{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-03","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1927-04-05","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0403170\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Senaton and\nBRUINS WINNERS\nStfFtf.7\n__aa_s____-\n\u2022gfr laid. ffiitog\nVOL. 25 NEls-ON, B. CpUEgDAY MORN|gfl?, APRIL 5, U27 No. 287-\nRITAIN WILL DEMAND SATISFACTION\nTHE WILDERNESS ENGULFS' TROUT LAKE MAN\nLOST 11 HI\nUS\nTrout Lake Old-Timer Set Out\non Trip to Cabin a\nMonth Ago\nBELIEVE STRUCK\nBY A 8N0WSLIDE\nSearchers Fail to Find Trace\nof Him; Bis Age Was\nFifty Years *\nMissing ln the hills for the past\nmonth,   and   presumably   dead,   the\n-Vjetlm   of   some   misadventure,   Jack\njlfcTaggart. Trout Lake old-timer,  Is\nlosing sought by search parties,  according to  word received  here  from\ntwo sources.\nj, letter received by Miss Betty\nHooBioii Saturday from Miss Vera\nRogers, Trout \u2014she. reported Mr.\nMcTaggart left Trout Lake for- his\ncabin, ln the hills above Ferguson.\nto get his gun, over a month ago,\nJ and never returned- She stated her\nbrothers, Harold and Ralph, with\ntheir dog, were making a trip to the\ncabin, to Bee if they could get a\ndas to the mystery, but had not yet\n\u25a0rstarned.\nInspector   W.   K.   Dunwoody   has\nreceived  a  report  from  the  Revel-\nI stoke headquarter* ot the provincial\n;'police, on stsps taken In the matter.\nI i-i-rlj   la  Mine  Cabin\nThs generally accepted theory at\nTrout Lake appears to bo that Mr.\nMJrTaM-trt < W**, Wtsgltt    by    snow*\n\\ slide.   Trout Lake gets lots of snow,\nand Ferguson even mare, being high-\ni er up.    There .are various old mine\n*, bulldingH in the hills above Ferguson,\n9 which would give shelter to a person\nf who found them,  but would  handily\n[provide   his   BubSlstsnce.'    The   fact\nt that the old-timer, who was a man\nB of 50 or more, was. Understood to be\nI intending   te   return     immediately,\n[ however, makes the theory that he\nj could   be  ln   some  mine cabin   not\n| very probable.\ni Apart from the anowgllde theory,\nhe might have had an accident that\ndisabled htm, and been burled by\nths enow.\n\u2022 \u00abB _ -\nHeavy Rams Fad\nto Keep Crowds in\nas Royalty Passes\nJMBWCASTLE,   N.S.W.,   April    4.   \u2014\nRa|u, continuous and at timos torrential, dampened but did not dismay the\nDuke  snd  Duchess  of  York,  as  they\nj began their Journey from New South\nWalee to Queensland today,\ni     Deer-He     bad     weather    conditions\nJ great  crowds gathered  In   the  streets\not   Sydney  ,to   bid   the   royal   Couple\n' farewell, and at  Maltland, and  New-\n;  castle,   rl.S.W.,   the   latter   their   Mopping place for the night, the visitors\n!   were    again    welcomed    by    cheering\ncrowds.\nAbbotsford Town\nHas Narrow Escape\nFrom Burning Down\nABBOTSFORD, April 4.\u2014Responding to appeal* tor asslatance when\nthe Abbotsford hotel caught fire to\nday, the fire brigade at Bumas, Wash,\njust south ot {he international boun\nd_ry, three mile* from her*, dashed\nacross the border, and it was largely\none te their efforts In combating the\nblase the entire business section of\nthe town ws* not destroyed.\nThe hotel and an adjoining busl-\nness tajoejt wore burned to the ground,\nwith ad ssthaatsd loss at 1108,0(10.\nHARD WARE \"EMPLOYEE\nTAKES OWN LIFE\n| EDMONTON, April 4.\u2014Usiiyf a .82\n(calibre automatic revolver. taker,\n[from the stock room in which he\niras workliig, Jack Bradford, II, em\n>loyes ai a wholesale hardware\nsarehouse, shot himself this morn\nThe bullet passed through the\nM.j.'y over the heart and death was\nauantanssui. No reason Is known\nths young  maa'e  notion.\n7oot and Mouth Ban\non Great Britain\nIs Lilted at Last\nliONDON, April 4.\u2014Restrictions\nj imposed on Great Britain on account\nof th* toot and mouth disease ot\ne have been removed, effective\nst midnight today. The ministry ot\nagriculture today announced the re-\n\u25a0novel was made in view ,of the tact\nthat no cases ot tbe disease have\nreen ropo >\u00bbi Britain since\naarch %\nADMITS KILLING HIS\nWIFE WITH HAMMER\nNEW YORK, April 4.\u2014Edward Demur*, aged 58, tonight confessed that\nhe killed hti wife, Helen Demars,\naged \u00ab., with a hammer, in their\napartment early today, police an -\nnounced, after Questioning1 the husband several' hours. In his confession, according to police, Demar-a\n\u2022aid his motive for the killlnf was\nthat his wife had been drinking and\nhad been receiving the attentions' of\nother men.\nIN\nHEAVY RAINS\nRoods   Blocked-,   Phone {Lines\nDown; Blizzard Follows\nRfttn\nWINNIPEG, April 4. \u2014 Motor traffic is blocked with highways flooded,\nmany farm hemes are threatened, and\ntelephone services have been hampered following a 21-hour rain fair* which\nhas Increased tbe flood danger ln\nManitoba, particularly In southeastern\nsections of tbe province.\nTbe Seine river, running through\nsoutheastern farm districts, has overflowed Its banks jn some eectiens,\nand the Red and As-jinlfaolae rivers\nalso are climbing to high levels.\nDrainage ditches are running full jn\nmany farming communities, and flood\ndanger Is feared along the Aeslnlbotfce\nwest of Winnipeg. The heavy rainfall\nhas made scores of highways ln the\ncoudtry   districts   impassable.\nFollowing 21 hours of rainfall, a\nheavy, w-ev snew aumaneaeed fa many\ndistricts of Manitoba tonight, aad\nblissard conditions were reported In\nthe Neepawa district, where telephone\nlines ere down, the wires breaking under  the weight of heavy snow.      * _.\ntn the western prorlocft*\u2014Saskat-\nchewan and Alberta\u2014cloudy and cool\nconditions were reported late tonight.\nSnow was reported falling at Saaha-\ntoon. \u25a0*\u2022\nI\nWhole Trunkfull Arrive** From\nCalifornia; Speech Occupies Day\nCIS*TROIT, April 4.\u2014King Cotton\nand Aaron Saplro's efforts to organise\nthe southern planters cooperatively\nWith occasional side trips to cover hi*\nactivities In New Jersey, Oregon and\nNew York were centered upon today\nln the Chicago lawyer's $1,000,000 libel\nault against Henry Ford.\nMany pieces of documentary evidence, letters, telegrams, contracts\ndrawn up by Sapiro for cooperative\nassociations and a apeech he made\nseven years ago went Into the record\ntoday.\nThe old speech \"by Sapiro at Montgomery required 50 minutes steady\nreading by James A: Reed, United\nState, senator, from Misaoarl, chief ot\nFord's counsel, and 'it provided him\nhis day'* chief topic,        \u2022\u25a0  \u2022!*Sgg\nSaplro's brother Milton arrived from\nCalifornia today, bringing a trunk\nfull of record* demanded by Senator\nReed last week.\nWhen court adjourned It was Indicated that cross-examination of Sapiro\nwaa tar from finished snd that it\nmight require ths remainder of the\nweek.\nAre Investigating\nWages and Hours of\n\u25a0 Girls is B.C. Stores\nVICTORIA, April 4\u2014Wages and\nworking hours of women and* girls\nIn wholesale and retail stores in British Columbia are under preliminary\ninvestigation by the women's minimum wage board, with a view to the\nearly reopening of the pres*nt rsgu-\nlatlons governing the mercantile field.\nPlan to Extend\nIrrigation System\nin the Okanogan\nVICTORIA, April 4\u2014Continuation\not the government Irrigation system\nin the Okanagan district, south of\nthe town ol Oliver, Is planned by the\nlands department for this year, This\nextension will bring a substantial new\narea under water, to make possible\nsettlement and. development Ths\nsum of 3TW.W* *\u00bba* bttSB provMetl\nto cover th* work.\nFREIGHT MTES\nBill Reducing Rates by 20 Per\nOnt Passes vCommittee\nStage\nfirVt BILL LINKED\nWITH DUNCAN REPORT\nAre   Certain   Exceptions;   Bill\nStands for Third Reading\nNew\nOTTAWA, April I.\u2014After discussion which lasted Into the morning\nhours, the house today passed In\ncommittee' stage the government bill\nto reduce railway freight' rates in\nthe mariUnies (with certain exceptions), by W per cent. The bill Is\nthe first of the government measures\nto implement recommendaltoDS in the\nDuncan report on maritime c-tatms.\nHon. C. \u00abA. Dunning, minister of\nrailways, who had charge of tho\nbill, estimated that it would entail\nan expenditure of about two and a\nhalt millions. The bill received second\nreading, went through committee\nstage,  and  stands  for third reading.\nAn .amendment moved by A. A\nHeaps, Labor, Winnipeg North, was\ndefeated.\nHeaps'  Amendment\naft. Heaps moved that \"this act\nshall remain In force for 10 years\nfi-em. the date on which it cemes\ninto operation, after which the act\nmay, by parliament, be renewed, either\nin its present form or with such\nmodifications as the conditions may\nrender -advisable.\"\nOutlining the scope of the bill, the\nminister ef railways said the recommendations of the Duncan report\nmight be taken to imply that the 20\npar cent reduction applied upon\nthrough r\u00abtes from the marltlmes to\ntho -United States.\nThe government bill:\n1. Did nbt\" provide for application\not the reduction upon Atlantic division proportion of international rates.\n2. Trie reduction would not apply\nto goods coming from overseas\nthrough maritime ports for distribution within the maritime provinces.\nMr. Dunning argued that to adopt\nanother course might raise grave\nquestions\" ot discrimination, in regard\nto the foods destined to provinces\nfurther west. The legislation came\nln for opposition from th\u00bb left side\nof the house.\nItalian Flyer Will\nVisit Vancouver\nOn Hit Big Flight\nVANCOUVER, April 4.\u2014Commander Franccesco de Pinedo, Italian\nairman, will come to Vancouver from\nSeattle on April 10, In the course of\nhis four-continent flight, according to\nSvord received today by M. Mast,\nItalian consul here, from the Italian\nconsul-general   in  Montreal.\nLady smith WiU Be\nPoliced by the\nProvincial Force\nVICTORIA, April 4 \u2014 Ladyemith\nwill be policed in future by the provincial police force, as a result of an\nagreement reached between the Lady\nsmith authorities and tbe provincial\ngovernment.\nAn order-in-council passed by the\ngovernment provides tor a poll in\nPrinceton, to decide whether tbe interior town shall become a village\nmunicipality or hot.\nCALGARY TYPIST\nCAPTURES TITLE\nTORONTO, April 4.\u2014Muriel Anderson of Calgary captured the senior\nCanada typewriting championship, In\na contest which was held eimultene-\nously In Victoria, Vancouver, Calgary,\nLondon, Winnipeg, Brockvllle and\nTcronto   Ml   SaturdAy   evening.\nMiss \u00bb*in Wright ot Toronto won\nthe championship and Armand Champagne wen the intermediate honors.\nEvelyn Wat ot Victoria, was returned\nwinner ot. the novice Canadian championship while the novice Canadian\naccuracy - title was won try D. Holt\not Vsnoottver.\nFlorensa WiUtlne ot Brockvllle, took\nsecond plaoe in the Canadian open\nchampionship, with a speed of 104\nword* a minute. The winner's average speed was 110 words a minute.\nSir Thomas Lipton\nAn Admirer of Silk\nStock'ngs, Evidently\nNEW TORK. Aoril 4,\u2014Blr\nThomas Lipton arrived on the\nLeviathan today to repeat his\noptimistic belief in his ability\nto build a yacht that will take\nAmerica's cup to England.\nAfter telling of a commission\ngiven Willie Fiji- te build a\ncraft \"that wlO seat any of the\nAmerican yachts,\" Sir Thomas\nturned to discuss flappers and\nsilk stockings .\nSpeaking as % bachelor he '\nsaid. \"When women pay 30\nshillings for a pair of silk\nstockings. I think they are entitled to show at least 28 shillings snd 8 penes worth.\"\nHe was his uaaat hale, hearty\nand social self and might cut\nmany years from the 77 the\nrecords show  him.\nTRADE HON BILL\nIS READ IN HOUSE\nDeclares Strike to \"Coerce the\nGovernment\" Illegal; Expect Opposition\nForeigners   Continue   to   Seek\nSafety;   Chinese   Rise\nAgainst Germans\nCHINESE MOBS ARE\nBUSY HANKOW CITY\nFeeling    Against    British    in\nShanghai  Grows  More\nBitter\nIvGNDON, April 4.\u2014Tbe govern\nmeat's trade union tfn which declares\nIllegal \"any strUie calculated to\ncoerce the government,1\" ana declares\npicketing, when calculated to intimidate or obstruct, to be unlawful, had\nits first readily in the house of\ncommons today, Sharp opposition\nfrom the Labor Jkjtfto te certain.\nThe'bill prcrVid*\u00a3s^^U<m.-iie&t'ami\nfines for \"any one instigating such\nIllegal strikes,\" and also declares that\nrefusal to participate ln \"aa illegal\nstrike shall not render 4 member of\na trade union liable to expulsion or\ndeprivation ol benefits to which he\notherwise would be entitled.\nTrade unions also are rehired to\nkeep their political funds entirely\nseparate from other funds, and civil\nservants, under the bill, are forbidden\nto belong to any trade union or organisation except those composed\nsolely of civil servants and whose\nobjects Hi.* non-political.\nOver Fifty More\nTyphoid Cases Reported\nin Montreal Districts\nMONTREAL, April 4.\u2014Public\nhealth authorities here are now satisfied thst the typhoid epidemic has\npassed lta worst stage, basing their\nopinion- on the marked decrease in\nthe dally average ot new cases reported. This evening the total aloes\nthe beginning of the outbreak was\n1(18, tbe number for the 34-hour\nperiod ending at 5 p.m., being 83.\nThis ejompared for 137 for the\nsame period a week ago.\nOPENTOT\nOF\nUnable to Remember Incidents\nof Two Weeks Ago; Before\nCommission\nTORONTO, April 4.\u2014Bocco Perrl,\ncalled \"the king of the bootleggers\"\nto quote counsel, took the witness\nstand before the royal commission on\ncustoms today. He proved a cool\nwitness, with a ready smile and a\nmemory which he admitted was\n\u25a0\"very poor,\" so poor, it turned out to\nbe, that Mr. Perrl -could give but' a\nvery vague account of his movement\nfor the past couple of weeks, though\nHon, N. w. Rowell, K.C., counsel for\nthe commission, urged upon him the\nimportance of doing so.\n\"Can't Remember\"\nMr. Perrrfl memory was sufficiently\nunreliable to call for protests from\nthe commissioners themselves. When\ncounsel asked him if he had come\ndown to Toronto from Hamilton last\nWeek with Mra Perri, he- answered\nwith his frequent, \"I can't remember.\"\n\"That's perfectly ridiculous and it's\nnot true,\" retorted Chief Commission\nBrown'to this response.    '\nMr. Perri was called to give the\ncommission some Information regarding- the very large number of long\ndistance telephone calls which originated at his number In Hamilton. Ae\nbrought out last week, when Mrs.\nRocco Perri took the stand, some of\nthem terminated at the distillery of\nOooderham 3c. Worts, limited, To\nronto. Counsel is anxious to< find\nout who gave the orders and where\nthe liquor went. Mrs. Perrl has disclaimed all knowledge of them, explaining that friehde end associates\nof her husband used Iter telephone\nfrequently. Mr. Penf* examination\ntoday was along the same lines.\nFOUND DEAD IN\nGAS-FILLED ROOM\nVANCOUVER, April 4. \u2014 Alfred\nWilliam Armes was found dead In a\ngas-filled room here yeet^rday afternoon. \"Discovery or tbe tragedy was\nmade by the landlady* of the premises.\nPolk* learned Armes had ben out\nof work \u00abor * year..\nSHANGHAI, April 4.\u2014From ChlWl\nprovince, seat of the Peking-government, and from the cities of Hankow and Canton came the most\ndisturbing    news    today.\nAs the Cantonese armies continued their march northward in the\ndirection of Peking, the situation In\nChlhli becomes more dangerous for\nforeigners and they are leaving their\nhomes and mission posts by the\nscore, making their way to what are\nlooked upon as safety sones along tha\nseaboard. Many foreign women and\nchildren are even leaving Peking.\nMere    Outbreaks\nAt Hankow where fighting occurred\nIn the Japanese concession Sunday,\nthere were further outbreaks by Chinese mobs again today. A Japanese\nwireless message reported that the\nChinese were storming the concession, but that Chinese troops were\ntaking a hand to maintain order. The\nJapanese evacuation of Hankow is\nunder way and it is expected It will\nbe completed shortly. Twenty-five\nJapanese have gone aboard the British gupboat, Bee, for shelter. A British gunboat has left for Wuchow,\nnorthwest of Canton, to protect Britishers there. The United States gunboat Pampang has reached Canton\nto cover the evacuation of foreigners.\nAn American exodus from that city\nis  repoprted.\nDetails of Sunday's rioting at Hankow where coolie disturbances created\na threatening situation several months\nago, reported that a number ot Japanese houses ln the concession were\ndestroyed by tho mob. Five Japanese\ncivilians and five sailors carried off\nby the Chinese are still missing. It\nIs feared that one of the sailors was\nthrown into the river after being\nkilled. The Chinese commander, General Tapg Seng Chili, apologised to\nto the Japanese consul-general for\nthe attack on the concessions. The\nJapanese consul-general, however, refused to consider a request that the\nsailors be withdrawn.\n\"Down    With    British\"\nAn indication of the bitter feelings against the Britishers in Shanghai was had today when banners\nappeared across the road leading into\nthe British settlement from the native Chapel quarter, in full view of\nBritish troops encamped along the\nbarriers, these banners proclaimed\nln Chinese \"Down with the British,\"\n\"Avenge the Chinese killed by the\nBritish at Nanking,\" and \"Evacuate\nBritish troops and warships from\nShanghai   or   suffer.\"\nGermans, hitherto Immune from Nationalist anti-foreignIsm now are beginning to feel Its effects through the\nYangtze \u2022Valley. The Germans have\nentirely evacuated Changaha, province\nof Hunan, because of a nationalist\nrule, which prevents foreigners from\ncarrying on business.\nj    .1    i    i       am\nAmendment to the\nPensions Act Deals\nWith Rehearting\nOTTAWA, April 4\u2014An am.ndment\nto the pensions act to provide that If\nnew evidence la secured within a year\nand placed before the board of pension commissioners, applicants for pen*\nsions be given a rehearing, will be\nproposed In legislation to b. brought\ndown by the government at the present session. Bon. J. H. King, minister\nof health and soldiers' civil reestab-\nliehment, stated ln the houae of commons  today.\nReturns With Sutherland After\nOttawa Trip on Peace\nRiver Question\nCarrol Successful in\nGetting Postponement\nof JaU Term Start\nMBW YORK, April 4.\u2014Earl Carroll,\ntheatrical producer, who was to have\nstarted for Atlanta today to begin a\npenitentiary term of a year aad a\nday for perjury ln connection With his\nbathtub party, obtained a poetpon.-\nment until April 13 ts \"put hie sasir\nntsa affairs in order.\"\nVANCOUVER, April 4.\u2014Premier\nOliver, accompanied by Hon. W. H.\nSutherland, minister of public works,\narrived here this afternoon from Ot\ntawa, where ihey interviewed ths\ngovernment and the railway committee of the house ot commons, on\nan outlet to the coast for tbe Peace\nriver district.\nTbe premier expressed himself as\nwell pleased with the results of\nhi* trip.\n\"I have nothing new to report,\" he\nsaid. \"Tour newspapers appear to\nhave kept you well Informed on what\ntranspired \u00bbt the meeting, but beneath\nwhat\" appears on the surface, I think\nwe were able to open the eyes ot\nmember* of the house to the claims\nof British Columbia.\"\nMore Troops Are Being Hurriedly Embarked Aboard\nShip for Shanghai\nLONDON, April 4.\u2014Without waiting for toe. other powsrs to decide\nwhether to make Joint demands on\nthe Chinese Nationalists for ths\nNanking outrages, tbe British cabinet\ntoday reaffirmed its decision to carry\nout a strong policy, single-handed. If\nnecessary, in obtaining full satisfaction. The government is determined\nto exact full reparations for the outrages, and the British demand, on\nChina are likely to be mada within\na very few days.\nIn the house of commons today,\nOeorge Lansbury, Laborlte, suggested that a commission of Investigation Into the Nanking affair bs established, but hs was howled down\nby the ministerial supporters Foreign Minister Chamberlain explained\nthe latest phases of th* Chinese\ncrisis in the house today and it waa\nannounced that reinforcements for\nth\u00ab Shanghai defence fore* are hurriedly preparing to embark at English port*.\nFLYING TREATY\nBE\nRevision    Will    Likely    Give\nAmerican   and   Canadian\nFlyers Same Privileges\nWASHINGTON, April 4.\u2014Region\nIs likely in the near future of the\ninternational flying treaty between the\nUnited States and Canada. It ex\nplres   on   April   SO,   next.\nIt was concluded five years ago and\nhas been renewed from year to year\nainee. Indications are that Canada\nwill ask for a conference on the regulations before agreement is\nreached.\nThe treaty governs flighi by citlsena\nof one country over the territory of\nthe other, landing regulations and so\nforth. Dissatisfaction has been expressed in some parts of Canada over\nthe landing regulations. It is said that\nwhile United States fliers are permitted to land, in the course of flight\nwithout hindrance in Canada, Canadian flyers are not given the same\nprivilege,   in    the    United   -States.\nSemi-official statements Issued in\nCanada recently indicate that some\neffort will be made to have landing\nprivileges made mutually In both\ncountries when the treaty  Is revised\nU. 5. Legation in\nOttawa WiU Be\nOpened m April\nWASHINGTON, April 4. \u2014 Hon,\nWilliam Phillips, recently appointed\nAmerican minister at Ottawa, will\nprobably open the United States legation at the Canadian capital about ths\nend of April. It was rumored the\nfailure of the deficiency bill to pass\ncongress would prevent opening of the\nOttawa legation before July, but Frank\nB. Kellogg, secretary of state, now\nthinks the delay is unnecessary. It la\npresumed that an emergency appropriation will be\" made for the remainder of this fiscal year.\nMeanwhile, Mr. Phillips is holidaying  in  London.\nDemands Upon Chinese likely\nto Be Blade in a Few\nDays\nLABOITRE HOWLED\nDOWN IN  HOUSE\nPARIS, April 4.\u2014The French government ha* Instructed Its minister\nat Peking to prole* to the Chinee*\ngovernment against the murder of\nt\u00abm French missionaries at Nanking\nand  to   demand   reparations.\nThe French consul at Shanghai has\nbeen instructed to make a similar\nprotest to the commander of tha\nNationalist  troops.\nMom Troop*\nCANTON, April 4.\u2014Two hundred\nBritish soldiers arrived today at\nShojneen, the foreign quarter here,\nto protect the island against a Chines*  attack. \u00bb\nANOTHER LEG\nI'lys From San Antonio to Hot\nSprings; Crossed Plains\nof Texas\nHOT 8PR1NO. N.M., April 4. -.\nCommander Franceeco de Pinedo,\nItalian aviator, completed the Saa\nAntonio to Hot Spring let ol his\naerial tour of four continents today,\nlanding- at the Elephant butte Irrigation reservoir this atternoon.\nDe Pinedo made the 70v-roHe trip\nacross the plains ot Texas and up\nthe Rio Grande from XI Paso ln\nseven hours and two minutes. Ha\nwas accorded a welcome by city officials ot Hot Spring-.\nKILLED   BY   OAR\nWINNIPEG, April 4.\u2014Miss Zyipba!\nConstance Stratton, aged 86. daughter\nof Ira Stratton, prominent in Manitoba educational circles, wss fatally-\ninjured when etruck by a street car\nhere tonight.    She died ln hospital.\nCuba WiU Create\nDiplomatic Post\nin Ottawa, Rumored\nMONTREAL, April 4.\u2014Information\nobtained from reliable sources hers\ntoday was to the effect that the Cuban\ngovernment will, ln all likelihood, ore-\nate a new diplomatic post ln Ottawa,\nfollowing the concluselon of the negotiation of a trade agreement between\nCanada aad the southern republic. Dr.\nA. P. Satoi de la Pens, local consul\nfor Cuba, but at present on furlough,\nwill, it is understood, b* appointed te\nOttawa.\nThe Weather  4\nMln. Max.