROOM   HOUSE.   PHONE   \u00ab1R   OR\napply   r.O   Box   537, (1552)\nHINHIIMIIIIIIIIIimlltlltllllltllllllllllll\nI    For Rent or\nH'E  C*.   W.   APPLEYARD   FOR   CAR\nInsurance   In   reliable   compsnl's.\n(1627)\n(311\nI'HOI'l.RTY   FOR   SIU\nSal\nSIC =\n\u00a3 Very    de\u00bblr-me    modern    six- \u00a3\n\"\" room     bungalow,     fireplace. \u00a3\n\u00a3 screened   porches,   garage,   two \u00a3\nr large   lot*,   good   garden   with \u00a3\n\u00a3    .tlit   trees,   excellent   location z\n\u00a3 close   'a. ~\nE                  a.  T.  HULL =\n\u00a3           Grsnd   Fork ,  B.C. \u00a3\n\u00a3                                         (1549) |\niTlllllllHIIIIIIHIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlii\n'IIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIimilllllltmillllM\n\u00a3 BARGAINS ln HOUSES \u00a3\nSmall cottage \u2014 2 \u00a3\nbedrooms, etc. 1100 =\ncash  will  handle.  Balance  as \u00a3\n*\u00a3   rent. *\nVery    close   ln,\nLIVESTOCK   FOR  SALE\n(23)\ntl'BMSIIED ROOMS FOR RKM    (ll)\nMANAGtNO PARTNER FOR POUL-\ntry farm. Investment required.\nParticulars Box 45 slocan city.\nB. C. (1625)\nTHREE ROOM FURNISHED SUITE.\nPrivate entrance. 124 Victoria \u00abt.\nPhone   627X. (1490)\nTWO    ROOM    FURNISHED    SUITE\nover store.  Tlie  Ark.  Phone 534.\n(1629)\ns Tn for . nre, petty apart-\nments.  210     alls  8t. (1553)\nSUITES-ASHMAN'S      APARTMENTS\n715   Baker   street. (1385)\nMISCELLANEOla  IVANtEl) (28)\nWANTED STEEL li'HEEI, WAGON,\nfor one hors*. W. Konken, Apple-\ndale. (1658)\nWANTED SMALL COOK SVA'E. Apply Box  270. Nelson,   B.  C.   (16081\nFOR SALE \u2014 GRADE AYRSHIRE\nand Holsteln cows, fresh, good\n\u25a0milters. John Egloff. Edscwood.\nB. C. (1631)\nI WO YOUNO COATS TWO YEARS\nold. Will freshen by April 20. Pox\n1181, Nelson, B. C. (H36)\n1 $1350\n1 cash   will\n\u2014 rent.\n- CfXAA Very cloee in. 2 \u2014\ns 9*WVw b*drooms andS\nI bath. etc. 5\n= A BIO SNAP in Fairview. 2 =\nI garden lot*, fruit trees. 2 bed- I\nS rooms, good living room\u2014       \u2014\ni $2500     i\n~, Term*.                    \u00a3\n~ DM....'OfsnB                       \u2122\n\u00a3 See   us   for                  \u00a3\n\u00a3 CAR   INSURANCE.            \u00a3\n5 C. W. Applcyard  \u00a3\nI & Co., Ltd.       1\n5 OENERAL   INSURANCE        \u00a3\n~ CITY   PROPERTY              =\n\u00a3 Nelson. B. C.    (1634) \u00a3\niiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihi\ni,iii.iiiiiimiiii:iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiini\n~ FOR    IMMEDIATE    SALE     s\n~ No reasonable offer refund   S\nI ^. Home    with    every    modern =\n! :*: convenience  and  most attrac- \u2014\ni: tlve   garden,   also  outbuildings \u00a3\n_ on   two   or   three   acres   ci \u2014\n8 land;   also   any   other   portloi. ~\ng of    property    Including    we*t \u2014\n\u2014 Arm  lake frontage lots. Apply s\n\u2014 R,   VENABLES,   Nelson,        \u25a0*\".\n\u00a3 ROWLAND  BOURKE,   Vlcto.1.1 \u00a3\n\u25a0 (16*8) -\nnillllMIIIIMIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIlin\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH\nGUIDE\nCOURT   ROYAL\nNELSON, No. 82.04\nA. O. T.\nMeet* 1st and SJ-d\nThurs., 8 p.m. .1\nEAGLE HALL^\nJuv. Forester*. 7,\nG.B. Abbott. Sec\nDon  721     (1647)\nConsult\nTHIS BUSINESS SERVICE GUIDE\nISM SON    CAHPEN'IKK   ***,.l'JP--FUK-\nniL..re repairing. UpnolaterlQg. gen-1\neral repair. Aauable Block.  (146J) \u25a0\ni'EClAl. I1AND-MADK HEAVY GAR-\nbige cans 82.75, rt!*,. 13.50. R. H.\nMaber, PIioqq 65S, 310 Koot. (14*34)\nBUSINESS AND PR0FKSSI0NAL DIRECTORY\nAccountants\nCHAS.     P.     HUNTER,     B.P.mT.AC.\nMunicipal and Commerrtai Audits.\nP.  O.  Box   1191,  Nelson,  B.   0.\n(1485)\nAssayers\nE. W. Widdowfon. Br>x A1108, Nelson,\nB.   C.   Standard   western   chsirneii.\n<146t}'\nFlorists\nCirlzzelle* Greenhousts. Nelson, cut\nflowers and floral design*.     (1473)\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. Pull\nline cut flowers at all time*. Plor-\nn.i  designs. Phon* 239. (1474)\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY. GILKER BLK\u201e NEUSON,\n(1467)\nMITTUN AND GEDDES, X-RAY and\nMCM, Cranbrook and Trail.  (1468)\nDR.   MACMILLAN,   GRAD.   PALMER\nSchool, Aber, Blk.. Neison. Ph. 212.\n(1469)\nMMIlllllllllllllllllllUltlllllllllllllll'lin\nH EXCEPTIONAL   VALUE =\nS Five-room new bungalow, fully 3\nH modern,   concrete    foundation I\n2 and   full-size   basement. zz\n~ Good  location, zW\n5 PHONE 888L2     (16261 I   ___\nTl IM M11 j| 111111111 f 11111 f 111111 f 111111 f III | iTf   H.    D.    DAWSON,    B.C.L.S.    ROOM\n 12A  R  w  c B]oclt  Nelfjon   W470J\nALTO.MOB1LLS    FOB   BILE        (40) \u2014\t\n aaUSSa SB | CHAS. MOORE, Griffin Blk., Nelson,\n19M   PONTIAC   COACH   \u2014   ONLY      B-   C'   Land   surveyor,   Box   654.