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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":" \t\nEdmonton Grads Take First\nGame for World Tide\n\u2014 Page Seven\ntH0n i\n;      T0U-I1* 3t\n6^\nNelson Beats Trail 10-5 in\nBasesball Game\n\u2014 Pa&e Seven\n254 NUDIST..\n,*\/_*\/\u2022_ *'C \/       *C '   DAILY    NEWS,    NKLSON,   B,    C,    MONDAY   MORNING    MAY    IB,    1933\n\/     T\u00b0*tlH ,,\t\n\"* t\u00bb ,.'*\u2022\nTHE CENTS A COPY\nMMBia  *t\n*\"*\u2022*,\n.LED: CHILDREN LEAVE\nA***''********\"********************\nFanatics End Hunger Strike in Nelson Jail; 53 of Children Sent to Various B. C. Homes\nOLICE INFORMATION\nPOINTS TO SIX IN\nGANG OF KIDNAPPERS\nCommunist:      PREMIER    OF   JA1\nPolice Able to Partially\nIdentify Criminals and\nPiece Story\nCONDON DESCRIBES\nMEETING ON BOAT\nKnow Names and Characteristics of Five; the\nSixth Is a Woman\nNEW YORK, May 15\u2014The\nNew York Times savs Dolice\nhave information the Lindbergh baby was kidnanped and\nslain by a gang of five men\nand one woman whose identities are believed to be known\nto New Jersey authorities. The\narrest of one or more of them\nis expected within a few days.\nOn the basis of information\nfurnished by Dr. John F. Condon* the \"Jafsie\" of the $50,-\n000 ransom payment, and by\nMorris Rosner, undercover intermediary, the paper says,\nstate police have been able\npartially to identify the criminals and to reconstruct the\nfirst,coherent picture of the\ncrime. t\nThe Times* itory In effect IB\nas follows: Charles A. Lindbergh,\nJr., was stolen from his crib on\nthe night of March 1 by three\nmen, one believed to be a German,\nanother an Italian and the third\na Brazilian. The leaders of the\nband, both Americans, remained In\nhiding In a shack In the Hour-\nland mountains and the woman,\naim an American, was brought\ninto the conspiracy to care for\nthe child.\nThe  kidnappers   had   no  Intention of doing away with the child\nat   first   hut   resorted   to   murder\nwhen   their   plans   began    to   go\nwrong.  They   forgot  to  bring   adhesive tape t0 seal the baby's lips\nand   with   his   unusually   strong\nlungs his screams could have been\nheard for some  distance.\nThe three actua* kidnappers travelled to the home of Colonel  Charles\nA.  Lindbergh  near   Hopewell,  N.   J.,\nin an automobile bearing New York\nlicence   plates.   The   woman   stayed\nin the car and the German and one\nconfederate entered  the house.\nBECAME PANIC   STRICKEN\nAfter carrying out their purpose\nthe party are believed t\u00a9 have lurked la the nelghiwrhood for some\ntime and possibly witnessed squads\nof police scouring the countryside.\nIt was at this point the criminals\nbecame panic-stricken and are believed to have battered their charge\nto death. Still they went ahead\nwith the ransom  negotiations.\nSeveral times police or intermedl\narles were on the verge of closing m\nori the actual kidnappers and the\nwoman but were pursuaded to bide\ntheir time for fear of Jeopardizing\nthe Hie of the baby\u2014already dead.\nThey were known to \"a number of\nunderworld characters\" who were\nout to \"get\" them lf the pollce\ndid  not.\nMEETING   ON   BOAT\nNEW YORK, May 15\u2014Dr. John\nF. Condon (Jafsle) Is quoted by\nthe Daily News aa saying the man\nhe paid 150,000 ransom for the return of the Lindbergh baby was one\nof a gaDg of five, all of whom he\nmet later oa a boat ln Long Island\nsound.\n\"Jafsle,** It was previously understood, negotiated with only one In\ndividual\u2014the    man    to    whom    he\n(CONTINUED   ON  PAGE   TWO)\nONE ARRESTED IN\nSASKATCHEWAN ON\nCHARGE OF ARSON\nSASKATOON, Sask., May 15 \u2014\nCharged with arson ln connection\nwith the fljes which razed' three\ngrain elevators Bt Meacham Miy 7,\nMike Osadchuk, aged about 28, on\nof a Meacham district farmer, was\narrested Saturday and appeared before Magistrate J. T. Leger here\nwhen his case was adjourned for\nhearing   to  May   23.\nThe arrest came as the climax to\none week's Investigation by the\nlocal detachment, R. C. M. P. Cor-\nporal Davies, who had been conducting the probe, came to the city\nFriday, obtained a warrant and made\nthe arrest Saturday. Osadchuk re*\nmains in the cells, having been refused   bail.\nDestroyed In t\\t tires were elevators owned by the wheat pool and\nthe Alberta Paclfl i and Standaro\nGrtln companies with an estimated\nloss of 170,000. Including loss of\nabout 70,000 bushels of wheat.\nEXAMINES FILES\nHOPEWELL, N. J., May 15\n(By Francis A. Jamieson, Associated Press staff writer)\u2014\nThe feverish hunt over land,\nsea and sky for the Lindbergh\nbaby killers was given momentum by the personal efforts of\nCol. Charles A. Lindbergh today while the aged \"Jafsie\"\nof the case sought to pick\nfrom the rogues' gallery the\nlikeness of the extortionist to\nwhom he paid $50,000 ransom.\nDr. John F. Condon, the 72-\nyear-old educationist who\ntossed the packet of money to\na man in the murky stillness\nof a cemetery near his New\nYork home, appeared at New\nYork police headquarters\nshortly after noon.\nHe   was   accompanied   by\nthree men believed to be New\nJersey detectives.\nEXAMINES\nCRIMINAL FILES\nThey went at once to the\nbureau of criminal identification, where thousands of criminals' pictures were on file.\nHours later they still were\npouring over the photographs.\nWhen they finally emerged from\nthe building Dr. Condon made the\ncryptic   statement:\n\"I couldn't do a thing.\"\nPreviously he had said h\u00a9 knew\nthe name, nationality and physical\ncharacteristics of the man who\nperpetrated  the hoax upon him.\n\"I know all about him,\"' the\naged   intermediary   added.\nWhether this man\u2014and the five\ngang members with whom John\nHughes Curtis and Colonel Lindbergh him- \"* negotiated\u2014played a\npart ln the kidnapping and murder\nor merely tried to commercialize\na crime committed by others, was\nth* major question confronting officials.\nRELATES  MEETING\nON   SHIP\nMeantime th* thanks of Col.\nand Mrs. Lindbergh for his efforts\nwere transmitted to Dr. Condon by\nletter and the New York D.ily News\nquoted \"Jafsie\" as relating a meeting aboard ship with the full kidnapping gang, numbering flv\u00ab men,\nthe same number as mentioned by\nCurtis.\nProsecutor Erwin E. Marshall of\nMercer county said Dr. Condon had\nsupplied the first name of the\nlone man to whom he said ransom.\nsaying the extortionist was called\n\"so-and-so\" authorities withholding\nthe actual name, and no surname\nwas   given.\nPolice added that Dr. Condon\nrelated the man to whom he talked\nsaid one of the gang knew Dr. Condon. The veteran lecturer, welfare\nworker and amateur sports enthusiast h\u00abs a wide acqualntancs\nin New York.\nSPRING SOMETHING SOON\nOfficial announcement was made\nthat no arrests had been reported\nand Marshall said in conferences\nwith authorities thus far no one\nhas been prepared to offer a theory\nwhich he thought strong enough to\n\"warrant the ]lkel\"--.od of something\nbeing sprung at an early date.\"\nCurtis was questioned further by\npolice here and Information which\nhe  gav\u00ab Was  being  checked.\nIn the word of Co. H. Norman\nSchwarzkopf:\nColonel Lindbergh is actively cooperating with the police author'ties\nand is assisting us ln every way\nhe can.\"\nUp and down the eastern coast\na flotilla of 25 cutters and some\nhundred smaller government craft\nand a complement of airplanes, all\nheavily armed, ln quest of the\nvessel used by the gang which tortured Co. Lindbergh with evasive\nreports about his son, whom they\nclaimed   to   toe   their   captive.\nThe coast  guard  searchers  had  a\nfull   description   of   the   boa\u00a3   and\nthe men,  furnished  them by Curtis\nthrough   New   Jersey   officials.\nKNOWS   NICKNAMES\nThey even knew th* nicknames of\nthe quintette whose boat foT weeks\nhud manoeuvred up and down the\nseaboard, sending cryptic messages\nto them; harassing an already-frantic father with messages of hope and\nthen messages that plunged him into despair; leading him on until\nthe very moment when, he received\nthe tragic news he would never\nsee his first-born alive again.\nWith a full story of Dr. Condon's negotiations and the efforts\nof Curtis before them, the officials\nwere making a wide-Hung effort\nto determine '#' ether the two Intermediaries had been hoaxed by\nthe   same   gang,   and   whether   thts\nTj\" A T r \u00abJ\n*S* A   to   I'mma   *~*J   MttJ\nBEFORE ASSASSIN GUNFIRE\nSecond Head of State to\nSuffer Death From Assassin Bullets\nFIVE BUILDINGS\nARE BOMBED\nVictim of Assassinators\nSECRETLY   ARRESTED\nMartin Parker, Sudbury, who Is\none of an unknown number of alleged Coi nunlsts who have been\nsecretly picked up frt . coast to\ncoast and transported to Halifax\nfor deportation. Parker was brought\nto Canada at the age of three and\nh\u00ab has lived here ever since.\nATTEMPT MADE\nTAKE LIFE OF\nUNION OFFICIAL\nSecretary, Mine Worker;\nUnion Shot at Sixth\nOne Arrested\nCAL04RY, Alta., May 13 (CD-\nArrest of a sixth person tn connection W'li**\u00bb nklrmtshes between\nstriking coal miners and police at\nBellevue and a report that an attempt had been made to shoot\n\u2022Jnhn Ntokaluk, secretary of the\nMine Workers Vnlon of Canada,\ndeveloped tonight while attempts\nto -settle the 11-week strike In\nthe Crow's Nest pass were under\nway.\nWhile announcing the arrest of\nHarvey Murphy, said to be an or-\nganlzer of the Mine Workers Union\nof Canada, on a charge of unlawful\nassembly, police declined to discuss\nthe alleged attempt to shoot Btoka-\nluk.\nThe report of the shooting of\nStokaluk, prominent In the affairs\nof the union for several years, was\ndriving and automcblle with Joseph\nKlkoski, secretary of the Blalrmore\nlocal of the ucton, from Bellevus\nto Blalrmore, a distance of five\nmiles, Friday nlg.t. A bullet is said\nto have shattered a read side window while the car was moving, but\nlther Qtockaluk nor Klkoski was\nInjured.\nStokaluk   Is  believed  to  be  somewhere   In   the   Crow's  Nest  tonight,\nand could not be reached.\nIN   OTHER\nDISTURBANCE\nMurphy, sought by po.lce In connection with the outbreaks at Bellevue May 4 and 8 when an attempt\nwaa made by the west Canada.*.\nCollieries, limited, to open its mine\nat Bellevue on an \"open shop\" basis,\nwaa arrested ln Calgary and will be\narraigned In court at Blalrmore\nFriday. ^Police alleged Murphy tock\npart in one of toe disturbances at\nBellevue,\nArrest of -phy and reported it-\ntempt to **ot Stokaluk came\nquickly fol. ..ing the vote Friday\nof employees of the International\nCoal snd Coke company, limited,\nand the McGllllvray Coal company,\nlimited, at Coleman in favor of returning to work on the 1931 scale\nand working agreement after being\nidle since the end of February. The\nvote to drop opposition to working\nconditions and return to the mine-\nwas carried 292 to 237, but the vote\ndid not affect employees of the\nWest Canadian Collieries at Bellevue,\nwho still arc protesting working\nconditions and especially the \"lay\noff\" system of the company.\n18 Men Surrender; Shot\nat Own Home; Cabinet\nDecides to Resign\nTOKYO, May 10 (Monday) (AP)\n\u2014The premier of Japan, Hayoshl\nInukal, fell mortally wounded at\ndusk yesterday before the revolver\nfire   of   military   terrorists,\nfllmtiltaneouily five buildings In\nTokyo were bombed. These Included\nthe headquarters of the dominant\nNelyukal political party, of which\nPremier   Inukal   was   president.\nAt   the   scene   of   some   of   the\nbombings, the terrorists left handbills    signed    \"The    Young    Army\nand    Navy    Officers'    astoeiatlon,\"\nand    expressing   fitter    dlnsatlsfae-\ntlon with the political parties, and\nthe way they had handled Internal\nand   foreign   affairs.\nWithin a few hours is young men,\nfive  of  them   naval   sub-lieu tenants,\nand  the others  farmer  military cadets, surrendered ln uniform to the\npollce.\nSuch was the political uneasiness\nin the wake of these sudden terroristic activities, that transaction on\nthe stock exchanges of Tokyo, Osaka,\nKobe and Nagoya were suspended.\nWOVND POLICEMEN\nAND   MAID\nNine uniformed young men das'.ed\nup to the official residence of the\npremier In an automobile late yes*\nterday and opened fire on four policemen snd a maid-servant who\ntried to halt their entrance. All five\nwere  wounded.\nInside, the premier was conversing\nwith a visitor Identified only as Mr\nTanaka, Mr. Inuksl'a daughter-in-\nlaw, hearing the disturbance ou t-\nslde, rushed ln and warned him to\nflee. ,\nThe crashing of doors was plainly\naudible.\nThe   veteran  leader  refused.\n\"SHOOT   IF   YOU   DARE!\"\nWhen the assassins burst int*.,\nthe drawing room brandls.lng re- j\nvol vers, Mr. Inukal arose and up-'\nbraided them ln strong terms.\n\"Shcot lf you dare I\" he said.\nTheir answer was a volly from\nnine revolvers. The premier fell,\nblood streaming from his face. The\nvisitor also was wounded.\nEvery means was adopted to save\nthe premier's life, including blood\ntransfusions, but six hours liter\nthe 77-year-old statesman died st\n11:25 p.m-., the second head of a\nstate tQ succumb to an assassin's\nbullet within io days, president Paul\nDoumer of France waa shot May 7.\nThree hours later a hurried ceremony waa held at the Imperial\npalace   transferring    the   powers   of,\nNUDE DISPLAY AT THRUMS IS\nNOT SENSATIONAL, WOMEN AND\nMEN WEEP WHENJHILDREN GO\nSunday Arrests Made Up Mostly of Women and Children; Pile Into Cars Without\nAny Protests\nFANATICS ASK FOR FOOD FOLLOWING\nSEVERAL DAYS OF HUNGER STRKING\nrRF.MIEU   SUTO'HT   1NVKAI\nReichers Tells Own Story of\nAttempt to Span the Atlantic\nChildren Are Dispatched to Coast to Enter Several\nHomes; Two Lady Attendants With\nLoads of Food\n(CONTINUED  ON  PAOE  TWO)\nREINFORCEMENTS\nARE RUSHED TO\nDISTURBED AREA\nGoose Tagged by\nJack Miner Found\nin East Kootenay\nKINOSVILLE. Ont,, Mny 15\n\u2014An l'ea of the vast stretches\nof territory covered by wild\ngeese ln their migratory flights\nwas revealed ln the finding la\nEast Kootenay, British Columbia, of the charred benes of\na. goose. On the leg of the\nbird, which apparently had\nperished in a bush fire, was a\ntag bearing the name of Jack\nMlner, Ontario naturalist. The\nbird at cne time had sought\nshelter on the great bird sanctuary at Klngsville and was\nfed by Miner. Tlie tag and\ninformation concerning ttl incident were sent to Miner by\na settler In an Isolated district near where the bird VII\nfound.\nBirds tagged by the na.ural-\n1st have' been found as tm\neast as the Atlantic coast\nand fro.n the Gulf of Mexico\nto Baffin's land, but t.:ls Is\nthe first time one ever hta\nbeen known to cross toe\nRocky   mountains.\nSighting of the President\nRoosevelt Led to Immediate Decision\nU Dead and 400 Injured; Moslem Attack Instigate\nRiots\nPRESIDENT OF\nMINE COMPANY\nTAKES OWN LIFE\nBUFFALO, NY.. May 15 <AP).~-\nA man Identified by police as Leo\nFrenhaus. 47, president of the Bid-\ngood Conoslidated Mines, Ltd., of\nToronto. committed suicide by\nshooting In a downtown hotel today. A JJ2-callbre postol lay near\nthe body and a medical examiner\nreturned a verdict of suicidal death.\nSEVERE    EARTH-WAKE    KITS\nFIVE; 20 INJURED\nBATAVIA, Java. May 15\u2014A severe\nearthquake In the Menado district\nof the Island of Celebes resulted\ntoday ln a casualty list of five dead\nand 20 injured. More than 150\nhouse* collapsed.\nBOMBAY, May 13 (AP.\u2014Troop\nreinforcements were moved today to\ndisturbed areas of Bombay where a\ncasualty list of 21 dead and 400\ninjured has been piled up during\ntwo days of rioting by Hindus and\nMoslems. Fifty of the Injured were\nln a serious condition.\nIn six different parts of Bombay\ntoday the police were co-npelled to\nfire  into  the  mobs.\nLate tonight there was no signs\nthat toe disorders would abate. Thc\nriot* had started stoning temples\nand rh<*v.ucs and several Hindu\nbuildings, including a four-story\ntenament,  were  set  a   tire.\nThe riots had their origin ln an\nattack by Moslems on two Hindu\nboys. Moslems atoned tramcars carrying Hindu passengers and some\ncloth shops were looted. Three Mohammedan children were reported\nkilled.\nLong-standing antipathies of the\nMoslems and Hinaus are believed to\nlie   behind  the  disorders.\n\" (CONTINUED   ON  PAGE  TWO)\nPERU  AND   MEXICO\nSEVERE RELATIONS\nMEXICO CITY, May 15 (AP).\u2014\nForeign Minister Manuel C. Telle*,\nannounced last nldht diplomatic relations between Mexico and Peru\nhad been severed.\nHon. R. W. Bruhn and\nDeputy Minister\nArrive in Nelson\nHon. R. W. Bruhn, minister of\npublic works, accompanied by his\ndeputy minister, Patrick Phillip, arrived ln Nelson last evening, being\ndriven here by William Ramsay, district engineer. They were registered\nat the Hume.\nMr. Bruhn and hU deputy were at\nGrand Forks Friday evening, and It\nwaa then announced they were leaving Saturday for Spokane, with an\nIntention of being at TraU Monday.\nPART OF 0K0T0KS\nMAIN STREET IS\nRAZEDjY FIRE|\nFor  Time  Threatens  Whole!\nTown; Fire-Fightinc\nEquipment, Ca!garv\nOKOTOKS, Alta,, May 13 (CP)\u2014Aj\nstretch of t.*.e main street of this\nlittle Alberta Ol) town today lay ln |\nruins aa result of yesterday's fire I\nthat destroyed four buQdl&fa ani'\ncaused damage of approximately $40,-:\n000 Most of the damage* was covered   by   insurance.\nStarting in the rear of the Martin\nblock from ur-known origin, thc\nblaze spread rapidly to the three\nother buildings housing several stores\nand ofrices. Entire stock or a men's\nfurnishing store was carried to\nsafety by  volunteers.\nFor a while the fire threatened\nthe whole town, but the blaze was\nchecked by arrival of fire figl-tin?\napparatus from Calgary, 25 miles\nnorth of Jiere. Spirka and burning\nembers fell on plies of lumber owned by the Skov Lumber company\nbut were extinguished before making\nheadway.\nDUST STORM HITS\nSASKATCHEWAN\nREGINA, Sask., May 15\u2014One of\ntm southern Saskatchewan's dreaded dust storms, starting Friday evening, died down .Saturday night,\nwhen rain filled clouds rolled down\nfrom the Alberta boundary line and\ndropped their contents over tbe\nprairies.\nA high wind, rapidly rising In\nvelocity, held sway Saturday and lt\nwas cold and dusty. Today the wind\nhad fallen, the temperature was\nrising and the atmosphere wai clear.\nny LOU REICHERS\nSpecial   dispatch   to   the   Associated\nPress  by  Brranfjement  with  Famous\nFeatures Sjndlcate, Inc\nM. PRESntrNT ROOSEVELT,\nat r.ea. May 15 (AP).\u2014The flight\nfrom Newark to Newfn.. nil land\nwas uneven! ful except for some\npoor  visibility  and  rain.\nI received a weather report at\nHarbor (.race from Harry Connor\nchief officer of the Baltimore\nmall line ship the \"City of Hamburg,\" who i:ild out my course\nmid furnished m> with navigation  data.\nHe indicated weather O.K., so\nI refueled and took-nff flying\nthe course Harry radioed me from\naboard ills ship in mid-ocean. The\nfirst hour out htm clear nnd cold\nuna* I -.Ighted f-everal Iceher*;h.\u00ab.\nThen low-hanging clouds obscured\nI he sea nnd fur nt _mwm) four\nhours I did not see it nnaln. After\nthat I got only occasional glimpse*\nthrough holes,\nVISIBILITY POOR\nWhen eight hours had passed I\ncame down through a hole to have\na look underneath. Tlie visibility was\npoor and I could see no Indication\nof land, so I climbed up again over\nthe clouds and flew another half\nhour.\nI repeated the same performance\nbut still no land. Again at nine\nhours and at nine and one-half\nthere was still nothing but water.\nI knew then that I had been carried by cross wind- e'ther to the\nnorth or scuth of Irclrt nd. Whenever I did spot water I could see\nfrom the whltccaps that surface\nwinds were southwest *-o I assumed\nmy position t*t be north.\nCARRIED   SOUTH\nTuring _outn * t\\ew for half an\nhour, still I could se\u00ab nothing but\nwater, so came to the conclusion\nthen that winds out of the north,\npossibly northwest, had carried me\nso far south that the southwest\nwind I was flving in then had not\nbeen  cnoiiRh  to  counteract  them.\nI flew north then for another half\nhour, returning to practically the\nsame position and decided then\nthe best hlng for me to do was to\nfly due east for the following reasons:\n1\u2014I figured I was ton far south\nof Ireland to be able to make It\nwith my remaining gas and also\nI was afraid I would be unable to\ncome down through the clouds and\nlocate my position as it had already\nturned night.\nNEARER   -SHIPPING   LINES\n2\u20141 thought possibly land would\nbe Just as close to the east ss to\nthe north and by heading east I\nwould b nearer th\u00ab, slipping lines.\n3\u20141 was thoroughly convinced,\neven though I found land 1 could\nnever get away with a landing\non account of the rocky nature of\nthe coast line so had already made\nuip my mind that the best thing\nto do would be Jump.\n(Note: Reichers probably means\nhe would attempt  to fly  his  plane\nDoukhobor population in the Nelson provincial jail mounted by 254 Sunday afternoon when provincial police officer*\nbrought in that number of Sons of Freedom who appeared\nin the nude Sunday at noon and later at the old orchard in\nThrums. Sunday evening, with departure of the train for the\ncoast, the jail population was decreased by 53 when 47 young\ngirls and six young boys were loaded onto a special coach and\ndispatched in care of women officers ahd policemen to public\ninstitutions at Vancouver and Victoria. The Doukhobors in\nthe jail and in the barbed wire enclosure there now total 511\nsouls of which 247 have been sentenced to three yars in the\npenitentiary.\nEarly Sunday morning the fanatics who had been on &\nhunger strike since Thursday announced their strike was\nover. j*\t\nSunday's  nude  demonstra- smaii MUr , a\u2122 bound for tht\nj tion at Thrums was just a rep- !^\u2122dh7^\nition of the event held a week\nj ago. Shortly before noon the\n.Doukhobors undressed. There\n| were police officers about and\nLhey sent to Nelson for trucks.\nAdditional officers arrived and\nat about 2:30 the first were\nI loaded   aboard    trucks   and\n* brought about 18 miles to the\nI jail. As fast as trucks drove\nup there was further stripping\nand the police had little difii-\njculty in handling the nudist?.\nI Most of tl.em were fully clothed be-\nj fore they reached the Nelson Jail,\ni There wae no religious ceremony un-\nj derway   as   in   previous   demoi-stra-\ntlons.\nIt ls believed that ther> are about\n\u25a0200 Sons of Freedoms left snd these\nit ls expected, will  likely  break  the\nlaw  in order to  _\u00ab In'     jail  with j iu'r'se'ri'.an't \u2022\u00a3\u00ab__.,n  SS___2\n___, hr\u201e,\u201e.r. __l .Pst.r.. ______   ....   .\u201e,\u201e .,,\u201e\u201e ...^ J _.. .__ JJ~ JJ\nand eight small children for the Loyal\nProtestants' home at Vancouver.\nTWUi'lD WELL\nihe children besides having the\nbest of attention from the men and\nlady guards are being treated well\non their trip to the cout. A supply\nnf fresh milk Tvent* with them. Arrangements it:-- - been made to pick\nup \u25a0iili'iiirn.-ii milk at points on the\n.way to the coast. Bread, apples.,\norHnges. peanuts, crn-kers and other foodst- pf*. were put on the train\nfor the ftmmntma, many of whom\ncarried their flour bags of extra\nclothing.\nborne of the older girls were bravely c*ir \/ing young sisters three or\nfour years of age. The th*y babes were\nguards. Hundreds of Nelson people\nview the entrainig 1 the children,\ndren.\nIt was Sunday morning that the\nSons of Preetlom after learning that\ntJietr children were to be taken away\nthat night, decided to give up thr.r\nhunger strike. Tliey sent a letter to\nfresh apples and dried fruit. They\npointed out that they did not wish\nstarchy foods for about two day*\". The\nletter asked for better accommodation, saying that the Doukhobors\n\"are not hoga. We are human beings.'*\nFollowing receipt of tlie letter tbe\nJail authorities prepare.! a light meal\ntheir brothers and sisters. There were I\nno Community members arrested on j\nSunday.\nOf the 253 arrested for the first\ntime since nude demonstrations have\noccurred this year, the majority of\nthem were women. It is estimated by\n'police that about 35  per cent were\nI ,v->men, 25 p* ' cent men and the bal-\nMM young children of from a few; f0_.   Lhe   Ooukllobor5   ^nd   they\" are\nI months of age to 18. It VM impossi-   iu-lng on   pruneB    etc\n' ble lor police to get a full OiKiItI-  XBNTl IN tH\ncation Sunday night owing to the ills-i Hurdrecis\"cro-.vded about the JaU\npatch of the childr-\"!. of those al-! yard aU dayt At vnmiX therc are 17\nready sentenced, and lo making ar- tvnia ln 115e on\u201e tonight there waa\nrangements for accommodation of not cnoUKh ro,)m Ior ftU t..,ft 51l lUm\nthoso arrested during the day. \u25a0 mateB< The Oouktiobors were orderly\njPABKUTt HEAR NEWS ,and chanting. Within an hour of the\nStaff-5ergeant   A.   T.      .cphenson, I children being taken tliey vere smll-\n[early Sunday i orning announced, to I lag brightly and hastily making prep- I\n! parents of the girls and boys who had ' aratlons for a night's rest. Blanl_?ts f\n| become wards of the government when | were Mag Issued \u25a0! du. k fell.\nj their parent* pleaded guilty and were j    t-UI   of   the   Doukhobors   arrested\n'sentenced   to   the   penitentiary,   that j Sund'iy   can   not   be   held   until   thl j\nthe   children   would   be   ~-ken   from   neccpsary flat arrives from the attor-\nthem and shipped away Sunday night, j ney-general. As in proceeding cases 15\nThere   was   a   great   demonstration, j |g expected that ill will admit going\nMany eyes w-ere full of tears and thejm the  nude  and  will  receive  three |\nkiddles   and   parents   were   close   to; year terms  in   the penitcnlary. The\neach other all day. Songs continued ! children   of   which  there ls a  large |\nail day long. At about 6 o'clock the\nchildren were summoned and tagsed.\nThey bore tags because they are going\nto different homes at the coast.\nnumber.'wilt go to public homes.\nThe JaU population figures are i\nrived at as follows: Convictions: May I\n5. 118:   May   12.  77;  M.iy  13. 52;  ar- |\nAt about 6:45 o'clock a special pfls-lrcsted Sunday 254; childr   . taken 04 I\n\u25a0enger coach was spotted outside tlie [for  a  total  of  505  Doul.hobors.   Al- |\n(CONTIMED   ON   PAGE   TWO)\njail and the Doukhobor parents,\nthrough a guard of city and provincial\npollce olfl'-ers, were allowed to carry\nor lead their children of all ages\naboard the train. Tears and walling\nwere not lacking. Several of the women broke ..own completely. Once\naboard the officers gave the parent*\na minute for last farewells and the\nparent* were taken off the train. As\nthe engine started up they waved\nfarewe s and shoute,* parting words.\nSome of the children were smiling\nbroadly and happy, but the majority\nwere lr tears. As the train got underway the frantic mothers got down on\nall fours and bowed ss their children\nwcre whlsited away. There was loud\nwalling and the police came in for\nsome bitter words from the women.\nSeveral had to be aided back, into thc\nJail yards.\nWHX   GET   EDUCATION\"\nThe children are going to various\ntomes to be given an education\nalong Canadian lines. They were lu\ncharge of instable John White, Mrs.\nJohn White, Kirs. C. G. Barber and\nDon Eckart, the latter a special who\nonly returned from Uie coast Sunday night after taking 31 boys to the\nindustrial school at Coquitlam.\n\u00bb The children on the special coach\nSunday night bore tage telling ot\ntheir destination. Six between the ages\nof 16 to 18 are on their way to\nthe boys' industrial school. 13 girls\n10 and under are going to the Children's Aid Society at Vancouver eight\ngirls. 11 to 14 are going to the girls'\nIna .atrial school at Vancouver; seven\nsmall children are going to thc Prot-\nl estanle' orphan home at Victoria, 12\nready left the J;.li tor the coast I\nboys. 47 girls and six boy- or a total |\nof 84; Prison total 511 Dcukiiobors.\n92-YEAU-OLI)\nPROSPECTOR\nTAKES TRAIL\nBtrRNS LAKE. May 15\u2014Stampeded\nby re pern of the new discoveries\nnorth of here W. R. (Bill) Watson,\n92, is returning to tlie scene of his\nearly   protpcctlng    days.\nThe lure cf tlio gold diggings has |\ntaftnwt  the   artcrle*.  cf  this  nona-\ngenar t_, Umbered up his Joints and |\nprepared   bin   to  chance   his   grubstake    on    another    tunt    for    the |\nrainbow's  end.\nCAPTAIN DOLLAR\nGROWING WEAKER |\nRAN RAFAEL, \"THllf., May 1...\u2014\nCapt. Robert Pollar, Hs-j ear-old\nveteran of the -'hipping and lumber Imliiitry, \u00ab*i\u00b0 said today hy\nhis ph>slcian to be srnnlng keeker every minute. He has been III\ntwo weeks with bronclal pneumonia and for the past 24 hours\nhas  been  ln a roma.\nWATER   LEVEL   AT   NELSON\nFriday\u201410.60 feet above low wtner.\nSaturday\u201411.05    leet    above     low\nvitcr.\n\u25a0bunda.','\u201411.35 leet above low water\n L\nCuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels and Cafes\n\u2022?_ VERNON STREET\nDinner\n75c\nPHONE 787\nLuncheon\n50c\nm\nHUME HOTEL\nNELSON, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\n\u25a0\u25bc\u25bc\u25bc-**A__A.A.A>'\u00bb\"*-r*sT*W*\\TA_kA*V.\nTHE   NEISON   DArLY   NEWS,   NIXBOS,   B.   C.   MONDAY   MORNING   MAY   18,   Wl~\nBURGOO KING ADDS\nPREAKNESS TO HIS\nLIST OF INQUESTS\nTick on \u2022nd Boatswain Nose\nArt Right Behind Thunder.\n\u2022ring Leader\nMORE ABOUT\nSIX IN GANG\n(CONTIMED   FROM   PAGE   ONE)\nHUME: C. H. Jackson. H. McTier.\nW, M. Archibald, J. H. Winter, Trail;\nIt. MacKenzle, D. Donaghy, A. E.\nHoward, Kenneth Moodle, Mr. Justice Murphy, Mr. tnd Mn. T. C.\nWalker, M;ss Morrow, Miss Ellis,\nMiss Wilson. \"Ips Symes, Mrs. Sydney Risk, A. Taylor, A. Dick. H.\nUndo. J. Ruttam. O. H. Bniley. W.\nP. rrant, T. M. Stephen, Mrs. W. P.\nDewey, J, R. Anstls, Roy C. Wright.\nH. I. Wtleon. R. J. Sandere, F. M.\nRutter, W. H, Lyne, Vancomer; 19.\nT. Anscrort. L. H. nawllngs; R.\nW. Bruhn, P. Philip, S. J. M. Moodie,\nVictoria;   O.   Storey,   Bouth   Slocan; I\nP. Broughton, New Denver; Mr. and\nMrs. R. J, Strand and sister, Spokane; Mr. and Mri. R. Johnstone,\nFred G, Perry, Fernto; Mr. and Mrs.\nG. W. Pearson, Kdmonton; H. C.\nBrown. Beverley Hills, Calif.; T. W.\nCartvttisht. Revelstoke; L. W. Campbell, Rowland; I*. B. Goddls, Mr.\nand Mrs. O. D. Vening, Dr. and Mra.\nJ. I. Kelly. R. W. Watson, J.\nFontaine, QMpiTT A- J* Balin*nt* T-\nA.. Wallace, G. Rum.ey, H. J. Ban-\nnan, Montreal; O. F. Smith, Toronto;\nO, Sibley, Medicine Hat; R. Crawford, Lethbridge;  J. Brydcn, TraU.\nBALTIMORE, Md.. Hay 15 (A*).\u2014\nBurgoo King, a royally bred son ol\nthe blue grass, moved Into the select\ncircle of feet thoroughbreds ai he\ncapped hla Kentucky derby victory\nwith a driving triumph ln th* 42nd\nrunning of tlie Preakness at Plmllco\nSaturday.\nComing from behind to nab the\ndfK\"i>ion in the closing strides, the\nJi. R. Bradley coit equaled the performances of the mighty Sir Barton\nand the great Gallant Fox, hereto**\nfore the only t\/* horses that ever\nwon both the <Urby and the pre\u00bbk*\nnesfl.\niWhere (lie GueithKinQ\nC(5he Savo}^\n\u2022.BISONS *TEWIST AND CINtST HfflTL\nMANY   ROOMS  WITH  PPIVATE\nBAT1IS OR BHOWEKS\nJ. A. KERR. Prop.\n*H \u00bbAK*\u00bb  ST. PHONE  11 gj\ni sg._r.-u.' itui\/i i. \u25a0*.__.iPt_fr,'fe'a*~L^*^ __FSff$_.\nTRAIL RESIDENT\nPASSESSATURDAY\nIf. Borton, District Old-Timer,\nDies it Trail After a\nShort Illncfa\nTRAIL. B. C, May 15\u2014H. Borton,\ndistrict old-timer who was born in\nSouth Wales 05 years ago and who\ncam\u00a9 to this district about 40 years\nago. died here late last night after\na short illness of six week*. He waa\ntaken to the hospital late last night\nand died a few hours after.\nHe has been tn charge of first sld\n\u2022supplies st the smelter for yeara.\nHis residence In this district was\ntJnvst continuous with the exception or a holiday trip which he\nmade to Ms home country two\nyears ago.\nI It Is not known whether or not\n! lie has relatives ln this country.\nFamous In 5 3-5 Seconds\nSAVOT* Mr- ani Mrs. C B. H\u00bbsl\u00ab-\nIn. and .-mil.. W. W. Fpwc'l, Bpo-\n*n\u00ab; U Ml!.., Mrs. J*. Immlnns. P.\n.  Cluf... H. J. In-l.Kn,  Nct.on;\n. Williamson. Mr. and Mrs. Brown,\nlew D.nv*r; Mr. and Mrs. J. Hickey,\nXr Pari; C. McLsod. X. Oloag,\n\u2022r. and. Ml*. \"*. Crowe, the Trail\ntp-Mbal* torn, M. J. Hin_l... Trppil;\n-.   Talbot,   B.   J.   Borlham.   Salmo;\nC. B. Hufty, Orsnd Tortcs: O. S.\nBaker, Yah*; T. A. Anderson, Winnipeg; E. Rose, Montreal; M. McCallum. Midway; F. T. Holmes, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Marsaek,\nSalmon Arm; W. W. Powell, Spokane; L. McEwan. EUlv\u00abrton; W. G.\nM. Rottmsn, I_.dner; W. W. Moore,\nGrand Forks; Mrs. 8. Shuttl.worth,\nBrockvllle, Ollt.\ncNew Grand Hotel\nT. U KAPAK, Trop.\nWMUy or Monthlf Rat*. ntn.le, 10 cent* and up\nHot and Cold Water Double, 11.50 and up\nPHONE SOS     -     \u2022     \u2022     T. 0. BOX 1061\nMEDICINE MEN\nSTILL HAVE POWER\nNSW ORAND: P. Jansen, Kokance;\nA, Popo... Winlaw; W. Joln-wn,\nancouw; J. Karleln, Boswell; M.