\nNELSON     Ii IE\nVictoria      17 M\nVancouver    40 it\nKamloopa     II 60\nBarkerville     I*\nPrince  Rupert     14 14\nBstsvan  .~.~..-.-. It 4*\nAtlin         <f\u00bb 4\nDawson     II* I\n\u2022Calgary     I\u00bb *\u00ab\nWinnipeg  ~.~ U 41    j\nPortland    44 14   .\nSan Francisco  41 M\nSeattle    .40 10 -\nSpokane   II II\nPentlcton    41\nVernon   14\nGrand Forks  II\nCranbrook     II 41\nEdmonton      4\u00b0 \u00ab*\nSwift Carrent   II\nPrince Albeit H 14\nQuAppslle      !\u2022 14\nNelson snd vicinity\u2014\"Partly cloudy\nand solder  with occasional  rain  or\nslset\ni\n\t\n 'aire Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 6, 1927\nBelgium haa 16,\u00bb0\u00bb diamond mHla\nand mot e than 7M wurkahapa for\ncoftttar' tha  atones.\nWoman Always Feb\nSleepy After Meals\n1 always fstt so sleepy and Ursd\naftsr niesls. Now 1 Bleep only -when\nI Co to bsd, aad then 1 sleep well.\nThank, to Adlerlka, I feel fine \"\u2014Mra.\nJ. Class. Jr. Just ONE spoonful Adlerlka relieve, gas snd that bloated\nfi-*Ung so you can eat and .leap\nbetter. ActB on BOTH upper and\nlower bowel and removes old waste\nnatter you never thought wss there.\nNo matter what you have tried for\nyour stomach, Adlerika will surprise\nyou.    Leading druggist* \t\nTO\nGROW CELERY\nST\nRich Soil Produces Best Crops\nof District; Tilled Near\nThirty Years\nA. B. Shannon of Ferndale Park,\nor   Four-Mils,   on   the  north  shors,\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\n&Rk\nGeorge BenweU, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of die Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRoom* with  Running  Water,   Private   Bathe   and   en   Suit*\nHeadquarter*   for   all   Travelling    Men    Mining   Men,   Lumbar   Men\nand Tourists\n--PBP1AL   SUNDAY   DINNER    f 1 00 Rotarlan  Headquarter*\nTbe Moat Comfortable Rotunda   in   the  City\nAvv\n. HUMB\u2014Jack Fleming, W. W\nt\u00ab.,'J- C. Young, A. Anderson, i\nwjwb, A. J. Chalmers, Vancouver\nVPv* Q. Norrie, Ymlr; J. T. L-aPage,\nSnvhane; Mr. and Mra. O. V. White,\nMew      Denver;      Thome*      Stevenson.\nCleveland; J. C. Blmone, E. K. Harris. W. D. Louden, Toronto; O. D\nRoberta Slocan City; H. C. McFar-\nland, Calgary; D. B. S'ramatae, Edmonton; George Hall, Victoria; F. G\nMagulre,   Vancouver.\nSAVOY\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nSteam [Iej|, Hot and Cold Running Water in A\nManv\n|TOY    \u2014    AW.   Ma'acnrd.    M.    O\nVartAoi'ver-   O    R    Hta-ert,   flll-\nRowland  Pow-a.M.   S^yth   Slocan;\nH. H. Powell, Perry Siding; Mrs. Je-i-\nflie McCualg, Newdale, Man.; R. Url\nand family, Wynndel; T. Coleman,\nTrail:   J    Thomson,   Longbeach.\n.1.\npecris Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\n1VM and cold water In every  room\nSteam   heated\nL\nA. LAPOINTE, Prep.\n'WJEENS \u2014 O. Poulin, Salmo; F.\nMMnlch, city; F. Nielsen, Rsvelstoke:\nJoe Oauther, Ymlr; C. Peterson, P.lns-\nt.S. \t\nNew Grand Hotel\n:     A   Modern   Brick   Building\n611  Varnon   Strsst,   Nslsol*   \u00bb\u2022  C.\nHot and Cold Water ani Telephone,\nin All Rooms. Steam Heated,\nThroughout.\nJ. Blomb-H-g, Prop. - European Plan\ni In town yesterday snd let It bs\nknown that he had decided to fo\nla far ths growing of celery.\nMr.  Hbannon  is  an  old-timer,  arriving ln this arsa In October, Ills.\nIn 1\u00bb01 he located tho Willow Point\nsSttlsmsftt,   staking   225   acres.\nCultivates M Acres\nHe has left It acres, 20 acrea of\nwhich are under cultivation and It\nln pasture. Beside, what ha has\ncultivated there Is a five-acre tract\nknown us Ferndale Park. -\nTh. crops from the \u201e-)ultlT**.t\u00bbd\nland may bs said to bo superior to\nmost ln the district. They are chiefly hay, potatoes, oats, clover, peas,\nturnips and   other  vegetables.\nOwing to -the richness of the soil,\nMr. Shannon thinks he will be able\nto produce finer celery than grows\nanywhere In this vicinity.\n. Besides his cultivation of the land,\nMr. Shannon koeps eight dairy cows\nand 20 to SO hogs. Hs supplies the\nWillow   Point   area   with   milk.\nGRANT JU)VISE5\nProvince  Also  Should   Market\nMore Bartlett Pears and\nPeaches\nCOLD STORAGE IS\nIMPORTANT NEED\nMme. Noel Makes\n3  yeara  af  atomach   trouble wrecked\nher    h-tarth.      Reduced   to   extreme\nweakness,   ahe   tried   Tanac   and\nnow   enjoys   full    itrength   and\nyouthful vigor.\nMme. Ignace Noel,\n21 8th. Ave., Lhnoi-\nlou, Quebec, la a\nhappy, healthy woman today. \"For 3\nwhole 3(*sam,\" she\nsaid, \"nervous indigestion caused me a\nlot of mlaery. My\nnerves were on raw\nedge all the tlrao.\nMy housework was\na heavy burden and\n\u00a3 waa Untie*)!* and\ndepressed. I grew\nso nervous the eightest nolae upset\nme. The lightest food, caused my\nstomach to bloat  with  fas.\n\"The slightest exertion was a big\neffort. I couldn't stand those conditions much longer and was getting\ndesperate, for nothing seemed to\nhelp. Finally I tried Tanlac and\nfrom the very first bott'o a marked\nImprovement showed. Normal sleep\nand appetite returned. Now my digestion is perfect. I took but 4\nbottles of Tanlac and to these alone\nmy complete recovery and present\nrobust hea th are due.\"\nIf you are below par, get a trial\nbottle today. Tanlac is nature's own\nremedy made from herbs, roots and\nbarks. Your druggist has It. Over\n52  million   bottles  a'ready  sold.\nPrairie  Martlets  Commissioner\nStresses  Systematizing\nMarketing\nNelson's Best Cafes\nMadden Hotel1\nT.   MADDEN.   Prop.\n\u2022Meam-Heated Rooms  by the Day.\nWeek or Month.\nlivery   coiwldei-ntlon   shown   to\nguests,\nOor. Baiter and Ward Sts., Nelson.\nMADDKN\nHarry    Howanuk,    N,\nGelgi, Calgary; Jim Burgees, Salmo\u25a0\nM. Jurlsice, Paul Jurisice, Nick Deple,\nMartin Hecunoud, J. Coror. S. Trau-\ncicle, Dan Heclueovice, V. Stimac,\nJack McNeil, Cranbrook: J. G. Gllker,\nBonnington; P. A. Moore, Nelson\nMoore,  Trail.\nGOLDEN  GATE CAFE\nonly White Cafe Opea Day and Night.\nFancy   Iced   Dishes.\nKlecli-k-    I-'rigkl-AIr   Cooling   System.\nSODA FOUNTAIN IN CONNECTION.\nA trial will convlncs you.\nPHONE   081 BAKER   ST.\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic  Restaurant\nRofinecnent    and    Delicacy    Prevail.\nOPEN    DAY    AND    NIGHT.\nLuncheon,   11:80   to   3    85c\nSpecial  Dinners  6:20  to  8    35c\nWe   specialize    ln   Chop   Suey   and\nNoodles\n\u2014PHONE   182.\u2014\nConcentration on wanted varieties\nthat are specially successful In certain sections, provisions of cold iter\nage facilities and -systematized mar\nketing\u2014the latter something he haa\nlong hammered upon\u2014are the major\nrecommendation* of J. A. Grant, Bri\ntish Columbia's prairie markets com\nmtseloner, In his annual report, just\nmade available by the provincial department of agriculture.\nBlag and Itnmb-vi cherries for\nthe Kootenay, Bartlett pears generality, more peaches, and increased\nrhubarb planting arc some of his\nrecommendations. J\nThe report indicate.*-; that with a\nrecord crop of apples of high quality\nexceeding for commercial purposes\nWOO cars, marketing condition* were\nmade difficult ln the 1328-27' season\nthrough  several  contributary  factors.\nLack of cold storage and general\nstorage facilities In British Columbia\nis stated to be one of the primary\ndefects of the marketing system\nfor British Columbia fruit. For this\nreason Washington shipp-trs are able\nto supply fruits from cold storage at\ntimes when British Columbia fruit\nTs not available. In this way the\nWashington fruit comes to the prairie\nmarkets from cold storage after the\nBritish Columbia season Is over.\nPrunes and pears' are instanced as\ncommodities to which thin state-\nmen! applies. Ripening earlier they\nreach the markets at profitable prices\nbefore British Columbia fruit Is\navailable, and, held In cold storage\nthey supply the market after Canadian fruit has been disposed of at\nlow prices, owing to glutted conditions  at  consuming  points.\nOn the other hand, the report\n(dates that cold storage facilities in\nprairie centers Is adequate for more\nthan  is offered for storage,  but, the\nS^-B-ia-*-\nNEW GRAND \u2014 Mrs. A. T. Garland. S. Thomberg, Kaslo; O. M.\nSmith, Salmo; B. C. Jacobson, Spokane; H. Plumb, Coeur d'AJene; Mr.\nand Mrs. O. Edatrom, New Denver; A.\nL. T. Smith, Midway; H. Laxer, Vancouver;  L. A.  McDougall,  Grand Forks.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\nSH   Blocks   Eaat  of   Post   Office.\nSteam heated. Hot and cold water\nRooms   by   day   or   week.\nAlso  Furnished   Suites.\nP.   II    BUSH,   Prop.\nTrifi l. i>. CAPE\nFinest Equipped Restaurant In the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAIt\u2014Ice Cream, Soda Water\nand Hot Drinks. Nice, clean, Jur-\nnlhsed rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe Cater to Private  Parties.\nTrail Hotels\nWhen In Trail, Stop at the\nHOTEL ARLINGTON\n.     A.   (Pete)   LEVE8QTJE,   Prop.\nCompletely    Renovated    snd    Refurnished\u2014Hot and Cold Running Water. Steam Heated\u2014Centrally Located\nSample Rooms ln Conaeetlon\nThe Old  Reliable\nCROWN  POINT  HOTEL\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\nSao  Baker  Street,   Nelson  B.  O.\nOPEN  DAY  AND   NK.II I\n11:30 to 2:30, Special Lunch . .35c\n5:S0 to 8.00 p.m..  Supper   ...35c\nPHONK    154\nCHILDREN CRY\nFOR\"CAST0RIA\"\nEspecially Prepared for Infant!\nand ChiMrei. of All Ages\nMother '\u25a0 Fletcher's Castorla has been\nin upe for over 30 years to relieve\nbabies and children of Constipation,\nFlatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea;\nallaying Fever Ishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach\nand Bowels, aids the assimilation of\nFood; giving natural sleep without\nopiates.\nThe Ki'iiuitio bears signature of\nTwo Thousand Orders in Two Days\nThis is what Mr. Lane Barker tells us the Tip Top office\nreceived last Monday and Tuesday.\nWE TOOK THIRTY IN OUR STORE\nSUITS TO MEASURE , \u00a537.00\nTwo Pairs of Pants   $36.00\nlack of orderly marketing ot the\ncrop, prevents the use of such facilities. Shippers desiring to get\nimmediate returns force tbe market\nat unprofitable prices.\nWinter Stocks\nAt February 18th there was a prospective market on the prairies, be-.\ntween thai date %nd June, tor 4M\noars of apples, but British Columbia\nbad only storage, available for that\nmarket, 200 cars, which were held\nby- tbe Associated Growers' organisation.\nThe cause of such scarcity Is assigned by the commissioner to tbe\noverlapping during November and\nDecember of winter and fall apple\n\u2022sales when prices were such as to\nreturn the grower little or nothing.\nIndifferent returns of this kind might\nhare been avoided by keeping the\nwinter varieties off tn* market at\nthe time. Fall varieties were for\nsale.\n_The results of the methods practiced In the past are that during late\nwinter and spring prairie jobbers\nhave been ordering Wlneaaps and\nother varieties not available from\nBritish Columbia \u2022 stock. These\nwould not be Imported if systematic\ncold storage were practiced, the commission*- contends.\nUnfavorable Market Co_fclltioa\u00bb\nOther adverse circumstances during the past year had to do with\nweather conditions the report states.\nWhilst, on the prairies these were\nexcellent up to August 10, cool and\nwet weather retarded harvesting and\nthreshing thus having the effect\nof turning, what was, at the beginning, an early marketing season ln\nBritish Columbia Into a very late\none. Such an emergency showed\nthe necessity of adequate storage facilities until the market was in a\nposition to absorb the fruit available.\nDuring ths past year an early sea-\non in the west and a late season In\nthe east resulted In unusual competition from two points not usually\ncompetitors. In the same way there\nwas overlapping of cherries with the\ncherry crop, as also the ripening\nof fruit from early and late districts\nsimultaneously instead of there being the usual difference of two\nweeks.\nThe most hazardous factor, states\nthe commissioner, was the unstabilii-\ning of marketing thr6ugh price cutting\nby unorganised independents and uncontrolled consignment to the trade,\nboth wholesale and retail.\nIfocouraffttif Aspects\nA very encouraging feature of the\nreport Is the reference to *the large\nincrease ln the distribution ot hothouse tomatoes and cucumbers produced In the coast districts, knows\nas the Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island. This extension of markets\nreached to Ontario and Quebec, to\nwhich provinces Vancouver Island\nbrocolll was also shipped.\nA very favorable impresSson was\ncreated ln the east by these shipments of brocolll \u00abs the qualtiy was\nequal ta that of anything imported\nfrom other provinces. The hot-house\nproducts received from British. Columbia were admitted to be superior\nto anything offered in competition.\nThe volume of hot-house products\nexported In 1926 was the greatest\non record and the markets commissioner predicts an annual increase\nin volume for some years to come.\nReviewing the situation in British\nColumbia in regard to commodities\nwhich are sufficiently planted In\nthis province and those Insufficiently\ngrown, the markets commissioner\noffers some advice tp growers. His\nrecommendations are:\nRhubarb\n\"Rhubarb planting can bo increased provided the growers go-in for\nearly vegetables to mix In the cars.\nUnless the early vegetables are more\ngrown It would be unwise to increase\nthe barb acreage as the Walla Walla\ndistricts, where direct competition\ncomes from, furnishes cars heavy to\nrhubarb, but containing asparagus,\nspinach, green onions, radish, and\nwith this mixture of needed . vegetables their cars are in preferred demand. If British Columbia rhubarb\ngrowers Include vegetables and hothouse tomatoes and cucumbers In\ntheir rhubarb oars they can almost\ndouble the present planting, as this\nwould shut out southern supply.\nSAmll Fruit*\n\"During the spring ot 1928 a very\nheavy planting of strawberries took\nplace and the bearing acreage\nclose to, If not in excess of any\nprevious pl-anting. This commodity\nshould not have any further acreage\nplanted in 1927.\n\"Raspberries are already planted\nin sufficient acreage for the present\nmarkets and tbe same advice can be\napplied to them.\n\"Gooseberries and blackberries are\noverplanted and a reduction of the\nacreage would bring better prices to\nthe producer.\nreaches\n\"There is a market on the prairies\nfor     three     times   the   amount   of\npeaches as are at present grown in\nMOTHERS\nAND  THEIP,   CHILDRtN\nI\nORNAMENTAL    TABLE    NAPKIN8\nOns Mother Says: .\nUntil I made napkin, attractive,\nmy children ignored them st the\ntable. I cut up an old tablecloth\ninto squares and hemmed them on\nthe machine. I leather-stltt-Ired\naround each border in different colors.\nBor Bess I chose navy blue cotton\nthread, for little Sallle I uaed pink,\nand for my black-eyed Bitlle a\nlovely shade of red. In the corner\nof,each napkin I wrote the name in\nbold script with a lead pencil and\nthsn outlined It in the color. In our\nfamily there Is crest use of napkins\nnow, I can tell you!\nBritish Columbia. The varietiee, aft.\ner early sorts such sa St. John and\nTriumph are past, should b\u00bb largely\nth\u00ab .J. H. Hsls snd Elberta. Ths\nElberta is a popular variety and\n78 \u00bber cent of all the peaches Imported are of that aort. Canneries\ndemand Lemon Cling snd other cling\nvarieties, as these hqjd up better\nthan freestone peaches This demand should have studied consideration with a view to meet the cannery demand. Aa a market variety\nthe cling has not been tried.\nApricots\n\"Indications are that sufficient\nplanting of the apricot Is now mod*,\nat least for a few years to corns.\nThe Oaoyos and Oliver districts ore\nspecialising in cots and as the trees\nsre young, heavy bearing time will\nlikely find that they havs enough\nplanted for all present market requirements. Trees that produca email\nsize, or No. 2 apricots, should bs\ndone.away with, as there la no demand for them.\n\u2022Jautaioup-*. .\n\"Cantaloupes   from   Oliver   should\nnot exceed  45  cars for prairie distribution.     These   cantaloupes   wars\nfavorably   received  in   Toronto  and\nMontreal this year, before the home\nstuff appeared,  but after that It Is\nImpossible-  for them  to  compete on.\nthese   markets.     During   the   early\nperiod   when   Ontario   and   Quebec\ncan take our cantaloupes the home\nmarket  will  be   found   more  profitable as the supply at that time la\nlees than the demand.\nCherries\n\"Blng and Lambert cherries and\nany late variety of the else and\ncolor of the Blng and Lambert can\nsafely be planted In the cherry-\ngrowing parts of the Kootenay district. Sufficient early cherries are\nnow planted In ths Okanagan and\nOliver districts of varieties other than\nBlng and Lambert. However, ln the\nOliver, Osoyoos and Keremeos districts where the season is usually\ntwo weeks ahead of others more Blng\nand Lambert cherries ehould be\nplanted. N6 other cherries ore In\npopular demand and Should not be\nplanted excepting as fertilisers.\nPlums and Prunes\n'The plums and prunes of the Interior run rather small. Early varieties from British Columbia come\nIn sharp competition with Orsgon\nsnd California late sorts. Ths Imported varieties are chiefly Italian,\nClimax, Wlckson and Tragedy. The\nvarieties from British Columbia are\nPeach Plum, Bradshaw, Italian,\nPond's Seedling, Yellow Egg, Black\nDiamond, Lombard, Imperial Gage,\nColumbia and a few Damsons. From\nOntario come the true Greengage and\nDamson plums, and there Is considerable demand for them. About the\nonly planting needed ot this produce In British Columbia is Italian,\nTragedy,  Damson and Greengage.\n\"More pears of the Bartlett type\ncan be used. The demand la greater than the supply now that cold\nstorage Is available. Ths De Anjou\nvariety can also hs grown, so eon\nthe Boac and any good late varisty,\nauch as Winter Nells. Last year\nCanada Imported pears to the value\nof 142,000 from ths United States.\nPears   require   both   favorable   cli\nmatic and soil conditions and ths\nhorticultural branch _iould he consulted as to' districts and location\nfor pears.\nAnne*  V\u00bb_\u00bbu_\n\"In Pentleton. Kalsden, Oliver,\nOsoyoos snd districts to ths south\nIt would bs sat* to. plant a lorgs\namount of Wltxssda At present this\nvariety la Imported from Washing*-\nton. Thsy are in great demand tor\ntheir color, late keeping and goad\nquality. With them can be grows\nthe YelleW Newtown varl\nmight be well to plant Astracl-an,\nYellow Transparent and extra\nearly varieties in thess early district*\nincluding Keremeos.\nTomatoes\n\"The pack of field tomatoea BM\nmproved, but at start ot season tM\nrade complains that ln every 4-lb.\n-asket they find tomotoBS ail ths\nway from green to ripe. Cars sha-sl-3\nbs taken to have all tomatoes In a\nl-lb. basket uniform as to rtpenem\nPhis can only be regulated by pack.\nn_ in the packing shed. It Is impossible to pack uniform ripeness\nin a field pack. K.lowna\" growsra\npa\u00abk In the packing house and tkati\ntomatoes aro easily worth 20 osnt*\na orate more than the average pock\nfrom Brttudi Columbia that cones\non 'the prairie market. Unless \u25a0mi-\nform ripeness \u25a0 and uniform pock is\nmaintained, uniform price would be\nunfair. In 1124 ths average field\npack kept prices from advancing\nwhen the market was bare.\nOnkms\n\"The box paek of onions was highly spoken of by the trade. Bo wen\nonions pasked ln Baseline s-jeka\nSample grade\" was uaed after tbs\nfrost. This grade does not protect\neither seller or buyer and onions\nshipped under \"Sample grade\" were\nsold subject to the report, on condition of arrival,\n'British Columbia onions are ths\nbeat onions grown and with mora\ncare ln packing and practice of storing they should exclude all other*\nfrom the prairie markets. Ontario\naad Quebec merchants speak highly\noTBiitlBh Columbia box pack onions\nand much export trade can bo looked\nfor.\"\n\u25a0  sa i   _.\nLOS ANQBLES, April 4.\u2014Sammy\nMandcll, lightweight champion of the\nworld, and Jackie Fields, Pacific wast\nflash, fought 12 lightning rounds hers\nto\/light In a no-decision session. Ring-\nalders and newspaper men rendered\nvarious verdicts, but the consensus\nwas a nlp-and-tuck battle.\nScented .teas are popular in Chins.\nThe 'flowers commonly used to glvs\nthe aroma are the white Jasmine and\nths ' yu Ian,\" a species of mag-no***.\nThe brew Is prepared by heating ths\nflower petals with the tea leaves.\nWas So Nervous\nThe Least Noise\nMade Her Jump\nMra. W. H. Tales, Ashen, Kaa,\n\u25a0writs.:\u2014\"I was bo-ared very ran_\nwith my heart and serves, aad U*\n1    oisa would malm sn joan. ass!\nstop ny heart besting.\nI told my mother about it ons day,\nsnd   she   said    t_U   sh.   had   ban\n*\u00bb\u25a0\nfot a box ef\nW__ I had t-M the one box I fan\nquite a lot batter sad by the time t fcnj\ntaken tores boss* X (a* -etat\" i\nPries Mr. a box at all dealers, or,\nnsflad -ssht oa reeerpt of pries M\nThs T. ]KBa-a Co, Tissti.iL Tomato.\n0_t\nHow Children Quickly\nGain Robust Health\nGo ahead, Mother, ami make the\nsickly little one strong and well\u2014make\nthe puny one sturdy and full of pep\u2014\nmake, the skinny one take on pounds\nof solid fleah\u2014get McCoy's Cod Liver\nExtract Tablets,    i\nThey are rich ln Vitalizing vitamines\n\u2014the kind of vitamines that create\nstrength, improve the appetite and\nbuild up the power to* resist disease.\nChildren love them as they do\ncandy, because they are sugar-coated\nand easy to take. One boy gained\n11% pounds in aeven weeks, and Is\nnow healthy and happy\u2014thousand* of,\nother children have grown strong and\nrobust.\nSixty tablets for 60 cents at City\nDrug & Book Co. And druggists every*\nwhere. Try them for 30 daya and If\nyou are not happily satisfied with the\nteat get your money back. But demand   .deCoy's^\u2014it   paya   to   get   the\ngenuine,\nPimples Were Awfully\nPainful. Cuticura Heals.\n. .I - -\nA smsll pimple appeared on my\nchin snd I scratched ft gaasJ-%\nmors to coma. The slmejn won\nhard and son snd I used to keep\n\u2022astchlng. They festered snd was\nawfal BBint-, sad my (sos loossd\nterrible. I wss diaoo_mgsd became\nwhen I went oat It saansd as tf\neveryone was loosing st aw.\n\" I m-fsn a. tog Codas*. Sea-pond\nOintment and in s week's time I\ncould see they ware helping me. I\ncontinued using than far a month\nend the ptmpks dissppsared. 1 was\n.salad.*' (Bisned)MnMrnrrrHetU,\nBardm, P. fi. I., No~. It. 1\u00abM.\nFat every purpose of the leaks\n\u2022nd both, Cuocur. Soap, Olntmsat\nsnd Talcum are excellent.\n THE NEE50N DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 5, 1927\nPage TOtta*\nJoy Gives Anecdotes of Nelson\nin Early Days; Praises\nNoted Citizens\nVINCENT TELLS OF\nHONOLULU'8 JM.AUTY\nA HANDFUL OF THOUSANDS\nInspected   Submarine;   Craters\nof Extinct Volcanoes Make\nGood Forts\n\/ Giving anecdotes of Nelson as hs\nknew 4 In 1893, when he first came\nhere, and later, R..G. Joy delighted\nNelson Rot&rians at their luncheon\nIn the Hume yesterday. H. M. Vincent, a member of the club, who has\njust returned from an extended visit\nto Honolulu, described his trip. President J.  S,  Carter presided.\ntub*. Joy stated that when he came\nhere in 1893 he had to come by way\nof Revelstoke and the Arrow lakes\nte ftobson, and then had to pack\nhis way through the mountain-*. He\npraised John Houston, Nelson's most\nhated mayor, as the organizer of the\ncity's first power plant, which was\nbuilt at Cottonwood falls, us the\nowner of ono of the first newspapers\nhere, and as a booster of mining.