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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":" Larry Gains Outpoints Primd\nCamera in London\n\u2014 Pa&e Seven\nmMml\ny6< j\nFrame Wins Indianapolis Speed\nRace in Record Time\n\u2014 Pa__e Ten\nON,    B.    C,   f-MBAX    MORNINO    MAY    31,    IMS\nnn: cents a copy\nMMum \u00bb\u2022\nBROWNE CRASHES INTO BAY\nSOVIET ORGAN\nGIVES wm\nTO  JAPANESE\nCharges Certain Elements\nWith Seeking: Invasion,\nSiberia\n71 Doukhobors Arc\nHeard; Admit Were\nNaked at Thrums\nSeventy-one members of the Horn\nof Freedom sect ol Doukhobors, arrested on hnnnay at Thrum*-! for\nappearing naked within view of the\npublic appeared before Magistrate\nJohn Cartmel Monday morning and\npleaded guilty. They were remanded\neight days fo^ sentence by the magistrate.\nKING'S PALACE\nAT BELGRADE,\nBOMB OBJECT\nEDITORIAL DEMANDS\nESTEEM, BORDERS\nRich Resources of Asiatic\nRussia Would Aid in\nEvent of War\nMOSCOW, May 30 . (AP)\u2014The\nrc-vernment organ Izvest la today\n\u25a0rhargrd certain Japanese elements\nwith seeking an Invasion of eastern Siberia to \"facilitate Japan's\nprrparat Inns \/or war against the\nUnited States hy making available\nfor the Japanese military machine\nthe rich nat ural resources of\nAsiatic   Russia.\"\nIn a sharp warning to Japan not\nto try to lay her handa on Siberia,\nthe vigorous editorial pronouncement called attention to \"recent\ndemands in o.rtaln sections of the\nJapanese press for war against So*\nnet   Russia.\"\nDeclaring that the resources of\nManchuria first were sought, Iz-\nvestla aald that Intelligent Japanese\npublic opinion oould not be relieved\nof responsibility for the alienee In\nthe face of such a campaign, \"which\nmight lead to foe sending of millions\nof people to a bloody slaughter.\"\n\"The Soviet union does not demand anything of Japan except\nesteem of lie borders,\" the editorial\naald.\nSK HYDROGEN\nBALLOiS OFF\nIN AIR RACE\nMake Provision in Case\nForced to Land in Wild\nCanadian Area\nPalace of King Alexander\nand J-ve Other Places\nBombed\nDAMAGE IS\nNEGLIGIBLE\nBRUENING CABINET RESIGNS\n' 00R HOUR HAS\nCOME, CRY OF\nADOLF HITLER\nC\\alms World Parachute Record\nn!\nU. S. ESTIMATES\nSEEK ADDITIONAL\nTAX $200,000,000\nHoover Summons Senate Democratic Finance Committee\nMembers\nOMAnA,   Ne*.,   May   In.\u2014Blown\nnorthwestward   hy   \u00bb  strong   wind\nthat delayed their take-off alrmxt\ntwo hours, six hydrogen-filled balloon* late today  started  from the\nmunicipal  airport  In  the  national\nballoon   races   final   event   of   the\nsecond  annual  Omaha  air races.\nTracy     Southworth     of     Monroe,\nMich*,   a   member   of   the   Michigan\nlegislature, piloted the Chevrolet Motor company entry, first to take off.\njit  left   at 6:48  p.  m.   (central  stan-\n! dard    time).    John    E.    Engie    was\nSouthworth's   aide.   Next   away   was\nthe Army No. 1 balloon, TO minutes\nlater. The  last balloon, the City of\nOmaha, departed at 6:46 p. m.\nDue to a shortage of gaa, none of\nthe big hags was filled to capacity.\nThe pilot to cover the most dls-\ntince is to get the third place on\nthe United States team for the international Oordon Bennett trophy\nat Basel, Switzerland, ln September.\nOfficials ordered the crews to carry\nflrearma and a week's emergency\nprovisions, since the prevailing wfhd\nfrom the southwest indicated that\nthey might be carried into sparsely\nsettled   eectlona   of   Canada.\nOcean Conquerors\nSee Where Flight\nPrincinles Laid\nWASHIKOTON, May 30\u2014President\nHoover summoned United States\nDemocratic finance and economy\ncommittee members to the White\nHouse tonight to disclose new estimates calling for an additional\n\u00bb200,000.000   in   taxes.\nA move for a supplemental revenue measur. providing possibly for\na genera] aales tax in addition to\nthe pending \u00bb1,000,000,000 bill about\nto gp through the senate Is contemplate <t\nSenator Reed, Republican, Penn.,\nafter a late day of White Housa\nconferences whtch also Included i\nSecretary of the Treasury Ogden L.,\nMills and C-l.arles O. Dawes, president\n, of the reconstruction finance cor-\nt poratlon, informed the senate of the\nrevised estimates.\nHis declaration was given to the\nsenate Just as a petition was laid\ndown pledging &5 members\u2014a substantial majority\u2014In opposition to\nthe aalea tax.\nSenator Harrison of Mississippi,\nthe Democratic tax leader. In presenting tra petition, told the senate\ntalcs tax advocates that a \"fight Is\nfutile.\"\nHe then moved to make up the\n$50,000,000 needed in the pending\nTevenue measure to m;et the budget\nestimates originally represented by\nSecretary Mills by restoration of\nhigher Income rates.\nTransoceanic Fliers Visit City\nof Aviation Forefather\nFLORENCE, Italy, May 30   .AP)\u2014-A\nInjured in Crash\nPresident     Hindenburgh\nAccepts Resignation of\nGerman Body\nKing Away on Rest; Four\nAre Arrested; One Injured by Explosion\nBELGRADE, Jugoslavia, May 30\n(AP).\u2014The palace of King Alexander and five other strategic\nspots In  the capital were bombed\ntoday.\nA short relpn of terror gripped\nthe city, until the police explained\nthat the missiles were not extremely dangerous, and wer* Intended more as a demonstration\nor warning.\nThe klni left \"for several days'\nrest\" at Nlaka Vanja, It was announced.\nTlie bomb thrown at the palace\nInjured a passerby. The other In*\nfllcted no Injuries, but caused slight\nproperty  damage.\nPour persons were arres'-td, lnclud\nIng a Hungarian, a Crojt and an\nunidentified woman. Ths fourth prisoner was Intercepted carrying a\npackage he said he found In front\nof the Danish legation. It proved to\nbe a bomb.\nKing Alexander has been reported\nln   disfavor   ln   several   quarters   of\nlate,  and  rumors  have been  spread _____   ___,..__,,\u201e_.\u201e_   .\nrepeatedly  that he^ had  been  forced ( ^ave established a new world's record for women. She took o(f from the\nBIGGEST PARTIES\nMAKE SUGGESTIONS\nNo Indication of Hitler\nStepping Directly Into\nPower\nTAKES SUDDEN\nDIVE WHILE IN\nACT, REFUELING\n'i\nTranspacific   Flight  Cut\nShort as Plane Lands in\nElliott Bay\nBROWNE'S SHOULDER\nIS DISLOCATED\nLIBERALS WILL\nSHORTLY HOLD\nPROVINCE MEET\nLeft Sitting  in  Air  as\nWing Buckles; Rescued From Water\nto abdicate, or had lied ths capital.\nAll ol .titm proved groundless.\nSPAIN CONTINUES\nIN A TURMOIL AS\nEXTREMISTS BUSY\nSix   Killed   as   Government\nForces Break Strike; Disorder Spreads\nMADRID,   Spain,   May   30    (AP) \u2014\nhalf hundred filers who conquered Despite an announcement from the\nthe Atlantic or Pacific arrived today j ministry cf Interior today that order\nln the city of \"the forefather of had been re-established through the\nmodern aviation\"\u2014Leonard da Vlncl. | nation after Sunday's extrrmlst out-\nThe fitera came from Naples after; breads, claahes occurred today at\nattending  ths  first  annual  congress  cadlz, Seville and Algeclras,\nPope Pius XI to\nCelebrate 75th\nBirthday, Tuesday\nVATTCAN CITY, May 30 (AP)\u2014\nThe ol&est sovereign ln Europe, Pijpe\nPlus, XI, becomes 75 years old tomorrow.\nHe will celebrate hi* diamond\nanniversary with a special mass of\nthanksgiving: in his prlvato chapel,\nHla sister. Donna Camilla Rattl, hla\nnleoe and hl\u00bb nephew by marriage,\nMarquise and Marquis Perslcheltl-\nUgollnl, and a few prelates of the\n. papal household will compromise\nhi* congregation.\nThe papal flag of yellow and white,\nwith the tiara and crowed golden\nkey* upon It, will be iholsted orr*\n-\u2022anises  points  In   Vatican  City.\nThree of Vancouver\nResidents Lucky in\nEpsom Derby Draw\nVANCOUVER, B. C. May 30 (CP).\n\u2014Three Vancouver residents\u2014Mrs. J.\nD. Oabbltaa, 22C8 West Fourteenth;\nArthur Turner, 1447 East Pender;\nand Dr. Oeorge T. Lawrence, 100\nEaat Fifth, got horse* ln the opening draw today at Dublin ln the\nIrish Free State hospitals sweepstake on the Epsom Derby, whlcH\nwill be run on Wednesday.\nMra. Gabbltas, wife of a Vancouver barber, drew Buckle, and Mr.\nTurner, proprietor of the Relhble\nMeat Market, Keefer street, drew\nWyvern. Dr. Lawrence, dentist, got\nAndrea,   Each   wilt   receive   at   least\nof the transoceanic aviators at Rome,\nSome of tftem knew only that the\nname da Vlncl meant a great sculptor and painter, the author of \"Tlie\nLast Supper.\" But when they came\ninto Florence they w:re informed\nby city officials that It was In this\ncity Leonardo made those studies by\nwhich he laid down the very principles of aviation that enabled today's\nvisitors to fly the Atlantic or the\nPacific.\nIt waa here that the I Stti century\ngenius sketched and planned the\nballoon, the parachute and the\nmodem heavler-than-alr machine.\nThe ctty fathers pointed out the\nhill overlooking Florence where\nLeonardo stood month after ' month\nand watched so attentively title\nflight of birds.\nThe Fascist perfect and the mayor\nof Florence told the visitors how\nI_eonard(\u00bb wrote down and sketched\nthe conclusions he drew from hla\nobservations.\nThe officials related to the visitors\nhow Leonardo distinguished between\nthe soaring flight and that produced\nby aucceaslva flappings of wings.\nFcr each type he defined tr.e action\nof the air and the part It played,\nshowing how the bird rises obliquely\nIn  an  aerial  incline  plane.\nSix were killed yesterday as government forces broke the back of a\nnatian-wlde   extremist  strike.\nFour strikers were slightly Injured\nln clashes with the pollce at Cadiz.\nWhen the authorities got the upper\nhand they padlocked extremist headquarters am Jailed leaders ln the\nmovement. Strikers stoned a street\ncar nnd wounded a woman passenger.\nService was suspended.\nShipyards   and    airplane   factories\nOIBL  JUMPS  AT   HEIGHT   OF 21,000   FEET\nMlsa   Bamaranda Braescue,   Roumanian   parachute   Jumper,   claims   to\n s established a new world's record  for women. She took o(f  from the\nCurtlaa-Wrlght airdrome In Alameda, Cal., with Harry Doashardt ss pilot.\nThey headed toward Sacrsmento and gained an altitude cl 24,000 Teet.\nThere Miss Braescue balled out. She landed safely nt Marysville, near\nSacramento. The former  worlds  record  tor women waa 21,179   rest\nMotorists Given\nWeek's Grace to\nObtain Licences\nVICTORIA, ..ay 30 (CD.\u2014Attorney-.icneral R, II. Pooley announced \u2022 day thnt a week's grace\nhad been given to motorists to obtain the *'ew drivers' licence. June\n. he htuted Has the last day perm .-\nted for old licences.\nMOVING PICTURE\nEXPEDITION TO\nGO TO ALASKA |:\nQUINTETTE OF\nFLYING BOATS\nREACH THE PASS\nRERUN,   Mnv   30   (By   l-onls   P.\nI\/K-liner. Awwlated Press staff correspondent).\u2014Mr.  iieinrirh   Bruen-\nIng and   his cabinet   stepped  a.slrtt   I\ntoday, and th,.  Nazi of Adolf lilt- \u2014\nler hailed the resl-nntlon with the   \u2022 , .        ,_     ,  ,\ntriumphant slogan, \u2022 Our hour has    EXCCUtlVe Makes Decision,\ncome.\"\nHut   when   president   Paul   Ton   [\nIlliMfrnhurg  accepted   the   reslgna-   ;\ntlon   of   the   tw<>-lear-old   rahlnet,\nthere   was   no  Indication   that   the   j\nFawUt   Hitler   hou Id   step   directly\nInto  power.\nAs' conferences progressed during j\nthe iIhv, the Impression grew Hint .\nthe fsmttt would not Immediately !\nca\u00bbh lit M tlie.r recent state tic- I\nlories, hut that perhapa the next\nchancellor would hr a man whom |\nthev could tolerate,\n\"ANOTH'.R   tllTSTIOX\"\nThen, after tlie Lausanne conference on June 18, there wsa aomr\ntalk that the Nazis might assume\npower\u2014but authorities agreed this\nwas   \"another  question\u2122\nAt an? rnte, the Utile Narl chieftain was ushered In to the president\nmm tonight to confer on th* complexion of a cabinet, after hurred-\nly breaking off hla election campaign tour la Heckler, yrtr. Ti.e outcome of the conference was not revealed.\nAsksf or Party\nPlatform\nNEW  WMTM1MTBL May 81\u2014\nThe Liberal knights of the province are looking to their armour\nnnd horse* ln preparation for a\ngreat tourney, which they sense\nwill take place at n\u201e very distant\ndate. They Intend to be ready\nwhen the lints are opened, and\ngood and trusty knights have already been chosen to carry the\ncolors of the party.\nHon.    T.    D.    Pattullo.   acknowledged   leader   of   the   party,  speak\nSEATTLE, May so.\u2014A speetaen-\nlar dive Into Elliott bay h\u00ab> t*>-\nday ended the transpacific flight\nattempt  of  Nathan   C.   Browne,  \u00bb\nNew   York   aviator.\nBrowne and Tils volunteer assistant in refueling operations, Fran*\nllrnoks were fished out of the\nwnter by a part* In t sea ated.\nBrowne had a dislocated shoulder\nand Brook* was unhurt. Although\nhe complained comically that \"he\nhadn't Intended to lake a bath.\nuntil   Saturday.''\n\"We both left the lane at the\nsame time,\" Brooka aald. \"We could\nnot help it. When the wing tor\u00bb off\nwe were left sitting almost In the\nopen air,\nRAINEO    PLANK\n\"It rained plane all around ua M\nwe settled In our parachute* to th\u00ab\nwater. We left the plane at an altitude of about &0O [eet, and th\u00ab\n\"chutes opened about 10o feet be*\nj tan we ht.''\nBrooks said the wing wu tarn off\nj ln   a   steep   dive   caused   when   tb\u00ab\n! weighted nozzle of the gasoline hoM\n'dangling   from   tha   refueling   plan*\nI above   caught   in   the   stabiliser   of\nj Browne's plsne and lifted the tall.\ni    Browne  was  cling tr     to  wrecksg*\n       when  he  wss  picked  up  aome  dialog at m meeting  or the executive   |lanc\u00ab   from   where   the   fuselage   of\nor Ihe provincial liberal convention   .the   plane   dropped   into deep water,\nheld In lhe |.e-lon  hall here Mon-   !     \"I   \u00bb'\u00bb\u00bb   flying   Just  above   them.\"\ndav,   Kflld   thfft   nrnuigeinenfH   wen*   i Frank W\u00bbialey, pilot of    be refuelin*\nbelli*    made    In    several    cnnMItu-   jahlp,  said,   \"and   we   were   trytnf   tn\nenclr*   |g   nominate   candidate!*   at   j\ntmrntk\nThe    following     resjlutlnns    were;\nocrat.c\nM (ifiLSTIONS\nThe    Socialist    and    N.izl    leaders,\n . ! comprising   tho   two   biggest   parties\nAre IlOUnd for the Great IJearin the present NlcbStag, were under.\n\u00a5    i     mm' i T\"  u   . 1?     \u2014      ' a'^od   to   have   given    their   fUUU\nLake Mineral Fields; From    \\linnB to the president.\nDetroit '     Tomorrow    the    centrist*     (Cath-\nmnko a contact with  the Lon\u00ab Star\nwiih our refueling hose.\nII KNM)   HOM   DOWN\nmA   h>   n,*   *\u00ab\u00bb^it-i     \"Tbo Loot Star dipped down tev*\nPreviously  the aged   exerutlve  had    unanimously   pawed   hy    the   ewcu   * ^   t.mM ^ >vot(J  a co,n,Ion  w)th\nsummoned  Paul  I^ebe, cha.rm-n of, tlvc after  they had  been thoroughly \u25a0 my  pUja  m ^  n,fts jockeylng ,0P\nthe   relchstag   nnd   a   power   in    Its   discussed: _\u201e\u00ab_.*-\u00ab- _.\u201e   ^a better position when lhe auddenl\/\nbtMMt part-, thi BeoiftUft or Social       l- W\u00bb* thla executive e,rd!ahy en-.\n'dorses   and    approves   ihe   policy   Ofi\ntho   party    as   enunciated    by   our;\nleader,   Mr.   pattullo.\nI*\\KTV   ri.ATKOKM\n2. That a committee of 10 be con- !\nstituted to confer with our leader\nand With Liberal associations\nthroughout the province, with a,\nview to th3 ratflwtloD of tbe pwty\nmanifesto   form,   the |\n((ONTIMEl*   ON   7AM   TWO)\nSTORER ANI)\nRONALD LAND\nAT SASKATOON\n'ollcsl,  Gorman  Niitlonallsis   and   th\nPeople's party will be heard, as well j platform to\nCCT)\u2014   flfl the remaining small   pirtlcs.             same  to he\nThus It was  Indicated   thsl for st i tlon   of t>\nWill  Film Picture  at  Point\nHarrow; Immense\nTroject\nSASKATOON.    Saslc.,    May    30\nTIIE   PAS,   Man.,   May   .10    (Of)\u2014lag the remaining small  pirtlcs. 'same  to  be  submitted   to a COttWC-   \"Winning   a   race   with   nightfall   by\nBouna   1<rc   Qtatt   Bear   lake's   rich      Thus lt was Indicated  thst for st , tion   of   0M   party   for   amendment   the    mm   of   their    teeth,\"   R.   H.\nmin.ral   (JnU*,  a quintette  cf   flying   least another day President von llln-j and   fjnal   endorsement. Storer   amj   B.   R.   Ronald,   co-pllota\nboats froDi Detroit completed ajdenbiirg would rerniln both captain : 3. That associations he asked to ol ti.e biplane Vancouver Sun, which\nlight from Winnipeg tonight, slip-' snd pilot of Germany's sh,p of HlRBlt all HHIWlI'lM tor iBOOflWTi- ofi June 24 will attempt a dawn-\nping tfeWB to perfect landings Hlfftolt. i tion In the platform not later than j to-dusk non-stop flight from Mont-\nthe mmttrnj Saskatchewan river. It j TUcre were many reasons assigned ' June 30. ! real 9a Vancouver, m:tde a perfect\nhad been reported thl machines were! to the resignation of Dr. Omening. I 4 TrTutt a convention or tlie pirty imidlng at the local airdrome at\nheaded directly for &lmoJiton from | Chief among them, however, WWtjbl MW at t^l earliest p.sslblo dftMJt^fl p.m., daylight siivlng time thli\nWlnnlp'g. lthe president's impression that the S such date U> be fixed by said co n- ;\u00abi-pnlng. T\u00bb'ir arrival from Clmon-\nJ. IL JT.aM.mnii of Detroit, ln \u25a0 Socialist-Centrist coalition of Bruen-1 mittee m cansuitatlon With the; ton and North Battleford was the\nrharRp of the fleet, said   t*ey wo\\Ud   ing   no   longer   represented   the   will   leader. It was staled  tbst the names | occasion    for    the    flru    lighting\nSEATTLF,    Blay    30\u2014W.    I.\nlyke, moving pictvire dlrecior.\nfly from The Pas to E.imonton\nwithin a day or two and then go\nnorth to Oreit Bear. The plan-s\ntpt away trom  Winnipeg this  morn-\n(CONTINUtO   its   PAOB   TWOJ\n\u25a0of   the   members   of   the   COSUttUtM   th\u00ab   beacon  light  since   the  air mall\nVan-\n     __ and   a\nJflfl ot\"^\"Arrived mm toelay   fron I Ing  and   reached   here   aficr   an   un\nwe^'nVt\"operating\"thert,\"and\"th're   the   south  and  began  outfitting  r>r| eventful  tSffct\nwas no taxi service. j an    expedition    to    P^int    BftttW,  7ZZ_\\7~Kfv\nAt   Seville    unidentified   BM,   he-   Alaska,   to   film   a   picture   there. KIM IE   TO   ANNOl B\u00ab H\nlleved    to    be    strike   sympathizers,      The   party,   which   will   be   g*t\\e. <>l>J>VyJON\ntried to set fire to thr.e crurches, from eight months to a year, will ! WINNIPEG, May J^^P^ *J\nbut the blaze, were extinguished be-1 sail Thursday on the Victoria lOT] toMIMllito ^jff^SJ^Hnt\nfore fey dW much damage. Nome.   T..e  trading  schooner   Nanuk , jar-north    Great    MM     ^      km\nMost   of   Seville's   industries   were   sailed several days ago lor the north,   Winder,   tin tlf&*   boats   left   here\nshut down by the strike, and rloter3|wlth ths bulk of their supplies, U\u00bb|tMl   morning   and   \u2014-\nDominion Has Final\nSay in Placing of\nwill   be  announced   within   the   next\ntlire  days. i\nSome objection wai raised to a\nconvention by \"ountry members on |\nthe grounds of expense, but the1\nresoluilon finally passed QluUJlm-\nously.\nWU   discontinued   las',   year.\nFARMERS BATTLE\nGRASSHOPPERS\nAmelia Is Guest\nat Tea Party in\nHouse of Commons\nsped    westward.\nany  Injuries. ,       we   a\u2122   ma_mt _a__t_ma   Isy   Premlpr  Pooltf  tojav   In   connect on\nAt  Madrid   today  13  persons IM l\u00aba   of   eupplles.*   Van   Dike   Ml. | stop  ne\u00ab   but   It  mta   \"UW>_\u00ab0\u25a0\"' I.\t\n 1.,,   eight   months    In   Africa    In  airport tsttitisHs :e't  the ah.ps were\nfilming   \"Trader   Horn\"   was   child's, hcidcd  for ilmjnton\npl.y to what this will be.\" !     In   chaw\nwiNtfH'taSE-r*\nNewfoundland Lottery\narrested aijO  accused of partlclpi:lng\nin  tho Sunday extremist  rlJts here!\nUniversity of B.\nC. to Award Six\nSdwhwhip*, Year\nOnly three mem\nMri or the expe;!l-1 Detroit,    the\nVICTORIA. May 30 \u2014(CP)\nwould   works    officials    called\nPEGINA     Miiy   ^0 -Two   Regimes\nwith  their InvHtUation   Into a s\u00bbtt-!are  i^fct^g   forward   to the runnl\nable   site   for   the    recreation    ot   ft Lj th0 fti(U*h derby at iptom Downs j !J.'\nf   J.    H.   BMtlTfn   tflMMD   Jail   to   house   SOU  of   Free- Ln Wednesday wtth Whftt tOtf amount' *\nfive-plane    fleet,    left j dom   arre-ted  and   convicted   in   the 110 A  fimilu  (ortttM   btBflBC on  the\nand  arrived  h\u00bb\ntlon,   those   who  will   play   tho   parts: Windsor last  week\nof BMUbftn of the Nnru rVMt Mount- ; Saturday    tttwaooS.    A    brief    j-itop\ned police, WW appe.ir in the picture.' (or  fuel  was made  at\nhe added. The novel, \"The Eskimo,\" j _ ,\t\nla to be f.lmed. \"Wo will pick our'\nentire cast (ro.n the native Eskimos\nof rolnt \u00a3:irrow,\" lie wild. \"We h>pc\n! w-> have 1 ick with thrm.\"\nI    Point   Barrow   ls   ice-lacked    up-1\n| ward of 10 months cl the >ear and1\n'once   the   expedition    arrives   there]\n\u25a0 balance,\nt.ie   works |    Robtrt   Lftlng   and   Edward   Mann\nKING AND QUEEN\nATTEND PROGRAM\nBY MUSIC STARS\nrecent  drive  at  Helaon,\nF.   W.   Ross,   clerk   of\nKenora,  Ont. I 'or the fcJeral department of works I rc\"eivea  notlflciilon   that   they   bftd\n  I J.   P-   Forde,   resld nt   tngllWW   b\u00abN  drftWn ft hnrhc QtXOta MacKj'-n in \\R<\nfor  the sa-ne departnieiu   ani   C.   H. 0uirst   colony   hospital   tru\u00ab   MWp\nPOCATTIXO, Idaho, May 30\u2014\nFat,ters of two countrifa an! the\nPOQfttellO and Biackfoot, battled a\nfj*t Hail iridian rtHmtbn between\ntlK\/'.lcned invasion Ot grasshoppers\nt,day. jfRtherlnjj nlUlona of tt_$\npests from an IrrlgftUoa Stnti before\nthev were able to invade Ilelds.\nTr.e fraMhoppers aie immature\nand   without   fully   developed   wings.\nhey originated In sand hl;ls nearny\nftOd wer* floating laebti deep down\nthe    canal.\nHOOK1'\nBTOLKN   I HOM\niivm.   si UOOL,  HUM\n\u25a0tff'SSS'l.r  Cm M^ S^\u00a3 I ST**\" \u00abTte return  to clvlUza-\n\u00bb100   scholarships__wlll_ be_ ftVUdM | tlon   w,u   ^ by   ^   tPam_   or   by\nannually  by the tTnlverslty of Brit- I \u00ab ,__   ,     \t\nLONDON.    May    30     (AP). \u2014 Mrs,    ....   \t\nAmelia Earhart Putnam, first woman I trlcuTatlon students of the pfoftnre,\nsolo flyer of the Atlantic, waa guest   it was decided at the regular meft-\nbetween   500   and\ntoday at a hastily arranged tea party\nln  the house  of commons.\nBhe was taken to the house by\nDavid K. E. Bruce, son-ln-Iaw Of\nAmbassador Andrew W. Mellon. Upon her appearance the party was\narranged, and nearly all the women\nmembers . of parliament, including\nLady Astor, were present. Another\nwho was present waq J. H. Thomas,\nsecretary of state for the dominions.\nLady Astor will take Mrs. Putnam\nto Epsom Downs to see the running\nof the Derby, and will Introduce her\nto George Bernard Bhaw, the noted\nplaywright,  on  Thursday.\nBROMLEY LANDS\nAT AMARILLO\nAMARILLO, Texas, May 30.\u2014Harold\nBromley, Texas flyer who set out\nfrom New York early today in an\noil-burning monor i\u00ab on a projected nonstop flight to Burbank,\nCal., landed at the airport here at\n9:35   p.   m.   {central   standard   time)\n\u00a3 1750. with  additional  prize  money' tonight.  He  aald he would  resume\nlf tha  horses are  placed, the  night to Burbanlt tomorrow.\nIng of the bo(\\rd of governors tonight. One scholarship will be granted for each of the following districts: Vancouver, Victoria, Vancou-*\nver Island (excluding Victoria). Yale,\nand th*. Kootenays, Similar scholarships have been awarded for a\nnumber of years by the university\nto   Junior   matriculation   students.\nEnrolment in the first year courses\nof the university will be limited\nnext year to 800 In arts and sgrl-\nculture and to 15 In the nursing\ncourse, by decision of the hoard.\nThis Is the same requirement which\nwas In force for the current ses-.\nalon.\nRegistration in the teachers' training course win be reduced from 140\nthis year to 80 for next year, according to the statement Issued after the meeting. Preference will be\ngiven to University of B. C. graduates in the following order: Master\nof arts, bachelor of arts wtth honors,\nand bachelor of arts In psas course,\naccording to marks. It was also decided to admit graduates of applied\nM*icn<> to the teachers' training\neourst   if  they  ara  qualified.\nGUILTY UNDER\nPROVOCATION\nIS VERDICT\nNEW WESTMINSTER. B. C. May\n30.\u2014Guilty under great provocation\nwaa the verdict returned by tbe\nJury Monday evening In the case\nagainst Frederick Henry Mercer,\ncharged with shooting three boys.\nFred William Thompson, Kenneth\nGillies and John Wlgi.\u201e, at Clayburn\nlast Hallowe'en. The Airy strongly\nrecommended mercy. Gillies hss lost\nthe sight of one eye. The other boys\nreceived no permanent injury. Mr.\nJustice Fisher reserved sentence until  the end  of the assises.\nEvidence was given to show that\nMercer, who Is an elderly man residing at Clayburn, was tormented\nby a number of boys who threw\nbombs and firecrackers. 1?3 threatened to shoot the boys lf they did\nnot desist, and the boys dared  him\nLONDON, May 30 (CP cable).\u2014\nThe Kln* and Queen tonight attended a command p?rformince of\nmusic hall stars In aid of the variety artlsta's benevolent fund, at\nwhich mors than $20,000 was realized.\nAn audience of nearly 3000 persons Jammed the palladium, where\nthe performance waa staged, while\nmany thousands more stood outside\nto cheer their majesties. Tiie King\nand Queen expressed delight at the\nshow, which included numbers by\nVesta Victoria, who once more sang\nher celebrated song, \"Waiting at the\nChurch\"; Marie Kendall, Fred Russell, and other old-timers of the\nBritish vaudeville  stage.\nDawson,   architect   of   Hie   Victoria\noffice   of   tlie   branch   called   on   th'\nitftkMi\nlottery.\nlilanda.lwito   liie   Irish   hOSjIUl   lotrry   also i pa.\ndrawn Monday.\nJust what mnount the two Begin*\n, will recel-1 Is shrouded in dmibt,\nattorney \u2022general,     after\nInspection    Of   several    |\nTim party Visited many Islands\nbetween Sidney Island, two and a\nhalf   miles   from   Vancouver   island\nshores and Pier Island clone tojbl|t based on the 91J999 000 pool\nSidney during the eourst* of theirUlilrh the ftWMPfttftlGl calls for, they\nInvestigation their recommendations! should benefit to the extent of over\nwill be sent direct to the depart-; j^qog even tf their horss fails to place,\nment ftt Ottawa and were not disclosed   here.\nAttorney General Pooley said the\nprovince would place every pOMlttll\nassistance at th\" disposal of the\nfederal authorities In connection\nwith t\".-e provision of f nelll ties fir\ntho.se under arrest, but that actual\ndecision as to what step* for these\nwould be taken re;nalns In the\nhands of the Dominion government,\nresponsible for the care of the prisoners cn vie ted and given penitentiary  term*.\nIt, John's, Newfoundland,]    VANCOUVER,   May   30\u2014According\nUi t port by thc Khool hoard, MJj\ncepstaho has nothing to do \u25a0 boeka  b\u00bbW   MM   stolen   during   t;*e\nfew montfaa from Byng high\nschool. West Sixteenth uvcmie. Fifty\nof the book.s have been recovered in\nstores where tli* y had been \u00a3old by\nthe   thieves.\nTHE WEATHER\nftSMO  n'iKilN to \"HOW\nDOWX\"  niVoHi 1 (.hantim;\nMi)\n40\nMax,\nTHREE   JAPANESE   ARMY\nIRASSI'OUTS   HAIL   FOR   JAPAN\nSHANGHAI, May 31 (Tuesday) \u2014\n(AP)\u2014Three Japanese army transports, bearing the last of the expeditionary force ol approximately\n100,000 whtch fought here last win*\nter, sailed today for Japan.\nThe enly  Japanese  force  now  remaining here consists of about 2500\nbluejacfcrta   who   will   carry   on   the\nusual  garrison  dutlea   In   the   inter-\nto do so, ssytng that he was yellow] national   settlement,    the   same   as\nand had not the pluck to fixe. oti*er foclgn detachments.\nPENSIONER PAYS\nFOR PRIVILEGES\nOF WORKING\nBELLEVILLE. Ont., May 30. \u2014 A\nman haa been found here who Is;\nwilling to p ; for the privilege of\nworking. Afier asking several farmers for work In vain ft local joun\u2122\nman offered on^ |7 a week and was\ngiven employment on those terms. Hi\nsaid h* was In receipt of a smal]\npension and would find It cheaper to\nlive on that ..aela.\nmoJOM\t\n ' jWtoria   53\nRENO, Ncv , May 30-Reno's Judges 1 Vancouver     58\nhave    put     the    bfftlm    on    divorce | Kamh.    s   ...!!.]....\".!.. 52\n\u2022setkers who  atterpt  to slip  L..rough ; patevnn\" Point,   ..,,,\u201e,\u00ab\u201e, 50\ncurt ln one iUy. prince  Rupftrt     ts\nThe  \"slow-down\" order was  Issued h^yjn      ||\nIn a Joint statement by Ju !ges B. * Ipfturili.   Y.T .!!!!.. 40\nCurler and  TlMMMa  F. Moran   which   settle '  64\nannouno d    the    sun    must    m%    ftt  purtlftlMli  Ore     U\nlea^t   once    between    filing   of   suit U^j   pranclsco     52\nand   granting   of   decree.  The   JUtffMltpoftisM  46\ndeclared    the    rule    would    not    be!pr|nc(.   ocor'-c     50\nwaived  under  any   consideration.       JLoa Angeles    61\nPentlcton   41\nVernon     46\nGrind ForV__i     41\nCalnary     48\nVANCOUVER.   Mfty   30. \u2014 Honoring | Edmont^r      52\nthe   memory   of   Oeorge   ..ashlnitton   [ Swift Current,    4U\ntwo Aaierlcan elm trees v Tr* \u25a0pUUftMd i Prlnc;   Albert    48\nadjacent  to the p.*.; of the PrsldeM i Qu'AppcMo        ;. 6..\nHarding   memoilal    In   Stanl:;   Park I \\vlnnlp-g   ....- 4;t\nhere  today. Ell Parker, Uniu^ Kfcttl I Nanaimo  55\nconsul,   ond   Mrs.   John   Blair,   pnal-   tOKIA \\M'\ndent, of  tVft  American   .omen's dub!    Nelson an     -virintty: Mostly cloudy\ndedicated the trcea. 'and modemUly  w<*'\"ui wtth showc:e.\nHONOR  MEMORY  OF  GEORGE\nWASHINGTON AT COAST\n51\n56\n50\n00\nC4\n'.9\n70\n64\n6H\n80\n78\n81\n74\n7n\n\u00ab3\n__\n r\\OE   TWO\nNELSON FOX OF\nAMERICANS OVER\nDECORATION DAY\nGovernment Awaits\nActuarial Report\nVICTORIA,   May   30   (CP).\u2014Pend-\nAsf   and   Monday,   principally   from! u.g  report from  an  agricultural  ln-\nNeieon was full of Americans Bun-\n\u25a0 TOft   NELSON    IMItT    NEWS,    NELSON,    B.    C._    TCESDAT   MORNING    MAT    81,    183\u00ab H\nexodus of Amer'-an cars by the Nelson-Spokane highway.\nSpokane, who came up here lor the\nDecoration d\u00abT- holiday.\nThe hotels were filled with the Tls-\nItors, and cara with Washington licence plates we're In evidence everywhere.\nFor tha moat part the Tisltora were\ncontent to spend the day atrictly in\ntown. Concentrating in the business\nsection, though aome drov* around\nto see the sights.\nvestigatton of workmen's oompenaa\ntlon matters in B. tt. now under\nway. no action will be taken hy\nthe government, lt waa Intimated\ntoday by Acting Premier Pooley. The\ngovernment ordered the preparation\nof actuarial data shortly after the\nlaat Bc.sKlon, and this work is now\nproceeding.\nMeanwhile former proposals for  a\nreorganization   in   the   board   have\nREV. W. J. CRICK    j Outpoints Camera\nSAYS FAREWELL AT\nSOCIAL EVENING\nMonday   night   there  was  a  great not been advanced.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels and Cafes\n4?2 VERNON STOEET\nDinner\n75c\nPHONE 787\nLuncheon\n50c\nHUME HOTEL\nNELSON, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHUME\u2014 C. Oray, Pentlcton; J.\nHockin, Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Jackson,\nI. M. Stephen. A. L. Tee17*1. W\nChatwih, Vanoouver; O. II. Burden.\nPort Crawford; H. Murray. Crawford\nBay; Lloyd JohnsVm, Klmberley;\nJoe   Oftlio,  Salmo;   Oeorge   Mclnnes.\nWynndel; A. O. R. Prlckard, Vernon; O. M. Out kins, Kelowna; H. H.\nMcBaln, T. A. Burns, Medicine Hot;\nA. J. Balmjent, T. A. Wallace. 0\nRumwy, Cranbrook; C. M. Bartlett,\nNelson;   A,   C.   Brew,   Kettle   Vnlloy.\n1 \u00ab\n$ fiffiiere (he Gue& Is King k\n- li\ncUhe Savo;\n>\/\nMASON'S NEWEST AND TINTST HOTEL\nMANY   POOM8   WITH   PPIVATE\nBATHS OR BHOWEHS\nP4 BAUER  ST.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nPHONE  19\n|\nRev. Archdeacon F. H. Graham Rids Vicar Godspeed;\nPraises His Work\nMAYOR MORGAN SPEAKS\nFOR NELSON COUNCIL\nGeorge  Massey and   Stanley\nHorswill Make Presentations\nIho presentation?, one by   Stmi-\nlley  Horswill, representing  the  Toe\nII   group   of   .\\el*nu   ,an,|   one   li>\nUeorgi   Manttf on   behalf  of  the\nchurchmen and nmgregntton of the\nChurch of the Redeemer, ahinj with\nfarewell spettbftft by  Kev. Arrhden-\nron I. II. (irahum and Mnyor J. I'*\n.Morgan teat red the social evenlnir\nInrenell   jirojtrnm nt the   Redeemer\nparish lull  .Monday  night  for Kev.\nH. 4. Crirk, vicar ot the Red'finer\nlor the pant three yearn, who Immt\nInr  Rlinherley In the morning ami\nwill lute,, nail fur England to take\na  poht-gmduate  course.\nAfter   a   very   Interesting   program\nof vocal solos, \"ianoforte eoloa   rccl-\ntHllons,   vocal   duets   and   trio's,   tea\nwas Berved   before going ahead   with\nthe presentations.