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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":" War Admiral is Winner of\nPreakness Classic\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\nnsmmjmwwprm'.mv' u*w\u00bbw , i'miwa^u.ii.piw.'mm\n1 Vt. i      '      ).:.]\nVOLUME t\u00bb\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\n\"HI\n'\u25a0\u25a0     fall.\nVancouver Third in the Home\nImprovement Loans\n\u2014Pa&e Nlm\n3LUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1937\ni\nNUMBER I\nUNABLE TO FORM NEW\nLetter Carrier Service Starts\nShortly for Nelson and Trail\nUNDERWOOD IN ~\nTHE PROPOSAL\nTrail Delivery to Start\nSeptember,   He\nIntimates\nSUGGESTS CHANGE\nIN STREET NAMES\nPoints  to   Need   for\nHouse Numl5ers;\nTells Cost\nGiven the approval of me postmaster-general, Trail and Nelson\nwill have home letter delivery\nshortly. This was Indicated over\nthe week-end by E. J. Underwood,\nchief superintendent of post office\nservices, when he visited the Interior centres wltn G. H. Clarke\nof Vancouver, postal director for\nBritish Columbia, and J. B. Cor-\nlay of Calgary, director for Alberta. He Intimated the service\nwould'probably start In Trail In\nSeptember, and stated he would\nwrite to Nelson upon hll return to\nOttawa.\nIn Nalson Mr. Underwood met\nolty council representatives and a\ncommittee of the board of trade\nconsisting of C F. McHardy, H. A.\nPearson and J. P. Fink.\n(Continued on Page Four)\nGreaf-Aunt of\nfive Generations One\nFamily Revealed in\nCoronation Note\nPhotos and stories ef the coronation spectacle In Britain are\nfinding a reflection In many Canadian homes, and In at least two\nInstances In Kootenay homes.\nWhen Mrs. Ada Green of 8toney\n* Creek, on the outskirts of Trail\nand Tadanac,  read  \"Coronation\nSidelights\" In Thursday's Issue of\nthe Netson Dally News she read an\nItem stating \"Mrs. Emma Coate,\nwhose 106 years have gained her\nthe title of Great Britain's oldest\nwoman, celebrated at her Taunton\nhome In Somerset by planting a\ncommemorative oak.\"\nMrs. Green in a letter to the News\nexplains that Mrs. Coate is \"my\nmother's-aunt, therefore my great-\naunt, my son's great-great-aunt, and\nmy   grandson's   great-great-great-\naunt, thus making five generations\nstill living, of which three live in\nTrail, the other two in Taunton.\"\nShe lists the generations thus:\n\"Mrs. Emma Coate, Taunton, aunt\nof Mrs. Ellen Derhanaw Taunton,\nmother ot Albert Henry Creen, East\nTrail, father of Glen Albert Green,\nEast Trail.\"\nThe other Instance In which the\ncoronation was closely connected\nwith the Kootenays was in the radio\npicture of Lord and Lady Armstrong\nentering Westminster abbey, Lord\nArmstrong being the godfather of F.\nA, Stuart of Nelson.\nsn't Take Long to Jam\nA minute or two before this picture was taken, a Salmo car and John\nFraser's auto collided as the latter started to leave the curb. It waa a\nslight collision, the damage being only about $2.50, but It served to jam\ntraffic at Baker and Ward streets intersection in short order.\nCrowds Applaud as II Dace\nMakes \"Digs\" at the World\nItaly to Be Self-Sufficient Even If She Has to\nWork \"24 Hours a Day\" Mussol ini Declares;\n\"World Armed to Teethr\nROME,   May   18   (Monday)-f\n(AP)\u2014The Italian press was Instructed today to ease up on Its\nantl-Brltlsh tactics.\nNo further aggressive attacks\nare to be made against Great\nBritain, and neither are any antl-\nBrltlsh polemics published In\nother countries to be reprinted,\nthe,instructions said.\nv,tWeWlntorrWated a* (Change\n'of polley following Premier Mus*\nsollnl't bitter attitude toward the\nBritish press, culminating In a\nvirtual   boycott   of   coronation\n*mmi'\nAll British newspapers except\nthreAwere banned from Italy, all\nItalian correspondents In London\nwere recalled, and' one British\ncorrespondent was expelled from\nItaly, British press Jibes at Italian fighters In Spain had angered\nItaly,\nSubscribers to the banned\nnewspapers said today they were\nreceiving the papers again,\nROME, May 1\u00ab (AP)-ltaly will\nmake herself economically self-\nsufficient even If she haa to work\n\"24 hours a day,\" Premier Benito\nMussolini proclaimed Saturday.\nHe called this program a guarantee of peace and a surety of \"the\nlife, the futura and the power\"\nof the Italian people. The premlr\nlaid down his dictum before members of the corporative guild which\nIncludes representatives of all\nphases of Fascist life, at their annual meeting,\nThe black-uniformed audience\nlaughed and applauded his Ironic\nreferences to democracies, which,\nhe declared, wished Italy to abandon her self-sufficiency program\n\"for we know not what.\"\nHe provoked a demonstration by\nan apparent reference to the United\nStates when he spoke of a country\nwhich \"prohibited collective laobr\ncontracts until a month ago.\"\n(Continued on Page Four)\nKing George VI Canadian Coins\nin Circulation; New Designs on\nReverse of All but the Dollar\nOTTAWA, May 18 (CP).-Can-\nada's new George VI silver, nickel\nand copper coins are now jingling\nIn the cash-registers and pockets of\nthe nation, having been issued from\nthe Canadian mint in three of the\nfive series on May 13. The shiny\nnew coins have aroused favorable\ncomment, Dies for the BO-cent and\none dollar pieces have not yet been\nreceived but will be here shortly.\nWhen the series is complete, It\nwas made'known today by Mint\nMaster J. H. Campbell, it is the intention to make available through\nthe Bank of Canada, specimen sets\ntor collectors.\nThe new coins which began to\nmake their appearance in general\ncirculation Friday, are copper cents,\nsmall; large nickels, dimes and quarters. They are the same size ai the\nissue ot the same coins which preceded them. The large cent and\nsmall silver 9-cent pieces have been\nabandoned, although many are still\nin circulation.\nFor the silver dollar, first minted\nin Canada in 1939 to mark the silver\nJubilee of King George V, the only\nchange will be on the obverse side\nwhich will bear the effigy of the\npresent King .instead of that of his\nfather. The reverse is a canoe\nmanned by an Indian paddler and a\nvoyaguer, with an islet in the background on which are two windblown firs, and the aurora borealis\nis streaking the sky.\nObverse of all the new coins are\nthe same, a profile likeness of\nGeorge VI, facing left. For the\" 50-\ncent piece the reverse bears between\nsupporters the ensigns armorial ot\nCanada in a shield surmounted by\nthe royal crown, with well-spaced\nlettering for the value of the year,\nand \"Canada\" which appears on all\nthe coins.\nFor the 25-cent piece the reverse\nis a caribou head with the value\nfigures placed between the antlers.\nA tishing schooner is reproduced on\nthe reverse of the 10-cent piece, a\nbeaver on the S-ccnt with maple\nleafs, while the copper cent bears a\ntwo-leaved maple twig. The nlckal\nand copper are smooth-edged and\nthe others grained.\nMUSSOLINI\nThree New Swim\nRecords\nHAMILTON, Ont., May 16 (CP).-\nThree Canadian swimming records\nwere broken here Saturday. New\nrecords were established for the\nJunior women's 200 yards free style;\nmen's 100 yards free style and men's\n200 yards four-man relay.\nAudrey Book, Hamilton, started\nthe record-smashing drive when she\nbroke Betty Bachelor's record established four years ago. Miss Book\nswept through the 200 yards free\nstyle in 2:36.09 to clip one-tenth of a\nsecond off the Toronto girl's mark.\nGeorge Larson, Hamilton, shattered the men's 100 yards free style\nmark also by a tenth of a second.\nLarson, an Olympic and British\ngames veteran for Canada, churned\nhis distance in 54.1, hoisting the record formerly held by Bob Pirie of\nToronto.\nThird record went to the Hamilton\nAquatic club's relay team, made up\nof Jack McCormick, Jack Lewis,\nHarold Whitlock and Jack Allaster.\nThey negotiated the 200. yards in\n1:39.02, two seconds faster lhan the\nmark they made last February when\nthey set a new record:\nRUSSIAN ARMY\nCOMMANDER\nSLAIN      \u2022\nMOSCOW, May 16 (AP)\u2014B. V.\nPavloff-Silvanksy, Soviet army commander and one of the country's\nbest known experimenters with\nparachutes, was shot and killed today by a scared civilian sentry. An\n18-year-old youth on guard at a\nsuburban airfield fled when Pav-\nloff-Silansky reproved him because\na hangar door had been left open.\nKilled in Spain\nFIND GIUI'S BODY;\nBOY'S THROAT CUT\n111   <#\nBelieved to be the lint Canadian\nkilled In fighting in war-torn Spain,\nAdrian Vanderbrugge (above), 83-\nyear-old resident of St. Catharines,\nOnt., was killed while fighting the\nFascist troops, .according to a report\nreceived by his parents. Vanderbrugge, a member of the Abraham\nLincoln Battalion, composed mostly\nof Americans,' Joined the loyalist\nforces at the beginning of the war.\nA civil engineer,.he had been active\nin Communist circles in St. Catharines.\nL\nVICE-PRESIDENT\nOF SHERBROOKE\nPAPER IS DEAD\nSHERBROOKE, Que., May 16\n(CP).\u2014Charles Percy Buckland, 41,\nvice-president and business manager\nof the Sherbrooke Record Publishing company, which prints the Daily\nRecord, died suddenly early today,\nUp until Saturday he had been at\nhis desk daily.\n-\u2014^\nWIFE OF QUEBEC\nBAKERY DRIVER\nThree Boys and Girl\nHave \"Good Chance\nof Living\"\nBABES PREMATURE\nI BY TWO MONTHS\nMother Making Gooa1\n\"$\u00abfco^^PaW'':\nIs Amazed\nFLASH!\nMONTREAL, May 17 (Men\nday)\u2014(CP)\u2014Two, a girl and\na boy, of tha quadruplets, born\nyesterday to Mrs. Paul Martel\ndied in hospital early today,\nMONTREAL, May .16 (CP)-\nQuadruplets arrived suddenly to\nday at the home of an amused\nbakery wagon driver and his dark-\neyed young wife.\n. Mrs. Paul Martel gave birth to\nthree boys and a girl In a front\nbedroom of their five-room house\nIn suburban Malsonneuve while\nher three, other toddlers raised a\nclamor In the kitchen and their\nfather proudly telephoned grandfather to \"Come over and get a\nsurprise.\"\nThe squalling quads\u2014second set\nborn In Quebec province this year\n\u2014thrived tonight In four Incubators at Ste. Justine hospital. In an-,\nother ward of tht hospital lay tha\nsturdy French-Canadian mother.\nIn considerable pain but making a\ngood recovery.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nAnother Zeppelin\nVictim Succumbs\nLAKEWOOD, N.J., May. 16 (AP).\n\u2014Otto C. Ernst, 78, Hamburg cotton\nbroker who was injured in the destruction ot the airship Hindenburg\nMay 6, died Saturday at Paul Kimball hospital. This brought the number of disaster dead to 36.\nThe condition of his wife, 63, also\ninjured in the disaster, was described as good.\nMRS. GRANT HALL\nDIES AT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, May 16 (CP).-\nMrs. Grant Hall, widow of trie former senior vice-president of the\nCanadian Pacific railway, died today at her home.\n3-Year-Old Lad Lives;\n7-Vear-Old Lass Is\n, Partly Burned\nCHILRENMAKE\nGRUESOME FIND\n\u2022'joeDid It\u2014Mommy's\nHurt Too,\" Says\nBaby\nBROOKHAVEN, N.Y., May 16\n(AP)<\u2014Children playing In a\nthicket near this Long Island village today found the partially\nburned body of a gjrl about seven\nyears old, and nearby a three-\nyear-old boy with his throat out\nDr. perry Hftiiensteln said the\nboy, who gave his name as \"Jimmy,\" would recover.\nA boy and a girl playing In the\nwoods stumbled upon the body of\na girl,\" Dr. Hohenstein said. \"The\nchild's threat had been cut and\nan attempt made to burn her\nbody. , \u2022\nLeas than 100 feet away the\nohlldron saw the boy, bleeding\nfrom a throat wound. Nearby a\nknife was found, I saw nothing at\ntha scene to Indicate the Identity\nof th* two children.   Both ware\nplainly dressed.\"    -      \u201e.r   ,   ,\nDr. Hohenstein notified Brook-\nhaven police, who also received a\nreport the girl's body was encased\nin a sack when found.\nThe Suffolk county district at'\ntorney, Brookhaven police and state\npolice immediately Joined in a\nthree-way investigation of the slay\nTii\u00bb first step, they said, was to\nlearn the identity of the children.\nThe boy, although conscious, could\nonly mumble \"Jimmy \u2014 Jimmy\"\nwhen hospital attendants asked his\nnfane.-. ' V    .'.,.. ?\u25a0\nBut ha could not gly^hls last\nname prtell where he lived,    ,\n\"Mommy's hurt, jatu    . \u25a0 \\\n\"Joe brought us Ice cream and\nthen hart us.\" ,'\nMargaret Savage, eight, was on\nher way to a confectionery shop and\nwas taking a short cut through the\nwoods' when She stumbled on the\nbody ot the girl. Frightened, she\nran to the highway, where she cr\u00abd.\nJumped up and down and waved\nuntil a motorist stopped;\nAbout 12 feet from the girl's body\nthe leaves and grass were burned\nand nearby a bloooswmed butcher\nknife, a bloodstained pair ot scissors,\nand an axe with no stains was\nfound: ..<\nA faint odor ot gasoline permeated the burned clothes of both\nvictims. ' .   , ,,\nDistrict Attorney Bsfrron Hill of\nSuffolk county said tha assailant\napparently believed ha had killed\nboth children, had saturated their\nclothes with gasoline, set fire to\nthem and piled on leaves.\nFor some reason the fire went\nout, Hill surmised, and the little\ngirl crawled a feiv.teet away and\ndied, while the boy managed to\nstruggle 200 feet away.\nPatterson Offers\nNANAIMO, B. C, May 16 (CP)\nVoters of this coal mining centre\ntoday had the promise of Dr. Frank\nPatterson, provincial Conservative\nleader, that a government headed\nby him would appoint a group of experts to consider how the interests\nof the coal industry could be best\nadvanced and how coal by-products\ncould be developed commercially.\nThe Conservative leader, speaking\non' behalf of Gordon N. Money,\nparty candidate for Cotnox-Court\nenay. in the June 1 provincial elec\ntions, criticized the present Liberal\ngovernment for having permitted a\nroyal commission to spend the last\nthree years Investigating British\nColumbia's industry \"at vast public\nexpense\" without having produced\na report or suggestions.   .\nALBANIA TOWN SEIZED, UPRISING\nTroops Rushed to Argyroskastro as Former\nCabinet Minister Stages Coup\nBELGRADE, Yugoslavia, May\n16 (AP)<\u2014Reporte from the Albanian border tonight said revolutionaries remained In possession of Argyrokastro. Police, the\nreports slid, were made prisoners.\nTho Tirana administration was\nsaid to have sent troops to tha\ntown. Most of Argyrokastro's Inhabitants are Greek.\nENCIRCLE TOWN\nTTRANA, May 16 (CP-Havas).-\nAlbanian government troops tonight\nencircled the town of Argyrokastro,\nheld since late yesterday by a group\nof rebels headed by former cabinet\nminister Ethem Toto, and advanced\nwithout resistance.\nAll positions between Tirana and\nArgyrokastro were reported occupied by the loyal troops. The uprising, in which a police captain was\nkilled, was described as \"Communist-inspired.\"\nCalm was reported In all other\nparts of Albania, with thousands of\nmessages pouring in to King Zog.\ndescribing the revolt as a \"criminal\nattempt\" and affirming the loyalty\not all sections ot the Albanian people.\nThe insurgents were said to have\nthe backing ot a police officer and a\nretired captain.\nDeath of Viscount Snowden\nComes as Shock to Britain\nCrippled at 27, Weaver's Son Rose to One\nof Most Important Positions in Public\nLife; Title Becomes Extinct\nLONDON, May 16 (CP)\u2014Friends and enemies that'he made during\na long political career today paid tribute to Viscount Snowden, a weaver's son who conquered a lifetime of ill health to become Labor's first\nchancellor of the exchequer. He died Saturday of a heart attack, aged 72.\nHis wife\u2014who once said Bhe fell in love with him \"when I saw him\nsmUe\"-rwas his only immediate sur-i\nvlvor. His title, Viscount Snowden\nof Ickornsliaw, becomes extict.\nLord Snowden struggled In recent years with increasing pain and\nillness. He was crippled at 27, when\nknocked from a bicycle. He spent a\nyear in bed and limped thereafter,\nwalking with the aid of two sticks.\nHis rise in public life despite severe physical handicap has been\ncompared, with that of President\nRoosevelt, who fought the crippling\neffects of infantile paralysis.\nThe. former chancellor of the exchequer, who took Great Britain off\nthe gold standard in the financial\ncrisis,ot. 1931 and Introduced the\nfamous \"axe and tax\" budget of the\nBathe year, died at 4 a.m. at his\ncountry home at Tilford, Surrey. He\nhad been inactive politically for\nfive years although his biting criticism of the National government\nwas occasionally heard in the house\not lords. \u25a0:,,.\u25a0'.\n(Continued on Page Two)\npremier who\nquit Saturday!\nadmits failui\nCaballero Refuses toj\nMake Further Try\natValehcia\nWEEK-END RAID BY\nAIR IS WORST YEl\nInsurgents   Drive  on\nToward Seaport\nof Bilbao\nVALENCIA,   Spain,   May   1\n(AP)\u2014Francisco Largo Caballero\ntonight refused to make further\nefforts to form a new government\nto replaoa the oablnet whose resignation ha turned In Saturday\nHis refusal, announced to President Manual Aaana who had corn-\nmissioned the atom, gray-haired\nleader to form a \"Win the War*\nministry, was based on strong opposition to his proposals on tht\nmakeup of the new oablnet.\nA stalemate was reached largely\nbecause of the veteran's Insistence\non  retaining  the  war  ministry\n; portfolio with the premiership...\nThis plan met the determined opposition of the communists who announced they were intent on reorganization ot the war machine for\nan intensive drive to victory against\nGeneral Francisco Franco's insurj-\nants.\n(Continued on Pane Four)\nAgainst One Big\n'   urn*  >\nPREMIER PATTULLO\n. PRINCE RUPERT, B. C, May 16\n'(CP)-Premler T. D. Pattullo told\nthe people of his constituency that\nhis government was in favor of collective bargaining by workers so\nlong as it was conducted on a democratic basis.\nThe premier, who reached here by\nplane at the end of the fifth lap of\nhis aerial campaign tour of British\nColumbia, said he had been asked\nby the Prince Rupert trades and\nlabo\/ council his position with respect to labor's demand for collective bargaining.\n\"I told them,\" he said, \"that if\nthey mean by collective bargaining\nthe interference of a One Big Union\nby means of which a small group o(\nmen will dictate the relations of\nworkers and employers, I am against\nit\"\nHe added: \"I am in favor of collective bargaining provided it is\nconducted on a fair and democratic\nbasis.\"\nBACK AT VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, May 16 (CF)-Pre-\nmier T. D. Pattullo ended an aerial\nelection campaign tour of British\nColumbia tonight when his plane\narrived in Victoria from Prince Rupert, 500 miles up the coast The premier left Prince Rupert, his home\nconstituency, this morning, stopping\nat Alert Bay for lunch. The flight\nfrom Alert Bay to Victoria, with\nPilot E. W. C. Dobbin at the controls, took two and a half hours.\nGOERINGOFF\nFOR MUNICH\nVENICE, Italy, May 16 (CP-\nHavas). \u2014 German Air Minister\nGoering left here today by plane for\nMunich. General Goering was accompanied by his wife who had vacationed in Italy.\nMRS, E. M. GOWAN DIES\nVANCOUVER, May 16 (CF)-Fu-\nneral services will be held in Vancouver tomorrow for Mrs. Ethel M.\nGowan, 60, wife of George H. Gow-\nan, supervisor of western branches\nof the Credit Foncier Branco-Cana-\ndien company here and formerly of\nEdmonton. She died in Victoria Friday.\n$80,000 Loss in\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska, May 16\n(AP). \u2014 Flood refugees looked\ngloomily upon the subsiding Tanaha\nand Chena rivers today end heard\nthat unofficial estimates set the loss\nfor the inundated area at not .less\nthan $650,000.\nAa the. water receded gradually,\nthe estimates of damage increased.\nWaters of Chena which joins Tan-\nana below Fairbanks dropped six\nfeet below Thursday's peak and remained at normal level for spring\nbreakup.\nRest al Windsor\nLONDON, May. 18 (CP Cable)-\nThe King and Queen relaxed in the\nquiet of the royal lodge at Windsor\ntoday following a crowded week.\nAhead of them are other strenuous\ndays filled with official engagements.\nLondon remained packed with\nsightseers. Immense crowds filled\nthe West End again Saturday night,\nblocking the streets and slowing\nautomobiles to a walk.\nEngagement ol\nWindsor and\nIs Soon\nKing May Announce.J|\n\"ursoSCpay Know]\nDate Tomorrow    |\n. LONDON, May 16 (API. - Th*\nSunday Referee predicted itoday tht<\nKing wtt.announce the engagement\nof tnalflKe ot Windsor and Mrs.\nWarfieiapai| Wk.'\n\"The King thi. week will announce th.4 engagement,\" th? Referee stated; \"It will be the royal\nfamily's first public recognition of\nthe duke's association with Mrs.\nWarfield. j ff\n\"The duke has asked the King if\nhe will make an announcement.\nThe King has.agreed and it will\nappear in the London Gazette, tha.\ngovernment's official organ, probably on Thursday . . .\"\nThe referee said tne Duke of Kenra\nWill be best man at the wedding\nand that the Princess Royal, lid-\nward's sister, Mary, Countess\"at\nHarewood, also will attend, both as\nrepresentatives of the royal family,\nThe Referee also seated Winston\nChurchill and David Lloyd Georga\nmay be wedding guests.\nWith the duke's wedding plana'\nlikely to be announced Tuesday, \"it \u25a0\nwas believed King George's &*\u2022'\nclsion as to whether the duk**\nfuture wife would be styled \"her;\nroyal highness\" would be forthcbm<\nIng this weak.\nWilkinsons Gel Scaled Down\nDamages From the Greyhounc\nGet $2695 of $15,384 Claimed; Mr. Justice\nManson Drives Court to Genelle, Views\nCorner; Urges Immediate Remedy\nOfficiating at the steering wheel,\nMr. Justice Manson Saturday personally transported the assize court\nout to Genelle, took road measurements at the site of the collision of\nNovember 3 between a Greyhound\nbus and P. A. Peterson's car, studied\nthe curve, the rock bluff on the\nupper side, the precipice on the\nlower side, matters ot travelled surface, angles of vision, passing cars,\nand other points pertinent to the\ndamage suite brought against Cen:\ntral Canadian Greyhound Lines,\nLtd., by Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Wilkinson of Grand Forks, and driving\nback to Nelson heard the addresses\nof counsel at a late afternoon session, and concluded the three-day\ntrial shortly after 6 o'clock with a\njudgment for the plaintiffs considerably scaled down from the damages claimed.\nMr. Wilkinson was awarded $1500\ngeneral damages and $345 special\ndamages, and Mrs. Wilkinson $850\ngeneral damages. The claim was for\n$10,000 general damages for Mr.\nWilkinson, $5000 general damages\nfor Mrs. Wilkinson, and $380.40 special damages for expenses incurred.\nFIVE ON JAUNT\nThe court party on the jaunt was\nlimited to official representatives,\nC. F, R. Pincott of Grand Forks foi\nthe plaintiffs, C. B. Garland for the\ndefendant company, John Cartmel.\ndeputy registrar, and F. G. Perry,\ncourt stenographer, the car being\nprovided by the Greyhound.\nWhile no recorded evidence waa\ntaken on the \"view,\" it is reported\n(Continued on Pane Four)\nWea\nSUNDAY WEATHfR\nNelson  - 32 6+\nVictoria  47 60\nVancouver  42 59\nKamloops , 36 58\nPrince George  29 60\nEstevan Point  42 50\nPrince Rupert  50 56\nLangara  42 50\nDawson, Y.T 34 46\nSeattle  52 58\nPortland, Ore 56 74\nSan Francisco  48 60\nSpokane   44 78\nLos Angeles'  60 74\nPenticton 34\nCalgary  38 62\nEdmonton  30 64\nSwift Current 26 68\nMoose Jaw   34 68\nPrince Albert   36 68\nSaskatoon  36 66\nQu'Appelle    36 63\nWinnipee   !  44 62\nI\ni\n-Trr-r^nfliiitfiliffl)i^ia^itftf.^iMlMttMl.^^\nHHMMftMgtf|ii|||\nHBgHfllHHMi\n WW- \"JW\"\u00ab**\u00bb\u00bbIU  in     a\n^PPWp|rlPpiPPr|\u00bb\nWSPW^R?'!w^',\"IwW^Ri?W\nvGE TWO-\noronalion Dinner Features Final\nEvent of Ihe Legion Bowling Term\nrizes Presented and\nSpeeches Follow a\nFine Repast\nPresentation o[ trophies won dur-\n% a season of splendid competition,\nvariety of toasts, short addresses\n:d a feeling of good fellowship\neated through the existence of\nie common bond, sportsmanship,\narked the Coronation dinner of\ne Canadian Legion Bowling club\nthe Legion hall Saturday night.\nie dinner formed also the official j\nason-closing. activity of the club.\nJ. Spencer, as toastmaster, pro-\n>sed the toast to \"the King.\"\n\"Our glorious dead\" was the next\nast, followed by a song, \"Absent,\"\nsautifully sung by Mrs. j. C. Hook-\n*. An encore, \"I Love You Truly,\"\nas given. A toast proposed by\n!r. Spencer lo \"our army, navy and\nr force\" was responded to by\ntajor A. E. Dalgas, officer com-\nlanding the 111m Field Battery,\n.C.A.\nIt was with great pleasure that he\nssponded to this toast, stated Mr.\nBlgas, for in his mind it was only\nirough the unselfish courage of\niis Majesty's forces, the army, navy\nnd air force, in the past war that\nrade it possible today for the\neople of the British nation to wit-\ness the coronation of their new\nling, a British monarch, and to\nather in celebration as those pres-\nnf were.\nTo \"fellow bowlers absent and\nresent\" was the next toast pro-\nosed by Mrs. J. H. Chapman. She\npoke briefly and feelingly on the\nast season's activities, games won\nnd lost during the year and sportsmanship generally.\nPresentation of a bouquet to Mrs.\nlhapman, known to the bowlers as\nMa,\" by Mr. Spencer, brought\nheers from the gathering. Mrs,\nChapman, \"the best bowler of the\nWEEK-END EXCURSIONS\nTO SPOKANE\nFrom South   \u00a3\u00a3 Aft   Round\nNelson       9>w     Trip\nGood Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays.    Final  return  following\nTuesday.\nGREAT NORTHERN Railway\nlot,\" added her thanks for the surprise.\nJ. H. Chapman proposed a toast\nto the \"Legion executives, president\nand staff.\"\nAll the credit for the splendid\ncondition of the alleys, for the way\nthe tourneys were conducted, and\nfor the revival of the sport in the\npast season was due largely to one\nman, \"Chappie,\" said Mr. Spencer\nin making a presentation on behalt\nof the club to Mr. Chapman,\nganizer, president and \"the hardest\nworker of the organization.\" Mr\nChapman stated that his efforts\nalone were not responsible for the\nflourishing condition of the club.\nbut the good spirit of the bowlers,\ntheir cooperation, the pinsetters\nand everyone, concerned, had\nbrought a \"touch of the old time.\"\nPresentation of the various\ntrophies was conducted by Mr.\nSpencer, chairman. The first presentation of the Cassios cup to Mrs.\nChapman and her team consisting\nof Mrs. T. Sowerby and Mrs. Robert\nSmith was followed by the singing\nof \"Mother Machree\" and \"Songs\nMy Mother Used to Sing\" by Victor\nGraves. Mrs. Chapman expressed\nher appreciation for the cooperation\nof her teammates and to Mr. and\nMrs. Nick Cassios for making possible the Cassios tournament. Next\npresentation was to S. J. Hillyard\nand his team, winners of the E.\nCollinson cup competition. Mr.\nHillyard answered for his team consisting of Nelson Jackson, D. Hin-\nton and J. Drummond. This was\nfollowed by singing of \"Smiles.\"\nThe Irvine shield won by J. Allen\nand team of N. Jackson and Frank\nSimms was presented, with \u2022 Mr.\nChapman answering for the absent\nplayers. \"The More We Are Together\" was sung in unison. In\npresenting the cup Mr. Spencer\nrecalled days ot 1919 when Fred\nIrvine was a bowler at the Legion\nand he himself was \"one of the pin\nboys.\"\nProud of her victory, Mrs. Chap,\nman accepted the Larson high aggregate score cup. She spoke\nbriefly on the fine character and\nsportsmanship of the donor, Carl\nLarson.   Mrs. Hooker rendered a\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.O-MONDAY MORNING, MAY I\nLondon Crowds Line Streets Hours Before Cor\nCrowds lined the streets of London through which the coronation\nprocession passed hours before the glittering parade got under way. These\nsmiling women are shown preparing for an all night vigil op the eve\nning preceding May 12. To see the procession they were content to spend\nthe night on improvised beds along the line of march. This picture was\ntransmitted to America by radio.\nGuide for Travellers\nr\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest In the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nGeo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30o and UP\nLunches lOo to SOo Dinner 40c to (So\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON, B.C. 422 VERNON ST.\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. F. Garrett,\nBault Ste. Marie, Ont; E. Burgess,\nSouth Slocan; V. Dolmage, H. M.\nAtkinson, H. C. Oliver, A. V. McLennan, J. Anderson, W. B. D. Lar-\nmouth, F. M. Lowell, W. P. Barret,\nF. W. Mathews, W. Needica, A. B.\nCliff, G. 0. Stratton, W. J. Twiss,\nL. W. Watson, J. D. Brook, J. W.\nHamilton, W. C. Terry, R. C. Guest,\nF, Hamilton, A. H. Macfarlane, E.\nF. Gillis, S. F. Cunnington, Vancouver; F. E. Wornser, Larchmont, N.Y.;\nMr. and Mrs. W. Harper, Trail; J.\nM. Baird, Cranbrook; R. V. Forbes,\nCreston; S. Ellis, P. A. Chester, G.\nW. Allan, Winnipeg; J. C. Butt, A.\nH. McGuire, F. L. Irving, D. Irving,\nCalgary; A. Anderson, D. McLeod,\nR. Todd, Medicine Hat; I. Crooks-\nton, Fernie; Mr. and Mrs. H. Anderson, Duncan; T. Reid, New Westminster; R. Hohrr, Dr. D. Hartin,\nSpokane; R. S. Fraser, D. J. Mc-\nAlmon, W. H. Percival, Penticton.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\n' MODERN  SAMPLE  ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark\/Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\n3E\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking NEL80N, B.C. Phone 234\nsolo, \"Mother of Mine,\" followed by\n\"Calling You Back to Me.\" '\nLarson high single cup was presented to Mrs. Thomas Sowerby,\n\"one of the new bowiers.\" The company united in singing \"When Irish\nEyes are Smiling,\" a solo part being\ntaken by Mr. Graves.\nMr. Chapman proposed a hearty\nvote of thanks to the committee\nwho had to work hard in making\nthe dinner a success, Mrs. James\nMclvor and committee, in charge of\ndecorations, Mrs. Hooker and committee, who were in charge of entertainment, and Mrs. Nelson Ball,\naccompanist, for her part in the\nentertainment, Mr, Chapman was\nconvener of the dinner event.\nH. E. Thain, secretary-treasurer\nof the Legion, congratulated the\nclub on its initiative in organieing\nsuch a splendid season and \"putting\nthe grand old sport of bowling over\nthe top.\" He hoped next season\nwould find \"three times as many\"\nbowlers on the alleys.\nExpressing his pleasure at seeing\nso many new faces and so many of\nthe old in the club again, Mr. Cassios addressed the gathering. He\nspoke briefly on the wonderful\nfeeling \"of good fellowship and\nsportsmanship that had pervaded\nthe club throughout its past season\nClosing their evening enjoyment\nin song, the gathering of 50 or\nbowlers joined in many of the old\nfavorites.\nAn inovation bringing oomments\nfrom all w*s the fine coronation\nmenu programs, planned by Mr.\nChapman. These were lined with\nred, white and blue and bore the\ncrown as a crest.\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St. Phone 897\nH. WASSICK.Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E.  MADDEN, Prop,\nCompletely Remodelled.\nt Hot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the City\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail-Phone us       Nelson-Phone 35\nTrail Livery Co.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nAFTER MAY 1st, 1937\nH. & H. TRANSFER\nLeave Nelson for Creston 6:30 a.m. Tuesday\u2014Friday\nLeave Creston for Nelson 12 noon. Wednesday\u2014Saturday\nThrough connection for Cranbrook, Kimberley and Fernie\nALL   FREIGHT   INSURED.\nP. 0. Box 677\nPljpne 77, Nelson, B. C.\nTelephone 16\nCreston, B. C.