\nHe spoke of Tom Collins, who\nwith Harold Seloui cleared the district then known as \"Bogus Town,\"\nbut now as Fairview; of Mike Egan,\na great prospector; ot N. Hoover,\nwho located the section of Nelson\nsouth of Hoover street; of J. Fred\nHume, former warehouse keeper; of\nMr. Buchanan, first manager of the\nBank of Montreal; and of many other\nnotable characters.\nMr. Vincent told of the beauty of\nthe sun as It rises over Diamond\n^mountain, of beautiful hibiscus\nflowers, (of bathing ln water heated\nby the sun to 78 degrees, of a submarine ho Inspected, of a trip around\nthe island, of the adaptation of ex\ntlnot volcano craters as fortifications\nand of many of the notable char\nacteristics of Honolulu.'\nCharles H. Maimton\u2014The former secretary of the Consolidated West\nDorAe Lake Mining corporation, who is charged with Issuing false statements In connection with an alleged overissue of the capital stock of the\ncompany. This picture was taken when he was ln the north country and\nhe Is holding a brick of solid gold of $5000 actual value.\nTRAIL REJECTS\nWATER COMPANY\nSYSTEM OFFER\nCity   on   Other   Hand   Offers\n$1100'for East Trail\nSystem\nThree Large Bears\nShot at Gold Hill;\nOne Just From\nDen\nPassengers arriving from Lardo report that three large black bears\nhave been shot at Gold Hill, a telephone messkge being received Satur\nday to that effect. One of the bears\nhad Just emerged from Its winter den\nwhen killed.\nTOPIC\nInteresting Tales of South Seas\nTold by Archdeacon Beer\nat Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., hprll 4\u2014\"Queer flab\nencountered on the Kaslo-Panama-\nSouthampton ryn.\" might well have\nbeen the caption of a travel talk given by Ven, 'Archdeacon H. Beer of\nKaslo. to (fc. Andrew\"! Churchmen's\nclub last night. It dealt with many\nInteresting observations other than\nhow a river Is utilized to float the\nbiggest mechaaMnen and men-of-war\noverland from tin-*- Atlantic to ths\nPacific ocean, and was the personal\nrecollections of Archdeacon Beer of a\n43-day voyage from Kaslo, B.C., via\nthe wonderful Panama canal, to visit\nthe Empire exhibition at Wembley,\nLondon.\nA Shanghai Jew, victim of epilepsy,\nbound for Vienna, Austria, to seek a\nsurgeon's aid, and talking of iuiclde\na magnificent wolfhound, mild man\nnered, but too ferocious looking to at\ntract friends though his owner paid\n$6n for his passage to Europe; and a\nchief officer who was Inaulted st being confounded with the ship's purser, were some of the queer fish the\narchdeacon met aboard the Dutch\nfreighter be sailed on from Portland,\nOre.\nLOVE TANGLE ENDS IN SHOOTING\n\\\nTRAIL COUNCIL\nT\nT\nSum   of   $200   Voted   Toward\nEntertainment  for the\nHotkey Team\nTRAIL, B.C., April 4. \u2014 City council tonight authorised a donation of\n$200 to the committee of the Trail\nCurling club, which is organising a\npublic banquet in honor of Trail's\nhockey team to be held in the K.P.\nhall on April  12.\nAlderman J. A. McKinnon urged the\ndonation as a, civic duty in honor of\nthe hockey boys. Mayor H. Clark\nstated that without his knowledge he\nhad been appointed chairman of the\ncommittee, which consists' of O. Kin\nn'H, J. Buchanan, T. Hopkins, A. J.\nMcDonald, H. Wade, L. P. Tyson, W.\nForrest  and  D.   McDonald.\nIt is expected that 2S0 people will\nbe banqueted. In addition to celebrating the victories of the hockey\ntenm, it Is planned to mark the occasion by awarding the curling prises\nwon last season,  It Is said.\nTRAIL, B.C., April _.-\u2014Rejection\nof {East Trail Water company's offer\nto sell Its irvalns and service rights\nto certain water users in East Trail\nand the vicinity;,to tho city for $2610\nplus one- year's revenue, **>jaa authorised by the city council tonight on\nthe recommendation of the fire, water  and  light  committee*.\nA counter offer was recommended\nby the committee. Ii was'that the\ncity should pay $1100 for the, mains\nand service rights, while allowing\nthe water company to collect the\nrevenue for a month or two until\nthe city mains and services were Installed, with the understanding that\nthe company would be responsible for\ndamagt-8 to city property from leakages meanwhile. The fire, water\nand light committee, tho city engineer -and the city solicitor were empowered to complete negotiations\nwith tho water company along such\nlines.\nRecently the water company asked\n$1862.70 for Its main and line, and\na .y^ajr'B nevenue, amounting to\n$1247.33, for that part of its plant\nnow serving 66 customers within the\ncity In blocks 7, 10, 11,. 12, 13 and\n\\i, and 39 customers In blocks 6,\n20, 26, 2T, 28 and 29 adjacent tt -Blast\nTrait city limits.\nTrail CouncA ts\nRepresented Upon\nJubilee Committee\nTRAIL, B.C., April 4.\u2014Four Trail\n\u2022city dads will represent the city on\nthe citizens' committee which will\narrange and direct Trail's celebration\nof Canada's diamond Jubilee on July\n1. Mayor H. Clark and Alderman\nJ. A. McKinnon, recently approached,\nhave acepted Invitations to work on\nthe committee. Aldermen A. G. Harvey and A. A. Milligan were tonight\nappointed by their colleagues on the\ncity council. The citizens committee\nwas initiated by the Trait Native\nSons' lodge, and is still ln process\nof formation.\nWas   Discovered   by   Douglas\nFairbanks; Wrestles in\nTrail\nCity Accepts Offer of  $96.25\nfor Whole Issue of\n$127,000'\nHempitd Aid Plans\nTag and Bridge\nDates This Sprit\nAt a meeeing \u00abf t*e Woomii .\npltal    Aid    st* (\u25a0'-\u2022-* v     ysjsrt <\nsoon, the ladles arranged that a tag\nshould   be   held   on   Easter M-_^^^|\nand  to   have  a  bridge  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nof hospital day. ln Hay\nThe $48 reallaed for the spring wa\nSaturday was turn**. over to t\u00bb\u00ab\nbuyers. Mrs. Ooorge Johnstone aad\nMrs. William Waldl*, te buy lia-to\nfor the hospital.\nHOTEL\nCASTLEGAR\nRooms,   Meals,   Lunches *\nPETE BARDIE, Prop.\n' Countess de Janse, tho former Alice Sllverthorne of Chicago, who shot\nand seriously wounded herself after ehootlng and dangerously wounding\nRaymond De Trafford. of a wealthy and prominent London family. The\n.hooting occurred on a London-bound iraln prior to its departure from\nI*arln. She was involved in a love affair with De Trafford, th-? latter (old\nnotice, and shot him because his love had cooled. r\nTRAIL, B.C., A-prll 4.\u2014An offer of\n$96.25 per 100 for the whole issue of\n$127,000 worth of city of Trail 5 per\ncent Interesting bearing 20-year bonds,\nmade privately by the Royal Financial\nCompany of Vancouver, was accepted\nby the city council  tonight.\nThe issue will represent $100,000\nworth of securities for the loan on\nwhich the city will finance thin year's-\nbig street paving extension Job. The\nblock of $27,000 will represent a Joan\nexpended, on constructing the East\nTrail sewer extension hist year, t'nder\nlocal improvement, financing the sewer\nextension was completed with short\nterm loans from a bank. The Issue\nof bonds In lieu Of the bank loans will\neffect  a  saving  tn   Interest  funding.\nThe figure, $96.25 per 100, reflects\na very favorable Increase in the credit\nrating of this munioiparity. Last year\nIt received only $94.53 per 100 for Its\nissue of $1,000,000 20-year ft per cent\nbonds, with which It financed last\nyear's street paving work and ths big\nwater works extension into East Trail\nWheelbarrow Pah\nArrive at Procter;\nDue Nelson Today\nMr. and Mrs. Dan J. Js Rous, who\nlsft Africa on a wheelbarrow tour\nof the world In 1922, and who in\ncrossing Csnada hats* spent two\nwinter, ln Canada, bns st lenses,\nOnt, and the other st Yahk, and\nwho broke camp soms time sfo, arrived st Procter Sunday night, s\ntelephone message received here\nstated.\n, They and their wheelbarrow,'which\ncarries their outfit, are expected in\nNelson today.\nTrail News of the Day\nMemorial Hall Tennis Club will hold\nnn orranlsatlon meeting at Tr_\u00bb p.m..\nM-ril \u00ab' Memli\u00absrs. and ail interested\ntn   tennlB,  please  attend.     (7450)\nSpain Is the land of centenarians.\nThree hundred and fifty-four persons\n($6 men and 258 women) have\nreached the age of 100; 75 men and\n1*04 women are more than 100 years\nCM and a number havs reached 110\nTRAIL, B.C., April 4.\u2014On WednM-\nday Trail will have in its midst one\ndf the most colorful villains of the\nmovies and the most sensational .of\nwrestlers in the world today. He Is\nBull' Mont Jin:!, who wilt grapple with\nJack MHO, Canadian Light heavyweight\nwrestler, in the Trail rink Friday\nnight.\nMontana is a man of personality\nwith a past. Mis life story is like\nthe dream of a fiction writer. Born\nin Milan, Italy, he went to the United\nStates in 1910 to work with a pick\nand shovel while dreaming of fame\nand fortune that has since come to\nhim. He took to wrestling in New\nTork tn his spare time, and while\ntraining was picked up by Douglas\nFairbanks and taken to Los Angeles\nto start as an \"extra\" ln film drama\nand to act as trainer for the athletic\nDoug. His professional career started\nabout that turn. Fame and fortune\ndescended on him with a bang, wBen\nhe waa featured as a gorilla by Marshall Neiian in \"On and Get It,\" ln\n1920. The film was an astonishing\nsuccess and created a new box office\nreceipts record.\nShortly afterward Montana was\nstarred in the films, and drew a fat\nfive-year contract. He played tn such\nfamous pictures as \"The Lost World\/'\n\"RoV'Im Good,' 'and was one of the\nremarkable villains ln Rudolph Valentino's last picture. \"The Son of the\nShslk.\"\nEXCELSIOR CLUB HEARS\nTALK ON PROHIBITION\nTRAIL, B.C., April 4.\u2014W. Everett\ntonight entertained members of the\nExcelsior club of the Knox ITntted\nchurch with an amusing resume of the\nhistory of the prohibition movement.\nHe gave his personal views resulting\nf_om 10 years of lecturing on the subject, with suggestions on the method\nof applying practical prohibition. There\nwas discussion on the drug traffic %y\ntha speaker and members of bis kudl\nTRAIL PURCHASES\nTWO GRAVEL BEDS\nTRAIL, p.C, April 4.*\u2014Purchase of\ntwo; gravel beds by the city at a\ntotal cost of $200 has been authorised,\nAn offer of 12 acres of gravel land\nbeing part of sublot 52, lot 4518\nKootenay, near Annable, owned by\nMrs. Martha Merry, for $1200 was\naccepted tonight. The other area consists of part of block 13 city of\nTrait. It is being sold by Q. Philli-\nbelll  for  $2000.\nAn Alaska bear, so large he took it\nfor a normal coast cedar butt, and!\nacrobatic seals werr captive queer fish\nhe saw) in Golden Gate park, San\nFrancisco.\nSea turtles, not the snapping kind,\nbut tin.'!' that let seagulls perrh\ndaintily on their backs for midocoan\nsurf riding sport, were queer acquaintances of his rolling down to\nPanama. There were others. One\nwas a shark \"about as big a* a moderate sized balsam tree.\" And there\nwere pelicans, who, unlike the sea-\ngulls, gracefully alighting on the\nwater, flopped below the surface - to\nhag a particularly succulent mackerel\nor other ocean-going dainty.\nHe saw mules that made steamship*\nbehave while passing through the\ncanal; four live alligators whose behaviour was best observed from n\ndistance; and the Culebra cut, which\nno engineering skill can make behave.\nTha X-ooks\nThen ln the middle of the six canals\nor locks, forming the Panama canal.\nhe saw the Chagres river, which, with\nIts dams and _#ntinuous flow -of\nwater, makeB possible- the raising of\nwater levels In the canals, and the\nfloating overland of ships between the\nAtlantic and the Pacific that only a\nfew years ago would have been forced\nto   circle  South  America #\nIn the Atlantic, off Porto Rico, he\nsaw threo whaloB, two of which nodded\nin passing. Tps$tfSfU been struck by\n\u25a0-wordflsh, orto in' |Ke breast--for the\narchdeacon assured hi* hearers that\nwhales suckle their young\u2014tho other,\nnear the tail. Both wer\u00ab making vigorous efforts to free the sword-like\nbone still embedded In their flesh as\nthey  voyaged  southward.\nThe archdeacon concluded with a\ndescription of some aspocls of the big\nEmpire exhibition at Wembley. He\ngave his impressions of the singing\nof a choir of 1500 boys in surplices,\naccompanied by the Coldstream\nGuards' band in the huge stadium; of\nthe wonderful display of gold ore-s;\nof timber, butter, fruits and huge pictures depicting the prntrle f-raln lands,\nBritish Columbia mountains, and the\nBritish Columbia coast, in the Canadian   exhibit.\nFE\nI ON CARPET\nThe first concrete bridge ln Pales- j\nUne, on the Andja, near Tel Aviv, |\nhas just been completed.\n nm\t\nOf tho estimated population of I\nChina. 320,000,0-00, between 15.000,000 j\nand 20,000,000 are  Mohammedans.\n\"Good Goods at GrayV\nWrist Watches\nA Special in\nLADIES' WRIST\nWATCHES\nWhite or Green Gold Cases.\nGuaranteed 15-Jewel Move- R\nments.   Values to  $18.00.\nYour choice for $12.75.\nJ.  B.  GIAT\nWatchmaker\u2014 Jrweler\u2014Optlolan\n707 BAKER ST.       PHONE US\nScandinavians at\nTrail Welcome\nNew Arrivals\nTRAIL, B.C., April 4. \u2014 Bidding\nfarewell to*. Mr. and Mrs.. E. Erickson,\nwho are leaving the city, and welcoming C J. Johnson, of East Trail, and\nfour of his countrymen coming with\nhim from Norway, the Scandinavian\nclub celebrated with a delightful social and dance In the Orange hell tonight. Music was furnished by volunteers, Including two clever accordian\nplaysra\nMr. Johnson left Trail before\nChristmas to escort Arthur Ruslness,\ntubercular Invalid, to his home in\nNorway, after the Scandinavian olub\nladles had raised the fund with numerous social gatherings. He reported\nthe Invalid was showing steady improvement in Boots. The new arrivals were A. Martcheson, Emil Sod-\nberg,  John  Inger  and John  Carlson.\nHarpy is a fabulous, filthy wiflfjed\n. ,-eature mentione in tbe Greek poems\nof Homer and in the Latin poems of\nVirgil. The harpy la described x aa\nravenous bird with sharp claws, and\nwith the head of. a woman whose\nface Is pale with linnger.\nCopra is the dried kernel of the coconut. The curing of copra is carried\non wherever the coconut tree abounds.\nIt is one of the chief exports of many\nof the South Sea islands. Stevenson,\nthe famous novolist, often mentions\nit. It Is from copra that coconut oil\nis  obtained.\nHeadache\nMade Her So Sick\nShe Could Not Work\nMiss Lois WhH-s, Cap. Bald, N B.\nwrits.:\u2014\"I soiessd .STerolr, for \u00a3\nlsof time, with s bad headset.. 11\nwoald sobs sad set* satil It mads us\n\u2022a ask I iiotiU ast work ss all.\nA. Umi\nThe Prince of Wales plana to leave\nLondon on August 1 for Iris visit to\nCans da.\n-: DODD'S\nI KIDNEY\nPILLS\n__SN\u00a3^i\nKIDIMI\n!i5j-|'|;|_iii,i\nsad after natal s fair bottles ot thii\nTBSdietne t fed thtt I cannot iwotn-\nimend it too hijrhlv to sll those who\nsuffer from heads*** of \u00bbny kind.\"\nI For ths psat .9 years B.B.B. has\nIbsen pat up only kv Ths T. Milbum\nOo., Limited, Toronto, Ont\nFor Psoriasis\n\u2022sks On asi-sai -an Ml .a\nBook    on    Skin ' Diseases,    sew\nTreatise on Chronic Diseases by\nEerbal Remedies Pamphlet on\ndm of Manhood and Diseases of\nMen. Booklet on femsle Ills; sod\nSflvles   free   by   diall;   80  years'\naperience Wlthottt crltlclilng or\nsparaslns your, local doctors,\nwrit, us before losing bops.\nTreatment by mall our specialty.\njsaoLisir. aiaasT. sum.\nlaST MB.\nUN Sans, Taaoonvar, a.o.\n.The Oldest Herbal Institution\nSutcliffe Team Wins a Knock\nont Tourney in Memorial     i\nHan\nA carpet howling tourney held hy\nthe Sons of England last night, in\nMemorial hall, on the knockout system, resulted in O. SutcUffe'a team\nemerging winners in the final round.\nEach match consisted of threo games.\nOeorge Brant's team made the hlcr\nscore of the evening when it defeated Alf Wood's team in the first\nround, 1-0.\nH. Stlrsaker's squad beat the J.\nWood squad, 6-2, in the first round,\nalso.\nAm winners so far, the Stlrraker\nmen theft played the Sutcllffe crew,\nwho had drawn a hyp, going down\nbefore them, 2-3.\nA winners' final then took place\nbetween the Sutcliffe tenm and (V\nHelgatc-a, tho Intlar representing th?\noriginal Brant cum, and tho Sut-\nrliffe's won th? match 5-4, and the\n[hnrnpionehip.\nA   losers'    final    between    the    two\nWood   teams,    was   won    by    the    J.\nWood aggregation,  4-2.\nTeams or rinks were an follows:\nO.  Sutcllffe,   skip;   A.  Cuthbert,  W-\nMuir, J. E.  Mnmson.\nG, Brant, skip; W. Brown, W. Itrll.\nW. Wood.\nA. Wood, t\u00bbkfp; .!. 1-Tnmson Jr, E.\nEKMt, T.  Cherry.\nJ. Wood, skip; W. T>no, J. Bailoss.\nO. fteigate.\nH.    Stir^ftker,    skip\nWalton, E. Frost.\nWhen you are tired\nwith house work <*\nBOVRIL puts new\n*\u00bb *W life into you\nC\nJoy,\nI\n*\\\ni\nA cup of Hot Bovril\n\u2014 how good it it I\nHow it revives and\nstimulates I And it\nis so nourishing.\nBovril is Beef itself\n\u2014concentrated. It\nbuilds up the resisting powers of the\nbody against colds,\nchills and ill-health.\nBOVRIL\nPUTS BEEF INTO YOU\nIIIIIIIIIIIMII|i|llll1l|Hlllll||mUlt1MllMMIIII1MlltMMIIIIlllUII\niiHiiiniiiiiiHiiifiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiifiiif.frir< u-p> .,\u2022\u2022.!\u2022\u2014:i\\-\nm\nim\n Pass Pmr\nDAILY   NEWS\nJ .very atoning exespt -essay by Th. News PsbUsBag oompany,\nffilud.   Nelson,  \u00bb.C\nBn.lneea Istten dwell bs addressed\n*\u00bb\u00ab \u00ab**ae\u00abs saa_***as_ orders made\npayable to The News Publishing oo_-\nnany, limit.*, sad la no ease to lndl-\nstlsal mensberB of the staff.\nAdvertlelsg rate card, aad ABC\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0suata of drcnlatloa mallsd on\nrsauest. or mar hs sees st the office\nof say aaverUstas agency rsoegats^\nhy th. Canadian Press saseetstlea\nftTBSCRrPTION  RATES\nBy taafl   (country),  per  month. .1   .1*\n__\u25a0*** year      (.14\nBy mall (dty). per year  it.**\nOaraid. Canada, per month 71\n_**\"\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0   yesr         7.6*\nOuivered, per week tl\nPsr  Tsar     11.0*\nPayahls la Advance\nisf\nTHE NELSON DXHY mm, TCEffl&Y MORNING, APRIL' 5,1927\nTTTBBDAT,  APRIL 5,   111?\nThe Bright Side of Our Peni-\ntentiaries\nAt the annual examinations by\nths   provincial   hoard   of   education, two high school entrance osr-\ntiflcateB were gained by inmate*\nof tha penitentiary.\nThe foregoing lines from the annual\nreport of the warden of New Westminster  penitentiary,   to   the   super-\nlateadeat   ot   penitentiaries,   from  a\nDominion blnebook Just received, are\narresting.\nAlongside the psaal ldsa of a penl\ntsntiery sentence, those at the head\nof our system of Justice, snd those\nIntimately administering our penal\nsystem, have the Ideal of developing\nfrom the unpromising material under\npunishment, better cltlsens.\nWere thess two inmates referred to\nboys or men** We do not know.\nNo doubt both boys and taen have\ntaken such certificate*, and perhaps\nhigher ones, at -the prison school tn\nthe past. Msny others will, ln the\nfuture. The satisfactory thing about\nIt la that the school 1* open, and that\nencouragement la given to develop\nthe mental power*. It la carrying\nfurther the idea of teaching ' every\nprisoner a trade.\nA certain man. narrow, gloomy,\nwicked, went to an American penitentiary. He waa an angry criminal,\nat war with his kind. Attar a year\nhi* call was occupied by a different\ntype of man, a man who had found\na new world, to him a veritable Hehv-\nsa. Ia ths prison school he learned\nwhat the little black character* they\nuse ln printing mean, and In his hours\nof enforced leisure ln the cell after\nthe nightly lock-up he spelled his way\n-\u25a0rough some rich books. His taking\nin Mud by the law ended In hie becoming a new roan.\nHere la ths entire report of the\neducational side of New Westminster\npenitentiary for tbe last year to be\nreported on:\nThe work of the librarian and\nschool-teacher has been a large\nfactor ln the work for better dt-\nlsenship. At the annual examinations by the provincial board of\neducation, two high school entrance certificates were gained by\nInmates has brought the library\nwell up to date, this addition comprising fiction of the higher,\nhealthy type, a* well as classical\nworks and others of educational\nvalue.\nMay  this  work  go   on.\n\u25a0 W\nLighter Side\nReaders    ef    The    Dally    Ifswa\ncontribute many of the best Items\nto this column. Just sign your\nname or initials, or mom-de-pIusM,\nand aead in your brightest ideas.\n\u2014Editor, Lighter Side.\nAUNT HET\n'1 may be old-fashioned, but\nthere's some things I dry in the\nkitchen instead of hangln' on\nthe tine.\"\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\n\u25a0y   LAURA  A.   KIRKMAN\nArt Is long. It Is also pretty thin\ntn thst kind of magazine.\n\u2014\u00ab\u2014    wp *s\nOf 10 Canadians, one has a profession, three have a trade, and six a\n\u2022ample case and an order book.\nSinclair Lewis can write but a limited ^number of books. There are\nonly bo many things to hate.\nAn old-time United States marine\ncan remember when the order wsb\nTire at will!\" instead of \"Camera!\nShoot!\"\nEater to Put End to Favoritism in Sales Tax Matter\nExposures by the Financial Post\naad other papers, of alleged favor\nltism extended by the department of\nnational revenue to \"sharp and designing firm* throughout the coun\ntry,\" who were allowed to accumulate\nhuge arrearages, ot sales tax, some\nUsees over msny years, has stirred up\nthe King government, and under current legislation power Is being taken\nto collect Interest on sale* tax arrears.\nThis new power, added to Internal\nmeasures It is announced that the\nminister, Hon. W. D. Euler, Intends\nto take, to discipline tbe department\nand atop the favoritism, 1* expected\nto stop the scandal' of discrimination,\na**d gst in the money. At least. Mr.\nEuler promise* that there shall not\nbe any considerable addition to existing arrearages, and apparently his\nunspoken promise to himself goes\nmuch   further   than   that   .\nMany millions of dollar* are owing\nthe government on thess sales tax arrears, aad the firm* owing them are\nusing government money without paying Interest. The discrimination consists, of course, ln proceedings not\nhaving been taken against them. With\nthe teeth being pat in the act, ln\npermitting the charging of interest,\ncollection will not be necessary, as It\nwill not bs to the interest of a\nfirm to incur heavy penalties.\nDOUBTLESS NATURE FORESAW\nSKYSCRAPERS. THE NECK IS\nPIVOTED ON A UNIVERSAL JOINT.\nEnglishmen drive to the left*: Americans to the right; hogs In the center.\nPutting religion ln politics may\nwork out sll right. It has needed a\nlittle   religion   for   a  long   time.\nCorrect this sentence: \"I cannot\ntell a lie,\" said the dentist; \"it will\nhurt  like thunder.\"\nIt's better to have children. Then\nafter your silver wedding you can\ndivide, the gravyy ladleB.\nUnder the propo.ed treaty, Nicaragua will bs protected! against\nSvsry   power   exespt   ths   oils   sh*\nhss rsason  ts fs\u00abr. \u201e\nUsually you can tell by watching\nthe man with the hoe whether he la\nInterested in a crop or bait.\nIt's strange how ths only man\nin ths United Statee who thinks\ns big guy innocent happens to gst\non ths jury.\njOl\nNo marriage can be ft success if\nthe thrill wears off before habit has\nmade It unnecessary.\nNow the long, anxious wait to see\nIf they discover the joker ln your\nIncome tax return.\nANSWERS TO  INQUIRIES\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nOranges\nCereal\nCreamed Dried Beef Toa*\nCoffee\n'Luncheon\nSpanish Omelet\nCream  Cheese Sandwiches\nRadishes\nWhole Wheat  Cookies Tea\nDinner\n\u2022Grapefruit Halves Topped\nwith  a   Maraschino  Cherry\nKosat  Chicken   ,\nHashed  Potatoea Peas\nLettuce Ruslan Dressing\nIce Cream Sponge Cake\nCoffee\nMrs. R.\u2014I wonder If you or any\nof tbe column readers can give me a\nrecipe for ice box cookies or frosen\ncookies?