\nARCHDEACON\nTHAIS ,h  Vlt A'.',\nIn bidding farewell. Archdeacon\nGralium related the story of fmtt*\n.v'b llrst. church and related the\npftld tribute to Mr. Crick for tho wonderful way i\" which the church h\u00bbd\nprogress made since that time and\ngone ahead since he took it over,\nnearly three years ago. The archdea-\n1 wished Mr. Crick Godspeed and\nevery IU0OM. but snld that he hoped\nMr. Crick wciilcl soon return to Mel-\npou to once more take over the duties which he had performed eo et-\nently and unerringly during hla\ne  as vicar  in Neleon. Arclulcact:\nMORE  ABOUT\nNAT BROWN\n(CONTIMED   flMM   PAOE   ONI)\nMr. Crick fllsco'-erert a serious nmls-\nLion, and stated lor publication bla\ndeep   regret   that   he   had   failed   to\nmention the most important ofganiea-\ntion of thc pftriftbftbft Women's Guild\nwith Mrs. Hr:-y Bishop na president\nnnd Mrs. Robert V\".-* Ki I tary. T!-c\nguild he stated, VM the organization 'whose splendid work had kept\nthe church alive, and It was only by\na lapse of memory that ho h*fl failed\nto pay It its Just tribute.\nJAPANESE SAID\nTO HAVE FIRED\nCITY OF HAILUM\nHAKIMS\", Man. tuii'ln, May W\\\u2014\nAPj\u2014Jitpapese forwi struck oat\nnorth uutl won (ii of lliiriiiu today\nlirenk   lhe   cinirdhtg   nimrnuMit\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nturned  nos.  down  and  darted lot\ntha  water.'*\nWhaley th\u00abn turned hla J>!an\u00ab\narnuntl and headed for Boslnf field.\nA new tVPt of life preserver, made\nfor the nary, which Browne wore on\nhla shoulders, kept him afloat. Ht\nwaa placed under an anaesthetic\nwhile physician* tended his shoulder.\nBrowne said he did not Jump from\nthe plane. But stayed with Ber. hoping to brlnit her neat up. He aald\ntne plane threat htm out and he\ngrabhed a piece ot the wlnl to hold\nhim up.\nIN   TEARS\nHe was ln tears whan he waa\npicked up by the rescue party, not\nfrom pain, he aald, but from \"dls-\nappointment.\" \u2022\n\"I thouKht lt was the last of me.\"\nsaid Browne after he awikenad from\nlhe snaesthetlo given while hla left\nshoulder was aet. \"1 couldn't let out\nlis tbe plane dova toward tha water,\nbut when the wins Buckled I was\nthrown out in tlw open. That waa\nabout  BOO  fen  above tha  water.\nWhat   breaka   I   Jot   this   trip.   I\ncould  have  mada  lt.  too,\"  Browne j J* ^\".^M, \"wh'era' he will be\nS!!?'.*! h'_,r'!f_\"_^___ t0 *ClUb!tl\u00bb   guest   of   hla   uncle   and   aunt,\nMr.  and   Mri.\nTRAIL, B. C. May S&-A wedding\not Interest to Trail waa eolamnlaed\nat Williams Lake May 2*. when\nAnne daughter ot Hodertck Mackenzie, M. L. A., and Mrs. Mac-\nkeazfc. became the bride ot Douglas\nStevens, a A. Sc., ot Trail, son ot\nMra. Thomas Stevenson ot Victoria.\nLowly early sumner flowars were\nused to decorate the hall, and wild\nfloors were combined with garden\nblooms to form tha \u00bbrch under\nwhich tte ceremony was p*r!<..med.\ndivert in marriage By her lather\nthe Bride wore a lovely dresa ot\npeah d ange lace and net, and long\nveil held In place wltw clusters of\norange bloasom. Her beautiful Bouquet waa of lllj of the valley and\nroeea. Mrt. Anne Dlion was matron\not honor and Miss Marian Steven-\naon, sister of the groom, was hrlclu-\nmaid. Utile Mlas Elenor and Mlai\nJoan Dixon were flower girl\".\non their return frojn thslr honeymoon Mr. and Mrs. Stevenson will\nreside ln Trail.\n...\nHum J. McAlpme, aon of Mm. P.\nJ. McAlplne, Bay avenue, left Thurs-\nDELEGATES LEAVE\nTHIS MORNING FOR\nFERNIEJMERING\nAbout 15 From Nelson and\nOver Score From All\nWest Kootenay\nCALGARY, COLEMAN,\nSPOKANE, SENDING\nAssociated Boards Will Open\nSessions Tonight in\nCity Hall\ni I   of   lii-urn\\nH.   \"nil   weri*   KptftfO\n(imhnm paid that the a     s apprcii- j   i\u201e   lune   set   tire   lo   lliiiltni,\nHtlon and heart felt retjret fit Mi\ncrick's leavinn, which he Ml, he Ml\npure, represented the sentiments of\nother clergymen In thc district. In\ndo*! ns Mr. Graha ni of fei-e^ t lie\nchurch every posMblc HMtttflCT that\nhe might render.\nM.WOIt M'lAKS\nHHt titJtiM U,\nMayor J. r. Morgan, fltllHll for\nthe cit;- council and t c citizens, expressed regret at the genuine loe* of\nft hard worker In the church among\ntl * yuung people and as a' mmUtXt\nworker. Wishing Mr. Click every happiness durlns his stay in England.\nMayor Morfran expressed the opinion\nthat Mr. Crick, would return to Canada before | nig.\non belmir ot the Toe H group of\nNelson. Blar'ey lloriswill pre\u00abenU.'il\nMr. Crick with two ntiafgad, mounle,;\nphotographs, one of Mr. Crick's pnrif.ii\ntaken ir<>m the blufl c\"er-lookln\u00ab ti\n1.-.0\nmllci   noitu   of   hen*.\nfO tlm MOtllWfftt, Miivur (ien-\nerftl Hideo lilrnmalsii's ITtb iher\nbrlfftdf BM ituipIhI t linuchon,\nM miles from llnrbln ou the\n\u2022ofipuL\nTELEPHONE TO\nCONNECT AFRICA\nWITH DOMINION\nJ SSSMi iilu uiu _m\\iAL}iik'$i7ii-_LMh& iij^jif^^j^^SSi^ ulilru?<:i5!^.:flj\nBAfCrr\u2014fl Larson, Newport; J. R.\nflhlell. flftlmo; Mr. and Mrs. John\nOleon ftnd family, Mt. ftnd Mrs. M. A.\nParker, Mr. and Mrt. O. D. LlrothflT.\nA Olsfcrom. Mr. and Mrs. r Ruppel.\nSpokane; 2 Bouwes, Northport; H.\nAnderson,   Bellow,   Idaho,   w.   M.\nMllllgan, Destiny Bay: N. J. rorn,\nWinnipeg; W. Webster, Vancouver;\nL. Miller, City; A. A. Dill, Seattle;\nMr. and Wo. H. .7. Thompson. Rossland; D. C. Rotv.ery. F. Sinclair,\nTrail\nMONlllHAI,, Mny :t0\u2014Annoiimr-\niiii'til Is iniidi' Unit on WcdnrMlnv\ninnrninK. June I, tetephnitc coni-\niniiiiiciiiioii \u00abni ite weldetl Ntveen\nOntaflo nnd ([neher ami lhe ellv\nof (ape VotHI anil ttlm Itiiiiorliint\npulrits hi BVBtfe AtiiPilra. A \\ohr-\njoiirni'y of apprnilnialel.v Hi.oi'ii\n\u25a0AN will he iisrrl In einiMTsations\nTin1 p:ilh will he \\\\n New Yorlv\nhospital and the other ol the Nelson 1 (lty to l.iMiihm. \u00bbml ihe l nndon-\nToc 11 group. |   Oftft   Town   rlinmiel   stn   the   Itft-\nOeorge Masney, people's  warden of     ii(I,i   j,l    Mllnerlini,   41   miles   from\ncNew Grand Hotel\nr. L. KAPAR, rrop.\nWMklr or Montbljr IUt\u00abi Binjle, 60 MM M| \u25a0\u2022\nBot ud Coin Witcr\nrllONB B03\nDuuble, tl.HO and up\n\u2022     F. O. BOX 1061\nWW   OBAND-Mr.   tM   Mn.   J. | WhltttlwT.   Vancouver;    O.    Bcnaif,\nBoullnt, Mr. ust Utt. R. J. PouhI\u00bb, Trail;    O.    Rlnghelm,    Creaton;    A.\nMr.   \u00abld   Mn.   K.   Ant,   SpoXane;   Holmea,   Hossland.\nM\u00abrlon    H\u00bbllld\u00bbT,    Alsmplt;    J    D. I  ^__\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nRot ftnfl C\"\"' wntf tn erer? room\nSteam Heated\n99ft Batter  ft. I'hone PO\nOUTONS\u2014Mr.\nring,  Spokane.\nftnd  Mra.  A.  Man-\nOccidental\nHotel\n70S Vernon St. rhone B87L\nH.   1TASSICK\nFifty noomt of Solid comfort\nHeadquarter\"   for   Loggers\nand Miners.\nthe Redeemer, presented Mr. Crick\nwith a time-piece and *poke briefly\non the wonder!ul improvements in\nthe rhiirch for which Mr. Crick Ma\nftlUQft tot^ill \u25a0 renponfilble.\n\\n Ait iti;i'i,ti>\nIn reply to the prcaen tat ions and\nspeeches, Mr. Crick thanked tho Toe\nH club, the Redeemer congregation\nHnd churchmen, Mayor Mor;.in and\nArchedacon Cirn. m and cnid that be\nlioped to return, to Canada Borne time\nsoon and once more Join his friends\nIn the Kootenay. Mr. Crick aUo\nihankcd the church congregation.\nchurchmen and church '-eipere for\ntheir splendid cooperation which hud\nm.uie his success possiblo here and\nhoped that his successor would Und\nthe same cooperation. In departing\nAir. crick Biiid that he found it hardest to leave ...a young friend* and\n\u25a0ftttf that he hoped some one would\nKive them just attention and carry\non hla work among the young people.\nThose taking part In tho program\nwhich was applauded time and time\nagain were Fairview troop of Girl\nnaimfrs, Miss R' h Rlxen, Mrs. E.\nMarsden, George Pa ton. Miss Frances\nI Graham, Mrs. J. S. Carter. Mrs. B.\nLowery, Fred Webber, Mrs. G. K. Ash-\nhy find Mrs. Brewer acted t\\s accompanist for vocal selections. A. ti,\nThompson was chairman of the farewell program. Perhaps tbe outstanding feature cf the cvenln's program\nwas a ghoat miry told by George\nPaton whe i the lights were turned\nlow.\nAfter tho farewell social  Mt over.\ntape   'limn.\nIrish Free Stale\nto Demand Britain\nReturn Annuities\nf'OUK. liMi PrM Slnle, May 30\n{AIM.\u2014ilin Iree Male |BftFimwtlt\nof   President    lie   Vftlffi    Intend!\n\u25a0OM ((\u00bb make a deiir-m' on (ireal\nIlrllain tit refund thP tUAOtfitt\nwhich hu been M'l In land an-\nimltlex In lhe Inst 1(1 vearv, I, F.\nLMMA minister of Industry, Mild\nIn  \u00ab  f-peeeh   here.\nMe also relleniteil (hut the j.nv-\nernnient was determined to tOOtt\nthe aiuiiiillcs pa\\ nn-nts the ne\\l\ninslalniem of nhleli Is due at\nthe ttlt  tt  -lime.\nroom   nnd   placed   In   bed.\n\"NAT   BHOWm;   FIND\"\nLater, while Browne slept, ft citizens' committee waa formed to atart\na fund to b* known M the \"Nat\nBrowne fund.\" to be given tho flyer\n\"in appreciation of his stamina,\ncotirnfre end ability as an aviator,\nnavigator  and   mechanic.\"\nBrooks was kept In the hospital\nfor observation aa he swallowed some\nBttOllfU when the win* tonks crumpled about him in mid-air.\nA total of 634 gallon* of gasoline\nmade Browne's plane weight ftbout\nfour tons. He had planned to load\n300 more gallons aboard from the\nI refueling plane and then make a\nj dash for Tokyo.\n[ It was Browne's second narrow e\u00ab-\ni care from death In two days. Yes-\nj irrday en oil leak In hla motor\nj developed after he had flown several\ni hundred milee toward his goal,\ni H\u00bbR( II\u00bb TO RLTtRN\n| Bl In tied by hot oil, Browne msn-\n: need to maneuver to a higher sltl-\n| tude until he could recover his vl-\nplon. When he saw how murh oil he\nWU loeing he dumprd most of hla\nfftMUnt  and  returned   here.\nIt was only upon ha return here\nthat he discovered lott ho hsd\nbroken a stabilizer wire ln gra\u00bbing a\ntr\u00abe on the tnke-ofr. He had noticed\nthe ship was vibrating'slightly but\nhad decided to take a chance and\nproceed.\nFlyer* here expressed thP opinion\nthe tall aammhlj. would have been\nshnken off before Browne could\npavibly h,ive reached Tokyo, rendering his plnne unmanageable.\nThe perilous take-off decided\nBrowne ln fnvor of mlri-nlr refueling\nBltfl a cabin plnne was hurriedly\nfitted up with extra tanks for the\nalt^mpt   today.\nDue to Browne's failure to complete the flight, the \u00ab30,000 prize\nfind raised by Seattle aviation enthusiasts live years ago win b\u00ab\nreturned to Its jdonors. When the\nfund was raised' one condition of\nthe pr!\u00ab fund stipulated that the\nflight must be completed by midnight of June 1.\nBrowne had only & few hours to\nspare In hit quest for the BOsl. Unfavorable winds had held h'm on the\nground   here  for the  past  week.\nMORE  ABOUT\nBRUENING\n\u2022tONTINVEn   TKOM  PAOE  ONE)\nJ.  W.  McAlplne  lor\nPicnic Committee\nIs Prepared to\n(To Ahead, Trail\nMADDEN\nHOTEL\nA Welcomt Awaits You\nIs.'    t_ HAI'DF.N\nComplete!\/   Remodelled\nHot ard Cold  Hater\nIn  ttl,   HEART   of   th\u00ab   CUT\nStirling Hotel\n2 Blocks East ot Post Office\nHot and Cold Water\nSteam Heat\nModerate Rates\nP. H. Hush, Prop.\nMADDEN \u2014 C. B. ItelUey. Grev\nCreek; J. Oliver, Lurdn; W Harding.\nRevelstoke; MlM M\u00abry Martd-n, 6e-\n4ttle;   J.   O.   Bryan,   Rospland.\nL. D. CAFE\nThe Finest in the City\nOpen All Hours\nFresh Food\u2014Delicious\nChop Suey\nPrompt Service\nSoda Fountain\nHOOMS TO KENT\nThe Royal CaSe\nCLASSIC  HF.SIACRANT\nRefinement   and   DtMMf   Prevail\nOPl.N  DAY  AM)  NOBS\nSpecial  runner, ItlSO lo 8 p.m.  'Us,\nSpccl3l   finnday   tlilckcn   MniKf  .*>uc\n>pcclallilng t^ \u00ab linn Siipy and Noodlea\nraom i\u00abj\nSTANDARD CAFEj\nNelson's   Popular       itrurant\nSpecial   Dinner   11   am,   till   8   p.m. |\nSunday   Dinner   5   p.m.   till   8   p.m  j\nSODA   KOL.NTAIN\nThe Finest of  Good  Sundaee\nHAVE   MID1CINB   FOR   IVMltV\nAILMENT\nChinese   Ilerhs   ha\\e   been\nfound  to  be   a\nNATIKAL   UM1DT\nWlv jrm come to Spokane, rome\nin nnd have a chut with \\i%, or by\nmail, no mailer what jour\nailment.\nlltKF,   (ON\u00ablT,TATI()N\nimllv  io n.in. Humlny  to a.m.\nto 8 p.m. to 3 p.m.\nWing Wo. Chinese Medicine\nCompany\nl>tnliH\u00ablird   18M\n136H N. Hnll St., Near Mnin Ave.\nfl'UKWK,   HASH.\nTRAIL, n. <\u2022., May 30.\u2014Tlie TraU\nflmelter plrmc OOHUBlttflg at a m^et-\nlnp toni?ht planned to go ahead\nwith picnic arfftttBCments. A dlt-\n\u2022UHlOQ mta he'd on 5'ibsnriptlon\nfitn) which wWl be looked nfter hy\nthe workmen's committee, and canvassers will be selected Tuesday. It\nIs ttvaetat tiie list w.U he returned\nJune 10. Whether the picnic will he\nheld at IMmq or not, depends\nupon the  mpooM io the lltt.\nTrail Exccldol Club\nHas Last of Meetings\nnUS\u00ab B. C. May 30.\u2014Their final EMttttW rir thl .tcn&on, niemhcro\nof the Kno\\* llnltorl rhniTli Ex-\nrelslor club BatherM this evening In\nthe chnrc'i hall Thc cvcnln. was\ndevoted tn dueuMMa of a nunmcr\ncamp. Miss Kitt;o Mailindale pre\nsided.\nFOUND\n\\    Itl -I\nI HUM\nEXPOti in:\nIN BED WITH\nBACKACHE\nNORTH     tIAV.     M;iv    Bfr\u2014Willi\nWardlionr,   f.^mU   In   the   MtUta   by   a\nttroup  of  chil-lrcn  fcturd*jr, died  h\nimfipitai _._ poauaan totey ttem ex\nposurc. llr. un;. Tfjatatt from i\nT-ronto boapll .1 tilt w.ck, and\nwandered toward Ms former iioxo\nat Port, Loftag, but became lott,\nFor four daya he lay lielplr\u00abB and ill\nbefore   the   children  found   him.\nHOKNTTS\nDBFBAT   IinsTI.K.S\nI   -II    AT    THAU\nTRAIL, li. C, HOTELS\nDOUGLAG\nHOTEL    9\nRcorr.s and Bath\nB. L. and *. OROUTAGE, Prnns.\nSte.-, mm not nnd Cold\nThroughout Water\nBoi  S3M .,,.  tt_\nTRAIL, B. C.\nArlington\nCentrally\nLocated\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA    P.  LEVKSgtE,  Prop.\n\"Two years igo I euffered with severe pains 19 the email of my hncic;\nand could With difficulty hold myself uprlctht. At times I had to fro to\nbed for a VMM nt 4 time. I went to\nnnd from hospital for 3 month?, end\nthey certainly did me jvod, but Ihey\ntold me they could not keep glvlnr.\nline medicine, hut MM I needed complete rest for 6 months, away from\n- the children. I could not brlnp my-\n-Uelf to be parted from the children,\nso I did not _ro to hospi.al any mire.\nI Btartcd using KruscJiim Salta and\nhave hat no trouble with my bajk\nsince, \"\u2014Mrs.    W.\nKrunrhen contains vital aalU that\ngo right down to the root cause of\nbackache. Soon after you start on\nKruschen, the nharpeat pain* of\nbsofcao, e cease. As you peri*vote I\nwith th*? \"little daily dose\" the;\ntwinges be6ome less and less fre- j\nquent, until finally you hardly know]\nwhat an ache cr pain is. Then, If\n(you're wise, you'll prevent the possi-1]\nI blllt.y of a relapse by continuing the]\nplncli    OX    Kruschen |\nthail,   b.  0.,  Mav  an\ndefented   the TlUltUl 3-0 tonight lo j\na   City   lOMtr   leagup   match.\n^ D00DS v;\n^KIDNEY^\nfej PILLS S\nh'\\\\, -3%M\nAL KlL)Nfy\nV   \u00bb1 J'ACK.tH'   i.(5   _{\n'_.<>'n iC'  .\ntiny,   taste>Rs\n\u25a0 cry   motnlng.\nof the people, and hla reported contention that tho army was no long-\nbehlnd   the  present  government\nea^e   of uprising.\norrosr mUOLVTtOM\nof troops\nToo, persona] Influences were at\nwork durln? the president's recent\nvacation at Neudeck, east Prussia.\nmama the Junkers (nrlstocnry) were\nreported to have objected to the\nchancellor's dissolution of Hitler's\nstorm troops, and opposed his drastic tltattat.\nThe president must now firrnre\nout a eomhinatloij supportetl fir\nnt least tolerated hy a majorltr\nI11 t he relchstag;, unless he Is\nulHlnir tn mmm immMBtltt e\\ec-\ntUmt\\ or eieente a rf *t d'etat es-\ntniiM>ihiticr an extra-eondtltutionnl\nillrfutorMilp,\nAs the presirtei\"s tours*\ntliroiiirhout has been nne nf me-\ntlHilmm eonitltiitlonality, the latter course pepmed unllkel\".\nTlv Berlin organ of the Hitlerites.\nAngrlff, immediately claimed a triumph for Hitler when the resignation was announced, and Na*t head-\nquuters pointed out that the resit-nation nnm0 shortly after a \"legal  reversal.\"\nThe supreme court it TelpElc recently held thnt the materials seized\nin raid*: on Na7l headquarters oq\nMarch 17 wae not Incriminating, after Prussian officials who made the\nmid  declared   they   had  evidence  of\ntattoo.\nThe Nr.r\/s said the decision spoke\nfor the storm troop*, and against,\nWilhelm f-roencr. Dr. Bruening's\nthen  minister  of  defend.\nDespite tM fcwepplr- deelnlon of\nthe president today. U was semiofficially fumounccd that no personal differences nxlstcd, and that\nthe old field marshal would write\na letter t,t appreciation and affec-\ntion to Germany's leader elnce March\n30,   1930.\nThose bMt prominently mentioned for the chancel rshlp are Baron\nWilhelm von Cay], Count Kuno voi\nJlornetg j Westarp.   nnd   Oscar   vah   der   OKten.\nDr. Bnuntaff, Who apparently had\nrefusrd to fhsko up his eabinrt\ndespite melting strength In the\nreichstn-. Rnd chose to resign m-\nsteid. mtt tako a !ong Iwl, His\nfriends said he was unwilling to\naccept the post of foreign minister.\nPARIS, May 30 (Ap).\u2014Tiie German political rrlsla was described today as \"most disquieting\" by Edouard Herriot. who la likely to be\nthe  next  premier  of Prance.\nIn an irtlcle entitled \"Orave Situation,\" published at Lyons, his\nhome town, M. Herubt declared\nGermany., miller? budget for 1S32\nand \"anti-Polish agitation\" by the\nfollowers of Adolf Hitler had especially   to   be   watched   by   Prance\nDissolution of tho relchstag and\nfresh gams for Hitler's Natloiil Socialist party in tho ensuing German\nelection* mttt suggested by the\nnewspaper Le Temps as a likely if.\ntcrmath to tho resignation^ of Dr.\nHeinrich   Bruenlnga   cablntt.\nsome   tlm;?.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nRichard Blnney of Vancouver, a\nfarmer resident of Trail, waa a visitor Here this weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. \u00a3. Fisher of Nelson arrived\nPrlday evening  to visit  her  son-ln-\n     \u00bbnd   daughter,   Mr.   and   Mra.\nT.-.omas Nutter, East Trail.\nI -9 \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Duncan of Spokane w:-re guests or relatives and\nfriends hero last week. Mr. Duncan\nIs the son of William Duncan, dalry-\n..An of Btoney Creek and Mrs. Duncan win be rememberod In Trail as\nMle* Kathleen Weaver. Her fatter\nwas an old time resident here, in\nbusiness on Bay avenue, Mr. and\nMrs. Duncan were visiting here prior\nto leaving fipokajio lor Loa Angeles,\nwhen Mr. Weaver resides.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Gerald Babcock left Saturday\nto visit her parent*. Mr. and Mrs.\nBilkpy of Kellogg, Idaho.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nHarold   M<Tnnes   was   In   Orand\nPorks over the wrckrnd, the guests\nof his mother, Mrs. N. L. Mclnnes.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nprlday evening a delightful social\nevening was spent at the homo of\nMr. and Mrs. William C. Baprunoff,\nMcQuarrle street, when their daughter Lily was 1l.0et.rs8 to several of her\nclassmates aaid friends. Tlie occanlon\nwaa a farewell party for Miss Velma\nGreig, who Is leaving for her home\nIn northern British Columbia. Dancing was enjoyed and a presentation\nmad* to the guest of honoT as \"\nmemoir ol her high school diy* in\nTrail. Miss Annie Saprunoff and Miss\nMary GrlptCh assisted the hostess ln\nserving refreshments. The gueat list\nIncluded tylM Mary CoUlgMi. Mlaa\nMartha Drapaka, Miss Nancy gammons, Mlsa Josie R^ss, Mies Lily\nEwlng, Miss Kate Zuk, Miss Olga\nAdamchuk. Miss Irene Moorcroft,\nRobert Snitih, AHstalr Repton, \"Bud\"\nScott, Alfonso Vendramlnl, Alfonso\nD'Arcangelo. Andy Zuk, Norman\nHinton. Erii'st potter and Lorne\nMcLeod.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. W. M. Campbell left this\nmorning via Spokane and Seattle to\nspend (MM time at the coast. Mrs.\nCampbell will visit for tw0 days in\nSeattle   before   going   to   Vancouver.-\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Donftld McKechnle and baby\nson returned to Trail from Armstrong Prlday. Thty will be the\nguests of Mrs. McKechnle's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. William Forrest of\nWarfleld.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. Mllburn fcnd daughter\nJune returned Saturday evening from\nVancouver, where they had been\n\u25a0imng of Mr. Mllburn'* brother and\n1 Istsr-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Edward\nMllburn, for the past tew weeks.\nMrs. Mllburn aleo visited in Nanaimo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMri. Frederic St. Denis left Friday\nWest Kooteuay delegate* and vis-\ntor* leaving thla morning for Fernie\nto attend the annual conventlou of\nthe Associated -arris cf Trade of\nEastern British Columbia, will number probably 36.\nNelson will be represented by & delegation of 15 or more. Including; J.\nR. Hunter, acting seen -ary of tie\nA*sociated Boards, President C. B.\nGarland, Alderman J. B. Gray and E.\nE. L. Dewdney, the official delgates.\nand D. Kerr, P. F. Payne, J. A. Kerr,\nJ. J. Campbell. J. Ivan MacKay J.\nM. Gordon. J S. Carter, W. B. Bam-\nford and others.\nTrail will be represented by Noble\nBlnns, president of the Associated\nBoards, President L. T. Tyson. T. W.\nBingay and W. Porteous, official delegates, ftnd P. Levesque and J. D. Anderson, and possibly others.\nLorne A. Campbell will represent\nRossland.\nA good delegation 1* expected from\nSlocan points.\nMost of th* delegates will go t>v\ntrain, but som* of the Nelsonlte* will\ngo by car.\nCranbrook ls understood to be planning a monster delegation.\nt'KATEKNAL   DELEGATIONS\nRecent information :celved by\nActing Secretary Hunter Is that Coleman Alta., is arranging a strong fraternal delegation from the coal points\nin the Alberta aide of tht Crows Nest\nPass, and that Calgary will b* represented, while the Northwest Mining\nassociation and chamber of commerce\nof Spokane will also b* represented.\nA wire received Monday from Grant\nHall, vice-president of the Canadian\nPacific Railway company, expressed\nregret that he would not be able to\nrealize hi* earlier hope c: being at\nthe convention.\nThe opening sesflsn will be held\nIn the Fernie city hall.\nBennett and Henry\nto Attend Meeting\nof Conservatives\nLONDON, Ont., May 30.\u2014Premier\nR. B. Bcnr - *;t, Premier George S,\nHenry and a group of their minister*\nln the federal and Ontario cabinet*\nwill b* her* Wednesday to participate\nIn th* rally of the Western Ontario\nConservative association.\nPremier Bennett will be accompanied from Ottawa by Hon. W. A.\nGordon, minister of Immigration,\nHon. Dr. D. M. Sutherland, minister\nOf national defence end Armand La-\nttrgne, M.P., deputy speaker of the\nhouse of Commons.\nCOUNCIL AT TRAIL\nMEETS TO DISCUSS\nMANY NEW BYLAWS\nTrail   Need*   Borrow   Mora\nMoney for Share of Relief; Complaints\nTeachers and Bible\nClass Honor Sunday\nSchool Head, Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C, May 30.\u2014Mrs, O.\nP. Horsley entertained Thursay afternoon  at the tea hour.\nMiss H. M. Butlln was a charming\ntea hostess Friday, entertaining the\nmembers of the Pastern  Star.\nAmos LaRue left on Wednesday\nfor Nakusp Hot Sprhigs where he\nwill act as caretaker during the\nsummer months.\nC. Howarth and son left by car\nFriday  for  Cilgary.\nMrs. F. L. Benton and Mrs. E.\nCragg-Jolinson entertained at the\nteahour Friday nt the home of the\nlatter, to compliment Mrs. F. T.\nAbey who Is leaving shortly for\nKaslo.\nMr, and Mrs. H. Clarke have as\ntheir guest Mr. Clarke's parents,\nMr.   and  Mrs.  Clarke  of  Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Johnstone, whose\nhome was destroyed by fire this\nweek, have been the guee' of Mrs.\nH. Waterfleld of Crescent Bay. The\nchildren have been staying with\nMrs. J. Norrls of Nakusp. Th* family expect to reside for several\nmonths ln th* house recently vacated by Mr. and Mrs. P. Jupp.\nThe teaching st ff and the bible\nclass of the United church Sund.iy\nschool honored their superintendent, H. L. Miller, Tuesday evening\nby tendering him a surprise party\nat his home on Francis street. The\nevening was very pleasantly spent\nwith    music    and    games,      During\nTRAIL, B. C, May 30\u2014 The city\ncouncil tonight referred to tho finance question of adjusting sewer rentals charged under new bylaws. The\ncouncil also :tferred to the finance\ncommittee tl'.e claim made by Pete\nRomas at the court of revision and\nhave reduced his assessment *aoo,\nbut th:-, will not be allowed on his\ntax notice.\nApproval was given the water application of J. p. Chown. The application of P. Forte was referred to\ntha city engineer. Action on an exposed drain for Weir street wae deferred for a-week.\nThe council authorized the paving of Daniel street near Maple. Alderman Grout go and A. Saunders reported that insurance on city trucks\nhad been renewed with th* commission Insurance Included.\nThe annual inspection tour of the\ncity was arranged tp start tomorrow.\nDr. F. S. Eaton, medical health officer, reportei on more case of German measles. Alderme-\u25a0> w. A. Newman repor 'd the complaint of Andy\nSchmackele that water collecting on\nthe Second avenue sidewalk during\nheavy rains was running off onto his\nproperty.\nJoe Hornsby was waiting on th*\ncouncil to request attention leading to\nhis property was assured the council\nwould go over the grounds when making It* tour. The eame answer wag\ngiven to Clarence Carr. who complained of damage to the fence, the\ncouncil had promised to repair.\nThe quest! \\ ot tax penalties \u00bb\u25a0\u25a0 1\nthe possibility of deferrfeig the dste\nby which penalties were added, were\ndiscussed   but no action taken.\nIt was reported the bylaw was In the\noffing by which -omlnce owners who\nclaim their taxes early ln the year\nmight receive  Interest.\nMayor Bruno LeR:ee stated that\nunless the - vernment made lt possible for the city to borrow money for\nUs share of relief the city will be\n\u25a0j nable to carry on the work afu\nJune 15. The rlty 1* no:r awaiting\nword from Vlcto-la.\nAdditional anticipation of the revenue alone bylr for $20,000 was given three readings. Tlio P. Forte lahd\nsalo bylaw was finally adopted.\nmorning   for   Vancouver,   where   she th|H   time   an  appropriate   presenta\nwill visit (or a few weeks. Rev. Mr.\nSt. Denl* has gone to London, Ont.,\nto attend th? assembly of the Presbyterian churoli.\nMiss Beth Kolinar, who Is attending Business college ln Nelson, was\nKolmur, Bay avenue, during the\nthe guest of her mother, Mrs. J. D.\nweekend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Dorothy Bowden, who ha* resided ln Trail during the pan two\nyears, left this morning via Spokane\nfor the home of her parents in Vancouver. Mlsa Bowden will apend a\nshort time in Seattle before proceeding to Vancouver, where siw will\nmake Jier home  for the present.\n\u2022 '   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Hunter Woodburn\nnnd family were visitors at Robson\nduring the weekend.\nR. P. Oorkertll and J. Craig have\nreturned from two Wtm%_t camping\nat Syrioga  creek.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nSenior Qlas* or the First Presbyterian church Sunday (Chool enjoyed\na hike to Rowland Saturday. They\nMn accompanied by their teacher\nMrs.   A.   B.   Clark.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. A* C. Graham spent\nthe weekend at their summer camp\nRobson. '\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. Stewart Anderson of Fort\nWilliam, Ont., ls the guest of her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Oomer Jones, Carlson street, for\nsome w;eks. Mrs. Anderson will proceed to M cjast later In the summer.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. C W. Oulllaum* and\nfamily were visitors in Robson during the  weekend.\n\u2022 .* . \u2022\nMr and Urs, A. W. Rogers, Mr.\nand Mrs. O. P. Harris, Mtss Virginia\nRogers and Miss Sonla Rogers of\nSpokane hav* been spending the\nweekend in Trill.\nMr. and Mrs. William Boushand\nand family cpent Sunday at their\nsummer Loni in Robson. They had\naa their guests, Mr. and Mrs. J. Brace-\ngirdle and family. 1\ntlon w-as . made In* appreciation of\nMr.   Miller's   faithful   eervlces.\nMr. and Mrs, Wales of Calgary\nwho have been the house-guests of\nMr. and Mrs. I, W. Bill of Glenbank\nleft Saturday for their home.\nMrs, A. H. Davis and small eon\nLouis, who have been visiting at\nthe home or Mr. and Mrs. L. Hascarl\nleft on Saturday for Revelstoke.\nDr. F. Rose\nPhysician and sur-\ngeon. Specialist In\nrectal and Intestinal\ndiseases  only.\nPlies\nCurtd without operation. Comtlnn-\ntlon mirrrurulljF treated. Write tor\ntree tionklrt. 4th floor Zletler Bid;.,\n126   Itlrenldt   Ave.,   Spokane,   \\Va\u00bbli.\nTHAT NASTY\nBOIL!\n\u2014 can be permanently healed and quickly relieved of pain\nby a thick poultice of\n\"MECCA\" OINTMENT. Saves\npainful cutting and lancing.\nRead circular in package for\nfull directions.\n25c, 35c  (Tube), 50c, $1.00.\nSummer Tourist Fares\nLOWEST IN YEARS\nEffective May 22 to Oct. 15\nReturn Limit, Octobtr II, 193.\nGO Eaat tU tbe world's greatest travel\neyetcm . . . apecinl aummer fares to all\npoint* In Canada and the United Statea.\nA daylight ride through the wonderful\nCanadian Rockies, with stop-overs at all\npoints of interest. Per\/ect service throughout.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS \u2014 IN-\nsursnec. Notary, a. D. Anderson.\nTrail. (1953)\nROUND TRIP FARES\nWlanlpnc- .      75.W\n11. M\nToronto- - -    10R.2O\n85. W\nMontreal - - \u00bb129.M\nr.hleaffo. \u2022 m\n90 ..TO\nOurlMA ...    1UM\n1'vtrf.ll   ...\n101.70\nS\u00bblni John -    147.90\nrhiiatuiphu\nUS. 14\nHalifax   ...    l'.l.iS\n1M.4JI\nMinnnapolla       7K.60\nNow York - -\n1SVI2\nU.  i'aol  - m     73.60\nBMtOft    -   -   m\n142.30\nFARES TO OTHER POINTS ON REQUEST\nSleeping* com part ritent, And compartment*\noliscrTBtion car* of the most modern and\nluxurious type; through nervier; dining ear\nProviding the cuisine for which tho Canadian\naciOe ia famous.\nAsk    about    Onr-w:iy    Coach    Pare*,\nSiefper reservations, details from any Can. Pac.\nRy.   ARpnt,  or   write:\nJ.    tt.   CASTER,   D.P.A.,   Nelson.\nCanadian Pacific\n k54\n,THl   NILSON    PAttY    SEAS,    NELSON,    B.    C.   TrBSDAY    MORMNO    MAT    31.    mt \u2022\nTtCt  THKI B\nSNAKE IN STRAW\nKILLS CATTLE\nMichel    Farmer    Dispatches\nSnake by I'sing His\nGun\nPROBE MAY UNCOVER FURTHER CHICANERY\nIN KREUGER'S FALLEN \"INDUSTRIAL EMPIRE\"\nMICHEL. B. C*. May 30.\u2014Importing rattlesnake* ln balled straw is\n* new one on Louis Mstenlk of\nthe   Elk   River   dairy   near   Michel.\nMr. Matenllt purchased a rar load j\nof balled straw from a feed company In Alberta and fed some of\nit to hts yearling calve* before going to work Saturday morning, when !\nhe cam* home he found one of his\ncalves dead and another passing\naway.\nMr. Matenlk started to Investigate and while looking around the\nbodies he heard a peculiar rattle\nand a large rattlesnake crawled out\nof some straw nearby. He went and\ngot a rifle and dispatched the\nmarauder. Upon exsmlnmg the dead\nantmsls he found both had been\nbitten In the neck by the reptile\nTher*. are no rattlers within miles\nof Michel so the snake must have\nfceen   concealed   In   a   ball   of  straw.\nThis ts a new one on Michel.\nPeople have heard of whiskey bc;ng\nfound In balls of straw but never\nrattlesnakes.\nT,ONG    BOCmi    FOR     IIOOVFR     I\nFrom Washington the country ]\nhears the president la \"an early j\nriser and a late worker. Few pres-1\nldents In the history of the United I\nStates have worked aa hard as I\nHerbert Hoover.\" So much has |\nhappened during the three years:\nho has been president that there j\nta twice as much work for a pres-'\nident   to   do.\nTry MIssMoFarlane's Favorite\nRecipe lor BISCUITS\n\\i teatpooa wit       4 teatpoons Magic\n2 cupa paitry flour       Raking Powder\n(or l\"i cups 2 tableipoont\nbread flour) ihorteninc\n*i cup milk, ot half milk and half water\nBift together flour, fraWng powder *n4\nwit. Cut in the chilled ahortening. Now\nadd the chilled liquid to make soft\ndough, Toai dough onto a floured board\nand do not handle more than is necea-\nwry. Roll or pat out with handi to about\nH inch thickneti. Cut out with a floured\nbiieuit cutter. Place on alightly greaied\npan or baking aheet and bake in hot oven\nSt450aF. 12 to 15 minutes.\n\"For Light, Flaky\nBiscuits\nuse.Magic\nBaking Powder,\"\nsays Miss M. McFarlane,\ndietitian of\nSt. Michael's Hospital,\na Toronto\n11 t nicomnRB\nJ. Magic because I know it is\n>\u00bb# , pure, and free\ni , \\\"\"~\\from harmful in-\n\u25a0 :*>. gredients.'*\nMiss McFartane's opinion is\nbased on a thorough knowledge of\nfood chemistry, and on close study\nof food effects upon thc body. On\npractical cooking experience, too.