\nCRICKET SCORES\nLONDON, May 16 (CP Cable)-\nClose of play scores in English first-\nclass cricket matches started Saturday follow:\nSussex 200 (J. Parks 97); Middlesex 121 runs for six wickets; at\nLord's.\nDerbyshire 234 (G. Pope 61, P.\nSmith five wickets for 86 runs);\nEssex 68 for three wickets; at\nChelmsford. ,\nWorcestershire 161 (Paine four for\n48); Warwickshire 133 for five wickets; at Birmingham.\nLancashire 106 (Verity six for 32);\nYorkshire 124 for two; at Manchester.\nHampshire 266 (McCorkell 108);\nKent 12 for no wickets; at Southampton.\nSomerset 219 (Longriff 56); Gloucestershire 78 for two wickets; at\nTaunton.\nSurrey 169 (Voce five for 76, Lar-\nwood four for 36); Nottinghamshire\n69 for three wickets; at Nottingham.\nNorthamptonshire 278 (Jupp 82,\nGrimshaw 81, Geary six for 78);\nLeicestershire 11 for no wickets; at\nNorthampton.\nNew Zealanders 235 (Mercer four\nfor 60, Jones four for 530); Glamor\ngan 25 for no wickets; 'at Cardiff.\nSMALL PUNTS\nTO TRANSPLANT\nARE IN DEMAND\nAsparagus, Rhubarb,\nNew on Saturday\nList in Nelson\nAppearance of many additional\nsmall plants for transplanting\nmarked activity on the Vernon\nstreet market Saturday. With little\nchanges in prices and few other\nchanges on the market stalls the\nplant and seed sections were the\nobjective of the busy gardeper and\nbargain seeker.\nAmong the new plants were small\ndaisies, cabbage, sweet peas, lubil-\nias, pensies, lilly of the valley, fox\ngloves, canterbury bells and a variety of rock plants.\nAsparagus, selling at 20\u00bb cents a\npound, and fresh rhubarb at- five\ncents a pound were new on the\nvegetable stalls.\nPrice of eggs remained steady at\n25 and 30 cents per dozen.\nFRUIT8:\nDried pears, 3 lbs ._   .25\nPrunes, 3  lbs \u201e   .25\nDried apples, 3 lb 25\nDried plums, 3 lb     .25\nKing apples, 7 lbs 25\nWagener apples, 7 lbs 25\nVEGETABLES\nTurnips, 8 lbs     .25\nCarrots, 8 lbj  ,   .25\nGarlic, lb _.,   .20\nParsley, bunch  ..  .0b\nPotatoes, 0 lbs : 25\nPotatoes, sack  2.50\nBeets, 7  lbs _.... \u25a0 .25\nDried onions, 6 lbs 2b\nSage,   bunch     ...    .06\nParsnips. 7 lbs.    .25\nGreen onions, 6 bunches 25\nCabbage, lb  04\nCelery,  lb.   11\nCelery, 2 lbs.  .7.    .25\nHorseradish, lb 15\nSeeds, pkg., each 10 and    .15\nLeeks, bunch    .05\nLettuce, head, ea. .15, 2 for 25\nSpinach, 3 lb 25\nGreen onions, bunch  05\nLeaf lettuce, bunch  10\n... .25\n... .03\n... .15\n... .10\n.... 10\n.. .10\n.. .05\n... 05\n... .19\n... .20\n... .25\n... .08\n... .20\n..   .05\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL CITY\nThis column is in charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of TraiL All\nevents of a social nature of interest in'Trail and Tadanac will appear\nIn this column. Mrs; Quayle will be glad to have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her home in Trail.\nlb\nARROW LAKES\nSERVICE\nEffective Tuesday, May 18,\n8.3. Minto will leave Robson\nWest at 11:30 a.m, thus providing direct connection with\nTrain No. 11, leaving Nelson\nat 10:05 a.m.\n(?o4c\nArtichokes, 4 lbs.\nPickling cabbage,\nSauerkraut, 2 lbs\t\nDried beans, lb. \t\nWax beans, lb ...\u00bb\t\nPeas, lb\t\nHot peppers, 3 for\t\nDandelion tips, bunch ....\nWater cress, bunch \t\nRadishes, 3 bunches \t\nRhubarb, 4 lbs\t\nNew cabbage, lb\t\nAsparagus, lb    \t\nRhubarb, lb. \t\nPLANTS, SHRUBS, ETC,\nPansy plants, doz. \t\nGladioli! bulbs, doz\t\nGeraniums '\nBegonias, ea.\n 35\n 35\n:o and up\n    .50\nRaspberry canes, doz    .35\nCurrant bushes, ea 25\nFruit trees 65\nShrubs   ; 3b\nViolets, 3 bunches  25\nCelery plants, doz 15\nStalks, doz 20\nAsters,, doz 20\nPetunias, doz 20\nGeraniums, each 20 and .25\nTomato plants, doz     .25\nPepper plants, doz 25\nMarigolds, doz 20\nSnapdragons, doz    .20\nSmall daisy plank, doz. 20\n2 dozen   35\nCabbage plants, doz.  20\nLubilias plants, doz 16\n2 dozen 25\nSweet pea plants, 3 plants  10\nPansy plants, ea 05\nFox gloves, ea 03\nTRAIL, B. C, May 16 - Quietly\nsolemnized at Rossland Saturday\nwas the wedding of Miss Muriel\nDeane of Prince Rupert and Harold\nBridgeman of Rossland, Rev. Mr.\nReed of the United church officiating at the home of the groom's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. A. Bridgeman, Mr. A. Bridge-\nman giving the bride in marriage.\nThe ceremony was witnessed by Mr.\nand Mrs. R. W. Wilson of Third\navenue, East Trail. Blue taffeta\nwas selected by the,'bride for her\nlovely floor length gown, a narrow\nsatin stripe giving a beautiful effect\nin the draped fulness of the skirt.\nThe bodice, of tailored lines, was\nopened from neck to waistline ot\nthe back, a belt marking the normal\nwaistline. A coronet of gardenias\nwas worn, the bridal bouquet being\ncomposed of pink carnations, roses\nand maidenhair fern. Concluding the\nceremony the bride and groom were\nentertained at a buffet supper, the\nbride's table being centred by a\nthree-tiered wedding cake which\nwas embedded in white tulle with\nornamentation of narcissi. Leaving\nSunday by car on a wedding trip.\nMr. and Mrs. Bridgeman visited in\nTrail, the bride wearing a white\nflannel suit, darker blue blouse,\nwhite hat and gloves, and blue and\nwhite shoes. The bride, who has\nbeen on the nursing staff at Esson-\ndale for a number of years, was\nguest of honor at numerous affairs\nat the coast and at Rossland, before\nher marriage.\nMr. and Mrs. Ed. Morgan. Victoria street, left Saturday for Sudbury, Ont.. where they will remain\nfor about three months, Mr. Morgan\nprimarily leaving to recuperate his\nhealth.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. W. Smith of Fruitvale visited\nin Trail Saturday.\nMiss Eleanor Armstrong left Saturday for Nelson where she will\nmake her home.\n* *.   *\nMr. and Mrs. Tudor Davies, who\nleave this week for England and\nV.'ales where they will visit relatives and friends, were honored\nguests Friday evening at a surprise\nparty tendered them in the hall ot\nFirst Baptist church, about 25 being\npresent. During the evening, Karl A.\nMargeson, on behalf of the assembled party,  presented farewell\nCrochet rugs  50 to 1.00\nRock plants, ea.\nLilly of the valley, ea\t\nCanterbury bells, ea\t\nSEEDS\nCorn seeds, lb. \t\nOnion seeds, multipliers, lb.\nPeas, seeds, lb\t\nSeeds, assorted, pkg 05 and .10\nMISCELLANEOUS\nCushions  .50 to 1.00\nPreserved fruit, quart  40\nJam. pint 30\nMarmalade,  pint   2b\nDill pickles, each  05\nPreserved fruits. Quart 40\nDAIRY   PRODUCTS\nButter, lb. 35 and .25\nCream,  pint   30\nCottage cheese, lb 10\nPrime cheese,, lb. _ 3b\nGoat cheese, lb. .25 and .3b\nNew cheese, lb 20\nWhipping cream, Vs pint     .20\nCream cheese, lb 25\nCurds,   lb 2.)\nMEATS\nBeef, lb \u201e...- 07 to .22\nVeal, lb  .08 to .20\nBeet, lb.    .05 to .20\nVeal. lb.    , .06 to .20\nLamb, lb. 10 to .26\nBacon, lb 25 to .30\nRabbit,  lb 2b\nLiver, lb _   .12\nDripping,   lb.  \u201e 08\nSausage, lb 10 and .15\nBologna,  lb lo\nChicken, lb 2b\nFowl, lb 20\nSausage meat  10 to .15\nHead cheese, lb 10\nEGOS\nEGGS\nGrade \"A\" medium, doz. 7 25 |\nGrade \"A\" large, doz 30\ngifts to the guests of honor. Musical\nnumbers and group singing afforded\na delightful program of entertainment, the serving of refreshments\ndrawing the event to a close.\na    \u2022    *\nGuilford Brett visited Saturday in\nTrail returning to his home in Nelson the same evening.\n\u2022 *   .\nMrs. W. J. Ternan of Rossland ii\na patient in the Trail-Tadanac hospital.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\n1 U. A. Harris of Toronto has arrived in Trail to take up residence,\nhaving obtained a position with, the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\ncompany.\n\"\u2022'\u2022,\u2022\u2022\nMrs. Vernon Bayes, East Trail,\nwas hostess to the evening circle of\nthe Catholic, Women's league at a\nmeeting held at her home. Numbered among her guests were Mrs. Arthur Farnum, Mrs. Samuel Hepworth. Mrs. J. Carins, Mrs. J. Guild,\nMrs. C. Gallagher and Mrs. W.\nWaite. \u25a0;,\u00ab{\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nTrail-Tadanac Schoolteachers' association entertained a large crowd\nFriday evening at their first annual\ndance, held in Elks' hall. A delicious\nsupper was served at, midnight in\nthe lower hall, dancing being enjoyed in the large upstairs hall.\nMusic makers and serpentines added to the festivity of the event. I.\nH. R. Jeffery, president of the association, welcomed the guests, Miss\nThersa Rossman being convener of\nrefreshments for the buffet supper.\nNoted among the guests were Mr.\nand Mrs. H. D. Bayley, Mr. and\nMrs. Charles Catalano, Mr. and Mrs.\nFred W. Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Eric\nJackson, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Millen,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Gagnon, Mr. and\nMrs. Charles E. Fenton, Mr. and\nMrs. William M. Cameron, Mr. and\nMrs. I. Jeffery, Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nMorrish, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Allison,\nMr. and Mrs. Denis Thain, Mr. and\nMrs. Stanley Tugwood, Mr. and\nMrs. Archie Miller, Mr. and Mrs.\nAngus W. McDonald, Mr. and Mrs.\nTim Player, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest\nLowther, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mc-\nTeer, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Brothers.\nMr. and Mrs. Howard Anderson,\nMr. and Mrs. Otto Neidermann,\nMr. and Mrs. A. B. Thompson, Howard Parker, A. E. Tweedale, J. Cross-\nman, Gus Hinterlitner, D. McLeod,\nRoy McKenzie, Miss B. Davies, Miss\nMarguerite Sandercock, Reub Nesbitt, Miss Agnes Rossman, Miss\nThersa Rossman, Miss Jean MacKinnon, C. Kennedy, Miss Ethel\nMoody, Miss Dorothy Williams, Miss\nKay Gillis, Miss McCaigg, Miss R\nHarris, Miss Merle Smith, R. E.\nHawkes, Mrs. William T. Truswell,\nJ. Wallace, Miss Menton, Miss\nJeanne Butorac. Miss E- Gansner\nand Miss A. Taylor.\nExcavation for\nElevator Nearly\nFinished, Wynndel\nWYNNDEL, B.C. - Miss Nell\nPayne of Alice Siding visited Mr.\nand Mrs. Abbott last week. Leah\nAbbott was a visitor in Creston.\nInlth Wood was chosen president\nand Margaret Bothie, secretary-treasurer- of the ladies softball team.\nR. J. McDougal of Cranbrook was\nconcluded in the series of mining\nlectures which were well attended.\nMr. Paul Otner left Monday for\nLumberton.\nExcavating for the new 60,000\nbushel Midland Pacific Grain Corporation elevator is almost complete.\nSite is about one quarter mile west\nof Wynndel and a siding is to be\nextended.\nMrs, E. Foxall returned Tuesday\nafter visiting her son and daughter\nin Nelson.\nMORE ABOUT\nSNOWDEN DEATH\n(Continued From Page One)\nHe will be cremated after a private service Tuesday at Woking,\nSurrey.\nKing George and Queen Mary\nsent messages to Lady Snowden, and\nRamsay Macdonald, former prime\nminister who made Snowden his\nchancellor of the exchequer, passed\nover the differences that broke their\nfriendship to say;\n\"A great man of our age has\npassed by.\"\nDespite his recent Illness, Lord\nSnowden's death came as a shock\nto the country.  Friday  ha was\nable to take a short' automobile\n.   ride and seemed so well that Lady\nSnowden came to London to at.\ntend the state ball at Buckingham\nPalace. She hastened back to Til-\nford when Informed of her husband's death.\n\"MOSES OF\nBRIT18H LABOR\"\nPhilip Snowden, dynamic cripple,\nwas the Moses ot the British Labor\nmovement, the firebrand of its\nyouth, the leavening agent and lawgiver of its more mature years.\nReduced to a mere shell of a\nphysical man by an accident suffered when he was only 27 years old,\nhe battled his way from obscurity\nin Lancashire to hold twice the post\nof chancellor of the exchequer, one\nof the highest offices of the British\nEmpire.\nThe interim saw him reviled as an\natheist, a destroyer and a traitorous\npacifist, then hailed as a savior.\nIn the trying times of the world\nwar Snowden was regarded as a\nscourge to British honor. Deeply\npacific, he spoke against not only\nwar as an institution, but against the\n1914-1918 conflict. He declared that\nbattles settled nothing and least of\nall the problems of the working\nclasses.\nYet a decade later the press of\nall tinges of political opinion in\nEngland was hailing him as a bulwark of British interest when at\nThe Hague debt conference he-\nfought off every attempt to reduce\nGreat Britain's share of the German reparations payments below the\n22 per cent awarded her at the Spa\nconference six years earlier.\nSnowden was wooed and won by\nsocialism while he was on his first\nserious sickbed. He was put there\nby being knocked off a bicycle and\nto pass the time of his long convalescence, he read everything he\ncould get his hands on. Some of that\nliterature was socialistic and he\nplunged into a study of it that converted him to its tenents.\nHe rose from his bed with permanent injuries to his back that\nforced him to hobble with rubber-\ntipped canes through the rest ot his\nlife. But' his dragging feet never\nfaltered on the path which he picked\nout for himself and ultimately they\nbrought him to the front benches of\nthe house of commons.\nThere\" he' would stand leaning\nupon his sticks or against a table\nwhile from his thin lips poured\nstreams of cold, incisive logic that\nconfounded the theories of his opponents. Nor did he dodga personalities. Thrusts at his motives or>the\nsincerity of his party brougSt answering darts of scqrnful rhetoric\nthat generally sent his attackers into\na scrambling rush for cover. >    ;\nIt was thus that he presenttd and\ndefended the first Laborite budget\nbefore the house in 1924. Thus also\nhe ridiculed and riddled the financial policy of his predecessor, Winston Churchill, when the second\nMacDonald cabinet was formed in\n1929.\nAnd at the peak of his career,\nwhen he faced the ellied nations at\nThe Hague and exacted England's\nfull share of the Young plan pay-\nments from Germany, he was\nequally startling. He pouded the\nconference table with his fist and\nrapped the floor with his canes as\nhe drove his points home. So adamant was he that the other conferees\ndubbed him \"Monsieur No-No.\"\nThe story of this fight stirred the\nBritish public from its traditional\nphlegm. Snowden's return to London was like the triumph of a victorious Roman general and if his\ncaptives were figurative and his\ntreasures only on paper, they were j\nrecognized for their full value by\nFor Better\nQuality\nFurniture\n, and\nHome\nFurnishings\nTwo Newcomers\nlo Take Boxla\nBow Wednesday\nWhen Murray Clark trots out his\nNelson boxla team, Kootenay champions, for the opening of the 1937\nseries Wednesday night two newcomers and three \"new\" locals will\nbe \"on call\". Trail, comes to Nelson,\nfor the season-opener.\nChief interest in the lineup centres about Hubie Smith, last season\nwith the B.C. title winning North\nShore Indians in the coast league,\nformerly of Ontario; and Earl Kelly,\nformer Province Bluebird and Richmond intermediate.\nJack Whitfield is a local newcomer who looks like a comer, Bob\nEmmott is spare goalie, and Bill\nTownsend, who got his baptism of\nfire last season, Is \"in there\" ready\nto stay put this year.\nRemainder of the team Includes\nlast season's title winners \u2014 Dave\nGibbons in goal., Stan Horswill, Leo\nAtwell, Pete Bonneville, Stew Paterson, Jack Bishop, Max DesBrisay,\n\"Bud\" Cooper, Johnny DeVoin, Pat\nEgan and \"Red\" Carr.\nthe hero-worshipping crowds that\ngreeted him.\nSnowden was bdrn July 18, 1864,\nin the West Riding.of Yorkshire near\nthe Lancashire border where wintry\nwinds sweep hanging mists across a\nbleak countryside. The moorlands\nran into the backyard of the cottage\nwhere he was born to John and\nMartha Snowden, weavers.\nAUV! LIVER\nmeansNEW LIFE\"\nThis biggest organ of your body\nmust be completely alive for\ncomplete life.\nBecause your liver attccts your kidneys,\nblood, dlftcatlon, energy, elands, muscles,\nit must be In good health if you are to ba\nIn Hood health. If your liver does not wt\u00bbrk\nproperly you fed rundown, half-nick,\netifrer indigestion, akin troubles, headaches, constipation, ami other ilia. So ba\naura your liver works properly by taking\nlfrult-n>tlves. Containing extracts of fruits\n\u2022nd herbs, Frult-a-tlvta act to bring\nnormal, healthy liver action: stimulate\nflow of bile; cleanse the entire system.\nAlready thousands have found new health\nwith this biggest selling ramsdy of Its kind\nIn Canada. Give Frult-a-tlves a trial. On\nsale at all drug stores.\nFRUIT A-TIVEStKs\n(Advt.)\nBritish Columbia\nInformation Bureau\nfor the\n\"Home Improvement\nPlan\"\n(National Employment Commltilon)\nis located at\n707 BANK OF\nNOVA SCOTIA BLDC,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n(Note: Through an error this\nwas omitted from Saturday's\nadvertisement   on   page   six).\nWhat they're saying\nabout MILLBANKS\n\"Do all you Deb* smoke Millbanks?\"\n\"Of courier\u2014we're expected to set\na good example to otherst\"\nMILLBANK\/;\nJfic iuttaL'ttlf\nCIGARET r ES\n \u2014\u2014-\u25a0\n\u2014\n\u2022iMiiiup^pp\u00bbi|\u00bbjppi.j,l|lij,ljlli H#\nPlPrWWUP'**^''.-!!1-!'*\ntoll!)\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.\u2014MONDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1937\nSporhr Parade, MayQueenand\nFireworks Feature Coronation\nDay Festivities at Golden City\nW. K. Esling, MP.\na Speaker at the\nCourt House\nROSSLAND, B.C, \u2014Rossland was\nin gala dress for the Coronation day\nfestivities. The national colors and\nthe Union Jack were everywhere\nin evidence. The opening exercises\nwere on the court house steps, with\nmusic furnished by the bugle and\ncity bands. The invocation was of\nfered by Rev. D. S. Catchpole, who\nspoke of the religious significance\nof the day. The Union Jack was raised by the Boy Scouts, followed by\nthe National Anthem and Land of\nHope and Glory, Mayor Gordon,\nintroduced W, K. Esling, M.P., who\nsaid in part:\n\"Justice, civil liberty and ordered\nfreedom constitute a precious heritage, and these time honored principles, permeating the people and\ntheir   homelands,   have   served   to\ncreate a British Commonwealth of\nNations, each of which is responsible\nfor its own destinies.\n\"On this day of gladness, recreation and celebration, we pay tribute to the crown, which symbolizes the unity and free association of\nthe nations of the commonwealth,\nand which embodies those principles\nof constitutional government, which\nthey hold most sacred. The coronation affords a more vivid sense of\nthe meaning and value of the crown\nand thereby strengthens the bonds\nof mutual trust and understanding\nbetween the sovereign and the peo\npie. and on this morning of sunshim.\nand gladness the sound of church\nbells throughout the Empire found\necho in the hearts of a God-fearing\npeople, and they, in turn, responded\nwith sincerity of heart and soul, 'God\nSave the King'.\"\nMi. Gordon in'expressing the hope\nthat this would be a day long to\nbe remembered by the children, reminded them that as British subjects they enjoyed privileges such\nas were given to few other peoples\nMedals and refreshment tickets\nwere distributed to the children\nafter which the company made its\nway to the sports grounds. Each\nchild'received ai ticket entitling him\nto a \"hot dog\" and a bottle of pop,\nan ice cream cone and two chocolate\nbars,\nQUEEN CROWNED\nQueen Lorraine Berg was crowned by Mrs. John E. Gordon, wife ol\nthe mayor, and made a very pretty\npicture in her royal robe of white,\nwith purple velvet train edged with\nermine. The queen was attended by\nMiss Ina Irvin, gold stick bearei.\nMiss Wilma Graham, crown bearer\nMisses Florence Harrison, Lillian\nStephens, Sadie MacAulay and Doreen Gresly-Jones, flower girls, and\nBilly Bradshaw and Frank Stevenson, pages. Mrs, William Gressly-\nJones, president of the Women's\nauxiliary to' the Canadian Legion,\npresented Queen Lorraine with a\nmemento of the occasion, and tiny\n'Marie Gresly-Jones presented Mrs.\nGordon with a beautiful bouquet.\nPRIZES PRESENTED\nQueen Lorraine presented prizes\nto the following:\nPosters\u2014Grade two\u2014June Palmer\nfirst, Betty Petrie second; Grade\nthree \u2014Peggy Johnson first, David\nSmith second, Viola Larsen third;\nGrade four\u2014Dorothy Mason first,\nDoreen Ling second, Clement Cameron third; Grade five \u2014 Morden\nHoyte first, James Keffer and Jack\nLaFace second; Grade six \u2014 Ormi\nJoy Butorac and Thelma Crane\nfirst, Violet Heaton and Janet Hut-\nton second, Grant Milligan third,\nGrade seven\u2014Betty Atkinson first,\nMary Conncbi second,\nEssays\u2014Grade eight and nine \u2014\nClaire Jamieson first, Helen Turner\nsecond, Leslie Fester third; Grades\nten. eleven and twelve\u2014Raymond\nMcLeod first, Bruce McKenzie\nsecond, and William Polonikoff\nthird.\nDecorated  kites\u2014Clifford   Morris\nWe Must Not\nLose HART\nTTNEQUALLED in all Canada is the record of\n^ achievement established by the Honourable\nJohn Hart, as Minister of Finance for British Columbia.\nAssuming office first under the\nlate Premier Brewster, Mr. Hart\nfound the finances of the province\nin a deplorable condition. Bank\ncredit was gone and British\nColumbia was unable to meet its\nissued cheques.\nDuring his tenure of office, Mr.\nHart stabilized the credit of the\nprovince and left the finances in\nexcellent condition.\nAgain taking the Ministry of\nFinance under the Honourable\nT. D. Pattullo's leadership, Mr.\nHart found the Tolmie administration had not only completely\ndestroyed the financial credit of\nthe province but had actually\nissued cheques to THE\nAMOUNT OF $1,009,509\nWITHOUT FUNDS WITH\nWHICH TO COVER. The bank\nrefused to extend credit for payment.\nIn financial circles it was freely\npredicted that British Columbia\nwould have to repudiate its\nindebtedness or go into bankruptcy.\nToday, less than four years since\nthe Liberal Adminstration\nassumed office, BRITISH\nCOLUMBIA'S CREDIT HAS\nBEEN RESTORED . . . bonds\nhave been sold at the highest\nprice and lowest interest rate in\nthe history of the province . . .\nand, according to the statement\nof Mr. Morris W. Wilson, president of the Royal Bank of Canada, British Columbia now leads\nall Canada in the march to\nrecovery.\nIT IS WELL TO REMEMBER\nTHESE FACTS AND THAT\nBRITISH COLUMBIA IS THE\nONLY PLACE IN NORTH\nAMERICA WHERE TAXA-\nTION HAS NOT BEEN INCREASED, BUT ACTUALLY\nREDUCED TO THOSE LEAST\nABLE TO PAY.\nAnd, while other provinces still\nflounder in financial difficulties,\nor wallow in political experiment,\nBritish Columbia is steadily\nmarching toward complete recovery.\nSane, Stable,\nProgressive Government\nVOTE LIBERAL\nHON. DR. WEIR LAUDJ NAKUSP\nAT CORONATION CELEBRATION\nfirst, Pat Ward second.\nRaces:\nGirls, four and under \u2014 Polly\nPochokoff first. Rignor Nora second,\nMarjorie Homer third, Roberta Folvick fourth.\nBoys\u2014Allan Bacon first, Sonny\nThorsteinsen second, Monty Taylor\nthird, Jerome Topliff fourth.\nGirls, six\u2014Joan Allibone first,\nElizabeth Densky second, Louise\nFredenckson third, Pauline Hert\nfourth.\nBoys\u2014Donald Davis first, Bob\nLennox second, Joe Duncan third,\nGordon Atkinson fourth.\nGirls seven r'nd eight \u2014 Anna\nMaie Spring first, Pamela Topliff\nsecond, Dora Dorion third.\nBoys\u2014Donald Duncan first, Steve\nYurich second, Clifford McMaitin\nthird.\nGirls nine and ten \u2014 Joyce Topliff first, Joan Bacon second, Mary\nStarsinic third.\nBoys\u2014Bernard Spring first, Jonn-\nny Pochokoff second, Leonard Cam-\nozzi third.\nGirls II and 12\u2014Joan Bacon first.\nHelen Schley second, Helen Pur-\ncello third. \u25a0\nBoys \u2014 Eugen Topliff first, Eddie\nConroy second.\nGirls 13 and 14 \u2014 Ivy Scott first,\nFreda Clare second, Florence Cor-\nrado third.\nBoys  \u2014  Jack  Cox  first,   Henry\nFourt second, Frank Cozzetto third.\nGirls  16 and under \u2014 Florence\nCorrado   first,   Ivy   Scott   second,\nMary Ling third.\nBoys \u2014 Jack Cox first, Ira Page\nsecond.\nBoys 17 and under \u2014 Stanley\nLayton first, Peter Clark second, Pat\nBeley third.\nEmpire relay, girls \u2014 Betty Atkinson, Ivy Scott, Florence Corrado\nand Anne Lucien; second, Helen\nSdao. Freda Clare, Freda Ludens\nand Helen Purcello.\nBoys \u2014 first, Jack Cox, David\nWoods, John Densky, Evan Cecconi;\nsecond. Jim Scott, George Watson,\nLido Bertoria, Bobby Irvin.\nSack Race \u2014 Florence Corrado\nfirst, Freda Clare second; boys \u2014\nTom Malone first, Bobby Irvin\nsecond, Vincent Marion third.\nEgg and spoon race \u2014 12 and\nunder \u2014 Mary Starsinic first, Lila\nGooding second, Joan Bacon third;\n13 and over \u2014 Miry Starsinic first,\nMary Ling second, Ruth Clare third,\nThree legged race \u2014 Freda Clare\nand Ruth Clare first, Florence Corrado and Margaret. Buick second,\nIvy Scott and Helen Purcello third.\nBoys throwing softball \u2014 Hugo\nSalo first, Donald McKay second,\nBob Stephenson third.\nBoys wheelbarrow race \u2014 Henry\nFourt and Jim Scott first, Bernard\nSpring and Leonard Cammozzi\nsecond, Jack Cox and Clifford Morris third.\nHigh jumping \u2014 Eddie Cox first.\nPeter Clark second and Jim Scott\nthird.\nKite flying \u2014 Donald McKay first,\nOle Osing second,\nBroad jumping \u2014 Peter Clark\nfirst, Jim Douglas second and Jim\nScott third.\nThe parade featured some beautifully decorated floats and private\ncars. First, prize for float was won\nby Rossland High school and second\nby the Orange lodge. Mrs. M. M.\nutorac was awarded first in the\nprivate car class and R. J. Portman\nsecond.\nOthers participating were Rossland Fire department, Bugle band,\nCity band, Scouts and Cubs, Mac-\nLean school, Canadian Legion,\nPythian Sisters and Mater Miser-\ncordiae hospital.\nA number of prettily decorated\nbicycles, doll buggies and wagons\nwere in evidence, Prizes for bicycles\nwent to Clement Cameron first,\nRalph Stinson second and Louis\nThompson third. Prizes for best decorated wagon went to Harry Mann\nfirst, John McNiven second and\nKennetn Davis third while Marian\nDupperson had the prettiest doll\nbuggy.\nAnother novel feature of the day\nwas the Maypole dancing, the pretty\ncostumes of the dancers adding\nmuch   to   its  attractiveness.\nA torchlight parade by the Boy\nScouts took place at dusk, and after\nthe display of fireworks at the city\npark, the boys, still carrying their\nflares, made their way to the top\nof. Columbia-Kootenay mountain\nand lit their beacon. A dance in\nK. P, hall concluded the festivities.\nCranbrook Bandsmen\nReceive Decorations\nCRANBROOK. B. C. \u2014 Chevrons\nand decorations appropriate to their\nnew ranks were presented to several members of the city band Wednesday. These were made by Bandmaster W. A- Burton.\nThose receiving decorations were:\nDeputy Bandmaster S. DeLuca, promoted to band sergt.-major; Bands-\nsergeant with eight bars, each deman .W. Blinston, promoted to band\nnoting five years of band service;\nbandsman M. T. Harris, promoted to\nband sergeant; Bandsman D. Kays,\npromoted to corporal with five service bars; Bandsman W. Mansfield\npromoted to corporal and Bandsman\nI, Cameron, promoted to corporal,\nTAG DAY SUCCESS\nA tag day, conducted by the Pythian Sisters assisted by Mrs. G\nLunn and Miss Isabelle Pattinson,\nwas held in connection with the coronation day celebration, and the receipts amounted to $135.26.\nThe four collecting the highest\namounts were Pearl Moore, $24.64;\nMrs. Talpin, Canal Flat, $19.94; B\nB. Archibald, $13.74; Miss Marjorie\nPattinson $9.22. Other girls were\nMiss Beatrice Moore. Miss Joai\nMacDonald, Miss Theresa Pascuzzo,\nMiss Kathleen Smith, Miss Joan\nFlower, Miss Florence Curie, Miss\nDorothy Curie, Miss Ivy Sisson\nMiss Bernice Quick, Miss Gladys\nGuthrie, Miss Frances Wheaton.\nMiss Feme Simpson, Miss Ailecn\nHayden, Miss Mary Philpot. Miss\nAnn MacGillivray, Miss Helen Caldwell, Miss Joan Quaife and Miss\nVivian Eberlein.\nDance, Parade, Sports\nand Fireworks, in\nBig Day\nNAKUSP, B. C.-In the Coronation day service in the Legion hall\nhere eight young ladies, Miss Eileen\nLeary, Miss Hazel Herridge, Miss\nMae Jarbo, Miss Monica Butlin.\nMiss Edith Horrey, Miss Georgina\nMunn and Miss Vera Johnson\nfigured in the ceremony of placing\nthe flag which was followed by the\nGeneral Salute played by the Boys'\nBugle band and \"God Save the\nKing\" sung by Mrs. C. L. Herridge\nand Percy Young sang \"Land of\nHope and Glory.\" The Ode to Coronation by John Masefield was recited\nby Miss Eileen Herridge.\nRev. C. Addyman paid' tribute to\nthe splendid charcter of Britain's\nnew king, George VI. He told of\nthe composition of the British flag.\nthe Union Jack.\nMiss R. Hamer played the piano\naccompaniment for the singing of\n\"Oh God Our Help in Ages Past\"\nand \"Oh Canada.\"\nPARADE OUTSTANDING\nThe parade, immediately following the service, was one of the\nfinest Nakusp has ever seen. Behind the Boys' Bugle band came\nthe royal family in their regal purple, John Bull and Britannia, Mist\nCanada, Indians and clowns, butter-\neilfs and airplanes, gayly decorated\ndoll carriages, a Chinese rick-shaw,\nbicycles, cars and floats, Prizes, for\nthe best decorated car went to F.\nRushton while a second was awarded to E. Oxenham. The Women's\ninstitute's bathing beach float captured first prize with Mrs, K. Jan-\nsen taking a second. Prizes for decorated bicycles went to Martin\nFunche and Melvin Buerge, George\nHay and Lawrence Reilly. The best\ndecorated wagon prizes were won\nby Earl Motherwell and Linden\nAalten; the best baby carriage by\nMrs. A. Stanley, the best doll carriages by Jean Battershall and Annie Mikalasic; and the best wheelbarrow by Mrs. W. Davies.\nThe group prize went to the\n\"royal family,\" Miss Mary Rushton,\nMiss Irene Buerge, Miss Sonja Dolman, Betty Miller. Stella Horrey.\nJoy Oxenham, Sidney Leary, Bernard Oxenham and Allan Stanley. A\nsecond group prize went tc Melvin\nLaRue and Joan Brown as John\nBull and Britannia. Individual\nprizes were won by Ruth Johnson as\nBritannia; Roe LaRue as butterfly;\nOlive Johnson as Miss Canada,\nNellie Horrey as an \"airplane\";\nBernice Jordon as \"parcel post\";\nBruce Motherwell as \"gum\"; and\nCyril Kershaw as \"burlesque king.\"\nDR. WEIR  SPEAKS\nHon. Dr. Weir, minister of education, presented the c o r o na t i o n\nbadges donated by the school board\nand the Women's institutes. Dr.\nWeir said that May 12 was a day\nof great solemnity and of great\nrejoicing for the people of the British Empire. He felt that \"we should\nbe humble rather than boastful\" of\nthe privilege of being a member of\nso great a nation. The coronation\nceremony. Dr. Weir continued, was\nthe symbolic representation of the\nvarious things Great Britain stood\nfor.\nDr, Weir congratulated the citizens on the quality of the parade\nwhich he thought just as splendid\nthose in the larger ' centers. He\nalthough not as large as would be\nthought few -communities in the\nEmpire could surpass Nakusp in\nbeauty.\nPrize winners of the various children's races were:\nBoys six years and upder\u2014Bruce\nMotherwell, Jimmie Brodie.\nGirls six and under \u2014 Doreen\nParent, W. Marshall.\nBoys six to eight years\u2014Arnold\nTalbot, Clifford  Watson.\nGirls  six   to   eight  years\u2014Mavis\narlow, Doreen  Parent.\nBoys .eight to twelve years \u2014Raymond Gill. Delbert Olson, Pat Smith.\nGirls six to eight yars\u2014Gladys\nOlson, Pamela Herridge, Beatrice\nSteenhoff.\nBoys' 100 yard dash\u2014A. Ehl, F.\nGreen, J. Kerr.\nGirls' 100 yard dash\u2014Betty Davison, Monica Butlin, Helen Rollins.\nBoys three-legged race \u2014 Bob\nStenhoff and Leonard Reilly, Jack\nKerr and Jack Bailey, Delbert Olson and Ernest Baird.\nGirls' three-legged race \u2014 Alice\nHumphres and Monica Butlin, Vera\nButlin and Mary Rushton.\nBoys' obstacle race\u2014Roy Gill,\nJack Bailey, F. Green, E. Baird.\nGirls' obstacle race\u2014Betty Dav-\nsion, Alice Humphris, Gladys Olson, Georgina Munn.