\nAnswer\u2014We have had recipes for\nice box cake published ln this column\nln the past, but none for the cookies\nyou refer to. Perhaps some housekeeper readers may know what they\nare and will he kind enough to write\nthe recipe on a postal card and mall\nit to me for publication?\nMrs. H. J. H-\u2014I have a closet In\nmy house which has a peculiar odor,\nfrom which there is no relief even\nafter I scour it with disinfectant.\nWhat would you do?\nAnswer\u2014I would first make certain\nthat there is not a dead mouse behind the boards. I would then paint\nthe closet Inside with several coats of\nflat white paint.\nMrs. C. O. O.\u2014I have heard of\nsome kind of salad dressing which Is\nmade with- canned evaporated milk,\nand would like the recipe if you have\nit.\nAnswer\u2014No doubt this Is the recipe to which you refer: Mock Russian Dressing: Mix together one-half\nteaspoon of salt, one-fourth teaspoon\nof black pepper and one-half teaspoon of dry mustard. Add three-\ntablespoons of undiluted evaporated\nmilk (which, of course, is thicker\nthan ordinary sweet milk) and Into\nthis mixture beat one-half cup of\nsalad oil, using an egg beater of the\nwheel type, and adding only a few\ndrops of the oil at a time. The\ndreselQg will become creamy but not\nthick. Now add two tablespoons of\nvinegar, beat thoroughly again, and\nstir i in five tablespoons ot chili\nsauce and one-half teaspoon or\nscraped raw onion. Serve cold on\nplain lettuce or romaine.\nBride\u2014Our little apartment bathroom has a tiled floor. Is there anything special I could use In scrubbing It?\nAnswer\u2014Tie, the same as brick,\nstone and mosaic floors, should be\nwashed In warm soapsuds, taking care\nnot to slop the water about. It\nshould then be rimed well and rubbed\ndry with a thick cloth fastened firmly\nover a flat mop. Make certain no\nwater Is left standing, aa it will in\ntime destroy the setting.\nTomorrow \u2014 Serving Left-Over\nChicken.\nAddress Inquiries to Miss Ktrkmen\nand inclose stamped-addressed eavel\nope for reply.\u2014Editor.\n[       Ten Tears Ago      j\nii     ii.\nThat Body\nof Yours\n\u2022V JAMM.W. BMTQN. HA\n'Litter\nThs civilised world on thla day,\nApril 5, 1M7. is celebrating the hundredth anniversary of the birth of\nLord  Lister,  the   famous  surgeon.\nLord Lister ws*Ja wenderful sur-\ngeoa, did clean, brilliant work In the\nhospital operating room, and yet the\nterrible hospital gangrene often followed, aad the patlenti died. Only\none person la three with an amputation of ths leg through the thigh\nlived to tell the tale.\nAnd yet, where a patient was -too\nsick to be removed to an hospital,\nend there did not appear much chance\nto gave tbe life, the patient recovered\nfrom  the operation  ln a short  time.\nLister thought that, perhaps. It was\nthe dirt la the hofffrUaln in those days\nthat was causing ths1,trouble, and had\neverybody wash their hands before\nhandling surgical patients. RUM tbe\ndeaths continued.\nIt was an article by Pasteur on\nputrefaction, ln which putrefaction\nwas said to be eaueed by living ferments, that gave him his Idea.\nLearning that a nearby city had\nbeen destroying the odor of Its sewage with carbolic ecld, Lister made\nan investigation, and decided that\ncarbolle acid would kill the organisms\nand   p*4vent  gangrene.\nHe made bfs hospital in Glasgow\n'he healthiest hospital In the world,\nind although his professional brethren\n'rt Oreat  Britain  were  slow  to  recog-\nnhielhe value of his work, Hs value\nwas proven in other countries, and\nfrnally Oreat Britain acknowledged\nthe debt owing to him ln the saving\nof  thousands of  lives.\nAt DavfB Misters puts it, \"It was\nMater, and Lister alone, who cleansed\nthe hospitals of the world.\"\n' And yet Lister was big enough to\nacknowledge publicly that anything\nand everything be had aocompllshM\nwas due to the Inspiration he received\nin reading Pasteur's \"Researches on\nI'ut refaction.\"\nIt la only fitting, than, that ln this\nhundredth anniversary, the world\nshould show reverenee to the memory\nof a mail whose k\u00a9ensigntednesa has\nsaved thousands of individuals from\nthe agony a&d death of gangrene.\/\nHOUSEKEEPER   QUITS\nPRINCES RI8BORQUOH, England.\nA prll 4.\u2014Mrs. Graham, housekeeper\nat Chennera, who has become known\nas the \"minister of the Interior,\" because of her job of helping keep the\nprime minister fit by Ihe \u00abv\u00b0per food,\nhas decided to retire after many years\nof* service* in one branch or another\nof the government.\nShe has served under Premiers\nLloyd Oeorge, Ramsay MacDopald and\nStanley Baldwin. She has declined\nto write reminiscences of the great\nmen ahe haa served as guests and\nresidents of the prime mlnfter's coun-\niry place.\nCHAPEL   IN   DANGER\nCAMBRIDGE) UNIVERSITY, April\n4.\u2014Famed King College chapel, built\nnearly 50<3 years ago by King\nHenry VI. is in darfger of collapse\nthrough the gradual deroy of foundations,  according  to  building   experts.\nCHILD   USED   BY THIEVES\nTORONTO. April 4,\u2014Several homes\nhave-been broken Into In the east end\nof  the   _Ry   by   thieves   who   use   axL\nsmall boy or girl.   Tha child Is puahtd j boxes   equipped   wl.h   looks.\nthrough the milk chute and, dropping\nioor   for\nthe ihiev this, residents\nIn the locality are having, thrtr milk\nMESTUHt\nMILK\n___ _____ _H HEI\nKecogn^edasthe\nstmidM\njr.\nUNSWEETENED\nQUALITY\nVXMBflBT\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure yonr bill*\nof liuilding Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS & SON\nIt IS onlr fair to nay that ths\nFinancial Post regard*,the new minister vary highly, and rates him as\na   \"flmt\"\nCertainly, thing-, sre very different\nfrom the days when Ron. Jacques Bureau, Hon. J. P. A. Cardln, and ths\nlata Bon. O. H. Boivln ln turn guided\nthe customs administration. Premier\nft   preoccupation   was   to   *tand\nFORTUNATELY, CONTEMPt FOR\nPARLIAMENT ISN'T PUNISHAB-E\nIF* TOTJ JUST FEEL IT.\nCorrect this sentence: \"If you will\nwait until after lunch,\" said the husband, 'TU he delighted to (0 shopping with you.\"\nThe moBt thrilling part of the atory\nIs where the muaic stops and the\nannouncer  begins to Jabber.\noff Investigation\u2014and morale of ths\ndepartment suffered from the knowledge that venal public servants were\nprotected and honest and efficient\nones   penalized,\n(The Daily  News of April 6. 1\u00bb17.)\nBorn, at Well-wet Fu, North  Honan,  China,   on  April  4, to  Dr.   and\nMrs.   F.   M.  Auld,   a  daughter.\n.   .   \u2022\nMiss Edna Whiting will leave tomorrow morning for Quebec, by way\nof Spokane, Chicago, Toronto and\nMontreal.\n\u2022   .   \u2022\nDr. and Mr*. F. M. Auld will sail\nfrom  Shanghai on June 9 .for Vancouver,  en  route  to  Nelson.\nI \u2666\u2022\u2022\nPte. D. J. McAlman, who returned\nto the city Tuesday night, has been\nrecommended to the attorney-general\nfor the post of game warden, by the\nNelson returned soldier* aid 'committee.\nNEW YORK. April 4*\u2014There's big\nmoney in teaching bridge. It is not\nunusual for an expert to make $1000\na week. Oroup demonstrations cost\n$275 an hour. One expert refused\n$1000   for   an   hour's   lesson.\nMake House Cleaning\na Pleasure\nBy using our Mops and Polishers. Grey bristle and string\nWall Sweeps, string Floor Dusters, all wire fastened.\nQ-Cedar, Chan and Twin Floor Dusters, string Deck Mops,\nhair Floor Brushes, Corn Brooms.\nCream and liquid Furniture Polish. Silver, Stone and\nMetal Polish. Chan, Linoleo, Rex and Jphnsoa's Paster\nand Liquid Floor Wax.- Johnson's Clean Floor 6, IB and\n25 pound Floor Polishing Brushes.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholessls   snd   R-rt.il   Quality   Hardwars\nNELSON PHONE 21\nU. C\n*\nhnowicmtf\n\u25a0\nOVERLAND\nTS     .    ..\n\\\n..... .   ..        ,\nNOW\u2014an Overland Whippet SIX!\nA car that combines all the engineering advances of the Whippet\nwith outstanding big-car merits hitherto limited to cars of-twice its price.\nGracefully distinctive -body styles-\nroomy armchair comfort\u2014tbe safety of\n4-wheel brakes\u2014remarkable economy\nof operation \u2014 performance without\nprecedent in a car of its size and\nweight.\nThe Whippet Six will do over 55\nmile* an hour as easily, as smoothly,\naa effortlessly as a Limited Train\u2014will\npick up from 5 to 30 miles an hour in\n114 seconds.\nPresented in six beautiful body\nstyles\u2014at a price so low that only the\ngreat popularity of the Whippet line\nmakes it possible.\nSee the Whippet Six\u2014compare it\npoint for point with the value others\noffer \u2014 then you will understand\nwhat Wiljys-Oyerland \"Engineering\nLeadership\" means to the light six\nbuyer.\n%015\nCoupe SIMS;\nI\nWHIPPET\nSIX COACH\nSedan   tl.US;\nTourlnt WAV\nRoadster tl.050;\nLandau $\/,!\u00ab.\nWHIPPET rOVR COACH S19S; Touring- WW;\nCoupe %79S; Roadster tttl; Sedan $9~M; Landau %HO.\nAll Prices F.O.B. factory, Toronto. Sales Tax Extra.\nSo Excise Tax'.\n\\ \u2022\nCAPITOL   MOTORS\nVernon Street, Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 65\n\u25a0_____\u25a0\n \" \u00a5HI NILSON KHLT NlWfl, TUESDAY MOENING, APRIL 5, 1927\n________\nIP\nThis Neat Model Shown in\nRose Blush Kid and Fancy\nReptile Trim.\nPrice $8.50\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeader* in Footfashion\nPotsK*\nBeans\nBnloyed^^\nsilks   by      A\nsnd    eld,\ntly cooked,\nstay to digest, nu-\nMUous, eoonomlcsl\nsnd ready to serve.\nTomato, Chili or\nPlain Sauce.\nTRY A CLASSIFIED AD.\n | IWINTEfl FAIR\nTO BE WITHIN    AT MEEK\nEU\nArt Registering Brands in East\nKootenay; Will War On\nHones\nCRANBROOK, B.CV April _.\u2014T. P.\nMcXtnile .Krnxli.tr comrnlitl-jner, along\nwith Mr. Brown ot Nelson, assistant\ncotti miss loner, left on Sunday, after a\nvlift to this district and the Windermere, looking Into matters pertaining\nto the administration of tNe rangei.\nWhile In the city, Mr. McKenrie conr\nferred with E H. Small, Indian agenf,\non the matter of Indians and thelr-olH\naervanoe of' the rang* laws, nnd alto allegations matte by stock men\nthat tlw Indians were selling beef for\nconsumption In the district without\nany check, which, on investigation,\nhowever, did not prove to be correct.\nMr. MoKensle was also aawared that\nthe Indian stock owners have been ln\ntbe habit of registering their brands,\n\u2022contrary to the opinion expressed at\nthe meeting last week of the stock\nmen   of  the  district.\nW*. McVenxle states that arrangements have been made for the forestry branch to make a start ln ridding\nthe ranges of stallion* at large, and\ntwo riders will start in to shoot them\non slgkt Steps will also be taken to\nget a better enforcement of the Brands\nact, particularly as to the inspection\nof  hides  shipped out.\nWhile tn the Windermere. Mr. McKensie held a meeting not only with\ntbe white stock men, but, on the request of the Indians themselves, he\nmet them and went Into range matters particularly affecting th* Indians\non   Shuswap and Kootenay  reserves.\nUnited Church Ladies\nat Cranbrook Hold\nSocial Tea and Sale\nCRANBROOK. B.C., April 4\u2014A successful and largely attended afternoon\nsocial function was held on Saturday\nat the home of Mrs. F, M. MacPher-\nson, Garden avenue, taking the form\nof a daffodil tea in aid of the United\nChurch Ladles' aid. The hostesB of\nthe afternoon was assisted In the reception of the guests by Mrs. J. M.\nClark and Mrs. Bryce Wallace, while\nMrs. J. T. Barvls and Mrs. T. H. De-\nBan, the president and vice-president,\nwere among those assisting in dispensing the afternoon tea- Candy and\nflowers  were also  on  .tale.\t\nAttendance Not So Large; Exhibits Are Good; Prizes\nAwarded\n^miillH\nartsyouright   ^\n'tortheday-*-\nCHASE LSANBORNS\nGRAY CRBBK, B.C.. April 4. \u2014 A\nwinter fair was hatd in the Gray\nCreek hall on March 28. The attendance and number of exhibits were net\nso great as last year owing to the\nroad to Crawford Bay b\u00abing impossible\nfor cars. It waa a cheerful gathering.\nMany attended from Crawford Bay\nand Sunshine Bay. The judges were\n\u2022E. C. Hune, district horticulturist, who\n.Judged the apples and vegetables; and\nMrs-. Hugh Roes of Nelson, who\njudged the canning, cooking and\nneedlework. Both judges consulted as\nto the art sketches and photographs.\nA turkey shoot was held and proved\na great draw. A wood sawing competition for men, and a nail driving\ncompetition for ladles were also very\npopular.\nThe class for sketches was a very\nintereetlng one, and the prise homemade toy was most Ingenious. It was\na model tavern made In bark about IS\nto 18 Inches high. A little garden of\nmoss and flowers waa In front, with\na pen of pigs In the corner, and the\nwindows had' curtains. The whole effect was extremely pretty.\nPhotographs- Oood\nThe winter photographs were all\ngood and fully displayed the beauty ef\nthe country In snow and  sunshine.\nTea was served by Mrs. O'Neill and\nhelpers.     The  prises   were   distributed\nby Mrs.  K.  Francis of Crawford Bay.\nPrix* list\nPlate of apples\u2014A. W. Lymberg,\nfirst;   L.   Clark,  second.\nPlate of potatoes\u2014M Benthlen,\nfirst; D. Dale, second.\nCarrots,   long\u2014Mrs.   Gooch,   first.\n.Carrots,   short\u2014Mrs.   Gooch,   first.\nBeets,  long\u2014W.  Mear,  first.\nHam\u2014L.  Bourne, first.\nEggs,  white, Mrs. Fisher, first.\nEggs,   brown\u2014T.   O'Neill,   first\nButter\u2014D.   Dale,   first.\nBottle of Cherries *\u2014 Mrs. Lymbery,\nflint.\nJams \u2014 L. Bourne, first; Mrs. Sib-\nbald,   second.\nCanned chicken \u2014 Mrs. W. Fraser,\nfirst.\nWhite bread \u2014 Mrs. Gooch, first;\nMrs. O'Neill, second.\nApple  pie\u2014Mrs.  Slbbald,  first.\nLayer cake\u2014Mrs. L. Clark, first;\nMrs. Oliver, second.\nPlain cookies\u2014Mrs. T. O'Neill, first. J\nNeedlework, color \u2014 Mrs. Fraser,\nfirst.\nNeedlework, white \u2014 Mrs. O'Neill,\nfirst;   Mrs.  Fraser,  second.\nKnitted   socks\u2014D.  Dale,   first.\nSketches\u2014Major Gooch, first; W?\nEayllsp,   second.\nolographs\u2014Mra.   Lymbery,   first.\nmemade   toy   \u2014   A-   W,   Lymbery,\nfirst *\nOhJldren's   BlSttun\nWater color\u2014Barbara Surge, first;\nDorothy Oliver, second.\nPencil    drawing   \u2014>   Dorothy   Oliver,\nSEAL BRAND COFFEE   fa\ntfCbffeJl\nes.\nI\nWINDOW CARDS\nThat Attract the Eye\nA Window Card to be effective must draw attention.\n, Good Typography is essential.\n. Bright Colors of Cardboard\nand Ink are often used to advantage.\nWe have a big stock of Colored Cardboard for the purpose.\nThe Daily News Job Dept\n.   Phone 144 (Two Lines)       ?\nPfUNTlNG-RVUNG-BOOKBlNDlNG\nOBEY\nuols_.\nThis   column  Is balsa; eond'\nby Mrs. M. J. Visum,   All a*w*\nof  a   social   naitrrs, IBclufllisJPi*-\nsrivste Materials lasata\n rw. ntcaill\nsocial \"nsurrs,  IBclulili\noepUoaa\npersona! .^^^^^^^^^\naspMir la this oolumn. Ti\n_raV\nItemB. msrrlssw, ace\ni  this oolumn.   Ta'~~'\nVigneux at h.r Sons.\nHiss Jon Glllwr, Vlctorls street.\nleft yesterday morntat via Iks Great\nNorthern for Mm,, Idaho, wkars\naha will vl.lt Dr. aad Mra C, Franklin Magee and al*o friends IB Spokane\nMra. W, C. MotleJ- of Bonnington\nspent  yesterday Is town.\nV.   J.   Kostancle  of Crescent   Valley\nwas a visitor to Nelson yesterday.\n...\nMra Q. T. Ironside of Sllvertos reft\nyest.rday- morning; Vr Her lioms after\nweca-cadir^^^^^^^^^^\n%.\nMiss   Doreen   Cherrlngton   of   Roee-\nland  spent  the week-end ln Nelson..\nMrs! Charles Holt of Balfour waa a\nTlsltor to town yesterday.\n\u2666    \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.   A.  J.   Watson  of Kootenay  B_,y\nwag. a visitor to the olty yeateada^.\nW.   sf.   Ltngle,   lumberman  of   Boss\nland, spent the week-end n\n    today\nn town, and\nCity.\".\n\\ leaves   today   for  t-Qocai\nMis* Nellie UeChLce, Kerr apartments, who Is on leave of ahaence.\nwas the recipient of a handsotae h*v\nbox yesterday afternoon, presented to\nher by J. It Hunter, manager of the\nNelson Hardware company, on behalf\nef the staff. Miss McClure will leave\nthis morning for Creston, to spend a\nmonth with friend*, \"en sottte to the\neast,, where she will visit her slater\nand brother.\nT. B. Hall of Mirror Lake left for\nSlocan City yesterday\nRobert    Burgess    of   Koch's\nspent  yesterday  in town.\nSiding\nfirst;   Barbara Surge,, second.\"\nWriting   \u2014   Barbara   Burge,\nfirst;\nAnnie Adams, second.\nHewing,   plain\u2014Roste  Adams,  first.\nNeedlework\u2014Barbara     Burge,     first;\nGwen  Burge,  second.\nHomemade   toy   \u2014   Bobby   Francis.\nfirst\n\u25a0paolal Pri.es\nMight -i   number  of   points   \u2014   Mrs.\nGooch  tied  with Mrs. Lymbery.\nBest display of exhibits, considering\nquality and number\u2014I)   Dale.\nMra.   A.   T*   Garland  of   Kaslo   is\nvisitor  ln   Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Prank Hill. Kerr\napartments,  spent Sunday In Procter.\n* *   *\nNichol Thompson of Vancouver was\na visitor to town Sunday.\n# a   *\nMrs. K. R. Redpath'g home on Victoria street was the meeting place of\nMrs. Fred H. Graham's circle of St.\nSaviour'*, yesterday afternoon, when\nthose attending were Mrs. W. J. Ast-\nley, Mrs. T. E. Maddock, Mrs.,, (.surg.-\nHorstegd, Mrs. W. T. Fotltffrlnghum.\nMrs, A. B. Sharp, Mrs. Ernest Steel-\nMrs. Gerald Reee, Mrs. A. J. Dunnett.'\nMra. F. R. Prltchard, Mrs. A, B. Ben-!\nnett, Mrs. F. C. Smith, Mrs. Harry\nGore, Mrs. William Rockcllffe, Mrs.\nC.  R.  Hamilton  and  Mrs.  p.  Q.  Morey.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nRev. 3. S. Mahood \"f Queens Bay\nspent  yesterday In Nslson.\n* \u2022 -. *\nMlsa L. Heasman leaves tomorrow\nTor Saskatoon.\n* \u2022   \u00bb'\nMrs. John McCallum' of Kootenay\nBay, who has been' a Nelson- visitor\nsince Friday, left yesterday afternoon\nfor her home, accompanied by Mrs. J.\nLeslie, and her daughter, who will be\nher guests  for some time.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. L. Burtt, principal of the Procter\nschool, was a visitor Jo the city over\nthe  week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nVictor   Erlck.son   of   Sllverton   spent\nthe  week-end  ln  Nelson.\n\u00bb   \u25a0\nand \"...__\nwere in  town   'estirday en route from\nTrail to their home in Kootenay Bay.\nC.     NorrlS    of    HHverton\nerday  I\nNelson.\n9U Baker Street.  Phone tOO.\nEASTER FROCKS\nAre Wonderfully Diversified\nEach creation, whether plain or fanciful, seems to strike some new\nnote in style preferred that gives each garment a distinction that\ncould hardly be attained in a season of lew style vanity that we\nhave this spring. The season's favorites are here in every wanted\ncolor. Model garments that will not be duplicated. They come in\nFlat Crepes, Georgettes' and Crepe-Back-Satins, and in ail the new\nspring shades. Sizes and styles for every figure and are reasonably\npriced for such beautiful garments. See these today, at f 19,50 TO\n965.00 EACH. 3____________|\nNew Tailored Suits\n$25.00 to $59.00 Each\nSmartly tailored Suits of All-Wool Tweeds or Poiret Twills. Boyish\nCoats with straight or rounded curves and one or two button styles.\nWrap-around or plain tailored Skirts. Sizes 16,18 and 20. PRICED\nAT 925.00, f 35.06, f 45.60 TO S59.66 EACH.\nturned  yesterday morning after week'\nending In  \" '\nLaborite's Side of\nBeer Bill Defeated\nin Manitoba House\nHewitt,  Kootenay   representa-\n;lal   house,   left\n\u25a0WINNIPEG, April 4.\u2014The sale of\nbeer bill, prepared by the Joint committee of veterans of Winnipeg, which\nasked for the sale of beer by the\nglass In licenced premises under\ngovernment control, and sponsored in\nthe house by C. A. Tanner, Labor,\nKUdonan-St. Andrews, was killed In\nthe second reading ln the legislature this afternoon.\nIn its place the government has\nintroduced a plebiscite act known as\nbill No- 189, which calls for a referendum on modification of the present\nliquor control act, which would permit the sale of beer by the glass and\nthe establishment of a \"cash and\ncarry\" -system.\nToday Mr. Tanner asked permission\nto withdraw his bill, but Mapor F.\nG. Taylor, Conservative leader, objected, declaring the Labor member\nwas \"just playing Into the hands ol\ni lii> government, which now was In a\n\"hole.\"\nThe bill then came up for Becond\nreading and was rejected by an overwhelming vote.\nLowden Is Possible\nCandidate for Honors\nin Presidential Race\nDES MOINES, la., April 4.\u2014Acting\non the assurance from former Governor Frank C. Lowden that ha would\ngive serious consideration to a re\nquest that\" he seek tho Republican\nnomination for present, \"If a suffl-\n\u25a0rient number of agricultural states\nln the middle .west demand It,\"\ngroup of Iowa legislators, returning\nfrom Illinois today, announced it\nwould at once perfect an organisation of 11 states for a Lowden boom.\nThe firm that has not suf-\n ficient telephone facilities is shutting the\ndoor in the face of\nbusiness.!\n\u2022 i*\nBRITISHiCOLUMBIA TELEfHONEjCO:\nK.   J.       __\nlive   of   a   coast   ftnancL.   \t\nyesterday   for  Trail   arid  Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nColonel and Mr*.. ..\u00ab\u00a3*-V. Allen and\nMr\u201e and Mrs. Q:' V. Melrose have\ntaken up residence in the Wasson\nhouse on  the  north shore. y\nBr. Arthur of Sudbury, Ont., who\nhas been spending the past few months\nwith his brother. Dr. E. C. Arthur,\nleft last night for the coast cities,\nwhere he will spend a couple of\nweeks.\nW. J. McLean 6f Trail spent a few\ndays ln this city, visiting hfs parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs. H. J. McLean.\nMrs. P*. R. Smith and Mrs. P. H.\nKirby, who have been visiting their\nsister, Mrs. A. 0. Lane, Delbruck\nstreet, left .Saturday morning for\ntheir home  in Kimberley.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Clarice Calvert, who has been\n.pending the past couple of weeks In\ntin- city visiting relatives and friends,\nleft for her horns ln Kaslo yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nW. Love has left for Saint John.\nN.B., whence he will sail, April 13, on\nthe Metagama for Glasgow, Scotland,\nwhere he will attend university.\n\u25a0  \u25a0\u2022   \u2022\nD. H; Sherman, recently of Shanghai, has arrived to make his home\nwith his parents, Captain and Mrs.\nSherman  or itoswell.\n\u2022 . -*       s\nMff. N. M. Cummins, who spent the\nrve-i'k-end in Nelson the guest of Mr.\ni nd Mrs. Douglas Cummins, Cnrbon-\nate atreet, left Sunday for Kaslo, to\nbe the guest of her daughter and son-\nin-law, Mr. find Mrs. Ernest Hacking.\nt -*    \u2022\nMrs*. A- B. Shannon, wlfo of A B.\nShann6n of Perndale Park, who has\nbeen receiving treatment at Kootenay\nLake General hospital for a broken\nleg, left yesterday for the home of\n'her daughter, Mrs. A. Wfgg, Silica\nstreet.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAt a quiet wedding'at the home of\nJohn A. Smith, 215 Silica street, at 7\no'clock last night, Mlsi Ida Smith became the bride of ajHj Christopher of\nVancouver, Rev. W. (aTMawhlnney performing the ceremony. * Jolin A. Smith\nand Mlsa Annie Smith, brother and\nsinter, respectively, of the bride, were\nwitnesses. Following the ceremony\nthe co-topic left on the coast train for\nVancouver,   where  th|y   will   reside.\n\u2022 \u2666    \u2022\nMils Helen Wilson of Spokane, formerly of Nelson, la the guest of Miss\nArnie Smith, 215 'Silica street Miss\nWilson came to Nelson to attend the\nmarriage of Miss Smith's sister, Ida,\nto  John  Christopher  last  night.\nMixed Marriages\nDeplored by the\nCatholic Church\nTORONTO, April I\u2014That mixed\nmarriages are deplored by tha Roman\nCatholic church and are a fruitful\nsource of leakage from'the household\nof the faith, was the declaration of\nRev. Dr. ORelltey, preaching in St.\nMichael's cath-sdml on' \"Mixed Marriages.