\nucher, Bosslaiid; J, Shean. Cran-\nroo\u00bb; A. _*rlco.f, Procter; J. Slako,\nymir; J. Dcnnlck, Salmo; Pollle\nBonn, Tarrys; John P^oker, Brilliant; Harold Orlce, C. McDiroush\nNelson.\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nHot enfl c'   u'-f\"' i'\u00ab *ftrj room\nUleMI   lleated\n(.(>.\u25a0.   Baker  St. .'hone   flft\nQUianrS. Jamee P. Dowell, Har-\nld Alder, Jack Bickerton, Dick\narnlngton, Alfred Gordon, T. Adit. O. BUne, Vancouver; W.\n[cFayden, Nelaon; Mrs. A. Mac-\nonald, L, Lunde, Trail.\nOccidental\nHotel\nW Vernon St. rhone 5I'L\nH.   WASSICK\nnrtj  Boom, of folia Conir..t\nlleadnu-rter.   (or   l.o._\u00bbr.\nand  Miner*.\nMADDEN\nHOTEL\nA Welcome Awaits You\nli'    r.  MAI'DUN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot and   Cold   Uater\nIn the IIIAH1   ot th. City\nStirling Hotel\n2 Blocks East of Post Office\nHot and Cold \"Vat.r\nSteam Heat\n.Moderate Rates\nPi H. Bush, Prop.\nMADDEN; W. J. Dalton, Medicine\nR. Whslt*, Calgary; B. Camp-\n.11'. Salmo; P. wlieatlcy. Prlnottoo;\n[lea C. Bush, Miss A. Bu>l>, Van-\nluver;   W.   R.   Faulktier.   Spokane;\n, Wllklns, Eholt; T. Hodgets, 'nail.\nTANDARD CAFE\nMslson'i  Popular       it- urant\n\u2022drf Dinner 11 tra. till 8 p.m\nmday  Pinner  6  p.m.   till   8  pm\nboda rfffTTfltW\nThe Finest of Oood  Bundaes\nThe Royal Ca\u00a3e\nCLASSIC  KISTACKANT\nU.nnemriit   anil   Ms****   I'rtiaU\nOPEN DAV  AMI NU.1IT\nSpecial Dinner. 11:1* lo 8 P.m. UH\nSpecial   Sunday   Chicken   Dinner  Ml.\nMpcclallzlnl In Chop Suey and -.oodles\nPIIO.NK  It*\nL. D. CAFE\nThe   llnrst  In   th.  City\nCi'l      AI.L   HOIRS\nPIN_   POOD- FROM T   *ERVIC15\nSC1DA   FOUNTAIN\nROOMS   TO   .tENT\nOur method ol .ubdlvld.n- tho\nda and counting the hour, comes\ndown from Babylon.\nTRAIL, B. C, HOTELS\nDOUGLAC\nHOTEL    9\nRooms and Bath\nB. U tnd A. GBOUTAOE. Prop..\n*pte*m Heated\nIhroothuut\n\u2022** *3\u00bb\u00ab\nDot and Cold\nnatw\n''on. -*3\nTRAIL. B. C.\nArlington\nCentrally\nLocated\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA   P. lEVlSUlE. Prop.\nlead The Nelson Daily News\nOTTAWA, May 15 (CP).\u2014Natives\nstill gather in age-old witchcraft\nceremonies nnd witch-doctors and\nmedicine men still hold wmty anions\nniperftltla \u25a0 aborigines, tho recently\nrrteeeed annual rppor* ot the Roj-al\nCanadian   Moun .;!   pollce  reveals.\nA.L.cn.g British Columbia Indians\nand Eskimos of thf Arctic, officers\nof the famous force have found evidence of the pcnriclous Influence\nof the medicine men \u25a0 nd of the\nextraordinary power he wields over\nhla tribe, instances have occurred,\nit Is stated, \"where a witch doctor\nhns actually caused the death of a\nman by surest ing ]t to him.\" The*-*\ninstances, however, are rare, and as\na rule the witch doctor simply\ntakes advantage of some natural\ndeath, claiming to b, responsible\nlor It, and thereby enhancing his\nposition  rt \u00bb worlipr  or  miracles.\nYoungc members of British Columbia Indian tribes resent the medicine\nman's  power,   and   P.C.M.P.   officers\non   on*   occasion   last   year   found\nthres young men  armed  with rifles\nlying   in   wait   for   a   witch   doctor\nwho was  on  his  way  to perform  a\ndance on ths grave of hts \"victim.\"\nCorp. M. T. Berger, of the Hazel-\nton   detachment,    reports    a    weird\n. ceremony performed in a cabin near\n[ Moricetown in which the witch doc-\ni tor purported tr. take a bear out of\n| a   sick   man's   body   and   \"blow   It\ni away,\" therby e..ri_,g him of an 111-\ni ness. Believed  to 15e the first white\nman   to   see   the   ceremony,   Bcr\u00aber\n* nnd Constable   '    T. Rlvett watched\n1 It from a window. Tyee David, Mor-\nloctown   chief,   r   neurasthenic,   was\n\\ chanting   on   his   hands   and   knees\ni in   tin.   middle   of   the   cabin   while\nmembers   of the   tribe  were   grouped\n1 around. Covered  by  a  bearskin,  the\nchief held in  his  hand a red stick\nwith   a   small   mirror   sunk   in   the\neclGe of the handle. As his chantlag\ngained strength  he  would  f.radually\nraise   himself   with   the   stick,   then\ncollapse on the floor, and  the  performance   would   be   repeated.  Tribal\nmembers Joined ln the chanting, the\nwomen utterlnc a peculiar wall.\n._.'H,\\1.S   .AIIUMTl.\nThis continued for 20 minute.**,\nuntil the chief appeared exhausted.\nThen Alejj Tyee, the mdicin. man,\nbent over David's stomich and pretended to take son.et_.inr. in his\nhands. Standing up, he raised his\nbends, still cupped, above his head,\nand blew into them. This VM the\n\"binwlng   away\"   of   the   bear.\nTyee David, the *iilef, claimed th*\nceremony did his sickness much\nsnort, \u2022Milch would have been ln-\n\u2022jTlutil tUd nc**. the i>olicn intT-\nruplM tbe ceremony. Alex Tyee and\nanother mertlclne man were given\nMippended  eestweee   of  one  year.\nAn odd Incident illustrative of the\nclash between modi*. -. scien*> and\nancient belled In tlie north occurred\nlat Coppermine. Dr. R. V Mirtin\ncompiiined lo the police that Ca-\nmiak, a native medicine- man, WH\nlnt*rf..****.| with his patiente, having\ninduced one m*\u00bbn to leave the hospital and submit to >*he nnc',*nt\nform of treatment, Death followed,\nDr, Mart!*-* gaid the patient was beyond saving, but he 'i*d to protect hla, other patient.-, and the native medicine man was warned not\nto  interfere.\nAn outbreak ef religious lanati-\nelem of a different sort brought\nofficers of the force It Leaf River,\nin t:y so\\ithwr._tern eorr'er of Un-\nftvi .^y. Whlt\u00ab. inhabitants of the\npost became alarmed when a native\nnamed Miller, his mind attested by\nstudy of the leu', ment. took it upon\nhimself to pla rellgloui leid-ar of\ntha \"fttlement. Making vestments\nfor himself. Miller led iht Eskimos\non parade and was beginning to be\n| rude to the whit*? people * hen the\npolice arrived. Th' let-der and nis\nflock w-ei> lectured and the matter\nwas closed, a report that th\u00ab Ei-\nklmo leader had ordered two women\nto be stoned I I death because of\ntheir barrenness being cenied by all\nth\u00ab   natives.\nMan's Heart Stopped\nby Bad Stomach Gas\nW L. _d:*r-. bloated so w.tb gas\nafter meals that his he.rt m \u00bb.-ed\nbeats. Ad.erlka .nought out all gas\nand now he eats anything and feels\nfine. Mann, Rutherford Co., Druggists.\nfl\nturned oyer the money la a Bronx\ncemetery the night of April a\n(John Hughes Curtis, the Norfolk\nIntermediary. h\u00bbs numbered at five\nthe band with which he and Colonel\nCharles A. Lindbergh  were  dealing)\nThe Dally News story further\nquotes the elderly Bronx lecturer\nas disclosing the nicknames of two\nof the gang\u2014\"John\" and \"Doc\"\u2014\nand as descrlblnf three of tham as\nof dermal), Italian and Spanish extraction. He was said to be under\npollca guard for fear of reprisals\nfrom  the  criminals.\n\"It was about a week after X bed\nmet the llrst one\u2014\"John\", Dr.\nCondon related, \"that I was *to]d I\nwould be taken on board the joat\nwhere the baby was. I was blindfolded and rowed out to a v-aeel\noff Throggs Week In the Bronx.\nIN   A   QSGU   OF   FIVE\n\"When 1 got on deck they took\n(he haml'iga from my eyes. I ent\nIn  the  center  of  a  circle  of  five\nmen.     Each     one     had     a     pistol\npointed ot me. I'll admit I was a\nlittle nervnus but I didn't bhow It.\n\" 'Put down  your  guns,'  1  said.\n'I'm not armed.  Vm  been a baseball  umpire  m\u00bb\u00abt  of  my  life  and\nI'm   used   to   settling   arguments\nwithout   weapons.'\n\"They    aU    lowered   their    pistols\nexcept  one   fellow   they  called   'Doc'\n'\"That may be all right.* he Mid,\n'but there is a fixed penalty for the\ncrime    we've    committed\u201450    years.\nWe aren't going t<j take any chances.\nIf  you  ever  tell   a  souj   about  this\nmeeting   we'll   get   you   lf   It's   the\nlast thing we do.'\nNO   EFFORT   TO   CONCEAL\n\"They made no effort to conceal\ntheir facei. One of them talked\nwith a German accent, one with an\nItalian, and another with a Spanish\naccent. I couldn't make out the\nnationalities of tlio other two.\n\"I asked John when he was going\nto show me the baby. But he said\nthey had decided tf.e day before to\ntransfer the child to a hiding place\nashore. It wu it .hat time W**!\npromised M> W-^d me the biby's\nsleeping garment, which I received\nthrough the mal] a few daya later.\nThey sent the exact kind the baby\nwas wearing the night it waa taken.\"\nDr. Condon waa M4 the WW\nhud two women associates, one ot\nwhom the newspaper Identified as\nthe woman wh0 \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0ed on him in\nthc Bronx with a message and later\nmet him by appointment at the\nTuckahoe. N. Y., railroad station\nwith further instructions.\nIt waa \"John\"\u2014the German\u2014who\n-cepted the ransom payment, Jafsie added, and It was \"John\" he\nmost distinctly remembers. He described the man as about 38 years\nold, a blond, about live feet, eight\nInches in height and of athletic,\nbuild. +m\nHe  wore   a   cap   several   sizes  too\n\u25a0man *nd W \u00bb >uUed l\u00b0* \u2122\nhis .yes. .   . .   _,.._.\nRosner, \u00bb'ho appfsrf\"* test H\"n\nHoning at polio* hs\u00bb<to\u00ab\u00bb\u2122\u00ab \"\"\"J\nyesterday, reverpled h. too- on. M\n_M ransom notes to Mew York and\nsupplied a list ot all person, to\nwhom h. had shown It. He w.s\npermitted to leav. vlH'out \u00bbur-\nv\u00abillarpce.\nDII1TY MCR\nI\u00ab  NEW  <U '*\nMeanwhile, a new clue was announced-,   dirty   hiprlap   tart.\nIt wa\u00bb picked up ahout 60 feet\nfrom the Improvised grave ot the\nInfant. _\nIt was taken carefully to police\nheadquarters to be examined ln the\nhope lt might In some way throw\nmore light on the strange  case.\nOne th.ory was that tho fhild\nmight havo been killed somewhere\nelse and the body transported In\nthe bag to the heavily-wooded section where lt was found.\nIt traces of blood were found on\nthe sack, thl. theory might gain\nweight.\nHop. ot finding other clues led\nofficial, to hav. \u00abU >'\"\u00ab\u2022 *\u25a0\u00a3\nand surface dirt, for a large radius\naround where the body was found.\nscraped up and taken to the Lindbergh garage. When the collection\ndries, chemists will analyw and\nstudy It.\nCUl'.\"   ANO   KVITlENCf\nIhe  kppown   evidence  ami   clue.\nPRAIRIE STORM BRINGS MOISTURE   f\nTO NEWLY-SOWED CROP AND HALTS \\\nEMBRYO OF SASKATCHEWAN DUSTER\nMORE ABOUT\nSTUDY FILES\nnow  Include:\nThe original ransom note left In\nthe  nursery.\nThc soliseriuent notes received\n*iv  the l.lmllirrihs.\nThe notes received hy rr. Condon. '\nTh. Information Dr. Condon\npicked up dpirlng W\u00ab l*\"1* '\"*\u2022*\"-\ntlsllons vvllh the men who po^ed\ntn him  as  kidnappers.\nThe \u25a0\u2022token*.\" Pr. Condon received ns 'MiriKif thwe men ac\ntiinll,  held  the  l>nl>..\nill. dp-MTlpllon of Ihe man to\nwhom he p.ld lhe *.v*.Hll\".\nThe rPPiilirpimlciitlPPn''. If nny.\nCurtis nnd hi\" tw\u00bb Norfolk \u00bb\"-\nsopl.iles received.\nThe Information Curtis tiilncO,\n.ti.on.ti long weeks of tie-ntl-\nallons, concerning the gang with\nwhom  he wa. dealing.\nThe   kidnapping   ladder.\nThe secret reports on the tracing of the marked hills which\ncomprised   the  *f..0.O00  ransom.\nAn.ljsls and study of the earth\nfound \u00abt the \"grave\" may furnish   clues.\nA broken shovel was found at\nth. scene during yeiteriiay morning, hut later It, wpp. plated of-\ntlilall) It had been placed there\nonly a .hort lime before.\nChief Snook, of the Hopewell\ntownship pollce, said he had received It from occupanls of a\nNew York car parked out on the\nroad.\nAnd now It', a new world word In rope-cllmblng. Normsn Parish\not the Los Angeles Athletic club went up \u2022 -J-foot rop. h.nd-ov.r-hand\nln 5 3-3 seconds, Of courae Norman didn't hav. * man on hla back,\nas la shown above, when he made hla r-cord climb. II. will cllmr. Jor\nUncle Sam ln the Olympic game* thl. summer.\n\"Governor\" Bruce\nHere for Visit\nFrom Windermere\nIsGutfitof Mr. ami Mrs, S. G.\nBlaylock at Itt.     if Home\nat Four-Mile\nR. Randolph Bruce, late lieuten-\nant-governor of British Columbia,\nwho since his last visit to Nelson\nhas made a world cruise hy C.P.R.\nsteamship, landing at New YorJt\ntn April, arrived here Sunday night\nby Kootenay Express, from Windermere, where he has been since his\nreturn to the province.\nMr. Bruce was met at the train\nby Mrs. 8. O. Blaylock, and will\nvisit Mr. and Mri. BlaylocK at\ntheir summer home at Four-Mile for\na few days. He expects to be In\ntown today  to see  old  friends.\nW. M. Archibald arrived from East\nKootenay with Mr. Bruce, registering at the Hume.\nMORE ABOUT\nREICHERS' TRIP\n(CONTIM-ED   nOM   PACE  ONE)\nover land and make a parachute\nJump rather than to attempt a forced land on rocky coast.\nBecause of the night and poor\nvisibility, plus my landing speed\nand 'the fact that I was tired, I\nfelt incapable of Judging t forced\nlandins.\nBo when sighting V*e lights of the\nPresident Roosevelt, and still no\nland and with very little gas left,\nI decided there was only one thing\nto do and thnt was to set the\nLiberty down on the water. I elg-\nnailed the boat to stand by and\ncame -down in the sea about 60\nyards  away.\nIt wai very dark and visibility\nso poor hat I had to hang my head\nout to see when landing. As I\nneeded both hands to land. I could\nnot protect my face and the shocit\nthrew me forward hitting the eowl,\nbut outside of bending my nose out\nI of shape.\u2014that required two _tltchos\nj to straighten it again\u2014there was no\nother damage.\"\nKerr Sinks Golf\nBall for Hole in\nOne on the Eighth\nLonrheach   Golfer  Propi\nMash.e Hhot Into Cup at\n130 Yard*, on Nelson Course\nJ.    t>    Kerr   of   l-onfbeaah\nJoined the famed .\"hole-in*\none club\" on Sunday when\nhe sunk hla ball Into the\neighth hole of the local club\ngrounds with a fine mat-hie\nshot.\nMr.  Kerr  was  playing with\nR.   X*.   McBrl-ie.   T.   R.   Wilson\nand Q+vtt Chew. All hit almost perfect shots at the\neighth and all made the green.\nWhen the golfers arrived on\nthe green there were but\nthree balls in sight. Shaw\nlooked Into the cup and picked\ncut a ball which proved to\nbe Mr. Kerr's. So close had all\nplayed the hole that Shaw's\nball rested within four feet\nof the hole, Mr. Wilson's six\nfeet and Mr. McBrlde'a 10\nfeet. The distance was 130 feet.\nREV. J. A. ROWLAND OF\nINVERMERE AT\nCOAST\nINvrRMERE, B. C, May lft,\u2014J. A.\nRowland, clergyman in charge of\nTrinity United church of this part\nleft thla week to attend a gathering of the church's dignitaries in\nVancouver, B. C.\nMlas Aiys Laurence of he Imperial\nBank staff ls away enjoying her\nholidays at th* home of her parents.\nMrs. Basil O. Hamilton, Invermere, secretary for the diocese of\nthe \"Living Message,\" published by\nthe Dominion Woman's auxiliary for\nCanada, and also editor for this\ndiocese of the same publication, left\nfor tha annual meeting of the Diocesan body to be held in Orand\nrorks, B. C-. during the second week\nin May. Bhe was accompanied' by\nMrs. Archer Smith, as delegate rep-\nresentinff the W. A. at Ed^ewater.\nThey will be pone about one week.\nIt is the intention to break the\nJourney at Nelson.\nMontreal Would\nMake Gardeners\nof Unemployed\nHOPEWTLt.. N. J., May 15\u2014Anie\nLlndbfTRh has tapped her reserve\nstrength  and  found   new  energy.\nThe erlals precipitated by the\nfinding of the broken b-cdy of her\nstrlen mm apparently had been\nweathered today and the young\nmother again sought t<, forget her\nsorrow in minor housekeeplnj problem*.\nCONTROVERSY ON\nSALES TAX SAVES\nB. C. LARGE SUM\nVICTORIA, May 15 (CPI \u2014In.\nvolvlng a savins ol bftwren \u00ab.0.0O0\nsnd p\u00bb50,000 lor the province, satisfactory settlement ws* reached yesterday m sales tax negotiations MB.\nducted between th. Dominion ard\nprovincial government* ln connection with s.ipplie, u,ett ,0- _n,m.\nPl>ved rtUf. premier Tolmie wlr-\neel members or his osblnet her.\ntnst the Dominion hsd agreed to tli.\nB^C. condition that sale, tax BhouW\nnot app y \u201e\u201e ,\u201ePh \u201e      \u201e \u00ab\ned by the government\nTil.  settlement  Is retroactiv.  and\nm apply to \u201e,ppi,es pimhued by\nm, local government for un-m.\nK,.\"\u2122..**1\"\" .?*\"\u00bb\u00bb<\u2022   >a\u00abt   .,\"r\nsup*.\nprov.\nLIBERAL  OBOAMZER  HERE\nB. J. M- Moodle. Liberal organize.*, arrived in Nelson by car Bun-\nday night, registering at the Hume-\nSome basement stores are Installing uHra-vlolet lamps to bring\nmore of the beneficial rays of\nsunlleht  Into  these  usually  sunless\nrooms.\n5*   \"*\"\u25a0\u00bb'   0,  '\"-\".\".\"igrerrne'n't \"\"[j\ncome   \u00bb,   we.com.   I\u201et..ll.,\u201ec*   ,_\nSS ______ m**\u25a0\u2022\u2022'\"\",* who\n5 SSSr*-*\u00bb\u25a0*.\u25a0\n5_aKS^*^\u00bb\u00abs\nThe chief importance of Karakul\nshfep U in the production of\nIsmb-jitina suitable for fur, including  broadtail, Persian  and  caracul\nMONTREAL, May 15 (CP). \u2014 A\nCommunity Garden league of Greater Montreal la the most recent project in aid of the unemployed to be\nlaunched by the Montreal Council\nof Social Agencies. A citizens' committee to furth - this undertaking\nhaa been formally c nstituted attar\ncareful study c; the merits of such\na project by a committee of th\u00ab\ncouncil. The organization wJl follow closely the p'a of the Montreal\ngarden committee during the war\nyears, when hundreds of garden\nPlots were made available for returned soldiers md others.\nThe two-fold ohject in this Instance Is to provide* for the families of the unemployed a profitable\noccupational interest and a source\nof supply of fresh vegetables during\nthe summer _*a\u00abon. If sufficient\nvacant land and the nece-.iary loola\ncan be found it is hoped that in\nthis way a needed outlet for the\nenforced leisure of thousands of the\nunemployed   will  be  provided.\nCold  Wave   Hits  Manitoba\nConditions Beet Sine*\n1915\n(CONTINUED   FROM   PAOE   ONE)\n-.Qtiir  included  the  j-tdnapperi   and\nItinera,   as   well   as  tt_(.   extortionists.\nUsing a grand Jury enquiry ?s\nhts agency, Attorney Charles 8.\nMcLaughlin of New fork city look-\ned forward to piaclnB toiether the\ncomplete najrative of the \"Jaffllo\"\nnerotlatlons, conducted in part\nthrough    newspaper   advertisement!.\nNot many hours after the lettered body of th\u00bb child was found\nin % thicket less than five miles\nfrom the Lindbergh estate last\nThursday. Col Schwarzkopf issued\na statement containing this declaration:\nGROUP    SUSPECTED\nWe have had under suspicion a\ngroup of pensoni suspected of being the kidnappers and Immediate\nsteps will b\u00ab taken to accomplish\ntheir   arrest.\"\nLater that night he said.\n\"Information concerning the gang\nreferred   to  ls  now  being  checked.\"\nLast night he -said.\n'The gang referred to In earlier\nbulletins is the one described by\nMr. Curtis and every effort Is being made to locate them.\"\nThis seemed sn Indication that\nofficials are working on the premise\nthat ths extortionist with whom\nColonel Lindbergh and Curtis were\nseelcing to deal were the actual\nkidnapper.!\u2014killers.\nSchwarzkopf, however, added In\nthe same bulletin the following\nstatement:\nnpruiPTioNR no\nNOT   COINCIDE\nAs has been shown tn Dr. Condon's own statements, he only saw\none member of the gang and the\ndescription given of this man doe\u00ab\nnot coincide sufflcietly closely to\nany of those described by Mr. Curtis\nto cause us to draw any conclusion.\"\nThis statement was open to the\ninterpretation that Schwarzkopf be-\nlleved the men who received the\n\u202250,000 from Hr. Condon ml-,ht\nhave been a member of the same\ngang Ourtls contact, but not necea-\nearlly one of the five men Curtis\nsaw.\nTo this speculation Behwartkopf\nadded in hia bulletin this afterncon:\n\"A study of the statement of Dr\nCondon and Mr. Curtis did not reveal anything sufficietly poeltive to\ndraw conclusive deductions concern-\ning the Identity of the intermediaries with whom they wert dealing\nThis bein-t studied further and more\nlnformntion is being gathered.\"\nProm tills chain of disclosures jt\nsepmed evident an intensive sifting\nof the Condon-Curtis clues was going on (n the hope of drawing forth\nsome pertinent threads that would\nmake a net ]n which to bag the\nflendinh criminals\nLINDBERGHS    WELL\nDr. John drier Hibbs, president\nof Princeton university and a close\npersonal friend of the Lindberghs,\nwas In communication with the\nfiler's estate during the afternoon\nand   later  announced:\n\"I have been told Col. and Mrs\nLindbergh ar\u00a9 both 'perfectly well,\"\nSTREAMS   OP   OARS\nMeantime, the sunny spring\nweather brought long line* of automobiles Into the Sourland countryside from all directions.\nSeen from any of the airplane-.\nthat occasional 1\" hovered overhead\nthese black ribbons of ears, stretching down -white roads, resembled\nborders  of  moun.ing  encircling  the\n!!,ar\\..^hlt0   houw   <*   tragsdy   on\nthe hilltop.\nAcross the road from the wooded\nsection in which a truckman had\nspied the little skeleton Thursday\nafternoon, a refreshment stand had\nbeen  erected.\nIn the woods two troopers kept\na silent watch over the \"scene\"\nOut m the road, state troopers\nkept the traffic stream moving\nCountry youths stood t the roadside with picture postcBrds of *he\nUndbergh home, hawking their\nwares in the ears of  motorists.\nThe disclosures of Morris Rosner\nmysterioua undercover man, hu added to the puzzling mass of data\nfiltering through the hands of investigators.\nWINNIPEG, Map 15 \u00abm\u2014Travelling eastward across the prairie\nwheat lands over the weekend, *\nstorm brought additional moiiturt\nto apeed the newly-seeded crops on\ntheir way to maturity and, as an\nIncident of Its progress, halted aa\nembry0 dust storm in southern Saskatchewan.\nChilly weather and oocealone.\nshowers prevailed in Manitoba today\nbut In Alberta where the etar.n\nstarted Saturday with snow and\ncold, higher temperatures and clear\nskies were the order. Without 50 per\ncent of the seeding in Alberta completed, the weekend weather developments and good growing condition*\nbrought a happy smile to the faces\nof  the   farmers.\nBoth northern and southern Saskatchewan receiver generous downpours of, ratn. It was particularly\nwelcomed In the south where tli*\nheavy April rains failed to make up\nthe moisture deficiency which results from two years of drought.\nENDS SOIL BLOWING\nMENACE\nHigh winds sprang up their Saturday and started tossing the dust\nabout but the rain oame on from\nthe west and ended fears of heavy\nsoli blowing, It fell steadily Saturday night and this morning and\ncontinued Its showers during the day\nThe northern part of the central\nprovince has, lf anything, too much\nmoisture and seeding operations\nhave been delayer. A 13 hour rainfall started Saturday. Today the\nskies were clear and fanners art\npreparing for a final drive to complete seeding. Soil conditions are\nconsidered The best since 1915.\nAround Saskatoon there was less\nrain and although further moisture\nwould bl welcomed germination conditions   are   good.\nWhen ti.e chill wave struak Manitoba early today it caused citizen*\nto shiver after two days of excessive warmth. The scattered \u00abhow\u00abra\nhad a gjod effect on crop-growing\nconditions.\nWolves to Meet\nScandinavians in\nLeague Football\nThe Wolves meet the Scandinavians In an intermediate city league\nfootball con' t at the Recreation\ngrounds at t* o'clock tonlsrht.\nOptimism favors the Wolves, sJ.\nthough every time they have met the\nScnndlntivlans this spring, tbe Scandinavians h- e emen-ed victors. The\nBrandinavtens superior ability Is attributed j long hov-s of grilling\npractice.\nModish Women Have the Blues\nThere's no denying the popularity of blue this spring. At a luncheon\nat g, smart New York hotel every alngle wom-n wore blue. You can get\nany effect you want with It. ao no wonder women like it. Mrs. Paul\nWhttemsn. with her dark auburn hair, \u00bbnd Mrs. William Sesmon, wtth her\nhoney-colored tresses, sat side by side. These two former movie favorites\nachieved very different results with blue. Mrs. WUiteman wort a smart\ndressmaked suit of navy wool, with three-quarters bell-shaped sleeve3, t\nwhite silk blouse with a \"little boy's collar\" and a stunningly chic little\nhat of blue cellaphane straw, with neee veil. Mrs.'Seaman was quietly\ndistinguished in her dark blue crepe Jtomalne afternoon drew, with monk-\nIlko neckline terminating in^a deep shoulder cape and a one-side blue\nstraw beret that showed her'lovely hair to advantage.\nSEASONAL TARIFF\nIMPOSED ON FOT'R\nNEW COMMODITIES\nOTTAWA. Mny 15\u2014Seasonal tariffs\nagainst four Imported vegetable.-, and\nfruits have been la-posed by Hon. Z.\nB. Rycltman, minister cf national\nrevenue. The duty value of cucumbers until Oct. 31 has been set at\nthree and one-half cents a pound.\nOn mushrooms, the duty value hss\nbeen fixed at fife cents a pound, to\napply ail year. The duty values for\nonions and rhubarb, also to apply\n12 mon.!-a ln the year, have been\nset at three-quarters of a cent and\ntwo   cents  a  pound   respectively.\nWolves Midgets and\nRovers Clash Tonight\nWolve Midgets and Rovers will tangle in a Juxer_i.e city football match\nat the Recreation grounds this afternoon at 4:30 o'clock.\nAlthough many of these players are\nnew to the game, the contest, are always l.:?nly founght and both teams\nshow a great deal of improvement\nsince they first sett f<_ot on the field, ley,\nMORE ABOUT\nASSASSINATED\n(CONTINUED  FROM  pAGB  ONE)\ngovernment to Korekiyo Takahashi,\nfinance minister in the cabinet. Mr.\nTakahashi became acting premier.\nMeanwhile polite reserves wert\nmobilized throughout the city.\nOTHER   GROUPS   ATTACK\nJust at the time tht terroriata\nattacked the premier, five other\ngroups of uniformed young men,\ntravelling in automobiles, swung Into\naction.\nOnt attacked the office of the\nmetropolitan police board at Bakur-\ndamen, the Cherry village gate of\nthe Imperial palace. Seven or eight\nshots were fired and two hand\ngrenades were exploded as they sped\non down the street, A policeman\n\\>d a newspaperman lay wounded\nbehind  them.\nMeanwhile a similar group threw\nhand grenades at the Sciyukal party\nheadquarters, inflicting slight damage.\nOthers placed bombs at the Bank\nof Japan in the heart of tlie financial district and at Mitsubishi bank.\nSlight damage was done to those\nbulUlngs.\nThen the home of Count Makino,\nlord keeper of the privy seal waa\nstruck by a bomb with but little\neffect.\nTht handbills left by the raiders\nalso denounced the present state of\neconomic affairs in Japan, the system of education and the navii and\nmilitary administrators of the country.\nTOKYO, May 18 (Monday) (AP) \u2014\nThe Japanese cabinet decided to\nresign following an urgent meeting\ncalled thla morning. Acting Premier\nTakahashi left the meeting and proceeded Immediately to the palace to\nsee Emperor Hlrohito.\nThe emperor Instructed Mr. Taka-\nhasl and bla cabinet to remain ln\noffice, however, until further orders.\nPrince Salon J1, the aged last of\ntht elder statesmen, was on his way\nto Tokyo, lt was announced, from\nhis villa at Oakltsu to confer with\nthe emperor  on a  new cabinet.\nINTEND OPENING\nFRUIT WAREHOUSE\nERICKSON POINT\nCRESTON, B. C, May 18.\u2014IT.\nHarrison of Vcrnor, who was manager of crestland Prutt company,\nlimited, -hlch operated at Creston\nand Erlckson last year, was here\nInterviewing orchardl*-ts who are\nselling through the firm in 1932,\nthe intention being to have only\nthe Erlckson warehouse open thla\nseason. Along with Erlckson the\nfirm will this vear have a branch\nat Oliver in order to overcome tht\ntroubles encountered i 1931 in m-\ncurlng adequate sup-piles of cantaloupes. At Oliver, too, the? will be\nln a more favorable position to supply the Scott and National line of\nwholesale houses, with whloh they\nare allied, with early field tomatoes,\nand stone fruits su-h as peaches\nand apricots which ar9 not a com*\nmercial proposition  iu Creston vaW\nEmbarrassed By\nPimples en Face\nMrs. O. J. Benson, Bcal Core, N.B-,\nwrite*:\u2014\"I waa in a very nervous,\nrundown condition, uni not able to\ndo my ow*a work.\nMy face waa covered with pimplea\nwhich was very annoying and ero-\nben-ueing to me at timet.\nAfter taking three bottles of Bur-\ndork Blood Bitters I can do my own\nwork, and the pimples have entirely\ndisappeared,\"\nFor sale tt all drug and *-ent*ral itorsi; manufactured, for ths Diet 52 years, only by The\nT. MilburD Co , Lid , Toronto, Oat.\n*\t\n\t\n \u2022TITE    KELSON    DAILY    NEW\u00ab.    NELSON,    B.    C.,    MONDAY    MORNING    MAT    11,    1333\nV-J     I I\nPAGE  TUBE**\nDIOCESAN LADIES\ni HAVE EXCELLENT\nFINANCIAL YEAR\n\"6th Annual Meeting at Grant-\nForks Reveals Balance\nI of $3733\nTwenty Grand's Little Sitter\n\u2022IRS. APPLEWHAITE |\nMADE PRESIDENT i\n  I\nMrs. Donaldson the Dominion I\nTreasurer, Speaks; More     j\nActive Interest I\n\t\n' GRAND FORKS, B.  C.  May   IS\u2014 \\\nnl 26tn annual convention  of the j\nVomen's auxiliary ior the Diocese of\nj 'Cootenay   opened   at   Holy   Trinity\njjhurch Wednesday, when  13 officers\nI  nd  life members  and  24  delegates\n* nswered the roll call.\nJt  Tho    meeting    started    with    the\nJ! .orporate   Communion   and   sermon\n[\u25a0 n   Holy   Trinity   church,   the   celebrant being the Lord Bishop of the\nk''itocese,   who   was   assisted   by   Rev.\n1 fr.  Barrett  of  Pentlcton   and   Rev.\ni*C.  Cuahon  of  Kettle   Valley.    Rev,\nj.V.   J.   Bllverwood   of   Grand   Porks\n(preached the sermon.\n:ij The   various   reports   of   the   different officers of the dloces* showed\n\u2022',, more  active  interest  having  been\nH aken throughout 1931, and althoui*h\nT\\ here waa a slight shortaRe  on  the\n| otal amount of nleiges undertaken,\n1,-hls amount will be fully  made up\nW$ the time the half-y-Tly amounts\nij,)f the branches are turned in.\nI J3 SENIOR BRANCHES\n1    Thft secretary's report showed that\nrhere were 43 sent      branches with\n\u25a0 -JOG   members,   and   a   correi-ponding\n(number of girls' helpers, little help-\n, ^rs and boys' leagues.\nIs   Prominent visitors at these meet-\n: ings are the Right Rev. A. J. Doull,\n\u2022O.D., Bishop of Kootenay, and Mrs.\nDonaldson, treasurer of the Domln-\non W. A.\nA pleasing feature was the presen-\n' tatlon of a life membership certlfl-\nI pat*   and   1   dge   to   Mrs,   Catherine\n, Wright   of   Summerland,    who   has\nTor  many   years  been   Dorcas  secre-\ni tary   of   th\u00ab   Diocesan   board   and\nwho Is returning  to England  with\nMT children.\nThe addresses of Mrs. Donaldson,\ntreasurer of the Dominion-wide or-\n.anizitlon, were outstanding features\n->i the meetings and .showed the\n.formation and Towth of the Wo-\ninen's Auxiliary to the Church of\n\u25a0England in Canada.\nOPEN FOR'JM INSTRUCTIVE\nI   The   open   forum   was   again   an\n, instructive portion of the meetings,\nto-here   questions   vital   to   tho   congregation  and  growth  of  the  work\n\u25a0ire  asked  and   answered.\nI   The  financial  statement  for   1931\nWHAT LURE OF SALT DOES TO\nFRESIATEIEN-MHIGANLAD\nHOBOES ALONG WATERFRONT\nHoboes From New Yorl*\nto Halifax Having Prized Recommendation\nPILE\nI SUFFERERS\nI We strongly recommend the\nuse of the new \"MECCA\"\n\u25a0PILE REMEDIES.\nNo. 1 for BLEEDING\nPILES.\nI No. 2 for ITCHING PILES.\nI They bring quick relief.\nAsk your druggest for them\n'by number.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nS. S. Nasookin.\nSpecial Trip\nKASLO and\nRETURN\nTUESDAY, MAY 24\nEMPIRE DAY\nLt. CITY WHARF 8 a.m.\nLv.  KASLO 7   P.m.\nFares: Adults $2.33\nChildren $1.20\nCity Band on Boat\nJ. S. CARTER\nD. P. A., Nelson\nThe little lady you see here, only a half hour old when she wu\nphotographed at the GreeiHrce stables in Lexington, Ky., is a full slsUr\nof Twenty Orand, who won three -year -o*U honors tut reason with\nseveral notable turf victories, including thc Kentucky Derby. Her proud\nparents are 8t. Germans and Bonus. Mrs. Bonus la fondly muzzling her\nInfant ln this picture.\nshowed a balance on hand from\n1930 of $929 and with receipts during the year made a total of \u00bb3733.\nTlio largest item was $1091 from\nthe United pledge fund; there was\n$265 from the united thankoffering.\nand $247 from afflMation fees. Disbursements came to $3733 with\n$1814 paid to the Dominion treasurer; $302 for Diocesan expenses, and\nthere was a balance on hand of\n$841 at the cIopc of the year.\nOFFICERS  ELECTED\nElection of officers took place on\nThursday afternoon and resulted as\nfollows.\nHon. President, Mrs. A. J. Dou'.l\nof  Vernon.\nHon. Vice-Presidents\u2014Wives of the\nArchdeacons of the Dioces\u00a9 of Kootenay.\nPresident\u2014Mrs. E. H. H. Apple-\nwalte of Willow Point.\nFirst Vice-president\u2014Mrs. H. A.\nSolly  of summerland.\nSecond Vice-president\u2014Mrs. F. V.\nHarrison  of  Cranbrook.\nThird Vlee-presidcnt\u2014Mrs. c* C.\nRaven  of Kaslo.\nRecording secretary, Mrs. Turner\nLee of Bonnlngton.\nCorresponding Secretary \u2014 Mrs.\nCharles  Hooklngs  of Nelson.\nTreasurer\u2014Mrs. A. T. Horswill of\nNelson.