\nBoys' apple race\u2014Ernest Baird,\nRaymond Gill.\nGirls' apple race\u2014Mae Jarbo,\nGeorgina Munn, Vera and Monica\nButlin.\nConsiderable interest was taken\nin the baseball game. Nakusp\nseniors vs. Nakusp High scholl. Tht\nHigh  school   was  victorious   14-10,\nLine-ups were:\nSeniors\u2014J. Harris. C. Picard, H\nAalten, A Matheson, J. Parent, R.\nJordan, C. Campe, A. Watson, D.\nReilly, A. Ehl. R. Dunn. Smith.\nHight school-H. Hiltz, D. Johnson, N. Harrison, F. Green, J. Cann,\nMcCullock, F. Benton. R. Kerr, R.\nMayoh, L. Lund, J, Kerr and W.\nCarlson.\nA huge bonfire and fireworks display marked the evenings entertainment. Later a dance in the\nLegion hall climaxed the day's activities.\n\u25a0P&fiF  THREE\nSILVER   PRODUCTION\nThe January output of silver in\nCanada amounted to 1,390,476 ounces\nof the value of $624,680, the average\nprice being 44.9262 cents per ounce,\nagainst a production of 1,835,604\nounces in the previous month worth\n$((31,900 based on an average price\nof 45.32 cents. Production in the corresponding month last year was reported at 1.213.488 ounces of the\nvain* of $537,636, the average being\n47.27 cents.\n^$f \"BAY\"\nfH*     Specials\nFor Monday's Selling'\nWomen's Knee'High\nChiffon\nHOSE\nThese Will More Out\nQuickly at This Price\nWith warmer days so close at hand you\ncannot afford to miss such an outstanding value. Cool and comfortable. Pure\nsilk, full fashioned, strong elastic tops.\nSubstandards of a regular 89c line. All the\nsummer shades. M mm*,.\nFECIAL FOR TODAY,        sM U K\nPair\t\n\u25a0c line, aii ir\n49'\n-Main Floor HBC\nWomen's Home\nFROCKS\nHere is another opportunity for the\nthrifty shopper!! Women's home frocks\nin serviceable prints. Guaranteed fast\ndyes. Good assortment of styles to suit\neveryone. Brighten up your kitchen with\nthese gay new home frocks. You wouldn't\nexpect to find values like these at such a\nlow cost. Regularly sold at\n$1.00. Sizes 14 to 44. ,     \u201e\u25a0    ,   .\nSPECIAL FOR TODAY,       ~QC\nEach\t\n79'\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nHand Embroidered\nPILLOW\nSLIPS\nBeautifully hand worked on\nfirm cotton. Many lovely designs. Makes an ideal gift at a\nbargain price.\nSPECIAL FOR\nTODAY.\nPair \t\n$|.oo\n-Second Floor H R O\nHit and Miss\nRUGS\nHeavy washable rugs.  In hit and miss\nstyle, with ends of solid color. A useful rug for bathroom or gen\neral use. Size 30x60.\nSPECIAL FOR TODAY, Each\n-uiur.  n  ust\n89'\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nMen's Broadcloth\nShorts\nBroadcloth shorts made from\nfancy pre-shrunk materials. Full\ncut with elastic waist band.\nSPECIAL mm ajgf.\nFOR TODAY, ZL\u00ab9C\n       \u2014Main Floor HBC\nMisses' and\nChildren's\nAll White\nSHOES\n8-IOV2    ll-2'\/2\nSmart white wide strap style\nwith large buckle.  Leather\nsoles and rubber heels.\nSPECIAL FOR TODAY\n$1-50\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\ntotetmvT^ dampHit^.^\nIMCORPORATID    Mrt  MAT   '\u00ab70.\n w\n\u2014\u2014\n\t\nSJf! #W.W?i\u00ab.H -L L.f l.sil Ufsiippvp^tffrfpsinp^^p\n r~~\n\u25a0PPjlMIJIIpifWfliW^\nr..^y i^tyj\u00bbry^-y.^''.^\u00bba ytwpsysi'yBiBgW\nPAGE FOUR \u25a0\nINSTITUTE HEARS\nOF EARLY DAYS\nAT NEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-The Women's institute met Ht the home of\nMrs. G. Burkitt May 5 with Mrs.\nG. Burkitt and Mrs. J. Burkitt as\nhostesses. Mrs. H. H. Pendry ot the\ncommittee tor pioneer history, read\nan interesting article of a Chirst-\nmas tree held in the Bosun hall in\nDecember 1907. This paper also\nstated Arthur Hendrickson had\nstruck two feet of high grade ore\nat the Neepawa mine.\nMrs. D. Shannon read some interesting articles about the early days\nin New Denver and the article\nstated that the New Denver town\nsite was surveyed in 1891.\nThese articles read by Mrs. Shannon were from the diary of Angus\nMclnnis.\nThirteen members and three visitors were present.\nLance Emerson of Trail spent a\nlew days in town.\nMiss Edna Shannon spent a few\ndays in Nelson and Trail.\nJames Black of Sandon was a\nvisitor in town Wednesday.\nCubs Win Twice\nTrail Softball\nGiants, Mercos, Union,\nand Jimmies Get\nWins\nTRAIL, B.C., May 16\u2014 Jimmies\nhanded Maroons a 6-4 defeat in a\nLadies' Softball league fixture that\nwas a stiff fight between pitchers;\nGiants defeated Arrows 19-18, Mercos beat Pirates 9-4, Union beat\nGiants 6-5, Cubs handed Union a 5-1\ndefeat and won over Arrows 17-5 in\nSenior Men's Softball league games\nhere today.\nThe ladies' game was the closest\nbattle staged by the fairer sex this\n;season. .One of their innumerable\nfine plays- included a beautiful\nthrow by Margaret Manduca from\nthe outfield to put out Eliza Edwards\nat home plate when she tried to\n\u25a0 stretch a three-base hit into a homer.\nIn the Giants-Arrow game hurlers\nwere easy on the baiters, but errors\nwere lew despite the fact 37 runners\n\"\"crossed the plate.\nLack of team practice was largely\ndue to Pirates' defeat, both Hughes\nand Sortome turning in a fine performance on the mound.\nUnion shoved home the winning\nrun of their victory over Giants in\nthe last half of the ninth to take the\nedge of an exceptionally close battle,\nBryant, pitching his second game\nof the day for Union, held the Cubs\nto six hits, Merlo, iron-man for the\nCubs, allowing but three.\nIn Cubs' second game, circuit\nclouts by Morris, Ponak, Minnow\nand Nello Angerilli were largely responsible for piling up the winning\nteam's 17 runs.\nM. Major-G. Barwis\nAre High in Net\n, Tournament Sunday\ni* High men in the first section of\n(the American club competition of\nthe Nelson Tennis club run off Sunday afternoon were M. Major and\nG. Barwis, men's doubles team and\nwinners for two consecutive years\nof the West Kootenay Men's doubles\n[title, with a total of 39 points out\n'of a possible 50.\n* Playing \" 'midst the showers'' on\nIthe higher courts the contestants\nlhad some difficulty getting started\n.'owing to the weather, while the\niladies on the lower courts got in lit-\n(tle play and will run off their sec-\nitional play during the week.\nOther contestants and their scores\nout of a possible 40 follow: Dr. L. J.\nMaurer and G. Simpson, 27; C.\nPrice and E. Stromstead, 18; Frank\niMorris and F. Phillips, 16; A) Mills\n'and J. A. Stewart, 16; and B. Mon-\nteleone and D. Wilson, 16. R. Nelson\nand N. Mahon scored eight out of\na possible 30 points.\nThe mixed sections of the American tourney will be run off next\nSunday.\nPart of a mill in Blackburn has\nbeen taken over by a new company formed to manufacture men's\nprotective clothing. Machinery is\nbeing installed and production will\nbegin in July or August. Work will\neventually be provided for about\ntwo .hundred people. Tiie town\nformerly had few industries other\nthan those connected with cotton,\nbut there are now many other\ntrades, most of which have been\naccommodated in former cotton\nmills.\nWater Laps the\nSix-Foot Mark\nSpeeding up a trifle in its rate of\nrise, the West Arm gained .42 foot\nduring the 48 hours ending Sunday\nafternoon at 6 o'clock, when it stood\nat 5.98 feet above the low water\nmark by the old Launch club gauge.\nFriday's mark was 5.56 feet. Sunday\nafternoon the water was lapping\nthe six-foot mark.\nHorswill Visits\n(reslon Valley\nCrawford    Bay   Area\nMonday; Tuesday\nSalmo Valley\nA. T. Horswill, Conservative candidate for Nelson-Creston riding,\ndrove over to Creston Friday morning, accompanied by Mrs. Horswill,\non a campaign trip, returning to\nNelson Saturday afternoon. He plans\nlater to make a three-day tour of\nCreston valley, and will then hold\nmeetings at different valley points.\nMonday Mr. Horswill will drive\nover the Gray Creek-Crawford Bay\narea, speaking at Gray Creek in\nthe afternoon and at Crawford Bay\nat night.\nReturning home Tuesday morning, Mr. Horswill will drive through\nto Sheep Creek, where he will speak\nin the afternoons, with meetings at\nSalmo and Ymir Tuesday night.\nMiss R. Hamer of\nNakusp Honored\nNAKUSP, B. C.-Members of the\nUnited Church Ladies aid were entertained at the home of Miss\nHomer Tuesday. A presentation was\nmade to Miss Homer as a token of\nappreciation of her services as organist at Nakusp United church.\nMrs. J. Dolman and three children\nhave returned from Trail where\nthey were guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nA. B. Thompson.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Sanderson of\nTrail are visiting at the home of\nMrs. Sanderson's brother-in-law\nand sister, Mr. and Mrs. H. L.\nMiller.\nJ. McQuair, who spent the winter\nat Three Forks, is spending a few\ndays at his home here.\nMr. and Mrs. Funk and family of\nFauquier have been guests at the\nhome of Mrs. Funk's brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. and Mis. R.\nBuerge.\nMrs. V. Moore of Graham's Landing was guest at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. D. Fulko.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Markwick of\nGraham's Landing were guests of\nMr. and Mrs. A. E. Fowler Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. M. DuMont of\nHunter's Siding were Nakusp visitors Tuesday.\nA. Miller was in town from Graham's Landing Wednesday.\nW. J. D. Rogers and J. Robins of\nArrow Park were visitors in town\nen route to Kaslo to attend a special\nmeeting'of the Masonic Order Tuesday.\nMrs. Harper and daughter, Ruby,\nleft Thursday for Calgary.\n- Captain and Mrs. C. S. Leary and\nHon. \"Dr. George Weir left Thursday for Kaslo.\nMrs. A. Watson has left for Penticton.\nJ, W. Bailey was a visitor to\nNelson and Salmo.\nMiss M. Younger of Nelson arrived Thursday to substitute at\nNakusp public school.\nW. G. M. Hakeman, R. Islip, J.\nW. Butlin, N. A. Herridge and A.\nMatheson motored to Kaslo Tuesday to attend a special Masonic\nfunction.\nWHOLESALE TRADE  IN  MARCH\nSubstantial improvement in the\nvalue of wholesale trade in Canada\nin 1937 as compared with 1936 is\nreflected in monthly returns received from almost 200 wholesale houses\noperating in nine lines of trade\nwhose aggregate sales for March\nwere 20,2 per cent higher than for\nMarch a year ago, This improvement, is a continuation of the series\nof gains recorded for every month\nof 1936 over the corresponding\nmonth of 1935 and for January and\nFebruary, 1937, over the same\nmonths of 1936, and is greater than\nfor any month since the commencement of this monthly survey almost\na year and a half ago. Total sales\nfor the first three months in 1937\nwere 16.0 per cent higher than for\nthe first quarter of 1936. this also\nbeing a record in quarterly comparisons of wholesale sales.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014The will of Col,\nE. G. Paley of the 18th Hussars left\n$25,000 to each of two maids, who\nhad served in his home for 17 years.\nFIRST\nCHOICE\nFOR THOSE WHO\nROLL THEIR    \/\nOWN      A\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.\u2014MONDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1937\nCompliments Ihe\nBar of Kootenay\nJudge Drives to Crow\nfor Cranbrook\nAssizes\nIn closing the five-day Nelson\nassizes Saturday evening at the\nconclusion of the last case, Mr. Justice Manson spoke appreciatively of\nthe cooperation extended to him by\nthe bar here.\n\"I want to thank you gentlemen,\"\nhe said to C. F. R. Pincott and C. B,\nGarland, counsel m she Wilkinson-\nGreyhound case, \"and the members\ndf the West Kootenay bar for your\nkindness and courtesy during my\nstay in your midst. It makes one's\nwork very much easier when one\nhas had the thougntful genialty and\ndignity which I have found in the\nmembers of the bar in Nelson and\nthose who came from outside.\"\nHis lordship left Sunday afternoon, accompanied by F. G. Perry\nof Fernie, court importer, for Cranbrook, for the Cranbrook assizes\nopening Monday, Inspector John\nMacdonald, commanding \"B\" division, driving them over.\nConvention May\nMake a Record\nWide Representation\nfor Associated\nBoards\nA record for boards represented\nwill probably be set by the convention of the Associated Boards of\nTrade of Eastern British Columbia\nopening at Rossland Tuesday morning as Penticton board is expected\nto be in attendance for the first\ntime in years, while the Salmo Valley and District board, newly organized, will make its bow. As\nGrand Forks and Greenwood are\nsending delegations, the western\nportion of the Associated Boards\nconstituency will be more strongly\nrepresented than for many years.\nAll the Kootenay boards are expected to be on hand, as usual.\nSome months ago the Revelstoke\nboard, which many years ago dropped out, asked to be readmitted.\nWhile it has not given any recent\nintimation regarding the convention\nit may be represented.\nCAMPBELL TO PRESIDE\nIn the absence of W. G. Ternan,\npresident, across the line for medical treatment, Lome A. Campbell,\nvice-president, is expected to wield\nthe gavel. The sessions open Tuesday morning at 10. Tuesday evening the Rossland board of trade\nwill banquet the delegates. The\nconvention business should be concluded Wednesday forenoon at the\nlatest. J. R. Hunter, secretary-\ntreasurer, will probably go over to\nRossland tonight.\nNelson hoard is expected to have\na large delegation, possibly 30 members, in attendance *i one or more\nof Tuesday's functions.\nMORE ABOUT\nSPAHISH\n(Continued From Page One)\nWhile political leaders strove to\nachieve order out of the welter of\nconflicting party demands, Sunday\ncrowds viewed destruction wrought\nby insurgent.air raiders at nightfall\nSaturday.\nThe number of dead in that raid-\nmost destructive yet suffered by the\ntemporary capital\u2014rose to 38 as victims in hospitals died. Among them\nwas the cook of the British embassy,\nJustine Garcia. Sixty-six were\nwounded,\nSeven insurgent bombers swooped\ndown on the city Saturday night as\ndusk fell. One bomb fell in front of\nthe British embassy, wounding a\ndoorman in addition to Garcia. Another fell in front of the ministry\nof marine and air. '\nINSURGENTS  ADVANCE\nGUERNICA, Northern Spain, May\n16 (AP) \u2014 Insurgent forces drove\ntheir lines forward a half-mile toward Bilbao today in the Amorebieta sector in a slashing reply to a\npre-drawn Basque attack.\nGeneral Francisco Franco's troops\ncamped tonight within seven miles\nof the Basque capital in the sector.\nThe Basques, reinforced by Astur-\nian shock troops, were driven back\nacross a spur of Mount Calvo westward from the village of Gorocica.\nGorocica, east of Bilbao and\nnortheast of Amorebieta, lies about\nmidway between Amorebieta and\nGuernica.\nSquadrons of bombing planes\ndumped explosives repeatedly on\nthe Basque positions, clearing the\nway for the infantrymen who\nstormed their foes' trenches' in a\nfierce attack with machine guns,\nrifles and hand grenades,\nThe advance followed the repulse\nof a desperate Basque effort to\nthrow back the insurgent lines\nsteadily drawing closer to Bilbao,\n4000 REFUGEES SAIL\nBILBAO, May 16 (CP-Havas)-\nWar office communiques today reported repulse of renewed insurgent\nattempts to take Mount Sollube and\nMount Jata.\nMeanwhile 4000 refugees sailed\nfor La Pallice, France, aboard the\nHabana. Two armored cruisers and\ntwo destroyers\u2014all British\u2014accompanied the ship after it had been\nI convoyed to the three-mile limit by\nSpanish war vessels.\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\nCKOV  CJCJ  CJCA CHWK  CFQC\n630\u00bb      \u00ab90        730        780       840\nCFJC\n860\nCJAT CFAC CJOC    CKY    CKCK\n910      930      990      960       1010\nCRCV\n1100\n5:00 Blossom time festival, Grimsby; 5:30 Melodic strings, Tor.; 6:00\nBadinage, Mon.; 6:30 Giving youth\na chance, talk, Ottawa; 6:45 News\nand weather, Tor.; 7:00 Henry Weber's Pageant of Melody orch., M.B.S.Chicago; 7:30 Youngbloods of\nBeaver Bend, drama, Winnipeg; 8:00\nMagnolia Blossoms, N.B.C. - N.V.;\n8:30 Book review, Prince Albert;\n8:45 Good Evening, news, Vancouver; 9:00 In School District No. 10.\nWill Davidson, m.c, Winnipeg; 9:3U\nTu an Evening Star, orch. dir. Tom\nGardiner, Edmonton (not CRCV),\n10:00 From the Coast Line, drama,\nVancouver; 10.30 News, Vancouver\n(B.C. Network).\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ  KGW  KFI   KPO  KOMO\n590 620 640 680 920\n5:30 Hour of charm, all-girl orch.;\n6:00 Lullaby' Lady, Vivian Delia\nChiesa, quar., trio, or.; 6:30 Burns\nand Allen with Ray Noble's or.; 7:00\nAmos 'n' Andy, blackface comedians;\n7:15 Uncle Ezra's Radio Station\nE-Z-R-A; 7:30 Margaret Speaks,\nguest artist, orchestra dir. Alfred\nWallenstein; 8:00 Fibber McGee and\nMolly, comedy, Ted Weems' orch.;\n:30 Vox Pop, sidewalk interviews:\n9:00 Hawthorne House, drama; 9:30\nMeakin's musical news; 10:00 News\nflashes, Sam Hayes; 10:15- Voice of\nHawaii, music; 1030, Al Ravelin's\norch.; 11:00 Phil Harris' orch.; 11:30\nRan Wilde's orch.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Good Time society, revue;\n6:00 Champions dir. Richard Him-\nber; 7:00 Sports graphic, Ira Blue;\n7:15 Lum and Abner, comedy; 7:30\nKing's Jesters' orch.; 8:00 Safety\nFirst (KGO); Bob Crosby and his\norchestra; 8:15 Dance hour, E.T.;\n8:30 Stanford University program;\n8:45 Lou Breese' orch.; Musical\nMoments (KGO); 9:00 House of\nMelody, John Nesbitt, Meredith\nWillson's orch. (KGO); Orchestras-\nLouis Panico; Jimmy Joy; Ran\nWilde; Harry Lewis; Jimmy Grier;\n11:00 Paul Carson, organist.\nCOLUMBIA  NETWORK\nKVI   KOIN   KNX   KSL   KOL\n670     940      1050    1130    1270\n5:00 Radio Theatre; 6:00 Wayne\nKing's   orch.;   6:30   Man   to   Man,\nsports; 7:00 Scattergood Baines, dr.;\n7:15 Isham Jones and his orchestra;\n7:30 Pick and Pat, comedy, company;\n8:00 Horace Heidt's Brigadiers; 8:30\nTed Fio-Rito's orch.; 9:00 Nocturne,\nwith  Eddie House, baritone; 9:15\nRay   Eldredge's   orch.;   9:30  Mark\nFisher and orchertra; 10:00 Wrestling matches (KNX, KSL); 10:45\nPete Pontrelli's orch.; 11:00 Tommy\nTucker's orch. (KSL); Ted Fio-Rito's\norch. (KSL H:W): 11:46 Black Chapel, drama.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver       \u2022 500 w\n5:10 News flashes; 5:15 Unele\nMickey's Mystery club; 6:15 News\nflashes; 6:30 Political broadcast; 7:00\nStock quotations; 7:30 Financial\ntalk; 7.45 Guilty or Not Guilty, E.T.;\n8:00 Political; 8:30 Sports; 10:00 Pete\nCowan's Old Timers; 11:00 Rhythm\nwranglers; 11:30 News flashes; 11:45\nSlumber hour.\n910 k CJAT 319.6 m\nTrail 1000 w\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:15 Musical Clock; 8:00 Request program:\n9:00 Organ fantasy; 8:15 Barn dance;\n9:30 The Old Timer; 10:00 What's\nnew?; 10:15 Memory lane; 10:30 Radio Chef; 10:45 Melod:? pipes; 11:00\nBackstage Wife, E.T.; 11:15 Kootenay Echoes; 11:30 Monitor views the\nnews; 11:45 House of Peter McGregor; 12:00 Hughesreel; 12:30\nLaugh Parade; 1:30 The Concert\n(four; 2:30 Swing Time; 3:00 Black\nMagic; 3:15 Hits and Encores; 4:45\nCecil and Sally; 5:00 Theatre news;\n5:15 Eb and Zeb, E.T.; 5:45 Growin'\nUp; 6:00 See C.B.C. network except:\n10:45 Lullaby Land.\n1030 k CFCN 293,1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n6:00 Honor the Law; 6:30 Red\nHead family; 6:45 Harlem Minstrels;\n7:30 Cub reporters; 8:00 Roy Watt's\nMusic Makers; 8:30 Concert orch.;\n9:00 News flashes; 9:30 Rhythmic\nAge; 10:05 Garden of Melody.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nBRITISH  EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nG8I 1S.26 mcs. (19.66 m.)\nGSD 11:76 met. (25.53 m.)\nGSC 9.58 met. (31.32 m.)\nGSB 9.51 met. (31.55 m.)\n6:00 p.m.\u2014Big Ben. Polo match.\n6:20\u2014Two Pianoforte recitals. 8:40\u2014\nThe Duchy of Cornwall. 7:40\u2014News\nand announcements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nRome 3 p.m.\u2014News in English;\nOpera; \"Music and Musicians,\" a\ntalk; Vocal concert; 2RO's mail bag.\n2RO, 31.1 m\u201e 9.63 meg.\nMoscow 4 \u2014 Young workers in\nSoviet industry; Songs of Soviet\nYouth. RAN, 31.2 m\u201e 9.6 meg.\nBerlin 4:30\u2014An appreciation of\nwomen. DJP, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg.\nPrague, Czechoslovakia 5:30 \u2014\nPrague teachers' chorus. OLR 4A\n25.34 m., 11.84 meg.\nCaracas 5:45\u2014Amateur hour. YV\n5RC, 51.7 m\u201e 5.8 meg.\nParis 7\u2014Musical program. TPA-4,\n25.6 m., 11.72 meg.\nTokyo 9:15\u2014Greetings and choral\nselctions, by students of the Truda\nWomen's college, in order to celebrate International Goodwill Day,\nJZJ, 25.42 m\u201e 11.80 meg.\n1 JOHANNESBURG, (CP)-Public\nfeeling has been aroused here by exhibition iii an amusement park of a\nnative boy who walks on all fours.\nShow-owners stated it is his only\nmeans of making a living.\nMORE ABOUT\nDAMAGE AWARD\n(Continued From Page One)\nthat his lordship's measurements\nshowed a narrower travelled roadway than any estimates given by\nwitnesses during the trial.\nWhen court resumed, Mr. Garland\nsummed up for the defendant for 45\nminutes, and Mr. Pincott reviewed\nthe plaintiffs' cause briefly.\nIn giving judgment, Mr. Justice\nManson stated that in this case, as\nnearly always with cases under the\nMotor Vehicle act, there was considerable difficulty by reason of conflict of evidence, witnesses differing\nwidely. This divergence he did not\nascribe to either perversity of witnesses, or deliberate statement of untruth, and the principal witnesses\nimpressed him as making a real endeavor to state the truth. But it was\nobvious that several times witnesses\nwere giving as their recollection of\nwhat happened, what their subsequent reasoning told them must have\nhappened.\nFour facts stood out from the\nevidence, said his lordship, the first\nbeing that the corner where the accident occurred was a wicked corner, with a rock bluff on the inner\nside, an acute curve, and a narrow\nroadway, its travelled surface being\nscarcely 16 feet.\nSHOULD FIX CORNER\nIt might be a costly business to\nremedy this corner, said his lordship,  but  It was a  corner  that\nought to be remedied without delay If any regard was to be had\nfor the safety of human life, on a\nmain highway of this province.\nThe second fact not in dispute was\nthat on the particular day of the\naccident the weather was bad. It had\nbeen snowing shortly before, and the\nroadway was slushy, with probably\nan ice surface under the snow.\nPlaintiffs, in Peterson's car, were\nbeing driven from Grand Forks to\nNelson through Trail, and by-the\npoint of the accident. From the evidence his lordship concluded Peterson to be a careful driver, l)ut also\nfrom the evidence, he was guilty of\nnegligence that contributed to the\naccident. There seemed no doubt\nthat Peterson was travelling the centre of the highway a short distance\nback. No great fault was to be found\nwith him for doing that on that day\non the narrow highway on open\nstretches, but it was a plain duty\nupon him not oijly to keep a strict\nlookout, but also to move well to\nthe right on approaching any place\nwhich was blind to his vision.\nA servant of the defendant company was driving a highway bus\nfrom Nelson to Trail, the bus being\n28 feet long, and 7 feet 8 inches\nwide ,and he .was late on his journey. He admitted approaching the\ncurve at 16 to 20 miles an hour, while\nplaintiff's witnesses put his speed\nconsiderably higher, even 30 to 35\nmiles being suggested. Trie defendant's driver was a good driver, with\nan experience of many years dura-\ntion, and he was driving on a schedule, to which he was instructed to\nkeep as close as he reasonably could.\nIt was not suggested his employer\nB. Marley Takes\nFirst of Weekly\nGolf Tourneys\nFirst \"handicap sweep\" or weekly\nstroke competition of the season run\noff at the Nelson Gol! and Country\nclub links was won by Blan Marley\nwith an 84 score which minus an 18\nstroke handicap gave him a score\nof 66, while Vic Owen playing a\ngood game, made a .close second,\nwith an 86 score minus an 18 stroke\nhandicap which gave him a score\nof 68.\nOther prize winners were W.\nBlane, L. Lubeth, and Roy Pollard\nall with scores of 69 strokes.\nThe exceptional entry of 25 contestants testified to the popularity\nof the weekly event.\nAmong other contestants were\nLeigh McBride, Ken McBride, C.\nStark, L. -A., McPhail, R. L. McBride, B. Townshenji, Don Clarke,\nArthur Lakes, Harold Lakes, Fred\nWeir, B. Sutherland, Arthur Parkes,\nA. C. Whitehouse, H. Seaman.\nSTEEL STRIKE\nLOOMS IN U. S.\nPITTSBURGH, May 16 (AP). -\nThe threat of a strike that might begin before the week ends, hung tonight over five of the biggest independent United States operators in\nthe booming steel industry.\n\"Sign or face a strike within 10\ndays,\" was the statement hurled by\nthe steel workers organizing committee to Bethlehem. Republic,\nYoungstown Sheet k Tube, Inland\n& Crucible Steel Corporations. They\nemploy 192,000 of the 570,000 steel\nworkors in the United States.\ninstructed   him   to   disregard   the\nsafety of his passengers.\nGOOD DRIVER ERRED\nGiving the most careful consideration to the evidence, supplemented\nby his view of the morning, Mr.\nJustice Manson said he could not\navoid the conclusion that the bus\ndriver did not use that care and\ncaution he should have used in go\ning around that wicked corner on a\nroadway 15'A feet wide. The driver\nsaid he could not hug the rock cut\ntoo closely, as otherwise the rear\nportion would drag. There were\nvarying estimates of the distance of\nthe bus from the rock wall, some\nsaid two feet, others four. If the\nright wheel was four feet from the\nwall, then the left crossed the centre\nline; if two feet, the front bumper\nwould project across the medial line\nof the highway. His lordship was\nsatisfied that when the bus driver\ncame around the corner his front\nbumper was over the middle line.\nIt was a much travelled highway,\nMr. Justice Manson pointed out.\nand even on that day a driver must\nanticipate adverse traffic, as the law\nrequired.\nBOTH ACTED TOO LATE\nWhen the emergency of a collision was presented to the two drivers, each did the best he could, but\nneither could save the situation-\nit was too late. The bus driver applied the brakes and handled the bus\nas well as it could possibly could be\nhandled. There was no fault with his\nhandling, at the last moment.\nPeterson was said to be in second\ngear, a wise precaution on a corner,\nbut his use of second gear should\nhave carried with it the realization\nthat while by that means a car could\nbe mare safely maneuvered, it could\nnot be so quickly maneuvered.\nThe situation boiled down to this,\nsaid his lordship: He did not think\nthe bus and car could have passed\nthat day at that point unless both\ndrivers had started to take their\nprecautions distinctly earlier than\nthey did. A dry day would have\nbeen different, as they could then\nmaneuver to great advantage, but\ndrivers must take care according to\nthe circumstances.\nRESPONSIBILITY 50-50\nConcluding, as was obvious, that\nthe accident was due to the negligence of both drivers, his lordship\ndid not think it could be said there\nwas an ultimate negligence; and he\nestimated the degree of their contributions to the accident, as nearly\nas could be determined, at about\n50 per cent each.\nBefore giving judgment, his lordship added one thing more\u2014that all\nthose involved should be tremendously thankful for their escape with\ntheir lives. It was a narrow shave;\nanother foot or two, and they would\nhave gone headlong down a bank\nwith a deep drop.\nMr. Justice Manson then gave\njudgment for damages as mentioned,\nmaking the judgment subject to a\nprior agreement between counsel\ngoverning the event of contributory\nnegligence by Peterson being found.\nLeafs Win First\nSoftball Battle\nWith Hazel Spiers, local speedball\nsoftball chucker, fanning 16 batters,\nthe Maple Leafs packed too much\nbatting punch for the Aces Sunday\nafternoon. They won the opening\ngame of the Nelson girls' softball\nleague, 19-9.\nWhile the Aces were outplayed on\nthe day's play they never gave up\ntrying and scored six of their nine\nruns in the last two innings after\nbeing on the short end of a 15-3\nscore at the end of the seventh.\nElvera Matheson was the only\nplayer of the Aces who did not fan\nat least once. In the first three in\nnings Hazel Spiers fanned eight batters. Alice Gillett caught a good\ngame for the winners and got 19\nputouts. She also obtained five hits\nincluding two long homers and a\ndouble. Deannie Wallace and Jean\nSpiers each obtained four hits. Iris\nJohansson, a new player, hit two\nhomers, and Pauline Stangherlin\none homer for the winners, Mary\nPayne also hit a circuit clout, but\nwas called out for missing a base.\nAnnie Busk, another new player,\nhit safely twice.\nFor the Aces, the work of Isabel\nDonovan, Elvera Matheson and Margaret Thompson was outstanding.\nIsabel Donovan hit two homers and\nwas credited with five assists and\none putout. Sybil Bradley, a newcomer to the Aces, hit a home run.\nGertie Whitehead fanned six batters\nand walked one.\nSUMMARY\nScore by innings: R H E\nMaple Leafs    212 202 603\u201419 24   3\nAces  202 011 033- 9 10   6\nStruck out by Hazel Spiers, 16;\nGertie Whitehead, 6; bases on balls\noff Hazel Spiers, 1; Gertie Whitehead, 1; home runs, Alice Gillett, 'f,\nIris Johansson, 2; Pauline Stan^ifr-\nlin, Isabel Donovan, 2; Sybil Bradley; two base hits, Deannie Wallace,\n2; Alice Gillett.\nThe teams were:\nMaple Leafs \u2014 Hazel Spiers, p;\nDeannie Wallace,, 2b;, Jean. Spiers,\nlb; Alice Gillett, -c; Iris Johansson,\ncf and ss; Mary Payne, 3b;- Phyllis\nWallace, If; Pauline Stangherlin, If;\nEva Hendrickson, rf; Doreen Long,\nss; Annie Busk, cf.\nAces\u2014Isabel Donovan, 3b; Sybil\nBradley, 2b; Margaret Thompson,\nlb; Elvera Matheson,.SS; Marjorie\nBradley, rf; Gertie Whitehead, p;\nDay, Jacques, cf.; Reta Weatherhead,\ncf; Carmella Del Puppo, c; and Dot\nWheeler, if.\nCharlie Nemrava, Joe Fierro Louis Aurelia and Bill Nemrava umpired with Margaret Thain as scorer.\nBELLEVILLE, Ont. (OP)\u2014Body\nof Samuel Burns, 75, away from\nhome two weeks, was found in the\nwater at Trenton. It was thought\nhe walked off the dock. \u25a0>\nMORE ABOUT\nMUSSOLINI\n(Continued From Page One)\n(Presumably he referred to the\nupholding of the Wagner,Labor Relations act by the United States\nsupreme court. Mussolini has set up\na \"corporative\"' system under which\nstrikes are forbidden and arbitration of labor disputes is comulsory.)\nStanding under a state of Julius\nCaesar, II Duce declared:\n\"Economic autarchy (self-sufficiency) is a guarantee of peace\nwhich we firmly desire. It is an impediment Of war. \u2022*\u2022\n\"For us it is impossile in a world\narmed to the teeth to abandon such a\npolicy. It would mean putting our\nselves tomorrow, in case of war, at\nthe mercy of those who have all\nand who can make war without\nlimitation of time or consumption,'\nGERMANY WOOING BRITAIN?\nLONDON, May 16 (AP)-Author\nitative observers saw strong indications tonight Great Britain, Ger\nmany and France have been holding\nhands under the cloak of coronation\nexcitement\nPremier Mussolini's declaration\nItaly will make herself economically self-sufficient was taken here as\nan indication he had heard about\nthis development.\nThe press has recorded the \"personal success\" being scored by Marshall Werner von Blomberg. At the\nGerman Ambassador Joachim von\nRibbentrop's coronation party Marshal Von Blomberg met General\nMarie Gustave Gamelin, French\narmy chief of staff, and they chatted for more than an hour.\nSTATESMEN TALK\nBy PAUL-LOUIS BRET\nLONDON, May 16 (Cp-Havas)-\nPursuit of common foreign policy\nwith France will be one of the aims\nof the cabinet under Neville Chamberlain, the diplomatic conversations underway here during the past\nfew days seem to indicate.\nFrench Foreign Minister Yvon\nDelbos saw Primij'Minister Baldwin,\nwith whom he discussed the past.