\" \"Good eld Catholic names\nmean nothing today,\"' he declared,\n\"polely threugh. the los* to the church\nof the children' of the mixed union.\"\nIn ah investigation', _\u00abade recently\nby an American exehnishop of 450\nfamilies of mixed marriages, 10 per\ncent only have remained steadfast to\nthe Catholic church. \"There is do\nreason ln the world,\" he emphasized,\n\"why Catholic young men and women\nshould not seek mates of their -own\nreligion In marriage, ft is only the\nvery rare exception where a mixed\nmarriage has turned out happy,\" be\ndeclared.\nFRUITYALE PUPILS\nRANKED FOR MONTH\nP-RUITVALE, B.C., April 4. \u2014 Tha\nfollowing is the result of March examinations at Frultvale school:\nMvisaoD. I.\nGrade VIII.\u2014-Mario-. Christie, Leslie\nKnowler, Dan Skinner (tie), Gilbert\nMason.\nGrade VII.\u2014Willie Williams. Helen\nAffleck. Llewellyn Christie, Charlie\nWillis nw.\nG-rada VI. \u2014 James Davis, Alex\nWebster, Fred Cole, Winnie Mason,\nTom   Win-,,*\nGrade V. \u2014 Oliver Grieve. Bertha\nMason, < Adelia Nlpkow, Tom Moon,\nRite   Btosnoff   (unranked),\nPerfect Attend ence\nHelen Affleck, Gilbert Mason, Fred\nOo_e, James Davis, Tom \"Wilcox, Bertha Mason, Winnie Mason, Willie\nWilliams, Charlie Williams. Alex Web\nster.\nKASLO NOTES\nKASLO, B.C., April 4. \u2014 Herbert\nHarrop of Harrop spent the week-end\nin town.\nH. L. Lindsay arrived In town Friday night after having spent the winter in California. Mr. Lindsay left\nby launch, Sunday, for his ranch at\nJohnson's Landing.\nH. L, Batten of Vancouver, engineer for the Victoria Syndicate, is\na business visitor to town. He is accompanied by bis wife and two children.\nJames Holt is down from the Day*\nbreak mine for a few days.\nMr. and Mrs. Heffernan of Mirror\nLake passed through, Saturday, on\ntheir way home from Poplar, where\nMrs.   Heffernan   has   spent   a   conple\nii vision   II.\nCInnon,   teacher.\nMiss   J.   McKInni   .   \t\nGrade fV.\u2014Jay Skinner. Helen Mor\ni'lson, Bessie Mason, Robert Davis,\nUnset   Knowler,   Roy  Edinger\nGrade HI. \u2014 Elliott Grieve, Rynald\nNlpkow.   Philip   Stposknoff.\nGrade II. \u2014 Florence Young, Albert Bath, Louise Bath, Harold Moon,\nDuncan   Barcley   (absent).\nGrade  I.\u2014-Sella Nlpkow.\nHospital Association\nat Inoermere Is in\nGood Financial Shape\nINVERMERE, B.C., Aoril 4, \u2014 The\nseventeenth annual meeting of the\nWindermere District Hospital association was held this week. The balanc<;\nsheet showed a 'remarkably good financial position, there being a surplus\nof  over  $11,000.\nOnly a slight change was made In\nthe officers,. A. Ernest Fisher being\nelected president, E. M. Sandilandw\nvice-president, Peter Mitchell Stod-\n\u00ablart secretary-treaaurer, with A Ash-\nworth and William Weir as auditors.\nThe other mrmbers of the committee\nof management are Mm E. M. Sundl-\nlands, Mrs. Basil G. Hamilton, Mi A.\n.1. Dobble, E. G. Erickson, A. M. Chl*-\nholm. Dr. F. E. Coy, R. G. Newton,\nA. McN. Robb, W. Howard Cleland and\nV. C. Stockdale.\nHis honor, H. Randolph Bruce, F It\nG.S., lieutenant-governor of the province, Who was one of the founders of\nthe hospital, was unanimously elected\nhonorary president.\nROBERT BALLANTYNE\nDIES, WINDERMERE\nINVllRMEKE, B.C., April 4. \u2014 Od\nThursday, March 31, after a long III-'\nless, Robert Ballantyne passed away\nit iTemter ranch, near Windermere,\nhe home of his daughter, Mrs. Jarnen\n\u2022Jorhand. His widow, a daughter, Mr*,\nlolland of Britannia Beach, B.C., two\nuna, James residing at San Gudo, AI-\nerta,    a\/I    Robert,    Calgary,    survive\nof   weeks   with   her   husband,   who  ts\nInterested hi  the  Bullock mines.\nR.  G,  Gallup  came   in  from Howser     j\non    Saturday's    boat\nTom   Wilson    is   down   from   Poplar\nund will spend a few days ln town,\nE.  C.   Hunt  of   Nelson  was In  town\nfor a  tew days to  supervise  spraying  -\nIn several local orchards.\nJ.   C.   Roberta  arrived   ln   town   Saturday   night   from   his   home   La   Port-  .   ,\nland,  Ore.    Mr.   Roberts  will  go  to   the\nDaybreak   mine   un   a   tour   of   Ihspec-     '\ntron. *     ,\nA.   G.   Larson   made   the   trip   to   tha'\nFlorence    mini*,    by    launch,    Saturday,\nreturning .to the  city to spend Sunday,\nand    left    Monday     morning    for    the* \"\nLucky Jime mine, where there  is to be<.\na   meeting   of   the  directors.\nC.  Jonsbcrg of Nelson spent Sunday \u25a0  -\nIn town.\nThe bake unle. held by tbe ladles'- - i1\nsld of tli_ United church, Uatu-rdw.. M\nafternoon,  was a financial success.      ..'\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\nLADIES!!\nYour Last Year's Spring\nCoat can be REFRESHED\nby CLEANING or DYEING\nH. K. FOOT\nHigh-Class  Dyer s\\ Cleensr\nFAIRVIEW   \u2022   NELSON,   B.   C.\n.in,\nborn   nt   Glass-\nMr.     Itllllilllt VII.\nord, Scotland, and with his wife,\n\u00bbfter retiring from his work as an accountant, moved to Canada, residing\n\"Or some yeiirs nrai' Stettler, Alberta,\n'n earlier life he was one of Scot-\nand's champion amateur athletes. For\nnsny years pJi-t his chief dt'lftfht and\n-treat pleasure has been a huge garden\nwhich h<* kept In a beautiful state of\ncultivation. Winning many prises as\nresult of nls labor. Mr Bnliantyne's\nfuneral   was   held   Saturday.\nBALFOUR NOTES\nBALFOUR. B.C., April 4. \u2014 The\nBalfour health committee gave a tea\nat tbe home of Mrs. F. M. Gates on\nThursday: March 11. in honor of Miss\nGarood, health nor'se. Those present\nwere very interested In a talk given\nhy Miss Garood of her travels in various lands, and they also enjoyed the\npiano solo alfo try Mrs. Seal. Following this Mrs. Cooper, Mrs. Conrad,\nMiss Garood and Mrs. Noakes plowed\nthe gnetits hy their singing. They\nwere accompanied on the piano by\nMrs. Seal and- Miss McQueen.\nA. G. R. Strickland has returned to\nhis ranch here' from the French Riviera, where he wintered with his\nmother.\nMrs. Heuston and small son have\nreturned  to  their ranch from Calgary.\nWomen\nThank\nScience for this new hygienic pad that discards\neasily as tissue \u2014 no\nlaundry\nBy BTLT.RN J. BTOCKI\u2014JfQ\nTHERE is now an exqirisitt \u00abt-r-\nc\u00ab*sor to the old-time \"sanitary\npsd.** A new way that offers far\ngreater protection. A way that ends\nthe old problem of disposal.\nEight in  10 better-dan womers\nnow n*e \"KOTEX.\"\nl\/ Discard* like tiume. No laondry..\nr     No embsrrassment.\nFive times ss absorbent a* ordinary cotton pads.\nDeodorizes, tha* eadiag ell dangrc\nof offending.\nObtainable at all drug aad department stores simply by raying\n\"KOTEX.*\" You ask for h wkhdatj\nhesitancy.\nBe sure to get tbe (-\"amine. Only.\nKotex itself is \"_tt\" Kotex. IafaiiJ\nnefs to yourself, try h.\nKOT6X\nlike\n_.\u201e,.\nFar\nInland\nA family saying goodbye to\nVancouver and going a Ion***\nway into the interior of British\nColumbia are taking a case of\nPacific Milk, we are informed,\nwith their supplies. We have\nreceived three or four letters\nfrom patrons who have said\nthey h. 1 bought a case of this\ngood milk and naturally when\nwe get such information it\ncauses elation.\nPACIFIC MM\nHead Office, Vancouver\nFactories  st   Lsdnsr   snd   Abbstafsrd\nCANADIAN j^, PACIFIC\nSHAsSMPS \u25a0\u25a0J\"*-**-.'. LIM.H'.'\nSt John to Europe\nTO  LIVERPOOL\nApr. 1 r.  Mlnnsdosa\n\u2022Apr. S3     Montelara\nTO   CHERBOUnG-80UTHAMI*TON-\nANTWERP\nApr. 14      Montnalrn .\nTO   CHERBOURG-SOUTHAMPTON\nApr. 1G   (From   N.Y.) .Emp of Scotland\nTO  LONDON\nApr. 21     Marlooa -\u25a0_\u25a0\nTO   GLASGOW \"*\u25a0\nApr. IS Meta-rama '\n-\u2014Culls at  Belfast.  -\nI    Csfivanisnt   Dirsct   (tsrviss   ts   T\n! Irslsnd.    No Transfer*. |\nSUMMER SAILINGS\nOiBBisian Aprtl m\nBerth reservations can Bow bs mads,.\nAak about new Tourist Third Cabin.\nPull   detail*,   with   rates,   from  sal*\nagent, or write\nJ.   a   CABTaB\n\u25a0 i\nFREE\n-COM!  \u00bb  AJID   T\u00bbT\nOur_ special   prpe  tKbacoo.    Many  ha\u00bb\u00ab\nSpain is seeking to ourb the crea\ntion of new title* to satisfy ambl\nUOgJj   \u00ab\u00ab   (ht-WC-flflk     __^\t\n' I used it for ysara. and never lire of tt\n- hClld.    cool,    fra\ngreat   and'   alto,\ntether  satisfying\n\u25a0\nNELSON TO LONGBEACH\nMAIL, PASSENGER AND TRANSFER SERVICE\nIs now in operation. Phone all orders to Nelson-\nTransfer Co., Ltd., Phone 35, and they will receive prompt\nand courteous attention.\nNELSON  TOANSFER  CO.,  LTD.\n___ __._ ___ II MoLaugWla   *na  Cb..i*l.l   >\u25a0 .lu*   0\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb>*a*   T_|\nDI TQf pg J   COR   VERNON   AND  STANLEY  8TS.\n__________\u25a0\n p\u00bbf\u00ab Bbt\nTHE NBLSON DAILY NEWS, TTJ\nsr=\nTHE   UNDERSTANDING   HEART\nBy PETER B. KYNE\n*%\nDale's windows as they came Into\nth\u00ab yard and Garland want Immediately to tha door and knocked. Th\u00ab\nchallenge from within was sharp and\ninstantaneous.\n'\"Who's there? -Speak, or I'll fire\nthrough   the   door.\"\n\"Don't Too. be so dog-goned uppity,\ngirl\" the aheriff cried back at her\n\"There'a three 91* u**\u2014Sheriff Bent-\nisy, Deputy -Sheriff Nott and Ranger\nGarland.\"\nTfee door opened Imtantly and\nMonica Dale stood framed In the\nlight She was smiling at them in\nthe friendliest possible manner. \"Now,\nwhat do you want?\" she demanded.\n(To   Bo Continued.)\nTh* door opened and Monica stood fra med in the light. \"Now what do you want?\"\ndemanded smiling.\n 1 ACTION SO PAR\n\u2022rand,  a  young   ranger,   is   trane-\nto ths San Dimaa National For-\nmrt*.   Chief Ranger Casey wel-\nhim and tells him to beware of\na cheftM of  Monica  Dale, who acts\ni toe-tout on Bogus Peak.    Oarland I*\nUfletl by telephone the next morning\n\"  -Robert    Lee    Mason,   an   escape-\nis   being   hunted   with   blood-\nMonica   ts   a   friend  of   Ma-\nao   Casey   does  not   phone   hei\ni appears at  Monica's gate ln a\nof collapne.    She  hides  him and\n\u2022as  him,   and   riding  out  shoots  the\nbloodhounds who are trailing him.\npretends to  the sheriff she killed\ndoss   because   she    thought   they\n-  chasing  deer.     He   and   his   men\nto   the   lookout    station   and\ntreats    them    to    moonshine\nthey leave the thought of having\n\u25a0V ths   dogs   brings   tears   to   her\nThe new ranger appears and Induces himself  as  Anthony  Oarland.\ntalks   to   her   freely,   not   knowing\n,     son   Is   Inside.     He   loses  his  heart\nito  her  and   pities   her   for  her  lonely\n\u25a0life.    He tells her of his training as a\n.lawyer   and   his   ambition   to   become\n'{Chief forester.    She offers  to turn on\nf.   the radio so they can listen to a oon-\ncert  at   a   San   Francisco   hotel.      He\nhears someone  snoring  inside,  and accuses    Monica    of    sheltering    Mason.\nAfter  a  turbulent   scene,   Garland   as-\n.stires her he will not betray her.   She\n-shows her gratitude and after he has\n\u2022gone  directs   Mason  how   to  make  his\n.'escape.      The    sheriff    makes   another\n*\u2022*..   only   to   discover,   while   chatting\nwith Monica, that Bob Mason has ridden away on his horse.    He storms at\nthe  girl, but sh*  only laueha at him.\nThe   sheriff   meets   Garland,   and   they\nmake   plans   to   trap   Mason.     Garland\nlearns  Monica's  hlatory  from the sheriff, and is pleased  to discover that she\nI -comes from a  fine family.\nNOW  GO  ON  WITH  THE  STORT\nCHAPTER    XIII.\n\"Monica< has ftghtin' blood back of\nl*\u00abr,\"    tfab.  sheriff    njrr<*ri.    \"I    don*t\n[know   Anything   about    hfr    mother's\n\u25a0 people,   except   that   they   were  Ban-\n[ainfs\u2014and if she came from the Ban-\nJ ninfs   of    Shasta   Valley   she   came\n[irate   ffary   stock.    I   think   she   did.\n11 think h#r uncle was old Judge EUs-\n[ Worth Banning, a scholar, a good lawyer, and  a  gentleman.   He   was  superior Judge in Siskiyou for IB years,\n\u25a0mad   never   had   a   decision   reversed\non   him.\"\n\u2022We were talking about Bob Mason\nand his ranch and the prospect of\nlite marrying Monica,\" Garland reminded the sheriff. \"What happened\nto prevent that?\"\n\"Nobody knows. Perhaps Monica\n. Just figured she wouldn't marry him,\nalthough nobody knows that he even\nItaked her, although he was a danged\ntool If he didn't. Bob Mason was\nthe most likely prospect in the lot.\nHe'd been to business college down to\nSacramento, on account of his old\n\u25a0pan figuring there was more money\nIn bookkeeping than In cows. Bob\nhad a good job in Barramento, too.\n\"They tell me he was making a\nhvndred a month, but when his dad\ndied he come back to settle, up the estate and after that he never seemed to\ncare about  city  life  any  more.\n\"The old man left him pretty well\nfixed\u2014I think the estate waa appraised   at   $40.000\u2014and   Bob   bought\nHoney Valley and continued ln the\ncattle businesss, having sort of Inherited a forest reserve gracing permit from his father. Just about the;\ntime everybody wan wondering what\nthe devil made him so slow,about\nmarrying Monica Dale he ups and\nmarries old Jeff Harrington's girl over\nto Klamath Falls. Kelcey waa a town\ngirl, pretty as a picture but not any\nmore sensible or well balanced than a\nmagpie.\n\"They had a baby the first year\u2014a\nboy\u2014and seemed to be getting along\nright well until the superintendent ol\nthe Hercules crowd over on Dogwood\nFlats took to spending a lot of his\nspare time over to Honey Valley\nwhen Mason was off working cattle or\nbuying feeders. Folks got to talking,\nand somebody sent Mason an anonymous letter, so he -called upon, this\nhere superintendent\u2014the feller's name\nwas Grant Bardwell\u2014and told htm\nplain, ln the presence of two witnesses, that his visits to Honey Valley\nwas causing unseemly gossip; that It\ndidn't lie In the blood of the Masons\nto stand by and let their women get\ntalked about, and ln consequence he'd\nbe obliged if Mr. BardweU couM see\nhis way clear to cease his visits,\nthat if he couldn't, his next visit\nto Honey Valley would be his last\nVisit anywhere. BardweU took a\nchance,  and  Mason  tunneled  him.\"\n\"What did Monica Dale do after\nMason   married T*\n\"Monica Dale didn't see mu-SI. of\nMason after he married Kelcey Har\nrington. Folks said Kelcey was Jeal\nous of her old friendship for Mason.\nAt any rate Monica sold her cows to\nBob and kept away from Honey Valley.\n\"Last year she got a Job as lookout\non Bogus and moved up here. She\nbuilt that cabin herself\u2014said she\nwanted a house built the way she\nliked it, not the way Uncle Sam liked I\nit. She could do this because Bogus\nIsn't .In tbe iSan Dlmaa- The edge of\nthe reserve passes two hundred yards\nbelow her house.\n\"She's applied for a homestead of\nsix hundred and forty acres under th^\nStone and Timber act, the land being\nworthless for agricultural purposes,\nand aa soon as she's complied with the\nlaw I reckon she'll be given a patent\nto it by the Land Office.\"\n\"Do you suppose she was ln love\nwith Mason?\" Garland queried casually.\n\"Nobody knows. Anyhow, I don't.\nI think they were just good nelghl\nbora. llf*. was a likable feller and\nany girl would have liked blm as a\nfriend. He'd been mighty kind and\nneighborly to her at a time when meb-\nbe she needed  a helping hand.\"\n\"Well, 1 dare say she's trying to\ncatch even, Sheriff. Whether she Is\nor not, I'm for her. And what's mor-a.\nCONFERENCE   ON   SWINE\n, OTTAWA, April 4.\u2014The department of agriculture has called a conference for April 2- and 23 on the\nsubject of swine. Representatives of\nthe packers, the producers and the\ndepartment of agriculture are to be\nrepresented.\nCommittor. Looking\nInto   Campaign   Fund\nAffair Concludes Work\nVANCOUVER, April ..\u2014Having\nheard all the evidsnee available, the\nroyal oommlaoton investigating provincial campaign tunas closed nere'\nthis afternoon.\n\"We have1 regarded the character\nol the evidence that any other witnesses I might give, and cannot see\nhow It can .materially alfect that\nwhich ws havs.\" declared Mr. Justice\nMorrison, chalrmsn of ths commission. \"We have no necessity of prolonging the sittings, as we cannot\nconceive of anything else that might\nhe offered. w\"e wl!l close and re-\n\/port wlthout'delay to the government.\" '     *\nOCEAN FALLS TOT       ?\nIS DROWNED\nOCEAN FAU.S. B.C. April 4. \u2014\nGeoffrey Godding, ^aged \u00ab, was\ndrowned when he slipped and fell\nfrom a plank projecting over a pool\nnear his home here.\nA pocket knife that uses a discarded razor Wade to do Its work Includes In Us handle* a corkscrew,\nbottle opener, cigar cutter and nail\nfile and cleaner.\nGRANTS\nBest Procurable\n(THE OfUClNAL-\nPure Scotch Whisky\nRICHEST IN FINEST\nHIGHLAND   MALT\n\u00abhf tad ...mm* \u00bb\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0  l.\n-   \"M. Ousfniil, M*-\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nFive million dollars and some of\nthe leader* ln English literature and\ndrama are ready to enter the motion\npicture field to break down United\n(States supremacy. ',\n         II ii \u2014    \u25a0\u25a0!!       jl\nBird of paradise Is the' name of a\nfatally of birds found In New Guinea\nsnd ln th. neighboring islands ot the\nSooth Pacific. The aule bird la soled\nfur th* extraordinary* beauty and luster   of   Its   plumage. . *\nDo They Laugh at Your\n\"Skinny\" Body?\nNew Combination of\nYeast and Iron Puts on\nPounds of Weight in 3\nWeeks\u2014or pay nothing\n\"Gainsd 10 Poundt;\nSallowness Gone\"\n\"IROMZ8D YEAST _> -Saved coast\t\nentirely aad h_ cleared up my ..How cam\neexioa.   I here gained aboet  10 poeodi.  1\nilie.e  it is a wonderful tonic'*\u2014 H. S. &,\nPaepeMac Wart, Que.\nThink of itl I to II pound, of good firm fleer,\nsddsd in I to I weeks! Tour compl.zion\nmade dear aad youthful\u2014_1 Is s angle\ncouth UMt\u2014 rot of nice, plesMst ubltu of\nIROHIZBD IIASTI\nanswer if. _\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb>.  UtORUI\nI Be. blood and body b-\nBot hew see. it work as quickly?   Th.\nUBD TBA1T osa-\ni buudinf properties\nof yssst and Iran in . new co_r.ntr.leJ (ons.\nB your tdris is pinply, sallow or Msfcky,\ntak. IBOIflZED TEAST today\u2014sad is. the\n_>rvwioo> chance to a clear. fr.r_. girlish\ncompletion. If your weight Is below normal,\nstart laOHIZKD TEAST mm\u2014snd sots\nbow Bound, are gained, bellows ffil sat snd\nsmooth, defltatful curves result Give. r_\nth. w.ij_t-b_ldiag beaetts of oed liver oil.\nGet tKOrTIZED TIAIT today. K r-l.u-ut-\ntssting race tablets to a bold.. AbrotoWly\nsafe te tak., containing no harmful drugs.\nTry It aa \"Monay-Baek\"\nG. today t. say drag star.. Ost a full -ti\u00bb\ntrastsuat. If jro >r> aet delighted, \u00ab,\u00bb \/or\nyour money tse*. If iscoBv.slSBt te TMnr\nrrom drsgit snd 111* to THK IMOtniSO\nTIAST CO., Fort Irl., Ost., Dsrt  11\u00ab O.\nI'm for that man Mason.   I hope we\ndon't catch him.\"\nThe sheriff was an honest man and\nvery human. \"I bops so. too, but\nthst ain't going to make me try any\nthe less to cAtch him,\" hs replied.\n\"Thlat's my Job and I aim to do my\nduty regardless of my personal aym-\npathles.\"\n\"The moon's up,\" Anthony Oarland\nreminded him a fow minutes later,\nbreaking a long silence during which\nboth men mt thinking of the tragedy\nln which they were now participants.\n\"Guess we can see our way down Bogus to the Forest Service trail.\"\nThey rose and, leading the horse,\nmads their way down to the trail.\nAfter following It halt a mile they\ncame across a member of the posse\nseated on the rump of a dead horse\nand calmly smoking a cigarette.\n\"I'm slttln' my horse ln tbs trail,\ntakln' a look down yonder Into the\nvalley, Sheriff,\" he explained, \"when\nMason -come rldln' down the trait on\nhorseback. At first I thought you\nwere comln'\u2014he had a horse the\nimage ot yours\u2014but when the Bight\not me caused him to turn off the trail\nand go atampedln' down-hill Into ths\nvalley I looked closer and aaw It must\nbe Mason. I yelled to him to stop\nand called him by name. He pulled\nup, sorted out a rifle beforo I could\nget mine out, and let my horse have It\n\"Wa rolled in the trail together, but\nI managed to Jump clear. Unfortunately my horse rolled over .on the\nscabbard with my rifle ln it, and I\nhad some delay gettln' the carcass off\nmy weapon. Meanwhile, Mason was\nakally-hootln- down Bogus like a dear,\ndodgln' in and out among the trees,\nand the range was pretty long before\nI got Into action.\n\"I emptied my magailne at him, but\ntho light was poor and goln' fast, and\nthe last I saw of Mason he was goln'\nfaster. .Before It got too dark\nsaw him streakln' across the floor\nof the valley and headed up Into the\ntimber to the  north.\"\nHe'll make for the lava battS over\nIn Modoc,\" the sheriff decided. \"I've\ngot to get to the nearest telephone\nand have the chief ranger warn the\nranger force up that way to be on the\nlookout for him. How far la It to your\nstation,    Garlandf\"\nAbout flvs miles, but by the time\nwe get there Mason will have passed\nthe station on the north fork of June-\nbug Creek. Hell try for the r'oreet\nService trail leading up Juhe-bug\u2014\nthe timber's too thick for him to ride\nacross country even ln the moonlight.\nIt's black as a pocket ln the heavy\ntimber, and the undergrowth Is very\nthick. ...\"..     .\nRanger Bolton and two forest\nguards are at June-bug station-juid If\nget word to them Immediately\nIjolton may bs able to intercept the\nman. I tell you he's got to rids the\nJune-bug trail. You had better telephone from the Bogus Lookout station.\nSheriff.\"\n\"Her phone Is out of order, Hanger.\"\n\"It wasn't out of order Oil* afternoon when I was there. I heard the\nbells ringing when headquarters was\ncatling other stations on tbe line. If\nit's out of order Monica Dele put It\nout of order\u2014and rm the boy who\ncan put it back In order.\"\n1*11 go back with you, Banger. I\nreckon I ought to apologise to that\ngirl anyhow, even it she ha* mads\na fool out of me. And while we're\nthere we might JoHy her Into giving\nus supper.\"\n\"I think 1*11 go, too,\" the recsatly\ndismounted member of the posse decided. \"Scenery's mighty poor diet\nfor a man that's been In the saddle\nIt    hours. Wbers's   your   horse,\nSheriff?\"\n\"He went dead lame on ma and besides he's beat out I left him tied on\ntop   of   the   hill   yonder.\"\n.\"How long ago?\"\n\"About II minutes sgo,\" ths *her-\n1ft lied glibly.\nThs man was relieved. \"I would\nhavs sworn Mason was rifling htm,\nIt hs hadn't (one by here mors than\nan hour ago,\" he declared-\nHe picked himself up stiffly, ths\nweary sheriff mounted Garland's\nhorse, and the trio proceeded up the\ntrail to the Bogus Lookout. There\nwa*   light   atreamlag   from   Monica\nlATTFinV and a srna^\nYVLfcJYLI payment down\ncjhis very day\nyou may enjoy a COM-\nthanks to the FcCeasy payment plan\nUnder the new F. & C. Easy Payment\nPlan, only weekly instalments of about $2.00\nstand between you and ths ownership of a\nsmooth-running CCM-   There is no longer\nany reason why you should not ride one this very day!\nThe \"down,\" or first, payment is small and need not\nworry you.\nChoose Your Model and Ride Before Night!\nWithout further waiting, you can walk into the nearest C C M dealer's, look over his stock of shiny new\nC-C-M's, and make your choice. The dealer will be pleased\nto extend you the special terms, which are easily arranged.' You can then mount your C-CM-, and glide\nsmoothly home or wherever else your fancy inclines.\nMany Years of Pleasure and Convenience\nWill Repay You\nThe purchase that you make today is one that will\nrepay you in years of service and pleasure. Your C-C*M -\nis built to retain its looks and to run smoothly for years.