\nEngineers\n' (1471)\nInsurance and Real Estate\n\u00ab 12.600 miles, Rood condition,\nINO cash, rhone Barwlw S06L.\n 03:35i\nFOIl   SALE    -    LADIES   C.   C.   It.\nBicycle, practically new. ,20. Nor-   \"\"wiincr'^toh^Mt^mM*^   T\/,v\"\"   viawiiicu   rtUS\nma Curzon, Slocan Park.      (1624)'     Hardware,^oBaker S^et.^UW   UsC     The     NelsOH     Daily\nft,   W.    DAWSON\u2014Real   Estate.\nwira\u2014*\"    \u2014 '\u25a0\u25a0'-    *' -\nIn-\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES\u2014Pimm-\n342. Cut flowers, potted plants\nand   flora]   dctnigns. (1475\u00bb\nSecond Hand Stores\n'Ihe Ark\u2014  Dealers in Second  Hand\ngood*.    Phono   634. 1.1476)\nStorage\nSTORAGE.   MOVING,   COAL,  WOOD.\nPhone 63. Burns Coal & Cartage.\n(1477)\nTransfer\nATKINSON TRANSFER, R06EMONT.\nCoal  an  Wood. (1478>\nWood Factory\nLAWSON'S WOOD FACTORY. HARD-\nwood merchant, 217 Baker street.\n(1479)\nNews Classified Ads\nTHE GUMPS-THE GREAT LOVER\nI.\nFRASER IS INJURED\nAT YANKEE GIRL\nYMIR, B. C\u201e April 12\u2014J. Pra\u00bb*r\nVM Injure-\"! at Yankee Girl mine nn\nRB*urdev arid was tnken to Mnti\nbv L.     tat'erv  for  mMieal  attpntlnn.\nSome tam*i work U being d-ne p\" r\nYmir and Is under thc supervision\not Hugh  Jones.\nThe Ymir school board hus had\n\u25a0MM  repair     ork   donp ihe  mad\nto th* ihlir Bchool * t the benefit\nor the pupils.\nArmovED cmcx iimtT\nThe term goiernment approved is\nspplled only to chlckt. which are\nproduced under th\u00a9 pre >|ons of t**e\nMftOfl poultry pollrle-, which have\n*-*en built up over * number of years\nbv the Dominion Department of Agriculture. These are the two general\nCtaNaaVa of chicks produced under the\n\u25a0federal approval policies.\nApproved   Breeder-Hutrhcry   Chicks;\nThese aro the i-hicks which nre\nproduced on the Register ' or R.o.P.\nbreeder's own plant, and frc their\nowr flork inatlngs which hive several years of R.O P. or R^gt^tered\nUwt| lines behind tli . and which\n*M entered und**r the Hatchery Approval Policv Thl* irrade of chtck* Is\nespecliJly suited for uw *f fnunda-\ntion s(<y'k, being Vat direct, wnV9$\not birds whloli havp bepn bred and\nbe*t*4 bv individual trap-n**P*Ing under Dominion government Mipc-vt-\n\"'on. It Is the class of chick preferred bv thone who seek the nrt higii-\n\u2022\u2022t in quality for thei- mmmerci I\n0 ckr, or for use &h f und.iiion ntoelt.\n'Hie Approved Breeder-Ha teliery op-\ner:ite8 under i-r-vernm'ml \u00bbupen\"laion.\nThis Includes regulation with reppe t\ntn the operation of the hatchery\nplnnt itself, aourc* of egg supply, eg^\n^\\\/r. nnd proper i\u00bbr|er,,--1 of rhlckb.\nAupc^ved   Cb''*ks;\n'['lief.e arc prnd']'*ed *nlv bv hflt-cr,-\nRlM en\"red under tli\" Federal P \"'-\ney of Hatchery Approval. They *-pre-\n**'it ihe big bulk \"f supply ol 'hicki-\nnf deppudab' quality. Not only does\nthe iiatrhery supplying thew chicks\noperate under government i-uper-\nvl.-lnn. but only eggs nnrmnJ ae to\nHhnpe and of a certain size may 1\"*\nmet, while the flock* from which tbe\neg* supply H obtained are rigidly\nselect ed by govern.1 ier' ) nspcct.nrs\n! rfure mating with male birds or ap-\npro\\ed quality. Apyrovcd chicks can\nbe obtained only from in approved\n!(*teh\u00abry,\nli.O.P   Sired  Chicks:\nA further sub-dtvlr-lon o[ the Approved Chick class is provided where\nthe approve^ chirks hav- been R.O.P\nsired. 1*1*1* m*>nn* that all the fIrekH\nii;>-; as the lyiurce of egg aup.ily for\ntlie b*tcb*ry Ottering SUCh Chirks fnr\nMil are headed by Approved R.OP\nmale*, the progeny ot certified R.OP\nt'-i.i'ii**.\nTHREE     BOCA       SUITE,      PARTLY I\nfurnished,    Apply    411    Silica    St-\n(1453)\nROOM AND B04KD\nBc'DROOM    FOR    RENT   WTTH   OR\nwithout board. Phon*-  433L1   <l*lf>>\nBLITEBIRD BOARDINO HOUSE.\nBosrd and Poom, *30 per month.\nC.   J.   Johnson,   East   Trail,   B.   C.\nanil\nPOl'LIRY    AND    Cans\nJJ 1111111111II1111II1111 ] 111111II111111 i 11111 \u25a0 11\n\u00a7 BOLIVAR   CHICKS   ARE =\n~ nrra chicks =\nS They  are bred  up to a stsn- zz\nZZ dard, not do\u00ab*n to a price. Al- ZZ\nZZ berta,    rhleks;    Leghorns.    12c. 3\n~ Reds,   Ro        and   Wyandottw, 3\n\u2022Z 14c.   B.   C   chl.-ks   a'c   higher- \u2022=\nZZ Expert  Service  on  Custom ZZ\n\\z Hatching,   Lowest   Rate*. S\nI BOLIVAR   HATCHERIES   LTD. S\nH 240   Third   Ave.   E.,   Calgary. S\nr Thone   R171R s\n5 or \u2122\nZ. Cloverdalc.   B.   C. |\n= (1406) ii\nIMIMI'llMMIIIllMIMIIIHIHHIlllllUMlin\n< 111IIII11M11M111111M1111IIIM1111F111H11111\nS HUSSEL'S JUBILEE RED        S\n\u2014 onon =\n1 Prices for May Imperial qua I- \u2014\nZ. Ity   Commercial   Chicks..\u2014..