\nMost dietitians in public institutions, like Miss McFtrline, use\nMagic exclusively. Because it is\nalways uniform, dependable, and\ngives consistently better baking\nresults.\nAnd Magic is the favorite of\nCanadian housewives. It outsells'\nall other baking powders combined.\nYou'll find Magic makes all your\nbaked foods unusually light and\ntender... and gives you the same\nperfect results every time.\nFree Cook Book-When you hate\nat home, thc new Mlgic Cook Book will\ngive you dozens of recipes for delicious\nbaked foods. Write to Standard Brands\nLtd., Fraser Avenue and Liberty Street,\nToronto, Ont.\nNEW YORK, May 30.\u2014Riding between his Tark\nAvenue penthouse and his conferences in Wall Street, Ivar\nKreupcr used to pass an unpretentious building in lower\nBroadway where bankruptcy hearings are held. Tho\n\"match king,\" more familiar with palaces than courtrooms,\nprobably never gave it a glance.\nBut today the twisting Kreuger trail ends at this sepulchre of defeat. In one of its small rooms, crowded and\nstifling, brusque strangers are pawing over the broken\ndreams of the dead genius.\nFinancial experts, who only a few short weeks ago regarded the mighty Swede with something like reverence,\nnow are helping to batter down the rotten skeleton of his\n\"industrial empire.\"\nNo eulogistic phrases come from the tight-lipped lawyers.\nBefore the suicide of Kreuger they might have called him'\n\"greatest of internationalists\"\u2014\"foremost genius of business organization\"\u2014\"most dazzling of financiers.\"\nBut today they are describing him, in terms of swindled\nmillions, a-, nothing but an uncommon crook.\nThe bearing represents an \u201ech_ng\u00bb and cut short the hoiiTa.\nattempt tu straighten OUt the  of  the   king\u2014Sweden  grimly  set  to\ntano-Wl nff*iirs of the hank- *\u2022* \" 1*rm ollt tl,c ml3t'e<!l1\"\ntangieci aiuns oi uie odiiK   whl\u201eh everyon, WM su\u201e mlat ^\nrupt International JIatch tor- revested by Kreuger's books. ThU.\nDOTatiOn and to trace its con- however, is being made dl'Ileult by\n1      .. ,, ,    ,,  i;    the   fact   that   the   \"mateh   king'\nnections through the complt- _,..ri.A m08. of bl_ cunning plans\ncated,   world-wide   structure in kla mind.\nnf the vut Krene-er interests Immediately  there was set up _\nOI tne VUl nrcuger iOWtol* _f_aU  \"Kreuger department ot  po-\nThe deeper they dig, the nre.1* composed or lawyers snd de-\nmore dishonesty is uncovered. taaUna.  soon  it   berime  evident\n,_.__, that    spnurato    Investigations    also\nIn   comparison   to   Kreuger, _,.m have t0 be conducted in st-\nPolizi    Was    a   piker;    be.-'.ide   most a score ot other countries.\nKi-eiii'er's scheme,- the South In tmmaa, independent lnvestt-\nKieuger s otmrnu, tne ouui.   _atlon_   h>vc   ,_nmg   up   ln   theso\nSea Bubble Was a mere Shell   countries. Holders o( Kreuger securl-\ngame.   It is evident that not ll,\u00bb \u00ab\u2122 anxiously trying to mn.\n*; , ,, nine  how   much   they  can   salvage\nfor several months more can I\/om the ^eci.\nthere be gathered and corre- ss(].,n<ni,o<m oon*\nlated the ftlll facts rMSnUng Not even an estimate can be\n. , , ,-   -,- r\u00bb...   made if total losses, for  those con-\n1ns amazing activities, but ,\u201euei arimlt thot stm mon _._.\nhere  are  a   few  established sationat cases of juggling and lorg-\n\"y may jet be brought to light,   ln\nIt was from the Jonkoplngs match factory, lower right, lar. est In Sweden, (hat Ivar K\"*h_<m. pictured above,\nbegan bis rl*e ''\u00bb fame and power. But when mln and ftjagmea wcre Imminent, It was In lhe aiwrlmeiit boils'*\nyat see at upper lefl, In Paris, that he commuted sulclilc. MM are ^hown MKs Karln Itiikmanii, Kreuger's\nchief secrclar., and M. Krister l.lltorln. slce-pre.ldenl of lhe Swedish tmtUstt (ompa'n. It was. Lit I oil n who\nfirst entered Kreuger's aparlmeiu and found  |,lm dead.\nfacts:\nluir Kreujter forgH, with h<\u00bb own\nhand, securities lo the Hmnunt of\n$l.iiOfl.f\"in.\nHe sold,   for  hundreds  of  millions   {300000,000!\nKreuger stocks and bonds alone.\nwhich have tumbled almost to the\nvanishing point tn price, the collapse   is   expected     to     wipe     out\nnf doH.'irs, slocks and bonds iwr-\nUally hacloed by tion-r\\lstent rom-\npiinlr*\"   with   ImiiEliiiiry   assets.\nTlirousli well-known banking\nhouses hfl borrowed hiifte sums 011\nmatch \u2022ntimtpolles he never owned.\nTo conceal some of Ihr evidences\nof   )it\u00ab   sh hull In 5   he   Jticgleri   plutn-\nRweden is still staggering under\nthe blow delivered by Its dflW.Ung\nIndustrialist. The %\u25a0> rnment, which\nwas forced off the gold standard\nby the loans it granted Kreuger, ls\nstriving desperately to bolster Its\ncredit. There la a prospect of morp\nidle   factories   and   men.     Some   2&0\ninm   fortune*   between   dummy   n\u00bbr-  or   tlie  mogt   promlnent  ramlliea   of\npornt bin*.\nIVitli many o.r his millions he *ub\nsldlred   the  ron\u00abc1em-es  of   HS^oclates\nStockholm arc reported to have lost\ntheir fortunes In the crash.\nFrance,    which    had    been     most\nand   officials   of   (.overninenK     Bll   rr!cndiy    to   tht   Swedish    Napoleon\nof    bh    former   aides    Hlready    lia\\e\nbeen   arretted   for   criitilunl   liability.\nAnother bu followed his cvamplc by\neommlttltiE  suicide.\nIn   Sweden,   ay W\u00bbB     3   hern   In\nFinance, apparently will suffer\nleast. Kreuger's borrowings there\nseem to have been secured to about\n95 per cent of the amounts involved.\nGermany   and   some   of   Its   bank'\nNew York, Americans are being are harci h|L E]1Knsh investors had\nquestioned. And almost certainly iAYge RUms ln various Kreuger corn-\nthere sic scores of individuals and p\u201e,ltes. naly Is shaken by the dia-\nconcerns whose names arc yet to C0Very 0f forced Italian bnnds to\nbe brought under suspicion. the extent of nearly \u00bb1000.000.W)0.\nNetwork of ItlTfltlptlftftl Other forgeries and mlsrepresenta-\nArier Hie first news of Kreuger's tions. have affected Poland, Spam\nsuicide\u2014a shock that wtni all S3- and Portugal,\ncurltles    tumbling,    closed    a   stock America,   Irom   which   Kreuger   Is\nsaid to have taken at least (flOO,-\nOOO.noo will be one ol the heaviest\nlosera,\nAmericans \"Hooked\"\nKreuger traded regularly in six\nof the world's largest stork exchanges, and brokers, many of them\nAmerlc ins, appear to have lost\nUrge sums he owed them for transacting his orders.\nThe Independent protective committee formed in New York by holders of Kreuger and Toll securities\nls headed by Samuel Untermyrr,\nprominent corpora I ion lawyer, and\nBalnbrldge Colby, former U. S. secretary of state. The committee believe that about 3;>0.000 American\nInvestors hive lost \u00bb25',000,(00 ou\nKreuger and  Toll  debentures alone.\nBanks involved 1.1 the marketing\nof the debentures In the United\nStates also have formed committees,\navowedly to protect their investors.\nBut now a court fight looms, ond\nUntermyer promises ti.e airing of \"a\npublic scandal of grave magnitude,\"\nIn connection wltli his attack on\nthe  bankers.\n51nce Kreuger Ll shown to have\nl>een guilty  of   draining   about.   f2\\,-\n000.000 from tlie CO&stWtJ which\nwa.i supposed to have stood behind\ncne Issue of bonds lu this country,\nthc quarrel at present centers nnm-\nly around the question of whether\nthe bankers who were the flsral\nagents were negligent In pc.mittlng\nhim to do this.\nNon-K\\ls(ent tOmtit\nTlie International MfttCtl company\nwaa organized ln 1E)23 under thi;\nBwadltt) Mat\/ii company wtllcb \\.. a\nsubsidiary or tot Kreuger nsd Voii\nholding co.i:p;>iiy. Intcrnatloml S\na holding consolidation of Swedish\nMatcli r.ian',if.\".cturlng nnd tiles companies In North and South Amerlci.\nIt QTtflastly was capltili.'Cd for\nJ73.000.0O0, Since L0M, iH6;!,000,00'J\nworth of its stocks and bOOds ha-.e\nbeen sold to Americans. Additional\nfi linnet ng, to ItM extent of %m%\\~\n000.000 worth of debentures, was\nundenaken  ln Januarj',   1931.\nBut f.ome startling f.icts have been\nbrought out concerning lhe condition or the company at that time.\nAt tho receivership bearing now\nunder wav In New York. Investigators testified that they were able to\nUnd    troom   ot   only   a   few   of   a\nTRAIL GIRLS ARE\nLOSERS^SOFTBALL\nNelson   Woolworth's   Team\nWins 18-17; First Inter-\ncity Game Here\nIn ths first Intercity softball fame\nof tbe season, women's Warns represent ng Woolworth's of Nelson and\nTrail met on the Junior High school\ngrounds Sunday morning, KeUon\nwlnnlny 18-17 after ta exciting\nnine-innings  piny\nNelson led until Tratl batten, went\non s rampage in the second inning, scoring s\"\"en ru- %. Ytttj sr^rerl\nt ve more In the ninth to make up\ntheir  final  score.\nThe   lineups:\nTrill\u2014P. Hwrtet, 2: M. I#ckie, fc\nG. Mawdseler, 1; E. Wllsor; H.\nIftVttttlty, 1: C. Minion. 1; A.\nLawes, |j R. Severn. 2; T. Mswdes-\nley.  3:   A.  Mnchs.   3.\nNelson-O. Horstead. *: I. Ough'-\nred. 4: E. Smith, 2: Berns Kline. 2;\nO. Jarrett, 2; O. Gibbon. 2: S. Jor-\naenson, l: K- O'SulliVRi. 1; 7.. Bates;\nH,   Thompson;   Miss   Kllberg,\nBIRTH FIGURES FOR\nAPRIL ARE DOWN\nAccording to 1 bulletin Issued by\nths Dominion buresv of statlstlci,\nbirths regls'env! In April in 64 cities\nof Canada numbered (J79S, destht\n4277 snd msrrlages 2142, ss compared with '.427 births, :i8\u00bbi dttttM\na-'d 2317 marrag---. In April ot Ntt\ny^ar. shewing s decrease of 8 per\nrent In births. 8 p*r cent in marriages, snd an lncresss of 10 per\ncent   In   deaths.\nHad bad dizzy spells\nAfraid to leave house . . . feared awful diziinc*! would make her keel\nover. She ne;d* Lvdis E. Pinkham'i\nVegetable Compound in tablet form.\ndozen foreign match monopolies\nwhich the company declared -n advertisements thit It possessed.\nThe s'.iavo Kruc-er boldly listed\nall there fc sin concessions among\nbit assets, And not one of the\neight well-known banking house:;\nbundling the debentures took the\ntrouble to check up on hla statements.\nrt.inneil  to 1n\\;i<Je I'. %\nTlie heirln? alao revealed that\nthe largest single tutt of Intcrna-\ntioml Matc!i ia a $73,000,000 debt\nowed It by a hitherto concealed\nsubsidiary called Continental Corporation A, G. But 'vo banker*,\nwho also are director.* of International Match, testified that they\nwere not acquainted with thc subsidiary sad consequently knew\nnothing nf what has 1'appcncd to\nthe   *7;i,OO(),000.\nAa the hunt, \"nes on , Tems c>\ntaln ht.it Kreuger. in defiance of\nour anti-trust Uwh, wh planning  t'i\nestablish one of his tatteb numop-\nOltM   In   the   United   States.\nUnited Commercial\nTravelers, Nelson,\nWin Membership Cup\nKootenay Council Makes Largest Membership (iain in\nPast Year\nBELLINGHA*' , Wash., Tay 30 -\n(AP)\u20148. W. Englis'i, Spjkane. was\nelected grand cjuiibclor, succeeding\nJ. H. Snjrdnr, Tacoma, pit the closing\nmtrUng of the United Commercial\nTravellers, juris:! let Ion of Wtthtnr*\nton, Oregon and British Columbia,\nhere  Saturday.\nOther officer* electe.l were: Charles\nC. WaJker, Portland, Junior counsellor; J. H. Snyder, past counselor;\nHoward B. Bell, Seattle, secretary\n(re-elected); J. P. Noel, Seattle,\ntiTiistirer; Matt Simper, Van__iuver,\nconductor; John F. Hall, Tacoma,\npage. MM Duncan, Portland, was\nappointed   chaplain.\nScor-tary Howard Betj presented\nKoot?nay council, Kelson, British\nColumbia, with a cup for the larg-\nMt membership gain durlnq thc put\nyear.\nThe convention recommended tlie\ncouncil deposit In Canadian banks\n50 per cent of Its surplus funds ti\ntake advantage of tho prrsent rate\ncf exchange.\nWhen cotton fibre was first\nmade Into paper about [lie seventh\ncentury, raw cotton mta employed,\nbut since tiie eleven'h century\nwatte   textiles   have   bMn   Uttfl\n^tt^laitteJtaoaiiitf   .\nrontpilni noiliim.\"\nThla \u00abtatcmen'. 00\n\u2022Ttry tin h our \u00abu\u00abr-\n\u00abnt\u00abt that Maftlc\nIlaklnt r<i\u00ab'ilcr la tn-.i\nfrom alum or any\nharmlul   lugiodleot\nDOMINION DAY IN\nNELSON WILL HAVE\nTHE USUAL SPORTS\nPlans are being initialed by Ihr\nCanadian   LtftOU   Bir*lc bnirl  for the\nnutomtry   ottebrel ton   of   DonlnU n\nday with a full day of sports at the\nRecreation   sr.>un jt.\nAs usun. the forenoon will he d\"-\n^oted to children'.! fp'Tts. to wlilch\nth?  children   will   be  ndmlttcd   free.\nThc ifnttl track tnd field procrtm,\nwith  open   oompttlttOQ.   Ulll  he  hr!c!\nIn tho af'ern'jm. A rpeeinl ftttun\nwill be tri exhibition of Sonit wort.\nwhich will be the first thing on I e\nprogram   in    tho   tfttrnoOB.\nThe quest-inn U i>clng con^dcrcd\nof  operating   boMhs on   the  gmund0,\nKantwbti on tht oirnlwii pltb,\nif*\nnot filed Si. Choilei, b\u00bb\nJ yois have \t\nbeautiful 80-page recipe book and learn firit hand tne many\niMngi you can do with thii richer evapotaled milk, ll gi\u00bbei a wealth\nof practical and economical tecipes for eakel, pies, pudding), ice\ncream, loups, candies, etc.\nSt. Charles ii rich ueainy miln, w.iolesome at nature mode It.\nThe butler fat is homui\u00abr,iied to keep it uniform end smooth. Sealed\nIn sanitary air-light tins, it keeps almost indefinitely. S\u00ab\"J \u00ab\" Your\nname and address and a FREE cook book will be mailed by return.\nST. CHARLES\nILK\nAppledale Has\nDay of Sporls\nAJTUBDA18, B. C, May 30.\u2014Tht\nc-elabrstlon  on   May  34  put cm   bv\nthe Progi-c^ive utoelttlon WM a\nsuccess in tpltt of hid weathtr.\nChildren's r;ices nieb st sack race,\negg race, thread tht QC*dlt, nn:l\ndriving, hlfb ;'iid brotd .lumps tnd\nttlgl of \u00bbnr were much r'Hoyed by\nboth young and Old. 'Hie pi-rry's\nbaseball team plaved the Apr'cdal\"\nteam With a tCOIt of P-10 m PtTTy't\nfa'-or. The.d iv Wai tndtd by a\nitSOt tilth a large crowd frcm valley points, Sou tli E'locni and Nelson,\nMr. and Utt, F W. Koptekl and\nson of Posshmd tptfit Sundnv visiting UT*, ItOptdtl'l sister, Mrs, J.\nV. Meyer. Thry were accompanied\nby   Al   Meyer.\nMiss Mary THlIU of WtTfTO nr-\nrfved TUttdty morning li attt d tbt\ncelebntlnn and dan^-e and WH\nthe   guest -of   her   parent*.   Mr.   and\nMrs.   f.  Ttatno,    tBcn  wtt   tocom*\npanied by Mr. aud ICn, Corelll\nand   children.\nMr. Bnd Mrs J. Pordvce and family snd friends Of Trail attendeil\nthe   24th   celebration.\nlorne Campbell of Trail li vlslt-\nImr his father, A. Younp, for a few\ndays,\nMiss    Hard    Sherwood   of    filoc^n\ncitv  is rttWUmf her tmtm, Mn. 8.\nBrldRC.\nBerylltum uttd ns windows for\nX-ray tubes is 17 times as transparent tn X-Myt ns aluminium of\nsimilar   thlckne-s.\nINDIAN CHIEF TO\nBE APPOINTED E0U\nCRESTON RESERVE\nCRKSTON. DC, May 30* -- Pretl j\nnyckmnii, Itulliii aqent. in charge!\nnf ihe rtttrtWI in both Fa^t and\nVfmt Kootenay, arrived yesterday on\nan official visit and during his vta)\nwill Mtltt wi'.li tho e'rcl ion of a\nchief    for    thp    crestrui    rcerve    In '\ntueottdon to tht 'ate Dominic i.nkc '\nwhott death   ;ook  place tonnt  tbnt [\nnip. ir,;*.-iip3 fr ui i c rot:rvt<\nnt Cranbrook, Tobacco     tint, WIc-\ndermerp tnd Athalmer tf% expccicd j\nfor tlie event, its writ as F.itl.er Patterson, Roman OtthoUc cleric, who\nUi in chart* ot Indian ml.\u2014ion work.\nJim \"l'ay!or I. at present, a patient* in Cotton V ii\"y pub] a hot-\npilal, rcrolv'.m: medicn] ttttnt on In\ncftniiecMnn with a h.idly cut tact\nftfld a fcvcre ibtktni up which he\nrevived when bt Wl off tlie running  board of an  auto while  rUims\n[along the hurd turftCf highway\nnorth   of   tOWO.\n| R. Johnson of Kltrhercr, who nas\nn bUtlQtai viFHor in town yesfer-\ndya. reports that, poftbfttl  has at Itft\ntaught on at that town, with a\nstrong sriuor glrla ic'in mtdt up at\nItaltnt fmm Ortdt vill nf tht pub-\n[.He achool anr] the high tohool, Mlaa\n\u25a0 Pprnule, principal cf ihe high, ts at\n\u25a0the heart nf the aHilctlc effort,  with\n\u25a0 Vera IgcQontgal, capta n, nnd Mrs\nj cuff May, aecrttary-teetturer, Bise-\ni bdi   is  alio  dotng  a   oomebuk   at\nKitchener thla :enr. and after the\ni Bint gttt into I ttttlg better lhAPt\nI a acbtdult of Bunay gtmta Will be\nI arranged with Crtaton nnd PorthUl,\ni Idaho.\n| W. H Archibald, who Wtt forced\n; to nbi:>don Hytng due to tht flooding of the airport on tiie (lata, has\nrcaumtd air travel aga a nnd La ut*\nj Ing ana et the c. m. fc 8, btplinta\ntequtpDtg   With   pontoon*      He   marie\ni hla  first  ipptaranet   with   hit  new\n.craft on Wed nes c! iy nnd la Undtng\nloll the j^erh flood waters ou the\ni flats, near ihe hargar,\nJOHNSON'S  IVNPINfi   BRU1 8\ni     JOHNSON'S   LANDINCi,   B    (_'.,  May\n30. -Miss fiant Jones It qptndlng\na few days In Kaslo, the guest of\n! Mrs.   \\V.   J,   Nelson.\nH.     Haper    nnd    F.     Carl'-mi    were\n! Birchvtla vlaltora during tht week.\nI Miss G. Nelson and Ken McPher-\nisnn ar-p spendmc the week-end at\n; their   bOBtta   In   Kaslo.\nJack Raper took ft party of fOUXtg\nI peoplp to ^rje-iti on Tuesday to\nlake part m the sports held there.\nTh0   tournament\nfor\nthe    WIlsA\ncup    Wta   completed\nM:\nf    'Jt,    -Ahe\nJ.   D.   Kerr   belt   R\nHoi\nrque.\nThe   prtlimlntrlM\nfor\nthe   ladle\nnoaon cup were itirted cm ttaj 30.1\nand the play carried on during tht\n1 week,\n|      Mrs. Cinv  \\'\\  DaVla bttl   Mrs. (1.  S. !\nOodfrty:  Un. w. j, Orova beat Mrs !\n'A. T. BttphOOton; Mrs, H Rotllng\nI beat Mrs. R, I,, MrBnrle; Mrs, O. j\nj Davis   brat   Mrs.   Jamtt   OShea;   Mrs  |\nK,   Lakea   beat  Mrs.  i,.  s.   Bradley; I\nj Mn, Cinv W. Davis beat Mrs. H, Ros-\nIlPg;   Mrs. Harold lakes hear  Mr*. W\nJ.   Grove.   Kiml-Mrp,  Guv   W.  Davis\n. bent Mrs.  H.  Uk\u00abt.\n!     The  lowers entered the  first (light, j\nj Results   were:   Miss   I,.   Cunllffe   beat j\n'Mrs.  James O'Shca;   Mrs   O,  S   God-\nj frey   beat   Mrs.   R.   1,.   M<-Brldf;   Mrs.\nL. fl. Bradley bent. Mlea L, Lunltffe; :\nJMrs    A.   T.   Stephenson   bent   Mrs.   O.\n8. Godfrey. P;inl-Mrs.  A. T.  gtpph-\nItnaon boat Mrs. i,, s, indlty.\nBrownie Pack No. 2\nHas Tea and Program;   j\nBoy Log for New Hall\nEruptions Disfigured Face.\nLasted 6 Years.  Cuticura Healed.\n\" My trouble begin with small pimples, a rga_b and blarkhpsds appearing on my face. The pimples were hard, red and itched, also festered\nand scaled over. The irritation was eo severe that I scratched and\ncaused'eruptions which disfigured my fac*. The trouble lasted two\nyears.\n\"I read an advertisement advertising Cuticura Soap and Ointment\nand sent for a free sample of each. Later I purchased more and after\nusing one box of Cuticura Ointment and two cakes of Cuticura Soap I\nwas completely healed, in less than two months.\" (Signcdj Miss Rose\nWalters, Chaplin, Sask. ,\nS^ap Be. Ointment M and r>1r. Talcum Be,   Sold everywhere.   Sample each fr\u00bbe,\nAdntCM Onarhan Dtpo*: J. T. Wnit C\u00bbmp\u00bbnT Limii\u00bbd, Mnnlraal.\n1 On Saturday nft.evnocn No. 3 pnrk.\nj Wtlaon Brownlta, i.o.u.F:. held i\n| ten ud sale of home cookir.c, canriy\nand flowers on the lawn of their\nBrown Owl it 516 Hxiver street.\nThe Brown es had charge of the\ntable, did the HUtag and thc w\u00abtt-\nlni<, and tbQVtd a pp'.endid apirij\nof service and ttU \u2022 .acrUtce all\nthrough   their work.\nSome of them presented s. little\nplay, entjiled \"Polly .ut the Kettle\nOn,\" In which thp pans Mi cleverly ac^ed by Jecelyn Wngft, C h-\nenne Pearce, Iris Johnson, Eleanor\nPaddon and Kathleen paddou. Sev-\nere! d3pce\u00bb end nopg\u00bb were alw\n(tiven. and the whole effort testified to the keenness and thoroughness  of  the  pack.\nThe takings amounted to 917.\nwhich will be given to buy a log\nIn. MM BtW Scout hall. Tills log wilt\nbo Inscribed with the pick's name\nnnd number, and will record nnoth-\ner tttllJttaflll effort by W of Cnn-\nada's   potential   ClUgtBt,\nAWARD TROPHIES\nFOR GOLF CLUB\nSPRING TOURNEY!\nMrs. Davte, Mrs. Sttphmson,\nJ. I). KctTJinrl ('. W.\nAppleyard, Win\nI Trophies and prtBtt fcr winners of j\ni th\" apriBg dub to'irm nent of tin ,\n; Nclsrn Ooif and ('<mnt\"y club ^ere j\njprsttnttd at thc clubhouse on Sun-,\nHay.\nThe NotOn cup, emblematic of the]\nhdita'   champiofhlp.   was   twardtd\nto  Rfn. Ciuy  W.  Uavls.  Mrs. H.  Uke.s '\u25a0\ni w;is     runner-up.     Hit      A.     Stephen\nwlnntr ot the tint flight, nnd MCra. j\nI I,.    8.    Prarlley    runner-up     [if   that i\n\u2022Wit,   entitling   tbtin   to   prin   i>o- i\n1 pitlopfi.\ni     J,   D.   Kerr   of   Longbtteh,   winner j\nof   the   meat  alngita,  received   Um '\nwn?on eup. n   BourQua wai ntmer- \\\nup In   tht championship flight, with\nC.   W,   Appleyarrl   victor   of   the   first]\n[flight  and b* Townthand a  runn*r-\ni *t\u00bb. .   i\nEno\nAcid Stomach\nInner sluggishness is the usual cause of\nunpleasant acid conditions. Get speedy,\ncomforting relief by drinking a glass of\nsparkling ENO'S \"Fruit Salt.\" Take ENO\nregularly to correct the trouble. ENO\nrids your system from clogging wastes\nand thus prevents any accumulation\nof acid-making poisons,    c^\nENOS\nFRUIT SALT\nBring Back\nProsperity\n-HBDI\nIn times like these...\nmore than ever, life insurance is a\nboon to all\u2014to the Uninsured as\nwell as the Insured.\nAs its premiums accumulate they\narc promptly used to assist in purchasing homes, in aiding farmers and\nfinancing industry\u2014thus keeping\nCanadian citizens gainfully-employed.\nIt insures more than Life\u2014it helps\nto provide work for the Breadwinner,\nand Food, Comfort and Shelter for\nhis family.       ,\t\nIt supports the Nation, loo\u2014thc\ncollective enterprise cf all the people.\nDuring thc Great War, for instance,\nthe Sun Life Assurance Company of\nCanada itself subscribed for\n$70,000,000 Canadian and allied\ngovernment war loan bonds.\nLast year thc Sun Life subscribed\n$23,000,000 to Canadian government\nissues. A portion of the proceeds of\nthese loans was to relieve unemployment. Even thc jobless share indirectly in the benefits of life\ninsurance.       \t\nThe _sufi Life is an important factor in\nrestoring prosperity to Canada. For over\nsixty years it has been privileged to serve\nits policyholders and proud to serve tht\nState. To-day, its world-wide organization\nand facilities make it more serviceable\nthan ever to the whole community.\nSun Life Assurance\nCompany of Canada\nHEAD   OFFICI:    MONTREAL\nas\n\u25a0\n.DIM\n r\\i,\\_  rot*\n!THl   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON,   \u00bb.   C,   TIUDAY   MORNINO   JUT   II,   ISStr\nSecret ^Places\n(Byjoan Sutherland\nINSTALMENT   XXVII.\n(Continued)\nFeverishly, while her eyes witched\nthe absurd play, her brain worked,\ntrying to reassure her that her fears\nwere Imaginary. For quite suddenly\nthe appalling truth came home to\nher. Thla \u00abm a trap, set why or\nLow. she could not conceive. Who\ncould ftMve known the truth\u2014? Why\nahould thla child of the gutter write\nthis folly? What did she know?\nWhat had sh\u00ab aald to Ravel? Oh,\nGod I Why wo J not words come\n. . . ? laughter . . . why could she\nnot Jest about thla thing . . . why\ndid her tongue cleave dryly to the\nroof of her mouth . . . \"\/ it was ridiculous\u2014lt was damnable. He was\nwatching her, thla man who had\ntrapped her Into thla aituatlon,\nwatching to . lf she betrayed herself by any algn of fear or uneasiness . . . and her hands were clenched and her fingers stralneC and she\ncould aee once again D'Arblaye's\nhuddled figure, and the pool of\nblood widening, ever widening upon\nthe rug . . . -t was no longer a\nplay, the acting was crude, the\nwords absurdly melodramatic; but\ncrudities and melodrama alike meant\nnothing to her now. It was no\nlonger a play she was watching, but\nthe happenings of that dreadful\nnight . . . she would have shrieked\nfor ihe thing to cease, but her lips\nwere dry ana no sound would come\nIrom   her   throat.\nScene by scene, detail by detail,\nthose hapj>e!i!ngs played themselves\nout . . . the woman on the -stage\nalone In the man's house . . . the\npassionate scene between them . . .\nehe heard nothing of the audience's\nwit and ribaldry, saw nothing of\nthe actors\" absurdities . . . did not\neven aee the wonder growing on the\nlaoea of her two comp.inloiiR, or the\nIntent wa'eh.ulncsa of Ravel ss he\nobserved her.\nA dagster instead of a revolver\n. . . two gallants, attired ln odd\ndraperies borrowrd .rom an adjoining studio, instead of a commissure\nof police ... a painted bo.i-d hoist-\ned up with the legend: \"Dungeon\nin tttm Bastille,\" painted upon it\nInstead of Dartmoor . . . and Toni's\nleap down fr .n her seat, ana Ravel's\nswift, stride across the loom, and\nher own shriek ringing ln her cars:\n\"I killed him! - killed him\u2014oh, my\nOod!\u2014I killed him!\" before the\nroaring darkness closed over her\nhead.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTlie   cold,   clinging   dampness   of\nfog lay over the western counties, a\nwhite mist, blanketing sound, penetrating the very marrow bonea with\ndeathly  chill.\nThe giant prison walls of prince-\nton Jau arose with startling suddenness in the mist. Gaunt, itark,\nugly\u2014even more so than usual\u2014the\nprison gave an Impression of desolation so profound that the heart\nstood still ln dismay. The crunch\nof men's boots on the hard gravel\nof the road\u2014an even, heavy tramp\nlacking the spring of a battalion's\nmovements, yet hardly less measured\nand defined\u2014was the only sound\nthat   broke   the   unearthly   etlljne&s.\nWalking fourth in line, his attire\nno whit different from the men behind and in front of him, but hi*\nshoulders still flat and erect, and\nthe heavy convict's boots not ^et\nhiding the easy lithe step, Feodor\n8taire approached the end of another day. But Inwardly, already\nthe terrible monotony of prison\nroutlns had got him within its\nstranglehold, and although only two\nmonths had passed since his arrival at Dartmoor, Feodor had endured   a  hundred  years  of  agony.\nPhysically, he VM In fine condition, since his health, always excellent, was maintained by the wonderful air and the hard and regular\nexercise; mentally, hs remained ln a\nstate that for the most part held\nall emotion and fentlent feeling In\nabeyance, waiting perhaps for the\nunguarded moment, the waking Instant, to break forth and sweep him\non its flood. He was unpopular still,\nfor the mere re,iv>n that he was\nunmistakably of a different breed\nfrom the mm about him, but such\nunpopularity trouhlcd him not at\nall. Tlie lofs which actually meant\nmost to him during those weeks\nhad been (lie absence of all book\",\nand the soul-deadening monotony\nof the labor\u2014two months\u2014eight,\nweeks-out of\u2014what? A lifetime\u2014\neight weeks\u2014and before him twenty-\nfive winters of cruel winds and\nblanketing white fogs. twenty-five\nsprings leading to what? Hope?\nHappiness? Achievement. Could even\ncharacter be achieved In this grim\nhouae of punishment? What sort of\nman would he be at the end of\nthose jears? could he endure or\nwould he be broken\u2014whit would\nconfront him when 'n tiie far-\ndistant future he night once more\nstep on thp road, a free man?\n(TO    BB    CONTINUED)\n^eYLINGERE^^PRlNG\nH?Ht OAwGC SET,\nitn. isor ivory wwou wrru\nAlENOOM lACt*\nNJhE FLtJW G_0<!G_TT&\nNICHTILBtLDKHASTHRtEr\nCOWS'Of NET RuewtOG\n. -. eOROERlMGreuEMMiO\nMATCHING SEPfKWS-\n-   CAPtUT.\nVassar's CashMeat Market\nSPECIALS for Tuesday and Wednesday\nFresh Eggs, Pullet   9 EC\nExtras, 2 doz. foruo\nSmall Smoked      19U#\nHams, lb VL'\"'\nOntario Cheese\nPer lb\t\nSwift's Bologna, by\nthe piece, ib. ...\nFowl, fresh killed\nPer lb\t\nBreakfast Sausage\nchoice fresh, lb. .\n20'\n18'\n10'\nFresh Pork Spare\nRibs, 3 lbs. for ..\nFresh Pork Steaks\nPer lb\t\nVeal Steaks,\nPer Ib\t\nVeal Roast\nPer lb\t\nChoice Pot Roast\nSteer Beef, lb. ..\nChoice Steer Sirloin 00<\nSteaks, lb **\n25'\n12^\n18*\n16'\n10'\n_> ^\nW' COMBINATION\nRight, is> of ivocv\nNIN9N WITH A WIDE-\nYOKEOFALENGON\nLAe& arr VE5Y iow\nAT THE BACK.      \"\nIsmK tMgPft\nOH THE AIR TONIGHT\nTUESDAY,   MAY   3t\n\u00bb.\nGood assortment of Cooked Meals\nGood assortment of Fresh and Smoked Fish\n6:00\u2014Dane? Hour\u2014With Louis\nMbOl- From N. Y. Mid ot'\/er cities\nto KGO, KHQ, KOMO, KGW, KFI\nKSL.\n6:00\u2014Musical Capers\u2014Variety program with the \"Lovable Liars\" aa\nmasters of ceremonies; aolojetj.\nand orchestra direction by Jena\nNorman.   KPO,   KGA,   KJR,   KEX.\n6:45\u2014Cecli and Rally\u2014 In. \"The\nFun nlcat Tnlm\" KPO, KGA.\nKJR.\n7:00\u2014Amoe 'n' Andy--Comedians.\nFrom ChJflefQ to KOO, KHQ.\nKOMO.   KFI,   KSL.   KGW.\n7:00\u2014Tom Mitchell baritone. KPO,\nKOA,   KJR.   KEX.\n7:15\u2014Popular Concert If cur\u2014Con-\nc rt orch. dlr, Cy Trobbe, KPO,\nKOA,   KJR.   KEX.\n7:15\u2014Memory Lane\u2014 R*ural Drama\nby H. C. Connette featuring Billy\nP.ige, Eileen PIbroU, Ted Maxwell\nKGO.   KHQ,   KOMO,   KFI.    KSL.\n7:45--KOO network. To lie announced.\n8:03\u2014Ralph Klrbery\u2014The Dream\nmnmr, KPO, KGA, KJR, KEX,\nKGW.\n8:00\u2014    Bluebird    Melodies -    Lucile\nKirtley.   soprano   orch.   dir\nH mlk   KGO. KFI.\n(.:(.!>\u25a0\u2014Dan ri.   orchestra.   From  N,   Y\ntn    KPO,    KGA,    KJR.    KEX.\n8:30\u2014John and Ned. vocal and Instrumental duo. KPO, KGA, KJR,\nKEX.\n8 ::10\u2014-Seymour Simon'a Orch Fr.\nDetroit to KOO, KHQ, KOW, KSL.   rose\nWOMAN'S PAGE\nTEACH CHILD TO\nHELP HIMSELF\nChildren Who Live in Dream Worlds\nMav Mm   Nettailn come tn. too?\".    It   wm   quit*   evident   that   Mrs\n_   .J .   .._   _.._ _    _. _._.   _.-._. *'t_.\u201e\u25a0_%    n','_ .'-m*.     in    u\/tt.i    her   _lm.__l.l*r\nMother*   without   any   experience\nwith    children   often   are    puzzled\nabout certain things. Ia it too nuichjg]ri cam* in. crossed the room and\nto expect * little child to do things aat on a small stool. The big com-\nJulie stopped In tho doorway and\nsmiled at her mother, then at me.\n\"Certainly,\" invited Mrs. I\/owe\ncordially. \"Tell her to come ri\u00abht\nIn and t*ke that comfortable choir\nby the window where ahe can aee\nthe   lilacs.\"\nJulie   turned  and   beckoned   to  a\nshsdov)r   person   in   tl*   taftU,   sidestepping  to allow  tho guest to cuter  first-\nThen the little seven -ye ar-o' J\nfor himself? How old ahould he W\nbefore he puts cm his own clothti,\nwashes his own bands, or can g0 to\nthe   toilet   himself?\nIt ls surprising how much a RhtM\nof two, or even leas, can do if he is\nencouraged. It Is considered very\ngocd training to allow him to do an\nmuch  as   possible  himself.\nThis dees not mean that hla\nmother can turn him over t^ Im\nown auspices; it ls merely reo.n-\nmended that ___\u2022 be enouragei be.\ncause it teaches several things. Doing means learning and the younger\nthe better.\nThe first time he tries he may be\nan hour trying to get into his little\nshirt and panties, another hour trying to wiggle his toes into twUted\nstockings.\nPATIENCE   IS   NECESSARY\nThe first time he washes his\nhands, standing cn a stool at thc\nwashstand ls going to be a sloppy,\nincomplete process, too. Anything\nhe does at first and perhaps for a\nlong time after will be more trying\nto your patience th*n to do it deftly\nand   quickly   yourself.\nBut patience will pay in the long\nrun. Patience and a lot of praise,\nbecause on your attitude will depend\nultimate   success.\nWhen he goes out to play let him\nhunt up his cwn coat and cap and\nput them o*\\ But you will have to\nbutton his coat. He won't be able\nto pull a sweater over his head peril apa now but jomedny he will sur*\nprixe   you.\nOf course you will have to wash\nhim thoroughly once, or ecver.il\ntimes a day in the beginning, UM\ngive him his bath (It should be\nonce a day. and brush his heal\n.once a week) and brush his teeth\nright. But let fcla learn to handle a\ntoothbrush anyway. It will lead to\ndexterity. Also have hlni learn to\nuse  a  handkerchief.\nA few safeguards are necessary,\nhowever.\nWatch the water In the bath roo.n.\nDon't allow him to put a plug in\nthe wash basin unless you are present. And don't le*. him turn on the\nhot water himself If you have on\nInstantaneous healer or one that\nsends the water belling out of the\nfaucet. Not until he ls over live\nyears old.\nWhen he blows his nose don't allow   him   to   blow  too  hard.   If   his\ncompletely    stepped\nfortable chair by the window, however, was empty. There was nt\nMrs. Nettafln except In Julie's dream-\nmind. M\nI hai known or cases of dream ____?__a__\nchildren and recognized the situation at once, but I was interested in observing the way Mrs.\nLowe handled It. That the dream\no:.tld was evidently a grown-up\nlady and not by a child at all\ninterested me. -too. Most girls have\nHildas or Bettys or MM Boys\noften have pets that walk softly\nand   unseen.\nBut Mrs. Netffln  waa   a lady evidently accustomer to the best.