\nIts frame is made of the best seamless steel tubing, reinforced at every joint. Its enamelling is of quadruple\nthickness; its 20-year nickel-plating double-coated over\nrust-proof copper. Its working parts are watch-like in\naccuracy:\nIn short, nothing is skimped. It is a \"quality wheel\"\nwhich will bring you a good resale price if, at any time,\nyou desire to dispose of if.\nOnce again, remember\u2014there is no reason why you should\n, not ride one. this very day I\nCOM- Bicycles\n\/\n-\nCleveland-Red Bird-Massey\nPerfect-Columbia\nAnd Joycycles for Children\nA\nSave*\nand\nH.R. KITTO\nGunsmith, Ogy-Acetylene Welding, Etc\nNELSON AGENT FOR C. C. M. BICYCLES\nMost Modjels Carried in Stock\n ran nttsan rrAiiY news, Tuesday morning, sprit: ., im\nSenators and Bruins Cop Section Titles!\nJ, bowed\nTHREE TD ONE\nRangers on Short End in Terrific Game; Penaltiea.Are' -\nNumerous\nFREDERICKSON LEADS\nIN THtf BOSTON ATTACK\nRangers 'Lose   Out   Through\nHaving Too Many Men on\nthe Fence\nMADISON SQUARE GARDEN,\nN\u00bbw York, April 4.\u2014Th\u00ab Boston\ngrains toniflht won the champion-\n\u2022hip of tho Amorican group of\nftfw Notional Hockey league, by\n\u2022Mooting New York Rangoro by 3\nto 1, and tho two-gam* round by\ntho samo ocoro. Rangoro hold the\nBraina to a no-acoro tio in Booton\non Saturday night, but tooight\nthoy woro unable to hold the\nruah of tho  Bootomt-oa.\nBooton will now moot Ottawa\nSotiatoro In a fivo-game aeries\nfor tho National Hockey league\nchampionship and for tho much\nbattered and famous Stanley cup.\nBooton grabbed off victory tonight in a second-period onslaught, which netted them three\n*     ffOOilo.\nThe aecond period provided both\nplayers and fans with the most hectic\ntlmei of a rugjrfd game.- It was\nmarket! by 14 \u00a9' the 27 penalties\n^iilch were handed out daring tho\n60 minutes of play. The teams during\nthis atanxa were seldom at a full\nstrength and short-handednesa practically cost the Rangers the gam*.\nThe Bruins took advantage of their\nextra man power, and led by Freder-\nlckflon they crashed the weakened\nRanger defence for two goals In\nquick succession. Hitch man and\nOliver crashing through to accept\npasses from Frederlckson right In\nfront of Chabot.\nDefensives  Play\nThe third period was marked by\na strictly defensive play on the part\nof Boston. \" Both toanu were tired\nafter th* tw\u00ab-previous *ttulhlng Ad\nhectic sessions, and It waa a case of\na Ranger attack against a Boston\ndefence, with the Boston system\nproving the more successful.\nClose to 15,000 witnessed the thrilling contest.\nAttacks Broken\nFirst Period\u2014Boucher drew from\nth\u00bb face-off. Bun Cook obtained the\npuck and drove ono from the blue\nline but It was wide. Early play saw\nboth defensive systems in form. The\nmajority of attacks being broken\naround center ice, Hltchman went\ndown the left wing and gave Chabot\nthe first stop of the game. The\n. Bruins got In two darting attacks ln\nsuccession, but Chabot was : equal\nto  the occasion.\nFrederickson we-flt off for tripping\nand the Rangers opened up wjih a\none-man advantage to help them.\nAbel rushed a bulletlike drive from\nthe Bruins' defence. The disc hit\nthe back boards and bounced nut In\nfront where Bill Cook swooped In to\nbat th* loose rubber past Winkler\nin.   4:51.\nFsns    Litter     led\nThe goal caused the New Tork fans\nto go wild. Hats were thrown roof\nhigh, torn paper and whole newspapers were showered upon the ice.\nThe players had to leave the ice until the debris was cleared.\nPlay was fast and furious with the\nBruins getting In .some dangerous\nattacks. BUI Cook went off for\nroughing Herberts. The Bruins immediately went on the aljtack, both\nFYed-eriokson and Golbraith having\nchances only to lose control at the\ncritical moments.\nThe officials were keeping the boys\nto hockey and the slightest infractions were being met with penalties.\nHltchman forced a scramble and\nthe Bruins with the exception of the\ngoalie rushed the net, Chabot sprawled\non the puck, however, and kept his\nnet clear.\u2014Rangers, 1; Bruins, 0.\nGame    Tied     Up\nSecond Period\u2014The Bruins were\nrather slow ;to get going and\nBoucher returned.\nBruins were forced to go short\nagain when Cleghorn slashed Johnson across the nose, the latter retiring for repairs. The weakened Bruins\nmanaged to hold 09 until at full\nstrenjrth   again.\nBoston's attacking forces were being\nbroken at center by some perfect poke\nchecking by Frank_ Boucher. The rugged Bruins finally broke away and\na dashing combination attack by Oalbralth and Herberts resulted in the\nlatter grabbing a pass right In front\nof Chabot to scoop ths disc Into tho\nnet  m 7:42.\nWith the score knotted at one-all,\ntho game developed into a gruelling\nbattle with play 'ranging back and\nforth aa one desperate attack after\nanother alternately broke against the\nstrong bulwarks at b$th ends of the\nirlnk.    .\nTwts   Goal*   Fast\nA flock of i\u00bb\u00abiiaKle\u00ab left but seven\nL\u00bb\u00bbn on tho Ice, including tho. goalios.\nBoston had three to tho Rangers\nfour, all returned but Boucher and\nShore, when Johnston Joined them,\nleaving the- Rangers ono ma\u00bb short.\nTho Bruins capitalised at this rtage\nand went into the lead with two goals'\nIn quick succession. Hltchman got the\nfirst on a pass from Frederlckson.\nOliver got the second also on a\npass from Fredlckson.\nThird period\u2014The Ranger\/ opened\non tho attack and the Bruins' efforts were for the most part devoted\nto the defensive. Coutu went off\nfor tripping, tha twenty-third penalty\nof tho hectic contest, and Boston\nwent to the system of shooting the\npuck the length of the ice to keep\ntho dashing Rangers away from\nWinkler. Winkler was peppered, but\nwith the help of a desperate defence,\nhe managed to kefep his not clear.\nThe Rangers kept forcing the play,\nbut their efforts were breaking\nagainst a determined Boston decence.\nTry as they did, their fast tiring\nefforts were proving unsuccessful\nagaimH an equally jaded Boston defence organization. The final belt\nwent and the Bruins skated oft with\ntho sectional honors safely tucked\naway.\nLineup\nBoston Position Rangers\nGoal\nWinkler        Chabot\nDefence\nShort*     Johnson\nCenter\nHltchman             AJ)**.\nFrederlckson      F. Boucher\n*    Wing\nOalbralth       Bun  Cook\nOliver            Bill    Cook\nSubstitutes\nHerberts-   .   Brown\nCoutu         Bourgeault\nCleghorn    T....   McKey\nW.  Boucher   .'. ,,..,,   Mttrdock\nStuart   Thompson\nMeeklng   > ;    \u2014    \u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\nSummary\n'Both  defences were  ;.irti_ht and  the\nHELD TO ONE-ALL\nFour to Nil Win of Senators on\nSaturday Gives Them the\nCanadian Pro Title\nFRENCHMEN SCORE\nFIRST COUNTER\nSenators'  Pace  Too   Fast  for\nHabitants; Record Crowd\"\nSees Contest\nFirst porlod\u20141, Rangers, Bill Cook,\n4:1.1.\n1 renames\u2014(Frederlckson, Shore 2,\nJohnson 2, Bill Cook, Stuart, F.\nBoucher.\nHeconrt period\u20142, Boston, Herberts,\n7:4!; \u00bb, Boston, Hltchman, 9:11; 4,\nBoston,  Oliver,  1:04.    '\nPenalties\u2014Shore 4, Abel 3, Frederlckson, Cleghorn, Bun Cook, Hitch-\nman, Oliver, F. Boucher, Johnson.\nThird period\u2014No score. t\nPenalties\u2014Coutu, Shore, Frederick:\nson,  Stuart,   Bill  Cook.\nYets Grow Bigger\n{k\/anyW**?mr\\\nBy AL DEMAREE\n(Former Pitcher, N. Y. Qiante)\nA veteran ball player Is always\nthe last person to discover and admit that he has paseed the pinnacle\nof his career and Is on the downgrade and slipping.\nAs John McGraw says, it Is really\ntragic and pathetic to listen to the\nexcuses the slipping veterans\" give\nfor their failures. No old-timers ever\nadmits, even to himself, that he is\nslowing up, and that his arm Isn't\nas good as ever and that his eyes\nare not as keen as they always were.\nHe has .an alibi for every failure. IK\nhe l* a pitcher he saye, \"I have as\nmuch stuff on the ball as I ever had\nbut I'm Just havmg a tough year!\"\nIf a hitter, he excuses his failure\nto hit by claiming that alL his line\ndrives are hit directy at the fielders,\nand if formerly a great base runner\nhe can't understand- how he Is being\nthrown out on balls that he used to\nbeat out easily.\nBut the youngsters during spring\ntraining* know which of the regulars\nare slipping and slowing up and\nwhich are not.\nOTTAWA, A p ril 4.-Ottawa\nSenators, ars champions ot the\neastern   section   of   the   National\nHockey league. Holding the\nMontreal Canadians to a one-all\ntio in a brilliant and stubbornly-\nfcught contest here tonight, the\nOttawam forced the Habitants\noff tho hockey map for the season. Ths four to nothing victory\nregistered by the toe*'* in Montreal on Saturday night gives the\nSenators s four-goal lead on The\naeries, which ended 5 to 1 in\ntheir favor.\nTonight's game here was a\nsplendid exhibition for two\np-erJode and ha.f of the third.\nThen, with only minutes to go,\nthe fire, died from the Canuck\nattack, ae they saw the futility\nof the task before them.\nCANADIENS SCORE FIRST\nScoring first slightly more than\nhalf way through the ohenlng period,\nCanadlens' hopes were raised and\nthey unloosed a terrific attack that\nwaa sustained until over 10 minutes\nof  the second period had elapsed.\nThen the Senators, sensing that\nthe gruelling pace was taking a heavy\ntoll on the visitors, bore down with\na vengeance and after a counter\nby Kllrea from Finnegan had been\nruled offside, the same pair went\nracing back to knot the count on the\ngame, 'and practically settled the series.\nIt was a comparatively clean game,\nonly eight minor penalties being Inflicted. The- Senators drew six of\n-these. 9 fsff    \u2022\nNighbor, Clancy, Hooley Smith and\nthe youthful KJlrea were Ottawa's\nbright stara, while Morens, Mantha\nand Gardiner stood out for the Habitants. The auditorium was jammed\nto capacity, 10,000 fans atending.\n\/ Hainsworth Is There\nFirst Period\u2014Nighbor and Hooley\nDroith closed up the onrly Canuck\nrushtfl. Clancy almost scored when\nhis rebouita from the fence crossed\nthe net mouth, after hitting Halnes-\nworth'a skate. Unable to work in,\nMorenz and Joliat shot long.\nClancy circled the Canadian net and\nHalneaw-orth went flat to save a goal.\nGagne almost scored with a golf\ndrive. Connell saved a sure goal\nwith a foot save when Joliat tricked\nhis way In for a shot. Halnesworth\nstretched   to  clear from  Clancy.\nMan tha worked in from center\nand*steppod right through the defence to score from Connell's goal\nmouth In 11:40.   ,\nNighbor was twice stopped Inside\non brilliant plays. A Morenz-Hart\ncombine was only Inches wide of the\nmark. It was terrific hockey' and\nthe pace told and they slowed down a\nbit. Canadlens, one; Senators, nil.\nSenators Force Play\nSecond Period\u2014Nighbor was in the\npen when they started. Morenz picked\nup Joliat's rebound, but his shot was\nweak,    Clancy    circled    three    times.\ni shooting was at long  range.\nBoucher rushed, but was not successful. Canadlens pressed. Joliat\nand Morens-'shooting hard. Morenz\nwas halted at the goal mouih on a\ngreat lone try Clancy almost knocked\nHalnesworth down with a hot drive.\nSenators were now forcing the\nplay. Kllrea picked up a loose puck\nwhen Gardiner stopped Finnegan and\nscored. Wilson, the referee, disallowed It although Kllrea came from\nbehind the play to do It. Kllrea repeated, Finnegan rushed again and\nwas stopped at the goal mouth. Kil-\nrea's shot was blo.ked, but Finnegan,\nrecovering his balance, tipped It Into\nthe  net  In  1:51.\nMorens and Joliat were in for a\nclose  try.\nHalnesworth passed one out from\nKllrea. Denneny and Clancy combined   to   no   effect.\nCsftiacKens Pnase\nThird Periw*\u2014Canadlens went raging into the attack, Joliat shooting\ntwice. Gagne was in on Morena's\npass, hut Kllrea saved. Joliat was\nrobbed when COnnell came ,out to\nstop him.    Canagtetis sent four men\nInto  the  attack,\nOttawas   checked   tenaciously,   Kil\nrea missed on ftnlth's pass with only\nHalnesworth   t(r*beat,\nCanadlens could not work past Ottawa's blue line. Kllrea rushed three\n11mes   In   succeMton.     Morenz   drove\na hot one Into Connell's pads. Boucher\nby Inches. Leplne and -Joliat\naccepted open net chances, but Cba-\n\u25a0\u25a0<] them both. Boucher elbowed lA-plne and went off. Alex.\nSmith  on for Denneny.\nCanadlens burned it up looking for\na  goal.    Connell  came  out  to block\nGardiner    H. Smith sent Halnesworth\nto his  knees  to  stop his  drive.\nLineup\nCanadians        Position        Ottawa\nGoal\nHalnesworth       Connell\nDefence\nLeduc   Boucher\nGaagllner         Clancy\nCenter\nMorenz   .,..'    Nighbor\nWhig\nGagne   H. Smith\nJoliat         Denenny\nSubstitutes\nLarochelle        Kllrea\nLeplne       Finnegan\nMatitha    Adams\nHalt      A. Smith\nCooper       Gorman\nPaaitglo       HolHday\nSummary\nFirst period\u20141, Canadlens, Martha,\n11:40.\nPenalties\u2014H. Smith, Joliat, Nighbor.\n\u25a0Second period\u2014I, Ottawa, Finnegan,\n12:59.   .\n;  Penalties    \u2014    Boucher,    Gardlnsfc,\nClancy.\nThird   Period\u2014No  score.\nPenalties\u2014Clancy, Boucher.\nTILLICUMSTO\nT\nTennis Way Soon m Weather\nPen-its;  Officers  An\nElected\nThs Bkook-im Tllllcuni Taunts and\nEowllns club bold tli.tr annual d\u00bb.t-\ntng last nlrht tn th. reatry of St\nPaul's  United   church,   when   th.   tab\nPACIFIC  COAST   LEAGUE\nPortland, 11;  Son Francisco, 12.\nSeattle,  3;  Los Angsles,  2.\nMission*, 0;  Oakland, 1,\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board or\nby the Government of British Columbia.\nlowlns   of\nen-niln,\nB     W\nHunt.r,     s.n\ntreasurer;    Miss    B.    Ks-*V\nCharlotte   Notinan\n9.  Donaldson   on nee\nIt was decided t\u201e put th. howllns\ncourts In order bo that they may bs\navailable  tor  play this Biases.\nAfter discussion.  It wss resolved  to\nloww    membership    f\u00abes    for    t.\nwhich   srs   now    scheduled   ss:     Men\nII,  Miss   IC.   man   aad   wife   1!,   sad\nstudents   IB.\n-\u2022asls ploy win .tart ss seos ss\nweather permits. Ths bowllas fees\nare separate.\nYOUR\nBEST\nInvestment\n$i\nONE OF OUR DOLLAR\nPIPES\nf OLD COUNTRY\nI . FOOTBALL RESULTS\nLONDON,   April   4,  \u2014  Football   results;\nBarUsh   XMf**\u2014rW  Division\nBirmingham  \u00ab,  Bolton  1.\n\u25a0aooad Division\nSouthampton 1, Chelsea 1.\nThird   DtvtMon^ XrrUMrB\nDoncaster I, Halifax 0.\nWexlngham 0, Wallsall  3.\nSCOTTISH    LEAGUE\nFirst  Division\nRyth Rovefs 2, Boness S.\nBathgate 2, qifdebank 2.    (Plays*\nFriday).\nArthurlle 1, Boness 1    (Playsd Friday).\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nFeathsr.tone 14, Wigan HigMleld 8.\nAgreeably sged,\nsmooth, fragrant\n\u2014congenial company anywhere\nThis BdTSr-nsnnt ts not ps.ll.-Md\nor dlspl*y\u00abd by tlhs Uqnor Control\n\u25a0oar* or hy th. BnnrsiB-mt of Brit-\nIs* Ones-Ms. '\nA .mall section of the Radiator\nPlant at Othawa, where Genersl\nMotor. .Radiator, are built.\nf\nevery\nprice class\nthe same\nAll benefit equally by the\nsweeping economies of combined purchasing* power.\nAll are built in the same\nefficient and well-equipped\nplant.\nAll are fashioned with the\nsame painstaking care and\nconsummate skill which are\ntraditional with the veteran\nCanadian craftsmen working there.\nCHEVROLET\nPONTIAC\nOLDSMOBILE\nOAKLAND\nMcLAUGHLIN-BUiCK\nCADILLAC\n1\n\u25a0\nt\nAll are proved on the same\ninternational Proving\nGround, the_greatest in all\nthe world.\nAnd so, in every price class\neach General Motors car presents the same high standard of value.  . . ,\n\"5\nThe utmost value at the lowest possible-price . . . that\nand nothing less!\ni\ni\nGENERAL MOTORS\nCANADA to\">*\nif!\n\"5\n\u25a0\u25a0J\n1*1\nXo*\u00abs Offlct **\u2022\u00ab \u2022sCUIlls s    O.h.ws.. Ostitis.\n *m\n\u00a5HE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MOISTING, APRIL 5, 1927\nFORTS EXPRESS\nTHEIR THIS\n- TO THE 11\nCeaeh Catches Mayor MeDoaald\nat aa Early Hear; Rolling\nEastward\n\"Nsvsr in all our hookey trips have\nws rscetved ths reception socorded\naa hy ths -jtUsens of leehtcn.\" In such\nWord* Stanley Burgoyne, coach ot the\nfort William hockey team, expressed\nSpprselatn*. on behalf of his team,\nto Major J. A. McDonald early Hon-\n\u00aby raornlag before the players took\ntrrp tMr Jwurney eastward. Mr. Bur-\nrroyns was assured by the mayor that\naad It been generally knew that the\n*Ports were \"to pass through Nelson,\n{hat a much bigger, better and more\nmteH.Ung welsoros would have been\naccorded them.\nTver. Frassr-s Msst\nNelson. Incidentally, waa the scene\nOt a rennkm When tbe Alias cup\nsemi-finalists stepped off the train\nSunday night, lor - \"Sootty\" Eraser,\nwell-known Kootenay - Boundary\nhockey star of former days, was on\nthe platform to greet his brother,\nPrank,  deitnce   man,   on  th*  fort*.\n\u2022\u2022Scotty,-* Who last played In tbe\nWest Kootenay league In UH lb a\nTrail uniform, ant who, also, starred\nIn the semi-pro day*, win be well\nremember*** ey fan* as a nockay star\nOf no mean ability. From ail report., his brother, though in the gams\nfor many years. Is ons ot the maln<\nstays of ths eastern lineup. \"Sootty\"\nIs at present stationed at a*syle,< sad\naccompanied the team to that point\nfrom Nelson, *\nAt Sundsy night's luncheon given\nths visitors by the* Nslson Amateur\nAthletic association, Stanley Bur-\ngoyns paid a gnat tribute to the\nVaaoouver Gyro dub, which, he\nstated, had done all ln Its power to\nmake the Forts' stay in Vancouver\non* of pleasure and enjoyment. He\nhad met several Nelson Gyros, and\nfrom the spirit displayed on every\nhadd, he said It would be Impossible\nto return home without, expressing\nbis' thanks for kindnesses shown his\nboys. Gyro had won Its way Into\nthe hearts of tbe players; .\nA  Quest  at  LS-rt\nYesterday morning th* team\nboarded ths Nasookrn at Procter\nlooking' forward with Interest at a\nsail over a British Columbia lake.\nAs \"Ned,\" th* porter carried by th*\nForts from Fort' William west, expressed It: \"This sure will be great;\nfor one time ln my lite I'm going to\nbe a guest among the guests.'* He\nwa* referring to the tact thst he\nwould have no responsibilities >m the\n22-mllc trip to Kootenay Landing.\nHe' was a railroader, not a steam-\nbos ter.\nBURNET MET\nEETSlOSSJflB\nWill Manage the Chicago Hawks\nNext Season; Hangs Up\nSkates\nWINNIPEG, April 4.\u2014Barney Stan\nley, who acted as playing: managpr\nfor the Winnipeg Maroon* of the\nAmerican association league this winter, has signed to pilot the Chicago\nBlack Hawks In the National league\nhockey next season. The report\nwas confirmed by Stanley on his re\nturn from the Windy City today. It\nIs Che veteran's intention to hang\ntip his skates for good and direct\noperations from the bench.\n\/ Stanley has enjoyed a moBt sue\npwwful career as a hockey player\nluid manager, having piloted the Kd-\nmonton Eskimos to a championship\nln the Western Canada. Hockey league\ntn l\u00bb2$-2\u00bb, while he kept th* Winnipeg Maroons at the top Of the\nleague for the greater part of the\nseason's schedule .just closed only\nto b* robbed of greater honors as the\nresult of a series of injuries to his\nproteges.\nVoorgts Favored      .\nto Win Golf; Has\nFoot Under Par\n, PINEHUR8T, N.C., April ^.\u2014George\nVoorgts, Washington, wss four under\np\u00bbx tor a 67, and a practical clinch to\nWife th* medal qualifying round of the\nUnited States northern and southern\ngolf I tournament today. William\nFouoes of Pittsburgh was second with\nIt, and George Dun lap, lf-year-old\nNew Yorker,  turned la a 74 for third\nSTARS IN MEMORIAL CUP SERIES\nThe heroes of the Memorial cup struggle In which the Dominion Junior hockey sbasaplsSrship was won by\nOwen Sound. _sft to right\u2014\"Bhrlmp\" McDougall, Owsa.Bound, center; Bensy Grsptt) Owen Sosnd. goalie; Andy\nSpooner, Port Arthur, goalie, and \"Bed Cross,\" Port Author, defence. The four stars whs-Were Ihe outstanding\nplayers for their respective clubs In the Dominion Junior final. McDougall scored four of his team's five goals.\nCross scored for the Pert., and both goalie, mads many remarkable'saves.\nIP\nTO TRAIL FIRST\nTIMEjntfO YEftRS\nAnna,   Mean   and   Lightning\nPeak,   Edgewood,   Ship\nLead Ore\nTwo mines, shipping for the first\ntime ]a two yed'rs, and another making its first shipment of 1*27, werr\nfeatures of ths ore receipts at the\nTrail reduction plant of the Consolidated Mining & Smelting Company of\nCanada tn the last IB days of March.\nThe Anna, Slocan City, shipped four\ntons of lead ore, and the Lightning\nPeak, ftdgewood, shipped 15 tons of\nlead ore. The Monitor, Thr#s Porks,\nshipped 3t tons of milling ore.\nTotal receipts ln the last 10 days of\nthe month of 14,858 tons, brought the\ntotal to data to 1_\u00ab,8_0 tons, and receipts from company mines of 10,97*-\ntons brought the company mines' total\nup to 111,814 tons. Custom ore for\nthe  10 days totaled  SI8fi.\nDetailed ore receipts for the week\nfollow:\nCopper ooncenrates \u2014 Allenby Copper  company, Allenby, 1014.\nLead ore\u2014Anna, Slocan City, 4;\nLightning Peak, Edgewood, 85; Patrick, Kaslo, 1.\nMilling ore\u2014Bluebell, Blonde), 613;\nDaybreak, Kaslo, Mi Duthle, Smithers,\n78; Enterprise, Enterprise, ISO; Lucky\nJim* Zlncton, lit. Monitor, Three\nForks, 86; Nosle Five, Sandon, 85;\nRuth Hope, Sandoa, 81; Whitewater,\nRetallack, 808; Yankee Girl. Ymir, 809.\nDry ore \u2014 Last Chance, Republic,\n546; Lone Pine, Republic. 85: Quilp,\nRepublic, 460.\n' WILL GET\nUnrecognized     Watchman    in\nNew York Waa Canadian\nLieutenant-Colonel\nNEW YORK, April 4.\u2014The British\nGreat War Veterans of America today took steps to provide a soldier's\nburial for Lieut.-Col John H. Brown,\nD.S.O., 60-year-old veteran, who cora-\nmittod suicide Sunday by inhaling illuminating gas, after hiding his real\nidentity for three years.\nAlthough investigations conducted\nby the veterans so far have failed to\ndisclose whether he left any near\nrelatives, It has been definitely de\ntermined that he was not a brother-\nin-law of Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur Murray as at first reported.\nColonel Brown, the veterans said\nwas second in comniand of the Sev\nenty-Third Canadian regiment and\nhad a distinguished record In France,\nwhere he won the DjS.O., and other\nmedals. He Identified himself to\nBritish consular authorities and\nhrough them secured a position. He\nWorked for nearly two years as\nhlght clerk In a Long Island hospital\nand during the past five months had\nbeen employed as night watchman by\na   hardware   firm.\nHe was known simply as \"John H.\nUrown,\" The fact that he concealed\nlis war record from all but the con'\n-ular authorities, never revealed tho\ntroke of Ill-fortune that left him pen-\nitless and Oupported himself through\n\"tumble occupations, was explained by\nBritish veterans as being typical of\nHe real British soldier Who would\nfather sleep In the park than ask for\niid.\"\nWINNIPEG TOILERS\nDEFEAT ALBERTANS\nRAYMOND, Alfa.. April \"4 \u2014Staging i\na rally in the last 10 minutes of play, j\nthe Winnipeg Tollers' basketball team j\nsmashed through a 6-polnt lead held I\nby the Union Jacks of Raymond, and\nadvanced another step toward the\nwestern Canada senior championship.\nThey acquired II points In the last\n10 minutes of play, the final score\nbeing:    Toilers, 87; Raymond,  2\".\nE\nI\nMEILNI\nSection of Shaft Is Now Being\nTrued  by Nelson  Iron\nSERIES START\nmm\nAt Boston Thursday and Saturday, at Ottawa on\nTuesday\nNEW YORK, April 4.\u2014The Ottawa\nSenators and the Boston Bruins,\nchampions, respectively, of the Canadian and United States sections of\nthe National Hockey league, will meet\nla the first game of the championship\nseries for the Stanley cup in Boston,\nnext  Thursday, April  1.