$12 -\n\u2014 per inn chicks. ZZ\nZz Contest Quaiit-y Chicks _ *15 \\z\n3 per 100 chicks; #8 p\u00ab*T 60 ZZ\n\u25a0 chicks; $.r) pt 25 chlcka, zz\n3 Express puid to vour statl\"n S\nS DAN  RUSbEL                  s\n2 lftnn orav Ave, 3;\n\u2014 New Westminster, B. C S\nI iffM) I\nIIIIIIHMIIiMIIIIMIUIIIIIIIMliHIIIMIIIIII\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIMIIIHIMMIIIMIIIMIII\n=     CHICK   BFtOOUERS    r\nS TaPrtrlc Brooders, aalllng a' \u2014\n~ cost   to  rl*;jr. r\n*^\u00a3 Also  \" nu]t.ry  Teed  and \u2014\n~ SUPPUM. ^\n(j. W. Greoi & Co. Ltd. =\n= iTIhbrldBc,    Albrrt* ~\nZ H54\u00abi   z\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nPullets aalll l>* acarce snd erg prices\nh.gll next fall. Ort .oiaae ol our fa\nC. White Leghorn or R. I. Red\nchick, lor wood results. Brftd Iron,\nhealthy, atgorous stork for blgt. production   and   largs  mitt \u25a0\nRlTf.tr  ft   SKNDALI.\nMtJner. B. c.\niluic n,\nTAKINfcr\nMAMA'J. ADVICE-\nTHEY MA^E\nPOOR  BleVN\nA'-U WOPKED\nUP ABOUT A\nCOUNT VNHO\nDOfcS NOT\nEXIST-\n=\u2014. nn  \t\nA.KID MA^E\n\u2022AAC>6   MleA\nBELIEVE\nTHE COUNT\n!*\u00bb. JU*ST\nCKA1Y OVf\u00a3P\nrAILLITi   KND\nPOLL OX!*\nWER  aNWERE-\nEVER.   \"iUE\nCjOES-\nttn\n1 -\nWHITE 1J5GHOHN CI1ICK3. HMD\nfrom finest ROP. t-tralns. Th\"\u00ab\nsr* profit makers, Ha per 100;\neggs \u00bb.a pAr 100 Book your orders\nesrly. Price 6; Bon. RR. I, Pen-\ntleton. B. C. 11362)\nLIMITKD \"TOMTaFR EMDUN CKKFr.\nwlilt^ Holland turkey, wnlt*- Wyan-\ndott*    egge.    Magee,    Gray    Creek.\niiani\nTOR HAt,\u00ab. BAJaRBO ROCK BBOObl\nHenp   \u00bbnd     rtamg   eggs.   Apr-la*   c.\nE   Tutt. Hobeon, B. C. (1601)\n -4^\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NEISON, B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDAY MORMNO, APRIL 13, 1933\nMarket and Mining News\nI. CLUMBER\nUDED, BRITAIN\nf Standard Observed Britain Partial to\nEmpire\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, *>N. Y., April 13.\u2014\nCopper quiet; electrolytic spot \u00bbnd\nfuture 5*4. Tin easy; spot and nearby 18.50; futur* 18-75. Iron quiet\nunchanged. Lead steady; spot New\nYork 8; East St. Louis 2.90. Zlno\nsteady;   East   St.   Louis   spot   and\nfuture 280. Antimony fl. Foreign\nbar   silver   29V,.\nAt London \u2014 Standard car\/per,\nSpot \u00a339 10 a; future \u00a329 10 . Eleo-\ntroy.aic, spot \u00a334; future \u00a331 10*.\nTlu, spot 102 15b | future \u00a3106.\nLead, spot \u00a311; future til 5i. ijlac\nspot \u00a3U 2s ed; future j.11 10s.\nVANCOUVER, April UM\nritish Columbia lumber ex-'\n\u25a0orters    can    expand    their\narket In Great Britain by\nonformation to the standards\nif that country in both qual-\nty and size, according to C.\n:  Malstre,   director  of  the\nritish  standard  institution,\n-vho is in Vancouver.\n\"Baltic lumber has been\ngiving us satisfaction for.\nJyears and their competition\nnust be met if Canadians are\nto dominate the market.\" Mr.:\nle Maistre declared. \"They\n\u2666mow exactly what we want in.\nmoisture content and size, and'\nalways live up to the specifi-\ncrtions laid down.\"\nToday   Mr.   Le   Malstre   conferreil \u25a0\nwith   BrKlsh   Columbl     lumbermen !\nIn connection 9*f%    \u00ablr marketm*-;\nproblem*  In England. ;\nj Second t .de lumber from thla !\n[province covid be sold ln larger\nquantities, however, if the exporter found that it would not pay\n'them to ad-ust their machinery to\ncompete In the first-grade market,\nMr. Le Malstre stated. He said that\nthere was a good market for this\ntype of wood.\nf-,andardlzati3n * ' oth grade and\n-.lze of lumber ls one of the numerous fur tlons of the organization which Mr. Le Maistre rcprc-\nr . His * ork in Australia, where\nbe visited recently, will, he expects,\n11 vert considerable amount of Great\nBritain* hardwood business in that\nairectton. Th* complaint against the\nfcv -altan product was irregular\nmolsture content and poor grading.\nrhi* * eliminate**' by th. adoption\n1 set standards which must be\n;lgldly  compiled  v. 1th,\nGreat Britain will give Empire\n(urn-\u2014*r every support, but the standards which lt seta down must be\nstricTy ndhere' t , \u25a0\u25a0 Le Maistre\np- nted  out.\nEGG MARKETS\nI   OTTAWA, April   12\u2014E?gi:\n\\ Toronto\u2014 Shipments jf storage\npacked eggs are selling to wholo-\nialers at extras 18H to 10. firsts\n16V4 to 17. Wholesale prices to retail\nstore* are extras 19, firsts 17, eco-\npnds   15.\n1 Montreal\u2014 Western shippers are\nstill asking extras 19, firsts 17, seconds 15 although some confirmations of sales have been made at\none-quarter to y_ cent less than\nthese price*.\nHalifax\u2014Dealers are quoting producers and country shippers extras\n14, first* 12, second* delivered,\ncases returned.\nSaint John\u2014Dealers are quoting\nproducers and country shippers extras 13 to 14, firsts 11 to 12, seconds\n9 to 10.\nNKVi  YORK STOCK\nj\n_\nAllegheny    \t\nts\n1\nIV.\nAll   Cntmlcal   ......\nOS\n01%\n03+4\nAndts   \t\n\u2022     J!4\n314\nMft\n3\n5114\nJ ft\nAm .