\nGirls' Secretary\u2014Mrs. H. A. Solly\nof Summerland.\nJunior   Secretary\u2014Mrs.  Perclval.\nLittle Helpers' Secretary\u2014Mrs. H.\nC. Caldicott of Trail.\nEditor of Living Message, Mrs. B.\nG. Hamilton, Invermere, who \\s alao\nsecretary-treasurer of \"Living Message.\"\nDorcas Secretary\u2014Mrs. T. Barlee.\nEducation Secretary\u2014Mrs. Hatcher.\nUnited Thankofferlng Secretary,\nMrs. Bar       of Summerland.\nBoys' Church League Secretary-\nMrs. Davis.\nprayer Partners* Secretary\u2014Mrs. F.\nV. Harrison of Cranbrook.\nSecretary for work among Orientals, Mrs M. F. Gibson of Vernon.\nCAPTURE OF BEE\nSWARM NOT\n. SO HARD A JOB?\nSix Births, No Deaths\nat Creston, April\nCRESTON, B. C May 15.\u2014Figure*, given out by the registrar of\nvital statistics shows that the stork\nPlayed no favorites in April, there\nbeing three boys and three girls\nIn the new arrlvalB. Three marriage\nlicenses were issued and there were\nthree death recorded. The revenue.*,\nfor the month at the office of the\nprovincial police were under $190^\nand of this amount about $1800\nwas for auto and drivers* licenses.\nLike the month of March there wai\nlittle or no activity in the police\nI court, except an occasional case In\nthe small debts' division. At the\nfirst or May 254 autos and trucks\nhad been licensed to operate. Up\nto the present thc license forms In\nconnection with fishing have not\narrived. Under 1932 regulations all\nover 18 years of age must have an\nangler's license, and there ts sure\nto be a rush for these with the\ntrout wason on all streams to open\non  June   1st.\nConstable Henry\nIs Transferred to\nPost at Cranbrook\nConstable   John   Henry   of   the\nprovincial police stuff cf Nelson, for\nsome time stationed at Corra Linn,\nleft Surfday morning for Cranbrook\nwhere today he will take over the\ndutlea of district clerk In the provincial   police   office.\n\"A ewarm of been in May is worth\na load of hay,\nA   swarm   of   bees   In   June   ls\nworth  a sliver spoon,\nA swarm  of bees   I  Julv  ls not\nworth % fly.\"\nA swarm   of    not  represent*  the\nworking    force    of    a    colony    and\n| tl- refore la a vsluible thing to\ncapture   and   hive,     sneclp.ljy   If   -t\nI Is a prime or first ewarm and\nemerges early in the   eason.   When\nja awnrm leaves Its hlve thc quero\nof  the  colony   goes   with  It,  other*\n! wise the swarm Boon returns to Its\nformer home end because of that\nfact,   many    beekeepers   follow   the\n[practice of clipping their queens'\nwings   before   th'   .swarming   season\n| starts,    in    order    to    prevent    the\n! escape    of    swarms    lat^r    In    tbe\nI season. lie -amt practice la followed ln thc ex peri... ent*. I apiary on\nthe central exper'-ne tal farm at\nOttawa and the Uowlng methods\narr  used  tn  hiving  a y  swarms.\nWhen a queen's win- are clipped\ntr - hlvlrig of a swarm is an easy\nmatter. While trip swarm ls etill\nin the air search for the queen In\nfront of the hive entrance and\nwhen found place her In a small\nbox or cage. Imme \u00a7n_tahj move the\nold hive from \u00ab tand and ln its\nplace put a new hlv**- fitted with\ndrawn combe or foundation. The\nsw- m will s'-'on return a- d as the\nfirt bees enter the new hive release the amongst them, Now\nor.  a i   *-\u25a0->   m\nhive and abov- It place thc supers\nfror- the old hive; -he swarm will\nthen go to work as though nothing\nhad haryencd. All beekeepers do\nno*; clip their queen's wings, und\nwhere this Is ot done the queen\nleaves with tho swarm. When the\nqueen is with * \u2022wai-n it usunlily\nclusters on some nea'-b'\" object for a\nfew hours and thus Is easily cip-\ntured. First pr* are a hive with\n\u2022I-  vn    comb    or    foundation    and\nj then   if   the   object   on   which   the\nj ewarm   has   clustered   ts   movable   lt\nlean be carried to the hive and the\nbees shaken down ln front of lt\nwhen they will quit*' ly enter the\nhive.    If,  however,  the cluster can-\n| not be carried to tlie 'ive, carry the\nhive 09   It   and   rlace   it   on   thc\nj ground ko that \"-e entrance is beneath th\u00ab swarm. Now Bharply\n(\u25a0.Kike or hrush *'ic bees down In\nfront ot the hive, moving the hive\nup close Jo tho fallen bees where\nthey will soon find the entrance\nand signal thc others to follow them\nhome.\nRegistration of\nVital Statistics\nShows Improvement\nVICTORIA, May 15 (CP)-Registration of births, marriages ant.\ndeaths among the Indians, Doukhobors and orientals has shown a vast\nimprovement in the past few months\naccording to Dr. H. E. Young, provincial i-caltl- officer. Dr. Young\nstated that stricter enforcement of\nthe regulations governing vital statistics was proving of much assistance to the department, particularly\nln compiling  death rates.\nThe Doukhobors' refusal to register, stated Dr. Young, was due to\nfear of compulsory military service.\nIndian statistics were under the\nsupervision of Indian agents. Orl\nentals were becoming more amenable to reason and in a short time\nDr. Young anticipates a perfect registration of all vital statistics, recording of which was started In 1871.\nRecords previous to thst time were\nobtained as far as possible Irom\nchurch records.\nwill soon be made\nthroush this paper,\nQuality and Mildness\nurret\nCIGARETTES\nImperii*. Tobocco Compe-ny of Canada, Limited\nCreston Advertises\nBlossom Week\nCRESTON, B r. May l.V-Everv\n\"foreign\" auto, the driver of which\ncan be humored or otherwise enlisted as a bearer of good tidings. Is\nhaving his car plastered with stickers done In prominent type announcing that hlqpsom week in the\nCreston valley will prevail from May\n14 to 21. In addition to this all\nthe auto buses travelling south, and\nrait are similarly adorned and\narrangements made to have all buses\nout of Lethbridge nnd Calgary similarly decorated. Supplies of the\nstickers have been sent former residents nrpw located at Cranbrook,\nKimberley, Fernie, Coleman and Mio\nLeod. and window cards of similar\ndesl-m are being placed in all shop\nwindows from creston tc Pernle.\nThis Is the Initial effort of the\nboard of trade publicity committee,\nunder the direction of S. A. Bpeers.\nto popularize blossom week, and If\nanything like a favorable response is\nsecured lt is the Intention to go\ninto the thing on a large, .vile ln\n10H.\nHALIFAX, N. 8.. May 15,\u2014(Bv\nOeorge C. Murray, Canadian Pre\"*'\nstaff writer'\u2014This 1* the story of\nhow a fresh-water sailor was lured\nto the heaving Atlantic by yarns of\n\"old salts\"; how he fought, fasted.\nbegge*-\", whistled and \"rode the rods\"\non his way from Saginaw, Michigan.\nto Halifax, Nova Bcotls; how an indomitable courage overcame seemingly insurmountable obstacles and\nplaced him on the _ble schooner\nAbundance, a three-sticker bound\nfor Spain with deals.\nHis chance came iwt when the\nhorizon looked blackest, when It\nappeared all his grit served only\nto leave Wm strande-u In a foreign\nport. Given little hope by the\nship's agent-., he had stalked, sullenly, bactt to the pier to have one\nlast look at the schooner and her\ntall spars. To his delight, he was\nhailed by the master, captain Louis\nKennedy, who Ind heerd of his\nyearnings for to\u00ab salt. A Jew\nmoments later he wai signed for\nthe voyage as Norman Boetcher, aged\n18. at $10 a month. He bad offered  to ship without wages.\nThat was Friday, April *\u2022\u2022*. and the\nAbundance was loaded and ready for\nsea. Po eager was he to be off\nbefore the captain changed his mind\nor in ter n at Ion il cim pi ration**, set\n<n that he usked why she did not\nfall at once. Again he was\nthrilled:\n\"Not on Friday,\" s_Jd the captain,\n?arelessly.\nSo Norman Botcher scribbled the\nrtrst entry in his diary:\n\"S-iltwatcrmen   are   still   BUperstt-\ntiO*J3.\"\nSO  DIARY\nHe d:d not keep a diary of his\n-.dventure*. during his wanderings,\nbut he described them In forlorn\nmoment** when his chances of boarding a ship seemed slim.\nAt such times as these, he displayed a card of , hich he was proud\nmd which had been his introduction\nto skippers along the waterfront\n*rom New York to Halifax. On the\nback  of the  card ths  wa-  written:\n\"If you have a place on your boat,\ntake this lad. He ls a good boy.\u2014\nVon Luckner.\"\nIt was signed hy the famon*. \"Sea\nDevil,\" the German marine hero of I\nthe war, whose innocent-looking\nschooner, carrying concealed guns,\nhad spelled disaster for merchantmen of the Allies. The youth\nhad approached him In New York\nbut the now civil captain's schooner\nwaa tied up indefln.tely. Whether\nlt was tbe youth's German name or\nseriousness of purpose that moved\nhlin. Von Luckner offered sympathy\nand the written recommendation.\n'.-.'.AN IN AWntfT\nBut the story re.UIy began in\nA.ugust, when a white yacht slipped\nthrough the 'resh-water lop of Saginaw Biy, an inlet from Lake Huron.\nAlmost every day during that month\nand. ln fact, since early spring, the\nlittle 35-footor with her centre-board\nlowered had piled the waters of\nthe bay and even nosed out Into\nthe somet'mes turbulent hke. Her\nskipper, Ncrman Boetcher. liked the\nopen wa*,**T. liked the feel of her\nlantlng deck as the stronger bresze\n\"knocked hrr over.\" He Imagined\nhimself at the helm of a sea-going\nschooner\u2014the kind those .altwatei-\nmen from \"down eaf-t\" who now\nplied their trade at rigging in the\nlake yards told about. At night,\nwhen the yacht was at anchor, the\nyouth listened to the \"men yarning;\nthrlr stories entranced him.\nWinter came and with lt th**\nlong term of two MMtttfl during\nwhich the yacht with her centreboard hauled must He under canvas, on the ways.\nStudies were irksome. Sagas of\nthe sea\u2014of long voyages through\n\u25a0.ales, of tropical grmdeur, of northern cold nnd h d.hlp\u2014sent into day\ndreams a mind that fhould have\nbe'n alert at Michigan state college.\nBy Christmas the longlnj for the\ndeck of a schooner urged a rebellious\nspirit > action. 1 -ere was & fond\nmother to be pacified and a fund\nhad to be created, but the se-. called\nand the fresh -wate sailor answered.\nWith $100 in his pocket he act- out\nfor the coast.\nIXP1NM1   NEW  YORK \u25a0\nFirst, New York. Expensive for a\n\u25a0stranger to live here, and the docks\nwere sooty and dirty from the fumes\nof many, man; funnels. Sails over\nwooden ships were few. Von Luck-\nner's recommendation was the nearest he came to E*ltttS| a ]\"b, Eno\\i*\"l.\nof this! Funds were low, but there\nwas enough meney t take him to\nBoston and mavbe luck\u2014a berth on\na trim sailer bound for Hong Boof.\nHonest-to-goodness winriships were\nscarce at Boston, too. There were\na fev* schooners, mostly clumsy\nIshermen at the modem type, but\n*.t least they Ind sail:.\nDays puna Into weeks, funds\nbecame exhausted, but one could\nsmell the salt on the Boston waterfront, and that was something. What\nto do? He remembered that salt-\nwatermen were a hard lot. he could\nnot be soft snd quit. Perhaps begging came hard to a college youth\nused to having plenty of change In\nhis pocket, but hunger poon drove\nhim uptown. His first \"touch\"\nfailed; on the second try a dime\nfell into his hand. He looked at\nLhe coin with contempt. Nearbv\nwas a newnboy. Gee! the kid looked\nhunfrry. and tliere sal twa term en were\na generous lot. The *-.allrr took a\nnotch In his brlt, as saltw-aterrn*n.\ndo, slipped the dime ;nto the\nsmall hand.\nNEW   SCHOONER   AMU. ES\nNext day a new schooner ran\ninto a dock, apart from tv e others.\nThfl mate was aboard\u2014a rough looking chap, hut these saltw.termen\nwere a hard *ot. Yes. the ship\ncould stand another man. Then,\ndisappointment: the mat^ was a\nscoundrel, a hell driver. The youth\nwas dl-tRUjsted with his suggestions,\nh\u201e said so. a fist struck him. his\nglasses were shattered; but liquor\nhad unsteadled the seaman, the\nlight fist of the youth knocked him\nover, the youth escaped to the deck.\nIt seemed h\u00ab was destined to return to the fresh water. He had\nfailed. He was disgusted. Then he\nremembered ' \"i riggc i had told\nstories about N-va Scotla, Its wooden shirs and iron men\u2014perhaps\nNova   teotli    was   different      There\n\"Jafsie's\" Trysting Place\nwas a boat leaving for Yarmouth.\nbut he had no money, Ha wondered\nhow stowaways succeeded He had\nit! That man on the dock there,\nthe ore with the dog on leash. If\nhe would allow him to take the dog\non  board\u2014he would trv It.\nBut tht rn**\"*. happened to be a\nfriend or the capt.il*!, any t-ick\nlike that would not be quite in\norder. However: \"K d. I lik* your\nnerve. Ill stake you for the passage.\"    It wag   done.\nThat vibration was terrible. Now\non a schooner, a little rock maybe,\nbut not that monotonous vibration.\nNorman Boetcher re-afllrmed his\ndislike tm st-amers.\nYAKMOt TH  Qt'IBT\nYarmouth\u2014not much doing here.\nLuaentiurf wh tlie place for him\u2014\nLunenburg with its champion racing\nschconer_. the home \u00b0* the Blue-\nhose. Riding on the undergear of\nK railw-y fp-.aht cer he arrived at\nLnHave, then wilked through a\ndriving Meet storm to the famous\ntown, it was a dirty night. He\nhad $1.30 left over from the Yarmouth trip; ht wondered how far\nhe could make It go. The clerk at\nthe hotel was a good sort, premised\nto provide a room f:r the $130 pnd\nperhaps a me_l In the morning.\nB slness vas dull that night, so\nthe clerk, a friend and the fresh-\nwaterman whlled away the hours\nwith music. The clerk played a\nmouth CTfran, th? friend an accord-\ntan and the fresh waterman Joined\ntn the harmony. He was quite a\nwhistler, and on this occasion he\nwhistled his way to a warm friendship. Two meals went under his\nbelt and he had 30 cents left in\nthe rnornln-. r.f ter squaring for the\nnight's 1  .sing.\nA good-natured captain of the\nLunenburg wa'erfront liked the\nyouth\"s smbit.on, but non,\u00bb of hlo\nboats would be railing for two weeks.\nThosf In the Bay? TMlIM were\nfl.\"...e:mcn, perhaps au odd rumrunner. Not. much chance there.\nAt Halifax ther? was r boat, loading de.ils for sunny Spain, That\nwas the only one he thought might\nhave a .-pare b-?rth\nARBIUls AT HALIFAX\nHalifax was 70 miles away, but\nBoetcher liked the t&Wtttt of Spain,\nso he flattened himself on top of\na box car and r Mtcd development.-*.\nIt was cold Up there but the train\nwas Halifas-roun-l; tlict was nil he\ncared. All went welt until the\ntrain reached W..verley, about 18\nmiles from the city. Here h*! was\nstartled wit-n a brakeman's \"Hey,\nyou!\" Down scrambled the fresh-\nwaterman. Now, where was Halifax?\nThc rails must lead to it. so he\nplodded along, reached the North\nEnd, and went straight to the witer-\nfront. After much questioning he\nfound a three-mas ted schooner loading deals. That must be the one.\nThere was no one on board, but she\nwould not sail for a day or two, so\nhe set about finding a bunk for the\nnight.\nAh! They had a Salvation Army\nhere. The letter from the minister\nback home Influenced the army\nhostel clerk, anci he was assured\nof shelter. That was that, so to\nmake sure hp did not miss any\navailal'*** berths nboird fhip he\nasked the police tr they knew of\nany schooners sal.ing for foreign\nports. No, the cops were a good lot,\nDU. the best they could do was .o\nrefer the youth to newdiTipcnnen.\nHe had tried his hand at newspaper\nwork one vacation, he talked the\npurlence, 6*> he approached the\npollce reporters. No, but there was\na \"-hipping man at the office who\nwould know all a* jt that boat\nloading deils. Luck, this time. The\nshtppln-- man ..new tl'e agents, tlie\ncaptain and almo-st a.-ything one\ncould lik him. Tlie youth went to\nhis Salvation Army bed feeling a\nlittle more hopefu..\nI CHAMCI AT LAST\nBut his consistent Hi-luck was\nwith him again next morning. The\nagents didn't think the capta.n nt\nlg g anyone. Here he nad come\na thousand miles, to the end of\nhe world, lt seemed, and he was\nno further ar-ead than when he\nhad sat at the feet of the riggers,\nlistening to their yarns. Two hours\nlate, he returne- to the dock, hoping there might be some masts\nshowln; by this time.    No, none,\nNorman Boetcher was not quit?\nsure what ho Intended dom** now;\nhe was not suro anything W\nworth doing.    Then , .\nLike to work your way nboirri,\nson? Hear you're wlttlOf to comr*\nwithout wages. Might find $10 a\nmonth at that. Ccme aboard tonight.*'\nIt was Captain. Louis Kennedy,\nskipper of the Abm-dan-'-**, the\nschoorer loading deals for Kpnln.\nThc exalted Fonftai. B_etcher\nspluttered something in reply; he\ncouldn't remember what when h*\ntold his newspaper friends about\nh.s   good   f-rtunc   before   he   silled.\nGOVERNMENTS OF\nDOMINION LIKELY\nTO HAVE MEETING\nBennett Proposes Preliminary\nConference for Dominion,\nProvinces in B. C\nVICTORIA,   May   IS    (CP)\u2014 Artlmj\non   the   proposal   of   Rt.   Hon.   R.   B.\nBennett, preliminary plans for m\nconference between the Dominion\nand provincial governmerrte are now\nbeing made, It was understood si\nthe legislative buildings yesterday.\nBritish Columbia hopes to have\nrepresentation at the conference\nwhen   called.\nTi.e conference -will be called\nshortly after prorogation of parliament. It Is understood.\n| If taxation ls dlflcuseed, the province may press for action by the)\nfederal government to clarify the position of gasoline and fuel oil taxes.\nBritish Columbia prepared the way\nfor imposition of a tax of half a\ncent a (rallon on fuel oil, at the\nlast session of legislature but so far\nhas not pyt t,-e plan into \"peratio...\nThe tax was designed to collect\n\u00bb38S,ooo on a 12 mon th* b.sl-i. according to the 1932-33 estimates.\nThe government expected thc tax\nwould be resisted and it bettered\nto be carefully studying Us position\nbefore taking further steps in the\n:r,attcr.\nOne of the self-der,rrlljed klflnappers of tlie Lindbergh baby was reported to have met Dr. John F. Condon, elderly lecturer of Furdhau.\nuniversity, at the .pat pictured here to titaom nc-otlatlnns for the stolen\nchild's return. It's a fence at a corner of Woodlawn ccmetTy in Bronx.\nNew York. Condon has been revealed ns the \"Jafsle\" whose cryptic public\nnotices in a New York newspaper were believed to have atftMtabed communication with tlie reputed abductors of the Llndbcrsris' son and to have\nled to the payment ol $50,000 ransom to no avail.\nMount Fernie Chapter\nof I. 0. D. E. Has Tea\nDRUGGISTS TO BE       |MISS RITA JONES\nPROSECUTED UNDER ;     ENTERTAINS ON\nLORD'S DAY ACT SIXTH BIRTHDAY\nVANCOUVER, May IS\u2014City druggists are the latest t0 ne prosecuted\nunder the Lord's Day act. Approximately 15 drug store managers have\nbeen summoned to appear \u2022** police\ncourt Monday charged with such\notfeuces ai -veiling lead pencils, battles ot Ink, writing pads, tliermo3\nbottlfs,   eic.\nThc prosecutions hav*. created a\ncontroversy among the druKglst-a\nw.o are privileged under the net to\nremain open on Sundays to HQ\nprescriptions and medicines and who\nhave been IMOStomed for many\nyears to sell other mercl. mdisc on\ntheir   shelves.\nChief Edgctt stated that the evidence was -jbtalned ln the ordinary\ncourse of police,  duty.\nCEDAR POSTS\nSHIPPED FROM\nCRESTON POINT\nCRESTON, B. C. M*y 13.\u2014About\nthe only activity lu .hipping circle-\nhere at present is the OUtfO of\ncedar posts. For the past rou.-le of\nweeks Winlaw A; Son have bM)\nabout a dozen men at work on their\nlimits along Goat Klvcr M well as\nWynndel on an order Hid to rim\nto 60,000. These urc* movint. out.\nfrom both centres and destined to\npoints in southern Alberta. Tlie | and\nreport persists that when tht*- post\nshipping   is cleaned  up  the   Wlnl.\nSOUTH SI.OCAN,  P. C. May   15 \u2014\nM..s- Ilita Jones cntcrfilnc-l a number of friends on Friday, Mny 6. on\nthe occasion of her fourteenth birthday ennlver_ary. Her mother latet-\ntd in entertaining the guesta ami\nin serving ten. The Invited guests\nwere Miss H*g Rr_dsha\\v, Mi-*s\nMolly Murrny, M.ss Tone Kingsley,\nMiss Eva Hendnct.son, Mi*-s Emma\nRodgers, Miss Thclma Bird, Miss\nB\"tty M-Doi.akl. lob Walk!'v.\nThomas H'.m'_, Julian Yea .man nnd\nftOUM   Edward\".\nMrs. W. J. Tlndnlc, accompanied\nby Mrs. John Murray. Mrs. Roy\nGraham and Mrs. Qeoffi Piatt, motored through to IpOlUUH at the\nlatter part of thc week to spend a\nfew days.\nA meeting of the Woman's  auxll-\n[ Ury mta held  at the  home of  Mrs.\ni F.   H.   B.ussel   on   TBWlUT   afternoon\n1 prior to her leaving  ss delegate   for\nJ the    W.    A.    convention    at    Grand\nForks.    Mrs.   Murray   presided.     The\n\u25a0pecrctary   reported   thnt   a   parcel   of\ngarments had been s-nt   towards   an\noutfit   for   a   g.rl    at    one    of   the\nIndian   resldentinl   schools.     It   was\nclcldcd  to give  a riCAptlOfi  for the\nRev,   W.   J.   CTlrk   H   n   furcwcil   on\nhis    lei vl tig    for    I*:ngl,ind    In    the\ncourse of two or three weeks,\nFERNTE, B. C, May 15\u2014 The\nMount Fernic chapter I. O. D. E.\nheld a most enjoyab.e diffodil tea\nan:l sale of hone cooking in the\nbMRBttl of the United church on\nBetttrtJ-f. Mr., William Currie and\nMrs. Kelman presided at tiie ur;is,\nw.-.llc MN Marian Corson, Wet Sey-\nmore, Wm Olive Brown and Mri.\nHuvcke served.\nHit. iattmh \/.ell'o returned from\nSpokane    Friday    af tern-on.    \u25a0tetMl\nof  MTenj   mouth**.\nMiss McLena-jhin of Victoria, in-\nspec or of Home Economics In the\nschool  U a Fernie visitor.\nDouflee Wallace has returned from\nVancouver,\nMiss Mildred Kastner arrived home\nfrom University of Alberta Monday,\nafter spcnrllng a week en route Willi\nMiss   l_:ul-e    \\dolp._   In   Calgary.\nGROWING GIRLS!\nProfit by the Experience of\nOthers at This Vital Time\nWAVV,  BTARLCICIH\nis   ACOtlTTEO\nPRINCE   GEORGE.   B.   C.   May   11\n(CPl\u2014W.ide  S'ar.elgu,  elderly   Texan\normer eowboy In 0eek-i,tehe*\nwan,   whs acquitted   by   h   jury   here\nyesterdiy    after    tw,.    and     a     half\nAble to (io\nto AU       I\nthe Dances\nsawmill  will  eminence cutting  up  ttouri  deliberation   on   \u25a0,_   oharge   of\nqulte   R   \u25a0ai'B'*   ttOjtM   of   I0.-5   thnt; murderirs  lis mlnlnt partner, Jack\nwere' taken  out during  the winter frey, at Australian Bar, below Qucs-I\nof 1930-31, on the  firm's limits et*t   t\u00bb|  on October 14 las:.\nof Creston. and which weTj taken to j\nthe mill at Wynndfl and ponded.\n\"Wnen I was lft\nt \u25a0wa* so ill m7\npeople thought I\nwa, going to die.\"\nwrites Mrs. Annie\nWilson. Sussex\nAve. Toronto. 'I had scarcely any\nblood, and was so weak I could\nhard'Iy walk. Had no appetite and I\nlost ground every day for a loiiff\ntime, until a friend recommended\nOr. Williams' Pin* Pills. I got them,\nnnd before I hart fiius-hea the first\nbox I was feeling better. I continued taking the pills until I wnj\ncontsdetely well. I wont to all the\ndencea and bed the Time of my life\nagain. I certainly recommend Dr.\nWilliams' Pink pill**, to any one who\n1*. anaemic or run clown In any way,\nfor they certainly rebuilt my bee-lib.\nDon't let. ruuiemi:- rob your grov,--\nItit* riff tighter or health and vigor,\nOive her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.\nIliey banish the condition by crear>\nihg new blood which imparts' health,\nvigor \"ind vimllty. Equally good fW\nsi] run-down or nervous conditions.\nAt your druggist's. 50c a package.\nColumbian College\nIs to Carry on as\nGirls* Institution\nNEW WESTMINSTER May IS -\nColumbian OOtttfO Will carry on. according to a decision of t -c board nf\ndirectors announced by Rev. E. E.\nBraden. chairman, yesterday to thl\nUnited church conference. Thc policy\nof the college will be changed, in\nSeptember it will become 1 girls'\n?rhooi Instead M being co-ccluca-\ntl.-i.al, as at prei-ent.\nGALT COAL\nSIMMKR PRICES COMMENCING MAY 1\nGALT LUMP  ?11 per Inn delivered\nSALT EGG  _   10 per ton delivered\nGALT STOVE      0 per ton delivered\nThis is the time lo make a saving.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE 33\nfrrrmv\/wm\nSince a process has been de-\nveloped for making thl:. copper\nsheets tn greater width*, than could\nbe attained by rolling, automobile\nmanufacturers are considering the\npossibility of makleg car tops of\ncopper.\nBATT.!*.!    B\nllftlrimmTTill\nBURGESS\nIGNITION\nBATTERIES\nare dependable\nDl SP1TF. WKATHt R OB **UVF!\nCCM \\\n*.38\u00b0.\u00b0\\\nSTANDARD\nBuy him a Bicycle\nhe can really beProudot\nANY bicycle is better than no bicycle. But\n. you will DOUBLE your boy's pleasure\nif you will mount him on a bicycle that be\ncan be really proud of. And there's no other\nbicycle that a boy is so eager to own as a\nCC.iM. Just ask your boy why. Among many\nothers, he will tell you of thc 7 big lcatum\nof CCM.'*.\nC-C-M- Owner's Service Guarantee\nBond with each C-C-M-\nIt puar^nteci the quality of the hit-wle end the\nKfYICi tn he pivrn on it. Am your dealer to -.how\nyou (hi*. (.CM. Owner's Scnire (.iur_nfcc Horn I\nwhen you fltfOf io lo MB his ner 1932 CCM. \u25a0MWfc\n7-J0\nCOM\nBicycles\nModels from $34.50 to $52.00\nC. C. M. Bicycles for Sale by\nHipperson Hardware Co., Ltd.\n Secret Places\n'By Joan Sutherland\nINITMMFNT   XX\n(CONTINUED)\n\"Try to sleep, dear,\" he aald, and\nTonl smiled up at him.\n\"I'll try, Uncle James,\" she said,\nbut the smile hurt him with its\n\u2022sffort, and ha cursed fat* as he\nwent downstairs to tn* library when\nthe other sat.\nLater, when dinner was over, and\nTon! had preceded them to the\ndrawing room, be asked his sinter a\npoint-blank   Question.\n\"Tell me. Alice, Is there any chance\nthat Stalre could have done this\nthing In anger? Had ha anything\nagainst  the  fellow.\"\n\"Nothing that any one knows of.\nThey were acquaintances merely,\nnever friends. Feodor rather disliked\nhim, I think, from what Tonl has\naald, hut that wsa all. Mo. It ls\nImpossible.\nAt. Malre made a sound of Impatience, and rising to his feet began walking up and down the room.\n\"What the devil did Greta, want\nto go about with a fellow like that\nior?\" he demnnrted with sudden Irritation. \"Might have known lt\nwould lead t0 trouble. Never know\nwhat a man of that type will do.\nCan't trust him.\"\nLady Alice, In answer to his angry\ncriticism, mads a little gesture that\ndismissed the subject as too difficult\nfor discussion.\n\"Greta ls headstrong. Ws none of\nus liked d'Arblaye, and that I\nthink encouraged her all the more In\na determ!nation to go about with\nhim ii she chose. After all, James.\nno one could dream of thts dreiuful\n\u2022ndlng of an slfsir that was merely\n\u00a7_,   flirtation   In   rather   poor   taste,\"\n\"I suppose his Infatuation for her\nhad not caused trouble with some\nether woman? His reputation Is\nvery  peculiar, I know.\"\nA shadow of dlstast* crossed Lady\nAlice's face; after a.- it was hor\ndaughter who was being discussed\nIn thla way, her daughter's conduct\nwhich mlgtt Indirectly have led to\ntha thing that had happend; and\nher brother, aeetng the shadow,\nleaned forward and touched her arm.\n\"My dear, I'm sorry,\" ha said\ngently. \"But we've got to face every\nTravers Sinclair got up from hli\nchair, and began walking up and\ndown the narrow room; beyond the\nhigh barred windows the daylight\nfiltered in, palely yellow from the\nsmoke-laden London sky, and the\nsmall ga- fire thst burned ln the\ngrate was depreselngly inadequate\nThs famous lawyer waa oold, snd\nbis physical discomfort wu increased by his mental disturbance, for\nhe wai quite well aware that he had\nan extraordinarily difficult case to\nhandle. His client's story was anything but satisfactory, snd, In his\nown mind, while believing Btaire\nInnocent, he also believed hs was\nshielding the real murderer. Whichever lt was, tha defence would be\npainfully thin, resting mors on tho\npolicy of forcing the prosecution to\nprove guilt, than enabling the prisoner  t0  prove  innocence.\nHe glanced at Stalre now as he\npaced up and down tbe room, and\nfrowned. A wholy innocent man\nwould be anxious to tell his story\u2014\nto have the chance from the witness\nbox to state the truth, and at least\nattempt to clear himself; but thla\nman had refused from tbe beginning\nto risk cross-examination, and Sinclair was unhappy about It. That\nStalre knew more than he had admitted was a certainty, but that he\nw.is guilty Sinclair did not believe.\nHe had met Staire In London and\nParisian society several times and\nbeen very agreeably lmpreajsed bv\nhim. Though he knew toj much of\nthe complexities of the highly civilized human nature to let that bias\nhts Judgment, even now hla occa-\n-fonal keen glances did not correct\nthat early impression but rather\nstrengthened   It.\nStalre, for a man about to be tried\nfor muroer after over three months'\ndetention without ball, was surprisingly calm ac\u00ab! self-controlled. The\ncase had been remanded twice, since\nthe French evidence nad taken time\nto collect\u2014the policeman who VM\nsummoned* when the body was found\n\u2014d'Arblaye's chauffeur who had\ndeposited his master and a lady at\nthe former's door\u2014the taxi driver\nwho had driven reodor\u2014people who\nhad seen d'Arrtaye at tne masked\nball at the opera\u2014the co.nrnlss.ilre\nwho   had    questioned    Feodor,   and\nkind   of   possibility   that  can   help\nStalre, and we can't afford to Ignore I half a dozen others. Now the wit\nnesses were finally assembled and\nthe  case  about to come  on.  Stalre,\nanything. By tbe way, has Stalre\narrived?\"\n\"He was brought over by air\u2014\nprivately\u2014this morning.\"\n\u2022To\u2014Brixton ?\"\n\u2022'Yea.\"\n\"Oood God. poor chap! It'i a-\u2014\nbut we'll get him out somehow. He's\ngot Travers Sinclair, I hear? Well,\nbe couldn't have a better man.\nThings are bound to come out\nright.\"\nINSTALMENT   XXI\nSYNOPSIS\nPeodor Stalre, attache of the British embassy In Paris, was accused\nof tbe murder of Comte Henri\n. d'Arblaye, snd Greta, wife of Ronald\nHalkett, Peodor's heat friend, had\nbeen under suspicion. -Stalre, 36\nyeara old, and Tonl Wire nam, 31,\ndaughter of Lady Alice Wareham\nand Greta's sister were to marry in\nra few weeks. Ronald's newspaper\nwork demanded long hours and\nOreta was much In the oompany\nof the wealthy d'Arblaye. Tonl asked Stalre to escort Greta home from\nthe Bai Masque but she left with\nd'Arblsye. Stalre followed and was\noutalde d'Arblaye's spartment house,\ncaught In a sudden storm, when\nGreta came running out, saying she\nshot d'Arblaye when he -snatched\n\u25a0ber up In his arms and started to\ncarry her into another room. Bhe\nhad forgotten her handbag. Feodor\n\u2022ent her home In a taxi, went back.\nwiped aU fingerprints from the\npistol, got the b\u00abg but was hailed\nby the concierge as he was leaving.\nStalre gave hia name. He coached\nGreta by phone 10 say she did not\nenter d'Arblaye'.-. apartment. Toni\nWanted to marry Feodor immediately\nw..en she learned he was to be taken\nt0 England for trial. She aJid her\nmother went to London to the home\nOf Lady Alice's brother, Lord Si\nMaire. Travcjs Sinclair was retained\nto defend Feodor.\nKOW GO ON WTTH THE STORY\n\"Understand, Sinclair, I will not\ngo into the witness box.\"\nPeodor's tone, curt and authoritative, was not to be mistaken, and\nTravers Sinclair realized It, to his\nown increasing uneasiness. He was\nsilent a moment, drawing hieroglyphics   on   the   paper   before   him.\n\"You understand It will make a\nbad  impression?\"\n\"I suppose so. That can't be help-.\ned. You must put up the best defence you can, obstruct and question tr.e prosecution, but lf I go\nInto the box I shall only succeed Jn\nhanging   myself.\"\nhe thought, was standing the orde,\nmagnificently. He was pale, and the\nlines about mouth and eyes, always\na little hare*., were now deep and\ngrim, the eyes were strained, he\nlooked years older, but his manner\nwas as composed and courteous as\never, and whatever dark secrets hla\nconscience might shelter, it was evident that he could command both\nnerves and temper with admirable\nskill.\nReallzir^ there was no more to be\nsaid, Sinclair came to a standstill\nbefore  his  client's  chair.\n\"Well,\" he said, \"I think that's\nall. I have told you exactly what my\nline will be, and I will do all In\nmy power for you. Luckily, Marget-\nson Is sn extraordinarily humane\nand mercifully-minded Judge\u2014more\nso than any other judge, I consider. I shall see you tomorrow for\na few minutes. Please God, we'll\npull  It off!\"\nHe went, leaving Feodor to be\nconducted back to hts cell, and on\nthe following aay, the trial opened\u2014\nas sen*.tonal a piece of legal\ndram a*, thc most Jaded appeuw\ncould   desire.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nThe morning that Feeders'* triil\nopened the rain descended ln London\nIn sheets of driving water, anci the\nwind Irom t.e nortliewt made the\nstreets a veritable purgatory for\nthose afoot. Tonl, very white, but\nquite comprised, followed her mothrr\nand uncle into the latter's car, and\nduring the drive to the Old Bailey\nsat looking straight before her not\n(.peaking, not even consciously seeing the gray, rain-swept pavements\nof hurrying trafilc. Thc-e weeks ot\nwilting had been to her a torture,\nwhich s-.e had borne with an apparent stoicism that had MON tlf\nama-*ed her family. AU her life Tom's\nhabit had been to ex pre.