\nGKUIOIS   LITTl.i;    HO0TIII\nMrs. *_owe and I tnlked presently of other -things. Juile would\nquietly tiptoe over to her protege\nand ask her if ehe could smell\nthe flowers\u2014wasn't It pretty in the\ngarden?\u2014to wait tat she'd ga out\nand get her a bouquet. Out Bhe\ntripped and returned with Bcmc-\nblossoms that MM IftUI on the chair\nseat,   the   lady's   ample   lap.\nLater tlie invisible guest was\ngiven Icr. Julie's mother poured\nher a cup and asked If sho would\nhave one lump,\" explained the\nlittle   girl.\nLowe- played in with her daughter\nand that the imaginary person, was\na   permanent  fixture.\nAfter \u00bb whll\u00a9 Julie excused them\nboth,  so  then  we could  tolk.\n\"Is \u2014la Mre. Whatyouraaycaller\nhere   much?\"   I   asked.\n\"A good bit\u2014not always,\" she\nreplied.   \"What  do you  think.?\"\n\"Has Julie little friends\u2014real\nones?\"\n\"Yea, but she wlllvleave them abruptly and come In and alt and\ntalk to her lavorlte. What shall\nI  do?\"\nThe Beauty Box\nBv Helen Follett\nDREAM WORLDS VANISH\nI think you are doing the right\nbut don't let her become\nobsessive, living in dreams, shunning the world, real people, and\nreal facts. She will get over It.\nOf course, if you kill off this\ndream child too abruptly eh\u00a9 will\nturn to some other imaginary\nworld and it will only be another\nwithdrawal. Mra. Nettafln sulta her\nbecause she ll always pleasant,\ncannct dtspul* her and sympathizes   with   her.  She  Is Julie  herself.\n\"But I should keep that child\nbusy\u2014very busy with pleasant\nthings,\" I explained. \"Let her\nknow that the real w^rld can be\nkind. She   will   take   her   lady\nfriend along for a while then n J-\nlcct  and   finally  desert  her.\"\n\"That la what I thought,\" replied my hostess. \"I think these\nthings usually work themselves out\nwithout   interference.\"\nOut In ahe yard Julie was playing \"catch\" with the boy next\ndoor. \"I think Mrs. Nettafln Will\n\u00bb:on die of starvation snd neglect.\"\nI remarked. \"3he probably d'-esn't\ncare much  for ball games.\"\nhead, attend to the nc*e last. When\ndry rouge is tised, it should be\nplaced atop powder and then powder placed atop It, forming as it\nwere, a cosmetic sandwich.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy LAURA  A. K1RKMAN\nTOMORROWS   MENU\nBreakfast\nOatmeal  Ccoked with Dates\nMed Egg\u00bb Bacon\nToast Marmalau\u00a9 Coffee\nLuncheon\nCheese   Toaat\nI^ttucB Russian Dressing\nFruit cup Cookies\nTe*\nTMnntr\nRoast of Beef\nGravy\nPotatoes Turnips\nCole  Slaw  Salad\nPrune Whip Coffee\nPermanent wave operators tell\namazing yarns about, ca*sh customers\nwho. seeking the hard boiled undulation, declare they haven't used\ndye when the trained eye wes plainly that a coloring \u25a0\u00a7\u25a0&* bM been\napplied, when susplcous. the opera-\nter Mttg no chances, but does a\ntest curl', very foousn of the client\nwith the tinted tresses, since the\ncontact of dye with (.team oftimes\nbrings Bad results, gome coloring\nagents do not disqualify the hair;\nit can havs its permanent Just the\ncame. Not so with preparations of\na different character. Beauty apera-\ntora are overcoming many difficulties.. All the patron has to do Is\nto Tell the truth.\nTenseness, a .littery nervous sys-\nem, emotional upsets get their re-\nveng by placing upon the feminine\ncountenance ugly lines and causing\ntlMUM to lose tone and resiliency.\nNo um. playing with cold cream and\nother beauty props unless one forms\nthe habit of keeping upon the face\na   calm,   serene   expression.   Frown   meat?\nANSWERS   TO   INQUIRIES\nMrs. r. p.: \"Why is it that ll\ncannot mak\u00a9 a really rich brown]\ngravy when roasting chicken?\"\nANSWER:   Some ovens differ from 1\nother ovens and I h*av\u00a9 often heard 1\nhousekeepers make this complaint\u2014 I\nthat  their  particular  over   will   not ]\nreally brown ft roast of meat or\nbird so that a rich brown gravy may ]\nbe made.   However, ir you roast the |\nchicken till U Is very well done, allowing a  little  more  then 20  minutes to the pound, and having th\u00a9 I\nbird  uncovered  at least \u00abt  the end\nof the roasting process, I bellev\u00a9 you I\nwill be able to make brown gravy by |\nadding first water to tiie pan ufter\ntaking out the chicken and pouring l\noff  some pt  the  fat)   and then  by\nstirring  iri  enough  flour-and-water- 1\npaste  U) thicken to desired consist- |\nency.\nYoung Housewife: \"Posalblj other\nwomen might like to hear sbout th\u00a9\nspice set I have just made by using\neight-ounce Jars, covering th\u00a9 tops\nwith blue enabel paint snd th\u00a9\ncurves tf__4$ parts., with gray, and\nthen painting forget-me-nots on gray\nparts, nnd printing (also ln blue\npaint) the names of th\u00a9 various\nspice* on a blank gray portion. They\nmatoh my blue and gray kitchen\ncolor scheme, but th\u00a9 same idea\ncould easily b\u00a9 worked, out In any\nother colors.\"\nANSWER: Thank you *0 much\nfor this excellent idea. I feel sure\noilier  women  will enjoy trying It.\nMeatless Dieter: \"Can you suggest   dinners   for   a   week   without\nlines, especially, are self Inflicted.\nDeep breathing exercises Wt\u00a3 develop the chest cavity, fill out a\nthroat that has gone saggy. Stand\nsm open window, hands on hips,\nANSWER: Monday: Tomato soup,\nrice souffle with green peas and\npotatoes tuid ft fnilt pie. Tuesday:\nCream cf celery soup, fried clams or\nfiled scallops, potatoes, squash, pud-\ndlntf.   Wednesday:   Spaghetti,     ital-\nWhen   a   girl   nppllcs   complexion    checks,\npowder, she gives her nose the first\nserving,   which   is   usually   plenty.\nIll Bad technique. The pad should put\n8:45\u2014Mona,  Law.   KPO,  KCIA, KJR, dangerous. Use a few drops of oil or   the dull finish  on the collar bone^\nKEX. 'whatever the doctor may recommend   first,   travel   up   over  the   chin   and\n9:fKV~Orchestra  From    Chicago    to  to loosen the mucous. l cheeks,  put  the  fluff on  the forc-\nKOO.\ntake a deep breath through the Ian style, with cheese; lettuce salad,\nnostrils, drinking In the air slowly. , Brown Betty pudding and hard\nLift up on the toes. Exhale through .sauce. Thursday: Baked beans, corn\nthe lips with a whistling sound. Icu the cob, celery-apple salad, peach\nTills simple exercise aerates tftwltUW. Friday; Baked fish, lima\nlungs,    develops   muscles,    reddens   beans, potatoes,  fruit gelatine.   Sat-\n9:00\u2014The Story  Teller. KPO, KOA.\nKJR,   KEX.\n9:30\u2014Musical      Highlights-orchestra\ndlreciion   Em 11   Polak,   KGO,   KHQ\n9:30\u2014Ted   Flo-Ritas   Orch.   Fr,   S.\nF.   to   KPO,   KOA,   KJR,   KEX.\n10:00\u2014New     Flashes\u2014-Sum       Hayes.\nProm L, A. ti KGO, KHQ, KOMO,\nKFI, KGW.\n10:00\u2014Waltz Time\u2014Betty  Kelly, so-\nI     prano;   orchest ra     direction     Rex\nDunn.   KPO,   KGA.   KJR.\n10:15\u2014The     Cnquettes--Vocal     trio.\nAnnette   Hastings   Marjorie   Prim-\nley,  Imelda  Montague.   KGO.\n10:30-Thc   Medicine   Show\u2014soloists;\norchwtra    direction     Rex    Dunn.\nKGO,   KGW.\n10::lO-Aroiini   the   Network.    From\nKEX,   Portland    to     KPO,     KGA,\nKJR.   KEX,   KSL.\n11:00\u2014Phil   Harris   Orch.   Fr.   L.   A.\nti  KGO,   KPT.\njojseph I 1J :00\u2014Jimmy Joy end His Orchestra\nKPO,   KGA,    KEX.\n11:30\u2014Witching    Hour\u2014Organ    concert,   Paul    Carson.     KPO,     KOA,\nKEX.\nlT:30\u2014Charles   Kaley's   Orch.   Fr. ,L.\nA. to KGO, KFI.\n12:00\u2014Organ Concert\u2014Dolly  Sargent\nKGO.\nBE\n-YOURSELF.\n\/\nmn\nR            \u2014dOH\u2014\n317.*\nM\nVANCOUVER\n500\nWATTa\n6.00\nMimical   Program\nfl:30\nN\u00abwn   Fla*h*a\n6M\nMusical   Program\n7 .10\nArt  Hatlnian\nTM\nTea  William,\n0.30\nBallroom\n10:30\nCabaret\nEatThis Food for Health and Enjoyment\nr\\0N*T be i nagger. Don't fret and\nfuss snd fume. If constipation is\ntindcrmining your health, rat fmJtrt\nAran Flakes, a food which most likely\nwill benefit you. Post's Bran\nFlaltrs is a food created to\ncorrect constipation due\nto lack of bulk in the diet.\ni*t*\nct^*\n\u20228&\nEat Post's Bran Flakes regularly \u2014\nwilh milk or crpam as a cereal or\nwith berries or fruits. There's a\ntempting flavour in each crisp, golden\ntouted flake. You'll enjoy\nIVt's Bran Flakes. F.very-\nbody does. Ask your grocer\nfor them. Made in Canada.\n^\nPOSTS BRAN FLAKES\nOrdmsry tun of constipnlinn, UionflM vith tno Ulll' bulk in thr dirt, lhou!4 yhU tn Pa't't Pram Tlaktt,\nIt your toil it abnormal, ceiuvU s comfcteiH ph_,\u00bb_uin st ence snd jollow hit advice.\n10.V)    K \u2014KNX\u2014 aiS.fl    M\nHOLLYWOOD 6000   WATTS\n8:15  Calmon   Lulxivlskl\n9:00    News    VaWt\nfl:15   KNX   ftMNOM*\nf):30   Hoopla   Hawjilana\n10:00   Jackie   Tn ylor'a   Ore he*! ra\n12:00 Ray Howpl',, Hocha Muchac'.iho\nIM    K \u2014KVl\u2014 3!HS    M\nTACOMA 1000  WATTS\n6:00   MuMc   fcatislics\ntdl studio\nfi-30    CBS    Symphony\n7:00   Jo?   Talooka,   CBS\n7:30   PBncho's   Orch.\n9:30  Ben  Bern if  and  Orchestra\n10:00   Ralph   Horr\n10:15   Oene   Qnnw's   Orch.\n11:00   Henry   Hal-Mead   Orchestra\n\u2014KOMO\u2014 32-Vfl   M\nlooo wArrs\n920   K\n\u2022a*Trt_i\n7:45 Male   Quartet\n800 Rajput   ET.\n8.*3 Vocal   Ensemble\n10:15 Coquettes\n11:00 Olobe  Trotter\n11:10 Phil   Harris'   Orch\n12:00 Organ   Recital\ntp\u00bb-\nCHOCOLATI   CAM\n'_. cup fat. pij cups sugar,\nsquare* chocolate, melted. 1\nspcon vanilla, I cup milk, 'i teaspoon sal'. 2'i cupa flour, 3 teaspoons   baking   powriar.   3   egga.\nCmm the fat and sugar. Add\nrest of the lngreltent*. Beat three\nminutes. Pour Into shallow pan\nfitted wlith waxed psper. Bake\nthirty minutes ln moderately slow\noven. Cool snd frost.\nBefore clipping off a hangnail,\nsoak the flnncr In hot soap sud***.,\nand gently detach the flesh from\nthe nail, using an oranito stick lor\nthe purpose. i\nurctay: Cream of onion, soup, omelet,\nspinach, potatoes, fruit cup. Bun-\nday: Vegetable soup with grated\ncheesf, succotash, fruit salad, and\nIce cream.\nTomorrow\u2014Requested   Pickles.\n,W VI\/\/\/\/\nsgggBgBg\nsT.MAdNf.DFOR ,iwt, r    x    i i   11 iese wonder-working suds\nesnowic&t.brightcst\/\/   that!s great; \\     \\  m\\ t  sj   i. .i   -r.\nwash TODfftf anoj didnT J [ dear ano vou J   kJ^v       Qfllgn! inNTTy Women\nWHY do so many women insist on RinsoF\nBecause thev know it washes clothes\nwhiter\u2014prts washable coloured things brighter\nBecause it saves scrubbing and boiling\u2014and Aon.\nthat jc5\u00ab the clothes!\nIt's the suds that do it\u2014thick, crcrnny, lasting.\nTwice as much as from light-weight puficd-up\nSoi ps\u2014ezm in hardest\nwater. The makers of 40\nwashers endorse Rinso.\nGreat for dishwashing,\ntoo. Get the BIG sue.\nThe hard-water soap for tub, washer ond dishpan\nMR 9WV0B6IVABU UMIW \u2014 h ^gwgrwowg\nBUT THEY QUICKLY LOST INTEREST\n-TURNED TO SOMEONE ELSE\nThe T-strap on Informs! evening\nsandals is back on Paris feet a-\ngiln, and It comes back ornamented WM) Jewels or in t color con-\ntrsjtting with the sandal Itself.\nThe black or white gown has a\nsaah of, for Instance, dark and\nlight green velvet plus pale green\ncatlii shoes with T-strap,. of blue\njirepn stone*. Any aroompaiivint;\nI jewelry  maiches  the shoes.\nFRIENDSHIPS WITH OTHER GIRLS\nNEVER LASTED. SOON SHE COULD\nFEEL SHE WASN'T WELCOME\nNO  B.O. NOW TO KEEP HER UNm*ouLAR.\n'.: PAY SHE'S SHOWERED WITH INVITATIONS\nWATCH OUT FOR \"B.O.\"\nIT'S & mistake to think we're Rife from bodf\nodour just because ve trent conscious^of\noffending. Flay safe! WaOrnndbirhe with Lifebuoy. Its gentle, getrchinf lather deodorizes\npores\u2014makes every trsceof -'B.O.\" vanish. Its\npleasint hygienic scent, that disappears ss you\nrinse\u2014tells you Lifebuoy purifies.\nA wonderful complexion loep\nMasrage Lifebuoy's pure, bland lather weilihto\nthe pores every night\u2014then rinse. Impurities\narc washed away\u2014dull \\-^.^a \"\ncomplexions freshen with ff\/**3B\nnew radiance. Adopt H r'^\/P\nLifebuoy today. I HI\nOTHF.*. I LtV.TJl.\n__________________\n_\n fc'sS\nx::r\nA NEW MODEL\nFOR STREET WEAR\nBrown Kid with Dark\nBrown Trim, Black, Baby\nCalf, Dull Calf Trim,\nLight weight Summer\nSole and Covered Heel.\nPrice S7.50 .\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLeaders in Foot Fashion\nSociety\nThU column Is conducted by\nMM. M. J- Viineux. All newa of a\nsocial nature. Including receptions, private entertainment!, per-\n\u25a0unsl Items marriagei. etc., will\nnppear tn this column. Telephone\nMrs. Vlgneux st her home, 019\nsilka street.\neTITE   NtLSOV   DAILY    NEWS,   NELSON,   B.    C,    TIESDAT   MORNINO    MAY    31,    1912\"\nJSummer Picnic\nI      Held by Students\nat South Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C.. May 30,\u2014\nt,The   St.   Matthew's   Sunday   school\n'held their usual summer picnic nt\n.the tennis courts,   Miss E. L. Bradshaw, the .superintend  '.t. had made\nUjtcellent   arrangement.,   for  an   all-\n[\u2022ound  good  time.    The  senior chll-\nren  competed    In    some    r uniting\naces.    Eva Hendrleksnn wa- first  In\nh\u00ab   potato   race;   Boh   Walkley   and\nMsrvyn Mclntyre first in the wheel-\nhirrow race;  Molly Murray snd Un\nBradshaw won the girls' three-legRed\nace; Winnie Rldgc heat all the com-\njetltors In the flat race.   The h:gh-\numplng   was   won   by     'lta   Join-.'.,\nIrst. and    Mett    Bradfihaw.   second.\nThe Junior children wcre entertained\nwith games.\nI    Mr.   a nd   Mrs.   W.   A.   Rober taon\ni announce    the    marriage    of    their\n; younger    daughter,    Iris    Merle,    to\nl David   Llewellyn Morrla   st  7  o'clock\nMonday   mornlnj,  which  took   place\nat the home of the  bride's parent*,\nSilver King roe.-1, with Rev. T. J. 6.\nFerguson officiating, only Immediate\nrelativ*     were pr\u00abbcr.t. The-tea tab?)\nwas centered  with   a   large  four-tier\n7-cdding cake. Pink tulips were used\nfor   decorations   sbout   the    rooms.\nAfter   a   brief   honevmoon   in   Spokane, Mr. snd Mrs. Morris will make\ntheir  home in Trull.\nMrs. J. M. Gordon, Kerr apartments, leaves this mornir.g to VLslt\nher relatives In Winnipeg. She was\n.ccompanied M fa.' fis Pernio by\nMr. Gordon, t. 10 will nttend thc\nAssociated BOtnJi of Trade convention.\nF. c* Whiteinuse, Hoover street,\nhas ns hts puest his daughter, Miss\nPeusy Whitehouse, who arrived Saturday from Ferule. Miss Whltehuuw\nexpects to leave shortly for the\ncast, from where she will leave on\na year's visit to relatives _b England.\nMr. and Mrs. E, Mason of Trail\nwere among tho... who motored from\nNelson   to   Metallne   Falls   Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. R. V, Ne'.lly left by\nmotor yesterday for Kimberley, where\nthey will visit en rout to Timmlns.\nOnt. They were accompanied on the\ntrip by Mr. Nellly's nephew, Bill\nNc-illy, and also by Harry Miller.\n.  Mrs. Thomas O'Neill of Grny Creek\n.5 visiting friends in the city.\nJohn Avis Jr. of Perry Siding\nspent   yestcrclny  in   Nelson.\nD. L. Doyle of Cedar Point was\na mon ss those who motored to Spokane Saturday to attend the Knights\nof Columbus Initiation nnd state\nconvention which took place there\nSunday.\nMrs. F. H. Hardin of South Slocan\npaid  a  visit to  town  y;sierday.\nMr. and Mrs. Alex A. Allan, who\nhave   been   guests  at   the   homo   of\nMr. and Mrs. Wilfrid AlUn, Rone-\nmont, left lesterday for their home\nin   Staveley,  Alta, I\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMra. Christie, who has been a pa-'\ntlent ln the Kootenay Lake Gen-j\neral hospital for the past month,1\nhas left that institution for the\nhome of Mr. o~ I Mrs. Earl E.\nSwanson, Maple street, Fairview.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs Fred L, Irwin, Mr\nsnd Mrs. Russell M MarEwan and\nMr, and M's. W, A. West motored to\nMetallne   Falls   Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Ternan returned to their home In Rossland\nyesterday after attending tha Morris-\nRobertson wedding yesterday morning.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. snd Mrs. vV. Kline and family\nhave returned from a motor trip to\nKelowna. where they went to visit\na sick rel tire.\nI   I   i\nC. E. Tedlock left yesterday morning for a few days' visit to Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. B. Irving of Thrums was\n__ recent visitor to tovn.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nVen. Archdeacon Fred II. Graham\nletves thla morning for C.rnbrook,\nwhere he will attend the executive\ncommittee meeting of the diocese\nof the Kootnay. ,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJ. Lyden of Grand Forks spent\nthc week-end In town, the gueet of\nhis brother-in-law end sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. G. F. Stevens, Terrace\napartments.\n\u2022 4       \u2022\nOscar H. Burden of Crawford Bay\npaid  a  visit  to   town  yesterday,\nT. E. Talbot of. Salmo ls a city\nvisitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. and Mrs. C. C. Brown of Spokane were week-end visitors ln Nelson,\ntee\nMr. and Mrs. H. H. Currie, Baker\nstreet, have had ns their guest Mrs.\nCurrie'.. mother, Mrs. Thomaa Mr-\nDonald of Victoria, wiio formerly resided here. Mr. McDonald ls expcc'.ed\nlater.\nDr. and Mrs. Jess Barth of Spokane spent the week-end at the\nhonir cf Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Larson,\nCarbonnte street,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nFred   Irvine,   leaves   this   morning\nfor crenbrook, where bt v.'Ul attend\na   committee   meeting   of  the   executive of the diocese of Kootenay.\nsee\nW. Williams or the Canadian Bank\nor Commerce staff is on two weeks'\nfurlough.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs.   Gordon   B.   Stephenson   and\nInfant son left the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital Sunrtiy for the\nhome of Mrs. Stephenson's parents,\nMr,   and   Mra.   J.   Bailess.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nVery  Rev.  J.  c.  McKenzie  united\nJn marriage on Sunday at high mass\nMiss Sanka Stadnick s.id Nicholas\nZytor, both of Hall Biding. Their\nuttendants were (he bride's sister,\nMrs. Isadore Lang of Nelson, and\nPeter Horlick of South Slocan,\n\u25a0   \u2022   \u2022\nFred Emory, formerly of Kansas\nCity, who has rerently been transferred to Portland, Ore,, and who\nspent the week-end with hia parents,\nMr. and Mrs, a. D, Emory. Vernon\nstreet, leave* for Portland this morning.\ns   \u2022   s\nJ. A. Kerr. W. R. Campion, T. F.\nMrKechnle. J. 8. Volume and Dr.!\nBradshaw motored to Metallne Falls\nSaturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. K. McAllister of Rosalind was\nla   town   yesterday   to   attend   the\nMorris-Robertson  wedding,\ntee\nMiss Betty Houston, who attends\nhigh school in I7eleon, returned yesterday from Slocan Park, where she\nvisited her mother, Mrs. a. N. Houston.\nWilliam Kelly md Parkle Murphy,\nboth of Spokane, returned yesterday\nfrom Appledale, where they visited\nfriends over the week-end. They left\nlater in the day for their home.\nsee\nMrs. Campbell, and daughter, Theresa, formerly of Nelson and now of\nPan Diego, cal,, arrived in the city\nSaturday, and are visiting friends In\ntown. They expect to visit in eastern   Canada   before   returning   south.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. F. F. Smith of Vancouver are city  visitors.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mta, George W. Steele.\nSilica street, motored to Metallne\nFalls  Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Hugh Bostock and son Hewitt of Ottawa nrrived Saturday night\ni to spend the summer months with\nI her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. R.\nHamilton, at Kokanee.\n! \u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mra. Lawrence McPhall.\n[ Silica street, had as tlirlr week-end\n; guests Mr. and Mrs. Klrby Orenfcll\n'of Rpokar.e and Mr, Ortnfell'l moth.\n[iT. Mrs. M. Grenfelj of l_ot_ Angeles,\nI Cal., who Is visiting  in Spokane.\n\u2022 %   *\nSamuel Alexinder has returned to\nKlmberley efer a brief via't at the\nhome of Mr, and Mrs. A. McL,\nFletcher,  Fairview.\nsee\nMr. snd Mrs. Wilfrid Allan left\nteak night for a visit to Vancouver\nand other coast cities,\n\u2022 \u2022   i\nMr. and Mrs. Archie Renwlck, 903\nHall street, have had as their guests\nMrs. Renwlek's molher. Mre. A. Llnd-\nberg of Nakusp, and her son, Roger,\nwho have returned.\nsee\nAlex Allan has* returned from a\nfew   days  spent   In   Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.   S.   Hayden   and   Mrs.   Frank\ni Baker were Joint nostwwe* to the\nmembera of the Fairview Tennis\n| club Sunday afternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDavid Wood, who haa been In the\ncity for the pa*t few davi on business, leaves this morning for his\nhome ln Winnipeg.\nFerguson Wilson. Josephine street,\nand his daughter Mabel, left yesterday by motor for Fire Vallev. where\nthey will visit Mr. Ferguson's parents. Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.    D.    T.    Fother Ingham    end\ndaughter, who have been visiting at\nthe home of Mra. Fotheringham's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. George A.\nHunter, Edgewood avenue, leave this\nmorning for their home ln Calgsry.\nCHARMING LADY\nOF \"OLD SCHOOL\"\nPASSES, COAST\nMrs. Serena  Clarke  Was  a\nChild During; Indian\nMutiny\nREV. C. JANZOW\nIS DELEGATE TO\nLUTHERAN MEET\nMillion Members to Be Represented al Milwaukee\nGathering\nTHE   LITTLE  GIRL WHO\nFOUND   HER   APPETITE\ni^j\nYESTERDAY (he only toyed -with\nher food \u2014 so no wonder Mother\nwan juit a little concerned. But\ntoday, it's another story. Mother\nhas found just the treat to tempt\na young appetite. It's a big bowl\nof Kellogg's Rice Krispies and\nmilk. And just sec her dip right\nin with her spoon andenjoy every\nmouthful of that good, nourishing cereal.\nIt gives you a lot of satisfaction,\ndoesn't it, to see your children\nenjoying their food? Well, just\ngive them Kellogg's Rice Krispies.\nCrisp, delirious rice bubbles that\nactually snap, crackle and pop In\nmilk or cream i\nAnd Rice Krispies are one of\nthe best cereals for children. So\ntempting, nourishing, and easy\nto digest. Splendid for the eve-\n, ning meal \u2014 they do not over-\nlax like many heavy foods, and\nso they encourage restful sleep.\nKellogg's Rice Krispies are\nmade with exacting care. Spotless ovens. Gleaming machinery.\nSunlit kitchens. No hands ever\ntouch this cereal. And Rice\nKrispies are sealnd In a protective\nWAXTITE bag which Is placed inside the red-and-green package,\nand keeps every morsel oven-\nfresh. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. Quality guaranteed.\na\\\n_AfcI\n_&_\nV\ni\u00a91\n\u25a0\u25a0\"m~_.'_.:'.: '\n***._,\ntm\nZ^SSNi\nJ_w\nWlgm\nVANCOUVER, May 30\u2014An interesting character and pictureanue\npersonality who had seen stirring days\nIn India died Saturday in the person\nof Mrs. Serena Clarke.\" She had\nreached the age of 89 and was a\ncharming old lady of gracious manner\u2014oup of tlie \"old school\" In the\nhighest sense of the term. Deith\noccurred at her residence, Pendrell\nstreet,\nMra. Clarke wm born In India of\na military family, and she married\nCol. John Trlst Clarke of MM Madras\nstaff corps. She knew the life of\ncamp and cantonment Intimately\nand had lived through colorful\npages of Anglo-Indian history. Her\nhusband predeceased her many years\nago.\nBorn In 1843, she wss a child during the Indian mutiny ln 18*17. She\nrecalled how she was hidden In\nchurches guarded by \"old men\"\u2014\nthe younger men being sway in v.e\nfighting illmKn, Her mem or\/ of the\nmutiny wan a succession of flights\nand   hldlnga-\nBUTCHERTERIA\nNEWS\nTuesday and Wednesday\nSPECIALS\nHigh-(.radc Meafs\nOLD  EM,I,1SH   TORK   PIES\u2014Our\n4 r* 25p\nCHOKE POHK  STEAKS\n3   Tor \t\n2SM\nCHOICE   FBESH-KHXED\nFOHI,\u2014r.nod ____A\n\u25a0nrtslit.   Each    35V\n2St\nFRF.SII   |*ORK   I.IYF.R-\n4   lhs\t\nFRI Sll PORK    F.snF.R-      DBs.\nLOIN   **<\u00bbV\nFRESH   PORK\nMD1AOI,   Ih.\nI2<\nBONEMM   MI.EH'  STEM \u2014\n\u25a04    lbs\t\nCHOiri; ROIM) STEAK\u2014\n2    Itss\t\n2S(\n3St\nsheet noun        iA_*\nPORK    ROILS mnty\nKOOTENAY LAKE TftOlT\nPIT  lb\t\n_IF.II  SPRINfl  SALMON \u2014\nrer  lb\t\nCHOICE   LINT.   COD\u2014\nPrr   II).\t\nF1IFSII    1I..LIU.T\u2014\nPer 'I\t\n.Ill I.IEIl    CHICKEN\u2014VttJ     l.lMy\nOur imn inalif.\n25*\n22<\n20?\nniONE 110\nPR S1     DELIVERY\nRUNCIMAN PLEADS\nFOR CONSIDERATION\nIN NEW COAL BILL\nMo^ than 1000 delegates, representing 1,150,000 membera of the\nEvangelical Lutheran Synod of Missouri, Ohio, snd other states, will\nassemble st Concordia college, Milwaukee, Wis., for the triennial convention from June 13 to 25. rm,\nCsrl Janiww of Bt. Johns Lutheran\nchurch will attend as delegate from\nAlberta-British Columbia synod. He\nis leaving on Wedneeday.\nReports of activities dining the\npast three yeara will be rendered\nand action taken on a large number of recommendation* from conferences, officials and Individual\ncongregations, many overtures belriK\nof  unusual interest and  importance.\nDuring the days preceding the\nconvention the presidents of the 29\ndLstrlcte of Synod, together with\nrepresentatives of the theological\nseminaries at St. Louis, Mo\u201e and\nSpringfield. 111., and the normal\nschools at River Forest. El., and\nSeward. Neb., will assemble to assign 180 candidates for the ministry\nuiid more than 100 prospective teachers In parochial schools ft field of\nlabor. This will bo the flrat time\nthat Dr. Ludwig Fuerbringer of\nConcordia seminary at St. Louis WlQ\nrepresent this, the largest Institution\nof its kind in America, as Its president.\nThe most Important mission reports will be rendered by the boards\nof home missions and church extension, whose sphere extends from\nAlaska to Mexico snd includes work\namong Gernun?., Persians, Lithuanians, Polls, Lettish. Slovenes. Italians, pan lards and Mexicans, the\nAmerican Indians, as well as arfiong\nthe deaf-mutes at tM places, aud\nthe blind. Foreign fields are In\nFr.mce. Germany, Finland, Fstho-\nnU, BD7.ll, Argentina, China and India. WorR among thi. negroes of the\nsouth snd larger and western cities\nIs carried on tosreth*r wl'h th^ affiliated Wisconsin, Norwegimi \u00abnd\nSlovak Synods.\nLONDON, May 30 <C P cablet \u2014\nThe house of commons Umlght adjourned debate on the government's\nnew   coal   bill   until   tomorrow.\nBefore adjournmrnt members\nheard Walter Runciman, president,\ncf the board of trade, beg everyone\nconnected with the coal Industry to\nexhaust scientific possibilities in the\nproduction, sale and DM of coal.\nMr. Runciman was moving e-cond\nreading of the bill which has encountered considerable popular opposition a* well ae disapproval of\nthe parliamentary Labor forces.\nSouth Slocan People\nMotor to Rossland\nI Benefits of Radio\nBroadcasting: Urged,\nUnivernity Training\nOTTAWA,    May    30\u2014The    use    of\nradio   broadcasting   to   extend    the\n. benefits of university training was\n(urged upon the 15th n^tional o^n-\ni ference of Canadian universities hen:\nj today by Professor E. A. Corbett,\n[director of extra-mural relations at\nI the University of Alberta, and con-\nj duetor of the university's radio\nj station, CKUA. This university 1ms\nI been a pioneer in the UM of the\nI radio for educational purp-scs ln\nCanada and ha* deve'opei a considerable volume of educational\nbroadcastbU which covers practically the Tic o:o provlnc.\nWith\nYour Friends\nIf you arc as much\nconcerned   in   ft\nfriendly chat with\nyour guest as you are\nin securing the finest\nfood, come to the\nGolden Gate, where\nno undur. noises or\ndin of music are more\nof disturbance than\ndlvcrtisement. Deli-\nclous food and attentive wrvlce aro adequate Inducements to\nbring folks here1 without lure of other un-\niol lei ted accompani-\nncnts.\nGolden Gate\nCafe\nThc Haven of fine Foods\nSOUTH SLOCAN. B.  C, May SO.\u2014 j\nMrs.   Eric  Anderson   accompanied   by\nher son Thomas has  returned   from\n\u2022    week's    visit   with    relatives    in\n; Portland   snd   Spokane,   making   the\n| trip   by   motor.     TLey   report   the;\n!ronds In good condition.\nj     Tha Rev. aI1[l Mr\u00ab- D. 8. Catchpole\nland  little sons, accompanied by Mrs. I\n! J.    Ewart,   Mrs.   Catchpole's   mother |\nwho ls visiting with them from Toiv '\ntyito,   were   visitors   here   on  Thurs-\nI clay,   motoring   through   from   Nelson'\nlei) route to their home in Rossland. i\nPhilip Smith, who is on  a hiking I\nexpedition    from    Winnipeg,    was    a\nvisitor   here   on   Thursday,   leaving\nlater to continue his ]ourney to his\ndestination, Vancouver,\nRichard Weeks, who has been\nspending a few months here visiting\nhis brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. F. M'-Domld, hns left\nI to spend two weeks In pentlcton\n| where he will be tho giiest of his\n| sister. Mrs. O. A. McDonald.\nI J. D. Yeatman left on Sunday for\na visit to Halcyon hot sprlnETf*. Hts\nj eon Edward motored through with\n' him and returned the following lltt,\nJohn Laurie was a visitor to KaMo\non  Emplrp day,\nMr, and Mrs. P. O. Bird snd\njrtiushters Thclma and Barbara and\nI Mr.s W. A. McCabe were motdrlets\nj to Rosslnnd recently where tliey\nj were the flMtt of Rev. and Mrs\nD.  S.  Catchpole.\nMiss 8. MeKinnon. a recent arrival from ihe Isle at Harris. Scotland, is staying with Mrs. W. W.\nBennett.\nMr. and Mrs. D- Muir were Nelson\nvisitors on Saturdav.\nSUMMER HATS\nWith Higher Crown,\nBroader Brims and\nLarge Trimmings\nThew. hats are new and very very 1932. With\nsummer weather, smart women are having a gorgeous time wearing these broad brims flopping\ndown over one eye. The larger trimmings give a\nvery gay and summer look. These hats are lovely\nbut best of all they are easy to wear\u2014a shape to\nflatter every face.\nEACH f4T0 S12.\nCyMea^hers^)\n607 <Bakcv St.\nPhone 200\n(l ^iwrSh^mw^Wi^^^ i\nPete Presfeng of    .\nTrail Passes on,\nTRAIL. B. C. May JO-Pete Pres-]\nteng, aged 31 years, died here following an Illness of several months''\nduration.\nBorn In HemncMvrgct, Norway,,\nApril 18, 1901. Mr. PreUeng came to j\nCanala ln 1927. After three years!\nspent on the prairies, he camo to,\nTrail, where he resided until his |\nd-sUi. He wis employed In the;\nsmelter department of the Consoli-i\ndated   Mining   rV   Smelting   company,\nTliere are no known relatives in\nTrafi.\nMilder Weather\nPredominates in\nNelson District\nWeather in Nelaon and vicrnity\ncontinued fslr in the period from\nSunday evening to Monday evening.\nPredominately cloudy on Monday\nmorning and clear in the afternoon,\na heavy wind sprang up In the evening bringing with lt dark atorm\ncloud*. Temperature extremes were\n68 and 49 degrees.\nWeasels have often been blamed\nfor iiilling chickens, when the real\nslayers were rats, which In tur a\nwere   being  hunted  by   the  weasels.\nAFEWAY STORE\nWITHOUT\n0\nThey came\u2014They sought\u2014They agreed that   Q\nVALUES ARE BEST AT SAFEWAY\nSPECIALS \u00a3or TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY\nMORNING\nMARKET\nFEATURES\nPure Food Market\nTUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY\nBULLETIN\nrork Steaks   *)\u00a3.<!\u2022 Fresh Pigs' Feet\n(\u2022\u201e,. mtO n ,.       ,u_\nCholc\n2 lbs. for\nChoice Veal Steaks\na lbs. for\t\nFresh Spare Ribs\nFcr Ib\t\nFresh Pork Kidneys O^C\n2 lbs. for uo\nFresh Beef Hearts\nPer lb\t\n35'\n10\"\n10'\n3 lbs. for\nFresh Pork Hocks\n3 lbs. for\t\nFresh Pork  Liver\n\u20221 lbs. for\t\nNew Laid Eggs,\nFirsts, doz\t\n25\"\n25'\n25'\n15\"\nBURNS & CO., LTD.\nniOXE   30\nWest Kootenay Butcherteria\nfor Free Delivery Phone 153\nCHOICE MILK-FED\nYEAL\nVEAL CHOPS, 2 lbs  3.'.^\nSHOULDER ROASTS VEAL\nPer lb   12e\nVEAL STEW, 3 lbs.\n;.\"\u00bb<\u2022\n1 Ih. Sliced Bacon, I Ih.      95<*\nYoung Beef Liver, both for\nLITTLE   PIG   SAUSAGE,    (Old\nCountry flavor) 2 lbs 35\u00a3\nCOTTAGE   ROLLS   (Cello   wrapped) each   35C\nKIPPERS (small and tasty)\n2 lbs  35?\nGROCERY\nDEPT.\nOrders Over $3.00\nDelivered Free\nPHONE 153\nSWANSOOWN    CAKE    FLOUR\nPer pkt  29o\nQUICK QUAKER OATS  (with\nchinaware) per pkt  2\"C\nBl'LMANS TOMATO JLICE (tall\ntins) each   lie\nSALMON, finest pink  (tall tins)\n2 for .\u2022... 23?\nCORN FLAKES (all\nkinds) 3 pkts\t\n25'\n;'RAB MEAT (for delicious salads)\nj '\u25a0_$, per tin 23c\nSafeway Stores Limited\n \u2022 IHI   >TLSON   DAILT   VEWS,   NELSON,   B.   C,   TUESDAY   MM   MAY   11,   193!\nclir :\\rrlsmt Sathj 2fruifi\nPublished every morning except Sunday by Newa Publishing Company. Limited   Nelaon, B   C.\nMember of Canadian  trsss leased  svlre newa service.\nAdvertising rata carda and A. B. C. statements of circulation\nmailed on request, or may be aeen at the offic* of any advertising\nagency recognized by the Canadian Dally Newspapers' Association.