-'or pow\n3%\nAm Mac . & Fdy\n14\n13ft\n131,\nAm .--melt it Ref\nta\nT*\n8\nAin   Tel\t\nioavs\n105*.\n107V,\nAm  Tobacco  \t\nM*\nOS\n69\nAnaconua    \t\nMl\n0\n0\".\nHit\n41\n43\nBait & \u00bb_hto  -\nMl\n814\n9\nB.ndlx   Aviation\nIV,\n7\n714\nBet i Steel  \t\n14\".\n13\n13'4\n7\n0%\nM,\ncan   Pacific    -\n12\",\n1214\n211,\nChcs   it   Ohio   \u201e..\n14'\/,\n12%\n13*4\nCerro \u00a3e Pasco \u201e..\n6\",\nMi\n5*4\n*\u2022\u25a0\u00bb\n814\n8\">a\nCom  & South ....\n3%\n214\n2'4\nCon C?'s N y ....\nll'i\n49'4\n50'4\nCorn    Pro-i    \t\n32 y.\n2*914\n39 ft\nO Wright Pfd ....\n\u2014\n\u2014\nM\nDupont       \u201e\n35 ft\n3314\n33'\/,\nEastman   Kodak\nM\n03 V,\n\u25a0Mi\nE'.efarlc pow & L\n614\n4\n6V,\nErie   \t\n4V\u00ab\n4\n4'*,\nFor.!    English   ....\n\u2014\n\u2014\n314\nFord    of    Can    ....\n\u2014\n\u2014\n8*4\nFT.si.  Nat Stores\n42*14\n41',,\nUW\nFreeport Texa* ....\nlift\n14\n1414\nGeneral   Motors\n.12\nlift\nll*\nGen   Tect   \t\n15'4\n14'\/-\n14:4\nGen  '. oods      \t\n33 ',4\n32 li\n33\nGol     ^ust  \t\n12\n11 ft\nlift\nGoo-   !ch     *\t\n814\n3\n3\nGrt :,orth Pfd ....\nnit\n10\n10'i'\nOrt   Wen   Sugar\n4\n\u2014\n4\nH;w   Sound ........\nOH\n0'4\n6'4\nIn   Nickel   \t\n6\nMl\nOH\n0\n0\nIn  Tel  & Tel  _.\n614\nKelly spring \t\nIti\n111\nI'\/a\n6\n6'4\n5 <h\nKresge   \u25a0   S   ,....\u201e\nD'Ka\n814\nM\nKroegg si Toll _\n'4\n14\nft\n10'\/.\n\u2014\n1814\nMack   Truck   .......\n13\",\n13\n13\nMilwauke    Pfd ....\n3V\u00ab\n1%\n1\u00bb4\nNash Motor-  \t\nItft\n11%\n12'i\nNat Dairy Prod ....\n23\n2214\n22*,\nN Tow ft Light \u201e\u201e\n\u2014'\n\u2014\nlO'\/j\nN T Central \t\n2014\n1814\n19\nPac Om &, Elect\n26'*,\n25'\/,\n26'*,\nPackard   Motors\n2'4\n\u2022ft\n214\n13\n4H\n1214\n31i\n12'4\nPhi'lips   Pete   ......\n3*4\nPure    Oil       \t\n314\n6V\u00bb\n3'4\n5\nRadio  Com \t\n514\nRadio   Keith   Or\n3 V.\n8*4\n3\nar,\n314\n2%\nSafeway Stores   ..\n43\n4314\n43'\/,\nSt Louis S Si T\n214\n\u2014\n2'4\nShell Union Oil ....\n2\",\n2'4\n\u2022ft\nS  Cal   Edison  \t\n2414\n24\n24'-,\n!3'4\n11*4\n12\nStand Oil of Cal\n19\nlift\nIS\nStand Oil of Ind\n\u2014\n\u2014\n13 \"4\nStand Oil of N J\n25%\n2314\n23 ft\nStewart Wamer ....\n3*4\n2 \"4\nMj\n10 V,\n111\n10'4\n\u2022ft\nTexas    Corp\n!0'4\nTexai  Gulf  Sul  _\n21V.\n20',\n20'4\nUnion r**U of Oal\n10%\n1014\n10V,\nUnion   Pacific   ....\n5411\n50\n51\u00bb,\nUnited Aircraft ..\n1014\n10\n1014\nU S Pipe & Fdy\n814\n814\n\u25a0tt\nU S Rubber \t\n3\n\u2014\n3\nU  S  Steel   \t\n34\".',\n3314\n34\"4\nWest T-Trjct\t\n23'4\n2214\n23 '4\nWillys   Overland\n1\n'4\n1\nYellow   Truck   -\n2\n2\nNEW YORK LIST\nSTEADIES SOME\nIndustrial and Utilities Issues Close Day\nHigher\nNEW YORK. April 12\u2014The\n;tock market struggled to regain its equilibrium today,\nind the effort was fairly suc-\ncttsful.\nHelped bv a noticeable learning of hqisidttfon, a good\nepresentat'on   of   industrial\n,tnd utility iss\"es closed hi-*rh-\n\u2022 r. Rails, less responsive to\n' occasional rallies in other di-\nI *\/ection, nevertheless finished\n1 above their lows; gome can-\ni 'died   early   losses.   Volume\n1 drifted back toward the low\n! 'cvels of activitv attained last\nI nonth, amounting to 1,552,-\nW shares.\nNet gain* ranting from a fraction\nto more than a point for U. B.\nSteel, American Can, General Elec-\n*rto, General Mc*or\\ case, Wool-\n\u2022vorth, Narth American, Sears Roe-\nluck, Peoples Ga*, International Tel-\n\"plione, United corpora'.lon, and\n\\n-?rlcan Telephone provided a\n^leaslnff contrast \u2022 recent behavior\n' theee leader*. Chemical and oil\ntb? \u25a0,ea were somewhat lew enthusl-\n-stlc, especially sl .ndard 0:1 of\nTew Jersey, oil 2, and Dupont, off\nHi. Corn Products, Continental Bak-\nng preferred, Dn*c, Ingersoll Rand\nnd Pacific Ll;'.ting weakened from\nI j 3 points.\nSanta Fe Railroad, after a 2-point\nI rise in the morning, flopped i net\nto 4*  and then halved its loss. The\n: preferred sold  nt 00, off 4.\nEXCHANGES\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nAtlantic Sutrar  m 10\nBel*   Tcleyh.ne  00\nBrazilian T L <fc Power  10\nBrit   American   Oil    \u00ab 8<4\nCanada    Bronze      II\nGaa Car ac Foundry  \u201e \u201e  4'i\nCan  Cerent   8\nCan Cement pfd  \u201e  58%\nCan   Industrial   Alcohol   \u201e  3i\nC.in   Steameblp   Lines     2ln\nC;;ns Mining & Smelling \u201e  38\nDon.    Textile  45\nI.niperlal    Tobacco    _  1%\nImperial  OU   7^\nl^i;e cf  the Woods    5\nMaaoey   Hwrls  3\nQuebec    Power    _  14',4\n3te,**l   oi^Cana-.a     15\nWinnipeg  Railway     2\nB.C.F\nB.C.\nlime\nrim mm\nRises Third Successive Day;\nTrading Is Lively But\nErratic\nBest Remedy for Colds and 'Flu\nRhum\nnegril\n\"This advertisement is,not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\"\nIncrease Your Crops By Using\nELEPHANT BRAND\nFERTILIZERS\n\u2666Ammonium Phosphate \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\n* FOR SALE AT\nNelson\u2014Wood Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nBonn ington\u2014Bonn Ing ton Co-operative.