** her fi-cl-\nlnga loudly, remarking often that\nshe could put up with anything\nFate enmt to dc.-l to her, as long\nas those around ler were aware of\nlt, and expressed their sympathy or\npier-sure    promptly.\nWhat Lady Alice had not quite\nrealized was that when it 0IO1I to\nthe depths of her nuure Tonl wu\nan utterly different being, not desirous of breaking down the barriers\nof  self-control   and  silence.\nAll the way ahe was silent, an*l\nLord St. Ma I re's occasional jerky\nremarks were addressed solely to his\nsLuter. although his attention was\nfor his niece, whose courage had\ncalled forth his secret admiration.\n(To   be   continued)\n\u25a0\u2022THE   NELSON    DAILY    NEWS,   NELSON,    B.    C,    MONDAY    MOBMNO    MAY    18,    1935 s\nWOMAN'S PAGE\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBt  LAl'RA  it.   KIRKMAN\nLove: a Remedy\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority on Problems of Love and Marriage\nThese Spring Accessories Ara to Be Stan \u2014 And Fell\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nBerrlea\nCereal\nCreamed   Chicken   on   Toast\nDoughnuts Coffee\nLancheon\nPc- f-.bie-'   r-tgi\nRolled   Asparagus   Sandwiches\nCooklei Cocoa\nDinner\nRadishes\nPot Rom'   **f Beef\npotatoes '\"\u2022nlons Carrots\n811pm   '    \u25a0 .aft*M|\nVanilla Cornstaroh Colfee\nNEW 1UKIII.N   THIS   WEEK\nRolled Asparagus Sandwiches. Although few housekeepers care to give\ntime to the preparation of \"fussy\"\ncooking, nevertheless lt Is a good\nplan, now and then, to practise\nm-'klP'*- sorr-e .WW all\" da-ntv ri'th.\nes for the family, so that you will\nbe able to n_9r> the-s dishes successfully at some other date, when\nyou sre expecting gue\u00abts. These\nsandwiches are made with white or\ngraham bread cut In slices one-\nfOTirtl, \u25a0\u25a0*\u2022*-\u00bb* t\"\"*\"l. ft*-** \u25a0 \u2014.*\u25a0*.--.\nmoist    loaf.      Remove    crust     and\nDip asparagus tips (either freshly\nrooked or canned) ln mayonnaise\ndressing and then roll them ln the\nsice of bread )l**e a 'el!** roll. Tie,\nor fasten with a toothpick snd put\ntn* rolled sandwiches Into the refrigerator for several hours, so that\nthey will keep their shape when\nserved.\nPea Oriddlecakes: Although canned pens may be used In this recipe,\nthe fresh, cooked variety are more\nr\"e_le'OW*i Mi***-* o**e '\u25a0'Int of !**\u2022\ngreen cooked peas wltn a little\npepper, one teaspoon of aalt, and\none tablespoon of melted butter;\nstir in one pint of sweet milk to\nwhich two eggs have been added.\nSift two cups of flour (or more, if\nnecessary, to mak-) an ordinary prld-\ndle-cake batter), with one-hnlf teaspoon of cream of tart*.r, and one\nteaspoon Of baking soda. Beat the\nmixture well and fry lu small cakes\na hot, buttered griddle. Serve\nhot,  with plenty of butter.\nThe Beauty Box\nBy HELEN FQLLETT\nIf arms show a mania for collecting freckles, rub with cut lemon\nat nl.ht. Let the Juice dry on.\nIn the morning lave away with clear\nwater and dry gently. T\u00bb-e freckle\nfigt * can't stop for a day, there\nmust be no armistice, because every\nmoment of exposure to wind or\nsunlight makes new ones lop out.\nThe sleeveless frock, sweet and\nnaive,   is   tough  on  pretty   arms.\nThese are the dsys when fever\nstrikes 'nto *' \u2022 feet and toes twinge\nlike all get out, Put the pedals ln\na tepid bath to whl i baking soda\nhas been added. Dr and anoint\nwltn cocoa-bitter, frlctlonlng It in\nwith the flattened palms, compresses of large towels wrung out ot\ncold water have a way of soothing\nlittle dogs that are hot and tired.\nFor tweezlng eyebrows there are\nspecial tweezers with rounded points\nthat catch a firm hold oi Mister\nFiizB-er ard uproots him. Before\nstarting the weeding, apply moist\nhot compresies. The process of\narching, under such conditions, will\nnot be tearful or painful.\nHas lt seemed to you lately that\nromance wasn't as prevalent aa It\nought to be? If so, don't worry any\nmore.\nLove dramas, real and Imaginary,\nhaven't been crowded off th* stage\nof ltfe at all.\nOn the contrary, strange as It may\nsound to you, love Is experiencing\nsomething of a boom.\nWhen I say thla, I am not guessing. I am quoting that excellent\nauthority, Mr. Wil. H. Hays, head of\nthe Motion Picture Producers and\nDistributors   of   America.\nMr, Hays has been talking about\nthe year Just passed, .031. Not a\ncheer'ul year for many of us. A\nyear when not only romantically\nInclined onlookers, but lovera themselves, might possibly have loet heart\nor  become  a  bit  cold-blooded.\nNothing of thp kind, Mr. Hays\nsays, and you may be sure he\nknows. Judging from the movies\nthst have been most frequented and\nmost praised, all over the country,\nwe Americans have shown less liking than formerly for the J nd of\nthrill that gangster storle\u201e give.\nWe're a little fed up on their ugly\nways. And we haven't cared as much\nas we used to for what Mr. Hays\ncalls the \"cheaply cynical'*  film.\nBut we have shown a great leaning toward the play that deals with\npure romance. That is, we're all\nof us more ln love with love than\never.\nThis news surprised me at flits,\nI must admit. But you see. of course\nwhat Mr. Hays' statement really\nmeans. We've all been undergoing\na kind of shell-shock during the\npast year or so. We've loet our Jobs,\nor had payouts, or had *>ne disappointment or another; so naturally, we have wanted contrast, some\nrelief. And to find lt, we have\nturned  to rf nance.\nBeing hard up has had, you see.\na sobering effect. It has Influenced\nus to give up our pretenses and a\nfavorlte pretense, durlng the past\nfew years, has been that of sobering' all   sentiment.\nBut sentiment la back again. We\nshall all be admitting shortly that\nwe hive hearts and that they are\nbeating normally. We can feel free\nwith plenty of love in them, and\nto confess a preference for play3\neven to weep delicious tears of romantic sympathy for two hours at\na time.\nIt's a good thing for even the\nleaf, romantic of us to sense our\nkinship  with  lovei\nU. B. C. PLAYERS\nTO ENTERTAIN AT\nNELSON TONIGHT\nTo Give Famous Three - Act\nCom** \"Alic* Sit-by-lh*\nFire\" by Barrie\n\u00abn\u00bbgpT)y TO BE. HRT 0\nIN THE OPERA HOUSE\nc-.v-.n#\u00bb-*nth   Anni\"i] -Soring\nPlay Put on by^-he Uni-\nversity Students\nA change or shampoo medium\nsometimes corrects a mm of oily\nhair. It ia particularly necessary\nthnt every bit of soap suds should\nbe removed; lt rant be done if the\nhead is diif-ked into the wa-.li bowl\nseveral times. A bath cpray combined with a strong ciurent cr\nwarm water will cha*-e soap out, but\nif you're still not sure, rlnse the\nhRir in a bowlful of water to whtch\nthree tablespoons of vinegar have\nbeen added.\nBec-upe of the struggle to attain\nthc boyish shape and the wearing\nof skin-tight braKii' en, there is\nconsiderable hollering going on for\nadvice concerning figure development. Girls are swinging their runs\nabout In an effort to promote the\nhigh rhest ence again. That's good\nfor 'em. Pew women get proper\nexercise, nor do all of them breathe\nproperly, flooding the lower cells of\nthe lungs wit*-, fresh air, which\nhabit causes tlie blood streams to\nsteam up, tint the complex)- with\nthat lovely .arnatlon pink, the\nlikes of whlrh no drug store paint\ncan   duplicate,\nTh* University of British Columbia Pl-tvers* club will present for\ntheir seventeenth annual sp-'nur play,\n\"Alice Slt-bv-tbe-F-re.\" a three-act\ncomedv by Sir James M. Barrie at\nth\u00bb Nelson Ooera House tonight.\nIt Is a Btory of the Interesting\ncomnlicatlnns that cenerlse when a\nmother returns to her grown-up\nbabies In England after having\nspent manv year In India with her\nhusband, a bluff old army colonel.\nShe finds that she isn't quit* as\n*\u2022\u00ab\u2022*\u25a0.*-.(\u2022*.  \u201e,   ,.*.,.   ,.--,,   f~   *\u201e    \u201e_,,   tv,.\nher children have some rather\n-'\u2022\u25a0.-t*,n*-* ti\"co*-les about the ways of\nthe world, drawn mostly from melo-\nri'-amatle n'avs. The denouement Ls\nbrought about In t'i-t _n**wt**u.m\nmanner for which Barrie Is so\nfamous.\nT\u00bbir\\TFn  CAST\nThe cast Is well chosen and we]]\n\u2666miner*, hs evl-****\"*-ed bv the fact\nthat three of the malor roles arc\nheinw nl-t'-ad by *v>on!e who were\nIn last year's snrlng play, \"The\nvo-itng Idea\" bv Noe* Coward. Those\nthree sre Mirjorv Ellis, who will\nplay the title role, \"Alice.\" Jack\nRut-tan, seen ss her husband \"Robert.\" snd Nanc\u00bb Svmes a*. \"Olnevrn.\"\na friend of the familv and co-\nplotter with the children. Alice's\nchildren. Amv nnd Cosmo, will be\nr-iaved hy Bettv Wilson and Harold\nT-ando. resnectlvely, while Alistair\nTaylor will Interpret \"Steve,\" another friend of the fam'ly. Minor\nroles will be taken by Swenhlld\nMatthi-ion, Margaret Stewart. Mary\nDernborough and Bettv Ja\"k. Miss\nJack will ali\u00b0o understudy the lead-\nIni part. \"Alice.**\nnhw mint ion\nOwln-r to the retirement of Prof.\nP. G. c* Wood, director and maln-\nstriy of the players' club for 17\nyears, the play will be directed by\nSydney Risk. Mr, Rlr,k Is a graduate member of the club and has\ntoured in three spring plays, being\nremembered chiefly for Mb performance as tho drunken gardener,\n\"Stile**,\" in \"Polly With  a paat.\"\nA feature of thla years p\u00bbrform-\nnnce Is that It will he presented ln\nthe settings en-rt costumes of LOn\ndon back in  1803.\nCATCHES   SMAM.   AT   <;REENWOOD\nGREENWOOD. B. C, May 15\nPishing mi commenced in the lakes\nof the district but no great catches\nhave been reported. The rivers and\ncierks will be open for sport\nJune 1st. Tliey are at present\nheavy ln flood and it w'.li * ke some\ntime before they will be in a condition  for fishing.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nThe following column of nodal\nnews flnd happenings In Roesland\nIs conducted by Mra, Besete B. f er-\ngut-on. Phone Mrs. Fcr* sen at her\nhome In RoBsland and giver her details of events of tr rest to this\ncolumn.\nROSSLAND, B. C. May 15.\u2014Mrs.\nB. P Anderson Lft Friday morning for Kimberley where ahe will\nvisit with her brother William Bust-\nin , and her niece, Mrs. Norman\nAllen.\n\u2022 \u25a0   |\nMrs. John Roscorla and her\ndaughter, Mitt Josephiiv Roscorla,\nleft this afternoon for Spokane, from\nwhich city Mrs. Roscorla will proceed to Call'.irnla, where she will\nvlstl frith relatives before leaving\nfor an extended visit in her old\nhome In Cornwall, England. Miss\nRoscorla wilt return t_> the city on\nMonday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThomas Hooper has retu*\" t ' from\nVancouver where he a.ten d the\nfuneral of his father, ** William\nHooper.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Marlon Dobbie has left for\nher home in Pentlct.n, after visiting\nwitn Mr- and Mrs. P. S. peters, LeRoi Hill.\n\u2022 *    * \/\nMiss Nettle Lingle .accompanied by\nher father. W. P. Lingle, Mrs. J- P.\nCooper and Mi._s Be.itrice Jeffen.,\nleft today by motor to spend the\nweek-end in Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. c. A. Towner have\n-eturned from a motor trip to\nSpokane.\n\u2022*\u25a0\u2022*.\u2666\nMrs. J. Van der Est and little\n-Inughter have been removed from\ntha hospital to their home.\nMiss Lorna Trlgqs celebrated her\ncoming of age by entertaining a\nnumber of friends at the home of\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel\nTrggs, LeRoi avenue. A very\n-ilps.*-,ant evening was spent with\nTimes and music, supper belnc\nmrrat at midnight. The table was\nirettily decorated with riaf.odlli, and\ncentered with a beautiful birthday\nrake. Mrs. Trlggs was assisted in\nc.rlng for her guests by Miss Myrtle\nDally. The guest included Mr. and\nMrs. E. Wilson, Mrs. John Harry,\nMra. Edward Sec-combe, Mrs. John\nC*)X, Mrs. Anton Hubner, Miss Olive\nTrlggs. Miss Owen Trewhella, Miss\nBeatrice Dally, Miss Myrtle Dally.\nMtss Miriam Dally, Miss Pearl Rowe,\nMiss Marie Wilson, Miss Olga Osing,\nM'ss Eilr-en Seccombe. Emmanuel\nTrlggs   Jr.,   and   Jack   Cox.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nRobert W. Grigor ls confined to\nMl home on Thompson Heights by\n'llness.\n       *it% Ul \u2022*?\u00a3\u00a3..\nWORKirfC iVWAI* Ht(?t FO(_\n13a lA-JY \"J.W.S   -AouR -*\nftttp mo hw^\/i.^-^ -\/Er\u2014-\nTfeouffta \u25a0*?\u2014 iW GhVi^\nfit! Tfi*_.     ,\nWtfotio mWKSh\nROSSLAND, B. C, May I!!\u2014A. E.\nWright of South Sl:c*n Is spending\nthe weekena at his home on Butte\nBtreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHector McKemtle of the work\nmen's compensation board was renewing old acquaintances in the city\nyesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. M. Clarke of Kaslo la the\nguest of her daughter, Mrs. D. B.\nJones,  Georgia  street.\n\u2022 *   t\nMrs. Iris EustU of the court house\nstaff Is spending the weekend ln\nTrail with her parents. Mr. and\nMrs. Alex  Ewlng.\nWell, there oertalnlj are lltUe surprises around\nevery corner when lt oomee to faelKons thli spring.\nThe more novel and original accessories are uie\nbetter, provided they are chic, comfortable, wearable.\nCertainly none of the new gadgets to brighten the\nfashion world are any emaj-ter and few as easy to look\nat and wear as the new ensembles made of solell felt.\nYou may never have thought of stepping out. to\nluncheon or tea ln felt shoes. But solell felt proves\nItself as trim and flattering as any fabric on the\nmarket. And you know what a year lt is for fabric\nhats, purses, shoes and ao on.\nThese felt ensembles come ln foursomes. There la a\ntricky little waistcoat\u2014one that looks adorable, too,\nwith white frocks. Then It Is complemented by a\nmatching felt het, shoes and purse.\nGaiety and  Originality to Fore\nThey  come  ln  the   gayest  colors and  have  novel\nfa*twnln\u00abt, orl^Lnal itltchlnga. the cuteet shape*, ar\nare tailored to perfection by outstanding manufa*\nturers.\nRather nautloal in Its appearanc-, Is the bright bli\nsolell felt ensemble which has Its snugly flted vo\nbordered with stitching and cut to fit down over tl\nskirt In pains in front It fastens ln i-eml-surpli*\nmanner. Th^ half-shell beret has an anchor over tl\nright eye, where you anchor Jt. The arm bag ls trl,\nand the new wider-bottom shs-pe. The T-strap send\nhaa tiny-pointed white kid edging, to match up wit\nthe stitching on the vest.\nTh\u00ab other ensemble shown la of gray yellow sole\nfelt. The yellow Jacket clips Btraight down the froi\nand It has a little notched collar. The hat has\naaucy turned-up brim, and a clip on its side. Tl\nmatching bag has a silver clasp and the shoes a\ntrimmed In white kid.\nCHURCH GUILD TO\nBUY HYMN BOOKS\nPROCTER.,    B.    C,    May    15\u2014Tho\nAnglican Church Guild met at the\nhome of Mra. E. Merrlfleld on Wednesday. As the supply of hymn\nbojka at the church needed renewing lt was voted that a down new\nones be bought. Finaj arrangements\nfor the visit of the bishop of the\nKootenay on the \"-th, were made.\nThose members present were Mrs. L.\nAppleton, Mrs. Exton. Mrs. A. S\nRitchie, Mrs. A. Major. Mrs. W. R.\nJarvis, Mra. W Boles. Mr*. B Merrrl-\nfleld, Rev. Clyde Harvey, and Mrs.\nJohnson of Rossland.\nMothers* Day Services\nAre Held at Greenwood\nGREEMWOOD, B. C, May 16.\u2014\nMothers* day service was held In the\nUnited church on Sunday. Rev. Mr.\nRudell, who officiated, gave a eer-\nmon honoring \"mother.'.' A pageant\nwas given by the Junior members\nof the church which was much appreciated by the large congregation.\nTlie church was beautifully decorated with tullpa which were dorated\nby members of the congregation in\nh.nur of the day.\n.\n\"WHO GOES THERE.\"\nsays the wise shopper\nChallenge of the sentry on guard, abrupt and imperative in\nthe dark.  \"Advance and give the countersign!'*\nTo the woman in the home, alertly watchful over her\nhousehold budget, passwords are important. Everything\noffered for sale is subject to suspicion unless it bears the\ncountersign\u2014the familiar trade-mark\u2014the name of a manufacturer or merchant whom she knows.\nEvery day she studies the advertising columns. From\nthem she determines values, and decides what she will buy\nand where. She knows that advertised goods are safe goods\nbacked by the reputation of the maker and the merchant.\nWhen she goes shopping\u2014whether for a bottle of ketchup or for a pearl necklace\u2014she challenges each product with\na \"Who goes there?\" And if it has the password of adver-\ntised excellence she makes her purchase tvUhout hesitation.\nThe advertisements in this paper are a safe guide to\nbuying. Redd them every day. Keep in touch with the latest\nnews of price, style and quality. Then buy with thc assurance that you will get your money's worth.\n \u2022Tlir.    Ml'l-iN    TIM1V    NEW\",    Ml.SDN,    B.    C,    MONDAY    MORNINO    MAY    11,    IO*-.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIK\nGood Shoes\n\u00a9\ncM[\nat\nAndrew & Co,\nLeaden In Foot Fashion\nNlimniilllllllllllllltlllllllllliilllll\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B.C. May 13\u2014Mrs. Charles\nPranaen entertained at br.dge Thura-\nI day and Friday evening, four tables\nj bring in play at each. Thursday\nMrs. W. E. B. M*\"*iypenny won\nflrat prise. Ml** Marie Matthews,\n! second and Mrs. B. J. Provost the\nj co?i_ioiatton. Mm. O. H. Nelson \u25a0**\u25a0-\n{alnted the hofteas in serving. L*it\nevening Mrs. fl. R. Walley assisted.\nThe prlres were won by Mis. Ale*\nHector, first, Mrs. Alfred baundera,\naecond and Mn, H. o. Hlnch, con*\nI sola tlon.\nIC BLACKWELL\nHEUOSSLAND\nof Mr. and Mrs. William\nBlackwell; Active In\nSport and Music\nnOfflSLANO, B. C, May 15\u2014Erie\nackwell, aged 17 years, eldest son\n1 Mr. and Mrs. William Blackwell,\nissed away Sunday morning n the\n\/rter's hospital after a week's Illness,\nl- death was caused by peritonitis.\n,:Erlc was born in Wolverhampton,\n!.!.\u00ab., and came to Canada with hit\n' rents about six years ago. With\niclded musical ability and having\nade quite a record in the vu.rlous\nranchei* of athletics, he was a\nipular member of the young peo-\nie. He was prominent in all the\nitlvlties of the young People of\nL Andrew's United church.\nEric is survived by his parents\nid by a younger brother, Frank.\n1EATTLE AMPHION\nCHOIR WINS TRAIL\nI      PYTHIAN SHIELD\n\"VANCOUVER, May 15 (CP>\u2014Brit-\n,h Columbia Musical Featlvai con-\nuded its 11-day se^ion here last\nIght with a grand final concert\n\/..en the Grand Choral champion-\nnip trophy, the B. C. Electric allver\n< hallenge cup, was awarded  to the\nl-ach choir of Vancouver.\nEarlier in the evening tho Seattle\nI mphion   Male   choir   was   awarded\nEg  Trail  Lodge Knights  of Pythias\n\u25a0 nield.\n' Gordon  Keatley.   Vancouver,   cap-\n. ired the Clarke Hamilton cup ln\n\u25a0\"he gold medallists' champion* nip\nocal solo event. In class 9 for\n-idles' choirs the Royal City Knights\n*t   Pythias   cup   held   last   year   by\n' he First United church or Viotorla\n\/as won by the Elgar Ladies choir\n,t   Vancouver.\nMiss Dorothy Vy*e of rrultvale\nwas a visitor in the city last eve-\nnlnft. She returned to rrultvale thla\nmorning.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. Johnstone of\nFernie are In the city for a few days\nvisiting their two daughters,\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. W. M. smith of\nFrultvale were In the city yestwday.\nThey were accompanied on their return home by their eon Harry, who\nattends high       oo* \u25a0 ere.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u25a0\nMlas Jean Motherwell and Miss\nMargaret Motherwell left this morning for Spokane. They will travel by\nairplane to Beattis and spend a\nvacation at Vancouver and other\ncoast  cities.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nTlr. ant Mrs. Cecil Burf-ess and\nMr. and Mrs. r. W. Jsckson are at\nWlllov   Point   for   the   weekend.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nRoy Foxlee and his brother rrank\nleft yesterday to spend tht weekend with their parents at Robson.\nMiss Doris Cawaton of portage la\nprairie, Man., arrives ln Trail this\nevening snd will be the guest of\nher brother-ln-'aw and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Glenn Quayle.\nMr. and Mrs. O. Arthur Rendell\nhave returned from a trip to Greenwood. KT. and Mrs. W. G. McKenzie moto ed with them as far aa\nCascade and spent a few days visiting at Christina 1 k\u00ab, returning to\nTrail with Mr. and Mrs. Rendell.\nTrj.il t*Ws o-- <MIV\nTHAU. HOUSES AHD LOTS - IM-\nspirano-. Notary. J. D. And.\u2122..'.\nTrail. nmt\nBONNINGTON FALUS\nBADMINTON CLUB\nCONCLUDES YEAR\nBONNINGTON FALLS, B C. May\n15.\u2014The Badminton club entertained at an Invitation dance as\na wind-up for th season's play. The\ncommittee had taken Infinite pains\nln the arrangements to ensure an\nenjoyable time. The hall v's decorated with multi-colored a earners\nand a pretty lighting lect.j Biipper\nwas served at midnight. Among\nthose attending were Mr. and Mrs.\nO. F. Chapman, Mrs, W. A. McCabe,\nMr and Mrs. P. O. Bird. Mr. and\nMr*. E. Bowkett, l\"s Cathie Laurie,\nMrs. D. M. Baddelcy, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. R. Corner, Misses Peggy snd Doreen Hill, Miss Je.n McKenzie, Miss\nKathleen Oray, Miss Myra Humphry, Miss Rose Exter, Miss Mary\nFhlilips, Miss Charlotte -ells, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Wllley, ;--. and Mrs.\nElmer Speers, Mrs. A. Oalrns, Trail.\nMr. *nd Mrs. B. McKlm, Mr. and\nMre. B. Rarllng, Mlsa Cora Barrett,\nNelson, Mr. and Mr.. E. J. McGregor,\nMr. and Mre. F. B. Hardin, Mrs. Mc-\nFadden, Mis. Elsie Oansner, W. J.\nTlndftle, J. McFadden, A. Lambert,\nW. Wadeaon, O. Batley, G. Thompson, M. Walker, H. Collier, C. Gray,\nC. FHher, J. Oray, H. Farenholtz\nof Nelson, J. Jerome, H. Harrop, R.\nGraham, V. Marshall. R. Weeks and\nL. Oeorge.\nAnnouncing\n{he Engagement\nLet your f.l^nds all know. Tell them\nwith an a tractive \u2022.n.nounccmcnt\nwhich expresses the true spirit of the\nhappy occasion. We create delightful\nnotices. . ....\nCall Us Today\nPHONE 144\nfolgmt Satlti i\\Tcui3 \"hh Dr-jarlmrnt\nCreators of Fine Printing\nEaker Street Nelson, B. C.\nYea, Slam One Passenger!\nThese little sisters spoke up with one voice when Miss PeRgy Burns,,\nUnited Airlines hostess, at right, attempted to collect a set-ond fare\nfollowing a trip between San Francisco and Los AnRctes, Calif. The\ntwins, Daisy and Violet Hilton, are of the Siamese variety. Tliey took\noff from San Francisco with one ticket. Air line official.1, wired shcad,\nordering collection of another fare. Now the California courts may be\nasked to decide the difference.    The girls certainly pull together.\nPREPARE HOMES\nFOR HOLIDAYS,\nMcBAINES LAKE\nMISSSMELLIEIS\nGIVEN A SURPRISE\nON HER BIRTHDAY\nthe Lake; Repair and\nEnlarge Homes\nPROCTER. B. \u2022*\u00ab May 15-Mlss\nMarfartt amelhe waa pleasantly sur*\nprised Wednesday night when a few\ncf   her   friends   motored   out   from\n,..\u2022_-\u25a0 r_       \u201ej   \u2122i ' Nelson,    the    Occ-\"**i    being    Miss\nSwimming Season Opened at 8rneme.8 blrtha,*_.\nfcuppor was served during which k\n\\at%t biruday cake made its appearance. Music and fortune telling\nwftB the order of tha evening.\nRev. aeorgo Kinney left for the\ncoast Monday night where he will\nattend the conference of the United\nChurch of Canada Iq be held ln\nNew   Westminster.\nMiss Wtm y Peters, who Is leaving\nshortly for England, and Miss Barbara Burge of Gray Creek were the\nguests cf I'sb Annie MacKinnon\nrecently.\nM'-as Margaret Smellle ii visiting\nter father. Captain Haig-Smellle,\n(Or a few days.\nMrs. Johnson of Rossland is spend-\ning a !**\u2022; days at the homo Mr*.\nE.   Merrlfleld.\nMrs.   J.   Robinson,   who   has   been\nFURNIE, B, C, May 15\u2014The swimming season has opened at McBaln\nlake pleasure resoTt with a number\ncf bathers enjoying a piunge tn tho\nwarm waters of the lake on Sunday\nlast.\nLot owners are busy improving\ntheir Bummer homes and getting\nready for their summer residence at\nthe lake. Mr, and Mrs. George Quail\nand Miss Frances Quail are staying\nat t_clr newly completed summer\nhome wT.Ue they are still doing\nInterior   work.\nMrs. Robert Potter Is enlarging\nher home by the addition of another\nrcom this summer.\nAt Dixie I_*.dge, E. Dicks is building a boat hou.se for their motor boat\nLADY GOLFERS OF\nFERIE PREPARE\nFOR COMPETITION\nFERNIE, B. C, May 15\u2014A large\nnumber of ladle* turned out far the\nOne club competition at the Oolf\nclub Tuesday. Miss Bessie Gtb3on\nheld the lowest net -.core. After the\ngame a tea was held ln\nhouse for which Mrs. Lew. Pollak\nconvened as-lsted bv Mra. Huycke.\nMrs. Dufour and Miss Seymore. A\nlittle innovati.n was introduced ny\nserving it buffet style.\nl>ady golfer's interest is now centering on the Larder competl.l.m\nwhich will finish .the end of June.\nThe last winner cf the Wilson cup\ncompetition held on the first and\nthird Tuesdays In the month waa\nMrs.  W.  W.  Brown.\nSociety\nthla  tafmutm   i\u00bb  conducted   bj\nMrs. M- I. vifii-u., All iichs ot a\n\u2022KKlal     ll *Uiu\\     InrludlUR     f**Ktp\u00bb\ntloni, pri-.tt*. .iiH'ftatnmcnts, per*\nKMMl beam, ...arr'.i-.**-**, etc., mm\nappear In this column. Teh-phone\nMm. Viciifux at her home, si\u00bb\nSilica street.\nHonoring Mrs. Arthur Balrd, who\nwith her hut-band and family has arrived frum He gin a. to nuke her home\nln Netem, Mrs. Ouy W. i .vis. Stanley\nstreet, entertained informally at the\ntea hour recently, pr'ns.ce and forKet-\nme-no's centered the tea table whrre\nMra. ilugh W. Rob?rtson preskicd.\nMrs.  Harold Lakes served.\nThose Invited were Mis. Balrd, Mrs\nP. O. Morf-y, Mlsa M. Cnmtron, Mrs.\nE. G. Bmyth, Mrs. John Cartmel. Mrs.\nW. J. Orove, Mtb. E. E. L. Dewdney.\nMrs W. R. Grubbe. Mrs, George John*\nI stone, Mrs. Louis John-ion, Mrs. L. S.\niBradley. Mrs. Wt*M. Walker. Mrs. Hugh\nW. Robertson, Mrs. A. T. Blepheneon.\niMrs. Jamfs O'Shen. Mrs. P F Payne.\nMrs. A. D.  McLeod   and  Mrs.  Harold\n'Lakce. ,\n| Mrs. Donald McLeod, Vernon street,\nwas the gucs of honor at an Informal bridge given on the occasion of\nner departure n:xt week for an extended visit to Scotland. M1m Margaret McLeod, was ho'tess and the\nprizes for the game wcre won by Mrs. :\nII. McArthur and Mm. W. M. Vance, j\nThose playing besides Mrs. Mct*0*3\nman Mrs. George Johnstone. Mrs. Gil- !\nbert Hartln, Mrs. T. G. Gibson. Miss ;\nAgnes Cant, Hrs. H. E. Dill. Mrs. W. ;\nM. Vance,  Mrs.  H. MoArthur,\n...\nMaurice Richardson  of Vancouver, i\nson of Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Richardson\nformerly   or   Nelson,   Is   spending   a\nweek In thc city.\n\u2022   \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Irene Llghtfoot of Grand Porks\nis visiting her sister, Winnie, at* the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. E, Norman.\n...\nMiss Isabel Nixon of Perry Siding.'\nwho teaches at Glade, was the weekend guest of her brother and sister-'\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Nixon, Silica\nMMVt.\nMl'tt Esther Chrlstenpon of fHflaflt\n,5ald a visit to town Saturday.\nD. Sutherland of Winlaw paid a\nvisit to town during the week-end.\nAmong Nelson vlshon Saturday was\nMrs. Elmer WaldTOfli of Castlegar. who\nIvltcd her husband who was operated\non at thc Kootenay Lako General hospital.\nr.n,\u00b0M\nmmaMmmmmmmmwtmia.mmm\\\nMrs. OtoOO,\ncity visitor\n, of Alr.nvorth, wU,\n\u25a0torCpft*\/\nSTORE NEWS\nNew Wash Frocks\nWash Frocks with the sty!_ and workmanship of the more\nexpensive silk frocks.   Developed of Frinted Broadcloths,\nvoiles or the new cotton mesh sleeveless or short sleeve\nstyles. Sizes for Misses in 14 to 20 and Women in Sires 38\nto 44.\nREASONABLY PRICED AT\nEACH S1.&5, \"'.2.95 TO ?4.50\nA Complete Range of\nChildren's Dresses\nA wonderful display of Children's dresses in sizes 2 to 14\nyears. They are made of fast color Prints or dimities. Sizes\nup to 6 years with bloomers or pantees to match. All smart\ndesigns.\nPRICED AT EACH .... $1.25, S1.65, \u00ab\"2.25 TO 94.00\nNew\nports\nHats\nNatural and White Bakou\nHats in the season's best\nstyles. Medium and large\noutlines. All headsizes.\nSPECIALLY PRICED AT\nEACH ?5.50 TO SC.50\nQjMea& her VD\nMr. nnd Mrs. E. Creed Johnston -t\nBt-nlngtcn \u25a0 id a visit to town, Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and . -. R. E. Ilorton. Onk\nstreet have m their guest Mr. Hor-\nton's 'later, Mrs. -culah Johnson and\nher children.\nWilllar Greenwood of Slocan City\nyas a city visitor Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nPrank tYor.ro and son of Apple-\ndule spent Saturday lu town.\nMr. and  Mrs. P. Horllck of South\nindisposed for the past week, ia able .Slocan were shoppers to Nelson Satur-\nto  be  about  again.\nMrs.   W.   A.   Ward   has   returned\nfrom   a   short   visit   to   Nelson,\nMRS.SMELL1EIS\nPROCTER HOSTESS\nHon. Randolph Bruce\nVisits, Invermere\nINVETIMEBE. B .C\u201e May 15.\u2014R.\nRandolph Bruce. LL.D.. along with\nCol. J. s. Dennis BOtOCM in here\nlaat week with the end In view of\nmaking plans for a private bUllcatl\ncampaign for the coming i*-C;v*,'in.\nThey are gu^ts at Mr, Bruc's late\nprivate residence, being entertained\nby Mr. and Mr*-. Gordon Love. M'ss\nDennis ls accompanying her father\nfrom their home in Victoria. U,\nRandolph Bruce haa Just completed\ntrip around the world in the\nCP-R. 8.8. Empress of Britain. He\nla most en thus! j stlc over the pleasure of his voyage.\nPROCTER, B, C. May 15-Mrs.\nW. H. >l| Ifl I \u25a0 mado a <*harmtnj_\nbOS-sMi on Thursday vhen she entertained at thc tea hour In hom.r\nof Mlsa Mnrgarct Smellle. whose\nmarriage  takes  place  shortly.\nQuantities  of  spring   blooms  were\nthe club- used   throughout   t;e   living   room.*..\nwhile   a   largo   bawl   of   tulips   and\nother   flowers   graced   the   center   of\nthe   daintily  arranged   tea   table.\nMrs. Smellle wai assisted ln serving t'.*.e gui-sts by Miss MacLean,\nMrs. Miurlce Major, Mrs. F. Raymond, Mrs. \\V. Soles and Ml-** Jtttll\nKnowles. Thc invited guests were\nMrs. G. Kinney, Mrs. J. flurf-i, Mrs.\nP. Raymcnd, Mrs. S, Bonacci, Mrs.\n% McLeod, Miss .7. MacLean,.. Mvs.\nJ. McLeod, Mrs. Jullr Bourne. Mrs.\nW. Word. Mrs. J. Bichan, Mrs. R.\nJarvis. IDst M. .larvls, Mrs. c\nKnowles, Miss J- Knowles, Mrs. A\nRitchie, Mrs. Coleman. Mrs. P. Bnn-\nnett, Mr.-. A. Helghton. Mrs. Wal'on,\nMrs. A. Major, Mrs. H. CUtt, IKt.\nW. Donaldson, Mrs. Ferg, Mrs. W\nS.Irs, Mrs. Dohcnlwrger, and Mrs.\nE.  MacLcnnan.\nMKS NEKLANDS VISITS AT\nISOtTII   SL(H.\\N\nBONNINGTON   FALI-S,   B.  C,  May\n15.\u2014Mrs.   AUstalr   Gairnr,   and   chil\nMrs. Nelson \u00bbeterson of Ymir were\ncity  visitors Ejautrday.\n\u2022 *    *\nMrs. McCain, of South Slocan paid\nx visit to town  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. and . s. Paterson of Farron\nwere among wcclt-end visitors to Nelson.\nMrs. E. J. McGregor and Mrs. R.\nKennedy of Bonnlnaton paid a visit\nto the city  S-jttturday.\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\n!>-*! mw^tW^^tm^\nheadciunrters . i Haarcm, who is visit-\nin., the houses of bit order in America. Father Poelman left Saturday for\nOttawa.\n\u25a0   a, i\nMr. and Mre. Percy Bird ot South\nSiocan spent baturday in tha city.\nMrs. A. Smith of Edgewootf paid a\nvisit to town yesterday.\nhave returned t\"t their home in Spokane,\nJames Draper of New Denver was a\ncity  shopper  t-nturday.\nMiss HeifiB of Cr-mbrook is a visit-\ning her brother on Carbonate s'rect\nMrs.  C. C. Haven   of   Kaslo  was\ncity  shopper Saturday.\nIA1RMEN FLYING\nRev. J. G. Archibald\nAttends Conference\nat NewWestm.n8ter|THE TRANSCMDA\nPLANEJtf FORKS\nOn Way to Montreal to Bcs-*1\nNon-Slop Refuelling\nTrip to Vancouver\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Carrie, Silica\nstreet, have as their gvttt Mrs. A. B.\nHa. , fornifrly of Nelson and now of j\nNanalmo. She will be met, here by fcW i\ndaughter-ln-1 .w. Mrs. Norman Hall , paid\nand son, DBU0M.\nGRAND   FORKS    B.   C,  May   15\u2014\nH.   H.   Henderson   ls   spending   the\nweek at Franklin Camp where he ls\nMr.  and  Mrs. W.  wr. Powell who  doing assessment *vork.\nnt a few days in Nelson la_.t week I     Mlaa   Marian    McKle   returned   On\nMonday    evening    from    Vancouver.\nRev.   J.   G.   Archibald   Is   ln   New\nWestminster   attending   the   conference of the United o.-urch which is\nbeing  held   in   that  city  thli  week.\nWord was received In the city this\nweek   that   Miss   Irene   Hutton   who\nIms   been   In   the  ea*t   for   several\nweeks,   has   undergone   an   operation\nand   is   progressing   favorably.\nJ    P.   C.   Wright,   wh0   bM   been\nj spending    the   past   fortnight   with\nj his   family    here,   returned   to   the\nI coast cn  Tuesday morning.\nWi M. Gowans. who has been In\nEast Kootena; for several weeks,\nspent a couple of da; 3 with his\nfamily   this   week.\nC. Williams of Trail la visiting\nwith frlerdj In the city this week.