\nBy   mail   (country)\nPer year _\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nper   monlh\nBy   mall   (city),   per   year\nOutalrte Canada, pe, month\nPer   ye\u00abr   \t\nDelivered,  per   week ,\u2014\nPer year \t\nPayable In advance.\nMember  Audit Bureau ol Circulation.\n_l   ttl\n_ 8 00\n_ 13.00\n_ .75\n_ 1.50\n_ .35\n.. 13.09\nTUESDAY, MAY 31, 198!\nScience Aids Pollce\nScotland Yard, by employing new scientific equipment, intends to make the way of the transgressor still\nmore hard. Just recently the infra-red-ray camera and\nthc wireless-direction finder have been installed. They\nprovide what is described as a magic eye for the police,\nand are regarded as marvels of the camera.\nThe new camera ran take pictures in the dark or in the\nthickest fog. It can photograph distant objects invisible to the naked eyp, detect minute differences in inks\nand dyes, show up secret writing or reveal alterations\nin written or printed documents.\nThe secret of this new magic eye is to be found in the\ninfra-red-ray\u2014thc invisible \"light\" at the lower end of\nthe spectrum, which is already widely used in the invisible ray burglar alarm. The direction-finder is one of\nScotland Yard's challenges to the scientific bandit and\ninternational crook, and may prove of particular use in\ntracking down secret wireless stations or tracing the\norigin of \"suspicious\" wireless transmissions.\nScotland Yard is also experimenting with what is\ncalled the \"egg bomb.\" The bomb contaminates everything it touches on explosion. Chemicals it contains are\nof an adherent character, and once it strikes an object\ncan only be removed with the greatest difficulty. If,\nfor example, bandits rob a jewelry store and jump into\na car with the object of making a get-away, one of these\nbombs might be thrown at the car, and leave it covered\nwith such marking as to make it a distinctive object to\nany policeman who might see it.\nIn the Punjab\nWhile there are still sporadic riots in the Punjab, in\nIndia, the situation seems to be settling down fairly satisfactorily since the Government of India took strong\nmeasures last year. At that time, following a number\nof riots during which there were numerous fatalities,\nupward of 10,000 people were given sentences in Punjab\njails, though many of these were later released on promise of good behaviour.\nThe chief trouble in this part of India is the grievances\nwhich the Moslems feel they have against the Hindus.\nThe grievances are described as religious, though in India it is difficult to separate religious from social and\neconomic troubles.\nIn Kashmir.as in most of the other Indian states, the\nkilling of cows is prohibited. Cows are holy to Hindus,\nand the offence of slaughtering one may be punished\nwith seven years imprisonment, nor is the penalty nominal, and Moslems are at present in jail on long sentences\nfor the offence. Canadians can scarcely conceive of the\nintensity of Hindu sentiment concerning cows, and it is\nnot probable that the law will be abolished in the present\ngeneration.\nThe Hindu convert to Mohammedanism loses his property. Astonishing as this may seem, it is in accordance\nwth the Hindu law, which vests property in the family\nm a whole. If an individual by conversion to another religion ceases to be a member of a Hindu family, he surrenders all his possessions to the remaining members of\nthe family and departs empty-handed. There are those\nwho believe it possible to modify this law, which is bitterly resented by the Moslems, but an altercation would\nstrike at the very root of the Hindu social system, and\nwould be fiercely resisted.\nEconomic difficulties are very great. The Moslems are\nin a comparatively weak position. Tliey complain of\nharsh treatment of the Hindu police, forest officers,\ngame wardens and sericultural authorities. In Kashmir\nthe officials are recruited to a disproportionate degree\nfrom among the Hindus. These men make good police\nofficers, but unbalanced recruiting gives the favored\ncommunity a sense of superiority and leads to arrogant\nbehaviour and corruption. The British Government has\nendeavoured to ameliorate this situation to some extent\nby carefully recruiting Moslems, and a British officer\nhas been lent to the State to reorganize the force.\nPrafatbly the most real ground for trouble is the belief of the Moslems that in Kashmir they are regarded\nas a lower class. This belief moves them to indignation\nat economic and religious differences which would otherwise be endured as part, of man's normal lot. -They\nmany times outnumber the Hindus, but they hold few\nexcepting subordinate posts, and are addressed and\ntreated by Hindu officers as people of little account. Of\nthe office holders, only 11% are Moslems.\nMany improvements have been made in an economic\nway. The peasant landholders and nearly every Moslem\nfarmer are protected in thp ownership of their land.\nCooperative societies of rrpdit, purchase and sale, assist\nthem to finance their agriculture and to market their\ncrops.    Land taxes are equitably assessed.\nThe head of the State is Sir Hari Singh, a Hindu. Of\nhis ministers in the Cabinet, only one is a Moslem. Since\nthe recent troubles occurred, to thc Cabinet have been\nadded two British officers, one as an administrator, and\nthe other as a judge. It is believed that the final solution\ncan only, come through educating to higher standards\nof knowledge and of life of the subordinate Moslem majority so that from their numbers may be selected men\nwho are fitted for official duties as well as desirous\ncf performing them.\nThat historian who said the Chinese were the most\npeaceful of people would have a hard time convincing\nthe Japanese marines v.-ho were at Shanghai.\nA man Just back from South America says that things\nare so bad down there that they're offering three birds\nin the bush for one in the hand.\nA Pittsburgh professor isolated vitamin C, which\ncan't be seen with the microscope. It certainly would be\ntough on him if he mislaid it.\n\"Between You\nand Me\"\nBy \"J.B.C.\"\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_!\u25a0* TTrrrrTrnxnxrrr- \u25a0 i\nProm observations made by your*\ntruly yesterday, It seem* aa though\nthe lake water Is dropping rapldh*.\nN leed this at LakeMde park after\nstrolling out that way. By the way,\nanyone who baa not visited the\npark ain'-e the cement Improvements\nhave been made \\s mlsalng something real. The \"board\" walk la a\nsiffbt and a wonderful improvement,\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nOn  my  way  Palrv:*w-warda I met\nJack Fox, who, (win? four oarsmeu\nout for a row, remarked about rowing and other athletic events \u2014\nAbout half way out the (trag I noticed E. A. Elliott tightening a nut\non t bumper of hla car\u2014Harry\npaterann    was    looking   on\u2014Mr.   Kl-\nllott  offered   me the whole \" \"\near fnr a (rood cigar\u2014Remirk\"d to\na friend about the lovely foliage in\nFalrv.ew plots\u2014Decided we were In\nthe   htntrtt   belt,   and   carried   on\u2014\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nNoticed Sergeant Alex Stewart with\nspecial chauffeur speed down the\nBtreet\u2014And spent a fe*r minutes\ncha'ting w:th a lady who had re-\nren'Iv taken eliarge of a bunch nf\nDoukhobor kiddies who were rr'i'lv\ntaken to the const\u2014The kldrl'es\nwere good, she declared, but the\nattention of the older g:rls given\ntiie younger ores was a great help\n\u2014Met Roy Hunter ard bis good wife\nwo-king in their f-ont yard\u2014Re-\nnvrked on the prettlness of hla\nyard \u2014And he said It was a lot of\n\u2022vrrk to keep up\u2014Roy was handling\na pick and ?ho el and the lady was\nputtaiflt the lawn mower, as she\nMid. \"to redure\"\u2014Noticed some particularly pretfv blooma ln Al Foster's yard, whl^h Is a show pl'ee\nJust now\u2014Drew attention to the\nprogress being made on Bill Talbot's house on Seconu street\u2014and\nI saw i lot ef FntrvlewJtes playing\ntennis\u2014 Reaching the tourist tables,\nI remarked that they seeded to be\nfull\u2014Ottttttd right\u2014 Even some of\nthe dwellers who\nUn.ted   States   were   full\u2014\nThe above hand -a played :n the\nOhio Valley brldja tovmament held\nIn Cincinnati. At almost all tables\na final declaration of four Spades\nwas reached. In one or two Instances South started with a bid of\ntwo or three No Trumps because the\ncount Justified it and every suit\nwas stopped; but : most Mm\nSouth gave the preference to a\n3farie bid because of the strength\nof the suit and '.hat fact that for\nNo Trump there, mtm two very\nthinly stopped suits, one of them\na doubleton. When the Spade was\nselected, two was rl a rule the Initial bid, and then a final dcclara-\ntloei of four was reached with help\nfrom   I'orth.\nThe No Trump Declarers met with\nserious difficulties. A Club was l~d\nand. while Declarer could see eight\nsur* tricks, he had to ch.mce the |\nDiamond finesse, in order to make!\nthe ninth. The tiMMt lost and 1\nthe adverse Clubs were then run I\nand   game   saved. ]\nAt tho table where B. Lee Hut- [\nehlnson 01 Cincinnati was South\nplaying a Spade contract the plnv\nwas aa follows: West led a Club\nwhich South wop with the Ace.\nThree rounds of trumps followed,\nand then the adverse Club lead was\nreturned,  East  winning.  To  trick   6\n...  \u201e       After the Phalaropes we have very.,round du'ky spots, the females b*\u00a5t gMt   led   a   Diamond,   South   played\nwe-e   from   the   few species of water birds to study *'larger spots and are brighter colour- y^  Eight  and   West  won  with   the\n\"On. they're DE-LICI0US!  Do you MAKE 'EM\nYOURSELF?\"\nBIRDS OF THE KOOTENAY\nAND ARROW LAKES\nBy J. E. H. KELSO, MD, M..   OU.\nAuction and\nContract Bridae\nBy  tbe   WnrM',   I.eartlnt   Authority,\nHILTON  C. WORK\nEND PLAY\n\u2666 J 15\n\"i-l-i\n\u2022144\n\u2666 IHO-Z-3\n\u2666 JHM-2\n\u2666 MM\n\u2666 10-1-3-2\n\u2666 54\n1I6MU TtM\nI mm 5 \u2666 7.5.5\n_m_Jtl4m\n\u2666 H-l-0-7\n\u2666 1-84-2\n\u2666 MM\ntil \u2014\nThat Body of Yours\nBy   J4MH   W.   BARTON\nEAT ACCORDING TO YOUR*ror th0 hm^- ^ **\u00bb\u2022 <* indmdus\nIfl more apt to have lung trouble ths\nwl' a wide body. Now as lung al!;\nment* demand plenty of good tor>'\nlt ls unfortunate that thc etoma<\nIn this type also la crowded down\nward, thus making it more dlfflcu'\nfor food to pws from the stomach 1\nthe small Intestine.\nTo make matters still worse, tt ha\nbeen found that most of these nat\nrow Individuals have a small ln\ntestlne (where food ls absorbed In\nto the blood) a ftw feet shorter 1\nlength than in those whose bodlr\nare of normal width ana length\nThis mean* of ^ourse less surlac\nfor   absorption.\nWhat sbout ons with tht Ion\nbody?\nHe haa plenty of -00m for __'\nlungs and stomach, and hi* sma\nintestine may be slightly longr\nthan in one whose body Is of noi\nmal >m;th and width. He\nthus havo a good appetite, t goo\nwide r.'.cn3-h, plenty of absorbln\nsurface, and good iarf, lungs\nsupply oxygen to our a up thl\nfood. It Is thla type of tndlvldui\nwho It likely to overeat and thu\nmore likely to develop tho penal\nj J ties   of   overeating   kidney   troubb\nBUILD\nI have written before about the\nthre* types of build or .hyslque (a)\nthe short --rrow oody on .the long\nlegs (b) the long wide -dy on the\nshort legs, and (e) the type that haa\na normal length f\"d width of body,\non legs of  normal   length.\nYou can readily 79 that Just as\ntheae bodies differ ln -* ,pc, so will\nthe; differ in weight for thc height.\nthus showing .hnt no table of weights\ncan be made to apply to everybody.\nIn the rench army only the length\nof the body 1s ttktu, being measured\nWidth the recruit sitting down.\nAs the ..arrow body t'ves less room\nTAOHfM   BKIPCiE\nBy   Special   Bequest\nLet other   towns  of   beauty   boast\nAnd praise their own dear apot.\nBut   scenes   around   the   Tag.:uni\nbridge\nAre  not  to be lorgot.\nThere nature In her wildest form\nAxong   the   mountains   high;\nW^uld    make    one    think,    when\nLooking   up\nTheir summit  touched   the  sky. \\ diabetes,  heart disease, and harden\nlug   of   the   arteries,   and   apoplex.\nAnd ao on down to the park-\nWatched kiddles enlorlng UltMttlltl\non the play apparatus\u2014And mentioned the distinct Improvement\nmBde by the city during the winter\n\u2014 I did my best to \"Keep Off Your\nGrass\" -and walked along tbe promenade\u2014Thought lt a shame, now\nthat the walls and railings are up,\nthat the city, with lots of electricity to spare, had not put up\nlights at Intervals\u2014Noticed the former dance pavilion was now opened\nup some, and protected by wire\nmeshing\u2014Then we hit the track for\nhome\u2014Water Is pretty high, and\nsome shacks will suffer dnmage lf\nIt should come up another 10 feet\u2014\nStopped at V\/alton's boathousp and\nchatted with Mr. Vvalton, who is\ncompleting n fine new boat for\nJohn Pierre\u2014It will be about the\nprettiest and biggest pleasure craft\non the lake\u2014Noticed one boat whose\nhouse was made of B, C. veneer\u2014\nRecalled former boating days, and\nthe \"Old Crescent\"\u2014She was a tlnv\nstern-wheeler about 40 feet over all\n\u2014Reaching the old shingle mill. I\nrealized It wis now a thing of the\npast\u2014This once thriving industry is\nno more, and all thst stands Is the\nold platform upon which the mill\nstood\u2014This reminded me of t.he\nformer mill which stood a little\nmore on the city wharf side of the\npresent site\u2014It wss burned down\nyears ago, along with an engineering\nworks\u2014well do I remember the day\n\u2014 Arthur Keeler's present home was\nalso on fire that day\u2014As was the\nold laundry on Front s'reet\u2014And\nburning shingles were carried all\nover town by a high wind-Wonder\nhow I remember?- Well, f was barelegged that day. and got my \"little\nlegs\" well blistered\u2014Crossed from\nthe railway track snd found an old\nopening into the ball pirk\u2014 Recalled\ndaya when we Fneaked in to games\u2014\nAnd days when  we played  tb\u00ab game\n\u2014 Stood   around   to   watch   the   boys\nin   connection   With   these   lakea.\nThe American Avocet wtth its\nslightly recurved bill ls very rare.\nI obtained two specimens which\nls only the t.:lrd record for B. C. although this species is common Is\nthe U. S. A- and other provinces\nIn   Canada.\nFamily Scolpacide Snipe like birds\nSandpipers etc,\nWilsons Snipe Qalllnago dellcata\nIs too well known to our resident\npopulation, especially the hunting\nfraternity   to  neei   description.\nThis Is a resident breeding ln\nsmall numbers at thc southern\nboundary more conmonly northward!\nI w.mdcr how many sputsmen \u25a0\nafier they have shot a snlpo examine Ite bill, probably very few\nIndeed, but it Is wed worth doing\nso. The tip cf lhe upper mandible\nis roug.:ened, the ending of\nnumerous nerves and a short eec-\ntlcn of this upper mandible can\nbe raided from the lower by the\naction of long muscle tendons. So\nthat tlie Snipe when probing in\nmu,1 can push In its long bill closed\nand on feeling deep down a small\ngrub cr other elible mat;\u00abr can\nraise the tip of the upper mandible and nip lt against the lower\nani secure lt. In freshly killed\nspecimens the tip of the upper\nmandible can be easily raised lrom\nUie  lower.\nAfter Wilsons snipe wo hive\nacvera] Sandpipers but they are too\nuncommon on the lakes to noed\ndescription lUMQ we arrive at tre\ndiminutive Itttt Sa;itlplpcr. PLsobla\nmlnutllla the tfBtllttt of our Sandpipers only 5 an;i % of an Inch\nin length. It Is by no means uncommon on the lakes as a spring\nand   fall   migrant.\nSubfamily Mlnenlinac Tattlers and\nCurlews. I\nThe   Greater   Yellow   legs   To tan us\nmolanojenils.\nThe   Leaser   Yellow    legs    Tolwius\ned than the males, and strange to j jack- West led the Five of Hearts\nrelates the male ls the partner 1 on mnltu North played the Trey.\nwhich Incubates (at least to *|East thc Nine, and Bouth the King,\ngreat eveno and attends tho young j to trick 8. South  led  the Deuce of\nhave    photographs    showing    tho\nmale    Incubating, Tlie    nest    1*\ntho ground, tho eggs as ln all\nSandpipers a.ro normally four ln\nnumber t..ey are buffy spotted with\ndark brown. The young, an.1 adults\nIn autumn after the moult lose\nthe dark spots on the under eur-\nface.\nAll -these Sandpipers observed by\ntho dwellers on these lakes shores\nat pre.sec.) will have tlie spotted\nunder surface, for at least another\nmonth until the young are fledged\nand the old ones han> moulted.\nLength of Spotted Sandpiper seven\ntn  eight  Inches.\nFamily Oharactrldae Plover\u00bb\u2014In\n8U1 family the birds are more compact and have sh.ef\\er bills than\nthe Sandpipers. Plovers are not\ncommon as a class on the lake\ndistrict. In some tlie hind toe is\nrudimentary In others  lt ls visaing.\nOf thc Tlovera we have the Black\nbellied Squatirola squatarola cyuo-\nsurae Thayer and Bangs. Tlie name\nls njt very appropriate for it la\nonly In tlw breeding season that\nthe bird carries a black btlley and\nbreast. I think the English name\nIs fnr better viz the Grey Plover\nfor likes Ita American subspecies\nthe European 1j grey above white\nbene.:.'h and cDly puitlng on thc\nblack unrlej parts aa a nuptial\ngarb. This fine plover Is unfortunately as well as the next the\nGolden by no means common in\n:bo district.\nThe Kill Jeer Oxyechus vociferous\n(Linnaeus)\u2014This beautiful plover is\ncommon on the lakes and It also\nI .-.und nesting far up the valleys,\nSfttn quite a little dlstanco from\nmarshy ground status. Common\nsummer vlMtant to the southern\nMainland -cf B. C. Breeds regularly\nnorth   to  the southern  part  of   t.-e\npracticing,    and    then    hiked    up   to;navlpe\u00ab   are   not   uncommon   nn   lbr \u25a0 carlbo)   district. few\" remain   all\nmore travelled *eetlors of the town | kikes. The fonrer a common \u2122'* ' w]ntcr on the southern coast, dcsl-\n\u2014Calculated we had walked thre\u00ab i Krar>t throughout thc province and ; dm but not common on Vane wive\nmiles\u2014 breeding    ln    the    northern    portion   jalfUi;1_   We   have   evidence   pointing\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022 I The   later   a   common   fall   migrant   t0 thp fact that tll0 speciCJI wtmtf-\nAt   last   we've  Idrned   how   HoIIv- isc:UXe    ln    fiprlllg'    Probab:y    Drecds   ed   on   the   Arrow   Lakes   1031-2.\nwoods    pJavers   spend    their    n'ghts ILn   the   110rt\"iern   interior. Description\u2014In     the     adult     the\nwhe-_ sleep doesn't come readily- Both liav* loag yplhw k^*' \u2122* letottt Is crossed by two black bands,\nand  they Bll exper.enc- those hours f\"1   Par's are blac \u2022 and   Brey  Rnd I the   f:rehcad.   the   collar,   and   under\nNeil Hamilton Coe< to the kitchen ;w'1\"'' T1\"' le5ser ls \"lmply a flm,u* I part,-,   white,  front   of   W*Wn   black.\n..I        __. _. i_ _ _.__._.        .     . !,<\u2022        >,lll Inn r.t        ft. s.        tn-   r\\ nr.        llll . .\\.0>   \u25a0   r ' . ... - ....\nAnd  tn  the  valley  far below\nThe  river  wends  tm  way;\nWhere men with baskets, rod and\nline\nOo  there   to  fish   all   day.\nT:-.ere,    wild    flowers    gaily    wave\non  high\nTheir   petals   In  the   breeze;\nWhile   hlrds   are   singing   merrily\nSweet fongs among  the  trees.\nTbe sun   its golden  rays did  cast\nFrom   out   the  skies  so   blue;\nThat   seemed   to   dress   the   earth\nbelow\nIn  garb  of  wondrous  hue.\nTls   scenes   like   these   we   ne'er\nforget\nThough   w e   travel   far   and\nwide;\nThe  day   wc   spent   with   nature's\ncharms\nAlong   the  mountain  side.\nHearts and North won with the\nAce. North no l^d the Ten of\nHearts, putting West ln the lead\nwith the Queen. That forced West I jj^ hv\nto lead a Diamond at trick 10 up\nto South's Ace-Queen, or a Club\nwhich allowed North to ruff and\nSouth to discard the Queen of\n'lamonds.\nAt another table at which Charles\nA. Hall, slso of Cincinnati, occu-\np ed the West seat, the play proceeded alcng the above lines except that on the eighth trick West\n\"exited\" by playing the Queen of\nHearts. North winning with the\nAce; and when the Heart was returned at trick 0 East won with\nthe Ja k and was able to lead a\nDiamond which allowed West to\nwin with his King and thus defeat\nthe  contract.\nThe hand la an illustration of\nhow experts work position play In\nsnd situations. Mr. Hall, who made\nthe exit play above described, and\nhis partner, Walter S. Schmidt, were\nthe winners of the pair championship   at   that   tournar nit.\n(Mrs.)    J.   M.   Plckard\n\u20ac30   Victoria  St.\nW.   i,   ('KICKS\nFA&fWCU    TO    CANADA\nThus we find that in instutlon\nwhere tuberculous patients are be\ning cared for, that plenty of r!c\nconcentrated food, meat eggs; crean\nIs   a   big  part  of   the   treatment.\nOn the other hand, as you knon\nin thft treatment of overweight\nheart, kidney, and hardening of th\narteries, foods are t'en that ar\nbulky, but not rich In other foot\nvalue, cabbage, celery, lettuce, spin\nach, grape fruit, and aaparagu*\nMeat and eggs are given once\nday   only.\nSo, take a look at yourself; ant\nIf you belong to either the flra\nor second class mentioned above\neat   accordingly.\nIlllllllllllltlllllllllllllllltllilllilllllllll\n\"DIII.D  B.  C. PAYROLLS\"\nFarewell,   O   Canada\u2014thla   wondrous\nland\nWhom   Nature   with\u2014most   generous\nhand\nHatJ.-.    scattered    on\u2014your    glorious\nstrand\nHer   bounteous  blessings!\nHush!\nBut  while I labored\u2014I reflected\nThat though by Nature\u2014Canada has\nbe-n blessed\nYet  by man   too  oftlmcs  cursed\nWith  knavish  dealings!\nTriumphant!!\nBut  should   Nature\u2014from   her  store\nPour out  her blessings\u2014at my  door\nThere are no gifts-\u2014I value more\nThan   friendship's   blessing*!\nW OEEN\nPassmore,   B.   C.   17-5-32\nTen Years Ago\n(From  The Dolly News\nof   May   111,   1922)\nThe mercury registered the high\nyesterday   of   80   degrees.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAdvices received from the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company\nare that the Consolidated will receive shipments of custom 7-lnc ore\nfor treatment at the special plant\nat Tadanac  Just completed.\nGeorge  W.  Steele,  after nearly   17\nyears' service In the employ of the\nWood, Vallance Hardware company,\nterminated his connection with the\ncompany yesterday, when he was\npresented with a gold watch by\nManager  G.  W. McBride.\n\u2022 at\nT. R. Wilson left last night for\nVictoria, where he is going to attend the Pjclfic Northwest amateur\ngolf  tournament.\nand   makes   sandwiches\nKen  Mnynard plays hU violin, and 1 b!n   '\ner   edition   of   the   for.rer   but   the j\nrump  and  sides of   tall\u00bba  bttUttful\nMaynard pays she can ten when ;\u00bb'^htly\nMr?\nhe Is ready to come back to bed\nby the tunes he selects. When they\nerow more cheerful he is getting\nHeepy.  .\nMlllan Bond Just sits and brushes\nher  hair.\nLucille Glepsoa rearranges furniture, imtttmtt mi completely that;\nJimmy and RutttU don't moffato\ntheir own home when they arise\nthe   next  morning.\nDonald cook strolls all through\nthe    house\nWalter Byron wnrks puzzles\u2014any\nkind   he   can   Und.\nThe larger bird runs ti thirteen\nInches ln length, the s'rn'.ler only\nrenoi.os   tm   and   a -half,\nThough not common we have\nboth the Eastern and Western Solitary Sm'Jplpers. The former Trtnga\nsMltarla.  solltarlfe   Wilson.\nThe latter Trlnga ttUttrtt clnna-\nmonea (SrtWftK). T..e WttCtn la\ntuppofd to breed In the northern\nportion of the province but for\nyears the nesting habile of these\ntwo subspecies were unknown, un-\n111 one d 1 y 11 wai dlscove red th at,\nthey utilised old nest,-, ot other\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022 I birds   to   breed    in   such   as   robins\nAn evplnrer returns from the wild* thnatltt and OtfatT birds oftta wdth\nC   Northern  Australia with   word   of 1 nests s^ve distance from the griun 1\n,t:,ight. m  the greater It ls.plnkUll  tlnge,\nI'piuvne-i. I     Th>, np.t fiS  ln   alm0f,t all   plovers\na HVtfft tribe  whose  eOPTtftfttjl\nHnlttd  to grunts.  Probably he tried\nto   interview   them   berore   breakfast,\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nIf a dentist yanks the wrong\ntooth, what's It worth to the patient?\nMrs. vera AnnunzJa of Chicago\nestimated Ihe figure at 110.006, but\n\u00bb jury in Judtre Marcus Kavaniugh's\ncourt said that. |1  would lie enough.\nDr. joprpi! Tfieter was the de.\nfend ant.\n\"I pointed to the tooth I wanted\npulled.\" H\u00bb. Annunzlata testified.\n\"It was the upper left second bl-\ncucpld. He gave me gas, not when I\ncame to I found he had ptUled the\nupper  left second  molar.''\nThe choice between sterling and\ngold was forced upon the government by the virtual breakdown of gold and tho rise of sterling as a managed currency, in\ndependent of gold. Sterling seems\nto be on the winning side, offering a better hope of escape from\nthe evils of deflation^\u2014-Stan 1 ey\nBruce,   Australian   leader.\nand sandpipers Is a depression In\nt.e ground, the eggs four tn number are dull buffy spotted brown\nand black. On the eighteenth of\nthis month I exa-mined a nest on\nthe Jordan Ranch up the Inonoik-\nlln vailey, It had the four eggs and! A sea moth gnaws a garment, so\nthese as usual with plovers and ig\u2014 u\u00abm a aiunsuo? iAtts mop\nsandpiper   lay   with   their   narrow j Chrysostom.\nends pointing downwards and In- \u2014-\u2014^^^\u2014-^^\nwards. The parent like all Ihe above\nmentioned kinds of birds, shammed\ndisablement when the nest was M-\nppOtAed, showing off a plteously\nbr.-ken   wing   and   leg.\nOod overrules all mutlnuoa accidents, bringa them under His\nlaws of fate, and makes them all\nserviceable to His purpose.\u2014Marcus   Antoninus.\nPacific\nMilk\nImproved\nAgain\nFrom the Inception Paclfio\nMilk has constantly sought\nto improve. More than 20\nImportant things have been\ndiscovered and Adopted during thc lire of this good\nmilk. Mast of these have\nsimply gone Into the work\nwithout announcement except whea wa learned how\nto ret a! n ALL the natural\ncream richness.\nNOW\u2014Pacific Milk haa dls-\ncovered how to use vacuum\ncans   for  containers   \u2014  the\ngreatest Improvement atnet\nthe  cream  Increase.\nPacific Milk\n\"100% B. C. Ow.ied and Controlled'\nriant  at   Abbotsford\nItlflllJfltllllMMIIIUllllllIllllllllllllllll\nLONDON DRY CIN\n\"This advertisement is not published or displayed b>\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\"\nTwenty Years Ago\nThis   Is  tlntOtt  s.  unique   habit   fcr\n.Sandpipers.   The   only   other   Sand*\np 1 per   fbtt   I   can    reea II      at      the\nmoment    with . a   similar    habit    ls\nthe    Green    Sandpiper,    a    European\nspecies. As is well known t.he Sandpiper   family   with   these   exceptions, j nuni\"mae\"ting   of\"the    sFocan   Cen*\nas   well   as   the   Plovers  nest on   the   tral   conservative   association,\nground.\nOur   eo.nmoii\n\u25a0 (From  Thc  Ihilly  News\noT  May   11,   IMS)\nA banquet was given  at  Sllverton\nI Wednesday    In    honor    of    William j\nHunter,   MP,P.,   following   the\nCase\ntooth.\nof    a    lady    losing\nbuck\n_ That Indiana woman who's ivfag her husband for a\ndivorce because he's always cross when the Chicago Cubs\nlose doesn't know how lucky she is Suppose he were a\nBoston Red Sox fan I\nDown in California the other day\na fellow was stung over 30 times by\na swarm or bees, which, he de.\ndared, amounted to a quart of\nbees. He was st.v .g badly in every\ninstmce but one, Tlie bee in that\ncase was probably a half-pint bee.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nBetween you nnd me\u2014A lot of\nAmericans enjoyed Decoration day in\nNelson. Some of them became pretty\nwel]  decorated,\nThe Lord ls .ongsurrering. and\nof great mercy, forgiving Inqulty\nand transgression, and by no\nmeans clearing the guilty, visiting\nthe Iniquity of the faC'.-ers upon\nthe children unto the third and\nfourth    generation.\u2014Numbers    14:18.\nThe upper current of society\npresents no certain criterion by\nwhich we can Judge of the direct len In which the unier cur-\nrVSfc    flows, -Macauly.\nSandpiper and H\nis very common on the lakes In\nttM Spotted Sinriplper ftetttlt Macu-\nInrla     (U&BtWt)    a    ver\/    common\nsummer iWttnt breeding throughout the province. The adult* in\nsummer have tht upper part* greenish olive marke-i with du.*ky, under\nparts    white    marked      wit..;      large\nAVNT HET\n\"There ain't nothln' riles me\nlllte havin\" Pa act the patient\nmartyr wh:n I'm fce'ln' bad an\ntryin'   to  start a  quarrel.\"\nThe first rowlt-g club regatta of\nthe reason will be held this altc^- :\nneon.   Six   crews   will   compete.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nMiss Elsie QtiMtUt, MIm O'ea ;\nEhinrhird, M'*w Edna Noxon and |\nMiss Jean Turner were successful ln |\nthe recent music examinations at\nIt,  Joseph's convent.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nFrom early m, nlng until closing j\ntime, the office of Stephen Hoaklns. '\nmining recorder, was Besieged by ;\nnppllcants for free miners' certlfi-1\ncatcs.\n25 Years Ago\n(From  The  tnn_f  News\nof   May   Mt   (mail\nJ. C. Drewery spent yesterdsy In\nthe city on his way to Moyle, and\nlater to Cowley. Alta.\n8* B. Fowler has returned from an\nciit-nded visit in the east. Mrs\nFowler, who has been visiting In\nSeattle,  r-turned  with ! ^r husband,\nThe Laugh-a-Lot. the new. 80-\nm:le-an-hour boat, will be hunched\nat   Five-mile   t day.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJ. S. Carter has gone to Vancouver In connection with the Spokane\nInternational road.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nE. Sandllandi, formerly of Sandon but now of Calgary, is a guest\nIn   tho <lty.\nFREE JAP-A-LAC FREE\nENDURANCE HOUSE PAINT\nWITH EVERY PURCHASE of JAP-A-LAC House Paint, Floor\nEnamel or Porch and Deck Paint we will give you Free, another\ncan 1-4 as large.\nNO STRINGS OR RED TAPE\nJAP-A-LAC PROPUCTS are sold\nunder a Money Back Guarantee.\nAbsolutely pure lead and oil, and\nwill cover 400 to 450 square feet to\nthe gallon, 2 coats.\nHu.   4   Eallons  nt  the  rrpifor  price  nnd   t\u00abc*1t\u00bb\n1  gnllim free.\nBuy  2   Eiillmis  at  the  regular   price   nnd   rcceut\nVa   gallon   free. ,\nBu;   1   gallon   nt   tlie   regular   price   and   receive\n1   quart free.\nBuy   '._   gallon   at  tlie  regular  price  and  recelte\n1 pint free.\nTHIS MEANS A 25'\/\u00b0 SAVING\nNelson Hardware Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nPIIONE 21\n (ode\n= IHB   >TtiON   DAILT   NITTS.   KELSON.   B.   C.   TCI. DAT   MORNINO   MAY   11.   1532'\nrsnt _rxs\nNational\nBaseball\nNATIONAL   LEAONl\nnlosgo   .    ..,\nW\n. \u2014\nIs\nia\nis\nis\nW\n10\n13\n11\nIS\nPet.\n.SIS\n\u2022Ml\nJill\n.488\n.487\n.491\n.447\n.491\nlttsbuiyh\t\n:. Loul. ______\n 31\nis\n- It\n11\nhil.aelphu   , -\n,. 19.\nT.   LOUIS   0-8\nIIICACO   4-6\nj CHICAGO, May 80\u2014Rogere Horo*-\ny'a   bat  led  th*  Chicago   Cub*   to\n8  to 3  victory over  St. Loul*  !n\nlie seoond game of today'* double-\neader,   after   tihe   world   champion*\nmistreated    -their    old    mate,\nurlel\u00abh Grimes, to win the opener,\nto   4.\nTn* HorjiabT warclub craetad Tex\narleton for a home run and a\n\u2022ouble, th* former blow balng the\nirst clube' aoore, and the latter\nParting a aeventh Inning drlv* that\netted two runa and put th* Oubs\n\u2022nfely in  front.\nGrlmee sailed nlon* in great\nhap* until the seventh Inning of\nhe opener, hut th* Card* opened\nip then and before th* aide oould\n\u25a0* retired five run* had ecered and\nlie bal] game wa.-, gone, Douglas by\ntottomley und Collin* helped In thc\nemoval   of  Grimes.\nFlrat  game:\nLoula ,\u2014 ii...   6     8   0\n*, Mcaao  -    4    13    3\nDerringer, Stout. Llndaey and Wll-\non; Grimes, May, Tinning and\n[artnett.\n6eoond game.\n\u25a0*t.  Loula   \u2014...._.   3     T\nCkkoago     - 8   U   0\nCarle ton, Sherdel and Mancuao.\n\u25a0nah,  Root  and   Herasley,   Hartnett.\nUROOKLYN 13-5\nHILAI-KLPHIA   4-5\nBROOKLYN, M\u00bby 30\u2014 Witeon\nlark and Van Mui_g0 each pitched\nit* fifth straight victory a* the\ntodgera swept today'* holiday bill'\nnth the phlllle*. 13 to 4 and 5\no 8. Each allowed only four hit*,\nnd Mungo struck out 12 batters\n:i the \u2022lent Inning* he worked of\nhe nightcap.\nThe first victory wa* an eeay one,\nespit* th* fact th* Dodgers made\neven error* behind Clark, but it\n\"quired a four-ma rails tn the\ni.it of the eight to pull out the\necond tilt. Klein, with a atngle and\nrlple, batted, in all the runs off\nfungo.\nFirst n*m*i\nPhiladelphia    _. ...\u2014\u2122.   4     4   3\n.rooklyn _,..._,.   13    10   7\nme,   F^0\n3T5MES\nni ore man\n\u25a0'^.^\\m.'i a<_____\nBstly  And  V.   