\nHarrop- -Harrop and  District  Co-operative.\nCreston\u2014Creston Valley co-operative; Crestl&nd Fruit\nCompany; Long, Allan & Long,\nCrawford Bay\u2014Crawford  Bay  Co-operative.\nWynndel\u2014Wynndel   \"jerry   Growers'   Association.\nWillow Points-Willow Point Co-operative.\nThrum*   Tarry and Thrum* Co-operative.\nGrand Porks\u2014Grand Forks Growers' Association.\nGreenwood\u2014Taylor & Sons\nAnd Associated Growers of B. C. local centers.\nThe CM. <& S. Co., cf Canada. Ltd.\nTRAIL, B. C.\nProducer* and  Refiners of Tadanao Brand Electrolytic\nCadmium. Bismuth. Lead, and Zlno\nMONTREAL, Que.. April 13\/\u2014(CP*\n\u2014British and foreign exchange in\nrelation to the Canadian dollar, as\ncompiled by the Roy*I Bank or\nCanada,   closed   today   *a   follow*k\nArgentina,  peso   \u201e   .2857\nAustralia,   pound   ,,.Mm. 8.3741\nBelgium,   belgu 1553\nBrazil, milreie \u201e_\u201e    .0741\nCzechoslovakia, crown -..\u2014.   .0329\nDenmrrk, krone   .2298\nFinland,   fmmark     ,...   ,0205\nFrance,   franc     \u201e    .0437\n\u2022\"irrmany,   rellchsmark        .28,10\nnrest Britain, pound  _..\u201e  4.2071\nGreece,   drachma  \u201e    .0143\nHolland,   florin    .'   .44-J8\nIndia,  rupee    ,    .3170\nI tally, lire  \u201e   _   .0570\nJnptm,    yen       \u201e_    .3710\nJugoslavia,   dinar    _ _...   .0199\nNew Zealand, pound  ... 3.8246\nNorway,    krone     _,.......\u201e   ,2176\nPolafld   zloti        .1251\nRoumania, leu  -~.\u201e-   .0008\nBouth Africa pound   5.0321\nSpain,    peseta    \u201e   0842\nSweden, krone   \u201e\u201e \u00ab   .;2ifl5\nSwitzerland, franc   ^.\u201e _   .2160\nUnited   States,   dollar   \u2014   10%   per\ncent  discount.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG. AprU 13 \u2014 Tutuiaj\nquotation,:\nOpsn    High    low . Close\nMny        Ml, 65'., 63'4     B5\nJuly    .....   6dl4 67 66\u00bb,     M%\nOct    68\u00bbi 69 Y. 67!,     'J91i\nOats:\nMay        32'i 33 32        31%\nJuly        32'i 331, Jan      s:),,\nOct    33',', 34 3314     3*\nBarley:\nMay        H 43\u00bb4 43        4214\nJuly        43% Mil tfti     42 li\nOct.     .....    40!4 40!, 40'i      40\u00bb,\nFlax:\nMay    ..... 102 U 103 101 >i 103\nJuly      104*4 1051, 104', 1051!,\nOct 107',i \u2014 \u2014 107'4\nRye:\nMay        4814     40'4 48        49>i\nJuly    .....    50         50*\/. 4911      803,\nOct    50\",     62 S0\\4     32\nCash prices:\nWheat:   No.   i   hard 66\"',:   No.   1\nnor,   6454;   No.   2   nor 8114;   No.   3\nnor 57'i; No. 4 55; No. 8 52!i: No. 6\n45:    feed   43;    track 64Hi    No.    1\ndurum,  87.\nTORONTO INDUSTRIALS\nBell   Telephone 94 30 60\nBrazilian  10H 0U 10\nB  A  Oil     9 S^i       $%\nCanada   Bread   _ \u2014 \u2014 2\nCanada   Dredge \u2014 \u2014 13'\/j\nCanada  Gypsum 3'i 3 3\nCanada  Malting 11 10 10\nCons    Bakeries 6 '   5*4       5*4\nCons    Mining    m 40 35 87\nDist    Sea-jrams 3% 3(-*a        S**\nDominion   Motors 2\\i 2 3\nPord of Can \"A\" 10 9^ .10\nGoodyear     \u2014 \u2014 60\nImperial   Oil   \u2122 8!i 7*4       TU\nun Tobacco   \u2014 \u2014 7'4\nInter   Nickel   .... 9V\u00bb 6V4       638\nInter   Pete     9H B!4       9*4\nLaura Secord  _.. 353b 3* 33%\nLoblaw   \"A\"   .... \u2014 \u2014 w%\nNoranda       18 15.53 19.75\nPage   Hersey   .... 43 49% 41*4\nPhol-o   Engravera \u2014 \u2014 15\nService   Stations \u2014 \u2014 4\nSupertefit    15 1444 143,4\nHiram  Walker  .. 3 2;\u00bb       2\"3\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMtNNEAPOUS. Minn.. April 13.\u2014\nPTrar 20 hit1 \u2666**. Carl-ad lotfl familv\npatents 4-70-80 barrel In 98-pound\ncotton sacks. Shipment^ 16,493.\nBran   15-50.\nWheat: No. 1 Nor. 71-73; No. 1\nRed Durum 55-56; May \u00ab8; July\n67%;   Sept  65*%.\nr   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u00bb}\\rrm i!)\"''V\nOats:  no.  3  White 35-36M.\nFlax; No. 1 Ulli-Ulii,\nWINmPEO, April 12 (CP)\u2014For\nthe third succewlve day W'.-eit prices,\non the strength of continued dry\nweather In the Unltsd States winter\nwhrat territory, scored moJer.ite\ngains on WlnnipeR's grain market\ntoday. Mjre than one cent was added today to brlntr the total recovery\nln value! since Friday to more than\nfo-    cents.\nOperati:ns today were quite lively\n.though at times erratic. A strong\nbullish sentiment was noticed\nthroughout which prevailed over\nearly selling to eend prices once\nmore en t'.e upward  trend.\nEach an evm cent blither. May\nana October deliveries closed st 65\nand 69 tr> 69'4 cents, respectively.\nJuly was i!4 up at 66y8 to 67 cent?.\nForecasts of rain to afford relief\nto pirched wheat lands ln th* United States were it 111 abssnt r,:day.