\nCharles Hufty of Slocan City who\nhas b.rn visiting his grand parents,\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. Hufty, Buker\nstreet  returned Saturday to his home.\nMr, and Mr.*.. Smith Cwwtn of Ymir\nVisit to tc-Aii  Saturday.\nBuster Denrln of winlaw pnld a visit to town Saturday.\n\u2022   \u2022    \u2022\nMra. A. Carney of Kaslo is a patient, in the Kootenay L\/ikc Genera]\nhospital.\nH. A. Wade and K. A. MatfMon both\n\u25a0M Trail wore went visiiors In Nelson  having  chjo.'-'d  a  game  of  golf\nwhile  here.\nAmong shoppers to Nelson Saturday\nwrre Mr. and Mrs. J, H. Wensley. t.,eir\nchughtcr, Mrs. W. T. .Smith and Miss\nAlice  Dunlop  who motored  in.\nMrs. Gllle. Jr.. of Ymir paid a visit\nto  Nelson  Saturday. _\nMrs. Mackic Returns\nto New Westminster\nbrit;.\ndren.    Sheila   Dawn    and    Allen,   ot  tWtt r.erkriry. Calif., motored to TraU\nTrail who have been the guests of\nMrs. Bert McKlm for the past week,\nhave   left   to  visit   In   Nelson.\nMrs. Ner-landa was the recent\nguest of Mrs, A. Somcrville at\nSouth Slocan.\nCOirMBl, ftTSBAM FtOff\nroM.moNS\nI     Tho   Dominion   water    power   and\nI hy-lromotrlc   bureau   of   the   depart-\n\\mmn   cf   ttM   Ir.tcrior   reports   that\nrun-orf  in  WUlll  Columbia  durlrttt\nJanuary   WU   below   aven-**e  due  to\nthc    fact    that    thc    preclplt-itlcn.\nthouuh    fairly   suh\u00ab**nntial,    fell    in\nthe form of Know in the higher ll*\nt.tudcrt   and   cc\u00bbld   w either   retarded\nntn-off.     The   tlrftcenry   was   m<*st\npronounced   In   the coastal  area  and\nlef.s    h    m    the    interior    of    the\nprovince;    the   coastal    run-off    was\nonly about 55 p-r -ent cf the Jnnu-\n'    *    * ] ary \u25a0 average,   while   in   thc   Central\nVery Rev. J. C. McKenzie recently , Fraser   basin   run-off   tftf   about   B._\nhad  as  his guest,  Rev.  *..  Poelman,   ptt   cent   of   normal     id   in   the\n3.   S.   H.   provincial   of   the   Bles**rd   North ' Tliompsou    river    basin    was\nSacrament   fathers   ln   Holland   with   nearly average.\nIsaar Goodwin of Salmo paid f* visit\nto town  Saturday.\nMr. nnd Mrs. Clarence Harmon of\nAln'-worth spent Saturday In the city\nshopping.\nWilliam Muraro,\nI Charles Oaltwjhe', 1\nicad, nnd\n'ing here\nto visit friends ji\u00absterda:\nCRESTON. B .C. May LV\u2014Mrs.\nJohn L'lithwaite and con, Robert,\nof Nelson, have returned to that\ncity after tt, abort visit here, guestft\nof Mr. nnd Mrs. Hasr-aul. Mr. Laltu-\nwnlie came by car to mret them.\nMi-is Mackle ot New Westmlnst.er.\nwho has spent thft p.*st month nt\nCrcstoi.. a gviest of her sister. Mrs.\nR. Thomson, left for home at the\nmlddV or the week.\nA eouplf. of Crnnbrcok men es-\n*;ocl..trd with L. D. cafe in that\ntown, were here yesterday and have\ntaken nn option to lease the vacant\nstore on Canyon street, formerly occupied by Creston meat market.\nMrs. R. J. Forbes got b.^ek on\nThursday from a short holiday vl.it\nwith   friends   m Snokane.\nH.   W.   Power   of   Spokane   was\nThursday  visitor with C, P.\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, May 15\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Lieutenant.** R. H. Storer and\nli. R. Ronald, flying the transeanada\nplane The Vancouver Sun landed\nhere at 6:20 p.m. yesterday, two\nhours and 10 minutes after their\ntakeoff from Vancouver, on the\nfirst leg of their flight across thc\nDominion.\nThe ilier*. will take off for Leth-\nbrhli_*e,   Albert a,   this   after n_on.\nThe ultimate destination of the\ntwo aviators is Montreal which they\nwill leave cn June 2\\ on the flrtl\natterrpteU tran*canada non-.\u00abtop refueling flight. Tliey hope to make\nthe return flight to Vancouver In 91\nhours. The purpose of the flight\nwhich Is sponsored by the Vancouver Run I. to demonstraV. the\npractibllity of a 30-hour aerial mall\nservice MffjH the Dominion :n\neasy stages c( approximately 600\nmiles.\n(JREKNWOOI) GOLFERS\nQUALIFY FOR\nCOT PLAY\nGRPTTNWOOD,     , C. Mny  11 -An\nelimination contest took place ma\nSuml'iy at thi Kettle valley golf\nlinks to ehOOM the four pliyers tn\neompefe fnr the Inter-rlul) eitp\nwhich will take place on Sundav between the clubs of Ooyocs, Kettle\nValley and Grand Porta, Tl'-c\nlowe.-st score** were fumed In by A.\nRoberts. .1, Riehter, D. A. Maedon.iUl.\nj J. crouriipr and E. Rlchter. The\nHayes t **Wtt\u00bb Vnlley club holds thc cup ftt\n1 pfiacnt\nThere   are   more   than   100,000.000\n\u25a0sheep in Austr-iliv ttmlth nrodll-,'\u2022\npome 2.000,BQ0 balc\u00ab of wool every\nyear.\nMr. Power waa a former editor of\nthe Koo'enaian. Kaslo, to which\ncity he was proceeding to visit old\nfriends. Fcr the prist 10 years he\nhas been a wall known IlRure in\nmining circles In Spoksne.\n11111LM It 1111 1H Ml I MM III1111111UI It 1MI 111 M1 i M M M11M M M1M111111M H MIMII1111M H\nTo Our Milk Customers\nWr will start our .sumnirr sclu-dulp of milk dplivi-ry\non Sunday, .May 15. tfltt, On Saturday tin; delivery\nwill be. in the afternoon aa usual and the Sunday de-\nlivery will leave the creamery \u25a0boot midnight and bt\ncompleted by 6 o'clock Sunday morning.\nIf you wish to make any change in your order ef-\nfectnijr these two deliveries please advise tho driver\nor phone 290.    \u2022\nAgain assuring you of our appreciation of the business you have given us, we are,\nCordially yours,\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nTALM   DAIRIES.  LTD. 11\nICE CREAM BUTTER MILK 11\nALL PERFECTLY TASTE-RIZED PRODUCTS 11\n'iimii'mii'iiimmmmMiMiiuii''i'u-'mmmimmmimutimm'->iiimmimi\n-\n _,\nTHE   KILSON   DAILT   NEWS.   MLBON,   B.   C.   MONDAY   MOBMSO   MAT   H,   1\"*3-**\nUp \u00a3!*&*\u00bb -Sa.hj Nfuia\nPunustied every morning except Sunday by News Publishing Company,  Limited   Nelaon, B   C.\nMember of Canadian  . r?as leased wire news service.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. 8. 0. statements of circulation\nmailed on request, or may be seen st the office of any advertising\nagency recognized by the Canadian Dally Newspapers' Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBi  m.tl   (country),   p*r month, __________\nPer year  ,\nBy   m.U   (city),  per   year __________\nOutside Canada, per mouth. ____________________________\nPer   year\nDelivered, per  week\nPet year  \t\nPayable ln advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ol circulation.\n_\u2022   ao\n._ pS.OO\n_ 13.00\n_ .75\n_ ISO\n_ M\n- 13.00\nMONDAY, MAY 16,1932\nThe Dole In Ancient Times\nTacitus .was the historian who believed that the insidious and dominant cause of the dissolution of the Roman Empire was the dole. In this latter stage, of our\ncivilization the dole is more pervading, more all-embracing and devised on a greater variety of planes than in\nthe days when ancient Rome ruled the world says the\nVictoria Colonist. Tacitus spent 10 years travelling round\nthat Empire, lie read the handwriting on the walls in\nSpain and Gaul, in Palestine and Syria and Egypt and\nCarthage. As others have done since he came to the\nconclusion that \"Industry will languish and idleness\nflourish where men lack the stimulus cither of fear or\nof hope to spur the efforts, and everyone relies for his\nsupport on doles, useless to himself and a burden to us.\"\nMr. II. Stanford Smith writing in the London Morn-.\ning Post on the analogy between conditions in the Roman Empire at the beginning of the fifth century B. C.\nand at the present time, says that in 500 B. C. pauperism had become sufficiently widespread to alarm the\nruling classes. As a palliative the Government began the\npractice of buying up grain and distributing it free, or\nselling it to the poorer inhabitants at a price much below the market value. This practice was known as the\nannona. It was a charitable measure at first. Then it\nbecame an accepted thing, and in time every Roman citizen had the right to receive five bushels of corn per\nmonth at half the normal rate, a grant which was made\ngratis after 58 B. C. In Rome, in that year, 320,000 per.\nsons out of 500,000 wcre in receipt of the dole.\nMr. Smith recalls that the most deplorable aspect of\nannona was its effect on Italian agriculture and on the\nItalian small holders. They were unable to compete with\nthe cheap imported grain which flooded the market. They\ntherefore sold or surrendered their holdings to their\ncreditors and \"drifted to the towns to swell their already\nteeming workless populations. The annona had an analogy with our import of cheap foreign corn today.\"\nAs time went on urbanization continued and the countryside became depopulated. Italy ceased to be a corn-\nproducing country. The Roman yeoman disappeared. A\nsituation then arose, says Mr. Smith, when the decadent descendants of agriculturists, \"became vicious, effeminate parasites, ever ready to riot, but too cowardly\nto be entrusted with the defence of their country which\nwas delegated to barbarian mercenaris.\" It was about the\nbeginning of the second century A. D. that the incessant economic drain of the annona began to make itself felt.\nThe Government at Rome became alarmed and introduced draconian laws which endeavored to chain the\nworker to his trade. Tlie peasants were attached to their\nholdings by force and their labor remunerated by a fixed chare of the product of the land worked. Taxation\nbecame crushing, so much so as to stifle a revival of\ncommerce which had sunk to a low ebb. These offorts\nfailed to restore prosperity. As Mr. Smith writes: \"Crisis followed crisis, production dwindled, currency became scarce, trade stagnated and poverty and wretchedness increased. Between 250-476 A. D. there was the\nblankest misery for thc Roman people, during which\nthey lost, besides their wealth, their civilization and\ntheir nationality.\"\nIf Russia and Japan milly come to blows, the Jap*\nmay find that the Shanghai affair was just an exhibition game.\nEvanston, 111., has found out that its citizens call police \"cops,\" \"bulls\" and \"flat-feet.\" But thats nothing\nto what the policemen call the citizens.\nAn Italian inventor has just perfected what he claims\nto be a foolproof airplane. We ought to let him have a\ntry at inventing a new form of government.\nMost pedestrians will agree with that retired locomotive driver who says level crossings are hard on the\nnerves.\nFor barefaced impudence, the Doukhobors who insist\non parading without clothes are hard to beat.\nMt. Vesuvius may still be the worlds best known volcano, but Manchuria is looming as a dangerous opponent.\nuBetu)een You\nand Me\"\nTwenty Years Ago\nfl-rom The rally News ot May 16\n1512)\nBrealflnij all records tot the year\nth* water ln the West Arm yesterday\ntests. 6*. Inches. This make* a total\nIncrease for the year ol 7 Icct\n.44  lnche*.\n...\nO. M. Annable, brother of Mayor\nAnnable. arrived last night on the\ncoast   train.\nAll  Germany  is  rlnsrlng with  the\ntelser's latest  Indiscretion,  which  Is\nnothing less than a threat to smash\nth* constitution  of  Abacc Lorraine\n\u2022   \u2022   .\nOhrlstlsn   X   was   proclaims,   kins\nof   Denmark   from   the   balcony   of\nth* palace \u00bbt 3 o'clock thla afwrnooo\n...\nManitoba  today   became   a   marl-\ntime  provlnc*  with  two magnificent\n**aporls,    Port    Nelson    and      F*ort\nChurchill, and with * territory the\n_sxss of a European empire In extent.\nIt Is Hq longer thc \"postage stamp\"\nprovlnc*.\nThere are no rich men In America   tpxiay.   We   don't   know   where\nthey   stand.   The    hltthest   type   of\nriches,  as persopjltled  In   tnh  coun-\n,   *\u25a0\u00ab.   practically   vanished,   and\n*T ar. alr.ld to look at tho ledg-\n'  to Me   lf   ihev   are   wrprln   anything  \u2014 Chart*.    M.   Schwab,   .tecl\n-\nLevel Decks In\nRoughest Seas\nWith the launching et Trieste,\nItaly, of the 48,000 ton liner. Conte\nDl Savola. Italy produces Ior the\ntrans-Atlantic -service the world's\nllrst mechanlciily stabilized pa*.\na*?nger ship. Three entirely new\nIdea* are embodied la the new\nship.\nIn addition to the even-keel\nfeature of the new liner, -which\nassures even decks In the rough*\nent of \u00abea**. wind and sea, resistance Is reduced to the minimum\nby the -stream line cr.nstructlon\nof hull and superstructure, in the\nplanning of welch the science of\naero-dynamlcs entered. A third\nnew and riis'inctive feature ls the\nelimination of the aft or \"dummv\"\nfunnel, and tbe setting of the\nsbip'e two funnels, well forward,\nthis arrangement . ffordlng exceptional room for sun and sports\ndeck.\nInstalled at a cost, approxl-\nlmatlng one million dollars, the\nstabilizer plant ls an entirely new\ndeparture In passenger-ship con-\n< ..uctlon.\nC-nsls.lng of three sipara.e gyro-\n'\u25a0cc;**,, each With i .rot r thlr-\niee._ feet in dfa Mtrr and a\nweight of 100 tons, or 300 tons ln\nall, the Conte de Savola'a stabilizer plant Is three times larger\nthan t.-e binges' stabl.iacr plant\nat   present   u.e.\nJeen \u00bbrt\u00bbtow. I daughter of Mr.\nand Mra. Gilbert Sr stow, of Otlnda\nOntario, Tins a spi**'k'pd birl*!y w.,o\nlaid an egg that Jean believes entitles the hen to fame.\nThe egg measures nine and one-\nhalf Inches In circumference, the long\nway, and seven Inches the short\nway  about.\n\u2022Such eggs were probably expressly\ndesigned to be used in those one-egg\ncake   receipts.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nSome more Doulthobora have been\nshipped away and som-. more have\ntaken off their clotr.es and landed in\nJail. The Doukhobor nude demonstrations are almost a good example\nof perpetual motion. This nakedness\nls getting to be tl **i-.me in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nBut here's what the Toronto Telegram   says:\nThough  many were Jailed and pursued,\nThat    can't    atop    the    Doukl.obor\nbrood.\nAnd   word   from   the   west,   where\nthey   ought   to  know  best.\nIs   that   nudist   para-leg   are   renude.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAnswer to Saturday's problem:\nEXAGGERATE\nEEETAAXO^iR\nEXAMINATION\nAATIIXNNOEM\nAbove are the words tr.at were\nformed by rearranging the letter's\nshown   below   each   word.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nHere's another:\nA boy Invested 60 cents ln lemonade, which he sold at three cents\nper glasj. When half of It was sold\nhe had 30 cents more than his\noriginal investment. How many\nglasses did he sell, and what would\nhla profit be when H all was sold?\neat\nAnswer  tomorrow.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nWho says Scots cannot Joke? An\nEaling reader found the foil, win \u201e\nnotice ln a hotel north of the Tweed;\n\u2022 \u2022   t\nThis hotel has been built and arranged for the special comfort and\nconvenience of lis vlMtors. On arrival, e.ich guest will be asked how\nhe Ukes the situation; and if he\nsays the hotel ought tn have been\nplaced up upon tbe knoll or further\ndown toward tbe river, the location\nof the house will be immediately\nchanged. Corner front rooms, up\nonly  one  flight,   for  every  guest.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBath?, gas hot and cold water,\nlaundry, telegraph, restaurant, fire-\nalarm, bar room, billiard table,\ndaily papers, sewing machine, gran\".\npiano, a clergyman, snd all other\nmodern convenience.*  in every room.\nMeals every minute If desired, and\nconsequently, no .second table. English, French and German dictionaries\nfurnished every guest to make up\nsuch a blll-of-fares as he may desire without regard to the bUl-alfalr\nafterward at the cftiee.\n\u2022 \u2022   i\nWaiters of any nationality (and\ncolon desired. Every waiter furnished with a libretto, buttonhole bouquet, full dress suit, ball tablet*,\nand his hair parted In the mi-idle.\nEvery guest will have the best neat\nln the dining hall and trie best\nwaiter In thc house.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nChildren will be welcomed with\ndelight, and are requested t0 bring\npes-tops to spin on the velvet carpet\nsnd hoop sticks to bang the carved\nrosewood furniture, specially provided for that purpose.\nThey will be allowed to bang on\nthe piano at all hour-), yell In the\nhalls, slide down the banisters, and\nmake themselves ss disagreeable as\nthe  fondet  mother  can  desire.\nDogs allowed in any room ln thc\nhouse, Including the wihilne room.\nGentlemen cm drink, smr-ke, swear,\nchew, gamble, teil snarly storl?.-.\nstare at the new arrivals, arid indulge ln any other Innocent amusement common to watering-places.,\nin any part of the hotel. Special\nattention given to parties who can\ngive information as to how these\nthings   arc   done   \"abroad.\"\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe proprietor will take tt aa a\npersonal affront If any guest, on\nleaving, should fall to dispute the\nbill, tell him he Is a swindler, the\nhouse a bam. the table wretched,\nthe wines vile, and that he (the\nguest) was never so imposed -upon\nin his life, will never stop there.\nagain, and rneans to warn hts friends.\nNelsonlfc-fl must be getting over\nthe Doukhobor excitement. T.-.ere\nwere more people at Sunday's ball\ngiune than there were congregated\naround the jail as they unloaded\nsome more nudists.\nDoukhcbora making efforts to get\nout of the barbed wire compound\nat the Jail may Use some of their\nclothing   II   they   get.   fntangl**d   La\nthe wire.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOver in Trail they have gone box\nlacrosse crazy. TI-.ey say Elliott\nCrowe is having the time of hi* life\nwith the  kids in his neighborhood.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWas    watching    James    Buchanan\ndo   some   lawn   bowling    in    Trail.\n\"Buck\"   is   considered   one   of   the\nbest   bowler.,   snd   curlers   ln   Trail.\nI   \u2022   \u2022\nI heard the other day that a public works official nearly trier! a\nnose-dtve from thc Castlegar ferry\nIn hla auto. That ferry must be a\ntough   one   to   manage.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nNoticed Tommy Thompson of Trail\ntaking in the bail game\u2014Scotty Nat-\nman calling the strikes and balls\u2014\nEvery time he Introduced a new\nbatter he said, \"So-and-So hitting\nfcr s:-and-so.\" And trere w.is not\none of these substitute bat.*crs who\nhit cr even rame near It. Scotty\n.hould have said \"batting'' Instead\nof   \"hitting.\"\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nLatest   t'ory    from   Russia:\nDictator   Stalin,  bullying   his   op-\npositl:n   Into   line,   pounds   on   the\ntable   and  shouts:\n\"III  Put ovt>r  *&*\u2022  flve*.,*H*'   P-an\nll It takes 100 years!\"\nAiter listening to \u2022^me baseball\nfane I have arrived at the conclusion that a fellow Is better off being a spectator.\np. \u2022    i\nBetween you and .. e\u2014 Although we\nwould not like t_ see Mr. Bruhn,\nthe public works minister, well oiled,\nI believe we could chow him the ad-\ny-ur,age of a wr-ll-oilcd road between\nNelson  and  Trail.\n\"That reminds me, Albert,   Our income-tax Is due tomorrow.\"\u2014The\nHumorist,  London.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\n1NBC   PROGRAMS\ne 00\u2014Radio Forum\u2014 Oliver Owen\nKuhn, master ceremonies. From\nWashington   to  KGO, KOMO.\n(3:00\u2014Meet the Orchestra \u2014 Introducing various Instruments ln\nthe orche-tra. Diiectlon Cy Trobbe,\nKGA.   KJR,   KEX.\n6:1.*\u2014Chief of Pollce Qulnn\u2014Series\nof talks on the San FvauciscJ\npolice   department.   KPO.\n6 ;_\u25a0(>\u2014Deml-Ta^Ke revue-\u2014 John P.\nMeibury, master of ceremonies;\norchestra, direction Jlminlc drier\nDonald Novis. tenor; Dick Webster,\nbarltnne; trio, vocalists; Jeanne\nShock, pianist. From L. A. to\nKGO, KHQ, KOMO, KGW, KFI,\nKSL.\n6:15\u2014Cecil and Sally\u2014In \"The Funniest Things,\" The comic strip\nOf  t.e  air.   KI*0,  KGA,  KJR.\n7;0i>\u2014 Amos 'n' Andy\u2014From Chicago\nto KGO,   KHQ,  KOMO.  KFI,  KSL.\n7:00\u2014Argent lne trio. KPO, KGA,\nKJR.\n7:15\u2014Alice Gentle, soprano\u2014 Salon\norchestra Cy Trobbe. KPO, KGA,\nKJR.\n7:15\u2014Vincent Lopez and his orchestra. From  N. Y.  to KGO.\n7:30\u2014 Lawrence Tlbbctt, baritone;\nHarvey Firestone Jr., guest speaker, \"Romance of Rubber\"; Daly's\norchestra. From N. Y. to KGO.\nKHQ.    KOMO,    KGW,    KFI,    KSL.\n8 ;00\u2014 Road Show \u2014 Variety program.   KPO,   KGA.  KJR,   KEX.\n8:00\u2014Adventures of Sherlock Holmes\n\u2014Dramatic sketch with Richard\nGordon, Leigh Lovel and Joseph\nBell; orchestra direction Graham\nHarris. From N. Y. to KGO, KHQ,\nKOMO,   KGW,   KFI,  KSL.\n8:30\u2014Jones and Hare\u2014songs and\npatter; Rhythm Rascals, Harry dfi\nCasta and Harold S:lman, piano\nduo. From N. Y. to KGO, KHQ,\nKOMO.   KGW, KFI,  KSL.\n8.4*5\u2014Dixie Memories\u2014Sam Moore.\nCarolyn More, Dixie Marsh; songs\nand   dialogue.   KGO,  KFI.\n9:00\u2014Croatian Tamburltza Ensemble\n\u2014direction Sigmund  Muller. KGO.\n9:30\u2014 Rendezvous\u2014 The Coquettes;\nAlvlno Rey, banjoht. KGO.\n9:30--Earl Burtnett's orc.es-.ra. From\nL. A. to KPO. KGA, KJR, KEX.\n10:00\u2014News flashes \u2014 Sam Hayes.\nFrom  L. A. to KGO, KHQ, KOMO.\nKFI, KGW.\n10:00-The   Witch  of  Endor\u2014   Mys-\n, tcry serial by C. E. Morse. KPO.\nKGA,   KJR,   KEX.\n10:15\u2014Eva Grunlger, contralto. KGO,\nKOMO. KGW.\n10:30\u2014Around the Network. From\nKOA, Denver, t^ KPO, KGA, KJR,\nKEX,   KSL.\n10:30\u2014O.ymplans \u2014 Male quartet\nMynjrd Junes, pianist and director.   KGO,   KGW,   fTHQ.\n11:00\u2014carol Lofner's orchestra. From\nS.  F.  to KGO.\n11:00\u2014Sirlngwood Ensemble \u2014 Dt\nrecti.n CHar.es Hart. Mary Wood,\nsoprano.   KPO,   KGA,  KEX.\n11.30\u2014Witching Hour \u2014 Organ concert, Paul Carson. KPO, KGA,\nKEX.\n5-30  K  \u2014 KHQ \u2014 508.2 M\nM'OKANE   \u2014   1000   WATTS\nH:.5--Edit_rlai    Page.\n9:30\u2014Meiody    Girl\n9:45\u2014Business Thermometer\n10:15\u2014Sweet   Music\n10:45\u2014Timely Topics\n11:00\u2014Fran  Morton's orchestra\n12:00\u2014 Deeert Caravan.\n760 K   \u2014 KV| \u2014  394.3 M\nI.M'OMA \u2014  100*0 WATTS\n0:30\u2014 Music   That  Satisfies\n6:4-5\u2014Myrt and Marge\n7:30\u2014Quarter hour\n9:00\u2014Blue Monday Jamboree\n10:00\u2014Anson Weeks' orchestra\n11:00\u2014Henry Halstead and orchestra.\n1210 K \u2014 CJOB \u2014 247.8 M\nVAMOIVEK  \u2014  500   WAITS\n6:15\u2014Jessie    McKay\n6:30\u2014Son    news   flashes\n6:4*>_Word Man\n7:30\u2014Piano  Rambler\n7:45\u2014Two Ll'i Felian\n8:00\u2014Studio\n9:30\u2014B.   C.   Rangers\n10:30\u2014Bud Rellly and His rwwaiians\nAuction and\nContract Brldqe\nBj   ft*  Wrprlo\".  I*a(llnr   Atithorltj.\nHUB*\nThat Body of Yours\nBJ   \"AMES   W.   BAKTON\nOtEATOiG A RE-ENTBY\njmrr\n\u2666.\u2022?\n41-3-2\n\u2666 A-Q-6-4-3 [S **\u2014' \u00a3 \u2666K-J-3-S-2\n\u2022(\u25a0\n\u2666 MM-.-3-2\n\u2666 10\n\u2666 \u2022\u25a0K-J-7-54   \u2014\nfoods \\v\"-> ac:\nHMPLES\nThe abr*ve Interesting fcaiid was\nplayed ln a duplies.* game at the\nBarclay Bridge Club in Philadelphia\nlast winter. The fact that Novth and\nSouth were vulnerable Increased the\nInterest considerably.\nMost of the S-uttu opened with a\nbid of one Heart; over whit. West\ncalled two Diamond!, North two\nSpades and East lour Diamonds.\nSouth then bid five Clubs; Wtrt,\naa a flag-flying effort, five Diamonds, and Nor.h five Heart... A few\nof the Declarers \"bit the dust;\"\nbut moat of the.-., made UM contract, their success hinging on a\nvery  simple  play.\nWest's opening _eal was a Diamond followed by another which\nSouth ruffed with the Deuce. South\ntYen led a Heart, and hla contract\nhinged upon the size of the Heart\nhe selected. If he led a Nine, Ten,\nor Seven and East's Ace took the\nfirst trick, all was well. He also was\nsecure lf he led one of the cards\nnamed and played Jack or Queen\nfrom dummy. In that event lt did\nnot matter whether East held up\nhU Ace; but if South led the Trey,\nhe waa doomed to disaster If East\ntook dummy's Jack. The reason ls\nthat North, must be given two en-\ntriea In order to lead Clubs twice,\nand leading the Trey of Hearts and\nplaying an honor from North would\nnot accomplish that object. At all\nthe table* the Ace won the first\nHeart trick and a Heart wai returned, East not wishing to lead a\nSpade up to dummy's strong ault\nor a Club from Klng-Ten-Stx. When\nNorth had entries on both the\nsecond and third rour-fa of Hearts,\nthe Clubs could be led and finessed\ntwice and the contract made; w'en\nNorth had only one entrv the contract  failed.\nWhen the Declarer made hts five-\nHeart contract he scored a han-i-\ncome net total of 650 points. At\none table East saw fit to bid six\nDiamonds which waa doubled and\nset. North o.*ened with the King of\nSpades, the' Ace covered and the\ntrick waa ruffed by South and a\nHeart led. Tho Declarer won t-e\nHeart and led two rounds of trumps\nbut after that he had to 1-se a\nHeart, a Club and two Spade*. 8o\nhe waa set four doubled; but not\nbeing vulnerable the pet cost him\nonly 600, and he was a gainer by\n50 points over the East, and We. t\npairs, who had a *>ur or five-Heart\nccn'-ract bid and made against them\nI write fieo.uel.tly about pimple*\nor acne beceuse It 1* a vary oommon\nnil.i.e.''. ..-. m *t em-.-.i \u25a0 \u25a0 - \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0\u2022\"\nt.-,ose tufferlng with It. especially as\nIt ls young people between 15 and\n30 year* of ago that are usually\nafflicted.\nThe fact that H is young people\ngives us or**) clue to It* cause, that\nis that when changing lrom boyhood\nto manhood, and girlhood to wo*\nnvanhood, there is a change In the\nglandular system of the body, and\nthe gland -j do not regulate certain\nfoxls Md wastes Just aa well as\nthey should.\nIf Uen the regulating procesfie*\nof the body do not handle certain\nfoods In such a way that the waste*.\n! from them are not removed properly\nand   these   wastes   getting   Into   the\n'blood  cause  pimples  or  acne,  what\n! can be done about lt?\n1 Skin specialists agree that the\npatient should  watch every  kind  of\n; l _od c.tcn, and try to find out Just\n] what food or foods seem to Increase\nt:*.e   severity  of   the   skin  eruptions.\nS;me    find    that    sue*.,    excellent\nfoods as eggs and  milk  Irritate  the\n^skln, while others suffering with\nacne find these foods have not this\neffect.\n0th****-, find that pork, salt meat_i\n-\" '\u2022    t'f.i.   fn its,   veal,   gooMl\nlltar, oaameli, aaotUara. msttun, butterl\nbat attm. fried foods of an\nbot br*j*_d. bot oatet tatt bot\nincitf-Mi tho number and atmatimr I\nCh* pimpk*.\nWhat   about  fats?\nDr. Jean Bogert tells u* that \"fE\nact ln two ways to cause acne, bolTn\nand     even     occasionally     to\neczema. First, large amount* ot fatJ\nin  the   food   slow   down   the   mj-vej\nment    of    digesMtjn    and    lnterfaa\nwith the digestion of other food* \u25a0\nthat   the   putrefaction   of   undlgeaU\nfood may take place in the inteetini\nSecond, if large amount* of free faJ\nare eaten the body may not be ai. 1\nto  handle  It  all  at once,  and  prcj\nducts due to the Incomplete use i\nburning   up  of   fat, may   accuunulatl\nIn  the  tissues. Thus these product\nand  those due to t.e Intes'inal puT\n{refaction,  when  absorbed  and\nrled  to the skin, are so irrltatinj\nthat    skin    disorder*    may    folloW\nSufferers    from    acne    or    pimple]\nshould   cut   down   on   fata*\u2014Cretan,\nbutter,    fat    meat*\u2014rich    deaserl\ngreasy   and   fried   foods.\nThe  thought then  U that  vhllf\nthe   treatment   of   the   pimple*   hi\nointments,  washes,  x-ray  and  othq\nmethods   are usually necessary,\nfood and getting rid M waste*, mu,\nalso be given attention.\nMost of our citizens are of forgeln\nextraction. They are home-loving\npeople and ask only for peace and\ngood gov.rnment. They will get it.\n\u2014Joseph r-orgo Oerny, new mayor\nof Cecero, HI.\nThe   demon-rtrated   incapacity\nthe   Democratic   party   to   rule\noountry will be one of tho Bepubltf\ncan .assets ln the coming campaign\n\u2014Dolly Curtis Wwin, sister ot Vlc*|\nPresident Curtla.\nGarden Supplies\nThis is the time to purchase supplies for your garden\nSpades, Shovels, Hoes, Rakes, Cultivators,\nPlows, Harrows, Seeds, also Seed Potatoes.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelson, B. C. Phone 21\n10f.f>  K  \u2014 KNX  \u2014 28...S M\nHOI A WOOD \u2014 5000 WATTS\n8:00\u2014Tho   Realtor   Calllornlani\n8:30\u2014Georgia Rlfleld players\n9:00\u2014News   items\n9:1!.\u2014KI-TX   Ensemble\n9:30\u2014Ethel    Duncan\n10:00^\u2014Jackie   Taylor   and   orchestra\n11 ;00\u2014Inn  orchestra\n13:00\u2014 Ray Howell, Hocha Muchacho\nThe Lighter Side\n\"That   girls   shows   distinction   In\nher  cl-tthea.\"\n\"You mean distinctly, don't you?\"\n\"That la*t thing you sent in wai\ngood,\" said the editor. \"We all enjoyed   reading   lt   very   much.\"\n\"Well, ln that case,\" said the\nyouthful poet. \"I take back what I\nsaid In t.e letter I wrote you yesterday about my determination never\nto send you any of my work again.\"\nThe editor slowly shx-l. his head.\n\"Don't do that,\" he murmvired;\n\"why that letter Is what I referred\nto.\"\n\u2014o\u2014\n\"I hnve lived ln Chicago for the\nlast iigtat years,\" writ** a correspondent.   Lucky   beggar,\nHobfirt\u2014\"What makes you think 1\nmust  be   -studying  bookkeeping?\"\nJasper\u2014\"BMNN you never return\nany   you   borrow.\"\n\"Ton probably don't remember\nme,\" begjn the self-made man\nproudly, \"but som*. yenrs aao when\n[ was poor and humble y_u gave\nme a message  to deliver.\"\n\"Ve-..'\" cried tlie busy  man. \"Have\nyou brought the aiu-wer?\"\n\u2014o\u2014-\nMelancholy Aunt Clara from the\ncountry   had   the  hahit  of   listening\nto the big clock on the town hall\nin the village where she wss visiting\nand exclaiming every time It struck:\n\"Eternity draws one hour nearer.\"\nClarence was very much Impressed\nwith that solemn reflection. One day\nlhe big clock, got out of order. W-fl4lt\nrepairing tt the workmen made it\nstrike every few mlnu.es. Clarence\nheard   It   with   bulging  eyes.\n\"Oh, Aunt Clara.\" he said, excitingly, \"eternity has got a move\non today.\"\n\u2014o\u2014\nThe bear and raccoon come down\na tree backward. A squirrel and most\nother tree climbers run down and\nup Alike.\nfactor\u2014\"Now. young man, what\nhave  you   got to  say  far  yourself?\"\nHis Son tin for a licking)\u2014\"Ho*.v\nabout a little local aniest-etlc?\"\nI have In my ce.iar 2.75 per cent\nbeer made under -ar time prohibition act, and I can vouch, personally\nthat it Ls not intoxicating.\u2014Congressman V 1111am t. Stafford of\nMilwaukee.\nA law may be said to je enforced\nwhen a majority of the people obey\nlt and a majority of thc prosecutions under t resUt ln couvlctions.\nUndoubtedly, prohibition is meeting\nthat standard. \u2014 Senitor Morris\nSheppard, author of tho lSt.-, amend\nment.\ni^> X v\n\\      \"Tro gallons, please\u2014and a  n.ce strong  piece of string.\n~-London  Opinion.\n\\\nWHAT DO YOU\nTHINK?\nWill Give Details\nof Collecting Eggs\nTo the Editor of\nTh\u00ab Nelson Daily News\nBlr: I notice your paper of April\n30th carried \u00ab**\u2022 \u00bb\u2022\u2022\u2022'-\"-\nT. Cooper of Cranbrook, B. C \u25a0ay-\nln\u00abt he wr1 \u25a0\u25a0 '**\u25a0 i\"**\nproposed to collect the eyed eggs,\nafter being deposited W tha gravel\nby th\u00ab parent fish.\nIf Mr. cooper will write to me\nher,, at Howser. B. C, I will gladly\ngive him aU det.iis.\nJ. T. THOMPSON\nTen Years Ago\n(From Tbe Dally  News of May 16,\n1922)\nConsiderable activity la being evidenced by the Nelson Senior Bae-\nb3ll club, whose members are rapidly\ngetting into gcod ball form aa the\nresult of strenuous practices.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nSilver was quoted on the New\nYork market Saturday at 70%; Monday, 72 % cente.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nGreat execution was done by anglers over the weekend, both on the\nmain lake and down  the river.\nOn Friday, May 12, at Creston,\nMiss Laura Augusta Tltswortf\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kmei\nfltsworth. was married to Georg*\nMontgomery Benwell, a_-n of Mr\nand Mrs. George Benwell of Nelson\n25 Year* Ago\n(From  The  Da1        .ws  or  May  Ifl.\nioo;>\nDr. W. O. Ros?, who has bee**\nconfined to his residence througn\nillness for the past few days, wa*.\nbetter las. evening ani ho-.es to re-\nume   his   practice  shortly.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe G. N. express reached the\ncity at 10:40 last night, the delay\nbeing caused by a breakdown of the\nlocomotive bet-veen Ymir and this\ncity.\n\u2022 t    \u2022\nH. A. Blackburn, formerly one of\nthe proprietors of the Kaslo Koote-\nnalan, who. since he sold out In\nKaslo. ;:as been foreman of the\nP.L5adcna, Cal., Star, has Just been\nappointed president of the newly\nestablished   Fresno   Herald.\nAUNT HET\nHANDMAIDEN\nMODERN\nBUSINESS\nWithout the aid of the\nhumming, whirring printing press your business would indeed be handicapped. Printed forms\nof all sorts speed production, sales\nand bookkeeping. We print anything\nfrom a calling card to a tally sheet\nTell us what you want, ,....