\nPresident Frank Calder tonight gave\nout the following schedule for the\nStanley cup games:\nAt Boston, April 7 and April 9; at\nOttawa, probably April 12. If further\ngames are neoessary to decide the\ntitle, they will be played at Ottawa on\ndates  tn  be  decided  later.\nDevelopment ot trouble tn the\nihaft of one' of the two generating\n-mitw ih the city power plant at\nrfppor Bonnington Kills has been\nipadf> the occasion of nn overhauling\nwhile the entire icily load-, less the\nenergy required for one street car,\nwhich has been taken off, is being\ncarried   by  the   other  unit.\nA section of th* shaft was brought\nIn to Nelson yesterday to be ground\nI hy the Nelson Irbn Works, to  true\nit\n'Apparently the trouble can be\nreiriedled, and haa been taken in\ntime,  and  the  citizens  need  feel no\n'apprehension,\" Mayor J. A. McDonald\nj stated last night.\nOTTAWA April 4. \u2014 President\nFrank Ahearn, owner and manager of\nthe Ottawa Senators, tonight' stated\nthat President Frank Calder of the\nLN.H.L., had agreed to appoint Jerry\nLaflamme to referee the championship hockey games between Ottawa\nSenators and Boston Bruins for the\nN.H.L. championship. It was expected that Billy Bell would be appointed to assist Laflamme, he added.\nIS\nOFF TO A GREAT\nHouse Expresses Desire to Participate in Interprovincial\nConference\nErie Thompson of Saint John, N.B.,\nwas among th. leading\" scorer, with\nf*T. Two Montr***.!*, sex-red II. These\nwar* C Ja. Rusdel I*, sol John Run-\n0*1 *\u00bb.\nDULUTH HORNETS\nWIN ONCE AGAIN\nDtJLUTH, Minn., April 4.\u2014In a\nclow hard-fought game the Dtt.tt-.-_\nHornets staged their second succes\nmtva, Wis over tha Minneapolis Miners\nwith a 1-0 score here tonight, ln the\nchampionship series of tha American\nHockey association. A solo rush by\nL-Lfrance, one of tha substitutes, in\ntha third period, brought victory to\ntha Hornets and, having won the\nInitial counter Saturday night 1-0,\nthoy need but one mora wis to take,\njjfcs ahampaortahlp.\nWINNIPEG, April 4.\u2014The legislature this afternoon went on record as\nIndorsing the old age pensions and expressed the desire that the government\nwould participate ln the intra-provln-\nclal conference to be held in connection with the federal scheme. The resolution waa proposed by Mrs. Edith\nRogers, Liberal, Winnipeg, and was\ncarried  unanimously.\nClaiming that a resolution proposed\nby J. K. Downes for a 15 per c*fit -reduction In the net profit of the liquor\ncontrol commission on the sale of\nwines and spirits would not have the\ndesired effect of elimination bootlegging as the price of the bottled\nwhisky would be reduced from $|.6f)\nto $4.30 only, Attorney-General Craig\nmoved an amendment that the house\nshould urge the Dominion government\nto reduce the customs and excise\nduties and sales tax by one per cent.\nFALL RIVEIt, Mass., April 4.\u2014Jack\nGagnon of New Bedford knocked out\nPat Ward of Montreal in the sixth\nround of their scheduled lo-rotmd bout\nhere  tonight.    They are heavyweights.\nBattling Sandrelli Of Montreal won\nthe Judges' decision in a -0-roHnd\nfeatherweight bout with J oh tin Diaa\nof New Bedfotd. i\nAnnual Meeting Large and Enthusiastic; Out for More\nOTeiuDers\nUsed Articles\nReal Estate\nRoom\nTo Rest\nBoat* aad\nAutomobiles\nClassified\nAdvertising\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nlirestock\nMaduacry\nFarm Product\nTuber and Mines\nSituations Wanted Female\nWANTED \u2014 Work or washing at\nhome. Family wash, 65 cents dosen,\nor 26 pleoes $1. Curtains and fine\nwearing    apparel,     specialty. All\nwork   guaranteed.     Apply   Box   7465,\nDaily News. (7466)\nBUST MOTHERS\u2014Let< me help you\nmake your children's clothes. Moderate terms. In your or my home.\nPhone I21L-. <7\u00bbf_)\nFor Rent\nFOR   RENT\u20144-room   house,   closs   In.\n1.  E.  Annable. (744*)\nFUllNIfSHED        HOUBJfflfc-raMNG\nROOM8t-\u00ab14 Josephine street. (7425)\nOFFICE SPACtt, or desk room, with\nclerical services If desired. Apply\nBox  7488,  Dally News (7488)\nOLAMHlFlHD ads bring remits quickly\nsnd sponomlcslly.   1 _c s word\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nFOR SALE!\u2014One Ice cream outfit, consisting of one 40-quart freeser, one\nice breaker, one 5-horse power motor\nwith shafting and belts In good condition, very cheap. Apply Kootenay\nValley Co-Op Milk Products Association.     Phone   IK. (TUB)\nSET CARPENTER TOOLS\u2014Miter and\nscroll saw machine. Mrs. A. E.\nWilson, Cherry and Latimer street,\nNelson. ' (f4W)\nFOR SALE\u2014A number of cedar logs\nsuitable for boat house or float. J.\ng  Annable.   (T__7)\nPRrVA_rB BALE HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE\u2014Simmons bed and mattress, dresser and stand, dining\ntable, bookcase, kitchen furniture,\netc. Call at 603 Nelson avenue, 1-3\np.m.  ___________\nFOR    SALE\u2014Fibre    sulky    with    top,\nhardly   used,   $10.00.     Phone   372.\n(7348)\nPIPE   AND   FITTINGS,\nBARBER     WIRE,     ETC.\n20,000 feet 1)4-Inch Pipe, Special,   lOo   par  foot.    Full   stock\nother sixes, also Fittings, at low\nprices.    New Galvanized Barbed\nWire,    $4.00,    Black,    $>00    per\nspool.   Roofing Felt, 1-ply, fl.iO,\n2-ply, $2.00, 3-ply, |2.66 per roll.\nExtra heavy Mineralized Surface,\n90   lbs.,   per  roll,   $3.00.    *Mxied\nWire Nails, $2.00 per Jce*.   Wire\nRope,  Canvas,   Logging Supplies\nand all kinds of equipment.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n135 Powell St. Vancouver, B.C.\n(7187)\nFOR SALE\u2014Snap this up! Remtng\nton portable typewriter, perfect con*\ndltlon.    Box 856. (7468)\nThe Nelson Rowing club held its\nannual, meeting last night in the city\nhail, when great enthusiasm, abounded.\nOfficers for the gnsutng year were\nelected ns follows** Honorary president, A. Lelth; honorary vice-presidents\u2014A. A. Perrter and J. S. Car-\ntor; president, C. F. McHardy; vice-\npre*ldent, Eddie Murphy; captain,\nJames Notman; vice-c.iptain, Fred\nHurt wig; secretary-treasurer, George\nFleury; executive Committee \u2014 Sid\nMcDonald, J. Cunliffe, Jim Carter,\nHoward Murphy, Hector Mackenzie;\nvolunteer membership committee\u2014Gordon Mackensle, N. Brown, James Notman, J. Laughton, J. Ink, Sid McDonald.\nThe meeting was well attended, and\nthe enthusiasm, shown augurs well for\na  successful   rowing  season.\nSeveral Bills Are\nGiven First Reading\n\u2022 in House of Commons\nOTTAWA, April 4.\u2014Three bills wore\ngiven first reading In the house of\ncommons today. The first, Introduced\nby Hon. Robert Forks, minister of\nimmigration, is to repeal a section\nof the Immigration act Inserted In\n1919, which allowed the deportation\nof British subjects without trial for\nsedition or for advocating the overthrow   of   parliamentary* government.\nThe second bill, Introduced by L.\nP. Bancroft, LiberaJ--Pro|rressive, Selkirk, would amend the Elections' act\nto Include school teachers and stud-\nnt's who were disfranchised each election  through  change of residence.\nThe third bill, sponsored by J. S.\nWoodsworth, Labor, Vinnlpcg Worth\nCenter, Ih entitled to an act to amend\nthe criminal code (blasphemous libel).\nBusiness Opportunities\nWANTED\u2014Partner, with small sawmill. Have nice bunch of timber,\nand can finance. J. Bancroft,'' Box\n8*2,  Trail.   B.C. (7467)\nBARRELS,  KEGS  AND  EMPTY   sacks\n\u2014McDonald   Jam   Company,   Nelson.\n         .   _    (7388)\nNursery Products\nMAOOOM STRAWBERRY PLANTS\nHeavy bearing strain, strong root\nsystem, $B 1000. Norman Anderson,\nGray Creek,  B.C. (74B8)\nMAGOON STRAWBERRY PLANTS\u2014\nFrom choice stock, $7.50 thousand,\ndelivered.    Tomlinson,  R.R.I, Nelson.\n  (7428)\nSENATOR DUNLAP AND VAN SAN\nSTRAWBERRY PLANTS, |fi.K0 per\nthousand. Monrad Wlgen, Wynndel,\n_______ (7008)\nGLADIOLI.    PEONIES\nIF YOU WANT the loveliest and best\nsend for free catalog. M. A O. Dodds,\n__ Sorrento,  B.C. (7384)\nSTRAWBMJRRY PLANTS \u2014 Gibson\nAroma, Dr. Ilurrilt, Magic Gem,\n$10.00 loon; parsons* Piauty, Ma-\ngoon, $6.CO. John Avis, Perry Bid-.\nIng. (7P84)\nFurniture\nFOft  SALE \u2014 Seven-piece  oak dining\nroom  suite.    Phone  499R. (7431)\nFurnished Roping to Rent\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's   Apartments.    <T3fi5)\nFor Exchange\nFOR SALE OR TRADE\u2014One Cyphers\n220 egg incubator, nearly new; also\none brooder, quite new. Apply W.\nH.  Norris,  Midway, B.C. (7SB6)\nLive stock sella quickly when It Is\nadvertised in these columns.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nTAKE NOTICE THAT ASSOCIATED\nMINING & MILLING COMPANY LIMITED, a Company Incorporated under\nLetters Patent (Dominion Charter), a\nMining and Development Company hav\ning Its registered office In the City ot\nTrail, B.C., intend to apply for per\nmission to purchase the following described l-fiuK situated about ten chains\nSouth of Goat Creek on the East side\nof Kootenay Lake, commencing at a\npost planted at the North West post\nof S.L. 4*A, thence South 60 chains to\npost No, 2, thence following high water\nmark on Lake Shore in a North West\nerly direction to post No. S, thence 25\nrliHins East to point of commencement\nand containing ISO acres more or less.\nDated  February  2ftth, 1937.\nASSOCIATED MINING ft MILLING  COMPANY  LIMITED,\n(7109) Ed.   Balnbrldge,  Agent\nCity Property for'gale*\nFOR SALE\n$900\u2014S rooms and bath. Bungalow style. Close ln. A real\nbargain. Easy terms.\n$1700\u2014Bungalow. Living room,\nopen fireplace, bed room,\nkitchen, pantry, bath room.\nModern fittings. Verandah\nback and front. Cement\nfoundation. Cement floor in\nbasement. A cosy little modern bungalow, as good aa\nnew.\n$2200\u20142 bed rooms, living room,\ndining room, AI white fix*\nCures. Cement foundation.\nCement floor In basement.\n20 x 20. Electric stove Included In purchase price.\nFive lots. Fruit trees. Easy\nterms.\n$8090\u2014Fully modern house** close\nln. 8 bed rooms, Bleeping\nporch, large living room and\ndining   room. Fireplace,\nbath room and toilet on first\nfloor. Separate toilet upstairs. Cement foundation.\nCement floor in basement.\nOffered for less than half\ntha cost of building. Very\neasy terms.\nI  often  stand and  pause and  think\nWhat  an  awful   thing  Is  rent;\nLike pouring water  down a sink,\nIt's gone before you know It's spent.\nAnd alt the while you know I meant\nTo buy a Home instead of rent.\nfC. W. Appleyard\"\nINSURANCE STOCKS BOND8\nCITY  PROPERTY\nBaker  Street Office\u2014Phone _\u00ab9\nC. W. Appleyard H. E. Appleyard\nBranch Office,  Stanley  St.\u2014Phone  736\n(F.  A.  Whitfield,  Mgr.)\nNELSON, B.C.\n(7407)\n$275.   ON   EA8Y,TERMS   \u2014  Acre   of\nground   with   small   plastered   house,\nFairview.     P.O.  Box  28,  Nelson.\n(7432)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.   1-Vjc a word,     \u25a0\nFurs\nGE3CHEIT FUR CO. LTD., 117 Cordova Street West, Vancouver, B.C.\nHighest prices paid ail kinds of raw\nfurs.    We  specialise  In  all  kinds of\nrabbit  skins-. '         (7130)\nBoats and Automobiles^\nX^-R5RT5rvnr*g^oX\"':u^ for\nsale  cheap.     Apply   722  Baker strret.\n(3454)\nWANTED \u2014- Late  model used car,  on\neasy terms.   Box  7387, Daily News.\n(7S67)\nFOR SALE -*- Chevrolet Sedan, good\nrunning order. WIddowson's Assay\nOffice. (7377)\nWILL SELL, OR TRADE FOR PROPERTY, 22-foot launch, Fairbanks\nMorse 2-cyIlnder engine, in first-\nclass shape. West Arm property\npreferred*    H.  Harding,  Nelson.\n(78*43)\nFOR SALS\u20141928 Studebaker Standard\nDuplex Phaeton. Has run thirty-\nfour hundred miles. Nicely broken\nIn for any speed. Thirteen hundred\ndollars will handle. Good reasons\nfor selling. Charles Catalano, Nelson,  B.C. (7844)\nTELL your wants through The Daily\nNews classified columns.\t\nLive Stock for Sale\nTWO OOATB\u2014Doss. Mrs. A. E. Wilson, Cs.rry and Latimer street. Nelson. ' (748\u00bb)\nSADDLE   HORSE,   In   a-ood   condition.\nApply P.O. Box 118, Nelson.      (7411)\nGOAT POIl SALE, CHEAP\u2014She will\nbe fresh soon, snd she Is a very\nRood milker. Apply 414 Observatory\nstreet.    (7410)\nAYRSHIRE JERSEY COW, due 16th\nApril; heavy milker. J. T. Bealby,\nNelson. (7420)\nAYRSHIRE COW \u2014 Freshens sacond\nApril. Heavy milker. T. B. tested.\nA. Scott, Willow Point.  (TH1>\nFOR SALE \u2014 Twenty head heavy\nhorses. 1400 to 1800 lbs.. In -rood\ncondition; also a full line nf logging\nand camp equipment. Continental\nLumber A Pols Co., Ltd., Kitchener,\nB.C.\nt?lS*l\nm\nFarms-Ranches for Sale\nTWO ACRES, large and small fruits,\ngood, house, .qhioken bouses; close\nto city limits. inquire. Bbx 7419,\nDaily  News. (7419)\nPoultry aM Eggs\nFOR SALE\u2014Purebred Jersey Blaek\nGiants' eggs, New' Jersey strain,\n$3.50 and |a per IE, Few cockerels\nand pullets left. Mrs. L. Bailey,\nSardls, B.C., BOX 11, (7S63)\n1  ii\nProperty Wanted\nWe have ft client who wants to . <-\nbuy     &     modern     five-roomed\nbungalow  or  cottage.\nIf you propose selling this\nSummer list your place now,\nwhile the Spring movement is on.\nCHARLES F. McHARDY\nInsurance   Agent.\nPhono   186. Nelson,   B.C.\n(74*1)\nInsurance\nWHY\ntsks chances, when protection eaa\n-   bs   bought   BO   rea.OB-.bly7     Ws\nare scents for old-eataplisbsd companies selling\nLIFE,\nFIR*\nAUTOMOBILB.\nACCIDENT   A  SICKNB88,\nsnd all other  lines of Insurance.\nWEST   END   AGENCIES\n119 Baker St., Nelson, B. C.\nPhone Ml                         P. O. Boa N\n (74(H)\nMachinery for Sale\nGASOLINE ENGINE\u2014S horse power,\nEaton's make, good condition, |\u00ab0.00.\nK.  Galney.  Harrop,  (7444).\nMINING MACHINERS \u2014 Marcy mills,\nWllfley tables, Coppus blowers,\npumps, Diesel engines, water wheels.\nRobert C. Sweatt, Ltd., 406 Hornby\nstreet.   Vancouver! (7440)\nBUSINESS AND       *\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nAflwyerg\nE\nw. wiDDOwrunr, box ahoi, n.i-\nLeon, B.C  standard western charges\n (?\u00bb\u00bb)\nAccounting\nV'    Auditor,   HacDonald  Jam  Bn!l_mg\nBox 1101, Nelson, B.C. (7MT)\nTransfer\nm\nitlAM'       TBAltmraaV\u2014 Baggag.\nGoat   anil   Wood.   1'hone 104.   17895)\nWood Working Factory\nLAWgOBt\u2014Below   market.    Carpenter\nand   Joiner.     Hardwood. (7890)\n'nairnr-M- and Real Estate\naW.   BAWlOsT\u2014\n*wsl  a.uu,   lasafsass,\nAnnable Bit.  P.O. Box  788. PI\nhone  197.\n7897)\nHa.   mxi,   ia-su-AircM,   tabu\n> ajid crrr nornn.\nSOU   Ward   Btreet (7\u00bb9\u00bb)\nChiropractors\nTVav. \u25a0.\u00bb. amAT\u20140-Ur-JSisrtes. Mfes.\na\/blk. Phones: Office, US. Rea HIT\nHours: 10-18 ahd 8 to 6. Evenings b,\nappointment.    Sat.: 9:80 to 12m.      (789*0\nFlorists\nG8uns_\u00a3B'S omManntovtwM, m.\nson. Cut flower, snd floral designs\n(tToo>\nnng. a jonasoa\u2014\n\"\"     Phone  848.     Cut  flowers     Pottwd\nPlants and Floral Emblems.       (74013\nWholesale\nAstACDoarAtD   k   oo.\u2014\n.   Wholesale  Grocers and  Provlslos\nMerchants, Importers of Teas, Coffesa\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and Fsnoy\nGroceries,   Nelson,  B.C.  . (7402)\nPj    i  \u25a0;   i is i'  i 1 i-MWililia\nEngineers\nAt (HUM CO.\u2014\nCOIfTBAC-t.'M\nFormerly Green. Bros., Burden, Nelsoa.\neim Ii __Usf jra-ramta.\nB.   O.,   Albsrts   sad   -omlnloa   Saal\nH.\nDominion    lissS\n  *8Tufrs_-ors (7408)\n8>.   DAWSOa, ~ Xtfaa   Burrsyor.\nMining and ClvU asflaen.\nKaslo,  B.C.\nFuneral Directors\nD.J. ROBERTSON,\nr. d. \u00bb. a a.\n\u25a0aattstv Parlors sad Keel Motor Users*\n1 -Son.  191  Bsrl  STlglrt   mi.\nSERVICE   m\n  (74W)\nStandard  *f_r_*sre\nCo. Undertskejs.\n__j__     PP\nAuto Hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Beat\nservices. P r 1 o e \u2022\nreasonable.    (74M)\n ESS\nGoes to 55 to- Gain of Nearly\nFoot; Steel Gets\nSupport\nNEW TOKK. April 4. \u2014 8terllnr ex-\nshanss firm at  tin  l-ll  for  M-dsy\nkills snd  MM*  demsad.\nForties bar  silver\u20146l**c.\nCanadian   doTlars\u20141-11   premium.\nFrsnes\u2014l.tl**c\nLira\u2014Mitts.\nN.laon    approximate    rate    stsrllsa,\nI..ITtt.\nMarks\u2014 21.70.\nKronen\u201421.11 tt.\nTHE NELSON t)AM MEWS. TUfiSDAY MORNING, APRIL 5,1S27\nF*-8*\n-=\niminw.\nMM LIST\nCanadian Steamships Preferred\nUp; Quebec Paver, Winnipeg Electric Strong\nClose to Hatt of\nHome Bank Holder*\nPay Double Liability\nOTTAWA.   April   4.    _   Of    tt\u00bb\nNEW TORK, April 4. \u2014 Speculator*\nf\u00abr the advance regained coatrol of\ntlw prloa movement in today's stock\nmarket, being aided by easier money\nrMea and report* that pre-Easter\ntrade waa running la large volume.\nErie common waa again oa* of the\nIndividual feature* ln the railroad\ngroup, crossing 60 to 'the highest price\nla SS years for a grain of nearly 4\n-points. Rock Island moved up nearly\nI points to a new high at \u00bb5. New\npeak prices also were recorded la the\nrail group by Missouri Pacific, West-\nen* Maryland second preferred, Union\nPtglflc, Oulf Mobile and Northern,\nPooria and Eastern, Bangor and Aroostook aad Wabash preferred \"A.\"\nUnited States Steel again received\netoellent support, closing a point\nhigher, at 170. General Motors closed\n1% higher, at 159. Among the score\nor mora- highs in the Industrial group\nwore Western Union, Fidelity Insurance, Burroughs, United Frvtt, Remington,  Eastman  and Fleisehraann.\nOtis offved better resistance to selling pressure, with indications that\nsoftte issues were harboring an overcrowded short interest, but Pan-American  \"B\" broke f points.\nTime money and commercial paper\nrates were unchanged. Money 4 per\ncent.\nTotal sales\u20141,728,000 shares.\nHla-li\nLow\nCtoae\nAllied   Chem.   ...\n143%\n141\n143\nAmer. ' Looo.    ...\n10I*\n169*\n10\u00bb*\nAmer.   Tela    ....\nll.tt\nlit*\n161*\nAatter.   Tohac,   ...\n12*14\n123*\n123*\n4\u00ab%\n46*\n41*\nm*\n17Mt\n171*\n\u2022 Bait. * Ohio   ...\n114\nI1'\n118*\nCast.   Piclflc    ...\n111\nllltt\n188*\nCert-o  de   Pasco...\n12%\n\u2022>  i\n12\nChili.   Copper   \u25a0..\n31*4\n\u2022 6*\n86*\nUK\n'40*\n41*\nCom  Products   ..\n6-y.\n54\n54*\n\\   Dodge   \"A\"    \t\nMtt\n18*\n19*\nDupont     \t\n221%\n211\n220*\n.   Ges.   Motors   ....\n180*4\n177*\n171\nOb  Nor.  pfd.\n877a\n86*\n86*\nHowe   Sound    . ..\nM\n38\n38\nIntl.   Nickel   ....\n\u00ab2\u00ab\n41*\n42\nKesne.  Copper   ..\n.2K\n61*\n62\nN. T. Central   ..\nl\u00abtt\n143*\n145\nNo*.   Pacific   ...\n88tt\n87\n88*\nPbOUpa   Pete.    ..\n46*\n46*\n49*\nRadio   Corp.    ....\n46 \u25a0_\n46*\n46*\n\u2022t \u25a0\nn\n94*\nShall    Union   till .\nn%\n27*\n27*\nIT*\n17*\n-17*\nSou.   Pacific   ....\nUS*\n112*\n112*\nStan.  Oil  Cal.   ..\nIt\n54*\n61\nStan. Oil N.J-  ..\n.16*\n36\n86*\n64*\n64*\n64.*\nTex.   Oulf   Sulph.\n\u00ab\u00abtt\n68*\n10*\nUrrfcra Oil Cal. ...\n43\n41*\n42\n| Union  Pacific   ...\n172*\n*l\u2122tt\n171*\nIT. S.  Rubber   ...\n62*.\n.   It\n61*\nTJv.S.   Steel   ....\n* Vrtilyo  Ovid.   ....\nmi.\nlit\n170\n22*\n21*\n22*\nWINNIPEG, April 4. \u2014 Dominion\nwar lasue price:\nWar loans\u20141811, 1101.10 to tltl.lt.\nVictory loan. \u2014 1927, 1100.20 tc\n1100.60; 1938, 8114.10 t. 8104.JO; 1184,\nJ103.70 to 1108.75; 1987, 1107.10 to\n\u2022107.25.\nWar loan renewals \u2022- 1127, 3100.20\n1931,   tltt to 1103.20.\nRefunding loans \u2014 1121, 3100.21 to\n3100.85; llll\\ 1102.60 to 3163.15; 1941,\nt98.30 to 108.40; 1940. 198.30 to 198.35;\n1144,' 398.30 to 891.40; 1141, 118.30 to\n}98.45.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORfC, April *. \u2014 Copper-\nQuiet ; electrolytic, spot and futures,\n111.12 to  $13.25.\nTin\u2014Firm; spot and nearby. $78;\nJune, $68.\nIron\u2014Steady; No. I fob. eastern\nPennsylvania, $21 to $21.50. No. 2\n[f.o.b.   Buffalo,   $17.50  to   $18.\nLead\u2014Easy; spot, $7.36.\nZinc\u2014 Steady; East St. Louis, 'spot\nand   futures,   $6.55   to   $6.57.\nAntimony\u2014Spot,   $13.50.\nAt  London:\nStandard copper \u2014 Spot, \u00a358 12s\n6d; futures, \u00a356 5s. Electrolytic \u2014\nSpot,   \u00a362;  futures,  \u00a302   10s.\nTin\u2014Spot, \u00a3210 7s 6d; futures, \u00a3301\n2s   6d.\nLead\u2014Spot, \u00a327 2s \u00abd; futures, \u00a327\n15a\nZinc\u2014Spot, \u00a32_ 17s,(Id; futures, \u00a330\n7a  6d.\nSpokane Stocks\n(Reported by C. W. Appleyard)\nBraslllan   Traction     tltt*\nConsolidated   Smelters     1211\nHalted  States Steel    1170\nAmerican  'Locomotive     1109*\nCanadian  Pacific Railway   1184\nHowe    Sound      1 18\nFamous   Players tilt\nWholesale Prices at\nNelson to Producers\nLight  hogs,   110  to  141  lbs llo\nYoung   fowl,   4   lbs.   up 22o\nOld   fowl   ..-. lto\nEggs,   firsts 25c\nEggs,   pullets    28c\nButterfat,    special     430\nButterfat, No. 2  Its\nButtas-fat. No. 1  7.AU\nDodge   Brothers      \u25a0...% It*\nInternational   Nickel 142\nInternational Tele. _ Tele 313*)\nGreat   Northern t 17*\nSllvorsmllh     28c\nDunwelt 31.38\nLeadsmlth          3*c\nLucky   Jim        Mo\nRichmond    .%     I-t \u2022_\u25a0\u25a0\nGoldsmith         ll*o\nCan. Car _ Foundry   I 81\nShswlnlgas     I 70*\nHeagrams I 24\nStudebaker     3 64*\nMontana Idaho        I 21\nKootenay   Florence        20c %\nCanada  Steamships   common   .-1 41\nCanada   Steamships   preferred. .| 11*\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nEARNINGS DOWN\nTORONTO, April 4. \u2014 Canadian\nPacific railway earnings for week ending March 31, 34,725,000, decrease,\n1101,000.\nMONTREAL, April 4. \u2014 Stocka.were\nalmost uniformly buoyant In today's\ntrsdlar os  th. locsl eiclnnge.\nBraslllan lost *\u2022\u00bb Casada steamship\npreferred came second and closed at\nthe sew high of II* Tor a gsln of\nI*. Asbestos preferred closed St\n17* for a gsln of *, after haying\n\u2022aid tip to ths sew high of 87*.\nQuebec Pow.r sad Wlnntp-w Electric wars strong feature., the former\nclosing at 241*, whll* the latter Issue closed st II*. up I*. and hs.lsl\nsold st the new high of It.\nOther price changea Included Abltibl,\nsp 1*; Canada Cemsst, up 1*; Canada Steamship, up I; shawlnigan, up\n1*; and Steal of Canada, off *, to\n111*, after having sold up to the\nsew high of 131.\nTotal Bales\u201425,414 shares; bonOB\u2014\n131,901..\nClaalisr  Quotstloas  I\nBask  of  Commons.    * 241\nBank   of   Montraal       III*.\nBask  of Nova Scotia   Ill ,\nRoyal   Bank       Ml\nAbltibl  Power t Paper     II*\nAbltibl   Power   _   Paper  pfd 117\nAsbestos   Corporation      23*\nAflbestos   Corporation . preferred.. 17\nAtlantic Sugar preferred   It\nBell   Telephone 141*\nBritish Columbia Fishing   .... II*\nBraalllan  T.   L.  _  Power    lit*\nB.  B.  Steel Corp       *\nE. Steel Corp. 2nd pfd     1\nBrompton   Paper     II*\nCan.  Car ft'Foundry    '.... 40\nCan. Car A Foundry .preferred... 88*\nCaa   Cement    141*\nCan.   Converters    ! 100\nCan.  Industrial  Alcohol    21*\nCaa   Steamship   Lines    41\nCan,   Locomottv.    91*\nDominion   Bridge lfil\nDominion   Glass      lit*\nDominion    Textile     Ill\nDominion  Textile   preferred    121\nHollinger   Mlnea     20.75\nLake  of   the   Woods    151\nLaurentlde      112\nMackay      Ill\nMontreal   Power! ...78*\nNational   Breweries     70*\nOgilvle   Milling    241\nPenmans   Limited     221\nPrice   Brothers      M*\nQuebec   Power    241*\nShawlnigan      '.  71*\nSpanish   River    1M*\nSpanish River'preferred   Ill\nSteel  Co. of Canada ttl\nSteel Co.  of Canada IN\nSt.   Lawrence  Flour  Mills    It*\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills pfd,... 81\nTuckett  Tobacco    , ****-\nTuckett    Tobacco     :.1!4\nWayagamack     , 47\nWinnipeg'Hallway preferred   .... 70*\nVancouver Stocks\n^nu^^^^^^\nwas rivw. la Iks\nof   \u2022asasaoas  today   la   aa.\nto a laSBttoa.\nON MI LIST\nDividend   Earing   (.olds\nStrong;   Noranda\nAdvance.\nAre\nJ\t\nAND Hi FACES\nMURDER CHARGE\nShot and Kilted Yoath, Tried to\nCot Her Throat, aad Then\nPoisoned Self\nHFS A \"GODT HOUNTT\nTORONTO, April 4. \u2014 A firm.