\nModerate export sates also were\nmads which ailed the market in Its\nclimb. Five hundred thousand bush-\neU was the estimate of th* business\nworked.\nCash (Trains, however, continued\nlifeless. Offerings continued HgJt and\nspreads again closed practically unchanged. The activity ln wheat futures was not reflected in coarse\ngrains, prices moving with a narrow\nranvc  throughout  the  eessl an.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nArno  \u201e ....\/..\u201e       ,01\"i\nAjax \u201e 88\nAmulet \u201e        .10\nA P Consolidated        .05\nAssociated \u201e 04^\nB   A  0.1    _ 50\n31dg0;d 05'j,\nBarry   Hclllngcr        .06',a\nBig   Missouri   ...t  .06!\/a\nCalmont   . ...        .05\nCh^mlcsl  Rreeirch      1.05\nClerlcy 01%\nDr,me     _      9.75\nDalhousle        .15\nEastcre.^t         .05\nEldorado    ~ ..- ...      1.30\nFoofhills          .06\nFslconbrldtje    65\nGmruida     \u201e 75\nHome   Oil    - ..- 20\nHowpy -_ nil\nHolllnger    _ \u201e      4.55\nHudson   Bay      1.80\nImperial   Oil           7.75\nInterna-tonal    Nickel      6.40\nKlrkland   Lake    tfVrt\nLake   Shore       27.00\nMacaw,*     30\nM:vndy    Ot\nMalartic         .03\nMclntyra?     13.00\nMining  0\u00ab>rp          .91.\nMiyland      12\nNewbec        .o\\3\/t\nNlpissing \u201e       .80\nNoranda     15 GO\nPend   Or^lite        .70\nPremier Oold  - - 40'4\nSherrit Gordon _ M|{\nSudburj'  Basin        .21\nSiscoe      (10\nTech    Hug Iks          4.00\nVlpond 30'i\nVenture*         .38\nWright   Han-reaves   .   . 2.41\nCANADA BONDS\nWINNIPEG. April ia\u2014Dominion of\nCanada   bonds:\nWAR   LOAN\n6.   1937,   103.40;    104.25.\nVICTORY    LOAN\nfi<4,  1933, 100.40;   103.25.\nfi',3,   1934,  9965;   100.50.\n5*\/j,   1937,   105,40;    106.50.\nWAR   LOAN   RKMC.VAL\n614.   1932,   100.40;   101.\u25a0*\nBLTUNDOKO   LOAN\n5, 1943, 9*6.15; 97 00.\n4tt, 1940, 93.40; 94.25.\n4tt, 1944, 91.25; 9213.\n4H,   1946.   90.90;   92.00.\nCONVERSION   LOAN\n4H,   1957.   B8.90;   90.00.\n4'4,   1958,   91.15;   91.73.\n4%,   1959,   90.15; '91.00.\nNATIONAL    SKRVICK    IOAN\n5, 1938,   97.15;   98.00.\n6, 1941, 06.15;   96.75.\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nWHEAT   ifltDtHG     N   PROGRESS\nWINNIPEG. Man., A 11 13\u2014Wheat\nseeding is now in progress in several districts of south Alberta, report* received by th* Canadian Pacific railway's agricultural d\u00abp.irt-\nment in Winnipeg show, and nt\nsome point* lb will ba general this\nweek.\nCALOART, .Utft* April 12 \u2014 Receipt\". Cattle 64, calves 11, hogs 343.\nSteers: Good and cbolce, 14.50 to\nUf medium, $4 to $4.35; common,\n93   tO   $3.75.\nHtlfera: Good and Ci'Olce, $435\nto *4.75; medium, 44 to MJAj com-\nmoL,   $3   to   43.75.\nFed calve?: Guoil and choice, \u20224.75\nto 45;  medium, 44 M MS').\nCows: Good. 42.75 to 43.50; medium. 92 to 43.60; oommon. 41,25\nto 41.75; canners and cutters, 4 50\nto  41.\nSheep: Good handy weight, $3 to\ni 48.50;  common, 41  to \u00ab3 50\nHogs: Select tocon. 44; bacon\n11>3 50;   butchers,  43.\ni ' MONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTRE.\\L. April 12\u2014Having lost\n11 cent* per pound in the past few\nweeks, butter turned upward today\nand was the feature of the produce\nand dairy market here. Egg. cheese\nand potato quotations all remained\nfirm,\n.^HKHH ETAOIN   SHR\nCheese, current 11V4  to 11\nCheese, summer.  13  to   13(,4.\nButter, No. 1 finest,  17H  to 18%,\nEggs, fresh specials 1.1 cartons, 25.\nEggs,   fresh   extras   in   carton*   24.\nEggs,   fresh   first*   ln   cartons,   23.\nVictor    Rollins,    Purchasing\nAgent Presents Facts  .\nat Victoria\nVICTORIA, B. C, April 12\u2014Victor Rollins, purchasing agent for the\nprovince, on the stand, at the recent unemployment Inquiry, told of\nthe efforts by the govern Tent to\nsecure British Co'.umbia to:as, as a\nsettled' policy. The government at\none point encouraged the West\nCoast Woolen mills to manufacture\nwhite bhnkets for use In British\nColumbia institutions, and grey\nblanket* for the camp*. T..ls had\nre-mltcj in purchase of more than\n300,000 pounds of British 0;lumbia\nwool from producers. Some 7000\nblanksts were bought through the\nWest Coast mill, and 450 pairs from\nTurner-Bfaton. at Victoria, for rush\norder. Financial assistance had been\nprivately arranged to enable the\nWest Cast mill to fill the order\nfor the larger nurrb-f-r.\nFLOIR   PRICES   CITED\nMr. Rollins told of prices paid\nfor Hour shipped to Golden and\nWindermere. The price paid had been\n45.10 a barrel on ordinary flour,\ncompared to the average Vancouver\nquotation of about 46.30 at that\ntime. British Columbia might have\nbought more cheaply at Oolden, said\nwitness, but wa* anxious to UM\nBritish Cblumbia flour, paying the\ndifference ln this ca*e. Alberta flour\nhad been obtainable at Golden, but\nthe government was following It*\nsettled policy of using British Columbia goods wherever possible.