\nThe future, Baldwin told him, rested with Chamberlain. Delbos then\nsaw the prime minister-to-be with\nwhom he discussed Anglo-French\ncollaboration in the coming period.\nOut of the interview, between\nGeneral Werner von Blomberg,\nreich defence minister, and foreign\nsecretary Eden it became clear\nGermany desires to ease the situation created by the Spanish civil\nwar and intends to conduct negotiations for a western pact. Diplomatic\naction along both these lines can be\nforecast.\nWith Milan Hodza, premier of\nCzechoslovakia, Eden discussed effect of Italo-German relations on\nthat country and Hodza, received\nsatisfactory assurances\u2014if not formal engagements\u2014that the independent existence of his country was regarded as essential for the preservation of European peace.\u2014(Copyright, 1937, by the Havas News\nAgency).\nHeavier Apple\nCrop Expected\nStales Hayden\nMay Be 25 to 30 Per\nCent; 1100 Signed.\nfor Advertising\nVANCOUVER, B.C., May 16 \u2014\nThat there would probably be a\nheavier apple crop in the Okanagan,\nMain Line, Kootenay and Creston\nareas this season, with the increase\nrunning possibly 25 to 30 per cent,\nwas anticipated by C. A. Hayden\nof Vernon, editor of Country Life\nin B.C., at Vancouver. The 1936 crop\nreturned $420,000 more than the 1935'\ncrop, he said. ]\n\"An increase of 25 per cent in\nproduction, and this estimate is based on a survey just made by a reliable authority, would mean at least\na million boxes, which would be a\nnormally good crop,\" Mr. Hayden\nstated.\nPeaches and pears promise to be\nheavy crops; plums and prunes\nabout the same. Apricots and cherries still show the effects of the ,\nOctober, 1935, freeze, but apricots\nare expected to reach 75 per cent\nof the 1935 record and chefcies arc\nexpected to be up 25 per cent, although the weather has not been\nany too good for pollenization.\nMr. Hayden believed the three\npresent members of the B.C. Tree\nFruit board, W. E. Haskins, George\nA. Barrat and O. W. Hembling,\nwould be returned at the board election May 27 as no other nominations\nwere in sight.\nThe board would probably make\nfurther efforts to organize an advertising and merchandising campaign,\nhe thought. Already more than.1100\ngrowers have authorized the board\nto make a levy on their fruit for\nthis purpose.\nOUTPUT OF LEAD\nLead production in Canada during January amounted to 34,112,307\npounds valued at $2,039,022, the average price during the month being\napproximately 5.98 cents, compared\nwith an output of 40,389,544 pounds\nvalued at $2,260,215 in December,\nthe average price being 5.596 cents.\nIn January, 1936, the production\ntoallled 28,106,650 pounds worth\n$959,316, the averge price being\n3,413 cents.\nRefined lead production in the\nUnited States was recorded at 41,223\ntons in January compared with 43,-\n613 in Ihe previous month. Stocks\nin the United States declined 2080\ntons during the month to 169,776\ntons. Mexico's output rose 4.9 per\ncent in January to 21,449 tons, and\nAustralian output was slightly higher at 19.637 tons, while the German\noutput was 6.3 per cent lower at\n14,652 tons.\nKelly Bowlers\nWin Trail (up\nTRAIL, B.C., May 16\u2014Joe Kelly's\nquintet took the Hardington cup\nwhen they came out in first place\nat the conclusion of Elks' 10-pin\nbowling league at Memorial alleys\nSaturday night, defeating Billy Mo-\nlisy's crew, former trophy holders,\nby a slight edge. '\nVictoria Teacher\nto Lecture Here\nK. C. Symons, headmaster of St,\nMichael's school at Oak Bay, suburb of Victoria, will address the\nNelson Women's Canadian club\nWednesday, speaking on \"The\nCrown Jewels of England,\" a subject\nof which he has made an intimate\nstudy. Mr. Symons is stated to be\nan accomplished lecturer.\nMORE ABOUT,\nLetter Carriers\n(Continued From Page One)\nAt Trail W, A. Porteous, president, and R. M. Hoyland, secretary, of the Trail board, met the\nparty ' and requested that additional drop letter boxes be placed\nat various poInU in the city and\non the Trall-Castlegar train. Mr.\nUnderwood promised he would\nInvestigate the first request but\nhe was opposed to a letter box on\nthe train on the ground that It\nmight lead to confusion and even\nto delays In delivery. Trail letters\nwould be taken at the.post office\nwicket up to 10 minutes before\ntrain time.\nCHANGE STREET NAMES\nMr; Underwood stated it.would\nbe necessary to change the names\nof several Nelson streets nOw.'similar, such as Kootenay avenue and\nKootenay street, Selwyn and Elwyn\nstreets, and others if they were\nlikely to be confused. Water anti\nFront streets, iv was proposed,\nshould be made one street, and it\nwas suggested the crescent around\nKootenay Lake General hospital\nmight be given a name. Since Mr-\nUnderwood's visit me suggestion\nhas been put forward that it be\ncalled the \"Crescent.\" .\nHe also desired that numbering\nof Nelson houses be improved, in\nSome cases by bringing numbers\nout where they could be more easily seen and in others by placing\nnumbers on houses now lacking\nthem. There were few of the latter,\nhowever, the majority being in districts where there has been considerable building in the past few\nyears.\nCOST $2000 PER CARRIER\nThe cost of letter delivery would\nbe approximately $2000 a year for\neach carrier. Each man would\nmake about 400 calls a day. No intimation was given the board of\ntrade committee as to how many\nmen would be required.\nMr. Underwood expected seven\nmen would be needed for Trail,\nadding that they would be chosen\nfrom a civil service list. No additions would be made to the clerical\nstaff at the Trail post office, he\nsaid, adding that tne staff was \"very\nefficient.\"\nThe chief superintendent stated\nthe postal service in British Columbia was satisfactory and that business showed an increase.\n\"Postal revenue throughout Canada, generally speaking, is on the\nincrease,\" said Mr. Underwood, adding that \"this is a fair indication of\nconditions in the Dominion.\"\nB:e had little to say regarding\nairmail except that \"decided progress'' had been made in preliminary work.\nGrand   *\nConservative Rally\nTONIGHT\nBROADCAST FROM\nCrystal Ballroom, Hotel Vancouver\nHEAR IT OVER\nCJAT, TRAIL - 8 to 9\nALL VANCOUVER CONSERVATIVE CANDIDATES WILL SPEAK\n\"Save Our Province From the Qrit Machine1'\n^_\n mmmm^m.\nHP***- \u2022 \u25a0 ; \u25a0 ^^\u25a0^^\"^'^^^\u2022rr^^^mmiTi^\n~   , \u25a0    \u25a0       .. \u2022,     \u2022'..        \u2022 -\nm\nWaterworks and\nTractor Bylaws\nPass, Rossland\nConfusion in Figures\nResults Error in\nReport\nKOSSLAND, B.C., May 16. -\nWhen Rossland ratepayers went to\nthe polls to vol* on three bylaws\nthey indorsed a $7500 bylaw for\npurchase of tractor and plow equip'\nment and a $4000 bylaw for waterworks improvement, but defeated a\n$5000 measure for street improvement. Through confusion of the\nfigures it was reported Saturday\nthat the waterworks bylaw had\nbeen defeated. It received, on the\ncontrary, a wider measure of indorsation than the tractor bylaw.\nThe figures on the successful bylaws were:\nTractor purchase-\nTor    85\nAgainst    35\nSpoiled     11\nWaterworks improvement:\nFor     95\nAgainst    30\nSpoiled     6\nThe recorded vote on the defeated\nstreet bylaw, under which black-\nfepping and bridge building was\nplanned, follow:\nFor  73\nAgainst    48\nSpoiled       10\nIn the case of the street bylaw\nthe affirmative vote was less than\nthree-fifths of the total vote as required for passage of a debenture\nbylaw. It was five voles short of\nthe necessary three-fifths.\nNakusp Man Has\nCrown Replica\n, NAKUSP, B. \u25a0 C.-E. J. Leveque,\nwho has one of the finest private\nmuseum collection in the country,\nhas added yet another interesting\npiece of work to his collection of\nhandcraft.\nKrje has made a crown, an almost\nexact copy of St. Edward's crown.\niris two feet in diametervand 30\ninches, high. During the coronation\ncelebrations it was on display in\nNakusp but will now be added to\nMr. Leveque's museum collection\nas a souvenir of May 12. 1937.\n\"MORTALS,   IMMORTALS\"\nSUBJECT, LESSON-SERMON\n\"Mortals and Immortals\" was the\nsubject of the Lesson-Sermon in all\nChurches of Christ, Scientist, on\nSunday.\nThe Golden Text was: \"They that\nare in the flesh cannot please God\nBut ye are not in the flesh, but in\nthe Spirit, if so be that the Spirit\nof God dwell in you\" (Romans 8:\n8, .8).\nAmong the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the\nfollowing from the Bible: \"Then\nthey that feared the Lord spake\nioften one to another: and the Lord\nhearkened, and heard it, and a book\nof- remembrance was written before\nbin for them that feared the Lord,\nand that thought upon his name\"\n(Malachi 3: 16).\nThe Lesson-Sermon also included\nthe following passage from the\nChristian Science lextbook, \"Science and Health with Key to the\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy;\n''Suffering, sinning, dying beliefs\nare unreal. When divine Science\nis universally understood, they wilj\nIjave no power over man, for man\nis, immortal and lives by divine authority.\"\nEASTERN STAR LADIES\nHOLD SUCCESSFUL SALE\nLadies of the Rose City Chapter\nNo. 28, Order of Eastern Star, held\na successful sale of home cooking in\nLowery s grocery Saturday morning.\nMrs. J. A. Curran, who convened\nthe. sale, was assisted by Mrs. M.\nPaterson. Mrs. E. Sutcliffe, Mr. and\nMrs. T. F. McKechnie, Mrs. F. E.\nWheeler and Mrs. George Clerihew.\nCOULDN'T SLEEP\nCOULDN'T WORK\nWhat a reliei to still*]\nAwn lo a rul night's\ntest, and awrrlu full;\n\u2022freihotj, roads\nOftbo lily's duties. I\nraitortorod by fretful j\njtifhU\u2014iouini, turn-1\n\u2014 new comfortable. Half awoke diyi\n'Mired, timing body and mind to work\njhoy needed rest \"Try Dodd'a Kidney\n\" oud a friend \u2014 \"it may bo your\nrldneyi\". I'm glad I followed bia advice u\ntrow I m sleeping lile \u2022top-thinks In    III\nDodd'iKidney Pills\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C\u2014MONDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1937\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThis column Is conducted by Miss Priscilla Gelinas. All newt? of a\nsocial nature, including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages,' etc., will appear in this column. Telephone Miss\nGelinas at her home, 202 Victoria street.\nCanadian Soldiers Relieve Guards at Buckingham Palace\nMrs. E. E. L. Dewdney, Carbonate\nstreet, entertained at a buffet luncheon and bridge at her home Friday\nThe tables were arranged with tulips\nend bleeding heart. Invited guests\nwere Mrs. E. C. Wragge, Mrs. R. W.\nHinton, Mrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. W\nM. Walker. Miss M. Cameron, Mrs.\nMcKay, Mrs. McKenzie, Mrs. H.\nLakes, Mrs. W. M. Cunliffe, Mrs.\nW. R. Grubbe; Mrs. C. W. Apple-\nyard, Mrs. W. Waldie, Mrs. W. Foth-\neringham, Mrs. P. G. Morey, Mrs\nH. Rosling. Mrs. J. G. Bunyan, Mrs.\nR. L. McBride, Mrs. Wilfrid Allan,\nMrs. L. E. Borden, Mrs. W. O. Rose,\nMrs. J. R. McLennan, Mrs. J. S.\nMacGregOr, Mrs. L. Craufurd. Mrs.\nT. F. Payne, Mrs. M. J. Vigneux,\nMrs. Sturgeon, Mrs. P. Lincoln, Mrs.\nW. A. Nisbet, Mrs. N. Murphy, Mrs.\nD. Blackwood,. Mrs. W. K. Gunn,\nMrs. Ii. W. Robertson and Mrs.\nJohn Gansner.\nMr. and Mrs. George Horstead announce the engagement of their\ndaughter. Loleta (Babs) to Reginald\nE. Stratton, the wedding to take\nplace, at St. .Saviour's pro-cathedral\nWednesday evening, June 16.\nDr. Francis and son of New Denver were in Nelson Saturday.\n...\nShoppers in Nelson Saturday included Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Peters of\nGray Creek.\nRev. J. J. Cheevers has returned\nfrom two weeks at Hamilton, London and St. Catharines, Ont.\nMiss Ivy Walker spent the weekend at the home of her mother here.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Ferguson and\ndaughter, Bobbie, of Ymir were in\nthe city Saturday.\nMrs. McDonald and her daughter.\nMiss Mary Elliott, of Spokane were\nin the city yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. T. Sindel!. Victoria street, had as their guert their\nnephew, F. Stone of Vancouver.\nMrs. J. Vallance of Ymir was a\ncity shopper Saturday.\nMrs. G. Dunkerly, 609 Nelson avenue, has as her guests her mother,\nMrs. M. Leadbeater and Mr. and\nMrs. Hugh Bell and son, Robert, of\nTrail, Mrs. C. Irwin if Castlegar and\nG. Dunkerly of Kimberley.\nMrs. A. E. Brown of Bonnington\nwas in town over the week-end,\nLen Truscott of New Denver spent\nthe week-end in the city.\n...\nMrs. E. Coleman and son, Donald,\nof Vallican were city shoppers Saturday.\nBruno Bourgeois of Trail spent\nthe week-end in town.\nTommy Malahoff of Tye was in\ntown  over the  week-end  to play\ntennis.\n...\nJane Tyson of Trail was in the city\nSaturday.\nA. Milne of Creston spent Saturday in town.\n...\nMrs. Turner Lee and Wilfrid Lee\nof Bonnington were in town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u00bb       \u2022\nMrs. C. S. Squires of Robson was\nin the city Saturday.\nMr. Howard is leaving for Trail\ntoday to spend a week.\nGracien Bourgeois spent Saturday\nat Creston.\n\u2022 at        *\nMrs. M. E. Watts, Third street, had\nas her guest Saturday, Miss Barbara\nBird of South Slocan.\nMrs. Frank of Salmo was a city\nvisitor Saturday.\nW. Bamford is leaving this morning for Toronto on holiday.\nDouglas Ritohifc, who attended\nUniversity of Alberta at Edmonton,\nis in town en route to Trail where\nhe is employed.\nMrs. W. Waldie, Stanley street,\nhad as her guests her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. R. Waldie\nof Robson.\nR. G. Elliott of South Slocan was\na.city visitor Saturday.\nT.  Hulls,  Fairview,  had  as  his\nguest over the week-end his daughter, Miss Hazel Hulls, who teaches\nat Brilliant,\nMrs. Ferguson of Longbeach was\na city shopper Saturday.\n\u00bb   *   \u2022\nArthur Larson celebrated his fifteenth birthday at a theatre party\nFriday. Refreshments were served\nMOVING\nCan be a truly arduous task\u2014but, it\nneedn't be. With the West Transfer\nmoving personell and equipment at\nyour service your worries can cease.\nPHONE 33\u2014We'll do the rest\nWest Transfer Co.\nEstablished 1899.\nat his home after. Invited were\nPatricia Nicholson, 'Shirley Scatcli-\nard, Lois Gamble, Betty Ferguson,\nGertrude Mara, Harry McKenzie,\nJim Dodding, Leo McKtnnon, Warren Ferguson, Elmer Gelinas and\nArt Larson.\nLeigh M. McBride and Cordon\nRoynon motored to Trail Sunday.\n\u2022     *   '   *\nG. Foloso, who was a guest of his\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. M. Poloso, Silica street, has\nreturned to the Ore Hill mine.\nW. D. Ogilvie of Harrop spent Saturday in town.\n* *   \u2022\nRev. Sister Bernard returned Saturday from a week at Vancouver.\nShe was accompanied home by\nSister M. Casimir of Bellingham.\nMiss Patricia Campbell was a\nguest of her mother, Mrs. I. C.\nCampbell, during the week-end at\nWillow Point.\nBennie Montelcone visited the Or.3\nHill mine.\nMr. and Mrs. J. T. Andrews and\nMr. and Mrs. P. G. Morey motored\nto Ainsworth yesterday.\n* *        \u2022\nMrs. Whitely of .South Slocan was\na city visitor Saturday.\nMrs. J. M. DeGirolamo and two\nchildren, Raymond and Lorraine.\nleft yesterday for Trail to visit Mrs.\nDeGirolamo's sister, Mrs. C. Catalano, for two weeks.\nJames Anderson, former mayor of\nKaslo, is leaving Nelson today for\nVancouver,\nMrs. Chapman of Bonnington\nspent Saturday in town.\n* *        *\nMr. and Mrs. Waymon Kidwell\nhave returned from Shelton, Wash,\nwhere they attended the funeral of\nMr. Kidwell's father.\nMrs. Dick Smith of Appledale was\na city visitor Saturday.\nMrs. O. M. Smith of Salmo was in\ntown Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. T. MacMillan, Carbonate street, have as their guests\ntheir daughter and son-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. H. J. Byrnes and baby\nson, Kenneth, of Vancouver. Mr.\nByrnes is en route to Calgary whepj\nhe has been transferred. Mrs. Byrnes\nwill visit in Nelson for a month.\nW. Wadesom of South Slocan wa?\nin the city Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Stangherlin and\ndaughters, Pauline and Marie, motored to Slocan City and New Denver to visit friends.\nMrs, Dave Laughton, Mrs. W. J\nHipperson, Mrs. F. Goucher of Nelson, and Mrs. Hearn of Salmo, leave\ntoday for Vernon to attend a Pythian\nSisters convention.\n* \u2022   \u00ab\nHenry Davis of Riondel, spent\nSaturday in town.\n* \u25a0   \u00ab\nGeorge Hanegin of Blewitt was a\ncity visitor Saturday.\nMrs. A. W. Stubbs, Nelson avenue,\nand her daughter, Miss Helen Stubbs,\nreturned last night from Spokane,\nwhere Miss Stubbs received medico]\nattention.\n\u00bb   \u2022   *\nMaurice Major of Procter, accompanied by his mother and daughtei,\nspent Saturday in town.\n* *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. W. Bennett and\nson of South Slocan were city visitors Saturday.\nDr. and Mrs. H. H. MacKenzie returned Sunday from Vancouver\nwhere the doctor attended a family\nreunion.\nF. H. W. Chanter of Longbeach\nleft Sunday for Kelowna.\nMrs. Johnstone of Bonnington was\nin the city Saturday\nMrs. Batley of South $locan speu\nSaturday in town.\nV        *        \u2022\nMrs. F. Landucci erf Trail was a\nguest of her mother here over the\nweek-end.\nMrs. F. Chapman of South Slocan\nwas a city visitor Saturday.\nMrs. Albert Lee, who visited in\ntown for a few days, left yesterday\nfor her home at Vancouver.\nMrs. Barwis and Miss Jessie Harrop of Harrop were in town yesterday to take part in the tennis tournament.\nMr and Mrs. Charles DeFerro,\nRobson street, had as their guests\nover the week-end their son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. C\nDeFerro of Trail, and Mr. and Mrs.\nM. Demeo, also of Trail.\nFor the first time in history Canadian soldiers\npaced back and forth in front of Buckingham palace\nwhen they relieved the Welsh Guards for six hours\nat the gates of both Buckingham and St. James'\npalaces.    Clad   in   khaki,   the   Canadian  soldiers,\nnumbering 48, created keen interest among the\ncoronation crowds that pressed so close the soldiers\nhad difficulty in pacing a straight line. The above\nphotograph shows a non-commissioned officer giving instructions to the Canadian force,\u2014Central\nPress radio soundphoto.\nTHE NET\nTENNIS NOTES\nBy FIPS\nIt is interesting to note the number of badminton players who are\nplaying tennis 'this year. For it is\nan absolutely new departure. Others\nhave, from all appearances, enjoyed\nthe game before.\nThe sudden shifting from one\ngame to the other leaves a great deal\nof room for awkwardness to creep\nin. The handling of a similar yet\nheavier racket and the use^of the\nwrist are our two main difficulties.\nEven those of us who do not play\nbadminton experience some trouble\nat the start of the tennis season and\nconsequently get the habit once a\nyear of going back to the fundamentals of the game and by so doing\ngradually arrive at our standard of\nplay of the previous season.\nUSING THE WRIST\nBadminton authorities say use\nyour wrist to make most every shot,\nand the tennis books tell us we.may\nuse it only on about two or. three\nof our shots. Thus .at this season of\nthe year we find ourselves trying\nto break habits formed by one excellent game in order to play another, also excellent. And no doubt wc\nwill be just as anxious to reverse\ntiie process when the time arrives,\nOne fault common to many players came to light in a peculiar man-\nne.r An interested spectator on leaving the courts, while admitting the\nscoring and fundamentals of the\ngame were a mystery to him, remarked that although there might i\nbe a certain amount of enjoyment\nin hitting the net with the first two\nballs served, when the same person\nrepeated the act from the other side\nof the court, he failed to see the\nstrength of. the proceedings. Our\nspectator has unwittingly uncovered\na'Very common error. We all feel\nperhaps a little guilty and often\nwish that said error had been termed a \"mistake\" instead of a \"crime\".\nFINE RETRIEVER\nThe latest addition to the club is\nnone other than \"Angus', pet do;;\ncf Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wells. As a\nretriever of balls which hnve come\nto rest on the outside of the fence\nAngus is taking many a prize. Only\nthe other day a race between it and\nDr. Roy Maurer ended in a tie, with\nMrs. Wells coming to the 'rescue;\nand returning the ball to its propr\nowner.\nAlf, the \"Red\" Carr of our local\nsenior hockey team, turns in a fast\ngame of tennis, but still thinks an\n\"offside\" rule should be introduced\ninto the game somewhere. Benny\nMonteleone, well known in badminton circles, though not complaining is finding a tennis ball much\nneavier than a badminton bird.\nThe weatherma, naturally unable\nto please everybody, has kept the\ngame from hitting its full swing so\nfar this season but with at least\nthree clubs in operation in the city\nthe prospects look promising.\nI EDINBURGH (CP).-More than\n| 100 residents of Foula, off the west\nI coast of Scotland, isolated for a\nI long period each winter, may soon\nhave connection with the mainland\nby wireless telephone.\npage riy|\nDr. Weir Pledges\nin His Address\nCapt Leary, M. L. A.\nTells of Difficult\nProblem\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014Hon. Dr. George\nWeir, minister of education and\nprovincial secretary, and Capt. C\nS. Leary, M.L.A., were speakers at\na large public meeting in the Opera\nHouse here Tuesday evening.\nF. Rushton. chairman, in introducing Mr. Leary, said he felt that Mr.\nLeary had done his utmost in the\ninterests of the people of the Kaslo-\nSlocan.\n\"It is not as an orator nor as a\ndemagogue, but it is in all sincerity\nof purpose that I come before you,\"\nMr. Leary said. A working man\nhimself, understanding both the\nproblems of the employer and the\nemployee, the speaker said he was\nalways 100 per cent behind any\nmovement for the good of the\npeople.\nIn speaking of the Kaslo-Slocan\nriding, Mr. Leary said it covered\na large territory with widely different interests. He touched on the\nvarious industries, lumbering, mining, apple growing and small fruit\ngrowing and also dealt with the\nurgency of the Doukhobor situation\nHe said he had tried to deal fairly\nwith every part cf the district and\nhad worked for the good of the\nwhole.\nDISCUSSES WAGE AND\nHOURS ACT\nCaptain Leary discussed the\nminimum wage and minimum hours\nof work and explained the amendments to the Workmen's Compensation Board act. The forestry\ntraining camps for young men and\nHealth Insurance\nal Nakusp Meeting\nthe training given In placer mining\nwere also mentioned.\nDr. Weir gave an account of th*\ngreat strides in social service work\nhe said was accomplished by the\nLiberal government, during (U\ntenure of office. Eastern authorities have said that British Columbia has the most efficient social\nservice branch in the Dominion at'\nthe present time. Dr. Weir stated. .\nHe explained the new system of\neducation which he said had been\nsuccessful in the Peace Hlver and\nin the Sumas district\nIn speaking of health insurance,\nDr Weir said he felt that \u25a0\u2022sou..1\nprevention is genuine economy \"   .\n\"If the Liberal government' goes\nback into office, health insurance\nwill be enacted,\" Dr. Weir said.\n\"King Anthony\"\nMoney Cause of\nPolice Warning\nLONDON, May 16 (AP).-It's not\nthe coronation of King \u2022 Georfe\u2022 Vt\nthat worries the Tudor \"pretender\"\nto England's throne. \"King Anthony\"\u2014it's the Bank of England. '.\n\"I'll get the bank of England\neven if they put me in jail for it,\nbecause its charter is invalid,\" said\nthe would-be King, otherwise Anthony Hall, in referring to a police\nwarning he must stop printing his\nown private currency.\nHis currency is for redemptibii\nwhen he \"mounts the throne\" by\nvirtue of tiie descent he claims\nfrom Anne Boleyn and Henry VJIU\nNOTICE\nTO NELSON CITIZENS\nIt has been reported there are some people in the Nelson district working on the public and giving \"Finger\nWaves\" without having passed the Hairdressers'\nExamination and being the holder of a qualified certificate.\nWarning is given that such is a contravention of the\nHairdressers Act of British Columbia. Anyone found\nguilty will be dealt with accordingly.\nIssued by Instructions of\nHAIRDRESSERS' ASSOCIATION of B.C.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nOVER 4,000,000 TYPISTS\nCAN'T BE WRONG!\n\u2022 Underwood's easier and faster\noperation hat always produced more\nand better typing per hour with lest\nfatigue, its more durable construction\n(a result of pioneering every major\ntypewriter development) has minimized\nadjustments and repairs. Hence, the\nUnderwood has always been the unerring\nchoice of typists, training schools and\nbusiness organizations\u2014the world over!\nThree  exclusive  features on the  new\nChampion Underwood \u2014 Cushioned\nTyping, Champion Keyboard and Touch\nTuning \u2014 will step up your typing\nroutine and reduce typing expense. A\ntest trial on your own work will prove\nthis fact. 'Phone Underwood now\u2014no\nobligation.\nUNDERWOOD ELLIOTT FISHER LIMITED\nJ. j. SEIT7, Pmltfcnt J, L SEJTZ, Vk^M.dtM\n307 7th Ave. West Calgary, Alta.\nPhone Main 1973\nLONDON (CP). - The government provided a number of seals\nin the stands along the coronation\nprocession routes for mothers and\nwidows of officers and men killed\nin the war.\nCanadians Use More Than Twice At Many Underwood Typewriters Ai\nAll Other Makes Combined\nIndia's plant scientists are developing varieties of cotton to resist the spotted and pink bollwon\u2122.\nMENUS\nRECIPES\nand\nMINTS\nGood\nBy\nMr*.\nMary\nMorton\nHousekeeping\nNAKUSP CLAIMS\nFIRST BIRTH ON\nCORONATION DAY\nNakusp claims the honor of the\nfirst coronation baby of the province. A daughter was born to\nMr. and Mrs. W. Henke (nee Miss\nMarjorie Bennett) at the Arrow\nLakes hospital Wednesday, May\n12, two minutes after midnight of\nMay 11. Miss J. Yurick. matron\nof the Arrow Lakes hospital attended the case in the absence of\nDr. H. F. Tyreman.\nA Japanese physician says that\nflying high altitudes may affect the\nteeth, causing aviators to suffer from\ndental decay.\nMENb HINT\nLamb Hash     Boiled Potatoes\nButtered   Carrots      Lettuce   Salad\nChocolate Buttermilk Cake\nCoffee or Tea\nYou may use sour milk in this\ncake recipe, if you wish, instead of\nbuttermilk.\n  |\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nCHOCOLATE BUTTERMILK\nCAKE \u2014 One-half cup butter, one-\nhalf cup packed light brown sugar,\none-half cup sugar, ioijr egg yolks,\none and one-half cups pastry flour, |\none teaspoon soda, one-fourth tea-!\nspoon salt, three squares hitter\nchocolate, two-thirds cup buttermilk, one teaspoon vanilla. Cream\nbutter and sugar. . Beat egg yolks\nuntil thick and lemon colored. Add\nto creamed mixture. Add melted\nchocolate. Combine and sift together at least three times the\nflour, salt and soda. Add alternately with buttermilk to the\ncreamed mixture. Add vanilla. Bake\nin two layers at 350 degrees F. for\n30 minutes.\nICING\u2014 Three egg whites, two\ncups brown sugar, one-half teaspoon cream of tartar, four table\nspoons cold water. .Combine ingredients and place over boiling\nwater. Beat for seven minutes or\nuntil icing stands in peaks. Whip\nuntil thick. After cake is iced top\nwith pecan or walnut halves.'\nHome  Decorating  Art\nHome decorating has become a\nreal art. It is not possible for every\nhousewife to be a home decoration expert, but if she deals with a\nmodern, up-to-date furniture store\nshe wilt be able to secure advice on home decoration free.\nRooms in the home should be blended into a restful combination of\ncolors, and not just thrown together\nas a hodge-podge. The draperies\nand curtains, pictures, and everything which goes into the room\nshould be adapted to the general\nscheme. In this way and in this\nway only can the housewife be sure\nshe is getting the best arrangement\nfor her home.\nWIFE  PRESERVERS\nThis is worth trying: someone\nsuggests that bad-tasting medicine\ncan be taken easily after chewing\na small piece of orange peel.\nOne Thing About Our Commercial\nPrinting Department\nOur Customers Repeat\nAnd the reason is QUALITY and SERVICE.\nIt is worth the PRICE\nTHE\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCommercial Printing Department\nPHONE 143\n \u25a0\u25a0''fwpippipppp^^\nAGE SIX-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C\nMaim lathj JfaaiH\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS.\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of   the  Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe    Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nMONDAY, MAY 17, 1937.\nMONDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1937\n*\nBALDWIN'S LAST BOW\nAs the time draws near for Prime Minister. Stanley\nBaldwin of Great Britain to quit the political stage, the\nBritish people are becoming more aware of the calibre of\nhis statesmanship. There have been more brilliant statesmen in Britain's public life, but none saner or more closely\nin touch with the real feelings of the British people.\nIt was fitting that the last appeal made in the house\nof commons by Mr. Baldwin on the eve of his retirement\nshould be a plea for peace in the mining industry. During\nall his years in office, the chief task of Stanley Baldwin\nhas been a constant striving for peace. Sometimes it was\nfor peace between discordant interests at home. Sometimes it was desperate activity to prevent war abroad.\nBut as a result of it all, Baldwin has learned the value of\nconciliation, and the worth of Britain's democratic institutions.\nNow he can say: \"We ought all to bear in mind\u2014and\nthis has reference to all industrial disputes\u2014that democracy, in which we all, in varying degree believe, is quite\nthe most difficult form of government that has probably\never been devised, and I doubt whether it has even been\nachieved in any country of the world yet. Autocracy is a\nvery easy form of government because we all have to do\nwhat we are told and that means we are saved the trouble\nof thinking. Under democracy, every individual in some\nmanner or other, has to do his own thinking, and on\nwhether he things rightly or wrongly, the whole success\nof democracy depends.\"\nRegarding the vexed question of industrial agreements, he says: \"What is the alternative to collective bargaining? There is none except anarchy, and there are\nrare elements fh the country that would like to see anarchy\nin the trade unions\u2014in my view, the most dangerous thing\nthat could happen. Another alternative is force, but we\nmay rule out force, and I would lay it down as a rule that\nas long as the industrial system remains what it is, collective bargaining is the right thing. I have no doubt\nabout that.\"\nReferring to the sympathy and admiration felt in\nother countries for the way Britain has weathered the depression, Mr. Baldwin declared that, except for those who\nlove industrial strife for its own sake, and they are but\na few, the fact that Britain had come through the depression with little industrial disorder was the greatest testimony that democracy is really functioning. He said that it\nwas oftener a harder thing to settle difficulties than to\nfight them out, and called on British leaders to show that\nthe democracy of that land could still practise the arts of\npeace in a world of strife.\nThe parting words of Prime Minister Baldwin deserve the consideration of leaders and ordinary citizens\nthroughout the Empire. The man who guided Britain\nthrough the last few difficult years may have made mistakes, but regardless of party, all thinkers who sympathize\nwith the British tradition must agree that his underlying\nphilosophy has been sound.