* tone\nwin- etfnced in \u2022 the tradlaf on tin-\nStandard Mtnlar exchange today. The\nvolume of btialnCM wa_ moderate, and\nprice movemeaU were varying. Tbe\ndlvtjknd-paylnf gold stocks were\n\u25a0tronf. Teck Hughe* featured with\na gain of Kpef cent, to $\u00ab.,.. Wright\nHarcreave-f wan up 5c, to fiMO; Doaae\nMines adTanoed he, to $8.55, aa did\nMclntyre, at 124.76. Lake Shore was\n\u25a0p 10, to 118.26. Kirklaad Lake waa\naa outstanding apot, -telling up to 82,\na gain of 5c. Beaver was up 2, to #4.\nMining CorpoiaVtJoa soared up 12_, to\n11.18. Vlpond gained 4, to 144. Laval\nQuebec was weaker, declining It, to\nU%. Duprat waa off %, to 12%\nNoranda advanced 16c, to 821.40.\nPEE ELECTRIC\nSI\nWINNIPEG, April 4. \u2014 With a formal charge of murder ptaeed \" before\nhef today, Ethel Plehker, 20-year-old\nRussian girl, remained in hospital tonight under a police guard, recovering\nfrom poison, aelf-admlnlsUred, follow-\ntag the shooting of Ruben Plckman\nwhile he slept in a rooming houae\nhere,  Saturday morning.\nRelating a story of unrequited love,\ntbe accused girl is said to have made\ndetailed confession to police officers. The statement tells, ft la alleged, how she attempted suicide after\ntho shooting of Plckmaa. She tried\nto cut her throat with a knife, but,\nfalling in this plan, she took poison.\nQuick medical aid saved her life, and\nher recovery la assured.\nWhen admitted to hospital, Saturday, the girl's only answer to questions of the police was \"I want t<\n\u2666die.\" She then refused to have treat-\nmeat, but prompt medical action was\nforced upon her. Today, however, she\ntallied readily with officers guarding\nher.\nShe may be able to appear In court\nnext week. An inquest was opened\ntoday, but. was adjourned a weak\npending investigation and the girl's\nrecovery.   ,\nCommon Shares Move Up Four;\nDistillery   Groups\nActive\nSUPERIOR, Neb., April 4. \u2014 Two\nmasked men held up and robbdd the\nFarmers' State bank of Superior today,   and   escaped   with   an   amount\nestimated  at   $25,000.\n       .._____ \u2014\nBusy Men\nTORONTO, jjpf 1 \u2666\u2022 \u2014 Wlnnlpet\nElectric common supplied the most In-\nterestlns action In today's strong but\nnot exceptionally active market on the\nToronto stock exchange. Batter conditions prevailing In Manitoba are\nheld responsible for the Increased\nsales of the company's surplus power.\nToday's trading In tbe common shares\nstarted  at 14, and moved up to II.\nThe last transaction was mads at\n17%. Final quotations were at 17%\nto lltt.\nIn the distillery group, Oooderham\n_ Worts reached a high mark at 19,\nand finished at 61%. Other prise\nchanges inclullilf BfaBllian, off tt;\nCanada Cement, up 1; steamship preferred, up 2*4; Smelters, off 114;\nNickel,  up   \u2022_;  Massey-Harrls, off  tt.\n\u2014Find our weekly Market Review a great saver of their\ntime. In a few minutes they can glean from it much valuable information about business and investment conditions that is often of great profit to themselves. Why not\nhave a, copy every week\u2014by mail?   Send the coupon.\n*\u2014 -   (Tenr Out ant Mail)\npif-s-c soul me    NAME\njour Weekly\nmscnnni\n   LTD.\nOZ5 HAITIMC* JT..WEST\nVANCOUVER. B.C.\nINVESTMENT   BANKERS\nMINING MEN!\nWe have the organization to give the best service as\n'   TRANSFER AGENTS, REGISTRAR AND TRUSTEE,\nFor British Columbia Mining Companies.\nKootenay Bond Investment Co., Ltd.\nWarren Block, City \u00bbf Trail. B.C.\nBid\nB.   C.  Silver          1.62\nCork   Province    uG tt\nDun well             1 .is\nGlacier        .11%\nQlaHatono    i 17**\nIndependence     OT *4\nIndian Mines OS\nInter.   Coal    lltt\nLucky   Jim    21\nLeadsmlth             06 tt\nMarmot   Metals 10\u201e\nPremier          3.11 .\nPorter Idaho           .lttt\nHiiin   Hope    I4H\nSelklrks     ;..       .lltt\nsilver   Crest        .07\nSilversmith      18 tt\nRichmond     lltt\nNat.  Silver  G.  S 18\nCoast   Copper        14.00\n& C.  Montana   OOl-lti\nBritish   Petr 18*4\nTrojan   Oil   \t\nSunloch    i.     -  .17\nAmulet\nAnaconda\nArgo\nArea\nBeaver\nBarry Holly\nCastle    \t\nCan.   Lorraine\nConlagaa\nCapital\nDome\nDon   Rouyn\nOold   Hill\nHoHy    \t\nIndian     .,'\t\nKlrkland   Lake II\nKeeley          l.ll\nLake  Shore        18.10\nLaval     II\nMclnty re,         24,70\nMining    Corpn       3.17\nNtpiBBlng            7.71\nI-lew   Ray H\nNoranda          81.13\nPioSoer            1.11\nPremier          I.1S\nRstlyn 81*4\nStadacona          14.1.\nTeck   Hughes          1.71\nTough Oakea 41\nTowagamac            MS\nVlpond      * 4.41\nWright    Hargreaves..    11.11\nWest Dome  Lake   ...       .07tt\nCent.   Man.   Mines   ..     1.20\nAsked\n1.71\n.01\n1.37\n.10\n.10\n.0114\n.Oltt\n.11\n.lltt\n01 %\n\u2022lltt\n2.18\n\u25a016*\n.21\n.07 tt\n.30\n\u202214 tt\n.11\n16.00\n\u2022Mtt\n.14\n.01 i.\n.11\nThe Consofidated Mining & Smehng\nCompany of Canada, I-aM\nOff-ins tmslllno sift   Rstlalm D*?\nTRAIL,   BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters ami Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper,-X*\n' Producers of Gold, Silver, C^tgJJv'Pi\n3.30\n.11\n21.41\n1.01\n2.17\nMajority of C.P.R.\n\u25a0 Common Stock Held\nin United King%\nVANCOUVER'S GRAIN\nEXPORTS DOWN SOME\nVANCOUVER, April 4. \u2014 Grain ex-\nportH from Vancouver for tbe season\nto fate total 2S,lft2,.t4 bushels, compared with 42,460,(15 buahela for the\nsame period a year ago.\nThe United Klnfdom took 17,754,420\nbushels this year; the orient, 6,992,-\n600.; Central and South America, 36.,-\n241; and Australia and Mew Zealand,\n81,593.\nWHEAT CLOSE IS\nUNSETTLED, CHICAGO\nCHICAGO, April 4. \u2014 Setbacks ln\nthe price of wheat formed the rule\ntoday largely as s result of .highly\npromising domestic crop conditions existing fn western Kansas alone. Closing quotations on wheat were unsettled, H to % to 1% net lower, with\ncorn unchanged to % off, oats unchanged, to H up, and provisions\nshowing So to 3c to 20c decline.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWtlMt\u2014\nMay .\nJuly .\nOct. .,\ni Jills-\nMay .\nJ uly .\nOat. .\nBarley\u2014\nMay .\nJuly .\nOct. .\nPU\u00bb\u2014\nMay .\nJuly .\nOat. .\nRye-\nHay .\nJuly .\nOet. .\n140*\n118 tt\nr.'.i\nsi\n14 T4\n49',\n7ltt\n*:,\\\nlltt\n192tt\n1 !>\u25a0''\".\n119*\nllittli\nHOlt\n13814\nllitt\nit\n14 %\n4114\n71%\n75 tt\nlltt\nllltt\nltttt\nlit*-\nLow\n140tt\n11714\n127*\n65*\n64*\n4ltt\n75'.\n74*\nlltt\nllltt\nIIS\n118 tt\nClose\n14014\n137*.\n137*\n55\n54*\nII*\n71*\n71*4\n\u00ab*'A\n111*\n195*\nl\u00bb8tt\n1.71\n.41\n4.4S\n10.70\n.01\nl.ll\nWinnipeg Electric\nMakes Progress m\nEvery Branch Industry\nWINKlPEa, April 4 A -sport recording Improvement in every branch\not the company's business wss* submitted by A. W. McUmiHit, t>re\u00abldent.\nand accepted by the shareholders at\nthe! thirty-fourth annual meeting of\nL the Winnipeg Electrlo company here\ntoday.\nTransportation servloSS, gSS Slid\nelectric -power systems of the company\nrecorded substantial progress during\ntbe past year, Mr. Mc_traont reported.\nTotsl assets of the Winnipeg Electric\n104- th. year ending December II, Hit,\nShow an increase of 11,498,811, now\nstanding at |t8,74t,\u00ablt.      _ _^\t\n101 %\n100*\nI***\nNo.  2\n10S        ltlK    llltt\n10214     llltt     100*\n98 lltt      lltt\nCash VMsss\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern 141%\nnorthern llltt, No. I northern 111,\nNo. 4 111*. No. I 111*, No. 6 91 tt\nfeed 79tt, (rack  Mitt.\nEgg MarketsT\nOTTAWA.   April   4.   \u2014   Toronto   \u2014\nExtras II.  firsts  17,  seconds  II,\nMontreal\u2014Extras .It,   firsts   21.  sea\nondB 15  ts 18\nWinnipeg\u2014Extras ,.2\u00bb,  firsts  ttt eag-\nonds It. i .\nSaskatoon   \u2014   Extras   24,   firsts   tl,\nseconds 19.\nCSlgsry\u2014Extra., II,   flratB   JO,   n.c-\nonds II.\nVancouver\u2014Extra.     25,     firsts     23,\npullet extras II.\nChicago' \u2014  Spot   tl   to   II*.   April\nM*. May  25!4,  Novorabera  21*\nNew   York-Firsts  14*   to   15.\nom\nCanadian stockholders\ncontrol the second largest\nblock of common stock in\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway company, coming second to United Kingdom\nholders, according to a\n\"statement issued at the\nend of the company's year.\nThe position of the holdings of common stock is\nas follows:\nUnited Kingdom ....53.96%\nCanada  19.43%\nUnited States 18.74%\nFranec   2.87%\nOther countries  5.00%\nMajor H. o. D. Seagravs, dst-igner and driver of tha great 1001 narss-\npower 4-ton Sunbeam racing car, \"His Majesty S,\" which hs brought from\nBritain to try out on the beach at Daytona Beach. Last weak his official\ntime was 201.14 mil*, an hour and unofficially he made 207.15. The\nprevious record was 17;;.88! miles an hour, held by Ggpt. Malcolm Campbell, also a Britisher.\nInjunction Continues\nin Mining Exchange\nCase at Toronto\nTORONTO, April I. \u2014 The motion\nby Morgan O, Kemmerer, to continue\nthe injunction to restrain the Standard\nStock and Mining exchange from suspending him for a period of 10 dajrs\nwas today adjourned tor one week.\nThe Injunction la to be continued, is\nthe meantime.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nAsoania,  at Halifax, from  London.\nChicago,  at Halifax, from Bordeaux.\nManchester    Producer,    at     Halifax,\nfrom Saint John.\nCapricorn, at Halifax, from Brest.\nON  cable' BOARD\nIjONDON, April 4,\u2014Sir Christopher\nJames Parr, high conuulssioner in\nLondon for New Zealand since last\nyear, has betn i\u00bbn_inated as New\nZealand's representative on the new-\nly-formpd cable board.\nKootenay Florence\nA inning- stock with Oreat Fasta-\nfaUMes\nFull  details  on  application.\nA Limited  Number of  Shares al JtOc\nXAMstM   8UOOB*T10xr\u00ab\nInternational   Nickel.   Seagram*,   Ores-\nNorthern,  Canada atenmahip-*  Preferred\nCanadian  Car  Preferred\nC. W. Appleyard\nChildren as younir. as I to 11 years\nolii are now flixplaylng art in exhibitions   in   Paris.\nIHBURABCZ \t\nCITY   rROFIKTT\nBaker  Street   Office\u2014Fhoa.  9SS\nC. V. Applsyard H. X. Appleyard\n\u25a0ranoh   Office,  Stanley  St.\u2014Fhon.  736\n(1-.  A.   Whltfl.ld,  K_T.)\nHELSOH.   D.   O.\nl\u00abo^tt|_l8!t4?mpanfi\nOther  Branches  at  Winnipeg,   Yorkton,   Saskatoon,   Edmonton,   Calgary,\nLethbridge,  Vancouver,  Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria\nMONTREAL,  April  i.  \u2014  Batter  and\ne\u00aba easier, cheese wall.\nClfinW\u2014Plnest weatern, t\u00abH ts 17\nButter\u2014No    1    psst-rbrlBsd    4H4    I\nLadies' Wear\nBLACK SATIN COATS!!\u2014A very pleasing selection of the latest Spring styles in\nBlack Satin Coats. The Vogue of Spring.    They are trimmed with chic fur\ncollars in white or grey and lined with Crepe de Chene.\nPrices $29.50, $35.00, $45.00, $65.00\nCHIC NEW YORK HATS in the smartest small, close fitting shapes, with the\nnew high crowns. Designed in Silk or Silk and Straw, and in a most fascinating range of colors: goosebery, sand, rose, beige, black and white, maroon, glace.\nSpecially priced  $4.05, $5.95, $8.50\nSecond, rioor\u2014 JJ.B.C.\nMen's Wear\nRAINCOATS FOR SPRING\nMEN'S ENGLISH GABERDINE RAIN COATS\u2014Made with Raglan Sleeves and\nAll-round Belt   Full lined.   In fawn shades $15.00 and $17.50\nMEN'S ENGLISH ALL-WOOL GABERDINE RAINCOATS\u2014Our Whitehall Brand.\nFull lined with silk in fawn and grey shades  $27.50\nMEN'S LIGHT WEIGHT MANDLEBERGS WATERPROOFS\u2014For summer wear.\n18 oz. weight.   Each $6.75\n,       Mala 1-x*\u2014H.B.C.\nDry Goods\nMAROCAIN CREPE\u201440 inches wide.  Comes in green, tan, grey, wine, peach,\nburnt orange, brown, etc.   Yard .\u2022..._  $ 1.95\nCREPE RAYON\u2014Heavy weight, 38-inch.   Colors of sand, white, orchid, rose,\nblack, blaes and burnt orange   85\u00ab>\nSILK CREPE VOILES in new floral designs, in shades of June blue, ecru, pale\ngreen and orchid, with printed design in a contrasting color $1.25\nBORDERED CREPE DRES\u00a7 LENGTHS\u2014In soft colors.   These are 54 inches\nwide.   All the oest colors are in this range, as above $6.25\n| \u00ab\u00ab>on4 \u00abo\u00abr-H.B.C.\nHouse Furnishings\nAfter the Spring Cleaning, possibly, that bed\nroom with its new paper and paint make the\nold bedstead look dingy.\nNew Steel Beds in the walnut finish in all\nsizes await you. They come in several new\nstyles with or without the fancy panels.\nAll-felt mattresses built by Restmore to fit\n| any bed.   Also coil or cable springs to fit.\nBed Sets at $25.00, $29.00, $32.00 and\n$35.00, complete.\nRestmore Mattresses and beds conduce restful'\n\u00ab____________, SieeP-\nTry pne and be convinced.\nDAY COUCH BEDS\u2014A couch by day and opens out to a bed at night.\nComtfrt*. $19.50, $22.50 and $25.00.\nThe most practical combination j-ou can buy, especially for verandah sleeping\nat night.\nA boon to those who sltep in the open. *\u2022\u00bb* \"\u00bbi,*\u00bb-H.a_, \u2022\n.   \u25a0\n -Tw-f\nIHE NEIaSON DATLT \u00ab1SW\u00a3 TUESDAY MORNING, APR1J, 5, 1927\nThe Ark\ntea a small to\"\u00bbn afloat. No ons to\n\u00bb Shopping with and no mall service\nt dsvart mental stores a way ln eoms\nr realon. We will moke tt worth\n\u2022 tar you to shop at The Ark\nstreet before you buy\nBlinds and Curtain MS-\nOet our prices\nJ. W. HOLMES\n\u20224 IN Vsrnsn tt\nBy Quality\nI We  Prosper\nWhai. you buy from us\nyou get QUALITY. It\nIt be SILVERWARE, CUT\nGLASS, DIAMONDS,\nWATCHES OR JEWELRY\nOR even if it be a'repair\njob. In our service to you\nwe maintain QUALITY.\nYet our PRICES are comparatively LOW.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nad   Optician\n.CLASSIFIED    AD8    BRING    RE-\nNOTICE\nOn Wednesday, April 6th, my\nstore will be closed all day for\nstock-taking on account ot\ntransfer of business to Mr. A.\nK.   Thrlsk.\nL.  O. CAMPBELL.\nDODGE\nSEDAN\nNew Models\non View\nImprove\n5 Main\nBearing\nEngine\nStrongly Built\nCar\nWhich Is\nCHEAPEST\nin the End\nCAPITOL MOTORS\nOEORGE W. PEASE,  Msnager\nOpp.  Post  Offic. Phons  H\nNothing  Is  too  good  for   the  ska\nSmy the's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION SPECIALIST\nIn business for your health. Let us\nfill your prescriptions. Mail order*\npromptly executed. Call and wait for\nyour car.    Vfeoa-a 1.\nSunday hour*: 1 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nCITY DRUG CO.\nFilms,   Kodaks,   Drug*,   Stationary.\nMall   Orders   Promptly   Despatched.\nBOX 1083    Nel.on. B. C.    PHONE 84\nCome   and   Got   Your   Weight   Free.\nTHE BATTERIES WE\n8ELL ARE GUARANTEED AMU OUR\nPRICES WILL PLEASE\nYOU.\nBENNETTS, LTD.\nThs  Horn,  ef   Electrical   Goods\nI\nI\nCorrect\nI   SHIRTS\nI\nFashion has decreed Magenta stripes and cheeks\nThis is a new red tint'and\nmakes a clean-cut dressy\nshirt.\nS3.00\nTRY  U8  \"IR8TI\nTRY A CLASSIFIED AD.\nDAINTY LINGERIE\nWhatever may be your requirements in underthings,\nwe are in a position to supply them.\nBLOOMERS\u2014Hylc-om, heavy quality rayon  83.50\nBLOOMERS\u2014Penman's rayon  f2.25\nBLOOMERS\u2014Glove Silk  S3.95\nBLOOMERS\u2014Crepe de Chene $4.05\nBLOOMERS\u2014Broadcloth fl.15\nBLOOMERS\u2014Dimity  75*\nVESTS\u2014Hyloom   ..,....^*.n,.\u201e.S2.00\nVESTS\u2014Penman's, rayon  fl.40\nSLIPS\u2014Rayon  ?2.75, ?3.00, ?3.50\nSTEP-INS\u2014In rayon, glove silk, crepe de chene.   Priced\nat _ S2.60 to S3.25\nCOMBINATIONS\u2014Maybelle, comprising vest, brassiere\ntop and knickers with hose suspenders $5.50\nNIGHTGOWNS\u2014Crepe de chene     86.50 and 87.50\nDimity  \u00ab fl.75\nOur Corset Department will deem it a pleasure to\nadvise your particular requirements in Corsets, etc.\nIRamsben JSros.\nMIHInsry        Rssdy-ts-Wesr        Dry   Goods        Boys'   Wssr\nSEATTLE PIONEER\nDIES AT HER HOME\ni SEATT_R April 4.\u2014Mrs. Sarah\n\"Druxmsa, Seattle pioneer, 65 years\nJold, died at her home here today.\n*9he came to Seattle \"Ironi Winnipeg\nkl years ago. \u2022siren children and\nJier husband, Moses Druxmin, .were\nat the bedside when she die_.\n* Daochters ot Scotia Whist Drive In\nK. P. Hall. Masllo-Sock, Friday afternoon, 1:11.   Admission \u00ab6c.     (7463)\n. a_10KT\u00bb  Qr'wTTMUB\nAll Knights are requested to be, at\nlodge tonltht Cards and refrssh-\ninents.\u2014D.  Lauglitos,' K.R.  and  S.\natst)\nMarcolllns\u2014Expert Operator. Make\nyour appointments earl?;- 16 Annable\n.Block.    Phone  216. (7461)\nMalty lerriee Olab will huve Heme\nCooking and Candy for sale at the\nEaster Novelty Tea -In Trinity Church\nJ'arlors, tomorrow, S to S pjo.  (7(18)\nII; Msa'and\" Y\/iit, _IU, \"\"prospeoSve\n\u25a0nembers advise A. Foster, B. Martin\nfr Miss E. Hunter. (7470)\nTh. i T. Tennis C*lrt> fees for lltt\n|J\u00ab:     Men,   It;   Ladles,   86:   Students.\nI Marlorie will resume. , Trall-N.lsoa\nBus Bervlcs, Tmir\u00bbo_y7 -7lh. Lease\nKelson 8:!0 a.m. ~^A*ri Trail 8:06\npm. (t4\u00abi)\ni ***s ,\u2014\n_Quj\u00abn Clly Hebekah Lodit., No. II,\n_-9-\u00b0'8\" _wl\" \"\"Mt tonight at I\n^'clook.    Flower   Drill. (7414)\n_ .\"efn. Isoleal\u2014Why not take a\nfriend for afternoon tea to Trinity\nChurch tomorrow? You'll want to\nfcuy on Easter aift st the Novelty\nTable. (74.7,\nI.   No more applications tB Join Nclaon\nrennis   Club  iluuer. court.)    will   hs\nIccepUd.    Court accommodation tilled,\na f (7461)\n(7461)\n-    Oooloar. Oet    your    Cakes.\n'lea.  Bread,  Fruit and   Tickle  for the\n\u00bbeek-end    at    St. Paul's    on    Friday\nafternoon. (7466)\nh\nFurnished  Suites\u2014Kerr  Apartment..\n' (7189)\n_ McDonald Jam Co, In the market fir\nstrawberries, raspberries, gooseberries,\nfed currants, black currants, blackberries,    cherries,    damsons. (7390)\nL__f,ths best of shoe repairs, Wed.\nP*\"**  la. (7891)\nsatisfactory\n47SV2)\nmoat\nWATSoas   for\nshoe repairing.\nJ!********   \u00bb\u00ab_\u00bb\u2022__ OK.T   0a_\nI   CAB   WTL_   n   OrSBATBT-\nT\u00bbTBJ\u00bb   BOTIOE.        i?H8)\n\u00bbT___\u00bb\npa-n. i\nPHONE\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysician   snd   Surgeon\nSuite   503   ts   SO*   Rookery    Building\nOver Whit.hou.e.\n8POKANE, WA8H.\nCornsr Wivsralde snd Howard\nSatin-Glo\nSatin-Glo Week\nCommences Saturday, 2nd AprU\n\"to Saturday, 9th April, Inclusive\nSatin-Glo is a Bapco Product, the modern interior finish\nfor Wans, Furniture and Woodwork.\nat Special Spring Price\nFo'' one week only once a year you can buy Satin*Glo\nabout a third reduction from the regular price.\nGallons  Rejular $2.85, with Coupon * 1.85\n _\u201e Regular $1.60, with Coupon \u2022 1.00\n .Regular 86c, with Coupon 60s*\nCoupons can be procured at our Retail Store.\nWood-Vailance Hardware Co Ltd.\n.LJSALE\nSole Agento\nNELSON, RC.\nRETAIL\nQUALITY\nand\nSERVICE\nFor Beit Grades of Coal\nand Wood, Call at or\nTelephone\nMcdonald cartage\n& FUEL CO.\n603    Baker    8t.\nIll     III\nPhone    EM\nAUCTION\n(Ml Carbonate St. I\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 2 p.m.\nFavored with Instructions from Mrs\nI* O. Campbell I will offer the fol-\nolw|n\u00bb: Fumed Oak Dining Room\nBet, ChestsMleld Chairs, Lawn Mower, Garden Tools, (las Plate, Oss\nOven, Linoleum, Dishes, Tables, Curtains Blinds, I Rl(h Chairs, Con-\ngoleum Ruf. Mahosney Rocker.\nFumed Oak Rocker, Couoh, Wicks*\nChairs Csrpet, Or.maphone, Portieres, Run, Child's Wicker Rocker,\nPictures, Chest of Drawers. Table\nLamp. Books, 81elfhs, Bsby Sleigh,\nPorch Chairs. Davenport, etc., etc.\nGoods on view morning ot sals.\nTerms Cash.       <S. HORaTEAD,\n-COMING-\nTHURSDAY, FRIDAY\nandJJATURDAY\nSpecial Extra\nMatinee\n(Children Only)\nThursday, after  school,\n3:30.   Admission. 15c\nNOTICE!\nHarold Lloyd Glasses given\naway free at the Starland\nafter school today.\nAll the breathless thrill* ot\n\"Safety last.\"\nAll the heart appeal of \"Grandma's Boy.\"\nAll the glorious fun of \"The\nFreshman.'^ i\nBye Bye,  Gloomblrd!\nADVANCE PRICES\nNights\u2014Adults 50c, Children 25c.\nMatinees\u2014Adults 86c, children 15c.\nAsS.HpcfwiD&Co.\nPhone 121\nPicnic Bam. lb 254\nCottage RoU Hams, lb   . .301.\nNew Laid Eggs  40*\nOranges from I doi.  . .(1.00\nSteal   Brtggs   and   MnKmiSss\nMew  Seeds  Bare   Arrived\n>o Aonoir t_t\nOTTAWA, April 4. \u2014 Premier W. I*\nMacK-msle Sing elated in the boos,\nof common, today that no action will\nbe taken st this session of parliament\nIn respect to the request of the province of Nova Scotia for an additional\nmember  ln  the  federal  parliament\nConsiderYour\nTeeth\nWhen you are enumerating\nthe thinKa which require attention in the spring\u2014such *a\nthe Home, the Garden, etc.\u2014\ndo not forget your physical\nwelfare.\nAnd your physical welfare is\nso much dependent on your\nteeth that they are among the\nfirst things to which you should\ngive attention.\n.  i\nOUR AIM\nEfficient   Dentistry   at\nReasonable Prices\nDR. KEELEY\nDENTI8T\n405'\/.   Baker   St,   Nesjon,   I.   C.\nAND   AT   TRAIL\nBOOKS\nWe always make It a polrfl to\ncarry in stock'the latest fiction.\nIn addition to the latest works\nof popular authors, we haro a\nlarge assortment of books that\nare   lastingly   popular.\nHere are a few:\n\"Young   Anarchy\",    by    Philip\nGlbbs.\n\"The City in the Sea\", by 8tac-\npool-e.\n\"Flying Clues\", Uy Chas. Dutton.\n\"The Runaway Trail\", by Albert\nTreynor.\n\"Short    Grass\",    by    Geo.    W.\nOgden.\n\"The     Mysterious    Affair    at\nStyles\", by Affatha Christie.\n\"The   Devil's   Guanl\",   by  Talbot Mundy.\n\"Miss Tiverton  Goes Out\".\n\"Monsieur\",   by   G<co.  Challls.\n'Sword and Candle\", By Sydney\nSmall.\n\"Never   Give   AH\",   by   Maude\nWarren.\n\"The    Christ * of    the    Indian\nItoad\",  by Stanley Jones.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Co*\nDoctors'   Prescriptions   Our\nSpecialty\nOyt-of-Town*    Orders    Receive\nOur   Most   Careful   and\nPrompt Attention\nTheDailyNews\n25 Cents a Week by\nCarrier.\nBy   Mall:\n60 Cents a Month or\n$6.00 a Year by Mail\nOutside Nelson.\nThe Paper Which Gives\nYou the News First\nThe Daily News\nPhone 144\nTells' for Comfort!\nFEL_.Hats that combine style with comfort are presented in s,\npleasing array. Our\nstocks never were so\ncomplete \u2014 that's why\nchoice will be easy.\n$5.00\n$6.00'\n$6.50\nNEW shapes, new colors and a variety\npf weights are presented\nin three inviting groups.\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nThe Super-Six\nESSEX\nCoach\n$1195       At Your\nSfdan ., S128S    Door Prtce_\nReliable \u2014 Economical \u2014 Comfortable\n\/ Unsurpassed in Value\nSmedley Garage Co*\nRead th* AdTertUementa\ni ranSAnramiTaa\nIncrease Your Salary\nEVENING CLASSES\nIndividual Tuition\nNelson Business College\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nSpecialising    in   Correcting    Dsfoctiv.\nSight  by  Proper  Qlaasss.\nQuick Rspsir 8srvlos.\nGRIFF1*\/  BLK.     .     .      PHONE   125\nLIVE DOWN TOWN\nAnd save time and street car\nfares.   You get real comport\nin the\nKERR APARTMENTS\nFLOWER SEEDS\nDid   you   see   the   wonderful\ndisplay 'of   Asters   Tom   Lane\nshowed   at   Nelson   Fair   lust\nyear?     The   best   ln   the   fair.\nAll Our Seeds\nTry our Collection of 7 varieties of these Immense Asters\nfor 60c. They contain a packet\nof the new Yellow Aster.\nRutherford Drug Co.\nN.lion\nMl\nGROCERIERU\nPHONE 235\n111>\\ \\l, CROWN riOAl*\u2014\nS >\u00bbrs 25\u00ab>\nCHTPSO\u2014For quick suds.\n\"2 Pkt. 45.\nBROOMS\u2014 5-strlng. Good value.\nEach  \u25a0'....50-fi\nyram rv GROOKRIBS\nFor\nService,\nPrice and\n, Quality\nPhones 10 and 193\n\u25a0g)CI\u00bbCE\u00bbY(g)\n-TONIGHT\u2014\nNorma\nShearer\nIN\n'UPSTAGE'\nCOMING T0MOR0W\nOne Day Only\n'Pals First*\nMrs. J. R. Marshal drew\nthe $2.50.\n\u25a0\"i\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1927_04_05","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403170","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1927-04-05 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1927-04-05 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0403170"}