\nThe department had been under\npressure from hundred* of smell\nmerchants throug.it the province to\ndistribute It* orders, and not buy\nwholesale where local dealers cou'.d\nbe utilized. The relief committee of\nthe cabinet had set a basis to accomplish this, allowing 5 per cent\na* a  dealer's profit.\nAt Golden |1637 had been paid\nto Thomas King A- Son. the firm of\nthe Liberal member for Columbia\nfor goods supplied, witness said, in\nresponse   to   further   questions.\nLumber   used   ln   the   camps   had\nbeen   bmght  at  price*  ranging  between 49.50 per   1000  feet  to 41550,\ndrltvered  In  the camp*.\nIIFDft   AND   MATTRESSES\nMr. Rollln* disclo.;d details In\nconnection with camp outfitting.\nSteel frame beds had been bought\nfor 12.40 each, with a return salvage\nvalue of 41 each. Cheap mattrcfisr-*,\nsufficient for the us* of the camps,\nhad been bmght for price* ranging\nfrom 90 cents to ILU each. These\norders had been split up among\nBrltl\u00abh Columbia w; oiesalers at Vancouver   and  Victoria.\nNEW ILLINOIS AL'   .RTA LTD.\nAHSIONED    IN    BANKRUPTCY\nCALGARY, April 12.\u2014Assignment\nln bankruptcy of New Illinois Albert'1 Ltd., whose parent company\nwas one of the first naptlia producing firms in Turner valley,\nan- unced,\nT\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 Industrials\n20 l!a;ls   \t\n20 Utilities ..\n62.33 up 0.29\n21.73 off 0.72\n24.59   up   0.10\nTORONTO MINING\nLIST CONTINUES\nDOWNWARD TURN\nTORONTO. April 12\u2014Price movement on the Standard Su,ck and\nmining exchange resumed it* downward march today and at thc close\n40 Issue* showed .oases, 7 made minor giliis and t4 closed un:hang*ed.\nThe session also brought a number\ncf new lows. S^les volume advanced\nto 253,000 shares with strong indications    of    liquidations.\nInternational Nickel and Hudson\nBay were the only firm spots a-mo-.g\nthe leaders, the former closm* up\n25 cent* to lfl.50 and tr.e latter 6\ncents to 4180. Noranja dropped 55\ncents to 415.53 while Consolidated\n8x\u00ablters with 5 shares cut broke\n410  to  cl \u2022*  at *  new  low  ot  433.\nThe reactionary tendency swept\nthrough the higher priced gold Issues. Lake Shore dropped 43 cents\nto 427.25; Teck-Hughes broke 25\ncent* to the lowest level ln\nyears.\nCities Service in moTement of 4\nshare* closed up 41.50 to 46, while\nother leading oil stocks declined.\nTBEHl LIST\nTIES\nSmelter Drops to 85; Active\nInterlisted Securities\nFirm\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG, April 12 \u2014 Receipts\nCattle 280. calve* 10, hogs  730.\nSteers, up to 1050 lbs,; Good and\nChoice 4460 to 46-25.\nSteers, over 1050 Ihe.: Good and\nCholc-g   44.75   to  4550.\nHeifers; Good and ohole* 14.23\nto 45.\nFed calves: Good and choice 45\nto   45.75.\nCows: Oood 43 to $3 50; canners\nand cutters *.75 to 11.50.\nBulls: Good 92 to 42.23.\nStocker and feeder steers: Good\n43  to  43.75.\nStock cows and heifers: Good 42.50\nto  $3.25.\nMilkers and springers: 428 to 435.\nVeal calves: Good ani choice\n94.30  to 95.\nHogs: Select baoon 41 per he&A\npremium; butchers 41 per bead discount;   extra  heavy  \u00ab2.50   to   93.\nLambs; Good handy weight 98 to\n16.23;   good   l-.eavles   94.30   to   45.\nSheep: Good heavies 41 t0 42.50;\ngood  handywelght 42.50  to 43.\nDOLLAR ENDS DAY\nHIGHER\nNEW YORK. April 12 (CP>\u2014British currencies fluctuatej narrowly\non local foreign exchange* for the\nsecond day today. Tho Canadian\ndollar closed 1-lfl cent ht\u00a3r.ef at\n901! cents, and the pound sterling\nended the session \\% cent lower at\n43.70%  for cable transfers.\nVOLUME OF GRAIN\nDOWN FROM 1931\nOTTAWA, April 12 fCPi.\u2014Volume\nof stocks of grain In all positions ln\nCanads on March 31 showed sub*\nstantlal reductions compared with\nthe same datP a year a>**o, states a\nreport issued by the Dominion bureau   of  statistic*   this   afternoon.\nCHICAGO, April 12 (By John P\nBouf-han, \/ seriated Press market\neditor). \u2014 In a fresh burst of\nstrength, wheat prices today outdid\nhigh price record! as far back as\nFebruary   28   last,\nKansas and Nebraska crop reports\ntoday were more bullish than at\nany time heretofore thl* season.\nField advices from the so*-tn central\npart of Kansas in particular contrasted sensationally with the fact\nthat up to April l the region re-\nferr--\" to had the best crop prospect ln the state. Nebraska* official statistician predicted abandonment of wheat acreage would bo\nthe   largnt  since   1917.\nWheat closed nervous, lc to \\%9\nabove yesterday's finish; corn || to\n*a advanced; oa*'' * to U up; and\nprovision*   unchanged   to   7c   down.