\nA WORD FOR THE OCTOPUS\nOne more bit of debunking. An eminent submarine\nscientist and photographer says the octopus will not deliberately attack a human being. It is news also that an\noctopus deliberates. It has been regarded as a grasping\ncreature that acts on impulse. Who has not shuddered\nover stories of slimy tentacles\u2014awesome word\u2014clutching\nand crushing their victims; and apparently with the utmost in slow deliberation ? It was the deep-sea killer from\nWhich there was no escape.  The \"devil-fish,\" it is called.\nApparently that view is all wrong. The octopus must\nbe provoked before it attacks; but who so foolish as to tease\nan octopus? However, the news is reassuring to fre\nquenters of ocean beds. The eight arms are extended toward the invader merely as a welcoming gesture; but if\nthe guest doesn't behave the octopus may lose jts temper.\nThat, happens even in human circles, though the octopus's\nway of expressing resentment is regarded as more effective\nthan man's. But now this sea monster may be catalogued\nwith the Algoma wolf as the friend of marwin a rather\nstandoffish way, it is true.\nThere are other species of the octopus whose methods\nit will be harder to debunk. They operate above water,\nthough generally underground, and their tentacles do a\ngreat deal of damage to humanity. They have to do with\nrackets of various kinds and with some lines of business\nthat may be quite legal. Many unfortunates are in their\nclutches. Nothing good can be said about these creatures\n\u2014and nothing good is said. They must continue to be\nregarded as slimy creatures, holding their victims in an\nembrace that means destruction. The deep-sea octopus\nmay have in his hideous make-up a touch of mercy, but\nhuman types are among the curses that humanity apparently must endure.\nAT ELECTION TIME\nWhy are we such arrant fools?\nWhy are we our servants' tools?\nWhy kow-tow to servants' rules?\nWe are surely free!\nWhy when we select someone\nOur provincial work to run\nHe should think himself the sun,\nSorely puzzles me.\nHe is but our hired man,\nThera to do the best he can.\nFreely we his work may scan.\nAnd if he is a flop\nThen you know it ts up to you\nTo get someone the work to do\nWho can an* will see it put through\nAnd let the other drop.\nWhy do we with noses high\nSome street scavenger pass by\nAnd approach with manner shy\nSome pompous M.L.A?\nEach was hired some work to do.\nEach engaged to put' it through.\nEach one claimed his work he knew,\nEs.cn collects hi* W-\nWhy do we great structures build,\nWith expensive fittings filled,\nAnd with sundry gadgets frilled,\nFor some civic pet,\nWhen we know his salary\nIs paid by folk who day by day,\nOn one-tenth his rste of psy,\nA scanty living get?\nWhy do we officials stand\nRanged all up and down the land,\nHoused in structures great and\ngrand,\nWhile we live In huts\nWho pass by with tilted nose,\nClassy suits and silken hose.\nUltra-snobs in every pose,\nScorning common mutts.\nWhy do we in polities\nStand for grafters' shameless tricks\nWhere party heejers will they fix,\nTrue to their rotten code?\nWhy put a man who never knew\nA single hard day's work to do\nAs foreman oe'er a husky crew\nOf men upon the road?\nAnd then we pay with heaps of cash\nThe men who're making such a\nhash.\nOur province bringing to a smash,\nWith loads of debt.   .\nThey promised much, but of\nthem  all\nNot one has done a thing at all,\nAnd now with ever-teeming gall,\nThey promise yet.\nOf course they know that we are\nfools,\nCommon, ignorant, stupid tools.\nThey know we know that they are\nghouls\nThat suck our blood.\nBut still they know by times a score\nWe'll vote as we have done before.\nAnd they can go on grafting more,\nTo suit their meed.\nNo wonder some of us see red!\nNo wonder that we are almost dead!\nThe thought to which each angered\nhead\nSo oft gives birth.\nWhen we see the way our country\nhath\nBeen led along tha downward path\nWe're tempted to arise in wrath\nAnd sweep them off the earth.\nSIMPLE SAM.\n\"Oh, please don't do that.  It frightens rifl.\"-Humorl;t.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK ?\nAll letters to the editor must be signed with the name of the\nwriter. A nom de plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines In typewritten copy should be double spaced.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy SHEPARD BARCLAY\n\"The Authority of Authorities\"\nPREFER RUFFS IN DUMMY\nWhen only four trumps are held\nby the declarer and three in the\ndummy, the contract can sometimes\nbe protected by letting the opponents take a trick which could be\nruffed in the long trump hand,\nespecially if that places the short\ntrump hand in position to ruff the\nnext round. By so doing, the declarer preserves a situation in\nwhich he can take four rounds of\ntrumps if that many be needed to\nconsume the hostile ones.\n\u2022 AQ7.4\n\u00bbKJ10\n\u2666 763\n+ K85\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nPIONEER\nEOPLE\nA Brief Sketch of Old Time\nKootenay Residents\nDR. AND MR8. MAJOR\nB^e-eme^ryemmmeme\nTHANKS PUTNAM, |\nGRAY FOR HELP\nAT CAMP LISTER\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014A committee meeting of\nFarmers' and Workers' Protective\nassociation, Camp Lister branch,\nwas held at the home of p. Rylan.\nHon. Wells Gray, minister of lands\nand Frank Putnam, M.P.P., Nelson-\nCreston attended in regards to the\n60-day vacation notices received by\n38 families of settlers, from the land\nsettlment board.\nThrough the efforts of the members of F. W. P. A, Mr. Putnam\ntook up the case with Mr. Gray\nand the matter was settled to the\nsatisfaction of the parties concerned.\nIn the name of the executive and\nmembers of Farmers and Workers\nProtective association we are taking\n\u2666 J 8 6\n\u00abB3\n\u2666 KQJ5\n+ 902\nthis opportunity of thanking Mr.\nGray, and Mr. Putnam who did\ntheir part in settling the matter.\nFarmers and Workers Protective\nAssociation,\nChalrmsn-P. W. STRELINE\nSecretary\u2014P. RYLAN\nCamp Lister, B.C.\nRETRACTS CLAIM\nOF STARVATION\nAT CRANBROOK\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u20141 wish to retract statements\nmade by me some time ago pertaining to an oriental case of starvation here. I presented the case as\nit was told to me by the party who\nnotified the police. An investigation\naltered the tacts of the case. I\napologise for having made those\nstatements. RAY WELL-OFF.\nCranbrook, B.C.. May 12, 1937.\ns> K10 8\n\u00a57642\n4 A 10 9 8\nAJ?\n\"She deserves to lose him. No\nbride with a lick o' sense will\nlet her husband find out she\nknows that kind o' stories.'\n\u00ab,-\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS ...\nLOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nANCIENT SAGE'S ADVICE GOOD\nPRACTICE TODAY\nCALL OF THE WILD\nBy G. S. REES\nROUND THE CITY\nHera and there\u2014Jack Ballantyne\nshowing   great   improvement   but\nstiU limping on his injured foot\u2014\nAl Tregillus watching the baseball\nand    lacrosse    workouts    Sunday\nmorning\u2014Jack Long in Sunday at\ntire fit for the ball diamond\u2014com\nmeriting on the painting of a Vernon\nstreet building\u2014Tony Arcure standing up for the painter\u2014Al Horswill.\nelection  candidate,  back   from   a\ntrip up main lake way\u2014Bill McKay\nand Pat Aitken taking in a boxla\npractice and  commenting  on  this\nand that\u2014and ho\\\u00bb the game should\nbe played\u2014They figure all that is\nnecessary is a lot of intestinal fortitude\u2014\"Slim\"   Collins   going   the!\nrounds with his watchman's clock\u2014\nSnd commenting on tne new planer\nfor the Powell company\u2014that is being   installed\u2014Slim   was   pleased\nwith the roller bearing equipment\nthat gives the machine easy action\n\u2014Dr. Ray Shaw returning to his\nboathouse in the \"Baby Molar\" after a  trip up the lake  Saturday\nafternoon\u2014He said \"she\" was performing  beautifully  with   a  new\nengine\u2014and also added, \"Isn't this\na fine summer's day?\"\u2014And he had\nMurray Clark and Cecil Lambert\nas passengers \u2014 Fred Irvine, who\nwas on the waterfront, remarked\nabout the presence of a huge hawk\n\u2014but I didn't get a glimpse at the\nbird\u2014Lake water is rising rapidly\u2014\nand I notice they are making repairs at the float\u2014Bob Horswill, I\nbelieve, spent the week-end up the\nmain lake with Dr. David Wilkinson\u2014for Bob heard from Mr. Seal\non Saturday that tne salmon were\ntaking the bait\u2014Bob hopes to land\nDearie me, another election looming. How do I know? Don't be silly\nHorace! Surely you can see the fat\nrabbits leaping from the Victorian\nmagic hat for the amusing enrichment of the peasantry in the sUcks,,\nthe nobility of plutocratic Victoria,\nand the proletarian maritimers on\nthe adjacent mainland of our sunset province. A government may\nforget how it won an election; it ever\nremembers how easily one is lost.\nThis consideration, especially towards the end of a normal term, operates inversely as the square of\nthe distance.\nCALM BEFORE STORM\nCommanding generals of this hurried provincial  political campaign\nera amazed to find out how light is\nsome of their heavy artillery, and\nhow their vast stocks of ammunition\nhave been pilfered by their opponents. The closed season closes and\nthe open season opens; and the conjunction  of  heated  verbiage  and\nchilly updraughts ot sceptical disbelief causes political thunders and\nlightnings  that  will  illumine  the\nfar horizons of the northland ice-\nbarriers   where   every   \"Mountie\"\ngets his man, even among the polor\nmists of the Yukon, as well as the\nlush southern valleys that border\nthe Land of the New Deal. We must\nschool ourselves to bear with fortitude that which has to be borne.\nKismet, Bismallah! There will be\nseveral   political   parties   bidding\nagainst each other with the public\nmoney for the public's votes in the\nprovincial elections \u2014 \"We don't\nknow where we're going, but we're\non our way\"! There will as usual be\nthe  customary  largesse  preceding\nthe trek to the polling booths, and\nnobody is going to shoot Santa Claus\nthe day before Christmas. Manna\nfor the faithful, and later, the boot\nfor the holders of office, if on the\nwrong side of the fence.\none considerably larger than that\ntaken by Tom Ledingham last season\u2014Dick Whitehead recalling\nplaying lacrosse against a French-\nCanadian team overseas during the\nwar days\u2014Ven. Archdeacon Graham declaring that \"Jimmie\" Anderson was in town after a trip to\nKaslo-\nBIG BUSINESS\nMom sends little Willie to store at\nthe busiest hour of (he day with the\nfollowing note:\n'Please buy these tickets for our\nparty and please give Willie an\nempty box, a piece ot wrapping\npaper and some string, also sell him\na stamp\u2014and will you weigh Willie\non your scales'1\"\nTODAY'S COMMENT\nJust burning up \"Questions-and-\nAnswers,\" as the Doukhobors said\nas they fired our schools.\nA. S. EVANS.\nBlewett, B.C.\nBALLYHOO\u2014BACKWASH\nIn today, out tomorrow, and the\nparty in power has to fight like\nblazes with words to hold their jobs.\nTheir opponents fight back with\nmore words; they all draw out \"the\nthreads of their verbosity finer than\nthe staple of their arguments\".\nS.0.8 8.0.8.\nSame old stunts, same old abracadabra; same hoary slogans, same\nold everything with a braying radio\nthrowing the stratosphere into cosmic confusion. Oh! to be in England, now that election time draws\nnear . . .!\nMaking a political soap-box of the\nradio seems Inevitable but none the\nless deplorable. A deluge of pulp\npamphlets \"for and agin\" passes in\none swift motion from post office\nboxes to post office floors, and do\nthey cost money! Plenty of free\nspeech and unstinted freedom of\nthe press. Not much free thinking,\nfor the spell-binders in their acquired glibness cause mental obfusca-\ntion. Two and two will make five\ninstead of four, figures will become astronomical, and logic go\nby the board.\nAt the blessed end, the Captains\nand their Cohorts will depart and\nthe land will again expreience the\nbeneficence of time uncluttered by\nelectioneering pronouncements.\nMan\/ hopes will be blasted by the\nballot box, but let us hope all will\nbe for the best. We shall achieve the\nGovernment we deserve, no more,\nno less. We may obtain Utopia, or\nwe may not! What is your prediction? The clash between the several\nparties contesting the seats of the\nMighty is such as to cause perplexi-\nity of thought in unravelling the\nwhys and wherefores of the current\nissues, which are, as ever, extraordinarily complex and difficult. We\ncan at least be thankful that our\nParliamentary system with all its\naeficiences and redundancies represents the crystallized experience\nof mankind in his search for the\nIdeal of Government, and in theory,\nalmost practically too, manages to\neffect laws which safeguard the\nrights of all in wisdom, equity and\njustice. Such achievements are mainly the accomplishments of tha political hewers of wood and drawers\nof water, who have the best interests\nof their fellowmen at heart, and to\nwhom therefore, we accord an honest tribute. Go to it, Conservative\nand Liberal, C.C.F. and Independent\n(and any other group), give us the\nbest you have and may the best\nmen win.\n(Dealer: South.' Both sides vulnerable.)\nSouth reached a contract of 4-\nHearts, here, after opening the bidding with 1-CIub, to which North\nresponded with 1-Spade, South 2-\nHearts, North 3-Hearts and South\n4-Hearts.\nThe diamond K was the opening\nlead, and when East signaled for\na continuance of that suit, the diamond J was played, followed by a\nthird diamond lead. South ruffed\nthis and then led two rounds of\ntrumps. He was now afraid to lay\ndown his last trump, so led clubs.\nEast ruffed the third round and led\nhis last trump, which South won,\ncashed his two remaining clubs and\nthen finessed the spade Q, which\nlost to East's spade K. The diamond Ace was now cashed, setting\nthe contract.\nWhen the third diamond lead\nwas made, South had a very simple\nway of making his contract by refusing to trump. If on this lead he\ndiscarded his losing spade, a fourth\nround of diamonds could have been\ntrumped in the dummy, or any other\nreturn could have been won. Played\nin this way, South could not have\nfailed to make four hearts.\nTOMORROW'8 PROBLEM\n+ AQ765\n\u2666JK52\n\u2666 AQ2\n*A2\n* J 10 81\nV 10 8\n\u2666 854\n+ 10743\nA\/.\nIS   *i\n5.\n,>K9\n\u00abf A64\n4 K J 10 6 i\n*K0D\n443\nVQJ973\n497\n*QJ80\nAmong the ancient fathers of\nmedicine, the Jewish physicians always have had a place of honor\nRabbi Ben Ezra, celebrated by\nBrowning, Maimonides, and Isaac\nBen Solimon, have a place in every\naccount of old medicine.\nThe last struck the keynote which\nhas been getting louder and stronger through the ages, when he said,\n\"The most important duty of the\nphysician is to prevent illness.\"\nOther of the aphorisms were:\n\"Most patients get better with'\nout much help from the physician\nby the power of nature.\"\n\"Employ only one medicine at a\ntime in all your cases and note its\neffects carefully.\"\n\"Never speak unfavorably of\nother physicians. Every one of us\nhas his lucky and unlucky hours.\"\nThe Talmud has been praised\nby many medical historians for its\nknowledge of many diseases and\nremedies, reflecting a very modern\nviewpoint. Fever is regarded as\n\"Nature's effort to expel morbific\nmatter and restor health.\"\nA sudden change in diet was re\ngarded as injurious, and this truth\nis reflected frequently in Hebrew\nwritings (see Maimonides below).\nThe Talmuds was full of knowledge about childbirth: it advised\nCaesarean section on the living and\ndead mother in proper cases. Cha-\nnina Ben Chania inserted wooden\nand natural teeth as early as the\nsecond century B. C.\nThe most famous commentator\non the Talmud was Maimonides.\nHe was born in Cordova, Spain, in\n1135, but lived most of his life in\nthe East, the physician to the great\nSultan Saladin, prominent in chron\nicles of the Crusades.\nMrs. Major, Procter, In her nursing\nuniform during tho world war\n(Dealer: South. North-South vulnerable.)\nHow should South play for 7-No\nTrumph against a lead of the\nheart 10?\n\u00bb-\n20 YEARS AGO\n-\u00ab\nI From Nelson  Dally News Files '\n!>-\nMay 17, 1917\nBIG  PRICE   FOR  PICTURE\nLONDON (CP).\u2014A new English\nsalesroom record was created when\nDe Hooch's Dutch Courtyard was\nsold for $87,500 at the first day's sale\nof treasures of the Rothschild family.\nMiss M. Robertson and I. G.\nJohnson left for Procter to assist\nin arrangements for the final social\nof the Procter Red Cross for the\nseason.\n* *   *\nMirror Lake\u2014John D. Barter,\nwho recently received the Ph. D. degree at the Berkeley university in\nCalifornia, left for England to enlist.\n* *   *\nRev. A. Wood took up his duties\nas pastor for the Ymir district.\n* *   \u2022\nF. J. Sammons and W. Hudson of\nNelson were amongst the first since\nthe opening of the season to report\ncatches of large salmon off Procter.\n* *   *\nBob McAllister of California outfought and outpointed Battling\nLevinsky in a ten-round bout in\nNew York.\n* *   \u2666\nMarshall Joffre and ex-premier\nViviani of France will visit in Montreal.\nKeeping up a harassing fire from\nvantage points surrounding the village of Fresnoy, Canadian and English troops are continuing their desperate attempt to recapture the village lost last week. A great German\ntrench system north of Sancy was\ncaptured by the French.\nPERTINENT TODAY\nIn his comment on the Talmud,\nthese aphorisms occur, which are\nas pertinent as the day they were\nwritten:\n'Food should be taken always In\nthe sitting position. There should\nbe no riding nor walking, nor\nmovements of the body until digestion is finished. The man who\ntakes a walk or any strenuous occupation immediately after eating\nsubjects himself to serious dangers\nof disease.\"\n\"Another axiom of medicine is\nthat so long as a man is able to he\nactive and vigorous, does not eat\nuntil he is overfull, and does not\nsuffer from constipation, he is not\nliable to disease. Even such men,\nhowever, are much safer if they do\nnot take food that may disagree\nwith them.\"\n\"Most diseases come from either\neating too much or partaking of\nunsuitable food. That was what\nSolomon meant with his proverb:\nI   30 YEARS AGO   I\nFrom Nelson Dally News Files I\nDr. Major, Procter, with soma prize\nfish caught on Kootenay lake\nBy MISS ISA MACKINNON\nPROCTER, B. C. - Doctor and\nMrs. Major, both born in England,\ncame to Canada in 1909, following\nthe retirement of the Doctor from\npractise, in which he had been for\n20 years.\nUpon their arrival here they\nbought a 30-acre wood-lot from\nSmellie and Swain. ,\nOn January l, when there was\nfour feet of snow on the ground,\nthey began to build their home.\nIt was necessary to light bonfires\nIn order to put in the foundation\nposts. By the end of March and before another snow fall, the house\nwas completed.\nDrfctor Majer returned to England\nin 1914 to render his services\nthroughout the war period. Mrs.\nMajor, who worked as a practical\nnurse, followed later with the boys,\ntwo of whom enlisted.\nThe Majors owned the first car\nin Reading, England and the first\none in this district\nThey returned to Procter In 1919\nand since then have made great\nprogress on their farm, growing\nfruit and vegetables and raising\ncattle.\n'He who puts a guard over hit\nmouth and his tongue protects himself from many evils,' that Is to\nsay, whoever protects his mouth\nfrom the overindulgence In foo4\nand his tongue from unsuitable\nspeech protects himself from many\nevils.\"\nThe Greek philosopher Aristotle\ndescribed about 170 birds in his\nwritings on nature.\nAmerica's big game hunters need\nmore practice, judging by reports\nlhat comparatively few elk were\nkilled in some national forests where\nhunting was permitted this winter to\nreduce the elk herds.\nMay 17, 1907\nA great gold strike is reported\nfrom Omenica river in British Columbia.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nOttawa\u2014Immigration authorities\nstated that 25,000 immigrants landed\nin Canadian ports during April\ncompared with 16,876 in April. 1906.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. H. Bird left on a\nthree-months' visit to England.\nThe waters of the West Arm are\nrising so fast that noticeable changes\nin the level are noted in less than\n12 hours.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Anthony Turner\nand Mrs. B. Townshend returned\nto Nelson after a six-months' visit\nin England.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nM. G. Nichols, manager of the\n1 Ymir mine, is a guest at the Hume\nMr. Blob brought his ladder obef |\nf Sara Loo's house after supper last\nnight, on account he was goln' t' do\na paintin' job there today. But the\nnew buttle thought he was a burglar,\nan' blowed a gun of? at him, wound-\nin' him in the oberalls; an' its the\n\u2022citement us (tot discovered!\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManui\nWHAT?   VOU IDIOT-\nWE ARE CLEAMIN&\nHOUSE- WHAT WILL.\nwe do?\nBRIDGE BUILDING AND STRUCTURAL   STEEL  WORK\nThe value o! wc-rk done by the\nconcerns in the bridge and structural steel work industry amounted\nto $7,597,599 in 1935, compared with\n$4,700,143 in 1934. $5,616,430 in 1933,\n$7,385,013 in 1932 and $22,170,215 in\n1931.\nNICKEL OUTPUT\nFebruary nickel production was\nrecorded at 17.330,201 pounds against\n16,173,486 in January and 16,151,374\nin February, 1936. Production during the first two months ot the\nyear amounted to 33.503,687 pounds\ncompared with 30,204,076 in the c\u00abi-\nresponding period of 1936 and 16,-\n237,847 in 1935.\n WmTmmmwmmmm..mxm. \\ \\ m. u i u.\nlliiPJfjpiiHHI.WMIIlllRI, (tilt llljyf 11\nwwww^Mw<^wm.s!m:Wi^wwwMr?.\nbao\nTrail Wins and\nLoses Baseball\nGames, Spokane\nSeaten   10-5  in  First\nGame; Win 3-2 in\nSecond\nSPOKANE, Wash., May 16 (CP).\n\u2014Spokane Boosters and a senior\nbaseball team from Trail, today split\na double-header, the Washington\nnine taking the first 10-5, and the\nBritish Columbians winning the second 3-2.\nIn the heavy-hitting, wild-pitching first game Casey Jones of Trail\nand .Eddie Gosselman of Spokane\neach hit two homers. Cliff Bogstie\nwalked nine, five in the second inning. Rosand of Spokane fanned\neight.\nThe nightcap was a pitchers battle\nbetween Ed Ferrir of Spokane and\nRed Tullock, Trail. Each fanned\ni four and walked two.\nPIRATES ADD\nANOTHER WIN\nJoe Bowman Wins His\nFifth Victory of\nthe Season\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nW L Pet.\nPittsburgh     16 5 .762\nSt. Louis     13 9 .691\nNew York     12 11 .522\nBrooklyn     11 11 .500\nChicago       10 12 .455\nCincinnati   ..,.\u25a0   8 12 .408\nPhiladelphia      9 14 .391\nBoston     8 13 .381\nPITTSBURGH, May 16 (AP)-Joe\nBowman won his fifth victory of the\nseason today for the league-leading\npirates when he'held St. Louis to\nsix hits to score a 2-1 victory. A\nsingle game record crowd of 39,571\ncrammed the park.\nBob Weiland, who had scored a\nvictory over Pittsburgh earlier in\nthe season, started for the gas house\ngang and was nicked in the opening\njnning for the two runs which won\nthe game. He pitched shutout ball\nthereafter, being lifted in the eighth\nfor a pinch-hitter.\nSt. Louis     1   6   1\n(Pittsburgh       2   7   0\nWeiland, Winford and Ogrodow-\nBki, Owen; Bowman and Todd.\nGIANTS LOSE AGAIN\nNEW YORK, May 16 (AP) -\nClaude Passeau, sophomore righthander, handed the Giants their\nsecond shutout of the season today,\nblanking them with five hits while\nfthe Phillies won a 6-0 victory.\nPasseau   joined   Brooklyn   Van\nI Mungo as the pitchers who have\nblanked the Giants this season. One\nbig inning, the fourth, when they\n'^cored four runs, put the game on\nice for the Phils.\nPhiladelphia    6   9   1\n[New York     0   5   2\nPasseau and Wilson; Melton,\n[Gumbert, Smith and Mancuso.\nVmpire Dies\n1?'$$$$\n57-77\n\u2014\u25a0\u25a0-\n'\u25a0'':\u25a0,:\u25a0\u25a0#;\u00a3::\u00a3\u25a0\u25a0\n'\u25a0->:\u25a0-!\u25a0:\u25a0-:\u25a0 :.-:::'.v \u25a0\n(\nHkE?*\n1\niB\nf'\nsir\n\u25a0     .\n*SSMfct\nwPP**\nq\n;\nW0fX.\n\/**\n**\"\\\n:::::M':'\n' \"\"tSUaiWt '\"    .\ni ':\\o'S\nmfi\nHfeh_\nCY PFIRMAN\nNEW ORLEANS, May 16 (AP) -\nCharles (Cy) Pfirman, 56, former\nbaseball umpire in the National\nleague, died in hospital here today.\nPfirman, an umpire for 26 years,\nworked more than 4000 ball games.\nHe retired in 1933. At one time he\nheld the National league record for\numpiring in 1710 consecutive games.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON. B.C\u2014MONDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1937\nSPORTING NEWS\nBaseball Club\nHas New Faces,\nGood Material\nThe Nelson senior baseball players\nwent through their first full workout of the season on Sunday morning. Officials and supporters now\nbelieve there are enough players in\nNelson to field a senior baseball\nclub that can give a good account\nof itself against most opposition.\nSeveral new faces appeared at Sunday's practice, including two new\nsouthpaws. Among the newcomers\nwere two former North Battleford\nplayers, including a brother of Mclntyre, who was a star defenceman\nwith the North Battleford Beavers,\nwho played against the Sudbury\nTigers in the Canadian Allan cup\nhockey finals.\nWith Chum Arcure returning to\nan active player role, Jack Ryan and\nSlim Kraft are at present handling\nthe coaching of the team. Weather\npermitting another practice will be\nheld on Tuesday evening. Jack Long\nis presdient of the club and Percy\nAndrews, secretary.\nBoxla Battlers\nHave Tough Tilt\nWorkout   Sunday   Is\n. Rough and Ready,\nPlenty of Speed\nNelson's boxla champions had\ntheir pictures taken Sunday morning and then took the floor to hammer and bump each other around\nwithout gloves in a lively practice.\nMurray Clark, coach, lined up two\npractice aggregations and they put\nplenty of zip into the workout. In\nBud Cooper, Pete Bonneville and\nStewie Paterson the Nelsonites have\na strong front line with an alternating line of Joe Kelly, late of St.\nHelen's team in Vancouver, Hubie\nSmith, formerly of the North Shore\nIndians and \"Red'' Carr to follow\nthem through. Dave Gibbons was\nin tiie nets and has not lost his eagle\neye. Pat Egan provided plenty of\ncomedy and lots of body checking\nwhile Horswill, Atwell, Townsend\nand others showed well. Bishop and\nDeVoin were absent.\nThere was no love lost in the\nworkout and if the boys continue\n(heir fast pace they should give a\nfine account of themselves Wednesday when the West Kootenay Boxla\nleague is officially opened in Nelson.\nBob Patterson was holding the\nwhistle yesterday morning.\n\"Can Toronto 'Catch' the Pennant!\"\nDODGERS LOSE\nBOSTON, May 16 (AP)\u2014Boston's\nI lowly Bees today ended Brooklyn\nDodgers' four-game winning streak\n\"Deacon\" Danny MacFayden\n[edged Van Lingle Mungo 3-2 in 11\n| innings.\nThe Bees made 14 hits. MacFay-\n. den, Boston's bespectacled hurler,\nhimself scored the winning run.\nBrooklyn       2   10   0\nBoston  . ...       3   14   0\nMungo and Spencgr; MacFayden\nand Lopez.\nHAFEY'S HIT WINS\nCINCINNATI, May 16 (AP) -\nWith one out in the ninth, Chick\nJlafey swung his warclub for the\nfirst time in two years for Cincinnati Reds today and, flying deep\ninto right field, scored Cuyler with\nrun by which the Reds won their\nthird game of tiie season from\nChicago, 3-2, before 19,600.\nGabby Hartnett, veteran Chicago\nbackstop who only recently- returned to the game after nursing a\n1 gore arm, was hurt in the fifth frame\nby a foul tip from Goodman's bat,\nand Bottarini, who relieved him,\n.was carried from the field with an\ninjured left foot after Cuyler collided with him in scoring the winning run. Neither injury was believed serious.'\nChicago     -    .   2     7   (l\nCincinnati   ....   3   11   0\nRoot, Carleton and Hartnett, Bot-\nItarini; Hollingsworth, Brennan, Hal-\nlahan and V. Davis.\nNEW YORK, May 16 (AP) -\nWheatley stable's Snark, at odds of\n10 to 1, won the Metropolitan Handicap, worth $6675 to the winner,\nover a muddy track at Belmont park\nSaturday. The time for the mile was\nJ:37 4-5. Snark, world record holder\nfor 6!4 furlongs, won by two lengths\nJrorn Green tree stable's Memory\nBook, with the favorite, Hal Price\nHeadley's Whopper, third. Eight\nstarted,\nBattir\\$\nLeaders\n \u00a9\t\n(By Associated Press)\nDucky Medwick climaxed a week\nof heavy slugging yesterday by getting two hits in three chances to\ntake over the lead in big league\nbaseball's batting race. The Cardinal clouter boosted his average\nseven points to .473 to pass the\nAmerican league leader, Beau Bell\nof the Browns, and increase his National league edge to 71 points over\nsecond place Al Todd of Pittsburgh.\nStandings of the leaders (first\nthree in each league):\nG AB\nMedwick. Cds .. 22 01\nBell. Browns . 19 78\nCronin, R Sox 17 71\nWalker. Tigs .. 2! 86\nTodd, Pirates .. 21 82\nBrack, Dodgers 21   86\nPucksters Beat\nShamrocks 8-4\nOn (he short end of a 4-1 score\nat the end of the first inning, the\nPucksters, men's softball club, made\na strong comeback in the latter innings to defeat the Blewett Shamrocks 8-4 in an exhibition game\nSunday afternoon. The result was\nin doubt until the flnai out was\nmade. Several sensational fielding\nplays were made by each club, especially in the outfield. Pat Egan.\nwho caught for the Pucksters, supplied the highlight of the game in\nthe eighth inning when he sent the\nball high over the left field fence\nfor the first time. As play had not\nbeen called Pat was not credited\nwith a home run.\nIn the opening inning, after the\nPucksters had scored one run, the\nShamrocks scored all of their four\nruns. Louis Aurelia slugged a\ndouble to score the first and Bill\nNemrava hit a homer with two on\nbase. The PueWers scored two\nruns in each of. the second, third\nand sixth innings, and one in the\nseventh. Len Blcknell, on the\nmound for the Pucksters, fanned\nfive batters and walked one, while\nJoe Fierro, on the mound for the\nShamrocks, struck out seven and\nwalked one.\nThe teams were:\nPucksters\u2014Pat Egan, Red Carr,\nJim McPhee, Albert Euerby, Nick\nSmith, Glen Vickers, Bill McKay.\nMax DesBrisay, Ty Culley and Len\nBicknell.\nShamrocks \u2014 Dennis Ball, Louis\nAurelia, Charlie Nemrava, Bill\nNemrava, Sid Ball, Nick Hucal, Art\nHill, Frankie Pasacreta, Jimmy Al\nIan and Joe Fierro.\nAnthony Seanlan and Pete Bon.\nneville umpired with Margaret\nThain as scorer.\nYANKS MOVE UP\nINTO THE LEAD\nGreatest Crowd Since\n'31 Sees Athletics\nDefeated\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nNew York\nPhiladelphia\nCleveland   ..\nBoston   \t\nDetroit  \t\nChicago   \t\nSt. Louis\nWashington\nW.\n12\n10\nPel\n.601)\n.5811\n.529\n.52!)\n.524\n.450\n.421\n.381\n-PAGE SEVEN\n'j^^MM\nAMERICA'S CUP\nSLOOP LOSES\nMAST\nMARBLEHEAD, Mass., May 16\n(CP).\u2014Harold S. vanderbilt's hopes\nof defending the America's cup to\nday appeared to have been dealt a\nserious blow by dismasting of his\nyacht, Ranger, off here Saturday\nwhile under tow for Newport, R.I.\nscene of the approaching interna\ntional sailing classic,\nThe big sloop was launched at\nthe Bath, Me., iron works Tuesday.\nShe started for Newport in the face\nof a brewing stori:., The 165-foot\nspar snapped about 85 feet above\nthe deck and plunged into the sea.\nFortunately the great duralumin\ntube, weighing in its entirety more\nthan three tons, did not fall on deck\nand no one was injured.\n\u2022   SATURDAY\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSt. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 2.\nPhiladelphia 6-1, New York 2-2.\nChicago 2, Cincinnati 3.\nBrooklyn   at   Boston   postponed,\nrain.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York 6, Philadelphia 5.\nCleveland 0, Chicago 6.\nBoston 4, Washington 5,\nDetroit 5, St. Louis 11.\nINTERNATIONAL\nNewark 9-6, Buffalo 5-3.\nJersey City 6-6, Toronto 4-4.\nBaltimore 9, Rochester 5.\nSyracuse at Montreal postponed,\nrain.\nAMERICAN ASSOC.\nMinneapolis 8, Toledo 1.\nSt. Paul 4, Columbus 3.\nMilwaukee at Indianapolis, rain,\nKansas City at Louisville, cold.\nPACIFIC COAST\nSan Francisco 3, Oakland 0.\nSeattle 1, Los Angeies 4.\nPortland 6, Missions 3.\nSan Diego 6, Sacramento 3.\nAPPARENTLY SOMEONE\nHAS CORNS\nIt appears the Nelson Lacrosse\nclub has stepped on the toes of the\nTrail club, and it appears those toes\nhave corns . . . rather tender ones\n. . . of which one is named Hubie\nand the other Smith. In case you\nhaven't been told, Hubie Smith, of\nthe coast Indian title team last\nseason, came to the Kootenays a\nshort time ago . . . ostensibly to\nplay for Trail . . . and transferred\nhis affections to Nelson.\nThe Trail club, if Sportsline Kelly\ncan be believed, consider the defalcation something in the light of\na steal. Mr. Kelly has even used\nthe unpleasant word \"gyp\". Tut, tut!\nIt occurs to me that some two\nwinters ago Nelson felt very much\nthe same way about Trail and a\ncouple of hockey players . . . one\n\"Red\" Carr and one Jim Haight. At\nthat time, carrying the cudgel for\nTrail, this defending correspondent\nasserted Nelson should not feel too\nbadly about it . . . that Carr and\nHaight had not been \"stolen\" from\nNelson . . . that they preferred to\nremain in Trail for the glory of\nthe game and their jobs.\nMR. MILLAR FROTHS\nIN ANGER\nNow the shoe is on the other foot.\nAccording to Mr. Kelly the Trail\nboxla executive is seeing red . . .\ngreat gobs of it . . . and he reports\nPresident Archie Millar as saying:\n\"Nelson was determined to hold\nHubie, and the league executive upheld Murray Clark and his club.\nIt's a plain steal.\n\"And there's the sportsmanship\nangle. A precedent has now been\nestablished to upset the understanding that a player belongs to the\nclub that brought him in.\n\"We did all we could for Trail\nfans in this matter. We did all we\ncould to rectify this amazing breach\nof sportsmanship on the part of\nNelson.\"\nThen he quotes Gordon Redgrave,\nTrail manager:\n\"We didn't want Hubie back. We\nwanted him suspended. But we'll\nmiss him just the same.\n\"Anyway, we've got a good team\nand we'll make it tough for Nelson\nthis year.''\nYANKS WIN AGAIN\nPHILADELPHIA. May 16 (AP).-\nBefore the largest Shibe park crowd\nsince the world series days of 1929,\n'30* and '31\u201438,728 fans\u2014the world\nchampion Yanket.:. too:: their sec\nond consecutive game from the\nAthletics today, 8-4, and with it\nthe American league lead.\nBaffled by the slants of Red Ruffing, making his first start of the\nseason after a long holdout, the\n'Mackmen saw George Caster pum-\nmeled by a barrage of extra-base\nhits in the late innings.\nYoung Tom Henrich drove in\nfour runs for New York, collecting\na home run, a triple and single to\nlead the attack on Caster, star\nrookie.\nNew York     8 10   0\nPhiladelphia       4   7   1\nRuffing, Murphy and Dickey;\nCaster and Brucker.\nWHITE SOX WIN\nCHICAGO, May 16 (AP) .-Chicago's spurting White Sox closed\ntheir fortnight's home stand today\nwith six victories and five defeats\nby banging Ivy Paul Andrews for\nfour eight-inning runs and 6-4 victory over Cleveland.\nTo the cheers of 22,000 fans the\nSox broke a 2-2 tie with five consecutive hits after one was put out\nin the eighth.\nCleveland    -   4 10   3\nChicago     6 15   1\nAndrews, Hudlin and Sullivan;\nKennedy, Brown and Sewell.\nC _P|, r  \u2014\nLRBORS  OCCUR. tfEFORe,\nNOT AFTER BM-LtSHlT\u00bb\nA player often will say that his\nclub turned, or he did something\njust as he was hitting the ball. Another will tell you that the loose\ngrip of his left hand at the end\nof the swing only shows that this\nhand loosened after he hit the ball.\nAnd so nine out of 10 players\nwould have you believe that errors\noccur just as. or after, the clubhead\nstrikes the ball.\nThis is a decidedly false notion.\nIt isn't humanly possible for anyone to do anything in the sma.*\nfraction of a second that it takes\nfor the clubhead to dislodge the\nball from its resting *place. Furthermore, the feeling of the clubhead striking the ball registers\nstrong enough to notify the player\nthat the deed has been done, and\nnothing he can do after^this point\ncan help the shot.\nSlow motion movies bear out\nthese statements. If the average\nplayer would only .realize that er\nrors occur long before the ball is\nhit, then he would be on the right\nroad to preventing such errors. It\nis safe to say that 90 per cent of\nthe errors originate in the back-\nswing, and this goes for those the\nplayer thinks he feels at the mo\nment of impact.\nNext: Mental State\n1\nTHE SCOTCH THAT CIRCLES THE GLOBE\n(This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nSUNDAY\nINTERNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nToronto 0, Jersey City 2.\nNewark 7-4, Buffalo 4-3.\nSyracuse 6-4, Montreal 12-8.\nBaltimore 3-0, Rochester 4-5.   ('\ninnings).\nAMERICAN ASSOC.\nMmneapoli.s 6-5, Toledo 14-2.\nSt. Paul 6-6, Columbus 7-5.\nKansas City 1-8, Louisville 4-5.\nMilwaukee ll-l, Indianapolis 2-2,\nPACIFIC COAST\nSeattle 16-7, Los Angeles 3-4.\nSan Francisco 10-0, Oakland 6-1.\nSan Diego 4-1, Sacramento 1-4.\nPortland 9-5. Missions 7-4.\nWESTERN  INTERNATIONAL\nYakima 5-7, Tacoma 0-5.\nBELGIUM LEADS 2-1\nBRUSSELS, Belgium, May 16\n(AP).\u2014Belgium's Davis cup tennis\nteam took a 2-1 lead over Switzerland in their second round Euro\npean zone tie today ny winning\nthe doubles match after splitting\nthe opening two singles engage\nments. Andre La^oix and Leopold\nde Borman defeated Steiner and\nManeff of the Swiss team 6-2, 6-4.\n6-1. Charles Aeyaert gave Belghim\nits shigles victor?, downing Max\nEllmer 13-11, 6-3, 6-3. Lacroic lost\nto H. C. Fisher 6-4, 6-2, 8-6.\nA SWELL SETUP FOR\nSEASON-OPENING\nAnd to quote now the apostro-\nphic Kelly:\n\"You gathered, listening to these\nhave been gypped, and that they\ngentlemen, that they figured they\nwere plenty sore about it.\n''A swell setup for the season's\nopening next Wednesday!\"\nAt the risk of a weak pun, may I;\nrepeat: \"A swell setup for the season's opening next Wednesday!\" In\nfact, I have known sports executives spend hours figuring how to\nbring about such a setup with its\nconsequent flaring fan interest\u2014\nand cash contributions at the gate-\nto start the season.\nSo, while Trail asserts a player\nbelongs to the club that brings him\nin, that Hubie's changed affections\nshould bring him suspension, that\nthe \"gentlemen's agreement\" has\nbeen ruptured all over the place by\nNelson's stand and Rossland's support, we still refuse to become excited. Even the assertion that it's\nopen warfare from now on fails to\nrouse any particular heat.\nINTELLIGENCE WILL BE\nTHE GUIDE t\nBecause after all, Trail has to\nhave someone to play with. I cannot believe the Trail executive will\ngather playeft from all over the\nplace \"just to show youse guys.\"\nGranted that the opportunity is\nthere, and possibly the motive, I\nstill think the Trail executive is too\nintelligent to ruinate boxla completely by building up an overwhelming team. We've seen in the\nKootenays what can happen to hockey and baseball when the competing ieams become too unbalanced, and it would be too damn bad\nif it should happen to lacrosse.\nBut, in the words of that inimit\nable original columnist: \"Wottha\nhell. Mehitabel!\" So long as boxla\npacks 'em in as it did last season\u2014\nand that will only be possible with\nfairly evenly balanced teams\u2014the\ngame will go on, defalcations notwithstanding.\nPINCH HIT WIN3\nWASHINGTON, May 16 (AP).-\nEric McNair's pinch-hit single,\nScoring Jimmy Fuxx, brought Boston a 12-inning 6-5 triumph over\nWashington Senators today before\n16,000 fans.\nBoston       6 12   0\nWashington      5 11   3j\nMarcum, Ostermueller, Wilson.;\nMcKain and R. Ferrell; Weaver,\nCohen, Linke and Riddle, Millies.\n6-4 FOR TIGER8\nST. LOUIS. May 16 (AP).\u2014The\nTigers and the Browns got 10 hits\napiece today, but Oetroit bunched\ntheirs more effectively and took the\nfinal game of the series 5-4 behind\nRoxy Lawson.\nBabe Herman, stationed in Detroit's left field in place of Goose\nGoslin, hit safely twice, getting a\ndouble and scoring the Tigers' counter in the fourth, and in the sixth\nhis single drove in Gerald Walker\nwith the winning run. In addition\nhe stole two bases.\nDetroit     5 10   0\nSt. Louis               -   4 10   2\nLawson and Cochrane; Bonetti\nand Huffman.\nHINESIJ CHAMP\nREMEMBER WHEN?\n(By Canadian Press)\nGallant Fox, winner previously\nof the Preakness Stakes, clinched\nthe elusive double when lie rode\nhome an easy winner in the Kentucky Derby seven years ago today.\nThe three-year-old went down in\nhistory with the Canadian-owned\nSir Barton, who .accomplished the\nfeat in 1919. Burgoo King and Omaha duplicated the trick in 1932 and\n1935.\nBLOOMFIELD, N.J., May 16 (AP)\n\u2014Blond Jimmy Hines, big hitter\nfrom Garden City, N.Y., and a candidate for this year's United States\nRyder cup team, won his first metropolitan golf championship today\nat the Forest Hill Field club with\na 72-hole total of 279, one under\npar, His individual 18 hole scores\nwere 68-71-70-70.\nVictory was worth $750 in prize\nmoney to Hines. In second place.\na stroke away, came lanky Henry\nPicard of Hershey, Pa.\n40,000 SEE WAR\nADMIRAL WIN IN\nTHE PREAKNESS\nSon of Man O' War\nJoins Ranks of\nChampions\nBy ORLO  ROBERTSON\nAssociated   Press  Staff  Writer\nBALTIMORE, May 16 (AP)\u2014\nWar Admiral, Samuel Riddle's\ngreat little son of Mon o' War,\nranked today among the small\ncircle of thoroughbreds who have\nwon the two outstanding United\nStates turf classics\u2014the Kentucky\nderby and the Preakness.\nThe Admiral thrust back the game\nstretch challenge of J. H. Louch-\nheim's Pompoon to win the $50,0U0\nPreakness here Saturday, but his\ndecision was not so decisive as that\nscored ver the same challenger in\nthe derby a week previous.\nBefore more than 40,000 spectators\nthe two horses came to the finish\nline of the 1 3-16 mile Preakness\ntest separated by a head to furnish\none of the most exciting climaxes\nin the 47 years of the Pimlico classic.\nPRESSED  ALL THE WAY\nWar Admiral had no such easy\ntime as he did in the derby, in which\nhe beat Pompoon by Vk lengths. He\nwas driving all through the Preakness .stretch but by running the distance in 1:58 2-5 he strengthened his\nclaim to America's three-year-old\nchampionship.\nThe track was a trifle slow from\nrains, yet the time was only 1-5 second slower than the Preakness record hung up by High Quest thjee\nyears ago.\nWar Admiral was the shortest\npriced winner in the history of the\nstake. A $2 ticket returned only\n$2.70. He paid $2.30 to place and .\n$2.40 to show. Pompoon returned\n$2.40 and $2.70 to place and show,\nrespectively. Flying Scot, one of the\noutsidrs in the wagering that favored little but the first two horses,\npaid 2 to 1 to show.\nThe victory netted owner Riddle\n$45,600 and ran War Admiral's earnings for the year io $106,600.\nOnly five other horses have scored\nthe Derby-Paeakness double. They\nwere Sir Barton, star of the now\ndisbanded Montreal stable of Com-'\nmander H. K. Ross, Gallant, Fox,\nBurgoo King, Omaha and Bold Venture. If War Admiral can take his\nnext engagement, the Belmont\nStakes June 5, his claim to the three-\nyear-old crown will be clinched.\nHoirve Runs\n(By Associated  Press)\nYesterday's homers: Henrich,\nYankees; Cissell, Athletics, one each.\nThe leaders: Bartell, Giants, 8;\nMedwick, Cardinals, 6; Kampouris,\nReds, 6; Johnson, Athletics 6; Selkirk, Yankees, 5; Walker, Tigers, 5.\nLeague totals: National 89, American 71. total 160.\nTORONTO\"ARGO\"\nWINS IN SINGLES\nAT PHILADELPHIA\nPHILADELPHIA, May 16 <CP).-\nThe double blue of the Toronto\nArgonaut Rowing tiub swept to victory and a new record in the second\nsingle sculls race #i ,',e American\nHenley Saturday when James B.\nRussell covered the mile and 5-16\nin 7:31.4.\nRussell, who won by two lengths\nover Joseph Angyal of Ravenswood\nBoat club of Long island City, N.Y.,\nshattered the record of 7:45,1 set by\nW. Rutherford of frinceton university in 1934.\nCELTIC WINS CUP\nBELFAST. May 16 (CP Cable)\u2014\nCeltic captured the Irish charity\nsoccer cup Satdrday by defeating\nDistillery V\/0. The match was played on Celtic's   ground.\nFootballers Show\nPlenty of Steam\nin First Workout\nShowing plenty of enthusiasm\nsome two dozen fcolbnlls, enough\nfor two teams, were out in their initial practice Sunday morning kicking the ball about. Little form, but\nplenty of punch and vim, was shown\nby the players in their exhibition.\nThe first will seon be put right\nby George Wallach, however, and\nafter a few turnouts Nelson will\nhave teams ready to go places in a\ncity or district, league.\nProminent among the players\nwere members of the 11th battery,\nwho plan on having a team entirely\nfrom their unit this season, Allan\nMcLean and Arthur Oliver were\namong the older players,\nMOSELEY, England (CP)-R. H\nWhitlock, English internation\nfield hockey centre-forward has announced his intention of retiring\nfrom the game to take up rugby,\nSTOKE, England (CP)~Sir Francis Joseph, Stoke City football president, is to present copies of a Coronation loving cup in china to the\nFootball association, the Football\nleague and leading clubs.\nLONDON (CP)-Prominent amateur rider for some years, Charlie\nHolland will lurn professional to\nparticipate in Ihe Coronation six\nday bike ^ace to be held at Wem\nbley.\nGrads Win Series\nEDMONTON, May 16 (CP)-Sup-\nporters of Edmonton Grads, great\nwomen's basketball machine, were\nwondering tonight when their favorites would be opposed by a team\ncapable of extending them and hoping that Tulsa Stenos, third and\nfinal challengers this spring for the\nUnderwood trophy, would be\nstronger than Wichita and Cleveland.\nThe Edmonton girls completed another defence of the trophy they\nhave held since 1923 by trouncing\nWichita 46-25 here Saturday night\nin the third game of a best-of-five\nseries. As in the first series this\nspring against Cleveland, Grads\nrouted the invaders with three\nstraight victories.\nCZECHS ELIMINATE POLAND\nWARSAW, May 16 (AP)-Czech-\noslovakia's Davis cup tennis team\nwon the doubles Saturday and eliminated Poland in a second round\nEuropean zone series, three matches\nto none. Ladislaus Hecht and Jo^\nseph Caska teamed up to defeat\nIganci Tlocynski and Joseph Hebda.\n6-1, 5-7, 6-1, 6-4.\nSTAWELL, Australia (CP)-They\nare still arguing whether Jack Mr-\nKinley was out in a cricket match\nhere when he hit a ball that struck\nan umpire on the head and, bounc\ning high in the air, was caught by\na fielder.\nBLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa\n<CP) \u2014 H. A. Gibson, Southern\nTransvaal, won the 26-mile marathon run at the South African Athletic championship meeting in the\nnew South African record time of\ntwo hours, 30 minutes, 45 seconds.\n*o\nBritish Consols\nCOSTLIER.. MILDER ..TOBACCOS\nEVERY   FEATURE   FOR   SAFETY\nAND\nLUGE\nJLtil Soit PER IMliE...\n~      mORE SflFETV FOR\nSOUR FRIRIliO\n\u2022 Saving money through bigger mileage is only one\nthing Dominion ROYAL MASTERS do for motorists . ..\nEvery year, accidents are prevented, costly damages\naverted, even lives saved\u2014thanks to their sure-gripping,\nskid-preventing Cogwheel Tread. Your family deserves\nthiB safety. You can get it\u2014along with the blowout\nprotection of Safety-Bonded Cords\u2014by replacing smooth\ntires now with longer-wearing, Tempered Rubber\nROYAL MASTER Tires. (Full 12-months guarantee.)\nDOMINION     RUBBER     COMPANY,     LIMITED\nnonunion\nROyRbmRSTER\n P\nini.ui'\n\u25a0^^\u25a0j^WHHWW'nm)   J*.\", fesmmfrfVlu-mifij *amme\u00bb*w**.!mym'm.,-m,~e~*T*-Tr~-~.~.-\n;,\"\u25a0'\u25a0 - :     -.>^:,v.-' :\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0;^\u00abFT--.-.is\u2122\u2122\nPAGE EIGHT -\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1937\nOpportunity Uses Classified Ads-You Can't Afford to Miss Them\nRrlanu Daily $rt\u00bbs\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy %  .05\nBy carrier per week      .25\nBy carrier per year   13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months y1.80; six months\n$3.00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one mouth 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7 50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per insertion  $ .22\n2 lines. 6 consecutive\ninsertions  88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion  33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions  132\n2 lines, 1 month - 2.86\n3 lines. 1 month   4.29\nFor   advertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox  numbers  lie  extra.  This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMtNT\nMAIL   ORDERS   from   out-of-\ntown residents given prompt\nattention.\nBIRTHS\nHENKE\u2014At Arrow Lakes hospital, Nakusp. May 12, to Mr. and Mrs\nW. Henke (nee Miss Marjorie Bennett) of Nakusp. a daughter.\nGARDENING AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nWEBSTER-To Mr. and Mrs. A\nWebster  of  Edgewood.   at  Arrow j\nLakes hospital, Nakusp, May 9, a\ndaughter.\nAALTEN-fo\"Mr. \"and Mrs.H\nAalten Jr. of Nakusp, at Arrow\nLakes hospital. Nakusp. May 10. a\ndaughter.   _\nJACKSON\u2014To Mr\" and Mrs. F.\nJackson of Edgewood. at Arrow\nLakes hospital, Nakusp. May 10. a\nson.\nPHIPPS \u2014 At Slocan Community\nhospital, New Denver. May 13. to\nMr. and Mrs. D^Phipps, a daughter\n\"\"THOMPSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. R.\nThompson, May 7. 1937. at St. Eugene hospital, Cranbrook. a son.\nFOR SALE\nPIPE,  TUBES,   FITTINGS\nNEW  AND  USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B.C.\n(292)\nA-l PORTABLE SHELTON CRO-\nquignole Permanent Wave machine. Also Feon Hair Dryer.\nCash or terms can be arranged\nWrite Mrs. McWilliams, Box 40,\nKimberley.  (473>\nFULLY EQUIPPED CAFE. REAS-\nonable price and excellent location. Club Cafe, Rossland, BC.\n(489)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver. B.C\n(293)\nFOR SAL,E - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar-sacks, liners McDonald Jan.\nCo, Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (297)\nFOR SALE - LAWN MOWER -\nWoodyatt-14, in.. Al shape\u2014$5,\n524 Gore\u2014Ph. 649R. <493>\nBABY BUGGY. IcTBOX. LAWN\nmowers. THE ARK STORE (382)\nCHAPTER 31\n\"I gave you the chance of\nmarrying the girl yourself, but you\nwouldn't take it,\" Lutman went on\nto Charles. \"I've been thinking the\nthing over, and it's obvious I made\na mistake in picking Jimmy as the\nbridegrocm. Youth doesn't nppeal\nto youth \u2014 only fools and novel-\nwriters think that. Jacqueline'?\nmuch more interested in me than\nSiie is in Jimmy. Now what do you\nthink about that?\"\n\"I think it's rather funny.\"\n\"Oh, do you? Why?\"\n\"Well, the first\u2014or is it the second?\u2014Mrs. Lutman is still alive,\nisn't she?\"\nThe Colonel glared.\n\"She divorced me in Australia,\"\nhe said quickly,\n\"No,\" said Charles gently. \"She\napplied for a divorce, and because\nshe had her own\u2014er\u2014little bit of\ntrouble she didn't get it.\"\n\"You know thai, but nobody else\ndoe6,'' Lutman replied. \"It was\nnearly 20 years ago. She got married -again and got awffy with it.\nShe's hardly likely to squeal.\"\nCharles shook his head decisively.\n\"I can't agree to that,\" he said.\n\"Jimmy was bad enough, heaven\nknows, but at any rate he's single.\nAnd in any case, do you imagine\nthat the' girl would\u2014er\u2014fall for\nyou?\" His eyes, with a smile of\nsatirical amusment, roamed over\nthe Colonel's corpulent, middle-\naged figure,\n\"You can leave'that to me,\" he\nsnapped. \"You don't suppose I'm\ngoing to let this thing slip through\nmy fingers just because this chit\ndoesn't like the man we chose to\nmarry her?\"\n\"She's surely entitled to .object.\"\n\"Entitled nothing! The marriage\nmarket isn't in such a flourishing\nstate these days that women have\na right to object to anything They\nought to be grateful when a decent\nman comes along and proposes to\nshoulder the responsibility of keeping them for the rest of their lives.\"\nCharles laughed outright.\n\"Wherever did you pick up sentiments like that? And who's the\ndecent man\u2014Jimmy?\"\n\"She may have a rough idea he\nisn't, but she can't know for certain.\"\n\"There's such a thing as intuition.\"\nLutman snorted. \"Intuition\"\nBah! .A mythical quality with\nwhich women endow themselves to\nveil their deficiencies in reasoning\npower. I tell you, I'm going to put\nth:s thing through; she'll marry\neitner Jimmy or me.\"\n\"And if she  refuses?\"\n\"i'l! force her. There are ways\nan.. means.\"\n\"You mean . .   \"\"\n\"I mean this: there arp two alternatives\u2014this affair goes through\neither with the girl's consent or\nWithout it.\"\nThere came a knock at the door\nand Miss Harringay entered, a\nhalf-dczen letters in her hand.\nAmong them was a thick foolscap\nenvelope bearing American stamps\nCharles looked at. it.\n\"This wi!! be a copy of the will.\nI imagine.\" he said, and tore open\nthe envelope.\n.Glancing cursorily through the\ndocument it contained, he was\nabout to put it on one side when\nLutman held out his hand.\n\"May I see it?\" he asked, and\nthe solicitor, with i shrug, handed\nthe typewritten sheets over to him.\nTht- Colonel road it through, and\nanybody    watching    h<m    closely\nROCK PLANTS & PERENNIALS\nChrysanthemums. Hardy acclimatized plants. Send for catalogue\nMcDiarmid & Squires, Robson\n|     (2761\nCHOICE FRUIT TREES. PEACH\nItalian Prunes and Red Delicious.\n75c each. T. Roynon, Nelson.\n(464)\nWANTED\nTO RENT SMALL FARM WITH\nsmall house, or will pay $500 cash\nfor one near Nelson. Write to\nSam Winlarski, P.O. Bsllevue\nAlta. (535)\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD OR BOARD-\ners. Apply 912 Edgewood Avenue.\n(506)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nBEAUTIFUL ALL-YEAR ROUND\nnew, modern home, one mile\nfrom ferry. Fruit trees, etc, Apply\nW. K. Clark, Savoy Hotel.    (549)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nmight have seen his eyes light up\nas he reached a certain clause on\nthe second page. Charles was not\nwatching him closely.\nLutman handed back the document.\n\"I'd like to have a copy of it,\"\nhe said in a casual tone. \"Let's\nget one made.\" He leaned over\nand touched 'the bell-push on\nStuckey's desk. As the typist\nentered, \"Make me a copy of this,\nwill you, please, at once,\" he asked,\nhanding her the document.\n\"Those two alternatives you\nspoke of, Lutman.\" Charles began.\nThe fleshy red-faced man sitting\nin the armchair by the side of the\ndesk was starring into vacancy, and\non his full sensual lips was a grim\nsmile\u2014an expression that held\nboth satisfaction and menace.\nWhen he spoke he had regained al!\nhis accustomed suavity and mocking floridness of speech.\n\"Did I speak of but two alternatives, my dear Charles''\" he\ndrawled. \"I was in error. There\nis a third\u2014and I rather fancy it\nmay prove to be the most satisfactory of all the possibilities.\"\nThe lawyer looked at him, puzzled. \"What do you mean?\" he\nasked, sharply,\nLutman shrugged his shoulders.\nHe sat upright in his chair, preparing to rise. As he did so, he\ncaught sight of the small bottle\nwhich Charles had placed on his\ndesk when he had entered the\noffice. Lutman picked it up and\nregarded it with mild curiosity.\n\"I didn't know perfume was a\nvice of yours,\" he said chaffingly.\n\"It isn't. A disreputable client\nslipped that to me when I interviewed him in his cell this morning. It shows you how I'm trusted\nby the criminal classes\"\n\"They look upon you as one of\nthemselves. I take it7\" Lutman\nhad removed the stopper and was\nsniffing at the contents of the bottle. \"Rather a compliment. What\nis it?\"\n\"Neurococaine.\"'\n\"Oh\u2014knockout drops?\"\n\"Yes. Ever used them''\"\n\"Don't be crazy,\" he sajd, \"Violence has never been a graft of\nmine. Two drops of that and\nyou'd go out\u2014just, like that!\" He\nsnapped his fingers. \"And you'd\nstay oui for four hours.\"\n\"You're wrong in the quantity.\nbut you've got the general idea.\"\n\"Would it kill you''\"\n\"Enough of it\u2014yes A little\nwould put you out for 10 minutes-\nlong enough,\" he added, \"to take\naway that interesting letter you\ncarry around with you \"\nThe Colonel rose and stood looking down at him with a faintly\ncontemptuous smile.\n\"You're not thinking of trying it\non me, my dear Charles''\"\n\"No, it doesn't belong to me, and\nI've given up using my clients\nproperties\"\nWhen the door had closed behind\nLutman, Carles rang a bell and,\nto the managing clerk who entered\nin response, he said:\n\"Take charge of this, will you\nBells'' Savinski's remanded till\nnext week and he'll be calling foi\nit. Put it where the children can't\nplay with it.\"\nBells accepted the bottle gingerly i     ,\n'I'll put it behind Chitty on Contracts,\" he said\n\"A worthy hiding place,' agreed\nhis emplover.\nLeft alone. Charles sat down ,p\nhis    desk    chair   hi6 chin on  his\nNOW IS\nTHE TIME\nTO PLANT\nBuy or sell  gardening\nand  nursery  products\nThrough the\nClassified   Advertisements\nFor SERVICE PHONE 144\nOUT-OF-TOWN READERS\nPrompt attention given mail orders\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n\"CLASSIFIED\nLargest in the Interior\n9i\nREAD MORE\nUSED MORE\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPLAIN   SEWING  AND  ALTERA-\ntions. Mrs. Ross. Rm. 6, Strathcona\n(4511\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC.. FOR SALE\nLEGAL NOTICES\nGovernment of the Province\nof British Columbia\nDEPARTMENT\nOF PUBLIC WORKS\n(Dominion Unemployment and Agricultural Assistance Act 1937)\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nSeparate Sealed Tenders, majked\n\"Tender for Project No.  \" will\nbe received by the Minister of Public Works, Parliament Buildings,\nVictoria, up tb 12 o'clock noon,\nTuesday, 25th May, 1937, and\nopened in public at that time and\ndate, for the following work:\u2014\nProject      Location and Description\n_No. of Work\n1 TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY\nKamloops-Cache Creek Section  Reconstruction Mi. 245.28\nto ML_247.48\t\n7 Nelson-Nelway Road\nApex-Hall Creek Section\nReconstruction Mi. 7.91 to Mi\n 1U1\t\n12 Rossland-Paterson.\nReconstruction from Paterson\nNorth 2.0 miles\t\nPlans, specifications, Form ot\nTender and Tender Envelope may\nbe obtained on deposit of the sum\nof Ten Dollars ($10.00) for each set\nat the office of the undersigned or\nfrom the following:\u2014\nE. H. Verner. District Engineer,\nCourt House, Vancouver.\nO. G. Gallaher, Asst. District Engineer, Court House, Nelson.\nThis deposit will be refunded on\nthe return of the Plans. Specifications, etc.. in good condition.\nEach ten'der must be accompanied\nby an accepted cheque made payr\nable to the Minister of Public Work'\nas follows:\u2014\nFor Project No. 1 Three Thousand\nSeven Hundred Dollars (3,700.001.\nFor Project No. 7 Four Thousand\nFive Hundred Dollars ($4,500.00).\nFor Project No. 12 Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000.00).\nIivaddition the successful tenderer\nwill be required to furnish an accepted cheque, or collateral accent'\nable to the Minister, of Public\nWorks', to the extent of ten per cent.\n(10%) of the Contract Price for the\ndue and faithful performance of the\nContract: or. alternatively, but only\nwith the consent or the Minister\nfurnish a Bond for a sum equal to\none hundred per cent. (100\".) of\nthe Contract Price in an approved\nCorporate Guarantee Company and\nin a form presciibed by the Department.\nContracts will be let only to residents of Canada, including Canadian\nfirms and corporations established\nand operating in Canada prior to\nApril 1st, 1937, but excluding all\nCanadian firms -and corporations\nestablished subsequent to the said\ndate, and to no others.   Tenderers\n(Continued on Next Column)\n(Continued)\nmust submit, with their tenders a\nlist stating the type and capacity\nof the equipment in their possession\nwhich they propose to use for carrying out the work and where the\nequipment is located so that it may\nbe inspected, if necessary.\nThe lowest or any tender will not\nnecessarily be accepted.\nA. DIXON.\nchief Engineer.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nParliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B.C., May 14th. 1937.   (553)\nPROVINCIAL ELECTIONS 1937\nFollowing are the Agents for\nCandidates in the Provincial Election, June 1, 1937. in the Creston-\nNelson Electoral District:\nG. H. Fraser of Nelson. BC,\nAgent for R. F. Bayliss, Cooperative Commonwealth Federation.\nC H. Hamilton of Nelson. BC,\nAgent for A. T. Horswill, Conservative.\nW.\u00bbD. Fleet of Nelson, B.C.. Agent\nfor H. L. Howe. Social Credit.\nJ. H. Beatty of Nelson. BC.\nAgent for J. W. Mulholland, Independent.\nE.   P.   Dawson   of  Nelson.  B.C..\nAgent for F. Putnam, Liberal.\nW. E. COLES.\nReturning Officer,\nCreston-Nelson Electoral District\nMay 13. 1937.  j503>\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 160)\nIN THE MATTER OF SUBLOT 2\nOF  BLOCK  \"A\" OF LOT 4396.\nKOOTENAY   DISTRICT.   PLAN\n834.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 11525-A to the above mentioned lands in the name of ADAM\nCRUICKSHANK and bearing date\nthe 27th November, 1909. I HEREBY\nGIVE NOTICE of my intention at\nthe expiration of one calendar\nmonth'from the first publication\nhereof to issue a Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person having any\ninformation with reference to'such\nlost Certificate of Title is requested\nto communicate witjj the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C. this\n7th day of May. 1937.\nA. W. IDIENS.\nRegistrar.\nDATE of first publication May\n10. 1937. (439)\nPERSONAL\nHIGHEST CLASS R U B B t R\ngoods Our quality and service\nwill amaze you 27 latex for $1 00\nGoods shipped same day as ordered Packed plain. Free cala\nlogue for men or women on request. Imperial Distributors. 152\nBurrows Ave.. Winnipeg. Man\n (15i\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorators and other\nstimulants One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write. Mann-Rutherford Co\n(296>\nMEN WHO HAVE BEEN CURED\nof stricture of the prostate gland,\nplease communicate with' Box\n524. Daily News. (5241\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nCOTTAGES, WIILOW POINT.    1\npartly furnished, near lake. 1 unfurnished, in orchard. J J. Campbell. R.R.1, Nelson. Phone 4S2L3.\n(531)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept. of Natura1\nResources. C.P.R. Calgary, Alta\n(2891\ntwo\" resiFential^properties\nof Mrs. A E. Gridley, 200 Block.\nVernon Street. Apply W. W. Ferguson. Solicitor. P.O.B. 9, or phone\n662, Gilker Block. _ (551)\nLOTS. ~ DIFFERENT' SIZES FOR\nsale. In orchard. Arabl\"1 or uncleared.   J.   J.   Campbell,   R.R.1.\n_ Nelson. Phone 462L3. (532'\nSMALL 4\" ROOM BUNGALOW IN\ngood condition. 2 lots, fruit trees\nCash payment and terms. 617 4th\nSt. Phone 354R, (3841\nI HAVE AN ABSOLUTELY\" NEW\nlisting\u2014a lovely bunga'ow home\nstone foundation. C. W. Appleyard\n(417)\n7 ROOM HOUSE.\" 2 LOTS. LEVEL\nproperty.  No  rocks  and   several\nfruit trees. Box 545, Daily News.