Davis;   Clark  and\nPltilnlch.\nSecond1 gara\u00ab:\nPhllsxWlphla    _ -.    S   A   1\nBrooklyn \\   t   11   1\nHoyt, Mungo and Lop\u00ab.\nH.   Elliott,   Dengs   snd   McCurdy;\nNEW YORK  6-4\nBOSTON 1-J\nBOOTON, May SO\u2014Forty thousand\nf.ru, pulling for the Brsvrs to fat.\nHooks and Slides\nBy William Broucher\nlasebaH attendance* have been good*\nluring the flrat few weeks of the\nampolgn. But a steady falling off\n.a receipts haa b\u00abn shown in nearly\nvery major league park.\nBefor* the summer ls over, there\nis reason to believe, baseball admu-\nion price* must be reduced. The\nractloo followed In many of the\n\u25a0\u25a0arks, of converting ordinary grand-\ntand aeait\u00ab into reserved seats, with\nn added 'tow, for important game*\nn Saturdays, Sunday and holidays,\nlay find tarn fans cold.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nHE BROOKLYN PLAN\nTake the caae la Brooklyn, where\nI appears to b* th* evident intent\n\u2022f th* management to make th*\nan* pay for grandstand enlarge-\nnant* and P*>T back that. 940.000\nhipped to St. Kmis for Hack Wilson\n-and pay through tho nose, at\nhat.\nTh* management has designated\neven additional rows of reserved\neat* in th\u00a3 lower section of the old\nrandstand which heretofore *old for\n1. VMM mm* stretch from home\n<late both along first and third base\ni nes.\nThere are from 4000 to 8000 seats\nn this newly reserved section. On\n)ig day* tb*** will go for 41.60,\nvhloh l* 60 cent* over the previous\nop price. With all of these seats\nMed, even a sports writer's mathe-\nnatlc* will yield the fact that 42250\ni day more 1* being coaxed out of\nh* Brooklyn fans' pockets.\n\u2022 \u2022   i\nPREMIUM ON CROWD\nOn. Brooklyn's opening day recently, 28,000 fans filled th* park, and\n>f course the new reserved section\n-ras Jammed. At the second game,\n'.he wcaUher waa bad and but 6800\nuirned out for the contest. The\nieata ln question wer* priced at |1\n\u25a0Jiwt day. Burt in the third and\nourtfh games, when crowd* of 20,000\n,and 18,000 paid their way in, the\nold 50 oents \"squeeze play\" was on\nagain.\nFor big games, with Important\ndrawing cards such as th* Olants, lt\nappears the 00 cent* more will be\ncharged.\nThis ewltch in price* is hardly\njustified, even ttiough the rabid\nBrooklyn fan prefers to mlts meals\nrather than hall games. The Brook\nlyn club has more reserved seata\nthan any other club in the two\nmajor leagues, even the Yankee sta\ndlum which seat* 85,000,\nBefore the grandstand enlargements\nwar* made at Ebbets Field, there\nwere * 31000 bleacher seat*. The\ncharge for these seats wa* 50 centa,\nBut now there are only 287 bleacher\nseat* and tihey ar* reserved for chll\ndren. Adult* are denied admittance\nto the only available bleachers.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nA REMOTE GRANDSTAND\nDirectly above the miniature\nbleacher* In Brooklyn Is a tier of 41\n\"grandstand\" *!at*. There are seats\nfor about 2000 people there. Since\nthesa *e\u00abt* are far enough away from\nhorn* plate to be known aa \"bleachers,\" tlie Flatbush fans are demanding that they be thrown open to the\npublic- at a 60-cent charge.\nThe practice of making row upon\nww of ordinary grandstand seats into \"reaerved seats\" for big games\nwlBh an extra charge ls not confined\nto Brooklyn. Et Is an almost universal practice on Saturdays and\nSundays ln cities where the league\nchtwnplon* are playing or where natural rival* meet on the diamond.\nThe fan* who have done pretty\nwell by the major league clubs during prosperous time* ought to bet\nsome kind of a break ln these daya\nwhen a half buck is not a tip but\nwill buy food and a few other things\nmore necessary than seats ln a ball\npark.\nMACD0NALDS\nFine Cut\nh ZIG-ZAG\nDdDers<\njttached\nten their standing, bad * painful\nMemorial day a* they watched th*\nNew York Giants tak* a pair from\nthe home boys S to 3 and 4 to 2,\nthe seoond ln 10 Inning*.\nCarl Hubbell'* tight pitching and\nMel OH* home run with two on\nfeatured the opening tusael. Sam\nGibson had the Braves shut out ln\nth* nightcap until two were out in\nth* ninth, When Randy Moore de\nllvered * pinch double and \"Plnkcy1\nHargrav* hit a home run to tie the\ncount.\nFirst   game:\nNew York    t   13   1\nBoston    2    8   1\nHubbell and Hogan; Zachary, Cunningham and  Spohrer.\nSecond gam*.\nNew York     4   13   1\nBoston ...   2     7   2\nGibson, Bell and Hogan; Bette,\nCantwell   and   Hargrave.\nCINCINNATI 4-2\nPITTSBURGH   2-5\nPITTSBURGH, May 30\u2014Th* PI-\nrales and Cincinnati Reds split a\nholiday double-header today, Pittsburgh winning the afternoon game,\n5 to 2. alter dropping the morning\nencounter, 4 lo 2.\nBill Swift heldv a tight rein in\nMM second <r>ntest, letting the\nReds down witu five scattered hit*,\nRlxey   noa-d   out   Harris   ln   the\nmorning  game.\n'  First  game:\nCincinnati        4   11   1\nPittsburgh        8     6   2\nF_lxev and Lombardi; Harris, Mclnc\nand Grace.\nCincinnati    _.    8     6   3\nPittsburgh     6   12   0\nBenton. Ogden and Lombardi;\nSwift and Grace.\nU.S. MAKES CLEAN\nSWEEP OF TENNIS\nIN AMERICAN ZONE\nPHILADELPHIA, May 30\u2014 The\nUnited State* made a clean sweep\nof its northern American rone final\noi QMls cup tennis play by winning\nthe remaining iwo singles events\ntoday.\nFrank X. ShleMr, In brilliant\nform, turned back\" Jack Crawford,\nthe antipodean ace, in a duel that\nwent the full five \u00bbet\u00bb. Then H.\nEllsworth Vines defeated Harry Hop-\nman, dropping only one set on tlie\nway and a  ZO-ga-me  affair.\nSh lelds had bested Hopman in\ntbe slnglea Friday and Vines had\nconquered Crawford. When John Van\nRyn and Wilmer Alllaon triumphed\nover Crawford and Hopman at doubles Saturday lt placed today's events\nin the light of exhibitions so far as\nany bearing on the outcome of the\ntie   was   concerned.\nHopman appeared off form whm\nShlcfiy went throuRh him to straight\nsets Friday but he drew frequent\napplause from thc gallery of 3000\nby a turn-out of form today, although Vines defeated him 6-2,\n9-11. 6-4, 6-4.\nAUSTRALIAN\nCHANGE*   PACES\nThe Australian overcame his previous error strvak and used a smart\nchange of pac* against Vine*, alternating ground strokes from deep\ncourt and deadly volli*s .trtm the\nmiddle. It waa only when Vines\nfound his forehand, which earlier\nhad beentdropplng into th* net. that\nHopman  capitulated.\nHopman had excellent control over\na series of dribbling drop shots\nthat barely trickled over the net.\nThey were clean placemen's for th\u00ab\nmost part, witih Vlnea nearly breaking hi* back trying to g?t up for\nthem,\nTh* Shields-Crawford encounter,\nwhich resulted 6-4. 7-5, 4-6, 3-6.\n9~t, sUvUvj off brilliantly with both\nmea  in   tc-p form.\nHIS   rOLKS   HAVE   SCRATCH\nBiasing Ben Sasbmon, who *hat\ntered th* record for the quarter-mil*\nthe other day, Is a frall-looklng chap\nwtr.o wear* glasse*. tn the son ol\nweeJthy parents who ih* ax the\nexclusive San, Francisco residential\nsuburb of Woodsld*, and began to\nrun, just for the fun of it, in 1920.\nwhen he wa* a senior at Burllngame\nhigh school.\nHome   Forces   Eliminate\nFavored   Stars;   Defending Champ Good\n6AUNTON. England., May 30\u2014Rising to greater heights than even the\nmoat hopeful had anticipated. Great\nBritain'* women golfers turned back\na wave of Invaders in the first round\nof match play in the British championship today, eliminating four of\nth* seven United States qualifier*\nand  all   five  French contestants.\nThe brilliant triumph of the home\nforces saw the elimination of such\nfavored ntar\u00bb a* Maureen Arcutt,\nof Englewood, N. J. who won the\nqualifying medal, Helen Hicks, the\nUnited States title holder, and Mra.\nRene Lacoste, who won the championship back In 1927. In comparison Britain's only major loss was\nDiana Flshwlck, winner of the title\nIn 1930. She was defeated by the\nAustralian champion, Susie Tolhurat,\non   th*   19th  green.\nEnid Wilwn, defending champion,\nserved notice she Is at the lop of\ngame by overwhelming Lulu\nEsmund, also of England, by a 7\nand Q e^unt. After clinching the\nmatch Miss Wilson played out the\nround In a sparkling 72,\nTWO  AMERICAN*  WIN\nTwo Americana, Glenna Collett\nVare and Virginia Van Wie, also\nwon their matches by decisive margins, wihil* Mrs. Ieona Pressler\nCheney. \u00a9; IjOj. Angeles, squeezed\nthrough narrowly. Miss Van Wie\ncrushed J**n McCulloch, Scottish\nchampion, 8 and 6, whll* Mra. Vare\nroutcit Mrs. George Coats, of Troon,\n7 and 6. Mrs. Cheney waa carried to\nthe 10 Ua green before she succeeded\nln downing Doris Chambers, Brltlah\nchampion   in   1823.\nMls^ Orcutt bowed before the\nsteady stroking of a comparatively\nunknown, Jean Hamilton, who completed her triumph on t^e 17th\ngreen  by a 2 and   1 margin.\nMlas Hicks played well enough to\nwin mo3t matches, but she caught\nD:t1s Park wlvn the Scottish player\nwas approaching perfectly snd putting with uncanny accuracy.\nAmerican\nBaseball\nAMERICAN   UAOUE\nW L\nNew York -   _. B6 11\nDetroit   24 16\nWashington \u2014..\u2014._\u00bb M 17\nPhiladelphia \u201e._. 23 17\nCleveland _  \u201e 24 19\nSt. Louis  _. 31 22\nChicago   _ ..._ 14 27\nBoston  \u201e  _.   7 32\nBig League\nBASEBALL\nTagging Runners\nCLEVELAND   1'MS\nCHICAGO   6-11\n\u2022 CLEVELAND, May 30\u2014A flat fight\nbetween George Morlarty, American\nleague umpire, and four membera\nof th* Chicago team followed Cleveland's victory ln both games of a\ndoubleheader over th* Whit* Sox\ntoday.\nMorlarty hrok* hia hand in knocking out Milt Gaston, pitcher, and\nthen was floored, Cleveland players\nsaid, tn tfl:* meles which Lou Fon-\nscca, manager, Charley Berry, catcher\nand  Frank  Grube,  catchi?r.\nCleveland players aald the argument started in the dressing room a*\na result of Morlarty calling * ball\nJust befor? Averill tripled, breaking\nup the ball game, and leading to\nCleveland's 12 to 11 victory tn th*\nsecond game. Cleveland won the\nfirst,   12   to   6.\nThe Indians charged that Berry\nchallenged Morlarty to fight while\nother Sox players gathered around.\nMorlarty answered he would fight\nthen all one after another.\nGaston stepped up, the Indians\nsaid, saying, \"You might \u2022\u2022 well\nstart with me.\" Morlarty *tnick j\nhim twice, breaking his hand on;\nthe pitcher'* Jaw and flooring Gaa-\nton.\nThe Cleveland players rescued Morlarty  and  restored  order.\nMorlarty, in a hospital, tonight j\nrefused to discuss the. fight, whtle\nFonsec* rharged that the umpire\n'\u2022dellbentely brought or. the dispute by sneering at th\u00ab Chicago\nplayers all day,\"\nFonaeca insisted Morlarty Issued\nthe first challenge to fight, although\nthe Cleveland players, tn a report\nto General Manager Billy Evans.\n*ald Berry first offered to fight, and\nGuston struck th* first blow.\nFirst game:\nChicago ....',    6     7   3\nCleveland    10   11   fl\nJones. Thomas and Grube, Connally and Myatt.\nSecond game;\nChicago     U   ll    1\nCleveland      12   16   J\nC*47W\u00a3,x: IZGGtNG Runnc*\nWfTH BMZ tfM\/fi MAVttm\nS4U tfCK\u00a3C> Our OF 6RA5&.\n,4 A-?<*t\/*\/?,,2^\u2014\nRecord Crowd Sees Canadian Negro Outpoint\nMan-Mountain\nINTERNATIONAL   BASEBALL\nNewark   9-3,   JtfWy   City   4-7,\nBaltimore   13-4.  Pending  4-0.\nToronto    1-2,   Buffalo    18-26.\nMontreal   4-5,   Rochester  2-8-\nBruce Campbell In Right Field:\nWho Is That Blrdl\nLONDON. May SO  <CP \u00a9able..\u2014\nLarry   (iatns,   loronto   negro,   who\nla Iip\u00bb.> wt*ij;lil champion uf the\nBritish Empire, tonight outpointed\nPrlmo (anient, Kalian giant. In\na 10-round boxing bout at White\nCity  atartlum,\nA crowd of 70.000 aaw the fight\nand set an all-time record for\nllrltl\u00bb.h attendance st ft flallo duel.\nSee nes of wild rxettement followed\nReferee Harts decision. Oaln*' wif*\nthrtw her arms around her dusi:7\nhushand's neck as aoon a* his t*c-\nj onds forced % way through tli*\ncheering throng that milled about\nth* rir.g. Tiie Canadian and his second* had to fight their way through\nthe crowd to the dressing room.\nThousands of person* shook hi*\nhand and slapp\u00abd him cm th* back.\ndelighted that st last ft Britljri\nfighter had beaten the Italian man-\nmounta.n, a no h',_h\u00bbrto had things\nhis own way her*.\nEIGHT! A\nBRILLIANT   BA\/TL1\nGums fn\\rht ft brilliant sad oou-\nrageous bactl* agninat * man 60\npounds heavier thSn htiu*elf, owning through tn good ihap* and a\nheavy winner on point*. ,\nCARNERA    1>ES   ELBOffH\nBoth boxers started off th* bout\ncautiously, testing \u00ab\u00abh other with\nshort jabs. At the cloa* of th* **c-\nnnd   round   Oaln*   crashed   a   per\nil)   AL DEMAREE\nNo less an authority than John J.\nMcGraw   advises   catchers   to   never I fectiy   timed   rlgt.it   to   *h*   Italian*\nattempt  to tag  witp   the   ball   held j J,BW; Jock,11n8wlltm\u201eb*c^_\u00b0? ^J?**1.8\ntn   ive   bare  hand  alone,   base-run\u25a0\nners   coming   into   the   plate.\nMany -times, It Is. of course impossible to held tlie hali In, both\nthe bare and glave h\u00abnd to mike\n\u25a0th* tag, but whenever lt can be\ndone, use both hands.\nWhenever you tag with the bare\nhand alone, you lay fMMU open\nto having the ball kicked out of\nyour hand, by a olever and unscrupulous baser un ner. But by blocking   tlie   pla.e  and   puling   MM   ball\nGregory, Eraster, McKain, Caraway,  on  him  with both hands,  this  pos-\nLyons and  Berry;   Hlldebnuid,  Pear-  slblllty  i* al.nobt, entirely eliminated.\nson, Jablonowskl, Fenell and Sewell\nBRLCE  DOUGLAS   CAMPBELL\nNEW YORK, May 30.\u2014you can take it or not from Bill Ki liefer,\nmansger d the St. Louts Browns, that at least one of the Campbells is\ncoming, O Ho, O Ho, and he's jueUy certain about that.\nThe Campbell in question Is Brnce Douglas Campbell of the Chicago\nclan by that name, and he was thrown In for good measure In the deal\nthat *ent Bump Hadley to St. Louia and brought IM Kress to tho White\nSox.\nIn this connection, Bill Killpfer thinks \"good measure\" Is a very appro-\nprist* term, because though Hadley was the man Killefer wanted, Campbell\nthus far has been  tho  better part or  the  bargain.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTrader Fnnscca's estimate of the young Scotchman nuv have been hastily\nformed. The Trader confided to this Inquiring reporter, shortly after\nthe deal had been made, that Campbell sure could kiss that old ajiplfj but\nthat he never ln all his life would he an outfielder.\nSince going to the Browns, Campbr'U has born* out the Trader's opinion\nof his hitting ability, and gone far toward donylug the aspersion cast\nupon  his fly-snajrglng propensities.\nKillcfer calls him the find of the season. And while it is possible that\nere torrid summer has waxed and w;u.ed in St. Louis young Mr. Campbell\nmay catch a fly ball upon his Scotch conk, Just take a look at Babe\nHerman over in Cincinnati \u201e_\\v__\\ reflect that nii.s\u00ab.in| a fly hall now and\nthen may not bo cause -for shooting down a young man, after all.\n\u2022 \u2022    9\nWhen Mr. Klllerer announced his line-up with Campbell In right field,\nthe press box launched a serious research movement to find out who\nthat bird was, and discovered that:\nBruce. Douglas Campbell t\u00ab a decidedly Scottish name\nBruce Douglas Campbell waa a aindlofc ball player in Chicago in 1930,\nand resided at U040 South Vernon Avenue, Chicago, 111,\nBruce Douglas Campbell was signed as a free agent by Donle* Bush. play**d\nIn five games for the Whit* Sox in September, iftr.0, and was able to bat\nduring those contests only a feeble .300. probably because he was unfamiliar with his new surroundings.\nBruce Douglas Campbell was inflicted on Blonmlngton, Ul., for tutelage.\nbut was *ent b*ick promptly to the White Sox benur.e people in tlr?\nThree-Eye League towns were walking right into the ball parks through\nthe holes Cnmybell batted into the lances.\nBruce Douglas Campbell wss optioned to Little Rock last year, where\nbecause of  the climate   he   mta able  to  bit  only   ,^81\nThat's the story thu* far.   Now go on with tiie box scores.\nDETROIT    17-4\nST.   LOI IS   9-0\nm\\ l\/3Uia, May _n\u2014Detroit Tigers\nwent into second place in the America \\i league by defeating St. Louis\nBrowns B both gain?s on a double-\nheader today, taking the first game\nby a score of 17 to 9 and the\nsecond 4 to 0.\nThe Tigers got 21 ants off three\nSt, Louis pitchers in the first game,\nthree of them home runs by MM,\nOe-l.r1n?er and Hayworth. In rh?\n\u2022MOM |UMi BrldgeB won a pitchers'\nduel over Hcbert.\nFirst gsme:\nDetroit    :.  17   31   ft\nSt.   Loul*       9    12    3\nWhltehlll,   Herring   and   Hayworih;\nGray.   Cooney,   polll   and   Ferrell,\n\u2022Second game;\nDetroit        4     fl    2\nSt;   _\/ml\u00bb     o\nBridges    and    SmS.    Hpbert\nBengough.\nIn the clinches Camera was able to\nget in blows to Gains' body, but\nthey did no damage. The crowd booed and jeered th* Italian in th*\nfilth for using hi* elbow*, apd th*\nreferee warned him twice, flrat for\nhitting with in open glov* and\nbecocrt for  using his *lbow*.\nGains drew round after round of\napplause from the crowd, when bt\nducked a left that went ov*r hi*\nhead in the sixth and then rushed\nhnmmerlng lefts and rights to\nthe body as Camera tried to pu^\nover another left to the head, poising hliwelj, Gaina sent two trrrlllo\nrights to Prlmo's ]aw. That caused\nin* giant to look hurt and aurpribed.\nGAINS    PARRIES\nEVBBTTHtKa\nIn the seventh,  earner*, tried  :n\nput  across   the   finishing   blow,   bu1.\nGam*   warded    off   earner*\"*    rigb'j\nand  then shot  hi* own  left to  the\nbody  and   right   to  the   face.   Prim\"\nswung  larry  off  the  eanva* *\u00a9T*r*l\ntimet,    in    th*   elgnUi    round,    but\nGains parried everything Prlmo sen'*\nover. Gains shot * perfect right t);:*'-\nsnapped   Camera's   head   back.\nCamera again tried to put over a\n\u25a0 - \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0I    -   _._ \u00bb-.--_-I telling Wow in tho tenth and nearlv\nffHCINP  TPflDUVl^\u2122   Larry   with  . right swing  to\nUULllnU   lI\\Urni   \u2022&\u2022   J\"w.   but   mt   Canadian   cam*\nI back   with   *  two-fisted   attack   thi1.\n  .eeut  tbe  si>ecrHtors  wild.\nTRAIL, B 0. May ,10\u2014 Eugene In his dressing room the MfTC\nPhilllpi cup will remain h-^re for a smoking * fat cigar, said, \"Carner.\nyr.-ir. Tbe trophy, pfMtttM tor an-!r,lfl n\"t hurt IM. I was surprise-\nmial   competition   Mtw**a  ttmpitrfmt \u00bbh*B   I   Mat   ou   pihng    up   point\nAl Demaree has prepared an Illustrated leaflet on \"Baseball fcignt>\"\nwhich he will gladly send to any\nreader requeuing It. Address Al\nDenmree in cure of this paper and\nbe sure I* t*mtmm a sclf-ailrires\/cd\nstamped  envelope.\nKIMiMYFMS\nTO LIFT PHILLIPS\nimuDurau u*a\nWAlKUIQtOli 2-6\nPHILADELPHIA,     May    30-In     a\nhome run mood, Philadelphia Athletics crashed through to two victories over the Washington Seuatoa\nin   Vbt  holiday  bill   today.\nThe Mackmen won the morn 1 n g\ngame by in to 3 and eam\u00bb back tn I\nthe afternoon to win nn up-hill j\nderision 8 to 6.\nThe Athletics htt five home runs\nIn swamplnjt Flrp Marberry ln the j\nmorning affair and giving Lefty j\nGrove his seventh straight win or I\neight In all. A! Simmons and Jimmy;\nDykes each hit twice for the circuit j\nIn this fray and Ed Coleman. Coast :\nleague rookie, collided for the other, j\nJimmy Foxx's 17th home run of,\nthe season with two on bases in j\nth* seventh inning off Crowder wip.\ned out the Senators' f.-3 lead In thc '\nafternoon game. Ossic Bluege and\nHeinle Manush also hit for the\ncircuit   in   thla   contest.\nFirst   game;\nWASHINGTON     2     6ft\nPhiladelphia     13   14\n. 1 lot the consolidated Mining a- Smelt-j ['!Hl MMWI landed a bMTf punch\nan* lug OOinpany fct Trail ami Kimberlrv.  OWMtt- *1 BttMS, but doer. nn|  fcfiov\nw** won  by -the Trail gOlf\u00bbri  bv an ! hnTV   t0   I,nrt   K   sood   punch\"\noverwhelming majorliv on f,.e oourto      MWT4* Hart said it was a rteter.\nof     ihe    jWaS-Trall     O-lf    and;0\/  eM,criervo  and   boxing  sKili   ort\nCountry   dUb.   Vm   ftftT,   firpt   time! f\",rrn';rn-\nthe    cup    wai    in   competition,    fe*      prlnrm   \u00ab\u00a3B\u00abWd   surprised   at    Hv\nKimbericv   nru   won    It   oa    their  (lerj*lnV'\"0*' rio * fWl* l^P'!'' ''\nhome  course. It*1'   \"Wn%   ?   a   \u25a0\u25a0*  f]*ht?   **\u25a0   *\nElghteeu-hole match's were played.\none   point   being  given   for   tiie   first\nnine,   another   for   the  i-cc.md   nine,\nand   on,?   for  the net.  Half   a   point\nwas given tat a. draw. Each Tf*U man\n\u2022ojojtd   It\u2014tout  not,  the  dcrisu<\nI won  the  last,  three rounds.   On\n,\" j think   so.   V-vc   I   wrm.   Threi*   \\\n' even.   How   do   I   lose,   then?\"\n! NO    IOI\"L   Wl____\nTbe   bout   was   fought   under\nm_mt_T_n!m*m \">e \"\" m\\mft\u00ab**- tT-mTfSi K3T\u00ab..\nFlayers   wrre   ma_ched   as   fallows\nKlmberley   men   being   nai.-cl   first:\nD. J. S. Hat.__.ird M P. F. Mclntyre.\nE. N:igle  vs  H.  c:.   Davidson.\nR   Henderson   vs   p,   w   |nm)*1t\nJ. GiegTifr.L n n   G.  Anderson.\nti. Sanderson vs w. P   Dunbar,\nCapt. T, j Bride  vs T   A.  Rice.\nte. Oray vi t. w Ungfty,\nJ.  OTs'eil  n  I.  Jaiulrell.\nboxing commission, both mean weai\nIng   siiecial    body   protectors   Iff*In*I\nlow   blows.    It   was   the    first   tin*\nthis   had   been   done   in   Englan:!.\nThe men nlfo wore wti.io git***\nso thai those in the fuithct tMta\nfrom tn* nnr could per mah bto*\ncMJxly.\nDan McCorkindale, South Afrlc.u.\nchanipliin whom Qains defeated fo.\n'lie    ch;im.>lot.j.hlp    of    the    British\nNorman-Bur.lctt   ncconipnnied   the: Empire,   scored    a    technical   knock\nj victors as  their  minuter. (out,   over   Maurice    Gnselle.    ItMth\n  j heavyweight  clnunplnn. In  the thirti\n| CATOIIS    HIN    ON     THACR round   of   one   of   the   Preliminaries\n|     Tu   the   tnok  MM   Of   19M   Wl \u2014\t\n]*30   and   '*'U   University   of   Florida;    Alfred  shrubb.  who  was   crackin.\nMarberry    and    Spencer,      Maple,\nGrove  and  Cochrane.\nSecond game:\nWashington      6     \u2022   ft!\nPhiladelphia         8\nQrowder,    Browne   and\nEarnshaw   and   Cochrane.\nI von every annual meet, on the sched- , records before mnny of our modern,\ni uie. The ace of the Mt team is' ithlrtlc heroes hart br-en born, la\n| J jo Hull, a leader in nation.il de- j coaching the Oxford uniwrslty track\ncathlon    competition. I tram.\nifl  oj Insist on \"GRANT'S BtST PROCURABLE\"\u2014The Original\n!'\" r' \u25a0 i For Sale at Vendor* or direct from \"M\u00bbil Order\nDept.\"  Liquor Omtrol  Board* Victoria,  B.C.\nNEW   YORK   7-1S\nBOSTON   .1-1\nNETV YORK. MM 30\u2014 The Tapk?es\nwalloped the Boston Red Sox twice\ntoday, 7 to 5 and || to 3. and\nIncreased their lead to five full\ngames over the Washington Senators.\nAlthough he was hit hard, Herb\npennocit lasted to win his third victory of the year in the first game.\nIn the nightcap the Yankees pounded four Red &ox curvers for 15 hits\nand scored In every inning but the\nsixth.\nFirst game;\nBoston    1   18ft\nNew   York.        7    12    1\nLlsenbee, Moore. MacFivden and\nConnolly,   peunock and Cickey.\nSecond game:\nBoston    3    Ii\nNew   York      13    15    ft\nRussell. KUne. HWilliM McLaughlin and Tate; Johnson and Dickey,\nJorgens.\nPaul    Hunden.   manager   of   the i\nFalcons,   and   pitcher  of   thit   team,\nstates that   It  was  not   the Falcon*;\nwho   placed   tlftMl I   Shamrocks   at\nTrafalgar grounds Siuiday attemoon.\nHe  state.',  that   UM  Shamrocks   arrived    unexpectedly    \u00a7nd    that    the\nboys on the grounds, including himself  aftd   two  other   members  of   the\nFalcon   team,   Phil   Kunta   and   H.\nElliot,  pirVed   up  a   team  to ftBoa\nmodal e    t-ini     The    pick-up    team\nlott   to   t-ho  Shamiocks   22-12.\n'i his idverti\nControl\npment is not published or displayed hy the Liquor\n3o3rd or the Government p\u00a3 British Columbia.\n !im welsw daily snrs. jteiwiw, \u00bb. e, jtwbat mosWwo  mat n. jNta\n|23 WHAT YOU WANT @MSJJ\/iM\nPOOLEY DENIES\nATTEMPT STOP\nLIQU0RMAK1NG\nMcKenzie Touches on  Doukhobor Problem at Conservative Meeting\nMi\u00bbs Mary Campbell\nIKDK*   IO  CLASSIFIED   Jl>8\nA.I.M-   H..MLD (11)\nI       II           -,     I   O.         I        ,     ; A,'l\"Mt'H1LI.,S    IOH   HIRE (41)\nIs Hospital (iraduatej\u00bb'ro.noBiLLs iub \"ale nm\nr                                              Hit*. (36)\n                     'i.iuihs (i)\nHUH.., I.Jt'NI H... rOR    RIM ((.ll\nha. been i^.-i \"I U,\u00ab .rsdusuo,,   li^i^iVtM,!'\/,\"   .vTv-Lb* !M!\nof    Miw   Mfuy   Campbell    of    rem\"-   __l_M\\f>,s   OITOHttMllts ..Mil\nfrom   Lhe   Ro.**!   Cc\u00abIuii'blin   Hoepi'al   *-ANAK1I *   H>R   SALE tBj\nat  Ne*-   Wentminver   were shs  lid*   \u00bb}]\u00bb A^U Ihh.k IOR MLR i^) ,\nb~n   m   irslmnit   for   -he   past   thin- j uKt\u00abs.MAKlio         n*MED \u00ab${ I\n\u25a0 earn     Miw    Campl^ll    won    h1trlKJ\"    i \\rm   and *1>MRT   rHODIICE (-i\u00bb) I\nFERN IK,    B\nWANT AND CLASBIT1ED\nANW.HIIMMi\nOns Insertiun   10  centa a line\ntil Insertions 40 cents a line\nOne  month  41.30  a line\nMinimum  two  lines\nBirth   notices   free   of  charge\nDeaths     marriages    and    cards    of\nthank*    20   centa   p*r   line\nFuneral flowers  is ct-nts per line\nNpws   of    ths   Day   Items   70   cents\nper  line.\nNO EXIRA COST IF CHARGE.*\nOOrFTTVAY, May 30\u2014Th*1 T. I?,\npa Hullo hsd misrepresented f^r's\nroncerrlng the liquor bmrd and Hie\n\u25a0abolition or the grand Jury was\nstated b\/ Attorney-Oeneral Pooley\nin addressing a meeting here Friday,\niheld under the auspices of t-h**\nComox Central Conservative MM-\ntnmmmM.\ninark* and obtained\nWaliirr JT*d\u00bbl given\nValley   Medical   Astvx-la'lon.\nM!m OUts N^grove ot Cranbrook\nia nmfmm$ & Frmie wtth Mrs. T\nUphill   Mr   sunt.\nOordon cummings arrived iv-m*\nfrom *he rowt, .\u25a0here he naa b*en\na'tenling   unlvtMtf.\nMl**. Zor^  MrNsh and Mrs   M'Nsb ' INtifei M\u00a3M S\nof   M<'Ba!ns   Lake   were   in   the   ett.    LIUST-Ulk   MiR   SALE\nw,),!,.. ll\\t>TOCK   WAMtD\nr      J' . nm irv\nCharles     Bennett     of     Ytnecu* *>'.: , oS|  '\\\"J,   FoVND\nformerly   r_**anBB,*r   of     the     Femi\"   maYhiMKY\nthe   R.    Fden   MKM   I'KOW.Kl V   FOR   PALE   (\u2122\niv    ths   FlB-er   i'OR   SALE   OR   EXCHANGE (17.\nIOK    MLE   OR    REM .i~)\nI IUM>HU> KOOM> 1 OH RENT    ..j)\nIIKMMUU   ROOMS   WAMED   (16\nHKMUKt   IOR   SALE\nHELP   WANTED\nHOI !\u00bbES   HUt   BENT\nIIUI'SEN   WAMLD\nIN   MtMOKlAM\ntNM'HANt J,\nMr.'(lank   of   Commerce   Is   back   Ln   th*   M \\RHUuL*\nReferring   to   ths   dr-piw-swn,\nPooley said ths* \"\u2022*\u2022 \u2022ovtvt _\naponslhle    for    brln^r*    down\nwig* scale  in  the world.\"\nDeclaring thst the Vancouver Pro'\ntacs had ml6-p'*\"*d !*<\u2022**, ha watt:]\n\"Tli* Province li*\u00bb misrg*p*jvl thnt\nthe government has taken up rude-\nels wtth Ottawa and that, ttM \u00bb''\nlorney-general 1b endeavoring to f.*\"^\nthe manufacture of bamn-mnda\nliquors. The ^lavement ls abaolu'ely\nuntrue.\"\nHon. W. A, McKenzie asld that the\nDominion   was   to   blame    for    the\nDoukhobor  problem-\nWASHED   THEIR   HANDS\nOF    THEM\n\"Ottawa brought tbe Doukhobors\nMM and after tliey had done so, and three men Pa*s*n*ers were nd-\nuhey washed their illy-viilte hands, mg. bur\u00abt into flames, about Im\nof them.\" he aald* i miles   nort__   of   Ymir   early   MM\n\u2022\u2022They declared  MIMU ttoy  ,\u201e.\u201e -_\u201elrh \u201e\u201e,,\u201e\u201e,, d\u201e..0,.\nare   M   your   problem.   Wh-,1   h\u00bba|.d   \u2122 fIwme y  JJJ of ,\u201e ....\nhappened? ________  ._.' iwutinj   the  itNl   \u00bbnd   lran->-o-_   o!\n\"ln  10 year,   they li^-e burned 30\n. *-hool_ \u00bbud tM C. P,\ne-'clty on t l.-nit of lrtf.r\u2014 *-'lon.\nICAR ON YMIR ROAD\n! DESTROYED, FIRE\nj K.   Stangherlin'g   Car   Com-\npletfly Dfrnolished; Vsr-\nsengen I'nhurl\n;,.an_b>rl!n-_\nThifh ^e\n>IIMS|..  1P1HI K. I.1.1BEB\nMISI Fl LAMIH \u00ab\nMIMH.HMlM M    ffB    \u00ab*M.E\nIIIM'lll.lMlll!     WAMI'.D\n>ll s|i \u00abi    1S51RIMKMS\nMIIUIS\nm k-ikv mouiris\nl RSIM.\nI'IKMINU\nllA.MS\nitni it.   Avn for.\u00ab\n,'KoriRlV   VIIR   'Alt\nIKrl'lKIY   HA.MIII\nKllUil.V.   IOR   >AIF\nRAM Hi\u00bb    FOR    RiM\nROOM   AMI   BOARI\"\nROOM*    .PR    RIM\nKOO,is   illMIll\n.( HOOl\u00ab\n\u25a0111 A1IONS   WAMtD\n. IOR1S  TO  H_M\n111H IHS\n(11\n(161\n141,1\n(101\n(21)\n(2D|\n141\n13:11\n141)\nl2.ll\n(.'41\n(01\n(llll\n|M|\n.31\ni:i_i\nI2'l|\n(.':i\n(.\u2022HI\n(Ml\nISI\ntill,\n1141 1\n(SI\n(131\n(-'61\n(341\n(351\n.in\nni)\nmi\n(1*11\n(18)\n(321\nllll\n1,11)\nWALLACE\u2014Bom to Mr. and Mr.\nNorman Q. Wallace at Kootenay lak?\ngeneral hoaptlal, May 29. a daughter.\nFITZSIMMONB-To  Mr   nsnet   Mrt !\nJ, Fltzeimmona. wl'lo-v Point, a eon l\nHEATHS\nTALBOT\u2014 Roaeir__ry Talbot, aged\n19 y?ar.., . months, at Kootenay\nlike General honpita!. May 29.\n,2354)\nSITUATIONS   WANT*!.\nJ1\"\nLADY WISHES POST-HOUPEKEEP-\ner to gentleman \u2014Brother would\ngive services ln return for nan\nand board. Box Ii73. Nelson. (2341)\nMrs. \\\\. Kirby Is\nMuch Improved\nat Slocan City\n,       ...     u,_   ,,.,u,.   tn'o  knot*   The   tires  of.\nn_T_   __V,.;\/.l'ise  oar,  \u00bb'\u00bbh   the  eiceptlon  ot   the j\nened   to  discontinue   \u00bb*W \u00ab_7\u00bb\u00bb. rtmnlnetS    .nt.ctF     although'\nln thla ftttlon unless aomcthnig I*!,',.,.\ndone. Willi the three-year penitentiary term they are now serving, tbe\nDominion government jays the cost\nof . the DouUiobors- maintenance.\nHad lt been two years or less, the\ngovernment of British Columbia\nwould   have\nSI OCAS'   CLAY.   B    C.   May   30-\nE    MartCUlan.    Alderman    Hicks,\nthey  were slightly scorched. The  car  M!SR   y,    Lvr.es   aud   Ted   Hicks   st-\nwas fully  Insured. tended a limlllB of *be track meet\nThe  flames .tared   In  tlie engine.  _\\   Applcciale   ou   Tuesday   eveclng.\nand ate ti-elr way thr^ugii the front      Mrs. w. Ktrb;.. who was a patirnt\npanel of the drivers seat before be-, tn   the   kcoienav   Lake   hospital   for\nIng noticed and by that time lt was aeveral days arrived home a few da;;,\n. ,    . h_ \u25a0 too late to save the car, which vas ago. much  Improved In  health.\nbeen  saoaico   \u00abim   \"'\u00ab1 \u201e.|th\u201e,    ,   ,ew   mmutc,   completely 1    Cecil  L.  Bruin  arrived   home  from\nI.ABDWOOD KLOORINO FUHMir-H-\ned. laid, scraped and finished.\nEstimates given free. H. Ronmark.\nPhone   1BSYI. 11940)\nPRFJSSMAKER       AVD      TAILORE_-t)\ndesires tewing. Box 1963, News.\n11853 J\nI IKMsHU) ROOMS f OK KENT    (1..I\nFURNISHED    SUITE.    MRS.    COVE,\n507 Carbona'e ,t. Phone 390R.\nFT'RNIEHED TWO-ROOM Mrs. Smiley. 511 Carbonate st. (2317i\nSUITES\u2014 ASHMAN s\n715 Baker street.\nROOMS    FOR    1IVNT\nAPARTMEN1S\n(1065)\nPARTLY  IimlSISHED SUITE WITH\n1 or 2  bedrooms. 533 Victoria st.\n(2346)\n(211\ncost.\n-Remember, you mnnot mike a\ngood ottlMI out of a Doukhobor by\nkindness.\"\nB.C.  EGG   LAVING\nMullan,   Idaho, on   Friday evening.\nMr.  and   Mn.  T.   MrNelsli   enter-\ntained a number of t'le younger scl\njStrangherlUi, Albert. Kelingg, G. 1 at bridge on Wednesday evening. A\niPllso  and   A   Graffe,   all   of   Nelson. ] pleasant time was spent\nenveloped   In   flames.   The   gaa   tank\ndid   11-v..   expkxle.\nThe pa.secng-r. In the or were E. |\nMkM m the 39th weekly report ot the British Columbia egg.\nlaying contest, being VI it the experimental   farm.   Agasslz.   B.   C.\nTotal Total\nOwner W.   Pts.   Eggs Points\nWHITE  WYANDOTTE\u2014\nC*nt,     A 38    AL- 1107\nLloyd.    Miss    R \u00bb3    53 A 1271\nMorton, John \u201e 60   S8.A 1277\nExp. Bt. Sidney 44   51 1 1046\nWHITE  LEGHORNS\u2014\nAPPleby,  P.  W. 41    A4.3 1057    1068.6\nChalmers, J. . . 47\nChalmers,   R.W. 49\nDarbey,\np. Ar Bona . . 52\nDledrelclia, J.C. 52\nEvans. T. C. .. 53\nFalrweatfer, W. 43\nFarrlngtnn    Br.   55\n(n-een.   .1  II\nHeadey. c. ... 80\nHolland * Sons 43\nHoman, M L... 46\nKennedy Bros... 82\nlaw-son.  C.   W..  62  X69.7  1237\nCranbrook Hostesses\nHonor Miss Godderis\n1148 3\n1185 5\n1212.9\n1130.1)\n514 1108  1128.1\n546 1174\n43.3 1116\n53 - 10-4\n50 1 116.1\n57,2 1271\n59 4 961)\n058 IU63\n43 4 1122\n50 7 1042\n63.9 1221\n1244 6\n1046\n1087.7\n1292 1\n1 atta\n1133 6\n1179 8\n1172 8\n10S93\n1297.7\n133.17\n1139.1\n1202.-\n958 3\nCRANBPOOK.   B.   C,   May   30\u20143.\nEllis reported on preparations tor\nthe Oyro barn dance st their regular dinner Thuriday evening. Advertising   for   the   event   has   been\nJ. Gilroy Returns\nFrom Chicago\nWhere Son 111\n'IQI.bLK     FOR     RENT\nFURNISHED COTTAGE-3 ROOMS\nand porch; sandy beach; wood\nand phor.e Included. \u00ab75 per .ea-\naon. Phone 471R3. (2299)\nSMALL HOUSE CI.OSE IN. FRESH-\nlv decorated throughout. Phone\n61R. (2278)\nFURNlI\u00bbHr:l)       COTTAdEfl       NEAR\nbeach  for  rent.  