-,...   \u2022\nwe will supply it.   List- ..\/\u25a0\u25a0*''\nings   of   most   popular\nforms in your town.\nCall Us Today\nPHONE 144\nNrlsmt Daily iCrtui. 3Iult DrprttttJ.nl\nCreators of Fine Printing\nBaker Street Nelson, B. C.\n\". never saw a old 1\\k'<.pp.  its.'\\\ncarrlpd   a   c3.Tib   in  l-'.s   \\^t   pocket   -\nthat didn't think he w.i, th. ansae:' |\nto .  rnal.t.n's prayer.\n Qanrutfct\nEP.\nMM ilVI\n1?\n\u00abW1\u00abS5\njELSON TRIMS\nHAL TEN TO\nAT BALL\nIc\" Gillette Slams Two\nHomers; One Scores\nThree\nORSWILL COLLECTS\nfINE THREE-BAGGER\nITNE THREE\nemore Rushed\nnore Rushed to Box too\nLate; Nelson Outfield Shines\nfiLE mM *.5e\n\u201e Wohbr\n(M.\n&>-^-hr*>\nUl ______\nTaltlng a lee4 tn tho first Inning\n|(s Nelson baseb l team tn an exht-\nlon game before a large crowd of\nIson and district fans defeated\njail toesers by a score of 10-5 j\nnd&y. It was an Interesting game\n\u2022 so early in the season and was\n*'-.t-ured   hy   heavy   hitting   by   tho\n\u25a0 'laoa players and by airtight sup-\n\u25a0 rt afforded the pitchers by the\n! *lson outfield. Harrison, Schumakec\n' 4   Horswill   were   picking   drives\ninx here, there and everywhere.\n\u25a0'Chic\" Gillette, Nelson's nifty left\nnded, first sacker was the hero\nthe day. In hia seoond trip to\ns plate he bUuuied the pill over\ne fenoe for a home run. His next\nne up there were two men out\nd tl_e bat-ex were full. Gillette le*\ne tit** bal i go by. He tackled\nml*' second ottering and tt flew\nIh and far over the fence for\nefty's\" t-econd homer of the game,\nree runners trotted in ahead of\nn. \"8<*oUy\" R**wu. of Tral] get ihe\nIff other homer of the game,\nUe-sto also slammed out a two-\ngg-ar.\nTrail started Morrla on tho mound\nd his slant* were liked by t he\nlson bat*tm*\u00bbn. He waa given poor\npport tn the second inning when\noembrlnl threw wide to second\nd Mollsky threw wild to third,\n\u2022re* runs were scored.\nMorrla waa relieved by Scotty\n-sg, usual third sacker for Trail,\n-d ho held Nelson down to one\n\u2022 o In four Innings. Louis DeMore,\nall's husky young left hander,\niled the laat Inning for the visit-\n*. He waa going well. He fanned\no and threw the third man out\nmaeU In thla frame.\n\"611m** Kraft started on the\n.jund, {of Nelson and pitched good\n11. Several times the infield left\nm down, there being weakness\nywn at th&rt and second. He waa\nleved by Allison, big young husky\n'hi hander. Although Trail bate\n*n found Allison's slant* he was\n'\/en excellent support by the out-\nId. Horswill and Schumaker mads\nme spectacular running catches\n.ring the game.\nNelson .outhit the visitors collect\ng 10 hit* to Trail's eight. Bach\nim contributed three errors. Sev-\nM attempts were made at double\ny and McTler nabble two Nelson\n\u2022lya but Trail managed the only\n.coeasful one when Rolhery, Molis,-\n\"nners at second and first bases.\nNelson held a 3-0 lead to the\n\u25a0 trd Inning when Trail garnered\no run* owing to Bey'a error. Nel-\nn added two In. th-Mr half ot\ne third. It was the fourth inning\n.nt was the spectacular one for\n\u2022laon fans. Twc men were out and\ne base* were loaded. GiUftip Step-\nd up aud hammered the ball over\ne fence to score three ahead of\nmself. Tran got one In the fourth\nid the score stood 9-9 ln favor of\nslapn. Ross, who was hurling for\n\u2022ail, held Nelson scoreless ln the\nfat two Innings while Trail grab-\nid off two runs ln the sixth. Nel-\n\u25a0n added one in the seventh and tt\nas all over,\nDemore gave, a credible exhibition\n.   Uie last  frame when he struck\n..it   two   Nelson  men  and  handled\nt ie ball for an assist for the third\n\u25a0an out.\n\u25a0The summary waa ax follows:\n' rail AB R H PO A E\n\"oliflkey, 3b ___ 4 0 I 3 3\nemore, cf, p ....,\u25a0 8 0 111\n\u2022ecembrtnt,   o    \u00ab_ 4   0   1   9   0   0\nfcTler.    in    _\u201e__. 4   0   0   6   0   0\noss,  3b,  p 4   2   2   18    1\naiu*lente,   lf   __ 4   0   113   1\nothery, as  \u25a0 ..     4 0   113   1\n(llburn, If  3   1110   0\noung,   rf    \u201e _ 3   0   0   0   0   0\norris, j* 3b, cf \u201e 3   1   0   1   0   0\nCHICAGQ  Fl\nLOSE ID GRIDS\nHOME RUN KINGS\nWorld-Famed Grades Win\n.. First of Two-Game Series for World Title\n**\u25a0*. *\"-    -_      :\n.;-- ^fl-SPlto***-!**\nA1*J5oCS 19 VeARS-VeT\nABl^ToVJiM'toSAME.\nf MASWat.\nCOMPlElED 3NEARS IMtfiE\nBI& LEA60ES WiD HAS WC*1\n*\u00bb\u00bbio(^gw3gag_v_>g'\n5owoS m-Titt it\/\noeoRriE ciwmit*.. WAU*eo\nONEHOORANDCOJERED\neMILE_.-nbVAfsi\u00ab.\n4*,\\w**_u> Ftoac,\n\u2022\u2022sta.vij'iat*\"*\nw\nL\nPet.\n18\n9\n.067\n1(1\nft\n.6411\n16\nIS\nJS18\n14\nlt\n4M\nIS\n14\n..ui\nin\nli\nMt\nft\n13\n.4.0\n8\nIS\n.313\n36   5   8 21 8 3\n_ 3    I    1    0 0 0\n_ 3   0   0   0 0 0\n-41133\n_ 4    3    3    6 0 0\n_ 4   1   3   3 0 0\n.401400\n_ 4   0   1   3 0 3\n_ 4    1    1    6 2 0\n.110    3 10\n_ 1   0   0   0 1 0\n_ 3   3   0   0 0 0\n_ 3    0   0   0 0 0\nelftos\nsrrlson,   lf   _\t\npewart. If  ._-...\ncLennan,   3b   _...\nI lie tl*.   lb   \t\n..swill,   rf  __\u2014.\n, -humaker, of ___,\n127,    8*     \u2014\nIchardsin,   c  .\u2014\nrciue,   **>   \t\noynon,   8b   _\u25a0\u25a0\n.Uson,   p   ,\n34 10 10 87   *   S\nScore*  bj   lmilngs:\nrail    _  OO* 101 000\u2014 \u00bb     \u00ab   8\nJ ilson 132 400 10X\u201410    10    S\nl Horn*    runs\u2014dinette      3,      Eoes:\nI pree-base   bit*   Horswill;   two-bas*\nlit*,  Gillette;   double  plays  Bothers\ni   Mollakey   to   McTler;   base   on\nills  oft   Morris   3,  .truck   out   by\nlorrU  3.  by  Bos*  3. by Dcmor* 3,\nI;  Kraft  4.  by  Allison  2;   hit   by\n. tched   ball   Mollskey,  Morris;   time\n\u25a0' game 1;55; umpire \"Scotty\" Not-\nan, -\nNational\nBaseball\nOhlC**|0         m...-~\u2014\nBoston . _n .\u25a0!-\nCincinnati    \u201e\u2014\nSt.   Louis    \u2014.\nPhiladelphia   \t\nBrooklyn    \u2014.\nNew   York   \u201e...\u201e\u201e_-.\nPittsburgh     \t\nNEW   YORK   9;\nCINCINNATI   1\nCINCINNATI. O., May 18.\u2014New\nYork Giants fell on four Cincinnati\nReds pitchers today and won 9 to 1.\nThe Red's lone tally came in the\neighth on two sin-rles and an out\nat first that brought a shower\nof pop bottles to tho field. Grantham hit a grounder toward flrat\nthat Jumped over Terry's head.\nHowever, Crltz. barked up Terry and\nslid into the sack with the bull\nabout the same time Gmntham did.\nPlay was held *ip even minutes by\nthe protests after Grantham waa\ncalled out by Umpire William Klein-\nNew   York     000 411 030\u20149 14 0\nClrclnnat      000 000 010\u20141    6 2\nHubbel and Hogan; Hilcher, Prey,\nJohnson, Ogden and Ashy, Lombardi,\n_.  \u00bb\nHTTIBtJBGfl 2;\nBROOKI\/'N   0\nBROOKLYN. May 15\u2014Steve Swet-\nonlc, Pittsburgh mound ace, shut\nout the Dodgers with two hits today. The pirate* won I \/ a 2 to 0\nscore.\nTony cucclnello was the only\nDodger to hit and the ony one\nto get past first- His double In\nthe fourth was a gift blow as Floyd\nVaughn backed up for his hoist,\ntheu decided not to t- ke lt and\nthe ball fell safely behind him.\nThe Pirates scored of Joe Shaute\nin the fifth on Plet's singly and\nsteal of second and third and an\ninfield out and in the sixth on\n8'ihr's  double  and   Vaughn's  single,\nPittsburgh  C^0 101 000\u20142 7 _\\\nBrooklyn  000 000 000\u2014o 2 \\\nSwetonls and Grace; Shaute,\nMoore and Lopez.\nPHILABE   THIA  8;\nCHICAGO   6\nCHICAGO. May 15.\u2014A barrage of\nextra base hit** in the closing Innings gave Philadelphia an 8 to\n0 victory over Chicago Cuba tn the\nseries opener today, accounted for\nLonnlo Warenke's first defeat of the\nseason.\nThe Cubs had peckri away at\nPhil Collins and hod a 4 to a\nlead going Into the seventh. The\nPhillies then opened up on War-\nnek*- and scored ln th\" last threo\ninnings  to   .et  the   decision.\nPhitadtlph'a  000 020 312\u20148 13 (i\nChtcagi*  100 11* 002\u20146    8 2\nOofllnt. Benge, Hansen and V.\nn-wt*.. Warneke and Hartnctt. J.\nTaylor.\nLure of Sport\nGets In Blood\nSP0RT>\nAmerican\nBaseball\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nW   Ii\nWtehlngton    \u2014 \u2014 19     t\nNew   York     \u2014 It     t\nClemeiand\nDetroit    \t\nPhiladelphia\nAt.   Louis   *\nChlCflJ?o     \u2014\nBoston -.\t\n, 19    11\nBDMONTON, May 18 (CP>.\u2014Tearing- through in a furious rally eight\nminutes before the final bell, Edmonton Commercial Graduates took\na 44 to 84 victory from Chicago Red\nDevils here Saturday night ln tht\nflrat of a two-gam* total-point series\nfor the Underwood trophy, tmblem\nof ladles international basketball\nsupremacy.\nAfter two periods of faltexinf pa-e*,\nthe world champions and the Chicago challengers swung Into a ter-\n'rifle stride In th* third quarter and\ncarried on until the 4000 fane were\nhoarse when the final bell sounded\nthe end of the conflict. Although\nbeaten, the Red Devils from aouth\nof the international boundary gave\nthe Grads the toughest struggle\nln many a day, and tt was only\nthe last minut* flaah of th$ famed\nGrads that gave them *rtc*toTY. A\u00bb a\nresult, Grada will carry \u00bb 10-point\nlead Into the second gam* here\ntomorroy night.\nMargartt MacBurnty mat **Mabe\"\nBelanger did th* heavy scoring for\nthe Grids. MacBurne*y counting 19\nand her youthful -partner from tha\n[Grad  farm netting   13.\nSchafer was th* only \u2022cowr fm\ntht Chicago girls In the first Quarter, counting a field goal while\nMacBurney, Belanger and Stone\ngave the Grads nin* points ln th*\nsam* time. Piedel counted th* only\ntwo field goals for the Red Devils in j\nthe seoond quarter while Grads added flv9 to make th* score 14 to fl.\nFTREWOBKS   8TART\nThen the firework* rtM-tto. The\nBed Devils broke out with til their\nfiery speed, broke through \u00ab*\u2022\nGrad defence and oonnt*d 10 points\nfor a total of 16 while holding their\nopponents to \u00bbtt polnta and a total  of  18.\nTwo point* down, th* H*d Devils\nwent Into the final quarter still\npounding at th* Orad defence. With\nhalf the quarter gone, the Orads\ne&m* to life, passed th* ball with\nstartling accuracy and cinched victory, Grads counted 24 point* ln\nthe final quarter, nine each by Mac-\nBumey and Belanger, while the\nchallengers counted 18, with Kline\ncounting seven and Kn.ehae four.\n(By the Aiioclated Presi)\nHOME BUNS YESTWtDAY\nFoxx, Athletics.   I.\nOehrlnger, Tigers, 1.\nFothergill,   White  bog,   1.\nKlein,  Phillies,   l.\nHunt, Phillies,  l.\nV.  Dans, Phillies,  1.\nMoore, Cubs,  1.\nUrbanskt,  Braves,  1.\nSchulmerlch. Braves,  I.\nHOME   RlNi.   SATIRDAY\nCochrane,   Athletics.   1.\nFoxx, Athletics,  1.\nComb,   Yankees,   1.\nKlein,   Phillies,   1.\nMver,  Senators,  1.\nWright.  Dodgers,   1.\n\u2022Orbanski.  Brave*,   1.\nTIIE   LEADERS\nFoxx,   Athletics,   ft.\nCollins, Cardinals, 8.\nTerry, Olants, 7.\nCochrane,   Athletic*.   T-\nGehringer,   Tigers,   7.\nLEAGUE   TOTALS\nAmerican  105.\nNational   84.\nTotal   139.\nCBLTTC GT.ENTORANS BEAT\nLINDFIELD    CRUSADERS\nBELFAST,   May   18    (CP   C*bl*).~-\nCeltic Glentorans defeated Linfleld\nCrusaders by th* score of 51 to\n21 in an Irish charity eup rugby\neeml-final here Saturday.\nBaseball's\nBig Six\n(By th*  AatMciaied  Preas)\nOf th* six leading batamea of the\nmajor leagues, only BUI Dickey and,\nto t lesser extent, Bill Terry, managed to avoid indignities at the\nhands of the pitchers  yesterday.\nDickey maintained his sensat.ontl\nL*rp\".irt with three hit* in three times\nat bat, shooting his average up 23\npoints to tli* new high mark of\n.452. Terry hU two out of five\nand gained thre* points, going into\nsecond place in the National league\na* Hughey Crrta loet five points.\nChick Hafey and Oarl Reynolds\nwent hltless fuor times up, loMng\n24 and tl point* reepecti-ely. The\nothers held their losses down, getting one his aplec*.\nTflE  hIA.MM.SU\n\"\"    a\nAB\n\u25a0*.\nH\nret.\nPoll. Athletic*   M\n09\n31\n41\n.441\nDlc-ey   Ys_k.M 30\n73\n1\u00bb\nan\n.483\nHatey, Bed* __ JO\n71\n18\n31\n.419\nReynold,,\n1)4\n14\nS5\n.373\nTerry Gl*nt. .... 31\nei\n31\n3*\n.383\nCrlt_, Giant* .... 31\n97\n12\n35\n.381\nFOUR TEAMS ENTER\nSOHBALI^LEAGUE\nTennis Getting: Off to Good\nStart at Creston; Basketball Through\nCttBBT**>N. B. C.. May 15.\u2014Wlttl\nth* lnt\u00abr-clty claeh lart Saturday\nthe curtain haa been >Wf down <>n\nbasketball, and this week sees the\ncommencement of th* softball Mason with a town leagu* consisting\nof four teams. Wildcats, public\nschool, high school \"A\" \u00bbnd high\nschool \"B.\" A achedule has been\ndrawn which will cirry the season\nwell Into June, with games for\neach Tuesday and Thursday evening.\nAlong with softball, tennis !s sl-o\ngetting under  way  at the two clay\ncourts of the Creston tsnnls club at\nexhibition   park,   which   have   been\nput ln the best po-vlble shape, and\nat the first evening's play there was\na turnout of 25, with th* ladies predominating.   Club   fee*   have   been\nvery   materially    reduced    for    1A33\n^_^_^_^_a_m_mm_mmmmm______________^_\u2014__ ahd  t  greatly   increased  interest  ln\nTh* enemy today is depression tennis Is looked for. Arrangement*\nand apathy. Let us atta_.k them nre under way to have matches with\nwith two of our old-fashioned char- ] outside teams, particularly Bonnera\nacterlstlcs\u2014good sense and good j Ferry, Idaho, wher\u00ab tennis ls get-\nhumor.*\u2014The Prlnce of Wales. \u25a0 ting tti first real start.\n.458\n.41*\nim\n.187\nNEW   YORK   S\nCLEVELAND   0\nNTW YORK, May 1\u00ab\u2014Charley ,*Ru*\nfu\u00ab the Red\" Ruffing, big Yankee\nright hander, pitched hla second sue-\ncewlve four-hit gam* today, turning\nback Cleveland Indians 5 to 0 for\nfne Yanks' sixth victory In a> row,\nand  the third straight shut-out.\nRuffing struck out 13 and beat\nthe Cleveland ace, Wesley Ferrell. It\nwas Perrell's third straight defeat\nafter  winning  his first  five  starts,\nFerrell held off the Yankee slug-\ngprs for five Inning* but after tw<i\nwen* out In the sixth, New York\nsent three runs, across the plate.\nRufh drew a pass, stole second, and\nscored on Ben Chapman's double,\nDickey followed with a slngl* anrt\nchapman scored. Then Tony Lassen\nfinished the rally with a triple.\nCleveland       0     4    0\nNew    York        5     8    1\nFerrell & Myatt; Ruffing dt Dickey.\nDETROIT ' 7\nPHILADELPHIA   t\nDETROIT,     May 15\u2014A\nrally   in   the  fifth Inning,\nfNTERNATIONAL\nWEEK-END SCORES\nXTERNATIONAL\nINDAY\nNewark 3-t, Montreal 4-3.\nReading 2. Rochester 3-\n.lerrwy   City  0,   Buffalo  4*\n' 4TI:rpay\n|f Newark   8-4,   Rochester   3-0.\nReading 4-3.  uffalo 3-4.\n\u2022 .lersey City 6-o, Toronto 4-3.\nBaltimore   5.  Montreal  4.\nBy ALL DEMAREE\nJohn E- Madden, once declared. He\nwoul4 rather breed and race a good\nhorse than bo president of tho\nUnited states.'*\nTo some this may appear an ex-\naggeratton, hut I have known many\nmen la other lines, of f-port, particularly bait.!.!, w'ro felt thc same\nIntense love of the sport they were\ncng;i;-ccl in.\nJohn McGraw, manager of the\nNew Tork Giants olten said that he\nwould not trade the privilege of\nmanaging a world-championship bal]\nclub for all Rockefeller's and Ford's\nmillions.\nThe la to George \u00a9tailings, the\n\"Mlraclo Man\" manager of the Boston Braves often said *hat if he\nwere worth millions he would manage a club in the smallest hush\nleague, rather than be out of baseball  altogether.\nThe lure of any ap*>rt la Ilk* a\ndrug If you stay in lt long enough.\nI have known many ball players\nwho stuck at the game for yean-\nwhen they could have made more\nmoney in other lines of business.\nThe game hart them.\nflv*\u00abrun\nclimaxed\nGUSTAFSON IS\nIN GOOD FORM\nASfflJME WINS'\nHurls Three-Hit game Attains.!\nthe Maulers; Score\n5-2\nby Charlie Oehringer's seventh home , Hum*\nOustafson hurled a three-hit game\nfor th* Hum* against the Maulers I\nSunday evening. Buchanan center j\nfielder of the Maulers fumbled a fly\n|p let in three runs and th* Maulers'\nlOHt   5-3,\nTeams*\nHume\u2014Romano I f.Defo* If, Gus*'\ntafson p, Stlrzafcer lb, McDougall\nc, Bell ss, Almatrom 3b. Brid lf,\nLettwalte cf, plsacreta, rf, W, Klrby 3b\nMaulers^-L, Stewart p-c, Anderson\n3b, Mc*Su*lg 3b, o. Stewart c-lb,\nR. Klrby If, Vamer rf, Kitto es-p,\nMcLean lb-sa, Buchanan cf.\nft    I  1\nMauler*    001 100 0\u20143     3   3\n, 000 OftO X\u20145     fl    3\nrun of thc season, figured promin\nently in a 7 to 3 victory by the\nTigers over Philadelphia Athletlca\nhere  today.\nThat attack was at th* expene* ot\nLeroy Ma.ha.ffey, who had engaged ln\na tight pitching duel with Tommy\nBridges during the first four Innings.\nMahaffey yielded to Rub* Walberg\nin the sixth and Bridge* gave way\nto F.ion Hog-\u00bbtt In the same inning\nwhen he wavered.\nFoxx got a horn* run In th* fifth,\nwith none on. ochringer drov* la a\ntotal of four run*.\nPhiladelphia    3    T   0\nDetroit       7   10   0\nMahaffey, Walberg and Cochrane;\nBridges,   Hogsett  and  Hayworth.\nST.  LOUIS  t\nW AS 1 UNO TON 0\nWASHINGTON, May 18\u2014St. Louis,\nancient \"Jinx\" of Washington, opened a series here today with a 1 to 0\nvictory, breaking a five-game winning  streak  for  the  Senator*.\nStewart set Washington down with\nfour hlta and never waa ln danger.\nFischer pitched himself out of A\ncouple of  bad spot* but filled the\nBOSTON   8;\nST.   LOUN   \u25a0>\nST. LOUIS. Mny 13.\u2014The world\nchampion Cardinals were given an\n8 to 3 defeat by Boston Braves today\u2014the d-y when the pennnnt\nemblematic of St. Louis' victory over\nPhJlarle'-phia AthM_M last year, was[mmda  me  that      rtaln largo  fishes\nraised   over   Sportsman's   park. |ln the tropics climb trees.\nCommissioner Bene* *? M.  Landi** i \u2022   \u2022   *\nand  pret-tdrnt  Mm   BWydler of  the!...-,-..   ANT)  ^pohoE\nNational league were present at the J \"r\u201e,.,.M,V f;om'the  way  they  h*ve\nHooks and Slides\nBy William  Broucher\nTHE DAVIS  IIP\nA uumb r of tennis experts already\nhave averted their belief that the\nUnited States win win ba-'_ the Davis\nICu.i* fr.-*m France this year- That re-\nTwo base hit* McQualg. Ourtafson\nbsse on balls of Oustafson 3, off\nStewart h *tmck out mf Stew&r.\n5,   by  Oustafson   11.\nPHYLISHASLAM\nBREAKS WOMEN'S\nSWIMMING MARK\nSASKATOON, Sank., May 15 \u2014\nPhylls Haalam, University of Saskatchewan swimmer, broke th* Canadian and tho American records for\nwomen's 230-yard breast stroke in\nofficial trial sanctioned by the Saskatchewan branch of the Canadian\nAmateur Swimming association held\nat tho local Y. M. C. A. pool Saturday night. Her time was 3.30 3-5.\nThe Canadian record waa 3.37 3-5\nand  the  American  3 30  4-5.\nPACIFIC  COAST LEAGUE\nSUNDAY\nSan   Francsoo   1-5;   Oakland   fl-0.\n(Second  game  seven   Innings.)\nSeattle  l*-5.   Los Angeles  8-6.\nPortland   3-3;   Missions   8-4.\nHollywood  5-5;   Sacramento 0-7.\nSATURDAY\nHollywood  4;   Sacramento  8.\nPortland   9;   Missions   4.\nOak1 nd 3;   San  Francisco 3,\nLos   Angeles   fl;    Seattle   2.\nvia 25 games this year. That reminds\nmc that once a man has been created j 8*\u00b0^'^'\u2122\"\na Knight of the Garter,    h*    must j Washington\nflag-raising ceremonies today. The i\nCardinal plavers of la**t year were :\npresented witn diamond rings -*y \u25a0\nCommif\u00abflloner  Landls.\nBoston       310 028 OHO--*- 15 fl ;\nSt. Louis  031 000 OOOt-J   7 J\nCunningham,    Brown    and   -JUr-\np-raves.   Spoil..;;    Derringer.   1 ;\u25a0\nStout, Carleton and Wilson,\n.TuilSll.g    _\nstarted out Lefty Grove and George\nEarnshaw fur going to have a tough\nume winning 10 games between 'hem\nthis year. That reminds mo that, according to the Byzantine calendar,\nMus re-illy  is not the ftm 1932, but\nMAT'S   A  LOT   OF GAMES\nA   Washington   \"-ports   writ\"\nMont\nTlie annual   production  of  copper\nIs   over   a   million   tons   ,of   whh'h !-owing\nthe    United    8tates    prod-ves    *p- '\u25a0'   > -\u25a0-''\u2022-\nproximately 80 per cent. 'Wuator', predicted that. Montla woum\n  fol-\n\\Ve?vers       third\nvictory    for    the\nbases In the ninth to lose thc game.\n    1     6   0\n    0     4   1\nwear some ..art of the Insignia day\nand night.\nHUH A msmi\nBrooklyn seems to hav* more re**\nserve strength than any other club\nln the National League, a* far as\ngrandstand seats are concerned. That\nreminds me that mushrooms have\nbeen known to lift and crack asphalt\npaths.\na   *\u25a0' *\nPK,)II1BITI0N Ny^J\nThree major leigue ball players\nought to get together with Boxtr\nFrankle Wine end hold a parade.\nTliey are Por r of th* Indians, Stein\nof the Athletics and Stout of th*\nBrowns. WhaL that reminds of ls nobody's business.\nStewart and Ferrell;\nberry and Berg.\nFischer, Mar*\nCHICAGO   9\nBOSTON   2\nBOSTON, May 15\u2014Chicago White\nSox pounded Wiley Moot** for nine\nhit* and eight runs In the first\ntw0 Inning, today and won the\nopen Ing game of their four-game\nserte* with the Red Sox, 0 to 3.\nBob Fothergill led the attack\nwith three hits in f.iur times st bat,\none of them with a humer wit**. \u25a0\nteammate on base. Vic Frazler let\nthe Red Sox down with only seven\nhits.\nChicago    9   14   0\nBoston   _.    3    7   l\nFrailer and Berry; Moore. Ll\"en\nbee,   Michaels   and   Steele,   Connolly.\nbur Monthly\nCheque\nuve\nto\nnq\nas you\n\u00bb    >i\n\"W7HEN you retire, yon will aiipreelftte a guar*\nantecd income of $150.00 a month \u2014a\nucvcr-failing income which will continue, without change, at long aa you live!\nSuch an income spells independence. It open* tlie\ndoor to a care-free future. It means security from\nmoney worries.\nTo make your dreams of retirement eome true,\nsimply invest part of your earnings each year in\nLife Insurance. Your future Income can bo more\nthan $130.00, or less\u2014depending entirely upon\nthe amount of savings you set aside for this\npurpose.\nAnd should yon not live to old age, your family\nis fully protected by tlie same Life Insurance*\u2014\nby the same monthly Income,\nAny Life Insurance representative will gladly give\nyou complete Information on tJb.it\u2014the most modern\nform of Life Insurance. He can suggest an attractive\nincome plan exactly suited to your needs.\nlife Insurance Service\nOne of a series of mtsngpj sponsored **y\nLife Insurance Comyanift\n\\ J.\n VOjrWlcL\n-AGE   Eir.HT\n\\-\n*-TH\u00a3   MLBOX   DAB.Y   KOia.   Otlstcre.   B.   0,   MWfDiT   MfmMN'O   M*T   1*.   I***-\ng] (13 WHAT YOU Wa\nEnvoy Mellon Welcomed to England\nHaJled by Imtieh oAatesnien u \"a valuable import\" and \"a bearer of\nhope.\" former ,Seoret*ry ol the Treaeury Andrew W. Mellon is shown\nabove 'left,1 at bt arrived in England lu asMime iit\u00ab duties as United\nStatea .imba-***-adoi. \"Next w my own country. 1 leel most, at home\nhere,'' he \u2022millng!\" told fo.mally-robcd Mayor F. Woolley (right) cf\nSouthampton, who \u2022Aelcomea him,\nLIQUOR SHIPPED   1^\u00b0^\u2122\nTO B. C. COMES IN\nB.C. MADE LUMBER\nTRAIL,   B    C,   May   15\u2014It   will   be\n| Trail   day   at   the   lunoheon   of   the\n[Spokane  chamber of  commerce  May\nccording   to   word   which   has\n{been   received   by   P.   H.   Chapman,\n, leerttary of C. M. &. 8. Glee party\nHemlock Found Suitable Wood!nnl  ^^mmamm by him to the\nKfforfH Being Made to\nBroaden Un\nVICTORIA, May 15\u2014The British\nColumbia lumber commlsiloner, in\na recent rtMCf .state* .hat after An\nexhaustive Investigation. And calling\non exporters and V-.-niakers. he ieels\nth*. iMa campaign of the Sritisi*.\nColumbia liquor board has been\nsuccessful, and thai practically 100\nper cent of liquor now shipper W\n' British Columbia is ln caaaa made\nof British Columbia lumber; mostly\nhemlock, and it has been found the j\nmaet -suitable f\u00abr :hi_ purpose. j\nThis bu_rt*_t\u00abM, thotigh not of pro- j\npo-rttor.aiitly large volume in itself.\nmay have vh-e result, h ll hoped, ot\n'ndut-'ing t.-,e British Otat makers to\ni_\u00bb B:-.t!fc!* col umber lumber for\nc.t.wr   '.inea.\n\"ill the ras*** for packing goods in\nOMt IftMl are mata ot imported\nlumber, -.vhieh runs Into many million   p9*2tttfi  sterling   i>er  yes:.\nWANT AND CLASSIFIED\nADVLBT1SLNG\nOne Insertion 10 cente a Una\nSix Insertions 40 cents a Una\nOna month  (1-30 a line\nMinimum   two   lines\nBirth  nottcei free of charge\nDeaths     marriages     snd     cards    of\nthanka.  20  cents   per  line\nFuneral flowtri 15 emu per Una\n.;ew_.   of   the   Day   Items   70   cents\nper line.\nNO L.YIRA COST IF CHAKbLH\nUilHU  TO CLAMinSD AM\n'\"WANTED\nFOR   HIKE\n\"    fc.ILt\nlit).\nBL.-.1\nCAN\nCATS  AV\nOLD TIMERS OF\nROSSLAND START\nMEMBER DRIVE\nMembers of Association With\nDate of Arrival; President 111\n\u25a0TOR   BFNT 14.11\nFOB  -ALE (441\n-    WANT*.!) ('5'\nKILMfltS (Jill\nSALE llll\n0(11.9  IMS  MLE (.Wl ,\n(411.   ASD   HUGS    IIAMLU (5111\nI'KI ssMAhl.Sli tit]\n1 AI1M   AM)   I.AIM   1-RODUC\". (J!M\nI-A1IM   PBOI'LKTV    TOR   KALI (3lil\nIOK   SALE   OK   LA. H\\.SOb (Id)\n(UK   MALE   OB   REM (\"*l\nI 1 KMslll.ll BOOMS IOR BENT 1151\nII KMsHUI   BOOMS   WAMED (IH\nIIOSSLAND, B C_ Mas- 15\u2014 Vice-\npresident J, H. McDonald, presided\nover the meetlnit of th. Rossland\nOld Timers' association Thursday\nevening in the absepiee, through 111-\nipess. of the president. R. W. Gripror.\nRopitlne business wa* transacted and\nsome preliminary arrangements made\nfor a membership drive. It being\nfelt that the membership should be\nbrought up to at least 100 by the\nnext meeting, two weeks from BOW.\nAllan Keating and Benjamin F. An.\nderson were elected honopary members of the association, ft was voted\nthat all women ln the city who can\ncomply with th* residence requirements, should be made honorary\nmembers of the association To (Is**,\nthose who have Joined tly assocls-\nllon together with the date of their\ncoming to Rossland sic Walter Stead.\n1808; J. H. McDonald, 1804; J. R.I\nHatfield, 1001; CiMrl*. corbett, 1807; \\\nH. H. Johnstone. t805; W. A. Ellct\nson, 1015; Tony Radlch. 1006;\nMsrgaret Powers, 1897; Howar\nguson, 1897; Mrs. Howard Ferguson\n1910; Robert W. Grigor, 1897: Edward Brown, 1895: Alfred William.\n1898; William H. Reid. 1910; Robert\nJ. Clegg. 1900; Robert D. Mptchell.\n1900; Thomas J. Supple. 1004; William r. McNeill, 1896; James *W.\nHunter, 1896; Ernest Morrison. 1809;\nCirri\u2122 Pitt, 1899; James M Jordan.\n1896; Samuel J, Hackney, 1809; Benjamin F. Anderson. 1915: Allan Keating. 1899; John M. Cclello, 1895:\nWilliam E. Costello.   1895.\nH KM 11 HE    I DB   SALE\nHELP    WAMED\n111PI Ms.   (OR   RENT\nHOLMS   WANTED\nIN   MIMOK1AM\n(NSLUANCt\nINVESTMENTS\nLIVESTOCK   FOB   SALE\nLIVESTOCK   WANTED\nLlll BABY\nLOST   AM)   FOUND\nMACHINERY\nMAKKIAC.LS\nMINING, TIMBER, LIMBER\nMISCEI.LANEOLS\nMISCH.I.ANEOI 8    FOB   SALE\nMISCELI.ANEOCS     WANTED\nMl'HCAl   INSTRUMENTS\nNOTICES\nNURSERY   PRODLCTS\nNURSING\nPERSONA!.\nPLANTS\nPOULTRY   AND   EGGS\nPROPERTY   FOR   SALE\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nRABBITS   FOR   SALE\nRANCHES    FOR    RENT\nROOM    AM)   HOARD\nROOMS   FOR   RENT\nKOOPiS   VYAMID\nSCHOOLS\nSITUATIONS   WANTED\nSTORES  TO  RENT\n(461\n(101\n(.11\n(20.\n(41\n(3)1\n1481\n(231\n(:M>\n161\n(311\n(561\np3I\n(381\n(291\n(37|\n(381\n1541 |\n181\nIffJ\n(14) '\n(51 i\n(531\n(!6)\n'(34l\n1351\n(2.-.*\n(491\nllTp\n(lip\n(181\n|33!\nllll\n(51)\nLEGAL NOTICES\n)6;   Mrs\nird  rer-\nIran   bu_r_   ol   trade.\nMeiulwrs of thc glee patty will be\nIn .-jpokane May 34 for their Joint\niniernatlonal concert with the Mendelssohn choir of tts_% city. Thc glee\nparty  will  be  some   30  strong   and. _\nwill be the guest of Spokane cham-IMany  DCCf oCCH\nber  ot   commerce  at  luncheon.\nTrail board of trade lb enrieBvorlng\nto arrange a dolegalion of Trail business men and to p-ovldc a speaker\nfrom this city at the luncheon.\nTho glee party will leave Trail\nMondipy, May 23, and return Wednesday.   May   _5.\nSPRING ASSIZES\nOPEN TODAY WITH\nCIVIL LIST ONLY\n\"BEER BARONS\" ARK\nDEFEATED IN FIRST\nSOFTBALL CONTEST\nMr. Justice Murphy Arrives\nto Preside; End of\n(\"rand .lury\nat Crawford Bav\nCRAWFORD BAY. B. C . May 15 \u2014\nTli^ deer are causing considerable\ntrouble to the ranchers here, damaging their fruit trees. Several\nsmall herds of four and seven have\nbeen    seen.\nFour deer were seen on the road\namong some Jersey cows. Q. Wilson\nand C. Derbyshire, while motoring\nto Creston recently, surprised s large\nherd of over a dozen on the highway.\n'POUND DISTRICT ACT\"\nPursuant to the provisions of Set-\nlion II of this Act, notice Is hcreb>\ngpven of the appointment of HENRY\nTOEWS ot Renat*. B. C.,*as pounu-\nkeeper of the pound established ac\nIlenpit*. ln the Kaslo-SIocan Electoral District.\nThe locution of the pound premises ls aa follows:\u2014Part of Block 17,\nMap 824, D. L. 8069, Kootenay District,\n\u2022    WM.   ATKINSON\nMinister   of   Agrtcultur.\nDeportment of  Agriculture\nVictoria.  B, c.\nApril   15th.   1933. ilO'lep\nPERSONAL\n(5)\nQUICK CASH. SELL PROVEN OLD\nChinese Eczema Remedy. Millions\nusing it Not seasonable Exclusive\nrights. Oeorge Y. Lee. 585 Duns-\nmulr  street.   Vancouver,  B.  C.\n(3073)\nMO-TORINO TO VAKCOUVER WED\nnesday. Room for two passengers.\nBox  2171.  Dally   News. (2171)\nHELP   WANTED\n(101\nWANTED \u2014 MAN AND WIFE OR\nwidow to take charge of three\nchildren ln return for home.\nPhone 670R1. |2172|\nRead  The Nelson Daily\nNews Classified Ads.\nExtra Vacation Money\nIt's in Your Attic, Garage,\nBasement, Etc.! Cash It\nin the Classified Way\nHundreds of others are raising their vacation money\ntliis way . . . you can do the same. There is always a\nready market among people who wish to buy for\nCASH that which you no longer need. Used ice boxes,\ntents, baby carriages, guns, pianos, radios, phonographs, furniture, stoves, bicycles, lamps and even\nused radiators and typewriters are daily sold in that\nway. These items are dust-covered dollars\u2014uncover\nthem, sell them, \"cash in\" on them! Turn them into\nvacation money. Phone 111 now and just say \"Classified Ads.\"\nSITUATIONS   WANTED\n(11)\nELECTRICIAN   20   YEARS   EXPER-\nlence wants work. Box 1962, News.\nl.il.i\nYOUTH GOOD ON RANCH DESIRES\nwoik of any hind. Box 2072. Daily\nNews. (2072)\nDKESSMAKFR      AND     TAILOR-SO\ndeslrta aewlnj. Box 1963, Newa.\n(1963)\nll RMS 111.1) ROOMS FQH RENT    (15)\nLARGE FRONT BEDROOM, ONE\nblock Irom Baker Btreet. Apply\n408 Victoria street. (210.)\nLIVESTOCK   FOB  SAL-\nOS)\nYOUNG REGISTERED AYRSHIRE.\nHeavy milker. Gentle. Will sell\nor exchanga for Jersey. Box 2114,\nDally   News. (2114,\nYORK HIRE   PIGS  FOR SALE   ;*._>(.\neach. Boothby. Ed.ewood, B. C.\n(1684)\nFOUR YOUNO HORSES. 1800 TO\n2000 lbs. Geo. Mclnnes, Wynndel.\nB. C. (2135)\nPOULTRY    AND    EGGS\n(16)\nHOUSEKEEPING  ROOMS. MRS Mr-\nLeau, Opposlt* Oas works, Nelson.\n(2138)\nSUITES\u2014ASHMAN'S    APARTMENTS\n715 Baxer street. (1905)\n'IOUSEH    FOR    RENT\n(ID\nFOR RENT \u2014 NEW FULLY FUR-\nnished house. July and August.\nPhone mornings, 314R. or writ.\nP. O. Box 676, Nelson. (21001\nFURNISHED   HOUSE   AND   APART-\nment* for summer months. Apply\nBox   10. South  slocan. (2169)\nFOR RENT\u2014.-ROOM. ALSO THREE\nroom house. Apply D. Magllo.\nPhono 808L or 483R. (2029)\nFOR RENT SIX ROOM COMPLETE-\nly furnished house. Phone 400R2.\n(210 fl\nSEVEN-ROOM   HOUSE   NEAR   Hospital. The Ark. Phon. 634.  (1999)\nMISCELLANEOUS-  WANTT.B\n(2!)\nWANTED   \u2014   ORAZINO   FOR    SIX\nyearlings   tn   vicinity   of   Nelson.\nPhone  188L3 or P. O.  Box  415.\n(2060)\nWANTED RIOHT AWAY, \u2014 TWO\ntrucks for contract, drawing logs.\n.. B. Winlaw, Wynndel.      i_09J\/\nPullet, will b* icare* and egg prices\nhigh next fall. Oet some of our S.\nC. W_i1* Leghorn or R. I. Red\nchicks for good results. Bred from\nhealthy, vigorous stock for high production and large eggs.\nRUMP le SENDALL\nMllncr,   B.  C.\n\u2022 11)74)\nFOR SALE \u2014 WlflTE LEGHORN\ncockerels, five weeks old. 20c\neach.   Phone   584L1. (2099)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR   SALE     (27)\nTEN CENTS POPULAR SHEET\nMusic, 3 for 25c. Name songs yoi,\nprs.er. Send coin with order to\nSheet Music Service, suite 3.\n709  Dunsmulr,   Vancouver.   ,212.i\nSECOND HANw PIPES. FnTTNOS.\nValves, etc. we carry a full stock\nof reconditioned pipes suitable for\nsll purposes, writ* to Swart_ pipe\nYard. 220 1st Ave., East, Vancouver, B. C. ilOblli\n\u25a0i\/kDTMa OIHBIMW**-!\nom\nlilMIIMHIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n= SAWMILL   FOR   SALE 3\n~ Comprising:   30   H.P.   Locomo- \u2014\nS  tlve    F.rebox   Boiler:    30    HP. _\\\n*r 9\"xl2\"   Centre   Crank   Engine; 3\n\u2014 Buckeye    Sawmill    with   three 2\nr Headblocks.  Headblocks,  He.id- **\"\n_*\u25a0 block*   upon   separate   trucks. _\u2022\nE for cutting long timbers;   one r:\n_\\ Hsnd   Edger, one Cutoff  Saw; _\\\n_\u25a0 one  McGregor  OourlBy  Planer \u25a0_;\n_Z and     Matcher,    24\"x8\"     with \u25a0_*\n_\\ Moulding     Attachment;      Log _\\\n_\\ \u00bbnd   Lumber Trucks,  Shafting *_\n\\\\ .nd  Sawdust Conveyor. _\\\nW Apply r\n= BURDEN &  WATSON =\nm port Crawford, B.C. z\n*_: 13130) =\nllllllllllllllllll1lllllllllllllllllllllil.tll.Tl\nFOR    RENT    \u2014    BARBER    SHOP.