\n(5451\nCOMPLETEl'URNlSHED APAkT-\nment house. Box 687. Nelson  BC\n(288)\nROOMfNG-HOUSE7 \" CENTRALLY\nlocated. Box 544, Daily News.\n(544)\nCLUB  \"HOT EXT \"CORNER- SILICA\nand Stanley Sts. Apply within.\n(534)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIt you find a cat or dog. pocket-\nbook, jewelry or fur. or anything else of value, telephone\nthe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted without coat to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nLOST-GOLD CHAIN USED AS A\nbracelet, between Hudson Bay\nand Civic Centre. Valued as a\nkeepsake. Reward. D. Carmichael\nRoom 16. Annable Block.     (495)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\nhands, and gloomily his mind surveyed the situation in its new\naspects. That he was in love with\nJacqueline Smith he no longer attempted to disguise from himself\nThat she could never herself develop for him any closer feeling\nthan one of sympathetic kindliness\nhe was equally certain. But that\nshe should be thrown to the wolves\nin the shape of Jim Asson or Colonel Luiman was intolerable, unthinkable. He shuddered.\nWhat was this further alternative to which Lutman had made\nreference? What was it he had\nsaid\u2014\"the most satisfactory of all\nthe possibilities.\" He hadn't mentioned it until after he had been so\nanxious to have 8 copy!\n(To  Be Continued)\nFURN. BUNGALOW BY MONTH\nBathroom, fireplace, ga.-age. Good\nbeach. Use of boat. Lovely garden, 4 miles from Kaslo. Rasmus-\nsen. Nelson. (474)\nFU r\"n I SH ED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent.   Annable Block\n(290)\n5   ROOM   HOUSE.   CENTRALLY\nlocated. 224 Vernon St. Ph. 488L\n(436)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.    (291)\nfHSKPG R00M.7 BED ROOM\nCall 3 to 5 p.m. 116 Vernon.   (543)\nFOR\" PEW-FURNISHED SUITES\nin Ihe Kerr Apartments      (307)\nFOR\" RENT-FURNISHED\" SUITE\nApply 712 Josephine. (485)\nLIGHTHOUSEKEEPING\" ROOMS\n918 Kojtenay Street. (541)\nfoTrent-furnFshed HOUSE\"\n618 Silica Street. (281)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nSHORTY'S REPAIR SHOP\nWe have the latest equipment to do\nexpert   ignition  and tune-up jobs.\nAgents for Hayes, Diamond T and\nCab-over engine I.!ick trucks  (546)\n1924 \"CHEV. TOURING,' WITHOUT\nhood.'Nearly new tires. Good battery. Strong engine. Licence. $60\nBox 533 Daily News. (533)\n2\"TRUCKS7fORD TON & DODGE\n2 ton. Write Box 471, Daily News\n(471)\n\"CHICKS\nWHICH\nGIVE\nRESULTS\"\nMay Prices\nLEGHORNS\nUnsexed Ptlllet Chicks\n$ 10 per   100 $ 22 per 100\n$ 90 per 1000 $105 per 500\nRUCKS AND REDS\ni 12 per   100 $ 25 per 100\n$110 per 1000 $115 per 500\nLIGHT SUSSEX\n$ 13 per   100 $ '25 per 100\nGovernment approved. Blood-tested\nstock. It will pay you to see our\nillustrated booklet. Write now. It's\nfree.\nRUMP k SENDALL LTD.\nLangley Prairie, B.C.\n(298)\nWRITE NOW FOR AN III US\ntrated Catalogue and Price lift of\nChicks. This describes heavy laying strains of White Lecjiorns\nRhode Island Reds. White vVyan-\ndottes and 1st Cross, besides jiving information on feeding poultry L F. Solly. Lakeview Poultry\nFarm, Westholme. B.C. (227)\nRHODE ISLAND RED CHICKS 17\nyears under government supervision. $12 per 100 Express paid\nDan Russell. 1806 Gray Ave,. New\nWestminster, BC. _   (139)\nLEGHORN _CHICKS \" $10, NEW\nHampshires $12 per 100 Satisfaction guaranteed T. A. Robinson\nB.C, Lands Co., Grand Forks, BC\n(79)\n1   VERY  FINE  AYRSHIRE  COW.\nHeavy milker.  Also Half Jersey\nHeifer.  Both   freshen  July.  Sell\ntogether. R. K. Wallace, Tarrys\n(5211\ngoats! can\" be\"\"seen~at\" pop\nInr.. L   Bobier, Taghum, BC\n(522)\nHELP WANTED\nCRESTON DISTRICT\nnow available fo. * real live man |\nwith car to handle the sale and distribution of Watkins well-known I\nline of household products. Real op- j\nportunity for right man. For fur- |\nther information apply The J. R.\nWatkins Company, 1010 Alberni St.,\nVancouver, B.C.        (554) I\nSTENOGRAPHER \"WANTED-FOR |\nKootenay Lake Genera] Hospital.\nMust have previous office experience. Application forms may be I\nhad from the Secretary.       (509)'\"\nCAPABLE\"\" GIRL   FOR-HOUSED\nwork on small ranch. 2 to cook I\nfor.   Mrs.   A.  Cutting,  Fauquier. [\n(467)\nSTRONG   MIDDLE   AGED   woman, knowledge of nursing.   Call |\n1223_Stanley Street.   __    __<478>\nGIRL   FOR   GENERAL   HOUSE-\nwork. Call eve's. 902 Fourth St.\n(505)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\nE W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINC1AI\nAnalyst. Assayer. Metallurgical\nEngineer, Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson.  B.C_ (324)\n\u2014 GRENVII.LE H  GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker Street.  Nelson. B C.    PO\nBox No  726    Representing shipper's interest at Trail, B C    (325)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(3261\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, dc   neuro-\ncalometer  and   X-ray.    16  years\nexperience. McCulloch Blk_(327)\nW J  BROCK. DC  X ray  15 Years'\nExperience. Gilker Blk.. Nelson\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH D DAWSON Nelson BC\nMine Surveys and Reports\nB.C Land Surveyor _(329)\nBOYD C AFFLECK. Fruitvale. BC\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(330)\nFlorists\nARTISTIC FLORAL MAKE-UP A\nspecialty.   Mrs. Hagarty.   Ph 215\n(331)\nFuneral Directors\nELECTRICAL,  MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\nHOIST MOTORS\nWound   rotor  motors   in  stock\nfrom 10 h p. to 250 h p. at various speeds    Enquire\u2014     '\nCROSSMAN  MACHINERY\nCOMPANY. LIMITED\n59 Alexander St.. Vancouver, BC.\n(295i\nFOR SALE-GARDEN TRACTOR.\nFelix tread. 5 h.p. In good running order. W. K. Clark. Savoy\nHotel. (550)\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert   Mortician        Lady Attendant\nModern  Ambulance Service\n(332)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nMutual Benefit Health k Ace.  Assoc\nWorld's largest Al  W Foote, Dist\nMgr.,  Hume  Hotel', Nelson, BC\n(333)\nROBERTSON\" REALTY \"CO.7 LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n311 Baker St.   Phone 68,        (334)\nR. W. DAWSON. Real Estate. Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. Phone 197\n(335)\nC, D\"\"bLACKWOOD\"\" Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est. Ph 9P\n(3361\nH. e'.\"dill\"\"auto and\"\"fi\"re IN-\nsuranee. Real Estate. 508 Ward St\n(337)\nFIT ANNABLE \" REAITe'STATE\nRentals. Insurance. Annable Blk\n(338)\nCHAS-FMcHARDY INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135. (339)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work. Laths\nWork Drilling. Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(340)\nH. E. STEVENSON. Machinist,\nBlacksmith, Electric and Acetylene\nWelder. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98. 708-12 Vernon St.. Nelson.   (230)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON. AGENT: C. C.\nSnowdon Oils. Greases, etc. Richardson Road Machinery Co. Culverts. Graders, Scrapers, Plows,\nScreens, Gravel Equipment, etc.\nMine Machinery. Steam Coals.\nOffice 518 Ward. Ph. 53; Res. 239.\n(341)\nNotaries\nD   J.  ROBERTSON. NOTARY\nPublic.   305 Victoria St., Nelson.\n(342)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor. list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\n(343)\nPhotography\nOUR BUSINESS FOR 1936 AL-\nmost doubled that of 1935, There\nmust be a reason. A trial order\nwill convince YOU of the superior\nPhoto Finishing done in our plant,\nYour film developed and printed\n25c Reprints, eight tor 25c KRYS-\nTAL PHOTOS, WILKIE, SASK;\n(344)\nSanitariums\nDR ALDRICH. SPOKANE. WA<!H,\nHeart. Stomach. Kidneyi Bladder\nDiseases treated.   X-ray work\n(345)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH    FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant, 217 0aker St.\n(346)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY.   SELL  k  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.   The Ark Store\n1 (347)\nTHECUMPS\nWatch Repairing\nWALK A  BLOCK AND SAVE A\nDollar. Boyle the Jeweller.   (349)\nBy Cus Edson\nWHAT'S THAT MAID HERE FOR, ANYHOW ?\nI'VE BEEN VAINLY TRYING TO FIND HER.\nFINGERPRINTS ON A &ROOM EVER SINCE\nSHE CAME HERE\u2014SHE STUDIES THE\nft LABOR QUESTION  FROM A\nDISTANCE, LIKE ASTRONOMERS\nSTUDY THE STARS\n\u2022<0'\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Rust Westover\nWHERE'S Ma\u00a3?J\nt'VflE C30T A    -\n\\*ft=DD|N<S\nPRESENT\nPOtt  HIM\nHE'S  IM HIS  OFFICE\nOH, I'M  DYlMtsr TO\nSEE   IX  WALLY\nVJELL, LOW Bp-'.DSE, VCUK VJEDD1NS IS OMt-V\nTHf?EE VJEEK.S OFF AND * WANT TO BE FlEST\nTD <SWE VOU A PRESENT J\nT\nTHERE'S   VUHEKE   VOU'U.   &E  SPENDIM'  MO^T\nOF  VOCX2  TIME AFTEfi VOU'EE  MARRtEO\n PPPfrfPPfpi?\niPPPP|PfiPW>W?WPP^PW!?SP!W\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-MpNDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1937\n. PAflf   Sil\u00bb't\n\/ANCOUVER THIRD IN HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS\n131,(11 IN 3ft\nLOANS MADE TO\nCOAST (ENTRE\nJew Waterford With\n\u00a340,985 Heads Cities\n.   Under 10,000\nOTTAWA, May 16 (CP).\u2014Of the\n,086,858 in loans taken out up to\nprll 15 last under the national\nnployment commission's home im-\n'ovement plan, $2,152,590 was disunited in towns and cities of 5000\n| more population, according to\ngures made public by Revenue\nJnister J. L. Ilsley, acting minister\n! finance. *\nToronto led all other communities\n1th a total of 654 loans amounting\n$245,965, while Montreal had 461.\nans amounting to $251,490. Van-\nmver trad 391 loans for a total ot\n;38,418, Winnipeg 207 for $86,179\nlth Ottawa and Edmonton next in\n\u25a0der. '\nA total of 7819 loans have been\niported and of these 5357 were in\nie cities and towns with popula-\nons exceeding 5000.\nNew Waterford, N.S., with a total\n! 130 loans for $40,895 headed the\n5t for towns of between 5000 and\n1,000. This exceeds the loans of\nvy other community under 40,000\n[habitants and Is greater than for\niveral cities in the classification of\n1,000' or over.\nFREE MINERS'\nCERTIFICATES\nEXPIRE MAY 31\nVICTORIA, May 16 (CP)-Pro-\nvinclal free miners' certificates are\nrenewable by May 31, and all certificates representing property held\nunder the Mineral act or Placer\nMining act must be reinstated or\ntht.' will lapse, officials of the British Columbia mines dpartment said\nSaturday.\nThe fees vary from $5 for individual miners to between $50 and $100\nfor incorporated concerns.\nIn addition there is the \"provisional\" free miner's certificate issued free under a special statute,\nand good for the taking up of a\nplacer claim without fee under certain conditions.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, May 16  (CP). -\nancoiiver wheat cash prices:\nStraight   Tough\nb. 1 hard \t\n 126%\n124%\no. 1 nor\t\n  125%\n123%\no. 2 nor\t\n  123%\n121%\no. 3 nor\t\n  118%\n116%\nO. ,4 nor\t\n  11.5%\n113 M,\nb. 5 wheat\t\n  109%\n106%\no. 6 wheat\t\n    99%\n96%\need \t\n    80%\n78%\nCALGARY, May 16 (CP)-Oil\nlares in light trade, continued to\nIvnnce on the Calgary stock ex-\nlange Saturday. Practically all\nlocks recorded gains at the close,\nmging from fractions to 15 cents,\nf Sc E. registered the biggest ad-\nance, 15 to 2.40; Ranchmen was\nb 8 at 42; Okalta 4 at 1.35 and\nulcan 3 at 1.15. Weymarn gained\nat 14.\nB.C. Secretary\nMerchants Will\nTalk at Nelson\nRetail merchants of the city tonight will hear an address bv\nGeorge R. Matthews, B.C. secretary\nof the Retail Merchants' Association\nof Canada, on- questions of d\u00bbep\ninterest to merchants. Mr. Matthews is visiting the larger centres\nof the province.\nIn an interview with a Nelson\nDaily News reporter he stated the\nMerchants' association, while\nstrictly non-political, \"apparently\nhad started to rea\u00abze its responsibility in supporting those provincial\ncandidates who see the need of\ncorrective measures, and who are\nnot so politically hidebound as to\nchoose experiency rather than action.\"\nMINING 8TOCK PRICE\nINDEX IS LOWER\nOTTAWA, May 16 (CP).-Declines\nin mining stocks prices caused a\ndrop of more than 4 points in the\nprice index of 24 mining issues for\nthe week ending May 13 at 140.1\ncompared with 144.5 the previous\nweek, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported today. The index, on\nthe base 1926 equals 100, was 149.4\nthe year before. The index for 21\ngold issues was 110 against 113.1 ami\n128.4 and for three base metals 264.3\ncompared with 273.8 and 236.4.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nta Pac Gr A  5\nisoc Brew of Can  14\nithurst P & P A  17%\nill\u201eTelephone   158(4\n\u2022aiilian T L & P  22\nit Col Pow A .'  36%\nItColPswB  8\ndid Prod A  60\n0 Cement pfd  103\nNor Porwer  20\nSteamship ...-  2%\n|n Steamship pfd  614\nmada Bronze  47\ntCar it Fdy  15%\nPac Rly  1214\nin Car k Fdy pfd  24\nin Celanese  26\nin Hydro Elec pfd  76\nin Ind Ale   5%\nin Ind Ale B  4%\nin Pac Rly   12%\nfcckshutt Plow   16%\nl>ns Min k Smelt  75%\nlist C Seag   20%\npm Bridge  49\nom Coal pfd  20\nbm Steel & Coal B  18\n|om. Textile   80\nIryden Paper  14\noundation Co of Can  23%\neneral Steel Wars  13%\nharles Gurd  SVf'\nyp Lime k A   14%\namilton Bridge   14\nbit Renfrew   14\nbward Smith Paper   25%\nlow Smith P 6s pfd  101\nnp Tob of Can  14\nHt Nickel  58%\n,ake of the Woods  38\nlassey Harris  11%\nIcColl Front  9%\n!ont L H & P  29%\nfat Brew   39%\n!at Brew pfd  41%\n[at Steel Car Corp  41\nPower Corp of Can  21\nSt Law Corr)        11\nSt Law A pfd  30%\nSt Law Paper Mills pfd     79\nSouthern Can Power          13%\nSteel of Can        77\nSteel of Can pfd ,  72%\nWestern Grocers   70\nBANKS\nBank of Canada      58\nCanadienne     157%\nCommerce  197\nMontreal  234\nRoyal\t\nToronto \t\nAbitibi P & P .,   ...\nBeauhamois Pr C .\n202\n216\n.     6%\n.    7\nBrew & Dist Van     7%\nBrew Corp of Can .\n2%\nBrew Corp of C pfd  19%\nB A Oil ...\u00bb  23\nB C Packers ..,  18\nCan D k Pock  '.  37%\nCan Vickers   8\nCan Wineries .     1.80\nCons Paper Corp  15%\nDom Stores     10%\nDonnacona Paper A  14%\nDonn Paper B  14%\nFord Motor A  23%\nFraser Co  39%\nImperial Oil     21%\nInt Pete  36\nInt Utilities A  17\nInt Utilities B   1%\nMacLaren P & P   27%\nMitchell Robt  21\nPage Hersev   98\nPrice Bros new   37%\nPrice Bros pfd  65%\nRoyalite Oil   36\nThrift Stores   1\nUnited Dist of Can    85\nWalker Gooder k W     43\nWalker G & W pfd       19%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nKenn Copper ....   54\n531.4\n54\nChem\n221\n221\n221\nKresge S S          23%\n23%\n23%\nn Can\n98\n97%\n98\nKroegger k T ..   21%\n21 Vi\n21%\na For Power\n7%\n7%\n7%\nMack Truck         45%\n45%\n45%\ni Smelt & Re\n82%\n82\n82\nMilwaukee   pfd    2%\n2%\n2%\ni Telephone..\n164\n164\n164\nMont Ward          51%\n501\/4\n51%\ni Tobacco ....\n76%\n75%\n75%\nNash Motors ....   18%\n18%\n18%\nilconda \t\n49%\n48%\n48%\nNat Dairy Prod  22%\n22\n22%\nchison\n89%\n88%\n88 Vs\nNat Pow 81 Lite    9%\n9%\n9%\niburn  Motors\n25\n24%\n24%\nN Y Central        45%\n45\n45\ndation Corp ..\n8%\n6%\n6%\nPac Gas * Elec   28%\n28%\n28%\nldwin Loco ..\n6%\n6%\n6%\nPackard Motors    9%\n9%\n9%\nIt & Ohio ....\n32%\n32%\n32%\nPenn R R             43%\n42%\n4.1\nndix Av ......\n19%\n19%\n19%\nPhillips Pete ....   53%\n53\n53%\nth Steel\n79%\n79\n79%\nPure Oil             18\n17%\n17%\nrden \t\nnada Dry\n24%\n26%\n24%\n26%\n24V,\n26%\nRCA      9\n8%\n8\n8%\n8%\nRKO           8%\nPR\t\n12%\n12%\n12%\nRem Rand   ....   25%\n24%\n25%\ntrro de Pasco\n62'4\n62\n62\nShell Union Oil   29\n28%\n28%\nles k Ohio ....\n57%\n56%\n56%\nS Cal Edison ...   23%\n23%\n23%\nirysler\t\n10914\n108%\n109\nSouth Pacific       58%\n56%\n56%\nin Gas N Y ....\n35\",\n35%\n35%\nStan Oil of Cal   43\n42%\n42%\nirn Prod\n56%\n56\n56%\nStan Oil of Ind  43%\n43%\n43%\nWright pfd ..\n5%\n5%\n5%\nStan Oil of N J   64%\n64%\n64%\nlpont \t\n154\n'152%\n154\nStewirt Warner   18%\n17%\n18%\n\u2022tman Kodak 164%\n164\n164\nStudebaker          14%\n14%\n14%\nec Pow k Lite\n17%\n17%\n17%\nTexas Corp     . ' 59%\n58%\n59%\nirct English .\n6%\n6%\n6 %\nTexas Gulf Sul   36%\n36\n36\n>rd of Canada\n23%\n23%\n23%\nTimken Roller ..   61%\n61%\n61%\nrst Nat Stores\n-44%\n44%\n44%\nUnder Type         80%\n80\n80%\n\u2022eeport  Texas\n25\n25\n25\nUn Carbide  100\n99%\n100\nsneral Electric\n'81.\n50%\n50%\nUn Oil of Cal ..   24%\n24%\n24%\nmeral Foods.\n39\n38%\n39\nUn Avcraft.        24%\n24%\n24%\nsneral  Motors\n55%\n55\n55\nUn Pacific  145\n144\n14.1\njodrich \t\n40%\n40%\n40%\nUS Pipe  .           53\n52%\n52%\nranby \t\n8%\n8%\n8%\nU S Rubber     55%\n55%\n55%\nrt North pfd\n54%\n51%\n54%\nU S Steel     .        96%\n95\n95\nrt West Sugar\n35\n35\n35\nVanadium Steel   27%\n27 %\n27%\niqker Prods ..\n12\n12\n12\nWarner Bros .... 12%\n11%\n12%\niwe Sound ....\n73 %\n73\n73\nWest Elec .... 134%\n134\n134%\nidson   Motors\n15%\n15%\n15%\nWestern   Union   56%\n56%\n56%\nt Nickel\n59'*\n58%\n58 <\/s\nWoolworth ...       47%\n47\n47\nt Tel & Tel\n10%\nin\n'10%\nWrigley               70\n70\n70\nwel Tea\t\n76\n70\n76\nYellow Truck  .   22\n21%\n22\nTADANACPLANT\nRECEIPTS PASS\n200,000 MARK\nTotal 201.294Tons Up\nto May 15; Company\nTonnage 194,848\nPassing the 200.000-ton mark, total receipts at the Tadanac plant of\nth^ Consolidated Mining & Smelt-\ning company up to May 15 reached\n201,294 tons. During the week May\n8 to 14 inclusive receipts amounted\nto 10,720 tons.\nThe company mines tonnage was\nswelled by 10.403 tons in the week\nto reach 194X48 tons; while the custom tonnage increased by 317 to an\naggregate of 6446. Ymir concentrates\nmade up 132 tons of the week's custom total.\nCustom shippers were:\nOres\u2014Boulder City. Boulder Spur,\n43; Highland-Bell, Beaverdell, 43;\nLittle Bertha, Grand Forks, 34.\nSkookum, Vernon, 26; Venus Juno.\nNelson, 34. Total 185.\nConcentrates\u2014Wesko, Ymir, 51;\nYankee Girl. Ymir, 81. Total 132.\nNEW YORK LIST\nHAS DULL DAY\nNEW YORK, May 16 (AP).-The\ngoing was slow and a trifle rough\nin Saturday's stock market, although\na handful of industrials and rails\nmanaged to gain ground moderately.\nTrading forces were shy and\nshifty from the start and few backed\njudgment with extensive commitments either way. Those who appeared in the board rooms confined\nthemselves principally to tape\nwatching.\nStimulus seemed to have faded\nfrom the truce in the Jones &\nLaughlin and General Motors\nstrikes. Current business news was\nstill cheering so far as it went, but\ntalk of a summer setback was again\nheard in analytic.it quarters.\nTransfers of 343.560 shares compared with 285,390 last Saturday.\nWith the exception of the latter\ndate it was the smallest turnover\nsince June of last year. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks\nended with an advance of .2 of a\npoint at 66.3.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR OFF\nNEW YORK, May 16 (API-Foreign currencies were higher in\nterms of the United States dollar in\nall centres Saturday. The pound\nsterling rallied % cent in New York\nto $3.94%, French fanes gained .00\n7-16 of a cent to 4.48%, German\nmarks bounded up .04 of a cent. The\nCanadian dollar eased 1-64 of a\ncent to 1.00 5-32.\nHOUSE SEPARATES BED, LIVING ROOM\nFor this delightful small, cozy\nhouse, which can be built for from\n$3200 to $3700, it is suggested that a\nlight cream exterior trim be used;\ngrass green shingle roof; deep blue\nshutters, and the body of the house\nbe painted white. ,\nThe living and sleeping portions\nof this design are completely separated, with a minimum hall area.\nOtherwise, every foot of floor space\nis in use and usable.\nBoth bedrooms, at the rear of the\nhouse, are located as far from traffic\nnoises as it is possible to be, The\nliving room  is  largei  there  i\u00ab a\npleasant porch, and a delightful\ndinette across the hall from the living room and in the front of the\nkitchen. Ample closet space is provided for. Deliveries at the kitchen\ndoor eliminate \"front door\" interruptions... \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\nIf you prefer to build the house\nwithout a basement, the area now\noccupied by'the cellar stairs, next\nthe chimney flue, makes an ideal\nheater room.\nOne of the well-balanced interior\ndoors is shown left, showing the\npopular narrow trim.\nOILS HIGHER ON\nTHE (OAST LIST\nVANCOUVER, May 16 (CP) -\nGains of from fractions to 14 cents\nwere registered in oil issues on the\nshort Saturday session of Vancouver\nstock exchange. Golds were steady\nand base metals slightly higher as\ntransactions totalled 163,295 shares.\nRanchmen's oil with a turnover\nof 16,000 shares closed up eight cents\nat 41. Calgary k Edmonton advanced 14 at 2.36, Vulcan 10 at 1.20 and\nA.P. Consolidated 3 at 34. Calmont\nat 57 and Commonwealth at 29 each\nadded 4 while Dalhousie at 77 and\nOkalta at 1.32 were both up 2. Mercury firmed a cent at 27, and United\n1% at 21%.\nIn the base metals, Pend Oreille\nwas up 20 at 2.90, Whitewater 1 at'\n11% and Reeves MacDonald was unchanged at 80. B.C. Nickel slipped\n2 at 23.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAldermac   .\nArgosy\nBagamac\t\nBidgood\nBig Miss \t\nBralorne   \t\nBuffalo A     .\nBunker H X ..\nCan  Mai\nCastle  Treth\nCent Man\n1.00\n 62\n 32\n.      .88\n 45\n6.50\n      9.00\n 12\n      1.20\n      1.03\n 07\nCent Pat  -   2.90\nChibougamou       1.08\nConiaurum             1.15\nCons M k S     76.25\nDarkwater  75\nDome     40.00\nDorval Siscoe  57%\nE Malartic      1.00\nFalcon   ....      7.80\nFed Kirk  14\nFrancoeur   80\nGillies Lake  49%\nGunnar Gold  76\nHardrock           1.55\nHarker Gold  15\nHollinger    11.25\nHowey    36%\nHudsBh  Bay      29.00\nInt Nickel     58.75\nJack Waite  90\nJ M Cons    .'...      .30\nKirkland L      1.37\nLeach Gold  63\nLake Shore     51.75\nLamaque C  08%\nLebel Oro       16%\nLittle Long L     5.40\nMay Spiers       5.10\nMan East  03\nMclntyre   .     34.75\nMcLeod Cock      1.70\nMk Red Lake     1.24\nMcWatters  51\nMining Corp      3.00\nMinto 15\nMoneta       t.32\nNoranda \t\nNormetal ..\nOmega\nParmour P\nPaymaster\n6150\n1\/15\n.57\n2.40\n.57\nPend Oreille 2.95\nPerron       1.10\nPickle Crow      6.80\nPioneer     4.05\nPremier Gold       2.55\nPorcupine C 04\nPreston East       1.07\nR Authier ....:.....     390\nR Lake G  :......      .39\nReno       89\nRoche LL      ., 15%\nSan Antonio     1.50\nShawkey        , :      .55\nSherr Gord  .,     2.25\nSiscoe    :...    3.90\nSlad  Malartic         1.25\nStsdacona  1.48\nSt Anthony 16\nSullivan           1.33\nSylvanite    '3.10\nTashota  10%\nTeck Hughes       5.00\nToburn       2.20\nVentures       1.80\nWaite Amulet      2.75\nWhitewater .12%\nWr Harg 6.40\nY Yan Girl  28\nPowell Rouyn       1.06\nAstoria Ryn  13\nOILS\nB A Oil ....\nC & E Corp\nRoyalite \t\nHome Oil          1.62\nImperial Oil     21.50\nInter Pete     35.90\nMcColl Front       9.40\nMerland  13%\nPantepec        7.25\nTexas Can \t\nPacalta  \t\nCalmont\nEast Crest\nFoundation\nUnited \t\nFoothills         1.00\nMercury  26\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power       6%\nBeatty  Bros   !    15%\nBrazilian       22%\nBrew & Dist      7%\nB A Oil     22%\nBrew Corp       3\nBrew Corp pfd    19%\nBC Power B       8\nBurt F N     40\nCan Bakeries A      4\nCan Bud Malt     8\nCan Car Fdy  15%\nCan Cement  ,    16V:\n23.00\n2.35\n36.00\n2.00\n.14\n.55\n.15\n.27\n.20\nCan Cement pfd\nCan Dredge\nCan Pac Rly\n103\n38\n12%\nCan Ind Ale      5%\nCan Ind Ale pfd   103\nCan Wineries       1%\nCafnation pfd   100\nCons Bakeries     20%\nCans Smelters new    76%\nDominion Bridge     48%\nDom Stores   10\nDom Tar k Chem     12%\n107 .\n20%\n20\nDom Tar pfd\t\nDist Seagrams \t\nFanny   Farmer   \t\nFord A       23%\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh .    Low\n30 industrials   170.13      169.08\n20  rails      58.13       57.81\n20 utilities  ..I..   27.67       27.45-\n40 bonds ,  '.:.'.'..:...:.:..'i.\"  \u25a0\u2014r 1\nClose Change\n169.60\u2014up .45\n87.90\u2014up .14\n27.53\u2014off .03\n101.23\u2014up    .05\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, May 16 (CP).\u2014Silver futures closed steady, off 10 points.\nNo sales.   Closing bids: May ,44.95; July 44.80; Sept. 44.70; Dec. 44.60.\nMontreal Steady\nMONTREAL, May 16 (CP) - A\nsteady undertone in light trading\nprevailed on Montreal stock exchange Saturday.\nNoranda went up to 61, a point\ngain, while Nickel, at 59%, was\nahead % and Consolidated Smelters\nunchanged at 77. Papers also displayed firmness, Bathurst and both\ncommon and preferred shares of St.\nLawrence Corporation moving fractionally higher.\nMontreal Power. Bell Telephone,\nCanada Northern Power and Shawinigan remained unchanged in utilities as B. C. Power \"A\" went to\n36%, up %, and Brazilian eased %\nto 22%.   \u25a0 '\u2022\nDividends\nLake Shore Mines, Ltd., quarterly\ndividend 100 per cent and bonus 100\noer cent, payable June 15 to shareholders fo. record June 1. ,\nPOUND HIGHER\nMONTREAL, May 16 (CP). -\nPound sterling advanced 15-32 cent\non Montreal foreign exchanges Saturday to. 4.93%. The French franc\ngained .01 cent to 4.48 cents while\nthe United States dollar remained\nunchanged at 5-32 discount.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, May 18(CP)-Grain\nfuture quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWheat;\nMay. .    .\nJuly .\nOct.\nOats:\nMay .\nJuly  ...\nOct.\" ...'\nBarley:\nMay .\nJuly    .\nOct.\nFlax:\nOct.\nRye:\nMay .\nJuly\t\nOct\t\n129%\n127%\n117%\n55%\n52\n45\n76H\n65%\n54%\n130%\n129%\n119\n56%\n52%\n45%\n72%\n67%\n54%\n129%\n127%\n117%\n55%\n52\n44%\n70%\n65%\n53%\n130%\n129%\n118%\nW\n52%\n45%\n72%\n67%\n54%\n171      171%   171      171%\n113 116% 113 115%\n104 106 103 104%\n85 86% 85 88%\nCasluwheat: No. 1 hard 130%; No.\n1 nor. 130%; No. 2 nor. 128V4; No. 3\nnor. 126%; No. 4 nor. 121%; No. 5\nwheat 116%; No. 6 wheat 109%;\nfeed wheat 85%; No. 1 garnet 125%;\nNo. 2 garnet 124%; durum 132%; No.\n1 A. R. W. 111%; No. 4 special 114%;\nNo. 5 speoia) 105%; No. 6 special\n97%; track 130%; screenings 15.00.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, May 16 (AP)-Bar\nsilver nominal. No quotation.\nBar silver 1-16 lower at. 20%d.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nBid\n.34\n.07\nListed\nA P Con \t\nAmal Oil \t\nArtec     \t\nBig  Missouri          .44\nBralorne        \t\nBridge R Con ....\nC k E Corp   \t\nCalmont O\nCommonwealth O\nDentonia \t\nGold Belt M \t\nHargal O  \t\nHome O     \t\nInter Coal  \t\nIsland Mount \t\nKopt Belle     '  \u25a0\u2022\nMak Siccar\nMcD Segur Ex ...\nMcLeod O: \t\nMinto      \t\nModel O    \t\nPioneer G ...\nPremier G\nPremier Border .\nQuatsino     \t\n00\n.04\n1.60\n.57\n.29\n.13\n.27\n.18%\n1.60\n.21\n.70\nGeneral Steelwares\nGyp L & A\n133,:\n14%\nHarding Carpet       5\nHinde Dauche   20\nGoodyear Tire   84%\nInt Metals  11'\nInt Milling pfd   101\nImperial Oil  21%\nImperial Tobacco   14%\nInt Nickel   59\nInt Pete   35%\nLoblaw A   23%\nLoblaw B  20%\nKelvinator  29%\nMaple Leaf Mfg      7%\nMassey Harris  11%\nMcColl Front       9%\nMont Power  29%\nMoore Corp   42\nOnt Steel pfd   11\nNat Steel Car  41\nPower Corp   20%\nPressed Metals   30\nSteel of Can   77%\nShawinigan , 26\nStand Paving       6V*\nHiram Walkoj-     43\nRelief Arl\nReno G\nReeves Mc\nSally\nSalmon  G\n.19\n.45\n- .13%\n.47\n4.05\n2.50\n.02%\n.04\n.20\n.85\n80\n,05\n.07\nSheep Creek     -77\nSpooner O\nSilbak Prem\nTaylor,B River\nVanalta ..\nVidette   ,'. \t\nWesko'\nYank\u00bbe Girl .. ..\nCURB\nAnaconda  .....\nBaltsc O \t\nBayview\nBeaver Silver\nBluebird     \t\nB C Nickel\nCongress\nCork Prov\nCrows N New\nDalhousie O\nDevenish\nDunwell M\nEast Crest O\nFawn M     .    .\nffairview Amal\nFederal G   \t\nAsk\n.36\n.08\n.09\n.45\n6.65\n.04%\n165\n.14%\n1.70\n.25\n.90\n.03\n.50\n.15\n.50\n2.55\n.02%\n.04%\n.21\n.88\n.80%\n.09\n.78\n.\u25a0>5\n2.30\n.08 \u2014\n.19\n.28\n.t5%\n.05\n.01\n.01%\n.03\n.23\n.05\n.01\n.0714\n.77\n06\n.03\n,14%\n.09\n,03%\n.07%\n.01%\n.02\n,03%\n.24\n.05%\n.07\n.04\n,26\n.09\n.38\n.03%\n.02%\n.07\n.06\n.13%\n.02%\n.05%\n.01\n.18%\n.02\n.02%\n.05\n.02\n.01%\n.01%\n.25\n.07%\n.18\n.27\n.12%\n.19\n.10\n.18\n.34%\n.01\n.01\n.05\n.06%\n.16\n1.32\n.14 \u25a0\u25a0\n2.90\n.05\n.03%\n.09%\n.41\n.02%\n.08%\nRoyalite.O     36.00\nRufus Arg          .03\nRuth Hope          \u2014\nSilvercrest\t\nSilversmith  \t\nSouthwest P\nSnnloch M \t\nU D L     \t\nUnited O \t\nViking G \t\nVulcan O\nWaverlv T New\nWellington   M\nWhitewater\nFoundation   \t\nFreehold O \t\nGeo Copper \t\nGeo Enter \t\nGeo River \t\nGolconda\nGold  Mount . .\nGrandview \t\nGrange M ,......\nGrull Wlhksne\nHaida     \t\nHigh Sarcee ....\nHome G\nIndian M   \t\nInter  Gold   . ...\nKoot Flo \t\nKoot King\nLakeview M ..\nLowery Pete  ...\nLucky Jim  \t\nMadison  O\nMercury\nMeridian New\nMerland O  \t\nMcGillivray .\nMid West Pete\nMill City  \t\nMonarch     \t\nMorton Wool\nMarmot M\nNicola \t\nNoble Five \t\nNordon O   . ..\u25a0\nOkalta Com \t\nPacalta   .   \t\nPend Oroille ...\nPorter Idaho\nPilot O\t\nQuesnelle Q\nRanchmens  \t\nRtli'ance'\nReward M\nSMELTER STOCK\nLOSES ADVANCE\nTORONTO, May 16 (CP)-Fri-\nday's rally in the Toronto stock\nmarket was carried a little further\nin quiet trading in Saturday's short\nsession, all index groups firming a\npoint or more. Miscellaneous mines.:\nincluding base metals, hacHhe widest advance. \t\nHolders of common shares of Abitibi Power & Paper company were\nmore cheerful and the price was\nmarked up a point to 7 while the\npreferred advanced a fraction. Common had dropped to 5% earlier in\nthe week on announcement of a\nproposed reorganization plan.\nSmelters, Nickel, Noranda and\nHudson Bay were strong at the\nopening but they eased off,- shed,<\nding the gains excepting % point\nheld- by Norapda.\nBig golds turned a bit heavy in\nthe second hour, bringing fractional\ndeclines for Lake Shore, Mclntyre\nand Hollinger.\nFUTURES GAIN\nATWINNIPEG\nAND CHICAGO\nBuying and Crop News\nHelps; Liverpool\nIs Closed\nWINNIPEG, May 16 (CP)-Wheat\nfutures bounded to higher levels\non the Winnipeg grain exchange\nSaturday when unfavorable growing\nconditions, both in North America,\nand Europe, and export investment\nbuying strengthened the props under the matket.\nAlthough little actual export sales\nof Canadian wheat were confirmed,\nexporters were credited with much\nof the support in the typical Saturday trading whicfi closed with\nwheat futures 2-1% cents higher,\nMay at $1.30%, July $1.29% and\nOctober $1.18%.\nMay wheat' scored a' four-cent\ngain in the week's final two sessions\nand ended Saturday at top levels for\nthe day.\nReports European crops had suffered from unfavorable weather and\ncontinued lack of moisture over the\ngreater wheat growing areas ot\nNorth American were major bullish\nfactors. However,.Southern. Alberta\nbnefited from overnight rairis of as\nmuch as .5 inch at Medicine Hat.\nTh* Liverpool exchange was closed for Whitsuntide holidays.\nBuenos Aires closed % cent higher.\nBUYING HtUPi   .\nCHICAGO, May 16 (AP)-Favpr-\nable crop advances\/ particularly\nfrom Canada, and'a. strengthening\n-wheat export situatioh.helped bring\nout buying that lifted wheat prices\nas much as 2% cents a bushel; Saturday.   .\nThe market was strong most of\nthe session, continuing the recovery\nwhich began Friday. There was\nlittle selling pressure.\n\u2022Wheat closed 1-2% centa higher,\nMay l,25%-26; corn w,as %-3 up,\nMay new 1.30% and oats were unchanged to 1% higher, May 50%.\nNew interest centred on an authoritative statement that half of\nthe Canadian wheat acreage needs\nimmediate moisture relief to prevent reduction, in yields.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, May 16 (CP)-Brlt-\nish and foreign .exchange closed\nhigher Saturday. Nominal rates lor\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, .3034..