J. J. Campbell.\n(1816)\nPENT '\n(2333) ;\nWTLLOW POINT B C. May 30-\nMr, and Mrs W Mlddleton and son\nInnea, who have bee- visiting with\nnd   Mrs.   H    I.   Mlddleton   and\n1047.6\n1194 2\n1250 5\n1390.8\n1431 tl\nLUrlll,    p     Fm 51 50.9  1190\nManor   P  Farm M 60.8 1133\nMe'calfe, C. P... 37 39.3    918\nRankin.   Oeorge 40 53.9 1133\nRobertson, A. .. 47 51.3    987\nRump   is   Send. 53 622  '050\nRuttledge,   MH. 5.r) 64.1   110(1\nSchofield.    A W. 53 63.2  13)4\nShannon   Bros.. 47 52.6 1264\nSmith    Bros          57 H6.3   1173\nUnlv    of   B    C. 58 65 8 1325\nVerrhere.  F.   O. 43 44.4 1218\nWard,   George   . 67 64.9   I277\nWatson,   A.   G.    SI 51 3 1316\nWMtlng.  W.  ... 51 84.4 mo\nWilson   Bros.  . .. 40 14 7   I202\nANCON.VS\u2014\nPullen.   F.   E       48 41       863\nBLACK   MISORC1*\nMartm. S. 6.         47\nBIRRED   lin<-hB\u2014\nL-imble.    .tames 49 .,03 1211\nPennington, a... 83 35 4  1341\nTrafton. C. II. -. 61 55 3   lln)\nWilliams.     Mrs   47 -IH 8   1031\nMOM  IM 4MI  RIDS\u2014\nArnculd.   H    K. so 56 4 I3:in\nBrown.   Jack         36 61.6    831\nPen.ers  Bad   T 31 21 4  1055\nRussell.    D             19 J.R.2   I2IRI\n33373408 3S14S4\nPralttrtlmi - Tt.t.xm conl\n(\u2014 _aa_tsat pen\nBadminton Club\nDnwc Successful\nEvent si Boswell\ndistributed    throughout    Ihe   dls'rlcl ^   M- M_.    _   __________  left. Sun\nand ticket* at fifty cents eac;: are 1A f0_ th(,lr hnm ,_ Vancouver,\nbeing sold. A bee ot membera \u00bb-IU Trie, were accompanied by Mrs. H.\nbe held some evening during the \u25a0, M1_tli,l0\u201e, who will vlsli In Van-\nweek when the barn will bo re- collver for a week,\nnovated and decorated for tlio dance. D L lyyy.e sprnt the week-end ln\nFollowing this weeks dinner a game  sp0k_ne.\nat   B0ftb3.ll   waa  played   against  the j    M\u201e   _.  7.   h. Apnlewlialte has re-\nKrembn club team, the Gyros losing, tumed  from  a  visit- to Bonnlngton\n5-6    after   an   evenly   fought   psV.      J.   Gilroy   has   returned   from   Chl-\nMtss   Woodland   and   Miss   Muriel |Cagn,   where   his son   Ian   lies  rrltl-\nBixter   were   joint,   hostesses   at   the j c.Hy  m,\nhome   of   the   former   at   a   bridge\nin   honor  of   Miss   MargtierPe   Godderis    whose    marriage    takes    place\nshortly.  Miss  H\"nderson.  Miss Wllby\nand  Miss  Robertson were the  prizewinners, the  guest of honour   being\npresented   wlt.i   a  handsome remembrance  of  the  occasion.  Tho guests\nwer\u00bb:   Mlsa   Mario   Flett.   Miss   Elsie\nFURNISHED    HOUSE    .'OR\nApply It   A   Alders-.nlth.\nDr. F. M. Auld Elected\nto Medical Executive,\nKelowna Conference\nKELOWNA, B.C., *May 30. \u2014 Offl-\ncer-. were ttnfnft Friday st _ht annual convention of tr\\\u00ab B. C. Mfdi-\nc.il Bfwociation an follows: Dr, W. J.\nKnox, Kelowna, president; Dr. G. 8.\nPurvis, N*.w Westminster, vlcr-pre..-\nident; Eh*. E, H. Cleveland, Vancouver, seer p tary-tren*.. rer. The new\nmembers of tlie executive are T>r.\nV,'. O. Blwiett. DUBMH! Dr. J. H.\nRuntltOD, R*velf.t.ol?e; and Dr F. M.\nAuld, Nelson. Dr. W. S. Tiirnbull ol\n1 lie frost did qottl a llt'le Hi of Vnnrouver is prrsidrnt-clect for next\ndam-jR*  to   Hu   crors  Itftfc  WW>.        |Wf<\nPHONE 144\nKasy isn't it? Just call 141\nand Miss Adtaker will gladly\nassist you in the wording of a\nWant-Ad that will insure quick\nrealization of your every v, ant.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nWANT-ADS\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUHIIIIIMIIIIIIIIillHIMHIIII\nflCE ICE ICE I\nI KEKP YOtlB FCX1DSTUFT8 rN = i\nS GOOD  SHAFE  THIS   SUMMFR _\u25a0\n~ BY    USING    OUR    ICE.      WE =\nZ HAVE   REGU1.AR   ICE ~\n= DELIVERY. -\n~ PHONE 5\n1 106 |\nI Williams'Transfer I\nS     60S Ward St. Nelson      5\ni (2361)   I\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTi\nSECOND HAN\u00bb FIFES, TTmttan,\nValves, etc. we carry . lull stoen\nof reconditioned pipes suitable tor\nsll purposes, writs to Swsrtz pipe\nYard,   2_0   nt   Ave.,   -\ncouver, B. C.\nVi\n(1,60)\nCHRISTIE WRECKING CO., lSHf\nWest 1st.. Ave., Vancouver\u2014 Safari to 75 per cent on all radiators,\ncylinder heeds and blocks.  tl___,\nL.OHT DELIVERY HORSE AND\nwagon also small ranoh planted\nto small fruits. Post office box 841\n  I2H5B)\nFOR SALE NEW RADIO OR WILL\ntrade for dining room suite. Applv\n217 Baker ,t. 133231\nSPECIAL HANDMADE HEAVY GAR-\nhage cans *2.75, reg. 43.S0. R. H.\nMaber, Phone 685. 310 Koot. (19041\nLAWN MOWER 14\" WOODYATT Al\ncondition 15, ___ Josephine.i234_ij\nFOR SALE OAK LIBRARY TABLE\nRev. W. J. Crick, Nelson.      (22801\nCLASSIFIED ADS SERVE CONTIN-\nouously\u2014Why not start one \u00abn*.\ning vou today.\nWANTED  LIGHT  COOK  STOVE i\nrange.   P.   o    Box   315.   Nelson\n(230\nSEE   C    W.   AFPIJ_YARD  FOR  0\/\nInsurance   tn   reliable   compenii\n1191\nAMOMOBILES   FOB   B Art\n1.30 DODGE-8 oor.TE. rumb:\nseat, fine performance; _ spsi\nwith carrier. Bargain for eeeV\nR. Thomas. R, R. 1, Nelaon. (227\nFOR SALE\u2014CHEVROLITr SBD\/\n19.1. Excellent .hspe. Apply R(\nW. J   Crick, or Appleyard.   .22'i\nPBIMINO\n(<\nmiiiiiiiHiiiimitimiiiimiiiiHttHm\nLoose Leaf Equipment\nBINDERS   FOR  ANY   SrTEErS\nWIOSB LEAF SHEETS\nFOR  ANY   BIHDEB\nNelson Daily News\nJOB DEPARTMENT\nPhone 144\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiniiimiiiiiiii\n: \u25a0 '\u25a0 I ii t im ill in ii i :>i I. it i ii. 11 ii\nCOURT   ROTA\nNELSON. No.82(\nA. O. F.\nMeets 1st snd 3t\nThurs.. S p.m.\nEAGLE    HALL.\nJuv. Forasters,\no. B. Abbott. Se\nBox  726    (1937\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssayers\nI, W. W-ddowson, Box A1108, NC-cn,\nB. C. Standard western charges.\n(1930)\nCECIL I. CROSSLT.Y. BOX 56B. NEL-\n\u00bbon. Leave samples at Whitfield\nA. Sturgeon. (2110)\nORENVILLE   H.   OR1MWOOD.   P    O.\nBox 418,. Ksslo, B. C. (2305)\nChiropractors\nAtJF.NTS WANTED\n(1!1\nTHE   J.   B.   WATKINS   COMPANY\nHas an exceptional opening In the\ncity of Nelson for a real live man\nto handle the se-le and distribution of their well known household products, serving and celling\nhundreds of satisfied customers.\nMust have a little capital, write\nor wire for further information to\n1350 Hornby St., Vancouver. B. C.\n(2340)\nLOST   ANI)   IUUW\n(31)\nWILL THE PERSON WHO FOUND\nthe gentleman's wrist watch ou\nt.he wiish bow. In the Standard\nCafe kindly return same to the\nNelson Dally News, Liberal reward,\n(2343)\nPOULTRY    AND   EOC.S\nco)\nPullet, will be Bcarce and egg prices\nhigh next fall. Get some ol our 3.\nc. White Leghorn or R. I. Red\nchicks for good results. Bred from\nhoaltbv. vigorous stock Ior nigh production *nd large eggs.\nRUMP ft  SEMDALL\nMUner, B. C.\ni1974)\nSPECIAL IN BABY CHICKS HATCH-\nIng Msy 30. June 6 and 13, *10\nper 100. Den Russell. 1R08 Gray\nave..   New  Westminster.  B.  C.\n(2300)\nDR. GRAY, GILKER BLK., NELSON.\n (1B81)\nMITT UN  AND GEDDES,  X-RAY UMl\nMCM, Crenbrook and Trail. (1982)\nDR.   MACM1LLAN.   GRAD.   PALMER\nSchool, Aber Blk.. Nelson. Ph. 212\n(1983)\nFlorists\nGi-l-t.zelle's Greenhouses, Nelson, Cut\n flowers and floral designs.   (1987)\nNELSON FLOWER STOPPe7~FULL\nline cut flowers at all times, Flor.\nal designs. Phone 233. (1988)\nFOR SAI E-IEGHOR.N COCKEREIJ3\nfour weeka old, 10 cents men.\nO'Neill, Gray Creek, (2288i\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES\u2014Phone\n342. Cut flowers, potted planta\nand -.oral designs. (1989)\nTransfer\nATKINSON TRANSFER. HOSEMONT\nCoal and Wood. (1992)\nEngineers\nH. D   DAWSON, B.C.L.S. ROOM 11\nK. W. C. Block. Nelson.      (\nCHAS, MOORE. Griffin Blk.. Nelso\nB. C. Land eurveyor, Box 654.\n(198*\nAccountants\nCHAS. F.  HUNTER,  B. F. DJT.  A. (\nMunicipal and commercial Audit\nP. O. Box 1191. Nelson, B. c.\n(197!\nStorage\nSTORAGE. MOVING. COAL. WOOI\nPhone 53. Burn's Coal A; Carta-\n(1991\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe  Ark\u2014Dealers lo  Second  Han\ngoods. Phone 634, (1991\nWE BUY CLOTHING. MUSICAL I.\n\u25a0truments rifles etc 317 Baker.dBO:\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Esttte, _r\neurance. Rentals. Next Hlppers.,\nHsrdwsre, Baker Btreet,.       doss\nWood Factory\nLAWSON'S WOOD FACTORY HART\nwood merchant. 217 Baker etree\n< 190*1\n1208.8 Wllby, Miss Jean Glendennlng, Miss\nMabel Stcnder, Ml^s Mabel Parker,\nMtss Ocrirude Patmore. Miss Vivien\nIKutnmer, Miss Jean Flett, _____ Pater\nson. Mis* Bossle Robertson, Mibs\nLaura Henderson, Miss Slmnne Hour-\n\"li _ igeoise. Miss Kay Murphy, KM Ethel\n'\"\"jSpccrr..\n[51,      M1M  Jri1\"   McPlwe  who   has  been\nle\u2014ll-ltlie    her   holidays     MB     the\nGeneral'   Hospltsl\nTHE  GUMPS-THAT'S  ALL  I  WANT  TO   KNOW\ntur I\nL38S.1\n12 ion  iiflflj\n1248 - !\ntaw j i\n1180 J I\n1041.1 1\n[1808.7\nU84J ! Mfr\n1410.1 i    S\nlOfWXLL I C \u25a0\nStdBU^oi chib du\nUtmotrlt]   htll   on   I\nmot*   MMOOttttMl   tttt*\nif\n*\u2022   htlA  IB' the\ntnt  r.r*'u  out\n!\u25a0'\nIf\nIn\n\u25a0fm*.\nRnttj-fll MlDV      ' lat*    *      ni\u00ab.rvr**i\nfrom WyeuwW, o-\u00bbv crtei uni o\u00abi\u00ab\nr^'nt*, in Um dirtriel Km*m$ tl\\ma\n\u25a0< tM fttttiuStd \u00bb\u00abt. Mr tnt ^*^!'\n:-..*r#T.\u00ab, Mr sn* Mrt n Btntdfttl,\nMIm Um Betwdftti, Mln* I>\u00bbothy\npnyeVe, ^\"^ Htmn unfi o Wns\ni\"im    ol    V-Fynndel,    Wm    \u25a0par-bor^\nr'i-\"8*r,     MlM    OWtB     BUTfr*     ri i-ni     .I'm\n\u25a0r-'ir.-i. of orts Crtet, Wtt IfirfftTtf\nStcatmno, ftn\u00bb _9rtlft ,t^rr,h^o^\nfilm JtmB MfteOftfor, Hwtjr Hm<\na-agor     Hay     MwCH\u00abfor,     MM\n.feeobton.     <\"* fi t>\u00bb\u00bb-ri-     rr Un,     toim*1\nl**    RBd    rliflnr    rtfr\\,^.\\rf,   r,1    CTB\u00ab\nr i-'i  r\u00bbv tnt  Wrl  M'E-ri' nf  Root-\nrnnv    pa-\nmint Bnnor MtrrtfltW of rrort*>r\nKtt MM gu\u00bbF=\u00bb of Wtt r.inn, JobB-\nttxmt for m\u00abv M\nOldest Living Gnduate\nnf MeGtfl  I'nivrrsity\nEnjoys 90th Rirlliday\n^.Ap.ift, cm, Itoy M <cp.\u2014 Br\nvmiMji  towtt.  xho  09l\u00abbrftt*d   his\nooth birthdsv n*re yttntinaf, l\u00bb t\\\u00bb\ntfinttt )ii-)*ryr m*dlca1 vntfust* ot\nMeom   unlTrrmtT.  M-^n'r^ii\nHt g~*r_un*?r]  ip   iR7n flnrf r-fo*lv\u00abd\nth*   t_+coTV.   \"liplomft   lss.)\"r.    bv   t>\\e\nr\u00bbfc\u00bb1o mHirsi r.-iunril   Th# lulu pr\n.T     DiinsmoT**    of    Mltt-h**ll,\ndiploma    THimrrcr   on**.    Dr\n.poiKiing\nhomr    Mt   on   Fllclny    to   r^lurti   l*.\ntntf,\nMrs.   C.   I    Twtfl   tftia   Ir-u.   r>'*n\nI   pttlntt In   UH \u25a0'\"\u25a0I-  Kug^iip hoppit-nl\nfor .<  foimi?lH lln.) ir'\\.rn*Pd >irj iMfj\n\u25a0iioni*..\nWiRV*-, kCUrdrad ant Dorothi;\nBriflwi h\u00bb*l rftiLrrrci tfom nt-'-fn-!\nftaOM *t Brnmlnn oollJl snA will\n__pent   the   nunmor   it   ttant*   hoirw.\nJlOiP.\nm\\n_ M tmnfii w'n\u00bb* ta Inmrninml\nVteltof \"ii \u00abSntiirrin.v ' h\u00ab\" gncst oi\nAalnrartd tmt Mr*. T. W\u00abtr.\nn ii'i Mj.. <;i. b Willis return\ni^-! ori Sftttfl -I'iv pvenins Irom s\nmotor tip to Ctlftfy. iv>b Willis\nuna bM -y*n atmaaXDt tht Ofclfsry\n'i'^Tiiuirwi ichool rrtunrtd \u25a0with ins\npMtnts\nGordon DmU) mtft nu bHB it-\ntmdUSfl tot Ca'sarj T-?chr.!c\u00bbi ICfeool\nr*turn\u00abd to ht& horr>\u00bb tmrntttf s^A\nmill   totnt   r*h#   fimm*\u00bbr   haft\nMurray McnriAM \u2022\u2022\u2022 ho** tl\nthr*B tiblM of  hridijp  on flstunUy\nmfllfil ryjnirHmfr.tlrig Mlf-s Msi-\nnoritl OOddffH and !lf. Frank\nfcmi'-h mhttn BWifttjii rnkm ?iir*\ntbortly  IOn Ofrtruda fsMnon tsd\nMr   .1. WbQlMM   r.\u00bbirl   tlM  Wfh  MORI\nTn* e,i*#,-ift in Km MtTcu'Tit-i\nGoddstrta. Mips LrQltMi Jtekaon, IOn\n\\'ivii.n Kuatmor, Wtt MnoM Bdni\u00ab\nf+*ls. MIps Ortrud* PttBLMN, n|nM\nB\u00bbhb!\u00bb Pob-rt^on. MlM BMI He-\nPhllUM,   3.   tfOsttrnm,   H    Godd*rlF,   F\nSmite, w. KeDoanld\nIJNbY IS ^T.ILL\n\\U   HOT WeVTEfc.\nAMM   REPUTES\nTo FORbWE  KIM\nK'R \u2022iPEMDiNU THE\nMK_tWT <V^A,T\n>NM\u00a3M WE went,\n%IN^U W*XNCjEb,\nUNBE^MOWM TO\nOUT OP   TWC\nKlMbME^^ OP\nMl^     rJF.ART,\nYO CWCM   ^ME\nPROWL-^R.\nV^MO  MA^> BEEM\nAMMOVIKjtr   TO^\\\n4Mb  HHNRIETTA-\n_:;_-=___=_,n0       |     ,\u201e,,_\ntCER  BLOOD W9Ut\nWHEN %M(\u00a3\nTW!NK% O** IT-\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nWm M. BcckwHh\nand T. A. Rice Win\n.Ifffertson Trophy\nttmtaaf\nlunonw\n(p.jii,  p  c, Hai .in\u2014t   |  Met\nifi M'.r- fcUrjory Boekvlti) von Hbt\nkffHvon   trophy   In   Um  final  boom\nnf    tttf    tivo-b-tll,    mix-d\nbtndlonp   oanM\u00bbtttloii   of\ntht  Bimlinl Trin QaJtt nnd  Oona-'\ntn diA,\nTh^v d*f\")'*d t W Blr.ffv a-si\n*fr_! P. F MetBtxn Ln tht tln'A aft*r\nthll ptlf bad \u2666\u00bb!!m!naf^d B I\nCtmrnt 99ft MM \u25a0 0 todhnnoB tt\nUMtt half Of  HM tamteftrntt]  brirk**\nTILLIE THE TOILER\ni .KiRiio r.OLO  NUTIHO\ntold op luiiiiMimi vnu\nVAJTOOOTVR.  Mny W   (CW\u2014Wtt\nvilli's oonMrrnt-inty irtlaMlfl **\nMa |U to 92n T+T ton Mm kotn\npiwni in nttupni mtnt of ttnu\nproperty, ^ockholdon of the carth-on\nBM0l\u00abflrtloeM Quartz Mining Comnny, limited,\nUnott'a wnra  i\"ld   at their  annua]   mMtlni\n\u2022ntlre   modletl   praftlw   w\u00ab\u00a7   carried! herp.   It   wf-i   lhe   largpftt  m-wUng  of\nm   in  Bb\u00ab  town of  Ayr.  Ont..  from  atoclcholderji   t0   date,   with   a   con-\n1870   to   1907,   when   he   retired   on   rlderable   contlntrcnt   frbra   couth   of\n\u2022coount  of   nine-*. (the  border.\nBy Westover\n bSl\nTHI   KELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   .NELSON.   B.   ft,   TIESDAV   MORMNO   MAY   31,   103Je\nPAGE   NINE\nMarket and Mining News\nRICES CONTINUE\nECLINE FURTHER,\nOR0NT0 MARKET\n)I\nfl\nlling of Montreal Group of\nInterlisted Issues Accelerates Move\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, May 30 \u2014 Met*! market closed \u00bbt London. Copper, standard epot \u00a326 3a Cd; future \u00a336 2a\n64; electrolytic, apot \u00a331 10a; future\n\u00a333. Tin, epot \u00a3lfl 2s 6d; future \u00a3117\n10s. Lead spot u ltss; future \u00a310 5a.\nZinc, spot 11 1C\u00bb; future \u00a311 13s.\nMONTREAL STOCK\nEXCHANGE IS WEAK\n\"OROJTPO,    May   30    (CP1\u2014Con- \t\nuance  of the decline In price on j -\"\" \" \u25a0  '\nToronto   stock   exchange   today , Selling Pressure Again Direct-\naccelerated   by   selling   of   IM\nntreal  ffroup of interlisted  Issues,\nh   special   weakness   being   mtnl-\nted   In   the   power   utility   group.\n| general market wa? more active\nn   expected   with   a   turnover   of\nMl   shares.   To   that   total   61   U-\ned Against Leading\nIssues\nMONTREAL, May 30 (CP)\u2014Ut t\nto It* own devices aa New York waa\na contributed, of which only 4, holidaying, tht Montreal stock ei-\n>wed gains at the close, against change gave a weal: display today.\nwhich were lower and 18 un- j Belling pressure was again directed\n'\"B^d- against ti.e leading  issues  and  nina\nlontreal power closed In  Toronto  new \\cmB for MVeral  y?ars were re-\n22, for ft net loss of 3 points on a looked,   tbs   outstanding   one   being\nnover  of 239 shares.  Other iQtrtl Kg Montrea: Power  which  broke 3*\nthe power group on the Toronto ; points V> 33.\nird    included    Brltlah    Columbia I    Such   actlvfl    i!8uw   te   Brazilian\nKOOTENAY BERRY\nCROP EXPECTED\nSHOW INCREASE\nCherry Set Not so Good; Early\nVegetables Are Well\nAdvanced\nfollowing are reports of the horticultural branches In tht Kootenay\ndistrict:\nKOOTENAY   AND\nARROW   LAKES\nThe weather hat turned much\ncoder during the P*>b week, with\nheavy ralna in all section*. These\nra.ns have done a lot of good to all\nspring planted crops and wtth warmer weather excellent growth can be\nexpected. \u00ab\nStrawberries are Just past the peak\nof bloom and Indication* are that\nthe crop will lie larger than last\nyear. Some of the patches ln low-\nlying placet have been damaged by\nrecent frost, but th* Injury will not\naffect   the   tonnage   to   any   extent.\n\\#er \"A\" off   .4   \u00bbi  new low  of;Traction,    Bell    Telephone,    Canada  Some cane  injury 1* showing up in\n_ International Utilities \"A\" off; cement preferred, Cockshutt How,\n-joints to close at a new low of 8,' Dominion Bridge. National Breweries,\nwer  corporation   off   1   to   a   new j shawini^n    and    Steal    of    Canada\not. 6   and  Shawlnlgan  off   144  loot about a point to enter new low\nto close at 8. } territory.\n>ther utility shares also sagged very few Issues resisted the gen-\n'ivily, B*H losing 2',; to close at aleral trend, Canadian Paciric railway\n\\jr low of 19Vs, Brazilian losing V4 j held unchanged at BJt; Atlantlo\nnew low of 8 and Consumers 3ugar gained 8 to 37. Three other\na losing  Vt   to close at  16.t. Ca- j8maji  gfting  T..ra   recorded.\ndian Pacific was firm, closing un-\nmged   at 9',i\nTORONTO STOCKS\n10\n.01\n.65\n.OS\n.05\n.04\n.30\n.OOT,\n.04'.\n.05\n.04\n.14\n.54\n.00\",\n10.50\n.08\n.06!i\n.89\n.03\n.50\n.50\n.17\n.33\n4 43\n1.07\n4 30\n.30\nS5.-5\n.10\n.03\nMN\n14.75\n.85\n.00\n.01l_\n.60\n13.10\n.35\n.40\n' .18\n.18\n.57\n8.30\n.24\n.30\nIfCht Kartfreav*. _      2.35\n>lt\u00abi  Ack\u00abrmnn   ..       .80\ninlet      ....\nP   Consollda'  t   \t\noclated\t\nMetalt \t\ngood  \t\n\u2022ry Holllnger\t\nMissouri    \t\nmont   .-. .......\nind E Landa  \t\n^mlcal Research \t\n.Icy _\t\n*>e  \t\nIhouale .__   ...\ntcreat  \u201e \u2014 -\norado    _ \t\ntlillla\t\nconbrldge  \u201e \t\nnada    _...\nne Oil\t\nlinger   -\t\ndaon   Bay   -\t\nernat.!onil Nickel \t\nkland Lake \t\n;e   Shore    -\t\n\u25a0aeea    _ _...\nndy\t\nirtlc   \t\nIntyre\t\nr  Corporation\nylond    -\t\njrtoee   _\t\nilaaing    \t\n\u25a0nnda    _\t\nid  Oreille\t\nmler  Oold   ._.\n\u25a0rrlt,   Oiirdon   \u201e\t\nIbury Basin \t\nCanada Cement preferred established Its low at 29, oil ly, points;\nBell Telephone lost 1 at 80; Cockshutt eased Va at _>,'_; Dominion\nBridge was down '\/, at\nlost I. at 4>i: Steel\nsold orr 1*. at UH and Bhawlnltan\ndropped ii at TH \u00bbI:er Mlllng\nat  7V4.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEO, Man\nquotations:\nMay 80.\u2014Oraln\nCpen   Hlfft   Low Close\n34%\n34\n30'A\n40'1\n40'4\n35'.\n40 V,\nua\n43',\n63 V4\n83%\n63 Vi\n98%\n33%\n30!.\n80S.\n39%\n35\nWheat:\nMay      63%    63%\nJuly      63%    63%\nOct  65%    66\nOats:\nMay      34%\nJuly    _.  34\nOct  30%\nBarley:\nMay      40\nJuly     40 M\nOct  86%\nmax:\nMay         83*%\nJuly     83\nOct     88\nRye:\nMay        40%\nJuly    41%\nOct    43%\nCash cloae:\nWheat: No. 1 Hard, 64%; No. 1\nNor., 6a3.- No. 2 'lor., 59}.; No. 3\nNor., 56V,; No. 4 Nor., 55, No. 8,\n50%; No. 8, 45>,i; feed, 43?.; track,\n63%; No. 1 Dur, 85%\n62%\n63%\n65%\n33%\n33%\n39%\n39%\n99\n83%\n88\n40\n40%\n42\n40%\n41\n43%\n*h Hughe:,\nond    \t\niture*\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nCALGARY   LIVESTOCK\nCALOARY, Ua.. May 30\u2014Receipts\nCattlo 176; calves 17 hoga 85; Bhcep\n13\nSteers: Good and choice, $4.90 to\n\u00bb5.25; medium M to \u00bb4.35; common M to 83.75.\nHeifers: Good and choice. 84.33\nto $4.75; l edlum, $4 to }4.25; common, 83 t-.i $3.1\".\nFed calves: Oood and choice, $5 to\niIONTREAL,   May   30\u2014Cheese   was\n'anoed another quarter of a cent\npound   here   t:dny   and   butter *5.40;  medlut   $4.50 to_$4.75\n3d   |.   cent per pound. Eggs  and\natoes   held   unchanged,\niheese,   Ontario, _\\<t   to 9%.\n\"heese. Quebec 9',..\nlutter,  No.  1  finest,  18%.\n!ggrs,   fresh   specials   ln \" cartons,\n24.\n22\n,2gs,  fresh extras  In cartons,\n23.\n:srgs,   freeh  firsts  ln  cartons,\nCows: Oood, 83 to $3.75; medium\n*2.50 to $2.75; common $1.50 to $2.25;\ncanners and cutters, 60 cents to $1\nBulls: Oood, $2 to $2.50; common\n$1 to 81.75.\nSheep: Oood handywelght, $8 to\n$3.50;  common, $1 to $2.50.\nLambs: Good handywelght, $6.25 to\n$6;  common. $3.75.\n191    Hogs:  f '\u25a0\"    bacon,  $3.85;   bacon.\n$3.35; butchers, $2.85.\neware\nPeril\nWHEN you are building,\nis the best time to\nmake your home safe from\nthe damage fire can do.\nOrder time-and-labour\nsaving Gyproc Wallboard for\nall interior walls, ceilings and\npartitions.\nWhen remodelling, extra\nspace may be gained by\ndividing the attic and basement with Gyproc partitions.\nNEW LOWS MADE,\nMONTREAL CURB\nMONTREAL, fay 30.\u2014T W O n<w\nlowa were est. Itched and three other\nIssues equalled the year's low, on the\nMontreal curb market today aa the\ntrend continued toward lower levels.\nVolume was fairly heavy, with Beauharnols active leader.. Five issues closed unchanged, Associated Oil, Beauharnois Distillers-Seagram, Home OU\nand Walker preferred. B. A. Oil touched a new low or 8 ,\u00ab. A-saoclated Oil\nand Beauharnois equalled their year's\nlow at 4 cents and 50 centa respectively. Imperial 'l^oacco showed the only\ngala of the day, lifting % from its\nyear's low of %% cents to sell at 9%,\nAmong the mines Mess touched a\nnew low of ii cents, showing a loss\nof 3 cent* for the day. \/ -'Ucl equalled Its year's low of 7 rents. Noranda\nlost 60  cents.  selling   at $13.30.\nLOSSES DOMINATE\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMISSION SHIPS\nSTRAWBERRIES TO\nPRAIRHARKET\nFresh   Vegetables   at   Coast\nMostly Local Produce at\nPresent\nFigures In Miami Mystery Death\nYou can paper it or panel\nit if you wish and it is an\nexcellent base for Gyptcx or\nAlabastine,\nth* raspberry patches,  the Cuthbert\nvariety   being   most   affected.   In   a\nnumber  of  cases  the   yield  will   be\ngreatly  reduced\nCHERRY   SIT   BAD\nAlthough the cherry bloom waa\none of the heaviest or a number\nof years, several growers have reported the set not any too good.\nIt ls rather early ln the season to\nmake any definite estimate on the\ncrop, but from reporta received and\ngeneral Inspection of a few sections,\ncondltlonB  point   to  a   considerably\nqif   Nickel: Iargw   croP   than   lMt   **\"\u25a0\nnf    ftUSSI       Th*   \u00bbPP\u00bb   bloom   te   over   \"\"1   \u00ab\u00bb\u2022\n1 \" calyx spray is being applied, although weather conditions have interfered to eom\u00ab extent with spraying operations.\nEarly potatoes are well up snd\nmaking good growth, and the planting of the latB crop has been completed. Other early vegetables are\ncoming on ln good shape, and\nlimited supply will be on tht loeil\nmarkets soon.\nGRAND  FORKS\nGrowing conditions have varied\nconsiderably during the past two\nweeks. The first part of the period\nwas hot and dry, with heavy winds\nwhich dried 'up the surface moat ure\nrapidly. The laat few days have been\ncool, with heavy rainfall, and all\ncrops are coming along rapidly. Small\nfruits are showing up exceptionally\nwell, and \u00abo far no damage from\nfrost has been recorded. The danger\nperiod from I; * M almost pait In\nthe valley.\nSPRAYING   GOES   ON\nOrchards are looking well, and\nspraying is under way. The fruit\ncrop will not be heavy this year, as\nthe set of fruit is very patchy in\nmost orchard*. Jonathans and Mc-\nIotcsh Red will be light, while\nWealthy and Duchess ar8 showing\nup fairly well, and also Delicious.\nProm present indications, prunes will\nbe heavy this seaaon.\nEarly vegetables and early potatoes are well advanced considering\nthe lai* season. Onions are not doing well, and already some plantings\nhave been plowed up and planted\nto late potatoes, corn, etc. Insect\npests are especially bad this season, and have taken heavy toll ln\nthe onion fields. Th* aoreage of\nonions Is the heaviest in the history of the valley,\nCRESTON   VALLEY\nThe past week has been cool,\nwindy, and showery, all crops greatly\nbenefiting by the rains. The season\nopened late, but the warm *pell\nabout the middle of the month advanced growth rapidly.\nOwing to thp rapidity with which\nthe bloom opened, many growers\ndid not have time to spray th*ir\norchards i.n the pink stage. The\nblooming period Is over, and as UM\nweather during this period was hot\nand clear, with cool nights free\nfrom ' frost, conditions were very\nfavorable for pollenlzation. The likelihood of damage from spring frosts\nls now about over aa the season Is\nwell advanced, and the flats are\ncovered   with   flood  water.\nmn\nBERRY   FAVORITES\nStrawberry planting !s ov<*!\\ about\n50 acres. It la estimated, being\nplanted throughout the valley. The\nvarieties Van flanfc and British Sov-\nerlgn comprise 75 per cent; Parsons\nBeauty,  2o per cent.\nAsparagus planting has Increased\nto some extent, but there was no\nacreage pVnted to early head lettuce, as most growers seem to favor\nlat,, planting, owing to the low\nprices prevailing last year, a reduction in the tomato acreage It\nnoted. Growers all over the country are at a loes to know Just what\nto plant, as prices are still low,\nand show no Indications of Improving.\nCuthbert raspberry canes were\ndamaged In the bud to some extent\nby the sudden chance In weather at\nthe  beginning  of March.\nIndications are for a heavy crop\nof tree fruits ln the orchards, all\nwinter apples look promising, Mc-\ntntosij being very heavy, also Orav-\n\u2022nsttta nnd ~n_\\an9m, Vncalthles are\npatchy,  but on  the  whole  good.\nSmall    fruits    should    be    heavier\nth\u00abn  last   year.   Cherries  Indicate\nheavy crop.\nInternational   Nickel\nNew Low; 28 Out of 61\nIssues Drop\nTORONTO,   May  30.   (CP)\u2014Today's\nsession on the Standard Mining and\nStock exchange w s one or dull trad-\n1' ; and reactionary prices. Losses\ndominated the movement of practically ail leaders with the br^wc inetnl\nsection standing to the front ln the\ndownward  movement.\nThe day's turnover was 90.000 -hares\nwith 61 stoclts * play, The price\ntrend shows 26 declines against 8\ngains and 25 unchanged.\nAccording to the movement yesterday there is no support behind International Nickel and thc stock at.aiji\nbroke through to a new lov; closing\ndown 3o cents to >t.85. Noranda also\nshowed a softer tendency dropping 50\ncents to $1.3.25. Base Metals at 30 cents\nand Falconbridge at 50 cents each lost\n5 points.\nB.C. Pioneer and Mining corporation were Tinu spots in the gol3 list,\neach gaining 5 points to close at\n$3 30 and 75 cents respectively, other\ngold issues were -oft wtth Lake Shore\ndown 85 cents to $29, Eldorado dropped 6 points to close at a new low\nof 85 centa. f> ne at $10.50 and Granada Oold at 55 cents each fell 5\npoints while Teck-Hughcs at $3.30\nand Vfrlght-Hartrrcavcs r $2.25 lost\npoint.\nWie NEW\nIVORY\nGyproc may be eaiily identified by\ntbe name on the board and the\nCreen stripe alon% the edge.\nGYPSUM, LIME AND ALABASTINE,\nCanada, Limited\nVancoaTtr, B.C.\nII v\nGYPRoq\n^^lirepioof Wrtllboard\nFOR   SALE\nA. H. Green Co. Ltd.\nT. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.\nHunter Bros. Ltd.\nTrail Mercantile Co. Ltd.\nLazaroff & Co.\nNelson, B\/C.\nNelson, B. C.\nRossland B. C.\nTrail, B. C.\nTrail, B. C.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nBid\nAsk\n...    .00\nOd\nG*or_la  River \t\n..    .03\n.02\nGrandvlew  \t\n...    .01\n.03\nLorne   Gold\t\n..    .10\n.11\n...    .01\".\n.01\nNoble  Five\t\n.    .05'.\n.03\nPend   OMIll*    \t\n...    .33\n40\nPlneer   Oold    \t\n... 8.36\n\u25a0JA'.t\nPorter Idaho \t\nM\nPremier    \u2014\n...    .\u00ab!\nAt\nReevea McDonald \t\n.u\n.    .3S'..\n...   .01\n3\u00bb\nOILS\nA  P   Consolidated   ....\nC and E Lands \t\nCalmont     *..\t\nCommonwealth     -\nEastcrest    - \t\nFabyan    \u201e\t\nHomo OU   \t\n(McDougall Segur \t\nMercury\t\nMcLeod   \t\nMayland   \t\nOknlU   New      \t\nSterling  TaClflc  \t\n.04\n.1$\n.oa\n.07\n.05\n.00'\n.17\n.011_|\n.07\n.21\n.05\n01'\/\n.06\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nAbltlbi            i\nAsbestos Corporation      15\nBell  Telephone      62\nBrazilian   T   L   *   Power   _....       8\nBrltlBh   American   Oil           8\nCan. Car &c Foundry          3\nCanadian OntWvt        2\nCan.  Industrial   Alcohol\t\nCons. Mining A; Smeltlnc,\"\nDominion   Brldgo   \t\nA   P   Oraln\t\nImperinl   Oil   \t\nLake of the  Woods  \t\nUutfy  Harris\t\nMontreal   power\nMontreal   Telegraph         44\nMontreal   Tramways\nShawlnlgan     \t\nSteel   of   Canada   \t\nWinnipeg   Railway   .\nVANCOUVER. B. C. May 30,\u2014The\nofferings of fresh vegetables o:i the\nstreet are fairly well confined to\nlocal produce. Local asparagus la\nselling at 15c to Iflc. depending on\ngrade, rield rhubarb ls down a little\nIn prjee. the range being 73c to\n$1 25 per 40-pound box. Hothouse\ntomatoes sre unchanged in price,\nbut a rlw ts anticipated. Shipments\nof FIJI Mandarin WW end bananas are well spoken of, and these\nare moving out freely, carrot* sre\nselling at $7 per crate, and hothouse\ncucumbers at $1.25 to $1.75 per\ndozen. Just at present the strawberry\nmarket appears to be somewhat unsteady, prices ranging from $3.io to\n$4.50 per crate. Head lettuce Is\nquoted from $3 to $3.25 per crate.\nCALOARY\u2014Calgary Is getting a\ndally quota of ra'.n and sunshine\nwhich Is nfferting strawberry snles.\nOne car of Kennewlrk etratftfrrles\narrived on Monday and some local\npreviously. Thr berries ar,. fff excellent quality and are selling nt\nMakes'*4.75 per crate. Tlie first B. C.\nstrawberries come in today, consisting of two crates from Mission.\nThese are showing the effect of\nrain. The first csr of Washington\nhead lettuce cvune In yesterday, and\nthe quality ls better than the B. C\ncoast product. Jobbers srft quoting\nthe Washington head lettuce at\n$7.50 per crate and the B. C. at $5.\nAll shipments of B. C. asparagus\nnre pronounced \"good quality\" by\nJobbers. Rhubarb ls now .lobbing at\n$1.35 per crate, with a Fair movement. The tomato dnty Rdvance to\n8c per pound finishes Mexico importations, leaving the field clear\nfor Cann<\/an-growr hothouse stuff.\nEDMONTON\u2014B. C. hothouse tomatoes and cucumbers are Increasing in volume with quality and condition fair. Tomatoes nre selling at\n$4 to $4.25, and cur umbers St $1.75\nto $2 per dOf*m. Mexican field to-\nmat Lies are quoted at $4.50 to $4.75\nper lug. Rhubarb supplies are heavy\nand demand fair, at $1.10 to $1.25\nper box. Head lettuce and new cabbage are arr'\" ing tn fitr condition.\nLettuce Is quoted at $4.75 to $5 per\ncrate, and cabbage at 7c to 8c per\nlb. Asparagus and eplnach are of\ngood quality. Spinach ls selling st\nper lb,, nnd aspantgus at 15c to 18c,\nLocal hothouse tomatoes, cucumbers, head lettuce, asparagus, bunch\nvegetables and rhubarb supplies are\nIncreasing In volume. Car arrivals:\nB. C, three anplew. two rliubarb and\nfour vegetahKs. Imported, two Mexico tomatoes end one of Florida\ncelei'y.\nSASKATOON\u2014Weather cooler. The\nwheat Is nearly all seeded, and\ngrowth good. Business Is fairly good\nand volume of practically all commodities increasing. B. C. apples and\nonion stocks are becoming very light.\nNew 811 version Texas onions are\nquoted at $3.75 p:r 50-lb. crate.\nMissouri strawberries arrived yesterday nnd showed fair to good quality. These mM at $7 50 per 24-\nquart crate. The Mexican field tomato deal was very satisfactory thla\nseason duo to fine condition on arrival, hut the price has advanced $5\nto $6 per lug on account of new\nduty. B. C. hothouse product should\nbenefit, nff sprrad between the two\nhas  been   10c  to  14c  per  lb.  retail.\nPIONEER GOLD IS\nFEATURE IN DULL\nTRADE, VANCOUVER\nSells at $3.35 to Gain 10 cents.\nReno Gold Coses at\n331-2Centt\nMrs. Jessie M. Kelth-Mlller, Australian aviatrix, was questioned for\nnearly an hour before the county\ngrand Jury which le Investigating\nthe death of Haden Clarke, 28-year-\nold writer, at Miami, 11a. Mrs. Kelth-\nMlller, shown above, was t flying\npartner of captain W. N. Lancaster\nwho has been accused, of killing\nClarke.\nCaptain W. N. Lancaster, former\nBritish flyer, shown above ln avis*\ntlon togs, Is reported to hav# admitted forging t\\.-> suicide notes\nwhich were found sfter the death\not Haden Clarke, 28-year-old author,\nat Miami, Pa. Captain Lancaster\nwas arrested and Jailed on a first\ndegree murder warrant.\nVANCOUVER, May 30. (CP)\u2014Firmness in Pioneer Gold 111 fair actlvlt\/\nfeatured an otherwise listless aeeaion\nof trading on the Vancouver stock\nexchange today. Of the dozen Imuss\nactive during ths day, three closed\nwith smaJl gains, two were fractionally lower whne the remaining seven\ncloaed unchanged.\nPioneer, opening unchanged at $3 35\nsold steadily at that pries until late\ntrading when the issue sold up to\n$3.35 at which price it closed, a gain\nof 10 cents. Reno Oold, after opening one hlghc \u25a0 at 35 cents sold down\none cent from Its previous dost at\n33 cents tut halved Its loss \u00bbt ths\ncloee to 83'4 cents. Nobis F1t\u00ab at 2*\ncents lost a quarter.\nCrow's Nest Isd th* activity In the\noils section iHh sn advance of % to\n$i% cents on a turnover of 5000\nshares.\nCanadian Paclfio continued to firm\nupward, gaining 26 cents to $035.\nTORONTO INDUSTRIALS\nBell Telephone ..82 80       80\nBrazilian     Ill       I           8\nB   A   Oil     8H        9%        I'i\nCanada Matting.. 