\nAppply   Box   2168,   Dally   News.\n\u2022 (21681\nRTY VT4NTFD\nWANTFD   TO   RFNT   RANCH   r.,\nschool.   Box   21413,   D\u00bbplly   New*\n(2\nAUTOMOBILES   TOR   SAIB\n1930    DODC.K-fl    COUPE.     RUM\nseat;    f|pp^   pprfiprnpp.ni*-    2\nwilh rarner. s   R. Thomas.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1927 FORD CO*\nOverhauled, excellent condl*\n\u00bb75. Box  2093. Dally News.\nNURSERY   PRODUCTS\nSEE   C    W.   APPLETARD FOR   CAR\nInsurance   ln  reliable  companies.\n(1940,\nFARM   PROPERTY   FOR   SALE   (36)\nTOR SALE \u2014 FULLY EQUIPPED\ndairy, stock and fruit ranch, on\nmain highway. Kootenay Lake\nPlnte will easily run 60 head ol\n\u2022took.   Box  2088,  Dally  News.\n(2088p\nDAHLIAS 25c TO 35c EACH:\nto 1:1.10 per dozen, j. T. B\nBox   097,   Nelson.  B.  C. (2\nPRINTING!\n'.!*!'>.illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllim\nLoose Leaf Equipment\nBINDERS  FOR  ANY  SHEETS\nLOOSE LEAF SHEETS\nFOR ANY BI.NDEB.\nNelson Daily News\nJOB DEPARTMENT\nPhop. 144\n(iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinir\niiiii'ii'iiiiiiiiimmii-i-iniiiiiiii-iii\n-LODGE-\nFOR SALE \u2014 TTVE ACRE RANCH,\ntwo miles out on Granite Road.\nAll kinds of fruit, five room\nhouse, large chicken house and\nother outbulldlpigp. All cleared.\nWater.   Writ*   Box   1184,   Ncl-opi.\nRANCH FOR SALE. 20 ACRES. W1L-\nlow Point, B. C. Box 2086, Dally\nNewa. 1*2086)\nWILL SACRIFICE ALL OR ANY\npart of my West Arm property.\nWhat offers? Rowland Bourse,\n1253 Lyall St.. Esquimau.      (2158)\nO. B. Abbott,\nBox  729    (19\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssayers\nE, W. Wlddowson, Box A1108, Ne'.j,-n,\nB. C, Standard western charges.\n(1930)\nCECIL E. CROSSLEY. BOX 568. NEL-\nson. Leave samples at Whitfield\n_c Sturgeon. (21101\nChiropractors\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, S. F. INT.  A\nMunicipal and Commercljl Aud\nP. O. Box 1191, Nelaon, B. C.\n(19\nFlorists\nDR. ORAY, OILKER BLK.. NELSON.\n119811 j\nMTTTUN AND OEDDFS, X-RAY and '\nMCM, Cranbrook and Trail. (1982)\nDR.   MACMILLAN,   ORAD.   PALMER\nSchool, Aber Blk., Nelson. Ph. 212.\n(1963)\nEngineers\nCHRISTIE WRECKING CO.. 1631-\nWest 1st. Ave., Vancouver\u2014Save\n60 to 75 per cent on all radiators,\ncylinder heads and blocks.  (1955,\nFOR SALE \u2014 COMPLETE SASH\nend door factory. Estate of the\nlate w. O. Orchard. \u00bb650, terms\nF. E. Archer. Kaslo, B- C.      (2170)\nSPECIAL HANDMADE HEAVY GAR-\nbage canB .2.75. reg. $3.50. R. H.\nMaber, Phone 655, 310 Koot. (19641\nOr]z7ol]e*s Greenhouses, Nelson\nflowers and floral  design*.   (19\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE.-FU\nline cut fjowers st sll times. Fl\nal designs. Phone 233. (198\nJOHNSON'S GREENIIOUSBS^Th\n342. Cut flowers, potted pla\nand floral designs. dggi\nSecond Hand Stores\nH. D   DAWSON. B.CLS. ROOM 12A\nK.  W.  C.  Block.  Nelson.      (1984)\nCHAS. MOORE. Griffin Blk., Nelson,\nB. O. Land Surveyor, Box 654.\n(1985)\nTransfer\nATKINSON TRANSFER, ROSEMONT.\nCoal and  Wood. (1992)\nStorage\nCLASSIFIED ADS SERVE CONTIN- !\nouously\u2014Why not start on* serving vou today*\nSTORAQE,   MOVING. COAL,   WOOD\nPhone 63. Bum* Coal _c Cartage.\n11991)\nThe  Ark\u2014Dealers tn  Second   Har\ngoods. Phone 534. (iog(\nBROOKS   BUYS  ETOH^YTMNcT\nBaker street. (i_9;\nInsurance and Real Estatr\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate, \u201e\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hlpperso\nHardware, Baker Street.\nWood Factory\nHE  GUMPS \u2014SITTING PRETTY\nLAWSON'S WOOI. FACTORY HATH\"\nwood merchant, 217 Baiter utri-p\n(UM\nMr.     JuttkM    Murpl.y    nrrivrd     bv :\nDm KefMo Valley train Sunday nigh*,*\n...   \u25a0. \u25a0 j ':c*m   thc   -.\"oirt,   to   prct-idc   at   the\nrERNIT.      P.     C     Mav     15.\u2014Th?' N\"lwn    sprtn?    MtfMf,    whlrh    will\nopahing mam m .he WrsU tttriwn Kooday mornta* \u00bbt 10 \u2022\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0**-_.\n>_gu*- of tattbti] ww pUyM on \u25a0*\" thP',e \u2022>\u00ab no \u2022\u2022rt-ntnai esses, no j\nU>dn\u00ab*v_i!V mulni wlvn the \"T*e: I \u25a0\u2022.rand J'-ry Will be rtquliad, and'\nUxmmf went down 10 rlelmt bttntt |n*nthlnp morf will br mm of tlile. tn-1\nthe   ' Holv   Name\"     -nn   by  a   yv:c\nof   !.   to  7.\nSoftball U io:n*. *o br one of thc\nleading \u25a0\u25a0pott* in Fernie. thi*-. rnim*\nmr, A city l*,a*_ne hd bttt farmed\nOt eight IttttM Ihr-r v ill be a\njjnm. tlaOfft every night, The team**\nentered In 'he league ate; p^er\nB' ont, MaQladnr*- Anne*;, Ftitry\nCreek, North End, Halv Name,\nCleaners ;ind Xncramt-\nTHE   TE4MS\nBeer Enron*.\u2014A. A\u00ab*nio. 3 Mnf-\nflola, J. Kns-mer, P. Kar-ine-. T.\nKnight. A. Prior. Fred Sterner, A\nWaaaoetc* W. Pearse\nHoly : ame\u2014tamm George, M.\nBUadteo, 8. lUamer, v. Qaor$t, M.\nfHi7.z3, John Ofior**e. Fertile, J.\nHughes and H.   taamer.\nTha only time ^o^l*\u2022 people offer\nto help their n-.ts'libors la when\nthey want  to get  than out of Hie\ncommunity.\natltutlon at II-am, \u00bb* [ti abolition i\nwill be effective after tha various j\nspring mlaai throughout the province. The final grand Jury lint, however\u2014from whtch ti-,e grand Jury\npanel lb made iip \u2014In being nsenl,\nhowever, at the currenl. HltMi here,\nto furnlMi the -.peclal Jury that, ls\ncalled for In the firet civil MM*\nSIX   CASES\nFour civil mtttm. nnd two divorce\naction*-, are pet. down for trial. They\nare   \u00ab.-*   tOOoW\n.smith va. Cummins et al. both of\nNelson, df-miitie t-ult KtfSII from a\nmotor ui'ddent, with gpwM Jviry.\nSingleton et al va. OHOpMU et al,\nboth of Trail, damage suit following\na motor acrident.\nTeterwn vs. C- P. R. company,\ndfimagc fult h\u00abfe<l on fire at, Pou*\npore.\nCaiowlla va. !*rlore \u00ab>t -.1, both of\nTrail,  suit-   for  commthalon.\nMcOovern vs. McGovern, bo'h of\nTrail,   divorce   action\nMcKellar vp McRellur, both of\nTrail,   tl Ivor re   action.\nl'V\u00a3  60NC   THROU<\u00bbM   IT AU.-\n\u2022JOST SWA(Y TILL HE'S BEEN MARftiftb AS\nLONG.fK%  I   MAVE-     THt^   LOVtY  bOVEY\n5;YUFF IS ALL RtC>WY- THli Ki%\\ ANO MAKE\nUP lUilNUl\u00ab   YHEY CAM WAVE YHEI^\nPUPPY LOVt-   BUT   I   HAVE POUM\u00a3>\nANiD  I   HAVE -REACHED-   YME RCAL-\nYWfc ID\u00a3AL *TATE OF MARR'KD UPe-\nNNHEW  ^V WlFS   NO\nMORE    WORRIES ABOUT\nMY  BAL5 MBAO AWD\nI   NO  LO**06E^\nCARE  WMfcTHER\n\u2022SHE   DOES\nOR NOT-*    *\nFARM\nANIMALS\nrULUK'S (mc MJBE\nI    BMt*rkrl for ALL of\n\u25a0.imr    life    slocK \u2014 a\nonrfeft  * here bayera\nooS. for. -ind expect to\nfind thr fl.ty*8 offer*\nngs.   That's in the\nTHE NELSOK\nDAILY NEWS\nWANT-ADS\nPhone 144\nCHARLES NICHOLS\nRETAINS POSITION\nAS A MAGISTRATE\nHWMWWmil. B C, Mhv JR.\u2014Mf*.\nHftl1Hm*f nnd son, Bohhy. of Orand\nFnrkp. have been the .-\u25a0\u2022-(.\u2022, of Mra\nH. C. Clark for wvenit daya. They\nreturiKd   borne  on   Monday.\nH. Cart\/r, erhool inj-pector, w\u00ab In\nClreenwoo-I Ifljut wee]- to attend a\n(\u25a0peeipil meeting of the whool trustee*, who met to dlaeusa ways and\nme-iiiH of eronomizinf.,\nCharles Nlchnla will retain hla\nposition la f-tipendary maglftrnte \u00bbt\nthe courthoupc.\nMil\"!* H. QnoilTri of IMBM ^e\nUk |UIVi ctf her unci*\" and aunt,\nMr   and   Un,   *    II.   Goodeve  at.  th**\nPtclfle hot*-i.\nOMtt B Olwk, rtneluB -rf Kodi\nCxaat wsb in town on TtWMbf.    He\nreports     plenty     ol     mot.-ture     nnd\nprriTnlM- of good  Crops.\nC. 0. L T. GROUPS\nARE FORMED, FORKS\nORAND JFOHK6, B. C, May 15-\nUnder the lo1 -Trf-hlp of Mrs. K.\nPople a MAJor C- Ct. I. T. group wa*.\norsanlzerl In the United church on\nTuesday evening. The following Of-\nttaart were e!e--ted: Prtttdant, Helen\nMrParlon; vfoe-pre.'ident, Dorothy\nDonaldson; bejretary, J*i\u00abl_ McDonald;\ntretteurer, June Dnniclaoii; phnlt-i\n'\u25a0 Geralrtlne Qowaiu.\n rriiB muson daily  news, nelson, b.  c,  monksv mobnino   may  is,  101*!=-\nFAOl   Nl\"**\n^\nvlarket and Mining News\n)ST TORONTO\nSTOCK ISSUES\nmm down\nHer Um 1 h2 to 35 11-2\nThree Make Gains\nOut of 32\n. TO,   May   15,\u2014-Trading   on\nnto atock er'.hange was slat * stand-till Saturday, moat\njof the issuer appearing los-\n' ground. Total s.l were 2585\n\"* and of -hs S3 issues called\n, three had ga ns against 17\n\u25a0 * and 12 \u2014\u2022re unc1 need.\na power \"A\" et 20'^ was ur  1,\n, io*t yl, c.p.r. lost n to ii1;\n; Shaw.ni.jar   lost   %   to cl.se  at\nw low of 11. In tb   st:el group\n. Hersey was off four to 41 with\n.-hires traded, 8 el of Canada\nt|,non lost % to close at new low\nwfljkt -\"ord of \"\"an -a \"A\" with\n>,share* out was off \u2022\/\u00ab to 7\u00bb\/_.\n.\u25a0\u2022tali end oils were flrn to lower\n(iters losing \"4 to 35Va, While\nH-*rial ol) loet  Vi.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 Industrials   52.48 off   0.08\n20 Rails   17.83 off 0.34\n20 Utilties   22.60 off 0.32\nSTOCKS, BONDS\nDECLINE ON THE\nNEWYORK LIST\nMany Favorites Drop to New\nLow Quotations; S im.\nulant Lacking\n\u2022 iVrt\nf.CL^IOWFR\n\t\nIfl Session V enfc and Nun\n! row; Rallies at End of\nDay\n. INNTPBO,   Ma*\/\" 15   (CP1\u2014Wheat\n*. nd   fractionally   lower   Sa'urday\ner the influence of bearish loet'.\n\u25a0 rej-wrta, began \u00bb slump at mid*\nilon   wh*n   the   market   was   rs-\ned weak, but rallied with re-\n\u25a0s of a move rent of grain for\n>rt to else* % to Vi lower.\nay eased -H to 61 Hi July tt to\nlo 63H end October H to 681..\nIth the Liverpool market closed\n. the weekend for WhLsuntide\ntiays. the short session on tha\n1 msrket was weak and narrow.\n,,ther over the areas that suffer-\n.o much from drought last year\n\u2022 very hot and dry. \u00bbnd with\ns or no covering at this time of\n\u25a0 year,    serious    evaporation    of\nace  moisture  Is feared.\nNEW YOItb., May IS (By John L.\nColey, A p financial writer)\u2014Little\nciunse occur.ed In the weekmd *\u2022-\nCWlty markets yesterday. Stock.\nsagged and so di*l bond:; losses were\nsomewhat smaller ior shares, but\nevidence that .he downward movement might be halted without some\nfresh   stimulant    was   lacking.\nStocks droppei ln '.he ftrtt hour\nwh\u00bb\u00ab many lavui.tej unveiled new\nlow Quotaocae. They steadied liter.\nprobaoly under _..io:t overing, hus\nreducing losses to a generil traction*, range, idling ooiulnue^ to oe\nrat er specialized, aifeetlng mlncl-\npally rails, uttlit;-.^ acd some mer-\n1 ..'.and.alng   l.sues.\n.Voow-riii anu iiA-Liua ran In j\na ..ea*: mar.-et, a.though uoth su:-\neu de.: ln reducing e*tae.s losses of\n2% sni two p.ints, .(_ pec.lvil.\nAme.ican T\u00ab.ephone, whosi dividend\nmee .1 ng c. mes soon, broke 1 \u2022\/\u00ab to\n9\u00abVt, the lowea in m.ny -.ears, before meeting much suppo.t. Standard Oil of New Jersey obvlcusiy suffered from President Teaglei *.*;e*\nmerit that dividends couU n:t b.\noominued Inleflntiely out of iur-\nplus.\nNEW Y02K STOCKS\nTORONTO STOCKS\nl*        .C4\n'\"* p.      i .72\nulet     __._,..__. .. .08\n* Consolldateij _-__.._ .OS\noclated \u201e____\u201e  .03\nMetal.   ., _____..\u201e  .30\ngood    ..... _, .01\nry  Holllnger  . -.  M\n'   Missouri   . ~- .  .06'..\nmont        .04\nr'.nd E Lands   __. .15\n*mlcs*   Research     .07\nK    - *0<,\u00b0\n\u25a0 housio   -.._-.-.\u2014....  .0*\norado  ___-.__,.\u2014_. 1 oa\nconhrtdge    ._ tcs\nmada     _._ .60\nno   OH    .  .ld'.i\n\u00bbey    , ..-_  .281',\nlinger       470\ndson   Bay    _ \u201e\u2014- .83\nernatlonal  Nickel   _.._...__ I.S5\nkland   lak*       .28',.\nShore     \u25a0{*\ncms*   \u201e._\u2014....__-.\u201e_._..-.,- \u25a0***\nnltoba  Basin   ,  .00'.\nlartlc   _ - .v - .03\nIntyr.    _.._._.,_..._-._ '-ttrs\n.iln_   Corp   . \u25a0  -*0\nViand  _-_  -08\nMsslng    _.__ _  -OO\nfanda       1420\nId   Owlll.   .......  **\niml.r Gold  .....  - \u25a0**\nerrlt   Oordon     \u25a05n'i\ndbury Basin . ,...-,  -20\ncoe     \u2014\u2014   \"\u2022''i\nAnthony   , \u25a0 \u00b05\nck Hughe*   3*3\npond    _ _...._..._\u2014 - \u2022\u20228'''.\nntures     - \u25a0*\",*r\n'\u2022Ight Harireav*s   3 22\nlit* Ac!    man - 35\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nSltlbi Poswr * P\u00bbt\u00bbr  \u2014   >ss\nibestc*   Cor.poratlon    ... I*\nill   Tel.phon*  *0'i\n' \u2022szllian T li & Power    BV.\n\u2022lt   American   Oil        8*4\nsn Car ,_ Foundr    \u2014.    4\nin   Cement    ,\u201e_..\u201e-._-\u2014.   3 V.\nan   Cement  pfd    _\u2014 \u00ab4*i\nin Industrial Alcohol  __....    .80\nin   powe-       \u2014    -00\nms Mining & Smelting  35\n_m!nlon   Brldg.   _. -,\u2014, 11\nomlnlon   Glass    , , 40\nom   Textile     40\nP   Grain        4\n,nperlal   Oil      -     8-t.\nike  est  the  Woods \u201e     '\nassey   Harris        2H\nontreal  Power  .._..,_ 37*.\nuebec    Power    _.__,   _._.  13 H\nlawlnlgan     __, .\u2014.... 10H\n*el ot Canadi.   -  12V,\n'Innlteg   Railway       3'i\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG.   May   14.\nOraln\nquo-\ntatlons:\nOpen\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nWHtAT\nMay    .....   83\n83\n81\".\n61V,\nJuly        68\na\n63V\u00ab\n83*,\n85.4\n64',,\n84 5,\nOATS\nMay       84*,\n86\n34*.\n341\nJuly   .....   sa*.\nm%\n32'A\n32'i\nOet      38*,\n2\u00bb=\u201e\nao.i\n391'.\nBARLtY\nMay      4oy,\n40*.\n40*.<\n40 V*,\nJuly   _...\u25a0 39(.\n_.<,_\n30',\n89',i\nOct.    ... _   33 K\n,_ut\n831,\n33 H\nI-LAX\nMay    ...._   80',.\n83\n80 Vi\n83\nJuly   . _   88\n85\n80 V.\n84\nOct _   87Vi\n87i.\n64\n86 <s_\nRYE\nMay         40?.\n40%\n40 Vi\n40 Vi\nJuly   ...._   41%\n41\".\n41*.\n41'\/,\nOct _   43\n43\n43'\/,\n42%\nCASH CLOSE:\nWfeat:   ttx   1\nhard\n84 V,;\n\"to.   1\n82 !i;   No. a   nor\n68*.\nNo.   i\nnor.\n65%;   No.  4  64V*\n;   No.\n6  49'\/,\n1   No.\n8 44%, teed 43H\ntrack 61 (k;\nNo. 1\ndur.   t.%.\nAllegheny   I \u2022\u00ab        t\nAndes    \u2014 \u2014 \u2014          a\nAm  can   __. 36>', 35y4 36;,\nAm   P.r   power 8 V. 3          5\nAm  MschlJe Fdy 13*. 13*. 13%\nAm   Smelt   Ret 6% t',       t'\u201e\nAm Telephone _ 95p\/4 9414 85 V.\nAm   Tobacco   ... 64 63'.. 63%\nAr._con_*      4% 4H 4't\nAte l*:n _ - 80% 30V. 80 .\nB   _\u25a0   O     5Vi |\u00a7       l_J\nEendlx  Aviation 8 5?4       61*\nBeth  \u00abt\u00ab*l   -  I-'. 13'4 UVt\nC  P    10% loii loy.\nCerro de   Pasco 6 \u2014         6\nC   i   O     14 13% 13%\nChryi'.er    _ 8% 8          8\nCom   _   Southern   3% 3V.       3%\nCon Gas N Y _- 4li% 45% 46%\nCorn Products _ 33% 32% 42V,\nDupont   37% \u00bb\u00ab(. 36%\n_M-  ** *  t   .... \u00abVi \u00ab         6%\nErl*  3Vi \u2014         3%\nFord Bngllah  .... \u2014 \u2014         3%\nFord of Canada \u2014 \u2014         6%\nFirst ...at  Stares 40?', 40 40Vi\nFrceport Texas _ 14% 13?i 14\nG*n Motors   10% 10 IOV4\nGen   Electric   ..\u201e 13% 13 13%\nOen   F\u00bb\u00bbd.     18 % I\u00bb 13%\nOold   Dust     11% 11 11%\nGoodrich     3% \u2014         3%\nO   N  ptd  9% 8%        8%\nHudson   Motor. 4 3%      t%\nIn.  Copper    1% 1%       1%\nInter Nickel   5 4%      4%\nInter   Tel   Tel 4% 4% 4%\nKelly  Spring 1 \u2014         1\nKenn  Coppejr  .... C% \"Vi       6%\nKresga S S  9% 9V. 9%\nKroegg & Toll Vi \u2014            %\nLchn   _   Fink 15 14 15\nMack   Truck   .... 13 121i 13\nMilwaukee  ptd 1% \u2014         lit\nNash  Motors  .... 10',i 10% 10%\nNat Dairy Prod 30% 19% 30\ntl f Is t.   \u2014 \u2014 11V4\nN Y Central   11% 10% 11%\nPac Oas 81  Elec 33% 25% 25%\nPack    Motors    .... 3% 3          3\nPann R R   10 8?4 10\nPhillips Pet* .._ 3% \u2014 3%\nPure Oil    3% \u2014         \u00bb%\nRadio   Corp     4 3?i       3?i\nSafeway  Storis 44 43',* 44\nS  Loul* St. \" T 1% \u2014          1%\nShell Union OU 2% \u2014 3%\nSo   Ca)   Edison 33'. \u2014 33 V.\nStand   Oil   Cal 18?', 18?l 18%\nStand  Oil   Ind \u2014 \u2014 17%\nStand   OD   N   J 33V, 93% 33%\nStewart   Warner 2% \u2014         2%\nSui.ebaker    4% \u2014 4'\/,\nTexas   Corp    .... 10'i .10% 10%\nTexa*   Quit   Sul 16% 16',s 16%\nUnion   c.rblm 17 16% 17\nUnion Oil Cal .9% 9 9%\nU   P     45 43% 44\nUnited Aircraft 7% 7%      7%\nC S Pipe & Fdy 9!. \u2014           9%\nU  S   Rubber   .... 3% \u2014 3%\nU   S   Steel    _ 37% 26?4 37\nWest   Elec     MH 22% 82%\nW'lys   Over    .... 1 \u2014          I\nYellow Truck  .... l?i \u2014          1%\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW    YORK,    May IS\u2014    Metals,\nnominally unchanged.\nForeign bar silver 28% cents.\nAt London\u2014Meta'.s, nominally unchanged.\n[\nIncrease Your Crops By Using\nELEPHANT BRAND\nFERTILIZERS\nAmmonium phosphate \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\nFOB BALE AT\nNelson-Wood Vallanc. Harrjwsr* Co., Ltd.\nBonnlngton\u2014Bonnlngton Co-operative.\nHarrop   Harrop and District Co-operative.\nCre*\u00bbon   Crwton Valley Co-operative; Croatian* ITUI.\nCompany; Long. Allan ft Long.\nCrawford Bas -Crawtord Bay Co-operatlT*.\nWynnd.l   Wynndel   Terry   Growers'   Association.\nWillow Point   Willow Point Co-operatlv\u00ab.\nThrum*   Tarry and Thrum* Co-op\u00abr\u00abtly\u00ab.\nOrand Forka-Grand Forks Growers* Association.\nOreenwood\u2014Taylor \u00ab. Sons\n4,nd Awoclated Orower. ot _*\u25a0 C. local c.*t*ra.\nThe CM.OS. Co. o( Canada, Ltd.\nTRAIL, B. C.\n-Toducen and n*fio*r\u00bb ot Tadanao Brand Beetrolytls\nCadmium. Bumuth, Lead, and Z'\"o\nDevelopment of\nWheat Is Normal\non tta Praises\nTfir\u00ab?e Quarter Sown in Saskatchewan anrl Wei. Over\nHalf in Alberta\nWll-miPSO,   M*n.,   May   15\u2014Wtth\nwarmer ruthtr tnd ginenlly f\u00bb-\nvori.ble condition!. \u00abv*rytblng pointi\nto pori-ful d\u00bbv\u00ablopment of we*t*rn\nwheat crop. Wfielily r\u00abport \u2022ubmlt-\nt*d hy agricultural dtnartment Canadian pacific railway thl* morning,\n~ttt\u00ab* ie***!n\u00ab- op*.atlon\u00ab wer* un-\nnterrunt*xl durlntr week \u2022 ni 9S per\n\"*n+\u00a7 of Manlto**a'i wheat crop now\n'n the ground. Saskatchewan claimi\n12 P*-* cent and Alberta 83.\nSowing of coara* grains 1* proceeding with 35 per cent of oat*\nnn-*ercover and Manitoba 1* In the\nlead. The (feeding of barley u anywhere from flv#* to 14 per cent,\ntM\u00abA|   m   Minltoha.\nWhere wheat u ab\"-v* ground, it\nshowa even germination and le of\nexcellent appearance, states the re-\npor* f aned from Canadian Pacific\nagents over all western lines. Slight\ndecren.se In wheat acreage la balanced hy Increased aeed'ng of coarse\n{\u25a0rain.*-. Sweet clover -nd other feed\neropa. Hltrher temperatures have\nhastened rr t' o' grass, and livestock are already finding improved\ngrazing.\nBritish Columbia aoft fnilt tree*\nhave shed their blossom and fruit\nappears to h* setting well. Apple\ntree* are In heavy bloom and field\ncrops In excellent growth'.\nBEDDING PLANTS\nREATURE LOCAL\nPUBUCMARKET\nBusiness Turnover Fa'r In the\nOther Lines With Prices\nSlaying the Same\nC. P. R. SCORES\nONLY GAIN ON\nMONMAL LIST\nMost Poular Issues Continue\nto Crumble; Price\nChanges Small\nEXCHANGES\nMONTREAL, * \"iy Ifl (CP>.\u2014British and foreign exchanga m relation to th* Canadian dollar as compiled by the Royal Bank of Canada, closed Saturday aa follo***s:\nArgentina    (pesos)      \u201e    ,2923\nAustralia   (pound)     3.2981\nBelgium    fbelga)     \u201e.\u201e.._ men\nBrai.il    (mtlrelB)     \u201e 0A32\nCzechoslovakia   (crown)   \u201e    .834\nDsnmark   (krone\")       ,224*)\nFinland    (flnmark)    \u201e    .0202\nPrance (   franc)   ,\u201e   _.   .0444\nGermany   (relehsmark)    \u201e   .268*7\nGreat Brltaln( pound)    4.1124\nHolland    (florin)   \u25a0 4859\nIndia   (rupee)   ...\u00ab.- _ -.-_,   .3092\nItaly   (lire) _. \u201e..,..,   .0580\nJapan    (yen)    _ \u201e    .3820\nJugoslavia   (dinar)    ,   .0204\nNew Zealand (pound) ..\u201e , 3.7385\nNorway    (krone)    \u201e  _.    .2074\nPoland   (x.loti)    _, _   .1270\nRoumania   (leu)   ...._ \u201e _   .006*)\nSouth  Africa   (pound)   \u201e m 4.402*.\nSpain   (peseta)    ,       0*320\nSweden   (krone) _    .2108\nSwitzerland    (franc)     2202\nUnited   States   (dollar)   12  7-16  per\ncent   p'cmlum.\nTh* strong ftatur* on Caturday's\npublic market at Nelson wa* the\nbeddinjj plant rules, which exceeded\nany rush on thc local market for\nsom* weeks with an enermou* turnover, alt5iou?h o-vtn-. t-> the large\nquir.' ties offered, th* plan ven-\n<iors wer* not sol<t out at closing\ntlm*.\nSales w*re :air in otner imw with\nall th\u00ab price listing remaining th*\nsame.\nPrice*  were.\nVEOKTAVLS9\nBeets, 7 lbs. .,..\u201e,.\u201e\u201e mmm $ .25\nCarrots,   fl   lbs _ 35\nTurlps,   fl   lbs    \u201e 25\nHorseradish. \u25a0**\u2022-\u25a0 lb.   m 10\nPotatoes,  100 lbs ,   1.25\nDry onloni, lb. \u201e 05\nGreen  onions,   bunch    .OS\nArtichokes, a lbs    .10\nHothouse radishes, bunch   10\nHothouse  lettuce,   r-uncb  ....-...\u201e   .10\nFRI'ITS\nApples, Ont-r'o, box     $1 to 1.35\nFT-mvPI***,   K.ANTS   AND\nRWBS\nQladioll, down  -    SI.\nPmsles,  dozen \u201e 3a\nCarmtlons, tw\\ \u201e \u201e    10\nPerns, each   $.90 to  1.50\nGeraniums, Up from  \u201e   .25\nPrimroses,  hunch   \u201e _   .10\nTomatoe*..   do\u00abn   _    53\nTomatoes,   potted,   doz.   \u201e..\u201e...\u201e   .75\nPetunias,   dor-en     I   .33\nFiaplcolifs.    dozen      \u201e   ,23\nv\/hit*  Lobelias,  dozen  .....   Mi\n*^abbag\u00ab.   d_.icen   \u201e.._...... \u201e   .15\nCaullflorir,   dozen   ...   .30\nAaters,   dozen    -  ....   .23\nStocks   doren   ,.\u201e _.\u201e mm   ,25\nLobelia,   dozen     ..\u00ab....\u201e    .23\nSnapdragon, dozen    _    .25\nGeraniums,   dozen   _ \u201e  1.75\nDahli-    each  -. $.25 to .35\nColtous   each    ,.._   .20\n.Scarlet Salv'a, each 20\nWhit* companula, eacn \u201e   .15\nMEATS\nPork, lb. ................ $.10 to  .15\nBeef,  lb.   \u201e ,..\u00bb07   to   .30\nVeal,   lb ..1.10  to  .20\n\"prlr*.  lamb, lb $.12  to '8\nTlv*r, baby beef, 3  \"b* _   ,25\nHead cheese, lb .....$.10 to .20\nRabbi*   lb _.\u201e,.   .30\nTong*   ,  lb \u201e m   jo\nOxtail,   lb \u201e.,,   45\nPOIXTRY, EOGS\nAND BUTTER\nEegs.   fr*eh   firsts,   down    15\nPresh extras, dozen  20\nSr-'ing checken, lb \u201e    .3B\nFowl,  lb.\t\nCheese,   lb , $.30   to   .40\nCream, H pint  _.....9\\$ to .20\nTRADING LISTLESS\nON MINING MARKET\nMONTRIAL, .y IS\u2014Mo.t ot the\npopular Issus. lost * lltt). tround\n8atur_\u00bby s. \u00bb*curlty li.istt on tht\nM.ntreal >t_cl. exch.nj. oon'.lnued\nto   crumb!*.\nTh. price, chsn... wer. or \u00abms41\nproportion* i\u00ab.-\u00abr_Jlr throughout th.\nlist, tt* sol* issue to Kor* \u00bbn \u00bbd-\nv.nc. bslng csn__Ip.n p.clllo r\u00bbil-\nwsy which climbs,  *.  \u00abt U!..\nOnly ie.7 .hste. chsn.ed hands.\nflh.wlnlgan, recntly restored to the\nunre.trlcted list, wu \u00bbctlv. leader\nwtth s.'.e. p( \u00ab9] share, tnd closed\nit 10%. * new low, o(t i\/.. Canadian\nPaclllc w\u00bb. Mcond with 4M sharei,\nfollowed by Bratlllan Traction which\nwu traded to the extent of 3&3\n\u25a0hare, and lost a.  tt ,%.\nPRECIOUS METALS\nGROUP ARE ACTIVE\nVANCOUVER LIST\nFirmer Tendency Noted and\nGains Ar\u00ab Irregular;\nLorn Gold Up 11\nVANCOUVER, May 15 (CP)\u2014 Fairly\ngood buying support In the precious\nmetals group gave active lasues on\nth* Vancouver stock exchange a\nfirmer tendency yestei*day than hart\nbeen evident during the week.\nGains were Irregular, ranging from\nfractions to 15 point* in. one Instance.\nLorn* Gold, on* of th* most active\nIssues among the mines, closed up a\nhalf at 11 cente. The issue opened 1\ncent stronger but realizing near the\ncl03fi cut t\u00abe advance in half. Pioneer marked up the biggest gain of\nthe session. Opening unchanged at\n3.15, the atock sold up to 3.15 at\nwhich tlsure ft closed, a net advance\nof 15 cents. Premier at 38 oents\nwa* up 1.\nCanadian Pacific sold up a dollar\nat 12.00 during trading but cased\nback to 1150 at the close, a net\nadvance of 50 cents over th* previous session.\nTORONTO. May  15.*\u2014List' 1-\ning  md  reactionary  pric*?3 i\nthe    movement    on    the d\nStock and Mlr-in*r exchsngi -.ir-\ndny. All leaders wer* soft In price,\nThe two hours of trading brought\naction Into 40 issue* of which 20\ndeclined in price, five advanced and\n15 closed unchanged. Sales totalled\n112.000   shares.\nHudson Bay was Vie most prominent ln the baae met*.I section,\nbreaking 12 cents to close at a new\nlov of 03 cents. Rumors continue to\ncirculate to the effect that Hudson\nBay will Boon suspend operations at\nFlin Flon. Noranda showed a small\nIons, closing down 3 cent* to $14.2n-\nFalconbr.dgo Toll a like amount to\na low at 55 cent*, while International Nickel wa* unchanged at 55.60.\nREVISION COURT\nON VOTERS LIST\nON THIS MORNING\nThis morning the court of revision\nof the provincial voters lift for Nelson riding will ht held ai the court\nhouse by Jahn Cartmel, registrar of\nvoters. This will be the last revision,\nunder the old legislation, and frj.n\nnow on, there will be monthly revision!.\nNo objections were filed agalrst\nany of the applicants seeking to 1)1\nplaced on  the list.\nCHICAGO WHEAT\nOFFJBRUPTLY\nWheat Closes Nervous; Pressure to Sell AYas\nGeneral\nCHICAGO, May 15 (By John P.\nBough-.n, A P market editor)\u2014 Dls-\n.urbed by proposed financial enactment* at Wellington and by Instability of the New York stock markst,\nwheat values underwent abrupt\ntumbles yesterday.\nFalling to mora than eight cents\na bushel under April top prices,\nwheat |MVN almost complete ab-\nsenca of any nggresslve buying.\nPressure to eeli was general, and in\naddition one of the largest professional traders here was reported to\nbe letting go of a big line of wheat\nholdings recently estimated to total\n6,000.000   bushels.\nWheat closed nervous, f| to 1 under Friday's finl\u00bb.i; with corn varying from ft off to U up; oats\n*!a t0 V_\\ down; and provisions unchanged   |g * setback of  15  cents.\nTravers Ready to Hit Comeback Trail\nJerry Travers, champion of 30 year* ago, Is coming\nback to th* golf wars as a professional, and ls\npictured abov* as he prepares for his comeback at\nMontclatr, N. J. Travers has been out of active competition since 1910* when he was eliminated In th* first\nround    of   the    \"mateur    tournament   at   Oakmont.\nTravers won amateur championships ln 1907, 1908,\n1912 and 1913 and waa runner-up to Prano;* Ouimet\nIn )9l*. Ttaver* was regarded a* the Bobby Jones of\nhis day. He is 45. Travers' driving stanc* la shown\nabove, center, and his putting action, at the right.\nTh*  Inset* show  hi* overlapping  grip.\nARCTIC EYING\nSHOWS AIRMEN\nAS NAVIGATORS\nMid-Winter   Hop   lo   Stake\nCoal Claims Gives\nAdded Laurel\nSt. Patrick's Still One of Finest\nExamples of Gothic Art in V. S.\nH*f,.' YORK, May *i.\u2014Representa-\ntlva of the finest church architecture, St. Patrick's Cathedral, on\nFifth avenue at 50th atreet ln New\nYork, has stood for mere than half\na ce-tury as a landmark which ha-*\nnot been eclipsed I Manhattan's\nsky-scraper*.\nWithin It* cloistered chapels eminent cardinals of the Roman Catholic church hav-. chanted mas* to\nmillion* Bin c it was dedicated by\nCardinal McCloskey In 1879, at year-.\nafter th* l*ylng of ths cornerstone.\nR*elilences of th* archbishop* ar,_!\ncanon* ar* on ths Majlis-*-*- avenue\nside.\nIts spires, rising 330 feet skyward,\nsuggeat Its slrse; an its architecture,\nin the decoratlv* and geometric\norder of Gothic, symbolizes th* conservatism tha*. ls best in \u2022octolastlc\nstructure*- It embodies the idea*\nof the gifted architect, Jamea Ren-\nwlck( who dc-.lgnet' the ma-n cathedral. The Lady Chapel, witfh IU\ntwo aemi-octajr _al -dde chapels, was\nadde-d '*_ 1901-0.\n*   *   \u2022\nAside from IU Importance to\nCa&hollc* in the metropolitan area,\nits 70 window* t*ll a graphic story\nwhich cannot be duplicated anywhere ln America. Forty-rive are\nfigured and 14 ar* of cathedral\nglass m geometric patterns. Thes*\nwindows wer* made in France*, som*\nby Henry Ely of Nantes, others by\nNlchola* I*orln of Chartres.\nPerhaps th* most famous of ths**\nIs the Window of the Blessed Virgin. It telle in 19 spsodea th*\nstory of Mary from her nativity up\nthrough her espousal to Joseph, the\nbirth <- th* Chr ., th* flight Into\nErvpt, her death, to the assumption.\nVANCOUVEKLIST\nHum\nBig Missouri   OQ .07\nGeorgia   River    10 \u2014\n    9..yY\nGolcondn     \u201e_    .10 \u2014\nGrancivlfT**-     \u2014 .03\nInt C&C  -     \u2014 -ll'i\nLo-ne Gold  U .12\nNational   Silver  _,   i)ls-i .02\nxoble   Five    \u00ab   .02' \\ .03\npend Oreille  .,     .35 -45\nUloneer   Gold  \u201e  3.15 325\nPorter   Idaho        \u2014 .05\nPremier     ,   .38 -40\nPeeves   McDonald        \u2014 .17\nR*M    Gold 3fl .40\n\u25a0511vercrest        .01 ~-\nWellington     \u2014 .01\nOILS\nA p Consolidated 04\ncalmont 0*1\nC   and   E   Lands  ..  _ 14\nCommonwealth    - -.   .05\nFibyan _, fW>\u00a3\nH.irgal - 0;1\nMcDougall   Segur     .OS\nMercury    .,. ..   .07.4\nMcLeod I\u00ab\nMayland     _.... 05\nRoyallt*  4.95\nSterling   Pacific   \u201e 04\n\/V a by product of the dash to\nthe border of the Arctic Circle last\nMarch by Oeorge Douglas and tho\nstaking of coal outcrops on the arm\nprojecting Into Graat Bear Lake\nknown as the Ccented Grass Hills,\nMr. pouglaa praises northern pilots\nhighly for the part they ylap in\nmining exploration work.\nThe feat of Mr. Douglas Is being\nable to direct the pilot to an elu<\nBive Indenture In the shore line\n100 miles weat of &VI10 Bay where he\nnoticed * coal outcrop 20 years ago,\n1* In Itself renuarabie. It was all the\nmore remarkable as the flight occurred ln the middle of tho Arctic\nwinter when the land scape markings were not well defl..ed and landing places for aeroplanes were not\nfrequent. Tlie rapidity with which\nnorthern exploration Is conducted\ntoday ls exemplified in the case of\nMr. Douglas, Leaving Toronto on a\nMonday by train for Edmonton, a\ndistinct of some 2.100 mile,\"!, he\nembarked by plare from that point\nalong the northern aerial highway\nto Great Bear Lak**, thence northwest to the site of his observation\nof coal 20 years Iff*. In telling of\nthe exploit Mr. Douglas gave great\npraise to Walter Gilbert, Canadian\nAirway* pilot and his mechanic,\nRudolf Heuss, for their ability as\nnavigators.\nIAST    fSM   MADE\nOne week, from the day that Mr.\nDouglas left Toronto he had covered the distance to Great Bear\nLake had staked the coal outcrop\nand was back at Fort Smitii, well\non his return Journey to E.lmonton\n\u2014a trip that by old method* of\ntransportation   would     have     taken\nLake AVhebaaka and back to Winnipeg. During this trip It waa pilot\ned by \"punch\" Dickens. The first\nlink in the chain of circumstances\nthat has made the \"C A S K\" famous was on thl* trip, when a forced,\nlanding was made enrout\u00a9 for Fitzgerald. After consuming the last\ndroy of 11.giving gasoline, with miles\nfrom the nearest ga* cache or\nhabitation, good fortune smiled on\nthe party within t few minutes\naft*; landing, by the appearance\nof the S. 6* Echo, making lt* annual\ntrip and carrying in Its hold a\nsupply of gasoline.\nAIR   AIL ROUTE   SURVEYED\nThis feat wa* followed In October\n1928, by an air survey of the Prairie\nAir Mall route by Pilot Buckanan,\ndelimiting tht first air mall route\nfrom Winnipeg to Reglna and the\ninauguration of th* Initial air mail\nservice.\nThe next achievement of the\n\"C A 6 K\" was to the Oxford Lake\narea, northeast of The Pas, Manitoba. Here 150 miles from th* closet\nhabitation, affording mechanical\nfacilities, th* motor *tarter (ailed\nand the absence of the starting\ncrank from the flying kit left th*.\nmotor facing sub-jw-ro weather with\nno means of starting. An abandoned\nblacksmith forge a few mile* away\nwas tlie MM' c-f converting a\ntool to a star.ing crank and again\nthe plane was able to continue on\nits   homeward   Journey,\nIt was In April, 19*29, that tho\n\"wonder ship\" again figured In Its\nhistory-making exploits, always In\ntlie hands of a different pilot, tills\ntlm* Pilot Thompson. The rou'e\nplanned lay from The Pas north to\nHudson's Bay with the intention of\nfollowing the shore line, but midwinter snow and 1c* left no distinguishing shore line to guide\nthen, Eskimo Point was finally\nreached but no safe landing Held\nVU afforded. The rough ice l.um-\nmocks made the risk of carrying\noff the landing gear very great.\nHere again the skill or the northern\npilot was demonstrat-d, and a uafe\nlauding effected with only the k0M\nof a tall skid. Commonplace flying\nfor the \"C A S K\" ensued throughout the summer of 1023 until ln\nAugust lt figured in taxl-tng the\nftre-ridden inhabitant.'. Of Cr^jibcrrj\nPortage  to  points  of   safety.\nEarly Convention\nof Conservatives\nVetoed, Executive\n\"Stand Pat\" Policy Decided\nUpon; Leadership ot Premier Not Discussed\nVANCOUVEE, May 16^\u2014E**eutlv*\nof the British Columbia Conservative\nassociation, meeting in Vancouver\nyeeterday, voted flatly affatnst calling an* early convention of the party.\nExperted to causa aome U*j**1t\nfirework* and possibly hav* an Important efrect on the political situation of province, the nveetlnf Tlrtu-\nally decided on a \"stand p*t\" policy\nfor  the  tlm* being. .