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nUNCOVERS 19 NEW\nLOWE, TRADING UP\nTORONTO. Aprij 12\u2014Further liquidation of stcck at New York today\nbrought out additional offerings of\ndomestic Issues on t.:e Toronto ttock\nexchange, with tho result that 19\nnew lows were uncovered. Volume\nIncreased to 18,823 shares and of 60\nIssues called a were higher against\n37  lower,  with   13 unchanged.\nWith a few exceptions losses were\n.small. Interna tlon nl Nickel w.i* the\nonly active ls&ue to advance, its gain\nbeing 'i to 61\u00bb with 1330 shares\nout. Smelters was off 3 to a new\nlow   of   36.\nIn the utility group British Co-\nlumbli Power A was off l bu a new\nlow of 19, Bell lost 3 to a new low\nof 90. Brazilian lost >>> and C. P. R-\ngained M to 14.\nMONTREAL, April 13,\u2014A momtn*\nsteadiness failed to continue today,\nand values on the Montreal stock\nexchange continued the declin*\nwhich ha* been going on for about\nthree weeks, with the exception ef\nan occasional day of moderate firmness.\nThe more active Interlisted Hour*\nltlei   wer*  firm,   but  in  other   1\u00bb-\n\u2022ues a fall ln values brought out\nsome seven new lowi for tlie year\nor longer. Brazilian Traction was\nagain a .vo leader, and remained\nunchanged at 10. Nickel held un-\nchanived at \u00ab%. whlle Canadian\nPacific, on PS\"! sales, gained H to\n14. The only other advance wa* in\nCanadian Car preferred, up Vi at 12.\n' Among stocks touching new low*\nwere B. C. Power \"A\", off % at\nlfPi; Smeltr-s, down 5 point* to\n35; j*aM**n P lries, off 1 at 10:\nGvpeum, off \u25a0'\u2022 ti 3: Holllnger, off\n.40 to 44.80; Steel of Csnad* common, off H at 15, and th* preferred   %   at   24%.\nThe bond department also *how*d\nlower prices. Montreal Tramway first\nmortgage lost 1H to 81, a new\nlow; refunding 1940 waa down 4180\nto 993; whil,- National Benrjc* 1938\ndeclined .75 to $97.25. Total sale*\nwer,.   934.450.\nStock Rale* were 10,215, compared\nwith   9f>64   yesterday.\nSterling closed at 94.2071, and\nUnited States money at a premium\nof   IO3'-   per   cent.\nSPEHAL REVENUE TAX\nWILL ACT ON SOME\nFOR PAST YEAR\nVICTORIA, April 12.\u2014Under the\nspecial revenue tax act. given second reading in the legislature Monday, those who did not pay the 1\nper cent universal levy during tbe\np:ist 12 montrw will be taxed for\nthat period If they are not exempt\nunder the  new tax law.\nTills will be in addition to taxation for . coming year. Those\nwho were exempt during the past\n12 months will have to pay their\ntaxes for that time on the new\nrate announced for 1032 income* la\nthe   budget.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nJUNES\nBig  Missouri    -   JIT\nOeocge   ETit    JJJ\nGftorgl* River - \u2014\nGolconda .*\u25a0-. \u25a0, \u25a0 .15\nosmdvtmr  03\nlot   c   \u00ab\u2022   O   .\u2014     1 \u2014\nLome    Gold . .18\nNatlorual   Silver   .  JOV.i\nNoble   Flvo    ..._-_ .03\nPremier    . M\nrend Oreille . \u2014\nPioneer   Gold  ... 8.75\nPorter Idaho  .M\nReno  Gold - \u2022*\"\u2022\nSllvercrest      . jOI\nWellington       . .01\nWhitewater    ...\u201e \u2014. \u2014\nOILS\nHome A p Consolidated  \u25a0\nC and E Lands - \u2014\nCalmont .\u2014 . 1\nKaatcrest  .\u201e>\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb.\nHome  OU 1\nMercury     - . ..\nMcLeod \u2014\nMill City   ,\nMayland\nRnyallte\n\u25a0OTA\n\u2022OS-A\n.1014\n.04\n.11 'n\\\n.16 V.\n.04\nAt\n.TO\n3.SS\nat\nM\nM\nat\nM\n.IS\nto\nM\n.18\nen\n3D\nJO\n\u00abaa\nOrer $,000,000 entries vera rrreitwd\nia (lie Turret Cigarette Hockey\nConte.l\u2014an unequalled record for\npopularity among prise contests in\nthe Dominion of Canada. The judging of entries is proceeding uithall\npo.iihle speed and a list of prise\ntcinners trill ne pithtinlied at lite\nearliest possible moment.\n12 for ISe\n20 for 25c\n\u2014and in flat line of fifty\nand one hundred.\nQke RECORD\nSPEAKS fox- ITSELF\nThe tremendous, nation-wide response to the eonteat\nrecently run in connection with the goals seored in the\nNational Hockey League for the season of 19.11-32, is evidence\nof the avid interest of all Canadians in their own national\ngame\u2014just as the continued preference of millions of\nCanadian smokers for Turret Cigarettes is indisputable\nevidence of their quality, mildness and coolness.\nAfter all, nothing can replace good, honest tobacco; grown\nand ripened right out in the field under nature's own sunlight\u2014nothing artificial about that\u2014and the high quality\nia \"inbred.\"\nQuality and Mildness\nurret\nC I GAKETTES\nImperial Tobacco Company of Canada, Limited.\nJ\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. 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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":"1932-04-13 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":"1932-04-13 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]. 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