1\nCons.  Bartrlss.... 6\\\\\nCons.   Mining   \u201e \u00bb        fftft     M\nTord   of  Can 'A* 7           9*^        6si\nImperial OU    \u2022           7H        T'%\nInternat    Nickel 4'i.       4H       *'\u2022\nInternat   Pet\u00bb   _ 70Vi      10          10\nLaura Becord   J*\nLoblaw    \"A\"    .... 9\nNoranda     ISS      13*      \"'i\nService Stations.. 8\nSupcrtest    12\nHiram  Walker _ 8          3H       3\nWINNIPEG WHEAT\nTRADING NARROW\nIN LISTLESS DAY\nSelling by Houses of Chicago\nConnection Causes Fractional Drop\nfact that a major portion of tt comes\nhrough American sources.\nCash wheat and coarse grain trade\nwas slow and price* generally closed,\nsympathetic to the decline in wheat.\nBEAD    THE    TAG    ON    THE    BAG\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\n2a\n10\/\n4\n7.75\n%n\nm\nIM\nI'J\nitt\nFATTENING    MOUUfl\nStudies recently concluded b y\nthe Poultry Division of the Dominion Experimental Farm show\nconclusively that meat meal is not\nnecessary ln the fattening and finishing of brollera. Sklm-inllk and\ngrains finely ground ' arc aU that\nare necesjary to obtain g<v>d galna\nln fattening. A gDOtf ration is:\nequal parts ground Vttftti ground\noats and ground barley, mixed\nwith sklm-mllk to the consistency\nof porridge, and one meil ahead.\nSuch a ration produces tne \"milk-\nfed\" finish which commends a\npremium   on   the   market.\nSHOWS   THAT   I.IVK   STOCK\nWM   IRI   SAVING   FACTOR\nThe Review of t he Li ve Stock\nMarket and Meat Trade for MJfl,\njust issued by the Markets Intelligence Service or tho Dominion\nDepartment  of   Agriculture  states:\n\"The commercial meat animals\nIndustry weathered tho year much\nbetter than any other major\nbranch of farm industry. Indeed\nsaleable live stock und, with this,\nof course, we mast include poultry,\nwas to Its possessor the saving\nfactor In the years busine's on\nthe farm. At the cpcnlrc. of the\nnew yoar, those producers who\nhad included live stock in their\n1931 program, found tlMWIMflTM In\na nitich more advantastMUa position   than    thosp    who   hat    not.\"\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA, May 30. \u2014 Eggi; Toronto: Sales of storage packed eggs are\nhelnj? made to wholesalers here at\nextras 15^, firsts idi:. Wholesale\nprices to retail stores are extras 17-\n19,   firsts   lo,  seconds   l.'J.\nMontreal: Ordinary gr*dod shipments tram Onta-lo points are selling\nto wholesalers at extraa 17'^; firsts\n14\"3, seconds 12',j. Storage packed\nshipments bring one-half cent above\nthese prices. For local ungraded ship-\nments dealers are quoting producers\nand country shippers extras 15-10,\nfirsts 13-14. seconds 11-12.\n..WlnBlUtj Iiooal dealers, quotations\nfor country shipments am unchanged\nat extras II. firsts 9, seconds 6 delivered, cases returned.\nEdmonton: Dt lere here are pay-\nIng produrers and country shippers\nlor egss, extras 8-10, BMt 7-9, seconds\n4-6.\nVancouver: Dealers are quoting producers for eggs at the 'arm extras\n10, firsts 9, pullot extras 8.\nWltmiPVO. May 30 (CP).\u2014Wheat\nclosed fractionally lower on the Winnipeg market today alter mid session reports of rain in the southern\nUnited States cauaed selling bursts\nby houses with Chicago connections.\nWith all American markets olosed for\nMemorial day. trading otherwlaa wis\nnarrow throug' sut with long periods\nOf almost total stagnation.\nMay dropped % to 62\\ and July\nand October each declined H to t3\\\nand 65'_i respectively.\nA limited export trade wa\u00ab worked\nbut lt was not important. Market\nnews waa    -ry limited owing to the\nThs Fertiliser Division ot ths\nDominion Seed Branch sounds t\ntimely not* In IU caution to farmers as to tha Importance to them\nof reading the tag wtilch must be\naffixed to such bs\u00ab of fertilizer\nsold In ths Dominion, It ls lm-\nsure, before accepting delivery of\nfertiliser in bags, that lt ls labelled properly and that the analysis\nshown on *he tag Is what he has\nordered and wants. It ls this guar*\nanteed aralysls whtch represents\nactually the real worth ot Wtt\nfertilizer. The label may appear\non the bag Itself, or on a tag\nattached. Should a fertiliser be\ndeliwred without such a label the\nmatter should b* brought at\nonce to the attention of ths neai-\n1 est office of the Dominion Seed\nBranch, responsible for the proper\nenforcement   of   the   Act.\nWINNIP-G. May 30. \u2014 Roosipte;\nCattle 615; calves 305; hogs 2950;\nsheep 26.\nSteers, up to 1050 lbs: OOod and\nchoice tS to 96.19.\nSteers,   over  1060 lbs:   Oood arm\nchoice IS to \u00ab5.75.\nHeifers: Good and choice 15 to tt.9*..\nFed   calves:   Good   and   oholoe   IS\nto 10.\nCom:  Oood M38 to  WTB;   o*n-\nmrs and cutters 75 cents to 11.71.\nBulls: f   -d tl-75 to t.\nstocksr tnd feeder stssrs: Oood tfl\nto M.75.\nstock oowi and helfwst Oocd tt-bti\nto \u00bb-1 28.\nMilkers and iprtngsn: t2\u00bb ta tmx\nVeal calves: Oood and atttaoe WfO\nto ts AO.\nHogs: Sslsco bacon $1 par hasd\npremium. Butchers 91' vat bnd dto*\ncount;  heavy 19.60.\nLambs: (spring) good haoflywdght\n98 to II.\nSheep: Oood hearts* tfl-90, good\nhandywelght IS to 9\u00bb-M.\nunllfc*   tho   famous   Maromtta\nstorks that m&fce their hnmsa in\ntowns, the American stork, th*\nWood Ibis, 11 ret ln lsotet*d southern   swamps.\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON.   May   30.   (AP).   \u2014   Braz\nTrue 997s; CPR |10*'i; Hydro Electric\n9644; Int Hold &, Inv Vi; Int Nkl\nI5H: Distillers n 2s 6d; Dunlop Rbr\n\u00a39 8d; Ford \u00a3'^b: Hud Bay 13s fid;\nShell T t T tl 10s; Vlcke-s 5s Gd;\nBrit 5 per cent war loan 1047, \u00a3101\n7a 6d; Brit 4..'j per cent war loan\n\u00a3101 15?: Brit 4 per cent 1D60-90\n\u00a3100 2s Gd,\nHe's 'Tough Enough9 to Win $3132.24\nfor $2 Ticket\ntP9HQ3\\32-2<r\nix*a\nJ*rry Halllpev, 90, retired HM<\nman. figured he was \"tough\nenough\" to st.^nd a in tin more\n\u2022'knocking about'1 at the ran* track.\nAnd Ui'' ho 1 oked at the lineup Tor tho dally double. Tufinuf\nand Knockabout stood out on the\nprogram,    A hunch!\nH\u00ab Invested 92. Tufinuf stood off\na stretch challenge from Tewscnelda\nand won by a noee_ Knockabout\nhad a harder time with Diodoro and\nIrfaneh, but came through. And\nthen Jerry HalUsey, shown at right,\npinched himself. But lt was true.\nHe held the winning ticket, the\nonly  one  of  Its  kind.\nAnd ln a few more minutes he\nheld a check for 13132.24, the world\nrecord \"double\" price, and a season\npass to Aurora track, donated by\nGeneral Manager E. P. Carruthers.\n\"No, I don't Intend to quit playing\n'em  now,'* he said.\nCOUNTER\nCHECK\nBOOKS\nMade In British Columbia at Eastern dfy prices\n... of every description and slza. Carbon o*\nAutomatic back.\nSpecial designs manufactured to youi: own\nparticular style.\nPHONE\n144\nand have our representative call and Show you\na full range of samples and the prices ... Buy\nBritish Columbia goods\nNelson Daily News Job Dept\n\"Creators of Fine Printing\"\nBaker Street \u2014 : \u2014 Nelson, B. C.\n , THI   KELSO*   DAILY   VEWS.   KILSON.   B.   C,   TTTSDAY   MOR-HNO   MAT   11,\nNYAL\nVETERINARY\nCOLIC\nREMEDY\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nJUNIOR HIGH GIRL\nSOFTBALLERS WIN\nOVER HIGH SCHOOL\nScore 37-2: Walkaway for the\nJunior High Teams; Six\nHome Runs Scored\nYour\nWatch\u2014Clock\nand\nJEWELRY REPAIRS\nwill receive prompt\nattention here.\nOur work fa satisfactory\n\u2014charges moderate\nE. Collinson\nJEWELER\nC. P. R. Time Inspector\nTeams W   L     T\nJunior Hl\u00ab;.   3   0    1 OOO\nTrinity      1   0   1.000\nMidgets     1    1     .500\nHlStl School _ _  0   3     .000\n,tsam won . free hitting gam. from\nths high school, 37-2, ln s gam-\nplay. _, at ths Junior high Monday\nnight.\nThre. home runs wer. scored by\nthe Junior high team during tfie\ngame. Bern. Kline scored three\nhome runs. Gladys Horstead scored\ntwo,   and   Maybelle   Stephenson   one.\nj    Lineups:\nj Junior !l:.h\u2014B. Kline 4, A. Saare\n3, J. Oow S, E. Smith 4, C. Thal-\nberg 4, G. Horfltcad _, M. Stephenson 3, J. Bell 1. W. Lute, 1. M.\nVance 1. A. Smith 6, E. Matheson\n1,  E.  Dinney.\nHigh Scho>l\u2014P. Gibbon 1, R. Hanson l, a. Held, C. Nygasrd, E. Johnson. D. Denlaon, M. Phillips, M.\nBeltner, A. Wlllets, M. Thompson,\nK.   MacNai\u00abhton.\nTlie   Junior   high    girls'    \u25a0g\u00bb\u00bb[HOBH   Rlin   KittgS\nWatch for Our\nWEEK-END SPECIALS\nHORSWILL BROS.\nPhone 233\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's  Dispensing  Chemists\nRELIABILITY\u2014riRF    TTRCOS\u2014\nLOWEST   TRICKS\nPhone  or Ic-nTe _ our orders.\nff, Ttrlh-er.\nKODAKS\u2014FILM\u2014STATIONERY\nPHONE   34 BOX   1083\nFor\u2014\nSERVICE\nPRICE and\nQUALITY\n\u2022 STAR ^\nGROCERY ^\nPhones 10 and 11\nHome runs yesterday\u2014Simmon*,\nDykes. Athletics, a; Foxx. Coleman.\nAthletlca;   Wilson,  Frederick,   O'Doul,\nt Dodgers, Ott, Olanta; AverUI, Morgan. Indians; Stone, Gehrlnger, Tl-\nger\u00bb, Bluege, Senators; Funk, White\nSox; Hayworth, Tigers; Larry. Yanks;\nPorter,    Indians;    Webb,    Red    Sox,\nI Manush, Senators; Hornsby, Cubs;\n3ewell.    Indians;    Hargrave,    Braves,\ni ono  each.\nj    The   leaders\u2014Foxx,   Athletics,   17;\n! Ituth, Yankees, H; Collins, Cards, 12;\ni Klein, Phillies,   U;   Terry  Giant*,   10.\nI Lengue totals\u2014American 183; National    152.   Grand   total,   335.\nO AB R H Pet.\n40 1W 45 62 .\u00ab5\n39 159 29 61 .384\n37 141 27 64 .383\n22 106 19 39 .368\nE.WHEELER AND MISS\nFULLER WIN \"IT\nDOUBLES\nI E. Wheeler and Miss H. Puller\n' beat J. Allen and Mlsa M. Gibbons\n6-1, 6-4, to win the \"B\" mixed\nfinals of the Nelson Golf and Country Tennis club tournament, Sunday.\ni It was the only final event which\nwas completed. Play Is continuing\nln  the  others.\nBATTLING   TRM'EY   WINS\nI BOLT    FHOM    KUHLOW\n] WINNIPEG, May 30 (CP)\u2014 Badly\n. beaten for f've rounds, Battling\nj Tracey, light heavyweight from\n! Montreal, cut loose with a dpvastat-\n; Ing right hand in the sixth and\n; knocked out Ad Kuhlow, Detroit,\n; In V'.e feature bout of an outdoor\nfight   card   here   tonight.\nGREASING\nPARTS\nOILING\nBRAKES\nEvery purpose, for all motorists' needs, we're\ncompletely equipped to take care of your automobile problems. Only expert mechanicians\nare permitted to touch your car.\nFinest\nMaterials\nGas, oil and grease arc of\nthe highest available\ngrades, while Tires come\nfrom thc best factories.\nAll parts and brake linings\nhave been tested for their\nquality.\nCosts Are\nReasonable!\nFor work that is of thc\nhighest grade and for materials that represent quality by actual tests you'll\nfind our charges quite\nmoderate in every respect.\nBetty Nuthall and\nFred Perry Move\nInto Mixed Finals\nFrench Tennis Championship\nField Narrows Down\nWithout Upset\nGASOLINE\nYour Car in Our Hands Will\nGive It Longer Life\nPHONE 35\nBaseball's\nBig Six\nBilly Dickey, the Yankees' hardhitting cai-cner, had climbed into\nthird plaoe )n the batting race today.\njonly one point behind Paul Wantr\ni of the Pirates. Five hit* ln nine\nI times ip In yesterday's dauble-\n! header with Boston eent Dickey's\nI mark to .383. while Waner wai\nlosing seven points.\nThe  leaders:\nTNDIANAPOLIS. M\u00ab..  K     *>   <*W.   MWetlcs   ..\nCharlea    Dunkley,   Associated   Press | p   Wanfri  P1\/atea\nsporu   writer).\u2014With   death-defying I Dickey.   Yankees\nspeed,   Freddie   Frame   of   Loe   An-| Lazzri, Yankees .. ,\u201e\u201e\u201e.,. no_\ngele, roared  to  victory  in the 30th | Hafey, M*  36   37 24 M M\ninternational     W0-m-     automobile .Hunt,   FWUI\u00ab     44 \"\u00ab 33 63 -353\nrac\u201e over tth\u00ab Indianapolis speedway today, leaving a string of broken records In the wake of hla tiny\ngray-pain ted.   eight-cylinder   racer.\nFrame, a 37-year-old driver, with\n10 years of racing experience behind\nhim, smashed ell existing records\nfor the 600-mile race when he\nbounced hts little rarer over the\nfinish  line  in  triumph.\nHe covered the distance tn\n4:48:03*79 to average 104.144 miles an\nhour, breaking the former reco-C of\n101.13 established by Peter de Paolo\nIn winning the 1923 event.\nWILCOX   SECOND\nLess than 44 seconds back of\nFrame came Howdy Wilcox, Indianapolis youngster, driving his first\nmajor race, to finish second. Cm-tt\nBergere of Los Angeles, a former\nmovie stunt man ln flying and automobile crack-ups, finished rilrd,\nabout -% miles back of 'VrHcox.\nBob Carey, from Anderson, ind., was\nfourth, with Russell Snowberger of\nPhiladelphia fifth. Zeke Meyer of\nPhiladelphia VM sixth, and Ira\nHall of Terre Haute, Ind., was .seventh.\nOnly 14 of the original 40 starters survived the strenuous competition of nerve, me-hanlcal stamina\nand daring speed. One by one the\n26 others dropped out of the race\nbecause of motor trouble or exciting smash ups.\nBILLY  ARNOLD  ORACHES\nBilly Arnold, 27-year-old Chicago\nan, and one of today's favorites, escaped dashing to death, Just as he\ndid a year ago, when hla car, speeding more than 100 miles sn hour,\ncrashed Into the high retaining wall\non the dangerous north turn, a\ntwisted wreck.\nArnold miraculously escaped with\na broken collarbone while his mechanic, Spider Matlock, of Chicago,\nsustained a brofcen pelvis bone, It\nwas Just a year ago that Arnold\ncrashed almost into the same spot\nIn a smashup that sent him to the\nhospital   for  six   months.\nToday Arnold set out determined\nto triumph; and he bounced Into\nthe lead, while the huge crowd of\n140,000 to 150.000 gasped Jn excitement of hla daring driving. At the\ntime of the crash Arnold was tearing alonti on his 150th mile with a\ncomfortably   lV.d   to   his   credit.\nAl Gordon of Long Beach, Cal.,\nwas another v.^ ,m of a crash, but\nhe luckily escaped Injury. The \/.ice\nhad no sooner started, after Edsel\nT. Ford of Detroit sent the drivers\nflying on their way, when Gordon's\ncar went over tho wall as the racers\nwere starting their second  lap.\nThe only foreign Invader, Juan\nOaudino of Buenos Aires, met with\ncomplete failure. The dashing young\nj South American was forced to sur-\ni render after his eight-cylinder car.\ndeveloping trouble from the start,\nhad   travelled  only   ..75  miles,\nLASfMINUTE\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nANDREWS TELLS\nROTARIANS OF\nGLEAMING SEAS\nSchools of Flying Fish Agitate\nthe Phosphorescent\nCaribbean\nVELVETY BREEZES\nCARESS BEACHES\nLife in Sub-Tropics Attractive\nAs Pictured by the\nTraveller\nBurglar Alarm Is\nAccidentally Set\nOff at City Bank\nStartling znany people on Bakei\nstreet, the burglar alarm at the j\niBank of Montreal, on the cornier of'\n] Baker and Kootenay streets, went!\noff accidentally, about 7:13 Monday I\nevening. After ringing for some mln-!\nute* lt was silenced. It ls believed\nthat a short circuit caused lt to\nstart ringing.\nAUTTUIL, France, May 30 (AP)--\nThe British team of Betty Nuthall\nand Fred Perry was In excellent\nform today and qualified for the\nfinals of the mixed doubles ln tbe\nFrench tennis championship. The\nsingles fl:ld narrowed down without\nan upset to a dozen men and 16\nwomen.\nMiss Nuthall and Perry defeated\nHenri Cochet, French star, and his\nBritish partner, Mrs. Eileen Bennett\nWhittingstall, 2-8, 6-2. 6-3. In the\nfinal round they will meet the\nstrong United States team of Mrs.\nHelen Wills M^ody and Sidney B.\nWood Jr., who today eliminated\nJosane Slgart and Jean Borotra,\nFrench   combination.   7-5,   6-2.\nSingles play worked into the third\nround wit;, little more excitement\ntoday than the surprisingly good\nshowing of the youthful Japanese\nDavis cup player. A. Kuwabara, who\ndefeated the Frenchman Paul Fcrct,\n6-1, 8-6, 0-3.\nTHIRD   BRITON   ADVANCES\nH. G. Lee. Great Britain, defeated\nOeorges Scrterlo, 2-6. 6-4, 6-3, 6-1,\nand Perry eliminated Antoim Cout-\nanson, 6-2. 6-3, 6-3. Tie third\nBriton advancing in the men's singles\nwas J. S. Ollff, who defeated Pierre\nLotan,   France,    6-2,   6-1,   6-1.\nOthers advancing were Gregory\nMangln. United States, who won\nfrom t e Frenchman Duplalx. 6-3,\n8-4, 6-4; Jacques Brugnon, France,\nwho defeated R* H. De. Hindu player. 6-1, 6-1, 6-2; Marcel Brrriard.\nFrance, who won from Georges Van\nZuylen,   8-10,   6-4.   4-6,   6-4,   6-2.\nIn women's Jingles CilU Aussem,\ndefending chaTpion. eliminated Ma-\ndama Si hia Jung Hcnrlotln, 4-0,\n6-2,   0-3.\nRene Iv-xoste. veteran of French\nDavis cup teams who Is trying \u00bb\ncomeback, will meet Wood tomorrow\nIn singles play.\nRECITAL GIYEN\nIN AID OF THE\nWOMEN'S WORK\nASBESTOS FOUND\nON WILD HORSE\nEAST KOOTENAY\nCANVASSING   SALESMAN   WANTED\nfor well-known household appliances. Commissions good. Apply,\nstating experience, to Box 2360,\nDaily News. (2300)\nWANTED \u2014 A LIGHT DELIVERY\ncar. State price, make, and year\nto P   .O.   Box  95.  Creston.   (23M)>\nTIRES\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd*\nULLBk\nE22\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nFor Rent\u2014Single or double housekeeping rooms. Annable block.\n(1069)\nQueen city Rebekah Lodge No. 16\nmeets tonight 7;30, Degree practice.\n12347)\nSuits |24. Rex Tailoring Co., Ltd.\nMacDonald   agent,   315 Vi   Baker   Si\n(1035)\nBaptist tea and bake sale Saturday afternoon ln the Institute\nrooms. \u2022\u2022 (2348)\nPiano class demonstration at Central schoo;. Parents and friends welcome. (2361)\nCameron Brothers  Slake\nGroup on Seam Found by\n15-Ycar-01d Boy\nDescribing the raptures of * moonlight voyage smong the keys between\nCuba and the continental United\nStates, J. T. Andrews told the Rotary club Monday of the continuous\nperformance of the flying fish,\nwhich, literal! y ln schools, leaped\nout of the water, spraying the surface of the Caribbean sea with\nphosphorescence.\nSome of the tortuoua passages between the keys In the section between Cuba and th\u00ab affiliated Isle\nof Pines appeared to be not over I\neight or 10 feet wide, and lt was j\neasy to see how the buccaneers\nthrove, and foiled naval pursuit, in\nwaters of such a nature, for the\nnavigator \/ho was not acquainted\nwith the passages could not possibly corner these ccrsalrs, he said.\nATTRACTIVE   ISLE\nMr. Andrews' address was in continuation of the one of two weeks\nago. and dealt with a trip taken\nby himself and Mrs. Andrews to the\nWest Indies ln 1920, and he dt'\u00bb#\na most attractive picture of the\nglamor of tho West Indies, which\nextended even to their pineapples,\noranges and grapefruit, which had a\nspecial luscfousness, these fruits as\nproduced in the isle of Pines being\npractically all Juice. The Isle had\nmany beautiful beaches, and the\ntrade winds blew with a velvety\nsoftness that was a caress and that\ninduced no shivering. There were\nbeautiful highways, covered with\nlight cars of a familiar make, which\nran with more than their wonted\nsmoothness. Foreigners of wealth\nerec'-ed magnificent residences in the\nSpanish style, built four-square\naround a courtyard or patio, Invariably centered by a beautiful garden.\nHe mentioned one beach community that a few years before consisted of palatini foreign residences,\nand at the time of his visit had\nalmost been obliterated by a cyclone, pigs and chicken* wandering\nover hardwood floors on which society functions had once been staged. Marble, Spanish mahogany and\nturpentine were some of the commercial products of this favored isle.\nTREE mtUD\nIM   FEET\nMr. Andrews mentioned a tree on\nthe I\u00able of Pines th.it had a spread\nof 320 feet, said to be the largest\ntree spread known in the world today.\nHe also mentioned In the principal park of New cleans a huge oak\ntree known aa the \"suicide'' tree,\nthat at the lime of visit had b^en\nthe site  of 32   suicides.\nOn the way home, Mr. and Mrs.\nAndrews as \"aliens\" had an Interesting time with the customs and\nImmigration officials at Tampa, Fla.,\nand were impressed at Washington,\nD. O.i with the wonderful congressional library, In which, Mr. Andrews said, full credit was given to\nBritish civilization. The entire tour\ncovered 9438 miles, and Wtf well\nworth  lt\u00ab  cost.\nEntertainment   at   Women's\nInstitute By Mrs.'Lawrence McPhail's Pupils\nMrs. Lawrence McPhail's pupils\ngave a pleasant entertainment at\ntheir recital in the Women's Institute rooms last Friday evening In\naid of the Women's Institute work.\nA large number of ladies gathered\nto   witness   this  recital.\nThe program:\nDuet, \"Morris Dance,\" Edna Bush\nand Daphne Sandercock.\n\"Frolic In the Forest.\" Janle West.\n\"Summer Morning Waltz,\" Florence\nBell.\n\"Lament,\"*  Horace Lapointe.\n\"Etude,\" Jessie Heatj.\n\"Witches'  Dance.\"  Wilfred  Laurie.\nEruet, \"Valse Arabesque,\" Edna\nBush and  Daphne Sandercock.\n\"Thrush  Mazurka,\" Betty  Emory.\n\"Nocturne,\" Cathleen Wheeler.\n\"Oavotte,\"  Bob  ..ndrew.\n\"Slumber Boat,\" Lois Gamble.\n\"Dark In the Valley,\" John Harding.\nDuet, \"Norwegian. Dance,\" Elizabeth Carrie and  Gladys Pearson.\nCanterbury Committee\nReaffirms \"Marriage\nIndissolubility\" Stand\nReport to Be Presented at the\nConvocation; Birth Control Included\nBaseball  club travels to Rossland   seam,\non Sunday by bus. a few seats for I\nhale. Apply J. Brennan or Wallach.\n(2350)\nI Nelson   lawn  bowling  club  greens\n1 will be opened by Mrs. J. Ivan Mac-\n: Kay,  Wednesday  afternoon, June  1,\n! at 2:30.                                           (2357)\nNOTICE\nI     There  will   be   two   new   Pontine\nj modelj,   on   display   at  Dill's   Super\nService Station. Call for demonstration, Tuesdny. May  31. (234tf>\nSamples of asbestos from a group\nof claims Just staked on Wild Horse\ncreek ln the Columbla-Kootenay valley In East Kootenay have been received by A. G. RUC.le. (TOO. Thomas\nCameron ot Mayook. who with his\nbrother stak.d the claims.\nThe vein, whose discovery adds\nasbestos to the list of East Kootenay\nminerals, was f.>und a couple of\nmonths ago by Jack Gray, 15-year-\nold youth, and he has an Interest\nin the group.\n4MA PROSPECTED\n1(1   YEARS\nFor 40 years that area has been\nprospered clc.sely. without the presence cf asbestos being suspected,\nthough ,'re whole area Is well known\nfor   Its  placer  gold   diggings.\nThe showing ls 15 to 16 Inches\nwide, nnd samples have been w;nt to\nthe department of mines at Ottawa\nto ascertain the commercial value of\nthe asbestos in the seam.\nThe two Cameron,-*, are well known\nMayook ranchers who &pent a portion\nof every year on Wild Horse creek.\nThey  are  preparing  to sink on  the\nAmounts for Veterans\nGerman Prison Camps\nIncluded in Estimates\nReports  of  No   Reparations\nBeing Available Is\nErroneous\nLONDON, May 30 (By Thomas T.\nChampion, C P staff writer) (C P\ncable) \u2014Marrlag?, divorce and birth\ncontrol are discussed ln the report of\na committee of the lower house\nconvocation of Canterbury on reso\nlu tlons on marriage and sex passed\nby fm Lambeth conference of 1930.\nThe committee's report, to be presented this week to the convocation\nIn London, has hitherto been held\nconfidential.\nIt welcomes the emphasis given by\nthe bishop's resolutions to the statement that \"the functions of sex as\nOod-glven factor ln human life\nare essentially noble and creative.\"\nWhile agreeing the bishops were\ncareful to reaffirm the principle of\nthe Indissolubility of marrlag1?, the\nreport expresses the opinion they\nwcre \"less careful to maintain the\nconsequences of the principle.\"\nThe report adds that \"Indissolubility carries with lt that divorce\nand re-marrlage are by Christian\nstandards Inadmissible.\" The majority\nof the committee regret the Inconsistency by which the admission of\nan innocent person re-marrled under\nclvli sanction Is contemplated as\npossible.\nDealing with blrtih control the report regrets the statement by the\nmajority of bishops at the Lambeth\nconference that \"other methods than\nabstlnence may bs used In aome\ncircumstances.\"\nCountry\nClub Shirts\n$1.95\nThe new Country)\nClub shirts by Forsyth have just arrived. They are 'perman-|\nized' to retain permanently, size, lustre\nind color. Made in all\nthe new plain shades,\nPeach, Horizon,\nDawn, Meadow and\nClub Tan.\nShorts of the samel\nmaterial with thel\nForbelt waist band.\n$1.00\nWatch  for  Horner'f\nWEEK-END   SPECIALS\nR. R. HORNER\nGROCER\nGLASSES -\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.|\nOPTOMETRIST AN. OPTICIAN\n\u2022 UIT. 10.-U. MIOICAL ART. .UH.BIN.1\nTAXI\nPhone\n\u2022&A|fe 'Tti. But of (fcrrl\n___n ___n Careful, Coarteoil\nmW m__W Drl.OT\nNalion Tranilw Co.. Ltd.\nPHONE\n44\nWOLVES SOCCER\nTEAM IS VICTOR\nWALTER LUTHER\nSUCCUMBS TO\nHEART ATTACK\nMONTREAL, May 30 (CP)\u2014Walter\nE. J. Luther, who headed the Montreal stock exchange throughout t\ntrying year when Oreat Britain departed from the gold standard and\n\"pegged\" minimum prices were en\nforced to prevent a panic, died In\nhis garage today or what ls believed\nto have been a heart attack.\nTonight a coroner's jury under Dr.\nArmgnd Trepanler returned a verdict\nKEEP OUT FLIES\nSCREEN DOORS\n3 Mutmi\nALL    ,STAM)A\"I)    KIZLS\n$2.50 ,\u201e $5.85\nn i n n o w\nSCREENS\niimi sr un .r.\nio iit un Hisnow\nSitu 9H\nGALVANIZED\nWIRE CLOTH\nIN   WIDTHS   24   In.\nto  311 In.\nIJSs Vt \u00bbQ, ft.\nBLACK\nWIRE CLOTH\nIN WIDTHS M In.\nto 48 In.\nIMT   ...    tt.\n6<\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale - NELSON, B. C. - Retail\nAUCTION\n407   NFLSON   AVEME\nWFDNF.SI.AY      2 P.M.      JUNE  1\nFavored with Instructions from\nr. H, Bartlett, I mtU offer the\nfollowing: <iar(len Hose, Kitchen\nUtensils, NAMi Tubs, tfeatrrs\nKffrfeerator. Waffle Iron, PULL\nlUNNFH iBT LIMOGES CHINA,\nCHESTERFIELD SUITE, R\u00bbR*,\nFloor Lamps. Chesterfield Table.\nCentre Tank*, Mantle Mirror,\nDrop Leaf PtplBf Tahle, 4 Windsor Chairs, Tea Wagon, Lino Rues,\nMorris Chnlr, (irass Chairs, EMCffH\nToaster, Walnut Bedroom Suite.\nMattresses, child's Iron Cot, Iron\nBed, etc., etr.\nGOODS ON VIEW MORMNO\nOF   SALE.   TERMS:   CASH.\nO.    HORSTEAD,\nAuctioneer.\nA tea and bake sale will be given\nThursday, June 2. by St. Paul's W.\nM. S-. at thft home of Mrs. T. O.\nGibpon, Carbonate street,\nprogram.\nwas put in the estimates last session\nto look after Canadian veterans who\n.suffered in German prison camps.\nThat   amount   Is   available.\nUnder the Lausanne treaty It waa\narranged hy Great Britain, France,\nItaly and Japan that the 5,000,000\nta Turkish pounds, credit of Turkey\nin Germany, be used to relmburi?\nthe Armenians who suffered In the\ni massacre. A commission sat in Paris\nThistles  Lose dame  IR  Karlyjanri adjudicated on these claims.\nClaims to the total of over J8.000,-\n000   were   filed   at   Ottawa   by   Ar-\nOTTAWA. May 30 (CP)\u2014Reports\nhave re.vched veterans' organizations\nin various centers that there Is no\nmoney in the reparations treasury\nfor Canadian veterans who suffered\nill treatment in German . prison\ncamps  whereas the sum of $300,000\nwas   granted   to   naturalized   Armen- |AiI\u201e411lI   ___v\u201emm iinwi\u2014 _.\n.\"V*' h\u00b0 l0Bt \"Olives a\u2122 property I of ANtfe due to natural causes. At\nin th* Turkish massacres. It was | the Inquest H. Glrard, a gardener\nexplained at the secretary of state employed by Mr, Lotttt at his\ndepartment today that theee reports country home at Hudson Heights,\n!,?. 25. \u00a3*!\u00a3*_ A *?*\u2022 ,ot *5oo-(W0 ] Que.,   stated   he   found   Mr.   Luther\n'  lying   underneath   the  electric   light\nswitch, the position Indicating he\nwas about to turn off the lights\npreparatory to locking up, when\nsuddenly stricken, the Motor of his\nautomobile was not running, Glrard\ndeclared,\nMr. Luther had driven to Hudson\nHeights from Montreal last night\nand was found dead ttiii morning.\nDr. E. Mlllay stated Mr. Luther had\nPart; Playing Against\nUrisk Wind\nTeams\nScandinavians\nWolves     \t\nMusical i Fairview  3\nThistles      3\nP W L D F A\n3 2 0 16 1\n3    2    0    16    1\nNelson Twentieth Century Liberal\nclub meeting tonight. May 31, at\n8 p. m. In Legion hall. (2336)\nUnfurnished 3-room suite, Hardwood floors. Electric Frldg., also one\nfurnished   eulte.   Kerr   Apts.   <1B45\u00bb\n1    2\n0    3\n0   3\n0   2\nA fair c^owd of football fans was\npresent when the Thistles kicked off\nagainst a strong wind to 1 se to the\nWolves 3-0 at the Nelson Recreation\ngrounds  Monday  evening.\nThe Wolves were t.'.e first to concentrate an attack, and. with the\nwin.i behind them, swept down upon\nthe Thistles' net and, during a melee\nln front of the gjal, the ball went\nWha t an i mprovemen t over the\nold ga\u201e rnnge! What handy compart-\nments for pots and pans! See the ln ott McLean for the first score.\nVANITV-the latest In gas BMW ITllc Wolves wcre nmv attacking\nat the City Gas Works. (2337) singly 9nt, aft*r some nice com-\n  I blnatlon  plays, Arcure scored a sec-\nThe annual meeting of the Cana-   onc\u00bb   e\u00b0al   wlth   *_**?Uo,fl   6h0t\ndian     Pacific     Railway     Employees' , aft<1r   13   minutes of  play.\nMedical   Association   of   British   Co- |    Thistles'    d-fence    was    having\nmenlans in Canadi who had become\nBritish subjects and who had lost\nproperty, fathers or mothers or wives\nor children In the massacre. Of these\nclaims, the only ones to be entertained by the Paris commission\nwera those where wives or children\nIftd been lost In which cases certain^\nsolatia were granted.\nTlie remainder of the claims were\nturned back to Ottawa and for\nyears the government struggled with\nth.3 problem as to what should be\ndone with them. It was finally deckled to award these claimants a\ntotal of |300,000 taken out of the\nfull   vote   of   $3,200,000.\nlumbla for Nelson and District will\nbe held ln the Canadian Legion on\nSaturday, June 4, 1932. at 8 p. m.\nP. CRAVEN\nLocal Secretary\n(2352)\nCARD OF THANKS\ndefence    was\n\"tough\" time with the fast Wolves'\nforwards and aTter 30 minutes play\nArcure broke throug.i and score! the\nthirl goal.\nThe Thistles had the advantage of\nPACIFIC   COAST   BASEBALL\nMission   5-0,   San   Francisco   3-6\nSacramento  6-3,   Portland   11-7.\nHollywood   6-0.   Los   Angeles   2-3.\nOakland   4-4,   Seattle   3-0.\nDiscussion   Deferred   on   Proposal\nfor   Sweepstake    Plebiscite\nVANCOUVER, May 30\u2014Discussion\nwas deferred until a latrr meeting\nthe wind after half time and pressed j by the city council this afternoon on\nstrongly, but the forwards mam woe-! Aid. H. J. Degravc's proposal that\nfully wea'\/ In front of the goal and: plebiscite *oe submitted t^ voters in\nGlllett had no difficulty keeping his, December to decide whether the city\n1 council shall ask the Dominion\ngovernment to authorize govern\nment    controlled    sweepstakes      for\ncharity   purposes.\nThe   Ymir   Celebration   Comlttee ; goal  Intact,\nwish to thank The Daily News, City      Lineup:\nDrug. Poole Drug. Smythes' pharmn-       Wolves\u2014Glllett.    Ward,    MV-Innes,\ncy.    Mann,    Rutherford,    Hipp-rson   Bradley,    Jeffs,    Wallach,   Whitfield.\nHdwe., Nelson Hardware. Wocd VM-   Campion, Arcure, Bowkett, McCronk. ^^^\nlance, L. D. Cafe. J3ks Taxi, Swifts, Thistles\u2014Morris, C. McLean. Ram-1 I have lived to know that the\nA. McDonald, and all, the people nf say. Ueinnw, Whlt.leli. Klrby, Bush.(secret of happiness ls never to al-\nYmlr who he'.ped to make our 24th 'Finding. Glllett, A. MacLean, Hart- low your energies to stagnate.\nof May celebration a success. (2353)    ley. \u2014Adam    Clarke.\nsuccumbed  to a  heart  attack.\nFor almost ten years, chemists\nof the University of Minnesota\nhave been studying effects of soil\non different metals used In mak*\nIng   burial   caskets.\nTAXI   and]\ntransfer!\nDally  Freight  Schedule to Tral|\nand  Rossland.  Leaves  Nelson\n10  a.m.    Trail  Depot  Domlnlor|\nOarage;   Rosslanu    >epot,   L.\nCafe. CON   CL'MMINSj\nOK\njsZiz^t\n13 STAN1.RY ST. PtlCrST. Vtil\nUse   The  Nelson   Daij\nNews Classified Ads i\nGALLAGHER'S   TONIC   AND\nSYSTEM   BUILDER\nThe  jcreat   Ilcrh   Medicine\u2014For  skin\n(]|s<nis\u00bb'_.    It clears  tne complexion.\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION   WR   SPECIALTY\nrilONE   1\nORDER COAL\nNOW\nStandard Lethbridge, a\nclean long burning coal\nthat gives the greatest\nvalue for your money.\nLump,  ton  $11.00\nEgg, ton     9.50\nCord Wood, Birch, Cedar\nAU  Lengths\n.  PHONE 701\nFairview Fuel Co.\nMatinee 2 p.m.\nNights 7 and 9 p.m.\n'Viennese\nNigflts,\nLast showing of this\nhaunting picture.\nLadies*\nDresserware\nat Night Performance.\nCOMING   TOMORROW\nJOAN CRAWFORD\nand\nCLARKE GABLE\nIn\n\"POSSESSED\"\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1932_05_31","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0405708","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1932-05-31 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":"1932-05-31 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}