\nThose ln attendance\u2014*memg *h*m\nfour ministers of th* f^*****-niment*\u2014\nopposed an election thla summer and\nthe sugt-or ton of an immediat*\nparty convention was vetoed. Ths\ngatherhie, it W announced, did no-.\ndiscus.! t:-* leadcr*-li.tu cf Premier\nS. P. Tolmie.\nA party orga.nlaer to tvaotai Mr.\nPrank A. MaoKe-nzile, forced to re-\n*>ign through HI health, will b* Delected within th* next few days b7\nthe organization committee. Warnv\ntribute was psld a* th* fi.ath*rtni, to\nMr. M.icKenzle'3 work. The committee will consider nominations and.\nrecommend an or-janiwr to th*\nexecutive   shortly.\nTOURIST BUSINESS\nOF B. C. RIVALS THE\nOTHER INDUSTRIES\nCURRENCIES UP\nmonths.   Months.   Mr.   JO->ua;las   contends   that  the   flying   feats   of  oiirillOPEi.  H.ihi*'  MILLS\nnorthern   ptlot*   havo   heeif   largely!    The   next   hou   for   the   \"wonder\nconcealed from the public owing to(si:lp\"   was   a   circuitous   fl.000-ml.*3\nthe secretive nature of their errands\nand the retiring nature of the men\nthemselves ln not wishing their exploit* made public. T.-ese pilots will\ntell you, he said, that there la more\nromance in driving a car on the\npaved highway and a great deal\nmore risk thAn flying to the uorth-\nern   outpost*.\nThe trip to the sit* of the coal\noutcrop added one more tare I to the\nCanadian Airways Fokker plane, tl**-\n_1g.:ated a* G-C-A-S-K. and known\nas the \"Wonder ship of the North.\"\nThat thl* particular pluiie should\nfigure in no .uany outsttin ling\nnorthern exploits has caused it to\nbe regarded tfl having a charmed\nexistence. It was put Into -.ervice\nin August. 18'_a and sincu that time\nha*j figured Ut more he\u00bb\u201ellno exploit* than any plane in Canada.\nOn* of it* first trip.1* was to bla7,e\nthe llrst air trail from Hudson's\nBay westward through the. barren\nland. The route was from Winnipeg\nto  The   Pas,   Churchill,   CheFterllelU\nhop around the fringe of the Arctic to Alaska, down the Pacific\nCoast to Prince Rupert and ba^k\n'0   Edmonton  and   Winnipeg.\nIn late nummer, 1920, a sister ship\nwas slated to take the MacAlplne\nexploration party on lt_> DOW (anioas\njaunt, but after the plane h;<d bc*.i_\nengulfed In Hudson'** B;iv, CASK\nthla time unUer Pilot Brow*, went\nto the site of tho accident to pick\nup the party and continue thc trip.\nThe MIMI was already Ifttl tm a\n.journey nurtbwarcl and tht pT'y\nm forced down ne;tr tli\u00bb*. Coronation Gulf. Thr \/\u25a0ubaeqiwi.t flCdlnj\nof tre p.'\/ty need not be re-told,\nbut the \"C A B K\" was left, marooned for eleven months through\nthe rigors of Arctic winter without\nprotect Ion until It mta **slv;ige:i the\nfollowing summer. Despll* eleven\nmonths' weathering. tV eng'ne\n\u25a0ttfttd with little difficulty end\nwas flown back to Port KaoUUTtajr\nfor a complete overhaul, A hurried\noverhaul   it  was  for   the  0 A I I\nInlet,   Baktr   Laker   and   down    to was   despatchei   to   Hunter   Bay   on\nH.-VRRISON  HOT  SPRIN06,   B.   C.\nMay 15 ,CPJ\u2014British Columbia's\ntourist business as a rival of her\nmining, fishing aud timber industries was pictured hero toulgtt bY\nH. B. Thompson, chairman of ths\nBritish Columbia liquor cont.-ol\nboard, addressing the fourteonth annual meeting of British Columbia,\nWashington   and   Oregon   bOMlMS..\nFrom tourist trade last year British Columbia earned an estimated\n$n_i,000,ooo comppred with WMMtt.-\n000 from lumber. ,*44.0O0.0O fvo_u\nmining and 415,000.000 from OatUaf,\nMr. Thompson stres,**ed the ne-\/e\u00bb-\nslty at advertiilng a* a means o*\nattracting the tourist trade, __tt*l\nye;.'.* United States tourists sperr'\n\u00bb8'>_,000,000 abroad and the west, 0:1\nboth Jtdcs of tbf International\nboundary, want* a$ much of that\nm~ncy a* pogitbtl.\nOreat e ir L-\u00bbke to t*ke over the\nBurwsi-h party on It* ms timet io pol<_\nexpedition. T.e MftflOQ was rlofin1?\nfW Arc-tic flythp; when the a A \u25a0 K\nmarie tti memorable flight over tho\nnorth magnetic pole and again ft**\nturned to its bru-e after MtOtfetf\nhlJ-lory-making   flight.\ntStm comm nplace flying, involving flUhU ov'T distances thab\nwould !v reponM *s phe.nomenal\nby Mm mfliot pilot*, the C A & K\nsi.ailed 1M3 with another h.stor\".-\nnmklng QlfM, returning with n\u00bb\nmotor purvlnf,, awnitl;.!*. new Mw\nto  conquer.\nNEW   TORK,   May   15   (CP1\u2014Local\niorelfrn   exchanges   ended   the   week\nyesterday with British currencies\ntractlonally higher. The Canadian\ndollar closed H cent stronger at 89\ncents, and pound sterling ended thc\nsnort session tt cent higher at\n93.65%   for   oabt*   transfers.\nO \/fl you Roll \\our Own..\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK. May 15\u2014S****'ln_ \u00ab-\nchange steady at .3.63% lor 60-day\nbills, and at t.3.653. lor demand.\nCanadian dollars 11 p.r oent dlso.\nFranc*   3.94   11-1.   centl.\nLire   5.15   cent*.\nUruguay 47.25 cent*.\nMark.   33 89   cents.\nMINNEAPOLIS   GRAIN\nBt. pa'.tl   -s Catliedral\nMINNEAPOLIS, May 15\u2014Flour unchanged. Shipment* 15,854. Bran\n13.00  to   1350.\nWheat: No. 1 nor e_\\i to 04'.:\nNo. I fed durum 4flsj, to 48-%; May\n59*.:    July   59*.;    Sept   BT.-\nCorn:   No.  3  yellow  S3*,   to  35V4.\nOat*:   No,  3   while   _\\y,   to   221,.\nFlai:  No.  I,  1.16  to  1.19.\nTret Chanttettr\nCttartttt taptrs\nVtsh ttory fiac-attm\nYour Pipe Knemt\nOiden's Cut Plut!\nUse Ogden's fine cut cigarette\ntobacco. It speeds up cigarette\nrollingand gives a sweeter, cooler,\nmore fragrant smoke. The\nbrand that has always sold on\nits merits.\nOGDEN'S\nFINE CUT\nCIGARETTE\nTG3ACCG,\nhmW-\n' *Q_*_*.J\n__\u25a0'..-\nif**.\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.HE   NELSON   DAILY   NETtS.   NELSON.   B.   C,   MONDAY   MOBNINO   MAY   lt,   IM!\nOur\nREMINGTON\nTrouble Man\nis in town. Phone us if you\nneed him.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPLANS COMPLETED\nFOR FERNIE MEET\nNearly 200 Entries Ilewived\nfor Athletic School Evenf\nMay 24\nPERNIE, B. C, Msy 15\u2014The executive of the Penile District School\nAthletic association has everything\nready for the big achool athletic\nmeet or the district on  May  14.\nThe city engineer had the track\nsmoothed out and prepared, for the\nsports and It Is now ln splendid\nchape. Tlie local committee of officers have completed all arrangements\nfcr the big banquet ln the evening\nat which the winners will receive\ntheir prizes. After the banquet a\ndance will be held to finish a day\nfull of sports snd fun.\nAlready nearly 200 entries have\nlx-en received from DM school children of the district. A number of\ncups and shields to be contested for\nare on display In a down town\nwindow.\nThe last week has been a period of\nintensive training by loca. school\nathletes and all evidence points to\nclosely   contested   events.\nMiss Sandercock\nand W. Bunyan are\nTennis Finalists\nFirst Tournament of Nelson\nClub Gets Underway\nOver Week End\nI-LAY IS ENTIREI Y\nIN MIXED DOUBLES\nMiss M. Gibbons, J. Allen, Miss\nH. Fuller and E. Wheeler,\n\"B\" Finalists\nAMERICAN WEEKEND\nBASEBALL RESULTS\n\\MKRin\\    ASSOCIATION\nBI NDAV\nIndianapolis   10-10.   Louisville   7*4\nKan--ns   Cttv   8-7.   Milwaukee   5-15.\nToledo   3-10,   Columbus   4-8.\nSt.   Paul    0,    Minneapolis   7.\nSATIRDAY\nMinneapolis   11. St.  Paul  7.\nKansas   City   6,   Milwaukee   P.\nToledo   10,   Columbus   11.\nGLASSES -\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nI       OPTOMETRIST ANO OPTICIAN\nSUIT. SOS ,0, MtDICAL AST. .UP.BIN.\nPhone\n35\nTAXI\nThe   Best   of   Serrtn\nCareful,   Courteous\nOlivers\nKelson Transfer Co.. Ltd.\nPULFORIVS (REAM\nOF OLIVES\nFor   Sunburn   nnd   .Vln-lhurn\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nprescription   Specialist\nPIIONE   1\nshop Willi   .s hy mai_\nBetter Than\nEver!\nUniversity\nPlayers\nIn\nA Three-Act Comedy\n\"Alice Sit<\nby'the>Fire\"\nOpera House,\nTONIGHT\nDoori Open 8:15 p.m.\nPrrf.prm_i.ire 8:30  p.m.\nSeat  Sale  at\nMann,   Rutherford   DfH   Co,\nReserved   75c,   85c;   Bush   00c.\nMiss M. Sandercoclt and W. Bun-\nya n emerged on top of the \"A\"\nclass mixed doubles ln th\u00ab Nelson\nGolf and Country Tennis club's first\ntournament of the season staged on\nSaturday and Sunday; while Miss\nM. Gibbons and J. Allan, Mtss H.\nFuller and E. Wheeler were left\nin the final rung in the \"B'* tournament.\nPlay throughout Saturday was\nhampered by a hlRh wind and by\nfar the beat brand of tennis was\nexhibited In both sections In the\nSunday contest. All matches were\nclose, some exceptionally ao, as\nnew team mates vied ln close\nproximity for shots on questionable\nterritory.\nHA LADY\nOPPONENTS\nA most noticeable feature of the\ngames was the tendency of the men\nto pla\/ the lady opponent and to\ncover up his own partner. Manv\nof the ladies In the \"A\" class were\nplaying their first games In that\nclass, having being moved up from\nthe \"B\" section. Beyond a little\ntendency to be meticulous and\norer-anxloua the played exceedingly well.\nIndies' and men's singles In both\n\"A\" and \"B\" sections will commence tourney play on Wednesday\nand the doubles In all classes will\nsf-art on Saturday. In the latter\nevent the player* ar^ requested to\nchoose their own partners and hand\nln the names by Wednesday morning. Drawing will be done then.\n\"A- MIXED TlOl'BLEt\nI PPFR   COt'RT\nMiss M. Desjardins and L. Simpson beat Miss C. Wright and F.\nClarlt,  6-7,   12-10. fl-2.\nMiss M. R*\u00bbhal and T. Malahoff\nbeat Miss L. Fleet and T. Bird 5-7,\n6-2, 6-2.\nMrs. R. Maurer and F. Morris\nbeat Miss A. Mansfield and G.\nSimpson,   8-3.   5-7,   6-4.\nMiss A. Johnstone and J. A.\nStewart 'eat Miss J. Waldie and\nL. Stewart 6-2. 6-4.\nMiss D. Dunnett and L. Bradley\nbent Miss E. Hamson and A. Nisbet\n1-8,  6-1,  6-4.\nMiss E. Wright and P. Dewdney\nbeat Miss N. Simpson and J. Aure*\nHo 6-4, 6-2.\nMiss J. Burns and P. D. Campbell\nbeat Mlas E. Dill and C. McDougall\n3-6,   6-2.   6-1.\nMise M. Noxnn and R. Maum\nbeat Miss H. Hillam and J. Stark\n8-6.   6-4.\nMlsa M. Sandercock arl W. Bunyan beat Miss K. Nisbet and F.\nPhillips   7-5.   11-9,\nMiss J. Nisbet and V. C. Owen\nr '. M. Lutes and R. Hobson 6-4,\n11-9.\nMrs. O. Simpson and O, Warner\nbeat Miss D. Blackwood and L.\nFielding   6-1.   6-4.\nMiss A. Johnstone and J. A. Stewart beat Mrs. Jtauer and F. Morris\n6-0. 6-1.\nMiss M. Rahal and T. Malahoff\nbeat Miss M. Desjardins and L.\nSimpson   4-6.   6-4.   9-7.\nMiss D. Dunnett and L. Bradley\nbeat Miss E. Wright ui*t P. Dewdney   6-1,   7-5.\nMiss R. Sandercock and W. Bunyan beat Miss J. Burns snd P. D.\nCampbell   6-4,   8-10,   6-3.\nMiss   M.   Noxon   and   R.   Maurer\nbeat    Miss    J.    Nisbet   and    V.   C.\nOwens 6-4, 9-7.\nSECOND   ROI'ND\nMlsa L. Cunllffe and \"ft. Bell veat\nMiss I. Robertson and R. Knight\n8-1.   6-2.\nMrs. E. Sowerby and E. Swanson\nbeat Mrs. C. Larson and Tim Romano fl-4, 9-7.\nMiss P. Cell n as and W. Vance\nbeat Miss M Hodges and R, R.\nHorner,   6-2,   8-3.\nMrs. O. Wright and Ted Romano\nbeat Miss G. Haydon and N. Ger-\nmnn   6-3,   6-2.\nMiss R. Kerr and R. Sampson beat\nMiss L. Boomer and A. Ritchie 6-0,\n6-4.\nTHinr WMJUB\nMiss L. Cunllffe and R. Bell beat\nMiss P. Gellnas and W. Vance 0-7,\n1-6.   6-3.\nMrs. G. Wright and Ted Romano\nbeit Miss R. Kerr and R. Sampson\n2-6,   6-3,  8-6.\nMrs.   O.  Simpson   and  O.   Warner\nbest Mrs. E. Sowerby  and  E.  Swanson\nMiss M. Rahal and T. Malahoff\nbeat Miss A. Johns* oat and J. A.\nStewar*   6-2,   6-4.\nMlas D. Dunnett and L. Bradley\nbeat Mlas L. cunllffe and R. Bell\n6-0,   6-3.\nMiss M. Sandercock and W. Bunyan beat MiM M. Noxon and R\nMaurer   7-5,   6-2.\nMrs.  O.  Wright and  Ted  Romano\nbeat Mrs. G. Simpson and O. Warner 6-4, 0-6.  6-4.\nSEMI-FINALS\nMiss M Rahal snd T. Malahoff\nbeat Mlas D, Dunnett and L. Bradley\n6-0,   6-3.\nMlas M. Sandercock and W   Bunyan  beat  Mrs.  o.  Wright  arid  Ted\nRomano 6-4, 0-6, 6-4\n\u2022FINALS\nMiss M. Banderoock and W. Bunyan    beat    Miss   M.   Rahal    and   T\nMalahoff 6-3,  7-5.\n.MIXED   -B1*   DOLBLES\nMlas E. Fleet and A. Doyle beat\nMtss R. King and P. Smith 6-0, 6-1.\nMiss D. Gibbons and E. Wheeler\nbeat Miss G. Stepnenson and D.\nRitchie,   6-1.   6-1.\nE. Defoe and Miss G. Stephenson\nbeat N. Beattle and Miss R. King\n6-2,   6-2.\nMiss F. Hanna and J. W. Buchanan beat Miss M. Gibbons and\nI.  Ritchie   7-5,  4-6, 6-4.\nMiss M. Gibbons and J. Allan\nbeat mm R, King and K. McBride\n6-1,   6-4.\nMiss B. Norrls and B. Allan beat\nMiss M. Dolphin and L. McBride\n4-6, 6-1,  8-6.\nMiss J. Gibson and T. J. Mateer\nbeat Miss E. McLeod and W. Ramsay   4-6,   6-1,   6-3.\nMiss R. Erlckson and Gee .Soot\nbeat Mlas to. Dolphin and L. Emerson,   first   set   default,   8-2.\nMis.. H. Hillam and J. Dolphin\nbeat Miss F. Hanna and J. Buchanan,  6-3,  6-1.\nMiM Fuller and E. Wheeler beat\nMiss G. Stephenson and M. Defoe,\n6-2,   8-3.\nMiss F. Hanna and J. Mateer beat\nMiss E. Dill and E. Stroma lead,\n6-1,   4-6,   8-4.\nMiss B. Norrls and B. Allan beat\nMiss   E.   Fleet   and   B.  Horstead.\nMiss H. Scanlan and W. Walt\nbeat Miss M. Scanlan and A.\nSmythe,  6-4, 3-6,  6-4.\nMiss M. Olbbons and J. Allan\nbeat Miss E. McLeod and W. Ramsay,   6-4,   6*3.\nMiss Fuller and E. Wheeler beat\nMiss H. Hillam and J. Dolphin, 8-3,\n6-3.\nMiss F. Hanna and J. Mateer beat\nMiss R. Edmundson and L. Purdy,\n6-2,   6-0.\nMiss Fuller and E. Wheeler beat\nMiss B. Norrls and B. Allan, 6-2, 6-3-\nMlas M. Gibbons and J. Allan beat\nMiss F. Hanna and J. Mateer, 8-4,\n9-11,  6-0.\nMlas L. Sheffield and W. Walt\nbeat Miss H. Scanlan and A. Hart,\n6-3.   7-5.\nMiss Fuller and E. Wheeler beat\nMiss L. Sheffield and W. Wait,\n6-3,   7-5.\nMlsa   L.   Sheffield   and   W.   Walt\nbeat   R.   Erlckson   and    Oee    Soot*\n7-5,    8-2.\nENTER    FINALS\nMiss M. Gibbons and J. Allsn\nwill meet Miss Fuller and E. Wheeler ln the finals.\nHawks, Wings Clipped, Re-overina\nTRAIL-TADANAC\nBOWLERS BEAT\nFAIRVIEW TEAM\nBUNCHES ITS TO\nNELSON RINK 3-1;   DEFEATFALCONS\nExtra Ends Played in Two Tie Steve Smith, Fairview South-\nGames in Friendly\nExhibitions\nTRAIL, B. C May ll\u2014Trall-Tada-\nnac lawn bowlers celebrated the\nopening of their new bowling green\nat Tadanac Saturday when they defeated Nelson t**>wlers three to one\nIn a series of friendly games. Attendance was large and selections\nwere plsyed during tbe afternoon\nby  tie  Trail   Elks  band.\nT.vo games went to ties and eitra\nem'* Wtrt played, P. Bates skipping\nhis Ram to a 16-18 victory while J.\nDraper and his team were defeated\n21-.9. This was the first game played this year by the Nelaon team ss\ntheir greens are not yet in shape\nfor playing. Games were called off\nlat 10-<nd and the rinks adjourned\n'to the clubhouse where they were\n! served refreshments by Trail Girl\nGuides.\nScores,   with   skips   of   each   rink\nmentioned first, were as follows:\nRae,  Morrant,   Watson  and  Deans\nWith bandages covering severe facial Injuries received In tho crash of!0;,, jjyjt   defeated    J.    Draper,    A^\nhis speed   plane,   Captain  Frank   Hawks   here   Is shown  in   tbe   Worcester, i&Mo.t,   F.   Ged\u00ab    and   D.   j_cc.\u00ab\u00bb   o.\nMass.,  city   hospital,   where   he   ls  \"recovering   satisfactorily.^     A   plastic Nelson,\npaw Whiffs 18\nBatters\nsurgical operation ls expected to restore his face to normal.   Pictured with\nhim ls Nurse Agnes La Plante.\nTRAIL ATHLETES\nCHOSEN TO ATTEND\nKIMBERLEY MEET\nSelect Cream of Athletes After Weeks of Practice;\nAH Set to Go\nTRAIL LACROSSE\nBODY ORGANIZED\nSATURDAY BALL\nRESULTS\nLUMBER of Quality\nIs lumber from Powell's.\u2014It means a lumber that\nwill last longer and a lumber that will give a greater\nsatisfaction.\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nPhone 176 Foot of Stanley Street\nWoodyatt\nLAWN\nMOWERS\nThe most satisfactory Canadian\nmade lawn mower.\n14 inch 813.50    16 Inch \u2022'14.00   18 Inch $14.50\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWHOLESALE - NELSON B. C. - RETAIL\nBoston's remarkable Braves pulled\ncloser to the Chicago Cubs as a\nresult of Saturday's play in the\nNational league, carving out a ninth\nInning 7-6 victory. Cincinnati turned on their tormentors, Brooklyn\nDodgers, Carrol pitching the Reds\nto a 6-3 win. St. Louis, slowly gaining much lost ground, defeated the\nPhillies 7-6. New York Giants and\nPittsburgh Pirates were rained out.\nWashington's Senators kept ahead\nof the f;eld ln the American league,\nwinning Saturday from Detroit, 6-4.\nIt took a quartette of Washington\nhurlers to hold off the Tigers.\nGeorge pipgras pitched four-hit ball\nfor New York Yankees and they\nshut out Cheago White Box, 6-0.\nCleveland Indians wound up their\nseries In Boston with a 6-0 victory,\nBrown allowing the Red Sox only\nfour hits. Lefty Grove was agAln In\nform, and the American league an**.\nIts third shutout of the day.\u2014again\nwith four lilts. Grove, backed by\nthree runs sprinkled over as manv\nInnings, baffled St. Louis Browns\nnnd flniehed ahead, 3-0.\nRRARS UH IP\nKKD   WING I*\nNewark's Bears made a mess of\nfeathers of Rochester's Red Wings,\nln the International league, taking\nboth ends of a double header, 8-6\nand 4-0. Holsclaw and Brennan held\nRochester safe at all times. Mon-\ntreal Royals fell before Baltimore,\nthe Orioles shoving over a tenth-\ninning victory* with a final count\nof 5-4. Jersey city and Toronto\nsplit a twin bill, the Bkoeters gr.ib-\nbing the first 0-4, despite Toronto';\nthreat In the ninth inning, but\nthe Leafs, behind 6e well's smart\ntwirling, took the abbreviated t_ec-\nand 3-0. Reading Keys and Buffalo\nBisons also divided honors, by the\nsame 4-3 score, The Keys taking the\nopener and BIbohr the nightcap.\nNATIONAL LEAGU.\nBrooklyn      010-002  000\u20143   0 0\nCincinnati     '\"\u25a001 210 TOO\u20145 15   1\nClark, Thurston and Lopez; Carroll   and   Lombardi.\nNew York at Pittsburgh, postponed\u2014rain.\nBoston       200 300 002\u20147 11 2\nChicago       120 002 001\u2014fl 10  2\nBrandt, Brown, Frankhnuse, Betts,\nSelbolri and Hargrave; Grimes Root\nnnd   Hartnett.\nPhiladelphia  100 201 011\u2014fl 13 3\nSt.    Louis    .        210 103 OOx\u20147 15 1\nAMERICAN   LEAGIE\nChicago      000  000 000\u2014 0 4 1\nNew  York    100 000 41x\u20146 9 1\nJones   and   Grube;    pipgras    and\n. Dickey.\n| Cleveland     _  003 300 OOO\u2014fl 11 0\n' Boston       000 000 00\u20140   4 1\n!     Brown     and      Sewell;     McFayden,\nI Welland and Tate.\nDetroit       102 010 000\u20144 9 1\nWashington      101 000 04x\u20146 5 0\nUhle, Hogsett and Ruel; Marberry,\n' Brown,   Burke,   Michaels   and   Berg.\n! ft,   Louis    COO 000 0O0\u20140 4 0\nPhllrvdelphla        101 001 Ox\u20143 7 0\n[    Hadley, Herbert and Ferrell; Grove\nand   Cochrane.\nTRAIL. B.C. May 16.\u2014Athletes\nto represent Trail at tVe Kootenay\nBoundary Schools' Athletic sssocla-\ntlon track meet at Klmberley next\nSaturday, have been selected. During past weeks b\"y and girl athletes have been trying their skill\nand prowess In the various events.\nSteady practice and training has\nbeen going on ard they now sre\nready to meet the best of the Kootenays.\nSelected   for   the   various   events\nare:\nSENIOR  BOYS\nBucl-.na and Richardson, 100 yards.\nBuckna and Richardson, 220 yards.\nMartello,   440   yards.\nMorris, 880  yards and mile.\nHaley   and   Billlle,   broad  Jump.\nBuckna  and  Baillle,  shot put.\nForrest  and   Baillle.  pole Tault.\nRichardson,   Martello,   Baillle   and\nBuckna, relay.\nJIN10R BOYS\nPaul Haley and Pat Haley or Matt\nMalnarlch,   100  yards.\nPaul  Haley,  220 ; ards.\nI*s T-eyland.  880 yards.\nPaul Haley, Pat Haley, broad\nJump.\nAlbert Haywood and Matt Malnarlch,   high   jump.\nAlbert Haywood and Matt Malnarlch.  pole  vault.\nMalnarlch,    Haley,   Haywood    and\nHaley,   relay.\nGIRLS\nJean Downle and Martha Drapaka,\n75 yards.\nTina Young and Irene Moorcroft,\n100 yards.\nMargaret Drapaka and Martha Dra-\npaka,   high   Jump.\nMargaret Drapaka and Jean Downle,   broarl   Jump.\nTina Young, Irene Moorcroft,\nMartha Drapaka and Jean Downle,\nrelay.\nCANADA TO HAVE \"ALL-STAR\"\nOLYMPIC   LACROSSE   TEAM\nOUELPH, Ont., May 15.\u2014An all-\nstar Canadian team will represent\nCanad*. ln the lacrosse series at\nthe Olympic games this fall, A. E.\nLyno, president of the Canadian\nLacrosse association, announced today.\nDAVIS CUP\nPLAY\nAlSTRAl.IA   DOWNS   Cl BA\nHAVANA, May 15 (AP) .\u2014Australia's Davis cup team made a clean\nBweep of the North American 7.one\nsemi-final matches with Cuba, winning both of the concluding singles\nmatches   today.\nWith the series already clinched,\nthe Australians substituted Clifford\nSlroule for Jack Crawford In one\nof today's matches, Harry O, Hop-\nman playing the other.\nHopman made the count 4-0 by\ntrouncing Rlcardo Morales. 6-2, 6-2,\n6-4 and Sir Uie walloped the Cuban singles champion Gustavo Voll-\nmer, In equally convincing fash-\nIon,   6-1,   6-1,   6-4.\nIn the opening singles matches\nFriday, Crawford beat Morales in\nstraight sets and Hopman disposed\nof Vollmer in four. The Australians\nwon the doubles yesterday In four\nsets.\nCrawford and his teammates will\nleave tomorrow for Kek West, Fla.,\nand then will prooe* 1 directly to\nPhiladelphia for the North American\nzone finals agalnat the United States\nMay  27, 28   and   30.\nI.S HAS CLEAN SWEEP\nOVER MEXICO\nNEW ORLEANS. May 15.\u2014The\nUnited States made a clean sweep\nof its Davis cup tennis series with\nMexico, winning 1 oth of today's\nsingles matches. Frank X. Shields\n\u25a0tcored the final victory, defeating\nEduardo Mestre, 6-0, 6-1, 6-0. Ellsworth Vines previously today had\ndefeated Rlcardo Tapla, 6-4, 5-7, 10-\n12,   8-6,   6-3.\nITALY   WINS    OPENING\nP,9ME, May H (API\u2014Italy's Davis\ncup stars won both of the opening\nsingles matches, ln the third-round\nseries against Spain today. Gtoglo de\nStefan! defeated Enrique Mayer. 6-1.\n6-4, 6-0 and Giovanni Palmleri\nconquered Aontonlo Juanlco, 6-0,\n8-1. 6-2.\nFRANCE  TAKES  LEAD\nAUTEUO., prance, May 15 (AP) \u2014\nFrance took a 2-1 lead over the\nUnited States in their special team\ntennis match today, winning the\ndoubles.\nChristian Boussus and Andre Merlin teamed up to win a fourset\nduel from Sidney B. Wood and\nGregory S. Mangln, 3*6, 6-4, 8-6,\n6-1.\nThe opening singles matches yesterday were split. Merlin defeating\nWood and Mangln winning by default fr_m Marcel Bernard who suffered an Injured knee while leading\ntwo sets  to one.\nTRAIL, May 15\u2014Bylaws for the\nTrail Lacrosse association have been\npassed and the new* sports body is\nnow on ftn organized basis.\nA. W. McDonald 1 the senior hockey club's executive representative and\nHarry Murdock will act for the\njuniors. Maple Leafs ara as yet unrepresented\nOutdoor practices will' continue\nuntil it ls known whether a floor is\nto be put In at the rink. Tnere 1*\nstill a lock of equipment.\n21-19.\nP. Bites, W. Brown, a. Brown and\nF. Waters of Nelson defeated Flynn.\nJ. Campbell, J. Thompson and A.\nBalfour of Trail,  16-15.\nR. McG.-ee, O. McKay, MeKinnon\nand O. Watson of Trail defeated\nE. Y. Brake, S. Bate, G. A. Meercs\nand  J.  Armstrong  of  Nelson,  27-17.\nMllllgan, Ferguson and Aitken of\nTrail defeated W. C. Chapman, W.\nBrown, R. A. Alders-nlth and E.\nPenwlll  of  Nelson  26-12.\nAfter a pitching duel of four\nInnings the Fairview squad bunched\neight hits for 10 runs to nose out\nthe Falcons 14-13 Saturday evening. The bright spot of the game\nwas the twirling of Steve Smith,\nsouthpaw of the Fairview team. He\nstruck out 18 men in 6 1-3 innings\nand only walked one man until the\nsixth.\nTeam* were:\nFalcou*\u2014yoore e. Hunden p-Sb,\nGillette 3b-p, K=skl lf, Elliott lb.\nP. Kuntz ss, Mclnnes cf, J. Kuntz\n2b,  Jarrett  2b,  Crack  rf.\nFairview\u2014Duffy 2b, Cooper rf, C\nSmith rf, Llpsett ss, Wilson c, Bishop 3b-c, Rothery 3b, Langlll lb-p,\nScott  If,  Haines  ef,  8.  Smith  6-lb.\nScore  nj Innings:\nR     H   E\nFalcons      130 2*25 0\u201413    13    6\nFairview   \u201e 301 0 10 0 X-\u201414    13   4\nThree-base hits I_anglll, two-base\nhits Crack, Moore, Elliott, Hundon,\nLipaett; base on balls, off Smith\n4, off Hunden I; struck out by\nSmith 18, by Langlll 2. by Hunden\n9, by Gillette 3.\nROBERT GEE PASSES\nAT NELSON, SUNDAY\nSENIOR BASEBALL\nLEAGUE BECOMES\nAN ALLCANADIAN\nTrail, Rossland, Grand Forks\nand Nelson Join; Umpire\nSystem Changed\nSIDEWALKS ON\nBAKER WILL BE\nPUT IN SHAPE\nWork May Start at End of\nWeek After Mill.Hail\nProject\nFour Canadian baseball teams participating, fltP Canadian-Washington\nleague will now be known as the\nKootenay Baseball league it wai\ndecided by members of the league\nwho, presided over by President C.\nE. Crowe of Trail, met ln the Savoy ;\nhotel here Sunday morning. The\nfour teams are Trail, Rossland,\nGrand  Forks  and Nelson.\nA new system ol umpiring ls to be\nInstituted. Each team Is to submit\ntwo and lf possible three na.mes to\nthe president as first, second and\nthird choice for umpires of games.\nThe president is to endeavor to get\numpires wh0 are acceptable to both\nteams.\nAll  players  ln Trail  who  are not\nregistered  In  the  Trail  club   are   to\nbe eligible to play for Rossland.\nLEAGIE   SERIES   DECIDED\nThe league series Is to consist of a\ntwo-round home and home schedule,\nthe winner of each i,alf playing off.\nIf the same team wins each half.\nthe first and second team will play\noff, two out of three games. Schedules for the first half were drawn\nup  as  follows:\nMay 22\u2014Rossland at Orand Forks;\nNelson  at  Trail.\nMay 20\u2014Trail at Rossland; Grand\nForks   at   Nelson.\njune 6\u2014Nelson at Rossland; Trail\nat Grand  Forks.\nJune 12\u2014Orand Forks at Trail;\nRowland  at  Nelson.\nJune 19\u2014Trail at Nelson; Orand\nForks   at   Rowland.\nJune 26\u2014Nelson at Grand Forks;\nRossland   at   Trail.\nAs soon as the concrete sidewalk\nproject on Mill and Hall streetj\nls completed, which should d*\nbefore the end of th\u00a9 week, a\ngeneral program of putting Baker\nstreet sidewalks In good ahape will\nbe entered upon. Cement from a\ncarload Just arrived was hauled up\nto Mill street Friday, ln preparation\nfor pouring concrete.\nIt ls expected that th Is sidewalk, which will extend from the\nMill-Hall intersection for a full\nblock on the north side of Mill\nand for half a block on the west\nside of Hall, will be finished about\nThursday,\nin bad nun\nThe Baker street sidewalks are.\ngenerally speaking, tht oldest lu\nthe city, and many of the squares\nare out of alignment, cracks hsva\ndeveloped in others, and there are\nsome places, also, where plank or\npoll temporarily serve. From end to\nend of Baker street, wherever necessary, the concrete will be aligned\nand completed, under the Instructions given by the city council.\nNo one method will be followed\nby City Engineer Boyd C. Affleck,\nbut ln most cases, probably, the\nworst square will be broken up and\nthe surrounding squares corrected,\nafter whloh new concrete will replace the broken square. But ln\nsome places lt may be necessary\nto lay considerable stretches of\nnew  concrete.\nThe two ends of Baser street are\nof course In excellent shape, their\nsidewalks having been laid at\nvarious  times   since   1927.\nRobert Oee. elderly Kootenay lake\nrancher, died at Nelson early Sunday   morning.\nHe leaves a wife and grown-up\nfamily.\nL>3T MINUTE\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nFURNISHED TWO ROOM SUITE \u2014\nK.   W.   C.   Block. inn\")\nNEWS Of THE DA\\\nSons of England meet tonight in\nMemorial   Hall,   8   o'clock.      (2167)\nSuite $24. Rex Tailoring Co., Ltd.\nMacDonald   agent,   315'a   Baker  St.\n(1935)\nFor Rent\u2014Single or double housekeeping rooms. Annable block.\nFor rent \u2014 rooms most reasonable\nby day or month, strathcona hotel.\n(20731\nCall   838  for' your  hauling   and\ntransfer work. Jack Hoogerwerf.\n(2120)\nUnfurnished 8-room suite. Hardwood floors. Electric Frldg., aJso one\nfurnished   suite,  Kerr   Apt*.   UU4&.\nCELEBRATION    AT    YMIR    MAY\n24. BIG ROCK DRILLING CONTEST.\nBaseball,  log  pawing  and all other\nsports. Dance tn the evening. Music\nby  Trail  Troubadours,  five  pieces.\n(21-32)\nWe are in the market for strawberries, raspberries, gooseberries,\nblackberries, cherries, plums, greengages, currant8 and crabapplea. McDonald  Jam Co., Ltd. (2082)\nGRAIN TO START MOVING TO\nCIIVKCHILL\nSASKATOON, Sask., May 15.*-\nOraln will start moving to Churchill tomorrow as part of the first\ncommercial shipment via the Hudson Bay route.\nToday only\u2014Kootenay Lake ferry\nwill make two trips. The first\nleaves Fraser's Landing at 9 a, m..\nand the next about & p. m., on\nthe arriva\/i of the Mtoyle from\nKaslo. Signed \u2014 Provincial public\nWorks. (2173)\nHoleproof\nHosiery\nwith\nthe\nEX-TOE\nCome in and see the n\u00ab\nSpring styles in HolH\nproof\u2014.patterns in colon\n;hat harmonize with you|\nnew Spring suits \u2014 df\njigns that appeal to you\ntaste\u2014in qualities tha\ngive you the utmost i\nwear \u2014 silks, silk an\nwools and lisles. Try\nfew pairs today.\n50c\n75c\n$1.00\nat\n^\nIn a race between a horse an\nlocomotive, in 1830, something\nwrong   with   the  engine and  w\nIt struggled along the horse won\nrace. \u2022\nFor Modern Plumbii,\nat Moderate Prices\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER   PLl'MBF.B\nOpp.  City  Uall rson. I\nLET US DISPENSE YOUB\n.     PRESCRIPTION\nPurest   Drugs,   Accurate   n'spens\nModerate  Charges\nCITY DRUG CO\nNelson's   Dispensing   Chemist-\nCall and get your correct weight\nCARD   OF   THANKS\nMr. Rod MacPherson and family\nof New Denver wish to thank all\nthose who so kindly assisted In\nany way, and all who sent floral\nand spiritual offerings, during their\nrecent sad bereavement in the\nloss of a loving wife and mother.\n(2175)\nLight am\nHeavy\nHaulage\nWith our equipment we ai\nprepared to take care of i\nyour transfer needs\u2014\nJUST CALL 797\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\n\"Mortals, Immortals\"\nLesson-Sermon in\nScience Church\nThe subject of tne lesson-sermon\nIn First Church or Christ, Scientist.\nNelson, on Sunday, was \"Mortals\nand   lmmii'ta_s.'* !\nOne of the Bible t-Mita was: \"Mark\nthe perfect man, and behold the\nupright: for the end of that nan is\npeace.\"    (Psalms   37:37).\nThe lesson-sermon also Included\nthe following passage from \"Science\nand Hen-lth with Key to the\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy.\n\"This mortal Is put off, and the\nnew man or real man is put on,\nin proportion as mortals realize I\nthe science of man and seek the\ntrue  model.\"   (Page  409).\nTHE   \"PACIFIC   COAST\"   PROVINCE\nIn the minds of most Canadians,\nBritish Columbia is always thought\nof as lying entirely along the Pacific\ncoist west of the mountains. It ls\nnot generally realized that about 27\nper cent of the total area of the\nprovince according to the Topographical survey, department of the\nInterior, lies within the Mackenzie\nriver watershed, or that Its northeast corner ls 300 miles east of\nthe mountains ln the basin of\nLUrd river, the greatest and least\nknown of the three main tributaries\nof the Mackenzie, namely the Aiha-\nbaaka. peace and I..ard. Moreover,\na large part of this area Is a continuation of the fertile plate.u\nwhich extends from tl*-) Great\nLakes to the Rockies and contains\nsome of the richest farming land in\nthe country.\nMAN TIIE PIMPS\nNew Orleans, located in a natural\nbowl with no outlet for rain w.iter\nto flow by gravity to the Mississippi,\nhas 1\" pumps removing 60.000 cubic\nfeet of storm water -ach and every\nminute of tha day.\nTWO GREAT STARS\nTOGETHER FOR THE\nFIRST TIME IN\nA TALKIE\n44\n\u2014run;. \u2014\nTAXI   and\nTRANSFIR\nDally Freight frt.edule to Trail\nand Hossland. Leaves Nelson at\n10 a.m. Trail Der Dominion\nGarage; Rossis ' Depot, L. D.\nCafe. C\\N  CCMM1NS\nMARLENE\nDIETRICH\nand\nCLIVE\nBROOK\nScreendom's most lovable personality        Screendom's most personable lover\nin\n\u2022\u2022Shanghai Express1'\nOnce her arms enfolded . .m\n. . . she was Ills . , , hut\nthat was before she became a\nnotorious adventure-\".*-!. Now In\na strange country, during war's\nexcitement, he claims her again!\nSee  how   he     ins.\nANNA MAY WONG\nWARNEROLAND\nEUGENE PALETTE\nThe warm, lo\\\\n_ Dietrich In\na mood jon have never seen her\nportray before! A romantic adventuress holding close to the\none man of 20- who want her!\nSEE    THIS    GREAT    \u2022\u25a0ICTIRE*\nThree days \u2014 Opening\ntoday\nMONDAY\nTUESDAY\nWEDNESDAY\nMatinee % p.m.\nEvenings   7   and   9  p.m.\nSHORT SUBJECTS\n'\"\u25a0       -    - \"- ...... j- --      r -   i .\nThose   Two   Hparkllng\nCommedlennen\nTHELMA TODD\nsnd\nZASU PITTS\n\"ON THE LOOSE\"\nComedy That Yon WIU Enjoy\nMOVIETONE NEWS\nCOMING\nTHURSDAY\nFRIDAY\nand\nSATURDAY\nMAIRICF.   CHEVALIER\nand\njeanett..   Mcdonald\nIn\nONE HOUR WITH YOU*\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_16","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\/1.0405989","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":"1932-05-16 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":"1932-05-16 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":""}]}