\nAustralia, pound, 3.9417.\nBelgium, belga, .1683.\nDenmark, krone. .2205.\nGermany, recihsmark, .4011.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9361.\nIndia, rupee, .3731.\nJapan, yen, .2879.\nNew,Zealand, pound, 3.9734.\n. Norway, krone. .2412.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9122.\nUnited States dollar 5-32 discount.\n.02%\n.50\n.23\n.90\n.21%\n.01%\n1*0\n.01%\n.11%\n.06%\n.02%\n.01%\n.19%\n.03\n.03\n.05%\n.02%\n.01%\n.03\n.30\n.08%\n.27%\n.03\n.21\n.26\n.01%\n.01%\n.05%\n.05%\n0t%\n.45\n.03\n.10\n39.00\n.03%\n.03\n.07\n130\nSTOCK  INDEX OFF\nOTTAWA, May 16 (CP)-Invest\ntors price index for 96 common\nstocks was \u25a0 fractionally lower for\nthe week ending May 13 at 131.5\ncompared with 131.9 the previous\nweek, the Dominion bureau ot statistics reported today. On the base\n1926 equals 100, the index was 114.2\nthe corresponding week in 1936. The\nindex for 68 Industrials was 215.3\nagainst 216.5 and 190.\nG.WI. EARNINGS DOWN\nNEW YORK. May 15 (API-General Motors Corporation reported\ntoday it had net earnings of $44,814,\n166 for the first quarter of 1937 de\nspite serious curtailment as-the re\nsuit of strikes. The figure compared\nwith $52,464,174 for the same period\nof 1936.    <\nOttawa Mill at\nSlocan City Is\nReady Operate\n,.. New type of portable mill, designed for small gold properties, is being\ninstalled at the Lakeview mine near\nSlocan city, and is expected to be\nin operation in a few days, reports\nA. G. Malcolm of Vancouver. An\nother mill of the same type is to be\ninstalled at Mr. Malcolm's property,\nthe Gold Wedge, also near: Slocan\nCity.- The mills have an approxi-\nI mate daily capacity of 10 tons'.\n. Designed and patented by W. F. J.\nMcErlean of Vancouver, the mill is\nknown as the \"Frustrum,\" taking\nits name from the frustrum prin*\nciple used to grind the ore. Its total\nweight is half a ton and the heaviest piece weighs 210\"pounds.?The\nmilling unit is contained within a\nboiler-plate- drum itwo feet, six\ninches in diameter.\nGrinding is accomplished with 14\nfrustrums of cast \"white iron'1 on\na replaceable steel race. By means\nof a fulcrum a pressure of 900\npounds to the square'Inch may be\napplied.\nAt the bottom of the drum Is a\nmercury trough for amalgamation\nand an automatic W^'r classifier.\nThe mill is designed to recover gold:\nTo recover other metals concentrat*\ning units would be necessary.\nRequiring 5 h.p. to operate it;\nthe mill has a positive friction drive.\nTwo of these mills are now in\noperation on Texada island on\nborhite ore, and their operation to\ndate, stated Mr. Malcolm, has proved satisfactory. The mill is a B. C,\nproduct:\nBAR GOLD UP\nMONTREAL, May 14 (CPl-Bar\ngold in London up one cent at\n$34.66 an ounce in Canadian funds:\n140s 6%d In British. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $34.92\nin Canadian.\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphates \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertilisers\nProducers and Refiners of\nTadanac Brand Metals '\nCOLD SILVER\nELECTROLYTIC\nLEAD ZINC CADMIUM BISMUTH\n\t\n\u25a0IHH\n \u2014mm\nmm\n\"\u25a0^wp\nppwp\n^m^immmmf^f\nPAGE TEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1937\nTht Bait Procurable\nSWEET PEA\nSEED\nNow available. Many named\ncolon and assorted.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrag Go.\nIdeal Weather\nat Creston for\nCoronation Day\nCHESTON, B. C.-Ideal weather\nbrought residents of Creston and\ndistrict out in full force Wednesday for coronation celebrations\nwhich were well handled by a committer headed by Reeve Mallan-\ndaine.\nA broadcast of coronation ceremonies at the monument at Canyon\nstreet and Barton avenue opened\nthe celebrations followed by the\nprocession and program at the park.\nConstable Ashby, E.C.M.P., led\nthe procession followed by Creston\nbrass band under G. Hamilton. Then\ncame ex-service men under J. B.\nHolder, accompanied by a delegation of U. S. Legion members from\nBonners Ferry, Ida., and the Boy\nScouts. Creston public school children with their teachers and Canyon\nschool pupils followed and behind\nthem were decorated bicycles, floats\nand autos.\nA brief religious service conducted by Rev. R. E. M. Yerburgh was\nheld at the park, closing with the\nnational anthem led by the band,\nwho then favored with a number\nof selections and provided music\nfor the maypole dance. This was\nexecuted by the following girls who\nwore white dresses with red sashes,\nunder the direction of Mrs. W.\nFraser: Margaret Donaldson, Irene\nFridham, Goldie Walker, Ethol'Mac-\nLaren, Marion Staples, Gloria Foss,\nLorna Caughey, Marguerite Grant\nand Muriel Raymond.\nThe local Indians followed with\na native dance. Boxing was directed by W. Ferguson. Bill Bourdon\nand Joe Dominic provided the\nheavyweight feature; Irving Ferguson hooked up with BUI Vigne and\nthe always popular bantams, Tony\nHolder and Jack Goodwin met in a\ntwo round'encounter. Referee Ferguson's draw decision in all cases\nproved popular. The rest of the program consisted in races for children;\nFrije winners fti the parade were:\nbest dressed boys, Allan McAlpine\nas Robin Hood; Louis Johnston as\n' a fly in spider web; Alvin Hendren,\nas highlander. Best dressed girls,\nShirley Shire, princess on pony;\nOlive and Irene Botterill, Coronation\ntwins; Carmen Gariepy, nurse.\nBoys' comic costume prizes went\nto Raymond Cooper, Huckleberry\nFinn;- Albert Kilgren, knight of\nthe road; Jack Truscott, South Sea\nIsland girl; George Lewis, Creston\nwheat. Girl's comic, Lois Bundy,\nB.C. bad roads; Bernice Vincent,\nMickey Mouse; Kathleen Joyce, Indian girl; Maisie Cartlidge, old lady.\nPrizes for floats went to the Canadian Legion and Creston Valley\nCooperative. Messinger Motors won\nfirst prize for the best decorated auto\nwith Helen Staples second and Allen\nSpeers third.\nPrizewinners for decorated bicycles were Frank Tames, Dick Staples\nand Charlotte Wilke. Fireworks\nand a dance rounded out the evening.\nGALT, Ont.\" (CP).-Gilt dogs\nwon't lead \"a dog's life\" this summer, police having given notice the\nbylaw requiring dogs to be kept\ntied up from April 15 until autumn\nwill be enforced.\nRossland-Trail Highway Getting\nComplete Overhaul Says Burns\nTo Finish Black Top\nWork From Trail to\nCastlegar\nBy A. R. JOY\nROSSLAND, B.C., May 13.-\"To-\nmorrow a crew of men will arrive\nfrom the coast to start a complete\nrepair of the Schofield highway\nfrom the 'water hole' to the pavement at the Rossland end,\" stated\nR. R. Burns, Liberal candidate for\nRossland-Trail riding, after reviewing the road conditions in the district at a Liberal meeting here tonight. #\n\"All the chuck holes Trill be\ncleared out and complete new sections put In and then a seal coat\nput over the top.\"\n\"The works department has started to crush rock to complete black\ntopping the whole distance with the\nexception of the Sullivan creek section, from Castlegar to Rossland.\"\nHOME FIRST\nTravel between people of our\nown district is more important than\ntourist traffic, and I have always\nstressed that.\n\"The Patterson highway Is the\nnatural outlet to the American side\nand we are entitled to have a good\nroad there. I had a battle with the\ngovernment to get them to see hat\nwas the logical way out. Work on\nthat road will be started soon.\n\"Conservatives are saying that\nthis road work is just being done\nbefore election time to get votes,\nbut you will remember that this\nwork has been under consideration\nfor some time and I am sure there\nis not one Conservative who would\nnot like to see it go ahead.\"\nA revelation to Rossland citizens\nwas Mr. Burns' announcement that\n55ft acres of land at Patterson had\nbeen set aside and declared a provincial park for district picnics,\netc. An administrative board will\ncomprise a representative of Rossland, Tadanac and Trail and the\ngovernment.\n. \"The park will have sanitary conveniences    and    proper    outdoor\nstoves,\" Mr. Burns declared.\nTALK.NECE8SARY\n\"Some people say I talk too much\nbut I assure you it has taken a lot\nof talk to impress the rest of the\nprovince that there is a district of\nRossland-Trail on the map.\"\nTom Reid, M.P., New Westminster, assured Mr. Burns he could not\ntalk too much, for his experience\nin the federal house was that the\nfarther away the district a member\nrepresented was from Ottawa, the\nmore talking was essential.\nDOUKHHOBOR PROBLEM\n\"The Doukhobor uroblem in the\ninterior is a most serious one,\" declared Mr. Reid, for they are the\n'first body of independent people\nwho have successfully defied the\nlaws of this country, yet Mr. Woods-\nworth of the C.C.F. party is in favor\nof giving the Doukhobors back\ntheir franchise.\n\"1 ask you to view seriously and\nalarmingly the granting of franchise\nto a. body determined to defy the\nlaws' of our land.\n\"The C.C.F. party says 'give franchise to all.' Would you consider\ngiving franchise to Japanese who\nregister their British Columbia\nbirths in Japan and &*-* under the\nheel and domination of Japan? If\nthey got their franchise, Japan\nwould have a direct connection with\nthe administration of this country.\nREID SKEPTIC\n\"Dr. Patterson has said that if the\nConservatives are elected to power\nthey will decrease the number ot\nmembers in the house. It sounds\ngood, but who is going to drop out\nafter they are elected? Unless the\ncandidates make a definite state-\nOpening League Lacrosse Game\nWednesday Night, May 19th, 8:30 P.M.\nNELSON    TRAIL\nVERNON STREET DOORS OPEN AT 7:45\nAdmission: Adults 25tp; Children Under 15 lOtf\nRetail Lumber \u2022\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nment that they will drop out I\nwould take with a great deal of\nskepticism what the leader says\nabout the reduction.\n\"Dr. Patterson says he is going to\neconomize. Just where is he going\nto cut down? When the Pattullo\ngovernment came Into power teachers could not get paid for the government checks came back N.S.F.\nThat administration that went out\nof power in 1933 was so bad that\nHon. R. B. Bennett was seriously\nconsidering establishing a commission in this province.\"\nSpeaking of the Constructive\nparty, Mr. Reid thought Rev. Mr.\nConnell might be able to establish\nan efficient and economic govern\nment, but when he linked up With\nRalph Bruhn he had said \"there\ngoes the efficient and economic\ngovernment.\" ,\nHe flayed Bruhn for unemployment scandals \"when money was\nhanded out In large gobs to friends.\"\n\"A grader purchased when Bruhn\nwas minister of public works was\nunloaded in Coverdale and two\ntrucks could not budge it with the\nbli.de up!\" he asserted.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n%mm \u00ab.\u00bb\u2014\u2014\u00bb\u00bb*\nVENUS BEAUTY SALON\nPHONE 380 GILKER BLOCK\n(228)\nSee the FRIGIDAIRE'S New Food\nSafety Indicator. Hipperson Hdwre.\n(552)\nFor a GOLDEN CRI8P WAFFLE\nwith pure maple syrup, go to the\nWHITE SPOT LUNCH. (215)\nSPALDING'S OFFICIAL SOFT-\nBALLS, GLOVES AND BATS, HIPPERSON HDWRE. (552K\nTo whom it may concern: I will\nnot be responsible for any debts\nincurred by any other than myself.\nW. Crocker. (555)\nSPEND EMPIRE DAY, MAY 24,\nAT SOUTH SLOCAN. FULL PROGRAM OF SPORTS. ENJOYABLE\nDAY ASSURED FOR ALL.     (642)\nWOMEN'8 CANADIAN CLUB\nMeeting Wed, evening, May 19th.\nSpeaker, Mr. K. C. Symons. Subject,\n'CROWN JEWEL8 OF ENGLAND.'\n(469)\nGEO. R. MATTHEWS, Prov. Secretary of the Retail Merchants'\nAssoc, of Canada, will address a\nmeeting at 8 p.m. TONIGHT In the\nSilver Room, Hume Hotel. Everybody welcome. (548)\nCONSERVATIVE COMMITTEt\nROOMS AND HEADQUARTERS\nAHE LOCATED IN THE FRONT\n'HALL OF THE EAGLE BLOCK\nAND WILL BE OPEN EVERY\nEVENING.   CONbtKVA I IVfc\nRALLY TONIGHT AT 8 O'CLOCK.\n(557)\nMADAM ATTREE'8 DANCE\nRECITAL\nFriday, May 28th, 8:15 p.m. Box\noffice now open at Attree' Studios,\nOddfellows' hall, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays,\nBook early, secure the se\u00a3t you\nwish, and avoid disappointment.\nPhone 676 for reservations, or call.\n(547)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nVen. Archdeacon Beer of Kaslo\npassed away Friday.   Service will\nbe held at St. Mark's Church, Kaslo,\nWednesday, at 2 p.m. (559)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nDOWNES \u2014 Passed away at his\nhome in Kaslo, Thursday, May 13,\n1937, Benjamin Downes, aged 62\nyears. Funeral services will be\nconducted by Trail Lodge No. 23.\nKnights of Pythias, at Trail City\nHall, Mopday, May 17, at 4:30 p.m.\nRemains will lie in state in the Hall\nfrom 2 p.m. Monday. Rev. L. A.\nMorrant officiating. Clark's Funeral\nChapel in charge arrangements.\n(558)\nPUBLIC MEETING\nMONDAY.MAY 17th, 1937\nSPEAKERS:\nTOM REID\n,      ' M.P.,  NEW  WE8TMIN8TER\nFRANK PUTNAM\nLIBERAL CANDIDATE, NELSON-CRESTON RIDING\nL H CHOQUETTE\nPRE8IDENT, NELSON DI8TRICT LIBERAL ASSOCIATION\nYMIR\u2014Ladies' Institute Hall, 7:00 p.m.\nSALMO\u2014Community Hall, 8:15 p.m.\nnelson to:\nO.W. R.T. W.E.Ex.\nSouth Slocan.. .45      .85      .60\nShoreacres 50      .90      .65\nBrilliant  85 1.55    1.10\nGreyhound Lines\nNelson Depot - 205 Baker St\nPHONE 800\n(262)\nMORE ABOUT\nQUADS\n(Continued Prem Page One)\nAn ambulance from the hospital\u2014\nthe same one where the Rondeau\nquads from St. Thomas de Joliette\nwere taken earlier In the year-\nrushed the Martel four away from\ntheir 30-year-old mother's side almost as soon as the last was born.\nThe mother followed a few hours\nlater, and her husband went along\nwith heh\nDOING WELL\nCanada's second set of living\nquadruplets\u2014the Mahaneys of Saint\nJohn, N.B.. are the only .others-\nwere reported doing well tonight\nDoctors watching them through the\nincubators' glass sides said they had\na good chance ot living.\nThree of the babes were brought\ninto the world by Dr. J. F. Leduc,\nFrench - Canadian physician who\nwas summoned by Martel when his\nwife suddenly announced to her\nhusband that birth was imminent\nlate this afternoon, two months before her time.\nDr. J. A. Barrette, the family\nphysician, could not be reached.\nWhen Martel dashed into Dr. Le-\nduc's office two blocks away from\nhis home the doctor was busy on\nanother case, and he got to the\nmother just a couple ot minutes be-\nfor the first quad came.\nEXPECTED TWINS\nWithout time even to disinfect his\nhands, the 45-year-old doctor presided at the first birth and then organized the confused household for\nthe others. After the first, the' doctor said later, he expected twins and\nperhaps triplets.\nThere was no hot water In the\nhouse, but Mrs. Arthur Moison and\na Mrs. Pion, neighbors, scurried\nabout getting some while trying at\nthe same time to shush year-old\nRaymond, who was bawling in the\nkitchen.\nThe second and third infanta came\nswiftly. By the time the third was\nbrought in Dr. Barrette had arrived.\nThe  small  bedroom   was   getting\ncramped then, so Dr. Leduc withdrew to the.hall and let the family\ndoctor officiate for the fourth.\nThe quadruple birth took In all\nabout 45 minutes, starting it five\no'clock and ending' at 6:45. By the\ntime It was over, the ambulance\nwas at the door, and the four\nyoungsters were bundled Into Incubators In tha bedroom and aped\noff to hospital, warmly wrapped.\nThe babies had come to the Mar'\ntels so suddenly, and the confusion\nin the household was such, that it\nwas hard to say afterwards in what\norder they had been born. Even Dr.\nLeduc confessed he had been too\nbusy to notice which had followed\nwhich.\nMembers of the family, though,\nthought the girl had been first.\nNO NAME8 YET\nThe 32-year-old father, astounded\nat the turn of events, said no names\nhad been chosen for his new sons\nand daughter. Looking for another\npicking out a single name, let alone\ntwo months before the birth, the\nMartels had not yet got around to\nfour.\nMartel's first act, even as the last\nof the babies was being born\", was\nto telephone elderly Ludger Monet,\nhis wife's father, and announce that\nhe had some new grandchildren\n\"How many?\" asked Ludger, himself the father of 10.\n\"Come over and get a surprise,\"\nthe grandfather said later his son'\nin-law had told him.\nAs reporters arrived at the Martel home on the ground floor of a\nthree-storey building, the mother ot\nthe quads was being wheeled out\nto the ambulance.\nBesides year-old Raymond, the\nMartels have two children^-Roger,\ntour, and Therese, twoj They have\nbeen (married five years.\nOn this occasion, as Mrs. Mar\ntel's time shortened, they had been\nexpecting something more than \u00ab\nsingle birth. \"Maybe we'll beat the\nDlonnes,\" Paul had observed jokingly to his wife just two hours\nbefore the first quad came. But\nthe four took his breath away.\nDR. DAFOE PLEASED\nCALLANDER, Ont., May 16 (CP)\n\u2014Busy preparing for the Dionne\nquintuplets' third birthday, Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe halted in his preparations tonight to send best wishes to\nthe Martel quadruplets, born today\nin Montreal.\n\"My goodness,\" he ejaculated\nwhen he was told about the new\narrivals, \"This country Is getting\nbetter every day, Well, we certainly with them all the best of\nluck.\"\nThe Dionne girls, born May 28,\n1934, were premature childreh just\nas Ihe Martel children are. They\nwere not expected until July.\nCoronation Day\nParade Cranbrook\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOUND-QUANTITY OF SEEDS.\nApply Columbia Bottling Works.\n(556)\nHospital's Women's\nAuxiliary Collect\n$200 by Tag Day\nLadies of the women's auxiliary of\nthe Kootenay Lake General hos\npital realized $200.05 through a tag\nSaturday.\nTaggers lined the streets of the\nNelson business section and it was\nthrough their efforts and those of a\ngrateful committee of auxiliary\nladies that the tag was a success.\nThe ladies' committee was con.\nvened by Mrs. J. T. Andrews and\nconsisted of Mrs. H. M. Whimster,\nMrs. L. N. Varner, Mrs. W. 0. Rose,\nMrs. F. W. Hewis, Mrs. H. Houston,\nMrs. R. D. Barnes, Mrs. S. Haydon,\nMrs. S. S. Simpson, Mrs. Duncan\nSmith, Mrs. George Wady, Mrs. E.\nA. Mann and Miss Gladys Ewing.\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\u2014Coronation\ncelebrations in Cranbrook began\nwith the firing of 21 guns from the\nrace course hill, assisted by sirens\nand whistles throughout the city\nThis waa followed by the parade\nand pageant.\nAt the head of the parade the\nUnion Jack was borne by Miss\nEleanor McKowan on a black\nmount and wearing a red and white\nmilitary riding costume. Then\ncame the officers and men of the\n24th Field Brigade H.C.A. and guns\nof the 107th Field Battery R.C.A.\nand veterans of the great war. City\ntire wagons and floats contributed\nby schools, organizations and private individuals stretched for several blocks and were followed by\ndecorated bicycles, tricycles, children on horses and tots with decorated doll carriages. St. Eugene mission led by Indian Agent Irwin and\npupils of the Indian school in care\nof Father Murphy and the Sisters\nfollowed and pupils of Wycliffe\npublic school, every one in costume,\nmade a colorful group.\nLater, members of the 24th Field\nBrigade R.C.A. paraded In front of\nthe armories tor flag raising, firing\nof the fue-de-joie and cheers for\nHis Majesty the King.\nPrize winners were:\nBest decorated floats, first, W. A.\nDrayton, Fort Steele, wild horse\nfloat in the year 1864; second, Cranbrook Central school, King Arthur's\ngalleon.\nBest decorated car, first, Ratcliffe\nand Stewart; second, Hanson garage,       i\nBest decorated bicycle, first, Eleanor Farrell; second, Raymond\nAnglin.\nBest-dressed Individual, first\nStanley Coleman; second, Mrs.\nComa.\nBest school children on horseback, Miss Joan Pelky and Melvin\nQuaife.\n' Best school children's float, first\nMiss Marion Fyles as Britannia;\nArchie Leonard and Sammy Fyles\nas pages;'second, Joe Philpot and\nBilly and David Hayden.\nBest dressed school children,\nfirst, Beverley Jean Ellis and Tommy Davidson as bride and groom;\nsecond, Miss Ila Dooling; third, C.\nRlorentino.\nsi Best decorated doll carriages,\nfirst, Miss Frances McNair; second,\nMiss Rhode Moore; third, Miss Mildred Davies.\nCoronation Day Pageant, staged\nby over 300 pupils of Cranbrook\npublic school, took place On the\nbeautiful terraced lawns of Baker\npark. The program included field\ngymnastics, folk dancing, enthron-\nment of Britannia, national dances,\nsinging by a massed choir and music by the Cranbrook City band and\nPipers A. Graham and E. Ewan.\nSelections by the choir during\nthe pageant were \"John Peel,\" \"Wi'\na Hundred Pipers,\" \"The Minstrel\nBoy,\" \"Men of Harlech.\" \"The\nMaple Leaf,\" \"0 Canada\" and\n\"Here's Health Unto His Majesty.\"\nThose who toon the major rolls\nin the pageant were Miss Faith\n\u25a0Webster as Britannia, Richard\nBanks as' John Bull. Miss Myrtle\nJones, Miss Imogene Moore and\nMiss Katharine Martin represented\nScotland. Miss Pearl Kennedy,\nMiss Theresa Pascuzzo and Miss\nfjrace Brock represented Ireland.\nMiss Shirley Home and Miss Isobel\nDunlop represented Wales. George\nSelwyn was Johnny Canuck, and\nthe provinces of Canada were represented by Miss Katherine Jones,\nMiss Ida Mann, Miss Ethel Quick,\nMiss Lorraine Waters, Miss Suzanne\nHarrison, Miss Helen Caldwell, Miss\nEthel Dingley, Miss Jean MacDonald, Miss Helen Scott and Miss Margaret Briggs.\nBill Kelly represented the North\nAmerican Indian; Roger Bertola the\nEskimo; Clarence Bylander, Australia; Roland Allen, New Zealand;\nDonald Adams, India; Alex Steele,\nSouth Africa; and Jack Tohue the\nislands beyond the seas. Pages\nwere Buddy Caldwell, Donald\nSmith, Tom Bronsdbn and Douglas\nSmith.\nIn the evening an Indian powwow and display of fireworks was\nfollowed by a dance sponsored by\nthe 24th Field Battery RCA. and\nthe Canadian Legion.\nMembers of the general commit\ntee in charge of the celebration\nwere: Chairman, Mayor T. M. Rob.\nerts; secretary-treasmer, F. W. Burgess; and E. W. Sjodin, D. Philpot\nT .Smith, G. Hanna, C. A. Sneath,\nRev. F. V. Harrison, R. Laurie, A.\nGenest, G. C. Barclay, Miss A.\nWoodland, Mrs. Caldwell and Mrs.\nS. McLeary.\nMembers of the executive com.\nmlttee were E. W. Sjodin, D. Philpot, R. Laurie, G. Hanna and Miss\nA. Woodland.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B. C-Mrs. Walter\nSchwartzenhauer and daughter of\nDeer Park are visiting Mrs.\nSchwartzenhauer's sister, Miss\nYvonne LeMarre.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. James Young of Tadanac spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Pearl Therrian has returned\nto her home tn the city, after spending the past year in Kimberley, the\nguest of her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. tad Mrs. G. N. Norquist.\nShe was accompanied on the return\ntrip by Mr. and Mrs. Nordquist and\nMr. and Mrs. Johnson ot Kimberley.\n\u2022 \u2022   * \u25a0\nMrs. James O'Reilly is visiting In\nVictoria.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT. H. Brown has returned from\nvisiting with his sister in Tacoma\n\u00bb   \u00ab   \u2022\nThe Rossland City band held an\nenjoyable banquet to celebrate their\nrecent victory at the musical festival. Wives and sweethearts of the\nmembers were guests, about 75 being present altogether.\n.   \u00ab   *\nRoland Nelson, Walter Nyberg\nand James Smith have returned to\nTrail   after  visiting  with  friends\nhere.\n...\nJoseph Murray of Bridge River\nhas taken up residence in the city.\n\u00ab   *   *\nCharles Egg has returned from\nGrand Forks where he visited with\nhis parents.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Doris Metzgar was guest of\nhonor at a charmingly arranged\nbirthday party at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. H. H. Metzgar, the occasion being her 16th birthday. Games\nand dancing were enjoyed. Mrs.\nMetzgar was assisted in serving by\nMisses Ida Osing and Curtis Triggs.\nThe guest of honor was the recipient of many pretty gifts. The guest\nincluded Misses Vivian Woodward,\nVerna Lins, Curtis Triggs, Ida Osing, Lorna Triggs, aMrtha Johnson,\nMarjorie Dlckensen, Miriam Dally.\nMrs. T. Monkhouse, Mrs. O. Osing,\nDavid Jorgenson, Ralph Erickson,\nS. Graham, John Fowler, Lome\nRobertson, Max Smith, John Irvin,\nEvald Berg, H. Metzgar and N.\nFerguson.\nLEGION MEN PAY\nLAST TRIBUTE TO\nJOHN GILLIS, VET.\nLast rites for John M. Gillis, 74-\nyear-old war veteran who dropped\ndead about midnight Tuesday, were\nperformed by Rev. James Ritchie\nat the funeral service chapel of\nSomers Funeral Home Saturday.\nMembers of the Canadian Legion\nwere present in a body.\nAt the service at the graveside In\nthe Nelson cemetery the \"Last Post\"\nwas sounded by Bugler Spurgeon\nLangill.\nHymn sung was \"Abide With Me.\"\nPallbearers were: John W. Mulholland, Phillip Allan, William A.\nJones, James Beattie, David. Marshall, N. (Nap) Malette.\nTrail Ladies' Choir Make Highest\nMarks of Choral Groups al (east\nReceives 91  for Test\nPiece \"Hie Away\"\nby Dunhill\nTRAIL, B. G, May 16 The Trail\nLadies' choir which took first place\nin the ladies' choir open class of the\n1937 festival here recently and was\nhighly commended by J)r., Alfred\nWhitehead, F.R.C.O, adjudicator,\nnot onjy garnered the honors sought\nat the coast but received an additional special trophy for attaining\nhighest marks in all choral groups,\n91, at the British Columbia musical\nfestival, according to a report from\nVancouver.\nThe Trail Ladies' choir consists ol\n32 voices, Mrs. S. S. McDiarmid\nbeing conductor. All members of\nthe choir were able to make the trip\nto Vancouver to share the honors.\nFriday night, competing in the\nIntermediate choir class, tor choirs\nof 30 to 39 voices, and against two\nother choirs, the Trail ladies came\ntut on top with marks of 87 and 89.\nSaturday night, in the small choir\nclass, for choirs of from 20 to 29\nvoices, competing against five\nchoirs, the Trail ladies did even\nbetter, receiving 87 and 91 for the\ntwo test pieces.\n\u2022 \"The Sky Is Full of Clouds\" by\nWalford Davis and \"Hie Away\" by\nDunhill were the small choir class\ntest pieces, \"Ask of Yon Damask\nGrows\" by Handel and \"Spring's\nAwakening\" by Rowley were the\ntest pieces for the intermediate\nclass.\nSr. Frederick Staton, adjudicator,\nsaid Saturday night's competition,\nin which six choirs were entered,\nhad been the greatest in the adult\nchoir section of the whole festival\nHe awarded the Trail choir 90\nmarks.\n\"The choir's work was of a first-\nrate character,\" the adjudicator said\n\"Words, quality, pitch and coloring\nwere excellent.\"\nMrs. W.M. Hooper\nPasses Sunday in\nHome at Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C., May W.-Mrs.\nCora Belle Hooper, aged 44, wife of\nWilliam M. Hooper, died at her home\non Kootenay' avenue, Rossland,\nearly Sunday morning after a\nweek's illness.\nMrs. Hooper was born In Aurora,\nMissouri, the youngest daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Anderson. She came to Rossland with her\nparents in 1914 and married Mr.\nHooper in 1917.\nShe was a member of the Women's Friendly Circle and the Women's Missionary society of St Andrew's United church.\nIn addition to her husband she is\nsurvived by her father, B. F. Anderson of this city, two sisters, Mrs.\nJames Moncrieff and Mrs. Henry\nDempster of Vancouver, and five\nbrothers, Charles T. and Ottis Anderson of Vinita, Okla.; Claude H.\nAnderson of Tulsa, Okla.; Troy F.\nAnderson of Stuttgart, Ark.; and\nOscar S. Anderson cf San Franciso.\nRAIN CLOUDS RETURN\nTO NELSON SUNDAY\nA veering wind returned the rain\nclouds and rain to Nelson Sunday,\nafter every visage of the forbidding\ndark gatherings had disappeared\nfrom Nelson skies Saturday.\nSaturday with its clear sky and\nnear 14 hours of blazing sunshine\nwas an ideal day for the sportsman\nor pleasure-seeker. Water of the\nWest Arm was dotted with tiny\ncraft ot many on their first outing of\nthe season, while Lakeside park was\nthe gathering place of the younger\nfolk enjoying their Saturday holiday. Sunday storm clouds fringed\nthe valley, later hiding the sun, and\nby 5 p.m. a heavy rainfall began.\nAlthough cloudy the mercury\nmarked a 64-degree high Sunday,\nonly one degree lower than Saturday. Dropping rapidly early Sunday\nmorning, the mercury halting at the\nfreezing point, while Saturday the\nminimum was but three degrees\nhigher.\nThe cut of lumber during 1935\namounted to almost three billion\nboard feet, an increase of 400 million over 1934. The value was $48,-\n000,000 or about 4.50 per capita. Half\nof the cut of lunmber was in British\nColumbia, the value being 24,000,000,\nor a per capita of $34.00. The Ontario\ncut .valued at over $8,000,000 made\nless than $2.50 per capita for the\nsecond lumbering province.\nDouglas fir is the tree which puts\nBritish Columbia in the pre-eminent\nlumbering position. The cut was 38\nper cent of all species of wood,\nspruce coming second with 27 per\ncent Hemlock and white pine were\nthird and fouth with less than 10\nper cent each. Cedar, balsam, yellow\nbirch and Jack pine follwed in that\norder. The cut of maple was Ju3t\nover one per cent of the total.\nAmongst the less common yet valuable woods were cherry, chestnut,\nred alder, butternut, hickory, walnut, tulip and willow.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg\nTHE TREND 18 TO\nYOUR OWN\nCIVIC\nSHOWING\n' Tonight, Tuesday night\nand Wednesday Matinee\n\u2014ii  a iiii\u25a0 i     i\u2014\u2014\nThree women in hit life:\nOne he loved. One he married. The\nother he sent to\nher death 1\nPLUS\nThe epic story of the men\nwho makes the newsreels.\nNORMAN FOSTER AND\nEVELYN KNAPP\nin\n\"Ladies Crave\nExcitement\"\nPLUS\nA 2-Reel Musical\n\"O. K. TUSH\"\nCOMING THURSDAY at\nREGULAR PRICES\n\"A Midsummer\nNight's Dream\"\nFlannel\nSLACKS\nThis year as never before, everybody will bt|\nwearing slacks\u2014They'rt\nsporty for sports wear\u2014-:\nThey're swank for after-;\nnoon wear\u2014and,they'rt;\ndressy for evening wear.\nNew checks', plaids and\nplain shades.\u2014\n$4.50 ,o $8:50\nEMORY'S\n***     limited      W\nA. J. CRACK\n8 SONS\nBuilders and Contractor!\nRemodel your kitchen under tin\nHome Improvement Flan. For\n(ull particulars write or call us.\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nFor all your needs In plumbing repairs, alterations, and\nInstallations.\nPh. 815       301 VICTORIA 8t\nThlt being\nFIRST AID WEEK\n-\nall over the Dominion, we ask\nyou to Inspect our window for\nFirst Aid requirements for the\nhousehold.\nAtSmythe's\nPrescription  Druggist\nPHONt 1\nConservative\nCAMPAIGN\nRural Meetings\nCRAY CREEK\nMonday Afternoon, Miy 17.\nCRAWFORD IAY 1\nMonday Evening, May 17.\nSPEAKER\nA. T. Horswil\nConservative Candidate for\nNelson-Creston Riding\niassMssssesw\n\u2022y\/^N'TV A V Tue\u00ab<>\u00bby mi    Complete Showi at\nL\\JU\u00a3\\L    Wednetday      2:00,7:00 and 8:\u00ab\n\" \"uGH AND LOV\u00a3 a\nWILLIAM POW\nJoy (ills the\nscreen when\nthree such light-\nhearted stars do\ntheir stuff to-\ngetherl Joon's\noul for a million\n...via matrimony\nor larceny...but\nBob end Bill\nhave plans of\ntheir own for\nherl It't the\ngrandest fun I\nwith\n| FRANK MORGAN\nJESSIE RALPH\n'^yVAN^y^rVV^A'\n&&$#&&&W&G^^\nI\ni\u00ab*S\u00ab\u00ab*\u00ab$$\u00ab8W\u00abW>>-\nr\n$&&&&es)&sssi&8&i#>s&&tr\u00ab$m&ssM9bm\nAdded       Will Rogers\nin his outstanding picture\n\"AMBASSADOR BILL\"\n;SfiSft4M\u00a3ft5\u00a3M\u00a3\u00abftfiM&M:\n*WW5*\u00bb\u00bbWSW>WX\nZ$$#&$$$&^^\ntmi^MtimmMim\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. 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Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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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. 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